{"id": "enwiki-00284491-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 in women's association football\nThe following are the scheduled events of women's association football for 2018 throughout the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284491-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 in women's association football, International WNT competitions, Invitational\nnote 1 The final match was cancelled due to weather issues and both teams were awarded the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 82], "content_span": [83, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284492-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 in women's road cycling\n2018 in women's road cycling is about the 2018 women's bicycle races ruled by the UCI and the 2018 UCI Women's Teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284492-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 in women's road cycling, World Championships\nThe World Road Championships is set to be held in Innsbruck, Austria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284492-0002-0000", "contents": "2018 in women's road cycling, Single day races (1.1 and 1.2)\n\u2020 The clock symbol denotes a race which takes the form of a one-day time trial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284492-0003-0000", "contents": "2018 in women's road cycling, UCI teams\nThe country designation of each team is determined by the country of registration of the largest number of its riders, and is not necessarily the country where the team is registered or based.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284493-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 knife murders at Pubei Road, Shanghai\nThe 2018 Pubei Road Knife Murders, also known as The 6\u00b728 Knife Murder on Pubei Road, or Huang Yichuan's Intentional Homicide, happened on June 28, 2018 in the Xuhui District of Shanghai, China. During this murder, two boys who attended the Shanghai World Foreign Language Primary School died, and another student and parent were injured. The suspect, Huang Yichuan, was arrested by the Procuratorate the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284493-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 knife murders at Pubei Road, Shanghai\nOn December 6, 2018, the first trial of the case was held. The murder was found to be the result of the defendant's hopelessness for life and his desire for revenge on the society. The prosecutor pointed out that Huang Yichuan suffered from schizophrenia. On May 23, 2019, The First Intermediate People's Court of Shanghai decided that Huang's mental illness did not affect his ability to control his own behavior. The court then imposed the death penalty, as well as depriving his political rights for life. On December 30, 2019, the Shanghai Senior People's Court rejected the appeal on Huang Yichuan's ruling, upheld the original judgment, and submitted it to the Supreme People's Court for approval. On December 3, 2020, Huang Yichuan was executed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284493-0002-0000", "contents": "2018 knife murders at Pubei Road, Shanghai, Description of the murders\nAt 11:31 a.m. on June 28, the Xuhui Branch of Shanghai Municipal Public Security Bureau received a phone call, saying that a man with a kitchen knife had cut three boys and a female parent near the sidewalk of Guilin West Street on Pubei Road. With the help of others at the scene of the attack, the police arrested Huang Yichuan, the assailant, and sent the injured victims to the hospital. By noon on June 28, two of the boys had died. At 1:50 p.m., the Xuhui police issued a call for information. According to a number of netizens, the site of the attack was found to be near the gate of the West Campus of the Shanghai World Foreign Language Primary School.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284493-0003-0000", "contents": "2018 knife murders at Pubei Road, Shanghai, Description of the murders\nAccording to a video uploaded by netizens, the two boys fell to the ground after being stabbed. There was a lot of blood at the scene, and some people used towels to stop the children's bleeding. A kitchen knife was also seen on the ground. A number of people at the scene, including the staff of city management, held Huang Yichuan down to prevent his escape, and a passing air conditioner repairman tied him up with a rope. After the police arrived, Huang was arrested and offered no resistance during the entire process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284493-0004-0000", "contents": "2018 knife murders at Pubei Road, Shanghai, Description of the murders\nOne of the students, known only as Tan, was confirmed to have died from injury to the central nervous system and hemorrhagic shock due to the stabbing. The other student who passed away, known as Fei, died of a brain injury and hemorrhagic shock, due to the stabbing of his head, face, and left palm. The third student, Jin, and the parent, Zhang, only suffered minor head injuries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284493-0005-0000", "contents": "2018 knife murders at Pubei Road, Shanghai, Identity of the murderer\nAccording to an examination of the First Branch of Shanghai People's Procuratorate, the criminal suspect Huang Yichuan, male, was unemployed at the time of the attack. He claimed that after a failure to find employment in many places, he went to Shanghai in early June 2018. After arriving, Huang came up with the idea to take revenge on society through murder. On the morning of June 28, he set out from his hotel with a stainless-steel kitchen knife and took a bus to Guilin West Street near the World Foreign Language Primary School. At about 11 a.m., he saw three students and a parent leaving the school. To avoid the security patrol at the school gate, he followed the group and stabbed them about 130 meters away from the school gate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 68], "content_span": [69, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284493-0006-0000", "contents": "2018 knife murders at Pubei Road, Shanghai, Identity of the murderer\nAfter the incident, his personal information was exposed through Human flesh search engine. According to a screenshot of Huang Yichuan's basic personal information that circulated on the Internet, he was born on June 3, 1989, in Hunan Province Suining County, and had been a student in the school of architecture of Hunan University of Science and Technology (HUST). Some students at HUST confirmed that Huang Yichuan had previously studied with them at HUST. They also mentioned that he had antisocial tendencies when he was a university student. When Huang graduated from the college, he left many threatening messages on Tencent QQ to many students. During the six years after his graduation, he participated in the Postgraduate Admission Test many times but always failed. In addition, during those years he had changed jobs more than ten times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 68], "content_span": [69, 918]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284493-0007-0000", "contents": "2018 knife murders at Pubei Road, Shanghai, Identity of the murderer\nAccording to a survey conducted by Caixin Online, Huang Yichuan's parents divorced when he was a child. His childhood home was in a building designed for the family of local civil servants in Suining County. Additionally, his grandmother, Wu, was found to have had schizophrenia for decades. In 2012 and 2013, Huang Yichuan failed the Postgraduate Admission Test twice and repeatedly failed to find a job, but he still hid the truth from his family and friends, claiming that he had a high income and perfect life.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 68], "content_span": [69, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284493-0007-0001", "contents": "2018 knife murders at Pubei Road, Shanghai, Identity of the murderer\nDuring the Spring Festival before the Pubei Knife Murders, Huang's mother thought that her son was more withdrawn and irritable, and some distant relatives thought that he may have inherited his grandmother's schizophrenia. In the year before the murders, Huang Yichuan traveled to Xiamen, Wuhan, Guangzhou, Shanghai and other cities, where he visited many kindergartens and primary schools, planning to commit the murders. A month before the Pubei murders, Huang Yichuan took the train from Guangzhou to Shanghai, spending most of his time at a youth hostel in the Pudong New Area. A few days before the incident, he heard on the radio that the Shanghai World Foreign Language Primary School was going to hold a graduation ceremony, so he determined to commit the murders on students from that school.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 68], "content_span": [69, 871]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284493-0008-0000", "contents": "2018 knife murders at Pubei Road, Shanghai, Criminal proceedings\nOn June 28, 2018, the first branch of Shanghai Municipal People's Procuratorate and the Xuhui District procuratorate appointed prosecutors to intervene in the case to guide the investigation and evidence collection. On June 29, Xuhui District Procuratorate approved the arrest according to the law. On August 14, the first branch of Shanghai Municipal People's Procuratorate initiated a public prosecution against Huang Yichuan for intentional murder to the First Intermediate People's Court of Shanghai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284493-0008-0001", "contents": "2018 knife murders at Pubei Road, Shanghai, Criminal proceedings\nOn December 6, the case was heard in a court session of the First Intermediate People's Court of Shanghai, attended by representatives of the National People's Congress, representatives of Shanghai Municipal People's Congress, the victims' families, and more than 50 other people. After the judicial identification, Huang Yichuan was diagnosed with schizophrenia, and as a result held limited criminal responsibility. During the trial, the procuratorate recommended the court to punish him according to the provisions of the third paragraph of Article 18 of the Criminal Law of the People's Republic of China. However, the court also considered that his motive for killing was particularly sinister, the crime had been planned for a long time, and the killing method was particularly brutal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 856]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284493-0009-0000", "contents": "2018 knife murders at Pubei Road, Shanghai, Criminal proceedings\nAt 10:00 a.m. on May 23, 2019, the First Intermediate People's Court of Shanghai issued the first judgment on the case. The defendant Huang Yichuan was sentenced to death for intentional homicide, and he was sentenced to be deprived of political rights for life. In the judgment, the First Intermediate People's Court of Shanghai pointed out that Huang Yichuan decided to kill primary school students in order to vent his anger because he \"thought he was being bullied and hurt by others.\" He had premeditated and prepared serious violence against innocent children, with despicable motives and cruel means.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284493-0009-0001", "contents": "2018 knife murders at Pubei Road, Shanghai, Criminal proceedings\nAlthough Huang Yichuan suffers from schizophrenia and therefore had limited criminal responsibility, his crime was extremely serious, and the court decided that his mental illness did not affect his ability to control his behavior in this case. After the sentence, the defendant did not appeal in court. According to a reporter, the sentencing on the morning of May 23 lasted only about half an hour, and the defendant appeared very calm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284493-0010-0000", "contents": "2018 knife murders at Pubei Road, Shanghai, Criminal proceedings\nLater, Huang formally made an appeal. On August 30, 2019, the second instance of the case opened for trial. In the second trial, Huang Yichuan argued that he did not plan to kill people in advance, and that he was committing homicide in a state of insanity. However, the procuratorial organ believed that the facts of Huang Yichuan's homicide were clear, the applicable law was correct, and the trial procedure was legal, meaning that his sentence was appropriate. Therefore, it was suggested that the court of second instance should reject the appeal and maintain its original judgment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284493-0010-0001", "contents": "2018 knife murders at Pubei Road, Shanghai, Criminal proceedings\nAt 12 a.m. of that day, the trial of second instance came to a close. On December 30, 2019, Shanghai Senior People's Court held a court session to make a public judgment on the appeal case, and they ruled to reject the appeal and uphold the original judgment that Huang Yichuan was sentenced to death and deprived of his political rights for life. On December 3, 2020, Huang Yichuan was executed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284494-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 local electoral calendar\nThis local electoral calendar for 2018 lists the subnational elections held in 2018. Referendums, retention elections, and national by-elections (special elections) are also included.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption\nThe 2018 lower Puna eruption was a volcanic event on the island of Hawai\u02bbi, on K\u012blauea volcano's East Rift Zone that began on May 3, 2018. It is related to the larger eruption of K\u012blauea that began on January 3, 1983, though some volcanologists and USGS scientists have discussed whether to classify it as a new eruption. Outbreaks of lava fountains up to 300 feet (90\u00a0m) high, lava flows, and volcanic gas in the Leilani Estates subdivision were preceded by earthquakes and ground deformation that created cracks in the roads.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption\nOn May 4, a 6.9 magnitude earthquake hit Puna. By May 27, 2018, 24 fissures had erupted lava in and near the Leilani Estates and Lanipuna Gardens subdivisions. The eruption forced the evacuation of approximately two thousand residents. The Puna Geothermal Venture, which provided one-quarter of the island's electricity, was forced to shut down and was later damaged by lava. The fissures had sent lava rivers that buried part of Hawaii Route 137 on May 19, and began flowing into the ocean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0002-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption\nOn May 29, lava from a new northeastern flow overran Hawaii Route 132, cutting the access between Kapoho and P\u0101hoa. The massive lava flow reached the Pacific Ocean at Kapoho Bay on June 4. Lava entered the Kapoho Crater and evaporated Green Lake, which had been the largest natural freshwater lake in Hawai\u02bbi. On the night of June 4\u20135, the northeastern flow of lava speedily moved forward and destroyed the subdivision of Vacationland Hawaii. By June 5, Kapoho Bay had been filled in with lava now forming a point where the bay had been. The volcanic activity was the most destructive in the United States since the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0003-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption\nBy August 7, 13.7 square miles (35\u00a0km2) of land had been covered by lava flows. About 875 acres (3.54\u00a0km2) of new land has been created in the ocean. The official number of houses destroyed by the eruption reached 700 on July 9. It was estimated that recovery efforts would cost more than $800 million (2018 USD). By early August the eruption had almost completely subsided, and on December 5, it was declared to have ended after three months of inactivity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0004-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Background\nThe volcanic event in Puna was the 62nd episode of K\u012blauea's east rift zone eruption that began in January 1983. Pu\u02bbu \u02bb\u014c\u02bb\u014d had become a prominent volcanic cone 19\u00a0km (12\u00a0mi) east of the summit caldera of K\u012blauea, since the 1983 eruption's beginning. In the 1980s and 1990s, Pu\u02bbu \u02bb\u014c\u02bb\u014d produced lava flows that destroyed the nearby Royal Gardens subdivision and the settlement of Kapa\u02bbahu. In 1990, lava flows from the K\u016bpa\u02bbianah\u0101 vent of K\u012blauea, downrift from Pu\u02bbu \u02bb\u014c\u02bb\u014d, destroyed and partly buried most of the nearby towns of Kalapana and Kaim\u016b.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0005-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Background\nOn April 30, 2018, the crater floor of the cone of Pu\u02bbu \u02bb\u014c\u02bb\u014d collapsed and the summit lava lake level in Halema\u02bbuma\u02bbu dropped significantly. In the first two days of May, hundreds of small earthquakes were detected on K\u012blauea's East rift zone, leading officials to issue evacuation warnings for some residents of the Puna District. On May 2, 2018, the US Geological Survey reported that ground deformation resulting from magma intruding beneath the Leilani Estates subdivision had caused ground cracks to form on roads in and around the subdivision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0006-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Background\nIn connection with the eruption and its possible effects on the Hilina Slump, the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory published information concluding that the chance of a catastrophic collapse would be incredibly remote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0007-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, Earthquakes and Leilani Estates fissures\nOn May 3, 2018, after a 5.0 earthquake earlier in the day, steaming ground cracks opened in Leilani Estates and began to spew lava, causing evacuations of the Leilani Estates and Lanipuna Gardens subdivisions. The outbreak marked the beginning of the 62nd episode of the east rift zone eruption that began in January 1983. That evening, Hawaii Governor David Ige activated the state National Guard to help with the evacuation process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 76], "content_span": [77, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0008-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, Earthquakes and Leilani Estates fissures\nThe next day, May 4, two homes were reported destroyed in Leilani Estates from three erupting vents. The Hawaii County Civil Defense Agency reported high levels of toxic sulfur dioxide gas in the area, and Talmadge Magno, the Civil Defense Administrator for Hawai\u02bbi County, stated that power lines had melted off poles from the heat. The Puna Geothermal Venture (PGV), a power station, was shut down on 22 May 2018; the geothermal power plant provided approximately 25% of the Big Island's power, but its shutdown was later stated not to present a risk to power on the island. A Temporary Flight Restriction area was declared by the FAA to restrict flights below 3,000 feet AGL in the eruption area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 76], "content_span": [77, 776]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0009-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, Earthquakes and Leilani Estates fissures\nA 6.9 magnitude earthquake occurred on May 4 that the United States Geological Survey said was related to the eruptions. The earthquake was the strongest to hit the state since 1975. On May 6, Hawai\u02bbi County Civil Defense reported that 26 houses had been destroyed by lava or fires in Leilani Estates. Lava fountains up to 300 feet (90\u00a0m) were observed in the subdivision. The lava vents formed a northeast\u2013southwest line; officials were concerned about potential damage to a water main in the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 76], "content_span": [77, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0010-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, Earthquakes and Leilani Estates fissures\nOn May 7, 1,700 people had been ordered to evacuate their homes. Two hundred residents and their pets were in two Red Cross shelters and hundreds more were staying with family and friends. Several first responders were sickened by sulfur dioxide gas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 76], "content_span": [77, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0011-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, Earthquakes and Leilani Estates fissures\nAlso on May 7, the International Charter on Space and Major Disasters was activated, for humanitarian use of satellite data. (The USGS used Sentinel2 and Arirang-2.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 76], "content_span": [77, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0012-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, Earthquakes and Leilani Estates fissures\nBy May 9, another home had been destroyed, along with other structures. The fifteenth fissure opened near the entrance to Lanipuna Gardens and added more lava to the nearly 117 acres (47\u00a0ha) covered since May 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 76], "content_span": [77, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0013-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, Earthquakes and Leilani Estates fissures\nAsh from Kilauea Eruption, right image shows the height of the plume by color.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 76], "content_span": [77, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0014-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, Earthquakes and Leilani Estates fissures\nBlue flames from burning methane gas in Leilani Estates, on 22 May 2018, 11:30\u00a0p.m. HST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 76], "content_span": [77, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0015-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, Earthquakes and Leilani Estates fissures\nAerial view of fissure 17 on May 14 around 4:30\u00a0p.m. HST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 76], "content_span": [77, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0016-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, Earthquakes and Leilani Estates fissures\nMap of ongoing intrusion and earthquake activity along K\u012blauea's East Rift Zone (May 2, 2018)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 76], "content_span": [77, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0017-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, Earthquakes and Leilani Estates fissures\nCollapse in the crater of Pu\u2018u \u2018\u014c\u2018\u014d, creating an ash plume (May 3, 2018)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 76], "content_span": [77, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0018-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, Earthquakes and Leilani Estates fissures\nA lava flow moves on Makamae Street in Leilani Estates at 09:32 am HST on May 6", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 76], "content_span": [77, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0019-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, Earthquakes and Leilani Estates fissures\nMap of the locations of eruptive fissures (May 5, 2018)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 76], "content_span": [77, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0020-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, New eastern fissures, lava flows reach sea\nOn May 12, a 16th fissure opened in Lower Puna, which spattered lava in an area east of Puna Geothermal Venture.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 78], "content_span": [79, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0021-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, New eastern fissures, lava flows reach sea\nA 17th fissure opened east of the 16th fissure later that day. As of May 14, 2018, lava flows from fissure 17 had traveled just under a mile from the vent, destroying an additional structure and leading officials to advise residents in an area known as Four Corners to evacuate due to the possibility that lava from a future fissure could cut Highway 132 and eventually Highway 137 as well. A spokeswoman for the mayor also reported that the chemistry of the lava was changing in later fissures, containing a mixture of more viscous old lava and faster-moving new magma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 78], "content_span": [79, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0022-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, New eastern fissures, lava flows reach sea\nBy May 16, there were 20 fissures. That day the ash plume from the summit reached 12,000 feet. On May 17, an eruption from the summit sent an ash cloud 30,000 feet high. A 21st fissure opened and several magnitude 3 earthquakes damaged the road near the entrance to Hawai\u02bbi Volcanoes National Park and some of the park buildings. On May 17, at approximately 4:15 a.m., an explosive eruption occurred at Halema\u02bbuma\u02bbu, creating a plume of ash 30,000 feet into the air.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 78], "content_span": [79, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0022-0001", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, New eastern fissures, lava flows reach sea\nOn May 19 some of the fissures had merged into a line of fountaining lava, with a lava flow split into separate lobes. At least two of the lava flows through parts of Malama K\u012b Forest Reserve crossed Highway 137 and flowed into the Pacific Ocean at Malama flats near MacKenzie State Recreation Area on May 19, producing clouds of irritating \u201claze\u201d (lava haze), made up of steam, hydrochloric acid, and volcanic glass particles produced by littoral explosions. Warnings regarding the hazard were issued for communities downwind of the lava\u2019s ocean entry points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 78], "content_span": [79, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0023-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, New eastern fissures, lava flows reach sea\nBy May 22, splashes from fissure 22's lava cone had engulfed the former Hawai\u02bbi Geothermal Project site adjacent to the PGV and was reported to be threatening the grounds of the PGV proper from the south until activity at fissure 22 slowed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 78], "content_span": [79, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0024-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, New eastern fissures, lava flows reach sea\nMay 19 Fissure 20 Lava flow as seen by USGS from a helicopter", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 78], "content_span": [79, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0025-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, New eastern fissures, lava flows reach sea\nSpattering and lava flow at fissure 20 in K\u012blauea Volcano's Lower East Rift Zone", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 78], "content_span": [79, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0026-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, New eastern fissures, lava flows reach sea\nLava from the Fissure 20 complex is entering the ocean in two locations", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 78], "content_span": [79, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0027-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, New eastern fissures, lava flows reach sea\nHot lava entering the ocean creates a dense white plume", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 78], "content_span": [79, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0028-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, New eastern fissures, lava flows reach sea\nLava fountain at fissure 22, from the north side of the fissure complex", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 78], "content_span": [79, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0029-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, New eastern fissures, lava flows reach sea\nLava enters the sea at two locations after crossing Hawaii Route 137", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 78], "content_span": [79, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0030-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, Reopening of Leilani Estates fissures and new northeastern lava flow\nFrom May 23, eruptions at the eastern fissures began to weaken considerably, as lava activity moved back up the rift zone; older fissures reopened to release fluid p\u0101hoehoe, which rapidly replaced the output of \u02bba\u02bb\u0101, and led to massive pooling of lava over lower Leilani Estates. On the same day, fissures 5, 13, and 15 began to form lava fountains around the Leilani Avenue-Kahukai Street intersection. Fissures 3, 7, 8, 9, 21 and 23 farther up the rift zone would experience intermittent but lively activity between May 24 to May 27 as the center of activity moved to fissure 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 104], "content_span": [105, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0030-0001", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, Reopening of Leilani Estates fissures and new northeastern lava flow\nA 24th fissure would also form farther up the fissure complex on May 27, between fissures 8 and 9. Due to continued encroachment by lava, the number of destroyed structures was revised upward to 82 on May 25. The area of land covered by the 2018 lava on May 25, 2018, reached 2,223 acres. The eastern fissures would experience limited resurgences in activity into June and July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 104], "content_span": [105, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0031-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, Reopening of Leilani Estates fissures and new northeastern lava flow\nThe pool of lava in Leilani Estates eventually spilled eastwards into two paths, one short-lived route running southeast parallel to lava channels headed for the ocean, and another travelling northeast, crossing Pohoiki Road over the western boundaries of the Puna Geothermal Venture. On May 27, one of the 11 geothermal wells at the PGV was covered by the advancing lava flow from the Leilani Estates fissures, the first time lava had covered a geothermal well, followed by a second well hours later, along with ten more structures in the adjacent Leilani Estates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 104], "content_span": [105, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0032-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, Reopening of Leilani Estates fissures and new northeastern lava flow\nAs the lava flow from Leilani Estates intensified by the end of May, activity shifted to \u02bbAhu\u02bbail\u0101\u02bbau (initially designated Fissure 8) as nearly all surrounding fissures ceased to release lava. \u02bbAhu\u02bbail\u0101\u02bbau's lava fountains rapidly formed a new cinder cone, increasing the volume of pooling lava over the course of the week and feeding the northeastern flow further.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 104], "content_span": [105, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0032-0001", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, Reopening of Leilani Estates fissures and new northeastern lava flow\nBy May 29, the northeastern flow approached Hawaii Route 132, which linked P\u0101hoa and Kapoho, blocking the access road to the PGV and forcing the closure of Route 132 between the Lava Tree State Park from the west and the Four Corners intersection to the east. The lava flow covered a section of the highway later that day, before travelling farther east in the direction of Kapoho. The northeastern lava flow also cut power to Kapoho and nearby developments including Vacationland Hawai\u02bbi, and surviving sections of Leilani Estates and Lanipuna Gardens. It was not known how and when power to those communities could be restored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 104], "content_span": [105, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0033-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, Reopening of Leilani Estates fissures and new northeastern lava flow\nBy the morning of June 3, the lava flow from \u02bbAhu\u02bbail\u0101\u02bbau had reached Kapoho and Vacationland Hawai\u02bbi, where it then destroyed hundreds of houses as it buried most of the town within a day. Lava also entered the Pu\u02bbu Kapoho crater and evaporated the 400-year old Green Lake inside the crater, the largest natural freshwater lake in Hawai\u02bbi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 104], "content_span": [105, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0033-0001", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, Reopening of Leilani Estates fissures and new northeastern lava flow\nThe flow entered the ocean at Kapoho Bay at about 10:30 PM HST that evening, creating plumes of laze, and began to fill the bay, building a lava delta that reached about 700 yards into the water by late afternoon on June 4. By June 5, the lava had completely filled the bay, and preliminary reports from Hawai\u02bbi County officials indicated that hundreds of homes had been destroyed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 104], "content_span": [105, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0034-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, Reopening of Leilani Estates fissures and new northeastern lava flow\nIn addition to the draining of Pu\u02bbu \u02bb\u014c\u02bb\u014d, the protracted release of lava along the Lower East Rift Zone has also led to significant drainage of lava away from Halema\u02bbuma\u02bbu at K\u012blauea, resulting in large scale inward slumping and collapse around the crater and regular earthquakes since May 17, similar in pattern to the crater's slumping during the 1924 event. Explosions or mild earthquakes of similar magnitude became an almost daily cyclical occurrence at the summit, and have also been reported to influence the intensity of lava surges at \u02bbAhu\u02bbail\u0101\u02bbau.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 104], "content_span": [105, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0035-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, Transition to steady lava effusion, and eventual end\nBy the middle of June 2018, lava eruption from the source in Leilani Estates reached a consistently vigorous rate, flowing in the direction of Kapoho Bay and forming a widening coastal lava field. By July 3, fissure 8's constant lava splatter created a cone that peaked at 180 feet (50\u00a0m) high. A total of 5,914 acres were reported by Hawaii Civil Defense to have been covered by lava, with 533 homes confirmed destroyed. On June 22, the number of houses covered by lava was revised upwards by Hawaii County Civil Defense to 614.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 88], "content_span": [89, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0035-0001", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, Transition to steady lava effusion, and eventual end\nBy July 1, that total had grown to 671 residences destroyed. The official toll of houses reached 700 on July 9, leaving 3 houses left standing in Kapoho. On July 13, geologists reported a tiny new island had appeared immediately offshore from the lava flow. The island was only 20 to 30\u00a0ft (6.1 to 9.1\u00a0m) across and may have formed as a submarine tumulus pushed up the outermost crust of the earth above sea level. It was connected to the mainland by an isthmus on July 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 88], "content_span": [89, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0036-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, Transition to steady lava effusion, and eventual end\nIn mid-July, the main stream of lava from \u02bbAhu\u02bbail\u0101\u02bbau changed course away from flowing around the northeast of Pu\u02bbu Kapoho crater following a breakout from a lava pond on July 9, redirecting to a new channel that traveled in a more direct southerly direction west of Pu\u02bbu Kapoho. The flow would cover more of the 1955 lava flow, and destroy more coastal features including Ahalanui Beach Park, its warm ponds, as well as Kua O Ka L\u0101 Public Charter School's Lower Puna compound on July 11. By July 24, 2018, the western boundaries of the lava spill was within 200 yards (180\u00a0m) of Isaac Hale Beach Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 88], "content_span": [89, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0037-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, Transition to steady lava effusion, and eventual end\nAs of July 21, 2018, the lava flow from \u02bbAhu\u02bbail\u0101\u02bbau was estimated to be a steady 26,000 US gallons per second (98\u00a0m3/s), according to the U.S. Geological Survey, which also stated that the most likely scenario was that lava effusion would continue at a steady rate for several months to two years. By mid-July 2018, the volume of lava had exceeded the volume deposited in the eruptions of 1955 or 1960.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 88], "content_span": [89, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0038-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, Transition to steady lava effusion, and eventual end\nEruption activity at \u02bbAhu\u02bbail\u0101\u02bbau began to see a downtrend beginning on August 5, 2018, as the intensity of both the lava channel and seismic activity at Halema\u02bbuma\u02bbu decreased significantly over the course of the following days. Within the same time frame, the USGS reported that Pu\u02bbu \u02bb\u014c\u02bb\u014d was venting gases at its highest rate in more than 10 years, though no other noticeable changes had taken place at the vent. On August 15, 2018, the lower east rift zone eruption was reported to have subsided, with no new lava entering the channel from \u02bbAhu\u02bbail\u0101\u02bbau in over a week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 88], "content_span": [89, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0038-0001", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Eruption, Transition to steady lava effusion, and eventual end\nWhile scientists cautioned that the eruption could resume at any time, in that week there was no further underground volcanic inflation registering on instruments, and no further summit collapse events, with only a small amount of lava active inside \u02bbAhu\u02bbail\u0101\u02bbau. Afterward, a small lava lake was maintained within the crater of the \u02bbAhu\u02bbail\u0101\u02bbau cone for another 3 weeks. On September 4, the lava lake in \u02bbAhu\u02bbail\u0101\u02bbau receded below the surface, bringing the eruption to an end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 88], "content_span": [89, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0039-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Impact and response\nThe Hawaii National Guard stated on May 11, 2018, that they were ready to evacuate up to 2,000 people at a moment's notice, through the use of land convoys and Blackhawk and Chinook helicopters. Hawaii Governor David Ige had made a request for a Presidential Disaster Declaration, which was approved that day and opened the door to federal assistance for the disaster. Starting May 23, two CH-53E Super Stallion helicopters were on standby in Hilo in case of sudden evacuation needs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0039-0001", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Impact and response\nThe U.S. Marine Corps helicopters were in support of Joint Task Force 5\u20130, a military/government partnership to assist in managing the disaster. The large heavy-lift helicopters have a carrying capacity of about 50 people at once, ensuring that residents south of the lava flow can be completely evacuated in a few hours, should the last functioning road out of the area south of the lava flow be cut off by the eruption.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0040-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Impact and response\nAs the area of destruction grew significantly as a result of \u02bbAhu\u02bbail\u0101\u02bbau's resurgence in late-May 2018, access to surviving sections of Leilani Estate within immediate proximity to the margins of the lava field began to be heavily restricted starting May 31. A proposed ban on future home construction in areas subject to high-risk of volcanic activity was also reported on July 1, 2018, to be in discussion by Hawaii politicians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0041-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Impact and response\nTemporary repair works were conducted for sections of Highway 11 (near Volcano Village and the entrance to Volcanoes National Park) and Highway 130 (connecting much of lower Puna to the rest of the island), which suffered cracks from seismic activities over the months, and have been subject to restricted use due to the extent of their damage. Chain of Craters Road, which has previously been partially covered by past lava flows, had also been prepared as an alternate escape route should Highway 130 be blocked by the current eruption, a measure previously taken during the 2014 P\u0101hoa lava flow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0042-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Impact and response\nIn early June, a Winter Weather Advisory alert was issued for the higher areas of the island due to freezing rain and ice falling. The quantity of lava reaching the ocean created large plumes of steam which rose high enough in the atmosphere to eventually condense and freeze before falling on the summit of Mauna Kea, 72 kilometres (45\u00a0mi) from the eruption.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0043-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Impact and response\nSporadic incidences of injuries and emergency rescues have been reported over the course of the eruption. The first known injury was reported on May 20, 2018: A homeowner was struck with a piece of \"lava spatter\" and suffered burns and a broken leg. Four people were evacuated by helicopter on May 19, after lava cut off their exit, and three people were airlifted on June 3 from the Kapoho area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0043-0001", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Impact and response\nOn July 16, a further 23 were injured when a tour boat carrying passengers observing a lava ocean entry was pelted by lava rocks thrown by an intense hydrovolcanic explosion, including a large lava rock that pierced through the boat's roof. Thirteen were treated at the hospital, including three who were admitted with unspecified injuries and one in serious condition with a broken thigh bone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284495-0044-0000", "contents": "2018 lower Puna eruption, Impact and response\nFEMA team sets up a mobile air quality monitoring station", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria\nOn 14 April 2018, beginning at 04:00 Syrian time (UTC+3), the United States, France, and the United Kingdom carried out a series of military strikes involving aircraft and ship-based missiles against multiple government sites in Syria during the Syrian Civil War. They said it was in reprisal for the Douma chemical attack against civilians on 7 April, which they attributed to the Syrian government. The Syrian government denied involvement in the Douma attacks and called the airstrikes a violation of international law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Background\nA Syrian government offensive to recapture the rebel-held Eastern Ghouta suburb began in February 2018. The offensive was condemned by Western media and human rights organizations for its reportedly brutal humanitarian consequences. By the beginning of April, Douma was one of the last rebel enclaves remaining in the region, with rebel group Jaysh al-Islam in control of the city. Russian and Syrian state media reported a deal between the rebel group and Russia to hand over Douma to government control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0001-0001", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Background\nOther news agencies reported members of the rebel group claiming a deal had not been brokered and that Jaysh al-Islam would not surrender Douma. What followed was a suspected chemical attack carried out in the Syrian city of Douma on 7 April 2018, with at least 70 people reported killed. One pro-opposition source said that a thousand people suffered from the effects.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0001-0002", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Background\nThe Jaysh al-Islam rebel group, which controlled Douma at the time, along with several medical, monitoring, and activist groups, including the pro-rebel White Helmets (Syria Civil Defence), all reported that two Syrian Air Force Mi-8 helicopters had dropped barrel bombs. The bombs were filled with chlorine gas and possibly sarin. The World Health Organization said it received reports from partner agencies that some 500 people arrived at health facilities showing \"signs and symptoms consistent with exposure to toxic chemicals.\" On 6 July 2018, the OPCW produced an interim report stating that chlorine residues had been found at the two attack sites, although no organophosphorous nerve agents or their degradation products were detected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0002-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Background\nAs with previous incidents, France, the United Kingdom, the United States, and other nations accused the Syrian government of being responsible for the use of chemical weapons. Russia and Iran, the Syrian government's main allies, denied chemical weapons had been used, claiming it was a false flag operation. Russia has said video of the chemical attack was staged by members of the White Helmets. Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA) said that the Saudi Arabian-backed Jaysh al-Islam was making \"chemical attack fabrications in an exposed and failed attempt to obstruct advances by the Syrian Arab Army\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0003-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Background\nIn May 2017, French President Emmanuel Macron said the use of chemical weapons in Syria would be a red line requiring immediate reprisal. France and the United States cited positive urine and blood samples collected as proof of chlorine being used in Douma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0004-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Background\nIn the early hours of 9 April 2018, an airstrike was conducted against Tiyas Military Airbase in Syria. The United States denied launching the airstrike, and an Israeli spokeswoman declined to comment. On 10 April, an emergency United Nations Security Council meeting was held where competing solutions were presented on how to handle the response to the chemical attack; all were eventually vetoed by Russia. By 11 April, Western nations began to consider military action in Syria, seeking a \"strong joint response.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0004-0001", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Background\nOn the same day, the Syrian government said it invited the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons to investigate the sites of the attacks. \"Syria is keen on cooperating with the OPCW to uncover the truth behind the allegations that some western sides have been advertising to justify their aggressive intentions,\" said SANA, quoting an official source in the Foreign Ministry. Russia denied chemical weapons were used, and on 13 April, blamed Britain for staging the event in order to provoke US airstrikes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0005-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Background\nBy 12 April, British Prime Minister Theresa May had ordered Royal Navy submarines in the Mediterranean to move within cruise missile range of Syria by the end of the week. British military sources later told The Times that days before the missile strikes a British Astute-class submarine armed with Tomahawk missiles and approaching within firing range of Syrian military targets was chased by \"one, and possibly two\" Russian Kilo-class submarines from the Russian Navy base at Tartus. The Russian submarines were supported by two frigates and an antisubmarine aircraft, while the British submarine was assisted by a US Navy P-8 Poseidon patrol aircraft. Ultimately, no British submarine took part in the strikes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0006-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Military action, International law\nThe United Nations Charter requires a mandate from the United Nations Security Council for sovereign states to use force for the purpose of maintaining international security, but not for acting in self-defence or the protection of populations threatened by extermination at the hands of their own government. Since the UN Charter came into effect in 1945, military action in retaliation or reprisal to the act of another state has been prohibited; but a reprisal may be justified if its aim is to force the other state into compliance with its international obligations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0006-0001", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Military action, International law\nRussia's use of its veto meant there was no prospect of the Security Council authorizing the use of force. Therefore, military action relies on an international public order argument based on defending the credibility of the prohibition of the use of chemical weapons, enforcing Syria's obligations under the terms of its membership of the Chemical Weapons Convention, and protecting civilians from further chemical weapon attacks to alleviate humanitarian suffering.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0007-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Military action, International law\nThe strikes came hours before inspectors from the OPCW Fact-Finding Mission were due to arrive in Syria to investigate the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0008-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Military action, International law\nThe United Kingdom published its legal position regarding military action which concluded limited strikes are justified on humanitarian grounds. After the strikes, the UK Parliament debated the considerations under international law regarding the urgency of the intervention, and whether there was a lack of practical alternatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0009-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Military action, Forces involved\nThe strikes were carried out by the forces of the United States, the United Kingdom, and France and were delivered by ship-launched, submarine-launched and airborne cruise missiles. All of the missiles launched by British and French forces were variants of the Storm Shadow missile, known as SCALP EG and Missile de Croisi\u00e8re Naval (MdCN for Naval Cruise Missile) in French service.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0010-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Military action, Forces involved\nFlying from RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus, four Royal Air Force Tornado GR4 fighters of No. 9 Squadron, supported by four Eurofighter Typhoon air superiority fighters of No. 6 Squadron, fired a total of eight Storm Shadow missiles. The Royal Navy deployed the Type 45 destroyer, HMS\u00a0Duncan, to provide air defense for allied naval forces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0010-0001", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Military action, Forces involved\nThe French Navy deployed a strike group in the Eastern Mediterranean consisting of the Cassard-class frigate Cassard, the Georges Leygues-class frigate Jean de Vienne, the Durance-class tanker Var, and the FREMM multipurpose frigates Aquitaine, Auvergne, and Languedoc; the latter ship fired three MdCN land attack missiles. The French strike group was accompanied by the US Navy Virginia-class submarine USS\u00a0John Warner, which launched six Tomahawk cruise missiles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0011-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Military action, Forces involved\nThe French Air Force participation in the strikes consisted of five Rafale B fighters from the Escadron de Chasse 1/4 Gascogne based at Saint-Dizier Air Base, each carrying two SCALP EG missiles, four Mirage 2000-5F air superiority fighters from the Escadron de chasse 1/2 Cigognes from Luxeuil Air Base, two E-3F airborne early warning and control planes from the 36e Escadre de commandement et de conduite a\u00e9roport\u00e9e Berry from Avord Air Base, and six C-135FR tankers from the Groupe de ravitaillement en vol 2/91 Bretagne from Istres Air Base.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0012-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Military action, Forces involved\nUS forces included two US Air Force B-1B Lancer bombers from the 34th Bomb Squadron, which fired a total of nineteen JASSM missiles after taking off from Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar. They were accompanied by four F-22A Raptor air superiority fighters from the 95th Fighter Squadron, two KC-10 Extender tankers from the 908th Expeditionary Air Refueling Squadron and one US Marine Corps EA-6B Prowler electronic-warfare aircraft from VMAQ-2, which all departed from Al Dhafra Air Base in the United Arab Emirates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0012-0001", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Military action, Forces involved\nImmediately after the strike it was claimed that long-range JASSM-ER had been fired by the two B-1B Lancer bombers, but five days later, the U.S. Air Force Central Command issued a correction saying that actually older JASSM-A were used. From a position in the Red Sea the US Navy Arleigh Burke-class destroyer USS\u00a0Laboon fired seven and the Ticonderoga-class cruiser USS\u00a0Monterey thirty Tomahawk cruise missiles, while the Arleigh Burke-class destroyer USS\u00a0Higgins fired twenty-three Tomahawks from a position in the northern part of the Persian Gulf.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0012-0002", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Military action, Forces involved\nThe Arleigh Burke-class destroyer, USS\u00a0Donald Cook was reported to have participated in order to mislead defending forces, firing no missiles. US Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis said twice as many weapons were used in the strike as in the 2017 Shayrat missile strike; an anonymous US Defense Department official quoted by The Washington Post said about 100 Tomahawk missiles were fired by the US.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0013-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Military action, Forces involved\nThe US Air Force also deployed a fighter group over the Eastern Mediterranean in the air-superiority and defensive-counter-air role, which consisted of at least eight F-15C Eagle fighters from the 493d Fighter Squadron and seven F-16C Falcon fighters from the 510th Fighter Squadron. The fighters were accompanied by at least two KC-135 Stratotanker aircraft from the 351st Air Refueling Squadron.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0014-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Military action, Forces involved\nAccording to US military's Director of the Joint Staff, the allocation of missiles to targets was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0015-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Military action, Forces involved\nSyria responded using its air defense systems, and its state media aired a video purporting to show a successful missile interception. The Syrian state news agency SANA and Colonel-General Sergei Rudskoi of the Russian military said Syria used Russian and Soviet air defense systems Pantsir-S1, S-125, S-200, Buk, and Kvadrat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0016-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Military action, Strikes\nPresident Donald Trump announced the strikes at 9\u00a0pm EDT, 13 April (4 AM, 14 April in Syria, 2 AM in London, 3 AM in Paris) along with allies France and the United Kingdom. Explosions were heard in Damascus, the capital of Syria, just as Trump was speaking. According to US Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Joseph Dunford, Russia had not been warned in advance of the incoming attack; he was contradicted by other American and French officials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0017-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Military action, Strikes\nUS Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Joseph Dunford said three sites were targeted: a scientific research center in Damascus, a chemical weapons storage facility west of Homs, and an equipment storage facility and command post also near Homs. The UK Ministry of Defence reported British aircraft struck the Him Shanshar chemical weapons precursor storage site 15 miles west of Homs. Witnesses reported loud explosions and smoke in the capital Damascus in the early morning, including in the Barzeh neighborhood, the site of the Barzah scientific research centre, a major research establishment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0017-0001", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Military action, Strikes\nThe strike destroyed what employees of the facility characterised as a Syrian antivenom medical center, but which US General Joseph Dunford described as a center for research, development, production and testing of chemical and biological weapons. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) said the attack sites included a scientific research center in Damascus and another in the Homs area, as well as military bases in Damascus and Homs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0017-0002", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Military action, Strikes\nThe US armed forces said all missiles hit their intended targets without interference, and according to Lieutenant General Kenneth McKenzie, the Syrian air defences fired 40 intercepting surface-to-air missiles but failed to hit any of the targets. He said most were fired after the last incoming missile had struck its target. Similarly, France said none of the twelve missiles it fired appear to have been intercepted, although there were reports that between three and seven French missiles were not fired due to malfunctions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0017-0003", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Military action, Strikes\nThe Syrian Army said it \"intercepted most of the missiles\", while the Syrian state media reported its air defenses shot down 13 incoming missiles near Al-Kiswah, south of Damascus. The Russian military reported Syria's air defences shot down 71 of 103 cruise missiles, and listed various airports and airbases, not mentioned by US military sources, as having been targeted partly or completely unsuccessfully. The SOHR, which is cited by many western media organisations, reported no known casualties, but stated there was considerable material damage while also saying that the Syrian Air Defense Force intercepted and downed at least 65 missiles. Syria's state-run TV news reported three civilians injured at Homs, and that the missile strike there was \"aborted\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 826]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0018-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Aftermath\nWorkers at a destroyed laboratory denied ever making any chemical weapons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0019-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Aftermath\nRussia called for an emergency meeting of the United Nations Security Council on 14 April, but the resolution it brought to the session condemning the attacks failed to pass, with only Bolivia and China supporting it. Nikki Haley, Permanent Representative of the United States to the UN, said the United States was \"locked and loaded\", should the Syrian government use chemical weapons again. A further meeting of the Security Council was scheduled to be held on 16 April, to discuss a resolution presented jointly by France, the UK, and the US. The resolution calls for an independent inquiry into the use of chemical weapons in Syria, medical evacuations, and the safe passage of aid convoys across the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0020-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Aftermath\nThe effectiveness and impact of the strike has been downplayed by analysts. In Syria, the strikes were interpreted as a victory for Bashar al-Assad, because their limited scope was seen as indicating that Western countries no longer intended to seriously challenge his rule. According to Russian state media, the governor of Russia's autonomous Khanty-Mansiysk district said after meeting with Assad that \"President Assad was in absolutely positive spirits. He is in a good mood.\" American Director of the Joint Staff, Lt. Gen Kenneth McKenzie, said the air strikes were a \"severe blow\" to the development of Syria's chemical weapons and that the United States military is \"ready anytime\" in the event of retaliation by the Syrian government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 788]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0021-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Aftermath\nThe activity of web brigades increased by \"2,000%\" following the attack, according to Chief Pentagon spokesperson Dana W. White. The UK's National Cyber Security Centre, the FBI, and the US Department of Homeland Security issued a joint alert warning of a Russian global hacking campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0022-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Aftermath\nAccording to Syrian state television, Syrian air defenses intercepted missiles that targeted Shayrat Airbase \"late Monday night\" (16 April); however, the Pentagon spokesman said the US military was not active at the time, while an Israeli military spokesman declined to comment. Hezbollah's media unit claimed Syrian air defenses had also intercepted three missiles which targeted Al-Dumayr Military Airport; a commander in the regional military alliance backing the government told Reuters that it was a false alarm and part of an \"electronic attack\" by Israel and the US on the Syrian radar system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0023-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Aftermath\nAccording to Jane's IHS, on 25 April 2018, the Russian Ministry of Defence (MoD) \"appeared to contradict\" the MoD's earlier 16 April account, and was now stating that 22 (rather than 32) missiles hit their targets, that 66 (rather than 71) were intercepted, and those other incoming missiles had suffered technical malfunctions. According to Russia, 46 missiles were intercepted in five areas of the capital of Syria and Duvali, Dumayr, Blai, and Mazzeh nearby airfields, and 20 missiles were intercepted in three areas of the Homs air defense zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0023-0001", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Aftermath\nThe MoD did agree that the U.S. hit all three of the publicly targeted sites. The MoD also displayed remnants of SCALP and Storm Shadow missiles purportedly shot down; Jane's stated that \"The missile remnants it displayed could have come from missiles that hit their targets or failed in a previous attack\". Russian government sources claimed they had recovered as duds one Tomahawk and one 'precision air launched' missile, and would study them to improve their own weapons systems; the US denied the claims as \"absurd\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0024-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Aftermath\nOn 21 April, the OPCW Fact-Finding Mission visited a site in Douma to collect samples, and on 25 April visited a second site in Douma to collect further samples. The team also interviewed people related to incident in Damascus. On 4 May, the OPCW announced that the initial deployment of the Fact-Finding Mission in Douma was complete. Analysis of the samples may take at least three to four weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0025-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Statements and reactions\nThe Syrian state media called the attack a \"flagrant violation of international law\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0026-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Statements and reactions, Belligerent nations\nFrench President Emmanuel Macron said in a statement on 14 April that France's \"red line has been crossed\", referring to the previous attacks on Douma. While announcing the strikes, UK Prime Minister Theresa May said there was \"no practicable alternative to the use of force\" to deal with the Syrian government's use of chemical weapons. Opposition politicians condemned the strikes, with many questioning May's decision to press ahead without obtaining parliamentary approval first. Leader of the Opposition Jeremy Corbyn called the strikes \"legally questionable\" and said \"Bombs won't save lives or bring about peace\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 81], "content_span": [82, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0026-0001", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Statements and reactions, Belligerent nations\nHe also urged the British government to push the United States and Russia to allow an independent investigation into the gas attack led by the United Nations. US President Donald Trump announced the strikes in a televised address, arguing they were part of the effort to stop Assad from using chemical weapons, and said the US was \"prepared to sustain this response\" until this was achieved. Dana W. White, The Pentagon Chief Spokesperson, said \"this operation does not represent a change in US policy or an attempt to depose the Syrian regime\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 81], "content_span": [82, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0026-0002", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Statements and reactions, Belligerent nations\nThe New York Times reported the reactions initially broke among partisan lines, with members of the Republican Party\u2014the party of President Donald Trump\u2014being generally supportive while the Democrats were generally critical. Republicans Tom Cotton and Orrin Hatch praised the strikes. Other lawmakers, in particular Democrats, although generally supportive of a limited strike to punish Assad for using banned chemical weapons, criticized the Trump administration for not seeking Congressional approval and for not having a \"coherent Syria Strategy\". Democratic senator Tim Kaine re-emphasized his long-held belief that the military intervention without Congressional authorization and long-term strategy are \"illegal\" and \"reckless\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 81], "content_span": [82, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0027-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Statements and reactions, Belligerent nations\nOn 19 April, at a Pentagon press briefing, American Director of the Joint Staff Lt. Gen. Kenneth McKenzie affirmed that Russian air defenses - which included advanced S-400 missile systems - were active but did not engage any missiles during the operation. \"Russian air defenses were energized. They were scanning. They had a mainstay [sic] air defense aircraft up. They did not choose to engage, so I cannot speculate about why they did or did not do that,\" McKenzie stated, while denying that any missiles were shot down by Syrian air defenses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 81], "content_span": [82, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0028-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Statements and reactions, Syrian-allied states\nThe Iran Foreign Ministry condemned the missile strikes, said there is \"no proof\" of Syrian responsibility in the chemical attack on Douma, and criticized the United States for attacking without waiting for an Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons investigation. Ali Khamenei, the Supreme Leader of Iran, called Trump, May and Macron \"criminals\" and warned \"they will gain nothing\" from the strike.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 82], "content_span": [83, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0029-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Statements and reactions, Syrian-allied states\nRussian politician Alexander Sherin referred to the strike as a terrorist attack and compared it to Operation Barbarossa. Russian President Vladimir Putin described the strikes as an \"act of aggression\". Russia also called for an emergency meeting of the United Nations Security Council. Anatoly Antonov, the Russian ambassador to the United States, strongly condemned the coalition attacks on Syria and warned the Western countries of \"consequences\". Sergei Rudskoi, a Russian Colonel-General, in a TV briefing, said Russia may consider sending S-300 surface-to-air missile systems to Syria and other countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 82], "content_span": [83, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0030-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Statements and reactions, Other NATO member states\nAlbania, Bulgaria, Canada, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Germany, Greece, Italy,the Netherlands, Poland, Romania, Spain, and Turkey all agreed the decision to attack was justified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 86], "content_span": [87, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0031-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Statements and reactions, Supranational organizations\nSecretary-General of the United Nations Ant\u00f3nio Guterres called for restraint from all states.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 89], "content_span": [90, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0032-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Statements and reactions, Supranational organizations\nPresident of the European Council Donald Tusk confirmed the European Union's support for the strikes as did High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Federica Mogherini. Secretary General of NATO Jens Stoltenberg supported the strikes in a statement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 89], "content_span": [90, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0033-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Statements and reactions, Supranational organizations\nThe Collective Security Treaty Organization condemned the strikes as violating norms of international law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 89], "content_span": [90, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0034-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Statements and reactions, Non-state organizations\nMohammad Alloush, a key member of Army of Islam coalition of Salafist and Islamist rebel groups, wrote that US-led military strikes in Syria were a \"farce\" as long as President Assad remained in power. The Hamas government in the Gaza Strip has condemned the bombing. The Lebanese Shia militant resistance group/political party Hezbollah sharply condemned the US, French, and British airstrikes on Syria, praising the Arab neighbor's air defense for confronting the missile attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 85], "content_span": [86, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284496-0035-0000", "contents": "2018 missile strikes against Syria, Statements and reactions, Religious organizations\nMoran Mor Ignatius Aphrem II, the patriarch of the Syriac Orthodox Church, and Patriarch John X of Antioch, primate of the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Antioch and All The East, issued a joint condemnation of the strikes. They said the bombings \"were clear violation of the international laws and the UN Charter\", and that the \"unjust aggression encourages the terrorist organizations and gives them momentum to continue in their terrorism.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 85], "content_span": [86, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284497-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 national electoral calendar\nThis national electoral calendar for 2018 lists the national/federal direct elections that were held in 2018 in all sovereign states and their dependent territories. By-elections are excluded, though national referendums are included.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284497-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 national electoral calendar, Indirect elections\nThe following indirect elections of heads of state and the upper houses of bicameral legislatures took place through votes in elected lower houses, unicameral legislatures, or electoral colleges:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284498-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 national road cycling championships\nThe 2018 national road cycling championships was held throughout the year and are organised by the UCI member federations. They began in Australia and New Zealand with the time trial event (both men and women) on 5 January, as is tradition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284498-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 national road cycling championships, Jerseys\nThe winner of each national championship wears the national jersey in all their races for the next year in the respective discipline, apart from the World Championships and the Olympics, or unless they are wearing a category leader's jersey in a stage race. Most national champion jerseys tend to represent a country's flag or use the colours from it. Jerseys may also feature traditional sporting colours of a country that are not derived from a national flag, such as the green and gold on the jerseys of Australian national champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284499-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships\nThe 2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships was the seventh edition of the single's world championships and was held in Cluj-Napoca, Romania, from 20 May to 26 May 2018 .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284499-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships\nAll the men's competitions was dominated by Vilmo\u0161 Zavarko, who won gold medals in every event. In the women's sprint triumphed Ines Mari\u010di\u0107 (Croatia), in the single German Sina Bei\u00dfer, while gold medal in the combination was won by Serbian Jasmina An\u0111elkovi\u0107, who set a new world record 890 pins. Mixed tandem rivalry was won by Czechs Ren\u00e1ta Navrkalov\u00e1 and Jan Endr\u0161t.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284499-0002-0000", "contents": "2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships, Participants\nBelow is the list of countries who participated in the championships and the requested number of athlete places for each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 64], "content_span": [65, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284500-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships \u2013 Men's combination\nThe men's combination event at the 2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships was held in Cluj-Napoca, Romania from 21 May to 26 May 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284500-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships \u2013 Men's combination, Results\nThe result for the combination was the sum of best results from a single starts in the single classic and sprint.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 79], "content_span": [80, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284501-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships \u2013 Men's single\nThe men's single event at the 2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships was held in Cluj-Napoca, Romania. Qualification took place on 21-22 May, while the knock-out phase from 24 May to 26 May 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284501-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships \u2013 Men's single, Results, Finals\nAccording to the results of the qualification, 32 players were put together in bouts, which took place on standard match rules - 4 sets of 30 throws. The competitor who obtains a larger number of sets wins. With an equal number of sets decides a higher total score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 82], "content_span": [83, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284502-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships \u2013 Men's sprint\nThe men's sprint event at the 2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships was held in Cluj-Napoca, Romania on 23 May 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284502-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships \u2013 Men's sprint\nThe title of world champion was successfully defended by Serbian Vilmo\u0161 Zavarko, who defeated German Axel Schondelmaier in the final. Bronze medals went to semi-finalists Italian Wolfgang Blass and representative of the hosts - Romanian Nicolae Lupu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284502-0002-0000", "contents": "2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships \u2013 Men's sprint, Results, Starting places\nThe starting places have been allocated on the basis of each team's achievements during the previous championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 91], "content_span": [92, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284502-0003-0000", "contents": "2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships \u2013 Men's sprint, Results, Draw\nThe players were drawn into pairs with the reservation that competitors from the same country can not play in the first round against each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 80], "content_span": [81, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284503-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships \u2013 Mixed tandem\nThe mixed tandem event at the 2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships was held in Cluj-Napoca, Romania on 22\u201323 May 2018. The first round took place after ending of the sprint events. Rest part was played the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284503-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships \u2013 Mixed tandem\nThe new world champions in mixed tandems became the Czechs Ren\u00e1ta Navrkalov\u00e1 and Jan Endr\u0161t. The silver medals went to Croatian Ana Jambrovi\u0107 and Hrvoje Marinovi\u0107, while the bronzes were won by Austrians Ramona Lienbacher and Philipp Vsetecka, and Romanians Tilda Duka and Petrut Ovidiu Mihalcioiu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284503-0002-0000", "contents": "2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships \u2013 Mixed tandem, Results, Starting places\nThe starting places have been allocated on the basis of each team's achievements during the previous championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 91], "content_span": [92, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284503-0003-0000", "contents": "2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships \u2013 Mixed tandem, Results, Draw\nThe tandems were drawn into bouts with the reservation that pair from the same country can not play in the first round against each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 80], "content_span": [81, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284504-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships \u2013 Women's combination\nThe women's combination event at the 2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships was held in Cluj-Napoca, Romania from 21 May to 26 May 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [72, 72], "content_span": [73, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284504-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships \u2013 Women's combination, Results\nThe result for the combination was the sum of best results from a single starts in the single classic and sprint.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [74, 81], "content_span": [82, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284505-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships \u2013 Women's single\nThe women's single event at the 2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships was held in Cluj-Napoca, Romania. Qualification took place on 21-22 May, while the knock-out phase from 24 May to 26 May 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284505-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships \u2013 Women's single, Results, Finals\nAccording to the results of the qualification, 32 players were put together in bouts, which took place on standard match rules - 4 sets of 30 throws. The competitor who obtains a larger number of sets wins. With an equal number of sets decides a higher total score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 84], "content_span": [85, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284506-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships \u2013 Women's sprint\nThe women's sprint event at the 2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships was held in Cluj-Napoca, Romania on 23 May 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284506-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships \u2013 Women's sprint\nThe defender of the title was the Pole Beata W\u0142odarczyk, who did not take off in Cluj after the end of her career and therefore did not have the opportunity to defend the championship. The new champion of the world became Croatian Ines Mari\u010di\u0107, after defeated her compatriot Mirna Bosak in final. The bronze medals was won by Hungarian Anita M\u00e9h\u00e9sz and Swedish Jenny Smevold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284506-0002-0000", "contents": "2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships \u2013 Women's sprint, Results, Starting places\nThe starting places have been allocated on the basis of each team's achievements during the previous championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 93], "content_span": [94, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284506-0003-0000", "contents": "2018 nine-pin bowling Single's World Championships \u2013 Women's sprint, Results, Draw\nThe players were drawn into pairs with the reservation that competitors from the same country can not play in the first round against each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 82], "content_span": [83, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284507-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 opening of regular sessions of the National Congress of Argentina\nThe 2018 opening of regular sessions of the National Congress of Argentina took place on March 1, 2018. It was a speech delivered by president Mauricio Macri at the National Congress of Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284507-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 opening of regular sessions of the National Congress of Argentina, Contents and delivery, Economy\nMacri pointed that unemployment and inflation are decreasing in the country. He said that if he had made reforms too quickly it would have caused an economic crisis, and if he did not made reforms the country would have faced a crisis similar to the one in Venezuela.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 102], "content_span": [103, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284507-0002-0000", "contents": "2018 opening of regular sessions of the National Congress of Argentina, Contents and delivery, Education\nMacri commented that education in Argentina is in a poor state, citing the results of the \"Aprender\" exams. He considered that this would leave the new generations unprepared to access high quality jobs in the future. He criticized the unions of the sector, accusing them of neglecting the educative needs for political gain and only being concerned about wages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 104], "content_span": [105, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284507-0003-0000", "contents": "2018 opening of regular sessions of the National Congress of Argentina, Contents and delivery, Crime\nThe president pointed that the country has a clear strategy for dealing with illegal drug trade, which would be bearing fruit. He also called to update the penal code. As for crime in general, he rejected both police brutality and pro-crime policies as viable solutions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 100], "content_span": [101, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284507-0004-0000", "contents": "2018 opening of regular sessions of the National Congress of Argentina, Contents and delivery, Abortion\nAlthough Macri defined himself as pro-life, he encouraged the Congress to have an abortion debate and discuss a potential abortion law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 103], "content_span": [104, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284507-0005-0000", "contents": "2018 opening of regular sessions of the National Congress of Argentina, Responses\nFormer president Eduardo Duhalde criticized Macri and considered that his government does not seek enough political consensus for its actions. Former president and current senator Cristina Fern\u00e1ndez de Kirchner and her son, deputy M\u00e1ximo Kirchner, did not attend the ceremony, and stayed at their home in Calafate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 81], "content_span": [82, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284508-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 opinion polling on the Donald Trump administration\nThis is a list of opinion polls taken on the Presidency of Donald Trump in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284509-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 opinion rigging scandal in South Korea\nThe 2018 opinion rigging scandal in South Korea is a political scandal that erupted in April 2018 after a group of ardent supporters of the South Korean President Moon Jae-in had been charged with online opinion rigging. The accused suspects were the members of the ruling Democratic Party (DPK). The main perpetrator, as well as the leader of the pro-Moon group, was a well-known power-blogger called \"Druking.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284509-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 opinion rigging scandal in South Korea, Organized opinion rigging\nDruking established a fake company known as the \"Neureupnamu (Japanese elm) publishing company\" in the city of Paju for organized opinion rigging. The accused used a macro program that can generate a barrage of online comments and likes in a few seconds in order to manipulate the public opinion in their favor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 70], "content_span": [71, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284509-0002-0000", "contents": "2018 opinion rigging scandal in South Korea, Controversy\nThe scandal led to a clash of political parties in South Korea. The Blue House and the ruling Democratic Party insisted that they are also a victim of the scandal. But the opposition parties emphasized that, since President Moon's involvement is suspected, this scandal is linked to the Moon administration's legitimacy. They called for a special prosecutor investigation for scrutiny.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284509-0003-0000", "contents": "2018 opinion rigging scandal in South Korea, Special prosecutor investigation\nOn 21 May 2018, the National Assembly of South Korea passed a bill to appoint a special prosecutor to investigate the scandal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284509-0004-0000", "contents": "2018 opinion rigging scandal in South Korea, Special prosecutor investigation\nOn 8 June of the same year President Moon appointed former prosecutor and lawyer Huh Ik-beom as special prosecutor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284509-0005-0000", "contents": "2018 opinion rigging scandal in South Korea, Special prosecutor investigation\nJustice Party lawmaker and long-time progressive activist Roh Hoe-chan committed suicide on 23 July during the investigation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284509-0006-0000", "contents": "2018 opinion rigging scandal in South Korea, Special prosecutor investigation\nKim Kyung-Soo, the governor of South Gyeongsang Province and a former lawmaker, was summoned by the Special Prosecutor, on 7 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284509-0007-0000", "contents": "2018 opinion rigging scandal in South Korea, Special prosecutor investigation\nThe special prosecutor issued a warrant for the arrest of Kim; however, the request was rejected by the Seoul central district court. Prosecutor Huh announced the official end of investigation on 27 August without any extension. The prosecutor announced the conclusion that governor Kim, a lawmaker at that time, was an accomplice to the scandal, and will be under indictment without detention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284509-0008-0000", "contents": "2018 opinion rigging scandal in South Korea, Special prosecutor investigation\nA The Minjoo Party spokesperson criticized the special prosecutor, claiming the investigation process depended only on Druking's testimony, without any proper evidence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284509-0009-0000", "contents": "2018 opinion rigging scandal in South Korea, Special prosecutor investigation, Decryption of encrypted files\nIn the special prosecutor's investigation of Druking in South Korea, the special prosecutor team tried to decrypt files encrypted by TrueCrypt and succeeded at decrypting some of them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 108], "content_span": [109, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284509-0010-0000", "contents": "2018 opinion rigging scandal in South Korea, Special prosecutor investigation, Decryption of encrypted files\nThe special prosecutor said the hidden volumes were especially difficult to deal with. He decrypted some of encrypted files by inputting words that the Druking group had possibly use as passwords into passphrases. For instance, the Druking group liked words such as Zi wei dou shu (Purple Star Astrology) and KKM (acronym of \uacbd\uc81c\uc801 \uacf5\uc9c4\ud654 \ubaa8\uc784), so the special prosecutor's team tried to input these words as passphrases or parts of them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 108], "content_span": [109, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284509-0011-0000", "contents": "2018 opinion rigging scandal in South Korea, Special prosecutor investigation, Decryption of encrypted files\nAfter the special prosecutor team decrypted some of the encrypted files, Druking's associates changed their minds about the investigation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 108], "content_span": [109, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284509-0012-0000", "contents": "2018 opinion rigging scandal in South Korea, Special prosecutor investigation, Decryption of encrypted files\nIn 2018, the special prosecutor indicted Gyeongnam Province Governor Kim Kyung-soo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 108], "content_span": [109, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284509-0013-0000", "contents": "2018 opinion rigging scandal in South Korea, Special prosecutor investigation, Decryption of encrypted files\nIn 2019, he was jailed for two years on charges of online-rigging operations both in first and second instance. In 21 July 2021, he was sentenced to two years by the supreme court for computer business obstruction, and eventually lost his position as governor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 108], "content_span": [109, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284510-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 protests in Hungary\nThe 2018 protests in Hungary were massive demonstrations and protests held against the government of Viktor Orb\u00e1n and his cabinet, yet a slave law sparked protests in December. The first wave of demonstrations began in April-May. The series of anti-government demonstrations in December 2018 was a political movement against the measures of the fourth Orb\u00e1n government, the direct precedents of which were the submission of the Overtime Act and the scandalous parliamentary day on 12 December 2018. On this day, members of the Jobbik, MSZP, LMP, DK and Dialogue in Parliament disrupted the legislature by whistling, shouting, scattering paper and preventing access to the presidential pulpit, thereby obstructing the vote. Protests erupted against the vote and the parliamentary session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 813]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284510-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 protests in Hungary, History\nOn November 6, 2018, Minister Zsolt Semj\u00e9n submitted a bill on administrative courts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284510-0002-0000", "contents": "2018 protests in Hungary, History\nOn November 20, 2018, two representatives of Fidesz, Krist\u00f3f Szatm\u00e1ry and Lajos K\u00f3sa, submitted an amendment to the Labor Code. At the sitting of 10 December 2018, the factions of the opposition parties tried to drag the debate with parliamentary obstruction to prevent a vote on the Overtime Act. Therefore, more than 2,900 amendments were tabled, on which the National Assembly should have voted one by one. However, following an opposition press conference on the obstruction, it was decided in the Judiciary Committee that the submitted motions could be voted on at the same time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284510-0003-0000", "contents": "2018 protests in Hungary, Demonstrations\nMass protests and anti-Orb\u00e1n protests were held by hundreds of thousands of demonstrators in April-May after corruption scandals arose. On the evening of the 12th of December, the news of the parliamentary scandal and the fact that the Office of the Parliament declared the voting of the laws to be regular, thousands of crowds gathered in Kossuth Square. The main demand was the repeal of the laws, but anti-government slogans were also voiced. Press reports highlight that both protesters and police have acted more violently than in previous anti-government demonstrations in recent years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284510-0004-0000", "contents": "2018 protests in Hungary, Demonstrations\nTo keep the 12th spontaneous demonstration awake, several movements took place across the country, but large-scale demonstrations were organized mainly in the capital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284510-0005-0000", "contents": "2018 protests in Hungary, Demonstrations\nA protest against the Overtime Act was held on 13 December, demanding the independence of education and the judiciary. The crowd made a big circle from Kossuth Square over the Chain Bridge and the Margaret Bridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284510-0006-0000", "contents": "2018 protests in Hungary, Demonstrations\nThe typically peacefully marching crowd returned to Kossuth Square, where, however, a conflict arose with police officers defending the Parliament: some protesters threw the police line, to which the police responded with a tear gas-stick dispersal. At least five protesters, including the vice president of Momentum Movement, were produced at the event. During the evening, there were also major clashes between protesters and police officers at the EMMI building, the Western Railway Station, Oktogon and Kir\u00e1ly utca.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284510-0007-0000", "contents": "2018 protests in Hungary, Demonstrations\nOn December 14, they also demonstrated in P\u00e9cs on Sz\u00e9chenyi Square, organized by the Momentum Movement, where \u00c1kos Hadh\u00e1zy also spoke. Some protesters toss eggs in the Dun\u00e1nt\u00fali Napl\u00f3 (\"Transdanubian Diary\") building merged into government media holding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284510-0008-0000", "contents": "2018 protests in Hungary, Demonstrations\nOn December 16, 2018, P\u00e9ter T\u00e1rk\u00e1nyi, a civil activist, \"Merry Christmas, Prime Minister!\" organized a demonstration entitled Jobbik, LMP, Momentum, MSZP, DK and Dialogue, among trade unions and opposition parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284510-0009-0000", "contents": "2018 protests in Hungary, Demonstrations\nDuring the demonstration, a crowd of about 10-15 thousand people marched together from Heroes' Square to Kossuth Square. In parallel with the events in the capital, smaller and larger movements were organized in Debrecen, Sopron, Gy\u00f6ngy\u00f6s, Szeged, B\u00e9k\u00e9scsaba, Gy\u0151r, Miskolc and Veszpr\u00e9m.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284510-0010-0000", "contents": "2018 protests in Hungary, Demonstrations\nThe demonstration was reported on the M1 website, but not the mass gathering in front of the headquarters. One part of the protest crowd of about 2,500 threw the line of the assigned police during the movements, while another asked the tossers not to toss them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284510-0011-0000", "contents": "2018 protests in Hungary, Demonstrations\n\u00c1kos Hadh\u00e1zy entered the MTVA building around 9 pm among several opposition members. Several representatives - Bernadett Sz\u00e9l, L\u00e1szl\u00f3 Varju, Istv\u00e1n Ujhelyi, Lajos Kor\u00f3zs, Anett B\u0151sz, Lajos Kepli, \u00c1gnes Kunhalmi, Andrea Varga-Damm, Tibor Bana, Zsolt Gr\u00e9czy, Bence Tordai - gave live telephone video coverage of the events\u00a0; the number of viewers on Facebook live has occasionally exceeded 40,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284510-0012-0000", "contents": "2018 protests in Hungary, Demonstrations\nThe deputies referred to Act XXXVI of 2012 on the Parliament, according to which they have the right to enter the public institution to meet with the editor in charge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284510-0013-0000", "contents": "2018 protests in Hungary, Demonstrations\nThe MTVA security chief did not deny entry, however, deputies were unable to meet with an editor. The protection of studios and editorial rooms by armed guards was justified on the grounds that the entry of Members into these areas would disrupt the proper functioning of the public institution. 13 opposition MPs spent the night in the headquarters to get the protesters to score 5 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284510-0014-0000", "contents": "2018 protests in Hungary, Demonstrations\nOn the morning of the 17th, a fight broke out between Hadh\u00e1zy and the MTVA security guards, and then Hadh\u00e1zy and Bernadett Sz\u00e9l were removed from the building. They filed a complaint. The head of MTVA initiated a property protection procedure at the clerk of \u00d3buda, which the clerk immediately initiated. Many are also demonstrations the increasing autocratic governing party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284510-0015-0000", "contents": "2018 protests in Hungary, Further Protests\nIn January 2019, a series of anti-slave law and anti-government demonstrations was met with water cannon and protesters tossed tissue papers at police. After the violence, peaceful protests and small demonstrations have been held with no police presence or no interventions in the protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284510-0016-0000", "contents": "2018 protests in Hungary, Further Protests\nOn 10 February, a protest was held in the capital Budapest against the government and the slave law. On 9 December, actors were on strike in a 2-day protest against a plan to control theatres. These protests were the biggest since January. 10,000 protesters marched demanding academic freedom on 23 October, the anniversary of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956. Thousands of university students protested on 7 September against the occupation of the national university. Thousands of young protesters marched on 25 July, protesting the invasion of the national broadcasting agency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284511-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 protests in Iran\nThe 2018 protests in Iran (Persian: \u0627\u0639\u062a\u0631\u0627\u0636\u0627\u062a \u0633\u0627\u0644 \u06f2\u06f0\u06f1\u06f8 \u062f\u0631 \u0627\u06cc\u0631\u0627\u0646) is mass protests and a popular uprising conspiring of peaceful demonstrations calling for better economic justice in June 2018 in Iran, the biggest wave of anti-government demonstrations since the 2017-2018 Iranian protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284511-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 protests in Iran, Background\nThe 2017-2018 Iranian protests is a wave of protests against the government after egg prices soared and a new budget law was passed, triggering deadly anti-government uprisings across the nation, leaving 23-25 killed in 11 days of mass protests. The 2018 Dervish protests is protests against discrimination that has left 1 dead. The protests was against economic hardships and failures to keep the country thriving.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284511-0002-0000", "contents": "2018 protests in Iran, Protests\nMarch 28-March 31:The 2018 Khuzestan protests erupted in the southern region of Khuzestan, leaving 1-2 killed in demonstrations against discrimination of Iranian Arabs. Clashes with police ensued into crackdown. On 29-31 March, after weeks of protests across the country, mass protests against wate shortages erupted throughout Isfahan, leading to clashes with the security forces, protesting polluted water and water shortages (Water crisis in Iran). Protesters and angry farmers rallied and demonstrated on 10 April and fight the security forces, who responded with Tear gas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284511-0003-0000", "contents": "2018 protests in Iran, Protests\nApril 14-June 2:A wave of truckers strikes was launched after truckers went on strike in Baneh and Isfahan, where shopkeepers closed their stores and shops and went on strike to protest economic failures and worsening conditions. The strike actions continue for 20 days. From 24 May till 4 June, a wave of popular strike campaigns was launched after truckers didn't receive their demands and demanded wage increases despite economic teeters in Isfahan. After the campaigns, police crackdown hard on protesters. Over the next 4-6 weeks, hundreds of merchant and trader unions went on strike, protesting against economic turmoil, demanding better wages and unemployment to stagnate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284511-0004-0000", "contents": "2018 protests in Iran, Protests\n25 June:On 25 June 2018, shops were shut and thousands gathered in the Bazaar area of Tehran to protest the economic situation. This was met with security forces firing tear gas at the protestors. Protests against the economic situation also occurred in Shahriar, Karaj, Qeshm, Bandar Abbas, and Mashhad. Some of the stores were closed enforcedly by unknown individuals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284511-0005-0000", "contents": "2018 protests in Iran, Protests\n26 June:People in Tehran took to the streets for the third straight day on 26 June, with many shops in Tehran's Bazaar remaining closed. Videos from social media showed the crowd in downtown Tehran chanting \"Death to the dictator\" and \"Death to Palestine\". Security forces clamped down on the protesters once again, arresting a large number of people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284511-0006-0000", "contents": "2018 protests in Iran, Protests\nStrikes and protests were also seen in Kermanshah, Arak and Tabriz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284511-0007-0000", "contents": "2018 protests in Iran, Protests\n27 June:Protests continued for a third day in Tehran, despite a heavy security presence, Reuters referred to the three days as \"the biggest unrest since the start of the year\". Iran's Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei, addressed the protests for the first time and called on the judiciary to punish those who disrupted economic security. Many of the protests involved traders in the Grand Bazaar in Tehran, who complained that the devaluation of the Iranian rial had forced them to stop trading.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284511-0008-0000", "contents": "2018 protests in Iran, Protests\n28 June:On 28 June, sources told Radio Farda that merchants had closed down the Bazaar in the city of Arak. Tehran's prosecutor general stated that a large number of protesters had been arrested and would likely face trial. Jafar Dolatabadi also stated in an interview that the protesters grievances are not only economic, and that \"people are grappling with political and social concerns\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284511-0009-0000", "contents": "2018 protests in Iran, Protests\nJuly:A new protest movement erupted across Iran by tens of thousands of protesting teachers and students, called \u201cNo to Pay Slips and Salary Policies\u201d over unpaid and unfair wages for teachers, that lasted for nearly three weeks, teachers are now deprived of an \u201cappropriate salary budget, and as a result, the quality of education has also been lowered for students\u201d. The protests began online but after a couple of days of online protests, marches and large demonstrations began on the streets in 15 July, the protests resulted in no achievement in Fars and Qazvin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284512-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 reasons of the Supreme Court of Canada\nThe table below lists the decisions (known as reasons) delivered from the bench by the Supreme Court of Canada during 2018. The table illustrates what reasons were filed by each justice in each case, and which justices joined each reason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284513-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 student protests in Colombia\nThe 2018 student protests in Colombia, or the national university strike in Colombia in 2018 was carried out between October 10 and December 16, it consisted of a series of protests and mobilizations carried out by students from public and private universities in Colombia due to the crisis of financing public education and its subsequent decision to its underfunding and the state repression of the country's student movements. It was carried out during the government of Iv\u00e1n Duque.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284513-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 student protests in Colombia, Background\nIn September 2018, the National Congress announced the General Budget of the Nation for 2019. The education sector, with $ 41.4 billion, was assigned the highest amount, followed by defense, with $ 33.6 billion, which was insufficient for the maintenance of Colombian public universities, since $ 500 billion is needed to close 2018; $ 3.2 trillion for operational expenses, and $ 15 trillion to pay off the \u201chistorical debt\u201d in infrastructure and educational quality. Law 30 of 1992, which regulates transfers from the nation to universities, adjusted resources based on the Consumer Price Index (CPI). This means that there is no growth of the resource, but a correction of the money year after year. Which despite the increase in university coverage does not finance this increase in coverage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 842]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284513-0002-0000", "contents": "2018 student protests in Colombia, Background\nOther causes of the strike were the \"Ser Pilo Paga\" program that received resources from Public Education to keep subsidized students in private universities, the economic policy of ICETEX, and the repeal of Law 1911 of 2018. Previously, student mobilizations have had an important role in the political life of the country: during the conservative hegemony of the 1920s, the protests during the dictatorship and the fall of General Rojas Pinilla, the 1971 National University Strike, the University protests. National in 1984, the seventh ballot of 1990, the Student Movement of 2011 against Law 30 of 1992, among other stories of this movement in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284513-0003-0000", "contents": "2018 student protests in Colombia, Organisers of the protests\nThe organisation of the strike was in charge of students from 32 public universities in the country (State University System), which would be joined by private universities, teachers and parents. A part of the student movement was welcomed under the platforms gathered in the so-called Broad Front for the Defense of Public Education: National Union of Higher Education Students, UNEES. Colombian Association of Student Representatives, ACREES. Colombian Federation of Student Representatives of Higher Education, FENARES. Trade Union Association of University Professors, ASPU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284513-0004-0000", "contents": "2018 student protests in Colombia, Consequences and aftermath\nHuman rights violations are reported by ESMAD, which intervened in the strike mobilizations, as in the case of Esteban Mosquera, a music student at the University of Cauca, who lost an eye. The national government was able to will allocate 4.5 billion pesos for education, unprecedented in the history of Colombia. It is proposed that a referendum be held for free public higher education14 and respect for university autonomy and its consolidation. However, breaches of the agreement are reported, for which students and teachers join the 2019 National Strike.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284513-0004-0001", "contents": "2018 student protests in Colombia, Consequences and aftermath\nIn addition, due to the corruption scandal at the District University (Wilman Mu\u00f1oz and Patricia Gamboa former officials of this University were imprisoned for the crime of embezzlement) and the protests and disturbances that occurred with it, and other universities in solidarity with the District University (especially the Javeriana University), marches were called for the dismantling of ESMAD and non-compliance with the agreements in the National Pedagogical University, the National University of Colombia, the University of the Atlantic (causing the resignation of the rector of this) among other Higher Education Institutions. In 2020, as a result of negotiations with students, the Ministry of Education and the Government of Casanare reached a financial agreement to convert Unitr\u00f3pico into a new public university.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 888]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284514-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 term opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States\nThe 2018 term of the Supreme Court of the United States began October 1, 2018, and concluded October 6, 2019. The table below illustrates which opinion was filed by each justice in each case and which justices joined each opinion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284514-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 term opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, 2018 term membership and statistics\nThis was the fourteenth term of Chief Justice Roberts's tenure and the first term for Justice Kavanaugh. The Court began its term with a vacant seat following the retirement of Justice Anthony Kennedy on July 31, 2018. The seat was filled by Brett Kavanaugh on October 6, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 97], "content_span": [98, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284515-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States\nThe Supreme Court of the United States handed down seven per curiam opinions during its 2018 term, which began October 1, 2018, and concluded October 6, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [71, 71], "content_span": [72, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284515-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States\nBecause per curiam decisions are issued from the Court as an institution, these opinions all lack the attribution of authorship or joining votes to specific justices. All justices on the Court at the time the decision was handed down are assumed to have participated and concurred unless otherwise noted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [71, 71], "content_span": [72, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284515-0002-0000", "contents": "2018 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Court membership\nAssociate Justices: Clarence Thomas, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer, Samuel Alito, Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh (confirmed Oct. 6, 2018)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 89], "content_span": [90, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284515-0003-0000", "contents": "2018 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Escondido v. Emmons\n586 U.S. ___ Decided January 7, 2019. Ninth Circuit reversed in part and vacated in part, and remanded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 92], "content_span": [93, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284515-0004-0000", "contents": "2018 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Shoop v. Hill\n586 U.S. ___ Decided January 7, 2019. Sixth Circuit vacated and remanded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 86], "content_span": [87, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284515-0005-0000", "contents": "2018 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Moore v. Texas\n586 U.S. ___ Decided February 19, 2019. Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas reversed and remanded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 87], "content_span": [88, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284515-0006-0000", "contents": "2018 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Moore v. Texas\nRoberts filed a concurrence. Alito filed a dissent, joined by Thomas and Gorsuch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 87], "content_span": [88, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284515-0007-0000", "contents": "2018 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Yovino v. Rizo\n586 U.S. ___ Decided February 25, 2019. Ninth Circuit vacated and remanded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 87], "content_span": [88, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284515-0008-0000", "contents": "2018 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Frank v. Gaos\n586 U.S. ___ Argued October 31, 2018.Decided March 20, 2019. Ninth Circuit vacated and remanded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 86], "content_span": [87, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284515-0009-0000", "contents": "2018 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Box v. Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky, Inc.\n587 U.S. __ _, 139 S.Ct. 1780, 204 L. Ed. 2d 78 Decided May 28, 2019. Seventh Circuit reversed in part.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 128], "content_span": [129, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284515-0010-0000", "contents": "2018 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Box v. Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky, Inc.\nSotomayor noted without separate opinion that she would deny the petition for a writ of certiorari as to both questions presented. Thomas filed a concurrence. Ginsburg filed an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part, noting that she would deny the petition for a writ of certiorari as to both questions presented.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 128], "content_span": [129, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284516-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 timeline of the Somali Civil War\nThis is a 2018 timeline of events in the Somali Civil War (2009\u2013present).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284517-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to Ireland\nPope Francis visited Ireland on 25 and 26 August 2018, as part of the World Meeting of Families 2018. It was the first visit by a reigning pontiff to the country since 1979 (though Francis had spent time studying English in Dublin in 1980, as Fr Jorge Bergoglio).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284517-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to Ireland, Preparations\nSpeculation that Pope Francis would visit Ireland began immediately upon the announcement on 27 September 2015 that the World Meeting of Families 2018 would be held in Dublin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 51], "content_span": [52, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284517-0002-0000", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to Ireland, Preparations\nPope Francis confirmed he would be visiting Ireland on 21 March 2018, at the weekly general audience in St. Peter's Square. Roman Catholic Primate of All Ireland Archbishop Eamon Martin and Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin announced the visit's schedule in Maynooth on the morning of 11 June 2018. The Government of Ireland also launched an official website for the papal visit on that date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 51], "content_span": [52, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284517-0003-0000", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to Ireland, Itinerary, Day 1: August 25, Saturday\nPope Francis was greeted by Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Affairs and Trade Minister Simon Coveney and his family. He then travelled in a \u0160koda Rapid (his preferred mode of transport for the visit to Dublin), to \u00c1ras an Uachtar\u00e1in, where he met with President Michael D. Higgins, his wife Sabina Higgins, government minister Katherine Zappone, Ambassador of Ireland to the Holy See Emma Madigan, the Archbishop Eamon Martin, Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin, the Secretary of State of the Vatican Cardinal Pietro Parolin, and Syrian asylum seekers, amongst others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284517-0004-0000", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to Ireland, Itinerary, Day 1: August 25, Saturday\nThe Pope signed the visitors' book with the following message: \"With gratitude for the warm welcome I have received. I assure you and the people of Ireland of my prayers that almighty god may guide and protect you all. Francis\". Pope Francis then planted a tree in the President's back garden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284517-0005-0000", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to Ireland, Itinerary, Day 1: August 25, Saturday\nLater, he met Prime Minister Leo Varadkar, and the two had a ten-minute private meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284517-0006-0000", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to Ireland, Itinerary, Day 1: August 25, Saturday\nDignitaries present at Dublin Castle included former PMs John Bruton, Bertie Ahern and Brian Cowen, former President Mary McAleese, Simon Coveney, Fianna F\u00e1il leader Miche\u00e1l Martin, Labour Party leader Brendan Howlin, Green Party leader Eamon Ryan, Minister for Health Simon Harris, Minister for Culture Josepha Madigan, Catherine Byrne, Richard Bruton, Senator David Norris, representatives from the Ulster Unionist Party and the Alliance Party of Northern Ireland, Moderator Dr Charles McMullen (leader of the Presbyterian Church in Ireland), disability rights activist Joanne O'Riordan, Colm O'Gorman and Marie Collins, amongst others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284517-0007-0000", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to Ireland, Itinerary, Day 1: August 25, Saturday\nVaradkar's speech referred to what he called \"the failures of both church and state\" to deal with the sexual abuse scandal, as well as church involvement in the Magdalene Laundries, mother and baby homes and illegal adoptions (currently being investigated under the Mother and Baby Homes Commission of Investigation), which were \"stains on our state, our society and also the Catholic church. People kept in dark corners behind closed doors, cries for help that went unheard.\" He went on to tell the Pope that modern Ireland needed a new covenant for the 21st century to learn from \"our shared mistakes\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284517-0007-0001", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to Ireland, Itinerary, Day 1: August 25, Saturday\nVaradkar also noted far-reaching Irish social changes since the previous 1979 papal visit. He said Ireland was more diverse, less religious with modernised laws on divorce, contraception, abortion and same sex marriage \"understanding that marriages do not always work, that women should make their own decisions, and that families come in many different, wonderful forms, including those headed by a grandparent, lone parent or same-sex parents, or parents who are divorced\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284517-0008-0000", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to Ireland, Itinerary, Day 1: August 25, Saturday\nFrancis' speech, delivered in Italian, condemned the long history of sex abuse by Catholic clergy in Ireland and acknowledged the church's lack of action on child sexual abuse, calling it a \"grave scandal\", but did not address victims' demands for more action to be taken. He praised the 20 years of peace in Ireland which stemmed from the Good Friday Agreement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284517-0009-0000", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to Ireland, Itinerary, Day 1: August 25, Saturday\nDemocratic Unionist Party leader Arlene Foster turned down an invitation from the Government of Ireland to attend the Dublin Castle event, saying she would be abroad with her family at the time; she later noted the irony in criticism of her reason given.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284517-0010-0000", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to Ireland, Itinerary, Day 1: August 25, Saturday\nLater, the pope held a silent prayer at the Candle of Innocence, which was dedicated in 2011 to honour victims of sex abuse, in St Mary's Pro-Cathedral in Dublin city centre. He then visited the Capuchin Day Centre for Homeless People.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284517-0011-0000", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to Ireland, Itinerary, Day 1: August 25, Saturday\nCrowds in Dublin were reported by BBC News to be one person deep. The first day of the Pope's visit concluded with a crowd of an estimated 82,500 attending the Festival of Families at Croke Park where various entertainers performed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284517-0012-0000", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to Ireland, Itinerary, Day 2: August 26, Sunday\nOn the second day of the visit, Pope Francis was flown to Ireland West Airport in County Mayo and visited Knock Shrine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284517-0013-0000", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to Ireland, Itinerary, Day 2: August 26, Sunday\nTraffic tailbacks of up to eight kilometres around the local area and reports of traffic congestion as early as 5:30am were reported. The Pope addressed approximately 45,000 pilgrims who visited the shrine and held a prayer service inside the shrine's chapel, where he prayed and sought forgiveness for the sex abuse scandals. After signing a Mayo GAA jersey (to be put on display at the airport), he returned to Dublin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284517-0014-0000", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to Ireland, Itinerary, Day 2: August 26, Sunday\nHe celebrated Mass at the Papal Cross in Phoenix Park. In the weeks leading up to the Phoenix Park service it was said that 500,000 would attend; Approximately 152,000 attended the service, according to the Office of Public Works. Before returning to Rome, Francis again met with Varadkar, who welcomed the Pope's call for action and forgiveness on clerical sex abuse, but said that Francis had to act on his words.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284517-0015-0000", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to Ireland, Press conference\nDuring the press conference on his flight back from Dublin to Rome, and following the launch of the Equal Future 2018 campaign against damage to children and young people from LGBT stigma four days earlier, Francis was asked what he would say to the father of a son who says he is gay. In his reply, the Pope said \"Don't condemn. Dialogue, understand, make space for your son or daughter. Make space so they can express themselves,\" \"You are my son, you are my daughter, just as you are!\" and \"that son and that daughter have the right to a family and of not being chased out of the family.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284517-0016-0000", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to Ireland, Controversies\nBefore the Pope's arrival there were concerns over disruption due to widespread road closures required, the estimated cost of \u20ac32 million of the visit, protests on the history of physical and sexual abuse in Catholic institutions, and the Catholic Church's opposition to same-sex marriage, abortion and contraception, with former President Mary McAleese describing it as a \"right-wing rally\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284517-0017-0000", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to Ireland, Controversies\nCoinciding with the Mass on Sunday, around 1,000 people assembled at Tuam's Town Hall in the West of Ireland and walked in silent vigil the 30-minute route to the Bon Secours Mother and Baby Home in remembrance of those who died or disappeared there. Meanwhile, at the Garden of Remembrance in Dublin at the same time, several thousand others were present for \"Stand4Truth\", held in solidarity with those who had been abused. Some called it a protest, others a space for anyone who felt excluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284517-0017-0001", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to Ireland, Controversies\nIt was organised by Colm O'Gorman, head of Amnesty International Ireland, himself a victim of sexual abuse by a priest. There were speeches, and music and then a silent walk to the site of the last Magdalen laundry to close in Ireland, on Sean McDermott Street, asking that it be preserved as a site of conscience, of memory and education.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284517-0018-0000", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to Ireland, Vigan\u00f2's call for resignation\nDuring, but otherwise unconnected with, the papal visit Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigan\u00f2, a former top Vatican diplomat in the United States and staunch conservative critic of Pope Francis, published a letter calling on Francis to resign, claiming that he was made aware in 2013 of abuse allegations in the US against prominent US Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, but took no action. Vigan\u00f2 said that Pope Benedict XVI had been aware of the abuse allegations and had placed restrictions on McCarrick's movement and public ministry from 2009, and that Pope Francis had lifted these restrictions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284517-0018-0001", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to Ireland, Vigan\u00f2's call for resignation\nHowever, the New York Times questioned Vigan\u00f2's allegations. It was pointed out that Pope Benedict XVI did not continue to place restrictions on McCarrick by the year 2012 as Vigan\u00f2 alleged, and that he continued publicly celebrating Mass. One high-profile appearance for McCarrick that year was at Pope Benedict's birthday celebration, where he joined with other bishops to present a birthday cake to the Pope. The Catholic magazine America listed several other public appearances McCarrick made during this time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284517-0018-0002", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to Ireland, Vigan\u00f2's call for resignation\nAmerica listed several reasons the letter seemed credible, including Vigan\u00f2's inside role in these matters as well as Pope Francis's \"lack of progress\" and \"lack of urgency\" regarding sexual abuse, but also listed several reasons to be skeptical about the letter, including Vigan\u00f2's \"perceived hostility toward Pope Francis\" for having removed him from his post in 2016, allegedly because Vigan\u00f2 was seen as having \"become too enmeshed in U.S. culture wars, particularly regarding same-sex marriage.\" Vigan\u00f2 also tried to quash the inquiry during Francis's papacy which led to the resignation of John Nienstedt as Archbishop of Saint Paul and Minneapolis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284517-0019-0000", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to Ireland, Commemorative items\nAn official commemorative medal marking the visit was released., The Dublin Mint Office also released a Celebration medal to mark the Popes visit The \"Lollipope\" \u2013 a lemon flavoured lolly complete with a picture of the Pope's face - was selling well ahead of the visit. Specially commissioned stamps, Pope Francis fridge magnets, candles, keyrings were also available as well as many t-shirts, hats and flags.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 58], "content_span": [59, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284518-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to the Baltic states\nPope Francis visited the Baltic states\u2014Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia\u2014from 22 to 25 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284518-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to the Baltic states\nIt was announced in November 2017 by the apostolic nuncio to Estonia that Pope Francis would travel to the nation in the autumn sometime, with September being provided as a possible date. It was further related a week after that the pope would also be visiting neighboring Latvia and Lithuania; he would travel to all three to celebrate the centenary of their independence. The official confirmation for the visit would be made, according to media reports, in December 2017. The visit to the Baltic states was confirmed in a Holy See press release on 9 March 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284518-0002-0000", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to the Baltic states, Visit, Lithuania\nPope Francis arrived at the airport in Lithuania's capital of Vilnius on September 22, where he was welcomed by Lithuania's President Dalia Grybauskaite and other political and civilian representatives. He later spoke outside the Presidential palace, where he noted how both Nazi and Soviet occupations weakened religious tolerance in the country and honored \"martyrs\" who died during these occupations. He also called for unity between Catholics, Lutherans, and followers of Eastern Orthodox in the country. He also visited the Divine Mercy Shrine, which serves as a major pilgrimage destination for Poles from neighboring Poland, and held a prayer service there.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 65], "content_span": [66, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284518-0002-0001", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to the Baltic states, Visit, Lithuania\nOn September 23, he visited Lithuana's second largest city, Kaunus. Speaking in the city's Santakos Park to an estimated crowd of 100,000, the Pope honored the Jews who suffered oppression during the Nazi occupation between 1941 and 1944. Commemorating the Lithuanian Holocaust Memorial Day, the Pope condemned anti-Semitism which fueled Holocaust propaganda. He also paid tribute to Lithuanians who were deported to Siberian gulags or tortured and oppressed during five decades of Soviet occupation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 65], "content_span": [66, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284518-0002-0002", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to the Baltic states, Visit, Lithuania\nHe later returned to Vilnius to hold three-minutes of silent prayer at the Vilnius Ghetto's Holocaust memorial on the date which marked the 75th anniversary of the liquidation of Jews in the area and also laid flowers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 65], "content_span": [66, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284518-0002-0003", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to the Baltic states, Visit, Lithuania\nHe afterwards visited Vilnius' Museum of Occupations and Freedom Fights, a Museum containing items and papers detailing the long history of Soviet oppression in Lithuania and which once served as headquarters for the local branch of the now defunct Soviet KGB, where he also spoke in the outside square to praise Lithuanians who stood up for their faith and described the country as a potential \"beacon of hope.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 65], "content_span": [66, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284518-0003-0000", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to the Baltic states, Visit, Latvia\nOn September 24, Pope Francis arrived at the airport in Latvia's capital of Riga. Upon arrival, he met with Latvian President Raimonds Vejonis and the two travelled to the Presidential Palace. Commemorating Latvia's 100th anniversary of independence from Russian control, the Pope placed flowers at Latvia's Monument of Independence. At Riga's Lutheran Cathedral, he joined local Lutheran and Eastern Orthodox leaders at a music-filled ecumenical prayer and acknowledged the many trials Latvians endured during two Soviet occupations and the World War II-era occupation by Nazi Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284518-0003-0001", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to the Baltic states, Visit, Latvia\nFollowing this meeting, he held a prayer service in front of elderly Latvian Catholics who survived Nazi and Soviet occupations at Riga's Catholic Cathedral, where he praised them for maintaining their faith during brutal occupations and called on them to use it to set an example. He repeated this message during a homily at the Mother of God Basilica in Aglona, which is considered to be Latvia's most important Catholic shrine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284518-0004-0000", "contents": "2018 visit by Pope Francis to the Baltic states, Visit, Estonia\nOn September 25, Pope Francis concluded his four-day trip to the Baltic nations by visiting Estonia. He arrived at the airport in the Estonian capital of Tallinn. Pope Francis met with President Kersti Kaljulaid, and the two gave a public address at the Rose Garden in the Tallinn district of Kadriorg, where the Pope acknowledged how sex abuse scandals are driving people away from the church. Before leaving Estonia, Pope Francis held an outdoor mass in front of a crowd of over 10,000 at Tallinn's Freedom Square.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 63], "content_span": [64, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy\nA motion of no confidence in the Spanish government of Mariano Rajoy was debated and voted in the Congress of Deputies between 31 May and 1 June 2018. It was brought by Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) leader Pedro S\u00e1nchez after the governing People's Party (PP) was found to have profited from the illegal kickbacks-for-contracts scheme of the G\u00fcrtel case in a court ruling made public the previous day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0000-0001", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy\nThis was the fourth motion of no confidence since the Spanish transition to democracy and the first one to be successful, as well the second to be submitted against Mariano Rajoy after the Unidos Podemos's one the previous year. Coincidentally, it was held 38 years after the first such vote of no confidence in Spain on 30 May 1980.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy\nThe motion successfully passed with the support of 180 deputies\u2014those of PSOE, Unidos Podemos, Republican Left of Catalonia, Catalan European Democratic Party, Basque Nationalist Party, Comprom\u00eds, EH Bildu and New Canaries\u2014and resulted in the downfall of Mariano Rajoy's government and in Pedro S\u00e1nchez becoming new Prime Minister of Spain. Public opinion at the time was found to be overwhelmingly in favour of the motion, as revealed by polling conducted in the days previous and during the events leading to the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0001-0001", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy\nSubsequently on 5 June, Rajoy announced his resignation as PP leader and his withdrawal from politics after having led the party for 14 years, vacating his seat in parliament and returning to his position as property registrar in Santa Pola. Prior to his ouster, Rajoy had hinted at the possibility that he might not seek re-election for a third term in office, with his ultimate farewell sparking a leadership contest that would see Pablo Casado being elected as new party chairman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0002-0000", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy\nBefore the unveiling of the court ruling that led to the motion's tabling, the Citizens (Cs) party of Albert Rivera had been in the lead in opinion polling for the most part of 2018. Rivera's erratic attitude during the lead up to the motion and its ultimate result\u2014which saw his party voting against it\u2014were widely regarded by media and political commentators as causing political initiative to shift from Cs towards S\u00e1nchez's PSOE, which would go on to win all elections held over the next year: general, local, regional and to the European Parliament. The failed 2019 government formation process and the electoral repetition in November that year would ultimately see a collapse in support for Cs and Rivera's resignation as party leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 804]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0003-0000", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Background\nThe motion was registered by the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) on 25 May 2018, one day after the governing People's Party (PP) was found by the National Court during their investigation of the G\u00fcrtel case to have profited from an illegal kickbacks-for-contracts scheme, with the confirmation of the existence of an illegal accounting and financing structure that ran in parallel with the party's official one since its foundation in 1989.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 73], "content_span": [74, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0003-0001", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Background\nThe Court had ruled that the PP helped establish \"an authentic and efficient system of institutional corruption via mechanisms to manipulate public tenders at the national, regional and local level\", while judging that Mariano Rajoy had not been \"truthful\" in his testimony as a witness during the trial. The severity of the ruling had prompted Rajoy's then-major parliamentary ally, Citizens (Cs), to publicly withdraw its confidence and supply support from the government and proclaim it as marking \"a before and an after\" in Spanish politics, prior to the motion's tabling by the PSOE.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 73], "content_span": [74, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0004-0000", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Background\nThe judicial ruling was the last in a series of corruption scandals that had beleaguered the minority PP government following the troubling 2016 government formation process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 73], "content_span": [74, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0004-0001", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Background\nJoining the string of corruption investigations unveiled in April 2017\u2014that had seen a previous, unsuccessful motion of no confidence being tabled by Unidos Podemos (the political alliance of Podemos and United Left) in June that year\u2014was the transpiring of evidence in March 2018 that Madrilenian president Cristina Cifuentes could have obtained a master's degree in the King Juan Carlos University through fraudulent means, which evolved into a full-fledged scandal by April as both the university and Cifuentes's regional government were found attempting to cover up the scandal through document forgery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 73], "content_span": [74, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0004-0002", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Background\nThe affair, together with the leaking of a 2011 video showing her being detained in a supermarket for shoplifting, ultimately contributed to Cifuentes announcing her resignation on 25 April 2018. On 22 May, two days before the National Court's ruling on the G\u00fcrtel case was made public, former Valencian president Eduardo Zaplana was arrested by the Civil Guard as a result of ongoing investigations for alleged money laundering and bribery crimes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 73], "content_span": [74, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0005-0000", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Background\nSince the tabling of Podemos's motion in June 2017, events other than corruption scandals had also contributed to the weakening of Rajoy and his government's stand in society. Among others, the constitutional crisis starting in September 2017 over the Catalan government's attempt to hold an independence referendum contrary to the Constitution and diverse judicial rulings, as well as the enforcement of direct rule over Catalonia as a result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 73], "content_span": [74, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0005-0001", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Background\nThe subsequent 21 December regional election (which saw the more pro-union Cs benefitting from a plummeting in the PP vote) led to the former surging to first place in nationwide opinion polls as well as to an alienation of parties supportive of Catalan independence\u2014namely, Republican Left of Catalonia (ERC) and the Catalan European Democratic Party (PDeCAT)\u2014further away from the national government's positions. Cs's surge in opinion polls had also seen the fading out of the main opposition party, the PSOE, and its leader, Pedro S\u00e1nchez\u2014not a deputy in Congress since his resignation as such in October 2016\u2014who found himself needing to recover the political initiative for his party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 73], "content_span": [74, 764]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0006-0000", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Background\nFinally, on 23 May 2018, the day before the ruling's publication, Mariano Rajoy and his government were able to get their budget for that year passed through the Congress of Deputies in a tight 176\u2013171 vote, with the decisive support of the Basque Nationalist Party (PNV) having been secured through a last-hour deal. This was despite the latter having pledged not to do so as long as direct rule was being enforced over Catalonia, thus theoretically ensuring the stability of the government until 2020. Rajoy's continuity in power beyond that year had sparked an internal debate within the party, as he had hinted at the possibility that he might not seek re-election for a third term in office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 73], "content_span": [74, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0007-0000", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Legal provisions\nThe Spanish Constitution of 1978 required for motions of no confidence to be proposed by at least one-tenth of the Congress of Deputies\u201435 out of 350. Following the German model, votes of no confidence in Spain were constructive, so the motion was required to include an alternative candidate for prime minister. For a motion of no confidence to be successful, it had to be passed by an absolute majority in the Congress of Deputies. A minimum period of five days from the motion's registration (dubbed as \"cooling period\") was required to pass before it could come up for a vote, but no maximum was established. Other parties were entitled to submit alternative motions within the first two days from the registration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 79], "content_span": [80, 799]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0008-0000", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Legal provisions\n1. The Congress of Deputies may challenge Government policy by passing a motion of censure by an absolute majority of its members.2. The motion of censure must be proposed by at least one tenth of the Deputies, including a candidate for the office of President of the Government.3. The motion of censure may not be voted on until five days after it has been submitted. During the first two days of this period, alternative motions may be submitted.4. If the motion of censure is not passed by the Congress, its signatories may not submit another during the same session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 79], "content_span": [80, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0009-0000", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Legal provisions\nConcurrently, the Prime Minister was barred from dissolving the Cortes Generales and calling a general election while a motion of no confidence was pending. If the motion was successful, the incumbent prime minister and his/her government were required to submit their resignation to the Monarch, while the candidate proposed in the motion was automatically considered to have the confidence of the Congress of Deputies and immediately appointed as prime minister. If unsuccessful, the signatories of the motion were barred from submitting another during the same session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 79], "content_span": [80, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0010-0000", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Legal provisions\nThe procedure for motions of no confidence was regulated within Articles 175 to 179 of the Standing Orders of the Congress of Deputies, which provided for the debate on the motion starting with its defence by one of the signatory members without any time limitations, to be followed by an also time-unlimited speech by the nominated candidate to explain his/her political programme. Subsequently, spokespeople from the different parliamentary groups in Congress were allowed to speak for thirty minutes, with an opportunity to reply or rectify themselves for ten minutes. Members of the government were allowed to take the floor and speak at any time of their request during the debate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 79], "content_span": [80, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0011-0000", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Events, Registration and support\nPedro S\u00e1nchez's decision to table the motion was taken in the hours following the publication of the court ruling on 24 May, having been persuaded to do so by his closest collaborators following the refusal from Mariano Rajoy and his government to give out any explanations or take any actions in response to the sentence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 95], "content_span": [96, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0011-0001", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Events, Registration and support\nIn accordance with the Constitution's requirements, the PSOE designated S\u00e1nchez as candidate for prime minister, who announced that, should the motion be successful, he would aim for the establishment of a \"transitional government\" that would ensure the country's \"governance\" and recover \"democratic normality\" in the wake of the huge political crisis sparked as a result of the G\u00fcrtel sentence and other scandals, then call for a snap general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 95], "content_span": [96, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0011-0002", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Events, Registration and support\nUnidos Podemos, Comprom\u00eds and New Canaries (NCa) immediately announced their support of the initiative, with ERC and PDeCAT remaining undecided but inclined to support it if it had real prospects of succeeding. As for Cs's stance, despite the party having withdrawn its support from the Rajoy government as a result of the ruling, it was not supportive of the motion and instead demanded Rajoy dissolve parliament and hold an early general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 95], "content_span": [96, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0012-0000", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Events, Registration and support\nSources within the government and the PP acknowledged that the parliament's arithmetics meant that the motion could have a realistic chance of succeeding, as the support of PSOE and Unidos Podemos together with that of peripheral nationalist parties would be enough to win the vote. They also admitted having lost control over the legislature and did not rule out a snap election for late 2018 or early 2019 even if the government survived the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 95], "content_span": [96, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0012-0001", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Events, Registration and support\nRajoy was reportedly \"deeply disgusted\" with the move staged by S\u00e1nchez, with whom he had come to trust over the Catalan issue over the previous months. He cancelled his prime ministerial schedule and held a press briefing the day of the motion's announcement on 25 May, where he accused S\u00e1nchez of \"seeking to govern with whoever at any cost\" and of \"lacking the moral legitimacy for tabling [the motion]\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 95], "content_span": [96, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0013-0000", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Events, Registration and support\nThe debate and the vote on the motion of no confidence were scheduled by then-President of the Congress of Deputies Ana Pastor for 31 May and 1 June, a mere week after it was tabled\u2014a stark difference with the 2017 one, which had been scheduled for three weeks after its registration\u2014in what was regarded as a deliberate attempt to foil the initiative by preventing Pedro S\u00e1nchez from having enough time to negotiate the required parliamentary support that he needed to succeed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 95], "content_span": [96, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0013-0001", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Events, Registration and support\nInitially, the PP was reported as being confident in surviving the vote due to S\u00e1nchez's contested leadership within his own party\u2014still reeling from its 2016 internal crisis and the harsh contest of the 2017 leadership election\u2014and the belief that they had the decisive support of the PNV after having secured it for the approval of the 2018 budget. Since it appeared unlikely for S\u00e1nchez to collect the support of such a heterogeneous grouping of parties in favour of his candidacy\u2014going from the left-wing EH Bildu and Podemos to the centre-right PDeCAT and PNV\u2014the conviction settled among PP's ranks that the motion would fail.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 95], "content_span": [96, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0014-0000", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Events, Registration and support\nNumerous inter-party meetings and phone calls took place between 25 and 30 May, seeing the PSOE sending their organization secretary, Jos\u00e9 Luis \u00c1balos, to probe the stance of other parties to the motion. Podemos's support was guaranteed\u2014with the party having pledged to back any such initiative since its own attempt in 2017 and its leader, Pablo Iglesias, actively helping the PSOE in securing the support of other parties\u2014whereas Cs had been discarded as a potential ally over its hostile position to allowing S\u00e1nchez's election as prime minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 95], "content_span": [96, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0014-0001", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Events, Registration and support\nThus, securing the support of the PNV would be essential, as it would allow the numbers for the motion to reach the 176-seat threshold together with all other likely allies. The PNV was in a difficult position: in an U-turn move, it had just helped approve Rajoy's budget for 2018 in exchange for economic benefits for the Basque Country, but it did not want to be singled out as the \"savior\" of the unpopular Rajoy's government if the Catalan nationalist parties did back the motion, as that decision would not be understood by its voters. Thus, the positions adopted by ERC and the PDeCAT would prove determinant for the motion's fate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 95], "content_span": [96, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0015-0000", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Events, Registration and support\nERC granted its unconditional support to the motion, seeking to oust Rajoy and the PP from government because of their enforcement of direct rule over Catalonia, but there were divisions within the PDeCAT as both former and incumbent Catalan presidents Carles Puigdemont and Quim Torra advocated for an abstention\u2014and, thus, for the motion's failure. The more moderate sector led by the PDeCAT's coordinator-general Marta Pascal, who favoured Rajoy's ouster and urged party colleagues to vote accordingly, was able to swing the party's official stance into supporting the initiative.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 95], "content_span": [96, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0015-0001", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Events, Registration and support\nAttempts to pressure the PNV saw the PSOE accepting to call an early election as a way to make it appear as if it was attempting to court Cs to its side, as well as Podemos leader Pablo Iglesias proposing to Cs leader Albert Rivera that, in the event of S\u00e1nchez's motion failing to succeed, then their both parties could join to sign an \"instrumental\" censure motion with the only goal of appointing an independent candidate who would then proceed to call a snap election, with such a proposal being well-received by Rivera.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 95], "content_span": [96, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0015-0002", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Events, Registration and support\nThis had the effect\u2014unintended by Cs\u2014of placing the PNV into the \"losing\" side if it did not support S\u00e1nchez's one, having to face the prospects of an eventual successful motion and a subsequent snap election anyway. By 29 May, S\u00e1nchez had secured the support of Podemos, Comprom\u00eds, ERC, PDeCAT, EH Bildu and NCa, all swayed by their common opposition to Rajoy's government, meaning that S\u00e1nchez had 175 votes: exactly half of the chamber, one short of the legal threshold of 176 needed for the vote to succeed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 95], "content_span": [96, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0016-0000", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Events, Debate and vote\nFacing the possibility of defeat, Rajoy himself attempted to personally persuade the PNV into remaining at his side, utilising his contacts with Confebask\u2014the Basque Business Confederation, believed to be able to exert some influence on the final decision\u2014to add to the pressure on the Basque party. However, the latter's leaders were already leaning towards supporting S\u00e1nchez's initiative, as a result of the combined efforts from PSOE and Podemos, the swing of ERC and the PDeCAT in favour of the motion and the conviction that they could not politically justify be seen as the ones allowing Rajoy to stay in power.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 86], "content_span": [87, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0016-0001", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Events, Debate and vote\nOn 31 May 2018, after having unsuccessfully suggested he resign as prime minister in order to call off the censure vote, the PNV reluctantly confirmed its support to the initiative, making Rajoy's defeat all but certain. The PP was thrown into a state of shock and disarray, as within one week the party went from a sense of relief following the approval of the 2018 budget to suddenly facing the prospects of the first successful vote of no confidence in democratic Spain. This would oust hundreds of party members from public office, forcing the whole party into opposition and thwarting Rajoy's plans for an orderly succession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 86], "content_span": [87, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0017-0000", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Events, Debate and vote\nDuring the first part of the debate on 31 May, the motion was defended by PSOE's Jos\u00e9 Luis \u00c1balos, which was followed by Rajoy's reply and then by S\u00e1nchez's speech. Rajoy defended his seven year-timespan in government, attacked the PSOE for its \"indulgence\" of its own corruption scandals, warned about the alleged prejudices\u2014both economic and political\u2014that, in his opinion, the motion's passage would entail for the country and rejected the offers for him to resign as prime minister (a move which could have possibly allowed the PP to remain in power, but with himself out of government).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 86], "content_span": [87, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0017-0001", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Events, Debate and vote\nAt lunchtime, Rajoy retreated into the Arahy restaurant close to the Puerta de Alcal\u00e1, where he would be staying until the night after receiving the confirmation from the PNV that they would be supporting the motion, not returning to the Congress for the second part of the debate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 86], "content_span": [87, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0017-0002", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Events, Debate and vote\nRajoy's absence, which came to be iconically\u2014albeit unwittingly\u2014symbolised by deputy prime minister Soraya S\u00e1enz de Santamar\u00eda's placement of her handbag on the empty seat of the prime minister, was duly noted by various media and politicians at a time when it was becoming increasingly apparent that the motion would pass, with Pablo Iglesias commenting that \"It's shameful that the prime minister's seat during a motion of no confidence is occupied by a handbag!\". The next day, Rajoy went to parliament right before the vote to take the floor for one last time, stating that \"it had been an honour to be prime minister of Spain\" and wishing S\u00e1nchez \"good luck\" in his future role.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 86], "content_span": [87, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0018-0000", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Events, Debate and vote\nFrom the motion's announcement to its being voted upon, there was speculation in the media and within political circles on the Rajoy resignation hypothesis. While Rajoy had publicly rejected the idea of resigning, the viability of such scenario, coupled with the real chances of a motion success, led King Felipe VI to clear out his schedule for the week in order to remain reachable at the Zarzuela Palace in the event that he was required to sign a resignation or appointment decree.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 86], "content_span": [87, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0018-0001", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Events, Debate and vote\nDuring Rajoy's absence from the second part of the parliamentary debate on 31 May, rumours spread throughout the Congress's hallways that he was about to resign in favour of his deputy S\u00e1enz de Santamar\u00eda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 86], "content_span": [87, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0018-0002", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Events, Debate and vote\nPP secretary-general and defence minister Mar\u00eda Dolores de Cospedal, who was known as the most ardent political rival of the still deputy prime minister both within the party and in the government, came out to speak in a press conference that afternoon to publicly silence any rumours of an upcoming resignation: \"Mariano Rajoy is not going to resign\", she said, \"because it would not benefit the general interests of Spain and the PP\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 86], "content_span": [87, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0019-0000", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Events, Debate and vote\nOn 1 June 2018, the censure motion was voted and approved with a 180\u2013169 result. The sole abstention came from the Canarian Coalition, which had initially pledged its opposition to the motion but recoiled at the last moment. As a result, Rajoy was required to tender his resignation to the King, and S\u00e1nchez ascended as prime minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 86], "content_span": [87, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0020-0000", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Opinion polls\nOpinion polling conducted in the days leading to and during the events of the vote of no confidence showed a large support in favour of the motion. PSOE and Podemos voters were found to be overwhelmingly in support of it, whereas PP voters mostly rejected the move. In contrast, Cs voters were found to be more frequently divided on the issue, rejecting the continuity of Rajoy's government but not being supportive of a new cabinet headed by S\u00e1nchez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 76], "content_span": [77, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0021-0000", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Aftermath\nWith the passage of the motion\u2014the first to be successful in Spain since the first such vote of no confidence on 30 May 1980, exactly 38 years earlier\u2014Mariano Rajoy and his government were required to step down. As S\u00e1nchez was automatically deemed to have the confidence of parliament, he was formally appointed as prime minister later that day. Rajoy subsequently announced his resignation as PP leader and his farewell from politics on 5 June, triggering a leadership contest to determine his successor, whereas S\u00e1nchez would unveil his new cabinet two days later on 7 June. On 21 July 2018, the until-then PP party's vice secretary-general of communication and deputy for \u00c1vila Pablo Casado was elected over Soraya S\u00e1enz de Santamar\u00eda as Rajoy's successor at the helm of the PP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 72], "content_span": [73, 854]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0022-0000", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Aftermath\nVarious media regarded it decisive that Rajoy and Congress speaker Ana Pastor had chosen to hold the vote immediately after the registration of the motion. Envisaged as a move aimed at thwarting the motion by limiting the time available for negotiations to occur, it instead led to opposition parties being forced to hastily decide their public stance on the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 72], "content_span": [73, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0022-0001", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Aftermath\nWithout time for any clashes or disputes to take place over programmatic contents or political concessions\u2014which could have ensued during a prolonged period of multi-party negotiations, potentially leading to the initiative's failure\u2014parties contrary to the PP government found their common rejection of Rajoy's premiership as the sole deciding factor at stake, turning the vote into a sort of ultimatum on whether to accept or reject Rajoy rather than a consideration of S\u00e1nchez's potential candidacy. This had the effect of turning the motion, envisaged in the Spanish legal system as constructive, into a \"destructive\" one, precipitating the downfall of Rajoy and his government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 72], "content_span": [73, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0023-0000", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Aftermath\nThe motion success had a sizeable impact in Spanish society. The PSOE, which languished in opinion polls conducted prior to the events surrounding the motion, and which had not won an election at the national level since 2008, was propelled to first place nationally in opinion polling, subsequently going on to win the April 2019 general election as well as the May 2019 local, regional and European Parliament elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 72], "content_span": [73, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0023-0001", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Aftermath\nIn contrast, the PP continued its stark decline in public support, with disenchanted voters shifting to support the newly-resurgent far-right Vox party\u2014a trend accentuated after Vox's surprise entry into the Parliament of Andalusia as a result the December 2018 regional election. Vox eventually entered the national, European and many regional parliaments and local councils for the first time throughout 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 72], "content_span": [73, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0024-0000", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Aftermath\nThe result of the vote and the motion itself were also regarded as a major blow to Cs's strategical prospects, with the party going from leading most opinion polls during the first part of 2018 to being overshadowed by the new prime minister's rising popularity and media prominence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 72], "content_span": [73, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284519-0024-0001", "contents": "2018 vote of no confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, Aftermath\nFrom that point onwards, Cs leader Albert Rivera\u2014whose decision to promptly withdraw his party's support from Rajoy's government after the unveiling of the G\u00fcrtel sentence was said to unwittingly contribute to S\u00e1nchez's move to table the motion\u2014lost the political initiative and, after a brief success in the April 2019 general election (in which his party came nine seats short of overcoming Casado's PP as the main opposition force in Spain), would be forced to resign and withdraw from politics following his party's meltdown in the election of November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 72], "content_span": [73, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak\nThe 2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak occurred in the north-west of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) from May to July 2018. It was contained entirely within \u00c9quateur province, and was the first time that vaccination with the rVSV-ZEBOV Ebola vaccine had been attempted in the early stages of an Ebola outbreak, with a total of 3,481 people vaccinated. It was the ninth recorded Ebola outbreak in the DRC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak\nThe outbreak began on 8 May 2018, when it was reported that 17 people were suspected of having died from EVD near the town of Bikoro in the Province of \u00c9quateur. The World Health Organization declared the outbreak after two people were confirmed as having the disease. On 17 May, the virus was confirmed to have spread to the inland port city of Mbandaka, causing the WHO to raise its assessment of the national risk level to \"very high\", but not yet to constitute an international public health emergency. The WHO declared the outbreak over on 24 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0002-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak\nSubsequent to the end of this outbreak, the Kivu Ebola epidemic commenced in the eastern region of the country on 1 August 2018; it was declared over on 25 June 2020. A further separate outbreak in the Province of \u00c9quateur was announced on 1 June 2020 by the Congolese health ministry, described as the eleventh Ebola outbreak since records began.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0003-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Epidemiology, Early cases\nThe earliest cases are believed to have occurred in early April 2018. The suspected index case was a police officer, who died in a health center in the village of Ikoko-Impenge, near the market town of Bikoro in \u00c9quateur province, according to the International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0004-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Epidemiology, Early cases\nAfter his funeral, eleven family members became ill, and seven of them died. All of the seven deceased had attended the man's funeral or cared for him while he was sick. The identification of this individual as the index case has not yet been confirmed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0005-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Epidemiology, Early cases\n\u00c9quateur province's Provincial Health Division reported 21 cases with symptoms consistent with Ebola virus disease, of whom 17 had died, on 3 May 2018. Of these, eight cases were subsequently shown not to have been Ebola-related. The outbreak was declared on 8 May after samples from two of five patients in Bikoro tested positive for the Zaire strain of the Ebola virus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0006-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Epidemiology, Early cases\nOn 10 May, the World Health Organization (WHO) stated that the Democratic Republic of the Congo had a total of 32 cases of EVD, and a further two suspected cases were announced on the following day, bringing the total cases to 34, all located in the Bikoro area of DRC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0007-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Epidemiology, Early cases\n* numbers are subject to revision both up, when new cases are discovered, and down, when tests show cases were not Ebola-related.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0008-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Epidemiology, Spread to Mbandaka\nIn the eight previous Ebola outbreaks in DRC since 1976, the virus had never before reached a major city. In May 2018, for the first time, four cases were confirmed in the city of Mbandaka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 71], "content_span": [72, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0009-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Epidemiology, Spread to Mbandaka\nOn 14 May, suspected cases were reported in the Iboko and Wangata areas in \u00c9quateur province, in addition to Bikoro. The WHO reported on 17 May 2018 that the first case of this outbreak in an urban area had been confirmed in the Wangata district of Mbandaka city, the capital of \u00c9quateur province, about 100 miles north of Bikoro. Mbandaka is a busy, densely populated port on the Congo River with a population of 1.2 million, leading to a high risk of contagion. The following day, the WHO raised the health risk in DRC to \"very high\" due to the presence of the virus in an urban area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 71], "content_span": [72, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0010-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Epidemiology, Spread to Mbandaka\nThe DRC government was particularly concerned about the virus spreading by boat transport along the Congo between Mbandaka and the capital, Kinshasa. The WHO also considered that there was a high risk of the outbreak spreading to nine other countries in the region, including the bordering Republic of the Congo and Central African Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 71], "content_span": [72, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0011-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Epidemiology, Spread to Mbandaka\nAs of 23\u00a0May\u00a02018, the focus of the outbreak was split between Bikoro and Iboko; Iboko had 55% of the confirmed cases of EVD and Bikoro had 81.5% of the fatalities. The cases in the Bikoro health zone were located in Ikoko Impenge (12), Bikoro (6), Momboyo (1) and Moheli (1); those in the Iboko health zone were located in Itipo (13), Mpangi (2), Wenga (1) and Loongo (1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 71], "content_span": [72, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0012-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Epidemiology, Spread to Mbandaka\nAccording to the fifth situation report released by the WHO, the case fatality rate (CFR) was 42.3%. Demographics had been reported for 44 cases as of 22 May; there were 26 cases of EVD in men and 18 in women; 7 cases were in children 14 years and under, and 9 were in those over 60 years. By 23 May, there had been 5 reported cases in health-care workers, including two who died. Contact tracing was being employed to identify contacts with infected individuals. On 29 May, it was reported that 800 contacts had been identified in the city of Mbandaka; the next day it was reported that 500 people in the city had been vaccinated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 71], "content_span": [72, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0013-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Epidemiology, Spread to Mbandaka\nOn 29 May, the WHO indicated that nine neighbouring countries had been alerted for being at high risk of spread of EVD, On 4 June, it was reported that Angola had closed its border with the DRC due to the outbreak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 71], "content_span": [72, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0014-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Epidemiology, End of the outbreak\nThis outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo was declared over on 24 July 2018 after 42 days passed without any new confirmed cases. Although it was noted that a new outbreak occurred only one week later in the eastern region of Kivu; and it has been established that they are not linked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 72], "content_span": [73, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0015-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Containment challenges\nThe Bikoro area had three hospitals, but the area's health services were described by WHO as predominantly having \"limited functionality\"; they received supplies from international bodies but experienced frequent shortages. More than half of the Bikoro area cases were in Ikoko-Impenge, a village not connected to the road system. Bikoro lies in dense rain forest, and the area's remoteness and inadequate infrastructure hindered treatment of EVD patients, as well as surveillance and vaccination efforts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0016-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Containment challenges\nAdherence was another challenge: on 20\u201321 May, three individuals with EVD in an isolation ward of a treatment center in Mbandaka fled; two later died after attending a prayer meeting, at which they may have exposed 50 other attendees to the virus. Bushmeat was believed to be one vector of infection, but bushmeat vendors at the Mbandaka market told reporters that they did not believe Ebola was real or serious. Hostility towards health workers trying to offer medical assistance was also reported. On 29 May, the WHO forecast that there would be 100\u2013300 cases by the end of July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0017-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Virology\nZaire ebolavirus, which was identified in this outbreak, is included in genus Ebolavirus, family Filoviridae,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0018-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Virology\nThe virus was named for the Ebola River, which runs as a tributary of the Congo River in the Democratic Republic of the Congo; the Zaire strain was first identified in 1976 in Yambuku.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0019-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Response\nM\u00e9decins Sans Fronti\u00e8res (MSF) established treatment centers in Bikoro, Ikoko and Wangata. WHO sent an expert team to Bikoro on 8 May, and on 13 May, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus visited the town. On 18 May, the WHO IHR committee met and decided against declaring a Public Health Emergency of International Concern. As of 24\u00a0May\u00a02018, WHO had sent 138 technical personnel to the three affected areas; the Red Cross sent more than 150 people, and UNICEF personnel were also active.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0019-0001", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Response\nOther international agencies sending teams included the UK Public Health Rapid Support Team and the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention. The Wellcome Trust donated \u00a32 million towards the DRC outbreak. Merck donated its experimental vaccine and Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance helped to support vaccination operations. Several tons of supplies were shipped to the DRC, including protection and disinfection kits and palliative drugs. After the virus spread to the city of Mbandaka, DRC health minister Oly Ilunga Kalenga announced that healthcare would be provided free for those affected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0020-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Response\nUS President Donald Trump has advocated rescinding Ebola funding and most financing for State Department emergency responses. National Security Advisor John Bolton removed the National Security Council's health security chief on the day that the Ebola outbreak was declared, shutting down the entire epidemic prevention office. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says \u201cabout five\u201d of its staff advise the Congolese government. CDC presence appears to be smaller than West African countries'. The U.S. Agency for International Development promised $1 million to WHO for Ebola efforts. Germany has promised $5.8 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0021-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Response, Surveillance\nSurveillance of travelers at Mbandaka's port and airport was performed. The DRC Ministry of Public Health identified 115 areas where movement of people increased the risk of virus transmission, including 83 river ports, nine airports and seven bus stations, as well as 16 markets. Jos\u00e9 Makila, the DRC minister of transport, stated that the Navy would be used to surveil river traffic on the Congo. On 10 May, the Nigerian Ministry of Health reported it would start screening at its borders, and on 18 May 2018, a total of 20 countries had instituted screening of travelers coming from the DRC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0021-0001", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Response, Surveillance\nWHO sent teams to 8/9 of the neighboring countries to assess their capability to deal with EVD spread and facilitate their surveillance. The DRC Ministry of Public Health worked with surveyors and cartographers from UCLA and OpenStreetMap DRC to improve mapping of the affected area. A laboratory commenced operations in Bikoro on 16 May, enabling local testing of patient samples for Ebola virus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0022-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Response, Surveillance\nBurials were organized by MSF and the Red Cross of the Democratic Republic of the Congo to minimize the risk of transmission. The United Nations Radio broadcast EVD awareness information, and posters and leaflets were prepared and distributed. UNICEF warned 143 churches across Mbandaka of the risks of prayer meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0023-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Treatment, Ring vaccination with rVSV-ZEBOV\nHealth authorities including DRC's Ministry of Public Health used recombinant vesicular stomatitis virus\u2013Zaire Ebola virus (rVSV-ZEBOV) vaccine \u2013 a recently developed experimental Ebola vaccine, produced by Merck \u2013 to try to suppress the outbreak. This live-attenuated vaccine expresses the surface glycoprotein of the Kikwit 1995 strain of Zaire ebolavirus in a recombinant vesicular stomatitis virus vector. rVSV", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 82], "content_span": [83, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0023-0001", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Treatment, Ring vaccination with rVSV-ZEBOV\n-ZEBOV was trialed in Guinea and Sierra Leone during the West African epidemic of 2013\u201316, with 5837 people receiving the vaccine; the trial authors concluded that rVSV-ZEBOV provided \"substantial protection\" against EVD, but subsequent commentators have questioned the degree of protection obtained and the degree of long-term protection conferred is unknown. As the vaccine had not been approved by any regulatory authority, it was used in DRC under a compassionate use trial protocol.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 82], "content_span": [83, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0024-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Treatment, Ring vaccination with rVSV-ZEBOV\nA ring vaccination strategy was used, which involves vaccinating only those most likely to be infected: direct contacts of infected individuals, and contacts of those contacts. Other groups targeted included health workers, laboratory personnel, surveillance workers and people involved with burials. People who were vaccinated were followed up for 84 days to assess whether they were protected from infection and to monitor any adverse events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 82], "content_span": [83, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0024-0001", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Treatment, Ring vaccination with rVSV-ZEBOV\nA total of 4,320 doses of the rVSV-ZEBOV vaccine were delivered to DRC's capital Kinshasa by WHO on 16 May, and a further 3,240 doses arrived three days later; with another 8,000 doses to be made available. The vaccine must be transported and stored at between \u221260 and \u221280\u00a0\u00b0C. A cold chain was established in Kinshasa by 18 May and has been extended to Mbandaka. WHO planned to concentrate on vaccinating three sets of contacts of confirmed EVD cases, two in Bikoro and one in Mbandaka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 82], "content_span": [83, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0025-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Treatment, Ring vaccination with rVSV-ZEBOV\nVaccination started on 21 May among health workers in Mbandaka, with 7,560 vaccine doses ready for immediate use, according to WHO. The DRC health minister Oly Ilunga Kalenga stated that vaccination of health workers and Ebola case contacts in the Wangata and Bolenge areas of Mbandaka would take five days, after which vaccination would start in Bikoro and Iboko. As of 24\u00a0May\u00a02018, 154 people in Mbandaka had been vaccinated, and preparations were started for vaccinating in Bikoro and Iboko.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 82], "content_span": [83, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0026-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Treatment, Ring vaccination with rVSV-ZEBOV\nUp to 1,000 people were expected to have been vaccinated by 26 May, according to WHO. It was the first time that vaccination had been attempted in the early stages of an Ebola outbreak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 82], "content_span": [83, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0027-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Treatment, Ring vaccination with rVSV-ZEBOV\nThe rVSV-ZEBOV vaccine proved effective for the strain of the Ebola virus in this outbreak, having via ring vaccination protected some 3,481 individuals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 82], "content_span": [83, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0028-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Treatment, Experimental therapeutic agents\nHealth officials considered trialing experimental treatments, including the antiviral agents favipiravir and GS-5734, and the antibody ZMapp. All three agents were given to patients during the West African epidemic, but none has yet been proved to be effective. The DRC Ministry of Public Health also requested that the US trial mAb114 treatment during the outbreak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 81], "content_span": [82, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0028-0001", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Treatment, Experimental therapeutic agents\nThe mAb114 monoclonal antibody was developed by the National Institutes of Health and Jean-Jacques Muyembe at the National Institute for Biomedical Research, and is derived from an EVD survivor of the 1995 Kikwit outbreak who still had circulating anti-Ebola antibodies eleven years later; it has been tested in macaques but not in humans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 81], "content_span": [82, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0029-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Treatment, Experimental therapeutic agents\nThe ZMapp cocktail was assessed by the World Health Organization for emergency use under the MEURI ethical protocol. The panel agreed that \"the benefits of ZMapp outweigh its risks\" while noting that it presented logistical challenges, particularly that of requiring a cold chain for distribution and storage. Despite being at earlier stages of development, three other therapies, mAb114, remdesivir and REGN3470-3471-3479, were also approved for emergency use under MEURI and the Ministry of Health in the DRC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 81], "content_span": [82, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0030-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, Prognosis\nPost-Ebola virus syndrome affects those who have survived EVD infection; the resulting signs and symptoms can include muscle pain, eye problems and neurological problems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 48], "content_span": [49, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0031-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, History\nThe Democratic Republic of the Congo (formerly Zaire) has had several previous EVD outbreaks since 1976, which are summarised in the Table below. All have been located in the west or north of the country. Three previous outbreaks (in 1976, 1977 and 2014) occurring in former province of \u00c9quateur, of which the current \u00c9quateur province forms part.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 46], "content_span": [47, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0032-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, History\nIn 2014, the WHO considered that the DRC was lagging behind the rest of Africa in health expenditures, at the relative rate of Intl$32 per head.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 46], "content_span": [47, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0033-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, History\nFor the 2017 Democratic Republic of the Congo Ebola virus outbreak, the DRC regulatory authorities approved the use of the experimental rVSV-ZEBOV vaccine, but logistical issues delayed its implementation until the outbreak was already under control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 46], "content_span": [47, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284520-0034-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9quateur province Ebola outbreak, History\nShortly before the first cases of the 2018 Ebola outbreak, the country experienced a widespread cholera epidemic (June 2017 \u2013 spring 2018), which was the most serious in the country since 1994.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 46], "content_span": [47, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284521-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9toile de Bess\u00e8ges\nThe 2018 \u00c9toile de Bess\u00e8ges (transl. Star of Bess\u00e8ges) was a road cycling stage race that took place between 31 January and 4 February 2018. The race was rated as a 2.1 event as part of the 2018 UCI Europe Tour, and was the 48th edition of the \u00c9toile de Bess\u00e8ges cycling race. The race included five stages; the first four were road stages while the fifth and final stage was a 10.7-kilometre (6.6\u00a0mi) individual time trial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284521-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00c9toile de Bess\u00e8ges, Teams\nEighteen teams were invited to start the race. These included two UCI WorldTeams, twelve UCI Professional Continental teams and four UCI Continental teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284522-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00d6rebro regional election\n\u00d6rebro County or Region \u00d6rebro held a regional council election on 9 September 2018, on the same day as the general and municipal elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284522-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00d6rebro regional election, Results\nThe number of seats remained at 71 with the Social Democrats winning the most at 25, a drop of four from in 2014. The party declined from 40.7\u00a0% to 34.5\u00a0% of the popular vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284523-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00d6sterg\u00f6tland regional election\n\u00d6sterg\u00f6tland County or Region \u00d6sterg\u00f6tland held a regional council election on 9 September 2018, on the same day as the general and municipal elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284523-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00d6sterg\u00f6tland regional election, Results\nThe number of seats remained at 101 with the Social Democrats winning the most at 31, a drop of six from 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284523-0002-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00d6sterg\u00f6tland regional election, Municipalities\nThe Moderates received one vote more than the Social Democrats in S\u00f6derk\u00f6ping, even though both results were rounded to 22.2\u00a0%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284524-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00darvalsdeild\nThe 2018 \u00darvalsdeild karla, also known as Pepsi-deild karla for sponsorship reasons, was the 107th season of top-flight Icelandic football. Twelve teams contested the league, including the defending champions Valur, who won their 21st league title in 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284524-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00darvalsdeild\nThe season began on 27 April 2018 and concluded on 29 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284524-0002-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00darvalsdeild, Teams\nThe 2018 \u00darvalsdeild was contested by twelve teams, ten of which played in the division the previous year and two teams promoted from 1. deild karla. The bottom two teams from the previous season, V\u00edkingur \u00d3. and \u00cdA, were relegated to the 2018 1. deild karla and were replaced by Fylkir and Keflav\u00edk, champions and runners-up of the 2017 1. deild karla respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284524-0003-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00darvalsdeild, Results\nEach team will play home and away once against every other team for a total of 22 games each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284525-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00darvalsdeild kvenna (football)\nThe 2018 \u00darvalsdeild kvenna is the 47th season of the women's football top level league in Iceland. \u00de\u00f3r/KA is the defending champion. The season is scheduled to begin on 3 May and to conclude on 22 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284525-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00darvalsdeild kvenna (football), Teams\nThe 2018 \u00darvalsdeild kvenna is contested by ten teams, eight of which played in the division the previous year and two teams promoted from 1. deild kvenna. The bottom two teams from the previous season, Haukar and Fylkir, were relegated to the 1. deild kvenna and were replaced by HK/V\u00edkingur and Selfoss, champions and runners-up of the 2017 1. deild kvenna respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284526-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 \u00ddokary Liga\nThe 2018 Turkmenistan Higher League (\u00ddokary Liga) season is the 26th season of Turkmenistan's professional football league. The season began on 3 March 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284527-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 \u0130stanbul Cup\nThe 2018 \u0130stanbul Cup (also known as the TEB BNP Paribas \u0130stanbul Cup for sponsorship reasons) was a tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 11th edition of the \u0130stanbul Cup, and part of the WTA International tournaments of the 2018 WTA Tour. It took place in Istanbul, Turkey, from 23 through 29 April 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284527-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 \u0130stanbul Cup, 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-00284527-0002-0000", "contents": "2018 \u0130stanbul Cup, 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-00284528-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 \u0130stanbul Cup \u2013 Doubles\nDalila Jakupovi\u0107 and Nadiia Kichenok were the defending champions, but Kichenok chose to compete in Stuttgart instead. Jakupovi\u0107 played alongside Irina Khromacheva, but lost in the first round to Natela Dzalamidze and Anna Kalinskaya.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284528-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 \u0130stanbul Cup \u2013 Doubles\nLiang Chen and Zhang Shuai won the title, defeating Xenia Knoll and Anna Smith in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284529-0000-0000", "contents": "2018 \u0130stanbul Cup \u2013 Singles\nElina Svitolina was the defending champion, but chose to compete in Stuttgart instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284529-0001-0000", "contents": "2018 \u0130stanbul Cup \u2013 Singles\nPauline Parmentier won the title, her first since 2008, defeating Polona Hercog in the final, 6\u20134, 3\u20136, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284530-0000-0000", "contents": "2018/19 Challenge Tour 1\nThe 2018/19 Challenge Tour 1 was an amateur snooker tournament that took place between 2\u20133 June 2018 at the Meadowside Leisure Centre in Burton upon Trent, England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284530-0001-0000", "contents": "2018/19 Challenge Tour 1, 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-00284531-0000-0000", "contents": "2018/19 Challenge Tour 10\nThe 2018/19 Challenge Tour 10 was an amateur snooker tournament, that took place between 6\u20137 March 2019 at the South West Snooker Academy in Gloucester, England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284531-0001-0000", "contents": "2018/19 Challenge Tour 10, 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-00284532-0000-0000", "contents": "2018/19 Challenge Tour 2\nThe 2018/19 Challenge Tour 2 was an amateur snooker tournament that took place between 10\u201311 July 2018 at the Preston Guild Hall in Preston, England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284532-0001-0000", "contents": "2018/19 Challenge Tour 2, 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-00284533-0000-0000", "contents": "2018/19 Challenge Tour 3\nThe 2018/19 Challenge Tour 3 was an amateur snooker tournament that took place on 28 July 2018 at the Arena Riga in Riga, Latvia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284533-0001-0000", "contents": "2018/19 Challenge Tour 3, 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-00284534-0000-0000", "contents": "2018/19 Challenge Tour 4\nThe 2018/19 Challenge Tour 4 was an amateur snooker tournament that took place between 27\u201328 August 2018 at the Stadthalle F\u00fcrth in F\u00fcrth, Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284534-0001-0000", "contents": "2018/19 Challenge Tour 4, 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-00284535-0000-0000", "contents": "2018/19 Challenge Tour 5\nThe 2018/19 Challenge Tour 5 was an amateur snooker tournament that took place between 18\u201319 September 2018 at the Cueball Derby in Derby, England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284535-0001-0000", "contents": "2018/19 Challenge Tour 5, 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-00284536-0000-0000", "contents": "2018/19 Challenge Tour 6\nThe 2018/19 Challenge Tour 6 was an amateur snooker tournament that took place between 4\u20135 October 2018 at the De Soeverein in Lommel, Belgium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284536-0001-0000", "contents": "2018/19 Challenge Tour 6, 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-00284537-0000-0000", "contents": "2018/19 Challenge Tour 7\nThe 2018/19 Challenge Tour 7 was an amateur snooker tournament that took place between 13\u201314 October 2018 at the Barnsley Metrodome in Barnsley, England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284537-0001-0000", "contents": "2018/19 Challenge Tour 7, 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-00284538-0000-0000", "contents": "2018/19 Challenge Tour 8\nThe 2018/19 Challenge Tour 8 was an amateur snooker tournament, that took place between 24\u201325 November 2018 at the Snooker Termin\u00e1l in Budapest, Hungary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284538-0001-0000", "contents": "2018/19 Challenge Tour 8, 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-00284539-0000-0000", "contents": "2018/19 Challenge Tour 9\nThe 2018/19 Challenge Tour 9 was an amateur snooker tournament, that took place between 26\u201327 January 2019 at the Star Snooker Academy in Sheffield, England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284539-0001-0000", "contents": "2018/19 Challenge Tour 9, 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-00284540-0000-0000", "contents": "20180206 Live at Budokan\n20180206 Live at Budokan is the third live DVD by Japanese rock band Coldrain, released on September 26, 2018. The end credits of the DVD/Blu-ray is the song \"My Addiction\" from the first studio album Final Destination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284540-0001-0000", "contents": "20180206 Live at Budokan\nThe entirety of Fateless is played in full with the exception of \"Aftermath\", which was not selected for unknown reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284540-0002-0000", "contents": "20180206 Live at Budokan\nDue to the COVID-19 pandemic, Coldrain announced that they would showcase the entire performance on YouTube to help entertain everyone while in quarantine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284540-0003-0000", "contents": "20180206 Live at Budokan, Track listing\n\"20180206 Live at Budokan\" was released in CD, DVD and Blu-ray formats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284540-0004-0000", "contents": "20180206 Live at Budokan, Track listing, DVD and Blu-ray\nAll lyrics are written by Masato Hayakawa; all music is composed by Coldrain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284541-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 1. FC K\u00f6ln season\nThe 2018\u201319 1. FC K\u00f6ln season was the 71st season in the football club's history and 1st consecutive and 9th overall season in the second flight of German football, the 2. Bundesliga, having been relegated from the Bundesliga in 2018. In addition to the domestic league, 1. FC K\u00f6ln also participated in this season's edition of the domestic cup the DFB-Pokal. This was the 71st season for K\u00f6ln in the RheinEnergieStadion, located in Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. The season covered a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284542-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 1. FC Magdeburg season\nThe 2018\u201319 1. FC Magdeburg season is the 53rd season in the football club's history. The season covers a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019. It is the first season the club plays in 2. Bundesliga, and the second season in a second-tier league after they had competed in the DDR-Liga in the 1966\u201367 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284542-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 1. FC Magdeburg 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-00284543-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 1. FC N\u00fcrnberg season\nThe 2018\u201319 1. FC N\u00fcrnberg season is the 119th season in the football club's history and 33rd overall season in the top flight of German football, the Bundesliga, having been promoted from the 2. Bundesliga in 2018. In addition to the domestic league, 1. FC N\u00fcrnberg also are participating in this season's edition of the domestic cup, the DFB-Pokal. This is the 69th season for N\u00fcrnberg in the Max-Morlock-Stadion, located in Nuremberg, Bavaria, Germany. The season covers a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284543-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 1. FC N\u00fcrnberg 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-00284544-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 1. FC Union Berlin season\nThe 2018\u201319 1. FC Union Berlin season is the 53rd season in the football club's history and 9th consecutive season in the second division of German football, the 2. Bundesliga and 13th overall. In addition to the domestic league, 1. FC Union Berlin also are participating in this season's edition of the domestic cup, the DFB-Pokal. This is the 53rd season for 1. FC Union Berlin in the Stadion An der Alten F\u00f6rsterei, located in K\u00f6penick, Berlin, Germany. The season covers a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284544-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 1. FC Union Berlin season, Season review, Pre-season\nAfter a disappointing season in which Union was only able to avoid relegation on the 33rd matchday, the team started into the season with a brand new look. Starting at the front with a new manager Urs Fischer, who has won numerous titles in the Swiss Super League with FC Basel; this was only the beginning of a new Union squad that saw drastic changes from the season before. Union would start the new campaign without fan favorite Steven Skrzybski but added key players such as Rafal Gikiewicz and Sebastian Andersson, both of whom would go on to feature in every fixture.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284544-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 1. FC Union Berlin season, Season review, 2. Bundesliga first half (matchday 1\u201317)\nUnion Berlin started their 13th ever 2. Bundesliga season with a 1\u20130 win at home to start the campaign, courtesy of a late free kick goal by former captain Felix Kroos. A 1\u20131 draw the next week against 1. FC K\u00f6ln in Cologne, was already a reason for optimism for the K\u00f6penick based club, as K\u00f6ln were predicted by many to promote back into the Bundesliga. This draw would be followed up with many similar score lines, as Union managed a staggering 10 draws in just the first half of the season, along with 7 wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 90], "content_span": [91, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284544-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 1. FC Union Berlin season, Season review, 2. Bundesliga first half (matchday 1\u201317)\nTwo key fixtures were a matchday nine 1\u20131 draw against 1. FC Heidenheim where goalkeeper Gikiewicz saved Union with a headed goal from a corner kick in the 94th minute. The second a 2\u20132 away draw against Hamburger SV, who after relegating for the first time in their history the season before, were favorites to go back up. During that first half of the season, Union was also drawn against Borussia Dortmund in the 2nd round of the DFB Pokal after 90 minutes, coming close to beating the Bundesliga club and creating a massive upset in Dortmund. Only to be stymied by a Marco Reus penalty kick goal in the final moments of the game. This impressive early-season run had Die Eisernen remaining undefeated in their first 17 games in 3rd place, within striking distance of promotion heading into the winter break to the surprise of many.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 90], "content_span": [91, 926]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284544-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 1. FC Union Berlin season, Season review, 2. Bundesliga second half (matchday 18\u201334)\nIn the first matchday of the 2nd half of the season, Union fans were met with a worrying result, losing the first game back in a 0\u20133 collapse to midtable Erzgebirge Aue. However, things quickly got back up on track with a win against eventual champions K\u00f6ln in Berlin 2\u20130. Union maintained their incredible results while playing at home the rest of the campaign, only losing one game out of their 17 at home all season against SC Paderborn, who had emerged as a promotion candidate as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 92], "content_span": [93, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284544-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 1. FC Union Berlin season, Season review, 2. Bundesliga second half (matchday 18\u201334)\nOn matchday 31 a 2\u20130 win against Hamburger SV in the near-impenetrable fortress that was the Stadion An der Alten F\u00f6rsterei launched Die Eisernen back into the top three, good enough for a playoff against the 16th place Bundesliga team for a chance at promotion. The possibility to promote automatically was there on the last matchday of the season, a win against VfL Bochum was all they needed to leapfrog into 2nd. Union fought their way back from 0\u20132 to a 2\u20132, and nearly managed the victory at the last gasp. With the draw, Union finished with 57 points, and only missed 2nd place on goal differential. However, their amazing home form and ability to draw on the road was enough, as they secured a place in the Bundesliga Relegation playoffs, facing off in a two-leg series against VfB Stuttgart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 92], "content_span": [93, 893]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284544-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 1. FC Union Berlin season, Season review, Relegation playoff (leg 1)\nThe first relegation playoff in club history would not be an easy task for the boys from K\u00f6penick. The relegation playoffs heavily favor the team from the Bundesliga, with few teams managing to come out victorious from 2. Bundesliga. The first leg of the playoffs was played in Stuttgart at Mercedes-Benz Arena and couldn't have been harder on the Union fans emotionally. Stuttgart took a 1\u20130 lead just before halftime thanks to Christian Gentner, but 89 seconds later Suleiman Abdullahi managed to reply with an assist from Sebastian Andersson, and all was level at the break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 76], "content_span": [77, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284544-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 1. FC Union Berlin season, Season review, Relegation playoff (leg 1)\nThe second half was opened quickly by VfB Stuttgart and started well for the home side as halftime substitute Mario Gomez found a goal for a quick 2\u20131 advantage. Union didn't give up despite the second setback, just as they hadn\u2019t on the road all season. They came back strong, played out their chances and in the 68th minute Marvin Friedrich tied the game up at 2\u20132 from a corner kick by Christopher Trimmel. Friedrich had featured in every single game during the season for Union, but this was the first time finding the back of the net in any.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 76], "content_span": [77, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284544-0004-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 1. FC Union Berlin season, Season review, Relegation playoff (leg 1)\nAfter that goal it was Union who looked the more likely side to win, as Sebastian Andersson created two great chances that very nearly forced the improbable victory. Union fans we\u2019re pleased with the 2\u20132 draw, since the away goals rule was in effect for these playoffs and Stuttgart had to come to Berlin and manage to find a win that had eluded virtually all visitors during the campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 76], "content_span": [77, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284544-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 1. FC Union Berlin season, Season review, Relegation playoff (leg 2)\nStadion An Der Alten F\u00f6rsterei was waiting for them, a place that Union had made a fortress during the 2018\u201319 season. Stuttgart would be forced to try and play attacking soccer, needing a 3 goal draw or victory to remain in Bundesliga. It was not an attractive game ripe with chances for either side, as the two teams battled in front of the crowd of over 22,000. Stuttgart thought they had the lead in the 9th minute when Dennis Aogo hit a free kick passed Gikiewicz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 76], "content_span": [77, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284544-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 1. FC Union Berlin season, Season review, Relegation playoff (leg 2)\nSomewhat controversially, it was promptly taken back by the video assistant referee, as Nicol\u00e1s Gonz\u00e1lez had been found to have obstructed Gikiewicz's view from an offside position, thus making the goal unofficial. The rest of the game was nerve-wracking for both sides. The match stayed 0-0 into the 80th minute, a goal for either side would see their side into the Bundesliga almost certainly. As the game opened up, Abdullahi had two shots beat the VfB Stuttgart defense, only to be denied by the woodwork each time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 76], "content_span": [77, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284544-0005-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 1. FC Union Berlin season, Season review, Relegation playoff (leg 2)\nStuttgart came towards the goal of Union more and more, each time the stout Union defense and Gikiewicz were there to answer. Finally, Union had to survive the longest five minutes the fans of Stadion An der Alten F\u00f6rsterei had ever witnessed. When the final whistle came, Union Berlin has successfully promoted to the Bundesliga, for the first time in their long history. Meanwhile the 2\u20132 aggregate result after two draws saw VfB Stuttgart relegated on the away goals rule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 76], "content_span": [77, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284544-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 1. FC Union Berlin season, Season review, Aftermath\nOnly moments after the game ended, the field was flooded with Union fans in celebration. It was a success which few thought possible pre-season but had come to fruition none the less. The small club from the east side of Berlin with a cherished bond between the club and its fans were going to play in the Bundesliga for the very first time. The 56th-ever team to play in the Bundesliga since its founding, and the first-ever from East Berlin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284544-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 1. FC Union Berlin season, Season review, Aftermath\nThe success in the promotion playoff cemented the 2018\u201319 season as the most famous ever in club history to this date, and simply a night no Union Berlin fan was ever going to forget. The following week Union paraded around the streets of Berlin and even down the Spree on a team boat, culminating in a party for players and fans alike at the Stadion An der Alten F\u00f6rsterei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284544-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 1. FC Union Berlin 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284544-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 1. FC Union Berlin season, Matches, Relegation play-offs\n2\u20132 on aggregate. Union Berlin won on away goals and are promoted to the Bundesliga, while VfB Stuttgart are relegated to the 2. Bundesliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284545-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 1. FSV Mainz 05 season\nThe 2018\u201319 1. FSV Mainz 05 season was the 114th season in the football club's history and tenth consecutive and thirteenth overall season in the top flight of German football, the Bundesliga, having been promoted from the 2. Bundesliga in 2009. In addition to the domestic league, Mainz 05 also participated in this season's edition of the domestic cup, the DFB-Pokal. This was the eighth season for Mainz in the Opel Arena, located in Mainz, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. The season covered a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284546-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 2. Bundesliga\nThe 2018\u201319 2. Bundesliga was the 45th season of the 2. Bundesliga. It began on 3 August 2018 and concluded on 19 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284546-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 2. Bundesliga\n1. FC K\u00f6ln and SC Paderborn were automatically promoted to the Bundesliga; Union Berlin were promoted after winning the Bundesliga relegation play-offs. 1. FC Magdeburg and MSV Duisburg were automatically relegated to the 3. Liga, while FC Ingolstadt 04 were also relegated to the 3. Liga after losing a playoff against SV Wehen Wiesbaden of that league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284546-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 2. Bundesliga, Season, Promotion Battle\nBefore the start of the season, Bundesliga relegations 1. FC K\u00f6ln and Hamburger SV were considered the biggest favourites for promotion. In the first round, both fulfilled this role: the Hamburger SV was able to get just ahead of Herbstmeister, the 1. FC Union Berlin followed after a round without defeat, including 10 draws, in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284546-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 2. Bundesliga, Season, Promotion Battle\nWhile the FC St. Pauli, the 1. FC Heidenheim and Holstein Kiel were gradually eliminated from the field of the chasers, the newly promoted SC Paderborn 07 advanced to the promotion places thanks to a strong back-series (1st place with 32 points in the back-round table). After 32 days of play, the 1. FC K\u00f6ln was crowned 2. Bundesliga champion for the fourth time and celebrated the re-entry into the Bundesliga; in the end, the 1. FC K\u00f6ln recorded the most victories and scored the most goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284546-0002-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 2. Bundesliga, Season, Promotion Battle\nThe Hamburger SV, on the other hand, played a disastrous return round (15th place with 19 points in the back-round table), which finally resulted in the missed re-emergence one match day before the end; the fight for second place became a long-distance duel between SC Paderborn 07 and 1. FC Union Berlin on the last day of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284546-0002-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 2. Bundesliga, Season, Promotion Battle\nIn the end, SC Paderborn 07 managed to make it to the Bundesliga on the last day of the season despite a 1-3 defeat in Dresden, 1. FC Union Berlin finished third in the standings and competed in the promotion delegation against VfB Stuttgart. After a 2-2 draw in Stuttgart and a 0-0 draw at home, 1. FC Union Berlin moved up to the Bundesliga for the first time thanks to the away goals rule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284546-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 2. Bundesliga, Season, Relegation battle\nAfter the first promotion to the 2. Bundesliga, the 1. FC Magdeburg had a first appearance with the direct relegation, which was fixed on the 33rd match day. In addition to the 1. FC Magdeburg, MSV Duisburg was also relegated after only two seasons in the second-class. On the last day of the match, SV Sandhausen secured direct class position with a 2-2 win at SSV Jahn Regensburg, FC Ingolstadt 04 closed the season on the 16th place in the table after a 2-4 defeat in Heidenheim and competed in the relegation delegation against SV Wehen Wiesbaden. After a 2-1 in Wiesbaden, the FC Ingolstadt 04 lost in the home game with 2:3 and was relegated to the 3rd league due to the away goals rule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284546-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 2. Bundesliga, Promotion play-offs, Second leg\n2\u20132 on aggregate. Union Berlin won on away goals and are promoted to the Bundesliga, while VfB Stuttgart are relegated to the 2. Bundesliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 54], "content_span": [55, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284546-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 2. Bundesliga, Relegation play-offs, Second leg\n4\u20134 on aggregate. Wehen Wiesbaden won on away goals and are promoted to the 2. Bundesliga, while FC Ingolstadt are relegated to the 3. Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284547-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 2. Frauen-Bundesliga\nThe 2018\u201319 2. Frauen-Bundesliga was the 15th season of Germany's second-tier women's football league, and the first as a single-division league. The season began on 18 August 2018 and concluded on 19 May 2019. The champions and runners-up were promoted to the Frauen-Bundesliga, while the three bottom teams were relegated to the Frauen-Regionalliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284547-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 2. Frauen-Bundesliga\n1. FC K\u00f6ln and USV Jena gained promotion to the Bundesliga while Hessen Wetzlar, SV Weinberg and SGS Essen II were relegated to the Regionalliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284548-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 2. Liga (Slovakia)\nThe 2018\u201319 2. Liga is the 26th season of the 2. Liga in Slovakia, since its establishment in 1993.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284548-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 2. Liga (Slovakia), 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-00284549-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 3. Liga\nThe 2018\u201319 3. Liga was the eleventh season of the 3. Liga. It began on 27 July 2018 and concluded on 18 May 2019. For the first time in the history of the 3. Liga, no reserve teams managed to obtain a spot in the league. VfL Osnabr\u00fcck and Karlsruher SC gained promotion the 2. Bundesliga, with Wehen Wiesbaden also earning promotion through the play-offs, while Energie Cottbus, Sportfreunde Lotte, Fortuna K\u00f6ln and VfR Aalen were relegated to the Regionalliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284550-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 3. Liga (Slovakia)\nThe 2018\u201319 3. Liga was the 26th season of the third-tier football league of Slovakia since its establishment in 1993. The league is composed of 63 teams divided in four groups of 16 teams each; only 3. liga V\u00fdchod (East) includes 15 teams. Teams are divided into four divisions: 3. liga Bratislava, 3. liga Z\u00e1pad (West), 3. liga Stred (Central), 3. liga V\u00fdchod (Eastern), according to geographical separation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284551-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 A-League\nThe 2018\u201319 A-League was the 42nd season of national level soccer in Australia, and the 14th since the establishment of the A-League in 2004. The regular season commenced on 19 October 2018 and concluded on 28 April 2019. The play-offs began on 3 May 2019 and ended with the Grand Final on 19 May 2019. Sydney FC defeated Perth Glory in the Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284551-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 A-League, Clubs, Foreign players\nThe following do not fill a Visa position:1Those players who were born and started their professional career abroad but have since gained Australian citizenship (and New Zealand citizenship, in the case of Wellington Phoenix);2Australian citizens (and New Zealand citizens, in the case of Wellington Phoenix) who have chosen to represent another national team;3Injury Replacement Players, or National Team Replacement Players;4Guest Players (eligible to play a maximum of fourteen games)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284551-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 A-League, Season statistics, Attendances, By club\nThese are the attendance records of each of the teams at the end of the home and away season. The table does not include finals series attendances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 57], "content_span": [58, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284551-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 A-League, Season statistics, Discipline\nDuring the season each club is given fair play points based on the number of cards they received in games. A yellow card is worth 1 point, a second yellow card is worth 2 points, and a red card is worth 3 points. At the annual awards night, the club with the fewest points wins the Fair Play Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 47], "content_span": [48, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284551-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 A-League, Awards, Monthly awards\nThe A-League Goal of the Month is an award that recognises the player who is deemed to have scored the best A-League goal each month of the season. The winner is chosen by an online public vote through the A-League website.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284551-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 A-League, Awards, Annual awards\nThe NAB Young Footballer of the Year Award was awarded to the finest performance of an under-23 player from Australia or New Zealand throughout the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 39], "content_span": [40, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284551-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 A-League, Awards, Annual awards\nThe following end of the season awards were announced at the 2018\u201319 Dolan Warren Awards night on 13 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 39], "content_span": [40, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284552-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 A.C. ChievoVerona season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Associazione Calcio ChievoVerona's eleventh consecutive season in Serie A. Chievo are competing in Serie A and the Coppa Italia, having finished 13th in the league the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284552-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 A.C. ChievoVerona season\nLorenzo D'Anna remained as coach of the club after replacing Rolando Maran during the 2017\u201318 season. On 13 September, Chievo were deducted 3 points after being found guilty of false accounting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284553-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 A.C. Milan season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 120th season in Associazione Calcio Milan's history and their 85th (108th overall) in the top-flight of Italian football. Milan competed in Serie A, the Coppa Italia, the UEFA Europa League and the Supercoppa Italiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284553-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 A.C. Milan season\nMilan qualified for the 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League group stage as the sixth-placed team of the previous season, but were originally banned by UEFA from European competition due to violations of Financial Fair Play regulations for failure to break-even. On 10 July 2018, Li Yonghong failed to keep up with his loan repayment plan, neglecting to deposit a \u20ac32\u00a0million installment on time in order to keep refinancing the \u20ac303\u00a0million loan debt owed to Elliott Management Corporation. As a result, ownership of the club was immediately transferred to the American hedge fund.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284553-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 A.C. Milan season\nMilan appealed to the Court of Arbitration for Sport, and the ban was overturned on 20 July 2018. Following the shareholders' meeting held on 21 July 2018, all previous directors, including Marco Fassone and Massimiliano Mirabelli, were officially dismissed, with Paolo Scaroni becoming the new chairman of the club, replacing Li Yonghong. In the summer of 2018, Leonardo returned to Milan as a sporting director, while the club's hall of fame player Paolo Maldini was hired for the first time as a sporting strategy and development director. In September 2018, the club hired a new CEO, Ivan Gazidis, who had previously worked with Arsenal for over a decade and began his work with Milan on 1 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284553-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 A.C. Milan season\nOnce again, the club failed to achieve its primary objective of qualifying for the Champions League, either through winning the Europa League (Milan suffered a group stage elimination), or finishing in the top 4 of the national league competition, i.e. Serie A. On 28 May 2019, following an unsatisfactory result, both Leonardo and Gennaro Gattuso announced their resignations, with the latter donating his entire \u20ac5,5 million severance package back to the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284553-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 A.C. Milan season\nHaving taken a week to contemplate his future, on 14 June 2019 Maldini assumed the role of a technical director responsible for the \"planning and development of the club's sporting area\". On the same day, another club legend Zvonimir Boban was appointed Chief Football Officer, overseeing the club's sporting area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284553-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 A.C. Milan season, Transfers, Summer window\nDeals officialised beforehand will be effective starting from 1 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284553-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 A.C. Milan season, Transfers, Winter window\nDeals officialised beforehand will be effective starting from 2 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284554-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 A.S. Roma season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Associazione Sportiva Roma's 91st in existence and 90th season in the top flight of Italian football. Having finished third the previous season, the club competed in Serie A, the Coppa Italia, and the UEFA Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284554-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 A.S. Roma season\nThe season was coach Eusebio Di Francesco's second in charge of the club. On 18 June 2018, Di Francesco extended his contract to remain as manager until 2020. However, after a poor string of results and elimination from the Champions League, Di Francesco was sacked on 7 March 2019 and replaced with former Roma manager Claudio Ranieri.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284555-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ABA League First Division\nThe 2018\u201319 ABA League First Division is the 18th season of the ABA League with 12 teams from Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro, Slovenia and Serbia participating in it. It is the first time since the 2011\u201312 season that there are no participants from North Macedonia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284555-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ABA League First Division, Format changes\nOn March 13, 2018, the Adriatic League Assembly decided to abolish the National standings and, as of the 2018\u201319 season, participants are determined only based on the results in the competitions under the umbrella of the Adriatic League (First Division and Second Division). Promotion and relegation will now be based on the First and Second Division. The last place team in the First Division is relegated to the Second Division, while the winner of the Second Division is promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284555-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 ABA League First Division, Format changes\nAlso, as of the 2018\u201319 season, the 11th placed team of the 2018\u201319 First Division season and the runners-up of the 2018\u201319 Second Division season will play in a Relegation Playoff for a spot in the 2019\u201320 First Division season. The format of the Qualifiers will be best of three, while the home court advantage will be given to the team that played in the First Division in the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284555-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ABA League First Division, Format changes\nThe maximum number of clubs from one country in the First Division is five. The last placed club in the First Division will have a guaranteed place in the Second Division in the following season. The confirmed competition system shall not be changed until the end of the 2024\u201325 season, if there are no significant changes in the European basketball by then.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284555-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ABA League First Division, Teams, Promotion and relegation\nA total of 12 teams will contest the league, including 11 sides from the 2017\u201318 season and one promoted from the 2017\u201318 Second Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284555-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ABA League First Division, Regular season\nThe season began on September 28, 2018. The regular season ended on March 17, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284555-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ABA League First Division, Playoffs\nThe semi-finals will be played in a best-of-three format, while the Finals were played in a best-of-five format. Playoffs will begin on 23 March 2019 and planned to end by 22 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284555-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ABA League First Division, Relegation playoffs\nAs of the 2018\u201319 season, the 11th placed team of the 2018\u201319 First Division season and the runners-up of the 2018\u201319 Second Division season will play in the Qualifiers for a spot in the 2019\u201320 First Division season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284555-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ABA League First Division, Relegation playoffs\nAs the team coming from the ABA League, Zadar had the home court advantage in the first and third game of the series, while MZT was the host of the second game of the Qualifiers series. Zadar won the series 2\u22121 and kept its First League status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284555-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ABA League First Division, Attendances\nUpdated to games played on April 22, 2019Source: Notes:1: previous season average applied to second division games", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284556-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ABA League Second Division\nThe 2018\u201319 ABA League Second Division is the 2nd season of the ABA Second Division with 12 teams from Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Serbia, and Slovenia participating in it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284556-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ABA League Second Division, Format changes\nOn March 13, 2018, the Adriatic League Assembly decided to abolish the National standings and, as of the 2018\u201319 season, participants are determined only based on the results in the competitions under the umbrella of the Adriatic League (First Division and Second Division). According to that, the promotion to the First Division is possible only from the Second Division. The last placed of the 2017\u201318 First Division season lose the right to participate in the 2018\u201319 season and its place is given to the 2017\u201318 Champion of the Second Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284556-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 ABA League Second Division, Format changes\nAlso, as of the 2018\u201319 season, the 11th placed team of the 2018\u201319 First Division season and the runners-up of the 2018\u201319 Second Division season will play in the Qualifiers for a spot in the 2019\u201320 First Division season. The format of the Qualifiers will be best of three, while the home court advantage will be given to the team that played in the First Division in the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284556-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ABA League Second Division, Format changes\nThe maximum number of clubs from one country in the First Division is five, while in the Second Division each country will have two participants. The last placed club in the First Division will have a guaranteed place in the Second Division in the following season. The confirmed competition system shall not be changed until the end of the 2024\u201325 season, if there are no significant changes in the European basketball by then.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284556-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ABA League Second Division, Format changes\nInstead of the Final Four tournament, as of the 2018\u201319 season, the Second Division champion will be given after the Playoffs, where four best teams of the regular season will compete. The last placed club in the 2017\u201318 season loses the right to participate in the 2018\u201319 season, regardless of its result in the national championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284556-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ABA League Second Division, Teams, Team allocation\nMacedonian League champions Rabotni\u010dki withdrew their place in 2018\u201319 season, as well as the semifinalists Kumanovo and Blokotehna. Their place was taken by Serbian team Vr\u0161ac.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284556-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ABA League Second Division, Teams, Team allocation\nThe labels in the parentheses show how each team qualified for the place of its starting round:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284556-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ABA League Second Division, Promotion playoffs\nAs of the 2018\u201319 season, the 11th placed team of the 2018\u201319 First Division season and the runners-up of the 2018\u201319 Second Division season will play in the Qualifiers for a spot in the 2019\u201320 First Division season. The format of the Qualifiers will be best of three, while the home court advantage will be given to the team that played in the First Division in the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284556-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ABA League Second Division, Promotion playoffs, Teams\nAs the team, coming from the ABA League, Zadar had the home court advantage in the first and third game of the series, while MZT was the host of the second game of the Qualifiers series. Zadar won the series 2\u22121 and kept its First League status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284556-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ABA League Second Division, Attendances\nUpdated to games played on March 14, 2019Source: Notes:1: 2017\u201318 season average applied to ABA League games", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284557-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ABL season\nThe 2018\u201319 ABL season was the ninth season of competition of the ASEAN Basketball League. The regular season started on 16 November 2018 and ended on 28 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284557-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ABL season, Teams\nAll the teams in 2017\u201318 season returned for this season. However, the following changes were happened:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284557-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ABL season, Teams, Imports\nThe following is the list of imports, which had played for their respective teams at least once. Each team can register 3 imports. Flags indicate the citizenship/s the player holds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284557-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ABL season, Regular season\nEach team will play 26 games throughout the season, 13 at home and 13 away. Each team will play the remaining 4 teams in their group, twice each at home and away. Each team will also play the 5 teams from the other group, once each at home and away. The groupings are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284557-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ABL season, Playoffs, Quarterfinals\nThe quarterfinals was a best-of-three series, with the higher seeded team hosting Game 1, and if necessary Game 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284557-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ABL season, Playoffs, Semifinals\nThe semifinals was a best-of-three series, with the higher seeded team hosting Game 1, and if necessary Game 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284557-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ABL season, Playoffs, Finals\nThe finals is a best-of-five series, with the higher seeded team hosting Game 1, 2, and 5, if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 36], "content_span": [37, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284557-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ABL season, Awards, End-of-season awards\nThe winners were announced before Game 2 of the 2019 ABL Finals at the OCBC Arena, Singapore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 48], "content_span": [49, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284558-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AC Sparta Prague season\nThe 2018\u201319 AC Sparta Prague season was the club's 124th season in existence and the 26th consecutive season in the top flight of Czech football. In addition to the domestic league, AC Sparta Prague participated in this season's editions of the Czech Cup and the UEFA Europa League. The season covered the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284558-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AC Sparta Prague season\nManager Pavel Hapal was fired on 27 July 2018, a day after loss against FK Spartak Subotica in first leg of UEFA Europa League's Second qualifying round. He was temporary replaced by Zden\u011bk \u0160\u010dasn\u00fd, Sparta's sports director.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284558-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AC Sparta Prague 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-00284558-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AC Sparta Prague 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-00284559-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ACB season\nThe 2018\u201319 ACB season, also known as Liga Endesa for sponsorship reasons, was the 36th season of the Spanish basketball league. It started on 29 September 2018 with the first round of the regular season and ended on 21 June 2019 with the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284559-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ACB season\nReal Madrid defended successfully the title and conquered its second consecutive league, 35th overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284559-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ACB season, Teams, Promotion and relegation (pre-season)\nA total of 18 teams contested the league, including 16 sides from the 2017\u201318 season and two promoted from the 2017\u201318 LEB Oro. This include the top team from the LEB Oro, and the winners of the LEB Oro playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284559-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ACB season, Season summary\nOn 30 September 2018, just in the first round and coming back Caf\u00e9s Candelas Breog\u00e1n 12 years later to the Liga ACB, their inaugural match against Divina Seguros Joventut was postponed due to problems with the main clock and the shot clocks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284559-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ACB season, Regular season, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after completion of each round. In order to preserve chronological evolvements, any postponed matches are not included in 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 13, but then postponed and played between rounds 16 and 17, it will be added to the standings for round 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 54], "content_span": [55, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284560-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ACF Fiorentina season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 92nd season in ACF Fiorentina's history and their 81st in the top-flight of Italian football. Having finished 8th the previous season, Fiorentina competed only in Serie A and in the Coppa Italia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284560-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ACF Fiorentina season\nThe season was coach Stefano Pioli's second in charge of the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284561-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AEK Athens F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was AEK Athens' 58th competitive season in the top flight of Greek football, 9th season in the Super League, and 95th year in existence as a football club. They also competed in the Greek Cup, reaching the final for the third consecutive time, and in the UEFA Champions League, reaching the Group Stage. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284561-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AEK Athens F.C. season, Players, Squad statistics\nNOTE: The players are the ones that have been announced by the AEK Athens' press release. No edits should be made unless a player arrival or exit is announced. Updated 30 June 2019, 23:59 UTC +2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284561-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AEK Athens F.C. season, Super League, League Table, Fixtures\nThe Super League Greece fixture list was announced on 9 August 2018. AEK Athens began their title defence against PAS Giannina at Olympic Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 68], "content_span": [69, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284561-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AEK Athens F.C. season, Greek Cup\nAEK Athens entered the Greek Cup at the fourth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284561-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AEK Athens F.C. season, UEFA Champions League\nAEK Athens entered the Champions League at the third qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284561-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AEK Athens F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Third Qualifying Round\nOn 1 August, it was determined that AEK Athens would face Celtic (Scotland) in the Third Qualifying Round of the UEFA Champions League. The Greek champions eliminated the Scottish side and secured a place into the UEFA Champions League Play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284561-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AEK Athens F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Play-Off Round\nOn 16 August, it was determined that AEK Athens would face MOL Vidi (Hungary) in the Play-Off Round of the UEFA Champions League. The Yellow-Blacks eliminated the Hungarian side and secured a place into the 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League Group Stage after twelve years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 69], "content_span": [70, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284561-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AEK Athens F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Group Stage\nOn 30 August, the draw for the 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League Group Stage was made. AEK Athens were drawn in Group E along with Bayern Munich (Pot 1), Benfica (Pot 2) and Ajax (Pot 3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284562-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AEK B.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 AEK B.C. season is AEK's 62nd season in the top-tier level Greek Basket League. AEK competed in four different competitions during that season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284563-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AFC Ajax season\nDuring the 2018\u201319 season, Ajax participated in the Eredivisie, the KNVB Cup and the UEFA Champions League. With winning both the competition and the cup, it meant the first double won since the 2001\u201302 season. In the Champions League, they knocked-out defending champions Real Madrid in the round of 16. After beating Juventus in the quarter-final, they reached a Champions League semi-final for the first time since 1997. Ajax were seconds away from reaching the final by beating Tottenham Hotspur, until Lucas Moura scored a last-minute goal, sending Tottenham to the final in Madrid on away goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284563-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AFC Ajax season\nOn an individual level, Du\u0161an Tadi\u0107 was the biggest surprise; signed from Southampton in June 2018 for just \u20ac11.4 million, the 30-year old unexpectedly became the club's leading goalscorer with a total of 38, including 9 goals in the Champions League. He doubled his personal season record for scoring, as well as earned the right to be the team's captain for the next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284563-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AFC Ajax season, Transfers for 2018\u201319\nFor a list of all Dutch football transfers in the summer window (1 July 2018 to 31 August 2018) please see List of Dutch football transfers summer 2018. For a list of all Dutch football transfers in the winter window (1 January 2019 to 1 February 2019) please see List of Dutch football transfers winter 2018\u201319.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 46], "content_span": [47, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284564-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AFC Bournemouth season\nThe 2018\u201319 AFC Bournemouth season is the club's fourth consecutive season in the top flight of English football and their 129th year in existence. This season Bournemouth will participate in the Premier League as well as the FA Cup and EFL Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284564-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AFC Bournemouth season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284564-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AFC Bournemouth 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-00284564-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AFC Bournemouth season, Competitions, Premier League, Matches\nOn 14 June 2018, the Premier League fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 69], "content_span": [70, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284564-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AFC Bournemouth season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284564-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AFC Bournemouth season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nThe second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August. The third round draw was made on 30 August 2018 by David Seaman and Joleon Lescott. The fourth round draw was made live on Quest by Rachel Yankey and Rachel Riley on 29 September. The draw for the quarter-final was made live on Sky Sports by Jamie Redknapp and Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink on 31 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284565-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AFC Chindia T\u00e2rgovi\u0219te season\nThe 2018\u201319 season will be the 8th season of competitive football by Chindia T\u00e2rgovi\u0219te, and the 4th consecutive in Liga II. Chindia T\u00e2rgovi\u0219te will compete in the Liga II and in Cupa Rom\u00e2niei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284565-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AFC Chindia T\u00e2rgovi\u0219te season, Competitions, Liga II\nThe Liga II fixture list was announced on 19 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284566-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AFC Wimbledon season\nThe 2018-19 season was the third in League One, the third tier of the English football league system, for AFC Wimbledon since their promotion in 2016 from League Two. Along with competing in League One, the Kingston upon Thames-based club participated in three cup competitions, the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284566-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AFC Wimbledon season, Matches, Pre-season friendlies\nThe Dons revealed they will play Reading, Woking, Queens Park Rangers, Brighton & Hove Albion, Havant & Waterlooville and Boreham Wood.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284566-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AFC Wimbledon season, Matches, League One, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League One fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284566-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AFC Wimbledon season, Matches, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October. The draw for the second round was made live on BBC and BT by Mark Schwarzer and Glenn Murray on 12 November. The third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018. The fourth round draw was made live on BBC by Robbie Keane and Carl Ikeme from Wolverhampton on 7 January 2019. The fifth round draw was broadcast on 28 January 2019 live on BBC, Alex Scott and Ian Wright conducted the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 45], "content_span": [46, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284566-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AFC Wimbledon season, Matches, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam. The second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284566-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AFC Wimbledon season, Matches, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced. The draw for the second round was made live on Talksport by Leon Britton and Steve Claridge on 16 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284567-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AHL season\nThe 2018\u201319 AHL season was the 83rd season of the American Hockey League. The regular season began October 5, 2018 and ended April 15, 2019. The 2019 Calder Cup playoffs followed the conclusion of the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284567-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AHL season, League changes\nThe league expanded by adding the Colorado Eagles to the Pacific Division and moved the two Texas-based teams to the Central Division from the Pacific. The Cleveland Monsters were moved from the Central to the North Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284567-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AHL season, League changes\nSimilar to the California and Arizona teams in the Pacific Division, Colorado plays 68 games in the regular season. This gave the Pacific Division a balanced schedule for the first time since its creation in 2015 and removed the necessity for playoff qualification based on points percentage. Continuing from previous seasons, the teams in the Atlantic, North, and Central Divisions all play 76 games. The Macgregor Kilpatrick Trophy for the regular season champion is still awarded based on points percentage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284567-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AHL season, League changes, Team and NHL affiliation changes\nAfter the National Hockey League (NHL) added the Vegas Golden Knights for the 2017\u201318 season, the NHL had 31 teams while the AHL still had 30. After exploring other AHL expansion options, the NHL Vegas expansion team eventually affiliated with the Chicago Wolves on a multi-year agreement. The affiliation with the Wolves left their former affiliate, the St. Louis Blues, without an affiliate and the Blues would send players to the Wolves and the San Antonio Rampage, the affiliate of the Colorado Avalanche.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 68], "content_span": [69, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284567-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AHL season, League changes, Team and NHL affiliation changes\nAfter the 2017 Board of Governors meeting, the league confirmed that it had made a commitment to an expansion applicant for a 31st team for the 2018\u201319 season later revealed to be the Colorado Eagles. The Eagles organization had been a member of the ECHL prior to the promotion and was the affiliate of the Avalanche. The Eagles join other recently added ECHL markets in the AHL such as Bakersfield, Charlotte, Ontario, and Stockton. The Blues then became the primary affiliate of the Rampage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 68], "content_span": [69, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284567-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AHL 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, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284567-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AHL season, Statistical leaders, Leading skaters\nThe following players are sorted by points, then goals. Updated as of April 14, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 56], "content_span": [57, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284567-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AHL season, Statistical leaders, Leading skaters\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2013 = Plus-minus; PIM = Penalty minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 56], "content_span": [57, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284567-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AHL season, Statistical leaders, Leading goaltenders\nThe following goaltenders with a minimum 1500 minutes played lead the league in goals against average. Updated as of April 14, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 60], "content_span": [61, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284567-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AHL season, Statistical leaders, Leading goaltenders\nGP = Games played; TOI = Time on ice (in minutes); SA = Shots against; GA = Goals against; SO = Shutouts; GAA = Goals against average; SV% = Save percentage; W = Wins; L = Losses; OT = Overtime/shootout loss", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 60], "content_span": [61, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284567-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AHL season, Calder Cup playoffs, Playoff format\nThe 2019 Calder Cup playoffs format was retained from the divisional format of the 2016 Calder Cup playoffs. During the regular season, teams receive two points for a win and one point for an overtime or shootout loss. The top four teams in each division ranked by points qualify for the 2019 Calder Cup playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 55], "content_span": [56, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284567-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AHL season, Calder Cup playoffs, Playoff format\nThe 2019 Calder Cup playoffs features a divisional playoff format, leading to conference finals and ultimately the Calder Cup finals. The division semifinals are best-of-five series; all subsequent rounds are best-of-seven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 55], "content_span": [56, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284568-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Ain M'lila season\nIn the 2018\u201319 season, AS Ain M'lila is competing in Ligue 1 for the 18th season, as well as for the Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284568-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Ain M'lila season, Squad list\nAs of August 11, 2018: 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, 40], "content_span": [41, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was AS Monaco FC's sixth consecutive season in Ligue 1 since promotion from Ligue 2 in 2013. They participated in the Coupe de France, the Coupe de la Ligue, the Troph\u00e9e des Champions and the UEFA Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC season, Season events\nOn 11 October, AS Monaco announced that they had parted ways with manager Leonardo Jardim. Two days later, 13 October, AS Monaco announced the appointment of Thierry Henry as their new head coach on a contract until June 2021. On 24 January, AS Monaco announced that they had suspended Thierry Henry and that Franck Passi would be leading the team while they made their decision on Henry's future. The following day, AS Monaco announced Henrys permanent departure and the re-appointment of Leonardo Jardim as manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC season, Season events, Transfers, Summer\nOn 8 June, AS Monaco announced that Terence Kongolo would be joining Huddersfield Town on a permanent basis when the transfer window opened on 1 July. The following day, 9 June, Samuel Grandsir signed for AS Monaco from Troyes on a five-year contract to begin 1 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC season, Season events, Transfers, Summer\nOn 13 June, goalkeeper Paul Nardi joined Cercle Brugge on a season-long loan deal, with Pierre-Daniel N'Guinda, Yoann Etienne and Kevin Appin all joining Cercle Brugge on loan for the 2018-19 season on 16 June. Four days later, on 20 June, Gu\u00e9vin Tormin also joined Cercle Brugge on a season-long loan deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC season, Season events, Transfers, Summer\nOn 23 June, Gil Dias joined Nottingham Forest on loan for the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC season, Season events, Transfers, Summer\nOn 27 June, Monaco announced the departure of Mehdi Beneddine to Quevilly-Rouen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC season, Season events, Transfers, Summer\nOn 28 June, Tiago Ribeiro joined Monaco's Academy squad from Porto, while Franck Irie joined Cercle Brugge on a season-long loan deal. The following day, on 29 June, Sofiane Diop and Isidor Wilson joined Monaco from Rennes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC season, Season events, Transfers, Summer\nOn 4 July, Irvin Cardona re-joined Cercle Brugge on loan for the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC season, Season events, Transfers, Summer\nOn 6 July, Monaco announced the signing of Jonathan Panzo from Chelsea, and Pel\u00e9 on a five-year contract from Rio Ave.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC season, Season events, Transfers, Summer\nOn 9 July, AS Monaco announced the signing of Rona\u00ebl Pierre-Gabriel on a five-year contract from Saint-\u00c9tienne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC season, Season events, Transfers, Summer\nOn 10 July, AS Monaco announced the signing of Antonio Barreca on a five-year contract from Torino, with Soualiho Me\u00eft\u00e9 going in the opposite direction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC season, Season events, Transfers, Summer\nOn 20 July, striker Adama Diakhaby followed Terence Kongolo in signing for Huddersfield Town for an undisclosed fee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC season, Season events, Transfers, Summer\nOn 24 July, Monaco signed Jean-Eudes Aholou from Strasbourg on a five-year contract, while Jo\u00e3o Moutinho moved to Wolverhampton Wanderers and Adrien Bongiovanni joined Cercle Brugge on loan for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC season, Season events, Transfers, Summer\nOn 27 July, Monaco announced the signing of Aleksandr Golovin to a five-year contract for an undisclosed fee from CSKA Moscow. Three days later, on 30 July, Monaco confirmed that Thomas Lemar had left the club to sign for Atl\u00e9tico Madrid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC season, Season events, Transfers, Summer\nOn 5 August, Monaco announced that Rachid Ghezzal had joined Leicester City, with Nabil Alioui joining Cercle Brugge on loan the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC season, Season events, Transfers, Summer\nTwo days later, on 7 August, Boschilia extended his Monaco contract until the summer of 2021, then joined Nantes on a season-long loan deal, while \u00c1lvaro Llorente moved to Extremadura on a season-long loan. On 8 August, Jonathan Mexique joined Cholet on a season-long loan deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC season, Season events, Transfers, Summer\nOn 13 August, young midfielder Ibrahima Diallo joined Brest on a season-long loan deal, while Keita Bald\u00e9 joined Inter Milan on a season-long loan deal with an option to make the move permanent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC season, Season events, Transfers, Summer\nOn 22 August, Dinis Almeida joined Xanthi on a season-long loan deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC season, Season events, Transfers, Summer\nOn 28 August, Benjamin Henrichs joined AS Monaco on a five-year contract from Bayer Leverkusen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC season, Season events, Transfers, Summer\nOn 30 August, Nacer Chadli signed a three-year contract with AS Monaco from West Bromwich Albion, Jorge joined Porto on a season-long loan deal and Lacina Traor\u00e9 had his contract terminated by mutual consent. The following day, Elderson Echi\u00e9jil\u00e9 also left AS Monaco after his contract was also terminated by mutual consent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC season, Season events, Transfers, Winter\nOn 2 January, AS Monaco announced their first signing of the winter transfer window, with Lyle Foster arriving from Orlando Pirates to sign until June 2023. The following day, 3 January, AS Monaco announced the signing of Naldo on an 18-month contract, after his Schalke 04 ended. On 10 January, Fod\u00e9 Ballo-Tour\u00e9 signed from Lille on a contract until June 2023. The following day, 11 January, Cesc F\u00e0bregas signed for AS Monaco on a contract until June 2022, and William Vainqueur joined on loan from Antalyaspor on 12 January. On 20 January, Samuel Grandsir was sent on loan to Strasbourg for the remainder of the 2018-19 season. On 24 January, AS Monaco and Nottingham Forest agreed to cancel Gil Dias's loan deal, allowing Dias to sign for Olympiacos on loan until 30 June 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 843]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC season, Season events, Transfers, Winter\nOn 27 January, AS Monaco announced the arrival of Gelson Martins on loan from Atl\u00e9tico Madrid until the end of the season. On 30 January, AS Monaco announced the signing of Carlos Vin\u00edcius on loan until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC season, Season events, Transfers, Winter\nOn 31 January, transfer deadline day, Georges-K\u00e9vin Nkoudou joined from Tottenham Hotspur on loan until the end of the season, whilst Youssef A\u00eft Bennasser, Pel\u00e9. Antonio Barreca, Almamy Tour\u00e9, Adama Traor\u00e9 and Lo\u00efc Badiashile all left on loan for the remainder of the season, joining Saint-\u00c9tienne, Nottingham Forest, Newcastle United, Eintracht Frankfurt, Cercle Brugge and Rennes, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC season, Season events, Transfers, Winter\nAlso on transfer deadline day, Adrien Silva joined on loan from Leicester City for the remainder of the season, with Youri Tielemans going the opposite way on loan for the rest of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC season, Season events, Contract extensions\nOn 11 July, Julien Serrano extended his contract with AS Monaco until the summer of 2022.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC season, Season events, Contract extensions\nOn 18 July, K\u00e9vin N'Doram extended his contract with AS Monaco until the summer of 2023.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC season, Squad, Out on loan\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284569-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Monaco FC season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nSource: Match reports in Competitive matchesOnly 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, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284570-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Saint-\u00c9tienne season\nThe 2018\u201319 AS Saint-\u00c9tienne season was the 99th professional season of the club since its creation in 1919.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284570-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Saint-\u00c9tienne 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-00284570-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AS Saint-\u00c9tienne 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-00284571-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ASUN Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 ASUN Conference men's basketball season began with practices in October 2018, followed by the start of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season in November. Conference play began in January 2019 and concluded in March 2019. It was the 41st season of ASUN Conference basketball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284571-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ASUN Conference men's basketball season\nLipscomb and Liberty tied for the regular season championship and were named co-champions. The ASUN Tournament was held March 4\u201310 at campus sites as top seeds hosted each round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284571-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ASUN Conference men's basketball season, Preseason\nOn October 17, 2018, the conference announced its preseason honors and polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 58], "content_span": [59, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284572-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ATK season\nThe 2018\u201319 ATK season was the club's fifth season since its establishment in 2014 and their fifth season in the Indian Super League. The fifth edition of ISL commenced with a new look ATK renewing its seasonal rivalry against Kerala Blasters FC on Saturday, September 29, at the Vivekananda Yuba Bharati Krirangan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284572-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ATK season, Background, Transfers\nAfter a disappointing season, ATK has appointed Sanjoy Sen as their mentor to recruit national players. The former Mohun Bagan A.C. head coach roped in some of his own former players who he had the experience of working with, along with former ATK players Arnab Mondal and Cavin Lobo", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284572-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ATK season, Background, 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, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284572-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ATK season, Pre Season and friendlies\nATK went to Spain on August 18 for their pre-season. This campaign will end on September 15. In Spain they played some friendly matches with local clubs and one match with Premier League club Fulham F.C..", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284572-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ATK season, Pre Season and friendlies\nThey played their first match on 31 August with Lorca FC and won by one goal scored by Kalu Uche. In the second friendly they won by one goal again by defeating Spanish club Real Murcia. ATK played their third match with highly competitive Premier League club Fulham F.C. and defeated just by a whisker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284572-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ATK season, Competitions, Super Cup\nAs one of the top six teams in 2018\u201319 Indian Super League, ATK qualified for the main round in 2019 Indian Super Cup. ATK were scheduled to play the I-League side, Real Kashmir FC in Round of 16 match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284572-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ATK season, Competitions, Super Cup\nATK defeated Real Kashmir Fc by 3 - 1 to reach quarter finals of Super cup. Now they will face Indian Super League team Delhi Dynamos in quarters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284572-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ATK season, Goalscorers\nThere have been 10 goals scored in 10 matches, for an average of 1 goal per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284572-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ATK season, Goalscorers, Goalscorers (Against)\nThere have been 10 goals scored in 10 matches, for an average of 1 goal per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 54], "content_span": [55, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284572-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ATK season, Player information, 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, 18], "section_span": [20, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284573-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AZ Alkmaar season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 53rd season of AZ Alkmaar and the club's 21st consecutive season in the top flight of Dutch football. In addition to the domestic league, AZ Alkmaar participated in the KNVB Cup and the UEFA Europa League. The season covered the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284573-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AZ Alkmaar season, Players, First-team squad\nFor recent transfers, see List of Dutch football transfers winter 2017\u201318", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284573-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AZ Alkmaar season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284573-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AZ Alkmaar 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284574-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AaB Fodbold season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was AaB's 36th consecutive season in the top flight of Danish football, 29th consecutive season in the Danish Superliga, and 133rd year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284574-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AaB Fodbold season, Squad, First team squad\nThis squad list includes any first team squad player who was available for the line-up during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284574-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AaB Fodbold season, Squad, Youth players in use\nThis list includes any youth player from AaB Academy who was used in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284574-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AaB Fodbold season, Competitions, Superliga, Relegation round\nPoints and goals will carry over in full from the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 69], "content_span": [70, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284574-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AaB Fodbold season, Statistics, Appearances\nThis includes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when appearances are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284574-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AaB Fodbold season, Statistics, Goalscorers\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-00284574-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AaB Fodbold season, Statistics, Assists\nThis includes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total assists are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284574-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AaB Fodbold season, Statistics, Clean sheets\nThis includes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total clean sheets are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284574-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AaB Fodbold season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nThis includes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total cards are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284574-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 AaB Fodbold season, Statistics, Suspensions\nThis includes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total matches suspended are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season was Aberdeen's 105th season in the top flight of Scottish football. Aberdeen also competed in the League Cup and the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season\nAberdeen also competed in qualifying for the 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, May\nOn 14 May, Scott McKenna & Graeme Shinnie were called up to the national team. On 28 May, Gothenburg Great Neale Cooper died at the age of 54. On 29 May, Graeme Shinnie made his full Scotland debut, coming on as a substitute in a 2\u20130 defeat to Peru.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, June\nOn 1 June, Lewis Ferguson officially joined the club, although the compensation fee still had to be sorted between the Dons and Hamilton Academical. On 2 June, Scott McKenna, in his fourth game for Scotland, was made team captain in a 1\u20130 defeat to Mexico. Graeme Shinnie also earned his first start for Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, June\nOn 5 June, Chris Forrester joined the club from Peterborough United for a fee believed to be in the region of \u00a3150,000. On 12 June, the club announced that their Pre-season training camp would be taking place in Ireland and the club would play a friendly against Cobh Ramblers. On 14 June, defender Anthony O'Connor joined Bradford City on a three-year deal. After his release from Ipswich Town, Irish International Stephen Gleeson signed on a two-year deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, June\nOn 15 June, the season league fixtures were announced by the SPFL, with the Dons starting at home to Rangers, with the game being live on TV on 5 August at 1pm. On the same day, the Dons announced a pre-season friendly at home to English Championship club West Bromwich Albion. On 20 June, the Europa League Second Qualifying Round draw was made and the Dons were drawn against English Premier League club Burnley. It was the first time the Dons played English opposition in Europe since Ipswich Town in 1981.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, June\nOn 25 June, Executive Vice-Chairman George Yule announced that he would be leaving his role following major surgery, said to be \"a prostate cancer scare\" but he explained he was \"heading towards full recovery\". On 26 June, Scotland Under-21 International Daniel Harvie, who was released last season as he wanted regular football, signed for Ayr United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, July\nOn 3 July, the start of the construction phase began on the New Aberdeen Stadium. On 8 July, after the 2\u20132 draw against St Johnstone, the Dons took the decision to cancel the friendly on 11 July with Inverness Caledonian Thistle due to \"a number of fitness concerns within the first team squad\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, July\nOn 11 July, goalkeeper Danny Rogers joined St Mirren on a season long loan deal. On the same day, former Hearts defender Krystian Nowak joined on trial. After being on loan last season, Dominic Ball rejoined the club again for a second season-long loan spell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, July\nOn 15 July, the friendly match between the Dons and Cove Rangers was abandoned after 50 minutes due to a severe head injury to Cove Rangers player Jordon Brown. After sustaining an injury in the match, the Dons announced defender Mark Reynolds was ruled out until the end of the year having to undergo knee surgery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, July\nOn 19 July, striker Adam Rooney left for newly promoted National League side Salford City for a reported fee of \u00a3375,000. He scored 88 goals in 197 appearances for the club. The transfer led to Accrington Stanley owner Andy Holt accusing Salford, and most notably Gary Neville, of \"buying\" a place in the English Football League, with Rooney reportedly due to earn \u00a34,000 per week at Salford. Motherwell manager Stephen Robinson also accused Neville of \"lacking etiquette\" after discussing his club's transfer business and \"blew them away with money\" to get the deal done.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, July\nOn 22 July, Austrian goalkeeper Sebastian Gessl joined on trial after leaving German side Karlsruher SC. On 25 July, the Dons signed both Goalkeeper Tom\u00e1\u0161 \u010cern\u00fd, on a one-year deal after his release from Partick Thistle, and defender Tommie Hoban, on loan from Watford with the club having the option of recalling him in January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, August\nOn 2 August, the Dons were knocked out of UEFA Europa League at the Second qualifying round stage against Burnley. Even though with defeat, the Dons were praised by Burnley fans by creating a great atmosphere at both matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 45], "content_span": [46, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, August\nAfter his actions after the match last season against Celtic, defender Shay Logan was suspended for the first 3 matches of the league season beginning on 5 August, against Rangers, Dundee and St Mirren. On 8 August, defender Scott McKenna was ruled out for 6 weeks with an injury picked up in the 1\u20131 draw with Rangers. On 13 August, striker James Wilson joined from Manchester United on a season-long loan deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 45], "content_span": [46, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, August\nAfter the 4\u20130 win in the League Cup against St Mirren, the Dons were drawn against Hibernian in the Quarter Finals, although at the time of the draw, it was not known whether it was Hibernian or Ross County. On 20 August, compensation was agreed after a tribunal for midfielder Lewis Ferguson after signing him from Hamilton Academical with the fee being kept private and although the Dons felt they had \"received a fair hearing\", Hamilton wanted \"The guidelines used in making the decision should be made available\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 45], "content_span": [46, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, August\nOn 22 August, the Dons rejected a \u00a33.5m bid from Celtic for defender Scott McKenna, with manager Derek McInnes stating that McKenna would not be sold in the transfer window, and that another bid would be a waste of time. Aberdeen valued the centre-half at around \u00a310m.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 45], "content_span": [46, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, August\nOn 30 August, Max Lowe joined on loan from Derby County, initially until January 2019. On 31 August, Jordan McGregor joined after being released from Airdrieonians and impressing on trial. He joined with the Development Squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 45], "content_span": [46, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, September\nOn Transfer deadline day, the Dons rejected a reported \u00a37m bid from Aston Villa for defender Scott McKenna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, September\nOn 1 September, Mikey Devlin was sent off by referee Craig Thomson after only 5 minutes in a 2\u20130 home loss to Kilmarnock. The decision was appealed by the Dons but was rejected by the SFA with manager McInnes stating that he was \"extremely disappointed with this outcome\" and he later criticized the SFA for their \"incompetency\". On 4 September, Bruce Anderson signed a new deal until 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, September\nAfter progressing through to the Semi-finals with a win against Hibernian (6\u20135 on penalties after a 0\u20130 draw after extra-time), the Dons were drawn to face Rangers. Alfredo Morelos and Kyle Lafferty were suspended for them. Oddly, the venue was not chosen until a later date due to clashes with Celtic and the Europa League, with Murrayfield Stadium being a likely option due to the demand for tickets. The following day, due to dismay expressed from the club and supporters, the match with Rangers was due to take place at noon at Hampden Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, October\nOn 3 October, the League Cup semi final match with Rangers was changed to a 4:30pm kick off time after fans and clubs appeals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, October\nOn 4 October, the SPFL suspended Scott McKenna for two matches after his challenge on Odsonne \u00c9douard in the match against Celtic. The Dons appealed however it was rejected. On 11 October, defender Scott McKenna came on a second-half substitute in a 2\u20131 defeat against Israel, marking his competitive debut for Scotland. Subsequently, following this match due to call-offs, Michael Devlin and Gary Mackay-Steven were called up for the friendly with Portugal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, October\nAberdeen reached the League Cup Final thanks to a late header from Lewis Ferguson against Rangers with manager McInnes claiming \"he was born to play at Hampden.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, November\nOn 6 November, Michael Devlin, Gary Mackay-Steven, Scott McKenna & Graeme Shinnie were all called up to the national team for the Nations League matches in Albania and at home to Israel. However Devlin was injured in training before the Albania match and subsequently missed the League Cup Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, November\nOn 13 November, striker James Wilson was awarded Goal of the Month for October for his stunning strike against Hamilton Academical.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, December\nOn 2 December, former Dons loanee Ryan Christie scored the only goal in a 1\u20130 win in the League Cup Final against the Dons. During the match, winger Gary Mackay-Steven suffered concussion in a challenge with Dedryck Boyata. He was down for 6 minutes and was taken to hospital then later released. Manager McInnes later said after the match, that he \"intends to come back to another final with Aberdeen and I intend to win another trophy\", with his only success with the club coming in the 2014 Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, December\nOn 5 December, the Dons won against Rangers at Ibrox with Scott McKenna scoring the only goal and having to play for almost 60 minutes with 10 men after Sam Cosgrove was wrongfully dismissed. A few days after the match, Connor McLennan signed a new deal until 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, December\nAlthough the Dons lost their next match to St Johnstone, after this they had back-to-back wins against newly-promoted clubs Livingston and St Mirren respectively, propelling the Dons to a season-high so far of fourth in the table. Sam Cosgrove's booking against Livingston for 'diving' was later rescinded. On 21 December, despite holding talks over an extended stay, Max Lowe returned to his parent club Derby County in January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, December\nAfter the comfortable 2\u20130 win over Hearts, the two managers had a spat beginning with Craig Levein claiming after the match they should have had 2 penalties. McInnes responded saying they \"moan about this and that\" but \"the best team won\". Levein then claimed McInnes of \"double standards\" and him talking \"tripe\" and said he was \"crying like a baby\" in a phone conversation. McInnes then responded again after the 4\u20133 defeat to Celtic saying Levein was \"irrational and childish\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, December\nThe Dons completed the year with a win against Livingston, placing fourth in the table. It was also announced the club will have their winter training camp again in Dubai. Later subsequently whilst in Dubai, striker Sam Cosgrove was awarded player of the month for December and manager Derek McInnes was awarded manager of the month for December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, January\nOn 7 January, Sam Cosgrove signed a contract extension until 2022. On the same day, youth defender Sam Roscoe extended his loan deal with Alloa until the end of the season. On 8 January, Greg Tansey had his contract terminated with the club and later that day signed for St Mirren. There was some confusion as to whether Dean Campbell had scored against Livingston in the away win, so the SPFL awarded Campbell with the goal, his first for the club. The Dons concluded their winter training camp in Dubai with a 2\u20130 friendly win against Dibba Al Hisn, with Sam Cosgrove scoring both goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, January\nOn 17 January, Max Lowe rejoined the Dons on loan from Derby County until the end of the season. On 18 January, after being on loan last season, Greg Stewart joined on loan until the end of the season from Birmingham City. The Dons returned to action in the Scottish Cup with a lackluster 1\u20131 draw against bottom of League One side Stenhousemuir, however they won the replay 4\u20131. On 22 January, summer signing Chris Forrester had his contract terminated by the club, sighting personal reasons. He returned to Ireland, his native homeland, to play for St Patrick's Athletic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, January\nOn transfer deadline day, Scott Wright joined Dundee, Bruce Anderson joined Dunfermline Athletic, and Mark Reynolds joined Dundee United all on loan respectively, until the end of the season. The Dons also rejected bids for defender Scott McKenna and winger Gary Mackay-Steven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0033-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, February\nThe Dons moved up to third in the table with a hard-fought 2\u20131 win at Easter Road against Hibernian, even with striker Sam Cosgrove and goalkeeper Joe Lewis going off with injuries. Both players, however, were fit to play in the next match in what was a pulsating 4\u20132 home defeat to Rangers, with Alfredo Morelos (who was later given a 3 match ban after an appeal) and Scott McKenna clashing with both men being sent off. It was the third time Morelos had been sent off against Aberdeen this season. Rangers goalkeeper Allan McGregor was also given a possible 2 match ban for 'kicking' Lewis Ferguson. McGregor was then given the 2 match ban.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0034-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, February\nEven after a stunning goal from Stephen Dobbie, Aberdeen seen off Queen of the South with a 4\u20131 win in the Scottish Cup at Pittodrie. They were drawn at home in the next round against the winner of either Kilmarnock or Rangers with the latter winning in the replay. In the next league match, the Dons drew 2\u20132 at home to St Mirren. During the match whilst broadcasting for BBC Scotland, Derek Ferguson (father of Lewis Ferguson) announced his son was set to sign a new deal with the club. He signed on until 2024. Defender Tommie Hoban was injured in the match and a few days later, he was ruled out until the end of the season through another knee injury. He returned to Watford for treatment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0035-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, February\nShortly after the 2\u20130 win away to St Johnstone, manager Derek McInnes announced that Shay Logan would be out with an ankle injury for up to three months. The club later that day announced the signing of experienced defender Greg Halford until the end of the season. Aberdeen ended the month with a home defeat to Hamilton Academical.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0036-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, March\nOn 1 March, Aberdeen FC's plans for the new \u00a350m stadium were given the legal go-ahead. The Dons Scottish Cup Quarter-final match with Rangers ended in a 1\u20131 draw but the match was marred with violence as 6 arrests were made and seats broken in the away section. The replay took place on 12 March. The Dons had a league match in between the Rangers matches, a 0\u20130 draw at Celtic Park. It was the first 0\u20130 between the sides since 1994.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0037-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, March\nOn 12 March, Scott McKenna & Graeme Shinnie were called up to the national team. Niall McGinn was called up for Northern Ireland. On the same day, the Dons won their Scottish Cup replay with Rangers 2\u20130 at Ibrox. They will play Celtic on 14 April in the Semi-final at Hampden Park with a 2:00pm kick off. Graeme Shinnie will be suspended for the match after picking up 2 yellows in the matches against Rangers. The Dons League home woes continued after they were held to a 1\u20131 draw with Livingston. The Dons ended March with their unbeaten away run coming to an end against Hearts at Tynecastle Stadium. Tom Crotty who has invested in the club became a director.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0038-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, April\nAberdeen began April by winning their first home League match of 2019 with a 3\u20131 win against Motherwell. The club announced that defender Mark Reynolds had agreed to join Dundee United permanently, having initially joined them on loan in January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0039-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, April\nThe Dons ended the pre-split fixtures with a 2\u20130 win against Dundee at Dens Park, with Sam Cosgrove scoring both goals taking his season tally up to 20. The post-split fixtures were announced with the Dons away to Kilmarnock and Rangers, then home matches against Celtic and Hearts, and finishing the season at Easter Road against Hibernian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0040-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, April\nScott McKenna was named captain for the Scottish Cup semi-final match against Celtic as normal captain Graeme Shinnie was suspended. Shinnie, out of contract at the end of the season, was in talks with Derby County. Aberdeen lost the match 3\u20130 exiting the competition, finishing the match with 9 men and with both manager and assistant being sent to the stands. Dominic Ball was given a second yellow after a head challenge with Ryan Christie which left the former with a black-eye and multiple cheek fractures. Lewis Ferguson was given a straight red for a tackle on Tom Rogic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0040-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, April\nAssistant head coach Tony Docherty was sent to the stand at half time and during the second half, manager Derek McInnes was also sent to the stand for appearing to hurl abuse at the Celtic fans, after they had allegedly sung a sectarian song about him. Police Scotland looked into the incident but found no clear evidence and both were later charged by the SFA. After the match, it was revealed Niall McGinn was out until the end of the season with an ankle injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0041-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, April\nTheir next league match seen them win at Kilmarnock, with the home side having three players sent off, although one was later rescinded. Steve Clarke ranted at referee Steven McLean saying that \"he should never referee Killie games again.\" He was later charged for his comments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0042-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, April\nOn 26 April before the Dons next match against Rangers their manager Steven Gerrard claimed Aberdeen only raise their games against them, with McInnes dismissing these comments. Defender Andrew Considine also signed a two-year contract extension with the option of a further year. Aberdeen lost the match 2\u20130 with Rangers scoring two penalties, one of which Considine was sent off for conceding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0043-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, May\nOn 4 May, Aberdeen lost 3\u20130 at home to Celtic, handing their opponents an eighth league title in a row. Captain Graeme Shinnie announced he signed a 3 year deal on a pre-contract for Derby County. He was also named in the Premier League Team of the Year, whilst Lewis Ferguson was nominated for Young Player of the Year. On 10 May, the Dons won their final home game of the season with a 2\u20131 win against Hearts. A few days after the match, back-up Goalkeeper Tom\u00e1\u0161 \u010cern\u00fd signed a new one-year deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0044-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, May\nOn 16 May, the Aberdeen player awards took place. Ethan Ross was named Development Player of the Year, Lewis Ferguson was named Young Player of the Year and scored the Goal of the Season, Max Lowe was named Players\u2019 Player of the Year, and Joe Lewis was named AFC Player of the Year. The next day, Ethan Ross signed a new two-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284575-0045-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aberdeen F.C. season, Summary, May\nOn the final day of the League season, the Dons came from behind to win 2\u20131 at Easter Road against Hibernian, however because Kilmarnock beat Rangers by the same scoreline, they finished the season in Fourth place. Aberdeen received the final European place after Celtic won the Scottish Cup Final against Hearts. In the close season, Frank Ross signed a new one-year deal with the option of a further year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284576-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Abilene Christian Wildcats men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Abilene Christian Wildcats men's basketball team represents Abilene Christian University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Wildcats are led by eighth-year head coach Joe Golding and play their home games at the Moody Coliseum in Abilene, Texas as members of the Southland Conference. They lost to Kentucky in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284576-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Abilene Christian Wildcats men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Wildcats finished the 2017\u201318 season 16\u201316, 8\u201310 in Southland play to finish in a three-way tie for eighth place. They failed to qualify for the Southland Tournament. They received an invitation to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they lost in the first round to Drake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 73], "content_span": [74, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284577-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Abilene Christian Wildcats women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Abilene Christian Wildcats women's basketball team represented Abilene Christian University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Wildcats, led by seventh year head coach Julie Goodenough, played their home games at the Moody Coliseum. They finished the season 23\u201310, 13\u20135 in Southland play to finish in fourth place. They won the Southland Women's Tournament to earn an automatic to the NCAA Women's Tournament for the first time in school history. They lost in the first round to Baylor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284577-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Abilene Christian Wildcats women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Wildcats finished the 2017\u201318 season 16\u201314, 9\u20139 in Southland play to finish in seventh place. In Southland Women's Tournament play, they defeated New Orleans in the first round. Their season ended when they lost to Central Arkansas in the tournament quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 75], "content_span": [76, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284578-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Accrington Stanley F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Accrington Stanley's first-ever season in League One and their 50th year in existence. Along with competing in League One, the club also participated in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy. The season ran from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284578-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Accrington Stanley F.C. season, Competitions, Friendlies\nStanley announced pre-season fixtures against Huddersfield Town, Middlesbrough and Blackburn Rovers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284578-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Accrington Stanley F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October. The draw for the second round was made live on BBC and BT by Mark Schwarzer and Glenn Murray on 12 November. The third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018. The fourth round draw was made live on BBC by Robbie Keane and Carl Ikeme from Wolverhampton on 7 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284578-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Accrington Stanley F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284578-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Accrington Stanley F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced. The draw for the second round was made live on Talksport by Leon Britton and Steve Claridge on 16 November. On 8 December, the third round draw was drawn by Alan McInally and Matt Le Tissier on Soccer Saturday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284579-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Adelaide Strikers WBBL season\nThe 2018\u201319 Adelaide Strikers Women's season was the fourth in the team's history. Coached by Andrea McCauley and captained by Suzie Bates, they finished sixth in the regular season of WBBL|04 and failed to qualify for finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284579-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Adelaide Strikers WBBL season, Squad\nEach 2018\u201319 squad featured 15 active players, with an allowance of up to five marquee signings including a maximum of three from overseas. Under a new rule, Australian marquees were classed as players who held a national women's team contract at the time of signing on for their WBBL|04 team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284579-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Adelaide Strikers WBBL season, Squad\nThe table below lists the Strikers players and their key stats (including runs scored, batting strike rate, wickets taken, economy rate, catches and stumpings) for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284580-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Adelaide United FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 Adelaide United FC season was the club's 15th season since its establishment in 2003. The club participated in the A-League for the 14th time and the FFA Cup for the 5th time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284580-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Adelaide United 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284581-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Adelaide United W-League season\nThe 2018\u201319 Adelaide United W-League was the club's eleventh season in the W-League, the premier competition for women's football in Australia. The team played home games at Marden Sports Complex and Coopers Stadium. and were managed by Ivan Karlovi\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284581-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Adelaide United 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284581-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Adelaide United W-League season, W-League, Results summary\nLast updated: February 2019, end of regular season. Source: Competitive Matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284582-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Afghanistan Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Afghanistan Premier League (also known as Gulbahar Afghanistan Premier League T20 2018) was the first edition of the Afghanistan Premier League Twenty20 (T20) franchise cricket tournament, held in the United Arab Emirates. It took place between 5 and 21 October 2018 at the Sharjah Cricket Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284582-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Afghanistan Premier League\nIn September 2018, the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) announced that they would not give No Objection Certificates (NOCs) to the active Pakistani players. In October 2018, the Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) denied to give NOCs to Mohammad Mithun and Soumya Sarkar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284582-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Afghanistan Premier League\nBalkh Legends won the title, after beating Kabul Zwanan by four wickets in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284583-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Africa Basketball League\nThe 2018\u201319 Africa Basketball League or Africa League was the 33nd edition of FIBA Africa's premier club Basketball tournament and the first under the new format and name of Africa Basketball League. The season saw an expansion from twelve to sixteen teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284583-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Africa Basketball League\nAfter this season, the competition was replaced by the Basketball Africa League (BAL), which will start in March 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284583-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Africa Basketball League, Competition format\nFIBA Africa has increased the number of participating teams from twelve to sixteen. These teams get their ticket for the Africa Basketball League through regional qualifiers (Zone 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 of FIBA Africa).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284583-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Africa Basketball League, Competition format\nThe qualifiers for the Africa Basketball League Group stage was held from September and until mid-December 2018, while the final phase will take place from January 11 to April 21, 2019, in various African cities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284583-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Africa Basketball League, Competition format\nThe 16 teams qualified for the round of 16 will be divided into 4 groups of 4 teams each and the competition will take place in the form of a championship where each team will face respectively the 3 opponents of his group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284583-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Africa Basketball League, Competition format\nThen, the first two clubs in each group will qualify for the Elite 8 where the clubs will be divided into four groups of two teams each and then games will be played in a home and away format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284583-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Africa Basketball League, Competition format\nAt this stage, the competition will be played in a one-way match against the principle of direct elimination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284583-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Africa Basketball League, Competition format\nThe Four winners will advance to the Final 4, that will be played on April 20 while the final take place the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284583-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Africa Basketball League, Teams\nA total of 16 teams from 10 countries will contest the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284583-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Africa Basketball League, Group stage\nThe draw was held in Abidjan on 12 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284583-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Africa Basketball League, Group stage\nThe two teams with the best records for each group qualified to Elite 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284583-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Africa Basketball League, Knockout phase, Elite 8\nThe Elite 8 games will be played in a home and away basis from March 22\u2013April 14, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284583-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Africa Basketball League, Knockout phase, Final Four\nOn 19 April 2019, the Kimbala Arena in Luanda, Angola was announced as host of the Final Four. The draw was held on 27 April 2019 in Abidjan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284584-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Africa Basketball League Group C\nGroup C of the 2018\u201319 Africa Basketball League was the group stage of the 2018\u201319 Africa Basketball League for Al Ahly, Ferrovi\u00e1rio da Beira, Primeiro de Agosto and REG BBC. Each team played each other once, for a total of three games per team, with all games played at the Prince Abdallah Al Faisal Sports Hall in Cairo. After all of the games were played, the two teams with the best records qualified for the final-eight round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284584-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Africa Basketball League Group C\nPrimeiro de Agosto and Al Ahly finished 1st and 2nd respectively, thus qualifying to the Elite Eight stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284585-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Air Force Falcons men's basketball team\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by PrimeBOT (talk | contribs) at 19:09, 21 June 2020 (\u2192\u200eSchedule and results: 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, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284585-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Air Force Falcons men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Air Force Falcons men's basketball team represented the United States Air Force Academy during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Falcons, led by seventh-year head coach Dave Pilipovich, played their home games at the Clune Arena on the Air Force Academy's main campus in Colorado Springs, Colorado as members of the Mountain West Conference. They finished the season 14\u201318, 8\u201310 in Mountain West play to finish in sixth place. They defeated San Jose State in the first round of the Mountain West Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Fresno State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284585-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Air Force Falcons men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Falcons finished the season 12\u201319, 6\u201312 in Mountain West play to finish in ninth place. They lost in the first round of the Mountain West Tournament to UNLV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284585-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Air Force Falcons men's basketball team, Offseason, 2018 recruiting class\nThere were no recruiting class for Air Force for 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 81], "content_span": [82, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284586-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Air Force Falcons women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Air Force Falcons women's basketball team represents the United States Air Force Academy during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Falcons, led by fourth year head coach Chris Gobrecht, play their home games at the Clune Arena on the Air Force Academy's main campus in Colorado Springs, Colorado and were members of the Mountain West Conference. They finished the season 8\u201322, 4\u201314 in Mountain West play to finish in tenth place. They lost in the first round of the Mountain West Women's Tournament to San Diego State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284587-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aizawl FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Aizawl's 35th competitive season and its fourth competitive season in the I-League, India's top flight professional football league. The season covers the period from 1 June 2018 to 31 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284587-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aizawl FC season, Squad information, 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284587-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aizawl FC season, Competitions, Mizoram Premier League\nThe Mizoram Premier League fixtures were announced on 31 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 62], "content_span": [63, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284587-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aizawl FC season, Competitions, Super Cup\nThe Super Cup venue and fixtures were announced on 5 February 2019 with all matches to be played at Kalinga Stadium in Bhubaneswar. By the virtue of finishing outside top-6, the Aizawl had to play a qualification round in the Super Cup. Before the qualification round, seven I-League clubs including the Aizawl announced they will withdraw from the Super Cup, citing \"unfair treatment to I-League clubs.\" They boycotted the qualifying round which resulted in walkover for the Chennaiyin to the main tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284588-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Akron Zips men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Akron Zips men's basketball team represented the University of Akron during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Zips, led by second-year head coach John Groce, played their home games at the James A. Rhodes Arena as members of the East Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 17\u201316, 8\u201310 in MAC play to finish in fourth place in the East Division. They defeated Miami (OH) in the first round of the MAC Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Buffalo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284588-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Akron Zips men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Zips finished the 2017\u201318 season 14\u201318, 6\u201312 in MAC play to finish in last place in the East Division. In the MAC Tournament, they defeated Western Michigan in the first round before losing to Eastern Michigan in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284589-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Akron Zips women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Akron Zips women's basketball team represents the University of Akron during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Zips, led by first year head coach Melissa Jackson, play their home games at the James A. Rhodes Arena as members of the East Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 16\u201315, 7\u201311 in MAC play to finish in fifth place in the East Division. They lost in the first round of the MAC Women's Tournament to Eastern Washington. They received an invite to the WBI where they lost in the first round to Tennessee Tech.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284590-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al Ahly SC season\nThe 2018\u201319 Al Ahly season was the 111th season in the football club's history and 60th consecutive and overall season in the top flight of Egyptian football, the Egyptian Premier League. In addition to the domestic league, Al Ahly also competed in this season's editions of the domestic cup, the Egypt Cup, the Egyptian Super Cup, the first-tier African cup, the CAF Champions League, and the first-tier Arab cup, the Arab Club Champions Cup. The season covered a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019; however Al Ahly played their first match of the season in March 2018 and played their last match in September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284590-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al Ahly SC season, Kit information\nSupplier: UmbroSponsors: Lava, WE, GLC Paints, Uber, Tiger Chips, Royal Dutch Shell", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284590-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al Ahly SC 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284590-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al Ahly SC 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284591-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al Ain FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Al Ain Football Club's 45th in existence and the club's 43rd consecutive season in the top-level football league in the UAE. In December 2018, Al Ain which celebrated the 50th anniversary participating in the 2018 FIFA Club World Cup, representing the host nation as the reigning champions of the UAE Pro-League, Al Ain defeated Copa Libertadores champions River Plate by penalties hosted in home stadium Hazza Bin Zayed Stadium to enter the final for the first time in team history and became the first Emirati club to reach the decisive match. The final, on 22 December, was lost 4\u20131 to UEFA Champions League winners Real Madrid at the Zayed Sports City Stadium in Abu Dhabi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284591-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al Ain FC season, Competitions, FIFA Club World Cup\nIn the first round on 12 December, Al-Ain defeated Team Wellington in a penalty shoot-out following a 3\u20133 draw at their home stadium, Hazza bin Zayed Stadium. Wellington, a semi-professional club that qualified as the OFC Champions League champion, entered halftime with a 3\u20131 lead that was cut back by an equalising volley from Marcus Berg. The match remained scoreless after extra time and advanced to a penalty shoot-out, which Al-Ain won 4\u20133 after five rounds after goalkeeper Khalid Eisa made two saves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 59], "content_span": [60, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284591-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al Ain FC season, Competitions, FIFA Club World Cup\nAl-Ain advanced to face African champions Esp\u00e9rance de Tunis in the second round match, held three days later at Hazza bin Zayed Stadium. The team defeated Esp\u00e9rance 3\u20130 in an upset that began with two goals scored in the opening 16 minutes. Al-Ain produced a larger upset in the semi-finals, defeating Copa Libertadores champions River Plate in a penalty shoot-out to advance to the Club World Cup final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 59], "content_span": [60, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284591-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al Ain FC season, Competitions, FIFA Club World Cup\nThe match began with two early goals for River Plate scored by Rafael Santos Borr\u00e9 following an opening strike from Berg; after an equalising goal was disallowed by the video assistant referee, Caio Lucas Fernandes scored for Al-Ain in the 51st minute to draw the teams level at 2\u20132. After a scoreless extra time, aided by goalkeeper Essa's saves, Al-Ain defeated River Plate 5\u20134 in a penalty shoot-out, its second of the competition, with Essa making one save on River's Enzo P\u00e9rez. The semi-final upset of River was called the \"greatest achievement\" in Emirati football history by Al-Ain manager Zoran Mami\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 59], "content_span": [60, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284591-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al Ain FC season, Statistics, 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, 49], "content_span": [50, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284592-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al Ittihad Alexandria Club season\nThe 2018\u201319 Al Ittihad season was the 104th season in the football club's history and 49th consecutive and 58th overall season in the top flight of Egyptian football, the Egyptian Premier League, having been promoted from the Egyptian Second Division in 1961. In addition to the domestic league, Al Ittihad also competed in this season's editions of the domestic cup, the Egypt Cup, and the first-tier Arab cup, the Arab Club Champions Cup. The season covered a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019; however Al Ittihad played their first match of the season in May 2018 and played their last match in September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284592-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al Ittihad Alexandria Club 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, 41], "section_span": [43, 65], "content_span": [66, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284592-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al Ittihad Alexandria Club 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, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284593-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al Sadd SC season\nIn the 2018\u201319 season, Al Sadd SC is competing in the Qatar Stars League for the 46th season, as well as the Emir of Qatar Cup and the Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284593-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al Sadd SC season, Pre-season and friendlies\nIt is decided that the first football team of the Al Sadd Club will leave for Austria to enter the camp on July 12 until the 28th of this month as part of preparations for the 2018\u201319 season. The team will play 3 friendly matches during the next period, during July 19 for the first friendly, July 23 for the second, and finally the third on July 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284593-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al Sadd SC 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-00284593-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al Sadd SC 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-00284594-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Ahli Saudi FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Al-Ahli's 43rd consecutive season in the top flight of Saudi football and 81st year in existence as a football club. Along with the Pro League, the club competed in the King Cup, Arab Club Champions Cup, and the Champions League. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284594-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Ahli Saudi 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284594-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Ahli Saudi FC season, Competitions, AFC Champions League, Group stage\nThe group stage draw was made on 22 November 2018 in Kuala Lumpur. Al-Ahli were drawn with Persepolis, Al-Sadd, and Pakhtakor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 80], "content_span": [81, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284595-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Batin F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Al-Batin's third consecutive season in Pro League and their 40th year in existence. This season Al-Batin participated in the Pro League and King Cup. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284595-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Batin F.C. season, Players, Squad information\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284596-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Faisaly FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Al-Faisaly's 9th consecutive season in Pro League, the top flight of Saudi Arabian football, and their 65th year in existence. Along with the Pro League, the club competed in the King Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284596-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Faisaly FC season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284596-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Faisaly 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284597-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Fayha FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Al-Fayha's 65th year in existence and second season in the Pro League. This season Al-Fayha participated in the Pro League and King Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284597-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Fayha FC season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284597-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Fayha FC 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284597-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Fayha 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-00284598-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Hazem F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Al-Hazem's 62nd season in their existence and their seventh in the Saudi Professional League. Al-Hazem were promoted to the top tier of Saudi football for the first time since 2011 during the 2017\u201318 season. Along with competing in the Pro League, the club also participated in the King Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284598-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Hazem F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284598-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Hazem F.C. season, Players, Squad information\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284599-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Hilal FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Al-Hilal's 43rd consecutive season in the top flight of Saudi football and 61st year in existence as a football club. Along with the Pro League, the club competed in the Saudi Super Cup, the King Cup, Arab Club Champions Cup, the Saudi-Egyptian Super Cup and the Champions League. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284599-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Hilal FC season, Squad information\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 23 August 2018.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, 45], "content_span": [46, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284599-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Hilal FC season, Competitions, Saudi Super Cup\nAs champions of the 2017\u201318 Pro League, Al-Hilal took on the 2018 King Cup winners, Al-Ittihad, for the season-opening Saudi Super Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284599-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Hilal FC season, Competitions, AFC Champions League, Group stage\nThe group stage draw was made on 22 November 2018 in Kuala Lumpur. Al-Hilal were drawn with Al-Duhail, Al-Ain, and Esteghlal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284599-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Hilal FC season, Competitions, Saudi-Egyptian Super Cup\nAs champions of the 2017\u201318 Pro League, Al-Hilal took on the 2017\u201318 Egypt Cup winners, Zamalek, for the Saudi-Egyptian Super Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 66], "content_span": [67, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284600-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Ittihad Club season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Al-Ittihad's 43rd consecutive season in the top flight of Saudi football and 92nd year in existence as a football club. Along with the Pro League, the club competed in the King Cup, the Sheikh Zayed Cup, and the Champions League. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284600-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Ittihad Club 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-00284600-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Ittihad Club season, Competitions, Super Cup\nAs champions of the 2018 King Cup, Al-Ittihad took on the 2017\u201318 Pro League winners, Al-Hilal, for the season-opening Saudi Super Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284600-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Ittihad Club season, Competitions, AFC Champions League, Group stage\nThe group stage draw was made on 22 November 2018 in Kuala Lumpur. Al-Ittihad were drawn with Al-Wahda, Lokomotiv Tashkent, and Al-Rayyan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 79], "content_span": [80, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284601-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Mina'a SC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season will be Al-Minaa's 43nd season in the Iraqi Premier League, having featured in all 45 editions of the competition except two. Al-Minaa are participating in the Iraqi Premier League and the Iraq FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284601-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Mina'a SC season\nThey enter this season having finished in a disappointing 15th place in the league in the 2017\u201318 season, and will be looking to wrestle back the title they won in the 1977\u201378 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284601-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Mina'a SC 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-00284601-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Mina'a SC season, Stadium\nDuring the previous season, the stadium of Al-Mina'a was demolished. A company will build a new stadium that will be completed in 2020. Since they can't play their games at Al Mina'a Stadium, they will be playing at Basra Sports City during this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284602-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Nassr FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Al-Nassr's 43rd consecutive season in the top flight of Saudi football and 63rd year in existence as a football club. Along with the Pro League, the club competed in the King Cup, Arab Club Champions Cup, and the Champions League. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284602-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Nassr FC season\nAl-Nassr won their eighth Pro League title on 16 May 2019 following a 2\u20131 home win over Al-Batin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284602-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Nassr 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284602-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Nassr FC season, Competitions, AFC Champions League, Group stage\nThe group stage draw was made on 22 November 2018 in Kuala Lumpur. Al-Nassr were drawn with Al-Wasl, Al-Zawra'a, and Zob Ahan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284603-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Shorta SC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Al-Shorta's 45th season in the Iraqi Premier League, having featured in all 44 previous editions of the competition. Al-Shorta participated in the Iraqi Premier League and the Iraq FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284603-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Shorta SC season\nThey entered this season having finished fourth in the league in the 2017\u201318 season, but under the management of Neboj\u0161a Jovovi\u0107 they achieved much better results and managed to secure the Iraqi Premier League title on 14 July with three games to spare. They finished five points above closest challenger Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya, thus qualifying for both the 2020 AFC Champions League and 2019\u201320 Arab Club Champions Cup. In the Iraq FA Cup, Al-Shorta were eliminated in the Round of 16 against Al-Kahrabaa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284604-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Wehda Club season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Al-Wehda's 74th season in their existence and first season back in the Pro League following their promotion last season. Along with competing in the Pro League, the club also participated in the King Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284604-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Wehda Club season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284604-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Al-Wehda Club 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-00284605-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Alabama A&M Bulldogs basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Alabama A&M Bulldogs basketball team represents Alabama A&M University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bulldogs, led by interim head coach Dylan Howard, play their home games at the Elmore Gymnasium in Normal, Alabama as members of the Southwestern Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284605-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Alabama A&M Bulldogs basketball team\nFor the second season in a row, Alabama A&M will be ineligible for postseason play due to APR violations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284605-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Alabama A&M Bulldogs basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bulldogs finished the season 3\u201328, 3\u201315 in SWAC play to finish in last place. Alabama A&M was ineligible for postseason play due to APR violations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284605-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Alabama A&M Bulldogs basketball team, Previous season\nOn May 11, 2018, head coach Donnie Marsh resigned after just one season marking the second consecutive year the school's head coach had resigned following the season. Six days later, A&M associate head coach Dylan Howard was named interim head coach of the team for the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284606-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Alabama Crimson Tide men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Alabama Crimson Tide men's basketball team represented the University of Alabama in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team was led by fourth-year head coach Avery Johnson and played its home games at Coleman Coliseum in Tuscaloosa, Alabama as a member of the Southeastern Conference. They finished the season 18-16, 8-10 in SEC play to finish in a tie for ninth place in SEC play. They defeated Ole Miss to advance to the quarterfinals of the SEC Tournament where they lost to Kentucky. They received an invitation to the National Invitation Tournament where they lost in the First Round to Norfolk State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284606-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Alabama Crimson Tide men's basketball team\nOn March 24, 2019, the school fired head coach Avery Johnson. A few days later, the school hired Buffalo head coach Nate Oats as coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284606-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Alabama Crimson Tide men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Crimson Tide finished the 2017\u201318 season 20\u201316, 8\u201310 in SEC play to finish in a tie for ninth place. They defeated Texas A&M and Auburn in the SEC Tournament before losing in the semifinals to Kentucky. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they defeated Virginia Tech in the First Round before losing in the Second Round to Villanova.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284607-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Alabama Crimson Tide women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Alabama Crimson Tide women's basketball team represents the University of Alabama in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Crimson Tide, led by sixth-year head coach Kristy Curry, play their games at Coleman Coliseum and were members of the Southeastern Conference. They finished the season 14\u201317, 5\u201311 in SEC play to finish in eleventh place. They defeated Vanderbilt in the first round of the SEC Women's Tournament before losing to Auburn in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284607-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Alabama Crimson Tide women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Crimson Tide finished the 2017\u201318 season 20\u201314, 7\u20139 in SEC play to finish in eighth place. They lost in the second round of the SEC Women's Tournament to Kentucky. They received an automatic bid to the Women's National Invitation Tournament and defeated Southern, UCF and Georgia Tech in the first, second and third rounds, before losing to Virginia Tech in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284608-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Alabama State Hornets basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Alabama State Hornets basketball team represents Alabama State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Hornets, led by 14th-year head coach Lewis Jackson, play their home games at the Dunn\u2013Oliver Acadome in Montgomery, Alabama as members of the Southwestern Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284608-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Alabama State Hornets basketball team, Previous season\nThe Hornets finished the 2017\u201318 season 8\u201323, 8\u201310 in SWAC play to finish in seventh place. Due to Grambling State's ineligibility, they received the No. 6 seed in the SWAC Tournament where they lost to Texas Southern in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284609-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Alabama\u2013Huntsville Chargers men's ice hockey season\nThe 2018\u201319 Alabama\u2013Huntsville Chargers ice hockey team represented the University of Alabama in Huntsville in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season. The Chargers were coached by Mike Corbett who was in his sixth season as head coach. His assistant coaches were Gavin Morgan and Lance West. The Chargers played their home games in the Propst Arena at the Von Braun Center and competed in the Western Collegiate Hockey Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284609-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Alabama\u2013Huntsville Chargers men's ice hockey season, Recruiting\nUAH added 8 freshmen and 2 transfers for the 2018\u201319 season, including 1 goalie, 5 forwards and 4 defenseman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 71], "content_span": [72, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284610-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Albacete Balompi\u00e9 season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Albacete Balompi\u00e9's 78th season in existence and the club's second consecutive season in the second division of Spanish football. In addition to the domestic league, Albacete participated in this season's edition of the Copa del Rey. The season covered the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284610-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Albacete Balompi\u00e9 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-00284610-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Albacete Balompi\u00e9 season, Players, 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284610-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Albacete Balompi\u00e9 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284611-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Albanian Basketball Superleague\nThe 2018\u201319 Albanian Basketball Superleague, is the 53rd season of the top professional basketball league in Albania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284611-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Albanian Basketball Superleague, Competition format\nThe six clubs played a four-legged round robin tournament where the four first qualified teams would advance to the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284611-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Albanian Basketball Superleague, Competition format\nThe fifth qualified team faced the runner-up of the second division in a best-of-three games playoff for avoiding relegation, and the last qualified team was directly relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284611-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Albanian Basketball Superleague, Playoffs\nThe semi-finals were played in a best-of-three playoff format and the finals in a best-of-five playoff format (1-1-1-1-1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284612-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Albanian Cup\n2018\u201319 Albanian Cup (Albanian: Kupa e Shqip\u00ebris\u00eb) was the sixty-seventh season of Albania's annual cup competition. Sk\u00ebnderbeu are the defending champions. Kuk\u00ebsi won the title for the second time in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284612-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Albanian Cup, Format\nTies are played in a two-legged format similar to those of European competitions. If the aggregate score is tied after both games, the team with the higher number of away goals advances. If the number of away goals is equal in both games, the match is decided by extra time and a penalty shoot-out, if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284612-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Albanian Cup, Preliminary round\nIn order to reduce the number of participating teams for the First Round to 32, a preliminary tournament is played. In contrast to the main tournament, the preliminary tournament is held as a single-leg knock-out competition. Matches were played on 2 September 2018 and involved the four best teams from the Albanian Second Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284612-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Albanian Cup, First round\nAll 30 teams of the 2018\u201319 Kategoria Superiore and Kategoria e Par\u00eb entered in this round along with the two qualifiers from the Preliminary Round. The first legs were played on 12 September 2018 and the second legs took place on 26 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284612-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Albanian Cup, Second round\nAll the 16 qualified teams from the First Round progressed to the Second Round. The first legs were played on 22 and 23 January 2019 and the second legs took place on 6 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284612-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Albanian Cup, Quarter-finals\nAll eight qualified teams from the second round progressed to the quarter-finals. The first legs were played on 12 and 13 March 2019 and the second legs took place on 3 April 2019. Sk\u00ebnderbeu automatically qualified to the semi-finals after Kamza was banned from football competitions for the remaining of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284612-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Albanian Cup, Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 24 April and the second legs were played on 8 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284613-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Albanian Women's National Championship\nThe 2018\u201319 Albanian Women's National Championship was the 10th season of the Albanian Women's National Championship, the top Albanian women's league for association football clubs, since its establishment in 2009. The season started on 15 September 2018 and ended on 2 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284614-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Albany Great Danes men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Albany Great Danes men's basketball team represented University at Albany, SUNY in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at the SEFCU Arena in Albany, New York and were led by 18th-year head coach Will Brown. They were members of the America East Conference. They finished the season 12\u201320, 7\u20139 in America East play to finish in a tie for fifth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the America East Tournament to UMBC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284614-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Albany Great Danes men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Great Danes finished the 2017\u201318 season 22\u201310, 10\u20136 in America East Conference play to finish in fourth place. In the America East Tournament, they were defeated by Stony Brook in the quarterfinals. Despite finishing with 22 wins, they opted to not play in a postseason tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284615-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Albany Great Danes women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Albany Great Danes women's basketball team represents the University at Albany, SUNY during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Great Danes, led by first year head coach Colleen Mullen, play their home games at SEFCU Arena and were members of the America East Conference. They finished the season 13\u201318, 9\u20137 in America East play to finish in fourth place. They defeated Binghamton in the quarterfinals before losing to Maine in the semifinals of the America East Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284615-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Albany Great Danes women's basketball team\nBernabei-McNamee left Albany on April 10 after two seasons for Boston College. On May 14, former Army assistant head coach Colleen Mullen was named the new head coach for the Great Danes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284615-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Albany Great Danes women's basketball team, Media\nAll home games and conference road games will stream on either ESPN3 on AmericaEast.tv. Most road games will stream on the opponents website. Selected games will be broadcast on the radio on WCDB.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 57], "content_span": [58, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284616-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Alcorn State Braves basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Alcorn State Braves basketball team will represent Alcorn State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Braves, led by fourth-year head coach Montez Robinson, will play their home games at the Davey Whitney Complex in Lorman, Mississippi, as members of the Southwestern Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284616-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Alcorn State Braves basketball team, Previous season\nThe Braves finished the 2017\u201318 season, 11\u201321, 7\u201311 in SWAC play to finish in eighth place. Due to Grambling State's ineligibility, they received the No. 7 seed in the SWAC Tournament, where they lost in the quarterfinals to Prairie View A&M.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284617-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Algerian Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Algerian Cup (Arabic: \u0643\u0623\u0633 \u0627\u0644\u062c\u0632\u0627\u0626\u0631 19-2018\u200e) was the 54th edition of the Algerian Cup. The winner qualified for the 2019\u201320 CAF Confederation Cup, The final was be played in July 5, 1962 Stadium. CR Belouizdad were the eventual winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284617-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Algerian Cup, Regional rounds, Fourth regional round\nThese are the results of the last regional rounds played on 23\u201325 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 60], "content_span": [61, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284618-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Algerian Ligue Professionnelle 1\nThe 2018\u201319 Algerian Ligue Professionnelle 1 was the 55th season of the Algerian Ligue Professionnelle 1 since its establishment in 1962. A total of 16 teams contested in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284618-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Algerian Ligue Professionnelle 1, Teams\n16 teams contest the league. MO Bejaia, Ain M'lila and CABB Arreridj were promoted from the 2017-18 Ligue 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284618-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Algerian Ligue Professionnelle 1, Teams, Stadiums\nAll Derby matches between CR Belouizdad, MC Alger, NA Hussein Dey, USM Alger and Paradou AC will be played on July 5, 1962 Stadium which seats 64,000 spectators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284618-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Algerian Ligue Professionnelle 1, Season statistics, Clean sheets\n* Only goalkeepers who played all 90 minutes of a match are taken into consideration. Updated to games played in August 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 73], "content_span": [74, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284618-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Algerian Ligue Professionnelle 1, Presidential elections Protests 2019\nImmediately after the announcement of several parties in the social networking sites on the events of Friday, February 22 against the fifth term of the current President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, LFP announced the suspension of a match between MC Alger vs MC Oran for round 22 and JSM Bejaia vs Paradou AC in the Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 78], "content_span": [79, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284618-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Algerian Ligue Professionnelle 1, Presidential elections Protests 2019\nOn 24 February 2019, The match between the CR Belouizdad vs DRB Tadjenanet were suspended, Which was to play on Tuesday, also has been delayed 3 games In addition, the matches USM Alger vs Paradou AC of Ligue 1 23rd day, US Biskra vs JSM Skikda and ASM Oran vs RC Relizane of Ligue 2 24th day, initially fixed for Friday 1 March are staggered to Saturday 2 March. A day later, another match was suspended in the Ligue 1 between USM Bel Abb\u00e8s and JS Saoura, in Ligue 2 Also postponed another match ASO Chlef vs JSM Bejaia. To be the sixth match postponed since the beginning of the demonstrations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 78], "content_span": [79, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284619-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Algerian Ligue Professionnelle 2\nThe 2018\u201319 Algerian Ligue Professionnelle 2 was the 55th season of the Algerian Ligue Professionnelle 2 since its establishment, and its fourth season under its current title. A total of 16 teams will contest the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284619-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Algerian Ligue Professionnelle 2, Team changes\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 54], "content_span": [55, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284620-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Algerian Women's Championship\nThe 2018\u201319 Algerian Women's Championship was the 21st season of the Algerian Women's Championship, the Algerian national women's association football competition. AS Suret\u00e9 Nationale won the competition after a close battle with Afak Relizane, winning the league by one point after a final day victory against ASE Alger Centre. SMB Touggourt finished bottom of the league after failing to gain a single point, losing all 22 of their fixtures with a goal difference of -129.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284620-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Algerian Women's Championship\nIn previous seasons, the league season had been split up into East and West sections, with the top six teams qualifying for a final championship round to determine the overall league champion. The 2018-19 season introduced a new, more straight-forward double round-robin, with the winner being the team with the most points after the 22 game season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284621-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Algerian Women's League Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Algerian Women's League Cup is the 3rd season of the Algerian Women's League Cup. The competition is open to all Algerian Women's clubs participating in the Algerian Women's Championship. FC Constantine wins the cup beating AS S\u00fbret\u00e9 Nationale in the final match played in Omar Hamadi Stadium, Algiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284621-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Algerian Women's League Cup, Round of 16\nThe first round of the cup was played on 6 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284622-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Intermediate Club Hurling Championship\nThe 2018-19 All-Ireland Intermediate Club Hurling Championship was the 15th staging of the All-Ireland Intermediate Club Hurling Championship, the Gaelic Athletic Association's intermediate inter-county club hurling tournament. The championship began on 14 October 2018 and ended on 10 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284622-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Intermediate Club Hurling Championship\nOn 10 February 2019, Oranmore-Maree won the championship following a 2-18 to 1-15 defeat of Charleville in the All-Ireland final. This was their first All-Ireland title in the grade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284622-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Intermediate Club Hurling Championship\nGraigue-Ballycallan's Conor Murphy was the championship's top scorer with 0-40.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284622-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Intermediate Club Hurling Championship, Format change\nPrior to the 2018-19 All-Ireland Championship, the London champions received a bye to the All-Ireland quarter-final stage where they played one of the provincial champions on a year-to-year rotational basis. As of 2018, the London champions were allowed to join the Connacht Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 73], "content_span": [74, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284623-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Junior Club Hurling Championship\nThe 2018-19 All-Ireland Junior Club Hurling Championship is the 16th staging of the All-Ireland Junior Club Hurling Championship, the Gaelic Athletic Association's junior inter-county club hurling tournament. The championship began on 14 October 2018 and is scheduled to end on 10 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284624-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship\nThe 2018\u201319 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship was the 49th annual gaelic football club championship since its establishment in the 1970\u201371 season. The winners receive the Andy Merrigan Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284624-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship\nThe defending champions were Corofin from Galway who defeated Nemo Rangers from Cork on 17 March 2018 to win their 3rd title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284624-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship, Competition format\nAll thirty two counties in Ireland and London play their county senior championships between their top gaelic football clubs. Each county decides the format for their county championship. The format can be straight knockout, double-elimination, a league, groups, etc. or a combination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 73], "content_span": [74, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284624-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship, Competition format\nOnly single club teams are allowed to enter the All-Ireland Club championship. If a team which is an amalgamation of two or more clubs, a divisional team or a university team wins a county's championship, a single club team will represent that county in the provincial championship as determined by that county's championship rules. Normally it is the club team that exited the championship at the highest stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 73], "content_span": [74, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284624-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship, Competition format\nConnacht, Leinster, Munster and Ulster each organise a provincial championship for their participating county champions. The Kilkenny senior champions play in the Leinster Intermediate Club Football Championship. Beginning in 2018\u201319, London compete in the Connacht championship. In previous years they played one of the provincial champions in a single match in December referred to as a quarter-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 73], "content_span": [74, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284624-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship, Competition format\nAll matches are knock-out. Two ten minute periods of extra time are played each way if it's a draw at the end of normal time in all matches including the final. If the score is still level after extra time the match is replayed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 73], "content_span": [74, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284624-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship, Competition format\nThe two semi-finals between the four provincial champions are usually played on a Saturday in mid February. The All-Ireland final is traditionally played in Croke Park on St. Patrick's Day, the 17th of March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 73], "content_span": [74, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284624-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship, Competition format\nAll matches are knock-out. Two ten minute periods of extra time are played each way if it's a draw at the end of normal time in the semi-finals or final. If the score is still level after extra time the match is replayed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 73], "content_span": [74, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284624-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship, TV Coverage\nTG4 continue to broadcast live and deferred club championship games each year. Eir Sport entered the second year of their agreement to broadcast live Gaelic football and hurling club championship games, including county championships, county finals and provincial and All-Ireland club championship matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 66], "content_span": [67, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284624-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship, County Finals, Leinster County Finals\nThe Kilkenny SFC champions take part in the Leinster Club Intermediate Football Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 92], "content_span": [93, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284624-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship, All-Ireland, All-Ireland Final\nTwo ten minute periods of extra time are played if the match is level at the end of the normal sixty minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 85], "content_span": [86, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284624-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship, 2018-19 Club All-Stars & Club Footballer of the Year\nThe Club All-Star awards were initiated in the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 107], "content_span": [108, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284625-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship\nThe 2018-19 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship was the 49th staging of the All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship, the Gaelic Athletic Association's premier inter-county club hurling tournament. The championship began on 28 October 2018 and ended on 17 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284625-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship\nCuala of Dublin were the defending champions. They were eliminated by Kilmacud Crokes in the semi-final of the 2018 Dublin Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284625-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship\nOn 17 March 2019, Ballyhale Shamrocks won the championship following a 2-28 to 2-11 defeat of St. Thomas's in the All-Ireland final. This was their seventh All-Ireland title overall and their first title since 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284625-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship\nBallygunner's Pauric Mahony was the championship's top scorer with 1-42.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284625-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship, Competition Format\nThe top hurling teams in Ireland's counties compete in their senior club championship. Each county decides the format for determining their county champions \u2013 it can be knockout, double-elimination, league, etc or a combination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 72], "content_span": [73, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284625-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship, Competition Format\nOnly single club teams are allowed to enter the All-Ireland Club championship. If a team which is an amalgamation of two or more clubs, a divisional team or a university team wins a county's championship, a single club team will represent that county in the provincial championship as determined by that county's championship rules. Normally it is the club team that exited the county championship at the highest stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 72], "content_span": [73, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284625-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship, Competition Format\nLeinster, Munster and Ulster organise a provincial championship for their participating county champions. Connacht discontinued their senior club championship after 2007 but they do organise intermediate and junior championships. The Galway champions represent Connacht in the All-Ireland senior club semi-finals as Galway club hurling is at higher level than the hurling in the other four Connacht counties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 72], "content_span": [73, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284625-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship, Competition Format\nSome Leinster, Munster and Ulster counties also enter their senior champions in the All-Ireland intermediate club championship (tier 2) as it is recognised that club hurling is weak in those counties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 72], "content_span": [73, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284625-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship, Competition Format\nAll matches are knock-out. Two ten minute periods of extra time are played each way if it's a draw at the end of normal time in all matches including the final. If the score is still level after extra time the match is replayed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 72], "content_span": [73, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284625-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship, Competition Format\nThe two semi-finals are usually played on a Saturday in early February. The All-Ireland final is traditionally played in Croke Park on St. Patrick's Day, the 17th of March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 72], "content_span": [73, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284625-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship, Competition Format\nAll matches are knock-out. Two ten minute periods of extra time are played each way if it's a draw at the end of normal time in the semi-finals or final. If the score is still level after extra time the match is replayed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 72], "content_span": [73, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284625-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship, Competition Format\nCounty championships April 2018 to November 2018Provincial championships October 2018 to December 2018All-Ireland semi-finals early February 2019All-Ireland final 17 March 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 72], "content_span": [73, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284625-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship, County Finals, Munster County Finals\nAs Imokilly are a divisional team, Midleton proceeded to the Munster Club Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 90], "content_span": [91, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284625-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship, All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship, All-Ireland Semi-finals\nThe Leinster, Munster and Ulster champions qualify for the All-Ireland semi-finals. The Galway champions represent Connacht and enter the competition at the semi-final stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 123], "content_span": [124, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284626-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Alloa Athletic F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Alloa Athletic's first season back in the Scottish Championship. They also competed in the Challenge Cup, League Cup and the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284627-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Alpe Adria Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Alpe Adria Cup is the fourth edition of this tournament. The season started on 25 September 2018. Egis K\u00f6rmend won its first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284627-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Alpe Adria Cup, Format\nSixteen teams from seven countries joined the competition and were divided into four groups of four teams, where the top two teams from each group will qualify for the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284628-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 America East Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 America East Conference men's basketball season will begin with practices in October 2018, followed by the start of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season in November. Regular season conference play began in December 2018 and concluded in March 2019. The 2019 America East Conference Tournament will be held from March 9-16, 2019. The Vermont Catamounts won their 3rd consecutive outright regular season championship, under the guidance of John Becker, who also received his third consecutive America East Coach of the Year Award, and fourth in total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284628-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 America East Conference men's basketball season, Preseason, Preseason All-Conference Teams\nAmerica East Preseason Player of the Year: Anthony Lamb (Vermont)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 98], "content_span": [99, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284628-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 America East Conference men's basketball season, Regular season, Conference matrix\nThis table summarizes the head-to-head results between teams in conference play. Each team will play 16 conference games, and at least 1 against each opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 90], "content_span": [91, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284628-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 America East Conference men's basketball season, Regular season, Player of the week\nThroughout the conference regular season, the America East Conference offices named one or two Players of the week and one or two Rookies of the week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 91], "content_span": [92, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284628-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 America East Conference men's basketball season, Awards, All-Americans\nTo earn \"consensus\" status, a player must win honors based on a point system computed from the four different all-America teams. The 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, 55], "section_span": [57, 78], "content_span": [79, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284629-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 American Athletic Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 American Athletic Conference men's basketball season began with practices in October 2018 followed by the start of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season in November. The conference held its media day in October 2018. Conference play began in December 2018 and concluded in March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284629-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 American Athletic Conference men's basketball season, Preseason, Preseason Coaches Poll\nThe American Coaches poll was released on October 15, 2018, with UCF predicted to finish first in the AAC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 95], "content_span": [96, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284629-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 American Athletic Conference men's basketball season, Regular season, Conference matrix\nThis table summarizes the head-to-head results between teams in conference play. Each team will play 18 conference games: one game vs. four opponents and two games against seven opponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 95], "content_span": [96, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284629-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 American Athletic Conference men's basketball season, Regular season, Player of the week\nThroughout the regular season, the American Athletic Conference named a player and rookie of the week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 96], "content_span": [97, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284629-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 American Athletic Conference men's basketball season, Postseason, NCAA Tournament\nThe winner of the AAC Tournament, Cincinnati, received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 89], "content_span": [90, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284629-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 American Athletic Conference men's basketball season, Postseason, NIT\nMemphis and Wichita State received at-large bids to the NIT.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 77], "content_span": [78, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284629-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 American Athletic Conference men's basketball season, NBA Draft\nNo AAC players were drafted in the 2019 NBA draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 71], "content_span": [72, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284630-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 American Athletic Conference women's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 American Athletic Conference women's basketball season began with practices in October 2017, followed by the start of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season in November. Conference play started in January 2018 and will conclude in March with the 2019 American Athletic Conference Women's Basketball Tournament at Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, CT.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284630-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 American Athletic Conference women's basketball season, Preseason, AAC Women's Basketball Tip-off\nPrior to the start of the season, the AAC head coaches voted on the finishing order of the teams, a Preseason All-Conference First Team, Preseason All-Conference Second Team, and a Preseason Player of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 105], "content_span": [106, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284630-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 American Athletic Conference women's basketball season, Preseason, AAC Women's Basketball Tip-off\nIn the vote, all eligible head coaches selected Connecticut to win the 2018\u201319 season. Connecticut head coach Geno Auriemma, barred by conference rules from voting for his own team, voted for South Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 105], "content_span": [106, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284630-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 American Athletic Conference women's basketball season, Regular season, Rankings\nNote: The Coaches Poll releases a final poll after the NCAA tournament, but the AP Poll does not release a poll at this time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 88], "content_span": [89, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284630-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 American Athletic Conference women's basketball season, Regular season, Conference matrix\nThis table summarizes the head-to-head results between teams in conference play. Each team will play 18 conference games, and at least 1 against each opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 97], "content_span": [98, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284630-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 American Athletic Conference women's basketball season, Regular season, Player of the week\nThroughout the conference regular season, the American Athletic Conference offices named a Player(s) of the week and a Rookie(s) of the week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 98], "content_span": [99, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284631-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 American Eagles men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 American Eagles men's basketball team represented American University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Eagles, led by sixth-year head coach Mike Brennan, played their home games at Bender Arena in Washington, D.C. as members of the Patriot League. They finished the season 15\u201315, 9\u20139 in Patriot League play to finish in fourth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Patriot League Tournament to Navy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284631-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 American Eagles men's basketball team, Previous season\nThey finished the 2017\u201318 season 6\u201324, 3\u201315 in Patriot League play to finish in last place. They lost in the first round of the Patriot League Tournament to Lafayette.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284632-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 American Eagles women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 American Eagles women's basketball team represents American University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Eagles, led by sixth year head coach Megan Gebbia, play their home games at Bender Arena and were members of the Patriot League. They finished the season 22\u201311, 16\u20132 in Patriot League play to share the Patriot League regular season title with Bucknell. They advanced to the championship game to the Patriot League Women's Tournament where they lost to Bucknell. They recited an automatic trip to the WNIT where they lost in the first round to Penn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284633-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Amiens SC season\nThe 2018\u201319 Amiens SC season was the 117th professional season of the club since its creation in 1901, and the club's 2nd consecutive season in the top flight of French football. It covered a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019. They participated in the Ligue 1, the Coupe de France and Coupe de la Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284633-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Amiens SC 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284633-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Amiens SC 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-00284634-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Anaheim Ducks season\nThe 2018\u201319 Anaheim Ducks season was the 26th season for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on June 15, 1993. The Ducks began the season on the road, defeating their division rival, the San Jose Sharks, who swept the Ducks in the First Round of the 2018 playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284634-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Anaheim Ducks season\nOn February 10, 2019, the Ducks fired head coach Randy Carlyle. He was temporarily replaced by interim coach Bob Murray. On March 26, 2019, the Ducks failed to make the playoffs for the first time since 2011\u201312.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284634-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Anaheim Ducks season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was released on June 21, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 66], "content_span": [67, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284634-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Anaheim Ducks 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-00284634-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Anaheim Ducks season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Ducks. Stats reflect time with the Ducks only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Ducks only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284634-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Anaheim Ducks season, Transactions\nThe Ducks have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284634-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Anaheim Ducks season, Draft picks\nBelow are the Anaheim Ducks' selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284635-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Andros Trophy\nThe 2018\u201319 Andros Trophy was the twenty-ninth season of the Andros Trophy, a motor racing championship for automobile ice racing and motorcycle ice racing held in France and Andorra. The season began in Val Thorens on 8 December 2018 and finished on 9 February 2019 in the Stade de France stadium. Jean-Baptiste Dubourg was the defending Elite Pro Drivers' champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284635-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Andros Trophy, Championship standings, Points systems\nPoints were awarded for both the two Qualifying sessions, Super Pole and the Super Final. Only the best result of both Qualifying sessions counted. The best time of a driver decided the classification in case of a tie break. For example if Driver A became first in Q1 and eighth in Q2 and Driver B became second in Q1 and first in Q2, but Driver A set the best time, then A would receive the most points. The sum of the points received after Qualifying and Super Pole decided the starting grid for the Super Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284635-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Andros Trophy, Championship standings, Points systems\nThere was no Super Pole in the Elite championship. Points were awarded based on the results as shown in the chart below. At all events the Elite Pro field was split up into two groups. The top eight drivers after Qualifying (and Super Pole) raced in a normal Super Final and the other drivers raced in a Final. Because eight drivers raced in the Super Final, the winner of the Final was classified as ninth. Drivers who entered the Stade de France round, which was not part of the regular championship, scored 100 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284635-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Andros Trophy, Championship standings, Points systems\nThe \u00c9lectrique championship had the same scoring system as the Elite Pro and Elite championships, but with different number of points and the Super Final was called a Final. Also in contrast to the Elite Pro championship, there was no Super Pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284635-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Andros Trophy, Championship standings, Points systems\nPoints are awarded based on finishing positions of the Final and Super Final as shown in the chart below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284635-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Andros Trophy, Championship standings, Points systems\nIn the Elite Pro, Elite and \u00c9lectrique championships each driver's two lowest-scoring rounds were dropped from their total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284635-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Andros Trophy, Championship standings, Drivers' championships, Elite Pro\n(key)\u00a0Bold\u00a0\u2013 Pole position Italics\u00a0\u2013 Fastest lap in (Super) Final (parentheses)\u00a0\u2013 Round dropped from total", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 80], "content_span": [81, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284636-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Angers SCO season\nThe 2018\u201319 Angers SCO season was the 99th professional season of the club since its creation in 1919. During the campaign, the club competed in Ligue 1 as well as the Coupe de France and Coupe de la Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284636-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Angers SCO 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-00284636-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Angers SCO 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284637-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Angolan Basketball League\nThe 2018\u201319 Angolan Basketball League was the 41st season of the Angolan Basketball League, the highest premier basketball league in Angola. On 19 May 2019, Petro de Luanda won its 13th league title, which meant qualification for the 2020 Basketball Africa League (BAL) season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284638-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Antigua and Barbuda Premier Division\nThe 2018\u201319 Antigua and Barbuda Premier Division was the 48th season of the Antigua and Barbuda Premier Division, the top division football competition in Antigua and Barbuda. The season began on 27 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284639-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Appalachian State Mountaineers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Appalachian State Mountaineers men's basketball team represented Appalachian State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Mountaineers, led by fifth-year head coach Jim Fox, played their home games at the George M. Holmes Convocation Center in Boone, North Carolina as members of the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 11\u201321, 6\u201312 in Sun Belt play to finish in 10th place. They lost in the first round of the Sun Belt Tournament to Louisiana\u2013Monroe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284639-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Appalachian State Mountaineers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Mountaineers finished the 2017\u201318 season 15\u201318, 9\u20139 in Sun Belt play to finish in a three-way tie for fifth place. They defeated Little Rock in the first round of the Sun Belt Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to UT Arlington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 77], "content_span": [78, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284640-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Appalachian State Mountaineers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Appalachian State Mountaineers women's basketball team represented Appalachian State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Mountaineers, led by fifth year head coach Angel Elderkin, played their home games at George M. Holmes Convocation Center and were members of the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 22\u201314, 10\u20138 in Sun Belt play to finish in fifth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Sun Belt Women's Tournament where they lost to Little Rock. They received an invitation to the WBI where they defeated UNC Asheville, Marshall, Campbell and North Texas to win the WBI championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284641-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arab Club Champions Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Arab Club Champions Cup, officially named the 2018\u201319 Zayed Champions Cup (Arabic: \u0643\u0623\u0633 \u0632\u0627\u064a\u062f \u0644\u0644\u0623\u0646\u062f\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u0628\u0637\u0627\u0644 2018\u201319\u200e) to mark 100 years since the birth of the late Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, was the 28th season (not including 1990) of the Arab World's inter-club football tournament organised by UAFA, and the first season since it was renamed from the Arab Club Championship to the Arab Club Champions Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284641-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arab Club Champions Cup\nThe final was played at the Hazza bin Zayed Stadium in Al Ain, United Arab Emirates, between Al-Hilal of Saudi Arabia and \u00c9toile du Sahel of Tunisia. It was the fourth time Al-Hilal reached the final in their history, while it marked the first appearance of \u00c9toile du Sahel in this stage. \u00c9toile du Sahel defeated Al-Hilal 2\u20131 in the final and won the title for the first time in their history, becoming the third Tunisian team to win the competition in the last five editions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284641-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arab Club Champions Cup\nEsp\u00e9rance de Tunis were the defending champions, having won the title in the previous edition. They were eliminated by Al-Ittihad Alexandria in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284641-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arab Club Champions Cup, Teams\nA total of 40 teams participated in the tournament; 20 from Asia and 20 from Africa. 10 clubs started in the qualifying play-off where two of them advanced to the first round which consisted of 32 teams. From then on, the tournament was played in a knockout format with home and away legs, until the final which was a one-leg match played in the United Arab Emirates. Due to the new format of the competition only being announced after the 2016\u201317 season had already ended, UAFA decided that for this edition of the tournament, teams would be invited to participate rather than strictly qualifying through performance in the 2016\u201317 season's domestic competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284641-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arab Club Champions Cup, Knockout phase, First round\nUSM Alger won 4\u20130 on aggregate. They were awarded a 3\u20130 walkover win in the second leg after Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya's players withdrew from the match at 71 minutes while losing 2\u20130 in protest at offensive chants from the home fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284642-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Argentine Primera Divisi\u00f3n\nThe 2018\u201319 Argentine Primera Divisi\u00f3n \u2013 Superliga Argentina (officially the Superliga Quilmes Cl\u00e1sica for sponsorship reasons) was the 129th season of top-flight professional football in Argentina. The season began on 10 August 2018 and ended on 7 April 2019. Boca Juniors were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284642-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Argentine Primera Divisi\u00f3n\nTwenty-six teams competed in the league, twenty-four returning from the 2017\u201318 season and two promoted from the 2017\u201318 Primera B Nacional (Aldosivi and San Mart\u00edn (T)). Four teams (Temperley, Olimpo, Arsenal, and Chacarita Juniors) were relegated to the Primera B Nacional championship in the previous tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284642-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Argentine Primera Divisi\u00f3n\nRacing won their eighteenth national league championship with one match to spare after a 1\u20131 draw against Tigre on 31 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284642-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Argentine Primera Divisi\u00f3n, Competition format\nThe tournament was contested by 26 teams. It began on 10 August 2018 and ended on 7 April 2019. Each team played the other 25 teams in a single round-robin tournament. The additional match against the main rival team in the so-called \"Fecha de Cl\u00e1sicos\" was once again omitted in this season. From 14 April to 2 June 2019, the Primera Divisi\u00f3n played a new competition named \"Copa de la Superliga\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284642-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Argentine Primera Divisi\u00f3n, Results\nTeams played every other team once (either at home or away) completing a total of 25 rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284642-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Argentine Primera Divisi\u00f3n, Relegation\nRelegation at the end of the season is based on coefficients, which take into consideration the points obtained by the clubs during the present season and the two previous seasons (only seasons at the top flight are counted). The total tally is then divided by the number of games played in the top flight over those three seasons and an average is calculated. The four teams with the worst average at the end of the season were relegated to Primera B Nacional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284642-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Argentine Primera Divisi\u00f3n, Awards\nThe following players were rewarded for their performances during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284643-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aris Thessaloniki B.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 Aris Thessaloniki B.C. season was the 65th appearance in the top-tier level Greek Basket League for Aris Thessaloniki. The club also competed in the Greek Basketball Cup where was eliminated by Promitheas Patras in Phase 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284643-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aris Thessaloniki B.C. season\nIn Europe Aris Thessaloniki was eliminated in Second qualifying round of Basketball Champions League by Russian Nizhny Novgorod. As a loser of BCL's qualifying rounds the club participated in FIBA Europe Cup. Aris Thessaloniki finished in 3rd place of Group G in Regular season and was eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284643-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aris Thessaloniki B.C. season\nThe club changed its manager in December and hired Ioannis Kastritis", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284644-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aris Thessaloniki F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 1st for Aris in the Super League after its return top division of Greece. The club also competed in the Greek Cup and were eliminated in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284644-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aris Thessaloniki F.C. season, Competitions, Greek Cup\nAris Thessaloniki entered the competition in the Group Stage, in the Pot 2, because it promoted from the Football League Football League . The final five clubs of the last Super League are introduced to the tournament in the Round of 16 and they are seeded in the draw. In the draws for the quarter-finals onwards, there are no seedings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 62], "content_span": [63, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284645-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona Coyotes season\nThe 2018\u201319 Arizona Coyotes season was the 40th season for the National Hockey League (NHL) franchise that was established on June 22, 1979, the 23rd season since the franchise relocated from Winnipeg following the 1995\u201396 NHL season, and the 47th overall, including the World Hockey Association years. On April 4, 2019, the Coyotes were eliminated from playoff contention after the Colorado Avalanche's 3\u20132 overtime win against the Winnipeg Jets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284645-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona Coyotes season, Schedule and results, Preseason\nNotes: Indicates split-squad. Game was played at Prospera Place in Kelowna, British Columbia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284645-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona Coyotes season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was released on June 21, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 68], "content_span": [69, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284645-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona Coyotes 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-00284645-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona Coyotes season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Coyotes. Stats reflect time with the Coyotes only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Coyotes only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284645-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona Coyotes season, Transactions\nThe Coyotes have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284645-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona Coyotes season, Draft picks\nBelow are the Arizona Coyotes' selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284646-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona State Sun Devils men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Arizona State Sun Devils men's basketball team represented Arizona State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Sun Devils, led by fourth-year head coach Bobby Hurley, played their home games at Wells Fargo Arena in Tempe, Arizona as members of Pac\u201312 Conference. They finished the season 23\u201311, 12\u20136 in Pac-12 play to finish for second place. In the Pac-12 Tournament, the Sun Devils defeated UCLA in the quarterfinals and lost to Oregon in the semifinals. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they defeated St. John's in the First Four, and eventually lost in the First round to Buffalo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284646-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona State Sun Devils men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Sun Devils finished the season 20\u201312, 8\u201310 in Pac-12 play to finish in a tie for eighth place. They lost in the first round of the Pac-12 Tournament to Colorado. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they lost in the First Four to Syracuse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 71], "content_span": [72, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284646-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona State Sun Devils men's basketball team, Rankings\n*AP does not release post-NCAA Tournament rankings^Coaches did not release a Week 2 poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 64], "content_span": [65, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284647-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona State Sun Devils men's ice hockey season\nThe 2018\u201319 Arizona State Sun Devils men's ice hockey season was the 4th season of play for the program at the Division I level. The Sun Devils represented Arizona State University and were coached by Greg Powers, in his 9th season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284647-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona State Sun Devils men's ice hockey season, Season\nFor the program's fourth year as a varsity squad, the Sun Devils produced their first winning record. The team also was ranked by both national polls for the first time and made its first ever NCAA Tournament appearance. Goaltender Joey Daccord became the first Sun Devil ever selected as an AHCA All-American. After Arizona State had finished its season, Daccord also became the first alumni to appear in an NHL game after signing with the Ottawa Senators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 64], "content_span": [65, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284647-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona State Sun Devils men's ice hockey season, Rankings\n*USCHO did not release a poll in weeks 11, 12 and 25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284647-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona State Sun Devils men's ice hockey season, Players drafted into the NHL, 2019 NHL Entry Draft\nNo Arizona State players were selected in the NHL draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 108], "content_span": [109, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284648-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona State Sun Devils women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Arizona State Sun Devils women's basketball team represents Arizona State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Sun Devils, led by twenty second year head coach Charli Turner Thorne, play their games at Wells Fargo Arena and were members of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season 22\u201311, 10\u20137 in Pac-12 play to finish in fifth place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the Pac-12 Women's Tournament where they lost to UCLA. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Women's Tournament where they defeated UCF and Miami (FL) in the first and second rounds before losing to Mississippi State in the sweet sixteen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284648-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona State Sun Devils women's basketball team, Rankings\n^Coaches' Poll did not release a second poll at the same time as the AP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284649-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team represented the University of Arizona during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team was led by 10th-year head coach Sean Miller and played their home games at McKale Center in Tucson, Arizona as members of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season 17\u201315, 8\u201310 in Pac-12 play to finish in three-way tie for 6th place. They received the 9-seed in the 2019 Pac-12 Tournament, where they lost to 8-seed USC in the first round, 65\u201378.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284649-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team, Previous season\nEntering the 2017\u201318 season, federal prosecutors in New York announced charges of fraud and corruption against 10 people involved in college basketball, including Arizona assistant coach Emmanuel \"Book\" Richardson. The charges allege that Richardson and others allegedly received payments from financial advisers and others to influence student-athletes to retain their services and in turn used those payments to secure recruits. Following the news, Richardson was suspended and relieved of all duties. On January 11, 2018, UA fired assistant basketball coach Book Richardson after his appeal failed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284649-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn February 23, 2018, according to a published report by ESPN, an FBI wiretap revealed that head coach Sean Miller talked with Christian Dawkins (another key figure in the scandal) to discuss paying their top prospect, Deandre Ayton, $100,000 to commit to Arizona, with the monetary situation being dealt with directly with him. While Miller would not coach their next game that day against Oregon, Arizona allowed Ayton to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284649-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team, Previous season\nCoach Sean Miller subsequently denied the allegation and the University of Arizona announced he will remain the coach of Arizona Wildcats men\u2019s basketball team, with Ayton also allowed to continue playing with the team for the rest of the season. However, as a consequence of the report involving Ayton, both of Arizona's remaining committed recruits from the class of 2018, Shareef O'Neal and Brandon Williams, announced they had decommitted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284649-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team, Previous season\nDuring the season, Arizona defeated Texas A&M in the Valley of the Sun Shootout in Phoenix, AZ. Arizona also defeated the same UMBC team that would go on to a historic upset of top-ranked Virginia in the NCAA tournament. Arizona lost to NC State, SMU and Purdue in the Battle 4 Atlantis in The Bahamas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284649-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team, Previous season\nThey finished the season 27\u20138, 14\u20134 in Pac-12 play to finish in a first place. The championship marked the school's 16th Pac-12 regular season championship title (back to back, 29th overall). As the No. 1 seed in the Pac-12 Tournament, Arizona defeated Colorado, UCLA (avenged from 82\u201374 loss on February 4 in Tucson, AZ) and USC to win the 2nd straight Pac-12 tournament championship title for the 7th time. As a result, the Wildcats received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament for the sixth consecutive year (35th NCAA tournament appearances). As a No. 4 seed in the South region, in the First round, they lost to No. 13 seed Buffalo 68\u201389.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284649-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team, Offseason, 2018 recruiting class\nBrandon Williams, originally from Panorama City, CA was the first commitment in the Arizona class. He committed to Arizona on June 6, 2017, over Gonzaga, Kansas, UCLA and USC. He was a consensus four-star prospect. He backed out of his commitment to Arizona after more information relating to the 2017\u201318 NCAA Division I men's basketball corruption scandal came out (similar to former Arizona commit Shareef O'Neal), but he ultimately decided to stay with Arizona on May 5, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284649-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team, Offseason, 2019 recruiting class\nNiccol\u00f2 'Nico' Mannion, originally from Siena, Italy, was originally a part of the 2020 recruiting class, but reclassified to the 2019 class in July 2018. He verbally committed to Arizona on September 14, 2018, over Marquette. Mannion is a consensus five-star prospect out of Pinnacle HS in Phoenix, Arizona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284649-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team, Offseason, 2019 recruiting class\nChristian Koloko, originally from Cameroon, was the second commitment in the Arizona class. He committed to Arizona on September 23, 2018, over California, Creighton, and Vanderbilt. He is a consensus three-star prospect out of Sierra Canyon School in Chatsworth, California.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284649-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team, Offseason, 2019 recruiting class\nJosh Green, originally from Sydney, New South Wales, Australia was the third commitment in the Arizona\u2019s 2019 recruiting class. He verbally committed to Arizona on October 4, 2018, over Kansas, North Carolina, Villanova, USC and UNLV. Green is a consensus five-star prospect out of IMG Academy in Bradenton, Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284649-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team, Offseason, 2019 recruiting class\nTerry Armstrong, originally from Flint, MI was the fourth commitment in the Arizona\u2019s 2019 recruiting class. He verbally committed to Arizona on October 24, 2018, over Michigan State, New Mexico, Oregon and Oklahoma. Armstrong is a consensus four-star prospect out of Bella Vista Prep in Scottsdale, Arizona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284649-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team, Offseason, 2019 recruiting class\nZeke Nnaji, originally from Lakeville, MN was the fifth commitment in the Arizona\u2019s 2019 recruiting class. He verbally committed to Arizona on November 23, 2018, over UCLA, North Carolina, Kansas and Purdue. Nnaji is a consensus four-star prospect out of Hopkins High School in Minnetonka, Minnesota.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284649-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team, Preseason, Red and Blue game\nThe annual Red-Blue game will take place at McKale Center on October 14, 2018. After sophomore Brandon Randolph defended his crown in the dunk contest, the Red team, led by Ira Lee, knocked off the Blue team, 39-33.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284649-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team, Preseason, Preseason rankings\nThe Arizona Wildcats were selected fourth in the 2018-19 Pac-12 media poll. On October 22, Arizona began the season unranked receiving 14 votes in the AP Poll. It was the first time since the 2010\u201311, began the season not in the AP Poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 77], "content_span": [78, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284649-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nThe Wildcats opponents were finalized in the summer and dates and times will be finalized in the fall. Current confirmed opponents are exhibition games against Division II school Chaminade, Baylor, Cal Poly, Houston Baptist, Montana, Georgia Southern, UC Davis, UTEP and Utah Valley. They will also participate in the 2018 Maui Invitational Tournament with three of the following potential opponents including (Auburn, Duke, Gonzaga, Illinois, Iowa State, San Diego, or Xavier). Arizona has two true away games with Alabama at Coleman Coliseum, and UConn at the XL Center. In the unbalanced 18-game Pac-12 schedule, Arizona will not play the two Washington schools on the road (Washington and Washington State) and two Los Angeles schools at home (UCLA and USC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 831]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284650-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona Wildcats women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Arizona Wildcats women's basketball team represented University of Arizona during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Wildcats, led by third-year head coach Adia Barnes, played their home games at the McKale Center and were members of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season of 24\u201313, 7\u201311 in Pac-12 play to finish in a tie for sixth place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the Pac-12 Women's Tournament where they lost to Oregon. They received an at-large bid to the Women's National Invitation Tournament, where they advanced to the finals and defeated Northwestern for the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284650-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arizona Wildcats women's basketball team, Previous season\nThey finished the season 6\u201324, 2\u201316 in Pac-12 play to finish in eleventh place. They lost in the first round of the Pac-12 Women's Basketball Tournament to Arizona State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284651-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arkansas Razorbacks men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Arkansas Razorbacks men's basketball team represented the University of Arkansas during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team was led by eighth-year head coach Mike Anderson, and played their home games at Bud Walton Arena in Fayetteville, Arkansas as a member of the Southeastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284651-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arkansas Razorbacks men's basketball team\nOn March 26, 2019, Arkansas athletic director Hunter Yurachek fired Anderson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284651-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arkansas Razorbacks men's basketball team, Previous season\nArkansas finished the season 23\u201312, 10\u20138 in SEC play to finish in a three-way tie for fourth place. As the No. 6 seed in the SEC Tournament, the Razorbacks defeated South Carolina and Florida before losing in the semifinals to Tennessee. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they lost in the first round to Butler.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284651-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arkansas Razorbacks men's basketball team, Previous season\nSenior guard Jaylen Barford was named first team All-SEC, while senior guard Daryl Macon was a second team All-SEC selection. Freshman center Daniel Gafford was named to the SEC All-Freshman Team. On March 26, 2018, Gafford announced he would forgo the 2018 NBA draft, and would be returning to Arkansas for his sophomore season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284652-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arkansas Razorbacks women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Arkansas Razorbacks women's basketball team represented the University of Arkansas in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. They were led by second-year head coach Mike Neighbors and played their home games at Bud Walton Arena in Fayetteville, Arkansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284652-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arkansas Razorbacks women's basketball team\nThe Razorbacks finished the regular season 17\u201313, 6\u201310 in conference play. They were seeded 10th in the SEC Tournament, earning a first-round bye. The team advanced to the finals, the lowest seed to do so in tournament history, against Mississippi State, where they lost 101\u201370. The team completed its postseason by advancing to the third round in the Women's National Invitation Tournament, where they lost to TCU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284652-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arkansas Razorbacks women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Razorbacks finished the 2017\u201318 season 13\u201318, 3\u201313 in SEC play to finish in a tie for eleventh place. They advanced to the second round of the SEC Tournament, where they lost to Texas A&M.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284653-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arkansas State Red Wolves men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Arkansas State Red Wolves men's basketball team represents Arkansas State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Red Wolves, led by second-year head coach Mike Balado, play their home games at the First National Bank Arena in Jonesboro, Arkansas as members of the Sun Belt Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284653-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arkansas State Red Wolves men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Red Wolves finished the 2017\u201318 season 11\u201321, 6\u201312 in Sun Belt play to finish in 11th place. They lost in the first round of the Sun Belt Tournament to Louisiana\u2013Monroe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 72], "content_span": [73, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284653-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arkansas State Red Wolves men's basketball team, Schedule and results\n* Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses. All times are in Central Time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 77], "content_span": [78, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284654-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arkansas State Red Wolves women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Arkansas State Red Wolves women's basketball team represents Arkansas State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Red Wolves, led by nineteenth year head coach Brian Boyer, play their home games at First National Bank Arena in Jonesboro, Arkansas as members of the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 12\u201318, 7\u201311 in Sun Belt play to finish in a ninth place. They lost in the first round of the Sun Belt Women's Tournament to Coastal Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284654-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arkansas State Red Wolves women's basketball team\nOn March 20, Bryan Boyer's contract wasn't renewed. He finish at Arkansas State with a 19 year record of 333\u2013287. On March 29, the school hired former Central Arkansas/Marshall head coach and Jonesboro, Arkansas native Matt Daniel for the job.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284655-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arkansas\u2013Pine Bluff Golden Lions men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Arkansas\u2013Pine Bluff Golden Lions men's basketball team represents the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Golden Lions, led by 11th-year head coach George Ivory, play their home games at the K. L. Johnson Complex as members of the Southwestern Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284655-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arkansas\u2013Pine Bluff Golden Lions men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Golden Lions finished the 2017\u201318 season 14\u201321, 12\u20136 in SWAC play to finish in a three-way tie for second place. Due to Grambling State's Academic Progress Rate violations and subsequent postseason ineligibility, the Golden Lions received the No. 1 seed in the SWAC Tournament. They defeated Mississippi Valley State and Southern before losing to Texas Southern in the tournament championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 79], "content_span": [80, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284656-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Armenia Basketball League A\nThe 2018\u201319 Armenia Basketball League A is the second season of the basketball first division of Armenia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284656-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Armenia Basketball League A, Competition format\nThe regular season consists in a double-legged round-robin tournament where the six teams qualify for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284656-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Armenia Basketball League A, Teams\nSix teams will take part in the competition after the withdrawal of 3 teams -Engineer, Shirak and Grand Sport-, and the admission of 2 teams -Aragats and Erebuni-.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284656-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Armenia Basketball League A, Teams\nTwo teams were relocated: Urartu Vivaro from Yerevan to Vanadzor and Artsakh from Stepanakert to Yerevan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284656-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Armenia Basketball League A, Playoffs\nThe playoffs are played in a best-of-seven format, with the series starting 1\u20131 or 2\u20130 depending on the head-to-head games in the regular season. The other five matches are played as 1-1-1-1-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284656-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Armenia Basketball League A, Playoffs\nFinal will be played in a best-of-nine format with the same format as in the previous series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284657-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Armenian Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Armenian Cup was the 28th edition of the football knockout competition in Armenia. This season's cup winners earned a place in the 2019\u201320 Europa League. The tournament began on 19 September 2018 and ended on 7 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284657-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Armenian Cup\nGandzasar Kapan were the defending champions after defeating Alashkert on penalties in the previous season's final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284657-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Armenian Cup, Format\nThe Armenian Football Cup this season was contested between twelve clubs over four rounds. The final was a single match which determined the cup winner, all other rounds were played over two legs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284658-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Armenian First League\nThe 2018\u201319 Armenian First League season is the 27th since its establishment. The season was launched on August 6, 2018, and concluded on June 13, 2019. Although Junior Sevan were reigned as champions, however, they did not gain promotion to the 2019\u201320 Armenian Premier League, due to not meeting the requirements of the Football Federation of Armenia to take part at the Armenian Premier League competition. Instead, runners-up Yerevan gained promotion, as they met the above-mentioned requirements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284658-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Armenian First League, Team changes\n5 new teams have joined the 2018\u201319 Armenian First League season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284658-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Armenian First League, Summary\nA total of 12 clubs have entered the competition with only 4 clubs -Erebuni, Lokomotiv Yerevan, Junior Sevan and Yerevan- being eligible for promotion, while the rest 8 teams were the reserve teams of clubs from the Armenian Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284658-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Armenian First League, Summary\nOn 28 February 2019, the FFA suspended the rights of Erebuni SC to continue competing in the second part of the 2018-19 Armenian First League and the club was expelled from the competition, plus a fine of AMD 500,000. Their matches of the second part of the season were given to their opponents by 0\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284658-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Armenian First League, Summary\nAlthough Junior Sevan were reigned as champions, however, they did not gain promotion to the 2019\u201320 Armenian Premier League, due to not meeting the requirements of the Football Federation of Armenia to take part at the Armenian Premier League competition. Instead, runners-up Yerevan gained promotion, as they met the requirements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284658-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Armenian First League, Stadiums and locations\n12 teams will take part in this season's competition, of which only 4 teams -Yerevan, FC Lokomotiv Yerevan, Junior Sevan, and Erebuni- are eligible to get the promotion right to the 2019\u201320 Armenian Premier League by the end of the competition. The remaining 8 teams are the reserve teams of the football clubs currently participating in the Armenian Premier League competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284659-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Armenian Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Armenian Premier League season was the 27th since its establishment. The season began on 4 August 2018 and ended on 30 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284659-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Armenian Premier League, Teams\nThe FFA decided to increase the 2018\u201319 Armenian Premier League participants from six to nine teams, thus three teams from 2017\u201318 Armenian First League were promoted. These are Ararat-Armenia, Artsakh FC and Lori.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284660-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Army Black Knights men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Army Black Knights men's basketball team represented the United States Military Academy during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Black Knights were led by third-year head coach Jimmy Allen, and played their home games at Christl Arena in West Point, New York as members of the Patriot League. They finished the season 13\u201319 overall, 8\u201310 in Patriot League play to finish in a tie for fifth place. As the No. 6 seed in the Patriot League Tournament, they lost in the quarterfinals to Lehigh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284660-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Army Black Knights men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Black Knights finished the 2017\u201318 season 13\u201317, 6\u201312 in Patriot League play to finish in a tie for eighth place. They lost in the first round of the Patriot League Tournament to Loyola (MD).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284661-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Army Black Knights women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Army Black Knights men's basketball team represents the United States Military Academy during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Black Knights, led by thirteenth year head coach Dave Magarity, play their home games at Christl Arena and were members of the Patriot League. They finished the season 11\u201319, 6\u201312 in Patriot League play to finish in seventh place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Patriot League Women's Tournament to Lafayette.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Arsenal's 27th season in the Premier League, 102nd overall season in the top flight and 99th consecutive season in the top flight of English football. The club participated in the Premier League and the UEFA Europa League, and participated in the FA Cup and the EFL Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season\nThis was the Arsenal's first season in 22 years without manager Ars\u00e8ne Wenger. For the second consecutive season, Arsenal qualified for the UEFA Europa League, improving on the last season's result and reaching the final where they were defeated by rivals Chelsea. This was the club's first season under new manager Unai Emery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nArsenal began their off-season by completing some squad alterations. They started by announcing the departure of club captain Per Mertesacker, who retired to become their new academy coach. After six years at the club, Santi Cazorla's departure was also announced upon the expiry of his contract. Further, Petr \u010cech, H\u00e9ctor Beller\u00edn, Mohamed Elneny, Mesut \u00d6zil, Granit Xhaka and Ainsley Maitland-Niles all received new squad numbers, with the latter two also extending their contracts with the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nAfter completing a clearout of backroom staff to coincide with their new club-model following the retirement of long-term manager Ars\u00e8ne Wenger, Spaniard Unai Emery was appointed as the club's new head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nThe first signing of the Emery era was Swiss right-back Stephan Lichtsteiner, who joined on a free transfer from Juventus on 5 June. The club then signed German goalkeeper Bernd Leno from Bayer Leverkusen two weeks later, for a rumored fee of \u00a319.2\u00a0million. Meanwhile, club stalwart Jack Wilshere departed following the expiry of his contract, after 17 years at the club, and Greek central defender Sokratis joined the club from Borussia Dortmund for \u00a314.8\u00a0million on 8 July. Shortly thereafter, the club signed defensive midfielder Lucas Torreira from Sampdoria for a reported fee of \u00a326.4\u00a0million on 10 July, and announced the transfer of Matteo Guendouzi from Lorient for a rumoured \u00a37\u00a0million a day later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, August\nOn 7 August 2018, Alisher Usmanov announced that he would accept an offer from American businessman Stan Kroenke to buy his 30% stake in Arsenal for \u00a3550\u00a0million, in a deal that would allow Kroenke to take full control of the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, August\nArsenal's first game was against reigning champions Manchester City on 12 August. They lost the game 2\u20130 after goals by Raheem Sterling and Bernardo Silva. The following game was against London rivals Chelsea on 18 August. Arsenal lost again, this time 3\u20132 though they had chances to get more from the game, courtesy of goals by Pedro, \u00c1lvaro Morata and Marcos Alonso while Henrikh Mkhitaryan and Alex Iwobi scored for Arsenal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, August\nArsenal's first win was a 3\u20131 victory against West Ham United on 25 August. Marko Arnautovi\u0107 scored first to put West Ham in front, but Nacho Monreal equalised minutes later, and an own goal by Issa Diop and a late goal by Danny Welbeck won the game for Arsenal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, September\nArsenal's first game in September and 4th game in the Premier League, was a 3\u20132 victory over Cardiff City on 2 September. Shkodran Mustafi scored the opening goal from a Granit Xhaka corner, but V\u00edctor Camarasa equalised just before the break. After the restart, Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang scored his first goal of the season to give Arsenal the lead. Cardiff equalised again from a Danny Ward header, but Alexandre Lacazette ensured the victory with a thumping shot to give Arsenal another three points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, September\nAfter the international break, Arsenal were the visitors against Newcastle United. After a dull first half, Granit Xhaka scored a stunning free kick to give Arsenal the lead. Mesut \u00d6zil doubled the advantage on his 200th appearance for Arsenal. Late on, Ciaran Clark scored in stoppage-time to give Newcastle hope. In the end, it was not enough as Arsenal won their third consecutive game 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, September\nArsenal started the Europa League with a 4\u20132 victory over Vorskla Poltava. Aubameyang opened the scoring after a counterattack. Danny Welbeck doubled the advantage, before Aubameyang and \u00d6zil both scored to lead 4\u20130. However, Vorskla scored two goals late in the game though Arsenal still went away with victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, September\nArsenal were at the Emirates against Everton. Lacazette scored a stunning opening goal, curling a shot into the top right corner. Moments later, Aubameyang scored a second for Arsenal, tapping in from close range, though Aubameyang was in an offside position. Nevertheless, Arsenal cruised to their fifth consecutive victory in all competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, September\nTo start off the EFL Cup campaign, Arsenal won 3\u20131 against Championship side Brentford. Arsenal scored twice through Welbeck, although Alan Judge pulled one back for Brentford. Alexandre Lacazette wrapped up the victory during stoppage-time to ensure Arsenal would progress to the next round. During the final match of September for Arsenal, they won 2\u20130 against Watford. Bernd Leno made his Premier League debut as a substitute after Petr \u010cech came off injured. Arsenal opened the scoring through a Craig Cathcart own goal following pressure by Lacazette. \u00d6zil doubled the lead when Lacazette squared the ball across for him to tap home. Arsenal came away with their seventh consecutive victory in all competitions and their fifth in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, October\nDue to political tensions, Henrikh Mkhitaryan did not travel to Azerbaijan for Arsenal's Europa League match against Qaraba\u011f. Arsenal nevertheless prevailed, 3\u20130, with Sokratis, Matteo Guendouzi and Emile Smith Rowe all scoring their debut goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, October\nArsenal's strong form continued with a dominant 5\u20131 victory over Fulham. Although the match was tied 1\u20131 at half-time, Arsenal scored four second-half goals to extend their winning run to nine in all competitions. Aaron Ramsey scored just 39 seconds after being introduced as a substitute; two goals each by Lacazette and Aubameyang completed the scoresheet. A 3\u20131 victory against Leicester City on 22 October 2018 saw \u00d6zil become the highest scoring German player of the Premier League era, with 30 goals. They continued the winning form with a 1\u20130 victory against Sporting in the Europa League, with Danny Welbeck getting the deciding goal. However, Arsenal's winning streak was stopped at eleven with a 2\u20132 draw against Crystal Palace at Selhurst Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, October\nFor their final match in October, Arsenal faced League One side Blackpool in the EFL Cup. The Gunners held a 2\u20130 lead courtesy of goals by Stephan Lichtsteiner and Emile Smith Rowe, but a second yellow card to Matteo Guendouzi allowed Blackpool to cut the lead to 2\u20131. Arsenal held on to advance to a quarterfinal matchup against Tottenham Hotspur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, November\nArsenal hosted Liverpool on 3 November 2018. A late strike by Alexandre Lacazette earned a point for the Gunners after James Milner gave Liverpool a second-half lead. In Europe, a 0\u20130 draw with Sporting secured passage into the round of 32, before a 1\u20131 draw with Wolverhampton Wanderers, where Henrikh Mkhitaryan's late strike ruled out Ivan Cavaleiro's opener.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, November\nAfter the international break, the Gunners played Bournemouth. A Jefferson Lerma own goal put them up before Joshua King equalized in first-half stoppage time. However, Aubameyang scored the winner to hand the Gunners their first victory of the month. Their final game of November was against Vorskla in the Europa League. UEFA decided before the match that it was to be moved from Poltava to Kyiv due to martial law in Ukraine, and Arsenal ran out 3\u20130 winners, with goals from Smith Rowe, Ramsey (from the penalty spot) and Joe Willock. This game also marked the debuts of Zech Medley, Charlie Gilmour, and Bukayo Saka, all from the substitute's bench, and confirmed that Arsenal would progress as group winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, December\nArsenal hosted the first North London derby of the year on 2 December 2018. They took an early 1\u20130 lead after Aubameyang converted a penalty in the 10th minute following a Jan Vertonghen handball in the box. However, Spurs scored two goals in a span of five minutes to take a 2\u20131 lead at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0018-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, December\nEmery made two substitutions and tactical changes at halftime, and the Gunners responded brilliantly, scoring three goals en route to a 4\u20132 comeback win; Aubameyang netted a brace and became the first player to score ten goals in the 2018\u201319 Premier League season; other goals from Alexandre Lacazette, and Lucas Torreira, of which was his first goal since joining the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, December\nArsenal continued their unbeaten run against rivals Manchester United at Old Trafford. In what was a dull match, Rob Holding and Aaron Ramsey both suffered injuries, the former tearing his anterior cruciate ligament, thus ruling him out for the rest of the season. The game ended in a 2\u20132 draw, despite Arsenal scoring two goals which were disallowed in the second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, December\nArsenal bounced back from their dropped points at Old Trafford with a 1\u20130 victory against Huddersfield at the Emirates. Alexandre Lacazette had a goal wrongly disallowed in the first half, and Arsenal finally broke the deadlock through a stunning overhead kick from Lucas Torreira, thus sealing the three points for Arsenal in an unsatisfying performance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, December\nArsenal won their final Europa League Group game at home against Qarabag. Alexandre Lacazette scored the only goal of the game in a 1\u20130 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, December\nArsenal lost 3\u20132 against Southampton at St. Mary's Stadium, thus ending their 22 games unbeaten run. Danny Ings opened the scoring for Southampton, but Henrikh Mkhitaryan equalized for Arsenal with a header. Ings got his second of the game just before halftime. In the second half, Henrikh Mkhitaryan equalized once again with a deflected effort. However, Charlie Austin scored in the 85th minute, capitalizing on a Bernd Leno error to nod home and defeat the Gunners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, December\nThe next match for Arsenal was a North London Derby at the Emirates against Tottenham in the EFL Cup. Tottenham got their revenge on Arsenal for the 4\u20132 defeat in the league with a 2\u20130 win, knocking out the Gunners from the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, December\nArsenal responded to their two consecutive losses with a 3\u20131 victory over Burnley. Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang opened the scoring in the 14th minute after a brilliant pass by Mesut \u00d6zil. Aubameyang scored his second in the 48th minute. Despite Ashley Barnes scoring to cut the deficit for Burnley, Alex Iwobi insured that Arsenal would walk away with all 3 points in stoppage time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, December\nArsenal faced Brighton away from home on Boxing Day. Aubameyang scored a goal early on after some brilliant footwork from Alexandre Lacazette. Despite the early lead, J\u00fcrgen Locadia scored, capitalizing on Stephan Lichtsteiner's error, forcing a draw at Falmer Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, December\nArsenal's last game of 2018 was against title contenders Liverpool F.C. at Anfield. Arsenal got off to the perfect start with an 11th-minute goal from Ainsley Maitland-Niles. However, Liverpool responded brilliantly, with Roberto Firmino scoring twice within the space of a minute right after Arsenal's opener. Sadio Man\u00e9 made matters worse with a goal in the 32nd minute. Mohammed Salah scored a penalty just before halftime, and Firmino got his hat trick with another penalty in the 55th minute, as Arsenal fell to a 5\u20131 defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, January\nArsenal started 2019 with a 4\u20131 victory against relegation contenders Fulham. Granit Xhaka, Alexandre Lacazette, Aaron Ramsey, and Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang scored for the Gunners; Aboubakar Kamara scored for the visitors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, January\nArsenal kicked off their FA Cup campaign away to Blackpool. Joe Willock scored a brace and Alex Iwobi added another en route to a 3\u20130 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, January\nArsenal lost again away in the league, Declan Rice's goal was enough for West Ham to snatch the 3 points at London Stadium. However, the Gunners responded in their next match, a 2\u20130 victory against rivals Chelsea at Emirates Stadium courtesy of Alexandre Lacazette and Laurent Koscielny goals took Arsenal within 3 points of the opponent. Despite the victory, the Gunners took a massive blow, as Hector Beller\u00edn tore his anterior cruciate ligament, ruling him out for the rest of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, January\nNext up was an FA Cup match against in-form rivals Manchester United. Alexis S\u00e1nchez scored for United against his former side. It was quickly made 2\u20130 in favor of the away team through Jesse Lingard. Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang halved the deficit just before the break, however Anthony Martial wrapped up the victory for United as Gunners were eliminated, losing 3\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, January\nArsenal's final game in January came at home to Cardiff City, who were playing their first match since the death of Emiliano Sala. Aubameyang scored the first goal of the game, slotting his penalty home. Lacazette doubled the advantage after making a brilliant run into the box. Nathaniel Mendez-Laing scored a stoppage-time consolation for Cardiff. The victory sent Arsenal up to 4th place over Chelsea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, February\nArsenal's first match of February was a tough one, away to title contenders and defending champions Manchester City. Sergio Ag\u00fcero scored for City in the 1st minute of the match. However, the Gunners responded, Laurent Koscielny nodded home from close range in the 10th minute. Ag\u00fcero scored his second just before the break, and City extended their lead to 3\u20131 with a controversial goal from Ag\u00fcero, thus sealing his hat trick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0033-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, February\nArsenal faced relegation-threatened Huddersfield away from home. Alex Iwobi scored first, before Lacazette doubled the advantage. Huddersfield scored a last-minute consolation, Sead Kola\u0161inac scoring an own goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0034-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, February\nAfter more than two months away from Europe, the Gunners were back in Europa League action via a trip to Barysaw to face Belarusian minnows BATE Borisov. However, a lacklustre display ensued, and Stanislaw Drahuns header on the stroke of half time, coupled with Alexandre Lacazette's late red card, saw BATE record a famous 1\u20130 win and an advantage to take to North London.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0035-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, February\nHowever, the second leg had a fairly varying script to the first game, with defensive errors from BATE ultimately gifting Arsenal a 3\u20130 win, after an early own goal from Zakhar Volkov, coupled with free headers from Shkodran Mustafi and Sokratis Papastathopolous guided Arsenal into the last-16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0036-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, February\nThe Gunners built on the victory with a routine 2\u20130 home win over Southampton, earned after early goals from Lacazette and Henrikh Mkhitaryan. The Arsenal faithful then witnessed yet another Emirates Stadium win, with midfield masterclasses from Mkhitaryan and returning Mesut \u00d6zil setting up a 5\u20131 dismantling of Bournemouth. Both \u00d6zil and Mkhitaryan scored, with the latter setting up goals from Laurent Koscielny and Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, whilst Lacazette was on the scoresheet for the third successive league match, bending home a wonderful free-kick with 12 minutes to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0037-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, March\nA testing March fixture schedule opened with a daunting trip to top-four rivals Tottenham Hotspur. Delays in the construction of Spurs new stadium meant the match was to be staged at Wembley, and the Gunners made a flying start, with Aaron Ramsey scoring for the fourth time at the national ground to put the visitors ahead on 16 minutes. A staggering double-save from Bernd Leno retained Arsenal's clean sheet before Tottenham were awarded a penalty mired in offside controversy in the 74th minute. Harry Kane buried the penalty to level the scores before Aubameyang was clipped in the penalty area in stoppage time. However, the Gabonese was denied from the spot, and Lucas Torreira was subsequently sent off late on as the Gunners had to settle for a frustrating 1\u20131 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 818]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0038-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, March\nThings worsened in midweek as, despite going ahead after three minutes from Alex Iwobi, the Gunners fell to another road defeat as Stade Rennais earned a convincing 3\u20131 win in the Europa League round of 16 first leg. The turning point was undoubtedly Papastathopoulos's red card shortly before the break, with Rennes levelling a minute later through Benjamin Bourigeaud. In the second period, the Gunners completely fell apart, with Nacho Monreal's own goal and Ismaila Sarr's late header inflicting a dangerous wound upon the Gunners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0039-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, March\nArsenal then had a stern test forthcoming. Manchester United were the visitors to Emirates Stadium, and a tense encounter ensued. United were still unbeaten domestically under Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, but that was about to change. Despite the Red Devils dominating in chances, a resolute Arsenal backline, coupled with defensive errors at the other end, saw Granit Xhaka's long-range attempt misjudged by goalkeeper David de Gea to but Arsenal in front, before a penalty from Aubameyang saw the Gabonese make amends for his miss at Spurs to seal a vital 2\u20130 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0040-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, March\nThe Gunners next fixture was at home against Rennes in the second leg of their round-of-16 tie. Trailing 3\u20131 from the first leg, Arsenal made the perfect start, with Aubameyang poking home Ramsey's cross after just five minutes to put them ahead. He then delivered a superb cross for Ainsley Maitland-Niles-Niles to make it 2\u20130 and put Arsenal ahead on away goals inside fifteen minutes. Rennes threatened sporadically, but Aubameyang added his second late on to wrap up a 3\u20130 triumph and 4\u20133 aggregate win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0041-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, April\nApril began with Arsenal seeking to rise to third after Tottenham's defeat at Liverpool closed the top-four gap to just a single point. The Gunners duly gathered the necessary three points after goals in either half from Aaron Ramsey and Alexandre Lacazette earned the Gunners a 2\u20130 victory over Newcastle United. It was also their 10th successive league win at the Emirates Stadium, the first time they had achieved such a run since its opening in 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0042-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, April\nHowever, the Gunners' were hauled back out of the top four next time out after Phil Jagielka's 10th-minute goal earned Everton a 1\u20130 win over the listless Gunners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0043-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, April\nArsenal needed to bounce back, and had no better opportunity to do so than in the first-leg of their Europa League quarter-final tie, against one of the favourites, Italian giants SSC Napoli. And the Gunners responded, claiming an impressive 2\u20130 win and duly seize control of the tie. Aaron Ramsey had put the Gunners ahead early, before Lucas Torreira's effort on 25 minutes deflected in off Kalidou Koulibaly to settle the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0044-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, April\nDespite lying fifth in the table and on course for the Europa League semi-finals, Arsenal's away form had been sketchy all season long, and it was perhaps rather disappointing that the Gunners had to wait nine months prior to their first clean sheet on the road in the Premier League in a rather bizarre 1\u20130 win at Watford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0044-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, April\nThe majority of the games action occurred inside the first eleven minutes, with Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang opening the scoring on ten minutes with one of the strangest goals of the season, with the lethal marksman managing to nip ahead of goalkeeper Ben Foster, and the Watford man hacked his clearance straight at Aubameyang as the ball rolled into the net. A minute later, Troy Deeney received his marching orders after elbowing Lucas Torreira in midfield. The ten-man Hornets did try hard, but ultimately fell to their first defeat of the month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0045-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, April\nArsenal then earned a second successive 1\u20130 win away from home as Alexandre Lacazette's stunning 36th-minute free-kick, coupled with a resolute defensive performance from the Gunners, saw them seal a vital win in Naples against Napoli, thus recording a 3\u20130 aggregate victory and subsequently qualifying them for the semi-finals for the second successive season. They were then drawn against Spanish outfit Valencia CF, who had ruthlessly dispatched fellow Spaniards Villarreal 5\u20131 on aggregate in the last eight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0046-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, April\nEverything was going smoothly in North London prior to the Gunners home match against safety-hunting Crystal Palace. However, a dull first-half display saw Unai Emerys side head into the break a goal behind after Christian Bentekes early header, his first goal all year long. However, Arsenal made a swift start to the second period, with Mesut \u00d6zil's ingenious chip on 47 minutes making it 1\u20131. Nonetheless, quickfire goals after the hour from Wilfried Zaha and James McArthur further extended Palaces lead to 3\u20131, and though Aubameyang pulled a goal back, the Gunners fell to a morale-shattering 3\u20132 defeat in their first league defeat at home since August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0047-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, April\nThey failed to respond in their next encounter, a trip to Wolverhampton Wanderers, and a first half blitz from the high-flying Pack seeing them take a 3\u20130 advantage into the break after goals from Ruben Neves, Conor Coady and Diogo Jota. Sokratis Papastathopolous then scored his first league goal from the Gunners with ten minutes to play, but it wasn't enough as Wolves sealed a superb 3\u20131 win. Another capitulation ensued away to Leicester City next time out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0047-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, April\nAt half-time, the game was locked at 0\u20130 but the Gunners were indeed a man down after a disputable Ainsley Maitland-Niles red card. With an hour played, Youri Tielemans headed the Foxes in front, before a late brace from the Gunners' arch-nemesis Jamie Vardy wrapped up a 3\u20130 triumph for Brendan Rodgers Leicester and leave Arsenal's top-four hopes in serious jeopardy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0048-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, May\nHowever, Europe once again proved the saviour of Arsenal, as a brace from Alexandre Lacazette laid the scaffolds for an impressive 3\u20131 comeback victory over Valencia in the first leg of the Europa League semi-final at the Emirates Stadium. However, it was the visitors who took the lead in North London, with Mouctar Diakhaby finishing off a clever Valencia set-piece move with a firm header, before Alexandre Lacazette slammed home Aubameyangs square ball to level it. Lacazette nodded home Granit Xhaka's cross before the break to make it 2\u20131 before Aubameyang wrapped up the win in the final minute of normal time, volleying home Sead Kolasinac's cross to ensure Arsenal took a healthy advantage to the second leg in Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0049-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, May\nThe Gunners had one foot in the Europa League final, but the top-four looked unlikely. The Gunners had to beat Brighton at home to attain any realistic chance of regaining their top-four status, and made the perfect start after Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang stroked home from the spot on nine minutes to put Arsenal in front. However, on the hour mark, Brighton were gifted a route back into the game after Solly March was hauled down from Granit Xhaka. Glenn Murray duly netted his 200th league career goal as the Seagulls earned a creditable 1\u20131 draw, leaving the Gunners needing to have three points and eight goal difference swing in their favour on the final day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0050-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, May\nWith the top four realistically out of reach, the Gunners travelled to Spain to contest what was arguably their most vital match of the season so far away to Valencia in the Europa League semi-final second leg. However, Valencia-in need of a 2\u20130 win to progress-made a fast start, taking the lead on 11 minutes after Kevin Gameiro turned home Rodrigo's cross, but a stunning volley from Aubameyang saw the two sides head into the break locked at 1\u20131, with Arsenal leading 4\u20132 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0050-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, May\nFive minutes into the second period, Arsenal practically sealed progression to the final in Baku after Alexandre Lacazette rifled home Lucas Torreira's pass, before Valencia made it 2\u20132 after Gameiro added his second, bundling over the line. However, the hosts found them behind again after Aubameyang poked home Maitland-Niles' low cross, before the Gunners' top scorer completed his first-ever Arsenal hat-trick, powering Henrikh Mkhitaryans through-ball, as Arsenal secured a famous 4\u20132 win, subsequently swaggering into the UEFA Europa League final for the first time since its 2009 rebrand, hammering Valencia 7\u20133 on aggregate. Later in the day, it was confirmed that Chelsea had beaten Eintracht Frankfurt on penalties after a 2\u20132 aggregate draw, meaning that all four finalists in Europe that season were from England, the first time this had happened from any country in history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 928]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0051-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, May\nQualified for the Europa League final and out of the top-four race, Arsenal named a weakened line-up in their fixture at Burnley on the final day of the season. After a goalless first 45', a loose ball from Ben Mee sent Aubameyang through on goal in the 52nd minute. He duly put Arsenal ahead, before volleying home Alex Iwobi's cross eleven minutes later to make it 2\u20130. Ashley Barnes then pulled a goal back for the home side before substitute-18-year-old Eddie Nketiah-netted his first Premier League goal for Arsenal, as the Gunners sealed a 3\u20131 win, thus finishing fifth, just one point behind Tottenham Hotspur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0052-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, May\nAfter the league disappointment, Arsenal had two weeks to prepare for what was dubbed as their most important game of the decade, the UEFA Europa League final against Chelsea in the Baku Olympic Stadium, Azerbaijan. However, the build-up was mired in controversy, with the undersized Baku airports permitting just 4000 fans of each London side, not to mention the 6628 mile round-trip, but the worst was in regard to Henrikh Mkhitaryans. One of the Gunners' better players in 2019, the fractioned relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan ensued in warnings from the Azerbaijani sports government, advising the midfielder not to travel. Mkhitaryan decided not to, with the Gunners heading to East Europe without him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0053-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, May\nOn final night, Arsenal and Chelsea walked out to an eerie atmosphere in Baku. Empty seats ringed the ground, and a listless first period ended goalless, mirroring the stark atmosphere. However, the final burst into life in the second. Just four minutes into the second period, Olivier Giroud nodded home Emerson Palmieri's cross against his former club to make it 1\u20130 Chelsea, before Pedro Rodriguez swept home on the hour to make it 2\u20130. Eden Hazard then stroked home from the spot to make it 3\u20130, with Arsenal appearing shell-shocked to their capitulation early in the second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0053-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Review, May\nHowever, a stunning half-volley from Alex Iwobi with 21 minutes to go restored a glimmer of home to the Arsenal camp, but Eden Hazard soon notched his second as Chelsea sealed a 4\u20131 victory, leaving Arsenal empty-handed after a strenuous end to the season. It was a reasonable campaign, but the manner of their defeat to Chelsea and in the top-four race was arguably the foundation for fans irk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0054-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Competitions, Premier League, Matches\nOn 14 June 2018, the Premier League fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0055-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Awards, Arsenal Player of the Month award\nAwarded monthly to the player that was chosen by fan voting on Arsenal.com", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 70], "content_span": [71, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284662-0056-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal F.C. season, Awards, Arsenal Goal of the Month award\nAwarded monthly to the goal that was chosen by fan voting on Arsenal.com", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Arsenal Women's Football Club's 33rd season of competitive football. The club participated in the Women's Super League, the FA Cup and the League Cup. This was the first full season of the club under Australian coach Joe Montemurro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season\nThe club qualified for the Champions League by securing a top two spot in the league with three games to go. In the penultimate game of the season, Arsenal secured the top spot of the league and was English champions once more after a seven-year wait. The Gunners finished runners-up in the League Cup and lost in the fifth round of the FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, Pre Season\nBefore the first friendlies in pre-season, the squad saw some changes. Midfielders Viktoria Schnaderbeck, Lia W\u00e4lti, defender Tabea Kemme (coming from the German Bundesliga) and goalkeeper Pauline Peyraud-Magnin (from the French Division 1) joined the squad, while Arsenal legend Alex Scott retired to focus on her media career, Heather O'Reilly moved back to the States and Anna Moorhouse and Lauren James switched to different English clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, Pre Season\nThe pre-season friendlies consisted of the 5\u20130 won homegame against Italian Serie A champions Juventus on 5 August, in which Vivianne Miedema scored four goals \u2013 Kim Little scored the other one. Arsenal participated in the Toulouse International Ladies Cup in France, where it competed against Montpellier HSC (won 2\u20131 with goals from Miedema and Dani\u00eblle van de Donk) and Paris Saint-Germain (2\u20132 draw, with a goal from Beth Mead and a last-minute penalty by Little). The tournament was won by Arsenal, ahead of the aforementioned teams and Bayern Munich (who Arsenal didn't play).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, August\nAfter the friendlies, the only game in August was the League Cup tie against West Ham United. The game was won 3\u20131, with two goals from McCabe and one from Emma Mitchell. It also was the first appearance of Lia W\u00e4lti in a competitive match for Arsenal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, September\nSeptember saw the club play four games, three for the league and one for the League Cup. Arsenal got off to a great start in the league, by firing five past Liverpool in their 5\u20130 match on 9 September (home). Miedema scored her first hattrick of the season and a goal a piece for Lisa Evans and Little. Liverpool was unable to score in the goal behind Pauline Peyraud-Magnin who made her first appearance in the Arsenal shirt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, September\nThe subsequent League Cup tie against Championship club Lewes on the 16th displayed the big class difference, Arsenal scored nine goals, with hattricks by Miedema and Little, with Van de Donk, McCabe and Evans each adding another goal to the scoreline, Lewes was unable to get a goal in leaving the score at 0\u20139. The thumping didn't stop there, Yeovil Town saw seven goals ending in the back of their net on 19 September (away), with Jordan Nobbs scoring a brace and Mead, McCabe, Miedema, Dominique Bloodworth and Little all scoring a goal. The team who held them to a season-defining 0\u20130 draw in the previous season was unable to respond to this firepower, ending the game in 0\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, September\nGreatest opposition came from West Ham United on the 23rd (home), who were able to go ahead on two occasions via goals by Kate Longhurst in a game that saw some sloppy defending and goalkeeping. A hattrick from Van de Donk and a goal from Little saw them come back, before Claire Rafferty scored from a free-kick leaving it up to Arsenal to keep the one goal advantage in the last few minutes of the game. The Gunners succeeded in that, the game ended in a 4\u20133 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, October\nAfter escaping from West Ham, Arsenal came up on 14 October against the champions from the previous season, Chelsea in a highly anticipated game (away). After a nervy first 20 minutes, Arsenal got the overhand when Little scored from the spot after a challenge from Adelina Engman on Mitchell inside the box. Before half-time, Miedema scored the second. Three more goals would come after half-time, Nobbs scored a fabulous cross-turned-goal, Miedema scored the fourth out of a rebound from an attempt by Mead and Nobbs got played in perfectly for the fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0007-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, October\n0\u20135, a big result for the Gunners, stating their title ambitions in a very clear way. Many positives, but also a big downside: in the second half a tackle from Drew Spence brought down the influential midfielder Little who was unable to continue and was later diagnosed with a broken leg, which will keep her off the pitch for up to 10 weeks. Spence got away with just a yellow card for this offence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, October\nOn the subsequent Sundays, Arsenal won both matches against Reading (6\u20130 at home, 21 October) and Bristol City (0\u20134 away, 28th). The Reading game saw another hattrick from Miedema, her third of the season (second in the league) and goals from Nobbs, Mead and Van de Donk. Bristol City saw four goals end up in their net, with Miedema scoring twice and Nobbs and Van de Donk claiming the other two goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0008-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, October\nBristol made it hard on Arsenal and the scoreline did not fully reflect the game, with two late goals (88' and 90') taking the score up to four, which did not seem fully deserved. Sophie Baggaley (Bristol goalkeeper) played a good game and held a lot of good shots. The two goals took Miedema up to 11 goals in just 6 games, making her the topscorer and well surpassing her four goals from the entire 2017\u20132018 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, November\nBirmingham City visited the Gunners at home on 4 November for what was predicted as the next big test after the game against Chelsea. The game started evenly with both teams unable to score a goal in the first half. The second half saw Nobbs score the first goal of the evening, but Arsenal was caught sleeping in the aftermath: Birmingham instantly responded with their goal, just a minute later. Not much later, Evans got to ground in the penalty area after being held on to by a Birmingham defender. Van de Donk converted the subsequent spot-kick. In the dying moments of the match, Nobbs scored the third goal - ending the game in 3\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, November\nAfter the international break, Arsenal visited Everton, who are at the bottom of the league at this point. The first half frustrated the Gunners, as they had a lot of chances, but were unable to put them past the Everton goalkeeper. It was Van de Donk who was able to find the back of the net in the end of the first half. The second half saw a quick start, Nobbs scored the second before Miedema scored another two. A comfortable 0\u20134 win, but a big blow to the team when Nobbs went down with a few minutes to play and had to be stretchered off the pitch. Later it was confirmed that she had sustained an ACL injury, side-lining her for the rest of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, November\nWith both Little and Nobbs out of the squad, the team welcomed Brighton & Hove Albion on 25 November. The Gunners saw themselves go behind in the ninth minute when a defensive mix-up let through Iniabasi Umotong, slotting in her shot past Van Veenendaal. It took some time for the team to get up to steam, as they were saved a second goal against not much later. They then picked up the pace and saw the three Dutch players, Miedema, Bloodworth and Van de Donk all fire a goal past the Brighton goalkeeper in the first half. The second half saw a lone goal from Mead to finish the game on 4\u20131, extending their winning streak to 9 league games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, December\n2 December saw the team travelling to Manchester to play second-placed Manchester City. The injuries clearly had hit hard on the team, with just nine fit senior outfield players, giving Paige Bailey-Gayle her first start for the team. It proved a frustrating afternoon for the Gunners, who saw Georgia Stanway fire two goals past Peyraud-Magnin, leaving Arsenal no chances. The 2\u20130 loss ended their winning run of 9 league games, but left them still on top of the league with three points clear.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, December\nAfter the league defeat against City, Arsenal played the two remaining games in the groupstage of the League Cup. The first one on 6 December saw them when 5\u20130 at home against Charlton Athletic, with both Miedema and McCabe scoring a brace, complemented by a Charlton own goal. A week later on the 12th, the Gunners traveled to Kent to play against the Millwall Lionesses. Millwall went ahead in the first half, in a match that saw three academy players in the starting eleven. In the second half, three Arsenal goals came in quick succession: first Miedema scored and a minute later Ruby Grant scored her first goal for the senior team. Williamson scored her first goal of the season some minutes later to get a comfortable 1\u20133 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, December\nThe League Cup results secured the top spot in the group and advancement to the play-offs stage. Because of the 11-team league, Arsenal did not play in the league whilst the other teams did. City went level on points but Arsenal had a game in hand and a better goal difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, Winter Transfer Window\nDuring the winter transfer window, the club made signings to strengthen the squad: Danish defender Janni Arnth (from Link\u00f6pings FC) and midfielder Katrine Veje (from Montpellier HSC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, January\nThe first game of 2019 was on 6 January away at West Ham United. It saw a slow start from Arsenal, who went behind after a goal from Jane Ross. Williamson and Arnth both scored a header from a corner by Mead, making it the first league goal for Williamson this season and Arnth scoring on her debut in an Arsenal shirt. Ross leveled just before half time, but two goals from Van de Donk made sure the Gunners won the match 2\u20134. The match also saw the return of captain Little, after having suffered a broken leg in the match against Chelsea. Later that afternoon, title rivals Manchester City drew against Bristol City, giving Arsenal a two-point lead and a game in hand at the top of the league table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, January\nIn the midweek on the 10th, Arsenal welcomed Birmingham City for the quarter-final of the League Cup. There were obvious signs of fatigue following the match against West Ham in the weekend. The first half saw no goals, but a good penalty stop from Van Veenendaal to deny Birmingham the lead. In the second half, a defensive mix-up led to the 0\u20131 lead for the visitors. The game however saw a nail-biting ending, when Van de Donk scored from a Miedema cross with six minutes left on the clock. In stoppage time, Miedema turned from provider to scorer when she sent home the pass from McCabe to make sure the game was won 2\u20131 in the 90 minutes and sending the Gunners into the semi-final. The game saw the first appearance of winter signing Katrine Veje.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, January\nThe last game before the January international break, on the 13th saw London rivals Chelsea come to Borehamwood. It would prove to be a hard match for the Gunners, with Erin Cuthbert scoring on both sides of half time to go 0\u20132 ahead. Miedema scored in the 80th minute to make 1\u20132. It would prove to make an exciting last ten minutes of the match, but in the end not enough to get a point out of the match. This meant that Manchester City would go top of the league and leave Arsenal in second place, one point behind City but with a game in hand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, January\nAfter the international break, Arsenal visited Reading on the 27th in Adams Park with good memories from last season's Continental Cup final win there. The team came out of the gates blazing with Miedema scoring her 16th league goal of the season, surpassing the record set for most league goals in a season by Ellen White in the previous season. A controversially given penalty used by Little and a last minute goal by McCabe, assisted with the first touches of just subbed on academy player Melisa Filis ended the game in a 0\u20133 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0019-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, January\nA win of fourth placed Birmingham City over third placed Chelsea might mean that the title could be decided between Arsenal and Manchester City, who are now 5 and 6 points clear of Birmingham City and Chelsea. The Gunners still have their game in hand over Manchester City, whilst just being one point down on them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, February\nOn the 3rd, Arsenal visited Crawley Wasps, a fourth tier team for the fourth round proper of the FA Cup. The game was played with an heavily rotated team, with six academy players in the game. It was Little who scored first, after which the academy player and just 16-year-old Grant scored a hat-trick to make the final score 0\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, February\nContinuing in the cups, the newly formed Manchester United visited the Gunners in Borehamwood in the semi-final of the WSL Cup on the 7th. The Championship side provided a good battle but it was Arsenal who struck first: Miedema scored on both sides of half-time to net her 24th and 25th goals of the season. United scored through Mollie Green in the 83rd minute leaving a nervy last 10 minutes. Although the game finished 2\u20131, the score suggests a more even tie than it was, Arsenal were clearly on top against the Championship side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, February\nThe injuries were not to be forgotten however and the Gunners were painfully reminded when they were outplayed by Chelsea away on the 17th. The two top three sides met for the fifth round of the FA Cup, in which Arsenal were unable to respond to the game played by Chelsea. Chelsea won the match 3\u20130 with a brace from Bethany England and a goal by Jonna Andersson, booting Arsenal out of the FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, February\nThe mid-week game (20 February) against Yeovil Town was supposed to be a routine win against bottom of the table, but the Gunners only found the back of the net in the second half. Two goals from Little (one of which a penalty) and a strike by Mead saw Arsenal win 3\u20130 leaving them still in contention for the league title with a two-point deficit on City but with two games in hand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, February\n23 February saw the League Cup final against Manchester City at Bramall Lane. This third game in a week saw Arsenal topscorer Miedema starting from the bench due to tiredness. The game was fairly even, both teams had chances but none went in the back of the net. After the regular 90 minutes and the extra time, it all came down to penalties. The game and previous games had taken a toll on the players, with both Williamson (who had a very good game) and Van de Donk both missing their penalties. City won 2\u20134 in the end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, March\nAfter the February/March international period, Arsenal returned to league action when they were visited by Bristol City on 14 March. The game saw a quick opening goal by Miedema in the 11th minute making the Gunners' intention clear. The team had to wait until the second half however to see the ball end in the back of the net again: two goals by Miedema and one by McCabe. These goals went unanswered by the Vixens, resulting in a convincing 4\u20130 victory. The three goals by Miedema was her fourth (third in the league) hat-trick of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, March\n24 March saw Arsenal travel to Liverpool for their rescheduled match. Having won the reverse fixture 5\u20130 at the start of the season and Liverpool's recent poor form made the Gunners heavy favourites for the game. Little opened the scoring after 20 minutes before Mead found the back of the net two minutes later. The second half saw a further strike from Mead and one by Bloodworth (however classified as an own goal by Sophie Bradley-Auckland). Courtney Sweetman-Kirk got one back via a penalty when Veje brought down a Liverpool player inside the box. The game ended after a goal by Miedema, her 20th league goal of the season, in 1\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, March\nThe last game before the April international break saw Arsenal go to Birmingham City in a bid to wrap up Champions League football for the next season. A win would see them secure second place in the league, which means qualification. Arsenal started the first half well and had several opportunities to go ahead but was unable to find a way past Hannah Hampton who had a very good game keeping for the Blues. Birmingham had a few chances on goal as well, notably Ellen White requiring a diving save from Peyraud-Magnin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0027-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, March\nThe second half started with much of the same: Arsenal had the upperhand but got sloppier and were unable to keep possession for very long. Of all the moments in the match, that was when McCabe shot the ball in the bottom-right corner of the Birmingham goal, just out of reach of Hampton. The match finished 0\u20131, securing Champions League football for the first time in five years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, April\nAfter the April international break, the Gunners returned to London Colney to prepare for the match against Everton at home on 21 April. Everton held the second-to-last spot in the league rankings and it was expected that the team would be able to brush them aside with relative ease. It turned out to be more difficult than expected, though the match started well with a goal from a corner in the fourth minute (scored either by Quinn or an own goal). Miedema followed suit, with a goal halfway through the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0028-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, April\nThe second half saw a tackle on Mead, which was only punished with a yellow card by the referee. Arsenal players argued with the referee about this, with Van de Donk even shoving her - earning a yellow card as well. Both the cards could have been straight reds as well. Some time after this incident, Van Veenendaal was unlucky or distracted and picked up a backpass from Williamson earning the Toffees an indirect free kick which went into the back of the net. It made for an anxious last half hour of the game, but the Gunners were able to see the game out: ending it with a 2\u20131 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, April\nThe stage was set for a possible title-winning game when Arsenal went to Brighton & Hove Albion on 28 April. After other European clubs had record attendances in their matches, Brighton moved the match to the Falmer Stadium in an attempt to boost the match attendance. The match set a new WSL record with 5,265 spectators, some way away from attendances in Europe but still a significant increase and a possible step up towards the future.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0029-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, April\nArsenal quickly got out of the blocks with Miedema scoring a great goal from range in the sixth minute, setting the scene of the match that was to follow. The Brighton goalkeeper was able to tip Miedema's shot to the crossbar, but it went back down into the goal. Miedema turned to provider to give a great through-ball to McCabe who slotted home the second goal after half an hour. The second half would see two further strikes: after 70 minutes, a great strike from distance by Mead leaving the keeper with no chance of saving it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0029-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, April\nA further six minutes later, Van de Donk scored the fourth goal ending the score with 0\u20134. This meant Arsenal could not be passed in the league table anymore by second-placed Manchester City, making the Gunners the 2018-19 Women's Super League champions after a seven-year wait since their last league title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284663-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Arsenal W.F.C. season, Review, May\nThe only game left for the Gunners was on 11 May against runners-up Manchester City, who visited Arsenal at Meadow Park. The game didn't have any significance to the league standings, as both teams had already qualified for the Champions League and Arsenal could not be passed for first place anymore. City could've gone the whole season unbeaten domestically, had it not been for an 88th-minute strike by Mitchell fired in from outside the area past several City players and goalkeeper Ellie Roebuck. The defender had to deal with her share of injuries during the season and had only returned from injury this last game of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284664-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Artsakh FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Artsakh FC's 1st season in the Armenian Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284664-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Artsakh FC season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284665-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aruban Division di Honor\nThe 2018\u201319 Aruban Division di Honor is the 58th season of the Aruban Division di Honor, the top division football competition in Aruba. The season began on 19 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284665-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aruban Division di Honor\nRacing Club Aruba won the league championship, beating Nacional in the final. It was Racing's 17th Aruban domestic league championship, and their first since 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284665-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aruban Division di Honor, Changes from 2017\u201318\nJuventud TL were relegated to the Aruban Division Uno. Brazil Juniors were promoted from the Division Uno.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284665-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aruban Division di Honor, Championship final, Third leg\nRacing Club Aruba won championship qualified for Caribbean Club Shield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284666-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season\nThe 2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season is a two-part competition: Apertura 2018 and Clausura 2019. Ascenso MX is the second-tier football league of Mexico. Apertura began on 20 July 2018, and Clausura began on 4 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284666-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season, Changes from the previous season\nNine teams met the requirements to be promoted to the Liga MX for the 2019\u20132020 season: Atl\u00e9tico San Luis, Ju\u00e1rez, Oaxaca, Sinaloa, Sonora, Tampico Madero, UdeG, Zacatecas, and Zacatepec. Atlante and Celaya lost their right to be promoted from the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284666-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season, Changes from the previous season\nThe relegated team of the Clausura 2019 Liga MX season had the option of paying MXN$120 million to remain in Liga MX. Of that amount, MXN$60 million would go to the Ascenso MX team that is not certified to be promoted and MXN$60 million would go to new projects determined by the Liga MX assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284666-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season, Changes from the previous season\nIf the team that had normally relegated to the tier below did then the MXN$120 million remained in Liga MX, the team's right to be the 18th team of Liga MX will be seceded to Liga MX and the MXN$120 million must be paid by the other 17 teams of Liga MX. The vacant position in Liga MX could then be occupied by a certified Ascenso MX team or an external sport project. If the position is not occupied, Liga MX reserves all rights to do as deemed fit with it for the 2019\u201320 Liga MX season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284666-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season, Changes from the previous season\nTeams in the Liga Premier de M\u00e9xico must be certified to be promoted to Ascenso MX. If a promoted team is not certified for Ascenso MX, the relegated Ascenso MX team is required to pay MXN$15 million, of which MXN$5 million are given to the team that is not certified, and MXN$10 million are for development projects of Ascenso MX.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284666-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season, Changes from the previous season\nTeam squads are limited to 12 players not developed in Mexico. A maximum of nine of those players may be in the match-day squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284666-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season, Changes from the previous season\nTeams are required to give youth players playing time. For the Apertura 2018 season, teams must accumulate 675 minutes with players born on or after 1997. For the Clausura 2019 season, teams must accumulate 882 minutes with players born in 1998.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284666-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season, Changes from the previous season\nThe away goals rule is no longer a tiebreaker for the liguilla.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284666-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season, Apertura 2018\nApertura 2018 was the 47th edition of Ascenso MX. The league season began on 20 July 2018 and ended on 11 November 2018. Cafetaleros de Tapachula defended their inaugural league title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284666-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season, Apertura 2018, Regular Season statistics, Top goalscorers\nPlayers sorted first by goals scored, then by last name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284666-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season, Apertura 2018, Attendance, Per team\nUpdated to games played on 11 November 2018Source: Notes:Only regular season listed", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 62], "content_span": [63, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284666-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season, Apertura 2018, Liguilla (Playoffs)\nThe eight best teams 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 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 61], "content_span": [62, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284666-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season, Apertura 2018, Liguilla (Playoffs), Quarter-finals\nThe first legs were played on 14 and 15 November, and the second legs were played on 17 and 18 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 77], "content_span": [78, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284666-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season, Apertura 2018, Liguilla (Playoffs), Quarter-finals\nAll times are UTC\u22126 except for matches in Canc\u00fan, Ciudad Ju\u00e1rez, Culiac\u00e1n, and Hermosillo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 77], "content_span": [78, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284666-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season, Apertura 2018, Liguilla (Playoffs), Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 21 and 22 November, and the second legs were played on 24 and 25 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 74], "content_span": [75, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284666-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season, Apertura 2018, Liguilla (Playoffs), Final\nThe first leg was played on 29 November, and the second leg was played on 2 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 68], "content_span": [69, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284666-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season, Clausura 2019\nThe Clausura 2019 season is the 48th season of Ascenso MX. The season began on 4 January 2019. The defending champions are Atl\u00e9tico San Luis, having won their first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284666-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season, Clausura 2019, Regular season, Results\nTeams play every other team once (either at home or away), with one team resting each round, completing a total of 15 rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 65], "content_span": [66, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284666-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season, Clausura 2019, Regular Season statistics, Top goalscorers\nPlayers sorted first by goals scored, then by last name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284666-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season, Clausura 2019, Attendance, Per team\nUpdated to games played on 14 April 2019Source: Notes:Only regular season listed", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 62], "content_span": [63, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284666-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season, Clausura 2019, Liguilla (Playoffs)\nThe four 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 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 61], "content_span": [62, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284666-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season, Clausura 2019, Liguilla (Playoffs), Quarter-finals\nThe first legs were played on 17 and 18 April, and the second legs were played on 20 and 21 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 77], "content_span": [78, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284666-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season, Clausura 2019, Liguilla (Playoffs), Quarter-finals\nAll times are UTC\u22125 except for matches in Culiac\u00e1n and Hermosillo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 77], "content_span": [78, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284666-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season, Clausura 2019, Liguilla (Playoffs), Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 24 April, and the second legs were played on 27 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 74], "content_span": [75, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284666-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season, Clausura 2019, Liguilla (Playoffs), Final\nThe first leg was played on 2 May, and the second leg was played on 5 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 68], "content_span": [69, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284666-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season, Aggregate table\nThe Aggregate table is the general ranking for the 2018\u201319 season. This table is a sum of the Apertura and Clausura tournament standings. The aggregate table is used to determine seeding for the \"Promotion\" Final and for 2019\u201320 Copa MX qualification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284666-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season, Relegation table\nThe relegated team will be the one with the lowest ratio of points to matches played in the following tournaments: Apertura 2016, Clausura 2017, Apertura 2017, Clausura 2018, Apertura 2018, and Clausura 2019. On April 5, 2019, Tampico Madero was relegated to Serie A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284666-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ascenso MX season, Relegation table\nLast update: 14 April 2019 Rules for relegation: 1) Relegation coefficient; 2) Goal difference; 3) Number of goals scored; 4) Head-to-head results between tied teams; 5) Number of goals scored away; 6) Fair Play points R = RelegatedSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284667-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Asian Le Mans Series\nThe 2018\u201319 Asian Le Mans Series was the seventh season of the Automobile Club de l'Ouest's Asian Le Mans Series. It is the fourth 24 Hours of Le Mans-based series created by the ACO, following the American Le Mans Series (since merged with the Rolex Sports Car Series to form the United SportsCar Championship), the European Le Mans Series and the FIA World Endurance Championship. The four-event season began at the Shanghai International Circuit on 25 November 2018 and ended at the Sepang International Circuit in Selangor on 24 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284667-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Asian Le Mans Series, Calendar\nThe calendar for the 2018\u20132019 season was announced on 3 February 2018, featuring four FIA Grade 1 circuits. The series returned to the Shanghai International Circuit for the first time since the 2014 season, with the venue replacing the Zhuhai International Circuit as the opening round of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284668-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Associa\u00e7\u00e3o Acad\u00e9mica de Coimbra \u2013 O.A.F. season\nThe 2017\u201318 season is Acad\u00e9mica's third season in the LigaPro. This season they will also take part in the Ta\u00e7a de Portugal and Ta\u00e7a da Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284669-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aston Villa F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Aston Villa's third consecutive season in the Championship following their relegation from the Premier League during the 2015\u201316 season, they finished in fifth place and were the winners of the subsequent play-offs to achieve promotion to the Premier League. It was also their 144th year in existence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284669-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aston Villa F.C. season\nOn 2 October 2018, Villa surrendered a two-goal lead, drawing 3\u20133 at home to bottom club Preston North End. One spectator threw a cabbage at manager, Steve Bruce, and there were calls from home fans on the Holte End for Bruce to go. The following day, he was sacked by Villa after a poor run of form. A week later, Dean Smith was appointed manager of 14th-placed Championship club Aston Villa, with John Terry as his assistant coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284669-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aston Villa F.C. season\nSmith was named as the EFL's manager of the week after overseeing a 3\u20130 win at Derby County on 10 November. He immediately managed to reinvigorate the \"Villans\" attack, and only a controversial injury-time equaliser from local rivals West Bromwich Albion at The Hawthorns denied them a place in the play-offs by 7 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284669-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aston Villa F.C. season\nHowever Villa's form dipped dramatically in the three months after Jack Grealish was sidelined with a shin injury picked up in that match, but on 2 March, Smith gave Grealish the captaincy on his return to the first-team and the 23-year old inspired an important 4\u20130 victory over play-off rivals Derby County. Smith was given that month's EFL Championship Manager of the Month award after achieving five wins in five games, including a victory over Second City derby rivals Birmingham City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284669-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aston Villa F.C. season\nOn 22 April 2019, the team surpassed a 109 year old club record for longest winning run after defeating Millwall 1\u20130 at Villa Park to make it 10 successive victories in 10 matches. The record had previously been held at nine straight wins. On 11 May, the new manager oversaw his 18th win with Aston Villa as they came from behind to beat West Brom 2\u20131 in the first leg of the Championship play-off semi-finals. Three days later, Villa came from behind at West Brom to win on penalties and secure a place in the play-off final. Villa went on to win promotion to the Premier League with a 2\u20131 victory over Derby County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284669-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aston Villa F.C. season, Competitions, Pre-season friendlies\nVilla announced friendlies with AFC Telford United, Kidderminster Harriers, Walsall and Dynamo Dresden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284669-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aston Villa F.C. season, Competitions, Championship, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the Championship fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284669-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aston Villa F.C. season, Competitions, Championship, Playoffs\nOn 22 April 2019, Aston Villa confirmed their place in this year's EFL Championship playoffs. On 30 April 2019, Aston Villa confirmed 5th place in this year's Championship and would therefore play their first leg at home. The date is set for Saturday 11 May 2019 at 12:30pm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284669-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aston Villa F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284669-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aston Villa F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam. The second round was drawn by Chris Waddle and Mick McCarthy on 16 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284669-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Aston Villa F.C. season, Squad statistics, Appearances and goals\nGiven one Red Card, which was later rescinded. Based on matches played until 28 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 72], "content_span": [73, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284670-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atalanta B.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Atalanta Bergamasca Calcio's eighth consecutive season in Serie A. The club competed in Serie A and the Coppa Italia, and had qualified for the second qualifying round of the UEFA Europa League following their seventh-place finish the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284670-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atalanta B.C. season\nThe season was coach Gian Piero Gasperini's third at the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284671-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Athletic Bilbao season\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Rodw (talk | contribs) at 09:39, 21 June 2021 (Disambiguating links to \u00d3scar Gil (link changed to \u00d3scar Gil (footballer, born 1995)) using DisamAssist.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284671-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Athletic Bilbao season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 120th in Athletic Club\u2019s history and the 88th in the top tier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284671-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Athletic Bilbao season, Squad, 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284672-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlanta Hawks season\nThe 2018\u201319 Atlanta Hawks season was the team's 69th season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA) and the 51st in Atlanta. On April 25, 2018, the Hawks and Mike Budenholzer mutually agreed to part ways. On May 11, 2018, the Hawks hired Lloyd Pierce as head coach. Four days later, the Hawks won the #3 pick in the 2018 NBA draft (though they later traded down to #5 on the night of the draft), as well as enter draft night with four total draft picks over a month later in June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284672-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlanta Hawks season\nDuring the offseason, the Hawks signed veteran Vince Carter, the 8th team he has played for in his 21-year career. Carter signed with the Hawks despite massive speculation he would make a return to his two original teams; the Toronto Raptors (where Carter played his first 7 seasons with) or the Golden State Warriors (whom drafted Carter in 1998). This season also produced the team's highest scoring game with 161 points in a 168\u2013161 quadruple overtime loss to the Chicago Bulls on March 1, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284672-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlanta Hawks season\nIt was also the third-highest scoring game in NBA history, as well as the third game where both teams scoring broke through the 160 point barrier in the same game. However, this brought the Hawks to another losing season as they missed the playoffs after a loss to the Rockets on March 19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284672-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlanta Hawks season, Draft picks\nEntering draft night, the Hawks would have four draft picks, three of which being in the first round. Their first of three first round picks rose up into the Top 3 of the NBA Draft after tying the Dallas Mavericks with the third-worst record of the season the previous season. The next first round pick was had by trading Adreian Payne to the Minnesota Timberwolves in exchange for their lottery-protected first round pick, which barely conveyed to them that season thanks to a do-or-die game at the end of that season against the Denver Nuggets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284672-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlanta Hawks season, Draft picks\nAfter that, their last first round pick was had by trading with the Los Angeles Clippers and Denver Nuggets, acquiring the Houston Rockets' first round pick from this season in relation to the Clippers' blockbuster trade in their removal of Chris Paul, as well as Jamal Crawford, Diamond Stone, and cash considerations from the Clippers and giving up the Washington Wizards' 2019 second round pick to Denver. Finally, their sole second round pick would be had by losing their first round tiebreaker with Dallas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284672-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlanta Hawks season, Draft picks\nIronically, the Hawks would trade their third pick (which became Luka Don\u010di\u0107) to the Dallas Mavericks in exchange for a protected 2019 first round pick and the fifth pick of the draft, which became Trae Young from the University of Oklahoma. Young was a player that, before the start of the previous season, was projected to be a second round pick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284672-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlanta Hawks season, Draft picks\nHowever, Young grew to be a star point guard for the Sooners, to the point where he became the first ever player in NCAA history to lead the league in both points and assists in the same season in his sole season with Oklahoma. For their second first round pick of the draft, the Hawks drafted sophomore shooting guard Kevin Huerter from the University of Maryland as the 19th pick of the draft. Finally, with their last first round pick of the year, the Hawks selected freshman power forward Omari Spellman from Villanova University, who was a prominent member of the team under their championship run last season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284672-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlanta Hawks season, Player statistics\nAfter all games. \u2021Waived during the season\u2020Traded during the season\u2260Acquired during the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284673-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic 10 Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 Atlantic 10 Conference men's basketball season was the 43rd season of Atlantic 10 Conference basketball. The season began with practices in October 2018, followed by the start of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season in November. League play began in late December and ended in March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284673-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic 10 Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2019 Atlantic 10 Tournament was held from March 13\u201317, 2019 at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284673-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic 10 Conference men's basketball season\nRhode Island was the defending regular season champion, while Davidson was the defending Tournament champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284673-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic 10 Conference men's basketball season, Head coaches, Coaching changes\nOn March 22, 2018, Rhode Island announced that head coach Dan Hurley had accepted the head coaching job at Connecticut. On April 4, assistant coach David Cox was promoted to head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 86], "content_span": [87, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284673-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic 10 Conference men's basketball season, Head coaches, Coaching changes\nOn March 23, 2018, La Salle head coach John Giannini and the school mutually agreed to part ways after 14 seasons. Giannini left with a 212\u2013226 record at La Salle. On April 8, the school hired Villanova assistant Ashley Howard as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 86], "content_span": [87, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284673-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic 10 Conference men's basketball season, Head coaches, Conference matrix\nThis table summarizes the head-to-head results between teams in conference play. Each team will play 18 conference games: one game vs. eight opponents and two games against five opponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 87], "content_span": [88, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284673-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic 10 Conference men's basketball season, Preseason, Preseason poll\nPrior to the season at the conference's annual media day, awards and a poll were chosen by a panel of the league's head coaches and select media members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 81], "content_span": [82, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284673-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic 10 Conference men's basketball season, Postseason, 2019 NCAA Tournament\nTwo teams from the Atlantic 10 qualified for the NCAA Tournament. Tournament champions Saint Louis qualified through the conference's automatic bid, and regular season champions, VCU, qualified through an at-large bid. It was the 14th straight season in which the conference earned an at-large bid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 88], "content_span": [89, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284673-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic 10 Conference men's basketball season, Postseason, 2019 NIT\nTwo teams from the Atlantic 10 earned at-large bids into the NIT.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 76], "content_span": [77, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284674-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic Coast Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 Atlantic Coast Conference men's basketball season began with practices in October 2018, followed by the start of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season in November. Conference play started in late December 2018 and concluded in March with the 2019 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament at the Spectrum Center in Charlotte, North Carolina. The season marks 65th season of Atlantic Coast Conference basketball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284674-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic Coast Conference men's basketball season, Preseason, ACC Preseason Media Poll\nCoaches, players, and the media met at the Spectrum Center in Charlotte, North Carolina for a media day on October 24, 2018. Players and coaches met the media, and coaches voted on the preseason conference poll and preseason All-ACC Teams. Results of the polls are shown below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 94], "content_span": [95, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284674-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic Coast Conference men's basketball season, Regular season, Rankings\nNotes: The week 2 Coaches Poll was released on the same date as the week 3 AP poll. No Coaches poll was released on the date when the week 2 AP Poll was released. The AP poll does not release a final poll after the NCAA Tournament, where as the Coaches Poll does.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 83], "content_span": [84, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284674-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic Coast Conference men's basketball season, Regular season, Conference matrix\nThis table summarizes the head-to-head results between teams in conference play. Each team will play 18 conference games, and at least 1 against each opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 92], "content_span": [93, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284674-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic Coast Conference men's basketball season, Regular season, Player of the week\nThroughout the conference regular season, the Atlantic Coast Conference offices named one or two Players of the week and one or two Rookies of the week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 93], "content_span": [94, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284674-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic Coast Conference men's basketball season, Regular season, Records against other conferences\n2018\u201319 records against non-conference foes through games played on February 2, 2019. Records shown for regular season only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 108], "content_span": [109, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284674-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic Coast Conference men's basketball season, Postseason, NCAA Tournament\nThe ACC had seven teams selected to the NCAA Tournament. This was tied for second overall with the SEC. The ACC's three number one seeded teams ties an all-time record. The previous time one conference had three number one seeds was in 2009, when the Big East accomplished the feat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 86], "content_span": [87, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284674-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic Coast Conference men's basketball season, Honors and awards, All-Americans\nTo earn \"consensus\" status, a player must win honors based on a point system computed from the four different all-America teams. The 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, 57], "section_span": [59, 91], "content_span": [92, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284674-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic Coast Conference men's basketball season, Honors and awards, ACC Awards\nZion Williamson\u2020 \u2013 DukeRJ Barrett \u2013 DukeDe'Andre Hunter \u2013 VirginiaCameron Johnson \u2013 North CarolinaKyle Guy \u2013 Virginia", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 88], "content_span": [89, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284674-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic Coast Conference men's basketball season, Honors and awards, ACC Awards\nLuke Maye \u2013 North CarolinaKy Bowman \u2013 Boston CollegeTy Jerome \u2013 VirginiaCoby White \u2013 North CarolinaKerry Blackshear Jr. \u2013 Virginia Tech", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 88], "content_span": [89, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284674-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic Coast Conference men's basketball season, Honors and awards, ACC Awards\nJordan Nwora \u2013 LouisvilleMarcquise Reed \u2013 ClemsonTyus Battle \u2013 SyracuseNickeil Alexander-Walker \u2013 Virginia TechJohn Mooney \u2013 Notre Dame", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 88], "content_span": [89, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284674-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic Coast Conference men's basketball season, NBA Draft\nThe Atlantic Coast Conference had a record six players selected in the lottery picks of the NBA Draft. Their ten first round selections tied the record for most first round selections from a conference in a single year. Also, the ACC had the most selections of any conference in the draft (thirteen total). The ACC also became the first conference to have five top-ten picks in the modern draft era (since 1966).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 68], "content_span": [69, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284675-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic Coast Conference women's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 Atlantic Coast Conference women's basketball season began with practices in October 2018, followed by the start of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season in November. Conference play started in January 2019 and concluded in March with the 2019 ACC Women's Basketball Tournament at the Greensboro Coliseum in Greensboro, NC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284675-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic Coast Conference women's basketball season, Preseason, ACC Women's Basketball Tip-off\nPrior to the start of the season, the ACC hosted a media day at the Sheraton/Le M\u00e9ridien Hotel in Charlotte, North Carolina. At the media day, the head coaches voted on the finishing order of the teams, an All-ACC team, a Preseason Player of the Year, and Newcomers to watch. The media day was hosted on October 2, 2018. A selected group of student athletes also took questions from the media on this day. This question and answer period was live streamed on theacc.com.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 102], "content_span": [103, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284675-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic Coast Conference women's basketball season, Preseason, ACC Women's Basketball Tip-off\nAt the media day, both the Head Coaches and the Blue Ribbon Panel selected Notre Dame to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 102], "content_span": [103, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284675-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic Coast Conference women's basketball season, Regular season, Rankings\nNote: The Coaches Poll releases a final poll after the NCAA tournament, but the AP Poll does not release a poll at this time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 85], "content_span": [86, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284675-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic Coast Conference women's basketball season, Regular season, Conference matrix\nThis table summarizes the head-to-head results between teams in conference play. Each team will play 16 conference games, and at least 1 against each opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 94], "content_span": [95, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284675-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic Coast Conference women's basketball season, Regular season, Player of the week\nThroughout the conference regular season, the Atlantic Coast Conference offices named a Player(s) of the week and a Rookie(s) of the week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 95], "content_span": [96, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284675-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic Coast Conference women's basketball season, Postseason, NCAA Tournament\nThe ACC sent a record tying eight teams to the NCAA Tournament, including two number 1 seeds. Eight teams were also selected in 2014, 2015, and 2018. Eight teams was the most out of any conference this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 88], "content_span": [89, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284675-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic Coast Conference women's basketball season, Honors and awards, ACC Awards\nHaley Gorecki, Jr., G, DukeKiah Gillespie, Jr., F, Florida StateAsia Durr, Sr., G, LouisvilleBeatrice Mompremier, Jr., F, MiamiEmese Hof, Sr., F/C, MiamiKiara Leslie, Sr., G, NC StateParis Kea, Gr., G, North CarolinaArike Ogunbowale, Sr., G, Notre DameJessica Shepard, Sr., F, Notre DameTiana Mangakahia, Jr., G, Syracuse", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 90], "content_span": [91, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284675-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic Coast Conference women's basketball season, Honors and awards, ACC Awards\nJanelle Bailey, So., C, North CarolinaBrianna Turner, Gr., F, Notre DameJackie Young, Jr., G, Notre DameTaylor Emery, Sr., G, Virginia TechRegan Magarity, Sr., F, Virginia Tech", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 90], "content_span": [91, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284675-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic Coast Conference women's basketball season, Honors and awards, ACC Awards\nMakayla Dickens, G, Boston CollegeMiela Goodchild, G, DukeValencia Myers, F, Florida StateElizabeth Balogun, G, Georgia TechElizabeth Dixon, F, Georgia TechElissa Cunane, C, NC StateMaeva Djaldi-Tabdi, F, SyracuseDara Mabrey, G, Virginia Tech", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 90], "content_span": [91, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284675-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic Coast Conference women's basketball season, Honors and awards, ACC Awards\nKiah Gillespie, Jr., F, Florida StateAsia Durr, Sr., G, LouisvilleEmese Hof, Jr., F, MiamiBeatrice Mompremier, Sr., F/C, MiamiParis Kea, Sr., G, North CarolinaKiara Leslie, Gr., G, NC StateArike Ogunbowale, Sr., G, Notre DameJessica Shepard, Sr., F, Notre DameTiana Mangakahia, Jr., G, SyracuseTaylor Emery, Sr., G, Virginia Tech", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 90], "content_span": [91, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284675-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic Coast Conference women's basketball season, Honors and awards, ACC Awards\nKobi Thornton, Jr., G, ClemsonHaley Gorecki, Jr., G, DukeMarina Mabrey, Sr., G, Notre DameJackie Young, Jr., G, Notre DameRegan Magarity, Sr., F, Virginia Tech", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 90], "content_span": [91, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284675-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic Coast Conference women's basketball season, Honors and awards, ACC Awards\nMakayla Dickens, G, Boston CollegeMiela Goodchild, G, DukeValencia Myers, F, Florida StateElizabeth Balogun, G, Georgia TechElizabeth Dixon, F, Georgia TechElissa Cunane, C, NC StateMaeva Djaldi-Tabdi, F, SyracuseDara Mabrey, G, Virginia Tech", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 90], "content_span": [91, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284675-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlantic Coast Conference women's basketball season, Honors and awards, ACC Awards\nDanielle Edwards, Sr., G, ClemsonSimone Westbrook, Gr., G, ClemsonEmese Hof, Sr., F/C, MiamiKiara Leslie, Gr., G, NC StateBrianna Turner, Gr., F, Notre Dame", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 90], "content_span": [91, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284676-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlas F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 Atlas F.C. season is the 89th season in the football club's history and the 49th consecutive season in the top flight of Mexican football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284676-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atlas F.C. season, Players, Squad information\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 28 October 2018.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, 53], "content_span": [54, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284677-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atl\u00e9tico Madrid season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Atl\u00e9tico Madrid's 88th season since foundation in 1903 and the club's 82nd season in La Liga, the top league of Spanish football. Atl\u00e9tico competed in La Liga, Copa del Rey, UEFA Champions League and UEFA Super Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284678-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atl\u00e9tico Petr\u00f3leos de Luanda season\nThe 2018\u201319 season of Atl\u00e9tico Petr\u00f3leos de Luanda is the club's 38th season in the Girabola, the Angolan Premier football League and 38th consecutive season in the top flight of Angolan football. In 2019, the club is participating in the Girabola, the Angola Cup and the CAF Confederation Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284679-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atl\u00e9tico San Luis season\nThe 2018\u201319 Atl\u00e9tico San Luis season is the 6th season in the football club's history. The team will compete in Ascenso MX and Copa MX.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284679-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atl\u00e9tico San Luis season\nAtl\u00e9tico San Luis are the current champions of Ascenso MX after winning the Apertura 2018 tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284679-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Atl\u00e9tico San Luis season, Players, Squad information\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 16 December 2018.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, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284680-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Auburn Tigers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Auburn Tigers men's basketball team represented Auburn University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season as a member of the Southeastern Conference. The team's head coach was Bruce Pearl in his 5th season at Auburn. The team played their home games at the Auburn Arena in Auburn, Alabama. They finished the season 30\u201310, 11\u20137 in SEC play. They defeated Missouri, South Carolina, Florida, and Tennessee to win the SEC Tournament. They received an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament where they defeated New Mexico State, Kansas, North Carolina, and Kentucky to advance to their first Final Four in school history where they lost to Virginia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284680-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Auburn Tigers men's basketball team, Previous season\nAuburn finished the 2017\u201318 season 26\u20138, 13\u20135 in SEC play to win a share of the SEC regular season championship. They lost to Alabama in the quarterfinals of the SEC Tournament. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they defeated College of Charleston to advance to the Second Round where they lost to Clemson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284680-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Auburn Tigers men's basketball team, Rankings\n*AP does not release post-NCAA Tournament rankings^Coaches did not release a Week 2 poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284681-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Auburn Tigers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Auburn Tigers women's basketball team represents Auburn University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Tigers, led by seventh-year head coach Terri Williams-Flournoy, play their home games at Auburn Arena as members of the Southeastern Conference. They finished the season 22\u201310, 9\u20137 in SEC play to finish in a tie for sixth place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the SEC Women's Tournament where they lost to Texas A&M. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Women's Tournament where they lost to BYU in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284681-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Auburn Tigers women's basketball team, Previous season\nThey finished the 2017\u201318 season 14\u201315, 5\u201311 in SEC play to finish in tenth place. They lost in the second round of the SEC Women's Tournament to Tennessee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284682-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Austin Peay Governors basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Austin Peay Governors men's basketball team represented Austin Peay State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Governors, led by second-year head coach Matt Figger, played their home games at the Dunn Center in Clarksville, Tennessee as members of the Ohio Valley Conference. 22\u201311 overall, 13\u20135 in OVC play to finish in fourth place. In the OVC Tournament, they defeated Morehead State in the quarterfinals before losing to Belmont in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284682-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Austin Peay Governors basketball team, Previous season\nThe Governors finished the 2017\u201318 season 19\u201315, 12\u20136 in OVC play to finish in third place. They defeated Eastern Illinois in the quarterfinals of the OVC Tournament before losing in the semifinals to Belmont. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they defeated Louisiana\u2013Monroe in the First Round, a game referred to as the Coach John McLendon Classic, and received a second round bye before losing in the quarterfinals to UIC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284682-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Austin Peay Governors basketball team, Schedule and results\n* Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses. All times are in Central Time", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284683-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian Athletics Championships\nThe 2018\u201319 Australian Athletics Championships was the 97th edition of the national championship in outdoor track and field for Australia. It was held from 4\u20137 April 2019 at the Sydney Olympic Park Athletic Centre in Sydney. It served as the selection meeting for Australia at the 2019 World Athletics Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284683-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian Athletics Championships\nDistance events were held separately, with the 10,000 metres taking place at the Zatopek 10K on 13 December 2018 at Lakeside Stadium in Melbourne, the mile run taking place at the Albie Thomas meet at the Crest Athletic Centre in Bankstown on 22 December 2018, and the 5000 metres taking place at the Sydney Track Classic on 23 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284684-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian Baseball League rosters\nThis is a list of the team rosters for each team for the 2018\u201319 Australian Baseball League season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284685-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian Baseball League season\nThe 2018\u201319 Australian Baseball League season was the ninth year Australian Baseball League (ABL) season, and was held from 15 November 2018 to 2 February 2019. It was the first season that it was played with eight teams, as the league expanded for the first time. The Brisbane Bandits won the championship for the fourth consecutive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284685-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian Baseball League season, Regular season\nWith the addition of the Auckland Tuatara and Geelong-Korea as expansion teams, the competition was split into a 'Northeast' and 'Southwest' division. The league retained a 10-round, 40 game schedule, with teams playing division rivals eight times and inter division teams four times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 57], "content_span": [58, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284685-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian Baseball League season, Postseason\nA new playoff structure was announced 29 August 2018 with the addition of a single wild card game between the fourth and fifth seeds prior to two rounds of best-of-three finals series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 53], "content_span": [54, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284685-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian Baseball League season, Postseason\nThe top seed awarded to the team with the best regular season record, with the other division winner awarded the second seed. The third and fourth seed were awarded to the two divisional runner ups with the fifth seed being given to the team with the next best season record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 53], "content_span": [54, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284686-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2018 Australian Figure Skating Championships were held on November 30 \u2013 December 7, 2018 at the Macquarie Ice Rink in Sydney, New South Wales. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, ice dance, and synchronized skating at the senior, junior, advanced novice, intermediate novice, and basic novice levels. The results were part of the selection criteria for the 2019 World Championships, the 2019 Four Continents Championships, and the 2019 World Junior Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284687-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian bushfire season\nThe bushfires were predicted to be \"fairly bleak\" in parts of Australia, particularly in the east, by the Bushfire and Natural Hazards Cooperative Research Centre (CRC) chief executive, Richard Thornton, in September 2018. Large bushfires had already burned through southern New South Wales during winter. The outlook for spring was of a higher likelihood of fires with a twice the normal chance of an El Nino for summer. Many parts of eastern Australia including Queensland, New South Wales and Gippsland, in Victoria, were already in drought.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284687-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian bushfire season\nAbove normal fire was also predicted for large parts of Southern Australia and Eastern Australia by the Bushfire and Natural Hazards CRC. The forecast noted that Queensland had recorded the ninth driest and fourth hottest period on record from April to November. New South Wales recorded the fourth hottest period and eighth driest on record, while Victoria experiences the 13th driest and seventh hottest period on record. Authorities in New South Wales brought forward the start of the bushfire season for much of the state from October 2018 to the beginning of August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284687-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian bushfire season, Fires by state or territory, New South Wales\nNew South Wales experienced 525 fires in the last week of July, more than twice the number from the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 80], "content_span": [81, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284687-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian bushfire season, Fires by state or territory, New South Wales\nOn 15 August, a bushfire near Bega burned out 2,300\u00a0ha (5,700 acres) of inaccessible bushland and threatened properties. Another fire in Budawang National Park, near Ulladulla, blackened 1,516\u00a0ha (3,750 acres) and a third fire near Nowra destroyed outbuildings and forced residents to evacuate. A firefighter named Alan Tully died on 17 August when his helicopter crashed while combating fires near Ulladulla. A fire started near Salt Ash, north of Newcastle, on 18 August and two days later had burnt out 2,000\u00a0ha (4,900 acres), on 20 August 70 fires were burning around the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 80], "content_span": [81, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284687-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian bushfire season, Fires by state or territory, Victoria\nOn 1 March several fires were lit in the east of the state as the result of a band of dry lightning. A bushfire in the Bunyip State Park destroyed 29 houses as well as 67 outbuildings and sheds over the following two days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284687-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian bushfire season, Fires by state or territory, Queensland\nBy 30 November, 144 bushfires were burning throughout Queensland at the end of a week where 200 fires had been battled by firefighters. High temperatures and strong winds made for difficult conditions and two houses, two cabins and 15 sheds were lost to fire with a further 14 houses damaged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284687-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian bushfire season, Fires by state or territory, Tasmania\nA series of bushfires started in Tasmania from late December as a result of lightning strikes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284687-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian bushfire season, Fires by state or territory, Tasmania\nThis included The Gell River fire, Great Pine Tier fire and Riveaux Road fire which burned through a combined than 278,000 hectares of the Southwest National Park from December 2018 to March 2019, occasionally through vegetation that was not fire resistant and will not regenerate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284687-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian bushfire season, Fires by state or territory, Tasmania\nFour houses and several outbuildings were lost during the fires, including Churchill's Hut, built in the 1920s by Elias Churchill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284687-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian bushfire season, Fires by state or territory, Western Australia\nA bushfire, that started on 11 October, approximately 120\u00a0km (75\u00a0mi) south east of Broome burned through an area of 880,000\u00a0ha (2,200,000 acres). Adverse conditions, the remote location and a lack of water meant that the fire was fought using back-burning, constructing fire lines and using aircraft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 82], "content_span": [83, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284687-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian bushfire season, Fires by state or territory, Western Australia\nIn mid-January, south western Australia experienced a major heatwave that triggered a large fire in Collie on 21 January, putting most of Collie at risk. The fire was extinguished the next day. About 160\u00a0ha (400 acres) was burnt out and four firefighters were hospitalised.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 82], "content_span": [83, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284687-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian bushfire season, Fires by state or territory, Western Australia\nOn 7 February, a large bushfire started in the Forrestdale Lake nature reserve in Forrestdale that put the suburbs of Forrestdale, Harrisdale and Piara Waters under an emergency warning. Over 144\u00a0ha (360 acres) was burned out with many vehicles and one home being destroyed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 82], "content_span": [83, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season\nThe 2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season was an average season that saw the formation of 11 tropical cyclones, six of which intensified further to become severe tropical cyclones. The season officially began on 1 November 2018 and concluded on 30 April 2019; however, as evidenced by Tropical Low Liua in September 2018 and Tropical Cyclones Lili and Ann in May 2019, tropical cyclones can form at any time of the year. As such, any system existing between 1 July 2018 and 30 June 2019 would count towards the season total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season\nDuring the season, tropical cyclones were officially monitored by the Bureau of Meteorology (BOM), the Indonesian Agency for Meteorology, Climatology and Geophysics (BMKG) in Jakarta, Indonesia, and the National Weather Service of Papua New Guinea in Port Moresby. The United States' Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) in Hawaii, and other national meteorological services such as MetService in New Zealand, M\u00e9t\u00e9o-France at La R\u00e9union, and the Fiji Meteorological Service (FMS), also monitored parts of the basin during the season in an unofficial capacity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season\nThis was the first Australian tropical cyclone season since 2014\u201315 to feature at least six severe tropical cyclones. It was also the third season in a row to begin prior to the official commencement date of 1 November, in this instance with the development of Tropical Low Liua on 26 September 2018. The most active month was December 2018, with a total of seven tropical lows existing in the region at some time during the month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season\nThe three strongest storms of the season\u2014Veronica, Trevor and Savannah\u2014all developed in March 2019, and together affected all three of the Bureau of Meteorology's Australian sub-regions as severe tropical cyclones. Overall, a total of five tropical cyclones existed within each of the three sub-regions throughout the season, representing an above-average season for both the Eastern Region and the Northern Region, but a below-average season for the Western Region. The season concluded much later than usual, and well after the official ending date of 30 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0001-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season\nTwo tropical cyclones developed during May\u2014Lili in the eastern Indonesian archipelago and Ann in the Coral Sea\u2014both of which made landfall as tropical lows after weakening from tropical cyclone intensity. At its peak, Ann was a Category 2 tropical cyclone, and was the strongest storm to form in the Australian region during May since Severe Tropical Cyclone Rhonda in 1997. In total, eight systems were named by the BOM during the season, with two named by the BMKG and one by the FMS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Seasonal forecasts\nDuring October, ahead of the tropical cyclone season, the Bureau of Meteorology issued a tropical cyclone outlook for the upcoming 2018\u201319 season, which would officially run from 1 November 2018 to 30 April 2019. Seasonal forecasts were issued for the basin as a whole, as well as the Eastern, Northern and Western regions and the North-Western sub-region. The forecasts took into account various factors, including the latest neutral to weak El Ni\u00f1o conditions that had been observed in the tropical Pacific Ocean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Seasonal forecasts\nThe outlooks showed that activity in the basin overall, as well as for each of its individual regions, would be near to below average. For the Western region between 90\u00b0E and 125\u00b0E, the BOM forecast that the area would also see activity below its average of 7, with a 56% chance of a below average number of tropical cyclones occurring. TCWC Perth also noted that there was a likelihood of two tropical cyclones and a significant likelihood of at least one severe tropical cyclone impacting Western Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Seasonal forecasts\nFor the North-Western sub-region between 105\u00b0E and 130\u00b0E, it was predicted that activity would be above average, with a 41% chance of below-average tropical cyclone activity. The Northern Territory, which was defined as being between as being 125\u00b0E and 142.5\u00b0E, had a 54% chance of an above-average season. The Eastern region between 142.5\u00b0E and 160\u00b0E was predicted to have a below-normal tropical cyclone season, with a 60% chance of below-average tropical cyclone activity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Low Liua\nDuring September 24, the JTWC started to monitor a tropical disturbance, that had developed about 990\u00a0km (615\u00a0mi) to the east-northeast of Port Moresby in Papua New Guinea. The system moved southeastwards over the following few days, and was classified as a tropical depression by the Fiji Meteorological Service on 26 September while situated on the boundary between the Australian basin and the South Pacific basin. The system proceeded to intensify into a category 1 tropical cyclone on the Australian scale, and was named 'Liua' by the Fiji Meteorological Service.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Low Liua\nThe system turned westwards and began tracking back towards the Australian region the next day, but was assessed as having weakened into a tropical depression prior to exiting the South Pacific basin on 28 September. After re-entering the Australian region, Ex-Tropical Cyclone Liua's weakening trend continued due to unfavourable atmospheric conditions and the cool sea surface temperatures of early spring. Dissipation of the tropical low into a remnant area of low-pressure occurred the following day over the northern Coral Sea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Low Liua\nWhile in the Australian region as a tropical low on 26 September, the system caused minor impacts in the Solomon Islands. Despite only existing as a tropical system in the Australian region for a short period of time, Ex-Tropical Cyclone Liua made the 2018\u201319 season the third in a row in which the region's tropical cyclone activity began prior to the official start date of 1 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Low Bouchra\nA weak low-pressure system developed in the equatorial Indian Ocean in M\u00e9t\u00e9o-France's area of responsibility on 1 November and moved slowly eastwards over the following few days while showing little sign of intensification. Late on 9 November, as the developing precursor depression to Severe Cyclonic Storm Gaja in the Bay of Bengal moved further away and the competing low-level airflow convergence associated with it diminished, the system's structure organised sufficiently to be classified as a tropical disturbance by M\u00e9t\u00e9o-France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Low Bouchra\nSoon there-afterwards, the system crossed the 90th meridian east and entered the Australian region, where it was classified by TCWC Jakarta as a tropical depression on 10 November local time. Later the same day, the JTWC assessed the developing low as having attained tropical storm status on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale, and assigned the system the unofficial designation 04S. A few hours later, at 10:00 UTC, the system moved back westwards and returned to the South-West Indian Ocean basin, where it gained the name 'Bouchra' from M\u00e9t\u00e9o-France and underwent a twelve-hour phase of rapid intensification to severe tropical storm status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Low Bouchra\nAfter meandering just to the west of the South-West Indian Ocean border for a number of days, the system re-entered the Australian region late on 12 November. By this stage, the system had weakened significantly from its peak intensity, and was only at tropical low strength. The period of residence in the Australian basin proved to be short-lived once again, however, with M\u00e9t\u00e9o-France indicating that Ex-Tropical Cyclone Bouchra had returned to the far-eastern part of their area of responsibility early on 13 November. The very next day, the Bureau of Meteorology noted that the system had once again returned to the Australian basin, and was located approximately 1,000\u00a0km (620\u00a0mi) northwest of the Cocos Islands, marking the tropical low's third period of existence in the Australian region in just five days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 887]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Owen\nThe Bureau of Meteorology noted on 29 November that a low-pressure system located over the Solomon Islands had developed into a tropical low. The following day, as the system approached Tagula Island on a south-westwards track, the Joint Typhoon Warning Center issued a tropical cyclone formation alert as the system improved in organisation. Fuelled by the warm sea surface temperatures of the Coral Sea, and aided by excellent upper outflow channels, the tropical low continued to strengthen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 79], "content_span": [80, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0008-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Owen\nAt 06:00 UTC on 2 December, the Bureau of Meteorology upgraded the system to a Category 1 tropical cyclone on the Australian scale, and gave it the name 'Owen', making it the first tropical cyclone to form in the basin during the season. Owen weakened rapidly on 4 December and was downgraded to a tropical low.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 79], "content_span": [80, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Owen\nOwen continued travelling westwards over the Coral Sea as a tropical low and made landfall well north of Cardwell, Queensland early on 10 December. After entering the Gulf of Carpentaria and reorganizing, Owen reattained Category 1 intensity on 11 December. The storm then completed an anti-cyclonic loop and turned back to the east. Owen gradually began to intensify, peaking as a Category 3 severe tropical cyclone with maximum 10-minute sustained winds of 150 kilometres per hour (93\u00a0mph).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 79], "content_span": [80, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0009-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Owen\nOwen made landfall near Kowanyama early on 15 December as a low-end Category 3 severe tropical cyclone and gradually weakened thereafter due to land interaction. That afternoon, Owen was downgraded to a tropical low once more. Late that day, Owen emerged into the Coral Sea once again, before transitioning into a subtropical low on 17 December. Soon afterward, the system restrengthened somewhat, before weakening again on 18 December. Afterward, Owen made a counterclockwise loop towards Australia, while steadily weakening. Owen degenerated into a remnant low on 20 December before dissipating two days later, just off the east coast of northern Queensland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 79], "content_span": [80, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Owen\nDuring the storm's passage over northern Queensland, Owen killed a person and produced steady rainfall throughout the region, with the highest totals predicted for the eastern coast compared to the southwestern portions of the state. Innisfail recorded a daily total of 149 millimetres (5.9\u00a0in) of rain on 15 December, with Cowley Beach recording 135 millimetres (5.3\u00a0in), Copperlode Falls Dam west of Cairns recording 130 millimetres (5.1\u00a0in) and Mission Beach recording 98 millimetres (3.9\u00a0in).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 79], "content_span": [80, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Kenanga\nOn 14 December, a tropical low formed well southwest of Sumatra. After a period of strengthening, it received the name Kenanga as it tracked roughly southwestward. Continuing on this course, it exited the basin on 16 December and subsequently strengthened into an intense tropical cyclone in the South-West Indian Ocean basin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 75], "content_span": [76, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Penny\nIn an active late December in terms of tropical low formation, the Bureau of Meteorology noted the development of a third weak tropical low in the monsoon trough extending from the tropical waters of the Coral Sea in the east, to the Timor Sea in the west. The revival of monsoonal and related convective activity in the region was associated with a moderate-strength pulse of the Madden\u2013Julian oscillation moving eastwards across the Maritime Continent. The tropical low, officially designated 07U, was located near the eastern coastline of Cape York Peninsula, and was assessed by the Bureau of Meteorology as having a high chance of intensifying to tropical cyclone strength within the next three days, owing to a favourable atmospheric environment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 73], "content_span": [74, 826]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Penny\nTropical Low 07U tracked slowly westwards, and passed over the east coast of Cape York Peninsula on 30 December, south of the town of Lockhart River. At this point, the Bureau of Meteorology issued its first tropical cyclone advice and forecast track map relating to the system. Maintaining its westward motion, the system emerged over the Gulf of Carpentaria very early in the morning of 31 December, crossing the Queensland coast between Aurukun and Weipa, where generally favourable conditions fuelled intensification. Tropical Low 07U turned eastwards at about midday on 31 December, and proceeded to strengthen into a category 1 tropical cyclone on the Australian scale a few hours later, being named \u2018Penny\u2019 by the Bureau of Meteorology.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 73], "content_span": [74, 817]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Penny\nTropical Cyclone Penny made landfall on the western Cape York Peninsula coastline, just south of Weipa, at approximately 15:30 local time on 1 January, generating maximum ten-minute sustained winds of 75 kilometres per hour (47\u00a0mph) near the centre. The system began to weaken as it tracked over land, and was downgraded to a gale-force tropical low a few hours later, with sustained tropical cyclone-strength winds persisting in the system's western semicircle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 73], "content_span": [74, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0014-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Penny\nThursday Island in the Torres Strait recorded ten-minute sustained winds of at least 41 kilometres per hour (25\u00a0mph) for a period of more than 17 hours while the system moved eastwards across Cape York Peninsula, including sustained winds of up to 65 kilometres per hour (40\u00a0mph) and gusts to 91 kilometres per hour (57\u00a0mph). Ex-Tropical Cyclone Penny crossed the east coast of Far North Queensland at Lockhart River in the early hours of the next morning, bringing the system over the warm waters of the Coral Sea for a second time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 73], "content_span": [74, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Penny\nEx-Tropical Cyclone Penny quickly tracked eastwards across the Coral Sea, while regaining the organisation and convective structure that had been eroded due to land interaction over Cape York Peninsula. At 06:00 UTC on 2 January, the Bureau of Meteorology assessed the system as having regained tropical cyclone structure and intensity, and upgraded it to a Category 1 tropical cyclone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 73], "content_span": [74, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Low Mona\nA weak tropical low developed in a monsoon trough stretching across the northern Coral Sea on 28 December, situated in the far northeast of the Eastern Region, near the southern Solomon Islands. The system meandered for a few days without any notable intensification, before moving slowly eastwards out of the Australian region late on 31 December. Upon entering the South Pacific basin, the system was classified as Tropical Disturbance 04F by the Fiji Meteorological Service. The system later intensified into Tropical Cyclone Mona on 2 January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Riley\nOn 22 January, a tropical low formed to the north of Kalumburu. The low slowly strengthened as it moved to the southwest, paralleling to the northwestern Kimberley coast. On 24 January, the low strengthened to Tropical Cyclone Riley, while located to the northwest of Broome. Riley then moved towards the west and was upgraded to Category 2 as it tracked further from the mainland. It further strengthened to a Category 3 Severe Tropical Cyclone, while located to the southwest of Onslow. As it entered an area of dry air and strong wind shear, Riley rapidly degraded to a Category 1 tropical cyclone before degenerating to a tropical low, while located to the southwest of Cocos Islands. Riley's remnants moved to the west, before dissipating entirely over the Indian Ocean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 80], "content_span": [81, 856]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Riley\nTropical Cyclone Advices were issued for the northwest Kimberley coast between Kuri Bay and Beagle Bay and then for the Pilbara coast between Whim Creek and Exmouth. Rowley Shoals reported gale-force winds for periods late on the 24th and during the 25th with a peak gust of 94 kilometres per hour. Overall, Riley caused minimal impacts on the Western Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 80], "content_span": [81, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Low 13U\nA tropical low, designated as 13U was identified inland, east of Mapoon on January 23 near a monsoon trough. The system moved westward over the northeastern Gulf of Carpentaria the following day and was forecasted to slowly strengthen. Tropical cyclone advices were issued early for the Gulf Coast, but the system moved back over the Cape York Peninsula near Weipa early on the 26th of January as it made a loop before it could develop significantly into a tropical cyclone. It moved ashore near Cape Keerweer without further strengthening due to its proximity to land. Tropical Low 13U then moved slowly southwest into the southern Gulf Country, where it stalled for five days between January 31 and February 5 before it was last noted to the west-southwest of Cairns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 837]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Low 13U\nThe tropical low associated with the monsoon trough brought torrential rainfall associated with floodwaters across the Far North Queensland and the Eastern Coast. It forced the Ross River Dam to release water, which worsened the pre-existing flooding of the Ross River in Townsville. Over 2000 properties in Townsville were flooded, and 3 deaths occurred as a result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Oma\nOn 7 February, a second tropical low developed within a very active monsoon trough, east of Cardwell on the northern Queensland coast. Environmental conditions over the Coral Sea in the low's vicinity were not particularly favourable for cyclogenesis, however, and the system was forecast by the Bureau of Meteorology as having only a low chance of developing into a tropical cyclone. On 11 February, the system exited the basin and later strengthened into Tropical Cyclone Oma in the South Pacific basin. The system reentered the Australian region basin on 21 February, as a Category 2 tropical cyclone. However, on 22 February, the system exited the Australian region basin and reentered the South Pacific basin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Oma\nLarge swells from the cyclone impacted large swathes of Queensland for approximately a week. Around Brisbane, the surf caused significant beach erosion; particularly affected was a 16\u00a0km (9.9\u00a0mi) stretch along Moore Park Beach. More than 30\u00a0people required rescue, some of whom were hospitalised, from the turbulent waters. One person drowned just off North Stradbroke Island after attempts to resuscitate him failed (while Oma was in the Australian region basin). Winds up to 80\u00a0km/h (50\u00a0mph) destroyed approximately A$700,000 (US$500,000) worth of Cavendish bananas in Cudgen, New South Wales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Savannah\nOn 8 March, Tropical Low 17U formed to the south of Bali. Over the next several days, the tropical low drifted west-northwestward, while changing little in intensity. On 12 March, 17U turned southwestward and began to organize, strengthening into Tropical Cyclone Savannah on 13 March. On 16 March, Savannah intensified into a Category 3 severe tropical cyclone, on the Australian region scale. It then reached its peak intensity early on 17 March, with maximum sustained 10-min winds of 175 kilometres per hour (109\u00a0mph). Later that day, it exited the basin and moved into the South-West Indian Ocean basin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 83], "content_span": [84, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Savannah\nAs a tropical low, Savannah brought heavy rainfall to Java. A five-year-old child was killed in a car accident in Surabaya. Landslides in Yogyakarta killed 5 individuals and left 1 missing. Flooding in Madiun caused damage of about 54.1 billion rupiah (US$3.78 million), the worst in two decades. In Magelang, 4 tourists were killed when they were overcome by flash flooding in a river. Damage due to flooding in several districts of East Java reached 52.2 billion rupiah (US$3.65 million). In Klaten and Sukoharjo of Central Java, the damage of the flooding stood at 934 million rupiah (US$65,000). Savannah also caused flooding in Bali, with Sawan, Buleleng recorded a damage of 150 million rupiah (US$10,000).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 83], "content_span": [84, 796]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Trevor\nOn March 15, a tropical low formed just off the east coast of Papua New Guinea. Over the next couple of days, the tropical low initially moved southeastward, crossing over the southeastern portion of Papua New Guinea on March 16, south of Port Moresby, and then turning southward on March 17. Late on the same day, the tropical low organized into Tropical Cyclone Trevor. Tropical Cyclone Trevor intensified rapidly to a severe category 3 cyclone before crossing the Queensland coast just south of Lockhart River.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 81], "content_span": [82, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0025-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Trevor\nThe cyclone slowed down before turning towards the southwest as it rapidly intensified to a severe category 4 intensity over the warm waters of the Gulf towards the Northern Territory coast. On March 23, it made its second Australian coastal landfall near the Northern Territory/Queensland Border and was subject to weakening. It rapidly degraded inland and it was last noted near Mount Isa on the afternoon of March 26.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 81], "content_span": [82, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Trevor\nA farm in Coen, Queensland suffered losses of at least A$1 million (US$710,000) from the flooding associated with the cyclone, as a result of damage to equipment and loss of cattle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 81], "content_span": [82, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Veronica\nOn 18 March, a tropical low formed to the southeast of East Timor. At 03:00 AWST on the morning of 20 March, the Bureau of Meteorology assessed the developing tropical low as having attained tropical cyclone strength, and named the system Veronica. Experiencing extremely favourable atmospheric conditions and very warm sea surface temperatures, Tropical Cyclone Veronica proceeded to intensify rapidly throughout the day, attaining Category 3 status on the Australian scale just 18 hours later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 83], "content_span": [84, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Veronica\nIn preparation for passage of Veronica, major shipping ports on the Pilbara coastline were forced to cease operations in the interests of safety. The port of Port Hedland, the most valuable export hub in Australia and one of the largest iron ore loading ports in the world, was closed on 22 March, with operations only resuming nearly four days later. As a result of the disruption to the mining and export operations, Rio Tinto estimated that its iron ore production would suffer reductions of approximately 14 million tonnes during 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 83], "content_span": [84, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0028-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Veronica\nRio Tinto's Cape Lambert port wharf also sustained damage from waves generated by the cyclone, and repairs to the company's Robe River sorting facility following a fire earlier in the year were delayed during the event. Fortescue Metals reported that exports of up to 2 million tonnes of its own iron ore were disrupted during the cyclone. In total, economic costs associated with the mining disruptions and damage caused by Veronica reached A$1.7 billion (US$1.2 billion) in Rio Tinto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 83], "content_span": [84, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Wallace\nIn late March, an increase in cross-equatorial flow from the northern Pacific Ocean led to the redevelopment of the monsoon trough across the tropical waters north of the Australian continent, centered in the Arafura and Coral Seas north of Queensland. On April\u00a01, the trough spawned Tropical Low 21U to the northeast of Darwin, Northern Territory, as well as a short-lived low southeast of Papua New Guinea. The low moved generally west-southwest and produced ample thunderstorms, fueled by a moist atmosphere, strong upper outflow, and warm waters; however, the development was hampered by strong wind shear.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 82], "content_span": [83, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0029-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Wallace\nOn 5\u00a0April, the JTWC designated the system as Tropical Cyclone\u00a023S. On the same day, the BoM upgraded the low to Tropical Cyclone Wallace, while the storm was about halfway between Timor and the northern coastline of Western Australia. Over the next few days, the intensity fluctuated, and the track shifted more to the southwest, due to a ridge over the Australian mainland. During this time, Wallace brought rainfall, high waves, and gusty winds to parts of Indonesia, with sustained winds of 45 kilometres per hour (28\u00a0mph) reported on East Nusa Tenggara.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 82], "content_span": [83, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0029-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Wallace\nThe BoM issued various cyclone watches and warnings for Australia's northern coast. While off Australia's northwest coast, Wallace dropped heavy rainfall on the mainland, reaching 159.0\u00a0mm (6.3\u00a0in) at Croker Island, including 52.0\u00a0mm (2.0\u00a0in) in one hour on 4\u00a0April. The offshore Browse Island reported sustained winds of 63 kilometres per hour (39\u00a0mph), the only location along the storm's path to report sustained gale-force winds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 82], "content_span": [83, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Wallace\nFollowing a decrease in wind shear, Wallace intensified further, developing symmetrical convection over the center, as well as primitive eye feature. Late on 8\u00a0April, the BoM upgraded Wallace to a Category\u00a03, estimating peak winds of 120 kilometres per hour (75\u00a0mph), while the storm was located approximately 530\u00a0km (330\u00a0mi) to the north-northwest of the town of Karratha. The JTWC estimated the same intensity during its storm existence, making Wallace the equivalent of a minimal hurricane but in its post analysis, they later downgraded it into high end tropical storm of 110 kmph windspeed .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 82], "content_span": [83, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0030-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Wallace\nDrier air and increasing wind shear caused Wallace to weaken. Only 24\u00a0hours after the storm's peak intensity, the centre became exposed from the increasingly asymmetric convection. On 10\u00a0April, the BoM downgraded the storm to a vigorous gale-force tropical low, and the JTWC issued their final advisory on Wallace. Wallace continued westward through the Indian Ocean and continued to weaken. The shallow remnant low passed south of the Cocos (Keeling) Islands on 14 April, producing a 24-hour rainfall total of 11.2\u00a0mm (0.4\u00a0in) at West Island. The low dissipated on 16 April as it approached the eastern border of M\u00e9t\u00e9o-France La\u00a0R\u00e9union's area of responsibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 82], "content_span": [83, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Low 22U\nOn 5 April, the Bureau of Meteorology reported that Tropical Low 22U had formed in the far northeastern Gulf of Carpentaria. The system began moving westward from the Torres Strait towards the northeastern coast of the Top End without any significant intensification due to generally unfavourable atmospheric conditions for cyclogenesis. The low moved across the Arafura Sea just off the Northern Territory coastline on 6 April, entering the Van Diemen Gulf the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0031-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Low 22U\nAs the system tracked generally westwards into the Timor Sea and began to roughly retrace the path that Severe Tropical Cyclone Wallace had taken a few days earlier, the low showed some signs of intensification. However, the atmospheric environment was generally unfavourable for significant strengthening, and the system remained relatively weak and devoid of gale-force winds. The tropical low passed close to Browse Island on 10 April before exiting the Timor Sea, and moving into the Indian Ocean proper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Low 22U\nAfter moving steadily southwestwards across the Indian Ocean to the northwest of Western Australia for several days, Tropical Low 22U began to approach the western Pilbara district and North West Cape of Western Australia. The Joint Typhoon Warning Center noted that despite wind shear leaving the low-level circulation centre exposed, the tropical low was relatively well-structured, with spiral banding wrapping into well-organised lower layers and a tightly defined centre. Particularly strong sustained winds were present in the southern quadrants of the system due to acceleration by the steep pressure gradient with a surface high-pressure system located to the south.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0032-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Low 22U\nAt 00:00 UTC on 14 April, ten-minute sustained winds peaking at 63 kilometres per hour (39\u00a0mph) were observed on Varanus Island, located about 60\u00a0km (35\u00a0mi) northwest of the mainland and 130\u00a0km (80\u00a0mi) west of the town of Karratha. Although such gale-force winds are equivalent to Category 1 intensity on the Australian scale, the Bureau of Meteorology's definition of a tropical cyclone requires these winds to extend more than halfway around the system's surface circulation for the system to be upgraded from a tropical low.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0033-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Low 22U\nThe tropical low made landfall on the coast of Western Australia near the town of Onslow, to the east of the Exmouth Gulf, on the afternoon of 14 April (local time). By this stage, the system had become trapped beneath strong upper-level westerly flow, which was acting to further displace the remaining fragmented convection to the east of the storm's centre. The weakened and shallow system proceeded eastwards towards the Northern Interior district of Western Australia, while continuing to unravel, dissipating by 05:00 UTC on 15 April, while located over the Great Sandy Desert.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0034-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Low 22U\nTropical Low 22U delivered sustained moderate to heavy rainfall to large areas of the Arnhem District during its track across the Gulf of Carpentaria and the Top End. The town of Nhulunbuy received especially large precipitation totals, with the nearby Gove Airport recording 229.6\u00a0mm (9.04\u00a0in) of rain during the 72-hour period to 09:00 local time (ACST) on 8 April\u2014its largest three-day total since March 2015 during the passage of Cyclone Nathan. Central Plateau in the west of the Arnhem Land region also received 81\u00a0mm (3.2\u00a0in) in the 20-hour period up to 05:00 ACST on 7 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0034-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Low 22U\nBrowse Island, situated approximately 175\u00a0km (110\u00a0mi) northwest of Western Australia's Kimberley coastline, experienced relatively strong winds on 10 April as Tropical Low 22U passed nearby, with ten-minute mean winds peaking at 54 kilometres per hour (34\u00a0mph), with gusts as high as 69 kilometres per hour (43\u00a0mph) also recorded. Upon nearing land in the far western Pilbara, the tropical low delivered moderate rainfall and gusty winds to locations throughout the region's coastal fringe and nearby islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0034-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Low 22U\nVaranus Island recorded gusts of up to 87 kilometres per hour (54\u00a0mph), coincident with sustained gale-force winds, and gusts reached 65 kilometres per hour (40\u00a0mph) and 61 kilometres per hour (38\u00a0mph) at Onslow and Barrow Island, respectively. Widespread wind gusts in excess of 50 kilometres per hour (31\u00a0mph) were observed in numerous areas, including at Roebourne, Mardie, Karratha and Thevenard Island. Learmonth Airport, near Exmouth on the North West Cape, accumulated 37.6\u00a0mm (1.48\u00a0in) of rainfall in the seven-hour period to 09:00 local time (AWST) on 14 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0035-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Low 23U\nDuring mid-April, a low-pressure system and its associated low-pressure trough generated heavy precipitation over the central-eastern Indian Ocean, including significant rainfall totals in the region of the Cocos (Keeling) Islands, a populated Australian external territory. On 21 April, as the low began to deepen, the system embedded within the trough was classified by the Bureau of Meteorology as a tropical low, while located southwest of the Indonesian island of Sumatra. The storm moved steadily southwestwards before stalling on 22 April, then assumed a more southerly motion on 24 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0035-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Low 23U\nThe Joint Typhoon Warning Center classified the system as a tropical depression on 25 April in accordance with the low's improved structure and organisation. It was noted that environmental conditions in the vicinity were largely favourable for continued development, with good poleward upper-level outflow and warm sea surface temperatures, with the only mitigating factor being moderate to high vertical wind shear to the north and south of the low. Organisation proceeded in response to the conducive conditions, with sustained convection and formative cloud banding developing around the consolidating low-level circulation centre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0036-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Low 23U\nDespite initial forecasts of a medium chance to develop into a tropical cyclone, the tropical low began to degrade later on 25 April, and it was indicated that the system was unlikely to intensify further. By this stage, the tropical low had commenced a direct binary interaction (consistent with the Fujiwhara Effect) with the significantly stronger Severe Tropical Storm Lorna, located less than ten degrees of longitude to the west, in the South-West Indian Ocean basin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0036-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Low 23U\nAs Lorna tracked east-southeastward towards the Australian region, the low-level circulation of the tropical low began to elongate, with the distribution of deep convective activity becoming increasingly fragmented. Now increasingly displaying features consistent with a vigorous low-pressure trough, the tropical low continued to weaken into 26 April, as it maintained its southward track. Having lost its structure, the Bureau of Meteorology indicated that the storm had dissipated as a tropical low by 06:00 UTC on 26 April. The ex-tropical low was fully absorbed by the intensifying Cyclone Lorna the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0037-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Low 23U\nThe tropical low's track brought the system within a few hundred kilometres of the Cocos Islands on 23\u201325 April. As a result of the close proximity of the storm, strong winds and moderate rainfall were experienced for an extended period on the islands. At Cocos Islands Airport on West Island, the capital of the Cocos Islands, sustained winds peaked at 59 kilometres per hour (37\u00a0mph)\u2014slightly below gale-force\u2014at 11:30\u00a0p.m. local time (17:00 UTC) on 24 April, with gusts of up to 76 kilometres per hour (47\u00a0mph) also recorded. Including associated heavy rainfall prior to the system's classification as a tropical low, West Island received 457.6\u00a0mm (18.0\u00a0in) of rainfall from 17 to 27 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0038-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Lili\nA moderate to strong pulse of the Madden\u2013Julian oscillation moved eastwards across the Maritime Continent during early May, generating unseasonal monsoonal activity throughout the Indonesian archipelago and far-northern parts of Australia. As this pulse had tracked across the Indian Ocean during the preceding fortnight, it had contributed to the favourable conditions which facilitated the intensification of Extremely Severe Cyclonic Storm Fani in the Bay of Bengal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 72], "content_span": [73, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0038-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Lili\nSimilarly, the presence of the pulse in the Maritime Continent generated favourable conditions for cyclogenesis in the tropical seas to the north of the Australian continent, despite May being outside the traditional bounds of the Australian region cyclone season. On 4 May, the Bureau of Meteorology noted the formation of a weak tropical low approximately 750\u00a0km (465\u00a0mi) to the north-northwest of Darwin, embedded within a low-pressure trough extending from Borneo to New Guinea. Over the next few days, the tropical low slowly moved southward over the Banda Sea while its central barometric pressure gradually deepened.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 72], "content_span": [73, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0038-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Lili\nStrong flaring convection began to surround the system as its low-level circulation centre consolidated on 7 May, and as a result, the JTWC issued a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert at 17:30 UTC. Located within an environment regarded as favourable for development, the JTWC forecast the system to strengthen into a tropical storm within the next 24 hours. The tropical low was upgraded to a Category 1 tropical cyclone on the Australian scale at 03:00 UTC on 9 May, by the Indonesian Agency for Meteorology, Climatology and Geophysics (BMKG), while centred approximately 570\u00a0km east of Kupang. Located just inside the area of responsibility of TCWC Jakarta upon reaching tropical cyclone status, the system was officially named Lili by the BMKG.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 72], "content_span": [73, 819]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0039-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Lili\nSoon afterwards, the JTWC followed suit, indicating that the storm's sustained winds had increased to the equivalent of tropical-storm-force on the Saffir\u2013Simpson hurricane wind scale (SSHWS). After turning towards the west-southwest at 00:00 UTC on 10 May, Lili soon began to weaken. Despite the marginally favourable environment for strengthening, land interaction and significant dry-air intrusion caused the system to deteriorate. Lili was downgraded to a tropical low at 12:00 UTC on 10 May, and dissipated by 06:00 UTC on 11 May, upon making landfall in northern East Timor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 72], "content_span": [73, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0040-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Ann\nOn 7 May, the Bureau of Meteorology indicated that a tropical low had developed within the South Pacific basin. The weak system tracked slowly towards the southwest, passing close to Honiara in the Solomon Islands on 8 May. At 06:00 UTC on 9 May, the tropical low crossed the 160th meridian east and entered the Australian region from the South Pacific basin. The environment was generally favourable for further development, with warm sea surface temperatures and good upper outflow, as well as relatively low vertical wind shear.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0040-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Ann\nThe system turned back eastward on 10 May, exiting the region by 06:00 UTC. The Bureau of Meteorology noted that the environment had become unfavourable for further intensification; however, contradicting this, the Joint Typhoon Warning Center forecast a gradual strengthening to tropical cyclone intensity over the following days in a supportive environment for cyclogenesis. Just twelve hours later, at 18:00 UTC on 10 May, the tropical low tracked back westward, entering the Australian region for the second time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0041-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Ann\nThe storm's low-level circulation proceeded to organise as deep convection developed around the centre, and the BOM upgraded the system to a Category 1 tropical cyclone at 18:00 UTC on 11 May, assigning the name Ann. Ann continued to strengthen, and the system attained Category 2 intensity at 18:00 UTC on the next day. However, the storm encountered unfavourable conditions soon afterward, weakening back to a Category 1 tropical cyclone on 13 May, as the system approached the far-northern coast of Queensland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0041-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Ann\nWeakening continued in the only marginally-supportive environment, with deep convection becoming displaced to the south of an increasingly-exposed low-level circulation centre. Ann was re-classified as a tropical low by the BoM at 03:00 UTC on 14 May, despite still producing gale-force winds, while located approximately 335\u00a0km (210\u00a0mi) east-northeast of Cooktown. Weakening continued, and the system made landfall near the town of Lockhart River on Cape York Peninsula at approximately 04:30 UTC on 15 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0041-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Ann\nEx-Tropical Cyclone Ann emerged over the Gulf of Carpentaria after 06:00 UTC as a shallow circulation, and degenerated into a weak remnant low twelve hours later. Ann entered the Arafura Sea on 16 May while continuing to drift westward. The storm was last mentioned by the BoM on 17 May, eventually dissipating near East Timor by 06:30 UTC on 18 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0042-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nOn the morning of 14 November, the Bureau of Meteorology noted the development of a tropical low in an area of thunderstorms situated about 490\u00a0km (305\u00a0mi) to northwest of Christmas Island. Located over the warm waters of the tropical Indian Ocean off the coast of Java, the system was forecast to track southeastward over the following days, and was assessed as having a moderate chance of developing into a tropical cyclone. The tropical low tracked in a generally south-southwesterly direction over the following few days, but remained below tropical cyclone intensity, due to atmospheric conditions that were unconducive to cyclogenesis. The system later dissipated on 18 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0043-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nOn 9 December, the Bureau of Meteorology announced the development of a weak tropical low from a low-pressure system moving westwards through the mid-eastern Coral Sea, located approximately 1100\u00a0km (680\u00a0mi) east-northeast of Townsville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0044-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nOn 27 December, the Bureau of Meteorology indicated that a weak tropical low had developed over the Timor Sea, approximately 490\u00a0km (305\u00a0mi) northwest of Darwin. In accordance with official forecasts, the tropical low did not strengthen, and dissipated on 28 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0045-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nOn 30 December, a weak tropical low developed over the Indian Ocean, south of the main Indonesian island of Java. Atmospheric conditions were unfavourable for significant development of the system, however, and as such, the tropical low did not intensify. The system meandered south of Indonesia before dissipating on 2 January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0046-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nOn 14 February, the post-tropical remnants of Cyclone Gelena from the South-West Indian Ocean entered the Australian region basin, before dissipating on 15 February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0047-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Storm names, Bureau of Meteorology\nSince the start of the 2008\u201309 season, there has only been one list from which the Bureau of Meteorology has assigned names to tropical cyclones, despite still operating three separate tropical cyclone warning centres (TCWCs) in Perth, Darwin and Brisbane. These warning centres monitor all tropical cyclones that form within the Australian region, including any within the areas of responsibility of TCWC Jakarta or TCWC Port Moresby. The tropical cyclone names that were assigned by the BOM during the 2018\u201319 season are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 76], "content_span": [77, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0048-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Storm names, Bureau of Meteorology\nIn 2020, the Bureau of Meteorology announced the names Trevor, Veronica and Ann would be retired due to the damage and notorieties associated with the systems. They were replaced with Trung, Verity and Amber respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 76], "content_span": [77, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0049-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Storm names, TCWC Jakarta\nThe tropical cyclone warning centre in Jakarta monitors tropical cyclones from the Equator to 11\u00b0S and between the longitudes 90\u00b0E and 145\u00b0E. The names assigned by TCWC Jakarta during the season to tropical cyclones that developed within their area of responsibility are given below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0050-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Storm names, TCWC Jakarta\nTropical cyclones named by TCWC Jakarta are normally rare; however this was the second season in a row in which at least two names were used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0051-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Storm names, TCWC Port Moresby\nTropical cyclones that develop between the Equator and 11\u00b0S, between 151\u00b0E and 160\u00b0E, are assigned names by the tropical cyclone warning centre in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea. No tropical cyclones were named by the PNG National Weather Service during the season. Tropical cyclone formation in this area is rare, with no cyclones being named in it since 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 72], "content_span": [73, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284688-0052-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Australian region cyclone season, Storm names, Others\nTropical Cyclone Oma re-entered the Australian region in the Coral Sea on 21 February as a Category 2 tropical cyclone. Its name was assigned by the Fiji Meteorological Service, as it first intensified to tropical cyclone strength while located in the South Pacific cyclone region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284689-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Austrian Basketball Bundesliga\nThe 2018\u201319 Austrian Basketball Bundesliga (German: \u00d6sterreichische Basketball Bundesliga) season, for sponsorships reasons named the Admiral Basketball Bundesliga (ABL), was the 73rd season of the first tier of basketball in Austria. ece Bulls Kapfenberg won its seventh domestic title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284689-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Austrian Basketball Bundesliga\nHayden Lescault of the Oberwart Gunners was named Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284689-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Austrian Basketball Bundesliga, Teams\nVienna DC Timberwolves will make their debut in the \u00d6BL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284689-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Austrian Basketball Bundesliga, Play-offs\nQuarterfinals were played in a best-of-three games format, semifinals in a 2\u20132\u20131 format and the final in a best-of-seven format 2\u20132\u20131\u20131\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284689-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Austrian Basketball Bundesliga, Play-offs, Quarterfinals\nThe team with the higher seed played game one and three (if necessary) at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284689-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Austrian Basketball Bundesliga, Play-offs, Semifinals\nThe team with the higher seed played game one, two and 5 (if necessary) at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284689-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Austrian Basketball Bundesliga, Play-offs, Finals\nThe team with the higher seed played game one, two and five (if necessary) at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284690-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Austrian Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Austrian Cup was the 88th edition of the national cup in Austrian football. The champions of the cup earned a place in the 2019\u201320 Europa League and would have begun play in the Group stage. Sixty\u2013four clubs participated in this season's cup competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284690-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Austrian Cup\nSturm Graz were the defending champions after winning the competition in the previous season by defeating Red Bull Salzburg in the final. Times up to 27 October 2018 and from 31 March 2019 are CEST (UTC+2). Times from 28 October 2018 to 30 March 2019 are CET (UTC+1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284690-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Austrian Cup, First round\nThirty\u2013two first round matches were played between 20 and 22 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284690-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Austrian Cup, Third round\nThe eight third round matches were played on 30 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284690-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Austrian Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe four quarter-finals matches were played from 15 to 17 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284691-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Austrian Football Bundesliga\nThe 2018\u201319 Austrian Football Bundesliga was the 107th season of top-tier football in Austria. Red Bull Salzburg successfully defended last year's title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284691-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Austrian Football Bundesliga, Changes, Structural changes\nThe league expanded from 10 to 12 teams. A new format was introduced this season, under which the league is split into a championship round and a relegation round after 22 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284691-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Austrian Football Bundesliga, Changes, Team changes\nWacker Innsbruck were promoted as champions of the 2017\u201318 Austrian Football First League and TSV Hartberg were promoted as runners-up. No teams were relegated as St. P\u00f6lten won their relegation playoff match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284691-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Austrian Football Bundesliga, Championship round\nThe points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded down) before the start of the playoff. As a result, the teams started with the following points before the playoff: Red Bull Salzburg 27 points, LASK 23, Sturm Graz 15, Wolfsberger AC 15, Austria Wien 15 and St. P\u00f6lten 15. The points of Red Bull Salzburg and Sturm Graz were rounded down \u2013 in the event of any ties on points at the end of the playoffs, a half point will be added for these teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284691-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Austrian Football Bundesliga, Relegation round\nThe points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded down) before the start of the playoff. As a result, the teams started with the following points before the playoff: Mattersburg 14 points, Rapid Wien 13, Hartberg 13, Admira Wacker M\u00f6dling 10, Rheindorf Altach 9 and Wacker Innsbruck 8. The points of Mattersburg, Rapid Wien, Admira Wacker M\u00f6dling and Wacker Innsbruck were rounded down \u2013 in the event of any ties on points at the end of the playoffs, a half point will be added for these teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284691-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Austrian Football Bundesliga, Europa League play-offs\nThe winner and the runner-up of the relegation round played a one-legged play-off semi-final match against each other. The winner played a two-legged final against the fifth-placed team from the championship round to determine the third Europa League participant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284692-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Austrian Football Second League\nThe 2018\u201319 Austrian Football Second League is the 45th season of the Austrian second-level football league and the first one as the Second League. The league has been expanded to 16 teams for this season with one team being promoted to the Austrian Bundesliga and 3 teams being relegated to the Austrian Regionalliga at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284692-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Austrian Football Second League, Teams\nSixteen teams will participate in the 2018\u201319 season. SV Horn, SKU Amstetten, FK Austria Wien II, SV Lafnitz, SK Vorw\u00e4rts Steyr, FC Juniors O\u00d6, SK Austria Klagenfurt and FC Wacker Innsbruck II were promoted either through promotion or application to the new league structure. No team was relegated the previous season due to a decision made in the expansion of the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284693-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Austrian Hockey League season\nThe 2018\u201319 Austrian Hockey League season began on 14 September 2018 and ended on 24 April 2019. The defending champion were HC Bolzano. On 24 April 2018, EC KAC won the Austrian Hockey Championship for the 31st time in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284693-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Austrian Hockey League season\nFollowing the regular season, bottom placed KHL Medve\u0161\u010dak Zagreb announced they would not be participating in the second phase of the season at the Qualifying round due to financial and scheduling difficulties on 28 January 2019. The Qualifying round was reduced to a pool of 5 teams each playing 8 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284694-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Austrian Regionalliga\nThe 2018\u201319 Austrian Regionalliga was the 60th season of the Austrian third-tier football league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284694-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Austrian Regionalliga\nThe Regionalliga is split into East, West and Middle (German: Ost, West & Mitte) divisions. The Regionalliga Ost is formed by clubs from the Vienna, Lower Austria and Burgenland Football Associations. The Regionalliga Mitte is made up of clubs from the Upper Austria, Carinthia and Styria Football Associations. The Regionalliga West is made up of clubs from the Salzburg, Tirol and Vorarlberg Football Associations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284695-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ayr United F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Ayr United\u2019s 109th season of competitive football and their first season back in the Scottish Championship following their promotion from League One in the 2017\u201318 season. Ayr also competed in the League Cup, Scottish Cup and the Challenge Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284695-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ayr United F.C. season, Summary, Season\nIn their first season back in the second\u2013tier of Scottish football, Ayr United finished in fourth place and qualified for the Premiership play-offs, losing to Inverness CT in the quarter-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284696-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Azadegan League\nThe 2018\u201319 Azadegan League was the 28th season of the Azadegan League and 18th as the second highest division since its establishment in 1991. The season featured 12 teams from the 2017\u201318 Azadegan League, two new teams relegated from the 2017\u201318 Persian Gulf Pro League: Siah Jamegan and Naft Tehran and two new teams promoted from the 2017\u201318 League 2: Karoon Arvand Khorramshahr and Shahin Bushehr both as champions. Navad Urmia replaced Gostaresh Foulad, while Sorkhpooshan Pakdasht replaced Esteghlal Jonoub. Oxin Alborz changed their name into Gol Reyhan. The league started on 10 August 2018 and ended on 30 April 2019. Gol Gohar won the Azadegan League title for the first time in their history. Gol Gohar and Shahin Bushehr promoted to the Persian Gulf Pro League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 799]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284696-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Azadegan League, Teams\nBefore the start of competition Naft Tehran was relegated to League 2 following financial problems", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284696-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Azadegan 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284697-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Azerbaijan Basketball League\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Asturkian (talk | contribs) at 15:38, 19 November 2019. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284697-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Azerbaijan Basketball League\nThe 2018\u201319 Azerbaijan Basketball League, is the 26th season of the top professional basketball league in Azerbaijan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284697-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Azerbaijan Basketball League, Competition format\nThe six clubs played a four-legged round robin tournament where the four first qualified teams would advance to the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284697-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Azerbaijan Basketball League, Playoffs\nThe semi-finals were played in a best-of-three playoff format and the finals in a best-of-five playoff format (1-1-1-1-1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284698-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Azerbaijan Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Azerbaijan Cup was the 27th season of the annual cup competition in Azerbaijan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284699-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Azerbaijan First Division\nThe 2018\u201319 Azerbaijan First Division is the second-level of football in Azerbaijan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284699-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Azerbaijan First Division, Teams\nSabah was promoted from the 2017\u201318 season to Azerbaijan Premier League, while Kapaz relegated to the First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284699-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Azerbaijan First Division, Teams\nOn 9 August 2018, it was announced that Ke\u015fla-2, Neft\u00e7i-2, Qaraba\u011f-2, Sabah-2, Sabail-2, Sumgayit-2 and Zira-2 will participate in the First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284700-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Azerbaijan Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Azerbaijan Premier League was the 27th season of the Azerbaijan Premier League. It was won by defending champions Qaraba\u011f. The season began on 11 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284700-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Azerbaijan Premier League\nThe winner of the league this season earned a spot in the first qualifying round of the 2019\u201320 Champions League, and the second and third placed clubs earned a place in the first qualifying round of the 2019\u201320 Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284700-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Azerbaijan Premier League, Teams\nKapaz was relegated at the conclusion of the previous season. Sabah were promoted and will participate in the Premier League this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284700-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Azerbaijan 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284700-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Azerbaijan Premier League, Teams, Foreign players\nA team could use only six foreign players on the field in each game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284700-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Azerbaijan Premier League, Results\nClubs played each other four times for a total of 28 matches each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284701-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 B.League season\nThe 2018\u201319 B.League season was the third season of the Japanese B.League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284702-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BBL-Pokal\nThe 2018\u201319 BBL-Pokal was the 52nd season of the German Basketball Cup, the domestic cup competition of the Basketball Bundesliga (BBL). This was the first season with the new format, which changed to a sixteen team knock-out tournament, with the sixteen highest seeded teams from the previous season qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284702-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BBL-Pokal\nBrose Bamberg won their fifth title after a one-point win over Alba Berlin in the final. Nikos Zisis hit the game-winner with 2.4 seconds left to give Bamberg the win by a one-point margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284702-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BBL-Pokal, Participants\nThe sixteen highest placed teams from the 2017\u201318 Basketball Bundesliga, without the relegated teams and promoted teams, qualified for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284702-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BBL-Pokal, Final\nThe draw for home-court advantage was held on 20 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284703-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BCHL season\nThe 2018\u201319 BCHL season is the 57th season of the British Columbia Hockey League (BCHL). The seventeen teams from the Interior, Island and Mainland divisions played 58-game schedules. The 2018 BCHL Showcase, hosted annually in Chilliwack, occurred shortly after the start of the season from September 20 to 22, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284703-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BCHL season\nIn March, the top teams from each division played for the Fred Page Cup, the BCHL Championship, won by the Prince George Spruce Kings. From there, they represented the league in the Doyle Cup, a best-of-seven series against the Alberta Junior Hockey League champion Brooks Bandits, normally to determine who represents the Pacific region in the National Junior A Championship. However, as the National Junior A Championship was being hosted in Brooks, Alberta, by the Brooks Bandits with the automatic hosts berth, the Spruce Kings were already guaranteed a spot in the tournament no matter the outcome. The Spruce Kings defeated the Bandits four games to two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284703-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BCHL season, Standings\nNote: GP = Games Played, W = Wins, L = Losses, OTL = Overtime Losses, Pts = Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284704-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BENE-League Handball\nThe BENE-League Handball 2018-19 was the sixth edition of the multi-intarnational handballcompetition between Belgium and the Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284705-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BFA Senior League\nThe 2018\u201319 BFA Senior League was the 28th season of the BFA Senior League, the top division football competition in Bahamas. The season began on 21 October 2018 and ended on 7 April 2019. The season was followed by a four-team playoff, with the championship match on 28 April 2019. Dynamos defeated Cavalier to earn their first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284705-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BFA Senior League, Regular season\nTeams play those of own division twice and of other division once.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284706-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BIBL season\nThe 2018\u201319 BIBL season is the 11th edition of Balkan International Basketball League (BIBL). The competition started on 16 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284706-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BIBL season, Competition format\nOriginally eight teams joined the competition, but Prishtina 2019 withdrew its participation in January due to the commitment in the FIBA Europe Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284706-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BIBL season, Competition format\nThe remaining seven teams play a round robin tournament where each team faced the others in home and away games. The top four teams qualify directly for the Final Four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284706-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BIBL season, Final Four\nThe BIBL Final Four is the final stage of the competition that follows the regular season. Will be played in a single knock-out match on April 6, 2019 and April 7, 2019 in Tirana, at the Feti Borova Sport Hall in the Tirana Olympic Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284707-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BLNO season\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by WOSlinker (talk | contribs) at 23:22, 25 November 2019 (fix small tag). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284707-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BLNO season\nThe 2018\u201319 BLNO is the 19th season of the Basketball League of Norway since its establishment. It started on 22 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284707-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BLNO season, Format\nThe ten participating teams first played the regular season, that consisted in a round-robin schedule containing three rounds with every team playing each opponent at least once home and once away for a total of 27 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284707-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BLNO season, Format\nAt the end of the regular season, the top eight teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284707-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BLNO season, Norwegian clubs in European competitions\nNorwegian clubs came back to European competitions sixteen years after their last participation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 61], "content_span": [62, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team represented Brigham Young University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. It was head coach Dave Rose's 14th and final season at BYU and the Cougars eighth season as members of the West Coast Conference. The Cougars played their home games at the Marriott Center in Provo, Utah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Cougars finished the 2017\u201318 season 24\u201311, 11\u20137 in West Coast Conference play to finish in third place. As the No. 3 seed in the WCC Tournament, they defeated San Diego in the quarterfinals and Saint Mary's in the semifinals before losing to Gonzaga in the championship game. They received an at-large bid to the National Invitation Tournament where they were defeated by Stanford in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Radio\nGreg Wrubell and Mark Durrant return to call men's basketball for the 2018\u201319 season, though Jason Shepherd will fill-in for Wrubell on the Cougar Tipoff while Robbie Bullough will fill-in for the Utah Valley game. The radio network is officially called the Nu Skin BYU Sports Network and can be found throughout Utah, Idaho, and Nationwide on SiriusXM and TuneIn. KSFI will take the place of KSL on November 6 as KSL will be providing election coverage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, Nevada\nSeries History: BYU leads series 13\u20136Broadcasters: Carter Blackburn & Pete GillenStarting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 65], "content_span": [66, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, Utah Valley\nSeries History: BYU leads 2\u20131Broadcasters: Dave McCann, Blaine Fowler, & Lauren McClainStarting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 70], "content_span": [71, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, Northwestern State\nSeries History: Series even 1\u20131Broadcasters: Dave McCann, Blaine Fowler, & Spencer LintonStarting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 77], "content_span": [78, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, Oral Roberts\nSeries History: BYU leads 5\u20130Broadcasters: Dave McCann, Blaine Fowler, & Spencer LintonStarting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 71], "content_span": [72, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, Alabama A&M\nSeries History: First MeetingBroadcasters: Dave McCann, Blaine Fowler, & Spencer LintonStarting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 70], "content_span": [71, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, Rice\nSeries History: BYU leads 5\u20132Broadcasters: Dave McCann, Blaine Fowler, & Spencer LintonStarting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, Houston\nSeries History: Houston leads series 4\u20132Broadcasters: Dave McCann, Blaine Fowler, & Lauren McClainStarting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 66], "content_span": [67, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, Illinois State\nSeries History: BYU leads series 1\u20130Broadcasters: , & Starting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 73], "content_span": [74, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, Utah State\nSeries History: BYU leads series 142\u201392Broadcasters: Dave McCann, Blaine Fowler, & Spencer LintonStarting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 69], "content_span": [70, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, Utah\nSeries History: BYU leads series 130\u2013128Broadcasters: Roxy Bernstein & Caron ButlerStarting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, Portland State\nSeries History: BYU leads series 1\u20130Broadcasters: Dave McCann, Blaine Fowler, & Spencer LintonStarting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 73], "content_span": [74, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, UNLV\nSeries History: UNLV leads series 18\u201316Broadcasters: & Sean FarnhamStarting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, San Diego State\nSeries History: BYU leads series 48\u201324Broadcasters: Carter Blackburn & Pete GillenStarting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 74], "content_span": [75, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, Pacific\nSeries History: BYU leads series 10\u20136Broadcasters: Steve Quis & Starting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 66], "content_span": [67, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, Saint Mary's\nSeries History: Series even 13\u201313Broadcasters: Dave Feldman & Adrian BranchStarting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 71], "content_span": [72, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, Portland\nSeries History: BYU leads series 18\u20132Broadcasters: Dave McCann, Blaine Fowler, & Spencer LintonStarting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 67], "content_span": [68, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, Santa Clara\nSeries History: BYU leads series 30\u20136Broadcasters: Dave McCann, Blaine Fowler, & Spencer LintonStarting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 70], "content_span": [71, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, Pepperdine\nSeries History: BYU leads series 13\u20139Broadcasters: Eric Rothman & Adrian BranchStarting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 69], "content_span": [70, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, San Francisco\nSeries History: BYU leads series 19\u20136Broadcasters: Barry Tompkins & Kelenna AzubuikeStarting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 72], "content_span": [73, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, Saint Mary's\nSeries History: Saint Mary's leads series 14\u201313Broadcasters: Steve Quis & Dan DickauStarting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 71], "content_span": [72, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, Gonzaga\nSeries History: Gonzaga leads series 15\u20136Broadcasters: Dave Feldman & Dan DickauStarting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 66], "content_span": [67, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, Loyola Marymount\nSeries History: BYU leads series 14\u20135Broadcasters: Dave McCann, Blaine Fowler, & Spencer LintonStarting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 75], "content_span": [76, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, Portland\nSeries History: BYU leads series 19\u20132Broadcasters: Steve Quis & Richie SchuelerStarting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 67], "content_span": [68, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, Pacific\nSeries History: BYU leads series 11\u20136Broadcasters: Dave McCann, Blaine Fowler, & Spencer LintonStarting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 66], "content_span": [67, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, San Diego\nSeries History: BYU leads series 14\u20135Broadcasters: Steve Quis & Casey JacobsenStarting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, Loyola Marymount\nSeries History: BYU leads series 15\u20135Broadcasters: Steve Quis, Ryan Hollins, & Kirsten WatsonStarting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 75], "content_span": [76, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, San Francisco\nSeries History: BYU leads series 19\u20137Broadcasters: Dave McCann, Blaine Fowler & Spencer LintonStarting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 72], "content_span": [73, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, Gonzaga\nSeries History: Gonzaga leads series 16\u20136Broadcasters: Eric Rothman & Sean FarnhamStarting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 66], "content_span": [67, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284708-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars men's basketball team, Game summaries, San Diego\nSeries History: BYU leads series 15\u20135Broadcasters: Dave McCann, Blaine Fowler & Spencer LintonStarting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284709-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 BYU Cougars women's basketball team represented Brigham Young University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. It was head coach Jeff Judkins's eighteenth season at BYU. The Cougars, members of the West Coast Conference, play their home games at the Marriott Center. In 2019 the Cougars won the West Coast Conference tournament championship game over Gonzaga. In that tournament, Paisley Johnson was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player. They finished the season 26\u20137, 15\u20133 in WCC play to finish in second round. In the NCAA Women's Tournament as a 7th seed in the Chicago regional they defeated Auburn in the first round before losing to Stanford in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284709-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars women's basketball team, 2018\u201319 media, BYU Sports Media\nAll Cougars home games are scheduled to be shown on BYUtv or on TheW.tv powered by Stadium. Conference road games will also be shown on TheW.tv. Most regular season road games will be streamed. Streaming partners for those games can be found on the schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 76], "content_span": [77, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284709-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars women's basketball team, Game Summaries, UC Riverside\nBroadcasters: , , & Series History: BYU leads series 2\u20130 Starting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 73], "content_span": [74, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284709-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars women's basketball team, Game Summaries, Cal\nBroadcasters: Robbie Bullough & Makenzi Pulsipher Series History: Cal leads series 4\u20130Starting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284709-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars women's basketball team, Game Summaries, Eastern Washington\nBroadcasters: Robbie Bullough & Makenzi PulsipherSeries History: BYU leads series 4\u20131 Starting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 79], "content_span": [80, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284709-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars women's basketball team, Game Summaries, Utah\nBroadcasters: Krista Blunk & Rosalyn Gold-OnwudeSeries History: BYU leads series 63\u201342 Starting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284709-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars women's basketball team, Game Summaries, Colorado State\nBroadcasters: Spencer Linton & Lauren McClainSeries History: BYU leads series 54\u201324Starting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 75], "content_span": [76, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284709-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars women's basketball team, Game Summaries, Pepperdine\nBroadcasters: Spencer Linton & Kristen KozlowskiSeries History: BYU leads series 17\u20132Starting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 71], "content_span": [72, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284709-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars women's basketball team, Game Summaries, Loyola Marymount\nBroadcasters: Spencer Linton & Kristen KozlowskiSeries History: BYU leads series 15\u20132Starting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284709-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars women's basketball team, Game Summaries, Saint Mary's\nBroadcasters: Elias FeldmanSeries History: Saint Mary's leads series 9\u20138Starting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 73], "content_span": [74, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284709-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars women's basketball team, Game Summaries, Gonzaga\nBroadcasters: Spencer Linton & Kristen KozlowskiSeries History: Gonzaga leads series 15\u20139Starting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 68], "content_span": [69, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284709-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars women's basketball team, Game Summaries, Portland\nBroadcasters: Spencer Linton & Kristen KozlowskiSeries History: BYU leads series 22\u20134Starting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284709-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars women's basketball team, Game Summaries, Saint Mary's\nBroadcasters: Spencer Linton & Kristen KozlowskiSeries History: Series Even 9\u20139Starting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 73], "content_span": [74, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284709-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars women's basketball team, Game Summaries, Pacific\nBroadcasters: Spencer Linton & Kristen KozlowskiSeries History: BYU leads series 14\u20134Starting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 68], "content_span": [69, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284709-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars women's basketball team, Game Summaries, Gonzaga\nBroadcasters: Greg Heister, Stephanie Hawk-Freeman, & Taylor BrooksSeries History: Gonzaga leads series 15\u201310Starting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 68], "content_span": [69, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284709-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars women's basketball team, Game Summaries, San Diego\nBroadcasters: Dave McCann & Kristen KozlowskiSeries History: BYU leads series 13\u20136Starting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 70], "content_span": [71, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284709-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars women's basketball team, Game Summaries, San Francisco\nBroadcasters: Robbie Bullough & Makenzi PulsipherSeries History: BYU leads series 18\u20135Starting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 74], "content_span": [75, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284709-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars women's basketball team, Game Summaries, Santa Clara\nBroadcasters: Spencer Linton, Kristen Kozlowski, & Lauren McClainSeries History: BYU leads series 15\u20132Starting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 72], "content_span": [73, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284709-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars women's basketball team, Game Summaries, Pepperdine\nBroadcasters: Spencer Linton & Kristen KozlowskiSeries History: BYU leads series 18\u20133Starting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 71], "content_span": [72, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284709-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 BYU Cougars women's basketball team, Game Summaries, Gonzaga\nBroadcasters: Elise Woodward & Dan Hughes (ESPN)/ Greg Wrubell & Kristen Kozlowski (BYU Radio)Series History: Gonzaga leads series 15\u201311Starting Lineups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 68], "content_span": [69, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284710-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bahraini King's Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Bahraini King's Cup is the 17th season of the Bahraini King's Cup, the national football cup competition of Bahrain since it was renamed as the King's Cup in 2003 (named Emir Cup or Federation Cup before). The winners of the competition will earn a spot in the 2020 AFC Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284710-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bahraini King's Cup, Preliminary round\nIn the preliminary round, nine teams were divided into two groups, one of five and one of four. The matches were played between 30 August and 25 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284710-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bahraini King's Cup, Round of 16\nThe first legs were played between 21 and 22 October 2018, and the second legs were played between 25 and 27 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284710-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bahraini King's Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs will be played between 4\u20135 December 2018, and the second legs will be played between 8\u20139 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284710-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bahraini King's Cup, Semi-finals\nThe first leg matches played on 6 February, while the second leg matches played on 11 February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284711-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bahraini Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Bahraini Premier League (also known as Nasser Bin Hamad Premier League for sponsorship reasons), is the 62nd top-level football season in Bahrain. The season started on 16 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284711-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bahraini Premier League, League table, Foreign players\nThe number of foreign players is limited to 6 per team, and should not be a goalkeeper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284712-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ball State Cardinals men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Ball State Cardinals men's basketball team represented Ball State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Cardinals, led by sixth-year head coach James Whitford, played their home games at Worthen Arena as members of the West Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 16\u201317, 6\u201312 in MAC play to finish in fifth place in the West Division. They defeated Eastern Michigan in the first round of the MAC Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Bowling Green.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284712-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ball State Cardinals men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Cardinals finished the 2017\u201318 season 19\u201313, 10\u20138 to finish in third place in the MAC West division. They lost in the quarterfinals of the MAC Tournament to Kent State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284712-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ball State Cardinals men's basketball team, Schedule and results\n* Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses. All times are in Eastern Time", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 72], "content_span": [73, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284713-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ball State Cardinals women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Ball State Cardinals women's basketball team will represent Ball State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Cardinals, led by seventh year head coach Brady Sallee, play their home games at Worthen Arena as members of the West Division of the Mid-American Conference. They seek to qualify for the NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament for the second time and the first time since 2009 but unfortunately they finished the season 8\u201323, 3\u201315 in MAC play to finish in last place in the West Division. They lost in the first of the MAC Women's Tournament to Toledo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284714-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Baltic Men Volleyball League\nThe 2018\u201319 Baltic Men Volleyball League, known as Credit 24 Champions League for sponsorship reasons, was the 14th edition of the highest level of club volleyball in the Baltic states.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284714-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Baltic Men Volleyball League, Participating teams\nThe following teams took part in the 2018\u201319 edition of Baltic Men Volleyball League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284714-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Baltic Men Volleyball League, Main Tournament\nAll participating 11 clubs were playing according to the double round robin system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284714-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Baltic Men Volleyball League, Playoffs\nThe four winners of each series qualified to the Final Four, while the other four teams were eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284715-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bangalore Super Division\nThe 2018\u201319 Bangalore Super Division was the eighth season of the Bangalore Super Division which is the third tier of the Indian association football system and the top tier of the Karnataka football system. The season started on 21 October 2018. Ozone F.C. were the defending champions. The league was contested by top 9 teams from 2017\u201318 season as well as ADE and Bangalore Eagles who were promoted from 2017\u201318 Bangalore 'A' division. They replaced Jawahar Union and CIL who were relegated to 2019\u201320 Bangalore 'A' Division. Kickstart FC, Bengaluru United and Bangalore Dream United were direct entry teams, thus bringing total number of teams to 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284715-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bangalore Super Division\nBengaluru FC 'B' won their first title with a game to spare. At the end of the season, Jawahar Union and CIL were relegated to 'A' Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284716-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bangladesh Championship League\nThe 2018-19 Bangladesh Championship League was 7th season of the Bangladesh Championship League since its establishment in 2012. A total of 11 teams will compete in the league. The season started on 10 February 2019 and ended on 24 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284716-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bangladesh Championship League, Venue\nAll matches were held at the BSSS Mostafa Kamal Stadium in Dhaka, Bangladesh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284717-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bangladesh Cricket League\nThe 2018\u201319 Bangladesh Cricket League was the seventh edition of the Bangladesh Cricket League, a first-class cricket competition. It was held in Bangladesh, starting on 21 November 2018 and concluding on 27 December 2018. South Zone were the defending champions. South Zone retained their title, after they beat North Zone by nine wickets in their final match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284717-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bangladesh Cricket League\nPrior to the start of the tournament, a players' draft took place. The third round match between Central Zone and East Zone finished as a draw, under controversial circumstances. The umpires called off the game due to bad light, eight minutes after the scheduled close, with East Zone six runs short of the target to win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284718-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bangladesh Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 BPL season, also known as BPL 6 or UCB BPL 2019 Powered by TVS (for sponsorship reasons), was the sixth season of the Bangladesh Premier League (BPL), the top level professional Twenty20 cricket franchise league in Bangladesh. The competition was organised by the Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB), featuring seven teams from seven cities. Teams are restricted to having four overseas players per side, instead of five in the previous edition of the tournament. Rangpur Riders were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284718-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bangladesh Premier League\nOriginally, the season was scheduled to start on 1 October 2018 and end on 16 November 2018. However, in May 2018, it was reported that the tournament might be moved to January 2019, because of security concerns around the Bangladeshi general election, which took place in December 2018. In July 2018, it was confirmed that the tournament would start in January 2019. For this edition of the tournament, the Decision Review System (DRS) were used for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284718-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bangladesh Premier League\nIn the final match, Comilla Victorians defeated Dhaka Dynamites by 17 runs to win their second title. In the final match, Tamim Iqbal was awarded the man of the match award, after scoring 141 not out. Rilee Rossouw was the leading run scorer in the tournament with 558 runs. Shakib Al Hasan was the leading wicket taker with 22 wickets and also won the player of the tournament award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284718-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bangladesh Premier League, Draft and squads\nBy 30 September 2018 the team franchises announced the names of their retained players for the tournament and their icon players. A players' draft was initially scheduled to take place on 25 October 2018. However, the date was moved to 28 October due to a schedule clash with the ODI series between Bangladesh and Zimbabwe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284718-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bangladesh Premier League, Draft and squads\nThe rest of the players were bought from the Players' Draft, which was held on 28 October 2018. Liton Das and Mustafizur Rahman were new additions to the list while Soumya Sarkar and Sabbir Rahman were excluded from the list. Initially, Steve Smith was barred from playing in the tournament by the Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB). However, the BCB overturned its decision, allowing Smith to take part in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284718-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bangladesh Premier League, Venues\nA total of 46 matches was played in these venues with the playoffs and final will be held at Dhaka. This season 3 venues will host all matches in 4 phases. In the first phase Dhaka will host 14 matches then Sylhet will host 8 matches in the second phase. Dhaka will again host 6 matches in the third phase while then Chittagong will host 10 matches of fourth phase. Final tournament will return to Dhaka again for playoffs and Final matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284718-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bangladesh Premier League, League stage\nA total of 42 matches were played in the league stage, with 24 matches played in Dhaka, 8 matches in Sylhet and 10 in Chittagong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284719-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bangladesh Premier League (football)\nThe 2018\u201319 Bangladesh Premier League (also known as TVS Bangladesh Premier League for sponsorship reason) is the 11th season of the Bangladesh Premier League since its establishment in 2007. A total of 13 football clubs will compete in the league. Dhaka Abahani are the defending champions. Bashundhara Kings and NoFeL Sporting Club entered as the promoted teams from the 2017 Bangladesh Championship League. The league was delayed and was rescheduled to start from 18 January 2019. Six venues will host 2019 Bangladesh Premier League. 2 clubs will be relegated to Bangladesh Championship League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284719-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bangladesh Premier League (football), Rule changes\nBangladesh became the latest member association to adopt AFC's 3+1 rule which will allow clubs to recruit one player of Asian origin in addition to their regular quota of three foreigners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284719-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bangladesh Premier League (football), Rule changes\nThe Bangladesh Football Federation executive committee decided to embrace the new AFC rule which encourages the mobility of talented Asian players and provides a fillip to the regional game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284719-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bangladesh Premier League (football), Teams\nTwelve teams were competed In previous season. This season, thirteen teams competed in the league, \u2013 the top eleven teams from the previous season and the two teams promoted from the Championship. The promoted teams were Bashundhara Kings and NoFeL Sporting Club (both the teams are playing BPL for the first time). They replaced Farashganj SC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284719-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bangladesh Premier League (football), Teams, Stadiums and locations\nFIFA and the AFC directed the BFF that matches of the professional league would have to organize at least five different venues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 75], "content_span": [76, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284719-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bangladesh Premier League (football), Teams, Stadiums and locations\nPrimarily, teams have applied for eight venues to the BFF. Abahani Limited, Sheikh Jamal Dhanmondi Club and Mohammedan Sporting Club, choose Bangabandhu National Stadium as their home venue. Arambagh and Saif Sporting Club applied for Mymensingh Stadium, Rahmatganj and Brothers for Birsreshtha Kamlapur Stadium, or Goplaganj Stadium, Sheikh Russel, Muktijoddha, newcomers Bashundhara Kings applied for Nilphamari Stadium, NOFEL for Noakhali, or MA Aziz Stadium in Chittagong, Team BJMC and Chittagong Abahani wanted Rajshahi Stadium as their home venue. After inspecting the facilities of these applied venues, BFF has sanctioned the following six stadiums for clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 75], "content_span": [76, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284719-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bangladesh Premier League (football), Results, Positions by round\nThe following table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches. In order to preserve the chronological evolution, 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 afterward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 73], "content_span": [74, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284720-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bangladesh Premier League Final\nThe 2019 Bangladesh Premier League Final was a day/night Twenty20 cricket match played between Comilla Victorians and Dhaka Dynamites on 8 February 2019 at the Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium, Dhaka to determine the winner of the 2018\u201319 Bangladesh Premier League, a professional Twenty20 cricket league in Bangladesh. It ended as Comilla Victorians defeating Dhaka Dynamites by 17 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284720-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bangladesh Premier League Final, Final, Background\nThe match has been played at Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium. The top two teams Rangpur Riders and Comilla Victorians faced each other in the Qualifier 1 and Comilla Victorians entered directly to final winning the Qualifier 1 while the Rangpur Riders got another chance to make their position in final going through Qualifier 2, played between the former and the winner of the Eliminator, Dhaka Dynamites who defeated Chittagong Vikings in the Eliminator. But Dhaka made it to final defeating Rangpur in the Qualifier 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284720-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bangladesh Premier League Final, Final, Report\nDhaka winning the toss decided to field first and their decision seemed to have worked when the picked up Evin Lewis so cheaply but Tamim Iqbal then made a partnership of 89 runs with Anamul Haque and in the process he picked up his fifty in 39 balls. Both Anamul Haque and Shamshur Rahman fell in a quick succession while the latter got out on a Golden duck.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284720-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bangladesh Premier League Final, Final, Report\nFurther no damage was done for Comilla, Tamim Iqbal along with the skipper Imrul Kayes made a 100 run partnership for the 4th wicket, in the process Tamim scored his first-ever century in BPL and it was also his highest individual score in T20 cricket along with that first time any Bangladeshi batsman scored a century in a T20 cricket final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284720-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bangladesh Premier League Final, Final, Report\nIn the chase Dhaka lost the wicket of Sunil Narine in the second ball of the innings as he got run out without facing any delivery (Platinum Duck). Upul Tharanga and Rony Talukdar made 102 run partnership for the 2nd wicket. After the fall of Tharanga and Talukdars's wicket no batsman could stand up with the bat and wicket kept falling on regular succession and in their full over quota Dhaka could only manage 182 runs losing 9 wickets and subsequently lost the match by 17 runs. As a result Comilla hold their second BPL title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284720-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bangladesh Premier League Final, Final, Summary\nTamim Iqbal was elected Man of the Match for his match winning century (141*) which was highest individual score in T20 cricket. While Shakib Al Hasan was elected Player of the Tournament for his all-round performance. Rilee Rossouw of Rangpur Riders was the most run getter in the tournament while Shakib Al Hasan, the skipper of Dhaka Dynamites was the most wicket taker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284721-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Barbados Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Barbados Premier League was the 73rd season of the Barbados Premier League, the top division football competition in Barbados. The season began on 21 October 2018. The regular season ended on 5 May 2019, which was followed by three-legged final in which Barbados Defence Force defeated Weymouth Wales for their sixth title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284721-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Barbados Premier League, Regular season\nAs with the previous season, the 12 teams were divided into two zones of six teams each. Barbados Soccer Academy, St. Andrew Lions, and Youth Milan were promoted from the previous season of Barbados Division One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284721-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Barbados Premier League, Championship final, Third leg\nBarbados Defence Force won championship qualified for Caribbean Club Shield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284722-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Barnsley F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season saw Barnsley playing in the EFL League One. The season covered the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284722-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Barnsley F.C. season\nOn 30 April 2019, it was confirmed that Barnsley F.C was promoted to EFL Championship, will play inthe 2019\u201320 EFL Championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284722-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Barnsley F.C. season, Competitions, Pre-season friendlies\nBarnsley announced pre-season friendlies against Gainsborough Trinity, York City, Salford City, West Brom Albion and Hull City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 65], "content_span": [66, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284722-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Barnsley F.C. season, Competitions, League One, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the EFL League One fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284722-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Barnsley F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October. The draw for the second round was made live on BBC and BT by Mark Schwarzer and Glenn Murray on 12 November. The third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284722-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Barnsley F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284722-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Barnsley F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced. The draw for the second round was made live on Talksport by Leon Britton and Steve Claridge on 16 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284723-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Bundesliga\nThe 2018\u201319 Basketball Bundesliga, known as the easyCredit BBL for sponsorship reasons, was the 53rd season of the Basketball Bundesliga (BBL), the top-tier level of professional club basketball in Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284723-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Bundesliga\nBayern Munich defended their title by defeating Alba Berlin in the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284723-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Bundesliga\nAlba Berlin, runners-up of the season, qualified for the 2019\u201320 EuroLeague as Bayern Munich was already given a wild card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284723-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Bundesliga, Regular season\nIn the regular season, teams play against each other two times home-and-away in a round-robin format. The first eight teams advance to the playoffs, while the last two placed teams will be relegated to the ProA for next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284723-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Bundesliga, Playoffs\nAll three rounds of the playoffs are played in a best-of-five format, with the higher seeded team playing the first, third and fifth game at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284724-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League\nThe 2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League was the third season of the Basketball Champions League (BCL), a European-wide professional basketball competition for clubs, that was launched by FIBA. The competition began in September 2018, with the qualifying rounds, and concluded in May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284724-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League\nThe Final Four was held in the Sportpaleis in Antwerp on 3 and 5 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284724-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League\nVirtus Bologna won its first BCL championship. As such, the team qualified for the 2020 FIBA Intercontinental Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284724-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League, Eligibility of players\nIn 2017, FIBA agreed to adopt eligibility rules, forcing the clubs to have at least 5 home-grown players in rosters of 11 or 12 players, or at least four, if the team has got fewer players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284724-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League, Team allocation\nA total of 56 teams (19 of which are champions) from 28 countries will participate in the 2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League. On July 11, 2018, Kalev/Cramo was replaced by Z-Mobile Prishtina. On July 12, 2018, Eski\u015fehir announced their withdrawal from the competition, leaving an open spot in group C that would be occupied by Lietkabelis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284724-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League, Team allocation, Teams\nLeague positions after eventual playoffs of the previous season shown in parentheses (TH: Champions League title holders; FEC: FIBA Europe Cup title holders).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284724-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League, Round and draw dates\nThe schedule of the competition is as follows (all draws are held at the FIBA headquarters in Mies, Switzerland, unless stated otherwise):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284724-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League, Qualifying rounds\nThe first qualifying rounds were held on 20\u201321 September and 22\u201324 September 2018. The second round was held on 25\u201326 September and 27\u201329 September 2018. The third round was played on 30 September and 2 October 2018. The losers of all the rounds entered the 2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284724-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League, Qualifying rounds, Draw\nThe 24 teams that entered in the first round were divided into four pots. Teams of pot A would play against teams from pot D in games 1 to 6, and pot B teams will face the ones of the pot C. Teams from pots A and B would play the second leg at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284724-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League, Qualifying rounds, Draw\nIn the second round, teams from games 7 to 12 would play the first leg at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284724-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League, Qualifying rounds, First qualifying round\nA total of 24 teams will play in the first qualifying round. The first legs were played on 20 and 21 September, while the second legs were played on 22 and 24 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284724-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League, Qualifying rounds, Second qualifying round\nThe twelve winners of the first qualifying round will play the second round. The first legs were played on 25 and 26 September, while the second legs were played on 27 and 29 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 79], "content_span": [80, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284724-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League, Qualifying rounds, Second qualifying round\nAfter the retirement of Eski\u015fehir, the winner of the series between Red October Cant\u00f9 and Telenet Giants Antwerp joined directly the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 79], "content_span": [80, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284724-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League, Qualifying rounds, Third qualifying round\nAfter the retirement of Eski\u015fehir, a total of 10 teams will play in the third qualifying round: five teams which enter in this round, and five of the six winners of the second qualifying round. Winners of game 13 will directly qualify to the regular season without playing this round. The first legs were played on 1 October, while the second legs were played on 4 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284724-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League, Regular season\nThe 32 teams are drawn into four groups of eight, with the restriction that teams from the same country cannot be drawn against each other. In each group, teams play against each other home-and-away, in a round-robin format. The group winners, runners-up, third-placed teams and fourth-placed teams, advance to the round of 16, while the fifth-placed teams and sixth-placed teams enter the 2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284724-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League, Regular season\nA total of 32 teams play in the regular season: 26 teams which enter in this stage, and the 6 winners of the third qualifying round. The regular season will start on 9 October 2018 and end 6 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284724-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League, Regular season, Draw\nTeams were divided into two pots according to the club ranking published by the organization. Twelve teams were named seeded teams while the rest would be unseeded teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284724-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League, Playoffs\nThe playoffs start on 5 March 2019 and end 3 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284724-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League, Playoffs\nIn the playoffs, teams play against each other over two legs on a home-and-away basis, except for the Final Four. In the playoffs draw, the group winners and the runners-up are seeded, and the third-placed teams and the fourth-placed teams are unseeded. The seeded teams are drawn against the unseeded teams, with the seeded teams hosting the second leg. Teams from the same group cannot be drawn against each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284724-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League, Playoffs, Round of 16\nThe first legs were played on 6\u20137 March, and the second legs on 13\u201314 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284724-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League, Playoffs, Quarterfinals\nThe first legs were played on 27\u201328 March, and the second legs were played on 3\u20134 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284724-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League, Final Four\nThe concluding Final Four tournament will be played on 3\u20135 May 2019. The drawing of the pairings took place on 10 April 2019. On 5 April, the Sportpaleis in Antwerp, Belgium was announced as the venue of the 2019 Final Four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284724-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League, Awards, Game Day MVP\nAfter each gameday a selection of five players with the highest efficiency ratings is made by the Basketball Champions League. Afterwards, the official website decides which player is crowned Game Day MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284724-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League, Prize money\nBased on final position, teams received prize money from the BCL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284725-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League Playoffs\nThe 2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League Playoffs will begin on 5 March, and will end on 5 May, with the Final, which will decide the champions of the 2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League. 16 teams compete in the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284725-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League Playoffs, Format\nThe playoffs involved the sixteen teams which qualified between the four first teams of each of the four groups in the 2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League Regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284725-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League Playoffs, Format\nThe group winners will face the fourth qualified teams and the runners-up will play against the third qualified teams. Winners and runners-up will play the second leg at home. In addition, the winners of the matches involving the group winners will play also the second leg of the quarterfinals at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284725-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League Playoffs, Format\nEach tie in the Playoffs, apart from the Final Four games, was played with two legs, with each team playing one leg at home. The team that scored more points on aggregate, over the two legs, advanced to the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284725-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League Playoffs, Format\nFor the round of 16, teams from the same group cannot be drawn against each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284725-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League Playoffs, Round of 16\nThe first legs will be played on 5\u20136 March, and the second legs will be played on 12\u201313 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284725-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League Playoffs, Quarterfinals\nThe first legs will be played on 27 March, and the second legs will be played on 3 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284726-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Championship of Bosnia and Herzegovina\nThe 2018\u201319 Basketball Championship of Bosnia and Herzegovina was the 18th season of this championship, with 11 teams from Bosnia and Herzegovina participating in it. Zrinjski was the defending champion. \u0160iroki won its tenth league title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284726-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Championship of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Competition format\nEleven teams would join the regular season, played with as double round-robin tournament. Igokea, participant in the 2018\u201319 Adriatic League First Division, would not join the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 77], "content_span": [78, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284726-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Championship of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Playoffs\nSemifinals will be played in a best-of-three games format, while the final in a best-of-five (2-2-1) format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 67], "content_span": [68, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284727-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Cup of Serbia\nThe 2018\u201319 Basketball Cup of Serbia is the 13th season of the Serbian 2nd-tier men's cup tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284727-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball Cup of Serbia\nThe Cup Finalists, Novi Pazar and Sveti \u0110or\u0111e, are qualified for the 2019 National Cup tournament held in Ni\u0161 in February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284728-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball League of Serbia\nThe 2018\u201319 Basketball League of Serbia (Serbian Cyrillic: \u041a\u043e\u0448\u0430\u0440\u043a\u0430\u0448\u043a\u0430 \u043b\u0438\u0433\u0430 \u0421\u0440\u0431\u0438\u0458\u0435 2018\u201319.) is the 13th season of the Basketball League of Serbia, the highest professional basketball league in Serbia. Also, it's the 75th national championship played by Serbian clubs inclusive of nation's previous incarnations as Yugoslavia and Serbia & Montenegro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284728-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketball League of Serbia, Playoffs\nThe playoffs are scheduled to start on June 2, 2019 and end on June 20, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284729-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketbol S\u00fcper Ligi\nThe 2018\u201319 Basketbol S\u00fcper Ligi was the 53rd season of the Basketbol S\u00fcper Ligi, the top-tier level professional club basketball league in Turkey. The season started on 6 October 2018 and ended 21 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284729-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketbol S\u00fcper Ligi\nAnadolu Efes captured its fourteenth title and its first championship in 10 years, after it defeated Fenerbah\u00e7e in seven in the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284729-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketbol S\u00fcper Ligi, Teams, Promotion and relegation\nYe\u015filgiresun Belediye and U\u015fak Sportif were relegated after finishing in the last two places during the previous season. T\u00fcrk Telekom promoted as the champions of the Turkish Basketball First League (TBL). Afyon Belediye promoted as the winners of the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284729-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketbol S\u00fcper Ligi, Teams, Promotion and relegation\nOn 12 July 2018, Eski\u015fehir Basket announced its withdrawal from the BSL. On 13 July 2018, it was announced that Bah\u00e7e\u015fehir Koleji received the vacant BSL spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284729-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketbol S\u00fcper Ligi, Teams, Promotion and relegation\nOn 2 October 2018, Trabzonspor announced its withdrawal from the BSL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284730-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketligaen\nThe 2018\u201319 Basketligaen was the 44th season of the highest professional basketball tier in Denmark. The season started on 25 September 2018 and ended on 13 May 2019. Bakken Bears defended its title. Ryan Evans of the Bears was named the season's Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284730-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketligaen, Competition format\nTeams were divided into two groups: Pro A, joined by the best five teams in the previous season, and Pro B, by the rest of the team. Each team would play against each other of their same league four times, while only twice with teams from the other side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284730-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketligaen, Competition format\nThe five teams of Pro A and the best three of Pro B qualified for playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284730-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketligaen, Teams\nAfter the end of the season, H\u00f8rsholm 79ers resigned to its place in the league. EBAA and V\u00e6rl\u00f8se joined the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284730-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketligaen, Playoffs\nThe playoffs were played between the eight teams of the competition, with a best-of-five series in a 1-1-1-1-1 format. The seeded team played games 1, 3 and 5 at home. The Finals will be played in a best-of-seven series and the bronze medal series as a single game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284731-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketligan season\nThe 2018\u201319 Basketligan season was the 26th season of the Basketligan, the top tier basketball league on Sweden. Norrk\u00f6ping Dolphins were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284731-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketligan season, Playoffs, Semifinals\nSeeded teams played legs 1, 3, 5 and 7 at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284731-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketligan season, Playoffs, Finals\nSeeded team played legs 1, 3, 5 and 7 at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284731-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Basketligan season, Relegation playoffs\nThe ninth qualified and the runner-up of the Superettan played a double-legged playoff for a place in the next Basketligan season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284732-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bataan Risers season\nThe 2018 Bataan Risers season is the 1st season of the franchise in the Maharlika Pilipinas Basketball League (MPBL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284733-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bayam\u00f3n FC season\nThe 2018-19 Bayam\u00f3n FC season, was the nineteenth season since the club's formation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284733-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bayam\u00f3n FC season, Overview\nIn January 2018, Marco V\u00e9lez was appointed Head Coach following the exit of Delfin Ferreres. Bayam\u00f3n FC finished runners-up in their preseason Bayam\u00f3n Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284733-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bayam\u00f3n FC season, Overview\nIn March 2018, Bayam\u00f3n FC began playing in the first Puerto Rican Football Federation Preparatory Tournament. They are currently first place and already secured their spot into the semi-finals stage. The team finished the group stage with an unbeaten streak of 9 wins, with Josep Becerra as the tournament top scorer. After beating Metropolitan FA in the semifinals, Bayam\u00f3n advanced to the finals facing GPS Puerto Rico. Bayam\u00f3n won the tournament after a 1-0 win against GPS Puerto Rico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284733-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bayam\u00f3n FC season, Overview\nIn August 2018, it was announced that Bayam\u00f3n FC will participate as one of the 10 teams of the new Liga Puerto Rico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284734-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bayer 04 Leverkusen season\nThe 2018\u201319 Bayer 04 Leverkusen season is the 115th season in the football club's history and 40th consecutive and overall season in the top flight of German football, the Bundesliga, having been promoted from the 2. Bundesliga Nord in 1979. In addition to the domestic league, Bayer Leverkusen also are participating in this season's editions of the domestic cup, the DFB-Pokal, and the second-tier continental cup, the UEFA Europa League. This is the 61st season for Leverkusen in the BayArena, located in Leverkusen, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. The season covers a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284734-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bayer 04 Leverkusen 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284734-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bayer 04 Leverkusen season, Players, 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284735-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Baylor Bears basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Baylor Bears basketball team represented Baylor University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. This was head coach Scott Drew's 16th season at Baylor. The Bears competed in the Big 12 Conference and played their home games at the Ferrell Center in Waco, TX.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284735-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Baylor Bears basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bears finished the 2017\u201318 season 19\u201315 overall and 8\u201310 in Big 12 play, finishing in a four-way tie for sixth place. As the No. 6 seed in the Big 12 Tournament, they were defeated by West Virginia in the quarterfinals. They were one of the last four teams not selected for the NCAA Tournament and as a result earned a no. 1 seed in the National Invitation Tournament, where they defeated Wagner in the first round before losing to Mississippi State in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284736-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Baylor Lady Bears basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Baylor Lady Bears basketball team represented Baylor University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. Returning as head coach was Hall of Famer Kim Mulkey for her 19th season. The team played its home games at the Ferrell Center in Waco, Texas and were members of the Big 12 Conference. They finished the season ranked #1 in the nation, with a record of 37\u20131, 18\u20130 in Big 12 to win the Big 12 regular season title. They also won the Big 12 Women's Tournament and earned an automatic bid to the NCAA Women's Tournament where they advanced to defeat Notre Dame in the championship game for the third title in team history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284736-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Baylor Lady Bears basketball team, Previous season\nThe Lady Bears finished the season 33\u20132, 18\u20130 in Big 12 to win the Big 12 regular season title. They also won the Big 12 Women's Tournament and earned an automatic bid to the NCAA Women's Tournament where they defeated Grambling State and Michigan in the first and second rounds before getting upset by Oregon State in the sweet sixteen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284736-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Baylor Lady Bears basketball team, Rankings\n^Coaches' Poll did not release a second poll at the same time as the AP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284737-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belarusian Cup\n2018\u201319 Belarusian Cup is the twenty eighth season of the Belarusian annual cup competition. Contrary to the league season, it is conducted in a fall-spring rhythm. It started in May 2018 and concluded with a final match in May 2019. Winners of the Cup will qualified for the first qualifying round of the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284737-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belarusian Cup, First Round\nIn this round 2 amateur clubs were drawn against 2 Second League clubs. The draw was performed on 3 May 2018. The matches were played on 12 and 13 May 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284737-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belarusian Cup, First Round\nAnother 3 amateur clubs and 12 Second League clubs were given a bye to the Second Round. Rukh Brest did not participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284737-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belarusian Cup, Second Round\nIn this round 2 winners of the First Round were joined by another 30 clubs. The draw was performed on 3 May 2018. The matches were played on 11 and 13 June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284737-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belarusian Cup, Round of 32\nIn this round 16 winners of the Second Round were drawn against 16 Premier League clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284737-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belarusian Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe draw was performed on 9 October 2018. The matches were played in March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284737-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belarusian Cup, Semi-finals\nThe draw was performed on 18 March 2019. The matches were played in April and May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284737-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belarusian Cup, Final\nThe final was played on 26 May 2019 at Vitebsky Central Sport Complex in Vitebsk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284738-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belarusian Premier League (basketball)\nThe 2018\u201319 Belarusian Premier League season is the 27th season of the top tier basketball league in Belarus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284738-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belarusian Premier League (basketball), Competition format\nTen teams joined the regular season, that consisted in a four-legged round-robin competition, later dividing all the teams into two groups. The six teams of the Group A and the two best of the Group B joined the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 66], "content_span": [67, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284738-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belarusian Premier League (basketball), Playoffs\nQuarterfinals will be played in a best-of-three games format and the rest of series in a 2-2-1 format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 56], "content_span": [57, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284739-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Basketball Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Belgian Basketball Cup (Dutch: 2018\u201319 Beker van Belgi\u00eb) was the 65th edition of Belgium's national basketball cup tournament. Telenet Giants Antwerp won its third cup title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284740-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Belgian Cup was the 64th season of Belgium's annual football cup competition. The competition began on 29 July 2018 and ended with the final in May 2019. The winners of the competition qualify for the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League Group Stage. Standard Li\u00e8ge were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284740-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Cup, Competition format\nThe competition consists of ten rounds. Except for the semi-finals, all rounds are single-match elimination rounds. When tied after 90 minutes in the first three rounds, penalties are taken immediately. In rounds four to seven and the quarterfinals, when tied after 90 minutes first an extra time period of 30 minutes are played, then penalties are taken if still necessary. The semi-finals will be played over two legs, where the team winning on aggregate advances. The final will be played as a single match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284740-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Cup, Competition format\nTeams enter the competition in different rounds, based upon their 2018\u201319 league affiliation. Teams from the fifth-level Belgian Third Amateur Division or lower began in round 1. Belgian Second Amateur Division teams entered in round 2, Belgian First Amateur Division teams entered in round 3, Belgian First Division B teams in round 5 and finally the Belgian First Division A teams enter in round 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284740-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Cup, First round\nThis round of matches is scheduled to be played on 28 & 29 July 2018 and includes teams playing in the Belgian Third Amateur Division and Belgian Provincial Leagues. Teams from the Belgian Third Amateur Division were seeded and could not play each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284740-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Cup, Fifth Round\nSome fifth round ties were reversed as amateur teams (tiers 3 and below) automatically received home advantage in case they met the stadium requirements regarding seating, lighting and safety. Amateur teams are allowed to sell their home advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284740-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Cup, Sixth Round\nThe draw for the sixth round was made on 28 August 2018 and included the 16 teams from the Belgian First Division A, which were all seeded and could not meet each other. All non-professional teams (division 3 and below) automatically received home advantage if their stadium had sufficient capacity and floodlight luminosity, which was the case for all teams except Duffel and Mandel United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284740-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Cup, Seventh Round\nThe draw for the seventh round was made immediately after the last game of the sixth round, between Anderlecht and Union SG, was finished. Six teams outside the top division qualified for this round, with Mandel United from the Belgian Second Amateur Division the lowest still in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284740-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Cup, Seventh Round\nThe matches will be played on 4, 5 and 6 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284740-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the quarter-finals was made on 5 December 2018, with the matches were played on 18 and 19 December 2018. Both Mechelen and Union SG, the two remaining teams from outside the top division managed to qualify for the Semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284740-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Cup, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the semi-finals was made on 19 December, after completion of the last matches of the quarter-finals. As the two teams remaining from the 2018\u201319 Belgian First Division B, Mechelen and Union SG, were drawn against each other, at least one team from outside the top division will play the final, which last happened in the 2001 Belgian Cup Final when Belgian Second Division champions Lommel lost to Westerlo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284740-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Cup, Semi-finals\nThe matches will be played on 23, 24, 29 and 30 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284740-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Cup, Final\nThe final took place on 1 May 2019 at the King Baudouin Stadium in Brussels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284741-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian First Amateur Division\nThe 2018\u201319 Belgian First Amateur Division was the third season of the third-tier football league in Belgium, as it was established in 2016. While Tessenderlo won the regular season, Virton became champions by virtue of winning the promotion play-offs. Defending champions Knokke finished last and were relegated together with Aalst and Geel. Oudenaarde was also relegated after losing the play-offs with teams from the Belgian Second Amateur Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284741-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian First Amateur Division, Team information, Team changes, In\nNote that no team from the 2017\u201318 Belgian First Division B was relegated into the 2018\u201319 Belgian First Amateur Division due to the fact that Lierse went bankrupt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 74], "content_span": [75, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284741-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian First Amateur Division, Promotion play-offs\nThe teams finishing in the top four positions entered the promotion play-offs. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff, as a result, Tessenderlo started with 31 points, Deinze with 30 points, Virton with 27 points and Lierse Kempenzonen with 24 points. Deinze was the only team for which the points were rounded up, therefore in case of equal points at the end of the playoffs they will always be ranked below the other teams. Going into the playoffs, only Deinze and Lierse had received a license, meaning that only those two teams are eligible for promotion, although Virton has successfully appealed the decision of not being handed a license and is thus also eligible for promotion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 813]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284742-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian First Division A\nThe 2018\u201319 Belgian First Division A (officially known as Jupiler Pro League) was the 116th season of top-tier football in Belgium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284742-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian First Division A, Championship play-offs\nThe points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. As a result, the teams started with the following points before the playoff: Genk 32 points, Club Brugge 28, Standard Li\u00e8ge 27, Anderlecht 26, Gent 25 and Antwerp 25. The points of Genk, Standard Li\u00e8ge, Anderlecht and Antwerp were rounded up, therefore in case of any ties on points at the end of the playoffs, the half point will be deducted for these teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284742-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian First Division A, Europa League play-offs\nGroup A of the play-offs consist of the teams finishing in positions 7, 9, 12 and 14 during the regular season and the first and third placed team in the qualifying positions in the 2018\u201319 Belgian First Division B. The teams finishing in positions 8, 10, 11, 13 and 15 were joined by the second placed qualifier from the 2018\u201319 Belgian First Division B in group B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284742-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian First Division A, Europa League play-offs, Semi-final\nThe winners of both play-off groups competed in one match to play the fourth-placed team of the championship play-offs for a spot in the final. This match was played on the field of the highest ranked team in the regular competition. Charleroi advanced to the final to play for a spot in the second qualifying round of the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284742-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian First Division A, Europa League play-offs, Final\nThe winner of the Europa League play-off semi-final and the fourth-placed team of the championship play-offs played one match to determine the Europa League play-off winner. Antwerp qualified for the third qualifying round of the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284743-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian First Division B\nThe 2018\u201319 season of the Belgian First Division B began in August 2018 and ended in April 2019. It was the third season of the First Division B following a change in league format from the old Belgian Second Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284743-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian First Division B\nThe season was impacted by the 2017\u201319 Belgian football fraud scandal which most notably involved Mechelen, as it was unclear upon completion of the season whether and how any involved clubs would be sanctioned and what the effect would be on the number of promotion and relegation places. As a result, Mechelen won the title and celebrated promotion on 16 March 2019, following a win over Beerschot Wilrijk in the promotion-playoffs, although the verdict on the investigation was still pending.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284743-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian First Division B\nEnd of May, Mechelen was found guilty and not allowed to be promoted, with runners-up Beerschot Wilrijk taking their spot instead. Mechelen appealed the decision at the Belgian Court for Sportsarbitration, which confirmed the verdict of guilt in July, but also ruled that according to the rules of the Belgian Football FA Mechelen could not be penalized with relegation back to the Belgian First Division A as the violation occurred during a previous season, hence Mechelen was allowed to keep its promotion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284743-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian First Division B, League table, Promotion play-offs\nThe winners of the opening tournament and the closing tournament will meet in a two-legged match to determine the division champion, who will promote to the 2019\u201320 Belgian First Division A. The team finishing highest in the aggregate table will be allowed to play the second leg at home. In case a single team wins both the opening and the closing tournament, that team will be promoted automatically and no play-offs will be organized.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284743-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian First Division B, League table, Promotion play-offs\nOn 9 November 2018, Mechelen won the opening tournament and was therefore assured of playing at least the promotion play-offs. On the final day of the closing tournament, Mechelen only managed a draw away to Lommel, allowing Beerschot Wilrijk to win the closing period. If Mechelen had won they would have assured direct promotion, instead they had to face Beerschot-Wilrijk in the promotion play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284743-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian First Division B, League table, Promotion play-offs\nThe first leg saw both teams having chances, with goalkeeper Michael Verrips making big saves in the first half to deny attempts by Erwin Hoffer and Gertjan De Mets, while in the second half Mechelen failed to take advantage of a red card for Jan Van den Bergh. In the second leg, Beerschot-Wilrijk again saw a player sent off following a vicious tackle by Marius Noubissi already after 32 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284743-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian First Division B, League table, Promotion play-offs\nNikola Storm opened the score for Mechelen just after the start of the second half, but ten-men Beerschot-Wilrijk managed the equalizer through penalty kick and looked on its way to promote via the away goals rule, when substitute Cl\u00e9ment Tainmont scored a volley just two minutes from time to win the match and send Mechelen back to the highest division after just one season in the Belgian First Division B. With that, Beerschot Wilrijk lost the promotion play-offs for the second consecutive year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284743-0004-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian First Division B, League table, Promotion play-offs\nSeveral weeks later, Mechelen was found guilty of match-fixing and not allowed to promote as a result, with Beerschot-Wilrijk taking their spot. Mechelen appealed the decision successfully, as per the rules of the Belgian FA they could no longer be punished for events of more than one year in the past.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284743-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian First Division B, League table, Relegation play-offs\nThe four bottom teams in the aggregate table took part in the relegation play-offs in which they keep half of the points they collected during the overall regular season (rounded up). As a result, the teams started with the following points before the playoff: Roeselare 17 points, Lommel 16, OH Leuven 15 and Tubize 12 points. As the points of all teams were rounded up, the half point deduction was not relevant in case of ties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 68], "content_span": [69, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284743-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian First Division B, League table, Relegation play-offs\nRoeselare started matchday 5 with 2 points, but the game, away against Lommel ended in a 0-1 win for Roeselare, giving them 3 points and tying with Tubize in points. On matchday 6 of 6, coincidentally, Roeselare met Tubize, and defeated them 4-0. As a result, Tubize were relegated to the Belgian First Amateur Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 68], "content_span": [69, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284743-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian First Division B, Season statistics, Team of the season\nUpon completion of the regular season a team of the season award was compiled, based upon the results of the team of the week results throughout the season, constructed based on nominations from managers, assistant-managers, journalists and analysts. The results were announced from 22 March 2019, with one player revealed each day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284744-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Second Amateur Division\nThe 2018\u201319 Belgian Second Amateur Division is the third season of the division in its current format, placed at the fourth-tier of football in Belgium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284744-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Second Amateur Division\nThe division consists of three separate leagues, each containing 16 teams. Leagues A and B consist of teams with a license from the Voetbalfederatie Vlaanderen (VFV, the Flemish/Dutch speaking wing of the Belgian FA), while league C contains teams with a license from the Association des Clubs Francophones de Football (ACFF, the French speaking wing of the RBFA). The champions from each of the three leagues will promote to the 2019\u201320 Belgian First Amateur Division. The fixtures were announced in July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284744-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Second Amateur Division, Promotion play-offs, Promotion play-offs VFV\nThe teams finishing in second place in the Second Amateur Division A and Second Amateur Division B will take part in a promotion playoff first round together with three period winners from both divisions. These 8 teams from the VFV will play the first round of a promotion-playoff, with two teams qualifying for the Promotion play-offs Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 85], "content_span": [86, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284744-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Second Amateur Division, Promotion play-offs, Promotion play-offs VFV\nIn division A, champions Sint-Eloois Winkel and runners-up Mandel United together won all periods. As a result, Mandel United was joined in the play-offs by the next three teams in the standings: Petegem, Gent-Zeehaven and Wijgmaal. In division B, only Hasselt and Bocholt has received a licence, with the two other spots remaining vacant. Overall this meant only six out of eight teams took part, therefore two teams were drawn to receive a bye into the second round: Gent-Zeehaven and Wijgmaal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 85], "content_span": [86, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284744-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Second Amateur Division, Promotion play-offs, Promotion play-offs VFV, VFV Round 1\nBocholt and Ronse qualified for the VFV second round promotion play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 98], "content_span": [99, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284744-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Second Amateur Division, Promotion play-offs, Promotion play-offs ACFF\nThe team finishing in second place in the Second Amateur Division C will take part in the promotion playoff first round together with three period winners. These 4 teams will play the first round of a promotion-playoff, with the winner qualifying for the Promotion play-offs Final. As champions La Louvi\u00e8re Centre won all three periods, this implied that normally the teams in positions 2 through 5 would take part in the playoffs, however both Hamoir and Rebecq were replaced as they did not receive (or apply for) a licence. Tilleur and La Louvi\u00e8re took their spot instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 86], "content_span": [87, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284744-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Second Amateur Division, Promotion play-offs, Promotion play-offs ACFF, ACFF Round 1\nThe two winning teams meet each other in round 2, the losing teams remain in the Belgian Second Amateur Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 100], "content_span": [101, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284744-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Second Amateur Division, Promotion play-offs, Promotion play-offs Final\nThe two winners of the Promotion play-offs on the VFV side (Ronse and Wijgmaal) and the winning team from the ACFF Promotion play-offs (Vis\u00e9) will play a final tournament together with the team that finished in 14th place in the 2018\u201319 Belgian First Amateur Division (Oudenaarde). The winner of this play-off promotes to (or remains in) the 2019\u201320 Belgian First Amateur Division. As Oudenaarde is a team from the VFV side, there will be an extra VFV team relegating from the 2018\u201319 Belgian Second Amateur Division in case a team from the ACFF side (Vis\u00e9) gets promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 87], "content_span": [88, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284744-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Second Amateur Division, Promotion play-offs, Promotion play-offs Final, Final Round 1\nVis\u00e9 won 8\u20134 on aggregate, Oudenaarde was relegated to the 2019\u201320 Belgian Second Amateur Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 102], "content_span": [103, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284744-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Second Amateur Division, Promotion play-offs, Promotion play-offs Final, Final Round 2\n2\u20132 on aggregate. Vis\u00e9 won on away goals and is promoted to the 2019\u201320 Belgian First Amateur Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 102], "content_span": [103, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284744-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Second Amateur Division, Relegation play-offs\nThe number of teams relegating from the Belgian Amateur Second Division in each wing (VFV and ACFF) depends on the number of teams of each wing relegating from the Belgian First Amateur Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284744-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Second Amateur Division, Relegation play-offs\nUpon completion of the 2018\u201319 Belgian First Amateur Division, with three VFV teams were relegated automatically, it was already known there would be at least one additional VFV team relegating from the 2018\u201319 Belgian Second Amateur Division. In case Oudenaarde, taking part in the Second Amateur Division Promotion play-offs Final and also from VFV side is also relegated and is replaced by a team from ACFF side, then a second VFV team will be relegated from the 2018\u201319 Belgian Second Amateur Division. On ACFF side on the other hand, no extra relegations would be necessary and only the three bottom teams in division C would be relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284744-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Second Amateur Division, Relegation play-offs, Relegation play-offs VFV\nThe teams finishing 14th in divisions A and B played each other in a single match to avoid relegation, with the losing team relegated and the winning team having to await the result of the Second Amateur Division Promotion play-offs Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 87], "content_span": [88, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284744-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Second Amateur Division, Relegation play-offs, Relegation play-offs VFV\nCity Pirates were relegated, three weeks later Eppegem was relegated as well as ACFF team Vis\u00e9 got promoted, resulting in an extra team from VFV to be relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 87], "content_span": [88, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284744-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Second Amateur Division, Relegation play-offs, Relegation play-offs ACFF\nAs there is only one division no playoff was organised. However due to the fact that only teams from the VFV side were being relegated from the 2018\u201319 Belgian First Amateur Division, no extra relegations took place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 88], "content_span": [89, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284745-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Third Amateur Division\nThe 2018\u201319 Belgian Third Amateur Division is the third season of the division in its current format, replacing the former Belgian Fourth Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284745-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Third Amateur Division, Championship matches\nBoth the two VFV and two ACFF teams winning their leagues can arrange a title match to determine the overall VFV and ACFF champions of the Belgian Third Division. This season, the overall ACFF champion was supposed to be determined over two legs, however Namur forfeited the return match after losing the first leg. On VFV side, Merelbeke and Tienen decided not to play a championship match. There was also no match between the overall VFV and ACFF champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284745-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Third Amateur Division, Championship matches, Championship match ACFF, Second Leg\nNamur did not show up for the return match and lost 1-9 on aggregate. Stockay was crowned overall ACFF champion in the Belgian Third Amateur Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 97], "content_span": [98, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284745-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Third Amateur Division, Promotion play-offs, Promotion play-offs VFV\nThe teams finishing in second place in the Third Amateur Division A and Third Amateur Division B will take part in a promotion playoff first round together with three period winners from both divisions. These 8 teams from the VFV will play the first round of a promotion-playoff, with two teams promoting to the 2019\u201320 Belgian Second Amateur Division. Depending on the number of VFV teams relegating from the 2018\u201319 Belgian First Amateur Division and possible mergers and bankruptcies, more teams might get promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 84], "content_span": [85, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284745-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Third Amateur Division, Promotion play-offs, Promotion play-offs VFV\nIn Division A, Wetteren (2nd place overall) and Zwevezele (won two periods) qualified directly, while Pepingen-Halle and Wingene were awarded a place based on their league finish. In a similar fashion in Division B, Houtvenne (2nd place overall) and Lyra-Lierse (won one period) were joined by Sint-Lenaarts and Betekom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 84], "content_span": [85, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284745-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Third Amateur Division, Promotion play-offs, Promotion play-offs VFV, VFV Round 1\nThe four winners will continue into the VFV Round 2 to play for the two extra promotion places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 97], "content_span": [98, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284745-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Third Amateur Division, Promotion play-offs, Promotion play-offs VFV, VFV Round 2\nPepingen-Halle and Zwevezele are promoted to the 2019\u201320 Belgian Second Amateur Division. Lyra-Lierse and Houtvenne moved to the third place match in case extra promotion places become available.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 97], "content_span": [98, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284745-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Third Amateur Division, Promotion play-offs, Promotion play-offs VFV, Third place match\nBy winning, Houtvenne is first in line to promote in case an extra spot opens up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 103], "content_span": [104, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284745-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Third Amateur Division, Promotion play-offs, Promotion play-offs ACFF\nThe team finishing in second place in the Third Amateur Division C and Third Amateur Division D will take part in a promotion playoff first round together with three period winners from both divisions. These 8 teams from the ACFF will play the first round of a promotion-playoff, with two teams promoting to the 2019\u201320 Belgian Second Amateur Division although more places could come up which is why the third round also features a match between the losers of the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 85], "content_span": [86, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284745-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Third Amateur Division, Promotion play-offs, Promotion play-offs ACFF\nIn Division C, CS Braine won two periods with the other being won by champion Namur Fosses. The three remaining spots were taken by third, fourth and fifth placed teams, respectively Aische, Tournai and L\u00e9opold Uccle. In Division D, Givry and Verlaine had each managed to win a period. Richelle and Onhaye also qualified as the two highest finishers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 85], "content_span": [86, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284745-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Third Amateur Division, Promotion play-offs, Promotion play-offs ACFF, ACFF Round 1\nThe four winners moved on to round 2 to contend for promotion, while the losing teams remain in the Belgian Third Amateur Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 99], "content_span": [100, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284745-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Third Amateur Division, Promotion play-offs, Promotion play-offs ACFF, ACFF Round 2\nThe two winning teams will be promoted to the 2019\u201320 Belgian Second Amateur Division, the losing teams will play a match to determine third and fourth place in case extra promotion places would come up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 99], "content_span": [100, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284745-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Third Amateur Division, Promotion play-offs, Promotion play-offs ACFF, ACFF Round 2\nVerlaine and Onhaye won promotion to the 2019\u201320 Belgian Second Amateur Division. A third team will be promoted in case Vis\u00e9, playing in the 2018\u201319 Belgian Second Amateur Division Promotion play-offs, wins promotion to the 2019\u201320 Belgian First Amateur Division. Therefore, Givry and Tournai will play a third-place match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 99], "content_span": [100, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284745-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Third Amateur Division, Promotion play-offs, Promotion play-offs ACFF, Third place match\nBy winning, Givry was first in line to promote in case an extra available spot. As Vis\u00e9 won promotion to the Belgian First Amateur Division, an extra ACFF team was promoted, resulting in Givry moving up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 104], "content_span": [105, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284745-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Third Amateur Division, Relegation play-offs, ACFF\nDue to the results in higher leagues, prior to the match it was certain the winner of this ACFF play-off would avoid relegation. Ganshoren was eventually spared as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284745-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Third Amateur Division, Relegation play-offs, VFV\nAt the time of the match, it was yet uncertain whether there would be one or two extra VFV teams relegated from the 2018\u201319 Belgian Third Amateur Division. Ternesse faced relegation by losing the match, Oostkamp also faced relegation three weeks later as ACFF team Vis\u00e9 got promoted, resulting in an extra team from VFV to be relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284746-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Women's Super League\nThe 2018\u201319 Belgian Women's Super League season is the 4th edition since its establishment in 2015. Anderlecht are the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284746-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belgian Women's Super League, League Standings\nIn the first stage teams play each other four times, for 20 matches each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284747-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belmont Bruins men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Belmont Bruins men's basketball team represented Belmont University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bruins, led by 33rd-year head coach Rick Byrd, played their home games at the Curb Event Center in Nashville, Tennessee as members of the Ohio Valley Conference. They finished the season 27\u20136, 16\u20132 in OVC play to finish in a tie for the regular season championship with Murray State. They defeated Austin Peay in the semifinals of the Ohio Valley Tournament before losing to Murray State in the finals. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament, their first ever at-large bid, where they defeated Temple in the First Four before losing in the first round to Maryland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284747-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belmont Bruins men's basketball team\nOn April 1, 2019, head coach Rick Byrd announced his retirement. He finished at Belmont with a 33-year record of 713\u2013347.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284747-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belmont Bruins men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bruins finished the 2017\u201318 season 24\u20139, 15\u20133 in OVC play to finish in second place. They defeated Austin Peay in the semifinals of the OVC Tournament to advance to the championship game where they lost to Murray State. Despite having 24 wins, they did not participate in a postseason tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284748-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belmont Bruins women's basketball team\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by PrimeBOT (talk | contribs) at 23:19, 21 June 2020 (\u2192\u200eSchedule and results: 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, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284748-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Belmont Bruins women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Belmont Bruins women's basketball team represents Belmont University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Bruins, led by second year head coach Bart Brooks, play their home games at the Curb Event Center as members of the Ohio Valley Conference (OVC). They finished the season 26\u20137, 16\u20132 in OVC play win the OVC regular season. They won the OVC Women's Tournament by defeating UT Martin and earns an automatic trip to the NCAA Women's Tournament where they lost to South Carolina in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284749-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bemidji State Beavers women's ice hockey season\nThe Bemidji State Beavers women's ice hockey program represented the Bemidji State University during the 2018-19 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284750-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bengaluru FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Bengaluru FC's sixth season as club since its establishment in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284750-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bengaluru FC season, Background, Transfers\nAt the fag end of 2017\u201318 Indian Super League season Bengaluru FC extended contract of defender Rahul Bheke till May 2021. He joined captain Sunil Chhetri and winger Udanta Singh, both has contract till the end of 2019\u201320 season. Defender Juanan extended his stay with Bengaluru FC for two more seasons. First choice goalkeeper Gurpreet Singh Sandhu extended his contract for five more seasons, which will keep him till 2023 with Bengaluru FC. Bengaluru FC's Australian midfielder Erik Paartalu also extended his stay with the club for two more seasons. Defender Nishu Kumar and striker Thongkhosiem Haokip extended their stay in the club for two more seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284750-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bengaluru FC season, Background, Transfers\nMidfielder Lenny Rodrigues transferred to FC Goa. Midfielder Boithang Haokip extended his stay with Bengaluru FC till the end of 2020 season. Bengaluru FC also extended contract of Spanish midfielder Dimas Delgado for one more season. Defender Harmanjot Khabra extended his stay with Bengaluru FC for three more season. English defender John Johnson ended his five years journey with the club at the end of the season to join ATK. Striker Daniel Lalhlimpuia left the Bengaluru FC after three-year stint with the club. Goalkeeper Lalthuammawia Ralte parted ways with the club as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284750-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bengaluru FC season, Background, Transfers\nBengaluru FC also released Spanish trio of Toni, V\u00edctor P\u00e9rez Alonso, and Daniel Lucas Segovia at the end of the season. Left-back Subhasish Bose transferred to Mumbai City FC. Bengaluru FC also released more inexperienced players at the end of season including Calvin Abhishek, Abhra Mondal, Joyner Lourenco, Zohmingliana Ralte, and Collin Abranches. Midfielder Malsawmzuala left the Bengaluru FC after three-year stint with the club. Midfielder Alwyn George transferred to FC Pune City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284750-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bengaluru FC season, Background, Transfers\nOn 3 June 2018, Bengaluru announced signing of Indian winger Kean Lewis for one season. Bengaluru FC also re-signed right-back Rino Anto. On 11 June Bengaluru FC announced signing of defenders Gursimrat Singh Gill and Sairuat Kima for two seasons. On 25 June Bengaluru FC announced signing of Bhutanese forward Chencho Gyeltshen on a one-year deal. On 6 July Bengaluru FC announced signing of Spanish winger Xisco Hern\u00e1ndez on a one-year deal. On 9 July, Bengaluru FC announced return of goalkeeper Soram Poirei after three years. He signed a one-year deal. After the early end to their AFC Cup campaign, Bengaluru FC signed Spanish center-back Albert Serr\u00e1n on a one-year deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284750-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bengaluru FC season, Background, Transfers\nAt the end of winter transfer window, Bengaluru loaned out Bhutanese striker Chencho Gyeltshen on a loan deal to I-League club NEROCA F.C. and was replaced by Spanish Attacking midfielder Luisma. After qualifying for 2018\u201319 Indian Super League playoffs, Bengaluru signed Spanish midfielder \u00c1lex Barrera on a short-term deal, owing to the injury of Erik Paartalu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284750-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bengaluru FC season, Pre-season and friendlies\nBengaluru FC started their pre-season on 14 July 2018 at the Bangalore Football Stadium, with a trip to Bellary in the first leg and Spain in the second leg before facing Altyn Asyr of Turkmenistan in AFC Cup Inter-zone play-off semi-finals on 22 August at the Sree Kanteerava Stadium. In the first friendly, Bengaluru played Atl\u00e9tico Saguntino and suffered a close defeat 2\u20131, with Dimas Delgado scoring the only goal. Playing against UAE Pro-League team Shabab Al-Ahli, Bengaluru suffered another defeat 5\u20131. Bengaluru's pre-season tour ended winless as they suffered 1\u20130 and 3\u20130 defeat to Villarreal B and Barcelona B, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284750-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bengaluru FC season, Pre-season and friendlies\nAfter the exit in AFC Cup, Bengaluru FC played a friendly against MEG and won 7\u20130 with Sunil Chhetri and Miku scoring braces. Bengaluru FC played friendlies with I-League side, Chennai City F.C. winning the first 5\u20130 and losing the second 1\u20132. Bengaluru FC next played friendly with I-League side, Gokulam Kerala F.C. and won the match 4\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284750-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bengaluru FC season, Competitions, Indian Super League, Summary\nBengaluru kicked off their campaign against defending champions Chennaiyin on 30 September 2018. Bengaluru FC started the game in a 4\u20132\u20133\u20131 with new signings Albert Serr\u00e1n and Xisco Hern\u00e1ndez making their ISL debut for the club. Miku broke the deadlock in the 41st minute to earn the lead for the home team. Bengaluru continued to attack in the second half, but none of the team could score the goal and Bengaluru registered the first win of the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284750-0007-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bengaluru FC season, Competitions, Indian Super League, Summary\nPlaying against Jamshedpur FC on 7 October, Nishu Kumar got the lead for Bengaluru at the stroke of half time with a long-range effort. Bengaluru paid for the missed chances as the substitute Gourav Mukhi scored an equalizer in the 81st minute. Bengaluru restored the lead in 87th minute when Sunil Chhetri scored goal from Harmanjot Khabra's lobbed pass. However, Bengaluru failed to secure all 3 points when Sergio Cidoncha scored the equalizer in the last minute and the game ended 2\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284750-0007-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bengaluru FC season, Competitions, Indian Super League, Summary\nAfter returning from the international break, Bengaluru played the first away game of the season against FC Pune City on 22 October. Sunil Chhetri scored twice in the first half and Miku scored another goal to wrap up a dominant 3\u20130 win. Playing the next away game against ATK, Bengaluru were trailing the home team when Komal Thatal scored in 15th minute. Bengaluru equalized just before the half-time when Miku converted the free-kick at the edge of the penalty box. In the second half, Erik Paartalu scored the second goal that proved decisive and Bengaluru won the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284750-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bengaluru FC season, Competitions, Indian Super League, Summary\nBefore heading to the international break, Bengaluru FC played southern rivals, Kerala Blasters on 5 November. Sunil Chhetri scored the goal in 17th minute from Miku's pass, but Kerala Blasters equalized in 30th minute when Nishu Kumar was adjudged to have fouled Sahal Samad inside the penalty box and Stojanovi\u010d converted the penalty. Both teams continued the quest to find the winner in the second half. Bengaluru FC took the lead in 80th minute when Naveen Kumar could not prevent Nikola Kr\u010dmarevi\u0107's own goal and Bengaluru returned to the top of the table with 2\u20131 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284750-0008-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bengaluru FC season, Competitions, Indian Super League, Summary\nBengaluru faced FC Goa on 22 November. Miku and Erik Paartalu were ruled out because of injuries and Chencho Gyeltshen made his first start for Bengaluru. The visitors took the lead in the 34th minute as Rahul Bheke's backheel flick off Xisco Hernandez' week shot at goal found the net. Both sides were reduced to 10-men when Mohamed Ali and Dimas Delgado were sent off in the second half. Goa equalized when Coro's square pass found Brandon Fernandes in front of the goal and the forward's shot took a deflection on its way into the net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284750-0008-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bengaluru FC season, Competitions, Indian Super League, Summary\nJust as Goa felt they were back in the match, Sunil Chhetri restored the visitors' lead in the 77th minute from Udanta Singh's cross. Playing against Delhi Dynamos FC on 26 November, Bengaluru played without Miku and Dimas Delgado and Erik Paartalu was not named in the starting lineup after recovering from toe injury. With key players missing, Bengaluru failed to stop Delhi from creating chances and were wasteful in the chances of their own. However, Delhi remained goalless as they could not finish chances they created.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284750-0008-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bengaluru FC season, Competitions, Indian Super League, Summary\nThe deadlock was broken in the dying minutes when Udanta jumped onto a loose ball and launched a low shot from outside the box. The ball took a deflection before hitting the frame of the goal and crossing the line and Bengaluru regained the top position on the table with 1\u20130 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284750-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bengaluru FC season, Competitions, AFC Cup\nBengaluru FC advanced to the inter-zone play-off semi-finals during 2017\u201318 season. The draw for the Inter-zone play-off semi-finals was held on 23 May 2018. Bengaluru FC were pitted against central Asian zone champions Turkmenistani club Altyn Asyr. Bengaluru played the first leg at home on 22 August 2018. Bengaluru were trailing by 3 goals in the game, but managed to score two goals before the end of the game. Bengaluru further suffered 2\u20130 defeat in the away leg and bowed out of the AFC Cup with 2\u20135 aggregate loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284750-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bengaluru FC season, Competitions, Super Cup\nAs one of the top six teams in 2018\u201319 Indian Super League, Bengaluru FC qualified for the main round in 2019 Indian Super Cup. Bengaluru FC were scheduled to play the I-League side, Mohun Bagan A.C. in Round of 16 match. However, Mohun Bagan withdrew from the tournament and Bengaluru got a walkover and advanced to the quarter-finals and faced 2018\u201319 I-League champions Chennai City F.C..", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284750-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bengaluru FC season, Coaching Staff, Management\nAlbert Roca, after a successful stint of two years, parted ways with Bengaluru FC at the end of the previous season and the assistant coach Carles Cuadrat succeeded him as the head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284750-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bengaluru FC season, Awards, Player of the Month award\nAwarded monthly to the player that was chosen by fan voting", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284750-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bengaluru FC season, Awards, ISL Player of the Month award\nAwarded monthly to the player that was chosen by fan voting", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284751-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Benin Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Benin Premier League is the 41st season of the Benin Premier League, the top-tier football league in Benin. The season started on 27 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284752-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bermudian Premier Division\nThe 2018\u201319 Bermudian Premier Division is the 56th season of the Bermudian Premier Division, the top division football competition in Bermuda. The season began on 15 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284752-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bermudian Premier Division, Teams\nTen teams compete in the league \u2013 the top eight teams from the previous season, and two teams promoted from the Bermuda First Division. The new teams this season are BAA Wanderers and Paget Lions, who replace Flanagan's Onions and YMSC Bluebirds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284753-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bethune\u2013Cookman Wildcats men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Bethune\u2013Cookman Wildcats men's basketball team represented Bethune-Cookman University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Led by second year head coach Ryan Ridder, they played their home games at Moore Gymnasium in Daytona Beach, Florida as members of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. They finished the season 14\u201317 overall, 9\u20137 in MEAC play, finishing in a tie for fifth place. The team received a No. 5 seed in the MEAC Tournament, where they were defeated 71\u201380 in the quarterfinals by No. 5 seed Howard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284753-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bethune\u2013Cookman Wildcats men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Wildcats finished the 2017\u201318 season 18\u201314, 12\u20134 in MEAC play, finishing in a three-way tie for first. Due to tie-breaking procedures, they received the No. 2 seed in the MEAC Tournament, where they lost to Morgan State in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 71], "content_span": [72, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284754-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bethune\u2013Cookman Wildcats women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Bethune\u2013Cookman Wildcats women's basketball team represents Bethune\u2013Cookman University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Wildcats, led by ninth year head coach Vanessa Blair-Lewis, play their home games at the Moore Gymnasium, as members of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. They finished the season 21\u201311, 11\u20135 in MEAC play to finish in third place. They won the MEAC Women's Tournament and earn their first automatic bid of the NCAA Women's Tournament in school history, where they lost to Notre Dame in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284755-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Be\u015fikta\u015f J.K. season\nThe 2018\u201319 Be\u015fikta\u015f J.K. season was the club's 115th year since its foundation, 97th season of competitive football and the club's 60th season contesting the S\u00fcper Lig, the top division of Turkish football. The 2018\u201319 season lasted from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284755-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Be\u015fikta\u015f J.K. season\nOn 19 April 2018, Be\u015fikta\u015f' Turkish Cup match against Fenerbah\u00e7e was abandoned after manager Be\u015fikta\u015f \u015eenol G\u00fcne\u015f was struck on the head with an object. As a result, the Turkish Football Federation ordered the remaining 32 minutes to be played behind closed doors. However, Be\u015fikta\u015f refused to travel to the match after an appeal failed. As a result, Be\u015fikta\u015f was banned from competing in the 2018\u201319 Turkish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284755-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Be\u015fikta\u015f J.K. 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-00284756-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon IBU Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Biathlon IBU Cup was a multi-race tournament over a season of biathlon, organised by the International Biathlon Union. IBU Cup is the second-rank competition in biathlon after the Biathlon World Cup. The season started on 26 November 2018 in Idre, Sweden and ended on 16 March 2019 in Martell-Val Martello, Italy. The defending overall champions from the 2017\u201318 Biathlon IBU Cup were Vetle Sj\u00e5stad Christiansen from Norway and Karolin Horchler from Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284756-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon IBU Cup, Calendar\nBelow is the IBU Cup calendar for the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284757-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup (BWC) was a multi-race series over a season of biathlon, organised by the International Biathlon Union. The season started on 2 December 2018 in Pokljuka, Slovenia and ended on 24 March 2019 in Oslo Holmenkollen, Norway. The defending overall champions from the 2017\u201318 Biathlon World Cup were Martin Fourcade of France and Kaisa M\u00e4k\u00e4r\u00e4inen of Finland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284757-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup, Calendar\nBelow is the IBU World Cup calendar for the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284757-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup, Retirements\nThe following notable biathletes retired during or after the 2018\u201319 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284758-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Individual Men\nThe 2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Individual Men started on Thursday 6 December, 2018 in Pokljuka and finished on Wednesday 13 March, 2019 in \u00d6stersund. The defending titlist was Johannes Thingnes B\u00f8 of Norway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284758-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Individual Men\nThe small crystal globe winner for the category was Johannes Thingnes B\u00f8 of Norway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284758-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Individual Men, Competition format\nThe 20 kilometres (12\u00a0mi) individual race is the oldest biathlon event; the distance is skied over five laps. The biathlete shoots four times at any shooting lane, in the order of prone, standing, prone, standing, totalling 20 targets. For each missed target a fixed penalty time, usually one minute, is added to the skiing time of the biathlete. Competitors' starts are staggered, normally by 30 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284759-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Individual Women\nThe 2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Individual Women started on 6 December 2018 in Pokljuka and finished on 12 March 2019 in \u00d6stersund. It was won by Lisa Vittozzi of Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284759-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Individual Women, Competition format\nThe individual race is the oldest biathlon event; the distance is skied over five laps. The biathlete shoots four times at any shooting lane, in the order of prone, standing, prone, standing, totalling 20 targets. Competitors' starts are staggered, normally by 30 seconds. The distance skied is usually 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) with a fixed penalty time of one minute per missed target that is added to the skiing time of the biathlete. In the \"Short Individual\" the distance is 12.5 kilometres (7.8 mi) with a penalty time of 45 seconds per missed target.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 65], "content_span": [66, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284760-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Mass start Men\nThe 2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Mass start Men started on Sunday 23 December, 2018 in Nov\u00e9 M\u011bsto and finished on Sunday 24 March, 2019 in Oslo Holmenkollen. The defending titlist was Martin Fourcade of France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284760-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Mass start Men\nThe small crystal globe winner for the category was Johannes Thingnes B\u00f8 of Norway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284760-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Mass start Men, Competition format\nIn the mass start, all biathletes start at the same time and the first across the finish line wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284760-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Mass start Men, Competition format\nIn this 15 kilometres (9.3\u00a0mi) competition, the distance is skied over five laps; there are four bouts of shooting (two prone and two standing, in that order) with the first shooting bout being at the lane corresponding to the competitor's bib number (bib #10 shoots at lane #10 regardless of position in race), with the rest of the shooting bouts being on a first-come, first-served basis (if a competitor arrives at the lane in fifth place, they shoot at lane 5).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284760-0002-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Mass start Men, Competition format\nAs in the sprint and pursuit, competitors must ski one 150 metres (490\u00a0ft) penalty loop for each miss. Here again, to avoid unwanted congestion, World Cup Mass starts are held with only the 30 top ranking athletes on the start line (half that of the pursuit) as here all contestants start simultaneously.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284761-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Mass start Women\nThe 2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Mass start Women started on 23 December 2018 in Nov\u00e9 M\u011bsto and finished on 24 March 2019 in Holmenkollen. It was won by Hanna \u00d6berg of Sweden, with the defending titlist, Kaisa M\u00e4k\u00e4r\u00e4inen of Finland, finishing 21st.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284761-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Mass start Women, Competition format\nIn the mass start, all biathletes start at the same time and the first across the finish line wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 65], "content_span": [66, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284761-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Mass start Women, Competition format\nIn this 12.5 kilometres (7.8\u00a0mi) competition, the distance is skied over five laps; there are four bouts of shooting (two prone and two standing, in that order) with the first shooting bout being at the lane corresponding to the competitor's bib number (bib #10 shoots at lane #10 regardless of position in race), with the rest of the shooting bouts being on a first-come, first-served basis (if a competitor arrives at the lane in fifth place, they shoot at lane 5).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 65], "content_span": [66, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284761-0001-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Mass start Women, Competition format\nAs in the sprint and pursuit, competitors must ski one 150 metres (490\u00a0ft) penalty loop for each miss. Here again, to avoid unwanted congestion, World Cup Mass starts are held with only the 30 top ranking athletes on the start line (half that of the pursuit) as here all contestants start simultaneously.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 65], "content_span": [66, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284762-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Mixed Relay\nThe 2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Mixed Relay started on Sunday 2 December, 2018 in Pokljuka and finished on Thursday 14 March, 2019 in \u00d6stersund. The defending team was Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284762-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Mixed Relay, Competition format\nThe relay teams consist of four biathletes. Legs 1 and 2 are skied by the women, and legs 3 and 4 by the men. The women's legs are 6 kilometres (3.7\u00a0mi) and men's legs are 7.5 kilometres (4.7\u00a0mi). Every athlete's leg is skied over three laps, with two shooting rounds: one prone and one standing. For every round of five targets there are eight bullets available, though the last three can only be single-loaded manually from the spare round holders or from bullets deposited by the athlete into trays or onto the mat at the firing line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284762-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Mixed Relay, Competition format\nIf after eight bullets there are still standing targets, one 150 metres (490\u00a0ft) penalty loop must be taken for each remaining target. The first-leg participants all start at the same time, and as in cross-country skiing relays, every athlete of a team must touch the team's next-leg participant to perform a valid changeover.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284762-0001-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Mixed Relay, Competition format\nOn the first shooting stage of the first leg, the participant must shoot in the lane corresponding to their bib number (bib #10 shoots at lane #10 regardless of their position in the race), then for the remainder of the relay, the athletes shoot at the lane corresponding to the position they arrived (arrive at the range in 5th place, shoot at lane five).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284762-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Mixed Relay, Competition format\nThe single mixed relay involves one male and one female biathlete each completing two legs consisting of one prone and one standing shoot. The female biathletes all start the race at the same time and complete one 6 kilometres (3.7\u00a0mi) leg before exchanging with their male counterparts who complete one 7.5 kilometres (4.7\u00a0mi) leg before exchanging again with the female skier who after completing another leg switches again with the male biathlete who completes the race. The rules regarding shooting are the same as in the regular mixed relay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284763-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Nation Women\nThe Nation's Cup Score Women in the 2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup was won by Norway, with defending titlist Germany reaching second place. Each nation's score comprises the points earned by its three best placed athletes in every Sprint and Individual competition, the points earned in the Women's Relay competitions, and half of the points earned in the Mixed Relay competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284764-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Overall Men\nIn the men's 2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup total score, for each participating athlete the points earned in all Individual, Sprint, Pursuit and Mass start competitions held during the season are added up with the two lowest scores subtracted at the end of the season to give that athlete's final score. This includes the results from the Biathlon World Championships 2019 (held between the World Cup stages in Salt Lake City and Oslo).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284764-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Overall Men, Standings\nIn each event places 1 to 40 (1 to 30 in a Mass start) are awarded points, a victory being worth 60 points. The full point system is shown in the table on the right. In a Mass start event only 30 athletes are allowed to participate and the points awarded for ranks 22 to 30 differ from the system used in other events. Equal placings (ties) give an equal number of points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284764-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Overall Men, Standings\nAn athlete's total World Cup Score is the sum of all World Cup points earned in the season, minus the points from 2 events in which the athletes got their worst scores. Ties in this score are broken by comparing the tied athletes' number of victories. If this number is the same for the athletes in question, the number of second places is compared, and so on. If a tie cannot be broken by this procedure, it remains a tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284765-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Overall Women\nIn the women's 2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup total score, for each participating athlete the points earned in all Individual, Sprint, Pursuit and Mass start competitions held during the season are added up with the two lowest scores subtracted at the end of the season to give that athlete's final score. This includes the results from the Biathlon World Championships 2019 (held between the World Cup stages in Salt Lake City and Oslo).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284765-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Overall Women, Standings\nIn each event places 1 to 40 (1 to 30 in a Mass start) are awarded points, a victory being worth 60 points. The full point system is shown in the table on the right. In a Mass start event only 30 athletes are allowed to participate and the points awarded for ranks 22 to 30 differ from the system used in other events. Equal placings (ties) give an equal number of points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 53], "content_span": [54, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284765-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Overall Women, Standings\nAn athlete's total World Cup Score is the sum of all World Cup points earned in the season, minus the points from 2 events in which the athlete got their worst scores. Ties in this score are broken by comparing the tied athletes' number of victories. If this number is the same for the athletes in question, the number of second places is compared, and so on. If a tie cannot be broken by this procedure, it remains a tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 53], "content_span": [54, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284766-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Pursuit Men\nThe 2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Pursuit Men started on Sunday 9 December, 2018 in Pokljuka and finished on Saturday 23 March, 2019 in Oslo Holmenkollen. The defending titlist was Martin Fourcade of France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284766-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Pursuit Men\nThe small crystal globe winner for the category was Johannes Thingnes B\u00f8 of Norway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284766-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Pursuit Men, Competition format\nThe 12.5 kilometres (7.8\u00a0mi) pursuit race is skied over five laps. The biathlete shoots four times at any shooting lane, in the order of prone, prone, standing, standing, totalling 20 targets. For each missed target a biathlete has to run a 150 metres (490\u00a0ft) penalty loop. Competitors' starts are staggered, according to the result of the previous sprint race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284767-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Pursuit Women\nThe 2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Pursuit Women started on Sunday 9 December 2018 in Pokljuka and finished on Saturday 23 March 2019 in Holmenkollen. It was won by Dorothea Wierer of Italy, with the defending titlist, Anastasiya Kuzmina of Slovakia, finishing third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284767-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Pursuit Women, Competition format\nThe 10 kilometres (6.2\u00a0mi) pursuit race is skied over five laps. The biathlete shoots four times at any shooting lane, in the order of prone, prone, standing, standing, totalling 20 targets. For each missed target a biathlete has to run a 150 metres (490\u00a0ft) penalty loop. Competitors' starts are staggered, according to the result of the previous sprint race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 62], "content_span": [63, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284768-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Relay Men\nThe 2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Relay Men started on Sunday 16 December, 2018 in Hochfilzen and finished on Saturday 16 March, 2019 in \u00d6stersund. The defending team was Norway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284768-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Relay Men, Competition format\nThe relay teams consist of four biathletes. Every athlete's leg is skied over three 2.5 kilometres (1.6\u00a0mi) laps for a total of 7.5 kilometres (4.7\u00a0mi), with two shooting rounds: one prone and one standing. For every round of five targets there are eight bullets available, though the last three can only be single-loaded manually from the spare round holders or from bullets deposited by the athlete into trays or onto the mat at the firing line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 58], "content_span": [59, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284768-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Relay Men, Competition format\nIf after eight bullets there are still standing targets, one 150 metres (490\u00a0ft) penalty loop must be taken for each remaining target. The first-leg participants start all at the same time, and as in cross-country skiing relays, every athlete of a team must touch the team's next-leg participant to perform a valid changeover.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 58], "content_span": [59, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284768-0001-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Relay Men, Competition format\nOn the first shooting stage of the first leg, the participant must shoot in the lane corresponding to their bib number (bib #10 shoots at lane #10 regardless of their position in the race), then for the remainder of the relay, the athletes shoot at the lane corresponding to the position they arrived (arrive at the range in 5th place, shoot at lane five).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 58], "content_span": [59, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284769-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Relay Women\nThe 2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Relay Women started on 16 December 2018 in Hochfilzen and finish on 16 March 2019 at the Biathlon World Championships in \u00d6stersund. Norway won; Germany unsuccessfully defended its title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284769-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Relay Women, Competition format\nThe relay teams consist of four biathletes. Every athlete's leg is skied over three 2 kilometres (1.2\u00a0mi) laps for a total of 6 kilometres (3.7\u00a0mi), with two shooting rounds: one prone and one standing. For every round of five targets there are eight bullets available, though the last three can only be single-loaded manually from the spare round holders or from bullets deposited by the athlete into trays or onto the mat at the firing line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284769-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Relay Women, Competition format\nIf after eight bullets there are still standing targets, one 150 metres (490\u00a0ft) penalty loop must be taken for each remaining target. The first-leg participants start all at the same time, and as in cross-country skiing relays, every athlete of a team must touch the team's next-leg participant to perform a valid changeover.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284769-0001-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Relay Women, Competition format\nOn the first shooting stage of the first leg, the participant must shoot in the lane corresponding to their bib number (bib #10 shoots at lane #10 regardless of their position in the race), then for the remainder of the relay, the athletes shoot at the lane corresponding to the position they arrived (arrive at the range in 5th place, shoot at lane five).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284770-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Sprint Men\nThe 2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Sprint Men started on Friday 7 December, 2018 in Pokljuka and finished on Friday 22 March, 2019 in Oslo Holmenkollen. The defending titlist was Martin Fourcade of France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284770-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Sprint Men\nThe small crystal globe winner for the category was Johannes Thingnes B\u00f8 of Norway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284770-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Sprint Men, Competition format\nThe 10 kilometres (6.2\u00a0mi) sprint race is the third oldest biathlon event; the distance is skied over three laps. The biathlete shoots two times at any shooting lane, first prone, then standing, totalling 10 targets. For each missed target the biathlete has to complete a penalty lap of around 150 metres (490\u00a0ft). Competitors' starts are staggered, normally by 30 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284771-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Sprint Women\nThe 2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Sprint Women started on 8 December 2018 in Pokljuka and finished on 21 March 2019 in Oslo. It was won by the defending titlist, Anastasiya Kuzmina of Slovakia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284771-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Sprint Women, Competition format\nThe 7.5 kilometres (4.7\u00a0mi) sprint race is the third oldest biathlon event; the distance is skied over three laps. The biathlete shoots two times at any shooting lane, first prone, then standing, totalling 10 targets. For each missed target the biathlete has to complete a penalty lap of around 150 metres (490\u00a0ft). Competitors' starts are staggered, normally by 30 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 61], "content_span": [62, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284772-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Stage 1\nThe 2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Stage 1 was the opening event of the season and was held in Pokljuka, Slovenia, from 2\u20139 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284773-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Stage 2\nThe 2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Stage 2 was the second event of the season and was held in Hochfilzen, Austria, from 13 to 16 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284774-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Stage 3\nThe 2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Stage 3 was the third event of the season and was held in Nov\u00e9 M\u011bsto, Czech Republic, from 20\u201323 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284775-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Stage 4\nThe 2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Stage 4 was the fourth event of the season and was held in Oberhof, Germany, from 10\u201313 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284776-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Stage 5\nThe 2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Stage 5 was the fifth event of the season and was held in Ruhpolding, Germany, from 17\u201320 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284777-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Stage 6\nThe 2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Stage 6 was the sixth event of the season and was held in Antholz-Anterselva, Italy, from 24\u201327 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284778-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Stage 7\nThe 2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Stage 7 was the seventh event of the season and was held in Canmore, Canada, from 7\u201310 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284779-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Stage 8\nThe 2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Stage 8 was the eighth event of the season and was held in Salt Lake City, United States, from 14\u201317 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284780-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Stage 9\nThe 2018\u201319 Biathlon World Cup \u2013 Stage 9 was the 9th and final event of the season and was held in Oslo, Holmenkollen, Norway, from 21\u201324 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284781-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big 12 Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 Big 12 men's basketball season began with practices in October 2018, followed by the start of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season in November. Regular season conference play began in December 2018 and concluded in March 2018. Kansas State and Texas Tech won a share of the regular season Big 12 Championship, ending the streak of 14 consecutive conference titles for Kansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284781-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big 12 Conference men's basketball season\nThe Big 12 Tournament was held from March 13 through 16 at the Sprint Center in Kansas City, Missouri. Iowa State defeated Kansas in the Big 12 Tournament championship game to receive the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284781-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big 12 Conference men's basketball season\nBaylor, Iowa State, Kansas, Kansas State, Oklahoma, and Texas Tech each received invitations to the NCAA Tournament. Texas Tech advanced to the NCAA championship game where they lost to Virginia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284781-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big 12 Conference men's basketball season, Coaches, Coaching changes\nThere were no head coaching changes following the 2017\u201318 Big 12 Conference men's basketball season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 76], "content_span": [77, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284781-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big 12 Conference men's basketball season, Coaches, Head coaches\nNote: Stats are through the beginning of the season. All stats and records are from time at current school only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 72], "content_span": [73, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284781-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big 12 Conference men's basketball season, Honors and awards, All-Americans\nTo earn \"consensus\" status, a player must win honors from a majority of the following teams: the Associated Press, the USBWA, Sporting News, and the National Association of Basketball Coaches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 83], "content_span": [84, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284782-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big Bash League season\nThe 2018\u201319 Big Bash League season or BBL|08 was the eighth season of the KFC Big Bash League, the professional men's Twenty20 domestic cricket competition in Australia. The tournament started on 19 December 2018. Adelaide Strikers were the defending champions. The competition was extended to a full home and away season for the first time, with each team to play each other twice at both a home venue and away venue. This consists of 56 regular season matches, two semi-final fixtures and the final. For this season of the tournament, the toss was replaced by a bat flip, with \"roofs and flats\" used instead of heads or tails.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284782-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big Bash League season\nThe season saw Cameron Bancroft's return to professional cricket, following his involvement in the ball-tampering scandal in March 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284782-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big Bash League season\nThe title was won by Melbourne Renegades, who defeated Melbourne Stars at the Marvel Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284782-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big Bash League season, TV audience\nThis was the first BBL season featuring the new cricket broadcasting rights deal made between Cricket Australia, Fox Sports Australia and Seven Network. Fox Sports broadcast all 59 matches from the BBL season on their new Fox Cricket channel, with 16 of those broadcast exclusively. Channel Seven will be broadcasting 43 matches, including all finals fixtures. For these 43 matches Channel Seven were the \u201cHost Broadcaster\u201d and did the toss and player of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284783-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big East Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 Big East Conference men's basketball season began with practices in October 2018, followed by the start of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season in November. This season marked the 40th year in the conference's history, but the sixth as a non-football conference, which officially formed on July 1, 2013. Conference play began in December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284783-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big East Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2019 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament was held at Madison Square Garden in New York from March 13 through March 17, 2019. Villanova defeated Seton Hall to win the tournament championship and receive the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284783-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big East Conference men's basketball season\nFour Big East schools received bids to the NCAA Tournament (Marquette, Seton Hall, St. John's, and Villanova). Villanova was the only team to make it out the Round of 64 before losing to Purdue in the Round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284783-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big East Conference men's basketball season\nFive Big East schools received bids to the National Invitation Tournament (Creighton, Xavier, Georgetown, Providence, and Butler) with only Creighton and Xavier advancing past the 1st Round, with the Bluejays making to the Quarterfinals before losing to TCU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284783-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big East Conference men's basketball season\nMarquette guard Markus Howard was named the Big East Player of the Year after leading the Big East in scoring with 25.0 PPG. Georgetown freshman guard James Akinjo was named Big East Freshman of the Year. Villanova head coach Jay Wright was named Big East coach of the year for the sixth time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284783-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big East Conference men's basketball season, Head coaches, Coaching changes\nOn March 27, 2018, Chris Mack was hired as the new head coach of Louisville, leaving Xavier after nine seasons. Four days later, longtime assistant coach Travis Steele was named the new head coach of the Musketeers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 83], "content_span": [84, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284783-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big East Conference men's basketball season, Preseason, Preseason poll\nPrior to the season, the Big East conducted a poll of Big East coaches, coaches do not place their own team on their ballots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 78], "content_span": [79, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284783-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big East Conference men's basketball season, Regular season, Conference matrix\nThis table summarizes the head-to-head results between teams in conference play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 86], "content_span": [87, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284783-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big East Conference men's basketball season, Regular season, Player of the week\nThroughout the season, the Big East Conference named a player of the week and a freshman of the week each Monday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 87], "content_span": [88, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284783-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big East Conference men's basketball season, Honors and awards, All-Americans\nTo earn \"consensus\" status, a player must win honors based on a point system computed from the four different all-America teams. The 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, 51], "section_span": [53, 85], "content_span": [86, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284783-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big East Conference men's basketball season, Honors and awards, Big East Awards\nMarkus Howard\u2020 \u2013 MarquetteMyles Powell\u2020 \u2013 Seton HallPhil Booth\u2020 \u2013 VillanovaEric Paschall\u2020 \u2013 VillanovaShamorie Ponds \u2013 St. John'sJessie Govan \u2013 Georgetown", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 87], "content_span": [88, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284783-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big East Conference men's basketball season, Honors and awards, Big East Awards\nKamar Baldwin \u2013 ButlerMax Strus \u2013 DePaulSam Hauser \u2013 MarquetteAlpha Diallo \u2013 ProvidenceNaji Marshall \u2013 Xavier", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 87], "content_span": [88, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284783-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big East Conference men's basketball season, Honors and awards, Big East Awards\nMarcus Zegarowski\u2020 \u2013 CreightonJames Akinjo\u2020 \u2013 GeorgetownJosh LeBlanc \u2013 GeorgetownMac McClung \u2013 GeorgetownJoey Hauser \u2013 MarquetteSaddiq Bey - Villanova", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 87], "content_span": [88, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284784-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big South Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 Big South Conference men's basketball season began with practices in October 2018, followed by the start of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season in November. Conference play began in January 2019 and concluded in February 2019. The season marked the 35th season of Big South Conference basketball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284784-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big South Conference men's basketball season\nOn December 21, 2018, Campbell's Chris Clemons became the all-time leading scorer in Big South history. He passed VMI guard Reggie Williams' 2,556 career point total in a game against Austin Peay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284784-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big South Conference men's basketball season, Preseason, Conference realignment\nDuring the 2018 offseason, one school left the Big South and two joined.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 87], "content_span": [88, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284784-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big South Conference men's basketball season, Preseason, Conference realignment\nOn successive days in November 2017, two schools were unveiled as incoming members\u2014former ASUN Conference member USC Upstate on the 15th, followed by former MEAC member Hampton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 87], "content_span": [88, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284784-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big South Conference men's basketball season, Preseason, Conference realignment\nLiberty, which had started a transition to FBS football in the 2017 season, had initially reached an agreement with the Big South that it would continue to house all of its other sports (except for field hockey and women's swimming, neither of which is sponsored by the Big South) in that conference after becoming classified as an FBS independent from the 2018 season forward. However, in May 2018, Liberty changed course, announcing that all of its other Big South sports would instead move to the ASUN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 87], "content_span": [88, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284784-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big South Conference men's basketball season, Preseason, Preseason All-Conference Teams\nBig South Preseason Player of the Year: Chris Clemons (Campbell)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 95], "content_span": [96, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284785-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big Ten Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 Big Ten men's basketball season began with practices in October 2018, followed by the start of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season on November 6, 2018. The regular season ended on March 10, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284785-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big Ten Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 season marked the first time in Big Ten history that the teams played a 20-game conference schedule. The new schedule included a regional component to increase the frequency of games among teams in similar areas. Over the course of a six-year cycle (12 playing opportunities), in-state rivals will play each other 12 times, regional opponents will play 10 times, and all other teams will play nine times. Three in-state series will be guaranteed home-and-homes: Illinois and Northwestern, Indiana and Purdue, and Michigan and Michigan State will always play twice. The conference opponent list was released on April 19, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284785-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big Ten Conference men's basketball season\nWith a win over Northwestern on March 9, 2019, Purdue won a share of the Big Ten regular season championship, its conference-leading 24th championship. Later that same day, Michigan State defeated Michigan to earn a share of the championship, marking back-to-back championships for the Spartans. Due to tie-breaking rules, Michigan State received the No. 1 seed for the Big Ten Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284785-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big Ten Conference men's basketball season\nThe Big Ten Tournament returned to its more traditional Midwest roots and was held at the United Center in Chicago, Illinois. The Tournament was held from March 13 through March 19, 2019. Michigan State won the Big Ten Tournament championship, defeating Michigan for the third time on the season in the championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284785-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big Ten Conference men's basketball season\nMichigan State guard Cassius Winston was named Big Ten Player of the Year. Purdue coach Matt Painter was named Big Ten Coach of the Year. Winston, Ethan Happ and Carsen Edwards were 2019 consensus All-Americans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284785-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big Ten Conference men's basketball season\nIn addition to Michigan State, who received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament, the conference set a conference record by sending eight teams to the Tournament: Michigan, Purdue, Wisconsin, Maryland, Iowa, Minnesota, and Ohio State. Michigan State advanced to the Final Four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284785-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big Ten Conference men's basketball season\nThe conference also sent two schools to the National Invitation Tournament: Indiana and Nebraska.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284785-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big Ten Conference men's basketball season, Preseason, Preseason All-Big Ten\nPrior to the conference's annual media day, unofficial awards and a poll were chosen by a panel of 28 writers, two for each team in the conference. Michigan State was the consensus selection to win the conference, receiving 22 of 28 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 84], "content_span": [85, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284785-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big Ten Conference men's basketball season, Preseason, Preseason All-Big Ten, Preseason All-Big Ten\nOn October 11, 2018, a panel of conference media selected a 10-member preseason All-Big Ten Team and Player of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 107], "content_span": [108, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284785-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big Ten Conference men's basketball season, Preseason, Preseason national polls\nSporting News was among the earliest of preseason polls to be released (September 20) and included Michigan (10), Michigan State (12) and Maryland (21).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 87], "content_span": [88, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284785-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big Ten Conference men's basketball season, Regular season, Player of the week\nThroughout the conference regular season, the Big Ten offices named one or two players of the week and one or two freshmen of the week each Monday. On December 18, Juwan Morgan earned United States Basketball Writers Association National Player of the Week recognition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 86], "content_span": [87, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284785-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big Ten Conference men's basketball season, Regular season, Early season tournaments\n11 of the 14 Big Ten teams participated in early season tournaments. Each team's finish is noted below. Indiana, Ohio State, and Rutgers did not participate in a tournament. Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Nebraska, Ohio State, Penn State, Rutgers, and Wisconsin participated in the Gavitt Tip-Off Games against Big East Conference teams for a fourth consecutive year. All Big Ten teams also participated in the ACC\u2013Big Ten Challenge against Atlantic Coast Conference teams, the 20th year for the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 92], "content_span": [93, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284785-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big Ten Conference men's basketball season, Regular season, Conference matrix\nThis table summarizes the head-to-head results between teams in conference play. Each team will play 20 conference games, and at least one game against each opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 85], "content_span": [86, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284785-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big Ten Conference men's basketball season, Honors and awards, All-Big Ten awards and teams\nOn March 11, 2019, the Big Ten announced most of its conference awards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 99], "content_span": [100, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284785-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big Ten Conference men's basketball season, Honors and awards, USBWA\nOn March 12, the U.S. Basketball Writers Association released its 2018\u201319 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 Big Ten representatives selected within their respective regions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 76], "content_span": [77, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284785-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big Ten Conference men's basketball season, Honors and awards, NABC\nThe National Association of Basketball Coaches announced their Division\u00a0I All-District teams on March 21, recognizing the nation's best men's collegiate basketball student-athletes. Selected and voted on by member coaches of the NABC, the selections on this list were then eligible for NABC Coaches' All-America Honors. The following list represented the District 7 players chosen to the list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 75], "content_span": [76, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284785-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big Ten Conference men's basketball season, Honors and awards, Other awards\nHapp, Edwards and Winston were 2019 consensus All-Americans (second team). Brazdeikis was an Associated Press All-American honorable mention selection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 83], "content_span": [84, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284785-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big Ten Conference men's basketball season, Postseason, NCAA Tournament\nThe winner of the Big Ten Tournament, Michigan State, received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. Eight Big Ten teams received bids to the NCAA Tournament, the most of any conference in the tournament and the most in the conference's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 79], "content_span": [80, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284785-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Big Ten Conference men's basketball season, Postseason, National Invitation Tournament\nTwo Big Ten teams received invitations to the National Invitation Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 94], "content_span": [95, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284786-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Binghamton Bearcats men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Binghamton Bearcats men's basketball team represented Binghamton University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at the Binghamton University Events Center in Vestal, New York and were led by 7th-year head coach Tommy Dempsey. They finished the season 10\u201323 overall, 5\u201311 in conference play to finish in seventh place. As the 7th seed in the 2019 America East Men's Basketball Tournament, they upset 2nd seeded Stony Brook in the quarterfinals 78\u201372, then lost to top-seeded Vermont 51\u201384 in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284786-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Binghamton Bearcats men's basketball team\nOn July 14, 2019, incoming sophomore and political science major Calistus Anyichie drowned in the upper portion of Buttermilk Falls State Park near Ithaca, New York.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284786-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Binghamton Bearcats men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bearcats finished the 2017\u201318 season 11\u201320, 2\u201314 in America East Conference play to finish in last place. In turn, they failed to qualify for the America East Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284787-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Binghamton Bearcats women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Binghamton Bearcats women's basketball team represented Binghamton University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Bearcats, led by first year head coach Bethann Ord, played their home games at Binghamton University Events Center as members of the America East Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284787-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Binghamton Bearcats women's basketball team, Media\nAll home games and conference road games will stream on either ESPN3 or AmericaEast.tv. Most road games will stream on the opponents website. All games will be broadcast on the radio on WNBF and .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 58], "content_span": [59, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Birmingham City Football Club's 116th season in the English football league system and eighth consecutive season in the second-tier Championship. Under the management of Garry Monk, they began the season under transfer restrictions imposed by the English Football League (EFL) for breaches of their Profitability and Sustainability Regulations, and finished it in 17th place after a nine-point deduction was also imposed. The deduction put paid to hopes of promotion via the play-offs, but the team were able to avoid relegation with two matches still to play. As with all League clubs, the first team competed in the FA Cup and EFL Cup; they lost their first match in both competitions, to West Ham United in the former and to Reading in the latter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 808]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season\nAfter conflict with the board over transfer policy and other issues, Monk was sacked on 18 June 2019. His assistant, Pep Clotet, was named caretaker head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season\nTwenty-six players made at least one appearance in first-team competition, of whom three were loan signings; there were fourteen different goalscorers. Che Adams, who appeared in all 48 of Birmingham's first-team matches, top scored with 22 goals, all of which came in league matches. The average league attendance, of 22,483, was nearly 7%\u00a0up on 2017\u201318.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, Overview\nAfter a 2016\u201317 season in which the club had three different managers and avoided relegation on the final day, Birmingham repeated the process in 2017\u201318. Garry Monk, appointed in March, vowed to change the pattern: he would be \"relentless, and whoever is not on board with that won't be here. The ones who are will be here. It has to be like that. We have to raise the mentality of the club. That goes for everyone at the club.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, Overview\nApart from assistant manager Pep Clotet, the remainder of his backroom staff, including first-team coach James Beattie and goalkeeping coach Darryl Flahavan, were those he had worked with before Middlesbrough sacked him some months earlier. That club had then placed his staff on gardening leave and included a clause preventing their working together or with Monk for a rival club for the next 12 months. After they joined Monk at Birmingham, Middlesbrough sought an injunction to enforce that clause, but the matter was settled out of court after a counter-claim for damages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, Overview\nFor sponsorship reasons, and in the light of the EFL's Profit and Sustainability (P&S) Regulations, the club's owners agreed a three-year naming rights package under which St Andrew's was renamed St Andrew's Trillion Trophy Stadium and the Wast Hills training ground became the Trillion Trophy Training Centre. It emerged in early July that the EFL had refused to register Birmingham's first signing of the summer window\u00a0\u2013 Danish left-back Kristian Pedersen\u00a0\u2013 because of failure to comply with P&S requirements and had placed the club under a transfer embargo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, Overview\nOn 30 July, BBC Sport quoted an EFL spokesperson confirming they had \"been in regular contact with the club throughout the summer and set out on 13 July [their] requirements in respect of the basis upon which the club would be able to make additions to Garry Monk's squad.\" The club then issued a statement expressing their disappointment with the continuing embargo despite their best efforts to comply, and their understanding of and empathy with supporters' frustrations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, Overview\nHowever, \"after consideration of the legal position as between the Club, Player and the EFL\" and despite the EFL being \"exceptionally disappointed\" at the club's attitude, a deal was reached. The club agreed to a business plan aimed at restricting expenditure, Pedersen was registered, and the club could make a further five signings under strict conditions, reported by the Birmingham Mail as meaning loans and free transfers only and a salary cap pitched at a \"debilitating\" level. The club faced further punishment, including possible points deductions, from an EFL commission to meet later in the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, Overview\nBirmingham made four signings in the summer transfer window: three loans\u00a0\u2013 winger Connor Mahoney from AFC Bournemouth, striker Omar Bogle from Cardiff City, and midfielder Gary Gardner\u00a0\u2013 younger brother of Craig Gardner\u00a0\u2013 from Aston Villa, and one free transfer, goalkeeper Lee Camp, also from Cardiff City. They cancelled Diego Fabbrini's contract, loaned out Nicolai Brock-Madsen, Jonathan Grounds, Cheick Keita, Cheikh Ndoye and Greg Stewart, and tried unsuccessfully to offload high-earning goalkeepers David Stockdale and Tomasz Kuszczak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, Overview\nIn the January transfer window, Birmingham made the last of their five permitted signings, Swedish international midfielder or forward Kerim Mrabti, whose contract with Djurg\u00e5rdens had expired. Bogle was recalled by his parent club, fringe players Luke Maxwell and Dan Scarr moved on, Viv Solomon-Otabor and Steve Seddon loaned out, and Stewart was recalled from Kilmarnock and loaned to Aberdeen instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0008-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, Overview\nThere was considerable interest from Premier League clubs in newly prolific striker Che Adams, but Birmingham did not want to sell, and no offer received was considered enough to force their hand given that the player could neither be replaced nor loaned back because of the signing restriction. A bid of \u00a312\u00a0million from Burnley was the highest reported. The Times suggested that a refusal to sell might constitute a further aggravated breach of the P&S rules. It also emerged that the restriction also applied to extending the contracts of existing players, which had particular relevance to team captain Michael Morrison whose contract was due to expire at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, Overview\nThe EFL hearing, originally scheduled for February 2019, was postponed to mid-March after a panel member recused themselves, \"with the intention of the Disciplinary Commission delivering the outcome quickly so the matter can be fully resolved before the end of this season.\" The panel finally sat on 18 March, and ruled that nine points be deducted in the current season; neither party took up their right to appeal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, Overview\nAccording to the Birmingham Mail, Monk turned the team into \"a side vastly superior than the sum of its parts\" to keep them in the top half of the table until a run of losses in March and a nine-point deduction led to a 17th-place finish. In June, it was reported that the relationship between Monk and chief executive Xuandong Ren had broken down. After making it clear he would not resign, Monk was sacked on 18 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0010-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, Overview\nAccording to Ren in an interview with The Times, Monk was sacked because of \"his attempt to use a single agent in transfer deals and his refusal to adapt the team's style of play\"; \"sources close to Monk\" disagreed, and \"suggested that Ren's comments were designed to explain the surprise sacking\u00a0... that has been badly received by many Birmingham fans.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0010-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, Overview\nA club statement with echoes of Monk's own of a year earlier called for a change in footballing philosophy and stressed the vital importance of \"everybody at the club to be sharing the same vision and commitment to the plans and processes.\" Despite the club's statement that they were not actively looking for a new permanent manager, Pep Clotet was appointed caretaker head coach, the remainder of the backroom staff stayed in post, and Craig Gardner was given a role as player-coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, Pre-season\nThe home kit consists of a blue shirt with white trim on the shoulders and upper chest and white stripes down the side seams, white shorts with blue trim and blue stripes down the side seams, and blue socks with white trim at the turnover. The away kit has a yellow shirt with three blue stripes on the shoulders, blue shorts with yellow stripes down the side seams, and yellow socks with blue trim. The kits are supplied by Adidas and bear the logo of the club's principal sponsor, online bookmaker 888sport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, Pre-season\nAfter a training camp based in Bad H\u00e4ring, Austria, which included friendly matches against Akhmat Grozny of the Russian Premier League and German fourth-tier club SSV Ulm, Birmingham City's first-team pre-season programme continued with matches against Doncaster Rovers, Cheltenham Town, Las Palmas and Brighton & Hove Albion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, EFL Championship, August\u2013September\nBirmingham City opened their 2018\u201319 EFL Championship season at home to Norwich City, without midfielder David Davis and forward Isaac Vassell, both injured, as well as a number of out-of-favour players including both senior goalkeepers, David Stockdale and Tomasz Kuszczak. The team lined up in a 4\u20134\u20132 formation with debutant Connal Trueman in goal, Maxime Colin and new signing Kristian Pedersen at full back, Michael Morrison (captain) and Harlee Dean at centre back, Maikel Kieftenbeld alongside Craig Gardner in central midfield, Jota and Jacques Maghoma as wide midfielders, and Che Adams and Lukas Jutkiewicz in the forward line. Birmingham led for much of the second half, but late in stoppage time, Onel Hern\u00e1ndez equalised for the visitors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 823]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, EFL Championship, August\u2013September\nIt was the first of a string of matches in which Birmingham either under-performed, as in the 1\u20130 defeat at Middlesbrough or the goalless draw with Queens Park Rangers when they had only one shot on target, or were unable to take advantage of their chances, as in the goalless draws with Swansea City and Sheffield United, a missed penalty against West Bromwich Albion, and the visit to Nottingham Forest when they let slip a two-goal lead. In what remained of August, Birmingham brought in four players: Lee Camp took over from Trueman in goal from the third match of the season and Gary Gardner replaced his brother in central midfield, while forward Omar Bogle and winger Connor Mahoney joined the first-team squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, EFL Championship, August\u2013September\nTheir first win finally arrived on 22 September, away to Leeds United, unbeaten and top of the table, courtesy of Adams' sharpness and what Leeds' manager Marcelo Bielsa claimed as a \"tactical error\" on his part. After conceding what Monk described as two poor goals stemming from two mistakes, Jutkiewicz scored twice in the second half to secure a draw at home to Ipswich Town and finish September in 16th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, EFL Championship, October\u2013November\nBirmingham began October with their eighth draw in eleven league matches, away to Brentford, despite Kieftenbeld's second-half red card for an off-the-ball incident involving opponent Neal Maupay. Garry Monk was also sent to the stands for his verbal reaction to the dismissal: he said afterwards that he was expecting Maupay to be booked for feigning injury. Kieftenbeld's sending off was rescinded on appeal, so he was available for the next match, against Rotherham United, in which Jutkiewicz scored his first Birmingham hat-trick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0016-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, EFL Championship, October\u2013November\nJutkiewicz continued with goals against Reading and Sheffield Wednesday and an assist for Adams' winning goal at Stoke City in a run of four wins that earned him the Championship Player of the Month award for October and earned Monk a nomination as Championship Manager of the Month as the team rose to ninth place in the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, EFL Championship, October\u2013November\nIn three consecutive matches, Birmingham scored first and failed to win. Away defeats against Derby County and Aston Villa, in which Jutkiewicz reached double figures, came either side of a home match in which Adams took advantage of defensive errors to put his side 2\u20130 ahead and Hull City scored three times in 14 minutes before Adams completed his hat-trick to level the scores. Having conceded ten goals in those three matches, Monk wanted his players to \"get back to that toughness\" that earned them their eleven-match unbeaten run. They finished November with a clean sheet in a 2\u20130 win at Millwall that left them in tenth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, EFL Championship, December\u2013February\nA rare goal from Kieftenbeld opened Birmingham's scoring in December: seconds after half-time, Preston North End's goalkeeper Declan Rudd misjudged an overhit pass, the ball went through his legs and into the net. That win was followed by a first home defeat since March, inflicted by Bristol City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0018-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, EFL Championship, December\u2013February\nThe year ended with two draws and two wins, Adams took his goals total into double figures, the largest crowd of the season thus far, of 26,344, saw Birmingham complete a double over their former manager Gary Rowett's Stoke City via Omar Bogle's fine individual goal\u00a0\u2013 the only one he scored for the club before his loan ended early\u00a0\u2013 and the team reached seventh place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, EFL Championship, December\u2013February\nTwo defeats and a draw preceded the visit to Swansea City, the club where Monk had spent much of his career as player and then manager. Pedersen was sent off before half-time, but Birmingham came back from 2\u20131 behind to tie the scores, and then took a 71st-minute lead when Adams \"whipped in an excellent curling shot from 20 yards (18\u00a0m)\" that was to win the club's Goal of the Season award. In the fourth minute of stoppage time, Oli McBurnie equalised; the draw left Birmingham in twelfth position. Adams scored in all four January matches, to take his total to 15 for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, EFL Championship, December\u2013February\nAdams continued the run with four goals in the first two matches of February, a penalty against Nottingham Forest and a hat-trick at Queens Park Rangers in which Birmingham took a 4\u20130 first-half lead before conceding three goals and relying on Camp saving a stoppage-time penalty to hold on to the win. An unexpected home defeat to Bolton Wanderers was followed by a 2\u20132 draw with Blackburn Rovers in which Adams took his total for the season past 20; he was named Championship Player of the Month. February ended with Birmingham in 8th place after a win away to Bristol City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, EFL Championship, March\u2013May\nWith the EFL hearing delayed until mid-March, Birmingham failed to score a goal or gain a point from the first four fixtures of that month. The eventual nine-point deduction was announced on 22 March, a week before the visit to local rivals West Bromwich Albion, where they twice took the lead before the hosts equalised via a penalty awarded for a foul outside the penalty area and then went on to win 3\u20132. The result left Birmingham in 17th position, five points above the relegation places having played more matches than the teams below them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, EFL Championship, March\u2013May\nThey went through the remaining seven fixtures unbeaten. Adams' 22nd and last goal of the season completed a double over Leeds United, the return to goalscoring form of Jutkiewicz and Morrison earned points against Sheffield United, Ipswich Town and Derby County, and a comfortable win against Rotherham United confirmed their Championship status for next season with two matches still to play. They finished 17th, twelve points above the relegation places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, EFL Championship, Match results\nGeneral source: Match content not verifiable from these sources is referenced individually.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 68], "content_span": [69, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, FA Cup\nAs with all teams in the top two tiers of English football, Birmingham City entered the FA Cup in the third round. They were drawn to play Premier League club West Ham United at the London Stadium. Marko Arnautovi\u0107 gave West Ham an early lead, but in a \"robust and open encounter\" Birmingham missed several chances to equalise, and substitute Andy Carroll doubled the lead in stoppage time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284788-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Birmingham City F.C. season, EFL Cup\nIn the first round of the EFL Cup, Birmingham were drawn away to another Championship team, Reading. With a televised Championship fixture three days later, Monk made eleven changes from the team that started the previous Saturday, with debuts for Lee Camp, Dan Scarr and Gary Gardner and first starts for Connor Mahoney, Beryly Lubala and Omar Bogle. Reading fielded a full-strength side and were rarely tested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Blackburn Rovers' 131st season as a professional football club and it will participate in the Championship following promotion from League One the previous season. Along with competing in the Championship, the club will also participate in the FA Cup and EFL Cup. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, May\nOn 14 May, Rovers confirmed their retained list. Danny Graham, Craig Conway, Lewis Mansell were offered new contracts whilst Rovers took up the option to extend Charlie Albinson's and Andrew Jackson's contracts by 12 months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, May\nElliott Ward, Liam Feeney, Aaron Dillon and scholars Matthew Campbell, Matthew Chan, Callum Dolan, Ben Donnelly-Blackburn, Frank Jones and Brad Lynch have been informed that they will not be retained by the club upon the expiration of their current contract/scholarship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, June\nOn 11 June Rovers announced striker Danny Graham had signed a new 12-month contract, until 2019, with the option of a further 12 months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, June\nOn 13 June Rovers announced midfielder Craig Conway signed a new 12-month contract, until 2019, with the option of a further 12 months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, June\nOn 22 June Rovers announced Rovers signed midfielder Joe Rothwell from Oxford United for an undisclosed fee on a three-year deal, until 2021. Also David Dunn left his role as the club's under-23 assistant manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, July\nOn 2 July Rovers announced the signing of midfielder Jacob Davenport from Manchester City for an undisclosed fee on a 4-year deal, until 2022.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, July\nOn 3 July Rovers announced that defender Darragh Lenihan had signed a new 4-year contract, until 2022.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, July\nOn 12 July Rovers announced that defender Derrick Williams had signed a new 3-year contract, until 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, July\nOn 13 July Rovers announced that defender Richie Smallwood had signed a new 2-year contract, until 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, July\nOn 18 July Rovers announced that defender Scott Wharton had signed a new 3-year contract, until 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, July\nOn 20 July Rovers announced that attacking midfielder Bradley Dack had signed a new 3-year contract, until 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, July\nOn 22 July Rovers announced defender Scott Wharton has re-joined Lincoln City on loan until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, July\nOn 30 July Rovers announced the signing of attacking midfielder Kasey Palmer from Chelsea on loan until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, August\nOn 3 August Rovers announced defender Matthew Platt has joined Accrington Stanley on loan until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, August\nOn 6 August Rovers announced the signing of attacker Adam Armstrong from Newcastle United for an undisclosed fee on a 4-year deal, until 2022.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, August\nOn 23 August Rovers announced the signing of midfielder Jack Rodwell on a free transfer on a 12-month contract until 2019, following his release from Sunderland. Also Blackpool announced the signing of Liam Feeney following his release from Rovers in the summer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, August\nOn 27 August Rovers announced the signing of midfielder Harrison Reed from Southampton on loan until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, August\nOn 28 August Rovers announced the signing of forward Ben Brereton from Nottingham Forest on loan until January, with the option to make his transfer permanent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, August\nOn 30 August Rovers announced defender Sam Hart had re-joined Rochdale on loan until the end of the season and midfielder Lewis Hardcastle had joined Port Vale on loan until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, August\nOn 31 August Rovers announced that goalkeeper Andrew Fisher had signed a new 3-year contract, until 2021. It was also announced that Rovers had reached a mutual agreement with Paul Caddis and Peter Whittingham to terminate their contracts with immediate effect. Rovers also announced the signing of young forward Mitchel Candlin from Walsall on loan with the option to make the move permanent in January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, September\nOn 3 September Notts County announced the signing of Elliott Ward following his release in the summer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, September\nOn 4 September Rovers announced the deadline day signing of young attacking midfielder Brad Lyons from Coleraine on loan until January, with the option to make his transfer permanent, had been approved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, September\nOn 7 September Rovers announced young development squad pair Lewis Thompson & Lewis Mansell have joined FC United on a 1-month loan until 6 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, September\nOn 21 September Rovers announced young defender Jack Doyle has joined Maidstone United on a 3-month loan until 22 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, September\nOn 28 September Rovers announced young goalkeeper Oliver Byrne have joined Bamber Bridge on a 1-month loan until 27 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, October\nOn 8 October Rovers announced young development squad pair Lewis Thompson & Lewis Mansell will remain at FC United for a further month until 10 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, October\nOn 26 October Rovers announced young goalkeeper Charlie Albinson have joined Warrington Town on a 1-month loan until 1 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, November\nOn 9 November it was announced that defender Jack Doyle has returned from his loan spell from Maidstone United due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, November\nOn 12 November Rovers announced youngster Lewis Thompson will remain at FC United for a further month until 15 December, while Lewis Mansell will return to the club following the end of his loan spell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, November\nOn 15 November Rovers announced that defender Charlie Mulgrew had signed a new 2 and half year contract, until 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, November\nOn 16 November Rovers announced that midfielder Elliott Bennett had signed a new 2 and half year contract, until 2021. Also Bradford City announced the signing of Paul Caddis following his release.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Summer activity, November\nOn 30 November Rovers announced manager Tony Mowbray had signed a new long-term contract putting pen to paper on a new 3 and half year deal, until 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0033-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, December\nOn 3 December Rovers announced u23 goalkeeper Charlie Albinson will remain at Warrington Town for a further month until 2 January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0034-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, December\nOn 10 December Rovers announced that u23 defender Joe Grayson had signed a new 2 and half year contract, until 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0035-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, December\nOn 13 December Rovers announced that midfielder Corry Evans had signed a new 2 and half year contract, until 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0036-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, January\nOn 2 January Rovers announced Matthew Platt and Sam Hart had been recalled from their loan spells from Accrington Stanley and Rochdale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0037-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, January\nOn 4 January Rovers announced the permanent signing of forward Ben Brereton from Nottingham Forest for an undisclosed fee on a 3 and half year deal, until 2022 and that forward Danny Graham had signed a one-year contract extension, until 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0038-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, January\nOn 7 January Rovers announced Lewis Hardcastle had been recalled from their loan spells from Port Vale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0039-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, January\nOn 9 January Rovers announced Kasey Palmer had been recalled by Chelsea, to join Bristol City on loan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0040-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, January\nOn 11 January Rovers announced the permanent signing of attacking midfielder Brad Lyons from Coleraine on an 18-month deal, until 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0041-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, January\nOn 14 January Rovers announced Mitchel Candlin had been recalled by Walsall. Also u23 goalkeeper Oliver Byrne had joined Stevenage on loan until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0042-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, January\nOn 15 January Rovers announced that u23 attacking midfielder Brad Lyons had joined St Mirren on loan until the end of the season. Also defender Sam Hart had joined Southend United on loan until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0043-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, January\nOn 16 January Rovers announced that u23 defender Sam Barnes had joined Marine on short loan deal until 14 February. Also u23 forward Lewis Mansell had joined Partick Thistle on loan until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0044-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, January\nOn 18 January Rovers announced that defender Joe Grayson had joined Grimsby Town on loan until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0045-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, January\nOn 22 January Rovers announced that defender Sam Hart had signed a 1-year contract extension, until 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0046-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, January\nOn 23 January Rovers announced that defender Scott Wharton has been recalled from his loan spell at Lincoln City & joined Bury on loan until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0047-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, January\nOn 24 January Rovers announced that defender Paul Downing had joined Doncaster Rovers on loan until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0048-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, January\nOn 28 January Rovers announced the signing of winger Harry Chapman from Middlesbrough for an undisclosed fee on a 2 and half year deal, until 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0049-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, January\nOn 30 January Rovers announced the signing of young Gibraltar international Louie Annesley from Lincoln Red Imps for an undisclosed fee on a 2 and half year deal, until 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0050-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, January\nOn 31 January Rovers announced u23 goalkeeper Oliver Byrne had joined Stevenage permanently, It was also announced that U23 pair Willem Tomlinson and Okera Simmonds had left the club by mutual consent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0051-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, February\nOn 1 February Rovers announced that u23 defender Tyler Magloire had signed a new 3 and half year contract, until 2022. It was also announced that Okera Simmonds had joined Accrington Stanley following his release.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0052-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, February\nOn 4 February it was announced Willem Tomlinson had joined Mansfield Town following his release.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0053-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, February\nOn 8 February Rovers announced that u23 goalkeeper Andy Fisher had joined FC United on a months loan. Also announced u23 midfielder Lewis Hardcastle had joined Barrow on a months loan. Rovers hosted an Hall of Fame event with the following players been introduced into it Ronnie Clayton, Bob Crompton, Bryan Douglas, Derek Fazackerley, Simon Garner, Alan Shearer & Brad Friedel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0054-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, February\nOn 9 February Rovers announced that u23 defender Matthew Platt had joined Southport on a months loan./", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0055-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, February\nOn 15 February Rovers announced that u23 defender Sam Barnes had signed his 1st professional contract putting pen to paper on a 2 and half year contract, until 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0056-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, February\nOn 20 February Rovers announced that u23 Canadian midfielder Ben Paton had signed a new 1 and half year contract, until 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0057-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, March\nOn 1 March Rovers announced that u23 midfielder John Buckley had signed a new 3 and half year contract, until 2022.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0058-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, March\nOn 5 March Rovers announced Indian forward Aniket Jadhav will join the academy for a 3-month training spell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0059-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, March\nOn 8 March Rovers announced that u23 goalkeeper Andy Fisher had extended his loan at FC United for a further month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0060-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, March\nOn 13 March Rovers announced that u23 pair Lewis Hardcastle & Matthew Platt had their loan spells extended, midfielder Hardcastle will remain at Barrow until 7 April & defender Platt will remain at Southport until 29 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0061-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, March\nOn 16 March Rovers announced that u23 defender Lewis Thompson had signed a new deal until 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0062-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, March\nOn 21 March Rovers announced that u23 forward Daniel Butterworth had signed a new 3 and half year contract, until 2022.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0063-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, March\nOn 27 March Rovers announced that u23 midfielder Stefan Mols had signed a new 2-year contract, until 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0064-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, March\nOn 28 March Rovers announced that u23 midfielder Lewis Hardcastle had joined Barrow permanently.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0065-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, April\nOn 2 April Rovers announced that u23 defender Charley Doyle had signed a new 12-month contract, until 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0066-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, April\nOn 4 April Rovers announced that u23 midfielder Joe Rankin-Costello had signed a new 2-year contract, until 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0067-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, April\nOn 23 April Rovers announced that defender Ryan Nyambe had signed a new contract until 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0068-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, April\nOn 31 April Rovers held their end of season awards the winners follow:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0069-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, April\nYoung Player \u2013 Lewis Travis,Players\u2019 Player \u2013 Danny Graham,Best Newcomer \u2013 Harrison Reed,Unsung Hero \u2013 Damien Johnson,Man of the Match (Seasonal) \u2013 Darragh Lenihan,Goal of the Season \u2013 Joe Rothwell,Player of the Year \u2013 Danny Graham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0070-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Winter activity, May\nOn 11 May Rovers announced that defender Matthew Platt had signed a new 1-year contract until 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0071-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Pre-season friendlies\nBlackburn Rovers announced six pre-season friendlies against Scottish Premiership side Hibernian, EFL League Two's Port Vale, Champions League finalists Liverpool, EFL League Two's Lincoln City, Premier League side Everton and newly promoted EFL League One side Accrington Stanley,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0072-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Championship season, Matchday\nOn 21 June 2018, the Championship fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0073-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, EFL Cup\nRovers entered the EFL Cup in the first round and were drawn away to Carlisle United. The second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August. The third round draw was made on 30 August 2018 by David Seaman and Joleon Lescott.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284789-0074-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, FA Cup\nThe third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284790-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackpool F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Blackpool F.C. 's 110th season in the Football League, and their second consecutive season in the third tier of the Football League. They finished the season in tenth place. Along with competing in League One, the club also participated in the FA Cup (eliminated in the third round), League Cup (eliminated in the fourth round) and Football League Trophy (eliminated at the group stage).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284790-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackpool F.C. season\nThe season covered the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284790-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackpool F.C. season\nGary Bowyer, manager of the club since 2016, resigned on 6 August. He was succeeded by Terry McPhillips on 10 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284790-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackpool F.C. season, Competitions, Friendlies\nBlackpool announced pre-season friendlies with Nantwich Town, Port Vale, AFC Fylde and Crewe Alexandra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284790-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackpool F.C. season, Competitions, EFL League One, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League Two fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284790-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackpool F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October. The draw for the second round was made live on BBC and BT by Mark Schwarzer and Glenn Murray on 12 November. The third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284790-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackpool F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam. The second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August. The third round draw was made on 30 August 2018 by David Seaman and Joleon Lescott. The fourth round draw was made live on Quest by Rachel Yankey and Rachel Riley on 29 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284790-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Blackpool F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284791-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bobsleigh World Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Bobsleigh World Cup was a multi-race series over a season for bobsleigh. The season started on 8 December 2018 in Sigulda, Latvia and finished on 24 February 2019 in Calgary, Canada. The World Cup was organised by the IBSF (formerly the FIBT) who also run World Cups and Championships in skeleton. The season was sponsored by BMW.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284792-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boise State Broncos men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Boise State Broncos men's basketball team represented Boise State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Broncos, led by ninth-year head coach Leon Rice, played their home games at Taco Bell Arena as a member of the Mountain West Conference. They finished the season 13\u201320, 7\u201311 in Mountain West play to finish in a three-way tie for seventh place. They defeated Colorado State in the first round of the Mountain West Tournament to advance to the quarterfinals where they lost to Nevada. This was the first time in Boise State history that they lost 20 games in a season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284792-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boise State Broncos men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Broncos finished the season 23\u20139, 13\u20135 in Mountain West play to finish in second place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Mountain West Tournament to Utah State. They received an invitation to the National Invitation Tournament where they lost in the First Round to Washington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284792-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boise State Broncos men's basketball team, Schedule and results\n* Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses. All times are in Mountain Time", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 71], "content_span": [72, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284793-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boise State Broncos women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Boise State Broncos women's basketball team represents Boise State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Broncos, led by 14th-year head coach Gordy Presnell, play their home games at Taco Bell Arena as a member of the Mountain West Conference. They finished the season 28\u20135, 14\u20134 in Mountain West play to win the Mountain West regular season title. Boise State won the 2019 Air Force Reserve Mountain West Women\u2019s Basketball Championship, which earned them the automatic bid to the NCAA tournament. They lost in the first round to Oregon State in overtime. With 28 wins, they finish with the most wins in the regular season in school history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284794-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bologna F.C. 1909 season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Bologna Football Club 1909's fourth season back in Serie A, after the club's relegation at the end of the 2013\u201314 season. Having finished 15th the previous season, the club competed in Serie A, finishing 10th, and in the Coppa Italia, where they were eliminated in the round of 16 by Juventus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284794-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bologna F.C. 1909 season\nRoberto Donadoni, who coached the club during the 2015\u201316, 2016\u201317, and 2017\u201318 seasons, departed Bologna on 24 May 2018; he was replaced by former Juventus and Milan player and Italy international Filippo Inzaghi on 13 June. After a long period spent in 18th place and thus within the relegation zone, Inzaghi was in turn replaced by Sini\u0161a Mihajlovi\u0107, on 28 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284795-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bolton Wanderers F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Bolton Wanderers's second season back in the second tier of English football following their immediate return from EFL League One. The season covered the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284795-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bolton Wanderers F.C. season, Pre-season\nFriendlies against St Mirren, Atherton Collieries, FC Halifax Town, Morecambe, Girona, Guiseley and Peterborough United were confirmed. The game against St Mirren was cancelled a day before when the players went on strike due to unpaid wages. Bolton's game against Morecambe was changed from an away game to a behind closed doors match at Bolton's Lostock training ground due to Globe Arena not yet being ready to host football matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284795-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bolton Wanderers F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Championship, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the Championship fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced. Bolton began their league campaign at newly relegated West Bromwich Albion on August 4 and finished it away at Nottingham Forest on May 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 77], "content_span": [78, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284795-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bolton Wanderers F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018. The fourth round draw was made live on BBC by Robbie Keane and Carl Ikeme from Wolverhampton on 7 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284795-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bolton Wanderers F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284796-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bonaire League\nThe 2018\u201319 Bonaire League, or known locally as the 2018\u201319 Kampionato, was the 49th season of the Bonaire League, the top division football competition in Bonaire. The season began on 2 November 2018 and ended on 17 May 2019. Real Rincon won their 11th title and were automatically qualified for the 2020 Caribbean Club Shield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284797-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Borussia Dortmund season\nThe 2018\u201319 Borussia Dortmund season was the 110th season in the football club's history and 43rd consecutive and 52nd overall season in the top flight of German football, the Bundesliga, having been promoted from the 2. Bundesliga Nord in 1976.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284797-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Borussia Dortmund season\nIn addition to the domestic league, Borussia Dortmund also participated in the season's editions of the domestic cup, the DFB-Pokal, and the first-tier continental cup, the UEFA Champions League. This was the 45th season for Dortmund in the Signal Iduna Park, located in Dortmund, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. The season covered a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284797-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Borussia Dortmund 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284798-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Borussia M\u00f6nchengladbach season\nThe 2018\u201319 Borussia M\u00f6nchengladbach season was the 119th season in the football club's history and 11th consecutive and 51st overall season in the top flight of German football, the Bundesliga, having been promoted from the 2. Bundesliga in 2008. In addition to the domestic league, Borussia M\u00f6nchengladbach also participated in this season's edition of the domestic cup, the DFB-Pokal. This was the 15th season for M\u00f6nchengladbach in the Borussia-Park, located in M\u00f6nchengladbach, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. The season covered a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284798-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Borussia M\u00f6nchengladbach 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284798-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Borussia M\u00f6nchengladbach season, Players, Loans\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-00284799-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup was the 23rd edition of Bosnia and Herzegovina's annual football cup, and the eighteenth season of the unified competition. The winner qualified to the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284799-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup\nFK \u017deljezni\u010dar Sarajevo were the defending champions, but they got eliminated by NK \u0160iroki Brijeg in the first round. FK Sarajevo won the cup after beating \u0160iroki Brijeg in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284799-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup, Participating teams\nThe following teams took part in the 2018\u201319 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284799-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup, Participating teams\nRoman number in brackets denote the level of respective league in Bosnian football league system", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284799-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup, Calendar\n1 Draw is held to determine what team will host leg 1 and what team will host leg 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284799-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup, Quarter final\nFirst legs were played on 27 February, return legs were played on 13 March", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284799-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup, Quarter final\n1Sloga asked the Football Association of Bosnia and Herzegovina for their match against Klis to be prolonged because of their preparations in Antalya, and according to the official announcement from the association, the proposal was approved. The match between these two teams was played on 5 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284799-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup, Semi final\nFirst legs were played on 3 April, return legs were played on 10 April", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284799-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup, Final\nFirst leg was played on May 8, return leg was played on May 15", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284800-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston Bruins season\nThe 2018\u201319 Boston Bruins season was the 95th season for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on November 1, 1924. The Bruins clinched a playoff spot on March 23, 2019, after a 7\u20133 win over the Florida Panthers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284800-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston Bruins season\nOn May 16, 2019, the Bruins advanced to the 2019 Stanley Cup Finals with a 4\u20130 victory over the Carolina Hurricanes, marking their first Stanley Cup Finals appearance since 2013. They would lose in seven games to the St. Louis Blues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284800-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston Bruins season, Schedule and results, Preseason\nNotes: Game was played at Shenzhen Universiade Sports Centre in Shenzhen, China. Game was played at Cadillac Arena in Beijing, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284800-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston Bruins season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was released on June 21, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 66], "content_span": [67, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284800-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston Bruins 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-00284800-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston Bruins season, Schedule and results, Playoffs\nThe Bruins faced the Toronto Maple Leafs in the First Round of the playoffs, and defeated them in seven games. They played against each other in the 2018 Stanley Cup playoffs, where the Bruins defeated the Maple Leafs in the First Round in seven games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284800-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston Bruins season, Schedule and results, Playoffs\nThe Bruins faced the Columbus Blue Jackets in the Second Round of the playoffs, defeating them in six games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284800-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston Bruins season, Schedule and results, Playoffs\nThe Bruins faced the Carolina Hurricanes in the Conference Finals, and swept the series in four games. They played against each other in the 2009 Stanley Cup playoffs, where the Bruins lost to the Hurricanes in the Conference Semifinals in seven games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284800-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston Bruins season, Schedule and results, Playoffs\nThe Bruins faced the St. Louis Blues in the Stanley Cup Finals, where the Bruins lost to the Blues in seven games. This marked the first time since 1990 that they had home ice advantage in the final round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284800-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston Bruins season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Bruins. Stats reflect time with the Bruins only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Bruins only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284800-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston Bruins season, Transactions\nThe Bruins have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284800-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston Bruins season, Draft picks\nBelow are the Boston Bruins' selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284801-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston Celtics season\nThe 2018\u201319 Boston Celtics season was the 73rd season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284801-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston Celtics season\nIn the playoffs, the Celtics swept the Indiana Pacers in the First Round. It was the first time since 2011 that the Celtics swept their opponent in the First Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284801-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston Celtics season\nIn the Semi-finals, the Celtics lost to the Milwaukee Bucks in five games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284801-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston Celtics season\nJust days before the second round matchup with the Bucks, Celtics legend John Havlicek, died on Thursday, April 25 at the age of 79. The team wore a black band with a white #17 (in honor of Havilcek) for Game 1 of the semi-final series with the Bucks which the Celtics won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284801-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston Celtics season, Player statistics, Regular season\nAfter all games. \u2021Waived during the season\u2020Traded during the season\u2260Acquired during the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284802-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston College Eagles men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Boston College Eagles men's basketball team represented Boston College during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Eagles, led by fifth-year head coach Jim Christian, played their home games at the Conte Forum as members of the Atlantic Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284802-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston College Eagles men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Eagles finished the 2017\u201318 season finished the season 19\u201316, 7\u201311 in ACC play to finish in 12th place. In the ACC Tournament, they defeated Georgia Tech and NC State before losing in the quarterfinals to Clemson. They received an invitation to the National Invitation Tournament where they lost in the First Round to Western Kentucky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284803-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston College Eagles men's ice hockey season\nThe 2018\u201319 Boston College Eagles men's ice hockey team represented Boston College in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season. The team was coached by Jerry York, '67, his twenty-fifth season behind the bench at Boston College. The Eagles played their home games at Kelley Rink on the campus of Boston College, competing in Hockey East.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284803-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston College Eagles men's ice hockey season\nThe Eagles competed in just one mid-season tournament during the 2018\u201319 season, forgoing the traditional holiday break tournament. The Eagles played in the 67th Annual Beanpot Tournament at the TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts, on February 4 and 11. Boston College defeated Harvard in the opening round by a score of 2\u20131, but fell to the defending champion Northeastern Huskies in the championship game, 4\u20132. The Eagles failed to secure the Beanpot title, but ended their two-season streak of finishing fourth in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284803-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston College Eagles men's ice hockey season\nThe Eagles finished the season 14\u201322\u20133, and 10-11-3 in conference play, seventh in Hockey East; their lowest finish since placing 6th in 2008-09. They advanced to the title game of the Hockey East tournament, however, they fell to the Northeastern Huskies by a score of 3\u20132. The Eagles failed to secure a bid to the NCAA Tournament, their third consecutive season missing the national tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284803-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston College Eagles men's ice hockey season, Previous season recap\nThe Eagles entered the 2018\u201319 season following a second consecutive semi-disappointing year. While earning the Hockey East regular season title with their strong 20\u201314\u20133 record, they missed out on participating in the NCAA Tournament for the second year in a row; the first time missing consecutive years since 1998. Additionally, they failed to secure any mid-season tournament title, placing fourth in both the inaugural Ice Vegas Invitational Tournament and in the Beanpot tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 76], "content_span": [77, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284803-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston College Eagles men's ice hockey season, Departures\nThree Eagles departed from the program from the 2017\u201318 roster:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 65], "content_span": [66, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284803-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston College Eagles men's ice hockey season, Departures\nAdditionally, long-time Associate Head Coach Greg Brown left the program to become the Assistant Coach for the New York Rangers of the NHL. Boston College alum and formerly assistant coach at Connecticut, Brendan Buckley was hired to fill the position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 65], "content_span": [66, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284803-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston College Eagles men's ice hockey season, Recruiting\nBoston College added five freshmen for the 2018\u201319 season: four forwards, and one defensemen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 65], "content_span": [66, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284804-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston College Eagles women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Boston College Eagles women's basketball team represents Boston College during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Eagles, were led by first year head coach Joanna Bernabei-McNamee. They play their home games at the Conte Forum and were members of the Atlantic Coast Conference. They finished the season 14\u201316, 3\u201313 in ACC play in thirteenth place. They lost in the first round of the ACC Women's Tournament to Virginia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284804-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston College Eagles women's basketball team, Previous season\nThey finished the season 7\u201323, 2\u201314 in ACC play to finish in fourteenth place. They lost in the first round of the ACC Women's Tournament to North Carolina. On March 1 after the 2017\u201318 season, head coach Erik Johnson resigned. He finished at Boston College with a six-year record of 68\u2013115. On April 10, Boston College hired former Albany head coach Joanna Bernabei-McNamee to be the next head coach of the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284805-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston University Terriers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Boston University Terriers men's basketball team represented Boston University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Terriers, led by eighth-year head coach Joe Jones, played their home games at Case Gym as members of the Patriot League. They finished the season 15\u201318, 7\u201311 in Patriot League play to finish in a three-way tie for seventh place. As the No. 8 seed in the Patriot League Tournament, they defeated Loyola (MD) in the first round before losing to top-seeded Colgate in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284805-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston University Terriers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Terriers finished the 2017\u201318 season 15\u201316, 10\u20138 in Patriot League play to finish in fifth place. In the Patriot League Tournament, they defeated Lehigh in the quarterfinals before losing to Bucknell in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 73], "content_span": [74, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284806-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Boston University Terriers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Boston University Terriers women's basketball team represented Boston University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Terries were led by first year head coach Marisa Moseley, played their home games at Case Gym and were members of the Patriot League. They finished the season 15\u201314, 11\u20137 in Patriot League play to finish in fourth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Patriot League Women's Tournament to Holy Cross.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284807-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Botola\nThe 2018\u201319 Botola, also known as Botola Maroc Telecom for sponsorship reasons, is the 62nd season of the Premier League and the 8th under its new format of Moroccan Pro League, the top Moroccan professional league for association football clubs, since its establishment in 1956. The season started on 25 August 2018 and ended on 15 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284807-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Botola\nIttihad Tanger came into the season as defending champions of the 2017\u201318 season. Mouloudia Oujda and Youssoufia Berrechid entered as the two promoted teams from the 2017\u201318 Botola 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284808-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Botola 2\nThe 2018-2019 Botola 2 is the 57th season of Botola 2, the second division of the Moroccan football league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284809-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Botswana First Division North\nThe 2018\u201319 Botswana First Division North was the 54th season of the Botswana First Division North football league since its inception in 1966. It was played from October to May instead of the usual August to May due to delays in the conclusion of a television broadcasting deal. TAFIC were crowned champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284810-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Botswana First Division South\nThe 2018-19 Botswana First Division South was the 54th season of the Botswana First Division South since its inception in 1966. It was played from August to May. Gilport Lions were crowned champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284811-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Botswana Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Botswana Premier League is the 54th season of the Botswana Premier League, the top-tier football league in Botswana, since its establishment in 1966. The season started on 18 August 2018. The league drew an average attendance of 1,300 per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284811-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Botswana Premier League, Teams, Promotion and Relegation\nTwo teams were relegated after one year in the Botswana Premier League, TAFIC F.C. and Uniao Flamengo Santos. They were joined by last place finishers Gilport Lions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284811-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Botswana Premier League, Teams, Promotion and Relegation\nThey were replaced by First Division North winners BR Highlanders, First Division South winners Notwane F.C., and promotion playoff winners Prisons XI.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284811-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Botswana Premier League, Summary\nTownship Rollers won their fourth consecutive Botswana Premier League after a 0\u20130 draw with Police XI on 27 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284811-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Botswana Premier League, Summary\nThis season also featured the relegation of four time champions Mochudi Centre Chiefs, who only picked up five points from nine matches late in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284812-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bowling Green Falcons men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Bowling Green Falcons men's basketball team represented Bowling Green State University during the 2017\u201318 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Falcons were led by fourth-year head coach Michael Huger, and played their home games at the Stroh Center as members of the East Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 22\u201312 overall, 12\u20136 in MAC play to finish second place in the East Division. As the No. 3 seed in the MAC Tournament, they advanced to the championship game, where they were defeated by Buffalo. They declined any offer to play in a postseason tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284812-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bowling Green Falcons men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Falcons finished the 2017\u201318 season 16\u201316, 7\u201311 in MAC play to finish in a tie for fourth place. As the No. 9 seed in the MAC Tournament, they lost in the first round to Central Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284812-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bowling Green Falcons men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nThe 2018-19 schedule was released on August 1, 2018. The Falcons will participate in the Legends Classic, competing in the Detroit Subregional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 73], "content_span": [74, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284813-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bowling Green Falcons women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Bowling Green Falcons women's basketball team represents Bowling Green State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Falcons, led by first year head coach Robyn Fralick, play their home games at the Stroh Center as members of the East Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 9\u201321, 2\u201316 in MAC play to finish in last place in the East Division. They lost in the first round of the MAC Women's Tournament to Kent State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284814-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bradford City A.F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Bradford City's 116th season in their history, their 104th in the English Football League and 106th in the English football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284814-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bradford City A.F.C. season, Pre-season\nOn 18 May 2018, Bradford City announced two friendly games against Farsley Celtic and Sheffield United. Three days later, they revealed further matches with Guiseley and local derby against Bradford Park Avenue. On 23 May 2018, a further date away at York City was added to the preseason schedule followed by an away date against Harrogate Town announced on 11 June. On 22 June 2018, a further away date against Carlisle United was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284814-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bradford City A.F.C. season, Competitions, League One, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League One fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284814-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bradford City A.F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October. The draw for the second round was made live on BBC and BT by Mark Schwarzer and Glenn Murray on 12 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284814-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bradford City A.F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284814-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bradford City A.F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284815-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bradley Braves men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Bradley Braves men's basketball team represented Bradley University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Braves, led by fourth-year head coach Brian Wardle, played their home games at Carver Arena in Peoria, Illinois as members of the Missouri Valley Conference. They finished the season 20\u201315, 9\u20139 in MVC play to finish in a three-way tie for fifth place. As the No. 5 seed in the MVC Tournament, they defeated Missouri State, Loyola, and Northern Iowa to win the tournament championship. As a result, they received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament as the No. 15 seed in the East region. There they lost to No. 2-seeded Michigan State in the First Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284815-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bradley Braves men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Braves finished the 2017\u201318 season 20\u201313, 9\u20139 in MVC play to finish in fifth place. They defeated Drake in the first round of the MVC Tournament before losing to Loyola\u2013Chicago in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284816-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bradley Braves women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Bradley Braves women's basketball team represents Bradley University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Braves were led by third year head coach Andrea Gorski. The Braves were members of the Missouri Valley Conference and play their home games at Renaissance Coliseum. They finished the season 20\u201310, 10\u20138 in MVC play to finish in fifth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Missouri Valley Women's Tournament to Illinois State. Despite having 20 wins and a better record, they were not invited to a postseason tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284817-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brentford F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Brentford's 129th year in existence and fifth consecutive season in the Championship. Along with competing in the Championship, the club also participated in the FA Cup and the EFL Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284817-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brentford F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019 and was their penultimate at Griffin Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284818-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brescia Calcio season\nThe 2018-19 season is Brescia Calcio's 109th in existence and eighth consecutive season in Serie B, the second tier of Italian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284818-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brescia Calcio season\nDavid Suazo was appointed manager of the club in June 2018 . He was let go on September 18 after three league matches. He was replaced by Eugenio Corini.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284818-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brescia Calcio season\nOn May 1, 2019, Brescia were promoted to Serie A for the 2019\u201320 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284818-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brescia Calcio season, Players, Squad information\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 2 February 2019. Appearances include league matches only. 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, 57], "content_span": [58, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284819-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brighton & Hove Albion F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Brighton & Hove Albion's 117th year in existence and second consecutive season in the Premier League. Along with competing in the Premier League, the club also participated in the FA Cup and EFL Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284819-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brighton & Hove Albion F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284819-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brighton & Hove Albion F.C. season\nBrighton beat Manchester United at home for the second season running on 19 August 2018. The game finished 3\u20132 to the Albion. On 4 May 2019 Brighton's Premier League status was confirmed for a third season after bitter rivals Crystal Palace beat Cardiff 3\u20132 in Wales. This confirmation came exactly a year after The Seagulls secured their safety in the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284819-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brighton & Hove Albion F.C. season\nIn the FA Cup Brighton made the semi final where they lost to Manchester City 1\u20130 at Wembley. In the EFL Cup Brighton lost 1\u20130 to Southampton at home in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284819-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brighton & Hove Albion F.C. season\nOn 10 May 2019 it was announced that captain, Bruno would be retiring from football. In his last game Brighton lost 4\u20131 to Manchester City. As a result City defended their Premier League title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284819-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brighton & Hove Albion F.C. season\nBrighton sacked manager Chris Hughton on 13 May, one day after the final game of the season, due to a poor end of season run of three wins in 23 games meaning Brighton narrowly secured survival by two points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284819-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brighton & Hove Albion F.C. season\nOn 20 May Brighton appointed Graham Potter as the new manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284819-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brighton & Hove Albion 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, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284819-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brighton & Hove Albion 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, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284819-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brighton & Hove Albion F.C. season, Pre-season\nBrighton & Hove Albion announced five pre-season friendlies against St. Gallen, Wimbledon, Charlton Athletic, Birmingham City, and FC Nantes\u2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284819-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brighton & Hove Albion F.C. season, Pre-season\n\u2020 The opponents for this match were supposed to be Sporting Clube de Portugal but were replaced by FC Nantes due to Sporting being unable to fulfil the fixture.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284819-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brighton & Hove Albion F.C. season, Competitions, Premier League, Matches\nOn 14 June 2018, the Premier League fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 81], "content_span": [82, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284819-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brighton & Hove Albion F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018. The fourth round draw was made live on BBC by Robbie Keane and Carl Ikeme from Wolverhampton on 7 January 2019. The fifth round draw was broadcast on 28 January 2019 live on BBC, Alex Scott and Ian Wright conducted the draw. Draw for the quarter-final was made on 18 February by Darren Fletcher & Wayne Bridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284819-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brighton & Hove Albion F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nThe second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284820-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brisbane Heat WBBL season\nThe 2018\u201319 Brisbane Heat Women's season was the fourth in the team's history. Coached by Peter McGiffin and captained by Kirby Short, the Heat finished third on the WBBL|04 ladder and qualified for the playoffs. In an \"incredible\" semi-final notable for a catch taken by Haidee Birkett on the last ball of the game, they defeated the Sydney Thunder to progress to their first championship decider appearance. In the final against the double-defending champions, the Sydney Sixers, Player of the Match Beth Mooney led an upset victory to secure Brisbane's maiden WBBL title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284820-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brisbane Heat WBBL season, Squad\nEach 2018\u201319 squad featured 15 active players, with an allowance of up to five marquee signings including a maximum of three from overseas. Under a new rule, Australian marquees were classed as players who held a national women's team contract at the time of signing on for their WBBL|04 team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284820-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brisbane Heat WBBL season, Squad\nThe table below lists the Heat players and their key stats (including runs scored, batting strike rate, wickets taken, economy rate, catches and stumpings) for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284820-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brisbane Heat WBBL season, Fixtures, Regular season\nResponding to the Sydney Thunder's first innings total of 7/171, Heat opener Beth Mooney recorded her maiden WBBL century but was then dismissed in the 17th over. With Brisbane still requiring 19 runs off the last twelve balls, Harmanpreet Kaur\u2014having already claimed two wickets, including the stumping of Mooney, for just ten runs\u2014came on to bowl her third over. The Heat, primarily through Delissa Kimmince, scored 13 runs off the over to swing the momentum once more. Laura Harris then hit the winning runs against the bowling of Nicola Carey with three wickets in hand and three balls remaining, making it Brisbane's highest successful run chase. The result helped to set up a semi-final encounter between the two teams on the following weekend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284820-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brisbane Heat WBBL season, Fixtures, Knockout phase\nThe lower-ranked Heat posted a first innings total of 7/140, recovering from 5/78 after 12 overs through an unbeaten knock of 32 from 25 by Laura Harris. After struggling through the middle overs of the run chase, a late charge by the Sydney Thunder brought the hosts back into the contest to leave a required five runs off the final delivery for victory. The last ball, sent down by spinner Jess Jonassen, was struck flat and cleanly to deep square leg by batter Nicola Carey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284820-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brisbane Heat WBBL season, Fixtures, Knockout phase\nJonassen immediately signalled disappointment as the ball set sail for beyond the boundary rope, therefore scoring six runs and clinching the match for Sydney... However, Brisbane fielder Haidee Birkett made enough ground in time to take a \"miracle\" catch just inside the field of play to knock the Thunder out of the tournament. The match, in conjunction with the other semi-final played later in the day, was hailed as a showcase of \"the irrefutable rise of women's cricket\" and \"sport with drama, skill and unpredictability \u2013 a potent recipe for success\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284820-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brisbane Heat WBBL season, Fixtures, Knockout phase\nIn front of the league's first-ever sellout crowd, the visiting Heat pulled off an upset victory to win their maiden championship and deny a Sydney Sixers three-peat. Requiring 34 runs with 36 balls remaining, Brisbane looked to be in control of the chase until the 15th over when Sydney leg spinner Dane van Niekerk struck twice\u2014including the removal of linchpin Beth Mooney for 65 through a forward-diving catch by Ellyse Perry in the outfield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284820-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brisbane Heat WBBL season, Fixtures, Knockout phase\nAlthough the Heat would continue to lose wickets, Laura Harris did enough to steady the ship, eventually hitting the winning runs with three wickets and four deliveries to spare. Player of the Final Mooney, who had been receiving on-field medical treatment for the flu and heat stroke, revealed in a post-match interview that her ongoing game delays instigated sledging from several opponents: \"It was kind of nice to know while I wasn't feeling well, I was going well enough to piss them off and they were getting frustrated at how long I was taking to face up... I've played enough cricket against (the Sixers) to know what gets under their skin and we definitely won that battle.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284821-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brisbane Roar FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 Brisbane Roar FC season was the club's 14th season participating in the A-League and in the FFA Cup for the fifth time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284821-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brisbane Roar 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284822-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brisbane Roar W-League season\nThe 2018\u201319 Brisbane Roar W-League season was the club's eleventh season in the W-League, the premier competition for women's football in Australia. The team played home games both at A.J. Kelly Park and Suncorp Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284822-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brisbane Roar W-League season, Players, Squad information\nLast updated 1 November 2018Note: 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, 65], "content_span": [66, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284822-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brisbane Roar W-League season, W-League, Results summary\nLast updated: February 2019, end of regular season. Source: Competitive Matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284823-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bristol City F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Bristol City's 121st season as a professional football club and their fourth consecutive season back in the Championship. Along with competing in the Championship, the club will also participate in the FA Cup and EFL Cup. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284823-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bristol City F.C. season, Competitions, Pre-season friendlies\nThe Robins revealed they would face Bitton, Cheltenham Town, Shrewsbury Town and Bournemouth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284823-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bristol City F.C. season, Competitions, Championship, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the EFL Championship fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284823-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bristol City F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe third round draw was made live on BBC One by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018. The fourth round draw was made live on BBC One by Robbie Keane and Carl Ikeme from Wolverhampton on 7 January 2019. The fifth round draw was broadcast on 28 January 2019 live on BBC One, Alex Scott and Ian Wright conducted the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284823-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bristol City F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284824-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bristol Rovers F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is the 136th season in Bristol Rovers' history and their 91st in the English Football League. Rovers will compete in the third tier of English football, League One as well as three cup competitions, FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284824-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bristol Rovers F.C. season, Competitions, Pre-Season Friendlies\nAs of 12 June 2018, Bristol Rovers have announced four pre-season friendlies against Eerste Divisie side FC Eindhoven, Yeovil Town and Forest Green Rovers of EFL League Two, and newly promoted Southern League side Melksham Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 71], "content_span": [72, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284824-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bristol Rovers F.C. season, Competitions, League One, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League One fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284824-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bristol Rovers F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284824-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bristol Rovers F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam. The second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284824-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bristol Rovers F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced. The draw for the second round was made live on Talksport by Leon Britton and Steve Claridge on 16 November. On 8 December, the third round draw was drawn by Alan McInally and Matt Le Tissier on Soccer Saturday. The Quarter-final draw was made conducted on Sky Sports by Don Goodman and Thomas Frank on 10 January 2019. The draw for the semi-finals took place on 25 January live on Talksport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284825-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 British Basketball League season\nThe 2018\u201319 British Basketball League season was the 32nd campaign of the British Basketball League since the league's establishment in 1987. The season featured 12 teams from across England and Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284825-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 British Basketball League season\nThe Leicester Riders were the three-time defending regular season champions, but were unable to defend that title as the London Lions achieved their first regular season title; a 99\u201380 victory at the Newcastle Eagles, on 26 April 2019, was enough for the Lions to have an unassailable lead ahead of the Riders. It was the Lions' second trophy of the season, after they defeated the Glasgow Rocks in the BBL Cup final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284825-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 British Basketball League season\nThe Lions were beaten in the playoff quarter-finals by the eighth-seeded Plymouth Raiders, who overturned a six-point deficit from the first leg into an eight-point aggregate victory. The Raiders were then beaten by the Riders in the semi-finals, before the Riders won their third consecutive playoff final with a 93\u201361 victory over the London City Royals, who in their first season in the league, had won the BBL Trophy in overtime against the Lions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284825-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 British Basketball League season, Regular season\nThe winners of the Regular season are considered as national champions. The London Lions achieved their first regular season title with a 99\u201380 victory over the Newcastle Eagles at the Eagles Community Arena on 26 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284825-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 British Basketball League season, Playoffs, Quarter-finals\nThe quarter-final matchups and tip-off times were confirmed by the league, on 28 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284825-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 British Basketball League season, British clubs in European competitions\nBritish clubs returned to European competitions eleven years after their last participation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 80], "content_span": [81, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284826-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brooklyn Nets season\nThe 2018\u201319 Brooklyn Nets season was the 43rd season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA), 52nd season overall, and its seventh season playing in the New York City borough of Brooklyn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284826-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brooklyn Nets season\nOn November 12, 2018, late in the first half of the game against the Minnesota Timberwolves, Caris LeVert suffered a subtalar dislocation of the right foot and was scheduled to return later in the season after rehabilitation, making his return on February 8, 2019. The December 16 game against the Atlanta Hawks at Barclays Center was the highest scoring game at the venue in Nets' history, while the 144 points scored by the Nets were the second-most points scored in regulation in franchise history. On March 19, the Nets came back from a 28-point deficit, which also was the biggest comeback in team history, when they defeated the Sacramento Kings 123\u2013121, and also became just the fourth team since the 1954\u201355 season to overcome a 25-point deficit in the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 805]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284826-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brooklyn Nets season\nFor the first time in his NBA career D'Angelo Russell was selected to participate in the NBA All-Star Game when he was announced as the replacement for the injured Victor Oladipo in the 2019 NBA All-Star Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284826-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brooklyn Nets season\nWith a 108\u201396 victory over the Indiana Pacers on April 7, the Nets clinched a playoff spot for the first time since the 2014\u201315 season. On April 10, in a 113\u201394 win against the Miami Heat, the Nets clinched their first winning season since 2013\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284826-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brooklyn Nets season\nIn the playoffs, the Nets faced the Philadelphia 76ers in the First Round, and were defeated in five games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284826-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brooklyn Nets season, Draft\nThe Nets entered the draft holding one first round pick and two second round picks. It became the last draft year where the effects of their Kevin Garnett and Paul Pierce trade with the Boston Celtics would take effect. The first round pick along with the second round pick (40th overall) were acquired on July 13, 2017, in a trade with the Toronto Raptors that sent DeMarre Carroll to the Nets in exchange for Justin Hamilton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284826-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brooklyn Nets season, Draft\nThe other second round pick (45th overall) was acquired on February 5, 2018, in a trade with the Milwaukee Bucks that sent Rashad Vaughn to the Nets in exchange for Tyler Zeller. However, just days before draft night, the Nets agreed to trade the 45th pick (which became Hamidou Diallo), another second round pick, Timofey Mozgov, and cash considerations to the Charlotte Hornets in exchange for Dwight Howard, although the trade would not be official until July 6, 2018. With the Nets' sole first round pick, Brooklyn selected the Bosnian-born D\u017eanan Musa, a small forward from Croatia's Cedevita Zagreb, while with the second round pick the Nets selected the Latvian-born small forward Rodions Kurucs from Spain's FC Barcelona Lassa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284826-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brooklyn Nets season, Game log, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was released on August 10, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284827-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brown Bears men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Brown Bears men's basketball team represented Brown University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bears, led by seventh-year head coach Mike Martin, played their home games at the Pizzitola Sports Center in Providence, Rhode Island as members of the Ivy League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284827-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brown Bears men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bears finished the 2017\u201318 season 11\u201316, 4\u201310 in Ivy League play to finish in second-to-last place. They failed to qualify for the Ivy League Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284828-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brown Bears women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Brown Bears women's basketball team represented Brown University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Bears, led by fifth year head coach Sarah Behn, played their home games at the Pizzitola Sports Center and were members of the Ivy League. They finished the season at 9\u201321, 1\u201313 to finish in a last place. They failed to qualify for the Ivy League Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284829-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brunei FA Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Brunei FA Cup (also known as the DST FA Cup for sponsorship reasons) is the 12th edition of the Brunei FA Cup, the knockout football tournament in Brunei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284830-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brunei Super League\nThe 2018\u201319 Brunei Super League (also known as the DST Super League for sponsorship reasons) is the 6th season of the Brunei Super League, the top Bruneian professional league for association football clubs, since its establishment in 2012. The season began on 26 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284830-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Brunei Super League, Teams\nA total of 10 teams competed in the league. MS ABDB were the defending champions. Menglait and Jerudong were relegated from last season, and were replaced by promoted teams Setia Perdana and IKLS. Tabuan Muda, the youth team ran by the National Football Association of Brunei Darussalam, entered the Premier League instead of the Super League for this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284831-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bryant Bulldogs men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u20132019 Bryant Bulldogs men's basketball team represented Bryant University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bulldogs were led by first-year head coach Jared Grasso, and played their home games at the Chace Athletic Center in Smithfield, Rhode Island as members of the Northeast Conference. They finished the season 10\u201320 overall, 7\u201311 in NEC play to finish in eighth place. As the No. 8 seed in the NEC Tournament, they lost in the quarterfinals to Saint Francis (PA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284831-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bryant Bulldogs men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bulldogs finished the 2017\u201318 season 3\u201328, 2\u201316 in NEC play to finish in last place. They failed to qualify for the NEC Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284831-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bryant Bulldogs men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn February 12, 2018, head coach Tim O'Shea announced that he would retire at the end of the season. He finished at Bryant with a ten-year record of 96\u2013210. On April 2, the school hired Iona assistant Jared Grasso as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284832-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bucknell Bison men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Bucknell Bison men's basketball team represented Bucknell University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bison, led by fourth-year head coach Nathan Davis, played their home games at Sojka Pavilion in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania as members of the Patriot League. They finished the season 21\u201312, 13\u20135 to earn a share of the regular season Patriot League championship. As the No. 2 seed in the Patriot League Tournament, they defeated Holy Cross and Lehigh before losing to Colgate in the championship game. They were not selected for postseason play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284832-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bucknell Bison men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bison finished the 2017\u201318 season 25\u201310, 16\u20132 in Patriot League to win the Patriot League regular season championship. They defeated Loyola (MD), Boston University, and Colgate to win the Patriot League Tournament championship. As a result, they received the Patriot League's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament where they lost in the First Round to Michigan State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284833-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bucknell Bison women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Bucknell Bison women's basketball team represents Bucknell University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Bison, led by eighth year head coach Aaron Roussell, play their home games at Sojka Pavilion and are members of the Patriot League. Bucknell won the Patriot Conference Tournament championship game over American, 66\u201354 to earn an automatic trip to NCAA Women's Tournament. They lost in the first round to Florida State. They finished the season 28\u20135, 16\u20132 in Patriot League play to share the Patriot League regular season title with American. With 28 wins, they finish with the most wins in program history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284833-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bucknell Bison women's basketball team\nAt the conclusion of the season, head coach Aaron Roussell left the team to take the coaching job at the University of Richmond. The school went to the Division III ranks for its new hire, naming Scranton's Trevor Woodruff as their new coach on April 26.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284834-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Budapest Honv\u00e9d FC season\nThe 2017\u201318 season will be Budapest Honv\u00e9d FC's 108th competitive season, 14th consecutive season in the OTP Bank Liga and 109th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284834-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Budapest Honv\u00e9d 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284834-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Budapest Honv\u00e9d 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284834-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Budapest Honv\u00e9d 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284834-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Budapest Honv\u00e9d 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284834-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Budapest Honv\u00e9d 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284834-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Budapest Honv\u00e9d 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284834-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Budapest Honv\u00e9d FC season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. Players with 1 card or more included only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284835-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Buffalo Bulls men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Buffalo Bulls men's basketball team represented the State University of New York at Buffalo during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bulls, led by fourth-year head coach Nate Oats, played their home games at Alumni Arena in Amherst, New York as members of the East Division of the Mid-American Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284835-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Buffalo Bulls men's basketball team\nThe Bulls posted a school-record 32 wins, including an NCAA Tournament victory over former head coach Bobby Hurley and Arizona State. Their season, which to that point was punctuated by a 13-game winning streak and MAC conference titles (regular and post-season), ended in a 78\u201358 loss to Texas Tech in the second round. At season's end, Oats departed to become head coach at Alabama despite signing an extension with Buffalo a week earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284835-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Buffalo Bulls men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe bulls finished the 2017\u201318 season 27\u20139, 15\u20133 in MAC play to win the MAC East Division and regular season championships. They defeated Central Michigan, Kent State, and Toledo to win the MAC Tournament championship. As a result, they received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. As the No. 13 seed in the South region, they upset Arizona in the First Round before losing to Kentucky in the Second Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284835-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Buffalo Bulls men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nThe 2018-19 schedule was released on August 1, 2018. The Bulls participated in the Basketball Hall of Fame Belfast Classic in Belfast, Northern Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284836-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Buffalo Bulls women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Buffalo Bulls women's basketball team represents the University at Buffalo during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Bulls, led by seventh-year head coach Felisha Legette-Jack, play their home games at Alumni Arena as members of the East Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 24\u201310, 12\u20136 in MAC play to win MAC East Division. Buffalo won the MAC conference tournament championship game over Ohio, 77\u201361. Cierra Dillard was named the tournament's Most Valuable Player. With that win they earn an automatic trip to the NCAA Women's Tournament where they upset Rutgers in the first round before losing to Connecticut in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284836-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Buffalo Bulls women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bulls finished the 2017\u201318 season 29\u20136, 16\u20132 in MAC play to win the MAC East Division. They advanced to the championship game of the Mid-American Conference Women's Basketball Tournament where they lost to Central Michigan. They received an at-large to the NCAA Women's Tournament where they upset South Florida in the first round to win their first NCAA tournament win in school history. They then defeated Florida State in the second round to advance to the sweet sixteen for the first time in school history. They lost to South Carolina. With 29 wins, they finished with the most wins in school history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284837-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Buffalo Sabres season\nThe 2018\u201319 Buffalo Sabres season was the 49th season for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on May 22, 1970.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284837-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Buffalo Sabres season\nAfter experiencing a ten-game winning streak in November that put them atop the NHL standings, the Sabres regressed sharply the rest of the season and were officially eliminated from playoff contention on March 23, 2019, after suffering a 7\u20134 loss to the Montreal Canadiens, joining the 2016\u201317 Philadelphia Flyers as the only teams in NHL history to win 10 consecutive games and be eliminated from playoff contention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284837-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Buffalo Sabres season\nWith the Carolina Hurricanes clinching a playoff berth in the 2019 Stanley Cup playoffs, the Sabres became the team with the longest active postseason appearance drought in the NHL at eight consecutive seasons, about 1.5 years after their football counterparts, the Buffalo Bills, ended what was the longest active postseason appearance drought in the NFL at 17 consecutive seasons. On April 7, 2019, the Sabres fired Phil Housley, who became the fifth head coach to be fired since the Pegulas bought the team from Tom Golisano in February 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284837-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Buffalo Sabres season, Schedule and results, Preseason\nNotes: Game was played at Clinton Arena in Clinton, New York. Game was played at Tribute Communities Centre in Oshawa, Ontario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284837-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Buffalo Sabres season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was released on June 21, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284837-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Buffalo Sabres 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284837-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Buffalo Sabres season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Sabres. Stats reflect time with the Sabres only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Sabres only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284837-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Buffalo Sabres season, Transactions\nThe Sabres have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284837-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Buffalo Sabres season, Draft picks\nBelow are the Buffalo Sabres' selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284838-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bulgarian Basketball Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Bulgarian Basketball Cup is the 65th edition of the annual cup tournament in Bulgaria. It is managed by the Bulgarian Basketball Federation. The competition will start on December 27, 2018, with the quarterfinals and will end with the Final on March 2, 2019 in Panagyurishte.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284838-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bulgarian Basketball Cup, Format\nThis season, only clubs from National Basketball League (Bulgaria) will participate, except Cherno More, which withdrew from the competition. The quarterfinals and semifinals are played in a double-legged format, while the Final is played in single game on a neutral venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284839-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bulgarian Cup\nThe 2018\u221219 Bulgarian Cup was the 37th official edition of the Bulgarian annual football knockout tournament. The competition began on 25 September 2018 with the first round and finished with the final on 15 May 2019. Slavia Sofia were the defending champions, but lost on penalties in the round of 16 to Ludogorets Razgrad. The final was contested between Lokomotiv Plovdiv and Botev Plovdiv, thus being the first ever final to feature the Plovdiv derby. Lokomotiv won the final with the score of 1\u20130 and clinched their first ever cup title. They also qualified for the second qualifying round of the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284839-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bulgarian Cup, Participating clubs\nBeroe Stara ZagoraBotev PlovdivBotev VratsaCSKA SofiaCherno More VarnaDunav RuseEtar Veliko TarnovoLevski SofiaLokomotiv PlovdivLudogorets RazgradSeptemvri SofiaSlavia SofiaVereya Stara ZagoraVitosha Bistritsa", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284839-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bulgarian Cup, Participating clubs\nArda KardzhaliBotev GalabovoChernomorets BalchikCSKA 1948 SofiaDobrudzha DobrichKariana ErdenLitex LovechLokomotiv Gorna OryahovitsaLokomotiv SofiaMontanaNesebarPirin BlagoevgradPomorieStrumska Slava RadomirTsarsko Selo Sofia", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284839-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bulgarian Cup, Matches, Round of 32\nThe draw was conducted on 29 August 2018. The games will be played between 25 and 27 September 2018. In this stage all of the participants started their participation i.e. the 14 teams from First League, the 15 non-reserve teams from Second League and the 3 winners from the regional amateur competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284839-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bulgarian Cup, Matches, Round of 16\nThe draw was conducted on 28 September 2018. The games will be played between 30 October and 1 November 2018. In this stage the participants will be the 16 winners from the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284839-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bulgarian Cup, Matches, Quarter-finals\nThe draw was conducted on 7 November 2018. The games will be played on 2, 3 and 4 April 2019. In this stage the participants will be the 8 winners from the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284839-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bulgarian Cup, Matches, Semi-finals\nThe draw was conducted on 4 April 2019, immediately after the conclusion of the quarter-finals. The first legs will be played on 16 and 17 April, while the second legs are scheduled for 23 and 24 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284839-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bulgarian Cup, Matches, Final\nThe final took place at the Vasil Levski National Stadium in Sofia on May 15, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284840-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bulgarian Hockey League season\nThe 2018-19 Bulgarian Hockey League season was the 67th season of the Bulgarian Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Bulgaria. Four teams participated in the league, and Irbis-Skate Sofia won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284840-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bulgarian Hockey League season, Regular season\nNote: The February 26, 2019 game between Irbis-Skate Sofia and HC Slavia Sofia wasn't played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284841-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bundesliga\nThe 2018\u201319 Bundesliga was the 56th season of the Bundesliga, Germany's premier football competition. It began on 24 August 2018 and concluded on 18 May 2019. It also marked the first season without Hamburger SV, previously the only team to have played in the top tier of German football in every season since the end of World War I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284841-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bundesliga\nFollowing a trial phase in the previous season, the video assistant referee system was officially approved for use in the Bundesliga after being added to the Laws of the Game by IFAB.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284841-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bundesliga\nBayern Munich were the defending champions, and won their 28th Bundesliga title (and 29th German title) and seventh consecutive Bundesliga on the final matchday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284841-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bundesliga, Teams\nA total of 18 teams participated in the 2018\u201319 edition of the Bundesliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284841-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bundesliga, Relegation play-offs, Second leg\n2\u20132 on aggregate. Union Berlin won on away goals and are promoted to the Bundesliga, while VfB Stuttgart are relegated to the 2. Bundesliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 52], "content_span": [53, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284841-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bundesliga, Monthly awards, Goal of the year (2018)\nJonas Hector won that award for his goal against Wolfsburg. He scored it for FC K\u00f6ln.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 59], "content_span": [60, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284842-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Burkinab\u00e9 Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Burkinab\u00e9 Premier League is the 57th edition of the Burkinab\u00e9 Premier League, the top-tier football league in Burkina Faso, since its establishment in 1961. It began on 31 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284843-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Burnley F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Burnley's 137th competitive season, their third consecutive in the Premier League and their 56th in top flight English football. Along with the Premier League, the club competed in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and UEFA Europa League. This was the club's first qualification to a European competition in 51 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284843-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Burnley F.C. season\nThe season covered the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284843-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Burnley F.C. season, Match details, FA Cup\nThe third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018. The fourth round draw was made live on BBC by Robbie Keane and Carl Ikeme from Wolverhampton on 7 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284844-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Burton Albion F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Burton Albion's 69th season in their history and their second in League One, following relegation from the Championship, the previous season. Along with competing in the League One, the club also participated in the FA Cup, League Cup and League Trophy. The season ran from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284844-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Burton Albion F.C. season, Competitions, Pre-season friendlies\nBurton confirmed friendlies with Mickleover Sports, Kidderminster Harriers, Aston Villa, Solihull Moors, Alfreton Town, Cardiff City and Matlock Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284844-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Burton Albion F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284844-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Burton Albion F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam. The second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August. The third round draw was made on 30 August 2018 by David Seaman and Joleon Lescott. The fourth round draw was made live on Quest by Rachel Yankey and Rachel Riley on 29 September. The draw for the quarter-final was made live on Sky Sports by Jamie Redknapp and Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink on 31 October. The semi-final draw was made live on Sky Sports by Piers Morgan and Peter Crouch on 19 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284844-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Burton Albion F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284845-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Burundi Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Burundi Premier League is the 55th edition of the Burundi Premier League, the top-tier football league in Burundi, since its establishment in 1963. It began on 17 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284846-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bury F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019. It is Bury's 134th season since the club was founded in 1885, and their first in EFL League Two following relegation from EFL League One in 2017\u201318. Besides competing in League Two, the team participated in the FA Cup, the EFL Cup and the EFL Trophy. In the latter, they reached the semi-final stage for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284846-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bury F.C. season, Competitions, Pre-season friendlies\nAs part of Bury's pre-season schedule, they faced Rangers, Huddersfield Town, Liverpool and Everton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 61], "content_span": [62, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284846-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bury F.C. season, Competitions, League Two, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League Two fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 59], "content_span": [60, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284846-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bury F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October. The draw for the second round was made live on BBC and BT by Mark Schwarzer and Glenn Murray on 12 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284846-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bury F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284846-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Bury F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw, bar the invited U-21 teams, was announced. The draw for the second round was made live on Talksport by Leon Britton and Steve Claridge on 16 November. On 8 December, the third round draw was made by Alan McInally and Matt Le Tissier on Soccer Saturday. The quarter-final draw was made on Sky Sports by Don Goodman and Thomas Frank on 10 January 2019. The draw for the semi-finals took place on 25 January live on Talksport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284847-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Butler Bulldogs men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Butler Bulldogs men's basketball team represented Butler University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They were coached by LaVall Jordan, in his second year as head coach of his alma mater. The Bulldogs played their home games at Hinkle Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana as members of the Big East Conference. They finished the season 16\u201317, 7\u201311 in Big East play which tied them for eighth place. As the No. 9 seed in the Big East Tournament, they were defeated by Providence in the quarterfinals. The Bulldogs received an at-large bid to the NIT as the No. 5 seed in the TCU bracket. There they were defeated in the First Round by Nebraska to end the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284847-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Butler Bulldogs men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bulldogs finished the 2017\u201318 season 21\u201314, 9\u20139 in Big East play to finish a tie for sixth place. As the No. 6 seed in the Big East Tournament, they defeated Seton Hall before losing to Villanova in the semifinals. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as the No. 10 seed in the Midwest region. There they defeated Arkansas in the First Round before losing to Purdue in the Second Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284847-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Butler Bulldogs men's basketball team, Schedule and results\n* Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses. All times are in Eastern Time", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284847-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Butler Bulldogs men's basketball team, Rankings\n*AP does not release post-NCAA tournament rankings^Coaches did not release a Week 1 poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284848-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Butler Bulldogs women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Butler Bulldogs women's basketball team represents Butler University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Bulldogs, led by fifth year head coach Kurt Godlevske, play their home games at Hinkle Fieldhouse and were members of the Big East Conference. They finished the season 23\u201310, 11\u20137 in Big East play to finish in third place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big East Women's Tournament to Creighton. They received an automatic bid to the WNIT where they defeated Northeastern and Kent State in the first and second rounds before losing to Cincinnati in third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284848-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Butler Bulldogs women's basketball team, Previous Season\nThe Bulldogs finished the season 15\u201317, 6\u201312 in Big East play to finish in eighth place. As the No. 8 seed in the Big East Tournament, they defeated Providence before losing to Marquette in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284849-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C.D. Guadalajara (women) season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Guadalajara's second competitive season and second season in the Liga MX Femenil, the top flight of Mexican women's football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284849-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C.D. Guadalajara (women) season\nGuadalajara finished fourth in the Apertura tournament, qualifying for the playoffs, but were eliminated in semifinals by UANL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284849-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C.D. Guadalajara (women) season\nThe next tournament, the Clausura 2019, the team finished eight overall, failing to qualify for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284849-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C.D. Guadalajara (women) season\nFor the Clausura tournament, manager Luis Camacho was replaced by Luis Manuel D\u00edaz, who led the team for the rest of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284850-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C.D. Guadalajara season\nThe 2018\u201319 C.D. Guadalajara season is the 112nd season in the football club's history and the 94th consecutive season in the top flight of Mexican football. In addition to the Liga MX and Copa MX, the club will also compete in the FIFA Club World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284850-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C.D. Guadalajara season, Players, Squad information\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 18 January 2019.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, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284851-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C.D. Marath\u00f3n season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was C.D. Marath\u00f3n's 68th season in existence and the club's 53rd consecutive season in the top fight of Honduran football. The club fought for its 10th league title, in which they failed on both Apertura and Clausura tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284851-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C.D. Marath\u00f3n season\nFacing also the 2018 Honduran Cup and the 2019 Honduran Supercup, the club went on to win the last one, the first Supercup in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284851-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C.D. Marath\u00f3n season, Overview\nH\u00e9ctor Vargas renewed his contract on April 23, during the 2017\u201318 Clausura tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284852-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C.D. Primeiro de Agosto season\nThe 2018\u201319 season of Clube Desportivo Primeiro de Agosto is the club's 41st season in the Girabola, the Angolan Premier football League and 41st consecutive season in the top flight of Angolan football. In 2019, the club is participating in the Girabola, the Angola Cup and the 2018\u201319 CAF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284852-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C.D. Primeiro de Agosto season, FAF Penalty\nAs a result of a match-fixing investigation launched by the Angolan Football Federation (FAF) on the 17th round match between Desportivo da Huila and 1\u00ba de Agosto, each team forfeited 3 points and a $5,000 fine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 51], "content_span": [52, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284853-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C.F. Monterrey season\nThe 2018\u201319 C.F. Monterrey season was the 83rd season in the football club's history and the 68th consecutive season in the top flight of Mexican football. In addition to the Liga MX and Copa MX, the club also competed in the CONCACAF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284853-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C.F. Monterrey season, Players, Squad information\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 3 December 2018.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, 57], "content_span": [58, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284854-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CA Bordj Bou Arreridj season\nIn the 2018\u201319 season, CA Bordj Bou Arreridj competed in the Ligue 1 for the 14th season, as well as the Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284854-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CA Bordj Bou Arreridj season, Squad list\nAs of August 11, 2018. 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, 48], "content_span": [49, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284855-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CA Osasuna season\nDuring the 2018\u201319 season, CA Osasuna participated in the Segunda Divisi\u00f3n and the Copa del Rey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284855-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CA Osasuna 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284856-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League\nThe 2018\u201319 CAF Champions League (officially the 2018\u201319 Total CAF Champions League for sponsorship reasons) was the 55th edition of Africa's premier club football tournament organized by the Confederation of African Football (CAF), and the 23rd edition under the current CAF Champions League title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284856-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League\nThis season followed a transitional calendar which allows the CAF club competitions to switch from a February-to-November schedule to an August\u2013to-May schedule, as per the decision of the CAF Executive Committee on 20 July 2017. It began in December 2018, right after the 2018 season had finished, and ended in May 2019, before the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations (which had been switched from a January/February to a June/July date). The next season then started after the Africa Cup of Nations and followed the new calendar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284856-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League\nDefending champions Esp\u00e9rance de Tunis won a second consecutive title, being declared the winners after their second leg match against Wydad Casablanca in the final was abandoned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284856-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League\nAs winners of the 2018\u201319 CAF Champions League, Esp\u00e9rance de Tunis qualified for the 2019 FIFA Club World Cup in Qatar, and earned the right to play against the winners of the 2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup, Zamalek, in the 2020 CAF Super Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284856-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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. As a result, theoretically a maximum of 68 teams could enter the tournament \u2013 although this level has never been reached.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 57], "content_span": [58, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284856-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League, Association team allocation\nFor the 2018\u201319 CAF Champions League, the CAF uses the 2013\u20132017 CAF 5-Year Ranking, which calculates points for each entrant association based on their clubs\u2019 performance over those 5 years in the CAF Champions League and CAF Confederation Cup. The criteria for points are the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 57], "content_span": [58, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284856-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League, Association team allocation\nThe points are multiplied by a coefficient according to the year as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 57], "content_span": [58, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284856-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League, Teams\nThe following 57 teams from 46 associations entered the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284856-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League, Teams\nAssociations are shown according to their 2013\u20132017 CAF 5-Year Ranking \u2013 those with a ranking score have their rank and score indicated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284856-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League, Schedule\nThe schedule of the competition was as follows (matches scheduled in midweek in italics). Effective from the Champions League group stage, weekend matches were played on Fridays and Saturdays while midweek matches were played on Tuesdays, with some exceptions. Kick-off times were also fixed at 13:00 (Saturdays and Tuesdays only), 16:00 and 19:00 GMT.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284856-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League, Qualifying rounds\nThe draw for the preliminary round and first round was held on 3 November 2018 in Rabat, Morocco, and was officially announced by the CAF on 9 November due to a special situation with the transitional calendar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284856-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League, Qualifying rounds\nIn the qualifying rounds, each tie was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If the aggregate score was tied after the second leg, the away goals rule would be applied, and if still tied, extra time would not be played, and the penalty shoot-out would be used to determine the winner (Regulations III. 13 & 14).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284856-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League, Qualifying rounds, First round\nThe 15 winners of the first round advanced to the group stage to join Esp\u00e9rance de Tunis, who received a bye to the group stage as the title holders, while the 15 losers of the first round entered the Confederation Cup play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284856-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League, Group stage\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 28 December 2018, 19:00 CAT (UTC+2), at the Nile Ritz-Carlton in Cairo, Egypt. The 16 teams, including the title holders, Esp\u00e9rance de Tunis, and the 15 winners of the first round of qualifying, were drawn into four groups of four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284856-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League, Group stage\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 quarter-finals of the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284856-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League, Group stage\nThe teams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, tiebreakers were applied in the following order (Regulations III. 20 & 21):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284856-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League, Knockout stage\nEach tie in the knockout phase 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. If the aggregate score was level, the away goals rule was applied, i.e. the team that scored more goals away from home over the two legs advanced. If away goals were also equal, then extra time was not played and the winners were decided by a penalty shoot-out (Regulations III. 26 & 27).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284856-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League, Knockout stage, Bracket\nThe bracket was decided after the draw for the knockout stage (quarter-finals and semi-finals), which was held on 20 March 2019, 20:00 CAT (UTC+2), at the Marriot Hotel in Cairo, Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284856-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League, Knockout stage, Quarter-finals\nIn the quarter-finals, the winners of one group played the runners-up of another group (teams from same group could not play each other), with the group winners hosting the second leg, and the matchups decided by draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284856-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League, Knockout stage, Semi-finals\nIn the semi-finals, the four quarter-final winners played in two ties, with the matchups and order of legs decided by draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 57], "content_span": [58, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284856-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League, Knockout stage, Final\nIn the final, the two semi-final winners play each other, with the order of legs determined by the semi-final draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284856-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League, Knockout stage, Final\nEsp\u00e9rance de Tunis were declared champions after second leg was abandoned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284857-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League group stage\nThe 2018\u201319 CAF Champions League group stage were played from 11 January to 16 March 2019. A total of 16 teams competed in the group stage to decide the eight places in the knockout stage of the 2018\u201319 CAF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284857-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League group stage, Draw\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 28 December 2018, 19:00 CAT (UTC+2), at the Nile Ritz-Carlton in Cairo, Egypt. The 16 teams, including the title holders, Esp\u00e9rance de Tunis, and the 15 winners of the first round of qualifying, were drawn into four groups of four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 46], "content_span": [47, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284857-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League group stage, Draw\nThe teams were seeded by their performances in the CAF competitions for the previous five seasons (CAF 5-Year Ranking points shown in parentheses). Each group contained one team from each of Pot 1, Pot 2, Pot 3, and Pot 4, and each team was drawn into one of the positions in their group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 46], "content_span": [47, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284857-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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 quarter-finals of the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284857-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League group stage, Format, Tiebreakers\nThe teams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, tiebreakers were applied in the following order (Regulations III. 20 & 21):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284857-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League group stage, Schedule\nThe schedule of each matchday was as follows (matches scheduled in midweek in italics). Effective from the Champions League group stage, weekend matches were played on Fridays and Saturdays while midweek matches were played on Tuesdays, with some exceptions. Kick-off times were also fixed at 13:00 (Saturdays and Tuesdays only), 16:00 and 19:00 GMT.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284858-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League knockout stage\nThe 2018\u201319 CAF Champions League knockout stage were played from 6 April to 31 May 2019. A total of eight teams competed in the knockout stage to decide the champions of the 2018\u201319 CAF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284858-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League knockout stage, Qualified teams\nThe winners and runners-up of each of the four groups in the group stage advanced to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284858-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League knockout stage, Format\nEach tie in the knockout phase 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. If the aggregate score was level, the away goals rule was applied, i.e. the team that scored more goals away from home over the two legs advanced. If away goals were also equal, then extra time was not played and the winners were decided by a penalty shoot-out (Regulations III. 26 & 27).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284858-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League knockout stage, Schedule\nThe schedule of each round was as follows. Effective from the Champions League group stage, weekend matches were played on Fridays and Saturdays while midweek matches were played on Tuesdays, with some exceptions. Kick-off times were also fixed at 13:00 (Saturdays and Tuesdays only), 16:00 and 19:00 GMT.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284858-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League knockout stage, Bracket\nThe bracket of the knockout stage was determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284858-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League knockout stage, Bracket\nThe bracket was decided after the draw for the knockout stage (quarter-finals and semi-finals), which was held on 20 March 2019, 20:00 CAT (UTC+2), at the Marriot Hotel in Cairo, Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284858-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League knockout stage, Quarter-finals\nIn the quarter-finals, the winners of one group played the runners-up of another group (teams from same group could not play each other), with the group winners hosting the second leg, and the matchups decided by draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 59], "content_span": [60, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284858-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League knockout stage, Semi-finals\nIn the semi-finals, the four quarter-final winners played in two ties, with the matchups and order of legs decided by draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284858-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League knockout stage, Final\nIn the final, the two semi-final winners play each other, with the order of legs determined by the semi-final draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284858-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League knockout stage, Final\nEsp\u00e9rance de Tunis were declared champions after second leg was abandoned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284859-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds\nThe 2018\u201319 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds were played from 27 November to 23 December 2018. A total of 56 teams competed in the qualifying rounds to decide 15 of the 16 places in the group stage of the 2018\u201319 CAF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284859-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Draw\nThe draw for the preliminary round and first round was held on 3 November 2018 in Rabat, Morocco, and was officially announced by the CAF on 9 November due to a special situation with the transitional calendar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 52], "content_span": [53, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284859-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Draw\nThe entry round of the 56 teams entered into the draw was determined by their performances in the CAF competitions for the previous five seasons (CAF 5-Year Ranking points shown in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 52], "content_span": [53, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284859-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Format\nIn the qualifying rounds, each tie was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If the aggregate score was tied after the second leg, the away goals rule would be applied, and if still tied, extra time would not be played, and the penalty shoot-out would be used to determine the winner (Regulations III. 13 & 14).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 54], "content_span": [55, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284859-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Schedule\nThe schedule of each round was as follows (matches scheduled in midweek in italics).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 56], "content_span": [57, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284859-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Bracket\nThe bracket of the draw was announced by the CAF on 9 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 55], "content_span": [56, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284859-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Bracket\nThe 15 winners of the first round advanced to the group stage to join Esp\u00e9rance de Tunis, who received a bye to the group stage as the title holders, while the 15 losers of the first round entered the Confederation Cup play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 55], "content_span": [56, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284859-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nThe preliminary round included the 54 teams that did not receive byes to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 65], "content_span": [66, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284859-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, First round\nThe first round included 30 teams: the 4 teams that received byes to this round, and the 26 winners of the preliminary round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 59], "content_span": [60, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284860-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup (officially the 2018\u201319 Total CAF Confederation Cup for sponsorship reasons) was the 16th edition of Africa's secondary club football tournament organized by the Confederation of African Football (CAF), under the current CAF Confederation Cup title after the merger of CAF Cup and African Cup Winners' Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284860-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup\nThis season follows a transitional calendar which allows the CAF club competitions to switch from a February-to-November schedule to an August\u2013to-May schedule, as per the decision of the CAF Executive Committee on 20 July 2017. It started in December 2018, right after the 2018 season has finished, and concluded in May 2019, before the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations (which has been switched from January/February to June/July).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284860-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup\nZamalek won the title for the first time, defeating RS Berkane in the final 5\u20133 on penalties after being tied 1\u20131 on aggregate, and earned the right to play against the winners of the 2018\u201319 CAF Champions League in the 2020 CAF Super Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284860-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup\nRaja Casablanca were the defending champions, but were eliminated in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284860-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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. As a result, theoretically a maximum of 68 teams could enter the tournament (plus 16 teams eliminated from the CAF Champions League which enter the play-off round) \u2013 although this level has never been reached.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284860-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup, Association team allocation\nFor the 2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup, the CAF uses the 2013\u20132017 CAF 5-Year Ranking, which calculates points for each entrant association based on their clubs\u2019 performance over those 5 years in the CAF Champions League and CAF Confederation Cup. The criteria for points are the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284860-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup, Association team allocation\nThe points are multiplied by a coefficient according to the year as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284860-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup, Teams\nThe following 55 teams from 43 associations entered the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284860-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup, Teams\nAssociations are shown according to their 2013\u20132017 CAF 5-Year Ranking \u2013 those with a ranking score have their rank and score indicated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284860-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup, Teams\nA further 15 teams (one fewer than usual) eliminated from the 2018\u201319 CAF Champions League enter the play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284860-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup, Schedule\nThe schedule of the competition is as follows (matches scheduled in midweek in italics). Effective from the Confederation Cup group stage, weekend matches are played on Sundays while midweek matches are played on Wednesdays, with some exceptions. Kick-off times are also fixed at 13:00, 16:00 and 19:00 GMT.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284860-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup, Qualifying rounds\nThe draw for the preliminary round and first round was held on 3 November 2018 in Rabat, Morocco, and was officially announced by the CAF on 9 November due to a special situation with the transitional calendar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284860-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup, Qualifying rounds\nIn the qualifying rounds, each tie was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If the aggregate score was tied after the second leg, the away goals rule would be applied, and if still tied, extra time would not be played, and the penalty shoot-out would be used to determine the winner (Regulations III. 13 & 14).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284860-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup, Qualifying rounds, First round\nAs there were 16 winners of the Confederation Cup first round, but only 15 losers of the Champions League first round for this season, the winners of the first round with the best CAF 5-Year Ranking (in bold italics) advanced directly to the group stage. The remaining 15 winners of the first round advanced to the play-off round, where they were joined by the 15 losers of the Champions League first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284860-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup, Qualifying rounds, Play-off round\nThe draw for the play-off round was held on 28 December 2018, 18:00 CAT (UTC+2), at the Nile Ritz-Carlton in Cairo, Egypt. The winners of the Confederation Cup first round were drawn against the losers of the Champions League first round, with the teams from the Confederation Cup hosting the second leg. The 15 winners of the play-off round advanced to the group stage to join \u00c9toile du Sahel, who advanced directly to the group stage as the winners of the first round with the best CAF 5-Year Ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284860-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup, Group stage\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 21 January 2019, 12:00 CAT (UTC+2), at the CAF headquarters in Cairo, Egypt. The 16 teams, including the winners of the first round with the best CAF 5-Year Ranking, \u00c9toile du Sahel, and the 15 winners of the play-off round of qualifying, were drawn into four groups of four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284860-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup, Group stage\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 quarter-finals of the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284860-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup, Group stage\nThe teams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, tiebreakers were applied in the following order (Regulations III. 20 & 21):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284860-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, the eight teams play a single-elimination tournament. Each tie is played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If the aggregate score is tied after the second leg, the away goals rule will be applied, and if still tied, extra time will not be played, and the penalty shoot-out will be used to determine the winner (Regulations III. 26 & 27).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284860-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup, Knockout stage, Bracket\nThe bracket was decided after the draw for the knockout stage (quarter-finals and semi-finals), which was held on 20 March 2019, 19:00 CAT (UTC+2), at the Marriot Hotel in Cairo, Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284860-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup, Knockout stage, Quarter-finals\nIn the quarter-finals, the winners of one group played the runners-up of another group (teams from same group could not play each other), with the group winners hosting the second leg, and the matchups decided by draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284860-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup, Knockout stage, Semi-finals\nIn the semi-finals, the four quarter-final winners played in two ties, with the matchups and order of legs decided by draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284860-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup, Knockout stage, Final\nIn the final, the two semi-final winners play each other, with the order of legs determined by the semi-final draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284861-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup group stage\nThe 2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup group stage were played from 3 February to 17 March 2019. A total of 16 teams competed in the group stage to decide the eight places in the knockout stage of the 2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284861-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup group stage, Draw\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 21 January 2019, 12:00 CAT (UTC+2), at the CAF headquarters in Cairo, Egypt. The 16 teams, including the winners of the first round with the best CAF 5-Year Ranking, \u00c9toile du Sahel, and the 15 winners of the play-off round of qualifying, were drawn into four groups of four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 47], "content_span": [48, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284861-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup group stage, Draw\nThe teams were seeded by their performances in the CAF competitions for the previous five seasons (CAF 5-Year Ranking points shown in parentheses). Each group contained one team from each of Pot 1 and Pot 2, and two teams from Pot 3, and each team was drawn into one of the positions in their group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 47], "content_span": [48, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284861-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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 quarter-finals of the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284861-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup group stage, Format, Tiebreakers\nThe teams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, tiebreakers were applied in the following order (Regulations III. 20 & 21):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 62], "content_span": [63, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284861-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup group stage, Schedule\nThe schedule of each matchday was as follows (matches scheduled in midweek in italics). Effective from the Confederation Cup group stage, weekend matches were played on Sundays while midweek matches were played on Wednesdays, with some exceptions. Kick-off times were also fixed at 13:00, 16:00 and 19:00 GMT.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284862-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup knockout stage\nThe 2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup knockout stage will be played from 7 April to 26 May 2019. A total of eight teams will compete in the knockout stage to decide the champions of the 2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284862-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup knockout stage, Qualified teams\nThe winners and runners-up of each of the four groups in the group stage advance to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284862-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup knockout stage, Format\nIn the knockout stage, the eight teams play a single-elimination tournament. Each tie is played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If the aggregate score is tied after the second leg, the away goals rule will be applied, and if still tied, extra time will not be played, and the penalty shoot-out will be used to determine the winner (Regulations III. 26 & 27).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284862-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup knockout stage, Schedule\nThe schedule of each round is as follows. Effective from the Confederation Cup group stage, weekend matches are played on Sundays while midweek matches are played on Wednesdays, with some exceptions. Kick-off times are also fixed at 13:00, 16:00 and 19:00 GMT.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284862-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup knockout stage, Bracket\nThe bracket of the knockout stage is determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284862-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup knockout stage, Bracket\nThe bracket was decided after the draw for the knockout stage (quarter-finals and semi-finals), which was held on 20 March 2019, 19:00 CAT (UTC+2), at the Marriot Hotel in Cairo, Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284862-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup knockout stage, Quarter-finals\nIn the quarter-finals, the winners of one group played the runners-up of another group (teams from same group could not play each other), with the group winners hosting the second leg, and the matchups decided by draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284862-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup knockout stage, Semi-finals\nIn the semi-finals, the four quarter-final winners played in two ties, with the matchups and order of legs decided by draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284862-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup knockout stage, Final\nIn the final, the two semi-final winners play each other, with the order of legs determined by the semi-final draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284863-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds\nThe 2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds were played from 27 November 2018 to 20 January 2019. A total of 70 teams competed in the qualifying rounds to decide the 16 places in the group stage of the 2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284863-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Draw\nThe draw for the preliminary round and first round was held on 3 November 2018 in Rabat, Morocco, and was officially announced by the CAF on 9 November due to a special situation with the transitional calendar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 53], "content_span": [54, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284863-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Draw\nThe entry round of the 55 teams entered into the draw was determined by their performances in the CAF competitions for the previous five seasons (CAF 5-Year Ranking points shown in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 53], "content_span": [54, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284863-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Format\nIn the qualifying rounds, each tie was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If the aggregate score was tied after the second leg, the away goals rule would be applied, and if still tied, extra time would not be played, and the penalty shoot-out would be used to determine the winner (Regulations III. 13 & 14).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284863-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Schedule\nThe schedule of each round was as follows (matches scheduled in midweek in italics).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 57], "content_span": [58, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284863-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Bracket\nThe bracket of the draw was announced by the CAF on 9 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 56], "content_span": [57, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284863-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Bracket\nAs there were 16 winners of the Confederation Cup first round, but only 15 losers of the Champions League first round for this season, the winners of the first round with the best CAF 5-Year Ranking (in bold italics) advanced directly to the group stage. The remaining 15 winners of the first round advanced to the play-off round, where they were joined by the 15 losers of the Champions League first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 56], "content_span": [57, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284863-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nThe preliminary round included the 46 teams that did not receive byes to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 66], "content_span": [67, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284863-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\n1\u20131 on aggregate. Cercle Mb\u00e9ri Sportif won 4\u20133 on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 66], "content_span": [67, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284863-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nAl-Ittihad won on walkover after Miracle Club withdrew prior to the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 66], "content_span": [67, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284863-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nAsante Kotoko won on walkover after the Cameroonian Football Federation was not able to confirm the engagement of Eding Sport by the CAF deadline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 66], "content_span": [67, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284863-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, First round\nThe first round included 32 teams: the 9 teams that received byes to this round, and the 23 winners of the preliminary round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 60], "content_span": [61, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284863-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, First round\n0\u20130 on aggregate. Mukura Victory Sports won 5\u20134 on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 60], "content_span": [61, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284863-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Play-off round\nThe play-off round included 30 teams: 15 of the 16 winners of the Confederation Cup first round, and the 15 losers of the Champions League first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 63], "content_span": [64, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284863-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Play-off round\nThe draw for the play-off round was held on 28 December 2018, 18:00 CAT (UTC+2), at the Nile Ritz-Carlton in Cairo, Egypt. The winners of the Confederation Cup first round were drawn against the losers of the Champions League first round, with the teams from the Confederation Cup hosting the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 63], "content_span": [64, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284863-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Play-off round\nThe teams were seeded by their performances in the CAF competitions for the previous five seasons (CAF 5-Year Ranking points shown in parentheses):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 63], "content_span": [64, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284863-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Play-off round\nFirst, a team from Pot A and a team from Pot D were drawn into seven ties. Next, a team from Pot B and a team from Pot C were drawn into five ties. Finally, the remaining teams from Pot C and Pot D were drawn into the last three ties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 63], "content_span": [64, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284863-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Play-off round\nThe 15 winners of the play-off round advanced to the group stage to join \u00c9toile du Sahel, who advanced directly to the group stage as the winners of the first round with the best CAF 5-Year Ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 63], "content_span": [64, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284864-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CB Miraflores season\nThe 2018\u201319 CB Miraflores season will be the fourth in existence and their second in the Liga ACB, the top flight of Spanish basketball, of this club, called San Pablo Burgos for sponsorship reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284864-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CB Miraflores season, Players, Squad information\nNote: Flags indicate national team eligibility at FIBA sanctioned events. Players may hold other non-FIBA nationality not displayed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284865-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CD Legan\u00e9s season\nDuring the 2018\u201319 season, CD Legan\u00e9s are participating in La Liga and Copa del Rey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284865-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CD Legan\u00e9s 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-00284865-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CD Legan\u00e9s season, Players, Reserve team\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284865-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CD Legan\u00e9s 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284866-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CESAFI season\nThe 2018\u201319 CESAFI season was the 18th season of the Cebu Schools Athletic Foundation, Inc., the preeminent inter-scholastic sports competition in Cebu. This season is hosted by the Cebu Institute of Technology\u2013University. The 2018\u201319 season will be the first season of the CESAFI under president Bernard Nicolas Villamor, of Cebu Institute of Technology\u2013University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284866-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CESAFI season\nThis season marks the first appearance of University of Cebu \u2013 Lapu-Lapu and Mandaue Campus (UC\u2013LM) as a regular member. UC\u2013LM will compete as a separate school from sister school University of Cebu, but will carry the same nickname as the latter, the Webmasters. Aside from UC\u2013LM, the Sisters of Mary\u2013Boystown will also compete in select events as a guest member.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284866-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CESAFI season\nFor the first time in the league's history, an Under-12 Division will be added to the fold, with basketball, chess, and football being the inaugural sports in the new division. In addition, weightlifting will also be making its debut as a demonstration sport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284867-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Challenge Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 CEV Challenge Cup was the 39th edition of the CEV Challenge Cup tournament, the former CEV Cup. 42 teams were participating from 28 countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284867-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Challenge Cup, Format\nQualification Phase (Knock-out with Home and Away Matches):1st Round (if needed) \u2192 2nd Round", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284867-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Challenge Cup, Format\nMain Phase (Knock-out with Home and Away Matches):1/16 Finals \u2192 1/8 Finals\u21921/4 Finals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284867-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Challenge Cup, Format\nFinal Phase (Knock-out with Home and Away Matches):Semi-Finals \u2192 Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284867-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Challenge Cup, Format\nAggregate score is counted as follows: 3 points for 3\u20130 or 3\u20131 wins, 2 points for 3\u20132 win, 1 point for 2\u20133 loss. In case the teams are tied after two legs, a Golden Set is played immediately at the completion of the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284867-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Challenge Cup, Qualification phase, 2nd Round\n1 Tricolorul LMV Ploie\u0219ti withdrew and Levski Sofia advanced automatically.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284868-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Champions League\nThe 2018-19 CEV Champions League was the highest level of European club volleyball in the 2018\u201319 season and the 60th edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284868-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Champions League, Qualification\nA total of 20 teams participate of the main competition, with 18 teams being allocated direct vacancies on the basis of ranking list for European Cups Competitions and 2 teams qualify from the qualification rounds. Drawing of lots for the pools composition was held on 2 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284868-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Champions League, Format\nA round-robin format (each team plays every other team in its pool twice, once home and once away) where the 20 participating teams are drawn into 5 pools of 4 teams each. The five pool winners and the best three second placed teams among all pools qualify for the Playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284868-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Champions League, Format\nThe standings is determined by the number of matches won. In case of a tie in the number of matches won by two or more teams, their ranking is based on the following criteria:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284868-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Champions League, Format\nA knockout format where the 8 qualified teams are each draw into the quarter-finals with the round winners advancing to the next rounds (semifinals and final). Matches in the quarter-finals and semifinals consists of two legs (home and away). Result points are awarded for each leg (3 points for 3\u20130 or 3\u20131 wins, 2 points for 3\u20132 win, 1 point for 2\u20133 loss). After two legs, the team with the most result points advances further in the tournament. In case teams are tied after two legs, a Golden Set is played immediately at the completion of the second leg. The Golden Set winner is the team that first obtains 15 points, provided that the points difference between the two teams is at least 2 points (thus, the Golden Set is similar to a tiebreak set in a normal match).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 808]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284868-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Champions League, Format\nA single match between the winners of the semifinals in a neutral venue decides the tournament champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284868-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Champions League, Pools composition\nDrawing of lots will be held on 2 November 2018, the 20 teams are divided in 4 pots of 5 teams each, with one team per pot being draw into each of the 5 pools (A, B, C, D, E).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284868-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Champions League, Pools composition\nSir Colussi Sicoma Perugia (ITA1) Zenit Kazan (RUS1) PGE Skra Be\u0142chat\u00f3w (POL1) Cucine Lube Civitanova (ITA2) Zenit Saint Petersburg (RUS2)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284868-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Champions League, Pools composition\nHalkbank Ankara (TUR1) Berlin Recycling Volleys (GER1) ZAKSA K\u0119dzierzyn-Ko\u017ale (POL2) Arkas Izmir (TUR2) VfB Friedrichshafen (GER2)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284868-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Champions League, Pools composition\nGreenyard Maaseik (BEL1) Tours VB (FRA1) ACH Volley Ljubljana (SLO1) \u010cEZ Karlovarsko (CZE1) Knack Roeselare (BEL2)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284868-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Champions League, Pools composition\nAzimut Modena (ITA3) Dinamo Moscow (RUS3) Trefl Gda\u0144sk (POL3) CL qualification CL qualification", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284869-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Champions League qualification\nThis article shows the qualification phase for 2018\u201319 CEV Champions League. A total of 16 teams entered this qualification round. During qualification, the winners of each tie keep on progressing until the last 2 teams standing join the 18 teams which have directly qualified to the main tournament League round based on the European Cups' Ranking List. All 14 teams which do not progress in qualification are allocated to the 2018\u201319 Men's CEV Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284869-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Champions League qualification, Participating teams\nDrawing of lots took place on 29 June 2018 in Luxembourg City, Luxembourg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 63], "content_span": [64, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284870-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 CEV Cup was the 47th edition of the European CEV Cup volleyball club tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284870-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Cup, Participating teams\nThe number of participants on the basis of ranking list for European Cup Competitions:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284871-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Women's Challenge Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 CEV Women's Challenge Cup will be the 39th edition of the European Challenge Cup volleyball club tournament, the former \"CEV Cup\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284871-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Women's Challenge Cup, Format\nThe tournament is played on a knockout format, with 32 teams participating. Initially 24 teams play a qualification round with the 12 winners advancing to the main phase. On 29 June 2018, a drawing of lots in Luxembourg City, Luxembourg, determined the team's pairing for each match. Each team plays a home and an away match with result points awarded for each leg (3 points for 3\u20130 or 3\u20131 wins, 2 points for 3\u20132 win, 1 point for 2\u20133 loss). After two legs, the team with the most result points advances to the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284871-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Women's Challenge Cup, Format\nIn case the teams are tied after two legs, a Golden Set is played immediately at the completion of the second leg. The Golden Set winner is the team that first obtains 15 points, provided that the points difference between the two teams is at least 2 points (thus, the Golden Set is similar to a tiebreak set in a normal match).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284871-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Women's Challenge Cup, Participating teams\nThe number of participants on the basis of ranking list for European Cup Competitions:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284872-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Women's Champions League\nThe CEV Champions League is the highest level of European club volleyball in the 2018\u201319 season and the 59th edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284872-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Women's Champions League, Qualification\nA total of 20 teams participate in the main competition, with 18 teams being allocated direct vacancies on the basis of ranking list for European Cups Competitions and 2 teams qualify from the qualification rounds. Drawing of lots for the pools composition was held on 2 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284872-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Women's Champions League, Format\nA round-robin format (each team plays every other team in its pool twice, once home and once away) where the 20 participating teams are drawn into 5 pools of 4 teams each. The five pool winners and the best three second placed teams among all pools qualify for the Playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284872-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Women's Champions League, Format\nThe standings is determined by the number of matches won. In case of a tie in the number of matches won by two or more teams, their ranking is based on the following criteria:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284872-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Women's Champions League, Format\nA knockout format where the 8 qualified teams are each draw into the quarter-finals with the round winners advancing to the next rounds (semifinals and final). Matches in the quarter-finals and semifinals consists of two legs (home and away). Result points are awarded for each leg (3 points for 3\u20130 or 3\u20131 wins, 2 points for 3\u20132 win, 1 point for 2\u20133 loss). After two legs, the team with the most result points advances further in the tournament. In case teams are tied after two legs, a Golden Set is played immediately at the completion of the second leg. The Golden Set winner is the team that first obtains 15 points, provided that the points difference between the two teams is at least 2 points (thus, the Golden Set is similar to a tiebreak set in a normal match).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284872-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Women's Champions League, Format\nA single match between the winners of the semifinals in a neutral venue decides the tournament champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284872-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Women's Champions League, Pools composition\nDrawing of lots was held on 2 November 2018, the 20 teams are divided in 4 pots of 5 teams each, with one team per pot being draw into each of the 5 pools (A, B, C, D, E).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284872-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Women's Champions League, Pools composition\nVak\u0131fbank Istanbul (Turkey 1) Imoco Volley Conegliano (Italy 1) Dinamo Moscow (Russia 1) Eczac\u0131ba\u015f\u0131 VitrA Istanbul (Turkey 2) Igor Gorgonzola Novara (Italy 2)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284872-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Women's Champions League, Pools composition\nChemik Police (Poland 1) B\u00e9ziers VB (France 1) Dinamo Kazan (Russia 2) \u0141KS Commercecon \u0141\u00f3d\u017a (Poland 2) RC Cannes (France 2)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284872-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Women's Champions League, Pools composition\nCSM Bucure\u0219ti (Romania 1) SSC Palmberg Schwerin (Germany 1) Minchanka Minsk (Belarus 1) Maritza Plovdiv (Bulgaria 1) H\u00e4meenlinna (Finland 1)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284872-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Women's Champions League, Pools composition\nFenerbah\u00e7e SK Istanbul (Turkey 3) Savino Del Bene Scandicci (Italy 3) Uralochka-NTMK Ekaterinburg (Russia 3) Allianz MTV Stuttgart (Germany 2) Budowlani \u0141\u00f3d\u017a (Poland 3)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284873-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Women's Champions League qualification\nThis article shows the qualification phase for 2018\u201319 CEV Women's Champions League. A total of 9 teams entered this qualification round. During qualification, the winners of each tie keep on progressing until the last 2 teams standing join the 18 teams which have directly qualified to the main tournament League round based on the European Cups' Ranking List. All 7 teams which do not progress in qualification are allocated to the 2018\u201319 Women's CEV Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284873-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CEV Women's Champions League qualification, Participating teams\nDrawing of lots took place on 29 June 2018 in Luxembourg City, Luxembourg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 71], "content_span": [72, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284874-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CFR Cluj season\nThe 2018\u201319 season will be the 48th season of competitive football by CFR Cluj. CFR Cluj will compete in the Liga I, Cupa Rom\u00e2niei and Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284874-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CFR Cluj season, Competitions, Liga I\nThe Liga I fixture list was announced on 5 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284874-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CFR Cluj season, Competitions, Cupa Rom\u00e2niei\nCFR Cluj will enter the Cupa Rom\u00e2niei at the Round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 52], "content_span": [53, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284874-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CFR Cluj season, Competitions, Supercupa Rom\u00e2niei\nCFR Cluj will play in the Romanian Supercup as winners of the Liga I against Cupa Rom\u00e2niei winners Universitatea Craiova.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 57], "content_span": [58, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284874-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CFR Cluj season, Competitions, UEFA Champions League\nAs winners of the 2017-18 Liga I, CFR Cluj entered the Champions League at the second qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 60], "content_span": [61, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284874-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CFR Cluj season, Competitions, UEFA Champions League, Second qualifying round\nThe draw for the second round took place on 19 June. CFR Cluj was drawn to play against Swedish champions Malm\u00f6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 85], "content_span": [86, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284874-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CFR Cluj season, Competitions, UEFA Europa League\nAfter losing to Swedish champions Malm\u00f6, CFR Cluj progressed to the Europa League Third Qualifying Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 57], "content_span": [58, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284874-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CFR Cluj season, Competitions, UEFA Europa League, Third qualifying round\nThe draw for the third round took place on 23 July. CFR Cluj was drawn to play against losing Armenian champions Alashkert.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 81], "content_span": [82, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284874-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CFR Cluj season, Competitions, UEFA Europa League, Play-off Round\nAfter emphatically beating Alashkert, CFR Cluj advanced to the play-off round. The draw for the play-off round took place on 6 August. CFR Cluj was drawn to play against Luxembourg champions F91 Dudelange.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 73], "content_span": [74, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284875-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CR Belouizdad season\nIn the 2018\u201319 season, CR Belouizdad competed in Ligue 1 for the 53rd season, as well as the Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284875-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CR Belouizdad season, Squad list\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 18 November 2018.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-00284875-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CR Belouizdad season, Squad list\nAs of August 11, 2018. 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, 40], "content_span": [41, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284876-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CS Concordia Chiajna season\nThe 2018\u201319 season will be the xth season of competitive football by Concordia Chiajna, and the yth consecutive in Liga I. Concordia Chiajna will compete in the Liga I and in Cupa Rom\u00e2niei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284876-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CS Concordia Chiajna season, Competitions, Liga I\nThe Liga I fixture list was announced on 5 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284876-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CS Concordia Chiajna season, Competitions, Cupa Rom\u00e2niei\nConcordia Chiajna will enter the Cupa Rom\u00e2niei at the Round of 32", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284877-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CS Constantine season\nIn the 2018\u201319 season, CS Constantine competed in the Ligue 1 for the 21st season, as well as the Champions League, and the Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284877-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CS Constantine season, Algerian Super Cup\nThe 2018 Algerian Super Cup is the 11th edition of the Algerian Super Cup, a competition with only one match, organized by the Professional Football League (LFP) and the Algerian Football Federation (FAF) since 2013. The Algerian Ligue Professionnelle 1 champion competes against the winner of the Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284877-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CS Constantine season, Algerian Super Cup\nTherefore, CS Constantine, the 2017-2018 champion of Algeria, played against USM Bel Abb\u00e8s, winner of the 2017\u201318 Algerian Cup. The rules of the game are: the duration of the game is 90 minutes and in case of a tie, a session of penalties is performed to separate the teams. Three substitutions are allowed for each team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284877-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CS Constantine season, Squad list\nAs of August 10, 2018. 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, 41], "content_span": [42, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284878-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CS Gaz Metan Media\u0219 season\nThe 2018\u201319 season will be the 72nd season of competitive football by Gaz Metan Media\u0219, and the 3rd consecutive in Liga I. Gaz Metan Media\u0219 will compete in the Liga I and in Cupa Rom\u00e2niei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284878-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CS Gaz Metan Media\u0219 season, Competitions, Liga I\nThe Liga I fixture list was announced on 5 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284878-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CS Gaz Metan Media\u0219 season, Competitions, Cupa Rom\u00e2niei\nGaz Metan Media\u0219 will enter the Cupa Rom\u00e2niei at the Round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 63], "content_span": [64, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284879-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CS Luceaf\u0103rul Oradea season\nThe 2018\u201319 is Luceaf\u0103rul Oradea's 13th season in the Romanian football league system, and their 5th season in the Liga II. Luceferii started the season with an almost entire new squad formed by only 11 players from the old one and a lot of young players. Cristian Lupu\u021b was confirmed as the manager of the team for this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284879-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CS Luceaf\u0103rul Oradea season, Competitions, Liga II\nThe Liga II fixture list was announced on 19 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284880-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CS Universitatea Craiova season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 48th season of competitive football by Universitatea Craiova. Craiova competed in the Liga I, Cupa Rom\u00e2niei and Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284880-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CS Universitatea Craiova season, Competitions, Liga I\nThe Liga I fixture list was announced on 5 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284880-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CS Universitatea Craiova season, Competitions, Cupa Rom\u00e2niei\nUniversitatea Craiova will enter the Cupa Rom\u00e2niei at the Round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 68], "content_span": [69, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284880-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CS Universitatea Craiova season, Competitions, Supercupa Rom\u00e2niei\nUniversitatea Craiova will play in the Romanian supercup as winners of the Cupa Rom\u00e2niei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284880-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CS Universitatea Craiova season, Competitions, UEFA Europa League\nAs winners of the 2017\u201318 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei, Universitatea Craiova will enter the Europa League at the third qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284880-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CS Universitatea Craiova season, Competitions, UEFA Europa League, Third qualifying round\nThe draw for the third round took place on 23 July. Universitatea was drawn to play against the winners from the second qualifying round match between RB Leipzig and H\u00e4cken. Universitatea Craiova will play on 9 August and on 16 August 2018. On 2 August, RB Leipzig was confirmed as Craiova's opponent after their 5\u20131 aggregate win over H\u00e4cken.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 97], "content_span": [98, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284880-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CS Universitatea Craiova season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. Players listed below made at least one appearance for Universitatea Craiova first squad during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 72], "content_span": [73, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284880-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CS Universitatea Craiova season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nLast updated: 1 July 2018Source: 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 72], "content_span": [73, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284881-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CSA 3-Day Provincial Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 CSA 3-Day Provincial Cup was a first-class cricket competition that took place in South Africa from 4 October 2018 to 14 April 2019. This was the first edition of the tournament not to be sponsored by Sunfoil, after they decided not to renew their sponsorship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284881-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CSA 3-Day Provincial Cup\nThe competition was played between the thirteen South African provincial teams. In previous editions of the competition, Namibia had also competed. However, in October 2018 they withdrew from South Africa's provincial competitions, citing issues around costs and logistics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284881-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CSA 3-Day Provincial Cup\nUnlike its counterpart, the CSA Franchise 4-Day Cup, the matches were three days in length instead of four. The tournament was played in parallel with the 2018\u201319 CSA Provincial One-Day Challenge, a List A competition which featured the same teams. KwaZulu-Natal were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284881-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CSA 3-Day Provincial Cup\nEastern Province and Northerns contested the final, which finished as a draw, therefore the title was shared.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284882-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CSA 4-Day Franchise Series\nThe 2018\u201319 CSA 4-Day Franchise Series was a first-class cricket competition that took place in South Africa from 26 September 2018 to 31 January 2019. It was the first edition not to be sponsored by Sunfoil, after they decided not to renew their sponsorship. Lions won the tournament, after beating Warriors in the final match of the competition. They won the fixture, with just nine deliveries left in the game, to gain enough bonus points to overtake the Cape Cobras. Titans were the defending champions, but finished in last place, with just one win in their ten matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284882-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CSA 4-Day Franchise Series\nCricket South Africa announced that the competition would be split into two sections, the first from September to November, and the second from December and January. This was used to help prepare the national side for the Test series against Pakistan, which was played in December 2018 and January 2019. During the break, the first edition of the Mzansi Super League also took place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284883-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CSA Provincial One-Day Challenge\nThe 2018\u201319 CSA Provincial One-Day Challenge was a List A cricket competition that took place in South Africa from 7 October 2018 to 7 April 2019. The tournament was played in parallel with the 2018\u201319 CSA 3-Day Provincial Cup, a first-class competition which featured the same teams. North West were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284883-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CSA Provincial One-Day Challenge\nThe competition was played between the thirteen South African provincial teams. In previous editions of the competition, Namibia had also competed. However, in October 2018 they withdrew from South Africa's provincial competitions, citing issues around costs and logistics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284883-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CSA Provincial One-Day Challenge\nEasterns won Pool A and Northerns won Pool B to advance to the final, with Easterns appearing in their first one-day final in 16 years. Easterns won the tournament, after they beat Northerns by two wickets in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284884-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CSA T20 Challenge\nThe 2018\u201319 CSA T20 Challenge was the sixteenth season of the CSA T20 Challenge, established by Cricket South Africa. It took place from 5 April to 5 May 2019. Titans were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284884-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CSA T20 Challenge\nIn April 2019, Cricket South Africa announced that this would be the final edition of the T20 Challenge, due to austerity measures and a restructure of domestic cricket in the country. Rain played a factor during the tournament, with several matches ending in a no result or being abandoned, including all three matches scheduled to be played on Easter Monday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284884-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CSA T20 Challenge\nFollowing the conclusion of the group stage matches, Lions, Warriors, Cape Cobras and Dolphins had all progressed to the semi-finals of the tournament. Lions and Dolphins played each other in the first semi-final, with Warriors and Cape Cobras playing each other in the second semi-final. In the first semi-final, Lions beat Dolphins by eight wickets to progress to the final of the tournament. They were joined in the final by Warriors, who beat Cape Cobras by 15 runs in their semi-final match. Lions won the tournament, beating Warriors by 11 runs in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284885-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CWHL season\nThe 2018\u201319 CWHL season was the 12th and final season of the Canadian Women's Hockey League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284885-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CWHL season, Offseason, One league movement\nStarting in March 2018, and throughout the offseason, current and former players took to social media to promote the concept of one unified professional women's hockey league. Players had utilized the hashtag #OneLeague to indicated their support.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 51], "content_span": [52, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284885-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 CWHL season, Offseason, CWHL draft\nHeading into the draft, the league reported that general managers were authorized to \"pre-sign\" their first and second round selections prior to the draft. The window for pre-signing expired on August 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 42], "content_span": [43, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284886-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cagliari Calcio season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Cagliari Calcio's third season back in Serie A after being relegated at the end of the 2014\u201315 season. The club competed in Serie A, finishing 15th, and in the Coppa Italia, where they were eliminated in the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284886-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cagliari Calcio season\nThe season was coach Rolando Maran's first in charge of the club, following his departure from fellow mid-table side A.C. ChievoVerona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284887-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cairns Taipans season\nThe 2018\u201319 NBL season was the 20th season for the Cairns Taipans in the National Basketball League (NBL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284887-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cairns Taipans season, Pre-season\nAs part of their pre-season, the Taipans played eight pre-season games. Their first game was held in Cairns against Drexel University, the second in Rockhampton against the Brisbane Bullets and the following two games were against Melbourne United. As a club in the NBL they also took part in the NBL Blitz, and played games against the Sydney Kings, the Perth Wildcats and the New Zealand Breakers, however they opted out of the NBLxNBA games. To finish their pre-season they played a final game in Adelaide against the Adelaide 36ers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284887-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cairns Taipans season, Regular season\nThe regular season of the NBL consists of 28 games, with the Taipans' 14 home games to played at the Cairns Convention Centre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284887-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cairns Taipans season, Awards, Most Valuable Player\nMelo Trimble - \"Melo Trimble was the clear choice for Taipans MVP this year, after breaking numerous club records and becoming the first player in over a decade to have at least 600 points, 100 rebounds, 100 assists and 50 made three-pointers in a regular season. The first-year import was also second in the NBL in scoring (22.6 points per game) third in assists (4.5 per game) seventh in three-pointers (43.1 per cent) and tied sixth for steals (1.2 per game).\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284887-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cairns Taipans season, Awards, Coaches Award\nJarrod Kenny - \"Selected by the coaches, the recipient of this award fulfils a variety of factors that they determine, whether that is the traits and values they bring to the team, their on-court efforts or their off-court contributions. This year, Jarrod Kenny was presented with the Coaches Award for bringing a competitive mentality and work ethic to training every day, while on game night he was consistently ready and was available to fill any role the team needed. Kenny is one of two players rostered for next season and alongside Rob Loe will return in the 2019/20 NBL season.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284887-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cairns Taipans season, Awards, Best Defensive Player\nD. J. Newbill - \"DJ Newbill has been named Best Defensive Player by his club for two straight seasons now, after winning the same award with the New Zealand Breakers last year. Newbill often had the task of stopping some of the most lethal scorers the NBL, and proved to be a problem for opposition teams with his basketball IQ, strength, energy and quick hands. Newbill was also tied sixth in the NBL for steals, averaging 1.2 per game.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284887-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cairns Taipans season, Awards, Member\u2019s Choice MVP\nMelo Trimble - \"As one of the many benefits of being a Taipans member, the Orange Army get the privilege for voting for their very own MVP and ensuring their favourite player gets recognised at the end of the season. Melo Trimble took out the Member\u2019s Choice MVP Award within an hour of voting being open, and the American gained the majority of votes from the 2018-19 Taipans members by a landslide.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284887-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cairns Taipans season, Awards, Player's Player\nKuany Kuany - \"Voted on by the playing group, each player confidentially provided a 3-2-1 vote for the best team mate throughout the season, with Kuany Kuany taking out the honour this season. Kuany is known for being the first to put his hand up to help, sticking to the team values, and always going the extra mile for his peers. His great attitude and warmth has made him a huge fan favourite in Cairns, with his outgoing personality and infectious energy a constant source of positivity for the Taipans.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284887-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cairns Taipans season, Awards, Club Person of the Year\nAnthony Fisher - \"Previously awarded to a volunteer, part-time member of staff or external individual that contributes to the Taipans, Anthony Fisher became the first player to ever be named Club Person of the Year on Friday. As a training player, he was an integral part of the Taipans training squad throughout the 2018-19 season, focusing on improving his game and his team mates. He has also been recognised for actively engaged in the Cairns community through Taipans promotions, school visits and clinics at Cairns Basketball.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284887-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cairns Taipans season, Awards, Commitment to Community\nNathan Jawai - \"While all Taipans players and staff deliver a number of appearances, engagements and activities in the Cairns community, the Commitment to Community Award is presented to the player that goes above and beyond their Taipans duty. Nate Jawai took out this award for the second year in a row, thanks to his ongoing efforts with the Taipans Indigenous Program and Queensland Government commitments. Jawai continues to be a superstar in the local community and is extremely passionate about the work he conducts as an Indigenous role model.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284888-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cal Poly Mustangs men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Cal Poly Mustangs men's basketball team represented California Polytechnic State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Mustangs were led by tenth-year head coach Joe Callero and played their home games at the Mott Athletics Center. Cal Poly was a member of the Big West Conference, and participated in their 23rd consecutive season in that league. They finished the season 6\u201323 overall, 2\u201314 in Big West play to finish in ninth place. They failed to qualify for the Big West Conference tournament. On March 6, 2019, it was announced that head coach Joe Callero would not be retained after his 10th season. He compiled a record of 126\u2013184 while at Cal Poly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284888-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cal Poly Mustangs men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Mustangs finished 9\u201322, and 4\u201312 in the conference. During the season, the Mustangs participated in the Great Alaska Shootout, which was held in Santa Clara, California and Anchorage, Alaska. The Mustangs finished in 3rd place by defeating the College of Charleston but losing to Central Michigan and Idaho. Prior to the tournament, Cal Poly won at Santa Clara as a friendly match. In the postseason, Cal Poly lost to rival UC Santa Barbara in the quarterfinals of the 2018 Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament in Anaheim, California.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284889-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cal State Bakersfield Roadrunners men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Cal State Bakersfield Roadrunners men's basketball team represented California State University, Bakersfield in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Roadrunners were led by eighth-year head coach Rod Barnes and competed at the Icardo Center. CSU Bakersfield was a member of the Western Athletic Conference. They finished the season 18\u201316, 7\u20139 in WAC play to finish in a tie for fifth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the WAC Tournament to Texas\u2013Rio Grande Valley. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they defeated Cal State Fullerton in the first round to win the Riley Wallace Classic and defeated Southern Utah in the second round before losing in the quarterfinals to Green Bay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284889-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cal State Bakersfield Roadrunners men's basketball team, Before the season\nThe Roadrunners finished 12\u201318 overall, and 5\u20139 in the conference. During the season, the Roadrunners participated in the Great Alaska Shootout, which was held in Anchorage, Alaska. The Roadrunners finished as a runner\u2013up from defeating Alaska Anchorage and Idaho but losing to Central Michigan. In the postseason, CSU Bakersfield lost to Utah Valley in the quarterfinals of the 2018 WAC Men's Basketball Tournament in Paradise, Nevada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 82], "content_span": [83, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284890-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cal State Fullerton Titans men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Cal State Fullerton Titans men's basketball team represented California State University, Fullerton in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Titans were led by sixth-year head coach Dedrique Taylor and competed at the Titan Gym. CSU Fullerton was a member of the Big West Conference, and participated in their 45th consecutive season in that league. They finished the season 16\u201318, 10\u20136 in Big West play to finish in a tie for second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284890-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cal State Fullerton Titans men's basketball team\nOn March 15, Fullerton defeated UCSB to reach the finals of the Big West tournament, where they played top-seeded UC Irvine in an attempt to reach the NCAA Tournament for the second successive year; however, the Titans were handily defeated by the Anteaters, 92\u201364, in a rematch of the previous year's championship. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they lost in the first round to Cal State Bakersfield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284890-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cal State Fullerton Titans men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Titans finished 20\u201312 overall, and 10\u20136 in the conference. During the season, the Titans participated in the Wooden Legacy, which was held in Fullerton, California. The Titans finished in 5th place from defeating Harvard and Sacramento State but losing to Georgia. In the postseason, CSU Fullerton defeated Long Beach State, UC Davis, and UC Irvine to become champions of the 2018 Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament in Anaheim, California. In addition, the Titans participated in the 2018 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, where they lost to Purdue in Detroit, Michigan in the First Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 73], "content_span": [74, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284891-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cal State Northridge Matadors men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Cal State Northridge Matadors men's basketball team represented California State University, Northridge in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Matadors, led by first-year head coach Mark Gottfried, competed at the Matadome. CSU Northridge was a member of the Big West Conference, and participated in their 18th consecutive season in that league. They finished the season 13\u201321, 7\u20139 in Big West play to finish in a tie for sixth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big West Tournament to UC Santa Barbara. They were invited to the College Basketball Invitational where they lost in the first round to Utah Valley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284891-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cal State Northridge Matadors men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Matadors finished 6\u201324 overall, and 3\u201313 in the conference. During the season, the Matadors participated in the Canc\u00fan Challenge under the Mayan division, which was held in Fresno, California, Fairfax, Virginia, and Canc\u00fan, Mexico. The Matadors finished in 4th place from losing to Southeast Missouri State and Binghamton. Prior to the tournament, CSU Northridge lost at Fresno State and at George Mason as friendly matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 76], "content_span": [77, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284892-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Calcutta Premier Division\nThe 2018 Calcutta Premier Division season was the 121st season of the Calcutta Premier Division, a state association football league within the Indian state of West Bengal. The league is divided into two groups \u2013 Group A and Group B. The Championship title is awarded only to the Group A winner, while four teams from Group A are relegated to Group B at the end of the season and four teams from Group B are simultaneously promoted to Group A for the next season. The fixtures of Group A and Group B started on 3 August and 5 August 2018 respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284892-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Calcutta Premier Division, Group A\nThe 2018 Calcutta Premier Division season is the 121st season of the Calcutta Premier Division, a state league within the Indian state of West Bengal. The league is divided into two groups \u2013 Group A and Group B. The title is awarded only to the Group A winner, played in a single round Robin format while four teams from Group A are relegated to Group B at the end of the season and four teams from Group B are simultaneously promoted to Group A for the next season. The fixtures of Group A kicked off on 3 August 2018, while the fixtures for Group B had kicked off on 5 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284892-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Calcutta Premier Division, Group B, Standings\nNotes: 1. After the completion of the single round robin, the teams will be divided into two groups of top 6 and bottom 4. The top 6 teams will play against each other in a single-leg format, called the championship round, while the bottom 4 teams play against each other in the same single-leg format called the relegation round. Each team carries forward their points and other records from the previous 1st round matches into the championship or the relegation round. Overall 4 teams are promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284893-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Calgary Flames season\nThe 2018\u201319 Calgary Flames season was the Flames' 39th season in Calgary, and the 47th for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on June 6, 1972.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284893-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Calgary Flames season\nThe Flames clinched a playoff spot on March 17, 2019, when the Minnesota Wild lost to the New York Islanders. On March 31, the team won its first division title since the 2005\u201306 season, and clinched the best record in what is now the Western Conference for the first time since the 1989\u201390 season. They also finished with 50 wins and 107 points, in both cases trailing only the 1989 Stanley Cup champions. The Flames faced the Colorado Avalanche in the first round, losing in five games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284893-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Calgary Flames season, Schedule and results, Preseason\nNotes: Indicates split-squad. Game was played at Shenzhen Universiade Sports Centre in Shenzhen, China. Game was played at Cadillac Arena in Beijing, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284893-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Calgary Flames season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was released on June 21, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284893-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Calgary Flames 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284893-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Calgary Flames season, Schedule and results, Playoffs\nThe Flames faced the Colorado Avalanche in the First Round of the playoffs. and were defeated in five games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284893-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Calgary Flames season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Flames. Stats reflect time with the Flames only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Flames only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284893-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Calgary Flames season, Draft picks\nBelow are the Calgary Flames' selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284894-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 California Baptist Lancers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 California Baptist Lancers men's basketball team represented California Baptist University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They were led by head coach Rick Croy who was in his sixth season at California Baptist. The Lancers played their home games at the CBU Events Center in Riverside, California as members of the Western Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284894-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 California Baptist Lancers men's basketball team\nThis season was CBU's first of a four-year transition period from Division II to Division I. As a result, the Lancers were not eligible for NCAA postseason play and did not participate in the WAC Tournament. They were eligible to play in the CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament or College Basketball Invitational. They finished the season 16\u201315, 7\u20139 in WAC play to finish in a tie for fifth place. The Lancers accepted an invitation to play in the CBI where they were defeated in the first round by Loyola Marymount.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284895-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 California Baptist Lancers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 California Baptist Lancers women's basketball team will represent California Baptist University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. They were led by head coach Jarrod Olson who is in his sixth season at California Baptist. The Lancers will play their home games at the CBU Events Center in Riverside, California as members of the Western Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284895-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 California Baptist Lancers women's basketball team\nThis season will be CBU's first of a four-year transition period from Division II to Division I. As a result, the Lancers are not eligible for NCAA postseason play and will not participate in the WAC Tournament. They received an automatic bid to the WNIT where they defeated by Pepperdine in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284896-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 California Golden Bears men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 California Golden Bears men's basketball team represented the University of California, Berkeley in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. This was Wyking Jones second year as head coach at California. The Golden Bears played their home games at Haas Pavilion as members of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season 8\u201323, 3\u201315 in Pac-12 play to finish in last place. They lost in the first round of the Pac-12 Tournament to Colorado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284896-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 California Golden Bears men's basketball team\nOn March 24, Jones was fired. He finished with a 2-year record of 16\u201347 overall and 5\u201331 in the Pac-12. Former Georgia and Nevada head coach Fox was hired on March 29.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284896-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 California Golden Bears men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Golden Bears finished the 2017\u201318 season with a record of 8\u201324, 2\u201316 in Pac-12 play to finish in last place. They lost in the first round of the Pac-12 Tournament to Stanford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284897-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 California Golden Bears women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 California Golden Bears women's basketball team represented University of California, Berkeley during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Golden Bears, led by eighth year head coach Lindsay Gottlieb, played their home games at the Haas Pavilion as members of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season 20\u201313, 9\u20139 in Pac-12 play to finish in a tie for sixth place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the Pac-12 Women's Tournament where they lost to Stanford. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Women's Tournament where they defeated North Carolina in the first round before losing to Baylor in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284898-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cambridge United F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Cambridge United's 107th season in their history, their 40th in the Football League, and their fifth consecutive season in League Two. Along with League Two, the club will also participate in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284898-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cambridge United F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284898-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cambridge United F.C. season, Competitions, Pre-season friendlies\nCambridge United announced they will face ten different opponents during their pre-season schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 73], "content_span": [74, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284898-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cambridge United F.C. season, Competitions, League Two, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League Two fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284898-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cambridge United F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284898-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cambridge United F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284898-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cambridge United F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced. The draw for the second round was made live on Talksport by Leon Britton and Steve Claridge on 16 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284899-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Campbell Fighting Camels basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Campbell Fighting Camels basketball team represented Campbell University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Fighting Camels, led by sixth-year head coach Kevin McGeehan played their home games at Gore Arena in Buies Creek, North Carolina as members of the Big South Conference. They finished the season 20\u201313, 12\u20134 in Big South play to win a share of the regular season championship with Radford. They defeated Hampton in the quarterfinals of the Big South Tournament before losing in the semifinals to Gardner\u2013Webb. As a regular season conference champion and No. 1 seed in their conference tournament who failed to win their conference tournament, they received an automatic-bid to the National Invitation Tournament where they lost in the first round to UNC Greensboro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 862]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284899-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Campbell Fighting Camels basketball team, Previous season\nThe Fighting Camels finished the season 18\u201316, 10\u20138 in Big South play to finish in fourth place. They lost to Liberty in the quarterfinals of the Big South Tournament. They were invited to the College Basketball Invitational where they defeated Miami (OH) and New Orleans before losing in the semifinals to San Francisco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284899-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Campbell Fighting Camels basketball team, Schedule and results\n* Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses. All times are in Eastern Time", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 70], "content_span": [71, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284900-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Campeonato Nacional da Guin\u00e9-Bissau\nThe 2018\u201319 Campeonato Nacional da Guin\u00e9-Bissau is the 42nd season (since independence) of the Campeonato Nacional da Guin\u00e9-Bissau, the top-tier football league in Guinea-Bissau. The season started on 22 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284901-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Campeonato Nacional de Futebol Feminino\nThe 2018\u201319 Campeonato Nacional de Futebol Feminino (also known as Liga BPI for sponsorship reasons) was the 34th edition of Campeonato Nacional de Futebol Feminino. SC Braga won the title for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284901-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Campeonato Nacional de Futebol Feminino, Teams\nTwelve teams will compete in the league \u2013 nine teams from the 2017\u201318 Campeonato Nacional, as well as three teams promoted from the Campeonato de Promo\u00e7\u00e3o.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 54], "content_span": [55, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284902-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Campeonato de Portugal\nThe 2018\u201319 Campeonato de Portugal was the sixth season of Portuguese football's new third-tier league, since the merging of the Segunda Divis\u00e3o and Terceira Divis\u00e3o in 2013, and the fourth season under the current Campeonato de Portugal title. A total of 72 teams competed in this division, which began in August 2018 and ended in June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284902-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Campeonato de Portugal, Format\nThe competition format consists of two stages. In the first stage, the 72 clubs will be divided in four series of 18 teams, according to geographic criteria. In each series, teams play against each other in a home-and-away double round-robin system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284902-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Campeonato de Portugal, Format\nIn the second stage, the two best-placed teams of each of four Series will dispute a series of playoff matches to promote to the LigaPro. The two finalists will be promoted directly. The five bottom clubs of each series will be relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284902-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Campeonato de Portugal, Promotion play-offs\nThe winners and the runners-up of the 4 Series were qualified to the Promotion Play-offs, where the winning team and the runner-up were promoted to 2019\u201320 LigaPro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284903-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Campionato Sammarinese di Calcio\nThe 2018\u201319 Campionato Sammarinese di Calcio was the 34th season since its establishment. It is the highest level in San Marino, in which the country's top 15 amateur football clubs played. The season began on 21 September 2018 and concluded with the play-off final on 25 May 2019. La Fiorita were the defending champions from the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284903-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Campionato Sammarinese di Calcio, Participating teams\nBecause there is no promotion or relegation in the league, the same 15 teams who competed in the league last season competed in the league this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284903-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Campionato Sammarinese di Calcio, Regular season\nThe 15 clubs were split into two groups; one with eight clubs and another with seven clubs. All teams played once against the teams within their own group. At the end of the regular season, the top four from each group advanced to group 1 of the second stage. All other teams advanced to group 2 of the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284903-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Campionato Sammarinese di Calcio, Second stage\nThe fifteen clubs played each other twice within their own group. At the end of the second stage, the first through sixth-placed clubs from group 1 advanced to the final stage. From group 2, the first and second-placed clubs advanced to the final stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 54], "content_span": [55, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284903-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Campionato Sammarinese di Calcio, Second stage, Group 2, Play\u2013off\nThe winner of the play\u2013off, Juvenes/Dogana, advanced to the final stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 73], "content_span": [74, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284903-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Campionato Sammarinese di Calcio, Final stage\nThe eight clubs which advanced from the second stage competed in a knockout format final stage to determine the champion of the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284903-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Campionato Sammarinese di Calcio, Final stage, Summary\nThe first legs of the quarter finals were played from 25 to 28 April 2019 and the second legs were played from 2 to 5 May 2019. The first legs of the semi finals will be played on 11\u201312 May 2019 and the second legs will be played on 17\u201318 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284903-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Campionato Sammarinese di Calcio, Final stage, Final\nTre Penne qualified for 2019\u201320 Champions League preliminary round and La Fiorita qualified for 2019\u201320 Europa League first qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284904-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Canadian network television schedule\nThe 2018\u201319 network television schedule for the five major English commercial broadcast networks in Canada covers primetime hours from September 2018 through August 2019. The schedule is followed by a list per network of returning series, new series, and series canceled after the 2017-18 television season, for Canadian, American and other series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284904-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Canadian network television schedule\nCBC Television was first to announce its fall schedule on May 24, 2018, followed by Global on June 4, Citytv on June 5, and CTV and CTV 2 on June 7, 2018. As in the past, the commercial networks' announcements come shortly after the networks have had a chance to buy Canadian rights to new American series. CTV 2 and Global are not included on Saturday as they normally only schedule encore programming in primetime on Saturdays.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284905-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Canberra Capitals season\nThe 2018\u201319 Canberra Capitals season was the 35th season for the franchise in the Women's National Basketball League (WNBL). It saw the team's eighth premiership win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284906-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Canberra United W-League season\nThe 2018\u201319 Canberra United FC season was the club's eleventh season in the W-League, the premier competition for women's football. The team played home games at McKellar Park and Seiffert Oval. The club's manager for the season was Heather Garriock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284906-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Canberra United 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284907-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Canisius Golden Griffins men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Canisius Golden Griffins men's basketball team represented Canisius College in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at the Koessler Athletic Center in Buffalo, New York as members of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference, and were led by 3rd-year head coach Reggie Witherspoon. They finished the 2018\u201319 season 15\u201317 overall, 11\u20137 in MAAC play to finish in a four-way tie for second place. As the No. 2 seed in the 2019 MAAC Tournament, they defeated No. 7 seed Manhattan in the quarterfinals 69\u201365OT before falling to No. 6 seed Monmouth 59\u201373 in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284907-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Canisius Golden Griffins men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Golden Griffins finished the 2017\u201318 season 21\u201311, 15\u20133 in MAAC play to finish in a share for the MAAC regular season title with Rider. It was their first conference regular season title since 1994. As the No. 2 seed at the MAAC Tournament, they were upset by in the quarterfinals by No. 7 seed Quinnipiac. They were invited to the College Basketball Invitational where they lost in the first round to Jacksonville State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 71], "content_span": [72, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284908-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cardiff City F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Cardiff City's 120th season in their existence and their second in the Premier League. Cardiff were promoted to the top tier of English football league system for the first time since 2013 during the 2017\u201318 season. Along with competing in the Premier League, the club also participated in the FA Cup and EFL Cup. The season covered the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284908-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cardiff City F.C. season\nOn 21 January, a Piper PA-46 Malibu light aircraft transporting Cardiff's recently signed player Emiliano Sala was crashed off Alderney, in the Channel Islands. The aircraft had been travelling from Nantes, France, to Cardiff. The wreckage of the aircraft was found thirteen days later. He was confirmed dead on 7 February. Two days before the tragedy, Sala was presented as a Cardiff player but had not decided on his shirt number at that time. Cardiff and Nantes are in dispute over the payment of the transfer fee for Sala.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284908-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cardiff City F.C. season, First-team squad\nAppearances and goals for the club and contracts are up to date as of 13 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284908-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cardiff City F.C. season, Competitions, Premier League, Matches\nOn 14 June 2018, the Premier League fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284908-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cardiff City F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284908-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cardiff City F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nThe second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284909-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Carlisle United F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Carlisle United's 114th season in their history and their fifth consecutive season in League Two. Along with League Two, the club participated in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284909-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Carlisle United F.C. season\nThe season covered the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284909-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Carlisle United F.C. season, Competitions, Pre-season friendlies\nThe Cumbrians confirmed friendlies against Barrow, Penrith, Kendal Town, AFC Fylde, Workington and Bradford City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284909-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Carlisle United F.C. season, Competitions, League Two, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League Two fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284909-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Carlisle United F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October. The draw for the second round was made live on BBC and BT by Mark Schwarzer and Glenn Murray on 12 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284909-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Carlisle United F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284909-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Carlisle United F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284910-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Carolina Hurricanes season\nThe 2018\u201319 Carolina Hurricanes season was the 40th season for the National Hockey League (NHL) franchise that was established on June 22, 1979 (following seven seasons of play in the World Hockey Association), and 22nd season since the franchise relocated from Hartford to start the 1997\u201398 NHL season. For the first time since 2009, the Hurricanes reached the playoffs, clinching a playoff berth with a 3\u20131 win against the New Jersey Devils on April 4, 2019. In the playoffs the Hurricanes reached the Conference Finals where they were swept by the Boston Bruins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284910-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Carolina Hurricanes season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was released on June 21, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 72], "content_span": [73, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284910-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Carolina Hurricanes 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 72], "content_span": [73, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284910-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Carolina Hurricanes season, Schedule and results, Playoffs\nThe Hurricanes faced the Washington Capitals in the First Round of the playoffs, and defeated them in seven games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284910-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Carolina Hurricanes season, Schedule and results, Playoffs\nThe Hurricanes faced the New York Islanders in the Second Round of the playoffs, sweeping them in four games, which was the first best-of-seven series sweep in Hurricanes/Whalers franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284910-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Carolina Hurricanes season, Schedule and results, Playoffs\nThe Hurricanes faced the Boston Bruins in the Conference Finals, and were swept in four games. They played against each other in the 2009 Stanley Cup playoffs, where the Hurricanes defeated the Bruins in the Conference Semifinals in seven games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284910-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Carolina Hurricanes season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Hurricanes. Stats reflect time with the Hurricanes only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Hurricanes only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284910-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Carolina Hurricanes season, Transactions\nThe Hurricanes have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284910-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Carolina Hurricanes season, Draft picks\nBelow are the Carolina Hurricanes' selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284911-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cayman Islands Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Cayman Islands Premier League was the 40th season of the Cayman Islands Premier League, the top division football competition in the Cayman Islands. The season began on 3 November 2018. The season ended on 17 March 2019 and Scholars International won their 12th league title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284911-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cayman Islands Premier League, League table\nThe 4 November match between North Side and Tigers was abandoned following a fight between the two clubs, causing both clubs to be awarded a 0\u20133 loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 51], "content_span": [52, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284912-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Celta de Vigo season\nDuring the 2018\u201319 season, RC Celta de Vigo participated in La Liga and the Copa del Rey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284912-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Celta de Vigo 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284912-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Celta de Vigo season, Players, Reserve team\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284912-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Celta de Vigo 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284913-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Celtic Cup\nThe 2018 Celtic Cup is the inaugural edition of the Celtic Cup rugby union competition, which features development regional and provincial teams from Ireland and Wales. It ran for six weeks from September 2018 until October 2018. Leinster A won the inaugural edition, beating Scarlets A in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284913-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Celtic Cup, Formation\nThe Irish Rugby Football Union and the Welsh Rugby Union created a new development competition, the Celtic Cup, for the emerging professional players from the four Irish provinces and four Welsh regions, announcing the tournament in August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284913-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Celtic Cup, Formation\nThe tournament, which features development squads from Pro14 teams Connacht, Leinster, Munster, Ulster, Cardiff Blues, Dragons, Ospreys and Scarlets, aims to provide a learning environment for development players, coaches and referees by recreating the week-to-week challenges presented by senior professional rugby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284913-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Celtic Cup, 2018 season\nThe first season of the Celtic Cup ran over seven consecutive weeks in 2018. The eight teams were divided into two conferences of four Welsh regions and four Irish provinces. Each Irish province played each of the Welsh regions and against two Irish provinces. Similarly, the Welsh regions played each of the Irish provinces and two of their Welsh counterparts, giving each team three home and three away fixtures. Derby matches were held on the opening and closing weekends of the pools stage, with the four inter-conference rounds in a block from rounds 2 to 5. The top-ranked province from the Irish conference then played the top-ranked region from the Welsh conference in the Celtic Cup Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284914-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Celtic F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Celtic's 130th season of competitive football. They competed in the Scottish Premiership, League Cup, Scottish Cup, Champions League and Europa League. Celtic won all three domestic tournaments, completing an unprecedented treble treble.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284914-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Celtic F.C. season, Pre-season and friendlies\nCeltic preceded the 2018\u201319 campaign with a pre-season tour of Austria, with matches against SK Vorw\u00e4rts Steyr, Bohemians 1905, Blau-Wei\u00df Linz and Sparta Prague. They also faced Shamrock Rovers and Standard Li\u00e8ge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284914-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Celtic F.C. season, Scottish Premiership\nThe Scottish Premiership fixture list was announced on 15 June 2018. Celtic began their title defence against newly-promoted Livingston at Celtic Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284914-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Celtic F.C. season, Scottish League Cup\nOn 29 July, Celtic were drawn to face Partick Thistle at Firhill Stadium in the second round of the 2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup. The League Cup holders progressed to the quarter-finals with a 3\u20131 victory over their city rivals. On 19 August, Celtic were drawn to face St Johnstone at McDiarmid Park in the quarter-finals. The Bhoys' trophy defence continued courtesy of a late Leigh Griffiths strike in Perth. On 26 September, Celtic were drawn to face Heart of Midlothian in the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284914-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Celtic F.C. season, Scottish League Cup\nGoals from Scott Sinclair, James Forrest and Ryan Christie secured Celtic's place in the final, a third consecutive League Cup final and fifth consecutive domestic cup final in Brendan Rodgers' reign. On 2 December, Celtic won the Scottish League Cup for the third consecutive season, defeating Aberdeen 1\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284914-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Celtic F.C. season, Scottish Cup\nOn 24 November, Celtic were drawn to face Airdrieonians at Celtic Park in the fourth round of the 2018\u201319 Scottish Cup. A Scott Sinclair double and a debut goal for Timothy Weah secured a 3\u20130 win. On 20 January 2019, Celtic were drawn to face St Johnstone in the fifth round. Scott Sinclair's hat-trick was coupled by Scott Brown's first goal in two years, and a James Forrest strike, which sealed Celtic's place in the quarter-finals. On 11 February, Celtic were drawn to face Hibernian at Easter Road in the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284914-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Celtic F.C. season, Scottish Cup\nGoals from James Forrest and Scott Brown secured Celtic's place in the semi-finals. On 4 March, Celtic were drawn to face Aberdeen or Rangers in the semi-finals. On 12 March, it was determined that Aberdeen would be Celtic's opponents, having defeated Rangers 2\u20130 in their quarter-final replay. The Bhoys sealed their place in the final with James Forrest, Odsonne \u00c9douard and Tom Rogic all on the scoresheet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284914-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Celtic F.C. season, UEFA Champions League\nCeltic entered the Champions League at the first qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284914-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Celtic F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, First qualifying round\nOn 19 June, Celtic were drawn to face Alashkert (Armenia) in the First Qualifying Round of the UEFA Champions League. The Bhoys won 3\u20130 in both legs \u2013 courtesy of goals from Odsonne \u00c9douard, James Forrest, Callum McGregor and Moussa Demb\u00e9l\u00e9 \u2013 and secured a place in the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 73], "content_span": [74, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284914-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Celtic F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Second qualifying round\nOn 18 July, it was determined that Celtic would face Rosenborg (Norway) in the Second Qualifying Round of the UEFA Champions League. The Scottish champions eliminated the Norwegian side in the previous season's qualifying phase and did so again. Goals from Odsonne \u00c9douard and Olivier Ntcham secured Celtic's passage into the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 74], "content_span": [75, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284914-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Celtic F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Third qualifying round\nOn 1 August, it was determined that Celtic would face AEK Athens (Greece) in the Third Qualifying Round of the UEFA Champions League. The Bhoys were eliminated following a 3\u20132 defeat on aggregate and parachuted into the UEFA Europa League play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 73], "content_span": [74, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284914-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Celtic F.C. season, UEFA Europa League, Play-Off Round\nOn 16 August, it was determined that Celtic would face S\u016bduva (Lithuania) in the Play-Off Round of the UEFA Europa League. The Bhoys last faced the Lithuanian side in the 2002\u201303 UEFA Cup first round; a 10\u20131 aggregate victory marked the beginning of Celtic's path to the final in Seville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 62], "content_span": [63, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284914-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Celtic F.C. season, UEFA Europa League, Group Stage\nOn 30 August, the draw for the 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League Group Stage was made. Celtic were drawn in Group B along with Red Bull Salzburg (Pot 1), RB Leipzig (Pot 3) and Rosenborg (Pot 4).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284914-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Celtic F.C. season, UEFA Europa League, Round of 32\nOn 17 December, Celtic were drawn to face Valencia in the 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League Round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284914-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Celtic F.C. season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. Players listed below made at least one appearance for Celtic first squad during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284914-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Celtic F.C. season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nLast updated: 25 May 2019Source: Only 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284914-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Celtic F.C. season, Statistics, Hat-tricks\n4 Player scored four goals; (H) \u2013 Home; (A) \u2013 Away; (N) \u2013 Neutral", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284914-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Celtic F.C. season, Club, Kit\nSupplier: New Balance / Sponsors: Dafabet (front) and Magners (back)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284914-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Celtic F.C. season, Club, Kit\nThe club is in the fourth year of a deal with manufacturer New Balance. The kit range for the 2018\u201319 season is inspired by the Bold Bhoys and marks 115 years since the club first used green and white hoops on the jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284915-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Central Arkansas Bears basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Central Arkansas Bears basketball team represent the University of Central Arkansas during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bears are led by fifth-year head coach Russ Pennell and play their home games at the Farris Center in Conway, Arkansas as members of the Southland Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284915-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Central Arkansas Bears basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bears finished the 2017\u201318 season 18\u201317, 10\u20138 in Southland play to finish in seventh place. They defeated Lamar in the first round of the Southland Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Stephen F. Austin. They were invited to the College Basketball Invitational where they defeated Seattle before losing in the quarterfinals to Jacksonville State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284916-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Central Arkansas Sugar Bears basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Central Arkansas Sugar Bears basketball team will represent the University of Central Arkansas during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Sugar Bears will be led by seventh year head coach Sandra Rushing and will play their home games at the Farris Center. They are members of the Southland Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284916-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Central Arkansas Sugar Bears basketball team, Previous season\nThe Sugar Bears finished the 2017\u201318 season 25\u201310, 14\u20134 in Southland play to finish in third place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Southland Women's Tournament where they lost to Stephen F. Austin. They received an invite to the WBI where they defeated SIU Ewardsville, Weber State and Nevada in the first round, quarterfinals and semifinals to advanced to the championship game where they lost to Yale in the championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284917-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Central Coast Mariners FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 Central Coast Mariners FC season was the club's 14th season since its establishment in 2004. The club participated in the A-League for the 14th time and the FFA Cup for the fifth time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284917-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Central Coast Mariners FC season, Review\nThe Mariners were defeated in the first round of the 2018 FFA Cup by Adelaide United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284917-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Central Coast Mariners FC season, Review\nThis season saw the appointment of Mike Mulvey as head coach following the departure of Paul Okon late in the previous season. Mike Mulvey lasted only until round 21 before becoming the forth coach sacked in 5 seasons. In the transfer window, the club re-signed two former players: all-time top scorer Matt Simon and New Zealand midfielder Michael McGlinchey. In pre-season, Jamaican Olympic sprint champion Usain Bolt also came to the club to train on an indefinite basis. Mulvey was sacked by the Mariners following their 8-2 loss at home against Wellington Phoenix. Alen Stajcic was named as caretaker to carry out the remainder of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284917-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Central Coast Mariners FC season, Background\nThe Mariners ended the previous A-League season in last place after losing to F3 Derby rivals Newcastle Jets 8\u20132 on the final matchday. Paul Okon had stepped down as head coach late in the season and his replacement, Wayne O'Sullivan, had his contract terminated soon after season's end. Former Gold Coast United and Brisbane Roar coach Mike Mulvey was named as the new coach in April 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284917-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Central Coast Mariners 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, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284918-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Central Connecticut Blue Devils men's basketball team\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by PrimeBOT (talk | contribs) at 23:19, 21 June 2020 (\u2192\u200eSchedule and results: 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, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284918-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Central Connecticut Blue Devils men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Central Connecticut Blue Devils men's basketball team represented Central Connecticut State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Blue Devils were led by third-year head coach Donyell Marshall, and played their home games at the William H. Detrick Gymnasium in New Britain, Connecticut as members of the Northeast Conference. They finished the season 11\u201320 overall, 5\u201313 in NEC play to finish in last place. They failed to qualify for the NEC Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284918-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Central Connecticut Blue Devils men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Blue Devils finished the 2017\u201318 season, 14\u201318, 7\u201311 in NEC play to finish in eight place. They lost in the first round of the NEC Tournament to Wagner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 78], "content_span": [79, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284919-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Central Connecticut Blue Devils women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Central Connecticut Blue Devils women's basketball team represented Central Connecticut State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Blue Devils were led by twelfth-year head coach Beryl Piper, and played their home games at the William H. Detrick Gymnasium in New Britain, Connecticut as members of the Northeast Conference. They finished the season 7\u201321 overall, 4\u201314 in NEC play to finish in ninth place. They failed to qualify for the NEC Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284920-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Central Michigan Chippewas men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Central Michigan Chippewas men's basketball team represented Central Michigan University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Chippewas, led by seventh-year head coach Keno Davis, played their home games at McGuirk Arena as members of the West Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 23\u201312, 10\u20138 in MAC play to finish in second place in the West Division. They defeated Western Michigan and Kent State to advance to the semifinals of the MAC Tournament where they lost to Buffalo. They were invited to the College Basketball Invitational where they lost in the first round to DePaul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284920-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Central Michigan Chippewas men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Chippewas finished the 2017\u201318 season 21\u201314, 7\u201311 in MAC play to finish in fifth place in the West Division. They defeated Bowling Green in the first round of the MAC Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Buffalo. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they defeated Fort Wayne and Wofford to advance to the quarterfinals where they lost to Liberty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 73], "content_span": [74, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284921-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Central Michigan Chippewas women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Central Michigan Chippewas women's basketball team represented Central Michigan University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Chippewas, led by twelfth-year head coach Sue Guevara, played their home games at McGuirk Arena as members of the West Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 25\u20138, 15\u20133 in MAC play to win the MAC West Division. The Chippewas advanced to the semifinals of the MAC Women's Tournament, losing there to Buffalo. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Women's Tournament, losing to their in-state rival Michigan State in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284921-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Central Michigan Chippewas women's basketball team\nThis proved to be the final season for Guevara as head coach, as she retired during the 2019 offseason. At the same time that CMU announced her retirement, it announced that Guevara's top assistant Heather Oesterle would succeed her as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284922-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National\nThe 2018\u201319 Championnat National season was the 21st season since the establishment of the Championnat National, which serves as the third division of the French football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284922-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National, Promotion play-offs\nA promotion play-off was held at the end of the season between the 18th-placed Ligue 2 team and 3rd-placed team of the 2018\u201319 Championnat National. This was played over two legs on 28 May and 2 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284922-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National, Promotion play-offs\nLe Mans won 3\u20132 on aggregate and were promoted to Ligue 2, while Gaz\u00e9lec Ajaccio were relegated to the Championnat National.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284923-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National 2\nThe 2018\u201319 Championnat National 2 is the 21st season of the fourth tier in the French football league system in its current format. The competition is contested by 64 clubs split geographically across 4 groups of 16 teams each. The teams included amateur clubs (although a few are semi-professional) and the reserve teams of professional clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284923-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National 2, Teams\nOn 13 July, the FFF ratified the constitution of the competition, and published the groups as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284923-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National 2, Season Outcomes, Champions and promotions\nThe champion of Championnat National 2 is decided by measuring performance of each group winner in matches against the top 6 clubs in their group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 73], "content_span": [74, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284923-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National 2, Season Outcomes, Champions and promotions\nCr\u00e9teil are champions of 2018\u201319 Championnat National 2 and are promoted to 2019\u201320 Championnat National.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 73], "content_span": [74, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284923-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National 2, Season Outcomes, Champions and promotions\nLe Puy, Toulon and Bastia-Borgo are promoted to 2019\u201320 Championnat National.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 73], "content_span": [74, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284923-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National 2, Season Outcomes, Relegation\nMonaco (res), Pontarlier, Nice (res), N\u00eemes (res), Bordeaux (res), Mont-de-Marsan, Furiana-Agliani, Boulogne-Billancourt, Le Havre (res), Haguenau, Feignies Aulnoye and Arras finished in the relegation places and will be relegated to 2019\u201320 Championnat National 3 subject to any reprieves in the next section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284923-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National 2, Season Outcomes, Reprieves\nAny reprieves required due to administrative relegations, mergers or clubs folding are decided by taking, in order, the 14th placed clubs ranked by order of their record against clubs finishing 9th to 13th position in their group, followed by the 15th placed clubs ranked by order of their record against clubs finishing in 10th to 14th position in their group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284923-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National 2, Season Outcomes, Reprieves\nOn 24 May 2019, Paris Saint-Germain (res) announced they would not be registering for Championnat National 2 next season, meaning an automatic reprieve for the best 14th placed team, Monaco (res).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284923-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National 2, Season Outcomes, Reprieves\nAlso on 24 May 2019, the body responsible for governance of clubs in French football, the DNCG, administratively relegated Mantes due to financial arrears. The club successfully appealed this decision on 3 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284923-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National 2, Season Outcomes, Reprieves\nOn 4 June 2019, the DNCG administratively relegated Jura Sud, subject to appeal. The club successfully appealed this decision, as announced on 8 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284923-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National 2, Season Outcomes, Reprieves\nOn 12 June 2019, the DNCG administratively relegated Martigues, subject to appeal. The club successfully appealed this decision on 3 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284923-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National 2, Season Outcomes, Reprieves\nOn 25 June 2019, the DNCG administratively relegated Athl\u00e9tico Marseille, subject to appeal, and also gave Tours an administrative relegation on top of their relegation from Championnat National, subject to appeal. This was confirmed at appeal on 11 July 2019, confirming the reprieve of N\u00eemes (res).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284923-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National 2, Season Outcomes, Reprieves\nOn 11 July 2019, the DNCG appeal committee confirmed the earlier decision of the DNCG to give an administrative relegation to Tours FC in addition to their sporting relegation from 2018\u201319 Championnat National, meaning they will play in Championnat National 3 for the 2019\u201320 season, which causes the reprieve of Haguenau.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284924-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National 3\nThe 2018\u201319 Championnat National 3 is the second season of the fifth tier in the French football league system in its current format. The competition is due to be contested by 168 clubs split geographically across 12 groups of 14 teams. The teams include amateur clubs (although a few are semi-professional) and the reserve teams of professional clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284924-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National 3, Teams\nOn 13 July, the French Football Federation ratified the constitution of the competition, and published the groups as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284924-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National 3, Promotion and relegation\nIf eligible, the top team in each group will be promoted to Championnat National 2. If a team finishing top of the group is ineligible, or declines promotion, the next eligible team in that group will be promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284924-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National 3, Promotion and relegation\nGenerally, three teams will be relegated from each group to their respective top regional league, subject to reprieves. Extra teams will be relegated from a group if more than one team is relegated to that group from Championnat National 2. In the case that no teams are relegated to a group from Championnat National 2, one less team will be relegated from that group to the regional league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284924-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National 3, Promotion and relegation\nReserve teams whose training centre is categorised as category 2B or lower cannot be promoted to Championnat National 2 by the rules of the competition. It was announced in September 2018 that the following reserve teams would be ineligible for promotion following the categorisation of their training centres:AC Ajaccio, Amiens SC, Brest, Clermont, Dijon and Paris FC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284924-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National 3, Season outcomes, Promotion\nAngoul\u00eame, Angers (res), Bourges Foot, SC Bastia, Louhans-Cuiseaux, Mulhouse, Montpellier (res), Saint-Quentin, Rouen, Guingamp (res), Gobelins and Chamali\u00e8res finished in the promotion places, and were promoted to 2019\u201320 Championnat National 2, subject to ratification by the FFF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284924-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National 3, Season outcomes, Promotion\nOn 12 June 2019, the financial regulator of the FFF, the DNCG denied Mulhouse promotion, subject to appeal. The decision was successfully appealed, and Mulhouse were promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284924-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National 3, Season outcomes, Champions\nThe title of Champion of Championnat National 3 is awarded to the team with the best record in games against the teams that finished in 2nd to 6th place in their group, with goal difference to separate ties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284924-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National 3, Season outcomes, Relegation\nPau (res), Cestas, Montmorillon, Chauray, Laval (res), La Suze, Amilly, Saint-Jean-le-Blanc, Cannet, Le Pontet, \u00c9F Bastia, AS Saint-R\u00e9my, La Charit\u00e9, Avallon, Grandvillars, Sarreguemines, Nancy (res), \u00c9pernay, Agde, Loz\u00e8re, Tarbes, Senlis, Dunkerque (res), Tourcoing, Chantilly, ASPTT Caen, Bayeux, D\u00e9ville-Maromme, Montagnarde, Atlantique Vilaine, Br\u00e9tigny, Le M\u00e9e, Meaux Academy, Noisy-le-Sec, Moulins and Ytrac finished in the relegation places and were relegated to the top division of their respective regional leagues, subject to any reprieves detailed in the next section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284924-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National 3, Season outcomes, Reprieves\nIn Group D, Bastelicaccia were reprieved due to the reprieve of Monaco (res) in 2018\u201319 Championnat National 2, caused by the decision of Paris Saint-Germain (res) not to participate next season. Subsequently, on 11 July 2019, they were re-relegated as a result of the relegation of Athl\u00e9tico Marseille from 2018\u2013Championnat National 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284924-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National 3, Season outcomes, Reprieves\nIn Group H, Agde were reprieved due to the reprieve of N\u00eemes (res) in Championnat National 2, caused by the administrative relegation of Tours FC to Championnat National 3 (where they will take the place of their reserve team).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284924-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National 3, Season outcomes, Reprieves\nIn Group F, Sarreguemines were reprieved due to the reprieve of Haguenau in Championnat National 2, caused by the administrative relegation of Athl\u00e9tico Marseille.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284924-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National 3, Season outcomes, Reprieves\nIn Group B, Laval (res) were reprieved due to the administrative relegation of Saint-Nazaire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284924-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Championnat National 3, Season outcomes, Reprieves\nIn Group A, Pau (res) were reprieved due to the administrative relegation of Limoges.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284925-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Champions Hockey League\nThe 2018\u201319 Champions Hockey League was the fifth season of the Champions Hockey League, a European ice hockey tournament. The tournament was competed by 32 teams, and qualification was on sporting merits only. The six founding leagues were represented by between three and five teams (based on a four-year league ranking), while seven \"challenge leagues\" were represented by one team each. One place was awarded to the Continental Cup champion. Unlike in the first three editions, founding teams did not automatically qualify. The group stages began on 30 August 2018, and ended on 17 October 2018. The season had an average attendance of 3,401 per game, one percent increase from the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284925-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Champions Hockey League\nSwedish team Fr\u00f6lunda HC won their third Champions Hockey League title, defeating Red Bull M\u00fcnchen, the first German team to reach the final, 3\u20131 at the Scandinavium in Gothenburg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284925-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Champions Hockey League, Team allocation\nA total of 32 teams from different European first-tier leagues participated in the 2018\u201319 Champions Hockey League. Besides the Continental Cup champions, 24 teams from the six founding leagues, as well as the national champions from Slovakia, Norway, Denmark, France, Belarus, Great Britain and Poland qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284925-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Champions Hockey League, Team allocation\nThe qualification for these places was set out in the rules as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284925-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Champions Hockey League, Group stage\nFor the group stage, the teams were drawn into 8 groups of 4 teams. Each team played home and away against every other team for a total of 6 games. The best 2 teams qualified to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284925-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Champions Hockey League, Group stage, Pots\nAs the reigning CHL champions, JYP were the top seeded team. In the top pot were also the reigning champions of the six founding leagues and the regular season winner of SHL. The 16 remaining teams from founding leagues were placed to pots 2 and 3. The fourth pot included playoff champions of seven challenge leagues and Yunost Minsk, the champion of 2017\u201318 IIHF Continental Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284925-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Champions Hockey League, Group stage, Pots\nJYP V\u00e4xj\u00f6 Lakers K\u00e4rp\u00e4t Kometa Brno ZSC Lions Red Bull M\u00fcnchen HC Bolzano Djurg\u00e5rdens IF", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284925-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Champions Hockey League, Group stage, Pots\nTPS HC Plze\u0148 SC Bern Eisb\u00e4ren Berlin Vienna Capitals Skellefte\u00e5 AIK Tappara Mountfield HK", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284925-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Champions Hockey League, Group stage, Pots\nEV Zug N\u00fcrnberg Ice Tigers Red Bull Salzburg Malm\u00f6 Redhawks HIFK Ocel\u00e1\u0159i T\u0159inec HC Lugano Fr\u00f6lunda HC", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284925-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Champions Hockey League, Group stage, Pots\nHC '05 Bansk\u00e1 Bystrica Neman Grodno Storhamar Ishockey Cardiff Devils Aalborg Pirates Dragons de Rouen GKS Tychy Yunost Minsk", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284925-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Champions Hockey League, Group stage, Group stage tie-breaking criteria\nIf two teams were tied in points after the group stage was finished, the teams precedence was decided by head-to-head games. If teams were tied after that, then the team which was ranked higher prior to the tournament will take precedence. When comparing head-to-head results, the following criteria was applied:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284925-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Champions Hockey League, Playoffs, Format\nIn each round except the final, the teams played two games and the aggregate score decided the team which advanced. As a rule, the first leg was hosted by the team who had the inferior record in the tournament to that point and the second leg was played on the home ice of the other team. If aggregate score was tied, a sudden death overtime followed. If the overtime is scoreless, the team who wins the game winning shot competition advanced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284925-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Champions Hockey League, Playoffs, Format\nThe final was played on the home ice of the team who had the better record in the tournament on 5 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284925-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Champions Hockey League, Playoffs, Bracket\nThe 8 group winners and the 8 second-placed teams advanced to the Round of 16. The teams were divided into two seeding groups and group winners were randomly drawn against runners-up. Teams who had faced each other in the group stage couldn't be drawn against each other in the round of 16. The draw took place in Helsinki, Finland on 19 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284925-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Champions Hockey League, Statistics, Leading goaltenders\nThe following goaltenders led the league in save percentage, provided that they have played at least 40% of their team's minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284926-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Charleston Southern Buccaneers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Charleston Southern Buccaneers men's basketball team represented Charleston Southern University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Buccaneers, led by 14th-year head coach Barclay Radebaugh, played their home games at the CSU Field House in North Charleston, South Carolina as members of the Big South Conference. They finished the season 18\u201316, 9\u20137 in Big South play to finish in a four-way tie for fifth place. They defeated UCS Upstate and Winthrop to advance to the semifinals of the Big South Tournament where they lost to Radford. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they defeated Florida Atlantic in the first round before falling in the second round to fellow Big South member Hampton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 819]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284926-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Charleston Southern Buccaneers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Buccaneers They finished the season 15\u201316, 9\u20139 in Big South play to finish in a four-way tie for fifth place. As the No. 8 seed in the Big South Tournament, they defeated Presbyterian in the first round before losing in the quarterfinals to UNC Asheville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 77], "content_span": [78, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284927-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team represented the University of North Carolina at Charlotte during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The 49ers, led by first year head coach Ron Sanchez, played their home games at the Dale F. Halton Arena as members Conference USA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284927-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe 49ers finished the 2017\u201318 season 6\u201323, 2\u201316 in C-USA play to finish in last place. They failed to qualify for the C-USA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284927-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Charlotte 49ers men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn December 14, 2017, head coach Mark Price was fired after a 3\u20136 start to the season and was replaced by Fancher. Houston Fancher was named interim coach for the remainder of the season. On March 6, 2018, new athletic director Mike Hill fired Fancher. On March 19, the school hired Virginia associate head coach Ron Sanchez as their new head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284928-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Charlotte 49ers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Charlotte 49ers women's basketball team represents the University of North Carolina at Charlotte during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The 49ers, led by seventh year head coach Cara Consuegra, play their home games at Dale F. Halton Arena and were members of Conference USA. They finished the season 18\u201314, 9\u20137 in C-USA play to finish in a tie for seventh place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the C-USA Women's Tournament where they lost to UAB. They received an at-large bid to the Women's National Invitation Tournament where they lost to VCU in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284929-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Charlotte Hornets season\nThe 2018\u201319 Charlotte Hornets season was the 29th season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA). On April 13, 2018, the Hornets fired head coach Steve Clifford after the team missed the playoffs. On May 10, 2018, the Hornets hired James Borrego as head coach. This season is notable because the team is celebrating their 30th year in the NBA, also announcing that Muggsy Bogues and Dell Curry would be ambassadors for the team. With a Detroit Pistons win on April 10, against the New York Knicks, the Hornets were eliminated from playoff contention for the third straight season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284929-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Charlotte Hornets season\nThis season also marked Tony Parker's 18th and final season in the NBA, as he announced his retirement on June 10, 2019. As the last remaining active player from the Spurs Big 3, this season was Parker's first missing the playoffs and he was also the last remaining active player from the Spurs' 2003, 2005, and 2007 championship teams. Parker's retirement also left Rajon Rondo of the Los Angeles Lakers and Udonis Haslem and Dwyane Wade of the Miami Heat as the last remaining active players to win championships in the 2000s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284929-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Charlotte Hornets season\nAfter 8 years, this season marked the end of the Kemba Walker era in Charlotte as he joined the Boston Celtics during the following summer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284930-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Charlton Athletic F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Charlton Athletic's 113th season in their existence. Along with competing in the League One, the club will also participate in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284930-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Charlton Athletic F.C. season, Competitions, Friendlies\nOn 22 May 2018, Charlton Athletic announced its first confirmed friendly taking place ahead of the 2018/19 season would be against Welling United at Park View Road. On 29 May the first home friendly was announced which would see Brighton & Hove Albion visit The Valley on 24 July 2018. A further home friendly was added against Norwich City for 28 July 2018. On 27 June 2018 it was announced that a behind-closed door friendly between Queens Park Rangers and Charlton Athletic would take place on 7 July at QPR's Harlington training ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284930-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Charlton Athletic F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October. The draw for the second round was made live on BBC and BT by Mark Schwarzer and Glenn Murray on 12 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284930-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Charlton Athletic F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, Charlton Athletic were drawn away to Milton Keynes Dons in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284930-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Charlton Athletic F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284931-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chattanooga Mocs men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Chattanooga Mocs basketball team represented the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Mocs, led by second-year head coach Lamont Paris, played their home games at McKenzie Arena and as members of the Southern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284931-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chattanooga Mocs men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Mocs finished the 2017\u201318 season 10\u201323, 3\u201315 in SoCon play to finish for ninth place. In the SoCon Tournament, they lost to East Tennessee State in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284931-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chattanooga Mocs men's basketball team, Schedule and results\n* Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses. All times are in Eastern Time", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284932-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chattanooga Mocs women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Chattanooga Mocs women's basketball team represented the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Mocs, led by first-year head coach Katie Burrows, played their home games at the McKenzie Arena as members of the Southern Conference (SoCon). The Mocs finished the season 14\u201317, 8\u20136 in third place in the SoCon, losing to Furman in the quarterfinals of the conference tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284932-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chattanooga Mocs women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe 2017\u201318 Chattanooga Mocs women's basketball team represented the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga during the 2017\u201318 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Mocs, led by fifth-year head coach Jim Foster, played their home games at the McKenzie Arena as members of the Southern Conference (SoCon). The Mocs finished the season 17\u201313, 8\u20136 in third place in the SoCon, losing to UNC Greensboro in the conference tournament. They received an at-large berth in the 2018 WNIT but lost in the first round to UAB. Foster retired soon afterwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284933-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cheetahs season\nIn the 2018\u201319 rugby union season, the Cheetahs participated in the 2018\u201319 Pro14 competition, their second appearance since joining the competition in 2017\u201318. The remained in Conference A of the competition, along with Irish sides Connacht and Munster, Italian side Zebre, Scottish side Glasgow Warriors and Welsh sides Cardiff Blues and Ospreys.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284933-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cheetahs season, Personnel, Coaches and management\nThe Cheetahs coaching and management staff for the 2018\u201319 Pro14 season are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 58], "content_span": [59, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284933-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cheetahs season, Personnel, Player movements\nPlayer movements between the 2017\u201318 Pro14 season and the end 2018\u201319 Pro14 season are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 52], "content_span": [53, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284933-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cheetahs season, Standings, Round-by-round\nThe table below shows the Cheetahs' progression throughout the season. For each round, their cumulative points total is shown with the conference position:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284933-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cheetahs season, Player statistics\nThe Pro14 appearance record for players that represented the Cheetahs in 2018\u201319 is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284934-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chelsea F.C. Women season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Chelsea Women's 27th competitive season and 9th consecutive season in the top flight of English football. It was the first season after the naming switch from Chelsea Ladies FC and also the first season in the rebranded FA WSL. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284935-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chelsea F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Chelsea's 105th competitive season, 30th consecutive season in the top flight of English football, 27th consecutive season in the Premier League, and 113th year in existence as a football club. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284935-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chelsea F.C. season, Overview, August\nChelsea began the league campaign under new manager Sarri with a \"comfortable\" 3\u20130 victory at Huddersfield Town, with new midfielder Jorginho scoring a penalty on his debut, in between goals from N'Golo Kante and Pedro. This was followed with a home clash with Arsenal in the first home match of the season. After Pedro and Alvaro Morata quickly established a firm Chelsea advantage, Arsenal fought back to level before the break before Marcos Alonso won it late for the Blues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284935-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chelsea F.C. season, Overview, August\nChelsea then made the long trip to Newcastle, and took the lead with fourteen minutes to play with an Eden Hazard penalty. With seven minutes to play, striker Joselu leveled it up, however Chelsea would have the last word, with a DeAndre Yedlin own goal with three minutes left seeing them edge it 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284935-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chelsea F.C. season, Overview, September\nChelsea began September by earning their fourth successive league win, courtesy of a 2\u20130 triumph over Bournemouth after goals from Pedro and Hazard late on. This was followed by a clash with Cardiff City, but Chelsea were silenced after a surprise early goal from Sol Bamba; however two goals in six minutes from Hazard ensured Chelsea took a 2\u20131 lead, before he completed his hat-trick ten minutes from time. A Willian goal soon afterwards sealed a 4\u20131 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284935-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chelsea F.C. season, Overview, September\nThis was followed by a trip to Greek outfit PAOK Salonika in the opening group stage contest of that season's UEFA Europa League, with Chelsea playing in the competition for the first time since winning it in 2013. The Blues started off their campaign brightly, scoring after just seven minutes through Willian, but ultimately had to battle to a 1\u20130 win. However, Chelsea dropped their first points of the campaign against a West Ham team that had been winless at home thus far that season. drawing 0\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284935-0002-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chelsea F.C. season, Overview, September\nChelsea followed the point at the London Stadium with a League Cup third-round success at Liverpool. After falling behind on 56 minutes through Daniel Sturridge, Chelsea struck back through Emerson and Hazard to claim a 2\u20131 win. They then faced a Reds side with a stronger team sheet at Stamford Bridge in the league, but were undone thanks to a late Sturridge stunner, and had to settle for a 1\u20131 draw. However, with Hazard having scored five league goals in the month, including the hat-trick against Cardiff, he was awarded with the Premier League Player of the Month for September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284935-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chelsea F.C. season, Overview, October\nOctober began with a narrow win over Hungarians MOL Vidi in the Europa League, with Morata scoring the game's only goal with twenty minutes to play. Chelsea then turned on the style in a 3\u20130 league win at Southampton, with Ross Barkley scoring his first of the season in between Hazard and Morata goals. Next up, Jose Mourinho \u2013 who had won three Premier League titles with Chelsea \u2013 made his return to Stamford Bridge as manager of Manchester United, who were eighth in the league and struggling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284935-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chelsea F.C. season, Overview, October\nChelsea took a 1\u20130 lead into half-time after a looping header from Antonio Rudiger, but a quickfire double from Anthony Martial in the second half put United in front; however, a 96th minute equalizer from Ross Barkley kept Chelsea's unbeaten season intact. Chelsea maintained their perfect Europa League record after a hat-trick for Ruben Loftus-Cheek helped them to a 3\u20131 win over Belarusian BATE Borisov, before the young English forward scored his first league goal of the season to cap off a \"commanding\" 4\u20130 destruction of Burnley at Turf Moor. Chelsea then battled to a 3\u20132 home win over Derby County in the League Cup last 16, with all five goals coming in an eventful first half, with Fikayo Tomori and Cesc Fabregas (along with a Richard Keogh own goal) on target for the Blues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 835]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284935-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chelsea F.C. season, Overview, November\nChelsea began November with a 3\u20131 home win over Crystal Palace, thanks largely to Morata's double. A nervy 1\u20130 win at BATE followed, with Olivier Giroud scoring his first goal under Maurizio Sarri, sealing a spot in the last 32 of the Europa League. Afterwards, Chelsea extended their unbeaten run of the campaign to eighteen matches after a goalless draw at home with Everton. However, their unbeaten record under Sarri was halted at that figure, with several defensive lapses seeing them fall to a 3\u20131 loss at Tottenham. Chelsea, however, recovered well by securing top spot in their Europa League group with a dominant 4\u20130 win over PAOK Salonika, with Giroud scoring twice and Callum Hudson-Odoi getting his first senior goal in a convincing display to cap off November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 821]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284935-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chelsea F.C. season, Overview, December\nChelsea began December with a routine 2\u20130 home win over Fulham, thanks to goals from Pedro and Loftus-Cheek. before losing for just the second time that season, away to Wolves. After Ruben Loftus-Cheek gave Chelsea a first-half lead, the hosts struck back with second-half goals from Raul Jiminez and Diogo Jota to claim a 2\u20131 win. Chelsea were underdogs heading into a clash against a Manchester City team who had not lost domestically since April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284935-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chelsea F.C. season, Overview, December\nHowever, despite being outplayed for large periods of the contest, a rocket-shot from Kante and a looping header from David Luiz sealed a memorable 2\u20130 win to ensure Chelsea's return to the top four. Chelsea then completed their Europa League group campaign with a 2\u20132 draw away to MOL Vidi. After going ahead through Willian, an Ethan Ampadu own goal and Loic Nego's sweet volley put the home side ahead, before a late leveller from Giroud sealed a point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284935-0005-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chelsea F.C. season, Overview, December\nAfter first-half goals from Pedro and Hazard helped Chelsea battle past a resilient Brighton team, Maurizio Sarri's team set up a League Cup semi-final with London rivals Tottenham after scraping past Bournemouth 1\u20130 in the quarter-finals. However, this was followed by a frustrating home defeat to Leicester City, with the Foxes becoming the first team to win at Stamford Bridge all year thanks to Jamie Vardy's 51st-minute effort. After goals from either side in first-half stoppage-time, Eden Hazard's penalty won the day at Watford, before 2018 ended on a high for Chelsea after N'Golo Kante scored the only goal at Selhurst Park against Crystal Palace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284935-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chelsea F.C. season, Overview, January\nA disappointing goalless draw at home with Southampton was not the best way possible to start the new year, but Chelsea soon secured their first win of 2019 after beating Nottingham Forest 2\u20130 in the FA Cup third round. However, a 1\u20130 reverse to Tottenham in the first leg of the League Cup semi-final followed, before goals from Pedro and Willian earned a 2\u20131 victory over Newcastle United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284935-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chelsea F.C. season, Overview, January\nChelsea (in fourth) had the gap to fifth closed to three points after Arsenal won 2\u20130 in a one-sided London derby, before beating Tottenham 4\u20132 on penalties after winning 2\u20131 in the second leg of the League Cup semi-final, to set up a final against holders Manchester City. They then strolled to a 3\u20130 win over Sheffield Wednesday in the FA Cup fourth round, before falling out of the top four after suffering a 4\u20130 league reverse at Bournemouth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284935-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chelsea F.C. season, Overview, January Transfers\nChelsea only signed two players in January; the first was Juventus` Argentine forward Gonzalo Higuain, who arrived on loan for the remainder of the season, with an option to buy at the end. The second was young American prospect Christian Pulisic, who signed from Borussia Dortmund, though was sent back on loan to Germany for the remainder of the campaign. A host of players departed on loan, among them Alvaro Morata to Spaniards Atletico Madrid and Michy Batshuayi to Fenerbahce. Five players also departed permanently, most notably Cesc Fabregas, who joined French side AS Monaco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284935-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chelsea F.C. season, Overview, February\nChelsea returned to fourth after walloping Huddersfield Town 5\u20130 in the Premier League, with January signing Gonzalo Higuain scoring twice on his home debut. However, Chelsea's flaws were exposed after being beaten 6\u20130 at Manchester City, in their heaviest league defeat since 1992, when they lost 7\u20130 to Nottingham Forest. After the City drubbing, Chelsea earned a 2\u20131 win away to Swedish outfit Malmo FF in the first leg of the Europa League last 32. An FA Cup exit to Manchester United was followed by the second leg, which Chelsea won 3\u20130 to secure passage to the last 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284935-0008-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chelsea F.C. season, Overview, February\nChelsea then faced Manchester City in the League Cup final, and put in a solid defensive display to draw 0\u20130. In extra-time, however, manager Sarri attempted to call goalkeeper Kepa Arrizabalaga off, but the Spanish stopper refused to be substituted, and City went on to win 4\u20133 on penalties. Chelsea ended February with a critical home match against Tottenham in the league. After taking the lead through Pedro, Chelsea won 2\u20130 after a Kieran Trippier backpass rolled into his own net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284935-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chelsea F.C. season, Overview, March\nMarch began with Higuain scoring his first away goal for Chelsea in a narrow 2\u20131 success at Fulham, before goals from Pedro, Willian and Hudson-Odoi ensured a 3\u20130 first leg win over Dynamo Kiev in the last 16 of the Europa League. A stoppage-time equalizer from Eden Hazard earned them a point against Wolves, before Olivier Giroud's first Chelsea hat-trick ensured a memorable 5\u20130 win away to Dynamo Kiev, and an 8\u20130 aggregate victory. A 2\u20130 league loss to Everton further dented Chelsea's Champions League qualification hopes, before March ended with a controversial win at Cardiff City, with Cesar Azpilicueta scoring from an offside position and Cardiff having at least \"two good penalty shouts.\" waved away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284935-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chelsea F.C. season, Overview, April\nChelsea maintained their 100% league record against Brighton with a 3\u20130 victory at Stamford Bridge that lifted them to fifth. Eden Hazard scored what would win the Premier League goal of the Month for April with a fantastic solo effort as the forward netted a brace in the 2\u20130 win over West Ham United. A late Marcos Alonso header earned Chelsea a 1\u20130 away win in the first leg of the Europa League quarter-finals against Czech Slavia Prague, before second-half goals from Sadio Mane and Mohamed Salah saw Chelsea lose 2\u20130 at Liverpool in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284935-0010-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chelsea F.C. season, Overview, April\nHowever, they followed this up with a thrilling 4\u20133 win against Slavia Prague in the return quarter-final leg of the Europa League, with Chelsea leading 4\u20131 after 27 minutes. Chelsea then drew with Burnley 2\u20132, as Kante scored his first goal of 2019 and Higuain adding his fourth for the club. All four goals came in a thrilling opening 24 minutes, before April finished with Alonso cancelling out Juan Mata's opener in a 1\u20131 draw away with Manchester United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284935-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chelsea F.C. season, Overview, May\nMay began with a tense 1\u20131 draw away to German Eintracht Frankfurt in the first leg of the Europa League semi-final, with Pedro lashing home an equalizer just before half-time. Chelsea then secured a top-four finish for the first time since 2017, after second-half goals from Ruben Loftus-Cheek, David Luiz and Gonzalo Higuain earned a 3\u20130 home win against Watford. Chelsea then faced Frankfurt in the second leg of the Europa League semi-final and, after taking the lead through Loftus-Cheek, were forced into extra-time after a second-half goal from Luka Jovic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284935-0011-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chelsea F.C. season, Overview, May\nCesar Azpilicueta had a goal disallowed for a foul on goalie Trapp in the build-up, before Eden Hazard scored the winning penalty in the shootout to send Chelsea to meet Arsenal's 7\u20133 aggregate winners over Valencia in the final in Baku, Azerbaijan. Chelsea's final day draw at Leicester secured a third-place league finish, with Chelsea having amassed 72 points from a possible 114.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284935-0011-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chelsea F.C. season, Overview, May\nChelsea collected one individual award for the league campaign, with Eden Hazards 15 assists enough to earn him the Premier League Playmaker Award for the most assists, whilst also collecting the Chelsea Player of the Year, Players` Player of the Year and Goal of the Year. After a 3\u20130 win away to New England Revolution in a warm-up friendly, Chelsea faced Arsenal in the UEFA Europa League final. After a tense first half of few openings, Olivier Giroud nodded Chelsea in front on 49 minutes, and the team soon were ahead 2\u20130 after Pedro swept home on the hour mark. Hazard made it 3\u20130 from the spot before Alex Iwobi pulled on back for Arsenal; however, a second from Hazard sealed the game ensured a 4\u20131 win as Chelsea won the Europa League for the second time in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 825]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284936-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cheltenham Town F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Cheltenham Town's 132nd season in existence and their third consecutive season in League Two. Along with competing in League Two, the club participated in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284936-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cheltenham Town F.C. season\nThe season covered the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284936-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cheltenham Town F.C. season, Competitions, Pre-season friendlies\nThe Robins revealed friendlies with Bristol City, Cirencester Town, Reading U23s, Evesham United, Birmingham City, Weston-super-Mare and Walsall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284936-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cheltenham Town F.C. season, Competitions, League Two, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League Two fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284936-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cheltenham Town F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October. The draw for the second round was made live on BBC and BT by Mark Schwarzer and Glenn Murray on 12 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284936-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cheltenham Town F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam. The second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284936-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cheltenham Town F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced. The draw for the second round was made live on Talksport by Leon Britton and Steve Claridge on 16 November. On 8 December, the third round draw was drawn by Alan McInally and Matt Le Tissier on Soccer Saturday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284937-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chennaiyin FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 Chennaiyin FC season was the club's fifth season since its establishment in 2014 and their fifth season in the Indian Super League. They will also play in the 2019 AFC Cup. This is the first time an ISL club will play in any continental championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284937-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chennaiyin FC season, Transfers, Pre-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, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284937-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chennaiyin FC season, Transfers, Pre-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, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284937-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chennaiyin FC season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284937-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chennaiyin FC season, Squad, Out on loan\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284937-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chennaiyin FC season, Pre-season and friendlies\nChennayin FC started their pre-season in Malaysia on 14 August under the watchful eyes of John Gregory. The team is supposed to play four warm-up matches and will return to Chennai on September 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284937-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chennaiyin FC season, Pre-season and friendlies\nIn the first friendly, Chennaiyin played with Malaysia U19 and drew the match. Playing against Malaysia Premier League team MIFA, Chennaiyin won in penalties by 3-2 after regulation time ended in 1-1. They played their third match against Felda United and drew that match. Chennaiyin played their last match of Malaysian sojourn against Terengganu FC and lost it 2-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284938-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chicago Blackhawks season\nThe 2018\u201319 Chicago Blackhawks season was the 93rd season for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on September 25, 1926. The Blackhawks were coached by Joel Quenneville, in his 11th season as the Blackhawks' head coach, for the first 15 games of the season. On November 6, 2018, Quenneville was fired and Jeremy Colliton was named the new head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284938-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chicago Blackhawks season\nThe Blackhawks were eliminated from playoff contention on April 2, 2019. This marked the first time since the 2006\u201307 and 2007\u201308 seasons that the Blackhawks had missed the playoffs in back-to-back seasons. The Blackhawks finished the season 36\u201334\u201312 to finish in sixth place in the Central Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284938-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chicago Blackhawks season\nPatrick Kane led the team in scoring, scoring 44 goals and a regular season career-high of 110 points. Alex DeBrincat scored 41 goals in his second season in the NHL while Jonathan Toews had a resurgent year, scoring a regular season career-high in goals (35) and points (81).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284938-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chicago Blackhawks season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was released on June 21, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284938-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chicago Blackhawks 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284938-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chicago Blackhawks season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Blackhawks. Stats reflect time with the Blackhawks only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Blackhawks only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284938-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chicago Blackhawks season, Transactions\nThe Blackhawks have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284938-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chicago Blackhawks season, Draft picks\nBelow are the Chicago Blackhawks's selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284939-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chicago Bulls season\nThe 2018\u201319 Chicago Bulls season was the 53rd season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284939-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chicago Bulls season\nOn December 3, 2018, the Bulls fired Fred Hoiberg and replaced him with his assistant Jim Boylen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284939-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chicago Bulls season\nThis season also produced the Bulls' highest-scoring game in franchise history, recording 168 points on March 1, 2019 in a quadruple overtime 168\u2013161 win over the Atlanta Hawks. It broke a team record previously set in the 1983\u201384 season. It was also the third-highest scoring game in NBA history, as well as the third game where both teams scoring broke through the 160 point barrier in the same game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284939-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chicago Bulls season, Player statistics\nAfter all games. \u2021Waived during the season\u2020Traded during the season\u2260Acquired during the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284939-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chicago Bulls season, Transactions, Trades\nJabari Parker Bobby Portis 2023 protected second round draft pick", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284940-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chicago State Cougars men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Chicago State Cougars men's basketball team were led by first-year head coach Lance Irvin. Their home games were held on campus at the Emil and Patricia Jones Convocation Center. The Cougars are members of the Western Athletic Conference. They finished the season 3\u201329, 0\u201316 in WAC play to finish in last place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the WAC Tournament to New Mexico State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284940-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chicago State Cougars men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Cougars finished the 2017\u201318 season 3\u201329, 1\u201313 in WAC play to finish in last place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the WAC Tournament to New Mexico State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284940-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chicago State Cougars men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Cougars had the worst average point margin in Division I at \u201322.7 points, despite winning two games by over 40 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284940-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chicago State Cougars men's basketball team, Previous season\nAfter the season, Chicago State fired head coach Tracy Dildy during the week of March 5, 2018, although it was not officially announced until a week later. After a nearly a five-month search, Lance Irvin, a Chicago native and former assistant coach at DePaul and several other schools, was named the new head coach of the Cougars on August 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284941-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chinese Basketball Association season\nThe 2018\u201319 CBA season was the 24th season of the Chinese Basketball Association (CBA). In this campaign, the regular season expands from 38 games to 46 games, while the playoffs expand from 10 teams to 12 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284941-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chinese Basketball Association season, Team changes\nThe Shanxi Brave Dragons changed their official English name to the Shanxi Loongs at a lavish unveiling ceremony in September. \u201cLoongs\u201d is the Cantonese term for Dragons and was chosen by team ownership, even though people living in Shanxi speak Mandarin Chinese.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 59], "content_span": [60, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284941-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chinese Basketball Association season, Team changes\nThe Bayi Rockets began playing their home games in Nanchang after spending many years in Ningbo, and the Zhejiang Guangsha Lions began playing their home games in Zhuji to cultivate a fanbase away from central Hangzhou and stop splintering local support with the Zhejiang Golden Bulls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 59], "content_span": [60, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284941-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chinese Basketball Association season, Draft\nThe 2018 CBA Draft, the fourth edition of the CBA draft, took place on 29 July 2018. 14 players were selected in the draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 52], "content_span": [53, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284941-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chinese Basketball Association season, Foreign players policy\nAll teams except the Bayi Rockets can have two foreign players. The bottom two teams from the previous season (except Bayi) have the additional right to sign an extra Asian player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284941-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chinese Basketball Association season, Foreign players policy, Rules Chart\nThe rules for using foreign players in each game are described in this chart:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 82], "content_span": [83, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284941-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chinese Basketball Association season, Foreign players policy, Rules Chart\n++ If a team waives its right to sign an extra Asian player, it may use its 2 foreign players for 7 quarters collectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 82], "content_span": [83, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284941-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chinese Basketball Association season, Foreign players policy, Import chart\nThis is the full list of international players who competed in the CBA during the 2018-19 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 83], "content_span": [84, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284941-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chinese Basketball Association season, Statistics\nThe CBA is like the NCAA, and unlike the NBA, as the CBA combines regular season statistics with playoff statistics, so these lists are not yet final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284941-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chinese Basketball Association season, Awards, Yearly awards\nThis is a list of the 2018\u201319 CBA season's yearly awards winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 68], "content_span": [69, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284941-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chinese Basketball Association season, Awards, Players of the Week\nThis is a list of the 2018\u201319 CBA season's Player of the Week award winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 74], "content_span": [75, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284941-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chinese Basketball Association season, Awards, Players of the Month\nThis is a list of the 2018\u201319 CBA season's Player of the Month award winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 75], "content_span": [76, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284941-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chinese Basketball Association season, Awards, Young Rising Stars of the Month\nThis is a list of the 2018\u201319 CBA season's Young Rising Star of the Month award winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 86], "content_span": [87, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284941-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chinese Basketball Association season, All-Star Weekend\nThe 24th CBA All-Star Game and associated events were held in Qingdao on January 12\u201313, 2019. Saturday featured the Rising Stars Challenge, in which a team of CBA Rookies & Sophomores faced a squad of students from the Chinese University Basketball Association, as well as the preliminaries of the Slam Dunk Contest, Three-Point Shootout, and Skills Competition. Sunday featured the All-Star Game, with the North hosting the South, and the finals of the three individual events taking place at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 63], "content_span": [64, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284942-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chinese Men's Volleyball Super League\nThe 2018\u201319 Chinese Men's Volleyball Super League is the 23rd season of the Chinese Men's Volleyball Super League, the highest professional volleyball league in China. The season began on 22 October 2018 and ended with the Finals on 27 February 2019. Shanghai Golden Age are the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284942-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chinese Men's Volleyball Super League\nOn 27 February 2019, Shanghai Golden Age won their 15th Chinese Men's Volleyball Super League title, after defeating Beijing BAIC Motor in the final, 3\u20130 (3\u20130, 3\u20132, 3\u20130).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284943-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chinese Women's Volleyball Super League\nThe 2018\u201319 Chinese Women's Volleyball Super League was the 23rd season of the Chinese Women's Volleyball Super League, the highest professional volleyball league in China. The season began on 8 November 2018 and ended with the Finals on 9 March 2019. Tianjin Bohai Bank were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284943-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Chinese Women's Volleyball Super League\nOn 9 March 2019, Beijing Baic Motor won their 1st Chinese Women's Volleyball Super League title, after defeating Tianjin Bohai Bank in the final, 3\u20130 (3\u20132, 3\u20131, 3\u20131).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284944-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cincinnati Bearcats men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Cincinnati Bearcats men's basketball team represented the University of Cincinnati in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bearcats were led by 13th-year head coach Mick Cronin, and played its home games at the newly renovated Fifth Third Arena as members of the American Athletic Conference. They finished the season 28\u20137, 14\u20134 in AAC play, finishing in second place. They defeated SMU, Wichita State, and No. 1 seed Houston to win the AAC Tournament for the second consecutive year, and received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. As the No. 7 seed in the South region, they were upset by No. 10 seed Iowa in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284944-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cincinnati Bearcats men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bearcats finished the 2016\u201317 season 31\u20135, 16\u20132 in AAC play to win the regular season championship. They defeated SMU, Memphis, and Houston to win the AAC Tournament and received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. As the No. 2 seed in the West region, they defeated Georgia State in the First Round before being upset by Nevada in the Second Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284944-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cincinnati Bearcats men's basketball team, Offseason, Departing players\nOn September 13, 2018 Associate Head Coach Larry Davis resigned before the start of the season. In October, Greg Youncofski was named as the third assistant coach for the 2018-19 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 79], "content_span": [80, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284944-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cincinnati Bearcats men's basketball team, Preseason, AAC media poll\nThe AAC media poll was released on October 15, 2018, with the Bearcats predicted to finish second in the AAC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 76], "content_span": [77, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284944-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cincinnati Bearcats men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nThe Bearcats had a pre-season tour in Canada, playing three teams on the trip. The Bearcats will reopen Fifth Third Arena against Ohio State on November 7, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 71], "content_span": [72, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284945-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cincinnati Bearcats women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Cincinnati Bearcats women's basketball team will represent the University of Cincinnati during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The season marks the sixth for the Bearcats as members of the American Athletic Conference. The Bearcats, led by first year head coach Michelle Clark-Heard, will return to play their home games at Fifth Third Arena after a one year for renovation. They finished the season 24\u201311, 12\u20134 in AAC play to finish in third place. They advanced to the semifinals of the American Athletic Women's Tournament where they lost to UCF. They received an automatic bid Women's National Invitation Tournament where they defeated Youngstown State, Minnesota, Butler in the first, second and third rounds before losing to TCU in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 843]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284945-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cincinnati Bearcats women's basketball team, Media\nAll games will have a video stream on , ESPN3, or", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 58], "content_span": [59, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284945-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cincinnati Bearcats women's basketball team, Offseason, 2018 Recruits\nThe Bearcats did not sign any high school recruits for the 2018-19 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 77], "content_span": [78, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284946-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Clarkson Golden Knights women's ice hockey season\nThe Clarkson Golden Knights women's ice hockey program represented Clarkson University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season. The Golden Knights entered the season as the defending national champions as well as the ECAC regular season and tournament champions. They also entered the season as the top-ranked team in both the USCHO.com and the USA Today/USA Hockey Magazine polls for the second time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284946-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Clarkson Golden Knights women's ice hockey season\nDuring the season, the Golden Knights participated in the first NCAA women's ice hockey games outside the United States when they traveled to Belfast for a two-game series with Northeastern.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284947-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Clemson Tigers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Clemson Tigers men's basketball team represented Clemson University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Led by ninth-year head coach Brad Brownell, the Tigers played their home games at Littlejohn Coliseum in Clemson, South Carolina as members of the Atlantic Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284947-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Clemson Tigers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Tigers finished the 2017\u201318 season 25\u201310, 11\u20137 in ACC play to finish in a four-way tie for third place. They defeated Boston College in the quarterfinals of the ACC Tournament before losing in the semifinals to Virginia. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they defeated New Mexico State and Auburn to advance to the Sweet Sixteen where they lost to Kansas in the Sweet Sixteen. The Tigers 25 wins tied the most in program history and their 11 conference wins are the most in program history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284947-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Clemson Tigers men's basketball team, Rankings\n*AP does not release post-NCAA tournament rankings^Coaches did not release a Week 2 poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284948-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Clemson Tigers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Clemson Tigers women's basketball team represents Clemson University during the 2018\u201319 college basketball season. The Tigers are led by first year head coach Amanda Butler. The Tigers, members of the Atlantic Coast Conference, play their home games at Littlejohn Coliseum. They finished the season 20\u201313, 9\u20137 in ACC play to finish in seventh place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the ACC Women's Tournament where they lost to Louisville. They received an at-large bid of the NCAA Women's Tournament, which was their first trip 2002 where they defeated South Dakota in the first round before losing to Mississippi State in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284948-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Clemson Tigers women's basketball team\nDuring the off-season it was announced that Amanda Butler would be taking over as head coach for Audra Smith.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284948-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Clemson Tigers women's basketball team, Previous Season\nThe Tigers finished the 2017\u201318 season 11\u201319, 1\u201315 in ACC play to finish in fifteenth place. They lost to Georgia Tech in the first round of the ACC Tournament. After this season, head coach Audra Smith was fired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284949-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cleveland Cavaliers season\nThe 2018\u201319 Cleveland Cavaliers season was the 49th season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA). The Cavaliers entered the season as runners-up in the 2018 NBA Finals, in which they were swept by the Golden State Warriors in four games, the first Finals sweep since 2007, in which the Cavs were also swept, by the San Antonio Spurs. The Cavaliers had the worst team defensive rating in the NBA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284949-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cleveland Cavaliers season\nLeBron James was not on the roster for the first time since 2013\u201314, as he signed with the Los Angeles Lakers in the offseason as a free agent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284949-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cleveland Cavaliers season\nOn October 28, 2018, the Cavaliers fired Tyronn Lue after a 0\u20136 start (the worst start for a team coming off the NBA Finals) and replaced him on the interim basis with his assistant Larry Drew, who would become permanent coach on November 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284949-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cleveland Cavaliers season\nWithout LeBron James, as with the 2010\u201311 season (James' first departure from Cleveland), the Cavaliers struggled to find a solid identity, ranking in the bottom 10 in all of points per game, opponent points per game, pace, offensive rating, and defensive rating. They finished at 19\u201363, the third worst record in the league, second worst in the Eastern Conference, and their worst season since 2010\u201311. This was also the Cavs' first losing season since the 2013\u201314 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284949-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cleveland Cavaliers season, Draft\nThe Cavaliers entered the 2018 NBA draft with the rights to the eighth overall pick, which originally belonged to the Brooklyn Nets. Cleveland acquired the pick from the Boston Celtics in the Kyrie Irving trade during the summer of 2017. The Cavaliers used the pick to acquire point guard Collin Sexton, a freshman out of the University of Alabama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284949-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cleveland Cavaliers season, Preseason summary\nOn July 1, 2018, LeBron James confirmed that he would be leaving the Cavaliers and signing a four-year, $154 million contract with the Los Angeles Lakers. This marked the second time in which James left the Cavaliers in free agency, with the first coming when James joined the Miami Heat in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284949-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cleveland Cavaliers season, Player statistics\nAfter all games. \u2021Waived during the season\u2020Traded during the season\u2260Acquired during the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284950-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cleveland State Vikings men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Cleveland State Vikings men's basketball team represented Cleveland State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They were coached by second-year head coach Dennis Felton. The Vikings played their home games at the Wolstein Center as members of the Horizon League. They finished the season 10\u201321, 5\u201313 in Horizon League play to finish in eighth place. They failed to qualify for the Horizon League Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284950-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cleveland State Vikings men's basketball team\nOn July 12, 2019, head coach Dennis Felton was fired. He finished at Cleveland State with a record of 22\u201344.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284950-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cleveland State Vikings men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Vikings finished the 2017\u201318 season 12\u201323, 6\u201312 in Horizon League play to finish in a tie for eighth place. As the No. 8 seed at the Horizon League Tournament, they defeated Youngstown State and upset No. 1 seed Northern Kentucky and No. 4 seed Oakland to advance to the championship game where they lost to Wright State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284951-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Am\u00e9rica season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Club Am\u00e9rica's 6th consecutive season in the Liga MX, and 74th consecutive season in the top-flight of Mexican football. The club will participate in the Liga MX and the Copa MX.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284951-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Am\u00e9rica season, Pre-season and friendlies\nClub Am\u00e9rica will precede their 2018\u201319 campaign with a series of friendlies to be contested in the United States. The matches were announced in May 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284951-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Am\u00e9rica season, Squad, 2018 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284951-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Am\u00e9rica season, Squad, 2019 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284952-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Atl\u00e9tico Boca Juniors season\nThe 2018\u201319 Club Atl\u00e9tico Boca Juniors season is the 90th consecutive Primera Divisi\u00f3n season for the senior squad. During the season, Boca Juniors will take part in the Primera Divisi\u00f3n, Copa de la Superliga, 2017\u201318 Copa Argentina, 2018\u201319 Copa Argentina, Supercopa Argentina, Final Stages of the 2018 Copa Libertadores and in the Group Stage of the 2019 Copa Libertadores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284952-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Atl\u00e9tico Boca Juniors season, Season overview, June\nFrank Fabra is ruled out of the 2018 FIFA World Cup after sustaining an anterior cruciate ligament tear in his left knee, also, he will miss the entire 2018 Copa Libertadores. On June 27 Boca announced that Sebasti\u00e1n Villa is the first signing of the season, after reaching an agreement with Colombian champions Deportes Tolima.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 64], "content_span": [65, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284952-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Atl\u00e9tico Boca Juniors season, Season overview, July\nGino Peruzzi, Nicol\u00e1s Colazo, Tom\u00e1s Pochettino, Marcelo Torres, Franco Cristaldo, Nicol\u00e1s Benegas and Nazareno Sol\u00eds returned from their loans. Oscar Ben\u00edtez returned to their club after a loan spell in Boca. Franco Cristaldo and Nazareno Sol\u00eds are loaned to San Mart\u00edn (SJ) and Nicol\u00e1s Benegas is loaned to Brown. On July 6, two players arrive to the club: Carlos Izquierdoz is purchased from Santos Laguna and Mauro Z\u00e1rate is purchased from Watford. Marcelo Torres is loaned to Banfield. On July 16 Walter Bou is loaned to Vit\u00f3ria and Nicol\u00e1s Colazo is loaned to Aris. Left back Lucas Olaza is loaned from Talleres (C), in the operation Tom\u00e1s Pochettino and Gonzalo Maroni are loaned to Talleres (C).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 64], "content_span": [65, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284952-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Atl\u00e9tico Boca Juniors season, Season overview, August\nThe first official match of the season is a 6\u20130 win against Alvarado in the Round of 64 of Copa Argentina, in the next round Boca will face San Mart\u00edn (T). On August 2, Boca and Lan\u00fas reached an agreement for the transfer of goalkeeper Esteban Andrada while Guillermo Sara is transferred to Lan\u00fas. In the first game of the Round of 16 of Copa Libertadores, Boca achieved a great victory 2\u20130 against Libertad. Guido Vadal\u00e1 is loaned to Universidad de Concepci\u00f3n. The first match of the Argentinian tournament was a 1\u20130 victory over Talleres (C).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 66], "content_span": [67, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284952-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Atl\u00e9tico Boca Juniors season, Season overview, August\nBoca played awful and lost 2\u20130 against Estudiantes (LP), Boca's 46 rounds as leader came to the end. The level did not improved and Boca drew 0\u20130 against Hurac\u00e1n. Boca and Santiago Vergini agreed to mutually terminate the defender's contract, Vergini subsequently joined Bursaspor. In the second leg of the Round of 16 of Copa Libertadores, Boca won 4\u20132 against Libertad and advanced to the Quarterfinals, facing Brazilian team Cruzeiro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 66], "content_span": [67, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284952-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Atl\u00e9tico Boca Juniors season, Season overview, September\nBoca improved the level and managed to win 3\u20130 over V\u00e9lez Sarsfield. Sebasti\u00e1n P\u00e9rez Cardona is loaned to Pachuca. Boca advanced to the Round of 16 after a 2\u20130 win over San Mart\u00edn (T). On September 15, Boca won 1-0 a really though match against Argentinos Juniors. In the first leg of the Quarterfinals of Copa Libertadores, Boca won 2\u20130 against Cruzeiro. Boca played a bad game and lost 2-0 the Supercl\u00e1sico against River Plate. Boca was eliminated of the 2017\u201318 Copa Argentina after an awful defeat against Gimnasia y Esgrima (LP). On the last match of September, Boca won 3\u20131 over Col\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 69], "content_span": [70, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284952-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Atl\u00e9tico Boca Juniors season, Season overview, October\nIn the second leg of the Quarterfinals of Copa Libertadores, Boca drew 1\u20131 against Cruzeiro and advanced to the Semifinals, facing Brazilian team Palmeiras. On October, 7 Boca drew 2\u20132 against Racing. Goalkeeper Carlos Lampe signs with Boca on a three-month loan from Huachipato. On October 20, Boca drew 0\u20130 against Rosario Central. In the first leg of the Semifinals of Copa Libertadores, Boca played a great match and won 2\u20130 over Palmeiras. On October 27, the reserve team played and lost 2\u20131 against Gimnasia y Esgrima (LP). Boca qualified to the Finals of the 2018 Copa Libertadores after defeating Palmeiras, and will face old time rival River Plate in an unprecedented edition of the Supercl\u00e1sico. Boca also becomes the team with most finals disputed in the history of Copa Libertadores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 67], "content_span": [68, 863]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284952-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Atl\u00e9tico Boca Juniors season, Season overview, November\nIn the first match of the month, Boca won 4\u20131 against Tigre. The first leg of the 2018 Copa Libertadores Finals ended in a 2\u20132 draw, a very disputed match. On the round 13 of Superliga, Boca defeated Patronato 1\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284952-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Atl\u00e9tico Boca Juniors season, Season overview, December\nIn the first match of the month, Boca won 1\u20130 against Independiente. Boca lost the 2018 Copa Libertadores after losing 3\u20131 in the finals against old rival River Plate. Guillermo Barros Schelotto is no longer the coach of Boca, after two years that included two Argentine League trophies. Edwin Cardona finished his loan with the club and returned to Monterrey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284952-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Atl\u00e9tico Boca Juniors season, Season overview, January\nGustavo Alfaro is appointed as the new manager of the club. Cristian Espinoza and Carlos Lampe finished their loans with the club and returned to Villarreal and Huachipato. Nahuel Molina returned from their loan on Defensa y Justicia. On January 2, Boca and Ajax reached an agreement for the transfer of defender Lisandro Magall\u00e1n. Central defender J\u00fanior Alonso is loaned from Lille. Sebasti\u00e1n P\u00e9rez Cardona is loaned to Barcelona. Goalkeeper Marcos D\u00edaz signed with the club. Boca and Borussia Dortmund reached an agreement for the transfer of defender Leonardo Balerdi. Gonzalo Lamardo is loaned to San Mart\u00edn (T).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 67], "content_span": [68, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284952-0008-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Atl\u00e9tico Boca Juniors season, Season overview, January\nJorman Campuzano is purchased from Atl\u00e9tico Nacional and Iv\u00e1n Marcone is purchased from Cruz Azul. On January 18, Boca and San Lorenzo reached an agreement for the transfer of defender Gino Peruzzi. Pablo P\u00e9rez is loaned to Independiente, and Leonardo Jara is loaned to D.C. United. Nahuel Molina is loaned to Rosario Central. The first match of the year was a 1\u20131 against Newell's Old Boys. Right back Kevin Mac Allister is loaned from Argentinos Juniors. Nicol\u00e1s Colazo is loaned to Tigre and Mateo Retegui is loaned to Estudiantes (LP). Central defender Lisandro L\u00f3pez is loaned from Benfica. Boca purchases a percentage of Lucas Olaza from Talleres (C) and is loaned to Celta de Vigo. Walter Bou is loaned to Uni\u00f3n La Calera. Boca won 4\u20130 against San Mart\u00edn (SJ) in one of the matches posponed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 67], "content_span": [68, 866]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284952-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Atl\u00e9tico Boca Juniors season, Season overview, February\nBoca and Zenit Saint Petersburg reached an agreement for the transfer of defensive midfielder W\u00edlmar Barrios. Boca won Godoy Cruz 2\u20130. Agust\u00edn Heredia is loaned to Godoy Cruz. On February 10, Boca travelled to C\u00f3rdoba and drew 1\u20131 against Belgrano. On February 17 Boca defeated Lan\u00fas 2\u20131. Boca lost 2\u20131 against Atl\u00e9tico Tucum\u00e1n in one of the matches postponed. Agust\u00edn Rossi is loaned to Deportes Antofagasta. On February 24 Boca won 1\u20130 against Defensa y Justicia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284952-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Atl\u00e9tico Boca Juniors season, Season overview, March\nOn March 1 Boca won 3\u20131 against Uni\u00f3n. In the beginning of 2019 Copa Libertadores Boca draw Jorge Wilstermann 0-0. On March 9 Boca won 3\u20130 against San Lorenzo. On March 12 Boca won 3\u20130 over Deportes Tolima. On March 14, Boca and Fernando Gago agreed to a contract termination; he played 199 games and won 9 titles. On March 9 Boca won 4\u20131 against San Mart\u00edn (T) and qualified for 2020 Copa Libertadores. On March 29 Boca won 2\u20130 against Banfield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 65], "content_span": [66, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284952-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Atl\u00e9tico Boca Juniors season, Season overview, April\nOn April 2 Boca lost 3\u20130 against Athletico Paranaense. In the final round of Superliga, Boca drew 1\u20131 against Aldosivi and ended the League in the third position. On April 10 Boca won 4\u20130 against Jorge Wilstermann. On April 19 Boca won the first match of 2018\u201319 Copa Argentina 2\u20130 against Estudiantes (RC). On April 24 Boca draw 2\u20132 against Deportes Tolima in Copa Libertadores. On April 28 Boca won 2\u20131 against Godoy Cruz in Copa de la Superliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 65], "content_span": [66, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284952-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Atl\u00e9tico Boca Juniors season, Season overview, May\nOn May 2 Boca won the Supercopa Argentina against Rosario Central defeating them 6\u20135 in penalties after a 0\u20130 draw. On May 5 Boca advanced to the quarterfinals of Copa de la Superliga by winning 3\u20131 against Godoy Cruz. On May 9 Boca Won 2\u20131 against Athletico Paranaense and clinched the first place in the Group G of Copa Libertadores. On May 12, Boca draw V\u00e9lez Sarsfield 0\u20130 in the first leg of Copa de la Superliga quarterfinals. On May 16, Boca won 5\u20134 in penalties after another 0\u20130 draw against V\u00e9lez Sarsfield and advanced to the semifinals. On May 19, Boca draw Argentinos Juniors 0\u20130 in the first leg of Copa de la Superliga semifinals. On May 26, Boca won 1\u20130 against Argentinos Juniors and advanced to the Copa de la Superliga final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 808]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284952-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Atl\u00e9tico Boca Juniors season, Season overview, June\nOn June 2 Boca played the last match of the season, a 2\u20130 defeat against Tigre in the final of the Copa de la Superliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 64], "content_span": [65, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284952-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Atl\u00e9tico Boca Juniors season, Competitions, Overall\n1: The Round of 32 will be played in the next season. 2 : The group stage was played the previous season. 3 : The final stages are played in the next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 64], "content_span": [65, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284953-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Atl\u00e9tico Independiente season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Club Atl\u00e9tico Independiente's 6th consecutive season in the top-flight of Argentine football. The season covers the period from 20 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284953-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Atl\u00e9tico Independiente 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, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284953-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Atl\u00e9tico Independiente 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, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284954-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Atl\u00e9tico River Plate season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Club Atl\u00e9tico River Plate's 8th consecutive season in the top-flight of Argentine football. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284954-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Atl\u00e9tico River Plate season, Squad Summer\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, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284954-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Atl\u00e9tico River Plate season, Squad Winter\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, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284955-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Brugge KV season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Club Brugge's 127th season in existence and the club's 59th consecutive season in the top flight of Belgian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284955-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Brugge KV season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284956-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Necaxa season\nThe 2018\u201319 Club Necaxa season is the 94th season in the football club's history and the 8th consecutive season in the top flight of Mexican football since the team most recent promotion to Liga MX.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284956-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Necaxa season, Players, Squad information\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 6 January 2019.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, 54], "content_span": [55, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284957-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Puebla season\nThe 2018\u201319 Club Puebla season is the club's 72nd professional season in 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. The club will also play Copa MX.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284957-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Puebla season, Players, Squad information\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 6 January 2019.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, 54], "content_span": [55, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284957-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Puebla season, Statistics, Attendance\nPuebla's Home Attendance by round, Estadio Cuauht\u00e9moc has a capacity of 51,726.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284958-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Universidad Nacional season\nThe 2018\u201319 Club Universidad Nacional season is the 64th season in the football club's history and the 57th consecutive season in the top flight of Mexican football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284958-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Universidad Nacional season, Players, Squad information\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 3 December 2018.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, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284958-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Club Universidad Nacional season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nLast updated: 13 January 2019Source: 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, 40], "section_span": [42, 73], "content_span": [74, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284959-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coastal Carolina Chanticleers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Coastal Carolina Chanticleers men's basketball team represents Coastal Carolina University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Chanticleers, led by 12th-year head coach Cliff Ellis, play their home games at the HTC Center in Conway, South Carolina as members of the Sun Belt Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284959-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coastal Carolina Chanticleers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Chanticleers finished the 2017\u201318 season 14\u201318, 8\u201310 in Sun Belt play to finish in eighth place. They lost in the first round of the Sun Belt Tournament to Texas State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 76], "content_span": [77, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284959-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coastal Carolina Chanticleers men's basketball team, Schedule and results\n* Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses. All times are in Eastern Time", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 81], "content_span": [82, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284960-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coastal Carolina Chanticleers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Coastal Carolina Chanticleers women's basketball team represents Coastal Carolina University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Chanticleers, led by sixth year head coach Jaida Williams, play their home games at HTC Center and were members of the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 17\u201315, 8\u201310 in Sun Belt play to finish in eighth place. They advanced to the second round of the Sun Belt Women's Tournament where they lost to Appalachian State. They received an invitation to the WBI where they lost to Campbell in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Colchester United's 82nd season in their history and their third successive season competing in League Two. Along with competing in League Two, the club also participated in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season\nColchester missed the play-offs by just a single point in a dramatic season finale. Having been in and around the automatic promotion positions early season, Colchester found themselves fighting for the play-offs for much of the campaign. However, a drop in form in March going into mid-April saw them drop out of the play-off places and struggled to make a return. A short spell of form at the end of the season left them in contention with a game to spare, but an 87th-minute equaliser for Newport County in their game on the final day of the season meant the U's finished eighth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season\nIn the FA Cup, Colchester were eliminated by League One side Accrington Stanley in the first round, and League Two rivals Cheltenham Town beat the U's following a penalty shoot-out in the first round of the EFL Cup. Colchester finished third in their EFL Trophy group, missing out on progression following defeats by Southampton under-21s and Cambridge United but did record an Essex derby victory against Southend United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nColchester's position in League Two for the 2018\u201319 season was confirmed on 21 April 2018, when the U's suffered a 2\u20131 defeat at Lincoln City, mathematically ruling out potential for promotion through the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nOn 8 May, following the conclusion of the 2017\u201318 season, Colchester announced four players would be leaving on 1 July 2018 following the expiry of their contracts. These included Doug Loft whose time with the U's had been plagued by injury, Scottish duo Denny Johnstone and Craig Slater who had both been on loan north of the border during the previous season, and Tommy O'Sullivan who again had been out on loan with Torquay United during the latter part of last season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nOn 9 May, Academy graduate Drey Wright signed a two-year pre-contract agreement with Scottish Premiership side St Johnstone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nOn 10 May, Colchester signed Cheltenham Town midfielder Harry Pell on a three-year contract for an undisclosed six-figure sum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nOn 12 May, both Tom Lapslie and Brennan Dickenson took up the option of a further year on their contracts to remain with Colchester until summer 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nOn 15 May, defender Ryan Jackson signed a contract extension with the club until the summer of 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nThe club announced on 18 May that seven of the under-23 squad would be released at the end of their contracts. This included Tarryn Allarakhia, Charley Edge, Dominic Kurasik, Eli Phipps, Josh Pollard, Callum Sturgess and JJ Wilson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nThree scholars were offered professional contracts to remain with the club on 24 May, with Dean Ager, Callum Jones and Ollie Kensdale all offered terms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nOn 24 May, Colchester signed goalkeeper Bailey Vose from Brighton & Hove Albion for an undisclosed fee on a two-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nFollowing a successful trial towards the end of the 2017\u201318 season, Noah Chesmain agreed a one-year contract with the club on 25 May after his release by Millwall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nOn 30 May, the club confirmed seven under-23s players had agreed contract extensions. These included George Brown, Ryan Clampin, Eoin McKeown, Decarrey Sheriff, Sam Warde, and Diaz Wright, who agreed one-year deals, and Louis Dunne, who signed a two-year deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nOn 1 June, the club announced that the new stadium sponsors would be JobServe and the stadium therefore renamed JobServe Community Stadium after the expiry of Weston Homes' ten-year deal. The same day, it was announced Millwall would be visiting the stadium for a pre-season friendly on 24 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nClub captain Luke Prosser agreed a new two-year deal with Colchester United on 6 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nOn 7 June, Colchester signed former West Bromwich Albion goalkeeper Ethan Ross on a two-year contract, while Wolverhampton Wanderers forward Aaron Collins joined the club in a season-long loan deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nOn 8 June, Frank Nouble signed a two-year contract with the U's joining from League Two rivals Newport County after his contract had expired. Meanwhile, three more friendlies were confirmed, with trips to nearby Maldon & Tiptree and newly-promoted National League side Braintree Town on 7 and 10 July respectively. Also announced was a trip to north Wales to play Colwyn Bay on 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nOn 12 June, a further friendly fixture was added with a trip to Dagenham & Redbridge set for 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nOn 15 June, Colchester were drawn away to Cheltenham Town in the EFL Cup first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nOn 22 June, Colchester announced another friendly game against Dartford on 21 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nOn 27 June, Colchester signed Swindon Town striker Luke Norris on a three-year deal for an undisclosed fee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nOn 29 June, manager John McGreal announced that both Sean Murray and Sam Walker had left the club after failing to agree new contracts, while he also hoped out-of-contract Kane Vincent-Young would remain with the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nOn 5 July, Colchester signed centre back Chris Forino-Joseph on a one-year contract following a trial period with the under-23 side last season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nColchester played their first pre-season friendly against Maldon & Tiptree on 7 July. The visitors in their new away kit took the lead through captain Luke Prosser when he headed in Aaron Collins' corner kick after 12-minutes. Three minutes later, Collins was again the provider for Sammie Szmodics to convert from close range. Collins was then fouled in the penalty area and stepped up to convert from the spot on 27-minutes. On the half-hour mark, Sam Warde, playing for the Jammers, scored for the home side with a 25-yard free kick. After the break, both sides made wholesale changes, and Mikael Mandron completed the scoring to make it 4\u20131 to United on the hour mark.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nA final pre-season game against League One Gillingham was arranged on 10 July for Saturday 28 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nColchester travelled to Braintree Town for their second pre-season friendly. The U's took the lead after ten minutes when Frank Nouble registered his first goal for the club following a lay-off from Ryan Gondoh. In the second half the lead was doubled when Mikael Mandron struck on 51-minutes, before Sammie Szmodics scored four minutes later to make it 3\u20130. Junior Ogedi-Uzokwe scored from close range in the 71st minute and Mandron scored his third goal in two games to complete the scoring three minutes from time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nDuring their summer training camp in Cheshire, the U's faced Northern Premier League side Colwyn Bay. Two goals from Mikael Mandron and one each from Tom Lapslie, Aaron Collins and Frank Nouble secured an easy victory for Colchester.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nFollowing the announcement that JobServe had gained the stadium naming rights, JobServe owner and club chairman Robbie Cowling announced JobServe would also be the club's shirt sponsor for home and away kits for the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nOn 13 July, Colchester were drawn against Southend United and Cambridge United for the EFL Trophy group stage, with their final Category One under-21 invited opponents revealed on 18 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nDagenham & Redbridge held the U's to a 1\u20131 draw at Victoria Road on 17 July. Michael Cheek opened the scoring with a free kick at the midway point of the first half, but Diaz Wright scored five minutes from full-time to rescue a draw for the visitors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nColchester's final opponents in the EFL Trophy group stage were drawn on 18 July with Southampton under-21s set to visit the Community Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nA late own goal proved the difference between hosts Dartford and the U's on 21 July. Ronnie Vint put the ball into his own net following a cross from Brennan Dickenson after 81-minutes as Colchester battled to a narrow victory over the National League South side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0033-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nIn their penultimate friendly fixture and their first of two home friendly games, Colchester defeated Millwall 2\u20131 thanks to first-half goals from Sammie Szmodics and Kane Vincent-Young, still to sign a new contract with the U's. Millwall earned a late consolation goal through Jed Wallace in the 89th minute to deny United a clean sheet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0034-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nOn 25 July, under-23s centre-back Will Wright signed for National League side Dagenham & Redbridge on loan until January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0035-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nOn 27 July, Junior Ogedi-Uzokwe joined National League side Bromley on loan until January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0036-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, Preseason\nColchester closed their pre-season campaign with a resounding 5\u20131 win over Gillingham at the Community Stadium. Sammie Szmodics opened the scoring inside five minutes. Szmodics then provided the assist for Aaron Collins to make it 2\u20130 after quarter of an hour, before Mikael Mandron made it 3\u20130 on 30-minutes. On 39-minutes, Gillingham's Mark Byrne received a red card for a challenge on Tom Lapslie. The visitors pulled a goal back just before the interval through Dean Parrett. Mandron restored the U's three goal advantage on 57-minutes, and Tom Eastman rounded off an unbeaten pre-season with Colchester's fifth goal on 62-minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0037-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, August\nColchester United's League Two campaign started with an away game at Notts County on 4 August. John McGreal handed debuts to Harry Pell, Aaron Collins and Frank Nouble. Dillon Barnes was selected in goal for the U's and claimed a clean sheet for himself as the match ended 0\u20130, with both teams having good opportunities to take all three points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 62], "content_span": [63, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0038-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, August\nAfter much speculation about his future, Kane Vincent-Young signed a new two-year contract with the club on 6 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 62], "content_span": [63, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0039-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, August\nOn 7 August, the U's signed Dagenham & Redbridge academy player David Agboola to bolster the under-23 squad. He signed a one-year contract with the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 62], "content_span": [63, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0040-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, August\nColchester faced Port Vale in their first home fixture of the season. Courtney Senior and Ryan Jackson scored in the eighth and 23rd-minutes respectively to hand the home side a 2\u20130 win on 11 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 62], "content_span": [63, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0041-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, August\nColchester were once again eliminated from the EFL Cup at the first round stage. Hosts Cheltenham took the lead within the first minute through Ryan Broom following a defensive error by Frankie Kent. In the second half, Dillon Barnes conceded a penalty after a foul on Jacob Maddox. Conor Thomas stepped up to convert the kick and give Cheltenham a 2\u20130 lead. Substitute Sammie Szmodics registered his first goal of the season 12-minutes after arriving on the pitch in the 79th minute, before debutant Luke Norris scored to level the match at 2\u20132. The game ended in a draw, with a penalty shoot-out ensuing. Cheltenham won the shoot-out 6\u20135 after Courtney Senior missed the decisive kick in sudden death.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 62], "content_span": [63, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0042-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, August\nOn 18 August, Colchester scored a 95th-minute equaliser in their game at Mansfield Town. Following a goalless first half, the hosts took an 81st-minute lead through Craig Davies, but Sammie Szmodics goal drew the U's level in the fifth minute of added time to secure a 1\u20131 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 62], "content_span": [63, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0043-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, August\nOn 21 August, Noah Chesmain signed for Southern League Premier Division Central side Hitchin Town in an initial month-long loan deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 62], "content_span": [63, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0044-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, August\nThe U's hosted Crewe Alexandra in their first midweek fixture of the season on 21 August. Frankie Kent scored his first goal of the campaign after four minutes, before Brennan Dickenson scored his first goal since April 2017 to double Colchester's advantage just four minutes later. Dickenson then grabbed another goal on 26-minutes to give the hosts a 3\u20130 lead going in to half-time. After the break, Ryan Jackson scored his second goal of the campaign just before the hour mark, before substitute Luke Norris scored his first league goal for Colchester on 74-minutes. Tom Lapslie added another goal on 77-minutes to earn a comprehensive 6\u20130 victory for the U's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 62], "content_span": [63, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0045-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, August\nColchester suffered their first defeat of the season at home to Northampton Town on 25 August. A second-half goal from Matt Crooks was added to in injury time by Billy Waters but the U's earned themselves a late consolation goal after Aaron Pierre scored an own goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 62], "content_span": [63, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0046-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, August\nOn 30 August, Tariq Issa signed for Southern League Premier Division Central side Needham Market on loan until January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 62], "content_span": [63, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0047-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, August\nOn 31 August, Cameron James joined National League side Braintree Town on loan until January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 62], "content_span": [63, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0048-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, September\nOn 1 September, Colchester won 3\u20131 in their second trip to Whaddon Road in less than a month following the 2\u20132 EFL Cup penalty defeat to Cheltenham. Luke Norris scored from the penalty spot on 12 minutes after Frankie Kent was fouled in the penalty area, and then added a second from a free kick after 26 minutes. After the break, Cheltenham pulled a goal back through Kevin Dawson, but Colchester secured victory in the 88th minute, again from the penalty spot, as Harry Pell converted against his former club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0049-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, September\nColchester faced Southampton Under-21s on 4 September in an EFL Trophy clash. John McGreal handed debuts to defensive pair Aaron Barnes and Paul Rooney. The U's fell behind in the 26th minute to a Marcus Barnes goal. After the break, Ryan Clampin was introduced for his Colchester debut. Southampton added a second goal in the fourth minute of added time in front of a Community Stadium attendance of just 532.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0050-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, September\nHarry Pell scored in his second consecutive league games against Tranmere Rovers on 8 September. James Norwood had given the hosts the lead just before half time but Pell's strike on the hour mark earned Colchester a point from the 1\u20131 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0051-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, September\nOn 28 September, Paul Rooney joined Bromley on loan for one month, while Sam Warde joined Leiston in a month-long loan deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0052-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, September\nColchester welcomed former manager Joe Dunne back to the Community Stadium for the first time as an opposing manager when the U's hosted Cambridge United on 15 September. Sammie Szmodics scored his third goal of the season to open the scoring on 23 minutes. Twelve minutes later Frank Nouble registered his first Colchester goal to give the home side a 2\u20130 advantage going into the break. In the second half, substitute Courtney Senior scored his second goal of the season to earn a comfortable win for the U's and lift them to fourth in the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0053-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, September\nColchester surrendered a two-goal lead to draw 3\u20133 at Oldham Athletic on 22 September. Luke Norris opened the scoring after 15 minutes, and Harry Pell scored to make it 2\u20130 on 50 minutes. Sam Surridge pulled a goal back for the hosts on 59 minutes, before Norris scored his sixth goal of the season to hand the U's a 3\u20131 lead. Surridge then scored again with five minutes remaining to reduce the deficit, but not before Peter Clarke scored an 88th-minute equaliser.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0054-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, September\nColchester hosted Bury in their final game of the month on 29 September. The U's lost Frankie Kent to injury after just nine minutes of play, and his replacement Tom Eastman was also withdrawn following an injury at half time. This came after Bury opened the scoring through Byron Moore after 35 minutes. Bury then doubled their lead on 52 minutes through Chris Dagnall. Luke Norris converted from the penalty spot on 81 minutes to give the U's a glimmer of hope of earning some points but they eventually fell to a 2\u20131 defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0055-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, October\nOn 2 October, the U's bounced back from their home defeat by Bury to win 3\u20131 against Yeovil Town. Tom Eastman scored his first goal of the season to give Colchester a 25th-minute lead. After the interval, Frank Nouble scored his second Colchester goal on 59 minutes, before adding a second on 84 minutes. Yeovil pulled a goal back in the fifth minute of added time through Tom James.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0056-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, October\nColchester suffered their first away defeat of the season on 6 October. Sammie Szmodics had opened the scoring against Stevenage after just two minutes, but former U's man Kurtis Guthrie levelled the score on 41 minutes. Ben Kennedy converted from the penalty spot after Brennan Dickenson fouled Steve Seddon in the penalty area eight minutes from time. Emmanuel Sonupe then added a third for Stevenage two minutes later to drop Colchester out of the play-off zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0057-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, October\nColchester took on Southend United for an Essex derby clash in the EFL Trophy at the Community Stadium on 9 October. Frankie Kent scored after 39 minutes and on 49 minutes Aaron Collins scored his first goal in a U's shirt for a 2\u20130 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0058-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, October\nColchester returned to winning ways in the league with a 3\u20131 victory over Crawley Town on 13 October. Sammie Szmodics opened the scoring after 27 minutes for the home side. Crawley equalised after Luke Prosser was judged to have fouled Luke Gambin in the penalty area and Filipe Morais converted the spot kick. After the break, Frank Nouble restored the U's lead on 57 minutes, and Luke Norris scored his eighth goal of the season in the final minute of normal time. Crawley had a man sent off when Bondz N'Gala kicked out at Norris.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0059-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, October\nOn 20 October, Colchester won 1\u20130 at Morecambe with Courtney Senior's third goal of the season separating the two sides. They were then defeated 1\u20130 on the road at Grimsby Town on 23 October with Wes Thomas' second-half goal winning it for the home side. This followed the FA Cup first round draw, at which Colchester were drawn away to League One Accrington Stanley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0060-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, October\nOn 26 October, young goalkeeper Bailey Vose joined National League South side Dartford in an initial month-long loan deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0061-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, October\nColchester hosted league leaders Lincoln City on 27 October. Frankie Kent's third goal of the season in the 28th minute was enough to consign Lincoln to only their third defeat of the season and reduce the gap to five points between the two sides in the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0062-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, November\nColchester moved into the promotion places with a 1\u20130 home win over Swindon Town on 3 November. Shortly after top scorer Luke Norris had been stretchered off with an injury against his former club, Sammie Szmodics scored his sixth goal of the season. The U's held on in the second half to gain all three points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0063-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, November\nOn 10 November, the U's played their FA Cup first round tie against Accrington Stanley. After only three minutes, Colchester lost defender Tom Eastman to injury, and then goalkeeper Rene Gilmartin suffered a similar fate after half an hour. Shortly after Dillon Barnes was brought on to replace Gilmartin, Accrington scored through Daniel Barlaser. The hosts held on to record a 1\u20130 victory, spelling a first round exit for the U's for a third successive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0064-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, November\nThe U's played their second cup game in three days in their final group stage EFL Trophy match at Cambridge United. Colchester-born Ollie Kensdale made his senior debut in defence, but United were first to concede to an Ade Azeez goal after 32 minutes. On the stroke of half-time, Dillon Barnes saved a penalty from Azeez, and saved the follow-up effort, but later conceded to Azeez again nine-minutes from full-time. In second-half injury time, Harry Pell scored his fourth goal of the campaign to give the U's hope, but Emmanuel Osadebe struck a third for Cambridge less than a minute later to dump Colchester out of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0065-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, November\nColchester suffered their third consecutive defeat on 17 November as they were beaten 2\u20130 at Newport County. They slipped out of the automatic promotion places as a result. They made a return to the promotion spots following a 1\u20131 home draw with Exeter City on 24 November. Jayden Stockley cancelled out Sammie Szmodics' 67th-minute strike, bundling the ball into the net on 70 minutes to rescue a point for the away side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0066-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, November\nSzmodics scored in a second successive game to level with Luke Norris on eight goals as the club's top goalscorer. His deflected effort was enough to see off Forest Green Rovers at The New Lawn on 27 November to keep Colchester third in the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0067-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, November\nAfter Paul Rooney's loan spell at Bromley ended, he made another loan move to Billericay Town on 30 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0068-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, December\nMikael Mandron registered his first goal of the season on 8 December as Colchester beat Sol Campbell's Macclesfield Town 1\u20130 in his first game in charge of the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0069-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, December\nEoin McKeown joined National League South side Wealdstone in an emergency loan deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0070-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, December\nColchester suffered a 4\u20130 defeat at Carlisle United on 15 December. Three second-half goals put the match beyond the U's in their heaviest defeat of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0071-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, December\nOn 21 December, Cameron James returned to Braintree Town on loan until 16 January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0072-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, December\nCaptain Luke Prosser scored the only goal of the game as second-placed Milton Keynes Dons hosted the third placed U's at Stadium MK, earning Colchester a first-ever win at the stadium and inflicting a first home defeat of the season on the Dons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0073-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, December\nOn Christmas Eve, Ollie Kensdale signed his first professional contract, signing on until summer 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0074-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, December\nColchester dropped out of the play-off places on Boxing Day following a home defeat by Stevenage. The U's fell behind after five minutes when Joel Byrom's free kick hit the post and went in off Rene Gilmartin. They then found themselves two goals down on 36-minutes following a Danny Newton tap-in. Luke Prosser scored his second goal in as many games to reduce the deficit in a dominant second-half but Colchester were eventually consigned to a 2\u20131 loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0075-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, December\nIn their final game of 2018, Colchester were held to a dull 0\u20130 draw by Morecambe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0076-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, January\nColchester started the new year in terrible fashion with a 2\u20130 defeat at Crawley Town on New Year's Day. The hosts had to play for almost an hour with ten men after Joe McNerney was sent off. On the hour mark, Crawley took the lead through Luke Gambin against the run of play. Colchester were also reduced to ten men in the 89th minute when Frankie Kent was sent off for a second bookable offence, allowing Gambin to score again with the resulting free kick. With the result, they fell out of the play-off places and the top seven for the first time since early October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0077-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, January\nOn 2 January, Aaron Collins' loan from Wolverhampton Wanderers was terminated by mutual consent after four starts and a total of ten appearances for the U's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0078-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, January\nOn 3 January, Tom Lapslie agreed a 2+1\u20442-year contract extension, committing himself to the club until summer 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0079-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, January\nOn 4 January, young goalkeeper Ethan Ross joined Maidstone United in an initial one-month loan deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0080-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, January\nIn their first home game of 2019, Colchester hosted bottom-of-the-table Notts County and were held to a 3\u20133 draw. Colchester struck first through Sammie Szmodics who scored his ninth goal of the season. They were pegged back on 16 minutes when Jon Stead scored, and three minutes later the visitors were in front following a Daniel Jones goal. County went further ahead on 32 minutes through Kristian Dennis before an attempted clearance deflected into the net from Mikael Mandron to bring the U's back into the game at 3\u20132. In the second-half, Courtney Senior was fouled in the penalty area and Harry Pell stepped up to convert.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0081-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, January\nOn 8 January, Ryan Clampin signed a new contract to keep him with the club until summer 2021. Meanwhile, Will Wright's loan at Dagenham & Redbridge was extended until the end of the season, and Decarrey Sheriff joined National League South side Dulwich Hamlet on loan for a month having completed his loan spell at Maldon & Tiptree.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0082-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, January\nAfter going four games without a win, Colchester picked up their with a 3\u20130 victory at Port Vale on 12 January. Courtney Senior put the visitors ahead after five minutes, and the U's were 2\u20130 ahead when Harry Pell scored on 18 minutes. He then scored his third in two games on 69 minutes to move the U's back into the play-off places and fourth in the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0083-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, January\nOn 19 January, Colchester took a 2\u20130 lead by the 30th-minute against high-flying Mansfield Town through Tom Eastman and Courtney Senior goals. After the break, Mansfield scored three goals to win the match 3\u20132. The U's then lost again from a winning position away to Crewe on 26 January. Sammie Szmodics had scored an eleventh-minute goal for his tenth of the season, but Crewe equalised shortly after half-time and then scored a late winner to drop Colchester out of the play-off places once again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0084-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, January\nOn 29 January, Colchester signed Shrewsbury Town winger Abo Eisa on loan for the remainder of the season. The following day, the club announced the re-signing of Ben Stevenson on a 2+1\u20442-year deal from Wolverhampton Wanderers. Stevenson had appeared for the U's on loan during the 2017\u201318 season after signing for Wolves during the January 2018 transfer window. On 31 January, transfer deadline day, the U's brought in Newcastle United winger Callum Roberts on loan until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0085-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, February\nOn 1 February, Colchester announced the signings of two triallists who had been involved with the under-23 squad. Midfielders Tyrique Hyde and Percy Kiangebeni each signed deals until June 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0086-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, February\nColchester bounced back from two successive defeats to convincingly beat Northampton Town 4\u20130 at Sixfields Stadium on 2 February. Frank Nouble scored his fifth goal of the season to open the scoring on 25-minutes. The score remained the same until the interval, and half-time substitute and debutant Abo Eisa doubled the U's advantage five minutes after coming on. Kane Vincent-Young made it 3\u20130 after 53-minutes, before Sammie Szmodics completed the scoring on 67-minutes with his tenth league goal of the campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0087-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, February\nStriker Junior Ogedi-Uzokwe was once again loaned out on 6 February, joining League of Ireland Premier Division side Derry City until 30 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0088-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, February\nThe U's moved back into the play-offs and up to fourth in the table with a comfortable 3\u20130 win over Cheltenham Town at the Community Stadium on 9 February. Each goalscorer had scored in the 4\u20130 win at Northampton last weekend as Kane Vincent-Young opened the scoring on 30-minutes before Frank Nouble doubled the lead two minutes from the break. In the second-half, Abo Eisa scored his second goal in his second game for the club to secure victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0089-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, February\nMacclesfield Town hosted the U's on 16 February and took the lead in the 44th-minute Scott Wilson. Colchester equalised after the break when Frank Nouble converted a penalty after Courtney Senior had been fouled in the penalty area. Neither side could score a winner and drew 1\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0090-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, February\nOn 22 February, midfielder Sam Warde joined League of Ireland Premier Division side Sligo Rovers on loan until the end of June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0091-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, February\nColchester hosted fellow play-off hopefuls Carlisle United on 23 February hoping to make up for their 4\u20130 defeat at Brunton Park in December. After a goalless first-half, the visitors took the lead on 57-minutes through Hallam Hope, but Colchester pressed for an equaliser and scored in the 84th-minute through Frankie Kent to draw 1\u20131 and record an undefeated February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0092-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, March\nOn 2 March, Colchester suffered their first defeat since 26 January when they were beaten 3\u20130 at Swindon Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0093-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, March\nOn 9 March, Colchester returned to the play-off positions with a 3\u20130 home win over Newport County. Sammie Szmodics scored his twelfth goal of the season on 20-minutes, and Courtney Senior doubled the U's lead in first-half stoppage time. Frank Nouble then scored the game's third goal against his former club. Meanwhile, Noah Chilvers came off the bench in the 89th-minute of the match to make his professional bow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0094-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, March\nOn 12 March, Colchester were beaten 3\u20130 at home by Forest Green Rovers. Frank Nouble was sent off for a second bookable offence in the second-half, leaving the U's in seventh in the League Two table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0095-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, March\nCallum Roberts' loan spell with the club was cut short on 13 March after being recalled by Newcastle United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0096-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, March\nOn 16 March, Colchester suffered a second successive 3\u20130 defeat at Exeter City. The result dropped them out of the play-off places, but the match did see the debut of Colchester's youngest-ever first-team player when 16-year-old Todd Miller replaced Courtney Senior in the 87th-minute of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0097-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, March\nColchester lost their third consecutive league game on 23 March with a 2\u20130 home defeat by Tranmere Rovers. The result dropped the U's to ninth place in the table and four points off the play-off positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0098-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, March\nFollowing the news that Harry Pell had been ruled out for the remainder of the season with his hamstring injury, Colchester signed Sam Saunders on a short-term contract until the end of the season having previously played in League One for Wycombe Wanderers until his January release.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0099-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, March\nOn 30 March, Kane Vincent-Young scored a 96th-minute winner at Cambridge United to seal a first victory in three weeks for the U's and return them to the play-off hunt with the club finding themselves in eighth position, just one point shy of the play-off places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0100-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, April\nColchester were beaten 2\u20130 at home by Oldham Athletic on 6 April, dropping them to ninth position and two points outside of the play-off positions. They then lost 2\u20130 at Bury on 13 April, falling further behind in the play-off race with the U's now five points adrift of seventh-placed Exeter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0101-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, April\nThe U's closed the gap to seventh-placed Exeter to just two points on 19 April with a 1\u20130 home victory over Grimsby, Frank Nouble scoring Colchester's only goal of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0102-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, April\nColchester were held to a draw by relegation-threatened Yeovil Town on 22 April. The hosts took the lead in the 53rd-minute, but Colchester goalkeeper Dillon Barnes was sent off for violent conduct two minutes later, allowing substitute goalkeeper Ethan Ross to come on for his professional debut. He kept a clean sheet for his 40-minute cameo. Tom Eastman scored the U's equaliser on 75-minutes to move up to eighth but remained two-points behind seventh-placed Exeter with two matches to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0103-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, April\nOn 27 April, Colchester won their final home game of the season 2\u20130 against automatic promotion-chasing Milton Keynes Dons. Sammie Szmodics scored his 13th goal of the season after just two minutes of play, and Frankie Kent doubled the lead two minutes into the second-half. The match saw the full debut of Ethan Ross in the U's goal in the absence of suspended Dillon Barnes and the injured Rene Gilmartin. Colchester were still two points shy of seventh-placed Exeter with one game remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0104-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, April\nOn 29 April, Frankie Kent was named as Colchester United Player of the Year at the club's annual awards ceremony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0105-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview, May\nKnowing only a win would stand the club any chances of reaching the play-offs, the U's travelled to Champions Lincoln City on 4 May and comfortably won 3\u20130 with three first-half goals. Brennan Dickenson opened the scoring on 22 minutes, then Sammie Szmodics scored his 14th and 15th goals of the season in the 27th and 44th-minutes respectively. However, their attempts were in vain when Newport County equalised at Morecambe in the 87th-minute of their match to pip the U's to seventh place by a single point, spelling a fourth successive season in League Two for Colchester.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0106-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Match details, Preseason friendlies\nColchester United announced their first pre-season friendly on 1 June, with Millwall visiting the Community Stadium on 24 July. Away trips against Maldon & Tiptree, Braintree Town, and Colwyn Bay were confirmed on 8 June, and a trip to Dagenham & Redbridge confirmed on 12 June. It was announced on 22 June the U's would take on Dartford on 21 July. A final pre-season friendly was arranged on 10 July for the visit of League One Gillingham for 28 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0107-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Match details, League Two, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League Two fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0108-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Match details, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the EFL Cup draw for the first round was made in Vietnam. Colchester were drawn away to Cheltenham Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0109-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Match details, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the draw for the first round of the EFL Trophy took place. Colchester were in Group B with Essex derby rivals Southend United and former U's manager Joe Dunne's Cambridge United. Southampton under-21s were revealed as Colchester's final opponents on 18 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0110-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Match details, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC on 22 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284961-0111-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colchester United F.C. season, Squad statistics, Player debuts\nPlayers making their first-team Colchester United debut in a fully competitive match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 70], "content_span": [71, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284962-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colgate Raiders men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Colgate Raiders men's basketball team represented Colgate University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Raiders, led by eighth-year head coach Matt Langel, played their home games at Cotterell Court in Hamilton, New York as members of the Patriot League. The Raiders punched their ticket to their first NCAA tournament since 1996. There they lost to Tennessee in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284962-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colgate Raiders men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Raiders finished the 2017\u201318 season 19\u201314, 12\u20136 in Patriot League play to finish in second place. They defeated Lafayette and Holy Cross to advance to the championship game of the Patriot League Tournament where they lost to Bucknell. They were invited to the College Basketball Invitational where they lost in the first round to San Francisco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284963-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colgate Raiders women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Colgate Raiders women's basketball team represents Colgate University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Raiders, led by third year head coach Bill Cleary, play their home games at Cotterell Court and were members of the Patriot League. They finished the season 12\u201317, 8\u201310 in Patriot League play to finish in sixth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Patriot League Women's Tournament to Lehigh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284964-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 College of Charleston Cougars men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 College of Charleston Cougars men's basketball team represented the College of Charleston during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Cougars, led by fifth-year head coach Earl Grant, played their home games at the TD Arena in Charleston, South Carolina as members of the Colonial Athletic Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284964-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 College of Charleston Cougars men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Cougars finished the 2017\u201318 season 26\u20138, 14\u20134 in CAA play to share the regular season title with Northeastern. At the CAA Tournament they defeated Drexel, William & Mary, and Northeastern to become CAA Tournament champions. They earned the CAA's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament as a #13 seed where they lost in the First Round to Auburn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 76], "content_span": [77, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284965-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 College of Charleston Cougars women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 College of Charleston Cougars women's basketball team represents the College of Charleston during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Cougars, led by fifth year head coach Candice M. Jackson, play their home games at the TD Arena and were members of the Colonial Athletic Association. They finished the season 7\u201323, 3\u201315 in CAA play to finish in a tie for last place. They lost in the first round of the CAA Women's Tournament to William & Mary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284965-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 College of Charleston Cougars women's basketball team\nOn March 14, Jackson's contract was not renewed. She finished at Charleston with a record 5 year record of 39\u2013103. The Cougars hired Lamar head coach Harmony for the same position on April 19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284966-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colonial Athletic Association men's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 CAA men's basketball season will mark the 34th season of Colonial Athletic Association basketball, taking place between November 2018 and March 2019. Practices commenced in October 2018, and the season will end with the 2019 CAA Men's Basketball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284966-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colonial Athletic Association men's basketball season, Preseason, Preseason All-Conference Teams\nColonial Athletic Association Preseason Player of the Year: Justin Wright-Foreman (Hofstra)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 104], "content_span": [105, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284966-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colonial Athletic Association men's basketball season, Regular season, Conference matrix\nThis table summarizes the head-to-head results between teams in conference play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 96], "content_span": [97, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284966-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colonial Athletic Association men's basketball season, Postseason, NCAA tournament\nThe CAA had one bid to the 2019 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, that being the automatic bid of Northeastern by winning the conference tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 90], "content_span": [91, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284966-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colonial Athletic Association men's basketball season, Postseason, National Invitation Tournament\nHofstra received an automatic bid to the 2019 National Invitation Tournament by winning as regular season conference champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 105], "content_span": [106, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284967-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colorado Avalanche season\nThe 2018\u201319 Colorado Avalanche season was the 24th operational season and 23rd playing season since the franchise relocated from Quebec prior to the start of the 1995\u201396 NHL season. As well as the franchise's 40th season in the National Hockey League and 47th season overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284967-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colorado Avalanche season\nOn April 4, 2019, the Avalanche clinched a playoff spot after a 3\u20132 overtime win against the Winnipeg Jets. In the playoffs, the Avalanche defeated the Calgary Flames 4\u20131 in the First Round to secure their first playoff series win since 2008. Their season, however, would come to an end after losing to the San Jose Sharks in seven games in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284967-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colorado Avalanche season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was released on June 21, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284967-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colorado Avalanche 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284967-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colorado Avalanche season, Schedule and results, Playoffs\nThe Avalanche faced the Calgary Flames in the First Round of the playoffs, and defeated them in five games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284967-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colorado Avalanche season, Schedule and results, Playoffs\nThe Avalanche faced the San Jose Sharks in the Second Round of the playoffs, and were defeated in seven games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284967-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colorado Avalanche season, Player statistics\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Avalanche. Stats reflect time with the Avalanche only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Avalanche only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284967-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colorado Avalanche season, Transactions\nThe Avalanche have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284967-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colorado Avalanche season, Draft picks\nBelow are the Colorado Avalanche's selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284968-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colorado Buffaloes men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Colorado Buffaloes men's basketball team represented the University of Colorado in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They were led by head coach Tad Boyle in his ninth season at Colorado. The Buffaloes played their home games at CU Events Center in Boulder, Colorado as members of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season 23\u201313, 10\u20138 in Pac-12 play to finish in a 3-way tie for fourth place. They defeated California and Oregon State in the first round and quarterfinals of the Pac-12 Tournament before losing in the semifinals to Washington. They received an invitation to the National Invitation Tournament where they defeated Dayton in the first round, Norfolk State in the second round before losing to Texas in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 821]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284968-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colorado Buffaloes men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Buffaloes finished the 2017\u201318 season 17\u201315, 8\u201310 in Pac-12 play to finish in a tie for eighth place. They defeated Arizona State in the first round of the Pac-12 Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Arizona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284969-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colorado Buffaloes women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Colorado Buffaloes women's basketball team represents the University of Colorado Boulder during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Buffaloes, led by third year head coach JR Payne, play their home games at the CU Events Center and were a member of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season 12\u201318, 2\u201316 in Pac-12 play to finish in last place. They lost in the first round of the Pac-12 Women's Tournament to Arizona State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284969-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colorado Buffaloes women's basketball team\nJR Payne's 2018\u201319 Colorado team started the Pac-12 conference season 0\u201311, the worst start to conference competition in program history, before finally winning its first conference game against USC on February 10, 2019. The previous worst conference start in program history was 9 losses to start conference play. Linda Lappe's 2015\u201316 Colorado team is the only other Colorado team to ever start 0\u20139 in conference. Lappe was fired at the end of that season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284970-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colorado State Rams men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Colorado State Rams men's basketball team represented Colorado State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team was coached by Niko Medved in his first season. The Rams played their home games at Moby Arena on CSU's main campus in Fort Collins, Colorado as members of the Mountain West Conference. They finished the season 12\u201320, 7\u201311 in Mountain West play to finish in a three-way tie for seventh place. They lost in the first round of the Mountain West Tournament to Boise State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284970-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colorado State Rams men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Rams finished the 2017\u201318 season 11\u201321, 4\u201314 in Mountain West play to finish in tenth place. They lost in the first round of the Mountain West Tournament to Utah State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284970-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colorado State Rams men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn February 3, 2018, prior to their game against Nevada, head coach Larry Eustachy was placed on administrative leave amid an internal investigation by Colorado State of Eustachy's conduct with players and other staff members. Eustachy had previously been reprimanded by the university in 2017 for the same type of behavior from a 2014 university led investigation. On February 8, players boycotted practice because of the lack of communication from the athletic department as to the situation. On the same day, it was reported that Eustachy would be fired by the school.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284970-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colorado State Rams men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Rams were initially led by assistant coach Steve Barnes for the first 2 games of Eustachy's absence. However, prior to the team's home game against San Jose State on February 10, he was also placed on administrative leave. Assistant coach Jase Herl took over as interim head coach for the rest of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284970-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colorado State Rams men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn March 22, Drake head coach and former CSU assistant coach Niko Medved was hired as the new head coach of the Rams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284971-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Colorado State Rams women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Colorado State Rams women's basketball team represents Colorado State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Rams, led by seventh year head coach Ryun Williams, play their home games at Moby Arena, and are members of the Mountain West Conference. They finished the season 8\u201322, 2\u201316 in Mountain West play to finish in last place. They lost in the first round of the Mountain West Conference Women's Basketball Tournament to Utah State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284972-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Columbia Lions men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Columbia Lions men's basketball team represented Columbia University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at Levien Gymnasium in New York City and were led by third-year head coach Jim Engles, as members of the Ivy League. They finished the season 10\u201318, 5\u20139 in Ivy League play to finish in seventh place. They failed to qualify for the Ivy League Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284972-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Columbia Lions men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Lions finished the 2017\u201318 season 8\u201319, 5\u20139 in Ivy League play to finish in a tie for fifth place and failed to qualify for the Ivy League Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284973-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Columbia Lions women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Columbia Lions women's basketball team represents Columbia University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Lions, led by third year head coach Megan Griffith, play their home games at Levien Gymnasium and were members of the Ivy League. They finished the season 8\u201319, 4\u201310 in Ivy League play to finish in seventh place. They failed to qualify for the Ivy Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284974-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Columbus Blue Jackets season\nThe 2018\u201319 Columbus Blue Jackets season was the 19th season for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on June 25, 1997. On April 5, 2019, the Blue Jackets clinched a playoff spot after a 3\u20132 shootout win over the New York Rangers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284974-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Columbus Blue Jackets season\nThe Blue Jackets won their first ever playoff series by sweeping the Presidents' Trophy winners, the Tampa Bay Lightning, in the First Round of the playoffs. However, the Blue Jackets were not able to carry their success into the Second Round, and they were eliminated by the Boston Bruins in six games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284974-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Columbus Blue Jackets season, Schedule and results, Preseason\nNotes: Game was played at Clinton Arena in Clinton, New York.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284974-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Columbus Blue Jackets season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was released on June 21, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 74], "content_span": [75, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284974-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Columbus Blue Jackets season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nLegend:\u00a0\u00a0Win (2 points)\u00a0\u00a0Loss (0 points)\u00a0\u00a0Overtime/shootout loss (1 point)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 74], "content_span": [75, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284974-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Columbus Blue Jackets season, Schedule and results, Playoffs\nThe Blue Jackets faced the Tampa Bay Lightning in the First Round of the playoffs, and swept the series in four games, marking the first time in franchise history the team won a playoff series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284974-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Columbus Blue Jackets season, Schedule and results, Playoffs\nThe Blue Jackets faced the Boston Bruins in the Second Round of the playoffs, where they fell to the Bruins in six games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284974-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Columbus Blue Jackets season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Blue Jackets. Stats reflect time with the Blue Jackets only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Blue Jackets only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284974-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Columbus Blue Jackets season, Transactions\nThe Blue Jackets have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284974-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Columbus Blue Jackets season, Draft picks\nBelow are the Columbus Blue Jackets' selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284975-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Combined Counties Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 Combined Counties Football League season (known as the 2018\u201319 Cherry Red Records Combined Counties Football League for sponsorship reasons) was the 41st in the history of the Combined Counties Football League, a football competition in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284975-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Combined Counties Football League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division was reduced from 22 to 20 clubs, and featured four new teams after the promotion of Westfield and Bedfont Sports to the Southern League, the transfer of North Greenford United to Spartan South Midlands League Division One, and the relegation of Godalming Town, Epsom & Ewell and Farnham Town to Division One:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 59], "content_span": [60, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284975-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Combined Counties Football League, Division One\nDivision One featured seven new teams after Worcester Park, Staines Lammas and Farleigh Rovers were demoted for ground grading reasons, South Park Reserves left the league, and Badshot Lea, Cobham and Raynes Park Vale were promoted to the Premier Division:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 55], "content_span": [56, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284976-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Conference USA men's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 Conference USA men's basketball season began with practices in October 2018, followed by the start of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season in November. Conference play began in late December and concluded in early March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284976-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Conference USA men's basketball season\nOld Dominion won the C-USA regular season championship by two games. The conference used a regular season schedule format which the conference hoped will increase NCAA Tournament berths. whereby the 14 teams played each other once with a second game for travel partners in the first seven weeks of C-USA play. After those 14 games, the league standings determined the matchups for the rest of the regular season. The teams were divided into two groups of five (teams in first through fifth place and 6\u201310) and a group of four (11\u201314).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284976-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Conference USA men's basketball season\nDuring the final three weeks, teams played within their respective grouping for the last four games of conference play. Home and away games within the groups were determined by a preset formula. C-USA Commissioner Judy MacLeod said that \"With the goals to improve seeding and increase the number of teams that advance to the postseason, we viewed this as a great opportunity to enhance our top teams' resumes by providing them additional quality games within their conference schedule.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284976-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Conference USA men's basketball season\nThe C-USA Tournament was held from March 13\u201316, 2019 at The Ford Center at The Star in Frisco, Texas. Old Dominion defeated Western Kentucky in the Tournament championship game. As a result Old Dominion received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. No other C-USA teams received an NCAA Tournament bid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284976-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Conference USA men's basketball season, Head coaches, Coaching changes\nFollowing a loss to Lamar on November 27, 2017 that saw UTEP drop to 1\u20135 on the season, head coach Tim Floyd announced that he was retiring effective immediately. The school had previously announced a new athletic director, Jim Senter, a week prior, but Floyd said that had nothing to do with his decision. Assistant Phil Johnson was named interim head coach of the Miners the next day. On March 12, 2018, the school hired Fresno State head coach Rodney Terry as the new head coach of the Miners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 78], "content_span": [79, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284976-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Conference USA men's basketball season, Head coaches, Coaching changes\nOn December 14, 2017, head coach Mark Price was fired by Charlotte after a 3\u20136 start to the season and was replaced by Houston Fancher. Houston Fancher was named interim coach for the remainder of the season. On March 6, 2018, new athletic director Mike Hill fired Fancher. On March 19, the school hired Virginia associate head coach Ron Sanchez as the school's new head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 78], "content_span": [79, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284976-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Conference USA men's basketball season, Head coaches, Coaching changes\nMarch 16, 2018, Florida Atlantic head coach Michael Curry was fired after four seasons. On March 22, it was announced that the school had hired Florida assistant head coach Dusty May as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 78], "content_span": [79, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284976-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Conference USA men's basketball season, Head coaches, Coaching changes\nMiddle Tennessee head coach Kermit Davis left the school on March 19, 2018 to accept the head coaching job at Ole Miss. On March 24, the Blue Raiders named UNC Asheville head coach Nick McDevitt as the team's new head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 78], "content_span": [79, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284976-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Conference USA men's basketball season, Head coaches, Coaching changes\nOn April 2, 2018, FIU fired head coach Anthony Evans after five seasons. On April 20, the school announced VCU associate head coach Jeremy Ballard was hired as the new head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 78], "content_span": [79, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284976-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Conference USA men's basketball season, Regular season, Conference matrix\nThis table summarizes the head-to-head results between teams in conference play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284976-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Conference USA men's basketball season, Postseason, C-USA Tournament\nOnly the top 12 conference teams were eligible for the tournament. Old Dominion defeated Western Kentucky in the tournament championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284977-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Connacht Rugby season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Irish provincial rugby union side Connacht Rugby's eighteenth season competing in the Pro14, and the team's twenty-third season as a professional side. It was Andy Friend's first season in charge of the side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284977-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Connacht Rugby season\nIn the regular season, Connacht were in Conference A of the Pro14. The team finished third in their conference, qualifying for the play-offs for the first time since the 2015\u201316 season where they were beaten by Ulster in the quarter-final. As well as playing in the Pro14, the team competed in the Challenge Cup in Europe. They qualified as one of the best runners up from a pool including Bordeaux, Perpignan and Sale Sharks to reach the quarter-finals, where they again met Sale. A 20\u201310 defeat saw the team eliminated in the last eight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284977-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Connacht Rugby season\nIn addition to the league and European competitions, the Connacht Eagles development side competed in two new competitions. The first was the Celtic Cup, which saw them play against other Irish provinces' development teams and sides from Wales. The Eagles finished bottom of the Irish conference the inaugural edition of this tournament. The second competition was the Cara Cup, which involved the Irish provinces and the New England Free Jacks, a newly established Major League Rugby side. The Eagles won both of their games, beating Ulster and the Free Jacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284977-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Connacht Rugby season, Background\nFollowing the removal of head coach Kieran Keane one year into a three-year deal, Andy Friend was hired as his replacement. The team also had a new captain for the season, following the retirement of John Muldoon, the province's most-capped player. In August 2018, Jarrad Butler was named as his replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284977-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Connacht Rugby season, Coaching and management team\nNote: Flags indicate national union as has been defined under WR eligibility rules. Individuals may hold more than one non-WR nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284977-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Connacht Rugby season, Players, Senior playing squad\nNote: Flags indicate national union as has been defined under WR eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-WR nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284977-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Connacht Rugby season, Players, Academy squad\nNote: Flags indicate national union as has been defined under WR eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-WR nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284977-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Connacht Rugby season, Results, Pro14\nGreen background indicates teams that compete in the Pro14 play-offs, and also earn a place in the 2019\u201320 European Champions Cup(excluding South African teams who are ineligible)Blue background indicates teams outside the play-off places that earn a place in the 2019\u201320 European Champions Cup Yellow background indicates the loser of the play-off between the two fourth-ranked European teams in each conference, that earned a place in the 2019\u201320 European Rugby Challenge Cup. Plain background indicates teams that earn a place in the 2019\u201320 European Rugby Challenge Cup. (CH) Champions. (RU) Runners-up. (SF) Losing semi-finalists. (QF) Losing quarter-finalists. (PO) Champions Cup play-off winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284978-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Argentina\nThe 2018\u201319 Copa Argentina (officially the Copa Total Argentina 2018\u201319 for sponsorship reasons) was the tenth edition of the Copa Argentina, and the eighth since the relaunch of the tournament in 2011. The competition began on 16 January 2019 and ended on 13 December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284978-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Argentina\nRiver Plate defeated Central C\u00f3rdoba (SdE) in the final to win their third title. As champions, they qualified for the 2020 Copa Libertadores group stage and the 2019 Supercopa Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284978-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Argentina\nRosario Central, the defending champions, were eliminated by Sol de Mayo in the Round of 64.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284978-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Argentina, Teams\nEighty-seven teams took part in this competition: All twenty-six teams from the Primera Divisi\u00f3n; twelve teams of the Primera B Nacional; six from the Primera B, four from the Primera C; three from the Primera D and all thirty-six teams from Federal A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284978-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Argentina, Teams, Second Level, Primera B Nacional\nThe best twelve teams at the 13th round of 2018\u201319 tournament qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 63], "content_span": [64, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284978-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Argentina, Teams, Third Level, Primera B Metropolitana\nThe top-six teams at the 19th round of 2018\u201319 Primera B tournament qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 67], "content_span": [68, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284978-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Argentina, Teams, Fourth Level, Primera C Metropolitana\nThe top-four teams at the 19th round of 2018\u201319 Primera C tournament qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 68], "content_span": [69, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284978-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Argentina, Teams, Fifth Level, Primera D Metropolitana\nThe top-three teams at the 15th round of 2018\u201319 Primera D tournament qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 67], "content_span": [68, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284978-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Argentina, Regional Round, Round I\nIn the Round I, 20 teams from Torneo Federal A participated. The round was played between 16 and 20 January, on a home-and-away two-legged tie. The 10 winning teams advanced to the Round II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284978-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Argentina, Regional Round, Round II\nIn the Round II, 10 qualified teams from the Round I and the remaining 16 teams from Torneo Federal A participated. The round was played between 20 and 28 January, on a home-and-away two-legged tie with best team in the Torneo Federal A hosting the second leg. The 13 winning teams advanced to the Final Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284978-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Argentina, Final Rounds, Draw\nThe draw for the Final Rounds was held on 31 January 2019, 12:30 at AFA Futsal Stadium in Ezeiza. The 64 qualified teams were divided in four groups. Teams were seeded by their historical performance and Division. Champions of AFA tournaments playing in Argentine Primera Divisi\u00f3n were allocated to Group A. The matches were drawn from the respective confronts: A vs. C; B vs. D. Some combinations were avoided for security reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284978-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Argentina, Final Rounds, Round of 64\nThe Round of 64 had 13 qualified teams from the Regional Round (13 teams from Torneo Federal A), 13 qualified teams from the Metropolitan Zone (6 teams from Primera B Metropolitana; 4 teams from Primera C and 3 teams from Primera D), 12 teams from Primera B Nacional and 26 teams from Primera Divisi\u00f3n. The round was played between 26 February and 21 July, in a single knock-out match format. The 32 winning teams advanced to the Round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284978-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Argentina, Final Rounds, Round of 32\nThis round had 32 qualified teams from the Round of 64. The round was played between 14 July and 19 September, in a single knock-out match format. The 16 winning teams advanced to the Round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284978-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Argentina, Final Rounds, Round of 16\nThis round had the 16 qualified teams from the Round of 32. The round was played between 7 September and 10 October, in a single knock-out match format. The 8 winning teams advanced to the Quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284978-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Argentina, Final Rounds, Quarterfinals\nThis round had the 8 qualified teams from the Round of 16. The round was played between 11 and 25 October, in a single knock-out match format. The 4 winning teams advanced to the Semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284978-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Argentina, Final Rounds, Semifinals\nThis round had the 4 qualified teams from the Quarterfinals. The round was played on 14 November 2019, in a single knock-out match format. The 2 winning teams advanced to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284979-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Catalunya\nThe 2018\u201319 Copa Catalunya is the 30th staging of the Copa Catalunya. The competition began on 28 July 2018 and will be played by teams in Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B, Tercera Divisi\u00f3n and the top teams of Primera Catalana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284979-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Catalunya, Tournament, Fourth round\nMatches were played on 7 November 2018. One of the teams qualified from the third round received a bye and goes straight to the semifinals. In this round, the Segunda Divisi\u00f3n teams, Barcelona B, Gimn\u00e0stic and Reus, enter the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284980-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Catalunya basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 Copa Catalunya season, is the 20th season of Copa Catalunya.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284980-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Catalunya basketball season\nThe All Star Game was played at Pavell\u00f3 Nou Congost in Manresa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284980-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Catalunya basketball season, Format, Regular season\n28 teams are divided in two groups. The first round was on September 29, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284980-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Catalunya basketball season, Format, Final Stage\nThe Final Stage will be played in play-off ties in a two-legged format, with the exception of the final four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284980-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Catalunya basketball season, Format, Relegation PlayOffs\nIn the relegation playoffs, teams played against each other must win two games to win the series. The winners remain at Copa Catalunya for the next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284980-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Catalunya basketball season, Teams, Promotion and relegation (pre-season)\nA total of 28 teams contest the league, including 18 sides from the 2017\u201318 season, three relegated from the 2017\u201318 EBA and seven promoted from the 2017\u201318 CC 1\u00aaCategoria. On July 14, 2018, CB Salt achieved a vacant on Liga EBA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 86], "content_span": [87, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284980-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Catalunya basketball season, Relegation PlayOffs\nThe first legs were played on 19 May 2019, the second legs on 26 May 2019 and the third legs, if necessary, on 2 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284980-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Catalunya basketball season, Final round, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs will be played on 18\u201319 May 2019, and the second legs will be played on 25\u201326 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284980-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Catalunya basketball season, All Star Game\nThe 2019 Copa Catalunya All-star event will be held on January 26, 2019 at Pavell\u00f3 Nou Congost in Manresa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284980-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Catalunya basketball season, All Star Game\nThe Black team won the game 94-91. The MVP of the game was Pedro Cuesta who scored 17 points along with 6 rebounds and Guillem S\u00e1nchez won the Slam Dunk Contest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284981-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa El Salvador\nThe Copa El Salvador 2018\u201319 is the sixth staging of the Copa El Salvador football tournament and the second straight edition played since being brought back from its hiatus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284981-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa El Salvador, Participants\nThis tournament will feature all the clubs from the Salvadoran Primera Divisi\u00f3n, 10 from the Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, and 10 from the Tercera Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284981-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa El Salvador, Round of 16\nThe Round of 16 draw took place on February 1, 2019 . The first leg took place in the first week of February and the return leg the last week of February. Jalacatal FC, Mar y Plata and Turin FESA from Tercera Divisi\u00f3n (third tier), are the lowest-ranked team still in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284981-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa El Salvador, Quarter Final\nThe Quarter Final draw took place on March 8, 2019 . The first leg took place in the third week of March and the return leg the end of March. Once Lobos from Segunda Divisi\u00f3n (second tier), are the lowest-ranked team still in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284981-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa El Salvador, Semi Final\nThe Semi Final draw took place on TBD, 2019 . The first leg took place in the second week of TBD and the return leg the TBD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284982-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a\nThe 2018\u201319 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a was the 26th edition of the Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, also known as Copa RFEF, a knockout competition for Spanish football clubs in Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B and Tercera Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284982-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a\nMirand\u00e9s won the trophy, a cash prize of \u20ac90,152 and the qualification for the next year tournament. The runner-up received a cash prize of \u20ac30,051 and every semifinalist \u20ac12,020. Additionally, each winner of autonomous community tournament received \u20ac3,005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284982-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a\nThe competition began in late July 2018 with the first games of the Regional stages and ended on 28 March 2019 with the national final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284982-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, Regional tournaments, West Andalusia and Ceuta tournament\nBetis Deportivo was the only registered team and qualified directly for national phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 92], "content_span": [93, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284982-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, Regional tournaments, East Andalusia and Melilla tournament\nHu\u00e9tor T\u00e1jar was the only registered team and qualified directly for national phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 94], "content_span": [95, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284982-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, Regional tournaments, Asturias tournament\nThe twelve qualified teams will be divided into four groups of three teams, where the winners will qualify for the semifinals. Teams will be drawn according to their league positions in the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 76], "content_span": [77, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284982-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, Regional tournaments, Basque Country tournament\nTournament will be played in two stages, the first with two groups, one of three teams and the other with two. Winners will play the final over two matches. The group stage phase was drawn on 6 September by Basque Football Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 82], "content_span": [83, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284982-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, Regional tournaments, Canary Islands tournament\nTenerife B was the only registered team and qualified directly for national phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 82], "content_span": [83, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284982-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, Regional tournaments, Cantabria tournament\nTeams qualified between second and ninth place in 2017\u201318 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n Group 3 registered for playing the competition. The bracket was drawn on 11 July. Quarter-finals and Semi-finals will be played in Cabez\u00f3n de la Sal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284982-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, Regional tournaments, Castile-La Mancha tournament\nThe Castile-La Mancha Football Federation announced the XVII Torneo Junta de Comunidades de Castilla La Mancha as the regional Copa RFEF qualifying tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 85], "content_span": [86, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284982-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, Regional tournaments, Castile and Le\u00f3n tournament\nThe competition will be played in a group stage between three teams, all of them from the province of Burgos. The group was drawn on 4 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 84], "content_span": [85, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284982-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, Regional tournaments, Catalonia tournament\nLlagostera was the only registered team and qualified directly for national phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284982-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, Regional tournaments, Extremadura tournament\n17 teams joined the tournament, consisting in a single-game knockout tournament. The preliminary round and the round of 16 were firstly drawn, and later each round was drawn independently.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 79], "content_span": [80, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284982-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, Regional tournaments, Galicia tournament\nTwelve teams registered for playing the competition. The bracket was drawn on 6 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 75], "content_span": [76, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284982-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, Regional tournaments, Madrid tournament\nThe competition will be played in a group stage between three teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 74], "content_span": [75, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284982-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, Regional tournaments, Navarre tournament\nThe competition will be played in a group stage between three teams. The group was drawn on 8 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 75], "content_span": [76, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284982-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, Regional tournaments, Valencian Community tournament\nThe competition will be played in three rounds in two leg ties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 87], "content_span": [88, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284982-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, National tournament, Qualified teams\nBarakaldo (3) Ceuta (4) Conquense (3) Cornell\u00e0 (3) Cultural Durango (3) Don Benito (3) Gimn\u00e1stica Torrelavega (3) Internacional (3) Langreo (3) Marbella (3) Mensajero (4) Mirand\u00e9s (3) Navalcarnero (3) Poblense (4) R\u00e1pido de Bouzas (3) Talavera de la Reina (3) Teruel (3) Yeclano (4)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284982-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, National tournament, Qualified teams\nAlcobendas Sport (4) Arandina (4) Berganti\u00f1os (4) Betis Deportivo (4) Cacere\u00f1o (4) Cartagena B (4) Ejea (3) Hu\u00e9tor T\u00e1jar (4) Lealtad (4) Llagostera (4) Pe\u00f1a Deportiva (4) Pe\u00f1a Sport (4) Real Uni\u00f3n (3) Roda (4) Socu\u00e9llamos (4) Tenerife B (4) Tropez\u00f3n (4) Varea (4)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284982-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, National tournament, Preliminary round\nThe draw for the Preliminary round and round of 32 was hold on 26 October 2018. The matches were played between 31 October and 7 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 73], "content_span": [74, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284982-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, National tournament, Round of 32\nThe draw for the Preliminary Round and Round of 32 took place on 26 October 2018. The matches will be played between 15 November and 6 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 67], "content_span": [68, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284982-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, National tournament, Round of 16\nThe draw for the Round of 16 took place on 13 December 2018. Matches were played between 9 and 24 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 67], "content_span": [68, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284982-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, National tournament, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the Quarter-finals took place on 25 January 2019. Matches were played between 6 and 13 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284982-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, National tournament, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the Semi-finals and Final took place on 15 February 2019. Matches were played between 27 February and 6 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 67], "content_span": [68, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284983-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa de la Reina de F\u00fatbol\nThe 2018\u201319 Copa de la Reina de F\u00fatbol was the 37th edition of the Spanish women's association football national cup. Real Sociedad won their first title ever.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284983-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa de la Reina de F\u00fatbol, Format changes\nSince this season, all the 16 teams of the Primera Divisi\u00f3n would join the competition. All the rounds were played in a single-game format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284983-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa de la Reina de F\u00fatbol, Format changes\nIn the round of 16, the home team was designed by the luck of the draw, while in the quarterfinals, teams that have played the previous round away had preference to host the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284983-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa de la Reina de F\u00fatbol, Format changes\nOn 17 January 2019, the Royal Spanish Football Federation announced that the final will be played at Los C\u00e1rmenes stadium, in Granada. For the first time in the Cup history, the Spanish royal family attended the match with Queen Letizia of Spain representing it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284983-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa de la Reina de F\u00fatbol, Round of 16\nThe round of 16 was drawn on 22 October 2018 at La Ciudad del F\u00fatbol in Las Rozas de Madrid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284983-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa de la Reina de F\u00fatbol, Quarter-finals\nThe quarter-finals were drawn on 13 December 2018 at La Ciudad del F\u00fatbol in Las Rozas de Madrid. The match between Athletic Bilbao and Atl\u00e9tico Madrid, played at San Mam\u00e9s, beat the Spanish attendance record for a women's football match at that time with 48,121 spectators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284983-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa de la Reina de F\u00fatbol, Semi-finals\nThe semi-finals were drawn on 4 February 2019 at La Alhambra in Granada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284984-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa del Rey\nThe 2018\u201319 Copa del Rey was the 117th staging of the Copa del Rey (including two seasons where two rival editions were played). The winners were assured a place in the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League group stage, and both they and the runners-up automatically qualified for the four-team 2019\u201320 Supercopa de Espa\u00f1a.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284984-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa del Rey\nBarcelona entered the competition as four-time defending champions in an attempt to conquer an unprecedented fifth consecutive title. The Catalans reached the final for the sixth time in a row, but were beaten by Valencia 2\u20131 who achieved their eighth title overall and the first since 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284984-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa del Rey, Qualified teams\nThe following teams are qualified for the competition. Reserve teams are excluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284984-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa del Rey, First round\n41 teams entered the competition at this round. Five Segunda B or Tercera Divisi\u00f3n teams that in the previous season did not play in Tercera Divisi\u00f3n received a bye. The rest were paired according to proximity criteria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284984-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa del Rey, First round\nDue to the breach of the competition rules, giving byes to unauthorised teams, the draw of the first and second round had to be partially repeated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284984-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa del Rey, First round\nDuring the draw, Villanovense, Murcia, Badalona, Tudelano and Lorca FC received a bye to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284984-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa del Rey, Second round\nThe 22 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n teams entered the competition in this round and were joined by the winners of the previous stage, except for Mutilvera, who received a bye to the third round. Segunda Divisi\u00f3n teams were drawn against each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284984-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa del Rey, Third round\nThe Segunda Divisi\u00f3n teams faced each other, except for Mallorca, who received a bye to the round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284984-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa del Rey, Final phase\nThe draw for the Round of 32 was held on 19 October 2018 at La Ciudad del F\u00fatbol, Las Rozas de Madrid. In this round, all La Liga teams entered the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284984-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa del Rey, Final phase\nRound of 32 pairings were as follows: the six remaining teams participating in the 2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B and Tercera Divisi\u00f3n faced the four 2018\u201319 La Liga teams which qualified for the UEFA Champions League and two of the three teams which qualified for the Europa League. The six remaining teams participating in Segunda Divisi\u00f3n faced the last Europa League team not drawn previously and other La Liga teams. The remaining teams faced each other. In matches involving teams from different league tiers, the team in the lower tier played the first leg at home. This rule was also be applied in the Round of 16, but not for the quarter-finals and semi-finals, in which the order of legs was based on the luck of the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 762]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284984-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa del Rey, Round of 32\nThe draw for the round of 32 took place on 19 October at La Ciudad del F\u00fatbol, in Las Rozas de Madrid. On 23 October, the RFEF designated the referees for first leg matches. All first leg matches were scheduled to be played between 30 October and 1 November; however, the match between Athletic Bilbao and Huesca had to be postponed because of the preparations for an MTV concert in San Mam\u00e9s. On 8 November, the RFEF made public the schedules for the second leg, scheduled to be played between 4 and 6 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284984-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa del Rey, Round of 32\nSant Andreu, from Tercera Divisi\u00f3n (fourth tier), was the lowest-ranked team still in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284984-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa del Rey, Round of 16\nThe Round of 16 draw took place on December 13, 2018 at Ciudad del F\u00fatbol in Las Rozas, Madrid. The first leg took place in the second week of January and the return leg the following week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284984-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa del Rey, Round of 16\nSporting Gij\u00f3n, from Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, was the only remaining team that did not play in the top tier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284984-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa del Rey, Round of 16\nIn this round, the video assistant referee was applied for the first time ever in the Copa del Rey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284984-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa del Rey, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the quarter-finals took place on 18 January 2019 at Ciudad del F\u00fatbol in Las Rozas, Madrid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284984-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa del Rey, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the semi-finals took place on 1 February 2019 at the venue for the final of the competition, the Benito Villamar\u00edn Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284984-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa del Rey, Semi-finals\nAll four teams remaining came from pot 2, which included teams involved in European competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284984-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa del Rey, Semi-finals\nThe winners of the semi-finals advance to the final and qualify for the 2019 Supercopa de Espa\u00f1a.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284984-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa del Rey, Final\nThe final took place on 25 May 2019 at the Benito Villamar\u00edn Stadium in Seville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284985-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa del Rey de Hockey Hierba\nThe 2019 Copa del Rey de Hockey Hierba is the 102nd edition of the Copa del Rey de Hockey Hierba, Spain's annual field hockey cup competition. It was held from 22 to 24 March at Club de Campo in Madrid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284985-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa del Rey de Hockey Hierba\nThe eight best teams from the first half of the 2018\u201319 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor will participate in the tournament. The participating teams are Real Club de Polo, Atl\u00e8tic Terrassa, Club Egara, the hosts Club de Campo, Junior, CD Terrassa, Tenis and Jolaseta. Club Egara are the defending champions, having won the 2017\u201318 edition. However they were beaten in the semi-finals by the eventual champions Real Club de Polo 5\u20134 after a shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284985-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Copa del Rey de Hockey Hierba\nReal Club de Polo won a record-extending 30th title by defeating Atl\u00e8tic Terrassa 3\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284986-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coppa Italia\nThe 2018\u201319 Coppa Italia, also known as TIM Cup for sponsorship reasons, was the 72nd edition of the national cup in Italian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284986-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coppa Italia\nJuventus were the defending champions having won the last four editions, but were eliminated by Atalanta in the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284986-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coppa Italia\nLazio won the competition by defeating Atalanta 2\u20130 in the final, winning their seventh title overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284986-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coppa Italia, First stage, First round\nA total of 36 teams from Serie C and Serie D competed in this round, eighteen of which advanced to second round. The first round matches were played on 28 and 29 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284986-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coppa Italia, First stage, Second round\nA total of forty teams from Serie B, Serie C and Serie D competed in the second round, twenty of which advanced to join twelve teams from Serie A in the third round. The second round matches were played on 4, 5 and 7 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 47], "content_span": [48, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284986-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coppa Italia, First stage, Third round\nA total of 32 teams from Serie A, Serie B and Serie C competed in the third round, sixteen of which advanced to the fourth round. The third round matches were played on 11 and 12 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284986-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coppa Italia, First stage, Fourth round\nA total of sixteen teams from Serie A, Serie B and Serie C competed in the fourth round, eight of which advanced to the round of 16. The fourth round matches were played on 4, 5 and 6 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 47], "content_span": [48, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284986-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coppa Italia, Final stage, Bracket, Round of 16\nRound of 16 matches were played from 12 to 14 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 55], "content_span": [56, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284986-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coppa Italia, Final stage, Bracket, Quarter-finals\nQuarter-final matches were played from 29 to 31 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 58], "content_span": [59, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284986-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coppa Italia, Final stage, Bracket, Semi-finals\nThe first legs of the semi-finals were played on 26 and 27 February and the second legs on 24 and 25 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 55], "content_span": [56, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284987-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coppa Titano\nThe 2018\u201319 Coppa Titano was the 61st edition of the football competition in San Marino. The cup was contested under a new format this season. The competition began on 23 October 2018 and ended on 19 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284987-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coppa Titano\nS.P. La Fiorita were the defending cup champions after winning the previous tournament by defeating S. P. Tre Penne in the final by the score of 3\u20132 after extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284987-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coppa Titano, Format\nThe draw for the opening round was held on 30 August 2018. The final was contested over one leg, all other rounds were contested over two legs. When a winner was not determined in regular time, extra time and then penalties were used to determine a winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284987-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coppa Titano, First round\nThe first legs of the first round were played on 23\u201324 October 2018, and the second legs were played on 6\u20137 November 2018. The draw for the first round was held on 30 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284987-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coppa Titano, Quarter\u2013finals\nThe first legs of the quarter\u2013finals were played on 4\u20135 December 2018, and the second legs were played on 16 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284987-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coppa Titano, Semi\u2013finals\nThe first legs of the semi\u2013finals will be played on 6\u20137 April 2019, and the second legs will be played on 13\u201314 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284988-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coppin State Eagles men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Coppin State Eagles men's basketball team represented Coppin State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at the Physical Education Complex in Baltimore, Maryland, and were led by 2nd-year head coach Juan Dixon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284988-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coppin State Eagles men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Eagles finished the 2017\u201318 season 5\u201327, 5\u201311 in MEAC play to finish in 11th place. They lost in the first round of the MEAC Tournament to North Carolina Central.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284989-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cornell Big Red men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Cornell Big Red men's basketball team represented Cornell University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Big Red, led by third-year head coach Brian Earl, played their home games at Newman Arena in Ithaca, New York as members of the Ivy League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284989-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cornell Big Red men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Big Red finished the season 12\u201316, 6\u20138 in Ivy League play to finish in fourth place. They lost in the semifinals of the Ivy League Tournament to Harvard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284990-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cornell Big Red women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Cornell Big Red women's basketball team represents Cornell University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Big Red, led by seventeenth year head coach Dayna Smith, play their home games at Newman Arena and are members of the Ivy League. They finished the season at 12\u201314, 6\u20138 to finish in a 3-way tie for fourth place. Due to a tie breaker with to Yale and Dartmouth earns the 4th seed in Ivy League Women's Tournament which they lost to Princeton in semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284991-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cornish Pirates RFC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is the Cornish Pirates 16th season in the second tier of the English rugby union league system, the RFU Championship and their first season in the Championship Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France\nThe 2018\u201319 Coupe de France was the 102nd season of the main football cup competition of France. The competition was organised by the French Football Federation (FFF) and was open to all clubs in French football, as well as clubs from the overseas departments and territories (Guadeloupe, French Guiana, Martinique, Mayotte, New Caledonia (AS Magenta, winner of 2018 New Caledonia Cup), Tahiti (AS Dragon, winner of 2017\u201318 Tahiti Cup), R\u00e9union, Saint Martin and Saint Pierre and Miquelon).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France\nParis Saint-Germain were the four-time defending champions, but lost in the final on penalties to Rennes, who won their third Coupe de France title and first since 1971.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France, Dates\nDates for the first two qualifying round are set by the individual Regional leagues. The remaining qualifying rounds, the seventh and eight round, and the round of 64 take place at weekends. The later rounds up to, but not including, the final, take place on midweek evenings. The final will take place on Saturday 27 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France, Teams, Round 1 to 6\nThe first six rounds, and any preliminaries required, are organised by the Regional Leagues and the Overseas Territories, who allow teams from within their league structure to enter at any point up to the third round. Teams from Championnat National 3 enter at the third round, those from Championnat National 2 enter at the fourth round and those from Championnat National enter at the fifth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France, Teams, Round 1 to 6\nThe number of teams entering at each qualifying round was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France, Teams, Round 7\n145 qualifiers from the Regional Leagues will be joined by the 11 qualifiers from the Overseas Territories and the 20 teams from Ligue 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France, Teams, Round 7, Regional Leagues\nFigures in parenthesis indicate the tier of the French football league system the team play at.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 57], "content_span": [58, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France, Seventh round\nThe draw for the seventh round was made in two parts. First the Overseas teams were drawn against opponents from the French League structure who had applied to potentially travel overseas. The main draw took place the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France, Seventh round\nThe draw for the overseas teams took place on 30 October 2018. The main draw took place on 31 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France, Seventh round\nMatches took place on 16, 17 and 18 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France, Seventh round, Main draw\nAs in previous editions of the competition, the main draw was split into 10 regional groups, with the split primarily ensuring an equal distribution of clubs from the different tiers, and secondarily grouping by geography.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France, Seventh round, Main draw\nThe lowest ranked team remaining in the competition at this stage was AS Carri\u00e8res Gr\u00e9sillons from tier 9 (District division 1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France, Seventh round, Main draw\nMatches took place on 16, 17 and 18 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France, Eighth round\nThe draw for the eighth round was made in two parts. First the remaining overseas team was drawn against opponents from the French League structure who had applied to potentially travel overseas. The overseas team, Aiglon du Lamentin, played at home due to playing their seventh round match away from home. The main draw took place later in the day. Both draws took place on 20 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France, Eighth round, Main draw\nAs in previous editions of the competition, the main draw was split into 6 regional groups, with the split primarily ensuring an equal distribution of clubs from the different tiers, and secondarily grouping by geography. The lowest ranked teams remaining in the competition at this stage were Entente Crest-Aouste and AS Villers Houlgate C\u00f4te Fleurie both from tier 8 (Regional League 3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France, Eighth round, Main draw\nMatches took place on 8 and 9 December 2018, with three matches postponed until the following weekend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France, Round of 64\nThe draw for the ninth round (known as the round of 64) took place on 10 December 2018. The 20 Ligue 1 teams joined the draw at this stage. The draw was split into four groups to ensure equal distribution of teams from each tier, with geographical proximity a secondary factor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France, Round of 64\nThe lowest ranked teams remaining in the competition at this stage were Olympique Strasbourg and ESC Longueau both from tier 7 (Regional League 2). Olympique Strasbourg entered the competition in the first round, so had been in the competition longest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France, Round of 64\nGames were played on 4, 5, 6 and 7 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France, Round of 32\nThe draw for the tenth round (known as the round of 32) took place on 7 January 2019. This was an open draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France, Round of 32\nThe lowest ranked teams remaining in the competition at this stage were Noisy-le-Grand FC and ES Viry-Ch\u00e2tillon, both from tier 6 (Regional League 1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France, Round of 32\nGames were played on 22, 23, 24 and 27 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France, Round of 16\nThe draw for the eleventh round (known as the round of 16) took place on 24 January 2019. This was an open draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France, Round of 16\nThe lowest ranked team remaining in the competition at this stage was SC Bastia, from tier 5 (Championnat National 3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France, Round of 16\nGames were played on 5, 6 and 7 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 83]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the quarter-finals took place on 6 February 2019. This was an open draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France, Quarter-finals\nThe lowest ranked team remaining in the competition at this stage was AS Vitr\u00e9 from tier 4 (Championnat National 2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France, Quarter-finals\nGames were played on 26 and 27 February and 6 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284992-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the semi-finals took place on 28 February 2019. This was an open draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284993-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Auvergne-Rh\u00f4ne-Alpes\nThe 2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Auvergne-Rh\u00f4ne-Alpes was the qualifying competition to decide which teams from the leagues of the Auvergne-Rh\u00f4ne-Alpes region of France took part in the main competition from the seventh round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284993-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Auvergne-Rh\u00f4ne-Alpes, First round\nThese matches were played on 25 and 26 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 77], "content_span": [78, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284993-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Auvergne-Rh\u00f4ne-Alpes, Second round\nThese matches were played on 1 and 2 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 78], "content_span": [79, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284993-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Auvergne-Rh\u00f4ne-Alpes, Third round\nThese matches were played on 15 and 16 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 77], "content_span": [78, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284993-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Auvergne-Rh\u00f4ne-Alpes, Fourth round\nThese matches were played on 29 and 30 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 78], "content_span": [79, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284993-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Auvergne-Rh\u00f4ne-Alpes, Fifth round\nThese matches were played on 13 and 14 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 77], "content_span": [78, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284993-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Auvergne-Rh\u00f4ne-Alpes, Sixth round\nThese matches were played on 27 and 28 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 77], "content_span": [78, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284994-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Bourgogne-Franche-Comt\u00e9\nThe 2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Bourgogne-Franche-Comt\u00e9 was the qualifying competition to decide which teams from the leagues of the Bourgogne-Franche-Comt\u00e9 region of France took part in the main competition from the seventh round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284994-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Bourgogne-Franche-Comt\u00e9, First round\nThese matches were played on 18 and 19 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 80], "content_span": [81, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284994-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Bourgogne-Franche-Comt\u00e9, Second round\nThese matches were played on 25 and 26 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 81], "content_span": [82, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284994-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Bourgogne-Franche-Comt\u00e9, Third round\nThese matches were played on 15 and 16 September 2018. Included in the draw is AS Saint Pierraise from the Overseas Collectivity of Saint Pierre and Miquelon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 80], "content_span": [81, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284994-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Bourgogne-Franche-Comt\u00e9, Fourth round\nThese matches were played on 29 and 30 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 81], "content_span": [82, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284994-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Bourgogne-Franche-Comt\u00e9, Fifth round\nThese matches were played on 13 and 14 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 80], "content_span": [81, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284994-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Bourgogne-Franche-Comt\u00e9, Sixth round\nThese matches were played on 27 and 28 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 80], "content_span": [81, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284995-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Bretagne\nThe 2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Bretagne was the qualifying competition to decide which teams from the leagues of the Bretagne region of France took part in the main competition from the seventh round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284995-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Bretagne, First round\nThese matches were played on 24, 25 and 26 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 65], "content_span": [66, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284995-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Bretagne, Third round\nThese matches were played on 15 and 16 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 65], "content_span": [66, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284995-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Bretagne, Fourth round\nThese matches were played on 29 and 30 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 66], "content_span": [67, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284995-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Bretagne, Fifth round\nThese matches were played on 13 and 14 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 65], "content_span": [66, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284995-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Bretagne, Sixth round\nThese matches were played on 27 and 28 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 65], "content_span": [66, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284996-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Centre-Val de Loire\nThe 2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Centre-Val de Loire was the qualifying competition to decide which teams from the leagues of the Centre-Val de Loire region of France took part in the main competition from the seventh round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284996-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Centre-Val de Loire, Preliminary rounds\nThese matches were played on 25 and 26 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 83], "content_span": [84, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284996-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Centre-Val de Loire, First round\nThese matches were played on 25 and 26 August and 2 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 76], "content_span": [77, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284996-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Centre-Val de Loire, Second round\nThese matches were played on 1, 2 and 9 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 77], "content_span": [78, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284996-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Centre-Val de Loire, Third round\nThese matches were played on 15 and 16 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 76], "content_span": [77, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284996-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Centre-Val de Loire, Fourth round\nThese matches were played on 29 and 30 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 77], "content_span": [78, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284996-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Centre-Val de Loire, Fifth round\nThese matches were played on 13 and 14 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 76], "content_span": [77, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284997-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Corsica\nThe 2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Corsica was the qualifying competition to decide which teams from the leagues of the Corsica region of France took part in the main competition from the seventh round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284997-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Corsica, Second round\nThese matches were played on 1 and 2 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 65], "content_span": [66, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284997-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Corsica, Fifth round\nThese matches were played on 13 and 14 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 64], "content_span": [65, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284998-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Grand Est\nThe 2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Grand Est was the qualifying competition to decide which teams from the leagues of the Grand Est region of France took part in the main competition from the seventh round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284998-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Grand Est, First round\nThe first round qualifiers for the regional league of Grand Est were organised separately by the three constituent sectors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 66], "content_span": [67, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284998-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Grand Est, First round, Alsace\nThese matches were played on 6, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 19 and 20 June and 12 August 2018 in Alsace. Tiers shown reflect the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 74], "content_span": [75, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284998-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Grand Est, First round, Champagne-Ardenne\nThese matches were played on 9, 10, 17 and 24 June 2018 in Champagne-Ardenne. Tiers shown reflect the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 85], "content_span": [86, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284998-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Grand Est, First round, Lorraine\nThese matches were played on 2, 3, 8, 9, 10, 17 and 23 June and 12, 15 and 19 August 2018 in Lorraine. Tiers shown reflect the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 76], "content_span": [77, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284998-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Grand Est, Second round\nThese matches were played on 12, 15, 18, 19, 26 and 29 August 2018 (with two replays played 9 and 12 September).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 67], "content_span": [68, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284998-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Grand Est, Third round\nThese matches were played on 14, 15 and 16 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 66], "content_span": [67, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284998-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Grand Est, Fourth round\nThese matches were played on 29 and 30 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 67], "content_span": [68, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284998-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Grand Est, Fifth round\nThese matches were played on 29 and 30 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 66], "content_span": [67, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284998-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Grand Est, Sixth round\nThese matches were played on 27 and 28 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 66], "content_span": [67, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284999-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Hauts-de France\nThe 2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Hauts-de France was the qualifying competition to decide which teams from the leagues of the Hauts-de France region of France took part in the main competition from the seventh round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284999-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Hauts-de France, Preliminary round\nThese matches are from the Aisne district only, and were played on 19 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 78], "content_span": [79, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284999-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Hauts-de France, Preliminary round\nThese matches are from the Artois district only, and were played on 19 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 78], "content_span": [79, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284999-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Hauts-de France, Preliminary round\nThis match is from the Flandres district only, and was played on 26 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 78], "content_span": [79, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284999-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Hauts-de France, First round\nThese matches are from the Somme district only, and were played on 17, 23 and 24 June 2018. Tiers shown reflect the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 72], "content_span": [73, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284999-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Hauts-de France, First round\nThese matches are from the Aisne district only, and were played on 26 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 72], "content_span": [73, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284999-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Hauts-de France, First round\nThese matches are from the C\u00f4te d'Opale district only, and were played on 26 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 72], "content_span": [73, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284999-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Hauts-de France, First round\nThese matches are from the Flandres district only, and were played on 26 and 29 August and 2 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 72], "content_span": [73, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284999-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Hauts-de France, First round\nThese matches are from the Artois district only, and were played on 26 and 29 August 2018 (with one match replayed on 2 September 2018).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 72], "content_span": [73, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284999-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Hauts-de France, First round\nThese matches are from the Escaut district only, and were played on 26 and 30 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 72], "content_span": [73, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284999-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Hauts-de France, First round\nThese matches are from the Oise district only, and were played on 26 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 72], "content_span": [73, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284999-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Hauts-de France, Second to third round framing\nThe Escaut district required a framing round, to reduce the number of teams going forwards to the third round from 44 to 43. This match was played on 8 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 90], "content_span": [91, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284999-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Hauts-de France, Third round\nThese matches were played on 15 and 16 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 72], "content_span": [73, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284999-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Hauts-de France, Fourth round\nThese matches were played on 28, 29 and 30 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 73], "content_span": [74, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284999-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Hauts-de France, Fifth round\nThese matches were played on 13 and 14 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 72], "content_span": [73, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00284999-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Hauts-de France, Sixth round\nThese matches were played on 27 and 28 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 72], "content_span": [73, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285000-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, M\u00e9diterran\u00e9e\nThe 2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, M\u00e9diterran\u00e9e was the qualifying competition to decide which teams from the leagues of the M\u00e9diterran\u00e9e region of France took part in the main competition from the seventh round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285000-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, M\u00e9diterran\u00e9e, First round\nThese matches were played on 25 and 26 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 69], "content_span": [70, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285000-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, M\u00e9diterran\u00e9e, Second round\nThese matches were played on 1 and 2 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 70], "content_span": [71, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285000-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, M\u00e9diterran\u00e9e, Third round\nThese matches were played on 15 and 16 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 69], "content_span": [70, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285000-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, M\u00e9diterran\u00e9e, Fourth round\nThese matches were played on 28, 29 and 30 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 70], "content_span": [71, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285000-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, M\u00e9diterran\u00e9e, Fifth round\nThese matches were played on 13, 14 and 17 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 69], "content_span": [70, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285000-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, M\u00e9diterran\u00e9e, Sixth round\nThese matches were played on 27 and 28 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 69], "content_span": [70, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285001-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Normandy\nThe 2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Normandy was the qualifying competition to decide which teams from the leagues of the Normandy region of France took part in the main competition from the seventh round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285001-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Normandy, First round\nThese matches were played on 18 and 19 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 65], "content_span": [66, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285001-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Normandy, Second round\nThese matches were played on 24, 25 and 26 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 66], "content_span": [67, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285001-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Normandy, Third round\nThese matches were played on 15, 16, 22 and 23 September 2018, with one replay on 30 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 65], "content_span": [66, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285001-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Normandy, Fourth round\nThese matches were played on 29 and 30 September 2018, with one tie re-arranged for 7 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 66], "content_span": [67, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285001-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Normandy, Fifth round\nThese matches were played on 13 and 14 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 65], "content_span": [66, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285001-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Normandy, Sixth round\nThese matches were played on 27 and 28 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 65], "content_span": [66, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285002-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Nouvelle-Aquitaine\nThe 2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Nouvelle-Aquitaine was the qualifying competition to decide which teams from the leagues of the Nouvelle-Aquitaine region of France took part in the main competition from the seventh round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285002-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, First round\nThese matches were played on 24, 25 and 26 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 75], "content_span": [76, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285002-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, Second round\nThese matches were played on 1 and 2 September 2018, with one tie replayed on 9 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 76], "content_span": [77, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285002-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, Third round\nThese matches were played on 15 and 16 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 75], "content_span": [76, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285002-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, Fourth round\nThese matches were played on 29 and 30 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 76], "content_span": [77, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285002-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, Fifth round\nThese matches were be played on 12, 13 and 14 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 75], "content_span": [76, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285002-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, Sixth round\nThese matches were played on 27 and 28 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 75], "content_span": [76, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie\nThe 2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie was the qualifying competition to decide which teams from the leagues of the Occitanie region of France took part in the main competition from the seventh round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie, First round\nThese matches are from the Ari\u00e8ge district, and were played on 25 and 26 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 66], "content_span": [67, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie, First round\nThese matches are from the Aveyron district, and were played on 24, 25 and 26 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 66], "content_span": [67, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie, First round\nThese matches are from the Gers district, and were played on 24, 25, 26 and 29 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 66], "content_span": [67, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie, First round\nThese matches are from the Lot district, and were played on 17, 18 and 19 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 66], "content_span": [67, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie, First round\nThese matches are from the Hautes-Pyr\u00e9n\u00e9es district, and were played on 24, 25 and 26 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 66], "content_span": [67, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie, First round\nThese matches are from the Tarn district, and were played on 25 and 26 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 66], "content_span": [67, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie, First round\nThese matches are from the Tarn-et-Garonne district, and were played on 17, 18 and 19 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 66], "content_span": [67, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie, First round\nThese matches are from the Haute-Garonne district, and were played on 24, 25 and 26 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 66], "content_span": [67, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie, First round\nThese matches are from the Aude district, and were played on 26 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 66], "content_span": [67, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie, First round\nThese matches are from the Gard-Loz\u00e8re district, and were played on 26 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 66], "content_span": [67, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie, First round\nThese matches are from the H\u00e9rault district, and were played on 25 and 26 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 66], "content_span": [67, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie, First round\nThese matches are from the Pyr\u00e9n\u00e9es-Orientales district, and were played on 25 and 26 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 66], "content_span": [67, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie, Second round\nThese matches are from the Ari\u00e8ge district, and were played on 1 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 67], "content_span": [68, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie, Second round\nThese matches are from the Aveyron district, and were played on 31 August and 1 and 2 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 67], "content_span": [68, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie, Second round\nThese matches are from the Gers district, and were played on 31 August and 1 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 67], "content_span": [68, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie, Second round\nThese matches are from the Lot district, and were played on 24, 25 and 26 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 67], "content_span": [68, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie, Second round\nThese matches are from the Hautes-Pyr\u00e9n\u00e9es district, and were played on 31 August and 1 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 67], "content_span": [68, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie, Second round\nThese matches are from the Tarn district, and were played on 1 and 2 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 67], "content_span": [68, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie, Second round\nThese matches are from the Tarn-et-Garonne district, and were played on 25 and 26 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 67], "content_span": [68, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie, Second round\nThese matches are from the Haute-Garonne district, and were played on 31 August and 1 and 2 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 67], "content_span": [68, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie, Second round\nThese matches are from the Aude district, and were played on 2 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 67], "content_span": [68, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie, Second round\nThese matches are from the Gard-Loz\u00e8re district, and were played on 31 August and 1 and 2 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 67], "content_span": [68, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie, Second round\nThese matches are from the H\u00e9rault district, and were played on 2 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 67], "content_span": [68, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie, Second round\nThese matches are from the Pyr\u00e9n\u00e9es-Orientales district, and were played on 2 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 67], "content_span": [68, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie, Third round\nThese matches were played on 15 and 16 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 66], "content_span": [67, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie, Fourth round\nThese matches were played on 29 and 30 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 67], "content_span": [68, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie, Fifth round\nThese matches were played on 13 and 14 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 66], "content_span": [67, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285003-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Occitanie, Sixth round\nThese matches were played on 27 and 28 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 66], "content_span": [67, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories\nThe 2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories make up the qualifying competition to decide which teams from the French Overseas Departments and Territories take part in the main competition from the seventh round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [80, 80], "content_span": [81, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Mayotte, First round\nNote: Mayotte League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):R\u00e9gionale 1 (R1)R\u00e9gionale 2 (R2)R\u00e9gionale 3 (R3)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 102], "content_span": [103, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Mayotte, Second round\nThese matches were played on 11 and 22 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 103], "content_span": [104, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Mayotte, Second round\nNote: Mayotte League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):R\u00e9gionale 1 (R1)R\u00e9gionale 2 (R2)R\u00e9gionale 3 (R3)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 103], "content_span": [104, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Mayotte, Third round\nThese matches were played on 11 and 22 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 102], "content_span": [103, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Mayotte, Third round\nNote: Mayotte League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):R\u00e9gionale 1 (R1)R\u00e9gionale 2 (R2)R\u00e9gionale 3 (R3)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 102], "content_span": [103, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Mayotte, Fourth round\nNote: Mayotte League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):R\u00e9gionale 1 (R1)R\u00e9gionale 2 (R2)R\u00e9gionale 3 (R3)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 103], "content_span": [104, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Mayotte, Fifth round\nNote: Mayotte League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):R\u00e9gionale 1 (R1)R\u00e9gionale 2 (R2)R\u00e9gionale 3 (R3)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 102], "content_span": [103, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Mayotte, Sixth round\nNote: Mayotte League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):R\u00e9gionale 1 (R1)R\u00e9gionale 2 (R2)R\u00e9gionale 3 (R3)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 102], "content_span": [103, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, French Guiana, Third round\nThis season, the preliminary rounds start with the third round, due to the number of teams entered. These matches were played on 24, 25, 26 and 29 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 108], "content_span": [109, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, French Guiana, Third round\nNote: French Guiana League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 108], "content_span": [109, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, French Guiana, Fourth round\nThese matches were played on 15, 16 and 18 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 109], "content_span": [110, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, French Guiana, Fourth round\nNote: French Guiana League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 109], "content_span": [110, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, French Guiana, Fifth round\nThese matches were played on 29 and 30 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 108], "content_span": [109, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, French Guiana, Fifth round\nNote: French Guiana League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 108], "content_span": [109, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, French Guiana, Sixth round\nNote: French Guiana League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 108], "content_span": [109, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Guadeloupe, Second round\nThis season, the preliminary rounds start with the second round, due to the number of clubs entering. These matches were played on 22, 24, 25 and 26 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 106], "content_span": [107, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Guadeloupe, Second round\nNote: Guadeloupe League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 106], "content_span": [107, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Guadeloupe, Third round\nThese matches were played on 31 August and 1,2 and 5 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 105], "content_span": [106, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Guadeloupe, Third round\nNote: Guadeloupe League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 105], "content_span": [106, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Guadeloupe, Fourth round\nThese matches were played on 2 and 3 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 106], "content_span": [107, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Guadeloupe, Fourth round\nNote: Guadeloupe League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 106], "content_span": [107, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Guadeloupe, Fifth round\nThese matches were played on 19 and 20 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 105], "content_span": [106, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Guadeloupe, Fifth round\nNote: Guadeloupe League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 105], "content_span": [106, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Guadeloupe, Sixth round\nThese matches were played on 23 and 24 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 105], "content_span": [106, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Guadeloupe, Sixth round\nNote: Guadeloupe League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 105], "content_span": [106, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, R\u00e9union, Second round\nThis season, the preliminary rounds start with the second round, referred to locally as the first round of the regional competition, due to the number of participants requiring fewer rounds than other regions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 103], "content_span": [104, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, R\u00e9union, Second round\nThese matches were played on 21 and 22 April and 2 May 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 103], "content_span": [104, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, R\u00e9union, Second round\nNote: Re\u00fanion League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):R\u00e9gionale 1 (R1)R\u00e9gionale 2 (R2)D2 D\u00e9partemental (D2D)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 103], "content_span": [104, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, R\u00e9union, Third round\nThese matches were played on 12 and 13 May 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 102], "content_span": [103, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, R\u00e9union, Third round\nNote: Re\u00fanion League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):R\u00e9gionale 1 (R1)R\u00e9gionale 2 (R2)D2 D\u00e9partemental (D2D)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 102], "content_span": [103, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, R\u00e9union, Fourth round\nThese matches were played on 2 and 3 June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 103], "content_span": [104, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, R\u00e9union, Fourth round\nNote: Re\u00fanion League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):R\u00e9gionale 1 (R1)R\u00e9gionale 2 (R2)D2 D\u00e9partemental (D2D)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 103], "content_span": [104, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0033-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, R\u00e9union, Fifth round\nThese matches were played on 21, 22, 23 and 25 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 102], "content_span": [103, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0034-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, R\u00e9union, Fifth round\nNote: Re\u00fanion League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):R\u00e9gionale 1 (R1)R\u00e9gionale 2 (R2)D2 D\u00e9partemental (D2D)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 102], "content_span": [103, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0035-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, R\u00e9union, Sixth round\nNote: Re\u00fanion League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):R\u00e9gionale 1 (R1)R\u00e9gionale 2 (R2)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 102], "content_span": [103, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0036-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Martinique, Second round\nThis season, the preliminary rounds start with the second round, due to the number of clubs entered. These matches were played on 25 and 26 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 106], "content_span": [107, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0037-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Martinique, Second round\nNote: Martinique League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):R\u00e9gionale 1 (R1)R\u00e9gionale 2 (R2)R\u00e9gionale 3 (R3)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 106], "content_span": [107, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0038-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Martinique, Third round\nThese matches were played on 31 August, 1 and 2 September and 3 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 105], "content_span": [106, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0039-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Martinique, Third round\nNote: Martinique League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):R\u00e9gionale 1 (R1)R\u00e9gionale 2 (R2)R\u00e9gionale 3 (R3)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 105], "content_span": [106, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0040-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Martinique, Fourth round\nThese matches were played on 25 and 26 September and 6 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 106], "content_span": [107, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0041-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Martinique, Fourth round\nNote: Martinique League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 106], "content_span": [107, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0042-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Martinique, Fifth round\nThese matches were played on 5, 6 and 12 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 105], "content_span": [106, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0043-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Martinique, Fifth round\nNote: Martinique League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 105], "content_span": [106, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0044-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Martinique, Sixth round\nThese matches were played on 23 and 24 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 105], "content_span": [106, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0045-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Martinique, Sixth round\nNote: Martinique League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 105], "content_span": [106, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0046-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Saint Pierre and Miquelon, First round\nThe Overseas Collectivity of Saint Pierre and Miquelon has teams participating in the qualification rounds of the competition for the first time. With only three teams in the collectivity, there was just one first round match, with the third team receiving a bye to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 120], "content_span": [121, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285004-0047-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Saint Pierre and Miquelon, Second round\nWith only three teams in the collectivity, there was just one second round match, with the winner entered into the third round draw in the Bourgogne-Franche-Comt\u00e9 region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 80], "section_span": [82, 121], "content_span": [122, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285005-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Paris-\u00cele-de-France\nThe 2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Paris-\u00cele-de-France was the qualifying competition to decide which teams from the leagues of the Paris-\u00cele-de-France region of France took part in the main competition from the seventh round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285005-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Paris-\u00cele-de-France, First round\nThese matches were played on 22 and 29 April and 1 and 20 May 2018. Tiers shown reflect the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 76], "content_span": [77, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285005-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Paris-\u00cele-de-France, Second round\nThese matches were played on 30 May and 1, 2, 3, 7, 10 and 13 June 2018. Tiers shown reflect the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 77], "content_span": [78, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285005-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Paris-\u00cele-de-France, Fourth round\nThese matches were played on 29 and 30 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 77], "content_span": [78, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285005-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Paris-\u00cele-de-France, Fifth round\nThese matches were played on 13 and 14 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 76], "content_span": [77, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285005-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Paris-\u00cele-de-France, Sixth round\nThese matches were played on 27 and 28 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 76], "content_span": [77, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285006-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Pays de la Loire\nThe 2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Pays de la Loire was the qualifying competition to decide which teams from the leagues of the Pays de la Loire region of France took part in the main competition from the seventh round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285006-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Pays de la Loire, Third round\nThese matches were played on 15 and 16 September 2018, with one tie replayed on 23 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 73], "content_span": [74, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285006-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Pays de la Loire, Fourth round\nThese matches were played on 29 and 30 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 74], "content_span": [75, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285006-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Pays de la Loire, Fifth round\nThese matches were played on 13 and 14 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 73], "content_span": [74, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285006-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Pays de la Loire, Sixth round\nThese matches were played on 27 and 28 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 73], "content_span": [74, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285007-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France preliminary rounds\nThe 2018\u201319 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds make up the qualifying competition to decide which teams take part in the main competition from Round 7. This is the 102nd season of the main football cup competition of France. The competition is organised by the French Football Federation (FFF) and is open to all clubs in French football, as well as clubs from the overseas departments and territories (Guadeloupe, French Guiana, Martinique, Mayotte, New Caledonia (qualification via 2018 New Caledonia Cup), Tahiti (qualification via 2017\u201318 Tahiti Cup), R\u00e9union, Saint Martin and Saint Pierre and Miquelon).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285007-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France preliminary rounds, Overseas departments and territories, French Guiana\nNote: French Guiana League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):Regional 1 (R1)Regional 2 (R2)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 95], "content_span": [96, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285007-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France preliminary rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Mayotte\nNote: Mayotte League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):R\u00e9gionale 1 (R1)R\u00e9gionale 2 (R2)R\u00e9gionale 3 (R3)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 89], "content_span": [90, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285007-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France preliminary rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Guadeloupe\nThese matches were played on 23 and 24 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 92], "content_span": [93, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285007-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France preliminary rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Guadeloupe\nNote: Guadeloupe League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):Ligue R\u00e9gionale 1 (R1)Ligue R\u00e9gionale 2 (R2)Ligue R\u00e9gionale 3 (R3)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 92], "content_span": [93, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285007-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France preliminary rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Martinique\nThese matches were played on 23 and 24 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 92], "content_span": [93, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285007-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France preliminary rounds, Overseas departments and territories, Martinique\nNote: Martinique League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):R\u00e9gionale 1 (R1)R\u00e9gionale 2 (R2)R\u00e9gionale 3 (R3)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 92], "content_span": [93, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285007-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France preliminary rounds, Overseas departments and territories, R\u00e9union\nNote: Re\u00fanion League Structure (no promotion to French League Structure):R\u00e9gionale 1 (R1)R\u00e9gionale 2 (R2)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 89], "content_span": [90, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285007-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France preliminary rounds, Nouvelle-Aquitaine\nThese matches were played on 27 and 28 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 62], "content_span": [63, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285007-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France preliminary rounds, Pays de la Loire\nThese matches were played on 27 and 28 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 60], "content_span": [61, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285007-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France preliminary rounds, Corsica\nThese matches were played on 27 and 28 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285007-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France preliminary rounds, Bourgogne-Franche-Comt\u00e9\nThese matches were played on 27 and 28 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 67], "content_span": [68, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285007-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France preliminary rounds, Grand Est\nThese matches were played on 27 and 28 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 53], "content_span": [54, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285007-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France preliminary rounds, M\u00e9diterran\u00e9e\nThese matches were played on 27 and 28 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285007-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France preliminary rounds, Occitanie\nThese matches were played on 27 and 28 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 53], "content_span": [54, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285007-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France preliminary rounds, Hauts-de-France\nThese matches were played on 27 and 28 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285007-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France preliminary rounds, Normandy\nThese matches were played on 27 and 28 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285007-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France preliminary rounds, Bretagne\nThese matches were played on 27 and 28 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285007-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France preliminary rounds, Paris-\u00cele-de-France\nThese matches were played on 27 and 28 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 63], "content_span": [64, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285007-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de France preliminary rounds, Auvergne-Rh\u00f4ne-Alpes\nThese matches were played on 27 and 28 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285008-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de la Ligue\nThe 2018\u201319 Coupe de la Ligue was the 25th year for the league cup competition held in France. Forty-four clubs participated in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285008-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de la Ligue\nStrasbourg won their fourth Coupe de la Ligue title (their first in fourteen years) following a 4\u20131 win on penalties over Guingamp in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285008-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de la Ligue\nParis Saint-Germain were the five-time defending champions after winning the cup in the previous five seasons, but were eliminated in the quarter-finals after a 2\u20131 loss to Guingamp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285008-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de la Ligue, First round\nTwelve first round matches were played on 14 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285008-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de la Ligue, Second round\nSix second round matches were played on 28 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285008-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de la Ligue, Third round\nThe draw for the third round matches was held on 12 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285008-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de la Ligue, Round of 16\nThe draw for the Round of 16 matches was held on 14 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285008-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de la Ligue, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the quarter-final matches was held on 19 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285008-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coupe de la Ligue, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the semi-final matches was held on 10 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285009-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coventry City F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Coventry City's 135th , Louie George Hall was in goal season in their existence, and the club's first season back in League One following promotion from League Two at the end of the 2017\u201318 season. Along with competing in League One, the club will also compete in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285009-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coventry City F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285009-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coventry City F.C. season, Competitions, Preseason friendlies\nThe Sky Blues will face Sutton United, Everton U23s, Aston Villa U23s, Stevenage, Derby County and West Bromwich Albion, in memory of Cyrille Regis as part of their pre-season preparations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285009-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coventry City F.C. season, Competitions, League One, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League One fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285009-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coventry City F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by former Coventry players Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285009-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coventry City F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285009-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coventry City F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285009-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Coventry City F.C. season, Squad information, Squad details\n* Player age and appearances/goals for the club as of beginning of 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 67], "content_span": [68, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285010-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Crawley Town F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season will be Crawley Town's 123rd season in their history and their fourth consecutive season in League Two. Along with League Two, the club will also compete in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285010-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Crawley Town F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285010-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Crawley Town F.C. season, Pre-season\nCrawley Town announced friendlies with Fulham, Ipswich Town, Charlton Athletic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285010-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Crawley Town F.C. season, Competitions, League Two, Matches\nThe fixtures for the 2018\u201319 season were announced on 21 June 2018 at 9am.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285010-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Crawley Town F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285010-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Crawley Town F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285010-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Crawley Town F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285010-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Crawley Town F.C. season, Statistics, Top scorers\nThe list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285010-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Crawley Town F.C. season, Statistics, Clean sheets\nThe list is sorted by shirt number when total appearances are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285011-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Creighton Bluejays men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Creighton Bluejays men's basketball team represented Creighton University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bluejays were led by ninth-year head coach Greg McDermott and played their home games at the newly-named CHI Health Center Omaha, as members of the Big East Conference. They finished the season 20\u201315, 9\u20139 in Big East play to finish in a four-way tie for third place. As the No. 5 seed in the Big East Tournament, they lost to Xavier in the quarterfinals. They received a bid to the National Invitation Tournament as the No. 2 seed in the TCU bracket where they defeated Loyola and Memphis before losing to TCU in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285011-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Creighton Bluejays men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bluejays finished the 2017\u201318 season 21\u201312, 10\u20138 in Big East play to finish in a three-way tie for third place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big East Tournament to Providence. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as the No. 8 seed in the South Region. There the Bluejays lost in the First Round to Kansas State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285011-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Creighton Bluejays men's basketball team, Offseason, Departures\nIn addition to the departing players, top assistant Darian DeVries left to take the head coaching vacancy at Drake. He had been with Creighton since 1998, first as an equipment manager and then from 2001 as an assistant coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 71], "content_span": [72, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285012-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Creighton Bluejays women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Creighton Bluejays women's basketball team represents Creighton University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Bluejays, led by sixteenth year head coach Jim Flanery, play their home games at D. J. Sokol Arena and were members of the Big East Conference. They finished the season 15\u201316, 8\u201310 in Big East play to finish in a tie for seventh place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Big East Women's Tournament where they lost to DePaul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285013-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Crewe Alexandra F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Crewe Alexandra's 142nd season in their history, their 95th in the English Football League and third consecutive in League Two. Along with competing in League Two, the club also participated in the 2018\u201319 FA Cup, 2018\u201319 EFL Cup and 2018\u201319 EFL Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285013-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Crewe Alexandra F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285013-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Crewe Alexandra F.C. season, Competitions, Friendlies\nThe Railwaymen announced pre-season friendlies with Colwyn Bay, Barrow, Bala Town, Kidsgrove Athletic, Altrincham, Nantwich Town, Leek Town and Blackpool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285013-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Crewe Alexandra F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285013-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Crewe Alexandra F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285013-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Crewe Alexandra F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285014-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Croatian First Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 Croatian First Football League (officially Hrvatski Telekom Prva liga for sponsorship reasons) was the 28th season of the Croatian First Football League, the national championship for men's association football teams in Croatia, since its establishment in 1992. The season started on 27 July 2018 and finished on 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285014-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Croatian First Football League, Teams\nOn 23 April 2018, Croatian Football Federation announced that the first stage of licensing procedure for 2018\u201319 season was complete. For the 2018\u201319 Prva HNL, only eight clubs were issued a top level license: Dinamo Zagreb, Gorica, Hajduk Split, Inter Zapre\u0161i\u0107, Lokomotiva, Osijek, Rijeka and Slaven Belupo. All of these clubs except Gorica were also issued a license for participating in UEFA competitions. In the second stage of licensing, clubs that were not licensed in the first stage could appeal on the decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285014-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Croatian First Football League, Results\nEach team played home-and-away against every other team in the league twice, for a total of 36 matches each played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285014-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Croatian First Football League, Relegation play-offs\nAt the end of the season, ninth-placed team Istra 1961 contested a two-legged relegation play-off tie against \u0160ibenik, runners-up of the 2018\u201319 Croatian Second Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285015-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Croatian First League (men's water polo)\nThe 2018\u201319 Croatian First League is the 28th season of the Croatian First League, Craotian premier Water polo league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285015-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Croatian First League (men's water polo), Team information\nThe following 10 clubs compete in the Croatian First League during the 2018\u201319 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 66], "content_span": [67, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285016-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Croatian Football Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Croatian Football Cup was the twenty-eighth season of Croatia's football knockout competition. The defending champions were Dinamo Zagreb, having won their fifteenth title the previous year by defeating Hajduk Split in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285016-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Croatian Football Cup, Preliminary round\nThe draw for the preliminary single-legged round was held on 1 August 2018 and the matches were played on 29 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285016-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Croatian Football Cup, Preliminary round\n* Match played on 18 August. * * Match played on 21 August. * ** Matches played on 28 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285016-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Croatian Football Cup, First round\nThe draw for the First round was held on 31 August 2018 and the matches were played on 26 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285016-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Croatian Football Cup, First round\n* Match played on 18 September. * * Match played on 19 September. * ** Matches played on 25 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285016-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Croatian Football Cup, Second round\nThe second round matches were played on 31 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285016-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Croatian Football Cup, Final\nThe final was played on 22 May 2019 at Stadion Aldo Drosina in Pula.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285017-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Croatian Second Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 Croatian Second Football League (also known as Druga HNL and 2. HNL) is the 28th season of the Croatian Second Football League, the second level football competition for men's association football teams in Croatia, since its establishment in 1992. The season started on 24 August 2018 and is scheduled to end in May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285017-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Croatian Second Football League\nThe league is contested by 14 teams and played in a double round robin format, with each team playing every other team twice over 26 rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285017-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Croatian Second Football League, Teams\nOn 23 April 2018, Croatian Football Federation announced that the first stage of licensing procedure for 2018\u201319 season was completed. For the 2018\u201319 Druga HNL, only six clubs outside of top level were issued a second level license: Dinamo Zagreb II, Gorica, Hajduk Split II, Lu\u010dko, Osijek II and Sesvete. In the second stage of licensing procedure clubs that were not licensed in the first round appealed the decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285017-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Croatian Second Football League, Teams\nThe following teams have mathematically secured their place in the 2018\u201319 Druga HNL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285018-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Croatian Women's First Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 Croatian Women's First Football League (Prva hrvatska nogometna liga za \u017eene) was the twenty eight season of Croatian Women's First Football League, the national championship for women's association football teams in Croatia, since its establishment in 1992. The season started on 22 September 2018 and ended on 2 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285018-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Croatian Women's First Football League\nThe league was contested by ten teams and played in a double round robin format, with each team playing every other team two times over 18 rounds. \u017dNK Osijek were the defending champions, having won their twenty second title in 2017\u201318.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285018-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Croatian Women's First Football League, Teams\nThe following is a complete list of teams who are contesting the 2018\u201319 Croatian Women's First Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 53], "content_span": [54, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285019-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Croatian Women's Football Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Croatian Women's Football Cup was the twenty-eighth season of the annual Croatian football cup competition. Fourteen teams participated in the competition, all ten teams from the 2018\u201319 Croatian Women's First Football League and four teams from second level that applied for competition. The competition began on 6 October 2018 and will end on 9 June 2019 with the final in Krapina, a nominally neutral venue. Split were defending champions and successfully defended their title after beating Osijek in the final. Katarina Zrinski and Grani\u010dar \u0110ur\u0111evac received bye to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285020-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cruz Azul season\nFor the Mexican football club Cruz Azul, the 2018\u201319 season is its 59th season in existence and its 55th consecutive season in the top tier of Mexican football. Cruz Azul will compete in Liga MX and Copa MX.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285020-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cruz Azul season, Season overview, October\nOn 31 October, Cruz Azul faced Monterrey in the Copa MX final in the Estadio BBVA Bancomer. Cruz Azul won the match 0\u20132, with goals from Hern\u00e1ndez and Cauteruccio, clinching their fourth title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285020-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cruz Azul season, Season overview, December\nOn 13 December, Cruz Azul played the first leg of the Liga MX final against Am\u00e9rica which ended as a goalless draw. The second leg was played on 16 December with Cruz Azul losing the match 0\u20132. This was the first final with both legs played in the same stadium since Verano 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285020-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cruz Azul season, Season overview, January\nCruz Azul's four-year association with Under Armour ended with the Apertura 2018 season after being unable to reach an agreement on a new deal. Cruz Azul announced Joma as their new kit manufacturer on 1 January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285020-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cruz Azul season, Competitions, Overview, Aggregate table\nThe aggregate table (the sum of points of both the Apertura and Clausura tournaments) will be used to determine the participants of the Apertura 2019 Copa MX. This table also displays teams that have qualified for the 2020 CONCACAF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 65], "content_span": [66, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285020-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cruz Azul season, Competitions, Apertura 2018, Copa MX\nOn 5 June, Cruz Azul were drawn in Group 6 of the Copa MX alongside Liga MX club Atlas, and Ascenso MX club Zacatepec.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 62], "content_span": [63, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285020-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cruz Azul season, Competitions, Clausura 2019, Copa MX\nOn 11 December, Cruz Azul were drawn in Group 5 of the Copa MX alongside Liga MX club Le\u00f3n, and Ascenso MX club Oaxaca.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 62], "content_span": [63, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285020-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cruz Azul season, Squad statistics, Injury record\n- Player is injured - Player has recovered from injuryLast updated: 15 August 2018Source:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 57], "content_span": [58, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285021-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Crystal Palace F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Crystal Palace's sixth consecutive season in the Premier League (extending their longest ever spell in the top division of English football) and the 113th year in their history. In this season, Palace participated in the Premier League, FA Cup and EFL Cup. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285021-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Crystal Palace F.C. season, Players\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285021-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Crystal Palace F.C. season, Friendlies\nThe club had a pre-season tour to Scandinavia to play FC Helsing\u00f8r and Halmstads BK, first-team friendlies away against Oxford United and Reading, and at home to Toulouse, as well as Palace XI (mixture of first-team and Under-23s) fixtures against Bromley, Stevenage, Boreham Wood and Kingstonian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285021-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Crystal Palace F.C. season, Competitions, Premier League, Matches\nOn 14 June 2018, the Premier League fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285021-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Crystal Palace F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nIn the third round draw, made on 3 December 2018, Palace were drawn at home to League Two team Grimsby Town. They won through a late Jordan Ayew goal after Grimsby had a man sent off, and in the draw for the next round were paired with fellow Premier League team Tottenham Hotspur. Palace won 2\u20130 against Spurs, earning an away tie against League One team Doncaster Rovers in the fifth round. The draw for the quarter-final was made on 18 February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285021-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Crystal Palace F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nCrystal Palace entered the competition in the second round, where they were drawn against Swansea City. The third round draw was made on 30 August 2018, where Palace were drawn to play away against West Brom. The fourth round draw was on 29 September with Crystal Palace again drawn away, this time to Middlesbrough. Palace lost the game to a goal in first-half injury time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285022-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei\nThe 2018\u201319 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei was the 81st season of the annual Romanian primary football knockout tournament. As winners, Viitorul Constan\u021ba, qualified for the second qualifying round of the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285022-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei\nTimes up to 27 October 2018 and from 31 March 2019 were EEST (UTC+3). Times from 28 October 2018 to 30 March 2019 were EET (UTC+2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285022-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei, Preliminary Rounds\nThe first rounds, and any preliminaries, are organised by the Regional Leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285022-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei, First Round\nAll matches were played on 1 and 2 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 82]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285022-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei, Second Round\nAll matches were played on 14, 15 and 16 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285022-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei, Third Round\nAll matches were played on 28 and 29 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285022-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei, Fourth Round\nThe matches were played between 11 and 13 September 2018. The game between Flac\u0103ra Moreni and Chindia T\u00e2rgovi\u0219te was played on the 18th because it clashed with a rescheduled league match of Chindia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285022-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei, Round of 32\nThe matches were played on 25, 26 and 27 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285022-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei, Round of 16\nThe matches were played on 30, 31 October and 1 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285022-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei, Quarter-finals\nThe matches were played on 26, 27 and 28 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285022-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei, Semi-finals\nThe semi-final matches are played in a round-trip system. The first legs were played on 3 and 4 April 2019 and the second legs were played on 24 and 25 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285023-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei (women's football)\nThe 2018\u201319 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei was the 16th season of the annual official Romanian women's football knockout tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285023-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei (women's football), First Round\n14 Liga III teams entered the competition for the First Round. The 7 matches in this round were all scheduled and played on Sunday, 14 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285023-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei (women's football), Second Round\nThe 7 teams that advanced from the First Round were joined by most of the remaining teams: 14 Liga II teams and 8 Liga I teams, for a total of 29 teams playing 14 matches, while one received a bye. The matches were scheduled to be played on or around 28 October. Two were played in advance, on 25 and 27 October 2019, while two were scheduled on 31 October and two more were postponed for later, on 17 and 18 November. 8 games were played on the original scheduled day of 28 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 54], "content_span": [55, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285024-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cura\u00e7ao Prom\u00e9 Divishon\nThe 2018\u201319 Cura\u00e7ao Prom\u00e9 Divishon is the 93rd season of the Cura\u00e7ao Prom\u00e9 Divishon, the top division football competition in Cura\u00e7ao. The season began on 28 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285025-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Curling World Cup was the first edition of the Curling World Cup, held between men's, women's, and mixed doubles teams. It had three legs and a Grand Final, taking place in Suzhou, China, Omaha, United States, J\u00f6nk\u00f6ping, Sweden, and Beijing, China respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285025-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup, Format\nCurling World Cup matches have eight ends, rather than the standard ten ends. Ties after eight ends are decided by a shoot-out, with each team throwing a stone and the one closest to the button winning. A win in eight or fewer ends earns a team 3 points, a shoot-out win 2 points, a shoot-out loss 1 point, and 0 points for a loss in eight or fewer ends.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285025-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup, Format\nEach event has eight teams in the men's, women's, and mixed doubles tournament. The teams are split into two groups of four, based on the Curling World Cup rankings, whereby the 1st, 3rd, 5th, and 7th, ranked teams are in one group and the 2nd, 4th, 6th, and 8th ranked teams in the other. The first place teams in each group plays against each other in the final. In the event of a tie for first place, a shoot-out is used, with the same format used to decide matches tied after eight ends.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285025-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup, Qualification\nFor the first three legs of the Curling World Cup, the eight spots in the tournament are allocated to each of the hosting member associations, the highest ranked member association in each zone (the Americas, European, and Pacific-Asia), and two teams chosen by the World Curling Federation. Member associations may choose to send the same teams to all three legs or have different teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285025-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup, Qualification\nThe host (China), the winners of each leg, the current world champions, a team specifically invited, and the two highest remaining member associations on the Curling World Cup ranking list qualified for the Grand Final. Two separate teams from the same member association may qualify for the Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285025-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup, Qualification, Ranking points\nRanking points were assigned in each of the first three legs to determine the final member associations qualified for the Grand Final. Member associations were awarded their points from round robin play as well as 5 points for the runner-up and 10 for the champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285026-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup \u2013 First Leg\nThe First Leg of the 2018\u201319 Curling World Cup took place from September 12 to 16, 2018 at the Suzhou Olympic Sports Center in Suzhou, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285026-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup \u2013 First Leg\nCanada had a clean sweep, winning all three disciplines. Rachel Homan's team beat out the Swedish Anna Hasselborg rink in the women's final, team Kevin Koe defeated Norway's Steffen Walstad in the men's event, and Laura Walker and Kirk Muyres beat out Sarah Anderson and Korey Dropkin from the United States for mixed doubles gold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285026-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup \u2013 First Leg, Format\nCurling World Cup matches have eight ends, rather than the standard ten ends. Ties after eight ends will be decided by a shoot-out, with each team throwing a stone and the one closest to the button winning. A win in eight or fewer ends will earn a team 3 points, a shoot-out win 2 points, a shoot-out less 1 point, and 0 points for a loss in eight or fewer ends.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285026-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup \u2013 First Leg, Format\nEach event will have eight teams in the men's, women's, and mixed doubles tournament. The teams will be split into two groups of four, based on the Curling World Cup rankings, whereby the 1st, 3rd, 5th, and 7th, ranked teams will be in one group and the 2nd, 4th, 6th, and 8th ranked teams in the other. The first place teams in each group will play against each other in the final. In the event of a tie for first place, a shoot-out will be used, with the same format used to decide matches tied after eight ends.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285026-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup \u2013 First Leg, Qualification\nFor the first three legs of the Curling World Cup, the eight spots in the tournament are allocated to each of the hosting member associations, the highest ranked member association in each zone (the Americas, European, and Pacific-Asia), and two teams chosen by the World Curling Federation. Member associations may choose to send the same teams to all three legs or have different teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285026-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup \u2013 First Leg, Men, Teams\nSkip : Kevin KoeThird: B. J. NeufeldSecond: Colton FlaschLead: Ben Hebert", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285026-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup \u2013 First Leg, Men, Teams\nSkip : Bruce MouatThird: Grant HardieSecond: Bobby LammieLead: Hammy McMillan Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285026-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup \u2013 First Leg, Men, Teams\nFourth: Beno\u00eet SchwarzThird: Sven MichelSkip: Peter de CruzLead: Valentin Tanner", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285027-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup \u2013 Grand Final\nThe Grand Final of the 2018\u201319 Curling World Cup took place from May 8 to 12, 2019 in Beijing, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285027-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup \u2013 Grand Final\nCanada's Jennifer Jones defeated Switzerland's Silvana Tirinzoni in the women's final. Canada's Kevin Koe defeated China's Zou Qiang in the men's final and Norway's Kristin Skaslien and Magnus Nedregotten defeated Canada's pair of Laura Walker and Kirk Muyres in the mixed doubles final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285027-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup \u2013 Grand Final, Format\nCurling World Cup matches have eight ends, rather than the standard ten ends. Ties after eight ends will be decided by a shoot-out, with each team throwing a stone and the one closest to the button winning. A win in eight or fewer ends will earn a team 3 points, a shoot-out win 2 points, a shoot-out loss 1 point, and 0 points for a loss in eight or fewer ends.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285027-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup \u2013 Grand Final, Format\nEach event will have eight teams in the men's, women's, and mixed doubles tournament. The teams will be split into two groups of four, based on the Curling World Cup rankings, whereby the 1st, 3rd, 5th, and 7th, ranked teams will be in one group and the 2nd, 4th, 6th, and 8th ranked teams in the other. The first place teams in each group will play against each other in the final. In the event of a tie for first place, a shoot-out will be used, with the same format used to decide matches tied after eight ends.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285027-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup \u2013 Grand Final, Qualification\nThe host (China), the winners of each leg, the current world champions, a team specifically invited, and the two highest remaining member associations on the Curling World Cup ranking list will qualify for the Grand Final. Two separate teams from the same member association may qualify for the Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285027-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup \u2013 Grand Final, Men, Teams\nSkip : Thomas UlsrudThird: Torger Nerg\u00e5rdSecond: Christoffer SvaeLead: H\u00e5vard Vad Petersson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285028-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup \u2013 Second Leg\nThe Second Leg of the 2018\u201319 Curling World Cup took place from December 5 to 9, 2018 at the Ralston Arena in Omaha, United States. Satsuki Fujisawa and her rink won the women's competition. John Shuster and his rink won the men's competition. Kristin Skaslien and Magnus Nedregotten won the mixed doubles competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285028-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup \u2013 Second Leg, Format\nCurling World Cup matches have eight ends, rather than the standard ten ends. Ties after eight ends will be decided by a shoot-out, with each team throwing a stone and the one closest to the button winning. A win in eight or fewer ends will earn a team 3 points, a shoot-out win 2 points, a shoot-out less 1 point, and 0 points for a loss in eight or fewer ends.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285028-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup \u2013 Second Leg, Format\nEach event will have eight teams in the men's, women's, and mixed doubles tournament. The teams will be split into two groups of four, based on the Curling World Cup rankings, whereby the 1st, 3rd, 5th, and 7th, ranked teams will be in one group and the 2nd, 4th, 6th, and 8th ranked teams in the other. The first place teams in each group will play against each other in the final. In the event of a tie for first place, a shoot-out will be used, with the same format used to decide matches tied after eight ends.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285028-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup \u2013 Second Leg, Qualification\nFor the first three legs of the Curling World Cup, the eight spots in the tournament are allocated to each of the hosting member associations, the highest-ranked member association in each zone (the Americas, European, and Pacific-Asia), and two teams chosen by the World Curling Federation. Member associations may choose to send the same teams to all three legs or have different teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285028-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup \u2013 Second Leg, Men, Teams\nSkip : Thomas UlsrudThird: Torger Nerg\u00e5rdSecond: Christoffer SvaeLead: H\u00e5vard Vad Petersson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285028-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup \u2013 Second Leg, Men, Teams\nSkip : Bruce MouatThird: Grant HardieSecond: Bobby LammieLead: Hammy McMillan Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285029-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup \u2013 Third Leg\nThe Third Leg of the 2018\u201319 Curling World Cup took place from January 30 to February 3, 2019 at the J\u00f6nk\u00f6ping Curling Club in J\u00f6nk\u00f6ping, Sweden. Korea's Kim Min-ji defeated Sweden's Anna Hasselborg in the women's final. Canada's Matt Dunstone defeated Sweden's Niklas Edin in the men's final. Canada's Kadriana Sahaidak and Colton Lott beat Norway's Kristin Skaslien and Thomas Ulsrud for mixed doubles gold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285029-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup \u2013 Third Leg, Format\nCurling World Cup matches have eight ends, rather than the standard ten ends. Ties after eight ends will be decided by a shoot-out, with each team throwing a stone and the one closest to the button winning. A win in eight or fewer ends will earn a team 3 points, a shoot-out win 2 points, a shoot-out less 1 point, and 0 points for a loss in eight or fewer ends.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285029-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup \u2013 Third Leg, Format\nEach event will have eight teams in the men's, women's, and mixed doubles tournament. The teams will be split into two groups of four, based on the Curling World Cup rankings, whereby the 1st, 3rd, 5th, and 7th, ranked teams will be in one group and the 2nd, 4th, 6th, and 8th ranked teams in the other. The first place teams in each group will play against each other in the final. In the event of a tie for first place, a shoot-out will be used, with the same format used to decide matches tied after eight ends.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285029-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup \u2013 Third Leg, Qualification\nFor the first three legs of the Curling World Cup, the eight spots in the tournament are allocated to each of the hosting member associations, the highest ranked member association in each zone (the Americas, European, and Pacific-Asia), and two teams chosen by the World Curling Federation. Member associations may choose to send the same teams to all three legs or have different teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285029-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Curling World Cup \u2013 Third Leg, Women, Teams\nSkip : Tori KoanaThird: Junko NishimuroSecond: Mao IshigakiLead: Arisa KotaniAlternate: Yuna Kotani", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 51], "content_span": [52, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285030-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cyclo-cross Superprestige\nThe Cyclo-cross Superprestige 2018-19 \u2013 also known as the Telenet Superprestige for sponsorship reasons \u2013 is a season long cyclo-cross competition held in Belgium and the Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285031-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cymru Alliance\nThe 2018\u201319 Cymru Alliance, known as the Huws Gray Cymru Alliance for sponsorship reasons, was the 29th and final season of the Cymru Alliance, which is in the second level of the Welsh football pyramid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285031-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cymru Alliance\nThe league consisted of sixteen teams with the champions promoted to the Welsh Premier League and the bottom team relegated to either the Mid Wales Football League, the Welsh Alliance League or the Welsh National League (Wrexham Area), dependent on the location of that team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285031-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cymru Alliance\nThe season began on 10 August 2018 and concluded on 27 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285031-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cymru Alliance, Teams\nCaernarfon Town were champions in the previous season and were promoted to the Welsh Premier League. They were replaced by Prestatyn Town who were relegated from the Welsh Premier League and Bangor City who were demoted from the Welsh Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285031-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cymru Alliance, Teams\nThe bottom three teams from the previous season, Caersws, Llandudno Junction and Queens Park were relegated to the Mid Wales Football League, the Welsh Alliance League and the Welsh National League (Wrexham Area), respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285031-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cymru Alliance, Teams\nWelsh National League (Wrexham Area) champions, Buckley Town, Welsh Alliance League champions, Conwy Borough and Mid Wales Football League champions, Llanrhaeadr were promoted to the Cymru Alliance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285032-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cypriot Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Cypriot Cup was the 77th edition of the Cypriot Cup. A total of 24 clubs were accepted to enter the competition. It began on 5 December 2018 with the first round and concluded on 22 May 2019 with the final held at GSP Stadium. The winner of the Cup was AEL Limassol for seventh time and qualified for the 2019\u201320 Europa League second qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285032-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cypriot Cup, First round\nThe first round draw took place on 5 December 2018 and the matches were played on 5 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285032-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cypriot Cup, Second round\nThe second round draw took place on 21 December 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285032-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cypriot Cup, Second round\nThe following eight teams advanced directly to second round and will meet the eight winners of the first round ties:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285032-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cypriot Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe quarter-finals draw took place on 4 February 2019 and the matches were played on 20, 27 February and 6 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285032-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cypriot Cup, Semi finals\nThe semi-finals draw took place on 8 March 2019 and the matches will be played on 3 and 17 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285033-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cypriot Cup for lower divisions\nThe 2018\u201319 Cypriot Cup for lower divisions was the 11th edition of the Cypriot Cup for lower divisions. A total of 22 clubs entered the competition. It began on 24 October 2018 with the first round and concluded on 8 May 2019 with the final which was held at AEK Arena. Digenis Morphou won their 2nd cup trophy after beating Olympias Lympion, in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285033-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cypriot Cup for lower divisions, Format\nOnly teams from the Cypriot Third Division and STOK Elite Division could participate. Participation was not compulsory. 22 of 30 participated this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285033-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cypriot Cup for lower divisions, Format\nThe competition consisted of five rounds. In the first, second and third round each tie was played as a single leg and was held at the home ground of one of the two teams, according to the draw results. Each tie winner was qualifying for the next round. If a match was drawn, extra time was following. If extra time was drawn, there was a replay at the ground of the team who were away for the first game. If the rematch was also drawn, then extra time was following and if the match remained drawn after extra time the winner was decided by penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285033-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cypriot Cup for lower divisions, Format\nThe fourth round was played in a two-legged format, each team playing a home and an away match against their opponent. The team which scored more goals on aggregate was qualifying for the next round. If the two teams scored the same number of goals on aggregate, then the team which scored more goals away from home was advancing to the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285033-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cypriot Cup for lower divisions, Format\nIf both teams had scored the same number of home and away goals, then extra time was following after the end of the second leg match. If during the extra thirty minutes both teams had managed to score, but they had scored the same number of goals, then the team who scored the away goals was advancing to the next round (i.e. the team which was playing away). If there weren't scored any goals during extra time, the qualifying team was determined by penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285033-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cypriot Cup for lower divisions, First round\nThe first round draw took place on 9 October 2018 and the matches played on 24 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 52], "content_span": [53, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285033-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cypriot Cup for lower divisions, Round of 16\nThe round of 16 draw, took place on 11 December 2018 and the matches played on 16 and 23 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 52], "content_span": [53, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285033-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cypriot Cup for lower divisions, Quarter-finals\nThe quarter-finals draw took place on 30 January 2019 and the matches played on 20, 27 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285033-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cypriot Cup for lower divisions, Semi-finals\nThe semi-finals draw took place on 6 March 2019 and the matches will played on 27 March and 3 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 52], "content_span": [53, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285034-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cypriot First Division\nThe 2018\u201319 Cypriot First Division was the 80th season of the Cypriot top-level football league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285034-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cypriot First Division, Teams, Promotion and relegation (pre-season)\nAris Limassol and Ethnikos Achna were relegated at the end of the first-phase of the 2017\u201318 season after finishing in the bottom two places of the table. They were joined by Olympiakos Nicosia, who finished at the bottom of the second-phase relegation group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 76], "content_span": [77, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285034-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cypriot First Division, Teams, Promotion and relegation (pre-season)\nThe relegated teams were replaced by 2017\u201318 Second Division champions Enosis Neon Paralimni.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 76], "content_span": [77, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285034-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cypriot First Division, 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-00285034-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cypriot First Division, Regular season, Positions by Round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches. In order to preserve chronological progress, any postponed matches are not included in 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285034-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cypriot First Division, Championship round, Positions by Round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 70], "content_span": [71, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285034-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cypriot First Division, Relegation round, Positions by Round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 68], "content_span": [69, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285035-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cypriot Second Division\nThe 2018\u201319 Cypriot Second Division is the 64th season of the Cypriot second-level football league. It began on 15 September 2018 and expect to end in April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285035-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cypriot Second Division, Format\nFourteen teams participated in the 2018\u201319 Cypriot Second Division. All teams will play against each other twice, once at their home and once away. The team with the most points at the end of the season is crowned champions. The first two teams will be promoted to the 2019\u201320 Cypriot First Division and the last four teams will be relegated to the 2019\u201320 Cypriot Third Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285036-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cypriot Third Division\nThe 2018\u201319 Cypriot Third Division was the 48th season of the Cypriot third-level football league. Digenis Akritas Morphou won their 2nd title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285036-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cypriot Third Division, Format\nSixteen teams participated in the 2018\u201319 Cypriot Third Division. All teams played against each other twice, once at their home and once away. The team with the most points at the end of the season crowned champions. The first four teams promoted to the 2019\u201320 Cypriot Second Division and the last four teams relegated to the 2019\u201320 STOK Elite Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285036-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cypriot Third Division, Format, Point system\nTeams received three points for a win, one point for a draw and zero points for a loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285037-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cyprus Basketball Division A\nThe 2018\u201319 Cyprus Basketball Division A is the 52nd season of the Cyprus Basketball Division A, the top-tier level men's professional basketball league on Cyprus. It started on 13 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285037-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cyprus Basketball Division A, Competition format\nEight teams joined the regular season, where after a three-legs round-robin tournament, the four first qualified would join the playoffs for the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285037-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cyprus Basketball Division A, Competition format\nAEL and Omonia promoted from Division 2 while APOP was relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285037-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Cyprus Basketball Division A, Playoffs, Bracket\nSemifinals were played in a best-of-three games, while the finals, in a best-of five one with seeded teams playing games 1, 2 and (if necessary) 5 at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285038-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Czech Cup, known as the MOL Cup for sponsorship reasons, was the 26th season of the annual knockout football tournament of the Czech Republic. It began with the preliminary round in July 2018 and ended with the final in May 2019. The winner of the cup will gain the right to play in the third qualifying round of the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285038-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech Cup, First round\n86 teams took part in this stage of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 83]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285038-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech Cup, Second round\n54 teams participated in the second round; 11 First League teams (all other than those playing in European competitions) entered the competition at this stage, joining the 43 winners of the first round matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285038-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech Cup, Third round\n32 teams participated in the third round; the final five First League teams entered the competition at this stage (holders Slavia Prague, Viktoria Plze\u0148, Jablonec, Sigma Olomouc and Sparta Prague). They were joined by the 27 winners of the second round matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285038-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech Cup, Fourth round\nThe fourth round is due to commence on 31 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285039-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech Extraliga season\nThe 2018\u201319 Czech Extraliga season was the 26th season of the Czech Extraliga since its creation after the breakup of Czechoslovakia and the Czechoslovak First Ice Hockey League in 1993.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285039-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech Extraliga season, Regular season, Scoring leaders\nList shows the ten best skaters based on the number of points during the regular season. If two or more skaters are tied (i.e. same number of points, goals and played games), all of the tied skaters are shown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285039-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech Extraliga season, Regular season, Scoring leaders\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2013 = Plus/Minus; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285039-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech Extraliga season, Regular season, Leading goaltenders\nThese are the leaders in GAA 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.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 67], "content_span": [68, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285039-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech Extraliga season, Regular season, Leading goaltenders\nGP = Games Played; TOI = Time On Ice (minutes); GA = Goals Against; SO = Shutouts; Sv% = Save Percentage; GAA = Goals Against Average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 67], "content_span": [68, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285039-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech Extraliga season, Playoffs\nTen teams qualify for the playoffs. Teams 1\u20136 have a bye to the quarterfinals, while teams 7\u201310 meet each other in a preliminary playoff round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285039-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech Extraliga season, Playoffs, Playoff bracket\nIn the first round the 7th-ranked team will meet the 10th-ranked team and the 8th-ranked team will meet the 9th-ranked team for a place in the second round. In the second round, the top-ranked team will meet the lowest-ranked winner of the first round, the 2nd-ranked team will face the other winner of the first round, the 3rd-ranked team will face the 6th-ranked team, and the 4th-ranked team will face the 5th-ranked team. In the third round, the highest remaining seed is matched against the lowest remaining seed. In each round the higher-seeded team is awarded home advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285039-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech Extraliga season, Playoffs, Playoff bracket\nIn the first round the meetings are played as best-of-five series and the rest is best-of-seven series that follows an alternating home team format: the higher-seeded team will play at home for games 1 and 2 (plus 5 and 7 if necessary), and the lower-seeded team will be at home for game 3 and 4 (plus 6 if necessary).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285039-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech Extraliga season, Playoffs, Playoff bracket\nPlay-off final: Bili Tygri Liberec - HC Ocelari Trinec 2:4 (1:2, 3:1, 4:1, 1:2 OT, 2:3 OT, 4:2). HC Ocelari Trinec has won its second Czech league title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285040-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech First League\nThe 2018\u201319 Czech First League, known as the Fortuna liga for sponsorship reasons, was the 26th season of the Czech Republic's top-tier football league. The defending champions were Viktoria Plze\u0148, who won their fifth Czech title the previous season. The season was the first with a new league structure in which 16 clubs play each other home and away, until the league is split up into championship, Europa League and relegation groups. Dukla Prague lost seven consecutive games at the start of the season, becoming the first team in the Czech First League to do so.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285040-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech First League, Regular season, Results\nEach team plays home-and-away against every other team in the league, for a total of 30 matches played each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285040-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech First League, Championship group\nPoints and goals were carried over in full from the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285040-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech First League, Europa League play-offs\nTeams placed between 7th and 10th position will take part in the Europa league play-offs. The best of them will play against the fifth-placed of the championship play-offs to determine the Europa League play-off winners. The winners will qualify for the second qualifying round of the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285040-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech First League, Relegation group\nPoints and goals were carried over in full from the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285040-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech First League, Relegation play-offs\nTeams placed 14th and 15th in the relegation group will face 2nd and 3rd teams from Czech National Football League for two spots in the next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285040-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech First League, Relegation play-offs, Match 1\nMFK Karvin\u00e1 won 3\u20132 on aggregate and retained their spot in the 2019\u201320 Czech First League; Vyso\u010dina Jihlava remained in the 2019\u201320 Czech National Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285040-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech First League, Relegation play-offs, Match 2\n1. FK P\u0159\u00edbram won 3\u20133 on aggregate with away goals and retained their spot in the 2019\u201320 Czech First League; FC Zbrojovka Brno remained in the 2019\u201320 Czech National Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285041-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech National Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 Czech National Football League was the 26th season of the Czech Republic's second tier football league. SK Dynamo \u010cesk\u00e9 Bud\u011bjovice won their third second division title, and were promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285041-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech National Football League, Results\nEach team plays home-and-away against every other team in the league, for a total of 30 matches played each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285042-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech Women's First League\nThe 2018\u201319 Czech Women's First League is the 26th season of the Czech Republic's top-tier football league for women. Sparta Praha were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285042-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech Women's First League, Format\nThe eight teams will play each other twice for a total of 14 matches per team. After that the top four teams will play a championship round for another six matches per team. The bottom placed four teams play the relegation round. The champion and runners-up qualify for the 2019\u201320 UEFA Women's Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285042-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech Women's First League, Final stage, Championship group\nPlayed by the teams placed first to fourth of the regular season. Teams play each other twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285042-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech Women's First League, Final stage, Relegation group\nPlayed by the teams placed fifth to eighth of the regular season. Teams play each other twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 65], "content_span": [66, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285042-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Czech Women's First League, 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285043-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C\u00e1diz CF season\nThe 2018\u201319 C\u00e1diz CF season was the club's 109th season in existence and its third consecutive season in the second division of Spanish football. In addition to the domestic league, C\u00e1diz participated in this season's edition of the Copa del Rey. The season covered the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285043-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C\u00e1diz CF season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285043-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C\u00e1diz CF season, Players, 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285043-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C\u00e1diz 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285044-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n season\nThe 2018\u201319 C\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n season was their second in existence and their debut in professional basketball, after achieving one of the vacant places in LEB Plata, third division, after the expansion. The club was called TeslaCard C\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n for sponsorship reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285044-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n season, Overview, Pre-season\nAfter failing to promote to Liga EBA in the club's first season, C\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n achieved one of the eight places created after the expansion of the LEB Plata from 16 to 24 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285044-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n season, Overview, Pre-season\nDespite the sporting failure, Nacho Gal\u00e1n, owner, decided to continue as head coach and only former NBA player Robert Swift and Junior Johnson continued in the club. With the aim to promote Asturian players, C\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n signed four of them: former ACB and EuroLeague player Sa\u00fal Blanco, former LEB Plata Javier Men\u00e9ndez, Alejandro Rubiera from local Liga EBA team Gij\u00f3n Basket and \u00c1ngel Moro, who played two years ago also at Gij\u00f3n Basket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285044-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n season, Overview, First stage\nOn 6 October 2018, C\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n beat \u00c1vila Aut\u00e9ntica Carrefour \"El Bulevar\" in their debut in the professional basketball by 75\u201367. Four days later, the team lost their first match by wasting the work made in the first half against Queser\u00eda La Antigua CB Tormes with a disastrous third quarter, lost by 8\u201325. Osayande was the best player by performing 18 points and 12 rebounds and Nelson Yengue made his debut with the team. The week ended with the first home loss, against Basket Navarra Club. Despite winning the first quarter by 16 points, with nine three-points shots made, Navarra won the match thanks to a shot of Carles Marzo with only nine-tenths of a second left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285044-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n season, Overview, First stage\nThe bad streak continued on 21 October, at Azpeitia, with a 74\u201372 loss against Juaristi ISB after an overtime. With this third loss, C\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n was dropped to the last position of the Group West.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285044-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n season, Overview, First stage\nOn 12 December, C\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n announced the come back of former Gij\u00f3n Baloncesto point guard Rub\u00e9n Su\u00e1rez, that played with the club in the previous season. Subsequently, Junior Johnson was waived. In his first match, C\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n beat Queser\u00eda La Antigua CB Tormes by 78\u201366, continuing the team's good streak at home, with three consecutive wins. On 30 December, C\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n lost in the last second against Juaristi ISB in a match where point guard \u00c1ngel Moro was injured for the rest of the season. This was the first match of South African Pieter Prinsloo that, despite being signed in August, could not play with the club due to bureaucratic problems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285044-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n season, Overview, First stage\nOn 19 January, C\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n lost a very controversial home match against Aquimisa Laboratorios Queso Zamorano. After being losing by 14 points at the end of the third quarter, the Geometrics took the lead of the game when, with 1:30 left, Sa\u00fal Blanco was disqualified as being called an unsportsmanlike foul to him and a technical foul to Zamora player Anthony Libroia, thus meaning the visitors having one more free shot and recovering the possession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285044-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n season, Overview, First stage\nOne week later, despite losing at Bodegas Rioja Vega, Shane Osayande was named MVP of the week with a Performance Index Rating of 30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285044-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n season, Overview, First stage\nC\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n ended the first stage with three consecutive wins for reaching the ninth position with nine wins and 13 losses. The club would start the group for avoiding the relegation with six wins and four losses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285044-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n season, Overview, Second stage\nC\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n started the second stage with a huge home win against Arcos Albacete Basket by 79\u201362. Osayande, with 19 points 20 rebounds and four blocks, was chosen MVP of the week. However, the injury of Sa\u00fal Blanco, which only played a couple of minutes in the win against Albacete, dropped the team to the relegation positions after six consecutive losses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285044-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n season, Overview, Second stage\nPoint guard Davy Baltus was fired in the week previous to the match of the seventh round against Torrons Vicens CB L'Hospitalet, that meant the come back of Sa\u00fal Blanco and a new win by beating the Catalans by a huge 86\u201352. However, despite winning four of the last five games, C\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n could not avoid relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285044-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n season, Overview, Second stage\nSa\u00fal Blanco was named member of the team of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285044-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n season, Players, Squad information\nNote: Flags indicate national team eligibility at FIBA sanctioned events. Players may hold other non-FIBA nationality not displayed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285044-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n season, Players, Squad information, In\nFrom the previous season, only Robert Swift and Junior Johnson continued in the club. Rub\u00e9n Su\u00e1rez came back during the season after his retirement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285044-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 C\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n season, Players, Squad information, Out\nAs a result of promoting two divisions, C\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n changed all its roster before the season. During the season, Davy Baltus was fired due to disciplinary issues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285045-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DEL season\nThe 2018\u201319 Deutsche Eishockey Liga season was the 25th season since the founding of the Deutsche Eishockey Liga running from 14 September 2018 to 30 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285045-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DEL season\nAll 14 clubs from the previous year and the L\u00f6wen Frankfurt applied for a license. The season saw the same teams as last year, as all teams were given their license.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285045-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DEL season\nAfter a points-per-game record during the regular season with 2,23 points per game, the Adler Mannheim won the title for their seventh time deafeating EHC Red Bull M\u00fcnchen 4\u20131 in the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285045-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DEL season, Player and staff awards\nDuring the season, Danny aus den Birken, goalkeeper of EHC Red Bull M\u00fcnchen was selected als player of the year and goalie of the year. Philipp Gogulla from D\u00fcsseldorfer EG was awarded as forward of the year whereas Joonas Lehtivouri from the Adler Mannheim was elected as defenceman of the year. For the award of the best rookie of the year, the later NHL first round pick Moritz Seider was chosen by the DEL-fans. The lineup is completed by Don Jackson (RB M\u00fcnchen) as coach of the year. After the playoffs, Adler Mannheim's goalkeeper Dennis Endras was awarded with the MVP of the playoffs-title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285045-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DEL season, Playoffs, Pre-playoffs\nThe playoff qualification were played between 6 and 10 March 2019 in a best-of-three mode.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285045-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DEL season, Playoffs, Quarterfinals\nThe quarterfinals were played between 12 and 31 March 2019 in a best-of-seven mode.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285045-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DEL season, Playoffs, Semifinals\nThe semifinals were played between 2 and 16 April 2019 in a best-of-seven mode.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285045-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DEL season, Playoffs, Final\nThe final was played between 18 and 30 April 2019 in a best-of-seven mode.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285045-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DEL season, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top skaters sorted by points, then goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285045-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DEL season, 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, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285046-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DEL2 season\nThe 2018\u201319 DEL2 season was the sixth season since the founding of the DEL2, the second tier of German ice hockey, set below the Deutsche Eishockey Liga. The season ran from 14 September 2018 till 28 April 2019. L\u00f6wen Frankfurt was crowned league premiers by finishing top of the regular season standings. Ravensburg Towerstars caused an upset by claiming the championship title by defeating L\u00f6wen Frankfurt 4-2 in the final series. Promoted team, Deggendorfer SC, was unable to survive in DEL2 and was relegated after losing the relegation playoffs final 3-4 against W\u00f6lfe Freiburg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285046-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DEL2 season, Modus\nFourteen teams competed in the 2018\u201319 DEL2 regular season. Deggendorfer SC was promoted from Germany's third division, Oberliga. Each team played each other twice in the regular season, home and away, for a total of 52 matches each. The top six teams directly qualified for the championship playoffs, played in a best of seven format. Teams placed seven to ten advanced to the championship playoff qualifiers, which follow a best of three format. The bottom four teams enter the relegation playoffs. The two losing teams from round 1 face off in the relegation final with the losing team being relegated to Oberliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285046-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DEL2 season, Modus\nThe DEL2 champion does not automatically get promoted to DEL. In September 2015, the DEL and DEL2 agreed to reintroduce promotion and relegation between the two leagues from the 2017\u201318 season onwards. The DEL2 champion would then have the opportunity to be promoted, provided it fulfilled the licensing requirements of the DEL, while the last-placed DEL club would be relegated. In 2018, the two leagues signed a new agreement to reintroduce an automatic promotion and relegation system to start in 2020\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285046-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DEL2 season, Regular season, Results\nThe cross table represents the results of all matches of the regular season. The home team is listed in the middle column, the visiting team in the top row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 44], "content_span": [45, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285046-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DEL2 season, Regular season, Standings\nPoints rules: 3 points for regulation win; 2 points for OT or SO win; 1 point for OT or SO loss; 0 points for regulation loss Tie-break rules: 1) points; 2) head-to-head points; 3) head-to-head goal difference; 4) head-to-head number of goals scored. (C) Champions; (P) Premiers; (R) Relegated Source:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285046-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DEL2 season, Regular season, Top goaltenders\nNote: To qualify for this list, goaltenders need to have played a minimum of 20 matches Source:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285046-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DEL2 season, Playoffs, Championship\nThe qualifiers for the playoffs ran between 8 March 2019 to 12 March 2019. Four teams (7v10 and 8v9) competed in best of three series\u2019. The two winning teams advanced to the championship playoffs. In 2019, the two lower ranked teams in the qualifiers, Dresdner Eisl\u00f6wen and ETC Crimmitschau, won their series and advanced to the playoffs. Kassel Huskies and Heilbronner Falken were knocked out and their season ended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 43], "content_span": [44, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285046-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DEL2 season, Playoffs, Championship\nThe championship playoffs ran between 15 March 2019 to 28 April 2019. Eight teams competed in best of seven series'. The series winning teams advanced through from the quarter-finals to the final. In 2019, the top seed L\u00f6wen Frankfurt dominated their quarter and semi-finals to reach the final. However, they lost the final series 4-2 to third seed Ravensburg Towerstars. The Towerstars claimed their second division 2 championship and their first DEL2 championship trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 43], "content_span": [44, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285046-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DEL2 season, Playoffs, Championship\nNote: All numbers represent series results, not a match score", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 43], "content_span": [44, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285046-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DEL2 season, Playoffs, Relegation\nThe relegation playoffs is contested between the four teams who finish bottom of the regular season standings. Run between 15 March 2019 and 16 April 2019, the four teams play best of seven series\u2019. The teams that lose their first round advance to the second round. The winners secure their DEL2 status and avoid relegation. Whoever loses the second round is relegated to Oberliga. The 2019 edition saw Deggendorfer SC relegated to Oberliga after losing their first round series 4-0 against Bayreuth Tigers before going to the wire but ultimately losing the seventh match against W\u00f6lfe Freiburg in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 41], "content_span": [42, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285046-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DEL2 season, Playoffs, Relegation\nNote: All numbers represent series results, not a match score", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 41], "content_span": [42, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285047-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal\nThe 2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal was the 76th season of the annual German football cup competition. Sixty-four teams participated in the competition, including all teams from the previous year's Bundesliga and the 2. Bundesliga. The competition began on 17 August 2018 with the first of six rounds and ended on 25 May 2019 with the final at the Olympiastadion in Berlin, a nominally neutral venue, which has hosted the final since 1985. The DFB-Pokal is considered the second-most important club title in German football after the Bundesliga championship. The DFB-Pokal is run by the German Football Association (DFB).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285047-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal\nThe defending champions were Bundesliga side Eintracht Frankfurt, after they defeated Bayern Munich 3\u20131 in the previous final. Frankfurt were knocked out of the competition in the first round by fourth-division side SSV Ulm, losing 1\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285047-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal\nBayern Munich won the final 3\u20130 against RB Leipzig for their 19th title. With the win, Bayern completed their 12th domestic double, and therefore played away to 2018\u201319 Bundesliga runners-up Borussia Dortmund in the 2019 DFL-Supercup in August 2019. Because Bayern qualified for the Champions League through the Bundesliga, the sixth-place team in the Bundesliga, VfL Wolfsburg, earned qualification for the group stage of the 2019\u201320 edition of the UEFA Europa League, and the league's third second round spot went to the team in seventh, Eintracht Frankfurt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285047-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal, Format, Participation\nThe DFB-Pokal began with a round of 64 teams. The 36 teams of the Bundesliga and 2. Bundesliga, along with the top 4 finishers of the 3. Liga automatically qualified for the tournament. Of the remaining slots, 21 were given to the cup winners of the regional football associations, the Verbandspokal. The 3 remaining slots were given to the three regional associations with the most men's teams, which at the time were Bavaria, Lower Saxony, and Westphalia. The runner-up of the Lower Saxony Cup was given the slot, along with the best-placed amateur team of the Regionalliga Bayern.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 40], "content_span": [41, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285047-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal, Format, Participation\nFor Westphalia, the winner of a play-off between the best-placed team of the Regionalliga West and Oberliga Westfalen also qualified. As every team was entitled to participate in local tournaments which qualified for the association cups, every team could in principle compete in the DFB-Pokal. Reserve teams and combined football sections were not permitted to enter, along with no two teams of the same association or corporation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 40], "content_span": [41, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285047-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal, Format, Draw\nThe draws for the different rounds were conducted as following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285047-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal, Format, Draw\nFor the first round, the participating teams were split into two pots of 32 teams each. The first pot contained all teams which had qualified through their regional cup competitions, the best four teams of the 3. Liga, and the bottom four teams of the 2. Bundesliga. Every team from this pot was drawn to a team from the second pot, which contained all remaining professional teams (all the teams of the Bundesliga and the remaining fourteen 2. Bundesliga teams). The teams from the first pot were set as the home team in the process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285047-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal, Format, Draw\nThe two-pot scenario was also applied for the second round, with the remaining 3. Liga and/or amateur team(s) in the first pot and the remaining Bundesliga and 2. Bundesliga teams in the other pot. Once again, the 3. Liga and/or amateur team(s) served as hosts. This time the pots did not have to be of equal size though, depending on the results of the first round. Theoretically, it was even possible that there could be only one pot, if all of the teams from one of the pots from the first round beat all the others in the second pot. Once one pot was empty, the remaining pairings were drawn from the other pot with the first-drawn team for a match serving as hosts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285047-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal, Format, Draw\nFor the remaining rounds, the draw was conducted from just one pot. Any remaining 3. Liga and/or amateur team(s) were the home team if drawn against a professional team. In every other case, the first-drawn team served as hosts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285047-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal, Format, Match rules\nTeams met in one game per round. Matches took place for 90 minutes, with two halves of 45 minutes. If still tied after regulation, 30 minutes of extra time were played, consisting of two periods of 15 minutes. If the score was still level after this, the match was decided by a penalty shoot-out. A coin toss decided who took the first penalty. A total of seven players were allowed to be listed on the substitute bench, with up to three substitutions being allowed during regulation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 38], "content_span": [39, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285047-0008-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal, Format, Match rules\nAfter approval by the IFAB in 2016, the use of a fourth substitute was allowed in extra time as part of a pilot project. From the quarter-finals onward, a video assistant referee was appointed for all DFB-Pokal matches. Though technically possible, VAR was not used for home matches of Bundesliga clubs prior to the quarter-finals in order to provide a uniform approach to all matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 38], "content_span": [39, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285047-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal, Format, Suspensions\nIf a player received five yellow cards in the competition, he was then suspended from the next cup match. Similarly, receiving a second yellow card suspended a player from the next cup match. If a player received a direct red card, they were suspended a minimum of one match, but the German Football Association reserved the right to increase the suspension.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 38], "content_span": [39, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285047-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal, Format, Champion qualification\nThe winner of the DFB-Pokal earns automatic qualification for the group stage of next year's edition of the UEFA Europa League. As winners Bayern Munich had already qualified for the UEFA Champions League by winning the Bundesliga, the spot went to the team in sixth, VfL Wolfsburg, and the league's second qualifying round spot went to the team in seventh, Eintracht Frankfurt. As Bayern won both the Bundesliga and the DFB-Pokal, completing a double, the runner-up of the Bundesliga, Borussia Dortmund, hosted the 2019 DFL-Supercup at the start of the next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285047-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal, Schedule\nAll draws were generally held at the German Football Museum in Dortmund, on a Sunday evening at 18:00 after each round (unless noted otherwise). The draws were televised on ARD's Sportschau, broadcast on Das Erste. From the quarter-finals onwards, the draw for the DFB-Pokal der Frauen also generally took place at the same time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 27], "content_span": [28, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285047-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal, Schedule\nThe rounds of the 2018\u201319 competition were scheduled as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 27], "content_span": [28, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285047-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal, Matches\nA total of sixty-three matches took place, starting with the first round on 17 August 2018 and culminating with the final on 25 May 2019 at the Olympiastadion in Berlin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285047-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal, Matches\nTimes up to 27 October 2018 and from 31 March 2019 are CEST (UTC+2). Times from 28 October 2018 to 30 March 2019 are CET (UTC+1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285047-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal, Matches, First round\nThe draw for the first round was held on 8 June 2018 at 22:00, with Palina Rojinski drawing the matches. The thirty-two matches took place from 17 to 20 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285047-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal, Matches, Second round\nThe draw for the second round was held on 26 August 2018 at 18:00, with Gina L\u00fcckenkemper drawing the matches. The sixteen matches took place from 30 to 31 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 40], "content_span": [41, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285047-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal, Matches, Round of 16\nThe draw for the round of 16 was held on 4 November 2018 at 18:00, with Serdal Celebi drawing the matches. The eight matches took place from 5 to 6 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285047-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal, Matches, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the quarter-finals was held on 10 February 2019 at 18:15, with Fabian B\u00f6hm drawing the matches. The four matches took place from 2 to 3 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 42], "content_span": [43, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285047-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal, Matches, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the semi-finals was held on 7 April 2019 at 18:00, with Lena Goe\u00dfling drawing the matches. The two matches took place from 23 to 24 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285047-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal, Matches, Final\nThe final took place on 25 May 2019 at the Olympiastadion in Berlin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285047-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal, Bracket\nThe following is the bracket which the DFB-Pokal resembled. Numbers in parentheses next to the match score represent the results of a penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285047-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal, Top goalscorers\nThe following are the top scorers of the DFB-Pokal, sorted first by number of goals, and then alphabetically if necessary. Goals scored in penalty shoot-outs are not included.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 34], "content_span": [35, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285047-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal, Broadcasting rights\nIn Germany, all matches and a simulcast (Konferenz) channel were broadcast live on pay TV via Sky Sport. Selected matches from the first round to the quarter-finals, along with highlights from all matches, were broadcast on free TV by Das Erste's Sportschau live from ARD. Both semi-final matches and the final were broadcast by both Das Erste and Sky Sport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 38], "content_span": [39, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285048-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal Frauen\nThe 2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal was the 39th season of the annual German football cup competition. Fifty teams participated in the competition, including all teams from the previous year's Frauen-Bundesliga and the 2. Frauen-Bundesliga, excluding second teams. The competition began on 11 August 2018 with the first of six rounds and ended on 1 May 2019 with the final at the RheinEnergieStadion in Cologne, a nominally neutral venue, which has hosted the final since 2010. The DFB-Pokal is considered the second-most important club title in German women's football after the Bundesliga championship. The DFB-Pokal is run by the German Football Association (DFB).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285048-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal Frauen\nThe defending champions were Frauen-Bundesliga side VfL Wolfsburg, after they defeated Bayern Munich 3\u20132 on penalties in the previous final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285048-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal Frauen\nThey successfully defended their title after a 1\u20130 victory over SC Freiburg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285048-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal Frauen, Format\nClubs from lower leagues will host against clubs from higher leagues until the quarter-finals. Should both clubs play below the 2. Bundesliga, there will be no host club change anymore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285048-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal Frauen, Schedule\nThe rounds of the 2018\u201319 competition are scheduled as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285048-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal Frauen, Matches\nA total of forty-nine matches took place, starting with the first round on 11 August 2018 and culminating with the final on 1 May 2019 at the RheinEnergieStadion in Cologne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285048-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal Frauen, Matches\nTimes up to 27 October 2018 and from 31 March 2019 are CEST (UTC+2). Times from 28 October 2018 to 30 March 2019 are CET (UTC+1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285048-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal Frauen, Matches, First round\nThe eighteen matches were drawn on 12 July and took place on 12 August 2018. The twelve clubs from the 2017\u201318 Bundesliga season and the two clubs promoted from the 2017\u201318 2. Bundesliga received a bye.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285048-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal Frauen, Matches, Second round\nThe sixteen matches were drawn on 18 August and took place on 8 and 9 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285048-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal Frauen, Matches, Third round\nThe sixteen matches were drawn on 10 September and took place on 17 and 18 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285048-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal Frauen, Matches, Quarterfinals\nThe draw was made on 10 February 2019. The matches took place on 12 and 13 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285048-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal Frauen, Matches, Semifinals\nThe draw was made on 14 March 2019. The matches took place on 31 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285049-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DHB-Pokal\nThe 2018\u201319 DHB-Pokal was the 43rd edition of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 79]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285049-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DHB-Pokal, Format\nThe first round was split in a north and a south part and played in mini tournaments where only the winner advanced to the round of 16. From there on a knockout system was used to determine the winner. The final four was played on one weekend in Hamburg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285049-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DHB-Pokal, Round 1\nThe draw was held on 19 June 2018. The matches were played on 18 and 19 August 2018 with a semifinal and final. The winner of each tournament advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285049-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DHB-Pokal, Round of 16\nThe draw was held on 22 August 2018. The match from Berlin was moved forward to 16 September due to their involvement in the 2018 IHF Super Globe, the other matches will be played on 16 and 17 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285049-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DHB-Pokal, Quarterfinals\nThe draw was held on 18 October 2018. The matches will be played on 27 November and 18 and 19 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 32], "content_span": [33, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285049-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DHB-Pokal, Final four\nThe draw was held on 8 January 2019. The matches were played on 6 and 7 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285050-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DPR Korea Premier Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 DPR Korea Premier Football League was the second season of the reformed DPR Korea Premier Football League, the top North Korean association football league, to use a home-and-away format. The league started on 1 December 2018 and continued until October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285050-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DPR Korea Premier Football League, Teams\nThere was no promotion or relegation from the previous season. A total of 13 teams participate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285050-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DPR Korea Premier Football League, League table\nNote: The following table is compiled from known results reported in the news media, and may not align with the official table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 55], "content_span": [56, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285050-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DPR Korea Premier Football League, League table\nStatus of remaining 4 games is unknown, they could have been cancelled or played, but not reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 55], "content_span": [56, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285050-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DPR Korea Premier Football League, League table\nAfter the end of the season, official media from DPRK stated that Kigwancha finished second, although according to previously reported results, they could only finish in 4th place (given that they played their last game and won). Also, despite Ky\u014fnggong'\u014fpsong finishing bottom of the table, they remained in the top flight, while the second-to-last Kalmaegi were relegated for unknown reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 55], "content_span": [56, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285051-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DRB Tadjenanet season\nIn the 2018\u201319 season, DRB Tadjenanet is competing in Ligue 1 for the 4th season, as well as for the Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285051-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DRB Tadjenanet season, Squad list\nAs of August 11, 2018. 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, 41], "content_span": [42, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285052-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dallas Mavericks season\nThe 2018\u201319 Dallas Mavericks season was the 39th season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA). With an overtime loss to the New Orleans Pelicans on March 18, the Mavericks would once again have a losing season and not make the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285052-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dallas Mavericks season\nIt was Dirk Nowitzki's 21st and final season with the Mavericks, making his season debut on December 13, 2018 against the Phoenix Suns. Not only would he break a record previously set by Kobe Bryant for the most seasons spent playing for a single NBA team, but he also became the fifth player in the NBA history to play in the league for 21 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285052-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dallas Mavericks season\nBelieved by many as the greatest Maverick of all time, Nowitzki led the Mavs to 15 playoff appearances (2001-2012; 2014-2016), to a Finals appearance in 2006, and to their first championship title in 2011, defeating the Big 3-led Miami Heat. A 14-time NBA All Star, Nowitzki is the first European player to start in an All Star game, and the first to win the MVP Award. He is also the highest scoring foreign-born player in NBA history and on March 18, 2019, became the 6th highest scoring player of all time, surpassing Wilt Chamberlain's 31,419 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285052-0001-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dallas Mavericks season\nNowitzki's retirement leaves former Maverick and fellow 1998 draftee Vince Carter as the last remaining active player to have played in the 1990s. Additionally, Carter will also become the first player to play in 4 different decades, a record Nowitzki could have possibly achieved prior to announcing his retirement on April 9, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285052-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dallas Mavericks season\nOn January 31, 2019, the Mavericks acquired NBA All-Star Kristaps Porzi\u0146\u0123is in exchange for Wesley Matthews and former no. 9 overall pick Dennis Smith Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285052-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dallas Mavericks season, Draft\nEntering the night of the draft, the Mavericks originally held only the fifth, thirty-third, and fifty-fourth picks of the 2018 NBA Draft. The last of their second round picks was acquired from a three-way trade the previous season from the Denver Nuggets that also involved the New York Knicks. The Mavericks originally fell down a spot from fourth to fifth during the NBA Draft Lottery due to them originally missing out on the Top 3 selections, despite having the tiebreaker over the Atlanta Hawks for better odds there.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285052-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dallas Mavericks season, Draft\nThis also resulted in them having the better second round pick over the Hawks by comparison. Ironically, by the night of the draft, Dallas traded their original first round pick in the draft (which became Oklahoma Sooners point guard Trae Young) and a protected 2019 first round pick to Atlanta in exchange for the Hawks' own first round pick, which became the Slovenian superstar guard/forward Luka Don\u010di\u0107. Don\u010di\u0107 is a combo guard/small forward that grew to be a very major contributor for Real Madrid Baloncesto in the EuroLeague and Spain's national Liga ACB, winning championships and MVP awards throughout his professional tenure there, including being named the youngest ever EuroLeague Final Four MVP that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285052-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dallas Mavericks season, Draft\nDuring the beginning of the second round, the Mavericks selected point guard Jalen Brunson from Villanova University. Brunson was a key contributor for two out of three years of NCAA Championships during his time at Villanova, with his second championship year (final college year overall) also naming him both the consensus National College Player of the Year and All-American First Team member. Finally, with their last (54th) pick, they traded that selection (which became Southern Methodist University point guard Shake Milton) to the Philadelphia 76ers in exchange for their last two second round picks this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285052-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dallas Mavericks season, Draft\nWith pick #57, the Mavericks received power forward Ray Spalding from Louisville University, while the very last selection of the 2018 NBA Draft became combo forward Kostas Antetokounmpo, younger brother of superstar Giannis Antetokounmpo, from Dayton University. Antetokounmpo later signed a two-way contract to stay with the team on July 13, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285052-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dallas Mavericks season, Player statistics\n\u2021Waived during the season\u2020Traded during the season\u2260Acquired during the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285053-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dallas Stars season\nThe 2018\u201319 Dallas Stars season was the 52nd season for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on June 5, 1967, and 26th season since the franchise relocated from Minnesota prior to the start of the 1993\u201394 NHL season. The Stars clinched a playoff spot on April 2, 2019, after a 6\u20132 win against the Philadelphia Flyers. They defeated the Nashville Predators in the First Round, and faced the St. Louis Blues in the Second Round, where they were defeated in seven games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285053-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dallas Stars season, Schedule and results, Preseason\nNotes: Game was played at BOK Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285053-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dallas Stars season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was released on June 21, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285053-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dallas Stars 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285053-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dallas Stars season, Schedule and results, Playoffs\nThe Stars faced the Nashville Predators in the First Round of the playoffs, and defeated them in six games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285053-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dallas Stars season, Schedule and results, Playoffs\nThe Stars faced the St. Louis Blues in the Second Round of the playoffs, and were defeated in seven games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285053-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dallas Stars season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Stars. Stats reflect time with the Stars only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Stars only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285053-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dallas Stars season, Transactions\nThe Stars have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285053-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dallas Stars season, Draft picks\nBelow are the Dallas Stars' selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285054-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dameh\u00e5ndboldligaen\nThe 2018\u201319 Dameh\u00e5ndboldligaen (known as HTH GO Ligaen for sponsorship reasons) is the 83rd season of Dameh\u00e5ndboldligaen, Denmark's premier handball league. For the first time ever, the league features 14 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285054-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dameh\u00e5ndboldligaen, Top goalscorers, All-Star Team\nThe all-star team and awards were announced on 20 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285055-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Danish 1st Division\nThe 2018\u201319 Danish 1st Division season is the 23rd season of the Danish 1st Division league championship, governed by the Danish Football Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285055-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Danish 1st Division\nThe division-champion will be promoted to the 2019\u201320 Danish Superliga, while the runners-up and the third placed team will face promotion playoffs. The teams in 11th and 12th places are relegated to the 2019\u201320 Danish 2nd Divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285055-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Danish 1st Division, Participants\nFC Helsing\u00f8r finished last in the 2017\u201318 Danish Superliga relegation play-off and were relegated to the 1st Division after only one season in the first tier. Silkeborg IF lost to Esbjerg fB and Lyngby Boldklub lost to Vendsyssel FF in the relegation play off and were relegated as well. Vejle Boldklub, Esbjerg fB and Vendsyssel FF were promoted to the 2018\u201319 Danish Superliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285055-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Danish 1st Division, Participants\nBrabrand IF and Skive IK were relegated to the 2018\u201319 Danish 2nd Divisions. Brabrand IF was relegated immediately after just one season at the second tier while Skive IK lasted four seasons in the league. Hvidovre IF and N\u00e6stved Boldklub won promotion from the 2017\u201318 Danish 2nd Divisions. Hvidovre will play at the 1st Division for the first time since 2013\u201314 season, where as N\u00e6stved won promotion after only one season's absence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285055-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Danish 1st Division, Participants, Personnel and sponsoring\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, 67], "content_span": [68, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285055-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Danish 1st Division, Play-offs, Promotion play-offs\nLyngby won 4\u20133 on aggregate and promoted to 2019\u201320 Danish Superliga", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285055-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Danish 1st Division, Play-offs, Promotion play-offs\nHobro won 3\u20130 on aggregate and stayed in the Danish Superliga", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285056-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Danish 2nd Divisions\nThe 2018\u201319 Danish 2nd Divisions was be divided in two groups of twelve teams in the autumn of 2018. In the spring of 2019 there was a promotion play-off and a relegation play-off. The top two teams of the promotion play-off group were promoted to the 2019\u201320 Danish 1st Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285056-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Danish 2nd Divisions, Promotion Group\nThe top 6 teams from each group will compete for 2 spots in the 2019\u201320 Danish 1st Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 45], "content_span": [46, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285056-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Danish 2nd Divisions, Relegation Group\nThe bottom 6 teams from each group will compete to avoid the 4 relegations spots to the Denmark Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285057-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Danish Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Danish Cup, also known as Sydbank Pokalen, was the 65th season of the Danish Cup competition. The winners of the tournament, Midtjylland, earned qualification into the third qualifying round of the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285057-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Danish Cup, Structure\n88 teams, representing all levels of competition, participated in the 44 first-round matches. Eight more teams from the two highest divisions entered round two while the remaining six teams from the 2018-19 Danish Superliga joined the competition in the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285057-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Danish Cup, Participants\n102 teams competed for the Danish Cup. All teams from the top three divisions in 2017\u201318 are automatically entered while lower division teams play qualifying matches to enter the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285057-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Danish Cup, First Round\nIn the first round of the tournament the teams are divided into a West and East pool. In the West Pool, 46 teams participate, divided into two pools, the \"Funen / Jutland Pool\" and \"Jutland Pool\". The East Pool consists of 42 teams and is not split up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285058-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Danish Superliga\nThe 2018\u201319 Danish Superliga season was the 29th season of the Danish Superliga. Midtjylland were the defending champions. The season started on 13 July 2018 and ended on 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285058-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Danish Superliga, Teams\nFC Helsing\u00f8r finished as loser in the relegation play-offs in the 2017\u201318 season and was relegated to the 2018\u201319 1st Division along with Silkeborg IF, and Lyngby who lost their respective relegation play-offs as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285058-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Danish Superliga, Teams\nThe relegated teams were replaced by 2017\u201318 1st Division champions Vejle BK, who returned after nine years of absence, as well as the play-off winners Vendsyssel FF who got promoted to the top division for the first time ever, and Esbjerg fB who returned after a one-year absence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285058-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Danish Superliga, Teams, Personnel and sponsoring\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, 57], "content_span": [58, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285058-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Danish Superliga, Championship round\nPoints and goals will carry over in full from the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285058-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Danish Superliga, Championship round, Positions by round\nBelow the positions per round are shown. As teams did not all start with an equal number of points, the initial pre-playoffs positions are also given.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 64], "content_span": [65, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285058-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Danish Superliga, Relegation round\nPoints and goals will carry over in full from the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285058-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Danish Superliga, European play-offs\nThe winning team from the 4-team knock-out tournament will advance to a Europa League play-off match. In the final, the team with the most points from the relegation round group stage will host the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285058-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Danish Superliga, European play-offs\nIf the 2018\u201319 Danish Cup winner, found on 17 May in the final, is involved in the play-offs, they will be withdrawn, as they will enter the Europa League third qualifying round directly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285058-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Danish Superliga, Relegation play-offs\nThe relegation play-offs were streamlined slightly compared to the previous system, essentially doing away with the former first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285058-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Danish Superliga, Relegation play-offs\nThe winner of match 1 will finish 11th and stay in the Superliga, while the losers of match 2 will finish 14th and be relegated directly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285059-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dartmouth Big Green men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Dartmouth Big Green men's basketball team represented Dartmouth College during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at the Leede Arena in Hanover, New Hampshire and were led by third-year head coach David McLaughlin as members of the Ivy League. They finished the season 11\u201319 overall, 2\u201312 in Ivy League play, finishing in eighth place, and failed to qualify for the Ivy League Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285059-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dartmouth Big Green men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Big Green finished the 2017\u201318 season 7\u201320, 3\u201311 in Ivy League play to finish in last place and failed to qualify for the Ivy League Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285060-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dartmouth Big Green women's basketball team\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by PrimeBOT (talk | contribs) at 19:18, 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, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285060-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dartmouth Big Green women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Dartmouth Big Green women's basketball team represented Dartmouth College during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Big Green, led by sixth year head coach Belle Koclanes, played their home games at Leede Arena and were members of the Ivy League. They finished the season at 13\u201314, 6\u20138 to finish in a 3 way tie for fourth place. Due to a tie breaker loss to Cornell and Yale they failed to qualify for the Ivy League Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285061-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Davidson Wildcats men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Davidson Wildcats men's basketball team represented Davidson College during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Wildcats were led by 30th-year head coach Bob McKillop and played their home games at the John M. Belk Arena in Davidson, North Carolina as fifth-year members of the Atlantic 10 Conference. The Wildcats finished the season 24\u201310, 14\u20134 to finish as runners-up in the Atlantic 10 regular season. They defeated Saint Joseph's in the quarterfinals of the A-10 Tournament before losing to Saint Louis in the semifinals. They received an at-large bid to the National Invitation Tournament as a No. 4 seed, where they lost to Lipscomb in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285061-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Davidson Wildcats men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Wildcats finished the 2017\u201318 season 21\u201312, 13\u20135 in the A-10 to finish in third place. In the A-10 Tournament they defeated Saint Louis, St. Bonaventure, and Rhode Island to be A-10 Tournament champions. They received the A-10's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament where they lost in the First Round to Kentucky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285062-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Davidson Wildcats women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Davidson Wildcats women's basketball team represented Davidson College during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Wildcats were led by second year head coach Gayle Coats Fulks. The Wildcats are fifth year members of the Atlantic 10 Conference and played their home games at the John M. Belk Arena. They finished the season 17\u201315, 10\u20136 in A-10 play to finish in a tie for fourth place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the A-10 Women's Tournament where they lost to Dayton. They received an invite to the WBI where they lost to Marshall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285062-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Davidson Wildcats women's basketball team, Media, Davidson Wildcats Sports Network\nAll home games were featured on ESPN+, the new home of the Atlantic 10 Digital Network basketball package. Select away games were broadcast on an audio-only basis on the school's website. Derek Smith, who has been the play-by-play voice since the 2003-04 season, provided the call for all games with Sam Goldfarb providing color commentary for home games and Leslie Urban providing color commentary for away postseason games. Select games were televised.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 90], "content_span": [91, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285063-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dayton Flyers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Dayton Flyers men's basketball team represented the University of Dayton during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Flyers were led by second-year head coach Anthony Grant and played their home games at the University of Dayton Arena as members of the Atlantic 10 Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285063-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dayton Flyers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Flyers finished the 2017\u201318 season 14\u201317, 8\u201310 in A-10 play to finish in ninth place. They lost in the second round of the A-10 Tournament to VCU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285064-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dayton Flyers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Dayton Flyers women's basketball team will represent the University of Dayton during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Flyers, led by third-year head coach Shauna Green, play their home games at UD Arena and were members of the Atlantic 10 Conference. They finished the season 17\u201314, 10\u20136 in A-10 play to finish in a tie for fourth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the A-10 Women's Tournament where they lost to VCU. They received an at-large bid to the WNIT where they lost to Northwestern in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285064-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dayton Flyers women's basketball team, Media, Dayton Flyers Sports Network\nThe Dayton Flyers Sports Network will broadcast Flyers games off of their athletic website, DaytonFlyers.com, with Shane White on the call. Most home games will also be featured on the A-10 Digital Network. Select games will be televised.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 82], "content_span": [83, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285065-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DePaul Blue Demons men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 DePaul Blue Demons men's basketball team represented DePaul University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They were led by fourth-year (seventh overall with DePaul) head coach Dave Leitao and played their home games at the Wintrust Arena in Chicago as members of the Big East Conference. They finished the season 19\u201317, 7\u201311 in Big East play to finish in a three-way tie for last place. As the No. 10 seed in the Big East Tournament, they lost in the first round to St. John's. They received a bid to the College Basketball Invitational where they defeated Central Michigan, Longwood, and Coastal Carolina to advance to the championship series against South Florida. There, in a best-of-three series, they lost to South Florida two games to one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 831]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285065-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DePaul Blue Demons men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Blue Demons finished the 2017\u201318 season 11\u201320, 4\u201314 in Big East play to finish in a tie for ninth place. They lost in the first round of the Big East Tournament to Marquette.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285066-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DePaul Blue Demons women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201318 DePaul Blue Demons women's basketball team represented DePaul University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Blue Demons, led by thirty-third year head coach Doug Bruno, played their home games at the Wintrust Arena as members of the Big East Conference. They finished the season 26\u20138, 14\u20134 in Big East play to finish in second place. DePaul won the Big East Conference tournament championship game over Marquette, 74\u201373. They were upset in the first round by Missouri State in the NCAA Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285066-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DePaul Blue Demons women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Blue Demons finished the 2017\u201318 season 27\u20138, 15\u20133 in Big East play to share the Big East regular season title with Marquette. They won the Big East Women's Tournament by defeating Marquette in the championship game. They received an automatic bid to the NCAA Women's Tournament where they defeated Oklahoma in the first round before losing to Texas A&M in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285066-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 DePaul Blue Demons women's basketball team, Rankings\n^Coaches' Poll did not release a second poll at the same time as the AP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285067-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Debreceni VSC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season will be Debreceni VSC's 41st competitive season, 26th consecutive season in the OTP Bank Liga and 116th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285067-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Debreceni VSC 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-00285067-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Debreceni VSC 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-00285067-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Debreceni VSC 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-00285067-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Debreceni VSC 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-00285067-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Debreceni VSC 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-00285067-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Debreceni VSC 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-00285067-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Debreceni VSC 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-00285068-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens men's basketball team represented the University of Delaware during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Fightin' Blue Hens, led by third-year head coach Martin Ingelsby, played their home games at the Bob Carpenter Center in Newark, Delaware as members of the Colonial Athletic Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285068-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Fightin' Blue Hens finished the 2017\u201318 season 14\u201319, 6\u201312 in CAA play to finish in a four-way tie for seventh place. They defeated Elon in the first round of the CAA Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Northeastern.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 74], "content_span": [75, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285069-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens women's basketball team represents the University of Delaware during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Fightin' Blue Hens, led by second year head coach Natasha Adair, play their home games at the Bob Carpenter Center and were members of the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA). They finished the season 16\u201315, 11\u20137 CAA play to finish in a 3 way tie for third place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the CAA Women's Tournament to Towson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285070-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Delaware State Hornets men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Delaware State Hornets men's basketball team represented Delaware State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at Memorial Hall in Dover, Delaware, and were led by 1st-year head coach Eric Skeeters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285070-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Delaware State Hornets men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Hornets finished the 2017\u201318 season 4\u201328, 2\u201314 in the MEAC play to finish in last place. They lost in the first round of the MEAC Tournament to North Carolina A&T. They lost every game on the road and on a neutral court, with both of their non-conference victories coming against non-Division I schools. They had the dubious distinction of finishing the season 351st in RPI out of the 351 teams in the NCAA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285070-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Delaware State Hornets men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn February 22, 2018, head coach Keith Walker was fired and associate head coach Keith Johnson was named interim head coach for the remainder of the season. On July 26, 5 months after Walker was fired, the school hired UMBC assistant Eric Skeeters for the head coaching job.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285071-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Delhi Dynamos FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 Delhi Dynamos FC Season was the club's fifth season in Indian Super League since their establishment in 2014. This was also the club's last season as Delhi Dynamos FC before relocating to Odisha to get rebranded as Odisha FC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285071-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Delhi Dynamos FC season, Pre-season and friendlies\nThis time Delhi Dynamos will do their pre-season in two phases. In the first phase they will train in Kolkata to get accustomed with Indian condition after that they will go to Doha to train in Aspire Academy for their final preparation before Indian Super League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285071-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Delhi Dynamos FC season, Pre-season and friendlies\nOn 16 August 2018, they started their first phase of pre season with Indian players in Kolkata under the watchful eyes of assistant coach Mridul Banerjee. They played 2 friendly games with local clubs Taltala Dipti Sangha and Peerless SC. Beating both clubs comfortably by 3-0 and 4-0 respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285071-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Delhi Dynamos FC season, Pre-season and friendlies\nOn 5 September 2018, They flown to Doha to train in Aspire Academy. Where they played 3 friendly games with local UAE clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285071-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Delhi Dynamos FC 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-00285072-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Denizlispor season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Denizlispor's 34th season in the TFF First League and their 52nd in existence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285073-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Denmark Series\nThe 2018\u201319 Denmark Series was the 54th season of the Denmark Series which is a Danish football competition featuring amateur clubs. It is the fourth tier of the Danish football league system. The competition is divided in four groups of ten teams each, based on geographical location. The winner of each group will be promoted to the 2019\u201320 Danish 2nd Divisions. Relegation from the Denmark Series is wholly dependent on clubs relegating from the Danish 2nd Division; again, based on their geographical location.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285073-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Denmark Series\nBecause four clubs from west of the Great Belt relegated from the 2018\u201319 Danish 2nd Divisions, and no teams east of the Great Belt, the 8th, 9th and 10th places of the West Groups (3 & 4) faced direct relegation to the lower tiers. The two 7th places in the East Groups (1 & 2) therefore face each other in direct play-off match for a place in the Denmark Series on a neutral ground. The overall winner remains in the Denmark Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285073-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Denmark Series, East Groups\nNo clubs from the East Groups relegated directly to the lower tiers, as four clubs west of the Great Belt relegated from the 2018\u201319 Danish 2nd Divisions (Odder IGF, Tarup-Paarup IF, Kjellerup IF and BK Marienlyst). Kastrup Boldklub became to only East Group club to relegate after a 3\u20130 loss to Taastrup FC in a direct play-off match for a place in the 2019\u201320 Denmark Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285073-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Denmark Series, East Groups\nTFC Odsherred disbanded following the season, saving Kastrup Boldklub from direct relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285073-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Denmark Series, West Groups\nSix clubs relegated directly from the Denmark Series from the West Groups, as four clubs west of the Great Belt relegated from the 2018\u201319 Danish 2nd Divisions (Odder IGF, Tarup-Paarup IF, Kjellerup IF and BK Marienlyst).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285073-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Denmark Series, Relegation play-offs\nThere was no playoff match in the West Groups (Groups 3 & 4) because Skovshoved IF (east of the Great Belt) survived in the Danish 2nd Division and four west clubs relegated from the Danish 2nd Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285073-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Denmark Series, Relegation play-offs, East Region\nThe East Region (Groups 1 & 2) relegation play-off was played on 23 June 2019 at the Glostrup Stadion. The \"home\" team (for administrative purposes) was Taastrup FC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 57], "content_span": [58, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285074-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Denver Nuggets season\nThe 2018\u201319 Denver Nuggets season was the 43rd season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA). The team revealed a new logo for the 2018\u201319 season. With a win against the Boston Celtics on March 18, the Nuggets clinched a playoff spot for the first time since the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285074-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Denver Nuggets season\nIn the playoffs, the Nuggets defeated the San Antonio Spurs in the First Round in seven games, winning their first playoff series since the Carmelo Anthony era in 2009. In the Semifinals, the Nuggets lost to the Portland Trail Blazers in seven games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285075-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Denver Pioneers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Denver Pioneers men's basketball team represented the University of Denver during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Pioneers, led by third-year head coach Rodney Billups, played their home games at Magness Arena and are members of The Summit League. They finished the season 8\u201322, 3\u201313 in Summit League play to finish in last place. They failed to qualify for the 2019 Summit League Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285075-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Denver Pioneers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Pioneers finished the season 15\u201315, 8\u20136 in Summit League play to finish in third place. In the Summit League Tournament, they defeated Oral Roberts in the quarterfinals before losing to South Dakota State in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285076-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Denver Pioneers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Denver Pioneers women's basketball represent the University of Denver in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Pioneers, led second year head coach Jim Turgeon, play their home games at Hamilton Gymnasium with 1 game at Magness Arena and were members of The Summit League. They finished the season 18\u201314, 10\u20136 in Summit League play to finish in a tie for third place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Summit League Women's Tournament to North Dakota. They received an automatic bid to the Women's National Invitation Tournament where defeated New Mexico in the first before losing to Idaho in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285077-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Deodhar Trophy\nThe 2018\u201319 Deodhar Trophy was the 46th edition of the Deodhar Trophy, a List A cricket competition in India. It was contested between three teams selected by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI). It was played from 23 to 27 October 2018. India C won the tournament by defeating India B by 29 runs in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285078-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Deportivo Alav\u00e9s season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Deportivo Alav\u00e9s's 107th season in existence and the club's 14th season in the top flight of Spanish football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285078-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Deportivo Alav\u00e9s 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-00285078-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Deportivo Alav\u00e9s 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-00285079-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Deportivo Toluca F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 Deportivo Toluca F.C. season was the 102nd season in the football club's history and the 66th consecutive season in the top flight of Mexican football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285079-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Deportivo Toluca F.C. season, Players, Squad information\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 13 January 2019.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, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285079-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Deportivo Toluca F.C. season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nLast updated: 17 February 2019Source: 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285079-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Deportivo Toluca F.C. season, Statistics, Attendance\nToluca's home attendance per round. Estadio Nemesio D\u00edez has a capacity of 31,000 spectators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285080-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Deportivo de La Coru\u00f1a season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Deportivo de La Coru\u00f1a's 112th season in existence and the club's first season back in the second division of Spanish football. In addition to the domestic league, Deportivo de La Coru\u00f1a participated in this season's edition of the Copa del Rey. The season covered the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285080-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Deportivo de La Coru\u00f1a 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-00285080-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Deportivo de La Coru\u00f1a 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-00285081-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Derby County F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Derby County's eleventh consecutive season in the Championship in their 135th year in existence. Along with competing in the Championship, the club also participated in the FA Cup and EFL Cup. This season was Frank Lampard's sole full season as Derby County manager following Gary Rowett's move to Stoke City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285081-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Derby County F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285081-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Derby County F.C. season, Competitions, Pre-season friendlies\nThe Rams revealed friendlies against Notts County, Mansfield Town, Southampton, Coventry City and Wolverhampton Wanderers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285081-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Derby County F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam. The second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August, with the third round draw made on 30 August. The draw for the fourth round took place on 29 September, broadcast live on the Quest highlights show EFL on Quest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285081-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Derby County F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018. The fourth round draw was made live on BBC by Robbie Keane and Carl Ikeme from Wolverhampton on 7 January 2019. The fifth round draw was broadcast on 28 January 2019 live on BBC; Alex Scott and Ian Wright conducted the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285082-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Derde Divisie\nThe 2018\u201319 Derde Divisie season was the third in the new Dutch fourth tier. They played before that in the Topklasse, until the restructuring of the Dutch football league system in the summer of 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285082-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Derde Divisie\nIn May 2019, the referee scored a goal for HSV Hoek against Harkemase Boys. The goal was all the more noteworthy because it occurred on the last weekend possible before rules changes came into effect from 1 June to stop this kind of activity on the part of the referee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285082-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Derde Divisie, Promotion/Relegation Play-offs Derde Divisie and Hoofdklasse\nThe numbers 15 and 16 of each of the 2018\u201319 Derde Divisies (2 times 2 teams) and the 3 (substitute) period winners of each of the 2018\u201319 Hoofdklassen (4 times 3 teams), making 16 teams, decide in a 3-round 2-leg knockout system, which 3 teams play next season in the 2019\u201320 Derde Divisie leagues. The remaining 13 teams play next season in the 2019\u201320 Hoofdklasse leagues. Contrary to previous seasons, the play-offs for Saturday and Sunday teams are not fully separated any more.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 83], "content_span": [84, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285082-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Derde Divisie, Promotion/Relegation Play-offs Derde Divisie and Hoofdklasse\nThe 4 Derde Divisie teams and the 4 highest ranked (substitute) period winners (HPWs) from the Hoofdklassen are released from playing the first round. Teams are paired in such a way that the 2 middle ranked (substitute) period winners (MPWs) from the Saturday Hoofdklassen play against the lowest ranked (substitute) period winners (LPWs) from the other Saturday Hoofdklasse. The same applies for the Sunday MPWs and LPWs. So at this stage there will be no matches yet between Saturday and Sunday teams. The lowest ranked teams (LPWs) will play the first match at home, and the highest ranked teams (MPWs) the second match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 83], "content_span": [84, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285082-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Derde Divisie, Promotion/Relegation Play-offs Derde Divisie and Hoofdklasse\nIn the second round there're still no matches between Saturday and Sunday teams. The following applies identical for the Saturday as well as Sunday teams. The highest ranked Derde Divisie team (H3D) will play against the winner of the match between the LPW of the A league against the MPW of the B league. The lowest ranked Derde Divisie team (L3D) will play against the HPW of the A league. The HPW of the B league will play against the winner of the match between the LPW of the B league against the MPW of the A league. The lowest ranked teams will play the first match at home, and the highest ranked teams the second match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 83], "content_span": [84, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285082-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Derde Divisie, Promotion/Relegation Play-offs Derde Divisie and Hoofdklasse\nThe first final is between the winners of the 2 matches in which the Derde Divisie Saturday teams play. The second final is between the winners of the 2 matches in which the Derde Divisie Sunday teams play. The consequence is that at least 1 Saturday and at least 1 Sunday Derde Divisie team will relegate. The third final is between the winners of the 2 remaining matches. This is the only play-offs match in which a Saturday and a Sunday team will face each other and for sure both teams will be Hoofdklasse period winners. Therefore, at least 1 Hoofdklasse team will promote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 83], "content_span": [84, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285082-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Derde Divisie, Promotion/Relegation Play-offs Derde Divisie and Hoofdklasse, Results\nSparta Nijkerk, Gemert and Hoogland promoted to the 2019-20 Derde Divisie. Eemdijk, SJC, JVC Cuijk and OJC Rosmalen relegated to the 2019-20 Hoofdklasse. The other teams remained in the 2019-20 Hoofdklasse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 92], "content_span": [93, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285083-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Detroit Mercy Titans men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Detroit Mercy Titans men's basketball team represented the University of Detroit Mercy during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Titans, led by first-year head coach Mike Davis, played their home games at Calihan Hall as members of the Horizon League. They finished the season 11\u201320 overall, 8\u201310 in Horizon League play, ending in a 3-way tie for sixth place. As the No. 7 seed in the Horizon League Tournament, they lost in the quarterfinals to eventual tournament champion Northern Kentucky,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285083-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Detroit Mercy Titans men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Titans finished the season 8\u201324, 4\u201314 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, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285083-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Detroit Mercy Titans men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn March 26, 2018, the school fired head coach Bacari Alexander after two seasons. On June 13, the school hired Texas Southern head coach Mike Davis as the Titans' new coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285084-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Detroit Pistons season\nThe 2018\u201319 Detroit Pistons season was the 78th season of the franchise, the 71st in the National Basketball Association (NBA), and the second in Midtown Detroit. This was the first season under new head coach Dwane Casey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285084-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Detroit Pistons season\nThe Pistons qualified for the NBA playoffs during the final game of the regular season with a 115\u201389 victory over the New York Knicks on April 10. This marked the first time the team qualified for the playoffs since the 2015\u201316 season and for only the second time in the last 10 seasons. In the first round of the playoffs, the Pistons were eliminated by the Milwaukee Bucks in four games, and got swept in the playoffs for the third time since 2009, not winning a playoff game since May 26, 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285084-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Detroit Pistons season\nAs of 2021, This season marked the last time the Pistons made the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285084-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Detroit Pistons season, Offseason\nOn May 7, 2018, the Detroit Pistons fired head coach Stan Van Gundy after the team missed the playoffs for the second consecutive season. On June 11, 2018, the Pistons hired Dwane Casey as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285084-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Detroit Pistons season, Player statistics, Regular season\nAfter all games. \u2021Waived during the season\u2020Traded during the season\u2260Acquired during the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285085-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Detroit Red Wings season\nThe 2018\u201319 Detroit Red Wings season was the 93rd season for the National Hockey League (NHL) franchise that was established on September 25, 1926. It was also the Red Wings' second season at Little Caesars Arena. The team was eliminated from playoff contention on March 12, 2019, and missed the playoffs for the third year in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285085-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Detroit Red Wings season, Off-season\nOn June 22, the Red Wings hired Dan Bylsma as an assistant coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285085-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Detroit Red Wings 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-00285085-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Detroit Red Wings season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Red Wings. Stats reflect time with the Red Wings only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Red Wings only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285085-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Detroit Red Wings season, Transactions\nThe Red Wings have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285085-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Detroit Red Wings season, Draft picks\nBelow are the Detroit Red Wings' selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285086-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dhaka Premier Division Cricket League\nThe 2018\u201319 Dhaka Premier Division Cricket League was an edition of the Dhaka Premier Division Cricket League, a List A cricket competition that was held in Bangladesh. It was the sixth edition of the tournament with List A status, although almost 35 seasons have been played before achieving the status. It started on 8 March, and concluded on 23 April 2019. Directly before the List A tournament started, the inaugural edition of the 2018\u201319 Dhaka Premier Division Twenty20 Cricket League took place, featuring the same twelve teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285086-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dhaka Premier Division Cricket League\nAbahani Limited were the defending champions. They won the tournament, finishing ahead of Legends of Rupganj on net run rate. It was their third List A title, and their 20th overall in the history of the competition. In their final match of the tournament, they beat Sheikh Jamal Dhanmondi Club by nine wickets. Soumya Sarkar scored 208 not out, the highest individual total in List A cricket in Bangladesh, and the first double century in List A cricket by a Bangladeshi batsman. Sarkar's innings also contained 16 sixes, also a record for a List A innings in Bangladesh. Sarkar and Jahurul Islam scored 312 runs for the opening wicket, which was another record for a List A match in Bangladesh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285086-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dhaka Premier Division Cricket League, Summary\nAgrani Bank Cricket Club and Kala Bagan Krira Chakra were relegated in the previous tournament, and were replaced by Bangladesh Krira Shikkha Protishtan and Uttara Sporting Club in this edition of the competition. Ahead of the tournament, a players' draft took place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 54], "content_span": [55, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285086-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dhaka Premier Division Cricket League, Summary\nThe round seven fixture between Bangladesh Krira Shikkha Protishtan and Shinepukur Cricket Club ended in a tie. It was only the third tied match in since the competition achieved List A status for the 2013\u201314 tournament. The round eight fixture between Mohammedan Sporting Club and Brothers Union saw Mohammedan Sporting Club awarded the win, after Brothers Union refused to bat following a rain delay. Brothers Union assessed the pitch after the rain delay, saying that it was not possible to play on the wicket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 54], "content_span": [55, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285086-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dhaka Premier Division Cricket League, Summary\nFollowing the conclusion of the group stage fixtures, Legends of Rupganj, Abahani Limited, Prime Bank Cricket Club, Prime Doleshwar Sporting Club, Mohammedan Sporting Club and Sheikh Jamal Dhanmondi Club had all qualified for the Super League section of the tournament. Meanwhile, Brothers Union, Bangladesh Krira Shikkha Protishtan and Uttara Sporting Club finished in the bottom three places in the table, and therefore moved to the Relegation League playoffs, with the bottom two teams being relegated to the Dhaka First Division Cricket League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 54], "content_span": [55, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285086-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dhaka Premier Division Cricket League, Summary\nBangladesh Krira Shikkha Protishtan were the first team to be relegated to the Dhaka First Division Cricket League, after they lost to Uttara Sporting Club by one wicket in their first Relegation League fixture. In the final match of the Relegation League phase, Brothers Union beat Bangladesh Krira Shikkha Protishtan by six wickets to ensure their survival, and relegating Uttara Sporting Club in the process. Old DOHS Sports Club and Partex Sporting Club were promoted from the First Division, replacing them for the next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 54], "content_span": [55, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285086-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dhaka Premier Division Cricket League, Points tables\nTeam qualified for the Super League phase of the tournament", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285087-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dhaka Premier Division Twenty20 Cricket League\nThe 2018\u201319 Dhaka Premier Division Twenty20 Cricket League was the first edition of the Dhaka Premier Division Twenty20 Cricket League, a Twenty20 cricket competition that was held in Bangladesh. It started on 25 February 2019 and concluded on 4 March 2019. The tournament took place directly before the 2018\u201319 Dhaka Premier Division Cricket League, and features the same twelve teams. The final of the competition was played as a night game at the Sher-e-Bangla National Stadium in Mirpur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285087-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dhaka Premier Division Twenty20 Cricket League\nThe Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) instigated the tournament in order to give Bangladeshi players more experience in the 20-over format, in the hope that local players will become more prominent in the Bangladesh Premier League. For this reason the tournament featured local cricketers exclusively, unlike the Dhaka Premier Division Cricket League, in which foreign players take part.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285087-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dhaka Premier Division Twenty20 Cricket League\nShinepukur Cricket Club were the first team to qualify for the semi-finals of the tournament, after they won their two matches in Group C. On the final day of the group stage, Prime Bank Cricket Club from Group A and Sheikh Jamal Dhanmondi Club from Group B also progressed to the semi-finals. The final match in Group D, between Gazi Group Cricketers and Prime Doleshwar Sporting Club was washed out, so the fixture was rescheduled for the reserve day to determine which team progresses. Prime Doleshwar Sporting Club won the rescheduled match by three wickets, winning Group D and becoming the fourth team to advance to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285087-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dhaka Premier Division Twenty20 Cricket League\nIn the first semi-final, Sheikh Jamal Dhanmondi Club beat Shinepukur Cricket Club by five wickets, with man of the match Ziaur Rahman finishing unbeaten on 72 runs from just 29 balls. The second semi-final saw Prime Doleshwar Sporting Club beat Prime Bank Cricket Club by six wickets, with their captain, Farhad Reza, taking five wickets for 32 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285087-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dhaka Premier Division Twenty20 Cricket League\nSheikh Jamal Dhanmondi Club won the tournament, after they beat Prime Doleshwar Sporting Club by 24 runs in the final. Imtiaz Hossain was named as the man of the match, after scoring 56 runs, and Farhad Reza was named as the player of the tournament, following his all-round performance. Following the conclusion of the competition, the BCB confirmed their intentions to have the tournament as a permanent fixture in their domestic calendar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285088-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dhaka Second Division Football League\nThe 2018-19 Dhaka Second Division Football League was 5th edition of the league. It is the 4th tier football league in Bangladesh founded 2015 by the Bangladesh Football Federation. Twelve teams participate in the league. Samaj Kallyan O Krira Shangshad Mugda is promoted to Senior Division League as champion, with East End Club and Dilkusha Sporting Club following as second and third place holders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285089-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dhaka Senior Division League\nThe 2018\u201319 Dhaka Senior Division League was 5th season of the league since the league was rebranded as third tier Dhaka Senior Division League in 2007. A total of 13 teams competed in the league. Kawran Bazar PS won the title, with Dhaka Wanderers Club following in second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285089-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dhaka Senior Division League, 2019 Dhaka Senior Division League Teams\nThe following 13 clubs will competed in the Dhaka Senior Division League during the season 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 77], "content_span": [78, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285090-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Didi 10 season\nThe 2018\u201319 Didi 10 competition is Georgian domestic rugby union competition operated by Georgian Rugby Union. One new team from I league was promoted to Didi 10 (Vepkhvebi) and Bagrati Kutaisi was relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285090-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Didi 10 season, Table\nIf teams are level at any stage, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285091-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dijon FCO season\nThe 2018\u201319 Dijon FCO season was the 20th professional season of the club since its creation in 1998.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285091-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dijon FCO 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285091-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dijon FCO 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-00285092-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Division 1\nThe 2018\u201319 Maltese Division 1 season, is the premier men's basketball competition in Malta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285092-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Division 1, Competition format\nSeven teams joined the regular season and competed in a double-legged round-robin tournament. The four best qualified teams of the regular season joined the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285092-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Division 1, Playoffs\nThe semifinals were played in a best-of-three-games format, while the finals in a best-of-five (1-1-1-1-1) format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285093-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Division 1 F\u00e9minine\nThe 2018\u201319 Division 1 F\u00e9minine season was the 45th edition since its establishment. Lyon were the defending champions, having won the title in each of the past twelve seasons. The season began on 25 August 2018 and ended on 4 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285093-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Division 1 F\u00e9minine, Teams\nTwo teams were promoted from the Division 2 F\u00e9minine, the second level of women's football in France, to replace two teams that were relegated from the Division 1 F\u00e9minine following the 2017\u201318 season. A total of 12 teams currently compete in the league; two clubs will be relegated to the second division at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285094-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor Femenina de Balonmano\nThe Divisi\u00f3n de Honor Femenina 2018\u201319, or Liga Guerreras Iberdrola 2018-19 after sponsorship of Iberdrola, is the 62nd season of women's handball top flight in Spain since its establishment. The season began on 7 September. A total of 14 teams take part the league, 12 of which had already contested in the 2017\u201318 season, and two of which were promoted from the Divisi\u00f3n de Plata 2017\u201318.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285095-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor Juvenil de F\u00fatbol\nThe 2018\u201319 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor Juvenil de F\u00fatbol season is the 33rd since its establishment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285095-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor Juvenil de F\u00fatbol, League tables, Ranking of second-placed teams\nThe best runner-up will qualify for the Copa de Campeones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 90], "content_span": [91, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285095-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor Juvenil de F\u00fatbol, League tables, Ranking of second-placed teams\nThe seven best runners-up are determined by the following parameters, in this order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 90], "content_span": [91, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285095-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor Juvenil de F\u00fatbol, League tables, Ranking of third-placed teams\nThe two best third-placed will qualify for the Copa del Rey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 89], "content_span": [90, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285095-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor Juvenil de F\u00fatbol, League tables, Ranking of third-placed teams\nThe seven best third-placed are determined by the following parameters, in this order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 89], "content_span": [90, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285095-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor Juvenil de F\u00fatbol, Copa de Campeones\nThe seven group champions and the best runner-up were qualified to this competition whose winner will play the 2019\u201320 UEFA Youth League. The draw was held in Vigo on 23 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285095-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor Juvenil de F\u00fatbol, Copa de Campeones\nThe quarterfinals were played in A Madroa, while the semifinals and final at Bala\u00eddos, in Vigo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285096-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor de Hockey Hierba\nThe 2018\u201319 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor de Hockey Hierba was the 53rd season of the Divisi\u00f3n de Honor de Hockey Hierba, the highest field hockey league in Spain. The season began on 9 September 2018 and it concluded with the championship final on 19 May 2019 in Terrassa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285096-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor de Hockey Hierba\nReal Club de Polo were the defending champions, while Linia 22 and Jolaseta entered as the promoted teams from the 2017\u201318 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor Masculina B. Club Egara won their 15th title by defeating Real Club de Polo 2\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285096-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor de Hockey Hierba, Play-offs\nThe semi-finals and final were played on 18 and 19 May 2019 and hosted by Club Egara in Terrassa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 53], "content_span": [54, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285096-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor de Hockey Hierba, Play-offs, Quarter-finals\nThe quarter-finals were played over two legs, both games being played at the best-placed team's pitch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 69], "content_span": [70, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285096-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor de Hockey Hierba, Play-offs, Relegation play-off\nJolaseta won series 2\u20130 and therefore both clubs remain in their respective leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 74], "content_span": [75, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285097-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor de Rugby\nThe 2018\u201319 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor was the 52nd season of the top flight of the Spanish domestic rugby union competition since its inception in 1953.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285097-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor de Rugby\nThe championship playoffs began in May finishing with the Final on 28 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285097-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor de Rugby\nValladolid won its third consecutive title, its ninth overall, after defeating local arch-rivals SilverStorm El Salvador in the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285097-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor de Rugby, Competition format\nThe Divisi\u00f3n de Honor season takes place between September and March, with every team playing each other home and away for a total of 22 matches. Points are awarded according to the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285097-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor de Rugby, Competition format\nThe six teams with the highest number of points at the end of 22 rounds of matches play the championship playoffs. The top two teams win a semifinal berth automatically, while the next four teams play off to take the remaining two spots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285097-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor de Rugby, Competition format\nThe club which finishes bottom is relegated, while the club that finishes 11th goes into a playoff with a team from Divisi\u00f3n de Honor B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285097-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor de Rugby, Competition format, Promotion and relegation\nThe bottom team in the standings is relegated to Divisi\u00f3n de Honor B, while the team finishing 11th play the relegation playoff. The top team from Divisi\u00f3n de Honor B is promoted to Divisi\u00f3n de Honor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 80], "content_span": [81, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285097-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor de Rugby, Relegation playoff\nThe relegation playoff was played over two legs by La Vila, the team finishing 11th in Divisi\u00f3n de Honor, and Santander, the losing team from Divisi\u00f3n de Honor B promotion playoff final. Santander won 57\u201353 on aggregate and gained promotion to the Divisi\u00f3n de Honor for the 2019\u201320 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285098-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divizia A (men's handball)\nThe 2018\u201319 Divizia A is the 61st season of the Romanian men's handball second league. A total of 24 teams contested the league, being divided in four series, Seria A (6 teams), Seria B (7 teams), Seria C (5 teams) and Seria D (6 teams). At the end of the season the first two places from each series will qualify for the Divizia A promotion play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285098-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divizia A (men's handball), Promotion play-offs, Semi-final tournament\nThe first two eligible teams from each series of the regular season will compete in two main group which will be played in a neutral venue. The first two ranked teams from each group of the semi-final tournament will qualify for the Final Four. The semi-final tournament was played on neutral ground, in Bra\u0219ov.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285098-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divizia A (men's handball), Promotion play-offs, Final Four\nThe Final Four was played on neutral ground, in Ploie\u0219ti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285098-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divizia A (men's handball), Promotion/Relegation play-offs\nThe 3rd and 4th-placed teams of the Divizia A promotion tournament faced the 11th and 12th-placed teams of the Liga Na\u021bional\u0103. The first two places promoted to Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 and the last two relegated to Divizia A. The play-offs were played on neutral ground, in Drobeta-Turnu Severin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285099-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divizia A (women's handball)\nThe 2018\u201319 Divizia A is the 61st season of the Romanian women's handball second league. A total of 27 teams contested the league, being divided in four series, Seria A (6 teams), Seria B (8 teams), Seria C (7 teams) and Seria D (6 teams). At the end of the season the first two places from each series will qualify for the Divizia A promotion play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285099-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divizia A (women's handball), Promotion play-offs, Semi-final tournament\nThe first two eligible teams from each series of the regular season will compete in two main group which will be played in a neutral venue. The first two ranked teams from each group of the semi-final tournament will qualify for the Final Four. The semi-final tournament was played on neutral ground, in F\u0103g\u0103ra\u0219.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 80], "content_span": [81, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285099-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divizia A (women's handball), Promotion play-offs, Final Four\nThe Final Four was played on neutral ground, in Ploie\u0219ti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285099-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divizia A (women's handball), Promotion/Relegation play-offs\nThe 3rd and 4th-placed teams of the Divizia A promotion tournament faced the 11th and 12th-placed teams of the Liga Na\u021bional\u0103. The first two places promoted to Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 and the last two relegated to Divizia A. The play-offs were played on neutral ground, in Cisn\u0103die.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285100-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divizia A1 (men's volleyball)\nThe 2018\u201319 Divizia A1 season was the 70th season of the Divizia A1, the highest professional volleyball league in Romania. Tricolorul LMV Ploie\u0219ti was the defending champion. At the end of the season, Arcada Gala\u021bi won their first title. VCM Piatra Neam\u021b and Tricolorul Ploie\u0219ti were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285100-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divizia A1 (men's volleyball), Competition format\nThe competition format will be the same as in the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285101-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divizia A1 (women's volleyball)\nThe 2018\u201319 Divizia A1 season was the 69th season of the Divizia A1, the highest professional volleyball league in Romania. CSM Bucure\u0219ti was the defending champion. At the end of the season, Alba Blaj won their fourth title. Agroland Timi\u0219oara and Penicilina Ia\u0219i were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285101-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divizia A1 (women's volleyball), Competition format\nThe competition format will be the same as in the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285101-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divizia A1 (women's volleyball), Team changes, Excluded teams\nCSU Oradea promoted to Divizia A1, but due to the lack of funds chose not to join the championship and enrolled again in the Divizia A2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 69], "content_span": [70, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285101-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divizia A1 (women's volleyball), Team changes, Excluded teams\nMedicina T\u00e2rgu Mure\u0219 encountered financial problems and entered in a partnership with the newly founded CSM T\u00e2rgu Mure\u0219, becoming the women's volleyball section of the sports club. The team was enrolled in the Divizia A2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 69], "content_span": [70, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285102-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divizia Na\u021bional\u0103 de Seniori season\nThe 2018\u201319 Divizia Na\u021bional\u0103 de Seniori is the second premier Romanian rugby competition, reserved for club teams. The number of participating teams is decreased from initially twelve teams to just nine due to ACS Rugby Morometii Turnu Magurele, CS Mana\u015ftur and CS Sportul Studentesc Bucure\u0219ti the three teams which had pulled out for financial reasons., with addition of the 2017-18 champions and runners-up of the second tier championship DNS-Divizia Nationala de Seniori. The eventual champions of the Divizia Na\u021bional\u0103 de Seniori have the right to promote up to the SuperLiga with the relegating teams going down to Divizia A, Romania's 3rd level competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285102-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divizia Na\u021bional\u0103 de Seniori season, Tables\nThis is the regular season league table for Group Centre-North:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285102-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divizia Na\u021bional\u0103 de Seniori season, Tables\nThis is the regular season league table for Group Centre-South:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285102-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divizia Na\u021bional\u0103 de Seniori season, Fixtures & Results, Play-off Semifinals\nThe semi-finals were held on 18 May 2019 12:00 and 14:30 at Olimpia and Dan P\u0103ltini\u0219anu respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285102-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divizia Na\u021bional\u0103 de Seniori season, Fixtures & Results, Play-off Semifinals\nBoth finals were held on 25 May 2019, 1 week after the semi-finals at Stadionul Fepa 74.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285102-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divizia Na\u021bional\u0103 de Seniori season, Fixtures & Results, Play-out Semifinals\nThe semi-finals were held on 18 May 2019 09:00 at Mihail Naca and Prin\u021b Ghic\u0103 respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285102-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Divizia Na\u021bional\u0103 de Seniori season, Fixtures & Results, Play-out Semifinals\nBoth finals were held on 26 May 2019, 1 week and 1 day after the semi-finals at Stadionul Olimpia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285103-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Di\u00f3sgy\u0151ri VTK season\nThe 2018\u201319 season will be Di\u00f3sgy\u0151ri VTK's 53rd competitive season, 8th consecutive season in the OTP Bank Liga and 108th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285103-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Di\u00f3sgy\u0151ri VTK 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-00285103-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Di\u00f3sgy\u0151ri VTK 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-00285103-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Di\u00f3sgy\u0151ri VTK 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-00285103-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Di\u00f3sgy\u0151ri VTK 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-00285103-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Di\u00f3sgy\u0151ri VTK 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-00285103-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Di\u00f3sgy\u0151ri VTK 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-00285103-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Di\u00f3sgy\u0151ri VTK 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-00285104-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Djibouti Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Djibouti Premier League is the 31st season of the Djibouti Premier League, the top-tier football league in Djibouti. The season started on 9 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285105-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dominica Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Dominica Premier League is the 54th season of the Dominica Premier League, the top division football competition in Dominica. The season began on 18 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285106-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Doncaster Rovers F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Doncaster Rovers' 140th season in their existence, 16th consecutive season in the Football League and second consecutive season in League One. Along with League One, the club also participated in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285106-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Doncaster Rovers F.C. season\nThe season covered the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285106-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Doncaster Rovers F.C. season, Squad, Statistics\nThis includes any players featured in a match day squad in any competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285106-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Doncaster Rovers F.C. season, Competitions, Friendlies\nDoncaster Rovers announced pre-season friendlies against Alfreton Town, Frickley Athletic, Birmingham City and Sheffield United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285106-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Doncaster Rovers F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October. The draw for the second round was made live on BBC and BT by Mark Schwarzer and Glenn Murray on 12 November. The third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018. The fourth round draw was made live on BBC by Robbie Keane and Carl Ikeme from Wolverhampton on 7 January 2019. The fifth round draw was broadcast on 28 January 2019 live on BBC, Alex Scott and Ian Wright conducted the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285106-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Doncaster Rovers F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam. The second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285106-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Doncaster Rovers F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285107-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dorados de Sinaloa season\nThe 2018\u201319 Dorados de Sinaloa season is the 16th season in the football club's history. The team will compete in Ascenso MX and Copa MX.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285107-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dorados de Sinaloa season, Players, Squad information\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 16 December 2018.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, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285108-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Drake Bulldogs men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Drake Bulldogs men's basketball team represented Drake University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bulldogs were led by first-year head coach Darian DeVries. They played their home games at Knapp Center in Des Moines, Iowa as members of the Missouri Valley Conference. They finished the season 24\u201310, 12\u20136 to earn a share of the MVC regular season championship. As the No. 2 seed in the MVC Tournament, they defeated Illinois State before losing to Northern Iowa in the semifinals. They received a bid to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they lost in the first round to Southern Utah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285108-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Drake Bulldogs men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bulldogs finished the 2017\u201318 season 17\u201317, 10\u20138 in MVC play to finish in to finish in a tie for third place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the MVC Tournament to Bradley. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they defeated Abilene Christian in the first round in a game referred to as the Lou Henson Classic. In the second round they were defeated by Northern Colorado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285108-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Drake Bulldogs men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn March 22, 2018, it was announced that head coach Niko Medved had accepted the head coaching position at Colorado State, where he had previously served as an assistant. A week after Medved's departure, Drake hired Creighton assistant and Iowa native Darian DeVries for the head coaching job.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285109-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Drake Bulldogs women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Drake Bulldogs women's basketball team represents Drake University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Bulldogs, led by seventh-year head coach Jennie Baranczyk, play their home games at Knapp Center and are members of the Missouri Valley Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285109-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Drake Bulldogs women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bulldogs finished the 2017\u201318 season 26\u20138, 18\u20130 in MVC play to win the MVC regular season championship. They defeated Valparaiso, Southern Illinois and Northern Iowa to become champions of the Missouri Valley Women's Tournament. They earned an automatic trip to the NCAA Women's Tournament where they lost to Texas A&M in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285110-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Drexel Dragons men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Drexel Dragons men's basketball team represented Drexel University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Dragons, led by third-year head coach Zach Spiker, played their home games at the Daskalakis Athletic Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania as members of the Colonial Athletic Association. They finished the season 13\u201319, 7\u201311 in CAA play to finish in a tie for sixth place. They were defeated in the quarterfinals of the 2019 CAA Men's Basketball Tournament by College of Charleston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285110-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Drexel Dragons men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Dragons finished the 2017\u201318 season 13\u201320, 6\u201312 in CAA play to finish in a tie for 7th place. They lost to Charleston in the CAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285110-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Drexel Dragons men's basketball team, Preseason\nIn a poll of the league coaches, media relations directors, and media members at the CAA's media day, Drexel was picked to finish in ninth place in the CAA. Junior guard Kurk Lee was named as an honorable mention to the preseason All-Conference team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 55], "content_span": [56, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285110-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Drexel Dragons men's basketball team, Team statistics\nAs of the end of the season. Indicates team leader in each category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285111-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Drexel Dragons women's basketball team\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by PrimeBOT (talk | contribs) at 19:20, 21 June 2020 (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, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285111-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Drexel Dragons women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Drexel Dragons women's basketball team represents Drexel University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Dragons, led by sixteenth-year head coach Denise Dillon, play their home games at the Daskalakis Athletic Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania as members of the Colonial Athletic Association. They finished the season 24\u20139, 14\u20134 in CAA play to finish in second place. They advanced to the championship game of the CAA Women's Tournament where they lost to Towson. They received an at-large bid to the Women's National Invitational Tournament where they lost in the first round to Harvard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285111-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Drexel Dragons women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Dragons finished the 2017\u201318 season 27\u20138, 16\u20132 in CAA play to finish in a tie for 1st place. They lost to Elon in the CAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285112-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Duke Blue Devils men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Duke Blue Devils men's basketball team represented Duke University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They were coached by 39th-year head coach, Mike Krzyzewski. The Blue Devils played their home games at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, North Carolina as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference. Led by tournament MVP Zion Williamson, they won Duke's 21st ACC tournament title. They received the ACC's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament and reached the Elite Eight, where they lost 68\u201367 to Michigan State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285112-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Duke Blue Devils men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Blue Devils finished the 2017\u201318 season 29\u20138, 13\u20135 in ACC play to finish in second place. They defeated Notre Dame in the quarterfinals of the ACC Tournament before losing to North Carolina in the semifinals. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as the No. 2 seed in the Midwest region. There they defeated Iona, Rhode Island, and Syracuse to advance to the Elite Eight. In the Elite Eight, they lost to No. 1 seed Kansas in overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285112-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Duke Blue Devils men's basketball team, Schedule and results\n\u2020 Record for the largest on-campus attendance in college basketball history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285112-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Duke Blue Devils men's basketball team, Ranking movement\n^Coaches did not release a Week 2 poll. *AP does not release post-NCAA Tournament rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 64], "content_span": [65, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285113-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Duke Blue Devils women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Duke Blue Devils women's basketball team will represent Duke University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. Returning as head coach was Joanne P. McCallie entering her 12th season. The team plays its home games at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, North Carolina as members of the Atlantic Coast Conference. They finished the season 15\u201315, 6\u201310 in ACC play to finish in a tie for tenth place. They advanced to the second round of the ACC Women's Tournament where they lost to Florida State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285113-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Duke Blue Devils women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe 2017-18 Blue Devils finished the season 24\u20139, 11\u20135 in ACC play to finish tied for fourth place in the regular season. They were the fourth seed in the ACC Women's Tournament, where they lost their first game to NC State. The received and at large bid to the 2018 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament, and were seeded fifth in the Albany region. They beat Belmont and Georgia before losing to Connecticut in the Sweet 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285114-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Duleep Trophy\nThe 2018\u201319 Duleep Trophy was the 57th season of the Duleep Trophy, a first-class cricket tournament in India, which took place in August and September 2018. India Red were the defending champions. All of the matches took place at the NPR College Ground in Dindigul. The BCCI's technical committee structured the tournament to have four teams from four Ranji Trophy Groups, similar to the 2002\u201303 Duleep Trophy, but on the day of team selections, the format of the previous season was retained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285114-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Duleep Trophy\nAll three round-robin matches finished as draws. The first match, India Red took three points, as a result of a first-innings lead, with India Green getting one point. The second match, India Red had a first-innings lead over India Blue, therefore gaining three points, and advancing to the final. In the third and final match, India Blue finished with a first-innings lead against India Green, and advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285114-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Duleep Trophy\nIndia Blue won the tournament, beating India Red by an innings and 187 runs in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285114-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Duleep Trophy, Squads\nAkshay Wadkar replaced Abhishek Gupta in India Red's squad, as Gupta's doping ban was going to expire after the start of the Duleep Trophy. On 22 August, Siddhesh Lad and Ricky Bhui were released from their Quadrangular Series squads and added to the India Red and Blue teams respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285115-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dumbarton F.C. season\nSeason 2018\u201319 was Dumbarton's first in the third tier of Scottish football for six years, having finished ninth and lost the playoffs in 2017\u201318. Dumbarton also competed in the Challenge Cup, Scottish League Cup and the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285115-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dumbarton F.C. season, Story of the season, May\nTwo days after the Sons relegation to Scottish League One club director Callum Hosie died. The same day Tom Walsh became the first member of the squad to depart, joining Inverness Caledonian Thistle on a two-year deal. On 16 May the club released seven players, with David Smith, David Wilson, Kyle Prior, Grant Gallagher, Chris Johnston, Dougie Hill and Dimitris Froxylias all exiting. Meanwhile, Jamie Ewings was released as a player, but continued as the club's goalkeeper coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285115-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dumbarton F.C. season, Story of the season, May\nCalum Gallagher, Scott Gallacher, Andy Dowie, Stuart Carswell, Kyle Hutton and Danny Handling were all offered new deals, whilst Christopher McLaughlin and Iain Russell were offered training facilities. Pre -season friendlies were then arranged against East Kilbride, Cumbernauld Colts and Queen's Park. Goalkeeper Scott Gallacher rejected a new deal to join Airdrieonians on 19 May, joining up with Grant Gallagher at the Lanarkshire side. Captain Andy Dowie was the first man to re-sign for the club, inking a one-year deal on 23 May, and he was followed by Kyle Hutton. Liam Dick left however, having made 17 appearances since signing in January 2018. Meanwhile, a fourth pre-season friendly was arranged against Heart of Midlothian on 7 July. Willie Dyer became the club's first signing of the summer on 30 May, joining on a year long deal from Brechin City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 918]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285115-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dumbarton F.C. season, Story of the season, June\nJune started with striker Mark Stewart having the second year of his contract cancelled. Following this Turnberry Homes signed a new two-year deal to continue as the club's shirt sponsors. Bobby Barr became the club's second signing of the summer, joining on a year long deal from Raith Rovers. Ross Forbes was announced as the club's third summer signing on 11 June \u2013 signing a season long deal nine years after a loan spell with the club. A day later the club's top scorer from the 2017\u201318 season, Calum Gallagher, signed a new one-year deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285115-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dumbarton F.C. season, Story of the season, June\nThe week ended with Grant Adam becoming the club's fourth signing of the summer, joining on a one-year deal from Forfar Athletic. His arrival was followed by that of striker Rory Loy, who joined after leaving Falkirk, however Danny Handling turned down a new deal with the club to join Scottish League Two side Edinburgh City. Stuart Carswell was the next player to commit himself for another season, signing a new one-year deal after 54 appearances and two goals in his 18 months at the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285115-0002-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dumbarton F.C. season, Story of the season, June\nThe following week defenders Ross Perry and Cammy Ballantyne signed for the club on year-long deals, and they were joined by Ryan Thomson who joined after leaving Stranraer. A day after signing Thomson marked his debut with a goal, which was added to by strikes from Calum Gallagher and Iain Russell (playing as a trialist) as Dumbarton overcame Lowland League side East Kilbride in their first friendly of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285115-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dumbarton F.C. season, Story of the season, July\nRussell made it two in as many games, as he scored a late winner in a 3\u20132 comeback victory against Cumbernauld Colts on 1 July, with fellow trialist Andy Little also on target. That form earned him a new year long deal, and he made his third debut as a signed player in a 2\u20130 friendly defeat to Heart of Midlothian. Little also joined the club, on a short-term deal, on 11 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285115-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dumbarton F.C. season, Story of the season, July\nA busy week also saw the arrival of goalkeeper Jamie McGowan, who joined having left Greenock Morton, and forward Michael Paton who had impressed as a trialist against Heart of Midlothian. In the Scottish League Cup Sons opened their season with a 0\u20130 draw against Lowland League champions Spartans, winning the bonus point on penalties after Grant Adam saved two spot-kicks. They followed that result up with a 1\u20130 victory over Queen's Park thanks to a Calum Gallagher goal, their first victory since the restructuring of the Cup in the summer of 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285115-0003-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dumbarton F.C. season, Story of the season, July\nDefeat to Scottish Premiership Kilmarnock courtesy of a Kris Boyd hat-trick followed, despite the Sons taking the lead twice. Rory Loy made his debut for the club as a second-half substitute after missing the earlier games through injury, with Craig Barr and Bobby Barr (his first goal for the club) scoring for Dumbarton. The League Cup campaign ended on a low note however, with a 6\u20130 defeat to St Mirren.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285115-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dumbarton F.C. season, Story of the season, August\nDumbarton kicked off their league campaign with a 2\u20130 victory against East Fife, with Andy Dowie scoring his first goal for the club. That was followed by a 2\u20130 home defeat to Forfar Athletic. The club did progress to the 2nd round of the Scottish Challenge Cup however, with Michael Paton scoring his first goal for the club in a 2\u20131 victory against Scottish Championship side Greenock Morton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285115-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dumbarton F.C. season, Story of the season, August\nThat was followed by a 1\u20131 draw at home with Arbroath, with Ross Forbes scoring an injury-time leveler, before defeat against Brechin City, where the Sons threw away a two-goal lead with 30 minutes remaining. Bobby Barr and trialist Brad Spencer got the goals. With the squad down to bare bones Stevie Aitken dipped into the transfer market once more \u2013 signing Spencer on a permanent deal along with Dundee United defender Scott Allardice. On deadline day Jack Aitchison became the 14th signing of the summer \u2013 joining on a loan deal until January from Celtic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285115-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dumbarton F.C. season, Story of the season, September\nSeptember opened with another defeat, this time against newly promoted Stenhousemuir. Craig McPherson was appointed first-team coach a week later, but a third consecutive loss followed, this time in the Scottish Challenge Cup against Montrose. The same opponents visited a week later in the league, and this time Dumbarton recorded victory. Two goals inside two minutes from Andy Dowie and Ross Forbes gave the Sons their first home league win since early April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285115-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dumbarton F.C. season, Story of the season, September\nBrad Spencer scored his first goal as a signed player for the club a week later, but it was cancelled out by a Cammy Russell strike as Sons drew their next game against Airdrieonians. The month ended with a 5\u20131 home defeat to Raith Rovers. On the final day of the transfer window Dom Thomas became the club's 15th signing of the summer \u2013 joining on a four-month loan from Kilmarnock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285115-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dumbarton F.C. season, Story of the season, October\nWith Grant Adam injured, Sons turned to the transfer market again \u2013 bringing in Robbie Mutch on an emergency loan deal. Mutch made his debut the following day in a 3\u20132 defeat to Stranraer that saw Sons end the first quarter in ninth position \u2013 only ahead of Montrose on goal difference. Two days later Stephen Aitken was sacked having been in charge since May 2015. Ian Durrant and Jamie Ewings were put in temporary charge for the trip to Arbroath which Sons lost 3\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285115-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dumbarton F.C. season, Story of the season, October\nOn 21 October Jim Duffy was announced as the club's new manager with Craig McPherson returning to the club as his assistant a fortnight after leaving his position as first team coach. His first action was to sign goalkeeper Chris Smith on loan from East Kilbride after Falkirk recalled Robbie Mutch. Smith debuted that weekend, keeping a clean sheet in a 4\u20130 victory against East Fife in Duffy's first game in charge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285115-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dumbarton F.C. season, Story of the season, November\nDumbarton failed to build on that result however, falling to the foot of the Scottish League One table after a 1\u20130 defeat to Montrose on 3 November. Three days later striker Andrew Little announced his retirement from football. A 2\u20131 home victory against Stenhousemuir followed, before Sons were able to name just two outfield subs in a 3\u20130 defeat to Forfar Athletic. The following week another 3\u20130 defeat followed, this time against Airdrieonians in the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285115-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dumbarton F.C. season, Story of the season, December\nThe inconsistent form continued into December, as Sons opened the month with a 4\u20131 victory against Brechin City, thanks to a brace from Calum Gallagher and goals from Ross Forbes and Dom Thomas. A week later an injury time Brad Spencer goal rescued a point at home to Airdrieonians, before Sons lost 4\u20132 to Raith Rovers \u2013 conceding twice in the final two minutes. Their final home game of 2018 ended in a 1\u20130 defeat to Stranraer, before an injury time Ross Forbes free-kick earned a point against Stenhousemuir in their final game of 2018. The year ended with kit coordinator Colm McKinlay, who had been with the club since Stephen Aitken's appointment in 2015, resigning from the position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285115-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dumbarton F.C. season, Story of the season, January\n2019 opened with Scott Allardice returning to parent club Dundee United. A day later Dumbarton suffered their second consecutive home defeat, losing 3\u20132 to Forfar Athletic with Bobby Barr scoring twice. Ben Armour became the club's first signing of the window, joining on a development loan from Greenock Morton, whilst Dom Thomas returned to Kilmarnock at the end of his loan spell. Armour made his debut the next day, starting in a 1\u20130 defeat to ninth placed Brechin City, where Sons conceded in injury time and played half-an-hour with ten men following the dismissal of Michael Paton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285115-0009-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dumbarton F.C. season, Story of the season, January\nThe following day club captain Andy Dowie left by mutual consent to focus on a career outside football. Dowie was followed by summer arrivals Brad Spencer and Jamie McGowan who were both released on 16 January. David Ferguson became the club's second signing of the window, joining on loan from Ayr United and his arrival was quickly followed by that of Henk van Schaik who joined on a temporary transfer from Livingston. Both players made their debut in a 1\u20131 draw with Montrose, with trialist striker Boris Melingui scoring for the Sons. Melingui signed a contract until the end of the season on 30 January and his arrival was followed by that of goalkeeper Conor Brennan who also joined following his release by Brechin City. On deadline day Dom Thomas returned to the club on loan from Kilmarnock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 861]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285115-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dumbarton F.C. season, Story of the season, February\nThomas marked his return with a goal and an assist in a 2\u20132 draw with Airdrieonians. He scored again a fortnight later, with Ross Forbes and Ross Perry also on the scoresheet as Dumbarton recorded their first away victory since the opening day against Stranraer in Ross Forbes' first game as club captain. Meanwhile, Robert Brooks was appointed the club's new kit coordinator, replacing Colm McKinlay who had resigned in December. Sons made it two away wins in a row, with Thomas getting his first senior hat-trick in a 4\u20133 success against East Fife. The month ended with a 2\u20132 draw against Raith Rovers, with Ross Forbes and Stuart Carswell on the scoresheet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285115-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dumbarton F.C. season, Story of the season, March\nThe positive form continued into March, as Sons opened the month with a 2\u20130 victory against league leaders Arbroath. Defender Brian McLean became Sons' 23rd signing of the season on 6 March, joining on a deal until the end of the season having left Brunei based DPMM FC. Dom Thomas and Jim Duffy were then announced as the League One Player of the Month for February. McLean made his debut the following weekend in a 1\u20133 victory against Montrose as Dumbarton went seven league games unbeaten for the first time since early 2014. After a game against Airdrieonians fell to the weather, Sons unbeaten run ended on 23 March with a 4\u20131 defeat to Raith Rovers. The following week Sons suffered another loss, this time against Stenhousemuir.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285115-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dumbarton F.C. season, Story of the season, April\nApril opened with Dumbarton drawing their re-arranged League One match with Airdrieonians 3-3 thanks to goals from Dom Thomas, Calum Gallagher and Ross Forbes. Sons then recorded their first victory in three games with a 2\u20131 triumph against Brechin City thanks to an own-goal from former Dumbarton player Dougie Hill and a Calum Gallagher header. A scoreless draw with Forfar Athletic followed, leaving Sons four points clear of the bottom two positions with three games remaining. Safety was secured a week later with a 3\u20130 victory against East Fife \u2013 Sons' fourth success of the season against the Fifers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285115-0012-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dumbarton F.C. season, Story of the season, April\nThe following week forward Dom Thomas was nominated for PFA Scotland League One Players' Player of the Year after scoring 14 times in 24 games for the club. April ended with a 2\u20131 victory against Stranraer, with Ross Forbes and Calum Gallagher both scoring their 13th goals of the season. After the match Stuart Carswell was named as the club's Player of the Year, with Dom Thomas picking up the Young Player of the Year award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285115-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dumbarton F.C. season, Story of the season, May\nMay began with Calum Gallagher and Jim Duffy picking up the League One Player and Manager of the Month awards for April, Sons' second awards double of the season. The season ended with a 1\u20131 draw with Champions Arbroath, a result that left the Sons sixth in the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285115-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dumbarton F.C. season, Player statistics, Captains\nLast updated: As of match played 4 May 2019Source: 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, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285116-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dundee F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Dundee's fifth consecutive season in the top flight of Scottish football since their promotion at the end of the 2013\u201314 season. Dundee also competed in the League Cup and the Scottish Cup. On 4 May, Dundee were automatically relegated to the Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285116-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dundee F.C. season, Season Summary\nDundee player Paul McGowan admitted in court to spitting on a bouncer after leaving a nightclub after the previous seasons awards. Dens manager Neil McCann admitted there was \"No positives\" to take from the defeat in their second League Cup group match to Dunfermline Athletic in which they lost 1\u20130. Dundee were knocked out of the Second Round of the League Cup by Ayr United with manager Neil McCann saying the \"3-0 scoreline probably flattered us.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285116-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dundee F.C. season, Season Summary\nNeil McCann said it was a \"sore one to take\" after Dundee's loss against Hibernian, their sixth straight league loss leaving them pointless at the bottom of the league. On 16 October, McCann was sacked from his role, taking assistant manager Graham Gartland with him and leaving the club bottom of league with 7 defeats in 8 league matches. On 17 October, the club announced Jim McIntyre as their new manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285116-0001-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dundee F.C. season, Season Summary\nJim would have a poor start to his stint as Dundee manager, where the team lost 4 games in a row, conceding 13 goals and scoring none in that space. Starting with a home draw against relegation rivals St Mirren, Dundee would go on an unbeaten streak, coming back from 2 goals down to draw at Easter Road and earning a decisive 4\u20130 victory over Hamilton Accies. However, they failed to win another match until after the winter break at Hearts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285116-0001-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dundee F.C. season, Season Summary\nDundee also crashed out of the Scottish Cup with a 3\u20130 defeat in a replay away to Queen of the South. Dundee ended the pre-split fixtures by losing 7 matches, the joint worst run throughout the League season. This losing run continued after the split, and the club were relegated on 4 May in a 1\u20130 loss to Hamilton Academical with ex-Dundee United player Tony Andreu scoring the winner in the 83rd minute after a penalty was conceded by Ryan McGowan. This loss marked their tenth in a row, the worst run of defeats in the Premiership in 15 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285116-0001-0004", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dundee F.C. season, Season Summary\nOn 12 May, Jim McIntyre and assistant manager Jimmy Boyle were sacked by the club. Ex-player and reserve team coach James McPake was named as interim manager for the final game against St Mirren. Darren O'Dea would also play his final professional game against St Mirren, but would be sent off just 22 minutes into the game, in what would finish as a 2\u20133 defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285117-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dundee United F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Dundee United's 110th season, having been founded as Dundee Hibernian in 1909. It was their third season in the Scottish Championship, having been relegated from the Scottish Premiership at the end of the 2015\u201316 season. United also competed in the Challenge Cup, League Cup and Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285117-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dundee United F.C. season, Summary, Management\nUnited began the season under the management of Csaba L\u00e1szl\u00f3, who had signed an 18\u2013month contract the previous season. On 30 September 2018, following a 5\u20131 home defeat to promotion rivals Ross County, L\u00e1szl\u00f3 left his position as manager by way of \u201cmutual agreement\". On 8 October, former Hearts manager Robbie Neilson was appointed as United\u2019s new head coach. His first match in charge was a 2\u20131 victory away to Partick Thistle and Neilson stated that he felt he could replicate his success at Hearts and lead Dundee United back to the Scottish Premiership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285117-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dundee United F.C. season, Results and fixtures, Scottish Cup\nAs a top four finisher in the SPFL Championship for the 2017-18 season, Dundee United entered the 2018-19 Scottish Cup in the fourth round, played over the weekend of 19 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285118-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dunfermline Athletic F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Dunfermline Athletic's third season in the Scottish Championship, having finished 4th in the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285118-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dunfermline Athletic F.C. season, Squad statistics, Captains\nLast updated: 4 May 2019Source: 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, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285118-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dunfermline Athletic F.C. season, Squad statistics, Appearances and goals\nDuring the 2018\u201319 season, Dunfermline used twenty-eight different players in competitive matches. The table below shows the number of appearances and goals scored by each player. Defender and captain Lee Ashcroft made the most appearances, playing forty-four out of a possible 45 games. Myles Hippolyte and Louis Longridge scored the most goals, with six in all competitions. Loanee Bruce Anderson finished as the top-scorer for league matches, with 5 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 81], "content_span": [82, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285118-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dunfermline Athletic F.C. season, Squad statistics, Goalscorers\nDuring the 2018\u201319 season, sixteen Dunfermline players scored 51 goals in all competitions, with 2 goals having been an own goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285119-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Duquesne Dukes men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Duquesne Dukes men's basketball team represented Duquesne University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Dukes, led by second-year head coach Keith Dambrot, played their home games at the A. J. Palumbo Center in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania as members of the Atlantic 10 Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285119-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Duquesne Dukes men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Dukes finished the 2017\u201318 season 16\u201316, 7\u201311 in A-10 play to finish in a three-way tie for 10th place. As the No. 10 seed in the A-10 Tournament, they lost Richmond in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285120-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Duquesne Dukes women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Duquesne Dukes women's basketball team will represent Duquesne University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Dukes were led by sixth year head coach Dan Burt. The Dukes were members of the Atlantic 10 Conference and play their home games at the Palumbo Center. They finished the season 19\u201313, 11\u20135 in A-10 play to finish in third place. They advance to the semifinals of the A-10 Women's Tournament where they lost to Fordham. Despite having 19 wins, they were not invited to a postseason tournament for the first time since 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285120-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Duquesne Dukes women's basketball team, 2018\u201319 media, Duquesne Dukes Sports Network\nAlex Panormios and Tad Maurey provide the call for home games on A-10 Digital Network. Select games will be televised.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 92], "content_span": [93, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285121-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dutch Basketball League\nThe 2018\u201319 Dutch Basketball League (DBL) was the 59th season of the Dutch Basketball League, the highest professional basketball league in the Netherlands. The regular season started on 6 October 2018 and ended 30 April 2019. The best eight teams qualify for the playoffs which start on 2 May 2019. Donar was the defending champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285121-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dutch Basketball League\nThe season saw Landstede Zwolle win its first domestic championship, after defeating defending champions Donar in the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285121-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dutch Basketball League, Format\nDue to the increase of teams from nine to ten, the format for the DBL season was changed. The eight highest-placed teams during the regular season qualify for the play-offs, while the two last-placed teams are eliminated. In the quarter-finals, a best-of-three series is played. In the semi-finals, a best-of-five series is played. The finals are decided through a best-of-seven series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285121-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dutch Basketball League, Teams\nOn 3 May 2018, the DBL officially announced the Dutch Windmills would make their debut in the upcoming season. Forward Lease Rotterdam changed its name to Feyenoord Basketball, as the team became a part of the multi-sports club of association football club Feyenoord.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285121-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dutch Basketball League, Teams\nDespite reaching the semi-finals of the NBB Cup and being in the fifth place in the DBL, Windmills struggled with financial problems throughout the season. In December 2018, Windmills was refused entrance to its home arena due to its payment arrears. On 10 April 2019, it was announced that Windmills would withdraw from the DBL. Its results in the second half of the competition were scrapped by the DBL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285121-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dutch Basketball League, Players, Foreign players\nIn 2017, league policy was changed and the number of allowed foreign players per team was increased from 4 to 5. Additional was the restriction that a team is not allowed to have five foreign players on the court at the same time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285121-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dutch Basketball League, Players, Notable transactions\nTransactions including players who have won a DBL award, were named to an All-DBL Team or were DBL All-Stars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285121-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dutch Basketball League, Final standings\nThe final standings are based upon performance in the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285122-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dynamo Dresden season\nThe 2018\u201319 Dynamo Dresden season was the 69th season in the football club's history and third consecutive season in the second division of German football, the 2. Bundesliga and 8th overall. In addition to the domestic league, Dynamo Dresden also competed in this season's edition of the domestic cup, the DFB-Pokal. The season covered a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285122-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Dynamo Dresden season, Season summary\nOn 22 August 2018, Dynamo parted company with manager Uwe Neuhaus. He was replaced by Cristian Fi\u00e9l on an interim basis, before Maik Walpurgis was appointed as his permanent replacement on 11 September 2018. Malpurgis was sacked in February 2019, with Cristian Fi\u00e9l appointed as his replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285123-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EBU Player of the Year Championship\nThe 2018\u201319 EBU Player of the Year Championship was the competition's fifth season. Points were accumulated over the EBU's ten most prestigious events from 1 October 2018 to 30 September 2019. Graham Osborne won his first title, becoming the fifth player to win the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285123-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EBU Player of the Year Championship, Summary of Results\nThis list displays the top ten players (including ties); 129 players received points. Winners of each event are highlighted in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285124-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ECHL season\nThe 2018\u201319 ECHL season was the 31st season of the ECHL. The regular season was scheduled to run from October 12, 2018, to April 7, 2019, with the Kelly Cup playoffs to follow. Twenty-seven teams in 20 states and two Canadian provinces each play a 72-game schedule. The Kelly Cup was won by the Newfoundland Growlers in their inaugural season over the Toledo Walleye.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285124-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ECHL season, League business, League changes\nAfter serving as league commissioner for 16 seasons, Brian McKenna, stepped down from the position following the 2017\u201318 season. He was replaced by Ryan Crelin, who had most recently been serving as the ECHL's chief operating officer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285124-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ECHL season, League business, Conference realignment\nAs the new ECHL teams in Portland, Maine, and St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, were added to the North Division of the Eastern Conference, the Wheeling Nailers were moved to the Western Conference and Central Division. With the Colorado Eagles joining the American Hockey League, the Kansas City Mavericks moved back to the Mountain Division from the Central.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 60], "content_span": [61, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285124-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ECHL season, League business, Annual Board of Governors meeting\nThe annual ECHL Board of Governors meeting was held at the New York-New York Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada, from June 18 to 22, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 71], "content_span": [72, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285124-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ECHL season, League business, All-star game\nThe 2019 CCM/ECHL All-Star Classic was held on January 21, 2019, at the Huntington Center in Toledo, Ohio. The All-Star Classic retained the four team, 3-on-3 player tournament style used the previous season, but featured two teams made from the Toledo Walleye (named Team Hooks and Team Fins) and one team for each conference's All-Star players. In the round-robin, the Western Conference and Team Fins each went 2\u20131, while the Eastern Conference and Team Hooks went 1\u20132. In the semifinal round, the Eastern Conference defeated the Western Conference 4\u20133 and Team Fins defeated the Team Hooks 3\u20131. The Eastern Conference All-Star team then defeated Team Fins 2\u20131 following a shootout. The Brampton Beast's David Pacan was named the tournament's Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 51], "content_span": [52, 819]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285124-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ECHL season, League business, All-star game\nThe skills competition took place in between rounds of the tournament. The Toledo Walleye's Bryan Moore won the fastest skater event, the Walleye's A.J. Jenks won the hardest shot event, and the Brampton Beast's David Pacan won the accuracy shooting event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 51], "content_span": [52, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285124-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ECHL season, Standings\nx\u00a0 - clinched playoff spot, \u00a0y\u00a0 - clinched regular season division title, \u00a0z\u00a0 - Brabham Cup (regular season) champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285124-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ECHL season, Postseason, Playoffs format\nAt the end of the regular season, the top four teams in each division qualifies for the 2019 Kelly Cup playoffs and be seeded one through four based on highest point total earned in the season. Then the first two rounds of the playoffs are held within the division with the first seed facing the fourth seed and the second seed facing the third. The division champions then play each other in a conference championship. The Kelly Cup finals pits the Eastern Conference champion against the Western Conference champion. All four rounds are a best-of-seven format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 48], "content_span": [49, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285125-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL Championship\nThe 2018\u201319 EFL Championship (referred to as the Sky Bet Championship for sponsorship reasons) was the third season of the EFL Championship under its current name, and the twenty-seventh season under its current league structure. Norwich City were crowned champions on the final day, following a 2\u20131 win over Aston Villa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285125-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL Championship, Team changes\nThe following teams had changed division after the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285126-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 EFL Cup was the 59th season of the EFL Cup. Also known as the Carabao Cup for sponsorship reasons, the competition was open to all 92 clubs participating in the Premier League and the English Football League. The first round was played on 14 August 2018, ten days after the start of the Football League season. Manchester City successfully defended their title, their first step in becoming the first English team to complete a domestic treble for the football season, as they later won the 2018\u201319 Premier League and the 2018\u201319 FA Cup. The final was held at Wembley Stadium in London on 24 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285126-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL Cup, Format\nIn June 2018, it was announced that there would be a number of changes to the competition after a vote by all of the English Football League clubs at their annual EFL Summer Conference in Portugal. Extra time would be scrapped for all rounds except for the final with the tie progressing straight to a penalty shoot-out in the event of a draw after 90 minutes. This was introduced in order to reduce \"additional fatigue issues\". The ABBA penalty system trial would also be scrapped and the format for a penalty shoot-out would return to the ABAB format. Seeding was removed for the first two rounds however the first two rounds remained organised on a regional basis. Video assistant referees (VAR) were also authorised for use at matches played at Premier League club grounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 801]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285126-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL Cup, Access\nAll 92 clubs in the Premier League and English Football League entered the season's EFL Cup. Access was distributed across leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285126-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL Cup, Access\nIn the first round, the draw was regionalised into northern and southern clubs with 22 Championship clubs and all League One and League Two clubs entering in this round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285126-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL Cup, Access\nThe following round, the two remaining Championship clubs Swansea City and Stoke City (who finished 18th and 19th respectively in the 2017\u201318 Premier League season), and the Premier League clubs not involved in either the Champions League or Europa League entered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285126-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL Cup, Access\nArsenal, Burnley, Chelsea, Liverpool, Manchester City, Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur all received byes to the third round owing to their participation in European competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285126-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL Cup, Access\nThe first round draw was held on 15 June 2018 in Vietnam. The second round draw was held on 16 August 2018 in England, drawn by Mick McCarthy and Chris Waddle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285126-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL Cup, First round\nA total of 70 clubs played in the first round: 24 from League Two (tier 4), 24 from League One (tier 3), and 22 from the Championship (tier 2). The draw for this round was split on a geographical basis into 'northern' and 'southern' sections. Teams were drawn against a team from the same section. The draw was made on 15 June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285126-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL Cup, Second round\nA total of 50 clubs played in the second round with 13 teams from the Premier League joining in this round (teams without international liabilities), also the 2 remaining Championship teams entered. The draw for this round was split on a geographical basis into 'northern' and 'southern' sections. Teams were drawn against a team from the same section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285126-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL Cup, Third round\nA total of 32 teams played in this round. The seven remaining Premier League clubs involved in European competition joined the 25 match-winners from the second round. The draw was held on 30 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285126-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL Cup, Fourth round\nThe fourth round draw took place on 29 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285126-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe quarter-final draw took place on 31 October and was made by Jamie Redknapp and Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285126-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL Cup, Semi-finals\nThe semi-final draw took place on 19 December and was made by Peter Crouch and Piers Morgan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285126-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL Cup, Broadcasting\nThese matches were televised live in the UK and Ireland by Sky Sports:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285127-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL League One\nThe 2018\u201319 EFL League One (referred to as the Sky Bet League One for sponsorship reasons) was the 15th season of the Football League One under its current title and the 26th season under its current league division format. Fixtures were released on 21 June 2018 and the opening round of matches was played on 4 August 2018. The league season ended on 4 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285127-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL League One\nThe summer transfer window closed five days after the start of the season, on 9 August 2018, following a vote by all 72 clubs in the Football League. However, clubs were able to make loan signings until 31 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285127-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL League One, Team changes\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2017\u201318 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285128-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL League Two\nThe 2018\u201319 EFL League Two (referred to as the Sky Bet League Two for sponsorship reasons) was the 15th season of Football League Two under its current title and the 26th season under its current league division format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285129-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL Trophy\nThe 2018\u201319 EFL Trophy, known as the Checkatrade Trophy for sponsorship reasons, was the 36th season in the history of the competition, a knock-out tournament for English football clubs in League One and League Two of the English football system, and also including 16 Premier League and Championship \"Academy teams\" with Category One status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285129-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL Trophy\nLincoln City were the defending champions, but were eliminated in the second round by Accrington Stanley. Portsmouth won the competition for the first time, defeating Sunderland in front of an EFL Trophy record attendance in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285129-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL Trophy, Participating clubs\nOf the sixteen invited Category One academies, fourteen competed in the 2017\u201318 competition; only Arsenal and Wolverhampton Wanderers did not participate. Arsenal rejected an invitation to compete in each of the previous two tournaments, while Wolves were not invited to compete in 2017\u201318 competition after fielding a side in the 2016\u201317 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285129-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL Trophy, Participating clubs\nReading and Sunderland's academy sides missed out after participation in the previous two years; Sunderland's first team competed for the first time since the 1987\u201388 competition, however, following their relegation to League One. Barnsley and Burton Albion both returned to the competition after relegation; they last competed in the 2015\u201316 season, when Barnsley won the trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285129-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL Trophy, Participating clubs\nMacclesfield Town competed for the first time since the 2011\u201312 edition, following their promotion from the National League. Fellow promoted side Tranmere Rovers returned after a four year hiatus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285129-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL Trophy, Participating clubs\nLiverpool and Manchester United both rejected an invitation to compete for the third successive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285129-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL Trophy, Group stage and Knockout rounds, Round 2\nThe round 2 draw took place on 16 November with ties due to be played from the week beginning 3 December. Teams were drawn in a regionalised format, with the proviso that no teams from the same Group Stage group can meet. To ensure this, group winners from groups A to D were drawn against group runners-up from groups E to H in the same section, and vice versa. Teams listed 1st are at home and won their group in Round 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 60], "content_span": [61, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285129-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL Trophy, Group stage and Knockout rounds, Round 2\nIf scores are level after 90 minutes in Rounds 2, 3, and 4, the game will be determined by the taking of penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 60], "content_span": [61, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285129-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL Trophy, Group stage and Knockout rounds, Round 3\nThe draw for round 3 was held on Saturday, 8 December. Northern and Southern section teams were still segregated this round and will be brought together in the next round (the quarter-finals). No seeding is used from this point: all teams within their denoted section are in a blind draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 60], "content_span": [61, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285129-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL Trophy, Group stage and Knockout rounds, Round 4 / Quarter-finals\nQuarter-final pairings are determined by means of an unseeded draw. There are no further segregated sections of the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 77], "content_span": [78, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285129-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL Trophy, Group stage and Knockout rounds, Semi-finals\nThe four winners from the quarter-finals will contest the semi-finals, with the pairings determined by an unseeded draw. Matches will be played as one leg, and will advance directly to penalties if the teams are tied after 90 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285129-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EFL Trophy, Group stage and Knockout rounds, Final\nThe two winners from the semi-finals, Portsmouth and Sunderland, contested the final at Wembley Stadium on 31 March 2019. Portsmouth won 5\u20134 on penalties following a 2\u20132 draw after extra time to win their first EFL trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 58], "content_span": [59, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285130-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Challenge Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 EHF Challenge Cup was the 22nd edition of the European Handball Federation's third-tier competition for men's handball clubs, running from 6 October 2018 to 19 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285130-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Challenge Cup, Overview, Round and draw dates\nAll draws will be held at the European Handball Federation headquarters in Vienna, Austria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285130-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Challenge Cup, Round 2\nTeams listed first played the first leg at home. Some teams agreed to play both matches in the same venue. The first legs were played on 6\u20137 October and the second legs were played on 13\u201314 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285130-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Challenge Cup, Round 3\nTeams listed first played the first leg at home. Some teams agreed to play both matches in the same venue. The first legs were played on 17\u201318 November and the second legs were played on 24\u201325 November 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285130-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Challenge Cup, Last 16\nThe draw seeding pots for the Last 16 Knockout round were composed as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285130-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Challenge Cup, Last 16\nThe draw for the last 16 round was held on 27 November 2018. The first leg was scheduled for 9\u201310 February, while the second leg followed on 16\u201317 February 2019.Some teams agreed to play both matches in the same venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285130-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Challenge Cup, Quarterfinals\nThe draw event was held at the EHF Office in Vienna on Tuesday 19 February 2019. The draw determined the quarter-final and also the semi-final pairings. Teams listed first will play the first leg at home. For the quarter-finals, there was no seeding as all eight teams were drawn from the same pot one after another. There was also no country protection applied in the draw. The semi-final draw followed using the quarter-final pairings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285130-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Challenge Cup, Quarterfinals\nThe first quarter-final leg is scheduled for 23\u201324 March, while the second leg will follow on 30\u201331 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285130-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Challenge Cup, Semifinals\nThe first semi-final legs was scheduled for 20\u201321 April 2019, while the second legs followed on 27\u201328 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285130-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Challenge Cup, Final\nThe first leg was played on 11\u201312 May and the second was played on 18\u201319 May 2019. The final home rights draw was held on 30 April 2019 in Vienna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285131-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Champions League\nThe 2018\u201319 EHF Champions League was the 59th edition of Europe's premier club handball tournament and the 26th edition under the current EHF Champions League format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285131-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Champions League\nRK Vardar defeated Telekom Veszpr\u00e9m 27\u201324 in the final to win their second title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285131-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Champions League, Competition format\nTwenty-eight teams, divided into four groups, participated in the competition. Groups A and B were played with eight teams each, in a round robin, home and away format. The top team in each group qualified directly for the quarter-finals, while the bottom two in each group dropped out of the competition. The remaining 10 teams qualified for the first knockout phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285131-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Champions League, Competition format\nIn Groups C and D, six teams played in each group in a round robin format, with both home and away games. The top two teams in each group then met in an elimination play-off, with the two winners proceeding to the first knockout phase. The remaining teams were eliminated from the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285131-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Champions League, Competition format\n12 teams played home and away in the first knockout phase, with the 10 teams qualified from Groups A and B and the two teams qualified from Groups C and D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285131-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Champions League, Competition format\nThe six winners of the matches in the first knockout phase were joined by the winners of Groups A and B to play home and away for the right to contest the VELUX EHF FINAL4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285131-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Champions League, Competition format\nThe culmination of the season, the VELUX EHF FINAL4, continued in its existing format, with the four top teams from the competition competing for the title over one weekend in LANXESS arena, Cologne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285131-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Champions League, Group stage\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 29 June 2018 at 12:30 at the Erste Campus in Vienna, Austria. The 28 teams were drawn into four groups, two containing eight teams (Groups A and B) and two containing six teams (Groups C and D). The only restriction was that teams from the same national association could not face each other in the same group. The only exception was HBC Nantes, who play against one of the two French rivals in the group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285131-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Champions League, Group stage\nIn each group, teams will play against each other in a double round-robin format, with home and away matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285131-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Champions League, Group stage\nAfter completion of the group stage matches, the teams advancing to the knockout stage will be determined in the following manner:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285131-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Champions League, Group stage\nIf the ranking of one of these teams is determined, the above criteria are consecutively followed until the ranking of all teams is determined. If no ranking can be determined, a decision shall be obtained by EHF through drawing of lots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285131-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Champions League, Group stage\nDuring the group stage, only criteria 4\u20135 apply to determine the provisional ranking of teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285131-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Champions League, Group stage, Playoffs\nThe top two teams from Groups C and D contested a playoff to determine the two sides advancing to the knockout phase. The winners of each group will face the runners-up of the other group in a two-legged tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285131-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Champions League, Knockout stage\nThe first-placed team from the preliminary groups A and B advanced to the quarterfinals, while the 2\u20136th placed teams advanced to the round of 16 alongside the playoff winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285132-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Champions League group stage\nThe 2018\u201319 EHF Champions League group stage began on 12 September 2018 and concluded on 3 March 2019. A total of 28 teams competed for 14 places in the knockout stage of the 2018\u201319 EHF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285132-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Champions League group stage, Draw\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 29 June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 46], "content_span": [47, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285132-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Champions League group stage, Format\nIn each group, teams played against each other in a double round-robin format, with home and away matches. After completion of the group stage matches, the teams advancing to the knockout stage were determined in the following manner:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285132-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Champions League group stage, Tiebreakers\nIn the group stage, teams were ranked according to points (2 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss). After completion of the group stage, if two or more teams had the same number of points, the ranking was determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285132-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Champions League group stage, Tiebreakers\nIf the ranking of one of these teams is determined, the above criteria are consecutively followed until the ranking of all teams is determined. If no ranking can be determined, a decision shall be obtained by EHF through drawing of lots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285132-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Champions League group stage, Groups\nThe matchdays were 12\u201316 September, 19\u201323 September, 26\u201330 September, 3\u20137 October, 10\u201314 October, 1\u20134 November, 7\u201311 November, 14\u201318 November, 21\u201325 November, 28 November\u20132 December 2018. For Groups A and B, additional matchdays included, 6\u201310 February, 13\u201317 February, 20\u201324 February and 27 February\u20133 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285132-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Champions League group stage, Playoffs\nThe top two teams from Groups C and D contested a playoff to determine the two sides advancing to the knockout phase. The winners of each group will face the runners-up of the other group in a two-legged tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285133-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Champions League knockout stage\nThis article describes the knockout stage of the 2018\u201319 EHF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285133-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Champions League knockout stage, Qualified teams\nThe top six placed teams from each of the two groups advanced to the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285133-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Champions League knockout stage, Format\n12 teams played home and away in the first knock-out phase, with the 10 teams qualified from groups A and B and the two teams qualified from groups C and D. After that, the six winners of these matches in the first knock-out phase joined with the winners of groups A and B to play home and away for the right to play in the final four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285133-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Champions League knockout stage, Final four\nThe final four was held at the Lanxess Arena in Cologne, Germany on 1 and 2 June 2019. The draw took place on 7 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285134-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 EHF Cup was the 38th edition of the EHF Cup, the second most important European handball club competition organised by the European Handball Federation (EHF), and the sixth edition since the merger with the EHF Cup Winners' Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285134-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Cup, Round and draw dates\nThe schedule of the competition is as follows (all draws will be held at the EHF headquarters in Vienna, Austria).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 37], "content_span": [38, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285134-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Cup, Qualification stage\nThe qualification stage consists of three rounds, which are played as two-legged ties using a home-and-away system. In the draws for each round, teams are allocated into two pots, with teams from Pot 1 facing teams from Pot 2. The winners of each pairing (highlighted in bold) qualified for the following round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285134-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Cup, Qualification stage\nFor each round, teams listed first will play the first leg at home. In some cases, teams agree to play both matches at the same venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285134-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Cup, Qualification stage, Round 1\nA total of 22 teams entered the draw for the first qualification round, which was held on Tuesday, 17 July 2018. The draw seeding pots were composed as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 45], "content_span": [46, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285134-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Cup, Qualification stage, Round 1\nThe first legs were played on 1\u20132 and the second legs were played on 8\u20139 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 45], "content_span": [46, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285134-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Cup, Qualification stage, Round 2\nThe first legs were played on 6\u20137 October and the second legs were played on 13\u201314 October 2018. Some teams agreed to play both matches in the same venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 45], "content_span": [46, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285134-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Cup, Qualification stage, Round 3\nA total of 32 teams entered the draw for the third qualification round, which was held on Tuesday, 16 October 2018. The draw seeding pots were composed as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 45], "content_span": [46, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285134-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Cup, Qualification stage, Round 3\nThe first legs were played on 17\u201318 November and the second legs were played on 24\u201325 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 45], "content_span": [46, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285134-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Cup, Group stage\nThe draw of the EHF Cup group stage took place on Thursday, 29 November 2018. The 16 teams allocated into four pots were drawn into four groups of four teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285134-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Cup, Group stage\nIn each group, teams play against each other home-and-away in a round-robin format. The matchdays are 9\u201310 February, 16\u201317 February, 23\u201324 February, 2\u20133 March, 23\u201324 March and 30\u201331 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285134-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Cup, Group stage\nIn the group stage, teams are ranked according to points (2 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss). After completion of the group stage, if two or more teams have scored the same number of points, the ranking will be determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285134-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Cup, Group stage\nIf the ranking of one of these teams is determined, the above criteria are consecutively followed until the ranking of all teams is determined. If no ranking can be determined, a decision shall be obtained by EHF through drawing of lots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285134-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Cup, Group stage\nDuring the group stage, only criteria 4\u20135 apply to determine the provisional ranking of teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285134-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Cup, Group stage, Ranking of the second-placed teams\nThe top three second-placed teams will qualify to the quarter-finals. The ranking of the second-placed teams will be determined on the basis of the team's results in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 64], "content_span": [65, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285134-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Cup, Knockout stage, Quarter-finals\nSince THW Kiel won their group, they qualified directly for the EHF Cup Finals and will not have to play the quarter-finals. In this case, the quarter-finals will consist of only three two-legged fixtures. The draw for the quarter-final pairings was held on Tuesday, 2 April, at 11:00 CET in the EHF headquarters in Vienna. The three group winners were placed in Pot 1, and the three best second-ranked teams were placed in Pot 2. The group winners started the quarter-finals with an away match on 20 and 21 April, and played the second leg at home on 27 and 28 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 47], "content_span": [48, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285134-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Cup, Knockout stage, Final four\nThe seventh edition of the EHF Cup Finals in 2019 was hosted by THW Kiel after the EHF Executive Committee decided to award the hosting rights to the German club at its meeting on 6 December 2018. The tournament took place at Sparkassen-Arena in Kiel, on 17 and 18 May 2019. The draw was held on 30 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285134-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Cup, Knockout stage, Final four\nAs group winners, THW Kiel avoided playing the quarter-finals and qualified directly for the EHF Cup Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285135-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Cup group stage\nThis article describes the group stage of the 2018\u201319 EHF Cup, a men's handball competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285135-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Cup group stage, Draw\nThe draw of the EHF Cup group stage took place on Thursday, 29 November 2018. The 16 teams allocated into four pots were drawn into four groups of four teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 33], "content_span": [34, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285135-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Cup group stage, Format\nIn each group, teams will play against each other in a double round-robin format, with home and away matches. After completion of the group stage matches, the top teams and the best three second-placed teams advance to the Quarter-finals. Teams are not able to face opponents from the same country in the group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285135-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Cup group stage, Tiebreakers\nIn the group stage, teams will be ranked according to points (2 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss). After completion of the group stage, if two or more teams had scored the same number of points, the ranking will be determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285135-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Cup group stage, Tiebreakers\nIf the ranking of one of these teams is determined, the above criteria are consecutively followed until the ranking of all teams is determined. If no ranking can be determined, a decision shall be obtained by EHF through drawing of lots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285135-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EHF Cup group stage, Groups\nThe matchdays will be 9\u201310 February, 16\u201317 February, 23\u201324 February, 2\u20133 March, 23\u201324 March and 30\u201331 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285136-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EIHL season\nThe 2018\u201319 EIHL season was the 16th season of the Elite Ice Hockey League. The regular season commenced on 8 September 2018 and ended on 31 March 2019, with the playoffs following in April 2019. The two-time reigning league champions were the Cardiff Devils, who won both the regular season and playoff titles in 2017\u201318.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285136-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EIHL season\nThe Devils were unable to make it three regular season titles in succession, after a season-long battle for the top position with the Belfast Giants. The league title came down to the final day of the regular season; the Coventry Blaze's 3\u20131 victory over the Devils at the Coventry Skydome handed the league title to the non-playing Giants, on a regulation wins (by 39 to 38) tie-break. It was the Giants' fourth regular season title, and first since 2013\u201314. The playoff final resulted in a matchup between the Devils and the Giants in Nottingham; the Devils achieved their second consecutive playoff title with a 2\u20131 victory on Gleason Fournier's game-winning goal, with 7:33 remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285136-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EIHL season, Teams\nAfter having twelve teams for the 2017\u201318 season, the league reduced to eleven for the 2018\u201319 season. This was due to the Edinburgh Capitals \u2013 who had finished bottom of the league with just five wins \u2013 losing the rights to use the Murrayfield Ice Rink to a consortium that was led by David Hand, the brother of former Capital Tony Hand. Hand's consortium revived the Murrayfield Racers name, with a similarly-named franchise having been active between 1952 and 1996, and attempted to join the league in place of the Edinburgh Capitals, but this request was denied. As a result, the Murrayfield Racers joined the Scottish National League. The Hull Pirates, from the National Ice Hockey League, also considered an application to the Elite League, but ultimately did not take up this option.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 817]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285136-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EIHL season, Teams\nThe league featured three conferences, just as it did in 2017\u201318. The Gardiner Conference remained fully Scottish but became a three-team division, with the demise of the Edinburgh Capitals; the Dundee Stars, the Fife Flyers and the renamed Glasgow Clan (formerly Braehead) making up the trio. The two other conferences remained unchanged, with four teams in each. These were the Patton Conference, consisting of the Coventry Blaze, the Guildford Flames, the Manchester Storm and the Milton Keynes Lightning; and the Erhardt Conference, consisting of the four \"Arena\" teams: the Belfast Giants, the Cardiff Devils, the Nottingham Panthers and the Sheffield Steelers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285136-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EIHL season, Standings, Overall\nEach team played 60 games, playing each of the other ten teams six times: three times on home ice, and three times away from home. Points were awarded for each game, where two points are awarded for all victories, regardless of whether it was in regulation time or after overtime or shootout. One point was awarded for losing in overtime or shootout, and zero points for losing in regulation time. At the end of the regular season, the team that finished with the most points was crowned the league champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285136-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EIHL season, Standings, Overall\nThe league title came down to the final day of the regular season; the Coventry Blaze's 3\u20131 victory over the Cardiff Devils at the Coventry Skydome handed the league title to the non-playing Belfast Giants, on a regulation wins tie-break. It was the Giants' fourth regular season title, and first since 2013\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285136-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EIHL season, Standings, Erhardt Conference\nOnly intra-conference games counted towards the Erhardt Conference standings. Each team played the other three teams in the Conference six times, for a total of 18 matches. The Belfast Giants won the Conference for the third time, after the Cardiff Devils lost 5\u20134 against the Sheffield Steelers at Sheffield Arena on 16 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 50], "content_span": [51, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285136-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EIHL season, Standings, Gardiner Conference\nOnly intra-conference games count towards the Gardiner Conference standings. Each team plays the other two teams in the Conference six times, for a total of 12 matches. The Glasgow Clan won the Conference for the fifth time, after a 5\u20131 win over the Dundee Stars at Braehead Arena on 12 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 51], "content_span": [52, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285136-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EIHL season, Standings, Patton Conference\nOnly intra-conference games counted towards the Patton Conference standings. Each team played the other three teams in the Conference six times, for a total of 18 matches. The Guildford Flames won the Conference for the first time, after a 1\u20130 win over the Manchester Storm at the Guildford Spectrum on 17 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285136-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EIHL season, Playoffs, Quarter-finals\nThe quarter-final schedule was announced after the conclusion of the final-day regular season matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 45], "content_span": [46, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285136-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EIHL season, Playoffs, Semi-finals\nThe schedule for the Playoff Finals weekend was announced after the conclusion of the quarter-final matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 42], "content_span": [43, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285136-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EIHL season, Regular season statistics, Scoring leaders\nThe following players led the league in points at the conclusion of the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285136-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EIHL season, Regular season statistics, Leading goaltenders\nThe following goaltenders led the league in goals against average at the conclusion of the regular season, while playing at least 1140 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 67], "content_span": [68, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285136-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EIHL season, Playoff statistics, Scoring leaders\nThe following players led the league in points at the conclusion of the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 56], "content_span": [57, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285136-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EIHL season, Playoff statistics, Leading goaltenders\nThe following goaltenders led the league in goals against average at the conclusion of the playoffs, provided they played 60 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 60], "content_span": [61, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285137-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EML season\nThe 2018\u201319 EML season (also known as the Coolbet Hokiliiga for sponsorship reasons) is the 79th season of the Meistriliiga, the top level of ice hockey in Estonia. The season began on 29 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285138-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ENPPI SC season\nThe 2018\u201319 ENPPI season was the 34th season in the football club's history and 15th consecutive and overall season in the top flight of Egyptian football, the Egyptian Premier League, having been promoted from the Egyptian Second Division in 2002. In addition to the domestic league, ENPPI also competed in this season's editions of the domestic cup, the Egypt Cup. The season covered a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285138-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ENPPI SC 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285138-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ENPPI SC 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285139-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ES S\u00e9tif season\nIn the 2018\u201319 season, ES S\u00e9tif competed in Ligue 1 for the 49th season. It was their 23rd consecutive season in the top flight of Algerian football. They also competed in the Champions League, Club Championship and the Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285139-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ES S\u00e9tif season, Squad list\nAs of August 11, 2018. 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, 35], "content_span": [36, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is the club's 99th season in existence. East Bengal discontinued its tie-up with their main sponsors \"Kingfisher\" after 20 long years of partnership. On 5h July 2018, East Bengal announced a partnership with business giants Quess Corp as their main sponsors, leading to the formation of a new entity named \"Quess East Bengal FC Pvt. Ltd.\" (QEBFC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Pre-Season Overview\nEast Bengal FC roped in 4 players from 2017\u201318 I-League champions Minerva Punjab F.C. : goal-keeper Rakshit Dagar, defender Kamalpreet Singh, midfielder Kassim Aidara and forward Bali Gagandeep. East Bengal FC also signed experienced defender Kingshuk Debnath from arch-rivals Mohun Bagan. Veteran custodian Abhra Mondal rejoined East Bengal FC from Bengaluru FC. East Bengal FC also announced the signing of midfielder Sanchayan Samaddar who was part of the Bengal Santosh Trophy squad and promoted youngstar Ginkaholen Haokip from their junior squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Pre-Season Overview\nEast Bengal FC roped in Costa Rica national team centre-back Jhonny Acosta who played all 3 games in the 2018 FIFA World Cup for a rumored fee of Rs. 1.4 Cr. On 18 August, East Bengal FC announced former Real madrid B manager Alejandro Men\u00e9ndez Garc\u00eda as the new coach. On 24 August, East Bengal FC announced the signing of former Granada C.F. centreback Borja G\u00f3mez P\u00e9rez. On 30 August, East Bengal FC signed former Mexico international Enrique Esqueda on a free transfer, however making him the highest paid footballer in I-League with a rumoured of Rs 4.2 Cr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview\nEast Bengal FC started the season with an entire makeover. East Bengal FC parted ways with long time sponsors Kingfisher after 20 years and entered into a new partnership with Quess Corp as their main investors. East Bengal FC is will be taking part in the 2018\u201319 I- League. East Bengal FC roped in Costa Rica national team center back Jhonny Acosta who played all 3 games in the 2018 FIFA World Cup. East Bengal also roped in ex-Granada CF centre-back Borja G\u00f3mez P\u00e9rez to strengthen their defence for their quest for the 2018\u201319 I-League. East Bengal announced ex-Real madrid B manager Alejandro Men\u00e9ndez as the new coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview, August\nEast Bengal FC started off as the 8 times defending champions of the Calcutta Football League, in search of the 9th consecutive league title. The red and gold brigade started off with an abandoned game against Tollygunge Agragami however, won 2-0 comfortably against WB Police FC with Lalrindika Ralte opening the scoring for the season and Kassim Aidara making it 2\u20130. East Bengal FC succumbed to the defensive of Calcutta Customs FC as they failed to score and the match ended a goalless draw. East Bengal FC won the next 5 games to lead to the all-important Kolkata Derby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview, September\nEast Bengal FC made a great comeback against their arch-rivals Mohun Bagan in the first Kolkata Derby of the season, after the Mariners led 2-0 within 30 minutes. East Bengal FC rallied from behind with goals from star debutante Jhonny Acosta and the equalised from Laldanmawia Ralte from a Lalrindika Ralte corner. East Bengal FC however lost the 2 next matches against Peerless FC and Mohammedan SC and eventually lost the title to arch-rivals Mohun Bagan after holding it for 8 long years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview, September\nEast Bengal FC suffered a huge blow when the AIFF put on a Transfer Ban on the Red and Golds which will prevent them from signing any further player until 31 January 2018. The Transfer Ban was imposed after the AIFF disciplinary committee found East Bengal FC guilty of unethically poaching Sukhwinder Singh of Minerva Punjab which the player was still in contract with the team from Punjab. Alejandro Men\u00e9ndez took over the reins of the East Bengal FC manager after the Calcutta Football League ended and planned to play a few friendlies as a pre-season before the 2018\u201319 I-League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview, September\nEast Bengal FC played FC Goa in a pre-season friendly on 22 September at Bambolim, Stadium, Goa and lost via a single goal after a terrific solo effort from Ferran Corominas put the Goan side ahead in the 75th minute. East Bengal put up a great fight against the Indian Super League side after just 3 days of new coach Alejandro Menendez took over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview, October\nEast Bengal FC flew off to Malaysia for 3 weeks to conduct the Pre-season for the upcoming 2018\u201319 I-League. East Bengal FC would stay at the MSN Sports Complex Residential Training Facilities at Kuala Lumpur and play 5 practice matches in the interim. East Bengal FC faced Malaysia Premier League side UiTM F.C. on 7 October in the first Pre-season game in Malaysia. After conceding an early goal, the Red and Gold brigade made a come-back and rallied past 4 goals to win 1\u20134 against the Malaysian side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview, October\nYami Longvah, Enrique Esqueda, Mahmoud Amnah and Jobi Justin were on the score-sheet. East Bengal was to play against another Malaysia Premier League side UKM F.C. on 10 October in the second of the 5 pre-season friendlies however due to bad pitch conditions due to excessive rainfall, the match was abandoned before kick-off. East Bengal played against Malaysia Super League side Terengganu F.C. on 13 October in the next Pre-season friendly game in Malaysia. Ex-East Bengal fans' heartthrob Do Dong Hyun featured in the match against the Red and Golds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0006-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview, October\nEast Bengal FC drew 0\u20130 against the Malaysia Super League side who became runners-up in the 2018 Malaysia Cup.East Bengal played against Malaysia Premier League side PDRM FA in the next pre-season game where they won handsomely by a 6-2 margin, with Jobi Justin netting twice and goals each from Enrique Esqueda, Surabuddin Mollick and Bidyashagar Singh with another one being an own-goal. East Bengal faced UiTM F.C. Reserves in the last pre-season friendly at Malaysia where they won 1-0 courtesy of a goal from Enrique Esqueda. The Red and Gold brigade remain undefeated in the pre-season tour in Malaysia", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview, October\nEast Bengal FC faced NEROCA F.C. in the first game of 2018\u201319 I-League season, away at Imphal. Mexican frontman Enrique Esqueda's brace with one in each half ensured the Red and Golds have a perfect start to the campaign. Academy graduate Manoj Mohammed debuted for the Red and Golds as a Left-back and gained huge praise for his excellent performance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview, November\nEast Bengal FC faced Shillong Lajong F.C. in the second game of the campaign, again away at Shillong which they won 3\u20131. Jobi Justin's brace in the first half along with academy graduate Bidyashagar Singh's goal in the second half ensured East Bengal FC win. Manoj Mohammed again started for the Red and Gold brigade as East Bengal FC defence looked properly organized to throw off any attack from the home side. With 6 points from the first two games, this is East Bengal FC's best start to an I-League campaign since 2010\u201311.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0008-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview, November\nEast Bengal FC faced Chennai City F.C. on 13 November, at Salt Lake Stadium, Kolkata for the first home game of the season which they lost 1\u20132. Sandro Rodr\u00edguez scored the first goal from a free-kick in the dying moments of the first half for Chennai City F.C. to give them a 1\u20130 lead at HT. Enrique Esqueda equalized for the Red and Golds however N\u00e9stor Gordillo scored the winner for the away team in the 85th min from the spot. On 21 November, AIFF lifted the ban imposed on East Bengal FC on signing new players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0008-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview, November\nOn 23 November, East Bengal FC announced the signing of their 6th Foreigner ]Jaime Santos Colado of Spain who previously played in the Segunda Division B for teams like Sporting de Gij\u00f3n B and CD Mirand\u00e9s as a Winger and Attacking midfielder. East Bengal FC faced Aizawl F.C. next on 24 November, away at Aizawl and in a crunch game, the Red and Gold brigade lost 3\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0008-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview, November\nAizawl F.C. took the lead early, but East Bengal FC came back into the game in the second half to lead 1-2 however two late goals from the home side took the game away from East Bengal FC. East Bengal FC was denied a clear goal, when Lalramchullova's free-kick hit the crossbar and bounced back from inside the goal into play, the referee kept the game on, not adjudging it a goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview, December\nEast Bengal FC faced the reigning champions Minerva Punjab F.C. on 4 December, at the Salt Lake Stadium, Kolkata where they lost by a solitary goal. William Opoku scored the decisive goal in the 78th minute of the game after East Bengal custodian Ubaid C.K. made a mistake. This was East Bengal FC's 3rd defeat in succession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0009-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview, December\nEast Bengal FC faced the Gokulam Kerala F.C. on 8 December, at the Salt Lake Stadium, Kolkata next which they won by 3\u20131, credit to an all-round performance from Joby Justin who assisted the first goal for Brandon Vanlalremdika, scored the second and was a constant threat at the Gokulam Kerala's penalty box. Lalramchullova scored the third for the Red and Gold Brigade which ensured 3 points for the home side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0009-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview, December\nEast Bengal FC faced Mohun Bagan on 16 December, at the Salt Lake Stadium, Kolkata for the first leg of Kolkata Derby of the I-League season and in a thrilling encounter, the Red and Gold brigade emerged victorious by 3\u20132 with the Mariners going down to 10 men in the second half. It was Mohun Bagan who took an early lead in the 13 min when Omar Elhussieny dodged past Lalramchullova to put in a perfect cross for Azharuddin Mallick to slot in into an empty net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0009-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview, December\nEast Bengal FC equalized just 4 minutes later with Laldanmawia Ralte netting home from an excellent through ball from Jobi Justin. Jobi Justin was again on the mark when he scored in the 44th minute with a sublime overhead volley to take the lead in the Kolkata Derby. After the break, Mohun Bagan was down to 10 men as Kingsley Obumneme was sent off for a double booking when he stopped Jobi Justin from behind after he was nutmegged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0009-0004", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview, December\nEast Bengal FC increased their lead from the resulting free-kick as Laldanmawia Ralte was again at the position from a perfect cross from Lalrindika Ralte to make it 3\u20131 in the 61st minute. This was Laldanmawia Ralte's 4th goal in Kolkata Derby. Dipanda Dicka reduced the margin for Mohun Bagan in the 75th minute, however, the Red and Gold brigade held on to the lead and won their first Derby after 33 months gap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0009-0005", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview, December\nEast Bengal FC faced Churchill Brothers on 20 December, at the Tilak Maidan in Goa and after being 1-0 down within 2 minutes from a Willis Plaza strike, East Bengal rallied back with strikes from Jaime Santos and Lalrindika Ralte. Jaime Santos scored a perfect volley from a Lalrindika Ralte corner to equalize the game and in the second half it was Lalrindika Ralte himself who scored directly from a free-kick to win 3 points for the Red and Gold brigade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0009-0006", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview, December\nEast Bengal FC faced Real Kashmir F.C. on 28 December, at home but failed to get 3 points from the fixture after the game ended in a 1\u20131 draw. Lalramchullova put the ball inside his own net just after the break but it was none other than Jobi Justin who scored the equalizer for East Bengal FC to secure a point for the home side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview, January\nEast Bengal FC faced Indian Arrows on 8 January 2019 at Kalinga Stadium in Bhubaneshwar and in a hard-fought contest the Red and Gold brigade came out victorious by 1\u20132, courtesy of goals from Laldanmawia Ralte and Jobi Justin one in each half. Arrows scored one consolation late in the second half but East Bengal FC managed to hold on to the lead and emerge with 3 points/ Lalrindika Ralte missed a penalty in the first half which could have increased the lead for East Bengal FC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0010-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview, January\nEast Bengal FC faced Chennai City F.C. away at Coimbatore on 14 January next where in a crunch encounter East Bengal FC lost 2-1 even after taking the lead in the 9th minute courtesy of a Laldanmawia Ralte goal. The home team rallied to score 2 goals with defensive lapses from the Red and Gold Brigade. East Bengal FC faced Indian Arrows next on 18 January at home and in a lacklusture game, the Red and Gold brigade managed to win by a solitary goal courtesy of Jaime Santos who tapped home from a Jobby Justin grounded cross.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0010-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview, January\nEast Bengal FC faced Mohun Bagan next on 27 January in the return leg of the Kolkata Derby and like the first leg derby, East Bengal FC again managed to win against their arch-rivals by 2\u20130 with goals from Jaime Santos and Jobby Justin. This was the first time since 2003\u201304, and only the 3rd time overall that East Bengal FC managed an NFL/I-League Derby Double against their arch-rivals Mohun Bagan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview, February\nEast Bengal FC faced NEROCA F.C. next on 7 February at the Salt Lake Stadium and made a remarkable comeback victory after going behind 0-1 as early as in the 3rd minute when Chencho Gyeltshen scored for the visitors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0011-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview, February\nThe home team tried hard but could find the back of the net, until Enrique Esqueda came in as a super sub and scored a brilliant headed brace to secure all three points for East Bengal FCEast Bengal FC faced Shillong Lajong F.C. next on 14 February at the Salt Lake Stadium and displayed complete dominance as they won by 5\u20130 against the highlanders. Laldanmawia Ralte bragged the first hat-trick of the season for East Bengal FC while the other two were scored by Jobby Justin and Enrique Esqueda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0011-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview, February\nEast Bengal FC faced Churchill Brothers S.C. next on 17 February at the Salt Lake Stadium and could only manage a 1\u20131 draw after ex-East Bengal FC frontman Willis Plaza scored to take a 0\u20131 lead for the away team, which was equalized by Kassim Aidara, who headed home from a Lalrindika Ralte freekick to make it 1\u20131. East Bengal FC faced Aizawl F.C. next on 25 February at the Salt Lake Stadium for the last home game of the season and could only manage a point which hampered their title hopes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0011-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview, February\nAizawl F.C. took the lead in the first half which was then equalized by Enrique Esqueda in the second half. The Red and Gold brigade failed to score the winning goal as Jobby Justin's header came off the bar in the dying minutes of the match. Jobby Justin was suspended after the match for spitting charges and is supposed to miss the next 6 matches. East Bengal FC faced Real Kashmir F.C. next on 28 February at Delhi and in a sublime first half display took an early lead of 2\u20130 with goals from Enrique Esqueda and Jaime Santos. The Kashmir team managed to score a goal in the second half from the penalty spot however East Bengal FC managed to emerge victorious, keeping their title hopes alive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview, March\nEast Bengal FC faced Minerva Punjab F.C. in the penultimate game of the season on 3 March at Chandigarh and had to win to keep their tile hopes alive and ina thriller of a game, East Bengal FC managed a 1\u20130 win courtesy of a cool finish from none other than frontman Enrique Esqueda. With this victory, East Bengal FC sits at 39 points from 19 matches, just 1 point behind the league leaders Chennai City F.C. with the last match scheduled on 9 March 2019 for both the teams, which will be the decider for the 2018\u201319 I-League title. On 6th Match, East Bengal FC announced a 2 years contract extension for coach Alejandro Men\u00e9ndez Garcia and his team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Season Overview, April\nEast Bengal F.C. gave walk over to Delhi Dynamos F.C. in the Round of 16 in 2019 Indian Super Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Competitions, Super Cup\nEast Bengal FC along with six other I-League clubs \u2014 Minerva Punjab F.C., Mohun Bagan, NEROCA F.C., Gokulam Kerala F.C., Aizawl F.C., and Chennai City F.C. \u2014 announced they will withdraw from Super Cup, citing \"unfair treatment to I-League clubs.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Honours, Titles Won\n*U-19 tournament since 2015. Defeated Mohun Bagan U-19 in the final: 1\u20131; 4\u20133 (p)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285140-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Bengal FC season, Honours, Titles Won\nEast Bengal Reserves team played in the tournament. Defeated Mohammedan Sporting in the final: 0-0; 3-1 (p)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285141-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Carolina Pirates men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 East Carolina Pirates men's basketball team represented East Carolina University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Pirates were led by first year head coach, Joe Dooley, who previously coached the Pirates from 1995\u20131999, and played their home games at Williams Arena at Minges Coliseum as fifth-year members of the American Athletic Conference. The Pirates finished the season 10\u201321, 3\u201315 in AAC play to finish in 11th place. They lost in the first round of the AAC Tournament to Wichita State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285141-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Carolina Pirates men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Pirates finished the 2017\u201318 season 10\u201320, 4\u201314 in AAC play to finish in 11th place. They lost in the first round of the AAC Tournament to UCF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285141-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Carolina Pirates men's basketball team, Previous season\nFollowing a 2\u20134 start to the season, eighth-year head coach Jeff Lebo announced his resignation from ECU on November 29, 2017 and Perry was named interim head coach. On April 4, 2018 the school announced that Florida Gulf Coast head coach Joe Dooley, who coached the Pirates from 1995 to 1999, would return as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285142-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Carolina Pirates women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 East Carolina Pirates women's basketball team will represent East Carolina University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Pirates, led by first year head coach Chad Killinger and later first year head coach Nicole Mealing, play their home games at Williams Arena at Minges Coliseum and were fifth year members of the American Athletic Conference. They finished the season 16\u201315, 6\u201310 AAC play to finish in a tie for seventh place. They defeated SMU in the first round before losing in the quarterfinals of the American Athletic Women's Tournament to Connecticut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285142-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Carolina Pirates women's basketball team\nAssistant coach Killinger was initially named interim head coach of the Pirates for the season, but health concerns led to his resignation 11 games into the season on December 26, 2018, and Killinger's top assistant Mealing was named interim coach for the rest of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285142-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Carolina Pirates women's basketball team, Media\nAll Pirates home games will have a video stream on , ESPN3, or . Road games will typically be streamed on the opponents website, though conference road games could also appear on ESPN3 or AAC Digital. Audio broadcasts for most road games can also be found on the opponents website.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 60], "content_span": [61, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285143-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Midlands Counties Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 East Midlands Counties Football League season was the 11th in the history of East Midlands Counties Football League, a football competition in England at level 10 of the English football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285143-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Midlands Counties Football League, League\nThe league featured 13 clubs from the previous season, along with seven new clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 54], "content_span": [55, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285144-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Superleague\nThe 2018\u201319 East Super League (known as the McBookie.com East Superleague for sponsorship reasons) was the 17th 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, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285144-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Superleague\nThe season began on 4 August 2018 and ended on 27 May 2019. Bonnyrigg Rose were the reigning champions but cannot defend their title after moving to the East of Scotland Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285144-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Superleague\nLochee United won their third title with two games remaining on 20 May 2019 after a 2\u20130 win away to Forfar West End, before going on to end the season unbeaten. As winners they enter the 2019\u201320 Scottish Cup at the Preliminary round stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285144-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Superleague, Teams\nFor the 2018\u201319 season, league reconstruction reduced the Superleague from sixteen to twelve teams after 24 Junior clubs moved to the East of Scotland Football League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285145-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Tennessee State Buccaneers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 East Tennessee Buccaneers basketball team represented East Tennessee State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Buccaneers, led by fourth-year head coach Steve Forbes, played their home games at the Freedom Hall Civic Center in Johnson City, Tennessee as of the Southern Conference. They finished the season 24\u201310, 13\u20135 in SoCon play to finish in a tie for third place. They defeated Chattanooga in the quarterfinals of the SoCon Tournament before losing in the semifinals to Wofford. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they lost in the first round to Green Bay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285145-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East Tennessee State Buccaneers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Buccaneers finished the 2017\u201318 season 25\u20139, 14\u20134 in SoCon play to finish in second place. They defeated Chattanooga and Furman to advance to the championship game of the SoCon Tournament where they lost to UNC Greensboro. Despite having 25 wins, they did not participate in a postseason tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 78], "content_span": [79, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285146-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East of Scotland Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 East of Scotland Football League (known as the Central Taxis East of Scotland League for sponsorship reasons) was the 90th season of the East of Scotland Football League, and the 5th season as the sixth tier of the Scottish football pyramid system. The season began on 11 August 2018 and ended on 18 May 2019. Kelty Hearts were the reigning champions but could not defend their title after being promoted to the Lowland Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285146-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East of Scotland Football League\nThe league saw an increase from 13 to 39 teams and was split into three parallel conferences, each containing 13 teams. The additional teams consisted of 24 clubs who applied to switch from the SJFA East Region, one from the SJFA West Region, one new team and Hawick Royal Albert who were relegated from the Lowland League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285146-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East of Scotland Football League\nThe winners of each conference took part in a round-robin competition at the end of the season, with Bonnyrigg Rose Athletic being crowned league champions on 4 May 2019 after winning both their championship play-off matches. They later clinched promotion to the Lowland League after gaining their SFA licence on 14 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285146-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East of Scotland Football League\nThe top five clubs in each conference, and best 6th-placed, formed the new 16-team Premier Division for the 2019\u201320 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285146-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East of Scotland Football League, Teams, To East of Scotland Football League\nInverkeithing Hillfield Swifts also joined having previously played in the Fife Amateur Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 84], "content_span": [85, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285146-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East of Scotland Football League, Championship play-off\nAt the end of the season, the three conference winners took part in a three match round-robin competition to determine the league champion, and subject to meeting the required licensing criteria, promotion to the Lowland League. Bonnyrigg Rose Athletic were crowned champions after winning both of their matches, and later gained promotion having eventually received their SFA licence on 14 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285146-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 East of Scotland Football League, Notes\nClub has an SFA Licence (as of March 2019) and are eligible for promotion to the Lowland League should they win the championship play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285147-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eastern Counties Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 Eastern Counties Football League was the 76th season in the history of Eastern Counties Football League, a football competition in England. The season saw Division One divided into two sections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285147-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eastern Counties Football League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 16 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with four new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 58], "content_span": [59, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285147-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eastern Counties Football League, Division One North\nIt was the first season Division One was split into two sections. Division One North featured 12 clubs which competed in Division One last season, along with seven new clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285147-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eastern Counties Football League, Division One South\nIt was the first season Division One was split into two sections. Division One South featured four clubs which competed in Division One last season, along with 15 new clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285148-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eastern Illinois Panthers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Eastern Illinois Panthers men's basketball team represented Eastern Illinois University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Panthers, led by seventh-year head coach Jay Spoonhour, played their home games at Lantz Arena as members of the Ohio Valley Conference. They finished the season 14\u201318, 7\u201311 in OVC play to finish in sixth place. They lost to UT Martin in the first round of the OVC Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285148-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eastern Illinois Panthers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Panthers finished the 2017\u201318 season 12\u201319, 7\u201311 in OVC play to finish in eighth place. They defeated Tennessee State in the first round of the OVC Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Austin Peay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 72], "content_span": [73, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285148-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eastern Illinois Panthers men's basketball team, Preseason\nIn a vote of conference coaches and sports information directors, EIU was picked to finish in 7th place in the OVC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 66], "content_span": [67, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285148-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eastern Illinois Panthers men's basketball team, Preseason, Preseason All-OVC team\nThe Panthers had one player selected to the preseason all-OVC team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 90], "content_span": [91, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285149-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eastern Kentucky Colonels men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Eastern Kentucky Colonels men's basketball team represented Eastern Kentucky University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Colonels, led by first-year head coach A. W. Hamilton, played their home games at McBrayer Arena within Alumni Coliseum as members of the Ohio Valley Conference. They finished the season 13\u201318 overall, 6\u201312 in OVC play, finishing in a four-way tie for sixth place. Tiebreakers worked against them, so they failed to qualify to play in the OVC Tournament for the fourth consecutive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285149-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eastern Kentucky Colonels men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Colonels finished the season 11\u201320, 5\u201313 in OVC play to finish in a three-way tie for ninth place. They failed to make the OVC Tournament for the third consecutive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 72], "content_span": [73, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285149-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eastern Kentucky Colonels men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn February 26, 2018, the school fired Dan McHale as head coach after three seasons. He finished at EKU with a three-year record of 38\u201355. On March 23, NC State assistant A.W. Hamilton was hired as the new head coach of the Colonels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 72], "content_span": [73, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285150-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eastern Michigan Eagles men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Eastern Michigan Eagles men's basketball team represented Eastern Michigan University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Eagles, led by eighth-year head coach Rob Murphy, played their home games at the Convocation Center in Ypsilanti, Michigan as members of the West Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 15\u201317, 9\u20139 in MAC play to finish in third place in the West Division. They lost in the first round of the MAC Tournament to Ball State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285150-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eastern Michigan Eagles men's basketball team, Previous season\nThey finished the season 22\u201313, 11\u20137 in MAC play to finish in second place in the West Division. They defeated Akron in the quarterfinals of the MAC Tournament before losing in the semifinals to Toledo. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they defeated Niagara in the first round before losing in the second round to Sam Houston State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285150-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eastern Michigan Eagles men's basketball team, Preseason\nThe Eagles were predicted to finish first in the MAC West by several college basketball preseason magazines. Those included Lindy's Sports College BasketballLindy's Sports, Athlon Sports College Basketball and Street & Smith's Basketball Yearbook.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 64], "content_span": [65, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285150-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eastern Michigan Eagles men's basketball team, Schedule and results\n* Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses. All times are in Eastern Time", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 75], "content_span": [76, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285151-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eastern Michigan Eagles women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Eastern Michigan Eagles women's basketball team represents Eastern Michigan University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Eagles, led by third year head coach Fred Castro, play their home games at the Convocation Center, as members of the West Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 14\u201317, 6\u201312 in MAC play to finish in fourth place in the West Division. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the MAC Women's Tournament where they lost to Central Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285152-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eastern Washington Eagles men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Eastern Washington Eagles men's basketball team represented Eastern Washington University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Eagles were led by second-year head coach Shantay Legans and played their home games at Reese Court in Cheney, Washington as members of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 16\u201318, 12\u20138 in Big Sky play to finish in third place. They defeated Montana State and Southern Utah to advance to the championship game of the Big Sky Tournament where they lost to Montana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285152-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eastern Washington Eagles men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Eagles finished the 2017\u201318 season 20\u201315, 13\u20135 in Big Sky play to finish in a tie for third place. At the Big Sky Tournament they defeated Portland State and Southern Utah to advance to the championship game where they lost to Montana. They were invited to the College Basketball Invitational where they lost in the first round to Utah Valley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 72], "content_span": [73, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285153-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eastern Washington Eagles women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Eastern Washington Eagles Women's basketball team represents Eastern Washington University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Eagles were led by eighteenth year head coach Wendy Schuller and play their home games at Reese Court. They were members of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 13\u201320, 9\u201311 in Big Sky play to finish in a tie for sixth place. They advanced to the championship game of the Big Sky Women's Tournament where they lost to Portland State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285154-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Edmonton Oilers season\nThe 2018\u201319 Edmonton Oilers season was the 40th season for the National Hockey League (NHL) franchise that was established on June 22, 1979, and 47th season including their play in the World Hockey Association (WHA). The Oilers were eliminated from playoff contention on April 1, 2019, after the St. Louis Blues' shootout win against the Colorado Avalanche, missing the playoffs for the second consecutive season and for the twelfth time in the past thirteen seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285154-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Edmonton Oilers season, Schedule and results, Pre-season\nNotes: Game was played at Lanxess Arena in Cologne, Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285154-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Edmonton Oilers season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was released on June 21, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 68], "content_span": [69, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285154-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Edmonton Oilers season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nLegend:\u00a0\u00a0Win (2 points)\u00a0\u00a0Loss (0 points)\u00a0\u00a0Overtime/shootout loss (1 point)Notes: Game was played at Scandinavium in Gothenburg, Sweden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 68], "content_span": [69, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285154-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Edmonton Oilers season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Oilers. Stats reflect time with the Oilers only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Oilers only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285154-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Edmonton Oilers season, Transactions\nThe Oilers have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285154-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Edmonton Oilers season, Draft picks\nBelow are the Edmonton Oilers' selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285155-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eerste Divisie\nThe 2018\u201319 Eerste Divisie, known as Keuken Kampioen Divisie for sponsorship reasons, was the sixty-third season of Eerste Divisie since its establishment in 1955. It began in August 2018 and ended in May 2019 with the returns of the finals of the promotion/relegation play-offs, involving also the 16th- and 17th-placed teams from the 2018\u201319 Eredivisie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285155-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eerste Divisie, Teams\nA total of 20 teams are taking part in the league. Fortuna Sittard gained promotion to the Eredivisie, and was replaced by FC Twente, who finished bottom in the 2017\u201318 Eredivisie. FC Emmen and De Graafschap won the post-season playoff, and are replaced in the 2018\u201319 Eerste Divisie by Roda JC and Sparta Rotterdam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285155-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eerste Divisie, Teams\nAt an extraordinary KNVB federation meeting on June 7, 2018, representatives of amateur and professional football reached an agreement to renew the football pyramid in the 2019\u201320 season. Part of the Agreement was that no promotion/relegation would take place between the Eerste and Tweede Divisie this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285155-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eerste Divisie, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after completion of each round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285155-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eerste Divisie, Season statistics, Top scorers\nUpdated to match(es) played on 3 May 2019. Source: nos.nl", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285155-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eerste Divisie, Season statistics, Assists\nUpdated to match(es) played on 3 May 2019. Source: nos.nl", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 50], "content_span": [51, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285155-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eerste Divisie, Promotion/relegation play-offs\nTen teams, two from the Eredivisie and eight from the Eerste Divisie, play for two spots in the 2019\u201320 Eredivisie, the remaining eight teams playing in the 2019\u201320 Eerste Divisie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285155-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eerste Divisie, Promotion/relegation play-offs\nKey: * = Play-off winners, (a) = Wins because of away goals rule, (e) = Wins after extra time in second leg, (p) = Wins after penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285156-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eerste Klasse\n2018\u201319 Eerste Klasse was a Dutch Eerste Klasse association football season of the Eerste Klasse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285157-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egypt Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Egypt Cup was the 87th edition of the oldest recognised football tournament in Africa. It is sponsored by WE, and known as the WE Cup for sponsorship purposes. It started with the First Preliminary Round on 12 August 2018, and concluded with the final on 8 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285157-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egypt Cup\nEgyptian Premier League side Zamalek successfully defended their title and defeated Pyramids 3\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285157-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egypt Cup, Format, Participation\nThe Egypt Cup began with a round of 32 teams. The 18 teams of the Egyptian Premier League, along with the 14 winning teams qualified from the Fifth Preliminary Round of the 2018\u201319 Egypt Cup qualifying rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 40], "content_span": [41, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285157-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egypt Cup, Format, Draw\nThe draw for the main competition was held at the Egyptian Football Association headquarters in Gezira, Cairo on 4 October 2018 and was broadcast live on ON Sport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285157-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egypt Cup, Format, Draw\nFor the first round, the participating teams were split into three pots, the first one contained the three promoted teams from the Egyptian Second Division and the fifteenth placed team in the Egyptian Premier League, the second one contained the other 14 teams of the Egyptian Premier League and the last one contained the 14 teams qualified from the Fifth Preliminary Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285157-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egypt Cup, Format, Match rules\nTeams meet in one game per round. Matches take place for 90 minutes, with two-halves of 45 minutes. If still tied after regulation, 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 shoot-out. A coin toss will decide who takes the first penalty. A total of seven players are allowed to be listed on the substitute bench, with up to three substitutions being allowed during regulation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 38], "content_span": [39, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285157-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egypt Cup, Format, Champion qualification\nUsually, the winner of the Egypt Cup earns automatic qualification for the 2019\u201320 CAF Confederation Cup. If they have already qualified for the CAF Confederation Cup or CAF Champions League through their position in the Egyptian Premier League, then the spot will go to the cup runners-up. If the cup runners-up also qualified for an African competition through their league position, then the spot will be given to the fourth placed team in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285157-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egypt Cup, Format, Champion qualification\nHowever, since the competition will conclude in September 2019 and the 2019\u201320 CAF Confederation Cup began in August 2019, the winner of this season's edition of the competition won't earn qualification for the CAF Confederation Cup, and the spot awarded to the cup winner was given to the fourth placed team in the 2018\u201319 Egyptian Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285157-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egypt Cup, Qualifying rounds\nAll of the competing teams that are not members of the Egyptian Premier League had to compete in the qualifying rounds to secure one of 14 available places in the Round of 32. The qualifying competition began with the First Preliminary Round on 12 August 2018. The final (fifth) qualifying round was played on 3 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 36], "content_span": [37, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285157-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egypt Cup, Round of 32\nThe matches were played from 8 October to 2 December 2018. This round included four teams from the Egyptian Third Division, Ittihad El Shorta, MS Minyat Samanoud, Muslim Youths (Qena) and Naser El Fekreia, the lowest ranking sides left in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285157-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egypt Cup, Round of 16\nThe matches were played from 23 October 2018 to 17 August 2019. This round included two teams from the Egyptian Second Division, Al Jazeera and El Mansoura, the lowest ranking sides left in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285157-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egypt Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe matches were played from 3 January to 30 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285157-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egypt Cup, Semi-finals\nThe matches were played on 1 and 2 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 81]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285157-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egypt Cup, Bracket\nThe following is the bracket which the Egypt Cup resembled. Numbers in parentheses next to the match score represent the results of a penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285157-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egypt Cup, Top goalscorers\nThe following are the top scorers of the Egypt Cup, sorted first by number of goals, and then alphabetically if necessary. Goals scored in penalty shoot-outs are not included.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 34], "content_span": [35, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285158-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egypt Cup qualifying rounds\nThe 2018\u201319 Egypt Cup qualifying rounds open the 87th season of the competition in Egypt, the oldest association football single knockout competition in Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285158-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egypt Cup qualifying rounds, Calendar\nThe calendar for the 2018\u201319 Egypt Cup qualifying rounds, as announced by the Egyptian Football Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285158-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egypt Cup qualifying rounds, First Preliminary Round\nFirst Preliminary Round fixtures were played from 12 to 18 August 2018. A total of 205 teams from the Egyptian Third Division and the Egyptian Fourth Division entered at this stage of the competition. A large number of clubs did not enter the competition due to financial status and other different reasons, including Al Fanar, a club that was playing in the Egyptian Second Division in the previous season. The results were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285158-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egypt Cup qualifying rounds, Second Preliminary Round\nSecond Preliminary Round fixtures were played on 4 and 5 September 2018. The results were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285158-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egypt Cup qualifying rounds, Third Preliminary Round\nThird Preliminary Round fixtures were played on 24, 25 and 26 September 2018. A total of 39 teams from the Egyptian Second Division entered at this stage of the competition. Damietta, El Tahrir and Al Walideya, all playing in the 2018\u201319 Egyptian Second Division, did not enter the competition. The results were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285158-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egypt Cup qualifying rounds, Fourth Preliminary Round\nFourth Preliminary Round fixtures were played on 29 and 30 September 2018. The results were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285158-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egypt Cup qualifying rounds, Fifth Preliminary Round\nFifth Preliminary Round fixtures were played on 3 October 2018. The results were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285158-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egypt Cup qualifying rounds, Competition proper\nWinners from the Fifth Preliminary Round advance to the Round of 32, where teams from the Egyptian Premier League enter the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285159-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Basketball Super League\nThe 2018\u201319 Egyptian Basketball Super League was the 45th season of the Egyptian Basketball Super League. It started on 29 October 2018 with the first round of the regular season and ended on 4 May 2019 with the finals. The champions qualified for the 2020 Basketball Africa League (BAL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285159-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Basketball Super League\nSporting was the defending champion, but was defeated in the quarterfinals by the eventual champions Zamalek, who won their 14th title after defeating Gezira in the finals, the title was decided in Game 5, which Zamalek won 87\u201366.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285159-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Basketball Super League, 2019 Final\n2019 Egyptian Basketball Super League Finals It is a final between the two Egyptian basketball giants Zamalek and Gezira. For Details 2019 Egyptian Basketball Super League Finals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285160-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Handball League\nThe 2018\u201319 Egyptian Handball League was the 63th season of the Egyptian Handball League, which the team Zamalek won after an absence of two years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285160-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Handball League, League System\nThe 2018\u201319 Egyptian Handball League system happens in two phases. The first phase divides the 18 teams into two groups, with the first four teams from each group advancing to the next round. The next round, a stage of one group, wins the most points. If both teams have the same number of points, a play-off occurs. Knowing that the teams heads of the two groups go up with four points, the seconds are two points, the third is a point and the fourth is a point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285160-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Handball League, The final stage\nKnowing that the teams heads of the two groups go up with four points, the seconds are two points, the third is a point and the fourth is a pointZamalek and Al Ahly have 4 points before The final stage begain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285160-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Handball League, The final stage, Final Group\nAfter the end of the final stage, Zamalek was declared the winner of the Egyptian Handball League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 62], "content_span": [63, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285160-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Handball League, Cairo Derby\nThe first round match of the final stagedate= Friday 1 March 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285160-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Handball League, Cairo Derby\nThe second round match of the final stagedate= Sunday 28 April 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285161-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Egyptian Premier League, also known as The WE League for sponsorship purposes, was the 60th season of the Egyptian Premier League, the top Egyptian professional league for association football clubs, since its establishment in 1948. The season started on 31 July 2018 and concluded on 28 July 2019. Fixtures for the 2018\u201319 season were announced on 8 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285161-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Premier League\nEl Gouna, Nogoom and Haras El Hodoud entered as the promoted teams from the 2017\u201318 Egyptian Second Division. They replaced El Raja, Tanta and Al Nasr who were relegated to the 2018\u201319 Egyptian Second Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285161-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Premier League\nDefending champions Al Ahly won their 4th consecutive and 41st overall Egyptian Premier League title on 24 July 2019, following their 3\u20131 away win against Al Mokawloon Al Arab.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285161-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Premier League, Overview, Fans return to the stadiums\nFrom this season on, the Egyptian Football Association (EFA) officially allowed the fans to attend league matches again, after they showed great discipline while attending non-league matches in the previous years. The EFA banned all fans from attending all matches back in February 2012, where the Port Said Stadium riot occurred during Al Masry and Al Ahly match in the 2011\u201312 Egyptian Premier League, which resulted in the death of 72 Al Ahly fans, 1 Al Masry fan and 1 police officer. All Egyptian Premier League fixtures since then was played behind closed doors, and sometimes with a group of people who were invited by the clubs involving in a match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285161-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Premier League, Overview, Al Masry return to Port Said\nFrom this season on, the Egyptian Football Association (EFA) was supposed to allow Al Masry to play all local home matches at Al Masry Club Stadium (previously known as Port Said Stadium) in Port Said, after the club successfully acquired the stadium from the Governorate of Port Said on 5 January 2016. However the local security authorities refused this decision, and the club ended up playing their home matches at various stadiums in different cities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285161-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Premier League, Overview, Al Masry return to Port Said\nThe EFA banned Al Masry Club Stadium from hosting all football or sport activities after the Port Said Stadium riot occurred in 2012, and Al Masry played all of their local matches, both home and away, at Borg El Arab Stadium in Alexandria and at Ismailia Stadium in Ismailia for African matches since then.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285161-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Premier League, Overview, Al Assiouty Sport takeover\nOn 18 June 2018, Mahmoud Al Assiouty, president of Al Assiouty Sport, announced that the club was officially sold to two investors from Saudi Arabia. The club name was changed to Pyramids Football Club, and the deal was later confirmed on 27 June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285161-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Premier League, Overview, Nogoom El Mostakbal rebranding\nOn 29 July 2018, just two days before the start of the season, Nogoom El Mostakbal announced on their official Facebook page that the club name has been changed to Nogoom Football Club. Club president Mohamed El Tawila stated that the decision to rename the club came after they reached their goal by promoting to the Egyptian Premier League for the first time. The old name, Nogoom El Mostakbal, in Arabic, means \"Future Stars\", and the new name, Nogoom, means \"Stars\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285161-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Premier League, Teams\nEighteen teams competed in the league - the top fifteen teams from the previous season, and three teams promoted from the Second Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285161-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Premier League, Teams\nTeams promoted to the Egyptian Premier LeagueThe first team to be promoted was Haras El Hodoud from Group C, following their 1\u20130 away win against Al Hammam on 10 April 2018. The Alexandrian side managed to return to the Premier League after staying only two season in the Second Division, and participated in the top flight for the fifteenth time in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285161-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Premier League, Teams\nThe second team to be promoted was El Gouna from Group A, following their 1\u20130 away win against Al Salam on 11 April 2018. El Gouna earned a spot in the Premier League for the fifth time in the club's history, having played four seasons in the top flight before with the 2014\u201315 season being the most recent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285161-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Premier League, Teams\nThe third team to be promoted was Nogoom (which was known as Nogoom El Mostakbal during that time) from Group B, following their 1\u20130 home win against Montakhab Suez on 18 April 2018. Nogoom managed to secure the promotion spot after a fierce contest that lasted until the last day of the league with Tersana, who lost 1\u20130 to Gomhoriat Shebin on the same day to confirm the promotion of Nogoom El Mostakbal to the Premier League for the first time in the club's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285161-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Premier League, Teams\nTeams relegated to the Egyptian Second DivisionThe first club to be relegated was Al Nasr, who suffered an immediate return to the Second Division following a 2\u20131 away defeat to Al Masry on 12 April 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285161-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Premier League, Teams\nThe second club to be relegated was Tanta, their stay in the Premier League came to an end after spending only two season in the top flight following a 1\u20132 home defeat to Al Masry on 21 April 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285161-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Premier League, Teams\nThe third club to be relegated was El Raja, who also suffered an immediate return to the Second Division after Wadi Degla managed to secure the last safe spot in the Premier League following a 2\u20131 home win against El Entag El Harby on 21 April 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285161-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Premier League, Teams, Foreign players\nClubs can have a maximum of four foreign players registered during the season. Clubs cannot sign foreign players unless these players have played in the first or second tier in their countries. Clubs also cannot sign any foreign goalkeepers. In addition, each club can register a total of two players from Palestine or Syria; those players were be treated as Egyptians, and won't count as foreign players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285161-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Premier League, Results, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches. In order to preserve chronological evolvements, any postponed matches were not included in the round at which they were originally scheduled, but added to the full round they were played immediately afterwards. For example, if a match was scheduled for matchday 13, but then postponed and played between days 16 and 17, it was added to the standings for day 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285162-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Second Division\nThe 2018\u201319 Egyptian Second Division was the 39th edition of the Egyptian Second Division, the top Egyptian semi-professional level for football clubs, since its establishment in 1977. The season started on 8 August 2018 and concluded on 19 April 2019. Fixtures for the 2018\u201319 season were announced on 23 May 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285162-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Second Division\nAswan, FC Masr and Tanta won Group A, Group B and Group C respectively and secured the promotion to the 2019\u201320 Egyptian Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285162-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Second Division, Team changes\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285162-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Second Division, Teams\nA total of forty-two teams competed in the league \u2013 thirty sides from the 2017\u201318 season, three relegated from the 2017\u201318 Egyptian Premier League and nine promoted from the 2017\u201318 Egyptian Third Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285162-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Second Division, Results, 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 in 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285163-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Super Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Egyptian Super Cup (also known as the 2018\u201319 SAIB Egyptian Super Cup for sponsorship reasons) was the 16th Egyptian Super Cup, an annual football match played between the winners of the previous season's Egyptian Premier League and Egypt Cup. It was played at Borg El Arab Stadium in Alexandria, Egypt, on 20 September 2019, contested by Al Ahly and Zamalek. Al Ahly defended the trophy they won in the previous edition and defeated Zamalek 3\u20132, winning their record-extending 11th trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285163-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Super Cup, Background\nIn the 2017\u201318 Egyptian Premier League, Al Ahly and Ismaily were the only two teams in the league's title race, with the latter finishing the first half of the season on top. However, after Frenchman coach S\u00e9bastien Desabre left Ismaily mid-season to join the Ugandan national team as their manager, the club started to fall apart and went from being on top with a difference of 4 points to finishing the league behind Al Ahly with 68 points; 20 points less than the champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285163-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Super Cup, Background\nAl Ahly officially won their record-extending fortieth Egyptian Premier League title on 12 March 2018 with 6 games to spare. The team broke numerous league records over the course of the season, including most points with 88 points, most wins with 28 wins and most goals scored in a single season with 75 goals. Al Ahly's Moroccan forward Walid Azaro also finished the league as the top goalscorer with 18 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285163-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Super Cup, Background\nZamalek won the 2017\u201318 Egypt Cup after defeating Smouha 5\u20134 on penalties in the final after the match ended 1\u20131 at extra time, winning their 4th Egypt Cup title in the previous 5 editions of the competition. Both teams' way to the final was considered \"too easy\" by the media, especially for Zamalek who faced 2017\u201318 Egyptian Second Division sides El Minya and Haras El Hodoud in the round of 32 and round of 16 respectively. The Egyptian Football Association were also heavily criticized for changes they made to the competition, mainly for the changes made to the draw where they made sure that the cup defending champions can only face the previous league winners in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285163-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Super Cup, Background\nDuring the 2017\u201318 season, both teams met each other in the league two times. Al Ahly won the first encounter 3\u20130 on 8 January 2018 at Cairo International Stadium thanks to goals from Moamen Zakaria, Abdallah El Said and Walid Azaro. Zamalek won the second encounter 2-1 which was played on 26 April 2018 at the same stadium, with Kabongo Kasongo and Ayman Hefny scoring for Zamalek and Walid Soliman scoring the only goal for Al Ahly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285163-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Egyptian Super Cup, Match, Officials\nOn 19 September 2019, just one day before the match, the Egyptian Football Association announced German referee Felix Brych as the referee for the match. Brych is ranked as a UEFA elite category referee, and he is considered one of the best referees in Europe. His compatriots Mark Borsch and Kim Stefan Luppwere chosen as the assistant referees, while Egyptian referee Mohamed Hassan was chosen as the fourth official.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285164-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eintracht Frankfurt season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 120th in the history of Eintracht Frankfurt, a football club based in Frankfurt, Germany. It was their 7th consecutive season and 50th overall in the top flight of German football, the Bundesliga, having been promoted from the 2. Bundesliga in 2012. In addition to the domestic league, Eintracht Frankfurt also were participating in that season's edition of the domestic cup, the DFB-Pokal. This was the 94th season for Frankfurt in the Commerzbank-Arena, located in Frankfurt, Hesse, Germany. The season covered a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285164-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eintracht Frankfurt 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285165-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ekstraklasa\nThe 2018\u201319 Ekstraklasa was the 93rd season of the Polish Football Championship, the 85th season of the highest tier domestic division in the Polish football league system since its establishment in 1927 and the 11th season of the Ekstraklasa under its current title. The league was operated by the Ekstraklasa SA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285165-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ekstraklasa\nThe season started on 20 July 2018 and concluded on 19 May 2019. It is the second Ekstraklasa season to use VAR. After the 20th matchday the league went on a winter break between 23 December 2018 and 8 February 2019. The regular season was played as a round-robin tournament. A total of 16 teams participated, 14 of which competed in the league during the 2017\u201318 season, while the remaining two were promoted from the 2017\u201318 I liga. The fixtures were announced on 22 March 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285165-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ekstraklasa\nEach team played a total of 30 matches, half at home and half away. After the 30th round (in the beginning of April 2019), the league was split into two groups: championship round (top eight teams) and relegation round (bottom eight teams). Each team played 7 more games (teams ranked 1 to 4 and 9 to 12 played four times at home). Therefore, each team played a total of 37 matches. The team at the top of the Championship round won the league title. The two teams at the bottom of the Relegation round were relegated to 2019\u201320 I liga. This was the sixth season to take place since the new playoff structure has been introduced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285165-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ekstraklasa\nThe defending champions were Legia Warsaw, who won their 13th Polish title the previous season. Piast Gliwice succeeded Legia, winning its first ever Polish top league title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285165-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ekstraklasa, Teams\nSixteen teams will compete in the league \u2013 the top fourteen teams from the previous season, as well as two teams promoted from the I liga. Mied\u017a Legnica were promoted to the Ekstraklasa for the first time. Zag\u0142\u0119bie Sosnowiec will make a return to the Ekstraklasa for the first time since 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285165-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ekstraklasa, Attendances\nSource: (in Polish)Notes:1: Team played last season in I liga.2: Lech Pozna\u0144 stadium's stands were closed for spectators during two games. Those games were not included in the summary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285166-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ekstraklasa (men's handball)\nThe 2018\u201319 Ekstraklasa was the 63rd season of the Ekstraklasa, Polish's top-tier handball league. A total of fourteen teams contested this season's league, which began on 31 August 2018 and concluded in May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285166-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ekstraklasa (men's handball), Format\nDuring the licensing process, work was underway to change the formula of the competition. Finally, the division into two groups was dropped and after the main round the teams will be divided into two groups: the first eight will create the quarter-final pairs, while the remaining six teams will play the match-revenge round for the Ekstraklasa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285166-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ekstraklasa (men's handball), Teams\nThe following 14 clubs compete in the Ekstraklasa during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285166-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ekstraklasa (men's handball), Regular season\nA victory over a team in full-time added three points and after regulation time added two. A loss after regulation time also add a bonus point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285166-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ekstraklasa (men's handball), Relegation round\nA victory over a team in full-time added three points and after regulation time added two. A loss after regulation time also add a bonus point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285166-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ekstraklasa (men's handball), Relegation round, Play-offs\nSPR Stal Mielec won 64\u201353 aggregate and stays in the Superliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285167-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 El Dakhleya SC season\nThe 2018\u201319 El Dakhleya season was the 14th season in the football club's history and 6th consecutive and overall season in the top flight of Egyptian football, the Egyptian Premier League, having been promoted from the Egyptian Second Division in 2011. In addition to the domestic league, El Dakhleya also competed in this season's edition of the domestic cup, the Egypt Cup. The season covered a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285167-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 El Dakhleya SC 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-00285168-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 El Entag El Harby SC season\nThe 2018\u201319 El Entag El Harby season was the 14th season in the football club's history and 4th consecutive and 7th overall season in the top flight of Egyptian football, the Egyptian Premier League, having been promoted from the Egyptian Second Division in 2015. In addition to the domestic league, El Entag El Harby also competed in this season's editions of the domestic cup, the Egypt Cup. The season covered a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285168-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 El Entag El Harby SC 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285168-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 El Entag El Harby SC 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-00285169-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 El Gouna FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 El Gouna season was the 16th season in the football club's history and 5th season in the top flight of Egyptian football, the Egyptian Premier League, having been promoted from the Egyptian Second Division in the previous season. In addition to the domestic league, El Gouna also competed in this season's editions of the domestic cup, the Egypt Cup. The season covered a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285169-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 El Gouna FC 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285169-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 El Gouna 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-00285170-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Elche CF season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Elche Club de F\u00fatbol's 96th season in existence and the club's fourth consecutive season in the second division of Spanish football. In addition to the domestic league, Elche participated in this season's edition of the Copa del Rey. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285170-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Elche CF 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285170-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Elche CF season, Players, 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285170-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Elche 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285171-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Electric Production Car Series\nThe 2018\u201319 Electric Production Car Series was to be the inaugural season of the zero-emission motorsport championship. The season would have started at Jerez on 4 November 2018, but was postponed indefinitely due to a lack of a lead investor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285171-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Electric Production Car Series, Calendar\nThe provisional calendar for the 2018\u201319 season was announced on 24 April 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285172-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Elitedivisionen\nThe 2018\u201319 Elitedivisionen is the 47th season of the highest women's football league in Denmark and is currently contested by 8 teams each year in Denmark. Fortuna Hj\u00f8rring are the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285172-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Elitedivisionen, Main round\nTeams play each other twice. Top six advance to the championship round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285172-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Elitedivisionen, Championship round\nTeams play ten more matches. Points are reset, but bonus points are awarded for the placement in the main round. 10 points for first place, 8 points for second place and then 6, 4, 2 and 0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285173-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eliteserien (women's handball)\nThe 2018\u201319 Eliteserien is the 52nd season of the Eliteserien, Norway's premier handball league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285173-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eliteserien (women's handball), Team information\nA total of 12 teams will be participating in the 2018/19 edition of Eliteserien. 9 teams were qualified directly from the 2017/18 season. The two top ranked teams from the First Division, Fana HE and Skrim Kongsberg, and third-place finisher R\u00e6lingen HK who defeated Sola HK in the relegation playoff were promoted to the Eliteserien.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 56], "content_span": [57, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285173-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eliteserien (women's handball), 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, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285173-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eliteserien (women's handball), Championship playoffs\nBest of three format is applied in all playoff stages, with the higher seeded team playing the second and third game (if necessary) at home. If a game ended with a draw after the regular time, it will proceed to two 5-minutes periods of extra time. If there is still a draw, another 2 \u00d7 5-minutes extra time will be played. If the scores are still level after two extra times, the winners are decided by a 7-meter shootout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285173-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eliteserien (women's handball), Championship playoffs\nTop ranked teams from the regular season choose their opponents in the quarterfinal and semifinal stages. The remaining two highest ranked teams after the quarterfinal stage can not meet in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285173-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eliteserien (women's handball), Awards, All Star Team and other awards\nThe All Star Team and other awards were announced on 14 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 78], "content_span": [79, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285173-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eliteserien (women's handball), Relegation playoff\nGjerpen HK Skien won series, 2\u20130 and avoided from the relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 58], "content_span": [59, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285174-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Elitserien (bandy)\nThe 2018\u201319 Elitserien was the twelfth season of the present highest Swedish men's bandy top division, Elitserien.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285174-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Elitserien (bandy), Results\nTeams play each other twice, once at home and once away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285175-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Elon Phoenix men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Elon Phoenix men's basketball team represented Elon University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Phoenix, led by tenth-year head coach Matt Matheny, played as fifth-year members of the Colonial Athletic Association and played their home games at the brand new Schar Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285175-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Elon Phoenix men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Phoenix finished the 2017\u201318 season 14\u201318, 6\u201312 in CAA play to finish in a four-way tie for seventh place. They lost in the first round of the CAA Tournament to Delaware.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285175-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Elon Phoenix men's basketball team, Previous season\nThis was the final season that Elon played their home games at Alumni Gym.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285176-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Elon Phoenix women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Elon Phoenix women's basketball team represents Elon University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Phoenix, led by eighth year head coach Charlotte Smith, play their home games at the brand new Schar Center and were members of the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA). They finished the season 9\u201321, 4\u201314 in CAA play to finish in eighth place. They lost in the first round of the CAA Women's Tournament to Hofstra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285177-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Empoli F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Empoli Football Club's 83rd in existence and 13th season in Serie A. It was the club's first season back in the top-flight after suffering relegation at the end of the 2016\u201317 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285178-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Emporia State Lady Hornets basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Emporia State Lady Hornets basketball team represented Emporia State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division II women's basketball season, which was the 45th Lady Hornets basketball season. The Lady Hornets were led by first-year head coach Toby Wynn. The team played their home games on Slaymaker Court William L. White Auditorium in Emporia, Kansas, the home court since 1974. Emporia State is a member of the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285178-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Emporia State Lady Hornets basketball team, Preseason outlook\nThe Lady Hornets enter the 2018\u201319 season after finishing with a 17\u201311 overall, 11\u20138 in conference play last season under Jory Collins. Losing in the MIAA Tournament caused the team's first Tournament loss in 16 games, winning the tournament for the past 5 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 69], "content_span": [70, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285178-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Emporia State Lady Hornets basketball team, Preseason outlook\nCollins announced his resignation on March 12, 2018 to become an assistant coach for former boss and former Lady Hornet basketball coach, Brandon Schneider, at the University of Kansas. On April 6, 2018, Toby Wynn, head coach of the Seward County Saints women's basketball program, was announced as the seventh head coach in Lady Hornet history. Wynn had a winning record of 349\u201384 .806 while at Seward County and won four Kansas Jayhawk Community College Conference championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 69], "content_span": [70, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285178-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Emporia State Lady Hornets basketball team, Preseason outlook\nOn October 9, 2018, the Lady Hornets were chosen to finish third in the coaches poll and fourth in the media poll in the MIAA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 69], "content_span": [70, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285178-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Emporia State Lady Hornets basketball team, Media\nThe Lady Hornets basketball games are broadcast on KFFX-FM, Mix 104.9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 57], "content_span": [58, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285179-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 En Avant de Guingamp season\nThe 2018\u201319 En Avant de Guingamp season was the 106th professional season of the club since its creation in 1912.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285179-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 En Avant de Guingamp 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-00285179-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 En Avant de Guingamp 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-00285180-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 England Korfball League\nThe 2018\u201319 England Korfball League season is played with 10 teams. Trojans KC are the defending korfball champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285180-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 England Korfball League, Teams\nThe league will be played with 10 teams. The teams that have finished from 1st to 9th place as of 19 April 2018 in the 2017\u201318 season qualified for the 2018/19 season. The remaining place was filled by Bristol Thunder who won the Promotion Play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285181-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 English Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 120th season of the English Football League (EFL) and the third season under that name after it was renamed from The Football League in 2016. It began on 3 August 2018 and concluded on 5 May 2019, with the promotion play-off finals at Wembley Stadium on 25\u201327 May 2019. For the sixth season running, the league was sponsored by Sky Betting & Gaming and was therefore known as the Sky Bet EFL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285181-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 English Football League\nThe EFL is contested through three divisions: the Championship, League One and League Two. The winner and the runner up of the Championship are automatically promoted to the Premier League and they are joined by the winner of the Championship playoff. The bottom two teams in League Two are relegated to the National League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285181-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 English Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 season marked the start of an initial two-year partnership between the EFL and its official charity partner Mind. The mental health charity had its logo displayed on the shirts of all EFL clubs and worked with the EFL to promote mental health within football and the wider community. Also, this season saw one of the EFL's original members, Notts County, relegated from the league for the first time ever.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285182-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Equatoguinean Primera Divisi\u00f3n\nThe 2018\u201319 Equatoguinean Primera Divisi\u00f3n is the 41st season of the Equatoguinean Primera Divisi\u00f3n, the top-tier football league in Equatorial Guinea, since its establishment in 1979.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285182-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Equatoguinean Primera Divisi\u00f3n, Regional stage\nThe 24 teams are divided into Regi\u00f3n Insular and Regi\u00f3n Continental, with 12 teams in each region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285182-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Equatoguinean Primera Divisi\u00f3n, Regional stage\nThe top three teams from each region qualify for the Liguilla Nacional. The bottom two teams from each region are relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285182-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Equatoguinean Primera Divisi\u00f3n, Liguilla Nacional\nPlayed between 16 and 30 June 2019 in Regi\u00f3n Continental.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285183-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eredivisie\nThe 2018\u201319 Eredivisie was the 63rd season of the Eredivisie since its establishment in 1955. The season began on 10 August 2018 and concluded on 15 May 2019; the Europa League and relegation play-offs will take place later that month. PSV were the defending champions. Emmen, De Graafschap and Fortuna Sittard joined as the promoted clubs from the 2017\u201318 Eerste Divisie. They replaced Sparta Rotterdam, Twente and Roda JC who were relegated to the 2018\u201319 Eerste Divisie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285183-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eredivisie, Teams\nA total of 18 teams took part in the league: The best fifteen teams from the 2017\u201318 season, two promotion/relegation playoff winners (FC Emmen and De Graafschap) and the 2017\u201318 Eerste Divisie runners-up (Fortuna Sittard). FC Emmen will play in the Eredivisie for the first time in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285183-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285183-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eredivisie, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after completion of each round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285183-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eredivisie, Play-offs, European competition\nFour teams will play for a spot in the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League second qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285183-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eredivisie, Play-offs, European competition\nKey: * = Play-off winners, (a) = Wins because of away goals rule, (e) = Wins after extra time in second leg, (p) = Wins after penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285183-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eredivisie, Play-offs, Promotion/relegation play-offs\nTen teams, two from the Eredivisie and eight from the Eerste Divisie, play for two spots in the 2019\u201320 Eredivisie, the remaining eight teams playing in the 2019\u201320 Eerste Divisie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 61], "content_span": [62, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285183-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eredivisie, Play-offs, Promotion/relegation play-offs\nKey: * = Play-off winners, (a) = Wins because of away goals rule, (e) = Wins after extra time in second leg, (p) = Wins after penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 61], "content_span": [62, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285184-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eredivisie (women)\nThe 2018\u201319 Eredivisie Vrouwen is the ninth season of the Netherlands women's professional football league. The season takes place from 7 September 2018 to 3 May 2019 with nine teams. Ajax started the season as defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285184-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eredivisie (women), Format\nAt the regular season, the nine teams play each other twice (once at home and once away), for a total of 16 matches each. After that the top five teams qualify for a championship play-off and the bottom four teams play a placement play-off. Teams played each other twice in the championship play-offs group, for a total of 8 matches each while in the placement groups teams play each other three times for a total of 9 matches each. Points accumulated at the regular season are halved and added to the points of the play-off stage rounds. There is no relegation nor promotion in the league and the champion qualifies to the 2019\u201320 UEFA Women's Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285184-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eredivisie (women), Play-offs, Championship\nThe top five were set after matchday 16. Points of the first stage were halved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285184-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Eredivisie (women), Play-offs, Placement\nThe bottom four were set after matchday 16. Points of the first stage were halved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285185-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ergotelis F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Ergotelis' 89th season in existence and 12th overall in the Football League, the second tier of the Greek football league system. It is the second consecutive season of the club in the competition since the club's latest promotion from the Gamma Ethniki. The club also participates in the Greek Cup, entering the competition in the Third Round. The contents of this article cover club activities from 1 June 2018 until 18 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285185-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ergotelis F.C. season\nFollowing the departure of Takis Gonias for Wadi Degla at the end of the previous season and his replacement with Cypriot manager Nikki Papavasiliou, Ergotelis impressed with their performance in the Greek Cup, where they managed to advance to the Round of 16 despite being drawn in the same group with Super League powerhouses PAOK and Aris. They went on to eliminate local Super League rival OFI in the knock-out phase to eventually make it to the quarter-finals for the first time since 1986, matching the club's best-ever performance in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285185-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ergotelis F.C. season, Players, Out of team\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, 51], "content_span": [52, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285185-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ergotelis F.C. season, Statistics, Squad statistics\nAppearances denote players in the starting lineup, with the numbers in parentheses denoting appearances as substitute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285185-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ergotelis F.C. season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nLast updated: 5 May 2019Source: Competitive matchesOrdered by , \u00a0 and = 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285186-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Erkekler Basketbol S\u00fcper Ligi\nThe 2018\u201319 Erkekler Basketbol S\u00fcper Ligi season, was the premier men's basketball competition in Northern Cyprus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285186-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Erkekler Basketbol S\u00fcper Ligi, Competition format\nSeven teams joined the regular season and competed in a double-legged round-robin tournament. The four best qualified teams of the regular season joined the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285186-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Erkekler Basketbol S\u00fcper Ligi, Playoffs, Bracket\nSemifinals were played in a best-of-five games (2-2-1), while the finals, in a best-of-seven one (2-2-1-1-1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285187-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Esp\u00e9rance Sportive de Tunis season\nIn the 2018\u201319 season, Esp\u00e9rance Sportive de Tunis is competing in the Ligue 1 for the 64th season, as well as the Tunisian Cup. It is their 65th consecutive season in the top flight of Tunisian football. They will be competing in Ligue 1, the Champions League, Super Cup, the Arab Club Champions Cup, the FIFA Club World Cup, the CAF Super Cup and the Tunisian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285187-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Esp\u00e9rance Sportive de Tunis season, 2019 Champions League, knockout stage, Final\nEsp\u00e9rance de Tunis were initially declared winners following a refusal by Wydad Casablanca to resume play following an issue with VAR, though CAF later ruled the second leg must be replayed in a neutral venue to decide the champions. However, the decision to order a replay was thrown out by the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), who told the Confederation of African Football (CAF) to refer the case to its proper disciplinary structures for a decision, and on 7 August 2019, Esp\u00e9rance de Tunis were declared winners for a second time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 88], "content_span": [89, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285187-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Esp\u00e9rance Sportive de Tunis season, Squad information, Goalscorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted alphabetically by surname when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 74], "content_span": [75, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285188-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Essex Senior Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 Essex Senior Football League season was the 48th in the history of Essex Senior Football League, a football competition in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285188-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Essex Senior Football League\nThe provisional club allocations for steps 5 and 6 were announced by the FA on 25 May 2018. The constitution was ratified by the league at its AGM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285188-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Essex Senior Football League, Clubs\nThe league featured 16 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with four new clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285188-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Essex Senior Football League, Clubs\nAlso, Wadham Lodge changed name to Leyton Athletic, while Waltham Forest changed name to Walthamstow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285189-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Esteghlal F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the Esteghlal Football Club's 18th season in the Iran Pro League, and their 25nd consecutive season in the top division of Iranian football. They also competed in the Hazfi Cup, and 73rd year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285189-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Esteghlal F.C. season, Players, First team squad\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 6 June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285189-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Esteghlal F.C. season, Players, Persian Gulf 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-00285189-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Esteghlal F.C. season, Players, 2018 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, 71], "content_span": [72, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285189-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Esteghlal F.C. season, Statistics, Goalscorers\n1 Includes 2018 AFC Champions League, 2019 AFC Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285189-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Esteghlal F.C. season, Statistics, Clean sheets\n1 Includes 2018 AFC Champions League, 2019 AFC Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285189-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Esteghlal F.C. season, Statistics, Disciplinary record, Bookings & sending-off\nLast updated: 5 June 2019Source: 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, 86], "content_span": [87, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285190-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Estonian Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Estonian Cup was the 29th season of the Estonian main domestic football knockout tournament. Narva Trans won their second title after defeating N\u00f5mme Kalju in the final and qualified for the first qualifying round of the UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285190-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Estonian Cup, First Round (1/64)\nThe draw was made by Estonian Football Association on 19 May 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285190-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Estonian Cup, First Round (1/64), Byes\nThese teams were not drawn and secured a place in the second round without playing:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285190-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Estonian Cup, Second round (1/32)\nThe draw for the second round was made on 19 June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285190-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Estonian Cup, Third round (1/16)\nThe draw for the third round was made on 19 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285190-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Estonian Cup, Fourth round (1/8)\nThe draw for the fourth round was made on 24 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285190-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Estonian Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the fourth round was made on 2 March 2019. Maardu Linnameeskond and JK Tabasalu advanced a league level between 2018 and 2019 league seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285190-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Estonian Cup, Final\nFinal was played on 25 May 2019 at A. Le Coq Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 79]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285191-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ethiopian Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Ethiopian Premier League is the 72nd season of top-tier football in Ethiopia (21st season as the Premier League). The season started on 27 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285192-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ettifaq FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Al-Ettifaq's 74th season in existence and their third consecutive season in the Pro League. Along with the Pro League, the club competed in the King Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285192-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ettifaq FC season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285192-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ettifaq 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-00285192-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ettifaq FC season, Players, Squad information, 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, 66], "content_span": [67, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285193-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Euro Hockey League\nThe Euro Hockey League 2018\u201319 was the twelfth season of the Euro Hockey League, Europe's premier club field hockey tournament, organized by the European Hockey Federation. Round One was held in Barcelona from 5 until 7 October 2018 and the knockout stage was held in Eindhoven from 17 until 22 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285193-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Euro Hockey League\nThe final was played between Waterloo Ducks and Rot-Weiss K\u00f6ln. The Waterloo Ducks defeated Rot-Weis K\u00f6ln 4\u20130 to become the first Belgian club to win the Euro Hockey League. Mannheimer HC took the bronze medal and Gonzalo Peillat became the top scorer with nine goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285193-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Euro Hockey League, Association team allocation\nA total of 24 teams from 12 of the 45 EHF member associations participated in the 2018\u201319 Euro Hockey League. The association ranking based on the EHL 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, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285193-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Euro Hockey League, Association team allocation, Qualified teams\nThe following teams qualified for the 2018-19 Euro Hockey League. 12 teams got a bye to the KO16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 72], "content_span": [73, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285193-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Euro Hockey League, Format Changes\nThe EHL board has decided not to continue with the field goal equals two trial, used last season, so this season every goal will return to equaling one whether it comes from the field or a penalty corner. Due to the overcrowded international hockey calendar from 2019 onwards because of the 2019 Men's FIH Pro League, the EHL has combined the KO16 and FINAL4 events at Easter, making a six-day event from April 17 to 22, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285193-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Euro Hockey League, Round One\nRound One was held from 5 until 7 October 2018 at the Pau Negre Stadium in Barcelona. The draw took place on 17 July 2018. If a game is won, the winning team receives 5 points. A draw results in both teams receiving 2 points. A loss gives the losing team 1 point unless the losing team loses by 3 or more goals, then they receive 0 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285193-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Euro Hockey League, Knockout stage\nThe knockout stage took place at Sportpark Aalsterweg in Eindhoven, Netherlands from 17 until 22 April 2019. The draw took place at 21 October 2018 and the schedule was announced on 15 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285193-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Euro Hockey League, Knockout stage, Qualified teams\nThe knockout phase involves 16 teams, consisting of the 4 pool winners and the 12 already qualified teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285194-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Euro Hockey Tour\nThe 2018\u201319 Euro Hockey Tour was the 23rd season of Euro Hockey Tour. It started in November 2018 and lasted until May 2019. It consisted of Karjala Tournament, Channel One Cup, Sweden Hockey Games and Carlson Hockey Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285194-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Euro Hockey Tour, Karjala Tournament\nThe Karjala Cup was played between 8\u201311 November 2018. Five of the matches were played in Helsinki, Finland and one match in Prague, Czech Republic. The tournament was won by Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285194-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Euro Hockey Tour, Channel One Cup\nThe 2018 Channel One Cup was played between 13\u201316 December 2018. Four matches were played in Moscow, Russia, one match was held in Tampere, Finland and one match as an outdoor game in Saint Petersburg, Russia. The tournament was won by Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285194-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Euro Hockey Tour, Sweden Hockey Games\nThe 2019 Sweden Hockey Games were played between 7\u201310 February 2019. Five of the games were played in Stockholm, Sweden and one game in Yaroslavl, Russia. The tournament was won by Czech Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285194-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Euro Hockey Tour, Carlson Hockey Games\nThe 2019 Carlson Hockey Games were played between 1\u20135 May 2019. Five of the games were played in Brno, Czech Republic and one game in Stockholm, Sweden. Tournament was won by Sweden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285195-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroCup Basketball\nThe 2018\u201319 EuroCup Basketball season, also known as 7DAYS EuroCup for sponsorship reasons, is the 17th season of Euroleague Basketball's secondary level professional club basketball tournament. It is the 11th season since it was renamed from the ULEB Cup to the EuroCup, and the third season under the title sponsorship name of 7DAYS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285195-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroCup Basketball, Team allocation\nA total of 24 teams participate in the 2018\u201319 EuroCup Basketball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285195-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroCup Basketball, 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, 50], "content_span": [51, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285195-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroCup Basketball, Round and draw dates, Draw\nThe draw was held on 5 July 2018 at the Mediapro Auditorium in Barcelona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285195-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroCup Basketball, Round and draw dates, Draw\nThe 24 teams were drawn into four groups of six, with the restriction that teams from the same country could not be drawn against each other. For this purpose, Adriatic League worked as only one country. For the draw, the teams were seeded into six pots, in accordance with the Club Ranking, based on their performance in European competitions during a three-year period and the lowest possible position that any club from that league can occupy in the draw is calculated by adding the results of the worst performing team from each league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285195-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroCup Basketball, Round and draw dates, Draw\nThe fixtures were decided after the draw, using a computer draw not shown to public, with the following match sequence:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285195-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroCup Basketball, Round and draw dates, Draw\nNote: Positions for scheduling do not use the seeding pots, e.g., Team 1 is not necessarily the team from Pot 1 in the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285195-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroCup Basketball, Round and draw dates, Draw\nThere were scheduling restrictions: for example, teams from the same city in general are not scheduled to play at home on the same round (to avoid them playing at home on the same day or on consecutive days, due to logistics and crowd control).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285195-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroCup Basketball, Regular season\nIn each group, teams played against each other home-and-away in a round-robin format. The group winners, runners-up, third-placed teams and fourth-placed teams advanced to the Top 16, while the fifth-placed teams and sixth-placed teams were eliminated. The rounds were 2\u20133 October, 9\u201310 October, 16\u201317 October, 23\u201324 October, 30\u201331 October, 6\u20137 November, 13\u201314 November, 20\u201321 November, 11\u201312 December, and 18\u201319 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285195-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroCup Basketball, Top 16\nIn each group, teams played against each other home-and-away in a round-robin format. The group winners and runners-up advanced to the Playoffs, while the third-placed teams and fourth-placed teams were eliminated. The rounds were 2\u20133 January, 8\u20139 January, 15\u201316 January, 22\u201323 January, 29\u201330 January, and 5\u20136 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285195-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroCup Basketball, Playoffs\nIn the playoffs, teams play against each other must win two games to win the series. Thus, if one team wins two games before all three games have been played, the game that remains is omitted. The team that finished in the higher Top 16 place will play the first and the third (if it is necessary) legs of the series at home. The playoffs involves the eight teams which qualified as winners and runners-up of each of the four groups in the Top 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285196-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroCup Basketball Playoffs\nThe 2018\u201319 EuroCup Basketball Playoffs began on 5 March and will end on 12 or 15 April 2019 with the second or third leg, if necessary, of the 2019 EuroCup Finals, to decide the champions of the 2018\u201319 EuroCup Basketball. Eight teams compete in the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285196-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroCup Basketball Playoffs\nTimes up to 27 March 2019 are CET (UTC+1), thereafter (finals) times are CEST (UTC+2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285196-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroCup Basketball Playoffs, Format\nThe playoffs involves the eight teams which qualified as winners and runners-up of each of the four groups in the 2018\u201319 EuroCup Basketball Top 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285196-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroCup Basketball Playoffs, Format\nEach tie in the playoffs, apart from the final, is played with a best-of-three-games format. The team that performed better in the Top 16 will play the games first and third, if necessary, at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285196-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroCup Basketball Playoffs, Quarterfinals\nThe first legs were played on 5 March, the second legs on 8 March and the third legs, if necessary, on 13 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285196-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroCup Basketball Playoffs, Semifinals\nThe first legs were played on 19 March, the second legs on 22 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285196-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroCup Basketball Playoffs, Finals\nThe first leg will be played on 9 April, the second leg on 12 April, and the third leg on 15 April 2019, if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285197-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroCup Women\nThe 2018\u201319 EuroCup Women was the seventeenth edition of FIBA Europe's second-tier international competition for women's basketball clubs under such name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285197-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroCup Women, Teams\nTeams were confirmed by FIBA Europe on 29 June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 81]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285197-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroCup Women, Group stage\nDraw for the group stage was made on 5 July 2018 in Munich, Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285198-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroLeague\nThe 2018\u201319 Turkish Airlines EuroLeague was the 19th season of the modern era of Euroleague Basketball and the eighth under the title sponsorship of the Turkish Airlines. Including the competition's previous incarnation as the FIBA Europe Champions Cup, this was be the 62nd season of the premier competition for European men's clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285198-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroLeague\nThe season started on 11 October 2018 and finished in May 2019 with the 2019 EuroLeague Final Four at Fernando Buesa Arena in Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain. CSKA Moscow won the championship after defeating Anadolu Efes in the championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285198-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroLeague, Team allocation\nA total of sixteen teams participated. The labels in the parentheses show how each team qualified for the place of its starting round (TH: EuroLeague title holders). Eleven teams were placed as Licensed Clubs, long-term licenses, while five spots were given to Associated Clubs, based on merit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285198-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroLeague, Teams\nA total of 16 teams from 9 countries contest the league, including 11 sides with a long-term licence from the 2017\u201318 season, 1 team qualified from the EuroCup and the 4 highest-placed teams from the ABA League, the German Bundesliga, the VTB United League and the Spanish ACB.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285198-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroLeague, Teams\nBayern Munich and Budu\u0107nost VOLI qualified, after clinching the Bundesliga and ABA League titles respectively. Khimki qualified as runner-up of the VTB United League. Herbalife Gran Canaria qualified as the highest-placed team in the Liga ACB without a long-term EuroLeague licence. Dar\u00fc\u015f\u015fafaka qualified as the EuroCup champions, after beating Lokomotiv Kuban in the Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285198-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroLeague, Regular season\nIn the regular season, teams played against each other home and away in a round-robin format. The top eight teams advanced to the playoffs and the bottom eight teams were eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285198-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroLeague, Playoffs\nPlayoffs series are best-of-five. The first team to win three games wins the series. A 2\u20132\u20131 format is used \u2013 teams with home-court advantage play games 1, 2, and 5 at home, while their opponents host games 3 and 4. Games 4 and 5 are only played if necessary. The four victorious teams advance to the Final Four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285198-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroLeague, Final Four\nThe Final Four, held over a single weekend, is the last phase of the season. The four remaining teams play a single knockout round on Friday evening, with the two winners advancing to the championship game. Sunday starts with the third-place game, followed by the championship game. The Final Four was played at the Fernando Buesa Arena in Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain on 17 and 19 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285198-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroLeague, Attendances, Average home attendances\nSource: Notes:1: 2017\u201318 season average applied to EuroCup games 2: AX Armani Exchange Olimpia played one match at PalaBancoDesio, instead of Mediolanum Forum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 57], "content_span": [58, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285198-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroLeague, Attendances, Top 10\nPanathinaikos game against Olympiacos was played with only 17,345 seats available for security reasons", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285199-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroLeague Regular Season\nThe 2018\u201319 EuroLeague Regular Season is played from 11 October 2018 to 6 April 2019. A total of 16 teams compete in the regular season to decide the eight places of the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285199-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroLeague Regular Season\nTimes since 1 November 2018 up to 22 March 2019 are CET (UTC+1), times up to 26 October 2018 and since 28 March 2019 are CEST (UTC+2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285199-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroLeague Regular Season, Format\nIn the regular season, teams play against each other home-and-away in a round-robin format. The eight first qualified teams will advance to the Playoffs, while the last eight qualified teams will be eliminated. The matchdays are from 11 October 2018 to 5 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285199-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroLeague Regular Season, Format, Tiebreakers\nIf a tiebreaker does not resolve a tie completely, a new tiebreak process is initiated with only those teams that remain tied. All points scored in extra periods will not be counted in the standings, nor for any tie-break situation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285199-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroLeague Regular Season, League table, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after completion of each round. In order to preserve chronological evolvements, any postponed matches are not included in 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 13, but then postponed and played between rounds 16 and 17, it will be added to the standings for round 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 67], "content_span": [68, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285200-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroLeague Women\nThe 2018\u201319 EuroLeague Women was the 61st edition of the European women's club basketball championship organized by FIBA, and the 23rd edition since being rebranded as the EuroLeague Women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285200-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroLeague Women, Team allocation\nA total of 20 teams from 11 countries participated in the 2018\u201319 EuroLeague Women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285200-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroLeague Women, Team allocation, Teams\nLeague positions of the previous season shown in parentheses (TH: EuroLeague Women title holders):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285200-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroLeague Women, Round and draw dates, Draw\nThe draw was held on 5 July 2018 at the FIBA headquarters in Munich, Germany. The 16 teams were drawn into two groups of eight. For the draw, the teams were seeded into eight seeds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285200-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroLeague Women, Regular season\nThe regular season started on 24 October 2018 and ended on 20 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285200-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroLeague Women, Regular season\nThe four top teams of each group qualified for the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285200-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroLeague Women, Regular season\nIf teams are level on record at the end of the Regular Season, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285200-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroLeague Women, Awards\nThis year the regular season awards decided by fan vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285200-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroLeague Women, Individual leaders\nStats includes postseason games and are sorted on average per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285200-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 EuroLeague Women, Team leaders\nStats includes postseason games and are sorted on average per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285201-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Euroleague Basketball Next Generation Tournament\nThe 2018\u201319 Euroleague Basketball Next Generation Tournament, also called Adidas Next Generation Tournament by sponsorship reasons, is the 17th edition of the international junior basketball tournament organized by the Euroleague Basketball Company.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285201-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Euroleague Basketball Next Generation Tournament\nAs in past years, 32 teams joined the first stage, which are played in four qualifying tournaments between December 2018 and February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285201-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Euroleague Basketball Next Generation Tournament, Qualifying tournaments, Valencia\nThe Valencia Tournament was played between 28 and 30 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 90], "content_span": [91, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285201-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Euroleague Basketball Next Generation Tournament, Qualifying tournaments, Munich Tournament\nThe Munich Tournament was played between 25 and 27 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 99], "content_span": [100, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285201-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Euroleague Basketball Next Generation Tournament, Qualifying tournaments, Kaunas Tournament\nThe Kaunas Tournament was played between 8 and 10 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 99], "content_span": [100, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285201-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Euroleague Basketball Next Generation Tournament, Qualifying tournaments, Belgrade Tournament\nThe Belgrade Tournament was played between 22 and 24 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 101], "content_span": [102, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285201-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Euroleague Basketball Next Generation Tournament, Final Tournament\nThe Final Tournament was played between 16 and 19 May 2019 in Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 74], "content_span": [75, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup is the fifth edition of the European Rugby Challenge Cup, an annual second-tier rugby union competition for professional clubs. Including the predecessor competition, the original European Challenge Cup, this is the 23rd edition of European club rugby's second-tier competition. Clubs from five of the nations that participate in the Six Nations Championship (Scotland being the only exception), along with club-sides from Romania and Russia, are competing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup\nThe first round of the group stage began on 12 October 2018, and the competition will end with the final on 10 May 2019 in Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom. This will be the second time the final will be held in England in the era of the current Challenge Cup, and the 12th including finals of the original Challenge Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup, Teams\nA total of 20 teams qualified for the 2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup; 18 qualified from across the Gallagher Premiership, Guinness Pro14 and Top 14, as a direct result of their domestic league performance, with two qualifying through the Continental Shield competition. Subject to the allocation of the 20th place in the 2018\u201319 Champions Cup as per EPCR rules, the distribution of teams was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup, Teams, Qualifying competition \u2013 European Rugby Continental Shield\nThe qualification tournament was reformatted as a competition in its own right, the European Rugby Continental Shield, in 2017. Eight teams were split into two pools of four to compete in the pool stage of the European Rugby Continental Shield. Each team played the four teams in the other pool once. The winner of each pool then played-off against the runner-up of the other pool. The winners of these two qualifying play-offs played each other in a two-legged play-off for a place in the Challenge Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 103], "content_span": [104, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup, Teams, Qualifying competition \u2013 European Rugby Continental Shield\nThe two Russian teams who had competed in the 2017\u201318 tournament played each other in a two-legged qualifying play-off for a place in the Challenge Cup. The winners of the two qualifying play-offs, having both qualified for the Challenge Cup, then played each other in the European Rugby Continental Shield final in May 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 103], "content_span": [104, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup, Teams, Ineligible teams\nHeidelberger RK were due to become the first German club to take part in either of the two major European rugby union competitions after qualification from the 2017\u201318 European Rugby Continental Shield. However, they were ruled ineligible by EPC Rugby due to their primary financial backer, Hans-Peter Wild, also being the majority shareholder in Stade Fran\u00e7ais and therefore being in a position to influence two teams in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup, Teams, Ineligible teams\nTimi\u0219oara Saracens, who had been eliminated by Heidelberger RK at the Continental Shield semi-final stage (effectively the Challenge Cup play-off) were confirmed as their replacement on 11 June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup, Teams, Team details\nBelow is the list of coaches, captain and stadiums with their method of qualification for each team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup, Teams, Team details\nNote: Placing shown in brackets, denotes standing at the end of the regular season for their respective leagues, with their end of season positioning shown through CH for Champions, RU for Runner-up, SF for losing Semi-finalist and QF for losing Quarter-finalist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup, Seeding\nThe 20 competing teams were seeded and split into four tiers; seeding was based on performance in their respective domestic leagues. Where promotion and relegation is in effect in a league, the promoted team was seeded last, or (if multiple teams are promoted) by performance in the lower competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup, Seeding\nTeams are taken from a league in order of rank and put into a tier. A draw is used to allocate two second seeds to Tier 1; the remaining team goes into Tier 2. This allocation indirectly determines which fourth-seeded team entered Tier 2, while the others enter Tier 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup, Seeding\nGiven the nature of the Continental Shield \u2014 a competition including developing rugby nations and Italian clubs not competing in the Pro14 \u2014 the two qualifiers from that competition were automatically included in Tier 4 and are seeded equally, despite officially being ranked 1 and 2 from that competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup, Seeding\nThe brackets show each team's seeding and their league (for example, 1 Top 14 indicates the team was seeded 1st from the Top 14).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup, Pool stage\nThe draw took place on 20 June 2018 in the Olympic Museum, Lausanne, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup, Pool stage\nTeams in the same pool play each other twice, both at home and away in the group stage started in October 2018, and continues through to January 2019. The pool winners and three best runners-up progressed to the quarter finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup, Pool stage\nTeams are awarded competition points, based on match result. Teams receive four points for a win, two points for a draw, one attacking bonus point for scoring four or more tries in a match and one defensive bonus point for losing a match by seven points or fewer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup, Pool stage\nIn the event of a tie between two or more teams, the following tie-breakers will be used, as directed by EPCR:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup, Knock-out stage, Format\nThe eight qualifiers are ranked according to their performance in the pool stage and compete in the quarter-finals which will be held on the weekend of 28\u201331 March 2019. The four top teams will host the quarter-finals against the four lower teams in a 1v8, 2v7, 3v6 and 4v5 format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup, Knock-out stage, Format\nThe semi-finals will be played on the weekend of 19\u201321 April 2019. As in recent seasons, a fixed semi-final bracket is set in advance. However, beginning this season the higher-seeded team will host each semi-final regardless of whether they won their quarter-final at home or on the road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup, Knock-out stage, Format\nThe winners of the semi-finals will contest the final, at St James' Park, on 10 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup, Season records, Team\n111\u20133 Northampton Saints at home to Timi\u0219oara Saracens on 18 January 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup, Season records, Team\n82\u201321 La Rochelle away to Enisei-STM on 13 October 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup, Season records, Team\n111\u20133 Northampton Saints at home to Timi\u0219oara Saracens on 18 January 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup, Season records, Team\nNorthampton Saints at home to Timi\u0219oara Saracens on 18 January 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup, Season records, Player\nMaxime Lafage for La Rochelle away to Enisei-STM on 13 October 2018 Andy Uren for Bristol Bears at home Enisei-STM on 19 January 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup, Season records, Player\nAndy Uren for Bristol Bears at home Enisei-STM on 19 January 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup, Season records, Player\nJames Grayson for Northampton Saints at home to Timi\u0219oara Saracens on 18 January 2019 Callum Sheedy for Bristol Bears at home Enisei-STM on 19 January 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup, Season records, Player\nIhaia West for La Rochelle away to Zebre on 19 January 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup, Season records, Player\nCamille Lopez for Clermont at home to Harlequins on 20 April 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285202-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup, Season records, Attendances\nEnisei-STM at home to Bristol Bears on 12 January 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285203-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup pool stage\nThe 2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup pool stage is the first stage of the competition in the fifth season of the European Rugby Challenge Cup. The competition involves twenty teams competing across five pools of four teams for eight quarter-final places \u2013 awarded to the five pool winners and the three top-ranked pool runners-up. The pool stage begins on 13 October 2018 and is due to be completed on 18 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285203-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup pool stage, Seeding\nThe 20 competing teams were seeded and split into four tiers; seeding was based on performance in their respective domestic leagues. Where promotion and relegation is in effect in a league, the promoted team was seeded last, or (if multiple teams are promoted) by performance in the lower competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 56], "content_span": [57, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285203-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup pool stage, Seeding\nTeams will be taken from a league in order of rank and put into a tier. A draw will be used to allocate two second seeds to Tier 1; the remaining team goes into Tier 2. This allocation indirectly determines which fourth-seeded team entered Tier 2, while the others enter Tier 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 56], "content_span": [57, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285203-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup pool stage, Seeding\nGiven the nature of the Continental Shield \u2013 a competition including developing rugby nations and Italian clubs not competing in the Pro14 \u2013 the two qualifiers from that competition were automatically included in Tier 4 and are seeded equally, despite officially being ranked 1 and 2 from that competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 56], "content_span": [57, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285203-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup pool stage, Seeding\nThe brackets show each team's seeding and their league (for example, 1 Top 14 indicates the team was seeded 1st from the Top 14).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 56], "content_span": [57, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285203-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup pool stage, Pool stage\nThe draw will take place on 20 June 2018 in the Olympic Museum, Lausanne, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285203-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup pool stage, Pool stage\nTeams in the same pool will play each other twice, both at home and away in the group stage, that will begin in October 2018, and continue through to January 2019, before the pool winners and three best runners-up progressed to the quarter finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285203-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup pool stage, Pool stage\nTeams will be awarded competition points, based on match result. Teams receive four points for a win, two points for a draw, one attacking bonus point for scoring four or more tries in a match and one defensive bonus point for losing a match by seven points or fewer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285203-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup pool stage, Pool stage\nIn the event of a tie between two or more teams, the following tie-breakers will be used, as directed by EPCR:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285204-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup (known as the Heineken Champions Cup for sponsorship reasons) is the fifth season of the European Rugby Champions Cup, the annual club rugby union competition run by European Professional Club Rugby (ECPR) for teams from the top six nations in Europe. It is the 24th season of pan-European professional club rugby competition. This competition is the first to be sponsored by Heineken since the 2013\u201314 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285204-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup\nThe tournament started on 12 October 2018. The final, featuring the last two winners of the event, Saracens and Leinster, took place on 11 May 2019 at St James' Park in Newcastle upon Tyne, England, with Saracens being crowned champions for the third time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285204-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup, Teams\nTwenty clubs from the three major European domestic and regional leagues competed in the Champions Cup. Nineteen of these qualified directly as a result of their league performance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285204-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup, Teams\nIn a change to previous seasons, the play-off to decide the 20th team was not held. The final place in the Champions Cup is now directly awarded in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285204-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup, Teams, Team details\nBelow is the list of coaches, captain and stadiums with their method of qualification for each team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285204-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup, Teams, Team details\nNote: Placing shown in brackets, denotes standing at the end of the regular season for their respective leagues, with their end of season positioning shown through CH for Champions, RU for Runner-up, SF for losing Semi-finalist, QF for losing Quarter-finalist, and PO for the Pro14 7th place play-off winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285204-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup, Seeding\nThe twenty competing teams are seeded and split into four tiers, each containing five teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285204-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup, Seeding\nFor the purpose of creating the tiers, clubs are ranked based on their domestic league performances and on their qualification for the knockout phases of their championships. For example, a losing quarter-finalist would be seeded below a losing semi-finalist, even if they finished above them in the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285204-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup, Seeding\nBased on these seedings, teams are placed into one of the four tiers, with the top seed clubs being put in Tier 1. The nature of the tier system means that a draw is needed to allocate two of the three second seed clubs to Tier 1 and to allocate one of the three fourth seed clubs to Tier 2. The tiers are shown below. Brackets show each team's seeding and their league (for example, \"1 Top 14\" indicates the team was seeded 1st from the Top 14).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285204-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup, Pool stage\nThe draw took place on 20 June 2018, in Lausanne, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285204-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup, Pool stage\nTeams in the same pool play each other twice, at home and away, in the group stage that begins on the weekend of 12\u201314 October 2018, and continues through to 18\u201320 January 2019. The five pool winners and three best runners-up progress to the quarter finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285204-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup, Pool stage\nTeams are awarded group points based on match performances. Four points are awarded for a win, two points for a draw, one attacking bonus point for scoring four or more tries in a match and one defensive bonus point for losing a match by seven points or fewer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285204-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup, Pool stage\nIn the event of a tie between two or more teams, the following tie-breakers are used, as directed by EPCR:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285204-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup, Knock-out stage, Format\nThe eight qualifiers are ranked according to their performance in the pool stage and compete in the quarter-finals which will be held on the weekend of 28\u201331 March 2019. The four top teams will host the quarter-finals against the four lower teams in a 1v8, 2v7, 3v6 and 4v5 format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285204-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup, Knock-out stage, Format\nThe semi-finals were played on the weekend of 19\u201321 April 2019. As in recent seasons, a fixed semi-final bracket was set in advance. Beginning this season, the higher-seeded team received home country/venue advantage for each semi-final, regardless of whether they won their quarter-final at home or on the road. Also new for this season was the EPRC's use of discretion to allow semi-finals to be played at a qualified club's home venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285204-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup, Knock-out stage, Format\nThe winners of the semi-finals contested the final, at St James' Park, on 11 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285204-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup, Season records, Team\n52\u20133 Leinster at home to Wasps on 12 October 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285204-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup, Season records, Team\n56\u201327 Saracens at home to Glasgow Warriors on 30 March 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285204-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup, Season records, Team\nLeinster at home to Wasps on 12 October 2018Leinster at home to Bath on 15 December 2018Saracens at home to Glasgow Warriors on 30 March 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285204-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup, Season records, Team\nCastres at home to Exeter Chiefs on 20 October 2018Lyon at home to Saracens on 13 January 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285204-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup, Season records, Player\nJoey Carbery for Munster at away to Gloucester on 11 January 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285204-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup, Season records, Player\nAlex Lozowski for Saracens at home to Glasgow Warriors on 30 March 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285204-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup, Season records, Player\nOwen Farrell for Saracens at home to Munster on 20 April 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285204-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup, Season records, Player\nJulien Dumora for Castres at home to Exeter Chiefs on 20 October 2018 Jonathan Wisniewski for Lyon at home to Saracens on 13 January 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285204-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup, Season records, Attendances\nNewcastle Falcons at home to Montpellier on 21 October 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285205-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup pool stage\nThe 2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup pool stage is the first stage of the 24th season of European club rugby union, and the fifth under the European Rugby Champions Cup format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285205-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup pool stage\nThe competition involves twenty teams, across five pools of four teams, for eight quarter-final places \u2013 awarded to the five pool winners and the three top-ranked pool runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285205-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup pool stage\nThe pool stage began on the weekend of 12-14 October 2018, and ended following 6 rounds of games, on the weekend of 18-20 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285205-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup pool stage, Seeding\nThe twenty competing teams are seeded and split into four tiers, each containing five teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 56], "content_span": [57, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285205-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup pool stage, Seeding\nFor the purpose of creating the tiers, clubs are ranked based on their domestic league performances and on their qualification for the knockout phases of their championships. For example, a losing quarter-finalist would be seeded below a losing semi-finalist, even if they finished above them in the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 56], "content_span": [57, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285205-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup pool stage, Seeding\nBased on these seedings, teams are placed into one of the four tiers, with the top seed clubs being put in Tier 1. The nature of the tier system means that a draw is needed to allocate two of the three second seed clubs to Tier 1 and to allocate one of the three fourth seed clubs to Tier 2. The tiers are shown below. Brackets show each team's seeding and their league (for example, \"1 Top 14\" indicates the team was seeded 1st from the Top 14).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 56], "content_span": [57, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285205-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup pool stage, Pool stage\nThe draw took place on 20 June 2018, in Lausanne, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285205-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup pool stage, Pool stage\nTeams in the same pool play each other twice, at home and away, in the group stage that begins on the weekend of 12/13/14 October 2018, and continues through to 18/19/20 January 2019. The five pool winners and three best runners-up progress to the quarter finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285205-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup pool stage, Pool stage\nTeams are awarded group points based on match performances. Four points are awarded for a win, two points for a draw, one attacking bonus point for scoring four or more tries in a match and one defensive bonus point for losing a match by seven points or fewer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285205-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup pool stage, Pool stage\nIn the event of a tie between two or more teams, the following tie-breakers will be used, as directed by EPCR:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285205-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup pool stage, Pool stage\n(Q) denotes the team has qualified for the quarter-finals as the pool winners(q) denotes team has at least qualified for the quarter-finals as one of the three highest-scoring second-place teams", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season\nThe 2018\u20132019 European windstorm season was the fourth instance of seasonal European windstorm naming in Europe. Most storms form between September and March. The first named storm, Ali, affected primarily the United Kingdom and Ireland on 19 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Background and naming\nIn 2015, the British and Irish national meteorological agencies, Met Office and Met \u00c9ireann respectively, announced a pilot project to name storm warnings as part of the Name our Storms project for wind storms and asked the public for suggestions. The meteorological offices produced a full list of names for 2015\u20132016 through to 2017\u20132018, common to both the UK and Ireland. A new list of names was released on 11 September 2018 for the 2018\u20132019 season. Names in the UK were based on the National Severe Weather Warning Service, when a storm is assessed to have the potential for an Amber 'be prepared' or Red 'take action (danger to life)' warning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Background and naming\nThere are two main naming lists, created by the national meteorological agencies of the UK and Ireland, and France, Spain and Portugal respectively. Additionally, former Atlantic hurricanes will retain their names as assigned by the National Hurricane Center of the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Background and naming, France, Spain and Portugal\nThis is the second season in which the meteorological agencies of France, Spain and Portugal will be naming storms which affect their areas. This naming scheme is partially overlapping with that used by the UK and Ireland, as storms named by the other group of agencies will be used reciprocally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 84], "content_span": [85, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Background and naming, Other naming systems\nTwo former Atlantic hurricanes transitioned into European windstorms during the season, and retained their names as assigned by the National Hurricane Center in Miami, Florida:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 78], "content_span": [79, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Background and naming, Other naming systems\nAdditionally to these naming systems, the Free University of Berlin also names high and low pressure areas through its \"Adopt a vortex\" programme. The Nordic nations of Denmark, Norway and Sweden also name storms with more limited reciprocation. Other nations may also name storms either through their national meteorological institutions or popularly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 78], "content_span": [79, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Season summary\nThe season began on 16 September 2018 with the naming of Storm Helene, a former Atlantic hurricane. However, as it weakened considerably while approaching the British Isles, all warnings for Helene were discontinued on 18 September. Later that day, the second storm of the season, Storm Ali, was named by the Met Office and Met \u00c9ireann with the issuance of amber wind warnings for the following day. The third storm of the season, Bronagh, was named on 20 September; the earliest third named storm in a season since naming began.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms\nThe season was prefaced by the extratropical remnants of Hurricane Helene which affected the UK and Ireland on 17\u201318 September. This began an active period of storm formation under a fast moving jet stream over the Atlantic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Ex-Hurricane Helene\nWhile still a tropical cyclone, Hurricane Helene affected the Azores from 15 to 16 September 2018. The system subsequently completed an extratropical transition on 16 September as it accelerated north-eastwards towards the British Isles, with the outer bands of Storm Helene causing minimal impacts in north-western Spain and Portugal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Ex-Hurricane Helene\nStorm Helene crossed the UK and Ireland on 17\u201318 September, with the Met Office and Met \u00c9ireann issuing yellow wind warnings. The Met Office's yellow warning of wind covered southern England, the Midlands and Wales overnight from 17 to 18 September, with forecasts predicting winds of up to 60 to 70\u00a0mph (97 to 113\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Ex-Hurricane Helene\nHelene was downgraded as it approached the British Isles, with winds gusting to only 40 to 50\u00a0mph (64 to 80\u00a0km/h) in isolated locations; as a result, all warnings were cancelled on 18 September as Helene was still crossing the UK. Subsequently, Helene emerged into the Norwegian Sea and stalled off the coast of Norway as a weakened system, finally being absorbed by Storm Bronagh approaching from the south-west on 21 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Ali\nStorm Ali was named on 18 September by Met \u00c9ireann and Met Office, who both issued Amber weather warnings for wind associated with Ali. The centre of circulation of Ali made landfall in south-western Ireland in the early hours of 19 September, crossing into Northern Ireland before re-emerging into the Atlantic and then making a second landfall close to Ullapool in north-western Scotland at around 14:00 local time (UTC+1). The highest wind gust recorded in the Republic of Ireland was 143\u00a0km/h (89\u00a0mph) at Mace Head weather station in County Galway. The highest gust record in the United Kingdom was 102\u00a0mph (164\u00a0km/h) recorded on the Tay Road Bridge in Scotland. The winds on this storm were equivalent to a Category 2 on the Saffir\u2013Simpson scale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 804]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Ali\nStorm Ali killed two people in Ireland and the UK. A caravan was blown over a cliff onto a beach near the village of Claddaghduff in County Galway, killing a woman who was visiting from Switzerland. In County Armagh, a man in his 20s was killed by a falling tree. Falling trees also severely injured a woman in Cheshire. There was also severe tree damage in the Galway City and County region, which led to numerous school and road closures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0012-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Ali\nElectricity supplies were lost to more than 100,000 homes across Northern Ireland, with more than 25,000 remaining without power into the following morning; the worst affected areas for power outages were Omagh, Dungannon and Enniskillen. Across the border in the Republic of Ireland, more than 186,000 properties lost electricity during Ali, of which 119,000 had power restored by the end of the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Ali\nIn County Antrim, the M1 motorway was closed in both directions for several hours after power cables fell across the carriageways. Enterprise trains between Belfast and Dublin were delayed for up to seven hours due to debris on the tracks. Services between Belfast and Derry were suspended, and a blanket speed restriction of 50\u00a0mph (80\u00a0km/h) was enforced on all NI Railways services pending track inspections, causing widespread delays. There were also delays to flights at Belfast International Airport. In Greenock in Scotland, the MS Nautica cruise ship broke free from her moorings and drifted for several hours before being rescued by tugboats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Ali\nA major incident was declared by police in Dumfries and Galloway after many people were injured by flying debris; schools were placed on lockdown for the safety of students, as Ali's highest winds in this area occurred around the end of the school day. On the Highland Main Line, a freight train was derailed after striking fallen tree branches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0014-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Ali\nIn Cumbria, fallen trees and power lines caused disruption to transport and left homes without power; overturned lorries caused the M6 motorway to close for several hours, and Virgin Trains services along the West Coast Main Line were delayed or cancelled between Preston and Glasgow Central. Dozens of trees fell or were damaged across the city of Sheffield, where council housing stock suffered considerable damage, including one housing block which had its roof ripped off in the Gleadless Valley area of the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Ali\nAfter clearing the UK, Ali made landfall in Norway, where several thousand homes were left without power in the west of the country. Ali subsequently tracked over northern Scandinavia and into Siberia, exiting the basin on 22 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Bronagh\nBronagh first developed as a wave depression close to the southeast coast of Ireland. The storm was named on 20 September, and was expected to develop further over the British Isles. Yellow weather warnings were issued with the \"possibility\" that further upgrades to Amber warnings may be needed depending on how Bronagh developed over the UK. However, Bronagh did not develop over the Isles, and instead strengthened over the North Sea. Thus, no Amber alert for Bronagh was issued by the UK Met Office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Bronagh\nBronagh brought heavy rainfall to southern Ireland, Wales, and northern England. Heavy rainfall fell across Wales and northern England on 20 September as Bronagh approached. In Sheffield, 66.2\u00a0mm (2.61\u00a0in) of rain fell in a 24-hour period, breaking the previous record of 58.9\u00a0mm (2.32\u00a0in) set on 14 September 1994 for the city's wettest September day since records began. Rainfall accumulations reached 70\u00a0mm (2.8\u00a0in) widely across Wales and northern England, with some parts of Wales recording up to 100\u00a0mm (3.9\u00a0in) of rain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Bronagh\nAs a result of heavy rainfall from Bronagh, widespread flooding was reported. Flash flooding in Sheffield was the worst to affect the city since June 2007. Along the A6178 Sheffield Road between Sheffield and Rotherham, rapidly rising floodwaters caused cars and vans to become stranded. In nearby Tinsley, a woman had to be rescued from her car after becoming trapped in rising water. East Midlands Trains reported that severe flooding from the River Sheaf and Porter Brook was affecting Sheffield station, with services delayed or cancelled as a result. Bus services across the city were also suspended as the flooding peaked during the evening rush hour, stranding thousands of people. Flooding was additionally reported in Sheffield City Centre, Bradway, Intake, Meersbrook, Nether Edge and Woodseats amongst other districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 886]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Bronagh\nThe storm continued to intensify over the North Sea, tracking towards Norway. The island of Heligoland and the Alte Weser lighthouse on the German coast recorded gusts of 107\u00a0km/h (66\u00a0mph), while the Lindesnes Lighthouse in Norway recorded the highest wind speed at 154\u00a0km/h (96\u00a0mph). A truck driver in Hamburg suffered injuries after his truck was hit by a shipping container. Bronagh absorbed the remnants of ex-Hurricane Helene over the Norwegian Sea before making landfall in Scandinavia on 22 September, subsequently tracking northwards into the Arctic and out of the basin by 25 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Callum\nOn 10 October, a weak weather system to the south of Spain organized into Storm Callum. Callum moved further northeastward while strengthening in particularly favourable conditions. The system then underwent explosive cyclogenesis, as it was forced toward the United Kingdom by a jet stream. On 11 October, Callum reached its peak intensity on approach to Cardiff, Wales. The storm began to weaken due to an impinging weather system. which had an adverse effect on Callum before it made impact on land.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0020-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Callum\nThe system then brought intense winds with speeds of up to 76\u00a0mph (122\u00a0km/h) to parts of northern England, along with torrential rains to parts of Wales with 95.6\u00a0mm (3.76\u00a0in) recorded in Libanus but overall only made a minimal impact on land. Unexpected warm weather was reported soon after, with Donna Nook in Lincolnshire reaching 26.5\u00a0\u00b0C (79.7\u00a0\u00b0F) in the afternoon. At 21:00 UTC, Callum subsequently moved across Iceland and the Norwegian Sea as a weakened system, continuing northwards into the Arctic and out of the basin by 16 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Callum\nAs of 13 October 2018, the storm has caused two indirect fatalities; a 33-year-old man and a 35-year-old woman are said to have encountered difficulties in the Penarth Marina. The storm has caused one direct fatality; a person died after a landslide in Cwmduad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Ex-Hurricane Leslie\nWhile still a tropical cyclone, the center of Hurricane Leslie passed within 100 nautical miles (190\u00a0km) of Madeira. This prompted the issuance of tropical storm warnings to the archipelago on 11 October, the first ever tropical cyclone warnings issued in Europe. Beaches and parks were closed, 180 sports matches were postponed and dozens of flights were cancelled until Leslie began to move away from the archipelago and all warnings were cancelled on 13 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Ex-Hurricane Leslie\nLeslie transitioned into a powerful extratropical cyclone on 13 October and made landfall in Figueira da Foz in central Portugal with sustained winds of 110\u00a0km/h (70\u00a0mph) at 21:10 UTC that day. Red weather warnings were issued for 13 out of 18 districts in Portugal by the time Leslie made landfall, including Lisbon. Extreme wind gusts, associated with a sting jet, were recorded in the Figueira da Foz area after landfall, gusting as high as 180\u00a0km/h (110\u00a0mph).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Ex-Hurricane Leslie\nHigh winds and flooding from heavy rainfall caused damage across Portugal and Spain, leaving 324,000 homes without power in Portugal at the height of the storm. Sixty people were evacuated from their homes during the storm, and more than 1,000 trees were blown down across Portugal. Leslie caused two fatalities and 28 injuries in mainland Portugal, and damage estimated at more than \u20ac100 million across the Iberian peninsula.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Ex-Hurricane Leslie\nLeslie weakened as it moved across the Iberian peninsula, with winds gusting up to a maximum of 97\u00a0km/h (60\u00a0mph) reported across Spain. However, heavy rainfall from the system persisted and later fed into a low-pressure system to the north, resulting in record-breaking rainfall across southern France. Severe thunderstorms and flash flooding were reported, with Carcassonne recording 180\u00a0mm (7.1\u00a0in) of rainfall in a five-hour period on 14 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0025-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Ex-Hurricane Leslie\nThe worst affected town was Villegailhenc in Aude; the Aude River rose to a height of 7.0\u00a0m (23\u00a0ft) above average, its highest level since 1891, and flooding in Villegailhenc resulted in 14 fatalities. Wind gusts of 11\u00a0km/h (6.8\u00a0mph) and wave heights of 7.60\u00a0m (24.9\u00a0ft) were recorded in S\u00e8te. In total, damage from Leslie in southern France was estimated at more than \u20ac220 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Adrian\nStorm Adrian formed on 28 October over the western Mediterranean Sea, becoming the sixth named storm of the season and the first to be named by M\u00e9t\u00e9o-France. Adrian strengthened as it tracked between the Balearic Islands and Corsica, later making landfall in Corsica on 29 October with winds gusting up to 189\u00a0km/h (117\u00a0mph). In the city of Ajaccio, winds gusts of up to 117\u00a0km/h (73\u00a0mph) were recorded, the second highest ever measured in the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Adrian\nAdrian subsequently continued northwards and made landfall along the French Riviera later that day, bringing high winds, heavy rain, thunderstorms and a severe storm surge along the south coast of France. Severe coastal erosion damaged the beaches at Nice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0027-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Adrian\nA trailing weather front from Adrian advanced into northern Italy causing severe coastal flooding, the Italian Riviera was severely damaged, the port of Rapallo completely destroyed with two hundred damaged and sunken boats, partially isolated Portofino by land with destruction of the coastal road, while on Adriatic coast, has killed six people in Venice and has damaged the Basilica of San Marco and left 75% of the city underwater; across northern Italy, flooding and landslides from heavy rainfall killed a further four people. Two tornadoes touched down in the centre of Terracina, killing one person and injuring ten others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Adrian\nHeavy snowfall was reported in central France as the centre of Storm Adrian advanced northwards, and 200,000 houses lost power. 28 departments of central France were placed under an orange alert for severe snow and ice, with up to 15\u00a0cm (5.9\u00a0in) of snow falling over a wide area and up to 50\u00a0cm (20\u00a0in) falling over higher ground. A 75-year-old woman was killed and four other people were injured in a multiple-vehicle road accident in Aveyron caused by heavy snowfall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Adrian\nOn 30 October, Adrian continued northwards into Belgium and the Netherlands before emerging into the North Sea, having weakened considerably over land. Late on 30 October, Adrian brought heavy rainfall and moderate winds to south-east England and East Anglia, before moving into the Norwegian Sea and dissipating off the coast of Norway on 31 October. The wider circulation of Adrian additionally caused dust storms in Algeria, Tunisia and Libya starting on 28 October, subsequently directing a dense plume of Saharan dust over Italy on 29 October and into Greece on 30 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Adrian\nAfter emerging into the Norwegian Sea on 1 November, Adrian stalled and re-intensified, slowly drifting towards Iceland. On 3 November, Adrian was absorbed by the remnants of Hurricane Oscar while centred between Iceland and northern Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Beatriz\nStorm Beatriz formed on 6 November over the central Atlantic Ocean, being named by the Agencia Estatal de Meteorolog\u00eda of Spain. Remaining largely stationary over the middle of the Atlantic, Beatriz steadily strengthened, reaching a central pressure of 960\u00a0hPa (28\u00a0inHg) on 7 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Beatriz\nBeatriz had been forecasted to bring strong winds and heavy rainfall for northern Spain, France and southern England on 9 November, and weather warnings were issued in advance of the arrival of Beatriz in these areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0033-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Diana\nStorm Diana was named by the Portuguese Institute of Sea and Atmosphere (IPMA) on 24 November, with an orange warning being issued for the Azores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0034-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Julia\nA National Weather Service Ocean Prediction Centre analysis showed the low reaching a nadir of 934\u00a0hPa (27.6\u00a0inHg).. The UK Met Office produced an analysis chart with the low at 936\u00a0hPa (27.6\u00a0inHg).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0035-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Freya\nCarnival processions in the German towns of Bottrop and Oberhausen were cancelled. One person died in Ochtrup after their car was hit by a falling tree. A second person died in Kempten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0036-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Laura\nA storm-related traffic accident in northern Germany caused three deaths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0037-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Laura\nA wind gust of 244\u00a0km/h (152\u00a0mph) was measured at 3,845\u00a0m (12,615\u00a0ft) on Aiguille du Midi, a new record since measurements began in 1993 on that mountain. The old record of 225\u00a0km/h (140\u00a0mph) dated back to 11 January 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0038-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Gareth\nGareth experienced explosive cyclogenesis when, between 10 and 11 March, its central pressure fell 37\u00a0hPa (1.1\u00a0inHg) in 24 hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0039-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Miguel\nOn 5 June, the Spanish Met Agency named Miguel. It was expected to hit the UK from The 7th to 13 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0040-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Storms, Storm Miguel\nOn 7 June, storm Miguel produced gusts up to 129\u00a0km/h (80\u00a0mph) at the Atlantic coast of France. At \u00cele d'Yeu, France, one of these gusts set a record for the month of June, last set in 1981.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0041-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Other systems\nThe fully extratropical remnants of Tropical Storm Ernesto crossed Ireland and the United Kingdom on 18\u201319 August, bringing heavy rainfall and winds of up to 40\u00a0mph (64\u00a0km/h), unseasonably strong for the time of year. The heavy rainfall from the remnants of Ernesto caused some flooding across the two countries. Additionally, Ernesto dragged up warm tropical air over the British Isles, resulting in unusually warm and humid weather. No warnings were issued in advance of Ernesto by either Met \u00c9ireann or the Met Office, and no damage was reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0042-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Other systems\nCyclone Fabienne, named by the Free University of Berlin, affected Germany on 23 September with winds of up to 158\u00a0km/h (98\u00a0mph), causing widespread damage across southern and central Germany. One person, a 78-year-old woman, was killed after being struck by a falling tree at a campsite in Bamberg. A four-year-old boy suffered critical injuries after being struck by a falling tree in Epfenbach. Structural damage to properties was reported from a possible tornado in Erzgebirgskreis. Air and rail travel was disrupted across Germany, Austria and Switzerland due to high winds and fallen trees on train tracks. In the Czech Republic, more than 140,000 buildings were left without power during the height of Fabienne overnight on 23\u201324 September, and 23 buildings in Prague suffered structural damage. Two people were injured in Olomouc when a tree fell into their house.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 921]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0043-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Other systems\nCyclone Zorbas formed over the Mediterranean Sea on 25 September. Beginning on 27 September, the system began to acquire some subtropical and then tropical characteristics, becoming a Mediterranean tropical-like cyclone. Heavy rainfall from Zorbas resulted in flash flooding which killed five people in Tunisia and three people in Greece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0044-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Other systems\nStorm Kuisma (named by the Finnish Meteorological Institute; FUB: Gertraud) made landfall in southern Finland on 27 September, causing a storm surge of up to 123\u00a0cm (48\u00a0in) in Hamina and 92\u00a0cm (36\u00a0in) in Helsinki. The storm surge and heavy rainfall resulted in some coastal flooding. Kuisma brought winds gusting up to 114\u00a0km/h (31.7\u00a0m/s; 71\u00a0mph), bringing down trees and power lines; however, damage was lower than initially expected. Around 4,500 properties were left without power.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0045-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Other systems\nStorm Alfrida (named by the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute; FUB: Zeetje) crossed northern Europe on 1\u20132 January. In Denmark, high winds from Alfrida were involved in blowing a semi-trailer off a freight train on the Great Belt Fixed Link, resulting in a collision with a passenger train in which eight people were killed and sixteen more were injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0045-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Other systems\nExperts however considered the wind speed measured at the bridge, a strong gale, to be insufficient for causing the accident by itself, which was confirmed in the official report by Accident Investigation Board Denmark where it was found that it only could happen because of a locking mechanism on the freight train that did not function properly. In Sweden, where winds gusting up to 110\u00a0km/h (30\u00a0m/s; 67\u00a0mph) were recorded, a commuter train collided with fallen trees along the Saltsj\u00f6banan railway near Stockholm, although there were no injuries. The entire phone network on the island of Gotland was taken offline due to damage from Alfrida, and more than 100,000 homes were left without power in mainland Sweden. Power outages continued for over 30,000 homes across Sweden three days after the passage of Alfrida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 867]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285206-0046-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Other systems\nOn 10 March, Storm Eberhard moved across the Netherlands, Belgium and central Germany. It caused one death in Belgium and one in Germany. 700.000 Households were without electricity in Poland and Czechia. On 11 March the Storm caused two deaths in Ukraine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter\nThe 2018\u201319 European winter occurred from late 2018 to early 2019. Notable events included the early snows in Spain and intense flooding in Italy, in cities such as Venice, the intense snow storms which affected central Europe in January, the snow storms in Greece over the New Year period, as well as the end of February. As well as severe winter weather, there was also exceptional warmth across western Europe in the last week of February. Parts of France had their warmest February day on record, with temperatures up to 28.1\u00a0\u00b0C (82.6\u00a0\u00b0F) at Eus on the 27th. Many places in the United Kingdom also broke temperature records, including the national record in Kew Gardens, at 21.2\u00a0\u00b0C (70.2\u00a0\u00b0F) on the 26th. Unlike previous winters, a developing El Ni\u00f1o was expected to influence weather patterns across Europe, although the affect is not fully known.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 876]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter\nOfficially, winter 2018\u201319 began in the Northern Hemisphere on the winter solstice, which in 2018 occurred on 21 December 2018, and ended at the March equinox, which in 2019 occurred on 20 March 2019. Based on the meteorological definition, the first day of winter is 1 December and the last day 28 February. However, as is often the case wintry weather is not confined to these definitions. Europe had a terrible weather in winter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Forecasts\nAccuweather released its European forecast on 18 October 2018. They highlighted that conditions in North Western Europe and Western Scandinavia would be wet and unsettled, with frequent windstorms in the United Kingdom, Northern France and Western Norway. Similarly, Southeastern Europe was predicted to have occasional storms, with a swathe of warmer than average temperatures covering most of Portugal and Spain, as well as Italy and extending as far east as South Western Ukraine. Most of Eastern Europe, including parts of Scandinavia were predicted to have 'cold shots', this area extended from eastern Sweden down to Ukraine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Forecasts\nThe most active part of the storm season was predicted to be from January to February, with such cities as Manchester, UK Belfast, UK and Glasgow, UK at the highest risk of impacts from storms. A cold spell with the severity of that of earlier in 2018, The beast from the east, was not expected. Accuweather predicted that in December, storms would be most frequent in Northern Spain and France. Despite predicting above normal rainfall, they didn't expect extreme flooding which was seen in the winter of 2013\u201314. Storms were predicted to continue into March and April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Forecasts\nUnsettled weather was also predicted to last throughout much of the season for Germany, too. Despite unsettled weather in Northern Europe, lasting warmth was predicted in Southern Europe, with drought not being a concern as a result of early rainfall winter. Cold shots were predicted to reach as far east as Poland and the Czech Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Monthly Timeline, August\nDuring the final week of August, temperatures started to rapidly decline across Northern, Western and Central Europe, with frosts in the UK and heavy snow in Austria and Germany accompanied by temperatures below freezing. In Austria, the city of Salzburg reported 5\u00a0cm (2.0\u00a0in), with nearby mountains reporting as much as 40\u00a0cm (16\u00a0in).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Monthly Timeline, September\nSeptember 2018 saw the start of the Autumn season in Europe, with the first storms of the 2018\u201319 European windstorm season, Ex-Hurricane Helene striking western Europe on the 15th and 16th. The first named storm, Ali, affected the UK and Ireland on the 18th. Parts of Germany and the Netherlands experienced record cold toward the end of the month, with Germany recording a national record low for September of \u22125.0\u00a0\u00b0C (23.0\u00a0\u00b0F) in Nuremberg. In the Netherlands, De Bilt recorded the country's lowest maximum temperature for 23 September, reaching 10.9\u00a0\u00b0C (51.6\u00a0\u00b0F).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 52], "content_span": [53, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Monthly Timeline, September\nThen later in the month, the 30th was the coldest September temperatures in the Netherlands for 47 years, with temperatures falling to \u22121.5\u00a0\u00b0C (29.3\u00a0\u00b0F). In the United Kingdom, Katesbridge in County Down, Northern Ireland recorded the coldest September temperature in the country since 2012, at \u22123.6\u00a0\u00b0C (25.5\u00a0\u00b0F). This was also the record low for Northern Ireland in September. However, this record was broken at the same location in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 52], "content_span": [53, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Monthly Timeline, October\nFor most parts of the Alps, the first substantial snowfall of the season occurred on the 1st. Most areas received 20\u00a0cm (7.9\u00a0in) to 30\u00a0cm (12\u00a0in), but some areas received up to 40\u00a0cm (16\u00a0in). The snow line was as low as 1400\u00a0m.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Monthly Timeline, October\nFrom the 13th to the 15th, Ex-Hurricane Helene battered the Iberian peninsula with heavy rains up to 180\u00a0mm (7.1\u00a0in) in places, and winds gusting up to 110\u00a0mph (180\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Monthly Timeline, October\nStorm Adrian was a severe storm that affected Western Europe and Northern Africa from 27 October until 3 November. It brought heavy, flooding rains to Venice, Italy, with officials estimating that 75% of the city was underwater, with depths exceeding for only the 5th time in recorded history. The system brought winds of up to 117\u00a0mph (188\u00a0km/h). The system brought heavy snowfall to parts of France, with upper areas receiving up to 50\u00a0cm (20\u00a0in) with lower elevations seeing up to 15\u00a0cm (5.9\u00a0in)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Monthly Timeline, October\nThere was also a cold snap in the United Kingdom at the end of the month, with temperatures as low as \u22129\u00a0\u00b0C (16\u00a0\u00b0F) at St Harmon, Wales on the 30th. This was the lowest reading in the UK in October since 1993. Halloween was then predicted to be one of the coldest on record since a temperature of \u221210.6\u00a0\u00b0C (12.9\u00a0\u00b0F) was recorded in 1926.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0009-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Monthly Timeline, October\nThis period also saw heavy snowfall across North East England and Southern Scotland, with some places experiencing a 'white halloween' and the coldest day time temperatures in October since the 2008 cold snap. Depths of up to 10\u00a0cm (3.9\u00a0in) were recorded. Overall, the UK recorded its coldest October since 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Monthly Timeline, November\nWeather during November was benign, with little noteworthy occurrences. However, there were 3 named storms, Beatriz, Carlos and Diana, which were named by the meteorological agencies of France, Spain and Portugal. The most severe of these storms was Diana, which produced a wind gust of 112\u00a0mph (180\u00a0km/h) at Cairngorm, United Kingdom. Over Scandinavia, there was an unusual lack of snow, especially over Lapland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Monthly Timeline, December\nThe lack of snow that prevailed throughout Scandinavia in November continued into December. However, snow finally fell on the 12th, with places such as Rovaniemi reporting up to 21\u00a0cm (8.3\u00a0in). Storm Deirdre affected the United Kingdom on the 15th and brought a rare spell of freezing rain to many areas. It also brought heavy snow and rain to places, with some areas of Scotland receiving up to 50\u00a0cm (20\u00a0in).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Monthly Timeline, January\nThe major snowfalls occurred from 2 to 9 January 2019 across central and southern Europe, killing at least 13 people. Schools in Austria were closed, and people were advised to clear their rooves of snow after several buildings collapsed. Snow also blanketed the Greek capital, Athens for the first time in years and schools were forced to close. An avalanche in Norway, measuring 990\u00a0ft (11,900\u00a0in) left 4 people presumed dead. The system also brought very low temperatures too, as low as \u221220\u00a0\u00b0C (\u22124\u00a0\u00b0F) in Northern Greece and \u221224\u00a0\u00b0C (\u221211\u00a0\u00b0F) in Romania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0012-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Monthly Timeline, January\nThe maximum depth of snow was 210\u00a0cm (83\u00a0in) Tauplitzalm, Styria, Austria on the 6thFurther heavy snow on the 10th and 11th lead to a snow depth of 110\u00a0cm (43\u00a0in) in Bavaria, Germany, with a further 17 dead. Heavy snow was also reported in Macedonia. The winter storms had over 200 flights cancelled, and some areas of Austria declaring a catastrophe. After the snowstorms in central Europe had subsided, snowfall then hit the UK, France and the Netherlands on the 22nd, with depths reaching 10\u00a0cm (3.9\u00a0in) to 15\u00a0cm (5.9\u00a0in) in places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0012-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Monthly Timeline, January\nAt the end of the month, a cold spell set in, in the UK and Ireland, as well as bringing low temperatures, it also brought disruptive snowfall. On the 30th, heavy snow struck North West England overnight (29th\u201330th), and heavy snow continued to fall until around 11am. The heavy snow forced 214 schools to close as well as both Liverpool and Manchester airports, which closed for 2 hours. Depths of 20\u00a0cm (7.9\u00a0in) to 30\u00a0cm (12\u00a0in) were reported after the snowfall. In many places in the UK, temperatures plummeted below \u221210\u00a0\u00b0C (14\u00a0\u00b0F) over the course of the cold snap with temperatures in all areas well below freezing by day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Monthly Timeline, February\nDespite the month starting cold, with temperatures down to \u221216\u00a0\u00b0C (3\u00a0\u00b0F) in the UK, and with widespread snow cover from January lasting for the first few days. There were 4 windstorms named by the French, Spanish and Portuguese meteorological associations. They were Helena, Isaias, Julia and Kyllian. The most severe of these was Helena, which produced a wind gust of 114\u00a0mph (183\u00a0km/h) in France. From mid-month, a spell of exceptionally warm weather began across western Europe, primarily affecting France and the UK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0013-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Monthly Timeline, February\nIn the UK, records were first broken in Scotland, on the 21st, Aboyne reached 18.3\u00a0\u00b0C (64.9\u00a0\u00b0F), beating the previous record of 17.9\u00a0\u00b0C (64.2\u00a0\u00b0F) from 1897. On the 22nd, a new record was set in Wales, with 18.1\u00a0\u00b0C (64.6\u00a0\u00b0F) at Gogerddan. This record was then beaten again on the 24th, with 19.1\u00a0\u00b0C (66.4\u00a0\u00b0F) also at Gogerddan. On the 25th, the UK national record was broken along with the Welsh record, again, with 20.6\u00a0\u00b0C (69.1\u00a0\u00b0F) at Trawsgoed, Wales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0013-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Monthly Timeline, February\nThis was the first time that 20.0\u00a0\u00b0C (68.0\u00a0\u00b0F) had been reached in February in the UK. The English record was also broken this day, with 20.4\u00a0\u00b0C (68.7\u00a0\u00b0F) at Northolt, London. The 26th then broke the UK wide record again, as well as the English and Welsh records too. The temperature reached 21.2\u00a0\u00b0C (70.2\u00a0\u00b0F) at Kew Gardens, England and 20.8\u00a0\u00b0C (69.4\u00a0\u00b0F) in Porthmadog, Wales. During this spell, Northern Ireland was the only UK country not to set a new record, the current record was set in 1998. In France, extreme temperatures were exceptionally high for the season too, with temperatures reaching highs of 28.1\u00a0\u00b0C (82.6\u00a0\u00b0F) at Eus on the 27th. Although some places did set new temperature records, the national record remains at 31.2\u00a0\u00b0C (88.2\u00a0\u00b0F) on 29 February 1960.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 824]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Monthly Timeline, March\nDuring March, there were two named storms, Laura and Gareth. Laura was more severe in terms of wind, as a gust of 152\u00a0mph (245\u00a0km/h) was reported in France. Storm Gareth, named by the UK Met Office, was more remarkable in terms of rainfall, 137\u00a0mm of rain was reported as falling in Capel Curig, Wales in just a few hours. Despite the prolonged drought preceding the heavy rainfall, cities such as York and Ross-on-Wye flooded. Snow was also reported in locations such as Dunblane, Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Monthly Timeline, April\nThe last major snow storm of the season occurred over the United Kingdom on 4 April 2019. Up to 40\u00a0cm (16\u00a0in) of snow was reported as falling in Northern England and Scotland, with temperatures well below normal for the time of year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Monthly Timeline, May\nEarly May brought cold and snow back to many parts of the United Kingdom, France and Germany. With snow falling in places it had never fell in the month of May before. For example, snow was recorded as lying at C\u00f4te d\u2019Azur for the first time in May. Snowfall was also widely recorded across parts of the United Kingdom, even to relatively low levels, with some places seeing up to 10\u00a0cm (3.9\u00a0in) on 7 May. Germany also saw some snowfall on 4 May, with depths exceeding 20\u00a0cm (7.9\u00a0in) in some areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 46], "content_span": [47, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0016-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Monthly Timeline, May\nThe snowfall was coupled with unusually low temperatures. Paris had its coldest May in 22 years. Parts of the UK recorded the lowest May temperatures since 1981, as low as \u22126.2\u00a0\u00b0C (20.8\u00a0\u00b0F) in Kinbrace, Scotland. The Early May Bank holiday was also the coldest on record in the UK, with temperatures as low as \u22125\u00a0\u00b0C (23\u00a0\u00b0F).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 46], "content_span": [47, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Snow cover and sea ice advancement, Snow cover\nThe first snow cover of the season was reported on Tuesday 21 August, across eastern parts of Russia. However, this was temporary as by the 23rd, this snow had melted, although a few small patches remained. Snow cover was observed again across parts of Eastern Russia on the 6 and 7 September. This snow did melt in some places however, in a small area of Siberia, this snow cover persisted throughout the month. The first snow cover of the season started to appear in Norway and Sweden on 17 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 71], "content_span": [72, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0017-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Snow cover and sea ice advancement, Snow cover\nOn 5 October, snow cover became widespread over northern parts of Finland, Sweden and Norway, as well as far North Eastern Russia and Northern Mongolia. On the 7th, snow cover became widespread across Iceland. By 12 October, snow cover across Northern Parts of Scandinavia had mainly melted, but snow cover across far east and north Russia become much more widespread. By the 17th, snow cover, although patchy, had advanced into central western Russia, with most of Scandinavia snow free again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 71], "content_span": [72, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0017-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Snow cover and sea ice advancement, Snow cover\nBy the 26th, the first snow cover started to appear of the United Kingdom and more general snow cover over most of Russia and Scandinavia. By 26 November, most of Russia was snow covered as well as Scandinavia. Snow cover extended into Ukraine and Belarus too, with widespread snow cover across the alps. By 16 December, snow covered all of Russia and Scandinavia, as well as most of Eastern Europe and extending into France and the UK. By 19 February, snow cover started receding across Scandinavia and Eastern Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 71], "content_span": [72, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0017-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Snow cover and sea ice advancement, Snow cover\nParts of south eastern Russia start to lose their snow cover on 1 March. By 31 March, snow cover was lost across western parts of Russia. By the end of April, Northern Scandinavia and central-western Russia eastwards still had snow cover. By 29 June, only far Northern parts of Russia still had snow cover left from winter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 71], "content_span": [72, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Snow cover and sea ice advancement, Sea ice\nThe minimum extent of the summer season was reached on 19 September, and again on the 23rd. The sea ice extent dropped to 1.77 million square miles (4.59 million square kilometres), which tied the record for the sixth lowest (with 2008 and 2010). The minimum was reached 5 and 9 days later than the mean date of 14 September. After this, ice began forming much quicker than average. This meant by 30 November, most places had above average ice-cover. Sea ice extent peaked on 13 March, at 5.71 million square miles (14.78 million square kilometres). This was the 7th lowest peak, tying with 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 68], "content_span": [69, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285207-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 European winter, Overview by country, United Kingdom\nIn the United Kingdom, winter was much warmer than average, and the warmest since 2015\u201316. Anomalies of 1.5\u00a0\u00b0C (2.7\u00a0\u00b0F) above average were recorded across most of England, Wales and Northern Ireland, with anomalies of 1.0\u00a0\u00b0C (1.8\u00a0\u00b0F) above in Scotland. The period of very low rainfall continued into the winter, with most places seeing between 50\u201370% of their average rainfall, with places in South East Scotland seeing less than 30%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 60], "content_span": [61, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285208-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Evansville Purple Aces men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Evansville Purple Aces men's basketball team represented the University of Evansville during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Purple Aces, led by first-year head coach Walter McCarty, played their home games at the Ford Center as members of the Missouri Valley Conference. They finished the season 11\u201321 overall, 5\u201313 in MVC play, and finishing in last place. As the No. 10 seed in the MVC Tournament, they lost to Illinois State in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285208-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Evansville Purple Aces men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Purple Aces finished the 2017\u201318 season 17\u201315, 7\u201311 in MVC play to finish in a three-way tie for seventh place. As the No. 8 seed in the MVC Tournament, they lost to Northern Iowa in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285208-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Evansville Purple Aces men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn March 13, 2018, Evansville fired head coach Marty Simmons. He finished at Evansville with an 11-year record of 184\u2013175. On March 22, the school hired Boston Celtics assistant coach, former Kentucky player, and Evansville native Walter McCarty as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285209-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Evansville Purple Aces women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Evansville Purple Aces women's basketball team represents the University of Evansville during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Purple Aces, led by third year head coach Matt Ruffing, play their home games at Meeks Family Fieldhouse and were members of the Missouri Valley Conference. They finished the season 4\u201326, 2\u201316 in MVC play to finish in last place. They lost in the first round of the Missouri Valley Women's Tournament to Loyola\u2013Chicago.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285210-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Everton F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Everton's 65th consecutive season in the top flight of English football and their 141st year in existence. They participated in the Premier League, FA Cup and EFL Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285210-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Everton F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285210-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Everton F.C. season, Pre-season, Friendlies\nFor their pre-season tour, Everton announced they would be playing six teams away from home, which were ATV Irdning, Bury, Lille, Porto, Blackburn Rovers and Rennes. They also played one game at home against Valencia. Everton hosted Gor Mahia at Goodison Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285210-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Everton F.C. season, Competitions, Premier League, Matches\nOn 14 June 2018, the Premier League fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285210-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Everton F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nIn the FA Cup, Everton entered the competition in the third round and were drawn home to Lincoln City. The fourth round draw was made live on BBC by Robbie Keane and Carl Ikeme from Wolverhampton on 7 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285210-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Everton F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nEverton joined the competition in the second round where they defeated Rotherham United at home. They lost to fellow Premier League side Southampton in the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285210-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285211-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Everton L.F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Everton Ladies Football Club's second season competing in the FA Women's Super League since being promoted after winning the 2017 WSL2 Spring Series, and being one of the league's foundation clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285211-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Everton L.F.C. season\nAhead of the 2018\u201319 season, Everton announced that they would play the first half of the season at Merseyrail Community Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285211-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Everton L.F.C. season, Review\nAfter going winless in the league for the first six matches reaching bottom of the table, Everton sacked longtime manager Andy Spence and appointed goalkeeper coach, Jennifer Herst, as interim manager. On 1 December Willie Kirk was announced as manager for the Ladies first team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285211-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Everton L.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, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285211-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Everton L.F.C. season, Competitions, FA WSL Cup\nEverton was drawn into Group Two North for the 2018\u201319 FA WSL Cup. Despite opening the tournament with a win over Reading, Everton was officially eliminated from qualifying to the Quarter Finals after a home loss to Manchester United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285212-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Exeter City F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Exeter City's 117th year in existence and their seventh consecutive season in League Two. The club also participated in three cup competitions; the FA Cup, EFL Cup, and EFL Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285212-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Exeter City F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285212-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Exeter City F.C. season, Pre-season\nExeter City played six pre-season friendlies in July 2018 \u2013 all away from home at teams based in South West England \u2013 winning five and drawing one. There were no pre-season friendlies at St James Park due to redevelopment work taking place over the summer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285212-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Exeter City F.C. season, Competitions, League Two, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League Two fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285212-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Exeter City F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285212-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Exeter City F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. The second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285212-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Exeter City F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 18 July 2018, the final groups for the first round of the 2018\u201319 EFL Trophy were confirmed, with Exeter being placed in Southern Section Group D. The draw for the second round was made live on Talksport by Leon Britton and Steve Claridge on 16 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285212-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Exeter City F.C. season, Squad list\nIncludes all players registered to the club for any period of time between 1 July 2018 and 30 June 2019. Players registered with club for entire period unless otherwise noted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285212-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Exeter City F.C. season, Squad list\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, 43], "content_span": [44, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285213-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 F.C. Copenhagen season\nThe 2018\u201319 FC Copenhagen season was F.C. Copenhagen's 27th season of existence, competing each year in the Danish Superliga, the top tier of football in Denmark. In addition to capturing its 13th Danish Superliga championship, FCK competed in the Danish Cup, exiting in the fourth round, and the UEFA Europa League, advancing to the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285214-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 F.C. Motagua season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is F.C. Motagua's 72nd season in existence and the club's 53rd consecutive season in the top fight of Honduran football. As runners-up of both Apertura and Clausura last season, the club is looking for their 16th and 17th league title. They also competed for the 2018 Honduran Cup and the 2018 CONCACAF League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285214-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 F.C. Motagua season, Overview\nCoach Diego V\u00e1squez will be leading the team for his 10th consecutive tournament. Last season, V\u00e1squez reached 200 consecutive games as Motagua's manager, a club's and league record. The club started the season on 22 July with a shocking 1\u20132 defeat against Las Delicias F.C. in the 2018 Honduran Cup, making this the second time in a row they fall through the first round against a Liga Mayor club at such tournament. On 1 November 2018, the club lost 2\u20133 on aggregate against C.S. Herediano in the final series of the 2018 CONCACAF League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285214-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 F.C. Motagua season, Overview\nThis marked the first time in history that the club qualified to a final in a tournament organized by CONCACAF. With the defeat, Motagua failed to qualify to the 2019 CONCACAF Champions League. Thanks to their outstanding participation in the first half of the season, coach V\u00e1squez, as well as players Jonathan Rougier, Juan Montes and Rubilio Castillo were nominated at the 2018 CONCACAF Awards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285214-0001-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 F.C. Motagua season, Overview\nOn 16 December 2018, the club conquered their 16th national title with a 2\u20131 aggregate score over their city rivals Club Deportivo Olimpia in the Apertura final series, a win which gave them the right to qualify to the 2019 CONCACAF League. For their second year in a row, the club was voted as the best Honduran team according to Uruguayan newspaper El Pa\u00eds. In the Clausura tournament, Motagua repeated and once again lifted the trophy with a 3\u20132 win on aggregate over their city opponents Olimpia in the final series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285214-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 F.C. Motagua season, Kits\nThe 2018\u201319 home, away and third kits were published on 24 June. On 5 December, the club released a special retro edition commemorating the 90th anniversary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 33], "content_span": [34, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285214-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 F.C. Motagua season, Players, International caps\nThis is a list of players that were playing for Motagua during the 2018\u201319 season and were called to represent Honduras at different international competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285215-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Challenge Cup (Botswana)\nThe 2018-19 FA Challenge Cup was the 46th edition of the FA Challenge Cup, Botswana's premier football knockout tournament. It was sponsored by Orange and was known as the Orange FA Cup or Orange FA Cup Season 1 for sponsorship reasons. It started with the preliminary round on the weekend of 16 February 2019 and concluded with the final on 15 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285215-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Challenge Cup (Botswana)\nBotswana Premier League side Gaborone United were the defending champions but were eliminated by Extension Gunners on penalties in the round of 32. Orapa United went on to win the title for the first time in history, making them the first Orapa side to do so.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285215-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Challenge Cup (Botswana), Qualifying rounds\nAll 16 Premier League teams automatically qualified to the round of 32. The top 8 teams from First Division South and top 8 from First Division North had to go through the preliminary round and were joined by the 16 regional champions. Winners of this round qualified for the round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285215-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Challenge Cup (Botswana), Preliminary round\nThe preliminary round draw took place on 23 January 2019. The draw was seeded into two, namely the northern and southern blocks. Southern block games were played on 16 and 17 February while northern block games were played on 23 and 24 February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285215-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Challenge Cup (Botswana), Round of 32\nThe round of 32 draw was conducted on 24 February 2019 after the conclusion of the preliminary round. It was not seeded. Jwaneng Fighters, Atlanta Chiefs, Black Rangers, Black Peril, Sand Diamonds, Peacemakers, Kazungula Young Fighters and Santa Green from Division One are the lowest ranked teams still in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285215-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Challenge Cup (Botswana), Round of 16\nThe round of 16 draw was conducted on 4 April 2019. It was not seeded. Jwaneng Fighters, Sand Diamonds and Kazungula Young Fighters from Division One are the lowest ranked teams still in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285215-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Challenge Cup (Botswana), Quarterfinals\nThe quarterfinal draw was conducted on 14 April after the conclusion of the round of 16. It was not seeded. Jwaneng Fighters and Kazungula Young Fighters from Division One are the lowest ranked teams still in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285215-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Challenge Cup (Botswana), Semifinals\nThe semifinal draw was conducted on 28 April after the Jwaneng Fighters and Police XI game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285216-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 FA Cup (also known as the Football Association Challenge Cup) was the 138th edition of the oldest football tournament in the world. It was sponsored by Emirates and known as The Emirates FA Cup for sponsorship purposes. It started with the Extra Preliminary Round on the weekend of 11 August 2018 and concluded with the final on 18 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285216-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Cup\nPremier League side Chelsea were the defending champions, but they were eliminated by Manchester United in the fifth round on 18 February 2019 in a rematch of the previous year's final. Manchester City won their sixth FA Cup title and their first since 2011, making them the first English club to complete a domestic treble, having earlier won the EFL Cup and the Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285216-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Cup, Qualifying rounds\nAll of the competing teams that are not members of either the Premier League or English Football League competed in the qualifying rounds to secure one of 32 available places in the First Round Proper. The qualifying competition began with the Extra Preliminary Round on 11 August 2018. The fourth and final qualifying round was played over the weekend of 20 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 33], "content_span": [34, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285216-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Cup, First Round Proper\nThe First Round draw took place on 22 October and was made by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin. All 40 First Round Proper ties were to be played on the weekend of 10 November with 13 replays to be played on 20 and 21 November. 32 teams from the qualifying competition joined 48 teams from League One and League Two to compete in this round. This round included three teams from Level 7, the lowest-ranked teams still in the competition at that point: Metropolitan Police, Haringey Borough and Hitchin Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285216-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Cup, Second Round Proper\nThe Second Round draw took place on 12 November. The 40 winners of the First Round Proper played in 20 Second Round Proper ties on the weekend of 1 December. This round included five teams from Level 6 (Guiseley, Slough Town, Southport, Stockport County and Woking), who were the lowest-ranked teams still in the competition. This round included an all-Welsh tie, Wrexham at home against Newport County, the first such tie in the FA Cup since the latter took on Swansea City in the first round of the 2006\u201307 tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 35], "content_span": [36, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285216-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Cup, Third Round Proper\nThe Third Round draw took place on 3 December 2018 and was broadcast live on BBC One and BT Sport before the final second round tie between Guiseley and Fleetwood Town. All 32 Third Round Proper ties took place on the weekend of 4\u20137 January 2019. A total of 64 clubs played in the third round; 20 winners of the second round, and 44 teams from the Premier League and EFL Championship entering in this round. This round included one team from Level 6, Woking, the lowest-ranked team still in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285216-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Cup, Third Round Proper\nThe scheduling for the third round was controversial, due to the number of games scheduled outside the traditional kick-off slot of 15:00 GMT on Saturday. Only 10 of 32 Third Round Proper matches kicked off at that time. This was a result of the FA signing a new overseas television deal in October 2016, which came into force this season. The new contract caused a number of matches to be moved to other time-slots to accommodate viewers outside the UK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285216-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Cup, Fourth Round Proper\nThe draw for the Fourth Round took place on 7 January following the Southampton\u2013Derby County game. It was shown on BBC and was conducted by Carl Ikeme and Robbie Keane. All 16 Fourth Round ties were played on the weekend of 25\u201328 January 2019. This round included one team from Level 5, Barnet, the lowest ranking and only non-League side left in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 35], "content_span": [36, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285216-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Cup, Fifth Round Proper\nThe draw for the Fifth Round took place on 28 January 2019. Matches were played on the weekend of 15\u201318 February 2019. This round included one team from Level 4, Newport County, the lowest ranking side left in the competition. As of this season, extra time and penalties replaced replays as the method for resolving a drawn tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285216-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the quarter-finals took place on 18 February 2019. Matches were played on the weekend of 16\u201317 March 2019. This round included two teams from Level 2, Millwall and Swansea City, the lowest ranking sides left in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 30], "content_span": [31, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285216-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Cup, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the semi-finals took place on 17 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 27], "content_span": [28, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285216-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Cup, Final\nThe final was played on 18 May 2019 at Wembley Stadium, London.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 21], "content_span": [22, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285216-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Cup, Bracket\nThe following is the bracket which the FA Cup resembled. Numbers in parentheses next to the match score represent the results of a replay, except for the quarter-finals stage onwards. Numbers in parentheses next to the replay score represents the results of a penalty shoot-out except for the quarter-finals stage onwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 23], "content_span": [24, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285217-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Cup qualifying rounds\nThe 2018\u201319 FA Cup qualifying rounds open the 138th 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 736 teams were accepted for the competition, one fewer than the previous year's 737.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285217-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Cup qualifying rounds\nThe large number (644) of non-League teams entering the tournament, from (Levels 5 to 10) in the English football pyramid, required the competition to start with six rounds of preliminary (2) and qualifying (4) knockout matches. The 32 winning teams from the Fourth qualifying round progressed to the First Round Proper, where League teams tiered at Levels 3 and 4 entered the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285217-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Cup qualifying rounds, Calendar\nThe calendar for the 2018\u201319 FA Cup qualifying rounds, as announced by The Football Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285217-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Cup qualifying rounds, Extra preliminary round\nThe Extra preliminary round fixtures were played on Friday 10, Saturday 11 and Sunday 12 August 2018; replays were to take place no later than Thursday 16 August 2018. The draw was held on Friday 6 July 2018. A total of 368 teams, from Level 8, Level 9 and Level 10 of English football, entered at this stage of the competition. The round included 80 teams from Level 10 of English football, the lowest ranked clubs to compete in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285217-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Cup qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nThe Preliminary round fixtures were played on Friday 24, Saturday 25, Sunday 26 and Monday 27 August 2018; replays were to take place no later than Thursday 6 September 2018. The draw was held on 6 July 2018. A total of 320 clubs took part in this stage of the competition, including the 184 winners from the Extra preliminary round and 136 new clubs: 120 remaining clubs from Level 8 (all except Bracknell Town and Guernsey) and 16 clubs (those, who were promoted from level 8) from Level 7 of English football. The round included 32 teams from Level 10, the lowest-ranked teams still in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285217-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Cup qualifying rounds, First qualifying round\nThe First qualifying round fixtures were to be played on Friday 7, Saturday 8 and Sunday 9 September 2018; replays no later than Thursday 13 September 2018. The draw was held on 28 August 2018. A total of 232 teams took part in this stage of the competition, including the 160 winners from the Preliminary round and 72 entering at this stage from the four divisions at Level 7 (all except those who were promoted from level 8) of English football. The round included eight teams from Level 10, the lowest-ranked teams still in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285217-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Cup qualifying rounds, Second qualifying round\nThe Second qualifying round fixtures were played on Saturday 22 and Sunday 23 September 2018; the last replay played on Thursday 7 October 2018. The draw was held on 10 September 2018. A total of 160 teams took part in this stage of the competition, including the 116 winners from the First qualifying round and 44 entering at this stage from two divisions at Level 6 of English football. The round included Anstey Nomads, Atherstone Town and Burnham from Level 10, the lowest-ranked teams still in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285217-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Cup qualifying rounds, Third qualifying round\nThe Third qualifying round fixtures were to be played on Saturday 6 October 2018 with all replays completed by Thursday 11 October 2018. The draw took place on 24 September 2018. The 80 winning teams from the Second qualifying round took part in this stage of the competition and no additional teams entered at this stage. The round included Dunston UTS, from Level 9 of the football pyramid as the lowest-ranked team still in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285217-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Cup qualifying rounds, Fourth qualifying round\nThe Fourth qualifying round fixtures were played on Saturday 20 October 2018 with all replays completed by Thursday 25 October 2018. The draw took place on 8 October 2018. A total of 64 teams took part in this stage of the competition: the 40 winners from the Third qualifying round and the 24 members of the National League who entered at this stage, representing Level 5 of English football. The round included Dunston UTS from Level 9 of the football pyramid, the lowest-ranked team still in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285217-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Cup qualifying rounds, Competition proper\n32 winners from the Fourth qualifying round advance to the First Round Proper, where 48 teams from League One (Level 3) and League Two (Level 4) of English football, operating in the English Football League, enter the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285217-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Cup qualifying rounds, Broadcasting rights\nThe qualifying rounds aren't covered by the FA Cup's broadcasting contracts held by BBC Sport and BT Sport, although one game per round will be broadcast by the BBC on its media platforms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285217-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Cup qualifying rounds, Broadcasting rights\nThe following qualifying rounds matches were broadcast live in the UK:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285218-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Trophy\nThe 2018\u201319 FA Trophy (known for sponsorship reasons as the Buildbase FA Trophy) is the 50th season of the FA Trophy, an annual football competition for teams at levels 5\u20138 of the English National League System.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285218-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Trophy, Calendar\nThe calendar for the 2018\u201319 Buildbase FA Trophy, as announced by The Football Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 27], "content_span": [28, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285218-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Trophy, Calendar\nOne team at Level 8 did not enter (Guernsey). This was the first year to have an Extra Preliminary Round, due to the increase from 72 to 88 teams in the Level 7 leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 27], "content_span": [28, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285218-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Trophy, Third Round Proper\nFollowing their victory over Weymouth, Ramsbottom United are the lowest-ranked team still in the competition, and the only team left from the eighth tier of English football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285219-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Vase\nThe 2018\u201319 Buildbase FA Vase is the 45th season of the FA Vase, an annual football competition for teams playing below Step 4 of the English National League System. The competition is to be played with two qualifying rounds preceding the six proper rounds, semi-finals (played over two legs) and final to be played at Wembley Stadium. All first-leg ties until the semi-finals are played with extra time if drawn after regulation \u2013 first-leg ties may also be resolved with penalties if both teams agree and notify the referee at least 45 minutes before kick-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285219-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Vase, Calendar\nThe calendar for the 2018\u201319 Buildbase FA Vase, as announced by The Football Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 25], "content_span": [26, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285219-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Vase, Semi-Finals\nSemi final fixtures were played on 16 March and 23 March 2019, with the second leg going to extra time and penalties if required.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285219-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Vase, Semi-Finals, Second leg\nChertsey Town F.C. won 5-3 on penalties after drawing 1\u20131 on aggregate", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 40], "content_span": [41, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285220-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA WSL\nThe 2018\u201319 FA WSL was the eighth edition of the FA Women's Super League (WSL) since it was formed in 2010. It was the first season after a rebranding of the four highest levels in English women's football. The previous FA WSL 2 became the Championship \u2013 eleven clubs competed in the 2018\u201319 FA Women's Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285220-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA WSL\nArsenal won their first WSL since 2012 with a 4\u20130 victory over Brighton & Hove Albion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285220-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA WSL, Teams\nFollowing restructuring of the women's game in order to provide for a fully professional Women's Super League (WSL), membership of both the first and second tier is subject to a licence, based on a series of off-the-field criteria. Yeovil Town estimated the budget needed for a WSL season at about \u00a3350,000. Existing WSL teams were first offered the opportunity to bid for licences, with all applying FA WSL clubs retaining their place in the first tier, with Brighton & Hove Albion from the WSL2 also offered a place in the WSL. From the first tier, Sunderland were unsuccessful in their license application.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 21], "content_span": [22, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285220-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA WSL, Teams\nThis left up to two places in the WSL and up to five places in the Championship for applying clubs. Fifteen applications were received for both the top two tiers, and West Ham was given a licence in the second stage, so that the league is made up of 11 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 21], "content_span": [22, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285221-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's Championship\nThe 2018\u201319 FA Women's Championship was the first rebranded edition of the FA Women's Championship, the second tier of women's football in England, renamed from the FA WSL 2 which was founded in 2014. The season ran from 8 September 2018 to 12 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285221-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's Championship\nOn 20 April 2019, Manchester United won the title, and promotion to the FA WSL, with two games to spare in their debut season after recording a 7\u20130 victory over Crystal Palace. Tottenham Hotspur subsequently secured second place and promotion following a 1\u20131 draw at Aston Villa in their penultimate fixture. Millwall Lionesses finished bottom but were spared relegation as the FA sought to expand both of the top two divisions to twelve teams each by 2019\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285221-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's Championship, Teams\nEleven teams compete in the league. Following restructuring of the women's game in order to provide for a fully professional Women's Super League (WSL), membership of both the first and second tier is subject to a license, based on a series of off-the-field criteria. Existing WSL teams were first offered the opportunity to bid for licenses, with all applying FA WSL 2 clubs retaining their place in the second tier, except for Brighton & Hove Albion who were offered a place in the WSL. From the second tier, Oxford United and Watford did not apply for licenses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285221-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's Championship, Teams\nThis left up to two places in the WSL and up to five places in the Championship for applying clubs, of which one place in the Championship was reserved for the winners of the FA Women's Premier League Championship play-off, providing that club met the licensing criteria. Fifteen applications were received for both the top two tiers, and five of these applicants were accepted into the Championship: Manchester United, Lewes, Leicester City Women, Sheffield United as well as Premiership play-off winners, Charlton Athletic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285221-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's Championship, Teams\nSheffield announced on 24 June 2018 that it was withdrawing from the league ahead of the season, due to the financial commitments required by The Football Association proving too onerous. Doncaster Rovers Belles announced similarly on 12 July 2018. A place in the league was subsequently awarded to Crystal Palace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285221-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's Championship, Table\nFor the inaugural season, the top two teams will be automatically promoted subject to obtaining a licence. There will be no relegation at the end of the campaign with a view to expanding the top two tiers to twelve teams each by 2019\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285221-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's Championship, Awards, Player of the Month\nResults of Player of the Month voting as polled by FA Women's Championship. Number of nominations in brackets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285221-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's Championship, Awards, LMA Manager of the Month\nResults of Manager of the Month as awarded by the League Managers Association. Number of awards in brackets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285222-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's League Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 FA Women's League Cup was the 8th edition of the FA Women's Super League and FA Women's Championship's league cup competition. It is sponsored by Continental AG, who have sponsored the competition since its creation, and is officially known as the FA Continental Tyres League Cup. All 22 teams of the FA Women's Super League and FA Women's Championship contest the competition - the largest field in the history of the cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285222-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's League Cup\nArsenal are the defending champions. Before the competition, only Manchester City and Arsenal had won the cup in the previous seven seasons it was contested in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285222-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's League Cup, Format changes\nFollowing the previous season's reversion to a group format in the initial stage, the 2018\u201319 WSL Cup will keep the same format but expand to accommodate the increase in teams in the top two divisions of women's football to 22. As a result, two of the four groups will contain six teams while the others remain at five, with only the top two going through to the quarter-finals from each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285222-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's League Cup, Knock-out stage, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for this round was made on 18 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285222-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's League Cup, Knock-out stage, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the semi-finals was made on 12 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285223-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's National League\nThe 2018\u201319 FA Women's National League is the 27th season of the competition, and the first since a restructure and rebranding of the top four tiers of English football by The Football Association. Began in 1992, it was previously known as the FA Women's Premier League. It sits at the third and fourth levels of the women's football pyramid, below the FA Women's Championship and above the eight regional football leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285223-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's National League\nThe league features six regional divisions: the Northern and Southern divisions at level three of the pyramid, and below those Division One North, Division One Midlands, Division One South East, and Division One South West. The league normally consists of 72 teams, divided equally into six divisions of twelve teams. After two resignations from and one late promotion to the FA Women's Championship, and one withdrawal from Division One, the league started the 2018\u201319 season with 13 teams in the Northern Division but only 11 in Division One Midlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285223-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's National League\nAt the end of the season the champions of the Northern and Southern divisions will both qualify for a Championship Play Off match against each other which will decide the overall National League Champion. Subject to meeting league requirements both teams will be promoted to the FA Women's Championship. As part of the Football Association's restructure, clubs from the FA Women's Super League and FA Women's Championship were able to enter teams into the Reserve Section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285223-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's National League, Premier Division, Championship play-off\nThe overall FA WNL champion will be decided by a play-off match to be held at the end of the season. Both sides will also earn promotion to the FA Women's Championship subject to meeting licensing requirements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285223-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's National League, Division One, Division One South West\nSt Nicholas withdrew from the league after the first weekend without playing a match due to a lack of numbers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285224-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's National League Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 FA Women's National League Cup is the 28th running of the competition, which began in 1991. It is the first since a restructure and rebranding of the top four tiers of English football by The Football Association. It is the major League Cup competition run by the FA Women's National League, and for the fifth season it is being run alongside their secondary League Cup competition, the National League Plate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285224-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's National League Cup\nAll 72 National League clubs entered at the Determining round, with the winners continuing in the competition and the losers going into the National League Plate tournament. Blackburn Rovers is the reigning champions, having defeated Leicester City Womens 3\u20131 the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285224-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's National League Cup, Results\nAll results listed are published by The Football Association. Games are listed by round in chronological order, and then in alphabetical order of the home team where matches were played simultaneously.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285224-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's National League Cup, Results\nThe division each team play in is indicated in brackets after their name: (S)=Southern Division; (N)=Northern Division; (SW1)=Division One South West; (SE1)=Division One South East; (M1)=Division One Midlands; (N1)=Division One North.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285224-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's National League Cup, Results, Qualifying rounds, Determining round\nThe competition begins with a Determining Round, which consisted of all 72 teams in the FA Women's National League being drawn in pairs. The winners of these 36 games progress to the next stage of the competition, while the losers qualify for the 2018\u201319 FA Women's National League Plate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 85], "content_span": [86, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285224-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's National League Cup, Results, Competition proper, First round\nWith 36 teams progressing from the determining round, four needed to be eliminated to allow a single-elimination knockout tournament to take place. Twenty eight of the winners from the determining round were given byes to the second round, with eight teams being drawn against each other in first round ties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 80], "content_span": [81, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285225-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's National League Plate\nThe 2018\u201319 FA Women's National League Plate is the fifth running of the competition, which began in 2014. It is the secondary League Cup competition run by the FA Women's National League (FA WNL), and is run in parallel with the league's primary League Cup competition, the National League Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285225-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's National League Plate\nThe teams that take part in the WNL plate are decided after the determining round of the WNL Cup. The winners of determining round matches continue in the WNL Cup, while the losers move into the WNL Plate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285225-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's National League Plate\nAll 72 National League clubs were included in the determining round draw. St Nicholas withdrew from the competition before playing a match, meaning 36 teams progressed in the Cup and 35 were entered in the Plate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285225-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's National League Plate\nWest Ham United were the reigning champions, having defeated Luton Town 5\u20130 in the 2017\u201318 final, but did not defend their title after obtaining a licence to the FA Women's Super League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285225-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's National League Plate, Results\nAll results listed are published by The Football Association. Games are listed by round in chronological order, and then in alphabetical order of the home team where matches were played simultaneously.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285225-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's National League Plate, Results\nThe division each team play in is indicated in brackets after their name: (S)=Southern Division; (N)=Northern Division; (SW1)=South West Division One; (SE1)=South East Division One; (M1)=Midlands Division One; (N1)=Northern Division One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285225-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Women's National League Plate, Results, First round\nDue to there being 35 teams in the competition, three first round matches are played to eliminate three teams allowing a full single-elimination knockout tournament to take place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285226-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Youth Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 FA Youth Cup was the 67th edition of the FA Youth Cup. The defending champions were Chelsea who were going for their sixth win in a row. Liverpool won the final 5-3 after a penalty shoot-out against Manchester City, it was their fourth win in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285226-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FA Youth Cup, Final\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-00285227-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FAO Women's League\nThe 2018\u201319 FAO Women's League was the 6th edition of the FAO Women's League. Rising Student's Club were the defending champions. The FAO Women's League (FWL) is organised every year by the Football Association of Odisha (FAO), the official football governing body of Odisha, India. The regular season started on 20 February 2019 and ended on 9 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285227-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FAO Women's League, League stage\nNote: The winner of the league stage would qualify for the 2018\u201319 Indian Women's League season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285228-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FAW Women's Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 FAW Women's Cup is the 27th edition of the FAW Women's Cup, the premier knock-out cup competition for women's association football teams in Wales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285228-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FAW Women's Cup\nMost teams entered the competition at the first round stage, however there were also three qualifying round matches and Swansea City were given a bye to the second round as reigning champions, having beaten Cardiff City in the previous season's final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285228-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FAW Women's Cup, Format\nThe tournament is a single-elimination knock-out tournament, with six teams entering in the qualifying round, 27 receiving a bye to the first round proper, and the reigning champions entering at the second round stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285228-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FAW Women's Cup, Qualifying round\nThe draw for the qualifying round took place at the FAW's headquarters in Cardiff. All three matches took place on Sunday 16 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285229-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Academica Clinceni season\nThe 2018\u201319 is Academica Clinceni's 12th season of competitive football by Academica Clinceni, and the 6th consecutive in Liga II. Academica Clinceni will compete in the Liga II and in Cupa Rom\u00e2niei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285229-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Academica Clinceni season, Competitions, Liga II\nThe Liga II fixture list was announced on 19 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285230-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Akhmat Grozny season\nThe 2018\u201319 FC Akhmat Grozny season was the 10th successive season that the club will play in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Russia, and their second as Akhmat Grozny. Akhmat Grozny finished the season in 8th place, whilst also reaching the Round of 16 in the Russian Cup, where they were defeated by Arsenal Tula.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285230-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Akhmat Grozny season, Season review\nOn 2 September, Lediakhov resigned as manager, with Ruslan \u0130diqov being appointed as the caretaker manager. On 5 September, Akhmat Grozny announced the return of Rashid Rakhimov as manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285230-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Akhmat Grozny season, Season review\nOn 19 May, Andrei Semyonov signed a new contract with Akhmat Grozny, keeping him at the club until 2022.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285230-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Akhmat Grozny season, Season review\nOn 25 May, Yevgeni Gorodov signed a new one-year contract, whilst Odise Roshi signed a new three-year contract that will keep him in Grozny until the summer of 2022.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285230-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Akhmat Grozny season, Season review\nOn 27 May, Akhmat Grozny announced that Milad Mohammadi and Bekim Balaj had left the club after their contracts had expired, whilst Rodolfo had retired and joined their coaching staff, and Ablaye Mbengue had signed a new three-year contract, keeping him in Grozny until the summer of 2022.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285230-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Akhmat Grozny 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285230-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Akhmat Grozny 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285231-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Alashkert season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Alashkert's seventh season in the Armenian Premier League and twelfth overall. Alashkert were defending Premier League champions, having won the title the previous three seasons. Domestically, Alashkert finished the season in fourth place, whilst winning the Armenian Cup and Armenian Supercup for the first time in their history, earning themselves qualification to the UEFA Europa League for the 2019\u201320 season. In Europe, Alashkert were knocked out of the Champions League by Celtic in the First Qualifying Round, and by CFR Cluj in the Third Qualifying Round in the Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285231-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Alashkert season, Season events\nOn 7 July, Alashkert announced the permanent signings of Goran Antoni\u0107, C\u00e9sar Romero, Oliver Pr\u00e1znovsk\u00fd, Jefferson and the loan signing of Gustavo Marmentini.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285231-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Alashkert season, Season events\nAlashkert began their season by hosting Celtic at the Republican Stadium in the First Qualifying Round of the UEFA Champions League on 10 July. Goals from Odsonne Edouard, James Forrest and Callum McGregor, gave Celtic a 3\u20130 victory. The following week, 18 July, Alashkert traveled to Celtic Park to face Celtic in the second leg of their Champions League tie. Despite a first half sending off for Jozo \u0160imunovi\u0107, two goals from Moussa Demb\u00e9l\u00e9 and one from James Forrest gave Celtic another 3\u20130 win and a 6\u20130 aggregate victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285231-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Alashkert season, Season events\nOn 30 July, Alashkert announced the return of Lester Peltier to the club from Banants, however on 3 September, Peltier's contract was terminated by mutual consent in order to enable Peltier to join Saudi Arabian club Al-Mujazzal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285231-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Alashkert season, Season events\nOn 21 September 2018, Varuzhan Sukiasyan was fired as manager with Owner Bagrat Navoyan, and Alashkert-2 manager Sergey Erzrumyan taking temporary charge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285231-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Alashkert 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-00285232-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Anzhi Makhachkala season\nThe 2018\u201319 FC Anzhi Makhachkala season was the club's fourth season back in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of football in Russia, since their relegation at the end of the 2013\u201314 season. Anzhi finished the season 15th in the league, being relegated back to the Russian Football National League, whilst they were knocked out of the Russian Cup at the Round of 16 stage by Spartak Moscow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285232-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Anzhi Makhachkala season, Season events\nWith manager Vadim Skripchenko's contract expiring at the end of the 2017\u201318 season, was replaced by Magomed Adiyev on 4 June 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285232-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Anzhi Makhachkala season, Season events\nAnzhi Makhachkala were initially relegated at the end of the 2017\u201318 season, but FC Amkar Perm announced on 13 June that the Russian Football Union had recalled their 2018\u201319 license, making them ineligible for the Russian Premier League or Russian Football National League. Anzhi then re-applied for their Premier League membership on 15 June, with their admission to the 2018\u201319 Russian Premier League being confirmed on 22 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285232-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Anzhi Makhachkala season, Season events\nOn 10 May 2019, following a 0-1 defeat to Arsenal Tula, their relegation back to the Russian Football National League was confirmed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285232-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Anzhi Makhachkala 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-00285233-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Ararat Yerevan season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was FC Ararat Yerevan's 28th consecutive season in Armenian Premier League. They finished the season in ninth and last place, in the Armenian Premier League whilst being knocked out of the Armenian Cup by Banants in the Second Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285233-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Ararat Yerevan season, Season events\nOn 30 July, Armen Stepanyan was appointed as Ararat Yerevan's new Head Coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285233-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Ararat Yerevan season, Season events\nOn 4 August, Ararat announced the singings of Zaven Badoyan, Alan Tatayev, Roni and Dmitri Malyaka, whilst Arman Meliksetyan, Argishti Petrosyan and Gegham Tumbaryan were all released by mutual consent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285234-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Ararat-Armenia season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was FC Ararat-Armenia's 1st season in Armenian Premier League, in which they won their first Championship and reached the Semifinal of the Armenian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285234-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Ararat-Armenia season, Season events\nOn 2 August 2018, Vadim Skripchenko was appointed as the new head coach of Ararat-Armenia, before being sacked on 25 September, and Ararat-Armenia-2 manager Artak Oseyan being appointed as caretaker manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285234-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Ararat-Armenia season, Season events\nOn 10 August, Ararat-Armenia sold both Erik Azizyan and Armen Hovhannisyan to Zempl\u00edn Michalovce.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285234-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Ararat-Armenia season, Season events\nOn 1 October, Vardan Minasyan was appointed as the new head coach of Ararat-Armenia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285234-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Ararat-Armenia season, Squad, Out on loan\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285235-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Arsenal Kyiv season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was first season in the top Ukrainian football league for FC Arsenal Kyiv since its reformation in 2014. Arsenal competed in Premier League, Ukrainian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285235-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Arsenal Kyiv season, Competitions, Premier League, League table\nTeams that placed 10th and 11th in the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League play two-leg play-off with the second and third teams of the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League. The draw for play-offs took place on 24 May 2019 and the games will be played on 4 and 8 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285235-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Arsenal Kyiv season, Competitions, Second leg\nKolos Kovalivka won 2\u20130 on aggregate and were promoted to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Chornomorets Odesa were relegated to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285235-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Arsenal Kyiv season, Competitions, Second leg\nKarpaty Lviv won 3\u20130 on aggregate and retained their spot in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Volyn Lutsk remained in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285235-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Arsenal Kyiv season, Competitions, Second leg\nDue to fan violence at the game and attack on referee, the original score 1\u20133 was scratched and replaced with technical score 0\u20133 loss to Volyn and win for Karpaty. Additionally, the Lutsk department of police started criminal proceedings on the fact of intentional damage to property during the game by the Karpaty fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285236-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Arsenal Tula season\nThe 2018\u201319 FC Arsenal Tula season was the club's third season back in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Russia, since relegation at the end of the 2014\u201315 season, and their fourth in total. Arsenal Tula finished the season in 6th and were knocked out of the Russian Cup by Ural Yekaterinburg in the semifinals. Due to Ural's defeat to Lokomotiv Moscow in the Cup Final, Arsenal Tula qualified for the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League qualifying stages for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285236-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Arsenal Tula season, Season events\nOn 1 June, Oleg Kononov was announced as Arsenal Tula's new manager. Kononov left Arsenal Tula by mutual consent on 12 November, with Igor Cherevchenko being announced as his replacement on 13 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285236-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Arsenal Tula 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-00285236-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Arsenal Tula 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-00285236-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Arsenal Tula 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-00285236-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Arsenal Tula 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-00285236-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Arsenal Tula 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-00285237-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Astra Giurgiu season\nThe 2018\u201319 season will be the 48th season of competitive football by Astra Giurgiu. Astra Giurgiu will compete in the Liga I and in Cupa Rom\u00e2niei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285237-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Astra Giurgiu season, Competitive, Liga I\nThe Liga I fixture list was announced on 5 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285237-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Astra Giurgiu season, Competitive, Cupa Rom\u00e2niei\nAstra Giurgiu will enter the Cupa Rom\u00e2niei at the Round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285238-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Augsburg season\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Mediocre Legacy (talk | contribs) at 18:46, 23 May 2021. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285238-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Augsburg season\nThe 2018\u201319 FC Augsburg season was the 112th season in the football club's history and 8th consecutive and overall season in the top flight of German football, the Bundesliga, having been promoted from the 2. Bundesliga in 2011. In addition to the domestic league, FC Augsburg also participated in this season's edition of the domestic cup, the DFB-Pokal. This was the 10th season for Augsburg in the WWK Arena, located in Augsburg, Bavaria, Germany. The season covered a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285238-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Augsburg 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-00285239-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Banants season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was FC Banants's eighteenth consecutive season in the Armenian Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285239-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Banants season, Season events\nOn 11 August 2018, Ilshat Fayzulin was appointed as Banants caretaker manager following the resignation of Artur Voskanyan. On 5 September, Fayzulin was confirmed as the new permanent head coach of Banants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285240-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona B season\nThe 2018-19 FC Barcelona B season was the 48th competitive season that the club had played. Competing in Group 3 of the Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B under Garc\u00eda Pimienta and finishing 8th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285241-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona Femen\u00ed season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was FC Barcelona Femen\u00ed's 18th season as FC Barcelona's official women's football section and its 11th consecutive season in Primera Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285241-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona Femen\u00ed season, Season overview\nOn June 4, 2018, the club announced their first transfer- the arrival of Dutch defender and 2017 UEFA Women's EURO winner Stefanie van der Gragt from AFC Ajax.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285241-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona Femen\u00ed season, Season overview\nOn June 6, 2018, the club announced the retirement of Spanish goalkeeper Andrea Gim\u00e9nez after two years with the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285241-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona Femen\u00ed season, Season overview\nOn June 12, 2018, the club announced that Spanish defender Ruth Garc\u00eda would return to her previous club Levante UD Femenino, where she played for nine years. Garc\u00eda was at Barcelona for five years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285241-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona Femen\u00ed season, Season overview\nOn June 19, 2018, the club announced the signing of French midfielder Kheira Hamraoui from French club Lyon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285241-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona Femen\u00ed season, Season overview\nOn June 25, 2018, the club announced the signing of Mexican goalkeeper Pamela Tajonar from Sevilla, where she spent 4 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285241-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona Femen\u00ed season, Season overview\nOn June 30, 2018, six player contracts expired. Of those were Danish defender Line R\u00f8ddik Hansen, who transferred to Danish side FC Nordsj\u00e6lland, Spanish goalkeeper and club captain Laura R\u00e0fols who retired after 14 years with the club, and young defender Perle Morroni, who returned to Paris-Saint Germain after the expiration of a six-month loan deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285241-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona Femen\u00ed season, Season overview\nOn July 2, 2018, the club announced the departure of Spanish forward Olga Garc\u00eda to Atl\u00e9tico Madrid after 3 years with the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285241-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona Femen\u00ed season, Season overview\nOn July 24, 2018, Marta Unzu\u00e9 was sent to Athletic Club on a two-year loan deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285241-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona Femen\u00ed season, Season overview\nOn August 25, 2018, Barcelona won their seventh and fifth-consecutive Copa Catalunya by defeating Espanyol 7-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285241-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona Femen\u00ed season, Season overview\nOn January 8, 2019, following a draw to league rivals Espanyol, the club announced the termination of coach Fran Sanchez's contract. Former Catalan national team coach Llu\u00eds Cort\u00e9s assumed his role the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285241-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona Femen\u00ed season, Season overview\nOn December 31, 2018, \u00c9lise Bussaglia left the club and transferred to French side Dijon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285241-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona Femen\u00ed season, Season overview\nOn January 31, 2019, at the end of the January transfer window, the club signed striker Asisat Oshoala on a 6-month loan deal from Chinese club Dalian Quanjian. Oshoala was given Bussaglia's vacated number 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285241-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona Femen\u00ed season, Season overview\nOn February 17, 2019, Barcelona exited the Copa de la Reina following a 2-0 loss to eventual champions Atl\u00e9tico Madrid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285241-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona Femen\u00ed season, Season overview\nOn March 27, 2019, Barcelona defeated LSK Kvinner in the UWCL and reached their second ever UWCL semifinal, where they would play FC Bayern Munich.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285241-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona Femen\u00ed season, Season overview\nWith goals by Kheira Hamraoui in the first leg and a Mariona Caldentey penalty in the second leg, Barcelona ended their semifinal tie on April 28 with a 2-0 aggregate score and reached their first ever UWCL final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285241-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona Femen\u00ed season, Season overview\nThe league race went down to the final day, but Barcelona fell to Granadilla on the final match day. With an Atleti win, the league ended with Atleti receiving 86 points and Barcelona receiving 78, making it the 4th season in a row that Barcelona finished second in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285241-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona Femen\u00ed season, Season overview\nOn May 18, 2019, Barcelona played their first UWCL final against European powerhouse Lyon. The match ended in a 4-1 loss for Barcelona, the single Barcelona goal in the match coming from Asisat Oshoala.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285241-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona Femen\u00ed season, Season overview\nDespite having relative success in all competitions, this was the first year since 2010 where Barcelona went trophyless (not including the Copa Catalunya).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Futbol Club Barcelona's 119th season in existence and the club's 88th consecutive season in the top flight of Spanish football. Barcelona was involved in four competitions after winning the double of La Liga and Copa del Rey in the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season\nThe season was the first since 2001\u201302 Season without former captain Andr\u00e9s Iniesta, who departed to joined Vissel Kobe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, June\nOn 3 June, Barcelona and defender Samuel Umtiti reached an agreement to extend the player's contract for a further five seasons through to 2022\u201323 with a release clause of \u20ac500 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, June\nOn 11 June, Barcelona reached an agreement with Watford for the transfer of Gerard Deulofeu for \u20ac13 million plus \u20ac4 million in variables. Barcelona will also receive a percentage of any future transfer fee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, July\nOn 8 July, Barcelona announced that they had reached an agreement with Guangzhou Evergrande for the loan transfer of Paulinho for one season, with a subsequent purchase option for the Chinese club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, July\nOn 9 July, Barcelona and Gr\u00eamio finalized the transfer of Arthur following the agreement the two clubs reached in March for a transfer fee of \u20ac31 million plus \u20ac9 million in variables. The player will sign a contract for the next six seasons and the buyout clause is set at \u20ac400 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, July\nOn 12 July, Barcelona announced that they had paid the buyout clause for Cl\u00e9ment Lenglet which stood at \u20ac35.9 million. The player, who joined from Sevilla, signed a contract with the club for the next five seasons and the buyout clause is set at \u20ac300 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, July\nOn 23 July, Barcelona announced that they had reached an agreement with Sivasspor for the loan transfer of Douglas for one season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, July\nOn 23 July, Barcelona announced that they had reached an agreement with Deportivo La Coru\u00f1a for the loan transfer of Adri\u00e1n Ortol\u00e1 for one season, with a subsequent purchase option for the A Coru\u00f1a club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, July\nOn 24 July, Barcelona announced that they had reached an agreement with Bordeaux for the transfer of Malcom for a transfer fee of \u20ac41 million plus \u20ac1 million in variables. The player signed a contract for the next five seasons until the end of 2022\u201323.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, August\nOn 1 August, Barcelona and Everton reached an agreement for the transfer of Lucas Digne to the English club for an initial fee of \u20ac20.2 million and \u20ac1.5 million in variables.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, August\nOn 3 August, Barcelona announced that they had reached an agreement with Bayern Munich for the transfer of Arturo Vidal to the Catalan club for the next three seasons for a fee of \u20ac18 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, August\nOn 4 August, Barcelona and Sevilla reached an agreement for the transfer of Aleix Vidal to the Andalusian club for a transfer fee of \u20ac8.5 million, plus \u20ac2 million in variables.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, August\nOn 9 August, Barcelona and Everton reached an agreement for the transfer of Yerry Mina for a fee of \u20ac30.25 million with an additional \u20ac1.5 million in variables. Barcelona also negotiated a buy-back clause in the transfer. Additionally, Andr\u00e9 Gomes was loaned to Everton for the 2018\u201319 season. The English club agreed to pay a fee of \u20ac2.25 million for the single season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, August\nOn 12 August, Barcelona defeated Sevilla 1\u20132 in the Spanish Super Cup at the Stade Ibn Batouta in Morocco; goals from Gerard Piqu\u00e9 and Ousmane Demb\u00e9l\u00e9 handed the Catalans their 13th Supercopa de Espa\u00f1a title. The trophy was the first won under the captaincy of Lionel Messi, who also claimed his record-breaking 33rd trophy with the club. Additionally, the match saw official debuts from Arthur, Lenglet, and Arturo Vidal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, August\nOn 16 August, Barcelona announced that they had reached an agreement for the transfer of Marlon to the Italian club Sassuolo for an initial fee of \u20ac6 million, including a buy-back clause for the Catalans. Barcelona will receive additional \u20ac6 million if Marlon makes 50 appearances for Sassuolo. If he would be sold before that, Barcelona will receive 50% of the future transfer fee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, August\nOn 18 August, Barcelona defeated Alav\u00e9s 3\u20130 with two goals from Messi, including the 6,000th La Liga goal in the club's history, and one from Coutinho to secure Bar\u00e7a an opening day victory for a tenth successive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, August\nOn 25 August, Barcelona defeated Real Valladolid 0\u20131, Bar\u00e7a made it two wins out of two thanks to a goal from Demb\u00e9l\u00e9. The match also saw an official debut from Malcom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, September\nOn 2 September, Barcelona demolished newly promoted Huesca 8\u20132. A sensational Messi who scored 2 goals had the chance to get his hat-trick with a final minute penalty, but chose to be generous and gave the chance to Su\u00e1rez who scored his 2nd goal of the game. Demb\u00e9l\u00e9, Ivan Rakiti\u0107, Jordi Alba were also on the scoresheet, along with an own goal from Jorge Pulido.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, September\nOn 15 September, Barcelona defeated Real Sociedad 1\u20132. Despite trailing at half time, goals from Su\u00e1rez and Demb\u00e9l\u00e9 turned things around to make it four wins out of four in La Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, September\nOn 18 September, Barcelona beat PSV Eindhoven 4\u20130 in their first Champions League game of the season. Another great performance of Messi as he managed his record-breaking 8th Champions League hat-trick and Demb\u00e9l\u00e9 notched the remaining goal from a solo effort to complete another victory for the Blaugrana side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, September\nOn 23 September, Barcelona draw Girona 2\u20132. Sending off for Lenglet hinders home side, Messi and Piqu\u00e9 found the net for the Blaugrana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, September\nOn 26 September, Barcelona lost to Legan\u00e9s 2\u20131. Coutinho's opener counts for nothing as top against bottom clash took unexpected twist with two goals in a minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, September\nOn 29 September, Barcelona draw Athletic Bilbao 1\u20131. Substitutes Messi and Munir came to the rescue to salvage a draw at Camp Nou after Basques had taken 41st-minute lead", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, October\nOn 3 October, Barcelona defeated Tottenham 2\u20134, with some major changes in the starting eleven introducing Arthur as a starter for the first time in midfield, the benching of Dembele and putting Coutinho back in attack with Messi and Suarez. Valverde's men secured an important victory in a classic, end-to-end match in London to maintain their perfect start in the Champions League group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, October\nOn 7 October, Barcelona drew with Valencia CF 1-1. Messi scored a beautiful equaliser after an early opener from Garay to earn the blaugranes a share of the spoils at Mestalla.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, October\nOn 20 October, Barcelona defeated Sevilla 4-2. Four goals and a sensational performance by Ter Stegen allowed Bar\u00e7a to snatch first place back from the leaders on a night that Leo Messi went off injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, October\nOn 24 October, Barcelona defeated Inter Milan 2-0. Rafinha and Jordi Alba's superb goals left the Catalans flying high in Champions League Group B with the maximum points at the halfway stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, October\nOn 28 October, in the first El Cl\u00e1sico of the season, and the first since 2007 not to feature Messi or Cristiano Ronaldo, Barcelona thrashed Real Madrid 5\u20131 at the Camp Nou, with Luis Su\u00e1rez scoring a hat-trick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, November\nOn 3 November, Barca defeated Rayo Vallecano 2-3, two goals from Su\u00e1rez and another from Ousmane Demb\u00e9l\u00e9 earned the Blaugranes a late win at Vallecas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, November\nOn 6 November, Barca draw Inter Milan 1-1, Malcom's 1st goal was not enough at the Giuseppe Meazza after the equalizing goal of Icardi, but Bar\u00e7a still made the knockout stages with two games in hand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, November\nOn 11 November, Barca lost 3-4 to Betis, The Andalusians spoiled Messi's return to action who scored 2 goals, with a shock victory in a dramatic encounter at the Camp Nou seeing Rakitic being sent off after picking his 2nd yellow card .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, November\nOn 24 November, Barca draw Atl\u00e9tico Madrid 1-1, Diego Costa's late header at the Wanda Metropolitano was cancelled out by Ousmane Demb\u00e9l\u00e9 after a brilliant pass of Messi in the final minute of normal time.in addition both Sergi Roberto and rafinha got injured after the game against Atl\u00e9tico", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0033-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, November\nOn 28 November, Barca defeated PSV Eindhoven 1-2, Goals from a sensational Messi and Piqu\u00e9 clinched the points that ensure top spot in Champions League Group B with a game in hand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0034-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, December\nOn 2 December, Barcelona defeated Villarreal 2-0 with goals from Gerard Piqu\u00e9 and Carles Ale\u00f1\u00e1, as well as a great all-round team performance which ensured the win and a clean sheet against worthy opponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0035-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, December\nOn 8 December, Barcelona defeated Espanyol 0-4 with two sensational free kicks from Leo Messi, plus goals from Demb\u00e9l\u00e9 and Luis Su\u00e1rez which brought derby delight and another week at the top of the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0036-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, December\nOn 11 December, Barcelona drew 1-1 with Tottenham producing a magnificent performance as Demb\u00e9l\u00e9 scored Bar\u00e7a's only goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0037-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, December\nOn 16 December, Barcelona defeated Levante 0-5 playing sensational football which saw them power their way to victory in Valencia. Leo Messi scored yet another hat-trick with Luis Su\u00e1rez and Gerard Piqu\u00e9 scoring the other goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0038-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, December\nOn 20 December, Barcelona announced that they had reached an agreement with Valencia for the transfer of Jeison Murillo on loan for the remainder of the 2018/19 season. The agreement includes a purchase option worth \u20ac25m.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0039-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, December\nOn 22 December, Barcelona defeated Celta Vigo 2-0 with goals from Leo Messi and Ousmane Dembele. The win ensured Barca remained on top of the table, three points ahead of Atletico Madrid, heading into the winter break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0040-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, January\nOn 6 January, Barcelona defeated Getafe 1-2, goals from a sensational Leo Messi and a volley from Luis Su\u00e1rez overcame a tough opponent and put the Barcelona five points clear at the top of the Liga table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0041-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, January\nOn 10 January, Barcelona lost to Levante 2-1 in Copa del Rey round of 16, Philippe Coutinho converted a penalty five minutes from the end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0042-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, January\nOn 13 January, Barcelona defeated Eibar 3-0, by 2 goals of Luis Suarez who was on fire with the first goal coming from a brilliant combination with a reborn Philipe Coutinho, the other goal being scored by none other than a sensational Leo Messi, which made it his record 400th La Liga goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0043-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, January\nOn 17 January, Barcelona defeated Levante 3-0 in Copa del Rey round of 16 return game, by 2 goals of Ousmane Dembele and a goal of Leo Messi, this win made sure Barcelona qualified for the Copa del Rey quarter finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0044-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, January\nOn 20 January, Barcelona defeated Legan\u00e9s 3-1, as the first-place Catalans chew up the 'Cucumber Growers' at Camp Nou.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0045-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, January\nOn 23 January, Barcelona lost to Sevilla 2-0 in the Copa del Rey quarterfinals. Juan Sarabia and Ben Yedder scored the goals for Sevilla.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0046-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, January\nOn 23 January, Barcelona announced that they had reached an agreement with Ajax for the transfer of Frankie De Jong who will be joining the Catalan club from 1 July 2019. The transfer fee is 75 million euros, plus a further 11 million in variables. The player will be signing a contract for the next five seasons, through to 2023/24.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0047-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, January\nOn 27 January, Barcelona won Girona 0-2. Nelson Semedo's first League goal and another Leo Messi special handed Bar\u00e7a all three points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0048-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, January\nOn 30 January, Barcelona won Sevilla 6-1 in the Copa del Rey quarterfinals 2nd leg. Phil Coutinho nets a brace, while Ivan Rakitic, Sergi Roberto, Luis Su\u00e1rez and Leo Messi notch a goal each. the victory made sure Barcelona qualified for the semifinals of the Copa del Rey", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0049-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, February\nOn 1 February, the announcement was made that Barcelona would face Real Madrid in the semifinals of the Copa del Rey, in the second El Cl\u00e1sico of this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0050-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, February\nOn 2 February, Bar\u00e7a draw Valencia 2-2, Leo Messi scored twice as first-place Bar\u00e7a battle back from 2-0, first-half deficit to earn a tie and provisionally extend their lead at the top of the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0051-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, February\nOn 6 February, Bar\u00e7a draw Real Madrid 1-1, The Catalans and the Madrile\u00f1os finished all square at Camp Nou in the first leg of the Copa del Rey semifinals; Malcom pulled Bar\u00e7a even after Lucas V\u00e1squez put Los Blancos up early. Making the second leg game at the Bernabeu even more exciting", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0052-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, February\nOn 10 February, Bar\u00e7a draw Athletic 0-0, Bar\u00e7a had the possession but without doing too much with it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0053-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, February\nOn 16 February, Bar\u00e7a won Valladolid 1-0, Bar\u00e7a picked up three vital points in La Liga thanks to a Leo Messi first half penalty. Messi could have doubled the lead with a second penalty given near the end, but the keeper stopped the penalty", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0054-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, February\nOn 19 February, Bar\u00e7a draw Lyon 0-0, Bar\u00e7a had 25 shots on goal but no joy with the tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0055-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, February\nOn 23 February, Bar\u00e7a won Sevilla 2-4, Lionel Messi's stunning hat-trick against his favourite opponent, and Luis Suarez's late goal secured the points for the Blaugrana who twice went behind.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0056-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, February\nOn 27 February, Bar\u00e7a won Real Madrid 0-3 (1-4 agg), Luis Su\u00e1rez was the hero as his two goals plus an own goal send a rampant Bar\u00e7a flying into yet another cup final, the 6th Copa Del Rey final in a row for Barca and they are looking to make it their 5th straight victory in a row", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0057-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, March\nOn 2 March, Bar\u00e7a won Real Madrid 0-1, Ivan Rakitic goal secured second win of the week at the Bernab\u00e9u. It was four seasons in a row now that Bar\u00e7a have won at Real Madrid in the league, a feat that no other team has ever achieved. FC Barcelona have claimed their 96th win the fixture overtaking Real Madrid for the first time in 87 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0058-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, March\nOn 4 March, Bar\u00e7a and Sergi Samper agreed to a contract termination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0059-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, March\nOn 9 March, Bar\u00e7a won Rayo Vallecano 3-1. Ra\u00fal de Tom\u00e1s scored for the visitors in the 25th minute with an outside of the box shot, Gerard Piqu\u00e9 equalised with a header in the 39th minute, Lionel Messi put Barcelona in the lead with a 51st-minute penalty and Luis Su\u00e1rez finished off the game with an 82nd minute tap-in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0060-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, March\nOn 13 March, Bar\u00e7a won Lyon 5-1 (5-1 agg), a magnificent performance from Lionel Messi saw the Argentine grab two of Bar\u00e7a's five goals, and assist in two more for Gerard Piqu\u00e9 and Ousmane Demb\u00e9l\u00e9, Philippe Coutinho completing the scoring. FC Barcelona hold the record in the Champions League for 12 consecutive appearances in the last eight of Europe's top club competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0061-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, March\nOn 15 March, it was announced that Bar\u00e7a would face Manchester United in the quarter-finals of the UEFA Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0062-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, March\nOn 17 March, Bar\u00e7a won Real Betis 1-4. Leo Messi posted yet another legendary hat-trick performance, Luis Su\u00e1rez added the other, and Bar\u00e7a fly into a ten-point lead in La Liga. Unfortunately the Uruguayan sustained an injury keeping him out of play for 10\u201315 days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0063-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, March\nOn the 30th, Barcelona got back to winning ways after the international break, with a 2-0 victory over Espanyol in Derbi barcelon\u00ed with both goals from Messi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0064-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, April\nA thriller of an encounter against Villarreal on 2 April found Bar\u00e7a grab a point in a 4-4 draw after two late goals from Messi and Su\u00e1rez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0065-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, April\nOn 6 April, Bar\u00e7a won against Atl\u00e9tico de Madrid at the Camp Nou 2-0, goals scored by Luis Suarez and Lionel Messi, a thriller of a match that saw Spanish centre forward Diego Costa being sent off the field after receiving a red card. With that win, Messi became the player with the most wins in La Liga with 335.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0066-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, April\nOn 10 April, Bar\u00e7a won Manchester United 0-1, that was the first victory at Old Trafford via a Luke Shaw own goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0067-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, April\nOn 13 April, Bar\u00e7a drew with Huesca 0-0, a much-changed Barcelona gave first team debuts to Jean-Clair Todibo and Moussa Wague.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0068-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, April\nOn 16 April, Bar\u00e7a won Manchester United 3-0 (4-0 agg). An incredible performance by Messi who scored two first-half goals with Coutinho adding a second-half rocket to qualify Bar\u00e7a for their eighth Champions League semi-final in the last 12 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0069-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, April\nOn 20 April, Bar\u00e7a won against Real Sociedad 2-1, Lenglet's towering first-half header and Alba's second were enough for Bar\u00e7a to take all three points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0070-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, April\nOn 23 April, Bar\u00e7a won against Alav\u00e9s 0-2, Ale\u00f1\u00e1's opener and Su\u00e1rez's spot-kick were enough to earn all three points against Alav\u00e9s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0071-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, April\nOn 27 April, Bar\u00e7a won against Levante 1-0, Substitute Messi fired in the only goal of the game to secure a 26th Liga title with three games in hand, which made it Bar\u00e7a's 8th La Liga title in 11 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0072-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, May\nOn 1 May, Bar\u00e7a won 3\u20130 against Liverpool in the first leg of the Champions League semi-final. Suarez scored the first goal, followed by two goals by Messi, the third a superb freekick from over 30 yards, providing them with a clear advantage going into the away leg on 7 May at Anfield. Messi's second goal saw him reach 600 goals for Bar\u00e7a in 683 matches. On 4 May, Bar\u00e7a lost 2\u20130 to Celta Vigo in La Liga, with much of the team rested for the second game with Liverpool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0073-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, May\nOn 7 May, Barca lost 4\u20130 against Liverpool via goals from Divock Origi (2) and Georginio Wijnaldum (2), with Barca eliminated from the Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0074-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, May\nOn 19 May, in Barcelona's final La Liga match of the season, Messi scored twice in a 2\u20132 away draw against Eibar (his 49th and 50th goals of the season in all competitions), which saw him capture his sixth Pichichi Trophy as the league's top scorer, with 36 goals in 34 appearances; with six titles, he equalled Zarra as the player with the most top-scorer awards in La Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0075-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, May\nOn 25 May, Bar\u00e7a lost the Copa Del Rey final to Valencia 1\u20132. Lionel Messi scored the only Barcelona goal that night. This loss marked the end of the season for FC Barcelona who won two trophies (La liga and Supercopa de Espa\u00f1a) out of the possible four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0076-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Squad information, First team squad, From youth squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 82], "content_span": [83, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0077-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Pre-season and friendlies, International Champions Cup\nBarcelona began their 2018\u201319 pre-season with a tour of the United States in the 2018 International Champions Cup. Bar\u00e7a played against Tottenham Hotspur at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Roma at the AT&T Stadium in Arlington and Milan at the Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 83], "content_span": [84, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0078-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Pre-season and friendlies, Joan Gamper Trophy\nThe Blaugrana finished their pre-season preparations with the annual Joan Gamper Trophy match against Boca Juniors of Argentina at the Camp Nou on 15 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 74], "content_span": [75, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0079-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Competitions, La Liga\nBarcelona were the defending champions. On 24 July 2018, the La Liga fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0080-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Competitions, Copa del Rey\nBarcelona entered the competition as the four-time defending champions, having won consecutive editions in 2014\u201315, 2015\u201316, 2016\u201317 and 2017\u201318.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0081-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Competitions, Supercopa de Espa\u00f1a\nAs the winners of the 2017\u201318 Copa del Rey and 2017\u201318 La Liga, Barcelona faced the Copa del Rey runners-up, Sevilla, for the season opening Supercopa de Espa\u00f1a. For the first time in the tournament history, it was a single match hosted in a neutral venue at the Stade Ibn Batouta in Tangier, Morocco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0082-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Competitions, UEFA Champions League\nOn 30 August, Barcelona were drawn in Group B of the UEFA Champions League alongside Tottenham Hotspur from Premier League, PSV Eindhoven from Eredivise and Internazionale from Serie A. After topping Group B, Barcelona advanced to knockout phase as a seeded team, and were drawn against Lyon from Ligue 1 in the round of 16. In the draw for the quarter-finals, Barcelona were drawn against Premier League side Manchester United, and in the draw for the semi-finals, against the winner of the tie between Liverpool and Porto, if Barcelona advance to a further round. Originally, the quarter-finals match was scheduled to be played with the first leg at Camp Nou and the second leg at Old Trafford, but the order of the two legs was reversed to avoid Manchester United and Manchester City from playing home on the same night or on consecutive nights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 64], "content_span": [65, 913]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0083-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nLast updated: 4 May 2019Source: , 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, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285242-0084-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Barcelona season, Statistics, Injury record\n- Player is injured - Player has recovered from injuryLast updated: 4 May 2019Source:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285243-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Basel season\nThe 2018\u201319 FC Basel season is the 126th season in club history and the club's 24th consecutive season in the top flight of Swiss football. Basel were runners-up in the previous season. The season started on the weekend of 21\u201322 July 2018 and will end on Saturday 25 May 2019. The first round of the Swiss Cup was played on the week-end 29, 30 June and 1 July. Basel played the first round on Friday 29 June against lower classed FC Montlingen and they were victorious. Therefore Basel continued in the competition in the second round against FC Echallens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285243-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Basel season\nBasel were also qualified for qualifying phase and play-offs (League Path). The draw for the second qualifying round was held on 19 June 2018 (after the completion of the first qualifying round draw). The first leg was played on 24 July and the second leg played on 1 August 2018. But Basel were eliminated by PAOK and they therefore continued in the Play-off round of the Europa League against Vitesse Arnhem.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285243-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Basel season, Club, Management\nRapha\u00ebl Wicky was the first team manager at the start of the season. His assistant was Massimo Lombardo and a further member of the training staff was Werner Leuthard. Due to the very poor start into the season Wicky was sacked on 26 July, after the Champions League qualifying defeat against PAOK. Alexander Frei then took over as interim coach until a new manager was named. On 2 August Basel announced that Marcel Koller had signed as new manager. He appointed Thomas Janeschitz and Carlos Bernegger as his assistants. Massimo Colomba stayed as the Goalkeeper coach. Massimo Ceccaroni is head of the FCB Youth System.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285243-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Basel season, Club, Further information\nThe FC Basel annual general meeting took place on 4 June 2018. The board of directors under president Bernhard Burgener with sportdirector Marco Streller, Peter von B\u00fcren, financial manager, Patrick Jost, marketing as well as Reto Baumgartner, Dominik Donz\u00e9 and Benno Kaiser remained on the board. Roland Heri was voted onto the board as COO.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285243-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Basel season, Overview, Offseason and preseason\nBetween the end of the 2017\u201318 FC Basel season and this season there were quite a few changes in the team squad. All three goalkeepers left the team. Tom\u00e1\u0161 Vacl\u00edk transferred to Sevilla, Mirko Salvi transferred to Grasshopper Club and Germano Vailati ended his active career. Furthermore, Mohamed Elyounoussi left the club and joined Southampton. Michael Lang also left the club and joined Borussia M\u00f6nchengladbach. Cedric Itten transferred to St. Gallen,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 58], "content_span": [59, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285243-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Basel season, Overview, Offseason and preseason\nIn the other direction Basel were not too busy on the transfer market. On 22 June 2018 Basel announced that they had signed goalkeeper Jonas Omlin from Luzern and on 26 June 2018 Basel announced that they had signed Aldo Kalulu from Lyon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 58], "content_span": [59, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285243-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Basel season, Overview, Offseason and preseason\nDuring the winter break, on 4 February 2019, the club announced that Edon Zhegrova had been signed in on loan for 18 months from Genk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 58], "content_span": [59, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285243-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Domestic League\nThe season started on the weekend of 21\u201322 July 2018. Basel's priority aim for the new season was to win the league championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285243-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Domestic Cup\nBasel's clear aim for the cup this season was to win the title. The first round was played on the week-end 29, 30 June and 1 July. Basel played their first-round game on Friday 29 June away from home against lower classed FC Montlingen. In the first round Basel beat Montlingen 3\u20130, in the second round Echallens R\u00e9gion 7\u20132 and in the round of 16 Winterthur 1\u20130. In the quarter finals Sion were defeated 4\u20132 after extra time and in the semi finals Z\u00fcrich 3\u20131. All these games were played away from home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285243-0008-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Domestic Cup\nThe final was held on the 19 May 2019 in the Stade de Suisse Wankdorf Bern against Thun. Albian Ajeti scored the first goal, Fabian Frei the second for Basel, then Dejan Sorgi\u0107 netted a goal for Thun, but the end result was 2\u20131 for Basel. Basel's aim for this competition was therefore fulfilled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285243-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Champions League\nBasel entered into the this season's Champions League in the qualifying phase and play-offs (League Path). The draw for the second qualifying round was held on 19 June 2018 (after the completion of the first qualifying round draw). The first legs will be played on 24 and 25 July, and the second legs will be played on 31 July and 1 August 2018. Basel were matched against the greek team PAOK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 55], "content_span": [56, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285243-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Basel season, Players, First team squad\nThe following is the list of the Basel first team squad. It also includes players that were in the squad the day the season started on 21 July 2018 but subsequently left the club after that date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285243-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285243-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Basel season, Results and fixtures, Swiss Cup\nThe draw for the first round was held in June 2018. The Super League and Challenge League clubs were seeded and could not be drawn against each other. The lower division teams were granted home advantage and Basel were therefore drawn away. The home advantage was also granted to the team from the lower league in the second and third rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285243-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Basel season, Results and fixtures, UEFA Champions League, Qualifying phase\nBasel were qualified for the 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League in the qualifying phase (League Path) in the second qualifying round. The draw for this round was held on 19 June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 86], "content_span": [87, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285243-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Basel season, Results and fixtures, UEFA Europa League, Third qualifying round\nFollowing their elimination in the UEFA Champions League qualifying phase, Basel were qualified for the Europa League third qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 89], "content_span": [90, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285244-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Bayern Munich season\nThe 2018\u201319 FC Bayern Munich season was the 120th season in the football club's history and 54th consecutive and overall season in the top flight of German football, the Bundesliga, having been promoted from the Regionalliga in 1965. Bayern Munich also participated in this season's edition of the domestic cup, the DFB-Pokal, and the premier continental cup competition, the UEFA Champions League. Bayern were the reigning Bundesliga champions and therefore participated in the German super cup, the DFL-Supercup. This was the 14th season for Bayern in the Allianz Arena, located in Munich, Bavaria, Germany. The season covers a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285244-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Bayern Munich 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285245-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Boto\u0219ani season\nThe 2018\u201319 season will be the xth season of competitive football by Boto\u0219ani, and the yth consecutive in Liga I. Boto\u0219ani will compete in the Liga I and in Cupa Rom\u00e2niei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285245-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Boto\u0219ani season, Competitions, Liga I\nThe Liga I fixture list was announced on 5 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285245-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Boto\u0219ani season, Competitions, Cupa Rom\u00e2niei\nBoto\u0219ani will enter the Cupa Rom\u00e2niei at the Round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285246-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Chornomorets Odesa season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is 28th season of Odessa football club \"Chornomorets\" in the championships / cups of Ukraine, and 81rd season in the history of the club. This season \"Chornomorets\" competed in Premier League and Ukrainian Cup. After finishing at 11th place in the Premier league, \"Chornomorets\" lost to \"Kolos\" (Kovalivka) in play-offs and was relegated to First League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285246-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Chornomorets Odesa season, Competitions, Premier League, League table\nTeams that placed 10th and 11th in the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League play two-leg play-off with the second and third teams of the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League. The draw for play-offs took place on 24 May 2019 and the games will be played on 4 and 8 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 80], "content_span": [81, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285246-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Chornomorets Odesa season, Competitions, Second leg\nKolos Kovalivka won 2\u20130 on aggregate and were promoted to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Chornomorets Odesa were relegated to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285246-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Chornomorets Odesa season, Competitions, Second leg\nKarpaty Lviv won 3\u20130 on aggregate and retained their spot in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Volyn Lutsk remained in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285246-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Chornomorets Odesa season, Competitions, Second leg\nDue to fan violence at the game and attack on referee, the original score 1\u20133 was scratched and replaced with technical score 0\u20133 loss to Volyn and win for Karpaty. Additionally, the Lutsk department of police started criminal proceedings on the fact of intentional damage to property during the game by the Karpaty fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285247-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Desna Chernihiv season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was 1st season in the top Ukrainian football league for FC Desna Chernihiv. Desna competed in Premier League, Ukrainian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285247-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Desna Chernihiv season, Competitions, Premier League, League table\nTeams that placed 10th and 11th in the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League play two-leg play-off with the second and third teams of the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League. The draw for play-offs took place on 24 May 2019 and the games will be played on 4 and 8 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285247-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Desna Chernihiv season, Competitions, Second leg\nKolos Kovalivka won 2\u20130 on aggregate and were promoted to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Chornomorets Odesa were relegated to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285247-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Desna Chernihiv season, Competitions, Second leg\nKarpaty Lviv won 3\u20130 on aggregate and retained their spot in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Volyn Lutsk remained in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285247-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Desna Chernihiv season, Competitions, Second leg\nDue to fan violence at the game and attack on referee, the original score 1\u20133 was scratched and replaced with technical score 0\u20133 loss to Volyn and win for Karpaty. Additionally, the Lutsk department of police started criminal proceedings on the fact of intentional damage to property during the game by the Karpaty fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285248-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season\nThe 2018\u201319 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season is the 70th consecutive edition in Liga I, following Liga I 2018-19, of competitive football by Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti. It competed in Cupa Rom\u00e2niei 2018-2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285248-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Competitions, Liga I\nThe Liga I fixture list was announced on 5 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285248-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Competitions, Cupa Rom\u00e2niei\nDinamo Bucure\u0219ti will enter the Cupa Rom\u00e2niei at the Round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 63], "content_span": [64, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Football Club Drita's 19th consecutive season in the top flight of Kosovar football. Drita will be involved in Football Superleague of Kosovo and Kosovar Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Season overview, June\nOn 19 June, before leaving for Gibraltar Drita transferred footballer Betim Haxhimusa from their local rivals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 46], "content_span": [47, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Season overview, June\nOn 6 June Drita transferred Albanian goalkeeper Edvan Bakaj from KF Liria. Bakaj has signed a one-year contract with the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 46], "content_span": [47, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Season overview, July\nOn 3 July after returning from the state of Gjilbardari and winning victories there in the Pre-Eliminary Round in the UEFA Champions League, FC Drita transferred the other player from his local rivals SC Gjilani, midfielder Zgjim Mustafa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 46], "content_span": [47, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Season overview, July\nOn 21 July was presented the offensive midfielder at Drita Eri Lam\u00e7ja, was more active to KF Luftetari", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 46], "content_span": [47, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Season overview, August\nOn 3 August transferred Edenilson Bergonsi Bergonsi is not unheard of for the supporters as he was part of the Drita for the half-season at the end of 2016. \"Edenilson Bergonsi is the next transfer for the 2018/2019 season. Bergonsi has signed a one-year contract with our team and Monday is expected to start drills with the group.\" said a club official!", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Season overview, August\nOn 6 August champions in power have formalized the deal with Filonit Shaqiri, who is the third player to come from rivals from the same city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Season overview, August\nOn 17 August Football Federation of Kosovo has sentenced FC Drita to 10,000 euros and 2 games without a spectators, with the reason that the supporters of FC Drita had wrong behavior by throwing fireworks on the field that significantly contaminated the air and hampered the course of the match and used offensive expression to the team and the opposing supporters", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Season overview, August\nOn 18 August although the transfer deadline for the transfer of players has been completed, FC Drita has presented the latest lead, defender Ervis Kaja. The player was recently part of KF Liria from Prizren, as he previously made his career in KF Tirana, KF La\u00e7i, KF Besa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Season overview, September\nOn 13 September after Drita loss against KF Llapi, Bekim Isufi resigned from the position of the coach! Under the direction of Bekim Isufi, Drita was the champion of the Kosovo Super League, as well as won the Super Cup of Kosovo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Season overview, September\nOn 15 September Fisnik Ker\u00e7eli resigned from the position of the Sports director of the team. In the message to the Drita's supporters he said: \"I can not remain indifferent to the situation that we are in. Recently, with the arrival of some unprofessional people, I think the situation got out of control!\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Season overview, September\nOn 17 September Drita FC has signed a 1-year agreement with the coach from Albania, Shp\u00ebtim Duro. Duro in the past has coached Albanian clubs such as KF Partizani from Tirana, KF Flamurtari Vlor\u00eb from Vlora, KF Vllaznia from Shkodra, KF Skenderbeu from Kor\u00e7a and KF Shk\u00ebndija from Tetovo. This is the first time that Duro will lead a team in Kosovo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Season overview, September\nOn 17 September The club of Gjilan has formalized Ardian Nuhiu as assistant of Shp\u00ebtim Duro, who was presented on the same day to The Intellectuals. Nuhiu has signed the two-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Season overview, December\nOn 20 December, Drita was awarded as the best team of the year, Xhevdet Shabani was awarded as the best player of the year and the coach Bekim Isufi was awarded as the best coach of the year. Betim Haxhimusa and Kastriot Rexha have awarded for the best Superliga scorers with 13 goals each. Whereas for the best formation of the year are selected 3 players of Drita: Xhevdet Shabani, Kastriot Rexha and Endrit Krasniqi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Season overview, January\nOn 2 January, Drita has held talks with Albania's National Team Player, Jahmir Hyka, by signing a contract for four months with a salary of 10,000 euros for month. But Hyka has rejected this offer due to the poor quality of Kosovo's Super League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Season overview, January\nOn 6 January, Drita announced the transfer of Arb\u00ebr Shala loan to FC Kamza. He will stay at this club until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Season overview, January\nOn 10 January, The defender, Perparim Osmani was loaned for six months from Prishtina to the Drita.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Season overview, January\nOn 10 January, Drita has reached agreement with midfielder Endrit Krasniqi to continue co-operation for another year. Krasniqi's contract signed before international matches expired in January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Season overview, January\nOn 16 January, Drita has announced that has unilaterally terminated the contract with the defender from Albania, Ervis Kaja. Kaja, as the club from Gjilan has announced, has not responded to the invitation to start the preparatory phase for the Superliga spring season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Season overview, January\nOn 21 January, Drita has announced the break-out of cooperation with the Edvan Bakaj the goalkeeper from Tirana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Season overview, January\nOn 22 January, Viktor Kuka ha loaned to KF Ferizaj for 6 month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Season overview, January\nOn 24 January, Has presented 5 players: Denis Haliti, left defender, who is called back from loan. Festim Krasniqi is another player who will strengthen the wing of the attack. Klajdi Burba a classic forward, and after Edvan Bakaj leave the team Drita has transferred Mario Kirev a goalkeeper from Kamza", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Season overview, February\nOn 11 February, Ardian Nuhiu was named the new coach of FC Drita", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Support\nAfter celebrating the championship title, Drita FC supporters, Intelektualet, got ready for the UEFA Champions League, unfortunately, they could not be present in Gjilbartar because of the distance and ticket price!", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Support\nAfter the victories in Gibraltar, Drita played the first qualifying match in Mitrovica, as the Gjilan City Stadium did not meet the conditions of UEFA. So \"Intellectuals\" traveled 30 buses from Gjilan to Mitrovica, where about 10,000 supportes were present. Intellectuals unfold a giant choreographer with the message \"A road paved with sacrifice 1990 - 2018\", this message was devoted to all Kosovar footballers who sacrificed everything for Kosovo football- While in the return match, around 100 \"intellectuals\" in Malm\u00f6, Sweden, where there unfolded a giant flag of Albania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Support\nAfter losing from Malm\u00f6, Drita played against F91 Dudelange from Luxembourg. About 50 intellectuals were present in Luxembourg, while in the second game that took place in Mitrovica there were about 3,000 intellectuals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Support\nIn the SuperCup game between Drita and Prishtina, they traveled around 10 bus with intellectuals. In this game intellectuals threw pyrotechnics in the field, where 3 days after the match the Football Federation of Kosovo sentenced them with 2 games without supporters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita 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-00285249-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita 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-00285249-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita 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-00285249-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita 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-00285249-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Competitions, Kosovar Supercup\nAs the winners of the 2017\u201318 Kosovar Cup and 2017\u201318 Football Superleague of Kosovo, Drita faced the Kosovar Cup winner, Prishtina for the season opening Kosovar Supercup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 55], "content_span": [56, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0033-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Competitions, UEFA Champions League\nDrita competed in the UEFA Champions League for the first time in the 2018\u201319 season, entering at the preliminary round. On 12 June 2018, in Nyon, the draw was held and Drita were drawn against the Andorran side Santa Coloma. On 26 June 2018, Drita beat Santa Coloma at Victoria Stadium in Gibraltar and became the first Kosovar side to win a UEFA Champions League match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 60], "content_span": [61, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285249-0034-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Drita season, Competitions, UEFA Europa League\nAfter being eliminated from Malm\u00f6, Drita continued to play in the second qualifying round of UEFA Europa League. On 17 July 2018, Drita teaches the upcoming rival which was the champion of 2017\u201318 Luxembourg National Division, F91 Dudelange.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 57], "content_span": [58, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285250-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Dunav Ruse season\nThis page covers all relevant details regarding Dunav Ruse for all official competitions inside the 2018\u201319 season. These are the First Professional Football League and the Bulgarian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285250-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Dunav Ruse 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285251-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Dun\u0103rea C\u0103l\u0103ra\u0219i season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 57th season of competitive football by Dun\u0103rea C\u0103l\u0103ra\u0219i, and their first ever in Liga I. Dun\u0103rea C\u0103l\u0103ra\u0219i competed in the Liga I and in Cupa Rom\u00e2niei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285251-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Dun\u0103rea C\u0103l\u0103ra\u0219i season, Competitions, Liga I\nThe Liga I fixture list was announced on 5 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285252-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Dynamo Kyiv season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was 28th consecutive season in the top Ukrainian football league for Dynamo Kyiv. Dynamo competed in Premier League, Ukrainian Cup, UEFA Champions League, UEFA Europa League and 2018 Ukrainian Super Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285252-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Dynamo Kyiv season, Competitions, Ukrainian Premier League, League table\nTeams that placed 10th and 11th in the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League play two-leg play-off with the second and third teams of the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League. The draw for play-offs took place on 24 May 2019 and the games will be played on 4 and 8 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 83], "content_span": [84, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285252-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Dynamo Kyiv season, Competitions, Second leg\nKolos Kovalivka won 2\u20130 on aggregate and were promoted to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Chornomorets Odesa were relegated to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285252-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Dynamo Kyiv season, Competitions, Second leg\nKarpaty Lviv won 3\u20130 on aggregate and retained their spot in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Volyn Lutsk remained in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285252-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Dynamo Kyiv season, Competitions, Second leg\nDue to fan violence at the game and attack on referee, the original score 1\u20133 was scratched and replaced with technical score 0\u20133 loss to Volyn and win for Karpaty. Additionally, the Lutsk department of police started criminal proceedings on the fact of intentional damage to property during the game by the Karpaty fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285253-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Dynamo Moscow season\nThe 2018\u201319 Dinamo Moscow season was the club's second season back in the Russian Premier League, following their relegation at the end of the 2015\u201316 season. They finished the season in 12th place, reached the Round of 16 in the Russian Cup, where they were defeated by Rubin Kazan, and officially moved into their new stadium, the VTB Arena, on the final day of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285253-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Dynamo Moscow 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-00285253-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Dynamo Moscow season, Squad, Out on loan\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285253-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Dynamo Moscow season, Transfers, Summer\nIn:Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285253-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Dynamo Moscow season, Transfers, Summer\nOut:Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285253-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Dynamo Moscow season, Transfers, Winter\nIn:Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285253-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Dynamo Moscow season, Transfers, Winter\nOut:Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285254-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Girondins de Bordeaux season\nThe 2018\u201319 FC Girondins de Bordeaux season was the 138th professional season of the club since its creation in 1881. Bordeaux finished their 2017\u201318 season in 6th place, qualifying for the UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285254-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Girondins de Bordeaux 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285254-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Girondins de Bordeaux 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285255-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Goa season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the club's fifth season since its establishment in 2014 and their fourth season in the Indian Super League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285255-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Goa season, Season overview, June\nOn 9 June 2018, midfielder Hugo Boumous extended his contract with the club. On 17 June, Goa announced the signing of Lenny Rodrigues from Bengaluru FC. On 29 June, Goa signed Jackichand Singh from Kerala Blasters FC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285255-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Goa season, Season overview, July\nOn 8 July, Goa signed Lalthuammawia Ralte from Bengaluru FC. On 12 July, Goa signed full back Nirmal Chettri. On 20 July, Goa signed defender Mourtada Fall. On 25 July, midfielder Ahmed Jahouh extended his contract with the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285255-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Goa season, Season overview, August\nOn 5 August, Goa signed full back Carlos Pe\u00f1a. On 14 August, Goa signed winger Miguel Palanca from Anorthosis Famagusta FC. Goa traveled to Spain for their pre-season preparations. They played their first friendly match of the season in against Deportiva Minera.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285255-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Goa season, Season overview, September\nThey played five friendly matches in Spain, winning all the matches. They returned to Goa and played two friendlies against I-League clubs East Bengal and Indian Arrows and ended their pre-season preparations, they finished their pre-season without losing a single match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 49], "content_span": [50, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285255-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Goa season, Season overview, October\nOn 1 October, Goa started their 2018\u201319 Indian Super League season with a 2\u20132 away draw against NorthEast United. On 6 October, Goa won 1\u20133 away against Chennaiyin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285255-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Goa season, Pre-season and friendlies\nOn 22 August 2018, Goa began their pre-season tour in Spain. Goa played some friendly matches with their first match against Deportiva Minera, second match against Cartagena B, third match with Cartagena FC, fourth with Mar Menor FC and fifth with CD Algar. They returned to Goa and played their sixth friendly match against East Bengal and Indian Arrows.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285255-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Goa season, Competitions, Indian Super League, Goalscorers\nThere have been 22 goals scored in 9 matches, for an average of 2.44 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 69], "content_span": [70, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285255-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Goa season, Competitions, Indian Super League, Goalscorers (Against)\nThere have been 14 goals scored in 9 matches, for an average of 1.56 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 79], "content_span": [80, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285255-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Goa season, Squad information\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285255-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Goa season, Squad information, Current technical staff\nAs of June 2018, FC Goa's head coach is Sergio Lobera. He has signed a two-year contract and begins with the club in July 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 65], "content_span": [66, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285256-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Hermannstadt season\nThe 2018\u201319 season will be the 4th season of competitive football by Hermannstadt, and their first ever in Liga I. Hermannstadt will compete in the Liga I and in Cupa Rom\u00e2niei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285256-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Hermannstadt season, Competitions, Liga I\nThe Liga I fixture list was announced on 5 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285257-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Karpaty Lviv season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was 26th season in the top Ukrainian football league for FC Karpaty Lviv. Karpaty competed in Premier League, Ukrainian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285257-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Karpaty Lviv season, Competitions, Premier League, League table\nTeams that placed 10th and 11th in the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League play two-leg play-off with the second and third teams of the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League. The draw for play-offs took place on 24 May 2019 and the games will be played on 4 and 8 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285257-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Karpaty Lviv season, Competitions, Second leg\nKolos Kovalivka won 2\u20130 on aggregate and were promoted to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Chornomorets Odesa were relegated to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285257-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Karpaty Lviv season, Competitions, Second leg\nKarpaty Lviv won 3\u20130 on aggregate and retained their spot in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Volyn Lutsk remained in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285257-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Karpaty Lviv season, Competitions, Second leg\nDue to fan violence at the game and attack on referee, the original score 1\u20133 was scratched and replaced with technical score 0\u20133 loss to Volyn and win for Karpaty. Additionally, the Lutsk department of police started criminal proceedings on the fact of intentional damage to property during the game by the Karpaty fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285257-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Karpaty Lviv season, Competitions, Second leg, Relegation round\nTeams that placed 10th and 11th in the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League play two-leg play-off with the second and third teams of the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League. The draw for play-offs took place on 24 May 2019 and the games will be played on 4 and 8 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285257-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Karpaty Lviv season, Competitions, Second leg\nKolos Kovalivka won 2\u20130 on aggregate and were promoted to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Chornomorets Odesa were relegated to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285257-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Karpaty Lviv season, Competitions, Second leg\nKarpaty Lviv won 3\u20130 on aggregate and retained their spot in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Volyn Lutsk remained in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285257-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Karpaty Lviv season, Competitions, Second leg\nDue to fan violence at the game and attack on referee, the original score 1\u20133 was scratched and replaced with technical score 0\u20133 loss to Volyn and win for Karpaty. Additionally, the Lutsk department of police started criminal proceedings on the fact of intentional damage to property during the game by the Karpaty fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285258-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Krasnodar season\nThe 2018\u201319 FC Krasnodar season was the eighth successive season that Krasnodar will play in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Russia. They finished the previous season in 4th place, and as a result of FC Tosno failing to obtain a UEFA licence for their 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League Group Stage spot, they qualified directly for the Groups Stage of the UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285258-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Krasnodar season, Season events\nDmitry Stotsky was Krasnodar's first summer signing, penning a four-year contract on 15 May, with Uro\u0161 Spaji\u0107 becoming the second summer signing 11 days later, when he signed a five-year contract on 26 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285258-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Krasnodar season, Season events\nOn 9 July, German Onugkha signed from Volgar Astrakhan on a four-year contract, whilst Ivan Taranov signed a one-year contract on 11 July. On 13 July, Nikolay Markov returned to Krasnodar, signing a one-year contract. 6 days later, 19 July, Krasnodar announced the signing of Christian Cueva on a four-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285258-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Krasnodar season, Season events\nOn 10 August, Krasnodar announced the signing of J\u00f3n Fj\u00f3luson on a three-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285258-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Krasnodar season, Season events\nFollowing Pavel Mamayev's arrest for assault in October, Krasnodar announced that they had imposed the maximum fine they could on Mamayev, removed him from first team training and were investigating how to terminate his contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285258-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Krasnodar season, Season events\nOn 27 November, Viktor Claesson extended his contract with Krasnodar until the end of June 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285258-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Krasnodar season, Season events\nOn 28 May, Alyaksandr Martynovich, Cristian Ram\u00edrez, Yury Gazinsky and Ari all signed new contracts with the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285258-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285259-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Krylia Sovetov Samara season\nThe 2018\u201319 PFC Krylia Sovetov Samara season was the club's first season back in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of football in Russia, since their relegation at the end of the 2016\u201317 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285259-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Krylia Sovetov Samara season, Season events\nOn 5 October 2018, manager Andrey Tikhonov was fired, with Miodrag Bo\u017eovi\u0107 being anointed in his place on the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285259-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285259-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Krylia Sovetov Samara 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285259-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285259-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285259-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285259-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285260-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Lokomotiv Moscow season\nThe 2018\u201319 FC Lokomotiv Moscow season was the club's 27th season in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of the Russian football league system. Lokomotiv Moscow was the League defending champions. Lokomotiv Moscow also won the Russian Cup and took part in the Champions League. Lokomotiv also contested the Russian Super Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285260-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Lokomotiv Moscow season\nLokomotiv launched a women's team, which are participating in the Russian Women's Football Championship, the highest division in Russia for women football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285260-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Lokomotiv Moscow season, First team squad, Information\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 20 February 2019.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, 34], "section_span": [36, 65], "content_span": [66, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285260-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Lokomotiv Moscow season, Competitions, Champions League\nLokomotiv have qualified directly for the group stage of the 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League League after winning the 2017\u201318 Russian Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285260-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Lokomotiv Moscow season, FC Kazanka Moscow\nThe 2018/19 FC Kazanka Moscow season will be the club's 2nd season in the Russian Professional Football League following the club's relaunch last year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285260-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Lokomotiv Moscow season, FC Kazanka Moscow, Squad information\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 2 June 2019.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, 34], "section_span": [36, 72], "content_span": [73, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285260-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Lokomotiv Moscow season, WFC Lokomotiv Moscow\nThe 2018 WFC Lokomotiv Moscow season will be the club's 1st season in the Russian Women's Football Championship following the club's relaunch in April 2018. WFC Lokomotiv Moscow also took part in the Russian Women's Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285260-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Lokomotiv Moscow season, WFC Lokomotiv Moscow, Squad information\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 1 September 2018.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, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285261-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Lviv season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was 2nd season in the top Ukrainian football league for FC Lviv. Lviv competed in Premier League, Ukrainian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285261-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Lviv season\nOn completion of the 2017\u201318 Ukrainian Premier League season, Veres Rivne, who had moved their operations to Lviv during the season announced the merging with FC Lviv who competed in the 2017\u201318 Ukrainian Second League and retain their name. This is the first time of such \"swap\" that has occurred with a team from the Ukrainian Premier League. Its certification the club passed on 5 June 2018. Along with that the FFU certification committee is consulting with the UEFA in regards of the \"clubs swap\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285261-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Lviv season\nOn 6 June 2018 it was announced that it is too early speculate composition of the league for the next season as the UEFA will make its final decision by allowing or not participation of FC Lviv. It is possible that some of already relegated clubs might be given a second chance if UEFA will insist on impossibility of the Lviv-Veres team swap. On 12 June 2018 Ukrainian Premier League updated its website removing any mentioning of NK Veres Rivne ever competing in the league and its record being awarded to FC Lviv.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285261-0001-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Lviv season\nMore to the story, in interview to \"Tribuna\" a head of the FFU Attestation Committee Viktor Bezsmernyi explained that it was Veres that received certificate for the 2018-19 Ukrainian Premier League and then the club changed its name. At same time the old-new president of Veres Khakhlyov demonstrated the club's certificate for the 2018-19 Ukrainian Second League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285261-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Lviv season, Competitions, Premier League, League table\nTeams that placed 10th and 11th in the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League play two-leg play-off with the second and third teams of the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League. The draw for play-offs took place on 24 May 2019 and the games will be played on 4 and 8 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285261-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Lviv season, Competitions, Second leg\nKolos Kovalivka won 2\u20130 on aggregate and were promoted to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Chornomorets Odesa were relegated to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285261-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Lviv season, Competitions, Second leg\nKarpaty Lviv won 3\u20130 on aggregate and retained their spot in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Volyn Lutsk remained in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285261-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Lviv season, Competitions, Second leg\nDue to fan violence at the game and attack on referee, the original score 1\u20133 was scratched and replaced with technical score 0\u20133 loss to Volyn and win for Karpaty. Additionally, the Lutsk department of police started criminal proceedings on the fact of intentional damage to property during the game by the Karpaty fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285262-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Mariupol season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was 19th season in the top Ukrainian football league for FC Mariupol. Mariupol competed in Premier League, Ukrainian Cup and UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285263-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Metz season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 87th season in the existence of FC Metz and the club's first season back in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Metz participated in this season's editions of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285263-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Metz season\nThe club was crowned as champions of the campaign with two games to spare and promoted to the top flight after only one year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285263-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Metz 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285263-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Metz 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285264-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Midtjylland season\nThe 2018\u201319 FC Midtjylland season is FC Midtjylland's 20th season of existence, and their 18th consecutive season in the Danish Superliga, the top tier of football in Denmark. In addition to a second place finish in the Superliga, Midtjylland won its first Danish Cup and competed in the UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285265-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Nantes season\nThe 2018\u201319 FC Nantes season was the 75th professional season of the club since its creation in 1943, and the club's 15th consecutive season in the top flight of French football. It covers a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019. They participated in the Ligue 1, the Coupe de France and Coupe de la Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285265-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Nantes 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285265-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Nantes 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-00285266-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Oleksandriya season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was 7th season in the top Ukrainian football league for FC Oleksandriya. Oleksandriya competed in Premier League, Ukrainian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285266-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Oleksandriya season, Competitions, Premier League, League table\nTeams that placed 10th and 11th in the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League play two-leg play-off with the second and third teams of the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League. The draw for play-offs took place on 24 May 2019 and the games will be played on 4 and 8 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285266-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Oleksandriya season, Competitions, Second leg\nKolos Kovalivka won 2\u20130 on aggregate and were promoted to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Chornomorets Odesa were relegated to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285266-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Oleksandriya season, Competitions, Second leg\nKarpaty Lviv won 3\u20130 on aggregate and retained their spot in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Volyn Lutsk remained in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285266-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Oleksandriya season, Competitions, Second leg\nDue to fan violence at the game and attack on referee, the original score 1\u20133 was scratched and replaced with technical score 0\u20133 loss to Volyn and win for Karpaty. Additionally, the Lutsk department of police started criminal proceedings on the fact of intentional damage to property during the game by the Karpaty fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285267-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Olimpik Donetsk season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was fifth consecutive season in the top Ukrainian football league for Olimpik Donetsk. Olimpik competed in Premier League, Ukrainian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285267-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Olimpik Donetsk season, Competitions, Premier League, League table\nTeams that placed 10th and 11th in the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League play two-leg play-off with the second and third teams of the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League. The draw for play-offs took place on 24 May 2019 and the games will be played on 4 and 8 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285267-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Olimpik Donetsk season, Competitions, Second leg\nKolos Kovalivka won 2\u20130 on aggregate and were promoted to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Chornomorets Odesa were relegated to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285267-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Olimpik Donetsk season, Competitions, Second leg\nKarpaty Lviv won 3\u20130 on aggregate and retained their spot in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Volyn Lutsk remained in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285267-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Olimpik Donetsk season, Competitions, Second leg\nDue to fan violence at the game and attack on referee, the original score 1\u20133 was scratched and replaced with technical score 0\u20133 loss to Volyn and win for Karpaty. Additionally, the Lutsk department of police started criminal proceedings on the fact of intentional damage to property during the game by the Karpaty fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285268-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Orenburg season\nThe 2018\u201319 Orenburg season was the club's first season back in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Russia, following their relegation at the end of the 2016\u201317, and their second in their 42 year history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285268-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Orenburg season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285268-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Orenburg 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-00285268-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Orenburg 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-00285269-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Politehnica Ia\u0219i (2010) season\nThe 2018\u201319 season will be the 9th season of competitive football by Politehnica Ia\u0219i, and the 5th consecutive in Liga I. Politehnica Ia\u0219i will compete in the Liga I and in Cupa Rom\u00e2niei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285269-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Politehnica Ia\u0219i (2010) season, Competitions, Liga I\nThe Liga I fixture list was announced on 5 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285269-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Politehnica Ia\u0219i (2010) season, Competitions, Cupa Rom\u00e2niei\nPolitehnica Ia\u0219i will enter the Cupa Rom\u00e2niei at the Round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 70], "content_span": [71, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285270-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Porto season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Futebol Clube do Porto's 109th competitive season and 85th consecutive season in the top flight of Portuguese football. It began on 4 August 2018 and concluded on 25 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285270-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Porto season\nPorto started the season with a 3\u20131 victory in the Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira against the 2017\u201318 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal holders, Desportivo das Aves, which secured the club's 21st Superta\u00e7a win and first since 2013. Porto led the 2018\u201319 Primeira Liga for more than half of the season, but lost it to Benfica on 2 March 2019, after a 1\u20132 home defeat. Porto finished the league as runners-up with 85 points, two points behind Benfica. Porto reached the finals of the 2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a da Liga and the 2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, but were defeated on both occasions by Sporting CP after a penalty shootout, for the second consecutive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285270-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Porto season\nIn UEFA competitions, Porto participated for the 8th consecutive and 23rd overall time in the UEFA Champions League group stage, a record shared with Barcelona and Real Madrid. They advanced to the round of 16 as group winners, where they beat Italian side Roma to qualify for the quarter-finals for the first time since 2015. For the second consecutive season, they were eliminated from the competition after losing to English side Liverpool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285271-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Pune City season\nThe 2018\u201319 FC Pune City season is the club's fifth season since its establishment in 2014 and their fifth season in the Indian Super League. This was the club's last season in the Indian Super League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285271-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Pune City season, Pre-season and friendlies\nFC Pune City kicked -off their pre-season preparations by participating in the second edition of the AWES Cup in Goa from 29 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285271-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Pune City season, Pre-season and friendlies\nIn the last edition of AWES Cup, FC Pune City Reserves squad went up to semifinals before losing to Dempo Sports Club 1\u20130. But this time around, the club has decided to participate in the event with their entire first team squad. FC Pune City is placed along with Dempo SC, Salgaocar FC and FC Goa in Group A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285272-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Pyunik season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Pyunik's 25th season in the Armenian Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285272-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Pyunik season, Season events\nOn 2 December, during Pyunik's match against Gandzasar Kapan, manager Andrei Talalayev was sent off for insulting the Fourth official. Talalayev was subsequently banned from football until the end of the season, 31 May 2019, on 6 December 2018. On 9 April, Talalayev left Pyunik by mutual consent, with Aleksandr Tarkhanov being appointed as the new manager on 11 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285272-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Pyunik 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-00285273-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Red Bull Salzburg season\nThe 2018\u201319 FC Red Bull Salzburg season was the 86th season in club history. They were defending League champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285273-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Red Bull Salzburg season, Season review, July and August\nRed Bull Salzburg started the Bundesliga season on 29 July 2018 against LASK. Red Bull Salzburg won the match 3\u20131. Red Bull Salzburg got an own goal from Alexander Schlager and two goals from Mu'nas Dabbur. Maximilian Ullmann scored for LASK from the penalty spot. Matchday two took place on 4 August 2018 against SV Mattersburg. Red Bull Salzburg won the match 2\u20130 with goals from Andr\u00e9 Ramalho and Mu'nas Dabbur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285273-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Red Bull Salzburg season, Season review, July and August\nRed Bull Salzburg 2018\u201319 season started with a first round match in the Austrian Cup against ASK\u00d6 Oedt. Red Bull Salzburg won 6\u20130 with two goals from Xaver Schlager, two goals from Reinhold Yabo, a goal from Smail Prevljak, and a goal from Mu'nas Dabbur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285273-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285274-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Rostov season\nThe 2018\u201319 FC Rostov season was the club's tenth successive season in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of football in Russia. They finished the season 9th in the Premier League, and reached the Semifinal of the Russian Cup, where they lost to eventual winners Lokomotiv Moscow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285274-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Rostov 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-00285275-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Rubin Kazan season\nThe 2018\u201319 FC Rubin Kazan season was the sixteenth successive season that Rubin Kazan played in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285275-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285275-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Rubin Kazan 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285275-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Rubin Kazan 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285275-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285275-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285276-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Schalke 04 season\nThe 2018\u201319 FC Schalke 04 season was the 115th season in the football club's history and 28th consecutive and 51st overall season in the top flight of German football, the Bundesliga, having been promoted from the 2. Bundesliga in 1991. In addition to the domestic league, Schalke 04 also were participating in this season's editions of the domestic cup, the DFB-Pokal, and the first-tier continental cup, the UEFA Champions League. This was the 18th season for Schalke in the Veltins-Arena, located in Gelsenkirchen, North Rhine-Westphalia. The season covered a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285276-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Schalke 04 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-00285277-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Shakhtar Donetsk season\nThe 2018\u201319 Shakhtar Donetsk season was the club's 28th season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285277-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Shakhtar Donetsk season, Squad, Other players under the contract\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, 75], "content_span": [76, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285277-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Shakhtar Donetsk season, Squad, U21 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, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285277-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Shakhtar Donetsk season, Competitions, Ukrainian Premier League, League table\nTeams that placed 10th and 11th in the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League play two-leg play-off with the second and third teams of the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League. The draw for play-offs took place on 24 May 2019 and the games will be played on 4 and 8 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 88], "content_span": [89, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285277-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Shakhtar Donetsk season, Competitions, Second leg\nKolos Kovalivka won 2\u20130 on aggregate and were promoted to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Chornomorets Odesa were relegated to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285277-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Shakhtar Donetsk season, Competitions, Second leg\nKarpaty Lviv won 3\u20130 on aggregate and retained their spot in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Volyn Lutsk remained in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285277-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Shakhtar Donetsk season, Competitions, Second leg\nDue to fan violence at the game and attack on referee, the original score 1\u20133 was scratched and replaced with technical score 0\u20133 loss to Volyn and win for Karpaty. Additionally, the Lutsk department of police started criminal proceedings on the fact of intentional damage to property during the game by the Karpaty fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285277-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Shakhtar Donetsk season, Competitions, Championship round table\nTeams that placed 10th and 11th in the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League play two-leg play-off with the second and third teams of the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League. The draw for play-offs took place on 24 May 2019 and the games will be played on 4 and 8 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285277-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Shakhtar Donetsk season, Competitions, Second leg\nKolos Kovalivka won 2\u20130 on aggregate and were promoted to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Chornomorets Odesa were relegated to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285277-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Shakhtar Donetsk season, Competitions, Second leg\nKarpaty Lviv won 3\u20130 on aggregate and retained their spot in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Volyn Lutsk remained in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285277-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Shakhtar Donetsk season, Competitions, Second leg\nDue to fan violence at the game and attack on referee, the original score 1\u20133 was scratched and replaced with technical score 0\u20133 loss to Volyn and win for Karpaty. Additionally, the Lutsk department of police started criminal proceedings on the fact of intentional damage to property during the game by the Karpaty fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285278-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Spartak Moscow season\nThe 2018\u201319 Spartak Moscow season was the twenty-seventh successive season that the club played in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285278-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Spartak Moscow season, Season events\nOn 22 October 2018, Massimo Carrera was sacked as manager, with Ra\u00fal Riancho being appointed as caretaker manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285279-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC St. Pauli season\nThe 2018\u201319 FC St. Pauli season is the 108th season in the football club's history and 8th consecutive season in the second division of German football, the 2. Bundesliga and 26th overall. In addition to the domestic league, FC St. Pauli also are participating in this season's edition of the domestic cup, the DFB-Pokal. This is the 56th season for FC St. Pauli in the Millerntor-Stadion, located in St. Pauli, Hamburg, Germany. The season covers a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285279-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC St. Pauli 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-00285280-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Twente season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is FC Twente's second visit to the Eerste Divisie following their relegation from the 2017\u201318 Eredivisie. It marks their return to the second highest division in Dutch football after spending 34 consecutive seasons in the top flight of Dutch football. Marino Pusic was promoted to head coach after filling in as interim manager after the departure of Gertjan Verbeek during the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285280-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Twente season\nFC Twente were confirmed as champions of the 2018\u201319 Eerste Divisie season on 22 April 2019, finishing top of the Netherlands' second-highest tier of football for the first time in the club's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285280-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Twente season, Season review, Pre-season\nFC Twente's pre-season got off to a rocky start. Following the relegation to the Eerste Divisie, the club was forced to slash spending after reducing the overall budget from 30 million to 18 million euros. In late June it became apparent that FC Twente was in dire need of financial help, leaving the club in great uncertainty about the future. The club even threatened to file for bankruptcy if the Enschede city council does not stand guarantee for 7 million euros.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285280-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Twente season, Season review, Pre-season\nA few weeks later FC Twente announced it staved off bankruptcy after the city council agreed to a rescue plan. City officials agreed to freeze interest and repayments of a loan made to the club over a two-season period. In addition, some 30 of the club's sponsors have agreed to invest 10 million euros in the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285280-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Twente season, Season review, Pre-season\nOn 31 May, FC Twente announced their first signing of the summer; the return of Dutch midfielder Wout Brama from Australian side Central Coast Mariners, signing him on a free transfer. Brama previously played at Twente between 2005 and 2014 where he won the Eredivisie in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285280-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Twente season, Friendlies\nFC Twente revealed pre-season fixtures against Heerenveen, FC Emmen, VVV-Venlo, G\u00f6ztepe S.K. and Al-Taawoun.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285280-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Twente season, Competitions, Eerste Divisie, League table\nTen teams, two from the Eredivisie and eight from the Eerste Divisie, play for two spots in the 2019\u201320 Eredivisie, the remaining eight teams playing in the 2019\u201320 Eerste Divisie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285280-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Twente season, Competitions, Eerste Divisie, Matches\nOn 15 June 2018, the Eerste Divisie fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285281-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Ufa season\nThe 2018\u201319 FC Ufa season was their fifth successive season in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Russia, and sixth in total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285281-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Ufa season, Season events\nDuring pre-season, manager Sergei Semak left by mutual consent, to become manager of Zenit St.Petersburg. On 13 June, Sergei Tomarov was appointed as the club's new manager, but resigned on 7 November 2018 being replaced by Dmitri Kirichenko. Kirichenko left Ufa by mutual consent on 27 March, with Vadim Evseev becoming Ufa's third manager of the season on the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285281-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Ufa 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-00285281-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Ufa 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, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285282-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Universitatea Cluj season\nThe 2018\u201319 season will be the 93rd season of competitive football by Universitatea Cluj, and the 1st in Liga II, after two years of absence, being promoted at the end of the previous season of Liga III. Universitatea Cluj will compete in the Liga II and in Cupa Rom\u00e2niei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285282-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Universitatea Cluj season, Competitions, Liga II\nThe Liga II fixture list was announced on 19 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285282-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Universitatea Cluj season, Competitions, Liga II, Promotion Play Off\nAs Universitatea Cluj lost the Promotion play-off on aggregate 2-1, Universitatea Cluj remained in Liga II for another season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 79], "content_span": [80, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285283-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Ural Yekaterinburg season\nThe 2018\u201319 Ural season was the club's sixth successive season that the club played in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Russia. They finished the season in 10th place, whilst they were runners up in the Russian Cup to Lokomotiv Moscow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285283-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Ural Yekaterinburg 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-00285283-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Ural Yekaterinburg 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-00285283-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Ural Yekaterinburg 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-00285283-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Ural Yekaterinburg 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-00285283-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Ural Yekaterinburg 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-00285283-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Ural Yekaterinburg 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-00285284-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Viitorul Constan\u021ba season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 10th season of competitive football by Viitorul Constan\u021ba, and the 7th consecutive in the Liga I. Viitorul Constan\u021ba competed in the Liga I, Cupa Rom\u00e2niei and Europa League. The club won their first Romanian Cup on 25 May 2019, defeating Astra Giurgiu in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285284-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Viitorul Constan\u021ba 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-00285284-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Viitorul Constan\u021ba season, Competitions, Liga I\nThe Liga I fixture list was announced on 5 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285284-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Viitorul Constan\u021ba season, Competitions, UEFA Europa League\nAfter finishing fourth in the 2017-18 Liga I, Viitorul Constan\u021ba entered the Europa League at the first qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285285-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Viktoria Plze\u0148 season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is FC Viktoria Plze\u0148's 26th season in the Czech First League. The team is competing in Czech First League, the Czech Cup, and the UEFA Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285285-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Viktoria Plze\u0148 season\nPavel Vrba returned to manage the club in the summer of 2017. He had previously served as manager from 2008 to 2013 before leaving to manage the national team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285285-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Viktoria Plze\u0148 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285285-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Viktoria Plze\u0148 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285286-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Vitosha Bistritsa season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Vitosha Bistritsa's second consecutive season in the Bulgarian First League after they won play-offs against Pirin Blagoevgrad (0:1 home loss and 2:1 away win with goals of Radko Mutafchiyski and Grigor Dolapchiev and Lokomotiv Sofia (2:2 after extra time with goals by Daniel Kutev and Stefan Hristov, and 4:2 after penalties).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285287-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Voluntari season\nThe 2018\u201319 season will be the 9th season of competitive football by Voluntari, and the 4th consecutive in Liga I. Voluntari will compete in the Liga I and in Cupa Rom\u00e2niei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285287-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Voluntari season, Competitions, Liga I\nThe Liga I fixture list was announced on 5 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285287-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Voluntari season, Competitions, Cupa Rom\u00e2niei\nVoluntari will enter the Cupa Rom\u00e2niei at the Round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285288-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Vorskla Poltava season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was 23rd consecutive season in the top Ukrainian football league for Vorskla Poltava. Vorskla competed in Premier League, Ukrainian Cup and UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285288-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Vorskla Poltava season, Competitions, Premier League, League table\nTeams that placed 10th and 11th in the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League play two-leg play-off with the second and third teams of the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League. The draw for play-offs took place on 24 May 2019 and the games will be played on 4 and 8 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285288-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Vorskla Poltava season, Competitions, Second leg\nKolos Kovalivka won 2\u20130 on aggregate and were promoted to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Chornomorets Odesa were relegated to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285288-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Vorskla Poltava season, Competitions, Second leg\nKarpaty Lviv won 3\u20130 on aggregate and retained their spot in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Volyn Lutsk remained in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285288-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Vorskla Poltava season, Competitions, Second leg\nDue to fan violence at the game and attack on referee, the original score 1\u20133 was scratched and replaced with technical score 0\u20133 loss to Volyn and win for Karpaty. Additionally, the Lutsk department of police started criminal proceedings on the fact of intentional damage to property during the game by the Karpaty fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285289-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Yenisey Krasnoyarsk season\nThe 2018\u201319 Yenisey Krasnoyarsk season was the first season that the club will play in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Russia. Yenisey finished the season in 16th position, being relegated back to the RFNL at the first opportunity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285289-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Yenisey Krasnoyarsk season, Season events\nOn 14 June, Pavel Komolov signed for Yenisey Krasnoyarsk from Amkar Perm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285289-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Yenisey Krasnoyarsk season, Season events\nOn 18 June, goalkeeper David Yurchenko signed for Yenisey Krasnoyarsk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285289-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Yenisey Krasnoyarsk season, Season events\nOn 25 June, Mikhail Kostyukov joined Yenisey Krasnoyarsk after his Amkar Perm contract expired, with Petar Zanev also joining from Amkar Perm the following day..", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285289-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Yenisey Krasnoyarsk season, Season events\nOn 29 June, David Mildzikhov joined FC Khimki on loan until the end of the 2018/19 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285289-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Yenisey Krasnoyarsk season, Season events\nOn 5 July, Fegor Ogude became the fourth former Amkar Perm player to sign for Yenisey Krasnoyarsk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285289-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Yenisey Krasnoyarsk season, Season events\nOn 13 July, Rade Dugali\u0107 signed for Yenisey Krasnoyarsk from Tosno.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285289-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Yenisey Krasnoyarsk season, Season events\nOn 13 July, Aleksei Gritsayenko signed for Yenisey Krasnoyarsk on a one-year loan deal from Krasnodar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285289-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Yenisey Krasnoyarsk season, Season events\nOn 16 July, Enis Gavazaj signed from Sk\u00ebnderbeu Kor\u00e7\u00eb with Dmitri Yatchenko signing the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285289-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Yenisey Krasnoyarsk season, Season events\nOn 19 July, Darko Bodul signed for Yenisey Krasnoyarsk on a two-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285289-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Yenisey Krasnoyarsk season, Season events\nOn 20 July, Aleksandr Zotov signed for Yenisey Krasnoyarsk on a season-long loan, whilst Ali Gadzhibekov signed from Krylia Sovetov.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285289-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Yenisey Krasnoyarsk season, Season events\nOn 1 February 2019, Oleh Danchenko signed on loan from Shakhtar Donetsk for the rest of the season, whilst Aleksandr Sobolev joined on loan for the remainder of the season from Krylia Sovetov on 3 February. Also on 3 February, Arsen Khubulov signed on a permanent contract from BB Erzurumspor, whilst Babacar Sarr signed on 5 February, after his Molde FK contract was cancelled in January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285290-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Zenit Saint Petersburg season\nThe 2018\u201319 Zenit Saint Petersburg season was the 94th season in the club's history and its 23rd consecutive season in the Russian Premier League. The club also participated in the Russian Cup and the UEFA Europa League. Zenit finished the season 1st, winning their 5th Russian Premier League title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285290-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Zenit Saint Petersburg season, Season Events\nPrior to the start of the season, 29 May 2018, Sergey Semak replaced Roberto Mancini as manager of Zenit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285290-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Zenit Saint Petersburg 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, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285291-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Zorya Luhansk season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was 18th season in the top Ukrainian football league for Zorya Luhansk. Zorya competed in Premier League, Ukrainian Cup and UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285291-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Zorya Luhansk season, Competitions, Premier League, League table\nTeams that placed 10th and 11th in the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League play two-leg play-off with the second and third teams of the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League. The draw for play-offs took place on 24 May 2019 and the games will be played on 4 and 8 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285291-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Zorya Luhansk season, Competitions, Second leg\nKolos Kovalivka won 2\u20130 on aggregate and were promoted to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Chornomorets Odesa were relegated to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285291-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Zorya Luhansk season, Competitions, Second leg\nKarpaty Lviv won 3\u20130 on aggregate and retained their spot in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Volyn Lutsk remained in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285291-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FC Zorya Luhansk season, Competitions, Second leg\nDue to fan violence at the game and attack on referee, the original score 1\u20133 was scratched and replaced with technical score 0\u20133 loss to Volyn and win for Karpaty. Additionally, the Lutsk department of police started criminal proceedings on the fact of intentional damage to property during the game by the Karpaty fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285292-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FCSB season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was FCSB's 71st season since its founding in 1947.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285292-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FCSB 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, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285292-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FCSB season, UEFA Club rankings\nThis is the current UEFA Club Rankings, including season 2017\u201318.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285293-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIA World Endurance Championship\nThe 2018\u201319 FIA World Endurance Championship was the seventh season of the FIA World Endurance Championship, an auto racing series co-organised by the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) and the Automobile Club de l'Ouest (ACO). The series is open to Le Mans Prototypes and grand tourer-style racing cars divided into four categories. The season marked the first move to a winter schedule for the championship, with the season starting at the Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps in May 2018 and concluding at the 24 Hours of Le Mans in June 2019. World championship titles were awarded for LMP drivers, GTE drivers, LMP1 teams and GTE manufacturers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285293-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIA World Endurance Championship, Schedule\nThe series announced a provisional schedule on 1 September 2017 that shifted the season calendar from a spring to autumn layout with the 24 Hours of Le Mans marque event held in the middle of the championship, to one running from the May 2018 and to June 2019, including two runnings of Le Mans. This \"super season\" of eight races spans across more than a year instead of the usual eight months. This shift in calendar length allows the following 2019\u201320 season to return to a shorter length by starting in the autumn and concluding at Le Mans in the summer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285293-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIA World Endurance Championship, Schedule\nThe schedule does not include the Circuit of the Americas, Bahrain, Mexico City, or the N\u00fcrburgring which were all part of the 2017 championship. In addition to Le Mans being included in both 2018 and 2019, the 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps is also run twice. Sebring International Raceway returns to the series for the first time since the inaugural season in 2012, although the WEC does not participate in the WeatherTech SportsCar Championship's 12 Hours of Sebring. The WeatherTech series runs their race the day after WEC's 8-hour, 1,000-mile event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285293-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIA World Endurance Championship, Schedule\nThe schedule was revised two weeks later with the announcement of the eighth round of the championship, returning to Silverstone Circuit in the United Kingdom. The unannounced event was originally planned for February 2019, with negotiations taking place over a return to Mexico City. With the Mexico City deal failing to materialize, the event at Silverstone was moved to August 2018 to bridge the gap between Le Mans and the Asian rounds of the series starting in October. Further, the Fuji and Shanghai rounds had their dates changed, however Fuji was later returned to its originally scheduled date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285293-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIA World Endurance Championship, Teams and drivers, LMP2\nIn accordance with the Le Mans Prototype LMP2 regulations for 2017, all cars use the Gibson GK428 4.2\u00a0L V8 engine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 65], "content_span": [66, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285293-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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, 40], "section_span": [42, 77], "content_span": [78, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285293-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIA World Endurance Championship, Results and standings, Drivers' championships\nFour titles are offered to drivers, two with world championship status. The LMP World Endurance Drivers' Championship is reserved for LMP1 and LMP2 drivers while the GTE World Endurance Drivers' Championship is available for drivers in the LMGTE categories. FIA Endurance Trophies are awarded in LMP2 and in LMGTE Am.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 87], "content_span": [88, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285293-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIA World Endurance Championship, Results and standings, Drivers' championships\nEntries were 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 was awarded to the team and all drivers of the pole position car for each category in qualifying. Furthermore, a race must complete two laps under green flag conditions in order for championship points to be awarded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 87], "content_span": [88, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285293-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIA World Endurance Championship, Results and standings, Manufacturers' and teams' championships\nA world championship for LMGTE manufacturers is awarded, while the former title for manufacturers in LMP1 has been replaced by a world championship for LMP1 teams. FIA Endurance Trophies are awarded for LMP2 and LMGTE Am teams, while the former trophy for LMGTE Pro teams had been eliminated for 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 104], "content_span": [105, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285293-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIA World Endurance Championship, Results and standings, Manufacturers' and teams' championships, World Endurance LMP1 Championship\nPoints are awarded only for the highest finishing competitor from each team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 139], "content_span": [140, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285293-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIA World Endurance Championship, Results and standings, Manufacturers' and teams' championships, World Endurance GTE Manufacturers' Championship\nThe two highest finishing competitors from each manufacturer are awarded points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 153], "content_span": [154, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285294-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup was the fourth season of the FIBA Europe Cup, a European professional basketball competition for clubs, that was launched by FIBA. The competition began on 20 September 2018, with the qualifying rounds, and concluded on 1 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285294-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup\nDinamo Sassari won its first European title after beating s.Oliver W\u00fcrzburg in the 2019 FIBA Europe Cup Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285294-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup, Team allocation, Teams\nThe labels in the parentheses show how each team qualified for the place of its starting round:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285294-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup, Round and draw dates\nThe draw will take place on the 31 July 2018 in the FIBA headquarters in Munich, Germany. The schedule of the competition is as follows (all draws are held at the FIBA headquarters in Munich, Germany, unless stated otherwise):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285294-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup, Qualifying rounds\nThe draw for the qualifying rounds was held on 31 July 2018 at the FIBA headquarters in Munich, Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285294-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup, Qualifying rounds\nIn the qualifying rounds, teams are divided into seeded and unseeded teams based on their club coefficients, and then drawn into two-legged home-and-away ties. Teams from the same country cannot be drawn against each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285294-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup, Qualifying rounds, First qualifying round\nA total of 10 teams played in the first qualifying round. The first legs were played on 20 and 21 September, and the second legs were played on 26 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 66], "content_span": [67, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285294-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup, Qualifying rounds, Second qualifying round\nA total of 16 teams will play in the second qualifying round: 11 teams which enter in this round, and the 5 winners of the first qualifying round. The first legs were played on 3 October, and the second legs will be played on 10 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285294-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup, Qualifying rounds, Lucky losers table\nThree teams would advance as lucky losers of the qualifying rounds, for replacing teams that qualified for the Basketball Champions League regular season and previously confirmed their intention to join the FIBA Europe Cup if they were eliminated in the qualifying rounds. Teams with the smallest point difference in the second qualifying round advanced to the regular season. A draw to determine the groups for the clubs qualified as the best-ranked losing sides will be held in the FIBA Europe office in Munich on 11 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 62], "content_span": [63, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285294-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup, Qualifying rounds, Lucky losers table\nRanked third among the lucky losers, Den Bosch clipped the fourth-ranked Keravnos due to a higher number of points scored, with the teams tied in point differential.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 62], "content_span": [63, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285294-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup, Regular season\nThe draw for the regular season was held on 31 July 2018 at the FIBA headquarters in Munich, Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285294-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup, Regular season\nThe 32 teams are drawn into eight groups of four, a maximum of two clubs from the same country can be in the same group. In each group, teams play against each other home-and-away in a round-robin format. The group winners and runners-up advance to the second round, while the third-placed teams and fourth-placed teams are eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285294-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup, Regular season\nThe following 10 teams chose the option of ending their continental adventure if they were eliminated from the Champions League qualifying rounds and therefore refuse to participate in the FIBA Europe Cup:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285294-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup, Regular season\nA total of 32 teams play in the regular season: the six teams directly qualified, the eight winners of the second qualifying round, the 15 of 23 losers of the 2018\u201319 Champions League qualifying rounds and three lucky losers of the second qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285294-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup, Regular season\nDepending on the number of teams mentioned above that were eliminated from the Basketball Champions League qualifying rounds and with the aim to complete the 32 places in the regular season, the number of the defeated teams in the second qualifying round of the FIBA Europe Cup that advanced to the regular season were determined by the point difference recorded at the end of their pairings. In their draw, the first qualifying round was used for tie-breaking. In the draw persists, the next criteria was the performance of clubs in the last three seasons at the European competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285294-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup, Regular season\nThe match-days are on 17 October, 24 October, 31 October, 7 November, 14 November and 21 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285294-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup, Regular season\nTurkish side Sakarya B\u00fcy\u00fck\u015fehir and British side Leicester Riders played in their first European campaigns ever.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285294-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup, Second round\nIn each group, teams play against each other home-and-away in a round-robin format. The group winners and runners-up advance to the round of 16, while the third-placed teams and fourth-placed teams are eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285294-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup, Second round\nA total of 16 teams play in the second round: the eight group winners and the eight runners-up of the regular season. The match-days will be on 12 December 2018, 19 December, 9 January, 23 January, 30 January and 6 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285294-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup, Play-offs, Round of 16\nThe first legs were played on 5\u20136 March, and the second legs on 12\u201313 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285294-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup, Play-offs, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs were played on 20\u201321 March, and the second legs on 27\u201328 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285294-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup, Play-offs, Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 10 April, and the second legs were played on 17 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285294-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup, Play-offs, Finals\nThe first leg will be played on 24 April, and the second leg will be played on 1 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285295-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup Play-offs\nThe 2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup play-offs will begin on 6 March and conclude on 24 April and 1 May 2019 with the 2019 FIBA Europe Cup Finals, to decide the champions of the 2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup. A total of 16 teams will compete in the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285295-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup Play-offs, Format\nEach tie in the knockout phase, is played over two legs, with each team playing one leg at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285295-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup Play-offs, Format\nThe draw was made with the only restriction that these lucky losers could not be paired against each other, being decided all the bracket by the luck of the draw in the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285295-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup Play-offs, Qualified teams, Second round group winners and runners-up\nThe four group winners and second-placed teams from the second round advanced to the play-offs. In case of vacants due to opt-out options of teams transferred from the Basketball Champions League, these places would be filled with the best third-qualified teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 93], "content_span": [94, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285295-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup Play-offs, Qualified teams, Transfers from Champions League regular season\nEight teams from the 2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League Regular season transfer to the FIBA Europe Cup. These include the fifth and sixth-placed teams. The clubs from Basketball Champions League Regular Season which had opt-out clauses from playing in the FIBA Europe Cup Play-offs and in the event of them claiming fifth or sixth place, their spot would be filled by the best-ranked third-placed teams from the Second Round. They will be ranked according to the FIBA Europe Cup regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 98], "content_span": [99, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285295-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup Play-offs, Round of 16\nThe first legs were played on 5\u20136 March, and the second legs were played on 12\u201313 March 2019. Team 2 played the second leg at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285295-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup Play-offs, Quarterfinals\nThe first legs were played on 20 March, and the second legs were played on 27 March 2019. Team 2 played the second leg at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285295-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup Play-offs, Semifinals\nThe first legs were played on 10 April, and the second legs were played on 17 April 2019. Team 2 played the second leg at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285295-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup Play-offs, Final\nThe first legs will be played on 24 April, and the second legs will be played on 1 May 2019. Team 2 plays the second leg at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285296-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup\nThe International Ski Federation (FIS) Alpine Ski World Cup was the premier circuit for alpine skiing competition. The inaugural season launched in January 1967, and the 2018\u201319 season marks the 53rd consecutive year for the FIS World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285296-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup\nThis season began in October 2018 in S\u00f6lden, Austria, and concluded in mid-March 2019 at the finals in Soldeu, Andorra. The biennial World Championships interrupted the tour in early February in \u00c5re, Sweden. During the season, the most successful female skier of all time, four-time overall World Cup champion Lindsey Vonn of the United States, retired after the World Championships, at which she won a bronze medal in downhill. Also, two-time overall champion Aksel Lund Svindal of Norway retired at the same meet, at which he won a silver medal in downhill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285296-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup\nMarcel Hirscher of Austria won his eighth straight men's overall championship, an all-time record, and moved in third place in overall wins (68) behind only Ingemar Stenmark (86) and Vonn (82). Mikaela Shiffrin of the United States won her third straight women's overall championship and moved into 5th place on the overall win list (60). After the season, Hirscher also retired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285296-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup, Women\nPrior to the start of the season, 4-time overall World Cup champion (and 20-time crystal globe winner) Lindsey Vonn of the United States announced her retirement effective as of the end of the season. Due to lingering injuries, she moved her retirement date up to the World Championships in February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285296-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup, Women\nIn December, Mikaela Shiffrin became the eighth athlete (four men, four women) to win at least 50 World Cup races across all disciplines, as well as the youngest (at age 23) to do so. Shiffrin ended the season with 17 race victories (3 Super Gs, 4 giant slaloms, 8 slaloms, and 2 parallel slaloms/city events), breaking Vreni Schneider's 30-year-old record of 14 wins in a (much shorter) season, which was set in the 1988-89 season. Shiffrin also won four crystal globes for the season, tying the women's record held by Vonn and Tina Maze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285296-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup, Women\nOn 6 March 2019, former slalom season champion (and Olympic gold medalist) Frida Hansdotter announced her retirement from alpine skiing following the 2018\u20132019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285296-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup, Retirements\nThe following athletes announced their retirements during or after the season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285297-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Cross-Country Alpen Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 FIS Cross-Country Alpen Cup (OPA Cup) was a season of the Alpen Cup, a Continental Cup season in cross-country skiing for men and women. The season began on 21 December 2018 in Valdidentro, Italy and concluded on 17 March 2019 in Oberwiesenthal, Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285298-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Cross-Country Continental Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 FIS Cross-Country Continental Cup (COC) was a season of the FIS Cross-Country Continental Cup, a series of second-level cross-country skiing competitions arranged by the International Ski Federation (FIS).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285298-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Cross-Country Continental Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Continental Cup contained nine different series of geographically restricted competitions; five in Europe, two in North America and one each from Asia and Oceania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285298-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Cross-Country Continental Cup, Winners\nThe overall winners from the 2018\u201319 season's Continental Cups were rewarded a right to start in the first period in the following 2019\u201320 World Cup season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285299-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Cross-Country Eastern Europe Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Eastern Europe Cup was a season of the FIS Cross-Country Eastern Europe Cup, a Continental Cup season in cross-country skiing for men and women. The season began on 22 November 2018 in Vershina Tyoi, Russia and concluded on 27 February 2019 in Syktyvkar, Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285300-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Cross-Country Far East Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 FIS Cross-Country Far East Cup was a season of the Far East Cup, a Continental Cup season in cross-country skiing for men and women. The season began on 16 December 2018 in Alpensia, Pyeongchang, South Korea and concluded on 3 March 2019 in Shiramine, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285301-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Cross-Country Nor-Am Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 FIS Cross-Country Nor-Am Cup was a season of the Nor-Am Cup, a Continental Cup season in cross-country skiing for men and women. The season began on 8 December 2018 in Vernon, British Columbia, Canada and concluded on 3 February 2019 in Duntroon, Ontario, Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285302-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Cross-Country Slavic Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Slavic Cup was a season of the FIS Cross-Country Slavic Cup, a Continental Cup season in cross-country skiing for men and women. The season began on 15 December 2018 in \u0160trbsk\u00e9 Pleso, Slovakia and concluded on 27 February 2019 in Kremnica, Slovakia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285303-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Cross-Country World Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 FIS Cross-Country World Cup was the 38th official World Cup season in cross-country skiing for men and ladies. The season began on 24 November 2018 in Ruka, Finland and concluded with the World Cup Final on 24 March 2019 in Qu\u00e9bec, Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285303-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Cross-Country World Cup\nThe biennial World Championships in Seefeld, Austria interrupted the World Cup in mid-February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285303-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Cross-Country World Cup, Points distribution\nThe table shows the number of points won in the 2018/19 Cross-Country Skiing World Cup for men and ladies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285303-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Cross-Country World Cup, Retirements\nThe following athletes announced their retirements during or after the season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285304-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Cross-Country World Cup Finals\nThe 2018\u201319 FIS Cross-Country World Cup Finals were the 11th edition of the FIS Cross-Country World Cup Finals, an annual cross-country skiing mini-tour event. The three-day event was held in Quebec City, Canada. It began on 22 March 2019 and concluded on 24 March 2019. It was the final competition round of the 2018\u201319 FIS Cross-Country World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285304-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Cross-Country World Cup Finals\nJohannes H\u00f8sflot Kl\u00e6bo of Norway and Stina Nilsson of Sweden won the two first stages of the mini-tour; a sprint freestyle and a mass start classic. Alex Harvey ended his skiing career with the fastest time on the third stage freestyle pursuit, which secured him both a World Cup race victory and the second place in the World Cup Final overall standings. Therese Johaug of Norway was the Winner of the Day among the ladies at the last day of the World Cup season. Johannes H\u00f8sflot Kl\u00e6bo and Stina Nilsson won the overall standings by defending their leading positions on the third stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285304-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Cross-Country World Cup Finals, Overall leadership\nThe results in the overall standings were calculated by adding each rider's finishing times on each stage. On the sprint stage, the winners were awarded 30 bonus seconds. On the second stage, the three fastest skiers in finish were awarded 15, 10 and 5 bonus seconds, and the ten first skiers to pass the intermediate sprint points were also awarded bonus seconds. No bonus seconds were awarded on the third stage. The skier with the lowest cumulative time was the overall winner of the Cross-Country World Cup Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 62], "content_span": [63, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285304-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Cross-Country World Cup Finals, Overall leadership\nA total of CHF 240,000, both genders included, was awarded in cash prizes in the race. The overall winners of the World Cup Finals received CHF 22,500, with the second and third placed skiers getting CHF 17,500 and CHF 11,000 respectively. All finishers in the top 20 were awarded money. CHF 5,000 was given to the winners of each stage of the race, with smaller amounts given to places second and third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 62], "content_span": [63, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285304-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Cross-Country World Cup Finals, World Cup points distribution\nThe overall winners are awarded 200 points. The winners of each of the three stages are awarded 50 points. The maximum number of points an athlete can earn is therefore 350 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 73], "content_span": [74, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285305-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Cup (ski jumping)\nThe 2018/19 FIS Cup (ski jumping) was the 14th FIS Cup season in ski jumping for men and the 7th for ladies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285305-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Cup (ski jumping)\nOther competitive circuits this season include the World Cup, Grand Prix, Continental Cup, FIS Race and Alpen Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285306-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Freestyle Ski World Cup\nThe 2018/19 FIS Freestyle Ski World Cup was the fortieth World Cup season in freestyle skiing organised by International Ski Federation. The season started on 7 September 2018 and ended on 30 March 2019. This season included six disciplines: moguls, aerials, ski cross, halfpipe, slopestyle and big air.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285307-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup\nThe 2018/19 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup was the 36th World Cup season, organized by the International Ski Federation. It started on 24 November 2018 in Ruka, Finland and concluded on 17 March 2019 in Schonach, Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285307-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup, Retirements\nFollowing are notable Nordic combined skiers who announced their retirement:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 50], "content_span": [51, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285308-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Race (ski jumping)\nThe 2018/19 FIS Race (ski jumping) is the 20th FIS Race regular season as the fourth level of ski jumping competition since 1999/00. Although even before the world cup and in the old days FIS Race events were all top level organized competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285308-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Race (ski jumping)\nOther competitive circuits this season included the World Cup, Grand Prix, Continental Cup, FIS Cup and Alpen Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285309-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Ski Flying World Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 FIS Ski Flying World Cup was the 22nd official World Cup season in ski flying. The winner was be 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, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285310-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Ski Jumping Alpen Cup\nThe 2018/19 FIS Ski Jumping Alpen Cup was the 29th Alpen Cup season in ski jumping for men and the 11th for ladies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285310-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Ski Jumping Alpen Cup\nOther competitive circuits this season included the World Cup, Grand Prix, Continental Cup, FIS Cup and FIS Race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285311-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup\nThe 2018/19 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup is the 28th in a row (26th official) Continental Cup winter season in ski jumping for men and the 15th for ladies. This is also the 17th summer continental cup season for men and 11th for ladies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285311-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup\nOther competitive circuits this season include the World Cup, Grand Prix, FIS Cup, FIS Race and Alpen Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285311-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup, Map of continental cup hosts\nAll 21 locations hosting continental cup events in summer (8 for men / 1 for ladies) and in winter (14 for men / 4 for ladies) this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 69], "content_span": [70, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285311-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285312-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup was the 40th World Cup season in ski jumping for men, the 22nd official World Cup season in ski flying, and the 8th World Cup season for ladies. The season began on 17 November 2018 in Wis\u0142a for men and in Lillehammer for ladies; the season concluded on 24 March 2019 in Planica for men and in Chaykovsky for ladies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285312-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup\nThe first edition of ladies' Raw Air was organized simultaneously with men's edition between 9\u201314 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285312-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup\nAnd at the end of the season new tournament called \"Russia Tour Blue Bird\" for ladies was organized in Nizhny Tagil and Chaykovsky between 16\u201324 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285312-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup\nNew rules have been introduced at the 2018 Fall meeting in Z\u00fcrich: from now on one Continental Cup point will be enough to perform at the Ski Flying event and not one World Cup point anymore. Also all qualification rounds awarded with 3,000 CHF and Ski Flying qualifications with 5,000 CHF from this season on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285312-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup, Map of world cup hosts\nAll 26 locations hosting world cup events for men (19) and ladies (14) in this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285312-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup, Map of world cup hosts\nRaw Air Planica7 Willingen Five Four Hills Tournament Russia Tour Blue Bird", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285313-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIS Snowboard World Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 FIS Snowboard World Cup was the 25th World Cup season in snowboarding organised by International Ski Federation. The season started on 8 September 2018 in Cardrona, New Zealand and concluded on 24 March 2019 in Winterberg, Germany. Competitions consisted of parallel slalom, parallel giant slalom, snowboard cross, halfpipe, slopestyle and big air.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285314-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIU Panthers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 FIU Panthers men's basketball team represented Florida International University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Panthers, led by first-year head coach Jeremy Ballard, played their home games at Ocean Bank Convocation Center in Miami, Florida as members of Conference USA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285314-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIU Panthers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Panthers finished the 2017\u201318 season 14\u201318, 8\u201310 in C-USA play to finish in a tie for seventh place. They lost in the first round of the C-USA Tournament to Southern Miss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285314-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIU Panthers men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn April 2, 2018, FIU fired head coach Anthony Evans after five seasons. On April 20, the school announced VCU associate head coach Jeremy Ballard was hired as the new head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285315-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FIU Panthers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 FIU Panthers women's basketball team represents Florida International University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Panthers, led by third year head coach Tiara Malcom, play their home games at FIU Arena, and were members of Conference USA. They finished the season 5\u201324, 2\u201314 in Conference USA play to finish in a 3 way tie for twelfth place. Due to a tie breaker loss to Florida Atlantic and UTSA they failed to qualify for the Conference USA Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285316-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FK Dukla Prague season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Dukla Prague's eighth consecutive season in the Czech First League and culminated in their relegation. The club made the worst start ever by any club in the first league, losing seven consecutive matches at the beginning of the season under Pavel Drsek, who was replaced in September 2018 by Roman Skuhrav\u00fd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285316-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285316-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FK Dukla Prague season, Players, Transfers, In\nDukla signed four players permanently in the summer; as well as midfielder \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1n Krunert joining from Bohemians 1905, three defenders arrived: D\u00e1vid Bob\u00e1l signed from Budapest Honv\u00e9d FC, Martin Chlumeck\u00fd arrived from Liberec, and Daniel Sou\u010dek joined from Slavia Prague. Midfielder David Breda and forward Ond\u0159ej \u0160tursa joined on loan from Jablonec and Viktoria Plzen respectively. Defenders J\u00e1n \u010eurica and Nikola Raspopovi\u0107 joined in September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285316-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FK Dukla Prague season, Players, Transfers, In\nIn the winter break, Spanish midfielder Pablo Gonz\u00e1lez joined the club from Salamanca. Czech striker Vojt\u011bch Hada\u0161\u010dok and Czech defender Daniel Kozma also joined the club. Luk\u00e1\u0161 Hol\u00edk and R\u00f3bert Kova\u013e returned to Dukla for the second half of the season after their loans expired. Samuel Danc\u00e1k returned from his loan ahead of schedule to join Dukla for the second half of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285316-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FK Dukla Prague season, Players, Transfers, Out\nIn the summer, defenders Martin Jir\u00e1nek and Ond\u0159ej Ku\u0161n\u00edr, and midfielder \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1n Kore\u0161 left Dukla after the expiry of their contracts. Mario Holek and N\u00e9stor Albiach returned to Sparta Prague after their loans at Dukla expired. Dominik Preisler joined FC Vyso\u010dina Jihlava on loan, while Luk\u00e1\u0161 Hol\u00edk was loaned to his previous club, Zl\u00edn. Samuel Danc\u00e1k went out on a season-long loan to Olympia Radot\u00edn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285316-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FK Dukla Prague season, Players, Transfers, Out\nStriker Ivan Schranz and midfielder Frederik Bilovsk\u00fd left in the mid-season break to join AEL Limassol and FC Nitra respectively. Defender D\u00e1vid Bob\u00e1l left after the expiry of his contract. David Breda and Ond\u0159ej \u0160tursa returned to their parent clubs after the expiry of their loans. David Bezdi\u010dka left to join Teplice on loan, while Martin Chlumeck\u00fd was loaned to FC Vyso\u010dina Jihlava.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285316-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FK Dukla Prague season, Statistics, Home attendance\nThe club had the lowest average attendance in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285316-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FK Dukla Prague season, Cup\nAs a First League team, Dukla entered the Cup at the second round stage. In the second round, Dukla travelled to Bohemian Football League side P\u00edsek, Dukla winning 2\u20130 with both goals coming in the first half of the match. The third round match was away against Viktoria \u017di\u017ekov of the Czech National Football League. The game was decided by Frederik Bilovsk\u00fd's 81st minute goal. In the fourth round, Dukla hosted league rivals Teplice and lost 3\u20131, concluding their cup run for another season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 35], "content_span": [36, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285317-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FK Partizan season\nThe 2018\u201319 season will be Fudbalski Klub Partizan's 72nd season in existence and the club's 13th competing in the Serbian SuperLiga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285318-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FK Partizani Tirana season\nIn the 2018\u201319 season, Partizani Tirana were competed in the Kategoria Superiore for the sixth consecutive season. The club won the title for the first time since 1992\u201393 season and for the 16th time total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285318-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FK Partizani Tirana season, Players\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285318-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FK Partizani Tirana season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285318-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FK Partizani Tirana season, Statistics, Clean sheets\nThe list is sorted by shirt number when total appearances are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285319-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FK Sarajevo season\nThe 2018\u20132019 season was Sarajevo's 71st season in existence, and their 19th consecutive season in the top flight of Bosnian football, the Premier League of BiH. Besides competing in the Premier League, the team competed in the National Cup and the qualifications for UEFA Europa League. The season covers the period from 25 June 2018 to 24 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285319-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FK Sarajevo season\nIn that season Sarajevo won the double title, winning both the league and the cup. The club qualified to the 2019\u201320 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds as well. The season was also manager Husref Musemi\u0107's third at the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285319-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FK Sarajevo season, Squad information, 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, 63], "content_span": [64, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285319-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FK Sarajevo season, Squad information, First-team squad, From youth squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285319-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FK Sarajevo season, Statistics, Squad appearances and goals\nNumber after the \"+\" sign represents the number of games player started the game on the bench and was substituted on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 67], "content_span": [68, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285320-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FK \u017deljezni\u010dar season\nThe 2018\u20132019 season was \u017deljezni\u010dar's 98th in existence and their 19th season in the Premijer Liga BiH. The team competed in the Premijer Liga BiH, Kup BiH and the UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285320-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FK \u017deljezni\u010dar season\nThe club finished on 4th place in the league, while it got knocked out from the cup in the first round. In the season, \u017deljezni\u010dar primarily also qualified to the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League qualifying rounds, but the club didn't get an UEFA licence and eventually, 5th placed FK Radnik Bijeljina got qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285320-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FK \u017deljezni\u010dar season, Squad information, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by position, and then shirt number.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285320-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 FK \u017deljezni\u010dar season, Squad information, Disciplinary record\nLast updated: 25 May 2019Source: 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, 69], "content_span": [70, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285321-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fairfield Stags men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Fairfield Stags men's basketball team represented Fairfield University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at Webster Bank Arena in Bridgeport, Connecticut and Alumni Hall in Fairfield, Connecticut as members of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference, and were led by eighth year head coach Sydney Johnson. They finished the 2018\u201319 season 9\u201322 overall, 6\u201312 in MAAC play to finish in a three-way tie for ninth place. As the 10th seed in the 2019 MAAC Tournament, they were defeated by No. 7 seed Manhattan in the first round 53\u201357.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285321-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fairfield Stags men's basketball team\nOn March 11, 2019, head coach Sydney Johnson was fired. He finished at Fairfield with an eight-year record of 116\u2013147.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285321-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fairfield Stags men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Stags finished the 2017\u201318 season 17\u201316, 9\u20139 in MAAC play to finish in a tie for fifth place. As the No. 6 seed at the MAAC Tournament, they defeated No. 11 seed Marist, upset No. 3 seed Niagara and No. 7 seed Quinnipiac to advance to the championship game, where they lost to Iona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285322-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fairleigh Dickinson Knights men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Fairleigh Dickinson Knights men's basketball team represented Fairleigh Dickinson University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team was led by sixth-year head coach Greg Herenda. The Knights played their home games at the Rothman Center in Hackensack, New Jersey as members of the Northeast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285322-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fairleigh Dickinson Knights men's basketball team\nThe Knights compiled a 21\u201314 record and went 12\u20136 in NEC play to finish in a tie for first place. They defeated Wagner, Robert Morris, and Saint Francis (PA) to capture the NEC Tournament Championship as the 2-seed. By winning the NEC tournament, the Knights received the conference's automatic bid and defeated Prairie View A&M in the First Four Round of the NCAA Tournament in Dayton, OH. The Knights then lost to 1-seed Gonzaga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285322-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fairleigh Dickinson Knights men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Knights finished the 2017\u201318 season 13\u201318, 9\u20139 in NEC play to finish in a tie for sixth place. They defeated Saint Francis (PA) in the quarterfinals of the NEC Tournament before losing in the semifinals to LIU Brooklyn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 74], "content_span": [75, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285322-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fairleigh Dickinson Knights men's basketball team, Preseason\nIn a poll of league coaches at the NEC media day, the Knights were picked to finish in second place. Senior guard Darian Anderson was named the preseason All-NEC team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 68], "content_span": [69, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285323-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Falkirk F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Falkirk's sixth consecutive season in the Scottish Championship and their eighth consecutive season in the second-tier of Scottish football. Falkirk also competed in the League Cup, Challenge Cup and the Scottish Cup. Falkirk finished the season in tenth place and were relegated to the third-tier of Scottish football for only the second time in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285323-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Falkirk F.C. season, Summary, Management\nFalkirk began the 2018\u201319 season under the management of Paul Hartley who had guided the club to safety from relegation in his previous season. On 27 August, Hartley left his position as manager following a poor start to the season. Ray McKinnon was appointed as his replacement on 31 August but he could not prevent the club from being relegated. Falkirk's relegation was confirmed on the final day of the season despite winning their final match against league winners Ross County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285324-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Feldhockey-Bundesliga\nThe 2018\u201319 Bundesliga was the 77th season of the Bundesliga, Germany's highest field hockey league. It began on 25 August 2019 and it concluded with the championship final on 19 May 2019 in Krefeld.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285324-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Feldhockey-Bundesliga\nUhlenhorst M\u00fclheim were the defending champions, and won their 18th Bundesliga title by defeating Mannheimer HC 5\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285324-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Feldhockey-Bundesliga, Teams\nTwelve teams competed in the league \u2013 the top ten teams from the previous season and the two teams promoted from the 2. Bundesliga. The promoted teams were Hamburger Polo Club and Blau-Weiss Berlin, who replaced TSV Mannheim and M\u00fcnchner SC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285324-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Feldhockey-Bundesliga, Play-offs\nThe championship play-offs were held at the Gerd-Wellen-Hockeystadion in Krefeld on 18 and 19 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285325-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fenerbah\u00e7e Basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 Fenerbah\u00e7e Basketball season was the 105th season in the existence of the club. The team played in the Basketbol S\u00fcper Ligi (BSL) and in the European first tier EuroLeague.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285325-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fenerbah\u00e7e Basketball season, Players, Squad information\nNote: Flags indicate national team eligibility at FIBA sanctioned events. Players may hold other non-FIBA nationality not displayed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285325-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fenerbah\u00e7e Basketball season, Competitions, Basketball Super League, Matches\n7th and 22nd rounds were bye due to Trabzonspor's withdrawing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 84], "content_span": [85, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285326-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fenerbah\u00e7e S.K. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Fenerbah\u00e7e's 61st consecutive season in the S\u00fcper Lig and their 111th year in existence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285326-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fenerbah\u00e7e S.K. season, Transfers, Out\nTotal spending: \u20ac16.04MTotal income: $3M \u2013 \u20ac22.50MExpenditure: $3M 0000000000 \u20ac6.46M", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285326-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fenerbah\u00e7e S.K. season, Competitions, S\u00fcper Lig, Results summary\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, 30], "section_span": [32, 72], "content_span": [73, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285327-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ferencv\u00e1rosi TC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season will be Ferencv\u00e1rosi TC's 116th competitive season, 10th consecutive season in the OTP Bank Liga and 119th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285327-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ferencv\u00e1rosi TC season, Players, First team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285327-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285327-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285327-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285327-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285327-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285327-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285328-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Feyenoord Basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 Feyenoord Basketball season was the 65th season in the existence of the club. The club will play in the Dutch Basketball League (DBL) and NBB Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285328-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Feyenoord Basketball season\nIt was the first season as Feyenoord Basketball and the first season under head coach Richard den Os. On 2 March 2019, Den Os resigned as head coach, Jan Stalman replaced him as interim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285328-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Feyenoord Basketball season, Players, Squad information\nNote: Flags indicate national team eligibility at FIBA sanctioned events. Players may hold other non-FIBA nationality not displayed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285329-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Feyenoord season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Feyenoord's 111th season of play, the club's 63rd season in the Eredivisie and its 97th consecutive season in the top flight of Dutch football. It was the fourth season with manager Giovanni van Bronckhorst. Feyenoord entered the 2018\u201319 KNVB Cup in the first round and the 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League in the third preliminary round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285329-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Feyenoord season, Competitions, Eredivisie, Matches\nThese are the matches scheduled for Feyenoord in the 2018-2019 Eredivisie season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 59], "content_span": [60, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285329-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Feyenoord season, Player details\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, 40], "content_span": [41, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285329-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Feyenoord season, Player details\nSource: for players, positions, and squad numbers: ,for actual stats:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285329-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Feyenoord season, Transfers, Summer window\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, 50], "content_span": [51, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285329-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Feyenoord season, Transfers, Summer window\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, 50], "content_span": [51, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285329-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Feyenoord season, Transfers, Winter window\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, 50], "content_span": [51, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285329-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Feyenoord season, Transfers, Winter window\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, 50], "content_span": [51, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285330-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Finnish Basketball Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 of the Finnish Basketball Cup is at its 33rd edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285330-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Finnish Basketball Cup\nThe competition was interrupted in 2013 and resumed for the season 2018\u201319. The Opening match was played on 30 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285330-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Finnish Basketball Cup, Format\nEvery Finnish basketball team from any league could join voluntarily the Finnish Basketball Cup. The competition is structured in single game play-off series, with the exception that the teams that lose at the first and second round have a second chance to qualify by playing an additional play-out round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285330-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Finnish Basketball Cup, First round\nIn the first round all the teams qualify to the second round, no matter what the result is. But the winners from the first round play against each other in a single game play-off format, while the losers go in a play-out round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285330-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Finnish Basketball Cup, Second round\nThe second round play-offs are played amongst the teams that won in the first round. The winning teams go directly to the fourth round, while the losing teams play an extra third round with the chance to qualify to the fourth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285330-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Finnish Basketball Cup, Second round\nThe play-outs are played amongst the teams that lost the first play off round. The losing teams are out from the competition, while the winning teams play in the additional round against the losing team from the play-offs of the second round, with a chance to qualify to the fourth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285330-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Finnish Basketball Cup, Third round\nIn the third round the teams who won the play-outs play against the teams that lost the second round of play-offs. The winners will qualify to the fourth round and will play against the teams that won the second round of play-offs", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285330-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Finnish Basketball Cup, Bracket\nThe final stage is played in single match quarters, semifinals and final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285331-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 First League of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina\nThe 2018\u201319 First League of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina was the 24th season of the First League of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the second tier league football in Bosnia and Herzegovina, since its original establishment and the 19th as a unified federation-wide league. It began on 11 August 2018 and got concluded on 2 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285331-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 First League of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina\nTuzla City, at that time still known as Sloga Simin Han, were the last champions, having won their first championship title in the 2017\u201318 season and earning a promotion to the Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285332-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 First League of the Republika Srpska\nThe 2018\u201319 First League of the Republika Srpska was the twenty-fourth season of the First League of the Republika Srpska, the second tier football league of Bosnia and Herzegovina, since its original establishment and the seventeenth as a second tier league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285333-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 First Professional Football League (Bulgaria)\nThe 2018\u201319 First Professional Football League was the 95th season of the top division of the Bulgarian football league system, the 70th since a league format was adopted for the national competition of A Group as a top tier of the pyramid and also the 3rd season of the First Professional Football League, which decides the Bulgarian champion. The season began on 20 July 2018 and finished on 30 May 2019. Ludogorets Razgrad became champions for the 8th consecutive time, on the final matchday of the season, with a 4\u20131 home win over Cherno More Varna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285333-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 First Professional Football League (Bulgaria), Teams\nFourteen teams are competing in the league \u2013 the top thirteen teams from the previous season, and one team promoted from the Second League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 60], "content_span": [61, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285333-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 First Professional Football League (Bulgaria), Teams\nBotev Vratsa were promoted as champions of the 2017\u201318 Second League. The promoted club replaced Pirin Blagoevgrad, who were relegated after elimination in the relegation play-offs by Vitosha Bistritsa. Botev Vratsa return to the top tier after a 5-year absence, while Pirin Blagoevgrad ended a 3-year stay in the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 60], "content_span": [61, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285333-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 First Professional Football League (Bulgaria), Teams, Personnel and sponsorship\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, 53], "section_span": [55, 87], "content_span": [88, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285333-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 First Professional Football League (Bulgaria), Teams, Personnel and sponsorship\nNote: Individual clubs may wear jerseys with advertising. However, only one sponsorship is permitted per jersey for official tournaments organised by UEFA in addition to that of the kit manufacturer (exceptions are made for non-profit organisations). Clubs in the domestic league can have more than one sponsorship per jersey which can feature on the front of the shirt, incorporated with the main sponsor or in place of it; or on the back, either below the squad number or on the collar area. Shorts also have space available for advertisement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 87], "content_span": [88, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285333-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 First Professional Football League (Bulgaria), Championship round\nPoints and goals will carry over in full from regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 73], "content_span": [74, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285333-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 First Professional Football League (Bulgaria), Championship round, Positions by round\nBelow the positions per round are shown. As teams did not all start with an equal number of points, the initial pre-playoffs positions are also given.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 93], "content_span": [94, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285333-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 First Professional Football League (Bulgaria), Relegation round\nPoints and goals will carry over in full from regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 71], "content_span": [72, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285333-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 First Professional Football League (Bulgaria), Relegation play-offs, Bracket\nWinners of matches 3, 5 and 6 will play in the top division next season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 84], "content_span": [85, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285334-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Flamengo Basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 season of Flamengo Basketball is the 99th season of the club, and the club's 11th in the Novo Basquete Brasil (NBB). This is the first season after the club captain Marcelinho Machado retired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285334-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Flamengo Basketball season, Offseason\nOn May 15, 2018, Flamengo announced they would not renew with head coach Jos\u00e9 Neto after the team failed to win a title or obtain FIBA Americas League qualification for the second season in a row. On June 4, Gustavo de Conti was named as Neto's replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285334-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Flamengo Basketball season, Offseason\nOn July 2, 2018, the club announced the creation of the General Manager position, with Diego Jeleilate arriving from Corpore/Paulistano for the job.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285334-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Flamengo Basketball season, Pre-season\nOn May 21, 2018, it was announced that the club would play against the Orlando Magic in Florida during the 2018 NBA preseason, in October 5. This will mark the 5th time the club will play against NBA opposition (a record between South American clubs), the 4th time in American soil, and the 3rd against the Magic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285334-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Flamengo Basketball season, Pre-season\nThe State League was played as the main preparation for the upcoming season, despite being an official competition. Flamengo won all 6 league round games, despite new signing Kevin Crescenzi missing all games due to ankle injury. He played his first couple for the club on the semifinals against semi-amateur side ABIG/Niter\u00f3i, winning both games (97-38 and 113-55). Flamengo played local rival's Botafogo in the finals, winning the series 2\u20130. It was the 13th straight State League title for the club, and 45th overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285334-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Flamengo Basketball season, Pre-season\nOn September 28, 2018, Flamengo announced that Leandro Barbosa signed to play for the team in their NBA preseason game against the Magic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285334-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Flamengo Basketball season, Competitions, 2018 Campeonato Carioca, Results summary\nLast updated: September 8, 2018.Source: Competitive matchesGround: A = Away; H = Home; R = Rest. Result: L = Loss; W = Win; R = Rest; P = Postponed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 90], "content_span": [91, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285334-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Flamengo Basketball season, Competitions, Campeonato Carioca Playoffs, Semi finals\n*Due to scheduling conflicts, Niter\u00f3i's home game was played at Flamengo's arena", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 90], "content_span": [91, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285334-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Flamengo Basketball season, Competitions, 2018 Liga Sudamericana, First Stage (Group D)\nLast updated: October 25, 2018.Source: Competitive matchesGround: A = Away; H = Home; R = Rest. Result: L = Loss; W = Win; R = Rest; P = Postponed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 95], "content_span": [96, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285334-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Flamengo Basketball season, Competitions, 2018 Liga Sudamericana, Semifinals (Group F)\nLast updated: November 7, 2018.Source: Competitive matchesGround: A = Away; H = Home; R = Rest. Result: L = Loss; W = Win; R = Rest; P = Postponed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 94], "content_span": [95, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285334-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Flamengo Basketball season, Competitions, 2018-19 NBB, League table\nLast updated: November 11, 2018.Source: Competitive matchesGround: A = Away; H = Home; R = Rest. Result: L = Loss; W = Win; R = Rest; P = Postponed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285335-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fleetwood Town F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Fleetwood Town's 111th season in their history and fifth consecutive season in League One. Along with League One, the club also participated in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285335-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fleetwood Town F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285335-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fleetwood Town F.C. season, Competitions, Friendlies\nFleetwood Town announced a pre-season friendlies against Salford City, STK Fluminense \u0160amor\u00edn, Tranmere Rovers, Morecambe and Chorley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285335-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fleetwood Town F.C. season, Competitions, League One, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League One fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285335-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fleetwood Town F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October. The draw for the second round was made live on BBC and BT by Mark Schwarzer and Glenn Murray on 12 November. The third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285335-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fleetwood Town F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam. The second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285335-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fleetwood Town F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285336-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida A&M Lady Rattlers basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Florida A&M Lady Rattlers basketball team represented Florida A&M University during the 2018\u201319 college basketball season. The Rattlers were led by ninth-year head coach LeDawn Gibson, until she was fired on February 12, 2019. Assistant coach Kevin Lynum took over as interim head coach for the remainder of the season. The Lady Rattlers, members of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference, played their home games at the Alfred Lawson, Jr. Multipurpose Center. They finished the season 4\u201325, 2\u201314 in ACC play to finish in last place. They lost in the first round of the MEAC Women's Tournament to Howard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285337-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida A&M Rattlers basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Florida A&M Rattlers basketball team represented Florida A&M University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at the Teaching Gym in Tallahassee, Florida, and were led by second year head coach Robert McCullum as members of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. Florida A&M is ineligible for postseason play due to failure to meet the APR multi-year threshold. They finished the season 12\u201319 overall, 9\u20137 in MEAC play, finishing in a tie for fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285337-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida A&M Rattlers basketball team, Previous season\nThe Rattlers finished the 2017\u201318 season 9\u201325, 7\u20139 in MEAC play to finish in a tie three-way tie for seventh place. As the No. 9 seed in the MEAC Tournament, they defeated Howard before losing to Hampton in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285338-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida Atlantic Owls men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Florida Atlantic Owls men's basketball team represented Florida Atlantic University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Owls, led by first-year head coach Dusty May, played their home games at the FAU Arena in Boca Raton, Florida as members of Conference USA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285338-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida Atlantic Owls men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Owls finished the 2017\u201318 season 12\u201319, 6\u201312 in C-USA play to finish in a tie for 11th place. They lost in the first round of the C-USA Tournament to UAB.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285338-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida Atlantic Owls men's basketball team, Previous season\nMarch 16, 2018, head coach Michael Curry was fired after four seasons at Florida Atlantic. On March 22, it was announced that the school had hired Florida assistant head coach Dusty May as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285339-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida Atlantic Owls women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Florida Atlantic Owls women's basketball team represents Florida Atlantic University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Owls, led by second year head coach Jim Jabir, play their home games at FAU Arena and are members of Conference USA. They finished the season 5\u201325, 2\u201314 in C-USA play to finish in a 3 way tie for twelfth place. They lost in the first round of the C-USA Women's Tournament to Old Dominion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285340-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida Gators men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Florida Gators men's basketball team represented the University of Florida in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Gators were led by fourth-year head coach Mike White and played their home games in the Exactech Arena at the Stephen C. O'Connell Center on the university's Gainesville, Florida campus as members of the Southeastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285340-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida Gators men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Gators finished the 2017\u201318 season 21\u201313, 11\u20137 in SEC play to finish in third place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the SEC Tournament to Arkansas. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they defeated St. Bonaventure in the First Round before losing in the Second Round to Texas Tech.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285341-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida Gators women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Florida Gators women's basketball team represents the University of Florida in the sport of basketball during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Gators compete in Division I of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and the Southeastern Conference (SEC). The Gators, led by second-year head coach Cameron Newbauer, play their home games in the O'Connell Center on the university's Gainesville, Florida campus. They finished the season 8\u201323, 3\u201313 in SEC play to finish in a tie for twelfth place. They defeated Ole Miss in the first round of the SEC Women's Tournament before losing to Missouri in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285341-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida Gators women's basketball team, Previous season\nThey finished the season 11\u201319, 3\u201313 in SEC play to finish in a 3 tie for eleventh place. They lost in the first round of the SEC Women's Tournament to Ole Miss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285342-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida Gulf Coast Eagles men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Florida Gulf Coast Eagles men's basketball team represented Florida Gulf Coast University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Eagles were led by first-year head coach Michael Fly and played their home games at Alico Arena in Fort Myers, Florida as members of the Atlantic Sun Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285342-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida Gulf Coast Eagles men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Eagles finished the 2017\u201318 season 23\u201312, 12\u20132 in ASUN play to win the ASUN regular season championship. In the ASUN Tournament, they defeated USC Upstate and North Florida to advance to the championship game where they lost to Lipscomb. As a regular season conference champion who failed to win their conference tournament, they received an automatic bid to the National Invitation Tournament where they lost in the First Round to Oklahoma State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 72], "content_span": [73, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285342-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida Gulf Coast Eagles men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn April 4, 2018, head coach Joe Dooley left the school to become the head coach at East Carolina, where he was previously the head coach from 1995 to 1999. The following day, assistant head coach Michael Fly was promoted to head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 72], "content_span": [73, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285343-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida Gulf Coast Eagles women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Florida Gulf Coast Eagles women's basketball team will represent Florida Gulf Coast University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Eagles, led by seventeenth year head coach Karl Smesko, will play their home games at the Alico Arena and were members of the Atlantic Sun Conference. They finish the season 28\u20134, 16\u20130 in A-Sun play to win the Atlantic Sun regular season. Florida Gulf Coast won the conference tournament championship game over Liberty, 72\u201349. They lost in the first round to Miami (FL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285343-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida Gulf Coast Eagles women's basketball team, Media\nAll home games and conference road are shown on ESPN+ or A-Sun.TV. Road games are also broadcast on the .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 64], "content_span": [65, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285343-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida Gulf Coast Eagles women's basketball team, Rankings\nCoaches did not release a Week 2 poll and AP does not release a final poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 67], "content_span": [68, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285344-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida Panthers season\nThe 2018\u201319 Florida Panthers season was the 26th season for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on June 14, 1993. The Panthers were eliminated from playoff contention on March 26, 2019, after losing 6\u20131 to the Montreal Canadiens. This was also the final season for Roberto Luongo, who announced his retirement on June 26, 2019 after playing 19 seasons in the NHL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285344-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida Panthers season, Schedule and results, Preseason\nNotes: Game was played at BOK Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Game was played at Amway Center in Orlando, Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285344-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida Panthers season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was released on June 21, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285344-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida Panthers season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nLegend:\u00a0\u00a0Win (2 points)\u00a0\u00a0Loss (0 points)\u00a0\u00a0Overtime/shootout loss (1 point)Note: Game was played at Hartwall Arena in Helsinki, Finland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285344-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida Panthers season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Panthers. Stats reflect time with the Panthers only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Panthers only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285344-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida Panthers season, Transactions\nThe Panthers have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285344-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida Panthers season, Draft picks\nBelow are the Florida Panthers' selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285345-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida State Seminoles men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Florida State Seminoles men's basketball team represented Florida State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Seminoles were led by head coach Leonard Hamilton, in his 17th year, and played their home games at the Donald L. Tucker Center on the university's Tallahassee, Florida campus as members of the Atlantic Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285345-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida State Seminoles men's basketball team\nThe Seminoles finished the season with a school record twenty-nine wins as well as a school record thirteen ACC wins, finishing in fourth place. Florida State reached the finals of the ACC Tournament, finishing as runner-up; they received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as a four seed, advancing to the Sweet Sixteen for the second consecutive year and the sixth time in program history. The senior class, including Terrance Mann, Christ Koumadje, P.J. Savoy, and Phil Cofer, also became the winningest class in school history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285345-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida State Seminoles men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Seminoles finished the 2017\u201318 season with a record of 23\u201312, 9\u20139 in ACC play, to finish in a tie for eighth place. The Seminoles lost in the second round of the ACC Tournament to Louisville. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they defeated Missouri, Xavier, and Gonzaga to advance to the Elite Eight for the first time since 1993, where they lost to Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285345-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida State Seminoles men's basketball team, Rankings\n*AP does not release post-NCAA Tournament rankings^Coaches did not release a Week 2 poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285346-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida State Seminoles women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Florida State Seminoles women's basketball team, variously Florida State or FSU, represents Florida State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. Florida State competes in Division I of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). The Seminoles are led by head coach Sue Semrau, in her twenty-second year, and play their home games at the Donald L. Tucker Center on the university's Tallahassee, Florida campus. They are members of the Atlantic Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285346-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida State Seminoles women's basketball team\nThe Seminoles finished the season with a record of 24\u20139, going 10\u20136 in ACC play to finish in sixth place. Florida State reached the quarterfinals of the ACC Tournament. The Seminoles received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as a fifth-seed, their seventh consecutive tournament appearance, where they reached the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285346-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida State Seminoles women's basketball team, Previous season\nFor the 2017\u201318 season, the Seminoles finished with a record of 26\u20137, 12\u20134 in the ACC, to finish in third place. Florida State was eliminated in the quarterfinals of the ACC Tournament by Notre Dame. The Seminoles received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as a three-seed, their sixth consecutive tournament appearance, and were upset in the second round of the tournament by Buffalo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 72], "content_span": [73, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285346-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Florida State Seminoles women's basketball team, Schedule and results\n* Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses. G=Greensboro Region", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 77], "content_span": [78, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285347-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Football League (Greece)\nThe 2018\u201319 Football League is the second division of the Greek professional football league system and the eighth season under the name Football League after previously being known as Beta Ethniki. This year the participating teams were reduced from 18 to 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285347-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Football League (Greece), Team changes\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285348-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Football Superleague of Kosovo\nThe 2018\u201319 Football Superleague of Kosovo season, also known as the IPKO Superleague of Kosovo (Albanian: IPKO Superliga e Kosov\u00ebs) for sponsorship reasons with IPKO is the 20th season of top-tier football in Kosovo. The season began on 18 August 2018 and will end on 19 May 2019. A total of 12 teams are competing in the league: nine teams from the 2017\u201318 season and three teams from the 2017\u201318 First Football League of Kosovo. Drita are the defending champions from the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285348-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Football Superleague of Kosovo, Teams and stadiums\nBesa Pej\u00eb and Vllaznia Pozheran were relegated after finishing the previous season in eleventh and twelfth-place respectively. They will be replaced by the champions and runners-up of the 2017\u201318 First League, Ballkani and KEK respectively. Ferizaj defeated V\u00ebllaznimi in play-off to claim their top-flight spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 58], "content_span": [59, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285348-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Football Superleague of Kosovo, Results\nEach team plays three times against every opponent (either twice at home and once away or once at home and twice away) for a total of 33 games played each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285348-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Football Superleague of Kosovo, Relegation play-offs\nThe ninth and tenth-placed teams, Trep\u00e7a'89 and Gjilani respectively, each paired off against the third and fourth-placed teams from the 2018\u201319 First Football League of Kosovo season, V\u00ebllaznimi and Besa Pej\u00eb respectively; the two winners will play in the top-flight next season. As with previous seasons, both play-offs will be played on neutral ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285348-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Football Superleague of Kosovo, Relegation play-offs\nTrep\u00e7a'89 retained their spot in 2019\u201320 Football Superleague of Kosovo; V\u00ebllaznimi remained in 2019\u201320 First Football League of Kosovo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285348-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Football Superleague of Kosovo, Relegation play-offs\nGjilani retained their spot in 2019\u201320 Football Superleague of Kosovo; Besa Pej\u00eb remained in 2019\u201320 First Football League of Kosovo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285349-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ford Trophy\nThe 2018\u201319 Ford Trophy was the 48th season of The Ford Trophy, the List A cricket tournament in New Zealand. It was the eighth in a sponsorship deal between New Zealand Cricket and Ford Motor Company. Originally scheduled to take place between December 2018 and February 2019, it was brought forward, starting on 24 October and finished on 1 December 2018. Unlike the previous edition of the competition, the tournament featured ten rounds of matches, instead of eight. Auckland were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285349-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ford Trophy\nOn 7 November 2018, in the fifth round fixture between Northern Districts and Central Districts, a new record in List A cricket was set for the most runs scored off one over, with 43. Northern Districts' batsmen Joe Carter and Brett Hampton scored the runs from the bowling of Willem Ludick. The over included two no-balls, six sixes, a four and a single.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285349-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ford Trophy\nFollowing the conclusion of the group stage, Otago finished top of the table, and progressed directly to the final of the tournament. Wellington and Auckland finished second and third respectively, progressing to the elimination final. In the elimination match, Wellington beat Auckland by three wickets, with James Neesham scoring 120 not out. In the final, Wellington beat Otago by three wickets to win their eighth title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285350-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fordham Rams men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Fordham Rams men's basketball team represented Fordham University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Rams, led by fourth-year head coach Jeff Neubauer, played their home games at Rose Hill Gymnasium in The Bronx, New York as a member of the Atlantic 10 Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285350-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fordham Rams men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Rams finished the 2017\u201318 season 9\u201322, 4\u201314 in A-10 play to finish in last place. They lost in the first round of the A-10 Tournament to George Washington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285351-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fordham Rams women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Fordham Rams women's basketball team represents Fordham University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Rams are led by eighth-year head coach Stephanie Gaitley. They were members of the Atlantic 10 Conference and play their home games at the Rose Hill Gymnasium. They finished the season 25\u20139, 13\u20133 in A-10 play to win share the regular season title with VCU. Fordham won the Atlantic 10 Conference tournament championship game over VCU, 62\u201347. They lost in the first round to Syracuse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285351-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fordham Rams women's basketball team, Media, Forham Rams Sports Network\nForham Rams games will be broadcast on WFUV Sports and streamed online through the . Most home games will also be featured on the A-10 Digital Network. Select games will be televised.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 79], "content_span": [80, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285352-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Forest Green Rovers F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Forest Green Rovers's 130th year in existence and their second consecutive season in League Two. Along with competing in League Two, the club participated in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and the EFL Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285352-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Forest Green Rovers F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285352-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Forest Green Rovers F.C. season, Competitions, Pre-season friendlies\nFGR will play Brimscombe & Thrupp, Torquay United, Weston-super-Mare, Leeds United, Swindon Supermarine, Bristol Rovers, Hereford, Shortwood United and Wrexham in pre-season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 76], "content_span": [77, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285352-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Forest Green Rovers F.C. season, Competitions, League Two, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League Two fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 74], "content_span": [75, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285352-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Forest Green Rovers F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285352-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Forest Green Rovers F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam. The second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 62], "content_span": [63, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285352-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Forest Green Rovers F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285353-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Formula E Championship\nThe 2018\u201319 FIA Formula E Championship was the fifth season of the FIA Formula E championship, a motor racing championship for electrically-powered vehicles recognised by motorsport's governing body, the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA), as the highest class of competition for electric open-wheel racing cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285353-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Formula E Championship\nThe 2018\u201319 season saw the introduction of the all-new Gen2, second generation Formula E car, which boasted significant technological advances over the previous Spark-Renault SRT 01E chassis \u2013 its power output rose from 200\u00a0kW to 250\u00a0kW and top speeds rose to around 280\u00a0km/h (174\u00a0mph). The arrival of the Gen2 car also saw an end to the series\u2019 mid-race car-swaps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285353-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Formula E Championship\nFrenchman Jean-\u00c9ric Vergne entered as the defending Drivers\u2019 Champion after securing his first title at the New York City ePrix, while Audi Sport Abt Schaeffler returned as defending Teams\u2019 Champions \u2013 having beaten Vergne's Techeetah team by a narrow two point margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285353-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Formula E Championship\nThe 2019 Hong Kong ePrix was the 50th race of Formula E since its inception in 2014. Formula E has raced in 22 cities in 17 countries across five continents and has seen 13 global manufactures compete in the series. Four drivers have started every Formula E race; they are Lucas di Grassi, Sam Bird, Daniel Abt and J\u00e9r\u00f4me d'Ambrosio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285353-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Formula E Championship\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the first to have an official support category since Greenpower ran the Schools Series during Formula E's debut 2014\u201315 season. The Jaguar I-Pace eTrophy featured at 10 of the 13 rounds of the calendar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285353-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Formula E Championship\nAfter the first race in New York City, Jean-\u00c9ric Vergne secured enough points to become the Drivers' Champion, winning his second Formula E championship. Techeetah won their first constructor's championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285353-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Formula E Championship, Calendar\nThe 2018-2019 championship was contested over thirteen rounds in Europe, Africa, Asia, the Middle East, North America and South America.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285353-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Formula E Championship, Calendar, European Races\nA separate competition within the overall Formula E Championship structure which includes all European cities that are part of the calendar has been included. The driver who achieves the best podium finishes of all five races will be awarded a trophy produced by voestalpine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285353-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Formula E Championship, Results and standings, Drivers' Championship standings\nPoints were awarded to the top ten classified finishers in every race, the pole position starter, and the driver who set the fastest lap, using the following structure:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 86], "content_span": [87, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285353-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Formula E Championship, Results and standings, Drivers' Championship standings\n\u2020 \u2013 Drivers did not finish the race, but were classified as they completed more than 90% of the race distance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 86], "content_span": [87, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285354-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fortuna D\u00fcsseldorf season\nThe 2018\u201319 Fortuna D\u00fcsseldorf season is the 124th season in the football club's history and 24th overall season in the top flight of German football, the Bundesliga, having been promoted from the 2. Bundesliga in 2018. In addition to the domestic league, Fortuna D\u00fcsseldorf also are participating in this season's edition of the domestic cup, the DFB-Pokal. This is the 15th season for D\u00fcsseldorf in the Merkur Spiel-Arena, located in D\u00fcsseldorf, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. The season covers a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285354-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fortuna D\u00fcsseldorf 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285355-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Four Hills Tournament\nThe 2018\u201319 Four Hills Tournament, part of the 2018\u201319 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup, took place at the four traditional venues of Oberstdorf, Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Innsbruck and Bischofshofen, located in Germany and Austria, between 29 December 2018 and 6 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285355-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Four Hills Tournament\nJapan's Ryoyu Kobayashi won the tournament ahead of German ski jumpers Markus Eisenbichler and Stephan Leyhe, becoming only the second Japanese ski jumper to win the title, following Kazuyoshi Funaki in 1997\u201398. Kobayashi also became the third ski jumper in history to win all four events, after Sven Hannawald in 2001\u201302 and Kamil Stoch in 2017\u201318.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285356-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Frauen-Bundesliga\nThe 2018\u201319 season of the Frauen-Bundesliga was the 29th season of Germany's premier women's football league. It ran from 15 September 2018 to 12 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285356-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Frauen-Bundesliga\nVfL Wolfsburg won their third straight and fifth overall title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285357-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 French Guiana R\u00e9gional 1\nThe 2018\u201319 French Guiana R\u00e9gional 1 was the 58th season of the French Guiana R\u00e9gional 1, the top division football competition in French Guiana. The season began on 1 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285357-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 French Guiana R\u00e9gional 1, League table\nNote: 4 points for a win, 2 points for a draw, 1 point for a defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285358-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fresno State Bulldogs men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Fresno State Bulldogs men's basketball team represented California State University, Fresno in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bulldogs were led by first-year head coach Justin Hutson and played their home games at the Save Mart Center as members of the Mountain West Conference. They finished the season 23\u20139, 13\u20135 in Mountain West play to finish in third place. They defeated Air Force in the quarterfinals of the Mountain West Tournament before losing in the semifinals to Utah State. Despite having 23 wins, they did not participate in a postseason tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285358-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fresno State Bulldogs men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bulldogs finished the season 21\u201311, 11\u20137 in Mountain West play to finish in a tie for fourth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Mountain West Conference Tournament to San Diego State. Despite having 21 wins, they did not participate in a postseason tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285358-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fresno State Bulldogs men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn March 12, 2018, head coach Rodney Terry left Fresno State to become head coach at UTEP. He finished at Fresno State with a seven-year record of 126\u2013108. On April 5, it was announced that the school had hired San Diego State assistant coach Justin Hutson as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285359-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fresno State Bulldogs women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Fresno State Bulldogs women's basketball team represents California State University, Fresno during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Bulldogs, led by fifth year head coach Jaime White, play their home games at the Save Mart Center and are members of the Mountain West Conference. They finished the season 19\u201313, 11\u20137 in Mountain West play to finish in fourth place. They advanced to the semifinal of the Mountain West Women's Tournament where they lost to Boise State. They received an at-large bid to the WNIT where they lost to Pacific in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285360-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Frosinone Calcio season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Frosinone Calcio's second-ever season in Serie A. The club were promoted as champions of Serie B at the end of the 2017\u201318 season, after spending two seasons in the second division following their maiden Serie A campaign in 2015\u201316. Frosinone competed in Serie A and the Coppa Italia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285361-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fulham F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 Fulham season was the club's 121st professional season and their 14th in the Premier League, after the club won promotion from the EFL Championship after defeating Aston Villa in the 2018 EFL Championship play-off Final at Wembley Stadium on 26 May 2018. The club also competed in the FA Cup and the EFL Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285361-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fulham F.C. 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-00285361-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fulham F.C. season, Transfers, Loans in\nAndr\u00e9 Sch\u00fcrrle's loan ended early when Fulham were relegated in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285361-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fulham F.C. season, Friendlies\nFulham confirmed friendlies against Crawley Town, Reading, Fenerbah\u00e7e, Lyon, Sampdoria and Celta de Vigo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285361-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fulham F.C. season, Competitions, Premier League, Matches\nOn 14 June 2018, the Premier League fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 65], "content_span": [66, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285361-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fulham F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285361-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Fulham F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nThe second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August. The third round draw was made on 30 August 2018 by David Seaman and Joleon Lescott. The fourth round draw was made live on Quest by Rachel Yankey and Rachel Riley on 29 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285361-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285362-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Furman Paladins men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Furman Paladins men's basketball team represented Furman University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Paladins, led by second-year head coach Bob Richey, played their home games at Timmons Arena in Greenville, South Carolina as members of the Southern Conference. They finished the season 25\u20138, 13\u20135 in Socon play to finish in a tie for second place. They defeated Mercer in the quarterfinals of the SoCon Tournament before losing in the semifinals to UNC Greensboro. They received an at-large bid to the National Invitation Tournament where they lost in the first round to Wichita State. This season was the first team in school history to be ranked in the AP Poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 754]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285362-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Furman Paladins men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Paladins finished the 2017\u201318 season 23\u201310, 13\u20135 in SoCon play to finish in third place. They defeated Western Carolina in the quarterfinals of the SoCon Tournament before losing in the semifinals to East Tennessee State. Despite having 23 wins, they did not participate in a postseason tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285362-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Furman Paladins men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nIn its first two road games, Furman had a pair victories over teams that had reached the final four of the 2018 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament: Loyola on November 9 and defending national champion Villanova on November 17. On December 3, 8\u20130 Furman became ranked in the AP Poll for the first time in school history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285363-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 G.D. Chaves season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Chaves' 16th season in the top flight of Portuguese football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285364-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 GET-ligaen season\nThe 2018\u201319 GET-ligaen was the 80th season of Norway's premier ice hockey league, GET-ligaen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285364-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 GET-ligaen season\nThe regular season began on 8 September 2018, and was concluded on March 5, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285364-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 GET-ligaen season\nThe playoffs to determine the 2019 Norwegian Ice Hockey Champions began March 7, and ended April 15, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285364-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 GET-ligaen season, Arenas\nSince Nye Jordal Amfi will not be completed until the 2020\u201321 season, V\u00e5lerenga used Furuset Forum as a temporary arena the whole season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285364-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 GET-ligaen season, Arenas\nLillehammer repeated their Winter Classic match in H\u00e5kons Hall from the 2017-18 season against Storhamar. The match was played on November 17, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285364-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 GET-ligaen season, Arenas\nManglerud Star played a home match against Storhamar Hockey in the Gj\u00f8vik Olympic Cavern Hall. The match was played on October 29, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285364-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 GET-ligaen season, Regular season, Standings\nx \u2013 clinched playoff spot; y \u2013 clinched regular season league title; r \u2013 play in relegation series", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285364-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 GET-ligaen season, Regular season, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nList shows the ten best skaters based on the number of points during the regular season. If two or more skaters are tied (i.e. same number of points, goals and played games), all of the tied skaters are shown. Updated as of September 7, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 70], "content_span": [71, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285364-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 GET-ligaen season, Regular season, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2013 = Plus/Minus; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 70], "content_span": [71, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285364-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 GET-ligaen season, Regular season, Statistics, Leading goaltenders\nThe top five goaltenders based on goals against average. Updated as of September 7, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 74], "content_span": [75, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285364-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 GET-ligaen season, Playoffs\nAfter the regular season, the top eight teams qualified for the playoffs. In the first and second rounds, the highest remaining seed chose which of the two lowest remaining seeds to be matched against. In each round the higher-seeded team was awarded home ice advantage. Each best-of-seven series followed a 1\u20131\u20131\u20131\u20131\u20131\u20131 format: the higher-seeded team played 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, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285364-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 GET-ligaen season, Qualification\nAfter the regular season has ended, the lowest ranked team in the league and the two highest ranked teams in the 1. divisjon will compete for the right to play in the 2019\u201320 GET-ligaen. The tournament will be organized according to a double round robin format, where each club plays the others twice, home and away, for a total of six games. The points system and ranking method used, will be the same as in the GET-ligaen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285364-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 GET-ligaen season, Qualification, Standings\nq \u2013 qualified for next years GET-league; r \u2013 will play in next years 1. division", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285365-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 GFA League First Division\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by 71.208.32.185 (talk) at 18:03, 11 September 2020. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285365-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 GFA League First Division\nThe 2018\u201319 Gambian Premier League is the 50th season of the GFA League First Division, the top-tier football league in Gambia. The season started on 24 November 2018 and ended on 9 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285366-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 GFA Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 GFA Premier League is the 35th season of the GFA Premier League, the top division football competition in Grenada. The season began on 24 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285367-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 GNK Dinamo Zagreb season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Dinamo Zagreb's 28th season in the Croatian First Division and 106th year in existence as a football club. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285367-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 GNK Dinamo Zagreb season\nDinamo will be defending their title as league champions, as well as their title as cup winners. They will also compete in the 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, entering the second qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285367-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 GNK Dinamo Zagreb season\nThe club's manager is Nenad Bjelica, who will be in his first full-season with the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285367-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 GNK Dinamo Zagreb season, Review, Pre-season\nOn 23 June, Dinamo played their first friendly match of the pre-season, beating Macedonian side Rabotni\u010dki Skoplje, winning 4\u20130, with Mario \u0160itum (2), Dino Peri\u0107 and Antonio Marin scoring the goals. Five days later, on 28 June, Dinamo played Azerbaijani side Qabala, winning 2\u20130, with Ivan \u0160unji\u0107 and Antonio Marin scoring the goals. The following players officially joined the club: Emir Dilaver (from Lech Pozna\u0144), Damian K\u0105dzior (from G\u00f3rnik Zabrze), Marin Leovac (from PAOK) and Mislav Or\u0161i\u0107 (from Uslan Hyundai), Lovro Majer (from feeder-club NK Lokomotiva) and K\u00e9vin Th\u00e9ophile-Catherine (from AS Saint-\u00c9tienne).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285367-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 GNK Dinamo Zagreb season, Review, Pre-season\nThe following players left the club: Borna Sosa (to Stuttgart), Ante \u0106ori\u0107 (to Roma) and El Arabi Hillal Soudani (to Nottingham Forrest) and the club will earn a combined \u20ac18m from their transfers. On 3 July, Dinamo trashed Austria Klagenfurt in a 6\u20131 win; with Armin Hod\u017ei\u0107, Ivan \u0160unji\u0107, Izet Hajrovi\u0107, Filip Benkovi\u0107, Luka Menalo and Amer Gojak scoring one goal each. A day later, on 4 July, Dinamo beat Triglav 4\u20130 with Mario \u0160itum, Ivan Fioli\u0107, Dani Olmo and Mario Budimir scoring the goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285367-0003-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 GNK Dinamo Zagreb season, Review, Pre-season\nThree days later, on 7 July, Dinamo beat Polish side Cracovia following Kamil Pestka's own goal in the 90th minute of the game. On 18 July, Dinamo drew 0\u20130 with feeder-team Sesvete. This was followed by a 2\u20131 away win over Vara\u017edin in the last friendly game of the season, with goals from Armin Hod\u017ei\u0107 and Dino Peri\u0107, on 20 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285367-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 GNK Dinamo Zagreb season, Review, July\nOn 24 July, in the first leg of the 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League second qualifying phase, Dinamo beat Israeli club Hapoel Be'er Sheva by a scoreline of 5\u20130, despite media outlets calling Dinamo the underdogs of the match, as Hapoel had reached a historic 3\u20132 win over Inter Milan in the UEFA Europa League just two years prior. Dinamo won with goals coming from Izet Hajrovi\u0107, Mislav Or\u0161i\u0107, Arijan Ademi (2) and Armin Hod\u017ei\u0107, taking a 5\u20130 lead into the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285367-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 GNK Dinamo Zagreb season, Review, July\nOn 28 July, in the first league match of the season, Dinamo drew 1\u20131 with Rude\u0161, initially going 0\u20131 down following Sadegh Moharrami's own goal, but a late equalizing goal from Dino Peri\u0107 was enough to prevent defeat. In the second leg of the 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions second qualifying phase against Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Dinamo went 0\u20132 down by half-time, following a goal from John Ogu and Petar Stojanovi\u0107's own goal. Dinamo eventually managed to draw the game 2\u20132 with goals from Mario Budimir and Izet Hajrovi\u0107, confirming Dinamo's advancement into the next stage of the tournament qualifying phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285367-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 GNK Dinamo Zagreb season, Review, August\nOn 3 August, Dinamo beat Istra 1961 by a scoreline of 3\u20130; with two goals from Mario Gavranovi\u0107 and one goal from Marin Leovac. On 7 August, Dinamo beat Kazakhstani champions Astana in the first leg of the third qualifying round of the UEFA Champions League, winning 2\u20130 with goals from Mario Budimir and Dani Olmo, despite being considered underdogs prior to the match. On 9 August, Dinamo Zagreb confirmed that Filip Benkovi\u0107 signed for Premier League club Leicester City, in a fee in the region of \u00a313m.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285367-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 GNK Dinamo Zagreb season, Squad information, 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, 69], "content_span": [70, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285368-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gabala FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Gabala's 14th season in the Azerbaijan Premier League, the top-flight of Azerbaijani football. The club participated in the Premier League, finishing fourth. They also entered the Azerbaijan Cup, defeating Sumgayit 1-0 to win their first title. They also played in the Europa League, where they were eliminated by Progr\u00e8s Niederkorn in the First Qualifying Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285368-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gabala FC season, Season Events\nAt the end of the previous season, Roman Hryhorchuk left the club after his contract expired, with Sanan Gurbanov being appointed as the club's new manager on a two-year contract. On 16 June, Sabien Lilaj signed a one-year contract, with the option of a second, from Sk\u00ebnderbeu Kor\u00e7\u00eb. Ten days later, 26 June, Gabala signed their second player from Sk\u00ebnderbeu Kor\u00e7\u00eb, Nigerian forward James Adeniyi on a three-year contract. On 3 July, Lalaw\u00e9l\u00e9 Atakora signed a one-year contract with Gabala, with the option of an additional year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285368-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gabala FC season, Season Events\nOn 6 January 2019, Anar Nazirov returned to Gabala for his third spell with the club, signing on an 18-month contract from Zira, whilst Agil Mammadov moved to Neftchi Baku the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285368-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gabala FC season, Season Events\nOn 9 January 2019, young midfielder Hajiagha Hajili, made his season-long loan deal with Qaraba\u011f a permanent transfer. On 11 January, Davit Volkovi signed from Saburtalo Tbilisi on a one-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285368-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gabala FC season, Squad, Out on loan\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285369-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gabon Championnat National D1\nThe 2018\u201319 Gabon Championnat National D1 (known as Gabon Oil National Foot 1 for sponsorship reasons) will be the 51st season in top-flight football in Gabon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285369-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gabon Championnat National D1\nThe competition began on 23 February 2019. Although the competition is scheduled to take place wholly within 2019, it is regarded as the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285369-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gabon Championnat National D1, First stage\nThe top two teams from Groups A and B and the top teams from Groups C and D advance to the Championship playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 50], "content_span": [51, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285370-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Galatasaray S.K. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Galatasaray's 115th in existence and 61st consecutive season in the S\u00fcper Lig. The club became Turkish champions for the 22nd time in their history, and won a second consecutive S\u00fcper Lig title following their success in the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285370-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Galatasaray S.K. season\nIn Europe, Galatasaray competed in the UEFA Champions League, as well as the UEFA Europa League, the Turkish Cup and the Turkish Super Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285370-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Galatasaray S.K. season\nThis article shows statistics of the club's players in the season, and also lists all matches that the club played during the season. The season covered a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285370-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Galatasaray S.K. season, Sponsorship\nCompanies that Galatasaray had sponsorship deals with during the season included the following.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285370-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Galatasaray S.K. season, Players, Other players under contract\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, 70], "content_span": [71, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285371-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gamma Ethniki\nThe 2018\u201319 Gamma Ethniki is the 36th season since the official establishment of the third tier of Greek football in 1983. It start on 30 September 2018. This year 12 teams will be promoted. After the finish of the eight groups, the first team of each group will be promoted to Football League and then the 8 runner-up teams after draw will play two legs to determine which four teams will be promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285371-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gamma Ethniki\n107 teams are divided into eight groups according to geographical criteria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285371-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gamma Ethniki\nNeos Amfilochos, Doxa Kranoula, APO Kanaris Nenita, AO Panthyreatikos, AO Potamia Megalo Chorio, AE Vathyllou Pansamiakou and Aigiros Mystegnon withdrew from the league before the group draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285371-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gamma Ethniki, Promotional Play off\nFirst leg will be played at 5th of May & Second leg at 12th", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285372-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gardner\u2013Webb Runnin' Bulldogs men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Gardner\u2013Webb Runnin' Bulldogs men's basketball team represented Gardner\u2013Webb University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Runnin' Bulldogs, led by sixth-year head coach Tim Craft, played their home games at the Paul Porter Arena in Boiling Springs, North Carolina as members of the Big South Conference. They finished the season 23\u201312, 10\u20136 in Big South play to finish in a tie for third place. They defeated High Point, Campbell and Radford to be champions of the Big South Tournament. They earned the Big South's automatic-bid to the NCAA Tournament, their first NCAA Tournament bid in school history, where they lost in the First Round to Virginia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285372-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gardner\u2013Webb Runnin' Bulldogs men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Runnin' Bulldogs finished the 2017\u201318 season 14\u201318, 9\u20139 in Big South play to finish in a four-way tie for fifth place. As the No. 6 seed in the Big South Tournament, they lost to Winthrop in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 76], "content_span": [77, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285372-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gardner\u2013Webb Runnin' Bulldogs men's basketball team, Schedule and results\n* Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses. S=South. All times are in Eastern Time", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 81], "content_span": [82, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285372-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gardner\u2013Webb Runnin' Bulldogs men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nDespite both being members of the Big South, their meeting with USC Upstate on November 28 will be considered a non-conference game. The game was scheduled prior to USC Upstate joining the conference. Their meeting on January 12 will be a conference game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 81], "content_span": [82, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285373-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gaza Strip Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Gaza Strip Premier League was the 2018\u201319 season of the Gaza Strip Premier League, the top football league in the Gaza Strip of Palestine. The season started on 8 September 2018 and ended on 10 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285373-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gaza Strip Premier League, Teams\nA total of 12 teams competed in the league. Shabab Khan Yunis were the defending champions. Al-Qadisiya and Al-Ahli Gaza were relegated from last season, and were replaced by promoted teams Al-Ahli Beit Hanoun and Khidmat Khan Yunis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285374-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Genoa C.F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Genoa Cricket and Football Club's twelfth consecutive season in Serie A. The club competed in Serie A and in the Coppa Italia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285374-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Genoa C.F.C. season\nThe season was coach Davide Ballardini's first full campaign in charge, after taking over from the sacked Ivan Juri\u0107 during the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285375-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 George Mason Patriots men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 George Mason Patriots Men's basketball team represented George Mason University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The season marked the 53rd for the program, the fourth under head coach Dave Paulsen, and the sixth as members of the Atlantic 10 Conference. The Patriots played their home games at EagleBank Arena in Fairfax, Virginia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285375-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 George Mason Patriots men's basketball team, Previous season\nThey finished last season 16\u201317, 9\u20139 in A-10 play to finish in a four-way tie for fifth place. As the No. 5 seed in the A-10 Tournament, they defeated Massachusetts in the second round before losing to Saint Joseph's in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285375-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 George Mason Patriots men's basketball team, Preseason\nFrom July 31 to August 8, the men's basketball team toured Spain, visiting Madrid, Valencia and Barcelona among other cities. As part of the trip, the team played three games against Spanish semi-professional teams. The Patriots won games against Club Baloncesto Alcobendas and the Mataro All-Stars and lost to Baloncesto CP La Roda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 62], "content_span": [63, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285376-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 George Mason Patriots women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 George Mason Patriots women's basketball team represents George Mason University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Patriots, led by sixth year head coach Nyla Milleson, play their home games at EagleBank Arena and were members of the Atlantic 10 Conference. They finished the season 16\u201314, 8\u20138 in A-10 play to finish in seventh place. They lost in the first round of the A-10 Women's Tournament to George Washington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285376-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 George Mason Patriots women's basketball team, Media, George Mason Patriots Sports Network\nPatriots games will be broadcast on WGMU Radio and streamed online through . Most home games will also be featured on the A-10 Digital Network. Select games will be televised.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 98], "content_span": [99, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285377-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 George Washington Colonials men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 George Washington Colonials men's basketball team represented George Washington University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Colonials were led by third-year head coach Maurice Joseph and played their home games at the Charles E. Smith Center in Washington, D.C. as members of the Atlantic 10 Conference. They finished the season9\u201324, 4\u201314 in A-10 play to finish in a tie for 12th place. As the No. 12 seed, they defeated Massachusetts in the first round of the A-10 Tournament before losing to George Mason in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285377-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 George Washington Colonials men's basketball team\nGeorge Washington parted ways with Maurice Joseph on March 15, 2019 after three seasons and an overall record of 44\u201357. On March 21, the school hired Siena head coach Jamion Christian as the new head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285377-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 George Washington Colonials men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Colonials finished the 2017\u201318 season with a record of 15\u201318, 7\u201311 in A-10 play to finish in a three-way tie for 10th place. They defeated Fordham in the first round of the A-10 Tournament before losing to Saint Louis in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 74], "content_span": [75, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285378-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 George Washington Colonials women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 George Washington Colonials women's basketball team will represent George Washington University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Colonials, led by third year head coach Jennifer Rizzotti, play their home games at Charles E. Smith Center and were members of the Atlantic 10 Conference. They finished the season 10\u201320, 7\u20139 in A-10 play to finish in a 3 way tie for eighth place. They lost in the first round of the A-10 Women's Tournament to Saint Joseph's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285378-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 George Washington Colonials women's basketball team, Media\nWRGW will carry the Colonials games and broadcast them online at GWRadio.com. The A-10 Digital Network will carry all non-televised Colonials home games and most conference road games through RaiseHigh Live.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 66], "content_span": [67, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team represented Georgetown University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Hoyas, led by second-year head coach Patrick Ewing, played their home games at the Capital One Arena in Washington, D.C., as members of the Big East Conference. They finished the season 19\u201314, 9\u20139 in Big East play to finish in a four-way tie for third place. As the No. 6 seed in the Big East Tournament, they lost to Seton Hall in the quarterfinals. They received a bid to the National Invitation Tournament as the No. 3 seed in the UNC Greensboro bracket where they lost in the first round to Harvard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Hoyas finished the 2017\u201318 season at 15\u201315, 5\u201313 in Big East play, to finish in eighth place in the conference. As the No. 8 seed in the Big East Tournament, they lost in the first round to St. John's. Georgetown finished the season without a winning record for the third straight year, the first time that had happened since the 1971\u201372, 1972\u201373, and 1973\u201374 seasons, and without participating in a postseason tournament in three consecutive years for the first time since 1972, 1973, and 1974.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nIn addition to center Chris Sodom \u2013 dismissed from the team at midseason, he had transferred to George Washington \u2013 Georgetown had lost four players since the conclusion of the previous season: guards Trey Dickerson, Jonathan Mulmore, and three-season walk-on Ra'Mond Hines had graduated, and, most notably, the team's second-leading scorer, forward Marcus Derrickson, had foregone his senior year of college to enter the 2018 National Basketball Association draft. However, a core of veteran players \u2013 junior Jagan Mosely and sophomore Jahvon Blair at guard, sophomores Jamorko Pickett and Antwan Walker at forward, and senior guard/forward Kaleb Johnson \u2013 returned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nJunior forward George Muresan, the son of former NBA player Gheorghe Muresan, made the team as a walk-on for the third straight season. Forward Trey Mourning, who had missed the entire 2017\u20132018 season due to injury, also returned to action in 2018\u20132019 as a redshirt senior, and the team hoped his perimeter shooting talents would pay dividends on offense. Most significantly, center Jesse Govan, the team's top scorer, who initially had indicated after the end of the previous season that he, like Derrickson, would leave school to enter the 2018 NBA draft, had changed his mind and decided to play his senior year at Georgetown in 2018\u20132019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nA number of new players joined the team for the season. After sitting out the 2017\u20132018 season in accordance with NCAA transfer rules, forward Greg Malinowksi, a good perimeter shooter who previously had played for three seasons for William & Mary \u2013 where he had shot 40 percent in three-pointers during the 2016\u20132017 season \u2013 became eligible to play for the Hoyas as a redshirt senior, and it was hoped that he would fill the gap left by Derrickson's early departure for the NBA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nFreshman forward Grayson Carter also joined the team, and freshman forward Jaden Robinson made the team as a walk-on. Also new to the team was junior center \u00d6mer Yurtseven, who transferred from North Carolina State; under NCAA transfer rules, he had to sit out the season, but he was expected to begin play with the Hoyas in the 2019\u20132020 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nThe arrival of three freshman \u2013 guards Mac McClung and James Akinjo and forward Josh LeBlanc \u2013 generated particular excitement in the basketball program and among its fans. LeBlanc was a versatile forward who was best known for his defense and his abilities in transition play. Akinjo was a skilled and high-scoring point guard, a position Georgetown had struggled to fill effectively since the graduation of Markel Starks in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nMcClung had risen to national attention in high school with his spectacular dunks and high scoring; he had set a Virginia state record for points scored in high school a single season with 1,153, beating the old record of 948 set by his idol Allen Iverson, a former Georgetown and NBA great. Both in high school and in Kenner League play at McDonough Gymnasium on the Georgetown campus during the summer of 2018, McClung thrilled fans with his athleticism and dunking ability, and he and Akinjo dominated the scoring in Kenner League games that summer. McClung and Akinjo in particular provided star power to the 2018\u20132019 team that Georgetown had been missing for several seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nOn October 11, 2018, Georgetown issued a press release announcing that Antwan Walker had been dismissed from the team that day. After Walker had begun to emerge as an important contributor to Georgetown's frontcourt late the previous season and followed that up with a successful summer in Kenner League play in 2018, observers had speculated that he might start for the Hoyas in 2018\u20132019. His departure suggested greater playing time for Josh LeBlanc, Trey Mourning, Kaleb Johnson, and Greg Malinowski in the 2018\u20132019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nA preseason poll of Big East Conference coaches picked Georgetown to finish seventh in the Big East in 2018\u20132019. At the Big East's media day at Madison Square Garden in New York City on October 25, head coach Patrick Ewing dodged reporters\u2032 questions about his expectations for the 2018\u20132019 squad, saying only that he was hoping for \"a much better year\" than in 2017\u20132018 and offering that \"everything\" about the team would have to get better for it to finish with more than the five conference wins it had the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nEwing and Georgetown athletic director Lee Reed both believed that a good program had to be built slowly, and Ewing added, \"Last year, I said we were building a foundation... Now we\u2019re starting to put the building up.\" He indicated that in 2018\u20132019 he would place an emphasis on getting the Hoyas to play together well as a team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Nonconference schedule\nWith Trey Mourning making the first start of his college career, the Hoyas began their season on November 6 with a victory at Capital One Arena against Maryland Eastern Shore, improving their all-time record against the Hawks to 9\u20130. Jesse Govan led the team with 13 points, while Josh LeBlanc had a double-double (11 points and 11 rebounds) in the first college game of his career. Jamorko Picket also scored 11 points, including three 3-pointers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Nonconference schedule\nFour days later, the Hoyas began competition in the 2018 Jamaica Classic, the Hoyas\u2032 first appearance in an in-season tournament or showcase event of Patrick Ewing's tenure as head coach. The Classic was an unbracketed, four-game showcase event, and under its format the Hoyas started by playing a game at Capital One Arena against Central Connecticut State. The Blue Devils kept the game close, trailing by only three points with four minutes remaining, but Jamorko Pickett sank two three-pointers as part of a 9\u20130 Georgetown run that clinched the Hoya win. Jesse Govan scored 26 points, James Akinjo contributed 13, and Pickett and Trey Mourning added 12 each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Nonconference schedule\nBefore continuing play in the Jamaica Classic, Georgetown took part in the Gavitt Tipoff Games, an annual competition played between the Big East Conference and the Big Ten Conference which matched eight Big East teams against eight Big Ten teams. Georgetown had played in the Gavitt Tipoff Games during the first two seasons of the competition, losing to Maryland in both 2015 and 2016, but had not participated in 2017. This season, the Hoyas went on the road to face Illinois on November 13 in the most hostile environment the team had yet faced with Patrick Ewing as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0009-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Nonconference schedule\nGeorgetown's freshmen were particularly effective, scoring 61.3 percent of Georgetown's points and making key plays, including 12 points by Mac McClung that included a steal and breakaway reverse dunk to complete a 9\u20132 Georgetown run and give the Hoyas a 75\u201372 lead with just under five minutes remaining, a 19-point, seven-assist game by James Akinjo that included a floater and ensuing free throw to give the Hoyas an 84\u201380 lead with 39 seconds left, and 14 points and seven rebounds by Josh LeBlanc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0009-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Nonconference schedule\nJesse Govan and Jamorko Pickett blocked back-to-back shots in the final seconds and Govan and Jagan Mosely sank key free throws as time wound down to give Georgetown an 88\u201380 victory. Govan and Jahvon Blair each finished with 11 points. The Hoyas improved their all-time record against the Fighting Illini to 2\u20134, their all-time record in the Gavitt Tipoff Games to 1\u20132, and their season record to 3\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Nonconference schedule\nGeorgetown then made its first overseas trip under Ewing, traveling to Jamaica to resume competition in the Jamaica Classic with two non-bracketed showcase games at the Montego Bay Convention Centre in Montego Bay. Ewing, a Jamaica native who had emigrated to the United States at the age of 12, had accepted the invitation to play in the Classic partly because he wanted to show his players his birth country, and because Jagan Moseley's father and Jahvon Blair's parents also had been born on the island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0010-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Nonconference schedule\nThe first game, against unbeaten Loyola Marymount, was the first meeting of the schools since 1979; the Hoyas led by five points at halftime, but the Lions had a strong second half in which they built a lead of as many as 15 points before handing Georgetown its first loss of the season, 65\u201352, behind 27 points by senior guard James Batemon. Two days later, Georgetown bounced back in the next game, in which the Hoyas fell behind former Big East Conference rival South Florida by 11 points early in the second half but pulled out a victory in overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0010-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Nonconference schedule\nThe Hoyas then returned to Capital One Arena for the final game of the Jamaica Classic, building a 22-point lead against Campbell before the Fighting Camels staged a second-half comeback \u2013 largely thanks to 45 points by senior guard Chris Clemons, 27 of them after halftime \u2013 that brought Campbell to within six points of the Hoyas with 12 seconds left before James Akinjo made four straight free throws to clinch the win for Georgetown. Jesse Govan had a double-double (20 points and 11 rebounds) against Loyola Marymount, 27 points against South Florida, and 13 in the Campbell game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0010-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Nonconference schedule\nJosh LeBlanc scored 12 points against Loyola Marymount, narrowly missed a double-double in the South Florida game with nine points and 10 rebounds, and scored 11 against Campbell. James Akinjo finished with 10 points against Loyola Marymount, 14 against South Florida, and 17 against Campbell. Trey Mourning led the Hoyas in the Campbell game with a double-double (27 points and 12 rebounds, both career highs) and three assists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Nonconference schedule\nThe Campbell game began a three-game homestand that saw the Hoyas also face Richmond, completing a home-and-home series between the Hoyas and Spiders that had begun the previous season, and Liberty, the Flames\u2032 first game against a Big East opponent since playing Georgetown in 2012. Georgetown won both games to stretch its winning streak to four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0011-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Nonconference schedule\nJesse Govan scored a game-high and season-high 29 points and pulled down nine rebounds against Richmond, while Mac McClung broke out of an early-season slump to score 16 points, James Akinjo contributed 13, and Greg Malinowski scored in double digits for the first time as a Hoya with 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0011-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Nonconference schedule\nAlthough Liberty was ranked sixth in the United States in defense, the Hoyas shot 53 percent from the field against the Flames five days later and went 19\u2013for\u201329 (65.5 percent) in free-throw attempts, with Akinjo scoring 19 points, Govan finishing with a double-double (17 points and 10 rebounds), McClung adding 12 points, and Josh LeBlanc grabbing 10 rebounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Nonconference schedule\nWith a four-game winning streak and a record of 7\u20131, Georgetown next went on the road to meet Syracuse before a crowd of over 24,000 at the Carrier Dome. It was the fourth year in a row the two schools \u2013 bitter rivals throughout the 35-season history of the original Big East Conference \u2013 had met in non-conference play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0012-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Nonconference schedule\nDuring the first half, the Hoya defense held the Orange to 7-for-27 (25.9 percent) shooting from the field and junior guard Tyus Battle \u2013 who had scored a career-high 29 points at Capital One Arena in the previous season to lead Syracuse to a comeback win over the Hoyas \u2013 to 1-for-8 (12.5 percent) shooting. The Hoyas went into the locker room at halftime leading 35\u201322; it was the second-fewest points Syracuse had scored in a half in the 38-season history of the Carrier Dome. In the second half, Georgetown quickly took its largest lead of the game, 37\u201322.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0012-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Nonconference schedule\nThen, however, Syracuse went on a 14\u20132 run that included 10 points by Battle, and closed to a 39\u201336 deficit. With 11:51 left to play, Syracuse closed to 48\u201347 on a Battle jumper. A three-pointer by Syracuse redshirt sophomore Travis Hughes gave the Orange a 50\u201348 lead \u2013 the first Syracuse lead since 5\u20133 \u2013 which Syracuse extended to a six-point advantage. The Hoyas closed to 60\u201359 on three straight three-pointers by Greg Malinowski, then tied the game at 60\u201360 before retaking the lead at 65\u201362 with 4:50 left to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0012-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Nonconference schedule\nWith Georgetown leading 66\u201364, Orange freshman guard Jalen Carey hit a desperation three-pointer to regain the lead for Syracuse at 67\u201366 with 2:35 remaining. Govan hit a jumper to give Georgetown a 68\u201367 lead before Battle sank a three to put Syracuse back in front, 70\u201368, with 1:28 left. With a little over a minute remaining, Govan hit a three-pointer to give Georgetown a 71\u201370 lead, but Battle \u2013 who finished with 26 points \u2013 sank a pull-up jumper with 2.5 seconds to play to once again give the Orange a comeback win, 72\u201371; it was Syracuse's fifth straight victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0012-0004", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Nonconference schedule\nIn the second half, Syracuse shot 18-for-30 (60.0 percent) overall from the field, including 7 of 14 three-pointers. For the game, Georgetown committed 15 turnovers, and Syracuse scored 19 points off them. Govan had a double-double with 22 points and 12 rebounds, McClung finished with 18 points, and Malinowski had 11 off the bench, while Josh LeBlanc grabbed 12 rebounds in addition to scoring eight points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0012-0005", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Nonconference schedule\nThe game completed a four-year, four-game series between Georgetown and Syracuse, and it ended amid speculation that the schools would not play again in the near future, because the Atlantic Coast Conference\u2032s decision to go to a 20-game schedule the following season would make it too difficult for the Orange to schedule Georgetown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Nonconference schedule\nAfter a week off, Georgetown met SMU at Capital One Arena in the first game of a home-and-home series in which the Hoyas were scheduled to travel to play at SMU the following season. It was only the second meeting of the schools, and the first since Georgetown defeated SMU during the 1984 NCAA Tournament in the days when Patrick Ewing was a Georgetown player. The Mustangs shot 10\u2013for\u201325 (40.0 percent) from three-point range, while the Hoyas shot only 40 percent overall from the field and 4\u2013for\u201318 (22.2 percent) from beyond the arc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0013-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Nonconference schedule\nIn the final six minutes, the Hoyas missed seven of their eight field goal attempts, and the Mustangs sank five out of six free throws during the final minute to clinch the victory. Georgetown suffered back-to-back losses for the first time in the 2018\u20132019 season, falling to 7\u20133. Jesse Govan scored 17 points, James Akinjo contributed 16, and Mac McClung added 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Nonconference schedule\nThe Hoyas concluded their non-conference schedule with three more home games, facing Appalachian State, Little Rock (coached by Patrick Ewing's onetime New York Knicks teammate Darrell Walker), and Howard. Georgetown pulled away from Appalachian State late in the game for a 10-point victory over the Mountaineers, but Trey Mourning suffered a concussion during the game and missed the next six games, leaving it to Josh LeBlanc to start in his place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0014-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Nonconference schedule\nIn a shoot-out with Little Rock, Mac McClung scored a career-high 38 points and James Akinjo finished with a career-high 25 points, but Little Rock freshman forward Nikola Maric also had a career high with 27 points, and Trojans junior guard Ryan Pippins tied the game at 84\u201384 on a 30-foot (9.1-meter) three-pointer at the buzzer to force overtime. Little Rock took an 89\u201388 lead in overtime before McClung sparked a 12\u20132 Hoya run that finally clinched a 102\u201394 Georgetown victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0014-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Nonconference schedule\nDuring the week between the Little Rock and Howard games, McClung suffered a sprained ankle that forced him to miss the next four games, but even with McClung and Mourning sidelined, the Hoyas decisively defeated Howard, 102\u201367, dealing the Bison their fourth straight loss, and giving Georgetown its first back-to-back 100-plus-point games since February 1966. In addition to their performances against Little Rock, McClung scored 14 points and Akinjo 17 points against Appalachian State. Jesse Govan finished with 12 points against Little Rock and had his fourth double-double of the season against Howard with 23 points and 11 rebounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0014-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Nonconference schedule\nJosh LeBlanc had a double-double (10 points and 10 rebounds) against Appalachian State and another against Howard (22 points and 11 rebounds), the second and third double-doubles of his collegiate career. Greg Malinowski contributed 11 points in the Appalachian State game. Kaleb Johnson just missed a double-double against Little Rock, scoring 12 points and pulling down nine rebounds, while Jahvon Blair contributed 15 points and five assists in the Howard game. The Hoyas finished the nonconference portion of their schedule with a three-game winning streak and a record of 10\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Nonconference schedule\nThe Little Rock game was the 1,400th Georgetown game broadcast by Rich Chvotkin, the radio voice of the Hoyas. Chvotkin had broadcast every Georgetown men's basketball game since his debut in the 1974-75 season opener with the exception of most of the games of the 1990\u20131991 season, which he missed when he mobilized for six months of United States Army Reserve service during the Gulf War shortly after calling the fourth game that year. Chvotkin's milestone was announced before the Little Rock game began and acknowledged with applause by the crowd at Capital One Arena as Chvotkin rose at courtside and waved in response.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nGeorgetown opened its Big East conference schedule on January 2 with a win at Butler in which Greg Malinowski had his best game as a Hoya, scoring a career-high and game-high 26 points on 10-for-12 (83.3 percent) shooting from the field overall, going a career-best 6-for-7 (85.7 percent) from three-point range, and grabbing seven rebounds; he scored both the final six points of the first half and the first six points of the second half, moving Georgetown from a 38\u201334 deficit late in the first half to a 46\u201338 lead soon after halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0016-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nJessie Govan added 17 points and Josh LeBlanc and James Akinjo each contributed 12 against the Bulldogs. Three days later, the Hoyas faced St. John's \u2013 the 112th meeting of the schools \u2013 in Georgetown's Big East home opener at Capital One Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0016-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nFor the first time since the home game with St. John's the previous season, Georgetown had five players score in double figures \u2013 Jesse Govan with 25 points, James Akinjo with 17, Greg Malinowski and Jamorko Pickett with 13 each, and Josh LeBlanc with a double-double (12 points and 12 rebounds) \u2013 but St. John's also had five players score in double figures, led by junior guard Shamorie Ponds with 37 points, and the Red Storm won in overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0016-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nIt was the Red Storm's first victory on the road at Georgetown since January 18, 2003, snapping a 13-game St. John's losing streak in games played at Georgetown. It also ended Georgetown's second four-game winning streak of the year, and the Hoyas would not win more than two in a row for the rest of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nFour days later, Georgetown lost its second game in a row as the Hoyas made their first six three-pointers and pulled out to a 39\u201322 lead at Xavier, but went 3-for-21 from beyond the arc after that and blew their lead when Xavier went on a 17\u20130 run to tie the game at 39\u201339. Xavier denied the Hoyas an inside game by shifting to an effective zone defense late in the first half and won 81\u201375.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0017-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nJesse Govan scored 27 points, James Akinjo added 13, and Greg Malinowski finished with 12, but the Hoyas lost to the Musketeers for the sixth time in a row and ninth time in the last 10 meetings, and their all-time record against Xavier fell to 4\u201314. For the season, Georgetown fell to 11\u20135 overall and 1\u20132 in the Big East.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nGeorgetown returned to Capital One Arena to open a three-game homestand by facing Providence. The game saw 26 ties and 13 lead changes and was tied at 73\u201373 at the end of regulation thanks to a long three-pointer at the buzzer by Mac McClung, who returned to action after sitting out four games with a sprained ankle and finished with 16 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0018-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nIn the final seconds of the first overtime period, James Akinjo \u2013 who finished with 20 points and nine assists \u2013 hit three free throws and sank a three-pointer to tie the game at 86\u201386 as time ran out. In the second overtime, Jesse Govan made five free throws to clinch a 96\u201390 Georgetown win; Govan had a double-double (14 rebounds and a career-high 33 points that included two clutch three-pointers). The Hoyas evened their Big East record at 2\u20132 and improved to 12\u20135 on the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nThe Hoyas next hosted No. 15 Marquette, their first ranked opponent of the season. Since losing their conference opener, the Golden Eagles had won three straight. Trey Mourning returned to action after missing six games with a concussion. Marquette junior guard Markus Howard \u2013 the fourth-leading scorer in the United States at 25.8 points per game \u2013 did not score in three minutes of play before going to the bench for the remainder of the game with lower back pain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0019-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nGeorgetown trailed sometimes by as many as six points during the first half, but nonetheless went to the locker room at halftime with a 40\u201337 lead. The Hoyas pulled ahead by eight points soon after halftime, but then went five minutes without scoring during a 14\u20130 Marquette run that gave the Golden Eagles a 57\u201351 lead with 10:27 remaining in the game. Georgetown came back to tie the game at 60\u201360 on a Jesse Govan three-pointer with 7:49 left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0019-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nMarquette junior guard/forward Sam Hauser \u2013 who finished with a career-high 31 points, scoring 22 of them in the second half \u2013 scored on a jumper in the paint to give the Golden Eagles a 72\u201370 lead with just over a minute left to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0019-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nWith 12 seconds remaining, James Akinjo attempted to drive the basket but Marquette freshman forward Brendan Bailey blocked his shot; then, with Georgetown behind 72\u201371, Akinjo \u2013 who shot 1-for-10 from the field and scored eight points \u2013 ignored Ewing's called play to kick the ball out to a wide-open Govan for a potentially game-winning three-pointer and instead drove the basket again, resulting in Marquette sophomore forward Theo John blocking Akinjo's shot easily.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0019-0004", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nHauser clinched a 74\u201371 Marquette victory \u2013 the first time the Golden Eagles had won four straight Big East games since 2013 \u2013 with two free throws with 2.7 seconds left; Mac McClung's half-court desperation shot that followed came after the buzzer. McClung led the Hoyas with 24 points, Govan finished with 14 points and nine rebounds, and Kaleb Johnson had 12 points off the bench, It was Georgetown's third straight loss to Marquette and eighth consecutive loss to ranked teams since beating then-No. 11 Butler in January 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0019-0005", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nThe loss dropped Georgetown to 2\u20133 in Big East play, leaving Georgetown under .500 in the conference after five Big East games for the third straight season. Discussing Akinjo's late-game choices after the game, Ewing said, \"We just didn\u2019t play smart enough at the right time, or share the ball at the right time...Twice James [Akinjo] drove in there... At the end of the game we ran a play for either Jessie [Govan] or Mac [McClung] or him to get the shot and he drove it and they came and blocked the shot. There were two people open. [ Akinjo] has to play smarter. I know he\u2019s a freshman, but it\u2019s not time to be freshmen anymore. It\u2019s the second half of his freshman year. We\u2019re in the Big East, and these are games that you\u2019re not going to get back.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 837]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nThe homestand ended with a game against Creighton, and Ewing showed his displeasure with Akinjo by relegating him to the bench, the first time in Akinjo's college career that he had not started. Akinjo nonetheless played 30 minutes and had a career-best 11 assists, but poor shot selection plagued him as it had in the Marquette game, and he went 2\u2013for\u20139 from the field and scored only six points, giving him an offensive output in the Marquette and Creighton games combined of 14 points on 3-for-21 (14.3 percent) field-goal shooting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0020-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nThe Bluejays snapped a four-game losing streak and defeated the Hoyas despite a double-double (22 points and 12 rebounds) by Jesse Govan and 10 points each by Josh LeBlanc and Mac McClung. The Hoyas had again suffered back-to-back defeats and had lost four of their last five games, dropping to 12\u20137 overall and 2\u20134 in the Big East. Georgetown's six conference games all had been decided by six points or less, two of them in overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nThe Hoyas traveled to Madison Square Garden for a rematch with St. John's, then returned home to close out January with a rematch with Xavier. Georgetown won both games, avenging defeats at the hands of both teams earlier in the month. Against the Red Storm, Mac McClung had a game-high 25 points, Jesse Govan contributed 20 points and nine rebounds, and Josh LeBlanc had a 15-point performance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0021-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nAgainst the Musketeers at Capital One Arena four days later, James Akinjo broke out of his slump to score 10 points as part of a late-game 16\u20137 Hoya surge as Georgetown handed Xavier its fourth straight defeat; Akinjo went 7-for-7 in free throws and led all scorers with 23 points, while Josh LeBlanc added 17 points, Govan finished with 12 points, and McClung scored 11. The two-game winning streak got Georgetown back to .500 in Big East play at 4\u20134 and improved the team's overall record to 14\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nGeorgetown's first game in February was on the road against its second ranked opponent of the season, No. 14 Villanova, at the Wells Fargo Center. The Hoyas led 34\u201333 at halftime, but by the time 5:48 was left in the game, the Wildcats had pulled ahead 58\u201353.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0022-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nWhile Georgetown went scoreless for six minutes late in the game despite averaging 83.2 points per game for the season, the Wildcats extended their lead, with Villanova sophomore guard Collin Gillespie scoring a career-high 30 points on 6-for-11 (54.5 percent) shooting from three-point range and 10-for-12 (83.3 percent) in free throws, and Villanova went on to win 77\u201365. It was Villanova's tenth straight victory, and the Wildcats posted a Big East record of 9\u20130 for the first time since the 2009\u20132010 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0022-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nVillanova improved its record at the Wells Fargo Center since the 2012\u20132013 season to 32\u20133, while Georgetown suffered its sixth straight loss in games played at Villanova and fell back below .500 in Big East play at 4\u20135. James Akinjo led the Hoyas with 19 points, while Jamorko Pickett finished with 10 and Trey Mourning came off the bench to add 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nThree days later, Georgetown visited Providence and came away with a road win, sweeping the season series with the Friars and dealing them their third straight loss. The Hoyas outrebounded the Friars 50\u201333 and outshot them both from the field overall, 44 percent to 37 percent, and from three-point range, hitting 7-of-18 shots (38.9 percent) from beyond the arc to Providence's 4-of-22 (18.2 percent).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0023-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nIn a balanced attack by Georgetown's starters, Josh LeBlanc led Georgetown, finishing with a double-double (17 points and 11 rebounds), and Mac McClung had 13 points, six rebounds, and five assists, while Jesse Govan contributed 13 points, Jamorko Picket scored 12, and James Akinjo had 10 points and eight assists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0023-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nThe win again brought Georgetown to .500 in the Big East at 5\u20135, equaling their conference win total for the entire year in each of the previous two seasons, but two losses soon followed, a narrow one to Butler at Capital One Arena and a rout at Seton Hall that saw the Pirates take a 20-point lead early in the game in what Ewing described as Georgetown's worst performance in his two seasons as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0023-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nAgainst Butler, McClung scored 21 points, Pickett added 18, and Govan had 12 points and nine rebounds, while in the Seton Hall game Govan led the Hoyas with 20 points and Greg Malinowski scored 16 off the bench. In summarizing the loss at Seton Hall, the Associated Press described the Hoyas as \"young and exciting,\" but added, \"Unless they win a bundle down the stretch, or the conference tournament, they should be an NIT team.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nAfter a week off, Georgetown hosted Villanova at Capital One Arena. The Wildcats had lost two of the four games they had played since defeating the Hoyas early in February, but still were ranked No. 17. Mac McClung led the team in the first half, scoring 17 points as the Hoyas as a team went 7-of-18 (38.9 percent) from three-point range and built a 42\u201332 lead by halftime. In the second half, Villanova closed to 50\u201343 before Georgetown scored eight unanswered points to stretch its lead to 58\u201343 with 13:13 left to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0024-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nThe Wildcats never got closer than nine points for the rest of the game, and the Hoyas came away with an upset 85\u201373 win. Georgetown outshot Villanova from the field 51 to 38 percent, and Georgetown's bench, led by Kaleb Johnson's eight points, outscored Villanova's 22\u20139. Jesse Govan had his Big East-leading eighth double-double of the season with 21 points and 11 rebounds, McClung also scored 21, and James Akinjo had 10 points and nine assists. The Hoyas snapped a nine-game losing streak against the Wildcats and beat them in a home game for the first time since January 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0024-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nIt was Georgetown's first victory over a ranked opponent since beating then-No. 11 Butler in January 2017, and it was the first time that a team coached by Patrick Ewing had defeated a Top 25 team in eight tries. It also was the first time that Villanova had lost back-to-back conference games in 104 Big East games it had played since joining the new Big East Conference in 2013. The win improved Georgetown's overall record to 16\u201310, exceeding its win total in each of the previous three seasons, and raised its conference record to 6\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nHoping to build momentum and make a case for a bid to the 2019 NCAA Tournament, the Hoyas moved on to a game at Creighton three days later, but lost. Jahvon Blair led the team with 16 points, and Greg Malinowski scored 12, but overall the Hoyas came out flat for the game, their starters underperforming on offense and the team lacking a defensive solution for the Bluejays\u2032 offense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0025-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nAfter the game, Patrick Ewing declared that the NCAA Tournament was his team's goal, and that the loss had disappointed him because \"\u201cGreat teams back up what they did,\u201d referring to building momentum following the win over Villanova, while \u201c[a] mediocre team did what we did today,\u201d meaning take a step backwards after a signature win. Discussing the matter with The Washington Post three days after the loss at Creighton, Ewing said, \"\u201cWe\u2019ve been talking about our [Big East Tournament] seeding and what our goals are, and our goal is to try to make the NCAAs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0025-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nSo we have to finish the season strong. We have to finish well in the Big East to have an opportunity to do that. I thought that the way we played versus Villanova, it was a great opportunity to build. We just didn\u2019t have the energy, the focus, the fire that we needed to play the way we needed to come away with a great road win at Creighton... We have to have a sense of urgency. We only have four games left, and we\u2019re still right in the hunt. We do what we need to do, and we could end up as good as third in the Big East Tournament. But we need to play with more of a sense of urgency than we did in our last outing.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nWith that challenge from their coach and a growing sense that an NCAA Tournament bid was a possibiity, the Hoyas returned to Capital One Arena for their final homestand of the season, with games against DePaul and Seton Hall. Georgetown dealt DePaul its fourth straight loss, with Jesse Govan scoring 26 points, Mac McClung finishing with 15 points, and James Akinjo adding 13 points and six assists. On Senior Day three days later, the Hoyas played their last game of the year at Capital One Arena and faced a tougher challenge in Seton Hall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0026-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nGeorgetown trailed 28\u201324 at halftime, before taking the lead in the second half, but Seton Hall redshirt senior guard Michael Nzei tied the game at 59\u201359 with a jumper at the end of regulation to force overtime. The Pirates again tied the game at 66\u201366 when Seton Hall freshman guard/forward Jared Rhoden scored on a buzzer-beating dunk off a fast break at the end of overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0026-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nGovan scored all 11 of Georgetown's points in the second overtime, hitting a three-pointer with 3:20 remaining to give Georgetown a 71\u201369 lead, then, after the Pirates tied the game at 71\u201371, sinking one of two free throws, a second-chance layup, and finally two more free throws with 10 seconds left to clinch a 77\u201371 Georgetown victory and hand Seton Hall its third straight loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0026-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nThe Hoyas gave up 35 points to Pirate junior guard Myles Powell, but Govan and Josh LeBlanc both finished with double-doubles, Govan scoring 21 points and grabbing 12 rebounds and LeBlanc adding 14 points and a career-high 17 rebounds, while James Akinjo contributed 16 points. The back-to-back wins gave Georgetown a record of 8\u20138 in the Big East and 18\u201311 overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nBack on the bubble for an NCAA berth, and hoping to earn a No. 3 seed in the 2019 Big East Tournament, the Hoyas went on a two-game road trip that began with a winnable rematch with ninth-place DePaul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0027-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nHowever, both their offense and defense let them down; they had their worst shooting performance since the game at Villanova, with only James Akinjo and Mac McClung \u2013 with 13 points each \u2013 scoring in double figures, and their defense allowed four Blue Demons to score in double figures, including 30 points by redshirt senior guard Max Strus and 24 by senior guard Eli Cain. DePaul sank 14 three-pointers and scored 27 points off 15 Georgetown turnovers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0027-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nDePaul pulled out to a 25\u201315 lead followed by a 17\u20130 run that stretched DePaul's lead to 42\u201315, and at halftime the Blue Demons led 54\u201331; the 54 points were the most DePaul had scored in the first half of a game all season. In the second half, the Hoyas closed to a 14-point deficit, but another DePaul run put the Blue Demons ahead by 38 points with just under three minutes to play, and DePaul won 101\u201369.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0027-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nThe 32-point loss tied a loss at the hands of Villanova in January 2018 for Georgetown's biggest margin of defeat under Ewing, and it was the first time in Ewing's tenure as head coach that an opponent had scored 100 or more points against Georgetown. After the game, Ewing said, \"\u201cI don\u2019t have an answer for it. We\u2019ve talked about the importance of this game for trying to lock in that third seed [in the Big East Tournament].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0027-0004", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nAnd I just thought that we didn\u2019t come with the right energy and the right effort for whatever reason...I guess we thought we were just going to show up and it was just going to happen. The reason why I was so proud of my team last game [against Seton Hall] was we didn\u2019t start out playing particularly well, but our defense kept us in the game. Today, our defense was nonexistent. We couldn\u2019t stop anyone.\u201d Ewing blamed the embarrassing loss on Georgetown's lack of energy and preparedness, saying \u201cWe didn\u2019t come ready to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0027-0005", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nFor as big of a game as this was for us, we didn\u2019t come out with the right energy, the right effort, intensity that we talked about from after our last game. To a man. No one was ready to play, in my opinion.\u201d In the tightly packed Big East standings, the loss dropped the Hoyas all the way from third to seventh place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nGeorgetown closed out its regular season on March 9 at No. 16 Marquette, its fourth and final meeting of the season with a ranked opponent. The Golden Eagles had lost three in a row, and were trying to avoid a fourth straight loss to end their season. The Golden Eagles led 39\u201337 at halftime and extended their lead to 60\u201353 with 10:57 left in the game, but the Hoyas came back to tie it at 63\u201363. Late in the game Jamorko Pickett sank a three-pointer to give Georgetown an 82\u201377 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0028-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nMarquette redshirt freshman Joey Hauser responded with a three to reduce Georgetown's advantage to 82\u201380 with 46 seconds to play. Jesse Govan hit one of two free throws to make the score 83\u201380, but Marquette junior guard Markus Howard was fouled on the next possession and also hit one of two free throws to close to 83\u201381 with 11 seconds left. After James Akinjo made two free throws to extend Georgetown's lead to 85\u201381, Howard scored on a three-pointer to cut it to 85\u201384.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0028-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nPickett then made the first of two free throws with 2 seconds to play, time expired during the struggle to grab the rebound after he missed the second, and the Hoyas upset the Golden Eagles 86\u201384. Marquette shot only 23\u2013for-67 (34.3 percent) from the field, and went 26-for-36 (72.2 percent) from the free-throw line, below their 77-percent free-throw success rate for the season. Akinjo led the Hoyas with 25 points, Mac McClung added 23, and Govan and Pickett finished with 10 points each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nGeorgetown concluded its regular season with a record of 19\u201312 overall and 9\u20139 in the Big East, in both cases their best record since the 2014\u20132015 season, and in a four-way tie for third place in the Big East, its best finish in the conference since the 2014\u20132015 season. It was also the Hoyas\u2032 first overall winning record and first non-losing conference season since the 2014\u20132015 season. They had gone 2\u20132 against Top 25 teams, but had played inconsistently, winning back-to-back Big East games only twice all season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0029-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nSpeaking after the victory over Marquette, Ewing said, \"We had a great win today and it would be a shame if we don't follow it up on Thursday\" \u2013 in Georgetown's first game of the upcoming Big East Tournament \u2013 \"with another great performance. So, we have to build on it.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Big East Tournament\nUnder tie-breaking criteria, Georgetown was seeded sixth in the 2019 Big East Tournament and received a first-round bye in the tournament for the first time since 2015. In the quarterfinals, the Hoyas faced Seton Hall, which, like Georgetown had finished at 9\u20139 and in a four-way tie for third place in the regular season but had been seeded third based on tie-breakers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0030-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Big East Tournament\nIn a decisive first half, Pirates junior guard Myles Powell scored 29 points \u2013 a tournament record for a single half, beating the 27 points Doug McDermott scored for Creighton in a single half in a game against DePaul during the 2014 tournament \u2013 shooting 10-for-14 (71.4 percent) from the field overall and 4-for-7 (57.1 percent) in three-pointers, and he finished the half by scoring 13 straight points that included three three-pointers and an end-to-end drive for a layup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0030-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Big East Tournament\nGeorgetown, meanwhile, committed 10 turnovers during the half that resulted in 20 Seton Hall points, and the Pirates led 53\u201328 at halftime. Powell cooled off after halftime, but the Hoyas never got closer than 14 points, and Seton Hall won 73\u201357, knocking Georgetown out of the tournament. James Akinjo led the Hoyas with 15 points, and was the only Hoya to score in double figures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, National Invitation Tournament\nThe blowout loss in the first game of the Big East Tournament dashed the Hoyas\u2032 hopes of playing their way into a 2019 NCAA Tournament bid, and Georgetown missed the NCAA Tournament for a fourth straight season, the first time that had happened since a four-year drought from the 2001\u20132002 through 2004\u20132005 seasons. However, the Hoyas did receive an invitation to the 2019 National Invitation Tournament. It was their first NIT appearance since 2014, and their first postseason tournament appearance of any kind since they played in the 2015 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 92], "content_span": [93, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0031-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, National Invitation Tournament\nThe 2019 NIT used a number of experimental rules, including a three-point line set approximately 20 inches (51\u00a0cm) farther from the basket to match the distance used by the International Basketball Federation (FIBA); a free-throw lane widened from 12 feet (3.7 meters) to 16 feet (4.9 meters), the width used in the National Basketball Association; a shot clock that reset to 20 seconds instead of 30 seconds after an offensive rebound; the elimination of one-and-one free throws; and team foul totals that reset to zero at the 10-minute mark of each half for the purpose of determining free throws, with teams shooting two bonus free throws after the fifth team foul of each 10-minute segment and awarded two bonus free throws after the second team foul committed under two minutes remaining in each half if that foul occurred before the fifth team foul of the segment, with team fouls resetting in each overtime period and teams shooting two free throws beginning with the fourth team foul or the second team foul committed under two minutes remaining if that came before the fourth team foul of the overtime period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 92], "content_span": [93, 1211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, National Invitation Tournament\nSeeded third in one of the NIT's brackets, Georgetown faced Harvard, the No. 6 seed, in the first game. Harvard had qualified automatically for the NIT by winning the Ivy League regular-season championship and had missed an NCAA Tournament bid by losing to Yale in the championship game of the 2019 Ivy League Tournament. The two schools had not met since December 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 92], "content_span": [93, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0032-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, National Invitation Tournament\nAs the higher seed, Georgetown hosted the game, but with Capital One Arena booked to host a Washington Capitals National Hockey League game, the Hoyas met the Crimson at a packed McDonough Gymnasium in Georgetown's first on-campus game since November 2016. The crowd included United States Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan, a Harvard Law School alumna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 92], "content_span": [93, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0033-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, National Invitation Tournament\nThe Hoyas appeared to put out a lax effort during the game, and Harvard led 13\u20136 after only four minutes of play. By halftime, the Crimson had outrebounded the Hoyas 21\u201314, although Georgetown led, 36\u201335. The Hoyas did not score for nearly nine minutes during the second half and trailed for most of the last 10 minutes of the game. With 38 seconds to play, however, Jesse Govan hit a three-pointer to bring the Hoyas within one point at 69\u201368.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 92], "content_span": [93, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0033-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, National Invitation Tournament\nJames Akinjo then fouled Harvard's leading scorer, junior guard Bryce Aiken, who sank both free throws to put Harvard ahead 71\u201368 with 14 seconds remaining. On Georgetown's next possession, Govan attempted another three-pointer with seven seconds left, but missed; Greg Malinowski grabbed the rebound but could not get another three-point attempt off before the buzzer ended both the game and Georgetown's season as Harvard won, 71\u201368.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 92], "content_span": [93, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0034-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, National Invitation Tournament\nIn his final game as a Hoya, Govan had a game-high 25 points, while Akinjo contributed 15, and Mac McClung finished with 10, but four Harvard players also finished in double figures. Although Harvard committed 16 turnovers to Georgetown's eight, the Crimson outrebounded the Hoyas 39\u201330. Georgetown's record fell to 3\u20131 all-time against Harvard. After the game, Ewing said, \"I believe that we had a very good year. We won 15 games last year; we won 19 this year. Hopefully next year we\u2019ll make a lot more, make the NCAAs, and go far. Right now it hurts. I\u2019m disappointed. It\u2019s a tough loss. Now we have to start going out to recruit and getting ready for next year. My seniors, I\u2019d like to thank them for the hard work they\u2019ve put in.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 92], "content_span": [93, 828]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0035-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Wrap-up\nGeorgetown's season ended with two straight first-round tournament eliminations and an overall record of 19\u201314. For the fourth straight season, the Hoyas never made the Top 25 in either the Associated Press Poll or the Coaches Poll \u2013 the first time that had happened in four consecutive seasons since 1996-1997, 1997-1998, 1998-1999, and 1999-2000. They also missed the NCAA Tournament for a fourth straight season, the first time that had happened since 2001, 2002, 2003, and 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0035-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Wrap-up\nHowever, they achieved a number of things that they had not since the 2014\u20132015 season, namely a winning season, a non-losing Big East Conference record, and a post-season tournament appearance, although like the other eight Hoya teams that had made the post-season since Georgetown's 2007 Final Four appearance, they had failed to advance beyond the first or second round of the NCAA Tournament or NIT, losing in the NIT's first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0035-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Wrap-up\nBut they had avoided the late-season losing streak that had befallen the Georgetown teams of the previous three seasons and had even shown signs of growth in defeating two ranked teams late in the year. Picked preseason to finish seventh in the Big East, they had finished in a four-way tie for third, and their No. 6 seed in the Big East Tournament \u2013 one slot higher than predicted preseason \u2013 gave them their first first-round bye in the tournament since 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0036-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Wrap-up\nFor the second straight year, Jesse Govan was the team's leading scorer; he started all 33 games, shooting 49.6 percent from the field overall and 41.2 percent in three-pointers, averaging 17.5 points and leading the team with 7.5 rebounds per game. James Akinjo played in all 33 games and started all but one of them, and he averaged 13.4 points and 2.9 rebounds per game, shooting 36.5 percent from the field overall and 39.1 percent from three-point range.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0036-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Wrap-up\nMac McClung played in 29 games, starting all of them, shooting 39.2 percent in field-goal attempts and 27.7 percent from three-point range, and he averaged 13.1 points and 2.6 rebounds per game. Josh LeBlanc appeared in all 33 games and started 22, shooting 63.0 percent from the field overall and 71.4 percent from beyond the arc, averaging 9.1 points and 7.3 rebounds per game. Trey Mourning started 11 of the 26 games he played in, and he averaged 6.3 points per game on 43.5 percent shooting from the field as well as 3.8 rebounds per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0036-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Wrap-up\nJamorko Pickett played in 31 games, starting 23 of them, shooting 38.3 percent in field-goal attempts and 35.6 percent from three-point range, and he averaged 6.2 points and 3.8 rebounds per game. Playing in his only season as a Hoya, Greg Malinowski appeared in all 33 games, starting six of them, and averaged 5.7 points per game on 44.4 percent shooting from the field overall and 38.7 percent on three-pointers, and he pulled down 3.2 rebounds per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0036-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Wrap-up\nJahvon Blair came off the bench to play in 31 games, averaging 4.3 points per game on 35.6 percent field-goal shooting overall and 34.4 percent from three-point range, and he had 1.3 rebounds per game. Kaleb Johnson started two of the 31 games he played in; he ended the season with a field-goal percentage of 59.3 \u2013 50.0 from three-point range \u2013 and with per-game averages of 4.3 points and 2.9 rebounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0036-0004", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Wrap-up\nJagan Moseley played in 32 games and had seven starts, and he finished with 3.1 points and 1.9 rebounds per game, shooting 46.3 percent from the field and 36.7 percent from beyond the arc. Grayson Carter came off the bench in the 14 games he played in, and he averaged 1.1 points per game on 27.8 percent shooting from the field \u2013 33.3 percent in three-point attempts \u2013 and grabbed 1.0 rebound per game. Walk-ons George Muresan and Jaden Robinson each played in one game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0037-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Wrap-up\nJesse Govan, Greg Malinowski, Trey Mourning, and Kaleb Johnson all graduated in 2019. In his 128-game career, Govan started 90 games, shooting 50.1 percent overall from the field and 40.8 percent from three-point range and averaging 13.0 points and 6.6 rebounds per game, and he scored 1,664 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0037-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Wrap-up\nIn addition to his only year at Georgetown, Malinowski had played for three seasons at William and Mary, and he finished his four-season college career having played in 128 games, starting 36 of them, shooting 42.9 percent from the field and 39.0 percent from three-point range and averaging 6.3 points and 3.1 rebounds per game. Mourning completed his 62-game college career with 11 starts, a field goal percentage of 43.9 percent \u2013 15.3 percent from beyond the arc \u2013 and 3.2 points and 2.0 rebounds per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0037-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Wrap-up\nKaleb Johnson played in 124 college games, starting 35 of them, scoring 4.3 points per game on 54.4 percent shooting from the field overall and 37.2 percent from three-point range and averaging 2.7 rebounds per game. The Class of 2019 was the first graduating class since the Class of 2005 to spend its entire four years at Georgetown without ever playing in an NCAA Tournament game, and only the second to do since the Class of 1974.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0038-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Wrap-up\nAt the end of April, the news broke that after the conclusion of the academic year freshman forward Grayson Carter would transfer to UT Arlington in search of greater playing time. He finished his only season as a Hoya having appeared in 14 games, all off the bench, playing a total of 66 minutes, shooting 27.8 percent from the field and 33.3 percent from three-point range, and averaging one rebound and 1.1 points per game. Under NCAA transfer rules, he had to sit out the 2019\u20132020 season, but would be eligible to play for the Mavericks beginning in the 2020\u20132021 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0039-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Wrap-up\nWith a young team and an all-freshman backcourt, the 2018\u201319 Hoyas played inconsistently, often following impressive performances against strong \u2013 even ranked \u2013 opponents with lackluster losses to lesser foes, and failed to achieve the late-season momentum necessary to make a push for an NCAA Tournament bid or a deep run in the Big East Tournament or the NIT. In reviewing the season after the first-round NIT loss to Harvard, the Casual Hoya website wrote, \"For every rousing win, there was a deflating loss. For every meaningful stride by a freshman, there was a discouraging regression by a veteran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0039-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Wrap-up\nSeemingly every inspired, dogged performance was followed by a flat-footed one...the Hoyas...face questions, particularly related to coaching, where game preparation and defensive coherence too often were lacking.\" But the site broke the news the day before the Harvard loss that Jones County Junior College small forward Galen Alexander had decided to transfer to Georgetown with immediate eligibility the following season, and after the Harvard game described the season's freshman class as \"excellent,\" recruits for the following season as \"promising,\" and the program as \"trending in the right direction.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0039-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Wrap-up\nPatrick Ewing viewed the season as another step forward in restoring Georgetown's men's basketball program to the national prominence and success it had once enjoyed, and said that he believed that 19 wins and an NIT appearance represented important progress. His goal for the following season was for Georgetown to the return to the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0040-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Attendance\nGeorgetown averaged 7,212 fans per home game during the 2018\u20132019 season. It was a 30-year low for the Hoyas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 58], "content_span": [59, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285379-0041-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Roster\nNote: Antwan Walker was dismissed from the team in October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 54], "content_span": [55, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285380-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Georgetown Hoyas women's basketball team represents Georgetown University in the 2018\u201319 college basketball season. The Hoyas, led by second year head coach James Howard and were members of the Big East Conference. The Hoyas play their home games at the McDonough Gymnasium. They finished the season 19\u201316, 9\u20139 in Big East play to finish in a tie for fourth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Big East Women's Tournament where they lost to Marquette. They received an at-large bid to the WNIT where they defeated Sacred Heart, Harvard, Big East member Providence in the first, second and third rounds before losing to James Madison in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285381-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgia Bulldogs basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Georgia bulldogs basketball team represented the University of Georgia during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team's head coach was Tom Crean in his first year at Georgia. They played their home games at Stegeman Coliseum in Athens, Georgia as members of the Southeastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285381-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgia Bulldogs basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bulldogs finished the 2017\u201318 season 18\u201315, 7\u201311 in SEC play to finish in a tie for 11th place. As the No. 12 seed in the SEC Tournament, they defeated Vanderbilt and Missouri before losing to Kentucky in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285381-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgia Bulldogs basketball team, Previous season\nOn March 10, 2018, the school fired head coach Mark Fox after nine seasons at Georgia. On March 13, the school hired former Marquette and Indiana coach Tom Crean to replace Fox.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285382-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgia Lady Bulldogs basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Georgia Lady Bulldogs women's basketball team represents University of Georgia in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Lady Bulldogs, led by fourth-year head coach Joni Taylor, play their home games at Stegeman Coliseum and were members of the Southeastern Conference. They finished the season 18\u201312, 9\u20137 in SEC play to finish in a tie for sixth place. They lost in the second round of the SEC Women's Tournament to Arkansas. Despite having 18 wins, they were not invited to a postseason tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285382-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgia Lady Bulldogs basketball team, Previous season\nThe Lady Bulldogs finished the 2017\u201318 season 26\u20137, 12\u20134 in SEC play to finish in a tie for second place. They advanced to the semifinals of the SEC Women's Tournament, nationally ranked 19th, where they lost to 8th-ranked South Carolina. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Women's Tournament where they defeated Mercer in the first round before losing to Duke in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285382-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgia Lady Bulldogs basketball team, Rankings\n^Coaches' Poll did not release a second poll at the same time as the AP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285383-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgia Southern Eagles men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Georgia Southern Eagles men's basketball team represents Georgia Southern University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Eagles, led by sixth-year head coach Mark Byington, play their home games at Hanner Fieldhouse in Statesboro, Georgia as members of the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 21\u201312, 12-6 in Sun Belt play to finish in a 3-way tie for second place. They defeated Louisiana\u2013Monroe in the quarterfinals of the Sun Belt Tournament before losing in the semifinals to UT Arlington. Despite having 21 wins, they did not participate in a postseason tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285383-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgia Southern Eagles men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Eagles finished the 2017\u201318 season 21\u201312, 11\u20137 in Sun Belt play to finish in third place. They defeated Louisiana\u2013Monroe in the quarterfinals of the Sun Belt Tournament before losing in the semifinals to Georgia State. Despite having 21 wins, they did not participate in a postseason tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285384-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgia Southern Eagles women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Georgia Southern Eagles women's basketball team represents Georgia Southern University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Eagles, led by fourth year head coach Kip Drown, play their home games at Hanner Fieldhouse and were members of the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 7\u201322, 2\u201316 in Sun Belt play to finish in last place. They failed to qualify for the Sun Belt Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285384-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgia Southern Eagles women's basketball team\nOn March 10, head coach Kip Drown's contract was not renewed. He finished a four-year record at Georgia Southern of 32\u201386. On March 27, the school hired Anita Howard from Division II Columbus State University as a head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285385-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgia State Panthers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Georgia State Panthers men's basketball team represents Georgia State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team's head coach was Ron Hunter, who coached his eighth and final season at Georgia State. The Panthers play their home games at the GSU Sports Arena in Atlanta, Georgia as a member of the Sun Belt Conference. Finishing with a 13\u20135 conference record, GSU won its third Sun Belt regular season championship in the last six years. The Panthers defeated Texas State, and UT Arlington to become champions of the Sun Belt Tournament. As a result, they received the Sun Belt's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament where they lost to Houston in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285385-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgia State Panthers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Panthers finished the season 24\u201311, 12\u20136 in Sun Belt play to finish the regular season in second place. The Panthers defeated Troy, Georgia Southern, and UT Arlington to become champions of the Sun Belt Tournament. As a result, they received the Sun Belt's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. As the No. 15 seed in the West region, they lost to Cincinnati in the First Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285386-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgia State Panthers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Georgia State Panthers women's basketball team represented Georgia State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Panthers, led by first year head coach Gene Hill, were a member of the Sun Belt Conference and played their home games on campus at the GSU Sports Arena. They finished season 17\u201314, 11\u20137 in Sun Belt play to finish in fourth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Sun Belt Women's Tournament to Appalachian State. They received an invitation to the WBI where they lost to North Alabama in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285387-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets men's basketball team represented the Georgia Institute of Technology during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They were led by third-year head coach Josh Pastner and played their home games at Hank McCamish Pavilion as members of the Atlantic Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285387-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Yellow Jackets finished the 2017\u201318 season 13\u201319, 6\u201312 in ACC play to finish in 13th place. They lost in the first round of the ACC Tournament to Boston College.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 74], "content_span": [75, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285388-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets women's basketball team represented Georgia Institute of Technology during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. Returning as head coach was MaChelle Joseph in her 16th season. The team played its home games at McCamish Pavilion in Atlanta, Georgia as members of the Atlantic Coast Conference. They finished the season 17\u201313, 7\u20139 in ACC play to finish in ninth place. They lost in the second round of the ACC Women's Tournament to North Carolina. Despite having 17 wins, they were not invited to a postseason tournament for the first time since 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285388-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets women's basketball team\nLess than a month after being placed on leave for a personnel matter, Georgia Tech fired Joseph on March 26 after 16 seasons. She finished her tenure with 311 wins, the most in program history. On April 9, Tech hired coaching veteran and ESPN analyst Nell Fortner, whose most recent coaching job had been an 8-season stint at Auburn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285388-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets women's basketball team, Previous season\nThey finished the 2017\u201318 season 20\u201314, 6\u201310 in ACC play to finish in tenth place. They advanced to the second round of the ACC Women's Tournament where they lost to Virginia. They were invited to the Women's National Invitation Tournament where they advanced to the third round where they lost to Alabama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 76], "content_span": [77, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285389-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgian Superliga\nThe 2018\u201319 Georgian Superliga was the 19th season of the Georgian Superliga since its establishment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285389-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgian Superliga, Format\nRegular season consisted in a double-legged round-robin competition where the eight best teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285389-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgian Superliga, Teams\nThe league was expanded to ten teams. Two clubs have been promoted from A-league, TSU Tbilisi as champion and MIA Academy Titebi as runner-up, and after winning a promotion/relegation playoff against Sokhumi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285389-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgian Superliga, Playoffs\nAll the rounds will be played in a best-of-five games format, (2-2-1) format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285389-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Georgian Superliga, Relegation playoffs\nThe winner of the playoffs between the ninth qualified and the runner-up of the A-League will join the next Superleague season with Vera, champion of the second-tiered league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285390-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Getafe CF season\nDuring the 2018\u201319 season, Getafe CF participated in La Liga and the Copa del Rey. The season covered a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285390-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Getafe 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285390-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Getafe CF season, Players, 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285390-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Getafe 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285391-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Division 2 Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Gibraltar Second Division Cup was the twelfth edition of the second division cup tournament on Gibraltar, and second under its current title. After a year without the tournament due to renovations to the only stadium on the territory, Victoria Stadium, the tournament returned in January 2019 during the 2018\u201319 Gibraltar Second Division's mid-season break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285391-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Division 2 Cup\nGibraltar Phoenix are the reigning champions, having won the last title in 2017, however they are unable to defend their title as they were promoted to the Gibraltar Premier Division at the end of the 2016\u201317 Gibraltar Second Division season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285391-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Division 2 Cup\nThe draw for the group stage was made along with first round draws for the 2019 Rock Cup and 2018\u201319 Gibraltar Intermediate Cup on 29 November 2018. Bruno's Magpies won the cup on 3 March 2019, defeating Olympique 13 2\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285392-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Intermediate Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Gibraltar Intermediate Cup is a single-leg knockout tournament played by under-23 clubs from Gibraltar, who compete in the Gibraltar Intermediate League. With 9 teams competing in its inaugural edition, the first round consisted of two teams playing off to compete in the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285392-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Intermediate Cup\nThe champions of this first edition were Mons Calpe, who defeated Manchester 62 4\u20131 in the final on 15 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285392-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Intermediate Cup, First Round\nThe draw for the first round took place on 29 November 2018, with the match taking place on 3 December. The teams taking part were Lynx and Glacis United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285392-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Intermediate Cup, Quarter-Finals\nThe draws for the quarter-finals and semi-finals were made on 5 December 2018. The matches are to be played between 20-22 December 2018. St Joseph's dissolved their intermediate team ahead of their tie against Gibraltar Phoenix, so Phoenix were granted a walkover win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285393-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Intermediate League\nThe 2018\u201319 Gibraltar Intermediate League is the first season of under-23 football in Gibraltar, after reforms to reserve team football in June 2018. The league is expected to be contested by ten clubs, and began on 21 August 2018 despite initially being set to begin on 13 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285393-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Intermediate League, Format\nThe Gibraltar Intermediate League was established by the Gibraltar Football Association in June 2018 as a merger of the pre-existing Reserves Division and Under 18 Division, in order to aid player development on the territory. Competing clubs are required to register a reserve squad of 18 players, of which 13 must be Gibraltarian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285393-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Intermediate League, Teams\nThe following teams were registered by the Gibraltar Football Association to compete. However, Gibraltar United withdrew from the league on the eve of their first game, citing a lack of players. St Joseph's resigned in December 2018 ahead of their Gibraltar Intermediate Cup tie against Gibraltar Phoenix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285393-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Intermediate League, Teams\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, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285393-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Intermediate League, Season statistics, Scoring, Clean Sheets\n1:Bradley Banda kept 3 clean sheets for Glacis United before transferring to Lynx.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 79], "content_span": [80, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285394-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Premier Division\nThe 2018\u201319 Gibraltar Premier Division was the 120th season of the top-tier state football league in Gibraltar, as well as the sixth season since the Gibraltar Football Association joined UEFA in 2013. The league was contested by ten clubs, and began on 13 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285394-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Premier Division\nLincoln Red Imps were the reigning champions, having won their 23rd title the previous season. They competed in the UEFA Champions League qualifiers, while Europa and St Joseph's contested the UEFA Europa League qualifiers. The season was marred by revelations of betting rules violations by a host of players and coaches at a number of clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285394-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Premier Division, Format\nThe ten Premier Division clubs played each other three times for a total of 27 matches each. The tenth-placed team in the league would be relegated and the ninth-placed team in the league would enter a playoff with the second-placed team from the Second Division for a place in the 2019\u201320 Premier Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285394-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Premier Division, Format\nThe champions earned a place in the preliminary round of the 2019\u201320 Champions League, and the second\u2013placed club earned a place in the preliminary round of the 2019\u201320 Europa League. This season also saw the expansion of the Home Grown Player Rule to require all teams to have a minimum of three Gibraltarian players on the field of play at all times, as well as introducing a maximum registered squad size of 25 players. However, the introduction of the Gibraltar Intermediate League allows them to register a reserve squad of 18 players, of which 13 must be Gibraltarian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285394-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Premier Division, Format, Violations of betting rules\nStarting in November, the Gibraltar FA began issuing a number of bans following an in-depth investigation of suspected betting rule violations by players and coaches. At first, several Europa players, including Rubo Blanco, Iv\u00e1n Moya and manager Juan Jos\u00e9 Gallardo, were banned Following this, Lincoln Red Imps manager Yiyi P\u00e9rez was also suspended In March 2019, Lions Gibraltar and Gibraltar Phoenix players including Rafael Bado and Juan Manuel Llaves received bans. On 12 April, 4 further players from Boca Gibraltar, Gibraltar United and Manchester 62, as well as former St Joseph's and Glacis United manager Alfonso Cortijo, received bans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 71], "content_span": [72, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285394-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Premier Division, Teams\nAt the conclusion of the previous season, Manchester 62 were relegated. Boca Gibraltar took their place, having won the Second Division title and earning promotion for the first time in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285394-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Premier Division, Teams\nLynx finished 9th the previous season, leaving them to face the runners up in the Second Division, FC Olympique 13, in a play-off. Lynx won the play-off 2\u20130 on 8 June 2018 to secure their status in the Premier Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285394-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Premier Division, Teams\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, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285394-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Premier Division, Awards, Monthly awards\nNo league football was played in September 2018 due to the international break and the Gibraltar Music Festival.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285394-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Premier Division, Awards, End-of-season awards\nEnd of season awards were handed out by Football Gibraltar, the Gibraltar Football Association's official UEFA correspondents, on 28 May and 2 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285395-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Second Division\nThe 2018\u201319 Gibraltar Second Division was the sixth season of the second tier football in Gibraltar since the Gibraltar Football Association joined UEFA. The season began on 15 August 2018. After the expulsion of Angels the previous season and withdrawal of Cannons, the league was contested by 7 clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285395-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Second Division\nThis season saw the return of the Second Division Cup after stadium renovations saw the tournament scrapped the previous year. The tournament took place during a mid-season break from 17 December 2018 until 9 March 2019. Boca Gibraltar were the reigning champions, earning promotion to the 2018\u201319 Gibraltar Premier Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285395-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Second Division\nThere was no promotion after the completion of this season due to the merger of Gibraltar's football leagues to form the new Gibraltar National League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285395-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Second Division, Format\nClubs played each other three times for a total of 18 matches each, with a break in mid-season for clubs to contest the Chesterton's Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285395-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Second Division, Format\nThis season saw an expansion of the Home Grown Player (HPG) rule, which required clubs to name a minimum of 4 home grown players in their matchday squads with at least three of them on the field of play at all times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285395-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Second Division, Teams\nBoca Gibraltar were promoted to the 2018\u201319 Gibraltar Premier Division as champions last season. FC Olympique 13 lost their promotion playoff, so remained in the division. Manchester 62 were relegated to the Second Division after finishing bottom of the 2017\u201318 Gibraltar Premier Division. Cannons folded and withdrew from the league after the end of the season, while Angels were not re-admitted following their expulsion, leaving the Second Division with just seven teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285395-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Second Division, Season statistics, Top scorers\n1 Robert Montovio scored 4 goals for Europa Point before transferring to Manchester 62.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285395-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Second Division, Season statistics, Clean sheets\n1 Juan Carlos Bedmar kept 2 clean sheets for Leo before transferring to Manchester 62.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285395-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gibraltar Second Division, End-of-season awards\nEnd of season awards were handed out by Football Gibraltar, the Gibraltar Football Association's official UEFA correspondents, on 2 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285396-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gillingham F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Gillingham's 126th season in their existence and sixth consecutive season in League One. Along with League One, the club also participated in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285396-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gillingham F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285396-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gillingham F.C. season, Competitions, Friendlies\nIn May 2018, friendlies with Folkestone Invicta, Faversham Town, Margate, Tonbridge Angels and Eastleigh were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285396-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gillingham F.C. season, Competitions, League One, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League One fixtures for the season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285396-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gillingham F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October. The draw for the second round was made live on BBC and BT by Mark Schwarzer and Glenn Murray on 12 November. The third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018. The fourth round draw was made live on BBC by Robbie Keane and Carl Ikeme from Wolverhampton on 7 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285396-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gillingham F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285396-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gillingham F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285397-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gimn\u00e0stic de Tarragona season\nThe 2018\u201319 Gimn\u00e0stic de Tarragona's season was the 132nd season in the club's existence and the fourth consecutive in Segunda Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285398-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Girabola\nThe 2018\u201319 Girabola is the 41st season of top-tier football in Angola. The season will run from 27 October 2018 to 19 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285398-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Girabola\nThe league comprises 16 teams, the bottom three of which will be relegated to the 2020 Provincial stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285398-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Girabola\nThe winner and the runner-up qualify to the 2019\u201320 CAF Champions League whereas the 3rd placed team qualifies to the 2019\u201320 CAF Confederation Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285398-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Girabola\nIn the 13th round match between Saurimo FC and ASA, the home team goal-keeper Anselmo, felt confident enough to leave his goal unguarded and shoot a free kick that had been awarded for his team, 25 minutes into the game. His confidence paid off as he scored the only goal in the home team's 1-0 win, something unheard of in Angolan football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285398-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Girabola, Teams\nA total of 16 teams contested the league, including 13 sides from the 2018 season and three promoted from the 2018 Segundona - ASA, Saurimo FC (ex-Bikuku FC) and Santa Rita de C\u00e1ssia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285398-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Girabola, Teams\nOn the other hand, Domant FC, J.G.M. and Primeiro de Maio were the last three teams of the 2018 season and will play in their respective provincial leagues seeking qualification for the 2019\u201320 2nd division qualifiers. Clube Desportivo Primeiro de Agosto are the defending champions from the 2018 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285398-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Girabola, Changes from 2018 season\nRelegated: Domant FC, J.G.M., Primeiro de Maio Promoted: ASA, Saurimo FC (ex-Bikuku FC), Santa Rita de C\u00e1ssia", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285398-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Girabola, FIFA penalty\nThe Angolan Football Federation was instructed by FIFA to relegate Kabuscorp for failing to meet payment claims by former player Rivaldo. Even though the debt has reportedly been paid in full, Kabuscorp failed to pay within the established deadline. The club faced a second relegation penalty regarding their dispute with TP Mazembe", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285399-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Girona FC season\nDuring the 2018\u201319 season, Girona FC participated in La Liga and the Copa del Rey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285399-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Girona 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285399-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Girona FC season, Players, 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285399-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Girona 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-00285400-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Glasgow Warriors season\nThe 2018\u201319 season will see Glasgow Warriors compete in the competitions: the Guinness Pro14 and the European Champions Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285400-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Glasgow Warriors season, Season overview, New co-captaincy\nThe Warriors went back to a co-captaincy role - previously done by the club in season 2016-17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285400-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Glasgow Warriors season, Season overview, New co-captaincy\nThis season Callum Gibbins joined Ryan Wilson as the Warriors' co-captains for the season ahead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285400-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Glasgow Warriors season, Team, Squad\nFraser Brown Kevin Bryce James Malcolm Grant Stewart George Turner", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285400-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Glasgow Warriors season, Team, Squad\nAlex Allan Jamie Bhatti Zander Fagerson Siua Halanukonuka Oli Kebble Adam Nicol Petrus du Plessis D'Arcy Rae", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285400-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Glasgow Warriors season, Team, Squad\nBrian Alainu'uese Scott Cummings Andrew Davidson Jonny Gray Kiran McDonald Greg Peterson Tim Swinson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285400-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Glasgow Warriors season, Team, Squad\nAdam Ashe Matt Fagerson Bruce Flockhart Chris Fusaro Callum Gibbins Thomas Gordon Rob Harley Matt Smith David Tameilau Ryan Wilson Lewis Wynne", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285400-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Glasgow Warriors season, Team, Squad\nAlex Dunbar Nick Grigg Peter Horne Sam Johnson Huw Jones Patrick Kelly Stafford McDowall", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285400-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Glasgow Warriors season, Team, Squad\nRobert Beattie Stuart Hogg Rory Hughes Lee Jones Lelia Masaga Max McFarland Robbie Nairn Tommy Seymour Ratu Tagive D. T. H. van der Merwe", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285400-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Glasgow Warriors season, Team, Squad, Scottish Rugby Academy Stage 3 players\nThese players are given a professional contract by the Scottish Rugby Academy. Although given placements they are not contracted by Glasgow Warriors. Players graduate from the Academy when a professional club contract is offered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 84], "content_span": [85, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285400-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Glasgow Warriors season, Team, Squad, Scottish Rugby Academy Stage 3 players\nThese players are assigned to Glasgow Warriors for the season 2018\u201319. A further intake will be announced later in August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 84], "content_span": [85, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285400-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Glasgow Warriors season, Team, Squad, Scottish Rugby Academy Stage 3 players\nAcademy players promoted in the course of the season are listed with the main squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 84], "content_span": [85, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285400-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Glasgow Warriors season, Team, Squad, Back up players\nOther players used by Glasgow Warriors over the course of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285400-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Glasgow Warriors season, Player statistics\nDuring the 2018\u201319 season, Glasgow have used 50 different players in competitive games. The table below shows the number of appearances and points scored by each player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285400-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, Pre-season and friendlies\nThe pre-season matches were a mixed bag for the Warriors. Dave Rennie was happy with the Harlequins match at Perth; noting that the Glasgow side were missing 20 internationals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 72], "content_span": [73, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285400-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, Pre-season and friendlies\nIn contrast, the Northampton Saints match was a bit of a wake-up call. Rennie stated that 'We got beaten up a bit tonight' and blamed a lack of communication, the quality of tackle technique and a lack of patience. On a more positive note he continued 'They\u2019re all things we can tidy up.'", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 72], "content_span": [73, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285400-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, Pre-season and friendlies, Match 1\nGlasgow Warriors: Oli Kebble, James Malcolm, Darcy Rae, Scott Cummings, Johnny Gray, Bruce Flockhart, Chris Fusaro, Matt Smith, Nick Frisby, Brandon Thomson, Lelia Masaga, Paddy Kelly, Sam Johnson, Robbie Nairn, Rory HughesReplacements (all used): Kevin Bryce, Grant Stewart, Alex Allan, Adam Nicol, Greg Peterson, Rob Harley, Thomas Gordon, Kaleem Barreto, Adam Hastings, Ratu Tagive, Stafford McDowell, Alex Dunbar, Niko Matawalu, Joe Reynolds, Ruaridh Jackson, Adam AsheHarlequins: 15. James Lang, 14. Nathan Earle, 13. Joe Marchant, 12. Ben Tapuai, 11. Gabriel Ibitoye, 10. Marcus Smith, 9. Danny Care,1. Nick Auterac, 2. Dave Ward, 3. Phil Swainston, 4. Stan South, 5. Matt Symons, 6. Dino Lamb, 7. Luke Wallace, 8. Renaldo BothmaReplacements: Elia Elia, Max Crumpton, Mark Lambert, Will Collier, Hugh Tizard, Ben Glynn, Archie White, Dave Lewis, Charlie Mulchrone,Tim Visser, Henry Cheeseman, Charlie Walker, Ross Chisholm", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 1010]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285400-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, Pre-season and friendlies, Match 2\nNorthampton Saints: Tuala (Mallinder 55); Pisi (Tuitavake 28), Hutchinson (Burrell 5 (Pisi 40 (Collins 75)), Francis (Burrell 55), Collins (Sleightholme 40); Biggar (Grayson 2), Reinach (Mitchell 55); Waller (c) (Davis 40 (van Wyk 60)), Fish (Haywood 40 (Hartley 60)), Franks (Ford-Robinson 40 (Painter 60)); Ribbans (Ratuniyarawa 40), Lawes (Moon 60); Haskell (Gibson 40), Br\u00fcssow (Ludlam 40), Harrison (Eadie 40). Glasgow Warriors: Ruaridh Jackson; Tommy Seymour, Alex Dunbar, Sam Johnson, Niko Matawalu; Adam Hastings, George Horne; Jamie Bhatti, George Turner, Darcy Rae; Scott Cummings, Greg Peterson; Rob Harley, Callum Gibbins(c), Ryan Wilson (c). Replacements: (all used) Kevin Bryce, Grant Stewart, Alex Allan, Oli Kebble, Adam Nicol, Andrew Davidson, Matt Smith, Adam Ashe, Nick Frisby, Brandon Thomson, Patrick Kelly, Nick Grigg, DTH van der Merwe, Rory Hughes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 954]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285400-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, Pro14, League table\nGreen background indicates teams that compete in the Pro14 play-offs, and also earn a place in the 2019\u201320 European Champions Cup(excluding South African teams who are ineligible)Blue background indicates teams outside the play-off places that earn a place in the 2019\u201320 European Champions Cup Yellow background indicates the loser of the play-off between the two fourth-ranked European teams in each conference, that earned a place in the 2019\u201320 European Rugby Challenge Cup. Plain background indicates teams that earn a place in the 2019\u201320 European Rugby Challenge Cup. (CH) Champions. (RU) Runners-up. (SF) Losing semi-finalists. (QF) Losing quarter-finalists. (PO) Champions Cup play-off winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285400-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, Pro14, Results\nEdinburgh won the 1872 Cup with a series score of 2 - 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285400-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285400-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285400-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285400-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285400-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285401-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Goa Professional League\nThe 2018\u201319 Goa Professional League is the 21st season of the Goa Professional League, the top football league in the Indian state of Goa, since its establishment 1996. The league kicked on 10 October 2018 and will conclude in March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285401-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Goa Professional League\nThe league matches are being played at the Duler Stadium Poriat Football Ground, Navelim Football Ground, Corps of Signal Football Ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285402-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gokulam Kerala FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Gokulam Kerala's second season since its establishment in 2017 and their second season in the I-League. Gokulam Kerala will also be involved in the Super Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285402-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gokulam Kerala FC season, Review and events, I-League\nGokulam Kerala started their 2018-19 Hero I-League campaign against Mohun Bagan on October 27, 2018. The match resulted in a draw. Their first win was in their 4th match against Shillong Lajong on November 11, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285402-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gokulam Kerala FC season, Squad information, 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, 69], "content_span": [70, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285402-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gokulam Kerala FC season, Pre-season and friendlies\nGokulam Kerala Played a friendly against Bengaluru FC at Sree Kanteerava Stadium in Bengaluru.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285402-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gokulam Kerala FC season, Statistics, Squad statistics\nPlayers Used: Gokulam Kerala has used a total of 38 different players in all competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 62], "content_span": [63, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285403-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Golden State Warriors season\nThe 2018\u201319 Golden State Warriors season was the 73rd season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA), and its 57th in the San Francisco Bay Area. The Warriors entered the season as the two-time defending NBA champions, having won back-to-back NBA championships. Coming off back-to-back championships, the Warriors attempted their first \"three-peat\" in franchise history, but were defeated by the Toronto Raptors in the 2019 NBA Finals. This was the Warriors' final season at Oracle Arena in Oakland, before moving to the new Chase Center in San Francisco, beginning with the 2019\u201320 NBA season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285403-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Golden State Warriors season\nThe Warriors won the Pacific Division title and Western Conference Championship for the fifth consecutive season. They finished with the best record in the Western Conference, with a record of 57\u201325. Golden State made the playoffs for the seventh consecutive season, a new franchise record. The previous record was six, in the team's first six years of existence between 1947 and 1952. Golden State recorded 50 wins for the sixth consecutive season, a franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285403-0000-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Golden State Warriors season\nIn the postseason, the Warriors defeated the Los Angeles Clippers 4\u20132 in the First Round, the Houston Rockets 4\u20132 in the Western Conference Semifinals, and swept the Portland Trail Blazers 4\u20130 in the Western Conference Finals. The Warriors' run ended in the NBA Finals, where they lost 4\u20132 to the Toronto Raptors. Golden State made their fifth consecutive Finals appearance and are the second team in NBA history to achieve this feat after the Boston Celtics made ten straight between 1957\u20131966.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285403-0000-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Golden State Warriors season\nThe Warriors playoff run was riddled with injuries, with DeMarcus Cousins (quadricep tear in the First Round), Stephen Curry (dislocated finger in the Semifinals), Kevin Durant (calf strain in the Semifinals, ruptured achilles in the Finals), Andre Iguodala (calf strain in the Western Conference Finals), Klay Thompson (hamstring strain and a torn ACL in the Finals), and Kevon Looney (fractured collar bone in the Finals) all missing a combined total of 26 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285403-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Golden State Warriors season\nThompson broke the NBA record for three-pointers made in a game with 14, surpassing the 13 made by teammate Curry in the 2016\u201317 season. Curry broke the NBA record for most three-pointers made in the playoffs with 470. The record was held by Ray Allen, who had 385. This season Curry also moved into third on the all-time career three-point scoring list with 2,483; only Allen and Reggie Miller having made more three-pointers during the regular season in NBA history. Curry, Durant, and Thompson were all named to the All-Star Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285403-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Golden State Warriors season\nDurant was named MVP of the game, the fourth time a Warrior player has won the award and first since 1967. Curry and Durant were named to the All-NBA Team. Green and Thompson were named to All-Defensive Team, it was Green's fifth consecutive selection which tied Nate Thurmond for the most selections in franchise history. With the addition of free agent DeMarcus Cousins in the off-season, the Warriors had five All-Stars on their roster that were named to the 2018 All-Star Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285403-0001-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Golden State Warriors season\nThis is the sixth time in NBA history a team has had five All-Stars from the previous season, and the first since the Boston Celtics in 1976. From November 15 to 21, the Warriors lost four games in a row for the first time since the 2012\u201313 season, and for the first time under the tenure of Steve Kerr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285403-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Golden State Warriors season\nFollowing the season, Durant signed with the Brooklyn Nets as a free agent, Iguodala was traded to the Memphis Grizzlies, Cousins signed with the Los Angeles Lakers as a free agent, and Shaun Livingston retired. This season marks the most recent time the Warriors made the playoffs, as well as the Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285403-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Golden State Warriors season, Player statistics, Regular season\nAfter all games. \u2021Waived during the season\u2020Traded during the season\u2260Acquired during the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285404-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team (also informally referred to as the Zags) represented Gonzaga University, located in Spokane, Washington. in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team was led by head coach Mark Few, in his 20th season as head coach. This was the Bulldogs' 15th season at the on-campus McCarthey Athletic Center and 39th season as a member of the West Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285404-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bulldogs team finished the 2017\u201318 season 32\u20135, 17\u20131 in WCC play to win the WCC regular season championship. They defeated Loyola Marymount, San Francisco and BYU to become champions of the WCC Tournament. They received the WCC's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament where they defeated UNC Greensboro and Ohio State to advance to the Sweet Sixteen where they lost to Florida State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285404-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Rankings\n*AP does not release post-NCAA Tournament rankings.^Coaches did not release a Week 2 poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 56], "content_span": [57, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285405-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gonzaga Bulldogs women's basketball team\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by PrimeBOT (talk | contribs) at 19:26, 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-00285405-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gonzaga Bulldogs women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Gonzaga Bulldogs women's basketball team represents Gonzaga University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Bulldogs (also informally referred to as the \"Zags\"), are members of the West Coast Conference. The Bulldogs, led by fifth year head coach Lisa Fortier, play their home games at the McCarthey Athletic Center on the university campus in Spokane, Washington. They finished the season 29\u20135, 16\u20132 in WCC play to win the WCC regular season. They advanced to the WCC Women's Basketball Tournament where they lost to BYU. They received at-large bid to the NCAA Women's Tournament where defeated Little Rock in the first round before losing to Oregon State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285406-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gozo First Division\nThe 2018\u201319 Gozo First Division (known as the BOV GFL First Division for sponsorship reasons) was the 72nd season of the Gozo Football League First Division, the highest division in Gozitan football. The season began on 14 September 2018. Victoria Hotspurs were able to defend the title won the previous season, winning their thirteenth title in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285406-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gozo First Division, Format\nThe season is composed of a round-robin system where each team plays each other three times, totalling 21 games. The seventh-placed team will play a relegation play-off with the second-placed team in the Second Division. Most of the matches are scheduled to be played at the Gozo Stadium, with Sannat Ground and Ker\u010bem Ajax Stadium being used as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285406-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gozo First Division, Teams\nEight teams compete in the league \u2013 the top six teams from the previous season, the winner of the relegation play-off between the seventh-placed team and the second-placed team in the Second Division, and a promoted team from the Second Division. Second Division winner Munxar Falcons replaced Oratory Youths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285406-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gozo First Division, Results, Matches 1\u201314\nTeams play each other twice, once assigned as home and once away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285406-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gozo First Division, Results, Matches 15\u201322\nTeams play every other team once (either assigned at home or away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285406-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Gozo First Division, Relegation play-off\nA play-off match took place between the seventh-placed team from the First Division, G\u0127arb Rangers, and the second-placed team from the Second Division, Sannat Lions, for a place in the 2019\u201320 GFL First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285407-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Grambling State Tigers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Grambling State Tigers men's basketball team represents Grambling State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Tigers, led by second-year head coach Donte Jackson, play their home games at the Fredrick C. Hobdy Assembly Center in Grambling, Louisiana as members of the Southwestern Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285407-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Grambling State Tigers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Tigers finished the 2017\u201318 season 17\u201314, 13\u20135 in SWAC play. However, the Tigers were ineligible for postseason play due to APR violations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285408-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Granada CF season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 33rd season in Segunda Divisi\u00f3n played by Granada CF, a Spanish football club based in Granada, Andalusia. It covers a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285409-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Grand Canyon Antelopes men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Grand Canyon Antelopes men's basketball team represents Grand Canyon University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They are led by head coach Dan Majerle in his sixth season at Grand Canyon. The Antelopes play their home games at the GCU Arena in Phoenix, Arizona as members of the Western Athletic Conference. They finished the season 20\u201314, 10\u20136 in WAC play to finish in third place. They defeated Seattle and Utah Valley to advance to the championship game of the WAC Tournament where they lost to New Mexico State. They were invited to the College Basketball Invitational where they lost in the first round to West Virginia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285409-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Grand Canyon Antelopes men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Antelopes finished the 2017\u201318 season 22\u201312, 9\u20135 in WAC play to finish in third place. They defeated UMKC and Utah Valley to advance to the championship game of the WAC Tournament where they lost to New Mexico State. They were invited to the College Basketball Invitational where they lost in the first round to Mercer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285410-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final\nThe 2018\u201319 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final and ISU Junior Grand Prix Final took place from 6 to 9 December 2018 at the Doug Mitchell Thunderbird Sports Centre in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. The combined event was the culmination of two international series \u2014 the Grand Prix of Figure Skating and the Junior Grand Prix. 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, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285410-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final, Records\nThe following new ISU best scores were set during this competition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285411-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greek A2 Basket League\nThe 2018\u201319 Greek A2 Basket League was the 33rd season of the Greek A2 Basket League, the second-tier level professional club basketball league in Greece. It was the fourth season with the participation of 16 teams. Playoff and play out games were also held, for a fourth consecutive season. Ionikos Nikaias clinched the championship by winning the regular season. Along with the playoffs winners Iraklis, they were automatically promoted to the 2019\u201320 Greek Basket League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285412-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greek Basket League\nThe 2018\u201319 Greek betshop.gr Basket League was the 79th season of the Greek Basket League, the top-tier level professional club basketball league in Greece. The season started on 7 October 2018, and ended on 15 June 2019. Panathinaikos OPAP won the Greek Basket League championship for a record 37th time, after beating Promitheas Patras 3\u20130 in the Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285412-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greek Basket League\nThe season infamously featured a major feud between traditional rivals Panathinaikos and Olympiacos over refereeing decisions in the 2019 Greek Cup semifinals game between the two teams, which eventually culminated in Olympiacos also forfeiting their playoffs. Finally, Olympiacos withdrew from the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285412-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greek Basket League, Teams, Promotion and relegation\nKoroivos and Trikala Aries were relegated, after finishing in the last two places in the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285412-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greek Basket League, Teams, Promotion and relegation\nThe first club that was promoted was Peristeri, which won its third A2 Basket League championship, after finishing with a 29\u20131 record, in the 2017\u201318 season. The second team to be promoted was Holargos, as the winners of the promotion play-offs. Holargos defeated Apollon Patras 3\u20130, in the finals of the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285412-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greek Basket League, Playoffs\nThe eight highest ranked teams in the regular season qualified for the playoffs. All series will be played with a 2\u20132\u20131 format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285412-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greek Basket League, Playoffs, Finals\n1 Olympiacos refused to participate in their playoff series against Panathinaikos over refereeing disputes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285413-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greek Basketball Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Greek Basketball Cup was the 44th edition of Greece's top-tier level professional national domestic basketball cup competition. The previous winners of the cup were AEK. The cup competition started on 15 September 2018, and ended 17 February 2019. Panathinaikos won the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285413-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greek Basketball Cup, Format\nThe top six placed teams from the top-tier level Greek Basket League's 2016\u201317 season, gained an automatic bye to the 2017\u201318 Greek Cup quarterfinals. While the eight lower placed teams from the 2016\u201317 Greek Basket League season; along with all of the teams from the 2nd-tier level Greek A2 Basket League's 2017\u201318 season, and the 3rd-tier level Greek B Basket League's 2017\u201318 season, played in preliminary rounds, competing for the other two quarterfinals places. The quarterfinals and onward rounds were played under a single elimination format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285413-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greek Basketball Cup, Preliminary rounds, Round 2\nNote: Aiolos Trikalon decided to forfeit their game against Faiakas Kerkyras.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 57], "content_span": [58, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285413-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greek Basketball Cup, Final rounds\nA.S. Diagoras Dryopideon and A.O. Pagrati reached the Round of 16, after winning the preliminary rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285413-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greek Basketball Cup, Final rounds\nNote: Olympiacos decided to forfeit their semifinals game versus Panathinaikos at halftime, over reffing disputes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285413-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greek Basketball Cup, Final rounds\nPanathinaikos \u2013 PAOK 79\u201373 (46\u201336), Quarters: 29\u201315, 46\u201336, 59\u201358, 79\u201373. Referees: Papapetrou, Karakatsounis, Tsarouchas", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285413-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greek Basketball Cup, Final rounds\nPanathinaikos (Pitino): Calathes 19, Langford 17, Gist 14, Thomas 12, Papapetrou 10, Antetokounmpo 5, Mitoglou 2, Payne, Kilpatrick, Lekavi\u010dius, Vougioukas, Papagiannis", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285413-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greek Basketball Cup, Final rounds\nPAOK (Papatheodorou): Hatcher 23, Goss 15, Margaritis 13, Garrett 10, Jones 9, Zaras 3, Jefferson, Tepi\u0107, Chrysikopoulos, Koniaris, Tsochlas, Schizas", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285414-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greek Football Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Greek Cup was the 77th season of the Greek Football Cup. A total of 73 clubs were accepted to enter, 16 from the Super League, 16 from the Football League and the 41 previous season local FCA Cup Winners. PAOK won the competition for third consecutive year (thus defending the title) beating AEK Athens 1\u20130 in the final held at Athens Olympic Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285414-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greek Football Cup, Qualifying rounds, First round\nThe draw for this round took place on 13 August 2018. 12 teams out of the original 53 did not participate in the draw. The majority of the games were held on 26 August 2018, with the exception of matches 12 and 16, which will take place on 2 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285414-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greek Football Cup, Qualifying rounds, Second round\nThe draw for this round took place on 27 August 2018. All Games were held between 5-12 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285414-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greek Football Cup, Qualifying rounds, Second round\nAO Kardia, Apollon Paralimnio, Aris Avato, Niki Volos, Tilikratis, O.F. Ierapetra, Ermionida, Korinthos 2006, Thyella Kamari, Ethnikos Piraeus and PAS Cithaeron Kaparelli advanced on walkover.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285414-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greek Football Cup, Qualifying rounds, Third round\nThe draw for this took take place on 7 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285414-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greek Football Cup, Qualifying rounds, Third round\nA total of 32 teams are involved in the Round 3 draw: The 16 2018\u221219 Football League teams entering in this round, and the sixteen winners of the previous round. 16 single-match fixtures will be determined, of which the winners will qualify to the competition Group Stage. All Games will be held between 15-16 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285414-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greek Football Cup, Group stage\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 18 September 2018, 12:00 EEST, at the headquarters of the Hellenic Football Federation in Goudi, Athens. The 32 teams were drawn into eight groups of four. For the draw, the teams were seeded into four pots based on the following principles:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285414-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greek Football Cup, Group stage\nTeams in each group will play one another in a round-robin basis, with the top two teams of each group advancing to the knockout stage. Match-day 1 matches will be held between 25-27 September, Match-day 2 matches will be held between 30 October and 1 November, while Match-day 3 will be held between 4-6 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285414-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greek Football 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 mechanism of the draws for each round is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285414-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greek Football Cup, Round of 16\nThe draw for this round took place on 21 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285414-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greek Football Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for this round took place on 25 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285414-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greek Football Cup, Semi-finals\nThe draw for this round took place on 8 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285414-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greek Football Cup, Final\nAssistant referees:Mark Borsch (Germany)Marco Achm\u00fcller (Germany)Fourth official:Thorsten Schiffner (Germany)Video assistant referee:Sascha Stegemann (Germany)Assistant video assistant referee:Sven Jablonski (Germany)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285415-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Green Bay Phoenix men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Green Bay Phoenix men's basketball team represented the University of Wisconsin\u2013Green Bay in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Phoenix, led by fourth-year head coach Linc Darner, played their home games at the Resch Center, with five home games at the Kress Events Center, as members of the Horizon League. They finished the season 21\u201317, 10\u20138 in Horizon League play to finish in a tie for fourth place. They defeated UIC in the quarterfinals of the Horizon League Tournament before losing in the semifinals to Wright State. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they defeated East Tennessee State, FIU, Cal State Bakersfield, and Texas Southern to advance to the championship game where they lost to Marshall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285415-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Green Bay Phoenix men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Phoenix finished the 2017\u201318 season 13\u201320, 7\u201311 in to finish in seventh place. They defeated Detroit in the first round of the Horizon League Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to eventual Horizon League Tournament champion Wright State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285416-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Green Bay Phoenix women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Green Bay Phoenix women's basketball team represented the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Phoenix, led by head coach Kevin Borseth, in the seventh year of his current stint and 16th year overall at Green Bay, played their home games at the Kress Events Center and were members of the Horizon League. It was the 40th season of Green Bay women's basketball. They finished the season 22\u201310, 15\u20133 in Horizon play to finish in second place. They advanced to the championship game of the Horizon League Women's Basketball Tournament where they lost to Wright State. They received an automatic bid to the WNIT where they lost to Kent State in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285417-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Greenock Morton F.C. season\nSeason 2018\u201319 saw Greenock Morton compete in the Scottish Championship the second tier of Scottish football, having finished seventh in 2017\u201318. Morton also competed in the Challenge Cup, Scottish League Cup and the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285418-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Grimsby Town F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Grimsby Town's 141st season of existence and their third consecutive season in League Two. Along with competing in League Two, the club will also participate in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285418-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Grimsby Town F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285418-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Grimsby Town F.C. season, Competitions, Friendlies\nThe club have confirmed the first four pre-season friendlies will be against Cleethorpes Town, Sunderland, York City and Doncaster Rovers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285418-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Grimsby Town F.C. season, Competitions, Friendlies\nThe annual pre-season fixture versus Cleethorpes Town will take place at the new home ground of their opponents, The Linden Club, on Saturday 7 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285418-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Grimsby Town F.C. season, Competitions, Friendlies\nThe Mariners will then play host to EFL League One side Sunderland on Tuesday 17 July before travelling to York City on Saturday 21 July. Town will then host Doncaster Rovers at Blundell Park on Tuesday 24 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285418-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Grimsby Town F.C. season, Competitions, League Two, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League Two fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285418-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Grimsby Town F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October. The draw for the second round was made live on BBC and BT by Mark Schwarzer and Glenn Murray on 12 November. The third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285418-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Grimsby Town F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285418-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Grimsby Town F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced. It was later announced that Northern Group G would include Newcastle United U21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285419-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Guadeloupe Division of Honor\nThe 2018\u201319 Guadeloupe Division of Honor is the 68th season of the Guadeloupe Division of Honor, the top division football competition in Guadeloupe. The season began on 25 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285419-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Guadeloupe Division of Honor, League table\nNote: 4 points for a win, 2 points for a draw, 1 point for a defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285420-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Guam Soccer League\nThe 2018\u201319 Guam Soccer League (Budweiser Soccer League for sponsorship reasons) is the 30th season of Guam Soccer League, Guam's first-tier professional soccer league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285420-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Guam Soccer League\nThe season started on 13 October 2018, and concluded on 27 April 2019, with each team playing 21 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285420-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Guam Soccer League, Teams\nA total of eight teams competed in the league, reduced from the previous season of 17 teams. NAPA Rovers were the defending champions. Guam U-19 (also known as Manhoben Lal\u00e5hi) entered this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285421-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Guildford Flames season\nDuring the 2018\u201319 season, the Guildford Flames will participate in the Elite Ice Hockey League. It will be the 27th year of ice hockey played by the Guildford Flames and the twelfth season under Paul Dixon as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285421-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Guildford Flames season\nThe Guildford Flames were shown live on FreeSports for the following games: Wednesday 10 October 2018 @ Belfast, Wednesday 21 November 2018 @ Coventry, Wednesday 16 January 2019 @ Manchester Storm and Wednesday 30 January a home to Sheffield Steelers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285421-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Guildford Flames season\nA John Dunbar first period goal and a Travis Fullerton shutout in the Guildford Flames 1-0 victory over Manchester Storm on Sunday 17 February 2019 resulted in their historical first ever Elite League trophy securing the Patton Conference title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285421-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Guildford Flames season, Standings, Overall\nEach team played 60 games, playing each of the other ten teams six times: three times on home ice, and three times away from home. Points were awarded for each game, where two points are awarded for all victories, regardless of whether it was in regulation time or after overtime or shootout. One point was awarded for losing in overtime or shootout, and zero points for losing in regulation time. At the end of the regular season, the team that finished with the most points was crowned the league champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285421-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Guildford Flames season, Standings, Patton Conference\nOnly intra-conference games counted towards the Patton Conference standings. Each team played the other three teams in the Conference six times, for a total of 18 matches. The Guildford Flames won the Conference for the first time, after a 1\u20130 win over the Manchester Storm at the Guildford Spectrum on 17 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285422-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Guin\u00e9e Championnat National\nThe 2018\u201319 Guin\u00e9e Championnat National, called Ligue 1 Pro, is the 53rd season (since independence) of the Guin\u00e9e Championnat National, the top-tier football league in Guinea. The season started on 13 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285423-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 HNK Gorica season\nThe 2018\u201319 HNK Gorica season was the club's 10th season in existence and the 1st season in the top flight of Croatian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285423-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 HNK Gorica season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285424-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 HNK Hajduk Split season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 108th season in Hajduk Split's history and their twenty-eighth in the Prva HNL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285424-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 HNK Hajduk Split season, First-team squad\nFor details of former players, see List of HNK Hajduk Split players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285424-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285425-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 HNK Rijeka season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 73rd season in HNK Rijeka's history. It was their 28th successive season in the Croatian First Football League, and 45th successive top tier season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285426-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hajer Club season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Hajer's third consecutive season in the Prince Mohammad bin Salman League following their relegation from the Professional League during the 2015\u201316 season, it was also their 68th year in existence. Along with competing in the MS League, the club also participated in the King Cup. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285426-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hajer Club season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285427-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hallyburton Johnstone Shield\nThe 2018\u201319 Hallyburton Johnstone Shield was a 50-over women's cricket competition, the second season with the name Hallyburton Johnstone Shield, that took place in New Zealand. It ran from November 2018 to March 2019, with 6 provincial teams taking part. Central Hinds beat Auckland Hearts in the final to win the tournament, their third 50-over title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285427-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hallyburton Johnstone Shield, 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285427-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hallyburton Johnstone Shield, 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285427-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hallyburton Johnstone Shield, 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285428-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hamburger SV season\nThe 2018\u201319 Hamburger SV season was the 100th season in the football club's history and their first season in the 2. Bundesliga, where they were relegated from the Bundesliga the previous season after spending 55 seasons in the league. In addition to the domestic league, Hamburger SV also participated in this season's edition of the domestic cup, the DFB-Pokal. This was the 66th season for Hamburg in the Volksparkstadion, located in Hamburg, Germany. The season covers a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285429-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hamilton Academical F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Hamilton's fifth consecutive season in the top flight of Scottish football since their promotion at the end of the 2013\u201314 season. Hamilton also competed in the League Cup and the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285430-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hampton Pirates men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Hampton Pirates men's basketball team represented Hampton University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Pirates, led by tenth-year head coach Edward Joyner, played their home games at the Hampton Convocation Center in Hampton, Virginia as first-year members of the Big South Conference. They finished the season 18\u201317, 9\u20137 in Big South play to finish in a four-way tie for fifth place. They defeated Longwood in the first round of the Big South Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Campbell. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they defeated St. Francis Brooklyn in the first round to win the Coach John McLendon Classic, fellow Big South member Charleston Southern in the second round, and NJIT in the quarterfinals before losing in the semifinals to Marshall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 885]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285430-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hampton Pirates men's basketball team, Previous season\nThey finished the season 19\u201316, 12\u20134 in MEAC play to finish in a three-way tie for the MEAC Regular season championship. After tiebreakers, they received the No. 1 seed in the MEAC Tournament where they Florida A&M and North Carolina A&T to advance to the championship game where they lost to North Carolina Central. As a regular season conference champion, and No. 1 seed in their conference tournament, who failed to win their conference tournament, they received an automatic bid to the National Invitation Tournament where they lost in the First Round to Notre Dame.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285430-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hampton Pirates men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe season was the Pirates' final season as members of the MEAC, as the school announced on November 16, 2017 that they will join the Big South Conference for the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285431-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Handball-Bundesliga\nThe 2018\u201319 Handball-Bundesliga was the 54th season of the Handball-Bundesliga, Germany's premier handball league and the 42nd season consisting of only one league. It ran from 23 August 2018 to 9 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285431-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Handball-Bundesliga\nSG Flensburg-Handewitt won their third overall and second consecutive title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285431-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Handball-Bundesliga, Teams, Arenas and locations\nThe SAP Arena in Mannheim, home of the Rhein-Neckar L\u00f6wen, is the largest venue in the league as it seats 13,200 fans in its HBL configuration. While the smallest is the Scharrena, the smaller of the two home venues of TVB Stuttgart, only being able to accommodate 2,251 fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285431-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Handball-Bundesliga, Awards, Monthly awards\nThe goal of the month award can be awarded to anyone in the league system while the player of the month award only count Bundesliga performances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285432-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Handbollsligan\nThe 2018\u201319 Handbollsligan was the 85th 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. IFK Kristianstad won the regular season, but IK S\u00e4vehof won the playoffs and claimed their sixth Swedish title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285433-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hannover 96 season\nThe 2018\u201319 Hannover 96 season was the 123rd season in the football club's history and 30th overall season in the top flight of German football, the Bundesliga, having been promoted from the 2. Bundesliga in 2017. Hannover 96 also participated in this season's edition of the domestic cup, the DFB-Pokal. This was the 60th season for Hannover in the HDI-Arena, located in Hanover, Lower Saxony, Germany. The season covered a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285433-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hannover 96 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-00285433-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hannover 96 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-00285434-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hapoel Haifa F.C. season\nHapoel Haifa Football Club is an Israeli football club located in Haifa. During the 2018\u201319 campaignthe club have competed in the Israeli Premier League, State Cup, Toto Cup, Super Cup, UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285435-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hartford Hawks men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Hartford Hawks men's basketball team represented the University of Hartford in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at the Chase Arena at Reich Family Pavilion in West Hartford, Connecticut and were led by 9th-year head coach John Gallagher. They were members of the America East Conference. They finished the season 18\u201315, 10\u20136 in America East play to finish in fourth place. They defeated UMass Lowell in the quarterfinals of the America East Tournament before losing in the semifinals to UMBC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285435-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hartford Hawks men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Hawks finished the 2017\u201318 season 19\u201314, 11\u20135 in America East Conference play to finish in third place. In the America East Tournament, they defeated New Hampshire in the quarterfinals, before losing in the semifinals to UMBC. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament, where they lost in the first round to San Diego.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285436-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hartford Hawks women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Hartford Hawks women's basketball team represented the University of Hartford during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Hawks, led by third year head coach Kim McNeill and will once again play their home games in the Chase Arena at Reich Family Pavilion and were members of the America East Conference. They finished the season 23\u201311, 14\u20132 in American East play to finish in second place. They advanced to the championship game of the America East Women's Tournament where they lost to Maine. They received an automatic bid to the Women's National Invitation Tournament, where they lost to Providence in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285436-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hartford Hawks women's basketball team, Media\nAll home games and conference road games will stream on either ESPN3 or AmericaEast.tv. Most road games will stream on the opponents website. All games will be broadcast on the radio on WWUH.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 53], "content_span": [54, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285437-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Harvard Crimson men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Harvard Crimson men's basketball team represented Harvard University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at the Lavietes Pavilion in Boston, Massachusetts and were led by 12th-year head coach Tommy Amaker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285437-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Harvard Crimson men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Crimson finished the 2017\u201318 season 18\u201314, 12\u20132 in Ivy League play to share the Ivy League regular season championship with Penn. As the No. 1 seed in the Ivy League Tournament, they defeated Cornell in the semifinals before losing to Penn in the championship game. As a regular season league champion, and No. 1 seed in their league tournament, who failed to win their league tournament, they received an automatic bid to the National Invitation Tournament, where they lost in the First Round to Marquette.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285438-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Harvard Crimson women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Harvard Crimson women's basketball team represents Harvard University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Crimson, led by thirty-seventh year head coach Kathy Delaney-Smith, play their home games at the Lavietes Pavilion and are members of the Ivy League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285439-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hawaii Rainbow Warriors basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Hawaii Rainbow Warriors basketball team represented the University of Hawai\u02bbi at M\u0101noa during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Rainbow Warriors, led by fourth-year head coach Eran Ganot, played their home games at the Stan Sheriff Center in Honolulu, Hawaii. Hawaii was a member of the Big West Conference, and participated in their 7th season in that league. They finished the season 18-13, 9-7 in Big West play. They placed fourth in the conference, losing to Long Beach State in the quarterfinals of the Big West tournament. It was the second straight year Hawaii blew a double digit lead in the tournament en route to being eliminated in the quarterfinals for the third straight year. Despite being eligible, citing health and season length, the team declined an invitation to the CIT for the second consecutive year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 905]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285439-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hawaii Rainbow Warriors basketball team, Previous season\nThe Rainbow Warriors finished the 2017\u201318 season 17\u201313, 8\u20138 in Big West play to finish in sixth place. As the No. 6 seed in the Big West Tournament, they were defeated by UC Irvine in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285440-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hazfi Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Hazfi Cup was the 32nd season of the Iranian football knockout competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285440-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hazfi Cup\nThe final played at the Foolad Arena in Ahvaz on 2 June 2019 between Damash Gilan and Persepolis which Persepolis won the match 1\u20130 and won its second double after 20 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285440-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hazfi Cup, Participating teams\nA total of 62 teams participated in the 2018\u201319 Hazfi Cup. The teams were divided into three main groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 38], "content_span": [39, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285440-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hazfi Cup, Second stage, Fourth Round (Round of 32)\nThe 16 teams from Iran Pro League entered the competition from the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 59], "content_span": [60, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285440-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hazfi Cup, Bracket\nThe following is the bracket which the Hazfi Cup resembled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285441-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 122nd season of competitive football by Heart of Midlothian (Hearts) with the team participating in the Scottish Premiership. Hearts are playing their fourth consecutive season in the top tier of Scottish football, having been promoted from the Scottish Championship at the end of the 2014\u201315 season. They reached the Semi-final of the Scottish League Cup and reached the Final of the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285441-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Results and fixtures, Friendlies\nHearts will return for pre-season training on 21 June, with the first preseason friendly scheduled to take place against Arbroath at the start of July. Further preseason friendlies are scheduled to take place against Dumbarton, Partick Thistle, Queen of the South and Forfar Athletic. A scheduled trip to Germany for a training camp was cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285441-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Results and fixtures, Friendlies\nDuring the winter break Hearts travelled to Murcia for a five-day training camp. Whilst in Spain they are scheduled to play a bounce game against Lokeren.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285441-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Results and fixtures, Premiership\nThe Scottish Premiership fixture list was announced on 15 June 2018. Hearts began the season with a 4\u20131 away victory against Hamilton Academical at New Douglas Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 74], "content_span": [75, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285441-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Results and fixtures, League Cup\nHaving not qualified for Europe Hearts entered the League Cup at the group stages. On 25 May, Hearts were drawn in Group C, alongside Cove Rangers, Cowdenbeath, Inverness Caledonian Thistle and Raith Rovers. On 18 July 2018, Hearts played Cove Rangers, which marked the first competitive match at Balmoral Stadium. Olly Lee opened the scoring after 11 minutes, before fellow debutante Steven MacLean doubled the advantage in the second half. Cove pulled one back via Paul McManus with 15 minutes remaining, but were unable to equalise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285441-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Results and fixtures, League Cup\nDuring the 65th minute of the match Andrew Irving entered the field of play, replacing Olly Lee. Irving's contract extension had not been correctly lodged with the Scottish Football Association, rendering him ineligible to play as his registration expired on 9 June. An SPFL disciplinary hearing took place on Monday 23 July, as a result of which Hearts were deducted two points from the group stages and fined \u00a310,000, with \u00a38,000 of the fine suspended until the end of the next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285441-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Results and fixtures, League Cup\nHearts next group match was against Raith Rovers. Kevin Nisbet opened the scoring early in the second half for the home side, before Michael Smith equalised from 25 yards out. In the 90th minute Christophe Berra had a goal disallowed for impeding the keeper, however replays showed the foul was committed by a fellow Raith player. With the sides level at 1\u20131 penalties were taken, with Hearts taking the bonus point 4\u20132 on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285441-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Results and fixtures, League Cup\nThe group stage was wound up with two 5 \u2013 0 wins at Tynecastle Park against Cowdenbeath and Inverness Caledonian Thistle, with goals from Steven MacLean, Uche Ikpeazu, Peter Haring, Steven Naismith, Michael Smith and Ben Garuccio. The result against Inverness meant Hearts qualified to the Second round on goal difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285441-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Results and fixtures, Scottish Cup\nHeart of Midlothian entered the competition in the fourth round of competition as one of the sixteens teams to enter in this round of the competition. Their first opponent was at Tynecastle Park to Premiership side Livingston where a goal from Sean Clare saw the team win the match 1\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285441-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Results and fixtures, Scottish Cup\nIn the fifth round they was drawn against Junior club Auchinleck Talbot at home who had knocked out a Championship side in the previous round. The match saw four different goal scorers with Christophe Berra scoring the opener in the tenth minute of play. Two more goals from Demetri Mitchell and Steven MacLean opened the gap to three goals before the break. A goal in the second half from Aidan Keena secured the 4\u20130 win but not before an injury forced them down to ten men for the final twelve minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285441-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Results and fixtures, Scottish Cup\nThe quarter final saw the team travel to Firhill Stadium for the match against Championship side Partick Thistle. After an early goal from Christophe Berra, the team dominated the game with 59% of the possession. The tie though headed into a replay after Christie Elliott scored to level the match in the 72nd minute. The replay at Tyncastle Park saw the away team getting the opening goal in the 17th minute from a Scott McDonald tap to give the championship side the early lead. But a goal from Uche Ikpeazu and the penalty conversation from Sean Clare saw Hearts qualify for the semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285441-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Results and fixtures, Scottish Cup\nFor Hearts, this meant a semi final with another Championship side in Inverness in the first of two matches at Hampden Park. After a lacklustre first half, Uche Ikpeazu broke deadlock for the Hearts in the 49th minute with the shot coming off a deflection. After Jamie McCart goal was deemed offside in the 61st minute, John Souttar doubled the lead only four minutes later. Sean Clarke gave Hearts a 3\u20130 victory after Ikpeazu was brought down by Mark Ridgers to give a penalty which was converted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285441-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, First team player statistics, Captains\nChristophe Berra continued as captain for season 2018\u201319, having been re-appointed as captain the previous season. Only six games into the season Berra suffered a torn hamstring at Tynecastle against Celtic, ruling himself out for a period of around 6 months. In his absence three other players were given the opportunity to captain Hearts. Fellow defender John Souttar was initially appointed captain in his absence at the age of 21, however whilst on international duty with Scotland Souttar injured the lining of his hip and was ruled out for five months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 79], "content_span": [80, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285441-0010-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, First team player statistics, Captains\nWith Berra and Souttar injured Steven Naismith took the captain's armband for the first time against Aberdeen on 20 October 2018. Naismith's stint as Captain lasted just three games, as he suffered a tear in the cartilage in his knee during the League Cup Semi-final and was ruled out for a period of six to eight weeks. This led to Peter Haring becoming the fourth player of the season to play as captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 79], "content_span": [80, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285441-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, First team player statistics, Captains\nBerra returned as captain earlier than anticipated on 2 December versus Rangers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 79], "content_span": [80, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285441-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, First team player statistics, Captains\nLast updated: 25 May 2019Source: 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, 79], "content_span": [80, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285441-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, First team player statistics, Squad information\nDuring the 2018\u201319 season, Hearts have used thirty-five players in competitive games. The table below shows the number of appearances and goals scored by each player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 88], "content_span": [89, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285441-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, First team player statistics, Squad information\nAppearances (starts and substitute appearances) and goals include those in Scottish Premiership, League Cup and the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 88], "content_span": [89, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285441-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, First team player statistics, Disciplinary record\nDuring the 2018\u201319 season, Hearts players have been issued with ninety-five yellow cards and five red. The table below shows the number of cards and type shown to each player. In addition striker Steven MacLean accepted a retrospective two match ban for violent conduct against Celtic's Eboue Kouassi in the League Cup. Having gone over the SFA disciplinary points threshold, Steven Naismith served a one-match ban.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 90], "content_span": [91, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285441-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, First team player statistics, Disciplinary record\nA yellow card issued for simulation to Uche Ikpeazu during the game versus Aberdeen on 30 March 2019, was rescinded on appeal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 90], "content_span": [91, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285441-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, First team player statistics, Clean sheets\nLast updated: 25 May 2019Source: Match reports in Competitive matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 83], "content_span": [84, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285441-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Club, Deaths\nThe following players and people associated with the club died over the course of the season. Former vice chairman and director Pilmar Smith, 1956 Scottish Cup club captain Freddie Glidden and defender Tommy Darling,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 53], "content_span": [54, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285441-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Club, International selection\nOver the course of the season a number of the Hearts squad were called up on international duty. John Souttar and Steven Naismith were called up to represent Scotland, Arnaud Djoum to represent Cameroon, Aaron Hughes, Michael Smith and Bobby Burns to represent Northern Ireland, Marcus Godinho to represent Canada, Jimmy Dunne to represent Republic of Ireland and Ben Garuccio to represent Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285441-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Club, International selection\nIn addition a number of the Hearts squad were called up to represent Scotland at youth level. Callumn Morrison and Jamie Brandon were called up to the under-21 squad, Morrison was also called up to the under-20 squad, Harry Cochrane and Chris Hamilton to the under-19 squad, Harry Stone, Cammy Logan, Connor Smith and Aaron Hickey to the under-17 squad and Jay Charleston-King and Leo Watson to the under-16 squad. In addition Bobby Burns was called up to represent Northern Ireland at under-21 level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285441-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Club, A War of Two Halves\nThe interactive play A War of Two Halves was presented at Tynecastle, dealing with the stories of the original 13 players who joined the 16th (Service) Battalion of the Royal Scots. It was first shown as part of the Edinburgh Festival Fringe on 27 August 2018. It ran again in the run-up to the centenary of the Armistice of 11 November 1918.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285441-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Club, Awards\nCraig Levein and the following players received Scottish Professional Football League awards over the course of the season. The club's annual award ceremony took place on 12 May 2019, with Steven Naismith winning both fans and players player of the year award. The full list of awards are included below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 53], "content_span": [54, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285441-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285442-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hellas Verona F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Hellas Verona Football Club's first season back in Serie B after being relegated to the second division at the end of the 2017\u201318 Serie A season. The club finished 5th in the 2018\u201319 Serie B season and were promoted back tot eh Serie A via winning the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285442-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hellas Verona F.C. season, Season summary\nOn 21 June 2018, Fabio Grosso was appointed manager of Hellas, signing a two-year deal at the newly relegated Serie B club. Grosso was sacked on 1 May 2019 after a shock 3\u20132 home loss to relegation-threatened Livorno. He was replaced the next day by Alfredo Aglietti, with the goal to help the club getting into the promotion playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285442-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hellas Verona F.C. season, Season summary\nUnder Aglietti's short tenure, he managed to guide the club to fifth place in the regular season, and then to the promotion playoff finals, where Verona defeated Cittadella to achieve promotion to Serie A after only a single season in the second division. Despite his successes, however, Aglietti was not confirmed for another season, and Ivan Juri\u0107 was named as his replacement in charge of the club a few days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285442-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hellas Verona F.C. season, Squad, First team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285442-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hellas Verona F.C. 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285443-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hellenic Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 Hellenic Football League season was the 66th 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-00285443-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hellenic Football League\nThe provisional club allocations for steps 5 and 6 were announced by the FA on 25 May 2018. The constitution was ratified by the league at its AGM on 8 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285443-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hellenic Football League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 14 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with five new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285443-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hellenic Football League, Division One East\nDivision One East featured ten 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, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285443-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hellenic Football League, Division One West\nDivision One West featured nine 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, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285444-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hertha BSC season\nThe 2018\u201319 Hertha BSC season was the 127th season in the football club's history and 6th consecutive and 36th overall season in the top flight of German football, the Bundesliga, having been promoted from the 2. Bundesliga in 2013. In addition to the domestic league, Hertha BSC also participated in this season's editions of the domestic cup, the DFB-Pokal. This was the 51st season for Hertha in the Olympiastadion Berlin, located in Berlin, Germany. The season covered a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285444-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hertha BSC 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-00285445-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hibernian F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Hibernian's (Hibs) second season of play back in the top league of Scottish football (the Scottish Premiership), having been promoted from the Scottish Championship at the end of the 2016\u201317 season. Hibs also entered the Europa League, and progressed through two qualifying rounds before losing to Norwegian club Molde. They were knocked out of the League Cup in a penalty shootout by Aberdeen, and in the Scottish Cup by Celtic, and finished fifth in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285445-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hibernian F.C. season\nHibs manager Neil Lennon was suspended by the club on 26 January 2019, and was subsequently replaced by Paul Heckingbottom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285445-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hibernian F.C. season, Results and fixtures, Scottish Premiership\nThe schedule for the first 33 rounds of the 2018\u201319 Premiership was announced on 15 June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285445-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hibernian F.C. season, Results and fixtures, League Cup\nAs one of the four clubs participating in European competition, Hibs received a bye to the second round (last 16) of the League Cup. Hibs defeated Ross County in the second round, and were paired with Aberdeen in the quarter-finals. After both the regulation time and extra time periods finished goalless, Aberdeen won a penalty shootout to progress to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285445-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hibernian F.C. season, Results and fixtures, Scottish Cup\nAs a Premiership club, Hibernian entered the Scottish Cup at the fourth round stage and were drawn at home to League Two club Elgin City. They won 4\u20130 and were then drawn at home to Raith Rovers in the fifth round. A 3\u20131 victory put Hibs into the quarter-final, where they were drawn at home to cup holders Celtic. They lost 2\u20130 to a Celtic side managed by Neil Lennon, who had left Hibs four weeks previously.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285445-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hibernian F.C. season, Results and fixtures, UEFA Europa League\nHaving finished fourth in the 2017\u201318 Scottish Premiership, Hibs qualified for the 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League. In the first qualifying round they were paired with Faroese club Runav\u00edk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285446-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 High Point Panthers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 High Point Panthers men's basketball team represented High Point University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Panthers, led by first-year head coach Tubby Smith, played their home games at the Millis Athletic Convocation Center as members of the Big South Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285446-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 High Point Panthers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Panthers finished the season 14\u201316, 9\u20139 in Big South play to finish in a four-way tie for fifth place. As a 7 seed, they lost to Longwood in the first round of the Big South Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285446-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 High Point Panthers men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn March 7, 2018, head coach Scott Cherry and the school mutually agreed to part ways. On March 26, it was reported that the school had hired High Point alumnus Tubby Smith as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285446-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 High Point Panthers men's basketball team, Schedule and results\n* Non-conference game. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses. All times are in Eastern Time", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 71], "content_span": [72, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285447-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 High Point Panthers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 High Point Panthers women's basketball team represents High Point University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Panthers, led by seventh-year head coach DeUnna Hendrix, play their home games at the Millis Athletic Convocation Center as members of the Big South Conference. They finished the season 22\u20139, 15\u20133 in Big South play to finish in second place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big South Women's Tournament to Charleston Southern. They received an automatic bid to the WNIT where they lost to Ohio in the first round", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285447-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 High Point Panthers women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe 2017-18 team finished the season 17\u201314, 10\u20138 in Big South play to finish in fourth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Big South Women's Tournament where they lost 78-54 to eventual champion Liberty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285447-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 High Point Panthers women's basketball team, Preseason Honors\nFor the second straight season, senior guard Emma Bockrath was voted the Big South Conference preseason player of the year. In 2017\u201318, Bockrath ranked first in the conference in steals per game in conference play (2.7), fifth in points (14.1), sixth in field goal percentage (43.2%), and seventh in rebounds (6.6). Longtime AAU teammate Shea Morgan was named to the All-Big South Second Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285447-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 High Point Panthers women's basketball team, Preseason Honors\nThe Panthers were picked to finish second in the Big South Conference, behind Radford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285447-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 High Point Panthers women's basketball team, Schedule and results\n* Non-conference game. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses. All times are in Eastern Time", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 73], "content_span": [74, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285448-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Highland Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 Highland Football League (known as the Breedon Highland League for sponsorship reasons) was the 116th season of the Highland Football League, and the fifth season as the fifth-tier of the Scottish football pyramid system. The season began on 28 July 2018 and ended on 27 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285448-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Highland Football League\nCove Rangers were the defending champions and successfully retained the title on 13 April 2019 with one match still to play, after a 1\u20130 win away to Forres Mechanics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285448-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Highland Football League\nThey faced the winners of the 2018\u201319 Lowland Football League (East Kilbride) in the Pyramid play-off, winning 5\u20131 on aggregate. Cove then defeated Berwick Rangers 7\u20130 on aggregate in the League Two play-off final to gain a place in Scottish League Two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285448-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Highland Football League, Teams\nFort William had given notice to withdraw from the league after years of struggling, but new investors came forward and the club opted to continue for at least another season. Champions Cove Rangers failed to gain promotion in the play-offs, so the league membership remained unchanged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285448-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Highland Football League, Teams, Stadia and locations\nAll grounds are equipped with floodlights as required by league regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285449-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hobart Hurricanes WBBL season\nThe 2018\u201319 Hobart Hurricanes Women's season was the fourth in the team's history. Coached by Salliann Briggs and captained by Sasha Moloney, they finished on the bottom of the WBBL|04 ladder. The Hurricanes consequently claimed their second consecutive wooden spoon, having also finished last in the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285449-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hobart Hurricanes WBBL season, Squad\nEach 2018\u201319 squad featured 15 active players, with an allowance of up to five marquee signings including a maximum of three from overseas. Under a new rule, Australian marquees were classed as players who held a national women's team contract at the time of signing on for their WBBL|04 team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285449-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hobart Hurricanes WBBL season, Squad, Personnel changes\nAdjustments made to the squad before and during the season included:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285449-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hobart Hurricanes WBBL season, Squad, Players and statistics\nThe table below lists the Hurricanes players and their key stats (including runs scored, batting strike rate, wickets taken, economy rate, catches and stumpings) for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285450-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 HockeyAllsvenskan season\nThe 2018\u201319 HockeyAllsvenskan season is the 14th season that the second tier of Swedish ice hockey has operated under that name. The series consists of 14 teams playing a regular season in which each team plays each other team four times, twice at home and twice away. This is followed by a series of promotion and relegation tournaments, with the teams finishing first through eight participating in promotion playoffs, and the teams finishing 13th and 14th forced to requalify to avoid relegation to the Hockeyettan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285450-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 HockeyAllsvenskan season, Post-season, Finals\nThe top two teams from the regular season will meet in a best-of-five tournament, with the winner advancing directly to the SHL qualifiers, and the losing team forced to play an additional playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285450-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 HockeyAllsvenskan season, Post-season, HockeyAllsvenskan playoffs\nTeams 3\u20138 from the regular season will play a single round-robin tournament, with teams 3\u20135 getting home-ice advantage. The season is then over for all but the winning team, which advances to the meet the loser of the HockeyAllsvenskan finals in a playoff to the SHL qualifiers. Teams also started with bonus points based on their position in the regular season standings. Team 3 began with three points, team 4 with two points, and team 5 with one point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285450-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 HockeyAllsvenskan season, Post-season, Playoff to the SHL qualifiers\nIn the playoff to the SHL qualifiers (Swedish: Play Off inf\u00f6r direktkval till SHL), the losing team from the HockeyAllsvenskan finals will meet the winning team from the HockeyAllsvenskan playoffs in a best-of-three series. The winning team will advance to the SHL qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 76], "content_span": [77, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285450-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 HockeyAllsvenskan season, Post-season, SHL qualifiers\nTwo teams from the HockeyAllsvenskan and two teams from the SHL played a best-of-seven series, with the winners qualifying for play in the 2019\u201320 SHL season and the losers qualifying for play in the 2019\u201320 HockeyAllsvenskan season. The winner of the HockeyAllsvenskan finals met team 14 from the SHL, while the winner of the playoff to the SHL qualifiers met team 13 from the SHL. Mora IK and Leksands IF faced each other for the third consecutive year, in these qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285450-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 HockeyAllsvenskan season, Post-season, SHL qualifiers\nFor the first time since 2013 and for the first time since the current SHL qualifier format was introduced in 2015, both SHL teams (Timr\u00e5 IK and Mora IK) failed to re-qualify for the SHL and thus were relegated. IK Oskarshamn and Leksands IF qualified for the SHL by winning their respective series. IK Oskarshamn promoted to the top-tier league for the first time in the club's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285450-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 HockeyAllsvenskan season, HockeyAllsvenskan qualifiers\nTeams 13 and 14 from the regular season will defend their spots in HockeyAllsvenskan in the HockeyAllsvenskan qualifiers (Swedish: Kval till HockeyAllsvenskan).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 62], "content_span": [63, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285451-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hofstra Pride men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Hofstra Pride men's basketball team represented Hofstra University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Pride, led by sixth-year head coach Joe Mihalich, played their home games at Mack Sports Complex in Hempstead, New York as members of the Colonial Athletic Association. Hofstra won the CAA regular season championship but lost to Northeastern in the championship game of the 2019 CAA Men's Basketball Tournament. Their regular season championship earned them an automatic berth to the 2019 National Invitational Tournament, where they lost to NC State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285451-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hofstra Pride men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Pride finished the 2017\u201318 season 19\u201312, 12\u20136 in CAA play to finish in third place. They lost in the first round of the CAA Tournament to UNC Wilmington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285452-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hofstra Pride women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Hofstra Pride women's basketball team represents Hofstra University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Pride, led by thirteenth year head coach Krista Kilburn-Steveskey, play their home games at Hofstra Arena and are members of the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA). They finished the season 11\u201322, 3\u201315 in CAA play to finish in a tie for last place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the CAA Women's Tournament where they lost to James Madison.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285452-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hofstra Pride women's basketball team\nOn March 26, Kilburn-Steveskey announced her resignation from Hofstra after 13 seasons, leaving with the program's most wins as head coach (211).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285453-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Holy Cross Crusaders men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Holy Cross Crusaders men's basketball team represented the College of the Holy Cross during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Crusaders, led by fourth-year head coach Bill Carmody, played their home games at the Hart Center in Worcester, Massachusetts as members of the Patriot League. They finished the season 16\u201317, 6\u201312 in Patriot League play to finish in last place. They defeated Lafayette in the first round of the Patriot League Tournament before losing to Bucknell in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285453-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Holy Cross Crusaders men's basketball team\nFollowing the season, head coach Bill Carmody announced his retirement. On July 3, 2019, the school named Marquette assistant Brett Nelson as Carmody's replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285453-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Holy Cross Crusaders men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Crusaders finished the season 12\u201319, 8\u201310 in Patriot League play to finish in sixth place. In the Patriot League Tournament, they defeated Navy in the quarterfinals before losing to Colgate in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285454-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Holy Cross Crusaders women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Holy Cross Crusaders women's basketball team represents the College of the Holy Cross during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Crusaders, led by thirty-fourth year head coach Bill Gibbons, play their home games at the Hart Center and were members of the Patriot League. They finished the season 18\u201313, 9\u20139 in Patriot League play to finish in fifth place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the Patriot League Women's Tournament where they lost to Bucknell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285455-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Honduran Liga Nacional de Ascenso\nThe 2018\u201319 Honduran Liga Nacional de Ascenso is the 52nd season of the Second level in Honduran football and the 17th under the name Liga Nacional de Ascenso. The tournament is divided into two halves (Apertura and Clausura), each crowning one champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285455-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Honduran Liga Nacional de Ascenso, Apertura\nThe Apertura tournament runs from August to December 2018. C.D. Real Sociedad won the tournament after defeating San Juan F.C. in the final series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285455-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Honduran Liga Nacional de Ascenso, Promotion\nC.D. Real Sociedad and Olancho F.C., the winners of both Apertura and Clausura respectively, faced to decide the team promoted to 2019\u201320 Honduran Liga Nacional. Real Sociedad obtained promotion again after being relegated one year ago.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 52], "content_span": [53, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285456-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hong Kong FA Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Hong Kong FA Cup was the 44th edition of the Hong Kong FA Cup. 10 teams entered this edition, with two games played in Round 1 before the Quarter Final stage. The competition was only open to clubs who participated in the 2018\u201319 Hong Kong Premier League, with lower division sides entering a separate competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285456-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hong Kong FA Cup\nThe champion received HK$100,000 in prize money and the runners up received HK$40,000. The MVP of the final received a HK$10,000 bonus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285456-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hong Kong FA Cup, Bracket\nBold = winner* = after extra time, ( ) = penalty shootout score", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285457-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hong Kong First Division League\nThe 2018\u201319 Hong Kong First Division League was the 5th season of Hong Kong First Division since it became the second-tier football league in Hong Kong in 2014\u201315. The season began on 9 September 2018 and ended on 12 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285458-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hong Kong Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Hong Kong Premier League (also known as the BOC Life Hong Kong Premier League for sponsorship reasons) was the fifth season of the Hong Kong Premier League, the top division of Hong Kong football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285458-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hong Kong Premier League\nTai Po won their first top flight title in club history. They are the third different team to win the Hong Kong Premier League and the first district team to win a top flight title since Yuen Long during the 1962\u201363 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285458-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hong Kong Premier League, Teams\nA total of 10 teams contest the league, including nine sides from the 2017\u201318 Hong Kong Premier League and one promoted from the 2017\u201318 Hong Kong First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285458-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hong Kong Premier League, Teams, Stadia and locations\nRemarks:1The capacity of Aberdeen Sports Ground is artificially reduced from 9,000 to 4,000 as only the main stand is opened for football matches. 2The capacity of Yanzigang Stadium is artificially reduced from 2,000 to 1,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285458-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hong Kong Premier League, Teams, Foreign players\nThe number of foreign players is restricted to six (including one Asian player) per team, with no more than four on pitch during matches. R&F are allowed to register a maximum of 3 foreigners at any one time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285458-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hong Kong Premier League, Positions by round\nTo 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285458-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hong Kong Premier League, Attendances\nSource: Notes:1: Team did not play in the Premier League last season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285459-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hong Kong Second Division League\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Frietjes (talk | contribs) at 14:59, 28 January 2020 (\u2192\u200eReferences). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285459-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hong Kong Second Division League\nThe 2018\u201319 Hong Kong Second Division League was the 5th season of the Hong Kong Second Division since it became the third-tier football league in Hong Kong in 2014\u201315. The season began on 9 September 2018 and ended on 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285460-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hong Kong Senior Challenge Shield\nThe 2018\u201319 Hong Kong Senior Challenge Shield was the 117th edition of the Hong Kong Senior Shield. 10 teams entered this edition, with two games being played in Round 1 before the Quarter Final stage. The competition was only open to teams that played in the 2018\u201319 Hong Kong Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285460-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hong Kong Senior Challenge Shield\nThe champions received HK$150,000 in prize money while the runners up received HK$50,000. The MVP of the final received a HK$10,000 bonus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285460-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hong Kong Senior Challenge Shield, Bracket\nBold = winner* = after extra time, ( ) = penalty shootout score", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285461-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hong Kong Third Division League\nThe 2018\u201319 Hong Kong Third Division League was the 5th season of Hong Kong Third Division since it became the fourth-tier football league in Hong Kong in 2014\u201315. The season began on 16 September 2018 and ended on 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285462-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse\nThe 2018\u201319 season of the Hoofdklasse was played in four leagues, two Saturday leagues and two Sunday leagues. The champions of each group promoted directly to the 2019\u201320 Derde Divisie. The 2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse started on Saturday 1 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285462-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse, Play-offs, Promotion\nIn each competition teams play periods of 10 games, three times per season (30 games per season). After each period the best team which has not yet qualified earns a spot in the play-offs for the Derde Divisie as the period champion. If a period winner ends the season as champions, they will be replaced by the highest ranked team not yet qualified for the play-offs. In total 12 (substitute) period winners and 4 teams from the Derde Divisie compete for 3 spots in next seasons Derde Divisie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 41], "content_span": [42, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285462-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse, Play-offs, Promotion\nDue to the removal of Papendorp from the league, there have been only 2 periods of 14 games each in the Hoofdklasse B Sunday. The highest ranked team not yet qualified for the play-offs was assigned as third period winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 41], "content_span": [42, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285462-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse, Play-offs, Relegation\nThe teams in place 13 and 14 at the end of the season fight against relegation in the relegation play-offs. They face the period champions of the Eerste Klasse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 42], "content_span": [43, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285462-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse, Promotion/Relegation Play-offs Hoofdklasse and Eerste Klasse, Saturday\nThe numbers 13 and 14 from each of the 2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse Saturday leagues (2 times 2 teams) and 3 (substitute) period winners of each of the 2018\u201319 Eerste Klasse Saturday leagues (5 times 3 teams), making 19 teams, decide in a 3-round single match knockout system, which 3 teams play next season in the 2019\u201320 Hoofdklasse Saturday leagues. The remaining 16 teams play next season in the 2019\u201320 Eerste Klasse Saturday leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 91], "content_span": [92, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285462-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse, Promotion/Relegation Play-offs Hoofdklasse and Eerste Klasse, Saturday\nThe 2 highest ranked Hoofdklasse teams (numbers 13) are released from playing the first round. Out of the 2 lowest ranked Hoofdklasse teams (numbers 14) and the 5 highest ranked (substitute) period winners (HPWs), 3 more teams are by draw released from playing the first round. The remaining 14 teams are paired by draw in such a way that, a HK or HPW team will always play a lowest ranked (substitute) period winner (LPW), and the highest ranked team gets the home advantage. The ranking order is HPW, HK, middle ranked (substitute) period winner (MPW) and LPW teams. If 2 equally ranked teams face each other, the order in which the 2 teams are drawn decides on the home advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 91], "content_span": [92, 775]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285462-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse, Promotion/Relegation Play-offs Hoofdklasse and Eerste Klasse, Saturday\nThe 7 winners of the first round and the 5 teams released from playing the first round, making 12 teams, are paired by draw. The highest ranked team gets the home advantage. The ranking order is identical as in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 91], "content_span": [92, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285462-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse, Promotion/Relegation Play-offs Hoofdklasse and Eerste Klasse, Saturday\nThe 6 winners of the second round are paired by draw. Matches are played on neutral ground and the 3 winners play next season in the 2019\u201320 Hoofdklasse Saturday leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 91], "content_span": [92, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285462-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse, Promotion/Relegation Play-offs Hoofdklasse and Eerste Klasse, Saturday, Results\nARC promoted to the 2019-20 Hoofdklasse Saturday. Spijkenisse and DETO Twenterand maintained in the 2019-20 Hoofdklasse Saturday. CSV Apeldoorn and Nootdorp relegated to the 2019-20 Eerste Klasse Saturday. The other teams remained in the 2019-20 Eerste Klasse Saturday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 100], "content_span": [101, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285462-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse, Promotion/Relegation Play-offs Hoofdklasse and Eerste Klasse, Sunday\nThe numbers 13 and 14 from each of the 2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse Sunday leagues (2 times 2 teams) and 3 (substitute) period winners of each of the 2018\u201319 Eerste Klasse Sunday leagues (6 times 3 teams), making 22 teams, decide in a 4-round single match knockout system, which 2 teams play next season in the 2019\u201320 Hoofdklasse Sunday leagues. The remaining 20 teams play next season in the 2019\u201320 Eerste Klasse Sunday leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 89], "content_span": [90, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285462-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse, Promotion/Relegation Play-offs Hoofdklasse and Eerste Klasse, Sunday\nThe Hoofdklasse teams and 6 highest ranked (substitute) period winners (HPWs) are released from playing the first round. The 12 remaining (substitute) period winners are paired by draw in such a way that, a middle (substitute) period winner (MPW) will always play a lowest ranked (substitute) period winner (LPW). The MPW teams also get the home advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 89], "content_span": [90, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285462-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse, Promotion/Relegation Play-offs Hoofdklasse and Eerste Klasse, Sunday\nThe 6 winners of the first round and the 10 teams released from playing the first round, making 16 teams, are paired by draw in such a way that, two HPW teams can never face each other. The highest ranked team gets the home advantage. The ranking order is HPW, highest ranked Hoofdklasse (HHK) teams (numbers 13), lowest ranked Hoofdklasse (LHK) teams (numbers 14), MPW and LPW teams. If 2 equally ranked teams face each other, the order in which the 2 teams are drawn decides on the home advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 89], "content_span": [90, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285462-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse, Promotion/Relegation Play-offs Hoofdklasse and Eerste Klasse, Sunday\nThe 8 winners of the first round are paired by draw. The highest ranked team gets the home advantage. The ranking order is identical as in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 89], "content_span": [90, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285462-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse, Promotion/Relegation Play-offs Hoofdklasse and Eerste Klasse, Sunday\nThe 4 winners of the third round are paired by draw. Matches are played on neutral ground and the 2 winners play next season in the 2019\u201320 Hoofdklasse Sunday leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 89], "content_span": [90, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285462-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse, Promotion/Relegation Play-offs Hoofdklasse and Eerste Klasse, Sunday, Results\nMoerse Boys and JOS Watergraafsmeer promoted to the 2019-20 Hoofdklasse Sunday. De Bataven, Vlissingen and Fortuna Wormerveer relegated to the 2019-20 Eerste Klasse Sunday. VKW and Leonidas played an extra match. The other teams remained in the 2019-20 Eerste Klasse Sunday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 98], "content_span": [99, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285462-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse, Promotion/Relegation Play-offs Hoofdklasse and Eerste Klasse, Sunday, Extra match\nBecause JVC Cuijk, relegated from the Derde Divisie, decided to stop playing football at top amateur levels completely, due to lack of the necessary funds, an extra spot became available in the Hoofdklasse Sunday leagues. Therefore the two teams who lost in the fourth round of the play-offs were given a second chance. In an extra match, on neutral ground, these teams competed for the spot that became available.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 102], "content_span": [103, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285462-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse, Promotion/Relegation Play-offs Hoofdklasse and Eerste Klasse, Sunday, Extra match\nLeonidas maintained in the 2019-20 Hoofdklasse Saturday Sunday. VKW remained in the 2019-20 Eerste Klasse Sunday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 102], "content_span": [103, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285463-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Horizon League men's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 Horizon League men's basketball season began with practices in October 2018, followed by the start of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season in November. Conference play began in January 2019 and concluded in February 2019. The season marked the 39th season of Horizon League basketball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285463-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Horizon League men's basketball season, Regular season, Conference matrix\nThis table summarizes the head-to-head results between teams in conference play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285463-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Horizon League men's basketball season, Coaches, Coaching changes\nOn March 26, 2018, Detroit Mercy fired head coach Bacari Alexander after two seasons. On June 5, the school hired Texas Southern head coach Mike Davis as the Titans' new coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285464-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Houston Baptist Huskies men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Houston Baptist Huskies men's basketball team represent Houston Baptist University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They are led by head coach Ron Cottrell in his 28th season at HBU. The Huskies play their home games at Sharp Gymnasium as members of the Southland Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285464-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Houston Baptist Huskies men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Huskies finished the 2017\u201318 season 6\u201325, 2\u201316 in Southland play to finish in a tie for 11th place. They failed to qualify for the Southland Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285465-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Houston Baptist Huskies women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Houston Baptist Huskies women's basketball team will represent Houston Baptist University in the 2018\u201319 college basketball season. The Huskies, led by sixth year head coach Donna Finnie, will play their home games at the Sharp Gymnasium and were members of the Southland Conference. They finished the season 8\u201320, 3\u201315 in Southland play to finish in a tie for last place. They failed to qualify for the Southland Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285465-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Houston Baptist Huskies women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Huskies finished the 2017\u201318 season with an overall record of 10\u201318 and 6\u201312 in Southland play to finish in tenth place. They failed to qualify for the Southland Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 72], "content_span": [73, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285466-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Houston Cougars men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Houston Cougars men's basketball team represented the University of Houston during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Cougars were led by fifth-year head coach Kelvin Sampson as members of the American Athletic Conference. Beginning December 1, 2018, they played their home games at Fertitta Center, which reopened after a $60 million upgrade. The Cougars played their first four non-conference home games at H&PE Arena while construction on Fertitta Center was completed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285466-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Houston Cougars men's basketball team\nHouston finished the 2018\u201319 regular season 29\u20132, including an AAC-best 16\u20132 record in conference play. They were the runner-up in the American Athletic Conference Tournament, falling 69\u201357 to Cincinnati in the final. The Cougars earned the #3 seed in the Midwest Region of the NCAA Tournament, where they went 2\u20131, advancing to the Sweet Sixteen before falling 62\u201358 to Kentucky. Houston's final overall season record of 33\u20134 set a program record for wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285466-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Houston Cougars men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Cougars finished the 2017\u201318 season 27\u20138, 14\u20134 in AAC play to finish in a tie for second place. As the No. 3 seed in the AAC Tournament, they defeated UCF and Wichita State before losing to Cincinnati in the championship game. The Cougars received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as the No. 6 seed in the West region. They defeated San Diego State in the First Round before losing to eventual National Runner-up Michigan in the Second Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285467-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Houston Cougars women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Houston Cougars women's basketball team represented the University of Houston during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The season marked the sixth for the Cougars as members of the American Athletic Conference. The Cougars were led by fifth-year head coach Ronald Hughey. They played their home games at Fertitta Center, which reopened on December 1, 2018, after a $60 million upgrade. The Cougars played their first three non-conference home games at H&PE Arena while construction on Fertitta Center was completed. They finished the season 15\u201316, 9\u20137 in The American play to finish in fourth place. They lost to South Florida in the quarterfinals of the American Athletic Conference Women's Tournament. They received an at-large bid to the Women's National Invitation Tournament, where they lost to Arkansas in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 909]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285467-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Houston Cougars women's basketball team, Media\nAll Cougars games home and away are aired on the Houston Cougars IMG Sports Network, streamed online via the , with Gerald Sanchez and Louis Ray on the call. Before conference season home games were streamed on . Conference home games rotated between ESPN3, , and the Houston Portal. Road games typically streamed on the opponents' websites, though some conference road games also appeared on ESPN3 or AAC Digital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 54], "content_span": [55, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285468-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Houston Rockets season\nThe 2018\u201319 Houston Rockets season was the 52nd season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA), and their 48th in the Houston area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285468-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Houston Rockets season\nDespite early struggles in the season including an on-court altercation between rival guards Chris Paul and Rajon Rondo, injuries among its players, and losing core players including Trevor Ariza, the team made a dramatic improvement and finished as the 4th seed in the West. Most notable within the surge would be Harden's impressive play. It included his 30-point streak which started on December 11, all the way to a surprising 32 games until ending on February 25. This streak had left him 2nd for continuous 30+ points in a game, leaving Wilt Chamberlain as 1st. On March 24, against the Pelicans, they had clinched another playoff spot for the 7th straight year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285468-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Houston Rockets season\nIn the playoffs, the Rockets defeated the Utah Jazz in the First Round in five games. However, the Rockets would lose in six games against the two-time defending NBA champion Golden State Warriors in the Western Conference Semifinals, their fourth playoff exit against the Warriors in the last five postseasons. They previously lost to the Warriors in 2015 (conference finals), 2016 (first round), and 2018 (conference finals).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285468-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Houston Rockets season, Draft picks\nEntering the night of the draft, the Rockets had only one selection at hand, with it being the pick they acquired from the Miami Heat via a previous trade involving the Memphis Grizzlies and Charlotte Hornets, being the lowest second round pick of those teams. On the night of the draft, the Rockets selected former University of Southern California guard De'Anthony Melton as their sole selection that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285468-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Houston Rockets season, Draft picks\nMelton only played one season at USC, playing that previous season as a starter in 25 out of 36 games played there, recording averages of 8.3 points, 4.7 rebounds, 3.5 assists, 1.0 blocks, and 1.9 steals per game that season. He was originally planned to play in his sophomore season, but was suspended and later left in relation to the 2017\u201318 NCAA Division I men's basketball corruption scandal. Prior to the start of the season, Melton was traded alongside veteran power forward Ryan Anderson to the Phoenix Suns on August 31, 2018, in exchange for veteran point guard Brandon Knight and power forward Marquese Chriss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285468-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Houston Rockets season, Player statistics, Regular season\nAfter all games. \u2021Waived during the season\u2020Traded during the season\u2260Acquired during the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285469-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Howard Bison men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Howard Bison men's basketball team represented Howard University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bison, led by ninth-year head coach Kevin Nickelberry, played their home games at Burr Gymnasium in Washington, D.C. as members of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285470-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Huddersfield Town's 110th year in existence and second season in the Premier League following promotion via the 2017 Championship play-off Final. The club has finished their FA Cup and EFL Cup campaigns. They suffered the joint-earliest relegation to the Championship since Derby County in 2008 after a 2\u20130 defeat to Crystal Palace on 30 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285470-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285470-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Competitions, Premier League, Matches\nOn 14 June 2018, the Premier League fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 78], "content_span": [79, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285470-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285470-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nThe second-round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 62], "content_span": [63, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285470-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Awards, Huddersfield Town Blue & White Foundation Player of the Month Award\nAwarded monthly to the player that was chosen by members of the Blue & White Foundation voting on", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 116], "content_span": [117, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285471-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hull City A.F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Hull City's second consecutive season in the Championship and their 115th year in existence. Along with the Championship, the club competed in the FA Cup and EFL Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285471-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hull City A.F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285471-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hull City A.F.C. season, First team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285471-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hull City A.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, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285471-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hull City A.F.C. season, Pre-season\nThe players returned to pre-season training on 25 June 2018. On 8 July 2018 the team travelled to Portugal for a 12-day training camp. On 25 May 2018 two fixtures were confirmed as part of the Portugal trip, Maritimo on 10 July 2018 and Braga on 13 July 2018. On 31 May 2018 an away fixture against Rochdale on 21 July 2018 was announced and a home fixture against Newcastle United was announced to take place on 24 July 2018. A further away fixture against Barnsley was scheduled for 28 July 2018. The final work-out for the team was the Billy Bly Memorial Trophy against North Ferriby United that was contested at the Chadwick Stadium, North Ferriby on 30 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285471-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hull City A.F.C. season, Competitions, Championship, Matches\nThe fixtures for the season were announced on 21 June 2018. Hull start the season with a home match against Aston Villa, run by former manager Steve Bruce, on 6 August 2018. This being the reverse of the opening match of the previous season. The season will close on 5 May 2019 with a home match against Bristol City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285471-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hull City A.F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nThe draw for the first-round of the cup took place on 15 June 2018 in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam with the ties taking place in the week commencing 13 August 2018. Hull were in the Northern Section of the draw and were drawn away to Sheffield United. The match was played on 14 August 2018. Hull got off to a good start with Jon Toral opening the scoring on the 18-minute mark, both teams had chances to score but it was not until the 75th minute that Billy Sharp brought Sheffield level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285471-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hull City A.F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nThe match finished 1\u20131 and a penalty shootout was required to find a winner. Sheffield got off to a bad start with Oliver Norwood missing his kick but all the other kicks were converted so Hull won 5\u20134 on penalties, to put them in to the second-round. The draw for the second-round took place the following day and Hull was drawn at home to Derby County, matches to take place week beginning 27 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285471-0006-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hull City A.F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nThe match took place on 28 August 2018, and Derby County got off the ground after 24-minutes when Martyn Waghorn lobbed the ball over George Long on his debut for Hull. Florian Jozefzoon scored his first goal for Derby after 38-minutes and after 73-minutes he again shot at goal which was deflected in by Brandon Fleming. Mason Mount added a fourth just before full-time, leaving Hull to exit the competition 0\u20134 on the night.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285471-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hull City A.F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe draw for the Third Round of the FA Cup took place at Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018. Hull were drawn away to their next league opponents Millwall with the match taking place over the week-end of 4\u20137 January 2019. The match was chosen for live broadcast and scheduled for 14:00 on 6 January 2019. The first-half saw Millwall have the better of the chances but failed to capitalise. Early in the second-half Jon Toral broke the deadlock for Hull. Following a triple substitution by Millwall after 64-minutes things turned Millwall's way with substitute Shane Ferguson opening their account in the 82nd minute. Three minutes later he scored a second to give Millwall a 2\u20131 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285471-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285471-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hull City A.F.C. season, Kits\nThe home kit for the 2018\u201319 season was unveiled on 8 June 2018, manufactured by Umbro, the shirt is a traditional black and amber vertical stripped design, complemented by black with amber trim shorts and amber socks with black bands. The away kit was unveiled on 20 July 2018 as all black with amber trim. The third kit was revealed on 13 August 2018, as all white shirts and socks with Sulphur Spring detailing. With the shorts being Sulphur Spring. SportPesa is the shirt sponsor and in March 2019 it was announced that this sponsorship would be extended to the 2019\u201320 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285471-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hull City A.F.C. season, Awards\nThe annual awards for the club took place on 7 May 2019 and saw Jarrod Bowen pick-up the Player of the Year, Players' Player of the Year and Supporters' Player of the Year awards. Evandro Goebel was presented with the Goal of the Season award for his goal against Aston Villa on 19 January 2019. Keane Lewis-Potter took the award for Academy Player of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Hyderabad cricket team's 85th competitive season. The Hyderabad cricket team and Hyderabad women's cricket team are senior men's and women's domestic cricket teams based in the city of Hyderabad, India, run by the Hyderabad Cricket Association (HCA). They represent the state of Telangana in domestic competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Squads\nPragyan Ojha moved to the Bihar ahead of the 2018\u201319 season. The Hyderabad also got new coach with Yadav replacing J. Arunkumar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Squads\nSandeep got selected to the India Red squad for the 2018\u201319 Duleep Trophy, a first-class cricket tournament in India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Squads\nSiraj got selected to the India A while Rohit to the India B for the 2018\u201319 Deodhar Trophy, a List A cricket tournament in India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Squads\nSiraj and Rayudu were retained by the Royal Challengers Bangalore and the Chennai Super Kings ahead of the auction for the 2019 Indian Premier League, a professional Twenty20 cricket league in India. None of the Hyderabad players were picked by the franchises during the auction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Vijay Hazare Trophy\nThe Vijay Hazare Trophy, a List A cricket tournament in India, fixtures were announced by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) on 29 August 2018 and the Hyderabad was placed in the Group B with all the group fixtures to be played in New Delhi. The team was selected on 12 September with Akshath Reddy appointed as the captain and Arjun Yadav as the head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Vijay Hazare Trophy\nAmbati Rayudu missed out on the selection because of his national duties for the 2018 Asia Cup while Chama Milind, who missed out last season because of the injury, made a comeback into the squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0005-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Vijay Hazare Trophy\nThough there were doubts on the team selected owing to the eligibility of the selection committee who were appointed by the steering committee led by former players like V. V. S. Laxman and Mohammad Azharuddin but did not get cleared by the HCA general body as per the BCCI rule book, the team finally got the nod for the tournament on 18 September from the High Court appointed Committee of Administrators (CoA) though the CoA declared the selection committee illegal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Vijay Hazare Trophy\nThe Hyderabad began their campaign on a winning note defeating the Madhya Pradesh by seven wickets. The Hyderabadi bowlers took regular wickets to bowl-out Madhya Pradesh to 231 while measured half-centuries from Tanmay Agarwal and Rohit Rayudu completed the chase for the Hyderabad with seven wickets and 14 balls to spare. In the second match, Nitish Rana's unbeaten knock of 91 in 87 balls helped the Delhi chase the revised target of 176 in 30.4 overs in a rain-hit match to hand the Hyderabad their first defeat in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Vijay Hazare Trophy\nEarlier, it was Manan Sharma who troubled the Hyderabad batsmen in the middle with his four-wicket haul until Mohammad Siraj's cameo at the end with a couple of sixes that helped the Hyderabad to recover to 205. In another rain-affected reduced-over match, the Saurashtra successfully chased the revised target of 110 in 19 overs with the combined batting effort from Robin Uthappa, Aarpit Vasavada and Prerak Mankad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0006-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Vijay Hazare Trophy\nEarlier, the Hyderabad recovered in the middle from the top-order collapse with 95-run partnership between Kolla Sumanth and Bavanaka Sandeep but could not capitalize on that partnership as the Hyderabad suffered from another collapse at the end and were restricted to 196 in 45 overs. The Hyderabad's match against the Andhra, their fourth match of the tournament, was washed off due to the incessant rains in Delhi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0006-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Vijay Hazare Trophy\nIn the fifth match, Mehdi Hasan's maiden fifer helped the Hyderabad bowl out the Uttar Pradesh for 130 despite their skipper, Suresh Raina's half-century while the opening partnership of 124 between Akshath and Tanmay handed the Hyderabad a 9-wicket win over the Uttar Pradesh. Chasing 223 to win, the Chhattisgarh were bowled out to 121 with Palakodeti Sairam and Mehdi sharing three wickets between them as the Hyderabad secured their third win in six matches. Earlier, Rohit's half-century along with the support from Sandeep's 41 helped the Hyderabad post 222 in 50 overs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0006-0004", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Vijay Hazare Trophy\nSiraj missed the rest of the group matches for the Hyderabad as he was selected to the national team for the test series against the West Indies. In the seventh match, two-wicket hauls along with the tight bowling from Sairam and Ravi Kiran helped the Hyderabad restrict the Kerala to 189 despite the half-century from VA Jagadeesh while an unbeaten century partnership between Rohit and Sandeep completed the chase for the Hyderabad with seven wickets to spare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0006-0005", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Vijay Hazare Trophy\nThe Hyderabad survived the scare in their last group match defeating the Odisha narrowly by one wicket but still need the favorable results on the last day to qualify for the knockout stage. Chasing 248 to win, the Hyderabad enjoyed the strong start with the half-centuries from their openers, Tanmay and Akshath but their dismissals triggered the batting collapsed until an unbeaten 43-run knock from Sumanth completed the chase despite the flurry of wickets at the other end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0006-0006", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Vijay Hazare Trophy\nEarlier, the Odisha had a strong start too with the century partnership between Govinda Poddar and Subhranshu Senapati but the six-wicket haul from Milind helped the Hyderabad restrict the Odisha to 247. The defeat of the Baroda to the Maharashtra in the Group A helped the Hyderabad advance to the knockout stage as they finished third in the Group B and fifth across the groups A & B with five wins, two losses and a draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Vijay Hazare Trophy\nThe fixtures for the knockout stage were announced by the BCCI on 11 October with Bengaluru hosting all the fixtures as the Hyderabad faced the Andhra in the quarter-final on 15 October. The Hyderabad announced their squad for the knockout stage on 11 October as Rayudu came back to the squad to lead the team following the completion of the Asia Cup. Rayudu replaced Himalay Agarwal while Mohammad Muddassir replaced Siraj and the Hyderabad's U\u201319 all-rounder, Ajay Dev Goud replaced Ashish Reddy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0007-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Vijay Hazare Trophy\nWith Siraj not being selected into playing XI for the India during the on-going West Indies Test Series, he was released by the BCCI on 14 October to play for the Hyderabad during the knockout stage. Chasing 282 in 50 overs, the Andhra lost the first wicket to Siraj but the half-centuries from Hanuma Vihari and Ricky Bhui put the Andhra in the winning position only for the Siraj to come back and remove the both set-batsmen that triggered the Andhra's collapse as they were restricted to 267 and helped the Hyderabad advance to the semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0007-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Vijay Hazare Trophy\nEarlier, the Hyderabad posted 281 with the help of Sandeep's 96-run knock along with the supporting knocks from Rayudu and Sumanth in the middle and brisk scoring from Milind at the end. The Hyderabad was eliminated in the semi-final where the Mumbai defeated them in a rain-hit match by 60 runs. The Hyderabad were troubled early in the match despite Sandeep's counter-attack and were reduced to 123/6 in 35 overs but an unbeaten ton from Rohit along with the support from Akash Bhandari and Mehdi helped the Hyderabad post 246 in 50 overs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0007-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Vijay Hazare Trophy\nPrithvi Shaw started aggressively for the Mumbai scoring his fifty in just 34 balls and helped the Mumbai post 155 in 25 overs along with the support of an unbeaten half-century from Shreyas Iyer before the rain stopped the play. The Mumbai were adjudged winners as they were ahead by 60 runs according to the VJD method.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Vijay Hazare Trophy, Points Table\nPoints system\u00a0: W = 4, T/NR = 2, L = 0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 83], "content_span": [84, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Ranji Trophy\nRanji Trophy, a first-class cricket tournament in India, fixtures were announced by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) on 29 August 2018 and the Hyderabad was placed in Group B. The team was selected on 29 October with Akshath Reddy appointed as the captain to lead the team in their opening match against the Kerala on 1 November in the absence of their senior player, Ambati Rayudu, who was on the national duty. Rayudu later announced his retirement from the first-class cricket on 3 November to focus on the shorter version of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Ranji Trophy\nThe Hyderabad began their campaign with a draw against the Kerala. The centuries from Sachin Baby and VA Jagadeesh helped the Kerala declare their first innings at 495/6 after they lost the toss and were put to bat by the Hyderabad. The rain played the spoil-sport washing out the third day with the match heading towards the draw while Kolla Sumanth and Bavanaka Sandeep avoided the Kerala bowl out the Hyderabad for three points on the last day as both teams shared one point each in the end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0010-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Ranji Trophy\nThe Hyderabad won the toss and elected to bat in the second match against the Tamil Nadu who were competing without their main players \u2013 Ravichandran Ashwin, Murali Vijay and Vijay Shankar. Akshath led their batting from the front scoring his maiden double century in the first-class cricket while Sandeep scored a century as the Hyderabad declared their innings at 565/8 inside first hour of the third day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0010-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Ranji Trophy\nThe centuries from Abhinav Mukund and Narayan Jagadeesan helped the Tamil Nadu not lose the wickets as their first innings remained unfinished ending the match in a draw as both teams shared a point. The Hyderabad faced the Nitish Rana-led Delhi on 20 November as they won the toss and elected to bat in their first home match of the tournament while the Delhi missed the services of their senior players, Gautam Gambhir and Ishant Sharma, in this match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0010-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Ranji Trophy\nThe century from Tanmay Agarwal provided the good start for the Hyderaabad while the maiden century from Ravi Teja and his 133-run stand with Chama Milind helped the Hyderabad post 460 in their first innings despite the middle-order collapse. The debutant, Tanay Thyagarajan, put the Hyderabad on the top as his five-wicket haul helped the Hyderabad secure the first innings lead on the last day of the match despite the half-centuries from Hiten Dalal, Lalit Yadav and Rana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0010-0004", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Ranji Trophy\nHaving already secured three points for the match and not much time to get the result for the match, the Hyderabad posted 156/1 in 43 overs with the help of the half-centuries from Tanmay and Akshath before the both sides agreed to call-off the match early. The Hyderabad lost the toss and were asked to field as they faced the Himachal Pradesh in their fourth match. The century from Prashant Chopra along with the half-centuries from Priyanshu Khanduri and Mayank Dagar helped the Himachal post 351.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0010-0005", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Ranji Trophy\nIn reply, the collective batting effort from the Hyderabad batsmen including the half-centuries from Akshath, Sandeep and Ravi Teja helped them secure a slender first innings lead of one run. The Hyderabad bowlers led by Ravi Kiran bowled out the Himachal on the last day for 97 in 45.2 overs in the second innings with Ravi Kiran claiming four wickets while their openers completed the chase in 29 overs to secure a ten-wicket win and a bonus point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Ranji Trophy\nThe Hyderabad were bowled out for 124 in 35.3 overs after losing the toss and asked to bat against the Madhya Pradesh in their fifth match of the tournament. Himalay Agarwal resisted the initial collapse to help the Hyderabad recover from 29/5 and remained unbeaten at 69 as Avesh Khan finished the innings with his seven-wicket haul. The debutant, Ajay Rohera, posted an unbeaten world-record debut score of 267 as the Madhya Pradesh declared their first innings at 562.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0011-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Ranji Trophy\nThe Hyderabad could not avoid the collapse once again as they were bowled out for 185 despite the half-century from Rohit Rayudu as the first innings hero for the Madhya Pradesh, Khan, finished the match with another five-wicket haul in the second innings to help the Madhya Pradesh win by an innings and a bonus point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0011-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Ranji Trophy\nMohammad Siraj and Karthikeya Kak were added to the squad with former returning from a successful tour with the India A and latter on his form while playing for U-23 while KSK Chaitanya replaced the out-of-form Sumanth as wicket-keeper in the playing XI ahead of the match against the Bengal. The Hyderabad won the toss and elected to field which was affected by the delayed start due to wet outfield as Abhimanyu Easwaran's knock of 186 helped the Bengal post 336 despite the four-wicket haul from Ravi Kiran. In reply, the half-centuries from Rohit and Himalay could not help the Hyderabad get three points as the four-wicket hauls from Ashoke Dinda and Mukesh Kumar helped the Bengal take the first-innings lead of 24 runs in a drawn match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 806]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Ranji Trophy, Points Table\nPoints system\u00a0: Win by an innings or 10 wickets = 7, Win = 6, Draw with first innings lead = 3, Draw with first innings deficit = 1, No Result = 1, Loss = 0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 76], "content_span": [77, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy\nThe Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, a Twenty20 tournament in India, fixtures were announced by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) and the Hyderabad was placed in the Group E with all the group fixtures to be played at New Delhi. Ambati Rayudu announced his availability for the team ahead of the tournament. The Hyderabad selectors made the passing of Yo-Yo fitness endurance test, an endurance test used by the Indian cricket team and the other international teams, as mandatory for the selection process to ascertain the fitness level of the players. The 15-men squad led by Rayudu was announced on 15 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Men's team, Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, Points Table\nPoints system\u00a0: W = 4, T/NR = 2, L = 0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 87], "content_span": [88, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Women's team, Squads\nTrisha got selected to the India Blue squad for the 2018\u201319 Senior Women's Challenger Trophy, a women's List A cricket tournament in India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Women's team, One Day League\nSenior Women's One Day League, a Women's List A cricket tournament in India, fixtures were announced by BCCI on 26 October 2018 and the Hyderabad was placed in Elite Group C. The squad was selected on 12 November with Sravanthi Naidu leading the team as they faced the Odisha in their first match of the One Day League at Cuttack on 1 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Women's team, One Day League\nThe Hyderabad started the tournament on the winning note as they defeated the Odisha by 28 runs. The Hyderabad posted the total of 183/7 in 50 overs after winning the toss and electing to bat. Skipper Sravanthi was the top-scorer for the Hyderabad with an unbeaten knock of 49 while their opener, Trisha chipped in with 76-ball 47. In reply, the Odisha were restricted to 155/8 with Trisha and Himani Yadav taking two wickets each. An all-round performance from Trisha helped the Hyderabad defeat the Rajasthan by 78 runs in their second match of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0017-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Women's team, One Day League\nThe 107-run second wicket partnership between Trisha and Mamata Kanojia helped the Hyderabad post 207/5 in 50 overs with both scoring the half-centuries before the five-wicket haul from Trisha helped the Hyderabad bowl out the Rajasthan for 129. The Hyderabad were bowled out for 148 by the Himachal Pradesh despite the useful contributions from their middle order, Kanojia and Vanka Pooja, after they lost the toss and were put to bat in their third match. Neena Chaudhary's unbeaten knock of 49 completed the chase for the Himachal Pradesh who won the match in 37.5 overs with four wickets to spare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0017-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Women's team, One Day League\nThe Hyderabad bounced back from the defeat to beat the Uttar Pradesh by 53 runs and record their third win of the tournament. The half-centuries from Trisha and Kanojia helped the Hyderabad post the target of 212 to the Uttar Pradesh before the latter were bowled out for 158 with Trisha and Yadav sharing seven wickets between them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Women's team, One Day League\nThe second consecutive half-century from Kanojia and a collective bowling effort helped the Hyderabad win their fifth match against the Jharkhand by 24 runs. Despite an early setback with Trisha's dismissal, an unbeaten half-century from Kanojia helped the Hyderabad post 155/8 in 50 overs while quick wickets during the Jharkhand's innings troubled them as they were eventually bowled out for 131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0018-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Women's team, One Day League\nThe three-wicket haul from Varsha Choudhary and three run-outs helped the Madhya Pradesh restrict the Hyderabad to 148/9 in 50 overs while the half-century from Tamanna Nigam helped the Madhya Pradesh complete the chase with four wickets to spare as the Hyderabad were handed their second defeat of the tournament in six matches. The Hyderabad suffered the second consecutive defeat as they fell short of target by 15 runs against the Assam despite the useful knocks from Vanka and Sunitha Anand. Earlier, Bhogi Shravani and Yadav shared five wickets between them to restrict the Assam to 205. The final group match against the Jammu & Kashmir was washed out which resulted in finishing fifth in the group stage and failing to advance to the knockout stage for the Hyderabad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 842]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Women's team, One Day League, Points Table\nPoints system\u00a0: W = 4, D/A = 2, L = 0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 80], "content_span": [81, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Women's team, T20 League\nSenior Women's T20 League, a Women's Twenty20 cricket tournament in India, fixtures were announced by BCCI on 26 October 2018 and the Hyderabad was placed in Group D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285472-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Hyderabad C.A. season, Senior Women's team, T20 League, Points Table\nPoints system\u00a0: W = 4, D/A = 2, L = 0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 76], "content_span": [77, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285473-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 H\u00e5ndboldligaen\nThe 2018\u201319 H\u00e5ndboldligaen, is the 83rd season of the H\u00e5ndboldligaen, Denmark's premier Handball league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285473-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 H\u00e5ndboldligaen, Team information\nThe following 14 clubs compete in the H\u00e5ndboldligaen during the 2018\u201319 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285473-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 H\u00e5ndboldligaen, Team information, Personnel and kits\nFollowing is the list of clubs competing in 2018\u201319 H\u00e5ndboldligaen, with their manager, kit manufacturer and shirt sponsor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 60], "content_span": [61, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285473-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 H\u00e5ndboldligaen, Regular season, Standings\n! There's a new relegation playoff made in November 2014", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285473-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 H\u00e5ndboldligaen, Regular season, Schedule and results\nNo . 1-8 from the regular season divided into two groups with the top two will advance to the semifinals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 60], "content_span": [61, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285473-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 H\u00e5ndboldligaen, Playoff, Semifinal\n! Best of three matches. In the case of a tie after the second match, a third match is played. Highest ranking team in the regular season has the home advantage in the first and possible third match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285473-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 H\u00e5ndboldligaen, Playoff, 3rd place\n! Best of three matches. In the case of a tie after the second match, a third match is played. Highest ranking team in the regular season has the home advantage in the first and possible third match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285473-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 H\u00e5ndboldligaen, Playoff, Final\n! Best of three matches. In the case of a tie after the second match, a third match is played. Highest ranking team in the regular season has the home advantage in the first and possible third match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285473-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 H\u00e5ndboldligaen, Relegation Playoff\nNo. 5 from the relegation playoff and winner, of the playoff match between 2nd and 3rd, from the first division is meet each other for the last seat. The winner stays in the league. the loser relegated to Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285474-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 I liga\nThe 2018\u201319 I liga (currently named Fortuna I liga due to sponsorship reasons) was the 11th season of the Polish I liga under its current title, and the 71st season of the second highest division in the Polish football league system since its establishment in 1949. The league was operated by the PZPN. The league was contested by 18 teams. The season was played in a round-robin tournament. The season started on 20 July 2018 and will conclude on 19 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285474-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 I liga, Changes from last season\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 40], "content_span": [41, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285474-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 I liga, Attendances\nSource: (in Polish)Notes:1. Team played last season in Ekstraklasa.2. Team played last season in II liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 27], "content_span": [28, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285475-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 I-League\nThe 2018\u201319 I-League was the 12th season of the I-League, the top Indian professional football league, since its establishment in 2007. The season started on 26 October 2018 and is scheduled to conclude in March 2019. Unlike the Indian Super League, the I-League did not take a mid-season break during the 2019 AFC Asian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285475-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 I-League\nMinerva Punjab was the defending champions having won the previous season. Real Kashmir joined as a promoted club from the I-League 2nd Division. Churchill Brothers, having been relegated the previous season, were given an exemption by the All India Football Federation for this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285475-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 I-League\nChennai City FC were the champions for this season, winning the title on the last day. This was their first title win in the history of the club. The top scorer in the league was Chennai City FC\u2019s Pedro Manzi, who finished the season with 21 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285475-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 I-League, Teams, Foreign players\nOn 20 June 2018, it was decided by the All India Football Federation that the number of foreigners for each I-League club will be kept six as previous season. Asian player quota is abolished. Clubs can sign maximum six players of any nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285475-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 I-League, Teams, Foreign players\nIndian Arrows cannot sign any foreign players as they are the AIFF developmental team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285476-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 I-League 2nd Division\nThe 2019 I-League 2nd Division (known as Hero 2018\u201319 I-League 2nd Division, for sponsorship reasons) was the 12th season of the I-League 2nd Division, the second division Indian football league, since its establishment in 2008. The league was played from January to April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285476-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 I-League 2nd Division\nTRAU won the title and earned the promotion to 2019\u201320 I-League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285476-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 I-League 2nd Division, Teams\nAt the start of the season 23 teams applied for participation in this edition of the league. On 7 December 2018, it was announced by the league committee that nine clubs cleared the licensing criteria and are allowed to participate in this season. Additionally TRAU F.C. were granted three days of extension to clear the club licensing, considering the situation in their state league. TRAU cleared the licensing, taking the total teams competing to sixteen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285476-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 I-League 2nd Division, Teams, Foreign players\nEach club, excluding the Indian Super League reserve sides, can register three foreign players in their squad. One of the foreign players has to be from an AFC Member Nation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285476-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 I-League 2nd Division, Final round\nGroup champions from preliminary round and second placed team from Group C will qualify for this round. The four sides will play each other twice in the home and away format. The team that finishes top of the table in the Final Round will be crowned champions, and earn promotion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285477-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IBL Indonesia\nThe 2018\u201319 Indonesian Basketball League is the fourth and last season of the Starting5 as a promoter of the league. The regular season will begin on 30 November 2018 until 17 February 2019, with the Playoffs starting on 1 until 23 March 2019. The Pre-Season was held on 14 until 21 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285477-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IBL Indonesia, Foreign Players\nEach club in the first divisions will be allowed up to three registered foreign players, excluding one foreign-born player who has become a naturalized Indonesian citizen. Two foreign players will be allowed on the court. Naturalized players can play as Indonesian citizens and have no limitations. Each club will be allowed one naturalized player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285477-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IBL Indonesia, Individual awards\nForeign Player of the Year\u00a0: Madarious Gibbs (Satya Wacana Salatiga)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285477-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IBL Indonesia, Individual awards\nCoach of the Year\u00a0: Wahyu Widayat Jati (NSH Jakarta)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285477-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IBL Indonesia, Individual awards\nDefensive Player of the Year\u00a0: Michael Vigilance Jr. (Bogor Siliwangi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285477-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IBL Indonesia, Individual awards\nSixthman of the Year\u00a0: Abraham Damar Grahita (Stapac Jakarta)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285477-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IBL Indonesia, Individual awards\nMost Improve Player of the Year\u00a0: Widyanta Putra Teja (Stapac Jakarta)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285477-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IBL Indonesia, Playoffs, First round\nAll games held from 1 and 2 March 2019, in Hi-Test Arena, Batam", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285477-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IBL Indonesia, Playoffs, Semi finals\nAll games held from 8 to 10 March 2019, in Soemantri Brodjonegoro Indoor Stadium, Jakarta", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285478-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Africa Qualifier\nThe 2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Africa Qualifier was the tournament played as part of qualification process for the 2021 ICC T20 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285478-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Africa Qualifier\nTwelve regional qualifiers were held by the International Cricket Council (ICC), with 62 teams competing during 2018 in five regions \u2013 Africa (3 groups), Americas (2), Asia (2), East Asia Pacific (2) and Europe (3). The top 25 sides from these progressed to five Regional Finals in 2019, with seven teams then going on to compete in the 2019 ICC T20 World Cup Qualifier, along with the six lowest ranked sides from the ICC T20I Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285478-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Africa Qualifier\nThe first African sub-regional qualifier (North-Western sub region) was held in Nigeria, with the two other groups staged in Botswana and Rwanda. The top two teams in each group advanced to the regional finals tournament, which will determine two African entrants to the 2019 ICC T20 World Cup Qualifier. In April 2018, the International Cricket Council (ICC) granted full international status to Twenty20 men's matches played between member sides from 1 January 2019 onwards. Therefore, all the matches in the Regional Finals were played as Twenty20 Internationals (T20Is).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285478-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Africa Qualifier\nFrom the North-Western sub region group, both Ghana and Nigeria qualified for the Africa Regional Finals. Simon Ateak of Ghana was named the player of the tournament in the North-Western group. The second group, the Eastern sub region, started on 7 July 2018. Both Kenya and Uganda qualified for the Africa Regional Finals from the Eastern sub region group. Uganda's Riazat Ali Shah was named the player of the tournament for the Eastern group. From the Southern sub region group, Botswana and Namibia qualified for the Africa Regional Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285478-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Africa Qualifier\nThe Regional Finals were held in Uganda in May 2019. Namibia and Kenya both progressed to the T20 World Cup Qualifier after finishing first and second respectively in the Regional Finals. In July 2019, the ICC suspended Zimbabwe Cricket, with the team barred from taking part in ICC events. As a result of their suspension, the ICC confirmed that Nigeria would replace them in the T20 World Cup Qualifier tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285478-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Africa Qualifier, North-Western sub region\nThe North-Western sub region group was held in Nigeria from 14 to 21 April 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 68], "content_span": [69, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285478-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Africa Qualifier, Eastern sub region\nThe Eastern sub region group was held in Rwanda from 7 to 14 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 62], "content_span": [63, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285478-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Africa Qualifier, Southern sub region\nThe Southern sub region group was held in Botswana from 28 October to 3 November 2018. Zambia, initially listed as an entrant, withdrew before the tournament draw was released.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 63], "content_span": [64, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285478-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Africa Qualifier, Regional Finals\nThe Regional Finals were held in Uganda from 20 to 24 May 2019, with the top two sides progressing to the 2019 ICC T20 World Cup Qualifier tournament in the UAE. Originally, the finals were scheduled to start on 19 May, but all three fixtures were washed out, with the matches rescheduled for the tournament's reserve day. Ahead of the final day of fixtures, Kenya, Namibia and Nigeria were all in contention of finishing in the top two places and progressing to the 2019 ICC T20 World Cup Qualifier tournament. However, all of the matches on the last day were washed out, therefore Namibia and Kenya both progressed to the T20 World Cup Qualifier after finishing first and second respectively in the Regional Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285478-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Africa Qualifier, Regional Finals\nIn August 2019, the ICC confirmed that Nigeria had also progressed to the T20 World Cup Qualifier, after Zimbabwe had been suspended from taking part in international cricket tournaments in the previous month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285479-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Americas Qualifier\nThe 2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Americas Qualifier was the tournament played as part of qualification process for the 2021 ICC T20 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285479-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Americas Qualifier\nTwelve regional qualifiers were held by the International Cricket Council (ICC), with 62 teams competing during 2018 in five regions \u2013 Africa (3 groups), Americas (2), Asia (2), East Asia Pacific (2) and Europe (3). The top 25 sides from these progressed to five Regional Finals in 2019, with seven teams then going on to compete in the 2019 ICC T20 World Cup Qualifier, along with the six lowest ranked sides from the ICC T20I Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285479-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Americas Qualifier\nThe first sub-regional qualifier was held in Argentina with the other in the United States. The top two teams in each group advanced to the regional finals tournament, which would determine two American entrants to the 2019 ICC T20 World Cup Qualifier. In April 2018, the International Cricket Council (ICC) granted full international status to Twenty20 men's matches played between member sides from 1 January 2019 onwards. Therefore, all the matches in the Regional Finals will be played as Twenty20 Internationals (T20Is).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285479-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Americas Qualifier\nFrom the Southern sub region group, both Bermuda and the Cayman Islands qualified for the Americas Regional Finals. From the Northern sub region, Canada and United States also qualified for the Americas Regional Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285479-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Americas Qualifier\nThe Regional Finals were held in Bermuda from 18 to 25 August 2019. Following the conclusion of matches that took place on 22 August 2019, Canada and Bermuda had both progressed to the T20 World Cup Qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285479-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Americas Qualifier, Southern sub region\nThe Southern sub region group was held in Argentina from 26 February to 3 March 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 65], "content_span": [66, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285479-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Americas Qualifier, Northern sub region\nThe Northern sub region was held in the United States from 20 to 26 September 2018. Originally, the sub region matches were scheduled to start on 19 September, but were postponed by one day because of Hurricane Florence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 65], "content_span": [66, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285479-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Americas Qualifier, Regional Finals\nThe Regional Finals were held in Bermuda from 18 to 25 August 2019, with the matches played at the Bermuda National Stadium and White Hill Field. On 21 August 2019, the Bermuda Cricket Board confirmed that all the remaining matches scheduled to be played at the Bermuda National Stadium would be moved to White Hill Field, due to the condition of the pitch. Canada won the Regional Finals to progress to the 2019 ICC T20 World Cup Qualifier. They were joined by Bermuda, who finished in second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285480-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Asia Qualifier\nThe 2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Asia Qualifier was the tournament played as part of qualification process for the 2021 ICC T20 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285480-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Asia Qualifier\nTwelve regional qualifiers were held by the International Cricket Council (ICC), with 62 teams competed during 2018 in five regions \u2013 Africa (3 groups), Americas (2), Asia (2), East Asia Pacific (2) and Europe (3). The top 25 sides from these progressed to five Regional Finals in 2019, with seven teams then going on to compete in the 2019 ICC T20 World Cup Qualifier., along with the six lowest ranked sides from the ICC T20I Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285480-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Asia Qualifier\nThe first Asian sub-regional qualifier was held in Kuwait from 20 to 27 April 2018. The second sub-regional qualifier took place in Malaysia between 3 and 12 October 2018. The top three teams in each group advanced to the regional finals tournament, which will determine two Asian entrants to the 2019 ICC T20 World Cup Qualifier. In April 2018, the International Cricket Council (ICC) granted full international status to Twenty20 men's matches played between member sides from 1 January 2019 onwards. Therefore, all the matches in the Regional Finals will be played as Twenty20 Internationals (T20Is).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285480-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Asia Qualifier\nFrom the Western sub-region group, the United Arab Emirates were the first team to qualify for the regional final. They were joined by Qatar and Kuwait. From the Eastern sub-region group, Nepal, Singapore and Malaysia qualified for the regional final. However, in March 2019, the ICC announced that the UAE would host the qualifier tournament. Later the same month, the ICC released the match schedule for all the Regional Finals, with the UAE omitted from the Asia Regional Final. The number of teams that could qualify from the Asia Regional Final was also reduced from two to one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285480-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Asia Qualifier\nThe Regional Finals were held in Singapore in July 2019. Singapore progressed to the T20 World Cup Qualifier after winning the Regional Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285480-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Asia Qualifier, Western sub-region tournament, Points table\nKuwait advanced to the Regional Finals after defeating Saudi Arabia in the third-place play-off match", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 85], "content_span": [86, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285480-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Asia Qualifier, Eastern sub-region tournament, Points table\nUnlike Western sub-region tournament, there were no play-offs to determine the top three positions. Instead, the standings from the league was considered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 85], "content_span": [86, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285480-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Asia Qualifier, Regional Finals\nThe Regional Finals were held in Singapore from 22 to 28 July 2019. The last match of the Finals, between Nepal and tournament hosts Singapore, saw the winner of the fixture, Singapore, qualify for the 2019 ICC T20 World Cup Qualifier. Kuwait's Muhammad Kashif was named the Player of the Series, after scoring 143 runs during the Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285481-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup East Asia-Pacific Qualifier\nThe 2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup East Asia-Pacific Qualifier was the tournament played in Fiji and Philippines as part of qualification process for the 2021 ICC T20 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285481-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup East Asia-Pacific Qualifier\nTwelve regional qualifiers were held by the International Cricket Council (ICC), with 62 teams competing during 2018 in five regions \u2013 Africa (3 groups), Americas (2), Asia (2), East Asia Pacific (2) and Europe (3). The top 25 sides from these progressed to five Regional Finals in 2019, with seven teams then going on to compete in the 2019 ICC T20 World Cup Qualifier, along with the six lowest ranked sides from the ICC T20I Championship. In April 2018, the International Cricket Council (ICC) granted full international status to Twenty20 men's matches played between member sides from 1 January 2019 onwards. Therefore, all the matches in the Regional Finals were played as Twenty20 Internationals (T20Is).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285481-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup East Asia-Pacific Qualifier\nThe top two teams in Group A, and the top team of Group B of the East Asia-Pacific Qualifier, progressed to the Regional Finals. Papua New Guinea won Group A, with Vanuatu finishing in second place to progress to the Finals. Group B was won by the Philippines. It was also the first ICC tournament to be held in the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285481-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup East Asia-Pacific Qualifier\nThe Regional Finals were held in Papua New Guinea in March 2019. Papua New Guinea progressed to the T20 World Cup Qualifier after winning the Regional Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285481-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup East Asia-Pacific Qualifier, Group A\nGroup A was held in Fiji from 25 to 29 August 2018, with the top two teams progressing to the Regional Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 62], "content_span": [63, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285481-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup East Asia-Pacific Qualifier, Group B\nGroup B was held at Friendship Oval at Emilio Aguinaldo College in Dasmari\u00f1as, Philippines from 1 to 7 December 2018. The top team progressed to the Regional Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 62], "content_span": [63, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285481-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup East Asia-Pacific Qualifier, Regional Finals\nThe Regional Finals were held in Papua New Guinea from 22 to 24 March 2019. Following the effects of Cyclone Trevor, fixtures on the opening two days could not be played due to a waterlogged pitch, so the schedule was rearranged. On the first day of fixtures, Papua New Guinea won their two matches, both by large margins. Before the last day of matches, Papua New Guinea and Vanuatu were both in contention to win the group, with the Philippines being eliminated. On the last day of fixtures, Papua New Guinea won the group to advance to the 2019 ICC T20 World Cup Qualifier, with Vanuatu being eliminated after losing against the Philippines. Nalin Nipiko of Vanuatu was named the Player of the Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285482-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Europe Qualifier\nThe 2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Europe Qualifier was a cricket tournament that formed part of qualification process for the 2021 ICC T20 World Cup. Twelve regional qualifiers were held by the International Cricket Council (ICC), with 62 teams competing during 2018 in five regions \u2013 Africa (3 groups), Americas (2), Asia (2), East Asia Pacific (2) and Europe (3). The top 25 sides from these progressed to five Regional Finals in 2019, with seven teams then going on to compete in the 2019 ICC T20 World Cup Qualifier, along with the six lowest ranked sides from the ICC T20I Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285482-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Europe Qualifier\nEighteen countries from the European region competed in the initial phase of the tournament, divided into three groups of six each. Those matches took place in the Netherlands between 29 August and 2 September 2018. The top two of each group advanced to the ICC World T20 Europe Regional Finals in 2019. In April 2018, the International Cricket Council (ICC) granted full international status to Twenty20 men's matches played between member sides from 1 January 2019 onwards. Therefore, all the matches in the Regional Finals were played as Twenty20 Internationals (T20Is).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285482-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Europe Qualifier\nThree of the fixtures on day one of the qualifiers were abandoned because of rain. All three matches were replayed on the tournament's reserve day, 31 August 2018. Denmark and Germany qualified from Group A for the Regional Finals. They were joined by Italy and Jersey from Group B, and Norway and Guernsey from Group C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285482-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Europe Qualifier\nThe Regional Finals were held in Guernsey in June 2019. Jersey progressed to the T20 World Cup Qualifier after winning the Regional Finals. Jersey finished level on points with Germany, with Jersey advancing with a better net run rate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285482-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Europe Qualifier, Regional Finals\nThe Regional Finals took place in Guernsey from 15 to 20 June 2019. Germany announced their squad for the finals on 14 May 2019, which included three players (Ollie Rayner, Craig Meschede and Dieter Klein) with experience playing for county teams in English domestic cricket, although only Meschede joined up with the final squad. On 31 May 2019, the ICC confirmed all of the squads for the Regional Finals. During the tournament, Michael Richardson, who has also played in English domestic cricket, was added to Germany's squad, replacing the injured Daniel Weston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285482-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ICC T20 World Cup Europe Qualifier, Regional Finals\nAt the mid-point of the Regional Final, Jersey and Italy had pulled clear from the other teams, both recording three wins from three matches. All four fixtures scheduled to take place on 18 June were washed out, with them being moved to the reserve day on 20 June. On the last day of fixtures, Jersey won the group to advance to the 2019 ICC T20 World Cup Qualifier, despite losing to Germany in the last match of the Regional Finals, progressing due to a superior net run rate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285483-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IIHF Continental Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Continental Cup was the 22nd edition of the IIHF Continental Cup, Europe's second-tier ice hockey club competition organised by International Ice Hockey Federation. The season started on 28 September 2018 and the final tournament was played from 11 to 13 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285483-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IIHF Continental Cup, First round, Group A\nThe Group A tournament was played in Sofia, Bulgaria, from 28 to 30 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285483-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IIHF Continental Cup, Second round, Group B\nThe Group B tournament was played in Ritten, Italy, from 19 to 21 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285483-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IIHF Continental Cup, Second round, Group C\nThe Group C tournament was played in Riga, Latvia, from 19 to 21 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285483-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IIHF Continental Cup, Third round, Group D\nThe Group D tournament was played in Lyon, France, from 16 to 18 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285483-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IIHF Continental Cup, Third round, Group E\nThe Group E tournament was played in Belfast, United Kingdom, from 15 to 17 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285483-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IIHF Continental Cup, Final round\nContinental Cup Final tournament was played in Belfast, United Kingdom, from 11 to 13 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285484-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IR Tanger season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Ittihad Riadi Tanger's 36th in existence and the club's 20th season in the top flight of Moroccan football, and fourth consecutive in the first division after promotion. The team participated in CAF Champions League for the first time in his history after winning the Botola title in the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285484-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IR Tanger season, Kit\nSupplier: Gloria Sport / Club Sponsor: front: Moroccan Airports Authority, Renault, APM Terminals, Tanger-Med\u00a0; back: Valencia\u00a0; sleeves: STG Telecom\u00a0; short: RCI Finance Maroc / League Sponsor: front: Maroc Telecom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 29], "content_span": [30, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285484-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IR Tanger season, Season review, May\nOn 27 May, the club completed the transfer of 26-year-old Midfielder Hamza Jelassi from CA Bizertin on a three-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285484-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IR Tanger season, Season review, June\nOn 8 June, Ittihad Tanger and Hugo Almeida agreed to mutually terminate the Brazilian's contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285484-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IR Tanger season, Season review, June\nOn 12 June, the club completed the transfer of 27-year-old forward Omar Eddahri on a three-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285484-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IR Tanger season, Season review, June\nOn 14 June, Al Kharaitiyat centre-back Aurelien Josue Mohy signed on a season-long loan. And the club completed the transfer of the player Omar Najdi for one-year contract. And the club also announced the signing of the winger Abdelkabir El Ouadi coming from Raja Casablanca for three-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285484-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IR Tanger season, Season review, July\nOn 3 July, the club completed the transfer of 28-year-old Forward Salva Chamorro from UD Logro\u00f1\u00e9s on a two-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285484-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IR Tanger season, Season review, July\nOn 7 July, Ittihad Tanger announces the termination the contract of the players Yassine Lebhiri and Khalid Serroukh at their request.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285484-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IR Tanger season, Season review, July\nOn 10 July, the club completed the transfer of four players; Mohamed Zghino from Mouloudia Oujda for five year, Abdelelah Erroubia from Chabab Houara for four years, Ayoub Gaadaoui from Chabab Atlas Kh\u00e9nifra for three years, and Benaissa Benamar from Jong FC Twente for five years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285484-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IR Tanger season, Season review, July\nOn 15 July, Ittihad Tanger reached an agreement with the Saudi club Al-Raed FC to loan Ahmed Hammoudan for a year worth $350,000, with the possibility of buying the contract at the end of the loan period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285484-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IR Tanger season, Season review, July\nOn 20 July, the club confirmed the transfer of Yasser Imrani to Wydad F\u00e8s on a season-long loan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285484-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IR Tanger season, Season review, July\nOn 24 July, Ittihad Tanger announces the termination the contract of the players Pablo Ganet, Anas Aqachmar and Mohammed Amine Ennali.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285484-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IR Tanger season, Season review, July\nOn 25 July, the club announces the termination the contract of the player Omar Eddahri at his request.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285484-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IR Tanger season, Season review, July\nOn 25 July, The club loaned three of its players: Ayman Ben Ali and Zakaria Boulaich to Raja Beni Mellal, and Younes Ed-dyb to Olympique Dcheira for one year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285484-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IR Tanger season, Season review, July\nOn 31 July, Ittihad Tanger announced that they had reached an agreement with Dragon Club for the transfer of Rostand Junior M'ba\u00ef for a transfer fee of \u20ac100,000. The player will sign a contract for the next four seasons until the end of 2021\u201322.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285484-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IR Tanger season, Season review, August\nOn 7 August, Ittihad Tanger completed the transfer of the 24 years midfielder Soufian Echcharaf from Chabab Rif Al Hoceima on a two-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285484-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IR Tanger season, Season review, August\nOn 18 August, the club completed the transfer of the 28 years goalkeeper Issam Lahlafi from Chabab Atlas Kh\u00e9nifra on a three-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285484-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IR Tanger season, Season review, September\nOn 1 September, Ittihad Tanger completed the transfer of the 37 years midfielder Issam Erraki for one renewable season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285484-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IR Tanger season, Season review, September\nOn 17 September, Al-Nassr midfielder Mohamed Fouzair signed on a season-long loan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285484-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IR Tanger season, Season review, September\nOn 17 September, the club completed the transfer of the 26 years right-back Mohamed Hamami from Difa\u00e2 El Jadidi on a three-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285484-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IR Tanger season, Season review, September\nOn 25 September, the club announced Ahmad Al-Ajlani would be the new IRT coach following the departure of Driss El Mrabet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285484-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IR Tanger season, Season review, October\nOn 11 October, Ittihad Tanger has introduced its new sponsor STG telecom in a three-year contract for 1,5 million dirhams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285484-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IR Tanger season, Season review, December\nOn 18 December, Ittihad Tanger announced that Ousseynou Thioune would be departing the club after three seasons. Ousseynou joined Spanish club Tarragona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285484-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IR Tanger 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-00285484-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IR Tanger season, Players, Squad, Out 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285484-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IR Tanger season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nLast updated: 6 June 2019Source: 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 57], "content_span": [58, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285484-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IR Tanger season, Statistics, Injury record\n- Player is injured - Player has recovered from injuryLast updated: 5 December 2018Source:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285485-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ISU Challenger Series\nThe 2018\u201319 ISU Challenger Series was held from August to December 2018. It was the fifth season of a group of senior-level international figure skating competitions ranked below the Grand Prix series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285485-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ISU Challenger Series, Challenger Series rankings\nThe ISU Challenger Series rankings were formed by combining the two highest final scores of each skater or duo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285486-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating\nThe 2018\u201319 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating was a series of invitational senior internationals which ran from October 2018 through to December 2018. Medals were awarded 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 in Vancouver.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285486-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating\nOrganized by the International Skating Union, the series set the stage for the 2019 Europeans, the 2019 Four Continents, and the 2019 World Championships. The corresponding series for junior-level skaters was the 2018\u201319 ISU Junior Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285486-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, Requirements\nSkaters were eligible to compete on the senior Grand Prix circuit if they had reached the age of 15 before July 1, 2018. They were also required to have earned either a minimum total score or minimum technical elements scores (TES) at certain international events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 54], "content_span": [55, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285486-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, Assignments\nThe ISU announced the preliminary assignments on June 29, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285486-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, Qualification\nAt each event, skaters earned points toward qualification for the Grand Prix Final. Following the sixth event, the top six highest scoring skaters/teams advanced to the Final. The points earned per placement were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285486-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, Qualification\nThere were originally seven tie-breakers in cases of a tie in overall points:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285486-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, Qualification\nIf a tie remained, it was considered unbreakable and the tied skaters all advanced to the Grand Prix Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285487-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ISU Junior Grand Prix\nThe 2018\u201319 ISU Junior Grand Prix was the 22nd season of a series of junior international competitions organized by the International Skating Union. It was the junior-level complement to the 2018\u201319 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating. Skaters competed for medals in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dance, as well as for qualifying points. The top six from each discipline met at the 2018\u201319 Junior Grand Prix Final, which was held together with the senior final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285487-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ISU Junior Grand Prix, Competitions\nThe locations of the JGP events change yearly. In the 2018\u201319 season, the series was composed of the following events in autumn 2018:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285487-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ISU Junior Grand Prix, Entries\nSkaters who reached the age of 13 by July 1, 2018 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. Competitors were chosen by their countries according to their federation's selection procedures. The number of entries allotted to each ISU member federation was determined by their skaters' placements at the 2018 World Junior Championships in each discipline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285487-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ISU Junior Grand Prix, JGP Final qualification standings, 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 advance to the Final. The points earned per placement are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 85], "content_span": [86, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285487-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ISU Junior Grand Prix, JGP Final qualification standings, Qualification rules\nThere are seven tie-breakers in cases of a tie in overall points:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 85], "content_span": [86, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285487-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ISU Junior Grand Prix, JGP Final qualification standings, Qualification rules\nIf there is still a tie, it is considered unbreakable and the tied skaters all advance to the Junior Grand Prix Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 85], "content_span": [86, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285488-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ISU Short Track Speed Skating World Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 ISU Short Track Speed Skating World Cup was a multi-race tournament over a season for short track speed skating. The season began on 2 November 2018 in Canada and ended on 10 February 2019 in Italy. The World Cup was organised by the ISU who also runs world cups and championships in speed skating and figure skating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285489-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ISU Speed Skating World Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 ISU Speed Skating World Cup, officially the ISU World Cup Speed Skating 2018\u20132019, was a series of six international speed skating competitions that ran from November 2018 through March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285489-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285490-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 World Cup 1\nThe first competition weekend of the 2018\u201319 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was held at the Meiji Hokkaido-Tokachi Oval in Obihiro, Japan, from Friday, 16 November, until Sunday, 18 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285491-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 World Cup 2\nThe second competition weekend of the 2018\u201319 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was held at the Tomakomai Highland Sport Center in Tomakomai, Japan, from Friday, 23 November, until Sunday, 25 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285492-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 World Cup 3\nThe third competition weekend of the 2018\u201319 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was held at the Arena Lodow Tomasz\u00f3w Mazowiecki-Lodsch in Tomasz\u00f3w Mazowiecki, Poland, from Friday, 7 December, until Sunday, 9 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285493-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 World Cup 4\nThe fourth competition weekend of the 2018\u201319 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was held at Thialf in Heerenveen, Netherlands, from Friday, 14 December until Sunday, 16 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285494-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 World Cup 5\nThe fifth competition weekend of the 2018\u201319 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was held at the Vikingskipet in Hamar, Norway, from Friday, 1 February, until Sunday, 3 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285495-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 World Cup 6\nThe sixth and final competition weekend of the 2018\u201319 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was held at the Utah Olympic Oval in Salt Lake City, United States, from Sunday, 9 March, until Sunday, 10 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285496-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ISU World Standings and Season's World Ranking\nThe 2018\u201319 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 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285496-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ISU World Standings and Season's World Ranking\nThe single & pair skating and ice dance rankings take into account results of the 2016\u201317, 2017\u201318 and 2018\u201319 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285496-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ISU World Standings and Season's World Ranking\nThe 2018\u201319 ISU season's world ranking is based on the results of the 2018\u201319 season only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285496-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ISU World Standings and Season's World Ranking\nThe 2018\u201319 ISU world standings for synchronized skating are based on the results of the 2016\u201317, 2017\u201318 and 2018\u201319 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285497-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IUPUI Jaguars men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 IUPUI Jaguars men's basketball team represented Indiana University \u2013 Purdue University Indianapolis during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Jaguars, led by fifth-year head coach Jason Gardner, played their home games at Indiana Farmers Coliseum in Indianapolis, Indiana as second-year members of the Horizon League. They finished the season 16\u201317, 8\u201310 in Horizon League play to finish in a three-way tie for sixth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Horizon League Tournament to Wright State. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they lost in the first round to Marshall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285497-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IUPUI Jaguars men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Jaguars finished the season 11\u201319, 8\u201310 in Horizon League play to finish in a tie for fifth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Horizon League Tournament to Oakland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285497-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IUPUI Jaguars men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe season marked the first season as members of the Horizon League as IUPUI replaced Valparaiso who left the Horizon League to join the Missouri Valley Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285497-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 IUPUI Jaguars men's basketball team, Schedule and results\n* Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses. All times are in Eastern Time", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285498-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Icelandic Men's Basketball Cup\nThe 2018\u20132019 Bikarkeppni karla, named Geysisbikarinn for sponsorship reasons, was the 53rd edition of the Icelandic Men's Basketball Cup, won by Stjarnan against Njar\u00f0v\u00edk. The competition was managed by the Icelandic Basketball Federation and the final four was held in Reykjav\u00edk, in the Laugardalsh\u00f6ll in February 2019, and was broadcast live on R\u00daV. Brandon Rozzell was named the Cup Finals MVP after turning in 30 points and 4 assists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285499-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Icelandic Women's Basketball Cup\nThe 2018\u20132019 Bikarkeppni kvenna, named Geysisbikarinn for sponsorship reasons, was the 45th edition of the Icelandic Women's Basketball Cup, won by Valur against Stjarnan. The competition is managed by the Icelandic Basketball Federation and the final four was held in the Laugardalsh\u00f6ll in Reykjav\u00edk during the days of 13\u201316 February 2019. Helena Sverrisd\u00f3ttir was named the Cup Finals MVP after turning in 31 points, 13 rebounds and 6 assists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285499-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Icelandic Women's Basketball Cup\nDanielle Rodriguez of Stjarnan led all scorers with 104 points in 4 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285500-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Idaho State Bengals men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Idaho State Bengals men's basketball team represented Idaho State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bengals, led by seventh-year head coach Bill Evans, played their home games at Holt Arena and Reed Gym in Pocatello, Idaho as members of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 11\u201319, 7\u201313 in Big Sky play to finish in 11th place. They lost in the first round of the Big Sky Tournament to Southern Utah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285500-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Idaho State Bengals men's basketball team\nOn March 26, Idaho State decided to not renew the contract of head coach Bill Evans. He finished at Idaho State with a seven-year record of 70\u2013141.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285500-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Idaho State Bengals men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bengals finished the 2017\u201318 season 14\u201316, 9\u20139 in Big Sky play to finish in a tie for sixth place. They lost in the first round of the Big Sky Tournament to Southern Utah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285501-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Idaho State Bengals women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Idaho State Bengals women's basketball team represents Idaho State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Bengals, led by eleventh year head coach Seton Sobolewski, play their home games at Reed Gym. They were members of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 20\u201311, 15\u20135 in Big Sky play to finish in a tie for second place. They lost in the semifinals of the Big Sky Women's Tournament to Eastern Washington. They received an at-large bid to the WNIT where they lost to Arizona in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285502-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Idaho Vandals men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Idaho Vandals men's basketball team represented the University of Idaho during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Vandals, led by eleventh-year head coach Don Verlin, played their home games at the Cowan Spectrum, with a few early season games at Memorial Gym, in Moscow, Idaho as members of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 5\u201327, 2\u201318 in Big Sky play to finish in last place. They lost in the first round of the Big Sky Tournament to Montana State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285502-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Idaho Vandals men's basketball team\nOn June 14, 2019, head coach Don Verlin was fired amid possible NCAA violations. He finished at Idaho with an 11-year record of 177\u2013176.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285502-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Idaho Vandals men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Vandals finished the 2017\u201318 season 22\u20139, 14\u20134 in Big Sky play to finish in second place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big Sky Tournament to Southern Utah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285503-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Idaho Vandals women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Idaho Vandals women's basketball team represents the University of Idaho during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Vandals, led by eleventh year head coach Jon Newlee, play their home games at the Cowan Spectrum with early season games at Memorial Gym, and are members of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 22\u201312, 16\u20134 in Big Sky play to win the Big Sky regular season championship. They advanced to the semifinals of the Big Sky Women's Tournament where they lost to Portland State. They received an automatic bid to the Women's National Invitation Tournament where defeated Loyola Marymount and Denver in the first and second rounds before losing to Arizona in the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 775]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285504-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team represented the University of Illinois at Urbana\u2013Champaign in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Led by second-year head coach Brad Underwood, the Illini played their home games at State Farm Center in Champaign, Illinois as members of the Big Ten Conference. The Illini finished the season 12\u201321, 7\u201313 in Big Ten play, to finish in a three-way tie for 10th place. Due to tie-breaking rules, they received the No. 11 seed in the Big Ten Tournament where they defeated Northwestern in the first round before losing to Iowa in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285504-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Illini finished the 2017\u201318 season 14\u201318, 4\u201314 in Big Ten play to finish in a three-way tie for 11th place. As the No. 13 seed in the Big Ten Tournament, they lost in the first round to Iowa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 71], "content_span": [72, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285504-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team, Offseason, Player departures\nOn March 5, 2018 Mark Smith announced his decision to transfer to a new school, indicating he did not fit into Illinois' system moving forward. On March 15, Leron Black announced his decision to forgoing final year of eligibility to declare for the NBA draft after already graduating with his bachelor's degree. He intended to sign with an agent, ending his collegiate career. On March 26, Te'Jon Lucas and Michael Finke both announced they would transfer to other programs. Lucas announced he would transfer to Milwaukee to complete his two years of remaining eligibility after sitting out for a season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 84], "content_span": [85, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285504-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team, Offseason, Player departures\nFinke announced he will transfer to Grand Canyon and have one year of immediate eligibility as a graduate transfer. In late April, Matic Vessel left the program and returned to his home country of Slovenia to explore his options to continue basketball. On June 7, 2018 Greg Eboigbodin announced his intent to transfer out of Illinois, which left Illinois with four returning scholarship players from the prior season. Eboigbodin announced on July 30, 2018 that he would transfer to Northeastern University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 84], "content_span": [85, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285504-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team, Offseason, 2018 recruiting class\nIn October 2017, five-star point guard Ayo Dosunmu verbally committed to Illinois over Wake Forest at the flagship Jordan Brand Store on State Street in the Chicago Loop. Dosunmu signed his National Letter of Intent in November 2017 to attend Illinois. In March 2018, Dosunmu was named one of 26 high school seniors who will participate in the Jordan Brand Classic on April 8, 2018, at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 88], "content_span": [89, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285504-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team, Offseason, 2018 recruiting class\nDosunmu is the third Illini to be selected to play in the Jordan Classic, joining Dee Brown who played for the Red team in 2002 and Jalen Coleman-Lands who played in 2015. Dosunmu was also selected to play in the second annual Iverson Roundball Classic All-American Game that will take place in April 2018 at Souderton Area High School outside of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 88], "content_span": [89, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285504-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nThe season will mark the first time in Big Ten history that the teams will play a 20-game conference schedule, setting a precedent for all Division I basketball. The new schedule will also include a regional component to increase the frequency of games\u00a0among teams in similar areas. Over the course of a six-year cycle (12 playing opportunities), in-state rivals will play each other 12 times, regional opponents will play 10 times, and all other teams will play nine times. Three in-state series that will be guaranteed home-and-homes: Illinois and Northwestern, Indiana and Purdue, and Michigan and Michigan State will always play twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 76], "content_span": [77, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285505-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Illinois Fighting Illini women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Illinois Fighting Illini women's basketball team represented the University of Illinois during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Fighting Illini, led by second-year head coach Nancy Fahey, played their home games at State Farm Center as members of the Big Ten Conference. They finished the season 10\u201320, 2\u201316 in Big Ten play to finish in last place. They lost in the first round of the Big Ten Women's Tournament to Purdue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285506-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Illinois State Redbirds men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Illinois State Redbirds men's basketball team represented Illinois State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Redbirds, led by seventh-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 17\u201316, 9\u20139 in conference play, to finish in a tie for the fifth place. As the number seven seed in the MVC Tournament, they defeated Evansville in the opening round and were beaten by Drake in the quarterfinal round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285506-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Illinois State Redbirds men's basketball team, Previous Season\nThe Redbrids finished the 2017\u201318 NCAA Division I men's basketball season 18\u201315, 10\u20138 in MVC play, to finish in a tie for third place. They were the number three seed and defeated Missouri State in their quarterfinal game and Southern Illinois in their semifinal game to advance to the championship game of the MVC Tournament where they lost to Loyola\u2013Chicago.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285507-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Illinois State Redbirds women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Illinois State Redbirds women's basketball team represents Illinois State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Redbirds, led by first year head coach Kristen Gillespie, play their home games at Redbird Arena and were members of the Missouri Valley Conference. They finished the season 19\u201312, 11\u20137 in MVC play to finish in fourth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Missouri Valley Women's Tournament where they lost to Drake. Despite having 19 wins, they were not invited to a postseason tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285508-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Incarnate Word Cardinals men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Incarnate Word Cardinals men's basketball team represent the University of the Incarnate Word during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Cardinals are led by 1st-year head coach Carson Cunningham and play their home games at McDermott Convocation Center in San Antonio, Texas as members of the Southland Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285508-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Incarnate Word Cardinals men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Cardinals finished the 2017\u201318 season 7\u201321, 2\u201316 in Southland play to finish in a tie for 11th place. They failed to qualify for the Southland Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 71], "content_span": [72, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285508-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Incarnate Word Cardinals men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe season marked the Cardinals' first full season as a Division I school after a four-year transition period from Division II to Division I and were thus eligible for postseason play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 71], "content_span": [72, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285509-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Incarnate Word Cardinals women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Incarnate Word Cardinals women's basketball team will represent the University of the Incarnate Word in the 2018-19 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. They were led by coach Christy Smith, in her third season. They finished the season 5\u201324, 5\u201313 in Southland play to finish in a tie for tenth place. They failed to qualify for the Southland Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285509-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Incarnate Word Cardinals women's basketball team\nOn March 10, Christy Smith's contract was not renewed. She finished with a 3 year record of 21\u201368.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285509-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Incarnate Word Cardinals women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Cardinals finished the 2017\u201318 season 5\u201324, 4\u201314 in Southland play to finish in eleventh place. They failed to qualify for the Southland Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 73], "content_span": [74, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285510-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian Arrows season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Indian Arrows' 5th competitive season in the top-flight of Indian football, I-league. Indian Arrows was formed in 2010 on the behest on then Indian team coach, Bob Houghton, with the main goal of nurturing young talent in India in the hope of qualifying for 2018 FIFA World Cup in Russia. It was disbanded by AIFF in 2013 when their club sponsor, Pailan Group, could not financially support the group. But revived again in 2017-18 season immediately after FIFA U-17 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285510-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian Arrows season\nIt was revived again for 2017\u201318 season and fielded the team in 2017-18 I-League after the successful hosting of 2017 FIFA U-17 World Cup to give more game time to U-17 world cup players and best talent from U-19 players who recently played in 2018 AFC U-19 Championship qualification. They played in Goa and Delhi as their home grounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285510-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian Arrows season\nIndian Arrows ended their I-League campaign on 27 February 2018 finishing last in the league but will not be relegated since it was formed as development side by AIFF. They got selected for qualifying match of 2018 Indian Super Cup but were eliminated losing to Mumbai City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285510-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian Arrows season\nThey finished 8th among 11 clubs in I-League 2018-19 season winning 6 games, drawing 3 and losing the rest 19. They scored 11 goals conceding 28. Although after their I-League season, they were successful in reaching Super Cup 2019 edition's round of 16 defeating Kerala Blasters by 2-0 margin. They got knocked out by eventual Champions FC Goa by 3-0 margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285510-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian Arrows season, Squad information\nIndian Arrows project was reinstated after 3 years. On 28 November 2017, AIFF announced squad for this season, consisting mostly of U-17 World-Cup players and some U-19 national players. This is considered as development squad for young and upcoming talent in India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285511-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian Elite League\nThe 2018\u201319 Elite League, also known as 2018\u201319 Hero Elite League for sponsorship reasons and formerly known as Youth League U18 was the eleventh season of the Indian Elite League and the fourth season of the competition as an under-18 one. Shillong Lajong were the defending champions, but could not advance to knock out stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285511-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian Elite League, Qualifiers, Kolkata zone\nThe qualifiers for Kolkata Zone were divided in two groups with five teams in each group, with SAI (East Zone), United S.C., and Rainbow AC advanced to the zonal round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285511-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian Elite League, Zonal round, Karnataka\u2013Andhra zone\nThe matches of Karnataka\u2013Andhra zone kicked off on 8 October 2018 with Ananthpur Sports Academy defeating Boca Juniors 2\u20130 in the opening game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285511-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian Elite League, Zonal round, Rest Of India zone, Group B\nAll matches were played at Khuman Lampak Turf Ground, Imphal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285511-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian Elite League, Zonal round, Rest Of India zone, Group C\nAll matches will be played at TRC Turf Ground, Srinagar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285511-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian Elite League, Zonal round, Rest Of India zone, Group D\nAll matches were played at Kahaani Sports Academy Ground, Ahmedabad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285511-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian Elite League, Playoffs\nTen teams entered this round, out of which five will progress to the final round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285511-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian Elite League, Final round, Group B\nMatches played at Don Bosco Ground, Borda and Nagoa Ground, Nagoa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285512-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian Super League playoffs\nThe 2018\u201319 Indian Super League playoffs was fifth playoffs series in the Indian Super League, one of the top Indian professional football leagues. The playoffs began in March 2018 and concluded with the final in March 2018 in Mumbai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285512-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian Super League playoffs\nThe top four teams from the 2018\u201319 ISL regular season had qualified for the playoffs. The semi-finals took place over two legs while the final was a one-off match at the Mumbai Football Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285512-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian Super League playoffs\nThe defending champions from last season, Chennaiyin, failed to qualify for the playoffs this season and thus were not able to defend their title. This was also NorthEast United's first playoff appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285513-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian Super League season\nThe 2018\u201319 Indian Super League season was the fifth season of the Indian Super League, one of the top Indian professional football leagues. It was established in 2013. The regular season began on 29 September 2018 and concluded on 17 March 2019. The league took a mid-season break for around one month from 17 December 2018 to early January 2019 due to India's participation in the 2019 AFC Asian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285513-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian Super League season\nChennaiyin were the defending champions, having defeated Bengaluru in the 2018 final, however they did not qualify for the playoffs having finished the last in the regular season. Bengaluru FC won their maiden title by defeating FC Goa 1\u20130 in the final which was held on 17 March 2019. Bengaluru FC became the first team who won the ISL Championship as well as after topped the league stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285513-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian Super League season, Foreign Players\nThe number of foreign players allowed in the squad will be reduced from eight to seven from 2018 to 2019 season, however the maximum number of foreign players allowed on the pitch will remain same at five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285513-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian Super League season, Season statistics, Scoring, Hat-tricks\n4 \u2013 Player scored four goals(H) \u2013 Home team(A) \u2013 Away team", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285514-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian Women's League final round\nThe 2018\u201319 Indian Women's League final round will be played between twelve teams divided into two groups to decide the champion of Indian Women's League third season. It will be played from 5 to 22 May at the Guru Nanak Stadium in Ludhiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285514-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian Women's League final round, Knock\u2013out stage\nTop two teams from each group will make it to the semifinals, will be played on 20 May and the final will be held on 22 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285515-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian Women's League season\nThe 2018\u201319 Indian Women's League season is the third season of the Indian Women's League, a women's football league in India. The league will start from 5 May 2019 and twelve teams will participate in the league. All the matches will be played in Guru Nanak Stadium, Ludhiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285515-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian Women's League season, Qualifiers\nState women's leagues organised by various state federations acted as qualifier this season, as the champions of the leagues been awarded a place in the final round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season\nThe 2018\u201319 Indian cricket season was the 126th cricket season since the commencement of first-class cricket in India. The international cricket season started early in June 2018 with Afghanistan playing its home matches against Bangladesh. Afghanistan went on to win the T20I series 3\u20130. The Indian national team started its season hosting Afghanistan for the latter's Test cricket debut. India won the match in two days by an innings and 262 runs. West Indies toured India and lost the Test series 0\u20132, ODI series 1\u20133 and the T20I series 0\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season\nAustralia toured India and won the T20I series 2\u20130 and ODI series 3\u20132. India also played host to Afghanistan's home games against Ireland. Afghanistan won the T20I series 3\u20130 and Test series 1\u20130. The ODI series was drawn 2\u20132. England women's toured India and lost the WODI series 1\u20132 but won the WT20I series 3\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season\nIndia was scheduled to host Asia Cup but it was moved to the United Arab Emirates, following ongoing political tensions between India and Pakistan. In July, the scheduled Asia Cup Qualifiers were also shifted from India to Malaysia. Zimbabwe was also scheduled to tour India but due to the conflicting dates with 2019 Indian Premier League, the Zimbabwe's tour was put in doubt and the series was postponed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season\nThe A-team season consisted of tours from Australia A, South Africa A, England Lions and Australia A Women. South Africa A lost the first class series 0\u20131. They were joined by India B and Australia A for a List A Quadrangular Series. India B defeated Australia A in the final to win the series. Australia A drew the first class series 1\u20131. England Lions lost the first class series 0\u20131 and List A series 1\u20134. Australia A women won the women's list a series 0\u20133 but lost the women's T20 series 3\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season\nThe domestic season was the biggest ever after addition of nine new teams as per the Lodha Panel recommendations and overs 2000 matches were played. During the season, BCCI faced strain on its resources(umpires and referees) due to high number of matches. The domestic season began with Duleep trophy and finished in May with 12th season of Indian Premiere League. India Blue won the Duleep trophy. Bengal won the Vijay Hazare trophy. India C won the Deodhar trophy. Vidharbha won the Ranji Trophy. Vidharbha also won the Irani Trophy. Karnataka won the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy. Mumbai Indians won the 2019 Indian Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season\nThe women's domestic season began in August with the new Women's T20 Challenger Trophy and ended in May with Women's T20 Challenge. India Blue Women won the T20 Challenger Trophy. Bengal women won the one-day league. India Red Women won the One-Day Challenger Trophy. Punjab won the Senior Women's T20 League. IPL Supernovas won the 2019 Women's T20 Challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Domestic\nThe domestic season was the largest ever with addition of nine new teams as per the Lodha Panel recommendations and over 2000 matches were held. The nine new teams that will make their debut in the season are Arunachal Pradesh, Bihar, Manipur cricket team, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland, Puducherry, Sikkim and Uttarakhand. The new teams played in the plate group with old 28 teams playing in Elite Groups A, B and C. New teams also struggled for availability of grounds and players for the teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Domestic\nThe qualification structure, of top-5 teams qualifying from Group-A and B combined, was a source of confusion and controversy. The shortage of umpires and match officials also remained a serious issue for the BCCI. Cricket Association of Bengal complaint about the poor quality of umpires during Ranji Trophy. BCCI also had to face issue of players misusing their domicile to play for the new teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Domestic, Men's\nThe men's season began in August with Duleep Trophy. India Blue defeated India Red by an innings and 187 runs in the final to win the tournament. The Vijay Hazare Trophy was played in September and October. Mumbai defeated Delhi in the final by 4 wickets to win the Vijay Hazare trophy. Deodhar Trophy was held in October. India C won the Deodhar Trophy by defeating India B by 29 runs in the final. The Ranji Trophy started in November and finished with knockouts being played in January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Domestic, Men's\nFor the new teams in Plate group, the professional players played the key role of guiding and holding their teams during the Ranji trophy. Vidarbha successfully defended the Ranji Trophy crown by defeating Saurashtra by 78 runs in the final played at Nagpur. By winning the Ranji Trophy, Vidharbha played Rest of India in a Best vs Rest format one-off match for Irani Cup. Vidharbha defeated Rest of India on first-innings basis to win the Irani Cup. The Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy was held in February and March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0006-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Domestic, Men's\nKarnataka won the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy for the first time after beating Maharashtra by 8 wickets in the final. The men's season ended with the 12th season of IPL, which ran from 23 March to 12 May. Mumbai Indians defeated Chennai Super Kings by 1 run in the final to win the 2019 Indian Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Domestic, Women's\nThe Inter-zonal multi-day game was eliminated from the women's season. The Challenger Trophy was also held in T20 format along with previously played one-day format. The new T20 Challenger Trophy started the domestic season in August. India Blue Women defeated India Red women by 4 runs to win the inaugural trophy. The One-Day League was played in December. Due to scheduling conflicts, the knockout for the one-day tournament were delayed and moved from 24\u201329 December to 26\u201331 December. Bengal defeated Andhra by 10 runs in the final to win their first One Day League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0007-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Domestic, Women's\nOne Day League was followed by One-Day Challenger Trophy in January. India Red defeated India Blue by 15 runs to win the Challenger Trophy for the 3rd time. T20 League was held in February. Punjab beat Karnataka by 4 runs to win the Senior Women T20 league. A parallel women's tournament with IPL, a followup to 2018 Women's T20 Challenge was held in May 2019 with three teams. IPL Supernovas defeated IPL Velocity by 4 wickets in the final to win the 2019 Women's T20 Challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Junior level, International, Under-19 Men's International Quadrangular Series 2018\nBCCI announced the Under-19 quadrangular tournament between Afghanistan, Nepal, India-A and NCA. NCA was later replaced by India-B while tournament was also shifted from Kolkata to Lucknow. The tournament was looked upon as a preparation for the Youth Asia Cup. The tournament was played from 12 to 18 September 2018. India U-19 B defeated India U-19 A by 10 runs in the final to win the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 113], "content_span": [114, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Junior level, International, Under-19 Men's Youth Test Series vs South Africa\nIn February and March 2019, South Africa Under-19 cricket team toured India to play 2-match Youth Test series against India Under-19 cricket team. Both the matches were played at the Greenfield International Stadium, Thiruvananthapuram. India Under-19 won the first test by 9 wickets. In 2nd test, India Under-19 defeated South Africa by an innings and 158 runs. Hence, India clean sweeped the Under-19 Youth Test series 2\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 108], "content_span": [109, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Junior level, International, Under-19 Men's International Quadrangular Series 2019\nBCCI announced the Under-19 quadrangular tournament between Afghanistan, Oman, India-A and India-B. Due to visa issues, Oman was later replaced by Afghanistan. The tournament was played from 5 to 11 March 2019 at Thiruvananthapuram. India U-19 B defeated India U-19 A by 72 runs in the final to win the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 113], "content_span": [114, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Junior level, Domestic Men's\nVijay Merchant Trophy was originally scheduled to start from 3 October but was postponed to 21 October after the request from state associations. Due to scheduling conflicts, the Cooch Behar trophy was also delayed. Vidarbha U-19 Men defeated Tamil Nadu U-19 Men by 83 runs in the final to win Vinoo Mankad Trophy. India Green Under-19 defeated India Blue Under-19 by 6 wickets in the final to win the Men's U19 One-Day Challenger Trophy. Haryana Under-16 defeated Jharkhand Under-16 on first-innings basis in the final to win the Vijay Merchant Trophy for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0011-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Junior level, Domestic Men's\nPunjab Under-23 defeated Bengal Under-23 by 1 wicket in the final to win the Col C K Nayudu Trophy. Uttar Pradesh U-19 Men defeated Vidarbha U-19 Men on first-innings basis in the final to win the Cooch Behar Trophy. Vidarbha U-23 Men defeated Delhi U-23 Men by 4 wickets in the final to win the trophy. In the final tournament of the season, South Zone University Men defeated North Zone University Men by 60 runs to win the Vizzy Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Junior level, Domestic Men's, Under-23\nThe Under-23 age group consisted of Col C K Nayudu Trophy(Multi-day competition) and One-Day League and Knockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Junior level, Domestic Men's, Under-23\nCol C K Nayudu Trophy was played from 2 November 2018 to 7 February 2019. BCCI's move to allot women umpires for the tournament was appreciated. Shiva Singh's 360-degree action in a match was Bengal was a source of controversy leading to a clarification from MCC. Puducherry's Rex Singh took all 10 wickets in an innings in a league stage match against Manipur. Punjab Under-23 defeated Bengal Under-23 by 1 wicket in the final to win the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Junior level, Domestic Men's, Under-23\nMen's U23 One-Day League and Knockout was played from 13 February to 15 March 2019. The tournament's qualification structure was similar to Ranji Trophy. Vidarbha U-23 Men defeated Delhi U-23 Men by 4 wickets in the final to win the trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Junior level, Domestic Men's, Inter-University\nVizzy Trophy was initially scheduled to played in Knockout format from 20 to 23 March 2019. The tournament's format was changed to Round-Robin format which was followed by a final. It was played from 17 to 23 March 2019. South Zone University Men defeated North Zone University Men by 60 runs to win the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 77], "content_span": [78, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Junior level, Domestic Men's, Under-19\nThe Under-19 age group consisted of Cooch Behar Trophy(Multi-day competition), Vinoo Mankad Trophy(One-day competition) and One-Day Challenger Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Junior level, Domestic Men's, Under-19\nCooch Behar Trophy was played from 19 November 2018 to 14 February 2019. The tournament's qualification structure was similar to Ranji Trophy. Uttar Pradesh U-19 Men defeated Vidarbha U-19 Men on first-innings basis in the final to win the trophy. Due to shortage of umpire and match officials, the third round of tournament was delayed from 17 to 20 December to 21 to 24 January and the knockouts were shifted from 29 January to 18 February. Manipur's Rex Singh took all 10 wickets in an innings in a league stage match against Arunachal Pradesh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Junior level, Domestic Men's, Under-19\nVinoo Mankad Trophy was played from 5 October to 4 November 2018. The tournament's qualification structure was similar to Ranji Trophy. Vidarbha U-19 Men defeated Tamil Nadu U-19 Men by 83 runs in the final to win their maiden trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Junior level, Domestic Men's, Under-19\nMen's U19 One-Day Challenger Trophy was played from 10 to 16 November 2018 at Lucknow. India Green Under-19 Men defeated India Blue Under-19 Men by 6 wickets in the final to win the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Junior level, Domestic Men's, Under-16\nThe Under-16 age group solely consisted of Vijay Merchant Trophy(Multi-day competition).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Junior level, Domestic Men's, Under-16\nVijay Merchant Trophy was played from 21 October 2018 to 15 January 2019. It remained the only tournament to be played at intrazonal basis at round-robin stage. The tournament was originally scheduled to start from 3 October but was postponed to 21 October after the request from state associations. Mumbai Under-16 team's captain Musheer Khan was banned for three years for misbehaviour towards his teammates. Haryana Under-16 defeated Jharkhand Under-16 on first-innings basis in the final to win the tournament for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Junior level, Domestic Women's\nThe Inter Zonal competition and Multi-Day Game format was eliminated from the season. The junior women's domestic season began in October with Women's U23 T20 Challenger Trophy. India Green Under-23 Women defeated India Blue Under-23 Women by 8 wickets to win the tournament. Uttar Pradesh U-23 Women defeated Andhra U-23 Women in the final by 18 runs to win the Women's U19 T20 League. India Red Under-19 Women defeated India Blue Under-19 Women by 10 runs to win the Women's U19 T20 Challenger Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0022-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Junior level, Domestic Women's\nRailways U-23 Women defeated Maharashtra U-23 Women in the final by 3 wickets to win the Women's U23 T20 League. Bengal U-19 Women defeated Delhi U-19 Women by 26 runs (by VJD method) to win the Women's U19 One-Day League. Bengal U-23 Women defeated Mumbai U-23 Women by 2 runs to win the Women's U23 One-Day League. India Blue Under-23 Women defeated India Green Under-23 Women by 5 wickets to win the Women's U23 One-Day Challenger Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Junior level, Domestic Women's, Under-23\nThe Under-23 age group consisted of One-Day League, One-Day Challenger Trophy, T20 League and T20 Challenger Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Junior level, Domestic Women's, Under-23\nWomen's U23 One-Day League was played from 17 March to 14 April 2019. The tournament's qualification structure was similar to Ranji Trophy. Bengal U-23 Women defeated Mumbai U-23 Women by 2 runs to win the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Junior level, Domestic Women's, Under-23\nWomen's U23 One-Day Challenger Trophy was played from 20 to 24 April 2019 at Ranchi. India Blue Under-23 Women defeated India Green Under-23 Women by 5 wickets in the final to win the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Junior level, Domestic Women's, Under-23\nWomen's U23 T20 League was played from 14 January to 5 February 2019. Two teams each from 5 groups qualified for the 2-group Super League. Winners of the two groups met in the final. Railways U-23 Women defeated Maharashtra U-23 Women in the final by 3 wickets to win the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Junior level, Domestic Women's, Under-23\nWomen's U23 T20 Challenger Trophy was played from 4 to 8 October 2018 at Mysuru. India Green Under-23 Women defeated India Blue Under-23 Women by 8 wickets in the final to win the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Junior level, Domestic Women's, Under-19\nThe Under-19 age group consisted of One-Day League, T20 League and T20 Challenger Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Junior level, Domestic Women's, Under-19\nWomen's U19 One-Day League was played from 10 February to 11 March 2019. The tournament's qualification structure was similar to Ranji Trophy. Bengal U-19 Women defeated Delhi U-19 Women by 26 runs (by VJD method) to win the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Junior level, Domestic Women's, Under-19\nWomen's U19 T20 League was played from 14 October to 3 November 2018. Two teams each from 5 groups qualified for the 2-group Super League. Winners of the two groups met in the final. Uttar Pradesh U-19 Women defeated Andhra U-19 Women in the final by 18 runs to win the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285516-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indian cricket season, Junior level, Domestic Women's, Under-19\nWomen's U19 T20 Challenger Trophy was played from 12 to 16 November 2018 at Guntur, Andhra Pradesh. India Red Under-19 Women defeated India Blue Under-19 Women by 10 runs in the final to win the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285517-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball team represented Indiana University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Their head coach was Archie Miller, his second year as Indiana head coach. The team played its home games at Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall in Bloomington, Indiana, as a member of the Big Ten Conference. The season officially kicked off with its annual event, Hoosier Hysteria, on September 29, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285517-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball team\nDespite getting off to a strong start of 12\u20132, which included 3 conference wins, IU struggled mightily down the backstretch of the season. Riddled with injuries and the inability to shoot, the Hoosiers lost 12 of 13 games before turning things around and finishing the regular season with a 4-game winning streak. Having put themselves back into the conversation for making the NCAA Tournament for the first time in 3 years, the Hoosiers looked to knock off Ohio State in the Big Ten Tournament. With a win, many bracketologists had IU safely in the field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285517-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball team\nHowever, the Hoosiers fell short and lost to Ohio State, 75\u201379. IU was deemed one of the Last Four Out in the NCAA Tournament, so they earned 1-seed in the NIT, where they advanced to the Quarterfinals before losing to Wichita State, 63\u201373. Thus, the Hoosiers 119th season ended with an overall record of 19\u201316 and 8\u201312 in the Big Ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285517-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball team, Previous season\nMiller's first season was a major remodeling job, starting with laying the foundation of a pack-line defense and valuing possessions. Early in the season, Miller stated practices were 75% defense, 25% offense. That scheme showed early and often, as the Hoosiers struggled mightily throughout the season to find any flow or rhythm on offense, despite the defense making leaps and bounds in the overall rankings of Division 1 basketball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285517-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball team, Previous season\nWith a surprising early second round loss in the 2018 Big Ten Tournament to Rutgers, 67\u201376, and losing enough games to keep them out of both the NCAA tournament and NIT, including games in which they were favored, such as Indiana State and Fort Wayne, IU's first season under their new coach came to a disappointing close. They finished with an overall record of 16\u201315 and 9\u20139 in the Big Ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285517-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball team, Offseason, Departures\nOn April 12, 2018, junior forward Juwan Morgan announced he was entering the NBA draft, but he would not sign with an agent. However, on May 29, 2018, it was revealed that he had withdrawn from the draft and would return for his senior season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285517-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball team, Offseason, Recruiting class\nWith the commitment of Romeo Langford on April 30, 2018, not only did Archie Miller recruit his first 5-star player, he also landed IU's first Indiana Mr. Basketball since Cody Zeller in 2011. In addition, he also signed two other finalists for the award in Rob Phinisee and Damezi Anderson. Miller rounded out the incoming class with the second best player from Ohio in Jerome Hunter, as well as another 4-star in Jake Forrester from Pennsylvania; this group of high school seniors comprised a Top 10 2018 recruiting class. Within the state of Indiana, there was a total of four 5- and 4-star 2018 recruits, 3 of whom committed to Indiana. The last addition to the team roster was made on May 3, 2018 when graduate transfer Evan Fitzner of Saint Mary's College claimed the final scholarship available.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 75], "content_span": [76, 878]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285517-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nThe 2018\u201319 season will mark the first time in Big Ten history that the teams will play a 20-game conference schedule. The new schedule will also include a regional component to increase the frequency of games among teams in similar areas. Over the course of a six-year cycle (12 playing opportunities), in-state rivals will play each other 12 times, regional opponents will play 10 times, and all other teams will play nine times. Three in-state series that will be guaranteed home-and-homes: Illinois and Northwestern, Indiana and Purdue, and Michigan and Michigan State will always play twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285517-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball team, Rankings\n*AP does not release post-NCAA Tournament rankings^Coaches did not release a week 2 poll", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 56], "content_span": [57, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285518-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indiana Hoosiers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Indiana Hoosiers women's basketball team represents Indiana University Bloomington during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Hoosiers were led by fifth year head coach Teri Moren and play their home games at Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall as a member of the Big Ten Conference. They finished the season 21\u201313, 8\u201310 in Big Ten play to finish in a tie for tenth place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the Big Ten Women's Tournament where they lost to Iowa. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament where they defeated Texas in the first round before losing to Oregon in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285519-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indiana Pacers season\nThe 2018\u201319 Indiana Pacers season was Indiana's 52nd season as a franchise and 43rd season in the NBA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285519-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indiana Pacers season\nThe Pacers endured a major setback when their star player, Victor Oladipo, suffered a season-ending knee injury in a January game against Toronto. Oladipo was nevertheless voted an All-Star reserve. The Pacers struggled after Oladipo's injury, posting a 16\u201319 record during the rest of the season. Despite their late-season struggles, the Pacers clinched a playoff appearance and matched their 48\u201334 record from the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285519-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indiana Pacers season\nThe Pacers were defeated in four games by the Boston Celtics in the first round of the playoffs. For the second time in three years the Pacers were swept in the playoffs, and the loss marked their fourth consecutive defeat in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285519-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indiana Pacers season, Player statistics, Regular season\nAfter all games. \u2021Waived during the season\u2020Traded during the season\u2260Acquired during the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285520-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indiana State Sycamores men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Indiana State Sycamores basketball team represented Indiana State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Sycamores, led by ninth-year head coach Greg Lansing, played their home games at the Hulman Center in Terre Haute, Indiana as members of the Missouri Valley Conference. They finished the season 15\u201316, 7\u201311 in MVC play to finish in a tie for eighth place. As the No. 8 seed in the MVC Tournament, they lost to Valparaiso in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285520-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indiana State Sycamores men's basketball team\nISU coach Greg Lansing began the season needing two wins during the season to surpass his mentor (Royce Waltman) on the ISU Coaching Leaderboard. Waltman had 134 wins. Lansing passed Waltman following the Sycamores victory over the McKendree Bearcats and is currently second (148) in wins at Indiana State; the leader Duane Klueh has 182. Junior Guard Jordan Barnes became the 39th member of the ISU 1,000-pt Club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285520-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indiana State Sycamores men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Sycamores finished the 2017\u201318 season 13\u201318, 8\u201310 in MVC play to finish in sixth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the MVC Tournament to Illinois State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285521-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Indiana State Sycamores women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Indiana State Sycamores women's basketball team represents Indiana State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Sycamores, led by first year head coach Vicki Hall, play their home games at the Hulman Center and were members of the Missouri Valley Conference. They finished the season 11\u201319, 5\u201313 in MVC play to finish in eighth place. They lost in the first round of the Missouri Valley Women's Tournament to Valparaiso.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285522-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inter Milan season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Football Club Internazionale Milano's 110th in existence and 103rd consecutive season in the top flight of Italian football. The side competed in Serie A, the Coppa Italia, the UEFA Champions League and the UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285522-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inter Milan season, Season overview\nOn 20 May 2018, in the final round of 2017\u201318 Serie A, Inter beat Lazio 3\u20132 at Stadio Olimpico, which qualified them for the UEFA Champions League after a six-year absence. Later, in pre-season summer friendlies, Inter finished third place in 2018 International Champions Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285522-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inter Milan season, Season overview\nDuring the summer transfer window, Inter bought Radja Nainggolan from Roma and Lautaro Mart\u00ednez from Racing Club, also signing Stefan de Vrij and Kwadwo Asamoah as free agents. Due to restrictions of Financial Fair Play Regulations, Inter cannot spend too much on transfer market. Thus, some new players are transferred via \"loan with option to buy\", including Matteo Politano from Sassuolo, \u0160ime Vrsaljko from Atl\u00e9tico Madrid and Keita Bald\u00e9 from AS Monaco. On 14 August 2018, club manager Luciano Spalletti signed a new contract to keep him at the club for the next three seasons, until 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285522-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inter Milan season, Season overview\nOn 3 September 2018, Inter announced their squad list for 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285522-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inter Milan season, Season overview\nInternazionale completed a double over arch-rivals A.C. Milan. On 21 October 2018, a late Mauro Icardi strike assured Inter of a 1\u20130 victory over Milan. Icardi headed a Matias Vecino cross into an empty net, between A.C. Milan centre-backs Alessio Romagnoli and Mateo Musacchio into an empty net goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma had abandoned to catch the cross. This was after both teams had goals disallowed in the first half, but ended a highly defensive second half. On 17 March 2019, Vecino half volleyed in a goal after Martinez assisted, a Perisic cross having found the Argentine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285522-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inter Milan season, Season overview\nInter made it two after Stefan De Vrij headed in a Matteo Politano cross from a short Inter Milan corner and the win was sealed after Politano went down in the Milan penalty area following a debatable foul by Milan winger Samu Castillejo. Martinez stepped up to score the resulting penalty kick. A Ti\u00e9mou\u00e9 Bakayoko header from a Hakan Calhanoglu free-kick and a Musacchio header from a Milan short corner were not enough for Inter's arch rivals and Inter completed the first league double in the Milan derby in a while.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285522-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inter Milan season, Season overview\nAmong Inter's other great victories were two thrashings of Genoa, a 5-0 thumping on 3 November 2018 and a 4-0 crushing on 3 April 2019. Inter's victory in November featured two outstanding performances from Roberto Gagliardini and Joao Mario, the former of whom scored two goals and the latter of whom assisted three goals and scored one himself.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285522-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inter Milan season, Season overview\nGagliardini drew first blood for the hosts by pouncing on a loose ball, and two minutes later on 16 minutes Inter doubled their lead through Matteo Politano who finished an inviting pass from Mario, one-on-one with goalkeeper Ionu\u021b Radu who watched the ball roll past him into the centre-right of the net. Radu spent the season at Genoa on loan from Inter Milan and transferred to the Genoese outfit permanently at the end of the season, in a solid campaign for the Romanian which was one of the bright sparks of an unnerving season for Genoa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285522-0005-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inter Milan season, Season overview\nA long throw at the start of the second half allowed Gagliardini to score his second goal via a Radu save following a Perisic shot. Mario scored in injury time to make the scoreline very convincing, a fine finish from just inside the penalty area after receiving the ball from Keita Balde. Mario grabbed his hat-trick of assists deep into injury time by setting up Radja Nainggolan who marked his return from injury with a goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285522-0005-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inter Milan season, Season overview\nThe scoreline was very representative of a game in which Inter dominated and had most of the chances and were rewarded with a high number of goals. Inter's visit to Genoa later in the season was again a good affair for the Nerazzuri. Gagliardini scored two again, the first after 15 minutes finishing a Kwadwo Asamoah cross after Perisic dummies the ball through to Gagliardini who in the centre right of the area tucked into the centre right of the goal. The goal was created by Matteo Politano's dribble down the left wing of the pitch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285522-0005-0004", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inter Milan season, Season overview\nGenoa defender Cristian Romero was sent off on 39 minutes, receiving a red card for throwing Mauro Icardi to the floor, on the night of his first game since a fallout between Icardi's agent (and wife) and Inter Milan chiefs with the striker apparently desiring a transfer move in the summer, ideally to Real Madrid, though there were links of Icardi with Chelsea, which saw Icardi miss much of the season, in the penalty area. Icardi scored the resulting penalty to double Inter's lead and this began a more amicable relationship between player and club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285522-0005-0005", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inter Milan season, Season overview\nPerisic's finish near the right-hand bottom corner of the goal from a one-two with Icardi made it three in the second half and with ten minutes to spare despite Radu's block of a Gagliardini header from a Perisic corner was judged to have crossed the line by goal-line technology, giving the Italian central midfielder his second goal of the night. It was another match Inter gloriously dominated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285522-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inter Milan season, Season overview\nInter engulfed victories over A.C. Milan and Genoa in November inside a seven-game winning run, with defeat of Milan the fifth win on the trot in the league and victory over Genoa the seventh. Inter beat Sampdoria 1\u20130, Fiorentina 2\u20131, Cagliari 2\u20130, SPAL 2\u20131,A.C. Milan 1\u20130, Lazio 3\u20130 in another notable season's accomplishment, and Genoa 5-0 on this run of form. An Icardi double and a Brozovic goal were enough to ensure the win over Lazio, a game in which Inter goalkeeper Samir Handanovic was outstanding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285522-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inter Milan season, Season overview\nInter otherwise went through a season of highs and lows. Early on in the season, Inter looked like they could bid for the title after the seven-game winning run left them few points behind Juventus and roughly level on points with Napoli. Following several draws and losses and a poor start to the year 2019, which first saw a win in February, courtesy of Martinez's winner at Parma, Inter dropped out of the title race, and spent the rest of the season challenging for a place in the 2019-20 UEFA Champions League group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285522-0007-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inter Milan season, Season overview\nA 1\u20130 victory over Napoli with Martinez nabbing the winner after Kalidou Koulibaly and Lorenzo Insigne were sent off for the Neapolitan side was retaliated for by a 4-1 thrashing in Naples which left Inter Milan leaving it until the last day of the season to secure a place in the UEFA Champions League for the 2019\u201320 season. Keita Balde's goal seemed to see Inter smoothly progress into the tournament of the European football elite, but an equaliser from opponents Empoli meant Inter's hopes were on a knife edge as Milan and Atalanta were winning their matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285522-0007-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inter Milan season, Season overview\nA dramatic Nainggolan winner sent the San Siro into euphoria as Inter assured themselves of a Champions League place, though in the tense atmosphere, Inter (Keita Balde) and Empoli had players sent off before the match ended. The match condemned Empoli to relegation to Serie B. It, however, secured a Champions League place for Inter. It was a satisfactory season for the Nerazzuri, as relievingly Inter stayed at the same level as the season before but did not kick on as expected and so were a bit disappointing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285522-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inter Milan season, Season overview\nInter fared poorly in the Coppa Italia, knocked out in their second match of the tournament by Lazio on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285522-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inter Milan season, Season overview\nInter Milan were unlucky to be knocked out in the group stages of the Champions League. Inter started their campaign by defeating Tottenham 2-1 after a great comeback including a late Vecino winner and then PSV Eindhoven were beaten 2-1 too in a nervy match. Defeat at Barcelona, though, was not followed well, as a draw against Barcelona, defeat to Tottenham and a draw with PSV allowed Tottenham's draw against Barcelona to see the eventual finalists of the season's competition through to the next round at the expense of Inter. In the defeat at Barcelona, Marcelo Brozovic's slide to the floor to block a Lionel Messi free-kick became a popular meme on social media due to the unusual nature of the tactic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 754]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285522-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inter Milan season, Season overview\nThe Europa league also proved disappointing. Inter thrashed Rapid Vienna 5-0 on aggregate to progress to the round of 16 after being demoted as third-place in their Champions League group to the Europa League. They were beaten by Eintracht Frankfurt, though, because of a Luka Jovic goal at the San Siro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285522-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inter Milan season, Season overview\nInter did, though, hold themselves up well and maintained progress, and so can be judged to have had a successful enough season. However, towards the end of the campaign, manager Luciano Spalletti was sacked and replaced by former Juventus, Italy and Chelsea managed Antonio Conte, owing to the club's desire to progress further than they had done this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285523-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inverness Caledonian Thistle F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 Inverness Caledonian Thistle F.C. season is the club's second season in the Scottish Championship, having been relegated from the Scottish Premiership at the end of the 2016\u201317 season. Caley Thistle will also compete in the Scottish Challenge Cup, Scottish League Cup and the Scottish Cup. This season will be the 25th season since Inverness joined the Scottish Football League. This season is also the return of the Highland derby after Ross County were relegated one season after Inverness.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285523-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inverness Caledonian Thistle F.C. season, Summary, Management\nJohn Robertson will return to the club for his second season after a close finish to the previous season, by missing out on playoffs by only two points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285523-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inverness Caledonian Thistle F.C. season, Fixtures and Results\nFixtures will be announced by the SPFL in June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 70], "content_span": [71, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285523-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inverness Caledonian Thistle F.C. season, Fixtures and Results, Friendlies\n*Note: Games played on the same day and same time are played with two different squads led by two different managers. Fixtures are being played on the same day as to avoid preseason friendlies leaking into time taken up by the League Cup Group Stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 82], "content_span": [83, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285523-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inverness Caledonian Thistle F.C. season, Fixtures and Results, League\nSPFL fixtures were announced at 9:00am GMT on Friday, 15 June 2018, and are subject to change.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 78], "content_span": [79, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285523-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inverness Caledonian Thistle F.C. season, Fixtures and Results, League\n*despite losing to Dundee United, Inverness still secured Play Offs, as Dunfermline failed to gain ground against Queen of the South.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 78], "content_span": [79, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285523-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inverness Caledonian Thistle F.C. season, Fixtures and Results, Scottish Cup\nInverness played their Scottish Cup match on Sunday, 25 November 2018, as they are drawn into the 3rd round of the tournament against Edinburgh City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 84], "content_span": [85, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285523-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inverness Caledonian Thistle F.C. season, Fixtures and Results, League Cup\nInverness were drawn into Group C of the 2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup on 25 May 2018, along with Heart of Midlothian, Raith Rovers, Cowdenbeath, and Cove Rangers, the first match will be played on 14 July. However, Inverness failed to make the best runners up, losing out on goal difference to Partick Thistle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 82], "content_span": [83, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285523-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inverness Caledonian Thistle F.C. season, Fixtures and Results, Irn Bru Challenge Cup\nInverness were the defending champions going into this cup, with the first game being played on 14 August 2018, however were knocked out in their first game by Dunfermline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 93], "content_span": [94, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285523-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inverness Caledonian Thistle F.C. season, Fixtures and Results, North of Scotland Cup\nIn this competition, Inverness will use a mixed team of mainly U19s and some first team/reserve players to give a fair chance to the significantly smaller teams they come up against.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 93], "content_span": [94, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285523-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Inverness Caledonian Thistle F.C. season, First team player statistics, Overall Goalscorers\n* *players in Italics left the club during the season, so cannot move up the table", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 99], "content_span": [100, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285524-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iona Gaels men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Iona Gaels men's basketball team represented Iona College during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Gaels were led by ninth-year head coach Tim Cluess, and played their home games at the Hynes Athletic Center in New Rochelle, New York as members of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference. They finished the regular season 17\u201316 overall, 12\u20136 in MAAC play to win the regular season championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285524-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iona Gaels men's basketball team\nAs the No. 1 seed in the 2019 MAAC Tournament, they defeated No. 9 seed Saint Peter's, No. 5 seed Siena and No. 6 seed Monmouth 81\u201360, to become champions of the MAAC Tournament for a record fourth consecutive time. They earned the MAAC's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Tournament, receiving a 16 seed in the Midwest region, and facing No. 1 seed North Carolina in the first round. Iona led 38\u201333 at the half, while making 10-of-21 3-pointers. But North Carolina opened the second half on a 25\u20137 run, leading by as many as 20, en route to a 88\u201373 victory. Iona's 15 made three-point field goals are the most ever by a North Carolina opponent in its NCAA tournament history of 171 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285524-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iona Gaels men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Gaels finished the 2017\u201318 season 20\u201314, 11\u20137 in MAAC play to finish in fourth place. They defeated Manhattan, Saint Peter's and Fairfield to become champions of the MAAC Tournament for the third consecutive time. They earned the MAAC's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament where they lost in the first round to Duke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285525-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iowa Hawkeyes men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Iowa Hawkeyes men's basketball team represented the University of Iowa during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team was led by ninth-year head coach Fran McCaffery and played their home games at Carver\u2013Hawkeye Arena as members of the Big Ten Conference. The Hawkeyes finished the season 23\u201312, 10\u201310 in Big Ten play to finish in sixth place. They defeated Illinois in the second round of the Big Ten Tournament before losing to Michigan in the quarterfinals. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as the No. 10 seed in the South region. There they defeated No. 7-seeded Cincinnati in the First Round before losing to No. 2-seeded Tennessee in the Second Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285525-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iowa Hawkeyes men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Hawkeyes finished the 2017\u201318 season 14\u201319, 4\u201314 in Big Ten play to finish in a three-way tie for 11th place. As the No. 12 seed in the Big Ten Tournament, they defeated Illinois before losing to Michigan in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285525-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iowa Hawkeyes men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nThe 2018\u201319 season will mark the first time in Big Ten history that the teams will play a 20-game conference schedule, setting a precedent for all Division I basketball. The new schedule will also include a regional component to increase the frequency of games among teams in similar areas. Over the course of a six-year cycle (12 playing opportunities), in-state rivals will play each other 12 times, regional opponents will play 10 times, and all other teams will play nine times. Three in-state series will be guaranteed home-and-homes: Illinois and Northwestern, Indiana and Purdue, and Michigan and Michigan State will always play twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285525-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iowa Hawkeyes men's basketball team, Rankings\n^Coaches did not release a Week 1 poll. *AP does not release post-NCAA Tournament rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285526-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iowa Hawkeyes women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Iowa Hawkeyes women's basketball team represented the University of Iowa during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Hawkeyes, led by 19th year head coach Lisa Bluder, played their home games at Carver\u2013Hawkeye Arena in Iowa City, IA as members of the Big Ten Conference. They finished the season 29\u20137, 14\u20134 in Big Ten play to finish in second place. Iowa won the Big Ten Conference tournament championship game over Maryland, 90\u201376.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285526-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iowa Hawkeyes women's basketball team\nThey received an automatic bid to the NCAA Women's Tournament as the No. 2 seed in the Greensboro region where they defeated Mercer and Missouri in the first and second rounds, NC State in the sweet sixteen to advance to the elite eight for the first time since 1993. They lost to eventual national champion Baylor in the elite eight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285527-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iowa State Cyclones men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Iowa State Cyclones men's basketball team represented Iowa State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Cyclones were coached by Steve Prohm, who was in his fourth season at Iowa State. They played their home games at Hilton Coliseum in Ames, Iowa as members of the Big 12 Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285527-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iowa State Cyclones men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Cyclones finished the 2017\u201318 season 13\u201318, 4\u201314 in Big 12 play to finish in last place. They lost in the first round of the Big 12 Tournament to Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285527-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iowa State Cyclones men's basketball team, Rankings\n^Coaches did not release a Week 1 poll. *AP does not release post-NCAA Tournament rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285528-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iowa State Cyclones women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Iowa State Cyclones women's basketball team represents Iowa State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Cyclones were coached by Bill Fennelly, who was in his 24th season at Iowa State. They play their home games at Hilton Coliseum in Ames, Iowa as members of the Big 12 Conference. They finished the season 26\u20139, 13\u20135 in Big 12 play to finish in second place. They advanced to the championship game of the Big 12 Women's Tournament where they lost to Baylor. They received at-large bid of the NCAA Women's Tournament defeated New Mexico State in the first round before getting upset by Missouri State in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285528-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iowa State Cyclones women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Cyclones finished the 2017\u201318 season 14\u201317, 7\u201311 in Big 12 play to finish in a tie for seventh place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the Big 12 Women's Tournament where they lost to Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285528-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iowa State Cyclones women's basketball team, Rankings\n^Coaches' Poll did not release a second poll at the same time as the AP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285529-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ipswich Town F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Ipswich Town's 17th consecutive season in the second tier of English football and 141st year in existence. Along with competing in the Championship, the club also participated in the FA Cup, going out in the third round, and League Cup, in which they were eliminated in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285529-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ipswich Town F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285529-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ipswich Town F.C. season, Kits\nSupplier: Adidas / Sponsor: Magical Vegas (chest), East Anglian Children's Hospices (back), Nicholas Estates (shorts)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 38], "content_span": [39, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285529-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285529-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ipswich Town F.C. season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 75], "content_span": [76, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285529-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ipswich Town F.C. season, Pre-season\nA pre-season friendly with Milton Keynes Dons was announced on 17 May 2018. Further matches with Braintree Town and Crawley Town were announced a day later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285529-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ipswich Town F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285529-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ipswich Town F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285530-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iran Football's 3rd Division\nThe article contains information about the 2018\u201319 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 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285530-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iran Football's 3rd Division\nIn total and in the first round, 65 teams will compete in 5 different groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285530-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iran Football's 3rd Division, First round\nEach team who give up in 2 matches, will be relegated 2 divisions for next season. Therefore, in this stage, the teams which give up 2 matches, will be eligible to play in the provincial 2nd division for 2019-20 season (and not eligible to play in the provincial 1st division)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285530-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iran Football's 3rd Division, Second round\nSecond Round will be started after first round (December 2018)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285530-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iran Football's 3rd Division, Second round\nTeams rankes first and second in each group (Total 6 teams) will promote to 2nd Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285530-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iran Football's 3rd Division, Second round\nTeams ranked 9th and 10th in each group and the 2 worst 8th ranked teams (Total 8 teams) will be relegated to 1st round of 3rd Dicivion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285530-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iran Football's 3rd Division, Second round\nEach team who give up in 2 matches, will be relegated 2 divisions for next season. Therefore, in this stage, the teams which gave up 2 matches, will be eligible to play in the provincial 1st division for 2019-20 season (and not eligible to play in the 1st stage of 3rd division as a lower Division)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285531-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Irani Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Irani Cup is the 57th season of Irani Cup, a first-class cricket competition in India. It was played as a one-off match between the Vidarbha (the winner of the 2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy) and Rest of India cricket team, from 12 February 2019 to 16 February 2019. In April 2018, ESPNcricinfo had reported that Irani Cup was proposed to be no more part of the domestic season but it was included in the final schedule released by BCCI in July. Vidarbha successfully defended their title and defeated Rest of India on first-innings basis to win the tournament. Vidarbha became the third team after Bombay and Karnataka to defend both the Ranji Trophy and Irani Cup. Hanuma Vihari became the first player to score 3 consecutive centuries in Irani Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285531-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Irani Cup, Squads\nUmesh Yadav had a niggle and was replaced by Darshan Nalkande.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285532-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iranian Basketball Super League\nThe 2018\u201319 Iran Super League season was the 29th season of the Iranian basketball league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285532-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iranian Basketball Super League\nShahrdari Tabriz was the defending champion, but the club withdrew before the start of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285532-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iranian Basketball Super League, Playoffs, Quarterfinals\nThe higher-seeded team played the second and third leg (if necessary) at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 64], "content_span": [65, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285532-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iranian Basketball Super League, Playoffs, Semifinals\nThe higher-seeded team played the first, second and fifth leg (if necessary) at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285532-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iranian Basketball Super League, Playoffs, Final\nThe higher-seeded team played the first, second and fifth leg (if necessary) at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285533-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iranian Futsal Super League\nThe 2018\u201319 Iranian Futsal Super League are the 20th season of the Iran Pro League and the 15th under the name Futsal Super League. Mes Sungun are the defending champions. The season will feature 12 teams from the 2017\u201318 Super League and two new teams promoted from the 2017\u201318 1st Division: Sunich and Ahoora.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285534-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iranian Volleyball Super League\nThe Iranian Volleyball Super League 2018\u201319 was the 32nd season of the Iranian Volleyball Super League, the highest professional volleyball league in Iran. The season started on 10 October 2018 and ended on 18 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285535-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iraq Division One\nThe Iraq Division One of 2018\u201319. Al-Qasim won the league and were promoted to the 2019\u201320 Iraqi Premier League along with Zakho.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285535-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iraq Division One, Format\nTeams from all over Iraq participated in preliminary qualifications for the final stage, which consist of 12 teams split into two groups. The winners of the two groups were promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285536-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iraq FA Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Iraq FA Cup was the 30th edition of the Iraqi knockout football cup competition, the main domestic cup in Iraqi football. A total of 20 teams from the Iraqi Premier League and 25 teams from the Iraq Division One and Iraq Division Two participated. It started on 12 September 2018 and the final was played on 26 July 2019 at the Al-Shaab Stadium in Baghdad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285536-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iraq FA Cup\nThe winners of the competition were Al-Zawraa, who extended their record number of cup wins to 16 with a 1\u20130 victory over Al-Kahrabaa, thanks to a late goal by Safaa Hadi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285536-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iraq FA Cup, Format, Participation\nThe cup starts with the first round, consisting of 24 teams from the Iraq Division One and Iraq Division Two. 1 team is automatically placed in the playoff round, where they face one of the first round's winners for a place in the Round of 32. The 20 Iraqi Premier League clubs join the 12 qualified teams to form the Round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 42], "content_span": [43, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285536-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285536-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iraq FA Cup, Schedule\nThe rounds of the 2018\u201319 competition are scheduled as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285536-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iraq FA Cup, First round\n24 teams from the Division One and Division Two competed in this round, and 1 team (Al-Mohandessin) was automatically placed into the playoff round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285536-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iraq FA Cup, Round of 32\n20 top-tier teams and 12 lower-tier teams competed in this round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285537-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iraqi Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Iraqi Premier League (Arabic: \u0627\u0644\u062f\u0648\u0631\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0631\u0627\u0642\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0645\u062a\u0627\u0632 2018\u201319\u200e) was the 45th season of the Iraqi Premier League, the highest division for Iraqi association football clubs, since its establishment in 1974. The season started on 14 September 2018 and ended on 24 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285537-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Iraqi Premier League\nA two-horse title race ensued for most of the season and Al-Shorta ended up as champions by finishing five points ahead of Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya at the top of the table. During this season, Al-Shorta managed to equal the record of 39 consecutive Iraqi Premier League matches undefeated set by Al-Zawraa in 1994. The club's manager Neboj\u0161a Jovovi\u0107 became the first manager from Europe to win the Iraqi Premier League title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285538-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Irish Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Irish Cup (known as the Tennent's Irish Cup for sponsorship purposes) was the 139th edition of the premier knock-out cup competition in Northern Irish football. The competition began on 11 August 2018 and concluded with the final at Windsor Park on 4 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285538-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Irish Cup\nColeraine were the defending champions, having defeated Cliftonville in the 2018 final. Crusaders were the eventual winners, defeating second-tier side Ballinamallard United 3\u20130 in the final to lift the Cup for the fourth time overall, and the first time in the 10 years since winning the 2009 final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285538-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Irish Cup, Format and schedule\nAll ties level after 90 minutes used extra time to determine the winner, with a penalty shoot-out to follow if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 38], "content_span": [39, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285538-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Irish Cup, Format and schedule\n126 clubs entered this season's competition - a reduction of four clubs compared with the 2017\u201318 total of 130 clubs. 90 regional league clubs from tiers 4\u20137 in the Northern Ireland football league system entered the competition in the first round, with 76 of them drawn into 38 first round fixtures and the remaining 14 clubs receiving a bye into the second round. The 38 first-round winners were joined by the 14 byes and the 12 clubs of the NIFL Premier Intermediate League in the second round. After two further rounds, the eight surviving clubs joined the 24 senior NIFL Premiership and NIFL Championship clubs in the fifth round. All ties level after 90 minutes used extra time to determine the winner, with a penalty shoot-out to follow if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 38], "content_span": [39, 796]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285538-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Irish Cup, Results, Second round\nThe twelve members of the NIFL Premier Intermediate League joined the competition at this stage as well as the first-round winners and byes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 40], "content_span": [41, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285538-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Irish Cup, Results, Sixth round\nFour ties were played on 2 February 2019, with four ties postponed to 11 February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285539-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Irish Super League season\nThe 2018\u201319 Irish Super League season was the 46th running of Basketball Ireland's premier men's basketball competition. The season began featuring 12 teams from across the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland, before dropping to 11 mid-season following Swords Thunder disbanding in February 2019. The regular season began on 29 September 2018 and ended on 24 March 2019 with Tralee Warriors claiming their maiden championship. Killester were victorious in the National Cup, while Templeogue won the Champions Trophy for the first time after finishing as runners-up in three out of the previous four seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285540-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Isle of Man Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 Isle of Man League was the 110th season of the Isle of Man Football League on the Isle of Man. St Georges were the defending champions, having won the previous three championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285541-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ismaily SC season\nThe 2018\u201319 Ismaily season was the 96th season in the football club's history and 48th consecutive and 56th overall season in the top flight of Egyptian football, the Egyptian Premier League, having been promoted from the Egyptian Second Division in 1962. In addition to the domestic league, Ismaily also competed in this season's editions of the domestic cup, the Egypt Cup, the first-tier African cup, the CAF Champions League, and the first-tier Arab cup, the Arab Club Champions Cup. The season covered a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019; however Ismaily played their last match of the season in July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285541-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ismaily SC 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285541-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ismaily SC 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285542-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israel State Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Israel State Cup (Hebrew: \u05d2\u05d1\u05d9\u05e2 \u05d4\u05de\u05d3\u05d9\u05e0\u05d4\u200e, Gvia HaMedina) is the 80th season of Israel's nationwide Association football cup competition and the 65th after the Israeli Declaration of Independence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285542-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israel State Cup, Preliminary Rounds, First to Fourth Rounds\nRounds 1 to 4 double as cup competition for each division in Liga Bet and Liga Gimel. The two third-Round winners from each Liga Bet division and the fourth-Round winner from each Liga Gimel division advance to the sixth Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285542-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israel State Cup, Preliminary Rounds, First to Fourth Rounds, Liga Bet\nMaccabi Sektzia Ma'alot-Tarshiha won the district cup and qualified along with Beitar Nahariya to the sixth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 78], "content_span": [79, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285542-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israel State Cup, Preliminary Rounds, First to Fourth Rounds, Liga Bet\nF.C. Daburiyya won the district cup and qualified along with Maccabi Bnei Raina to the sixth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 78], "content_span": [79, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285542-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israel State Cup, Preliminary Rounds, First to Fourth Rounds, Liga Bet\nHapoel Hod HaSharon won the district cup and qualified along with Shimshon Tel Aviv to the sixth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 78], "content_span": [79, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285542-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israel State Cup, Preliminary Rounds, First to Fourth Rounds, Liga Bet\nF.C. Dimona won the district cup and qualified along with Ironi Modi'in to the sixth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 78], "content_span": [79, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285542-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israel State Cup, Preliminary Rounds, First to Fourth Rounds, Liga Gimel\nF.C. Aramshe Danun won the district cup and qualified to the sixth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 80], "content_span": [81, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285542-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israel State Cup, Preliminary Rounds, First to Fourth Rounds, Liga Gimel\nMaccabi Basmat Tab'un won the district cup and qualified to the sixth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 80], "content_span": [81, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285542-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israel State Cup, Preliminary Rounds, First to Fourth Rounds, Liga Gimel\nF.C. Pardes Hanna Lior Bokar won the district cup and qualified to the sixth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 80], "content_span": [81, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285542-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israel State Cup, Preliminary Rounds, First to Fourth Rounds, Liga Gimel\nMaccabi Neve Sha'anan Eldad won the district cup and qualified to the sixth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 80], "content_span": [81, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285542-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israel State Cup, Preliminary Rounds, First to Fourth Rounds, Liga Gimel\nClub Sporting Tel Aviv won the district cup and qualified to the sixth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 80], "content_span": [81, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285542-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israel State Cup, Preliminary Rounds, First to Fourth Rounds, Liga Gimel\nMaccabi HaShikma Ramat Hen won the district cup and qualified to the sixth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 80], "content_span": [81, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285542-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israel State Cup, Preliminary Rounds, First to Fourth Rounds, Liga Gimel\nHapoel Gedera won the district cup and qualified to the sixth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 80], "content_span": [81, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285542-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israel State Cup, Preliminary Rounds, First to Fourth Rounds, Liga Gimel\nHapoel Sderot won the district cup and qualified to the sixth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 80], "content_span": [81, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285542-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israel State Cup, Fifth Round\nThe fifth Round is played within each division of Liga Alef. The winners qualify to the sixth Round", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285542-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israel State Cup, Seventh Round\nHapoel Bnei Lod, Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla, Hapoel Marmorek and Hapoel Akko were pre-qualified for the Next Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285543-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israeli Basketball National League\nThe 2018\u201319 Israeli Basketball National League (or the Liga Leumit) is the 19th season of the Israeli Basketball National League. It started on October 31, 2018 with the first round of the regular season and ended on May 24, 2019 with the finals. Maccabi Haifa have won the championship after defeating Hapoel Galil Elyon 3\u20131 in a best of five series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285543-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israeli Basketball National League, Teams\nThe following teams had changed divisions after the 2017\u201318 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285544-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israeli Basketball Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Israeli Basketball Premier League, for sponsorship reasons Ligat Winner, is the 65th season of the Israeli Basketball Premier League. Maccabi Tel Aviv is the defending champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285544-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israeli Basketball Premier League, Teams\nHapoel Be'er Sheva was promoted from the Liga Leumit, after they swept Maccabi Kiryat Gat 3\u20130 in the finals. Meanwhile, Maccabi Haifa was relegated after finishing in the last place the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285544-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israeli Basketball Premier League, Playoffs\nThe first round of the playoffs is played in a best-of-five format, with the higher seeded team playing the first, third and fifth game at home. The Playoffs started on May 23, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285544-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israeli Basketball Premier League, All-Star Event\nThe 2019 Israeli League All-star event was held at the Menora Mivtachim Arena in Tel Aviv on 12 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 57], "content_span": [58, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285544-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israeli Basketball Premier League, All-Star Event\nThe International team won the game 134-130. The MVP of the game was JP Tokoto who scored 19 points along with five rebounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 57], "content_span": [58, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285544-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israeli Basketball Premier League, All-Star Event\nGuy Pnini won the Three-Point Shootout and Cor-J Cox won the Slam Dunk Contest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 57], "content_span": [58, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285545-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israeli Basketball State Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Israeli Basketball State Cup was the 59th edition of the Israeli Basketball State Cup, organized by the Israel Basketball Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285545-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israeli Basketball State Cup\nThe Final Four of the tournament was held from February 11\u201314 in the Pais Arena in Jerusalem.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285545-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israeli Basketball State Cup\nOn February 14, 2019, Hapoel Jerusalem won its fifth State Cup title after an 82\u201367 win over Maccabi Rishon LeZion in the Final. TaShawn Thomas was named the Final MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285545-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israeli Basketball State Cup, First Round\nTen teams participated in the First Round. Maccabi Tel Aviv, Hapoel Holon and Hapoel Jerusalem were pre-qualified for the Quarterfinals and didn't play in the First Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285545-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israeli Basketball State Cup, First Round\nOn October 15, 2018, The Israel Basketball Association (IBBA) disqualified all the teams from the Liga Leumit, aside from Maccabi Haifa, due to the league's lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285545-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israeli Basketball State Cup, Final Four\nThe Final Four of the tournament was held from February 11\u201314 in the Pais Arena in Jerusalem.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285546-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israeli Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Israeli Premier League, also known as Ligat Japanika for sponsorship reasons, was the twentieth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 77th season of top-tier football in Israel. The season began on 25 August 2018 and concluded on 25 May 2019. Hapoel Be'er Sheva were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285546-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israeli Premier League, Teams\nA total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2017\u201318 season and two promoted teams from the 2017\u201318 Liga Leumit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285546-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israeli Premier League, Teams\nHapoel Akko and Hapoel Ashkelon were relegated to the 2018\u201319 Liga Leumit after finishing the 2017\u201318 Israeli Premier League in the bottom two places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285546-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israeli Premier League, Teams\nHapoel Tel Aviv were promoted as the winners of the 2017\u201318 Liga Leumit. This ends the team's one-year absence from the top division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285546-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israeli Premier League, Teams\nHapoel Hadera were promoted as the Runner-ups of the 2017\u201318 Liga Leumit. This marked the return of Hadera to the top division after 39 years of absence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285546-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israeli Premier League, Teams, Foreign players\nThe number of foreign players were restricted to six per team, while only five could have been registered to a game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285546-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israeli 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-00285546-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israeli Premier League, Championship round\nKey numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 26 games)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285546-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israeli Premier League, Championship round\nDue to 3 teams that play in the Netanya stadium qualifying to this round, and in order to insure that all the last games of this round, can be played in the same time(for purity reasons), the order of the games, has been changed. Affecting fixtures 33,35 and 36.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285546-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israeli Premier League, Relegation round\nKey numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 26 games)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285547-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Israeli Women's Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 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 21st season of Israel's women's nationwide football cup competition. The competition began on 25 October with one first round match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285548-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Isthmian League\nThe 2018\u201319 season is the 104th season of the Isthmian League, which is an English football competition featuring semi-professional and amateur clubs from London, East and South East England. This is also the first season to consist of four divisions after the league reorganised the former South Division into the new South Central and South East divisions. The league is also known as the Bostik League under a sponsorship deal with Bostik.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285548-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Isthmian League, South Central Division, Team changes\nThe following teams were allocated to the South Central Division:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 61], "content_span": [62, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285548-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Isthmian League, South East Division, Team changes\nThe 16 teams from the preceding season's South Division remained in the South East Division. They were joined by the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 58], "content_span": [59, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285548-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Isthmian League, League Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Alan Turvey Trophy (formerly the Isthmian League Cup) was the 45th season of the Alan Turvey Trophy, the cup competition of the whole Isthmian League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285548-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Isthmian League, League Cup, Calendar\nThe Isthmian League Cup was voluntary this season. Five clubs decided not to take part in the competition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285548-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Isthmian League, League Cup, Preliminary round\nTwenty-six clubs participated in the Preliminary round, while fifty-one clubs received a bye to the First round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285548-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Isthmian League, League Cup, First round\nThirteen clubs to have made it through the Preliminary round were entered into the draw with fifty-one clubs who get a bye, making sixty-four clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285549-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 JLT One-Day Cup\nThe 2018 JLT One-Day Cup was the 50th season of the official List A domestic cricket competition in Australia. It was played over a four-week period at the start of the domestic season to separate its schedule from the Sheffield Shield season. The tournament was held in Townsville, Sydney, Perth and Melbourne. Fox Cricket broadcast 13 matches from the tournament. The tournament was sponsored by Jardine Lloyd Thompson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285549-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 JLT One-Day Cup, Squads\nNew South Wales captain Peter Nevill was ruled out of the tournament after suffering a broken thumb while batting in the nets at the WACA Ground prior to the start of the Blues' campaign. He was replaced in the squad by Jay Lenton, while Kurtis Patterson assumed captaincy duties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285549-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 JLT One-Day Cup, Squads\nTasmanian all-rounder James Faulkner sustained a calf injury whilst playing for Lancashire Lightning in the semi-final of England\u2019s domestic T20 competition. He was replaced in the squad by Gurinder Sandhu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285549-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 JLT One-Day Cup, Squads\nSouth Australia\u2019s Daniel Worrall sustained a back injury and was replaced by allrounder Luke Robins in the squad prior to the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285549-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 JLT One-Day Cup, Squads\nSimon Mackin, Will Bosisto and Sam Whiteman were added to the Western Australian squad after D'Arcy Short, Marcus Stoinis and Matt Kelly were ruled out for the start of the tournament through injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285549-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 JLT One-Day Cup, Squads\nQueenslander Jimmy Peirson made an early recovery from his injury and joined their squad prior to the match against Tasmania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285549-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 JLT One-Day Cup, Squads\nChris Green and Ben Dwarshuis were added to the New South Wales squad in place of Jason Sangha and Trent Copeland prior to their clash with Tasmania, to allow the latter two to play Grade Cricket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285549-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 JLT One-Day Cup, Squads\nWicket keeper Peter Nevill returned to the New South Wales squad after making a quick recovery from a broken thumb. He replaced fellow wicket keeper Jay Lenton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285549-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 JLT One-Day Cup, Squads\nPat Cummins was added to the New South Wales squad after recovering from a back injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285549-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 JLT One-Day Cup, Debutants\nThe following players made their List A debuts throughout the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285550-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 JS Kabylie season\nIn the 2018\u201319 season, JS Kabylie competed in the Ligue 1 for the 48th season, as well as the Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285550-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 JS Kabylie season, Pre-season\nFollowing the conclusion of the 2018\u201319 campaign, JS Kabylie announced they would play Saarbr\u00fccken, Hertha Wiesbach, Hamm Benfica and FV Lebach in July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285550-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285550-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 JS Kabylie season, Squad list\nAs of August 11, 2018. 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, 37], "content_span": [38, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285551-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 JS Saoura season\nIn the 2018\u201319 season, JS Saoura competed in the Ligue 1 for the 7th season, as well as the Champions League, and the Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285551-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 JS Saoura season, Squad list\nAs of August 11, 2018. 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, 36], "content_span": [37, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285552-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jackson State Tigers basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Jackson State Tigers basketball team represented Jackson State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Tigers were led by sixth-year head coach Wayne Brent, and played their home games at the Williams Assembly Center in Jackson, Mississippi as members of the Southwestern Athletic Conference. They finished the season 13\u201319 overall, 10\u20138 in SWAC play to finish in a three-way tie for third place. As the No. 3 seed in the SWAC Tournament, they were upset by No. 6 seed Alabama State in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285552-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jackson State Tigers basketball team, Previous season\nThe Tigers finished the 2017\u201318 season 12\u201320, 9\u20139 in SWAC play to finish in sixth place. Due to Grambling State's ineligibility, they received the No. 5 seed in the SWAC Tournament where they lost to Southern in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285553-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jacksonville Dolphins men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Jacksonville Dolphins men's basketball team represented Jacksonville University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Dolphins, led by fifth-year head coach Tony Jasick, played their home games at Swisher Gymnasium on the university's Jacksonville, Florida campus as members of the Atlantic Sun Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285553-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jacksonville Dolphins men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Dolphins finished the 2017\u201318 season 15\u201318, 8\u20136 in ASUN play to finish in third place. They defeated Kennesaw State in the quarterfinals of the ASUN Tournament before losing in the semifinals to Lipscomb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285554-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jacksonville Dolphins women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Jacksonville Dolphins women's basketball team represents Jacksonville University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Dolphins, led by first year head coach Darnell Haney, play their home games at Swisher Gymnasium and were members of the Atlantic Sun Conference. They finish the season 14\u201316, 7\u20139 in A-Sun play finish in sixth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the 2019 Atlantic Sun Women's Basketball Tournament to Liberty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285554-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jacksonville Dolphins women's basketball team, Media\nAll home games and conference road games are shown on ESPN3 or A-Sun.TV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 60], "content_span": [61, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285555-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jacksonville State Gamecocks men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Jacksonville State Gamecocks men's basketball team represented Jacksonville State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Gamecocks, led by third-year head coach Ray Harper, played their home games at the Pete Mathews Coliseum in Jacksonville, Alabama as members of the Ohio Valley Conference. They finished the season 24\u20139, 15\u20133 in OVC play to finish in third place. They defeated UT Martin in the quarterfinals of the OVC Tournament before losing in the semifinals to Murray State. Despite having 24 wins, they did not participate in a postseason tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285555-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jacksonville State Gamecocks men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Gamecocks finished the 2017\u201318 season 23\u201313, 11\u20137 in OVC play to finish in fourth place. They defeated Tennessee Tech in the quarterfinals of the OVC Tournament before losing in the semifinals to Murray State. They were invited to the College Basketball Invitational where they defeated Canisius and Central Arkansas to advance to the semifinals where they lost to North Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 75], "content_span": [76, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285556-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jaguar I-Pace eTrophy\nThe 2018\u201319 Jaguar I-Pace eTrophy was the inaugural season of the battery electric zero-emission international motor racing series supporting the FIA Formula E Championship, which started in December 2018 and ended in July 2019. The series saw entrants compete in a race-prepared Jaguar I-PACE, built by Jaguar's Special Vehicle Operations team with technical support from M-Sport who maintain the cars, with the races taking place on selected Formula E weekends.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285556-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jaguar I-Pace eTrophy, Results and standings, Drivers' championship\nPoints were awarded to the top ten classified finishers in every race, and the pole position starter in each class, using the following structure:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 75], "content_span": [76, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285556-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jaguar I-Pace eTrophy, Results and standings, Drivers' championship\n\u2021 \u2013 Qualification was not held due to poor weather conditions and safety concerns. Therefore, no extra point was given for pole position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 75], "content_span": [76, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285557-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 James Madison Dukes men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 James Madison Dukes men's basketball team represented James Madison University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Dukes, led by third-year head coach Louis Rowe, played their home games at the James Madison University Convocation Center in Harrisonburg, Virginia as members of the Colonial Athletic Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285557-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 James Madison Dukes men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Dukes finished the 2017\u201318 season 10\u201322, 6\u201312 in CAA play to finish in a four-way tie for seventh place. They lost in the first round of the CAA Tournament to Drexel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285558-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 James Madison Dukes women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 James Madison Dukes women's basketball team represents James Madison University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Dukes, led by third year head coach Sean O'Regan, play their home games at the James Madison University Convocation Center and are members of the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA). They finished the season 29\u20136, 16\u20131 in CAA play to win the CAA regular season title. They lost in the quarterfinals of the CAA Women's Tournament to Hofstra. They received an automatic bid to the Women's National Invitation Tournament where they defeated North Carolina A&T, South Florida, Virginia Tech in the first, second and third rounds, Georgetown in the quarterfinals before losing to Northwestern in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285559-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jamshedpur FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the second season of competitive football played by Jamshedpur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285559-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jamshedpur FC season, Background\nThe 2017\u201318 season was Jamshedpur's first ever season after they were awarded one of two expansion slots into the Indian Super League. After winning the expansion slot, the club announced the signing of their first head coach, Steve Coppell. The club then went on the assemble their inaugural season squad, bringing in India international Anas Edathodika as their first player and the Spanish defender, Tiri, as their first foreign player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285559-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jamshedpur FC season, Background\nJamshedpur played their first game on 18 November 2017 against NorthEast United. Despite being down a man due to a sending off, the club managed to hold on for a 0\u20130 draw. The club then played their first match at home on 1 December against ATK, which turned out to be another 0\u20130 draw. Throughout the season, scoring goals was a problem for Jamshedpur, with Coppell stating at the halfway mark of the campaign that scoring goals was \"a big priority for us\". Despite that, Jamshedpur would go on to end the season in fifth, one place below a finals spot, with only 16 goals scored, tied second-lowest in the league in that category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285559-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jamshedpur FC season, Background, Squad changes\nLess than a week after their last match of the 2017\u201318 ISL season, Jamshedpur confirmed their first signing for the next season as Chennai City midfielder Michael Soosairaj. The club then announced that they had retained goalkeeper Subrata Pal, defenders Tiri, Yumnam Raju, midfielders Memo, Wellington Priori, Bikash Jairu, and forwards Farukh Choudhary and Sumeet Passi. Then, on 17 April 2018, the club announced their second signing, defender Pratik Chaudhari of Delhi Dynamos. Nine days later, the club announced their third signing, goalkeeper Subhasish Roy Chowdhary of Kerala Blasters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285559-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jamshedpur FC season, Pre-season and friendlies\nJamshedpur FC departed for Madrid, Spain on 14 August 2018 to take part in the pre-season camp. The team will be playing five practice matches in the duration of a month-long tour. The team will be training at the Los \u00c1ngeles de San Rafael facility in Spain. This training facility is famous for hosting the preseason for La Liga giants Atl\u00e9tico de Madrid. The team will be playing practice matches during the preseason with teams such as Atl\u00e9tico Madrid B , Gimn\u00e1stica Segoviana CF, Torrelodones C.F., CD M\u00f3stoles URJC. etc which majorly are from second and third division of Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285560-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Japan Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2018\u201319 Japan Figure Skating Championships were held on December 20\u201324, 2018 in Osaka. It was the 87th edition of the event. 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, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285560-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Japan Figure Skating Championships, Japan Junior Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2018\u201319 Junior Championships took place on November 23\u201325, 2018 in Fukuoka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 85], "content_span": [86, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285560-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Japan Figure Skating Championships, International team selections\nOn 25 December 2018, the Japan Skating Federation published its selections for the 2019 World Championships, 2019 Four Continents Championships, 2019 World Junior Championships, and 2019 Winter Universiade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 73], "content_span": [74, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285560-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Japan Figure Skating Championships, International team selections, World Championships\nThe 2019 World Championships will be held on March 18\u201324, 2019 in Saitama, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 94], "content_span": [95, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285560-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Japan Figure Skating Championships, International team selections, Four Continents Championships\nThe 2019 Four Continents Championships will be held on February 7\u201310, 2019 in Anaheim, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 104], "content_span": [105, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285560-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Japan Figure Skating Championships, International team selections, World Junior Championships\nThe 2019 World Junior Championships will take place on March 4\u201310, 2019in Zagreb, Croatia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 101], "content_span": [102, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285560-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Japan Figure Skating Championships, International team selections, Winter Universiade\nThe 2019 Winter Universiade will be held on March 4\u20139, 2019 in Krasnoyarsk, Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 93], "content_span": [94, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285561-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jordan FA Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Jordan FA Cup is the 39th season of the national football competition of Jordan. The winners of the competition earned a spot in the 2020 AFC Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285561-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jordan FA Cup, Preliminary round\nThe preliminary round was played between 20 and 23 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285561-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jordan FA Cup, Preliminary round\nAl Arabi 0 - 0 (4 - 3 P) Ittihad Jerash", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 80]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285561-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jordan FA Cup, Preliminary round\nAl Jalil 2 - 2 (3 - 5 P) Al Hamra", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 74]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285561-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jordan FA Cup, Preliminary round\nAl Khaleej 2 - 2 (4 - 2 P) Al Badeya", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 77]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285561-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jordan FA Cup, Round of 32\nThe round of 32 was played between 11 and 23 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285561-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jordan FA Cup, Round of 16\nThe round of 16 was played between 18 and 20 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285561-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jordan FA Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs were played between 14 and 17 May 2019, and the second legs were played on 20 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285561-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jordan FA Cup, Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 24 May 2019, and the second legs were played on 27 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285562-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jordanian Pro League\nThe 2018\u201319 Jordanian Pro League (known as the Al-Manaseer Jordanian Pro League, named after Ziad AL-Manaseer Companies Group for sponsorship reasons) was the 67th season of Jordanian Pro League since its inception in 1944. The season started on 15 August 2018 and finished in May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285562-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jordanian Pro League\nAl-Wehdat are the defending champions of the 2017\u201318 season. Al-Salt and Al-Sareeh joined as the promoted clubs from the 2017\u201318 League Division 1. They replaced Mansheyat Bani Hasan and Al-Yarmouk who were relegated to the 2018\u201319 League Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285562-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jordanian Pro League, Teams\nTwelve teams will compete in the league \u2013 the top ten teams from the 2017\u201318 season and the two teams promoted from the 2017\u201318 Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285562-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jordanian Pro League, Teams\nThe first team to be promoted was Al-Salt, following their 0\u20131 defeat against Al-Sareeh on 8 May 2018. Al-Salt are playing in the Premier League for the first time in their history. They were also promoted as the 2017\u201318 League Division 1 winners on 15 May 2018, following their 2\u20130 victory against Al-Arabi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285562-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jordanian Pro League, Teams\nThe second team to be promoted was Al-Sareeh, following their 2\u20130 victory against Sahab on 15 May 2018, the last day of the regular season. Al-Sareeh returned to the Premier League for the first time since the 2016\u201317 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285562-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jordanian Pro League, Teams\nThe first team to be relegated was Mansheyat Bani Hasan, following their 2\u20134 defeat against Shabab Al-Ordon on 26 April 2018, ending their 2-year stay in the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285562-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jordanian Pro League, Teams\nThe second team to be relegated was Al-Yarmouk, ending their 1-year stay in the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285562-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jordanian Pro League, Teams, Foreign players\nThe number of foreign players is limited to 3 per team, and should not be a goalkeeper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285562-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Jordanian Pro League, Positions by round\nThe following table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches. In order to preserve the chronological evolution, 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 afterward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285563-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Junior ABA League\nThe 2018\u201319 Junior ABA League is the second season of the Junior ABA League with twelve men's under-19 teams from Serbia, Croatia, Slovenia, Montenegro and Bosnia and Herzegovina. Teams are the junior selections of the 2018\u201319 ABA League First Division teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285563-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Junior ABA League, Competition\nTwelve under-19 teams are participating at the 2018\u201319 Junior ABA League season and they are divided into two semi-final Groups. In the group stage, all teams will face each other team within a group in a round-robin system. The two best placed teams of each group will advance to the final tournament. At the final tournament, the teams will play two games \u2013 the semifinal and the final or third place game. The winner of the final tournament will become the 2018\u201319 ABA Junior Tournament Champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285564-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Juventus F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Juventus Football Club's 121st in existence and 12th consecutive season in the top-flight of Italian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285564-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Juventus F.C. season\nOn 10 July 2018, Cristiano Ronaldo became the highest ever transfer for an Italian club with his \u20ac100 million transfer from Real Madrid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285564-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Juventus F.C. season\nThe season was the first since 2000\u201301 without Gianluigi Buffon, who joined Paris Saint-Germain (although he returned for the following season).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285564-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Juventus F.C. season, Players, Squad information\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 2 February 2019. Appearances include league matches only. 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, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285564-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Juventus F.C. season, Notes\nA. The match was called off at the 72nd minute due to the annual tradition of pitch invasion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285565-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 K-Electric F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is K-Electric's 105th competitive season, 105th consecutive season in the top flight of Pakistani football, 10th consecutive season in the Pakistan Premier League since gaining promotion from Football Federation League in 2006 and 105th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285565-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 K-Electric F.C. season, Season, National Challenge Cup\nK-Electric were placed in group H with two second division teams, including runners-up Sui Northern Gas and Asia Ghee Mills. K -Electric finished last in their group after losing 1-0 to Sui Northern Gas and drew 0-0 to Asia Ghee Mills.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285566-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 K.R.C. Genk season\nThe 2018\u201319 K.R.C. Genk season was the club's 31st season in existence and the 24th consecutive season in the top flight of Belgian football. In addition to the domestic league, Genk participated in this season's edition of the Belgian Cup and the UEFA Europa League. The season covered the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285566-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 K.R.C. Genk 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-00285566-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 K.R.C. Genk 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-00285566-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 K.R.C. Genk season, Competitions, UEFA Europa League, Group stage\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 31 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 73], "content_span": [74, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285566-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 K.R.C. Genk season, Competitions, UEFA Europa League, Knockout phase\nThe draw for the round of 32 was held on 17 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 76], "content_span": [77, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285567-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KBL season\nThe 2018\u201319 KBL season was the 23rd season of the Korean Basketball League (KBL), the highest level of basketball in South Korea. Ulsan Hyundai Mobis Phoebus won its seventh KBL championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285568-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KF Tirana season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Klubi i Futbollit Tirana's 80th competitive season, 78th in the Kategoria Superiore and 98th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285568-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KF Tirana season, Season overview, June\nOn 1 June 2018, Tirana announced to have signed a new two-year contract with manager Z\u00e9 Maria, making him the highest paid coach in Albania. The defender Erion Hoxhallari agreed a new contract until June 2020 despite interest from several European clubs. Then he was sent on loan at fellow Superliga side La\u00e7i on a short-term contract only for their UEFA Europa League campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285568-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KF Tirana season, Season overview, June\nOn 14 June, Tirana reached a principal agreement with striker Michael Ngoo for the contract renewal. The club announced their first summer transfer nine days later, the Macedonian striker Dejan Blazhevski, who signed a 1+1 contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285568-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KF Tirana season, Season overview, June\nOn 29 June, the youngster Ernest Mu\u00e7i signed his first professional contract that will link him with Tirana for the next three years. The club also presented their second signing of summer transfer window, the midfielder Eni Imami who signed for the next two seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285568-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KF Tirana season, Season overview, July\nTirana begun the month by completing the signing of Vincent Atinga on a contract until June 2021. Youngsters Jurgen \u00c7elhaka and Marsel Ismailgeci both signed three-year contracts, their firsts as professionals. The club then announced the next signing, the Ghanaian midfielder Winful Cobbinah, who signed a three-year deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285568-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KF Tirana season, Season overview, July\nThe club did not offer a new deal the youngster Patrik Bardhi who left as a free agent and later signed for Kastrioti Kruj\u00eb. After one season, Alked \u00c7elhaka left the club by terminating the contract by mutual consent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285568-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KF Tirana season, Season overview, July\nOn 16 July, Asion Daja and Dorian K\u00ebr\u00e7iku both signed contracts for the new season. On 23 July, Tirana beat the concurrence of their rivals Partizani and signed the midfielder Edon Hasani on a two-year contract. The next days, Tirana announced that they were going to play friendly matches with Apolonia Fier, Flamurtari Pristina and Prishtina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285568-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KF Tirana season, Season overview, July\nIn the first friendly, Tirana recorded a 2\u20130 win at Selman St\u00ebrmasi Stadium against Apolonia Fier with the goal coming from newcomers Dejan Blazhevski and Edon Hasani. On 27 July, Sedat Berisha was unveiled as Tirana's newest player by signing a one-year contract with an option to renew. In the second one, Tirana won again, this time 3\u20130 versus Flamurtari Pristina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285568-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KF Tirana season, Season overview, August\nClub vice-captain Gentian Mu\u00e7a returned in training after more than a year after healing from the Spinal disc herniation and a neck tumor which he discovered in July of the previous year. In the third and final friendly against Prishtina, Tirana suffered the first loss, as the Football Superleague of Kosovo side won 3\u20131 with Albi Doka scoring the consolation goal for the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285568-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KF Tirana season, Season overview, August\nOn 14 August, Tirana acquired the services of goalkeeper Shp\u00ebtim Mo\u00e7ka as a free agent. Mo\u00e7ka, who previously played for Teuta Durr\u00ebs, signed a contract running until the end of the 2018\u201319 season. Tirana commenced the Kategoria Superiore season four days later by playing against Kamza at home; the team surprisingly lost via a Sebino Plaku late winner. The following week, Tirana didn't go more than a goalless draw against Teuta Durr\u00ebs, earning their first championship point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285568-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KF Tirana season, Season overview, August\nPlayers such as Rei Qilimi, Alvaro Bishaj, Jurgen Vrapi, Hardy Binguila and Kenneth Muguna were all released by the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285568-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KF Tirana season, Season overview, August\nOn 29 August, Tirana was drawn in the first round of the 2018\u201319 Albanian Cup against Iliria Fush\u00eb-Kruj\u00eb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285568-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KF Tirana season, Season overview, August\nOn 31 August 2018, Nnamdi Oduamadi joined the club on a two-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285568-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KF Tirana season, Season overview, September\nTirana begun the new month by playing in the third league match against Kuk\u00ebsi at Loro Bori\u00e7i Stadium; youngster Ernest Mu\u00e7i scored the consolation goal for the team which was defeated 3\u20131. Two goals from Cobbinah and one each from Blazhevski and Turtulli secured a 4\u20131 victory in the first leg of the Albanian Cup, first round, over Iliria Fush\u00eb-Kruj\u00eb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285568-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KF Tirana season, Season overview, September\nBack in league, Tirana won their first championship match on 16 September by defeating Luft\u00ebtari Gjirokast\u00ebr 3\u20131 at home; Blazhevski, Turtulli and Greca gave Tirana their first top-flight win after 484 days. The team then played Sk\u00ebnderbeu Kor\u00e7\u00eb away in the matchday 5; despite opening the score with a header from Edon Hasani, the team conceded in the last minutes in a match which was marred by referee's mistakes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285568-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KF Tirana season, Season overview, September\nOn 25 September, Tirana won conformably the second leg of Albanian Cup first round against Iliria Fush\u00eb-Kruj\u00eb; Sentamu scored a hat-trick which was followed by Ngoo's goal. The team will play Flamurtari Vlor\u00eb in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285568-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KF Tirana season, Season overview, September\nThree days later, Tirana played their first derby match against Partizani Tirana after more than a year; the team lost again, making it 14 consecutive matches without winning. The loss also meant the team's worst Kategoria Superiore start since 2007\u201308 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285568-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KF Tirana season, Season overview, October\nTirana's October begun with a 3\u20132 win at Kastrioti Kruj\u00eb for the second win of the season. A brace by Blazhevski and an owngoal from Stijepovi\u0107 sealed the victory for the while&blues. It was Tirana's first away win in Kategoria Superiore since February 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285568-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KF Tirana season, Season overview, October\nIn the next league match, Tirana fell at the hands of La\u00e7i; the guests won 1\u20130 at Selman St\u00ebrmasi Stadium thanks to a goal of Redon Xhixha while Blazhevski missed a crucial penalty in the last minutes. Following the match, striker Nnamdi Oduamadi was sent at hospital with a broken rib due to heavy challenges from La\u00e7i players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285568-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KF Tirana season, Players, Squad information, From youth squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 70], "content_span": [71, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285568-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KF Tirana season, Statistics, Clean sheets\nThe list is sorted by shirt number when total appearances are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285569-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KHL season\nThe 2018\u201319 KHL season was the eleventh season of the Kontinental Hockey League. The season started on 1 September 2018 and ended on 19 April 2019. Continental Cup winners CSKA Moscow became the first team to win the Gagarin Cup finals in a series sweep, defeating Avangard Omsk in four games to win their first Gagarin Cup, after two previous Finals defeats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285569-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KHL season, Season changes\nFor the 2018\u201319 season, 25 teams competed in the KHL \u2013 down from 27 in 2017\u201318. The two teams that were excluded from the league were HC Lada Togliatti and HC Yugra, with both teams moving to the Supreme Hockey League. As well as this, Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod were moved from the Western Conference, to the Eastern Conference; as a result, the Western Conference consisted of 12 teams and the Eastern Conference consisted of 13 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285569-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KHL season, Season changes\nThe 2018\u201319 season featured the most games of any KHL season to date, with each team scheduled to play 62 games, up from 56 in 2017\u201318.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285569-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KHL season, Season changes, KHL World Games\nThis season witnessed the first time that KHL games were played in Austria and Switzerland, as part of the KHL World Games. Slovan Bratislava played in both Austrian games (on 26 and 28 October) at the Albert Schultz Eishalle in Vienna \u2013 home to the Vienna Capitals of the Austrian Hockey League \u2013 losing 9\u20130 to CSKA Moscow, and 7\u20130 to SKA Saint Petersburg. The Swiss games were played at the Hallenstadion in Z\u00fcrich \u2013 home to the ZSC Lions of the Swiss National League \u2013 with Dinamo Riga playing in both games (on 26 and 28 November), losing 3\u20131 to SKA Saint Petersburg, and 5\u20130 to CSKA Moscow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285569-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KHL season, Teams\nThe 25 teams were split into four divisions: the Bobrov Division and the Tarasov Division as part of the Western Conference, with the Kharlamov Division and the Chernyshev Division as part of the Eastern Conference. On 24 April 2018, the KHL announced re-alignment after both Lada Togliatti and Yugra Khanty-Mansiysk left the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285569-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KHL season, League standings\nEach team played 62 games, playing each of the other twenty-four teams twice: once on home ice, and once away from home. As well as this, each team played a further two games against each of their divisional rivals, and four games total against non-divisional teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 36], "content_span": [37, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285569-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KHL season, League standings\nPoints were awarded for each game, where two points were awarded for all victories, regardless of whether it was in regulation time, in overtime or after a shootout. One point was awarded for losing in overtime or a shootout, and zero points for losing in regulation time. At the end of the regular season, the team that finished with the most points was crowned the Continental Cup winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 36], "content_span": [37, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285569-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KHL season, Gagarin Cup playoffs\nThe 2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs started on 25 February 2019, with the top eight teams from each of the conferences, and finished on 19 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285569-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KHL season, Player statistics, Scoring leaders\nThe following players led the league in points, at the conclusion of the regular season. If two or more skaters are tied (i.e. same number of points, goals and played games), all of the tied skaters are shown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 54], "content_span": [55, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285569-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KHL season, Player statistics, Leading goaltenders\nThe following goaltenders led the league in goals against average, at the conclusion of the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 58], "content_span": [59, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285569-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KHL season, Awards, Season awards\nThe KHL's end-of-season awards ceremony was held on 28 May 2019 in Barvikha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285570-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KK Crvena zvezda season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is the 74th Crvena zvezda season in the existence of the club. The team played in the Basketball League of Serbia, in the Adriatic League and in the EuroCup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285570-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KK Crvena zvezda season\nCrvena zvezda won their first Adriatic Supercup trophy, the fourth Adriatic League Championship, and the 20th National Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285570-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KK Crvena zvezda season, Overview\nIn summer 2018 the team started with signing Milan Tomi\u0107 as a head coach. Soon to follow were the players Billy Baron, Michael Ojo and two centers from Radonji\u0107 era: Maik Zirbes and Du\u0161an Risti\u0107. Zvezda also added experienced Stratos Perperoglou and Mouhammad Faye, as well as point guard Joe Ragland. The last one to sign was combo guard Nemanja Nenadi\u0107 from development team FMP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285570-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KK Crvena zvezda season, Overview\nAfter the end of the 2017\u201318 season, Stefan Jankovi\u0107 decided to part ways with Crvena zvezda even though he was under contract with them, with both parties having different views on his contract status. His contract status was since then under review by the Basketball Federation of Serbia and FIBA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285570-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KK Crvena zvezda season, Overview\nCrvena zvezda started the season well, convincingly winning ABA Super Cup tournament by beating last season ABA champion Budu\u0107nost in the final game. Tomi\u0107 struck a great balance between hard defense and versatile offense, causing team to grab the first spot at the beginning of ABA League, as well as the EuroCup Group A. Bad streak in EuroCup during November caused the Zvezda to finish group phase on the third spot, which was still good enough for it to advance to the next stage. In ABA, Zvezda ended the first part of the season with 11-0, having defeated every opponent in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285570-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KK Crvena zvezda season, Players, Squad information\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, 59], "content_span": [60, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285570-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KK Crvena zvezda season, Competitions, Adriatic League, Results by round\nLast updated: March 16, 2019.Source: Competitive matchesGround: A = Away; H = Home; R = Rest. Result: L = Loss; W = Win; R = Rest; P = Postponed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 80], "content_span": [81, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285570-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KK Crvena zvezda season, Competitions, EuroCup, Regular season results by round\nLast updated: December 19, 2018.Source: Competitive matchesGround: A = Away; H = Home; R = Rest. Result: L = Loss; W = Win; R = Rest; P = Postponed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285570-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KK Crvena zvezda season, Competitions, EuroCup, Top 16 results by round\nLast updated: February 5, 2019.Source: Competitive matchesGround: A = Away; H = Home; R = Rest. Result: L = Loss; W = Win; R = Rest; P = Postponed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285570-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KK Crvena zvezda season, Competitions, Serbian Super League\nThe 2018\u201319 Basketball League of Serbia was the 13th season of the Serbian highest professional basketball league and the Super League, as the second part of the season, and was held from April 27 to June 17, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285570-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KK Crvena zvezda season, Competitions, Serbian Super League, Results by round\nLast updated: May 29, 2019.Source: Competitive matchesGround: A = Away; H = Home; R = Rest. Result: L = Loss; W = Win; R = Rest; P = Postponed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285570-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KK Crvena zvezda season, Competitions, Radivoj Kora\u0107 Cup\nThe 2019 Radivoj Kora\u0107 Cup was 13th season of the Serbian cup tournament and was held within February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285571-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KK Partizan season\nIn the 2018\u201319 season, Partizan NIS Belgrade will compete in the Serbian League, Radivoj Kora\u0107 Cup, Adriatic League and EuroCup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285571-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KK Partizan 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285571-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KK Partizan season, Basketball League of Serbia\nThe 2018\u201319 Basketball League of Serbia is the 13th season of the Serbian highest professional basketball league and the Super League, as the second part of the season, will be held within April to May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285572-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KNVB Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 KNVB Cup, for sponsoring reasons officially called the TOTO KNVB Cup, was the 101st season of the annual Dutch national football cup competition. It commenced on 18 August 2018 with the first of two preliminary rounds and concluded on 5 May 2019 with the final played at De Kuip in Rotterdam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285572-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KNVB Cup\nThe defending champions were Feyenoord from the Eredivisie, who beat AZ 3\u20130 in the final in the previous season on 30 April 2018. They were eliminated by Ajax in the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285572-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KNVB Cup\nAjax as the winners participated in the 2019 Johan Cruyff Shield against PSV Eindhoven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285572-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KNVB Cup, Matches, Preliminary rounds\nThe draw for the preliminary rounds were performed by Ridgeciano Haps on 7 July 2018 and was streamed live on the website of the KNVB.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 45], "content_span": [46, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285572-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KNVB Cup, Matches, Preliminary rounds, First preliminary round\n58 amateur teams qualified for this stage, although 26 received a bye to the next round, leaving 32 teams to compete for a spot in the second preliminary round. The participants are semi-finalists from the district cup tournaments, and teams from the Derde Divisie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 70], "content_span": [71, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285572-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KNVB Cup, Matches, Preliminary rounds, Second preliminary round\nIn the second preliminary round, 54 amateur teams played. The participants were the 16 winners of the first preliminary round, 26 teams that were given a bye in the first preliminary round, and 12 teams from the Tweede Divisie. The matches were played on 18, 21, 22, and 25 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 71], "content_span": [72, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285572-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KNVB Cup, Matches, Main tournament\nThere are 64 teams going into the main tournament: 27 winners from the preliminary rounds, 34 professional teams, and three (replacement) period champions from the Tweede Divisie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285572-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KNVB Cup, Matches, Main tournament, Second round\nThe draw for the second round was performed on 29 September 2018 at 23:00 CEST. The matches of the second round took place between 30 October and 1 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 56], "content_span": [57, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285572-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KNVB Cup, Matches, Main tournament, Round of 16\nThe draw for the round of 16 took place on 3 November 2018 at 23:00 CET. The matches of the round of 16 took place between 18 and 20 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 55], "content_span": [56, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285572-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KNVB Cup, Matches, Main tournament, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the quarter-finals took place on 22 December 2018 at 23:00 CET. The matches of the quarter-finals took place between 22 and 24 January 2019. From this round on the referees are assisted by video assistant referee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 58], "content_span": [59, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285572-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KNVB Cup, Matches, Main tournament, Semi-finals\nThe semi-finals took place on 27 and 28 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 55], "content_span": [56, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285573-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KRL F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Khan Research Laboratories Football Club's 23rd competitive season, 22nd consecutive season in the top flight of Pakistani football, 12th consecutive season in the Premier League, and 23rd year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285573-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KRL F.C. season, Month by month review, September\nKhan Research Laboratories started their season with a 3\u20130 win over National Bank with a hat-trick scored by Iftikhar Ali Khan. In its second and last league game of September, Khan Research Laboratories drew 0\u20130 to Muslim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 57], "content_span": [58, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285573-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KRL F.C. season, Month by month review, October\nKhan Research Laboratories faced newly promoted Sui Northern Gas on 4 October, the match ended in a 1\u20131 draw with Iftikhar Ali Khan scoring his fourth goal in three matches. Their fourth match of the season was a 3\u20130 win over newly promoted Baloch Nushki, Izharullah Khan, Umair Ali and Iftikhar Ali Khan scored for Khan Research Laboratories. On 21 October, Khan Research Laboratories faced rivals K-Electric in match that ended 1\u20131, with Izharullah Khan scoring for Khan Research Laboratories.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 55], "content_span": [56, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285573-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 KRL F.C. season, Month by month review, October\nOn 24 October, Khan Research Laboratories faced their longtime-rivals WAPDA, with Khan Research Laboratories winning the game 1\u20130 after a late-goal from Umair Ali. In their last match of the October, the club faced Pakistan Air Force in a 1\u20131 draw, after Danish Hameed's goal was equalised by Pakistan Air Force's Irfan Ali at 63rd minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 55], "content_span": [56, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285573-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KRL F.C. season, Month by month review, November\nOn 1 November, Khan Research Laboratories faced Afghan Chaman, which the club won 3\u20130 with attacking trio Iftikhar Ali Khan, Izharullah Khan and Umair Ali scoring for Khan Research Laboratories. On 6 November, Khan Research Laboratories defeated struggling Karachi Port Trust 1\u20130 with winger Umair Ali scoring a late goal for the club. On 16 November, Khan Research Laboratories defeated Pakistan Navy 3\u20130, with goals from Iftikhar Ali Khan, Izharullah Khan and Zaid Umar. On 19 November, the club faced longtime-rivals Pakistan Army in a 1\u20131, with Muhammad Shahid scoring equaliser for Khan Research Laboratories at 43rd minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285573-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 KRL F.C. season, Month by month review, November\nOn 23 November, the club extended its unbeaten run to 12 matches after defeating newly-form and promoted Civil Aviation Authority 2\u20131 with Iftikhar Ali Khan and captain Zia Us-Salam scoring for the club. On 26 November, Khan Research Laboratories' unbeaten run came to an end after losing 1\u20130 Sui Southern Gas, with Habib-ur-Rehman scoring the winning goal of the game. On 29 November, Khan Research Laboratories defeated National Bank 1\u20130 courtesy of an own goal from Misbah-ul-Hassan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285573-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KRL F.C. season, Month by month review, December\nKhan Research Laboratories faced Muslim in their first match of December, winning the match 2\u20131 with Umair Ali scoring in 12th minute and Muhammad Shahid scoring a penalty in the 92nd minute of the match, which caused a mob of angry people attacking the referee. On 6 December, Khan Research Laboratories defeated Sui Northern Gas 3\u20131, Waqar Ihtisham, Iftikhar Ali Khan and Umair Ali scoring the goals. On 10 December, they defeated Baloch Nushki 2\u20130 with Imran Khan and Zaid Umar scoring for the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285573-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 KRL F.C. season, Month by month review, December\nKhan Research Laboratories ended their next three matches with three consecutive draws, 1\u20131 draw with rivals K-Electric and WAPDA with Junaid Ahmed scoring against K-Electric and Iftikhar Ali Khan against WAPDA and a 0\u20130 with Pakistan Air Force. On 23 December, Khan Research Laboratories defeated Afghan Chaman 5\u20130 with Imran Khan and Zeeshan Siddiqui scoring a brace and Iftikhar Ali Khan also scoring, taking his tally to 11 goals. The club played a goalless draw against Karachi Port Trust on 26 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285573-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KRL F.C. season, Month by month review, January\nThe club lost two consecutive matches for the first time in the season, losing 1\u20130 Pakistan Army and Pakistan Navy. On 9 January, Khan Research Laboratories defeated Civil Aviation Authoriy 1\u20130 with a 23rd-minute goal from Umair Ali, leaving them 3 points behind first placed Pakistan Air Force and 1 point behind second placed Sui Southern Gas. On the final day of the league, Khan Research Laboratories defeated title contenders Sui Southern Gas 4\u20130, with Iftikhar Ali Khan and Junaid Ahmed scoring a goal each and Izharullah Khan scoring a brace. The victory leveled Khan Research Laboratories with first place Pakistan Air Force on 51 points, although Khan Research Laboratories won the league on goal difference, having a goal difference of +28 against Pakistan Air Force's +27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 55], "content_span": [56, 839]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285573-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KRL F.C. season, Season, National Challenge Cup\nKhan Research Laboratories were the defending champions of the National Challenge Cup, they were knocked out in group stages after losing 1\u20130 to Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority in the final group match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 55], "content_span": [56, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285573-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KRL F.C. season, Statistics, Top scorers\nThe list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285573-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 KRL F.C. season, Statistics, Clean sheets\nThe list is sorted by shirt number when total clean sheets are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285574-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kabuscorp S.C.P. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season of Kabuscorp Sport Clube do Palanca is the club's 17th season in Angolan football and the 12th consecutive season in the Girabola, the top flight league of Angolan football. In 2018\u201319, the club participated in the Girabola and the Angola Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285574-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kabuscorp S.C.P. season, FAF Penalty\nKabuscorp forfeited 9 points, for failing to address payment claims by a total 6 individuals, following a 15-day deadline stipulated by the Angolan Football Federation (FAF). The first case includes former player Adaw\u00e1 Mokanga, the second case includes former staff members Afonso Paxe Filho, Dombasi Jo\u00e3o, Kutama Shabani and former head-coach Romeu Filem\u00f3n whereas the third case refers to former club physician Dr. Caetano Maria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285574-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kabuscorp S.C.P. season, FIFA penalty\nThe Angolan Football Federation received a letter from FIFA ordering Kabuscorp to be relegated for failing to meet payment claims by former player Rivaldo. Even though the debt has reportedly been paid in full, Kabuscorp failed to pay within the established deadline. The club faced a second relegation penalty regarding their dispute with TP Mazembe", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285575-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kansas Jayhawks men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Kansas Jayhawks men's basketball team represented the University of Kansas in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, which was the Jayhawks' 121st basketball season. The Jayhawks, members of the Big 12 Conference, played their home games at Allen Fieldhouse in Lawrence, Kansas. They were led by 16th year Hall of Fame head coach Bill Self.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285575-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kansas Jayhawks men's basketball team, Season notes\nThe Jayhawks entered the season with high expectations due to returning All-Big 12 players Udoka Azubuike and LaGerald Vick, adding three 2018 McDonald's All-Americans, and several transfers coming off their redshirt years. Following the 2017\u201318 season, several sports websites ranked Kansas 1st on their \"Way too early rankings\" which preview the next season. The Jayhawks also entered the season ranked number 1 in the AP Poll. Despite the high expectations, the team dealt with adversity during the season as four different players that were expected to be starters missed time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 59], "content_span": [60, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285575-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kansas Jayhawks men's basketball team, Season notes\nSilvio De Sousa was declared ineligible by the NCAA, Udoka Azubuike underwent season ending surgery in January, Marcus Garrett missed five games due to injury, and LaGerald Vick took a leave absence in February to handle personal issues and eventually announced he wouldn't return. On February 23, 2019, the Jayhawks lost to Texas Tech 62-91. The loss was the Jayhawks worst conference loss under Bill Self and worst conference loss since the 1999-2000 season when they lost to Oklahoma State 53-86. Following a 68\u201381 loss to Oklahoma on March 5, the Jayhawks were eliminated from Big 12 regular season title contention, ending their NCAA record streak of 14 consecutive titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 59], "content_span": [60, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285575-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kansas Jayhawks men's basketball team, Roster and coaching staff changes, Graduation\nBelow are players who graduated from the University of Kansas without any college eligibility left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 92], "content_span": [93, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285575-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kansas Jayhawks men's basketball team, Roster and coaching staff changes, Early draft entrants, Hired agent\nPlayers that hire an agent after declaring for the NBA draft automatically forfeit any remaining college eligibility. Below are any players that declared for the draft and hired an agent and will not be returning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 115], "content_span": [116, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285575-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kansas Jayhawks men's basketball team, Roster and coaching staff changes, Early draft entrants, Did not hire agent\nPlayers who do not hire an agent can return to their college as long as they withdraw from the draft no more than 10 days after the final day of the NBA Draft Combine, which made May 31 the final date to withdraw from the 2018 Draft. The following players entered the draft without initially hiring an agent. Also included is their final decision to either return to Kansas or if they hired an agent and stayed in the draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 122], "content_span": [123, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285575-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kansas Jayhawks men's basketball team, Schedule and results\n\u2020While the Jayhawks primary home arena is Allen Fieldhouse, they do play one game a year at the Sprint Center in Kansas City. These games are officially considered home games", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285575-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kansas Jayhawks men's basketball team, Rankings\n*There was no coaches poll for Week 1, so the rank provided is the preseason rank.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285576-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kansas Jayhawks women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Kansas Jayhawks women's basketball team represented the University of Kansas in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Jayhawks were led by fourth year head coach Brandon Schneider. They played their home games at Allen Fieldhouse in Lawrence, Kansas as members of the Big 12 Conference. They finished the season 13\u201318, 2\u201316 in Big 12 play to finish in last place. They advanced in the quarterfinals of the Big 12 Tournament where they lost to Iowa State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285576-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kansas Jayhawks women's basketball team, Schedule and results\nx- All JTV games will air on Metro Sports, ESPN3 and", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 69], "content_span": [70, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285577-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kansas State Wildcats men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Kansas State Wildcats men's basketball team represented Kansas State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Their head coach was Bruce Weber in his seventh year at the helm of the Wildcats. The team played its home games in Bramlage Coliseum in Manhattan, Kansas as members of the Big 12 Conference. In the NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament, they were upset by UC Irvine in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285577-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kansas State Wildcats men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Wildcats finished the 2017\u201318 season 25\u201312, 10\u20138 in Big 12 play to finish in fourth place. They defeated TCU in the quarterfinals of the Big 12 Tournament before losing to Kansas in the semifinals. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as the No. 9 seed in the South region. There they defeated Creighton, UMBC, and Kentucky to advance to the Elite Eight. In the Elite Eight, they lost to Loyola\u2013Chicago.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285577-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kansas State Wildcats men's basketball team, Rankings\n*AP does not release post-NCAA tournament rankings^Coaches did not release a Week 2 poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285578-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kansas State Wildcats women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Kansas State Wildcats women's basketball team represents Kansas State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Wildcats were led by fifth-year head coach Jeff Mittie. They play their home games at Bramlage Coliseum in Manhattan, Kansas and were members of the Big 12 Conference. They finished the season 21\u201312, 11\u20137 in Big 12 play to finish in a tie for fourth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Big 12 Women's Basketball Tournament where they lost to Baylor. They received at-large bid of the NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament as a 9th seed in the Albany Regional where they lost to Michigan in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285579-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kategoria Superiore\nThe 2018\u201319 Kategoria Superiore was the 80th official season, or 83rd season of top-tier football in Albania (including three unofficial championships during World War II) and the 19th season under the name Kategoria Superiore. The season began on 17 August 2018 and ended on 30 May 2019. Partizani, won the league title on 12 May 2019 with 3 matches to spare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285579-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kategoria Superiore\nThe winners of this season's Superiore earned a place in the first qualifying round of the 2019\u221220 Champions League, with the second and third placed clubs earning a place in the first qualifying round of the 2019\u221220 Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285579-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kategoria Superiore, Teams\nTwo clubs earned promotion from the Kategoria e Par\u00eb, Kastrioti and Tirana, joined the Superiore this season. Lushnja and Vllaznia were relegated at the conclusion of last season, the latter for the second time in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285579-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kategoria Superiore, 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-00285579-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kategoria Superiore, Results\nClubs will play each other four times for a total of 36 matches each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285580-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kategoria e Dyt\u00eb\nThe 2018-19 Kategoria e Dyt\u00eb was the 47th official season of the Albanian football third division since its establishment. There were 27 teams competing this season, split in 2 groups. The winners of the groups played the league's final against each other and also gained promotion to the 2019-20 Kategoria e Par\u00eb. The runners-up qualified to the play-off round which they played against the 9th ranked teams in the 2018-19 Kategoria e Par\u00eb. Devolli and T\u00ebrbuni were promoted to the 2019-20 Kategoria e Par\u00eb. T\u00ebrbuni won their fourth Kategoria e Dyt\u00eb title after beating Devolli in the final match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285581-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kategoria e Par\u00eb\nThe 2018\u201319 Kategoria e Par\u00eb was the 71st official season of the Albanian football second division since its establishment. The season began on 9 September 2018 and ended on 25 May 2019. There were 20 teams competing this season, split in 2 groups, each with 10 teams. The top 5 teams from each group qualified to the promotion round, while the last teams qualified to the relegation round. The 2 winners of the qualification round gained promotion to the 2019\u201320 Kategoria Superiore, and played the division's final against each other. Bylis and Vllaznia were promoted to the 2019\u201320 Kategoria Superiore. Tomori and Vora were relegated to the 2019\u221220 Kategoria e Dyt\u00eb. Bylis won their fourth Kategoria e Par\u00eb title on 23 May 2019 after beating Vllaznia in the final match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285581-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kategoria e Par\u00eb, Extra play\u2212off match\nAn extra play\u2212off match was played between the losers of the regular play\u2212offs to replace the vacant spot left by Kamza, who was relegated from the Kategoria Superiore to the Kategoria e Dyt\u00eb by federation decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285582-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kennesaw State Owls men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Kennesaw State Owls men's basketball team represented Kennesaw State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at the KSU Convocation Center in Kennesaw, Georgia and were led by fourth-year head coach Al Skinner. They finished the season 6-26 overall, 3\u201313 in ASUN play to finish in a tie for 8th place, and due to their tiebreaker over Stetson, they qualified for the conference tournament. As the #8 seed in the ASUN Tournament, they lost in the first round to top-seeded Lipscomb 71\u201386.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285582-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kennesaw State Owls men's basketball team\nOn February 21, 2019, Skinner announced his resignation from Kennesaw State effective at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285582-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kennesaw State Owls men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Owls finished the 2017\u201318 season 10\u201320, 6\u20138 in ASUN play to finish in sixth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the ASUN Tournament to Jacksonville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285583-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kennesaw State Owls women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Kennesaw State Owls women's basketball team represents Kennesaw State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Owls, led by third year head coach Agnus Berenato, play their home games at the KSU Convocation Center and were members of the Atlantic Sun Conference. They finished the season 9\u201322, 4\u201312 in A-Sun play to finish in seventh place. They advanced to the semifinals of the A-Sun Tournament where they lost to Florida Gulf Coast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285584-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kent Senior Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Kent Senior Cup was an English football competition played between senior clubs in the county of Kent. It was administered by the Kent County Football Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285584-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kent Senior Cup, First Round\n16 teams entered at the First Round with a further 8 receiving byes directly into the Second Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285585-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kent State Golden Flashes men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Kent State Golden Flashes men's basketball team represented Kent State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Golden Flashes, led by eighth-year head coach Rob Senderoff, played their home games at the Memorial Athletic and Convocation Center, also known as the MAC Center, as members of the East Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 22\u201311, 11\u20137 in MAC play to finish in third place in the East Division. They lost in the quarterfinals of the MAC Tournament to Central Michigan. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they lost in the first round to Louisiana\u2013Monroe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285585-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kent State Golden Flashes men's basketball team, Previous season\nIn the 2017\u201318 season, the Golden Flashes finished the season 17\u201317, 9\u20139 in MAC play to finish in second place in the MAC East division. They defeated Northern Illinois and Ball State in the MAC Tournament before losing to Buffalo in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 72], "content_span": [73, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285586-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kent State Golden Flashes women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Kent State Golden Flashes women's basketball team represents Kent State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Golden Flashes, led by third year head coach Todd Starkey, play their home games at the Memorial Athletic and Convocation Center, also known as the MAC Center, as members of the East Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 20\u201313, 11\u20137 in MAC play to finish in fourth place in the West Division. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the MAC Women's Tournament where they lost to Buffalo. They received an at-large bid to the WNIT where they defeated Green Bay in the first round before losing to Butler in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285587-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball team represented the University of Kentucky in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team played its home games in Lexington, Kentucky for the 43rd consecutive season at Rupp Arena, with a capacity of 23,500. The Wildcats, led by John Calipari in his 10th season as head coach, played in the Southeastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285587-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Wildcats finished the 2017\u201318 season 26\u201311, 10\u20138 in SEC play to finish in a three-way tie for fourth. In the SEC Tournament, the Wildcats defeated Georgia, Alabama, and Tennessee to win the tournament championship for the 31st time in school history. As a result, the Wildcats received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. As the No. 5 seed in the South region, they defeated No. 12 Davidson and No. 13 Buffalo to advance to the Sweet Sixteen. There, they lost to No. 9-seeded Kansas State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285587-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball team, Offseason, Departures\nOn April 2, 2018, Tai Wynyard announced that he would be transferring from Kentucky. On April 6, Kevin Knox announced that he would declare for the 2018 NBA draft and would hire an agent, forgoing his remaining eligibility. On April 9, Sacha Killeya-Jones announced he would be transferring as well. Also, on April 9, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander announced that he would declare for the draft and would be hiring an agent, foregoing his remaining NCAA eligibility. On April 16, Hamidou Diallo also announced that he would declare for the draft and hire an agent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 70], "content_span": [71, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285587-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball team, Offseason, Departures\nThree other players announced their entry in the draft, but did not initially hire agents, giving them the option to return to Kentucky. P. J. Washington declared for the draft on April 3, followed by Wenyen Gabriel on April 18 and Jarred Vanderbilt on April 20. On May 30, 2018, the NCAA's final day to announce a return, P.J Washington announced he would return for a sophomore season. Jarred Vanderbilt and Wenyen Gabriel announced on May 30, 2018 that they would remain in the 2018 NBA Draft and forgo their remaining college eligibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 70], "content_span": [71, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285587-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball team, Offseason, 2018 recruiting class\nImmanuel Quickley, from Havre de Grace, Maryland, was the first commitment to Kentucky's 2018 class. He committed to Kentucky on September 22, over offers from Kansas and Miami. He was a consensus five-star prospect and was ranked the consensus No. 12 overall player by the four main recruiting services. The Wildcats' second 2018 commitment was Keldon Johnson, a small forward from South Hill, Virginia, who committed on November 11. Kentucky beat out Maryland, NC State, and Texas for Johnson's signature. He was also a consensus five-star prospect and ranked by ESPN as its #7 overall prospect.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 81], "content_span": [82, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285587-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball team, Offseason, 2018 recruiting class\nTyler Herro was the third commitment for Kentucky's 2018 class. A former Wisconsin commit, Herro committed to Kentucky the week after his official visit. Herro was a consensus four-star prospect and was ranked the No. 4 shooting guard in the 2018 class by ESPN. E.J. Montgomery was the fourth commitment for Kentucky's 2018 class. A former Auburn commit, he re-opened his recruitment after the Auburn staff was implicated in the 2017\u201318 NCAA Division I men's basketball corruption scandal. Montgomery committed to Kentucky on April 9, 2018. Montgomery was a five-star prospect and was ranked #12 in the 2018 class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 81], "content_span": [82, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285587-0003-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball team, Offseason, 2018 recruiting class\nOn April 10, 2018, Ashton Hagans committed to the University of Kentucky over offers from Georgia and North Carolina. Hagans was originally the second commitment in the 2019 recruiting class and the #1 ranked point guard in the class of 2019 by 247 sports. On June 15, 2018, Hagans announced that he would be reclassifying into the 2018 class and play for the Cats in the upcoming season, thus making him the fifth recruit in the class of 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 81], "content_span": [82, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285587-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball team, Offseason, Incoming transfers\nOn June 20, 2018, Reid Travis announced that he would transfer to Kentucky. Travis was a two-time first team All-Pac-12 for Stanford and averaged 19.5 PPG and 8.7 RPG in his final year with the Cardinal. As a grad transfer, he is eligible to play immediately.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 78], "content_span": [79, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285587-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball team, Rankings\n*AP does not release post-NCAA Tournament rankings^Coaches did not release a Week 2 poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 57], "content_span": [58, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285588-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kentucky Wildcats women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Kentucky Wildcats women's basketball team represents the University of Kentucky in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The team plays its home games in Lexington, Kentucky at Memorial Coliseum with two home games being played at Rupp Arena. The team is led by Matthew Mitchell in his twelfth season as head coach. They were a member of the Southeastern Conference. They finished the season 25\u20138, 11\u20135 in SEC play to finish in fourth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the SEC Women's Tournament to Missouri. They received an at-large to the NCAA Women's Tournament where they defeated Princeton in the first round before losing to NC State in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285588-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kentucky Wildcats women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 season opened up with a 10-day trip to Italy, where the team won two out of three games against international competition. The non-conference regular season also featured a trip to the U.S. Virgin Islands, where the team participated in and won the Paradise Jam Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285588-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kentucky Wildcats women's basketball team, Previous Season\nThe 2017\u201318 team finished the season 15-17, 6-10 for ninth place in SEC play. They defeated Alabama in the second round of the SEC Tournament before losing to the #1 seed Mississippi State in the quarterfinals. The Wildcats failed to make a postseason appearance for the first time in eight seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285589-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kenyan Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Kenyan Premier League is the 16th season of the Kenyan Premier League, the top-tier football league in Kenya, since it began in 2003, and the 56th season of top-division football in Kenya since 1963. The season started on 8 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285590-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kerala Blasters FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Kerala Blasters's fifth season since their establishment in 2014 in the Indian Super League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285590-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kerala Blasters FC season, Review and events, Indian Super League\nKerala Blasters started their 2018\u201319 Hero Indian Super League campaign with a 0\u20132 victory over ATK. But the Hero ISL 2018\u201319 was a disastrous campaign for Kerala Blasters as they finished the season in 9th place in the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 73], "content_span": [74, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285590-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kerala Blasters FC season, Review and events, Super Cup\nThe team's performance in the Super Cup was also well below as that of expected. They were eliminated in the qualification round by Indian Arrows.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285590-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kerala Blasters 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285590-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kerala Blasters FC season, Statistics, Squad statistics\nPlayers Used: Kerala Blasters has used a total of 23 different players in all competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285590-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kerala Blasters FC season, Pre-season and friendlies\nKerala Blasters started their pre season in July in Ahmedabad to prepare for a competition called Toyota Yaris La Liga World. They faced Melbourne City FC from Australia and Spanish club Girona FC in the competition. They suffered heavy losses by Australian club 0\u20136 and Spanish club 0\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285590-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kerala Blasters FC season, Pre-season and friendlies\nIn September 2018, Kerala started their second phase of pre season before Indian Super League in Thailand. Where they played some friendly matches with local clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285591-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kerala Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Kerala Premier League Season is the sixth season of the Kerala Premier League. The season features 11 teams which will be divided into 2 groups and is played on a home-and-away format. The season kicked off on 16 December 2018. Kozhikode Quartz, SBI Kerala and Trikaripur withdrawn from the league due to financial problems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285591-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kerala Premier League, Teams\nCentral Excise, Cochin Port Trust and Kerala Police are pulled out from the 2018\u201319 season. Golden Threads, RFC Kochi, Kovalam FC along with Indian Navy were added making 2018\u201319 season a 11-team affair.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285591-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kerala Premier League, Teams, Foreign players\nClubs can sign maximum four players of any nationality but only three is allowed in the playing eleven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285592-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ke\u015fla FK season\nThe Ke\u015fla 2018-19 season is Ke\u015fla's first full season since the changed their name in 28 October 2017, and the eighteenth Azerbaijan Premier League season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285592-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ke\u015fla FK season, Season Events\nOn 5 June, Azer Salahli and Fuad Bayramov signed new one-year contracts with Ke\u015fla and Slavik Alkhasov signed a new two-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285592-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ke\u015fla FK season, Season Events\nOn 13 June, Ke\u015fla signed new one-year contracts with Tarlan Guliyev, Jabir Amirli, Andre Clennon, Murad Gayali, Denis Silva and Adrian Scarlatache, whist Sertan Tashkin signed a new two-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285592-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ke\u015fla FK season, Season Events\nOn 22 June, Ke\u015fla agreed new one-year contracts with Orkhan Sadigli, Vagif Javadov and Ebrima Sohna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285592-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ke\u015fla FK season, Season Events\nOn 17 July Yuriy Maksymov left Ke\u015fla by mutual consent. On 25 July, Mladen Milinkovi\u0107 was appointed as Ke\u015fla's new manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285592-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ke\u015fla FK season, Season Events\nOn 28 July, Ke\u015fla signed Elnur Jafarov on a one-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285592-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ke\u015fla FK season, Season Events\nOn 9 August, Ke\u015fla signed Nikola Mitrovi\u0107 on a one-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285592-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ke\u015fla FK season, Season Events\nOn 14 August, Ke\u015fla announced the signing of Ruslan Nasirli on a one-year contract from MOIK Baku, and Samir Masimov on a two-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285592-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ke\u015fla FK season, Season Events\nOn 17 August, Orkhan Sadigli joined Sumgayit on a season-long loan deal, with Ke\u015fla announcing the signing of Edvinas Girdvainis the following day, 18 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285592-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ke\u015fla FK season, Season Events\nOn 1 October, Ke\u015fla announced the signing of Diallo Guidileye on a contract until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285592-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ke\u015fla FK season, Season Events\nOn 11 October, Ke\u015fla announced the signing of Jonathan Ayit\u00e9 on a contract until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285592-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ke\u015fla FK season, Season Events\nOn 29 October 2018 Milinkovi\u0107 was sacked as manager, with Tarlan Ahmadov being appointed as his replacement on 30 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285592-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ke\u015fla FK season, Squad, Out on loan\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285593-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Khuzestan Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Khuzestan Premier League season was the 19th season of the Khuzestan Premier League which took place from September 7, 2018 to April 26, 2019 with 16 teams competing from the province of Khuzestan. This was the second year that the league played with 16 teams. Teams played home and away with one another each playing 28 matches. Eftekhar Shushtar finished the season on top of the standings and was promoted to division 3 of the Iranian football system. Meanwhile, with Esteghlal Veys' withdrawal from the league, they will be relegated to the Khuzestan Division 1 along with last place finishers Esteghlal Abadan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285593-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Khuzestan Premier League, League changes\nDuring week 4 of the season, Esteghlal Veys did not take the field against Jonub Susangerd due to monetary issues. The team officially withdrew from the league prior to the start of week 5 matches. The league continued with the remaining 15 teams and Esteghlal's results were removed from league records. Week 30 was scheduled to take place prior to the New Year, however, due to bad weather conditions, the league cancelled 4 matches while playing only those matches that would alter the league champion and the team being relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285594-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kilmarnock F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Kilmarnock's sixth season in the Premiership, and their 26th consecutive season in the top flight of Scottish football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285594-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kilmarnock F.C. season, Overview\nKillie, like the previous season, went on a pre-season training camp in La Manga, Spain. On 13 July 2018, manager Steve Clarke said that Youssouf Mulumbu had left Kilmarnock and wasn't expected to return to the club. A Kilmarnock XI took part in two friendly matches. The first was against East Kilbride on 18 July 2018 in which Daniel Higgins scored the only goal of the game to give Killie a 1\u20130 win. On 22 July 2018, Killie played local junior side Kilwinning Rangers in Ben Lewis's testimonial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285594-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kilmarnock F.C. season, Overview\nKilmarnock finished the season in third place - the club's highest league finish since 1966 - and with a record points tally. Eamonn Brophy's 89th-minute penalty secured a 2\u20131 win over Rangers in the last game of the season to secure third and qualification to the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285594-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kilmarnock F.C. season, Overview\nKilmarnock were seeded for the group stage draw of the League Cup and were drawn to face Premiership rivals St Mirren along with Dumbarton, Queen's Park and Spartans. In their opening fixture, Kilmarnock drew 0\u20130 with St Mirren and missed out on the opportunity for a bonus point as they lost 3\u20132 on penalties. They won their subsequent three matches to finish first in Group H. Killie were eliminated in the second round by Rangers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285594-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kilmarnock F.C. season, Overview\nKilmarnock entered the fourth round of the Scottish Cup as one of the Premiership clubs, starting on 19 January 2019. After defeating Forfar Athletic, they lost to Rangers in a fifth round replay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285595-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kisv\u00e1rda FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season will be Kisv\u00e1rda FC's debut season in the OTP Bank Liga and the 16th in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285595-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kisv\u00e1rda 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-00285595-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kisv\u00e1rda 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-00285595-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kisv\u00e1rda 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-00285595-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kisv\u00e1rda 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-00285595-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kisv\u00e1rda 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-00285595-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kisv\u00e1rda 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-00285595-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kisv\u00e1rda 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-00285596-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process\nThe 2018\u221219 Korean peace process was initiated in order to resolve the long-running Korean conflict and denuclearize Korea. International concern about North Korea's nuclear weapons came to a head in 2017, when they posed a direct threat to the United States. At the same time, Moon Jae-in was elected president of South Korea with the promise of returning to the Sunshine Policy, favoring good relations with North Korea. A series of summits were held between North Korea's Kim Jong-un, South Korea's Moon, and Donald Trump of the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process\nTrump became the first sitting US President to meet a North Korean leader and to enter North Korean territory. Kim became the first North Korean leader to enter South Korean territory. Moon became the first South Korean President to give a speech in North Korea. In parallel to this, a number of cultural exchanges began. Tensions were lowered on both sides of the DMZ.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process\nThe summits failed to make substantial progress towards denuclearization or a peace treaty. In October 2019, talks in Sweden began between US and North Korean negotiating teams, but broke down after one day. Subsequently, relations deteriorated, though dialogue continued.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Background\nIn 1945, at the end of World War II, Korea was divided. In 1950, war broke out between North and South Korea. The United States intervened to defend the South and has continued a military presence to the present day. A cease fire ended the fighting in 1953, but no official peace treaty has been signed. Frequent clashes have occurred up to recent times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Background\nAt the end of the Cold War, North Korea lost its supporters in the Soviet Bloc. In December 1991 North and South Korea made an accord, the Agreement on Reconciliation, Non-Aggression, Exchange and Cooperation, pledging non-aggression and cultural and economic exchanges. They also agreed to prior notification of major military movements and established a military hotline, and to work on replacing the armistice with a \"peace regime\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Background\nIn 1994, concern over North Korea's nuclear program led to the Agreed Framework between the US and North Korea. In 1998, South Korean President Kim Dae-jung announced a Sunshine Policy towards North Korea. An Inter-Korean summit was held in 2000. Continuing concerns about North Korea's development of nuclear missiles led in 2003 to the six-party talks that included North Korea, South Korea, the US, Russia, China, and Japan. In 2006, however, North Korea resumed testing missiles and on October 9 conducted its first nuclear test. A second inter-Korean summit was held in 2007. By 2017, estimates of North Korea's nuclear arsenal ranged between 15 and 60 bombs, probably including hydrogen bombs. In the opinion of analysts, the Hwasong-15 missile is capable of striking anywhere in the United States. There was an increase in militaristic rhetoric on both sides.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 907]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Thaw at the Winter Games\nIn May 2017 Moon Jae-in was elected President of South Korea with a promise to return to the Sunshine Policy. In his New Year address for 2018, North Korean leader, Chairman of the Workers' Party of Korea Kim Jong-un proposed sending a delegation to the upcoming Winter Olympics in South Korea. The Seoul\u2013Pyongyang hotline was reopened after almost two years. At the Winter Olympics, North and South Korea marched together in the opening ceremony and fielded a united women's ice hockey team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Thaw at the Winter Games\nAs well as the athletes, North Korea sent an unprecedented high-level delegation, headed by Kim Yo-jong, sister of Kim Jong-un, and President Kim Yong-nam, and including performers like the Samjiyon Orchestra. The delegation passed on an invitation to President Moon to visit North Korea. An opinion poll taken on 15 February found that 61.5% of South Koreans thought Moon should take up the invitation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Thaw at the Winter Games\nThe performances by the Samjiyon Orchestra at the Olympics marked the first time since 2006 that any North Korean artist performed in South Korea. The North Korean ship which carried the orchestra, Man Gyong Bong 92, was also the first North Korean ship to arrive in South Korea since 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Thaw at the Winter Games\nFollowing the Olympics, the governments of North and South Korea raised the possibility that they could host the 2021 Asian Winter Games together. On 1 April, South Korean K-pop stars performed a concert in Pyongyang titled \"Spring is Coming\", which was attended by Kim Jong-un and his wife. Meanwhile, propaganda broadcasts stopped on both sides. The K-pop stars were part of a 160-member South Korean art troupe which performed in North Korea in early April 2018. It also marked the first time since 2005 that any South Korean artist performed in North Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, April 2018 inter-Korean summit\nOn 27 April, a summit took place between Moon and Kim in the South Korean zone of the Joint Security Area. It was the first time since the Korean War that a North Korean leader had entered South Korean territory. The leaders met at the line that divides Korea. Kim and Moon signed the Panmunjom Declaration pledging to work towards a final peace to the Korean conflict within a year and the complete denuclearization of Korea. The agreement also called for the end of military activities in the region of the Korean border and the reunification of Korea. The leaders also agreed to work together to connect and modernise their railways.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, April 2018 inter-Korean summit\nOn 5 May, North Korea adjusted its time zone to match the South's. In May, South Korea began removing propaganda loudspeakers from the border area in line with the Panmunjom Declaration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, May 2018 inter-Korean summit\nMoon and Kim met on May 26 to discuss Kim's upcoming summit with Trump. The summit led to further meetings between North and South Korean officials during June. On June 1, officials from both countries agreed to move forward with the military and Red Cross talks. They also agreed to reopen a jointly operated liaison office in Kaesong that the South had shut down in February 2016 after a North Korean nuclear test. The second meeting, involving the Red Cross and military, was held on June 22 at North Korea's Mount Kumgang resort, where it was agreed that family reunions would resume.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, 2018 North Korea\u2013United States Singapore Summit\nDonald Trump met with Kim Jong-un on June 12, 2018, in Singapore, in the first summit meeting between the leaders of the United States and North Korea. They signed a joint statement, agreeing to security guarantees for North Korea, new peaceful relations, reaffirmation of the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula, recovery of soldiers' remains, and follow-up negotiations between high-level officials. Immediately following the summit, Trump announced that the US would discontinue \"provocative\" joint military exercises with South Korea, and he wishes to bring the U.S. forces back home at some point, but he said that was not part of the Singapore agreement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 77], "content_span": [78, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Aftermath of Singapore summit, Subsequent negotiations\nOn July 6\u20137, Pompeo visited North Korea for the third time to continue the negotiations with General Kim Yong-chol. After the meeting, Pompeo stated that the talks had been productive and that progress had been made \"on almost all of the central issues\". However, the North Korean state media criticized the meeting soon after, saying the U.S. had shown a \"gangster-like attitude\" and calling the demands of the Trump administration \"deeply regrettable\". Pompeo delivered a letter from Kim to Trump, in which the latter expressed his hope for successful implementation of the US-North Korea Joint Statement and reaffirmed his will for improving the relations between the countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 84], "content_span": [85, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Aftermath of Singapore summit, Subsequent negotiations\nPompeo announced on August 23, 2018, that he would return to North Korea the following week for the fourth round of talks. The following day, Trump tweeted that he had asked Pompeo not to make the trip because he felt \"we are not making sufficient progress with respect to the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula\". South Korean Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha urged continued U.S.-North Korean talks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 84], "content_span": [85, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Aftermath of Singapore summit, Subsequent negotiations\nIn August, Foreign Minister Kang said that she had \"considerable\" consultations over a declaration of a formal end of the Korean War with the Chinese and U.S. foreign ministers. Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi expressed support for a declaration. North Korean Foreign Minister Ri Yong Ho said he was \"alarmed\" by U.S. insistence on maintaining sanctions until North Korea denuclearizes and what he said was U.S. reluctance to declare an end to the Korean War.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 84], "content_span": [85, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0014-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Aftermath of Singapore summit, Subsequent negotiations\nAccording to Vox, Trump had made an spoken agreement with North Korea to sign a declaration ending the Korean War, both at a White House meeting on June 1, and during the Singapore Summit. However, National Security Adviser John Bolton and Defense Secretary Jim Mattis both opposed signing the declaration before denuclearization.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 84], "content_span": [85, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Aftermath of Singapore summit, Return of remains of US soldiers\nOn July 27 North Korea handed over 55 boxes of human remains, thus starting to fulfill their pledge in the Singapore declaration. The remains were saluted in a ceremony in their honor by US soldiers. More than 36,000 American troops died during the Korean War, but some 7,700 remain unaccounted for, including 5,300 believed to have died in North Korea. The remains of 220 soldiers were recovered from North Korea during the years 1996-2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 93], "content_span": [94, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0015-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Aftermath of Singapore summit, Return of remains of US soldiers\nNorth Korea reported to the U.S. Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency that they could not be sure how many individuals were represented in each of the 55 boxes. After the failure of the Hanoi Summit, the US suspended the program. By October 2019, it was reported that 35\u201340 servicemen had been identified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 93], "content_span": [94, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Aftermath of Singapore summit, Dismantling of rocket launch sites\nOn July 24, North Korea began to dismantle a rocket launch site at Tonchang, an action which Kim had pledged to Trump. South Korean President Moon called the move \"a good sign for North Korea's denuclearization\". At the same time, the Sohae Satellite Launching Station was being dismantled. Satellite imagery showed that several key facilities had been demolished, including the rail-mounted processing building, where space launch vehicles were prepared before moving them to the launch pad, and the rocket engine test stand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 95], "content_span": [96, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0016-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Aftermath of Singapore summit, Dismantling of rocket launch sites\nAccording to the analyst website 38 North, the Sohae Station was believed to have played an important part in North's ICBM program, and its dismantlement represented a first step towards fulfilling Kim's commitment to disarmament. By August 7, there was more progress on dismantling facilities at the Sohae Station, including the demolition of the test stand's concrete foundations, launch pad's gantry tower, and the pad foundation. According to 38 North, these actions had to be viewed cautiously as since they were neither permanent or irreversible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 95], "content_span": [96, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Aftermath of Singapore summit, Other developments in North and South Korea\nNorth Korea stopped its anti-American government propaganda after the Singapore summit and cancelled its annual anti-US government rally. North Korea staged a grand parade for its 70th anniversary without its ICBMs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 104], "content_span": [105, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Aftermath of Singapore summit, Other developments in North and South Korea\nOn 23 June 2018, South Korea announced that it would not conduct annual military exercises with the US in September, and would also stop its own drills in the Yellow Sea, in order to not provoke North Korea and to continue a peaceful dialog. On July 1, South and North Korea resumed ship-to-ship radio communication, which could prevent accidental clashes between South and North Korean military vessels around the Northern Limit Line (NLL) in the West (Yellow) Sea. On 17 July 2018, South and North Korea fully restored their military communication line on the western part of the peninsula.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 104], "content_span": [105, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Aftermath of Singapore summit, Other developments in North and South Korea\nNorth and South Korea competed as \"Korea\" in some events at the 2018 Asian Games. North Korean movies were screened at the Bucheon International Fantastic Film Festival in South Korea. In August, reunions of families divided since the Korean War took place at Mount Kumgang in North Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 104], "content_span": [105, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Aftermath of Singapore summit, Other developments in North and South Korea\nNorth and South Korea agreed to reduce guard posts and equipment along the DMZ. U.S. General Vincent Brooks responded, \"I have some concerns about what that means militarily for the ability to defend along the Military Demarcation Line\". However, he assessed the risk as being to \"a reasonable degree\" and said that the move represents an outstanding opportunity to reduce tensions on the DMZ.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 104], "content_span": [105, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Third inter-Korean summit in 2018\nOn 13 August, the South Korean Blue House announced that Moon would attend the third inter-Korean summit with Kim in Pyongyang in September. On September 5, during the meeting with South Korean special envoy Chung Eun-yong about the upcoming summit, Kim declared that he wanted to accomplish the denuclearization of Korea before the US leader Donald Trump completes his first term (January 2021).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Third inter-Korean summit in 2018\nIn Pyongyang, on September 18, both leaders signed an agreement titled the \"Pyongyang Joint Declaration of September 2018\". The agreement called for the removal of landmines planted at the Joint Security Area. North Korea agreed to dismantle its nuclear program in the presence of international experts if the U.S. took reciprocal action. Moon became the first South Korean leader to give a speech to a North Korean audience when he addressed 150,000 spectators at the Arirang Festival on 19 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, North Korea\u2013United States Hanoi Summit, 2019\nDonald Trump met with Kim Jong-un on February 27, 2019, in Hanoi, Vietnam, in the second summit meeting between the leaders of the United States and North Korea. On February 28, 2019, the White House announced that the summit was cut short and that no agreement was reached, with Trump later elaborating that it was because North Korea wanted an end to all sanctions. North Korean Foreign Minister Ri Yong-ho asserted that the country only sought a partial lifting of five United Nations sanctions placed on North Korea during 2016\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 74], "content_span": [75, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, DMZ meeting, 2019\nIn April 2019 Trump tweeted that a third summit between him and Kim \"would be good\". On June 12, 2019, he received a letter from Kim which he described as \"beautiful\". On June 26, 2019, it was announced that talks were underway to hold a third U.S.\u2013North Korean summit. On June 22, 2019, an undated photo was also released by the North Korean government of Kim Jong-un reading a letter from Trump. Kim described the letter as \"excellent\" and described Trump as the \"supreme leader\" of the United States. However, Kim later denied reports of continued talks with the United States, and relations with the U.S. State Department still remained hostile.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, DMZ meeting, 2019\nOn June 30, 2019, Donald Trump and Moon Jae-in met with Kim Jong-un at the DMZ. The meeting was apparently the result of an impromptu Trump tweet suggesting a possible meeting with Kim at the DMZ \"just to shake his hand and say Hello(?)!\". When they met, Trump and Kim shook hands, and Kim said in English, \"It's good to see you again\", \"I never expected to meet you at this place\", and \"You are the first US President to cross the border\". They briefly crossed the border into North Korea before crossing back into South Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, DMZ meeting, 2019\nAfter meeting at the border, Trump, Kim and Moon Jae-in entered the Inter-Korean House of Freedom for approximately one hour. A result of the brief meeting was that both U.S. and North Korea agreed to set up teams to resume denuclearization talks, which had previously stalled at the Hanoi Summit earlier in the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, DMZ meeting, 2019\nThe meeting has been reported as historic as it was the first time a sitting U.S. president has set foot in North Korea; former US Presidents Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton had previously visited North Korea after they left office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Subsequent developments in 2019\nDuring 2019, North Korea conducted a series of short\u2013range missile tests, while the US and South Korea took part in joint military drills in August. On 16 August 2019, North Korea's ruling party made a statement criticizing the South for participating in the drills and for buying US military hardware, calling it a \"grave provocation\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Subsequent developments in 2019\nOn September 10, 2019, Trump tweeted that he had asked Bolton for his resignation which was given shortly thereafter. North Korea had previously called Bolton a \"warmonger\". Pro -North Korean newspaper Chosun Sinbo welcomed Bolton's resignation, stating that he was to blame for breaking off the February summit in Hanoi. Trump had disagreed with Bolton's advocacy of \"Libyan model\" for North Korea. Bolton subsequently repudiated Trump's policy, saying that North Korea was becoming more dangerous.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Subsequent developments in 2019\nOn 23 September 2019, Trump and Moon met in New York, at the time of the 74th United Nations General Assembly session. Trump downplayed the seriousness of North Korea's short-range missiles stating that they had not been covered by an agreement and describing them as \"nothing spectacular\". Both Trump and Moon expressed support for continuing negotiations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Subsequent developments in 2019\nAs agreed at the DMZ summit, talks began in Stockholm on 5 October 2019 between US and North Korean negotiating teams. After one day, the North Koreans said that talks had broken down, blaming US inflexibility. The US team, however, said discussions were good, and would be resumed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Subsequent developments in 2019\nOn December 7, 2019, a spokesman for North Korea's Defense Academy announced that an important test had been conducted at the Sohae Satellite Launching Station, but no details were forthcoming.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0033-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Subsequent developments in 2019\nIn December 2019, US Ambassador to the United Nations Kelly Craft said during a meeting of the UN Security Council that was called at her request that the US was prepared to take \"simultaneous steps\" with North Korea to achieve peace. But she also warned the North Koreans against conducting further missile tests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0034-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Aftermath\nIn May 2020, saying he intended to employ \"new policies\", Kim met with the Central Military Commission of the Workers' Party and discussed boosting North Korea's nuclear deterrent. The augmentation of conventional artillery was discussed as well. On June 5, 2020, the North Korean foreign minister Ri Son-gwon said that prospects for peace between North and South Korea, and the U.S., had \"faded away into a dark nightmare\". He indicated that subsequent to the meeting with Trump, the North's efforts had focused instead on amassing a more \"reliable force to cope with the long-term military threats from the U.S.\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0034-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Aftermath\nOn June 13, Kim Yo-jong, sister of Kim Jong-un, warned that \"before long, a tragic scene of the useless North-South joint liaison office completely collapsed would be seen\". On June 16, the North threatened to return troops that had been withdrawn from the border to posts where they had been previously stationed. Later that day, the liaison office in Kaesong was blown up by the North Korean government. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the South Korean delegation had left the building in January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0035-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Aftermath\nIn September, Moon and Kim exchanged friendly letters about COVID-19 and the typhoons that had hit Korea. On 22 September, Moon addressed the UN General Assembly and called for a \"permanent peace regime\" in Korea. Kelly Craft, the US ambassador to the UN, backed his call and said that there had been significant progress in negotiations so far. On the same day, the crew of a North Korean patrol boat killed a South Korean fisheries officer whom they encountered off their coast and torched his flotation device. Kim apologized to South Korea for the incident. In November, the South Korean defense ministry reaffirmed its commitment to the peace process in an ASEAN security meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285596-0036-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korean peace process, Aftermath\nIn February 2021, South Korea continued to omit North Korea's \"enemy\" status from the South Korean military's White Paper after downgrading the status of Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285597-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korisliiga season\nThe 2018\u201319 Korisliiga season was the 79th season of the top professional basketball league in Finland. Karhu successfully defended their title to repeat as Finnish national champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285597-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korisliiga season, Format\nThe eleven teams played four times against each one of the other teams for a total of 40 games. The eight best qualified teams joined the playoffs and the last one played a best-of-three relegation playoff against the First Division runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285597-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korisliiga season, Teams\nUra promoted from First Division and Kobrat remained in the league as Espoo United was expelled due to financial irregularities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285597-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Korisliiga season, Playoffs\nThe quarter-finals and semi-finals were played in a best-of-three 1\u20131\u20131\u20131\u20131 format with re-seeding in the semifinals. The finals were played in a best-of-seven playoff format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285598-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kosovar Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Kosovar Cup was the football knockout competition of Kosovo in the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285598-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kosovar Cup, Second Round\nThe draw for the second round was held on 6 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285598-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kosovar Cup, Third Round\nThe draw for the third round was held on 30 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285598-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kosovar Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the fourth round was held on 11 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285598-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kosovar Cup, Semifinals\nThese matches were played on 17 April and 1 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285599-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kosovo Basketball Superleague\nThe 2018\u201319 IP Superliga e Basketbollit is the 25th season of the Kosovo Basketball Superleague. It started on 22 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285599-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kosovo Basketball Superleague, Teams\nPeja was expelled from the league due to not meeting the criteria for being admitted. Ponte Prizreni replaced them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285599-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kosovo Basketball Superleague, Playoffs\nPlayoffs will be played in a best-of-five playoff format. The higher seeded teams played game 1, 2 and 5 at home in the semifinals and games 1, 3 and 5 in the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285600-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kuwait Crown Prince Cup\nThis will be the 26th edition of Kuwait Crown Prince Cup where the 15 teams are in a knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285601-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kuwait Emir Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Kuwait Emir Cup is the 57th edition, Kuwait SC are the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285602-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kuwait Federation Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Kuwait Federation Cup tournament saw all 15 Kuwaiti clubs participating in 2 groups, rather than 3. Kazma SC are the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285603-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kuwaiti Division One\n33rd edition of the tournament, 5-time champions Al-Shabab SC are the former champions. Originally the league would consist of 7 teams but with the Kuwait FA announced its expansion in football so last seasons 2017\u201318 relegated team have been un-relegated and 2017\u201318 Kuwaiti Division One winners Al-Shabab SC and losing play-off team Al-Fahaheel FC will all compete this season. So moving forward any new team to be founded and join football would join the Kuwaiti Division One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285604-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kuwaiti Premier League\n57th edition of the tournament. Kuwait SC are the defending champions. Originally the league was structured at 8 teams but Kuwait FA announced its expansion in football so last seasons 2017\u201318 relegated team have been un-relegated and 2017\u201318 Kuwaiti Division One winners Al-Shabab SC and losing play-off team Al-Fahaheel FC will all compete this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285604-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Kuwaiti Premier League, Teams, Foreign players\nThe total number of foreign players is restricted to five per club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285605-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LBA season\nThe 2018\u201319 LBA season, also known as Serie A PosteMobile for sponsorship reasons, was the 97th season of the Lega Basket Serie A (LBA), the men's top tier professional basketball division of the Italian basketball league system (LBA). The regular season began on October 7, 2018 and finished on May 12, 2019, with the playoffs started on May 18 (dependent on an Italian club qualifying for the 2019 EuroLeague Final Four, 2019 EuroCup Playoffs or for the 2019 Champions League Playoffs) and finished on June 22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285605-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LBA season\nAs in previous years, Molten Corporation provided the official ball for all matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285605-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LBA season\nUmana Reyer Venezia won their 4th title by beating Banco di Sardegna Sassari in game 7 of the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285605-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LBA season, Teams, Promotion and relegation (pre-season)\nA total of 16 teams contested the league, including 15 sides from the 2017\u201318 season and one promoted from the 2017\u201318 Serie A2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285605-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LBA season, Teams, Promotion and relegation (pre-season)\nAlma Pallacanestro Trieste was the promoted club from the Serie A2 Basket after beating Novipi\u00f9 Casale Monferrato at game 3 of league's playoffs, and returned to the top division after a 14 years absence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285605-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LBA season, Teams, Promotion and relegation (pre-season)\nTrieste replaced Betaland Capo d'Orlando who were relegated during the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285605-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LBA season, Changes from 2017\u201318\nAs in previous seasons, LBA clubs must play in arenas that seat at least 3,500 people. From 2017\u201318 season, all clubs must host their home playoffs matches in arenas with a seating capacity of at least 5,000 people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285605-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LBA season, Rules\nEach team is allowed either five or seven foreign players under two formulas:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285605-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LBA season, Rules\nEach club can choose the 5+5 formula, that consists of five Italian players and five foreign players, and the 3+4+5 formula, with five Italian players, three foreigners from countries outside the EU and four foreigners from EU countries or \"Cotonou Countries\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285605-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LBA season, Rules\nAt the end of the season there will be a prize of \u20ac500.000,00 for the top three ranked teams, that had chosen the 5+5 formula, considering the playing time of Italian players, and \u20ac200.000,00 for those teams that will obtain the best results with their youth sector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285605-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LBA season, Regular season\nIn the regular season, teams played against each other home-and-away in a round-robin format. The eight first qualified teams advanced to the Playoffs, the last seven qualified teams were eliminated, while the last one qualified team was relegated and replaced by the winner of the playoffs of the second-level Serie A2 Basket. The matchdays were from October 7, 2018, to May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285605-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LBA season, Regular season, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after completion of each round. In order to preserve chronological evolvements, any postponed matches are not included in 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 13, but then postponed and played between rounds 16 and 17, it will be added to the standings for round 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 54], "content_span": [55, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285605-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LBA season, Playoffs\nThe LBA playoffs quarterfinals and semifinals were best of five formats, while the finals series were best of seven format. The playoffs began on May 18, 2019, and finished on June 22, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285605-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LBA season, Supercup\nThe 2018 Italian Supercup, also known as Zurich Connect Supercoppa 2018 for sponsorship reasons, was the 24rd edition of the super cup tournament of the Italian basketball. The Supercup opened the 2018\u201319 season on 29 and 30 September 2018, and it was contested in the PalaLeonessa in Brescia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285605-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LBA season, Supercup\nQualified for the tournament were Fiat Torino and Germani Brescia, as Italian Cup finalists, AX Armani Exchange Milano and Dolomiti Energia Trento as LBA Playoffs finalist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285605-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LBA season, Supercup\nAX Armani Exchange Milano beat the tournament host Germani Basket Brescia 59\u201381, while Fiat Torino beat Dolomiti Energia Trento 81\u201372.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285605-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LBA season, Supercup\nAX Armani Exchange Milano was the Supercup winner for the third consecutive season after beating Fiat Torino in the final 82\u201371. Milano used an 11\u20130 run to start the second quarter and jump in front. Milano held a 41\u201331 lead at halftime, then Vladimir Micov nailed three triples early in the third quarter to open a 55\u201338 lead. Torino closed in with a 0\u201312 run in the fourth quarter, but Art\u016bras Gudaitis had a three-point play to extend it to 76\u201367, and sending Milano on its way to victory. Micov and Gudaitis scored 17 points apiece to lead Milano to its first trophy of the season. Nemanja Nedovi\u0107 scored 14, and Mike James had 10 in a victory. Tony Carr paced Torino with 15 points, while Tekele Cotton, Tyshawn Taylor and Jamil Wilson scored 11 apiece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285605-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LBA season, Cup\nThe 51st edition of the Italian Cup, knows as the PosteMobile Final Eight for sponsorship reasons, was contested in February 2019. As in the previous edition, Nelson Mandela Forum in Florence hosted the Cup. Eight teams qualified for the Final Eight were Avellino, Bologna, Brindisi, Cremona, Milano, Sassari, Varese and Venezia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 23], "content_span": [24, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285605-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LBA season, Cup\nSegafredo Virtus Bologna stunned AX Armani Exchange Milano 84-86 and Vanoli Cremona defeated Openjobmetis Varese 82\u201373 in the Italian Cup quarterfinals on Thursday. The game was not as close as the final score would indicate with Bologna leading by multiple possessions throughout the fourth quarter and Milano only getting within 2 on a Curtis Jerrells triple on the buzzer. Tony Taylor scored 23 points and Pietro Aradori 16 for Bologna, which took a big step towards adding to its record eight Italian Cup triumphs. James Nunnally paced Milano with 19 points while leading scorer Mike James shot just 1 for 11 on three-pointers and finished with 13 points. For Cremona, Drew Crawford scored 22 points and Wesley Saunders added 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 23], "content_span": [24, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285605-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LBA season, Cup\nOn the second night of the Italian Cup quarterfinals, Banco di Sardegna Sassari edged Umana Reyer Venezia 88-89 behind 24 points from Dyshawn Pierre and New Basket Brindisi out-gunned Sidigas Avellino 95-98 as Adrian Banks poured in 26 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 23], "content_span": [24, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285605-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LBA season, Cup\nVanoli Cremona will play New Basket Brindisi in the final of the Italian Cup. In the semifinals, Cremona topped Segafredo Virtus Bologna 102-91 as Travis Diener netted 26 points on 6-for-9 three-point shooting. Mangok Mathiang added 19 points and 10 rebounds in the victory. Brindisi held off Sassari 86\u201387, with John Brown scoring 20 points, and Jeremy Chappell collecting 18 points plus 9 rebounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 23], "content_span": [24, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285605-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LBA season, Cup\nVanoli Cremona lifted the Italian Cup for the first time after beating New Basket Brindisi 83\u201374 in the final. Wesley Saunders posted 18 points and 9 rebounds and Drew Crawford also scored 18 to lead the winners. Michele Ruzzier added 12 points off the bench. Cremona used a 9-0 second-quarter run to surge ahead from a 25\u201325 tie and led 45\u201337 at halftime. The lead stood in double figures for most of the second half and Brindisi never got closer than 6. John Brown posted 21 points and 8 rebounds and Tony Gaffney scored 19 in defeat. Drew Crawford was named Panasonic MVP of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 23], "content_span": [24, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285606-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LEB Oro season\nThe 2018\u201319 LEB Oro season was the 23rd season of the Spanish basketball second league. It started on 5 October 2018 with the first round of the regular season and ended on 2 June 2019 with the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285606-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LEB Oro season, Format changes\nOn 2 June 2018, the General Assembly of the Spanish Basketball Federation agreed some changes in the competition format:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285606-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LEB Oro season, Teams, Promotion and relegation (pre-season)\nA total of 18 teams contested the league, including 14 sides from the 2017\u201318 season, two relegated from the 2017\u201318 ACB and two promoted from the 2017\u201318 LEB Plata.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 68], "content_span": [69, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285606-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LEB Oro season, Regular season, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after completion of each round. In order to preserve chronological evolvements, any postponed matches are not included in 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 13, but then postponed and played between rounds 16 and 17, it will be added to the standings for round 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 58], "content_span": [59, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285606-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LEB Oro season, Copa Princesa de Asturias\nThe Copa Princesa de Asturias was played on 8 February 2019, by the two first qualified teams after the end of the first half of the season (round 17). The champion of the cup would have played the playoffs against the ninth qualified if it has finished the league between the second and the fifth qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285607-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LEB Plata season\nThe 2018\u201319 LEB Plata season was the 19th season of the Spanish basketball third league. It started on 6 October 2018 with the first round of the regular season and ended on 25 May 2019 with the promotion playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285607-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LEB Plata season, Format changes\nOn 2 June 2018, the General Assembly of the Spanish Basketball Federation agreed some changes in the competition format:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285607-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LEB Plata season, Teams, Promotion and relegation (pre-season)\nA total of 24 teams contested the league, including 10 sides from the 2017\u201318 season, two relegated from the 2017\u201318 LEB Oro, four promoted from the 2017\u201318 Liga EBA and eight guest teams according to the FEB criteria. On July 11, 2018, Isover Basket Azuqueca, CB Vic Universitat de Vic, B\u00e0squet Girona, Aquimisa Laboratorios Queso Zamorano, Igualitorio Cantabria Estela, Queser\u00eda La Antigua CB Tormes, TeslaCard C\u00edrculo Gij\u00f3n and Zornotza Saskibaloi Taldea achieved the vacancies from the expansion to 24 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 70], "content_span": [71, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285607-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LEB Plata season, First phase, Group East, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after completion of each round. In order to preserve chronological evolvements, any postponed matches are not included in 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 13, but then postponed and played between rounds 16 and 17, it will be added to the standings for round 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 69], "content_span": [70, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285607-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LEB Plata season, First phase, Group West, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after completion of each round. In order to preserve chronological evolvements, any postponed matches are not included in 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 13, but then postponed and played between rounds 16 and 17, it will be added to the standings for round 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 69], "content_span": [70, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285607-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LEB Plata season, Second phase, Group A1, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after completion of each round. In order to preserve chronological evolvements, any postponed matches are not included in 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 3, but then postponed and played between rounds 6 and 7, it will be added to the standings for round 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285607-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LEB Plata season, Second phase, Group A2, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after completion of each round. In order to preserve chronological evolvements, any postponed matches are not included in 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 3, but then postponed and played between rounds 6 and 7, it will be added to the standings for round 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285607-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LEB Plata season, Copa LEB Plata\nThe Copa LEB Plata was played on 22 December 2018, by the first qualified team of each group after the end of the first half of the season (round 11 of first phase).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285608-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LEN Champions League\nThe 2018\u201319 LEN Champions League was the 56th edition of LEN's premier competition for men's water polo clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285608-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LEN Champions League, Overview, Team allocation\n12 teams are directly qualified for the Preliminary round (TH: Champions League title holders).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285608-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LEN Champions League, Preliminary round\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 5 September 2018 in Barcelona. The 16 teams were drawn into two groups of eight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285608-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LEN Champions League, Preliminary round\nIn each group, teams play against each other home-and-away in a round-robin format. The group winners, runners-ups and third placed teams advance to the Final 8. They are joined by the host of the tournament and the fourth placed team from a group other than one the host plays in. The matchdays are 17 October, 3 and 21 November, 5 and 19 December 2018, 9 and 23 January, 6 and 27 February, 16 and 27 March, 13 and 24 April, 15 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285608-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LEN Champions League, Preliminary round\nA total of 9 national associations are represented in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285609-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LEN Euro Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 LEN Euro Cup was the second tier of European competition in water polo. It ran from 28 September 2018 to 13 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285610-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LEN Euro League Women\nThe 2018\u201319 LEN Euro League Women was the 32nd edition of the major European tournament for women's water polo clubs. It ran from 24 January to 20 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285610-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LEN Euro League Women\nThe Final 4 was contested in Sabadell, Spain, on 19 and 20 April. The home team became European champion for the fifth time, defeating Greece's Olympiacos in the final match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285610-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LEN Euro League Women, Overview, Calendar\nThe calendar of the competition was announced on 25 May 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285610-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LEN Euro League Women, Preliminary Round\nThe draw of the pools for the Preliminary Round was held in Kirishi, Russia, before the 2018 Super Cup, on 9 october 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285610-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LEN Euro League Women, Knockout stage, Quarterfinals\nThe draw took place at LEN headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland, on 29 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285610-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LEN Euro League Women, Knockout stage, Final Four\nThe allocation of the Final 4 in Sabadell and the draw of the semifinals were announced by LEN on 13 March 2019. The Spanish team hosted the finals for the second time (the first one was the 2016 edition).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285611-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LIU Brooklyn Blackbirds men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 LIU Brooklyn Blackbirds men's basketball team represented LIU Brooklyn during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Blackbirds were led by second-year head coach Derek Kellogg, and played their home games at the Steinberg Wellness Center, with two home games at the Barclays Center, as members of the Northeast Conference (NEC). They finished the season 16\u201316 overall, 9\u20139 in NEC play to finish in a tie for fifth place. As the No. 6 seed in the NEC Tournament, they advanced to the semifinals, where they were defeated by Saint Francis (PA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285611-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LIU Brooklyn Blackbirds men's basketball team\nThe season was the final season for the LIU Brooklyn athletic program as a distinct entity, and also the last for the \"Blackbirds\" nickname. Long Island University merged its two athletic programs\u2014the Division I LIU Brooklyn Blackbirds and Division II LIU Post Pioneers\u2014into a single Division I athletic program that has since competed as the LIU Sharks. The unified LIU program maintained LIU Brooklyn's NEC membership. The Brooklyn campus will be home to the unified basketball program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285611-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LIU Brooklyn Blackbirds men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Blackbirds finished the 2017\u201318 season at 18\u201317, 10\u20138 in NEC play to finish in a tie for fourth place. As the No. 4 seed in the NEC Tournament, they defeated St. Francis Brooklyn, Fairleigh Dickinson, and Wagner to become NEC Tournament champions. They earned the NEC's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament where they lost in the First Four to Radford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285612-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LKL season\nThe 2018\u201319 Lietuvos krep\u0161inio lyga, also called Betsafe-LKL for sponsorship reasons, was the 26th season of the top-tier level professional basketball league of Lithuania, the Lietuvos krep\u0161inio lyga (LKL). The Betsafe LKL championship started on 22 September 2018 and ended on 1 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285612-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LKL season, Competition format\nDuring the regular season, all teams play 36 games. The top eight teams in the regular season standings, after playing their entire 36 game schedule, qualified for the playoffs in the quarterfinals, that was played in a best-of-three games format. The semifinals were played in best-of-three format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285612-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LKL season, Competition format\nThe final round was be played between the two winners of the semifinals. The finals series, for first place, as also games for third place were played in a best-of-five format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285612-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LKL season, Play\u2013offs\nQuarterfinals and semifinals were played in a best\u2013of\u2013three games format, while the finals in a best\u2013of\u2013five format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285613-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LNBP season\nThe 2018\u201319 LNBP season was the 19th season of the Liga Nacional de Baloncesto Profesional, Mexico's top professional basketball league. It started in October 2018 with the first round of the regular season and ended in April 2019 with the last game of the finals, won by Fuerza Regia de Monterrey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285613-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LNBP season, Teams\nA total of 14 teams contest the league, including four new franchises.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285614-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LNH Division 1\nThe 2018\u201319 LNH Division 1 is the 67th season of the LNH Division 1, French premier handball league and the 42st season consisting of only one league. It runs from 5 September 2018 to 5 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285614-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LNH Division 1, Team information\nThe following 14 clubs compete in the LNH Division 1 during the 2018\u201319 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285615-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LPB season\nThe 2019\u201320 LPB season was the 86th season of the premier Portuguese basketball league and the 11th season under the current Liga Portuguesa de Basquetebol (LPB) format. For sponsorship reasons, the league was also known as Liga Placard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285615-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LPB season, Format\nThe competition format consisted of two stages: a regular season, comprising two phases, and the play-offs. In the first phase of the regular season, the twelve participating teams compete against each other in a double round-robin system, with home and away matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285615-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LPB season, Format\nThe second phase of the regular season comprised two groups; the six best-ranked teams at the end of the first phase competed in Group A, and the remaining six teams competed in Group B. Again, teams in each group competed against each other in a double round-robin system, with home and away matches. The six Group A teams and the two best-ranked Group B teams qualified for the play-offs, while the two worst-ranked teams in Group B were relegated to the second-tier Proliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285615-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LPB season, Format\nThe play-offs were disputed as a single-elimination tournament, with fixtures determined by each team's classification in the previous round, and comprise three knockout rounds (quarter-finals, semi-finals and finals) played in a best-of-five system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285615-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LPB season, Playoffs\nSeeded teams played at home games 1, 2 and 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 74]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285616-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LSU Lady Tigers basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 LSU Lady Tigers basketball team represented Louisiana State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season college basketball season. The Lady Tigers, led by eighth-year head coach Nikki Fargas, played their home games at Pete Maravich Assembly Center and are members of the Southeastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285616-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LSU Lady Tigers basketball team\nThe Lady Tigers finished the season 16\u201313, 7\u20139 in SEC play. As a 6th seed, they lost in the second round of the SEC Women's Tournament to Tennessee. They missed being selected for the NCAA Division I Tournament and were invited to play in the Women's National Invitation Tournament but declined.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285616-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LSU Lady Tigers basketball team, Previous season\nThe Lady Tigers finished the 2017\u201318 season 19\u201310, 11\u20135 in SEC play to finish in a four-way tie for fourth place. As a 4th seed, they lost in the quarterfinals of the SEC Women's Tournament to Texas A&M. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Women's Tournament where were upset by Central Michigan in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285616-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LSU Lady Tigers basketball team, Rankings\n^Coaches' Poll did not release a second poll at the same time as the AP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285617-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LSU Tigers basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 LSU Tigers basketball team represented Louisiana State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team's head coach was Will Wade, in his second season at LSU. Tony Benford also served as interim head coach for the last regular season game, 2019 SEC Men's Basketball Tournament and 2019 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament. They played their home games at the Pete Maravich Assembly Center in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, as a member of the Southeastern Conference. They made the NCAA Tournament where they beat Yale, Maryland where they lost to Michigan State in the Sweet Sixteen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285617-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LSU Tigers basketball team, Previous season\nThe Tigers finished the 2017\u201318 season 18\u201315, 8\u201310 in SEC play to finish in a tie for ninth place. They lost in the second round of the SEC Tournament to Mississippi State. The Tigers received an invitation to the National Invitation Tournament where they defeated Louisiana before losing in to Utah in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285617-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LSU Tigers basketball team, Rankings\n*AP does not release post-NCAA Tournament rankings^Coaches did not release a Week 2 poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285618-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 La Liga\nThe 2018\u201319 La Liga season, also known as LaLiga Santander for sponsorship reasons, was the 88th since its establishment. The season began on 17 August 2018 and finished on 19 May 2019. Fixtures for the 2018\u201319 season were announced on 24 July 2018. This was the first La Liga season to use VAR.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285618-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 La Liga\nBarcelona were the defending champions, and they secured a second consecutive title with three games to spare following victory over Levante on 27 April. Huesca, Rayo Vallecano and Valladolid joined as the promoted clubs from the 2017\u201318 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n. They replaced M\u00e1laga, Las Palmas and Deportivo La Coru\u00f1a, who were relegated to the 2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285618-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 La Liga, Summary\nSeveral clubs made managerial changes before the start of the season. Among them were Real Madrid, when Zinedine Zidane resigned following the club's third consecutive UEFA Champions League victory. He was replaced by Julen Lopetegui, who was managing the Spanish national team at the 2018 FIFA World Cup in Russia at the time of announcement and was dismissed from that job as a result. Other incomers included Pablo Mach\u00edn at Sevilla, who was hired after his success with newly promoted Girona the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 24], "content_span": [25, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285618-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 La Liga, Summary\nIn the transfer window, the biggest deal saw Real Madrid lose Cristiano Ronaldo to Juventus for a fee of \u20ac112 million; the Portuguese forward had scored 450 goals in 438 games during his nine years in the Spanish capital. Real Madrid's additions included Belgium international goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois for \u20ac35 million from Chelsea, and striker Mariano returned to the club from Lyon for \u20ac22 million. Defending champions Barcelona added Cl\u00e9ment Lenglet to their defence, Arturo Vidal to midfield, and spent over \u20ac40 million on Brazilian forward Malcom. Players exiting Barcelona included Andr\u00e9s Iniesta at the end of a successful 16-year-spell, as he signed for Vissel Kobe in Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 24], "content_span": [25, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285618-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 La Liga, Summary\nVeterans Gabi and Fernando Torres also left Atl\u00e9tico Madrid for new teams in Asia, while the same club welcomed in the likes of World Cup-winning French midfielder Thomas Lemar and Portugal's Gelson Martins. After a successful previous season, in which the team finished fourth and returned to the Champions League, Valencia made permanent the loan signing of Portuguese winger Gon\u00e7alo Guedes from Paris Saint-Germain and Geoffrey Kondogbia from Inter Milan. Forward Simone Zaza and midfielder Jo\u00e3o Cancelo both left to Italy, while Kevin Gameiro arrived as replacement. Athletic Bilbao sold Kepa Arrizabalaga to Chelsea for \u20ac80 million, a world record fee for a goalkeeper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 24], "content_span": [25, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285618-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 La Liga, Summary\nThe tenth round of matches featured the first El Cl\u00e1sico of the season, which Barcelona won 5\u20131 at home against Real Madrid with a hat-trick by Luis Su\u00e1rez. The result put Madrid into 9th place, and led to the dismissal of Lopetegui after only five months. Other early pace-setters included Sevilla with their prolific strike partnership of Andr\u00e9 Silva and Wissam Ben Yedder, Alav\u00e9s who were briefly league leaders in mid-October, Espanyol, and Valladolid who had been taken over by former Brazil international Ronaldo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 24], "content_span": [25, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285618-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 La Liga, Teams, Promotion and relegation (pre-season)\nA total of 20 teams will contest the league, including 17 sides from the 2017\u201318 season and three promoted from the 2017\u201318 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n. This will include the two top teams from the Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, and the winners of the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 61], "content_span": [62, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285618-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 La Liga, Teams, Promotion and relegation (pre-season)\nThe first team to be relegated from La Liga were M\u00e1laga. Their relegation was ensured on 19 April 2018, following a late 0\u22121 defeat to Levante, ending their 10-year spell in the top division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 61], "content_span": [62, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285618-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 La Liga, Teams, Promotion and relegation (pre-season)\nThe second team to be relegated were Las Palmas, after a 0\u22124 home defeat to Deportivo Alav\u00e9s on 22 April 2018, ending their three-year spell in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 61], "content_span": [62, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285618-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 La Liga, Teams, Promotion and relegation (pre-season)\nThe last team to be relegated were Deportivo La Coru\u00f1a, following a 2\u22124 home loss to Barcelona on 29 April 2018. This result ensured Deportivo's third relegation in seven years, and also handed Barcelona their 25th La Liga title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 61], "content_span": [62, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285618-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 La Liga, Teams, Promotion and relegation (pre-season)\nOn 21 May 2018, Huesca were promoted to La Liga for the first time ever by winning 2\u20130 at Lugo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 61], "content_span": [62, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285618-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 La Liga, Teams, Promotion and relegation (pre-season)\nRayo Vallecano was the second team to earn promotion to La Liga on 27 May 2018 by winning against Lugo as well, this time 1\u20130. Rayo returned after a two-year absence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 61], "content_span": [62, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285618-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 La Liga, Teams, Promotion and relegation (pre-season)\nValladolid was the last team to be promoted after beating Sporting Gij\u00f3n and Numancia in the play-offs. Valladolid returned to top division after 4 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 61], "content_span": [62, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285618-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 La Liga, Teams, Promotion and relegation (pre-season)\nThis was the first season since the 2014\u201315 season without any teams from the archipelagos of Spain (teams located on the Balearic Islands and Canary Islands) since Las Palmas was relegated and Tenerife failed to qualify for the promotion play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 61], "content_span": [62, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285618-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 La Liga, Teams, Stadia and locations\nCelta signed a sponsorship contract with Abanca to rename their stadium as Abanca-Bala\u00eddos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285618-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 La Liga, Teams, Matches outside Spain\nOn 16 August 2018, La Liga signed a 15-year agreement with Relevant Sports (owners of the International Champions Cup) to schedule one match per season within the United States. This would mark the first time ever that an official La Liga league match would be held there. The match between Girona and Barcelona, to be played on 27 January 2019, was selected to be played in Miami, but it required the approval of the Royal Spanish Football Federation. On 21 September 2018, the Spanish Football Federation denied approval of the match being held in Miami.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 45], "content_span": [46, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285618-0015-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 La Liga, Teams, Matches outside Spain\nOn 26 October 2018, following a request for guidance from the Spanish Football Federation, US Soccer and CONCACAF, the FIFA Council discussed La Liga's proposal. At the end of the meeting, the FIFA Council stated that \"Consistent with the opinion expressed by the Football Stakeholders Committee, the Council emphasised the sporting principle that official league matches must be played within the territory of the respective member association\". On 13 December 2018, Barcelona left their disposition to play the match in Miami without effect.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 45], "content_span": [46, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285618-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 La Liga, League table, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches. In order to preserve chronological evolvements, any postponed matches are not included to the round at which they were originally scheduled, but added to the full round they were played immediately afterwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 49], "content_span": [50, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285618-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 La Liga, Season statistics, Zamora Trophy\nThe Zamora Trophy is awarded by newspaper Marca to the goalkeeper with the lowest goals-to-games ratio. A goalkeeper has to have played at least 28 games of 60 or more minutes to be eligible for the trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 49], "content_span": [50, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285619-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 La Salle Explorers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 La Salle Explorers basketball team represented La Salle University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Explorers, led by first-year head coach Ashley Howard, played their home games at Tom Gola Arena in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania as members of the Atlantic 10 Conference. They finished the season 10\u201321, 8\u201310 in A-10 play to finish in ninth place. They lost in the second round of the A-10 Tournament to Rhode Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285619-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 La Salle Explorers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Explorers finished the 2017\u201318 season 13\u201319, 7\u201311 in A-10 play to finish in a three-way tie for 10th place. As the No. 12 seed in the A-10 Tournament, they lost in the first round to Massachusetts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285619-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 La Salle Explorers men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn March 23, 2018, head coach John Giannini and the school mutually agreed to part ways after 14 seasons. Giannini left with a 212\u2013226 record at La Salle. On April 8, the school hired Villanova assistant Ashley Howard as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285620-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 La Salle Explorers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 La Salle Explorers women's basketball team will represent La Salle University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Explorers, led by first year head coach Mountain MacGillivray, play their home games at Tom Gola Arena and were members of the Atlantic 10 Conference. They finished the season 6\u201325, 3\u201313 in A-10 to finish in a tie for last place. They lost in the first round of the A-10 Women's Tournament to Dayton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285620-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 La Salle Explorers women's basketball team, Media, La Salle Explorers Sports Network\nSelect Explorers games will be broadcast online by the . The A-10 Digital Network will carry all non-televised Explorers home games and most conference road games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 92], "content_span": [93, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285621-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lafayette Leopards men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Lafayette Leopards men's basketball team represented Lafayette College during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Leopards, led by 24th-year head coach Fran O'Hanlon, played their home games at the Kirby Sports Center in Easton, Pennsylvania as members of the Patriot League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285621-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lafayette Leopards men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Leopards finished the 2017\u201318 season 10\u201321, 7\u201311 in Patriot League play to finish in seventh place. They defeated American in the first round of the Patriot League Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Colgate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285622-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lafayette Leopards women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Lafayette Leopards women's basketball team represents Lafayette College during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Leopards, led by second year head coach Kia Damon, play their home games at Kirby Sports Center and were members of the Patriot League. They finished the season 9\u201322, 2\u201316 in Patriot League play to finish in last place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the Patriot League Women's Tournament where they lost to Bucknell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285623-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lamar Cardinals basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Lamar Cardinals basketball team represented Lamar University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Cardinals were led by fifth-year head coach Tic Price and played their home games at the Montagne Center in Beaumont, Texas as members of the Southland Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285623-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lamar Cardinals basketball team\nThe Cardinals finished conference play with as 12\u20136 record in a three-way tie with New Orleans and Southeastern Louisiana for third place. The team qualified for the 2019 Southland Conference Men's Basketball Tournament as the fifth seeded team. They won the first-round game against eighth seed Houston Baptist by a score of 81\u201379. The season ended when the Cardinals were eliminated in the second round by fourth seed New Orleans with a score of 72\u201376.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285623-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lamar Cardinals basketball team, Previous season\nThe Cardinals finished the 2017\u201318 season 19\u201314, 11\u20137 in Southland play to finish in a tie for fifth place. They lost in the first round of the Southland Tournament to Central Arkansas. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they lost in the first round to UTSA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285623-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lamar Cardinals basketball team, Offseason, Player additions\nThree players signed letters of intent during the early signing period. Christian Barrett, a transfer, played at Jacksonville College. Barrett will play forward. Davion Buster and Gehlon Easter were high school recruits. Both will play guard. Another transfer, Edwin Jeudy, was announced on March 17, 2018. Jeudy will be transferring from Gillette College. He was ranked number 78 in the 2018 Junior College Basketball Top 100 Player Rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 68], "content_span": [69, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285623-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lamar Cardinals basketball team, TV and radio media\nAll Lamar games will be broadcast on KLVI, also known as News Talk 560.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285623-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lamar Cardinals basketball team, TV and radio media\nLive video of all home games (except those picked up by Southland Conference TV agreements) will be streamed on ESPN3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285624-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lamar Lady Cardinals basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Lamar Lady Cardinals basketball team represented Lamar University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Cardinals, led by sixth year head coach Robin Harmony, played their home games at the Montagne Center as members of the Southland Conference. The Lady Cardinals finished the 2018\u201319 season with an overall record of 24-7. They won the Southland Conference regular season championship were 17-1 in Southland play. After losing to Abilene Christian in the Southland Conference tournament semi-final game 79-88, the Lady Cardinals were an automatic qualifier to the WNIT.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285624-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lamar Lady Cardinals basketball team\nTheir season ended with a first round 71-73 loss to the South Alabama in the first round. The loss ended a 42 home court win streak which started on November 16, 2016. Chastadie Barrs set the NCAA Division I steals record in the WNIT game at 192. She had tied the steals record of 191 the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285624-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lamar Lady Cardinals basketball team, Previous season\nThe Lady Cardinals finished the 2017\u201318 season with an overall record of 22-8. They won the Southland Conference regular season championship were 17-1 in Southland play. After losing to Nicholls State in a Southland Conference tournament semi-final game 68-74, the Lady Cardinals were an automatic qualifier to the WNIT. Their season ended with a first round 68-80 loss to the TCU in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285625-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Latvian\u2013Estonian Basketball League\nThe 2018\u201319 Latvian\u2013Estonian Basketball League, known as OlyBet Latvian\u2013Estonian Basketball League for sponsorship reasons, was the inaugural season of the newly formed Latvian\u2013Estonian Basketball League, the combined top basketball division of Latvia and Estonia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285625-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Latvian\u2013Estonian Basketball League\nThe season began on 28 September 2018, with the 2018 Estonian champions Kalev/Cramo hosting a game against the 2018 Latvian champions Ventspils. The Final Four was played at the Saku Suurhall in Tallinn, Estonia, with Ventspils winning the inaugural title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285625-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Latvian\u2013Estonian Basketball League, Competition format\nThe competition format follows the usual double round-robin format. During the course of the regular season, which lasts from 28 September 2018 to 24 March 2018, all the teams play each other twice, once at home and once away, for a total of 28 games. Teams receive two points for a win and one point for a loss. Teams are ranked by total points, with the eight highest-ranked teams advancing to the double-legged quarter-finals. The winning teams will determine the champion in a Final Four tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 62], "content_span": [63, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285625-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Latvian\u2013Estonian Basketball League, Teams\n15 teams, 7 from Estonia and 8 from Latvia, are contesting the league in the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285625-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Latvian\u2013Estonian Basketball League, Play-offs\nThe quarter-finals were played with a double-legged format while the semi-finals and final in a Final Four format was hosted at the Saku Suurhall in Tallinn, Estonia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 53], "content_span": [54, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285625-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Latvian\u2013Estonian Basketball League, Individual statistics\nPlayers qualify to this category by having at least 50% games played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285625-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Latvian\u2013Estonian Basketball League, Latvian championship\nThe six best Latvian teams qualified for the national play-offs, that started on 10 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285625-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Latvian\u2013Estonian Basketball League, Latvian championship\nQuarterfinals and semifinals are played in a best-of-five games format (1-1-1-1-1) while the final in a best of seven one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285625-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Latvian\u2013Estonian Basketball League, Latvian championship, Third place series\nThe team with the higher seed played game one, two, five and seven (if necessary) at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 84], "content_span": [85, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285626-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 League 2 (Iran)\n2018\u201319 Iran Football's 2nd Division is the 18th under 2nd Division since its establishment (current format) in 2001. The season featured 21 teams from the 2nd Division 2017\u201318, three new teams relegated from the 2017\u201318 Azadegan League: Saba Qom, Rah Ahan Tehran and Iranjavan Boushehr, and four new teams promoted from the 3rd Division 2017\u201318: Chooka Talesh, Shahrdari Kamyaran, Esteghlal Ramshir, Jahad Nasr Sirjan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285627-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lebanese FA Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Lebanese FA Cup was the 47th edition of the national football cup competition of Lebanon. It started with the First Round on 12 October 2018 and concluded with the final on 25 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285627-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lebanese FA Cup\nDefending champions Ahed beat Ansar in the final to win their second consecutive Lebanese FA Cup, their sixth in total. The winner qualified for the 2020 AFC Cup play-off round; however, as Ahed also won the Lebanese Premier League, the AFC Cup spot went to second-placed Ansar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285627-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lebanese FA Cup, Bracket\nThe following is the bracket which the Lebanese FA Cup resembled. Numbers in parentheses next to the score represents the results of a penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285628-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lebanese Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Lebanese Premier League season began on 21 September 2018 and concluded on 21 April 2019. 2018\u201319 was the 58th season of the Lebanese Premier League, the top Lebanese professional league for association football clubs in the country, established in 1934.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285628-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lebanese Premier League\nAhed were the defending champions. Shabab Sahel and Chabab Ghazieh joined as the promoted clubs from the 2017\u201318 Lebanese Second Division. They replaced Shabab Arabi and Islah who were relegated to the 2018\u201319 Lebanese Second Division. Ahed won their third consecutive Lebanese Premier League title, and seventh overall, with two games to spare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285628-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lebanese Premier League, Summary, Issues\nThe 2018\u201319 season was one of the worst for Lebanese football since the Lebanese Civil War for various issues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285628-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lebanese Premier League, Summary, Issues\nThe first issue was the poor preparation and management of most clubs. Nejmeh had changed their head coach twice and bought five of ten summer signings only in the last week of the transfer window. Ansar changed their coach a week before the season began and signed two players in the last days of the transfer window. The league's smaller clubs had other problems. Tadamon Sour found themselves without a head coach or president at the start of the season. Tripoli also began the season without a head coach, as well as having not signed any new players. Nabi Chit SC changed their name to Bekaa SC in a failed attempt to attract more investors. Overall, only five of twelve teams kept their manager from the previous season, and most summer acquisitions were concluded in the final days of the signing window.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 860]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285628-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lebanese Premier League, Summary, Issues\nThe second issue concerned the tensions between the Lebanese Football Association (LFA) and the clubs, with the referees' performances being the hot topic. Clubs like Ansar and Nejmeh protested to the Federation, threatening to leave the league if no improvements were to be made. These tensions culminated with the resignation of Semaan Douaihy, a member of the Executive Committee of the LFA. Salam Zgharta FC and Racing Beirut announcing their withdrawal from all LFA-managed competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285628-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lebanese Premier League, Summary, Issues\nThe final issue the league faced was the re-emergence of match-fixing. While the LFA proved its existence, it made no effort to punish the parties involved or to cancel the results of the implicated teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285628-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lebanese Premier League, Summary, League summary\nAl Ahed FC won their third consecutive title with a ten-point margin. The battle for second place went down to the wire, with Ansar claiming an AFC Cup spot from Nejmeh in the last matchday of the league. The relegation battle was also determined on the last matchday, with eight of the 12 teams all candidates for relegation. The Beirut Municipal Stadium and the Fouad Chehab Stadium returned to host Lebanese Premier League matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285629-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lebanese Second Division\nThe Lebanese Second Division (Arabic: \u0627\u0644\u062f\u0648\u0631\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0644\u0628\u0646\u0627\u0646\u064a - \u0627\u0644\u062f\u0631\u062c\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062b\u0627\u0646\u064a\u0629\u200e) is the second division of Lebanese football. It is controlled by the Federation Libanaise de Football Association. The top two teams qualify for the Lebanese Premier League and replace the relegated teams, while the bottom two are relegated to the Lebanese Third Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285629-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lebanese Second Division\nNahda Barelias and Shabab El Bourj were promoted from the Third Division, while Al Shabab Al Arabi and Al Islah were relegated from the Lebanese Premier League in 2017\u201318.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285630-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lebanese Women's Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 Lebanese Women's Football League was the 12th edition of the Lebanese Women's Football League since it was formed in 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285630-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lebanese Women's Football League\nSAS won their fourth title with a 2\u20131 victory over defending champions Zouk Mosbeh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285631-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lech Pozna\u0144 season\nLech Pozna\u0144 is a Polish football club based in Pozna\u0144. This is their 96th season overall. They compete in Ekstraklasa, the highest ranking league in Poland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285631-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lech Pozna\u0144 season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285631-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lech Pozna\u0144 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-00285632-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lechia Gda\u0144sk season\nThe 2018\u201319 Lechia Gda\u0144sk season is the club's 75th season of existence, and their 11th continuous in the top flight of Polish football. The season covered the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285632-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lechia Gda\u0144sk season, Season information\nOn 9 February 2019 Lechia wore their first ever non-green or non-white kit for a home match. The team wore an all black kit in respect to Pawe\u0142 Adamowicz, the mayor of Gda\u0144sk, who was a life long Lechia fan who was murdered on 14 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285632-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285632-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lechia Gda\u0144sk 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285633-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lee Man FC season\nThe 2018-19 season is Lee Man's second consecutive season in Hong Kong Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285633-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lee Man FC season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285633-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lee Man FC season, Squad\nPlayers' positions as per club's announcement. Remarks:LP These players are considered as local players in Hong Kong domestic football competitions. FP These players are registered as foreign players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285633-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lee Man FC season, Squad, Out on loan\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285633-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lee Man FC season, Matches, Hong Kong Premier League\nOn 27 July 2018, the fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced, with the home match against Kitchee being the first match in the league of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285634-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Leeds United F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Leeds United's ninth consecutive season in the Championship. Along with competing in the Championship, the club also participated in the FA Cup and EFL Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285634-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Leeds United F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285634-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Leeds United F.C. season, Review\nBefore a 2\u20130 victory over Derby County on 11 January 2019, manager Marcelo Bielsa admitted he had sent a spy to the Derby FC training ground, after reports emerged in the press that a man was spotted the previous day outside the Derby training ground. Derby manager Frank Lampard was critical of Bielsa's method. On 12 January, Leeds United released a statement in response to the incident. Tottenham Hotspur Manager Mauricio Pochettino described the incident as 'not a big deal' and commonplace in Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285634-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Leeds United F.C. season, Review\nOn 15 January, the EFL announced they would be investigating the incident. With intense media scrutiny on what was coined 'Spygate' in the media, Bielsa announced a press briefing on 16 January 2019, where he gave a detailed analysis of his research on a PowerPoint presentation to the gathered media and journalists, detailing his meticulousness, thoroughness and preparation over his opponents, with some journalists in attendance describing it as a 'coaching masterclass' and 'genius'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285634-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Leeds United F.C. season, Review\nThe 'Spygate' saga was resolved on 18 February, when Leeds were fined a sum of \u00a3200,000 by the EFL for breach of a portion of Rule 3.4 of EFL Regulations (\"In all matters and transactions relating to The League each Club shall behave towards each other Club and The League with the utmost good faith. \"), with the EFL also announcing a new rule as a result, that teams could not watch opposition training up to 72 hours before a game. It was subsequently revealed, by Bielsa, that he paid the \u00a3200,000 fine in full himself.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285634-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Leeds United F.C. season, Competitions, Pre-season friendlies\nLeeds announced pre-season friendlies against Forest Green Rovers, York City, Southend United, Oxford United, Guiseley and Las Palmas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285634-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Leeds United F.C. season, Competitions, Championship, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the Championship fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285634-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Leeds United F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285634-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Leeds United F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam. The second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285635-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Legia Warsaw season\nThe 2018\u201319 Legia Warsaw season is the club's 102st season of existence, and their 82st in the top flight of Polish football. Legia entered the 2018\u201319 season as the defending Ekstraklasa champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285635-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Legia Warsaw 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285635-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Legia Warsaw 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285636-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lehigh Mountain Hawks men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Lehigh Mountain Hawks men's basketball team represented Lehigh University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Mountain Hawks, led by 12th-year head coach Brett Reed, played their home games at Stabler Arena in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania as members of the Patriot League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285636-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lehigh Mountain Hawks men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Mountain Hawks finished the 2017\u201318 season 16\u201314, 11\u20137 in Patriot League play to finish in a tie for third place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Patriot League Tournament to Boston University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285637-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lehigh Mountain Hawks women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Lehigh Mountain Hawks women's basketball team represents Lehigh University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Mountain Hawks, led by twenty-fourth year head coach Sue Troyan, play their home games at Stabler Arena and are members of the Patriot League. They finished the season 21\u201310, 12\u20136 in Patriot League play to finish in second place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Patriot League Women's Tournament where they lost to American. Despite having 21 wins and a better record, they were not invited to a postseason tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285638-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Leicester City F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 Leicester City season was the club's 114th season in the English football league system and their 51st (non-consecutive) season in the top tier of English football. This was their fifth consecutive season in the 2018\u201319 Premier League. They also competed in the FA Cup and EFL Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285638-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Leicester City F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285638-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Leicester City F.C. season\nThe season was marred by the death of owner Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha in a helicopter crash outside the King Power Stadium on 27 October, shortly after a 1\u20131 home draw against West Ham United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285638-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Leicester City F.C. season, Pre-season, Pre-season friendlies\nLeicester City announced that they will play pre-season friendlies against Notts County, Valencia and Lille, with a further two matches against Akhisarspor and Udinese Calcio as part of a tour to Austria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285638-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Leicester City F.C. season, Competitions, Premier League, Matches\nOn 14 June 2018, the Premier League fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285638-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Leicester City F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285638-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Leicester City F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nThe second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August. The third round draw was made on 30 August by David Seaman and Joleon Lescott. The fourth round draw was made live on Quest by Rachel Yankey and Rachel Riley on 29 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285638-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Leicester City F.C. season, Awards, Club awards\nLeicester's annual award ceremony, including categories voted for by the players and supporters, was held on 7 May 2019. The following awards were made:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285639-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Leinster Senior Cup\nThe 2019 Leinster Senior Cup was the 118th staging of the Leinster Football Association's primary competition. It included all Leinster based League of Ireland clubs from the First Division and Premier Division, as well as a selection of intermediate level sides. The competition was won by St Patrick's Athletic", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285639-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Leinster Senior Cup, Preliminary Round\nThe draw for the preliminary round and first round was made on 1 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285639-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Leinster Senior Cup, Fourth Round\nThe 12 Leinster teams from the League of Ireland join the competition in this round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285640-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lesotho Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Lesotho Premier League is the 51st season of the Lesotho Premier League, the top-tier football league in Lesotho, since its establishment in 1970. The season started on 15 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285641-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Levante UD season\nDuring the 2018\u201319 season, Levante UD are participating in La Liga and Copa del Rey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285641-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Levante UD 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285641-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Levante UD 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285642-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liberty Flames basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Liberty Flames men's basketball team represented Liberty University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team played its home games in Lynchburg, Virginia for the 29th consecutive season at Vines Center, with a capacity of 8,085. The team was led by Ritchie McKay, in his sixth season, but fourth season since his return to the program. They were first-year members of the Atlantic Sun Conference. They finished the season 29\u20137, 14\u20132 in ASUN play to share the regular season championship with Lipscomb. They defeated Jacksonville, North Florida and Lipscomb to be champions of the Atlantic Sun Tournament. They received the ASUN's automatic-bid to the NCAA Tournament where they defeated Mississippi State in the First Round before losing in the Second Round to Virginia Tech.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 850]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285642-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liberty Flames basketball team, Previous season\nThey were members of the Big South Conference. They finished the season 22\u201314, 9\u20139 in Big South play to finish in a four-way tie for fifth place. They defeated Campbell and UNC Asheville to advance to the championship game of the Big South Tournament where they lost to Radford. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they defeated North Carolina A&T in the first round in a game referred to as the Jim Phelan Classic. They received a second round bye and defeated Central Michigan in the quarterfinals before losing in the semifinals to UIC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285643-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liberty Lady Flames basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Liberty Lady Flames basketball team represents Liberty University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Eagles, led by twentieth-year head coach Carey Green, play their home games at the Vines Center and were first year members of the Atlantic Sun Conference. They finished the season 16\u201316, 10\u20136 in A-Sun play to finish in a tie for third place. They advanced to the championship game of the A-Sun Tournament where they lost to Florida Gulf Coast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285644-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Libyan Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Libyan Premier League season was an abandoned season that was supposed to be the 46th since its establishment. The season has started on 28 November 2018. Fixtures of the 2018\u201319 were announced on 30 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285644-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Libyan Premier League\nAl-Nasr were the defending champions. Al-Sadaqa and Abu Salem joined as the promoted clubs from the 2017\u201318 Libyan First Division. They replaced Qurdabia, Al-Andalus, Ascharara, Abi al Ashhar, Al-Tarsana and Annajma who were relegated to the 2018\u201319 Libyan First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285644-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Libyan Premier League, Summary\nBefore the start of the season many disagreements took place which led to the postponement of the start of the season several times. The Competition Organising Committee in the Libyan Football Federation has chosen 14 September to be the date of starting the new season but, there were 4 clubs who demanded the postponement of the season. These clubs were Al-Nasr, Al-Ahly Benghazi, Al-Ahly Tripoli, Al-Madina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285644-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Libyan Premier League, Summary\nThe reason behind this was that these clubs wanted to hold a meeting for the general assembly for discussing the problems that the previous season has faced and how to avoid them and solve the current . As a result of the clubs demands and the security situations, The Competition Committee delayed the start of the new season until 2 October but didn't hold the general assembly meeting. However, On 12 October the eastern group clubs were hosted in the headquarters of Darnes Club. The clubs made an agreement to refuse the start of the season until they get their demands from the Football Federation. Their demands were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285644-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Libyan Premier League, Summary\nThe Football Federation had accepted their demands except the 2nd point. On the other hand, All the western clubs (except Al-Ahly Tripoli and Al-Ittihad) also held a meeting in Al-Madina Club and they also have refused the start of the season until they get their demands which were to get financial support from the Football Federation but the last didn't approve their demands and delayed the season again due to problems and this time until 26 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285644-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Libyan Premier League, Summary\nHowever, another club meeting was held between all the western clubs (except Al-Ittihad and Al-Ittihad Misurata) in Abu Salem Club headquarters where they agreed to not start the season until the removal of the president of the Libyan Football Federation Jamal Aljaafari. Meanwhile, the Competition Committee has held the draw of the league without the knowledge of the clubs and without any representative from them in the draw ceremonies and the draw wasn't held in the headquarters of the Football Federation in Tripoli but it was held in Misurata instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285644-0003-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Libyan Premier League, Summary\nThe Competition Committee has also chosen 9 November as a date of starting the new season. However, because of the long postponement of the season which will have a negative effect on the club's especially those who will compete on continental level and will also affect the national team, the clubs Rafik and Asswehly have agreed to start the new season without any demands. The Competition Committee as usual delayed the season until 21 November to solve some problems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285644-0003-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Libyan Premier League, Summary\nOn the other hand the refusing clubs of the East and West which were:Abu Salem, Aschat, Al-Ahly Tripoli Al-Wahda, Al-Madina, Al-Hilal, Al-Mahalla, Shabaab al Jabal, Darnes and Al Ta'awon have organised a competition for the necessity of keeping their players in the form of games. The competition was under the name of Activator Competition for Libyan Premier League Clubs or Libya Tajma'ona (Libya brings us together). However, some refusing clubs like Al-Ahly Benghazi and Al-Nasr didn't participate in the competition because of their preparation for CAF Champions League preliminary round games as they were camping in Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285644-0003-0004", "contents": "2018\u201319 Libyan Premier League, Summary\nOn 21 November the refusing clubs made a statement indicating their demand for holding the General Assembly meeting and their need for financial support. However, the league has already started and the first game was between Al-Ittihad and Aschat which saw the withdrawal of the latter because of their refusal to start the league before getting what they demanded in the statement. On 24 November, the Executive Office held a meeting to decide whether to keep or withdraw the trust from the LFF president Jamal Aljaafari by the majority of vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285644-0003-0005", "contents": "2018\u201319 Libyan Premier League, Summary\nThe majority decided to withdraw trust from Jamal Aljaafari and he will be removed from his position temporarily until the New General Assembly meeting which was scheduled to be held on 8 December in Sirte until it was delayed to 20 December in Marj. However, The league will continue on its scheduled date. The executive office has appointed the former referee and vice president Abdulhakim Alshilmani as the new president for the Libyan Football Federation. 85 clubs representatives have attended the meeting with 82 clubs voting against Jamal Aljaafari, 2 clubs voting for him and 1 club refusing to vote. As a result, Jamal Aljaafari was removed permanently from his position as a president of the Libyan Football Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285644-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Libyan Premier League, Summary\nThe second round of matches in the second group featured the first Tripoli Derby of the season, which Al-Ittihad won 2\u20131 at Misurata Stadium against Al-Ahly Tripoli. The result put Al-Ahly into 12th place temporarily. Other early pace-setters included Al-Akhdar and Shabaab al Jabal who are currently the top two teams in the first group as of mid-February, Asswehly, Al-Madina and Abu Salem who are the second, third and fourth placed teams in the second group respectively as of the first week of February. The third round of matches in the first group featured the first \"Benghazi Derby\" of the season, which Al-Ahly Benghazi won 1-0 at Benina Stadium against Al-Nasr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285644-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Libyan Premier League, Summary\nThe season suffered delays several times. It was first delayed in mid-February so that the national team could hold a training camp in Tunisia in preparation for an important match against South Africa. It was delayed again a month later for the same reason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285644-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Libyan Premier League, Summary\nEarly in the season, the LFF announced that the season would continue during Ramadan at night. However, due to the 2019 Western Libya offensive, the LFF decided to suspend the league. Sources inside the LFF indicated that the season was close to being cancelled. However, the LFF decided to postpone the season until June 15 (though at this stage, many foreign coaches had fled the country and foreign players terminated their contracts).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285644-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Libyan Premier League, Summary\nJune 15th passed, and there was no sign of the league continuing. The LFF later decided to cancel the season and announced that Al-Ittihad will play in the 2019-20 CAF Confederation Cup and Al-Nasr will play in the 2019-20 CAF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285644-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Libyan Premier League, Teams, Groups\nDue to the continued security situation in Libya in 2018 and the difficulty in air-travel for most teams, the participating teams were grouped by their geographical location into two groups of twelve teams. Teams from each group were scheduled to play every team from their group in a home-and-away round robin format with 3 points given for a win and 1 point for a draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285644-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Libyan Premier League, Teams, Stadiums\nThe following stadiums were chosen by the Competitions Committee to be available to host league games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285644-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Libyan Premier League, Teams, Stadiums\n1 As per the decision of the Stadiums Assessments Committee of the Libyan Football Federation on 30 October 2018 these stadiums will not host matches until they are repaired. On 27 January, the Competition Committee announced the ability of these stadiums to host the league games again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285644-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Libyan Premier League, First stage, Group 1, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches. In order to preserve chronological evolvements, any postponed matches are not included to the round at which they were originally scheduled, but added to the full round they were played immediately afterwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285644-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Libyan Premier League, First stage, Group 2, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches. In order to preserve chronological evolvements, any postponed matches are not included to the round at which they were originally scheduled, but added to the full round they were played immediately afterwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285645-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liechtenstein Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Liechtenstein Cup was the 74th season of Liechtenstein's annual cup competition. Seven clubs competed with a total of 15 teams for one spot in the first qualifying round of the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League. FC Vaduz were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285645-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liechtenstein Cup, First round\nThe first round involved all except the four highest-placed teams. Five teams received a bye to the second round by drawing of lot. FC Vaduz II did not enter the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285645-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liechtenstein Cup, Second round\nThe second round involved all except the four highest-placed teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285645-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liechtenstein Cup, Quarterfinals\nThe quarterfinals involved the four teams who won in the second round, as well as the top four highest placed teams (FC Vaduz, FC Balzers, USV Eschen/Mauren and FC Ruggell).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285646-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Alef\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga Alef season was the 10th season as third tier since its re-alignment in 2009 and the 77th season of third-tier football in Israel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285646-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Alef, Promotion play-offs, Test matches\nHapoel Acre won 7\u20134 on aggregate and remained in Liga Leumit. Maccabi Herzliya remained in Liga Alef.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 52], "content_span": [53, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285647-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga EBA season\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga EBA season is the 25th season of the Spanish basketball fourth league. The season started on 22 September 2018 and will end on 19 May 2019 with the promotion playoffs to LEB Plata.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285647-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga EBA season, Competition format\nTeams are divided in five groups attending to geographical criteria. Groups A, C, D and E are divided in two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285647-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga EBA season, Competition format, Final stage\nThe three best teams of each group and the fourth of Group A (champion of the previous season) will play the promotion playoffs. From these 16 teams, only six will be promoted to LEB Plata.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285647-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga EBA season, Competition format, Final stage\nSince this season, only two teams will host one of the two final stages. Each final stage consist in two groups of four teams where the group winners will promote directly to LEB Plata.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285647-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga EBA season, Competition format, Final stage\nThe two runners-up from each stage will play a final match for the two last spots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285647-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga EBA season, Competition format, Eligibility of players\nThe Spanish Basketball Federation limited the number of non-EU players to only two and forced the clubs to have at least eight homegrown players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285647-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga EBA season, Regular season, Group A\nThe 28 teams of the group were divided into two subgroups, where the two first qualified teams of each one would join the final stage. The two group winners will face for deciding the first and second position of the group; the same for the two runners-up, deciding the positions third and fourth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285647-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga EBA season, Regular season, Group A, Finals\nThe winner of this single-legged series qualified as group A champion. The game was played on 4 May at Municipal of Zizur Nagusia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285647-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga EBA season, Regular season, Group C\nAs in the group A, the 28 teams were divided into two subgroups, where the two first qualified teams of each one would join the Final Four for deciding the three participant teams in the final stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285647-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga EBA season, Regular season, Group C, Finals\nThe winner, runner-up and third place game winner qualifies for the final stage. The games were played on 4 and 5 May at Pavell\u00f3 Barris Nord of Lleida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285647-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga EBA season, Regular season, Group C, Finals\nWinners remained at Liga EBA. First leg was played on 5 May, second on 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285647-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga EBA season, Regular season, Group D\n20 teams were divided into two groups. The five first teams of each group joined the second stage, where the best three teams will join the final stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285647-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga EBA season, Regular season, Group E\n17 teams were divided into two groups. The four first teams of each group joined the second stage, where the best three teams will join the final stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285647-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga EBA season, Promotion playoffs\nThe 16 qualified teams will be divided in four groups of four teams. The winner of each group will promote to LEB Plata. The four runners-up will play a repechage to decide two more promotion spots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285648-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga FPD\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga FPD season, also known as Campeonato Banco Popular for sponsorship reasons, is the 98th since its establishment. The tournament is the second since the 2006\u201307 season to use the Apertura and Clausura names to their short tournaments, marking a departure from the Invierno and Verano tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285648-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga FPD\nThe Voit Lummo is the official match ball of the tournament. Deportivo Saprissa are the defending champions, after defeating Herediano in the Clausura 2018 tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285648-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga FPD, Teams and Structure Changes\nA total of 12 teams will contest the league, including 11 sides from the 2017\u201318 season, one team promoted from the Liga de Ascenso.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 45], "content_span": [46, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285648-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga FPD, Teams and Structure Changes\nSan Carlos were promoted for the first time to the Liga FPD after defeating Jicaral in the Liga de Ascenso final, thus replacing Liberia in the Liga FPD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 45], "content_span": [46, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285648-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga FPD, Teams and Structure Changes\nFor this season, the league has changed the playoff format. The top 4 teams in the regular season will progress to a two-legged knockout tournament. If the same team that wins the regular season wins the playoff, that team wins the season championship immediately. Should a different team win the playoff than won the regular season, those two teams will meet in a two-legged Grand Final for the season championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 45], "content_span": [46, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285648-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga FPD, Apertura\nThe Apertura tournament will be played in the second half of 2018, starting on 21 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 26], "content_span": [27, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285648-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga FPD, Apertura, Regular season\nThe regular season began on 21 July 2018 and ended on 11 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285648-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga FPD, Apertura, Regular season\nOn 17 October 2018, the match between Lim\u00f3n and Grecia was suspended in the 25th minute due to a waterlogged pitch. The remaining 65 minutes were played the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285648-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga FPD, Apertura, Grand final\nIf the regular season winners are unable to win the playoffs, a double-legged final will be played against the playoffs winner in order to determine the champions of the Apertura tournament. The team with the better accumulated record over the regular season and playoffs will host the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 39], "content_span": [40, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285648-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga FPD, Clausura, Regular season\nThe regular season began on 12 January 2019 and will end of 28 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285648-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga FPD, Clausura, Playoffs, Finals\n1-1 on aggregate. San Carlos wins 1-0 on away goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 44], "content_span": [45, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285648-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga FPD, Clausura, Grand final\nIf the regular season winners are unable to win the playoffs, a double-legged final will be played against the playoffs winner in order to determine the champions of the Clausura tournament. The team with the better accumulated record over the regular season and playoffs will host the second leg. For this tournament, San Carlos won both the regular season and playoffs, so they were declared champions without a grand final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 39], "content_span": [40, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285648-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga FPD, List of foreign players in the league\nThis is a list of foreign players in the 2018\u201319 season. The following players:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 55], "content_span": [56, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285648-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga FPD, List of foreign players in the league\nA new rule was introduced this season, that clubs can have four foreign players per club and can only add a new player if there is an injury or a player is released and it's before the close of the season transfer window.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 55], "content_span": [56, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285648-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga FPD, List of foreign players in the league\n(player released during the Apertura season) (player released between the Apertura and Clausura seasons) (player released during the Clausura season)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 55], "content_span": [56, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285649-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Femenina de Baloncesto\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga Femenina de Baloncesto, also known as Liga Dia for sponsorship reasons, is the 56th season of the Spanish basketball women's league. Regular season will start on 13 October 2018 with the first matchday of the regular season and it will end on 7 April 2019 with the 26th matchday. The playoffs (quarter-finals, semi-finals and final) will be held between 10 April and 5/9 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285649-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Femenina de Baloncesto\nThe 2019 Spanish Cup will return to the Final Eight format, not used since 2009. It will be played between 28 February and 3 March 2019, featuring the top seven teams of the league after the 13th matchday on December 30th, which will join the host.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285649-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Femenina de Baloncesto, Teams, Promotion and relegation (pre-season)\nA total of 14 teams contest the league, including 12 sides from the 2017\u201318 season and two promoted from the 2017\u201318 Liga Femenina 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 81], "content_span": [82, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285649-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Femenina de Baloncesto, Regular season, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after completion of each round. In order to preserve chronological evolvements, any postponed matches are not included in 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 13, but then postponed and played between rounds 16 and 17, it will be added to the standings for round 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285650-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga I\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga I (also known as Liga 1 Betano for sponsorship reasons) was the 101st season of the Liga I, the top professional league for Romanian association football clubs. The season began on 20 July 2018 and ended on 2 June 2019, being the fourth to take place since the play-off/play-out rule has been introduced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285650-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga I\nDun\u0103rea C\u0103l\u0103ra\u0219i and Hermannstadt joined as the promoted clubs from the 2017\u201318 Liga II. CFR Cluj managed to defend the title for the first time in their history, while FCSB became the first team in the country to finish as runner-ups for four consecutive seasons in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285650-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga I, Teams\nThe league consists of 14 teams: twelve teams from the 2017\u201318 Liga I and two new teams from the 2017\u201318 Liga II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 21], "content_span": [22, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285650-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga I, Teams\nThe first club to be promoted was Dun\u0103rea C\u0103l\u0103ra\u0219i, following their 3\u20131 win against Ripensia Timi\u0219oara on 5 May 2018. Dun\u0103rea will play in the Liga I for the first time in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 21], "content_span": [22, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285650-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga I, Teams\nThe second club to be promoted was Hermannstadt, following their 1\u20131 draw against Chindia T\u00e2rgovi\u0219te on 13 May 2018. Hermannstadt will play in the Liga I for the first time in their history, but the city of Sibiu, which had many different teams over time, returned in the Liga I after six years of absence, where was last time represented by Voin\u021ba Sibiu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 21], "content_span": [22, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285650-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga I, Teams\nThe first club to be relegated was Juventus Bucure\u0219ti, which were relegated on 22 May 2018 following a 1\u20133 defeat against Concordia Chiajna, ending their 1-year stay in the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 21], "content_span": [22, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285650-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga I, Teams\nThe second club to be relegated was Poli Timi\u0219oara, which were relegated on 2 June 2018 following their 1\u20130 win against Concordia Chiajna, ending their 3-year stay in the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 21], "content_span": [22, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285650-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285650-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga I, Regular season\nIn the regular season the 14 teams will meet twice, a total of 26 matches per team, with the top 6 advancing to the Championship round and the bottom 8 qualifying for Relegation round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 30], "content_span": [31, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285650-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga I, Championship play-offs\nThe top six teams from Regular season will meet twice (10 matches per team) for places in 2019\u201320 UEFA Champions League and 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League as well as deciding the league champion. Teams start the Championship round with their points from the Regular season halved, rounded upwards, and no other records carried over from the Regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 38], "content_span": [39, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285650-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga I, Relegation play-outs\nThe bottom eight teams from regular season met twice (14 matches per team) to contest against relegation. Teams started the Relegation round with their points from the Regular season halved, rounded upwards, and no other records carried over from the Regular season. The winner of the Relegation round finished 7th in the overall season standings, the second placed team \u2013 8th, and so on, with the last placed team in the Relegation round being 14th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 36], "content_span": [37, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285650-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga I, Promotion/relegation play-offs\nThe 12th-placed team of the Liga I faced the 3rd-placed team of the Liga II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 46], "content_span": [47, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285650-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga I, Season statistics, Top scorers\n1 Alexandru Mitri\u021b\u0103 was transferred to New York City during the winter transfer window.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 46], "content_span": [47, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285650-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga I, Attendances\nUpdated to games played on 2 June 2019Source: Notes:1: Played last season in Liga II.2: Hermannstadt played 16 matches out of their stadium which was under renovation.3: FCSB played 5 matches out of their stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 27], "content_span": [28, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285650-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga I, Champion squad\nGoalkeepers: Giedrius Arlauskis (31 / 0); Jes\u00fas Fern\u00e1ndez (3 / 0); Cosmin V\u00e2tc\u0103 (2 / 0). Defenders: K\u00e9vin Boli (10 / 0); M\u00e1rio Camora (32 / 1); \u00c1d\u00e1m Lang (18 / 0); Cristian Manea (34 / 1); Andrei Mure\u0219an (22 / 2); Paulo Vin\u00edcius (31 / 2); Andrei Peteleu (8 / 0); Andrei Radu (1 / 0).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 30], "content_span": [31, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285650-0014-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga I, Champion squad\nMidfielders: Mihai Bordeianu (26 / 1); Valentin Costache (18 / 1); Emmanuel Culio (25 / 5); Ciprian Deac (26 / 4); Damjan \u0110okovi\u0107 (33 / 4); Ovidiu Hoban (12 / 1); Alexandru Ioni\u021b\u0103 (23 / 2); C\u0103t\u0103lin Itu (1 / 0); Sebastian Mailat (10 / 0); Mate Male\u0161 (8 / 0); Thierry Moutinho (16 / 1); Adrian P\u0103un (27 / 3); Claudiu Petrila (5 / 0). Forwards: J\u00falio Baptista (2 / 0); Cristian Bud (4 / 0); Giuseppe De Luca (3 / 0); Billel Omrani (32 / 6); Robert Tambe (6 / 0); George \u021aucudean (27 / 8); Urko Vera (2 / 0). (league appearances and goals listed in brackets)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 30], "content_span": [31, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285650-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga I, Champion squad\nManager: Edward Iord\u0103nescu / Toni Concei\u00e7\u00e3o / Alin Minteuan / Dan Petrescu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 30], "content_span": [31, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285651-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga I (women's football)\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga I is the 29th season of the top level women's football league of the Romanian football league system. It will decide the Romanian champions and UEFA Women's Champions League participant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285651-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga I (women's football), Regular season\nIn the regular season the 10 teams will meet twice, a total of 18 matches per team, with the top 3 advancing to the Championship round and the bottom 7 qualifying for Relegation round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285651-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga I (women's football), Championship round\nThe top three teams from Regular season will meet twice (4 matches per team) for a place in 2019\u201320 UEFA Women's Champions League as well as deciding the league champion. Teams start the Championship round with their points from the Regular season halved, rounded upwards, and no other records carried over from the Regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285651-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga I (women's football), Lower table round\nThe teams ranked from 4th to 6th in the Regular season will meet twice (4 matches per team) for deciding the final league rankings. Teams start the Lower table round with their points from the Regular season halved, rounded upwards, and no other records carried over from the Regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285651-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga I (women's football), Relegation round\nThe bottom three teams from Regular season (without 10 place, which was excluded) will meet twice (4 matches per team) to contest against relegation. Teams start the Relegation round with their points from the Regular season halved, rounded upwards, and no other records carried over from the Regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285652-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga II\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga II (also known as 2018\u201319 Liga II Casa Pariurilor) was the 79th season of the Liga II, the second tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 4 August 2018 and ended on 1 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285652-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga II\nA total of 20 teams contested the league. It was the third Liga II season with a single series. The season was played in a round-robin tournament. The first two teams were promoted to Liga I at the end of the season and the third-placed team played a play-off match against the 12th-placed team from Liga I. The last five teams were relegated to Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285652-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga II, Team changes, Excluded teams\nAfuma\u021bi withdrew from Liga II after the end of the last season and was enrolled instead in the Liga III, a move made due to financial reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 45], "content_span": [46, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285652-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga II, Team changes, Teams spared from relegation\nMetaloglobus Bucure\u0219ti was spared from relegation due to withdrawal of Afuma\u021bi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285652-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga II, Team changes, Renamed teams\nJuventus Bucure\u0219ti was renamed as Daco-Getica Bucure\u0219ti after being summoned by Juventus Torino to remove the term \"Juventus\" from its name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285652-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga II, 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, 35], "content_span": [36, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285652-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga II, Liga I play-off\nThe 12th-placed team of the Liga I faces the 3rd-placed team of the Liga II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285652-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga II, Season statistics, Clean sheets\n*Only goalkeepers who played all 90 minutes of a match are taken into consideration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 48], "content_span": [49, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285652-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga II, Season statistics, Attendances\nUpdated to games played on 1 June 2019Source: Notes:1: Farul Constan\u021ba played five matches out of their stadium until it was renovated to meet Liga II standards.2: Balote\u0219ti and Sportul Snagov played one match, respectively two matches out of their stadiums.4: ACS Poli Timi\u0219oara and Daco-Getica Bucure\u0219ti played last season in the Liga I.5: Aerostar Bac\u0103u, Energeticianul, Farul Constan\u021ba, Petrolul Ploie\u0219ti and Universitatea Cluj played last season in the Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 47], "content_span": [48, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285653-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga II (women's football)\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga II was the 6th season, since its reintroduction in 2013, of the second level women's football league of the Romanian football league system. 16 teams divided in 2 series played in the competition that consisted of a double round-robin lasting 14 stages, totaling 112 matches. In addition, a two-legged play-off was played to determine one more promoted team at the end of the season, since CFR Timi\u0219oara withdrew from Liga I and vacated a place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285653-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga II (women's football), Team changes, Excluded and spared teams\nArmonia Dolhe\u0219ti was disbanded in the summer of 2018, so Viitorul Reghin (8th place in 2017\u201318 Liga II, Seria I) was spared from relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285653-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga II (women's football), Team changes, Excluded and spared teams\nLuceaf\u0103rul Filia\u0219i took over Real Craiova's spot after its relegation from 2017\u201318 Liga I, although some viewed it as just a name change. The move was possible by disaffiliating the old Real Craiova club and transferring the senior team components to Luceaf\u0103rul Filia\u0219i Sport School, along with their club president, local politician F\u0103nel V\u0103duva. As such, the first squad was able to continue in Liga II, as they relegated at the end of the 2017\u201318 Liga I, thus they were not required to start in Liga III as it happens with new teams. Consequently, the spot of Real 2 Craiova, which was taken over by Luceaf\u0103rul 2 Filia\u0219i was transferred to Liga III, as two teams from the same club cannot play in the same league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285653-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga II (women's football), League tables and Results, Promotion Play-off\nThe second best placed team in Seria I faces the second best placed team in Seria II (excluding second teams of Liga I clubs) to decide the last promoted club to 2019-20 Liga I, after CFR Timi\u0219oara withdrew during the 2018\u201319 Liga I season, and vacated a spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 81], "content_span": [82, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285654-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga III\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga III was the 63rd season of Liga III, the third tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 24 August 2018 and ended on 25 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285654-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga III, Team changes, Excluded teams\nAfter the end of the previous season, T\u00e2rgu Mure\u0219 and Olimpia Satu Mare were dissolved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 46], "content_span": [47, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285654-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga III, Team changes, Excluded teams\nConcordia II Chiajna and Mioveni II withdrew from Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 46], "content_span": [47, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285654-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga III, Team changes, Teams spared from relegation\nMetaloglobus Bucure\u0219ti was spared from relegation to Liga III due to withdrawal of Afuma\u021bi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 60], "content_span": [61, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285654-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga III, Team changes, Teams spared from relegation\nSportul Chiscani, Pa\u0219cani, Iernut, Viitorul Domne\u0219ti, Delta Dobrogea Tulcea and Unirea Dej and were spared from relegation to Liga IV due to lack of teams in the Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 60], "content_span": [61, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285654-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga III, Team changes, Other teams\nAfuma\u021bi withdrew from Liga II after the end of the last season and was enrolled instead in the Liga III, a move made due to financial reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 43], "content_span": [44, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285654-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga III, Team changes, Other teams\nReserve team of FC Boto\u0219ani was enrolled in the championship instead of Gauss Bac\u0103u which withdrew due to financial problems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 43], "content_span": [44, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285654-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga III, Team changes, Renamed teams\nACS Dumitra moved from Dumitra to Bistri\u021ba and changed the club's name to 1. FC Gloria. The club would like to be considered the successor of ACF Gloria Bistri\u021ba, but it does not own its brand and record yet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 45], "content_span": [46, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285654-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga III, Team changes, Renamed teams\nFC Aninoasa moved from Aninoasa to Pucioasa and changed its name to FC Pucioasa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 45], "content_span": [46, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285654-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga III, Possible relegation\nAt the end of the season, a special table was made between 12th places from the 5 series. The last team in this table was also relegated in the Liga IV. In this table, 12th place teams are included without the points obtained against teams that relegated in their series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285655-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV is the 77th 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 playoff to gain promotion. This is the second season when the counties were divided into 7 regions, each consisting of 6 counties and the draw was made on 15 February 2019, with 4 months before the first matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285655-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV, 2018\u20132019 Promotion Play-Off\nThe matches are scheduled to be played on 15 and 22 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 45], "content_span": [46, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285656-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Alba\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Alba was the 51st season of the Liga IV Alba, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 25 August 2018 and ended on 2 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285656-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Alba, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Alba face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Mure\u0219 County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285657-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Arad\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Arad was the 51st season of the Liga IV Arad, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 11 August 2018 and ended on 1 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285657-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Arad, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Arad face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Hunedoara County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285658-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Arge\u0219\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Arge\u0219 (known as Liga Fortuna Sports for sponsorship reasons) was the 51st season of the Liga IV Arge\u0219, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 25 August 2018 and ended on 9 June 2019. Real 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, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285658-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Arge\u0219, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Arge\u0219 County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 V\u00e2lcea County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285659-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Bac\u0103u\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Bac\u0103u was the 51st season of Liga IV Bac\u0103u, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 25 August 2018 and was ended on 12 June 2019. CSM Bac\u0103u was crowned as county champion and qualify to the promotion play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285659-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Bac\u0103u, Team changes\nDue to the low number of teams, the conty football association (AJF Bac\u0103u) has announced that the county football championship will have only one level, which will be attended by the teams from the Liga IV Bac\u0103u and Liga V Bac\u0103u of the previous season and new formed teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285659-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Bac\u0103u, Competition format\nThe league consisted of 24 teams divided into 2 series of 12 teams and will play a regular season, followed by a play-off and play-out. The regular season is a double round-robin tournament. At the end of regular season, the first 3 ranked teams in each series will qualify for championship play-off and the winner will participate for promotion play-off to Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285659-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Bac\u0103u, Competition format\nIn the play-off will participate only teams that have legal personality and hold C.I.S. (Certificate of sports identity) issued by the Ministry of Youth and Sport and teams with at least one group of children and juniors (U19, U17, U15, U13, U11).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285659-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Bac\u0103u, Championship play-off\nThe teams was start the play-off with points gained in the regular season, after the results with the last two teams was canceled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285659-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Bac\u0103u, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Bac\u0103u County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Boto\u0219ani County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285660-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Bihor\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Bihor was the 51st season of the Liga IV Bihor, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 24 August 2018 and ended on 9 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285660-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Bihor, Relegation play-out\nThe 13th-placed team of the Liga IV \u2013 Bihor County faces the 2nd-placed team of the Liga V \u2013 Bihor County, Seria I and 14th-placed team of the Liga IV \u2013 Bihor County faces the 2nd-placed team of the Liga V \u2013 Bihor County, Seria II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285660-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Bihor, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Bihor County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Cluj County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285661-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Bistri\u021ba-N\u0103s\u0103ud\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Bistri\u021ba-N\u0103s\u0103ud was the 51st season of Liga IV Bistri\u021ba-N\u0103s\u0103ud, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 2 September 2018 and ended on 9 June 2019, the championship play-off, and on 30 June 2019, the championship play-out. Minerul Rodna crowned as county champion and qualify to promotion play-off in Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285661-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Bistri\u021ba-N\u0103s\u0103ud, Competition format\nThe league consisted of 16 teams divided into 2 series of 8 teams and will play a regular season, followed by a play-off and play-out. The regular season is a double round-robin tournament. At the end of regular season, the first 4 ranked teams in each series will qualify for championship play-off and the winner will participate for promotion play-off to Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285661-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Bistri\u021ba-N\u0103s\u0103ud, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Bistri\u021ba-N\u0103s\u0103ud County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Satu Mare County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285662-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Boto\u0219ani\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Boto\u0219ani (known as Liga IV Givova for sponsorship reasons) was the 51st season of the Liga IV Boto\u0219ani, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 19 August 2018 and was ended on 9 June 2019. Viitorul Albe\u0219ti crowned as county champion and qualify to promotion play-off in Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285662-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Boto\u0219ani, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Boto\u0219ani County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Bac\u0103u County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285663-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Bra\u0219ov\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Bra\u0219ov was the 51st season of the Liga IV Bra\u0219ov, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 25 August 2018 and ended on 8 June 2019.Olimpic Z\u0103rne\u0219ti crowned as county champion and qualify to promotion play-off in Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285663-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Bra\u0219ov, Teams\nA total of fourteen teams competed in the 2018\u201319 edition of the Liga IV Bra\u0219ov County, thirteen from previous season and one newly promoted sides.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285663-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Bra\u0219ov, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Bra\u0219ov County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Covasna County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285664-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Br\u0103ila\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Br\u0103ila was the 51st season of the Liga IV Br\u0103ila, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 25 August 2018 and ended on 8 June 2019. Viitorul Ianca crowned as county champion and qualify to promotion play-off in Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285664-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Br\u0103ila, Competition format\nThe nine teams will play a regular season, followed by a play-off and play-out. The regular season is a double round-robin tournament. At the end of the regular season, the first five teams will play a championship play-off and the last four teams will play a relegation play-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285664-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Br\u0103ila, Championship play-off\nThe championship play-off played in a double round-robin tournament between the best five ranked teams from regular season. The teams started with half of the points accumulated in the first stage of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285664-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Br\u0103ila, Championship play-out\nThe championship play-out played in a double round-robin tournament between the last four ranked teams from regular season. The teams started with half of the points accumulated in the first stage of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285664-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Br\u0103ila, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Vrancea face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Br\u0103ila County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285665-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Bucharest\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Bucharest was the 51st season of the Liga IV Bucharest, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 24 August 2018 and was ended on 2 June 2019. Carmen Bucure\u0219ti win the title and qualify to promotion play-off in Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285665-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Bucharest, Competition format\nThe 16 teams will play a regular season, followed by a championship play-off. The regular season is a double round-robin tournament and at the end of the regular season, the top four ranked teams qualify for the championship play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285665-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Bucharest, Championship play-off\nChampionship play-off played in a single round-robin tournament between the best four teams of the regular season. The teams started the play-off with the following points: 1st place \u2013 3 points, 2nd place \u2013 2 points, 3rd place \u2013 1 point, 4th place \u2013 0 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285665-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Bucharest, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Bucharest face champions of Liga IV \u2013 C\u0103l\u0103ra\u0219i County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285666-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Buz\u0103u\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Buz\u0103u was the 51st season of the Liga IV Buz\u0103u, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 25 August 2018 and ended on 8 June 2019. Team S\u0103geata crowned as county champion and qualified for the promotion play-off in Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285666-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Buz\u0103u, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Buz\u0103u County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Gala\u021bi County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285667-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Cara\u0219-Severin\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Cara\u0219-Severin was the 51st season of Liga IV Cara\u0219-Severin, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 8 September 2018 and ended on 9 June 2019. Voin\u021ba Lupac crowned as county champion and qualified for the promotion play-off in Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285667-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Cara\u0219-Severin, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Cara\u0219-Severin County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Timi\u0219 County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285668-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Cluj\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Cluj was the 51st season of the Liga IV Cluj, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 1 September 2018 and ended on 26 May 2019. Flore\u0219ti crowned as county champion and qualify to the promotion play-off in Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285668-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Cluj, Overview, Teams\nA total of fifteen teams will participate in the 2018\u201319 edition of the Liga IV Cluj County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285668-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Cluj, Overview, Competition format\nThe league will be played in a double round-robin format. The team ranked first will crowned county champion and qualify to promotion play-off in Liga III. The last two teams will relegated to Liga V Cluj \u2013 County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285668-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Cluj, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Cluj County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Bihor County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285669-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Constan\u021ba\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Constan\u021ba was the 51st season of the Liga IV Constan\u021ba, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 18 August 2018 and ended on 1 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285669-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Constan\u021ba\nPoseidon Limanu-2 Mai crowned as county champion and qualify to promotion play-off in Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285669-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Constan\u021ba, Overview, Teams\nThe league expanded from sixteen teams to eighteen teams and no teams were relegated from previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285669-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Constan\u021ba, Overview, Competition format\nThe league was played in a double round-robin format. The team ranked first will crowned county champion and qualify to promotion play-off in Liga III. The last two teams will relegated to Liga V Constan\u021ba County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 55], "content_span": [56, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285669-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Constan\u021ba, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Constan\u021ba County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Tulcea County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285670-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Covasna\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Covasna was the 51st season of the Liga IV Covasna, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 18 August 2018 and ended on 2 June 2019. St\u0103ruin\u021ba Zagon 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-00285670-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Covasna, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Covasna County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Bra\u0219ov County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285671-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV C\u0103l\u0103ra\u0219i\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV C\u0103l\u0103ra\u0219i (known as Liga IV Acerbis for sponsorship reasons) was the 38th season of the Liga IV C\u0103l\u0103ra\u0219i, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 18 August 2018 and ended on 8 June 2019.Mosti\u0219tea Ulmu win the title and qualify to promotion play-off in Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285671-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV C\u0103l\u0103ra\u0219i, Teams\nThe league was expanded to eighteen teams, sixteen from previous season and two newly promoted \u2014 Viitorul Pl\u0103t\u0103re\u0219ti and Victoria Drago\u0219 Vod\u0103.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285671-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV C\u0103l\u0103ra\u0219i, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 C\u0103l\u0103ra\u0219i face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Bucharest County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285672-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Dolj\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Dolj, commonly known as Liga IV Acerbis for sponsorship reasons, was the 51st season of the Liga IV Dolj, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 25 August 2018 and ended on 8 June 2019. Tractorul Cetate was crowned as county champion and qualify to the promotion play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285672-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Dolj, Championship play-off\nAt the end of the regular season, the first six teams will play a Championship play-off and the winners crowned as county champions and qualify to the promotion play-off to Liga III. The teams will start the play-off with the number of points gained in the regular season only against the other qualified teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 43], "content_span": [44, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285672-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Dolj, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Dolj County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Teleorman County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285673-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV D\u00e2mbovi\u021ba\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV D\u00e2mbovi\u021ba was the 51st season of the Liga IV D\u00e2mbovi\u021ba, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 18 August 2018 and ended on 8 June 2019. Gloria Corne\u0219ti was crowned as county champion and qualify to the promotion play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285673-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV D\u00e2mbovi\u021ba, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 D\u00e2mbovi\u021ba County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Olt County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285674-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Gala\u021bi\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Gala\u021bi was the 51st season of the Liga IV Gala\u021bi, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 1 September 2018 and ended on 9 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285674-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Gala\u021bi, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Gala\u021bi County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Buz\u0103u County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285675-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Giurgiu\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Giurgiu was the 38th season of the Liga IV Giurgiu, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 25 August 2018 and ended on 8 June 2019. Mihai Bravu win the title and qualify to promotion play-off in Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285675-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Giurgiu, Competition format\nThe league consisted of 30 teams divided into 2 series, South Series (Seria Sud) with fourteen teams and North Series (Seria Nord) with sixteen teams, and will play a regular season, followed by a play-off. The regular season is a double round-robin tournament. At the end of regular season, the first 2 ranked teams in each series will qualify for championship play-off and the winner will participate for promotion play-off to Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285675-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Giurgiu, Championship play-off\nThe championship final played between winners and runners-up of the two series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 46], "content_span": [47, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285675-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Giurgiu, Championship play-off, Final\nMihai Bravu won the 2018\u201319 Liga IV Giurgiu and qualify for promotion play-off to Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285675-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Giurgiu, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Giurgiu face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Prahova County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285676-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Gorj\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Gorj was the 51st season of the Liga IV Gorj, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 2 September 2018 and ended on 9 June 2019. Gilortul T\u00e2rgu C\u0103rbune\u0219ti crowned as county champion and qualify to promotion play-off in Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285676-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Gorj, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Gorj face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Mehedin\u021bi County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285677-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Harghita\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Harghita was the 51st season of the Liga IV Harghita, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 25 August 2018 in the West Series and 1 September 2018 in the East Series. The season ended on 9 June 2019 with the final between the winners of the two series. Gheorgheni was crowned as county champion and qualify to the promotion play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285677-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Harghita, Team changes\nThe league was expanded from one series with eight teams to two series \u2013 West Series, with 14 teams and East Series, with 8 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285677-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Harghita, Team changes\n15 teams were promoted from Liga V \u2013 Harghita County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285677-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Harghita, Competition format\nThe West Series is played in a double round-robin tournament. The winner will qualify for the championship final and the last two ranked teams will be relegated to Liga V \u2013 Harghita County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285677-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Harghita, Competition format\nIn the East Series, in the first phase, regular season is played in a double round robin tournament. In the second phase, the play-off played between the places 1\u20135 and play-out between places 6\u20138. The first place will play the championship final and the last team will be relegated to Liga V \u2013 Harghita County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285677-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Harghita, Regular season, League tables, East Series\nThe teams started the play-off with half of the points accumulated in the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285677-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Harghita, Regular season, League tables, East Series\nThe teams started the play-out with half of the points accumulated in the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285677-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Harghita, Championship play-off\nThe winner of West series face winner of East series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285677-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Harghita, Championship play-off\nGheorgheni won the 2019\u201320 Liga IV Harghita and qualify for promotion play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285677-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Harghita, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Harghita County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Sibiu County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285678-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Hunedoara\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Hunedoara was the 51st season of the Liga IV Hunedoara, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 8 September 2019 and ended on 2 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285678-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Hunedoara, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Hunedoara face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Arad County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285679-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Ialomi\u021ba\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Ialomi\u021ba, also known as Liga IV Secomi Travel for sponsorship reasons, was the 51st season of the Liga IV Ialomi\u021ba, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 8 September 2018 and ended on 8 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285679-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Ialomi\u021ba\nRecolta Gheorghe Doja crowned as county champion and qualify to promotion play-off in Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285679-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Ialomi\u021ba, Overview, Teams\nA total of sixteen teams competed in the league - thirteen from the previous season, one newly promoted side and two admitted teams to replace the teams withdrawn before the start of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285679-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Ialomi\u021ba, Overview, Competition format\nThe league was played in a double round-robin format. The team ranked first will crowned county champion and qualify to promotion play-off in Liga III. The last two teams will relegated to Liga V Ialomi\u021ba County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 54], "content_span": [55, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285679-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Ialomi\u021ba, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Ialomi\u021ba County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Ilfov County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285680-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Ia\u0219i\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Ia\u0219i was the 51st season of the Liga IV Ia\u0219i, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 19 August 2018 and concluded on 9 June 2019. Moldova Criste\u0219ti crowned as county champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285680-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Ia\u0219i, Teams\nA total of 16 teams are taking part in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 78]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285680-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Ia\u0219i, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Ia\u0219i County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Vaslui County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285680-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Ia\u0219i, Promotion play-off\nHu\u0219ana Hu\u0219i promoted to 2019\u201320 Liga III. Moldova Criste\u0219ti does not have C.I.S. (Certificate of Sports Identity) and was excluded from promotion play-off by the Romanian Football Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285681-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Ilfov\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Ilfov was the 51st season of the Liga IV Ilfov, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 25 August 2018 and ended on 25 May 2019.Viitorul Pantelimon crowned as county champion and qualify to promotion play-off in Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285681-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Ilfov, Teams\nA total of twelve teams competed in the league. The format has been changed from two series of 11 teams to one series of 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285681-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Ilfov, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Ilfov County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Ialomi\u021ba County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285682-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Maramure\u0219\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Maramure\u0219 was the 51st season of the Liga IV Maramure\u0219, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 1 September 2018 and ended on 1 June 2019. Viitorul Ulmeni crowned as county champion and qualified for the promotion play-off in Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285682-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Maramure\u0219, Competition format\nThe league consisted of 22 teams divided into 2 series, South Series (Seria Sud) with 12 teams and North Series (Seria Nord) with 10 teams. The winners of the two series will play the championship final and the winner will participate for promotion play-off to Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285682-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Maramure\u0219, Championship final\nIn the championship final played the winners of the two series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285682-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Maramure\u0219, Championship final\nViitorul Ulmeni won the 2018\u201319 Liga IV Maramure\u0219 and qualify for promotion play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285682-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Maramure\u0219, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Maramure\u0219 County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 S\u0103laj County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285683-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Mehedin\u021bi\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Mehedin\u021bi was the 51st season of the Liga IV Mehedin\u021bi, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 1 September 2018 and ended on 2 June 2019. Strehaia crowned as county champion and qualify to promotion play-off in Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285683-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Mehedin\u021bi, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Mehedin\u021bi face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Gorj County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285684-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Mure\u0219\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Mure\u0219, commonly known as Liga IV Elite, was the 51st season of the Liga IV Mure\u0219, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 31 August 2018 and ended on 8 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285684-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Mure\u0219, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Mure\u0219 face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Alba County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285685-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Neam\u021b\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Neam\u021b was the 51st season of Liga IV Neam\u021b, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 9 September 2018 and ended on 9 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285685-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Neam\u021b, Competition format\nIn the initial phase of the season, the league consisted of six teams playing each other four times, twice at home and twice away. The best four ranked teams qualify to championship play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285685-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Neam\u021b, Championship play-off\nThe championship play-off tournament between the best four teams played in a double round-robin tournament and the winner declared county champion and qualify for the promotion play-off to Liga III. The teams started with half of the points accumulated in the first stage of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285685-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Neam\u021b, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Neam\u021b County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Suceava County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285686-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Olt\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Olt was the 51st season of the Liga IV Olt, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 26 August 2018 and ended on 9 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285686-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Olt, Team changes\nDue to the expansion of the format from 12 to 19 teams at the end of the previous season no one was relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285686-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Olt, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Olt County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 D\u00e2mbovi\u021ba County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285687-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Prahova\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Prahova, commonly known as Liga A Prahova, was the 51st season of the Liga IV Prahova, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 18 August 2018 and ended on 9 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285687-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Prahova\nBlejoi became champions of Prahova County four rounds before the end of the season with 4\u20131 victory at Cornu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285687-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Prahova, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Prahova face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Giurgiu County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285688-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Satu Mare\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Satu Mare was the 51st season of the Liga IV Satu Mare, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 24 August 2018 and ended on 8 June 2019. Satu Mare win the title and qualify to promotion play-off in Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285688-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Satu Mare, Competition format\nThe league consists of 37 teams divided into three series. Tur-Talna Zone and Some\u0219 Zone with 12 teams and Crasna Zone with 13 teams. The winners of each series qualify to the final four. The teams ranked 2nd in each series qualify for the tournament play-off, and the winner will qualify for the final four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285688-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Satu Mare, Play-off\nIn the play-offs played the teams from the 2nd place of the three series. The winner qualifying in the final four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285688-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Satu Mare, Final four\nIn the final four played the winners of the three series and the winner of the play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285688-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Satu Mare, Final four, Final\nSatu Mare won the 2018\u201319 Liga IV Satu Mare and qualify to promotion play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285688-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Satu Mare, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Satu Mare County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Bistri\u021ba-N\u0103s\u0103ud County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285689-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Sibiu\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Sibiu was the 51st season of the Liga IV Sibiu, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 1 September 2018 and ended on 9 June 2019. Viitorul \u0218elimb\u0103r was crowned as county champion and qualify to the promotion play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285689-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Sibiu, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Sibiu County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Harghita County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285690-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Suceava\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Suceava (known as Liga Inter Conti for sponsorship reasons) was the 51st season of the Liga IV Suceava, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 2 September 2018 and ended on 9 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285690-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Suceava, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Suceava County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Neam\u021b County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285691-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV S\u0103laj\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV S\u01celaj was the 51st season of the Liga IV S\u0103laj, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 1 September 2018 and ended on 2 June 2019. Unirea Mir\u0219id crowned as county champion and qualify to promotion play-off in Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285691-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV S\u0103laj, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 S\u0103laj County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Maramure\u0219 County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285692-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Teleorman\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Teleorman (Liga IV Fortuna Sports for sponsorship reasons) was the 51st season of the Liga IV Teleorman, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 25 August 2018 and ended on 1 June 2019. Unirea Br\u00e2nceni win the title and qualify to promotion play-off to Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285692-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Teleorman, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Teleorman County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Dolj County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285693-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Timi\u0219\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Timi\u0219 was the 51st season of the Liga IV Timi\u0219, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 10 August 2018 and ended on 15 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285693-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Timi\u0219, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Timi\u0219 County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Cara\u0219-Severin County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285694-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Tulcea\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Tulcea was the 51st season of the Liga IV Tulcea, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 16 September 2018 and ended on 9 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285694-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Tulcea\nPesc\u0103ru\u0219ul Sarichioi crowned as county champions and qualify to promotion play-off in Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285694-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Tulcea, Teams\nDue to the lack of teams the format was changed, from two series of eight to one series of ten teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285694-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Tulcea, Teams\nThe ten teams played a regular season in a double round-robin tournament and the best four ranked teams qualified to championship play-off. The championship play-off also was played in a double round robin tournament and the teams started with half of the points accumulated in the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285694-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Tulcea, Championship play-off\nThe championship play-off played in a double round-robin tournament between the best four ranked teams from regular season. The teams started with half of the points accumulated in the first stage of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285694-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Tulcea, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Tulcea County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Constan\u021ba County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285695-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Vaslui\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Vaslui was the 51st season of the Liga IV Vaslui, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 8 September 2018 and ended on 28 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285695-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Vaslui, Overview, Teams\nA total of twelve teams participate in the 2018\u201319 edition of Liga IV Vaslui County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285695-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Vaslui, Overview, Competition format\nThe 12 teams will play a regular season, followed by a play-off and play-out. The regular season is a double round-robin tournament. At the end of the regular season the first 8 ranked teams will enter the play-off. The occupants of places 9-12 go into play-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285695-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Vaslui, Relegation play-out\nMoara Domneasc\u0103 and Juventus F\u0103lciu were relegated to the Liga V \u2013 Vaslui.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285695-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Vaslui, Relegation/Promotion play-off\nSporting B\u00e2rlad relegated to Liga V \u2013 Vaslui. Viitorul Vetri\u0219oaia promoted to 2019\u201320 Liga IV Vaslui.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 53], "content_span": [54, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285695-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Vaslui, Championship play-off\nHu\u0219ana Hu\u0219i won the 2018\u201319 Liga IV Vaslui and qualify for promotion play-off. source:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285695-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Vaslui, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Vaslui County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Ia\u0219i County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285695-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Vaslui, Promotion play-off\nHu\u0219ana Hu\u0219i promoted to 2019\u201320 Liga III, after Moldova Criste\u0219ti was excluded from play-off by the Romanian Football Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285696-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Vrancea\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV Vrancea (known as Superliga Altdorf Tehnik for sponsorship reasons) was the 51st season of the Liga IV Vrancea, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 22 September 2018 and ended on 9 June 2019. Mausoleul M\u0103r\u0103\u0219e\u0219ti win the title and qualify to promotion play-off in Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285696-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Vrancea, Competition format\nThe league consisted of 16 teams divided into three groups, Group A with six teams, Group B and Group C with five teams each and played a regular season, followed by a championship play-off. The championship play-off played between best eight teams from the regular season in a double round-robin tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285696-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Vrancea, Regular season, League tables, Possible qualification to championship play-off\nAt the end of the regular season, a special table was made between 3rd places from the three series. The best two teams in this table was qualify in the championship play-off . In this table, 3rd place teams are included with the points obtained against the first two ranked in their series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 103], "content_span": [104, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285696-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Vrancea, Championship play-off\nThe championship play-off played between best eight teams from the regular season in a double round-robin tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 46], "content_span": [47, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285696-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV Vrancea, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Vrancea face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Br\u0103ila County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285697-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV V\u00e2lcea\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga IV V\u00e2lcea, commonly known as Superliga V\u00e2lcea, was the 52nd season of the Liga IV V\u00e2lcea, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 18 August 2018 and was concluded on 16 June 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285697-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV V\u00e2lcea, Competition format\nThe 12 teams will play a regular season, followed by a play-off and play-out. The regular season is a double round-robin tournament. At the end of the regular season, the first six teams will play a championship play-off and the last six teams will play a relegation play-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285697-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV V\u00e2lcea, Promotion/relegation play-off\nThe 9th and 10th-placed teams of the 2018\u201319 Liga IV V\u00e2lcea faces the 3rd-placed teams in the two series of the 2018\u201319 Liga V V\u00e2lcea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 53], "content_span": [54, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285697-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga IV V\u00e2lcea, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 V\u00e2lcea County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Arge\u0219 County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285698-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Leumit\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga Leumit was the 20th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 77th season of second-tier football in Israel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285698-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Leumit\nA total of sixteen teams contested in the league, including twelve sides from the 2017\u201318 season, the two promoted teams from 2017\u201318 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2017\u201318 Israeli Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285698-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Leumit, Changes from 2017\u201318 season, Team changes\nHapoel Tel Aviv and Hapoel Hadera were promoted to the 2018\u201319 Israeli Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 62], "content_span": [63, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285698-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Leumit, Changes from 2017\u201318 season, Team changes\nHapoel Ashkelon and Hapoel Acre were relegated after finishing as the two bottom-placed clubs in the 2017\u201318 Israeli Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 62], "content_span": [63, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285698-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Leumit, Changes from 2017\u201318 season, Team changes\nMaccabi Herzliya, and Ironi Nesher were directly relegated to Liga Alef after finishing in the previous season in last two league places. They were replaced the top placed teams from each division of 2017\u201318 Liga Alef, Sektzia Nes Tziona (from South Division) and Hapoel Iksal (from North Division).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 62], "content_span": [63, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285698-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Leumit, Overview, Stadia and locations\nThe club is playing their home games at a neutral venue because their own ground does not meet league requirements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 51], "content_span": [52, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285698-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Leumit, Promotion/Relegation playoff\nThe 14th-placed team, Hapoel Acre, faced 2018\u201319 Liga Alef promotion play-offs winner Maccabi Herzliya in a two-legged tie. The matches took place on 26 and 29 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285698-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Leumit, Promotion/Relegation playoff\nHapoel Acre won 7\u20134 on aggregate and remained in Liga Leumit. Maccabi Herzliya remained in Liga Alef.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285699-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga MX Femenil season\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga MX Femenil season was the second season of the top-flight women's football league in Mexico. The season was contested by eighteen teams, all being the counterpart women's teams of the men's league clubs Liga MX. The season was split into two championships\u2014the Torneo Apertura and the Torneo Clausura\u2014each in an identical format and each contested by the same eighteen teams. Unlike the inaugural season, all eighteen Liga MX clubs fielded a women's team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285699-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga MX Femenil season, Teams, stadiums, and personnel\nThe following eighteen teams competed this season. Puebla and Lobos BUAP are fielding a team for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285699-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga MX Femenil season, Torneo Apertura\nThe Apertura 2018 regular season started on 13 July and ended on 19 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285699-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga MX Femenil season, Torneo Apertura, Regular season, 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 in 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 8, but then postponed and played between days 11 and 12, it will be added to the standings for day 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 83], "content_span": [84, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285699-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga MX Femenil season, Torneo Apertura, Regular season, Top goalscorers\nPlayers sorted first by goals scored, then by last name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 80], "content_span": [81, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285699-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga MX Femenil season, Torneo Apertura, Regular season, Attendance\nUpdated to games played on 19 November 2018Source: Notes:Only regular season listed1: New team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 75], "content_span": [76, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285699-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga MX Femenil season, Torneo Clausura\nThe Clausura 2019 is the second championship of the season. The regular season started on 4 January 2019 and will end on 24 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285699-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga MX Femenil season, Torneo Clausura, Regular season, 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 in 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 8, but then postponed and played between days 11 and 12, it will be added to the standings for day 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 83], "content_span": [84, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285699-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga MX Femenil season, Torneo Clausura, Regular season, Top goalscorers\nPlayers sorted first by goals scored, then by last name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 80], "content_span": [81, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285700-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga MX season\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga MX season (known as the Liga BBVA Bancomer MX for sponsorship reasons) was the 72nd professional season of the top-flight football league in Mexico. The season was split into two championships\u2014the Torneo Apertura and the Torneo Clausura\u2014each in an identical format and each contested by the same eighteen teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285700-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga MX season, Teams, stadiums, and personnel\nThe following eighteen teams competed this season. Lobos BUAP was initially relegated to the Ascenso MX after accumulating the lowest point coefficient last season, but instead they will continue to compete in the Liga MX after the 2017\u201318 Ascenso MX champion, Cafetaleros de Tapachula, who won promotion after defeating Alebrijes de Oaxaca, was not certified to be promoted. Lobos BUAP paid MXN$120 million to be disbursed to Cafetaleros de Tapachula and remain in Liga MX.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285700-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga MX season, Torneo Apertura, Regular season\nThe Apertura 2018 was the first championship of the season. The regular season began on 20 July 2018 and ended on 25 November 2018. The defending champions were Santos Laguna, having won their sixth title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285700-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga MX season, Torneo Apertura, Regular season, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches. In order to preserve chronological evolvements, any postponed matches were not included in the round at which they were originally scheduled, but added to the full round they were played immediately afterwards. For example, if a match was scheduled for matchday 13, but then postponed and played between days 16 and 17, it was added to the standings for day 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 75], "content_span": [76, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285700-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga MX season, Torneo Apertura, Regular season statistics, Top goalscorers\nPlayers sorted first by goals scored, then by last name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 83], "content_span": [84, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285700-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga MX season, Torneo Apertura, Attendance, Per team\nSource: Notes:Only regular season listed1: Played in Estadio Azul last season.2: Played one match at Estadio Nemesio D\u00edez .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 61], "content_span": [62, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285700-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga MX season, Torneo Clausura\nThe Clausura 2019 was the second championship of the season. The tournament began on 4 January 2019 ended on 26 May 2019. Am\u00e9rica were the defending champions, having won their 13th league title the previous tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285700-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga MX season, Torneo Clausura, Regular season, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches. In order to preserve chronological evolvements, any postponed matches were not included in the round at which they were originally scheduled, but added to the full round they were played immediately afterwards. For example, if a match was scheduled for matchday 13, but then postponed and played between days 16 and 17, it was added to the standings for day 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 75], "content_span": [76, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285700-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga MX season, Torneo Clausura, Regular season statistics, Top goalscorers\nPlayers sorted first by goals scored, then by last name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 83], "content_span": [84, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285700-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga MX season, Relegation table\nLast update: 5 May 2019 Rules for relegation: 1) Relegation coefficient; 2) Goal difference; 3) Number of goals scored; 4) Head-to-head results between tied teams; 5) Number of goals scored away; 6) Fair Play points R = Relegated. Source:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285700-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga MX season, Aggregate table\nThe aggregate table (the sum of points of both the Apertura and Clausura tournaments) was used to determine the participants of the 2019\u201320 Copa MX. This table also displays teams that qualified for the 2020 CONCACAF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285701-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Nacional de B\u00e1squet season\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga Nacional de B\u00e1squet season is the 35th season of the top professional basketball league in Argentina. The season started on 22 September 2017 with the Torneo S\u00faper 20, which finished on 22 December 2018. The regular season began on 5 December 2018 and finished on 12 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285701-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Nacional de B\u00e1squet season\nFollowing the last season, the competition continues with all 20 teams being placed in a single group, playing a double round-robin, where the best 16 teams at the end of the season qualify for the championship playoffs, while the two teams with the worst record play in a best-of-five relegation series. Before the start of the regular season, the Torneo S\u00faper 20 took place, which awarded two berths to the 2019 Liga Sudamericana de B\u00e1squetbol. Quilmes was relegated after losing the playoff series against Atenas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285701-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Nacional de B\u00e1squet season, Relegation and promotion\nLa Liga Argentina de B\u00e1squet Champions Libertad covered the berth left by Salta Basket, who lost the relegation playoffs against Ferro Carril Oeste.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285701-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Nacional de B\u00e1squet season, Torneo S\u00faper 20\nThe second edition of the pre-season tournament Torneo S\u00faper 20 took place between 22 September and 22 december 2018. Four groups of five teams each were formed, and played a double round-robin. The top three teams from each group advanced to the playoff stage directly, while the fourth and fifth teams of each group were paired in four best-of-three series to grant the four remaining berths for the playoff stage. The playoff stage consisted of best-of-three series up to the semifinals, where a final four, single-elimination match format was used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285701-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Nacional de B\u00e1squet season, Playoffs\nPlayoffs began on 15 May. The relegation series between Atenas and Quilmes began on 18 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285702-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Nacional de Guatemala\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Blueandwhite87 (talk | contribs) at 19:20, 18 March 2020 (\u2192\u200ePersonnel and sponsoring). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285702-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Nacional de Guatemala\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga Nacional de F\u00fatbol de Guatemala season is the 21st season of the Liga Nacional de Guatemala, the top football league in Guatemala, in which the Apertura and Clausura season is used. The season began in July 2018 and will end in May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285702-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Nacional de Guatemala, Team information\nA total of 12 teams will contest the league, including 10 sides from the 2017\u201318 Liga Nacional and 2 promoted from the 2017\u201318 Primera Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285702-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Nacional de Guatemala, Team information\nDeportivo Marquense and C.D. Suchitep\u00e9quez were relegated to 2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3n the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285702-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Nacional de Guatemala, Team information\nThe relegated team was replaced by the 2017\u201318 Primera Divisi\u00f3n winners. Chiantla and Deportivo Iztapa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285702-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Nacional de Guatemala, Team information, Promotion and relegation\nPromoted from Primera Divisi\u00f3n de Ascenso as of June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285702-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Nacional de Guatemala, Team information, Promotion and relegation\nRelegated to Primera Divisi\u00f3n de Ascenso as of June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285702-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Nacional de Guatemala, List of foreign players in the league\nThis is a list of foreign players in 2018-2019 season. The following players:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285702-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Nacional de Guatemala, List of foreign players in the league\nA new rule was introduced a few season ago, that clubs can only have five foreign players per club and can only add a new player if there is an injury or player/s is released.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285702-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Nacional de Guatemala, List of foreign players in the league\n(player released during the Apertura season) (player released between the Apertura and Clausura seasons) (player released during the Clausura season)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285703-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Nacional de Honduras\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga Nacional de Honduras season was the 53rd edition of the Liga Nacional de Honduras, the top football league in Honduras, since its establishment in 1965. The tournament started in July 2018 and ended in June 2019. The season was divided into two halves (Apertura and Clausura), each crowning one champion. F.C. Motagua as winners of both tournaments, qualified to the 2019 CONCACAF League as HON1. Club Deportivo Olimpia as runner-ups and C.D. Marath\u00f3n as the team with the third best record, also qualified to international contention for next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285703-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Nacional de Honduras, 2018\u201319 teams\nA total of 10 teams will contest the tournament, including 9 sides from the 2017\u201318 season plus C.D. Real de Minas, promoted from the 2017\u201318 Liga de Ascenso.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285703-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Nacional de Honduras, Apertura\nThe Apertura tournament was the first half of the 2018\u201319 season which run from 28 July to 16 December 2018. The schedule of the Apertura was released on 13 July. F.C. Motagua finished at the top of the standings for their first time since 2010. Meanwhile, Lobos UPNFM reached their best regular season performance finishing third. C.D. Real de Minas finished last in their first league appearance. Club Deportivo Olimpia eliminated Real C.D. Espa\u00f1a and qualified to their first final series since 2016. Motagua, their rivals on the other side, qualified to their fifth consecutive final. With a 2\u20131 aggregate score, Motagua conquered their 16th national title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285703-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Nacional de Honduras, Clausura\nThe Clausura tournament was the second half of the 2018\u201319 season which ran from January to June 2019. The schedule was released on 20 December 2018. Club Deportivo Olimpia finished on top of the standings for the first time since 2017. Lobos UPNFM made history in the play-offs stage after beating Real C.D. Espa\u00f1a and qualifying to their first ever semifinal. Just as it happened in the Apertura tournament, F.C. Motagua defeated their city rivals in the final series and conquered their 17th national title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285703-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Nacional de Honduras, Top goalscorers\nThe top scorer was determined by the addition of goals of both Apertura and Clausura tournaments in all their phases.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285703-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Nacional de Honduras, Aggregate table\nRelegation was determined by the aggregated table of both Apertura and Clausura tournaments. After 36 rounds, C.D. Real de Minas, Juticalpa F.C. and C.D. Honduras Progreso finished with 31 points each, with the goal difference being irrelevant. All three teams had to play a one round-robin playoff to determine the team to be relegated. It was only the second time in league's history that three teams were involved in a relegation triangular, the first one being held back in 1989.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285704-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 (men's basketball)\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 season will be the 69th season of the Liga Na\u021bional\u0103, the highest professional basketball league in Romania. This will be the first season under a new format, which increases the number of teams to 22. CSM U Oradea are the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285704-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 (men's basketball), Competition format\nThe Romanian Basketball Federation agreed a change in the competition format for the 2018\u201319 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 61], "content_span": [62, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285704-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 (men's basketball), Play-offs\nAll series were played in a best-of-five games format, except the third place match which was played in best-of-three games format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 52], "content_span": [53, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285705-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 (men's handball)\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 is the 61st season of Romanian Handball League, the top-level men's professional handball league. The league comprises 14 teams. Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti are the defending champions, for the third season in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285705-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 (men's handball), Play-Off, First round\nThe top eight teams from regular season will be distributed in two main groups consisting of four teams each. In the group the teams will meet twice (6 matches per team) and at the end, they will qualify for the knockout phase. Teams start the group phase with a certain number of points (6, 4 or 2), depending on the place occupied in the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 62], "content_span": [63, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285705-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 (men's handball), Play-Off, Second round\nThe teams that played in the first round of the play-offs will also play in the second round, but for different objectives, depending on the rankings obtained in the previous round. The winners of the Seria A and Seria B groups will play in the league final, the second places will compete for the \"bronze medal\" and a place in the 2019\u201320 EHF Cup, the third places will fight for the 5th place and the last ranked teams will play against each other for the 7th place. All the finals were played in a best-of-three games format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285705-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 (men's handball), Play-Out\nThe bottom six teams from regular season will meet twice (10 matches per team) to contest against relegation. Teams start the play-out round with a number of points ranging from 1 to 5, depending on the place occupied in the regular season. The winner of the Relegation round finishes 9th in the overall season standings, the second placed team - 10th, and so on, with the last placed team in the Relegation round being 14th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285705-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 (men's handball), Promotion/Relegation play-offs\nThe 11th and 12th-placed teams of the Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 faced the 3rd and 4th-placed teams of the Divizia A promotion tournament. The first two places promoted to Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 and the last two relegated to Divizia A. The play-offs were played on neutral ground, in Drobeta-Turnu Severin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 71], "content_span": [72, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285706-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 (women's basketball)\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 season is the 69th season of the Liga Na\u021bional\u0103, the highest professional basketball league in Romania. Sepsi SIC is the defending champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285706-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 (women's basketball), Competition format\nThe Romanian Basketball Federation agreed a change in the competition format for the 2018\u201319 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285706-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 (women's basketball), Team changes, Renamed teams\nBC Sirius was moved to the sports club of Municipality of T\u00e2rgu Mure\u0219 and was renamed as CSM T\u00e2rgu Mure\u0219.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 72], "content_span": [73, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285706-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 (women's basketball), Team changes, Renamed teams\nCSBT Alexandria was moved to the sports club of Municipality of Alexandria and was renamed as CSM Alexandria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 72], "content_span": [73, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285706-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 (women's basketball), Play-offs\nAll series were played in a best-of-five games format, excluding the third place match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285707-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 (women's handball)\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 is the 61st season of Liga Na\u021bional\u0103, the Romanian top-level women's professional handball league. The league comprises 14 teams. CSM Bucure\u0219ti are the defending champions, for the fourth season in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285707-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 (women's handball), Promotion/Relegation play-offs\nThe 3rd and 4th-placed teams of the Divizia A promotion tournament faced the 11th and 12th-placed teams of the Liga Na\u021bional\u0103. The first two places promoted to Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 and the last two relegated to Divizia A. The play-offs were played on neutral ground, in Cisn\u0103die.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 73], "content_span": [74, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285708-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Paname\u00f1a de F\u00fatbol\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga Paname\u00f1a de F\u00fatbol (also known as the Liga Cable Onda) was the 28th season of the Liga Paname\u00f1a de F\u00fatbol, the top-flight football league in Panama. The season began on 17 July 2017 and was scheduled to end in May 2018. Ten teams competed throughout the entire season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285708-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Paname\u00f1a de F\u00fatbol, Teams\nChorrillo formed with Deportivo Centenario de Cocl\u00e9 and la Universidad Latina de Panam\u00e1 to become Uni\u00f3n Deportivo Universitario therefore there was no need for a relegation. Taking their place for this season are the overall champions of last season's Liga Nacional de Ascenso, Costa del Este F.C..", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285708-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Paname\u00f1a de F\u00fatbol, List of foreign players in the league\nThis is a list of foreign players for the 2018-2019. The following players:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285708-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Paname\u00f1a de F\u00fatbol, List of foreign players in the league\n(player released mid season) (player released during Apertura and Clausura)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285709-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Premier de M\u00e9xico season\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga Premier de M\u00e9xico season is divided into two divisions named Serie A and Serie B. Liga Premier is the third-tier and fourth-tier football league of Mexico. The tournament began on 24 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285709-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Premier de M\u00e9xico season, Serie A, Changes from the previous season\nThe league went on to play in a tournament per season, playing 30 games per club. Followed by the eliminatory phase between the eight best classified to determine the champion of each division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 80], "content_span": [81, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285709-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Premier de M\u00e9xico season, Serie A, Regular Season statistics, Top goalscorers\nPlayers sorted first by goals scored, then by last name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 90], "content_span": [91, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285709-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Premier de M\u00e9xico season, Serie A, Attendance, Per team\nUpdated to games played on 21 April 2019Source: (available in each game report)Notes:Only regular season listed1: Team played Serie B last season.2: Team played Serie B last season, the local games were played in Puerto Morelos.3: Team played Ascenso MX last season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285709-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Premier de M\u00e9xico season, Serie A, Liguilla de Ascenso (Promotion Playoffs)\nThe four 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 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, 37], "section_span": [39, 88], "content_span": [89, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285709-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Premier de M\u00e9xico season, Serie A, Liguilla de Ascenso (Promotion Playoffs), Quarter-finals\nThe first legs will be played on 24 and 25 April, and the second legs will be played on 27 and 28 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 104], "content_span": [105, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285709-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Premier de M\u00e9xico season, Serie A, Liguilla de Ascenso (Promotion Playoffs), Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 1 and 2 May, and the second legs were played on 4 and 5 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 101], "content_span": [102, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285709-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Premier de M\u00e9xico season, Serie A, Liguilla de Ascenso (Promotion Playoffs), Final\nThe first leg was played on 8 May, and the second leg was played on 11 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 95], "content_span": [96, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285709-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Premier de M\u00e9xico season, Serie A, Liguilla de Filiales (Reserve Teams Playoffs)\nThe four best teams of reserve teams table 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 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, 37], "section_span": [39, 93], "content_span": [94, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285709-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Premier de M\u00e9xico season, Serie A, Liguilla de Filiales (Reserve Teams Playoffs), Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played 25 April, and the second legs was played on 28 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 106], "content_span": [107, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285709-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Premier de M\u00e9xico season, Serie A, Liguilla de Filiales (Reserve Teams Playoffs), Final\nThe first leg was played on 2 May, and the second leg was played on 5 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 100], "content_span": [101, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285709-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Premier de M\u00e9xico season, Serie B, Changes from the previous season\nThe league went on to play in a tournament per season, playing 30 games per club. Followed by the eliminatory phase between the eight best classified to determine the champion of the division. The tournament will be played in a single group of 16 members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 80], "content_span": [81, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285709-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Premier de M\u00e9xico season, Serie B, Regular Season statistics, Top goalscorers\nPlayers sorted first by goals scored, then by last name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 90], "content_span": [91, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285709-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Premier de M\u00e9xico season, Serie B, Attendance, Per team\nUpdated to games played on 21 April 2019Source: (available in each game report)Notes:Only regular season listed1: Team played last season on G\u00f3mez Palacio, Durango.2: Team did not play last season.3: Team played last season on Tercera Divisi\u00f3n.4: Team played last season on Tlaltenango de S\u00e1nchez Rom\u00e1n, Zacatecas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285709-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Premier de M\u00e9xico season, Serie B, Liguilla (Playoffs)\nThe four 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 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, 37], "section_span": [39, 67], "content_span": [68, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285709-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Premier de M\u00e9xico season, Serie B, Liguilla (Playoffs), Quarter-finals\nThe first legs were played on 26 and 27 April, and the second legs were played on 3, 4 and 5 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 83], "content_span": [84, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285709-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Premier de M\u00e9xico season, Serie B, Liguilla (Playoffs), Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 8 May, and the second legs were played on 11 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 80], "content_span": [81, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285709-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Premier de M\u00e9xico season, Serie B, Liguilla (Playoffs), Final\nThe first leg were played on 15 May, and the second leg will be played on 18 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285710-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Primera de Nicaragua\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga Primera de Nicaragua season was divided into two tournaments (Apertura and Clausura) and determined the 71st and 72nd champions in the history of the Liga Primera de Nicaragua, the top division of football in Nicaragua. The Apertura tournament was played in the second half of 2018, while the Clausura was played in the first half of 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285710-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Primera de Nicaragua, Format\nThe Apertura play-off format was changed from previous years, while the Clausura will use the same 4-team play-off format. For the Apertura, the top four teams from the regular stage advanced to a \"quadrangular\" double-round robin instead of a play-off stage. The regular stage and quadrangular winners would have played to decide the tournament's champion, but ultimately the same team won both and the final was not necessary. The same format was recently adopted by the Costa Rican Primera Divisi\u00f3n, but for both half seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285710-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Primera de Nicaragua, Team information\nA total of ten teams contested the league, including eight sides from the 2017\u201318 Primera Divisi\u00f3n, and two sides from the 2017\u201318 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285710-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Primera de Nicaragua, Team information\nFC San Francisco Masachapa finished last in the aggregate table and were relegated to the Segunda Divisi\u00f3n. The champions from the Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, ART Municipal Jalapa were promoted in their place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285710-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Primera de Nicaragua, Team information\nThe 9th place team in the aggregate table, Chinandega FC, faced the second place team from the Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, Deportivo Sebaco, in a playoff for a spot in the Primera Divisi\u00f3n. However, due to Sebaco's financial problems, they were not allowed in the playoff, meaning Chinandega remained in Primera Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285710-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Primera de Nicaragua, List of foreign players in the league\nThis is a list of foreign players in the 2018\u201319 season. The following players:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285710-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Primera de Nicaragua, List of foreign players in the league\nA new rule was introduced this season, that clubs can have four foreign players per club and can only add a new player if there is an injury or a player/s is released and it is before the close of the season transfer window.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285710-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Primera de Nicaragua, List of foreign players in the league\n(player released during the Apertura season) (player released between the Apertura and Clausura seasons) (player released during the Clausura season)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285711-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Puerto Rico\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga Puerto Rico season, is the league's inaugural season of Liga Puerto Rico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285711-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Puerto Rico, Summary\nFollowing the absence of a football league in Puerto Rico for the 2017\u201318 season, the Puerto Rican Football Federation organized a Preparatory Tournament that ran from March until June 2018. 10 teams participated on the tournament won by Bayam\u00f3n FC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285711-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Puerto Rico, Summary\nThe league's launch conference was held on August 23, 2018. The league kicked off on September 29, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285711-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga Puerto Rico, Regular season, 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 in 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 60], "content_span": [61, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285712-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga TDP season\nThe 2018\u201319 Liga TDP season is the fourth-tier football league of Mexico. The tournament began on 7 September 2018 and finished on 15 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285712-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga TDP season, Competition format\nThe Tercera Divisi\u00f3n (Third Division) is divided into 13 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 13 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285712-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga TDP 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 FA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285712-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga TDP season, Group 1\nGroup with 15 teams from Campeche, Chiapas, Quintana Roo, Tabasco and Yucat\u00e1n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285712-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga TDP season, Group 2\nGroup with 16 teams from Puebla, San Luis Potos\u00ed, Tlaxcala and Veracruz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285712-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga TDP season, Group 5\nGroup with 16 teams from Mexico City\u00a0and State of Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285712-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga TDP season, Group 6\nGroup with 12 teams from Guerrero, Mexico City, Morelos, Puebla and State of Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285712-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga TDP season, Group 7\nGroup with 17 teams from Hidalgo, Mexico City, Puebla and State of Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285712-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga TDP season, Group 8\nGroup with 19 teams from Guanajuato, Guerrero, Michoac\u00e1n\u00a0and Quer\u00e9taro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285712-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga TDP season, Group 9\nGroup with 20 teams from Durango, Guanajuato, Jalisco, San Luis Potos\u00ed and Zacatecas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285712-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga TDP season, Group 12\nGroup with 20 teams from Coahuila, Nuevo Le\u00f3n and Tamaulipas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285712-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga TDP season, Promotion Playoffs\nThe Promotion Playoffs will consist of seven phases. Classify 64 teams, the number varies according to the number of teams in each group, being between three and six clubs per sector. The country will be divided into two zones: South Zone (Groups I to VII) and North Zone (Groups VIII to XIII). Eliminations will be held according to the average obtained by each group, being ordered from best to worst by their percentage throughout the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285712-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga TDP season, Promotion Playoffs, Round of 64\nThe first legs were played on 8 and 9 May, and the second legs were played on 11 and 12 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285712-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga TDP season, Promotion Playoffs, Round of 32\nThe first legs will be played on 15 and 16 May, and the second legs will be played on 18 and 19 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285712-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga TDP season, Promotion Playoffs, Final Stage\nUntil the championship series, the teams are divided into two geographical zones: South and North, the participants will be seeded according to their position in the general classification table and their location. In the final series, the winners of each of the two zones will face each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285712-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga TDP season, Promotion Playoffs, Final Stage, Round of 16\nThe first legs were played on 22 and 23 May, and the second legs will be played on 25 and 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 69], "content_span": [70, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285712-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga TDP season, Promotion Playoffs, Final Stage, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs were played on 29 May, and the second legs will be played on 1 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 72], "content_span": [73, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285712-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga TDP season, Promotion Playoffs, Final Stage, Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 5 June, and the second legs will be played on 8 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 69], "content_span": [70, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285712-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga TDP season, Promotion Playoffs, Final Stage, Final\nThe first leg was played on 12 June, and the second leg was played on 15 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 63], "content_span": [64, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285712-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga TDP season, Reserve Teams, Table\nLast updated: May 6, 2019 Source: P = Position; G = Games played; Pts = Points; Pts/G = Ratio of points to games played; GD = Goal difference", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285712-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga TDP season, Reserve Teams, Playoffs, Round of 16\nThe first legs were played on 10 and 11 May, and the second legs will be played on 17, 18 and 19 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 61], "content_span": [62, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285712-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga TDP season, Reserve Teams, Playoffs, Round of 16\nAll times are UTC\u22125 except for matches in Ciudad Ju\u00e1rez and Hermosillo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 61], "content_span": [62, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285712-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga TDP season, Reserve Teams, Playoffs, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs were played on 22 and 23 May, and the second legs were played on 25 and 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 64], "content_span": [65, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285712-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga TDP season, Reserve Teams, Playoffs, Quarter-finals\nAll times are UTC\u22125 except for match in Ciudad Ju\u00e1rez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 64], "content_span": [65, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285712-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga TDP season, Reserve Teams, Playoffs, Semi-finals\nThe first legs will be played on 29 and 30 May 2019, and the second legs will be played on 1 and 2 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 61], "content_span": [62, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285712-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga TDP season, Reserve Teams, Playoffs, Semi-finals\nAll times are UTC\u22125 except for match in Ciudad Ju\u00e1rez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 61], "content_span": [62, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285712-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga TDP season, Reserve Teams, Playoffs, Final\nThe first leg was played on 6 June, and the second leg was played on 9 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 55], "content_span": [56, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285712-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liga TDP season, Regular Season statistics, Top goalscorers\nPlayers sorted first by goals scored, then by last name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285713-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LigaPro\nThe 2018\u201319 LigaPro (also known as Ledman LigaPro for sponsorship reasons) was the 29th season of Portuguese football's second-tier league, and the fifth season under the current LigaPro title. A total of 18 teams competed in this division, including reserve sides from top-flight Primeira Liga teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285713-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 LigaPro, Teams\nA total of 18 teams contested the league, including 14 sides from the 2017\u201318 season, 2 teams relegated from the 2017\u201318 Primeira Liga and 2 promoted from the 2017\u201318 Campeonato de Portugal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285714-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ligat Nashim\nThe 2018\u201319 Ligat Nashim was the 21st 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-00285714-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ligat Nashim\nThe defending champions were F.C. Kiryat Gat, having won back to back championships in 2016\u201317 and 2017\u201318.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285715-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ligue 1\nThe 2018\u201319 Ligue 1 season, also known as Ligue 1 Conforama for sponsorship reasons, was the 81st season since its establishment. The season began on 10 August 2018 and concluded on 24 May 2019. Paris Saint-Germain were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285715-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ligue 1\nOn 21 April, Paris Saint-Germain won their second consecutive Ligue 1 title and eighth title overall following Lille's 0\u20130 draw against Toulouse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285715-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ligue 1, Teams\nTwenty teams competed in the league, with two promoted teams from Ligue 2, Reims and N\u00eemes, replacing the two relegated teams from the 2017\u201318 Ligue 1 season, Troyes and Metz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285715-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ligue 1, Results, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches. In order to preserve chronological evolvements, any postponed matches are not included to the round at which they were originally scheduled, but added to the full round they were played immediately afterwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285715-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ligue 1, Relegation play-offs\nThe 2018\u201319 season ended with a relegation play-off between the 18th-placed Ligue 1 team, Dijon, and the winner of the semi-final of the Ligue 2 play-off, Lens, on a two-legged confrontation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 37], "content_span": [38, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285715-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ligue 1, Relegation play-offs\nDijon won 4\u20132 on aggregate and therefore both clubs remained in their respective leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 37], "content_span": [38, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285716-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ligue 1 (Congo)\nThe 2018\u201319 Congo Ligue 1 was the 52nd season of the Congo Ligue 1, the top-tier football league in the Republic of the Congo, since its establishment in 1961. The season started on 8 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285717-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ligue 1 (Ivory Coast)\nThe 2018\u201319 C\u00f4te d'Ivoire Ligue 1 is the 60th season of the C\u00f4te d'Ivoire Ligue 1, the top-tier football league in the Ivory Coast (C\u00f4te d'Ivoire), since its establishment in 1960. The season started on 7 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285718-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ligue 1 Mauritania\nThe 2018\u201319 Ligue 1 Mauritania is the 39th season of the Ligue 1 Mauritania, the top-tier football league in Mauritania. The season started on 28 September 2018 and ended on 4 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285719-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ligue 2\nThe 2018\u201319 Ligue 2 (referred to as the Domino's Ligue 2 for sponsorship reasons) season was the 80th season since its establishment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285719-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ligue 2, Promotion play-offs\nA promotion play-off competition was held at the end of the season, involving the 3rd, 4th and 5th-placed teams in 2018\u201319 Ligue 2, and the 18th-placed team in 2018\u201319 Ligue 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285719-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ligue 2, Promotion play-offs\nThe quarter-final was played on 21 May and the semi-final was played on 24 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285719-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ligue 2, Relegation play-offs\nA relegation play-off was held at the end of the season between the 18th-placed Ligue 2 team and the 3rd-placed team of 2018\u201319 Championnat National. This was played over two legs on 28 May and 2 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 37], "content_span": [38, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285719-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ligue 2, Relegation play-offs\nLe Mans won 3\u20132 on aggregate and were promoted to Ligue 2, while Gaz\u00e9lec Ajaccio were relegated to the Championnat National.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 37], "content_span": [38, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285719-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ligue 2, Post-season actions and reprieves\nOn 12 June 2019, the financial regulator of French football, the DNCG announced that Nancy and Sochaux would be relegated to Championnat National due to their financial position. The decision is appealable, and both teams have indicated that they are appealing. Should one or more of the decisions be upheld at appeal, then Gaz\u00e9lec Ajaccio and B\u00e9ziers would be reprieved from relegation in that order.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 50], "content_span": [51, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285719-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ligue 2, Post-season actions and reprieves\nOn 25 June 2019, the DNCG announced that AC Ajaccio would also be relegated to Championnat National due to their financial position. The club have indicated they are appealing. If this decision is upheld at appeal in addition to those of Nancy and Sochaux, then Red Star would also be reprieved from relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 50], "content_span": [51, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285719-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ligue 2, Post-season actions and reprieves\nOn 3 July 2019, Nancy successfully appealed the DNCG decision, and will remain in Ligue 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 50], "content_span": [51, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285719-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ligue 2, Post-season actions and reprieves\nOn 8 July 2019, it was announced that Sochaux had successfully appealed the DNCG decision, and will remain in Ligue 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 50], "content_span": [51, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285719-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ligue 2, Post-season actions and reprieves\nOn 12 July 2019, it was announced that AC Ajaccio would remain in Ligue 2, having been successful in their appeal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 50], "content_span": [51, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285720-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liiga season\nThe 2018\u201319 Liiga season was the 44th season of the Liiga (formerly SM-liiga), the top level of ice hockey in Finland, since the league's formation in 1975.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285720-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liiga season, Regular season\nTop six advanced straight to the quarter-finals, while teams between 7th and 10th positions played a wild card round for the final two spots. The Liiga is a closed series and thus there is no relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285720-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liiga season, Regular season\nRules for classification: 1) Points; 2) 3-point wins 3) Goal difference; 4) Goals scored; 4) Head-to-head points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285721-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lille OSC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Lille OSC's 75th season in existence and the club's 19th consecutive season in the top flight of French football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285721-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lille OSC 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-00285721-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lille OSC 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-00285721-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lille OSC season, Players, 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285722-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Linafoot\nThe 2018\u201319 Linafoot was the 58th season of the Linafoot, the top-tier football league in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, since its establishment in 1958. The season started on 23 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285723-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lincoln City F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Lincoln City's 135th season in their history and their second season back in League Two after missing out on the League Two playoff final in the 2017/2018 season. Along with League Two, the club also participates in the FA Cup, and has been eliminated from the EFL Cup and EFL Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285723-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lincoln City F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285723-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lincoln City F.C. season, Competitions, Friendlies\nAs of 7 June 2018, Lincoln City have announced six pre-season friendlies against Blackburn Rovers, Sheffield Wednesday, Lincoln United Boston United, Norwich City and Scunthorpe United", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285723-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lincoln City F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October. The draw for the second round was made live on BBC and BT by Mark Schwarzer and Glenn Murray on 12 November. The third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285723-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lincoln City F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam. The second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285723-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lincoln City F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced. The draw for the second round was made live on Talksport by Leon Britton and Steve Claridge on 16 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285724-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lindenwood Lady Lions ice hockey season\nThe Lindenwood Lady Lions women represented Lindenwood University in CHA women's ice hockey during the 2018-19 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season. The team struggled with their record, with nine newcomers, and a team made up of very young players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285724-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lindenwood Lady Lions ice hockey season, Awards and honors\nSophomore Sierra Burt was named to the All-CHA Second Team. Burt was a power play specialist with four multi-point games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 66], "content_span": [67, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285724-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lindenwood Lady Lions ice hockey season, Awards and honors\nForward Jada Burke, Defender Taylor Kirwan and Goaltender Sophie Wolf were all named to the All-Rookie Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 66], "content_span": [67, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285725-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lipscomb Bisons men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Lipscomb Bisons men's basketball team represented Lipscomb University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at the Allen Arena in Nashville, Tennessee and were led by 6th-year head coach Casey Alexander. They finished the season 29\u20138, 14\u20132 in ASUN play to finish in a share of the regular season championship with Liberty. They defeated Kennesaw State and NJIT to advance to the championship game where they lost to Liberty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285725-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lipscomb Bisons men's basketball team\nAs a regular season conference champion and No. 1 seed in their conference tournament who failed to win their conference tournament, they received an automatic bid to the National Invitation Tournament where they defeated Davidson, UNC Greensboro, NC State, and Wichita State to advance to the championship game where they lost to Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285725-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lipscomb Bisons men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bisons finished the 2017\u201318 season 23\u201310, 10\u20134 in ASUN play to finish in second place. They defeated Stetson, Jacksonville and Florida Gulf Coast to become champions of the ASUN Tournament. They earned the ASUN's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament where they lost in the First Round to North Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285726-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lipscomb Bisons women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Lipscomb Bisons women's basketball team represents Lipscomb University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Bisons, led by seventh year head coach Greg Brown, play their home games at Allen Arena and were members of the Atlantic Sun Conference. They finished the season 4\u201325, 2\u201314 in America Sun play to finish in last place. They failed to qualify for the Atlantic Sun Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285726-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lipscomb Bisons women's basketball team\nOn March 8, Greg Brown was fired after 7 seasons at his alma mater, in which the Bisons went 44\u2013164 overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285726-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lipscomb Bisons women's basketball team, Media\nAll home games and conference road are shown on ESPN3 or A-Sun. TV. Non conference road games are typically available on the opponents website.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 54], "content_span": [55, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285727-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Little Rock Trojans men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Little Rock Trojans men's basketball team represented the University of Arkansas at Little Rock during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Trojans, led by first-year head coach Darrell Walker, played their home games at the Jack Stephens Center in Little Rock, Arkansas as members of the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 10\u201321, 5\u201313 in Sun Belt play to finish in a tie for last place. They failed to qualify for the Sun Belt Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285727-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Little Rock Trojans men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Trojans finished the 2017\u201318 season 7\u201325, 4\u201314 in Sun Belt play to finish in last place. They lost in the first round of the Sun Belt Tournament to Appalachian State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285727-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Little Rock Trojans men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn March 9, 2018, the school fired head coach Wes Flanigan after just two seasons where he compiled a record of 22\u201342. On March 29, the school hired former NBA player Darrell Walker who had spent the last two seasons as head coach of Division II Clark Atlanta University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285728-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Little Rock Trojans women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Little Rock Trojans women's basketball team represents the University of Arkansas at Little Rock during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Trojans, led by sixteenth year head coach Joe Foley, play their home games at the Jack Stephens Center and were members of the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 21\u201311, 15\u20133 in Sun Belt play to win the share the Sun Belt regular season title with Texas\u2013Arlington and won the Sun Belt tournament title to earn an automatic trip to the NCAA Women's Tournament where they lost in the first round to Gonzaga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285729-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. Women season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Liverpool Football Club Women's 30th season of competitive football and its ninth season in the FA Women's Super League and at the top level of English women's football, being one of the league's foundation clubs. It is also its first season following a re-brand from its former name Liverpool Ladies Football Club. Neil Redfearn replaced Scott Rogers as manager before the preseason. Redfearn joins the club after guiding Doncaster Rovers Belles to the crown of FA WSL 2 in the previous season. Redfearn resigned after three months and only two matches in charge, ending his tenure with a 5\u20130 loss to Arsenal in the league's opening weekend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Liverpool Football Club's 127th season in existence and their 57th consecutive season in the top flight of English football. It was also the club's 27th consecutive season in the Premier League. The club also competed in the UEFA Champions League, the FA Cup and the EFL Cup. The season covered the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season\nLiverpool finished the Premier League season as runners-up to Manchester City, to whom they suffered their only league defeat of the season, scoring 97 points, the then third-highest total in the history of the English top division and the most points scored by a team without winning the title. They remained unbeaten at home in the league for the second season in a row and matched the club record of 30 league wins in a season. In the UEFA Champions League, Liverpool reached the final for the second consecutive year, winning 2\u20130 against Tottenham Hotspur to secure the club's sixth win in the competition. However, success eluded Liverpool in domestic cup competitions as they exited both the FA Cup and EFL Cup in the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season\nLiverpool's 2018\u201319 pre-season kicked off with its second signing (the first being Naby Ke\u00efta, a deal finalised the previous season) of the campaign with the transfer of Brazilian midfielder Fabinho from French club AS Monaco, a deal which became official on 1 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season\nLiverpool seemed set for their third signing when the media confirmed that Liverpool had reached a deal with French club Lyon for their captain, Nabil Fekir. However, the club, while confirming negotiations were ongoing, announced that Fekir would be remaining at Lyon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season\nThe first match of the pre-season took place on 7 July when the Reds visited Chester. Two goals from Harry Wilson in the first half followed by five goals in the second half, from James Milner from the spot, Daniel Sturridge, Ryan Kent, Danny Ings, then another goal from Sturridge to give Liverpool a 0\u20137 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season\nThe club moved along to 10 July and a visit to Merseyside counterparts Tranmere Rovers. Rafael Camacho, Sheyi Ojo and Adam Lallana all scored in the first half to give the Reds a 0\u20133 lead. Tranmere fired back with goals from Jonny Smith scoring a rebound after a hard free kick Loris Karius could not hold on to, then Amadou Soukouna tacked on a late second, but Liverpool held on and won 2\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season\nOn 13 July, Liverpool formally announced their third signing of the summer \u2014 Swiss winger Xherdan Shaqiri from Stoke City, signing him for \u00a313\u00a0million, his reported release clause.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season\nThe following day, on 14 July, Bury was able to deny Liverpool a victory with a 0\u20130 draw at Gigg Lane. Sturridge, Ojo and Dominic Solanke all had attempts cleared from the goal line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season\nOn 19 July, Liverpool confirmed their fourth signing of the summer in Alisson for a \u00a356\u00a0million transfer fee, making him the most expensive goalkeeper in history at the time of purchase. That same day, Liverpool defeated Blackburn Rovers 0\u20132 with two second-half goals from Sturridge and Lazar Markovi\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season\nLiverpool then participated in the International Champions Cup in the United States, first heading to Charlotte's Bank of America Stadium on 22 July to play Borussia Dortmund. Virgil van Dijk opened scoring in the first half to give the Reds a 1\u20130 lead at halftime, but Dortmund stormed back with two goals from American Christian Pulisic and a late penalty kick from Jacob Bruun Larsen to give Dortmund the 1\u20133 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season\nUp next, on 26 July, was a trip to MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, where Liverpool took on Manchester City. Leroy San\u00e9 opened the scoring in the 57th minute, but it was substitutes Sadio Man\u00e9 and Mohamed Salah, coming back from their time off following the 2018 FIFA World Cup, to give Liverpool the 1\u20132 victory over the Premier League rivals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season\nFinally was the trip to Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor and a crowd of over 100,000 people on 29 July against rivals Manchester United. Liverpool first saw a penalty converted by Man\u00e9, only for an immediate response from an Andreas Pereira free kick. In the second half, goals from Sturridge, Ojo (from the penalty spot) and newest signing Xherdan Shaqiri's bicycle kick on his debut gave Liverpool the 1\u20134 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season\nOn 4 August, Liverpool travelled to Ireland to defeat Napoli 5\u20130 with goals in the first half from Milner and Georginio Wijnaldum, then in the second half from Salah, Sturridge and Alberto Moreno.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season\nLiverpool's final pre-season fixture was on 7 August in a rare preseason match at Anfield as hosts to Torino. Liverpool opened the scoring with goals from Roberto Firmino and Wijnaldum each scoring. Andrea Belotti answered with a header before the half, but Sturridge responded with another goal to a strong pre-season to give Liverpool the 3\u20131 victory in their final pre-season match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, August\nLiverpool's opening Premier League fixture was at Anfield against West Ham United on 12 August. The Reds took a 2\u20130 half-time lead with goals from Salah and Man\u00e9, before the latter scored a seemingly offside goal to make it 3\u20130. In the final few minutes, Sturridge scored Liverpool's fourth and final goal with his first touch of the game, only 24 seconds after replacing Salah. The 4\u20130 win put Liverpool in first position of the league table for the first time since November 2016. The scoreline also meant that Liverpool became just the second club in Premier League history to score four or more goals in four consecutive games against a single opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, August\nLiverpool's first away game of the league season was at Selhurst Park against Crystal Palace on 20 August. Initially, the game was an even contest before Liverpool were awarded a late first half penalty following a foul by former Liverpool player Mamadou Sakho on Salah. James Milner converted the penalty to give Liverpool the 0\u20131 lead at the half. The second half was equally even for the most part. However, at the very end, Palace defender Aaron Wan-Bissaka received a red card to give Liverpool a one-man advantage. Man\u00e9 then scored a late second in stoppage time to eventually give Liverpool a 0\u20132 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, August\nLiverpool's final fixture of the month saw the team return to Anfield to take on Brighton & Hove Albion on 25 August. The visitors' resistance was broken in the 23rd minute when Salah put the Reds ahead 1\u20130 and the game went on to finish with no further changes to the scoreline. The win saw Liverpool take the maximum nine points from the first three league fixtures for the first time since the 2013\u201314 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, September\nLiverpool's next fixture was on 1 September against Leicester City. Liverpool took an early lead through a goal from Man\u00e9, which was then followed by Firmino's first goal of the season. His late first-half header to give the Reds a comfortable 2\u20130 lead at half-time. This was followed by a howler from goalkeeper Alisson, attempting to dribble the ball only to lose it to Kelechi Iheanacho, with Rachid Ghezzal then scoring into the empty net. Liverpool managed to survive the opposition's continued pressing and record a 2\u20131 win to maintain their 100% record start to the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0017-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, September\nLiverpool's next fixture, which came after the international break, was on 15 September, away at Tottenham Hotspur, a team they had not beaten away from home since the 2014\u201315 season. The Reds took the lead in the 39th minute, with Wijnaldum scoring his first Premier League away goal for Liverpool. Firmino scored his second goal of the season to put the Reds 2\u20130 up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0017-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, September\nA late goal from Erik Lamela added drama to the match, but Liverpool held on to secure their fifth league win of the season and maintain their 100% record to the start of the season, with the result also meaning that this was the club's best start to a season since 1990. Also, the match was marked by Firmino's eye injury, sustained in a clash with Jan Vertonghen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, September\nLiverpool's first UEFA Champions League match of the season was against Paris Saint Germain, the French champions, on 18 September. The Reds took the lead through a header from Sturridge, followed by a penalty from Milner, before Thomas Meunier scored to slightly decrease the margin to 2\u20131 at half-time. Teenager Kylian Mbapp\u00e9 scored in the last few minutes to make it 2\u20132 as he took advantage off a mistake from Salah. Firmino, who came on as a substitute just minutes before the equalizing goal, scored in the last few seconds of the game to win it 3\u20132 and open Liverpool's continental campaign with a win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, September\nLiverpool's next game was against on 22 September, against Southampton. Liverpool took the lead through an own goal from Wesley Hoedt in the early minutes of the game, followed by a goal from Jo\u00ebl Matip just ten minutes after, with the Reds' third goal falling in the last minute of the first-half, with Shaqiri hitting the bar from a free-kick and Salah slotting in the goal, to win the game 3\u20130 for the Reds, as Liverpool won a seventh straight game in all competitions from the start of a season for the first time in 28 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, September\nLiverpool's next fixture was up against Chelsea on 26 September, in the Carabao Cup third round. The Reds initially took the lead through a goal from Sturridge, only for Emerson Palmieri to score the equaliser in the last ten minutes of the match, which was followed by Eden Hazard scoring a stunning goal in the final minutes of the match to give Chelsea the win and end Liverpool's unbeaten start to the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, September\nThree days later, on 29 September, the Reds once again played against Chelsea in the Premier League. A goal from Eden Hazard once again gave Chelsea the lead at half-time before Sturridge scored a magnificent late goal to share the points for both sides.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, October\nThe Reds' next match was against Napoli in the Champions League at the Stadio San Paolo on 3 October. Liverpool struggled throughout the game, particularly in attack, where they failed to register a single shot on target for the first time since 2006. A goal from Lorenzo Insigne in the 90th minute finally would break the deadlock after Liverpool's defense stopped several chances. Following the defeat, manager J\u00fcrgen Klopp stated that the Reds \"only had themselves to blame\" for the loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, October\nTheir final game before the international was against league champions Manchester City on 7 October, with plenty of hype ahead of the game. However, the match would eventually finish goalless as both teams' defences earned praise. The highlight of the match was Riyad Mahrez missing a penalty in the last few minutes of the game after Virgil van Dijk fouled Leroy San\u00e9, with Mahrez skying the ball over the crossbar to mark a 0\u20130 draw. During the international break, the Reds would suffer several injury problems to key players, including Salah, Man\u00e9, Van Dijk and Ke\u00efta, though only the latter would be out for an extended period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, October\nThe Reds' first match following the international break was against Huddersfield Town on 20 October, and a third meeting between close friends Klopp and David Wagner. The Reds went ahead following Salah's strike in first half, as the game also marked the introduction of Fabinho, who made his Premier League debut after coming as a substitute in the 69th minute. Huddersfield has several attempts but were unable to score as Liverpool were able to hold on and win 1\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, October\nLiverpool's next match was a midweek Champions League fixture against Red Star Belgrade on 24 October. Following an initially close opening, the Reds went ahead through Roberto Firmino's goal in the 20th minute, which was followed by Salah's goal at the stroke of half-time. Salah scored his second goal from the penalty spot, which was his 50th goal for the club in all competition. Man\u00e9, after missing a penalty, scored to give Liverpool a 4\u20130 win, with the result, along with a 2\u20132 draw between Napoli and Paris Saint-Germain in the other group fixture, moving the Reds to top of their Champions League group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, October\nLiverpool's next fixture was against Cardiff City on 27 October. The Reds went ahead with a goal from Salah in the tenth minute, but afterwards were unable to break Cardiff's defence before Man\u00e9 scored to make it to 2\u20130 in the 66th minute, only for Callum Paterson to score in the 77th minute. Afterwards, Shaqiri scored his first goal for the club to make it 3\u20131, with Man\u00e9 scoring three minutes later to make it 4\u20131 and temporarily move the Reds to the top of the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, November\nThe Reds' next match was against Arsenal on 3 November. In a very close match, Milner scored his 50th Premier League goal to open a 1\u20130 lead for Liverpool in the 61st minute, following an error from goalkeeper Bernd Leno, though Alexandre Lacazette scored a late equaliser after he had taken the ball away from Alisson as the two sides shared a 1\u20131 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, November\nThree days later, Liverpool played against Red Star Belgrade in the Champions League, with the Reds suffering a shock 2\u20130 defeat after two early goals from Milan Pavkov, with the defeat severely threatening Liverpool's qualification hopes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, November\nThe Reds' next fixture was against Fulham on 11 November. Following an unexpectedly close first-half, Salah scored just 14 seconds after Fulham scored a goal that was controversially considered offside. Shaqiri scored his second goal for the club in the second half as the Reds won 2\u20130 and temporarily return to the top of the league table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, November\nFollowing the international break, Liverpool's next game was against Watford at Vicarage Road on 24 November. The Hornets scored inside the second minute, but Gerard Deulofeu's goal was flagged offside. After an initially close first half, Salah opened the scoring for Liverpool, which was then followed by a free-kick goal from Trent Alexander-Arnold, who scored his first goal of the season. In the last few minutes of game time, captain Jordan Henderson was sent off following a foul on \u00c9tienne Capoue, which resulted in his second yellow card and dismissal. A late header from Firmino was then enough to give Liverpool a 3\u20130 away win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, November\nThe final match of the month for Liverpool was an away trip to Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League group stages. The hosts went ahead through a goal from Juan Bernat followed by a goal from Neymar to double the lead for the hosts. Despite a penalty from Milner, the Reds were unable to score an equalizer and left Parc des Princes without any points. The defeat would mean that Liverpool had to win either 1\u20130 or by two goals against Napoli in their final match to progress to the knockout stages of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, December\nIn the last month of the calendar year, Liverpool played against city rivals Everton on 2 December. In a very tight and close game, several attempts on goal were made by both teams, with Alisson saving a header from Andr\u00e9 Gomes and Joe Gomez clearing the rebound and a shot from Gylfi Sigur\u00f0sson. In the final seconds of the game, Divock Origi scored his first goal for the club since May 2017, following a bizarre error from goalkeeper Jordan Pickford, to seal a dramatic 1\u20130 win for the Reds and extend Everton's winless run against Liverpool to 18 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0033-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, December\nIn the midweek fixture on 5 December, the Reds played away against Burnley. The hosts took a surprise lead through Jack Cork after Alisson was unable to gather the ball following a Burnley corner. Liverpool would soon hit the equalizer through a superb low finish from Milner and soon after substitute Firmino scored with his first touch to overturn the result in Liverpool's favour, with Shaqiri scoring in added time just moments following a save from Alisson to seal a 3\u20131 win. The victory meant that Liverpool were unbeaten in their first 15 league games, the club's best ever league start in history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0034-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, December\nIn the weekend fixture of 8 December, Liverpool won 4\u20130 against Bournemouth with a hat-trick from Salah and an own goal from Steve Cook, to move top of the league table. The game was also marked by Milner making his 500th Premier League appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0035-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, December\nThe club's next game was a crucial tie against Napoli in their Champions League group fixture. Liverpool went ahead with a goal from Salah, which was followed by the hosts missing several clear attempts. In injury time, Arkadiusz Milik had a chance to equalize from eight yards away from goal, but his shot was denied by Alisson, who made a crucial save as Liverpool won 1\u20130 and qualify for the knockout phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0036-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, December\nIn the next fixture on 16 December, Liverpool hosted fierce rivals Manchester United, who were in poor form but did not taste defeat against the Reds since March 2014. In the end, Liverpool emerged victorious. The hosts went ahead through a volley goal from Man\u00e9, before Jesse Lingard equalized following an error from goalkeeper Alisson. Substitute Shaqiri then scored twice in seven minutes to confirm a 3\u20131 victory for the Reds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0037-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, December\nThe following fixture was on 21 December, an away fixture against Wolverhampton Wanderers, resulting in a 2\u20130 win for the visitors. Salah scored the opening goal following a cross from Fabinho, with the Egyptian then assisting Van Dijk's goal, with the Dutchman scoring his first league goal for Liverpool. The result guaranteed that, regardless of other results, Liverpool would be top of the Premier League on Christmas Day, with Manchester City's unexpected home loss to Crystal Palace ensuring the Reds would be four points clear.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0038-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, December\nThe traditional Boxing Day fixture saw Liverpool host Newcastle United and former manager Rafael Ben\u00edtez. The hosts went ahead through a wonderful strike from Dejan Lovren, which was followed by a second-half penalty from Salah after the Egyptian was fouled by Paul Dummett, before Shaqiri's strike wrapped up the three points, with substitute Fabinho scoring his first goal for the club to complete a 4\u20130 victory. The result, coupled with other favourable results in the league, ensured that the Reds would go into their final game of 2018 six points clear, and would be top on New Year's Day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0039-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, December\nLiverpool's final game of 2018 saw the Reds again at Anfield, this time hosting Arsenal just 56 days after the reverse fixture at the Emirates. Despite falling behind in the 11th minute to a goal from Gunners academy graduate Ainsley Maitland-Niles, a frantic spell just a couple of minutes later saw Liverpool go 2\u20131 up thanks to a Firmino brace, with Man\u00e9 extending the lead in the 32nd minute and Salah again scoring from the penalty spot in the dying minutes of added time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0039-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, December\nOnly one goal was scored in the second half, just after the hour mark, with Firmino completing his first ever Liverpool hat-trick from the penalty spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0039-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, December\nWith Tottenham Hotspur having lost 3\u20131 at home to Wolves in the earlier kick-off, the result saw the Reds go nine points clear at the top of the table, albeit the gap being then reduced to seven points by Manchester City's victory at Southampton the following day, with the club not only extending their unbeaten run in the league to 21 games, but also successfully going unbeaten at Anfield in the league in 2018, as well as equalling the record set by Rafael Ben\u00edtez's team in 2008\u201309 of going unbeaten at Anfield in the league for 31 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0040-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, January\nLiverpool kicked off the new calendar year with a daunting trip to the Etihad to face Manchester City, knowing full well a win could see their lead extended to ten points. In a tight first half, Liverpool were denied the lead after a goal-line clearance by City defender John Stones, confirmed by goal-line technology before City captain Vincent Kompany controversially avoided a red card for a studs-up challenge on Salah, with Sergio Ag\u00fcero opening the scoring for the champions in the 40th minute. Liverpool pulled themselves level in the second half, Firmino scoring after the hour mark, but San\u00e9 won the game for City just under ten minutes later. The defeat ended Liverpool's unbeaten start to the season and pulled City firmly back into the title race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 814]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0041-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, January\nThis match turned out to be Liverpool's only Premier League defeat in the 2018\u201319 season and in the 2019 calendar year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0042-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, January\nThe following fixture was again away at Wolves, this time in the 3rd round of the FA Cup. With the title challenge firmly on his mind, Klopp made nine changes to the team, with only Milner and Lovren keeping their places from the defeat at City, giving first-team debuts to academy graduates Curtis Jones and Rafa Camacho and starting Fabinho at centre-back alongside Dejan Lovren. However, barely five minutes into the game, Lovren was substituted off with a hamstring injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0042-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, January\nHis substitute, Ki-Jana Hoever (who had been signed for the academy in the summer), became the youngest-ever Liverpool player to debut for the first-team, at age 16. Wolves opened up the scoring on the 38th minute with Ra\u00fal Jim\u00e9nez firing in on the counter. Much like at the Etihad, Liverpool pulled themselves level in the second half with Origi scoring in the 51st minute. However, R\u00faben Neves fired the home-side back ahead four minutes later with a terrific 31-yard shot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0042-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, January\nThe West Midlands side could have even scored more, with Hoever making a fantastic last-ditch tackle to stop Jim\u00e9nez closing in on goal with 15 minutes left. The result saw Liverpool eliminated from the Cup in the 3rd round for the first time since 2011 and eliminated by Wolves for the second time in three seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0043-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, January\nDespite these results, there were positives for the club in the opening weeks of the month, with both Klopp and Van Dijk earning the Premier League Manager and Player of the Month awards, respectively, for December. Liverpool won all seven league games to go from second to first, while Van Dijk became the first league defender to win the award since 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0044-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, January\nThe Red's next league fixture was away at Brighton & Hove Albion, the Reds hoping to put the two previous defeats behind them. After a goal-less first half that saw the Reds fail to find a way past a stubborn Seagulls defence, a third Salah penalty in four league games in the 50th minute put the Reds ahead, a scoreline that stayed the same until full-time, sending Liverpool seven points clear at the top until the 14th at least.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0045-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, January\nFor the next game, Liverpool welcomed former manager Roy Hodgson and Crystal Palace to Anfield \u2014 the Reds aware that victory could see them again go seven points clear of City, but also aware that Palace had won three of their five previous league visits and had also won at City just four weeks previously. The game remained even until just after the half-hour mark when Palace forward Andros Townsend controversially scored with the Eagles' first shot on goal, barely a few seconds after he escaped being penalised for a hand-ball in the Palace penalty area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0045-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, January\nGoing one goal down into half-time, Liverpool came flying out in the second half with Salah scoring his 15th league goal of the season not even one minute into the half, with Firmino firing the home side into the lead just seven minutes later. However, Palace proved they were not down and out with James Tomkins pulling his side level just after the hour mark, only for Liverpool to restore their lead in the 78th minute through Salah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0045-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, January\nA second bookable offence for Milner saw the Reds down to ten men and their lead under threat before Man\u00e9 scored in added time to put the game beyond Palace. Max Meyer's first Palace goal proved to be too late as Liverpool secured their 19th league win of the season and extended their unbeaten home league run to 32 matches, the longest since going over 60 home league matches unbeaten between 1978 and 1980 in the former First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0046-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, January\nThe Reds' next game came ten days later as a result of the FA Cup fourth round being played on the weekend of 26\u201327 January, with Leicester City welcomed to Anfield. Aware that Manchester City had lost the previous day at Newcastle United, Liverpool had the chance to extend their lead at the top of the table once again but were ultimately frustrated by a resilient Foxes side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0046-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, January\nMan\u00e9 put the Reds ahead in the third minute only for Harry Maguire to head in an equalizer on the stroke of half-time just minutes after avoiding being sent off for being the last man on Man\u00e9. No goals were scored in the second half, with Leicester lucky to avoid conceding a penalty when Ke\u00efta was hauled down in the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0047-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, February\nLiverpool's first game of the month came against West Ham United at the Olympic Stadium and finished in a second successive 1\u20131 draw, with Michail Antonio scoring just before the 30-minute mark to cancel-out another Man\u00e9 opener. This allowed Manchester City to go top of the league on goal difference with wins against Arsenal and Liverpool's archrivals Everton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0048-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, February\nThe Reds then bounced back with what ultimately proved to be an easy 3\u20130 win over Bournemouth at Anfield, with Man\u00e9 and Wijnaldum scoring within ten minutes of each other in the first half and Salah adding the final goal just minutes after the start of the second half. With his goal, Salah became the first player since Luis Su\u00e1rez to score at least 20 goals in successive seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0049-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, February\nTen days later, the Reds welcomed German giants Bayern Munich to Anfield for the first leg of the last-16 Champions League knockout stage. The match finished 0\u20130 with both sides having chances but ultimately seeing the German champions resort to damage limitation for the last half-hour with Liverpool more likely to score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0050-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, February\nLiverpool's next match was away at Old Trafford to face rivals Manchester United, who had enjoyed an incredible resurgence under Norwegian interim manager Ole Gunnar Solskj\u00e6r following his appointment after the club's loss at Anfield in December. The game finished 0\u20130, the Reds having put in a poor performance against a United side that made all three substitutions in the space of 25 minutes in the first half and lucky to avoid a late loss, as a Jo\u00ebl Matip own goal was disallowed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0051-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, February\nWith scrutiny increasing both on and off the pitch for their next match, a home match against Watford, Liverpool secured their largest victory of the season with a 5\u20130 win over the Hornets. Man\u00e9 extended his impressive run of goals with a brace in the first half before Origi scored shortly after the hour mark to put the game beyond Watford. Van Dijk scored a late brace to keep the Reds one point clear of Manchester City and increase their goal difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0052-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, March\nOn 3 March, Liverpool played out a goalless draw at Everton at Goodison Park. The Reds tested Toffies goalkeeper Jordan Pickford several times in the half but ultimately failed to really bring a good save out of him. With City having won at Bournemouth the previous day, the Reds lost their lead at the top of the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0053-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, March\nThe following weekend, the Reds welcomed Burnley to Anfield, aware that only a win would be acceptable after City's win over Watford. However, the team got off to a poor start after Ashley Westwood scored directly from a corner after just six minutes, though replays revealed that Allison had been impeded by Clarets defender James Tarkowski in the build-up. Liverpool forced themselves back into the match 13 minutes later after Firmino took advantage of a fumbled shot from opposite goalkeeper Tom Heaton. Liverpool then took the lead just before the 30-minute mark through Man\u00e9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0053-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, March\nFirmino added his second goal of the match after the hour mark, again taking advantage of an error from Heaton, before Burnley pulled a second goal back in the first minute of added time through Icelandic midfielder J\u00f3hann Berg Gu\u00f0mundsson. However, Liverpool were not to be denied and deservedly won the match just two minutes later after Man\u00e9 scored his second goal of the game. The victory ensured that the Reds remained just one point behind City with eight matches to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0054-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, March\nThe next match saw Liverpool travel to Germany and the Allianz Arena for the second leg of their Champions League last-16 match against Bayern Munich. After an even 25-minute opening period, the Reds opened the scoring through Man\u00e9, who continued his fine scoring form with a fantastic finish that saw him manage to sidestep goalkeeper Manuel Neuer before firing into the goal. However, the German side fought back, levelling the score 13 minutes later through a Matip own goal, though the Reds would still be going through on away goals scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0054-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, March\nDespite Bayern increasing the pressure in the second half, it was Liverpool who added to their lead through a Van Dijk header just before the 70-minute mark. Ten minutes later, Man\u00e9 scored his second goal of the night to resolve the tie and send the Reds into the quarter-finals for the second-straight year and ensuring they would join fellow English sides Manchester City, Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur in the draw. Just days later, the draw was made for both the quarter-finals and the semi-finals, with Liverpool being drawn with Porto for the second season running with the possibility of facing either Manchester United or Barcelona in the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0055-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, March\nIn their final match before the international break, the Reds travelled back down to London to face strugglers Fulham at Craven Cottage, a match that saw the Merseyside club return to the top of the table with a 2\u20131 win. Despite putting in a poor performance and being pegged back to 1\u20131 with 15 minutes to play \u2014 Ryan Babel scoring against his former club after a mix-up between Allison and Van Dijk \u2014 a 26th-minute goal from Man\u00e9 and then an 81st-minute penalty from Milner ensured all three points for the Reds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0056-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, March\nThe Reds' last match of the month saw them welcome Tottenham at Anfield, aware that the title race was really heating up and that any dropped points could see the club miss out once again on their first Premier League title. After an even start, Firmino ended his goalless run by smashing in a shot in the 16th minute to give his side the lead. Tottenham deservedly equalised in the 70th minute through Lucas Moura after a strong second half up to that point and looked set to earn a point. However, Belgian defender Toby Alderweireld inadvertently scored an own goal in the 90th minute to ensure Liverpool earned the win. The Reds went two points clear entering the last two months of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0057-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, April\nFor their first match of the penultimate month of the season, Liverpool travelled to St Mary's Stadium on the south-coast to face Southampton, who had largely picked up form since the reverse match in September in part thanks to the appointment of former RB Leipzig manager Ralph Hasenhuttl. The Saints scored first, with Shane Long netting in the ninth minute to put the Reds under pressure. However, their lead lasted for less than 30 minutes after Ke\u00efta scored his first Liverpool goal to pull the Merseyside club level, despite Salah appearing to be offside in the build-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0057-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, April\nDespite attempts from Southampton to bring themselves back into the match, goals from Salah and Henderson \u2014 the former ending a nine-game drought and the latter scoring his first goal of the season \u2014 ultimately consigned the Saints to defeat and ensured Liverpool once again returned to the top of the table, albeit with Manchester City yet again having a game in hand. The result also mathematically ensured a top-four finish for the Reds and confirmed their place in the 2019\u201320 UEFA Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0058-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, April\nThe Reds' next match came four days later as they hosted Porto in the first leg of their Champions League quarter-final draw. The result of the match was a comfortable 2\u20130 win for Liverpool, with Ke\u00efta scoring his second goal for the club in as many matches after just five minutes and Firmino doubling the lead just before the half-hour mark to give the side the advantage in the tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0059-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, April\nLiverpool then followed this up with arguably their toughest remaining league match of the season as they welcomed Chelsea to Anfield one day before the 30th anniversary of the Hillsborough disaster. After City comfortably won at Crystal Palace in the earlier Sunday kick-off, the pressure was on the home side to return to the top of the table against a Chelsea side who had not lost in any competition at Anfield since 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0059-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, April\nAfter a goal-less first half, Liverpool came firing out in the second and scored two quick-fire goals in succession, Man\u00e9 heading the first goal in on the 51st minute mark and then Salah \u2014 just days after it had emerged that Chelsea fans in Prague had been recorded singing a racially discriminatory song about the Egyptian forward \u2014 scoring the second two minutes later, scoring a stunning goal into the top left corner of the net from 25 yards out. The scoreline remained the same until the final whistle, Chelsea going close twice through Eden Hazard but being unable to find the back of the net. The result once again saw Liverpool return to the top of the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0060-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, April\nThe next match saw the Reds travel to Portugal for the second leg of their Champions League tie with Porto. Despite making a slow start and having to weather several Porto attacks, the team took the lead in the 28th minute through a Man\u00e9 strike that appeared offside but was finally given by VAR. Salah scored the second goal in the second half only for defender \u00c9der Milit\u00e3o to score for the home side just a couple of moments later. However, the match was finally put to bed by two headers, the first from Firmino and the second from Van Dijk, sending Liverpool into the semi-finals for the second season running to face Barcelona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0061-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, April\nLiverpool's next match fell on Easter Sunday as they travelled to Wales to face Cardiff City, who had seen their battle to avoid relegation rejuvenated with an impressive away victory in their previous match which they won 2\u20130 away to Brighton & Hove Albion. After a goal-less first half that saw the Bluebirds deal with the attacking threat from the Reds very well, the away side finally got the goal they needed, Wijnaldum scoring with a wonderful finish in the 56th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0061-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, April\nCardiff very nearly equalized after seven minutes only for captain Sean Morrison to miscue his header and send the ball wide. With less than ten minutes to play, Morrison proceeded to concede a penalty by holding onto Salah in the penalty area for a good couple of seconds, a penalty that Milner calmly converted. The match finished 2\u20130 to Liverpool, again sending them to the top of the table but for only a couple of days, with Manchester City winning 2\u20130 in the Manchester derby at Old Trafford on 24 April, two days before Liverpool's home match against already-relegated Huddersfield Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0062-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, April\nApril came to an end on a high as Liverpool hosted already-relegated Huddersfield at Anfield, preparing for the first leg of their Champions League semi-final tie with a comfortable 5\u20130 win. Ke\u00efta started the scoring after just 15 seconds by taking advantage of a Huddersfield mishap, with Man\u00e9 scoring the second goal in the 23rd minute and Salah securing the third goal in added time at the end of the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0062-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, April\nOnly two goals were scored in the second hand, both Man\u00e9 and Salah scoring their second goals of the match in the 55th and 82nd minute respectively, but it gave the Reds their 16th home league win of the season and extended their unbeaten Anfield league run to 39 matches. The squad received a further boost after midfielder Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain came on as a substitute in the second half after over a year out of play with a serious knee injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0063-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, May\nThe Reds opened the final month of the season away at the Camp Nou to Barcelona on 1 May in the first leg of the Champions League semi-finals. In an initially close first 25 minutes, former Liverpool player Luis Su\u00e1rez opened the scoring. The second half was dominated with continued attacking pressure from Liverpool, but no goals came until Lionel Messi scored from close range after Su\u00e1rez had hit the bar. Only minutes later, Messi scored once again, this time a spectacular 30-yard free kick, as Barcelona completed a 3\u20130 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0064-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, May\nLiverpool's next match was three days later on 4 May, away against Newcastle United in the Premier League. The Reds opened the scoring with a goal from Van Dijk, only for Christian Atsu to level the match a few minutes later, tapping home the rebound after Alexander-Arnold appeared to handle Salom\u00f3n Rond\u00f3n's shot on the goal-line. A goal from Salah just several minutes later restored their lead as the first half drew to a conclusion. Not long after the second half began, Salom\u00f3n Rond\u00f3n scored to bring the match level. Only minutes before the final whistle, substitute Origi headed in Shaqiri's free-kick as the Reds won 3\u20132, ensuring that the Premier League title race would go down to the final match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0065-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, May\nThree days later, Liverpool faced Barcelona in the second leg of the Champions League semi-finals. Trailing with a 3\u20130 deficit and having had both Firmino and Salah injured prior to the game, many pundits and general media believed that it was highly unlikely for Liverpool to overturn the result. The Reds took the lead through Origi within a few minutes into the match and the score stayed as such once the first half concluded. In the second half, substitute Wijnaldum scored twice within the space of 122 seconds to even the tie. Ten minutes before the final whistle, Origi struck again following a quickly taken corner from Alexander-Arnold, completely overturning the tie into the Reds' favour as Liverpool won 4\u20130 to advance into their second successive Champions League Final and their third overall European final under Klopp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 885]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0066-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, May\nLiverpool's final league match of the season was on 12 May against Wolverhampton Wanderers. As title rivals Manchester City were playing at the same time against Brighton & Hove Albion, the Reds required a miracle in order to claim the league title. However, despite winning 2\u20130 with both goals from Man\u00e9, they ultimately finished in second place as City easily won their match 4\u20131, with the Reds being just one point away from winning their first league title in 29 years. Liverpool's total of 97 points was the highest number of points a second-placed team had ever finished with in the Premier League and in any of Europe's top league flights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0067-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, June\nOn 1 June, in their second successive Champions League Final, Liverpool defeated fellow English club Tottenham Hotspur 2\u20130 to secure a sixth European Cup victory and the club's first since 2005. Just over a minute in Liverpool were awarded a penalty after Moussa Sissoko was judged to have handled Man\u00e9's cross. Salah then scored from the spot to give the Reds the lead after just two minutes. Liverpool had some good chances to score, with Alexander-Arnold and Milner shooting just wide of the post in either half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0067-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Season review, June\nAt the other end Alisson made two great saves, notably to deny Christian Eriksen after the latters free-kick was pushed away by the Liverpool keeper. Then with just three minutes left, a poorly cleared corner found Origi just inside the penalty-area and he scored into the bottom right corner of the net to win the trophy for Klopp's team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0068-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Friendlies\nLiverpool revealed pre-season fixtures against Chester, Tranmere Rovers, Bury, Blackburn Rovers, Napoli and Torino. They also competed in the International Champions Cup against Borussia Dortmund, Manchester City and Manchester United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0069-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Competitions, Premier League, Matches\nOn 14 June 2018, the Premier League fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0070-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0071-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nThe third round draw was made on 30 August 2018 by David Seaman and Joleon Lescott.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0072-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Competitions, UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nOn 30 August 2018, the group stage draw was made live from Monaco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 79], "content_span": [80, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0073-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Competitions, UEFA Champions League, Knockout phase\nThe draw for the round of 16 was held on 17 December 2018, 12:00 CET, at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 82], "content_span": [83, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0074-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Competitions, UEFA Champions League, Knockout phase\nThe draw for the quarter-finals was held on 15 March 2019, 12:00 CET, at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 82], "content_span": [83, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0075-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Squad statistics, Appearances\nPlayers with no appearances are not included on the list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0076-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Squad statistics, Assists\nIncludes all competitive matches. Not all goals have an assist. Assists judged by WhoScored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0077-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Awards, End-of-season club awards\nDue to Liverpool's busy schedule the club decided not to hold their annual Players' Awards. The 2019 Liverpool F.C. Players\u2019 Award winners were announced on 27 May after an online vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0078-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Awards, Liverpool Standard Chartered Player of the Month award\nAwarded monthly to the player that was chosen by fans voting on", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 93], "content_span": [94, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0079-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Awards, Other awards\nMohamed Salah and Sadio Man\u00e9 shared the Premier League Golden Boot with Arsenal's Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, scoring 22 league goals apiece; goalkeeper Alisson kept 21 clean sheets to win the Premier League Golden Glove; and four Liverpool players were included in the PFA Team of the Year, including Virgil van Dijk, who won both the PFA Players' Player of the Year and Premier League Player of the Season awards. Four Liverpool players were in the Ballon d'Or top-seven. Van Dijk was named as runner-up, Man\u00e9 placed fourth, Salah fifth and Alisson seventh, while Alisson also won the inaugural Yashin Trophy, presented to the best performing goalkeeper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285730-0080-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Liverpool F.C. season, Awards, Other awards\nAt The Best FIFA Football Awards, Van Dijk and Alisson were named in the FIFA FIFPro Men's World XI, with Alisson being named as The Best FIFA Men's Goalkeeper, Van Dijk finishing as runner-up for The Best FIFA Men's Player and manager J\u00fcrgen Klopp being named as The Best FIFA Men's Coach. At the UEFA Club Football Awards, Alisson was named as the UEFA Goalkeeper of the Season, and Van Dijk was named as the UEFA Defender of the Season and awarded the UEFA Men's Player of the Year Award. Six Liverpool players featured in the 20-man UEFA Squad of the Season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285731-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Livingston F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the club's first season of play back in the top tier of Scottish football since 2006, having been promoted via the Premiership play-off from the Scottish Championship, at the end of the previous season. Livingston also competed in the League and Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285731-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Livingston F.C. season, Summary, Management\nHaving led the club to consecutive promotions manager David Hopkin departed the club during the close season on 31 May 2018, having declined the offer of a new contract. First team coach David Martindale took charge of team affairs in the interim. On 30 June 2018, former Rangers and Scotland striker Kenny Miller was appointed as player-manager on a two-year contract. Livingston marked his first managerial appointment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285731-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Livingston F.C. season, Summary, Management\nOn 20 August 2018, after just seven games Miller parted company with Livingston. The club wished Miller to take up a full time managers role, rather than the dual role he was currently undertaking and he wished to continue his career as a footballer. Assistant manager David Martindale took over team affairs in the interim, with Gary Holt being appointed as Head Coach three days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285731-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Livingston F.C. season, First team player statistics, Appearances\nDuring the 2018\u201319 season, Livingston used thirty three players in competitive games. The table below shows the number of appearances and goals scored by each player. Scott Pittman and Declan Gallagher started every match of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 73], "content_span": [74, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285731-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Livingston F.C. season, First team player statistics, Disciplinary record\nDuring the 2018\u201319 season, Livingston players were issued with Sixty-one yellow cards and four red. The table below shows the number of cards and type shown to each player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 81], "content_span": [82, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285732-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Logan Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Logan Cup was the 25th edition of the Logan Cup, a first-class cricket competition in Zimbabwe, that started on 3 December 2018. The tournament featured four teams, instead of the five that took part in the previous edition, with the Rising Stars being disbanded. The other change to the 2018\u201319 tournament was that it was being played across six rounds, instead of ten, as per previous years. Mountaineers were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285732-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Logan Cup\nIn January 2019, the matches in the third round of fixtures were both called off, following fuel protests taking place in the country. In February 2019, Mountaineers retained their title, with a match left to play, after they beat Mashonaland Eagles by ten wickets. It was their third consecutive title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285733-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Long Beach State 49ers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Long Beach State 49ers men's basketball team represented California State University, Long Beach in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The 49ers, led by twelfth-year head coach Dan Monson, competed in the Walter Pyramid. Long Beach State was a member of the Big West Conference, and participated in their 50th consecutive season in that league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285733-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Long Beach State 49ers men's basketball team, Before the season\nThe 49ers finished the season 15\u201318 overall, and 9\u20137 in the conference. During the season, the 49ers participated in the AdvoCare Invitational, which was held in Morgantown, West Virginia and Lake Buena Vista, Florida. Long Beach State earned 6th place by defeating Oregon State and losing to Missouri as well as Nebraska. Prior to the tournament, Long Beach State lost in a friendly match at West Virginia. In the postseason, Long Beach State lost to Cal State Fullerton in the quarterfinals of the 2018 Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament in Anaheim, California.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 71], "content_span": [72, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285733-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Long Beach State 49ers men's basketball team, Before the season\nWithin a few days of the elimination, Dan Monson accepted a five-year contract extension (through the 2022\u201323 school year) as a result of his past success at Long Beach State. Monson was rehired for multiple reasons, ranging from running the program primarily on sport ethics to his \"on the court\" results. To this season, Monson led the program to a Big West winning record each season since 2010\u201311 and participated in the NCAA Tournament once.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 71], "content_span": [72, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285733-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Long Beach State 49ers men's basketball team, Before the season\nGreg Floyd Jr. was a four-star recruit who turned down twenty-four other NCAA Division I schools for Long Beach State on September 7, 2016. Floyd was the highest rated incoming 49er since Jacob Thomas and Shelton Boykin, who were both a part of the recruiting class of 2010. On April 9, 2018, the Los Angeles Ballers announced that Floyd was ineligible [through the NCAA] to compete at Long Beach State due to scholastic probation at his former school. As a result, Floyd is currently an athlete for the Ballers, and the NCAA withdrew his commitment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 71], "content_span": [72, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285733-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Long Beach State 49ers men's basketball team, Before the season\nBy July 17, 2018, Long Beach State redesigned the court by emphasizing on the color black, removing The Beach motto for the main athletics logo, and installing darker wood. However, some of the former features of the previous court design still remain in a different fashion, such as the social media hashtags #GoBeach and #LBNation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 71], "content_span": [72, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285734-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Longwood Lancers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Longwood Lancers men's basketball team represented Longwood University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They were led by head coach Griff Aldrich, in his first season, and played their home games at Willett Hall in Farmville, Virginia as members of the Big South Conference. They finished the season 16\u201318, 5\u201311 in Big South play to finish in ninth place. They lost in the first round of the Big South Tournament to Hampton. They were invited to the College Basketball Invitational, their first ever Division I postseason tournament, where they defeated Southern Miss in the first round before losing in the quarterfinals to DePaul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285734-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Longwood Lancers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe 2017\u201318 Lancers finished the season 7\u201326, 3\u201315 in Big South play to finish in last place. They defeated High Point in the first round of the Big South Tournament to advance to the quarterfinals where they lost to Radford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285734-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Longwood Lancers men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn March 2, 2018, head coach Jayson Gee was fired. He finished at Longwood with a five-year record of 42\u2013120. On March 22, the school hired UMBC assistant Griff Aldrich as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285735-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lori FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Lori FC's first season in the Armenian Premier League since their reestablishment in March 2017. They finished the season 5th in the league and were runners up to Alashkert in the Armenian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285735-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lori FC season, Season events\nOn 13 December 2018, Armen Adamyan resigned as manager, with Artur Petrosyan being appointed as his successor on 25 December 2018. On 12 May, Petrosyan resigned with Vahe Gevorgyan being appointed as Caretaker Manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285735-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lori FC season, Season events\nAhead of Lori's Armenian Cup semifinal second leg on 22 April, Banants owner, Jevan Cheloian, removed his team from the pitch prior to kick-off in protest of the appointment of Gevorg Eghoyan as referee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285735-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lori FC season, Squad, Out on loan\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285736-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Los Angeles Clippers season\nThe 2018\u201319 Los Angeles Clippers season was the 49th season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA), their 41st season in Southern California, and their 35th season in Los Angeles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285736-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Los Angeles Clippers season\nFor the first time since the 2014\u201315 season, Austin Rivers was not on the roster following a trade to the Washington Wizards in exchange for Marcin Gortat, ending the father-son duo with his father, Doc Rivers. Additionally, longtime center DeAndre Jordan opted out of his contract with the Clippers, and became a free agent. On July 6, 2018, he signed a one-year deal with the Dallas Mavericks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285736-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Los Angeles Clippers season\nIn their first full season without stars Chris Paul, Blake Griffin, and DeAndre Jordan, the Clippers still produced a winning season by March 19, and clinched a playoff berth on March 26, 2019, following a victory over the Minnesota Timberwolves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285736-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Los Angeles Clippers season\nIn the playoffs, the Clippers faced the defending two-time NBA champion Golden State Warriors in the First Round, losing in six games. The two teams previously met in the 2014 playoffs, in which the Clippers won in seven games amidst a scandal surrounding former owner Donald Sterling. They were the first team since the 2016 playoffs to beat the Warriors twice on the road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285736-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Los Angeles Clippers season\nIn Game 2 of the First Round, the Clippers set an NBA record for the largest comeback in playoff history, overcoming a 31-point deficit in the third quarter, en route to defeating the Warriors 135\u2013131 to tie the series 1\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285736-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Los Angeles Clippers season, Player statistics, Regular season\nAfter all games. \u2021Waived during the season\u2020Traded during the season\u2260Acquired during the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285737-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Los Angeles Kings season\nThe 2018\u201319 Los Angeles Kings season was the 52nd season (51st season of play) for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on June 5, 1967. On March 18, 2019, the Kings were eliminated from playoff contention, and missed the playoffs for the third time in five seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285737-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Los Angeles Kings season, Schedule and results, Preseason\nNotes: Indicates split-squad. Game was played at Vivint Smart Home Arena in Salt Lake City, Utah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285737-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Los Angeles Kings season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was released on June 21, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285737-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Los Angeles Kings season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nLegend:\u00a0\u00a0Win (2 points)\u00a0\u00a0Loss (0 points)\u00a0\u00a0Overtime/shootout loss (1 point)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285737-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Los Angeles Kings season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Kings. Stats reflect time with the Kings only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Kings only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285737-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Los Angeles Kings season, Transactions\nThe Kings have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285737-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Los Angeles Kings season, Draft picks\nBelow are the Los Angeles Kings' selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285738-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Los Angeles Lakers season\nThe 2018\u201319 Los Angeles Lakers season was the franchise's 71st season, its 70th season in the National Basketball Association (NBA), and its 59th in Los Angeles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285738-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Los Angeles Lakers season\nFollowing the signing of NBA superstar and 3-time champion LeBron James on July 1, 2018, the Lakers hoped to finish with a winning record and playoff appearance for the first time since the 2012\u201313 season. However, after an improved 20\u201314 start to the season, several injuries accumulated throughout the season including James, Rajon Rondo, Lonzo Ball, and Brandon Ingram, and the Lakers fell below .500 by the All-Star break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285738-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Los Angeles Lakers season\nBy March, the Lakers were eliminated from playoff contention, extending the team's postseason drought to a franchise record six seasons, and a sixth straight losing season, even after improving from their 2017\u201318 campaign by two games. It is the first time James missed the playoffs since 2005 and first time he did not appear in the NBA Finals since 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285738-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Los Angeles Lakers season\nOn April 9, the conclusion of the Lakers' season, Magic Johnson stepped down as president of basketball operations. Three days later, Luke Walton and the team agreed to part ways.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285738-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Los Angeles Lakers season, Player statistics\nAfter all games. \u2021Waived during the season\u2020Traded during the season\u2260Acquired during the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285738-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Los Angeles Lakers season, Transactions, Signing of LeBron James\nOn July 9, 2018, superstar LeBron James signed a four-year, $154 million contract with the Lakers after playing a second stint with his hometown Cleveland Cavaliers. He led the team to their first championship title in 2016, and led them to the NBA Finals 4 other times (2007, 2015, 2017, and 2018). This marked his second time leaving the Cavs, after controversially doing so in 2010 to join the Miami Heat, where he led the team to 4 NBA Finals appearances, winning back-to-back in 2012 and 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285738-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Los Angeles Lakers season, Transactions, Signing of LeBron James\nThe signing also briefly intensified the Celtics\u2013Lakers rivalry, as his former Cavs teammate Kyrie Irving was traded to the Boston Celtics the year before and when former Celtics star Rajon Rondo joined LeBron in Los Angeles. Irving played 2 seasons for the Celtics before signing with the Brooklyn Nets during the 2019 offseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285739-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Louisiana Ragin' Cajuns men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Louisiana Ragin' Cajuns men's basketball team represented the University of Louisiana at Lafayette during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Ragin' Cajuns were led by ninth-year head coach Bob Marlin and played their home games at the Cajundome as members of the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 19\u201313 overall, 10\u20138 in Sun Belt play to finish in fifth place. As the No. 5 seed in the Sun Belt Tournament, they lost in the second round to South Alabama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285739-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Louisiana Ragin' Cajuns men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Ragin' Cajuns finished the 2017\u201318 season 27\u20137, 16\u20132 in Sun Belt play to win the Sun Belt regular season championship. The conference championship was the school's first since first regular-season title since sharing the 2000 title and its first outright title since joining the conference in 1991. They defeated Texas State in the quarterfinals of the Sun Belt Tournament before losing in the semifinals to UT Arlington. As a regular season conference champion who failed to win their conference tournament, they received an automatic bid to the National Invitation Tournament where they lost in the first round to LSU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285740-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Louisiana Ragin' Cajuns women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Louisiana Ragin' Cajuns women's basketball team represents the University of Louisiana at Lafayette during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Ragin' Cajuns are led by seventh-year head coach Garry Brodhead and play all home games at the Cajundome along with the Louisiana Ragin' Cajuns men's basketball team. They were members in the Sun Belt Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285740-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Louisiana Ragin' Cajuns women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Ragin' Cajuns finished the 2017\u201318 season 17-16, 10-8 in Sun Belt play to finish in a three-way tie for sixth place in the conference. They made it to the 2017-18 Sun Belt Conference Women's Basketball semifinal game after defeating the Georgia Southern Eagles 88-81 in 3 overtimes and the UT Arlington Mavericks 54-48. They lost in heartbreaking fashion against the Texas State Bobcats in the semifinals by the score of 56-62. The Ragin' Cajuns did not participate in post-season play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 72], "content_span": [73, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285741-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Louisiana Tech Bulldogs basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Louisiana Tech Bulldogs basketball team represented Louisiana Tech University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bulldogs, led by fourth-year head coach Eric Konkol, played their home games at the Thomas Assembly Center in Ruston, Louisiana as members of Conference USA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285741-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Louisiana Tech Bulldogs basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bulldogs finished the 2017\u201318 season 17\u201316, 7\u201311 in C-USA play to finish in a tie for ninth place. As the No. 10 seed in the C-USA Tournament, they defeated North Texas before losing to Old Dominion in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285742-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Louisiana Tech Lady Techsters basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Louisiana Tech Lady Techsters basketball team represented Louisiana Tech University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Lady Techsters, led by third year co-head coaches Brooke Stoehr and Scott Stoehr, played their home games at Thomas Assembly Center and were members of Conference USA. They finished the season 14\u201316, 6\u201310 in C-USA play to finish in tenth place. They lost in the first round of the C-USA Women's Tournament to Charlotte.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285743-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Louisiana\u2013Monroe Warhawks men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Louisiana\u2013Monroe Warhawks men's basketball team represents the University of Louisiana at Monroe in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Warhawks, led by ninth-year head coach Keith Richard, play their home games at Fant\u2013Ewing Coliseum as members of the Sun Belt Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285743-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Louisiana\u2013Monroe Warhawks men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Warhawks finished the 2017\u201318 season 16\u201316, 9\u20139 in Sun Belt play to finish in a tie for fifth place. They defeated Arkansas State in the first round of the Sun Belt Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Georgia Southern. They received an invitation to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they lost in the first round to Austin Peay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 72], "content_span": [73, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285744-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Louisiana\u2013Monroe Warhawks women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Louisiana\u2013Monroe women's basketball team represents University of Louisiana at Monroe in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Warhawks, led by fifth year head coach Jeff Dow, play their home games at Fant\u2013Ewing Coliseum and were members of the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 10\u201319, 4\u201314 in Sun Belt play to finish in eleventh place. They failed to qualify for the Sun Belt Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285744-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Louisiana\u2013Monroe Warhawks women's basketball team\nOn February 13, Jeff Dow will not return next season. He finish at Louisiana\u2013Monroe with a 5-year record of 44\u2013103.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285745-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Louisville Cardinals men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Louisville Cardinals men's basketball team represented the University of Louisville during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team played its home games on Denny Crum Court at the KFC Yum! Center in downtown Louisville, Kentucky as members of the Atlantic Coast Conference. They were led by first-year head coach Chris Mack who was hired on March 27, 2018 after it was announced interim coach David Padgett would not be retained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285745-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Louisville Cardinals men's basketball team\nThey lost to Minnesota in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285745-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Louisville Cardinals men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Cardinals finished the 2017\u201318 season with a record of 22\u201314, 9\u20139 in ACC play, finishing in a tie for 8th with Florida State, who they defeated in the second round of the ACC Tournament before losing to Virginia in the quarterfinals. They received an invitation to the NIT, where they defeated Northern Kentucky in the first round and Middle Tennessee in the second round before being defeated in the quarterfinals by Mississippi State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285746-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Louisville Cardinals women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Louisville Cardinals women's basketball team represented the University of Louisville during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Cardinals, led by 12th-year head coach Jeff Walz, played their home games at the KFC Yum! Center in their fifth year in the Atlantic Coast Conference. They finished the season 32\u20134, 14\u20132 in ACC play to win a share of the regular season title. They advanced to the championship game of the ACC Women's Tournament where they lost to Notre Dame. They received the at-large bid to the NCAA Women's Tournament as a No. 1 seed in the Albany region where they defeated Robert Morris and Michigan in the first and second rounds, Oregon State in the sweet sixteen before losing to Connecticut in the elite eight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 820]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285746-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Louisville Cardinals women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Cardinals finished the 2017\u201318 season at 36\u20133, 15\u20131 in ACC play to finish in a tie for first place. They won the ACC Women's Tournament. They received an automatic bid for the NCAA Women's Tournament as a number one seed. In the tournament, they advanced to the Final Four where they lost to Mississippi State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285746-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Louisville Cardinals women's basketball team, Rankings\nCoaches did not release a Week 2 poll and AP does not release a final poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285747-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lowland Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 Scottish Lowland Football League (known as the Geosonic Lowland League for sponsorship reasons) was the 6th season of the Lowland Football League, the fifth tier of the Scottish football pyramid system. The season began on 28 July 2018 and ended on 20 April 2019. Spartans were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285747-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lowland Football League\nEast of Scotland League champions Kelty Hearts joined the league after becoming the first club to gain promotion via the Lowland League play-off, thanks to their win against South of Scotland League winners Threave Rovers at the end of the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285747-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lowland Football League\nSelkirk resigned at the end of August after fulfilling three league games, reducing the number of clubs to 15. Their league defeats to East Kilbride (10\u20130), Civil Service Strollers (0\u20135) and Gretna 2008 (0\u20138) were expunged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285747-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lowland Football League\nEast Kilbride won their second league title on 26 March 2019 thanks to a 2\u20131 win over Spartans at K-Park, with three matches still to play. They faced the winners of the 2018\u201319 Highland Football League (Cove Rangers) in the Pyramid play-off, losing 5-1 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285747-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lowland Football League, Teams\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285747-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lowland Football League, Lowland League play-off\nA play-off was due to take place between the winners of the 2018\u201319 East of Scotland Football League and the 2018\u201319 South of Scotland Football League. However South of Scotland League champions Stranraer reserves were ineligible for promotion due to being a reserve team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285747-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Lowland Football League, Lowland League play-off\nInitially, the winners of the East of Scotland League (Bonnyrigg Rose Athletic) did not meet the required licensing criteria for promotion at the end of the season. However they were eventually awarded their SFA licence on 14 June 2019 and were confirmed as promoted to the 2019\u201320 Lowland Football League on the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285748-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Loyola Greyhounds men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Loyola Greyhounds men's basketball team represented Loyola University Maryland during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Greyhounds, led by first-year head coach Tavaras Hardy, played their home games at Reitz Arena in Baltimore, Maryland as members of the Patriot League. They finished the season 11\u201321, 7\u201311 in Patriot League play to finish in a tie for seventh place. As the No. 9 seed in the Patriot League Tournament, they lost Boston University in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285748-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Loyola Greyhounds men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Greyhounds finished the 2017\u201318 season 9\u201322, 6\u201312 in Patriot League play to finish in a tie for eighth place. They defeated Army in the first round of the Patriot League Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Bucknell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285748-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Loyola Greyhounds men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn March 8, 2018, the school announced G. G. Smith had resigned as head coach. He finished at Loyola with a five-year record of 56\u201398. On March 28, the Greyhounds hired Georgia Tech assistant coach Tavaras Hardy for the head coaching job.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285749-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Loyola Greyhounds women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Loyola Greyhounds women's basketball team represents Loyola University Maryland during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Greyhounds, led by thirteenth year head coach Joe Logan, play their home games at Reitz Arena and were members of the Patriot League. They finished the season 7\u201324, 5\u201313 in Patriot League play to finish in a tie for eighth place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the Patriot League Women's Tournament where they lost to Bucknell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285750-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Loyola Marymount Lions men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Loyola Marymount Lions men's basketball team represents Loyola Marymount University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Lions are led by fifth-year head coach Mike Dunlap. They play their home games at Gersten Pavilion in Los Angeles, California as members of the West Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285750-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Loyola Marymount Lions men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Lions finished the 2017\u201318 season finished the season 11\u201320, 5\u201313 in WCC play to finish in eighth place. They defeated Portland in the first round of the WCC Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Gonzaga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285751-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Loyola Marymount Lions women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Loyola Marymount Lions women's basketball team represents Loyola Marymount University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Lions, led by seventh year head coach Charity Elliott, play their homes games at the Gersten Pavilion and were members of the West Coast Conference. They finished the season 18\u201315, 10\u20138 in WCC play to finish in a tie for fifth place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the WCC Women's Tournament where they lost to Saint Mary's. They received an at-large bid to the WNIT which was their first postseason tournament since 2004, where they lost to Idaho in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285752-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Loyola Ramblers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Loyola Ramblers men's basketball team represented Loyola University Chicago during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Ramblers, led by seventh-year head coach Porter Moser, played their home games at the Joseph J. Gentile Arena in Chicago, Illinois. They were members of the Missouri Valley Conference. They finished the season 20\u201314, 12\u20136 in MVC play to earn a share of the MVC regular season championship. As the No. 1 seed in the MVC Tournament, they beat Valparaiso before losing to Bradley in the semifinals. As a regular season conference champion who did not win their tournament championship, the Ramblers received an automatic bid to the National Invitation Tournament as the No. 7 seed in the TCU bracket. There they lost in the first round to Creighton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 844]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285752-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Loyola Ramblers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Ramblers finished the 2017\u201318 season 32\u20136, 15\u20133 in MVC play with a win against Evansville on February 18, 2018, Loyola clinched at least a share of its first-ever Missouri Valley Conference regular season championship. With a win over Southern Illinois on February 21, the Ramblers clinched the outright MVC championship. The Ramblers defeated Northern Iowa, Bradley, and Illinois State to win the MVC Tournament. As a result, the Ramblers received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. As the No. 11 seed in the South Region, they upset No. 6-seeded Miami (FL) on a last second three-pointer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285752-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Loyola Ramblers men's basketball team, Previous season\nIn the Second Round, they defeated No. 3-seeded Tennessee to earn the school's first trip to the Sweet Sixteen since 1985. They then defeated Nevada in the Sweet Sixteen and Kansas State in the Elite Eight to advance to the Final Four for the first time since 1963. Their Cinderella run ended with loss to Michigan in the national semifinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285753-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Loyola Ramblers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Loyola Ramblers women's basketball team represents Loyola University Chicago during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Ramblers, led by third year head coach Kate Achter, play their home games at the Joseph J. Gentile Arena and were members of the Missouri Valley Conference. They finished the season 13\u201318, 6\u201312 in MVC play to finish in seventh place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the Missouri Valley Women's Tournament where they lost to Missouri State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285754-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luge World Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Luge World Cup was a multi race tournament over a season for Luge, organised by the FIL. The season started on 24 November 2018 in Innsbruck, Austria, and finished 24 February 2019 in Sochi, Russia..", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 133rd in the history of Luton Town Football Club, a professional association football club based in Luton, Bedfordshire, England. Their promotion from League Two in 2017\u201318 meant it was the club's first season in League One after a 10-year absence and 93rd season in the English Football League. The season ran from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Background and pre-season\nThe 2017\u201318 season was Nathan Jones' second full season as manager of Luton Town, having been appointed in January 2016. Luton began the season with an 8\u20132 victory over Yeovil Town, the club's biggest Football League victory since December 1996. Inconsistent results in their first six league matches left the club in mid-table, but seven wins from their next nine league matches, including a 7\u20131 win over Stevenage, saw Luton return to the top of the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Background and pre-season\nThe club's first defeat in 10 league matches meant they lost first place once more, but they soon regained it three matches later, during which time they became the first team in the history of the Football League to score seven or more goals on three occasions before Christmas, after defeating Cambridge United 7\u20130. By early December, Luton were the highest-scoring team in the country with 63 goals in all competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0001-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Background and pre-season\nHowever, their FA Cup third round exit at the hands of Newcastle United in January was followed up with a run of four wins from 12 league matches, which meant they relinquished first position once again in March. Luton finished the season in second place and were promoted to League One after a 10-year absence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, August\nLuton started the season with a 1\u20130 away defeat to Portsmouth on their return to League One, with Jamal Lowe scoring the winning goal in the 16th minute. The team recorded their first point of the season after drawing 1\u20131 at home to Sunderland, who took the lead shortly before half-time through Josh Maja with a shot into the bottom corner, before Matty Pearson equalised on 68 minutes from Alan Sheehan's cross.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, August\nThis was followed by a 1\u20130 away defeat to West Bromwich Albion in the first round of the EFL Cup, after Oliver Burke scored for the Championship team in the 62nd minute. Luton were beaten 3\u20131 away to Peterborough United, who were three goals up by half-time with two goals from Jason Cummings and one from Siriki Demb\u00e9l\u00e9, before Danny Hylton scored a consolation goal for Luton from Andrew Shinnie's cross 12 minutes from time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0002-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, August\nTheir first win of the season came after a 2\u20130 home victory over Southend United, in which Elliot Lee scored from seven yards to give Luton a second-minute lead after a shot from Pelly Ruddock Mpanzu deflected into his path. Hylton finished the scoring on 33 minutes with a penalty after Lee was fouled by Elvis Bwomono in the penalty area. Luton recorded a second successive home win after beating Shrewsbury Town 3\u20132, the away team taking the lead through a 23rd-minute penalty scored by Shaun Whalley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0002-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, August\nJorge Grant levelled the score early into the second half with a free kick from 20 yards, before Lee Angol restored Shrewsbury's lead 15 minutes later after capitalising on a mistake by James Shea. Jack Stacey equalised from close range in the 73rd minute, and Lee scored the winning goal with a deflected 22-yard free kick three minutes later. Leeds United midfielder Eunan O'Kane was signed on loan until 10 January 2019, while Jake Jervis and Luke Gambin were loaned to AFC Wimbledon and Crawley Town respectively until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, September\nLuton went behind away to Wycombe Wanderers when Joe Jacobson scored a penalty in the 15th minute, who had another penalty saved by Shea in the second half, before Pearson equalised with a 68th-minute header, meaning the match ended in a 1\u20131 draw. Forward Josh Neufville signed a two-year professional contract with the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, September\nAaron Jarvis scored with a powerful shot into the bottom corner from six yards to give Luton a fifth-minute lead at home to Brighton & Hove Albion U21 in their opening EFL Trophy group stage match, and Grant scored on 79 minutes with a deflected shot to make the score 2\u20130. However, Brighton scored a consolation goal through Aaron Connolly with a header in the 86th minute, and the match finished as a 2\u20131 victory. Assistant manager Paul Hart was released from his contract to allow him to join Notts County as technical director.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0003-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, September\nA 2\u20131 defeat away to Doncaster Rovers saw Luton's four-match unbeaten run come to an end, with the home team taking the lead in the sixth minute through Matty Blair. Lee equalised with a header shortly before half-time, and Ben Whiteman scored the winner for Doncaster less than a minute into the second half with a deflected 20-yard shot. Shinnie scored Luton's only goal in a 1\u20130 home win over Bristol Rovers with a low shot in the 62nd minute. Luton then drew 0\u20130 away to Blackpool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0003-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, September\nFree agent winger Kazenga LuaLua was signed on a contract until the end of the season. Luton drew 2\u20132 at home to Charlton Athletic, who had been on a four-match winning run. After going behind to Tariqe Fosu's 23rd-minute penalty, Luton scored two second half goals through Harry Cornick and James Collins, before Chris Solly equalised for Charlton with a volley in the fifth minute of stoppage time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, October\nSteve Rutter, a former coach educator for The Football Association who taught Jones during his coaching courses, was appointed as assistant manager. Luton achieved their first away win of the season after beating Oxford United 2\u20131. Ricky Holmes gave the home team the lead early in the second half, before Luton equalised through Collins who followed up for the rebound after Cornick's shot had hit the crossbar from Mpanzu's cross. Potts scored the winning goal in the 98th minute with a header from Sheehan's free kick, after he had a goal disallowed earlier in stoppage time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, October\nLuton won 3\u20132 at home to Scunthorpe United, and took the lead in the 10th minute with a Cornick shot from a tight angle, before Scunthorpe equalised seven minutes later through Lee Novak. Lee restored Luton's lead in the 26th minute with a 20-yard left-footed shot and James Justin converted Stacey's low cross on 85 minutes, before Stephen Humphrys scored a consolation goal for Scunthorpe in stoppage time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0004-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, October\nLuton progressed to the second round of the EFL Trophy as Southern Group H winners after a 3\u20130 home win over Milton Keynes Dons, in which they took the lead in the 17th minute when Sheehan scored a penalty after David Kasumu tripped Shinnie. LuaLua doubled the lead with a curling shot into the bottom corner on 29 minutes, and Grant finished the scoring 15 minutes into the second half with a close-range header.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, October\nAfter a six-match unbeaten run in all competitions, Luton were defeated 3\u20132 away to Barnsley, with Brad Potts giving the home team the lead on five minutes with a low shot from 20 yards, and Cameron McGeehan scored in the 26th minute to make the score 2\u20130. Collins scored both of Luton's goals, the first in first-half stoppage time with a penalty, and the second in the 86th minute from the rebound after LuaLua's cross hit the post, either side of Mamadou Thiam's curling shot on 79 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, October\nLuton entered their home match against Walsall with the visitors unbeaten away from home, and won 2\u20130 with goals scored in each half by Glen Rea from a Grant corner and Grant with a free kick from 25 yards. Luton moved into the play-off positions with a 4\u20131 home win over Accrington Stanley, taking the lead on five minutes when Hylton converted Justin's cross with a volley from close range, before the away team equalised through Offrande Zanzala with a powerful header in the 27th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0005-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, October\nAfter Shinnie restored Luton's lead with a 20-yard shot into the bottom corner in the 53rd minute, Hylton scored a minute later, before he completed his hat-trick on 70 minutes with a close-range header. Frankie Musonda joined National League South club Oxford City on a one-month loan. Luton won away to AFC Wimbledon in a league match for the first time after a 2\u20130 victory, with Mpanzu and Lee scoring in the second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, November\nShea made a number of saves as Luton held Rochdale to a 0\u20130 away draw, in which Hylton was sent off for a studs-up challenge on Ian Henderson. Luton beat Wycombe Wanderers 2\u20130 at home in the first round of the FA Cup, with Shinnie opening the scoring from a left-footed 25-yard curling shot in off the post in the 41st minute, before Cornick capitalised on a mistake by Adam El-Abd, scoring with a shot into the bottom corner on 71 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, November\nThe team lost 2\u20131 away to Peterborough United in their final EFL Trophy group stage match, and were 2\u20130 down at half-time after goals from Colin Daniel and Ivan Toney, before Luton recorded a consolation goal after goalkeeper Conor O'Malley dropped Pearson's cross and scored an own goal in the 73rd minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, November\nLuton achieved their first home league win over Plymouth Argyle since 2003 after a 5\u20131 victory. Collins opened the scoring in the 12th minute with a shot into the bottom corner, before Lee rebounded in Cornick's parried shot on 23 minutes. Justin extended the lead six minutes later, and won a penalty in first-half stoppage time converted by Collins, which made the half-time score 4\u20130. Collins completed his hat-trick in the second half, and Plymouth scored a consolation goal through Joel Grant late into the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0007-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, November\nLuton won for the seventh time in nine league matches after beating Gillingham 3\u20131 away, a result that saw them move into fourth place in the table. Shinnie gave Luton the lead in the 25th minute with a shot from the edge of the penalty area before Lee doubled the lead 10 minutes into the second half with a shot in off the crossbar from Collins' low cross.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0007-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, November\nLee made it 3\u20130 on 68 minutes with a shot into an empty net after Cornick's low shot hit the post, and Tom Eaves scored a consolation goal for Gillingham four minutes later from a tight angle. Justin rebounded in Cornick's parried shot to give Luton a 28th-minute lead in a home match against Bradford City. Lee scored twice in five minutes to make the score 3\u20130, and in the second half Cornick finished the scoring in the 89th minute, meaning the match ended in a 4\u20130 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, December\nLuton won 1\u20130 away in their second round match of the FA Cup against Bury, with Cornick scoring the winning goal in the 42nd minute. Luton then played Southend United at home in the EFL Trophy second round, and took the lead in the 81st minute through Arthur Read with a shot from 18 yards before Stephen McLaughlin equalised for the visitors seven minutes later with a deflected 20-yard shot. The match finished 1\u20131 after normal time and Luton lost the penalty shoot-out 4\u20132, meaning they were eliminated from the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0008-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, December\nLuton moved into the automatic promotion places in second place with a 2\u20130 home win over Fleetwood Town, in which they took the lead on 11 minutes when Cornick converted Shinnie's low cross, before Craig Morgan scored an own goal in the 80th minute. Connor Tomlinson joined National League South club Hemel Hempstead Town on a youth loan for one month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, December\nLuton won away to Coventry City for the first time since 1987 after a 2\u20131 victory, with the team's goals coming in the 38th and 57th minute from Pearson and Collins respectively, before Jonson Clarke-Harris scored a consolation goal for Coventry with a stoppage time penalty. Luton moved four points clear of third-placed Sunderland after beating Burton Albion 2\u20130 at home. Stacey opened the scoring in the first half with a left-footed shot into the bottom corner, and in the second half Collins scored a penalty after Hylton was fouled by Jamie Allen in the penalty area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0009-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, December\nMidfielder Drew Richardson, a first-year scholar, joined Isthmian League Premier Division club Harlow Town on work experience for one month. Shinnie and Cornick scored in each half of Luton's 2\u20130 away win over Scunthorpe United, a result that saw them move one point behind league-leaders Portsmouth. Luton had fallen two goals behind away to Walsall by the 67th minute with goals from Morgan Ferrier and Andy Cook.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0009-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, December\nCollins brought Luton back into the match five minutes later with a shot through the legs of goalkeeper Liam Roberts from 10 yards, before LuaLua equalised in the fourth minute of stoppage time, meaning the match ended in a 2\u20132 draw. The result meant Luton would begin 2019 on a 12-match unbeaten league run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, January\nLuton's first result of 2019 was a 0\u20130 home draw with Barnsley, with the best chance of the match coming from Lee's 20-yard shot which was saved by goalkeeper Adam Davies. Luton drew 0\u20130 away to Sheffield Wednesday to earn a third round replay in the FA Cup. Midfielder George Thorne joined on loan from Derby County until the end of the season, while Grant returned to Nottingham Forest after his loan was terminated early. Jones left Luton after being appointed the manager of Championship club Stoke City, with chief recruitment officer Mick Harford being appointed interim manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0010-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, January\nMusonda joined Hemel Hempstead Town on loan until the end of the season. Collins scored a 67th-minute penalty as Luton came from behind to draw 1\u20131 away to Sunderland after Chris Maguire had given the home team the lead on 16 minutes. Luton were knocked out of the FA Cup after losing 1\u20130 at home to Sheffield Wednesday in a third round replay, who scored their goal a minute into the second half through Atdhe Nuhiu. Barnsley midfielder George Moncur was signed on a two-and-a-half-year contract for an undisclosed fee, and Jack James joined Havant & Waterlooville of the National League on a one-month youth loan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, January\nLuton moved to within a point of Portsmouth once more with a 4\u20130 home win over Peterborough United, courtesy of a Collins hat-trick and Luke Berry's first goal of the season. Defender Toby Byron, a second-year scholar, joined Southern League Premier Division Central club Hitchin Town on work experience for one month. Pearson scored a 29th-minute header from a Justin corner as Luton beat Southend United 1\u20130 away and moved to the top of the table. Famewo was recalled from his loan at Grimsby and joined Championship club Norwich City for an undisclosed fee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0011-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, January\nLuton recorded their first league win over Portsmouth since 1995 after a 3\u20132 home victory, a result which saw them move five points clear of their second-placed opponents. The team were 1\u20130 up at half-time through Collins with a shot into the bottom corner, before Ronan Curtis equalised for Portsmouth early in the second half. Collins restored Luton's lead with a 77th-minute penalty, and Omar Bogle scored two minutes later to bring the score to 2\u20132, before Moncur scored the winner for Luton on 86 minutes with a free kick into the bottom corner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0011-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, January\nQueens Park Rangers defender Alex Baptiste, Nottingham Forest and Scotland international striker Jason Cummings, and Brighton & Hove Albion striker Aaron Connolly, a Republic of Ireland under-19 international, were signed on loan for the rest of 2018\u201319, while Lloyd Jones, Jack Senior and Jarvis were loaned to Plymouth, Harrogate Town and Falkirk respectively until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, February\nLuton moved six points clear at the top of the League One table with a 3\u20130 away win over Shrewsbury Town, in which Collins scored in each half, either side of Pearson's 53rd-minute cross into the top corner. This was followed by another 3\u20130 victory, this time at home to Wycombe Wanderers, which meant Luton equalled a club record of 19 matches unbeaten in the Football League. Luton took the lead in the 33rd minute when Collins converted Stacey's cross, before Moncur scored twice late in the second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0012-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, February\nHarford's appointment as interim manager was extended until the end of the season. Luton set a new club record of 20 matches unbeaten in the Football League after beating Fleetwood Town 2\u20131 away. Moncur opened the scoring in the first half with a free kick into the top corner, and in the second half Mpanzu scored with a 20-yard curling shot before Fleetwood recorded a consolation goal through Paddy Madden in stoppage time. Read joined Hemel Hempstead Town on a one-month youth loan. Luton's six-match winning run came to an end after drawing 1\u20131 at home to Coventry City, in which Luton took the lead in the 16th minute through Pearson with a header from Justin's corner, before Jordan Shipley scored Coventry's equaliser later in the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 799]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, March\nHylton scored his first goal since October to give Luton a 59th-minute lead at home to Rochdale, before Collins scored his 20th goal of the season in stoppage time, meaning the team won 2\u20130. Luton extended their unbeaten league run to 23 matches after drawing 0\u20130 away to Plymouth Argyle. Stacey scored in the 16th minute from a low shot as Luton beat Bradford City 1\u20130 away, and the result meant the team set a new club record of 12 away matches unbeaten in the Football League. Goalkeeper Tiernan Parker joined Hitchin Town on a work experience loan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0013-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, March\nLuton were held by Gillingham to a 2\u20132 home draw, in which they took the lead shortly before half-time through Hylton, before Tom Eaves equalised for the away team with a header early in the second half. Stacey restored Luton's lead on 67 minutes with a near post shot past goalkeeper Tom\u00e1\u0161 Hol\u00fd, and Luke O'Neill finished the scoring for Gillingham 12 minutes later with a free kick into the top corner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0013-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, March\nMpanzu gave Luton a 33rd-minute lead at home to Doncaster Rovers with a 20-yard side-footed shot into the bottom corner, before Hylton doubled the lead with a close-range finish on 57 minutes. LuaLua made the score 3\u20130 in the 82nd minute, and Berry finished the scoring in stoppage time. Luton won an away league match against Bristol Rovers for the first time since 1980 with a 2\u20131 victory and equalled a club record of 27 league matches unbeaten in the process. Luton took a two-goal lead through Collins and Berry, before Jonson Clarke-Harris scored a consolation goal for Bristol Rovers in first-half stoppage time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, April and May\nLuton drew 2\u20132 at home to Blackpool and extended their unbeaten league run to a club record 28 matches. Collins opened the scoring for Luton in the sixth minute from LuaLua's low cross, before Nya Kirby equalised for the visitors with a 20-yard volley on 30 minutes. Collins was sent off after receiving two yellow cards in two second-half minutes, and after Blackpool took the lead through Matty Virtue, Cummings scored four minutes from time to bring the score to 2\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0014-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, April and May\nLuton lost 3\u20131 away to Charlton Athletic, despite taking the lead in the 15th minute through Cornick with a shot into the top corner. Lyle Taylor scored twice during the second half for the home team, the first coming on 54 minutes with a penalty and the second coming on 72 minutes from a low shot, either side of Igor Vetokele's 70th-minute goal. The result ended Luton's run of 76 matches unbeaten in all competitions in which they scored the opening goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, April and May\nLuton won 3\u20130 away to Accrington Stanley, and took the lead through Collins with a penalty in the 24th minute, before Mpanzu scored twice in the second half. This was followed by a 2\u20132 home draw with AFC Wimbledon, in which Luton took the lead on eight minutes through Lee from close range, before Joe Pigott equalised for the away team with a header in the 28th minute from Anthony Wordsworth's cross. Collins restored Luton's lead on 39 minutes with a powerful header, before Steve Seddon scored AFC Wimbledon's equaliser in second-half stoppage time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0015-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, April and May\nLuton's final away match of the season ended in a 2\u20131 defeat to Burton Albion, resulting in the team only being above second-placed Barnsley on goal difference. Collins gave Luton a 30th-minute lead from close range, before Burton scored twice in the second half through Lucas Akins. Luton were promoted to the Championship after Portsmouth were defeated 3\u20132 at home to Peterborough and Sunderland lost 2\u20131 away to Fleetwood. Graeme Jones was appointed as manager two days later, officially taking charge on 7 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285755-0015-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, April and May\nMoncur scored a 25-yard free kick to give Luton a third-minute lead in their last match of the season at home to Oxford United, and Lee scored early in the second half to make the score 2\u20130. Luke Garbutt brought Oxford back into the match on 60 minutes, before Moncur restored Luton's two-goal advantage in the 73rd minute from close range, meaning the match ended in a 3\u20131 win. This meant Luton won the League One title and finished three points clear of second-placed Barnsley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285756-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luxembourg Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Luxembourg Cup was the 94th edition of the football knockout tournament in the country. The winners of the cup this season earned a place in the 2019\u201320 Europa League. The competition began on 5 September 2018 and ended on 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285756-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luxembourg Cup\nRacing FC were the defending champions after winning the previous season's Luxembourg Cup final over Hostert on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285756-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luxembourg Cup, Preliminary round\nFour preliminary round matches were played 5 September 2018. The draw for the preliminary and first rounds was held 6 August 2018. Four teams each from tiers 5 (3. Division) and 4 (2. Division) took part.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285756-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luxembourg Cup, First round\nThirty-six first round matches were played 7\u201312 September 2018. The draw for the preliminary and first rounds was held 6 August 2018. Seventeen teams from the lowest tier (5th level 3. Division) took part in this round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285756-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luxembourg Cup, Second Round\nThirty-two second round matches were played between 21 and 23 September 2018. The draw for the second round was held 10 September 2018. Three teams from the fifth tier (3. Division) took part in this round: Colmar-Berg, Moutfort-Medingen, and Bourscheid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285756-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luxembourg Cup, Third round\nSixteen third round matches were played 27\u201328 October 2018. The draw for the third round was held 24 September 2018. Bourscheid are the only remaining team competing from the lowest tier (5th tier 3. Division).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285756-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luxembourg Cup, Fourth round\nThe draw for the fourth round was held 5 November 2018. Seven of the eight matches were played on 9 December 2018 and the remaining match between Blue Boys Muhlenbach and Attert Bissen was played on 17 February 2019. Sporting Bertrange were the lowest ranked team left in the competition, competing in the third tier (1. Division).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285756-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luxembourg Cup, Quarter Final\nThe draw for the Quarter Final was held 13 November 2018 with the four matches played on 3 April 2019. Two teams from the second tier (Luxembourg Division of Honour) were still in the competition: Union Mertert-Wasserbillig and Blue Boys Muhlenbach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285756-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luxembourg Cup, Semi Final\nThe draw for the Semi Final was held 5 April 2019. Of the four remaining teams, only one team from outside the top flight (second tier Luxembourg Division of Honour) remained in the competition at this stage, Union Mertert-Wasserbillig.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285757-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luxembourg Division of Honour\nThe 2018\u201319 Luxembourg Division of Honour is the 58th season of second-tier association football in Luxembourg. The season began on 19 August 2018 and will end on 25 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285757-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luxembourg Division of Honour, Teams\nEtzella Ettelbruck and Rumelange were promoted to the Luxembourg National Division at the end of the previous season. They were replaced by Rodange 91 and Esch, who finished in the bottom two positions of the 2017\u201318 Luxembourg National Division. Norden 02, Grevenmacher, and Union 05 Kayl-T\u00e9tange were relegated at the end of the previous season and were replaced by Atert Bissen, Jeunesse Junglinster, and Koeppchen Wormeldange, who earned promotion from the Luxembourg 1. Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285757-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luxembourg Division of Honour, Results\nEach team plays every other team in the league, home-and-away, for a total of 26 matches each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 46], "content_span": [47, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285758-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luxembourg National Division\nThe 2018\u201319 Luxembourg National Division was the 105th season of top-flight association football in Luxembourg. The season began on 5 August 2018 and ended on 19 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285758-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luxembourg National Division\nF91 Dudelange were the defending champions from the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285758-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luxembourg National Division, Teams\nRodange 91 and Esch were relegated at the end of the previous season. Etzella Ettelbruck and Rumelange joined the league this season after earning promotion from the Luxembourg Division of Honour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285758-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luxembourg National Division, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches. In order to preserve chronological evolvements, any postponed matches are not included to the round at which they were originally scheduled, but added to the full round they were played immediately afterwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285758-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luxembourg National Division, Results\nEach team played every other team in the league home-and-away for a total of 26 matches each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285758-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luxembourg National Division, Relegation play-offs\nA play-off was played between the twelfth-placed team in the 2018\u201319 Luxembourg National Division and the third-placed team in the 2018\u201319 Luxembourg Division of Honour for one place in the 2019\u201320 Luxembourg National Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285758-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luxembourg National Division, Relegation play-offs\nUS Hostert remained in 2019\u201320 Luxenbourg National Division and FC Swift Hesperange remained in 2019\u201320 Luxenbourg Division d'Honneur", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285759-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luxembourg Women's Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Luxembourg Women's Cup was the eighteenth Luxembourg Women's Cup in football. The competition began on 13 October 2018 and the final was held on 1 June 2019. Racing won their first Luxembourg Women's Cup after defeating Wormeldange/Munsbach/CSG 4\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285759-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luxembourg Women's Cup, Round of 16\nThe matches were played on 8 December 2018 and 11 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285759-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Luxembourg Women's Cup, Quarterfinals\nThe matches were played on 20 April 2019 and 1 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285760-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 MC Alger season\nIn the 2018\u201319 season, MC Alger competed in the Ligue 1 for the 48th season, as well as the Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285760-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 MC Alger season, Squad list\nAs of August 13, 2018Note: 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, 35], "content_span": [36, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285761-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 MC Oran season\nIn the 2018\u201319 season, MC Oran competed in the Ligue 1 for the 52nd season, as well as the Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285762-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 MDFA Elite Division\nThe 2018\u201319 MDFA Elite Division is the 106th season of the MDFA Elite Division, the top-tier football league in Mumbai, a city in the Indian state of Maharashtra. ONGC F.C. were the defending champions. The league will commence from 1 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285762-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 MDFA Elite Division, Restructured\nThe 106th season of the MDFA Elite Division has been restructured. The league will be played between 26 teams (highest no. of teams ever) which will be divided into two groups. The Group A contains public sector clubs and the Group B contains private owned clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285762-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 MDFA Elite Division, Restructured\nThis decision was taken after the failure of private clubs who were not able to finish top 3 in the league table due to which clubs were not allowed entry into the I-League 2nd Division, another reason was the public sector clubs commitment for company tournaments due to which there were matches which got postponed, delaying the league further. The table standings of Group B will be considered for the upcoming seasons of I-League 2nd Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285762-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 MDFA Elite Division, Format\nThe league will be played in two stages: the Preliminary and the Playoffs. 13 teams each in two groups. In Preliminary round, the teams will play against each other only once. After the completion of Preliminary round the top 3 teams from both the group will advance to the Playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285763-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 MHL season\nThe 2018\u201319 Maritime Junior Hockey League season was the 52nd season in league history. The season consisted of 50 games played by each MHL team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285763-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 MHL season\nAt the end of the regular season, the league's top teams competed for the Canadian Tire Cup, the league's playoff championship trophy. The team successful in winning the Canadian Tire Cup has a chance to compete for the 2019 Fred Page Cup to determine the Eastern Canadian Champion, and if successful in winning, the team will then move on to compete for the 2019 Royal Bank Cup to determine the 2019 Junior 'A' champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285763-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 MHL season\nCanadian Tire became the new sponsor of the league's championship trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285763-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 MHL season, Team Changes\nThe Woodstock Slammers relocated to Grand Falls, NB becoming the Grand Falls Rapids.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285763-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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; STK = Streak; x = Clinched Playoff Spot y = Clinched Division; z = Clinched First Overall", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285764-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 MJHL season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the Manitoba Junior Hockey League's (MJHL) 102nd year of operation. The Portage Terriers defeated the Swan Valley Stampeders to win the Turnbull Cup for the ninth time in fifteen years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285765-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 MO B\u00e9ja\u00efa season\nIn the 2018\u201319 season, MO B\u00e9ja\u00efa is competing in the Ligue 1 for the 5th season, as well as the Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285765-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 MO B\u00e9ja\u00efa season, Squad list\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 19 August 2016.Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285765-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 MO B\u00e9ja\u00efa season, Squad list\nAs of August 11, 2018. 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, 36], "content_span": [37, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285766-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 MPBL Datu Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 MPBL Datu Cup was the second tournament of the Maharlika Pilipinas Basketball League and the first full season with a national scope. The tournament is patterned after the current format of the National Basketball Association of the United States and the now-defunct Metropolitan Basketball Association in the Philippines, which it is divided into two divisions: The Northern and the Southern Divisions. A record of 26 teams played in the conference, which ran for over 10 months, according to league commissioner Kenneth Duremdes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285766-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 MPBL Datu Cup\nThe almost year-long conference opened on June 12, 2018, which coincided with the Philippine Independence Day at the Smart Araneta Coliseum, Quezon City and ended with the final game of the MPBL Finals on April 25, 2019 where San Juan Knights prevailed over the Davao Occidental Tigers, 3 games to 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285766-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 MPBL Datu Cup, Regular season, Results\nNot all games are in home\u2013away format. Each team plays every team once. Number of asterisks after each score denotes number of overtimes played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285766-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 MPBL Datu Cup, Playoffs\nTeams in bold advanced to the next round. The numbers to the left of each team indicate the team's seeding in its division, and the numbers to the right indicate the number of games the team won in that round. Teams with home court advantage, the higher seeded team, are shown in italics and are marked in asterisks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285766-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 MPBL Datu Cup, Playoffs, Division 1st Round\nThe first round is a best-of-three series, with the higher seeded team hosting Game 1, and 3, if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285766-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 MPBL Datu Cup, Playoffs, MPBL Finals\nThe Davao Occidental Tigers held the homecourt advantage for the title series, as they have defeated the San Juan Knights in their regular-season matchup. But San Juan Knights eventually won the championship in 5 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285766-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 MPBL Datu Cup, Awards\nThe individual league awards was given before the Game 4 of the 2019 MPBL Datu Cup National Finals at the Filoil Flying V Centre in San Juan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285767-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 MPBL season\nThe 2018\u201319 MPBL season is the inaugural season of the Maharlika Pilipinas Basketball League. The league will feature five conferences \u2014 the Rajah Cup, Datu Cup, Lakan Cup, Mumbaki Cup, and the Urduja Cup. As the season opened on the 25th day of January in the year 2018, the inaugural conference billed as the Anta\u2013Rajah Cup started with 10 teams competing for the inaugural championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285768-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 MRF Challenge Formula 2000 Championship\nThe 2018\u201319 MRF Challenge Formula 2000 Championship was the sixth running of the MRF Challenge Formula 2000 Championship. It began on 16 November 2018 at the Dubai Autodrome in Dubai, United Arab Emirates and finished on 10 February 2019 at the Madras Motor Race Track in Chennai, India. The series comprised 15 races spread across three meetings. The 2018\u201319 season saw Britain's Jamie Chadwick become the first female champion of the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285769-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 MSV Duisburg season\nThe 2018\u201319 MSV Duisburg season was the 119th season in the club's football history. In 2018\u201319 the club played in the 2. Bundesliga, the second tier of German football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285769-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 MSV Duisburg season\nWith a loss on 12 May 2019, Duisburg was relegated to the 3. Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285769-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 MSV Duisburg season, 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 33], "content_span": [34, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285769-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 MSV Duisburg season, Results\nTimes from 1 July to 27 October 2018 and from 31 March to 30 June 2019 are UTC+2, from 28 October 2018 to 30 March 2019 UTC+1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285769-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 MSV Duisburg season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nLast updated: 19 May 2019Source: 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, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285770-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 MTK Budapest FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season will be MTK Budapest FC's 117th competitive season, 1st consecutive season in the OTP Bank Liga and 130th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285770-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285770-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285770-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285770-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285770-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285770-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285770-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285771-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maccabi Haifa F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Maccabi Haifa's 61st season in Israeli Premier League, and their 37th consecutive season in the top division of Israeli football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285772-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Maccabi Tel Aviv's 112th season since its establishment in 1906, and 71st since the establishment of the State of Israel. During the 2018\u201319 campaignthe club have competed in the Israeli Premier League, State Cup, Toto Cup, UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285773-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Macclesfield Town F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Macclesfield Town's first season back in League Two after gaining promotion the season before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285773-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Macclesfield Town F.C. season, Competitions, League Two, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League Two fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 72], "content_span": [73, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285773-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Macclesfield Town F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285773-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Macclesfield Town F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam. The second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August. The third round draw was made on 30 August 2018 by David Seaman and Joleon Lescott.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285773-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Macclesfield Town F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced. The draw for the second round was made live on Talksport by Leon Britton and Steve Claridge on 16 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285774-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Macedonian First Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 Macedonian First League was the 27th season of the Macedonian First Football League, the highest football league of North Macedonia (before 12 February Macedonia). It began on 11 August 2018 and ended on 26 May 2019. Each team played the other sides four times on home-away basis, for a total of 36 matches. Shk\u00ebndija were the defending champions, having won their second title in 2017\u201318.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285774-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Macedonian First Football League, Participating 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, 40], "section_span": [42, 81], "content_span": [82, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285774-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Macedonian First Football League, Results\nEach team played home-and-away against every other team in the league twice, for a total of 36 matches each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285774-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Macedonian First Football League, Results, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches. In order to preserve chronological evolvements, any postponed matches are not included to the round at which they were originally scheduled, but added to the full round they were played immediately afterwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285775-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Macedonian First League\nThe 2018\u201319 Macedonian First League will be the 27th season of the Macedonian First League, with 11 teams participating in it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285775-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Macedonian First League, Competition format\nThe eleven teams that compose the league played a double-legged round robin tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285775-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Macedonian First League, Competition format\nThe two last qualified teams will join the relegation playoffs with the two best teams from the Second League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285775-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Macedonian First League, Teams\nEleven teams joined the league as Vodnjanska was not admitted in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285775-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Macedonian First League, Teams\nVardar replaced Karpo\u0161 Sokoli and Strumica, relegated from the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285775-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Macedonian First League, Playoffs\nPlayoffs will be played with a best-of-five games format, where the seeded team played games 1, 2 and 5 at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285776-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Macedonian Football Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Macedonian Football Cup was the 27th season of North Macedonia's football knockout competition. Shk\u00ebndija were the defending champions, having won their second title in the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285776-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Macedonian Football Cup, Second round\nThe first legs were played on 19 September and the second legs will be played on 3 October 2018. Korabi got a bye to the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285776-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Macedonian Football Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs were played on 7 November and the second legs will be played on 5 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285776-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Macedonian Football Cup, Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 27 February and the second legs on 10 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285777-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Macedonian Second Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 Macedonian Second Football League was the 27th season of the Macedonian Second Football League, the second division in the Macedonian football league system. The season began on 18 August 2018 and concluded on 25 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285778-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Macedonian Third Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 Macedonian Third Football League was the 27th season of the third-tier football league in North Macedonia, since its establishment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285779-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa\nThe 2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa (English: Hungarian Cup) was the 79th season of Hungary's annual knock-out cup football competition. MOL Vidi FC won the competition by beating Budapest Honv\u00e9d FC in the final held at Groupama Ar\u00e9na on 25 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285779-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa, Main Tournament\nOn 4 September the draw took place at the headquarters of the Hungarian Football Federation. This was the first draw in the 2018\u201319 season where Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I and Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g II clubs were included.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285779-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa, 64th finals\nA total of 128 teams participated in the 6th round of the Magyar Kupa. The new entrants were 12 clubs from the 2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I, 20 clubs from the 2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g II, and 48 from the 2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285779-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa, 32nd finals\nOn 28 September 2018 the draw of the second round proper took place at the headquarters of the Hungarian Football Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285779-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa, 32nd finals\nNote: V\u00e1c FC played their home match against MOL Feh\u00e9rv\u00e1r FC at Szusza Ferenc Stadion due to the reconstruction of their original home stadium, Ligeti Stadion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285779-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa, 16th finals\nOn 31 October 2018 the draw of the second round proper took place at the headquarters of the Hungarian Football Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285779-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa, 8th finals, 1st leg\nOn 5 December 2018 the draw of the 9th round took place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285779-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa, Quarterfinals\nOn 27 February 2019 the draw of the quarter finals took place at the studio of M4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285779-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa, Top scorers\nBold text indicates players and teams who are still active in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285780-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa (men's handball)\nThe 2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa, known as (Hungarian: TippMix f\u00e9rfi Magyar Kupa) for sponsorship reasons, was the 61st edition of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285780-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa (men's handball), Schedule\nThe rounds of the 2018\u201319 competition are scheduled as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285780-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa (men's handball), Matches\nA total of 52 matches were take place, starting with Pre-qualifying on 29 August 2018 and culminating with the Final on 7 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285780-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa (men's handball), Matches, Pre-qualifying\nThe pre-qualifying round ties was scheduled for 29 August \u2013 2 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285780-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa (men's handball), Matches, First round\nThe first round ties was scheduled for 5\u201319 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285780-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa (men's handball), Matches, Second round\nThe second round ties was scheduled for 9\u201317 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285780-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa (men's handball), Matches, Third round\nThe third round ties was scheduled for 13\u201321 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285780-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa (men's handball), Matches, Fourth round\nThe fourth round ties was scheduled for 3\u201312 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285780-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa (men's handball), Matches, Fifth round\nThe fifth round ties was scheduled for 12 February \u2013 13 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285780-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa (men's handball), Final four\nThe final four will be held on 6\u20137 April 2019 at the F\u0151nix Hall in Debrecen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285781-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa (men's volleyball)\n2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa is the 60th edition of the Magyar Kupa tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285781-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa (men's volleyball), Matches\nA total of ... matches will take place, starting with Pre-qualifying on 28 September 2018 and culminating with the Final on 17 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285781-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa (men's volleyball), Matches, Pre-qualifying\nThe pre-qualifying round ties was scheduled for 29 August \u2013 2 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285782-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa (women's handball)\nThe 2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa, known as (Hungarian: TippMix T\u00f6r\u00f6k B\u00f3dog n\u0151i Magyar Kupa) for sponsorship reasons, was the 61st edition of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285782-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa (women's handball), Schedule\nThe rounds of the 2018\u201319 competition are scheduled as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285782-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa (women's handball), Matches\nA total of 45 matches were take place, starting with First round on 7 September 2018 and culminating with the Final on 17 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285782-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa (women's handball), Matches, First round\nThe first round ties was scheduled for 7\u201312 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285782-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa (women's handball), Matches, Second round\nThe second round ties was scheduled for 27 September \u2013 3 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285782-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa (women's handball), Matches, Third round\nThe third round ties was scheduled for 17\u201324 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285782-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa (women's handball), Matches, Fourth round\nThe fourth round ties was scheduled for 6\u201314 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285782-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa (women's handball), Matches, Fifth round\nThe fifth round ties was scheduled for 8\u201313 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285782-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Magyar Kupa (women's handball), Final four\nThe final four will be held on 16\u201317 March 2019 at the F\u0151nix Hall in Debrecen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285783-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maine Black Bears men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Maine Black Bears men's basketball team represented the University of Maine in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at the Cross Insurance Center in Bangor, Maine and were led by 1st-year head coach Richard Barron, who previously served as the head coach of Maine's women's basketball team. They finished the season 5\u201327 overall, 3\u201313 in conference play to finish in a tie for eighth place. As the 8th seed in the 2019 America East Men's Basketball Tournament, they were defeated by top-seeded Vermont 57\u201373 in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285783-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maine Black Bears men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Black Bears finished the 2017\u201318 season 6\u201326, 3\u201313 in the America East Conference play to finish in eighth place. In the America East Tournament, they lost to Vermont in the quarterfinals. On March 5, the school parted ways with head coach Bob Walsh and within hours hired Richard Barron, who was previously head coach Maine's women's basketball team from 2011\u20132017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285784-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maine Black Bears men's ice hockey season\nThe 2018-19 Maine Black Bears Men's ice hockey season was the 44th season of play for the program, the 42ns season competing at the Division I level, and the 35th season in the Hockey East conference. The Black Bears represented the University of Maine and played their home games at Alfond Arena, and were coached by Red Gendron, in his 6th season as their head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285784-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maine Black Bears men's ice hockey season, Personnel\nHead Coach: Red Gendron, 5th seasonAssistant Coach: Ben Guite, 5th seasonAssistant Coach: Alfie Michaud, 3rd seasonVolunteer Assistant Coach: Colten St. Clair", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 60], "content_span": [61, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285785-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maine Black Bears women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Maine Black Bears women's basketball team represents the University of Maine in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Black Bears, led by second year head coach Amy Vachon, play their home games at the Cross Insurance Center and are members of the America East Conference. Maine won the championship game of the 2019 America East Women's Basketball Tournament over Hartford to earn the automatic bid to the NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament. They lost in the first round to NC State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285785-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maine Black Bears women's basketball team, Media\nAll home games and conference road games will stream on either ESPN3 or AmericaEast.tv. Most road games will stream on the opponents website. All games will be broadcast on the radio on WGUY and online on the .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 56], "content_span": [57, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285786-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Major Arena Soccer League 2 season\nThe 2018\u201319 Major Arena Soccer League 2 season is the second season for the league M2. The regular season started on December 1, 2018, and ended on March 16, 2019. For the second year in a row, each team played a 12-game schedule. This season, the M2 expanded from 10 to 15 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285786-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Major Arena Soccer League 2 season, Standings\nAs of March 16, 2019\u00a0\u00a02018-19 League Championship\u00a0\u00a02018-19 Playoff Team(Bold) Division Winner", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 53], "content_span": [54, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285786-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Major Arena Soccer League 2 season, 2019 M2 Championship\nThe team with the best record gets a bye in the Quarter-Finals. The top two teams in the other divisions plus the third place team in the division having the top seed qualifies for the post-season. All playoff rounds will be a single elimination matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285787-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Major Arena Soccer League season\nThe 2018\u201319 Major Arena Soccer League season was the eleventh season for the league. The regular season started on November 30, 2018, and ended on April 14, 2019. Each team played a 24-game schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285787-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Major Arena Soccer League season, 2019 Ron Newman Cup, Format\nThe top two teams from each division qualified for the post-season. The Division Finals were a 2-game home and home series, with a 15-minute mini-game played immediately after Game 2 if the series was tied. The Conference Finals and Championship were single elimination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285788-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Malaysia Purple League\n2018\u201319 Malaysia Purple League (also known as SS Purple League for sponsorship reasons) is the fifth edition of Malaysia Purple League. It started on 21 December 2018 and will conclude on 27 January 2019. It will consist of 28 league ties (each tie consisting of 5 matches) in Stage 1. Top two teams in Stage 1, progressed to the finals stage. Meanwhile the rest to the Stage 2 (divided into 2 groups) to accumulates points to contest four remaining spots for finals stage. Finals stage will features six teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285789-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maltese FA Trophy\nThe 2018\u201319 Maltese FA Trophy was the 81st edition of the football cup competition. A record number of 67 clubs competed in the FA Trophy, with the first round starting on the weekend of 1\u20132 September 2018 and concluding with the final played on 18 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285789-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maltese FA Trophy\nValletta were the defending champions, but lost in the final to Balzan on penalties, the latter winning their first ever FA Trophy title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285789-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maltese FA Trophy, Format\nThe clubs in the Premier League, First Division, Second Division and Third Division together with those from the Gozo Football League are involved in the draws of the initial rounds. The 14 top-flight sides enter the fray in the third round. Matches which are level after regulation advanced to extra time and afterwards to penalties to determine a winner, when needed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285789-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maltese FA Trophy, Schedule\nThe draws were made on 6 August 2018 and were conducted by Dr. Angelo Chetcuti, the General Secretary of the Malta Football Association, and Rodney Pisani, the Deputy General Secretary of the Association who leads the Competitions Department.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285789-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maltese FA Trophy, Preliminary round\nEight preliminary round matches were played on 31 August till 2 September 2018. The draw for the preliminary, first, and second rounds was held on 6 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285789-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maltese FA Trophy, First round\nNine first round matches were played on 8-9 September 2018. The draw for the preliminary, first, and second rounds was held 6 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285789-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maltese FA Trophy, Second round\nEighteen second round matches were played on 26 and 28 October 2018. The draw for the preliminary, first, and second rounds was held 6 August 2018. AAll teams from Maltese First Division and Maltese Second Division entered in the Second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285789-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maltese FA Trophy, Third round\nSixteen third round matches were played on 30 November and 3 December 2018. The draw for the third and fourth rounds was held 5 November 2018. All teams from Maltese Premier League entered in Third round. The top six position from 2017-18 Maltese Premier League teams that are seeded in the third round of the FA Trophy. A total of thirty-two clubs will be involved in the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285789-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maltese FA Trophy, Fourth round\nEight fourth round matches were played on 26\u201327 January 2019. The draw for the third and fourth rounds was held 5 November 2018. In the Fourth Round there were 10 clubs from Maltese Premier League, 3 clubs from Maltese First Division, 2 clubs from Maltese Second Division and 1 club (Xewkija Tigers) from Gozo Football League left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285789-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maltese FA Trophy, Quarter-finals\nFour quarter-final matches were scheduled for 23 and 24 February 2019. The draw for the quarter-finals was held 29 January 2019. The eight clubs left were all from the Premier League. On 23 February 2019, four quarter-final matches were postponed amid safety concerns caused by the inclement weather, warnings of gale-force winds and hail-storm. The first FA Trophy quarter-final match between Piet\u00e0 Hotspurs and G\u017cira United, at the Hibernians Stadium, was abandoned by referee Emanuel Grech in the 88th minute, and finished on 3 May 2019 at Ta' Qali National Stadium, 19:00, from the point of abandonment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285789-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maltese FA Trophy, Semi-finals\nTwo semi-final matches were played on 11 and 12 May 2019 at National Stadium, Ta' Qali. The draw for the semi-finals was held on 3 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285789-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maltese FA Trophy, Final\nThe final took place on 18 May 2019; Balzan reached their second FA Trophy final while Valletta reached their 24th final which they triumphed 14 times. The last time Balzan and Valletta met together in the FA Trophy was the previous season in the semi-finals when Valletta beat Balzan by 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285789-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maltese FA Trophy, Television rights\nThe following matches were broadcast live on TVM2 and on TSN (offered by GO):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285790-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maltese Futsal League\nThe 2018\u201319 Maltese Futsal Premier League is the 9th season of the Maltese Gatorade League, the top Maltese league for futsal clubs, since its establishment in 2011. It is also 20th season of the futsal championship in Malta, since the beginning of organized futsal in the country in 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285790-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maltese Futsal League\nIt is a transitory season in the handover between the Futsal Malta Association and the Malta Football Association with regards to operation of the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285791-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maltese Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Maltese Premier League was the 104th season of top-flight league football in Malta. The season began on 17 August 2018 and ended in April 2019. Defending champions Valletta won their 25th title, following a penalty shootout win against Hibernians in a championship decider match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285791-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maltese Premier League, Teams\nLija Athletic and Naxxar Lions were relegated after they finished thirteenth and fourteenth the previous season. They are replaced by Qormi and Piet\u00e0 Hotspurs, the 2017\u201318 Maltese First Division champions and runners-up respectively. Tarxien Rainbows retained Premiership status by defeating \u017bejtun Corinthians in a play-off decider.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285791-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maltese Premier League, Results, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches. In order to preserve chronological evolvements, any postponed matches are not included to the round at which they were originally scheduled, but added to the full round they were played immediately afterwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285791-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maltese Premier League, Championship play-off\nAt the end of the season, Valletta and Hibernians finished off equal on 58 points; in the last matchday, Valletta were few minutes away from winning the title as they were leading 1\u20130 against \u0126amrun Spartans, but a goal in stoppage time levelled the match. Hibernians had a convincing 5\u20131 win over Balzan to force a championship decider to be played between the two on 18 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285791-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maltese Premier League, Relegation play-offs\nA play-off match took place between the twelfth-placed team from the Premier League, St. Andrews, and the third-placed team from the First Division, St. Lucia, for a place in the 2019\u201320 Maltese Premier League. St. Lucia became the first First Division club to win a Premier League play-off, thereby booking a place in next season's Premier League for the first time in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285792-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maltese Second Division\nThe 2018\u201319 Maltese Second Division (known as the BOV Second Division for sponsorship reasons) is the league competition for the third-tier league in the Maltese football league system. The opening fixture was played on 5 September 2018 and the league season ended on 20 April 2019. St. George's won the championship after winning the decider against fellow promoted team, Fgura United. At the other side of the table, St. Venera Lightnings and Siggiewi were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285792-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maltese Second Division, Overview\nThe number of teams will remain unchanged from the previous season and therefore the league will be contested by 13 teams, including 3 teams relegated from the 2017\u201318 Maltese First Division season and 2 teams promoted from the 2017\u201318 Maltese Third Division season. The 13 teams will play 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 156 matches will be played, with 24 matches played by each team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285792-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maltese Second Division, Overview\nThe top two teams will be promoted to the 2019\u201320 Maltese First Division, while the bottom two are relegated to the 2019\u201320 Maltese Third Division. The team which will place in the third position will get a second chance for promotion to the 2019\u201320 Maltese First Division by facing the third last-team team of the 2018\u201319 Maltese First Division; While the team which ends in the ante-penultimate position participates in a similar play-off against the third placed team of the 2018\u201319 Maltese Third Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285792-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maltese Second Division, Overview\nAs is the norm in Malta, the matches will be played at a number of venues designated by the Malta Football Association. 4 different venues were assigned for this year's competition, with the Centenary Stadium in Ta' Qali hosting the largest share of matches. In a bid of drawing more supporters to the stadiums, admission prices for the season were slashed to \u20ac2, with those for children aged under 12 years and senior citizens abolished completely.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285792-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maltese Second Division, Playoffs, Championship play-off\nSt. George's and Fgura United finished the regular season level on points and therefore a play-off was required to decide the winner of the 2018-19 Maltese Second Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285792-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maltese Second Division, Playoffs, Promotion play-off\nA play-off match took place between the twelfth-placed team from the First Division (Vittoriosa Stars), and the third-placed team from the Second Division (Mgarr United), for a place in the 2019\u201320 Maltese First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285792-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maltese Second Division, Playoffs, Relegation play-off\nA play-off match took place between the twelfth-placed team from the Second Division, (\u017babbar St. Patrick), and the third-placed team from the Third Division, (Msida Saint-Joseph), for a place in the 2019\u201320 Maltese Second Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285793-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester City F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Manchester City's 117th season of competitive football, 90th season in the top division of English football and 22nd season in the Premier League since it was first created. In addition to the Premier League, the club competed in the UEFA Champions League, FA Cup, EFL Cup, and FA Community Shield; for the Champions League, it was their eighth consecutive season competing in the tournament. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285793-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester City F.C. season\nDuring this season, City completed a domestic treble. Apart from winning all three of the major English football tournaments, they also won the Community Shield, the first time any team has ever held all four of England's primary football trophies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285793-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester City F.C. season, Season summary\nIn the 2018\u201319 season, Manchester City maintained their free scoring form under manager Pep Guardiola and became the first club in Europe's top leagues to pass 100 goals scored on 20 January 2019 when Danilo scored the first goal in City's 3\u20130 victory at Huddersfield Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285793-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester City F.C. season, Season summary\nCity went on to break their own record for a top flight English club for goals scored in all competitions in a season. Leroy San\u00e9's goal in City's 2\u20130 win at Old Trafford against Manchester United on 24 April 2019 overtook the previous record tally of 156, which was established by Manuel Pellegrini's City side back in their title-winning 2013\u201314 season. By the end of the 2018\u201319 season, the team reached 169 goals scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285793-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester City F.C. season, Season summary\nOn 24 February, City won their sixth League Cup title when they defeated Chelsea 4\u20133 on penalties after a goalless draw over 120 minutes at Wembley Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285793-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester City F.C. season, Season summary\nExpectations were high for City's 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League campaign. The team again won their group without breaking a sweat, then routed Schalke 04 in the round of 16, winning their home match 7\u20130. Similar to the previous season, City were drawn against an English club in the quarter-finals, this time Tottenham Hotspur. The Blues dropped their away match 0\u20131, with Sergio Ag\u00fcero missing a penalty. The home match was all-or-nothing for City and it proved to be one of the best matches of that season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285793-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester City F.C. season, Season summary\nRaheem Sterling scored in the beginning, but City quickly conceded two goals and now needed to score three to advance. The squad did exactly that, leading 4\u20132 with 20 minutes to play. However, Fernando Llorente's wrongly awarded handball for Spurs meant City again needed a goal. In added time, Sterling converted a pass from Ag\u00fcero and the entire stadium started celebrating what seemed to be a certain victory. However, the goal was disallowed after a VAR review and the Blues were eliminated in a heartbreaking fashion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285793-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester City F.C. season, Season summary\nThe 2018\u201319 Premier League title race was one of the closest contests of the Premier League era. City and Liverpool exchanged their leads 32 times over the season, in part due to fixture rearrangements for EFL and FA Cup matches and television demands. The two title contenders jointly amassed a combined total of 195 points, which at the time was the highest combined total in English top flight history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285793-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester City F.C. season, Season summary\nOn 12 May, City won their final league match of the league season 4\u20131 away at Brighton & Hove Albion to retain the Premier League title. In doing so, they matched their own record for 32 wins over a single season. They had to win their final 14 consecutive league matches to hold off the challenge of Liverpool, who themselves ended their season with nine-straight wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285793-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester City F.C. season, Season summary\nOne week later, on 18 May, City defeated Watford 6\u20130 at Wembley to win the FA Cup and complete an unprecedented English domestic treble and clean sweep of the major honors in English football. It was also City's first ever league and FA Cup double and their sixth overall FA Cup title. The 6\u20130 scoreline was also the joint largest winning margin in the history of the FA Cup Final and the largest for any final in the competition since 1903. This final win of the season was Manchester City's 50th in all competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285793-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester City F.C. season, Pre-season and friendlies\nManchester City began their 2018\u201319 campaign with a tour of the United States in the 2018 International Champions Cup. City played against Borussia Dortmund at Soldier Field in Chicago, Liverpool at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, and Bayern Munich at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285793-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester City F.C. season, Competitions, FA Community Shield\nAs champions of the 2017\u201318 Premier League, Manchester City took on the 2017\u201318 FA Cup winners, Chelsea, for the season-opening FA Community Shield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285793-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester City F.C. season, Competitions, Premier League, Fixtures\nThe Premier League fixtures for the 2018\u201319 season were announced on 14 June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 75], "content_span": [76, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285793-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester City F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nManchester City entered the competition in the third round and were given a home tie against Rotherham United. The fourth round draw was made live on BBC by Robbie Keane and Carl Ikeme from Wolverhampton on 7 January 2019. The fifth round draw was broadcast on 28 January 2019 live on BBC, Alex Scott and Ian Wright conducted the draw. Draw for the quarter-final was made on 18 February by Darren Fletcher & Wayne Bridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285793-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester City F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nManchester City entered the competition in the third round as the defending champions and were drawn away to Oxford United. A home tie against Fulham was confirmed for the fourth round. The semi-final draw was made live on Sky Sports by Piers Morgan and Peter Crouch on 19 December 2018. City won the final against Chelsea on penalties after a goalless draw over 120 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285793-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester City F.C. season, Competitions, UEFA Champions League\nOn 30 August, Manchester City were drawn in Group F of the UEFA Champions League alongside Shakhtar Donetsk, Lyon and 1899 Hoffenheim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285793-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester City F.C. season, Competitions, UEFA Champions League, Knockout phase\nOn 17 December 2018, the round of 16 draw was made in Nyon, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 88], "content_span": [89, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285793-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester City F.C. season, Competitions, UEFA Champions League, Knockout phase\nThe draw for the quarter-finals was held on 15 March 2019, 12:00 CET, at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 88], "content_span": [89, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285793-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester City F.C. season, Squad information, First-team squad\nUpdated to match played 18 May 2019 - end of seasonSource:\u00a0Ordered by squad number. Appearances include league and cup appearances, including as substitute. Age stated as at end of 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285793-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester City F.C. season, Statistics, Squad 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, 65], "content_span": [66, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285793-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester City F.C. season, Statistics, Goalscorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted alphabetically by surname when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285793-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester City F.C. season, Statistics, Hat-tricks\n(H) \u2013 Home\u00a0; (A) \u2013 Away; (N) \u2013 Neutral4 \u2013 Player scored four goals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285793-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester City F.C. season, Statistics, Clean sheets\nThe list is sorted by shirt number when total clean sheets are equal. Numbers in parentheses represent games where both goalkeepers participated and both kept a clean sheet; the number in parentheses is awarded to the goalkeeper who was substituted on, whilst a full clean sheet is awarded to the goalkeeper who was on the field at the start of play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285793-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester City F.C. season, Awards, Alan Hardaker Trophy\nAwarded to the player of the match at the League Cup final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285794-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester City W.F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season will be Manchester City Women's Football Club's 31st season of competitive football and its sixth season in the FA Women's Super League and at the top level of English women's football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285794-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester City W.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, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285795-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester United F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Manchester United's 27th season in the Premier League and their 44th consecutive season in the top flight of English football. The season was the first since 2005\u201306 without club captain Michael Carrick, who retired after the 2017\u201318 season and joined the club's coaching staff. Assistant manager Rui Faria left the club at the conclusion of that season, with Carrick and Kieran McKenna replacing him as the club's first-team coaches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285795-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester United F.C. season\nA disappointing Premier League campaign saw the club finish in sixth place. United were also eliminated early in the EFL Cup, losing on penalties to Championship side Derby County in the third round. The club reached the quarter-final stage of both the FA Cup and the UEFA Champions League, but were eliminated by Wolverhampton Wanderers and Barcelona respectively. This resulted in United's first consecutive trophyless seasons in 30 years. On 5 May 2019, following a draw at bottom-placed Huddersfield Town, United confirmed their place in the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League, making it the fourth time they had finished outside of the top four in the league since 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285795-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester United F.C. season\nOn 18 December 2018, with just seven wins in the first 17 league games, manager Jos\u00e9 Mourinho was sacked. His last game, two days earlier, ended in a 3\u20131 defeat to Liverpool. The following day, former United striker Ole Gunnar Solskj\u00e6r was appointed as caretaker manager until the end of the season, assisted by former coach Mike Phelan, who had left the club in 2013 following the retirement of Sir Alex Ferguson. On 28 March 2019, Solskj\u00e6r became full-time manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285795-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester United F.C. season, Pre-season and friendlies\nUnited preceded their 2018\u201319 campaign with a tour of the United States. The first three games were announced on 3 April 2018, with the opposition provided by Club Am\u00e9rica, San Jose Earthquakes and Liverpool. The club later announced that the tour would see them compete in the International Champions Cup. In the 2018 competition, United played against Milan at the StubHub Center in Carson, California, Liverpool at the Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor, Michigan, and Real Madrid at the Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285795-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester United F.C. season, Pre-season and friendlies\nAlexis S\u00e1nchez's arrival in the United States was delayed as he was not issued with a visa due to the 16-month suspended jail sentence he accepted in February for tax fraud during his time in Spain. The final pre-season game saw Manchester United play away to Bayern Munich at the Allianz Arena on 5 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285795-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester United F.C. season, Premier League, Matches\nThe Premier League announced the fixtures for the 2018\u201319 season on 14 June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 62], "content_span": [63, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285795-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Cup\nAs one of the 20 teams in the Premier League, Manchester United entered the FA Cup in the Third Round. The draw was made on 3 December 2018 and paired United with Reading, whom they had faced at the same stage two seasons earlier, when they won 4\u20130. United won the match 2\u20130; Juan Mata opened the scoring from the penalty spot after the video assistant referee ruled that Omar Richards had tripped Juan Mata in the penalty area, and another goal from Romelu Lukaku.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285795-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Cup\n19-year-old winger Tahith Chong made his FA Cup debut, replacing Juan Mata in the 62nd minute. The draw for the Fourth Round was made on 7 January 2019 and United were drawn away to Arsenal; the last time the two sides had met in the FA Cup was in the Sixth Round of the 2014\u201315 season, when Arsenal won 2\u20131 at Old Trafford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285795-0005-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Cup\nThis time Manchester United won 3\u20131; two goals in two minutes from former Arsenal forward Alexis S\u00e1nchez and Jesse Lingard put United 2\u20130 up with just over half an hour played, but Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang got one back for the Gunners shortly before half-time. Anthony Martial then came off the bench to seal the win for United with their third goal in the 82nd minute. The draw for the Fifth Round was made on 28 January 2019 and United were drawn away to Chelsea, whom they had faced in the final the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285795-0005-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Cup\nGoals from Paul Pogba and Ander Herrera before half-time sealed a 2\u20130 win for United. They were then drawn away to Wolverhampton Wanderers in the quarter-finals. Goals from Ra\u00fal Jim\u00e9nez and Diogo Jota gave Wolves a 2\u20131 win and a place in the semi-finals, with Marcus Rashford scoring a consolation goal for United in the 95th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285795-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester United F.C. season, EFL Cup\nThe draw for the third round of the EFL Cup was made on 30 August 2018, with Manchester United drawn at home to Derby County. United took the lead just three minutes in through Juan Mata, but an equaliser from Harry Wilson was followed by a red card for United keeper Romero. Marriot gave Derby the lead with five minutes to go, but Marouane Fellaini\u2019s stoppage-time strike ensured penalties; however Derby won 8-7 on spot kicks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 46], "content_span": [47, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285795-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester United F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nThe draw for the group stage of the 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League was made in Monaco on 30 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285795-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester United F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Knockout phase\nThe draw for the round of 16 was held on 17 December 2018, 12:00 CET, at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland. After finishing second in their group and progressing to the round of 16, United were drawn against French champions Paris Saint-Germain in the first competitive meeting between the two sides. In the first leg at Old Trafford, goals from Presnel Kimpembe and Kylian Mbapp\u00e9 gave PSG a 2\u20130 lead to take back to the Parc des Princes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285795-0008-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester United F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Knockout phase\nNeeding to score three times to progress, Romelu Lukaku opened the scoring for United in the second minute of the second leg, before Juan Bernat restored PSG's two-goal aggregate lead less than 10 minutes later. Lukaku then scored again after half an hour, to bring United within a goal of the quarter-finals. Former Manchester United midfielder \u00c1ngel Di Mar\u00eda had the ball in the back of the net early in the second half, only for the goal to be ruled out for offside, and Bernat hit the post late on after Mbapp\u00e9 had rounded David de Gea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285795-0008-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester United F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Knockout phase\nIn the 90th minute, referee Damir Skomina awarded United a penalty after using a VAR review to adjudge Kimpembe to have handled the ball in the penalty area. Marcus Rashford scored the spot-kick to make it 3\u20133 on aggregate and send United through to the quarter-finals on the away goals rule; this made them the first team in Champions League history to progress after losing by at least two goals at home in the first leg. Solskj\u00e6r gave 17-year-old forward Mason Greenwood and 19-year-old winger Tahith Chong their European debuts, the former also playing his first senior game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285795-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester United F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Knockout phase\nThe draw for the quarter-finals was held on 15 March 2019, with United paired with Barcelona. Both United and Manchester City were originally drawn to play their home legs in the same week; as United finished lower in the league the previous season, their tie was reversed. The first leg was played at Old Trafford on 10 April 2019. Barcelona won 1\u20130 thanks to an own goal by Luke Shaw that was originally ruled out for offside; the decision was later overturned after a VAR review. The second leg was played at Camp Nou on 16 April, with two goals from Lionel Messi and another from former Liverpool forward Philippe Coutinho giving the Spanish side a 3\u20130 win on the night, 4\u20130 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285796-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester United W.F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Manchester United Women's inaugural season following the club's successful application to join the newly-formed FA Women's Championship after a league restructuring. The club also competed in the FA Cup and League Cup. The team played their home games at Leigh Sports Village, while the training ground at The Cliff undergoes redevelopment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285796-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester United W.F.C. season, Pre-season\nIn March 2018, Manchester United announced their intentions to enter a women's team into the second tier of the 2018\u201319 season. Their application was confirmed in May and they were announced as one of four new teams to enter the division alongside Charlton Athletic, Leicester City and Lewes F.C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285796-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester United W.F.C. season, Pre-season\nOn 8 June 2018, former England international Casey Stoney was announced as head coach. The full 21-player squad was revealed in July and included the return of Katie Zelem, Emily Ramsey, Naomi Hartley, Fran Bentley, Millie Turner, Kirsty Hanson and Ella Toone who were all previously part of the club's Girls' Regional Talent Club and Centre of Excellence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285796-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester United W.F.C. season, Pre-season\nUnited's first game was a behind-closed-doors friendly against Liverpool on 15 July. The game had to be abandoned after goalkeeper Siobhan Chamberlain was taken to hospital with a suspected serious neck injury which was later confirmed not as serious as first thought.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285796-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester United W.F.C. season, FA Women's Championship, Matches\nOn 1 August 2018, the FA Women's Championship announced the fixtures for the 2018\u201319 season. The team confirmed promotion to the FA WSL on 17 April 2019 after victory over Aston Villa with three games to spare. Three days later, they clinched the Championship title with a win at home to Crystal Palace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285796-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester United W.F.C. season, Women's FA Cup\nManchester United entered the Women's FA Cup in the fourth round with the rest of the top two tiers and were drawn against WSL side Brighton & Hove Albion. Lauren James' brace earned United a 2\u20130 win to put them in the draw for the fifth round. They were drawn against fellow Championship side London Bees who United had already scored 14 goals against across their two league meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285796-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester United W.F.C. season, Women's FA Cup\nUnited progressed to the quarter-finals with a 3\u20130 win, held at back-up venue Ewen Fields, and were drawn against Reading to set up the second cup meeting between the two teams after Reading triumphed in the WSL Cup Group Stage earlier in the season. The WSL side triumphed for a second time, taking United to extra-time after a goalless 90 minutes before eventually winning 3\u20132 with Rakel H\u00f6nnud\u00f3ttir's late winner coming in the 120+2 minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285796-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester United W.F.C. season, FA Women's League Cup, Group stage\nManchester United were entered into Group Two North for the 2018\u201319 FA WSL Cup alongside WSL sides Liverpool, Everton and Reading and fellow Championship side Durham. They played two games at home and two away, winning three including both away ties to Merseyside teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285796-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manchester United W.F.C. season, FA Women's League Cup, Knockout phase\nThe draw for the quarter-final was made on 18 December, with Manchester United the only team from outside of the FA WSL to qualify from the group stage. They were drawn against West Ham United who had finished second in Group Two South behind defending champions Arsenal. After beating West Ham 2\u20130, United progressed to the semi-finals and were drawn against Arsenal. The tie was televised nationally on BT Sport as Arsenal won 2\u20131 to progress to their seventh final in eight years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 78], "content_span": [79, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285797-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manhattan Jaspers basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Manhattan Jaspers basketball team represented Manhattan College during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Jaspers, who were led by eighth-year head coach Steve Masiello, played their home games at Draddy Gymnasium in Riverdale, New York as members of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference. They finished the 2018\u201319 season 11\u201321 overall, 8\u201310 in MAAC play to finish in seventh place. As the No. 7 seed in the 2019 MAAC Tournament, they defeated No. 10 seed Fairfield in the first round 57\u201353 before falling to No. 2 seed Canisius 65\u201369OT in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285797-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manhattan Jaspers basketball team, Previous season\nThe Jaspers finished the 2017\u201318 season 14\u201317, 9\u20139 in MAAC play to finish in a tie for fifth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the MAAC Tournament to Iona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285797-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Manhattan Jaspers basketball team, Schedule and results\n* Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses. All times are in Eastern Time", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285798-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mansfield Town F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Mansfield Town's 122nd season in their history and their sixth consecutive season in League Two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285798-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mansfield Town F.C. season, Competitions, Friendlies\nMansfield Town announced they will compete with Vit\u00f3ria, Bradford Park Avenue, Derby County, Sheffield United, Sheffield Wednesday and Rotherham United during pre-season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285798-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mansfield Town F.C. season, Competitions, League Two, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League Two fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285798-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mansfield Town F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285798-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mansfield Town F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam. The second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285798-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mansfield Town F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced. The draw for the second round was made live on Talksport by Leon Britton and Steve Claridge on 16 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285799-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Marist Red Foxes men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Marist Red Foxes men's basketball team represented Marist College in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team played its home games in Poughkeepsie, New York for the 42nd consecutive year at the McCann Arena, which has a capacity of 3,200. This season marked the program's 38th Division I season and its 22nd consecutive year as a member of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference. The team was led by first-year head coach John Dunne, who took the open head coaching position after spending the last 12 seasons at conference rival Saint Peter's University. They finished the 2018\u201319 season 12\u201319 overall, 7\u201311 in MAAC play to finish in eighth place. As the No. 8 seed in the 2019 MAAC Tournament, they were defeated by No. 9 seed Saint Peter's in the first round 68\u201371 in overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 861]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285799-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Marist Red Foxes men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Red Foxes finished the 2017\u201318 season 6\u201325 overall, 4\u201314 in MAAC play to finish in a tie for tenth place. They lost in the first round of the MAAC Tournament to Fairfield. On March 5, 2018, head coach Mike Maker was fired. He finished at Marist with a four-year record of 28\u201397. On April 3, 2018, Marist hired their 12th head coach in program history, when Saint Peter's head coach John Dunne was tabbed as Mike Maker's successor. Dunne left Saint Peter's with a record of 153\u2013225 over the span of 12 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285799-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Marist Red Foxes men's basketball team, Preseason\nMarist entered the season having lost 20 or more games for the last four seasons under former head coach Mike Maker. The team returned all five of their starters from last season, which included Brian Parker, who was named Preseason Second Team All-MAAC. Parker entered the season as the 10th all-time leading scorer in school history, and led the team in scoring last season. Also returning was Ryan Funk, the team's long-distance threat, who came into his senior season having made 185 three-pointers in his career, which is sixth-highest in school history. Even with a new coach, and a completely new staff, MAAC coaches picked the Red Foxes to finish in sixth place in the preseason poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 57], "content_span": [58, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285799-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Marist Red Foxes men's basketball team, Awards\nFollowing the season, two Marist players were selected to All-MAAC teams. Senior guard Brian Parker was awarded All-MAAC Third Team honors, leading the Red Foxes in scoring, minutes played, field goal percentage, and assists per game. Senior guard Ryan Funk was named the MAAC Men's Basketball Sixth Player of the Year, averaging 11.7 points per game, while making 45 percent of his three-point shots during league play. He was the first Red Fox to win the award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 54], "content_span": [55, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285799-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Marist Red Foxes men's basketball team, Statistics, Players, MAAC Leaders\nTo qualify, players must have appeared in 75% of team's games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285800-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Marist Red Foxes women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Marist Red Foxes women's basketball team represented Marist College during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Red Foxes were led by 17th-year head coach Brian Giorgis, and played their home games at the McCann Arena as members of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference. They finished the regular season 23\u201310 overall, 13\u20135 in MAAC play to finish third place. As a No. 3 seed in the 2019 MAAC Tournament, they advanced to the championship game and were defeated by No. 1 seed Quinnipiac 51\u201381.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285800-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Marist Red Foxes women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Red Foxes finished the 2017\u201318 season 20\u201314, 14\u20134 in MAAC play to finish in second place. As the No. 2 seed at the MAAC Tournament, they defeated No. 7 seed Manhattan and No. 3 seed Siena to advance to the championship game, where they lost to top-seeded Quinnipiac. They were invited to the 2018 Women's National Invitation Tournament where they lost in the first round at St. John's 47\u201368.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285801-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Marquette Golden Eagles men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Marquette Golden Eagles men's basketball team represented Marquette University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Golden Eagles, led by fifth-year head coach Steve Wojciechowski, played their home games for the first time at Fiserv Forum as members of the Big East Conference. They were upset by Murray State in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285801-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Marquette Golden Eagles men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Golden Eagles finished the 2017\u201318 season 21\u201314, 9\u20139 in Big East play to finish in a tie for sixth place. As the No. 7 seed in the Big East Tournament, they defeated DePaul in the first round before losing to eventual tournament champion Villanova in the quarterfinals. They received an at-large bid to the National Invitation Tournament where they defeated Harvard in the first round and Oregon in the second round before losing to Penn State in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285801-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Marquette Golden Eagles men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe season marked the final season for the Eagles at the BMO Harris Bradley Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285801-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Marquette Golden Eagles men's basketball team, Rankings\n*AP does not release post-NCAA Tournament rankings^Coaches did not release a Week 2 poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285802-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Marquette Golden Eagles women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Marquette Golden Eagles women's basketball team represents Marquette University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Golden Eagles, led by fifth year head coach Carolyn Kieger, play their home games at the Al McGuire Center and were members of the Big East Conference. They finished the season 27\u20138, 15\u20133 in Big East in Big East play to win the Big East regular season title. They advanced to the championship game of the Big East Women's Tournament where they lost to DePaul. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Women's Tournament where they defeated Rice in the first round before losing to Texas A&M in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285802-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Marquette Golden Eagles women's basketball team\nOn April 3, Kieger left her alma mater after five seasons, the last three of which ended in NCAA tournament appearances, for the Penn State opening. She finish with a 5 year record of 99\u201364.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285802-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Marquette Golden Eagles women's basketball team, Previous season\nThey finished the 2017\u201318 season 24\u201310, 16\u20132 in Big East play to share the regular season title with DePaul. They advanced to the championship game of the Big East Women's Tournament, where they lost to DePaul. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Women's Tournament, where they defeated Dayton in the first round before losing to Louisville in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 72], "content_span": [73, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285803-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Marshall Thundering Herd men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Marshall Thundering Herd men's basketball team represented Marshall University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Thundering Herd, led by fifth-year head coach Dan D'Antoni, played their home games at the Cam Henderson Center as members of Conference USA. They finished the season 23\u201314, 11\u20137 in C-USA play to finish in sixth place. They defeated Rice before losing to Southern Miss in the quarterfinals of the C-USA Tournament. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they defeated IUPUI, Presbyterian, Hampton and Green Bay to become CIT champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285803-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Marshall Thundering Herd men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Thundering Herd finished the 2017\u201318 season 25\u201311, 12\u20136 in C-USA play to finish in fourth place. They defeated UTSA, Southern Miss, and Western Kentucky to become champions of the C-USA Tournament. They received C-USA's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament where, as a No. 13 seed, they upset No. 4 seed Wichita State 81-75 in the First Round before losing to No. 5 seed and rival West Virginia in the Second Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 71], "content_span": [72, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285804-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Marshall Thundering Herd women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Marshall Thundering Herd women's basketball team represented the Marshall University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Thundering Herd, led by second year head coach Tony Kemper, played their home games at the Cam Henderson Center and were members of Conference USA. They finished the season 17\u201315, 10\u20136 in C-USA play to finish in a tie for fifth place. They lost in the first round of the C-USA Women's Tournament to UTEP. They received an invitation to the WBI where they defeated Davidson in the first round before losing to Appalachian State in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285805-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Martinique Championnat National\nThe 2018\u201319 Martinique Championnat National is the 99th season of the Martinique Championnat National, the top division football competition in Martinique. The season began on 14 September 2018 then it ended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285805-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Martinique Championnat National, League table\nNote: 4 points for a win, 2 points for a draw, 1 point for a defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 53], "content_span": [54, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285806-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Martyr's Memorial A-Division League\nThe 2018\u201319 Martyr's Memorial A-Division League (Nepali: \u0936\u0939\u0940\u0926 \u0938\u094d\u092e\u093e\u0930\u0915 \u090f \u0921\u093f\u092d\u093f\u091c\u0928 \u0932\u0940\u0917 \u0968\u0966\u096d\u096b) season, also known as Pulsar Martyr's Memorial A-Division League for sponsorship reasons, was the 42nd edition of the Martyr's Memorial A-Division League. The season began on 29 September 2018 and ended on 8 January 2019. It was the first top division league held since the 2015 National League. On 16 September 2018, it was decided that there will be no relegation, however the two bottom placed teams would have two and one points deducted next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285806-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Martyr's Memorial A-Division League\nManang Marshyangdi Club were the defending champions and successfully defended their title on 28 December with two games to spare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285806-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Martyr's Memorial A-Division League, Teams\nA total of 14 teams, all based in the Kathmandu Valley, contested the league. Four teams from other parts of Nepal; Jhapa XI, Morang XI, Lumbini F.C. and Far Western F.C., were initially supposed to participate in the league announced initially for 2017. The teams had previously participated in the 2015 National League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285806-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Martyr's Memorial A-Division League, Teams\nOn the other side, six teams, that did not participate in the 2015 league, made their comebacks in the league after participating in the 2013-14 season: Friend's Club, Himalayan Sherpa Club, Jawalakhel Youth Club, Machhindra Football Club, Sankata BSC and Saraswati Youth Club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285806-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Martyr's Memorial A-Division League, Teams, Foreign players\nOn 16 May 2018, the All Nepal Football Association (ANFA) announced that the number of foreigners for each club would be four. One of those had to be from one of the countries of the SAARC Region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 67], "content_span": [68, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285807-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maryland Eastern Shore Hawks men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Maryland Eastern Shore Hawks men's basketball team represented the University of Maryland Eastern Shore in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at the Hytche Athletic Center in Princess Anne, Maryland, and were led by interim head coach Clifford Reed. The Hawks finished the season 7\u201325, 5\u201311 in MEAC play to finish in a tie for eighth place. As the No. 8 seed in the MEAC Tournament, they lost in the first round to South Carolina State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285807-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maryland Eastern Shore Hawks men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Hawks finished the 2017\u201318 season 7-25, 3-13 in MEAC play to finish in 12th place. As the No. 12 seed in the MEAC Tournament, they lost to Norfolk State in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 75], "content_span": [76, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285807-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maryland Eastern Shore Hawks men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn March 26, 2018, it was announced that head coach Bobby Collins' contract would not be renewed. He finished at UMES with a four-year record of 49\u201382. The school named assistant coach Clifford Reed interim head coach for the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 75], "content_span": [76, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285808-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maryland Terrapins men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Maryland Terrapins men's basketball team represented the University of Maryland, College Park in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They were led by eighth-year head coach Mark Turgeon and played their home games at Xfinity Center in College Park, Maryland, as members of the Big Ten Conference. They finished the season 23\u201311, 13\u20137 in Big Ten play to finish in fifth place. They lost in the second round of the Big Ten Tournament to Nebraska. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as the No. 6 seed in the East region. There they defeated Belmont before losing to LSU in the Second Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285808-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maryland Terrapins men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Terrapins finished the 2017\u201318 season 19\u201313, 8\u201310 in Big Ten play to finish in eighth place. They lost in the second round of the Big Ten Tournament to Wisconsin. They were invited to the College Basketball Invitational, but declined, marking their absence in a postseason tournament for the first time since 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285808-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maryland Terrapins men's basketball team, Offseason, Departures\nOn April 6, 2018, freshman forward Bruno Fernando announced he would test the NBA draft, but not sign with an agent. On May 28, he announced he would return to school. Sophomore guard Kevin Huerter declared for the NBA draft on April 20, 2018, but also announced he would not sign with an agent. On May 30, he announced he would stay in the draft and hire an agent thereby ending his college career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 71], "content_span": [72, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285808-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maryland Terrapins men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nThe season will mark the first time in Big Ten history that the teams will play a 20-game conference schedule, setting a precedent for all Division I basketball. The new schedule will also include a regional component to increase the frequency of games among teams in similar areas. Over the course of a six-year cycle (12 playing opportunities), in-state rivals will play each other 12 times, regional opponents will play 10 times, and all other teams will play nine times. Three in-state series will be guaranteed home-and-homes: Illinois and Northwestern, Indiana and Purdue, and Michigan and Michigan State will always play twice. The conference opponent list was released on April 19, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 70], "content_span": [71, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285809-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Maryland Terrapins women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Maryland Terrapins women's basketball team represented the University of Maryland, College Park in 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Terrapins, led by seventeenth year head coach Brenda Frese, played their home games at the Xfinity Center as members of the Big Ten Conference. They finished the season 29\u20134, 15\u20133 in Big Ten play to win the Big Ten regular season championship. They advanced to the championship of the Big Ten Women's Tournament where they lost to Iowa State. They received an at-large to the NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament as the No. 4 seed in the Albany region. There they defeated Radford before losing to UCLA in the Second Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285810-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mascom Top 8 Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Mascom Top 8 Cup was the eighth edition of the Mascom Top 8 Cup. It was played from 23 November 2018 to 9 March 2019 by the top eight teams from the 2017-18 Botswana Premier League. It was won by Jwaneng Galaxy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285811-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mauritian Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Mauritian Premier League is the 39th season of the Mauritian Premier League, the top flight for football league in Mauritius. The league would be contested by the top eight teams from the 2017-18 season as well as the two clubs promoted from the National First Division, Vacoas-Phoenix and Rivi\u00e8re du Rempart. They replaced the two teams that were relegated to the National First Division, Entente Boulet Rouge-Riche Mare Rovers and Chebel Citizens SC", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285811-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mauritian Premier League\nThe season began on 23 November 2018 and concluded on 27 April 2019. Pamplemousses SC won the league championship and qualified for the 2019-20 CAF Champions League qualifying round. Roche-Bois Bolton City qualified for the 2019-20 CAF Confederation Cup through winning the 2019 Mauritius Cup. AS Rivi\u00e8re du Rempart and AS Quatre-Bornes were relegated to the National First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285812-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 McNeese State Cowboys basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 McNeese State Cowboys basketball team represent McNeese State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Cowboys are led by 1st-year head coach Heath Schroyer and play their home games at the new on campus Health and Human Performance Education Complex in Lake Charles, Louisiana as members of the Southland Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285812-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 McNeese State Cowboys basketball team, Previous season\nThe Cowboys finished the 2017\u201318 season 11\u201317, 8\u201310 in Southland play to finish in a three-way tie for eighth place. They failed to qualify for the Southland Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285813-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 McNeese State Cowgirls basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 McNeese State Cowgirls basketball team will represent McNeese State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Cowgirls, led by third year head coach Kacie Cryer, will play all their home games at the Health and Human Performance Education Complex. They were members of the Southland Conference. They finished the season 7\u201322, 5\u201313 in Southland play to finish in a tie for tenth place. They failed to qualify for the Southland Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285813-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 McNeese State Cowgirls basketball team, Previous season\nThe Cowgirls finished the 2017\u201318 season with a 12\u201318 overall record and an 8\u201310 Southland Conference record to finish in eighth place. Their season ended with a loss to Texas A&M\u2013Corpus Christi in the first round of the Southland Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season was the club's ninth season since its establishment in 2009. The club competed in the A-League for the ninth time and the FFA Cup for the fifth time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, Pre-season matches\nMelbourne City began their pre-season by playing two games in Kochi, India beating Indian club Kerala Blasters 6\u20130 and losing to Spanish club Girona FC 6\u20130. During August-October, the club played a training match each month, drawing with Adelaide United at Coopers Stadium and beating Adelaide United and Perth Glory at City Football Academy. On 12 October, Melbourne City played Western Sydney Wanderers in a friendly for the second season in a row at McEwen Reserve which ended in a 4\u20131 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, May\nThe club released five players on 3 May. Nick Fitzgerald, Bruce Kamau, and Ruon Tongyik were released to the Western Sydney Wanderers, while Christian Cavallo and Manny Muscat later joined Green Gully. Later in the month, Danish midfielder Michael Jakobsen left to join Adelaide United and Australian midfielder Stefan Mauk joined Brisbane Roar via return to his parent club N.E.C. in the Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, June\nCity signed four players in nine days with Anthony C\u00e1ceres signing a one-year loan from Manchester City once more. Scottish player, Michael O'Halloran joined City on a two-year contract from Rangers. Riley McGree signed a one-year deal from Belgian club, Club Brugge. Lastly, former Central Coast Mariners man, Lachlan Wales also signed a one-year deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, June\nMelbourne City's marquee man, Marcin Budzi\u0144ski mutual terminated his contract, while Oliver Bozanic joined Scottish club Heart of Midlothian at the conclusion of his Melbourne City contract. Finally, City teenager, Denis Genreau was loaned to PEC Zwolle for a season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, July\nFor the second season in a row, Luke Brattan's loan was extendend by another additional year on 5 July. On 19 July, Melbourne City signed Australian midfielder Rostyn Griffiths, following his time at Uzbek club Pakhtakor Tashkent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, August\nOn 7 August, Melbourne City played their first FFA Cup game against Brisbane Roar with Luke Brattan suffering a big injury blow. His injury was on for a long time from the 36th minute. It was already past half-time, but referee kept the time of the game go on. When the full 90 minutes were up, the second half was restarted with the game almost being the longest FFA Cup match. It was still goalless then, so extra time came. In the 120th minute, Bruno Fornaroli's big strike in the top-left corner sent Melbourne City 1\u20130 clear to move to the Round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, August\nOn 29 August, Bruno Fornaroli was again the hero for Melbourne City, scoring a goal outside the box hitting the top-right hand side of the net, giving Melbourne City a 1\u20130 win against Newcastle Jets sending them to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, August\nOn 9 August, City's promising young talent, Daniel Arzani joined Manchester City, with the expectation to be immediately loaned out to Celtic. On 30 August, Melbourne City signed French attacking midfielder Florin Berenguer from Sochaux as a visa player. Melbourne City then made their second loan to PEC Zwolle, with goalkeeper Dean Bouzanis joining Denis Genreau on loan for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, September\nThree new players signed for Melbourne City in mid-September. After three years in Europe, Mark Birighitti signed a three-year deal to return to the A-League and replace Bouzanis who was loaned-out, Ritchie De Laet signed on a one-year loan from Aston Villa and was designated as a marquee player, and defender Curtis Good, who played for the club in 2012, returned on a one-year deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, September\nOn 19 September, Melbourne City played in their quarter-finals for the FFA Cup against Western Sydney Wanderers at AAMI Park. City lost 2\u20131 loss, with Riley McGree scoring his first goal for the club, and were knocked-out of the cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, October\nThe former Western Sydney Wanderers midfielder, Kearyn Baccus signed for Melbourne City as an injury replacement for Michael O'Halloran who suffered a hamstring injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, October\nOn 20 October, City played their first game of the season which ended in a 2\u20131 victory over their derby rivals, Melbourne Victory, placing them at the top of the table at the end of the round along with Wellington Phoenix. Ritchie De Laet and Riley McGree scored City's goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, November\nThe month of November didn't turn out well for Melbourne City. On 2 November, City again couldn't find a victory against Sydney FC still when City's last win against Sydney FC was a 1\u20130 victory in the 2016 FFA Cup Final. They were redeeming themselves after a 2\u20130 win against Wellington Phoenix on 9 November. On 24 November, City were again struggling to try and mostly win at Suncorp Stadium, Brisbane after a 2\u20130 defeat from Brisbane Roar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, December\nMelbourne City played their first game against Newcastle Jets for the season which ended in a 3\u20130 win, with Riley McGree scoring with only two minutes played, along with Luke Brattan who scored a long volley from outside the box to double City's advantage in stoppage time, as then the speedstar, Lachlan Wales scored his first goal for City with a long run to tap the ball home through the legs of Glen Moss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, December\nOn the 8th, City's was facing the top of the table's team, Perth Glory. It ended in a disappointing 1\u20130 loss with the only goal coming from Chris Ikonomidis. Curtis Good with 10 minutes to go, had also been sent off with a second yellow card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, December\nMelbourne City redeemed themselves again with a 2\u20130 win over Adelaide United with Jordan Elsey scoring an own goal from a crossing ball from Ramy Najjarine. Luke Brattan finished it off with a bullet into the bottom left corner, with Paul Izzo getting a hand to the ball, but couldn't keep it out. The celebration had Brattan using the corner flag as a golf club as he looked like he was playing golf.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, December\nThe final game for City in December, was the second Melbourne Derby of the season which Victory wanted to win for a seventh straight win of the season. The Swedish World Cup international striker, Ola Toivonen tapped the opening goal for Victory. City in stoppage time scored the equalizer with Dario Vido\u0161i\u0107 directing the header into back of the net. It resulted into a 1\u20131 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, January\nJanuary was a start that the Melburnians were dreaming for. Melbourne City faced the Western Sydney Wanderers on New Year's Day, with a 2\u20130 win over them. Two goals were in quick succession for City with Lachlan Wales and Ritchie De Laet both scoring in 3 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, January\nOn the 2nd, Anthony C\u00e1ceres loan ended leaving City to Manchester City as he also signed for Sydney FC in the transfer on another one-year loan. The next day the youngster, Anthony Lesiotis was released to Melbourne Victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, January\nWith the two Anthony's gone, City again was playing against Newcastle Jets at home result was a 2\u20131 win for City with Riley McGree and Luke Brattan again scoring the two first two goals when facing Newcastle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, January\nOn the 8th, Michael O'Halloran left City in a mutual-contract termination leaving City with only two forwards in their squad, being left with Bruno Fornaroli and Gianluca Iannucci.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, January\nThree days later, Melbourne City then faced Brisbane Roar at AAMI Park which ended in a 1\u20130 win with Ritchie De Laet scoring his fifth goal of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, January\nOn a Wednesday night in Gosford, Central Coast Mariners was hosting City for the second and last time for the season. The result was a heartbreaking 2\u20131 loss for City over bottom-of-the-table Mariners. The second goal for the Mariners, was from Matt Simon as Galekovic saved a penalty from Simon with the ball rebounding back to him and scoring on the other side of the net in the 89th minute which handed the Mariners their first win of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, January\nOn the 19th, City was facing the top-of-the table side, Perth Glory at home. Many chances came on for both teams, and eventually ended in a goalless game (0\u20130).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, January\nOn the 22nd, City played the Western Sydney Wanderers and had one of AAMI Park's highest-scoring games with the game ending in a 4\u20133 win for Melbourne City. Bart Schenkeveld was the hero and won the game for City in stoppage time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, February\nWith no star-man, up front including the marquee man Bruno Fornaroli; Jamie Maclaren and Shayon Harrison had signed for City in the opening two days of February. Maclaren was a signing for four years, which is almost the exact same time, Bruno Fornaroli had been into the club. Shayon Harrison (on loan from Tottenham Hotspur) signed on a one-year loan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, February\nOn 3 March, Melbourne City travelled to Jubilee Oval to face Sydney FC with no Maclaren or Harrison within their starting lineup. The game then resulted into a 2\u20130 loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, February\nJamie Maclaren and Shayon Harrison had returned to their match-day squad for a home clash against Adelaide United (9 February) with both of them in the Starting XI up front. Maclaren had opened his account with his first goal for Melbourne City and then ended in a 1\u20131 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, February\nOn the 15th, played for the third and final time against Newcastle Jets which this time ended in a 3\u20131 loss with again Jamie Maclaren scoring the goal for City which was now two-in-two, for the Melbourne number 29.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285814-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC season, Review, February\nBruno Fornaroli had finally called his time to depart Melbourne City on the 26th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285815-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City W-League season\nThe 2018\u201319 Melbourne City FC W-League season was the club's fourth season in the W-League, the premier competition for women's football in Australia. The team is based at the City Football Academy at La Trobe University and played home games at both AAMI Park and CB Smith Reserve. Melbourne City entered the season having won the past three W-League Grand Finals. This is the first season they were without Jess Fishlock as she joined Olympique Lyonnais instead of playing in the W-League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285815-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City W-League season\nOn 19 June 2018 Rado Vido\u0161i\u0107 was appointed as the new head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285815-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City 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, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285815-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne City W-League season, W-League, Results summary\nLast updated: February 2019, end of regular season. Source: Competitive Matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285816-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne Renegades WBBL season\nThe 2018\u201319 Melbourne Renegades Women's season was the fourth in the team's history. Coached by Tim Coyle and captained by Amy Satterthwaite, they finished fourth in the regular season of WBBL|04 and qualified for finals for the first time in the team's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285816-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne Renegades WBBL season\nIn a \"heartbreaking\" and \"thrilling\" semi-final loss at Drummoyne Oval\u2014notable for its \"miracle\" last-ball finish, resulting in the run out of Sophie Molineux and forcing a super over\u2014the Renegades were knocked out of the tournament by the defending champions, the Sydney Sixers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285816-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne Renegades WBBL season, Squad\nEach 2018\u201319 squad featured 15 active players, with an allowance of up to five marquee signings including a maximum of three from overseas. Under a new rule, Australian marquees were classed as players who held a national women's team contract at the time of signing on for their WBBL|04 team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285816-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne Renegades WBBL season, Squad\nPersonnel changes for the Renegades ahead of the season included:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285816-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne Renegades WBBL season, Squad\nThe table below lists the Renegades players and their key stats (including runs scored, batting strike rate, wickets taken, economy rate, catches and stumpings) for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285816-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne Renegades WBBL season, Fixtures, Regular season\nThe Renegades recorded the second one-wicket victory in the league's history when Lea Tahuhu, a fast bowler not known for her batting ability, hit the winning single off leg spinning Stars captain Kristen Beams with just one ball to spare. Courtney Webb, on 21 not out, was the set batter at the non-striker's end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285816-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne Renegades WBBL season, Fixtures, Knockout phase\nIn the Renegades' first finals appearance, with three runs required off the last ball for an upset victory, Sophie Molineux was short of her ground attempting the winning run due to a \"miracle\" piece of team fielding by Sixers players Erin Burns, Sarah Aley and Alyssa Healy. In the resulting super over, Sixers captain Ellyse Perry hit a six off Molly Strano to eliminate the Renegades from the tournament. The match, in conjunction with the other semi-final played earlier in the day, was hailed as a showcase of \"the irrefutable rise of women's cricket\" and \"sport with drama, skill and unpredictability \u2013 a potent recipe for success\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285817-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne Renegades season\nThe 2018\u201319 Melbourne Renegades season is the eighth in the club's history. Coached by Andrew McDonald and captained by Aaron Finch, they competed in the BBL's 2018\u201319 season and they ended up winning the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285817-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne Renegades season, Squad information\nThe following is the Renegades men squad for the 2018\u201319 Big Bash League season as of 28 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285818-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne Stars WBBL season\nThe 2018\u201319 Melbourne Stars Women's season was the fourth in the team's history. Coached by David Hemp and captained by Kristen Beams, they finished seventh in the regular season of WBBL|04 and failed to qualify for the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285818-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne Stars WBBL season, Squad\nEach 2018\u201319 squad featured 15 active players, with an allowance of up to five marquee signings including a maximum of three from overseas. Under a new rule, Australian marquees were classed as players who held a national women's team contract at the time of signing on for their WBBL|04 team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285818-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne Stars WBBL season, Squad\nThe table below lists the Stars players and their key stats (including runs scored, batting strike rate, wickets taken, economy rate, catches and stumpings) for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285818-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne Stars WBBL season, Fixtures\nThe Melbourne Renegades recorded the second one-wicket victory in the league's history when Lea Tahuhu, a fast bowler not known for her batting ability, hit the winning single off leg-spinning Stars captain Kristen Beams with just one ball to spare. Courtney Webb, on 21 not out, was the set batter at the non-striker's end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285819-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne Stars season\nThe 2018\u201319 Melbourne Stars season is the eighth in the club's history. Coached by Stephen Fleming and captained by Glenn Maxwell, they competed in the BBL's 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285819-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne Stars season, Players, Squad\nThe following is the Stars men's squad for the 2018\u201319 Big Bash League season as of 23 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285820-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne Victory FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 Melbourne Victory FC season was the club's 14th season since its establishment in 2004. The club participated in the A-League for the 14th time and the AFC Champions League for the seventh time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285820-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne Victory 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285821-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne Victory W-League season\nThe 2018\u201319 Melbourne Victory W-League season was the club's eleventh season in the W-League, the premier competition for women's football in Australia. The team played home games at Epping Stadium, Lakeside Stadium and AAMI Park. The club's head coach for the season was Jeff Hopkins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285821-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne Victory W-League season, Background\nThe Victory entered the season having missed out on the final series in the previous three years. In 2017\u201318, while they had improved defensively, they only finished a point off last place. Media predictions had them finishing in the top four in 2018\u201319, with former player G\u00fclcan Koca suggesting they could win the premiership/championship double.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 53], "content_span": [54, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285821-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne Victory W-League season, W-League, Regular season\nThe Victory opened their campaign with a match against Adelaide United at AAMI Park. Despite having 60 percent of possession, they were not able to convert any of their 21 shots at goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 67], "content_span": [68, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285821-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne Victory W-League season, W-League, Regular season\nPlaying Newcastle Jets on 1 November at Lakeside Stadium, the Victory took an early lead with Melina Ayres scoring a long-range goal after seven minutes. Natasha Dowie made the score 2\u20130 in the 11th minute before Cortnee Vine pulled a goal back for the Jets a minute later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 67], "content_span": [68, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285821-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne Victory W-League season, W-League, Regular season\nThe Victory match against Canberra United on 17 January at Seiffert Oval in Queanbeyan was abandoned after 16 minutes due to lightning. A rematch was scheduled for 5 February at McKellar Park in Canberra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 67], "content_span": [68, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285821-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne Victory W-League season, W-League, Regular season\nA 2\u20131 victory over Perth Glory at Dorrien Gardens secured the club's first W-League premiership. The Victory entered the match needing a point to win the trophy after Brisbane Roar were unexpectedly defeated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 67], "content_span": [68, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285821-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne Victory W-League season, W-League, Regular season\nThe makeup game against Canberra United at McKellar Park on 5 January was delayed for 35 minutes due to lightning. Victory rested several first-choice players in preparation for the semi-final five days later. The match ended 0\u20130 and the Victory were awarded the Premier's Plate after the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 67], "content_span": [68, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285821-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Melbourne Victory W-League season, Players, Squad information\nUpdated 27 October 2018. Note: 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, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285822-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Memphis Grizzlies season\nThe 2018\u201319 Memphis Grizzlies season was the 24th season of the franchise in the NBA and its 18th in Memphis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285822-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Memphis Grizzlies season\nOn May 1, 2018, the Grizzlies named former interim coach J. B. Bickerstaff as the official head coach. On February 7, 2019, Marc Gasol was traded to the Toronto Raptors, after spending 11 years with the Grizzlies (his entire NBA career up until then). This was the first time since the 2007\u201308 that Gasol was not on the team. They improved their record from the previous season, but still ended with a losing record and missing the playoffs. On June 19, 2019, Mike Conley was traded to the Utah Jazz, effectively ending his 12 year stint with the Grizzlies (his entire career up until that point).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285822-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Memphis Grizzlies season, Player statistics\nAfter all games. \u2021Waived during the season\u2020Traded during the season\u2260Acquired during the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285823-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Memphis Tigers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Memphis Tigers men's basketball team represented the University of Memphis in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. This was the 98th season of Tiger basketball, the first under head coach Penny Hardaway, and the sixth as members of the American Athletic Conference. They played their home games at the FedEx Forum. They finished the season 22\u201314, 11\u20137 in AAC play to finish in fifth place. They defeated Tulane and UCF to advance to the semifinals of the AAC Tournament where they lost to Houston. They were invited to the National Invitation Tournament where they defeated San Diego in the first round before losing in the second round to Creighton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285823-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Memphis Tigers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Tigers finished the 2017\u201318 season 21\u201313, 10\u20138 in AAC play to finish in a tie for fifth place. They defeated Tulsa in the AAC Tournament before losing to Cincinnati in the semifinals. Despite having 21 wins, they did not participate in a postseason tournament for the second time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285823-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Memphis Tigers men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn March 14, 2018, the school fired head coach Tubby Smith after two years. On March 20, the school hired former Memphis player and NBA star Penny Hardaway as coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285824-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Memphis Tigers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Memphis Tigers women's basketball team will represent the University of Memphis during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The season marks the sixth for the Tigers as members of the American Athletic Conference. The Tigers, led by eleventh year head coach Melissa McFerrin, plays their home games at the Elma Roane Fieldhouse. They finished the season 11\u201320, 5\u201311 AAC play to finish in a 4-way tie for ninth place. They defeated Temple in the first round before losing in the quarterfinals of the American Athletic Women's Tournament to Cincinnati.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285824-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Memphis Tigers women's basketball team, Media\nAll Tigers home games will have a radio broadcast live on WUMR. Video streaming for all home games will be available on the , ESPN3, or . Road games will typically be streamed on the opponents website, though conference road games could also appear on ESPN3 or AAC Digital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 53], "content_span": [54, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285825-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Belgian Hockey League\nThe 2018\u201319 Men's Belgian Hockey League was the 100th season of the Belgian field hockey men's top division. It began on 2 September 2018 and it concluded with the second leg of the championship final on 12 May 2019. Dragons were the defending champions, having won the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285825-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Belgian Hockey League\nL\u00e9opold won their 28th title by defeating Beerschot 6\u20135 in aggregate in the championship final (two-legged tie).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285825-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Belgian Hockey League, Regular season\nThe twelve teams are grouped in two pools of six (Pool A and Pool B) based on the previous season's ranking\u00a0:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285825-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Belgian Hockey League, Regular season\nThe teams of the same pool compete 2 times and face the teams of the other pool once. The first four of each pool are qualified for the play-offs and the last two of each pool play the play-downs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285825-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Belgian Hockey League, Play-offs\nAll rounds are played in a two-legged tie. The scheme for the quarter-finals is as follows\u00a0:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285825-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Belgian Hockey League, Play-offs\nThe semi-finals are played between the winners of series 1 and 2 and the winners of series 3 and 4. The winners qualify for the championship final where the two teams compete to decide who will be crowned Belgian champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285825-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Belgian Hockey League, Play-offs, Quarter-finals, (1A) Racing vs (4B) Herakles\nHerakles won series 3-3 (3-1) in aggregate after penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 92], "content_span": [93, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285825-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Belgian Hockey League, Play-offs, Semi-finals\nThe semi-finals were played from 1 to 5 May 2019 at Herakles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285825-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Belgian Hockey League, Play-offs, EHL Play-off\nThe EHL play-off was played from 11 to 12 May 2019 at Herakles. The third place winner is qualified for the 2019\u201320 Euro Hockey League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285825-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Belgian Hockey League, Play-offs, EHL Play-off\nHerakles won series 6\u20136 (5-3) in aggregate after penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285825-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Belgian Hockey League, Play-offs, Final\nThe final was played from 11 to 12 May 2019 at Herakles. Both teams are qualified for the 2019\u201320 Euro Hockey League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285826-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's FIH Series Finals\nThe Men's FIH Series Finals 2019 was the final stage of the 2018\u201319 edition of the Hockey Series. It was held from April to June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285826-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's FIH Series Finals\nThe International Hockey Federation (FIH) confirmed that Malaysia, India and France would host FIH Series Finals in 2019. The top two teams from each event qualified for the 2019 Men's FIH Olympic Qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285826-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's FIH Series Finals, Qualification\nThe following 24 teams, shown with pre-tournament World Rankings as of December 2018, when the pools were composed, qualified for the FIH Series Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285826-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's FIH Series Finals, Kuala Lumpur, Awards\nThe following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285826-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's FIH Series Finals, Bhubaneswar, Awards\nThe following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285826-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's FIH Series Finals, Le Touquet, Awards\nThe following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285827-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Hockey League season\nThe 2018\u201319 Men's England Hockey League season was the 2018\u201319 season of England's field hockey league structure. The season started on 22 September 2018 until 14 April, with a winter break in December and January for the Indoor season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285827-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Hockey League season\nSurbiton topped the regular season table but Hampstead and Westminster sealed the Championship after winning the play offs. Bowdon Hockey Club won the season ending Cup competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285827-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Hockey League season, League Finals Weekend, Final\nHampsteadTobias Reynolds-Cotterill (gk), Stephen Kelly, Richard Smith, Marc Edwards, Toby Roche (c), Rupert Shipperley, Paul Melkert, Samuel French, Matt Guise Brown, Harry Martin, Kwan Browne; subs-Jonny Gooch, James Oates, Chris Cargo, Will Calnan, Rhodri Furlong, Kei KaeppelerSurbitonHarry Gibson (gk), Luke Taylor, Ben Boon, Jonathan Gall (c), David Beckett, Zachary Wallace, James Royce, Alan Forsyth, Brendan Creed, David Goodfield, James Gall; subs-Tom Sorsby, Lewis Prosser, Arjan Drayton Chana, Hayden Beltz, Sam Spencer, Nicky Parkes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285827-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Hockey League season, England Hockey Men's Championship Cup, Final\nBowdonJames Mazarelo, Oliver Stoddart, Daniel Campbell, Samuel Cooke, Hugh Wickert, Richie Dawson-Smith, David Egerton, Thomas Ainsworth, William Tobin, Matt Steventon, Archie Phillips, Lee Parry, Sam Apoola, James Vallely, Ben White, Elliot White. CanterburyJoshua Izzard, James Henderson, Tom Bean, Toby Vaughan, Jack Balsdon, Louis Ridge, William Mead, Craig Boyne, Matt Burton-Bowen, William Heywood, Teague Marcano, Thomas Degiovanni, Matthew Carney, Adam Lee-Browne, Nathan Redman, Patrick Brookson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 80], "content_span": [81, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285828-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Hockey Series\nThe 2018\u201319 Men's Hockey Series was the inaugural season of the Hockey Series, a field hockey championship for men's national teams. The tournament started in June 2018 and finished in June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285828-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Hockey Series, Format\nThe Hockey Series was open to all national teams that were not playing in the Pro League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285828-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Hockey Series, Format\nThe Hockey Series took place in two rounds, the Open and the Finals. The nine highest-ranked teams in the FIH World Rankings (as of 9 June 2017) skipped the Open and advance directly to the Finals. All other national teams played in the Hockey Series Open, which featured eight regional events with up to six teams each. Fifteen teams qualified from the Hockey Series Open to the FIH Series Finals, for a total of 24 teams in the Finals. Those teams played in three events, with eight teams per event (three automatic qualifiers and five that advanced from the Open).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285828-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Hockey Series, Format\nThe top two placed teams in each of the Finals events qualified for the 2019 FIH Olympic Qualifiers. In this qualification event, they were joined by the top four placed teams from the Pro League, and the four highest ranked teams not already qualified. The teams will be drawn and play a two-legged tie to determine seven qualified nations for the Olympic Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285828-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Hockey Series, Schedule, FIH Series Finals\nThe pools and venues were announced on 23 October 2018 with three teams still to qualify. The final pools were confirmed on 21 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285829-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Hockey Series Open\nThe 2018\u201319 Men's Hockey Series Open was an international field hockey competition, serving as the first stage of the 2018\u201319 edition of the Hockey Series. It was held from June to December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285829-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Hockey Series Open, Lahore\nThe tournament was scheduled earlier but cancelled because the invited teams did not wanted to travel to Pakistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285830-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Hoofdklasse Hockey\nThe 2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse was the 46th season of the Hoofdklasse, the Netherlands' highest field hockey league. It began on 26 August 2019 and it will conclude with the third match of the championship final on 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285830-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Hoofdklasse Hockey\nKampong were the defending champions, having won the 2017\u201318 season by defeating Amsterdam in the championship final. Bloemendaal won their 20th title by defeating Kampong 2\u20131 over three matches in the championship final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285830-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Hoofdklasse Hockey, Teams\nA total of 12 teams took part in the league: The best nine teams from the 2017\u201318 season, the two promotion/relegation play-off winners (Pinok\u00e9 and Almere) and the 2017\u201318 Overgangsklasse winners (Klein Zwitserland), who replaced HDM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285830-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Hoofdklasse Hockey, Play-offs\nAll rounds are played in a best of three format, with the higher seeded team playing the second and third game at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285830-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Hoofdklasse Hockey, Play-offs, Semi-finals\nThe semi-finals were played from 15 to 19 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285830-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Hoofdklasse Hockey, Play-offs, EHL Play-off\nBecause the regular season champions, Bloemendaal, also qualified for the final, an extra series was needed to determine the third Dutch qualifier for the 2019\u201320 Euro Hockey League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285831-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's V-League (South Korea)\nThe 2018\u201319 Men's V-League was the 15th season of the Men's V-League, the highest professional men's volleyball league in South Korea. It is sponsored by Dodram and known as The Dodram 2018\u201319 Men's V-League for sponsorship purposes. The season started on 13 October 2018 and concluded on 26 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285831-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's V-League (South Korea), Format, Regular season\nRegular season plays a sextuple round-robin (triple home and away matches) and each single round-robin is called a round. Each team plays 36 games in the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285831-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's V-League (South Korea), Format, Regular season, Regular 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 95], "content_span": [96, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285831-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's V-League (South Korea), Format, Postseason\nThe top three teams in the regular season standing will qualify for the postseason. However, if the difference between the 3rd and 4th place team is within three match points, the 4th place team will also qualify. The lowest-qualifying team face off in a stepladder system, where each winners then faces the next-highest team, culminating in the finals against the top-ranked team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285832-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Volleyball Thailand League\nThe 2018\u201319 Men's Volleyball Thailand League is the 14th season of the Men's Volleyball Thailand League, the top Thai professional league for men's volleyball clubs. Eight teams competed in the league. The season started on 27 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285832-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Volleyball Thailand League\nNakhon Ratchasima The Mall are the defending champions, also the reigning asian club champions, while the 2018 Pro Challenge champion will has entered as the promoted team from the 2018 Volleyball Pro Challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285832-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Volleyball Thailand League, Clubs, National team players\nNote\u00a0:: players who released during second leg transfer window;: players who registered during second leg transfer window;\u2192: players who left club after registered during first or second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285832-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Volleyball Thailand League, Format, Regular season, Regular 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, 40], "section_span": [42, 99], "content_span": [100, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285832-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Volleyball Thailand League, Finals series, Venue\nThe final series matches are played at the MCC Hall The Mall Bang Kapi in Bangkok.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285832-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Men's Volleyball Thailand League, Statistics leader\nThe statistics of each group follows the vis reports P2 and P5. The statistics include 6 volleyball skills; serve, reception, set, spike, block, and dig. The table below shows the top 5 ranked players in each skill plus top scorers at the completion of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285833-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mercer Bears men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Mercer Bears men's basketball team represented Mercer University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bears, led by 11th-year head coach Bob Hoffman, played their home games at Hawkins Arena on the university's Macon, Georgia campus as fifth-year members of the Southern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285833-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mercer Bears men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bears finished the 2017\u201318 season 19\u201315, 11\u20137 in SoCon play to finish in a tie for fourth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the SoCon Tournament to Wofford. They were invited to the College Basketball Invitational where they defeated Grand Canyon in the first round before losing in the quarterfinals to North Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285834-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mercer Bears women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Mercer Bears women's basketball team represents Mercer University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Bears, led by ninth-year head coach Susie Gardner, play their home games at the Hawkins Arena as members of the Southern Conference (SoCon). They finished the season 25\u20133, 16\u20130 in Southern Conference play win the Southern Conference regular season. They won the SoCon Women's Tournament to earn an automatic trip to the NCAA Women's Tournament where they lost to Iowa in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285835-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mercyhurst Lakers women's ice hockey season\nThe Mercyhurst Lakers represented Mercyhurst University in CHA women's ice hockey during the 2018-19 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285835-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mercyhurst Lakers women's ice hockey season, Offseason\nKennedy Blair was selected to participate in the US National Team's Goalie Development Camp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 62], "content_span": [63, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285835-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mercyhurst Lakers women's ice hockey season, Awards and honors\nSarah Hine was named the CHA /best Defensive Forward. Emma Nuutinen was selected for the CHA All-Conference First Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 70], "content_span": [71, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285836-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mestis season\nThe 2018\u201319 Mestis season is the 19th season of Mestis, the second highest level of ice hockey in Finland after Liiga. KOOVEE was promoted from Suomi-sarja due to Espoo United declaring bankruptcy at the end of last season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285836-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mestis season, Regular season\nTop eight advance to the Mestis playoffs while the bottom two face the top two teams from Suomi-sarja for a relegation playoff. Since the highest series of Finnish hockey is a closed series no team will be promoted to Liiga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285836-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mestis season, Regular season\nRules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Goals scored; 4) Head-to-head points; 5) Penalty minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285836-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mestis season, Playoffs\nPlayoffs are being played in three stages. Each stage is a best-of-7 series. The teams are reseeded after the quarterfinals, so that the best team by regular season performance to make the semifinals faces the worst team in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285836-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mestis season, Relegation playoffs\nThe bottom two teams faced the top two teams from Suomi-sarja for a best-of-7 series were the winners got a place in Mestis for the next season. Peliitat and KOOVEE both won their series and thus avoided relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285837-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC) men's basketball season began with practices in October 2018, followed by the start of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season in November. Conference play started in January and concluded March 22, 2019. This season was the 38th season of MAAC basketball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285837-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference men's basketball season\nThe MAAC season saw four teams spend considerable time being in first place; Rider, Monmouth, Canisius and Iona. Rider started MAAC play off strong, winning seven of their first eight MAAC games, and looking like they would prove the preseason #1 pick correct. But then a five-game losing streak left them at 7\u20136, and two games out of first place. Monmouth started the regular season 0\u201312 at one point, but rebounded when MAAC play started, posting a 9\u20134 conference mark by February 9. Then a four-game losing streak struck down the Hawks, knocking them out of first place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285837-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference men's basketball season\nCanisius had a solid season, keeping up with Monmouth the whole way. Consecutive losses to Iona and Niagara late in the season struck down their first place hopes. Iona, which had won the MAAC Tournament three consecutive times coming into the season, started off 5\u20132, but like the others, a four-game losing streak left them at 5\u20136 in MAAC play. Sitting in sixth place, Iona found their new starting five combination, and reeled off seven straight wins to end the MAAC season, and take the regular season crown in 2019. It was the 11th MAAC regular season championship for the Gaels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285837-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2019 MAAC Tournament was held from March 7 through March 11 at the Times Union Center in Albany, New York. This marked the 20th time Albany has hosted the event. No. 1 seed Iona defeated No. 6 seed Monmouth in the championship game 81\u201360 to win the conference's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Tournament. With the win, Iona became the first MAAC team to win four consecutive MAAC Tournament championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285837-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference men's basketball season\nQuinnipiac was the first MAAC team of the season to see postseason action, as they accepted an invitation to participate in the 2019 CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament, losing to NJIT 81\u201392 in the first round. Iona received a No. 16 seed in the NCAA Tournament Midwest Region, and faced No. 1 seed North Carolina in the first round on March 22, 2019. Iona led 38\u201333 at halftime, but despite Iona making 10 of 21 3-point tries in the first half, North Carolina started the second half on a 32\u201311 run to take control of the game, winning 88\u201373.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285837-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference men's basketball season, Head coaches, Coaching changes\nOn March 5, 2018, Marist head coach Mike Maker was fired. He finished at Marist with a four-year record of 28\u201397. Marist hired Saint Peter's coach John Dunne as Maker's successor on April 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 98], "content_span": [99, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285837-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference men's basketball season, Head coaches, Coaching changes\nOn April 10, 2018, Seton Hall assistant coach Shaheen Holloway was hired as the new head coach at Saint Peter's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 98], "content_span": [99, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285837-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference men's basketball season, Head coaches, Coaching changes\nOn April 13, 2018, Siena head coach Jimmy Patsos resigned amid an investigation regarding abusive conduct and financial improprieties within the program. On May 2, the Saints hired Mount St. Mary's head coach Jamion Christian for the job.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 98], "content_span": [99, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285837-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference men's basketball season, MAAC regular season, Conference matrix\nThis table summarizes the final head-to-head results between teams in conference play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 106], "content_span": [107, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285837-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference men's basketball season, MAAC regular season, Player of the week\nThroughout the regular season, the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference offices named player(s) of the week and rookie(s) of the week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 107], "content_span": [108, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285837-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference men's basketball season, MAAC regular season, Records against other conferences\n2018\u201319 records against non-conference foes. Records shown for regular season only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 122], "content_span": [123, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285838-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mez\u0151k\u00f6vesdi SE season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Mez\u0151k\u00f6vesdi SE's 4th competitive season, 3rd consecutive season in the OTP Bank Liga and 41st year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285838-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mez\u0151k\u00f6vesdi 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285838-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mez\u0151k\u00f6vesdi 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285838-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mez\u0151k\u00f6vesdi 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285838-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mez\u0151k\u00f6vesdi 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285838-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mez\u0151k\u00f6vesdi 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285838-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mez\u0151k\u00f6vesdi 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285838-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mez\u0151k\u00f6vesdi SE 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-00285839-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Miami Heat season\nThe 2018\u201319 Miami Heat season was the 31st season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285839-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Miami Heat season\nThis was Dwyane Wade's final season, after playing 16 years in the NBA. Believed by many to be the best player in franchise history, Wade led the team to its first championship title in 2006, as well as back-to-back titles in 2012 and 2013. He also led the team to a total of 11 playoff appearances, and Finals appearances in 2011 and 2014. Including his honorary All-Star spot this season, Wade has 13 total NBA All-Star Game appearances to his name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285839-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Miami Heat season\nOn March 26, 2019, the Heat retired Chris Bosh's jersey prior to their game versus the Orlando Magic. A free agent since 2017, Bosh officially announced his retirement on February 12, 2019 due to an ongoing battle with blood clots that ended his playing career in 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285839-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Miami Heat season\nThe Heat were eliminated from playoff contention on April 9th, when the Pistons defeated the Grizzlies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285839-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Miami Heat season, Draft picks\nThe Heat did not have a pick in the 2018 NBA draft, with their selections having been traded to the Phoenix Suns and Memphis Grizzlies (later Houston Rockets), respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285839-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Miami Heat season, Player statistics\nAfter all games. \u2021Waived during the season\u2020Traded during the season\u2260Acquired during the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285840-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Miami Hurricanes men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Miami Hurricanes men's basketball team represented the University of Miami during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Led by eighth-year head coach Jim Larra\u00f1aga, they played their home games at the Watsco Center on the university's campus in Coral Gables, Florida as members of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285840-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Miami Hurricanes men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Hurricanes finished the 2017\u201318 season 22\u201310, 11\u20137 in ACC play to finish in a four-way tie for third place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the ACC Tournament to North Carolina. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they lost in the First Round to Loyola\u2013Chicago.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285840-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Miami Hurricanes men's basketball team, Offseason, 2018 recruiting class\nThere was no recruiting class of 2018 for Miami (FL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285841-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Miami Hurricanes women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Miami hurricanes women's basketball team represented the University of Miami during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Hurricanes, led by fourteenth-year head coach Katie Meier, play their home games at the Watsco Center and were members of the Atlantic Coast Conference. They finished the season 25\u20139, 10\u20136 in ACC play to finish in a tie for third place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the ACC Women's Tournament to Syracuse. They received an at-large bid of the NCAA Women's Tournament where they defeated Florida Gulf Coast in the first round before losing to Arizona State in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285841-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Miami Hurricanes women's basketball team, Previous season\nFor the 2017\u201318 season, the Hurricanes finished 21\u201311 overall and 10\u20136, 7th in the ACC. Miami was eliminated in the quarterfinals of the ACC Tournament by Florida State. The Hurricanes received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as an eight-seed, their fourth consecutive tournament appearance, and were upset in the first round of the tournament by Quinnipiac.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285841-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Miami Hurricanes women's basketball team, Rankings\nThe Coaches Poll releases a final poll after the NCAA tournament, but the AP Poll does not release a poll at this time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285842-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Miami RedHawks men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Miami RedHawks men's basketball team represented Miami University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The RedHawks, led by second-year head coach Jack Owens, played their home games at Millett Hall, as members of the East Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 15\u201317 overall, 7\u201311 in MAC play to finish in fifth place in the East Division. As the No. 9 seed in the MAC Tournament, they were defeated in the first round by Akron.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285842-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Miami RedHawks men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe RedHawks finished with a record of 16-18, 8-10 in MAC play for the 2017\u201318 season which netted them a third place finish. They lost to Western Michigan as a No. 12 seed in the MAC Tournament. In the first round of the MAC Tournament they advanced by defeating Ohio after which in the quarterfinals they lost to Toledo. They were invited to the College Basketball Invitational where they lost in the first round to Campbell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285842-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Miami RedHawks men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nThe 2018-19 non-conference schedule was released on July 20, 2018. The MAC conference schedule was announced on August 1, 2018. The RedHawks will participate in the Islands of Bahamas Showcase in Nassau, Bahamas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285843-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Miami RedHawks women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Miami RedHawks women's basketball team represents Miami University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The RedHawks, led by second year head coach Megan Duffy, play their home games at Millett Hall, as members of the East Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 23\u20139, 13\u20135 in MAC play to finish in second place in the East Division. They advanced to the semifinals of the MAC Women's Tournament where they lost to Ohio. They received an at-large bid to the Women's National Invitation Tournament where they lost to Western Kentucky in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team represented Michigan State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Spartans were led by 24th-year head coach Tom Izzo and played their home games at Breslin Center in East Lansing, Michigan as members of the Big Ten Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team\nWith a win over in-state rival Michigan on March 9, 2019, the Spartans earned a share of the Big Ten regular season championship, marking back-to-back championships for the school. It also marked the school's ninth conference championship under Tom Izzo. They finished the season 32\u20137, 16\u20134 to earn a share of the Big Ten championship. As the No. 1 seed in the Big Ten Tournament, they defeated Ohio State, Wisconsin, and Michigan for the third time on the season to win the tournament championship. The win over Ohio State on March 15, marked Tom Izzo's 600th career win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team\nThe Tournament win marked the school's sixth championship, the most in the Big Ten. The Spartans received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament as the No. 2 seed in the East Region. There they defeated Bradley and Minnesota to advance to the team's first Sweet Sixteen since 2015. In the Sweet Sixteen, they defeated No. 3-seeded LSU to advance to the Elite Eight. There they defeated overall No. 1 seed Duke to advance to the school's 10th Final Four and eighth under Izzo. In the Final Four, they lost to No. 3-seeded Texas Tech.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team\nGuard Cassius Winston was named the Big Ten Player of the Year, the ninth player in MSU history to receive the award. Winston was also named to several All-American lists, including the AP and Sporting News first team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Spartans finished the 2017\u201318 season 30\u20135, 16\u20132 in Big Ten play to win the regular season championship. As the No. 1 seed in the Big Ten Tournament, they beat Wisconsin in the quarterfinals before losing to Michigan in the semifinals. The Spartans received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament, their 21st consecutive trip under Izzo, as the No. 3 seed in the Midwest region. They defeated No. 14 Bucknell in the First Round before losing to No. 11-seeded Syracuse in the Second Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Previous season\nAs a result, the Spartans failed to make the Sweet Sixteen for the third consecutive year, a first for the Spartans with Izzo as head coach. The 16 Big Ten wins for the Spartans marked a school record and the 30 overall wins was only the fourth time in school history that the Spartans had won at least 30 games (all under Izzo).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Spartans were led by Miles Bridges (17.1 points and 7.0 rebounds per game), Cassius Winston (12.4 points and 6.9 assists per game), and Nick Ward (12.1 points and 7.1 rebounds per game).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Offseason, Departures\nOn March 28, 2018, Miles Bridges announced he would hire an agent and declared for the NBA draft, ending his college career. On April 2, Jaren Jackson Jr. announced he would also enter the draft and sign with an agent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 76], "content_span": [77, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Offseason, Recruiting class\nOn April 5, 2016, four-star power forward Thomas Kithier announced he would attend Michigan State. On November 22, 2016, four-star point guard Foster Loyer committed to MSU. He is the son of former Detroit Pistons Head Coach John Loyer. After receiving an offer three days prior, four-star small forward Gabe Brown announced on June 20, 2017 that he will play for the Spartans in 2018. On June 30, 2017, three-star power forward Marcus Bingham Jr. announced he would play for MSU in 2018. On September 11, 2017, four-star small forward Aaron Henry committed to play basketball at MSU in 2018. According to scout.com, after the commit of Aaron Henry, the Spartans had the third best recruiting class in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 82], "content_span": [83, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Offseason, Coaching rumors\nFollowing a tumultuous season off the court, it was rumored that the Orlando Magic were interested in at least interviewing Tom Izzo for their vacant head coaching position. Shortly thereafter, it was reported that Izzo would not take the job.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 81], "content_span": [82, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Offseason, Early offseason rankings\nIn April 2018, most early pollsters included Michigan State as a preseason top-15 team for the 2018\u201319 season. These included ESPN (No. 11), Sports Illustrated (No. 12), Yahoo! Sports (No. 9), USA Today (No. 8), NBC Sports (No. 13), CBS Sports (No. 11), Sporting News (No. 10), and Bleacher Report (No. 19).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 90], "content_span": [91, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Offseason, Early offseason rankings\nFollowing the deadline to withdraw from the NBA Draft, many media outlets released updated early top 25 rankings for the 2017\u201318 season. Most pollsters included Michigan State in the preseason top 25 for the 2018\u201319 season: ESPN (No. 9), Sports Illustrated (No. 9), NBC Sports (No. 13), and CBS Sports (No. 11).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 90], "content_span": [91, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Offseason, Returning players\nOn March 29, 2018, Nick Ward announced he too would enter the NBA draft, but he would not sign with an agent. On May 29, one day before the deadline to withdraw from the draft, Ward announced he would return to Michigan State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 83], "content_span": [84, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Preseason\nShortly after the team started practice in late September 2018, head coach Tom Izzo announced that Matt McQuaid and Joshua Langford had been named team captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 64], "content_span": [65, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Preseason\nOn October 5, Michigan State held its annual Midnight Madness at Breslin Center. Tom Izzo appeared via a magic trick and the school announced a celebration of the 40th anniversary of the 1979 NCAA National Championship team led by Earvin \"Magic\" Johnson. The team announced they would wear throwback 1979 jerseys as they celebrated \"40 Years of Magic.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 64], "content_span": [65, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Preseason, Preseason rankings\nIn its preseason college preview, Lindy's Sports ranked Michigan State No. 10 in the country. The Blue Ribbon Yearbook also listed MSU as No. 10. Athlon Sports also ranked MSU as No. 10 in the country and picked the Spartans to win the Big Ten. The Spartans were ranked 10th in both the AP and Coaches preseason polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 84], "content_span": [85, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Preseason, Preseason Big Ten Poll\nPrior to the conference's annual media day, awards and a poll were chosen by a panel of 28 writers, two for each team in the conference. Michigan State was picked to win the conference, receiving 24 of the 28 first place votes. Cassius Winston was named first-team All-Big Ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 88], "content_span": [89, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Preseason, Preseason Big Ten Poll\nAt the Big Ten media day, Cassius Winston and Nick Ward were named to the 10-member All-Big Ten Preseason Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 88], "content_span": [89, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Preseason, \"Secret\" scrimmage\nOn October 27, 2018, the Spartans scrimmaged against No. 3-ranked Gonzaga at Target Center in Minneapolis. The scrimmage consisted of two 20-minute halves that both began scoreless, as well as two five-minute periods for freshmen and walk-ons. Gonzaga won both halves, 58\u201346 in the first and 52\u201346 in the second. Nick Ward led the Spartans with 22 points and 12 rebounds. Cassius Winston added 16 points and eight assists, but turned the ball over six times. Sophomore Xavier Tillman also had 16 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 84], "content_span": [85, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Preseason, Exhibition\nThe Spartans played Tom Izzo's alma mater, Division II Northern Michigan, in an exhibition game at Breslin Center on October 30, 2018. The Spartans defeated the Wildcats 93\u201347 behind Nick Ward's 24 points and nine rebounds. Cassius Winston added 13 points and seven assists as MSU shot 49.2 percent from the field. Only freshman wing Aaron Henry played major minutes for the Spartans as the other members of MSU's five-man freshmen class did not enter the game until late in the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 76], "content_span": [77, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Kansas\nOn November 6, 2018, MSU faced No. 1-ranked Kansas in the Champions Classic in Indianapolis. The Spartans struggled with Kansas' size on the inside and fell behind by as many as 17 in the first half. Nick Ward struggled throughout the game, shooting only 25% from the field. Joshua Langford, who led the Spartans with 18 points only scored three in the first half as MSU trailed by 14 at halftime. MSU also struggled from the free throw line, shooting only 65%, including less than 50% in the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 77], "content_span": [78, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0018-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Kansas\nKenny Goins made three three-pointers and Langford scored 15 in the second half as MSU narrowed the lead to three with less than a minute remaining. However, the Spartans could not come closer, falling 92\u201387. Cassius Winston had 11 points in the loss and turned the ball over five times. Goins added a career-high 17 points and led the Spartans with 11 rebounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 77], "content_span": [78, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Florida Gulf Coast\nOn November 11, MSU opened its home schedule facing Florida Gulf Coast. Nick Ward recovered from his difficult game against the Jayhawks to shoot seven of 11 from the field and made 11 free throws while scoring 25 points to lead the Spartans. MSU's offense showed no issues, scoring 106 points in the blowout of the Eagles. However, MSU's defense allowed 82 points, much to the chagrin of Tom Izzo. Langford added 18 points while Cassius Winston scored 14 and added eight assists as MSU moved to 1\u20131 on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 89], "content_span": [90, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Louisiana\u2013Monroe\nThree days later, MSU welcomed Louisiana\u2013Monroe to Breslin Center. Nick Ward left the game midway through the first half with an ankle injury and only played five minutes. As a result, the game remained close through the opening minutes of the second half when Cassius Winston got hot, scoring 13 of his team-high 23 points early in the half. The Spartans then pulled away to win 80\u201359. Kenny Goins notched a career-high 15 rebounds while Xavier Tillman added 11 points and 13 rebounds in the win. After the game, Izzo said that he didn't think Ward's injury was anything serious.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 87], "content_span": [88, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Tennessee Tech\nOn November 18, Tennessee Tech visited Breslin and Spartans were unkind hosts. MSU obliterated the Golden Eagles by 68 points, tying the biggest win in school history and marking the largest win by a team under Tom Izzo. Nick Ward, started and showed no ill effects from his injury in the previous game as he scored 23 points in 23 minutes. MSU held the Eagles to only 14 first-half points in the win. Cassius Winston added 19 points and six assists as MSU moved to 3\u20131 on the season, winning 101\u201333.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 85], "content_span": [86, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, UCLA\nThe Spartans then traveled to Las Vegas to face UCLA in the Las Vegas Invitational on Thanksgiving. The No. 11-ranked Spartans ran the No. 17-ranked Bruins off the court, taking an early lead and leading 51\u201326 at the half. Cassius Winston again had 19 points while Nick Ward added 16. Kenny Goins notched 13 rebounds in the blowout as MSU led by as many as 29. Josh Langford added 14 points in the 87\u201367 blowout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 75], "content_span": [76, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Texas\nIn the championship game of the Las Vegas Invitational, MSU faced Texas who had upset No. 7-ranked North Carolina the previous day. MSU turned the ball over repeatedly in the early minutes of the game and the Longhorns jumped out to a quick double digit lead. With eight minutes remaining in the first half, Texas pushed the lead to 19 and the Spartans looked out of sorts. However, Josh Langford took control for the Spartans, scoring 29 points as they roared back to take the lead early in the second half. MSU, helped by Cassius Winston's 20 points, held on to notch another double digit win, winning 78\u201368 to earn the Invitational championship and pushing their record to 5\u20131 on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 76], "content_span": [77, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Louisville\nOn November 27, newly No. 9-ranked MSU traveled to face Louisville as part of the ACC\u2013Big Ten Challenge. The Spartans, who played without starting guard Matt McQuaid who suffered a thigh bruise late against Texas, struggled against Louisville. Without McQuaid, Cassius Winston played the majority of the game at the point and, at times, showed fatigue. He would eventually foul out with about four minutes remaining in the game. MSU trailed by six at halftime, but narrowed the lead and eventually took the lead in the second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 81], "content_span": [82, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0024-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Louisville\nHowever, missed free throws, nine in the game, resulted in the Spartans being unable to put the game away. In overtime, the Spartans could not get enough shots to fall as they lost 82\u201378. Kenny Goins notched a career-high 17 rebounds, but failed to take a shot or score a point in the game. Kyle Ahrens, starting for McQuaid, played well, scoring 15 points. The loss dropped MSU to 5\u20132 on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 81], "content_span": [82, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Rutgers\nMSU next traveled to face Rutgers to open the early portion of the Big Ten schedule on November 30. Rutgers, who sold out the RAC for the first time in November in over 20 years, started hot, taking an early lead. However, MSU, still playing without Matt McQuaid, rallied to take a two-point lead at the half. Cassius Winston scored a game-high 22 points as MSU opened a 13-point lead in the game. Rutgers brought the game close as the second half came to a close, but the Spartans held on to win by 11. Nick Ward played well, pouring in 20 points on seven of 12 shooting from the field. Joshua Langford added 14 as MSU moved to 6\u20132 on the season and 1\u20130 in Big Ten play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 78], "content_span": [79, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Iowa\nThree days later, the Spartans returned home for the first time in over two weeks to face No. 18 Iowa. Iowa took an early lead and kept the game close through most of the first half, but the MSU defense dominated the game. The Spartans held Iowa to 32.8% shooting from the field and 27.3% from three. MSU, behind Nick Ward's perfect 10\u201310 tonight pushed the lead to as many as 28 in the second half as they dominated the Hawkeyes in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 75], "content_span": [76, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0026-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Iowa\nKenny Goins added a career-high 19 points and 14 points in the game while Xavier Tillman also added a career-high 14. Cassius Winston notched 12 assists in the game and turned the ball over only one time. The Spartans only committed eight turnovers in the game after entering the game averaging over 13 a game. The 90\u201368 win moved MSU to 7\u20132 on the season and 2\u20130 in Big Ten play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 75], "content_span": [76, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Florida\nMSU returned to non-conference play as they traveled to face Florida on December 8. MSU led for the majority of the game leading by as many as 12, but could never put the game away. The Spartans returned to their turnover struggles, giving the ball up 15 times in the game. Tom Izzo continued to shorten his bench as Matt McQuaid made his return though did not start. Only eight players saw the floor for MSU and Cassius Winston seemed to struggle with fatigue, scoring only 10 points on four of 13 shooting including 0\u20135 from three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 78], "content_span": [79, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0027-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Florida\nKyle Ahrens, who started his third straight game, finished the scoring for the Spartans with seven straight points including a dunk as the shot clock expired with less than 10 seconds remaining to give the Spartans the 63\u201359 win. Xavier Tillman led the Spartans with 14 points while Josh Langford and Nick Ward added 13 each. The win moved the Spartans to 8\u20132 on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 78], "content_span": [79, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Green Bay\nAfter eight days off for finals, the Spartans returned to play at Breslin Center against Green Bay. The Phoenix shot well from the field early, making 10 of their first 15 shots and taking a 24\u201320 lead. However, from there the Spartans dominated behind Nick Ward's career-high 28 points and led 64\u201335 at the half. Cassius Winston scored 16 points and dished out 12 assists in the blowout while Josh Langford added 13. MSU even played all five freshmen from its recruiting class at the same time late in the game as the Spartans won easily 104\u201383. Michigan State dominated the boards, out-rebounding Green Bay 56\u201334. The win moved the Spartans to 9\u20132 on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 80], "content_span": [81, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Oakland\nFive days later, the Spartans welcomed Oakland to East Lansing. Cassius Winston scored 26 points and Xavier Tillman had five assists as the Spartans blew out the Grizzlies 99\u201369. MSU shot 58.5% from the field in the rout of Oakland. However, the Spartans did allow 13 made three-pointers by Oakland which left Tom Izzo less than happy after the game. The win moved MSU to 10\u20132 on the season with only one non-conference game remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 78], "content_span": [79, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Northern Illinois\nIn the final non-conference game of the season, MSU welcomed MSU alum and former Izzo assistant Mark Montgomery and his NIU Huskies to Breslin Center. The Spartans quickly out-paced the Huskies and dominated the first half, leading 43\u201319 at the break. Cassius Winston scored 24 points on six of seven shooting from three. Winston also dished out seven assists as Kenny Goins added 12 points in the blowout of the Huskies. Josh Langford struggled from the floor in the first half and did not play in the second with an ankle injury. The 88\u201360 win moved MSU to 11\u20132 on the season. Langford would not play in another game in the 2018\u201319 or 2019\u201320 season. Langford would not play another game until the 2020\u201321 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 88], "content_span": [89, 804]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Northwestern\nReturning to the Big Ten season brought Northwestern to East Lansing on January 2. The Spartans played without Josh Langford who was in a boot before the game. Northwestern played well to start the game, but MSU went on a 26\u20138 run to end the first half to blow the game open. Nick Ward scored all 21 of his points in the first half as the Wildcats chose not to double team him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 83], "content_span": [84, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0031-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Northwestern\nLeading by 20 at the half, MSU pushed the lead to as many as 32 in the second half before easing off the gas and winning by 26. Cassius Winston scored 13 points with 12 assists in the 81\u201355 win. The win moved Michigan State to 12\u20132 on the season and 3\u20130 in Big Ten play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 83], "content_span": [84, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Ohio State\nThree days later, MSU hit the road to take on No. 14-ranked Ohio State looking to move to 4\u20130 on the season. Cassius Winston struggled in the first half and was challenged by Tom Izzo at halftime. Winston responded, scoring 25 points to overcome a 43\u201336 halftime deficit. Nick Ward added 21 points and eight rebounds as the Spartans pulled away late to beat the Buckeyes by nine. The Spartans shot over 80% from the free throw line in the win including Ward who went 11\u201314. MSU moved to 13\u20132 on the season and 4\u20130 in conference. Josh Langford missed his second consecutive game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 81], "content_span": [82, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0033-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Purdue\nThe newly AP-ranked No. 6 Spartans (No. 5 in the coaches poll) returned home to face Purdue on January 8. MSU started slow, trailing for the first 10 minutes of the first half, but overcame the slow start to take control of the game by halftime. The Big Ten's leading scorer, Purdue's Carsen Edwards, was contained by MSU's tough defense and limited to 12 points on four of 12 shooting in the game. Cassius Winston took control in the second half, scoring 23 points as the Spartans pulled away late to win 77\u201359. Nick Ward added 16 points as MSU played once again without Josh Langford. The win moved the Spartans to 14\u20132 on the season and 5\u20130 in Big Ten play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 77], "content_span": [78, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0034-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Penn State\nMSU returned to the road on January 13 to face Penn State. The Spartans were again without Josh Langford and Kyle Ahrens, Langford's replacement in the starting lineup, missed the game with a back injury. MSU led from the start, however. Nick Ward scored 16 points for the Spartans while Matt McQuaid scored 15 and Cassius Winston scored 11. Michigan State turned the ball over 17 times but only trailed for 10 seconds in the game, leading by as many as 21. The 71\u201356 win marked MSU's 10th straight win. However, Tom Izzo was not pleased after the game and said Winston played one of his worst games. The win tied the school record for consecutive regular season conference wins at 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 81], "content_span": [82, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0035-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Nebraska\nThe Spartans continued their road trip to face Nebraska in Lincoln. The game remained tight throughout the first half, but MSU pulled away late to earn a 70\u201364 win, without both Josh Langford or Kyle Ahrens for the second consecutive game. Cassius Winston rebounded from his poor outing against Penn State in the previous game and led the way with a career-high 29 points. Winston went over 1,00 career points for MSU in the game as Nick Ward also added 15 points and 10 rebounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 79], "content_span": [80, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0035-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Nebraska\nMSU's defense again held a star player in check, limiting James Palmer Jr. to six of 21 from the field, though he did score 24 points. The win improved the Spartans' record to 16\u20132 on the season and 7\u20130 in conference play and set a school record with their 19th straight conference regular season win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 79], "content_span": [80, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0036-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Maryland\nFour days later, Michigan State returned home to face No. 13-ranked Maryland. The Spartans jumped out to an early first half lead before Maryland tied the game at 20 in the first half. MSU, however, answered an 11\u20130 run to end the half and never trailed again. MSU moved the lead to as much as 22 in the second half and finished with a 69\u201355 victory. The win moved MSU to sole possession of first place in the Big Ten as the only remaining undefeated team in conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 79], "content_span": [80, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0036-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Maryland\nKenny Goins and Cassius Winston led the way in scoring with 14 points apiece. Kyle Ahrens returned from a back injury to score four points. Nick Ward had one of the worst games of his MSU career, battling foul trouble and failed to score. The win marked MSU's 20th consecutive Big Ten regular season victory, extending the school record. The win improved MSU's record to 17\u20132 on the season and 8\u20130 in conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 79], "content_span": [80, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0037-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Iowa\nOn January 24, the Spartans traveled to face No, 19 Iowa in Iowa City. In their seventh straight game without Josh Langford, the Spartans struggled in the first half and trailed by as many as eight later in the half. MSU was able to narrow the lead to only a four-point deficit at half time. Iowa increased its lead again to eight early in the second half before MSU countered with 24\u20132 run to put the game out of reach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 75], "content_span": [76, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0037-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Iowa\nMSU moved the lead to as many as 18 in the second half as Cassius Winston took control, scoring 23 points and Nick Ward poured in 21. The Spartans made 21 of 22 free throw attempts in the game which helped lead to the win. The win, the school's 21st straight regular season conference win, moved MSU to 18\u20132 and 9\u20130 on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 75], "content_span": [76, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0038-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Purdue\nThree days later, MSU traveled to face Purdue in West Lafayette. Purdue dominate from the start leading throughout the first half and pushing the halftime score to 37\u201319. Purdue pushed the lead to as many as 24 in the second half before the MSU offense roared back while MSU limited Purdue's offense. Behind Cassius Winston's 23 points and eight assists, the Spartans moved to within four points with less than three minutes remaining in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 77], "content_span": [78, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0038-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Purdue\nTom Izzo then chose to foul Purdue guard Nojel Eastern who was a 45% free throw shooter, but he made six straight free throws to close out the game. The Spartans fell 73\u201363, ending their 15-game winning streak and their 21-game conference regular season streak. The loss moved the Spartans to 18\u20133 and 9\u20131 on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 77], "content_span": [78, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0039-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Indiana\nAfter playing three games in six days, the Spartans had five days to prepare for a visit from Indiana. A few days before the game, it was announced that guard Josh Langford, who had missed the previous eight games, would miss the remainder of the season. In an ESPN Gameday visit, the Spartans struggled from the foul line, making only eight of 22 free throws. The Hoosiers, who had lost seven straight games, led for most of the first half, but MSU narrowed the lead to three at the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 78], "content_span": [79, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0039-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Indiana\nCassius Winston scored 26 for the Spartans, but MSU, known for its rebounding, were outrebounded by Indiana including 20 offensive rebounds. As MSU struggled at the free throw line, the Spartans were unable to put the game away and had to settle for overtime. In overtime, Indiana's Romeo Langford led the way as the Hoosiers pulled out the 79\u201375 win over Michigan State. The loss was MSU's second straight loss, the first time they had lost two games in a row in a season since 2016. The loss also dropped MSU back into a first place tie with Michigan who had lost the night before to Iowa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 78], "content_span": [79, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0040-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Illinois\nMSU returned to the road to face Illinois at State Farm Center. Nick Ward did not start as Tom Izzo tried to send a message to his team. However, Illinois took an early lead and for the majority of the game as their intense defense forced the Spartans into 24 turnovers in the game. Cassius Winston alone had nine turnovers. However, the Spartans mounted a furious comeback late in the second half and even took the lead with just over six minutes left. However, Illinois went on a 15\u20138 run to end the game and notch the victory 79\u201374. MSU who had struggled from the free throw line against Indiana, made 23\u201325 against the Illini. The loss dropped MSU out of first place and put them a game behind Purdue and Michigan in the Big Ten standing with a 9\u20133 record, 18\u20135 overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 79], "content_span": [80, 854]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0041-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Minnesota\nMinnesota next visited the Spartans as MSU celebrated its 1979 National Championship team. MSU greats Earvin \"Magic\" Johnson, Greg Kelser, and others from the team were on hand as Michigan State thumped Minnesota 79\u201355. Nick Ward rebounded from his recent struggles and scored 22 points to lead all scorers while Matt McQuaid added 18 in the romp over the Golden Gophers. Cassius Winston only played 33 minutes in the game due to foul trouble in the first half and Kenny Goins left with an elbow injury, but MSU still dominated the game. MSU shot over 51% from the field and 40% from three in the win. The Spartans led throughout in the easy win over the struggling Gophers. The win ended MSU's three-game losing streak as they moved to 10\u20133 in conference and 19\u20135 overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 80], "content_span": [81, 854]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0042-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Wisconsin\nMSU returned to the road to face No. 20 Wisconsin looking to continue their winning ways. The game remained tight throughout as the teams exchanged baskets. Kenny Goins, who missed most of the previous game against Minnesota started and played well for the Spartans, scoring 12 points including three three-pointers as MSU was able to overcome Wisconsin's Ethan Happ who scored 20 points on the night. Cassius Winston led all scorers with 23 points and six assists as MSU was able to pull away at the end behind baskets by Goins and Nick Ward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 80], "content_span": [81, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0042-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Wisconsin\nHapp, struggled from the free throw line in the game, going 0\u20136 down the stretch. MSU pulled out the tough road win 67\u201359. The win, coupled with a Purdue loss earlier in the night and a surprise Michigan loss to Penn State, moved MSU back into a first place tie with Michigan at 11\u20133 in conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 80], "content_span": [81, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0043-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Ohio State\nOhio State traveled to East Lansing on February 17 looking to avenge a loss to the Spartans earlier in the season. OSU started well, leading for most of the first half and taking a six-point halftime lead. In the second half, MSU started without Nick Ward who was on the bench having his hand looked at by medical staff. Playing most of the half without Ward, the Spartans' defense clamped down holding the Buckeyes to only 13 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 81], "content_span": [82, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0043-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Ohio State\nMatt McQuaid (14 points) and Kenny Goins (10 rebounds) led MSU in the second half as they pulled away to win by 18, 62\u201344. Cassius Winston had 13 points and eight assists while Thomas Kithier played 10 important minutes in Ward's absence. Aaron Henry, after having a good game against Wisconsin earlier in the week, only played 10 minutes and was held scoreless. The win returned MSU to a first-place tie with Michigan atop the Big Ten standings at 12\u20133. Following the game, MSU announced that Ward had suffered a hairline fracture in his left hand and that he would be out indefinitely, further weakening the Spartans roster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 81], "content_span": [82, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0044-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Rutgers\nIn their first game since Nick Ward broke his hand, MSU struggled early against Rutgers on February 20. Rutgers led for most of the first half and led a seven-point lead at halftime. In the second half, Cassius Winston and Xavier Tillman took over. Winston scored 19 of his game high 28 points in the second half as he led the Spartans to 46 points in the second half. Tillman, starting in place of the injured word, played a career-high 33 minutes and scored a career-high 19 points as MSU rallied to defeat the Scarlet Knights. Kyle Ahrens again injured his back, but still played 20 minutes for the injury-depleted Spartans. Four Spartans, Winston, Tillman, Kenny Goins, and Matt McQuaid played over 30 minutes in the game. The win kept the Spartans in first place tie with Michigan who won the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 78], "content_span": [79, 886]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0045-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Michigan\nOn February 24, MSU traveled to face rival Michigan with the lead in the Big Ten on the line. Playing again without Nick Ward, MSU played well, led by Cassius Winston's 27 points. Michigan had trouble with MSU's ball screen offense, but still led midway through the second half. Winston then took over, using ball screens to drive to the basket or to dish to open shooters as MSU retook the lead. MSU shot 50% from the field in the game while their defense limited Michigan's offense to less than 40%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 79], "content_span": [80, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0045-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Michigan\nWinston had eight assists in the game as MSU ended a three-game losing streak to Michigan. Kenny Goins added 16 points, while Xavier Tillman scored 14 as MSU was able to hold on for the surprising seven-point win 77\u201370 win. The win moved MSU to 14\u20133 to first place in the conference and a game up on Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 79], "content_span": [80, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0046-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Indiana\nWith five days off and the conference championship in MSU's sights, the Spartans traveled to Indiana looking to avenge their earlier home loss to the Hoosiers. MSU, playing again without Nick Ward, led for the majority of the game, pushing the lead in to double figures in the second half. Despite shooting less than 38% from the field in the game, the Hoosiers narrowed the MSU lead late in the second half and took the lead on a free throw by Romeo Langford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 78], "content_span": [79, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0046-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Indiana\nWith more than 30 seconds left in the game, the Hoosiers, fouled Cassius Winston with less than 10 seconds to go with a foul to give. MSU took a timeout to draw up a play for the winner, but Winston settled for a fall away jumper that came up short and the Hoosiers completed the season sweep of the Spartans. The loss dropped MSU to 14\u20134 in the conference, a game behind Purdue and tied with Michigan with two games remaining. The loss appeared to end the Spartans chances for a Big Ten championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 78], "content_span": [79, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0047-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Nebraska\nMSU returned home to face a struggling Nebraska team. However, the Cornhuskers stayed close with the Spartans for the first 10 minutes, but MSU pulled away to lead by 18 at the half. Without Nick Ward for the fourth straight game, Kenny Goins led the Spartans with a career-high 24 points while Matt McQuaid also added a career-high 22 points. MSU led by more than 20 through portions of the second half, but Nebraska narrowed the lead to singled digits with 10 minutes remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 79], "content_span": [80, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0047-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Nebraska\nHowever, MSU, who leaned more heavily on freshmen Thomas Kithier, Gabe Brown, and Aaron Henry than in previous games, extended the lead again to win by 15. Henry also had a career-high in points, scoring 15 including an emphatic dunk in the second half. Cassius Winston added eight points and 10 assists as he struggled with knee tendinitis and only played 31 minutes. The win coupled with a Purdue loss to Minnesota later that night, moved MSU back into a first place tie with Michigan and Purdue in the conference at 15\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 79], "content_span": [80, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0048-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Michigan\nMSU welcomed Michigan to Breslin Center on March 9 for Senior Night with a share of the Big Ten championship on the line for the rivals. A win earlier in the day by Purdue meant that the winner of the game would earn a share of the Big Ten championship. Tom Izzo said before the game that Nick Ward could have played, but Izzo determined to hold him out until the Big Ten Tournament. Michigan, like when the teams met 13 days prior, started off well, surging to an early lead throughout the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 79], "content_span": [80, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0048-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Michigan\nFoul trouble hit both teams as Cassius Winston sat the final minutes of the half with two fouls. Meanwhile, Michigan's Ignas Brazdeikis and Isaiah Livers each were limited in the first half with two fouls as well. Despite not having Winston on the floor, MSU kept Michigan within reach and only trailed by six at the half. The second half continued as the first had ended with Michigan maintaining its lead, but MSU kept within striking distance. Winston then took over, making five straight shots at one point as the Spartans surged into the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 79], "content_span": [80, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0048-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Regular season, Michigan\nWinston finished with 23 points and seven assists. Xavier Tillman played well for the Spartans, notching 17 points while Kenny Goins added nine points and 16 rebounds. The Spartans dominated the board, outrebounding Michigan 46\u201320 and pulling away for the 75\u201363 win. The win gave the Spartans a share of the Big Ten title and marked back-to-back championships for the Spartans. MSU earned the No. 1 seed in the Big Ten Tournament with the win as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 79], "content_span": [80, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0049-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Postseason, Big Ten Tournament, Ohio State\nAs the No. 1 seed in the Big Ten Tournament, the Spartans faced Ohio State for third time on the season. The Buckeyes had beaten Indiana to advance to face Michigan State. Nick Ward returned for the Spartans, but did not start. He saw limited time, but played well, scoring eight points including a jump shot and free throw where he showed no ill affects from the broken hand. The Buckeyes kept the game close in the first half as Cassius Winston struggled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 97], "content_span": [98, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0049-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Postseason, Big Ten Tournament, Ohio State\nFreshman guard Foster Loyer stepped up for the Spartans, scoring 14 points off the bench, including three three-pointers to give MSU the lead. The Spartans extended their six-point halftime lead and were able to pull away in the second half and led by as many as 21 points. In an obvious attempt to reduce fatigue, Winston only played 22 minutes in the game and Tom Izzo lifted MSU's starters with two minutes remaining in the game. A late surge by the Buckeyes narrowed the lead, but MSU held on for a 77\u201370 win. The win marked the 600th career victory for Izzo, all at Michigan State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 97], "content_span": [98, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0050-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Postseason, Big Ten Tournament, Wisconsin\nThe following day, the Spartans faced off against Wisconsin, who MSU had defeated in Madison earlier in the season. Michigan State jumped out to a 18\u20134 lead within the first six minutes and never trailed in the game. Wisconsin kept the game within shouting distance for most of the game, but MSU pulled out the win 67\u201355. Cassius Winston led the Spartans with 21 points while Xavier Tillman added 17 points. Nick Ward again did not start, but played 11 minutes. He was saddled with foul trouble through most of the game and only scored two points. Winston injured his toe partway through the game and again saw his minutes restricted, playing only 28. The win sent MSU to the championship game of the Big Ten Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 96], "content_span": [97, 817]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0051-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Postseason, Big Ten Tournament, Michigan\nOn Selection Sunday, the Spartans squared off with Michigan for the third time in only two weeks, this time for the tournament championship. MSU, who won the previous two games against the Wolverines, started well, jumping out to a 17\u201311 lead halfway through the first half. However, Spartan guard Kyle Ahrens went down hard on his ankle while coming down with a rebound in the first half and was taken out on a stretcher with an air cast on his leg. Following the injury, Michigan finished the half outscoring the Spartans 10\u20136, giving them a 31\u201323 lead at the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 95], "content_span": [96, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0051-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Postseason, Big Ten Tournament, Michigan\nThe Wolverines came out hot in the second half, causing the Spartans to fall behind 39\u201326 in the early going. The Spartans were able to dig deep and complete a 22\u20139 run, tying the game at 48. MSU trailed the Wolverines by five with just over two minutes remaining, but a Matt McQuaid three pointer and a Cassius Winston assist to Xavier Tillman tied the score at 60 with 1:20 left in the game. A missed Zavier Simpson three-pointer led to a Winston lay up and a Spartans' lead at 62\u201360 with 29 seconds left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 95], "content_span": [96, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0051-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Postseason, Big Ten Tournament, Michigan\nThe MSU defense forced Michigan into bad shot attempts and MSU finished by making three of four free throws to give them the 65\u201360 win. MSU finished the game on a 10\u20130 run to earn their first Big Ten Tournament title since 2016. The win was the school's sixth tournament championship, which leads the Big Ten. The win also completed a three-game season sweep of in-state rival Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 95], "content_span": [96, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0052-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Postseason, NCAA Tournament, Bradley\nDespite winning the Big Ten regular season and tournament championships, MSU did not receive a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament. Instead, the Spartans received the No. 2 seed in the East Region. In the First Round, they struggled against No. 15-seeded Bradley, and trailed with only four minutes left in the game. However, helped by a season-high 25-for-26 from the free throw line, the Spartans pulled away for the 76\u201365 win. Kenny Goins struggled in the game, making only one of 10 shots and missing all seven three-point attempts. Cassius Winston led the way for the Spartans, scoring 26 points while Xavier Tillman added 16. The win moved MSU to the Second Round to face Big Ten foe Minnesota.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 91], "content_span": [92, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0053-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Postseason, NCAA Tournament, Minnesota\nIn the earliest tournament meeting of Big Ten teams since the field had expanded to 64, the Spartans throttled Minnesota. MSU shot over 57% from the field while limiting the Gophers to 30%. MSU dominated Minnesota on the glass, out-rebounding the Gophers 45\u201319. Xavier Tillman led a balanced scoring attack for MSU with 14 points while Cassius Winston added 13. The Spartans blew out Minnesota 70\u201350 to advance to the Sweet Sixteen for the first time since 2015, the longest Sweet Sixteen drought for the Spartans under Tom Izzo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 93], "content_span": [94, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0054-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Postseason, NCAA Tournament, LSU\nIn the Sweet Sixteen, MSU faced No. 3-seeded LSU. The Spartans dominated for a second consecutive game, jumping out to an early 8\u20130 lead, and never trailed in the game. Freshmen Gabe Brown (15 points) and Aaron Henry (20 points) each had career-highs in points as the Spartans ran away from the Tigers en route to an 80\u201363 victory. Cassius Winston added 17 points in the win as MSU led for the whole game. The win moved MSU to the Elite Eight for the first time since 2015, where they would face the No. 1 seed in the South region and overall No. 1 seed in the tournament, Duke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 87], "content_span": [88, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0055-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Postseason, NCAA Tournament, Duke\nIn the Elite Eight, Izzo faced Duke Coach Mike Krzyzewski for the 13th time. Izzo had only beaten \"Coach K\" one time with a record of 1\u201311 against him coming in to this game. Cassius Winston tallied a double-double with 20 points and 10 assists while Xavier Tillman added 19 points and nine rebounds. However, MSU, who led at the half, trailed by one with less than a minute remaining. Kenny Goins hit a three-pointer with 34 seconds remaining in regulation to give Michigan State the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 88], "content_span": [89, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0055-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Postseason, NCAA Tournament, Duke\nDuke had an opportunity to tie the game at the free throw line with five seconds remaining after Tillman was called for his fourth foul, however Duke freshman R.J. Barrett missed the first of two free throws and inadvertently made the second one. On the ensuing out-of-bounds play, Tillman passed the ball to Winston who sprinted ahead of Duke defenders and ran out the clock to secure the victory 68\u201367 victory. The Spartans snapped a seven-game losing streak against Duke and advanced to the Final Four for the first time since 2015. Winston was named the East regional's Most Outstanding Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 88], "content_span": [89, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0056-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Postseason, NCAA Tournament, Texas Tech\nThe Spartans faced No. 3-seeded Texas Tech in the Final Four on April 6, 2019. The visit marked the school's 10th Final Four and eighth under Tom Izzo. Texas Tech limited the Spartans to just under 32% shooting from the field and took a two-point lead in to halftime. The Spartans continued to struggled with the Red Raider defense in the second half, trailing throughout the half. Cassius Winston hit only four of his 16 shots and notched only two assists. Texas Tech moved the lead to 13 points with less than 10 minutes remaining, but the Spartans fought back to within one point. However, MSU could not complete the comeback and lost 61\u201351 ending their Tournament run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 94], "content_span": [95, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0057-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nThe season marked the first time in Big Ten history that the teams played a 20-game conference schedule. The new schedule also includes a regional component to increase the frequency of games among teams in similar areas. Over the course of a six-year cycle (12 playing opportunities), in-state rivals will play each other 12 times, regional opponents will play 10 times, and all other teams will play nine times. Three in-state series will be guaranteed home-and-homes: Illinois and Northwestern, Indiana and Purdue, and Michigan and Michigan State will always play twice. The conference opponent list was released on April 19, 2018. Michigan State released its full schedule on August 21, 2018. The Spartans faced Gonzaga in a \"secret scrimmage\" on October 27 in Minneapolis, Minnesota.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 75], "content_span": [76, 864]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285844-0058-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Rankings\n*AP does not release post-NCAA Tournament rankings^Coaches did not release a week 2 poll", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285845-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Michigan State Spartans women's basketball team represented Michigan State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Spartans, led by 12th-year head coach Suzy Merchant, played their home games at the Breslin Center in East Lansing, Michigan as members of the Big Ten Conference. They finished with a record of 25\u201312, 9\u20139 in Big Ten play to finish in a 4 way tie for sixth place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the Big Ten Women's Tournament where they lost to Maryland. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Women's Tournament where they defeated Central Michigan in the first round before losing to Notre Dame in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team represented the University of Michigan during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Wolverines, led by head coach John Beilein in his twelfth year, played their home games for the 52nd consecutive year at the Crisler Center in Ann Arbor, Michigan. This season marked the program's 103rd season and its 102nd consecutive year as a member of the Big Ten Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team\nThe team is coming off of the winningest season in school history and a runner-up finish in the 2018 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament. The entering class includes Canada men's national basketball team member Ignas Brazdeikis as well as Brandon Johns and David DeJulius, who finished second and third respectively in the 2018 Mr. Basketball of Michigan voting. The departing class includes graduating senior captains Muhammad-Ali Abdur-Rahkman and Duncan Robinson who had completed their eligibility, along with graduate transfer Jaaron Simmons. In addition, Moritz Wagner declared for the 2018 NBA draft. Sophomores Brent Hibbitts and Ibi Watson transferred out of the program. The team is also coming off a six-year stretch tied with North Carolina for the most NCAA tournament wins in the nation with 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 867]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team\nThe team established a school record with a 17\u20130 start (surpassing the 2012\u201313 and 1985\u201386 teams for best start) and tied a school record with 17 consecutive wins (tying the 1984\u201385 team). The entire starting lineup earned All-Big Ten recognition: Brazdeikis and Zavier Simpson earned 2nd team honors, while Jordan Poole, Jon Teske and Charles Matthews were named honorable mention. Brazdeikis was the Big Ten Freshman of the Year and Simpson was an All-Defensive team selection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Wolverines, who finished the 2017\u201318 season 33\u20138, were 13\u20135 in Big Ten play to finish in a tie for fourth. As the No. 5 seed in the Big Ten Tournament, they defeated Iowa, Nebraska, Michigan State, and Purdue to win the tournament championship. As a result, they received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. As the No. 3 seed in the West region, they defeated Montana, Houston, Texas A&M, and Florida State to advance to the Final Four. In the National semifinal, they defeated Loyola-Chicago before losing to Villanova in the championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Offseason, Departures\nMuhammad-Ali Abdur-Rahkman, Duncan Robinson, and graduate transfer Jaaron Simmons graduated during their senior seasons for the 2017\u201318 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team. On April 10, walk-on Brent Hibbitts announced that he would graduate and transfer with two years of eligibility remaining. On April 12, Ibi Watson announced his intention to transfer from the program. On April 14, Moritz Wagner declared for the 2018 NBA draft and hired an agent. On April 20, Charles Matthews declared for the 2018 NBA draft without hiring an agent. Matthews later withdrew his name from the draft and returned to school. On April 25, Watson, who had two years of eligibility remaining, announced he had agreed to transfer to Dayton and sit out a year. Hibbits transferred to play for head coach Dan Majerle at Grand Canyon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 72], "content_span": [73, 893]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Offseason, Expectations\nImmediately following the NCAA tournament and before the April 22, 2018 NBA Draft entry deadline, early rankings were put out by many services. Michigan was ranked by some: Sports Illustrated ranked them No. 4 with Wagner and Matthews both returning, while CBS Sports (No. 22), Yahoo! Sports (No. 12) and ESPN (No. 8) expected Wagner to go pro and ranked them lower. Sporting News expected both to go pro, but ranked Michigan No. 9. USA Today, who ranked Michigan No. 18, expected Wagner to leave and noted that Matthews may leave as well. Bleacher Report (No. 8) and Fox Sports (No. 14) did not clarify who they expected to return and ranked Michigan. NBC Sports omitted Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 74], "content_span": [75, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Offseason, Expectations\nImmediately following the decisions of Wagner to enter the draft and Matthews to return, Michigan was ranked by ESPN (17) and CBS Sports (21).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 74], "content_span": [75, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Offseason, Expectations\nBrazdeikis had the highest expectations among the incoming class from Yahoo! Sports and ESPN. USA Today expected Johns to be the brightest newcomer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 74], "content_span": [75, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Offseason, Expectations\nSporting News was the earliest of preseason polls to be released (September 20) and included Michigan (#10) as the highest of three ranked Big Ten teams. In the preseason Big Ten Media poll, Michigan was ranked second, collecting 4 of the 28 first place votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 74], "content_span": [75, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Offseason, Expectations\nPrior to the season Matthews was named to the 10-man preseason All-Big Ten team. He also was one of nine Big Ten players named to the preseason John R. Wooden Award watchlist and one of eight named to the preseason Naismith College Player of the Year watchlist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 74], "content_span": [75, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Offseason, 2018\u201319 recruits and personnel\nOn December 22, 2016, junior recruit David DeJulius became the first commitment for the Class of 2018 after receiving a December 17 offer following his career-high 46-point, 7-rebound, 5-assist performance of December 17 in leading East English Village Preparatory Academy over Dakota High School. Brandon Johns became the second commitment for the Class of 2018 when he committed to Michigan on June 29, 2017, over several other schools including hometown Michigan State, along with fellow Big Ten universities Indiana, Iowa, and Purdue. At the time of his commitment, Johns was considered by several recruiting sites, such as 24/7Sports as well as ESPN, as the top recruit from Michigan in the Class of 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 92], "content_span": [93, 803]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Offseason, 2018\u201319 recruits and personnel\nOn June 15, 2017, junior recruit Taylor Currie committed to Michigan becoming, at the time, their first commitment for the Class of 2019. On June 30, 2017, Currie announced that he would be reclassifying and would be set to join the Class of 2018 marking the third member of Michigan's 2018 recruiting class. On September 22, 2017, Ignas Brazdeikis became the fourth, member of the 2018 recruiting class. Brazdeikis, at time of commitment, was ranked in the top 50 in the 24/7Sports composite top 100 rankings for recruits of the class of 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 92], "content_span": [93, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0011-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Offseason, 2018\u201319 recruits and personnel\nBrazdeikis committed to Michigan over schools such as Vanderbilt and Florida. On September 29, 2017, Currie decommitted from Michigan dropping the amount of 2018 recruits to three. On October 2, 2017, Adrien Nunez became the fourth member of the 2018 recruiting class. Nunez received much attention over the summer scouting period and drew praise for his shooting ability. Nunez committed to Michigan over schools such as Penn State, Texas A&M, and Boston College. On October 4, 2017, Michigan added its fifth recruit to the 2018 recruiting class with the addition of Colin Castleton. The big man selected Michigan over Illinois in making his final choice. Castleton noted his connection with new Michigan assistant coach Luke Yaklich as a driving force behind communication with Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 92], "content_span": [93, 882]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Offseason, 2018\u201319 recruits and personnel\nJohns and DeJulius finished second and third in points (2,792 and 2,542, respectively), to Michigan State recruit Foster Loyer (3,691) in the 2018 Mr. Basketball of Michigan voting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 92], "content_span": [93, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Offseason, Other personnel\nOn June 29, 2018, Michigan announced the addition of transfer, and preferred walk-on, Jaron Faulds who had played 26 games averaging 4.5 points and 3.2 rebounds as a freshman for the 2017\u201318 Columbia Lions after completing his four-year varsity career at Holt High School. Foulds had been first-team All-state (Michigan) as a senior in 2017 and was a former AAU teammate of Isaiah Livers. He is a 6\u00a0ft 10\u00a0in (2.08\u00a0m) center who must sit out one season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 77], "content_span": [78, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Preseason\nThe team scheduled an August 17\u201326 trip to play three exhibition games and tour Barcelona and Madrid, Spain. The team defeated Madrid Generals 82\u201372 on August 20. On August 23 and 25, Michigan lost to KK Mega Bemax and Joventut Badalona. When the preseason AP Poll was released, Michigan was ranked number 19. On November 2, Michigan defeated Northwood 90\u201358 in an exhibition game with double digit scoring from all 5 starters, including 13 points from Charles Matthews and freshman Ignas Brazdeikis each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 60], "content_span": [61, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season\nThe full schedule was announced on August 21. The marquee games are a home game against North Carolina in the ACC-Big Ten Challenge and a road game against Villanova in the Gavitt Tipoff Games. The season will mark the first time in Big Ten history that the teams will play a 20-game conference schedule. During their next six-year cycle, teams within the same state will play 12 times, while teams within the same region will play 10 times. All other teams will play nine times. In addition, there will be three in-state series played between Illinois and Northwestern, Indiana and Purdue, and Michigan and Michigan State. Each time will play twice, guaranteeing a home game for each team. The conference opponent list was finalized on April 19, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 65], "content_span": [66, 818]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season\nOn August 31, 2016, it was announced that Michigan would participate in the 2018 Hall of Fame Tip Off at the Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Connecticut on November 17 and 18. On September 6, 2017, the three other participants for the tournament were announced: George Washington, Providence, and South Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 65], "content_span": [66, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season\nMichigan once again participated in the Gavitt Tipoff Games where they faced defending national champion Villanova in Philadelphia as a rematch of the 2018 national title game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 65], "content_span": [66, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season, November\nMichigan began the season with a 63\u201344 victory over Norfolk State. Michigan was led by Jon Teske with a game-high 13 points, eight rebounds, and a then career-high four blocks, while freshman Ignas Brazdeikis scored 12 points in his Michigan debut. With the win, John Beilein earned his 800th career win. On November 10, Michigan defeated Holy Cross 56\u201337. Michigan was led by Charles Matthews with a game-high 20 points, while Brazdeikis added 19 points, including 15 points in the first five minutes to start the second half. Teske added another five blocks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 75], "content_span": [76, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0018-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season, November\nOn November 14, Michigan defeated (#8 AP Poll/#8 Coaches Poll) Villanova 73\u201346 in the Gavitt Tipoff Games. Michigan was led by Matthews with a game-high 19 points, while Brazdeikis added 18 points, and a team-high seven rebounds. Michigan's defense forced 21 turnovers, including five steals by Zavier Simpson. On November 17, Michigan defeated George Washington 84\u201361. Michigan was led by Matthews with a game-high 25 points, while Jordan Poole added a then career-high 22 points, and Simpson added 14 points and 11 rebounds for his first career double-double.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 75], "content_span": [76, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0018-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season, November\nThis marked the first time Michigan had two 20-point scorers in the same game since March 22, 2018. The next day Michigan defeated Providence 66\u201347 to win the Hall of Fame Tip Off tournament. Michigan was led by Brazdeikis with a game-high 20 points, while Teske added a career-high 17 points, including his first career three-pointer. On November 23, Michigan defeated Chattanooga 83\u201355. Michigan was led by Brazdeikis with a career-tying 20 points, while Teske added seven points and a career-high 12 rebounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 75], "content_span": [76, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0018-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season, November\nOn November 28, Michigan defeated (#11/#13) North Carolina 84\u201367 in the ACC\u2013Big Ten Challenge, as Michigan shot a season-high 57.4 percent from the field, and tied a season-best with 50-percent from three-point range. Michigan was led by Brazdeikis with a career-high 24 points, while Matthews added 21 points and a team-high seven rebounds, Poole added 18 points, and Teske added a career-high five blocks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 75], "content_span": [76, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season, December\nOn December 1, Michigan defeated (#19/#18) Purdue 76\u201357 in its Big Ten Conference season opener. Michigan was led by Poole with a game-high 21 points, including 5-for-5 from three-point range, while Teske added a career-tying 17 points. Michigan's offense shot 50% on three point shots again and its defense held Purdue to 35.5% shooting, 26 points below their season average. Michigan's 19-point win marked the largest margin of victory over Purdue since 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 75], "content_span": [76, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0019-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season, December\nOn December 3, Poole was recognized as Big Ten Player of the Week and Brazdeikis was recognized as Big Ten Freshman of the Week for their performances against these two ranked teams. On December 4, Michigan defeated Northwestern 62\u201360. Michigan was led by Brazdeikis with a game-high 23 points, his fourth 20-point game of the season. After eight straight wins by 17 points or more and taking a 15-point lead with 17:19 remaining only to give up Northwestern's first lead with 6:24 remaining, Michigan needed late game heroics for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 75], "content_span": [76, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0019-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season, December\nPoole, who had 15 points, contributed an assist with 2:30 remaining and a dunk that provided the final margin of victory with 1:53 remaining. On December 8, Michigan defeated South Carolina 89\u201378. Michigan was led by Poole with a career-high 26 points, while Brazdeikis added 17 points. Brazdeikis was recognized as Co-Big Ten Freshman of the week on December 10. On December 15, Michigan defeated Western Michigan 70\u201362. Michigan was led by Matthews with 25 points and 10 rebounds, for his fifth career double-double and first of the season, while Poole added 14 points and a career-high four steals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 75], "content_span": [76, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0019-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season, December\nOn December 22, Michigan defeated Air Force 71\u201350. Michigan was led by Brazdeikis with 19 points, while Matthews added 17 points and a game-high seven rebounds. Michigan's defense forced 20 turnovers, with nine coming off steals, including four steals by Simpson. With the win, Michigan improved to 12\u20130 on the season for the third time in program history, and their best start to the season since going 16\u20130 in 2012\u201313. On December 30, Michigan defeated Binghamton 74\u201352.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 75], "content_span": [76, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0019-0004", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season, December\nMichigan was led by Brazdeikis with a game-high 21 points, while Poole added 18 points, including a career-high six three-pointers, and Simpson added a career-high 10 assists, and one rebound shy of a double-double. The following day, Brazdeikis earned Big Ten Freshman of the week recognition for the third time in December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 75], "content_span": [76, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season, January\nOn January 3, Michigan returned to Big Ten play with a 68\u201355 victory over Penn State. Brazdeikis posted his first career double-double with 16 points and a career-high 11 rebounds, while Poole added a team-high 17 points and Matthews added 14 points. Michigan's defense forced 18 turnovers, including eight steals and six blocks. On January 6, Michigan defeated (#21/#22) Indiana 74\u201363. Michigan was led by Matthews and Poole with 18 points each, while Brandon Johns added a career-high eight points and eight rebounds. On January 10, Michigan defeated Illinois 79\u201369.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 74], "content_span": [75, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0020-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season, January\nMichigan was led by Simpson with a season-high 16 points, while Teske added 13 points and 11 rebounds, for his third career double-double, and first of the season. All five starters for Michigan recorded double-digit points for the first time since November 13, 2017. With the win, the Wolverines improved to 16\u20130 on the season, matching the 2012\u201313 and 1985\u201386 teams for the best start to a season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 74], "content_span": [75, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0020-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season, January\nOn January 13, Michigan, who last lost to the national champion 2017\u201318 Villanova Wildcats, defeated Northwestern to establish a school record for best start at 17\u20130 and tied the 1984\u201385 team's 17-game win streak that was stopped by the eventual national champion 1984\u201385 Villanova Wildcats. The victory came on the strength of a career-high 24-point effort by Simpson and career-tying 17 points by Teske, who posted his second consecutive double-double (11 rebounds). On January 19, Michigan lost to Wisconsin 64\u201354, snapping their winning streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 74], "content_span": [75, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0020-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season, January\nMichigan was led by Teske with a team-high 15 points, while Poole added 14 points, and Simpson added 10 points and 11 rebounds, for his second career double-double. On January 22, Michigan defeated Minnesota 59\u201357 after a buzzer beater by Matthews. Michigan was led by Brazdeikis with a game-high 18 points and career-tying 11 rebounds, for his second double-double of the season, while Teske added 15 points and five rebounds. On January 25, Michigan defeated Indiana 69\u201346.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 74], "content_span": [75, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0020-0004", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season, January\nMichigan was led by Brazdeikis with a game-high 20 points, while Matthews added 10 points and a career-tying 11 rebounds for his sixth career double-double. Michigan jumped out to a 17\u20130 lead and its defense allowed only 18 points in the first half, as Indiana shot a season-low 27.6% from the field during the game. The 23-point victory marked the largest ever by Michigan on the road against Indiana. On January 28, Brazdeikis earned his fourth Big Ten Freshman of the Week recognition for his performances against Minnesota and Indiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 74], "content_span": [75, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0020-0005", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season, January\nThis surpassed Tim Hardaway Jr. and Nik Stauskas and established a new school record for most such awards. On January 29, Michigan defeated Ohio State 65\u201349. Michigan was led by Poole with a game-high 15 points, while Simpson added 11 points, 10 rebounds and a career-high 12 assists, becoming the sixth player in Michigan program history to record a triple-double. The game marked Simpson's 100th career game with Michigan, becoming the 70th Wolverine to the reach the milestone. Simpson recorded his 300th career assist, becoming the 15th Wolverine to reach the milestone. Michigan's defense held Ohio State under 50 points for the first time since 1949.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 74], "content_span": [75, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season, February\nOn February 1, Michigan lost to Iowa 74\u201359, as Michigan committed 20 fouls, tying a season high, and shot a season-low 32.3 percent from the field. Michigan was led by Brazdeikis and Poole with 16 points each. On February 5, Michigan defeated Rutgers 77\u201365. Michigan was led by Brazdeikis with a game-high 23 points, including a career-high five three-pointers. With the win, John Beilein passed Johnny Orr for the most Big Ten wins as Michigan head coach with 121. On February 9, Michigan defeated (#19/#19) Wisconsin 61\u201352.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 75], "content_span": [76, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0021-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season, February\nMichigan was led by Matthews with a game-high 18 points, while Teske added a career-tying 17 points and 12 rebounds, for his third double-double of the season. On February 12, Michigan lost to Penn State 75\u201369. Michigan was led by Matthews with 24-points, while Poole added 17 points. Head coach John Beilein was ejected from the game after receiving back-to-back technical fouls for arguing with officials just before halftime. On February 16, Michigan defeated (#24/#25) Maryland 65\u201352. Michigan was led by Matthews with 14 points, while Brazdeikis added 13 points and Simpson added 12 points and eight assists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 75], "content_span": [76, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0021-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season, February\nMichigan's defense forced 16 Maryland turnovers, marking the 20th game this season in which they have forced 10 or more turnovers. The win marked the Wolverines sixth victory over a ranked opponent this season. The win marked Michigan's 22nd consecutive home victory. On February 21, Michigan defeated Minnesota 69\u201360. Michigan was led by Poole with a game-high 22 points, while Teske added a career-tying 17 points and five blocks, and Simpson added five points and a season-high 12 assists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 75], "content_span": [76, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0021-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season, February\nMichigan's defense held Minnesota to 18 points in the first half, tied for the fewest points Michigan has allowed in a half this season. On February 24, Michigan lost their rivalry game against (#10/#11) Michigan State 77\u201370, their first home loss of the season. Michigan was led by Simpson with 19 points, while Brazdeikis added 16 points and nine rebounds, and Teske added 10 points and a game-high 11 rebounds, for his fourth double-double of the season. On February 28, Michigan defeated Nebraska 82\u201353 in their final home game of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 75], "content_span": [76, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0021-0004", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season, February\nMichigan was led by Teske with a career-high 22 points and 10 assists, his second consecutive game with a double-double, and his fifth of the season. Brazdeikis added 20 points, Livers added 12 points and 10 assists, for his first career double-double in his first start of the season, replacing an injured Matthews, and Colin Castleton added a career-high 11 points and three rebounds. This marked the first time Michigan had two 20-point scorers in the same game since November 28, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 75], "content_span": [76, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season, March\nOn March 3, Michigan defeated (#17/#20) Maryland 69\u201362, as all five Wolverine starters finished the game with double-digit points. Michigan was led by Brazdeikis with a game-high 21 points, while Simpson added 12 points and 10 assists for his third double-double of the season, and Teske added 11 points and 10 rebounds, for his third consecutive game with a double-double, and sixth of the season. On March 9 with a share of the 2018\u201319 Big Ten regular season title on the line, Michigan lost to (#9/#11) Michigan State 63\u201375, in their final game of the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 72], "content_span": [73, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0022-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season, March\nMichigan was led by Brazdeikis with 20 points, while Poole added 15 points. Michigan led by as many as 12 points late in the first half, however, Michigan State used a 20\u20132 run in the second half to take their first lead of the game, and eventually win the game. Michigan finished the season in third place, one game behind Michigan State and Purdue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 72], "content_span": [73, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season, Postseason, Big Ten Tournament\nOn March 15, Michigan opened its 2019 Big Ten Conference Men's Basketball Tournament play with a 74\u201353 victory over Iowa in the quarterfinals. Michigan was led by Brazdeikis with a game-high 15-points, while Teske added 12 points, 10 rebounds and two blocks for his eighth career double-double, and Simpson added 10 points and 11 assists for his fourth career double-double. Michigan's defense held Iowa to 35.6% shooting (21-of-59) from the field, including 6.3% (1-for-16) from three-point range. The win marked the Wolverines ninth consecutive win in the Big Ten Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, setting a tournament record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 97], "content_span": [98, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season, Postseason, Big Ten Tournament\nThe next day Michigan defeated Minnesota 76\u201349 in the semifinals of the Big Ten Tournament, as Michigan shot 51.6% (32-of-62) from the field. Michigan was led by Livers with a career-high 21 points, while Simpson added 15 points and a game-high nine assists, and Brazdeikis added 13 points. With the win, Michigan advanced to the Big Ten Tournament final for the third consecutive season. With nine assists in the game, Simpson became the 10th Wolverine to surpass 400 career assists. The win marked Beilein's 20th Big Ten Tournament victory, becoming the third coach in tournament history to reach the milestone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 97], "content_span": [98, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season, Postseason, Big Ten Tournament\nOn March 17, Michigan lost to Michigan State 60\u201365 in the finals of the Big Ten Tournament. Michigan was led by Brazdeikis with 19 points, while Poole added 13 points, and Teske added 10 points and 10 rebounds for his second double-double of the tournament. Michigan led by as many as 13 points early in the second half, but Michigan State went on a 13\u20134 run to tie the game at 48 with just over seven minutes remaining. The Spartans finished the game on a 10\u20130 run in the final two minutes of the game to secure the victory. The loss snapped Michigan's record-setting 10 game Big Ten Tournament winning streak. Simpson finished the tournament with a tournament-record 30 assists in three games, surpassing the previous record of 29 assists set by Mateen Cleaves in 1999. Brazdeikis and Simpson were both named to the All-Tournament Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 97], "content_span": [98, 936]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season, Postseason, NCAA Tournament\nOn March 21, Michigan began their participation in the 2019 NCAA Tournament with a 74\u201355 victory over Montana in the first round for the second consecutive year. Michigan was led by Matthews with a game-high 22 points and 10 rebounds, for his seventh career double-double, while Brazdeikis added 14 points, Teske added 11 points and nine rebounds, and Poole added 10 points. Simpson posted 10 assists in the game for the eighth time this season, setting a single-season program record for the most games with 10 or more assists. Michigan's defense held the Grizzlies to 33.3% shooting, while forcing 10 turnovers, as Montana missed 13 of its first 16 shots in the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 94], "content_span": [95, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season, Postseason, NCAA Tournament\nOn March 23, Michigan defeated Florida 64\u201349 in the second round. Michigan was led by Poole with a game-high 19 points, including four three-pointers, while Simpson added nine points, nine rebounds and nine assists, one point, rebound and assist shy of his second career triple-double. Michigan's defense held Florida to 34.5% shooting for the game, including 28.6% shooting in the second half, while their 49 points was a season-low for the Gators. With the win, Michigan advanced to the Sweet 16 for the third consecutive season, and earned their fifth 30-win season in program history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 94], "content_span": [95, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Regular season, Postseason, NCAA Tournament\nOn March 28, Michigan lost to (#9/#10) Texas Tech 44\u201363 in the Sweet Sixteen, as only five players scored for the Wolverines. Michigan was led by Brazdeikis with 17 points and a career-high 13 rebounds, for his third career double-double, while Matthews added 12 points. The Raiders defense held Michigan to just 16 field goals, 32% shooting and only a single three-point basket on 19 attempts, with the lone three-pointer coming from C.J. Baird. The Wolverines finished the season with a 30\u20137 record, for its second consecutive 30-win season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 94], "content_span": [95, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Honors, In-season honors\nOn January 9, Ignas Brazdeikis was one of seven Big Ten players named to the Midseason Top 25 John R. Wooden Award watchlist. On January 22, Simpson was one of four Big Ten athletes named to the Naismith Defensive Player of the Year Award Top 15 midseason watchlist. On February 5, Brazdeikis was one of four Big Ten athletes named to the Wooden Award Late Season Top 20 Watch List. On February 6, Matthews was the only Big Ten athlete named a Julius Erving Award Top 10 finalist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 75], "content_span": [76, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0029-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Honors, In-season honors\nThe following day, Brazdeikis was one of two Big Ten athletes (along with Jordan Murphy) named a Karl Malone Award Top 10 finalist. The entire starting lineup earned All-Big Ten recognition: Brazdeikis and Zavier Simpson earned 2nd team honors (coaches and media), while Jordan Poole (coaches and media), Jon Teske (coaches and media) and Charles Matthews (media) were named honorable mention. Brazdeikis was an All-Freshman selection and the Big Ten Freshman of the Year, while Simpson was an All-Defensive team selection. It was Michigan's first time with 5 All-Big Ten honorees since the 1984\u201385 Michigan Wolverines. Brazdeikis and Simpson were selected to the 2019 Big Ten Conference Men's Basketball Tournament All-Tournament team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 75], "content_span": [76, 812]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285846-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Honors, Team players drafted into the NBA\nJordan Poole was drafted 28th overall in the first round of the 2019 NBA draft by the Golden State Warriors. Ignas Brazdeikis was drafted 47th overall in the 2019 NBA draft by the Sacramento Kings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 92], "content_span": [93, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285847-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey season\nThe 2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's hockey team was the Wolverines' 97th season. They represented the University of Michigan in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season. The team was coached by Mel Pearson, in his second year as head coach, and played their home games at Yost Ice Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285847-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey season, Previous Season\nDuring the 2017\u201318 ice hockey season Michigan went 22\u201315\u20133, including 11\u201310\u20133 in Big Ten Play. Michigan lost in the semifinals of the 2018 Big Ten Men's Ice Hockey Tournament to Ohio State by a score of 3 to 2 in overtime. Michigan qualified for the 2018 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament as the #2 seed in the Northeast Regional. They beat Northeastern by a score of 3-2 in the first round of the tournament. Then they went on to beat Boston University 6 to 3 in the Regional Final. Michigan advanced to the Frozen Four for the first time since 2011, but lost to Notre Dame in the National Semifinals after captain Jake Evans scored the game-winning goal with six seconds remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 762]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285847-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey season, Previous Season\nWhen the team reached the Frozen Four it marked the sixth time a school had reached the final four of the NCAA Men's Ice Hockey Championship and NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament in the same season: Michigan (1964, 1992*, 1993* and 2018) and Michigan State (1999 and 2001).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285848-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines women's basketball team represented the University of Michigan during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Wolverines, led by head coach Kim Barnes Arico in her seventh year, played their home games at the Crisler Center. This season marked the program's 37th season as a member of the Big Ten Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285848-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines women's basketball team\nMichigan finished the season with a 22\u201312 record, including 11\u20137 in Big Ten play, to finish in fourth place in the Big Ten Conference. The team advanced to the semifinals of the Big Ten Conference Women's Basketball Tournament for the first time since 2001, where they lost to Maryland. They received an at-large bid to the 2019 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament, where they defeated Kansas State in the first round before losing to Louisville in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285848-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Michigan Wolverines women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Wolverines finished the 2017\u201318 season with a 23\u201310 record, including 10\u20136 in Big Ten play to finish in sixth place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the Big Ten Women's Tournament where they lost to Nebraska. They received an at-large bid to the 2018 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament where they defeated Northern Colorado in the first round, before losing to Baylor in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285849-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mid-American Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 Mid-American Conference men's basketball season began with practices in October 2018, followed by the start of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season in November. Conference play began in January 2019 and concluded in March 2019. The season marked the 76th season of Mid\u2013American Conference basketball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285849-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mid-American Conference men's basketball season, Preseason\nIn the preseason, Buffalo, which returned five of its six leading scorers from a team that defeated Arizona Wildcats men's basketball in the NCAA tournament, was discussed as a team that could potentially make a \"Cinderalla run\" in the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 66], "content_span": [67, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285849-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mid-American Conference men's basketball season, Regular season, Conference matrix\nThis table summarizes the head-to-head results between teams in conference play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 90], "content_span": [91, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285850-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders men's basketball team represented Middle Tennessee State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Blue Raiders, led by 1st-year head coach Nick McDevitt, played their home games at the Murphy Center in Murfreesboro, Tennessee as members of Conference USA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285850-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Blue Raiders finished the 2017\u201318 season 25\u20138 overall, 16\u20132 in C-USA play to win the regular season championship. In the C-USA Tournament, they were defeated in the quarterfinals by Southern Miss in overtime. As a regular season conference champion who failed to win their conference tournament, the Blue Raiders received an automatic bid to the National Invitation Tournament, where they defeated Vermont in the first round before losing to Louisville in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 76], "content_span": [77, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285850-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe season marked the first time in the program's history that the Blue Raiders were ranked in the AP Top 25 during the season, coming in at No. 24 on the week of February 19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 76], "content_span": [77, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285850-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders men's basketball team, Previous season\nHead coach Kermit Davis left the school on March 19, 2018 to accept the head coaching job at Ole Miss. He finished at Middle Tennessee with a 16-year record of 332\u2013188. On March 24, the Blue Raiders named UNC Asheville head coach Nick McDevitt as the team's new head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 76], "content_span": [77, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285851-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders women's basketball team represented Middle Tennessee State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Blue Raiders, led by fourteenth year head coach Rick Insell, played their home games at the Murphy Center and were fourth year members of Conference USA. They finished the season 23\u201311, 11\u20135 in C-USA play to finish in a tie for third place. They advanced to the championship game of the C-USA Women's Tournament where they lost to Rice. They received an at-large bid to the Women's National Invitation Tournament where they defeated IUPUI in the first round before losing to Ohio in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285852-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Middlesbrough F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Middlesbrough's second consecutive season in the Championship in their 143rd year in existence; the club also competed in the FA Cup and the EFL Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285852-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Season overview\nThe 2018\u201319 transfer window is club manager Tony Pulis' first official summer transfer window as Middlesbrough manager. Pulis' first signing of the window was a defensive Paddy McNair, arriving from rivals Sunderland for \u00a35\u00a0million. Bristol City star defender Aden Flint subsequently joined the club for a fee of \u00a37\u00a0million. Sam Stubbs and Djed Spence then joined the reserves, both on free transfers, arriving from Wigan Athletic and Fulham respectively. As August emerged, Andy Lonergan joined the club on a free transfer from rivals Leeds United. On 8 August 2018, Middlesbrough completed the signing of Jordan Hugill from West Ham United on a season-long loan deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285852-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Season overview\nTom\u00e1s Mej\u00edas, Martin Cranie, Tom Brewitt, Liam Cooke, Liam Hegarty, Jakub Sinior, Keiran Storey, Robbie Tinkler, Jay Wilson and Matthew Elsdon were all released at the end of the 2017\u201318 season. Antonio Barrag\u00e1n then left the club to join Real Betis permanently, having spent the previous season on loan there, while Mikael Soisalo and F\u00e1bio left to join Zulte Waregem and Nantes respectively. Players who were loaned out included Joe Fryer to Carlisle United, Hayden Coulson to St Mirren, Luke Armstrong to Gateshead, George Miller to Bradford City. The club then said their goodbyes to their team superstars: striker Patrick Bamford to Leeds, centre-back Ben Gibson and winger Adama Traor\u00e9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285852-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Competitions, Pre-season friendlies\nAs part of their pre-season preparations, Middlesbrough faced Sturm Graz, Spennymoor Town, SV Sandhausen, Accrington Stanley, Rochdale and Hartlepool United. Their match against Sunderland was abandoned at half-time because of storm conditions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285852-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Competitions, Championship, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the Championship fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285852-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018. The fourth round draw was made live on BBC by Robbie Keane and Carl Ikeme from Wolverhampton on 7 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285852-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam. The second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August. The third round draw was made on 30 August 2018 by David Seaman and Joleon Lescott. The fourth round draw was made live on Quest by Rachel Yankey and Rachel Riley on 29 September. The draw for the quarter-final was made live on Sky Sports by Jamie Redknapp and Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink on 31 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285853-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Midland Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 Midland Football League season was the 5th in the history of the Midland Football League, a football competition in England. The provisional club allocations for steps 5 and 6 were announced by the FA on 25 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285853-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Midland Football League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 15 clubs which competed in the previous season, along with five new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285853-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Midland Football League, Division One\nDivision One featured 16 clubs which competed in the previous season, along with three new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285854-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Milan Ciga Vasojevi\u0107 Cup\nThe 2019 Milan Ciga Vasojevi\u0107 Cup is the 13th season of the Serbian women's national basketball cup tournament.,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285854-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Milan Ciga Vasojevi\u0107 Cup\nThe tournament was held in Loznica from March 16\u201317, 2019. Crvena zvezda Kombank won the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285855-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Millwall F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Millwall's 134th year in existence, 93rd consecutive season in The Football League, and 42nd in the second tier. Millwall competed in the Championship, FA Cup, and League Cup. This season Millwall broke their club transfer fee record that they've paid for a player twice, firstly buying Tom Bradshaw from Barnsley for \u00a31.25 million, and then a week later buying midfielder Ryan Leonard from Sheffield United for \u00a31.5 million. They also broke the record received for a player, selling George Saville to Middlesbrough for \u00a38 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285855-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Millwall F.C. season\nMillwall knocked out Premier League side Everton on the way to reaching the FA Cup Quarter-final for the eleventh time in their history. Millwall spent the majority of the season in a relegation battle, securing their place in the Championship with two games to spare at the expense of Rotherham. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285855-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Millwall F.C. season, Pre-season, Friendlies\nMillwall announced pre-season friendlies against Dartford, Cambridge United Colchester United and VfL Bochum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285855-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Millwall F.C. season, Competitions, Championship, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the Championship fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 65], "content_span": [66, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285855-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Millwall F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018. The fourth round draw was made live on BBC by Robbie Keane and Carl Ikeme from Wolverhampton on 7 January 2019. The fifth round draw was broadcast on 28 January 2019 live on BBC, Alex Scott and Ian Wright conducted the draw. Draw for the quarter-final was made on 18 February by Darren Fletcher & Wayne Bridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285855-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Millwall F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam. The second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August. The third round draw was made on 30 August 2018 by David Seaman and Joleon Lescott.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285856-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Milton Keynes Dons F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Milton Keynes Dons' 15th season in their existence, and the club's first season back in League Two following relegation from League One at the end of the 2017\u201318 season. Along with competing in League Two, the club also competed in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285856-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Milton Keynes Dons F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285857-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Milwaukee Bucks season\nThe 2018\u201319 Milwaukee Bucks season was the 51st season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA). The Bucks moved from the Bradley Center to the new Fiserv Forum before the start of the season. On May 17, 2018, the Bucks hired Mike Budenholzer as head coach. The Bucks opened the season with seven straight wins, the first time they started a season 7\u20130 since 1971\u201372. On March 1, 2019, with a 131\u2013120 victory over the Los Angeles Lakers, the Bucks became the first team to secure a playoff berth in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285857-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Milwaukee Bucks season\nLater on, The Bucks clinched their first Division Championship since 2000-01. They then clinched the best record in the NBA with a win against the Philadelphia 76ers on April 4, 2019, achieving the feat for the first time since 1973\u201374. Eventually, the Bucks finished the regular season with a 60\u201322 record, the franchise's first 60-win season since 1980\u201381. The Bucks finished 33\u20138 at home, the second-best home record in the NBA, behind the Denver Nuggets, and their 27\u201314 road record was the best in the league, tied with the Golden State Warriors. The Bucks also won all 14 of their season series against Eastern Conference opponents, and lost back-to-back games just once, resulting in their longest losing streak for the season, at two games. The Bucks had the best team defensive rating in the NBA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 836]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285857-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Milwaukee Bucks season\nIn the playoffs, the Bucks defeated the Detroit Pistons in the First Round by a four-game sweep, winning their first playoff series since 2001. The Bucks then defeated the Boston Celtics in the Semifinals in five games, advancing to the Eastern Conference Finals for the first time since 2001, where they faced the Toronto Raptors and lost to the eventual NBA Champion in six games, despite taking the first two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285857-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Milwaukee Bucks season\nGiannis Antetokounmpo was named league MVP after this season and he and Khris Middleton were voted to play in the 2019 NBA All-Star Game. Also, following the season Malcolm Brogdon, who won Rookie of the Year in 2017, left the team in free agency for the Indiana Pacers after just three years with the Bucks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285858-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Milwaukee Panthers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Milwaukee Panthers men's basketball team represented the University of Wisconsin\u2013Milwaukee during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Panthers, led by second-year head coach Pat Baldwin, played their home games at the UW\u2013Milwaukee Panther Arena and the Klotsche Center as members of the Horizon League. They finished the season 9\u201322, 4\u201314 in Horizon League play to finish in last place. They failed to qualify for the Horizon League Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285858-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Milwaukee Panthers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Panthers finished the 2017\u201318 season 16\u201317, 8\u201310 in Horizon League play to finish in a tie for fifth place. They defeated UIC in the quarterfinals of the Horizon League Tournament before losing in the semifinals to Wright State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285859-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minerva Punjab FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 Minerva Punjab FC Season was the club's third season in the I-League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285859-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minerva Punjab FC season, Transfers\nMinerva Punjab saw an exodus of top players after their I-League victory in the 2017 season. Perhaps the biggest departure that Minerva Punjab was that of Chencho Gyeltshen. The Bhutanese attacker was the stand-out performer for Minerva in 2017 and was subsequently sold to Bengaluru FC. His departure left a huge gap in the Minerva squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285859-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minerva Punjab FC season, Transfers\nFollowing Chencho out of the door were Kiran Chemjong, Sukhdev Singh, Kamalpreet Singh, Bali Gagandeep, Kassim Aidara, Girik Khosla, Rakshit Dagar, and Abhishek Ambekar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285859-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minerva Punjab FC season, Transfers\nKamalpreet Singh, Gagandeep, Aidara, and Rakshit Dagar all signed for Minerva's title rivals East Bengal F.C.. Sukhdev Singh and Ambekar moved on to Mohun Bagan. Ahead of the 2018-19 I-League season, Minerva were left with a depleted squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285859-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minerva Punjab FC season, Transfers\nOn 6 July 2018 Minerva Punjab signed forward Yu Kuboki on a permanent transfer from Australian club Sydney Olympic FC. He had been in scintillating form for Sydney the previous season, scoring 11 goals in 22 matches as an attacking midfielder or a withdrawn striker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285859-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minerva Punjab FC season, Transfers\nIn August 2018 Minerva signed three players including Nigerian forward Philip Njoku.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285859-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minerva Punjab FC season, Transfers\nIn September 2018 they signed former Ozone FC striking duo C. S. Sabeeth and Brazilian Robert De Souza. They also extended contracts with defender Akashdeep Singh and striker Akash Sangwan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285859-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minerva Punjab FC 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285859-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minerva Punjab FC season, Pre-season and friendlies\nMinerva Punjab kicked off their pre-season preparations by participating in the 2018 Punjab State Super Football League from 26 August 2018. With 4 wins and 3 draws Minerva finished second in the league table. They beat league leader FC Punjab Police in the finals to win the 32nd Punjab State Super Football League title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285859-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minerva Punjab FC season, Pre-season and friendlies, J&K Invitational Cup\nMinerva Punjab participated in the J&K Invitational Cup organized by Real Kashmir FC. It was a knock out tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 81], "content_span": [82, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285859-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minerva Punjab FC season, Competitions, 2019 AFC Champions League\nThe AFC Champions League is the premier continental football competition organized by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC). As the champions of the I-League the previous season, Minerva Punjab FC earned a chance to qualify for the tournament. India did not have a direct-entry spot in the AFC Champions League and thus the champion team from India had to qualify for the tournament through the preliminary rounds. Minerva Punjab were put up against Saipa FC of Iran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285860-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minnesota Golden Gophers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Minnesota Golden Gophers men's basketball team represented the University of Minnesota in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Gophers, led by sixth-year head coach Richard Pitino, played their home games at Williams Arena in Minneapolis, Minnesota as members of the Big Ten Conference. The team was led by 2019 First team All-Big Ten selection Jordan Murphy and third team selection Amir Coffey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285860-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minnesota Golden Gophers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Golden Gophers finished the 2017\u201318 season 15\u201317, 4\u201314 in Big Ten play to finish in a three-way tie for 11th place. As the No. 11 seed in the Big Ten Tournament, they lost in the first round to Rutgers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 71], "content_span": [72, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285860-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minnesota Golden Gophers men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nThe 2018\u201319 season will mark the first time in Big Ten history that the teams will play a 20-game conference schedule, setting a precedent for all Division I basketball. The new schedule will also include a regional component to increase the frequency of games\u00a0among teams in similar areas. Over the course of a six-year cycle (12 playing opportunities), in-state rivals will play each other 12 times, regional opponents will play 10 times, and all other teams will play nine times. Three in-state series will be guaranteed home-and-homes: Illinois and Northwestern, Indiana and Purdue, and Michigan and Michigan State will always play twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 76], "content_span": [77, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285861-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minnesota Golden Gophers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Minnesota Golden Gophers women's basketball team represented the University of Minnesota during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Golden Gophers, led by first-year head coach Lindsay Whalen, played their home games at Williams Arena as members of the Big Ten Conference. They finished the season 21\u201311, 9\u20139 in Big Ten play to finish in a 4-way tie for fifth place. They lost in the second round of the Big Ten Women's Tournament to Indiana. They received at-large bid of the WNIT. There they defeated Northern Iowa in the first round before losing to Cincinnati in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285862-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minnesota Timberwolves season\nThe 2018\u201319 Minnesota Timberwolves season was the 30th season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285862-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minnesota Timberwolves season\nBefore the start of training camp, disgruntled All-Star Jimmy Butler requested a trade, indicating that he would not re-sign with the Timberwolves during the 2019 off-season. After multiple disputes and games where he played for Minnesota, Butler's wish was finally granted, sending him to the Philadelphia 76ers on November 12, 2018. On March 30, 2019, on his return against his former team Butler was booed during the players' introductions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285862-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minnesota Timberwolves season\nOn January 6, 2019, the Timberwolves fired head coach Tom Thibodeau and named Ryan Saunders as interim head coach. With a loss against the Hornets on March 21st, the Timberwolves were eliminated from playoff contention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285862-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minnesota Timberwolves season, Player statistics\nAfter all games. \u2021Waived during the season\u2020Traded during the season\u2260Acquired during the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285863-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minnesota Whitecaps season\nThe 2018\u201319 Minnesota Whitecaps season was the first in franchise history as a member of the National Women's Hockey League, in which the team won the Isobel Cup during their inaugural year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285863-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minnesota Whitecaps season, Background\nOn May 15, 2018, the NWHL announced that it had an agreement in principle to acquire ownership of the Whitecaps. The team is expected to join the NWHL as an expansion team for the 2018\u201319 season. The NWHL arranged with the Minnesota Wild to use TRIA Rink, the Wild's practice facility, as the site for Whitecaps home games. It was reported that the Whitecaps had hired 2018 Olympic gold medal-winning coach Robb Stauber and his wife Shivaun Stauber as coaches, sharing the head coaching responsibilities, but the parties never signed a contract. Whitecaps' founder and general manager Jack Brodt then returned to the coaching position he held prior to joining the NWHL and hired former University of Minnesota player Ronda Curtin Engelhardt as co-coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285863-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minnesota Whitecaps season, Background\nThe NWHL unveiled a new logo for the Whitecaps on August 21, 2018. Created by M Style Marketing, the colors incorporate blue, while, silver and black.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285864-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minnesota Wild season\nThe 2018\u201319 Minnesota Wild season was the 19th season for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on June 25, 1997. On April 2, 2019, the Wild were eliminated from playoff contention after the Colorado Avalanche's 6\u20132 victory against the Edmonton Oilers, marking the first time the Wild missed the postseason since the 2011\u201312 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285864-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minnesota Wild season, Schedule and results, Preseason\nNotes: Game was played at Wells Fargo Arena in Des Moines, Iowa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285864-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minnesota Wild season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was released on June 21, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285864-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minnesota Wild 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285864-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minnesota Wild season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Wild. Stats reflect time with the Wild only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Wild only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285864-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minnesota Wild season, Transactions\nThe Wild have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285864-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Minnesota Wild season, Draft picks\nBelow are the Minnesota Wild's selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285865-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mirwais Nika Provincial 3-Day\nThe 2018\u201319 Mirwais Nika Provincial 3-Day was the first edition of the Mirwais Nika Provincial 3-Day tournament, a first-class cricket competition in Afghanistan, that ran from 15 February to 15 March 2019. The five competing provincial sides were representing their regions after having come through regional qualifying events. In the final, the match finished as a draw, with Kabul Province declared as the winner, after taking a first innings lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285866-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mississippi State Bulldogs men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Mississippi State Bulldogs basketball team represented Mississippi State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bulldogs, led by fourth-year head coach Ben Howland, played their home games at the Humphrey Coliseum in Starkville, Mississippi as members of the Southeastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285866-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mississippi State Bulldogs men's basketball team\nThey were the 5th seed in the NCAA Tournament where they got upset by 12th seed Liberty in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285866-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mississippi State Bulldogs men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bulldogs finished the 2017\u201318 season 25\u201312, 9\u20139 in SEC play to finish in a tie for seventh place. They defeated LSU in the second round of the SEC Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Tennessee. They were received an at-large bid to the National Invitation Tournament where they defeated Nebraska, Baylor, and Louisville to advance to the semifinals where they lost to Penn State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 73], "content_span": [74, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285866-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mississippi State Bulldogs men's basketball team, Rankings\n*AP does not release post-NCAA Tournament rankings^Coaches did not release a Week 2 poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285867-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mississippi State Bulldogs women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Mississippi State Bulldogs women's basketball team represented Mississippi State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Bulldogs, led by seventh-year head coach Vic Schaefer, played their home games at Humphrey Coliseum as members of the Southeastern Conference (SEC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285867-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mississippi State Bulldogs women's basketball team\nThe Bulldogs are coming off a runner-up finish to Notre Dame for the national championship in which they lost 58\u201361.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285867-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mississippi State Bulldogs women's basketball team, Rankings\n^Coaches' Poll did not release a second poll at the same time as the AP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 68], "content_span": [69, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285868-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mississippi Valley State Delta Devils basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Mississippi Valley State Delta Devils basketball team represented Mississippi Valley State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Delta Devils were led by fifth-year head coach Andre Payne, and played their home games at the Harrison HPER Complex in Itta Bena, Mississippi as members of the Southwestern Athletic Conference. They finished the season 6\u201326 overall, 4\u201314 in SWAC play to finish in a tie for ninth place. They failed to qualify for the 2019 SWAC Tournament, as only the top eight teams are eligible to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285868-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mississippi Valley State Delta Devils basketball team, Previous season\nThe Delta Devils finished the 2017\u201318 season 4\u201328, 4\u201314 in SWAC play to finish in ninth place. Due to the ineligibility of Grambling State, the Delta Devils received the No. 8 seed in the SWAC Tournament and lost to Arkansas\u2013Pine Bluff in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 78], "content_span": [79, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285869-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Missouri State Bears basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Missouri State Bears basketball team represented Missouri State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bears, led by first-year head coach Dana Ford, played their home games at JQH Arena in Springfield, Missouri as members of the Missouri Valley Conference. They finished the season 16\u201316, 10\u20138 in MVC play to finish in a tie for third place. As the No. 4 seed in the MVC Tournament, they lost in the quarterfinals to Bradley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285869-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Missouri State Bears basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bears finished the 2017\u201318 season 18\u201315, 7\u201311 in MVC play to finish in a three-way tie for seventh place. As the No. 7 seed in the MVC Tournament, they beat Valparaiso in the first round before losing to Southern Illinois in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285869-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Missouri State Bears basketball team, Previous season\nOn March 3, 2018, the school announced that head coach Paul Lusk had been fired. He finished at Missouri State with a seven-year record of 106\u2013121. The school announced that former Tennessee State head coach Dana Ford had been named head coach of the Bears on March 21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285870-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Missouri State Lady Bears basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Missouri State Lady Bears basketball team represented Missouri State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Lady Bears, led by sixth year head coach Kellie Harper, played their home games at JQH Arena and were members of the Missouri Valley Conference. They finished the season 25\u201310, 16\u20132 in MVC play to finish in second place. They won the Missouri Valley Women's Tournament to earn an automatic trip to the NCAA Women's Basketball where upset DePaul and Iowa State in the first and second rounds to advance to the sweet sixteen for the first time 2001 where they lost to Stanford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285870-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Missouri State Lady Bears basketball team\nOn April 8, Harper left after 6 seasons to accept the head coaching job at her alma mater, Tennessee. She finish with a 6 year record of 118\u201379.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285871-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Missouri Tigers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Missouri Tigers men's basketball team represented the University of Missouri in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They were led by head coach Cuonzo Martin in his second year at Missouri. The team played its home games at Mizzou Arena in Columbia, Missouri as seventh-year members of the Southeastern Conference. They finished the season 15\u201317 overall, 5\u201313 in the SEC to finish in 12th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285871-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Missouri Tigers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Tigers finished the 2017\u201318 season 20\u201313, 10\u20138 in SEC play to finish in a tie for fourth place. As the No. 5 seed in the SEC Tournament, they lost to the Georgia Bulldogs in the second round. The Tigers received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as the No. 8 seed in the West region. The Tigers lost in the First Round to Florida State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285871-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Missouri Tigers men's basketball team, Offseason\nOn March 26, 2018, Michael Porter Jr. announced he would declare for the 2018 NBA draft and would forgo his final years of eligibility by signing with an agent. On April 5, his younger brother Jontay Porter also declared for the NBA draft, but did not sign with an agent. Shortly before the deadline to withdraw from the draft, the younger Porter did so and will return for his sophomore year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 56], "content_span": [57, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285872-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Missouri Tigers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Missouri Tigers women's basketball team represents the University of Missouri in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Tigers were led by ninth-year head coach Robin Pingeton. They play their games at Mizzou Arena and are members of the Southeastern Conference. They finished the season 24\u201311, 11\u20135 in SEC play to finish in fifth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the SEC Women's Tournament where they lost to Mississippi State. They received an at-large to the NCAA Women's Tournament where they defeated Drake in the first round before losing to Iowa in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285872-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Missouri Tigers women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Tigers began the 2017\u201318 season ranked #16 in both the AP and Coaches Polls. They finished the season 24\u20138, 11\u20135 in SEC play to finish in a four-way tie for fourth place. Ranked 14th nationally, they advanced to the quarterfinals of the SEC Women's Tournament where they lost to 19th-ranked Georgia. They received an at-large to the NCAA Women's Tournament where they were upset by Florida Gulf Coast in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285873-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Missouri Valley Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 Missouri Valley Conference men's basketball season began with practices in October 2018, followed by the start of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season on November 6, 2018. Conference play began in late December 2018 and concluded in March with the Missouri Valley Conference Tournament at Enterprise Center in St. Louis, Missouri.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285873-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Missouri Valley Conference men's basketball season\nDefending regular season and tournament champion Loyola shared the regular season title with Drake at 12-6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285873-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Missouri Valley Conference men's basketball season\nBradley defeated Northern Iowa in the championship game to win the Missouri Valley Conference Tournament and thereby received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285873-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Missouri Valley Conference men's basketball season\nBradley received the conference's only bid to the NCAA Tournament and lost to Michigan State in the first round, 76-65. Loyola-Chicago received a bid to the NIT and lost in the first round at Creighton, 70-61.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285873-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Missouri Valley Conference men's basketball season\nDrake was the only other conference school that received a bid to a postseason tournament, receiving a bid to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they lost in the first round at Southern Utah, 80-73.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285873-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Missouri Valley Conference men's basketball season, Head coaches, Coaching changes\nOn March 3, 2018, Missouri State announced that head coach Paul Lusk had been fired. He finished with a seven-year record of 106\u2013121. The school announced that former Tennessee State head coach Dana Ford had been named head coach of the Bears on March 21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 90], "content_span": [91, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285873-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Missouri Valley Conference men's basketball season, Head coaches, Coaching changes\nOn March 13, 2018, Evansville fired head coach Marty Simmons. He finished at Evansville with an 11-year record of 184\u2013175. On March 22, the school hired Boston Celtics assistant coach, former Kentucky player and Evansville native Walter McCarty as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 90], "content_span": [91, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285873-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Missouri Valley Conference men's basketball season, Head coaches, Coaching changes\nOn March 22, 2018, Drake announced that head coach Niko Medved had accepted the head coaching position at Colorado State, where he had previously served as an assistant. A week after Medved's departure, Drake hired Creighton assistant and Iowa native Darian DeVries for the head coaching job.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 90], "content_span": [91, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285873-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Missouri Valley Conference men's basketball season, Regular season, Conference matrix\nThis table summarizes the head-to-head results between teams in conference play. Each team will play 18 conference games, playing each team twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 93], "content_span": [94, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285874-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mizoram Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Mizoram Premier League is the seventh season of the Mizoram Premier League, the top division football league in the Indian state of Mizoram. The league kicked off from 6 September 2018 with eight teams competing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285875-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mohun Bagan AC season\nThe 2018\u201319 Mohun Bagan A.C. season is the 129th season of Mohun Bagan A.C. since the club's formation in 1889 and their 12th season in the I-League which is India's top football league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285876-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Moldovan Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Moldovan Cup (Romanian: Cupa Moldovei) was the 28th season of the annual Moldovan football cup competition. It began with the preliminary round on 12 May 2018, and concluded with the final on 22 May 2019. Milsami Orhei were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285876-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Moldovan Cup, Format and Schedule\nThe preliminary round and the first two rounds proper are regionalised to reduce teams travel costs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285876-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Moldovan Cup, Participating teams\nNumber in brackets denote the level of respective league in Football in Moldova. Teams in bold continue to the next round of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285876-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Moldovan Cup, Preliminary Round\n14 clubs from the Divizia B entered this round. Teams that finished higher on the league in the previous season played their ties away. 13 clubs from the Divizia B received a bye for the preliminary round. Matches were played on 12 May 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285876-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Moldovan Cup, First Round\n20 clubs from the Divizia B and 12 clubs from the Divizia A entered this round. In a match, the home advantage was granted to the team from the lower league. If two teams are from the same division, the team that finished higher on the league in the previous season played their tie away. Matches were played on 25 and 26 May 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285876-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Moldovan Cup, Second Round\nThe 16 winners from the previous round entered this round. In a match, the home advantage was granted to the team from the lower league. If two teams are from the same division, the team that finished higher on the league in the previous season played their tie away. Matches were played on 9 June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285876-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Moldovan Cup, Round of 16\nThe 8 winners from the previous round and 8 clubs from the Divizia Na\u021bional\u0103 entered this round. The home teams in the first legs and the pairs were determined in a draw held on 13 June 2018.The first legs were played on 20 June 2018 and the second legs on 5,6 and 7 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285876-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Moldovan Cup, Quarter-Finals\nThe 8 winners from the previous round entered the quarter-finals. The home teams in the first legs were determined in a draw held on 16 July 2018.The first legs were played on 26 September 2018 and the second legs on 31 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285876-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Moldovan Cup, Semi-Finals\nThe 4 winners from the previous round entered the semi-finals. The home teams in the first legs were determined in a draw held on 4 December 2018.The first legs were played on 16 and 17 April 2019 and the second legs on 7 and 8 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285876-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Moldovan Cup, Final\nThe final was played on Wednesday 22 May 2019 at the Zimbru Stadium in Chi\u0219in\u0103u. The \"home\" team (for administrative purposes) was determined by an additional draw held on 9 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285877-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Moldovan National Division (basketball)\nThe 2018\u201319 Moldovan National Division season, is the 28th season of the top basketball league in Moldova.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285877-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Moldovan National Division (basketball), Competition format\nSix teams joined the regular season, played as a double-legged round-robin tournament. The four best qualified teams joined the playoffs, that would be played in a best-of-five format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 67], "content_span": [68, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285877-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Moldovan National Division (basketball), Playoffs\nAll series were played in a best-of-five playoff format (2-2-1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 57], "content_span": [58, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285878-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Moldovan Under-19 Division\nThe 2018\u201319 Moldovan Under-19 Division (Romanian: Divizia Na\u021bional\u0103 U-19) was the Moldovan annual football tournament. The season began on 23 August 2018 and ended on 28 May 2019. Sheriff Tiraspol were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285878-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Moldovan Under-19 Division, Squads\nPlayers must be born on or after 1 January 2001, with a maximum of five players per team born between 1 January 2000 and 31 December 2000 allowed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285878-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Moldovan Under-19 Division, League table\nThe six clubs will play each other four times for a total of 20 matches per team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285879-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Moldovan Women Top League\nThe 2018\u201319 Moldovan Women Top League season in association football was the 19th since its establishment. The season began on 2 September 2018 and ended on 26 May 2019. Agarista-\u0218S Anenii Noi were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285879-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Moldovan Women Top League, Format\nThe schedule consists of two rounds, each team plays each other once home-and-away for a total of 16 matches per team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285880-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Moldovan Women's Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Moldovan Women's Cup (Romanian: Cupa Moldovei la fotbal feminin) was the 22nd season of the Moldovan annual football tournament. The competition started on 17 October 2018 and concluded with the final held on 2 June 2019. A total of nine teams had their entries to the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285880-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Moldovan Women's Cup, Final\nThe final was played on 2 June 2019 at the Municipal Stadium in H\u00eence\u0219ti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285881-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Momentum One Day Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Momentum One Day Cup was a domestic one-day cricket championship that took place in South Africa. It was the 38th edition of the championship, with the tournament running from 8 February to 31 March 2019. Dolphins and Warriors were the defending champions, as the final of the previous competition was washed out, and the trophy shared between the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285881-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Momentum One Day Cup\nCricket South Africa announced that the semi-finals and final of the competition would take place after the limited overs fixtures against Sri Lanka in March 2019, to help prepare the national side for the 2019 Cricket World Cup. Following the conclusion of the group stage fixtures, Titans, Dolphins, Warriors and the Cape Cobras had all progressed to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285881-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Momentum One Day Cup\nTitans beat Cape Cobras in the first semi-final, with Junior Dala taking his career-best figures of 6/19 in the match. In the second semi-final, Dolphins beat Warriors by seven wickets, chasing down the target of 120 runs inside twenty overs. In the final, Titans beat Dolphins by 135 runs, with Aiden Markram scoring 127 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285882-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Monmouth Hawks men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Monmouth Hawks men's basketball team represented Monmouth University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at OceanFirst Bank Center in West Long Branch, New Jersey as members of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference, and were led by 8th-year head coach King Rice. They finished the 2018\u201319 season 14\u201321 overall, 10\u20138 in MAAC play to finish in 6th place. As the 6th seed in the 2019 MAAC Tournament, they defeated No. 11 seed Niagara in the first round 76\u201372, upset No. 3 seed Quinnipiac 98\u201392 in the quarterfinals, upset No. 2 seed Canisius 73\u201359 in the semifinals before losing to No. 1 seed Iona, 60\u201381 in the championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285882-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Monmouth Hawks men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Hawks finished the 2017\u201318 season 11\u201320, 7\u201311 in MAAC play to finish in a tie for seventh place. They lost in the first round of the MAAC Tournament to Saint Peter's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285883-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montana Grizzlies basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Montana Grizzlies basketball team represented the University of Montana during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Grizzlies, led by fifth-year head coach Travis DeCuire, played their home games at Dahlberg Arena in Missoula, Montana as members of the Big Sky Conference. Finishing the season 26\u20139 overall, 16\u20134 in Big Sky play, the Grizzlies won the Big Sky regular season championship. As the No. 1 seed in the Big Sky Tournament, they defeated Sacramento State, Weber State, and Eastern Washington to win the tournament, and earned the Big Sky's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285883-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montana Grizzlies basketball team\nGiven a No. 15 seed in the West Region of the NCAA Tournament, Montana was defeated by Michigan in the first round for the second consecutive year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285883-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montana Grizzlies basketball team, Previous season\nThe Grizzlies finished the 2017\u201318 season 26\u20138, 16\u20132 in Big Sky play to win the Big Sky regular season championship. They defeated North Dakota, Northern Colorado, and Eastern Washington to be champions of the Big Sky Tournament. They earned the Big Sky's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament where they lost in the First Round to Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285884-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montana Lady Griz basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Montana Lady Griz basketball team represents the University of Montana during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Lady Griz were led by third year head coach Shannon Schweyen, play their home games at Dahlberg Arena and were members of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 14\u201316, 9\u20139 in Big Sky play to finish in a tie for sixth place. They lost in the first round of the Big Sky Women's Tournament to Southern Utah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285885-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montana State Bobcats men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Montana State Bobcats men's basketball team represented Montana State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bobcats, led by fifth-year head coach Brian Fish, played their home games at Brick Breeden Fieldhouse in Bozeman, Montana as members of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 15\u201317, 11\u20139 in Big Sky play to finish in a three-way tie for fourth place. They defeated Idaho in the first round of the Big Sky Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Eastern Washington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285885-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montana State Bobcats men's basketball team\nOn March 17, head coach Brian Fish was fired. He finished at Montana State with a five-year record of 65\u201392.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285885-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montana State Bobcats men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bobcats finished the 2017\u201318 season finished the season 13\u201319, 6\u201312 in Big Sky play to finish in a tie for eighth place. They lost in the first round of the Big Sky Tournament to North Dakota.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285886-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montana State Bobcats women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Montana State Bobcats women's basketball team represents Montana State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Bobcats, led by thirteenth year head coach Tricia Binford, play their home games at Brick Breeden Fieldhouse and were members of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 16\u201315, 11\u20139 in Big Sky play to finish in fifth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big Sky Women's Tournament to Portland State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285887-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montenegrin Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Montenegrin Cup was the 12th edition of the football tournament in Montenegro. The cup began on 28 August 2018 and ended on 30 May 2019. The winners of this competition earned a place in the UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285887-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montenegrin Cup\nOFK Titograd Podgorica won the previous season's tournament (under the name Mladost Podgorica), and were the defending champions. The club defeated Igalo in the final by the score of 2\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285887-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montenegrin Cup, Format\nTwenty\u2013six clubs participated in the competition this season. The first round and the final were contested over one leg with all other rounds being contested over two legs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285887-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montenegrin Cup, First round\nThe first round matches were played on 28\u201330 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285887-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montenegrin Cup, Second round\nFourteen clubs competed in the second round played over two legs from 3 to 24 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285887-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montenegrin Cup, Quarter\u2013finals\nThe quarter\u2013finals were played from 7 to 28 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285887-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montenegrin Cup, Semi\u2013finals\nThe semi\u2013finals were played from 17 April to 1 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285888-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montenegrin First League\nThe 2018\u201319 Montenegrin First League was the 13th season of the top-tier association football in Montenegro. The season began on 3 August 2018 and ended on 25 May 2019. Sutjeska Nik\u0161i\u0107 were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285888-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montenegrin First League, Results\nThe ten league clubs played each other four times for a total of 36 matches each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285889-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montenegrin Second League\nThe 2018\u201319 Montenegrin Second League was the 13th season since the establishment of the Montenegrin Second League. The season ran from 12 August 2018 to May 2019. That was the first season with 10 participants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285889-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montenegrin Second League, Format of competition\nA total of 10 teams participated in this edition of the Second League. The new members were FK Kom and FK De\u010di\u0107 who was relegated from 2017\u201318 Montenegrin First League, and winners of Montenegrin Third League playoffs - FK Arsenal Tivat. This was the first season of Second CFL with 10 participants. At the end of the season, worst-placed team on the table would be directly relegated to the Montenegrin Third League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285890-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montpellier HSC season\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by S.A. Julio (talk | contribs) at 10:46, 25 April 2021 (\u2192\u200eMatches: linking). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285890-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montpellier HSC season\nThe 2018\u201319 Montpellier HSC season was the 44th professional season of the club since its creation in 1974.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285890-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montpellier HSC 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285890-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montpellier HSC 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285890-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montpellier HSC 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285891-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montreal Canadiens season\nThe 2018\u201319 Montreal Canadiens season was the 110th season for the franchise that was founded on December 4, 1909, and their 102nd in the National Hockey League. Despite a strong effort, the Canadiens failed to qualify for the playoffs, marking the first time that the team missed back-to-back postseasons since the 2000\u201301 season. Finishing the season with 96 points, the Canadiens also tied the record for most points by a non-qualifying NHL team, joining the 2014\u201315 Boston Bruins and the 2017\u201318 Florida Panthers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285891-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montreal Canadiens season, Schedule and results, Preseason\nNotes: Game was played at Videotron Centre in Quebec City, Quebec.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285891-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montreal Canadiens season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was released on June 21, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285891-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montreal Canadiens 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285891-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montreal Canadiens season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Canadiens. Stats reflect time with the Canadiens 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, 65], "content_span": [66, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285891-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montreal Canadiens season, Transactions\nThe Canadiens have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285891-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Montreal Canadiens season, Draft picks\nBelow are the Montreal Canadiens' selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285892-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Morecambe F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Morecambe's 12th consecutive season in League Two, the fourth tier of English football. They finished 18th in League Two, and also competed in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy. They were eliminated in the First round of the FA Cup and the EFL Cup, and in the Group stage of the EFL Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285892-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Morecambe F.C. season\nThe season page covers the period between 1 July 2018 and 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285892-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Morecambe F.C. season, Competitions, Pre-season friendlies\nMorecambe revealed pre-season friendlies against Bamber Bridge, Alfreton Town, Chorley, Chester and Fleetwood Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285892-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Morecambe F.C. season, Competitions, League Two, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League Two fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285892-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Morecambe F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285892-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Morecambe F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285892-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Morecambe F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285893-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Morehead State Eagles men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Morehead State Eagles men's basketball team represented Morehead State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Eagles, led by second-year head coach Preston Spradlin, played their home games at Ellis Johnson Arena in Morehead, Kentucky as members of the Ohio Valley Conference. They finished the season 13\u201320, 8\u201310 in OVC play to finish in fifth place. They defeated SIU Edwardsville in the first round of the OVC Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Austin Peay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285893-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Morehead State Eagles men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Eagles finished the 2017\u201318 season 8\u201321, 4\u201314 in OVC play to finish in last place. They failed to qualify for the OVC Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285894-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Morgan State Bears men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Morgan State Bears men's basketball team represented Morgan State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at Talmadge L. Hill Field House in Baltimore, Maryland, and were led by 13th-year head coach Todd Bozeman. The Bears finished the season 9\u201321, 4\u201312 in MEAC play to finish in tenth place. As the No. 10 seed in the MEAC Tournament, they lost in the first round to Coppin State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285894-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Morgan State Bears men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bears finished the 2017\u201318 season 13\u201319, 7\u20139 in MEAC play to finish in a three-way tie for seventh place. As the No. 7 seed in the MEAC Tournament, they defeated South Carolina State and Bethune\u2013Cookman, before losing to North Carolina Central in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285895-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Motherwell F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Motherwell's thirty-fourth consecutive season in the top flight of Scottish football and the sixth in the newly established Scottish Premiership, having been promoted from the Scottish First Division at the end of the 1984\u201385 season. Motherwell will also competed in the League Cup and the Scottish Cup,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285895-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Motherwell F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season\nOn 26 June 2018, Maguire signed a new one-year contract with Motherwell, until the end of the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285895-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Motherwell F.C. season, Season review, Transfers\nOn 5 June 2018, Motherwell announced the signing of Mark Gillespie on a two-year contract from Walsall, with the transfer becoming official when the Scottish Transfer window opened on 9 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285895-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Motherwell F.C. season, Season review, Transfers\nOn 7 June 2018, Motherwell announced the signing of Liam Donnelly on an initial two-year contract from Hartlepool United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285895-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Motherwell F.C. season, Season review, Transfers\nOn 13 June 2018, Motherwell announced the signing of Danny Johnson on a two-year contract from Gateshead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285895-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Motherwell F.C. season, Season review, Transfers\nMotherwell announced their fourth signing of the summer on 19 June 2018, with Aaron Taylor-Sinclair signing a one-year contract with the club following the expiration of his Plymouth Argyle contract on 30 June 2018. The following day, 20 June, Motherwell announced the signing of Alex Rodriguez on an initial one-year contract, whilst Ross MacLean moved to Greenock Morton on a season-long loan deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285895-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Motherwell F.C. season, Season review, Transfers\nOn 2 July, Shea Gordon joined Partick Thistle on loan for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285895-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Motherwell F.C. season, Season review, Transfers\nOn 7 July, Jake Hastie joined Alloa Athletic on loan until January 2019. On 10 July, Motherwell announced that Broque Watson had joined the reserve team from Celtic and Neil McLaughlin had joined from Partick Thistle and would be immediately loaned out to Stirling Albion for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285895-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Motherwell F.C. season, Season review, Transfers\nOn 16 July, Motherwell announced the season-long loan signing of Conor Sammon from Hearts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285895-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Motherwell F.C. season, Season review, Transfers\nOn 3 August, Motherwell announced that C\u00e9dric Kipr\u00e9 had left the club to join Wigan Athletic for an undisclosed fee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285895-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Motherwell F.C. season, Season review, Transfers\nOn 9 August, Tom Aldred returned to Motherwell for a second loan-spell, agreeing a deal until the end of the season. The next day, Christian Mbulu signed a one-year contract with Motherwell after his release from Millwall at the end of the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285895-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Motherwell F.C. season, Season review, Transfers\nOn 10 December 2018, Vancouver Whitecaps announced that they had signed Rose to a two-year contract, following the acquisition of his MLS rights from Seattle Sounders, with Motherwell confirming that Rose would join Vancouver Whitecaps on 1 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285895-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Motherwell F.C. season, Season review, Transfers\nOn 1 January 2019, Barry Maguire joined Queen of the South on loan for the remainder of the season, whilst Jason Krones and Jordan Armstrong left the club after the expiration of their contracts. The following day, 2 January, Ryan Bowman moved permanently to Exeter City for an undisclosed fee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285895-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Motherwell F.C. season, Season review, Transfers\nOn 3 January 2019, Ross MacLean ended his loan deal with Greenock Morton to join Falkirk on a permanent basis. 2 days later, 5 January, Ross McCormack joined on loan until the end of the season from Aston Villa after his loan deal with Central Coast Mariners was cut short. On 7 January, Gboly Ariyibi joined Motherwell on loan for the remainder of the season from Nottingham Forest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285895-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Motherwell F.C. season, Season review, Transfers\nOn 30 January 2019, David Turnbull signed a new contract until the summer of 2021, whilst Aaron Taylor-Sinclair joined Crewe Alexandra on loan for the rest of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285895-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Motherwell F.C. season, Season review, Transfers\nOn 31 January, Transfer deadline day, Broque Watson joined East Fife on loan for the remainder of the season, George Newell went on loan to Albion Rovers for the rest of the season, and Ga\u00ebl Bigirimana left the club in a permanent move to Hibernian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285895-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Motherwell F.C. season, Season review, Transfers\nOn 7 March, Barry Maguire signed a new contract, until the summer of 2020, whilst Liam Grimshaw agreed a new deal on 12 March, keeping him at club until the summer of 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285895-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Motherwell F.C. season, Season review, Transfers\nOn 29 March, Adam Livingstone extended his contract until the summer of 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285895-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Motherwell F.C. season, Season review, Transfers\nOn 10 April, Jamie Semple extended his contract until the summer of 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285895-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Motherwell F.C. season, Season review, Transfers\nOn 11 April, Motherwell signed a pre-contract agreement with Inverness Caledonian Thistle defender Declan Gallagher, on a contract that will run until the summer of 2021. 6 days later, 17 April, Motherwell signed another pre-contract agreement with an Inverness Caledonian Thistle player, with Liam Polworth agreeing to a contract that will also run until the summer of 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285895-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Motherwell F.C. season, Season review, Transfers\nOn 1 May, Rangers announced that they had signed Jake Hastie to a pre-contract agreement, with the winger signing a four-year contract to begin once his Motherwell contract ends. On 15 May, Motherwell confirmed that Shea Gordon would leave the club when his contract expired at the end of the season, and would sign a permanent deal with Partick Thistle where he had been on a season-long loan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285895-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Motherwell F.C. season, Season review, Transfers\nOn 21 May, Motherwell announced that they had offered new contracts to Craig Tanner and Chris Cadden, whilst first teamer Christian Mbulu, Aaron Taylor-Sinclair, Elliott Frear, Carl McHugh, Alex Rodriguez, Curtis Main, George Newell and Jake Hastie would be leaving the club at the end of their contracts after turning down new deals or not being offered new terms. At the same time, Motherwell also confirmed that youngsters Shaun Bowers, Akeal Rehman, Shea Gordon, Liam Brown, Kyle MacDonald, Broque Watson and Neil McLaughlin would also be leaving the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285895-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Motherwell 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285895-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Motherwell F.C. season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285896-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mount St. Mary's Mountaineers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Mount St. Mary's Mountaineers men's basketball team represented Mount St. Mary's University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Mountaineers were led by first-year head coach Dan Engelstad, and played their home games at Knott Arena in Emmitsburg, Maryland as members of the Northeast Conference. They finished the season 9\u201322 overall, 6\u201312 in NEC play to finish in ninth place. They failed to qualify for the NEC Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285896-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mount St. Mary's Mountaineers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Mountaineers finished the 2017\u201318 season, 18\u201314, 12\u20136 in NEC play to finish in a tie for second place. As the No. 2 seed in the NEC Tournament, they were upset in the quarterfinals by Robert Morris.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 76], "content_span": [77, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285896-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mount St. Mary's Mountaineers men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn May 2, 2018, former head coach Jamion Christian left the team to take the head coaching job at Siena. One week later, the school hired former Mountaineer assistant coach Dan Engelstad from Division III Southern Vermont.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 76], "content_span": [77, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285897-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mountain West Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 Mountain West Conference men's basketball season began with practices in October 2018, followed by the start of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season in November. Conference play begins in January 2019 and concludes in February 2019. The season marks the 19th season of Mountain West Conference basketball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285897-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mountain West Conference men's basketball season, Preseason, Coaching changes\nOn February 26, 2018, Colorado State coach Larry Eustachy resigned after being placed on administrative leave. On March 22, Drake head coach and former CSU assistant coach Niko Medved was hired as the new head coach of Colorado State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 85], "content_span": [86, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285897-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mountain West Conference men's basketball season, Preseason, Coaching changes\nOn March 12, 2018, Fresno State head coach Rodney Terry left Fresno State to become head coach at UTEP. He finished at Fresno State with a seven-year record of 126\u2013108. On April 5, it was announced that the school had hired San Diego State assistant coach Justin Hutson as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 85], "content_span": [86, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285897-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mountain West Conference men's basketball season, Preseason, Coaching changes\nOn March 11, 2018, Utah State head coach Tim Duryea was fired after three seasons. He finished at Utah State with a three-year record of 47\u201349. On March 25, reports indicated that the school had hired South Dakota head coach Craig Smith as head coach, which was confirmed the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 85], "content_span": [86, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285897-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mountain West Conference men's basketball season, Regular season, Conference matrix\nThis table summarizes the head-to-head results between teams in conference play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 91], "content_span": [92, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285898-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mumbai City FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 Mumbai City FC season was the club's fifth season since its establishment in 2014 and their fifth season in the Indian Super League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285898-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mumbai City FC season, Pre-season and friendlies\nOn 31 August 2018, Mumbai City started their pre season in Thailand. They played with local clubs Chiangmai FC, Lampang F.C., Maejo United F.C. and Bangkok United F.C..", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285898-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mumbai City FC 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-00285898-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Mumbai City FC season, Players, Foreign players\nThe number of foreign players allowed in the squad will be reduced from eight to seven from 2018\u201319 season, however the maximum number of foreign players allowed on the pitch will remain same at five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285899-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Munster Rugby season\nThe 2018\u201319 Munster Rugby season was Munster's eighteenth season competing in the Pro14, alongside which they also competed in the European Rugby Champions Cup. It was Johann van Graan's second season as head coach and his first full season in the role, having joined partway through the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285899-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Munster Rugby season, Events\nMunster played two pre-season fixtures ahead of the 2018\u201319 campaign, the first against London Irish, whose directory of rugby is former Munster and Ireland head coach Declan Kidney, and the second against Exeter Chiefs, which was the first meeting between the two clubs. Munster beat London Irish 32\u201328, but lost 12\u20130 against Exeter Chiefs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285899-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Munster Rugby season, Events\nDrawn alongside French Top 14 champions Castres and English sides Exeter Chiefs and Gloucester, Munster competed in pool 2 of the 2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup. Munster opened their 2018\u201319 Pro14 season with a six-try 38\u20130 victory against South African side Cheetahs in Thomond Park on 1 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285899-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Munster Rugby season, Events\nRory Scannell, Dave Kilcoyne, Tommy O'Donnell, JJ Hanrahan, Dave O'Callaghan and Man-of-the-Match Darren Sweetnam scored the tries, with Hanrahan adding four conversions, in a match that saw Arno Botha, Mike Haley, Joey Carbery and academy players Shane Daly and Gavin Coombes make their competitive debuts for the province, whilst Neil Cronin also made his first appearance for Munster since March 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285899-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Munster Rugby season, Events\nTadhg Beirne made his debut for Munster in the provinces 25\u201310 defeat away to Glasgow Warriors on 7 September 2018. Munster's 64\u20137 win against Ulster on 29 September 2018 was a record win for the province in the Pro14; Munster's previous record win being 47\u20130 against Zebre in 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285899-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Munster Rugby season, Events\nIn round one of the 2018\u201319 Champions Cup on 13 October 2018, a try from CJ Stander and five points from the boot of Joey Carbery secured a 10\u201310 draw in Sandy Park against Exeter Chiefs, in a match in which Dan Goggin and Neil Cronin made their competitive European debuts, whilst Tadhg Beirne, who was Man-of-the-Match, Mike Haley and Joey Carbery made their European debuts for Munster. One week later, tries from Mike Haley, Rhys Marshall, Joey Carbery, who also kicked four conversions and one penalty in a Man-of-the-Match performance, Sammy Arnold and Andrew Conway helped Munster to a 36\u201322 bonus-point victory at home against Gloucester.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285899-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Munster Rugby season, Events\nIn the December 2018 back-to-back Champions Cup fixtures against Castres, Munster won 30\u20135 in round 3 on 9 December, with tries from Rory Scannell, CJ Stander and JJ Hanrahan, who also scored 15 points off the kicking tee. In the return leg away to Castres on 15 December, the French side won 13\u201312, with Joey Carbery scoring all of Munster's points from penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285899-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Munster Rugby season, Events\nIn round 5 of the Champions Cup, Munster beat Gloucester 41\u201315 away from home on 11 January 2019, with the tries coming from Joey Carbery (2), Rory Scannell, Keith Earls and Andrew Conway and 16 points of the kicking tee from Carbery. In round 6, Munster beat Exeter Chiefs 9\u20137 in Thomond Park on 19 January 2019 to advance to a record 18th Champions Cup quarter-final. Joey Carbery scored all of Munster's points from penalties in a closely fought, physical game. Munster defeated Edinburgh 17\u201313 in their quarter-final in Murrayfield Stadium on 30 March 2019 to advance to a 14th Champions Cup semi-final, which Munster lost 32\u201316 to Saracens in the Ricoh Arena on 20 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285899-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Munster Rugby season, Events\nMunster finished second in conference A in the 2018\u201319 Pro14 season, with 21 wins and 5 defeats, and beat Italian side Benetton 15\u201313 in their quarter-final on 4 May 2019, to secure a semi-final against provincial rivals Leinster in the RDS on 18 May 2019. which Leinster won 24\u20139, bringing to an end Munster's 2018\u201319 season. During the season, Munster played 31 games, winning 22, losing 8 and drawing 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285899-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Munster Rugby season, Events\nThe province scored 790 points, including 99 tries, in total, and had the best defensive record during the regular Pro14 season and Champions Cup pool stage, conceding an average of 12 points a game in the latter. In attack, Munster were the third highest try-scorers in the regular Pro14 season with 82 tries in 21 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285899-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Munster Rugby season, Events\nMunster were unbeaten at home all season, winning 10 games in Thomond Park and 4 in Irish Independent Park, and featured in their 18th Champions Cup quarter-final and 14th semi-final, extending records for both. 55 players were used in total throughout the season across all competitions, with 37 of those having followed the Munster pathway into the professional game. 11 players made their debuts for the province: Tadhg Beirne, Arno Botha, Joey Carbery, Mike Haley and Alby Mathewson, as well as 6 academy players: Diarmuid Barron, Craig Casey, Gavin Coombes, Liam Coombes, Shane Daly and Alex McHenry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285899-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Munster Rugby season, Events\nStalwart in the second row Billy Holland became the 10th player to win 200 caps for the province, whilst Andrew Conway, JJ Hanrahan, Jack O'Donoghue and Rory Scannell all won their 100th caps for Munster, with Scannell becoming the youngest player to do at the age of 25. Mike Haley played more minutes than any other player during the season, racking up 1,876 in 26 starts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285899-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Munster Rugby season, Events\nInternationally, 13 Munster players represented Ireland during the season: Sammy Arnold, Tadhg Beirne, Joey Carbery, Andrew Conway, Keith Earls, Chris Farrell, Dave Kilcoyne, Niall Scannell, Conor Murray, Peter O'Mahony, CJ Stander, Darren Sweetnam and John Ryan. 11 players were involved in the Ireland under-20s team that won a grand slam during the 2019 Six Nations Under 20s Championship: Craig Casey, Se\u00e1n French, Ben Healy, James McCarthy, Jonathan Wren and Josh Wycherley from the academy, and Jake Flannery, John Hodnett, Conor Phillips, Luke Masters and Billy Scannell were also involved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285899-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Munster Rugby season, Events\nThere were 6 sell-out attendances during the season at Thomond Park and Irish Independent Park, with all 4 games at the latter selling-out for the first time. Attendance increased by 15% across the season, with a 10% rise in ticket sales. All 3 of Munster's home Champions Cup pool fixtures were the highest attendance for their respective rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285899-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Munster Rugby season, Senior playing squad 2018\u201319\nMunster player movements for the 2018\u201319 season. For a full list, see List of 2018\u201319 Pro14 transfers. (Player's name in italics indicates a transfer that took place during the course of the season)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285899-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Munster Rugby season, Senior playing squad 2018\u201319, 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, 71], "content_span": [72, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285899-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Munster Rugby season, 2018\u201319 Pro14\nGreen background indicates teams that compete in the Pro14 play-offs, and also earn a place in the 2019\u201320 European Champions Cup(excluding South African teams who are ineligible)Blue background indicates teams outside the play-off places that earn a place in the 2019\u201320 European Champions Cup Yellow background indicates the loser of the play-off between the two fourth-ranked European teams in each conference, that earned a place in the 2019\u201320 European Rugby Challenge Cup. Plain background indicates teams that earn a place in the 2019\u201320 European Rugby Challenge Cup. (CH) Champions. (RU) Runners-up. (SF) Losing semi-finalists. (QF) Losing quarter-finalists. (PO) Champions Cup play-off winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285899-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Munster Rugby season, 2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup\nMunster faced Castres, Exeter Chiefs and Gloucester in pool 2 of the 2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup. They were seeded in tier 3 following their fourth-place finish overall and exit from the 2017\u201318 Pro14 season at the semi-finals stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 66], "content_span": [67, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285900-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Murray State Racers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Murray State Racers men's basketball team represented Murray State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Racers, led by fourth-year head coach Matt McMahon, played their home games at the CFSB Center in Murray, Kentucky as members of the Ohio Valley Conference. They finished the season 28\u20135, 16\u20132 in OVC play to finish second to Belmont on a tiebreaker for the regular season championship with Belmont. They defeated Jacksonville State and upset the short-handed Belmont Bruins to be champions of the OVC Tournament. They earned the OVC's automatic-bid to the NCAA Tournament where they defeated Marquette in the first round before losing in the second round to Florida State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 776]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285900-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Murray State Racers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Racers finished the 2017\u201318 season 26\u20136, 16\u20132 in OVC play to win the OVC regular season championship. They defeated Jacksonville State and Belmont to become champions of the OVC Tournament. They earned the OVC's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament where they lost in the First Round to West Virginia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285901-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Myanmar Women's League\nThe 2018\u201319 Myanmar Women's League (also known as the KBZ Bank Myanmar Women's League for sponsorship reasons) was the 3rd season of the Myanmar Women's League, the top Myanmar professional league for women's association football clubs, since its establishment in 2016. A total of 8 teams competed in the league, with the season beginning on 3 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285901-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Myanmar Women's League\nMyawady were the defending champions, having won the Myanmar Women's League title the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285902-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 M\u00e1laga CF season\nDuring the 2018\u201319 season, M\u00e1laga CF participated in the Segunda Divisi\u00f3n and the Copa del Rey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285902-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 M\u00e1laga CF 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285902-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 M\u00e1laga CF 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285903-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NA Hussein Dey season\nIn the 2018\u201319 season, NA Hussein Dey competed in the Ligue 1 for the 43rd season, as well as the Confederation Cup, and the Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285903-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NA Hussein Dey season, Squad list\nAs of August 10, 2018. 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, 41], "content_span": [42, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285904-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NACAM Formula 4 Championship\nThe 2018\u201319 NACAM Formula 4 Championship season was the fourth season of the NACAM Formula 4 Championship. It began on 26 October 2018 at the Aut\u00f3dromo Hermanos Rodr\u00edguez in Mexico City and ended on 4 August 2019 at the same venue after seven rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285904-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NACAM Formula 4 Championship, Race calendar and results\nAll rounds were held in Mexico. The first round was held in support of the 2018 Mexican Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285904-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NACAM Formula 4 Championship, Championship standings\nPoints were awarded to the top 10 classified finishers in each race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285905-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBA G League season\nThe 2018\u201319 NBA G League season was the 18th season of the NBA G League, the official minor league basketball organization owned by the National Basketball Association (NBA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285905-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBA G League season, League changes\nThe league expanded by one team, the Capital City Go-Go owned by the Washington Wizards, to have 27 teams for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285905-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBA G League season, League changes\nThere were three relocations, with two of them within the team's existing market. The most significant relocation was that of the Reno Bighorns, which were moved by their parent club, the Sacramento Kings, to Stockton, California and renamed the Stockton Kings. One of the in-market relocations was that of the Delaware 87ers, which were moved into a new nearby facility in Wilmington from their former home in Newark, and rebranded as the Delaware Blue Coats. Finally, the Rio Grande Valley Vipers moved within the urban area at the southernmost end of Texas, going from Hidalgo to nearby Edinburg with the opening of Bert Ogden Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285905-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBA G League season, League changes\nWith the addition of the Go-Go, the league slightly realigned its six divisions. The Go-Go were added to the Southeast and Delaware was shifted to the Atlantic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285905-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBA G League season, League changes\nDuring the season, league president Malcolm Turner stepped down to become the athletics director at Vanderbilt University. He was replaced by Shareef Abdur-Rahim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285905-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBA G League season, Regular season\nx \u2013 qualified for playoffs; y \u2013 Division champion; z \u2013 Conference champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285906-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBA season\nThe 2018\u201319 NBA season was the 73rd season of the National Basketball Association (NBA). The regular season began on October 16, 2018, and ended on April 10, 2019. The 2019 NBA All-Star Game was played on February 17, 2019, at the Spectrum Center in Charlotte, North Carolina. The playoffs began on April 13, 2019 and ended on June 13 with the Toronto Raptors defeating the defending NBA champion Golden State Warriors in the 2019 NBA Finals, becoming NBA champions for the first time in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285906-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBA season\nThis season would mark the first time since 2010 in which LeBron James did not make a Finals appearance. This would also be the final season for Dirk Nowitzki, Tony Parker and Dwyane Wade. This was the last NBA season to play in a regular 82-game season from mid-October to mid-April until the 2021-22 NBA season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285906-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBA season, Transactions, Free agency\nFree agency negotiations began on July 1. Players began signing on July 6 after the July moratorium ended. LeBron James' 4 year, $154 million contract with the Los Angeles Lakers was the biggest free agency news of the offseason after James spent the last 4 seasons as his second stint with his hometown Cleveland Cavaliers which began in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285906-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBA season, Preseason\nThe preseason began on September 28 and ended on October 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285906-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBA season, Preseason, International games\nThe Toronto Raptors played two preseason games in Canada: first against the Portland Trail Blazers at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver on September 29, and second with the Brooklyn Nets in Montreal at the Bell Centre on October 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 50], "content_span": [51, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285906-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBA season, Preseason, International games\nThe Dallas Mavericks and the Philadelphia 76ers played two preseason games in China, in Shanghai on October 5 and in Shenzhen on October 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 50], "content_span": [51, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285906-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBA season, Regular season\nThe regular season began on October 16, 2018, and ended on April 10, 2019. The entire schedule was released on August 10, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285906-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBA season, Regular season, International games\nOn June 20, 2018, the NBA announced that the Washington Wizards would play the New York Knicks at the O2 Arena in London, United Kingdom on January 17, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 55], "content_span": [56, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285906-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBA season, Regular season, International games\nOn August 7, 2018, the NBA announced that the Orlando Magic would play two games at Mexico City Arena in Mexico City. They played against the Chicago Bulls on December 13, 2018, and they played against the Utah Jazz on December 15, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 55], "content_span": [56, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285906-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBA season, Playoffs\nThe 2019 NBA playoffs began on April 13 and ended with the NBA Finals, which began on May 30 and ended on June 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285906-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBA season, Awards, Yearly awards\nAwards was presented at the NBA Awards ceremony, which was held on June 24. Finalists for voted awards were announced during the playoffs and winners were presented at the award ceremony. The All-NBA Teams was announced in advance in order for teams to have all the necessary information to make off-season preparations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285906-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285906-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285906-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285906-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285906-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBA season, Media\nThis was the third year of the current nine-year contracts with ABC, ESPN, TNT, and NBA TV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285906-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBA season, Uniforms, Uniform sponsorships\nIn April 2016, the NBA announced that teams would be permitted to sign a uniform sponsorship contract for the 2017\u201318 season. Prior and during the 2017\u201318 season, 21 teams signed a uniform sponsorship contract. Before and during the 2018\u201319 season, the remaining nine teams signed such contracts:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 50], "content_span": [51, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285907-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBB Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 NBB Cup (Dutch: 2018\u201319 NBB-Beker) was the 51st edition of the Netherlands' national basketball cup tournament. Donar was the defending champion. ZZ Leiden won its third national cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285907-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBB Cup, Format\nIn the first, second and third round teams from the Dutch second, third and fourth division participate. From the fourth round, teams from the Dutch Basketball League (DBL) enter the competition. Quarter- and semi-finals are played in a two-legged format. When a team form a tier lower than the DBL played a DBL team, one win is sufficient for the latter to advance to the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285907-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBB Cup, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the semi-finals was held on 18 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285907-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBB Cup, Semi-finals, First leg\nThe result of the first match between Windmills and Landstede was changed after four days, from 72\u201372 to 72\u201373, as a free throw was missed in the boxscore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285908-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBB season\nThe 2018\u201319 Novo Basquete Brasil (NBB) season is the 11th season of this top-tier level Brazilian professional basketball league. This tournament is organized by the Liga Nacional de Basquete (LNB). The NBB will also qualify teams for international tournaments such as the FIBA South American League (LSB) and FIBA Americas League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285908-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBB season\nIn this season, fourteen teams will play during the regular season. At the end of the season's home and away games, the top four league teams qualify for the quarterfinal playoffs, while the teams finishing in the 5th through 12th places will participate in playoffs to determine the other four teams in the quarterfinals. The quarterfinals are played in a best out of five series since the NBB 2015\u201316 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285908-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBB season\nFor this season, the last regular season placed team is relegated to the 2020 Liga Ouro, the NBB's second tier division. Also, only the 2019 Liga Ouro winner receives the right to play in the NBB 2019\u201320 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285908-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBB season, Broadcasting rights\nFor the first time since its inception in 2009, the NBB will have 4 TV broadcasting partners, along with live game transmissions at the official competition pages on Facebook and Twitter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285908-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBB season, Broadcasting rights\nMonday: 1 live game on FacebookTuesday: 1 or 2 live games on ESPN BrasilWednesday: 1 live game on TwitterThursday: 1 live game on Band SportsFriday: 1 live game on Fox SportsSaturday: 1 or 2 live games on Band plus extra night games on other channels", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285908-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBB season, Participating teams\nUniverso/Vit\u00f3ria moved from Salvador, to the capital Bras\u00edlia, after the end of the previous season. Universo/Vit\u00f3ria, despite being located in the same city, playing in the same arena, and having the same investors, is not the same Bras\u00edlia team that won the NBB championship three times in the past. That franchise ended after the 2016\u201317 NBB season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285908-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBB season, Transactions, Retirement\nOn May 12, 2018, following Flamengo's elimination in the 2017\u201318 NBB season semifinals, Marcelinho Machado retired from basketball after playing 22 seasons, 12 for Flamengo. Along with teammates Marquinhos and Olivinha, Marcelinho is the player with the most team success in the NBB, having reached the league's final on six occasions. He clinched the title in the 2008\u201309, 2012\u201313, 2013\u201314, 2014\u201315, and 2015\u201316 seasons, as well as winning the 2004\u201305 and 2007\u201308 CBB titles, the precursor of the NBB. He was also runner-up in the 2009\u201310 NBB season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285908-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBB season, Transactions, Retirement\nIn his career, Marcelinho also won the FIBA South American Basketball League, the FIBA Americas League, and the FIBA Intercontinental Cup, all while playing with Flamengo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285908-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBB season, Regular season\nThe regular season began on Saturday, October 13, 2018 13:35\u00a0UTC\u221203:00 at Gin\u00e1sio Ant\u00f4nio Prado Junior, home of Club Athletico Paulistano, who was defeated 75\u201385 by Mogi das Cruzes/Helbor. The regular season is scheduled to end on Tuesday, March 26, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285908-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBB season, Regular season, Standings\nThe standings are updated according to the LNB official website table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285908-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBB season, Regular season, Super 8 Cup\nA new competition on the NBB calendar, the Super 8 Cup consists of a series of single elimination games, played between the top 8 clubs of the regular season during the holiday break. The winner will qualify to the 2019 Americas League, to be played in October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285909-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBL (Czech Republic) season\nThe 2018\u201319 National Basketball League (Czech Republic) season was the 26th season of the Czech NBL. \u010cEZ Nymburk achieved their 16th consecutive title, this time without losing any game in the whole season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285909-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBL (Czech Republic) season, Format\nTeams in regular season play home and away against every other team in a round-robin tournament, before being split into two groups of six teams for playing again home and away against the teams from the same group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285909-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBL (Czech Republic) season, Format\nAfter the end of the stage after the first split, the six teams from to top group and the two first qualified teams from the bottom group joined the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285909-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBL (Czech Republic) season, Format\nThe other four teams would play again home and away against themselves for avoiding the relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285909-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBL (Czech Republic) season, Playoffs\nSeeded teams played at home games 1, 2, 5 and 7, while the third place game where played with a best-of-three format, playing the seeded team the matches 1 and 3 at home, and the finals in a double-legged one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285910-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBL Canada season\nThe 2018\u201319 NBL Canada season is the eighth season of the National Basketball League of Canada. The regular season ran from November 15, 2018, to March 31, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285910-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBL Canada season, League changes\nThe league originally intended to move the St. John's Edge to the Atlantic Division following the addition of the expansion Sudbury Five. However, after the NBL lost the Niagara River Lions and was back to four teams in Ontario, the league decided to play as a single table for the regular season schedule to ease the Edge's travel. The league still uses each team's overall record in a divisional table for playoff qualification as done in previous seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285910-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBL Canada season, Draft\nThe 2018\u201319 NBL Canada Draft and Combine was held on August 25\u201326.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285911-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBL pre-season\nThe pre-season of the 2018\u201319 NBL season, the 41st season of Australia's National Basketball League, started on 8 June 2018 and ended 5 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285911-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBL pre-season\nThe pre-season featured games in China and Malaysia. As well, it featured the NBLxNBA 2018 Tour in which five NBL teams played a total of seven games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285911-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBL pre-season, Games, 2018 NBL Blitz\nA pre-season tournament featuring all eight teams was held on 20-23 September 2018 in Bendigo and Ballarat. Bendigo Stadium hosted four games of the NBL Blitz on September 20 while Ballarat Minerdome hosted eight games from September 22-23. Both cities also hosted a range of community activities featuring NBL stars. The winners received the sixth annual Loggins-Bruton Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285911-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBL pre-season, Games, NBLxNBA 2018 Tour\nFive NBL teams will play a total of seven games against NBA teams in the 2018 pre-season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285912-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBL regular season\nThe regular season of the 2018\u201319 NBL season, the 41st season of the National Basketball League (NBL). It started on 11 October 2018 and finished on 17 February 2019. Eight teams participated, with the top four advancing to the finals series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285913-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBL season\nThe 2018\u201319 NBL season was the 41st season of the National Basketball League since its establishment in 1979. A total of eight teams have contested the league. The regular season had been played between October 2018 and February 2019, followed by a post-season featuring the top four in March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285913-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBL season\nAustralian broadcast rights to the season are held by Fox Sports, in the fourth year of a five-year deal, with two game per week simulcast on the Nine Network. In New Zealand, Sky Sport are the official league broadcaster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285913-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBL season\nAs Australia and New Zealand are participating in 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification, the league will take a break during the FIBA international windows of 26 November to 4 December 2018 and 18\u201326 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285913-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBL season\nThe Perth Wildcats won their ninth NBL championship after defeating Melbourne United in the Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285913-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBL season, Pre-season\nThe pre-season featured games in China and Maylasia. As well, it featured the NBLxNBA 2018 Tour in which five NBL teams played a total of seven games. Five NBL teams played a total of seven games against NBA teams in the 2018 pre-season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285913-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBL season, Regular season\nThe regular season started on 11 October 2018 and finished on 17 February 2019. Eight teams participated, with the top four advancing to the finals series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285913-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBL season, Regular 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 overall points percentage between the teams will determine order of seeding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285913-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBL season, Regular season, Ladder\n1Perth Wildcats won on overall points percentage. Melbourne United finished 2nd on overall points percentage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285913-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBL season, Finals series\nThe 2018\u201319 National Basketball League Finals were played in February and March 2019, consisting of two best-of-three semi-final series and the best-of-five Grand Final series. In the semi-finals, the higher seed hosts the first and third games. In the Grand Final, the higher seed hosts the first, third and fifth games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285913-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NBL season, Finals series\nAfter winning both of their semi-finals in straight games, the Perth Wildcats and Melbourne United progressed to the Grand Final where the Wildcats triumphed 3\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285914-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NC State Wolfpack men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 NC State Wolfpack men's basketball team represented North Carolina State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Wolfpack, led by second-year head coach Kevin Keatts, played its home games at PNC Arena in Raleigh, North Carolina and were members of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). They finished the season 24\u201312, 9\u20139 in ACC play to finish in a tie for eighth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the ACC Tournament to Virginia. They received a bid to the NIT where they lost in the quarterfinals to Lipscomb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285914-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NC State Wolfpack men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Wolfpack finished the 2017\u201318 season 21\u201312, 11\u20137 in ACC play to finish in a tie for third place. They lost in the second round of the ACC Tournament to Boston College. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they lost in the first round to Seton Hall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285914-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NC State Wolfpack men's basketball team, Rankings\n*AP does not release post-NCAA Tournament rankings^AP rankings not released for Week 1'Coaches rankings not released for Week 1 or Week 2", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 57], "content_span": [58, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285915-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NC State Wolfpack women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 NC State Wolfpack women's basketball team represents North Carolina State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Wolfpack, led by sixth-year head coach Wes Moore, play their home games at Reynolds Coliseum and were members of the Atlantic Coast Conference. They finished the season 28\u20136, 11\u20135 in ACC play to finish in a tie for third place. They advanced to the semifinals of the ACC Women's Tournament where they lost to Louisville. They received at-large bid of the NCAA Women's Tournament where they defeated Maine and Kentucky in the first and second rounds to advance to the sweet sixteen for the 2nd straight year where they lost to Iowa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285915-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NC State Wolfpack women's basketball team, Previous season\nThey finished the 2017\u201318 season 26\u20139, 11\u20135 in ACC play to finish in a tie for fourth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the ACC Women's Tournament where they lost to Louisville. They received at-large bid of the NCAA Women's Tournament where they defeated Elon and Maryland in the first and second rounds before losing to Mississippi State in the sweet sixteen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285915-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NC State Wolfpack women's basketball team, Rankings\nThe Coaches Poll releases a final poll after the NCAA tournament, but the AP Poll does not release a poll at this time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285916-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball rankings\nTwo human polls made up the 2018\u201319 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-00285916-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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 No. 1; second highest is ranked No. 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, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285917-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season began on November 6, 2018. The first tournament was the 2K Sports Classic and the season concluded with the Final Four in Minneapolis on April 8, 2019. Practices officially began on September 28, 2018. The season saw Zion Williamson dominate Player of the Year honors and media attention, while Virginia won its first NCAA Championship. The NCAA Championship Game between Virginia and Texas Tech would mark the final NCAA game with a 20 foot 9 inch three-point shot line, as it moved out to the FIBA standard of 22 feet and 2 inches the following year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285917-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Rule changes\nOn February 22, 2019, the NCAA announced a set of experimental rules that it would use in the 2019 National Invitation Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 61], "content_span": [62, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285917-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Rule changes\nThe following rules were also used in the 2018 NIT:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 61], "content_span": [62, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285917-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Rule changes\nA set of rules relating to free throws that had been used in the 2017 NIT was used again in the 2019 edition, with one modification:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 61], "content_span": [62, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285917-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Conference membership changes\nSix schools joined new conferences for the 2018\u201319 season. Four schools switched between Division I conferences for the 2018\u201319 season. In addition, two schools moved from Division II starting this season and are ineligible for NCAA-sponsored postseason play until completing their D-I transitions in 2022.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 78], "content_span": [79, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285917-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Conference membership changes\nIn addition to the schools changing conferences, the 2018\u201319 season was the last for Savannah State in D-I with its decision to reclassify all of its sports to D-II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 78], "content_span": [79, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285917-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Conference membership changes\nAlso, one D-I member adopted a new institutional and athletic identity. The 2017\u201318 school year was the last for Indiana University \u2013 Purdue University Fort Wayne (IPFW) as a single institution; the school's health sciences programs were taken over by Indiana University as Indiana University Fort Wayne, while all other academic programs are now governed by Purdue University as Purdue University Fort Wayne (PFW). As noted previously, the former IPFW athletic program was inherited by PFW and is now known as the Purdue Fort Wayne Mastodons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 78], "content_span": [79, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285917-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Arenas, Arenas reopening\nFour teams returned to newly renovated arenas, all of which were closed for the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 73], "content_span": [74, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285917-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Season outlook, Pre\u2013season polls\nThe top 25 from the AP and USA Today Coaches Polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 81], "content_span": [82, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285917-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Regular season, Upsets\nAn upset is a victory by an underdog team. In the context of NCAA Division I Men's Basketball this generally constitutes an unranked team defeating a team currently ranked In the Top 25. This list will highlight those upsets of ranked teams by unranked teams as well as upsets of #1 teams. Rankings are from the AP Poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 71], "content_span": [72, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285917-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Regular season, Upsets\nBold type indicates winning teams in \"true road games\"-i.e., those played on an opponent's home court (including secondary homes, such as Intrust Bank Arena for Wichita State).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 71], "content_span": [72, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285917-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Regular season, Conference winners and tournaments\nEach of the 32 Division I athletic conferences ends its regular season with a single-elimination tournament. The team with the best regular-season record in each conference is given the number one seed in each tournament, with tiebreakers used as needed in the case of ties for the top seeding. The winners of these tournaments receive automatic invitations to the 2019 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 99], "content_span": [100, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285917-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Postseason, NCAA Tournament, Tournament upsets\nFor this list, an \"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, 95], "content_span": [96, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285918-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey rankings\nTwo human polls made up the 2018\u201319 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 2018\u201319 season progressed, rankings were updated weekly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285919-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season\nThe 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season began in October 2018 and ended with the Frozen Four in April 2019. This was the 72nd season in which an NCAA ice hockey championship was held, and United States college ice hockey's 124th year overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285919-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, Regular season, Overtime rule changes\nThe NCAA Playing Rules Oversight Panel approved a proposal to allow conferences to use one of two alternative formats to award points in their league standings after the mandatory five-on-five, five-minute overtime period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 86], "content_span": [87, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285919-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, Regular season, Overtime rule changes\nAfter a traditional five-minute, five-on-five overtime, conferences may use either a five-minute, three-on-three overtime period and a shootout or only a shootout to award additional conference points. Conferences are not required to use one of the alternative systems and may end play after the five-minute overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 86], "content_span": [87, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285919-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, Regular season, Overtime rule changes\nDuring non-conference regular-season games, these alternative options are not permitted, and a game would end in a tie after the traditional five-minute overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 86], "content_span": [87, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285919-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, Regular season, Overtime rule changes\nIn regular-season tournaments that require advancement, a 20-minute sudden death format can be implemented for overtime, instead of the traditional five-minute overtime period. These tournaments also may use the three-on-three and shootout or the standalone shootout format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 86], "content_span": [87, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285919-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, Regular season, Overtime rule changes\nEach conference's approach if no goal is scored in the initial five-minute overtime:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 86], "content_span": [87, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285919-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, Regular season, PairWise Rankings\nThe PairWise Rankings (PWR) are a statistical tool designed to approximate the process by which the NCAA selection committee decides which teams get at-large bids to the 16-team NCAA tournament. Although the NCAA selection committee does not use the PWR as presented by , the PWR has been accurate in predicting which teams will make the tournament field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 82], "content_span": [83, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285919-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, Regular season, PairWise Rankings\nFor Division I men, all teams are included in comparisons starting in the 2013-14 season (formerly, only teams with a Ratings Percentage Index of .500 or above, or teams under consideration, were included). The PWR method compares each team with every other such team, with the winner of each \u201ccomparison\u201d earning one PWR point. After all comparisons are made, the points are totaled up and rankings listed accordingly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 82], "content_span": [83, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285919-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, Regular season, PairWise Rankings\nWith 60 Division I men's teams, the greatest number of PWR points any team could earn is 59, winning the comparison with every other team. Meanwhile, a team that lost all of its comparisons would have no PWR points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 82], "content_span": [83, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285919-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, Regular season, PairWise Rankings\nTeams are then ranked by PWR point total, with ties broken by the teams\u2019 RPI ratings, which starting in 2013-14 is weighted for home and road games and includes a quality wins bonus (QWB) for beating teams in the top 20 of the RPI (it also is weighted for home and road).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 82], "content_span": [83, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285919-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, Regular season, PairWise Rankings\nWhen it comes to comparing teams, the PWR uses three criteria which are combined to make a comparison: RPI, record against common opponents and head-to-head competition. Starting in 2013-14, the comparison of record against teams under consideration was dropped because all teams are now under comparison.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 82], "content_span": [83, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285919-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285919-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, Player stats, Leading goaltenders\nThe following goaltenders lead the NCAA in goals against average. GP = 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, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285919-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, Coaching changes\nThis table lists programs that changed head coaches at any point from the first day of the 2018-19 season until the day before the first day of the 2019-2020 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 65], "content_span": [66, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285920-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball rankings\nTwo human polls make up the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball rankings, the AP Poll and the Coaches Poll, in addition to various publications' preseason polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285920-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women'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 No. 1; second highest is ranked No. 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, 51], "section_span": [53, 75], "content_span": [76, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285921-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season began in November 2018 and concluded with the Final Four title game at Amalie Arena in Tampa, Florida in April 2019. Practices officially began in September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285921-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season, Conference membership changes\nSix schools joined new conferences for the 2018\u201319 season. Four schools switched between Division I conferences for the 2018\u201319 season. In addition, two schools moved from Division II starting this season. The former Division II schools are ineligible for NCAA-sponsored postseason play until completing their D-I transitions in 2022.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 80], "content_span": [81, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285921-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season, Conference membership changes\nIn addition to the schools changing conferences, the 2018\u201319 season was the last for Savannah State in D-I with its decision to reclassify all of its sports to D-II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 80], "content_span": [81, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285921-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season, Conference membership changes\nFinally, one D-I member adopted a new institutional and athletic identity. The 2017\u201318 school year was the last for Indiana University \u2013 Purdue University Fort Wayne (IPFW) as a single institution. Following the school's split into separate institutions governed by Indiana University and Purdue University, IPFW degree programs in health sciences are now overseen by Indiana University Fort Wayne, while all other degree programs are governed by Purdue University Fort Wayne (PFW). As noted in the \"Season headlines\" section, the IPFW athletic program, rebranded in 2016 as the Fort Wayne Mastodons, became the Purdue Fort Wayne Mastodons, representing only PFW.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 80], "content_span": [81, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285921-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season, Arenas, Arenas reopening\nFour teams returned to newly renovated arenas, all of which were closed for the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 75], "content_span": [76, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285921-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season, Arenas, Temporary arenas\nHouston began the 2018\u201319 season at Texas Southern's Health and Physical Education Arena, where the Cougars played most of their 2017\u201318 home games. The women played three home games at Texas Southern before moving into Fertitta Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 75], "content_span": [76, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285921-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season, Arenas, Temporary arenas\nRobert Morris planned to open the new UPMC Events Center on the site of its former on-campus Sewall Center in January 2019, but the opening has now been delayed to that summer. Until the new arena opens, the Colonials will continue to use the Student Recreation and Fitness Center, a building in the school's North Athletic Complex that opened in September 2017 as part of the UPMC Events Center project.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 75], "content_span": [76, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285921-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season, Season outlook, Preseason polls\nThe top 25 from the AP and USA Today Coaches Polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 83], "content_span": [84, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285921-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season, Regular season, Upsets\nAn upset is a victory by an underdog team. In the context of NCAA Division I Women's Basketball, this generally constitutes an unranked team defeating a team currently ranked in the Top 25. This list will highlight those upsets of ranked teams by unranked teams as well as upsets of #1 teams. Rankings are from the AP poll. Bold type indicates winning teams in \"true road games\"\u2014i.e., those played on an opponent's home court (including secondary homes).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 73], "content_span": [74, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285921-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season, Regular season, Conference winners and tournament winners\nEach of the 32 Division I athletic conferences ends its regular season with a single-elimination tournament. The team with the best regular-season record in each conference is given the number one seed in each tournament, with tiebreakers used as needed in the case of ties for the top seeding. The winners of these tournaments receive automatic invitations to the 2019 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 108], "content_span": [109, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285921-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season, Postseason, NCAA Tournament, Tournament upsets\nFor this list, an \"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, 97], "content_span": [98, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285921-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season, Award winners, All-America teams\nThe NCAA has never recognized a consensus All-America team in women's basketball. This differs from the practice in men's basketball, in which the NCAA uses a combination of selections by the Associated Press (AP), the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC), the Sporting News, and the United States Basketball Writers Association (USBWA) to determine a consensus All-America team. The selection of a consensus team is possible because all four organizations select at least a first and second team, with only the USBWA not selecting a third team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 83], "content_span": [84, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285921-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season, Award winners, All-America teams\nBefore the 2017\u201318 season, it was impossible for a consensus women's All-America team to be determined because the AP had been the only body that divided its women's selections into separate teams. The USBWA first named separate teams in 2017\u201318. The women's counterpart to the NABC, the Women's Basketball Coaches Association (WBCA), continues the USBWA's former practice of selecting a single 10-member (plus ties) team. The NCAA does not recognize Sporting News as an All-America selector in women's basketball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 83], "content_span": [84, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285922-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey rankings\nTwo polls made up the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey rankings, the USCHO.com poll and the USA Today/USA Hockey Magazine poll. As the 2018\u201319 season progresses, rankings were updated weekly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285923-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season\nThe 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season began in September 2018 and ended with the 2019 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey tournament's championship game on March 24, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285923-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season, Player stats, Scoring leaders\nThe following players lead the NCAA in points at the conclusion of games played on March 23, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 80], "content_span": [81, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285923-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season, Player stats, Leading goaltenders\nThe following goaltenders lead the NCAA in goals against average. GP = 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, 49], "section_span": [51, 84], "content_span": [85, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285924-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division II men's ice hockey season\nThe 2018\u201319 NCAA Division II men's ice hockey season began on October 26, 2018 and concluded on March 2 of the following year. This was the 37th season of second-tier college ice hockey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285925-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA Division III men's ice hockey season\nThe 2018\u201319 NCAA Division III men's ice hockey season began on October 13, 2018, and concluded on March 23, 2019. This was the 46th season of Division III college ice hockey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285926-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA football bowl games\nThe 2018\u201319 NCAA football bowl games were a series of college football bowl games completing the 2018 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The games began on December 15, 2018, and, aside from the all-star games that follow, ended with the 2019 College Football Playoff National Championship, which was played on January 7, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285926-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA football bowl games\nThe total of 40 team-competitive bowls in FBS, including the national championship game, was unchanged from the previous year. To fill the 78 available bowl slots, a total of 10 teams (13% of all participants) with non-winning records (6\u20136) were invited to bowl games. This was the second consecutive year, and only the third time in eight years, that no teams with losing seasons (6\u20137 or 5\u20137) were invited to fill available bowl berths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285926-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA football bowl games\nOnly 39 of the 40 bowls were played, with the First Responder Bowl becoming the first ever postseason game at the FBS-level (or its predecessors) to be cancelled, as a severe lightning storm lingered for over two hours near the Cotton Bowl Stadium. The game was scored as a no-contest for the teams involved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285926-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA football bowl games\nThe three all-star games were the East\u2013West Shrine Game and NFLPA Collegiate Bowl, played on January 19, and the Senior Bowl, played on January 26.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285926-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA football bowl games, Schedule\nThe schedule for the 2018\u201319 bowl games is below. All times are EST (UTC\u22125).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285926-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA football bowl games, Schedule, College Football Playoff and Championship Game\nThe College Football Playoff system is used to determine a national championship of Division I FBS college football. A 13-member committee of experts ranked the top 25 teams in the nation after each of the last seven weeks. The top four teams in the final ranking play in a single-elimination semifinal round, with the winners advancing to the National Championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 90], "content_span": [91, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285926-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA football bowl games, Schedule, College Football Playoff and Championship Game\nThe semifinal games for the 2018\u201319 season were the Cotton Bowl and the Orange Bowl. Both were played on December 29 as part of a yearly rotation of three pairs of six bowls, commonly referred to as the New Year's Six bowl games. The winners advanced to the 2019 College Football Playoff National Championship at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, California, on January 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 90], "content_span": [91, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285926-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA football bowl games, Schedule, Non-CFP bowl games\nFor the 2018\u201319 bowl season, the Gasparilla Bowl was re-located from Tropicana Field to Raymond James Stadium (which already hosts the Outback Bowl). Under new sponsorship deals in comparison to the prior season's bowl games, the Cactus Bowl was renamed the Cheez-It Bowl, the Heart of Dallas Bowl was renamed the First Responder Bowl, and the Foster Farms Bowl was renamed the Redbox Bowl. The Gator Bowl name was reinstated for the first time since the 2013 season, as it had been known as the TaxSlayer Bowl for the four prior editions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 62], "content_span": [63, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285926-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA football bowl games, Schedule, FCS bowl game\nThe FCS has one bowl game; they also have a championship bracket that began on November 24 and ended on January 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285926-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA football bowl games, Team selections\nGenerally, a team must have at least six wins to be considered bowl eligible. The College Football Playoff semi-final games are determined based on the top four seeds in the playoff committee's final rankings. The remainder of the bowl eligible teams are selected by each respective bowl based on conference tie-ins, order of selection, match-up considerations, and other factors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285926-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA football bowl games, Team selections, CFP top 25 standings and bowl games\nOn December 2, 2018, the College Football Playoff selection committee announced their final team rankings for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 86], "content_span": [87, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285926-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA football bowl games, Team selections, CFP top 25 standings and bowl games\nThree of the four semifinalists \u2013 Alabama, Clemson, and Oklahoma \u2013 had also been semifinalists the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 86], "content_span": [87, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285926-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA football bowl games, Team selections, Conference champions' bowl games\nThree bowls will feature two conference champions playing against each other\u2014the Boca Raton Bowl, Orange Bowl, and Rose Bowl. Rankings are per the above CFP standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 83], "content_span": [84, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285926-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA football bowl games, Team selections, Bowl\u2013eligible teams\nNumber of bowl berths available and assigned: 78Number of bowl-eligible teams: 82", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285926-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA football bowl games, Team selections, Bowl-eligible teams that did not receive a berth\nAs there were more bowl-eligible teams than berths available, four teams that were bowl-eligible did not receive an invitation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 99], "content_span": [100, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285926-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA football bowl games, Team selections, Bowl\u2013ineligible teams\n* Liberty is bowl ineligible until 2019, due to their transition from FCS to FBS. Liberty had six wins and could have requested an NCAA waiver, had there been insufficient bowl-eligible teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285926-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NCAA football bowl games, Team selections, Bowl\u2013ineligible teams\n** Ole Miss, who finished their regular season with a 5\u20137 record, has a two-year bowl ban which applies for the 2017 and 2018 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs\nThe 2018\u201319 NFL playoffs began on Saturday, January 5, 2019, after the 2018 season, and concluded with the New England Patriots becoming champions by defeating the Los Angeles Rams in Super Bowl LIII on Sunday, February 3, 2019 at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, Georgia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs\nFor the first time in NFL history, both conference championship games went to overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs\nThe New England Patriots became the first team since the Buffalo Bills from 1990-93 to reach at least 3 consecutive Super Bowls, and the first team since the 1972 Miami Dolphins to win the Super Bowl after losing it the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285927-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285927-0003-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285927-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2019, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 21, Houston Texans 7\nIndianapolis, who had started the year 1\u20135 and still managed to make the playoffs, buried the Texans with 276 yards and 21 points in the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2019, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 21, Houston Texans 7\nOn the opening drive of the game, Colts quarterback Andrew Luck completed three passes to T. Y. Hilton for 63 yards before finishing the drive with a 5-yard scoring completion to Eric Ebron. Then after a punt, Indianapolis drove 75 yards in 9 plays to go up 14\u20130. The key player on the drive was running back Marlon Mack, who carried the ball 6 times for 39 yards, caught a 6-yard pass and finished the drive with a 2-yard touchdown run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2019, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 21, Houston Texans 7\nHouston then drove to the Colts' 45-yard line; but while trying to convert a 4th-and-4, Deshaun Watson's pass was intercepted by Kenny Moore, who returned it from 10 yards to midfield. Indianapolis then advanced the ball to the Texans' 17-yard line, but they also failed to score when Luck's pass was deflected by J. J. Watt and then intercepted by lineman Brandon Dunn on the last play of the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2019, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 21, Houston Texans 7\nHouston had to punt after three plays and the Colts went on to drive to a 21\u20130 lead by moving the ball 65 yards in 7 plays, featuring two key receptions by receiver Dontrelle Inman. The first was for 21 yards and the second was an 18-yard touchdown catch. Houston responded with their most promising drive of the game, advancing the ball 69 yards to the Colts' 9-yard line. However, on a 4th-and-1 conversion attempt, Watson threw an incomplete pass with 1:24 left in the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2019, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 21, Houston Texans 7\nBoth defenses controlled the third quarter as the first six drives of it ended in punts. With just over 2 minutes left in the period, the Texans fired up a 16-play, 89-yard drive. Watson rushed for 10 yards, while also completing 9-of-11 passes for 66 yards, the last a 6-yard touchdown pass to Keke Coutee that made the score 21\u20137 with 11:04 remaining. Following a Colts punt, the Texans drove to a 3rd-and-10 on the Indianapolis 24-yard line. Watson's next two passes were incomplete, causing a turnover on downs with 4:17 remaining. The Colts then managed to run out the rest of the time, mainly due to plays from Mack, who picked up first downs with runs of 2, 15 and 26 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2019, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 21, Houston Texans 7\nLuck completed 19-of-32 passes for 222 yards, two touchdowns and an interception, and rushed for 29 yards. Hilton was his top receiver with five receptions for 85 yards. Mack carried the ball 24 times for a franchise postseason record 148 yards and a touchdown, while also catching two passes for six yards. Prior to this game, the Texans had not allowed a 100-yard rusher all season. Moore had 6 tackles (5 solo), a sack and an interception. Watson completed 29-of-49 passes for 235 yards, with one touchdown and one interception; he was also Houston's leading rusher with eight carries for 76 yards. Coutee caught 11 passes for 110 yards and a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2019, NFC: Dallas Cowboys 24, Seattle Seahawks 22\nDallas outgained Seattle in total yards 380\u2013299 and limited the Seahawks, the #1 rushing offense during the regular season, to just 73 yards on the ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2019, NFC: Dallas Cowboys 24, Seattle Seahawks 22\nDallas scored on their opening drive, advancing the ball 54 yards in 10 plays on the way to a 39-yard field goal by Brett Maher. This would be the only score of the first quarter, as the next six drives ended in punts. In the second quarter, Seattle quarterback Russell Wilson's completions to Ed Dickson and Tyler Lockett for gains of 26 and 40 yards set up Sebastian Janikowski's 27-yard field goal. Dallas responded with a drive to the Seattle 40-yard line, but it ended there as Maher missed a 58-yard field goal attempt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0010-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2019, NFC: Dallas Cowboys 24, Seattle Seahawks 22\nSeattle took over on their own 48-yard line; Wilson's 25-yard pass to Lockett on the ensuing drive set up another Janikowski field goal to give Seattle a 6\u20133 lead. A few plays into the Cowboys' next possession, they faced 3rd-and-1 with 1:11 left in the half. Ezekiel Elliott took a handoff, ran to the right and raced down the sideline for a 44-yard gain to the Seahawks' 22-yard line. Four plays later, Dak Prescott finished the 75-yard drive with an 11-yard touchdown pass to rookie receiver Michael Gallup with 28 seconds left, giving Dallas a 10\u20136 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0010-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2019, NFC: Dallas Cowboys 24, Seattle Seahawks 22\nLockett gave Seattle a chance to score by returning the ensuing kickoff 52 yards to the Cowboys' 49-yard line; Seattle could only advance to the 39-yard line from there and ended the half with Janikowski's missed field goal attempt from 60 yards. Janikowski injured his leg on the kick and had to miss the rest of the game, turning the kicking duties over to rookie punter Michael Dickson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2019, NFC: Dallas Cowboys 24, Seattle Seahawks 22\nWith 8:04 left in the third quarter, Seahawks defensive back Neiko Thorpe managed to knock Michael Dickson's 45-yard punt away from the end zone, where it was downed by Seattle on the Cowboys' 2-yard line. Dallas failed to gain any yards over their next three plays and Chris Jones' 42-yard punt gave the ball back to Seattle on the Dallas 44-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0011-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2019, NFC: Dallas Cowboys 24, Seattle Seahawks 22\nFaced with 4th down and 4 after three plays, Seattle decided to go for the first down, a gamble that paid off as Wilson threw a pass to Doug Baldwin, who barely managed to keep his feet in bounds while hauling in the ball at the left sideline for a 22-yard gain. Then when faced with 3rd-and-5, Wilson managed to pick up the first down himself on a 7-yard run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0011-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2019, NFC: Dallas Cowboys 24, Seattle Seahawks 22\nFinally with just over 2 minutes left in the quarter, Wilson finished the 9-play, 44-yard drive with a 4-yard touchdown run; Mike Davis ran for a successful two-point conversion, giving the Seahawks a 14\u201310 lead. Michael Dickson drop-kicked the ensuing kickoff, which went to running back Rod Smith at the 20-yard line, where he returned it 15 yards. Four plays later, Prescott completed a 34-yard pass to Amari Cooper at the Seattle 16-yard line, setting up Elliott's 1-yard touchdown run that gave the Dallas a 17\u201314 lead with just over 12 minutes left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0011-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2019, NFC: Dallas Cowboys 24, Seattle Seahawks 22\nAfter three plays, Tavon Austin returned Michael Dickson's 60-yard punt 51 yards to the Seattle 38-yard line. Dallas was now in prime position to take a late-game two-score lead, but after driving to the 16-yard line, Prescott threw a pass to Noah Brown that bounced off his shoulder and was intercepted in the end zone by K. J. Wright as he fell to the ground. Still, Dallas' defense rose to the occasion and forced a punt, which Cole Beasley returned 7 yards to the Dallas 37-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0011-0004", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2019, NFC: Dallas Cowboys 24, Seattle Seahawks 22\nThe Cowboys went on to drive 54 yards in 11 plays, aided by three Seattle penalties, including two pass interference calls on third down plays. Elliott also made a big impact with a 17-yard run, while Prescott converted a 3rd-and-14 with a 16-yard run before taking the ball into the end zone himself on a 1-yard score. This gave Dallas a 24\u201314 lead with 2:14 left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2019, NFC: Dallas Cowboys 24, Seattle Seahawks 22\nOn the second play after the kickoff, Wilson's 53-yard completion to Lockett gave Seattle a first down on the Dallas 13-yard line. Wilson followed this up with two completions to backup running back J. D. McKissic, the first for 6 yards and the second a 7-yard touchdown pass. Chris Carson then scored on a two-point conversion run, cutting the score to 24\u201322 with 1:16 left. However, Michael Dickson's ensuing drop kick went right into the hands of Beasley, enabling Dallas to run out the rest of the game and secure their first playoff win since the 2014 playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2019, NFC: Dallas Cowboys 24, Seattle Seahawks 22\nPrescott finished the game 22-of-33 for 226 yards and a touchdown, with one interception. He also rushed for 29 yards and a touchdown. His top receiver was Cooper, who caught seven passes for 106 yards. Elliott had 26 carries for 137 yards and a touchdown, while also catching four passes for 32 yards. For Seattle, Wilson completed 18-of-27 passes for 233 yards and a touchdown, while also running for 14 yards and a score. Lockett caught four passes for 120 yards, returned a kickoff for 52 yards and gained 22 yards on three punt returns. Michael Dickson averaged 51.4 yards per punt on his seven punts and put one of them in the 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2019, AFC: Los Angeles Chargers 23, Baltimore Ravens 17\nThe Chargers recorded six sacks, jumped out to a 23\u20133 lead and halted a late Ravens rally, forcing Lamar Jackson to fumble on the final drive to earn a trip to New England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 116], "content_span": [117, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2019, AFC: Los Angeles Chargers 23, Baltimore Ravens 17\nOn the Ravens' second possession of the game, Chargers defensive end Melvin Ingram forced a fumble from Kenneth Dixon that was recovered by safety Adrian Phillips, giving Los Angeles the ball on the Baltimore 14-yard line. Three plays later, Michael Badgley kicked a 21-yard field goal to give Los Angeles a 3\u20130 lead. Then the Chargers' defense forced a punt, which Desmond King returned 42 yards to the Ravens' 42-yard line, setting up a 53-yard Badgley field goal that increased their lead to 6\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 116], "content_span": [117, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0015-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2019, AFC: Los Angeles Chargers 23, Baltimore Ravens 17\nEarly in the second quarter, Phillips intercepted a pass from Jackson to give the Chargers a first down on the Ravens' 44-yard line. From there, they drove 27 yards to go up 9\u20130 on Badgley's third field goal. Following another Ravens punt, Los Angeles drove 53 yards in 12 plays to score on Badgley's fourth field goal on the last play of the half, giving them a 12\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 116], "content_span": [117, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2019, AFC: Los Angeles Chargers 23, Baltimore Ravens 17\nKing returned the second half kickoff 72 yards to the Ravens' 35-yard line, but this time the Chargers failed to score when Badgley's field goal attempt was blocked by Za'Darius Smith. After a Ravens punt, linebacker Patrick Onwuasor forced a fumble from Chargers tight end Virgil Green that was recovered by linebacker C. J. Mosley on the Los Angeles 21-yard line. This set up Justin Tucker's 33-yard field goal, cutting the score to 12\u20133 with 8:34 left in the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 116], "content_span": [117, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0016-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2019, AFC: Los Angeles Chargers 23, Baltimore Ravens 17\nAt the end of Los Angeles' next possession, the Ravens got another scoring opportunity when Javorius Allen blocked Donnie Jones's punt, resulting in Baltimore taking over on the Chargers' 40-yard line; they only managed to gain 4 yards with their next three plays and Tucker's 50-yard field goal attempt was wide right. Los Angeles then drove 60 yards in 10 plays, featuring a 28-yard completion from Philip Rivers to Mike Williams on the Ravens' 15-yard line. On the next play, Melvin Gordon ran the ball 14 yards to the 1-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 116], "content_span": [117, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0016-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2019, AFC: Los Angeles Chargers 23, Baltimore Ravens 17\nThe Ravens managed to keep Los Angeles out of the end zone for the next three plays, but Gordon scored with a 4th down 1-yard touchdown run on the first play of the 4th quarter; Rivers completed a pass to Williams for a two-point conversion, giving the Chargers a 20\u20133 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 116], "content_span": [117, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2019, AFC: Los Angeles Chargers 23, Baltimore Ravens 17\nA sack by Ingram on the Ravens' ensuing drive forced them to punt from their 14-yard line and Sam Koch's 31-yard kick gave the Chargers good field position on the Ravens' 45-yard line. Los Angeles then drove 16 yards, including a 9-yard scramble by Rivers on 3rd-and-8, to score on Badgley's 5th field goal, from 47 yards, that gave them a 23\u20133 lead. Taking the ball back with 9:02 left, Baltimore drove 75 yards in eight plays, including Jackson's 29-yard completion to Willie Snead on 4th-and-11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 116], "content_span": [117, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0017-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2019, AFC: Los Angeles Chargers 23, Baltimore Ravens 17\nOn the next play, Jackson threw a 31-yard touchdown pass to receiver Michael Crabtree, making the score 23\u201310. The Chargers recovered Baltimore's ensuing onside kick attempt, but still had to punt after three plays. Baltimore went on to drive 85 yards in 12 plays, the longest a 39-yard completion from Jackson to Dixon. On the last play, Jackson threw a 6-yard touchdown pass to Crabtree, narrowing their gap to 23\u201317 with 2:06 left. Baltimore then forced a punt with 45 seconds to go, giving them one last chance to drive for a winning touchdown, but Chargers linebacker Uchenna Nwosu forced a fumble while sacking Jackson and Ingram recovered it to give Los Angeles the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 116], "content_span": [117, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2019, AFC: Los Angeles Chargers 23, Baltimore Ravens 17\nRivers completed 22-of-32 passes for 160 yards and rushed for 15 yards. Ingram finished the game with seven tackles (two for a loss of yards), two sacks, a forced fumble and a fumble recovery. Phillips had five tackles (three solo), an interception and a fumble recovery. King returned a kickoff for 72 yards and had four punt returns for 46 yards. Jackson completed 14-of-29 passes for 194 yards, with two touchdowns and an interception; he was also Baltimore's leading rusher with 9 carries for 54 yards. Onwausor had seven tackles (six solo), a sack and a forced fumble.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 116], "content_span": [117, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2019, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 16, Chicago Bears 15\nNick Foles threw the game-winning touchdown pass to Golden Tate with 56 seconds remaining and then defensive tackle Treyvon Hester blocked a 43-yard Cody Parkey game-winning field goal attempt with five seconds remaining to seal it for the Eagles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2019, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 16, Chicago Bears 15\nBoth offenses had a slow start of the game. Philadelphia quarterback Nick Foles completed 4/6 passes for 57 yards on the opening drive, setting up Jake Elliott's 43-yard field goal to take a 3\u20130 lead. The next three drives ended in a punt, two of which were three-and-outs. Foles was picked off by Roquan Smith at the beginning of the second quarter when the Eagles were 10 yards into Chicago territory. Smith returned it into the end zone for what would have been a Bears touchdown, but he was ruled down by contact at Chicago's 35-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0020-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2019, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 16, Chicago Bears 15\nThe interception started a 47-yard drive in which Mitchell Trubisky completed 3 passes for 28 yards and rushed for 6. The possession ended in a Cody Parkey 36-yard field goal to tie the game at 3\u20133. Philadelphia went deep into the Bears' territory in their next possession, but a Foles pass intended for Nelson Agholor was intercepted by Adrian Amos inside the end zone. After another three-and-out by each team, Chicago set up the final drive of the quarter, starting from their own 11-yard line. Trubbisky completed 6/8 passes for 59 yards, the longest a 23-yard catch by Anthony Miller, as the team drove 78 yards to go up 6\u20133 on Parkey's 29-yard field goal as time expired in the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 802]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2019, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 16, Chicago Bears 15\nThe Eagles scored the first touchdown of the game in the third quarter to regain the lead. At the start of the drive, a late hit by Amos on Zach Ertz caused an unnecessary roughness penalty called against the Bears, on what would have been a three-and-out. Another penalty against the Chicago defense for pass interference on Prince Amukamara resulted in a 33-yard gain that gave the Eagles 1st-and-goal. Foles capitalized with a 10-yard touchdown pass to the rookie tight end Dallas Goedert, giving the Eagles a 10\u20136 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0021-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2019, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 16, Chicago Bears 15\nThe Bears' offense responded with a 62-yard drive, including a 45-yard completion from Trubisky to Allen Robinson, that ended in another field goal by Parkey from 34 yards at the beginning of the fourth quarter to cut the Eagles' lead to one at 10\u20139. The next Bears drive saw some Trubisky crucial throws, including a 19-yard pass to Taylor Gabriel on 3rd-and-11 and a 34-yard pass to Josh Bellamy. A 22-yard pass to Robinson for the touchdown culminated the possession and put Chicago ahead of Philadelphia once again, although their two-point attempt was unsuccessful, making he score 15\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0021-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2019, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 16, Chicago Bears 15\nThe Eagles, trailing by five, started what would be the winning drive on their own 40-yard line after a bad punt by the Bears. The Bears were able to stop three downs starting at their 2-yard line, but Philadelphia finally scored on 4th down with Foles' 2-yard touchdown pass to Golden Tate to take a one-point lead with less than one minute remaining. The Eagles went for the two-point conversion, but a rush by Wendell Smallwood was ruled to be short of the end zone. The play was reviewed, but video evidence was not clear enough to overturn the ruling on the field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2019, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 16, Chicago Bears 15\nChicago started their final drive of the game with 0:56 left. Tarik Cohen returned the kickoff 35 yards to the Bears' 42-yard line and a 25-yard pass from Trubisky to Robinson settled the home team into field goal position. The Eagles called a timeout before the snap to negate the first field goal try. After that, Parkey's 43-yard kick was tipped by the Eagles' defensive tackle Treyvon Hester, hit the left goal post and bounced off the crossbar to send Philadelphia to the divisional round. Parkey later reacted, \"I feel terrible. There's really no answer to it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0022-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2019, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 16, Chicago Bears 15\nI thought I hit a good ball.\" The kick became known as the \"double doink\" after NBC color commentator Cris Collinsworth stated immediately afterward, \"Oh my goodness, the Bears' season is going to end on a double doink\". The next day, the NFL officially declared the kick had been blocked by Hester instead of declaring it a Parkey missed field goal attempt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2019, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 16, Chicago Bears 15\nBoth offensive units relied much more on the passing game than the rushing one. Chicago quarterback Trubisky completed 26 passes out of 43 attempts for a total 303 yards and a touchdown, while Philadelphia's Foles completed 25 passes out of 40 for 266 yards and two scores. Meanwhile, the Eagles offense totaled 42 yards from 23 carries and the Bears totaled 65 yards from 18 carries, ending up as the last and second-to-last team in rushing yards at the wild card weekend, respectively. Robinson was the top receiver of the game, with 10 receptions, 143 yards and a score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Wild card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2019, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 16, Chicago Bears 15\nThe final drive of the first half included a controversial play. With 0:36 left, Trubisky threw a pass down the field to Miller, who apparently caught the ball, but was then broken up by Eagles cornerback Cre'Von LeBlanc. The play was ruled an incomplete pass by the referees, but upon reviewing it, it looked like it was indeed a complete pass, then fumbled as Miller became a runner. However, that hypothetical fumble was not recovered by anyone and the ruling on the field was upheld. While that was misunderstood by most viewers, the NFL rule book states that in this situation, \"if there is no video evidence of a clear recovery [\u2026] the ruling of incomplete stands.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 784]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2019, AFC: Kansas City Chiefs 31, Indianapolis Colts 13\nKansas City dominated the game the whole way through, racking up 433 yards and 29 first downs, while holding the Colts to 263 yards, 15 first downs and 0-for-9 on third down conversions. Kansas City would go to the AFC Championship Game for the first time since 1993 and the second time in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2019, AFC: Kansas City Chiefs 31, Indianapolis Colts 13\nIn the first quarter alone, the Chiefs gained 185 yards and nine first downs, while holding Indianapolis to 12 yards and no first downs. Following a Colts punt on the opening drive, Kansas City quarterback Patrick Mahomes led the team 75 yards in five plays, including his 44-yard completion to Sammy Watkins, to score on Damien Williams' 10-yard touchdown run. Indianapolis was quickly forced to punt again and the Chiefs stormed back for another touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0026-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2019, AFC: Kansas City Chiefs 31, Indianapolis Colts 13\nThis time, they drove 65 yards in eight plays to take a 14\u20130 lead with receiver Tyreek Hill's 36-yard touchdown run on an end around play. The Colts went three-and-out for the third time in row and Kansas City took off for another scoring drive as the first quarter ended. Mahomes completed 5-of-10 passes for 47 yards as the team advanced 48 yards in 15 plays to go up 17\u20130 on Harrison Butker's 39-yard field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2019, AFC: Kansas City Chiefs 31, Indianapolis Colts 13\nWith six minutes left in the second quarter, Indianapolis finally managed to strike back when Colts linebacker Najee Goode blocked Dustin Colquitt's punt and Zach Pascal recovered it in the end zone for a touchdown to make the score 17\u20137. But the Colts' defense still could not stop the Chiefs as Mahomes completed a 30-yard pass to tight end Travis Kelce on the first play of their ensuing drive. One play later, Mahomes hooked up with Hill for a 14-yard completion on the Colts' 26-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0027-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2019, AFC: Kansas City Chiefs 31, Indianapolis Colts 13\nKansas City was on the move and did not stop until Mahomes finished the possession with a 4-yard touchdown run, increasing their lead to 24\u20137. Indianapolis got the ball back with 1:40 left in the half. On their first play, Andrew Luck completed a 21-yard pass to Eric Ebron, giving the Colts their first first down of the game. He then followed it up with a 12-yard pass to Dontrelle Inman. The drive continued until the Colts reached the Chiefs' 5-yard line, but with only three seconds left in the half, 46-year old kicker Adam Vinatieri hit the left upright on his 23-yard field goal attempt\u2014his shortest missed field goal in 23 NFL seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2019, AFC: Kansas City Chiefs 31, Indianapolis Colts 13\nKansas City started the second half with a drive to the Colts' 33-yard line, but this time failed to score as Mahomes was sacked by Denico Autry for a 5-yard loss while trying to convert on 4th-and-5. Following some punts, Indianapolis got a big scoring opportunity when Darius Leonard forced and recovered a fumble from Watkins on the Chiefs' 20-yard line. But on the Colts' ensuing drive, Chiefs lineman Dee Ford forced a fumble while sacking Luck and linebacker Justin Houston recovered it with 50 seconds left in the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2019, AFC: Kansas City Chiefs 31, Indianapolis Colts 13\nThere would no more scoring until 5:30 remained in the game, when Luck finished an 87-yard drive with a 29-yard touchdown pass to T. Y. Hilton, cutting the score to 24\u201313 after Vinatieri missed the extra point, the first time he had missed such an attempt in the postseason. But any chance of a Colts comeback was ended on the Chiefs' following drive, starting with Tremon Smith's 23-yard kickoff return to the Chiefs' 39-yard line. From there, Damien Williams rushed seven times for 50 yards as the team drove 56 yards in nine plays to score on Darrel Williams' 6-yard rushing touchdown, making the score 31\u201313 and putting the game out of reach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2019, AFC: Kansas City Chiefs 31, Indianapolis Colts 13\nMahomes finished his first playoff game 27-for-41 for 278 yards while also rushing for 8 yards and a touchdown. Kelce was his leading receiver with seven receptions for 108 yards, while Hill caught eight passes for 72 yards, rushed for 36 yards and a touchdown, and gained 6 yards returning punts. Damien Williams, who had been thrust into the starting lineup late in the season to replace the departed Kareem Hunt and the injured Spencer Ware, finished his first playoff game with 25 carries for 129 yards and a touchdown, along with five receptions for 25 yards. Houston had two tackles for a loss, two sacks and a fumble recovery. Luck completed 19-of-36 passes for 203 yards and a touchdown, while also rushing for 17 yards. Leonard had 14 tackles (10 solo), a forced fumble and a fumble recovery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 922]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2019, AFC: Kansas City Chiefs 31, Indianapolis Colts 13\nThis would also be Luck's last game in the NFL, as he retired before the commencement of the 2019 NFL season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2019, NFC: Los Angeles Rams 30, Dallas Cowboys 22\nLos Angeles gained 459 yards, including 273 yards on the ground, with running backs C. J. Anderson and Todd Gurley both rushing for 100 yards each as they earned their first playoff win since the 2004 season and went to their first NFC Championship since 2001. On the other side of the ball, their defense limited Ezekiel Elliott, the league's leading rusher during the season, to just 47 yards on 20 carries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0033-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2019, NFC: Los Angeles Rams 30, Dallas Cowboys 22\nThe Rams advanced 57 yards in 11 plays on their opening drive, the longest a 19-yard completion from Jared Goff to tight end Tyler Higbee, to score on Greg Zuerlein's 25-yard field goal and take a 3\u20130 lead. Dallas responded by advancing the ball 71 yards in 7 plays, featuring a 20-yard run by Elliott. On the next play, Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott threw a 29-yard touchdown pass to Amari Cooper, giving the team a 7\u20133 lead. Los Angeles then drove 70 yards in 16 plays, but ended up having to settle for another Zuerlein field goal that made the score 7\u20136 with 31 seconds left in the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0034-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2019, NFC: Los Angeles Rams 30, Dallas Cowboys 22\nThe next time the Rams got the ball, Goff completed three of four pass attempts for 47 yards, while Anderson finished the drive with a pair of carries, the first for 14 yards and the second a 1-yard touchdown run that put the team up 13\u20137. Then JoJo Natson returned Dallas' next punt 12 yards to the Rams' 36-yard line, where the team went on to drive 64 yards in six plays, scoring with Gurley's 35-yard touchdown run that upped their lead to 20\u20137. The Cowboys were soon forced to punt again, giving Los Angeles one last chance to score before halftime. They managed to advance to the Dallas 45-yard line, but as time in the half expired, Zuerlein missed a 63-yard field goal attempt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0035-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2019, NFC: Los Angeles Rams 30, Dallas Cowboys 22\nDallas' offensive futility continued in the second half as they had to punt for the fourth consecutive drive and the Rams drove back for more points. A 21-yard completion from Goff to Brandin Cooks and an 18-yard run from Gurley set up Zuerlein's third field goal, from 44 yards, that put the Rams up 23\u20137. But this time, the Cowboys' offense finally managed to get a drive going, advancing 75 yards in nine plays.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0035-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2019, NFC: Los Angeles Rams 30, Dallas Cowboys 22\nReceiver Michael Gallup caught passes for gains of 27 and 44 yards, while Elliott converted a 4th-and-1 with a 5-yard carry, and later finished the drive with a 1-yard touchdown run. Then Prescott completed a pass to Cooper for a two-point conversion, cutting their deficit to 23\u201315 with 5:20 left in the third quarter. After forcing the Rams to punt, Dallas drove to the Los Angeles 35-yard line. On the first play of the fourth quarter, Elliott attempted to again convert a 4th-and-1, but this time he was stopped by Rams defenders John Johnson and Lamarcus Joyner for no gain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0036-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2019, NFC: Los Angeles Rams 30, Dallas Cowboys 22\nThe Rams then went on to drive 65 yards in 12 plays, successfully converting their own 4th-and-1 with a 1-yard touchdown run by Anderson to put themselves in front 30\u201315 with just over seven minutes left in the game. Prescott started off the Cowboys' next drive with a 24-yard completion to Gallup on the Rams' 49-yard line and later converted a 4th-and-1 with a 2-yard run. Eventually the team found themselves facing 4th-and-3 on the Rams' 17-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0036-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2019, NFC: Los Angeles Rams 30, Dallas Cowboys 22\nPrescott's pass on the next play was incomplete, but defensive back Aqib Talib was penalized for committing pass interference in the end zone, giving them first and goal on the 1-yard line, where Prescott eventually ran the ball into the end zone, making the score 30\u201322 with 2:11 left. After the ensuing touchback, Dallas forced the Rams into a 3rd-and-7, but Goff ran 9 yards for a first down, enabling Los Angeles to run out the clock and win the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0037-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2019, NFC: Los Angeles Rams 30, Dallas Cowboys 22\nGoff completed 15-of-28 passes for 186 yards and rushed for 12 yards. Anderson, playing for his third team in the 2018 season, had 23 carries for 123 yards and two touchdowns, and Gurley rushed for 115 yards and a touchdown, while also catching two passes for 3 yards. For the Cowboys, Prescott completed 20-of-32 passes for 266 yards and a touchdown, while also rushing for 3 yards and another touchdown. Gallup was the top receiver of the game with six receptions for 119 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0038-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2019, NFC: Los Angeles Rams 30, Dallas Cowboys 22\nAt age 32, Rams coach Sean McVay became the youngest coach to win an NFL playoff game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0039-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2019, AFC: New England Patriots 41, Los Angeles Chargers 28\nNew England piled up 347 yards in the first half and scored touchdowns on five of their first six possessions to defeat the Chargers, which sent the Patriots to the AFC championship game for the eighth consecutive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 122], "content_span": [123, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0040-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2019, AFC: New England Patriots 41, Los Angeles Chargers 28\nThe Patriots started the game by driving 83 yards in 14 plays, scoring on Sony Michel's 1-yard touchdown run. Chargers quarterback Philip Rivers quickly led his team right back, completing an 18-yard pass to Mike Williams on 3rd-and-15 before tying the game on a 43-yard touchdown completion to Keenan Allen. New England then drove 67 yards in 7 plays, the longest a 28-yard completion from Tom Brady to receiver Julian Edelman. On the next play, Michel ran 14 yards to the end zone to give the Patriots a 14\u20137 lead with less than a minute left in the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 122], "content_span": [123, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0041-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2019, AFC: New England Patriots 41, Los Angeles Chargers 28\nLos Angeles had to punt after three plays and Edelman returned it 6 yards to the Patriots' 42-yard line. Then he caught passes for gains of 11 and 17 yards as New England drove 58 yards to take a 21\u20137 lead on Brady's 15-yard touchdown pass to receiver Phillip Dorsett. Following another Chargers punt, Brady completed a 25-yard pass to running back James White on New England's first play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 122], "content_span": [123, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0041-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2019, AFC: New England Patriots 41, Los Angeles Chargers 28\nA few plays later, Michel took off for a 40-yard run to the Chargers' 9-yard line, where Rex Burkhead took the ball to the end zone over the next two plays, the second a 6-yard touchdown run to put the Patriots up 28\u20137. The next time New England got the ball, they were forced into a three-and-out, but Chargers returner Desmond King muffed their punt and Albert McClellan recovered it for the Patriots on the Chargers' 35-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 122], "content_span": [123, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0041-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2019, AFC: New England Patriots 41, Los Angeles Chargers 28\nBrady then started the ensuing possession with a 19-yard completion to Edelman, while Michel finished it with his third touchdown run, a 5-yard carry, that put the team up 35\u20137 with 1:40 left in the half. They nearly scored again after forcing an Los Angeles punt, but Dorsett was tackled on the Chargers' 30-yard line as time expired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 122], "content_span": [123, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0042-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2019, AFC: New England Patriots 41, Los Angeles Chargers 28\nIn the first half alone, Brady completed 23-of-29 passes for 233 yards and a touchdown, Michel had 16 carries for 105 yards and three touchdowns, White caught 10 passes for 71 yards, and Edelman caught 7 passes for 107 yards while also returning 3 punts for 31 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 122], "content_span": [123, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0043-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2019, AFC: New England Patriots 41, Los Angeles Chargers 28\nLos Angeles had to punt on their opening drive of the second half and Brady's 25-yard completion to tight end Rob Gronkowski set up a 28-yard Stephen Gostkowski field goal, increasing New England's lead to 38\u20137. This time the Chargers were able to respond, as Williams caught 3 passes for 40 yards as the team drove 72 yards in 10 plays to score on Melvin Gordon's 1-yard touchdown run, cutting the score to 38\u201314. But Los Angeles' defense still could not contain New England, as Brady's completions to Edelman and White for gains of 35 and 23 yards lead to another Gostkowski field goal, giving the Patriots a 41\u201314 lead with 12:27 left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 122], "content_span": [123, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0044-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2019, AFC: New England Patriots 41, Los Angeles Chargers 28\nFollowing a few punts, Rivers completed passes to Tyrell Williams and Allen for gains of 29 and 32 yards as the team drove to score on his 1-yard touchdown pass to tight end Virgil Green. Then he completed a pass to Allen for a two-point conversion, making the score 41\u201322 with 7:28 left. After failing to recover an onside kick, the Chargers forced a punt, but Patriots defensive back Stephon Gilmore ended their following drive with an interception. By the time Los Angeles got the ball back, only three minutes remained, which they used to drive 80 yards in 12 plays to score on Rivers' 8-yard pass to tight end Antonio Gates, making the final score 41\u201328 following a failed two-point conversion attempt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 122], "content_span": [123, 830]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0045-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2019, AFC: New England Patriots 41, Los Angeles Chargers 28\nBrady completed 34-of-44 passes for 343 yards and a touchdown. Edelman caught 9 passes for 131 yards and returned 5 punts for 37 yards, moving to second place all-time in playoff receptions, behind only Jerry Rice. White tied an all-time playoff record with 15 receptions for 97 yards. Michel ran 24 times for 129 yards and three touchdowns, and caught a pass for 9 yards. Rivers finished the day 25-of-51 for 331 yards, three touchdowns and an interception. Tyrell Williams was his top receiver with 5 receptions for 94 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 122], "content_span": [123, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0046-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2019, AFC: New England Patriots 41, Los Angeles Chargers 28\nWith this win, Tom Brady improved his record against Rivers to 8\u20130 (counting regular season and playoff games).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 122], "content_span": [123, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0047-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2019, AFC: New England Patriots 41, Los Angeles Chargers 28\nDown judge Sarah Thomas became the first woman to officiate an NFL postseason game and second woman to officiate a postseason game in one of the four major North American professional sports leagues, following the NBA\u2019s Violet Palmer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 122], "content_span": [123, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0048-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2019, NFC: New Orleans Saints 20, Philadelphia Eagles 14\nNew Orleans had defeated the Eagles 48\u20137 during the regular season, and while the score of this game would be much closer, the result did not change. Though Philadelphia scored touchdowns on their first two drives, the Saints' defense managed to shut them out for the rest of the game, clinching the win with an interception by Marshon Lattimore in the closing minutes on the Eagles' final possession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 119], "content_span": [120, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0049-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2019, NFC: New Orleans Saints 20, Philadelphia Eagles 14\nPhiladelphia got off to a strong start as cornerback Cre'Von LeBlanc intercepted Saints quarterback Drew Brees' pass on the game's first play, giving the Eagles a first down on the New Orleans 24-yard line. The Eagles then drove 76 yards in seven plays to score on Nick Foles' 37-yard touchdown pass to Jordan Matthews. The Saints soon had to punt, and Philadelphia drove back for more points. Their next drive covered 75 yards in 10 plays, the longest a 30-yard reception by Alshon Jeffery. Foles finished the drive with a 1-yard touchdown run on a QB sneak, giving his team a 14\u20130 lead before the Saints had managed to gain a single yard on offense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 119], "content_span": [120, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0050-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2019, NFC: New Orleans Saints 20, Philadelphia Eagles 14\nNew Orleans' third drive fared no better as they had to punt after Brees was sacked twice, the second time losing a fumble that was recovered by offensive tackle Ryan Ramczyk. But in what turned out to be a crucial momentum-shifting play, Lattimore made a leaping interception of a Foles pass on the Saints' 21-yard line with 13:35 left in the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 119], "content_span": [120, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0051-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2019, NFC: New Orleans Saints 20, Philadelphia Eagles 14\nNew Orleans then drove to a 4th-and-1 on their own 30-yard line and sent their punt unit onto the field. Playing from the blocking back position in the formation, backup quarterback Taysom Hill took a direct snap and ran four yards for a first down, extending the drive. On the next play, Brees completed a 42-yard pass to Michael Thomas on the Eagles' 24-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 119], "content_span": [120, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0051-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2019, NFC: New Orleans Saints 20, Philadelphia Eagles 14\nEventually, the Saints faced 4th-and-goal from the 2-yard line and managed to convert again, this time with Brees' 2-yard touchdown pass to receiver Keith Kirkwood to finish off the 12-play, 79-yard drive with 7:23 left in the half. After the next three drives resulted in punts, New Orleans got the ball on their own 6-yard line with 1:18 remaining in the half. Brees subsequently completed four successive passes for 71 yards as the team drove to a 45-yard field goal by Wil Lutz, making the score 14\u201310 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 119], "content_span": [120, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0052-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2019, NFC: New Orleans Saints 20, Philadelphia Eagles 14\nAfter forcing the Eagles to punt on the opening second-half possession, New Orleans went on the longest drive of the postseason to that point, covering 92 yards in 18 plays and taking 11:29 off the clock, which included overcoming a 41-yard touchdown completion called back by a holding penalty. Brees made two clutch first down completions on the drive, throwing a 20-yard pass to Thomas on 2nd-and-20 from the Saints' 44-yard line, and later hitting Thomas again for 20 yards to convert a 3rd-and-16. After this, Alvin Kamara's 15-yard run moved the ball to the Eagles' 2-yard line, and Brees completed a 2-yard touchdown pass to Thomas on the next play, giving the Saints their first lead of the game at 17\u201314 with 1:40 left in the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 119], "content_span": [120, 869]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0053-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2019, NFC: New Orleans Saints 20, Philadelphia Eagles 14\nAfter forcing the Eagles to punt, New Orleans drove 62 yards, including a 36-yard run by Mark Ingram Jr., to take a 20\u201314 lead on Lutz's 39-yard field goal with 10:28 left. Following another Eagles punt, the Saints drove 41 yards in 10 plays, featuring a 22-yard completion from Brees to Thomas on 3rd-and-13. With 3:03 remaining, they had a chance to put the game away, but Lutz missed a 52-yard field goal attempt wide to the right, giving the ball to Philadelphia on their 42-yard line. After driving to the Saints' 27-yard line, Foles threw a pass that went through the hands of Jeffery and was intercepted by Lattimore with 1:50 remaining, enabling New Orleans to run out the clock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 119], "content_span": [120, 807]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0054-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2019, NFC: New Orleans Saints 20, Philadelphia Eagles 14\nBrees finished the game 28-for-38 for 301 yards, two touchdowns, and an interception. Thomas caught 12 passes for a franchise postseason record 171 yards and a touchdown. Kamara rushed for 71 yards, caught four passes for 35 yards, and returned two kickoffs for 45 yards. Lattimore had eight tackles (four solo) and two interceptions. Foles completed 18-of-31 passes for 201 yards and a touchdown, with two interceptions. His rushing touchdown made him the third player in the Super Bowl era to have a rushing, receiving and passing touchdown in the postseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 119], "content_span": [120, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0055-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019\nFor the first time in the Super Bowl era, both conference championship games went into overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 72], "content_span": [73, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0056-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, NFC: Los Angeles Rams 26, New Orleans Saints 23 (OT)\nThough the Rams outgained the Saints in total yards 378 to 290, they never held the lead at any point in regulation. But after Greg Zuerlein made a 48-yard field goal with 15 seconds left in the fourth quarter to send the game into overtime, John Johnson's clutch interception set Zuerlein up for a 57-yard field goal (the second longest in postseason history) to win the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 126], "content_span": [127, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0057-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, NFC: Los Angeles Rams 26, New Orleans Saints 23 (OT)\nNew Orleans took the opening kickoff and drove 56 yards in 11 plays, the longest a 21-yard completion from Drew Brees to running back Alvin Kamara. Wil Lutz finished the drive with a 37-yard field goal to give the Saints a 3\u20130 lead. Then Saints linebacker Demario Davis intercepted a pass that bounced out of the hands of running back Todd Gurley, giving his team a first down on the Rams' 13-yard line. Three plays later, Lutz kicked a 29-yard field goal to put New Orleans up 6\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 126], "content_span": [127, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0057-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, NFC: Los Angeles Rams 26, New Orleans Saints 23 (OT)\nLos Angeles was quickly forced to punt, and the Saints soon drove for more points. Brees started his next drive with a 24-yard completion to tight end Josh Hill, and later converted a 3rd-and-3 with a 19-yard pass to Michael Thomas. Brees eventually finished the drive with a 5-yard touchdown toss to tight end Garrett Griffin, who had been promoted from the practice squad just two weeks earlier after missing the entire regular season. This gave New Orleans a 13\u20130 lead with 1:35 left in the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 126], "content_span": [127, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0058-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, NFC: Los Angeles Rams 26, New Orleans Saints 23 (OT)\nThe Rams took the ball back and soon faced 4th-and-5, but managed to keep the drive going with a fake punt in which punter Johnny Hekker threw the ball to Sam Shields for 12 yards, giving the Rams a first down for the first time in the game with 14 minutes left in the second quarter. The possession ended up going on for 14 plays and 62 yards before Zuerlein finished it with a 36-yard field goal to make the score 13\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 126], "content_span": [127, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0058-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, NFC: Los Angeles Rams 26, New Orleans Saints 23 (OT)\nAfter the next three possessions of the game ended in punts, Los Angeles got the ball with 1:52 left in the half. Quarterback Jared Goff started the drive with a pair of completions to Josh Reynolds for 22 total yards. Following two incompletions, he converted a 3rd-and-10 with a 17-yard pass to Brandin Cooks. On the next play, Goff completed a 36-yard pass to Cooks on the Saints' 6-yard line. Gurley then ran the ball in for a touchdown, cutting the Rams' deficit to 13\u201310 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 126], "content_span": [127, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0059-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, NFC: Los Angeles Rams 26, New Orleans Saints 23 (OT)\nAfter forcing the Rams to punt on the opening possession of the second half, New Orleans drove 71 yards in 12 plays, mainly on the strength of running backs Mark Ingram Jr. and Kamara. Ingram rushed three times for 25 yards on the drive, while Kamara had a 6-yard carry while also catching four passes for 34 yards. Brees ended the drive with a 2-yard touchdown pass to Taysom Hill, increasing the Saints' lead to 20\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 126], "content_span": [127, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0059-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, NFC: Los Angeles Rams 26, New Orleans Saints 23 (OT)\nLos Angeles responded by moving the ball 70 yards in 10 plays, including a 25-yard reception by Cooks and a 16-yard run by Reynolds on an end around play. With 3 minutes left in the third quarter, Goff converted a 3rd-and-goal with a 1-yard touchdown pass to Tyler Higbee, cutting the Rams' deficit to 20\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 126], "content_span": [127, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0060-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, NFC: Los Angeles Rams 26, New Orleans Saints 23 (OT)\nThe next three drives of the game resulted in punts, the last one a 44-yard kick by Thomas Morstead that pinned the Rams back on their 9-yard line. Goff then completed passes to Gerald Everett and Reynolds for gains of 39 and 33 yards as the team drove 90 yards in nine plays. Zuerlein kicked a field goal to tie the score 20\u201320 with just over five minutes left in regulation. Kamara returned the following kickoff 30 yards to the Rams' 35-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 126], "content_span": [127, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0060-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, NFC: Los Angeles Rams 26, New Orleans Saints 23 (OT)\nFour plays later, Brees completed a 43-yard pass to Ted Ginn Jr. on the Los Angeles 13-yard line. Two plays later, with the Saints facing 3rd-and-10, Brees threw a pass to receiver Tommylee Lewis, who was covered by Nickell Robey-Coleman. A hit by Robey-Coleman knocked Lewis to the ground and the pass fell incomplete. Replays showed that Robey-Coleman made contact with Lewis long before the ball arrived. However, no flag was thrown and the Saints had to settle for Lutz's third field goal, from 31 yards, which gave them a 23\u201320 lead with 1:26 remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 126], "content_span": [127, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0060-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, NFC: Los Angeles Rams 26, New Orleans Saints 23 (OT)\nOn the Rams' ensuing drive, Goff completed a 19-yard pass to Reynolds and then threw a 16-yard pass to Robert Woods to convert a 3rd-and-3 and give Los Angeles the ball on the Saints' 33-yard line. Three plays later, Zuerlein's 48-yard field goal tied the score with 8 seconds left on the clock and sent the game into overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 126], "content_span": [127, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0061-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, NFC: Los Angeles Rams 26, New Orleans Saints 23 (OT)\nNew Orleans got the ball at the start of overtime and drove to their 40-yard line. On the next play, Ingram was tackled by Aaron Donald for a 6-yard loss. Then as Brees attempted to make a desperate throw, he was hit by Rams lineman Dante Fowler, resulting in a high floating pass that was intercepted by John Johnson at the Rams' 46-yard line. Goff started Los Angeles' ensuing drive with a 12-yard pass to Higbee. Then after Anderson was dropped for a 3-yard loss, Goff's 6-yard pass to Higbee moved the ball to the Saints' 39-yard line. Goff's next pass was incomplete, and Zuerlein was brought out to kick a 57-yard field goal, which he did to give the Rams a 26\u201323 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 126], "content_span": [127, 801]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0062-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, NFC: Los Angeles Rams 26, New Orleans Saints 23 (OT)\nAfter the game, Saints coach Sean Payton protested bitterly about the non-call after Robey-Coleman's hit on Lewis on the final play of the Saints' fourth-quarter field goal drive. \"For a call like that not to be made, man, it's just hard to swallow. And then to get a phone call ...\" Payton said, trailing off. He added: \"We spoke initially, then I called to follow up. And the first thing [head of officials Alberto Riveron] said when I got on the phone\u2014'We messed it up.' Payton later said it was the type of foul you'd call \"if we were playing pickup football in the backyard.\" Eight days later, the NFL released a statement officially admitting the play was blown and should have been penalized.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 126], "content_span": [127, 826]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0063-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, NFC: Los Angeles Rams 26, New Orleans Saints 23 (OT)\nTwo Saints season ticket holders filed a lawsuit against the NFL over the incident, attempting to force the league to use its unfair act provisions and replay the game from the point of the missed call. The league, which has never used these provisions, opposed the action on the grounds that it could force the Super Bowl to be postponed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 126], "content_span": [127, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0063-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, NFC: Los Angeles Rams 26, New Orleans Saints 23 (OT)\nOn January 31, 2019, U.S. District Judge Susie Morgan in New Orleans ruled that the ticket holders could not compel the NFL or NFL Commissioner to enforce a rule that would change the result of the game or schedule a replay of the game. In response, Louisianans boycotted Super Bowl LIII. In the following season, the NFL changed their rules to allow pass interference calls (and non-calls) to be subject to replay challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 126], "content_span": [127, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0064-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, NFC: Los Angeles Rams 26, New Orleans Saints 23 (OT)\nGoff completed 25-of-40 passes for 297 yards, a touchdown and an interception, while also rushing for 10 yards. Cooks caught seven passes for 107 yards, while Reynolds caught four passes for 74 yards and rushed for 16 yards. Rams linebacker Cory Littleton had 12 tackles (11 solo). Brees completed 26-of-40 passes for 249 yards, two touchdowns and an interception. Kamara rushed for 15 yards, caught 11 passes for 96 yards, and had four kickoff returns for 119 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 126], "content_span": [127, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0065-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, NFC: Los Angeles Rams 26, New Orleans Saints 23 (OT)\nThe previous postseason meeting of these two teams was in the 2000\u201301 wild card playoffs when the Saints eliminated the Rams 31\u201328; at the time Rams were based in St. Louis and were the defending Super Bowl champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 126], "content_span": [127, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0066-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, AFC: New England Patriots 37, Kansas City Chiefs 31 (OT)\nNew England outgained the Chiefs in total yards 524\u2013290, and managed to prevent their defense, which led the league in sacks during the season, from getting any sacks in this game. Still, it would take an overtime touchdown by Rex Burkhead to put Kansas City away after a wild, back and forth fourth quarter in which the teams combined to score 38 points as the lead changed four times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 130], "content_span": [131, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0067-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, AFC: New England Patriots 37, Kansas City Chiefs 31 (OT)\nThe Patriots dominated the first half, holding Kansas City scoreless and limiting them to just 32 total yards. On the game's opening drive, New England running back Sony Michel rushed 6 times for 32 yards as the team drove 80 yards in 15 plays to score on his 1-yard touchdown run. After forcing a punt, the Patriots drove to a 1st-and-goal from the Chiefs' 5-yard line, but this time they failed to score. On 3rd down, linebacker Reggie Ragland intercepted Tom Brady's pass in the end zone for a touchback with 13:45 left in the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 130], "content_span": [131, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0067-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, AFC: New England Patriots 37, Kansas City Chiefs 31 (OT)\nAfter a few punts, Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes completed a 42-yard pass to Tyreek Hill on the Patriots' 23-yard line. On 3rd-and-9, Mahomes was sacked by Trey Flowers for a 14-yard loss, pushing Kansas City back to the 36-yard line, where they decided to punt rather than risk a long field goal attempt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 130], "content_span": [131, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0067-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, AFC: New England Patriots 37, Kansas City Chiefs 31 (OT)\nDustin Colquitt's 26-yard punt pinned New England back on their own 10-yard line; they still managed to drive to a 14\u20130 lead, with Brady completing a 30-yard pass to running back James White before hooking up with Phillip Dorsett for a 29-yard scoring play with 27 seconds left in the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 130], "content_span": [131, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0068-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, AFC: New England Patriots 37, Kansas City Chiefs 31 (OT)\nThe Chiefs managed to rally back on the opening drive of the second half. When faced with 3rd-and-2 after two plays, Mahomes burned the Patriots' defense with a 54-yard completion to Sammy Watkins, and followed it up with a 12-yard touchdown pass to tight end Travis Kelce, making the score 14\u20137. Later in the quarter, New England receiver Julian Edelman returned a punt 13 yards to the Chiefs' 37-yard line, setting up Stephen Gostkowski's 47-yard field goal that increased the Patriots' lead to 17\u20137. Kansas City responded by driving 75 yards in 9 plays, featuring Mahomes' 33-yard completion to running back Damien Williams. On the first play of the fourth quarter, Williams finished the drive with a 1-yard touchdown reception, cutting the score to 17\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 130], "content_span": [131, 890]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0069-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, AFC: New England Patriots 37, Kansas City Chiefs 31 (OT)\nNew England took the ball back and advanced to a 4th-and-1 on the Chiefs' 25-yard line. They attempted to convert with a run by Burkhead, but safety Daniel Sorensen broke through the line and tackled him for no gain. However, Kansas City soon had to punt. Officials ruled that Edelman muffed the punt and the Chiefs recovered the ball, but the call was overturned via video review. One play later, Brady threw a pass that bounced off Edelman's fingertips and was intercepted by Sorensen, who returned it 14 yards to the Patriots' 23-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 130], "content_span": [131, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0069-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, AFC: New England Patriots 37, Kansas City Chiefs 31 (OT)\nFollowing an incompletion, Mahomes threw a short pass to Williams, who raced down the left sideline for a 23-yard touchdown completion, giving Kansas City their first lead at 21\u201317, with 7:45 left in regulation. New England then drove 75 yards in 10 plays to retake the lead at 24-21, the longest being a 14-yard run by Burkhead, capped off with Michel's 10-yard touchdown run from 4th-and-inches. The Patriots' touchdown drive was kept alive by a controversial roughing the passer call against Chiefs defensive lineman Chris Jones, so instead of third-and-long the Patriots got 15 yards and a first down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 130], "content_span": [131, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0069-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, AFC: New England Patriots 37, Kansas City Chiefs 31 (OT)\nFollowing the Patriots' touchdown, Kansas City quickly took advantage of a lost fumble that was eliminated due to a holding penalty on Patriots defensive back J. C. Jackson, and a later pass interference penalty on Jackson that gained them 23 yards. Mahomes then threw a 38-yard completion to Watkins on the 2-yard line, and Williams ran the ball in for a touchdown on the next play; Kansas City led 28\u201324 with just over two minutes left in regulation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 130], "content_span": [131, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0070-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, AFC: New England Patriots 37, Kansas City Chiefs 31 (OT)\nCordarrelle Patterson returned the ensuing kickoff 38 yards to the 35-yard line. Then Brady threw passes to Edelman and Chris Hogan for gains of 20 and 11 yards; Hogan's one-handed catch was upheld on review. After an incompletion, Chiefs defensive back Charvarius Ward appeared to put the game away with an interception, only to see it overturned by a penalty against linebacker Dee Ford, who had lined up in the neutral zone before the ball was snapped. On the next play, Brady threw a 25-yard pass to Rob Gronkowski on the Kansas City 4-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 130], "content_span": [131, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0070-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, AFC: New England Patriots 37, Kansas City Chiefs 31 (OT)\nThen Burkhead scored on a 4-yard touchdown run, giving New England a 31\u201328 lead with 39 seconds left. After Tremon Smith's 26-yard kickoff return gave the Chiefs the ball on their 31-yard line, Mahomes completed a 21-yard pass to running back Spencer Ware, and a 27-yard completion to Demarcus Robinson, to set up Harrison Butker's 39-yard field goal with six seconds left, sending the game into overtime, the first such instance in an AFC Championship game since 1986.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 130], "content_span": [131, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0071-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, AFC: New England Patriots 37, Kansas City Chiefs 31 (OT)\nAfter winning the overtime coin toss, New England drove 75 yards in 13 plays for the game-winning touchdown. Edelman caught two third-down passes on the drive for gains of 20 and 15 yards, while Burkhead covered the final 15 yards to the end zone with a 10-yard run, a 3-yard run, and a 2-yard rushing touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 130], "content_span": [131, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0072-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, AFC: New England Patriots 37, Kansas City Chiefs 31 (OT)\nBrady completed 30-of-46 passes for 348 yards, with a touchdown and two interceptions. Edelman caught seven passes for 98 yards and returned three punts for 38 yards. Patterson returned 3 kickoffs for 80 yards and caught 2 passes for 16 yards. Michel was the top rusher of the game with 29 carries for 113 yards and two touchdowns. This gave him five total rushing touchdowns for the postseason, a rookie record. Linebacker Kyle Van Noy had 10 tackles (2 solo), two sacks and a forced fumble.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 130], "content_span": [131, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0072-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, AFC: New England Patriots 37, Kansas City Chiefs 31 (OT)\nMahomes finished the game 16-of-31 passes for 295 yards and three touchdowns, while also rushing for 11 yards. Williams rushed for 30 yards, caught five passes for 66 yards, and scored three touchdowns. Watkins was the game's leading receiver with four receptions for 114 yards. Smith had four kickoff returns for 99 yards. Sorensen had 14 tackles (11 solo) and an interception. After the game, the Chiefs fired defensive coordinator Bob Sutton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 130], "content_span": [131, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0073-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2019, AFC: New England Patriots 37, Kansas City Chiefs 31 (OT)\nThis was the Patriots' first postseason win on the road since 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 130], "content_span": [131, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0074-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Super Bowl LIII: New England Patriots 13, Los Angeles Rams 3\nThis was the first Super Bowl since 2012 to not feature a top seed from either conference, and the first time that both number two seeds qualified. This was the Patriots' third consecutive Super Bowl appearance. The Rams last made an appearance in 2001 when the team was based in St. Louis, coincidentally, facing the Patriots, their first as a Los Angeles based team since 1979. The Patriots won that game 20\u201317 on a field goal, as time expired, by Adam Vinatieri.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 82], "content_span": [83, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0074-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Super Bowl LIII: New England Patriots 13, Los Angeles Rams 3\nThe Patriots' current head coach\u2013starting quarterback tandem of Bill Belichick and Tom Brady were only active personnel left from the previous title game against the Rams. The Patriots won their sixth Super Bowl in 18 years (2001, 2003, 2004, 2014, 2016), and tied the Pittsburgh Steelers with the most Super Bowl wins. The Rams won their only Super Bowl in 1999, which was coincidentally hosted by Atlanta, and extended their drought to 20 years. This was the Patriots' 11th Super Bowl appearance (ninth under Brady and Belichick) and the Rams' fourth. The first half was the lowest scoring half (three points) since Super Bowl IX (two points). In the lowest scoring Super Bowl in NFL history, the Patriots won 13\u20133 to claim their sixth Super Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 82], "content_span": [83, 832]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0075-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Television coverage\nIn a change from previous Wild Card Weekends, NBC aired the late Sunday afternoon NFC game as a lead-in to their coverage of the Golden Globe Awards. ABC and ESPN simulcasted the AFC Wild Card game on Saturday afternoon, Fox aired the Saturday primetime NFC game, and CBS broadcast the other AFC playoff game in the early Sunday window.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285927-0076-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NFL playoffs, Television coverage\nFox then had both NFC divisional games, while CBS and NBC had one AFC divisional game each. Fox had exclusive coverage of the NFC Championship Game. CBS had exclusive coverage of the AFC Championship Game and also broadcast Super Bowl LIII.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285928-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL season\nThe 2018\u201319 NHL season was the 102nd season of operation (101st season of play) of the National Hockey League. 31 teams competed in an 82-game regular season. The regular season began on October 3, 2018, and ended on April 6, 2019. The 2019 Stanley Cup playoffs began on April 10, 2019, and the Stanley Cup Finals concluded on June 12, 2019, with the St. Louis Blues winning their first Stanley Cup in the Finals over the Boston Bruins in seven games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285928-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL season, League business, Salary cap\nOn June 21, 2018, the National Hockey League Players' Association announced that the salary cap would be set at $79.5 million per team for the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285928-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL season, League business, On-ice ads in the rink corners\nAfter a trial during the 2018 All-Star Game and China games, the NHL began to allow teams to sell on-ice advertising placements in the corners of the rink. NHL chief revenue officer Keith Wachtel estimated that these new placements could provide up to $10 million in additional revenue to teams per season. During the playoffs, these advertising areas will be controlled by the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 67], "content_span": [68, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285928-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL season, League business, Sports betting\nOn October 29, 2018, it was announced that MGM Resorts International would become the NHL's \"official sports wagering partner\" in the United States. This deal includes direct access to new forms of internal statistics data, as well as brand licensing agreements in relation to its sportsbooks, and came in the wake of a court ruling earlier in the year which declared the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act of 1992 (a U.S. law that forbade the legalization of sports betting outside of Nevada and other exempted states) to be unconstitutional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285928-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL season, League business, Expansion\nOn December 4, 2018, NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman officially announced that the league had approved an expansion team in Seattle, later christened the Seattle Kraken, which is planned to begin play in the 2021\u201322 season. To accommodate the addition in 2021, the new team will be placed in the Pacific Division, while the Arizona Coyotes will be moved to the Central Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 46], "content_span": [47, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285928-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL season, League business, Media rights\nThis was the eighth season under the NHL's ten year U.S. rights deal with NBC Sports and fifth season of its twelve year Canadian rights deals with Sportsnet and TVA Sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 49], "content_span": [50, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285928-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL season, League business, Media rights\nThrough BAMTech's prior 2015 agreement to run NHL.tv and the league's other digital properties, the subscription streaming service ESPN+ began offering up to 180 regular season games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 49], "content_span": [50, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285928-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL season, League business, Media rights\nOn December 20, 2017, CBC Television and Rogers Communications struck an agreement to renew its sublicensing agreement for Hockey Night in Canada through the end of Rogers's current broadcast contract. The two sides had previously reached an agreement to extend its original four-year agreement by an additional year. Rogers announced the retirement of long-time commentator Bob Cole from Hockey Night, after calling a limited schedule of games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 49], "content_span": [50, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285928-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL season, League business, Media rights\nThree teams shifted their radio broadcast rights exclusively to internet radio, all of which in heavily crowded large media markets with multiple sports teams seeking a limited number of radio outlets. The Los Angeles Kings \"Audio Network\" will now be exclusively carried on iHeartRadio. The New Jersey Devils and New York Islanders have a broadcast agreement with Entercom for the New York City market that will see only a limited number of games broadcast on their flagship sports station, WFAN, with the rest being carried on the company's Radio.com platform (the university radio station WRHU remains the Islanders' radio flagship). WFAN had already carried only a limited number of games from those teams in recent seasons, previously pawning off the remainder on other non-sports stations such as WNYM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 49], "content_span": [50, 858]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285928-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL season, League business, Media rights\nIn an effort to expand the league's television audience in Europe, the NHL began to schedule more weekend afternoon games (the \"European Game of the Week\") so they could air live during the primetime hours. The initiative launched with an NHL Global Series game in Gothenburg, Sweden, on October 6, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 49], "content_span": [50, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285928-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL season, League business, Draft\nThe 2018 NHL Entry Draft was held June 22 and 23, 2018. The Buffalo Sabres, by virtue of winning the draft lottery on April 28, held the first overall selection, using it to select defenceman Rasmus Dahlin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285928-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL season, League business, Preseason games in China\nTwo preseason games were played in China. The Calgary Flames and Boston Bruins played one game (Calgary as home team) at the Shenzhen Universiade Sports Center in Shenzhen on September 15, 2018, and played another (Boston as home team) at Cadillac Arena in Beijing on September 19, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 61], "content_span": [62, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285928-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL season, League business, Preseason games in Europe\nTwo preseason games were played in Europe. The New Jersey Devils played against SC Bern at PostFinance Arena in Bern, Switzerland, on October 1, 2018. The Edmonton Oilers played against K\u00f6lner Haie at Lanxess Arena in Cologne, Germany, on October 3, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285928-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL season, Regular season\nThe regular season began on October 3, 2018, and ended April 6, 2019. This season, the mandatory \"bye week\" that each team received was extended from five to seven days, to also include All-Star Weekend. The regular season schedule was released on June 21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285928-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL season, Regular season, International games\nThree regular season games, branded as the NHL Global Series, were played in Europe. The Edmonton Oilers and New Jersey Devils played at the Scandinavium in Gothenburg, Sweden, on October 6, 2018. The Florida Panthers and Winnipeg Jets played two games at Hartwall Arena in Helsinki, Finland, on November 1 and 2, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 55], "content_span": [56, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285928-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL season, Regular season, All\u2013Star Game\nThe 2019 National Hockey League All-Star Game was held in San Jose, California, at SAP Center, home of the San Jose Sharks, on January 26, 2019, the first time it was held on a Saturday after many years of the All-Star game being played on a Sunday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 49], "content_span": [50, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285928-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL season, Standings\nTie Breakers:1. Fewer number of games played2. Greater Regulation + OT Wins (ROW)3. Greatest number of points earned in head-to-head play (If teams played an uneven number of head-to-head games, the result of the first game on the home ice of the team with the extra home game is discarded.) 4. Greater Goal differential", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285928-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL season, Playoffs, Bracket\nIn each round, teams competed in a best-of-seven series following a 2\u20132\u20131\u20131\u20131 format (scores in the bracket indicate the number of games won in each best-of-seven series). The team with home ice advantage played at home for games one and two (and games five and seven, if necessary), and the other team was at home for games three and four (and game six, if necessary). The top three teams in each division made the playoffs, along with two wild cards in each conference, for a total of eight teams from each conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285928-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL season, Playoffs, Bracket\nIn the First Round, the lower seeded wild card in the conference played against the division winner with the best record while the other wild card played against the other division winner, and both wild cards were de facto #4 seeds. The other series matched the second and third place teams from the divisions. In the first two rounds, home ice advantage was awarded to the team with the better seed. Thereafter, it was awarded to the team that had the better regular season record followed by any necessary tie breakers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285928-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL season, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nThe following players led the league in regular season points at the conclusion of games played on April 6, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285928-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL season, Statistics, Leading goaltenders\nThe following goaltenders led the league in regular season goals against average at the conclusion of games played on April 6, 2019, while playing at least 1,800 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285928-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL season, NHL awards\nThe league's awards were presented at the NHL Awards ceremony, that was held following the 2019 Stanley Cup playoffs on June 19 at the Mandalay Bay Events Center. Finalists for voted awards were announced during the playoffs and winners were presented at the award ceremony. Voting concluded immediately after the end of the regular season. The Presidents' Trophy, the Prince of Wales Trophy and Clarence S. Campbell Bowl are not presented at the awards ceremony. The Lester Patrick Trophy is announced during the summer and presented in the fall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285928-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL season, Milestones, First games\nThe following is a list of notable players who played their first NHL game during the 2018\u201319 season, listed with their first team. Asterisk(*) marks debut in playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285929-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL suspensions and fines\nThe following is a list of all suspensions and fines enforced in the National Hockey League (NHL) during the 2018\u201319 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.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285929-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL suspensions and fines\nBased on each player's average annual salary, divided by number of days in the season (186) for non-repeat offenders and games (82) for repeat offenders, salary will be forfeited for the term of their suspension. Players' money forfeited due to suspension or fine goes to the Players' Emergency Assistance Fund, while money forfeited by coaches, staff or organizations as a whole go to the NHL Foundation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285929-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL suspensions and fines, Suspensions\n\u2020 - suspension covered at least one 2018 NHL preseason game\u2021 - suspension covered at least one 2019 postseason game# - Suspension was later reduced upon further review/successful appeal; information presented in italics\u00a0R\u00a0 - Player was considered a repeat offender under the terms of the Collective Bargaining Agreement (player had been suspended in the 18 months prior to this suspension)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285929-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL suspensions and fines, Fines\nPlayers can be fined up to 50% of one day's salary, up to a maximum of $10,000.00 for their first offense, and $15,000.00 for any subsequent offenses (player had been fined in the 12 months prior to this fine). Coaches, non-playing personnel, and teams are not restricted to such maximums.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285929-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL suspensions and fines, Fines\nFines for players/coaches fined for diving/embellishment are structured uniquely and are only handed out after non-publicized warnings are given to the player/coach for their first offense. For more details on diving/embellishment fines:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285929-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL suspensions and fines, Fines\nFines listed in italics indicate that was the maximum allowed fine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285930-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL transactions\nThe following is a list of all team-to-team transactions that have occurred in the National Hockey League (NHL) during the 2018\u201319 NHL season. It lists which team each player has been 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, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285930-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL transactions\nThe 2018\u201319 NHL trade deadline was on February 25, 2019. Players traded after this date were not eligible to play in the 2019 Stanley Cup playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285930-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL transactions, Contract terminations\nA team and player may mutually agree to terminate a player's contract at any time. All players must clear waivers before having a contract terminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285930-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL transactions, Contract terminations\nBuyouts can only occur at specific times of the year. For more details on contract terminations as buyouts:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285930-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285930-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL transactions, Free agency, Imports\nThis section is for players who were not previously on contract with NHL teams in the past season. Listed is their previous team and the league that they belonged to.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285930-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL transactions, Trades\n* Retained Salary Transaction: Each team is allowed 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, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285930-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NHL transactions, Trades\nHover over retained salary or conditional transactions for more information.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285930-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00285931-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NIFL Championship\nThe 2018\u201319 NIFL Championship was the third season of the NIFL Championship since gaining senior status. It is the second-tier of the Northern Ireland Football League - the national football league in Northern Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285931-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NIFL Championship, Teams\nThe 2018\u201319 NIFL Championship was contested by 12 teams. Institute were champions in the previous season, and were promoted to the 2018\u201319 NIFL Premiership. They were replaced by the bottom team in last season's Premiership, Ballinamallard United. Runners-up Newry City won 6\u20133 on aggregate in the promotion play-off against Carrick Rangers, also achieving promotion to the Premiership for this season and relegating Carrick Rangers to the Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285931-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NIFL Championship, Teams\nThe bottom team from the previous season, Lurgan Celtic, were relegated to the third-tier NIFL Premier Intermediate League. They were replaced by Dundela, winners of the Premier Intermediate League. The eleventh-placed team from the previous season, Dergview, remained in the Championship this season, after defeating the NIFL Premier Intermediate League runners-up Queen's University 4\u20131 on aggregate in the relegation play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285931-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NIFL Championship, Results, Matches 1\u201322\nDuring matches 1\u201322 each team played every other team twice (home and away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285931-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NIFL Championship, Results, Matches 23\u201332\nDuring matches 23\u201332 each team plays every other team in their half of the table twice (home and away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285931-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NIFL Championship, Play-offs, NIFL Championship play-off\nThe eleventh-placed team from the Championship, PSNI, faced Annagh United, the runners-up from the 2018\u201319 Premier Intermediate League over two legs for one spot in the 2019\u201320 NIFL Championship. PSNI won 5\u20133 on aggregate to retain their place in the Championship for next season. Annagh United remained in the Premier Intermediate League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285931-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NIFL Championship, Play-offs, NIFL Championship play-off\nPSNI won 5\u20133 on aggregate and retained their Championship status for the 2019\u201320 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285932-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NIFL Premiership\nThe 2018\u201319 NIFL Premiership (known as the Danske Bank Premiership for sponsorship reasons) was the 11th season of Northern Ireland's highest national football league in this format since its inception in 2008, the 118th season of Irish league football overall, and the sixth season of the league operating as part of the Northern Ireland Football League. The season began on 4 August 2018 and concluded on 27 April 2019, with the play-offs for promotion/relegation and the Europa League then taking place in May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285932-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NIFL Premiership\nCrusaders were the defending champions from the previous season. However, they were unable to defend their title, finishing in fourth place. Linfield were the eventual champions, lifting the league title for the second time in three seasons, and stretching their record tally of title wins to 53 overall. The Blues were confirmed as the champions on 13 April 2019, following a 0\u20130 draw at home against the outgoing champions, Crusaders, which left Linfield 12 points clear at the top of the table, with only three games remaining and nine points left to play for.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285932-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NIFL Premiership\nFor the second successive season, two clubs suffered relegation to the NIFL Championship. Newry City finished bottom of the table, and were relegated to the 2019\u201320 NIFL Championship after only one season in the top flight. Eleventh-placed Ards faced 2018\u201319 NIFL Championship runners-up, Carrick Rangers, in a two-legged promotion/relegation play-off. Carrick Rangers won the tie 3\u20131 on aggregate to secure promotion and relegate Ards. This brought an end to Ards' three-season stay in the top flight, and meant an immediate return to the Premiership for Carrick Rangers after only one season in the Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285932-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NIFL Premiership\nPremiership champions Linfield entered the 2019\u201320 UEFA Champions League, with the runners-up (Ballymena United) and the play-off winners (Cliftonville) entering the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League along with the 2018\u201319 Irish Cup winners, Crusaders. Linfield also qualified to take part in the newly-introduced Champions Cup against the 2019 League of Ireland Premier Division champions, Dundalk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285932-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NIFL Premiership, Teams\nTwelve teams competed in the 2018\u201319 NIFL Premiership, ten of which retained their Premiership status from the previous season. Ballinamallard United were relegated to the 2018\u201319 NIFL Championship after finishing bottom of the 2017\u201318 NIFL Premiership, and were replaced by Institute as winners of the 2017\u201318 NIFL Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285932-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NIFL Premiership, Teams\nCarrick Rangers finished in the promotion-relegation play-off place, and lost their Premiership place after losing the play-off 6\u20133 on aggregate against Championship runners-up Newry City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285932-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NIFL Premiership, Results, Matches 1\u201322\nDuring matches 1\u201322 each team played every other team twice (home and away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285932-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NIFL 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285932-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NIFL Premiership, Results, Matches 34\u201338\nDuring matches 34\u201338 each team will play every other team in their half of the table once. As this is the fourth time that teams play each other this season, home sides are chosen so that they will have played each other twice at home and twice away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285932-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NIFL Premiership, Play-offs, UEFA Europa League play-offs\nFour of the teams (Crusaders qualified for the Europa League directly as 2018\u201319 Irish Cup winners) that finished in the play-off places (3rd\u20137th position) participated in the Europa League play-offs to decide which team would qualify for the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League preliminary round. After victories over Coleraine and Glenavon in the semi-finals respectively, Cliftonville and Glentoran once again contested the final, with Cliftonville securing the last remaining place in next season's Europa League after a 2\u20130 win. This was a repeat of the 2016 and 2018 play-off finals, with Cliftonville winning 3\u20132 on both previous occasions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 65], "content_span": [66, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285932-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NIFL Premiership, Play-offs, UEFA Europa League play-offs, Final\nCliftonville won the Europa League play-offs, and qualified for the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League preliminary round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 72], "content_span": [73, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285932-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NIFL Premiership, Play-offs, NIFL Premiership play-offs, Pre play-off\nThe 2018\u201319 NIFL Championship runners-up, Carrick Rangers, took part in a Championship promotion pre play-off match against the 3rd-placed team, Portadown, with Carrick Rangers given home advantage as the higher-ranked of the two clubs. Carrick Rangers won the match 2\u20130 and advanced to the two-legged play-off against the 11th-placed NIFL Premiership team, Ards, for the last remaining place in the 2019\u201320 NIFL Premiership. The pre play-off match was played on 30 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 77], "content_span": [78, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285932-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NIFL Premiership, Play-offs, NIFL Premiership play-offs, Play-off\nThe 11th-placed Premiership team, Ards, played a two-legged tie against the pre play-off winners, Carrick Rangers, with Ards given the advantage of playing the second leg at home as the Premiership club. Carrick Rangers won the tie 3\u20131 on aggregate to secure promotion to the 2019\u201320 NIFL Premiership, with Ards being relegated to the Championship. The matches took place on 3 May and 6 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 73], "content_span": [74, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285932-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NIFL Premiership, Play-offs, NIFL Premiership play-offs, Play-off\nCarrick Rangers won 3\u20131 on aggregate, and were promoted to the 2019\u201320 NIFL Premiership. Ards were relegated to the 2019\u201320 NIFL Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 73], "content_span": [74, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285933-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NJIT Highlanders men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 NJIT Highlanders men's basketball team represented the New Jersey Institute of Technology during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Highlanders, led by third-year head coach Brian Kennedy, played their home games at the Wellness and Events Center in Newark, New Jersey as members of the Atlantic Sun Conference (ASUN). They finished the season 22\u201313, 8\u20138 in ASUN play to finish in fifth place. They defeated Florida Gulf Coast in the quarterfinals of the ASUN Tournament before losing in the semifinals to Lipscomb. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they defeated Quinnipiac in the first round before losing in the quarterfinals to Hampton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285933-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NJIT Highlanders men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Highlanders finished the 2017\u201318 season 14\u201316, 7\u20137 in ASUN play to finish in a tie for fourth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the ASUN Tournament to North Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285934-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NJIT Highlanders women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 NJIT Highlanders women's basketball team represents New Jersey Institute of Technology during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Highlanders, led by first year head coach Mike Lane, play their home games at the Wellness and Events Center. They were fourth year members of the Atlantic Sun Conference. They finished the season 6\u201324, 3\u201313 in A-Sun play to finish in eighth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of A-Sun Tournament to Florida Gulf Coast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285935-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NK Istra 1961 season\nThe 2018\u201319 NK Istra 1961 season was the club's 58th season in existence and the 10th consecutive season in the top flight of Croatian football. Additionally, it was the first season under ownership of Spanish Baskonia - Alav\u00e9s Group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285935-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NK Istra 1961 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-00285936-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NL season\nThe 2018\u201319 National League season was the 81st season of Swiss professional ice hockey and the second season as the National League (NL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285936-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NL season\nZSC Lions were the defending Swiss national champions, however missed the playoffs altogether.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285936-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NL season\nSC Bern won the regular season for a third consecutive year, and went on to defeat regular season runners-up EV Zug in the playoff finals 4\u20131 to claim their 16th Swiss championship, and third in four years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285936-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NL season\nThe qualification series between SC Rapperswil-Jona Lakers and SC Langenthal was not played, due to SC Langenthal's home arena not meeting NL requirements, therefore SC Rapperswil-Jona Lakers would remain in the NL for the 2019\u201320 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285936-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NL season, Player statistics, Scoring leaders\nThe following players led the league in points, at the conclusion of the regular season. If two or more skaters are tied (i.e. same number of points, goals and played games), all of the tied skaters are shown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 53], "content_span": [54, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285936-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NL season, Player statistics, Leading goaltenders\nThe following goaltenders led the league in goals against average, provided that they have played at least 40% of their team's minutes, at the conclusion of the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 57], "content_span": [58, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285936-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NL season, Relegation playoffs \u2013 Playouts, Playout final\nHC Davos 4\u20131 SC Rapperswil-Jona Lakers (3\u20132, 5\u20133, 2\u20133, 5\u20133, 3\u20131)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 64], "content_span": [65, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285936-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NL season, Relegation playoffs \u2013 Playouts, League Qualification\n2018\u201319 Swiss League champions SC Langenthal's home arena Schoren Halle did not comply with the National League's requirements, and if promoted they would therefore have had to play their home games at an alternative arena. Initially SC Langenthal announced that they would still play the league qualification despite not intending to gain promotion. However on April 5, SC Langenthal announced that they would not be contesting the League Qualification, meaning SC Rapperswil-Jona Lakers would remain in the National League for the 2019\u201320 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 71], "content_span": [72, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285937-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NTFL season\nThe 2018/19 NTFL season was the 98th season of the Northern Territory Football League (NTFL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285937-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NTFL season\nThe first game was played on Friday, 5 October, and the Grand Final was played on Saturday, 16 March, with the Nightcliff Tigers defeating Southern Districts Crocs by 22 points to win its fourth premiership. This was the first time when the club won a premiership since 1964/65, breaking its 54-year drought. This was the longest premiership drought in NTFL history, second is Wanderers Eagles by 34 years from 1923/24 to 1957/58).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285937-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NTFL season, Grand Final\nThis was the Nightcliff Tiger's first premiership win since the 1964/65 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285938-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NWHL season\nThe 2018\u201319 NWHL season is the fourth season of the National Women's Hockey League. All four teams from the previous three seasons returned: the Boston Pride, Buffalo Beauts, Connecticut Whale, and the Metropolitan Riveters while the Minnesota Whitecaps entered the league as an expansion team bringing the league to five teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285938-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NWHL season, League news and notes, One league movement\nStarting in March 2018 and throughout the off-season, current and former players took to social media to promote the concept of one unified professional women's hockey league between the NWHL and the Canadian Women's Hockey League. Players utilized the hashtag #OneLeague to indicate their support. The push continued during the NWHL All-Star Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285938-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NWHL season, League news and notes, All-Star Game\nThe 2019 NWHL All-Star Game and its Weekend festivities took place on February 9\u201310, 2019, at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 57], "content_span": [58, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285938-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NWHL season, League news and notes, All-Star Game\nThe skills challenge took place on February 9 at the Ford Ice Center, the Nashville Predators' practice facility, with a sell-out crowd. Kendall Coyne Schofield of the Minnesota Whitecaps won the fastest skater, two weeks following her appearance as the first woman to compete in the NHL's Skills Competition as part of the 2019 National Hockey League All-Star Game also in the fastest skater competition. Blake Bolden (Buffalo Beauts) won the hardest shot, Nicole Hensley (Buffalo Beauts) won the fastest goalie competition, and Dani Cameranesi (Buffalo Beauts) won the accuracy shooting contest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 57], "content_span": [58, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285938-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NWHL season, League news and notes, All-Star Game\nThe All-Star Game took place immediately following on February 10 immediately following a game between the NHL's St. Louis Blues and the Nashville Predators at Bridgestone Arena. The game was a four-on-four format between teams led by Shannon Szabados and Lee Stecklein, with Team Szabados winning 3\u20132 following a shootout. The game set an attendance record with 6,120 at the arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 57], "content_span": [58, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285939-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NZ Touring Cars Championship\nThe 2018\u201319 NZ Touring Cars Championship (known for commercial reasons as the 2018\u201319 BNT V8s Championship) was the twentieth season of the series, and the fourth under the NZ Touring Cars name. The field consisted of two classes racing on the same grid. Class one featured both V8ST and NZV8 TLX cars. Class two consisted of older NZV8 TL cars. The series was won by Australian Jack Smith, with Justin Ashwell taking the Class Two championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285939-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NZ Touring Cars Championship, Race calendar and results\nAll rounds are to be held in New Zealand. The first round in Pukekohe Park Raceway will be held in support of the Supercars Championship. Rounds 3, 4 and 5 are to be held with the Toyota Racing Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285940-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Namibia Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Namibia Premier League is the 29th season of the Namibia Premier League, the top-tier football league in Namibia. The season started on 9 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285941-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nashville Predators season\nThe 2018\u201319 Nashville Predators season was the 21st season for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on June 25, 1997. They entered the season as the defending Presidents' Trophy winners, which was won by the Tampa Bay Lightning on March 18, 2019. The Predators clinched a playoff spot on March 25, after a 1\u20130 win over the Minnesota Wild. They were later defeated by the Dallas Stars in six games in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285941-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nashville Predators season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was released on June 21, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 72], "content_span": [73, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285941-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nashville Predators 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 72], "content_span": [73, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285941-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nashville Predators season, Schedule and results, Playoffs\nThe Predators faced the Dallas Stars in the First Round of the playoffs, and were defeated in six games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285941-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nashville Predators season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Predators. Stats reflect time with the Predators only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Predators only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285941-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nashville Predators season, Transactions\nThe Predators have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285941-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nashville Predators season, Draft picks\nBelow are the Nashville Predators' selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285942-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National Basketball League (Bulgaria) season\nThe 2018\u201319 National Basketball League (Bulgaria) season was the 78th season of the Bulgarian NBL. Balkan Botevgrad won its fifth national title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285942-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National Basketball League (Bulgaria) season, Teams\nThe same nine teams of the previous seasons repeated participation in the 2018\u201319 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 59], "content_span": [60, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285942-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National Basketball League (Bulgaria) season, Regular season\nIn the regular season, teams play against each other three times home-and-away in a double round-robin format. The eight first qualified teams advance to the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 68], "content_span": [69, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285943-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National Basketball League (England) season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 47th edition of the National Basketball League of England. Solent Kestrels won their 1st league title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285944-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National Cricket League\nThe 2018\u201319 National Cricket League was the twentieth edition of the National Cricket League (NCL), a first-class cricket competition that was held in Bangladesh. The tournament started on 1 October 2018, with eight teams placed into two tiers. Khulna Division were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285944-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National Cricket League\nThe opening round of matches saw a total of thirteen centuries made by twelve different batsman, the first time this had happened at the start of a cricket tournament in Bangladesh. Round four of the tournament produced the two narrowest victories in the history of the NCL, with Sylhet Division winning their match against Dhaka Metropolis by three runs, and Rangpur Division beating Barisal Division by five runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285944-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National Cricket League\nRajshahi Division won the tournament, to claim their sixth title in the competition, after beating Barisal Division by six wickets in the final round of matches. In Tier 2, Dhaka Division were promoted for the next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285945-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National First Division\nThe 2018\u201319 National First Division was the season from August 2018 to May 2019 of South Africa's second tier of professional soccer, the National First Division. Stellenbosch FC were crowned champions on the final day, following a 0\u20130 draw with Maccabi FC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285946-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League\nThe 2018\u201319 National League season, known as the Vanarama National League for sponsorship reasons, was the fourth season under English football's new title of National League, fifteenth season consisting of three divisions and the fortieth season overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285946-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League, National League, Promotion and relegation\nDespite a 2\u20131 defeat to Boston United on 21 April 2018, Salford City became 2017\u201318 National League North champions after Harrogate Town lost 3\u20131 to Bradford Park Avenue. Havant & Waterlooville were crowned 2017\u201318 National League South champions on 28 April 2018 after a 3\u20132 victory over Concord Rangers. On 13 May 2018, Harrogate Town were promoted after a 3\u20130 win against Brackley Town in the 2017\u201318 National League North playoff final. All three teams will play in the National League for the first time in their History. On the same day as Harrogate's promotion, Braintree Town were also promoted after beating Hampton & Richmond 4\u20133 on penalties after a 1\u20131 draw in the 2017\u201318 National League South playoff final, securing an instant return to the National League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 66], "content_span": [67, 839]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285946-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League, National League, Promotion and relegation\nOn 24 April 2018, after 97 years as an EFL club, Chesterfield were relegated to the National League following Morecambe's 0\u20130 draw against Cambridge United. On 5 May 2018, despite a 3\u20130 victory against Chesterfield, Barnet became the second club to be relegated from League Two following Morecambe's 0\u20130 draw against Coventry City, ending their three-year stay in the EFL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 66], "content_span": [67, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285946-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League, National League, Promotion and relegation\nThese teams will replace Macclesfield Town, Tranmere Rovers, Chester, Guiseley, Torquay United and Woking. Macclesfield Town were crowned 2017\u201318 National League champions and promoted to League Two on 21 April 2018 after a 2\u20130 victory over Eastleigh, ending their six-year absence from the EFL. Tranmere Rovers were promoted to League Two on 12 May 2018 after a 2\u20131 victory over Boreham Wood in the playoff final and returned to the EFL after a three-year absence. Boreham Wood and Sutton United were invited to compete in the 2018\u201319 Scottish Challenge Cup in a new expansion of that competition as the highest-finishing remaining teams in the division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 66], "content_span": [67, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285946-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League, National League, Promotion and relegation\nChester were the first team to be relegated from National League on 8 April 2018 after a 2\u20130 loss to Tranmere Rovers. Despite staying up on the final day for the past two seasons, it was not to be third time lucky for Guiseley who joined them on 17 April 2018 after a 1\u20130 loss to relegation rivals Barrow. Torquay United became the third team to be relegated from the National league on 21 April 2018 after a 1\u20131 draw with Hartlepool United, confirming the club's first ever relegation to the Sixth Tier. The fourth and final team to suffer relegation was Woking, who were relegated on 28 April 2018 following a 2\u20131 defeat to Dover Athletic, ending their five-year stay in the National League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 66], "content_span": [67, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285946-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League, National League, Monthly awards\nEach month the Vanarama National League announces their official Player of the Month and Manager of the Month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285946-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League, National League, Team of the Season\nAt the end of the season, the National League announced its official team of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 60], "content_span": [61, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285946-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League, National League North, Monthly awards\nEach month the Vanarama National League North announces their official Player of the Month and Manager of the Month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 62], "content_span": [63, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285946-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League, National League South, Monthly awards\nEach month the Vanarama National League South announces their official Player of the Month and Manager of the Month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 62], "content_span": [63, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285946-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League, Step 3 Super Playoffs\nWith the introduction of a new division at Step 3 of the National League System, an altered promotion playoff process was implemented for the 2018\u201319 season for clubs to reach the National Leagues North and South for the 2019\u201320 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 46], "content_span": [47, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285946-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League, Step 3 Super Playoffs\nAs per prior seasons, 3 teams were relegated each from the North and South leaving 6 vacancies to fill. Each of the winners of the four Step 3 leagues were automatically promoted to the National Leagues North & South for 2019\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 46], "content_span": [47, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285946-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League, Step 3 Super Playoffs\nEach of the four leagues ran a playoff involving the teams finishing from second to fifth. The winners of these playoffs proceeded to the Super Playoffs. The playoff winners are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 46], "content_span": [47, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285946-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League, Step 3 Super Playoffs\nThe winners of the following two fixtures will be promoted:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 46], "content_span": [47, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285947-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 1\nThe 2018\u201319 National League 1, known for sponsorship reasons as the SSE National League 1, is the tenth season of the third tier of the English rugby union system, since the professionalised format of the second tier RFU Championship was introduced; and is the 32nd season since league rugby began in 1987.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285947-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 1\nThe league was one of the most competitive for years, with promotion and relegation not decided until the last round. In terms of the championship, at one point it looked like four teams could go on to win it, but in the end it was a two horse race between Ampthill and Old Elthamians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285947-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 1\nThe real decider was when Ampthill won 36-6 at home over Old Elthamians on 3 March 2019, but they still had to keep their head for the remaining five games as Old Elthamians pushed them all the way, eventually claiming the title on 27 April 2019 when they won 52-20 away to Loughborough Students. Ampthill would be promoted to the 2019\u201320 RFU Championship - the highest level the club had reached - where they could enjoy derby games at Bedford Blues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285947-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 1\nThe relegation battle was also hotly contested, with all three sides going down on the last day of the season. Loughborough Students had barely escaped relegation the previous year but after a poor first half of the season, they started to rally and gain some victories, helped by their try bonus record which was one of the best in the league, and looked at one point that they might do it yet again. However, defeats in their last two games against Plymouth Albion and champions, Ampthill, condemned them to the drop as the bottom ranked side in the division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285947-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 1\nThey were joined by Esher (15th), who went down despite a valiant win away to Blackheath, and Caldy (14th), who were relegated after losing to Birmingham Moseley, finishing just 2 points shy of 13th place Cambridge, who had an excellent away win to Sale FC to thank for keeping them up. Loughborough and Caldy would drop to the 2019\u201320 National League 2 North while Esher would fall to the 2019\u201320 National League 2 South. For Esher demotion to level 4 will make it the lowest level they have played at since the 1999-00 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285947-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 1, Structure\nThe league consists of sixteen teams with all the teams playing each other on a home and away basis to make a total of thirty matches each. There is one promotion place with the champions promoted to the Greene King IPA Championship. There are usually three relegation places with the bottom three teams relegated to either National League 2 North or National League 2 South depending on the geographical location of the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285947-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 1, Structure\nThe results of the matches contribute points to the league as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285947-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 1, Participating teams and locations\nTwelve of the sixteen teams participated in the preceding season's competition. The 2017\u201318 champions, Coventry, were promoted to the 2018\u201319 RFU Championship, swapping places with bottom club, Rotherham Titans, who were relegated from the 2017\u201318 RFU Championship. Sides relegated from the 2017\u201318 National League 1 included Fylde and Hull Ionians (both National League 2 North) and Old Albanian (National League 2 South).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285947-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 1, Participating teams and locations\nTeams promoted into the division include Cinderford and Sale FC, champions of 2017\u201318 National League 2 South and 2017\u201318 National League 2 North respectively, along with south runners up Chinnor who defeated the north's Sedgley Park in the promotion play-off. Cinderford are returning to National League 1 after an absence of two seasons, while Sale FC and Chinnor are both playing at the highest league level in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285947-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 1, Season records, Team\n59 \u2013 7 Ampthill at home to Caldy on 23 February 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285947-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 1, Season records, Team\n69 \u2013 29 Old Elthamians away to Loughborough Students on 2 February 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285947-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 1, Season records, Team\n69 \u2013 29 Old Elthamians away to Loughborough Students on 2 February 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285947-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 1, Season records, Team\nOld Elthamians away to Loughborough Students on 2 February 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285947-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 1, Season records, Team\nOld Elthamians away to Loughborough Students on 2 February 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285947-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 1, Season records, Team\nRotherham Titans at home to Rosslyn Park on 15 September 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285947-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 1, Season records, Team\nEsher away to Bishop's Stortford on 13 October 2018Sale FC at home to Rosslyn Park on 20 October 2018Birmingham Moseley at home to Cambridge on 15 December 2018Darlington Mowden Park at home to Cinderford on 15 December 2018Sale FC away to Esher on 30 March 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285947-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 1, Season records, Attendances\nPlymouth Albion at home to Birmingham Moseley on 30 March 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285947-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 1, Season records, Attendances\nOld Elthamians at home to Caldy on 1 December 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285947-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 1, Season records, Player\nJames Williams for Birmingham Moseley at home to Sale FC on 27 October 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285947-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 1, Season records, Player\nAdam Caves for Birmingham Moseley at home to Rotherham Titans on 22 September 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285947-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 1, Season records, Player\nTom White for Old Elthamians away to Loughborough Students on 2 February 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285947-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 1, Season records, Player\nAlex Dolly for Rotherham Titans at home to Rosslyn Park on 15 September 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285947-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 1, Season records, Player\nOwen Waters for Esher away to Bishop's Stortford on 13 October 2018 Chris Johnson for Sale FC at home to Rosslyn Park on 20 October 2018 Sam Hollingsworth for Birmingham Moseley at home to Cambridge on 15 December 2018 Warren Seals for Darlington Mowden Park at home to Cinderford on 15 December 2018 Emiliano Calle Rivas for Sale FC away to Esher on 30 March 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285948-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 North\nThe 2018\u201319 National League 2 North is the tenth season (32nd overall) of the fourth tier (north) of the English domestic rugby union competitions since the professionalised format of the second division was introduced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285948-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 North\nHull Ionians finished as champions following a bonus point home victory Leicester Lions on 13 April 2019, which sealed the league title with one round still to go. It was Ionians third National League 2 North title, equalling the record set by Macclesfield. It was a competitive league battle, with four teams looking like they could win but in the end Hull Ionians just did enough to claim the title, 4 points ahead of second placed Chester, who qualified for the promotion play-off. On 4 May 2019, Chester lost 10\u201319 away to National League 2 South runners up, Canterbury. That result meant that only Ionians would be promoted from the division, joining the 2019\u201320 National League 1 after just one season away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285948-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 North\nAt the other end of the table, newcomers Peterborough Lions were the first side to be relegated on 9 March 2019, with five games still to play, after they lost at home to Preston Grasshoppers. A week later a win for Sheffield Tigers on 6 April ensured the Sheffield based clubs safety, whilst condemning both Macclesfield and South Leicester to the drop, despite South Leicester winning their fixture away from home. Peterborough Lions and South Leicester would drop into Midlands Premier, while Macclesfield would fall to North Premier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285948-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 North\nAnother interesting fact from the season was the lowest ever recorded attendance in National League 2 North of just 37 who attended South Leicester's home game against Sedgley Park on 30 March 2019. South Leicester also set an overall low attendance record for the division, averaging just 85 supporters per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285948-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 North, Structure\nThe league consists of sixteen teams with all the teams playing each other on a home and away basis to make a total of thirty matches each. There is one automatic promotion place, one play-off place and three relegation places. The champions are promoted to the 2019\u201320 National League 1 and the runners up play the second-placed team in the 2018\u201319 National League 2 South with the winner also being promoted. The last three teams are relegated to either North Premier or Midlands Premier depending on the geographical location of the team (in some cases teams may join the southern regional leagues).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285948-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 North, Structure\nThe results of the matches contribute points to the league as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285948-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 North, Participating teams and locations\nTwelve of the teams listed below participated in the 2017\u201318 National League 2 North season. The 2017\u201318 champions Sale FC were promoted into the 2018\u201319 National League 1, replacing Fylde and Hull Ionians who were relegated from the 2017\u201318 National League 1. The three teams relegated from National League 2 North the previous season were Sheffield and Luctonians (both Midlands Premier) and Blaydon (North Premier).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285948-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 North, Participating teams and locations\nThe promoted teams include Preston Grasshoppers from North Premier (champions) who return to the division after an absence of just one season, while Peterborough Lions came up from Midlands Premier (playoffs). Midlands Premier champions Birmingham & Solihull were level transferred to the 2018\u201319 National League 2 South due to an imbalance of teams, being considered the most southerly team in the division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285948-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 North, Promotion play-off\nEach season, the runners-up in the National League 2 North and National League 2 South participate in a play-off for promotion to National League 1. Canterbury were runners up in the 2018\u201319 National League 2 South, and because they had a better record than the 2018\u201319 National League 2 North runners up, Chester, they host the play-off match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285948-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 North, Season records, Team\n91 \u2013 24 Huddersfield at home to\tSouth Leicester on 23 March 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285948-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 North, Season records, Team\n59 \u2013 12 Fylde away to South Leicester on 9 March 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285948-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 North, Season records, Team\n91 \u2013 24 Huddersfield at home to\tSouth Leicester on 23 March 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285948-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 North, Season records, Team\nHuddersfield at home to\tSouth Leicester on 23 March 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285948-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 North, Season records, Team\nHuddersfield at home to South Leicester on 23 March 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285948-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 North, Season records, Team\nHull Ionians at home to Peterborough Lions on 15 September 2018Hull Ionians at home to Macclesfield on 8 December 2018Huddersfield away to Preston Grasshoppers on 5 January 2019Huddersfield away to Hinckley on 16 February 2019Huddersfield at home to Wharfedale on 23 February 2019Preston Grasshoppers at home to Tynedale on 2 March 2019Stourbridge away to Preston Grasshoppers on 6 April 2019Huddersfield away to Sedgley Park on 27 April 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285948-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 North, Season records, Attendances\nFylde at home to Preston Grasshoppers on 22 December 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285948-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 North, Season records, Attendances\nSouth Leicester at home to Sedgley Park on 30 March 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285948-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 North, Season records, Player\nChris Johnson for Huddersfield at home to South Leicester on 23 March 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285948-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 North, Season records, Player\nJamie Broadley for Sheffield Tigers at home to Macclesfield on 3 November 2018 Callum Dacey for Hinckley at home to Chester on 23 February 2019 David Rundle for Stourbridge at home to Huddersfield on 9 March 2019 Myles Hall for Macclesfield at home to Peterborough Lions on 23 March 2019 Kian Stewart for Huddersfield at home to South Leicester on 23 March 2019 Henri Packard for Sheffield Tigers at home to Peterborough Lions on 6 April 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285948-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 North, Season records, Player\nChris Johnson for Huddersfield at home to South Leicester on 23 March 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285948-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 North, Season records, Player\nMark Ireland for Sheffield Tigers away to Fylde on 29 September 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285948-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 North, Season records, Player\nSam Crane for Hull Ionians at home to Peterborough Lions on 15 September 2018 Morgan Bunting for Hull Ionians at home to Macclesfield on 8 December 2018 Chris Johnson for Huddersfield away to Preston Grasshoppers on 5 January 2019 Chris Johnson for Huddersfield away to Hinckley on 16 February 2019 Chris Johnson for Huddersfield at home to Wharfedale on 23 February 2019 Thomas Davidson for Preston Grasshoppers at home to Tynedale on 2 March 2019 Chris Scott for Stourbridge away to Preston Grasshoppers on 6 April 2019 Chris Johnson for Huddersfield away to Sedgley Park on 27 April 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285949-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 South\nThe 2018\u201319 National League 2 South is the tenth season (32nd overall) of the fourth tier (south) of the English domestic rugby union competitions since the professionalised format of the second division was introduced. At the end of the season, Rams became champions when they won away to Clifton on 6 April 2019, sealing promotion with two games to go. It was a fitting reward for the Berkshire club, who were by far the strongest side in the division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285949-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 South\nThe runners up were Canterbury who claimed second spot after beating off stiff competition from the likes of Tonbridge Juddians and Henley Hawks. Despite finishing 21 points behind Rams, Canterbury's league results were still strong enough to enough to book a home promotion playoff against National League 2 North runners up, Chester. On 4 May 2019, Canterbury defeated Chester 19\u201310 to join Rams in the 2019\u201320 National League 1. For both clubs, National League 1 is the highest level they have ever reached since the leagues began back in 1987.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285949-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 South\nAt the other end of the table, London Irish Wild Geese became the first team to be relegated after they suffered a heavy loss away to Henley Hawks on 30 March 2019. They were followed a week later by league newcomers Guernsey, who also went down after just one season, following a heavy defeat away to Henley on 6 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285949-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 South\nOne week later still, Birmingham & Solihull became the third and final team to go down with one round still to play after they lost away to champions, Rams, on 13 April 2019, with a try bonus not enough to keep them up due to results elsewhere. London Irish Wild Geese and Guernsey will drop into London & South East Premier, while Birmingham & Solihull, who had initially been supposed to drop to Midlands Premier, decided to become an amateur club and drop out of the league system altogether.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285949-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 South\nA final point of note was Worthing's Matthew McLean, who once again finished as the league's top scorer \u2013 this time for a record-breaking 3rd time. McLean scored 341 points, including 22 tries \u2013 an outstanding total for a Worthing side that finished 9th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285949-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 South, Structure\nThe league consists of sixteen teams with all the teams playing each other on a home and away basis to make a total of thirty matches each. There is one automatic promotion place, one play-off place and three relegation places. The champions are promoted to the 2019\u201320 National League 1 and the runners-up play the second-placed team in the 2018\u201319 National League 2 North with the winner being promoted. The last three teams are relegated to either London & South East Premier or South West Premier depending on the geographical location of the team (in some cases teams may join the Midlands regional leagues).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285949-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 South, Structure\nThe results of the matches contribute points to the league as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285949-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 South, Participating teams and locations\nEleven of the teams listed below participated in the 2017\u201318 National League 2 South season. The 2017\u201318 champions Cinderford and play-off winners Chinnor, who won the promotion play-off against Sedgley Park, were promoted into the 2018\u201319 National League 1, while Old Albanian were relegated into the division from the 2017\u201318 National League 1. Sides relegated from the 2017\u201318 National League 2 South included Broadstreet (to Midlands Premier), Wimbledon (London & South East Premier) and Barnstaple (South West Premier).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285949-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 South, Participating teams and locations\nThe promoted teams are Dings Crusaders who finished as champions of South West Premier while Barnes (champions) and Guernsey (play-off) came up from London & South East Premier. Birmingham & Solihull were also included from the division when they were level transferred from National League 2 North having been promoted as champions of Midlands Premier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285949-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 South, Participating teams and locations\nThey were transferred to address an imbalance of teams in National League 2 caused by both Cinderford and Chinnor being promoted, with only Old Albanian dropping down to the south, and as the most southerly club in the northern division, Birmingham & Solihull were deemed the most suitable for a level transfer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285949-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 South, Promotion play-off\nEach season, the runners-up in the National League 2 North and National League 2 South participate in a play-off for promotion to National League 1. Canterbury were runners up in the 2018\u201319 National League 2 South, and because they had a better record than the 2018\u201319 National League 2 North runners up, Chester, they host the play-off match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285949-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 South, Season records, Team\n56 \u2013 0 Old Albanian at home to London Irish Wild Geese on 8 December 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285949-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 South, Season records, Team\n61 \u2013 5 Old Albanian away to London Irish Wild Geese on 6 April 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285949-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 South, Season records, Team\n70 \u2013 26\tBury St Edmunds at home to Guernsey on 15 September 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285949-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 South, Season records, Team\nBury St Edmunds at home to Guernsey on 15 September 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285949-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 South, Season records, Team\nWorthing Raiders at home to Redruth on 15 September 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285949-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 South, Season records, Team\nTonbridge Juddians at home Old Redcliffians on 3 November 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285949-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 South, Season records, Team\nOld Albanian away to Barnes on 15 September 2018Clifton away to Canterbury on 20 October 2018Old Redcliffians away to Redruth on 15 December 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285949-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 South, Season records, Attendances\nHenley Hawks at home to Rams on 5 January 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285949-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 South, Season records, Attendances\nOld Redcliffians at home to Worthing Raiders on 8 December 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285949-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 South, Season records, Player\nDaniel Watt for Old Albanian away to London Irish Wild Geese on 6 April 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285949-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 South, Season records, Player\nHenry Bird for Old Redcliffians at home to Guernsey on 17 November 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285949-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 South, Season records, Player\nMatthew McLean for Worthing Raiders at home to Redruth on 15 September 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285949-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 South, Season records, Player\nWill Robinson for Tonbridge Juddians at home to Old Redcliffians on 3 November 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285949-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National League 2 South, Season records, Player\nTom Bednall for Old Albanian away to Barnes on 15 September 2018 Bradley Barnes for Clifton away to Canterbury on 20 October 2018 Kieran Hill for Old Redcliffians away to Redruth on 15 December 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285950-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 National Premier League is the 45th season of the National Premier League, the top division football competition in Jamaica. The season began on 16 September 2018 and will end on 29 April 2019. Portmore United are the defending champions, having won their 6th title last season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285950-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National Premier League, Teams\nSandals South Coast FC and Boys' Town finished 11th and 12th in last season's competition and were relegated to their respective regional Super Leagues, the Western Super League and KSAFA Super League respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285950-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National Premier League, Teams\nAt the end of last season, the champions of the four Super Leagues participated in a promotion playoff double round robin tournament. Dunbeholden F.C. and Mount Pleasant Football Academy finished 1st and 2nd after the playoff and were promoted to the National Premier League for this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285950-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National Premier League, Playoffs, Results, Semifinals\nThe winners of these ties will qualify for the Caribbean Club Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285951-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National Premier Twenty20 Championships\nThe 2018\u201319 Fox Cricket National Premier Twenty20 Championships is an Australian Twenty20 cricket competition. This was the inaugural addition of the competition. It featured ten teams from the Premier Cricket Twenty20 competitions around Australia. It took place over two days on 5 and 6 March 2019. All matches took place in the Karen Rolton Oval precinct in Adelaide, South Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285951-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National Premier Twenty20 Championships, Teams, Qualification\nThe winners from the Australian Capital Territory, Northern Territory, Queensland, South Australian, Tasmanian and Western Australian Premier Cricket Twenty20 competitions qualified for this tournament. The finalists from the New South Wales and Victorian Premier Twenty20 competitions also qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 69], "content_span": [70, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285952-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National T20 Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 National T20 Cup was a Twenty20 domestic cricket competition that was played in Pakistan. It was the fifteenth season of the National T20 Cup in Pakistan, and was held from 10 to 25 December 2018 in Multan. Eight teams took part, with the top four teams progressing to the semi-finals. Lahore Blues were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285952-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National T20 Cup\nFollowing the conclusion of the group stage, Rawalpindi, Karachi Whites, Lahore Whites and Islamabad had all progressed to the semi-finals of the tournament. In the first semi-final, Rawalpindi beat Karachi Whites by six runs to progress to the final. They were joined in the final by Lahore Whites, who beat Islamabad by 88 runs in the second semi-final. In the final, Lahore Whites beat Rawalpindi by two wickets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285952-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National T20 Cup, Squads\nAhead of the tournament, the following players were selected. Each team picked 18 players, including two emerging players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285952-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 National T20 Cup, Fixtures\nThe Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) confirmed the fixtures for the tournament in December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285953-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Navotas Clutch season\nThe 2018\u201319 Navotas Clutch season is the 1st season of the franchise in the Maharlika Pilipinas Basketball League (MPBL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285954-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Navy Midshipmen men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Navy Midshipmen men's basketball team represented the United States Naval Academy during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Midshipmen were led by eighth-year head coach Ed DeChellis, and played their home games at Alumni Hall in Annapolis, Maryland as members of the Patriot League. They finished the season 12\u201319 overall, 8\u201310 in Patriot League play to finish in a tie for fifth place. As the No. 5 seed in the Patriot League Tournament, they advanced to the semifinals, where they were defeated by eventual tournament champion Colgate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285954-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Navy Midshipmen men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Midshipmen finished the 2017\u201318 season 20\u201312, 11\u20137 in Patriot League play to finish in a tie for third place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Patriot League Tournament to Holy Cross.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285955-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Navy Midshipmen women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Navy Midshipmen women's basketball team represents the United States Naval Academy during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Midshipmen, led by eleventh year head coach Stefanie Pemper, play their home games at Alumni Hall and were members of the Patriot League. They finished the season 10\u201318, 5\u201313 in Patriot League play to finish in a tie for eighth place. They lost in the first round of the Patriot League Women's Tournament to Holy Cross.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285956-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nebraska Cornhuskers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Nebraska Cornhuskers men's basketball team represented the University of Nebraska in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Cornhuskers were led by seventh-year coach head coach Tim Miles and played their home games at Pinnacle Bank Arena in Lincoln, Nebraska as members of the Big Ten Conference. They finished the season 19\u201317, 6\u201314 in Big Ten play to finish in 13th place. In the Big Ten Tournament, they defeated Rutgers and Maryland to advance to the quarterfinals where they lost to Wisconsin. They received an at-large bid to the National Invitation Tournament where they defeated Butler in the first round before losing to TCU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285956-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nebraska Cornhuskers men's basketball team\nOn March 26, 2019, Tim Miles was fired. Four days later, the school hired former Chicago Bulls' head coach Fred Hoiberg as the next head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285956-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nebraska Cornhuskers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Cornhuskers finished the 2017\u201318 season 2211, 13\u20135 in Big Ten play to finish in a tie for fourth place. As the No. 4 seed in the Big Ten Tournament, they lost in the quarterfinals to Michigan. Despite winning 13 Big Ten games, the Cornhuskers did not receive a bid to the NCAA Tournament, but did receive a bid to the National Invitation Tournament. However, they lost in the first round of the NIT to Mississippi State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285956-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nebraska Cornhuskers men's basketball team, Offseason, Departures\nOn March 27, 2018, junior guard James Palmer Jr. announced that he would declare for the NBA draft, but not sign with an agent. Junior forward Isaac Copeland also declared for the draft, but did not sign with an agent. Both chose to return to Nebraska for their senior seasons before the NBA Draft deadline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 73], "content_span": [74, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285956-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nebraska Cornhuskers men's basketball team, Offseason, 2018 Recruiting class\nFollowing the departure of Nebraska assistant coach Kenya Hunter in April, 2018, signee Xavier Johnson was granted a release from his Letter of Intent to Nebraska.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 84], "content_span": [85, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285956-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nebraska Cornhuskers men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nThe 2018\u201319 season marked the first time in Big Ten history that the teams will play a 20-game conference schedule, setting a precedent for all Division I basketball. The new schedule also included a regional component to increase the frequency of games among teams in similar areas. Over the course of a six-year cycle (12 playing opportunities), in-state rivals will play each other 12 times, regional opponents will play 10 times, and all other teams will play nine times. Three in-state series will be guaranteed home-and-homes: Illinois and Northwestern, Indiana and Purdue, and Michigan and Michigan State will always play twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 72], "content_span": [73, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285956-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nebraska Cornhuskers men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nThe Cornhuskers notably beat in state rival Creighton 94\u201375 in the 2018\u201319 season for the first time since the 2010\u201311 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 72], "content_span": [73, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285956-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nebraska Cornhuskers men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nNebraska again participated in the Gavitt Tipoff Games where they defeated Seton Hall. The Cornuskers also participated in the CBE Hall of Fame Classic on November 19 and 20, at the Sprint Center in Kansas City, Missouri. Fellow participants in the tournament included Missouri State, Texas Tech, and USC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 72], "content_span": [73, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285957-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nebraska Cornhuskers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Nebraska Cornhuskers women's basketball team represents the University of Nebraska during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Cornhuskers, led by 3rd year head coach Amy Williams, play their home games at Pinnacle Bank Arena and are a member of the Big Ten Conference. They finished the season 14\u201316, 11\u20135 in Big Ten play to finish in a 4 way for sixth place. They lost in the first round of the Big Ten Women's Tournament to Purdue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285958-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nedbank Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Nedbank Cup was the 2018\u201319 edition of South Africa's premier knockout club football (soccer) competition, the Nedbank Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285959-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Neftchi Baku PFK season\nThe Neftchi Baku 2018\u201319 season is Neftchi Baku's 27th Azerbaijan Premier League season. Neftchi will compete Azerbaijan Premier League and in the Azerbaijan Cup and Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285959-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Neftchi Baku PFK season, Season review\nOn 8 June, Roberto Bordin was announced as Neft\u00e7i's new manager on a two-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285959-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Neftchi Baku PFK season, Season review\nOn 12 June, Ruslan Ab\u0131\u015fov, Mahammad Mirzabeyov and Kyrylo Petrov all extended their contract with Neftchi Baku.| 2020", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285959-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Neftchi Baku PFK season, Season review\nOn 17 June, Bagaliy Dabo signed a two-year contract with Neft\u00e7i Baku.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285959-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Neftchi Baku PFK season, Season review\nOn 24 June, Neftchi Baku signed Goran Paracki on a two-year contract from Wellington Phoenix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285959-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Neftchi Baku PFK season, Season review\nOn 27 June, Rahman Hajiyev signed a new contract with Neftchi Baku, until the summer of 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285959-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Neftchi Baku PFK season, Season review\nOn 29 June, Neftchi Baku announced the signing of Kwame Karikari from Al-Arabi on a two-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285959-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Neftchi Baku PFK season, Season review\nOn 1 July, Soni Mustivar and Anton Krivotsyuk both signed a one-year extension to their contracts, keeping them at Neftchi Baku until the summer of 2020. The following day, 2 July, Namik Alaskarov also extended his contract until the summer of 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285959-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Neftchi Baku PFK season, Season review\nOn 8 December, Neftchi announced the signing of Mamadou Mbodj on a 2.5-year contract from FK \u017dalgiris, and a three-year contract with Mamadou Kane. On 20 December, Rashad Eyyubov had his contract terminated by mutual consent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285959-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Neftchi Baku PFK season, Season review\nOn 3 January, Neftchi announce the signing of Turan Valizada from Fenerbah\u00e7e on a three-year contract. 4 days later, 7 January, Agil Mammadov returned to Neftchi Baku from Gabala for his third stint with the club, signing an 18-month contract. On 23 January, Vangelis Platellas joined from OFI Crete on an 18-month contract. Slavko Brali\u0107 had his contract with Neftchi Baku by mutual agreement on 30 January 2019, whilst on the same day D\u00e1rio moved to Daegu. On 2 February, Gianluca Sansone signed a 1.5-year contract with Neftchi Baku.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285959-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Neftchi Baku PFK season, Season review\nOn 15 February, Petru Racu signed on a contract until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285959-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Neftchi Baku PFK 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285959-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Neftchi Baku PFK 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285960-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I\nThe 2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (also known as 2018\u201319 OTP Bank Liga), also known as NB I, was the 120th season of top-tier football in Hungary. The league was officially named OTP Bank Liga for sponsorship reasons. Videoton were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285960-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I, Teams\nBalmaz\u00fajv\u00e1ros and Vasas finished the 2017\u201318 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I in the last two places and thus were relegated to NB II division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285960-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I, Teams\nThe two relegated teams were replaced with the top two teams in 2017\u201318 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g II, champion MTK and runner-up Kisv\u00e1rda, each having the required licence for top-division play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285960-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I, Teams, Stadium and locations\nFollowing is the list of clubs competed in the league this season, with their location, stadium and stadium capacity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285960-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I, Teams, Personnel and kits\nAll teams are obligated to have the logo of the league sponsor OTP Bank as well as the Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I logo on the right sleeve of their shirt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285960-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285960-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I, Average attendances\nSource: Notes:1: Played last season in NB/II.2: MOL Vidi played five games at Pancho Ar\u00e9na before the opening of the S\u00f3st\u00f3i Stadion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285961-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's handball)\nThe 2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (known as the K&H f\u00e9rfi k\u00e9zilabda liga for sponsorship reasons) is the 68th season of the Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I, Hungarian premier Handball league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285961-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's handball), Team information\nAs in the previous season, 14 teams played in the 2018\u201319 season. After the 2017\u201318 season, V\u00e1ci KSE and Orosh\u00e1zi FKSE were relegated to the 2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/B. They were replaced by two clubs from the 2017\u201318 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/B; Mez\u0151k\u00f6vesdi KC and Vecs\u00e9s SE.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 62], "content_span": [63, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285961-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's handball), Team information, Personnel and kits\nFollowing is the list of clubs competing in 2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I, with their president, head coach, kit manufacturer and shirt sponsor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 82], "content_span": [83, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285961-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's handball), League table, Schedule and results\nIn the table below the home teams are listed on the left and the away teams along the top.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 80], "content_span": [81, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285961-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's handball), Season statistics, Attendances\nUpdated to games played on 19 May 2019. Source: Attendance numbers without Final matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 76], "content_span": [77, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285962-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's handball)\nThe 2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (known as the K&H n\u0151i k\u00e9zilabda liga for sponsorship reasons) is the 68th season of the Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I, Hungarian premier Handball league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285962-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's handball), Team information\nAs in the previous season, 14 teams played in the 2018\u201319 season. After the 2017\u201318 season, Kecskem\u00e9ti NKSE and Vasas SC were relegated to the 2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/B. They were replaced by two clubs from the 2017\u201318 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/B; Eszterh\u00e1zy SC and Mosonmagyar\u00f3v\u00e1ri KC SE.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 64], "content_span": [65, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285962-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's handball), Team information, Personnel and kits\nFollowing is the list of clubs competing in 2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I, with their president, head coach, kit manufacturer and shirt sponsor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285962-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's handball), League table, Schedule and results\nIn the table below the home teams are listed on the left and the away teams along the top.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 82], "content_span": [83, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285962-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's handball), Season statistics, Attendances\nUpdated to games played on 18 May 2019. Source: Attendance numbers without playoff matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 78], "content_span": [79, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285963-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/A (men's basketball)\nThe 2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/A (in English: National Championship I/A) was the 88th season of the Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/A, the highest professional basketball league in Hungary. Szolnoki Olaj was the defending champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285963-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/A (men's basketball)\nThe season ended on 21 June 2019, when Falco Vulcano won its second national championship after sweeping Egis K\u00f6rmend in the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285963-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/A (men's basketball), Teams\nThe following 14 clubs compete in the NB I/A during the 2018\u201319 season. TF Budapest was promoted to this season as champions from the Hungarian 2018\u201319 NB I/B. MAFC left the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 55], "content_span": [56, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285963-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/A (men's basketball), 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, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285963-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/A (men's basketball), Playoffs, Quarter-finals\nIn the quarterfinals, teams playing against each other had to win three games to win the series. Thus, if one team wins three games before all five games have been played, the games that remain are omitted. The team that finished in the higher regular season place, played the first, third and the fifth (if it was necessary) games of the series at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 74], "content_span": [75, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285963-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/A (men's basketball), Playoffs, Semi-finals\nIn the semifinals, teams playing against each other had to win three games to win the series. Thus, if one team wins three games before all five games have been played, the games that remain are omitted. The team that finished in the higher regular season place, played the first, third and the fifth (if it was necessary) games of the series at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 71], "content_span": [72, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285963-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/A (men's basketball), Playoffs, Finals\nIn the finals, teams playing against each other had to win three games to win the title. Thus, if one team won three games before all five games were played, the remaining games were omitted. The team that finished in the higher regular season place, played the first, the third, and the fifth (if it was necessary) games of the series at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 66], "content_span": [67, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285963-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/A (men's basketball), Playoffs, Third place\nIn the series for the third place, teams playing against each other had to win two games to win the 3rd place in the final rankings of the season. Thus, if one team won two games before all three games had been played, the remaining games were omitted. The team that finished in the higher regular season place, played the first and the third (if it was necessary) games of the series at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 71], "content_span": [72, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285963-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/A (men's basketball), Playout\nHigher ranked team hosted Game 1 plus Game 3 if necessary. The lower ranked hosted Game 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 57], "content_span": [58, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285964-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/A (women's basketball)\nThe 2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/A (transl. National Championship I/A) is the 82nd season of the Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/A, the highest professional basketball league in Hungary. Sopron Basket is the defending champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285964-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/A (women's basketball), Teams\nThe following 12 clubs compete in the NB I/A during the 2018\u201319 season. NKE-Csata was promoted to this season as champions from the Hungarian 2018\u201319 NB I/B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 57], "content_span": [58, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285964-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/A (women's basketball), 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, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285964-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/A (women's basketball), Playoffs, Quarter-finals\nIn the quarterfinals, teams playing against each other had to win two games to win the series. Thus, if one team wins three games before all five games have been played, the games that remain are omitted. The team that finished in the higher regular season place, played the first, third (if it was necessary) games of the series at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 76], "content_span": [77, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285964-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/A (women's basketball), Playoffs, Semi-finals\nIn the semifinals, teams playing against each other had to win three games to win the series. Thus, if one team wins three games before all five games have been played, the games that remain are omitted. The team that finished in the higher regular season place, played the first, third (if it was necessary) games of the series at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 73], "content_span": [74, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285964-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/A (women's basketball), Playoffs, Finals\nIn the finals, teams playing against each other had to win three games to win the title. Thus, if one team won three games before all five games were played, the remaining games were omitted. The team that finished in the higher regular season place, played the first, the third, and the fifth (if it was necessary) games of the series at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 68], "content_span": [69, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285964-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/A (women's basketball), Playoffs, Third place\nIn the series for the third place, teams playing against each other had to win two games to win the 3rd place in the final rankings of the season. Thus, if one team won two games before all three games had been played, the remaining games were omitted. The team that finished in the higher regular season place, played the first and the third (if it was necessary) games of the series at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 73], "content_span": [74, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285965-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/B (men's handball)\nThe 2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/B is the 51st season of the Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/B, Hungary's second tier Handball league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285965-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/B (men's handball), Team information\nThere are 12\u201312 clubs in the 2 group, with three-three promoted teams from Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 64], "content_span": [65, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285965-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/B (men's handball), Team information, Arenas and locations, Western Group\nThe following 12 clubs compete in the NB I/B (Western) during the 2018\u201319 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 101], "content_span": [102, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285965-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/B (men's handball), Team information, Arenas and locations, Eastern Group\nThe following 12 clubs compete in the NB I/B (Eastern) during the 2018\u201319 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 101], "content_span": [102, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285966-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/B (women's handball)\nThe 2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/B is the 51st season of the Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/B, Hungary's second tier Handball league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285966-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/B (women's handball), Team information\nThere are 12\u201312 clubs in the 2 group, with three-three promoted teams from Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 66], "content_span": [67, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285966-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/B (women's handball), Team information, Arenas and locations, Western Group\nThe following 12 clubs compete in the NB I/B (Western) during the 2018\u201319 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 103], "content_span": [104, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285966-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I/B (women's handball), Team information, Arenas and locations, Eastern Group\nThe following 12 clubs compete in the NB I/B (Eastern) during the 2017\u201318 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 103], "content_span": [104, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285967-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g II\nThe 2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g II (also known as 2018\u201319 Merkantil Bank Liga) was Hungary's 68th season of the Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g II, the second tier of the Hungarian football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285968-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g III\nThe 2018\u201319 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-00285968-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g III\nOn 11 July 2018, the three groups of the new season was finalised.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285969-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nevada Wolf Pack men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Nevada Wolf Pack men's basketball team represented the University of Nevada, Reno during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Wolf Pack, led by fourth-year head coach Eric Musselman, played their home games at the Lawlor Events Center on their campus in Reno, Nevada as members of the Mountain West Conference (MW). They finished the season 29\u20135, 15\u20133 in Mountain West play to share the regular season Mountain West championship with Utah State. They defeated Boise State in the quarterfinals of the Mountain West Tournament before losing in the semifinals to San Diego State. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they lost in the First Round to Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285969-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nevada Wolf Pack men's basketball team\nOn April 7, head coach Eric Musselman resigned to become the head coach at Arkansas. He finished at Nevada with a four-year record of 110\u201334, three trips to the NCAA Tournament, and were champions of the 2016 College Basketball Invitational.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285969-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nevada Wolf Pack men's basketball team\nOn April 11, Nevada hired Steve Alford as their next head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285969-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nevada Wolf Pack men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Wolf Pack finished the season 29\u20138 overall and 15\u20133 in conference play to win the MW regular season championship. They defeated UNLV in the quarterfinals of the MW Tournament before losing in the semifinals to San Diego State. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they defeated Texas and Cincinnati to advance to the Sweet Sixteen where they lost to Loyola\u2013Chicago.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285969-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nevada Wolf Pack men's basketball team, Preseason\nAccording to ESPN journalist Jeff Borzello, this season's Wolf Pack team \"has high-level talent throughout its roster\", later adding, \"There might not be a team in the country with more college-proven depth than Nevada.\" The team returns three players who earned all-conference recognition last season\u2014first-team members Jordan Caroline and Caleb Martin and second-team member Cody Martin, with Caleb Martin also having been named Player of the Year by MW coaches. Additionally, six transfers who averaged at least 13 points per game in their immediately previous seasons of college play will become eligible this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 57], "content_span": [58, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285969-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nevada Wolf Pack men's basketball team, Preseason\nAt the conference's media days in Las Vegas, Caroline and the Martin twins were named as preseason first-team all-conference picks for 2018\u201319, with Caleb Martin picked as the preseason Player of the Year. Jordan Brown, who headed the Pack's 2018 recruiting class, was named preseason Freshman of the Year. The Pack were also the overwhelming choice for the MW regular-season title, receiving all but one of the possible first-place votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 57], "content_span": [58, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285969-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nevada Wolf Pack men's basketball team, Rankings\n*AP does not release post-NCAA Tournament rankings^Coaches did not release a Week 2 poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 56], "content_span": [57, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285970-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nevada Wolf Pack women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Nevada Wolf Pack women's basketball team will represent the University of Nevada, Reno during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Wolf Pack, led by second year head coach Amanda Levens, play their home games at the Lawlor Events Center and were members of the Mountain West Conference. They finished the season 12\u201319, 7\u201311 in Mountain West play to finish in a tie for seventh place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the Mountain West Women's Tournament where they lost to Boise State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285971-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Hampshire Wildcats men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 New Hampshire Wildcats men's basketball team represented the University of New Hampshire in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at the Lundholm Gym in Durham, New Hampshire and were led by 14th-year head coach Bill Herrion. They finished the season 5\u201324 overall, 3\u201313 in conference play to finish in a tie for eighth place. They failed to qualify for the 2019 America East Men's Basketball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285971-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Hampshire Wildcats men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Wildcats finished the 2017\u201318 season 10\u201321, 6\u201310 in the America East Conference play to finish in a tie for sixth place. In the America East Tournament, they lost to Hartford in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285972-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Hampshire Wildcats women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 New Hampshire Wildcats women's basketball team represents the University of New Hampshire during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Wildcats, led by ninth-year head coach Maureen Magarity, play their home games in Lundholm Gym and are members of the America East Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285972-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Hampshire Wildcats women's basketball team, Media\nAll non-televised home games and conference road games stream on either ESPN3 or AmericaEast.tv. Select home games air on Fox College Sports, Live Well Network, or WBIN. Most road games stream on the opponent's website. All conference home games and select non-conference home games are broadcast on the radio on WPKX, WGIR and online on the .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 61], "content_span": [62, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285973-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Jersey Devils season\nThe 2018\u201319 New Jersey Devils season was the 45th season for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on June 11, 1974, and 37th season since the franchise relocated from Colorado prior to the 1982\u201383 NHL season. The Devils were eliminated from playoff contention on March 15, 2019, despite defeating the Vancouver Canucks. After missing the playoffs, the Devils received the first overall selection in the 2019 NHL Entry Draft, which was the second time in three years for the team, and selected Jack Hughes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285973-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Jersey Devils season, Schedule and results, Preseason\nNotes: Indicates split-squad. Game was played at PostFinance Arena in Bern, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285973-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Jersey Devils season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was released on June 21, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285973-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Jersey Devils season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nLegend:\u00a0\u00a0Win (2 points)\u00a0\u00a0Loss (0 points)\u00a0\u00a0Overtime/shootout loss (1 point)Notes: Game was played at Scandinavium in Gothenburg, Sweden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285973-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Jersey Devils season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\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, 64], "content_span": [65, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285973-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Jersey Devils season, Transactions\nThe Devils have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285973-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Jersey Devils season, Draft picks\nBelow are the New Jersey Devils' selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285974-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Mexico Lobos men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 New Mexico Lobos men's basketball team represented the University of New Mexico during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Lobos were led by second-year head coach Paul Weir. They played their home games at Dreamstyle Arena, more commonly known as The Pit, in Albuquerque, New Mexico as members of the Mountain West Conference. They finished the season 14\u201318, 7\u201311 in Mountain West play to finish in a three-way tie for seventh place. They defeated Wyoming in the first round of the Mountain West Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Utah State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285974-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Mexico Lobos men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Lobos finished the season 19\u201315, 12\u20136 in Mountain West play to finish in third place. They defeated Wyoming and Utah State to advance to the championship game of the Mountain West Tournament where they lost to San Diego State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285975-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Mexico Lobos women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 New Mexico Lobos women's basketball team represented the University of New Mexico during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Lobos, led by third year head coach Mike Bradbury. They played their home games at Dreamstyle Arena and were a member of the Mountain West Conference. They finished the season 24\u20137, 14\u20134 in Mountain West play to finish in second place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Mountain West Conference Women's Basketball Tournament to San Diego State. They received an automatic bid to the Women's National Invitation Tournament where they got upset by Denver in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285976-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Mexico State Aggies men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 New Mexico State Aggies men's basketball team represents New Mexico State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Aggies, led by second-year head coach Chris Jans, play their home games at the Pan American Center in Las Cruces, New Mexico as members of the Western Athletic Conference. They finished the regular season 27-4 and 15\u20131 in WAC play to win the WAC regular season championship. In the WAC Tournament, they defeated Chicago State, Texas\u2013Rio Grande Valley, and Grand Canyon to become WAC Tournament champions. They received the WAC's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament, where they lost in the first round to Auburn. They also set a school record for wins in a season and won 30 games for the first time in team history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 831]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285976-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Mexico State Aggies men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Aggies finished the 2017\u201318 season 28\u20136, 12\u20132 in WAC play to win the WAC regular season championship. In the WAC Tournament, they defeated Chicago State, Seattle, and Grand Canyon to become WAC Tournament champions. They received the WAC's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament where they lost in the First Round to Clemson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285977-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Mexico State Aggies women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 New Mexico State Aggies women's basketball team represented New Mexico State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Aggies, led by second year head coach Brooke Atkinson, played their home games at the Pan American Center and are members of the Western Athletic Conference. They finished the season 26\u20137, 15\u20131 in WAC play to win the regular season WAC championship. They defeated Chicago State, UMKC and Texas\u2013Rio Grande Valley to be champions of the WAC Women's Tournament. They received an automatic bid to the NCAA Women's Tournament where they lost in the first round to Iowa State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285978-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Orleans Pelicans season\nThe 2018\u201319 New Orleans Pelicans season was the 17th season of the New Orleans Pelicans franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285978-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Orleans Pelicans season\nThis season also marked the highest number of points scored in a game for the New Orleans franchise, with a franchise-high 149 points scored in their second game of the season on an October 19, 2018 win over the Sacramento Kings. However, the season also produced plenty of turmoil for the team through the surprising departure of DeMarcus Cousins to the Golden State Warriors in free agency, Anthony Davis announcing trade demands that ultimately were not met during this season, and the firing of general manager Dell Demps during the 2019 NBA All-Star Weekend. All of this would lead the Pelicans to another losing season with Davis on the team, with a 138\u2013136 overtime loss to the Phoenix Suns on March 16, ultimately eliminating them from playoff contention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 799]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285978-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Orleans Pelicans season\nOn May 14, 2019, after the conclusion of this season, the Pelicans won the top draft choice, making it the second time they won the lottery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285978-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Orleans Pelicans season\nAlso, this season marked the end of the Anthony Davis era in New Orleans, as he was traded to the Los Angeles Lakers on July 6, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285978-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Orleans Pelicans season, Player statistics\nAfter all games. \u2021Waived during the season\u2020Traded during the season\u2260Acquired during the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285979-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Orleans Privateers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 New Orleans Privateers men's basketball team represented the University of New Orleans during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Privateers were led by eighth-year head coach Mark Slessinger and played their home games at Lakefront Arena as members of the Southland Conference. The team finished the season 19\u201314 overall and 12\u20136 in conference play. In conference, they tied for 3rd place with Lamar and Southeastern Louisiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285979-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Orleans Privateers men's basketball team\nAs the number four seed in Southland Conference tournament, the Privateers defeated Lamar in the first round, Southeastern Louisiana in the second round, and lost to Abilene Christian in the championship finals game. Om March 17, New Orleans received an invitation to the College Insider Tournament. Their season ended with an overtime loss to Texas Southern.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285979-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Orleans Privateers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Privateers finished the season 16\u201317, 11\u20137 in Southland play to finish in a tie for fifth place. As the No. 5 seed in the Southland Tournament, they defeated Texas A&M\u2013Corpus Christi in the first round before losing to Sam Houston State in the quarterfinals. They received an invitation to the College Basketball Invitational where they defeated Texas\u2013Rio Grande Valley in the first round and received a second round bye before losing in the quarterfinals to Campbell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285980-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Orleans Privateers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 New Orleans Privateers women's basketball team will represent the University of New Orleans during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Privateers will be led by eighth year head coach Keeshawn Davenport and play their home games at the Lakefront Arena. They are members of the Southland Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285980-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Orleans Privateers women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Privateers finished the 2017\u201318 season 15\u201315, 11\u20137 in Southland play to finish in a three way tie for fourth place. They lost in the first round of the Southland Women's Tournament to Abilene Christian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 71], "content_span": [72, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285981-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New York Islanders season\nThe 2018\u201319 New York Islanders season was the 47th season in the franchise's history. It was their fourth season in the Barclays Center in the New York City borough of Brooklyn, which they moved into after leaving Nassau Coliseum in Nassau County on Long Island at the conclusion of the 2014\u201315 season. The Islanders also used Nassau Coliseum as a part-time venue starting this year where they played half of their 41 regular season home games, and as well as all First Round playoff home games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285981-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 New York Islanders season\nThe Islanders entered the season looking to improve on their 35\u201337\u201310 record from the previous season, as well as make the playoffs for the first time since the 2015\u201316 season. They were able to improve their performance, despite losing their longtime captain and franchise player John Tavares in free agency. The Islanders clinched a playoff spot on March 30, 2019, with a 5\u20131 win against the Buffalo Sabres. On April 16, the Islanders swept the Pittsburgh Penguins in the first round, making it their first playoff series sweep since the 1983 Stanley Cup playoffs. However, in the second round, the Islanders were not able to capitalize on their success against Pittsburgh, as they were swept by the Carolina Hurricanes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285981-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New York Islanders season, Schedule and results, Preseason\nNotes: Game was played at Nassau Coliseum in Uniondale, New York. Game was played at PPL Center in Allentown, Pennsylvania. Game was played at Webster Bank Arena in Bridgeport, Connecticut. Game was played at Tribute Communities Centre in Oshawa, Ontario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285981-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New York Islanders season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was released on June 21, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285981-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New York Islanders season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nLegend:\u00a0\u00a0Win (2 points)\u00a0\u00a0Loss (0 points)\u00a0\u00a0Overtime/shootout loss (1 point)Notes: Game was played at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. Game was played at Nassau Coliseum in Uniondale, New York.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285981-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New York Islanders season, Schedule and results, Playoffs\nThe Islanders faced the Pittsburgh Penguins in the First Round of the playoffs, and swept the series in four games, marking the first time since the 1982\u201383 season that they swept the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285981-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New York Islanders season, Schedule and results, Playoffs\nThe Islanders faced the Carolina Hurricanes in the Second Round of the playoffs, and were swept in four games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285981-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New York Islanders season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\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, 65], "content_span": [66, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285981-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New York Islanders season, Transactions\nThe Islanders have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285981-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New York Islanders season, Draft picks\nBelow are the New York Islanders' selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285982-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New York Knicks season\nThe 2018\u201319 New York Knicks season was the 73rd season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA). On April 12, 2018, the Knicks fired head coach Jeff Hornacek after the team missed the playoffs. On May 7, 2018, the Knicks hired David Fizdale as head coach. The Knicks were eliminated from playoff contention on March 4, 2019, when they lost to the Sacramento Kings 115\u2013108. The team ended the season with the worst record in the NBA, and tied the franchise-worst record set in the 2014\u201315 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285982-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New York Knicks season, Game log, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was released on August 10, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285983-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New York Rangers season\nThe 2018\u201319 New York Rangers season was the franchise's 92nd season of play and their 93rd season overall. The Rangers were eliminated from playoff contention on March 23, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285983-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New York Rangers season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was released on June 21, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285983-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New York Rangers season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nWin (2 Points)\u00a0\u00a0Loss (0 points)\u00a0\u00a0Overtime/shootout loss (1 point)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285983-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New York Rangers season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Rangers. Stats reflect time with the Rangers only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Rangers only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285983-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New York Rangers season, Transactions\nThe Rangers have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285983-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New York Rangers season, Draft picks\nBelow are the New York Rangers' selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285984-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Zealand Football Championship\nThe 2018\u201319 New Zealand Football Championship season (currently known as the ISPS Handa Premiership for sponsorship reasons) was the fifteenth season of the NZFC since its establishment in 2004. Ten teams competed in the competition with Auckland City and Team Wellington representing the ISPS Handa Premiership in the 2019 OFC Champions League after finishing Champions and Premiers (Auckland City) and runner-up (Team Wellington) respectively in the 2017\u201318 competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285984-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Zealand Football Championship, Regular season, Fixtures and results\nThe 2018\u201319 season sees every team play the other both home and away. With the finals series being played at the end of March 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 79], "content_span": [80, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285984-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 New Zealand Football Championship, Regular season, Fixtures and results, Round 21\n* The match between Canterbury United and Tasman United was cancelled due to the Christchurch mosque shootings and awarded as a 0\u20130 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 89], "content_span": [90, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285985-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newcastle Jets FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 Newcastle Jets FC season was the club's 18th season since its establishment in 2000. The club participated in the A-League for the 14th time, the FFA Cup for the 5th time, and the AFC Champions League for the 2nd time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285985-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newcastle Jets 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285986-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newcastle Jets W-League season\nThe 2018\u201319 Newcastle Jets W-League season was their eleventh season in the W-League, the premier competition for women's football in Australia. The team played home games at McDonald Jones Stadium and Newcastle Number 2 Sports Ground. The club's manager for the season was Craig Deans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285986-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newcastle Jets W-League season, Players, Current squad\nAs of 26 November 2018 Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285986-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newcastle Jets W-League season, W-League, Results summary\nLast updated: February 2019, end of regular season. Source: Competitive Matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285987-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newcastle United F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Newcastle United's second season back in the Premier League following their promotion from the 2016\u201317 EFL Championship and their 24th year in the Premier League. This season Newcastle United participated in the Premier League, EFL Cup and FA Cup. This article covers the period of 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285987-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newcastle United F.C. season, Club, Coaching staff\nThe Newcastle United first team coaching staff for the 2018\u201319 season consisted of the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285987-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newcastle United F.C. season, Friendlies\nAs of 14 June 2018, Newcastle United have announced five pre-season friendlies against St Patrick's Athletic, Hull City, FC Porto, S.C. Braga and FC Augsburg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285987-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newcastle United F.C. season, Friendlies\nOn 7 February 2019, Newcastle United confirmed a mid-season training camp in Spain which included a friendly against CSKA Moscow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285987-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newcastle United F.C. season, Competitions, Premier League, Matches\nOn 14 June 2018, the Premier League fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285987-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newcastle United F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nThe second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285987-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newcastle United F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018. The fourth round draw was made live on BBC by Robbie Keane and Carl Ikeme from Wolverhampton on 7 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285988-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newport County A.F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Newport County's sixth consecutive season in Football League Two, 66th season in the Football League and 98th season of English league football overall. For this season the club kit was redesigned to match that worn during the 1938\u201339 Third Division South championship-winning season. County reached the League Two play-off Final but narrowly missed out on promotion. They also reached the fifth round of the FA Cup for the first time since the 1948\u201349 season, losing to eventual winners Manchester City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285988-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season Review, League\nThe season began with an away loss to Mansfield Town, leaving County in 23rd place in the league table. However, wins at home to Crewe Alexandra, Notts County and Grimsby Town, and an away 1\u20131 draw at Exeter City lifted Newport into the play-off places after five games had been played. The following two games away at Port Vale and Oldham Athletic were also won, further improving County's league placing to 2nd, missing out on the top spot on goal difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285988-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season Review, League\nIn the next game, Newport suffered a surprising home six\u2013nil loss to Yeovil Town, dropping to 3rd place, but still within the automatic promotion zone. After briefly rising to 2nd again following the home win against Cambridge United, County consolidated their position in 3rd place until the loss to Crawley Town put them back into the play-off zone. Following the home win over Colchester United Newport were again in 3rd place with 18 games played, but they slowly slipped down the table, falling as low as 15th after 33 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285988-0001-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season Review, League\nHowever after the loss away to Northampton Town in the 36th game, County spent the rest of the season unbeaten, rising up the table back into the last play-off spot. However, going into the last game, any one of Exeter, Colchester, Carlisle or Stevenage could overtake them and qualify for the play-offs. Whereas the others all needed wins, Exeter could mathematically qualify with a draw, due to their superior goal difference. Into the last three minutes of the final game, both Colchester and Stevenage were winning, Exeter were being held to a draw and Newport were losing at Morecambe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285988-0001-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season Review, League\nThis left County in 11th place with the clock ticking towards full time. However, a Jamille Matt equaliser in the 87th minute lifted Newport back into 7th place at full time. Only Exeter could overtake County now, and as their match was still in progress it was several minutes before the league placings could be finalised. With Exeter failing to score, Newport were confirmed in the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285988-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season Review, League, Play-offs\nCounty's opponents were Mansfield Town, and they would be hoping for a better result than the season-opening's three\u2013nil loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285988-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season Review, League, Play-offs\nIn the home leg, Newport found themselves one\u2013nil down after 12 minutes, only for the top-scorer P\u00e1draig Amond to equalise in the 83rd minute, leaving things all square for the away leg. At Field Mill both teams played out the entirety of the 90 minutes and 30 minutes of extra time without a goal being scored. This took the game to penalties, with County to kick first. Dan Butler scored for Newport, with Nicky Ajose restoring parity for the home side. P\u00e1draig Amond for Newport and CJ Hamilton for Mansfield also scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285988-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season Review, League, Play-offs\nMickey Demetriou scored for Newport, but Tyler Walker's penalty kick was saved by Joe Day. Next up for Mansfield was Mal Benning who had to score to keep his side in the game. His penalty initially hit the post before ricocheting off Joe Day and into the goal. Newport's next penalty kick was taken by Matty Dolan who made no mistake and booked County's place in the play-off final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285988-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season Review, League, Play-offs\nThe final at Wembley was contested against Tranmere Rovers, who had been promoted to League Two in the previous season's National League play-off Final. Much like County's previous game with Mansfield, this too lasted the full 90 minutes without a goal being scored. However in the 89th minute Newport's captain Mark O'Brien was sent off for a second yellow card. This meant that County had to play the entirety of extra time with ten men. When it looked certain that this game would also go to penalties, Connor Jennings scored for Tranmere in the last minute of extra time to give them the win and promotion to League One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285988-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season Review, Cup\nCounty's FA Cup began with a trip to Southern League Metropolitan Police. Goals either side of half time by P\u00e1draig Amond and Jamille Matt completed a comfortable 2\u20130 win for Newport. County were again drawn away in the second round, this time to National League side Wrexham. The game, broadcast on BT Sport, ended in a 0\u20130 draw, necessitating a reply at Rodney Parade. The draw for the third round had been made before the replay had taken place, with the winners rewarded with a home tie against 2015\u201316 Premier League champions Leicester City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285988-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season Review, Cup\nNewport won the replay 4\u20130 and had still to concede a goal in the competition. In the third round, televised on the BBC, County took the lead against Leicester after just 10 minutes thanks to a Jamille Matt header. With the clock ticking down towards full time, Leicester's Rachid Ghezzal scored an equaliser in the 82nd minute. Newport had conceded an equaliser at exactly the same late stage in the previous season's fourth round match with Tottenham Hotspur, but this time they found an even later winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285988-0005-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season Review, Cup\nLeicester's Albrighton conceded a penalty for handball, which was duly converted by Amond, to put Newport into the fourth round for the second season in succession. In the fourth round, County were drawn away at Middlesbrough, in what was dubbed the Transporter Bridge Derby. At the Riverside, Daniel Ayala put Boro into the lead in the 51st minute and that is how the score remained at the 90th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285988-0005-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season Review, Cup\nDespite piling on the pressure in the last ten minutes, Newport could not find an equaliser, until former Boro academy player Matty Dolan scored in the fourth minute of stoppage time to force a replay. The draw for the fifth round had been made before the replay had taken place, with the winners rewarded with a home tie against Premier League champions Manchester City. The Middlesbrough replay, broadcast by BT Sport, was a completely different affair to the first game, with Newport running out comfortable 2\u20130 winners in a game they completely dominated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285988-0005-0004", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season Review, Cup\nManchester City had won both their previous FA Cup games 7\u20130 against Rotherham United and 5\u20130 against Burnley, but they found County a much sterner test. Newport kept the scoreline to 0\u20130 at half time, but shortly after the break Leroy San\u00e9 scored for the visitors, but their expected goal rush never materialised. It was not until the 75th minute that City scored their second through Phil Foden. P\u00e1draig Amond got a goal back for County in the 88th minute, leaving the score 1\u20132 in the 89th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285988-0005-0005", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season Review, Cup\nHowever, almost immediately Foden grabbed his second, with Riyad Mahrez scoring City's fourth in the fourth minute of stoppage time. Although County were out, P\u00e1draig Amond, who had scored in all five rounds, remained the FA Cup top goalscorer until Manchester City's Gabriel Jesus scored twice in their record-equalling final to share the honour. Newport had lost just two of their last 12 FA Cup matches, each time to one of the Premier League's 'big six' sides.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285988-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season Review, Cup\nIn the EFL Cup, Newport were drawn away to Cambridge United in the first round. County cruised to a 4\u20130 lead by the 90th minute, only to be denied a clean sheet by an Ade Azeez penalty. In the second round, Newport were drawn at home to Oxford United, but failed in their attempt at the Oxbridge double, losing 3\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285988-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newport County A.F.C. season, Competitions, League Two, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League Two fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285988-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newport County A.F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October. The draw for the second round was made live on BBC and BT by Mark Schwarzer and Glenn Murray on 12 November. The third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018. The fourth round draw was made live on BBC by Robbie Keane and Carl Ikeme from Wolverhampton on 7 January 2019. The fifth round draw was broadcast on 28 January 2019 live on BBC, Alex Scott and Ian Wright conducted the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285988-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newport County A.F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam. The second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285988-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Newport County A.F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the Under 21 invited clubs was announced. The draw for the second round was made live on Talksport by Leon Britton and Steve Claridge on 16 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285989-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Niagara Purple Eagles men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Niagara Purple Eagles men's basketball team represented Niagara University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at the Gallagher Center in Lewiston, New York as members of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference, and were led by 6th-year head coach Chris Casey. They finished the 2018\u201319 season 13\u201319 overall, 6\u201312 in MAAC play to finish in a three-way tie for ninth place. As the 11th seed in the 2019 MAAC Tournament, they were defeated by No. 6 seed Monmouth in the first round 72\u201376.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285989-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Niagara Purple Eagles men's basketball team\nOn March 11, 2019, head coach Chris Casey was fired. He finished at Niagara with a six-year record of 64\u2013129. On March 28, 2019, Niagara hired Patrick Beilein as their new head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285989-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Niagara Purple Eagles men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Purple Eagles finished the 2017\u201318 season 19\u201314, 12\u20136 in MAAC play to finish in third place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the MAAC Tournament to Fairfield. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament, where they lost in the first round to Eastern Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285990-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nicholls Colonels men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Nicholls Colonels men's basketball team represent Nicholls State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Colonels, led by first-year head coach Austin Claunch, play their home games at Stopher Gym in Thibodaux, Louisiana as members of the Southland Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285990-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nicholls Colonels men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Colonels finished the 2017\u201318 season 21\u201311, 15\u20133 in Southland play to earn a share of the regular season championship. As the No. 2 seed in the Southland Tournament, they lost in the semifinals to Stephen F. Austin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285990-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nicholls Colonels men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn March 15, 2018, head coach Richie Riley left Nicholls to take the head coaching job at South Alabama. Two weeks later, the school promoted assistant coach Austin Claunch to head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285991-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nicholls Colonels women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Nicholls Colonels women's basketball team represented Nicholls State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Colonels, led by eleventh year head coach DoBee Plaisance, played their home games at Stopher Gym and are members of the Southland Conference. The Colonels finished the 2018\u201319 season 20\u201312, 14\u20134 in Southland play to finish in third place. They lost to Texas A&M\u2013Corpus Christi in the second round of the Southland Women's Tournament. They received an invitation to the 2019 Women's Basketball Invitational tournament where they lost in the first round to Southern Miss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285991-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nicholls Colonels women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Colonels finished the 2017\u201318 season 19\u201313, 11\u20137 in Southland play to finish in a three way tie for fourth place. They won their first Southland Women's Tournament and earned an automatic trip to their first NCAA Women's Tournament in school history where they lost in the first round to Mississippi State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285992-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Niger Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Niger Premier League is the 49nd season (since independence) of the Niger Premier League, the top-tier football league in Niger. The season started on 28 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285993-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Norfolk State Spartans men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Norfolk State Spartans men's basketball team represented Norfolk State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Spartans, led by sixth-year coach Robert Jones, played their home games at the Joseph G. Echols Memorial Hall in Norfolk, Virginia as members of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. They finished the season 22\u201314 overall, 14\u20132 in MEAC play to finish in first place, and win the MEAC regular season championship. As the No. 1 seed in the MEAC Tournament, they were upset in the championship game by No. 3 seed North Carolina Central.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285993-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Norfolk State Spartans men's basketball team\nAs a conference champion who failed to win their conference tournament, and not selected to participate in the NCAA Tournament, they were awarded an automatic bid to the NIT. Given a No. 8 seed in the Alabama bracket, they upset No. 1 seed Alabama in the first round, then were defeated in the second round by No. 4 seed Colorado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285993-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Norfolk State Spartans men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Spartans finished the 2017\u201318 season 14\u201319, 11\u20135 in MEAC play to finish in a tie for fourth place. As the No. 5 seed in the MEAC Tournament, they defeated Maryland Eastern Shore before losing to North Carolina A&T in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285994-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Alabama Lions men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 North Alabama Lions men's basketball team represented University of North Alabama during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They were led by head coach Tony Pujol in his first season at North Alabama. The Lions played their home games at the Flowers Hall in Florence, Alabama as first-time members of the Atlantic Sun Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285994-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Alabama Lions men's basketball team\nThis season marks North Alabama's first of a four-year transition period from Division II to Division I. As a result, the Lions are not eligible for NCAA postseason play but can participate in the ASUN Tournament. They could also play in the CIT or CBI if invited.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285994-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Alabama Lions men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Lions finished the 2017\u201318 season 15\u201313, 10\u201310 to finish in a tie for sixth place in Gulf South Conference play. They lost in the first round of the Gulf South Tournament, losing to West Florida. The season marked the last season in Division II and the Gulf South Conference for the Lions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285995-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Alabama Lions women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 North Alabama Lions women's basketball team represented University of North Alabama during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. They were led by head coach Missy Tiber in her sixth season at North Alabama. The Lions played their home games at the Flowers Hall in Florence, Alabama as members of the Atlantic Sun Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285995-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Alabama Lions women's basketball team\nThis season is North Alabama's first of a four-year transition period from Division II to Division I. As a result, the Lions are not eligible for NCAA postseason play but can participate in the ASUN Tournament. They received an invitation to play in the WBI, where they advanced to the semifinals before losing to North Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285995-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Alabama Lions women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Lions finished the 2017\u201318 season 24-5, 17-3 to finish in second place in Gulf South Conference play. They lost in the first round of the Gulf South Tournament, losing to West Alabama. They were invited to the NCAA tournament and lost in the first round to Lee University. The season marked the last season in Division II and the Gulf South Conference for the Lions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285996-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North American winter\nThe 2018\u201319 North American winter was unusually cold within the northern portions of the United States, with frigid temperatures being recorded within the middle of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285996-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 North American winter\nSeveral notable events occurred, such as a rare snow in the Southeast in December, a strong cold wave and several major winter storms in the Midwest, and upper Northeast and much of Canada in late January and early February, record snowstorms in the Southwest in late February, deadly tornado outbreaks in the Southeast and a historic mid-April blizzard in the Midwest, but the most notable event of the winter was a record-breaking bomb cyclone that affected much of the central U.S. and Canada in mid March. Unlike previous winters, a developing weak El Ni\u00f1o was expected to influence weather patterns across North America. Overall, however, winter of 2018\u201319 was mild along the mid- and lower parts of the East Coast, West Coast, and most of the southern Plains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285996-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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 2018 occurred on December 21, and ends at the March equinox, which in 2019 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. Winter is often defined by meteorologists to be the three calendar months with the lowest average temperatures. Since both definitions span the calendar year, it is possible to have a winter storm in two different years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 788]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285996-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North American winter, Seasonal forecasts\nOn October 18, 2018, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Climate Prediction Center released its U.S. Winter Outlook. The outlook noted a 70 to 75% chance of El Ni\u00f1o developing. CPC Deputy Director Mike Halpert specified that development was expected to occur by late fall to early winter. He added that while the El Ni\u00f1o was expected to be weak, it still had the potential to bring drier conditions to the northern United States and wetter conditions to the southern U.S.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285996-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 North American winter, Seasonal forecasts\nThe outlook also noted the potential for the Arctic oscillation to bring colder-than-average conditions to the eastern U.S. and the possibility of the Madden\u2013Julian oscillation contributing to heavy-precipitation events along the West Coast. The temperature outlook favored warmer-than-normal conditions across the northern and western U.S. with the highest probabilities from the Pacific Northwest to the northern Plains and in Alaska. Such conditions were also favored in Hawaii. The outlook also noted that the Tennessee and Ohio Valleys, the Mid-Atlantic region, and the U.S. Southeast had equal chances of either above-, below-, or near-average temperatures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285996-0002-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 North American winter, Seasonal forecasts\nThe outlook did not delineate any areas likely to experience below-average conditions. The precipitation outlook noted an elevated probability of wetter-than-average conditions across the southern tier of the United States and along the eastern U.S. up to the Mid-Atlantic. Drier conditions were favored in parts of the northern Rockies and northern Plains, northern Ohio Valley, and Great Lakes regions. The drought outlook mentioned a high likelihood for drought conditions to persist across parts of the southwestern U.S., southern California, the central Great Basin, the central Rockies, the northern Plains, and parts of the interior Pacific Northwest. Drought conditions were favored to improve in the central Plains, the coastal Pacific Northwest, southern portions of Colorado and Utah, and in various areas in both Arizona and New Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 898]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285996-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North American winter, Events, Mid-November winter storm\nAn early season winter storm developed in a deep dive of the jet stream into the mid-south on November 13. In Monroe, Louisiana 0.4 inches of snow accumulated on the morning of November 14, breaking the record for the earliest snowfall by 10 days. In Mississippi light snow was reported in Greenville, sleet in Tupelo and Memphis, Tennessee picked up 0.6 inches (1.5\u00a0cm) of snow. Meanwhile, in Ohio, ice accumulations of one-quarter to one-third of an inch were reported in Cincinnati and Dayton metros as well as parts of Northern and Central Kentucky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285996-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 North American winter, Events, Mid-November winter storm\nA general 2 to 5 inches (5 to 12.7\u00a0cm) of snow fell in the St. Louis metro with isolated reports of 9 inches/22\u00a0cm. November 15, as the storm headed northeastward, an unexpected 6.4 inches (~16.2\u00a0cm) of snow fell in Central Park, catching many off guard and resulting in several hour-long commutes that night. Further north, the Toronto area received 10\u201315\u00a0cm (4-6 inches) of snow, leading to significant delays.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285996-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North American winter, Events, Late November blizzard\nA winter storm formed over the Pacific Northwest on November 23 and tracked into the interior Northeast by November 27. Snow caused a 20 vehicle pile-up in Colorado on Interstate 70, meanwhile Interstate 80 in Southeastern Wyoming had to be shut down due to heavy snow and strong winds. The storm snarled traffic in Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa, Missouri and parts of Illinois as blizzard conditions were reported in Salina, Kansas towards Independence, Missouri and northwards into Iowa and Illinois. Conditions were so bad that stranded drivers had to be rescued by snowmobile.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285996-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 North American winter, Events, Late November blizzard\nNationwide, nearly 3,000 flights were cancelled and 4 have died. 5.8 inches (14.7\u00a0cm) of snow fell in Kansas City and 8.4 inches (21.3\u00a0cm) were reported at O'Hare. Additionally, as the storm pushed into Upstate New York and Northern New England, over a foot of snow were recorded in some locations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285996-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North American winter, Events, Early December snowstorm\nA significant winter storm brought snow and ice from Southern plains to the Southeast. Early on December 8, 10.5 inches (27 centimetres) of snow fell in Lubbock, Texas. Snow fell as south and east as Abilene, Texas. This storm caused thousands of people to lose power and 60 car crashes were reported across the Lubbock area. This was the third time Lubbock has had a double digit snowfall. Only 4 inches were predicted across Lubbock; the residents were shocked to wake up to almost a foot of snow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285996-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 North American winter, Events, Early December snowstorm\nThe storm moved east from Texas and Oklahoma to the Carolinas and Virginia. The storm caused icing across Tennessee and Arkansas as well as some snowfall. Late on December 9, 1 foot (30 centimetres) of snow or more had fallen in parts of North Carolina and Virginia; both states had declared states of emergency. 240,000 Duke Energy customers had lost power in North Carolina, along with 170,000 more in South Carolina. Appalachian Power had 20,000 without power in Virginia. Alabama, Georgia and Tennessee also had power outages. Charlotte Douglas International Airport had over 1,000 cancellations. Near Winston-Salem, over 14 inches of snow fell, and part of Greensboro, North Carolina received nearly a foot. Three people died in North Carolina. Busick, North Carolina received 34 inches of snow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 864]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285996-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North American winter, Events, Mid-January winter storm\nA state of emergency was declared in Pennsylvania and New Jersey as a large winter storm made its way to the Northeastern United States. Three people had already been killed in the Midwest. By January 21, over 4,800 flights had been cancelled and 3,000 delayed. Interstate 55 in Missouri was blocked when snow caused 15 vehicles to crash. Snow totals in New York included 10-15 inches in the Albany area, 18-20 inches in the Adirondacks, and a foot of snow in Buffalo. Connecticut had nearly 28,000 lose power, as well as 3,000 in Ohio. In Southern Ontario, parts of Hamilton received over 40\u00a0cm (16 inches) due to lake-effect snow coming off of Lake Ontario. The Toronto area received around 10\u00a0cm (4 inches), with 20\u00a0cm (8 inches) in Montreal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 809]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285996-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North American winter, Events, Late January\u2013early February cold wave\nA storm, resulting from a polar vortex from the north, brought blizzard conditions and between 6 and 14 inches (15 to 35\u00a0cm) of snow to the Upper Midwest and Great Lakes region starting in the late evening hours of January 27, while a separate storm dropped snow over the Southeast. Accumulations reached 5 inches (13\u00a0cm) in Chicago and Minneapolis, 7 inches (18\u00a0cm) in Milwaukee, and 13 inches (33\u00a0cm) in Toronto (with 4 inches (10\u00a0cm) on the day before with a separate system).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 76], "content_span": [77, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285996-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North American winter, Events, Late January\u2013early February cold wave\nRecord-breaking and extreme cold immediately followed the storm as the polar vortex shifted south. Midwestern cities, including Minneapolis, Detroit, Chicago and Milwaukee are under wind chill advisories and severe wind chill warnings with wind chills approaching \u221255\u00a0\u00b0F (\u221248\u00a0\u00b0C) at night. Chicago area schools, universities, public transportation, and cultural attractions announced closures or reduced schedules during the weather emergency. Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer and Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers declared states of emergency due to the record low windchill temperatures. At least 22 people had reportedly died due to the storm as of January 31, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 76], "content_span": [77, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285996-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North American winter, Events, Mid-February storm complex\nAnother storm began on February 11, with some areas in the Midwestern and Northeastern United States expected to receive up to 12 inches (30\u00a0cm) of snow in the upcoming days, as well as parts of Ontario and Quebec expected to receive 14 inches (35\u00a0cm) . In Toronto, all schools were closed on February 12 in anticipation of the storm. The city saw up to 15\u00a0cm (6 inches) of snow followed by sleet and freezing rain. Ice and snow in Chicago resulted in 70,000 ComEd power outages. The storm's maximum snowfall accumulation was 26.5 inches (66\u00a0cm), which fell near Negaunee, Michigan. Ice secretion peaked at half an inch north of Toledo, Ohio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285996-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North American winter, Events, Early March nor'easter\nThe second storm had formed over the Rockies by March 2 and winter storm warnings were already in place there. In Colorado, 16 inches (40\u00a0cm) of snow fell at Estes Park and 3.7 inches (9.2\u00a0cm) fell at Denver International Airport. 13 inches (32.5\u00a0cm) of snow fell in Squaw Valley, California. As the storm tracked eastward, snow was wreaking havoc on parts of the Four Corner States and the Midwest, closing roads and cancelling over 700 flights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285996-0010-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 North American winter, Events, Early March nor'easter\nShaping up to be much more intense than the first storm for the US Northeast, The National Weather Service issued winter storm warnings from West Virginia to Maine. Closer to the Atlantic coast a mix of rain and snow affected major cities such as Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York City and Boston and further south, precipitation was rain, with severe thunderstorms along the cold front in the Deep South, resulting in a deadly early-season tornado outbreak in Dixie Alley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285996-0010-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 North American winter, Events, Early March nor'easter\nThe storm also affected Atlantic Canada, although the track of the low was much closer to the shoreline than the previous storm, resulting in mixed precipitation for Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island, with heftier snowfall totals in New Brunswick and Newfoundland. 24 centimetres (9.6 inches) of snow fell in Moncton and winds gusted to 170 kilometres per hour (110\u00a0mph) in Wreckhouse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285996-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North American winter, Events, Mid-March blizzard\nA Colorado low formed in the southwest and began tracking northeastward, undergoing explosive intensification in the process, bottoming out near 968 millibars over Kansas, meeting the criteria for a bomb cyclone and smashing all-time low pressure records at several towns in New Mexico, Colorado, Kansas and Texas. On March 13 the tight pressure gradient produced widespread wind gusts above 60\u00a0mph (95\u00a0km/h+), with a peak gust of 109 miles per hour (175\u00a0km/h) at Grand Prairie, strong enough to flip airplanes at the municipal airport there.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285996-0011-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 North American winter, Events, Mid-March blizzard\nAlong the cold front, a line of severe thunderstorms developed, mainly in Texas, dropping several tornadoes, 2 in New Mexico and 1 in Texas, damaging many homes. A combination of severe weather and strong winds cut power to 140,000 in Texas, mostly near Dallas. The storms also produced baseball-sized hail in many parts of the Southwest. As the storm tracked further north, in Ontario, because of the thick snowpack, forecasters were concerned about flooding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285996-0011-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 North American winter, Events, Mid-March blizzard\nMeanwhile, the storm brought extreme blizzard conditions to the plains, poor visibility closing many interstates from North Dakota to Colorado and just to the south, severe flooding caused billions of dollars in damage. A few notable snowfall totals from this storm include the more than 50 inches (125\u00a0cm+) that fell at Wolf Creek pass in Colorado, 26 inches (65\u00a0cm) that fell just south of Casper and 18 inches (45\u00a0cm) of snow, falling in Kadoka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285996-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North American winter, Events, Mid-April blizzard\nA historic mid-April winter storm produced several feet of snow across the Northern Plains and Midwest, with snowfall rates exceeding 2 inches per hour at times, combined with powerful winds resulted in widespread blizzard conditions. In the previous year, Minneapolis and St Paul had their largest April winter storm on record, although that record may have been challenged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285997-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Caledonian Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 North Caledonian Football League (known for sponsorship reasons as the Macleod & MacCallum North Caledonian League) was the 110th season of the North Caledonian Football League. The season began on 1 September 2018. Orkney were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285997-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Caledonian Football League\nGolspie Sutherland won their tenth league title, their first in four years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285998-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Carolina A&T Aggies men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 North Carolina A&T Aggies men's basketball team represented North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Aggies, led by third-year head coach Jay Joyner, played their home games at the Corbett Sports Center in Greensboro, North Carolina as members of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285998-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Carolina A&T Aggies men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Aggies finished the 2017\u201318 season 20\u201315, 11\u20135 in MEAC play to finish in a tie for fourth place. They defeated Delaware State and Norfolk State to advance to the semifinals of the MEAC Tournament where they lost to Hampton. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they lost in the first round to Liberty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 72], "content_span": [73, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285999-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Carolina Central Eagles men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 North Carolina Central Eagles men's basketball team represented North Carolina Central University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at McDougald\u2013McLendon Gymnasium in Durham, North Carolina, and were led by 10th-year head coach LeVelle Moton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00285999-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Carolina Central Eagles men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Eagles finished the 2017\u201318 season 19\u201316, 9\u20137 in MEAC play to finish sixth place. In the MEAC Tournament, they defeated Coppin State, Savannah State, and Morgan State to advance to the championship game against Hampton, which they won, to receive the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament for the second consecutive year. As a No. 16 seed, they lost in the First Four to Texas Southern.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 76], "content_span": [77, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286000-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball team represented the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team's head coach was Roy Williams, who was in his 16th season as UNC's head men's basketball coach. The Tar Heels played their home games at the Dean Smith Center in Chapel Hill, North Carolina as members of the Atlantic Coast Conference. They finished the season 29\u20137, 16\u20132 in ACC play to finish tied for the regular season conference championship with Virginia. As the No. 2 seed in the ACC Tournament, they advanced to the semifinals before ultimately losing to Duke. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as the No. 1 seed in the Midwest region, where they advanced to the Sweet Sixteen before losing to Auburn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 870]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286000-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Tar Heels finished the 2017\u201318 season with a record of 26\u201311, 11\u20137 in ACC play to finish in a four-way tie for third place. As the No. 6 seed in the ACC Tournament, they defeated Syracuse, Miami, and Duke before losing to Virginia in the championship game. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as the No. 2 seed in the West region where they defeated Lipscomb before losing to Texas A&M in the Second Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 71], "content_span": [72, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286000-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball team, Rankings\n*AP does not release post-NCAA Tournament rankings^Coaches did not release a Week 2 poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 64], "content_span": [65, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286001-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Carolina Tar Heels women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 North Carolina Tar Heels women's basketball team represents the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Tar Heels, led by thirty-third year head coach Sylvia Hatchell, play their games at Carmichael Arena and are members of the Atlantic Coast Conference. They finished the season 18\u201315, 9\u20139 in ACC play to finish in eighth place. They defeat Georgia Tech in the first round before losing in the second round of the ACC Women's Tournament to Notre Dame. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Women's Tournament, which was their first trip since 2015. They lost in the first round to California.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286001-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Carolina Tar Heels women's basketball team\nOn April 18, Hatchell resigned after an external review confirmed reports that she had made racially insensitive comments and mismanaged players' medical issues. Hatchell, the only coach with national titles in the AIAW, NAIA, and NCAA, left Chapel Hill with 1,023 wins overall and 751 in 33 seasons with the Tar Heels, including the 1994 NCAA title. The school tabbed Princeton's Courtney Banghart as their new head coach on April 29, officially announcing her the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286001-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Carolina Tar Heels women's basketball team, Previous season\nFor the 2017\u201318 season, the Tar Heelss finished 15\u201316 overall and 4\u201312 in ACC play which was 12th place. North Carolina was eliminated in the second round of the ACC Tournament by North Carolina State. The Tar Heels were not invited to post-season play", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 73], "content_span": [74, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286002-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Dakota Fighting Hawks men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 North Dakota Fighting Hawks men's basketball team representeed the University of North Dakota during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Fighting Hawks, led by 13th-year head coach Brian Jones, played their home games at the Betty Engelstad Sioux Center in Grand Forks, North Dakota as first-year members of the Summit League. They finished the season 12\u201318 overall, 6\u201310 in Summit League play, to finish in 7th place. In the Summit League Tournament, they were defeated by Omaha in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286002-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Dakota Fighting Hawks men's basketball team\nOn May 1, 2019, it was announced that head coach Brian Jones was stepping down, in order to take the associate head coaching position at Illinois State. On May 30, head coach of DII Northern State, Paul Sather, was announced as Jones' replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286002-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Dakota Fighting Hawks men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Fighting Hawks finished the 2017\u201318 season 12\u201320, 6\u201312 in Big Sky play to finish in a tie for eighth place. They defeated Montana State in the first round of the Big Sky Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Montana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 74], "content_span": [75, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286002-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Dakota Fighting Hawks men's basketball team, Previous season\nThis season was the last for North Dakota as a full Big Sky member. On July 1, 2018, the school joined the Summit League in all sports except for football. The football team is playing the 2018 and 2019 seasons as an FCS independent, but will play a full Big Sky schedule in both seasons, after which it will join the Missouri Valley Football Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 74], "content_span": [75, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286003-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Dakota Fighting Hawks men's ice hockey season\nThe 2018-19 North Dakota Fighting Hawks men's ice hockey season was the 77th season of play for the program and the 6th in the NCHC conference. The Fighting Hawks represented the University of North Dakota and were coached by Brad Berry, in his 4th season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286004-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Dakota Fighting Hawks women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 North Dakota Fighting Hawks women's basketball team represents the University of North Dakota during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Fighting Hawks were led by seventh year head coach Travis Brewster and play their home games at the Betty Engelstad Sioux Center. They were first year members of the Summit League. They finished the season 12\u201319, 6\u201310 in Summit League play to finish in sixth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Summit League Women's Tournament where they lost to South Dakota.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286005-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Dakota State Bison men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 North Dakota State Bison men's basketball team represented North Dakota State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bison, led by fifth-year head coach David Richman, played their home games at the Scheels Center in Fargo, North Dakota as members of the Summit League. They finished the season 19\u201316, 9\u20137 in Summit League play to finish in a tie for third place. As the No. 4 seed in the Summit League Tournament, they defeated Oral Roberts, Western Illinois, and Omaha to win the tournament championship. As a result, they received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament as the No. 16 seed in the East region. There the Bison lost to overall No. 1 seed Duke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 774]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286005-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Dakota State Bison men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bison finished the season 15\u201317, 5\u20139 in Summit League play to finish in a tie for fifth place. They defeated Fort Wayne in the quarterfinals of the Summit League Tournament before losing in the semifinals to South Dakota State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 71], "content_span": [72, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286006-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Dakota State Bison women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 North Dakota State Bison women's basketball represent North Dakota State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Bison, led fifth year head by Maren Walseth, play their home games at the Scheels Center and were members of The Summit League. They finished the season 7\u201322, 4\u201312 in Summit League play to finish in seventh place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Summit League Women's Tournament to South Dakota.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286006-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Dakota State Bison women's basketball team\nWalseth and NDSU mutually agreed to part ways on March 11 after 5 seasons. The Bison went 40\u2013106 overall in Walseth's tenure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286007-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Florida Ospreys men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 North Florida Ospreys men's basketball team represented the University of North Florida in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at the UNF Arena in Jacksonville, Florida and were led by 10th-year head coach Matthew Driscoll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286007-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Florida Ospreys men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Ospreys finished the 2017\u201318 season 14\u201319, 7\u20137 in ASUN play to finish in a tie for fourth place. In the ASUN Tournament, they defeated NJIT, before losing in the semifinals to Florida Gulf Coast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286008-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Florida Ospreys women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 North Florida Ospreys women's basketball team represents the University of North Florida in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Ospreys, led by fourth year head coach Darrick Gibbs, play their games at UNF Arena and were members of the Atlantic Sun Conference. They finished the season 15\u201314, 9\u20137 in A-Sun play to finish in fifth place. They advanced to the semifinals of A-Sun Tournament where they lost to Liberty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286008-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Florida Ospreys women's basketball team, Media\nAll home games and conference road games are shown on ESPN3 or A-Sun.TV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 60], "content_span": [61, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286009-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Superleague\nThe 2018\u201319 North Superleague (known as the McBookie.com North Superleague for sponsorship reasons) was the 18th season of the North Superleague, the top tier of league competition for SJFA North Region member clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286009-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Superleague\nBanks O' Dee were the reigning champions. The winners of this competition are eligible to enter the 2019\u201320 Scottish Cup at the Preliminary round stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286009-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Superleague, Teams and locations\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286010-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Texas Mean Green men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 North Texas Mean Green men's basketball team represented the University of North Texas during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Mean Green, led by second-year head coach Grant McCasland, played their home games at UNT Coliseum, nicknamed The Super Pit, in Denton, Texas, as members of Conference USA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286010-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Texas Mean Green men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Mean Green finished the 2017\u201318 season 20\u201318, 8\u201310 in C-USA play to finish in a tie for seventh place. They lost in the first round of the C-USA Tournament to Louisiana Tech. They were invited to participate in the College Basketball Invitational where they defeated South Dakota, Mercer, and Jacksonville State to advance to the best-of-three finals series against San Francisco. After losing in game 1, they won games 2 and 3 to become CBI champions. They also had the biggest crowd since 2010 at 6,291.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286011-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North Texas Mean Green women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 North Texas Mean Green women's basketball team represents the University of North Texas during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Mean Green, led by fourth year head coach Jalie Mitchell, play their home games UNT Coliseum, also known as The Super Pit, and were members of Conference USA. They finished the season 18\u201316, 7\u20139 in C-USA play to finish in ninth place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the C-USA Women's Tournament where they lost to Rice. They received an invitation of the WBI where they defeated Texas\u2013Rio Grande Valley, Utah State and North Alabama in the first round, quarterfinals and semifinals to advanced to the championship game where they lost Appalachian State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286012-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North West Counties Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 North West Counties Football League season (known as the Hallmark Security League for sponsorship reasons) was the 37th in the history of the North West Counties Football League, a football competition in England, and the first season following the split of the lower level into two geographically separated divisions. Teams were divided into three divisions: Premier Division, at Step 5, and Divisions One North and South, at Step 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286012-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North West Counties Football League\nThe provisional club allocations for steps 5 and 6 were announced by the FA on 25 May. The constitution was ratified by the league at its AGM on 16 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286012-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North West Counties Football League, Premier Division\nAt the end of the 2017\u201318 season, the following teams left the division:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 61], "content_span": [62, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286012-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North West Counties Football League, Premier Division\nThe remaining 17 teams, together with the following, formed the Premier Division for season 2018\u201319:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 61], "content_span": [62, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286012-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North West Counties Football League, Division One\nAt the end of the 2017\u201318 season, the following teams left the division:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 57], "content_span": [58, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286012-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North West Counties Football League, Division One\nThe remaining 19 teams were split into the two new geographically separated divisions - Division One North and Division One South", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 57], "content_span": [58, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286012-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North West Counties Football League, Division One North\nThe newly formed Division One North consisted of 20 clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286012-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North West Counties Football League, Division One South\nThe newly formed Division One South consisted of 20 clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286012-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North West Counties Football League, League Challenge Cup\nAlso called the Macron Challenge Cup for sponsorship reasons. Source for this section:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286012-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North West Counties Football League, League Challenge Cup, Second Round\n\u2020 eliminated due to playing ineligible playerAbbey Hulton United received bye due to both Padiham and Shelley being eliminated in previous round", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 79], "content_span": [80, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286012-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 North West Counties Football League, Division One Trophy, First Round\nAll the remaining Division One teams received a bye to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286013-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NorthEast United FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 NorthEast United FC season was the club's fifth season since its establishment in 2014 and their fifth season in the Indian Super League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286013-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 NorthEast United FC season, Pre-season and friendlies\nNorthEast United was rumoured to travel to Sweden for its preseason. The tour was cancelled and the club continued their preparations in India itself playing against teams like I-League champion Minerva Punjab and runner up NEROCA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286014-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northampton Town F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Northampton Town's 122nd season of existence and their first season back in League Two after a two-year absence. Along with competing in League Two, the club will also participate in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286014-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northampton Town F.C. season\nThe season ran from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286014-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northampton Town F.C. season, Competitions, Friendlies\nThe Cobblers announced they would face Northampton Sileby Rangers, St. Albans City, Brackley Town, Hull City U23, Barnet and Manchester United XI.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286014-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northampton Town F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286014-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northampton Town F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286014-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northampton Town F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced. The draw for the second round was made live on Talksport by Leon Britton and Steve Claridge on 16 November. On 8 December, the third round draw was drawn by Alan McInally and Matt Le Tissier on Soccer Saturday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286014-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northampton Town F.C. season, Awards, Club awards\nAt the end of the season, Northampton's annual award ceremony, including categories voted for by the players and backroom staff, the supporters, will see the players recognised for their achievements for the club throughout the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286015-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northeast Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 Northeast Conference men's basketball season began with practices in October 2018, followed by the start of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season in November. Conference play started in January and concluded in March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286015-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northeast Conference men's basketball season\nThe NEC Tournament was held from March 3 through March 9 with the higher-seeded team hosting each game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286015-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northeast Conference men's basketball season, Head coaches, Coaching changes\nOn April 2, 2018, Bryant announced Jared Grasso as the 8th head coach in program history. Grasso replaced Tim O'Shea, who retired after last season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 84], "content_span": [85, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286015-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northeast Conference men's basketball season, Head coaches, Coaching changes\nOn May 10, 2018, Mount St. Mary's announced Dan Engelstad as the 22nd head coach in program history. Engelstad replaced Jamion Christian, who went on to become the head coach at Siena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 84], "content_span": [85, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286015-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northeast Conference men's basketball season, NEC regular season, 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, 52], "section_span": [54, 91], "content_span": [92, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286015-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northeast Conference men's basketball season, NEC regular season, Player of the week\nThroughout the regular season, the Northeast Conference offices named player(s) of the week and rookie(s) of the week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 92], "content_span": [93, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286015-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northeast Conference men's basketball season, Postseason, NEC Tournament\nTeams are reseeded after each round with highest remaining seeds receiving home court advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 80], "content_span": [81, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286015-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northeast Conference men's basketball season, All-NEC honors and awards\nFollowing the regular season, the conference selected outstanding performers based on a poll of league coaches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 79], "content_span": [80, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286016-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northeast Conference women's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 NEC women's basketball season began with practices in October 2018, followed by the start of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season in November. Conference play started in January 2019 and concluded in March with the 2019 Northeast Conference Women's Basketball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286016-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northeast Conference women's basketball season, Head coaches\nNote: Stats shown are before the beginning of the season. All numbers are from time at current school.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 68], "content_span": [69, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286016-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northeast Conference women's basketball season, NEC regular season, Player of the week\nThroughout the regular season, the Northeast Conference offices named player(s) of the week and rookie(s) of the week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 94], "content_span": [95, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286016-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northeast Conference women's basketball season, Postseason, NEC Tournament\nAll games will be played at the venue of the higher seed", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 82], "content_span": [83, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286016-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northeast Conference women's basketball season, All-NEC honors and awards\nFollowing the regular season, the conference selected outstanding performers based on a poll of league coaches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 81], "content_span": [82, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286017-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northeastern Huskies men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Northeastern Huskies men's basketball team represented Northeastern University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Huskies, led by 13th-year head coach Bill Coen, played their home games at Matthews Arena in Boston, Massachusetts as members of the Colonial Athletic Association. They lost to Kansas in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286017-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northeastern Huskies men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Huskies finished the 2017\u201318 season 23\u201310, 14\u20134 in CAA play win a share of the regular season title with College of Charleston. They defeated Delaware and UNC Wilmington to advance to the championship game of the CAA Tournament where they lost to College of Charleston. Despite having 23 wins, they did not participate in a postseason tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286017-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northeastern Huskies men's basketball team, Offseason, Incoming transfers\nUnder NCAA transfer rules, Walters and Eboigbodin will have to sit out for the 2018\u201319 season, and have three years of remaining eligibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 81], "content_span": [82, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286018-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northeastern Huskies women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Northeastern Huskies women's basketball team represents the Northeastern University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Huskies, led by fifth year head coach Kelly Cole, play their home games at the Cabot Center and were members of the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA). They finished the season 20\u201312, 9\u20139 CAA play to finish in sixth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the CAA Women's Tournament where they lost to Drexel. They received an at-large bid of the WNIT where they lost to Butler in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286019-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Arizona Lumberjacks men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Northern Arizona Lumberjacks men's basketball team represented Northern Arizona University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Lumberjacks were led by seventh-year head coach Jack Murphy and played their home games at the Walkup Skydome in Flagstaff, Arizona as members of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 10\u201321, 8\u201312 in Big Sky play to finish in a tie for eighth place. They lost in the first round of the Big Sky Tournament to Sacramento State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286019-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Arizona Lumberjacks men's basketball team\nOn June 2, 2019, head coach Jack Murphy resigned to become the associate head coach at Arizona. He finished at Northern Arizona with a seven-year record of 78\u2013149.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286019-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Arizona Lumberjacks men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Lumberjacks finished the 2017\u201318 season 5\u201327, 2\u201316 in Big Sky play to finish in last place. They lost in the first round of the Big Sky Tournament to Northern Colorado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 75], "content_span": [76, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286020-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Arizona Lumberjacks women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Northern Arizona Lumberjacks women's basketball team represents Northern Arizona University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Lumberjacks, led by second year head coach Loree Payne, play their home games at the Walkup Skydome. They are members of the Big Sky Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286021-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Colorado Bears men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Northern Colorado Bears men's basketball team represented the University of Northern Colorado during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bears were led by third-year head coach Jeff Linder and played their home games at Bank of Colorado Arena in Greeley, Colorado as members of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 21\u201311, 15\u20135 in Big Sky play to finish in second place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big Sky Tournament to Southern Utah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286021-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Colorado Bears men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bears finished the 2017\u201318 season 26\u201312, 11\u20137 in Big Sky play to finish in fifth place. They defeated Northern Arizona and Weber State to advance to the semifinals of the Big Sky Tournament to Montana. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they defeated Drake, San Diego, Sam Houston State and UIC to become CIT champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286022-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Colorado Bears women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Northern Colorado Bears women's basketball team represented the University of Northern Colorado during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Bears were led by first year head coach Jenny Huth, played their home games at the Bank of Colorado Arena as members of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 21\u201311, 15\u20135 in Big Sky play to finish in a tie for second place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Big Sky Women's Tournament where they lost to Eastern Washington. They received an at-large bid to the WNIT where they lost to Wyoming in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286023-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Counties East Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 Northern Counties East Football League season was the 37th 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-00286023-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Counties East Football League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 16 clubs which competed in the previous season, along with four new clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 64], "content_span": [65, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286023-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Counties East Football League, Division One\nDivision One featured 17 clubs which competed in the previous season, along with three new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286023-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Counties East Football League, League Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Northern Counties East Football League League Cup was the 37th season of the league cup competition of the Northern Counties East Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 58], "content_span": [59, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286024-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Football Alliance\nThe 2018\u201319 Northern Football Alliance consists of 48 teams split over 3 leagues of 16 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286024-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Football Alliance, Premier Division\nThe following 3 clubs left the Northern Alliance Premier Division before the season -", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286024-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Football Alliance, Premier Division\nThe following 5 clubs joined the Northern Alliance Premier Division before the season -", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286024-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Football Alliance, Premier Division\nOther changes to Northern Alliance Premier Division before the season -", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286024-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Football Alliance, Division 1\nThe following 5 clubs left the Northern Alliance Division 1 before the season -", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286024-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Football Alliance, Division 1\nThe following 5 clubs joined the Northern Alliance Division 1 before the season -", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286024-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Football Alliance, Division 1\nOther changes to Northern Alliance Division 1 before the season -", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286024-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Football Alliance, Division 2\nThe following 5 clubs left the Northern Alliance Division 2 before the season -", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286024-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Football Alliance, Division 2\nThe following 5 clubs joined the Northern Alliance Division 2 before the season -", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286024-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Football Alliance, Division 2\nOther changes to Northern Alliance Division 2 before the season -", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286025-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 Northern Football League season is the 121st in the history of Northern Football League, a football competition in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286025-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Football League, Division One\nDivision One should consist of 20 clubs, however Team Northumbria resigned from the league and disbanded during the close season, and Blyth resigned shortly after the start of the season, after playing four games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286025-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Football League, Division One\nThe following 5 clubs left Division One before the season -", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286025-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Football League, Division One\nThe following 3 clubs joined Division One before the season -", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286025-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Football League, Division Two\nThe following 5 clubs left Division Two before the season -", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286025-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Football League, Division Two\nThe following 4 clubs joined Division Two before the season -", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286026-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Illinois Huskies men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Northern Illinois Huskies men's basketball team represented Northern Illinois University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Huskies were led by eighth-year head coach Mark Montgomery, and played their home games at the Convocation Center in DeKalb, Illinois as members of the West Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 17\u201317 overall, 8\u201310 in MAC play to finish in fourth place in the West Division. As the No. 7 seed in the MAC Tournament, they advanced to the semifinals, where they lost to Bowling Green.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286026-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Illinois Huskies men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Huskies finished the 2017\u201318 season 13\u201319, 6\u201312 in MAC play to finish in last place in the West Division. They lost in the first round of the MAC Tournament to Kent State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 72], "content_span": [73, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286027-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Illinois Huskies women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Northern Illinois Huskies women's basketball team represents Northern Illinois University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Huskies, led by fourth-year head coach Lisa Carlsen, play their home games at the Convocation Center in DeKalb, Illinois as members of the West Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 19\u201313, 10\u20138 in MAC play to finish in third place in the West division. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the MAC Women's Tournament where they lost to Ohio. Despite having 19 wins, they were not invited to a postseason tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286028-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Iowa Panthers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Northern Iowa Panthers men's basketball team represented the University of Northern Iowa during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Panthers, led by 13th-year head coach Ben Jacobson, played their home games at the McLeod Center in Cedar Falls, Iowa as members of the Missouri Valley Conference. They finished the season 16\u201318, 9\u20139 in MVC play to finish in a three-way tie for fifth place. As the No. 6 seed in the MVC Tournament, they beat Southern Illinois and Drake before losing to Bradley in the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286028-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Iowa Panthers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Panthers finished the 2017\u201318 season 16\u201316, 7\u201311 in MVC play to finish three-way tie for seventh place. As the No. 7 seed in the MVC Tournament, they defeated Evansville in the first round before losing to Loyola\u2013Chicago in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286028-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Iowa Panthers men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nPanther Sports Network (PSN) Cedar Falls Utilities Ch. 15/HD415; KCRG-TV Ch. 9.2; WHO-DT Ch. 13.2; KGCW Ch. 26, (NBC Sports Chicago or NBCSC+)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 74], "content_span": [75, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286029-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Iowa Panthers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Northern Iowa Panthers women's basketball team represents the University of Northern Iowa in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Panthers, led by twelfth year head coach Tanya Warren, play their home games at McLeod Center and were members of the Missouri Valley Conference. They finished the season 20\u201313, 12\u20136 in MVC play to finish in third place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Missouri Valley Tournament where they lost to Missouri State. They received an automatic bid to the Women's National Invitation Tournament where they lost to Minnesota in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286030-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Ireland Football League Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Northern Ireland Football League Cup (known as the BetMcLean League Cup for sponsorship purposes) was the 33rd edition of Northern Ireland's football knock-out cup competition for national league clubs, and the fifth edition of the competition as the Northern Ireland Football League Cup. This season's League Cup was contested by all 36 clubs of the three divisions of the Northern Ireland Football League. The competition began on 4 August 2018 with the first round, and concluded on 16 February 2019 with the final. The competition was sponsored by McLean Bookmakers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286030-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Ireland Football League Cup\nDungannon Swifts were the defending champions, after they defeated Ballymena United 3\u20131 in the 2018 final to win the competition for the first time and record the first ever senior trophy win since their formation in 1949. This season, Linfield were the eventual winners, defeating Ballymena United 1\u20130 in the final. Linfield were playing in the League Cup final for a record 13th time, and lifted the trophy for a record tenth time overall and the first time since they won the 2008 final 11 years earlier. Ballymena United appeared in the League Cup final for the third consecutive year - their fourth appearance in five years - and were consigned to defeat in the final for the second successive year and the third time in five years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286030-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Ireland Football League Cup, Format and Schedule\nThe competition was played in a straight knock-out format and was open to the 36 members of the Northern Ireland Football League. Replays were not used in the competition, with all matches using extra time and penalties to determine the winner if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 65], "content_span": [66, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286030-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Ireland Football League Cup, Results\nThe league tier of each club at the time of entering the competition is listed in parentheses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286030-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Ireland Football League Cup, Results, Second Round\nThe matches took place on 28 August 2018 and 12 September 2018. The top 16 league clubs from the previous season were seeded in this round in order to avoid drawing each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 67], "content_span": [68, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286030-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Ireland Football League Cup, Results, Second Round\nArds (1)Ballinamallard United (2)Ballymena United (1)Carrick Rangers (2)Cliftonville (1)Coleraine (1)Crusaders (1)Dungannon Swifts (1)Glenavon (1)Glentoran (1)Harland & Wolff Welders (2)Institute (1)Linfield (1)Newry City (1)Portadown (2)Warrenpoint Town (1)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 67], "content_span": [68, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286030-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Ireland Football League Cup, Results, Second Round\nAnnagh United (3)Ballyclare Comrades (2)Dergview (2)Dollingstown (3)Knockbreda (2)Larne (2)Limavady United (2)Lisburn Distillery (3)Loughgall (2)Lurgan Celtic (3)Moyola Park (3)Newington YC (3)Portstewart (3)PSNI (2)Sport & Leisure Swifts (3)Tobermore United (3)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 67], "content_span": [68, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286030-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Ireland Football League Cup, Results, Third Round\nThe matches took place on 9 October 2018 and 30 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286030-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Ireland Football League Cup, Results, Quarter-finals\nThe matches took place on 13 November 2018, 20 November 2018, and 4 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 69], "content_span": [70, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286030-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Ireland Football League Cup, Results, Final\nThe final was played on 16 February 2019 at Windsor Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286031-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Kentucky Norse men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Northern Kentucky Norse men's basketball team represented Northern Kentucky University (NKU) during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Norse, led by fourth-year head coach John Brannen, played their home games at BB&T Arena in Highland Heights, Kentucky as members of the Horizon League. They finished the season 26\u20139, 13\u20135 in Horizon League play to win a share of the regular season championship with Wright State. They defeated Detroit Mercy, Oakland, and Wright State to be champions of the Horizon League Tournament. They received the Horizon League's automatic-bid to the NCAA Tournament where they lost in the first round to Texas Tech.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286031-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Kentucky Norse men's basketball team\nDuring the season, forward Drew McDonald became the school\u2019s all-time career leader in both scoring and rebounds. He passed LaRon Moore's previous record of 859 rebounds in a December 8 loss to Eastern Kentucky, and passed Craig Sanders\u2019 previous record of 2,007 points in a win over Green Bay in the team's final regular-season game on March 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286031-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Kentucky Norse men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Norse finished the 2017\u201318 season 22\u201310, 15\u20133 in Horizon League play to win the Horizon League regular season championship. They were upset in the quarterfinals of the Horizon League Tournament by No. 8 seed Cleveland State. As a regular season league champion who failed to win their league tournament, they received an automatic bid to the National Invitation Tournament where they lost in the first round to Louisville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286032-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Kentucky Norse women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Northern Kentucky Norse women's basketball team will represent Northern Kentucky University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Norse, lead by third year head coach Camryn Whitaker, play their home games at BB&T Arena and were members of the Horizon League. They finished the season 11\u201318, 9\u20137 in Horizon League play to finish in a tie for fifth place. They lost in the first round of the Horizon League Women's Tournament to IUPUI.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286033-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 51st season of the Northern Premier League. After eleven seasons, the two divisions of Division One were re-aligned from North and South to West and East. The League sponsors for the last time were Evo-Stik.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286033-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Premier League, Premier Division, Team changes\nThe following 9 clubs left the Premier Division before the season -", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286033-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Premier League, Premier Division, Team changes\nThe following 7 clubs joined the Premier Division before the season -", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286033-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Premier League, Division One West, Team changes\nThe following 9 clubs left Division One North before the season -", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286033-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Premier League, Division One West, Team changes\nThe following 7 clubs joined Division One West before the season -", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286033-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Premier League, Division One East, Team changes\nThe following 11 clubs left Division One South before the season -", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286033-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Premier League, Division One East, Team changes\nThe following 9 clubs joined Division One East before the season -", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286033-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Premier League, Challenge Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Northern Premier League Challenge Cup, known as the 18\u201319 Integro Doodson League Cup for sponsorship reasons, is the 49th season of the Northern Premier League Challenge Cup, the main cup competition in the Northern Premier League. It is sponsored by Doodson Sport for a seventh consecutive season. 61 clubs from England and one from Wales will enter the competition, beginning with the First Round, and all ties will end after 90 minutes and conclude with penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286033-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northern Premier League, Challenge Cup\nThe defending champions, Atherton Collieries, were defeated in the first round by Droylsden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286034-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northwestern State Demons basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Northwestern State Demons basketball team represented Northwestern State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Demons, led by 20th-year head coach Mike McConathy, played their home games at Prather Coliseum in Natchitoches, Louisiana as members of the Southland Conference. They finished the season 11\u201320 overall, 6\u201312 in Southland play to finish in 11th place. Since only the top eight teams are eligible for the Southland Tournament, Northwestern State failed to qualify this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286034-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northwestern State Demons basketball team, Previous season\nThe Demons finished 2017\u201318 the season 4\u201325, 1\u201317 in Southland play to finish in last place. They failed to qualify for the Southland Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286035-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northwestern State Lady Demons basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Northwestern State Lady Demons basketball team will represent Northwestern State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Demons, led by third year head coach Jordan Dupuy, will play their home games at Prather Coliseum and were members of the Southland Conference. They finished the season 11\u201318, 6\u201312 in Southland play to finish in eighth place. Due to a tie breaker loss to New Orleans they failed to qualify for the Southland Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286035-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northwestern State Lady Demons basketball team, Previous season\nThe Lady Demons finished the 2017\u201318 season 7\u201322, 2\u201316 in Southland play to finish in twelfth place. They failed to qualify for the Southland Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 71], "content_span": [72, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286036-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northwestern Wildcats men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Northwestern Wildcats men's basketball team represented Northwestern University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They were led by sixth-year head coach Chris Collins as members of the Big Ten Conference. They played their home games at the newly renovated Welsh-Ryan Arena in Evanston, Illinois. The Wildcats finished the season 13\u201319, 4\u201316 in Big Ten play to finish in last place. They lost in the first round of the Big Ten Tournament to Illinois.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286036-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northwestern Wildcats men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Wildcats finished the 2017\u201318 season 15\u201317, 6\u201312 in Big Ten play to finish in 10th place. They lost in the second round of the Big Ten Tournament to Penn State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286037-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Northwestern Wildcats women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Northwestern Wildcats women's basketball team represents Northwestern University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Wildcats are led by 11th-year head coach Joe McKeown. They returned play their home games at Welsh\u2013Ryan Arena after a one year renovation. They are members of the Big Ten Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286038-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Norwegian First Division (ice hockey)\nThe 2018\u201319 First Division is the 29th season of Norway's second highest ice hockey league, First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286038-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Norwegian First Division (ice hockey)\nThe regular season began play on September 22, 2018, and will be concluded on March 3, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286038-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Norwegian First Division (ice hockey), Regular season, Standings\nx \u2013 clinched promotional playoff spot; y \u2013 clinched regular season league title; r \u2013 play in relegation series", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 72], "content_span": [73, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286038-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Norwegian First Division (ice hockey), Playoffs, Promotional Playoffs\nAfter the regular season ends, the lowest ranked team in the 2018\u201319 GET-ligaen and the two highest ranked teams in the First Division will compete for the right to play in the 2019\u201320 GET-ligaen. The tournament will be organized according to a double round robin format, where each club plays the others twice, home and away, for a total of four games. The points system and ranking method used, is the same as in the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 77], "content_span": [78, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286038-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Norwegian First Division (ice hockey), Playoffs, Relegational Playoffs\nAfter the regular season ended, the lowest ranked team in the First Division and the two highest ranked teams in the Second Division should have competed for the right to play in the 2019\u201320 Norwegian First Division. However, due to the bankruptcy of Kongsvinger Knights, and the announcement of Storhamar Yngres to withdraw from the 2019-20 season, the spots were offered to the two best Second Division teams, L\u00f8renskog and Haugesund Seagulls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 78], "content_span": [79, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286039-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Norwich City F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Norwich City's third consecutive season in the Championship. During the season they participated in the Championship, FA Cup and EFL Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286039-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Norwich City F.C. season\nThe season covered the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286039-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Norwich City F.C. season, Competitions, Friendlies\nOn 16 May 2018, SC Paderborn announced a pre-season friendly with Norwich City was to take place on 15 July. The club themselves confirmed the SC Paderborn friendly on 17 May, whilst also announcing a friendly with Union Berlin. Other friendly opponents include King's Lynn Town, Lincoln City, Crawley Town, Luton Town and Charlton Athletic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286039-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Norwich City F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam. The second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August. The third round draw was made on 30 August 2018 by David Seaman and Joleon Lescott. The fourth round draw was made live on Quest by Rachel Yankey and Rachel Riley on 29 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286039-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Norwich City F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286040-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Notre Dame Fighting Irish men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Notre Dame Fighting Irish men's basketball team represented the University of Notre Dame during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Fighting Irish, led by 19th-year head coach Mike Brey, played their home games at Edmund P. Joyce Center in South Bend, Indiana as sixth-year members of the Atlantic Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286040-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Notre Dame Fighting Irish men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Fighting Irish finished the 2017\u201318 season 21\u201315, 8\u201310 in ACC play to finish tied with Syracuse for tenth place. As the No. 10 seed in the ACC Tournament, they defeated Pittsburgh in the first round and Virginia Tech in the second round before losing to Duke in the quarterfinals. They were one of the last four teams not selected for the NCAA Tournament and as a result earned a No. 1 seed in the National Invitation Tournament, where they defeated Hampton in the first round before losing to Penn State in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 72], "content_span": [73, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286041-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Notre Dame Fighting Irish women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Notre Dame Fighting Irish women's basketball team represented the University of Notre Dame during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Fighting Irish, led by 32nd year head coach Muffet McGraw, played their home games at Edmund P. Joyce Center as members of the Atlantic Coast Conference. They were also the defending national champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286041-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Notre Dame Fighting Irish women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Fighting Irish finished the 2017\u201318 season at 35\u20133, 15\u20131 in ACC play to finish in a tie for first place. They were runners up in the ACC Women's Tournament losing to Louisville in the final game. They received an at large bid for the NCAA Women's Tournament as a number one seed. They won the tournament beating other number one seeds, Connecticut and Mississippi State along the way. This was the team's second national title in its history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 74], "content_span": [75, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286041-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Notre Dame Fighting Irish women's basketball team, Media\nAll Notre Dame games will air on WHPZ Pulse 96.9 FM. Games are streamed online live.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 64], "content_span": [65, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286041-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Notre Dame Fighting Irish women's basketball team, Rankings\nThe Coaches Poll releases a final poll after the NCAA tournament, but the AP Poll does not release a poll at this time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 67], "content_span": [68, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286042-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Nottingham Forest F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Nottingham Forest's 153rd season in existence and 11th consecutive season in the EFL Championship. In addition to the Championship, the club will participate in the FA Cup and EFL Cup. The season covers the period between 1 July 2018 and 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286043-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Notts County F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Notts County's 156th season in their history and their fourth consecutive season in League Two. The club also competed in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286043-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Notts County F.C. season, Competitions, Pre-season friendlies\nCounty confirmed friendlies against Basford United, Derby County, Leicester City and Luton Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286043-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Notts County F.C. season, Competitions, League Two, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League Two fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286043-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Notts County F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286043-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Notts County F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286043-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Notts County F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced. The draw for the second round was made live on Talksport by Leon Britton and Steve Claridge on 16 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286044-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 N\u00eemes Olympique season\nThe 2018-19 N\u00eemes Olympique season was the first season since 1992-93 for N\u00eemes Olympique in Ligue 1, the top tier of professional football league in the French football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286044-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 N\u00eemes Olympique 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286045-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OGC Nice season\nThe 2018\u201319 OGC Nice season was the 114th professional season of the club since its creation in 1904.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286045-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OGC Nice 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286045-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OGC Nice 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286045-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OGC Nice 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286046-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OHL season\nThe 2018\u201319 OHL season was the 39th season of the Ontario Hockey League, in which twenty teams played 68 games each according to the regular season schedule, from September 19, 2018 to March 17, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286046-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OHL season\nThe Guelph Storm won the J. Ross Robertson Cup as they defeated the Ottawa 67's in six games to represent the Ontario Hockey League in the 2019 Memorial Cup, which was hosted by the Halifax Mooseheads of the QMJHL at the Scotiabank Centre in Halifax, Nova Scotia from May 17\u201326, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286046-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286046-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286046-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286046-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286046-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286046-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286046-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OHL season, 2019 OHL Priority Selection\nOn April 6, 2019, the OHL conducted the 2019 Ontario Hockey League Priority Selection. The Kingston Frontenacs held the first overall pick in the draft, and selected Shane Wright from the Don Mills Flyers of the GTHL. Wright 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, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286046-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OHL season, 2019 OHL Priority Selection\nBelow are the players who were selected in the first round of the 2019 Ontario Hockey League Priority Selection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286046-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OHL season, 2019 NHL Entry Draft\nOn June 21-22, 2019, the National Hockey League conducted the 2019 NHL Entry Draft held at Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia. In total, 25 players from the Ontario Hockey League were selected in the draft. Thomas Harley of the Mississauga Steelheads was the first player from the OHL to be selected, as he was taken with the 18th overall pick by the Dallas Stars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286046-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OHL season, 2019 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-00286046-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OHL season, 2019 CHL Import Draft\nOn June 27, 2019, the Canadian Hockey League conducted the 2019 CHL Import Draft, in which teams in all three CHL leagues participate in. The Kingston Frontenacs held the first pick in the draft by a team in the OHL, and selected Martin Chromiak from Slovakia with their selection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286046-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OHL season, 2019 CHL Import Draft\nBelow are the players who were selected in the first round by Ontario Hockey League teams in the 2019 CHL Import Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286047-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OJHL season\nThe 2018-19 season was the 25th season for the Ontario Junior Hockey League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286047-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OJHL 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; z = clinched conference title", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286048-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OK Liga\nThe 2018\u201319 OK Liga is the 50th season of the top-tier league of rink hockey in Spain. It started on 22 September 2018 and end on 1 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286048-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OK Liga, Copa del Rey\nThe 2019 Copa del Rey was the 76th edition of the Spanish men's roller hockey cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286048-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OK Liga, Copa del Rey, Draw\nThe draw was held at the Olympic Pavilion of Reus on 7 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 35], "content_span": [36, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286048-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OK Liga, Supercopa de Espa\u00f1a\nThe 2018 Supercopa de Espa\u00f1a was the 15th edition of the Spanish men's roller hockey supercup, played on 15 and 16 September 2018 in Sant Sadurn\u00ed d'Anoia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286048-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OK Liga, Supercopa de Espa\u00f1a\nIt was played in a Final Four format between Noia Freixenet, who qualified as host team, Barcelona Lassa as league and cup champion, and Liceo and Reus Deportiu as second and third qualified of the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286048-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OK Liga, Supercopa de Espa\u00f1a\nBarcelona Lassa, defending champion, lost the title in the last 10 seconds of the final against Liceo, that achieved their second Supercup ever.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286048-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OK Liga, Lower divisions, OK Liga Plata\nThe OK Liga Plata, until the previous season known as Primera Divisi\u00f3n, is the second division of Spanish men's roller hockey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 47], "content_span": [48, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286048-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OK Liga, Lower divisions, OK Liga Bronce\nThe OK Liga Bronce is the new third tier, played with the best teams in the Regional leagues. For this first season, only the winners of the Catalan playoffs and four teams from the groups North and South each will be promoted to OK Liga Plata.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 48], "content_span": [49, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286049-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OK Liga Femenina\nThe 2018\u201319 OK Liga Femenina is the 11th season of the top-tier league of women's rink hockey in Spain. It will start on 20 October 2018 and will end on 25 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286049-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OK Liga Femenina\nHostelcur Gij\u00f3n was the defending champion. Generali Palau de Plegamans achieved their second league title after beating 7\u20135 Manlleu in the last match of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286049-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OK Liga Femenina, Teams\nDespite being relegated in the previous season, Liceo remained in the league as their reserve team won the promotion stage for teams from the northern Spain. The other place was for Cuencas Mineras, who will make their debut in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286049-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OK Liga Femenina, Teams\nAlso Reus Deportiu remained in the top tier after the resign of Catalan teams to promote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286049-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OK Liga Femenina, Copa de la Reina\nThe 2019 Copa de la Reina was the 14th edition of the Spanish women's roller hockey cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286049-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OK Liga Femenina, Copa de la Reina\nTelecable Gij\u00f3n won their fourth title ever, three years after their last win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286049-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 OK Liga Femenina, Copa de la Reina, Draw\nThe draw was held at the Olympic Pavilion of Reus on 7 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286050-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oakland Golden Grizzlies men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Oakland Golden Grizzlies men's basketball team represented Oakland University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Golden Grizzlies, led by 35th-year head coach Greg Kampe, played their home games at the Athletics Center O'rena in Auburn Hills, Michigan as members of the Horizon League. They finished the season 16\u201317, 11\u20137 in Horizon League play to finish in third place. They defeated Youngstown State in the quarterfinals of the Horizon League Tournament before losing in the semifinals to Northern Kentucky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286050-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oakland Golden Grizzlies men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Golden Grizzlies finished the 2017\u201318 season 19\u201314, 10\u20138 in Horizon League play to finish in fourth place. They defeated IUPUI in the quarterfinals of the Horizon League Tournament before losing in the semifinals to Cleveland State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 71], "content_span": [72, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286051-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oberliga (ice hockey) season\nThe 2018\u201319 Oberliga season was the 60th season of the Oberliga, the third-tier of German ice hockey. The Oberliga operated with two regional leagues, North and South. 25 teams competed in the season that spanned from 21 September 2018 till 30 April 2019. Tilburg Trappers and EC Peiting won the North and South premierships respectively. EV Landshut was crowned Oberliga champions by winning the playoffs, and by doing so they also secured promotion to DEL2. EHC Waldkraiburg, EC Harzer Falken, ECC Preussen Berlin were all relegated to Regionalliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286051-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oberliga (ice hockey) season, Teams\nOberliga North planned to expand to a sixteen team competition for 2018/19. However, those plans did not eventuate when the champions of Regionalliga North (Weserstars Bremen), East (ELV Tornado Niesky) and West (Herforder EV) all declined promotion to Oberliga North. The runners-up of each league also declined to submit an application for a licence. As such, the relegation of EC Harzer Falken was overturned and the team from Braunlage remained in the league. In August 2018, EHC Timmendorfer Strand 06 withdrew from the league and filed for bankruptcy. Oberliga North started the season with 13 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286051-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oberliga (ice hockey) season, Teams\nOberliga South planned to expand to a fourteen team competition for 2018/19. However, those plans were scrapped when the league was unable to find any suitable candidates in the Regionalliga East, South-West or Baveria. Deggendorfer SC left the league after being promoted to DEL2. Regionalliga South-West champion, SC Bietigheim-Bissingen U23 was unable to join the league due to the club having their first team in DEL2. TEV Miesbach also left the league after being relegated the previous season. Joining the league was the recently relegated DEL2 team, Bayreuth Tigers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286051-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oberliga (ice hockey) season, Teams\nOn 16 May 2018, DEL2 team, SC Riessersee, also joined the league after having their DEL2 licence cancelled. SC Riessersee had a protracted negotiation with DEL2 but ultimately was unable to agree to re-join the league. SC Riessersee then agreed to join Oberliga South for 2018/19. Oberliga South admitted the team with strict conditions including Riessersee not being able to participate in the championship playoffs and being forced to participate in the relegation playoffs regardless of their regular season performance. Oberliga South started the season with 12 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286051-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oberliga (ice hockey) season, Oberliga North\nOberliga North ran from 21 September 2018 till 3 March 2019. The league operated with a 48 match (4 matches against each team) regular season. The top six teams automatically qualified for the championship playoffs. The next four teams advanced to the qualification playoffs, playing for two final spots in the championship playoffs. Team's finishing eleventh to thirteenth have their season end after the regular season. The thirteenth team would be relegated to the Regionalliga. After 26 days into the season, Hamburg Crocodiles opened insolvency procedures, however they were okay to continue to compete in the season. The Oberliga board decided to impose the same conditions on Hamburg as they did SC Riessersee, the Crocodiles would be excluded from the championship playoffs. If they finished within the qualification positions, the next team below the qualification positions would take their place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 960]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286051-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oberliga (ice hockey) season, Oberliga North, Qualification playoffs\nTeams finishing seventh to tenth play best of three match series in the qualification playoffs to determine the final two places from Oberliga North in the Championship playoffs. Due to Hamburg being excluded and finishing ninth, Erfurt Black Dragons, who finished eleventh, progressed to the qualification playoffs instead. The matches occurred between 5 March and 10 March 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286051-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oberliga (ice hockey) season, Oberliga South\nOberliga South ran from 28 September 2018 till 10 March 2019. The league was broken into two stages. Stage one, the regular season, had all twelve teams compete in a home and away round before splitting into two regional groups for a second home and away round for a total of 32 matches. The top ten teams advanced to the Oberliga South qualification round to determine the league premier and eight qualifiers for the Oberliga championship playoffs. Normally the bottom two teams advanced to the relegation playoffs with eight Bayernliga teams, however, due to SC Riessersee entry conditions to the league, the bottom team and Riessersee would advance to the relegation playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286051-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oberliga (ice hockey) season, Oberliga South, Relegation playoffs\nTen teams took part in the relegation playoffs. Eight Regionalliga teams and two Oberliga teams. The top two teams from the eighteen match playoffs would qualify for the Oberliga in 2019/20. The bottom eight would qualify for the 2019/20 Regionalliga. SC Riessersee topped the playoffs to retain its status as an Oberliga team. EHC Waldkraiburg finished ninth and was relegated from Oberliga. EV F\u00fcssen secured promotion to Oberliga after finishing second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 73], "content_span": [74, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286051-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oberliga (ice hockey) season, Championship playoffs\nThe championship playoffs to determine the Oberliga champion and promotion to DEL2. The championship playoffs consisted of eight teams each from North and South who play a best of five series elimination format from the round of 16 to the Oberliga final. EV Landshut won the championship final series 3:2 over Tilburg Trappers to be crowned Oberliga-Meister and secure promotion to DEL2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286051-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oberliga (ice hockey) season, Championship playoffs\nDefenders: Sebastian Alt, Christian Ettwein, Stephan Kronthaler, Marius N\u00e4gele, Elia Ostwald, Paul Pfenninger, Mario Zimmermann, Luca Zitterbart", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286051-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oberliga (ice hockey) season, Championship playoffs\nAttackers: Leon Abstreiter, Peter Abstreiter, Marco Ba\u00dfler, Alexander Ehl, Christoph Fischhaber, Maximilian Forster, Maximilian Hofbauer, Miloslav Horava, Ales Jirik, Elias Lindner, Lukas M\u00fchlbauer, Julien Pelletier, Tomas Plihal, Luis Schinko, Marc Schmidpeter, Marco Sedlar, Sebastian Stanik, Vitali St\u00e4hle, Luca Trinkberger, David Wrigley", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286052-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Odense Boldklub season\nThe 2018\u201319 Odense Boldklub season was the club's 130th season, and their 57th appearance in the Danish Superliga. As well as the Superliga, the side was also compete in Sydbank Pokalen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286052-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Odense Boldklub season\nAt the end of the 2017\u201318 season, head coach Kent Nielsen got fired. Jakob Michelsen signed a 3-year contract on May 29 as new head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286052-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Odense Boldklub season\nOB finished as 3rd in the Superliga regular season despite starting with the worst opening six games in 19 years. OB finished strong in the last half of the season, among other things by winning five games in a row for the first time since 2009. OB had the chance to win the bronze medal, but could not keep going in the play-offs, and therefore it ended up with a 5th place. They finished off by losing to Br\u00f8ndby in the last and deciding game of the season, and therefore OB also missed the 4th place and Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286052-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Odense Boldklub season\nBut beside to a disappointing conclusion, OB ended up with the best season in eight years by finishing in the top-6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286052-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Odense Boldklub season, Season review, The new OB\nThe 2018\u201319 season indicated a new start and reboot for the club. Beside from the two new coaches, the club got a new CEO in April. The new CEO, Enrico Augustinus, had ambitions right from the start, and he wanted to create a new OB and make the club great again. Therefore, Augustinus and the board started to focus on better communication and branding, which hopefully would result in more spectators, due to the low average attendance the last few seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286052-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Odense Boldklub season, Season review, The new OB, Sponsors\nAfter 16 years as a main sponsor, Carlsberg was replaced by Albani. The new main sponsor is located in Odense as well, which makes the club more local. Furthermore, the stadium sponsor was changed too. NGF Nature Energy became new stadium sponsor, and the name was now Nature Energy Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 67], "content_span": [68, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286052-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Odense Boldklub season, Season review, The new OB, Mascot\nOB retired their mascot, the tiger Victor, who has been the mascot for over a decade. Instead they brought in an almost identical mascot, a cat, who was the OB mascot in the 90's. At the same time, the old intro song \"Eye of the Tiger\" was switched out for Carl Nielsen's \"Espansiva\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286052-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Odense Boldklub season, Season review, Pre-season\nThe OB pre-season were kicked off with the signings of academy players Jonathan Harboe and Mads Fr\u00f8kj\u00e6r-Jensen. They later on signed Horsens player Alexander Ludwig and academy player Mathias J\u00f8rgensen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286052-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Odense Boldklub season, Season review, Pre-season\nOB went on playing five pre-season games by winning them all, against Taarup/Paarup, \u00d6stersund, Kalmar, Roskilde and Hvidovre. A perfect start for the new head coach Jakob Michelsen. But people were still doubting the team to do well in the Superliga. The reason for was that sporting director Jesper Hansen did not acquire new big profiles. Although he promised a minimum of three new signings in the summer transfer window, but could not promise it would be done before the first Superliga match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286052-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Odense Boldklub season, Season review, July\nOB's opening Superliga fixture was away against promoted side Vendsyssel on 15 July. OB looked solid, but fell apart in the second half with two quick goals by Vendsyssel. Even though OB scored twice, the Stripes couldn't hold off Vendsyssel from winning 3\u20132. 17-year old Mathias J\u00f8rgensen came in as a sub and scored his first ever Superliga goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286052-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Odense Boldklub season, Season review, July\nAfter the disappointing loss, OB acquired Janus Drachmann from FC Midtjylland on a four-year deal. They also sold Andr\u00e9 R\u00f8mer to Randers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286052-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Odense Boldklub season, Season review, July\nWith the reinforcement they went on playing their home opener against head coach Michelsen's former team S\u00f8nderjyskE. OB were down 0\u20132 at half time, but a few substitutions turn things upside down. J\u00f8rgensen only needed 13 minutes on the pitch before he could score his second goal in the season, again as a sub, and brought OB on 1\u20132. Anders K. Jacobsen equalized at the 78 minute-mark. The game ended 2\u20132 even though OB had the chances for a win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286052-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Odense Boldklub season, Season review, July\nOB hoped to bring the good play from the S\u00f8nderjyskE-game into the next game away against Randers. They played well, but it did not bring them the first win of the season. It was R\u00f8mer who scored the crucial goal after just 39 seconds, after OB just sold him Randers. After the loss, people started to doubt if Michelsen was the right to take over the head coach position after just one point in three games against Vendsyssel, S\u00f8nderjyskE and Randers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286052-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Odense Boldklub season, Season review, August\nOB went on playing a tough game against F.C. Copenhagen in the fourth round at home. It looked like they did not stand a chance after the first three game, but OB did quite well. They had their chances to get in front and also could have got a penalty or two. With many missed chances and some bad luck, Dame N'Doye instead scored the deciding goal in favour of Copenhagen in the 85th minute. OB were now sitting in 13th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286052-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Odense Boldklub season, Season review, August\nIt was now everything or nothing when OB faced Hobro away in the fifth round. A battle between number 13 and 14, and therefore a battle of not sitting in last place. OB was anything else than lucky, and within 35 minutes they were down with 0\u20133. In the rainy conditions OB had a hard time creating chances, but they got a few in the closing minutes. Rasmus Festersen missed a penalty, and that was just the symbol of the OB's game. Helenius and Festersen made it 2\u20133, but could not get the equalizer. OB were now sitting in last place. The worst start to a season in 19 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286052-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Odense Boldklub season, Season review, August\nMeanwhile Sten Grytebust was rumored away, OB acquired Ivorian goalkeeper Sayouba Mand\u00e9. According to a lot of medias, Mand\u00e9 were brought in to replace Grytebust. Therefore, everybody a sale of the Norwegian keeper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286052-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Odense Boldklub season, Season review, August\nOB were now facing defending Superliga champion FC Midtjylland at home. Not exactly an easy job against the league's current number 3, who got also got three wins in a row. But against Copenhagen, OB showed that they could play against even the best teams. And that theory was proved correct as OB were the dominating team in the match. The only problem was still getting the opening goal. And after 74 minutes Marc Dal Hende banged Midtjylland in front, and OB were now facing another questionable defeat. But three minutes into stoppage time Nicklas Helenius equalized and got OB their second point of the season. A very deserved point that should have been three points, according to several medias.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286052-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Odense Boldklub season, Squad statistics, Goalscorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286053-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ohio Bobcats men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Ohio Bobcats men's basketball team represented Ohio University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bobcats, led by fifth-year head coach Saul Phillips, played their home games at the Convocation Center in Athens, Ohio as a member of the East Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 14\u201317 overall, 6\u201312 in MAC play to finish in last place in the East Division. As the No. 10 seed in the MAC Tournament, they were defeated in the first round by Northern Illinois.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286053-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ohio Bobcats men's basketball team\nOn March 13, 2019, head coach Saul Phillips was fired. He finished his five-year tenure at Ohio with an 81\u201377 overall record. Five days later, the school named Ohio alum Jeff Boals, head coach at Stony Brook, as their new head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286053-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ohio Bobcats men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bobcats finished the 2017\u201318 season 14\u201317, 7\u201311 in MAC play to finish in a tie for fourth place in the East Division. They lost in the first round of the MAC Tournament to Miami (OH).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286054-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ohio Bobcats women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Ohio Bobcats women's basketball team represented Ohio University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Bobcats, led by sixth year head coach Bob Boldon, played its home games at the Convocation Center in Athens, Ohio as a member of the Mid-American Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286054-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ohio Bobcats women's basketball team\nThey finished the season 30\u20136, 14\u20132 in MAC play to win MAC East Division. They advanced to the championship game of the MAC Women's Tournament where they lost to Buffalo. They received an automatic to the WNIT where defeated High Point, Middle Tennessee and Western Kentucky in the first, second and third rounds before losing to Northwestern in the quarterfinals. With 30 wins, they finish with the most wins in school history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286055-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ohio State Buckeyes men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Ohio State Buckeyes men's basketball team represented The Ohio State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Their head coach was Chris Holtmann, in his second season with the Buckeyes. The Buckeyes played their home games at Value City Arena in Columbus, Ohio as members of the Big Ten Conference. The Buckeyes finished the season 20\u201315, 8\u201312 in Big Ten play to finish in a tie for eighth place. As the No. 8 seed in the Big Ten Tournament, they defeated Indiana in the second round before losing to Michigan State in the quarterfinals. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as the No. 11 seed in the Midwest region. There they upset Iowa State in the First Round before losing to Houston in the Second Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 814]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286055-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ohio State Buckeyes men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Buckeyes finished the 2017\u201318 season 25\u20139, 15\u20133 in Big Ten play to finish in a tie for second place. As the No. 2 seed in the Big Ten Tournament, they lost to Penn State in the quarterfinals. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as the No. 5 seed in the West region. They defeated South Dakota State in the First Round before losing to Gonzaga in the Second Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286055-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ohio State Buckeyes men's basketball team, Rankings\n^Coaches Poll did not release a Week 2 poll at the same time AP did.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286056-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ohio State Buckeyes women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Ohio State Buckeyes women's basketball team represented the Ohio State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Buckeyes, led by 6th year head coach Kevin McGuff, played their home games at Value City Arena and are a member of the Big Ten Conference. They finished the season 14\u201315, 10\u20138 in Big Ten play to finish in fifth place. They lost in the second round of the Big Ten Women's Basketball Tournament to Wisconsin. They received an automatic bid to the WNIT where they got upset by Morehead State in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286057-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ohio Valley Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 Ohio Valley Conference men's basketball season began with practices in October 2018, followed by the start of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season in November. Conference play began in January 2019 and concludes in February 2019. The season marked the 70th season of Ohio Valley Conference basketball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286057-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ohio Valley Conference men's basketball season, Preseason, Preseason All-Conference Teams\nLedarrius Brewer (Southeast Missouri State)Jason Burnell (Jacksonville State)Christian Cunningham (Jacksonville State)Lamontray Harris (Morehead State)Fatood Lewis (UT Martin)Terrell Lewis (Eastern Illinois)Nick Mayo (Eastern Kentucky)Kevin McClain (Belmont)Ja Morant (Murray State)Terry Taylor (Austin Peay)Dylan Windler (Belmont)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 97], "content_span": [98, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286058-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oklahoma City Thunder season\nThe 2018\u201319 Oklahoma City Thunder season was the 11th season of the franchise in Oklahoma City and the 53rd in the National Basketball Association (NBA). Nick Collison (who had been with the franchise since it was based in Seattle), retired in May 2018 and was not on the roster for the first time since the 2002\u201303 season. The only remaining former SuperSonics' active players are Jeff Green and Kevin Durant, both of whom played their rookie seasons with the team in Seattle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286058-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oklahoma City Thunder season\nCollison's retirement also left Russell Westbrook as the longest tenured Thunder player and last remaining player on the roster from the 2011\u201312 season in which they won the Western Conference and went to the NBA Finals. On March 20, 2019, the Thunder retired Collison's No. 4 jersey, becoming the first Thunder player and the last former Sonic player to have their jersey retired. The Thunder had the fourth best team defensive rating in the NBA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286058-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oklahoma City Thunder season\nDespite speculation that Paul George would sign with his hometown team, the Los Angeles Lakers, in the off-season, George instead re-signed with the Thunder on June 30, 2018, exactly a year after he was traded to the team from the Indiana Pacers. The Thunder then clinched another playoff season due to the Kings loss to the Rockets on March 30th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286058-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oklahoma City Thunder season\nIn the playoffs, the Thunder were eliminated by the Portland Trail Blazers in the First Round thanks to a Damian Lillard series-clinching three pointer over Paul George in Game 5. This marked the third consecutive season the Thunder was eliminated in the First Round, and they are 0\u20139 in road playoff games since Durant's departure from the team. After 11 years, this season also marked the end of an era as Russell Westbrook was traded to the Houston Rockets following this season, and reunited him with former Thunder teammate James Harden, whom had played for the team from the 2009 to 2012 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286058-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oklahoma City Thunder season, Player statistics, Regular season\nAfter all games. \u2021Waived during the season\u2020Traded during the season\u2260Acquired during the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286059-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oklahoma Sooners men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Oklahoma Sooners basketball team represented the University of Oklahoma in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They were led by eighth-year head coach Lon Kruger and played their home games at the Lloyd Noble Center in Norman, Oklahoma as a member of the Big 12 Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286059-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oklahoma Sooners men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Sooners finished the 2017\u201318 season with an overall record of 18\u201314, 8\u201310 in Big 12 play to finish in a tie for eighth place. They lost in the First Round of the Big 12 Tournament to Oklahoma State. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they lost in the First Round to Rhode Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286060-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oklahoma Sooners women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Oklahoma Sooners women's basketball team represents the University of Oklahoma in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Sooners are led by Sherri Coale in her twenty-third season. The team plays its home games at the Lloyd Noble Center in Norman, Oklahoma as a member of the Big 12 Conference. They finished the season 8\u201322, 4\u201314 in Big 12 play to finish in a tie for eighth place. They lost in the first round of the Big 12 Women's Tournament to Texas Tech. They missed the postseason tournament for the first time since 1998 and their first losing season in 21 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286060-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oklahoma Sooners women's basketball team, Schedule\nx- Sooner Sports Television (SSTV) is aired locally on Fox Sports. However the contract allows games to air on various affiliates. Those affiliates are FSSW, FSSW+, FSOK, FSOK+, and FCS Atlantic, Central, and Pacific.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286061-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oklahoma State Cowboys basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Oklahoma State Cowboys basketball team represented Oklahoma State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They were led by second-head coach Mike Boynton Jr.. The Cowboys were members of the Big 12 Conference and played their home games at Gallagher-Iba Arena in Stillwater, Oklahoma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286061-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oklahoma State Cowboys basketball team, Previous season\nThe Cowboys finished the 2017\u201318 season with 21\u201315, 8\u201310 in Big 12 play to finish in a four-way tie for sixth place. They defeated Oklahoma in the first round of the Big 12 Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Kansas. They were invited to the National Invitation Tournament where they defeated Florida Gulf Coast and Stanford before losing in the quarterfinals to Western Kentucky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286062-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oklahoma State Cowgirls basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Oklahoma State Cowgirls basketball team represented Oklahoma State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Cowgirls, led by eighth year head coach Jim Littell, played their home games at Gallagher-Iba Arena and were members of the Big 12 Conference. They finished the season 14\u201316, 5\u201313 in Big 12 play to finish in seventh place. They lost in the first round of the Big 12 Women's Tournament to Kansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286063-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Old Dominion Lady Monarchs basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Old Dominion Lady Monarchs basketball team will represent Old Dominion University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Lady Monarchs, led by second-year head coach Nikki McCray-Penson, play their home games at Ted Constant Convocation Center and were members of Conference USA. They finished the season 21\u201311, 10\u20136 in C-USA play to finish in a tie for fifth place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the C-USA Women's Tournament where they lost to WKU. They received an at-large to the Women's National Invitation Tournament where they lost to Villanova in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286064-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Old Dominion Monarchs basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Old Dominion Monarchs basketball team represented Old Dominion University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Monarchs, led by sixth-year head coach Jeff Jones, played their home games at the Ted Constant Convocation Center in Norfolk, Virginia as members of Conference USA. They lost to Purdue in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286064-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Old Dominion Monarchs basketball team, Previous season\nThe Monarchs finished the season 25\u20137, 15\u20133 in C-USA play to finish in second place. They defeated Louisiana Tech in the quarterfinals of the C-USA Tournament before losing to Western Kentucky in the semifinals. Despite winning 25 games on the season, the Monarchs did not participate in a postseason tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286065-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oldham Athletic A.F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Oldham Athletic's 124th season in their history and first season back in the fourth tier since the 1970\u201371 season following relegation the previous season. Along with competing in League Two, the club will also participate in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286065-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oldham Athletic A.F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286065-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oldham Athletic A.F.C. season, Competitions, Pre-season friendlies\nThe Latics confirmed pre-season friendlies with Ashton United, Curzon Ashton, FC United of Manchester, Nottingham Forest and Preston North End.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286065-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oldham Athletic A.F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October. The draw for the second round was made live on BBC and BT by Mark Schwarzer and Glenn Murray on 12 November. The third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018. The fourth round draw was made live on BBC by Robbie Keane and Carl Ikeme from Wolverhampton on 7 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286065-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oldham Athletic A.F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286065-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oldham Athletic A.F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced. The draw for the second round was made live on Talksport by Leon Britton and Steve Claridge on 16 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286066-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ole Miss Rebels men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Ole Miss Rebels men's basketball team represented the University of Mississippi in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, their 109th basketball season. The Rebels were led by first-year, SEC Coach of the Year, Kermit Davis. The Rebels played their games at The Pavilion at Ole Miss in Oxford, Mississippi as members of the Southeastern Conference. The Rebels had an eight-win improvement from their previous season, which was eleventh best in Division I. The Rebels returned to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2015, where they were defeated in the First Round by 9th seeded Oklahoma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286066-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ole Miss Rebels men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Rebels finished the 2017\u201318 season 12\u201320, 5\u201313 in SEC play to finish in last place. They lost in the first round of the SEC Tournament to South Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286066-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ole Miss Rebels men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn February 12, 2018, 12th-year head coach Andy Kennedy, the school's all-time winningest head coach, and the school mutually agreed to part ways following the end of the season. However, on February 19, Kennedy announced that he would depart immediately, with assistant Madlock taking over on an interim basis. On March 15, 2018, it was announced that Ole Miss had hired Middle Tennessee head coach Kermit Davis as head coach of the Rebels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286066-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ole Miss Rebels men's basketball team, Rankings\n*AP does not release post-NCAA Tournament rankings^Coaches did not release a Week 2 poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286067-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ole Miss Rebels women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Ole Miss Rebels women's basketball team represented the University of Mississippi during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Rebels, led by first-year head coach Yolett McPhee-McCuin, played their home games at the Pavilion at Ole Miss and competed as members of the Southeastern Conference (SEC). They finished the season 9\u201322, 3\u201313 in SEC play to finish in a tie for twelfth place. They lost in the first round of the SEC Women's Tournament to Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286067-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ole Miss Rebels women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Rebels finished the season with a 12\u201319 overall record and a 1\u201315 record in conference play. One day after ending their season with a loss to Missouri in the second round of the SEC Tournament, fifth-year head coach Matt Insell was fired. One month later, McPhee-McCuin was hired to replace him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286068-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Olimpia Milano season, Team, Final roster\nNote: Flags indicate national team eligibility at FIBA sanctioned events. Players may hold other non-FIBA nationality not displayed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286069-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Olympiacos F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Olympiacos's 60th consecutive season in the Super League Greece and their 93nd year in existence. They also participate in the Greek Football Cup, and in the third qualification round of the UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286070-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Olympique Lyonnais season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Olympique Lyonnais's 69th professional season since its establishment in 1950. The side competed in Ligue 1, Coupe de France, Coupe de la Ligue and UEFA Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286070-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Olympique Lyonnais 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286070-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Olympique Lyonnais 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286070-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Olympique Lyonnais season, Competitions, UEFA Champions League\nOn 30 August, Lyon were drawn in Group F of the Champions League alongside Manchester City, Shakhtar Donetsk, and Hoffenheim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286071-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Olympique de Marseille season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Olympique de Marseille's 69th professional season since its creation in 1899 and 23rd consecutive season in the top flight. The club participated in Ligue 1, Coupe de France, Coupe de la Ligue and the UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286071-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Olympique de Marseille 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, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286071-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Olympique de Marseille 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-00286071-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Olympique de Marseille 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-00286072-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Olympique de M\u00e9d\u00e9a season\nIn the 2018\u201319 season, Olympique de M\u00e9d\u00e9a is competing in the Ligue 1 for the 3rd season, as well as the Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286072-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Olympique de M\u00e9d\u00e9a season, Squad list\nAs of August 11, 2018. 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, 45], "content_span": [46, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286073-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Omaha Mavericks men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Omaha Mavericks men's basketball team represents the University of Nebraska Omaha during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Mavericks, led by 14th-year head coach Derrin Hansen, play their home games at Baxter Arena as members of The Summit League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286073-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Omaha Mavericks men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Mavericks finished the season 9\u201322, 4\u201310 in Summit League play to finish in seventh place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Summit League Tournament to South Dakota State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286073-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Omaha Mavericks men's basketball team, Schedule and results\n* Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses. All times are in Central Time", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286074-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Omaha Mavericks women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Omaha Mavericks men's basketball team represents the University of Nebraska Omaha during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Mavericks, led by third year head coach Brittany Lange, play their home games at Baxter Arena and were members of The Summit League. They finished the season 8\u201321, 2\u201314 in Summit League play to finish in last place. They failed to qualify for the Summit League Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286075-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oman Professional League\nThe 2018\u201319 Oman Professional League is the 43rd edition of the Oman Professional League, the top football league in Oman. The season started on August 17, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286075-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oman Professional League, 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 during each game including at least one player from the AFC country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286076-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oman Quadrangular Series\nThe 2018\u201319 Oman Quadrangular Series was a Twenty20 International (T20I) cricket tournament, that was held in Oman in February 2019. The series was played between Ireland, Scotland, the Netherlands and hosts Oman. The Ireland team became the first Full Member side to tour the country. All the matches were played at the Al Emarat Cricket Stadium in Muscat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286076-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oman Quadrangular Series\nAhead of the final day of matches, the Netherlands had won both of their fixtures, therefore with a win against Ireland in their final match, they would win the series. However, the Netherlands lost the game against Ireland by one wicket, with Stuart Poynter hitting a six off the last ball to win the match. Despite the win, Ireland finished behind the Netherlands in the table on net run rate. The Netherlands would win the series if Scotland failed to defeat Oman in the final match. However, Scotland went on to beat the hosts by seven wickets, to finish top of the points table on net run rate, winning the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286076-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oman Quadrangular Series\nAs well as the T20I tournament, Ireland played two 20-over warm-up matches against the Oman Development XI side, losing both fixtures. Scotland also played three 50-over List A matches against Oman. In the first List A match, Scotland bowled Oman out for 24 runs, Oman's lowest List A total, and the fourth-lowest of all time. Scotland won the three-match series 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286077-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oral Roberts Golden Eagles men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Oral Roberts Golden Eagles men's basketball team represents Oral Roberts University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Golden Eagles are led by second-year head coach Paul Mills and play their home games at the Mabee Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma as members of The Summit League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286077-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oral Roberts Golden Eagles men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Golden Eagles finished the season 11\u201321, 5\u20139 in Summit League play to finish in a tie for fifth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Summit League Tournament to Denver.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 73], "content_span": [74, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286078-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oral Roberts Golden Eagles women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Oral Roberts Golden Eagles women's basketball team represented Oral Roberts University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Golden Eagles were led by seventh year head coach Misti Cussen and play their home games at the Mabee Center. They were members of The Summit League. They finished the season 18\u201313, 10\u20136 in Summit League play to finish in a tie for third place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Summit League Women's Tournament where they lost to South Dakota State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286079-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oregon Battle of the Books controversy\nThe Oregon Battle of the Books (OBOB) is a yearly event where students create teams and compete based on content from books selected by a committee. Students form teams of 4-5 students and are responsible for reading about 50 books and remembering contents such as plot, characters, and other relevant questions based on the novels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286079-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oregon Battle of the Books controversy, Controversial book choice\nWhen the reading list for the Oregon Battle of the Books 2018-2019 season was announced, it was met with a variety of reactions. The committee responsible for selecting the books students must read in order to compete included the novel George by Alex Gino. The novel follows the struggles of a 10 year old transgender girl named Melissa in the fourth grade. Both the Hermiston school district and the Cascade school district chose not to compete in the Oregon Battle of the Books (commonly known as OBOB) that academic year due to the inclusion of Gino's novel. Few of the OBOB book choices have been controversial and many educators and school districts had varying reactions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 752]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286079-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oregon Battle of the Books controversy, Reactions to George\nCascade school district superintendent Darin Drill explained the district's choice to not participate in the OBOB competition that year. Drill stated that the district deemed the content contained in the novel as inappropriate for the 3rd-5th graders meant to read the book for the competition. Drill and the rest of the Cascade school board were concerned about certain themes within the novel such as the mention of pornography and the possibility for children to learn how to clear their search history. The statements made by the Hermiston school district and the Cascade school district explicitly stated they were not protesting the inclusion of the novel because of the main character being a transgender girl but because of the other content the book contained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 67], "content_span": [68, 837]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286079-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oregon Battle of the Books controversy, Reactions to George\nAs the decisions made by the Hermiston and Cascade school districts spread, parents and OBOB committee members also commented on the situation. One parent expressed her frustration that parents had not been directly involved in the decision to leave the OBOB competition that year. Sara Hernandez, the parent of a student in the Cascade district, stated she was frustrated because the school board had made the decision without parent involvement and hadn't even allowed discussion but instead outright removed themselves from the OBOB competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 67], "content_span": [68, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286079-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oregon Battle of the Books controversy, Reactions to George\nThe administrative chair of the OBOB committee and a school librarian, Linda Fukasawa, released an email explaining how George was selected as one of the OBOB books and why the committee believed it was appropriate for 3rd grade to 5th grade children. Fukasawa continued to describe the committee's criteria for OBOB novels and stated George was chosen because it displayed diversity with a main character in the same age range as the children meant to read it for the OBOB competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 67], "content_span": [68, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286079-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oregon Battle of the Books controversy, Reactions to George\nThe author of the novel, Alex Gino, spoke with New York Daily News to release a statement about the meaning of the novel and why it was appropriate for children. Gino explained that they wanted to explore the theme of being young and queer, specifically young and transgender. As a genderqueer individual, Gino understands some of the struggles the main character Melissa faces throughout the novel and wanted to share that experience with children who are not typically exposed to media containing trans people. Gino also stated that the novel would not cause children to become transgender, but it might be able to comfort young trans kids and help their peers be more accepting of them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 67], "content_span": [68, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286080-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oregon Ducks men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Oregon Ducks men's basketball team represented the University of Oregon during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Ducks, led by ninth-year head coach Dana Altman, played their home games at Matthew Knight Arena as members of the Pac\u201312 Conference. They finished the season with a 25-13 record, 10-8 in conference play, and finished tied for 4th in the Pac-12. Oregon won the Pac-12 Tournament, upsetting the No. 1 seed Washington and receiving the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. Oregon entered the NCAA Tournament as a No. 12 seed and upset the No. 5 seed Wisconsin in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286080-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oregon Ducks men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Ducks finished the season 23\u201313, 10\u20138 in Pac-12 play to finish in a tie for sixth place. As the No. 6 seed in the Pac-12 Tournament, they defeated Washington State in the first round and Utah in the quarterfinals before being defeated by USC in the semifinals. They received an invitation to the National Invitation Tournament, where they defeated Rider in the first round before losing to Marquette in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286080-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oregon Ducks men's basketball team, Ranking movement\n*AP does not release post-NCAA tournament rankings.^Coaches did not release a Week 1 poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 60], "content_span": [61, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286081-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oregon Ducks women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Oregon Ducks women's basketball team represented the University of Oregon during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Ducks, led by fifth-year head coach Kelly Graves, played home games at the Matthew Knight Arena as members of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season 33\u20135, 16\u20132 in Pac-12 play to win the Pac-12 regular season title. They advanced to the championship game of the Pac-12 Women's Tournament where they lost Stanford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286081-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oregon Ducks women's basketball team\nThey received an at-large bid of the NCAA Women's Tournament where they defeated Portland State and Indiana in the first and second rounds, South Dakota State in the Sweet Sixteen and Mississippi State in the Elite Eight to reach the Final Four for the first time in school history. They lost to Baylor in the Final Four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286082-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oregon State Beavers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Oregon State Beavers men's basketball team represented Oregon State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Beavers, led by fifth-year head coach Wayne Tinkle, played their home games at Gill Coliseum in Corvallis, Oregon as members of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season 18\u201313, 10\u20138 in Pac-12 play to finish in a three way tie for fourth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Pac-12 Tournament to Colorado. Despite having 18 wins and a better record they failed to get an invitation to the National Invitation Tournament and also ruled out of the College Basketball Invitational.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286082-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oregon State Beavers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe 2017\u201318 Beavers finished the 2017\u201318 season 16\u201316, 7\u201311 in Pac-12 play to finish in tenth place. They defeated Washington in the first round of the Pac-12 Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to USC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286083-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oregon State Beavers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Oregon State Beavers women's basketball team represented Oregon State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Beavers, led by ninth year head coach Scott Rueck, played their games at the Gill Coliseum and were members of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season with a record of 26-8 (14-4 Pac-12). They played in the quarterfinals of the Pac-12 Women's Tournament where they were upset by Washington. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Women's Tournament where they defeated Boise State in the first round, and Gonzaga in the second round, before losing to Louisville for the 2nd consecutive year in the Sweet 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286084-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orlando Magic season\nThe 2018\u201319 Orlando Magic season was the 30th season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA). On April 12, 2018, the Magic fired head coach Frank Vogel after the team missed the playoffs. On May 30, Steve Clifford was named as Vogel's replacement. On September 6, owner Richard DeVos died at the age of 92 from complications of an infection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286084-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orlando Magic season\nOn April 7, 2019, the Magic clinched a playoff spot for the first time since the 2011\u201312 season, which had also been their most recent winning season. Additionally, they became the Southeast Division champions for the first time since the 2009\u201310 season. With the Magic clinching a playoff berth, the longest playoff drought in the eastern conference was inherited by the New York Knicks who failed to qualify for the postseason since 2012-13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286084-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orlando Magic season\nIn the playoffs, the Magic were eliminated by the eventual NBA champion Toronto Raptors in the first round, losing in five games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286084-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orlando Magic season, Player statistics, Regular season\nAfter all games. \u2021Waived during the season\u2020Traded during the season\u2260Acquired during the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286085-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo)\nThe 2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (known as the e\u00b7on f\u00e9rfi OB I oszt\u00e1ly\u00fa Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g for sponsorship reasons) was the 113th 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, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286085-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo), Team information\nThe following 16 clubs compete in the OB I during the 2018\u201319 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 65], "content_span": [66, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286085-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo), Regular season, Group A, Schedule and 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, 94], "content_span": [95, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286085-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo), Regular season, Group B, Schedule and 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, 94], "content_span": [95, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286085-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo), Second round, Championship round\nThe top four teams, from two groups advance from the regular season. Teams start the Championship round with their points from the Regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 81], "content_span": [82, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286085-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo), Second round, Championship round, Schedule and results\nKey numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 14 games)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 103], "content_span": [104, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286085-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo), Second round, Championship round, Schedule and 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, 103], "content_span": [104, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286085-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo), Second round, Relegation round\nThe bottom four teams, from two groups advance from the regular season. Teams start the Relegation round with their points from the Regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 79], "content_span": [80, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286085-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo), Second round, Relegation round, Schedule and 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, 101], "content_span": [102, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286085-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo), Final round, 1st \u2013 4th Placement matches\nFTC-Telekom Waterpolo won the series 9\u20130 with points ratio, and advanced to the Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 89], "content_span": [90, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286085-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo), Final round, 1st \u2013 4th Placement matches\nA-H\u00cdD OSC \u00dajbuda won the series 9\u20130 with points ratio, and advanced to the Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 89], "content_span": [90, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286085-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo), Final round, 1st \u2013 4th Placement matches, Finals\nHigher ranked team hosted Game 1 and Game 3 plus Game 5 if necessary. The lower ranked hosted Game 2 plus Game 4 if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 97], "content_span": [98, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286085-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo), Final round, 1st \u2013 4th Placement matches, Third place\nHigher ranked team hosted Game 1 plus Game 3 if necessary. The lower ranked hosted Game 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 102], "content_span": [103, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286085-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo), Final round, 5th \u2013 8th Placement matches\nHigher ranked team hosted Game 1 plus Game 3 if necessary. The lower ranked hosted Game 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 89], "content_span": [90, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286085-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo), Final round, 5th \u2013 8th Placement matches\nHigher ranked team hosted Game 1 plus Game 3 if necessary. The lower ranked hosted Game 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 89], "content_span": [90, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286085-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo), Final round, 9th \u2013 12th Placement matches\nHigher ranked team hosted Game 1 plus Game 3 if necessary. The lower ranked hosted Game 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 90], "content_span": [91, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286085-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo), Final round, 9th \u2013 12th Placement matches\nHigher ranked team hosted Game 1 plus Game 3 if necessary. The lower ranked hosted Game 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 90], "content_span": [91, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286085-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo), Final round, 13th \u2013 16th Placement matches\nHigher ranked team hosted Game 1 plus Game 3 if necessary. The lower ranked hosted Game 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 91], "content_span": [92, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286085-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo), Final round, 13th \u2013 16th Placement matches\nHigher ranked team hosted Game 1 plus Game 3 if necessary. The lower ranked hosted Game 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 91], "content_span": [92, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286085-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo), Relegation play-out\nHigher ranked team hosted Game 1 plus Game 3 if necessary. The lower ranked hosted Game 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 68], "content_span": [69, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286085-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo), Relegation play-out\nVasasPlaket won the 2\u20130 on series and therefore both clubs remain in their respective leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 68], "content_span": [69, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286086-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's water polo)\nThe 2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I was the 36th season of the Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I, Hungary's premier Water polo league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286086-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's water polo), Team information\nThe following 9 clubs compete in the OB I during the 2018\u201319 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 67], "content_span": [68, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286086-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's water polo), Regular season, Schedule and results\nIn the table below the home teams are listed on the left and the away teams along the top.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 87], "content_span": [88, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286086-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's water polo), Final round, Championship playoff\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, 49], "section_span": [51, 84], "content_span": [85, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286086-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's water polo), Final round, Championship playoff, Quarter-finals\nBVSC-Zugl\u00f3 Diapolo won the series 9\u20130 with points ratio, and advanced to the Semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 100], "content_span": [101, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286086-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's water polo), Final round, Championship playoff, Quarter-finals\nFTC-Telekom Waterpolo won the series 9\u20130 with points ratio, and advanced to the Semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 100], "content_span": [101, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286086-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's water polo), Final round, Championship playoff, Semi-finals\nHigher ranked team hosted Game 1 plus Game 3 if necessary. The lower ranked hosted Game 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 97], "content_span": [98, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286086-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's water polo), Final round, Championship playoff, Semi-finals\nUVSE-Hunguest Hotels won the series 2\u20130, and advanced to the Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 97], "content_span": [98, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286086-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's water polo), Final round, Championship playoff, Semi-finals\nDuna\u00fajv\u00e1rosi Egyetem-Maarsk Graphics won the series 2\u20131, and advanced to the Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 97], "content_span": [98, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286086-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's water polo), Final round, Championship playoff, Finals\nHigher ranked team hosted Game 1 and Game 3 plus Game 5 if necessary. The lower ranked hosted Game 2 plus Game 4 if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 92], "content_span": [93, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286086-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's water polo), Final round, Championship playoff, Third place\nHigher ranked team hosted Game 1 plus Game 3 if necessary. The lower ranked hosted Game 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 97], "content_span": [98, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286086-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's water polo), Final round, 5th \u2013 8th Placement matches, Relegation playout\nHigher ranked team hosted Game 1 plus Game 3 if necessary. The lower ranked hosted Game 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 111], "content_span": [112, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286086-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's water polo), Final round, 5th \u2013 8th Placement matches, 5th \u2013 8th Placement matches\nHigher ranked team hosted Game 1 plus Game 3 if necessary. The lower ranked hosted Game 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 120], "content_span": [121, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286087-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ottawa Senators season\nThe 2018\u201319 Ottawa Senators season was the 27th season of the Ottawa Senators of the National Hockey League (NHL). The Senators failed to qualify for the playoffs for the second consecutive year. The season saw the trading away of several notable veterans including Erik Karlsson, Matt Duchene, Mark Stone and Ryan Dzingel and the firing of coach Guy Boucher.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286087-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ottawa Senators season, Team business\nIn May 2018, the club announced the appointment of Nicolas Ruszkowski as its new chief operating officer. Ruszkowski has a background in public relations. Ruszkowski will be in charge of business operations and will not have a role in hockey operations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286087-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ottawa Senators season, Team business\nAssistant general manager Randy Lee was suspended by the club in June, after being charged for offences during the NHL Entry Draft Combine in Buffalo, New York. He resigned from the position in August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286087-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ottawa Senators season, Team business\nThe Belleville Senators head coaching vacancy was filled in June when the Senators announced the hiring of Troy Mann, a veteran of ten seasons in the North American minor leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286087-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ottawa Senators season, Team business\nThe Senators named a new assistant general manager on September 17. The new assistant general manager is Peter MacTavish, who was previously with law firm Norton Rose Fulbright Canada LLP, and CAA Hockey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286087-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ottawa Senators season, Team business\nThe Senators announced that the Brampton Beast will be the team's official ECHL affiliate after the Montreal Canadiens decided not to renew their affiliation with the Beast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286087-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ottawa Senators season, Team business\nThe Senators' plans to build a new arena downtown in partnership with Trinity Developments came apart after it was revealed that the Senators were suing Trinity for CA$700 million in damages. Trinity was developing a site adjacent to the LeBreton Flats site and the Senators felt this was inappropriate competition. Trinity responded with a CA$1 billion dollar lawsuit, accusing the Senators of being unwilling to contribute any money to the project.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286087-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ottawa Senators season, Team business\nThe National Capital Commission (NCC), in charge of the public lands the arena would be situated on, announced the cancellation of the partnership's bid to develop the site, but gave the sides an extension when the two parties agreed to mediation. On February 27, 2019, it was announced that mediation between the parties had failed to come to an agreement and that the NCC would explore other options for the site's redevelopment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286087-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ottawa Senators season, Off-season\nIn July, the Senators avoided arbitration with winger Mark Stone coming to agreement on a $7.3\u00a0million one-year contract. Contract negotiations with defenseman Cody Ceci went to arbitration, where he was awarded a $4.3\u00a0million one-year deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286087-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ottawa Senators season, Off-season\nIn August, the Senators' 2018 first-round pick Brady Tkachuk decided to forego further seasons in university to turn professional with the Senators, signing a three-year entry-level contract. The Senators hired former player Chris Kelly as a development coach on September 4, 2018. He joins former player Shean Donovan as development coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286087-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ottawa Senators season, Off-season\nA contract extension was offered to captain Erik Karlsson on July 1, with no terms disclosed publicly. Karlsson turned down the offer, prompting media speculation about his status. The media reported that Karlsson was free to negotiate terms with other teams, however, no trade was made at the time. Trade speculation heated up as the team neared training camp, and the team finally made a deal with the San Jose Sharks on September 13, one day before training camp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286087-0009-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ottawa Senators season, Off-season\nThe team received two NHL players (Dylan DeMelo, Chris Tierney), two young prospects (Josh Norris and Rudolfs Balcers), and first-round and second-round draft picks in exchange for Karlsson. Karlsson did not agree to a contract extension with the Sharks, and a second-round draft pick of the Sharks will go to the Senators should he re-sign with San Jose. An additional pick will go to the Senators should the Sharks trade Karlsson to the Eastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286087-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ottawa Senators season, Pre-season\nThe Senators played in the Kraft Hockeyville game again in pre-season, playing the Toronto Maple Leafs in Lucan, Ontario on September 18. The team played a six-game pre-season schedule, including two against Toronto, two against Montreal and two against Chicago.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286087-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ottawa Senators season, Regular season\nThe Senators' first game of the season, also the home opener, was on October 4, 2018, versus the Chicago Blackhawks. In the team's 26 seasons of play, this was the first time the Blackhawks were the opening night opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286087-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ottawa Senators season, Regular season\nDuring November, a video leaked of seven Senators players, including Matt Duchene, Chris Wideman, Chris Tierney, Dylan DeMelo and Thomas Chabot, mocking the team during an Uber ride from a game. The five-minute video featured the players laughing at the team's low ranked penalty kill, poor special teams and insulting assistant coach Martin Raymond, who was not present in the vehicle. The video quickly went viral, and started a dialogue about privacy and consent about recording conversations. The players involved issued apologies for their comments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286087-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ottawa Senators season, Regular season\nAt the trade deadline, the Senators traded away their top three scorers: Mark Stone, Matt Duchene and Ryan Dzingel; all were scheduled to become unrestricted free agents in July and had not agreed to contract extensions. Duchene and Dzingel were traded away to the Columbus Blue Jackets, and Stone was traded to the Vegas Golden Knights. At the trade deadline, the Senators were in last place in the NHL, a position they would hold for the rest of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286087-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ottawa Senators season, Regular season\nOn March 1, 2019, head coach Guy Boucher was fired and associate coach Marc Crawford was named as interim head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286087-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ottawa Senators season, Playoffs\nThe Senators failed to qualify for the 2019 Stanley Cup playoffs after being eliminated on March 9, 2019, following a 3\u20132 loss to the Boston Bruins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286087-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ottawa Senators season, Schedule and results, Pre-season\nNotes: Game was played at Lucan Community Memorial Centre in Lucan, Ontario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286087-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ottawa Senators season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was released on June 21, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 68], "content_span": [69, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286087-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ottawa Senators 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-00286087-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ottawa Senators season, Players, Statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Senators. Stats reflect time with the Senators only. \u2021No longer with team. Bold denotes team leader in that category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286087-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ottawa Senators season, Transactions\nThe Senators have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286087-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ottawa Senators season, Draft picks\nBelow are the Ottawa Senators' selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286088-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Oud-Heverlee Leuven's 17th competitive season in professional football and the team's third consecutive season at the second level following their relegation from the Belgian Pro League in 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286088-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season\nAlthough deemed as potential candidates for promotion at the start of the season, OH Leuven was never in contention and was always closer to the bottom of the table than to the top. After missing out on winning the opening tournament, going out early against amateur team Dessel Sport in the Belgian Cup and several disappointing results in the closing tournament, English coach Nigel Pearson was sacked in January 2019 and replaced by the duo of Vincent Euvrard (manager) and Franky Vercauteren (sports advisor).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286088-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season\nAfter the change, despite scoring more points, the team was not able to avoid the relegation play-offs, however with four wins out of six matches, the club avoided relegation in the end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286088-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Transfers\nThe first transfer news regarding the 2018\u201319 squad came in March, when Mechelen announced that despite their relegation from the Belgian First Division A, Ivorian defender Mamadou Bagayoko would remain at the team. He was already on loan from OH Leuven but would transfer permanently at the end of the season. One month later, another player left for Mechelen, as winger Nikola Storm signed a deal with the club to transfer there permanently after his loan from Club Brugge to OH Leuven would come to an end at the end of the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286088-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Transfers\nThe month of May involved the first new reinforcements, as OH Leuven brought in two Belgian youngsters: Olivier Myny was signed from Waasland-Beveren while Jellert van Landschoot was loaned from Club Brugge. Meanwhile, Pepingen-Halle, playing in the Belgian Third Amateur Division, had announced the signing of third goalkeeper Andreas Suederick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286088-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Transfers\nIn June, with Samy Kehli and Elliott Moore, two players were kept that were on loan during the previous season. Kehli was signed permanently from Lokeren, while the loan deal of Moore was extended with one more season. On top of this, also two new players joined the club as French experienced defender Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Duplus was signed from Lens, after already playing in Belgium for Zulte Waregem, White Star Brussels and Antwerp, followed by English youth international George Hirst from Sheffield Wednesday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286088-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Transfers\nEarly July, both Thomas Azevedo and Geert Berben moved to Lommel, their former team. Azevedo was already on loan to Lommel during the second half of the previous season and became a free agent player after his contract with OH Leuven ended, while Berben had been on loan to Oosterzonen Oosterwijk and was now sold. Later that same month, two youngsters left the squad, as striker Din Sula (who had been out on loan to Lommel) was signed by Waasland-Beveren and Jordy Gillekens was loaned to the youth squad of Fiorentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286088-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Transfers\nThe only incoming transfer in July was that of Dutch striker Sam Hendriks, arriving from Go Ahead Eagles. Later that summer, two players signed for Belgian First Amateur Division teams as their contracts had ended: experienced midfielder Flavien Le Postollec signed for Deinze, while youngster Jordy Lokando, who had returned from a loan to Heist, now moved permanently to RWDM47.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286088-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Transfers\nAs was the case for the last few seasons already, OH Leuven was again active on transfer deadline day, signing no less than three players. While the interest of OH Leuven in French midfielder Redouane Kerrouche from Paris had been apparent already over the prior weeks and the signing therefore anticipated, the loan deals of youngsters Ahmed Touba (from Club Brugge) and especially Polish 14 times international Bartosz Kapustka (from Leicester City) to many came as more of a surprise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286088-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Transfers\nFinally, throughout the summer some players did not have their contracts extended or saw their loan deals come to an end. Youngsters Dico Jap Tjong and Godwin Odibo were released, Benjamin Bambi and Leo Njengo returned from loans to Heist and Dessel Sport respectively, but were placed at the OH Leuven reserves. The loan deal of defender Benjamin Boulenger from Charleroi ended and was not prolonged neither.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286088-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Transfers\nDuring the 2018\u201319 winter transfer window, with the team suffering in the league while having a large squad, several transfers were expected on both incoming and outgoing side. The first transfer was however only announced mid-January and concerned a loan deal of Leo Njengo, who had been playing for the reserves so far this season and was given playing time with Belgian First Amateur Division-side Heist. Two incoming signings followed just after that, with central defender Sascha Kotysch and striker Thomas Henry. While Kotysch arrived from Sint-Truiden, the transfer of Henry was surprising as he was signed from direct opponents Tubize in the fight against relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286088-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Transfers\nThe final transfers of the 2018\u201319 season all happened in the last two days before closing of the transfer window. First another striker was brought into the squad with Yanis Mbombo, coming from Excel Mouscron. No mention was made whether it concerned a loan deal or a permanent move, only that Mbombo had signed a contract until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286088-0010-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Transfers\nOn transfer deadline day, OH Leuven got rid of four strikers, first sending youngsters Jo Gilis and Daan Vekemans out on loan to Eendracht Aalst, followed by Dutchman Sam Hendriks who returned to his home country after just half a season, to play out on loan for Cambuur. In the final hours, 2016\u201317 club top scorer Esteban Casagolda was sold to league competitors Roeselare. The final day also involved one more incoming transfer with midfielder Aboubakar Keita arriving on loan from Copenhagen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286088-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Belgian First Division B\nOHL's season in the Belgian First Division B began on 4 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286089-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oxford United F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Oxford United's third consecutive season in League One and their 125th year in existence. As well as competing in League One, the club participated in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286089-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oxford United F.C. season, Competitions, Friendlies\nOn 10 May 2018, Oxford United announced a pre-season tour of the Republic of Ireland was to take place in July. Opponents Portmarnock, Longford Town and UCD were revealed four days later. Later that day, friendlies with Oxford City and Hampton & Richmond Borough were scheduled. On 16 May, the club announced a friendly with Milton Keynes Dons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286089-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oxford United F.C. season, Competitions, League One, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League One fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286089-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oxford United F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October. The draw for the second round was made live on BBC and BT by Mark Schwarzer and Glenn Murray on 12 November. The third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286089-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oxford United F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam. The second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August. The third-round draw was made on 30 August 2018 by David Seaman and Joleon Lescott, handing Oxford a home tie against defending Premiership champions Manchester City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286089-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Oxford United F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced. The draw for the second round was made live on Talksport by Leon Britton and Steve Claridge on 16 November. On 8 December, the third round draw was drawn by Alan McInally and Matt Le Tissier on Soccer Saturday. The Quarter-final draw was made conducted on Sky Sports by Don Goodman and Thomas Frank on 10 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286090-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PAOK FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was PAOK Football Club's 93rd in existence and the club's 60th consecutive season in the top flight of Greek football. The team won the Super League unbeaten, defended their Greek Football Cup title won in 2018, and also competed in the UEFA Champions League and UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286090-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PAOK FC season, Competitions, Super League Greece, Matches\n\u2022 Man of the Match as has been voted by PAOK fans on official PAOK website and mobile app.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286090-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PAOK FC season, Competitions, Greek Football Cup\nPAOK entered the competition as the two-time defending champions, having won consecutive editions in 2016\u201317 and 2017\u201318.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 56], "content_span": [57, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286090-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286090-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PAOK FC season, Awards, Fans' Man of the Match award\nAs has been voted by PAOK fans on official PAOK website and mobile app.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 60], "content_span": [61, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286090-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PAOK FC season, Awards, Player of the Month award\nAwarded monthly to the player that was chosen by fans voting on", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 57], "content_span": [58, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286091-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PAS Giannina F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is PAS Giannina F.C. 's 24th competitive season in the top flight of Greek football, 9th season in the Super League Greece, and 53rd 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-00286091-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PAS Giannina F.C. season, Transfers, Summer, Out\nFor recent transfers, see List of Greek football transfers summer 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286091-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PAS Giannina F.C. season, Transfers, Winter, Out\nFor recent transfers, see List of Greek football transfers winter 2018\u201319", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286091-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PAS Giannina F.C. season, Competitions, Greek Cup\nPAS Giannina will enter the Greek Cup at the fourth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286092-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC CSKA Moscow season\nThe 2018\u201319 PFC CSKA Moscow season was the 27th successive season that the club 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, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286092-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Season events\nOn 5 June, Georgi Shchennikov signed a new contract with CSKA until the summer of 2023. On 14 June, CSKA announced that Konstantin Bazelyuk would spend the 2018\u201319 season on loan at FC SKA-Khabarovsk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286092-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Season events\nOn 15 June it was confirmed that CSKA would take FC Tosno's place in the Russian Super Cup on 27 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286092-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Season events\nOn 20 June, CSKA Moscow announced that they had agreed the transfer of H\u00f6r\u00f0ur Magn\u00fasson with Bristol City, with personal terms still to be signed, whilst Bristol City announced that Magn\u00fasson had left for an undisclosed fee. Two days later, 22 June, CSKA announced the signing of Jaka Bijol on a five-year contract from Rudar Velenje.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286092-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Season events\nOn 2 July, Sergei Tkachyov moved to Arsenal Tula on a season-long loan deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286092-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Season events\nOn 4 July, CSKA Moscow announced the signing of Rodrigo Bec\u00e3o on a season-long loan deal from Bahia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286092-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Season events\nOn 8 July, Sergei Ignashevich announced his retirement from football, with Aleksei Berezutski and Vasili Berezutski also announcing their retirement from football on 20 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286092-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Season events\nOn 18 July, Kirill Nababkin extended his contract with CSKA Moscow until the end of the 2019/20 season, with manager Viktor Goncharenko also extending his contract the following day, until the end of the 2019/20 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286092-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Season events\nOn 26 July, CSKA Moscow announced the signing of Ilzat Akhmetov on a four-year contract after his Rubin Kazan contract had expired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286092-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Season events\nOn 27 July, CSKA Moscow announced that Aleksandr Golovin had signed for AS Monaco on a record-breaking transfer fee for CSKA Moscow. Later the same day, CSKA Moscow won their seventh Russian Super Cup, with a 1-0 extra time victory over Lokomotiv Moscow. After the game, CSKA Moscow confirmed that Vitinho had left the club to join Flamengo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286092-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Season events\nOn 1 August, CSKA Moscow announced the arrival of Abel Hern\u00e1ndez from Hull City on a three-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286092-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Season events\nOn 14 August, CSKA Moscow announced that Aaron Olanare had left the club after his contract with cancelled by mutual consent. The following day, 15 August, CSKA Moscow announced the arrival of Nikola Vla\u0161i\u0107 on a season-long loan deal from Everton", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286092-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Season events\nOn 30 August, Igor Akinfeev signed a new contract with CSKA until the summer of 2022.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286092-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Season events\nOn 31 August, CSKA Moscow announced that Arn\u00f3r Sigur\u00f0sson had signed on a five-year contract from IFK Norrk\u00f6ping, that Takuma Nishimura had signed on a four-year contract from Vegalta Sendai, and Ivan Oblyakov had signed from FC Ufa until the summer of 2023.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286092-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Season events\nOn 5 October, CSKA Moscow announced the signing of Malian striker Lassana N'Diaye, on a contract until the summer of 2023, after he turned 18 on 3 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286092-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Season events\nOn 18 December, CSKA Moscow announced that goalkeeper Pavel Ovchinnikov and defender Ivan Maklakov had left the club at the expiration of their contracts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286092-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Season events\nOn 9 January 2019, Nayair Tiknizyan and Vitaly Zhironkin both signed a new contracts with the CSKA until the summer of 2022. On 22 January, CSKA Moscow announced that Fyodor Chalov had signed a new contract with the club, until the summer of 2022.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286092-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Season events\nOn 24 January, Timur Zhamaletdinov joined Lech Pozna\u0144 on loan until the end of the season, with an option for Lech Pozna\u0144 to make the move permanent at the end of the season. The following day Khetag Khosonov joined Tambov on loan until the end of the season, whilst Astemir Gordyushenko joined Tyumen on loan until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286092-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Season events\nOn 11 February, Timur Pukhov left CSKA Moscow to join Lithuanian club FK \u017dalgiris. On 19 February, Aleksandr Makarov moved on loan to Avangard Kursk for the remainder of the season, whilst Maksim Yedapin joined Yenisey Krasnoyarsk on a similar deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286092-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Season events\nOn 22 February, CSKA Moscow announced that Ivan Oleynikov had joined Fakel Voronezh on loan until the end of the season, whilst Igor Diveyev had joined the club on loan until the end of the season from Ufa, with an option to make the move permanent in the summer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286092-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Season events\nOn 26 April, Viktor Vasin signed a new contract with CSKA, keeping him at the club until the summer of 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286092-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Season events\nOn 31 May, CSKA Moscow announced that they had exercised their option to make Igor Diveyev's loan deal permanent, signing him to a five-year contract, whilst Anatoli Anisimov left the club after the expiration of his contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286092-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Squad, Out on loan\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286093-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC CSKA Sofia season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is CSKA Sofia's 70th season in the First League and their third consecutive participation after their administrative relegation in the third division due to mounting financial troubles. This article shows player statistics and all matches (official and friendly) that the club will play during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286093-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC CSKA Sofia season, Players, Current squad\nAs of 8\u00a0February\u00a02019Note: 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, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286093-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC CSKA Sofia season, Transfers, 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, 58], "content_span": [59, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286093-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC CSKA Sofia season, Transfers, 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, 58], "content_span": [59, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286094-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC Cherno More Varna season\nThis page covers all relevant details regarding Cherno More for all official competitions inside the 2018\u201319 season. These are the First Professional Football League and the Bulgarian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286094-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC Cherno More Varna season, Competitions, Pre-season and friendlies\nThe team started pre-season training on June 14. The club has announced 7 friendlies in the summer; one opponent to be confirmed at later stage. On 25 June 2018, the club revealed that the second friendly will be against Gandzasar, the Armenian Cup winners. On 29 August, another friendly with Chernomorets Balchik was announced during the first international break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 77], "content_span": [78, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286094-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC Cherno More Varna season, Statistics, Player appearances\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, 68], "content_span": [69, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286094-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC Cherno More Varna season, Statistics, Player appearances\nCorrect as of 15 August 2018. Starting appearances are listed first, followed by substitute appearances in parentheses where applicable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286094-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC Cherno More Varna season, Statistics, Minutes on the pitch\nIncludes injury time. Positions indicate the most natural position of the particular player, followed by alternative positions where he actually started games during the course of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286094-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC Cherno More Varna season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nCorrect as of 15 September 2018Players are listed in descending order of Players with the same amount of cards are listed by their position on the club's official website", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286094-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC Cherno More Varna season, Statistics, Injuries\nPlayers in bold are still out from their injuries. Players listed will/have miss(ed) at least one competitive game (missing from whole match day squad).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286094-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC Cherno More Varna season, Statistics, Home attendances\nCorrect as of match played on 31 August 2018. Win\u00a0\u00a0Draw\u00a0\u00a0Loss\u00a0\u00a0Void", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286095-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC Levski Sofia season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Levski Sofia's 98th season in the First League. This article shows player statistics and all matches (official and friendly) that the club has played during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286096-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC Ludogorets Razgrad season\nThe 2018-19 season is Ludogorets Razgrad's eight consecutive season in the Bulgarian First League, of which they are defending champions. They will also take part in the Bulgarian Cup, Supercup and will enter the UEFA Champions League first qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286096-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC Ludogorets Razgrad season, Season events\nOn 6 June 2018, Dimitar Dimitrov left Ludogorets by mutual consent, being replaced by Paulo Autuori. Three months later Autuori also left Ludogorets by mutual consent, being replaced by Antoni Zdravkov on 9 October 2018. On 6 March 2019 Zdravkov became the third manager of the season to leave the club by mutual consent, with Stoycho Stoev being announced as his replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286096-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PFC Ludogorets Razgrad 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, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286097-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PGA Tour\nThe 2019 PGA Tour was the 104th season of the PGA Tour, and the 52nd since separating from the PGA of America. The season began on October 4, 2018. The 2019 FedEx Cup Playoffs begun on August 8, and concluded on August 25, 2019, with Rory McIlroy winning his second FedEx Cup title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286097-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PGA Tour, Changes from the previous season, Schedule\nThe schedule contained 46 events, two fewer than the previous season. The schedule was shortened in an effort to complete the FedEx Cup Playoffs by the end of August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 60], "content_span": [61, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286097-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PGA Tour, Changes from the previous season, Schedule\nAs announced in 2017, the PGA Championship was moved from August to May on the weekend before Memorial Day, starting in 2019. The PGA of America cited the addition of golf to the Summer Olympics, as well as cooler weather enabling a wider array of options for host courses, as reasoning for the change. It was also believed that the PGA Tour wished to re-align its season so that the FedEx Cup Playoffs would not have to compete with the start of football season in late-August. Consequently, The Players Championship was moved from May back to March for the first time since 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 60], "content_span": [61, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286097-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PGA Tour, Changes from the previous season, New exemption\nThe PGA Tour added a one-time exemption for those who made 300 career cuts. J.J. Henry was the first to take advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 65], "content_span": [66, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286097-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PGA Tour, Changes from the previous season, Events\nOn hiatus: The Houston Open and Greenbrier Classic are not included in the shortened season, but they return in autumn of 2019 as part of the 2020 PGA Tour schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 58], "content_span": [59, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286097-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PGA Tour, Changes from the previous season, Events\nNew: Two new events were added to the schedule: the Rocket Mortgage Classic, played at Detroit Golf Club in Detroit, Michigan, and the 3M Open, played at the TPC Twin Cities in Blaine, Minnesota.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 58], "content_span": [59, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286097-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PGA Tour, Changes from the previous season, Events\nRelocations: The WGC Invitational was relocated from Akron, Ohio to Memphis, Tennessee when FedEx took over sponsorship of the event. Firestone Country Club no longer hosts a PGA Tour event, but the Senior Players Championship is now contested there, with Bridgestone taking over as that event's title sponsor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 58], "content_span": [59, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286097-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PGA Tour, Changes from the previous season, Events\nCancelled: The FedEx St. Jude Classic ceased now that the relocated WGC event, WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational, is played at the Classic's former location in Memphis. Quicken Loans National, played in the Washington, D.C. area, no longer appears on the PGA Tour schedule. The FedEx Cup playoff event, Dell Technologies Championship, has also been removed from the schedule with the number of playoff events reducing to three. The Northern Trust will now alternate between New Jersey, and Boston (the site of the Dell Technologies Championship).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 58], "content_span": [59, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286097-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PGA Tour, Changes from the previous season, Rules\nFrom January 1, 2019 onwards, tournaments followed the new rules released by the USGA and The R&A which were designed to speed up the pace of play. The most noticeable changes included golfers being able to putt on the green with the flag remaining in, and drops being made from knee rather than shoulder height.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 57], "content_span": [58, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286097-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PGA Tour, Changes from the previous season, Prize money\nAs well as changes to individual tournament prize funds, the FedEx Cup postseason bonus money increased by $25 million to $60 million, with the FedEx Cup champion getting $15 million. The winner of the Tour Championship will be the FedEx Cup champion. The Tour Championship begins with each player having an adjusted score relative to par which relates to the amount of FedEx Cup points accumulated (previously the Tour Championship was structured similar to other tournaments, and awarded FedEx Cup points). The Tour Championship will no longer have its own separate prize fund.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 63], "content_span": [64, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286097-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PGA Tour, Changes from the previous season, Prize money\nIn addition, the Wyndham Rewards Top 10 is introduced, a $10 million bonus to be divided among the FedEx Cup top 10 regular season finishers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 63], "content_span": [64, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286097-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PGA Tour, Changes from the previous season, Prize money\nThe tour also introduced the Aon Risk Reward Challenge. In most tournaments, a single hole is allocated to contribute to the challenge. A player's best two scores from every participating event a player competes in throughout the season is used. The player with the lowest average to par score wins $1m. The initiative is replicated on the LPGA Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 63], "content_span": [64, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286097-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PGA Tour, Schedule, Unofficial events\nThe following events do not carry FedEx Cup points or official money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 45], "content_span": [46, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286097-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PGA Tour, FedEx Cup, Points distribution\nThe distribution of points for 2019 PGA Tour events is:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 48], "content_span": [49, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286097-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PGA Tour, FedEx Cup, Points distribution\nTour Championship starting score (to par), based on position in the FedEx Cup rankings after the BMW Championship:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 48], "content_span": [49, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286097-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PGA Tour, FedEx Cup, Leaders\nFedEx Cup standing of the 30 qualifiers for the Tour Championship:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286098-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PLK season\nThe 2018\u201319 Polish Basketball League (PLK) season, the Energa Basket Liga for sponsorship reasons, was the 85th season of the Polish Basketball League, the highest professional basketball league in the Poland. Anwil W\u0142oc\u0142awek defended its title and repeated as Polish champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286098-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PLK season, Teams\nCzarni S\u0142upsk withdrew during the 2017\u201318 PLK season because of financial problems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286098-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PLK season, Teams\nOn 17 May 2018, Sp\u00f3jnia Stargard promoted to the PLK as the winners of the I Liga, after defeating Sok\u00f3\u0142 \u0141a\u0144cut 3\u20130 in the playoff finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286098-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PLK season, Teams\nAlso, during the pre-season, PGE Tur\u00f3w Zgorzelec withdrew from the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286098-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PLK season, Playoffs\nQuarterfinals and semifinals are played in a best-of-five format (2-2-1) while the finals in a best-of-seven one (2-2-1-1-1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286099-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PSA Men's World Squash Championship\nThe 2018\u201319 PSA Men's World Squash Championship was the 2018\u201319 men's edition of the World Squash Championships, which serves as the individual world championship for squash players. The event will take place in Chicago, United States from 23 February - 2 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286099-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PSA Men's World Squash Championship\nAli Farag won his first world title beating Tarek Momen in the final continuing the recent Egyptian domination of the sport. Former world champion Ramy Ashour was forced to withdraw from the tournament following further injury problems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286100-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PSA Women's World Squash Championship\nThe 2018\u201319 PSA Women's World Squash Championship was the 2018\u201319 women's edition of the World Squash Championships, which serves as the individual world championship for squash players. The event took place in Chicago, United States from 23 February - 2 March 2019. It was the first World Championships to be staged under a new tour structure and has a record prize money level of $1million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286100-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PSA Women's World Squash Championship\nNour El Sherbini won her third world title beating Nour El Tayeb in the final continuing the recent Egyptian domination of the sport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286101-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PSA World Tour\nThe 2018\u201319 PSA World Tour is the international squash tour organised circuit organized by the Professional Squash Association (PSA) for the 2018 squash season. It's the 4th PSA season since the merger of PSA and WSA associations in 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286101-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PSA World Tour\nThe most important tournaments in the series are the Men's and Women's PSA World Championship. The tour also features two circuits of regular events - PSA World Tour (formerly PSA World Series), which feature the highest prize money and the best fields; and PSA Challenger Tour with prize money ranging $5,500\u2013$30,000. In the middle of the year, the PSA World Tour tour is concluded by the Men's and Women's PSA World Tour Finals in Cairo, the season-ending championships for the top 8 rated players from World Tour level tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286101-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PSA World Tour, Overview, PSA World Tour changes\nStarting in August 2018, PSA revamped its professional tour structure in two individual circuits; PSA World Tour and PSA Challenger Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 56], "content_span": [57, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286101-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PSA World Tour, Overview, PSA World Tour changes\nPSA World Tour (formerly PSA World Series) will comprise most important tournaments in prize money ($50,000\u2013$1,000,000) for more experienced and higher-ranked players, including PSA World Championships and PSA World Tour Finals, labelled as following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 56], "content_span": [57, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286101-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PSA World Tour, Overview, PSA World Tour changes\nPSA Challenger Tour tournaments will offer a $5,500\u2013$30,000 prize-money, ideal circuit for less-experienced and upcoming players, that will include the following tiers:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 56], "content_span": [57, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286101-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PSA World Tour, Overview, PSA World Tour changes\nFurther, PSA will implement some rule changes like the removing of qualification rounds among others. Also PSA will grant 7 World Championship wildcards for winners of selected PSA Challenger Tour chosen by PSA. Additionally, PSA and WSF will jointly manage PSA Satellite Tour, a circuit for amateur or junior players who aim to become professionals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 56], "content_span": [57, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286101-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PSA World Tour, Overview, Prize money/ranking points breakdown\nPSA World Tour events also have a separate World Tour ranking. Points for this are calculated on a cumulative basis after each World Tour event. The top eight players at the end of the calendar year are then eligible to play in the PSA World Tour Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 70], "content_span": [71, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286101-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PSA World Tour, Overview, Prize money/ranking points breakdown\nRanking points vary according to tournament tier being awarded as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 70], "content_span": [71, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286101-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PSA World Tour, Statistical information, World Championship qualifiers\nWinners of a select group of PSA Challenger Tour tournaments chosen by PSA receive a wildcard for the 2019 PSA World Championship. The qualified players were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 78], "content_span": [79, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286101-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PSA World Tour, National championships\nThese are the winners of the most relevant 2018\u20132019 national squash championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286101-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PSA World Tour, Retirements\nFollowing is a list of notable players (winners of a main tour title, and/or part of the PSA Men's World Rankings and Women's 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 2018-19 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286102-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PSA World Tour Finals\nThe 2018\u201319 PSA World Tour is a series of men's and women's squash tournaments which are part of the Professional Squash Association (PSA) PSA World Tour from August 2018 until July 2019. The PSA World Tour tournaments are some of the most prestigious events on the men's and women's tour. The best-performing players in the World Tour events qualify for the annual 2019 Men's PSA World Tour Finals and 2019 Women's PSA World Tour Finals tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286102-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PSA World Tour Finals\nStarting in August 2018, PSA replaced World Series tournaments with new PSA World Tour, comprising four new tournament-tiers: Platinum ($164,500\u2013$180,500), Gold ($100,000\u2013$120,500), Silver ($70,000\u2013$88,000) and Bronze ($51,000\u2013$53,000) each one awarding different points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286102-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PSA World Tour Finals, PSA World Tour Ranking Points\nPSA World Tour events also have a separate World Tour ranking. Points for this are calculated on a cumulative basis after each World Tour event. The top eight players at the end of the calendar year are then eligible to play in the PSA World Tour Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286102-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PSA World Tour Finals, PSA World Tour Ranking Points\nRanking points vary according to tournament tier being awarded as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286102-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PSA World Tour Finals, Men's, Standings\nBold \u2013 Players qualified for the final(*) \u2013 Winners of Platinum's tournaments automatically qualifies for Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286102-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PSA World Tour Finals, Women's, Standings\nBold \u2013 Players qualified for the final(*) \u2013 Winners of Platinum's tournaments automatically qualifies for Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286103-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PSV Eindhoven season\nDuring the 2018\u201319 season, PSV Eindhoven participated in the Eredivisie, the KNVB Cup, the Johan Cruyff Shield and the UEFA Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286103-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PSV Eindhoven season, Season summary\nThe season was Mark van Bommel's first season as manager of PSV. He replaced Philip Cocu, who joined Fenerbah\u00e7e after five seasons at PSV, during which the club won three national titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286103-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PSV Eindhoven season, Season summary\nPSV started the season as defending Eredivisie champions, which qualified them for the Johan Cruyff Shield against cup winners Feyenoord. The match was scoreless after 90 minutes and went straight to a penalty shootout, which Feyenoord won 6\u20135. In the Eredivisie, PSV finished in second place despite winning their first 13 matches, three points behind Ajax. Although they did not win the league, they did break an Eredivisie record by scoring at least one goal in each of their first 32 matches (out of 34). PSV's campaign in the KNVB Cup was a disappointment, as they were knocked out in the second round by Eerste Divisie side RKC Waalwijk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286103-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PSV Eindhoven season, Season summary\nPSV qualified for the group stage of the UEFA Champions League by eliminating BATE Borisov in the play-off round. They were drawn into group B against Inter Milan, Barcelona and eventual finalists Tottenham Hotspur. PSV finished their group in fourth and last place, picking up only two points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286103-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286103-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PSV Eindhoven 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286103-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PSV Eindhoven 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286104-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball season began with practices in October 2018 followed by the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season on November 6, 2018. The conference schedule will begin in December 2018. This is the seventh season under the Pac\u201312 Conference name and the 59th since the conference was established under its current charter as the Athletic Association of Western Universities in 1959. Including the history of the Pacific Coast Conference, which operated from 1915 to 1959 and is considered by the Pac-12 as a part of its own history, this is the Pac-12's 103rd season of basketball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286104-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball season\nThe Pac-12 Tournament was held from March 13\u201316, 2019, at the T-Mobile Arena in Paradise, Nevada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286104-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball season, Regular season\nThe Schedule will be released in late September. Before the season, it was announced that for the sixth consecutive season, all regular season conference games and conference tournament games would be broadcast nationally by CBS Sports, FOX Sports, ESPN Inc. family of networks including ESPN, ESPN2 and ESPNU, and the Pac-12 Network.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 65], "content_span": [66, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286104-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball season, Regular season, Records against other conferences\n2018-19 records against non-conference foes as of (Jan. 2, 2018):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 100], "content_span": [101, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286104-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball season, Regular season, Record against ranked non-conference opponents\nThis is a list of games against ranked opponents only (Rankings from the AP Poll):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 113], "content_span": [114, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286104-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball season, Regular season, Record against ranked non-conference opponents\nTeam rankings are reflective of AP Poll when the game was played, not current or final ranking", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 113], "content_span": [114, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286104-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball season, Regular season, Conference schedule\nThis table summarizes the head-to-head results between teams in conference play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 86], "content_span": [87, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286104-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball season, Head coaches, Coaches\nNote: Stats shown are before the beginning of the season. Overall and Pac-12 records are from time at current school.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 72], "content_span": [73, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286104-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball season, Post season, Pac-12 Tournament\nOregon won the conference tournament held March 13\u201316, 2019, at the T-Mobile Arena, Paradise, NV. The top four teams had a bye on the first day. Teams 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, 49], "section_span": [51, 81], "content_span": [82, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286104-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball season, Post season, NCAA Tournament\nThree teams from the conference were selected to participate: Oregon, Washington and Arizona State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 79], "content_span": [80, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286104-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball season, Post season, National Invitation Tournament\nOne team from the conference were selected to participate: Colorado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 94], "content_span": [95, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286104-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball season, Awards and honors, Players of the Week\nThroughout the conference regular season, the Pac-12 offices named one or two players of the week each Monday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 89], "content_span": [90, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286105-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pacific Tigers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Pacific Tigers men's basketball team represented the University of the Pacific during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Tigers were led by third-year head coach Damon Stoudamire and played their home games at the Alex G. Spanos Center in Stockton, California as members of the West Coast Conference. They finished the season 14\u201318, 4\u201312 in WCC play to finish in ninth place. They lost in the first round of the WCC Tournament to Pepperdine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286105-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pacific Tigers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Tigers finished the 2017\u201318 season 14\u201318, 9\u20139 in WCC play to finish in a three-way tie for fourth place. They lost in the first round of the WCC Tournament to San Francisco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286106-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pacific Tigers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Pacific Tigers women's basketball team represents the University of the Pacific during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Tigers are led by fourth year head coach Bradley Davis. They play their home games at Alex G. Spanos Center and were members of the West Coast Conference. They finished the season 19\u201313, 10\u20138 in WCC play to finish in a tie for fifth place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the WCC Women's Tournament where they lost to Pepperdine. They received an at-large bid to the WNIT where defeated Fresno State in the first round before losing to Arizona in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286107-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Padideh Shahr-e Khodrou F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season are the Padideh Football Club's 5th season in the Iran Pro League and the top division of Iranian football. They are also competing in the Hazfi Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286107-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Padideh Shahr-e Khodrou F.C. season, Squad, First-team squad\nUpdated as April 9, 2019Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 68], "content_span": [69, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286107-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Padideh Shahr-e Khodrou F.C. season, Squad, First-team squad\nFor recent transfers, see List of Iranian football transfers winter 2018\u201319.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 68], "content_span": [69, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286107-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Padideh Shahr-e Khodrou 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, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286107-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Padideh Shahr-e Khodrou 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, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286108-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pafos FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Pafos's 5th year in existence, and second season in the Cypriot First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286108-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pafos FC season, Season review\nIn June, Pafos announced the signings of former Dundee defender Kevin Holt, and Evgenios Petrou from Ethnikos Assia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286108-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pafos FC season, Season review\nIn July, Pafos sign goalkeeper Jo\u00ebl Mall, defenders Lorran, Andreas Panayiotou, Radek Dejmek and Henrique, and midfielders Jens Cools and Zden\u011bk Folprecht.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286108-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pafos FC season, Season review\nIn August, Matija \u0160irok, Lulinha, Kostas Giannoulis, Federico Rasic, Diego \u017divuli\u0107, Pavel Lelyukhin and Adam Nemec all signed for Pafos. Whilst Andreas Karo and Luca Polizzi joined on loan from Apollon Limassol for the season, Patrick Banggaard from Darmstadt 98 and Brayan Angulo from Am\u00e9rica de Cali on similar loan deals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286108-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pafos FC season, Season review\nPafos finished off their summer signings in September by signing Simo Choukoud, Jander from Apollon Limassol and Giannis Angelopoulos from Olympiacos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286108-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pafos FC season, Season review\nOn 11 December, Deniss Rakels returned to Pafos following his loan spell at Riga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286108-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pafos FC season, Season review\nOn 22 January, Radek Dejmek left Pafos to join GKS Katowice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286108-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pafos FC season, Season review\nOn 1 February, Pafos announced the signing of Abdisalam Ibrahim after he'd left V\u00e5lerenga, and the signing of Art\u016brs Kara\u0161ausks from FK RFS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286108-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pafos FC season, Season review\nOn 26 February, K\u00e9vin B\u00e9rigaud was sent on loan to Riga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286108-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pafos FC season, Squad, Out on loan\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286108-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pafos FC 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286109-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pakistan Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Pakistan Premier League was the 61st season of Pakistan domestic football and the 12th season of the Pakistan Premier League, and the first season to be played since 2014\u201315.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286109-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pakistan Premier League\nThe season is scheduled to be held in Multan, Karachi and Lahore between 25 September and 11 January 2019, with 16 teams participating (12 PPL teams and 4 winner teams of second-tier play offs).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286109-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pakistan Premier League\nEach team would get to play each other twice, meaning in a season they would play 30 games. The bottom four teams get relegated to the second tier. The team that finishes first would get qualification in the AFC Cup, but AFC denied entry of Pakistani football clubs in 2019 AFC Cup because of incomplete licensing regulations due to absence of footballing activity since the end of 2014-15 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286109-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pakistan Premier League, Teams, Promotion and relegation, Teams relegated to FFL\nBaloch Quetta and Pakistan Railways were relegated at the end of 2014\u201315 season (no league was held until current season).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286109-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pakistan Premier League, Teams, Promotion and relegation, Teams promoted from FFL\nPakistan Navy got promoted after winning 2014\u201315 Pakistan Football Federation League, defeating Baloch Nushki 1\u20130 in the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 89], "content_span": [90, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286109-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pakistan Premier League, Teams, Promotion and relegation, Teams promoted from PPL Promotion Play-Offs 2018\nCivil Aviation Authority, Sui Southern Gas Company, Ashraf Sugar Mills and Sui Nouthern Gas Company won their matches and promoted to Pakistan Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 114], "content_span": [115, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286109-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pakistan Premier League, Season summary\nAshraf Sugar Mills and Pakistan Airlines withdrew from league with former withdrawing after playing first phase in Multan and latter not playing a single match due to financial issues. Baloch Nushki got relegated after failing to win a single match and ended third last in relegation zone with six points from 6 draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286109-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pakistan Premier League, Season summary\nOn 9 January 2019, Karachi Port Trust got relegated to Federation League for the first time ever, after they lost 2\u20130 to Muslim and 12th placed Sui Northern Gas winning their game match 4\u20133 against Afghan Chaman, leaving Karachi Port Trust 5 points from safe zone with only one match to play. Khan Research Laboratories won the league on the final match day. Pakistan Airforce were sitting at the top of table with 51 points, one point ahead of Sui Southern Gas and three ahead of Khan Research Laboratories, who both had to face each other on final match day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286109-0006-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pakistan Premier League, Season summary\nSui Southern Gas victory would hand them the title and for Khan Research Laboratories, they to beat the Sui Southern Gas by four goals to secure the title. Khan Research Laboratories the last game of the season, defeating title contenders Sui Southern Gas 4\u20130, finishing first on goal difference ahead of Pakistan Airforce. This is the smallest title winning margin in the history of Pakistan Premier League, with Khan Research Laboratories winning with a goal difference of just +1, as Pakistan Airforce had a goal difference on +27 and winners Khan Research Laboratories had +28.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286109-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pakistan Premier League, Results\n^\u00a0a:\u00a0Both Ashraf Sugar Mills and Pakistan Airlines withdrew from the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286110-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pakistan federal budget\nThe Federal budget 2018\u201319 is the federal budget of Pakistan for the fiscal year beginning from 1 July 2018 and ending on 30 June 2019. The budget was presented by finance minister Miftah Ismail on 28 April 2018, just months before the general elections scheduled in the country for the next government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286110-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pakistan federal budget\nThe budget announced several measures; including an allocation Rs. 1,100 billion for defence expenditures; a ten percent hike in salaries and pensions of civil and military employees; a health tax enforced on tobacco and import taxes on cell phones; around Rs. 2.22 trillion were to be used for debt servicing; changes were made to the progressive taxation system, with no taxes to be deducted on people with annual incomes of up to Rs. 400,000; Rs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286110-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pakistan federal budget\n25 billion were allocated for the health and medical sector under the Public Sector Development Programme, which would include several new projects; tax cuts were announced for the agriculture and dairy farming sectors; another Rs. 2.6 billion were announced for the National Accountability Bureau, which include employee expenses; all provinces were to get a total of Rs. 2.59 trillion as part of their share in the federal revenues; Rs. 18.2 billion would be spent on the fencing of the Afghanistan\u2013Pakistan barrier on the border; Rs. 130 billion worth of additional levies were slapped on petroleum products; and finally, smaller expenses were announced for setting up a media development and television monitoring system. The budgets for the President and Prime Ministerial residences, borne out of tax-payers funds, had also risen notably.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 876]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286111-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Paksi SE season\nThe 2018\u201319 season will be Paksi FC's 13th competitive season, 13th consecutive season in the OTP Bank Liga and 66th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286111-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286111-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286111-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286111-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286111-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286111-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286111-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286112-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Palestine Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Palestine Cup is the 2018\u201319 season of the top football cup in Palestine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286112-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Palestine Cup\nThere are two competitions, the Gaza Strip Cup for clubs in the Gaza Strip, and the West Bank Cup for clubs in the West Bank. A two-legged Palestine Cup final is played between the cup winners of the Gaza Strip and the West Bank.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286112-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Palestine Cup, Palestine Cup Final\nThe second leg was originally to be played on 3 July 2019. However, the match was postponed after Israel denied permits for all but 4 of Khadamat Rafah's players to travel to the West Bank, reportedly due to security concerns. In September 2019, the game was cancelled entirely after the decision by the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) was upheld by a court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286113-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Panathinaikos F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 Panathinaikos season is the club's 60th consecutive season in Super League Greece. They are also competing in the Greek Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286114-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Paradou AC season\nIn the 2018\u201319 season, Paradou AC competed in Ligue 1 for the 4th season, as well as the Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286114-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Paradou AC season, Squad list\nAs of August 11, 2018. 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, 37], "content_span": [38, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286115-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Paris Saint-Germain F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Paris Saint-Germain Football Club's 46th professional season since its creation in 1970, and its 45th consecutive season in the top-flight of French football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286115-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Paris Saint-Germain F.C. season\nThe season was the first since 2010\u201311 without Thiago Motta, who retired after the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286115-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Paris Saint-Germain F.C. 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286115-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Paris Saint-Germain 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286115-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Paris Saint-Germain F.C. season, Transfers, In\nFor recent transfers see List of French football transfers summer 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286116-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Paris Saint-Germain F\u00e9minine season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Paris Saint-Germain F\u00e9minine's 48th season since its creation in 1971, and its 32nd season in the top-flight of women's football in France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286116-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Paris Saint-Germain F\u00e9minine 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, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286116-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Paris Saint-Germain F\u00e9minine 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, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286117-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Parma Calcio 1913 season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Parma Calcio 1913's first season in Serie A since bankruptcy in 2015. The club competed in Serie A and in the Coppa Italia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286117-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Parma Calcio 1913 season\nOn 23 July 2018, Parma were handed a 5 point deduction for the 2018\u201319 Serie A season, following text messages from Parma player Emanuele Calai\u00f2 \"eliciting a reduced effort\" from two players of Spezia, a match Parma won 2\u20130 to secure promotion last season. However, that ban was overturned on 9 August following a decision by the Italian Football Federation's Board of Appeal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286118-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Partick Thistle F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Partick Thistle's first season back in the Scottish Championship, following their relegation from the Scottish Premiership at the end of the 2017\u201318 season. Thistle also competed in the League Cup, Challenge Cup and the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286118-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Partick Thistle F.C. season, Summary, Management\nPartick Thistle began the season under the management of Alan Archibald who been in charge since February 2013. On the 6th October, following a poor start to the season, Archibald left his position as manager and was replaced by Gary Caldwell who was appointed on 15th October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286119-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Patriot League men's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 Patriot League men's basketball season began with practices in October 2018, followed by the start of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season in November. Conference play began in January 2019 and concluded in February 2019. The season marked the 32nd season of Patriot League basketball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286119-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Patriot League men's basketball season, Preseason, Coaching changes\nOn March 8, 2018, Loyola (Maryland) announced G. G. Smith had resigned as head coach. He finished at Loyola with a five-year record of 56\u201398. On March 28, the Greyhounds hired Georgia Tech assistant coach Tavaras Hardy for the head coaching job.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 75], "content_span": [76, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286119-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Patriot League men's basketball season, Preseason, Preseason All-Conference Teams\nPatriot League Preseason Player of the Year: Sa'eed Nelson (American)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 89], "content_span": [90, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286120-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Penn Quakers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Penn Quakers men's basketball team represented the University of Pennsylvania in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at The Palestra in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and were led by fourth-year head coach Steve Donahue. The Quakers finished the season 19\u201312, 7\u20137 in Ivy League play to finish in a three-way tie for fourth place. As the No. 4 seed in the Ivy League Tournament, they lost in the semifinals to Harvard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286120-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Penn Quakers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Quakers finished the 2017\u201318 season 24\u20139, 12\u20132 in Ivy League play to win a share of the Ivy League regular season championship with Harvard. In the Ivy League Tournament, they defeated Yale and Harvard to become Ivy League Tournament champions. They received the Ivy League's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament where they lost in the First Round to Kansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286121-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Penn Quakers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Penn Quakers women's basketball team represents the University of Pennsylvania during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Quakers, led by tenth year head coach Mike McLaughlin, play their home games at the Palestra and were members of the Ivy League. They finished the season 24\u20137, 12\u20132 to share the Ivy League regular season title with Princeton. They advanced to the championship game of the Ivy League Women's Tournament where they lost to Princeton. They received an automatic trip to the Women's National Invitation Tournament where they defeated American in the first before losing to Providence in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286122-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Penn State Lady Lions basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Penn State Lady Lions basketball team represented Pennsylvania State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Lady Lions, led by 12th-year head coach Coquese Washington, played their home games at the Bryce Jordan Center as members of the Big Ten Conference. They finished the season of 12\u201318, 5\u201313 in Big Ten play to finish in twelfth place. They lost in the first round of the Big Ten Women's Tournament to Wisconsin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286122-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Penn State Lady Lions basketball team\nOn March 9, Coquese Washington was fired as head coach. She finished at Penn State with a 12-year record of 209\u2013169.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286123-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Penn State Nittany Lions basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Penn State Nittany Lions basketball team represented Pennsylvania State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They were led by head coach Pat Chambers, in his eighth season with the team, and played their home games at the Bryce Jordan Center in University Park, Pennsylvania as members of the Big Ten Conference. The Lions finished the season 14\u201318, 7\u201313 in Big Ten play to finish in a three-way tie for 10th place. They lost to Minnesota in the second round of the Big Ten Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286123-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Penn State Nittany Lions basketball team, Previous season\nThe Nittany Lions finished the 2017\u201318 season 26\u201313, 9\u20139 in Big Ten play to finish in a tie for sixth place. In the Big Ten Tournament, they defeated Northwestern and Ohio State before losing to Purdue in the semifinals. They received a bid to the National Invitation Tournament where they defeated Temple, Notre Dame, Marquette, and Mississippi State to advance to the NIT championship where they defeated Utah to become NIT champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286124-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Penn State Nittany Lions men's ice hockey season\nThe 2018\u201319 Penn State Nittany Lions men's ice hockey season was the 12th season of play for the program and the 6th season in the Big Ten Conference. The Nittany Lions represented Pennsylvania State University and were coached by Guy Gadowsky, in his 8th season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286124-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Penn State Nittany Lions men's ice hockey season, Season\nPlaying most of their non-conference schedule at home, Penn State rose up the rankings with a hot start to the season. The team cooled off when their conference schedule began and the Nittany Lions could not find any consistency for several months. Penn State ended up a game below .500 in the Big Ten standings and faced the prospect of having to win the Big Ten Tournament to receive an NCAA berth. After a rocky start the Nittany Lions overcame Wisconsin in the quarterfinal round, then pulled off an upset over top-ranked Ohio State to set PSU against Notre Dame. Both teams faced a win or go home scenario and played a close game throughout. The Fighting Irish gained three separate 1-goal leads and they were able to keep their final edge, holding Penn State off in the third period despite a barrage of shots from the Lions' nation-leading offense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 64], "content_span": [65, 920]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286125-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Penn State Nittany Lions women's ice hockey season\nThe Penn State Nittany Lions women represented Penn State University in CHA women's ice hockey during the 2017-18 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286126-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pepperdine Waves men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Pepperdine Waves men's basketball team represented Pepperdine University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Waves were led by head coach Lorenzo Romar, in the first season of his second stint after coaching the Waves from 1996 to 1999. They played their home games at the Firestone Fieldhouse in Malibu, California as members of the West Coast Conference. They finished the season 16\u201318, 8\u201310 in WCC play to finish in eighth place. They defeated Pacific, Loyola Marymount, and San Francisco to advance to the semifinals of the WCC Tournament were they were defeated by Gonzaga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286126-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pepperdine Waves men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Waves finished the 2016\u201317 season 6\u201326, 2\u201316 in WCC play to finish in last place. They defeated Santa Clara in the first round of the WCC Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Saint Mary's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286126-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pepperdine Waves men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn February 13, 2018, the school announced that head coach Marty Wilson would not return as head coach following the end of the season. He finished at Pepperdine with a seven-year record of 88\u2013129 (91\u2013139 when including his 3\u201310 record as interim head coach in 1995\u201396). On March 12, the school hired Lorenzo Romar as head coach. Romar returned to Pepperdine where he started his head coaching career in 1996.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286127-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pepperdine Waves women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Pepperdine Waves women's basketball team represents Pepperdine University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Waves, as members of the West Coast Conference, were led by second year head coach DeLisha Milton-Jones. The Waves play their home games at the Firestone Fieldhouse on the university campus in Malibu, California. They finished the season 22\u201312, 12\u20136 in WCC play to finish in a tie for third place. They advanced to the semifinals of the WCC Women's Tournament where they lost to Gonzaga. They received an automatic bid to the Women's National Invitation Tournament where defeated California Baptist and WCC member Saint Mary's in the second round before losing to Wyoming in the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 788]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286128-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Persepolis F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the Persepolis's 18th season in the Pro League, and their 36th consecutive season in the top division of Iranian Football. They were competing in the Hazfi Cup, Super Cup and AFC Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286128-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Persepolis F.C. season, Statistics, Goalkeeping\n* Beiranvand kept 7 clean sheets in 2018 ACL, 5 clean sheets happened before quarterfinal in 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286129-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Persian Gulf Pro League\nThe 2018\u201319 Persian Gulf Pro League (formerly known as Iran Pro League) was the 36th season of Iran's Football League and 18th as Persian Gulf Pro League since its establishment in 2001. Persepolis were the defending champions. The season featured 13 teams from the 2017\u201318 Persian Gulf Pro League and two new teams promoted from the 2017\u201318 Azadegan League: Naft Masjed Soleyman as champions and Nassaji Mazandaran. Machine Sazi replaced Gostaresh. The league started on 26 July 2018 and ended on 16 May 2019. Persepolis won the Pro League title for the fifth time in their history, a total 12th Iranian title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286129-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Persian Gulf Pro 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-00286129-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Persian Gulf Pro League, Foreign players\nThe number of foreign players is restricted to four per Persian Gulf Pro League 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. In bold: Players that have been capped for their national team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286129-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Persian Gulf Pro League, Attendances, Average home attendances\nSource: Notes:Matches with spectator bans are not included in average attendances Machine Sazi, Naft MIS and Nassaji played last season in Azadegan League Machine Sazi replaced Gostaresh", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286129-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Persian Gulf Pro League, Attendances, Attendances by round\nNotes:Updated to games played on 16 March 2019. Source: Matches with spectator bans are not included in average attendances Esteghlal Khuzestan played their matches against Foolad and Nassaji at Foolad Arena Machine Sazi played their matches against Esteghlal Khuzestan and Tractor Sazi at Sahand Saipa played their matches against Esteghlal and Persepolis at Takhti Tehran Saipa played their matches against Foolad, Nassaji, Paykan, Padideh, Sanat Naft, Sepahan and Tractor Sazi at Shohada Shahr-e Qods Sepahan played their match against Tractor Sazi at Foolad Shahr", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286130-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Perth Glory FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 Perth Glory FC season was the club's 22nd season since its establishment in 1996. The club participated in the A-League for the 14th time and the FFA Cup for the 5th time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286130-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Perth Glory 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286131-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Perth Glory W-League season\nThe 2018\u201319 Perth Glory FC W-League season was the club's eleventh season in the W-League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286131-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Perth Glory W-League season, Players, Squad information\nUpdated October 27, 2018Note: 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, 63], "content_span": [64, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286131-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Perth Glory W-League season, W-League, Results summary\nLast updated: February 2019, end of regular season. Source: Competitive Matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286132-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Perth Scorchers WBBL season\nThe 2018\u201319 Perth Scorchers Women's season was the fourth in the team's history. Coached by Lisa Keightley and captained by Meg Lanning, they finished fifth in the regular season of WBBL|04 and consequently failed to qualify for the finals for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286132-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Perth Scorchers WBBL season, Squad\nEach 2018\u201319 squad featured 15 active players, with an allowance of up to five marquee signings including a maximum of three from overseas. Under a new rule, Australian marquees were classed as players who held a national women's team contract at the time of signing on for their WBBL|04 team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286132-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Perth Scorchers WBBL season, Squad\nThe table below lists the Scorchers players and their key stats (including runs scored, batting strike rate, wickets taken, economy rate, catches and stumpings) for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286132-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Perth Scorchers WBBL season, Fixtures\nThe Thunder were catapulted to a score of 5/179 by a late 49-run partnership between Harmanpreet Kaur and Stafanie Taylor (which included 21 runs off the 18th over against the bowling of Taneale Peschel, who had taken 1/12 in her first three overs). Eight overs into the second innings, captain Meg Lanning had scored 71 of the Scorchers' 83 runs. Although Lanning was run out for 76 in the tenth over, Elyse Villani went on to score 66 not out, guiding the Scorchers to a six-wicket victory with one ball remaining. In doing so, the Scorchers set a new WBBL record for highest successful run chase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286133-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Peterborough United F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Peterborough United's 59th year in the Football League and their sixth consecutive season in the third tier, League One. Along with League One, the club also participated in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy. The season covered the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286133-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Peterborough United F.C. season, Competitions, Pre-season friendlies\nThe Posh announced friendlies against Stamford, Bedford Town, Peterborough Sports, St Neots Town, Mar\u00edtimo, Louletano and Bolton Wanderers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 76], "content_span": [77, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286133-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Peterborough United F.C. season, Competitions, League One, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League One fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 74], "content_span": [75, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286133-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Peterborough United F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October. The draw for the second round was made live on BBC and BT by Mark Schwarzer and Glenn Murray on 12 November. The third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286133-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Peterborough United F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 62], "content_span": [63, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286133-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Peterborough United F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced. The draw for the second round was made live on Talksport by Leon Britton and Steve Claridge on 16 November. On 8 December, the third round draw was drawn by Alan McInally and Matt Le Tissier on Soccer Saturday. The Quarter-final draw was made conducted on Sky Sports by Don Goodman and Thomas Frank on 10 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286134-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Philadelphia 76ers season\nThe 2018\u201319 Philadelphia 76ers season was the 70th season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286134-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Philadelphia 76ers season\nIn the 2017\u201318 season, the 76ers were led by Joel Embiid, who played in his first All-Star Game, and 2018 Rookie of The Year Ben Simmons. During the season, the team made some major trades, In November, they traded Dario Saric, Robert Covington, Jerryd Bayless, and a 2022 second round pick, for Jimmy Butler and Justin Patton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286134-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Philadelphia 76ers season\nThen just before the trade deadline, they acquired Tobias Harris, Boban Marjanovic and Mike Scott, in exchange for Landry Shamet, Wilson Chandler, Mike Muscala, the Sixers own 2020 first round pick, and the Miami Heat's unprotected first round pick in 2021 and two second round picks in 2021 and 2023. Finally, they traded Markelle Fultz to the Orlando Magic, for Jonathon Simmons, and a first and second round pick. The 76ers would win one less game then the previous season, going 51\u201331, and clinching the 3rd seed playoff spot for the second consecutive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286134-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Philadelphia 76ers season\nIn the playoffs, the 76ers defeated the Brooklyn Nets in the first round in five games, but lost to the eventual NBA champion Toronto Raptors in the Eastern Conference Semifinals in seven games due to a Kawhi Leonard buzzer beater in Game 7, which gave the Raptors a 92\u201390 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286134-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Philadelphia 76ers season, Draft picks\nEntering the 2018 NBA Draft, the 76ers had two first round picks and four second round pick. Their top selection was previously acquired through a three-way trade involving the Milwaukee Bucks and Phoenix Suns, with the Suns trading away the Los Angeles Lakers' selection (which was previously protected from 2015\u20132017 before ending up at #10) in exchange for Brandon Knight, while Philadelphia traded Michael Carter-Williams to Milwaukee, joining Tyler Ennis and Miles Plumlee. Their other first round pick would be their own selection, which rose up as high as #26 thanks to their 17-game winning streak ending the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286134-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Philadelphia 76ers season, Draft picks\nPhiladelphia also acquired two straight selections in the second round at #38 & #39 through trades with the Brooklyn Nets and New York Knicks (for selections that were possibly going to be from the Cleveland Cavaliers and Los Angeles Clippers) respectively. Furthermore, the 76ers held two of the last five picks of the 2018 NBA Draft, with the #56 selection being their own and the last pick of the draft being from the Houston Rockets as a part of Houston's ultimate blockbuster trade to acquire Chris Paul from the Los Angeles Clippers. By the end of the night, their number of selection were cut in half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286134-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Philadelphia 76ers season, Draft picks\nOriginally, the 76ers selected local small forward Mikal Bridges from Villanova University with the #10 pick of the draft. However, the 76ers would trade Bridges to the Phoenix Suns (thereby returning that selection from their 2012 Steve Nash trade back to them) in exchange for the Miami Heat's unprotected 2021 first round pick and the 16th pick of the draft, which became shooting guard Zhaire Smith from Texas Tech University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286134-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Philadelphia 76ers season, Draft picks\nDespite starting out the previous season as a less-than-highly regarded prospect, Smith grew his game to be one of the more highly regarded players of the season, as well as a key reason for Texas Tech's journey into the Elite 8. In 37 games played for Texas Tech (21 of which he started in), he averaged 11.3 points (on .556 overall shooting and a .450 three-point percentage), 5 rebounds, 1.8 assists, 1.1 steals, and 1.1 blocks per game, which resulted in him earning spots on both the Big 12 All-Defensive Team and Big 12 All-Newcomer Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286134-0004-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Philadelphia 76ers season, Draft picks\nNext, with their original first round pick at #26, Philadelphia selected shooting guard Landry Shamet from Wichita State University. Shamet was a redshirted sophomore who was previously the MVC Freshman of The Year and an All-MVC First Team member in his redshirted freshman year before a conference change lead to him being a member of the All-ACC First Team in his last season at Wichita State. During that season, Shamet averaged 14.9 points (on .489 shooting percentages with a very good .442 three-point percentage), 5.2 assists, 3.2 rebounds, and 0.7 steals in 31.7 minutes per game throughout 32 games played and stated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286134-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Philadelphia 76ers season, Draft picks\nAs for their second round picks, all of their original selections there would be traded. With the 38th pick (which became point guard Khyri Thomas from Creighton University), Philadelphia traded that selection to the Detroit Pistons in exchange for two future second round picks. A selection later, the 76ers traded the German small forward Isaac Bonga to the Los Angeles Lakers in exchange for the Chicago Bulls' 2019 second round pick and cash considerations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286134-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Philadelphia 76ers season, Draft picks\nFinally, with their last two second round picks (which became power forward Ray Spalding from Louisville University and Greek combo forward Kostas Antetokounmpo (brother of player Giannis Antetokounmpo) from Dayton University respectively), they would trade both of those second rounders to the Dallas Mavericks in exchange for Dallas' original last second round pick, which was Southern Methodist University point guard Shake Milton at the 54th pick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286134-0005-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Philadelphia 76ers season, Draft picks\nThroughout his time at Southern Methodist, Milton earned an honor for each season played there, with an All-ACC Rookie Team spot being acquired in his freshman year, and two All-ACC Second Team spots acquired during both his sophomore and junior years respectively. During his last season there, Milton recorded 18 points (on .449 overall shooting percentages with a very good .434 three-point percentage), 4.7 rebounds, 4.4 assists, 1.4 steals, and 0.6 blocks in 36.4 minutes per game throughout 22 games played and started before ending his season prematurely with a hand injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286134-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Philadelphia 76ers season, Player statistics, Regular season\nAfter all games. \u2021Waived during the season\u2020Traded during the season\u2260Acquired during the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286135-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Philadelphia Flyers season\nThe 2018\u201319 Philadelphia Flyers season was the 52nd season for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on June 5, 1967. The Flyers were eliminated from playoff contention on March 30, 2019, after a 5\u20132 loss to the Carolina Hurricanes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286135-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Philadelphia Flyers season, Schedule and results, Preseason\nNotes: Game was played at Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Uniondale, New York. Game was played at PPL Center in Allentown, Pennsylvania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286135-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Philadelphia Flyers season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was published on June 21, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 72], "content_span": [73, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286135-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Philadelphia Flyers 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 72], "content_span": [73, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286135-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Philadelphia Flyers season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Flyers. Stats reflect time with the Flyers only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Flyers only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286135-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Philadelphia Flyers season, Transactions\nThe Flyers have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286135-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Philadelphia Flyers season, Transactions, Free agents\nThe following players joined or left the Flyers during free agency. Two-way contracts are marked with an asterisk (*).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286135-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Philadelphia Flyers season, Transactions, Signings\nThe following players were re-signed by the Flyers. Two-way contracts are marked with an asterisk (*).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286135-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Philadelphia Flyers season, Transactions, Signings, Entry-level contracts\nThe following players \u2013 Flyers' draft picks, undrafted free agents, and the unsigned draft picks of other teams \u2013 were signed by the Flyers to entry level contracts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 81], "content_span": [82, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286135-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Philadelphia Flyers season, Draft picks\nBelow are the Philadelphia Flyers' selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season\nThe 2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season was the 51st season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA), as well as their 26th season at the Talking Stick Resort Arena. They finished with 19 wins to 63 losses, the franchise's worst regular season record since the inaugural season 1968\u201369.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season\nThe Suns started the season with a new head coach, signing former assistant coach Igor Koko\u0161kov to a three-year deal on May 2, 2018. After winning the first overall pick in the 2018 NBA draft, the Suns picked Deandre Ayton, a Bahamian center from the University of Arizona. They also gained the draft rights of the tenth overall pick, Mikal Bridges, through a trade involving the Philadelphia 76ers, thus recovering the final pick they received from first trading Steve Nash to the Los Angeles Lakers back in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season\nDuring the 2018 NBA free agency period, the Suns also acquired some key players from the Houston Rockets the previous season with Trevor Ariza on July 1 and Ryan Anderson and rookie De'Anthony Melton nearly two months later on August 31. But after failing to sign a starting-caliber point guard during free agency, general manager Ryan McDonough was fired before the regular season began on October 8. He was replaced by former Suns' player James Jones and Trevor Bukstein on an interim basis throughout the entire season; Jones was eventually named the permanent general manager after the end of this season, with Bukstein returning to his initial assistant general manager role going forward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season\nThe Suns were the first team eliminated from playoff contention on February 23, missing the playoffs for the ninth straight season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Draft picks\nEntering the draft, the Suns had just two first-round picks and two second-round picks. Their first pick would be their own pick, which became their first ever number one pick in franchise history after 50 seasons. It came as a result of having the second-worst record in franchise history, with only their inaugural season being worse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Draft picks\nThe Suns were guaranteed just the Miami Heat's first-round pick this year due to a 2015 trade involving the brothers Dragi\u0107, with both Zoran and Goran Dragi\u0107 being traded to Miami in a three-way trade including the New Orleans Pelicans in exchange for the rights to John Salmons, Danny Granger, the Heat's first-round pick this year, and Miami's completely unprotected 2021 first-round pick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0003-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Draft picks\nNear the conclusion of the previous season, the Suns had a chance to also receive the Milwaukee Bucks' first-round pick as well, as that was projected to be included alongside Greg Monroe and a second-round pick in order to offload Eric Bledsoe, who no longer wanted to be with the Suns. However, despite Miami winning more games against Milwaukee that season, the Suns would not gain Milwaukee's first-round pick this season. However, the Suns still retained the 16th pick from the Heat, alongside their 1st pick, up until draft night.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Draft picks\nPhoenix was also projected to have the Los Angeles Lakers' first-round pick from the Steve Nash trade of 2012, but the pick was traded to the Philadelphia 76ers to acquire Brandon Knight in 2015. The Suns regained that selection on draft night in exchange for the Miami Heat's first round selections that were previously acquired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Draft picks\nIn the second round, the Suns traded their own pick to the Memphis Grizzlies in exchange for Troy Daniels and what would be the Charlotte Hornets' second-round pick, although their own pick was kept by Phoenix due to top 55 protections placed on their own second-round pick for the second year in a row. Phoenix also gained the penultimate pick to the draft, the Toronto Raptors' second-round pick this year, after also gaining last year's second-round pick and the rights to Jared Sullinger in exchange for them briefly acquiring P. J. Tucker. In other transactions around their projected second-round picks, the Hornets' second-round pick would be traded to the Orlando Magic in exchange for Elfrid Payton, and the Bucks' second-round pick would go to the Brooklyn Nets (via a separate trade) due to it being inside the top 47.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 882]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Draft picks\nWith the top pick of the 2018 NBA Draft, the Suns selected the Bahamian freshman center Deandre Ayton from the nearby University of Arizona. While he was reported to be the #1 pick for weeks before the draft, Ayton competed with a few other players such as former high school teammate Marvin Bagley III, international superstar (and former player of new head coach Igor Koko\u0161kov's) Luka Don\u010di\u0107, Jaren Jackson Jr., and Mohamed Bamba during those weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Draft picks\nIn his sole season playing (and starting) in 35 games for Arizona, Ayton averaged 20.1 points (on .612 overall percentage and .343 three-point percentages), 11.6 rebounds, 1.9 blocks, 1.6 assists, and 0.6 steals under 33.5 minutes per game while also being named a consensus All-American First Team, the Pac-12's Player of the Year, the Pac-12's Freshman of the Year, being a member of the All-Pac-12 First Team, winning the Pac-12 Tournament's Most Outstanding Player Award, and winning the Karl Malone Award for being considered the best power forward of the NCAA, even though he projects more as a center entering the NBA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0005-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Draft picks\nAyton became a standout player for the Suns almost immediately entering the season, being an immediate starter for the team and being the only rookie this season a double-double average for their rookie season, averaging 16.3 points and 10.3 rebounds throughout the season. He ended the season being a member of the NBA All-Rookie First Team, with Ayton being a key figure for the Suns' future going forward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Draft picks\nWith the 16th selection, the Suns picked Texas Tech University's Zhaire Smith, but immediately traded Smith and the Miami Heat's 2021 first-round pick to the Philadelphia 76ers for the tenth overall pick (which actually was originally a part of their draft hoard from previous seasons back when it was known as a 2015 first-round pick from the Los Angeles Lakers), junior small forward Mikal Bridges from Villanova University. Bridges was considered a key member for Villanova when they won the NCAA Championship in two of his three seasons there.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Draft picks\nAs the starting small forward for all 40 games played the previous season, he averaged 17.7 points (on .514 overall percentage and a .435 three-point percentage), 5.3 rebounds, 1.9 assists, 1.5 steals, and 1.1 blocks under 32.2 minutes per game. In addition to being a two-time NCAA Tournament Champion in 2016 and 2018, Bridges also was named a consensus All-American Third Team member, an All-Big East First Team member, a Big East Tournament MVP, and the winner of the Julius Erving Award, all of which were earned in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0006-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Draft picks\nThis marked the second season in three years where the Suns had two top ten picks in the draft, though this time, it was considered a massive success for them. Bridges also became a key player for future seasons as well for his defensive versatility, alongside his improved shooting during said seasons. The Suns also selected French All-Star point guard \u00c9lie Okobo of the \u00c9lan B\u00e9arnais Pau-Lacq-Orthez from France's LNB Pro A as the 31st pick and shooting guard George King from the University of Colorado Boulder with the penultimate 59th pick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0006-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Draft picks\nOkobo was made part of the regular, 15-man roster, while King became one of the team's two-way contracts that season. Furthermore, they later traded for (and signed) another second-round pick in USC sophomore point guard De'Anthony Melton, the 46th pick of the NBA Draft, before the season began. Later in the season, the Suns signed Ray Spalding, the 56th pick of the NBA Draft selected from the University of Louisville, for the rest of the season, which left them with 6 total draft picks from this draft on their roster by the end of this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Free agency\nBefore June 26, the only players that were confirmed free agents were Oleksiy \"Alex\" Len (unrestricted) and Elfrid Payton (restricted, but the Suns had declared to not use their right of first refusal on him). Former two-way contract players Alec Peters and Danuel House also had the option to enter free agency or stay for a second year under a two-way contract. House then signed to play for the Houston Rockets in the 2018 NBA Summer League, while Peters stuck with the team during the event. Tyler Ulis was waived from his contract on June 30 for the purpose of extra salary cap space. Two days later, the Suns waived Alan Williams' non-guaranteed deal and the exception rights on the two-way contracts of Alec Peters and Danuel House to create more salary cap space.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 824]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Free agency\nNear the start of free agency on July 1, the Suns agreed to terms with the now former Houston Rockets forward Trevor Ariza on a one-year deal worth $15,000,000, which was signed officially on July 6. Ariza was considered their top free agent priority that season. Also on July 1, Suns' restricted free agent Elfrid Payton signed a one-year deal with the New Orleans Pelicans, his hometown team. On July 7, the Suns' star shooting guard Devin Booker agreed to a five-year maximum contract extension of around $158.3 million to remain with the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0008-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Free agency\nIt was the seventh-highest valued contract of the NBA at the time of its signing. On July 20, they announced that they had retained both Davon Reed and Shaquille Harrison, and also completed two separate trades. Their first trade involved sending guard/forward Jared Dudley and their top-35 protected 2021 second-round pick to the Brooklyn Nets in exchange for power forward Darrell Arthur. Not long after the trade for Arthur, the Suns sent $1,000,000 in cash considerations to the Philadelphia 76ers in a trade for power forward/center Richaun Holmes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0008-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Free agency\nThe next day, Oleksiy \"Alex\" Len signed a two-year deal with the Atlanta Hawks. Alec Peters then signed with PBC CSKA Moscow in Russia instead of retaining his two-way contract with the team. On July 25, their other former two-way contract, Danuel House Jr. signed a regular, one-year contract with the two-time defending champion Golden State Warriors. Alan Williams later signed a two-way contract with the Brooklyn Nets on September 19, and Tyler Ulis signed a training camp deal with the Golden State Warriors two days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Free agency\nOn August 3, the Suns announced they had re-signed a point guard from the previous season, Isaiah Canaan. The team later announced his deal was a non-guaranteed training camp deal, but it marked a return to play after his previous season ended with an ankle fracture on January 31, 2018. Before the month of August concluded, the Suns traded both projected starting point guard Brandon Knight and third-year power forward Marquese Chriss to the Houston Rockets in exchange for new starting power forward Ryan Anderson and rookie point guard De'Anthony Melton, who was previously drafted by Houston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0009-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Free agency\nIn order to make the trade work, Anderson agreed to cut back on his salary for next season to the same amount that Brandon Knight would have been paid; the Suns also sent a $2.6 million traded player exception to the Rockets. Melton signed a rookie deal with the Suns on September 21 after waiting on trying to have a potential point guard trade. On October 15, they waived point guard Shaquille Harrison and power forward Darrell Arthur, with the Suns failing to get a disabled player exception for Arthur's roster spot before season starting rosters had to be finalized. Shooting guard Davon Reed was also waived the following day and replaced by veteran guard Jamal Crawford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Free agency\nOn November 4, center Tyson Chandler agreed to a buyout with the Suns, later playing the rest of the season with the Los Angeles Lakers. On November 23, Isaiah Canaan agreed to leave the team via waiver, eventually playing briefly for the Milwaukee Bucks and Minnesota Timberwolves. On December 7, Phoenix signed Northern Arizona Suns guard Jawun Evans as their second two-way contract, though he would be waived on March 23, 2019 to later play for the Oklahoma City Thunder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0010-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Free agency\nThree days after that signing, Phoenix signed power forward/center Eric Moreland to a one-year deal, though they would waive him on January 3, 2019, after playing only one game with them, eventually signing with future NBA Finals champions, the Toronto Raptors. A week after that, the Suns agreed to trade their biggest free agent acquisition, Trevor Ariza to the Washington Wizards for small forward Kelly Oubre Jr. and point guard Austin Rivers (who got waived the next day).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0010-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Free agency\nInitially, the Suns planned on having a three-way trade with the Wizards and Memphis Grizzlies for some different players in mind, but miscommunication involving the Suns and Grizzlies (specifically whether it was Dillon Brooks or MarShon Brooks that was going to be traded to Phoenix in the original deal) eventually led to the trade between just the Suns and Wizards instead. In January 2019, the Suns started to sign 10-day contracts with various players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0010-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Free agency\nThey first gave power forward Quincy Acy two 10-day contracts on January 7 and 17 before giving former Lincoln Memorial University power forward Emanuel Terry a 10-day contract on January 27. On the February 6 trade deadline, Phoenix traded away power forward Ryan Anderson to the Miami Heat for guards Tyler Johnson and Wayne Ellington, with the latter player also being waived the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0010-0004", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Free agency\nFourteen days after the trade, the Suns signed former Dallas Mavericks power forward Ray Spalding to a 10-day contract before getting a two-year, partially guaranteed deal on March 3. Finally, on March 22, the Suns signed guard Jimmer Fredette from China to a similar two-year, partially guaranteed deal to return to the NBA for the rest of the season to finish off their season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Coaching changes\nIn March 2018, the Suns confirmed they were searching for a permanent head coach, although interim head coach Jay Triano was also stated as a candidate. The vice president of basketball operations at the time, James Jones, revealed that as many as 20 potential candidates were looked into for the head coach position between March and May 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0011-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Coaching changes\nSome of their potential interests during this coaching search included former Suns and Utah Jazz assistant coach Igor Koko\u0161kov, former Memphis Grizzlies head coach David Fizdale, European head coach David Blatt, then-current Atlanta Hawks head coach Mike Budenholzer, former Charlotte Hornets head coach Steve Clifford, former Orlando Magic head coach Frank Vogel, San Antonio Spurs assistant coach James Borrego, former Houston Rockets head coach Kevin McHale, Toronto Raptors assistant coaches Rex Kalamian and Nick Nurse, New Orleans Pelicans associate coach Chris Finch, and former Suns players Jason Kidd and Vinny Del Negro. On May 2, 2018, Triano was relieved of all of his coaching duties with the Suns as Koko\u0161kov was announced to sign a three-year contract as Phoenix's newest head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 856]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Coaching changes\nOn the same day the Suns relieved Jay Triano of his coaching duties, Phoenix also released assistant coach Tyrone Corbin alongside most of the old coaching staff, including former Northern Arizona Suns coach Tyrone Ellis. Triano became an associate head coach for the Charlotte Hornets, while Corbin became an assistant coach for the Orlando Magic, and Marlon Garnett joined the Atlanta Hawks' coaching staff. Former Orlando Magic assistant coach Corliss Williamson then joined Koko\u0161kov's coaching staff in Phoenix. Williamson was familiar with Koko\u0161kov as he played when Koko\u0161kov was an assistant coach during the Detroit Pistons' 2003\u201304 championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0012-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Coaching changes\nOn June 4, former Milwaukee Bucks interim head coach Joe Prunty became the team's leading assistant head coach. A week later, Jason Staudt, an assistant coach under Koko\u0161kov during his coaching tenure with the Georgia national basketball team, became an assistant coach for Phoenix, while former player Devin Smith became a player development coach. On June 18, the Suns hired former Arizona State University point guard and New Orleans Pelicans assistant coach Jamelle McMillan as an assistant coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0012-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Coaching changes\nOn June 22, the Suns also promoted Northern Arizona Suns head coach Cody Toppert to the director of player development position in Phoenix. On July 25, assistant coach Bret Burchard, one of the few Suns' coaches retained from the previous season, was named the head coach for the Northern Arizona Suns. Former Northern Arizona Suns' head coach and Phoenix Suns assistant coach Tyrone Ellis also left the Suns organization to become the head coach of the Stockton Kings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Off-season, Front office changes\nDuring the preseason on October 8, 2018, owner Robert Sarver made the abrupt decision to fire general manager Ryan McDonough. His decision was reflected upon the lack of a starting-caliber point guard being acquired by that point of the season. As a result, vice president of basketball operations James Jones and assistant general manager Trevor Bukstein were named the interim general managers for the rest of this season. Later that same day, the team also fired assistant general manager Pat Connelly, director of scouting Courtney Witte, director of international scouting Emilio Kova\u010di\u0107, and Northern Arizona Suns general manager Louis Lehman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Roster, Salaries\nFor this season, the minimum salary for two-way contracts is at $77,250, while the maximum salary is around $385,000, with potential to earn up to $506,215 in certain situations. As a result of the pre-season waiving of Darrell Arthur, Davon Reed, and Shaquille Harrison, both Arthur and Reed had their fully guaranteed respective salaries of $7,464,912 and $1,378,242 retained for the rest of the season (though with Reed later signing a two-way contract with the Indiana Pacers, Phoenix only paid $675,000 instead), while Harrison only received the partial guarantee of $50,000 he acquired earlier in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0014-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Roster, Salaries\nWhen Tyson Chandler and Isaiah Canaan were bought out and waived on November 3 and 28 respectively, the Suns opened more salary for the remainder of the season. Phoenix also bought out Austin Rivers' contract the day after trading for him on December 18, 2018. Eric Moreland was then waived on January 3, 2019, leaving the Suns with $33 million of dead salary cap space. With the waiving of Wayne Ellington after previously acquiring him on February 6, his $6,270,000 was also added onto the dead salary of the team's season. This left them with the third-highest amount of dead money for the season behind only the Atlanta Hawks and New York Knicks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Preseason\nThe Suns were one of the six NBA teams announced to take part in a series of preseason contests with the National Basketball League and scheduled to play the New Zealand Breakers in Phoenix. The official pre-season schedule was revealed on August 1 with their first game scheduled for October 1. This preseason period was also without Devin Booker, as he was recovering from pinkie surgery at the time, with the intent on returning before the regular season began.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0015-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Preseason\nA week after the Suns started the pre-season, during which time they earned a 1\u20132 record, with their sole victory in a close game against the New Zealand Breakers, team owner Robert Sarver fired general manager Ryan McDonough and replaced them with both James Jones and Trevor Bukstein under interim general manager positions the morning of their penultimate preseason game against the Golden State Warriors. The team ended the preseason with a 2\u20133 record, with Jones and Bukstein both taking over and sharing general manager duties for the rest of this season afterward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Transactions, Trades\n^\u00a0I:\u00a0The Brooklyn Nets only got Phoenix's 2021 second-round pick if the Suns didn't have that pick in the top 35 in terms of selections that season. Otherwise, the Suns were originally meant to keep that selection if it was inside that protection before a later trade with the Memphis Grizzlies (made under James Jones' guise as general manager going forward) resulted in it going to them in that event instead. However, with the Suns' vastly improved success from this season until that point in time, their second-round pick went to Brooklyn instead of Memphis with no reservations whatsoever.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Transactions, Free agents, Additions\n^\u00a0a:\u00a0Isaiah Canaan later ended up receiving only $446,803 officially for his time spent with the team this season. ^\u00a0b:\u00a0Isaiah Canaan was previously with the team during the 2017-18 season. However, on January 31, 2018, a gruesome leg injury forced him out of commission for the rest of the season, which lead to his agreed waiver on February 8, though he would train in Phoenix to recover along the way. ^\u00a0c:\u00a0Jawun Evans started out the preseason with the Los Angeles Clippers before being waived by them on October 15, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0017-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Transactions, Free agents, Additions\nHe then played with the Northern Arizona Suns on November 7 before signing a two-way contract with Phoenix on December 4. ^\u00a0d:\u00a0Eric Moreland ended up receiving only $221,328 for his brief stint with the Suns. ^\u00a0e:\u00a0Quincy Acy originally signed a 10-day contract with the Phoenix Suns on January 7, 2019. However, he received a second 10-day contract on January 17 before not signing on to a regular contract, with Phoenix giving out a new 10-day contract to Emanuel Terry instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0017-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Transactions, Free agents, Additions\n^\u00a0f:\u00a0Ray Spalding originally signed a 10-day contract worth $47,370 with Phoenix on February 20, 2019. However, despite not playing a single game for Phoenix at that time, Spalding was given a partially guaranteed deal on March 3, allowing him the full salary of $184,746 to finish off the season before potentially receiving $1,416,852 next year if it were agreed upon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0017-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Transactions, Free agents, Additions\n^\u00a0g:\u00a0Ray Spalding previously played in only one game with the Dallas Mavericks (which was coincidentally the season opener against the Suns) before playing with the affiliate Texas Legends for the rest of the season and then being waived on January 31, 2019. Spalding received a total of $184,746 from Phoenix this season (including the salary earned through his 10-day contract), with his next season potentially earning him $1,416,852 as well. ^\u00a0h:\u00a0Jimmer Fredette was given a guarantee of $198,579 throughout the rest of the season on March 22, 2019 before having a potential earning of $1,988,119 next year in the event his performances with the Suns went well this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Transactions, Free agents, Subtractions\n^\u00a0i:\u00a0Danuel House Jr. originally signed a deal with the Golden State Warriors on September 21, 2018. However, he would not stay with Golden State during the regular season. House then signed with the Rio Grande Valley Vipers on a separate deal after being waived by the Warriors before eventually signing a two-way contract with the Houston Rockets, his Summer League team this season, on December 6, 2018 after previously signing during the season with the Rockets. His contract eventually became a one-year deal with Houston on March 13, 2019 after previously disagreeing on two prior three-year deals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0018-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Transactions, Free agents, Subtractions\n^\u00a0j:\u00a0Similarly, Tyler Ulis also signed a deal with the Golden State Warriors on September 21, 2018. He also would not stay with the Warriors for the regular season, being waived on October 12. However, Ulis signed a two-way contract with the Chicago Bulls days later, splitting time between them and their NBA G League affiliate, the Windy City Bulls, before a hip injury on December 21 forced him to miss the rest of the season, which lead to him being waived six days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0018-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Transactions, Free agents, Subtractions\n^\u00a0k:\u00a0Alan Williams initially signed a two-way contract with the Brooklyn Nets on September 24, 2018, but he never played in Brooklyn during that first two-way contract with them. Williams was waived on January 2, 2019, but returned with a second two-way contract nine days later, which is where he'd play a few games with Brooklyn instead of the NBA G League affiliate Long Island Nets. ^\u00a0l:\u00a0Both Brandon Knight and Marquese Chriss were initially traded to the Houston Rockets on August 31, 2018 in exchange for Ryan Anderson and rookie De'Anthony Melton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0018-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Transactions, Free agents, Subtractions\nHowever, both Knight and Chriss were later traded from the Rockets to the Cleveland Cavaliers by the trade deadline on February 7, 2019, where they went alongside a first round pick and a second round pick for a three-way trade also involving the Sacramento Kings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0018-0004", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Transactions, Free agents, Subtractions\n^\u00a0m:\u00a0While Darrell Arthur considered all of his options going forward for his personal career, he did not sign with any team either in the NBA or elsewhere in the world after being waived by Phoenix, eventually retiring from playing basketball completely sometime in either December 2020 or January 2021, due in part to the upcoming COVID-19 pandemic throughout some future seasons in the NBA after this one. ^\u00a0n:\u00a0After being waived by the Suns in the preseason, Davon Reed signed a two-way contract with the Indiana Pacers on October 19, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0018-0005", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Transactions, Free agents, Subtractions\nThroughout the season, he split his playing time between Indiana and their NBA G League affiliate, the Fort Wayne Mad Ants. ^\u00a0o:\u00a0On November 4, 2019, Tyson Chandler agreed to waive his rights with the Suns for the rest of the season by having the team buy out his contract. ^\u00a0p:\u00a0After being waived by the Suns, Isaiah Canaan signed two 10-day contracts with the Minnesota Timberwolves on January 30 and February 11, 2019 before signing one 10-day contract with the Milwaukee Bucks on February 25, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286136-0018-0006", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix Suns season, Transactions, Free agents, Subtractions\n^\u00a0q:\u00a0After Quincy Acy was let go from the team, he played for the Texas Legends from February 24 to March 15, 2019, where he later played for the Shenzhen New Century Leopards for one game before being replaced for the rest of the 2018\u201319 CBA season. ^\u00a0r:\u00a0After Emanuel Terry's 10-day contract expired with the Suns, he returned to the Sioux Falls Skyforce on February 8, 2019, with a brief 10-day contract stint with the Miami Heat occurring from February 20 to March 1, 2019 before returning to Sioux Falls for the rest of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286137-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix mayoral special election\nThe 2018\u201319 Phoenix mayoral special election was held to elect the new Mayor of Phoenix, Arizona. The election was officially nonpartisan; candidates ran on the same ballot. In the initial round of the election, since no candidate reached 50 percent plus one vote (as required by Phoenix City Charter), a runoff election was held between the top two finishers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286137-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix mayoral special election\nIn October 2017, then incumbent mayor Greg Stanton announced that he was running for United States Congress in District 9, which includes much of Phoenix. Stanton resigned effective May 29, 2018, triggering a special election on November 6, 2018. The top two candidates from that election, Kate Gallego and Daniel Valenzuela, both fell short of the required 50 percent of the vote, therefore the mayoral race was decided by a final runoff election on March 12, 2019, which Gallego won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286137-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Phoenix mayoral special election\nPhoenix councilwoman Thelda Williams served as temporary mayor until Gallego took office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286138-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Piala Indonesia\nThe 2018\u201319 Piala Indonesia (known as the Krating Daeng Piala Indonesia for sponsorship reasons) was the seventh edition of Piala Indonesia. It began with the first round on 8 May 2018, and concluded with the finals on 21 July and 6 August 2019. The winner would qualify for the play-off round of the 2020 AFC Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286138-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Piala Indonesia\nWinner of the 2012 Piala Indonesia, Persibo were the defending champions, as there were no competition from 2013 to 2017 for various reasons, but they were eliminated in the first round by Madura United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286138-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Piala Indonesia\nPSM won the competition by defeating Persija 2\u20131 on aggregate in the two-legged finals, winning their first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286138-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Piala Indonesia, First stage, First round\nThe first round was featured by 128 teams. The first round matches were played from 8 May to 2 September 2018. Match list sorted by zone. All times are WIB (UTC+7).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286138-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Piala Indonesia, First stage, Second round\nThe second round was featured by 64 teams which were the winners of the first round. The second round matches was played from 20 November 2018 to 5 January 2019. Match list sorted by zone. All times are WIB (UTC+7).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286138-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Piala Indonesia, Second stage, Round of 32\nFor the round of 32, the first legs was played from 23 January to 5 February 2019 and the second from 31 January to 16 February 2019. The division shown for each team is the same as they registered from the first round. Match list sorted by zone. All times are WIB (UTC+7).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286138-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Piala Indonesia, Second stage, Round of 16\nFor the round of 16, the first legs was played from 15 to 19 February 2019 and the second from 20 to 24 February 2019. Match list sorted by zone. All times are WIB (UTC+7).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286138-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Piala Indonesia, Final stage, Quarter-finals\nFor the quarter-finals, the first legs was played from 24 April \u2013 19 June 2019 and the second from 3 May \u2013 27 June 2019. All times are WIB (UTC+7).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 52], "content_span": [53, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286138-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Piala Indonesia, Final stage, Semi-finals\nFor the semi-finals, the first legs was played from 29 to 30 June and the second from 6\u20137 July 2019. All times are WIB (UTC+7).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286139-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pittsburgh Panthers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Pittsburgh Panthers men's basketball team represented the University of Pittsburgh during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Panthers were led by first-year head coach Jeff Capel and played their home games at the Petersen Events Center in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania as members of the Atlantic Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286139-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pittsburgh Panthers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Panthers finished the 2017\u201318 season 8\u201324 overall and 0\u201318 in ACC play, finishing dead last in the conference and losing in the first round of the ACC Tournament to Notre Dame. On March 8, 2018, Pitt fired head coach Kevin Stallings. On March 27, Pitt hired Duke assistant coach Jeff Capel as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286140-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pittsburgh Panthers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Pittsburgh Panthers women's basketball team represented Pittsburgh University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Panthers, led by first year head coach Lane White, played their home games at the Petersen Events Center as members of the Atlantic Coast Conference. They finished the season 11\u201320, 2\u201314 in ACC play to finish in 14th place. They lost in the first round of the ACC Women's Tournament to Duke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286140-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pittsburgh Panthers women's basketball team, Previous season\nThey finished the season 10\u201320, 2\u201314 in ACC play to finish in a tie for thirteenth place. They lost in the first round of the ACC Women's Tournament to Wake Forest. On April 5, the previous head coach Suzie McConnell-Serio was fired. She finished at Pittsburgh with a 5-year record of 67\u201387.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286141-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pittsburgh Penguins season\nThe 2018\u201319 Pittsburgh Penguins season was the 52nd season for the National Hockey League team that was established on June 5, 1967. The Penguins clinched a playoff spot on April 4, 2019, after a 4\u20131 win against the Detroit Red Wings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286141-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pittsburgh Penguins season\nThe Penguins qualified for the 2019 Stanley Cup playoffs, where they were swept in the first round by the New York Islanders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286141-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was published on June 21, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 72], "content_span": [73, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286141-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Playoffs\nThe Penguins faced the New York Islanders in the First Round of the playoffs, where they were swept in four games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286141-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Penguins. Stats reflect time with the Penguins only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Penguins only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286141-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Transactions\nThe Penguins have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286141-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Draft picks\nBelow are the Pittsburgh Penguins' selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286142-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Plunket Shield season\nThe 2018\u201319 Plunket Shield was the 90th season of the Plunket Shield, the domestic first-class cricket competition in New Zealand. It took place between October 2018 and March 2019. Unlike the previous edition of the competition, the tournament featured eight rounds of matches, instead of ten. Central Districts were the defending champions. Up to eleven international players, including New Zealand's captain Kane Williamson, were available for the opening round of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286142-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Plunket Shield season\nIn the opening round of fixtures, in the match between Central Districts and Canterbury, both teams declared one of their innings for no runs, in a rain-affected match, to ensure that a result was possible. The same situation also happened in round seven of the tournament, with Auckland declaring their first innings for no runs and Canterbury declaring their innings on 22/2 to get a result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286142-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Plunket Shield season\nAhead of the final round of fixtures, Central Districts had a fifteen point lead over Canterbury, needing just five more points to win the competition and retain their title. However, following the Christchurch mosque shootings, Canterbury withdrew from their final game, against Wellington, therefore Central Districts retained their title. It was the first time in more than fifty years that Central Districts had won back-to-back titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286143-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PlusLiga\n2018\u201319 PlusLiga was the 83rd season of Polish Championship (19th season as professional league - PlusLiga) organized by Polish Volleyball League SA (Polish: Polska Liga Siatk\u00f3wki 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, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286143-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PlusLiga\nBBTS Bielsko-Bia\u0142a and Dafi Spo\u0142em Kielce were relegated to the first league after season 2017\u201318. \u0141uczniczka Bydgoszcz beat AZS Cz\u0119stochowa in playoffs for keeping in the PlusLiga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286143-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PlusLiga\nOn December 13, 2018 Stocznia Szczecin withdrew from the league due to financial issues. All results of the club were canceled and the league continued by 13 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286143-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PlusLiga, Regular season, 1st round\nOriginally the match Stocznia Szczecin vs. Trefl Gda\u0144sk was supposed to take place on October 14 at 2.45. At 5\u20135 in the first set the match was interrupted due to power failure. After a few hours of waiting, the match was canceled. The league committee announced that the match will be repeated from 0\u20130 on November 29, 2018. Because of financial issues of Stocznia Szczecin, the club was represented by limited roster of players (i.e. opposite Bartosz Kurek dissolved his contract).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 43], "content_span": [44, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286143-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PlusLiga, Regular season, 9th round\nBecause of financial issues of Stocznia Szczecin, the players have not received their salaries since the beginning of the season and most of them decided to leave the club by terminating their contracts by mutual agreement on late November or early December 2018. The match GKS Katowice vs. Stocznia Szczecin was the last meeting for most of the players, as of December 6, 2018 Stocznia did not have enough players required to play the match against Chemik Bydgoszcz. Due to the insolvency of the Stocznia club, management of the Polish Volleyball League undertook explanatory actions, Chemik Bydgoszcz and MKS B\u0119dzin agreed to postpone dates of the following matches with Stocznia in order to clarify the future of this club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 43], "content_span": [44, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286143-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PlusLiga, Play-offs, Semifinals\nTop two teams of Regular season are qualified to two different semifinal pairs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 39], "content_span": [40, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286144-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PlusLiga squads\nThis article shows the rosters of all participating teams at 2018\u201319 PlusLiga in Poland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286144-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PlusLiga squads, Aluron Virtu Warta Zawiercie\nThe following is the Aluron Virtu Warta Zawiercie roster in the 2018\u201319 PlusLiga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286144-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PlusLiga squads, Asseco Resovia Rzesz\u00f3w\nThe following is the Asseco Resovia Rzesz\u00f3w roster in the 2018\u201319 PlusLiga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286144-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PlusLiga squads, Cerrad Czarni Radom\nThe following is the Cerrad Czarni Radom roster in the 2018\u201319 PlusLiga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286144-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PlusLiga squads, Chemik Bydgoszcz\nThe following is the Chemik Bydgoszcz roster in the 2018\u201319 PlusLiga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286144-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PlusLiga squads, Cuprum Lubin\nThe following is the Cuprum Lubin roster in the 2018\u201319 PlusLiga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286144-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PlusLiga squads, GKS Katowice\nThe following is the GKS Katowice roster in the 2018\u201319 PlusLiga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286144-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PlusLiga squads, Indykpol AZS Olsztyn\nThe following is the Indykpol AZS Olsztyn roster in the 2018\u201319 PlusLiga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286144-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PlusLiga squads, Jastrz\u0119bski W\u0119giel\nThe following is the Jastrz\u0119bski W\u0119giel roster in the 2018\u201319 PlusLiga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286144-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PlusLiga squads, MKS B\u0119dzin\nThe following is the MKS B\u0119dzin roster in the 2018\u201319 PlusLiga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286144-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PlusLiga squads, ONICO Warszawa\nThe following is the ONICO Warszawa roster in the 2018\u201319 PlusLiga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286144-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PlusLiga squads, PGE Skra Be\u0142chat\u00f3w\nThe following is the PGE Skra Be\u0142chat\u00f3w roster in the 2018\u201319 PlusLiga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286144-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PlusLiga squads, Trefl Gda\u0144sk\nThe following is the Trefl Gda\u0144sk roster in the 2018\u201319 PlusLiga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286144-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 PlusLiga squads, ZAKSA K\u0119dzierzyn-Ko\u017ale\nThe following is the ZAKSA K\u0119dzierzyn-Ko\u017ale roster in the 2018\u201319 PlusLiga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286145-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Plymouth Argyle F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Plymouth Argyle's second consecutive season in League One and their 133rd year in existence. Along with competing in League One, the club participated in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286145-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Plymouth Argyle F.C. season, Competitions, Friendlies\nOn 10 May 2018, Plymouth Argyle announced eight pre-season friendlies for July. These were extended into ten friendlies when a tour of The Netherlands was announced in early July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286145-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Plymouth Argyle F.C. season, Competitions, League One, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League One fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286145-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Plymouth Argyle F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October. The draw for the second round was made live on BBC and BT by Mark Schwarzer and Glenn Murray on 12 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286145-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Plymouth Argyle F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286145-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Plymouth Argyle F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286146-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Polish Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Polish Cup was the sixty-fifth season of the annual Polish football knockout tournament. It began on 7 August 2018 with the first matches of the preliminary round and ended on 2 May 2019 with the final at PGE Narodowy. Winners of the competition would qualify for the qualifying round of the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League, however eventual winners Lechia Gda\u0144sk had qualified for Europe through their league performance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286146-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Polish Cup, Format changes\nBefore the start of the 2018\u201319 season, the PZPN confirmed the reforming plan of the Polish Cup, introducing several changes:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286146-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Polish Cup, Prize Money\nThe PZPN Board of Directors determined the size of the prizes at its meeting on May 23, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286146-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Polish Cup, Preliminary round\nParticipating in this round were 8 teams from the 2017\u201318 II liga from positions 11 to 18. Teams from places 11 to 14 faced teams from places 15 to 18 in the following pairs: 11\u201318, 12\u201317, 13\u201316, 14\u201315. The matches were played on 7 and 8 August 2018. The number in brackets indicates what tier of Polish football each team competes in during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286146-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Polish Cup, Round of 64\nThe draw for this round was conducted in the headquarter of PZPN on 10 August 2018. The matches was played on 25 to 27 September and 2 to 3 October 2018. Participating in this round were the 4 winners from the previous round, 16 teams from the 2017\u201318 Ekstraklasa, 18 teams from the 2017\u201318 I liga, 10 highest ranked teams from 2017\u201318 II liga and 16 winners of the regional cup competitions. Games were hosted by teams playing in the lower division in the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286146-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Polish Cup, Round of 32\nThe draw for this round was conducted in the headquarter of PZPN on 28 September 2018. The matches were played on 30\u201331 October and 7 November 2018. Games were hosted by teams playing in the lower division in the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286146-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Polish Cup, Round of 16\nThe draw for this round was conducted in the headquarter of PZPN on 8 November 2018. The matches were played on 4 to 6 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286146-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Polish Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe 8 winners from Round of 16 competed in this round. The matches were played on 27 February 2019, as well as 12 to 13 March. The draw for this round was conducted in the headquarter of PZPN, Warsaw on 7 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286146-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Polish Cup, Final\nMatch officials:Referee:Bartosz FrankowskiAssistant referees:Jakub WinklerAdam KupsikFourth official:Pawe\u0142 RaczkowskiVideo assistant referee:Tomasz KwiatkowskiMarcin Borkowski", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286147-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Polish Cup of men's volleyball\n2018\u201319 Polish Cup was the 62nd 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-00286147-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Polish Cup of men's volleyball\nAs a venue for final tournament was chosen Hala Orbita in Wroc\u0142aw. Quarterfinals opponents were drawn on January 8, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286147-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Polish Cup of men's volleyball\nZAKSA K\u0119dzierzyn-Ko\u017ale beat Jastrz\u0119bski W\u0119giel in final and achieved Polish Cup seventh time in club history. Polish outside hitter Aleksander \u015aliwka from ZAKSA K\u0119dzierzyn-Ko\u017ale has become the Most Valuable Player of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286147-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Polish Cup of men's volleyball, Final phase, Quarterfinals\nIn quarterfinals, two teams that have passed the 5 rounds of qualifications are joined by the current top 6 teams in regular season of the 2018\u201319 PlusLiga. The drawing of club pairs took place on January 8, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Port Vale's 107th season of football in the English Football League, and second consecutive season in EFL League Two. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 through to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season\nNeil Aspin marked his first summer transfer window as the club's manager with ten new permanent signings and five loan players in order to build his own squad, all of which were free signings except for striker Ricky Miller. The season started with five defeats in the opening seven games, before a 1\u20131 draw at Forest Green Rovers on 8 September marked a turnaround in results and performances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season\nThe team suffered 4\u20130 and 6\u20132 defeats at home to Lincoln City in the first round of the EFL Cup and in the league, though managed to win 1\u20130 at local rivals Crewe Alexandra to maintain a lower mid-table position from the end of August to the end of October. In the EFL Trophy, the two home group games set record low attendances at Vale Park and Nelson Agho became the youngest player in the club's history at age of 15 years and 262 days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0001-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season\nThey won all three group games to advance to the knockout stages, where they were drawn against Stoke City U21 \u2013 the Academy team of Potteries derby rivals Stoke City; Vale won the match 4\u20130 in front of a season high crowd of 7,940, but hooligans amongst the Stoke supporters caused around \u00a3100,000 of damage to Vale Park and surrounding areas of Burslem.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season\nVale suffered a miserable December following their win over Stoke, drawing three and losing two of their five league games against teams around them in the bottom half of the table. They did manage to pick up a 1\u20131 draw at league leaders Lincoln City on New Year's Day, though after the game Aspin considered leaving the club after feeling that supporters had shown him a \"lack of respect\". He chose to stay and oversaw a run to the EFL Trophy quarter-finals, where Vale ended up being knocked out by Bristol Rovers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season\nHowever he resigned on 30 January following a run of one win in ten league games. He was succeeded by John Askey, who managed to turn the team's form around after losing his first four games in charge. As relegation seemed increasingly unlikely, attention them turned to ownership issues, as fans protested against chairman Norman Smurthwaite. Rejecting offers to buy the club, Smurthwaite claimed that he would put the club into administration on 5 May if he was still the club's owner. Carol and Kevin Shanahan completed their takeover on 7 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nNeil Aspin's first signing of the window was 33-year-old goalkeeper Scott Brown, who had been an ever-present for Wycombe Wanderers when they won promotion out of EFL League Two the previous season. Aspin stated that Brown's experience would help with organising the Vale's young defenders on the pitch. He quickly followed this by bringing in 30-year-old Carlisle United midfielder Luke Joyce on a two-year contract and 24-year-old Alfreton Town winger Brendon Daniels on a six-month contract, describing Joyce as \"vastly experienced\" and Daniels as \"a local lad who is desperate to prove himself\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nNext to arrive were centre-backs Leon Legge and Connell Rawlinson, arriving on free transfers after leaving Cambridge United and The New Saints respectively. Aspin said that he hoped the experience of Legge would aid the development of young centre-half Nathan Smith. His sixth signing was central midfielder Manny Oyeleke, who had just left National League side Aldershot Town after picking up their Player of the Year award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0003-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nAfter a wait of some weeks, the seventh incoming player was revealed to be attacker Louis Dodds, who joined on a season-long loan from relegated Chesterfield; he had previously played for the Vale from 2008 to 2016. Aspin said that Dodds had been keen on a return to Vale Park and \"he has cost us next to nothing really\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0003-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nVale then acquired the services of Peterborough United striker Ricky Miller after paying an undisclosed fee; 29-year-old Miller had scored a remarkable goal tally in the National League but had thus far failed to establish himself in the Football League in a career hindered by legal troubles. Another Peterborough forward then arrived, this time 18-year-old Idris Kanu on a season-long loan, whilst defender Theo Vassell was also signed on a one-year deal from Aspin's former club Gateshead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0003-0004", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nGoing the other way, 20-year-old forward Dan Turner joined Scottish Championship club Falkirk on a six-month loan deal \u2013 which was terminated early on 5 October. Taking his place at Vale Park was Scott Quigley, signed on a season-long loan from Blackpool. Aspin also went on to sign former Stevenage midfielder Tom Conlon, who had impressed whilst on trial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nVale kicked off the season at home to Cambridge United on 4 August, and made a flawless start with both Tom Pope and Ricky Miller getting off the mark in a 3\u20130 victory. However the following performance was poor, as they fell to a 2\u20130 defeat at Colchester United. Aspin made his fourth loan signing of the summer later that week, bringing in 19-year-old Aston Villa full-back Mitch Clark as cover for James Gibbons and Cristian Monta\u00f1o.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nClark went straight into the starting eleven at home to Crawley Town on 18 August, and helped the new look defence to a clean sheet and 1\u20130 win despite the away side dominating the play for much of the second half. However three days later Vale were beaten 2\u20131 at Carlisle United, with Aspin blaming the referee for making a \"poor decision\" to give a first-half penalty against Rawlinson. Vale then went on to lose 1\u20130 at newly-promoted Tranmere Rovers, after which Aspin again bemoaned the officials, stating that his team should have been given a penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0004-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nAspin went on to say \"We had an apology from the Lincoln game to say it wasn't a penalty, we\u2019ve had an apology to say we should have had a penalty in the Carlisle game and an apology to say we should have had a penalty in the Tranmere game.\" Having managed to offload unwanted striker Tyrone Barnett on loan to Cheltenham Town, Aspin then signed 20-year-old box-to-box midfielder Lewis Hardcastle on a season-long loan from Blackburn Rovers and also brought in Ben Whitfield; Aspin had attempted to sign Whitfield in January before falling out with the player's agent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nVale opened September at home to Newport County, and though Pope scored to make himself the all-time top-scorer at the Vale Park stadium with 56 goals, Vale still went on to lose the game 2\u20131 after again being denied a penalty. Away at Forest Green Rovers, Vale turned around a one-goal half-time deficit to draw 1\u20131 after Pope converted a penalty won by Miller; Rovers ended the match with ten men after Farrend Rawson was shown a straight red card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nThey then went on to beat Northampton Town 2\u20130, with Whitfield and Oyeleke the scorers; Oyeleke was named in the EFL team of the week and his goal was listed as the League Two goal of the weekend. Over 1,900 Vale fans went on to travel nearby rivals Crewe Alexandra and witnessed a 1\u20130 victory thanks to a 75th-minute Legge header, ending a run of ten months without an away victory. Second-place Exeter City then came to Burslem and took a 1\u20130 lead that they defended until the seventh minute of injury-time, at which point Kanu scored a dramatic late equaliser, his first goal in professional football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nVale opened October with a difficult home tie with Milton Keynes Dons, and lost 2\u20130 after playing with ten men after 65 minutes when half-time substitute Monta\u00f1o went off injured; Aspin defended his decision to put Monta\u00f1o on as his final substitution by saying \"If he wasn't 100 per cent fit, he wouldn't have been on the bench... How stupid do you think I am?\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nVale then went on to lose 2\u20130 at second-from-bottom Grimsby Town, having gone one goal behind within the opening minute following a mistake from Clarke; after the game Aspin attempted to confront some hecklers who had abused him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0006-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nLeague leaders Lincoln City then returned to Vale Park on 13 October, and as they did in the EFL Cup won comfortably, leading the game after three minutes and going 3\u20130 up by half-time before winning the match 6\u20132; Aspin said it was like \"torture\" to watch the game but that \"I would only leave if I was sacked and that is not the case\". Four of Lincoln's goals came from set pieces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0006-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nThey recovered from this performance and picked up a hard-fought 1\u20130 victory at Oldham Athletic seven days later, which led Aspin to say that the team was united and that he had never \"lost the dressing room\". Aspin named the same team away at Stevenage, which ended in a 0\u20130 draw. Vale then closed out the month with a 1\u20130 win at home to Bury, Pope scoring against the run of play early in the second half after the team held on to a clean sheet following a difficult opening half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nDespite investing heavily in the summer, Notts County came to Vale Park on 3 November just one place above the relegation zone, and both sides had to be satisfied with a 2\u20132 draw after a late diving header from Pope rescued a point just two minutes after Elliott Ward had put County ahead on 87 minutes; in the first half Kane Hemmings had cancelled out Luke Hannant's early header. Both Aspin and County manager Harry Kewell claimed their sides deserved to win the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0007-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nTwo weeks later, Vale travelled to Mansfield Town and fell to a 1\u20130 defeat, with Oyeleke sent off on his return from injury after receiving two yellow cards. Vale then slipped to a 1\u20130 defeat at home to Swindon Town in front of just 3,877 spectators for a Saturday fixture, and failed to create any meaningful chances throughout the game. However they saw out the month with a comfortable 3\u20130 victory at Yeovil Town; two of the goals came from Monta\u00f1o, who had been highly criticised for his performance in the defeat to Swindon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nOn 8 December, Vale seemed to be heading for 2\u20130 defeat at Morecambe with a poor performance when, on 83 minutes, Antony Kay successfully evaded the home side's offside trap on a free-kick to pull a goal back, and then Pope scored an equalizing goal four minutes later; Brown then immediately gave away a penalty, which was missed by former Vale striker A-Jay Leitch-Smith to leave the final score at 2\u20132. Struggling Cheltenham Town came to Burslem the following week amidst awful weather conditions, and just 3,109 spectators witnessed a 2\u20132 draw, Kay secured a point with a stoppage-time header.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0008-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nNo goals were scored in the trip to the league's bottom club Macclesfield Town \u2013 a club that had rediscovered their National League winning form under new manager Sol Campbell; the clean sheet and a third consecutive draw were earned largely thanks to some impressive first-half saves from Brown. Grimsby Town were the visitors at Vale Park on Boxing day and they came away with a 1\u20130 win; Wes Thomas scored the only goal of the game on 62 minutes. Oldham arrived in Burslem three days later, having sacked manager Frankie Bunn following a 6\u20130 defeat; Vale crashed to a 4\u20131 defeat to the managerless \"Latics\" to put intense pressure on Aspin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nVale travelled to league leaders Lincoln City on New Year's Day and looked to be leaving with a 1\u20130 defeat despite a very credible performance, before Oyeleke scored a spectacular stoppage-time equaliser to secure a point; after the game Aspin threatened to quit the club after feeling that supporters had shown him a \"lack of respect\". After taking time to consider his position he said that he would remain as manager as he had the support of the players and the chairman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0009-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nOn 12 January, Vale fell to a 3\u20130 home defeat to Colchester, losing Pope to a hamstring injury in the process and Aspin bemoaned his side's poor run of luck. Two days later he signed versatile defender Adam Crookes on loan from Nottingham Forest, who had previously been recalled from a loan at Lincoln City after failing to break into the first-team there. Another new arrival was 23-year-old striker Danny Elliott, who was signed following a trial; he had previously been playing in the Spanish Tercera Divisi\u00f3n for San Cristoba.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0009-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nWith Pope ruled out of action for over a month with a hamstring injury, Miller was restored to the starting eleven at Crawley on 19 January and scored the only goal of the game to maintain the club's five-point gap above the relegation zone. Aspin went on to bring in 20-year-old Wales youth international forward Mark Harris on loan from Cardiff City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0009-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nHowever he was again facing questions over his own future following a 1\u20130 home defeat to promotion-chasing Carlisle United; Vale had actually looked good for a point until conceding a deflected goal on 79 minutes despite having Miller sent off for a reckless challenge just before half-time. They closed out the month with a 0\u20130 draw at Newport County, though ended a third consecutive game with only ten men as Gibbons was given a straight red card with five minutes left to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0009-0004", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nAspin tendered his resignation the following day, stating that \"I am very proud of the job we [he and assistant Lee Nogan] did in keeping the club in League Two and we leave the club in a better place on and off the pitch\". Despite having no manager, the club completed the loan signing of West Bromwich Albion defender Kyle Howkins, who had joined the club on loan at the same point of the 2017\u201318 season. Three more young midfield players were also signed, Callum Whelan and Toby Edser on loan from Manchester United and Nottingham Forest respectively, and Daniel Trickett-Smith from Leek Town \u2013 who was immediately returned on loan to Leek.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nFormer Macclesfield and Shrewsbury boss John Askey was appointed as the club's new manager on 4 February, signing a contract to run until the end of the season; he named Dave Kevan as his assistant. Five days later he took charge of his first game away at 20th-placed Cambridge, who leapfrogged the Vale with a 1\u20130 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0010-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nAskey named the same team at home to 22nd-placed Morecambe, and despite dominating the first-half they failed to score past an in-form Mark Halstead, with Pope missing a penalty; a 75th-minute Aaron Collins goal won all three points for the visitors, dragging Vale to within just five points of the bottom of the league. A 2\u20131 defeat at home to Tranmere three days later left Vale in 21st-place; James Norwood bagged a brace, before Whitfield's consolation ended Vale's club-record run of 571 minutes without scoring a goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0010-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nAskey switched to 4\u20134\u20132 and instigated four personnel changes for the trip to Cheltenham Town, but the end result was a fourth straight defeat and a run of one goal scored in seven matches. Vale had a goal wrongly disallowed for offside against Cheltenham and launched an official complaint to the Match Official Administration System, also citing six further major incidents in games earlier in the season that had cost the club vital points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nVale faced a crucial trip to Meadow Lane to face bottom-club Notts County on 2 March and kept a clean sheet and extended their gap over the relegation zone to four points with a goalless draw, though they dominated the game and wasted numerous chances to secure a much needed victory. Third-placed Mansfield then came to Burslem, with both sides' top-scorer absent (Pope injured and Tyler Walker suspended); Miller came into the side and scored two early second-half goals to secure an important 2\u20131 win, with Brown again impressing after saving a first-half penalty given away by Legge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0011-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nThree days later Vale put themselves eight points clear of the relegation zone with a comfortable 3\u20130 home win over Yeovil; Oyeleke, Conlon and Monta\u00f1o were the scorers; Colnon's goal was a goal of the season contender, and he and David Worrall played particularly well in a dominant midfield performance. The unbeaten run stretched to four games with a 0\u20130 draw in fierce windy conditions at Swindon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0011-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nForest Green ended the unbeaten run after the play-off chasing visitors left Burslem with a 2\u20130 victory, Reece Brown bagging a brace in the last minute of stoppage time after breaking the deadlock on 69 minutes; Askey bemoaned \"poor\" officiating in his post-match interview. Vale seemed to be heading for a defeat at Northampton after Legge was sent off just before half-time with the \"Cobblers\" 1\u20130 ahead, but Worrall scored a 44th-minute equaliser and Pope came on to convert a 75th-minute penalty; Pope's 100th goal for the club secured a 2\u20131 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nVale banished any remaining fears of relegation on 6 April by completing the double over local rivals Crewe Alexandra, with Pope scoring the only goal of the game on 78 minutes. They faced an uphill battle at Exeter seven days later after Howkins gave away a penalty in the opening minute, and were second-best all afternoon to the play-off hopefuls as the \"Grecians\" claimed a 2\u20130 win. Askey then made four changes for the return fixture with Stevenage, but a poor performance saw them slip to a 4\u20131 defeat, though the scoreline was generous to the \"Boro\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0012-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nAskey started with Elliot away at promotion-chasing MK Dons, a 1\u20131 draw in which Brown saved a first-half penalty and Conlon scored a fine opening goal. However Askey went on to criticise unnamed squad members for unprofessional behaviour, saying that \"...there are things that have gone on in my short stay here that shouldn't go on. I have had to deal with things I have never dealt with in 30 odd years of being in football\". Vale's final home game of the season was a 1\u20130 defeat to Askey's former club Macclesfield, who desperately needed the victory to stay in the league. The final away game of the season was a 1\u20131 draw at already-promoted Bury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, EFL League Two\nWith a final position of 20th being the joint-lowest in the club's history (along with 1979\u201380 and 2017\u201318), albeit with an improved points tally of 49, Askey released nine of the ten out of contract players: Dior Angus, Harry Benns, Mike Calveley, Danny Elliott, Luke Hannant, Antony Kay, Michael Tonge, Dan Turner and Theo Vassell, with Sam Hornby the only one to be offered a new deal (he rejected the deal and instead joined Bradford City). He also transfer listed Connell Rawlinson and Ben Whitfield. Askey himself signed a new three-year contract, whilst Leon Legge and David Worrall also signed contract extensions. However Ricky Miller left the club after his contract was terminated one year early by mutual consent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Finances & ownership issues\nNorman Smurthwaite returned formally to the role of Port Vale chairman on 1 August. The club started a new kit wear deal with Australian firm BLK. Smurthwaite was quoted as saying he would provide \u00a3400,000 for Aspin to spend in the January transfer window, funded by the proceeds of the cup windfalls and sale of Jordan Hugill. Smurthwaite was hospitalised after being struck by a car whilst walking outside Vale Park on 25 January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0014-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Finances & ownership issues\nSmurthwaite blamed \"logistical challenges\" for the deal to bring back former top-scorer Marc Richards breaking down on 31 January (transfer deadline day); the club instead signed four youngsters despite having no manager. As the transfer window was closing, the Port Vale Supporters' Club unanimously gave a vote of no confidence in Smurthwaite and elected to begin formal protests against his ownership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0014-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Finances & ownership issues\nSmurthwaite went on to issue a statement to condemn \"disgraceful abuse\" he had received and to urge supporters to not to use \"inappropriate language\" during protests and to consider the effect of protests on the club and the players; he stated that he was only involved in \"major\" decisions at the club and left day-to-day decisions to CEO Colin Garlick. Responding to accusations that the club had been operating \"on the cheap\", chief executive Colin Garlick stated that the club had the tenth-largest playing budget in League Two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0014-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Finances & ownership issues\nOn 1 March, Synectics Solutions owners Carol and Kevin Shanahan revealed that Smurthwaite had rejected their improved offer of \u00a33.5 million for the club. When the couple told Smurthwaite they were planning to go public about their offer he texted them to say \"sorry not interested. now please get back to your day job and continue the sterling work in the community.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Finances & ownership issues\n\"In Stoke-on-Trent, we don\u2019t expect a Russian billionaire or a sheikh or anything like that \u2013 we just want somebody with the community at heart who is willing to build long term. I don\u2019t think we\u2019re asking for much. If we don\u2019t go down this year, it will be the next year or the year after. We can\u2019t keep dicing with danger the way we have. If we go down and he [Smurthwaite] is still there, I don\u2019t think we\u2019ll come back. We\u2019ll be a Chester or a Darlington. I see us just plummeting, because we\u2019re not well run enough to rise up again. It\u2019s been exhausting and demoralising. It\u2019s a heartbreaking time to be a Vale fan\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Finances & ownership issues\nOn 23 March, Smurthwaite claimed that fans protests against him had cost the club a \u00a3500,000 stadium sponsorship deal, that he had never received a \"formal offer\" for the club and that he would put the club into administration if no new owner was in place by 5 May. Carol and Kevin Shanahan immediately put in a new offer for the club, leaving CEO Colin Garlick \"very optimistic\" of a deal being completed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0016-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Finances & ownership issues\nSmurthwaite then stated that an Asian consortium wanted to enter exclusive talks to buy the club for \u00a32.8m. Carol and Kevin Shanahan signed an exclusivity agreement to buy the club on 2 April. They completed their takeover of both the club and the ground on 7 May, ending Smurthwaite's seven years in charge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Cup competitions\nThe first round draw of the FA Cup saw Port Vale drawn at home to League One side Sunderland. A heavy defeat seemed a distinct possibility after they went 2\u20130 down inside 20 minutes, but Aspin changed formation and put on Oyeleke, who helped Pope to inspire a goal before half-time, though the team could not find the equaliser and were denied a strong penalty appeal by referee Anthony Backhouse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Cup competitions\nPort Vale were drawn at home to League Two rivals Lincoln City in the First Round of the EFL Cup, and made an early exit after losing 4\u20130 despite making only making three changes from the starting eleven that opened the league campaign. This was the club's biggest home defeat in the competition's history and the 2,440 attendance was the lowest at Vale Park in the competition since October 1981.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Cup competitions\nVale's opponents in the Group Stage of the EFL Trophy were League One sides Burton Albion and Walsall, along with Academy side Middlesbrough. They opened the group at home to Burton on 9 October, and won the 1\u20130 game thanks to a goal from substitute Ricky Miller; just 601 spectators showed up for the match, a new record low attendance for a first-team fixture at Vale Park. This record was broken seven days later as Vale recorded a 2\u20130 win over Middlesbrough U21, with Rawlinson joining Miller on the scoresheet. They then went on to finish as group winners after beating Walsall 2\u20131 at the Bescot Stadium, a game in which Nelson Agho came off the bench to become the youngest player in the club's history at the age of 15 years and 262 days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 803]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Cup competitions\nIn the second round of the EFL Trophy Vale faced a home tie with Stoke City U21 \u2013 the youth-team of Potteries derby rivals Stoke City \u2013 and easily won the match 4\u20130 after naming a strong starting eleven, including opening goal-scorer Pope. Despite it being their under-21 team, almost 4,000 Stoke fans attended the fixture to make the total attendance 7,940, in what Staffordshire Police described as their biggest footballing operation for 10 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0020-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Cup competitions\nAfter the game a portion of Stoke supporters vandalized Vale Park and surrounding areas of Burslem, Chief Superintendent Wayne Jones stated that \"We're talking about a minority of 150-200 people who had no interest in the football and were there for the trouble they expected to be played out and intended to cause disorder and damage.\" Smurthwaite estimated the repair bill at being close to \u00a3100,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Cup competitions\nOn 8 January, third round opponents Shrewsbury Town visited Vale Park and made 11 changes to their side that drew with Stoke City in the FA Cup three days earlier. The League One \"Shrews\" still proved a challenge and it took an 83rd-minute strike from Pope to take the game to a penalty shoot-out, which Vale won 4\u20133 whilst Aspin faced away as he was too nervous to watch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286148-0021-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Cup competitions\nVale exited the competition at the quarter-final stage after falling to a 3\u20130 defeat at struggling League One side Bristol Rovers; Conlon picked up two bookings shortly after half-time and a 61st-minute Tom Nichols penalty then stretched Bristol's lead to two goals and cued up a comfortable win for the home side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286149-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vila Premier League\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Chanheigeorge (talk | contribs) at 17:25, 14 January 2020 (\u2192\u200eLeague table). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286149-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vila Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Port Vila Premier League is the 25th season of the Port Vila Premier League, the top football league in Port Vila, the capital of Vanuatu. The season started on 27 October 2018. Tupuji Imere are the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286149-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vila Premier League, Teams\nA total of eight teams compete in the league. Sia-Raga and Mauwia were relegated from last season, and were replaced by promoted teams Galaxy and Yatel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286149-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vila Premier League, PVFA Top Four Super League\nThe top four teams of the Port Vila Premier League play in the Top Four Super League for a place in the OFC Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286149-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Port Vila Premier League, PVFA Top Four Super League, Grand Final\nWinner of the Grand Final qualifies for the 2020 OFC Champions League group stage and the 2019 VFF National Super League grand final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286150-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Portland Pilots men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Portland Pilots men's basketball team represents the University of Portland during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Pilots, led by third-year head coach Terry Porter, play their home games at the Chiles Center as members of the West Coast Conference. They finished the season 7\u201325, 0-16 in WCC play to finish in last place. They lost in the first round of the WCC Tournament to San Diego.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286150-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Portland Pilots men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Pilots finished the 2017\u201318 season 10\u201322, 4\u201314 in WCC play to finish in ninth place. They lost in the first round of the WCC Tournament to Loyola Marymount.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286151-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Portland Pilots women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Portland Pilots women's basketball team represents the University of Portland in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Pilots were led by fifth year coach Cheryl Sorensen. They play their homes games at Chiles Center and were members of the West Coast Conference. They finished the season 13\u201317, 5\u201313 in WCC play to finish in eighth place. They lost in the first round of the WCC Women's Tournament to San Francisco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286151-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Portland Pilots women's basketball team\nOn March 12, Cheryl Sorensen has agreed to parted ways. She finished at Portland with a 5 year record of 33\u2013117. On March 27, former George Fox head coach Michael Meek as the new coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286152-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Portland State Vikings men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Portland State Vikings men's basketball team represented Portland State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Vikings, led by second-year head coach Barret Peery, played their return home games at Viking Pavilion in Portland, Oregon after a one year renovation, as members of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 16\u201316, 11\u20139 in Big Sky play to finish in a three-way tie for fourth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big Sky tournament to Weber State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286152-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Portland State Vikings men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Vikings finished the 2017\u201318 season 20\u201314, 9\u20139 in Big Sky play to finish in a tie for sixth place. They defeated Sacramento State in the first round of the Big Sky Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Eastern Washington. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where, after a first round bye, lost in the second round to San Diego.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286153-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Portland State Vikings women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Portland State Vikings women's basketball team represents Portland State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Vikings, led by fourth-year head coach Lynn Kennedy, will return to play their home games at Viking Pavilion after a one year renovation and are members of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 25\u20138, 14\u20136 in Big Sky play to finish in fourth place. Portland State won the championship game over Eastern Washington to earn their second invitation to the NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament. They lost to Oregon in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286154-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Portland Trail Blazers season\nThe 2018\u201319 Portland Trail Blazers season was the franchise's 49th season in the National Basketball Association (NBA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286154-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Portland Trail Blazers season\nPrior to the season, owner Paul Allen died at the age of 65, and thus the team's ownership was (and is currently) managed by his estate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286154-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Portland Trail Blazers season\nOn March 25, 2019, the Trail Blazers clinched a playoff spot after defeating the Brooklyn Nets 148\u2013144 in double overtime. Jusuf Nurki\u0107 suffered a season-ending injury in the same game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286154-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Portland Trail Blazers season\nIn the playoffs, the Trail Blazers defeated the Oklahoma City Thunder in the first round, thanks to Damian Lillard's 37-foot series-clinching three pointer over Paul George in Game 5 at home, similar to his game-winner against the Houston Rockets in Game 6 of the First Round in the 2014 playoffs. The Trail Blazers thus won their first playoff series since 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286154-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Portland Trail Blazers season\nIn the Semifinals, the Trail Blazers faced the Denver Nuggets. In Game 3 of the Semifinals, the Trail Blazers defeated the Nuggets 140\u2013137 in the first quadruple overtime playoff game since 1953. They would eventually defeat the Nuggets in seven games, advancing to their first Western Conference Finals since 2000. However, the Trail Blazers would be swept by the defending two-time NBA champion Golden State Warriors in four games. In that series, the Trail Blazers became the first team in 20 seasons to have a lead of 17 points or more in three straight playoff games and lose all three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286154-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Portland Trail Blazers season, Player statistics, Regular season\nAfter all games. \u2021Waived during the season\u2020Traded during the season\u2260Acquired during the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 72], "content_span": [73, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286155-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Portsmouth F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Portsmouth's second season in EFL League One and their 120th season of existence. Along with competing in League One, the club also participated in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy. The season covered the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286155-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Portsmouth F.C. season, Competitions, Friendlies\nPortsmouth announced they will face Cork City, Havant & Waterlooville, Stevenage, Swindon Town and FC Utrecht as part of the pre-season preparations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286155-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Portsmouth F.C. season, Competitions, League One, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League One fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286155-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Portsmouth F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October. The draw for the second round was made live on BBC and BT by Mark Schwarzer and Glenn Murray on 12 November. The third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018. The fourth round draw was made live on BBC by Robbie Keane and Carl Ikeme from Wolverhampton on 7 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286155-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Portsmouth F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286155-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Portsmouth F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced. The draw for the second round was made live on Talksport by Leon Britton and Steve Claridge on 16 November. On 8 December, the third round draw was drawn by Alan McInally and Matt Le Tissier on Soccer Saturday. The Quarter-final draw was made conducted on Sky Sports by Don Goodman and Thomas Frank on 10 January 2019. The draw for the semi-finals took place on 25 January live on Talksport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286156-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Prairie View A&M Panthers basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Prairie View A&M Panthers basketball team represents Prairie View A&M University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Panthers, led by third-year head coach Byron Smith, play their home games at the William Nicks Building in Prairie View, Texas as members of the Southwestern Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286156-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Prairie View A&M Panthers basketball team, Previous season\nThe Panthers finished the 2017\u201318 season 16\u201318, 12\u20136 in SWAC play to finish in a three-way tie for second place. Due to Grambling State's Academic Progress Rate violations and subsequent postseason ineligibility, the Panthers received the No. 2 seed in the SWAC Tournament. They defeated Alcorn State in the quarterfinals before losing to Texas Southern in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286157-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier Badminton League\n2018\u201319 Premier Badminton League (also known as Vodafone PBL for sponsorship reasons) was the fourth edition of Premier Badminton League. It was played from 22 December 2018 to 13 January 2019. The season featured a new team \u2013 Pune 7 Aces \u2013 bringing the total to nine competing teams. Also, the Bengaluru team previously known as Bengaluru Blasters featured as Bengaluru Raptors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286157-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier Badminton League\nBengaluru Raptors beat Mumbai Rockets by 4 - 3 in the final tie to lift their maiden title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286158-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Premier League was the 27th season of the Premier League, the top English professional league for association football clubs, since its establishment in 1992. The season started on 10 August 2018 and concluded on 12 May 2019. Fixtures for the 2018\u201319 season were announced on 14 June 2018. The league was contested by the top 17 teams from the 2017\u201318 season as well as Wolverhampton Wanderers, Cardiff City and Fulham, who joined as the promoted clubs from the 2017\u201318 EFL Championship. They replaced West Bromwich Albion, Swansea City and Stoke City who were relegated to the 2018\u201319 EFL Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286158-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League\nDefending champions Manchester City won their fourth Premier League title, and sixth English top-flight title overall. They won their last 14 league games and retained the league title on the final day of the season, finishing on 98 points. Liverpool finished runners-up with 97 points \u2013 the highest total in English top-flight history for a second-placed team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286158-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League, Summary\nManchester City claimed the league title on the final day of the season with a 4\u20131 win at Brighton & Hove Albion, finishing on 98 points after a run of 14 wins. Liverpool held a 7-point lead over Manchester City on 3 January, but finished runners-up with 97 points \u2013 the third highest total in Premier League history and the highest in English top-flight history for a second-placed team, having lost only one league match all season \u2013 to eventual champions City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286158-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League, Summary\nChelsea and Tottenham Hotspur claimed the other two Champions League berths, finishing in third and fourth place respectively. Tottenham were in third place for much of the season and were considered potential title challengers until a 1\u20132 loss to Burnley in February. Chelsea would go on to win the season's UEFA Europa League, defeating Arsenal in the final 4\u20131. Arsenal had gone on a fourteen-game unbeaten run near the start of the season and began April in third place, but a run of four points in six matches saw them drop to fifth place, finishing outside of the Champions League spots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286158-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League, Summary\nManchester United's worst start to the season for 28 years led to the sacking of manager Jos\u00e9 Mourinho in December, with former player Ole Gunnar Solskj\u00e6r replacing him, initially as a caretaker. Solskj\u00e6r was appointed permanently after an impressive run of results which culminated in United's away goals victory over Paris Saint-Germain in the UEFA Champions League, but the team's poor form soon returned, and they eventually finished sixth after the team had won none of their final five league matches. Newly promoted Wolverhampton Wanderers achieved their highest finish since 1980 by finishing seventh, having taken points off every team in the league except Liverpool and Huddersfield Town. Their seventh-place finish was the highest for a newly promoted team since Ipswich Town finished 5th in the 2000\u201301 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 854]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286158-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League, Summary\nHuddersfield were the first team to be relegated, following their 0\u20132 defeat at Crystal Palace on 30 March 2019, coinciding with victories for Burnley and Southampton. They were relegated with six games remaining. This made Huddersfield the second team in Premier League history to be relegated before March ended, following Derby County in 2007\u201308. Fulham joined them after a 1\u20134 defeat at Watford on 2 April, relegated with five games remaining. Cardiff City were the final team to be relegated following a 2\u20133 loss at home to Crystal Palace on 4 May with one game remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286158-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League, Summary\nThe fastest goal in Premier League history was scored this season on 23 April by Shane Long in a 1\u20131 draw between his side Southampton and Watford after 7.69 seconds. On 4 May 2019, Fulham's Harvey Elliott became the youngest ever Premier League player at 16 years and 30 days. Tottenham Hotspur had a run of 28 games without a draw, the longest ever recorded from the start of a Premier League season. Manchester City did not draw any of their final 30 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286158-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League, Summary\nThe season saw two aviation incidents involving Premier League personnel. On 27 October 2018, Leicester City owner Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha was killed in a helicopter crash outside the King Power Stadium, shortly after a 1\u20131 home draw against West Ham United. Almost three months later, on 21 January 2019, Cardiff City player Emiliano Sala, en route to join the club following his record signing from Nantes, died on board a Piper PA-46 Malibu aircraft that crashed off Alderney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286158-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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 Wolverhampton Wanderers (returning to the top flight after a six-year absence), Cardiff City and Fulham (both teams returning after a four-year absence). They replaced Swansea City, Stoke City and West Bromwich Albion, ending their top flight spells of seven, ten and eight years respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286158-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League, Teams, Personnel and kits\nMatch balls supplied by Nike, this season's version is the Merlin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286158-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League, Attendances\nUpdated to games played on 1 December 2019Source: Notes:1: Team played last season in the Championship", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286159-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League International Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Premier League International Cup was the fifth season of the Premier League International Cup, a European club football competition organised by the Premier League for under-23 players. Bayern won the title by defeating Dinamo Zagreb 2\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286159-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League International Cup\nPorto were the defending champions, after beating Arsenal 1\u20130 in the previous season's final, but were eliminated in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286159-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League International Cup, Format\nThe competition featured twenty-four teams: twelve from English league system and twelve invitees from other European countries. The teams were split into six groups of four - with two English league clubs per group. The group winners, and two best runners-up, progressed into the knockout phase of the tournament. The knockout matches were single leg fixtures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286159-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League International Cup, Format\nAll matches - including fixtures between non-English teams - were played in England and Wales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286159-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League International Cup, Format, Teams\nAthletic Bilbao, Benfica, Everton, Leicester City, PSV Eindhoven, Porto and Villarreal made their fifth appearance in the competition. They are the only teams to take part in every season since the tournament was founded in 2014. Brighton & Hove Albion, Paris Saint-Germain and Southampton made their debuts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286160-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League Tournament\nThe 2018\u201319 Premier League Tournament was the 31st season of first-class cricket in Sri Lanka's Premier Trophy. The tournament started on 30 November 2018 and concluded on 10 February 2019. Fourteen teams took part in Tier A of the competition, split into two groups of seven. Bloomfield Cricket and Athletic Club finished in last place in the previous tournament, and were relegated to Tier B for this season. Negombo Cricket Club replaced them for this years' competition after they won the 2017\u201318 Premier League Tournament Tier B title. Chilaw Marians Cricket Club were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286160-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League Tournament\nIn January 2019, during the round six match between Colombo Cricket Club and Saracens Sports Club, Colombo's Malinda Pushpakumara took all ten wickets in the second innings of the match. Pushpakumara became the second Sri Lankan bowler to take all ten wickets in an innings. It was also the first ten-wicket haul in an innings in first-class cricket since 2009, and the best figures since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286160-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League Tournament\nFollowing the conclusion of the group stage, Chilaw Marians Cricket Club, Colombo Cricket Club, Colts Cricket Club, Nondescripts Cricket Club, Saracens Sports Club, Sinhalese Sports Club, Sri Lanka Army Sports Club and Tamil Union Cricket and Athletic Club had all progressed to the Super Eight section of the tournament. Meanwhile, Badureliya Sports Club, Burgher Recreation Club, Moors Sports Club, Negombo Cricket Club, Ragama Cricket Club and Sri Lanka Ports Authority Cricket Club were all moved to the Plate League phase, with the bottom team being relegated for the next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286160-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League Tournament\nIn the penultimate round of the Super Eight fixtures, Nondescripts captain Angelo Perera scored a double-century in each innings. This had only been done once before in first-class cricket, by Arthur Fagg for Kent against Essex in the 1938 County Championship in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286160-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League Tournament\nColombo Cricket Club won the tournament, after finishing top of the Super Eight table, ahead of Saracens Sports Club. In the Plate League, Sri Lanka Ports Authority Cricket Club lost their final match, against Burgher Recreation Club, therefore being relegated to Tier B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286161-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League Tournament Tier B\nThe 2018\u201319 Premier League Tournament Tier B was the second division of the 31st season of first-class cricket in Sri Lanka's Premier Trophy. The tournament was contested by nine teams, starting on 31 January 2019 and concluding on 23 May 2019. Negombo Cricket Club won the tournament in the previous season and were promoted to Tier A. They were replaced in Tier B by Bloomfield Cricket and Athletic Club after their relegation from Tier A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286161-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League Tournament Tier B\nLankan Cricket Club won the tournament and secured promotion to Tier A, after finishing top of the points table ahead of Sri Lanka Navy Sports Club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286162-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League of Belize\nThe 2018\u201319 Premier League of Belize is the eighth season of the Premier League of Belize, 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 will be played towards the end of 2018) and the closing (which will be played at the beginning of 2019).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286162-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League of Belize, Opening Season\nFrom the 2017\u201318 Premier League of Belize closing season, 7 teams continued to play in the opening season of 2018\u201319, with Altitude taking over the franchise of Placencia Assassins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286162-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League of Belize, Opening Season\nThere would be one league consisting of the 8 teams, who will play each other twice, with the top 4 teams advancing to the end of season playoffs. The opening season commenced on 22 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286162-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League of Belize, Opening Season, Awards\nIn the post-game ceremonies of the final game of the season, the individual awards were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286162-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League of Belize, Closing Season\nAll 8 teams that participated in the opening season will participate in the closing season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286162-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League of Belize, Closing Season\nThe format will be the same as the opening season with one league consisting of the 8 teams, who will play each other twice, with the top 4 teams advancing to the end of season playoffs. The closing season commenced on 12 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286162-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League of Belize, Closing Season, Awards\nIn the post-game ceremonies of the final game of the season, the individual awards were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286162-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League of Belize, List of foreign players in the league\nThis is a list of foreign players in the 2018\u201319 season. The following players:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286162-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League of Belize, List of foreign players in the league\nEach team can have a maximum of five foreign players in their roster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286162-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League of Belize, List of foreign players in the league\n(player released during the Opening season) (player released between the Opening and Closing seasons) (player released during the Closing season)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286163-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina\nThe 2018\u201319 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina, known as Liga 12 and also known as BH Telecom Premier League for sponsorship reasons, was the nineteenth season of the Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the highest football league of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The season began on 21 July 2018 and concluded on 25 May 2019, with a winter break between early December 2018 and late February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286163-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Teams\nA total of 12 teams contested in the league, including 10 sides from the 2017\u201318 season and two promoted from each of the second-level league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 55], "content_span": [56, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286163-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina, 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, 48], "section_span": [50, 75], "content_span": [76, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286163-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina, League table, Positions by table\nThe table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches. In order to preserve chronological evolvements, any postponed matches are not included to the round at which they were originally scheduled, but added to the full round they were played immediately afterwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 82], "content_span": [83, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286164-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier League of Eswatini\nThe 2018\u201319 Eswatini Premier League was the 2018\u201319 season of the Eswatini Premier League, the top-tier football league in Eswatini (formerly Swaziland), since its establishment in 1971. The season started on 14 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286165-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier Limited Overs Tournament\nThe 2018\u201319 Premier Limited Overs Tournament was a List A cricket competition that took place in Sri Lanka. It was the eighteenth edition of the Premier Limited Overs Tournament. The tournament ran from 4 to 19 March 2019. Sinhalese Sports Club were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286165-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier Limited Overs Tournament\nFollowing the conclusion of the group stage matches, Colombo Cricket Club, Moors Sports Club, Nondescripts Cricket Club, Panadura Sports Club, Ragama Cricket Club, Saracens Sports Club, Sinhalese Sports Club and Sri Lanka Army Sports Club had all progressed to the quarterfinals. Colombo Cricket Club, Moors Sports Club, Saracens Sports Club and Sinhalese Sports Club all won their quarterfinal matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286165-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premier Limited Overs Tournament\nIn the first semi-final, Sinhalese Sports Club beat Saracens Sports Club by 36 runs, via the Duckworth\u2013Lewis method to advance to the final. They were joined in the final by Colombo Cricket Club, after they beat Moors Sports Club by five wickets. Sinhalese Sports Club retained their title by beating Colombo Cricket Club by seven wickets in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286166-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premiership Rugby\nThe 2018\u201319 Gallagher Premiership was the 32nd season of the top flight English domestic rugby union competition and the first one to be sponsored by Gallagher. The reigning champions entering the season were Saracens, who had claimed their fourth title after defeating Exeter Chiefs in the 2018 final. Bristol Bears had been promoted as champions from the 2017\u201318 RFU Championship at the first attempt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286166-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premiership Rugby\nThe competition was broadcast by BT Sport for the sixth successive season and with five games also simulcast free-to-air on Channel 5. Highlights of each weekend's games were shown on Channel 5 with extended highlights on BT Sport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286166-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premiership Rugby, Summary\nSaracens won their fifth title after defeating Exeter Chiefs in the final at Twickenham after having finished second in the regular season table. Newcastle Falcons were relegated after being unable to win their penultimate game of the season. It was the third time that Newcastle have been relegated from the top flight since the leagues began and the first time since the 2011\u201312 Premiership Rugby season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286166-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premiership Rugby, Summary\nFor the first time since 2004, there was no London Double Header at Twickenham due to redevelopment work causing the closure of the stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286166-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premiership Rugby, Teams\nTwelve teams compete in the league \u2013 the top eleven teams from the previous season and Bristol Bears who were promoted from the 2017\u201318 RFU Championship after a top flight absence of one year. They replaced London Irish who were relegated after one year in the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286166-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premiership Rugby, Preseason\nThe 2018 edition of the Premiership Rugby Sevens Series would be held on 27 and 28 July at Franklin's Gardens. All twelve Premiership teams would feature in one venue over two days. Teams would be split into four pools of three which played each other once in a round-robin basis with the tournament splitting into Cup and Plate competitions on the second day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286166-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286166-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286166-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premiership Rugby, Fixtures\nFixtures for the season were announced by Premiership Rugby on 6 July 2018. Due to redevelopment work causing the closure of Twickenham Stadium, round 1 did not include the London Double Header.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286166-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premiership Rugby, Fixtures\nDespite a four-year deal being struck in 2016, no matches took place in the United States. It had previously been reported that Sale Sharks vs Harlequins in round 18 would take place at Toyota Park just outside Chicago, Illinois. However, the round 6 match between Harlequins and Saracens was broadcast live in the US on a major network with NBC as opposed to NBCSN broadcasting for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286166-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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 1 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286166-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premiership Rugby, Play-offs, Final\nMan of the Match: Maro Itoje (Saracens)Touch judges:Matthew CarleyTom FoleyTelevision Match Official:Graham Hughes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286166-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286167-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premiership Rugby Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Premiership Rugby Cup was the 47th season of England's national rugby union cup competition and the first under the new Premiership Rugby Cup format following the disbanding of the Anglo-Welsh Cup at the end of the 2017\u201318 season due to the withdrawal of the Welsh Pro14 regions. Although there are no stipulations on player selection, the cup was seen by many clubs as a development competition, and games took place during the Autumn International window and during the Six Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286167-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premiership Rugby Cup\nNorthampton Saints became the first ever winners of the Premiership Cup when they defeated Saracens 23 \u2013 9 in the final at Franklin's Gardens on 17 March 2019. It was the Saints' first domestic cup triumph since winning the 2009\u201310 LV Cup and their second overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286167-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premiership Rugby Cup, Competition format\nThe competition consists of the twelve English Premiership teams arranged in three pools of four clubs each, with each team playing three games against teams in their pool, as well as a 'derby' game against a team in another group. The top team in each pool, plus the best overall runner up, progress to the semi-finals, with the highest ranked teams having home advantage. The winners of the semi-finals then meet at the final in March 2019 to be held at the home ground of the highest ranked remaining team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286167-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premiership Rugby Cup, Pool stage, Round 4 (derby games)\nAfter three pool games, each team will play a 'derby' game against a team in another pool, with results counting towards the final standings in each pool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286167-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premiership Rugby Cup, Knock-out stage\nThe four qualifiers are seeded according to performance in the pool stage. The top 2 seeds host the semi-finals against the lower seeds, in a 1 v 4, 2v 3 format. Note, if two teams qualify from the same pool, they can still be drawn together in the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286167-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premiership Rugby Cup, Season records, Team\n52 \u2013 0 Bath at home to Gloucester on 4 February 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286167-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premiership Rugby Cup, Season records, Team\n32 \u2013 12 Saracens away to Harlequins on 26 January 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286167-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premiership Rugby Cup, Season records, Team\n59 \u2013 33 Northampton Saints at home to Newcastle Falcons on 9 February 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286167-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premiership Rugby Cup, Season records, Team\nNorthampton Saints at home to Newcastle Falcons on 9 February 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286167-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premiership Rugby Cup, Season records, Team\nBath at home to Gloucester on 4 February 2019Northampton Saints at home to Newcastle Falcons on 9 February 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286167-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premiership Rugby Cup, Season records, Team\nHarlequins away to Bath on 27 October 2018Saracens at home to Leicester Tigers on 27 October 2018Wasps at home to Bristol Bears on 11 November 2018Saracens away to Worcester Warriors on 8 February 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286167-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premiership Rugby Cup, Season records, Player\nSemesa Rokoduguni for Bath at home to Gloucester on 4 February 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286167-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premiership Rugby Cup, Season records, Player\nSemesa Rokoduguni for Bath at home to Gloucester on 4 February 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286167-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premiership Rugby Cup, Season records, Player\nJames Grayson for Northampton Saints at home to Newcastle Falcons on 9 February 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286167-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premiership Rugby Cup, Season records, Player\nDemetri Catrakilis for Harlequins away to Bath on 27 October 2018 Max Malins for Saracens at home to Leicester Tigers on 27 October 2018 Lima Sopoaga for Wasps at home to Bristol Bears on 11 November 2018 Alex Lozowski for Saracens away to Worcester Warriors on 8 February 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286167-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premiership Rugby Cup, Season records, Attendances\nLeicester Tigers at home to Worcester Warriors on 3 November 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286167-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premiership Rugby Cup, Season records, Attendances\nSale Sharks at home to Newcastle Falcons on 3 February 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286168-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premijer liga\nThe 2018\u201319 HT Premijer liga was the 28th season of the HT Premijer liga, the highest professional basketball league in Croatia. It started on October 6, 2018 and finished on May 30, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286168-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premijer liga, Format\nAs in the previous season, all participants in Premijer liga including teams that play ABA League joined the regular season. It was played with a double round-robin format where the eight first qualified teams joined the playoffs, while the penultimate will be play relegation playoffs and last qualified one was relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286168-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premijer liga, Playoffs\nQuarterfinals and semifinals will be played in a best-of-three-games format, while the finals in a best-of-five one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286168-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Premijer liga, Relegation playoffs\nAs of the 2018\u201319 season, team who lost the 2018\u201319 First League final and the 11th placed team of the 2018\u201319 Premijer liga season will play in the Qualifiers for a spot in the 2019\u201320 Premijer liga season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286169-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Presbyterian Blue Hose men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Presbyterian Blue Hose men's basketball team represented Presbyterian College during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Blue Hose, led by second-year head coach Dustin Kerns, played their home games at the Templeton Physical Education Center in Clinton, South Carolina as members of the Big South Conference. They finished the season 20\u201316, 9\u20137 in Big South play to finish in a four-way tie for fifth place. They defeated UNC Asheville in the first round of the Big South Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Radford. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament, their first ever Division I post season tournament, where they defeated Seattle and Robert Morris to advance to the quarterfinals where they lost to Marshall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 832]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286169-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Presbyterian Blue Hose men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Blue Hose finished the season 11\u201321, 4\u201314 in Big South play to finish in ninth place. They lost in the first round of the Big South Tournament to Charleston Southern.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286170-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Preston North End F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Preston North End's 139th season in existence, and their fourth consecutive season in the Championship. Along with the Championship, the club will also compete in the FA Cup and EFL Cup. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286170-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Preston North End F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season\nPaul Huntington, the club's longest-serving current player since he arrived from Yeovil Town in July 2012, signed a new three-year contract. He made 46 appearances last season. Other new contracts were signed during the summer by Alan Browne, Tom Clarke, Darnell Fisher, Paul Gallagher and Sean Maguire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286170-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Preston North End F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season\nStriker Eoin Doyle transferred to Bradford City on 1 August for an undisclosed fee and signed a two-year contract. On the same day, Preston announced that Billy Bodin had a knee ligament injury and would be out of action for up to six months. Sean Maguire, who had recently renewed his contract, was out for \"the first few weeks of the season\" with a hamstring injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286170-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Preston North End F.C. season, Season review, August\nPreston signed two forwards on season-long loans from Manchester City. They are Lukas Nmecha, who is an England U-21 striker, and Brandon Barker, an England U-20 winger. Both made their debuts in the club's second EFL Championship match, away to Swansea City on 11 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286170-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Preston North End F.C. season, Season review, August\nDaryl Horgan transferred to Hibernian on 10 August for an undisclosed fee and signed a three-year contract. Horgan had appeared a substitute in the opening match against QPR.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286170-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Preston North End F.C. season, Pre-season friendlies\nPNE announced they will compete with Bamber Bridge, AFC Fylde, West Ham United and Burnley during pre-season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286170-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Preston North End F.C. season, Competitions, Championship, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the Championship fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286170-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Preston North End F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286170-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Preston North End F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam. The second round draw was done on 16 August. The third round draw was made on 30 August 2018 by David Seaman and Joleon Lescott.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286171-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primeira Liga\nThe 2018\u201319 Primeira Liga (also known as Liga NOS for sponsorship reasons) was the 85th season of the Primeira Liga, the top professional league for Portuguese association football clubs. Porto were the defending champions but finished behind Benfica, who became champions for a record 37th time while equalling their own scoring record of 103 goals in the 1963\u201364 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286171-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primeira Liga, Incidents\nThe weeks leading up to the beginning of the competition were filled with several incidents:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286172-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera B Nacional\nThe 2018\u201319 Argentine Primera B Nacional was the 34th season of the Argentine second division. The season began on 25 August 2018 and ended on 8 June 2019. Twenty-five teams competed in the league, seventeen returning from the 2017\u201318 season, four teams that were relegated from Primera Divisi\u00f3n and two teams promoted from Federal A and B Metropolitana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286172-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera B Nacional, Competition format\nTwenty-five teams played each other once for a total of twenty-four matches each. The champion earns promotion to the Primera Divisi\u00f3n. The teams placed from 2nd to 9th place competed in the \"Torneo Reducido\" for the second promotion berth after the regular season ended. Two teams were relegated at the end of the season; one with indirect affiliation with AFA was relegated to the Torneo Federal A, while one directly affiliated faced relegation to Primera B Metropolitana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286172-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera B Nacional, League table, Championship play-off\nSarmiento (J) and Arsenal ended up tied in points at the end of the 24 weeks of regular season. Tournament rules establish that, unlike any other position on the table, if two or more teams are equal in points at the end of play, goal difference does not count and a playoff game is required. The winner of this match achieved promotion to the Primera Divisi\u00f3n as champions, while the loser qualified to the Torneo Reducido as runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 63], "content_span": [64, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286172-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera B Nacional, Torneo Reducido\nTeams ending between second and ninth place played the Torneo Reducido for the second promotion berth to Primera Divisi\u00f3n. Quarterfinals and semi-finals were played over two legs, and in case of a tie the best-placed team advanced. The finals were played over two legs, and a penalty shootout occurred in case of a tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286172-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera B Nacional, Relegation\nClubs with indirect affiliation with AFA are relegated to the Torneo Federal A, while clubs directly affiliated face relegation to Primera B Metropolitana. The bottom team of each table was relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286173-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3\nThe 2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3, also known as Lliga Multisegur Assegurances, was the 24th season of top-tier football in Andorra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286173-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3\nThe winner of the league this season earned a place in the preliminary round of the 2019\u201320 Champions League, and the second-placed club earned a place in the preliminary round of the 2019\u201320 Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286173-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3, Teams\nFC Ordino earned a place in the Primera Divisi\u00f3 this season by winning the 2017\u201318 Segona Divisi\u00f3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286173-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3, Regular season, Results\nThe eight clubs played each other three times for twenty\u2013one matches each during the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286173-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3, Championship and relegation round\nRecords earned in the regular season were taken over to the Championship round and relegation round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 58], "content_span": [59, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286173-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3, Primera Divisi\u00f3 play-offs\nThe seventh-placed club (third-placed in the relegation round), from the 2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3 and the runners-up from the 2018\u201319 Segona Divisi\u00f3, played in a two-legged relegation play-off for one place in the 2019\u201320 Primera Divisi\u00f3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286173-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3, Primera Divisi\u00f3 play-offs\nCE Carroi promoted to 2019\u201320 Primera Divisi\u00f3; FC Lusitanos relegated to 2019\u201320 Segona Divisi\u00f3", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286174-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3n (women)\nThe 2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3n Femenina de F\u00fatbol was the 31st edition of Spain's highest women's football league. The season started on 3 September 2018 and ended on 11 May 2019. Atl\u00e9tico Madrid won their third consecutive title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286174-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3n (women), Teams\nM\u00e1laga and Logro\u00f1o joined the league after earning promotion at the conclusion of the 2017\u201318 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286174-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3n (women), Best XI of the Season\nOn 27 June 2016, La Liga named their best XI of the 2018-19 Primera Division season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286175-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de El Salvador\nThe 2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de El Salvador (also known as the Liga Pepsi) is the 20th season and 39th and 40th Primera Divisi\u00f3n tournament, El Salvador's top football division, since its establishment of an Apertura and Clausura format. Alianza F.C. are the defending champions of both Apertura and Clausura tournaments. The league will consist of 12 teams. There will be two seasons conducted under identical rules, with each team playing a home and away game against the other clubs for a total of 22 games per tournament. At the end of each half-season tournament, the top eight teams in that tournament's regular season standings will take part in the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286175-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de El Salvador\nThe champions of Apertura or Clausura with the better aggregate record will qualify for the 2020 CONCACAF Champions League. The other champion, and the runner-up with the better aggregate record will qualify for the 2019 CONCACAF League. Should the same team win both tournaments, both runners-up will qualify for CONCACAF League. Should the final of both tournaments features the same 2 teams, the semifinalist with the better aggregate record will qualify for CONCACAF League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286175-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de El Salvador, Team information\nA total of 12 teams will contest the league, including 11 sides from the 2017\u201318 Primera Divisi\u00f3n and 1 promoted from the 2017\u201318 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286175-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de El Salvador, Team information\nDragon were relegated to 2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286175-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de El Salvador, Team information\nThe relegated team was replaced by the 2017\u201318 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n playoffs promotion winner. Jocoro F.C. won the Apertura 2017 and Clausura 2018 title, meaning there was no need for a promotion playoff and were promoted automatically.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286175-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de El Salvador, Team information, Promotion and relegation\nPromoted from Segunda Divisi\u00f3n de F\u00fatbol Salvadore\u00f1o as of June, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 83], "content_span": [84, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286175-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de El Salvador, Team information, Promotion and relegation\nRelegated to Segunda Divisi\u00f3n de F\u00fatbol Salvadore\u00f1o as of June, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 83], "content_span": [84, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286175-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de El Salvador, Notable events, Change of Ownership of Aguila\nThe Grupo Aguila Deportivo, SA de CV announced in June, 2018 that they were selling their operating rights for Aguila, on the 6th of July a new group under Adolfo Salume (Club Social \u00c1guila) had purchased Aguila from the Arieta group (Grupo Aguila Deportivo) for undisclosed fees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 86], "content_span": [87, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286175-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de El Salvador, Notable events, Pasaquina and Audaz moving stadium\nPasaquina announced that due to their home stadium not meeting new CONCACAF standards and minimal crowd numbers, they would play their home games at La Union stadium. Audaz also announced that they would play some games away from Estadio Jiboa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 91], "content_span": [92, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286175-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de El Salvador, Notable events, New ball sponsorship for the league\nThe league signed a new deal with Mexican company Voit to provide the balls used in the national league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 92], "content_span": [93, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286175-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de El Salvador, Notable events, Change of Ownership of Audaz\nThe Audaz Apasteque group announced in January, 2018 that they were selling their operating rights for Audaz, on the 6th of July a new group under Roberto Campos had purchased Audaz from the Juan Pablo Herrera group for undisclosed fees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 85], "content_span": [86, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286175-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de El Salvador, Notable events, Deduction of Points\nAudaz attempted to play in unapproved jersey, despite on the spot modification being done, referee abandoned the game and FESFUT decided to award the match to a 2-0 forfeit win to Isidro Metapan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 76], "content_span": [77, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286175-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de El Salvador, Notable events, Deduction of Points\nOn February 27, 2019 C.D. Municipal Limeno, Jocoro F.C. and C.D. Pasaquina were deducted six points due to failing to sign the right paperwork for their respective under 17 teams to compete in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 76], "content_span": [77, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286175-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de El Salvador, Notable events, Notable death from Apertura 2018 season and 2019 Clausura season\nThe following people associated with the Primera Division have died in end of 2018 and mid 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 121], "content_span": [122, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286175-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de El Salvador, List of foreign players in the league\nThis is a list of foreign players in the 2018\u201319 season. The following players:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 78], "content_span": [79, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286175-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de El Salvador, List of foreign players in the league\nA new rule was introduced this season, that clubs can have four foreign players per club and can only add a new player if there is an injury or a player is released and it is before the close of the season transfer window.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 78], "content_span": [79, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286175-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de El Salvador, List of foreign players in the league\n(player released during the Apertura season) (player released between the Apertura and Clausura seasons) (player released during the Clausura season)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 78], "content_span": [79, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286176-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Prince Mohammad bin Salman League\nThe 2018\u201319 Prince Mohammad bin Salman League was the 2nd season of the Prince Mohammad bin Salman League under its current name, and 42nd season of the Saudi First Division since its establishment in 1976. The season started on 28 August 2018 and concluded on 15 May 2019. Fixtures for the 2018\u201319 season were announced on 25 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286176-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Prince Mohammad bin Salman League\nThe first team to be promoted was Abha, following their 2\u20132 draw away to Al-Nojoom on 30 April 2019. Despite losing to Al-Qaisumah, Abha were crowned champions on 11 May 2019 following Damac's 1\u20131 draw with Al-Ain. The second team to be promoted was Damac, in spite of their 1\u20130 defeat away to Al-Tai, on 5 May 2019. The third and final team to be promoted was Al-Adalah, who were promoted on the final matchday following their 2\u20130 win at home against Damac on 15 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286176-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Prince Mohammad bin Salman League, Overview, First Division rebranding\nOn 7 March 2018, the Saudi FF announced that the league would be increased from 16 teams to 20 teams. The competition will be known as the Prince Mohammad bin Salman League for the second season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 78], "content_span": [79, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286176-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Prince Mohammad bin Salman League, Overview, Rule changes\nOn 7 March 2018, the SAFF announced that the numbers of foreign players were increased from 3 players to 7 players. They also increased the prize money to SAR 10\u00a0million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 65], "content_span": [66, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286176-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Prince Mohammad bin Salman League, Teams\nA total of 20 teams are contesting the league, including 9 sides from the 2017\u201318 season, 6 promoted teams from the Second Division, the two playoff losers from the 2017\u201318 Pro League playoffs, and three winners from the 2017\u201318 relegation playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286176-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Prince Mohammad bin Salman League, Teams\nNo teams were relegated from the Pro League. Due to an increase in the number of teams, the Saudi FF announced that the relegation was canceled and in its place was a relegation play-off. Both Pro League teams, Al-Raed and Ohod, won the playoffs and secured their top-flight status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286176-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Prince Mohammad bin Salman League, Teams\nAl-Washm were promoted as the winners of the Second Division and Al-Jabalain were promoted as the runners-up. Al-Jeel defeated Al-Ansar in the third place playoffs. Both teams were promoted after the increase of teams. The 4 teams were joined by the third-placed teams of both groups, Al-Adalah and Al-Ain. Abha defeated Al-Watani in the relegation playoffs and became the only Second Division side to win their relegation playoff match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286176-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Prince Mohammad bin Salman League, Teams\nAl-Washm and Al-Ain will play in the Prince Mohammad bin Salman League for the first time in their history. Al-Jabalain return to the MS League for the first time since the 2007\u201308 season. Abha return to the MS League for the first time since the 2014\u201315 season. Al-Ansar return to the MS League for the first time since the 2013\u201314 season. Al-Adalah and Al-Jeel return to the MS League after only a season's absence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286176-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Prince Mohammad bin Salman League, Teams\nOn 4 May 2018 Al-Watani became the only club to be relegated to the Second Division following their 1\u20130 defeat to Abha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286176-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Prince Mohammad bin Salman League, Team changes\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 55], "content_span": [56, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286176-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Prince Mohammad bin Salman League, Stadia and locations\n1: Najran will play at Prince Sultan bin Abdul Aziz Stadium due to the ongoing war in Yemen 2: Al-Adalah, Al-Jeel, Al-Nojoom and Hajer also use Al-Fateh Club Stadium (7,000 seats) as a home stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286176-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Prince Mohammad bin Salman League, Stadia and locations, Foreign players\nThe number of foreign players is limited to 7 per team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 80], "content_span": [81, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286176-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Prince Mohammad bin Salman League, Stadia and locations, Foreign players\nPlayers name in bold indicates the player is registered during the mid-season transfer window.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 80], "content_span": [81, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286176-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Prince Mohammad bin Salman 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 in the round at which they were originally scheduled but added to the full round they were played immediately afterward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 75], "content_span": [76, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286177-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Princeton Tigers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Princeton Tigers men's basketball team represented Princeton University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Tigers, led by eighth-year head coach Mitch Henderson, played their home games at Jadwin Gymnasium as members of the Ivy League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286177-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Princeton Tigers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Tigers finished the 2017\u201318 season with a record of 13\u201316 (5\u20139 in Ivy League play), which tied for fifth place with the Columbia Lions. They failed to qualify for the Ivy League Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286177-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Princeton Tigers men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nOn December 29, Princeton defeated number 17-ranked Arizona State after Richmond Aririguzoh made a pair of free throws with 24.8 seconds left to provide the final 67\u201366 margin of victory. It was Princeton's first win over a ranked opponent since defeating the 25-ranked 2011\u201312 Harvard Crimson on February 11, 2012 and the school's first win over a top-20 opponent since head coach Henderson was a player on the 1995\u201396 Princeton team that upset the UCLA Bruins in the 1996 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286178-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Princeton Tigers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Princeton Tigers women's basketball team represented Princeton University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Tigers, led by twelfth-year head coach Courtney Banghart, played their home games at Jadwin Gymnasium as members of the Ivy League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286178-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Princeton Tigers women's basketball team\nThe Tigers finished the season with a 22\u201310 overall record and 12\u20132 in the Ivy League. They tied Penn for first place in the conference's regular season to meet them in a playoff to determine which Ivy League team will get a first-round bid for the NCAA Tournament. The Tigers won, but lost in the first round to 17th-ranked Kentucky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286178-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Princeton Tigers women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Tigers finished the 2017\u201318 season with a 24\u20136 overall record and 12\u20132 in the Ivy League. They finished first in the conference to play Penn in a playoff to determine which Ivy League team will get a first-round bid for the NCAA Tournament. The Tigers won, but their postseason ended with a loss in the first round to 16th-ranked Maryland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286179-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Principality Premiership\nThe 2018\u201319 Principality Premiership was the third season of the new format of the Principality Premiership, the top tier of club rugby in Wales run by the Welsh Rugby Union. It was contested by sixteen Welsh clubs following an expansion from twelve teams at the start of the 2016\u201317 season. The 2018\u201319 season saw the end of \"ring-fencing\" and relegation returned for this season with four teams being automatically relegated to the 2019\u201320 WRU Championship and a fifth team avoiding relegation by winning a playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286179-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Principality Premiership, Structure\nThe structure this year has reverted to a traditional league. Each team will play each other team on a home and away basis for a total of 30 games. League points are awarded as such \u2013 4 points for a win, 2 for a draw and 0 for a loss. Teams can also earn an additional bonus point by scoring four or more tries in a match and/or losing by less than seven points. This season sees the return of relegation from the Premiership after two seasons of ring fencing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286179-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Principality Premiership, Structure\nThe bottom four sides will automatically be relegated to the Championship for the 2019\u201320 season. The 12th placed side will play-off against the winners of the 2018\u201319 WRU Championship at a neutral venue to determine the 12th team in next season's Premiership. If the winners of the Championship do not have an 'A License' necessary to compete in the Premiership, then the 12th placed team will remain in the Premiership for next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286179-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Principality Premiership, Teams\nThe same 16 teams that competed the previous season competed again this season. Merthyr are the reigning champions and are aiming to win the league for the third year in succession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286179-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Principality Premiership, Teams\nOrange = DragonsBlue = Cardiff BluesBlack = OspreysRed = Scarlets", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286179-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Principality Premiership, Promotion/relegation play-off\nThe 12th placed team of the Premiership (Llanelli) faced the winner of the Championship (Pontypool) to determine who the 12th team will be in next season's Premiership. The play-off was a one-off game played at a neutral venue. The venue was announced as Aberavon's home ground the Tablbot Athletic Ground on 7 May 2019. Llanelli won the game and would therefore remain in the Premiership for the 2019\u201320 season. Pontypool would contest the Championship for the 2019\u201320 season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286180-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro A season\nThe 2018\u201319 Pro A season, for sponsorships reasons the Jeep \u00c9lite, was the 97th season of the Pro A, the top basketball league in France organised by the Ligue Nationale de Basket (LNB). It was the second season with Jeep as main sponsor. The season started on 21 September 2018 with the regular season and ended on 25 June 2019 with the last game of the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286180-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro A season\nLDLC ASVEL won its nineteenth French championship and its first one since 2016. In the finals, they defeated Monaco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286180-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro A season, Teams, Promotion and relegation\nHy\u00e8res-Toulon and Boulazac Basket Dordogne were relegated after the 2017\u201318 season after the teams ended in the last two places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286180-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro A season, Teams, Promotion and relegation\nBlois promoted by finishing first in the regular season with a 27\u20137 record in the Pro B. Fos Provence made its Pro A debut after promoting, as Fos defeated Roanne in the finals of the promotion play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 53], "content_span": [54, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286180-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro A season, Teams, Promotion and relegation\nHowever, as ADA Blois did not meet the requirements for playing in Pro A, Boulazac remained in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 53], "content_span": [54, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286180-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro A season, Teams, Budgets\nOn 3 October 2018, the LNB published the budgets and salary expenditures of the Pro A clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286180-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro A season, Play-offs\nQuarterfinals were played in a best-of-three games format, while the semifinals and the finals in a best-of-five (2\u20132\u20131) format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 31], "content_span": [32, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286181-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro Basketball League\nThe 2018\u201319 Pro Basketball League, for sponsorship reasons the EuroMillions Basketball League, season was the 92nd season of the Pro Basketball League (PBL), first tier of basketball in Belgium. The season started on 5 October 2018 and ended 13 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286181-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro Basketball League\nFilou Oostende captured its eight consecutive league title after defeating Antwerp Giants in the playoff finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286181-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro Basketball League, Teams\nAll ten teams from the previous season would return this season. Nine teams got A-licences, which allows for participation in European competitions, while Leuven Bears received a B-licence and therefore could not play in Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286181-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro Basketball League, Teams\nKangoeroes Willebroek moved from Willebroek to the city of Mechelen and changed its name into Kangoeroes Mechelen. BC Oostende changed its name to Filou Oostende for sponsorship reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286181-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro Basketball League, Play-offs\nQuarterfinals and semifinals were played in a best-of-three games format, while the finals in a best-of-five (1-1-1-1-1) format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286181-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro Basketball League, Play-offs, Quarterfinals\nThe team with the higher seed played game one and three (if necessary) at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286181-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro Basketball League, Play-offs, Semifinals\nThe team with the higher seed played game one, two and 5 (if necessary) at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286181-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro Basketball League, Play-offs, Finals\nThe team with the higher seed played game one, three and five (if necessary) at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286182-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro Kabaddi League season\nThe 2018\u201319 Vivo Pro Kabaddi League was the sixth season of Pro Kabaddi League, a professional kabaddi league in India since 2014. The season began on 7 October 2018 and concluded on 5 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286182-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro Kabaddi League season\nBengaluru Bulls defeated Gujarat Fortune Giants in the final match to win their maiden title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286182-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro Kabaddi League season, Teams, Foreign Players\nEach team can sign maximum 3 foreign players in the squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286182-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro Kabaddi League season, Points Table\nThe teams are divided into two zones with each zone having six teams based on their geographical proximity. Each team will play 15 intra-zonal matches and 7 inter-zonal matches. Zone A", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286183-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro14\nThe 2018\u201319 Pro14 (also known as the Guinness Pro14 for sponsorship reasons) is the eighteenth season of the professional rugby union competition originally known as the Celtic League. It was the second season to be referred to as the Pro14 (the competition was named the Pro12 immediately prior to the addition of two South African teams).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286183-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro14\nFourteen teams competed in 2018-19 \u2014 four Irish teams: Connacht, Leinster, Munster and Ulster; two Italian teams: Benetton and Zebre; two Scottish teams: Edinburgh and Glasgow Warriors; two South African teams: Cheetahs and the Southern Kings; and four Welsh teams: Cardiff Blues, Dragons, Ospreys and Scarlets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286183-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro14\nLeinster were the defending champions, having won the 2017-18 final at the Aviva Stadium to take their fifth title in the competition's various iterations and seal a domestic league and European Cup double, becoming only the sixth team to do so and the first from the Pro14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286183-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro14, Format\nThe fourteen teams are split into two conferences of seven teams, with each conference featuring two teams from Ireland and Wales plus one team from Italy, Scotland and South Africa. To ensure a competitive balance, the teams are distributed approximately evenly between the conferences based upon their performance in the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 21], "content_span": [22, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286183-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro14, Format\nThe regular season is made up of 21 rounds \u20136 home and 6 away games against each team in their own conference7 games, either home or away, against the teams in the other conference2 additional regional derbies", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 21], "content_span": [22, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286183-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro14, Format\nThe first-placed teams in each conference are given a bye to the semi-finals with the second and third placed teams in each conference meeting in two quarter-finals for the two remaining semi-final places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 21], "content_span": [22, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286183-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro14, Format\nThe South African teams cannot compete in the European Rugby Champions Cup. The top three eligible European teams in each conference automatically qualify for following year's Champions Cup. The fourth ranked eligible team in each conference meet in a play-off match with the winner taking the seventh Champions Cup place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 21], "content_span": [22, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286183-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro14, Team changes, Ireland\nConnacht came into the new season with a new head coach, after removing Kieran Keane from his position one year into a three-year deal. Former Australia sevens coach Andy Friend was named as his replacement in May 2018, joining on a three-year contract. The team also had a new captain for the season, following the retirement of John Muldoon, record-holder for appearances both for Connacht and in the league. In August 2018, Jarrad Butler was named as his replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 36], "content_span": [37, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286183-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro14, Team changes, Ireland\nLike Connacht, Leinster had a new captain for the season. Isa Nacewa retired at the end of the 2017\u201318 season, after leading the province to an unprecedented Pro14-Champions Cup double. The team's all-time leading scorer Jonathan Sexton was named as captain in August 2018, with Rhys Ruddock as his vice-captain. The team also had a new backs coach following the departure of Girvan Dempsey, who signed with English Premiership side Bath in May 2018. Former player Felipe Contepomi was announced as his replacement in June 2018. He joined from the Argentine Rugby Union where he had been serving both as part of the coaching staff of Super Rugby side, the Jaguares, and as head coach of Argentina XV, the country's second tier international side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 36], "content_span": [37, 783]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286183-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro14, Team changes, Ireland\nMunster came into the league without their all-time leading try scorer Simon Zebo. It was announced in October 2017 that he would leave the province at the end of the 2017\u201318 season, with French Top 14 side Racing 92 later being confirmed as his next club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 36], "content_span": [37, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286183-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro14, Team changes, Ireland\nFollowing the departure of Les Kiss as the province's director of rugby in January 2018, Ulster confirmed in March 2018 that then-head coach Jono Gibbes would leave the province at the end of the season. In April 2018, the province announced that Scotland forwards coach Dan McFarland would be their new head coach, with the former Connacht and Glasgow assistant signing a three-year contract. However the Scottish Rugby Union insisted that McFarland must serve the nine-month notice period in his contract before joining Ulster, which would have left the province without a head coach until January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 36], "content_span": [37, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286183-0010-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro14, Team changes, Ireland\nIn July 2018, it was announced that Ireland forwards coach Simon Easterby would work with the Ulster coaches on an interim basis ahead of McFarland's arrival. After a four-month standoff, an agreement was reached in August 2018 to allow McFarland to take up his position with Ulster with immediate effect. Another addition to the coaching staff was long-serving squad member and Ireland international Jared Payne, who was forced to retire in May 2018 due to a head injury suffered on the 2017 Lions tour. The province announced that he would serve as their new defence coach. Banbridge head coach Daniel Soper was confirmed as Ulster's skills coach in June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 36], "content_span": [37, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286183-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro14, Team changes, Italy\nHaving served as one of the team's co-captain's, Italy centre Tommaso Castello was named as the Zebre skipper for the season. He had previously shared the captaincy with George Biagi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 34], "content_span": [35, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286183-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro14, Team changes, Scotland\nAfter spending much of the previous two seasons playing in the 5,500-capacity Myreside Stadium, Edinburgh announced in February 2018 that they would be returning permanently to Murrayfield, their previous home. Due to the stadium's larger size making it inappropriate for permanent use, the Scottish Rugby Union also announced plans to develop another, smaller ground with a capacity of 7,800 in the grounds of Murrayfield, on what were previously training pitches. It was estimated that the development would cost the Union in the region of \u00a35 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 37], "content_span": [38, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286183-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro14, Team changes, South Africa\nThe Cheetahs had a new captain for the 2018\u201319 season. It was announced in March 2018 that incumbent captain Francois Venter would leave the team at the end of the season, joining English side Worcester Warriors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 41], "content_span": [42, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286183-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro14, Team changes, Wales\nCardiff Blues confirmed in September 2017 that then-head coach Danny Wilson would leave the club at the end of the 2017\u201318 season, with John Mulvihill being announced as their new head coach on a three-year contract in March 2018. Also departing the club was the team's most-capped player, Taufa\u02bbao Filise. The Tongan international prop made his last appearance for the region in the final of the 2017\u201318 Challenge Cup, before retiring. In July 2018, Ellis Jenkins was named as the new team captain, replacing previous season's skipper Gethin Jenkins. Both players were also named as part of a 10-man \"leadership group\" within the squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 34], "content_span": [35, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286183-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro14, Team changes, Wales\nIn December 2018, Dragons parted company with head coach Bernard Jackman 18 months into a three-year deal. The team's forwards coach Ceri Jones was named as caretaker following Jackman's departure. In January 2019, it was announced that Jones would remain in the role until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 34], "content_span": [35, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286183-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro14, Team changes, Wales\nThe Ospreys were coached by Allen Clarke. He had started the previous season as the team's forwards coach, before being promoted to head coach on an interim basis in January 2018 following the sacking of Steve Tandy. In April 2018, it was announced that Clarke would take the job on a permanent basis and had signed a three-year contract. For the first time in eight seasons, the side came into the campaign with a new captain, with Justin Tipuric replacing Alun Wyn Jones in the role.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 34], "content_span": [35, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286183-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro14, Team changes, Wales\nThis was Wayne Pivac's final season in charge of the Scarlets, as it was announced in July 2018 that he would succeed Warren Gatland as Wales head coach. The agreement meant Pivac would take up the role following the 2019 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 34], "content_span": [35, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286183-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro14, Table\nGreen background indicates teams that compete in the Pro14 play-offs, and also earn a place in the 2019\u201320 European Champions Cup(excluding South African teams who are ineligible)Blue background indicates teams outside the play-off places that earn a place in the 2019\u201320 European Champions Cup Yellow background indicates the loser of the play-off between the two fourth-ranked European teams in each conference, that earned a place in the 2019\u201320 European Rugby Challenge Cup. Plain background indicates teams that earn a place in the 2019\u201320 European Rugby Challenge Cup. (CH) Champions. (RU) Runners-up. (SF) Losing semi-finalists. (QF) Losing quarter-finalists. (PO) Champions Cup play-off winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 20], "content_span": [21, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286183-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro14, Play-offs\nThe top side from each of the two conferences are given a bye to the semi-finals and have home advantage. Teams placed second and third in opposite conferences meet in the two quarter-finals to determine the other two semi-finalists with the teams ranked second having home advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 24], "content_span": [25, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286183-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro14, Play-offs\nThe play-offs are scheduled in the four weeks after the regular season has been completed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 24], "content_span": [25, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286183-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro14, Play-off for the 7th Champions Cup place\nSouth African teams cannot compete in the European Rugby Champions Cup as it is restricted to European teams. The top three eligible teams in the two conferences automatically qualify for the following year's Champions Cup. The seventh Champions Cup place is allocated to the winners of the playoff match between the fourth ranked eligible teams in each conference played at the home of the team with the most regular league points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 55], "content_span": [56, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286183-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro14, Play-off for the 7th Champions Cup place\nAs Leinster lost the Champions Cup final on 11 May 2019, Ospreys hosted Scarlets in the play-off on 18 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 55], "content_span": [56, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286183-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro14, Referees\nPro14 2018\u201319 14-man referee elite squad: (number of matches refereed):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 23], "content_span": [24, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286183-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro14, Referees\nNote: Additional referees are used throughout the season, selected from a select development squad that includes; Craig Evans (2) and Adam Jones (0) \u2013 both WRU, Sam Grove-White (3), Ben Blain (2), Keith Allen (1) \u2013 SRU and Joy Neville (1) \u2013 IRFU", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 23], "content_span": [24, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286183-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro14, Leading scorers\nNote: Flags to the left of player names indicate national team as has been defined under World Rugby eligibility rules, or primary nationality for players who have not yet earned international senior caps. Players may hold one or more non-WR nationalities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 30], "content_span": [31, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286184-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro50 Championship\nThe 2018\u201319 Pro50 Championship was the seventeenth edition of the Pro50 Championship, a List A cricket tournament that was played in Zimbabwe, which started on 8 December 2018. The tournament featured four teams, instead of the five that took part in the previous edition, with the Rising Stars being disbanded. The other change to the 2018\u201319 tournament was that it was played across six rounds, instead of ten, as per previous years. The Rising Stars were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286184-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pro50 Championship\nThe Mashonaland Eagles were the first team to qualify for the final of the tournament. They were joined in the final by the Matabeleland Tuskers, after they won their penultimate fixture by eight wickets. Mashonaland Eagles won the tournament, beating Matabeleland Tuskers by two wickets in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286185-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ProA\nThe 2018\u201319 ProA was the 12th season of the ProA, the second level of basketball in Germany. The champions and the runners-up of the play-offs were promoted to the 2019\u201320 Basketball Bundesliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286185-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 ProA\nHamburg Towers won its first ProA championship after defeating N\u00fcrnberg Falcons, which promoted too, in the finals. N\u00fcrnberg did not promote after all after it could not meet Basketball Bundesliga (BBL) BBL arena requirements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286186-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Professional U23 Development League\nThe 2018\u201319 Professional U23 Development League is the seventh season of the Professional Development League system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286187-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Providence Friars men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Providence Friars men's basketball team represented Providence College in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Friars, led by eighth-year head coach Ed Cooley, played their home games at the Dunkin' Donuts Center as members of the Big East Conference. They finished the season 18\u201316, 7\u201311 in Big East play to finish in a three-way tie for last place. As the No. 8 seed in the Big East Tournament, they defeated Butler before losing to Villanova in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286187-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Providence Friars men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Friars finished the 2017\u201318 season 21\u201314, 10\u20138 in Big East play to finish in a three-way tie for third place. As the No. 5 seed in the Big East Tournament, they defeated Creighton and No. 1-seeded Xavier in back-to-back overtime games to advance to the championship game. In a third straight overtime game, the Friars fell to Villanova in the championship game. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as the No. 10 seed in the West region where they lost to Texas A&M in the First Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286188-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Providence Friars women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Providence Friars women's basketball team represented Providence College in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Friars, led by third year head coach Jim Crowley, played their home games at Alumni Hall and were members of the Big East Conference. They finished the season 19\u201316, 8\u201310 in Big East play to finish in a tie for sixth place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the Big East Women's Tournament where they lost to DePaul. They received an at-large bid to the WNIT where they defeated Hartford and Penn in the first and second rounds before losing to Big East member Georgetown in the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286189-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Prva A liga\nThe 2018\u201319 Prva A Liga, known as Erste ko\u0161arka\u0161ke lige by sponsorship reasons, is the 13th season of the Montenegrin Basketball League, the top tier basketball league on Montenegro. Mornar is the defending champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286189-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Prva A liga, Competition format\nNine of the eleven teams that play the league join the regular season and play a two-round robin competition where the six first qualified teams join the Super Liga with the two 2018\u201319 ABA League teams (Budu\u0107nost Voli and Mornar). The last qualified team would play a relegation playoff against the second qualified of the Prva B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286189-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Prva A liga, Playoffs\nSemifinals will be played in a best-of-three-games format, while the finals in a best-of-five one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286190-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Purdue Boilermakers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Purdue Boilermakers men's basketball team represented Purdue University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Their head coach was Matt Painter in his 14th season with the Boilers. The team played their home games at Mackey Arena in West Lafayette, Indiana as members of the Big Ten Conference. With a win over Northwestern on March 9, 2019, the Boilermakers clinched a share of the Big Ten regular season championship, the school's 24th championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286190-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Purdue Boilermakers men's basketball team\nThey finished the season 26\u201310, 16\u20134 in Big Ten play to win a share of the Big Ten regular season championship, the school's conference-record 24th championship. As the No. 2 seed in the Big Ten Tournament, they were upset by Minnesota in the quarterfinals. The received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as the No. 3 seed in the South region. They defeated Old Dominion in the First Round before beating defending champion Villanova to advance to the Sweet Sixteen. In the Sweet Sixteen, they defeated Tennessee in overtime to advance to the Elite Eight. There they lost to No. 1 seed Virginia in overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286190-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Purdue Boilermakers men's basketball team\nOn October 12, 2018, Purdue signed Matt Painter to a rolling two-year contract extension, through the 2023\u201324 season. Following the conclusion of the regular season, Painter was named the Big Ten Coach of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286190-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Purdue Boilermakers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Boilermakers finished the 2017\u201318 season with a record thirty wins (30-7), 15\u20133 in Big Ten play to finish in a tie for second place. As the No. 3 seed in the Big Ten Tournament, they defeated Rutgers and Penn State before losing to Michigan in the championship game. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as the No. 2 seed in the East region. They defeated Cal State Fullerton in the First Round, but lost starting center Isaac Haas to a fractured elbow. Without Haas, they defeated Butler in the Second Round to advance to the Sweet Sixteen where they lost to No. 3 seed Texas Tech.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286190-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Purdue Boilermakers men's basketball team, Offseason, Departures\nOn March 26, 2018, sophomore guard Carsen Edwards announced he would enter the NBA draft, but would not sign with an agent. Edwards withdrew his name from the draft and returned for his junior season. On April 20, freshman Nojel Eastern announced he would also test the waters of the NBA draft without signing with an agent. Eastern also withdrew his name from the draft and returned to school.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 72], "content_span": [73, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286190-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Purdue Boilermakers men's basketball team, Offseason, Departures\nPurdue lost four team members to graduation and one to transfer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 72], "content_span": [73, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286190-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Purdue Boilermakers men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nThe 2018\u201319 season will mark the first time in Big Ten history that the teams will play a 20-game conference schedule, setting a precedent for all Division I basketball. The new schedule will also include a regional component to increase the frequency of games among teams in similar areas. Over the course of a six-year cycle (12 playing opportunities), in-state rivals will play each other 12 times, regional opponents will play 10 times, and all other teams will play nine times. Three in-state series will be guaranteed home-and-homes: Illinois and Northwestern, Indiana and Purdue, and Michigan and Michigan State will always play twice. Purdue announced a home and home series with Texas on May 17, 2018 to be played in Austin in 2018 and in West Lafayette in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 71], "content_span": [72, 843]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286190-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Purdue Boilermakers men's basketball team, Rankings\n*AP does not release post-NCAA Tournament rankings^Coaches did not release a Week 2 poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286191-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Purdue Boilermakers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Purdue Boilermakers women's basketball team represents Purdue University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. Boilermakers, led by 13th year head coach Sharon Versyp, play their home games at Mackey Arena and were a members of the Big Ten Conference. They finished the season 19\u201315, 8\u201310 in Big Ten play to finish in tie for tenth place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the Big Ten Women's Tournament where they lost to Rutgers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286192-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Purdue Fort Wayne Mastodons men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Purdue Fort Wayne Mastodons men's basketball team represented Purdue University Fort Wayne during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Mastodons were led by fifth-year head coach Jon Coffman and split their home games between the Gates Sports Center and the Allen County War Memorial Coliseum as members of the Summit League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286192-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Purdue Fort Wayne Mastodons men's basketball team\nThe season was the first in which Mastodons represented the new Purdue University Fort Wayne (PFW). The team previously represented the now defunct Indiana University \u2013 Purdue University Fort Wayne. On July 1, 2018, IPFW split into two separate institutions, with IU taking responsibility for IPFW's degree programs in health sciences and Purdue retaining all other academic programs. The Mastodons have since represented PFW. With the name change, the school's colors changed from Royal Blue and White to the Old Gold and Black used by the other three Purdue University campuses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286192-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Purdue Fort Wayne Mastodons men's basketball team\nOn June 18, 2018, the school announced that beginning July 1, 2018 all NCAA sports teams would be known as the Purdue Fort Wayne Mastodons. In addition, a new logo was revealed where the color blue has been incorporated as a secondary color to the university's official school colors of gold and black.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286192-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Purdue Fort Wayne Mastodons men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Mastodons finished the 2017\u201318 season 18\u201315, 7\u20137 in Summit League play to finish in fourth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Summit League Tournament to North Dakota State. They were invited to the CollegeInsdier.com Tournament where they lost in the first round to Central Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 74], "content_span": [75, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286192-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Purdue Fort Wayne Mastodons men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe season was the last in which the Mastodons represented IPFW, using \"Fort Wayne\" as its athletic brand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 74], "content_span": [75, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286193-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Purdue Fort Wayne Mastodons women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Purdue Fort Wayne Mastodons women's basketball team represents Purdue University Fort Wayne during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Mastodons, led by third year head coach Niecee Nelson and played their home games at play their home games at the Hilliard Gates Sports Center, with one home game at the Allen County War Memorial Coliseum. They were members of The Summit League. They finished the season 7\u201323, 3\u201313 in Summit League play to finish in eighth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Summit League Women's Tournament to South Dakota State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286193-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Purdue Fort Wayne Mastodons women's basketball team\nThe season marks the first for the school representing the new Purdue University Fort Wayne. The team previously represented the now defunct Indiana University \u2013 Purdue University Fort Wayne. On July 1, 2018, IPFW split into two separate institutions, with IU taking responsibility for IPFW's degree programs in health sciences and Purdue retaining all other academic programs. The Mastodons now represent Purdue University Fort Wayne. With the name change, the school's colors changed from Royal Blue and White to the Old Gold and Black used by the other three Purdue University campuses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286193-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Purdue Fort Wayne Mastodons women's basketball team\nOn June 18, 2018, the school announced that beginning July 1, 2018 all NCAA sports teams would be known as the Purdue Fort Wayne Mastadons. In addition, a new logo was revealed where the color blue has been incorporated as a secondary color to the university's official school colors of gold and black.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286194-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pusk\u00e1s Akad\u00e9mia FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season will be Pusk\u00e1s Akad\u00e9mia FC's 5th competitive season, 2nd consecutive season in the OTP Bank Liga and 7th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286194-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pusk\u00e1s Akad\u00e9mia 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286194-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pusk\u00e1s Akad\u00e9mia 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286194-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pusk\u00e1s Akad\u00e9mia 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286194-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pusk\u00e1s Akad\u00e9mia 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286194-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pusk\u00e1s Akad\u00e9mia 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286194-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pusk\u00e1s Akad\u00e9mia 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286194-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pusk\u00e1s Akad\u00e9mia FC season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. Players with 1 card or more included only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286195-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pyramids FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 Pyramids season was the 10th season in the football club's history and 2nd consecutive and 3rd overall season in the top flight of Egyptian football, the Egyptian Premier League, having been promoted from the Egyptian Second Division in 2017. It was also the 1st season for the club under their new name, after being sold to new owners and renamed from Al Assiouty Sport to Pyramids Football Club. In addition to the domestic league, Pyramids also participated in this season's editions of the domestic cup, the Egypt Cup. The season covered a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019; however Pyramids played their last match of the season in September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286195-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pyramids FC 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286195-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pyramids 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-00286195-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Pyramids FC season, Competitions, Egypt Cup\nPyramids entered the competition from the round of 32 and were given a home tie against Tanta. Starting from the round of 16, all matches were played on stadiums selected by the Egyptian Football Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286196-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 QMJHL season\nThe 2018\u201319 QMJHL season was the 50th season of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League (QMJHL). The regular season began on September 20, 2018, and ended on March 16, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286196-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 QMJHL season\nThe playoffs started March 22, 2019 and ended on May 11. The winning team, the Rouyn-Noranda Huskies, were awarded the President's Cup as the QMJHL champion and earned a berth in the 2019 Memorial Cup, being hosted by the Halifax Mooseheads of the QMJHL at the Scotiabank Centre in Halifax, Nova Scotia from May 17\u201326, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286196-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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; z = clinched Jean Rougeau Trophy", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286196-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286196-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286196-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 QMJHL season, 2019 President's Cup playoffs\nIn the first two rounds seeding is determined by conference standings, and in the two final rounds seeding is determined by overall standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 51], "content_span": [52, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286196-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 QMJHL season, Playoff leading scorers\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalties Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286196-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286197-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Qaraba\u011f FK season\nThe Qaraba\u011f 2018\u201319 season is Qaraba\u011f's 27th Azerbaijan Premier League season, of which they are defending champions, and will be their eleventh season under manager Gurban Gurbanov.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286197-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Qaraba\u011f FK season, Season overview\nOn 17 January 2019, Qaraba\u011f announced that Dzon Delarge had been sent to train with Qaraba\u011f-2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286197-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Qaraba\u011f FK season, Season overview, Transfers\nOn 2 June 2018, Rahil Mammadov and Filip Ozobi\u0107 both signed a three-year contract with Qaraba\u011f. On 26 June, Qaraba\u011f announced the signing of Abdellah Zoubir on a two-year contract from RC Lens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286197-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Qaraba\u011f FK season, Season overview, Transfers\nOn 4 July, Qaraba\u011f announced the signing of Hannes Halld\u00f3rsson on a two-year contract from Randers FC. The following day Simeon Slavchev joined Qaraba\u011f on a three-year contract. Qaraba\u011f announced the signing of Vagner on 6 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286197-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Qaraba\u011f FK season, Season overview, Transfers\nOn 24 July, Dzon Delarge and Innocent Emeghara signed for Qaraba\u011f.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286197-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Qaraba\u011f FK season, Season overview, Transfers\nOn 19 December, Qaraba\u011f announced the return of Reynaldo on a 2+1\u20442-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286197-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Qaraba\u011f FK season, Season overview, Transfers\nOn 9 January, Qaraba\u011f announced that they signed midfielder Hajiagha Hajili, who was on loan from Gabala, permanently on a four-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286197-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Qaraba\u011f FK 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-00286198-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Qatar Stars League\nThe 2018\u201319 Qatari League, also known as Qatar Stars League, is the 46th edition of top-level football championship in Qatar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286198-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Qatar Stars League\nThe Qatar Stars League (QSL) has announced the dates of the first phase of the 2018\u201319 QNB Stars League. The first phase of the QNB Stars League kicked off on 4 August 2018 and ended on 4 November 2018. The league ended on 13 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286198-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Qatar Stars League, Teams, Foreign players\nEach clubs are allowed to have nine foreign players. For the remainder of the season, each clubs can include one player from the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) and one player from Union of Arab Football Associations (UAFA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286199-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Qatar Volleyball league\nThe 2018\u201319 Qatar Volleyball league was the 40th season of the Qatar Volleyball league, the highest professional volleyball league in Qatar. A total of 10 teams will compete in the league. The season began on 22 October 2018 and is scheduled to conclude on 26 March 2019. Al Rayyan are the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286200-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Quaid-e-Azam One Day Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Quaid-e-Azam One Day Cup was the first edition of the Quaid-e-Azam One Day Cup, a List A cricket tournament that took place in Pakistan from 6 September to 4 November 2018. Each match was played after the conclusion of the corresponding first-class fixture in the 2018\u201319 Quaid-e-Azam Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286200-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Quaid-e-Azam One Day Cup\nFollowing the conclusion of the group stage, National Bank of Pakistan, Khan Research Laboratories, Habib Bank Limited and Islamabad from Pool A along with Sui Southern Gas Corporation, Pakistan Television, Water and Power Development Authority and Multan from Pool B had all qualified for the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286200-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Quaid-e-Azam One Day Cup\nIn the first quarter-final match, Water and Power Development Authority beat National Bank of Pakistan by eight wickets. In the second quarter-final, Habib Bank Limited beat Sui Southern Gas Company by 166 runs, with Jamal Anwar scoring a century. The third quarter-final saw Khan Research Laboratories beat Multan by six wickets. In the last quarter-final match, Pakistan Television beat Islamabad by nine runs, with Mohammad Waqas and Hasan Mohsin both scoring centuries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286200-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Quaid-e-Azam One Day Cup\nThe first semi-final match saw Water and Power Development Authority beat Khan Research Laboratories by five wickets to advance to the final. In the second semi-final, Habib Bank Limited beat Pakistan Television by seven runs. In the final Habib Bank Limited beat Water and Power Development Authority by 62 runs to win the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286201-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Quaid-e-Azam Trophy\nThe 2018\u201319 Quaid-e-Azam Trophy was a first-class domestic cricket competition that took place in Pakistan from 1 September to 8 December 2018. Following the conclusion of each match, the teams played each other in a List A fixture in the 2018\u201319 Quaid-e-Azam One Day Cup tournament. Sui Northern Gas Pipelines Limited were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286201-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Quaid-e-Azam Trophy\nIn April 2018, Zarai Taraqiati Bank Limited (ZTBL) won the Patron's Trophy Grade-II tournament to qualify for this years' edition of the competition. ZTBL won their opening fixture of the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy, against Lahore Blues, by 151 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286201-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Quaid-e-Azam Trophy\nPrior to the start of the tournament, two players were dropped by their teams. Ahmed Shehzad, captain of Habib Bank Limited (HBL), was left out of HBL's squad after testing positive for the use of a banned substance. Hasan Raza was not selected to play for Pakistan Television, after his alleged involvement in spot-fixing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286201-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Quaid-e-Azam Trophy\nDuring the tournament, the quality of some of the pitches was questioned. This included the fixture between Water and Power Development Authority and Sui Southern Gas Company, which was abandoned on day one due to an unsafe pitch, before it was restarted as a three-day game, and the fixture between Sui Northern Gas Pipelines Limited and Habib Bank Limited, which saw Sui Northern Gas Pipelines Limited being bowled out for just 35 runs in their first innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286201-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Quaid-e-Azam Trophy\nIn Pool A, Sui Northern Gas Pipelines Limited, Peshawar, Khan Research Laboratories and Habib Bank Limited all progressed to the Super Eight section of the tournament. They were joined by Sui Southern Gas Corporation, Water and Power Development Authority, Karachi Whites and Lahore Blues from Pool B. The Super Eight fixtures were originally scheduled to take place in Lahore. However, the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) moved the matches to Karachi due to bad weather. Meanwhile, Islamabad from Pool A and Zarai Taraqiati Bank Limited from Pool B were both relegated to the second-tier for the next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286201-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Quaid-e-Azam Trophy\nSui Northern Gas Pipelines and Habib Bank Limited won their respective Super Eight groups to progress to the final of the tournament. For the first time in several years, the final was not shown live on television. Habib Bank Limited won the tournament, despite the final ending as a draw, after they took a first-innings lead in the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286201-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Quaid-e-Azam Trophy, Teams\nUnited Bank Limited, who topped Pool B in previous edition of the competition, were disbanded in July 2018. Faisalabad scored only one point in the previous tournament. Zarai Taraqiati Bank Limited were promoted from the Patron's Trophy Grade-II tournament to replace them. Multan were added to the teams in this years' tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286202-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Queen of the South F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Queen of the South's Centenary season and is also the club's sixth consecutive season back in the second tier of Scottish football and their sixth season in the Scottish Championship, having been promoted as champions from the Scottish Second Division at the end of the 2012\u201313 season. Queens will also be competing in the Challenge Cup, League Cup and the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286202-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Queen of the South F.C. season, Summary\nQueens finished ninth in the Scottish Championship and their league position qualified the club for the semi final stage of the play-offs, where the played Montrose and progressed 6-2 on aggregate. Queens won the play-off final 3-1 on aggregate versus Raith Rovers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286202-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Queen of the South F.C. season, Summary\nQueens reached the third round of the Challenge Cup, losing 2\u20130 away to East Fife.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286202-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Queen of the South F.C. season, Summary\nQueens reached the second round of the League Cup, losing 4\u20132 after extra time at Palmerston to St Johnstone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286202-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Queen of the South F.C. season, Summary\nQueens reached the fifth round of the Scottish Cup, losing 4\u20131 to Aberdeen at Pittodrie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286202-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Queen of the South F.C. season, Player statistics, Captains\nLast updated: 18 May 2019Source: 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, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286202-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Queen of the South F.C. season, Player statistics, Clean sheets\nLast updated: 18 May 2019Source: Match reports in Competitive matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286203-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Queens Park Rangers F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Queens Park Rangers' fourth consecutive season in the Championship following their relegation from the Premier League in the 2014\u201315 season. Along with the Championship, the club will participate in the FA Cup and the EFL Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286203-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Queens Park Rangers F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286203-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Queens Park Rangers F.C. season, Kit, Kit information\nQPR agreed a multi-year partnership with Erre\u00e0 as the official technical kit suppliers, the 2018/19 season will be the second year of the deal. The kits will be 100 per-cent bespoke designs for the duration of the deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286203-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Queens Park Rangers F.C. season, Kit, Kit information\nThe 2018/19 season will be the second-year of a three-year shirt sponsorship deal with online casino Royal Panda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286203-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Queens Park Rangers F.C. season, Friendlies\nFor the 2018/19 season, QPR announced pre-season friendlies against Charlton Athletic, Barnet, Staines Town, AFC Wimbledon, 1899 Hoffenheim and FC Union Berlin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286203-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Queens Park Rangers F.C. season, Competitions, Championship, Matches\nThe fixtures for the 2018\u201319 season were announced on 21 June 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 76], "content_span": [77, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286203-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Queens Park Rangers F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nIn the FA Cup, QPR entered the competition in the third round and were drawn at home against Leeds United. The fourth round draw was made live on BBC by Robbie Keane and Carl Ikeme from Wolverhampton on 7 January 2019. The fifth round draw was broadcast on 28 January 2019 live on BBC, Alex Scott and Ian Wright conducted the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286203-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Queens Park Rangers F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, QPR were drawn at home against Peterborough United in the first round. The second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August. The third round draw was made on 30 August 2018 by David Seaman and Joleon Lescott.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 62], "content_span": [63, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286204-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Quinnipiac Bobcats men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Quinnipiac Bobcats men's basketball team represented Quinnipiac University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at People's United Center in Hamden, Connecticut as members of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference, and were led by 2nd-year head coach Baker Dunleavy. They finished the 2018\u201319 season 16\u201315 overall, 11\u20137 in MAAC play to finish in a four-way tie for second place. As the No. 3 seed in the 2019 MAAC Tournament, they were defeated by No. 6 seed Monmouth 92\u201398 in the quarterfinals. On March 13, 2019, they accepted an invitation to the CIT Tournament, where they played NJIT in the opening round on March 18, 2019, losing 81\u201392.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286204-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Quinnipiac Bobcats men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bobcats finished the 2017\u201318 season 12\u201321, 7\u201311 in MAAC play to finish in a tie for seventh place. As the No. 7 seed at the MAAC Tournament, they defeated No. 10 seed Siena and upset No. 2 seed Canisius to advance to the semifinals, where they lost to No. 6 seed Fairfield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286205-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Quinnipiac Bobcats women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Quinnipiac Bobcats women's basketball team represents Quinnipiac University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Bobcats are led by twenty-fourth year head coach, Tricia Fabbri, played their home games at People's United Center and were members of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference. They finished the season 26\u20137, 18\u20130 in MAAC play to win MAAC regular season and tournament titles to earn an automatic trip to the NCAA Women's Tournament. They lost to South Dakota State in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286206-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 R&F (Hong Kong) season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is R&F's 3rd season in the top-tier division in Hong Kong football. R&F will compete in the Premier League, Senior Challenge Shield, FA Cup and Sapling Cup in this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286206-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 R&F (Hong Kong) season, Squad, Summer\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286206-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 R&F (Hong Kong) season, Squad, Summer\nRemarks:LP These players are considered as local players in Hong Kong domestic football competitions. FP These players are registered as foreign players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286206-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 R&F (Hong Kong) season, Squad, Winter\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286206-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 R&F (Hong Kong) season, Squad, Winter\nRemarks:LP These players are considered as local players in Hong Kong domestic football competitions. FP These players are registered as foreign players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286207-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 R.S.C. Anderlecht season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is a season played by Anderlecht, a Belgian football club based in Anderlecht, Brussels. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019. Anderlecht will be participating in the Belgian First Division A, Belgian Cup and the UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286208-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RB Leipzig season\nThe 2018\u201319 RB Leipzig season was the 10th season in the club's history and 3rd consecutive and overall season in the top flight of German football, the Bundesliga, having been promoted from the 2. Bundesliga in 2016. In addition to the domestic league, RB Leipzig also participated in the season's editions of the domestic cup, the DFB-Pokal, and the second-tier continental cup, the UEFA Europa League. This was the 9th season for Leipzig in the Red Bull Arena, located in Leipzig, Saxony, Germany. The season covers a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286209-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RC Lens season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 113th season in the existence of RC Lens and the club's fourth consecutive season in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Lens participated in this season's editions of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue. The season was scheduled to cover the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286209-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RC Lens 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286209-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RC Lens 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286210-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RC Strasbourg Alsace season\nThe 2018\u201319 Ligue 1 season was Racing Club de Strasbourg Alsace's second season since its return to the top flight of French football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286210-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RC Strasbourg Alsace 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286210-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RC Strasbourg Alsace 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-00286211-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RCD Espanyol season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 84th season in La Liga played by RCD Espanyol, a Spanish football club based in Barcelona, Catalonia. It covers a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286212-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RCD Mallorca season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Real Club Deportivo Mallorca's 84th season in existence and the club's 1st season back in the second division of Spanish football. In addition to the domestic league, RCD Mallorca participated in this season's edition of the Copa del Rey. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286212-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RCD Mallorca 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286212-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RCD Mallorca 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286213-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship\nThe 2018\u201319 RFU Championship, known for sponsorship reasons as the Greene King IPA Championship, is the tenth season of the professionalised format of the RFU Championship, the second tier of the English rugby union league system run by the Rugby Football Union. It is contested by eleven English clubs and one from Jersey in the Channel Islands. The competition is sponsored by Greene King for a sixth successive season. Clubs in the league also competed in the inaugural RFU Championship Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286213-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship\nOn 19 April 2019 London Irish were declared champions with a round to go, following an emphatic win away against struggling Richmond, claiming promotion back to the Premiership for the 2019\u201320 season, in what was their second Championship title in three seasons. The next day (20 April), Richmond were relegated following relegation rivals Hartpury's victory at home against London Scottish. Richmond would drop to the 2019\u201320 National League 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286213-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship\nCoventry had the best campaign of a promoted club since the Championship's inception back in 2009\u201310 (regular season only), amassing 51 points on way to an 8th place finish - surpassing London Scottish's 45 point, 8th place finish back in 2011\u201312.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286213-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship, Structure\nThe Championship's structure has all the teams playing each other on a home and away basis. The first placed team in the competition is promoted to the Premiership; providing that club's ground fulfills the Rugby Football Union's Minimum Standards Criteria while the bottom side is relegated to National League 1. As part of an agreement with the RFU, each club will receive \u00a3530,000 funding. The British and Irish Cup, which the RFU Championship clubs played in with Welsh and Irish clubs, was scrapped due to the Championship clubs withdrawing and is to be replaced by a new cup competition \u2013 the RFU Championship Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286213-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship, Teams\nOn 24 March 2018 Rotherham Titans were relegated with three games to go, after losing away to Jersey Reds. Despite seeing some improvements in the second half of the season, the Yorkshire club were easily the weakest side in the division, dropping to 2018\u201319 National League 1, the lowest level the club have played for fourteen seasons. Promoted in their place were the winners of 2017\u201318 National League 1, Coventry, who return to the second tier for the first time since being relegated at the end of the 2009\u201310 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286213-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship, Teams\nOn 7 April 2018 Bristol were crowned champions of the 2017\u201318 season with two games to go following title rivals Ealing Trailfinders defeat that day to Doncaster Knights. They were therefore promoted to Premiership Rugby. In winning the championship Bristol also became the most decorated tier 2 side in English league history with four league titles to-date. They are replaced by London Irish who return to the Championship after just one year in the Premiership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286213-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship, Fixtures & Results\nFixtures for the season were announced by the RFU on 22 June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286213-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship, Season records, Team\n72 \u2013 5 London Irish at home to Yorkshire Carnegie on 13 October 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286213-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship, Season records, Team\n61 \u2013 20 Ealing Trailfinders away to Coventry on 23 March 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286213-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship, Season records, Team\n72 \u2013 5 London Irish at home to Yorkshire Carnegie on 13 October 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286213-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship, Season records, Team\nLondon Irish at home to Yorkshire Carnegie on 13 October 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286213-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship, Season records, Team\nNottingham at home to Doncaster Knights on 29 September 2018Coventry away to Nottingham on 23 December 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286213-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship, Season records, Team\nHartpury College away to Doncaster Knights on 8 September 2018Jersey Reds at home to Cornish Pirates on 13 October 2018Nottingham away to Richmond on 20 October 2018Nottingham at home to Ealing Trailfinders on 26 October 2018Nottingham away to Coventry on 13 April 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286213-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship, Season records, Attendances\nLondon Irish at home to Doncaster Knights on 23 March 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286213-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship, Season records, Attendances\nRichmond at home to Hartpury College on 29 September 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286213-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship, Season records, Player\nDougie Flockhart for Doncaster Knights at home to Richmond on 26 January 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286213-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship, Season records, Player\nRobin Wedlake for Cornish Pirates away to Hartpury College on 15 September 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286213-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship, Season records, Player\nCraig Willis for Ealing Trailfinders away to Coventry on 23 March 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286213-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship, Season records, Player\nShane O'Leary for Nottingham at home to Doncaster Knights on 29 September 2018 Will Maisey for Coventry away to Nottingham on 23 December 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286213-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship, Season records, Player\nLuke Cozens for Hartpury College away to Doncaster Knights on 8 September 2018 Aaron Penberthy for Jersey Reds at home to Cornish Pirates on 13 October 2018 Shane O'Leary for Nottingham away to Richmond on 20 October 2018 Shane O'Leary for Nottingham at home to Ealing Trailfinders on 26 October 2018 Shane O'Leary for Nottingham away to Coventry on 13 April 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286214-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 RFU Championship Cup was the inaugural season of the annual rugby union Championship Cup competition for second tier, professional English clubs playing in the RFU Championship. It was formed following the discontinuation of the British and Irish Cup at the end of the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286214-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship Cup\nThe inaugural winners were Ealing Trailfinders who defeated London Irish 23\u201317 in the final held at the Trailfinders Sports Ground. It was a deserved victory for Ealing, who were the best side in the competition, and was their second win in a cup competition in two seasons, having won the British and Irish Cup the previous season. Runner-up London Irish, who had won the Championship league title a few weeks earlier, missed out on a notable double.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286214-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship Cup, Competition format\nThe competition format was a group stage followed by a knockout stage. The group stage consisted of three (roughly) regional groups of four teams each playing home and away matches. Group matches ran for six consecutive weeks from November through to December following a break in the RFU Championship league campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286214-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship Cup, Competition format\nThe top two sides in each group, plus the two best third-placed teams, progressed to the knockout stage, with the best ranked sides receiving home advantage in the quarter-finals. The four winning quarter-finalists progressed to the semi-finals with the winners playing in the final in May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286214-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship Cup, Knock-out stage\nThe eight qualifiers were seeded according to performance in the pool stage - with the three pool winners making the top three seeds along with the best runner-up as seed number 4, and the next two runners-up and two best 3rd-placed teams making up the other four seeds. The top four seeds hosted the quarter-finals against the lower seeds, in a 1 v 8, 2 v 7, 3 v 6, 4 v 5 format. However, if two teams qualified from the same pool they could not be drawn together.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 45], "content_span": [46, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286214-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship Cup, Season records, Team\n59 \u2013 5 London Irish at home to Hartpury College on 9 December 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286214-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship Cup, Season records, Team\n38 \u2013 7 Jersey Reds away to Richmond on 1 December 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286214-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship Cup, Season records, Team\n64 \u2013 17 London Irish at home to Cornish Pirates on 18 November 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286214-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship Cup, Season records, Team\nLondon Irish at home to Cornish Pirates on 18 November 2018London Irish at home to Hartpury College on 9 December 2018Ealing Trailfinders at home to Cornish Pirates on 24 February 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286214-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship Cup, Season records, Team\nLondon Irish at home to Cornish Pirates on 18 November 2018London Irish at home to Hartpury College on 9 December 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286214-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship Cup, Season records, Team\nCornish Pirates at home to Bedford Blues on 11 November 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286214-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship Cup, Season records, Team\nJersey Reds at home to Ealing Trailfinders on 8 December 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286214-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship Cup, Season records, Player\nJack Macfarlane for Jersey Reds at home to Richmond on 24 November 2018 Jordan Burns for Ealing Trailfinders at home to Cornish Pirates on 24 February 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286214-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship Cup, Season records, Player\nJack Macfarlane for Jersey Reds at home to Richmond on 24 November 2018 Jordan Burns for Ealing Trailfinders at home to Cornish Pirates on 24 February 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286214-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship Cup, Season records, Player\nJacob Atkins for London Irish at home to Hartpury College on 9 December 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286214-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship Cup, Season records, Player\nJavier Rojas Alvarez for Cornish Pirates at home to Bedford Blues on 11 November 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286214-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship Cup, Season records, Player\nAaron Penberthy for Jersey Reds at home to Ealing Trailfinders on 8 December 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286214-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship Cup, Season records, Attendances\nEaling Trailfinders at home to London Irish on 4 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 57], "content_span": [58, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286214-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RFU Championship Cup, Season records, Attendances\nEaling Trailfinders at home to Nottingham on 2 February 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 57], "content_span": [58, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286215-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RIT Tigers women's ice hockey season\nThe RIT Tigers represented the Rochester Institute of Technology in College Hockey America during the 2018-19 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286216-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RK Zamet season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 62nd season in RK Zamet\u2019s history. It is their 11th successive season in the Dukat Premier League, and 41st successive top tier season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286216-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 RK Zamet season, Relegation play-offs, League table\nUpdated to match(es) played on 1 June 2019. This table contains statistics combined with the regular part of the Dukat Premier League with matches played by team in the relegation play-offs. Source:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 59], "content_span": [60, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286217-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Racing Club de Avellaneda season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Racing Club de Avellaneda's 34th consecutive season in the top-flight of Argentine football. The season covered the period from 10 August 2018 to 7 April 2019. The club won their 18th league title, and first in five seasons since 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286217-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Racing Club de Avellaneda 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-00286217-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Racing Club de Avellaneda 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, 40], "section_span": [42, 80], "content_span": [81, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286218-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Radford Highlanders men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Radford Highlanders men's basketball team represented Radford University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Highlanders, led by eighth-year head coach Mike Jones, played their home games at the Dedmon Center in Radford, Virginia as members of the Big South Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286218-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Radford Highlanders men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Highlanders finished the season 23\u201313, 12\u20136 in Big South play to finish in a tie for second place. They defeated Longwood, Winthrop, and Liberty to become champions of the Big South Tournament. The received the Big South's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament where they defeated LIU Brooklyn in the First Four before losing in the First Round to Villanova.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286218-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Radford Highlanders men's basketball team, Schedule and results\n* Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses. E=East", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 71], "content_span": [72, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286219-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Radford Highlanders women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Radford Highlanders women's basketball team represented Radford University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Highlanders are led by sixth year head coach Mike McGuire. They finished the season 26\u20137, 17\u20131 in Big South play win the Big South regular season title. Radford won the conference tournament championship game over the Campbell Lady Camels, 57\u201345 to earn an automatic bid of the NCAA Women's Tournament where they lost to Maryland in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286220-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Radivoj Kora\u0107 Cup\nThe 2019 Triglav osiguranje Radivoj Kora\u0107 Cup is the 17th season of the Serbian men's national basketball cup tournament. The tournament was held in Ni\u0161 from 14\u201317 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286220-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Radivoj Kora\u0107 Cup, Draw\nThe draw was held in the Hyatt Regency hotel in Belgrade on 31 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286221-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Raja Casablanca season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Raja Casablanca's 70th season in existence and the club's 62nd consecutive season in the top flight of Moroccan football. It covers a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286222-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rangers F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 139th season of competitive football by Rangers. It is their third consecutive season back in the top tier of Scottish football, having been promoted from the Scottish Championship at the end of the 2015\u201316 season. Rangers also competed in the Europa League, progressing through four qualifying rounds before being eliminated at the group stage. They were knocked out of both domestic cups (League Cup and Scottish Cup) by Aberdeen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286222-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rangers F.C. season, Squad statistics\nThe table below includes all players registered with the SPFL as part of the Rangers squad for 2018\u201319 season. They may not have made an appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286222-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rangers F.C. season, Squad statistics, Appearances, goals and discipline\nAppearances (starts and substitute appearances) and goals include those in Scottish Premiership, League Cup, Scottish Cup, and the UEFA Europa League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 80], "content_span": [81, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286223-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy\nThe 2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy was the 85th season of the Ranji Trophy, the premier first-class cricket tournament that took place in India between November 2018 and February 2019. Vidarbha were the defending champions. The final took place between Vidarbha and Saurashtra, starting on 3 February 2019. Vidarbha defeated Saurashtra by 78 runs in the final, to become the sixth team in the tournament's history to retain their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286223-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy, Background\nIn April 2018, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) reinstated Bihar for the competition, bringing the total teams to 29. In July 2018, the BCCI increased the total number of teams to 37, with the addition of Arunachal Pradesh, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland, Puducherry, Sikkim and Uttarakhand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286223-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy, Format\nThe tournament had four groups, with nine teams each in Groups A and B, and ten teams in Group C. All the new teams were placed in the Plate Group. The teams in the Plate Group were allowed to have up to three professional players in their squads. The top two teams from Group C and the top team in the Plate Group progressed to the quarter-finals of the tournament, along with five teams from Groups A and B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286223-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy, Summary, League phase\nThe opening round of fixtures saw a total of 94 players making their first-class cricket debut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 43], "content_span": [44, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286223-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy, Summary, League phase\nIn the third round match between Vidarbha and Baroda, Vidarbha's Wasim Jaffer became the first batsman to score 11,000 runs in the Ranji Trophy. In the fourth round match between Puducherry and Mizoram, Puducherry's Pankaj Singh set a new record for the most five-wicket hauls against different teams in the Ranji Trophy with 17. The fourth round of fixtures also saw the first occasion that seven captains scored centuries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 43], "content_span": [44, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286223-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy, Summary, League phase\nIn round five, Paras Dogra batting for Puducherry scored 253 runs against Sikkim. It was his eighth double century, going past Ajay Sharma's record of seven double centuries in the Ranji Trophy. Also in round five, Ajay Rohera set a new record for the highest score on debut in a first-class match. Batting for Madhya Pradesh against Hyderabad, he scored 267 not out, breaking the record of 260 runs set by Amol Mazumdar in 1994. Naman Ojha became the most successful wicket-keeper in Ranji Trophy history, breaking Vinayak Samant's record of 355 dismissals as wicket-keeper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 43], "content_span": [44, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286223-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy, Summary, League phase\nIn the sixth round of fixtures, Milind Kumar of Sikkim became the first batsman to score 1,000 runs in this edition of the tournament. He did so in the match against Mizoram, in his ninth innings of the competition. In round seven of the tournament, Ashutosh Aman of Bihar became the first bowler to take 50 wickets in this years' Ranji Trophy tournament. He went on to finish the tournament with 68 wickets, breaking the previous record of 64 dismissals set by Bishan Singh Bedi in the 1974\u201375 tournament. Round eight saw Pankaj Singh of Puducherry become the first seam bowler to take 400 wickets in the Ranji Trophy. In round nine, Tripura and Madhya Pradesh were both dismissed for just 35 runs in one of their innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 43], "content_span": [44, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286223-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy, Summary, League phase\nThe group stage of the tournament saw two captains retire from all forms of cricket. In November 2018, Gautam Gambhir initially stepped down as captain of Delhi, before announcing his retirement the following month. Gambhir went on to score 112 in his final innings, his 43rd century in first-class cricket. Saurashtra's captain, Jaydev Shah, also retired from cricket in December. He made record for most matches as captain in Ranji Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 43], "content_span": [44, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286223-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy, Summary, League phase\nThe ninth round match between Vidarbha and Saurashtra was Wasim Jaffer's 146th match in the Ranji Trophy. He broke Devendra Bundela's record of playing in the most Ranji matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 43], "content_span": [44, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286223-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy, Summary, League phase\nOn 2 January 2019, Rajasthan from Group C became the first team to qualify for the quarter-finals, after they beat Goa by ten wickets. Ahead of the penultimate round of fixtures, ten teams across Groups A and B still had a chance to progress to the quarter-finals. Vidarbha became the first team to qualify from Group A, after Baroda beat Karnataka by two wickets in their final group-stage match. Despite the loss, Karnataka also qualified from Group A. Uttarakhand won the Plate Group and advanced to the quarter-finals. On the final day of the group stage, Saurashtra and Gujarat from Group A, Kerala from Group B and Uttar Pradesh from Group C had also qualified for the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 43], "content_span": [44, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286223-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy, Summary, League phase\nChhattisgarh and Maharashtra across Groups A and B were relegated to Group C, while Goa were relegated from Group C to the Plate Group for the next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 43], "content_span": [44, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286223-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy, Summary, Knockout phase\nKerala were the first team to progress from the quarter-finals, after they beat Gujarat by 113 runs. It was the first time in the team's history that they had reached the semi-finals of the Ranji Trophy, beating their previous best of the quarter-finals, in the previous edition. The second team to qualify for the semi-finals was Karnataka, after they beat Rajasthan by six wickets. Defending champions Vidarbha beat Uttarakhand from the Plate Group by an innings and 115 runs to reach the semi-finals. In the last quarter-final fixture to finish, Saurashtra completed the highest successful run chase to win a match in the Ranji Trophy, scoring 372 runs to beat Uttar Pradesh by six wickets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286223-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy, Summary, Knockout phase\nThe first semi-final saw the defending champions Vidarbha beat Kerala by an innings and 11 runs inside two days. Wasim Jaffer became the first batsman to score 1,000 runs in two different seasons of the Ranji Trophy. Umesh Yadav took his best match figures in first-class cricket, taking twelve wickets for 79 runs. In the second semi-final, Saurashtra defeated Karnataka by five wickets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286223-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy, Summary, Knockout phase\nVidarbha defeated Saurashtra by 78 runs in the final, to become the sixth team in the tournament's history to retain their title. Vidarbha's captain Faiz Fazal said that \"it is not easy to win the Ranji Trophy. To win eleven matches, it's not a fluke. If anyone thought last year was a fluke, we have proven ourselves again\". For Saurashtra, it was their third straight loss in Ranji Trophy finals, with their captain Jaydev Unadkat saying he was really proud of how his team performed during the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286223-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy, Player transfers\nThe following player transfers were approved ahead of the season. All the new teams in the Plate Group also transferred players into their squads, along with signing professionals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286224-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy Group A\nThe 2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy was the 85th season of the Ranji Trophy, the first-class cricket tournament that took place in India. It was contested by 37 teams, divided into four groups, with nine teams in Group A. The group stage ran from 1 November 2018 to 10 January 2019. The top five teams across Group A and Group B progressed to the quarter-finals of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286224-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy Group A\nIn the opening round of fixtures, in the match between Mumbai and Railways in Delhi, players wore masks because of the poor air quality. In the third round match between Vidarbha and Baroda, Vidarbha's Wasim Jaffer became the first batsman to score 11,000 runs in the Ranji Trophy. The ninth round match between Vidarbha and Saurashtra was Jaffer's 146th Ranji match. He broke Devendra Bundela's record of playing in the most matches in the Ranji Trophy. In the fourth round match between Gujarat and Mumbai, Gujarat beat Mumbai by nine wickets, to become the first side to have four outright victories against them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286224-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy Group A\nAhead of the fifth round of fixtures, Saurashtra's captain Jaydev Shah announced that he would retire from all cricket following the team's match against Karnataka. He set the record for the most matches as captain in the Ranji Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286224-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy Group A\nVidarbha became the first team to qualify from Group A, after Baroda beat Karnataka by two wickets in their final group-stage match. Despite the loss, Karnataka also qualified from Group A. Chhattisgarh and Maharashtra across Group A and B were relegated to Group C, On the final day of the group stage, Saurashtra and Gujarat also qualified from Group A for the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286225-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy Group B\nThe 2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy was the 85th season of the Ranji Trophy, the first-class cricket tournament that took place in India. It was contested by 37 teams, divided into four groups, with nine teams in Group B. The group stage ran from 1 November 2018 to 10 January 2019. The top five teams across Group A and Group B progressed to the quarter-finals of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286225-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy Group B\nAhead of Delhi's first match, in round two of the tournament, Gautam Gambhir stepped down as captain of the side. Nitish Rana was appointed as the new captain of the team. In December 2018, Gambhir announced his retirement from all forms of cricket. Gambhir went on to score 112 in his final innings, his 43rd century in first-class cricket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286225-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy Group B\nIn round five of the tournament, Ajay Rohera set a new record for the highest score on debut in a first-class match. Batting for Madhya Pradesh against Hyderabad, he scored 267 not out, breaking the record of 260 runs set by Amol Mazumdar in 1994. Naman Ojha became the most successful wicket-keeper in the Ranji Trophy. He broke Vinayak Samant's record of 355 dismissals as a wicket-keeper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286225-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy Group B\nOn the final day of the group stage, Kerala qualified from Group B for the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286226-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy Group C\nThe 2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy was the 85th season of the Ranji Trophy, the first-class cricket tournament that took place in India. It was contested by 37 teams, divided into four groups, with ten teams in Group C. The group stage ran from 1 November 2018 to 10 January 2019. The top two teams from Group C progressed to the quarter-finals of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286226-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy Group C\nOn 2 January 2019, Rajasthan became the first team to qualify for the quarter-finals, after they beat Goa by ten wickets. Goa were relegated from Group C to the Plate Group for the next season. On the final day of the group stage, Uttar Pradesh qualified from Group C for the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286227-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy Plate Group\nThe 2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy was the 85th season of the Ranji Trophy, the first-class cricket tournament that took place in India. It was contested by 37 teams, divided into four groups, with nine teams in the Plate Group. The group stage ran from 1 November 2018 to 10 January 2019. The top team from the Plate Group progressed to the quarter-finals of the competition. The teams in the Plate Group were allowed to have up to three professional players in their squads.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286227-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy Plate Group\nAll of the matches in the first round of fixtures reached a result within three days, with Uttarakhand beating Bihar in two days. Nagaland beat Mizoram by an innings and 333 runs, the biggest winning margin for a team making its debut in the Ranji Trophy. Puducherry made their debut in the second round of the tournament, against Meghalaya.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286227-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy Plate Group\nIn fifth round match between Puducherry and Arunachal Pradesh, Paras Dogra scored his eighth double century. He broke Ajay Sharma's record of the most double centuries by a batsman in the Ranji Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286227-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy Plate Group\nIn the sixth round of fixtures, Milind Kumar of Sikkim became the first batsman to score 1,000 runs in this edition of the tournament. He did so in the match against Mizoram, in his ninth innings of the competition. In round seven of the tournament, Ashutosh Aman of Bihar became the first bowler to take 50 wickets in this years' Ranji Trophy tournament. He went on to finish the tournament with 68 wickets, breaking the previous record of 64 dismissals set by Bishan Singh Bedi in the 1974\u201375 tournament. Round eight saw Pankaj Singh of Puducherry become the first seam bowler to take 400 wickets in the Ranji Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286227-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy Plate Group\nUttarakhand won the Plate Group and advanced to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286228-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rayo Vallecano season\nDuring the 2018\u201319 season, Rayo Vallecano are participating in La Liga and Copa del Rey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286228-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rayo Vallecano season, Players\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286228-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rayo Vallecano season, Players, 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286228-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rayo Vallecano 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286229-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. Women season\nThe 2018\u201319 Reading F.C. Women season was the club's 12th season and their third in the FA Women's Super League, the highest level of the football pyramid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286229-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. Women season, Season events\nOn 2 July, Reading announced that Jade Moore, Jo Potter and Remi Allen had all extended their contracts with Reading for the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286229-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. Women season, Season events\nOn 5 July, Reading announced the signing of Rachael Laws from Sunderland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286229-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. Women season, Season events\nOn 9 July, Reading announced the double signing of Gemma Davison and Sophie Howard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286229-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. Women season, Season events\nOn 22 July, Reading signed Millie Farrow from Bristol City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286229-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. Women season, Season events\nOn 23 July, Reading signed Maz Pacheco from Doncaster Rovers Belles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286229-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. Women season, Season events\nOn 28 January, Reading announced the signing of Rakel H\u00f6nnud\u00f3ttir from Limhamn Bunkeflo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286229-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. Women season, Season events\nOn 4 April, Lauren Bruton extended her contract with Reading until the summer of 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286229-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. Women season, Season events\nOn 9 May, Fara Williams signed a new contract with Reading for the 2019\u201320 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Reading's 148th year in existence and sixth consecutive season in the Championship, and covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season\nOn 18 May 2018, Reading announced that they would be taking part in a six-day pre-season training camp in Bad Erlach, Austria, with two friendlies scheduled to be played against as yet un-confirmed opposition. The EFL Cup first round draw took place on 15 June 2018, in Vietnam, drawing Reading at home against Birmingham City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season, Transfers and contracts\nReading announced their first summer signing on 17 May 2018, Andy Yiadom signed a four-year contract with Reading, officially joining his new club on 1 July after the expiration of his Barnsley contract. Reading's second summer signing was announced on 5 June, with David Meyler signing a two-year contract, with the option of an additional year, on a free transfer from Hull City upon the conclusion of contract with them on 30 June. The following day, Reading announced that John O'Shea had signed a one-year contract to commence on 1 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 79], "content_span": [80, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season, Transfers and contracts\nOn 20 June, Reading announced that Andrija Novakovich had signed a new two-year contract with the club, and that he would spend the next season on loan at Eredivisie club Fortuna Sittard. Two days after, it was announced that goalkeeper Lewis Ward had also extended his contract with the club until the summer of 2020. On 2 July, Reading announced that youngsters Jamal Balogun, Andre Burley, Cameron Green, Adam Liddle, Akin Odimayo, Moroyin Omolabi and Jazz Wallace had all signed their first professional contracts with the club, whilst goalkeeper Luke Southwood had also signed a new two-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 79], "content_span": [80, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season, Transfers and contracts\nReading signed Marc McNulty from Coventry City, on 6 July, to a four-year contract for an undisclosed fee. Two days later, it was announced that Danzell Gravenberch had re-joined KSV Roeselare on loan for second successive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 79], "content_span": [80, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season, Transfers and contracts\nOn 10 July, Reading parted company with striker Yann Kermorgant by mutual agreement and Tennai Watson joined AFC Wimbledon on a season-long loan deal. Reading announced that they had signed Darren Sidoel from Ajax on a three-year contract on 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 79], "content_span": [80, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season, Transfers and contracts\nAcademy graduate J\u00f6kull Andr\u00e9sson agreed a two-year contract with Reading on 24 July, before joining Hungerford Town on loan until 1 January 2019. The following day, Joey van den Berg moved to NEC on a season-long loan deal, whilst Colchester United goalkeeper Sam Walker joined the club on a three-year deal. On 27 July, Lewis Ward joined Northampton Town on a season-long loan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 79], "content_span": [80, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season, Transfers and contracts\nSam Baldock signed a three-year contract with Reading, joining from Brighton and Hove Albion on 30 July. The following day, Reading confirmed that George Evans had moved to Derby County for an undisclosed fee and Sam Smith joined Oxford United on a season-long loan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 79], "content_span": [80, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season, Matches\nOn 30 June, Reading played their first pre-season fixture away at Eastleigh. The Royals lost the fixture 2\u20131, with the National League side scoring a late winner through Ben Williamson. Prior to this, Paul McCallum had put the hosts ahead in the first half, before Leandro Bacuna's equaliser. Reading played two different teams composed of first team players in either half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season, Matches\nOn 7 July, Reading faced League One outfit AFC Wimbledon at Kingsmeadow. Former-Royals loanee Kwesi Appiah put the hosts ahead, before Joe Pigott doubled their advantage just before the break. Adrian Popa and Sam Smith levelled the game with two goals in five minutes following the restart. Egli Kaja restored Wimbledon's lead, with Kane Crichlow wrapping up a 4\u20132 victory for the Dons with six minutes to play. As with the Eastleigh fixture, Reading fielded separate teams in either half. A 0\u20130 draw with Premier League Fulham followed a week later at the Recreation Ground in Aldershot. Twenty-one different players featured for Reading.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season, Matches\nAs part of the club's training camp in Bad Erlach, Austria, the Royals faced Turkish giants Be\u015fikta\u015f in Graz, as part of the Turks' preparation for their Europa League campaign. Ryan Babel and O\u011fuzhan \u00d6zyakup put Be\u015fikta\u015f into a two-goal lead in the second half, before Sam Smith and Mark McNulty levelled the contest in the final ten minutes. On the 20 July, Reading faced former Russian champions Rubin Kazan in Ilz with the sides playing out a 0\u20130 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season, Matches\nOn 28 July, Reading played their only home match of pre-season with the visit of Crystal Palace. The Premier League side won 4\u20130, with goals from Alexander S\u00f8rloth, Wilfried Zaha (two) and James Tomkins, rounding of a winless pre-season for Reading.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, August\nReading opened the season with a 2\u20131 home defeat against Derby County on 3 August. Reading opened the scoring in the 52nd minute through J\u00f3n Da\u00f0i B\u00f6\u00f0varsson, before Mason Mount equalised in the 60th minute and Tom Lawrence scored a last minute header to seal the victory for Derby County. Reading's second game of the season saw them travel to Nottingham Forest on 11 August. A single Hillal Soudani goal in the 68th minute saw the host emerge victorious, and Reading dropping to the foot of the table. On 14 August Reading hosted Birmingham City in the First Round of the EFL Cup, with goals from Yakou M\u00e9\u00eft\u00e9 and John Swift securing Reading's first win of the season and their place in the Second Round of the League Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, August\nOn 15 August, Axel Andr\u00e9sson signed a new contract with Reading until the summer of 2020, and then immediately joined Norwegian OBOS-ligaen club Viking FK on loan until the end of their season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, August\nOn 17 August, goalkeeper Liam Driscoll joined Hungerford Town on an emergency loan after J\u00f6kull Andr\u00e9sson was ruled out for a couple of week due to injury in a prior game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, August\nOn 20 August, Reading announced the signing of winger Josh Sims on a season-long loan deal from Southampton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, August\nOn 31 August, Reading announced that Saeid Ezatolahi had joined the club on a season-long loan deal from Rostov, and that Liam Moore had signed a new five-year contract, keeping him at Reading until the summer of 2023.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, September\nA 2\u20131 defeat to Sheffield Wednesday on 1 September means Reading suffer their most winless season in their 147-year history despite Liam Moore's late header in the 78th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, September\nOn 7 September, goalkeeper George Legg joined Aldershot Town on a one-month loan deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, September\nOn 12 September, Reading confirmed that Brian Tevreden had left the club to become Chief Executive at K.S.V. Roeselare, with Gianluca Nani taking over as Sporting Director.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, October\nOn 3 October, Reading announced that Yakou M\u00e9\u00efte had signed a new contract with Reading, until the summer of 2022.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, October\nOn 5 October 2018, Gabriel Osho joined Aldershot Town on loan until 4 November 2018, whilst Ade Shokunbi joined Billericay Town until January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, November\nOn 7 November, Gabriel Osho had his loan with Aldershot Town extended until the New Year, with Josh Barrett joining Osho at Aldershot Town on 10 November, signing an initial one-month loan dealOn 16 November, George Legg joined Braintree Town on a month-long loan deal, whilst Adam Liddle and Joel Rollinson signed youth loan moves with Eastbourne Borough until 16 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, November\nOn 19 November, Ron Gourlay left his role as CEO of Reading with immediate effect.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, December\nOn 3 December, Reading were drawn away to Manchester United by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, December\nPaul Clement was sacked as manager on 6 December, with U23 manager Scott Marshall taking temporary charge of the first team, and Gabriel Osho being recalled early from his loan deal with Aldershot Town. The following day, 7 December, Gianluca Nani left the club by mutual consent less than three months after joining Reading.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, December\nOn 16 December, young midfielder Tyler Frost joined Havant & Waterlooville on a month-long loan deal. On 20 December, Reading announced that Adrian Popa had moved to Ludogorets Razgrad on loan for the rest of the season, with Axel Andr\u00e9sson moving to Viking FK on permanent deal the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, December\nOn 21 December, Wealdstone announced the signing of Ramarni Medford-Smith on loan for one-month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, December\nFollowing Reading's 1\u20130 home defeat to Middlesbrough on 22 December, Reading announced the appointment of Jos\u00e9 Gomes as their new manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, December\nOn 24 December, goalkeeper Luke Southwood joined Eastleigh on a one-month loan deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, January, Transfers\nOn 29 December 2018, Oxford United announced that Sam Smith would return to Reading earl from his loan deal, after they'd activated a clause in the contract. On 3 January 2019, Pelle Clement left the club to join Eredivisie club PEC Zwolle, who were managed by Ex-Reading manager Jaap Stam. The following day Ben House joined Swindon Town on loan until the end of the season, whilst Darren Sidoel joined K.S.V. Roeselare on loan until the end if the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, January, Transfers\nOn 7 January, Reading announced that David Edwards had left the club to re-join Shrewsbury Town, whilst Josh Sims' loan deal had been ended early and he'd returned to Southampton, and Ovie Ejaria joined on loan until the end of the season from Liverpool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, January, Transfers\nOn 9 January, Lewis Baker joined Reading on loan for the remainder of the season from Chelsea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0033-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, January, Transfers\nOn 14 January, Reading announced that Lewis Ward's loan with Northampton Town had ended early, and that he would join Forest Green Rovers on loan for the remainder of the season. On 18 January, Reading announced that George Legg had joined Boreham Wood on loan until the end of the season, Sam Smith had joined Shrewsbury Town until the end of the season, and Tyler Frost and Ramarni Medford-Smith had extended their loans with Havant & Waterlooville and Wealdstone respectively for an additional month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0033-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, January, Transfers\nOn 22 January, Reading announced the singing of N\u00e9lson Oliveira on loan from Norwich City until the end of the season. The next day, 23 January, Emiliano Mart\u00ednez joined on loan from Arsenal for the remainder of the season. On 24 January, Luke Southwood extended his loan deal with Eastleigh until the end of the season. The following day Matt Miazga became the second Chelsea players to join Reading on loan for the rest of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0033-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, January, Transfers\nOn 29 January, Gabriel Osho joined Bristol Rovers on loan for the remainder of the season, whilst Tiago Ilori moved permanently to Sporting CP for an undisclosed fee. On 31 January, transfer deadline day, Leandro Bacuna left the club for Cardiff City on an undisclosed fee, and David Meyler and Marc McNulty left the club on loan for the remainder of the season, joining Coventry City and Hibernian respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0034-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, February\nOn 6 February, Salisbury announced that Liam Driscoll had joined them on loan, replacing follow Reading youth keeper James Hillson who'd moved to Arsenal on loan. On 10 February, Vito Mannone joined Minnesota United on loan terms which run until 1 January 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0035-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, February\nOn 25 February, Andy Rinomhota signed a new contract with Reading, lasting until the summer of 2022. The following day, Tom McIntyre, Teddy Howe and Jordan Holsgrove extended their contracts until the summer of 2021, Tom Holmes signed a new contract until the summer of 2022, and Sone Aluko moved to Beijing Renhe on loan until the end of the 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0036-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, March\nOn 12 March, Ryan East signed a new contract, until the summer of 2021, and made his first team debut against Leeds United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0037-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, April\nOn 17 April, Reading announced that Macron would be the team's new kit supplier for three seasons beginning at the start of the 2019\u201320 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0038-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, May\nOn 10 May Reading announced that they had offered new contracts to Tyler Frost, Adam Liddle, Ramarni Medford-Smith, Adam Desbois, Marcel Elva-Fountaine and Roberto Nditi and a first professional deal to Imari Samuels. Reading also confirmed that first team members George Legg, Anssi Jaakkola, Paul McShane, Danzell Gravenberch, Callum Harriott and Joey van den Berg would all leave the club following the completion of their contracts at the end of June, with John O'Shea retiring from football. Also leaving the club would be youngsters Jamal Balogun, Cameron Green, Moroyin Omolabi, Joel Rollinson, Ademola Shokunbi, Jazz Wallace, Jacob Pemberton, James Hillson. Shamar Moore, Terrance Saydee, Khalid Simmo and Thomas Stevens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0039-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, May\nOn 27 May 2019, Michael Olise was called up to the France at the 2019 Toulon Tournament, whilst the following day Danny Loader was called up to represent England, and Josh Barrett to represent Republic of Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0040-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Season review, May\nOn 28 May, youth team goalkeeper Coniah Boyce-Clarke agreed to sign a professional contract which Reading, until the summer of 2023, to commence the summer after his 17th birthday. On the same day, Claudio Osorio, Nelson Abbey and Malachi Talent-Aryeetey agreed to sign professional terms with the club once they turn 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286230-0041-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. 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-00286230-0042-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286230-0043-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Reading F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nThe second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286231-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Betis season\nDuring the 2018\u201319 season, Real Betis participated in La Liga, Copa del Rey and UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286231-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Betis 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-00286231-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Betis season, Players, Reserve team\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286231-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Betis 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286232-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Madrid Baloncesto season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Real Madrid's 88th in existence and the club's 36rd consecutive season in the top flight of Spanish basketball and the 12th consecutive season in the top flight of European basketball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286232-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Madrid Baloncesto season, Players, Squad information\nNote: Flags indicate national team eligibility at FIBA sanctioned events. Players may hold other non-FIBA nationality not displayed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286232-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Madrid Baloncesto season, Players, Depth chart\nColours: Blue = homegrown player; Red = non\u2013FIBA Europe player", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286232-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Madrid Baloncesto season, Competitions, Liga ACB, Results by round\nLast updated: 11 May 2019.Source: Competitive matchesGround: A = Away; H = Home; R = Rest. Result: L = Loss; W = Win; R = Rest; P = Postponed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 79], "content_span": [80, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286232-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Madrid Baloncesto season, Competitions, EuroLeague, Results summary\nLast updated: 1 April 2019.Source: Competitive matchesAll points scored in extra period(s) will not be counted in the standings, nor for any tie-break situation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 80], "content_span": [81, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286232-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Madrid Baloncesto season, Competitions, EuroLeague, Results by round\nLast updated: 5 April 2019.Source: Competitive matchesGround: A = Away; H = Home; R = Rest. Result: L = Loss; W = Win; R = Rest; P = Postponed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 81], "content_span": [82, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286233-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Madrid CF season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Real Madrid Club de F\u00fatbol's 115th season in existence and the club's 88th consecutive season in the top flight of Spanish football. It covered a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019. The season is widely described as one of the worst seasons in the club's modern history. The season was the first since 2008\u201309 without Cristiano Ronaldo, who departed to join Juventus in the summer of 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286233-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Madrid CF season, Summary, Pre-season\nAfter Zinedine Zidane's departure, Madrid announced on 12 June 2018, that Julen Lopetegui would take over the head coaching position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286233-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Madrid CF season, Summary, Pre-season\nOn 22 June 2018, Madrid announced their first signing of the season, adding Andriy Lunin to the squad. On 5 July 2018, Madrid signed \u00c1lvaro Odriozola. Five days later, Madrid agreed to sell Cristiano Ronaldo to Juventus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286233-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Madrid CF season, Summary, Pre-season\nThibaut Courtois joined Madrid on 8 August 2018 from Chelsea, while Mateo Kova\u010di\u0107 moved to Chelsea on loan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286233-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Madrid CF season, Summary, August\nThe season started on 15 August, with the 2018 UEFA Super Cup against Atl\u00e9tico Madrid. The game was lost 2\u20134 after extra time. Karim Benzema and Sergio Ramos gave Madrid the 2\u20131 lead up until ten minutes before the end of the game. It was the first European finals loss after nine wins. The new La Liga season started with a 2\u20130 victory against Getafe four days later, with goals from Dani Carvajal and Gareth Bale. Against Girona, Madrid came out with a 4\u20131 victory from behind, with a brace from Benzema and goals from Ramos and Bale. On 29 August 2018, Mariano D\u00edaz returned to Madrid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286233-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Madrid CF season, Summary, September\nOn the first day of the new month, a brace from Benzema and goals from Bale and Ramos secured Madrid three points in a 4\u20131 win over Legan\u00e9s. The away game at Athletic Bilbao, on 15 September 2018, ended in a 1\u20131 draw with the lone goal coming from Isco. Four days later, in the first match of group stage of the 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Madrid defeated Roma 3\u20130 after goals from Bale, Isco and Mariano. Marco Asensio scored the lonely goal in a 1\u20130 win over RCD Espanyol, just three days later. The first loss of the league season came on 26 September 2018, against Sevilla, losing 0\u20133. In the first league Madrid Derby against Atl\u00e9tico, the match ended in a goalless draw three days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286233-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Madrid CF season, Summary, October\nOn 2 October 2018, the Champions League match at CSKA Moscow ended in a 0\u20131 loss. Four days later, against Deportivo Alav\u00e9s, Madrid lost again 0\u20131. Their next game was a 1\u20132 loss against Levante UD on 20 October 2018, with the lone goal coming from Marcelo. The Champions League match, three days later, against Viktoria Plze\u0148 ended in a 2\u20131 win with goals from Benzema and Marcelo. Five days later, El Cl\u00e1sico was lost 1\u20135 with the goal coming from Marcelo. On 29 October 2018, Lopetegui was sacked and replaced by Santiago Solari. On the last day of the month, Madrid took on UD Melilla in the Copa del Rey round of 32 and won 4\u20130 after goals from Benzema, Asensio, Odriozola and Cristo Gonz\u00e1lez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286233-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Madrid CF season, Summary, November\nOn 3 November 2018, a penalty from Ramos and a goal from Vin\u00edcius J\u00fanior gave Madrid a 2\u20130 victory over Real Valladolid. Four days later, the return game at Viktoria Plze\u0148 in the Champions League ended with a 5\u20130 win, Benzema scored a brace and Bale, Casemiro and Toni Kroos each added one goal. Madrid defeated Celta Vigo 4\u20132 on 11 November 2018, after a goal from Benzema, Ramos, Dani Ceballos and an own goal. Solari became the official coach on 13 November 2018, after signing a contract through 2021. The away game at SD Eibar on 24 November 2018, was lost 0\u20133. The Champions League match at Roma was won 2\u20130 by goals from Bale and Lucas V\u00e1zquez. With that win, Madrid advance to the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286233-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Madrid CF season, Summary, December\nOn the first day of the month, an own goal and a goal from V\u00e1zquez secured Madrid three points after a 2\u20130 win over Valencia CF. The return leg of the Copa del rey round of 32 tie against Melilla on 6 December 2018, was won 6\u20131 to give Madrid a 10\u20131 victory on aggregate. Goals were scored with braces from Asensio and Isco plus goals from Vin\u00edcius and Javi S\u00e1nchez. Three days later, a Bale goal gave Real a 1\u20130 victory over SD Huesca.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286233-0008-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Madrid CF season, Summary, December\nMadrid suffered a 0\u20133 loss against CSKA Moscow in the last matchday of the Champions League group stage. A lone goal by Benzema helped Madrid to win 1\u20130 against Rayo Vallecano on 15 December 2018. On 19 December 2018, the semifinal of the 2018 FIFA Club World Cup was won 3\u20131 against Kashima Antlers with a hat-trick from Bale. The final three days later was won 4\u20131 against Al-Ain after goals from Luka Modri\u0107, Marcos Llorente, Ramos and an own goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286233-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Madrid CF season, Summary, January\nIn the first game of the new year on 3 January 2019, Madrid drew Villarreal 2\u20132 with goals from Benzema and Rapha\u00ebl Varane. Three days later, the match against Real Sociedad was lost 0\u20132. On 6 January 2019, Madrid announced the signing of Brahim D\u00edaz. Goals from Ramos, V\u00e1zquez and Vin\u00edcius gave Madrid a 3\u20130 first leg win against Legan\u00e9s on 9 January 2019, in the round of 16 in the Copa del Rey. On 13 January 2019, a late goal from Ceballos gave Madrid a 2\u20131 away win against Real Betis after Modri\u0107 scored the other goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286233-0009-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Madrid CF season, Summary, January\nDespite an 0\u20131 loss in the second leg three days later, an aggregate 3\u20131 victory over Legan\u00e9s secured Madrid a place in the quarterfinals of the Copa del Rey. Kiko Casilla joined Leeds United on 17 January 2019. Two days later, Madrid defeated Sevilla 2\u20130 with goals from Casemiro and Modri\u0107. A brace from Ramos and added goals by V\u00e1zquez and Benzema helped Madrid to get a 4\u20132 first leg victory over Girona in the quarterfinals of the Copa del Rey on 24 January. Three days later, Real recorded another 4\u20132 victory, this time over Espanyol, with two goals from Benzema and goals from Ramos and Bale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286233-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Madrid CF season, Summary, February\nOn 3 February, Madrid won 3\u20130 against Alav\u00e9s after goals from Benzema, Vinicius and Mariano. The first leg of the semifinals of the Copa del Rey against Barcelona on 6 February, ended in a 1\u20131 draw after V\u00e1zquez gave Madrid the lead. Three days later, Real won the Derby against Atl\u00e9tico 3\u20131 after goals from Casemiro, Ramos and Bale to move up to the second place. In the first leg of the Champions League round of 16 against AFC Ajax on 13 February, Madrid came away with a 2\u20131 away win with goals from Benzema and Asensio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286233-0010-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Madrid CF season, Summary, February\nFour days later, Girona defeated Madrid with a score of 2\u20131, with the lone goal coming from Casemiro. A 2\u20131 victory over Levante was recorded on 24 February, after goals from Benzema and Bale, both being penalties. Three days later, Madrid was knocked by Barcelona of the Copa del rey after a 0\u20133 second leg defeat, resulting in a 1\u20134 aggregate loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286233-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Madrid CF season, Summary, March\nThe next Cl\u00e1sico on 2 March was lost 0\u20131. Three days later, in the return leg in the Champions League round of 16 against Ajax, Madrid suffered a 1\u20134 home loss and was eliminated with 3\u20135 on aggregate. On 10 March, the game against Valladolid was won 4\u20131 after a brace from Benzema and goals from Varane and Modri\u0107. Zidane returned as the head coach the next day while Solari was sacked. On 16 March, Celta Vigo was defeated 2\u20130 with goals from Isco and Bale. On the last day of the month, goals from Isco, Ceballos and a late one from Benzema secured Madrid three points in a 3\u20132 win over Huesca.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286233-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Madrid CF season, Summary, April\nOn 3 April, the away game at Valencia was lost 1\u20132, with the lone goal coming from Benzema. Three days later, a brace from Benzema secured Madrid a 2\u20131 win over Eibar. On 15 April, Madrid got a 1\u20131 draw at Legan\u00e9s with a goal from Benzema. A hat-trick from Benzema secured Madrid a 3\u20130 win over Athletic Bilbao on 21 April 2019. At Getafe, on 25 April, Madrid was held to a scoreless draw. Three days later, the away game at Vallecano was lost 0\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286233-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Madrid CF season, Summary, May\nOn 5 May, Madrid defeated Villarreal 3\u20132 with a brace from Mariano and a goal from Jes\u00fas Vallejo. A week later, the away game at Real Sociedad was lost 1\u20133, with the lone goal coming from Brahim D\u00edaz. With that result, it was secured that Real finishes the season in third place. The last game of the season was lost 0\u20132 against Real Betis on 19 May 2019. A day later, Kroos signed a new contract until 2023.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286233-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Madrid CF season, Competitions\nTimes from 1 July to 27 October 2018 and from 31 March to 30 June 2019 are UTC+2, from 28 October 2018 to 30 March 2019 UTC+1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286233-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Madrid CF season, Statistics, Goals\n1 Includes 2018 UEFA Super Cup, 2018 FIFA Club World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286233-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Madrid CF season, Statistics, Clean sheets\n1 Includes 2018 UEFA Super Cup, 2018 FIFA Club World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286233-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Madrid CF season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nLast updated: 19 May 2019Source: 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, 62], "content_span": [63, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286233-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Madrid CF season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\n1 Includes 2018 UEFA Super Cup, 2018 FIFA Club World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286234-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Oviedo season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is the 36th season in Segunda Divisi\u00f3n played by Real Oviedo, a Spanish football club based in Oviedo, Asturias. It covers a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286234-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Oviedo season, Players, 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286234-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Oviedo season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nLast updated: 13 June 2019Source: and 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286235-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Sociedad season\nThe 2018\u201319 Real Sociedad season was the club's 72nd season in La Liga. This article shows player statistics and all matches (official and friendly) played by the club during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286235-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Sociedad season\nThe season was the first since 2002-03 without Xabi Prieto, who retired after the 2017-18 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286235-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Sociedad 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286235-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Sociedad season, Players, Reserve team\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286235-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Sociedad 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286236-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Valladolid season\nDuring the 2018\u201319 season, Real Valladolid are participating in La Liga and Copa del Rey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286236-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Valladolid 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286236-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Valladolid season, Players, 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286236-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Real Valladolid 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286237-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Red Star Belgrade season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Red Star's 13th in the Serbian SuperLiga and 73rd consecutive season in the top flight of Yugoslav and Serbian football. The club participated in the Serbian SuperLiga, the Serbian Cup and the UEFA Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286237-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Red Star Belgrade season, Squad, Goalscorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286237-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Red Star Belgrade season, Squad, Clean sheets\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total clean sheets are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286238-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Regional Four Day Competition\nThe 2018\u201319 Regional Four Day Competition was the 53rd edition of the Regional Four Day Competition, the domestic first-class cricket competition for the countries of the Cricket West Indies (CWI). The competition started on 6 December 2018 and concluded on 10 March 2019. Six teams contested the tournament \u2013 Barbados, Guyana, Jamaica, the Leeward Islands, Trinidad and Tobago, and the Windward Islands. Guyana were the defending champions. The players' draft for the tournament took place in May 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286238-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Regional Four Day Competition\nAhead of the final round of fixtures, Guyana had a 23-point lead over their nearest rivals, the Leeward Islands, with the Leeward Islands needing to score the maximum of 24 points in their last game to win the tournament. Guyana were confirmed as champions, after the Leeward Islands were bowled out for 90 runs in the first innings of their final match. The Leeward Islands would then go on to declare their second innings on 83/2, still 18 runs behind Barbados, and therefore lose the match. This was in an attempt to finish ahead of Barbados in the final table, but with a miscalculation on the points required, the Leeward Islands finished 0.2 points behind Barbados.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286238-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Regional Four Day Competition, Squads\nPrior to the start of the tournament, the following squads were selected in the Professional Cricket League draft:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286239-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Regional Super50\nThe 2018\u201319 Regional Super50 was the 45th edition of the Regional Super50, the domestic limited-overs cricket competition for the countries of the Cricket West Indies (CWI). The tournament started on 3 October 2018. The players' draft for the tournament took place in May 2018. The Windward Islands were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286239-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Regional Super50\nIn August 2018, both the United States national cricket team and the Canada national cricket team were invited to compete. Their participation was confirmed the following month. They were joined by the six regular teams of West Indian domestic cricket (Barbados, Guyana, Jamaica, the Leeward Islands, Trinidad and Tobago, and the Windward Islands), the Combined Campuses and Colleges team and the West Indies B cricket team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286239-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Regional Super50\nOn 6 October 2018, Chris Gayle played in his final List A cricket match for Jamaica, scoring a century, with Jamaica beating Barbados by 33 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286239-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Regional Super50\nFollowing the conclusion of the group stage, Guyana and Trinidad and Tobago from Group A along with Combined Campuses and Colleges and Jamaica from Group B had all progressed to the knockout stage of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286239-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Regional Super50\nIn the first semi-final, Guyana beat Jamaica by one wicket, with Guyana's captain, Leon Johnson, scoring his first century in List A cricket. In the second semi-final, Combined Campuses and Colleges beat Trinidad and Tobago by seven wickets, with Akeem Jordan taking a five-wicket haul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286239-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Regional Super50\nIn the final, Combined Campuses and Colleges beat Guyana by six wickets to win their first Regional Super50 title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286239-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Regional Super50, Squads\nPrior to the start of the tournament, players were selected in the Professional Cricket League draft: In September 2018, Cricket West Indies (CWI) confirmed the final squads for the tournament. Cricket Canada announced their squad on 1 October 2018. The squad for the United States was named two days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286240-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Regionalliga\nThe 2018\u201319 Regionalliga is the eleventh season of the Regionalliga, the seventh under the new format, as the fourth tier of the German football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286240-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Regionalliga, Format\nA new promotion format was used this season. The champions of the Regionalliga Nordost and S\u00fcdwest were promoted directly to the 2019\u201320 3. Liga, as well as the champion of a third league determined in a draw. The other two champions participated in the promotion play-offs to determine the fourth promoted team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286240-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Regionalliga, Format\nThe draw to determine which league got the final direct promotion spot (Bayern, Nord or West), along with the pairing order of the promotion play-offs took place on 27 April 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286240-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Regionalliga, Regionalliga Nord\n18 teams from the states of Bremen, Hamburg, Lower Saxony and Schleswig-Holstein competed in the seventh season of the reformed Regionalliga Nord. Werder Bremen II was relegated from the 2017\u201318 3. Liga. Lupo Martini Wolfsburg and VfL Oldenburg were promoted from the 2017\u201318 Niedersachsenliga and Holstein Kiel II was promoted from the 2017\u201318 Schleswig-Holstein-Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286240-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Regionalliga, Regionalliga Nord\nThe relegation process was reformed for this season. The regular scenario saw the bottom three clubs relegated. They were replaced by the champions of the Niedersachsenliga, while the champions of the Bremen-Liga, Oberliga Hamburg and Schleswig-Holstein-Liga played a round-robin play-off for the remaining two places. The fifteenth-placed club played off against the Oberliga Niedersachsen runners-up for a final place in the Regionalliga. This scenario varied depending on promotion to and relegation from the 3. Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286240-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Regionalliga, Regionalliga Nordost\n18 teams from the states of Berlin, Brandenburg, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt and Thuringia competed in the seventh season of the reformed Regionalliga Nordost. Chemnitzer FC and Rot-Wei\u00df Erfurt were relegated from the 2017\u201318 3. Liga. Optik Rathenow was promoted from the 2017\u201318 NOFV-Oberliga Nord and Bischofswerdaer FV was promoted from the 2017\u201318 NOFV-Oberliga S\u00fcd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286240-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Regionalliga, Regionalliga West\n18 teams from North Rhine-Westphalia competed in the seventh season of the reformed Regionalliga West. TV Herkenrath was promoted from the 2017\u201318 Mittelrheinliga, SV Straelen was promoted from the 2017\u201318 Oberliga Niederrhein and SV Lippstadt and 1. FC Kaan-Marienborn were promoted from the 2017\u201318 Oberliga Westfalen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286240-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Regionalliga, Regionalliga West, Westphalian DFB-Pokal play-off\nAs the Westphalian Football and Athletics Association is one of three regional associations with the most participating teams in their league competitions, they are allowed to enter a second team for the 2019\u201320 DFB-Pokal (in addition to the Westphalian Cup winners). A play-off took place between the best-placed eligible (non-reserve) Westphalian team of the Regionalliga West and the best-placed eligible team of the Oberliga Westfalen, with the winners qualifying for the DFB-Pokal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 71], "content_span": [72, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286240-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Regionalliga, Regionalliga S\u00fcdwest\n18 teams from Baden-W\u00fcrttemberg, Hesse, Rhineland-Palatinate and Saarland competed in the seventh season of the Regionalliga S\u00fcdwest. FC 08 Homburg and FK Pirmasens were promoted from the 2017\u201318 Oberliga Rheinland-Pfalz/Saar, TSG Balingen was promoted from the 2017\u201318 Oberliga Baden-W\u00fcrttemberg and Hessen Dreieich was promoted from the 2017\u201318 Hessenliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286240-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Regionalliga, Regionalliga Bayern\n18 teams from Bavaria competed in the seventh season of the Regionalliga Bayern. SV Heimstetten was promoted from the 2017\u201318 Bayernliga S\u00fcd and Viktoria Aschaffenburg was promoted from the 2017\u201318 Bayernliga Nord.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286240-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Regionalliga, Regionalliga Bayern, Relegation play-offs, Second round\nSince Bayern Munich II were promoted to the 3. Liga, the losers from the first round played for another Regionalliga spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 77], "content_span": [78, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286240-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Regionalliga, Promotion play-offs\nThe participants and pairing order for the 2018\u201319 promotion play-offs was determined by a draw held on 27 April 2018. The first leg was played on 22 May and the second leg on 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286241-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rhode Island Rams men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Rhode Island Rams basketball team represented the University of Rhode Island during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Rams, led by first-year head coach David Cox, played their home games at the Ryan Center in Kingston, Rhode Island as members of the Atlantic 10 Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286241-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rhode Island Rams men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Rams finished the 2017\u201318 season 26\u20138, 15\u20133 in A-10 play to finish win the A-10 regular season championship. They defeated VCU and Saint Joseph's to advance to the championship game of the A-10 Tournament where they lost to Davidson. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they defeated Oklahoma in the First Round before losing in the Second Round to Duke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286241-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rhode Island Rams men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn March 22, 2018, it was announced that head coach Dan Hurley had accepted the head coaching job at Connecticut. On April 4, assistant coach David Cox was promoted to head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286242-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rhode Island Rams women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Rhode Island Rams women's basketball team will represent the University of Rhode Island during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Rams were led by fifth year head coach Daynia La-Force. The Rams were members of the Atlantic 10 Conference and play their home games at the Ryan Center. They finished the season 8\u201321, 3\u201313 in A-10 to finish in a tie for last place. They lost in the first round of the A-10 Women's Tournament to Duquesne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286242-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rhode Island Rams women's basketball team\nOn March 12, Daynia La-Force was fired. She finished at Rhode Island with an 5-year record of 46\u2013102.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286242-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rhode Island Rams women's basketball team, 2018\u201319 media\nAll Rams home games and most conference road games that aren't televised will be shown on the A-10 Digital Network.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 64], "content_span": [65, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286243-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rice Owls men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Rice Owls men's basketball team represented Rice University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Owls, led by second-year head coach Scott Pera, played their home games at Tudor Fieldhouse in Houston, Texas as members of Conference USA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286243-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rice Owls men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Owls finished the 2017\u201318 season 7\u201324, 4\u201314 in C-USA play to finish in 13th place and failed to qualify for the C-USA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286244-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rice Owls women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Rice Owls women's basketball team represented Rice University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Owls, led by fourth year head coach Tina Langley, played their home games at the Tudor Fieldhouse and were members of Conference USA. They finished the season 28\u20134, 16\u20130 in C-USA play to win the C-USA regular season championship. They also won the C-USA Women's Tournament to earn an automatic trip to the NCAA Women's Tournament which was their first trip since 2005. They lost in the first round to Marquette in an overtime thriller. With 28 wins, they finished with the most wins in school history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286244-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rice Owls women's basketball team\nOn February 18, 2019, the Owls entered the AP Top 25 at No. 25. It was the Owls' first time being ranked in the AP Poll in program history. Rice won the Conference USA tournament championship game over Middle Tennessee, 69\u201354. Nancy Mulkey was named the tournament's Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286245-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Richmond Spiders men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Richmond Spiders men's basketball team represented the University of Richmond during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They were led by 14th-year head coach Chris Mooney and played their home games at the Robins Center Richmond as members of the Atlantic 10 Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286245-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Richmond Spiders men's basketball team\nThe Spiders finished the season 13\u201320, 6\u201312 in A-10 play to finish in a tie with Saint Joseph's for tenth place. As the No. 11 seed in the A-10 Tournament, they defeated Fordham in the first round before losing to Saint Louis in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286245-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Richmond Spiders men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Spiders finished the 2017\u201318 season 12\u201320, 9\u20139 in A-10 play to finish in a four-way tie for fifth place. As the No. 7 seed in the A-10 Tournament, they defeated Duquesne in the second round before losing to St. Bonaventure in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286246-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Richmond Spiders women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Richmond Spiders women's basketball team represents the University of Richmond during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Spiders, led by fourteenth year head coach Michael Shafer, play their home games at the Robins Center and were members of the Atlantic 10 Conference. They finished the season 9\u201321, 6\u201310 in A-10 play to finish in eleventh place. They lost in the first round of the A-10 Women's Tournament to Saint Louis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286246-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Richmond Spiders women's basketball team\nIt was announced that on March 10 that Shafer would not return, ending his 14-year coaching tenure at Richmond. Shafer leaves as the all-time winningest coach of the program with 223 wins, but never led the Spiders to the NCAA tournament during his time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286246-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Richmond Spiders women's basketball team, 2018\u201319 media\nAll Spiders games are broadcast on WTVR 6.3 with Robert Fish on the call. The games are also streamed on 2016-10-07 at the Wayback Machine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 63], "content_span": [64, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286247-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rider Broncs men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Rider Broncs men's basketball team represented Rider University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at the Alumni Gymnasium in Lawrenceville, New Jersey as members of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference, and were led by seventh year head coach Kevin Baggett. They finished the 2018\u201319 season 16\u201315 overall, 11\u20137 in MAAC play to finish in a four-way tie for second place. As the 4th seed in the 2019 MAAC Tournament, they were defeated by No. 5 seed Siena 81\u201387 in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286247-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rider Broncs men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Broncs finished the 2017\u201318 season 22\u201310, 15\u20133 in MAAC play to finish in a tie for first place with Canisius. After tie breakers, they were the No. 1 seed in the MAAC Tournament where they were upset in the quarterfinals by Saint Peter's. As a regular season conference champion, and No. 1 seed in their conference tournament, who failed to win their conference tournament, they received an automatic bid to the National Invitation Tournament where they lost in the First Round to Oregon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286248-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rink Hockey Euroleague\nThe 2018\u201319 Rink Hockey Euroleague is the 54th season of Europe's premier club roller hockey tournament organised by World Skate Europe-Rink Hockey Committee, and the 22nd season since it was renamed from European Champion Clubs' Cup to Euroleague.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286248-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rink Hockey Euroleague\nThe defending champions Barcelona were eliminated by Porto in the semi-finals. In the final, Sporting CP beat Porto 5\u20132 to win their second trophy in the competition, while Porto lost their 10th consecutive final and 12th overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286248-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rink Hockey Euroleague, Team allocation, Association ranking\nFor the 2018\u201319 Rink Hockey Euroleague, the associations were allocated places according to their coefficient, which takes into account the performance of each association's representative teams in European competitions between the 2014\u201315 and the 2017\u201318 seasons. The coefficient is calculated by dividing the total of points accumulated by the number of participating teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 68], "content_span": [69, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286248-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rink Hockey Euroleague, Team allocation, Association ranking\nParticipation is reserved to teams from associations that have an effective capacity to organise annually their own national championships. They will all have at least one team entering the competition. To allocate the other nine places, the D'Hondt method was applied to the coefficient of each association. In case of withdrawals, priority would be given according to the order established by the D'Hondt method.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 68], "content_span": [69, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286248-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rink Hockey Euroleague, Team allocation, Teams\nLeague positions of the previous season shown in parentheses (TH: Title holders). As English champions King's Lynn resigned to its place, that was occupied by a fourth Italian team following the allocation criteria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286248-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rink Hockey Euroleague, Draw\nThe 16 teams were allocated into four pots, with the title holders, Reus Deportiu, being placed directly as head-team of the Group A. The other three seeded teams will be from the three top ranked federations according to these priorities:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 36], "content_span": [37, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286248-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rink Hockey Euroleague, Draw\nIn each group, teams played against each other home-and-away in a home-and-away round-robin format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 36], "content_span": [37, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286248-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rink Hockey Euroleague, Group stage\nThe 16 teams were allocated into four pots, with the title holders, Reus Deportiu, being placed as seeded team in the Group A automatically. The other 3 seeded teams, Porto, Barcelona and Amatori Lodi, were automatically placed in groups B, C and D, respectively. The rest of the teams were drawn into four groups of four, with the restriction that teams from the same association could not be drawn against each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286248-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rink Hockey Euroleague, Group stage\nIn each group, teams played against each other home-and-away in a home-and-away round-robin format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286248-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rink Hockey Euroleague, Group stage\nA total of six national associations were represented in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286248-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rink Hockey Euroleague, Knockout phase\nThe knockout phase comprises a quarter-final round and a final four tournament with two semi-finals and a final. In the quarter-finals, group stage winners play against group stage runners-up (other than the one from their own group), the latter hosting the first of two legs. The winners qualify for the final four tournament, which will take place at the ground of one of the four finalists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286248-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rink Hockey Euroleague, Knockout phase, Final four\nThe final four tournament is taking place at Pavilh\u00e3o Jo\u00e3o Rocha in Lisbon, Portugal, on 11\u201312 May 2019. The home ground of Sporting CP, one of the teams qualified for the final four, was selected as the host venue on 18 April. It is the first time that the Euroleague final four is played in this venue, and the second time it is hosted in Lisbon, after the 2016 edition was played at Benfica's Pavilh\u00e3o Fidelidade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286249-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rink Hockey European Female League\nThe 2018\u201319 Rink Hockey European Female League is the 13th season of Europe's premier female club roller hockey competition organized by CERH.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286249-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rink Hockey European Female League, Format\nFourteen teams joined the first round while title holders Gij\u00f3n and another team by luck of the draw, got a wildcard for the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 50], "content_span": [51, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286249-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rink Hockey European Female League, Results, Preliminary round\nThe first leg was played on 10 November and the second leg on 1 December 2018. Montreux got a wildcard for the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286249-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rink Hockey European Female League, Results, Quarterfinals\nThe first leg was played on 12 January 2019 and the second leg on 18 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286250-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rio Ave F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Rio Ave's eleventh season back in the Primeira Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286250-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rio Ave F.C. season, Season events\nDuring the pre-sason, manager Miguel Cardoso resigned on 13 June 2018, with Jos\u00e9 Gomes being appointed as his replacement the same day. Six months later, 22 December 2018, Gomes resigned to take the vacant manager's position at English Championship club Reading, with Daniel Ramos being appointed as his replacement on 1 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286250-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rio Ave 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286250-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rio Ave 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286251-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Robert Morris Colonials men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Robert Morris Colonials men's basketball team represented Robert Morris University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Colonials, led by ninth-year head coach Andrew Toole, played their home games at the North Athletic Complex in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania as members of the Northeast Conference. They finished the season 18\u201317, 11\u20137 in NEC play to finish in fourth place. As the No. 4 seed in the NEC Tournament, they defeated No. 5 seed St. Francis Brooklyn in the quarterfinals before losing in the semifinals to No. 2 seed Fairleigh Dickinson. They were invited to the 2019 CollgeInsider.com Postseason Tournament where they defeated Cornell in the first round before falling to Presbyterian College in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 817]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286251-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Robert Morris Colonials men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Colonials finished the 2017\u201318 season, 16\u201317, 9\u20139 in NEC play to finish in a tie for sixth place. As the No. 7 seed in the NEC Tournament, they upset No. 2 seed Mount St. Mary's in the quarterfinals, before losing in the semifinals to No. 1 seed Wagner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286252-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Robert Morris Colonials women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Robert Morris Colonials women's basketball team represents Robert Morris University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Colonials, led by third year head coach Charlie Buscaglia, play their home games at the North Athletic Complex, as members of the Northeast Conference. They finished the season 22\u201311, 16\u20132 in Northeast Conference play win the Northeast Conference regular season title. They won the Northeast Women's Tournament and earn an received automatic bid of the NCAA Women's Tournament where they lost to Louisville in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286253-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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 2018-19 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season. The Colonials won their third consecutive regular season title, but lost in the CHA Tournament Championship 6-2 to the Syracuse Orange.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286254-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rochdale A.F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Rochdale's 112th year in existence and their fifth consecutive season in League One. Along with competing in League One, the club participated in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286254-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rochdale A.F.C. season, Competitions, Friendlies\nOn 17 May 2018, Rochdale scheduled a friendly away to Tranmere Rovers for the following July. A match with Stalybridge Celtic was announced a day later, prior to a match versus Stockport County being set on 21 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286254-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rochdale A.F.C. season, Competitions, League One, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League One fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286254-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rochdale A.F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October. The draw for the second round was made live on BBC and BT by Mark Schwarzer and Glenn Murray on 12 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286254-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rochdale A.F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam. The second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286254-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rochdale A.F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced. The draw for the second round was made live on Talksport by Leon Britton and Steve Claridge on 16 November. On 8 December, the third round draw was drawn by Alan McInally and Matt Le Tissier on Soccer Saturday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286255-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ross County F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season seen the club's return to the Scottish Championship after being relegated from the Scottish Premiership, the top flight of Scottish football. On 26 April 2019 however, they were crowned Champions and made an immediate return to the Premiership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286255-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ross County F.C. season\nRoss County also be competed in the League Cup, the Scottish Cup and the Scottish Challenge Cup. They won the Challenge Cup beating Connah's Quay Nomads in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286255-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ross County F.C. season, Results & fixtures, Pre-season\n*Note: Games played on the same day and same time are played with two different squads led by two different managers. Fixtures are being played on the same day as to avoid preseason friendlies leaking into time taken up by the League Cup Group Stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286256-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rotherham United F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Rotherham United's 94th season in their existence and the first back in the Championship following promotion via the play-offs last season. The club will also participate in the FA Cup and the EFL Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286256-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rotherham United F.C. season, Key Events\nOn 13 March 2019, Rotherham won away at Queens Park Rangers, claiming their first away win of the season, and their first win in the EFL Championship in 44 attempts, the last being on 9 April 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286256-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rotherham United F.C. season, Key Events\nRelegation from the EFL Championship was confirmed on the penultimate weekend of the season, 27 April 2019, when Rotherham lost away at West Bromwich Albion after Millwall had drawn their game earlier in the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286256-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rotherham United F.C. season, Squad statistics, Player statistics\nPlayers with zero appearances have been unused substitutes in one or more games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 73], "content_span": [74, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286256-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rotherham United F.C. season, Pre-season friendlies\nThe first announcement from the club regarding pre-season friendlies came on 31 May 2018, when a game against Mansfield Town was confirmed. This was followed a day later by confirmation of the usual opening friendly with Parkgate. Later on 1 June, the club announced two split-squad friendlies on the same day against Stocksbridge Park Steels and Sheffield F.C.. On 5 June the club announced a friendly against Premier League opposition, with Neil Warnock's newly promoted Cardiff City being hosted at New York Stadium. On 2 July the club announced a home friendly against Grimsby Town. This was subsequently cancelled on 6 July due to insufficient police resources being available. On 4 July the opposition for two friendlies during the clubs Austrian training camp was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 841]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286256-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rotherham United F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286256-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rotherham United F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam. The second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286257-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rugby Europe Conference\nThe 2018\u201319 Rugby Europe Conference is the third-level rugby union competition below the premier Championship and Trophy competitions. It is the third Conference under its new format. After Lithuania was promoted to the Trophy and Moldova relegated at the end of the 2017\u201318 season, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Cyprus, Hungary, Israel, Luxembourg, Malta, Moldova, Sweden and Ukraine compete for the Conference 1 title. While after the relegation of Estonia and the promotion of Bulgaria, Andorra, Austria, Bulgaria, Denmark, Finland, Latvia, Norway, Serbia, Slovakia and Slovenia will compete for the Conference 2 title. Due to the relegation of a Conference 2 North team and the promotion of a Southern team, the Conference 2 Pools had to be reallocated. While Bulgaria joined the Conference 2 South, Austria switched pools to the Conference 2 North, replacing Estonia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 907]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286257-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rugby Europe Conference\nThe winners of Conference 1 North and South will play an additional match, a Conference 1-Trophy Promotion play-off for the right to play the 2019\u201320 Rugby Europe Trophy. While the bottom placed teams of Conference 1 North and South will be relegated to Conference 2 for the following season, replacing the North and South winners of Conference 2. The bottom placed team with the worse overall record will be relegated and participate in the 2019 Rugby Europe Development season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286257-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rugby Europe Conference\nUkraine was directly promoted to 2019\u201320 Rugby Europe Trophy, because Malta was not able to play the Conference 1-Trophy Promotion play-off game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286258-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rugby Europe International Championships\nThe 2018\u201319 Rugby Europe International Championships is the European Championship for tier 2 and tier 3 rugby union nations. The 2018\u201319 season is the third of its new format and structure, where all Levels play on a one-year cycle, replacing the old format of a two-year cycle, with the teams playing each other both home and away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286258-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rugby Europe International Championships\nAfter the eligibility controversy of the 2018 Championship season, and the following points deduction, Romania faced and defeated Portugal in the relegation play-off to determine the last competitor for the 2019 Championship edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286258-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rugby Europe International Championships, Countries\nPre -tournament World Rugby rankings in parentheses. Trophy as of 24 September 2018, Conferences as of 8 October 2018 and Championship rankings as of 4 February 2019. After winning the relegation play-off between the winner of the 2018 Trophy, Portugal, and the last placed 2018 Championship team, Romania, and the win by the latter Portugal remained on the Trophy level, whereas Romania stayed inside the Championship. Following the 2017\u201318 season and the promotion of Bulgaria as well as the relegation of Estonia, Rugby Europe reallocated Austria from Conference 2 South to Conference 2 North for the 2018\u201319 Conference season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 59], "content_span": [60, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286258-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rugby Europe International Championships, Countries\nLegend:* Champion of 2017\u201318 season; \u2191 Promoted from lower division during 2017\u201318 season; \u2022 Division Champion but not promoted during 2017\u201318 season; \u2021 Last place inside own division but not relegated during 2017\u201318 season; \u2193 Relegated from higher division during 2017\u201318 season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 59], "content_span": [60, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286259-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rugby Europe Trophy\nThe 2018\u201319 Rugby Europe Trophy is the second-level rugby union competition below the premier Championship. It is the third Trophy competition under its new format, that will see Czech Republic, Lithuania, Netherlands, Poland, and Switzerland compete for the title, and a place in the Championship-Trophy Promotion play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286259-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rugby Europe Trophy\nThis year's competition sees Lithuania joining the Trophy after winning the Trophy-Conference 1 Promotion play-off against Malta. After the Championship-Trophy Promotion play-off of the 2017-18 season, which was played on 3 November 2018 between Portugal and Romania after the eligibility case of the 2018 Rugby Europe Championship, Portugal remained on the Trophy level and lost the relegation play-off for the second year in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286260-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rugby Europe Women's Trophy\nThe 2018\u201319 Rugby Europe Women's Trophy was the 20th edition of Rugby Europe's second division competition for women's national rugby union teams. The tournament was contested by the Czech Republic, Finland and Switzerland as a round-robin played over two seasons in 2018 and 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286261-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rugby League European Championship C\nThe 2018\u201319 Rugby League European Championship C (known as Euro C) is the initial phase of European qualifying to the 2021 Rugby League World Cup. The series involves two pools of three teams in a round-robin tournament. These matches took place between 16 June and 15 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286261-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rugby League European Championship C\nThe final match took place on 18 May 2019, and saw Greece defeat Norway to progress to the next round of qualifying against Scotland and Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286261-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rugby League European Championship C, Final\nAt the draw for the groupings for the 2019 Rugby League European play-off tournament it was announced that the Championship C final will be played in London on 18 May 2019. The game was a curtain-raiser to the League 1 game between London Skolars and Doncaster game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286262-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rugby Pro D2 season\nThe 2018\u201319 Rugby Pro D2 was the second-level French rugby union club competition, behind the Top 14, for the 2018\u201319 season. It ran alongside the 2018\u201319 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, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286262-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rugby Pro D2 season\nOn 29 March 2019, Massy became the first side to be relegated, a narrow home defeat against Montauban condemning them to the drop with four games still left to play. The other relegation spot was much more keenly fought, going all the way to the last round, when on 5 May 2019 Bourg-en-Bresse were the second team to go down, despite winning their final game, just 1 point behind 14th placed Aurillac. Massy and Bourg-en-Bresse drop to F\u00e9d\u00e9rale 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286262-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rugby Pro D2 season\nThe promotion play-off final was between Brive (1st in the league stage) and Bayonne (3rd). As they had topped the league stage, Brive were slight favourites to make an instant return to the Top 14, while Bayonne had had two tough games including a memorable 38-34 semi-final away against league runners up, Oxonnax, who like Brive had also hoped to make an instant return to the Top 14. In the final held at the Stade du Hameau, Pau, Bayaonne shaded a close game, 21-19, to win their first ever Pro D2 title and return to the Top 14 after an absence of two seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286262-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rugby Pro D2 season\nDefeated finalists Brive had a second shot at promotion when they faced 2018\u201319 Top 14 13th placed side, Grenoble, in the relegation playoff. Brive won 28-22 to take Grenoble's place and join Bayonne in the 2019\u201320 Top 14. Grenoble and bottom club, Perpignan, would be relegated to the 2019\u201320 Rugby Pro D2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286262-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rugby Pro D2 season, Competition format\nThe regular season uses a double round-robin format, in which each team plays the others home and away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286262-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286262-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rugby Pro D2 season, Competition format\nStarting with the 2017\u201318 season, Pro D2 conducts a play-off system identical to the one currently used in Top 14, with the top six teams qualifying for the play-offs and the top two teams receiving byes into the semi-finals. The winner of the play-offs earns the league championship and automatic promotion to the next season's Top 14; the runner-up enters a play-off with the second-from-bottom Top 14 team, with the winner of that play-off taking up the final place in Top 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286262-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rugby Pro D2 season, Competition format\nThis replaced the previous system in which the top team at the end of the regular season was declared champion, also earning a Top 14 place, while the second- through fifth-place teams competed in promotion play-offs. The play-off semi-finals were played at the home ground of the higher-ranked team. The final was 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, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286262-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rugby Pro D2 season, Promotion, Pro D2 to Top 14\nAs noted above, both promotion places will be determined by play-offs from 2017\u201318 forward, with the winner of the Pro D2 play-offs earning promotion and the runner-up playing the second-from-bottom Top 14 team for the next season's final Top 14 place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286262-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rugby Pro D2 season, Promotion, F\u00e9d\u00e9rale 1 to Pro D2\nAt the same time, LNR and the French Rugby Federation (FFR) changed the promotion process from F\u00e9d\u00e9rale 1 to Pro D2. For three seasons (2017\u201318 to 2019\u201320), only one team will be promoted to Pro D2 through the F\u00e9d\u00e9rale 1 competition. The second promotion place will be a \"wild card\" granted by LNR to a club that meets the following criteria:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286262-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rugby Pro D2 season, Promotion, F\u00e9d\u00e9rale 1 to Pro D2\nStarting with the 2020\u201321 season, LNR will create a third professional league, slotting between Pro D2 and F\u00e9d\u00e9rale 1 in the league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286262-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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. In certain circumstances, \"financial reasons\" may cause a higher-placed team to be demoted instead, or bar a F\u00e9d\u00e9rale 1 team from promotion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286262-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rugby Pro D2 season, Table\nThe current table for the 2018\u201319 Rugby Pro D2 is:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286262-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rugby Pro D2 season, Relegation playoff\nThe team finishing in 13th place of the Top 14 faces the runner-up of Pro D2, with the winner of this match playing in the 2019\u201320 Top 14 and the loser in the 2019\u201320 Pro D2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286262-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rugby Pro D2 season, Leading scorers\nNote: Flags to the left of player names indicate national team as has been defined under World Rugby eligibility rules, or primary nationality for players who have not yet earned international senior caps. Players may hold one or more non-WR nationalities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286263-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Russian Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Russian Cup, also known as the Olimp Russian Cup was the 26th season of the Russian football knockout tournament since the dissolution of Soviet Union. The Russian Cup is organized by the Russian Football Union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286263-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Russian Cup\nThe competition started on 21 July 2018 and concluded on 22 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286263-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Russian Cup, Round of 32\nThe round of 32 was played from 25 September 2018 to 10 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286263-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Russian Cup, Round of 16\nThe round of 16 was played from 25 October 2018 to 1 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286263-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Russian Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs were played on 28 November 2018 and 6 December 2018. The second legs were played on 24 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286263-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Russian Cup, Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 3 April 2019. The second legs were played on 15 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286264-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Russian Football National League\nThe 2018\u201319 Russian National Football League was the 27th season of Russia's second-tier football league since the dissolution of the Soviet Union. The season began on 17 July 2018 and ended on 25 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286264-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Russian Football National League, Team changes, Excluded teams\nAmkar Perm and Tosno were excluded from Premier League due to financial problems, but were also refused a license for the 2018\u201319 Russian Professional Football League, being subsequently dissolved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286264-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Russian Football National League, Team changes, Excluded teams\nKuban Krasnodar was excluded from championship due to financial problems, then being dissolved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286264-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Russian Football National League, Team changes, Excluded teams\nArarat Moscow was promoted from 2017\u201318 PFL, but were refused a license for the 2018\u201319 Russian National Football League, the club being subsequently dissolved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286264-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Russian Football National League, Team changes, Teams spared from relegation\nZenit-2 Saint Petersburg, Rotor Volgograd, Luch Vladivostok, Tyumen and Fakel Voronezh were spared from relegation due to lack of teams enrolled for the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 84], "content_span": [85, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286264-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Russian Football National League, Team changes, Other teams\nSakhalin Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk finished on the promotion place at the end of the 2017\u201318 PFL season, but refused to be promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286264-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Russian Football National League, Team changes, Renamed teams\nDynamo Saint Petersburg was moved from Saint Petersburg to Sochi and renamed as PFC Sochi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286264-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Russian Football National League, 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, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286265-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Russian Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Russian Premier League was the 27th season of the premier football competition in Russia since the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the 16th under the current Russian Premier League name. Lokomotiv Moscow came into the season as the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286265-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Russian Premier League\nThe new logo was presented on 24 July 2018, there was no title sponsor announced for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286265-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Russian Premier League, Teams\nAs in the previous season, 16 teams will play in the 2018\u201319 season. After the 2017\u201318 season, Anzhi Makhachkala, Tosno and SKA-Khabarovsk were relegated to the 2018\u201319 Russian National Football League. They were replaced by three clubs from the 2017\u201318 Russian National Football League, Orenburg, Krylya Sovetov Samara, and Yenisey Krasnoyarsk. Orenburg and Krylya Sovetov returned after one season of absence while Yenisey make their debut in the Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286265-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Russian Premier League, Teams\nOn 13 June 2018, FC Amkar Perm announced that the Russian Football Union recalled their 2018\u201319 season license, making them ineligible for the Russian Premier League or Russian Football National League. FC Anzhi Makhachkala, which was already licensed for the 2018\u201319 Premier League before losing in the 2017\u201318 relegation play-offs, was eligible to stay in the league ahead of the other relegation play-off losing club, FC Tambov. Anzhi re-applied for the Premier League membership on 15 June and was officially re-admitted into the Premier League on 22 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286265-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Russian Premier League, Tournament format and regulations, Basic\nThe 16 teams will play 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 will be played, with 30 matches played by each team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 72], "content_span": [73, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286265-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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 2 in that league will be promoted to the Premier League for the 2019\u201320 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286265-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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 winners securing Premier League spots for the 2019\u201320 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286265-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Russian Premier League, Relegation play-offs\nThe draw for relegation play-offs scheduling took place on 16 May 2019. The referees (including VAR teams) were appointed on 27 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286265-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Russian Premier League, Relegation play-offs, Second leg\nFC Ufa won 2\u20131 on aggregate and retained their spot in the 2019\u201320 Russian Premier League; Tom Tomsk remained in the 2019\u201320 Russian National Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286265-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Russian Premier League, Relegation play-offs, Second leg\nKrylia Sovetov won 3\u20132 on aggregate and retained their spot in the 2019\u201320 Russian Premier League; Nizhny Novgorod remained in the 2019\u201320 Russian National Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286265-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Russian Premier League, Results, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches. In order to preserve chronological evolvements, any postponed matches are not included to the round at which they were originally scheduled, but added to the full round they were played immediately afterwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286265-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Russian Premier League, Attendances\nUpdated to games played on 29 April 2019Source: Notes:1: Team played last season in the Russian Football National League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286265-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Russian Premier League, Awards, Top 33\nOn 26 June 2019, Russian Football Union named its list of 33 top players:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286266-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rutgers Scarlet Knights men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Rutgers Scarlet Knights men's basketball team represented Rutgers University\u2013New Brunswick during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Scarlet Knights, led by third-year head coach Steve Pikiell, played their home games at the Louis Brown Athletic Center in Piscataway, New Jersey as fifth-year members of the Big Ten Conference. The Knights finished the season 14\u201317, 7\u201313 in Big Ten play to finish in a three-way tie for 10th place. In the Big Ten Tournament, they lost in the first round to Nebraska.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286266-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rutgers Scarlet Knights men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Knights finished the 2017\u201318 season 15\u201319, 3\u201315 in Big Ten play to finish in last place. In the Big Ten Tournament, they defeated Minnesota and Indiana before losing to Purdue in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286267-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rutgers Scarlet Knights women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Rutgers Scarlet Knights women's basketball team represents Rutgers University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Scarlet Knights, led by 24th year head coach C. Vivian Stringer, play their home games at the Louis Brown Athletic Center, better known as The RAC, as a member of the Big Ten Conference. They finished the season 22\u201310, 13\u20135 in Big Ten play to finish in third place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Big Ten Women's Tournament where they lost to Iowa. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Women's Tournament in the 7th seed in the Albany Regional where they got upset by Buffalo in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286268-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Rwanda Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Rwanda Premier League is the 42nd season of the Rwanda Premier League, the top-tier football league in Rwanda. The season started on 19 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286269-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 S.C. Braga season\nDuring the 2018\u201319 S.C. Braga season, the club competed in the Primeira Liga, Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Ta\u00e7a da Liga and UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286269-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 S.C. Braga season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286270-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 S.L. Benfica season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Sport Lisboa e Benfica's 115th season in existence and the club's 85th consecutive season in the top flight of Portuguese football. It started with the UEFA Champions League third qualifying round on 7 August 2018 and concluded on 18 May 2019 with Benfica becoming Primeira Liga champions for a record 37th time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286270-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 S.L. Benfica season\nInternationally, Benfica played in the Champions League group stage for the ninth successive time, a Portuguese record ranking fourth all-time. However, with two losses at Est\u00e1dio da Luz, they set a domestic record of five consecutive home matches without a win in the competition. After finishing third in their group, they moved to the UEFA Europa League knockout phase, where they reached the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286270-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 S.L. Benfica season, Pre-season friendlies\nOn 15 May 2018, Benfica announced their pre-season schedule (updated on 28 June), which included the following matches:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286271-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 S.P.A.L. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was S.P.A.L. 's second season in the top-flight of Italian football since 1968. After being promoted as champions of Serie B in the 2016\u201317 season, SPAL finished just above the relegation places in 17th during the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286271-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 S.P.A.L. season\nThe season was coach Leonardo Semplici's fifth in charge of the club, after taking over in December 2014. On 3 July Semplici extended his contract with SPAL to 2020, with the option for a further year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286272-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 S.S. Lazio season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 118th season in Societ\u00e0 Sportiva Lazio's history and their 31st consecutive season in the top-flight of Italian football. Lazio competed in Serie A, the Coppa Italia and the Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286272-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 S.S. Lazio season\nThe season was coach Simone Inzaghi's third in charge of the club, having led Lazio to consecutive fifth-placed finishes in the 2016\u201317 and 2017\u201318 seasons. Lazio won the 2018\u201319 Coppa Italia 2\u20130 over Atalanta, winning their seventh title overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286273-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 S.S.C. Napoli season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Societ\u00e0 Sportiva Calcio Napoli's 73rd season in Serie A. The team has competed in Serie A, and has competed in the Coppa Italia, the UEFA Champions League, and the UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286273-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 S.S.C. Napoli season\nCarlo Ancelotti replaced Maurizio Sarri at the helm after three seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286274-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SAFA Second Division\nThe 2018\u201319 SAFA Second Division (known as the ABC Motsepe League for sponsorship reasons) was the 21st season of the SAFA Second Division, the third tier for South African association football clubs, since its establishment in 1998. Due to the size of South Africa, the competition was split into nine divisions, one for each region. After the league stage of the regional competition was completed, the nine winning teams of each regional division entered the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286274-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SAFA Second Division\nJDR Stars won the playoff after defeating Steenberg United 1-0 in the final. Both teams were promoted to the National First Division, with JDR Stars earning R1 million, and Steenberg United R500,000, in prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286275-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SBV Vitesse season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Vitesse's 29th consecutive season in the top flight of Dutch football, the Eredivisie, and 126th year in existence as a football club. The season covered the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286275-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SBV Vitesse season, Friendlies\nFollowing the conclusion of the 2017\u201318 campaign, Vitesse announced they would play Wolfsberger AC, Shakhtar Donetsk, Arsenal Tula and Lokomotiv Moscow in July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286275-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SBV Vitesse season, Competitions, Eredivisie, Results\nThe fixtures for the 2018\u201319 season were announced in June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 61], "content_span": [62, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286275-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SBV Vitesse season, Competitions, UEFA Europa League\nOn 20 June 2018, the second qualifying round draw was confirmed with Vitesse facing the eventual winners of the first qualifying round tie between Racing FC and Viitorul Constan\u021ba in July and August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286276-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SC Freiburg season\nThe 2018\u201319 SC Freiburg season is the 115th season in the football club's history and 3rd consecutive and 19th overall season in the top flight of German football, the Bundesliga, having been promoted from the 2. Bundesliga in 2016. In addition to the domestic league, SC Freiburg also are participating in this season's edition of the domestic cup, the DFB-Pokal. This is the 64th season for Freiburg in the Schwarzwald-Stadion, located in Freiburg, Baden-W\u00fcrttemberg, Germany. The season covers a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286276-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SC Freiburg 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-00286277-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SD Eibar season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was SD Eibar's 79th season in existence and the club's fifth consecutive season in the top flight of Spanish football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286277-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SD Eibar 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286277-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SD Eibar 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286278-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SD Huesca season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Sociedad Deportiva Huesca's inaugural season in the Spanish top-flight after achieving a historic promotion in the previous season in Segunda Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286279-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SDHL season\nThe 2018\u201319 SDHL Season was the 12th season of the Swedish Women's Hockey League. The season began in September 2018 and ended in February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286279-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SDHL season\nLule\u00e5 HF/MSSK were the regular season champions for the fourth season in a row, and defeated Link\u00f6ping HC 3-2 in the playoff finals to be crowned playoff champions for the third time in the last four years. G\u00f6teborg HC and SDE Hockey finished at the bottom of the table, but were able to avoid relegation to Damettan in the playoffs to the SDHL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286279-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SDHL season, League business, Partnerships\nPrior to the beginning of the season, German company Axelent announced that they would redirect their sponsorship of HV71 away from the Champions Hockey League and towards HV71's women's side, after the men's side failed to qualify for the CHL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 50], "content_span": [51, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286279-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SDHL season, League business, Broadcasting\n12 regular season games were broadcast live by C More.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 50], "content_span": [51, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286279-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SDHL season, Significant events, Pre-season\nFrom the 30th of August to the 2nd of September, the Damcup Ume\u00e5 exhibition tournament was held in Ume\u00e5, in northern Sweden, between Lule\u00e5 HF/MSSK, Modo Hockey, Damettan team IF Bj\u00f6rkl\u00f6ven, and the Japanese national team. Lule\u00e5 were crowned winners of the tournament after winning all three of their games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 51], "content_span": [52, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286279-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SDHL season, Significant events, Pre-season\nAt the end of September, the first Champions Cup was held in New Jersey between Lule\u00e5 and the Metropolitan Riveters, the reigning NWHL champions. Lule\u00e5 won the cup with a 4-2 victory, although the Riveters were missing a number of players due to injuries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 51], "content_span": [52, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286279-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SDHL season, Significant events, Post-season\nOn the 31st of March 2019, the Canadian Women's Hockey League announced that it was folding. In response, the league's players announced a strike movement titled ForTheGame, which led to the creation of the PWHPA. On the 10th of May, Kelty Apperson became the first ForTheGame player to sign a contract in Sweden, joining SDE Hockey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286279-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SDHL season, Significant events, Post-season\nIn July 2019, it was announced that the 2019 4 Nations Cup was due to be held in Lule\u00e5. In September, the Cup was cancelled due to the uncertainty surrounding the Swedish players' strike as well as the events\u00a0in North America.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286279-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SDHL season, Standings\nEach team played 36 regular season games, with three points being awarded for winning in regulation time, two points for winning in overtime or shootout, one point for losing in overtime or shootout, and zero points for losing in regulation time. At the end of the regular season, the team that finishes with the most points is crowned the league champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286280-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SEHA League\nThe 2018\u201319 SEHA League season was the eighth season of the SEHA (South East Handball Association) League and fifth under the sponsorship of the Russian oil and gas company Gazprom. Ten teams from seven countries (Belarus, Croatia, North Macedonia, Serbia, Slovakia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Romania) were participating in this year's competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286280-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SEHA League\nVardar were the defending champions. The SEHA League consists of two phases \u2013 the first one has 18 rounds in which all teams played one home and one away games against each other. Afterwards, the four best ranked clubs played on the Final Four tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286280-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SEHA League\nFinal four tournament was held in Brest, Republic of Belarus, on 2nd and 3rd of April. RK Vardar defeated PPD Zagreb 26\u201323 in the final to win their fifth title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286280-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SEHA League, Team information, Personnel and kits\nFollowing is the list of clubs competing in 2018\u201319 SEHA League, with their manager, team captain, kit manufacturer and shirt sponsor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 57], "content_span": [58, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286280-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SEHA League, Final Four\nThe SEHA - Gazprom League Executive Committee had made the decision for the final four tournament to be held at the Universal Sports Complex Victoria in Brest, Republic of Belarus, on 2nd and 3rd of April. The first-placed team of the standings faced the fourth-placed team, and the second-placed team played against the third-placed team from the standings in the Final Four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286281-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SHL season\nThe 2018\u201319 SHL season was the 44th season of the Swedish Hockey League (SHL). The regular season began in September 2018 and ended in March 2019. It was followed by the Swedish Championship playoffs and the relegation playoffs. The league consisted of 14 teams. The only new addition for this season was Timr\u00e5 IK, who replaced Karlskrona HK after defeating them in the 2018 SHL qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286281-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SHL season\nF\u00e4rjestad BK won the regular season, and Fr\u00f6lunda HC won the Swedish Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286281-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SHL season, Regular season, Standings\nEach team plays 52 games, playing each of the other thirteen teams four times: twice on home ice, and twice away from home. Points are awarded for each game, where three points are awarded for winning in regulation time, two points for winning in overtime or shootout, one point for losing in overtime or shootout, and zero points for losing in regulation time. At the end of the regular season, the team that finishes with the most points is crowned the league champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286281-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SHL season, Regular season, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nThe following players led the league in points, at the conclusion of matches played on 14 March 2019. If two or more skaters are tied (i.e. same number of points, goals and played games), all of the tied skaters are shown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 63], "content_span": [64, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286281-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SHL season, Regular season, Statistics, Leading goaltenders\nThe following goaltenders led the league in goals against average, provided that they have played at least 40% of their team's minutes, at the conclusion of matches played on 14 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 67], "content_span": [68, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286281-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SHL season, Playoffs\nTen teams qualify for the playoffs: the top six teams in the regular season have a bye to the quarterfinals, while teams ranked seventh to tenth meet each other (7 versus 10, 8 versus 9) in a preliminary playoff round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286281-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SHL season, Playoffs, Playoff bracket\nIn the first round the 7th-ranked team will meet the 10th-ranked team and the 8th-ranked team will meet the 9th-ranked team for a place in the second round. In the second round, the top-ranked team will meet the lowest-ranked winner of the first round, the 2nd-ranked team will face the other winner of the first round, the 3rd-ranked team will face the 6th-ranked team, and the 4th-ranked team will face the 5th-ranked team. In the third round, the highest remaining seed is matched against the lowest remaining seed. In each round the higher-seeded team is awarded home advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286281-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 SHL season, Playoffs, Playoff bracket\nIn the first round the meetings are played as best-of-three series and the rest is best-of-seven series that 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 and 4 (plus 6 if necessary).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286281-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SHL season, Playoffs, Eighth-finals\nThe teams ranked 7 and 10, and the teams ranked 8 and 9, respectively, will face each other in a best-of-three series in order to qualify for the quarter-finals. The better-ranked teams in the two series will receive home advantage, i.e. two home games, if necessary. The two winners will take the two remaining quarter-final spots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286281-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SHL season, Playoffs, Quarter-finals, (1) F\u00e4rjestad BK vs. (8) HV71\nGame 5 of this series was the second-longest Elitserien/SHL playoff game, with Oskar Steen's game-winning goal coming after 57:01 of overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 75], "content_span": [76, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286281-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SHL season, Playoffs, Statistics, Playoff scoring leaders\nThe following players led the league in points, at the conclusion of matches played on 2 May 2019. If two or more skaters are tied (i.e. same number of points, goals and played games), all of the tied skaters are shown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 65], "content_span": [66, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286281-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SHL season, Playoffs, Statistics, Playoff 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 2 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 69], "content_span": [70, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286282-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's basketball team represented Southern Illinois University Edwardsville during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Cougars, led by fourth-year head coach Jon Harris, played their home games at the Vadalabene Center in Edwardsville, Illinois as members of the Ohio Valley Conference. They finished the season 10\u201321, 6\u201312 in OVC play to finish in a four-way tie for seventh place. As the No. 8 seed, they lost in the first round of the OVC Tournament to Morehead State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286282-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Cougars finished the 2017\u201318 season 9\u201321, 5\u201313 in OVC play to finish in a three-way tie for ninth place. Due to Southeast Missouri State being ineligible for postseason play due to APR violations, the Cougars received the No. 8 seed in the OVC Tournament where they lost in the first round to Tennessee Tech.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 71], "content_span": [72, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286282-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's basketball team, Preseason\nIn a vote of conference coaches and sports information directors, SIUE was picked to finish in 12th place in the OVC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 65], "content_span": [66, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286282-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's basketball team, Postseason\nOn March 11, 2019, SIUE announced that coach Jon Harris' contract had not been renewed after a four-year record of 31 wins and 88 losses. Assistant coaches Brian Barone, Charles \"Bubba\" Wells, and Mike Waldo were all retained, with Barone being named as interim head coach. Former head coach Marty Simmons, one of only three Cougars coaches with a winning record, has expressed an interest in returning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 66], "content_span": [67, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286282-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's basketball team, Schedule and results\n* Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses. All times are in Central Time", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 76], "content_span": [77, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286283-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SK Rapid Wien season\nThe 2018\u201319 SK Rapid Wien season is the 121st season in club history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286283-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SK Rapid Wien season, Europa League, Europa League review\nRapid entered the Europa League in the 3rd qualifying round and reached the round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 65], "content_span": [66, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286284-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SK Slavia Prague season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was SK Slavia Prague's 26th season in the Czech First League. The team competed in Czech First League, the Czech Cup, the UEFA Champions League and the UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286284-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SK Slavia Prague season, Season Events\nOn 27 April, Slavia gathered three points against Olomouc (match-week 30), which was sufficient to be mathematically assured that the team will finish ahead of Sparta in the league table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286284-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SK Slavia Prague 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-00286284-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SK Slavia Prague 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-00286284-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SK Slavia Prague season, Squad, Unregistered\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286285-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SK Sturm Graz season\nThe 2018\u201319 SK Sturm Graz season started on 21 July 2018 in the Austrian Cup against Siegendorf.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286285-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SK Sturm Graz season, Bundesliga, Bundesliga review, July and August\nSturm Graz opened their Bundesliga campaign against TSV Hartberg on 28 July 2018. Sturm Graz won the match 3\u20132. Lukas Spendlhofer, Markus Pink, and Philipp Hosiner scored for Sturm Graz. Tasos Avlonitis scored an own goal and Dario Tadi\u0107 scored for Hartsberg. Matchday two took place on 4 August 2018 against Wacker Innsbruck. Sturm Graz won the match 3\u20132. Sturm Graz got two goals from Lukas Grozurek and a goal from Markus Pink. Martin Harrer scored two goals for Wacker Innsbruck. Matchday three happened on 12 August 2018. SKN St. P\u00f6lten won the match 2\u20130 with goals from Daniel Luxbacher and Taxiarchis Fountas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 76], "content_span": [77, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286285-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SK Sturm Graz season, Austrian Cup, Austrian Cup review\nSturm Graz opened up their 2018\u201319 season in the first round of the Austrian Cup against Siegendorf. Sturm Graz won the match 2\u20130 with goals from Markus Pink and Stefan Hierl\u00e4nder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286285-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SK Sturm Graz season, Europe, European review\nSturm Graz were drawn against AFC Ajax in the second qualifying round draw. On 25 July 2018, Ajax won the first leg 2\u20130 with goals from Hakim Ziyech and Lasse Sch\u00f6ne. Ajax won 3\u20131 in the second leg on 1 August 2018 and 5\u20131 on aggregate. Andr\u00e9 Onana scored an own goal for Sturm Graz. Ajax got two goals from Klaas-Jan Huntelaar and a goal from Du\u0161an Tadi\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286285-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SK Sturm Graz season, Europe, European review\nSturm Graz entered the third qualifying round of the Europa League after losing 5\u20131 on aggregate to Ajax in the second qualifying round of Champions League. Sturm Graz were drawn against the winner of the AEK Larnaca\u2013Dundalk tie. AEK Larnaca won the tie 4\u20130 on aggregate. AEK Larnaca won the first leg 2\u20130 with goals from Joan Guillem Truyols and Ivan Tri\u010dkovski. Stefan Hierl\u00e4nder was sent\u2013off during the match. An assistant referee was hit by a mug during the match. In the second leg, AEK Larnaca won the match 5\u20130 with three goals from Ivan Tri\u010dkovski and a goal from the penalty mark from Jorge Larena and a goal from Florian Taulemesse. With the loss, Sturm Graz were knocked out of the Europa League 7\u20130 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286286-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SKNFA Premier League\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Frietjes (talk | contribs) at 16:55, 10 January 2020. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286286-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SKNFA Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 SKNFA Premier League, is the 39th season of the SKNFA Premier League, the top division of football in Saint Kitts, one of the two islands of Saint Kitts and Nevis. The regular season began on 22 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286286-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SKNFA Premier League, Super 6\nSKNFA decided on 22 October 2019 to cancel the Super 6. No champions were declared for this season, and no teams were relegated (league to be expanded to 12 teams next season).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286287-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SLC Twenty20 Tournament\nThe 2018\u201319 SLC Twenty20 Tournament was a Twenty20 cricket tournament that was held in Sri Lanka. It was played between twenty-four domestic teams in Sri Lanka, with the tournament running from 15 to 27 February 2019. Nondescripts Cricket Club were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286287-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SLC Twenty20 Tournament\nOn the opening day of the tournament, Sinhalese Sports Club beat Saracens Sports Club in the Super Over, after the match ended as a tie, and Sadeera Samarawickrama scored an unbeaten century for Colts Cricket Club against Police Sports Club. On 19 February 2019, Dinesh Chandimal also scored a century in the tournament, a day after he was dropped from Sri Lanka's One Day International (ODI) squad for their series against South Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286287-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SLC Twenty20 Tournament\nFollowing the conclusion of the group stage fixtures, Chilaw Marians Cricket Club, Colombo Cricket Club, Galle Cricket Club, Moors Sports Club, Nondescripts Cricket Club, Ragama Cricket Club, Sri Lanka Army Sports Club and Tamil Union Cricket and Athletic Club had all progressed to the knockout phase of the tournament. From the quarterfinals, Colombo Cricket Club, Moors Sports Club, Nondescripts Cricket Club and Sri Lanka Army Sports Club all advanced to the semi-finals. Colombo Cricket Club won their quarterfinal fixture against Ragama Cricket Club in the Super Over, after the match was tied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286287-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SLC Twenty20 Tournament\nIn the first semi-final, Moors Sports Club beat Sri Lanka Army Sports Club by six wickets, despite Ashan Randika scoring a century for Sri Lanka Army. The second semi-final saw Nondescripts Cricket Club beat Colombo Cricket Club by one run, with the match going to the final ball. Moors Sports Club won the tournament, after they beat Nondescripts Cricket Club by one wicket in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286288-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SMU Mustangs men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 SMU Mustangs men's basketball team represented Southern Methodist University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Mustangs were led by third-year head coach Tim Jankovich and played their home games at Moody Coliseum on their campus in University Park, Texas as members of the American Athletic Conference. They finished the season 15\u201317, 6\u201312 in AAC play to finish in a tie for ninth place. They defeated Tulsa in the first round of the AAC Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Cincinnati.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286288-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SMU Mustangs men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Mustangs finished the 2017\u201318 season 17\u201316, 6\u201312 in AAC play to finish in ninth place. In the AAC Tournament, they defeated UConn before losing to Cincinnati in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286289-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SMU Mustangs women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 SMU Mustangs women's basketball team will represent Southern Methodist University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Mustangs, led by third year head coach Travis Mays, play their home games at Moody Coliseum and were sixth year members of the American Athletic Conference. They finished the season 11\u201319, 5\u201311 in AAC play to finish in a 4 way tie for ninth place. They lost in first round of the American Athletic Women's Tournament to East Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286289-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SMU Mustangs women's basketball team, Media\nAll Pony Express games will air on KAAM. Before conference season home games will be streamed on . Conference home games will rotate between ESPN3, , and Pony Up TV. Road games will typically be streamed on the opponents website, though conference road games could also appear on ESPN3 or AAC Digital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286290-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SPHL season\nThe 2018\u201319 SPHL season is the 15th season of the Southern Professional Hockey League (SPHL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286290-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SPHL season, League business\nAfter eleven seasons, president Jim Combs left the league to pursue other opportunities. He originally joined the league in the 2007\u201308 season and had been league president since 2010\u201311. Combs was replaced by Doug Price on January 17, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286290-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SPHL season, President's Cup playoffs\nFor 2019, the top eight teams at the end of the regular season qualify for the playoffs. The league kept the format implemented in the previous season where the top three seeds choose their opponent from the bottom four qualifiers, calling it the \"challenge round\". The second round will still have the highest versus lowest remaining seed format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 45], "content_span": [46, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286291-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SSGC F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Sui Southern Gas's first season in Pakistan Premier League since 2010\u201311 after winning one-legged promotion after defeating Gwadar Port Authority 7\u20131 on 17 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286291-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SSGC F.C. season, Squad statistics, Captains\nLast updated: 13 January 2019Source: 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286292-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SSV Jahn Regensburg season\nThe 2018\u201319 SSV Jahn Regensburg season was the 112th season in the club's football history. In 2018\u201319, the club played in the 2. Bundesliga, the second tier of German football. It was the club's second season back in this league after having won promotion from the 3. Liga in 2016\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286292-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SSV Jahn Regensburg season\nThe club also took part in the 2018\u201319 edition of the DFB-Pokal, the German Cup but was eliminated in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286292-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SSV Jahn Regensburg season, Events\nRegensburg had a good start in the season with a 2\u20131 home victory against FC Ingolstadt but had a dry spell after that. They lost the first round DFB-Pokal match against fifth-tier side BSG Chemie Leipzig 1\u20132 and could secure only one point out of their next four league matches. With only four points under their belt, the Jahn had to play the away match against Hamburger SV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286292-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 SSV Jahn Regensburg season, Events\nThe HSV were relegated from the Bundesliga at the end of the season before and were a big favourite for one of the promotion spots back to the Bundesliga which they confirmed by being in the first place before matchday 6. Regensburg achieved a surprising but deserved 5\u20130 victory over Hamburg. After this feat, they were able to secure a place in the middle of the table for the rest of the season and did not have to worry about relegation. On matchday 30, 21 April 2019, Regensburg finally could secure their place in the league for the next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286293-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 STOK Elite Division\nThe 2018\u201319 STOK Elite Division is the 4th season of the Cypriot fourth-level football league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286293-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 STOK Elite Division, Format\nFourteen teams participated in the 2018\u201319 STOK Elite Division. All teams played against each other twice, once at their home and once away. The team with the most points at the end of the season crowned champions. The first three teams were promoted to the 2018\u201319 Cypriot Third Division and the last two teams were relegated to the regional leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286293-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 STOK Elite Division, Format, Point system\nTeams received three points for a win, one point for a draw and zero points for a loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286294-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SV Darmstadt 98 season\nThe 2018\u201319 SV Darmstadt 98 season was the 121st season in the football club's history and their 19th overall season in the second tier of German football, the 2. Bundesliga. It was the club's second consecutive season in the second division, since relegation from the Bundesliga in 2016-17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286294-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SV Darmstadt 98 season, Squad, Squad information\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286295-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SV Werder Bremen season\nThe 2018\u201319 SV Werder Bremen season is the 120th season in the football club's history and 38th consecutive and 55th overall season in the top flight of German football, the Bundesliga, having been promoted from the 2. Bundesliga Nord in 1981. In addition to the domestic league, Werder Bremen also are participating in this season's edition of the domestic cup, the DFB-Pokal. This is the 72nd season for Bremen in the Weser-Stadion, located in Bremen, Free Hanseatic City of Bremen, Germany. The season covers a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286295-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SV Werder Bremen 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286296-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SVB Eerste Divisie\nThe 2018\u201319 SVB Eerste Divisie is the 86th season of the SVB Eerste Divisie, the top division football competition in Suriname. The season began on 1 November 2018 and will conclude on 4 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286297-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SVGFF Premier Division\nThe 2018\u201319 SVGFF Premier Division is the seventh season of the SVGFF Premier Division, the top-tier football in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines under its current format, and it is also the 12th season of top flight football altogether. The season started on 13 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286298-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sabah FK season\nThe Sabah FK 2018\u201319 season was Sabah's first Azerbaijan Premier League season, and their second season in existence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286299-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sabail FK season\nThe S\u0259bail FK 2018-19 season was S\u0259bail's second Azerbaijan Premier League season, and their third season in existence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286300-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sacramento Kings season\nThe 2018\u201319 Sacramento Kings season was the 74th season of the franchise, its 70th season in the National Basketball Association (NBA), and its 34th in Sacramento.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286300-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sacramento Kings season\nThe Kings entered the season with the longest NBA postseason drought appearances at 12 seasons, last qualifying in 2006. On May 15, 2018, the Kings were given the 2018 NBA draft second pick via the lottery, their highest first round pick since the 1989 NBA draft, and selected Duke University's Marvin Bagley III. The Kings improved from the previous season and held a winning record through the All-Star break, reaching the 30 win mark at the break for the first time since 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286300-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sacramento Kings season\nDespite the improved record, they again missed the playoffs for a record 13th straight season on March 30th as they lost against the Houston Rockets. This was the most wins the Kings have had since the 2005\u201306 NBA season where the Kings had a 44\u201338 record as the 8th seed in the Western Conference and lost to the San Antonio Spurs in a six games series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286300-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sacramento Kings season, Draft picks\nThe Kings entered draft night with two selections, the first of which had them rise up from tying the Chicago Bulls with the sixth-worst record of the draft the previous season turned into having the #2 pick of the draft and the second pick resulting in them having the higher of second-round picks after losing the first-round tiebreaker to the Bulls. With the second pick of the 2018 NBA Draft, Sacramento selected early freshman power forward Marvin Bagley III from Duke University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286300-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sacramento Kings season, Draft picks\nMarvin was one of the few top competitors entering the draft this year, and even though he was first projected to be a senior at Sierra Canyon High School earlier in the previous season, he jumped up into the collegiate rankings early to play a single season at Duke. In 33 games played for Duke (starting in all but one of those games), Bagley recorded spectacular averages of 21 points (at .614 overall percentage, including a .397 three-point percentage), 11.1 rebounds, 1.5 assists, .9 blocks, and .8 steals under 33.8 minutes per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286300-0002-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sacramento Kings season, Draft picks\nAs a result, he was named a consensus All-American First Team member, the Pete Newell Big Man Award winner as the best low-post player that year, the ACC Rookie of The Year, the ACC Player of the Year, and a member of the All-ACC First Team. As for their second-round selection at #37 (which became Gary Trent Jr. from Duke University), it was traded to the Portland Trail Blazers for two future second round picks and cash considerations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286300-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sacramento Kings season, Player statistics\nAfter all games. \u2021Waived during the season\u2020Traded during the season\u2260Acquired during the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286301-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sacramento State Hornets men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Sacramento State Hornets men's basketball team represented California State University, Sacramento in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Hornets were led by eleventh-year head coach Brian Katz and competed at The Nest as a member of the Big Sky Conference for the 23rd consecutive season. They finished the season 15\u201316, 8\u201312 in Big Sky play to finish in a tie for eighth place. They defeated Northern Arizona in the first round of the Big Sky Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Montana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286301-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sacramento State Hornets men's basketball team, Before the season\nThe Hornets finished 7\u201325 overall, and 4\u201314 in the conference. During the season, the Hornets participated in the Wooden Legacy, which was held in Fullerton, California. Sacramento State earned 8th place by losing to Cal State Fullerton, Saint Joseph's, and San Diego State. Sacramento State lost in both matches of the against rival UC Davis and Portland. In the postseason, Sacramento State lost to Portland State in the first round of the 2018 Big Sky Conference Men's Basketball Tournament in Reno, Nevada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 73], "content_span": [74, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286301-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sacramento State Hornets men's basketball team, Before the season\nOn July 19, 2018, the Sacramento State Hornets finished renovating The Nest's court. The renovation features include an emphasis on the main logo, implementing the school-known hashtag #StingersUp, and a redone of Sacramento State's colors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 73], "content_span": [74, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286301-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sacramento State Hornets men's basketball team, Season\nSenior Marcus Graves was named to the All-Big Sky Second Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 62], "content_span": [63, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286302-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sacramento State Hornets women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Sacramento State Hornets women's basketball team represents California State University, Sacramento during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Hornets were led by sixth year head coach Bunky Harkleroad and play their home games at Hornets Nest. They were members of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 10\u201319, 6\u201314 in Big Sky play to finish in ninth place. They lost in the first round of the Big Sky Women's Tournament to Northern Arizona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286303-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sacred Heart Pioneers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Sacred Heart Pioneers men's basketball team represented Sacred Heart University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. This was the Pioneers' 20th season of NCAA Division I basketball, all played in the Northeast Conference. The Pioneers were led by sixth-year head coach Anthony Latina and played their home games at the William H. Pitt Center in Fairfield, Connecticut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286303-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sacred Heart Pioneers men's basketball team\nThe Pioneers finished the 2018\u201319 season 15\u201317, 11\u20137 in NEC play to finish in third place. As the three-seed, they lost to six-seed LIU Brooklyn in the quarterfinals of the NEC Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286303-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sacred Heart Pioneers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Pioneers finished the 2017\u201318 season 10\u201321, 5\u201313 in NEC play to finish in ninth place. They failed to qualify for the NEC Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286303-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sacred Heart Pioneers men's basketball team, Preseason\nIn a poll of league coaches at the NEC media day, the Pioneers were picked to finish in ninth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 62], "content_span": [63, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286304-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saigon Heat season\nThe 2018\u201319 Saigon Heat season is the team's 7th season in the ASEAN Basketball League (ABL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286304-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saigon Heat season, Roster\nNote: Flags indicate national team eligibility at FIBA sanctioned events. Players may hold other non-FIBA nationality not displayed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286305-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saint Francis Red Flash men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Saint Francis Red Flash men's basketball team represented Saint Francis University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Red Flash, were led by seventh-year head coach Rob Krimmel, played their home games at DeGol Arena in Loretto, Pennsylvania as members of the Northeast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286305-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saint Francis Red Flash men's basketball team\nThe Red Flash finished the 2018\u201319 season at 18\u201315, 12\u20136 in NEC play to finish in a tie for first place. Due to tie breakers, they were the 1-seed in the 2019 Northeast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament. The Red Flash defeated Bryant in the quarterfinals and LIU Brooklyn in the semifinals, yet lost in the championship game to Fairleigh Dickinson. As Regular Season Co-Champions they received an NIT bid. Saint Francis lost to 1-seed Indiana in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286305-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saint Francis Red Flash men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Red Flash finished the 2016\u201317 season at 18\u201313, 12\u20136 in NEC play to finish in a tie for second place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the NEC Tournament to Fairleigh Dickinson. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they lost in the first round to UIC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286306-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saint Joseph's Hawks men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Saint Joseph's Hawks basketball team represented Saint Joseph's University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Hawks were led by 24th-year head coach Phil Martelli, and played their home games at Hagan Arena in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania as members of the Atlantic 10 Conference. They finished the season 14\u201319 overall, 6\u201312 in A-10 play to finish in a tie for tenth place. As the No. 10 seed in the A-10 Tournament, they advanced to the quarterfinals, where they lost to Davidson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286306-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saint Joseph's Hawks men's basketball team\nOn March 19, 2019, Phil Martelli was fired after 24 seasons as the head coach. He ended his tenure at Saint Joseph's with a 444\u2013328 record. Shortly thereafter, the school hired Philadelphia 76ers assistant coach Billy Lange as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286306-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saint Joseph's Hawks men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Hawks finished the 2017\u201318 season 16\u201316, 10\u20138 in A-10 play to finish in fourth place. They defeated George Mason in the quarterfinals of the A-10 Tournament before losing to Rhode Island in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286307-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saint Joseph's Hawks women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Saint Joseph's Hawks women's basketball team represents the Saint Joseph's University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Hawks, led by eighteenth year head coach Cindy Griffin, play their home games at Hagan Arena and were members of the Atlantic 10 Conference. They finished the season 12\u201319, 7\u20139 in A-10 play to finish in a 3-way tie for eighth place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the A-10 Women's Tournament where they lost VCU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286307-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saint Joseph's Hawks women's basketball team, Media\nAll non-televised Hawks home games air on the A-10 Digital Network. All Hawks games are streamed via the Saint Joseph's Sports Network on sjuhawks.com.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 59], "content_span": [60, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286308-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saint Kitts and Nevis National Cup\nThis tournament started on 26 February 2019 with preliminary round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286309-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saint Louis Billikens men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Saint Louis Billikens men's basketball team represented Saint Louis University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Their head coach was Travis Ford in his third season at Saint Louis. The team played their home games at Chaifetz Arena as a member of the Atlantic 10 Conference. They finished the season 23\u201313, 10\u20138 in A-10 play to finish in a tie for sixth place. They defeated Richmond, Dayton, Davidson and St. Bonaventure to be champions of the A-10 Tournament. They received the A-10's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament where they lost in the First Round to Virginia Tech.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286309-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saint Louis Billikens men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Billikens finished the 2017\u201318 season 17\u201316, 9\u20139 in A-10 play to finish in a four-way tie for fifth place. As the No. 6 seed in the A-10 Tournament, they defeated George Washington in the second round before losing to Davidson in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286309-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saint Louis Billikens men's basketball team, Preseason\nAt the Atlantic 10 Media Day, the Billikens was picked to win the Atlantic 10 in the league's annual preseason poll. Also, senior guard Javon Bess and sophomore guard Jordan Goodwin were named preseason second-team All-Conference, while sophomore forward Hasahn French was named to the third team. Bess landed on the league's preseason All-Defensive team as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 62], "content_span": [63, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286309-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saint Louis Billikens men's basketball team, Roster\nOn January 3, 2019, after appearing in 13 games, Carte'Are Gordon was granted his release from his scholarship and left the team. After appearing in two games, Ingvi \u00de\u00f3r Gu\u00f0mundsson withdrew from school and left the team on January 21, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 59], "content_span": [60, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286310-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saint Louis Billikens women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Saint Louis Billikens women's basketball team represents the Saint Louis University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Billikens, led by seventh year head coach Lisa Stone, play their home games at the Chaifetz Arena and were members of the Atlantic 10 Conference. They finished the season 15\u201316, 9\u20137 in A-10 play to finish in sixth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the A-10 Women's Tournament where they lost to Duquesne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286310-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saint Louis Billikens women's basketball team, Media\nAll non-televised Billikens home games and conference road games stream on the A-10 Digital Network.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 60], "content_span": [61, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286311-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saint Mary's Gaels men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Saint Mary's Gaels men's basketball team represents Saint Mary's College of California during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team is led by head coach Randy Bennett in his 18th season at Saint Mary's. The Gaels play their home games at the McKeon Pavilion in Moraga, California as members of the West Coast Conference. They made the NCAA Tournament where they lost in the first round to Villanova.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286311-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saint Mary's Gaels men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Gaels finished the 2017\u201318 season 30\u20136, 16\u20132 in West Coast Conference play to finish in second place. As the No. 2 seed in the WCC Tournament, they defeated Pepperdine in the quarterfinals before losing to BYU in the semifinals. They were one of the last four teams not selected for the NCAA Tournament and as a result earned a No. 1 seed in the National Invitation Tournament where they defeated Southeastern Louisiana in the first round and Washington in the second round before losing to Utah in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286312-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saint Mary's Gaels women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Saint Mary's Gaels women's basketball team represents Saint Mary's College of California in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Gales, led by thirteenth year head coach Paul Thomas, play their home games at the McKeon Pavilion and were members of the West Coast Conference. They finished the season 21\u201312, 12\u20136 in WCC play to finish in fourth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the WCC Women's Tournament where they lost to Gonzaga. They received an at-large bid to the Women's National Invitation Tournament where defeated Hawaii in the first round before losing to WCC member Pepperdine in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286313-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saint Peter's Peacocks basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Saint Peter's Peacocks basketball team represented Saint Peter's University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at Yanitelli Center in Jersey City, New Jersey as members of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference, and were led by first-year head coach Shaheen Holloway. They finished the 2018\u201319 season 10\u201322 overall, 6\u201312 in MAAC play to finish in a three-way tie for ninth place. As the 9th seed in the 2019 MAAC Tournament, they upset No. 8 seed Marist in the first round 71\u201368 in overtime before falling to No. 1 seed Iona, 71\u201373 in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286313-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saint Peter's Peacocks basketball team, Previous season\nThe Peacocks finished the 2017\u201318 season 14\u201318, 6\u201312 in MAAC play to finish in ninth place. As the No. 9 seed in the MAAC Tournament, they defeated No. 8 seed Monmouth and upset No. 1 seed Rider to advance to the semifinals, where they lost to No. 4 seed Iona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286313-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saint Peter's Peacocks basketball team, Previous season\nAfter the end of the season, head coach John Dunne left Saint Peter's to become the head coach at Marist. On April 10, 2018, Seton Hall assistant coach Shaheen Holloway was hired as his replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286314-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sam Houston State Bearkats men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Sam Houston State Bearkats men's basketball team represent Sam Houston State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bearkats are led by ninth-year head coach Jason Hooten and play their home games at the Bernard Johnson Coliseum in Huntsville, Texas as members of the Southland Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286314-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sam Houston State Bearkats men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bearkats finished the 2017\u201318 season 21\u201315, 12\u20136 in Southland play to finish in fourth place. They defeated New Orleans in the quarterfinals of the Southland Tournament before losing in the semifinals to Southeastern Louisiana. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where, after a first round bye, they defeated Eastern Michigan in the second round and UTSA in the quarterfinals before losing in the semifinals to Northern Colorado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 73], "content_span": [74, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286315-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sam Houston State Bearkats women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Sam Houston State Bearkats women's basketball team represented Sam Houston State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Bearkats, led by first year head coach Ravon Justice, played their home games at the Bernard Johnson Coliseum as members of the Southland Conference. They finished the season 16\u201313 overall, 11\u20137 in Southland play to finish in fifth place. As the No. 5 seed in the Southland Women's Tournament, they were defeated in the first round by Central Arkansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286315-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sam Houston State Bearkats women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bearkats finished the 2017\u201318 season 4\u201323, 1\u201317 in Southland play to finish in thirteenth place. They failed to qualify for the Southland Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 75], "content_span": [76, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286315-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sam Houston State Bearkats women's basketball team, Previous season\nOn March 7, Welch-Nicholls agreed to part ways. She finished at Sam Houston State with a 12 year record of 119\u2013234. On April 12, former Prairie View A&M head coach Ravon Justice was announced as her replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 75], "content_span": [76, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286316-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Samford Bulldogs men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Samford Bulldogs men's basketball team represented Samford University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bulldogs, led by fifth-year head coach Scott Padgett, played their home games at the Pete Hanna Center in Homewood, Alabama as members of the Southern Conference. The Bulldogs finished the season 17\u201316, 6\u201312 in SoCon play to finish in tie for sixth place. As the No. 7 seed in the SoCon Tournament|, they lost in the quarterfinals to UNC Greensboro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286316-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Samford Bulldogs men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bulldogs finished the 2017\u201318 season 10\u201322, 6\u201312 in SoCon play to finish in seventh place. They lost in the first round of the SoCon Tournament to Chattanooga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286317-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 San Antonio Spurs season\nThe 2018\u201319 San Antonio Spurs season was the 52nd season in the history of the franchise, and was its 43rd in the National Basketball Association (NBA) and its 46th in the San Antonio area. The Spurs finished the season with a 48-34 record and earned the seventh seed in the Western Conference playoffs. The team tied an NBA record with its 22nd consecutive playoff appearance. In the first round of the playoffs, the Spurs lost to the Denver Nuggets in seven games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286317-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 San Antonio Spurs season\nAs of 2021, This season marked the last time the Spurs made the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286317-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 San Antonio Spurs season, Season synopsis\nDuring the 2018 offseason, star forward Kawhi Leonard requested a trade. He and Danny Green were traded to the Toronto Raptors in exchange for DeMar DeRozan, Jakob P\u00f6ltl, and a 2019 protected first round pick on July 18, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286317-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 San Antonio Spurs season, Season synopsis\nThe 2018-19 season was the first season since the 2000\u201301 season in which point guard Tony Parker was not on the team. After 17 years with the Spurs, he signed with the Charlotte Hornets in the off-season. It was also the first season since the 2001\u201302 season without Manu Gin\u00f3bili, who retired from the NBA on August 27, 2018, officially ending what was the Spurs' \"Big Three\" era. The departures of Parker, Danny Green, and Kawhi Leonard, and the retirement of Gin\u00f3bili, left Patty Mills as the longest-tenured Spur on the roster. Mills and Marco Belinelli were the last remaining players on the team who had played for the Spurs' 2014 championship team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286317-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 San Antonio Spurs season, Season synopsis\nOn March 28, 2019, the Spurs retired Gin\u00f3bili's number 20 jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286317-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 San Antonio Spurs season, Player statistics, Regular season\nAfter all games. \u2021Waived during the season\u2020Traded during the season\u2260Acquired during the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286318-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 San Diego State Aztecs men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 San Diego State men's basketball team represented San Diego State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Aztecs, led by second-year head coach Brian Dutcher, played their home games at Viejas Arena as members in the Mountain West Conference. They finished the season 21\u201313, 11\u20137 in Mountain West play to finish in a tie for fourth place. They defeated UNLV and Nevada to advance to the championship game of the Mountain West Tournament where they lost to Utah State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286318-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 San Diego State Aztecs men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Aztecs finished the season 22\u201311, 11\u20137 in Mountain West play to finish in a tie for fourth place. They defeated Fresno State, Nevada, and New Mexico to become champions of the Mountain West Tournament. As a result, they received the Mountain West's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. As the No. 11 seed in the West region, they lost to Houston in the First Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286319-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 San Diego State Aztecs women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 San Diego State Aztecs women's basketball team represents San Diego State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Aztecs, led by sixth year head coach Stacie Terry, play their home games at the Viejas Arena as members of the Mountain West Conference. They finished the season 14\u201318, 7\u201311 in Mountain West play to finish in a tie for seventh place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Mountain West Women's Tournament where they lost to Wyoming.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286320-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 San Diego Toreros men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 San Diego Toreros men's basketball team represented the University of San Diego during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Toreros were led by first-year head coach Sam Scholl. They played their home games at Jenny Craig Pavilion in San Diego, California as members of the West Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286320-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 San Diego Toreros men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Toreros finished the 2017\u201318 season 20\u201314, 9\u20139 in WCC play to finish in a three-way tie for fourth place. They lost to BYU in the quarterfinals of the WCC Tournament. The Toreros were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they defeated Hartford in the first round, in a game referred to as the Riley Wallace Classic, and Portland State in the second round before losing in the quarterfinals to Northern Colorado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286320-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 San Diego Toreros men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn March 8, 2018, head coach Lamont Smith, who had been placed on administrative leave following an arrest for domestic violence 10 days earlier, resigned as head coach. Assistant coach Sam Scholl took over as acting head coach for the Toreros during the WCC Tournament and the CIT. On April 2, the school announced Scholl would remain the head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286321-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 San Diego Toreros women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 San Diego Toreros women's basketball team represents the University of San Diego in the 2018\u201319 college basketball season. The Toreros, as members of the West Coast Conference, were led by fourteenth year head coach Cindy Fisher. The Toreros play their home games at the Jenny Craig Pavilion on the university campus in San Diego, California. They finished the season 9\u201321, 2\u201316 in WCC play to finish in a tie for ninth place. They lost in the first round of the WCC Women's Tournament to Santa Clara.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286322-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 San Francisco Dons men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 San Francisco Dons men's basketball team represents the University of San Francisco during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Dons, led by third-year head coach Kyle Smith, play their home games at the War Memorial Gymnasium as members of the West Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286322-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 San Francisco Dons men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Dons finished the 2017\u201318 season 22\u201317, 9\u20139 in WCC play to finish in a three-way tie for fourth place. They defeated Pacific in the quarterfinals of the WCC Tournament before losing in the semifinals to Gonzaga. They were invited to the College Basketball Invitational where they defeated Colgate, Utah Valley, and Campbell to advance to the best-of-three championship series against North Texas where they won game 1 before losing game 2 and 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286323-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 San Francisco Dons women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 San Francisco Dons women's basketball team represents the University of San Francisco in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. They were led by head coach Molly Goodenbour in her third season at San Francisco. The Dons, as members of the West Coast Conference, play their home games at War Memorial Gymnasium. They finished the season 7\u201324, 2\u201316 in WCC play to finish in a tie for ninth place. They advanced to the second round of the WCC Women's Tournament where they lost to Loyola Marymount.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286324-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 San Jose Sharks season\nThe 2018\u201319 San Jose Sharks season was the 28th season for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on May 9, 1990. The Sharks clinched a playoff spot on March 19, 2019, when the Minnesota Wild lost to the Colorado Avalanche.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286324-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 San Jose Sharks season\nThe Sharks advanced all the way to the Western Conference Finals, where they were defeated by the eventual Stanley Cup Champion St. Louis Blues in six games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286324-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 San Jose Sharks 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-00286324-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 San Jose Sharks season, Schedule and results, Playoffs\nThe Sharks entered the playoffs as the Pacific Division's second seed and faced the third seed of the same division, the Vegas Golden Knights, defeating them in seven games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286324-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 San Jose Sharks season, Schedule and results, Playoffs\nIn the Second Round, the Sharks faced the Colorado Avalanche, defeating them in seven games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286324-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 San Jose Sharks season, Schedule and results, Playoffs\nIn the Conference Finals, the Sharks faced the St. Louis Blues, and lost in six games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286324-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 San Jose Sharks season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Sharks. Stats reflect time with the Sharks only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Sharks only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286324-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 San Jose Sharks season, Transactions\nThe Sharks have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286324-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 San Jose Sharks season, Draft picks\nBelow are the San Jose Sharks' selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286325-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 San Jose State Spartans men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 San Jose State Spartans men's basketball team represented San Jose State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Led by second-year head coach Jean Prioleau, the Spartans played their home games at the Event Center Arena as members of the Mountain West Conference. They finished the season 4\u201327, 1\u201317 in Mountain West play to finish in last place. They lost in the first round of the Mountain West Tournament to Air Force.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286325-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 San Jose State Spartans men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Spartans finished the 2017\u201318 season 4\u201326, 1\u201317 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, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286326-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 San Jose State Spartans women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 San Jose State Spartans women's basketball team represents San Jose State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Spartans were led by sixth-year head coach Jamie Craighead and play home games at the Event Center Arena as a member of the Mountain West Conference. They finished the season 6\u201324, 5\u201313 in Mountain West play to finish in ninth place. They lost in the first round of the Mountain West Women's Tournament to Nevada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286327-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Santa Clara Broncos men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Santa Clara Broncos men's basketball team represents Santa Clara University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Broncos are led by third-year head coach Herb Sendek and play their home games at the Leavey Center as members of the West Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286327-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Santa Clara Broncos men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Broncos finished the 2017\u201318 season 11\u201320, 8\u201310 in WCC play to finish in seventh place. They lost in the first round of the WCC Tournament to Pepperdine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286328-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Santa Clara Broncos women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Santa Clara Broncos women's basketball team represents Santa Clara University in the 2018\u201319 college basketball season. The Broncos are led by third year head coach Bill Carr. The Broncos were members of the West Coast Conference and play their home games at the Leavey Center. They finished the season 14\u201317, 6\u201312 in WCC play to finish in seventh place. They advanced to the second round of the WCC Women's Tournament where they lost to Pacific.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286329-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Santos Laguna season\nThe 2018\u201319 Santos Laguna season is the 36st season in the football club's history and the 31st consecutive season in the top flight of Mexican football. In addition to the Liga MX and Copa MX, the club will also compete in the CONCACAF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286329-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Santos Laguna season, Players, Squad information\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 3 December 2018.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, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286330-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Santosh Trophy\nThe 2018\u201319 Santosh Trophy was the 73rd edition of the Santosh Trophy, the premier competition in India for teams representing their regional and state football associations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286330-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Santosh Trophy\nKerala were the defending champions, having defeated West Bengal in the final during the 2017\u201318 season, but both teams failed to qualify for the main round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286331-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Santosh Trophy qualification\nThe 2019 Santosh Trophy qualifiers was the qualifying round for the 73rd edition of the Santosh Trophy, the premier competition in India for teams representing their regional and state football associations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286331-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Santosh Trophy qualification, East Zone\nThe East Zone matches of the Santosh Trophy qualifiers started on 2 February 2019 in Bhilai, Chhattisgarh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286331-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Santosh Trophy qualification, South Zone\nThe South Zone matches of the Santosh Trophy qualifiers started on 3 February 2019 in Neyveli, Tamil Nadu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286331-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Santosh Trophy qualification, West Zone\nThe West Zone matches of the Santosh Trophy qualifiers started on 7 February 2019 in Solapur, Maharashtra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286331-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Santosh Trophy qualification, North Zone\nThe North Zone matches of the Santosh Trophy qualifiers started on 11 February 2019 in Katra, Jammu and Kashmir.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286331-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Santosh Trophy qualification, North-East Zone\nThe North-East Zone matches of the Santosh Trophy qualifiers started on 11 February 2019 in Aizawl, Mizoram.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286331-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Santosh Trophy qualification, North-East Zone\nIn Group B, Nagaland withdrew just before the qualifiers after they failed to register players in Centralised Registration System.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286332-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sapling Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Hong Kong Sapling Cup was the 4th edition of the Sapling Cup, and was the first time in history without name sponsorship. The Cup was contested by the 10 teams in the 2018\u201319 Hong Kong Premier League. The objective of the Cup was to create more potential playing opportunities for youth players. Each team were required to field a minimum of two players born on or after 1 January 1997 (U-22) and a maximum of six foreign players during every whole match, with no more than four foreign players on the pitch at the same time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286332-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sapling Cup\nKitchee were the defending champions, but they were eliminated after failing to get out of group stage. Lee Man became the champions for the first time after beating Yuen Long in the final. This is also Lee Man's first title in club history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286332-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sapling Cup, Semi-finals\nThe two semi-finals took place on 13\u201314 April 2019 at Mong Kok Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286332-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sapling Cup, Final\nThe final took place on 27 April 2019 at Mong Kok Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286333-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saudi Professional League\nThe 2018\u201319 Saudi Professional League was the 44th edition of the Saudi Professional League, the top Saudi professional league for association football clubs, since its establishment in 1975. The season started on 30 August 2018 and concluded on 16 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286333-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saudi Professional League\nAl-Hilal were the defending champions after winning the Pro League last season for the 15th time. Al-Wehda and Al-Hazem have entered as the promoted teams from the 2017\u201318 Prince Mohammad bin Salman League. Al-Nassr were crowned as league winners for the 8th time on 16 May, after defeating Al-Batin 2\u20131 on the final day of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286333-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saudi Professional League\nOhod were the first team to be relegated after a 3\u20131 defeat to Al-Fayha on 12 April 2019. Al-Batin were the second team to be relegated following their 1\u20130 defeat to an already relegated Ohod. Al-Qadsiah were the third and final team to be relegated after a draw against Al-Hazem on the final day of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286333-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saudi Professional League\nAbderrazak Hamdallah was the top scorer with 34 goals, and was also named Player of the Season. He also set the record for most goals in a single season. Pedro Emanuel of Al-Taawoun won the Manager of the Season award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286333-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saudi Professional League, Changes\nOn 7 March 2018, the Saudi FF announced that the league would be increased from 14 teams to 16 teams. They also announced new rules limiting the club's squad size to 28 players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286333-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saudi Professional League, Teams\nSixteen teams will compete in the league\u00a0\u2013 the top twelve teams from the previous season, the two play-off winners and two teams promoted from the Prince Mohammad bin Salman League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286333-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saudi Professional League, Teams\nThe first club to be promoted was Al-Wehda, following their 2\u20132 draw away to Al-Mujazzal on 11 April 2018. Al-Wehda will play in the top flight of Saudi football after a seasons absence. They were crowned champions on 18 April 2018 after beating Al-Khaleej 1\u20130 at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286333-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saudi Professional League, Teams\nThe second club to be promoted was Al-Hazem, following their 4\u20131 win at home against Al-Mujazzal on 18 April 2017, coupled with Al-Tai's defeat against Hajer. Al-Hazem will play in the top flight of Saudi football for the first time since 2010\u201311.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286333-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saudi Professional League, Teams\nNo teams were relegated to the Prince Mohammad bin Salman League. Due to an increase in the number of teams, the Saudi FF announced that the relegation was canceled and in its place was a relegation play-off. Both Pro League teams, Al-Raed and Ohod, won the playoffs and secured their top-flight status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286333-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saudi Professional League, Teams, Stadiums\n1: Al-Faisaly play their home games in Al-Majma'ah. 2: Al-Hilal, Al-Nassr and Al-Shabab also use Prince Faisal bin Fahd Stadium (22,500 seats) as a home stadium. 3: Al-Hilal also use King Fahd International Stadium (62,685 seats) as a home stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286333-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saudi Professional League, Teams, Foreign players\nThe number of foreign players is limited to 7 per team. On June 7, 2018, the Saudi FF increased the number of foreign players from 7 to 8 players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286333-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286333-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saudi Professional League, Positions by round\nThe following table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches. In order to preserve the chronological evolution, 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 afterward. If a club from the Saudi Professional League wins the King Cup, they will qualify for the AFC Champions League, unless they have already qualified for it through their league position. In this case, an additional AFC Champions League group stage berth will be given to the 3rd placed team, and the AFC Champions League play-off round spot will be given to 4th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286333-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saudi Professional League, Relegation play-offs\nThe 13th place team in the Saudi Professional League, Al-Hazem, will face the 4th place team in the MS League, Al-Khaleej, over two legs on a home-and-away basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286333-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saudi Professional League, Season statistics, Scoring, Hat-tricks\n(H) \u2013 Home; (A) \u2013 Away4 Player scored 4 goals; 5 Player scored 5 goals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 73], "content_span": [74, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286333-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saudi Professional League, Attendances, By team\nUpdated to games played on 17 May 2019Source: Notes:\u2020 Teams played previous season in First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286334-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saudi Second Division\nThe 2018\u201319 Saudi Second Division was the 43rd season of the Saudi Second Division since its establishment in 1996. Fixtures were released on 4 September 2018 and the opening round of matches was played on 19 October 2018. The league season ended on 12 April 2019 with the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286334-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saudi Second Division, Overview, Changes\nOn 7 March 2018, the Saudi FF announced that the league would be increased from 20 teams to 24 teams, divided into 2 groups of 12 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286334-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saudi Second Division, Team changes\nA total of 24 teams are contesting the league, including 9 sides from the 2017\u201318 season, 1 relegated team from the MS League, 10 promoted teams from the 2017\u201318 Third Division, and four winners from the 2017\u201318 relegation playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286334-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saudi Second Division, Teams\n1: Al-Akhdoud will play at Prince Sultan bin Abdul Aziz Stadium due to the ongoing war in Yemen", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286334-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saudi Second Division, Teams, Foreign players\nThe number of foreign players is limited to 2 per team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286334-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saudi Second Division, Teams, Foreign players\nPlayers name in bold indicates the player is registered during the mid-season transfer window.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286334-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saudi Second Division, Third place play-off\nAl-Taqadom, who finished 2nd in Group A faced Al-Thoqbah who finished 2nd in Group B to decide the third-placed team. Al-Thoqbah defeated Al-Taqadom 3\u20131 after extra time to finish in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286334-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saudi Second Division, Final\nThe winners of each group will play a one-legged final to decide the champion of the 2018\u201319 Second Division. As winners of Group A, Al-Bukayriyah faced Hetten, the winners of Group B. The match was scheduled to be played on 12 April 2019, but was abandoned after 32 minutes due to heavy snowfall. Hetten won the match 1\u20130 and won their first ever Second Division title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286334-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Saudi Second Division, Final\nThe match was abandoned after 32 minutes due to heavy snowfall, and was resumed on 13 April 2019, 16:00, from the point of abandonment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286335-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Savannah State Tigers basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Savannah State Tigers basketball team represented Savannah State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Tigers, led by 14th-year head coach Horace Broadnax, played their home games at Tiger Arena in Savannah, Georgia as members of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. They finished the season 11-20 overall, 8-8 in MEAC play to finish in seventh place. As the No. 7 seed in the MEAC Tournament they lost in the first round to No. 11 seed Delaware State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286335-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Savannah State Tigers basketball team\nThis season marks the Tigers' final season playing in Division I as they will rejoin Division II after the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286335-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Savannah State Tigers basketball team, Previous season\nWith a win over South Carolina State on March 1, 2018, the Tigers earned a share of the MEAC regular season championship. They finished the season 15\u201317, 12\u20134 in MEAC play, finishing in a three-way tie for first place. Due to tie-breaking procedures, the Tigers received the No. 3 seed in the MEAC Tournament, where they lost to North Carolina Central in the quarterfinals. The Tigers were initially ruled to be ineligible for postseason play for a second consecutive season due to APR violations. However, the NCAA granted the Tigers a waiver allowed them to participate in postseason play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286336-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scandinavian Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Scandinavian Cup was a season of the Scandinavian Cup, a Continental Cup season in cross-country skiing for men and women. The season began on 14 December 2018 in \u00d6stersund, Sweden and concluded with a stage event 1\u20133 March 2019 in Madona, Latvia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286337-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scarlets season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 15th season in the history of the Scarlets, a Welsh regional rugby union side based in Llanelli, Carmarthenshire. In this season, they competed in the Pro14 and the European Rugby Champions Cup. This season, Welsh internationals Scott Williams and Aled Davies, Scottish international John Barclay and Irishman Tadhg Beirne were high-profile departures, while new recruits included internationals Kieron Fonotia, Uzair Cassiem and Sam Hidalgo-Clyne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286337-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scarlets season, Statistics\n(+ in the Apps column denotes substitute appearance, positions listed are the ones they have started a game in during the season)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286338-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Basketball Championship Men season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 50th campaign of the Scottish Basketball Championship, the national basketball league of Scotland. 19 teams were split into Division 1, featuring 10 teams, and Division 2, featuring 9 teams. Dunfermline Reign won their first league title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286338-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Basketball Championship Men season, Format\nIn Division 1, each team plays each other twice, once home, once away, for a total of 18 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 59], "content_span": [60, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286338-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Basketball Championship Men season, Format\nIn Division 2, each team plays each other twice, once home, once away, for a total of 16 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 59], "content_span": [60, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286339-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Basketball Championship Women season\nThe 2018\u201319 season of the Scottish Basketball Championship Women, the national women's basketball league of Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286339-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Basketball Championship Women season, Format\nIn Division 1, each team plays each other twice, once home, once away, for a total of 16 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 61], "content_span": [62, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286340-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Challenge Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Scottish Challenge Cup, known as the IRN-BRU Cup due to sponsorship reasons, was the 28th season of the competition. The tournament took on a similar format from the previous season with the addition of two teams from England's National League entering the competition for the first time. This took the total number of participating clubs to 58.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286340-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Challenge Cup\nThirty teams from the Scottish Championship, Scottish League One and Scottish League Two competed, along with four teams from the Highland Football League (one eliminated in preliminary round) and four from the Lowland Football League (one eliminated in preliminary round). In addition to this, Under-21 teams of the clubs competing in the Scottish Premiership were represented. This was the third edition with two clubs from both Northern Ireland's NIFL Premiership and the Welsh Premier League and was the second time that two teams from the League of Ireland entered. A new change was the addition of two entrants from the English National League (fifth tier).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286340-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Challenge Cup\nInverness Caledonian Thistle were the defending champions after they beat Dumbarton 1\u20130 in the 2018 final, but they were eliminated in the first round by Dunfermline Athletic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286340-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Challenge Cup\nRoss County won the competition for the third time, defeating Connah's Quay Nomads 3\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286340-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Challenge Cup, First round\nThe draw for the first round was made on 26 June 2018 at 1pm live on the .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286340-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Challenge Cup, First round, North Section, Draw\n01. Alloa Athletic02. Arbroath03. Brechin City04. Cowdenbeath05. Dundee United06. Dunfermline Athletic", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286340-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Challenge Cup, First round, North Section, Draw\n07 . East Fife08. Elgin City09. Forfar Athletic10. Inverness CT11. Montrose12. Peterhead", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286340-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Challenge Cup, First round, North Section, Draw\n13. Raith Rovers14. Ross County15. Stirling Albion16. Aberdeen U21s17. Dundee U21s18. Heart of Midlothian U21s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286340-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Challenge Cup, First round, North Section, Draw\n19. Hibernian U21s20. Livingston U21s21. St Johnstone U21s22. Cove Rangers23. Formartine United24. Inverurie Loco Works", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286340-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Challenge Cup, First round, South Section, Draw\n25. Airdrieonians26. Albion Rovers27. Annan Athletic28. Ayr United29. Berwick Rangers30. Clyde", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286340-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Challenge Cup, First round, South Section, Draw\n31. Dumbarton32. Edinburgh City33. Falkirk34. Greenock Morton35. Partick Thistle36. Queen of the South", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286340-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Challenge Cup, First round, South Section, Draw\n37. Queen's Park38. Stenhousemuir39. Stranraer40. Celtic U21s41. Hamilton Academical U21s42. Kilmarnock U21s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286340-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Challenge Cup, First round, South Section, Draw\n43. Motherwell U21s44. Rangers U21s45. St Mirren U21s46. Spartans47. East Kilbride48. East Stirlingshire", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286340-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Challenge Cup, Second round\nTeams from Wales (The New Saints and Connah's Quay Nomads), Northern Ireland (Crusaders and Coleraine), England (Sutton United and Boreham Wood) and the Republic of Ireland (Bohemians and Sligo Rovers) entered in the second round. Originally, Bray Wanderers were to be the second side to represent the League of Ireland however, they were subsequently thrown out by the FAI on 16 July 2018 for failing to pay their players and replaced by Limerick. A similar statement was released by the FAI hours later about Limerick who were also in financial difficulties. St Patrick's Athletic were then invited to compete as the next ranked team in line but declined. Sligo Rovers accepted the position in their place so they would represent the League of Ireland instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 807]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286340-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Challenge Cup, Second round, Draw\nThe draw for the second round was made on 16 August 2018 at 1pm live on the .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286340-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Challenge Cup, Second round, Draw\nTeams in Italics were not known at the time of the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286340-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Challenge Cup, Third round, Draw\nThe draw for the third round was made on 11 September 2018 at 1pm live on the .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286340-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Challenge Cup, Quarter-finals, Draw\nThe draw for the quarter-finals was made on 16 October 2018 at 1pm at The Hub in Edinburgh live on the .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286340-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Challenge Cup, Semi-finals, Draw\nThe draw for the semi-finals was made on 21 November 2018 at 1pm at Hampden Park live on the .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286340-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Challenge Cup, Player of the Round\nThe Golden Ball Award is a 'Player of the Round' award given to the player who is adjudged to have had the best performance of that round out of all the players in teams left competing in that round of the competition. The winner is voted for by supporters from a chosen short-list of players, which is posted on the Irn-Bru Football Twitter page.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286340-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Challenge Cup, Broadcasting rights\nThe domestic broadcasting rights for the competition are held jointly by BBC Alba, S4C (for matches involving Welsh teams) and subscription channel Premier Sports. Prior to the re-format in the 2016\u201317 season, BBC Alba had exclusive rights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286340-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Challenge Cup, Broadcasting rights\nOne of the semi-final matches was also confirmed as being broadcast live on BT Sport despite no apparent previous announcement of rights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286341-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Championship\nThe 2018\u201319 Scottish Championship (known as the Ladbrokes Championship for sponsorship reasons) was the 24th season in the current format of 10 teams in the second tier of Scottish football. The fixtures were published on 15 June 2018, with the league starting on 4 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286341-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Championship\nTen teams contested the league: Alloa Athletic, Ayr United, Dundee United, Dunfermline Athletic, Falkirk, Greenock Morton, Inverness CT, Partick Thistle, Queen of the South and Ross County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286341-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Championship\nRoss County won the league following a 4\u20130 win over Queen of the South on 26 April 2019 to return to the Premiership after only one season's absence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286341-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Championship, Teams\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2017\u201318 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286341-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Championship, Teams\nAyr United secured promotion to the Championship on 28 April 2018 after a 2\u20130 victory over Albion Rovers. Ross County were relegated to the Championship on 12 May 2018 after a 1\u20131 draw with St Johnstone. Alloa Athletic won promotion following a 2\u20131 aggregate victory in the play-off final. Partick Thistle were also relegated to the Championship following a 3\u20131 aggregate defeat to Livingston in the play-off final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286341-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Championship, Teams\nBrechin City were relegated to League One on 24 March 2018 after a 2\u20130 defeat to Greenock Morton. St Mirren secured promotion to the Premiership on 14 April 2018 after a goalless draw with Livingston, who were also promoted after winning the Premiership play-off final. Dumbarton were relegated after losing the Championship play-off final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286341-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Championship, League summary, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches. In order to preserve chronological progress, any postponed matches are not included in 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286341-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Championship, Results\nTeams play each other four times, twice in the first half of the season (home and away) and twice in the second half of the season (home and away), making a total of 180 games, with each team playing 36.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286341-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Championship, Season statistics, Scoring, Hat-tricks\n4 Player scored four goals; (H) = Home, (A) = Away", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286341-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Championship, Championship play-offs\nThe second bottom team (Queen of the South) entered into a 4-team playoff with the 2nd-4th placed teams in 2018\u201319 Scottish League One (Forfar Athletic, Raith Rovers and Montrose). Queen of the South secured their place in the Championship after defeating Raith 3\u20131 on aggregate in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Scottish Cup was the 134th season of Scotland's most prestigious football knockout competition. The tournament was sponsored by bookmaker William Hill in what was the eighth season of a nine-year partnership, after contract negotiations saw the initial five-year contract extended for an additional four years in October 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup\nThe cup was won for the third consecutive occasion, and a record 39th in total, by the defending champions, Celtic who had won the 2018 Scottish Cup Final on 19 May 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, Calendar\nThe calendar for the 2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, as announced by Scottish Football Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, Preliminary rounds, Draw\nThe draw for the preliminary rounds took place on Monday, 16 July 2018 at Hampden Park and was made by Scottish National Team Head Coaches Alex McLeish and Shelley Kerr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, Preliminary rounds, Draw\n19 clubs were involved in the draw, of which five received a bye to the second preliminary round, while the other 14 entered the first preliminary round. The teams competing in these rounds were made up of teams from the East of Scotland Football League (8), South of Scotland Football League (4), North Caledonian Football League (1), Scottish Junior Football Association (4) and the Scottish Amateur Football Association (2). Shortlees and Tynecastle took part in the Scottish Cup for the first time after winning the 2017\u201318 Scottish Amateur Cup and the 2017\u201318 South & East Cup-Winners Shield respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, Preliminary rounds, Draw\nThere were three parts to the draw. The first part determined which five clubs, from the 14 eligible, received a bye to the second preliminary round. The clubs which did not receive a bye into the second preliminary round entered the first preliminary round. Seven ties were then drawn in the first preliminary round to be played on Saturday, 11 August 2018. The final part of the draw saw six ties drawn in the second preliminary round to be played on Saturday, 1 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, Preliminary rounds, Draw\nClubs with a valid Club Licence at the date of the draw were eligible for a bye to the second preliminary round. Teams in Bold advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, Preliminary rounds, Preliminary round one\nGirvan, Linlithgow Rose, Lothian Thistle Hutchison Vale, Newton Stewart, and Wigtown & Bladnoch received a bye to preliminary round two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 63], "content_span": [64, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, First round\nThe first round took place on the weekend of 22 September 2018. Along with the six winners from the second preliminary round, there were 30 new entries at this stage - 16 from the Highland Football League and 14 from the Lowland Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, First round, Draw\nThe draw for the first round took place on Saturday, 1 September 2018 at Hampden Park and was made by former Scottish Cup winner Robbie Neilson and boxer Charlie Flynn. Selkirk withdrew from the competition before the draw was made so one team received a bye to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, First round, Draw\nBSC Glasgow were drawn to receive a bye to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, Second round\nThe second round took place on the weekend of 20 October 2018. Along with the 17 winners and one bye from the first round, there were 14 new entries at this stage - two each from the Highland Football League and the Lowland Football League and all 10 from League Two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, Second round, Draw\nThe draw for the second round took place at Hampden Park on 22 September 2018. The draw was made by Olympic bronze medallist Eve Muirhead and Kilmarnock's Scottish Cup winning captain Ray Montgomerie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, Second round, Draw\nTeams in Italics were not known at the time of the draw. Teams in Bold advanced to the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, Third round\nThe third round took place on the weekend of 24 November 2018. Along with the 16 winners from the second round, there were 16 new entries at this stage - all 10 from League One, and six from the Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, Third round, Draw\nThe draw for the third round took place at Hampden Park on 20 October 2018 at 5:45pm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, Third round, Draw\nTeams in Italics were not known at the time of the draw. Teams in Bold advanced to the fourth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, Fourth round\nThe fourth round took place on the weekend of 19 January 2019. Along with the 16 winners from the third round, there were 16 new entries at this stage - the remaining four clubs from the Championship, and all 12 from the Premiership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, Fourth round, Draw\nThe draw for the fourth round took place at Hampden Park on 24 November 2018 at 5:45pm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, Fourth round, Draw\nTeams in Italics were not known at the time of the draw. Teams in Bold advanced to the fifth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, Fifth round\nThe fifth round took place on the weekend of 9 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, Fifth round, Draw\nThe draw for the fifth round took place at Tynecastle Stadium on 20 January 2019 following the Hearts v Livingston match live on BBC One Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, Fifth round, Draw\nTeams in Italics were not known at the time of the draw. Teams in Bold advanced to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe quarter-finals took place on the weekend of 2 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, Quarter-finals, Draw\nThe draw for the quarter-finals took place at Victoria Park on 11 February 2019 following the Ross County v Inverness Caledonian Thistle match live on BBC Two Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, Quarter-finals, Draw\nTeams in Italics were not known at the time of the draw. Teams in Bold advanced to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, Semi-finals\nThe semi-finals took place on the weekend of 13 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, Semi-finals, Draw\nThe draw for the semi-finals took place at Firhill Stadium on 4 March 2019 during 'The Nine' live on BBC Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, Semi-finals, Draw\nTeams in Italics were not known at the time of the draw. Teams in Bold advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, Final\nThe final was played on 25 May 2019 at Hampden Park in Glasgow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, Bracket\nThe following is the bracket which the Scottish Cup resembled. Numbers in parentheses next to the match score represent the results of a replay, and numbers in parentheses next to the replay score represents the results of a penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, Media coverage\nFrom round four onwards, selected matches from the Scottish Cup are broadcast live in the UK and Ireland by BBC Scotland and Premier Sports (EIR Sport in the Republic of Ireland). BBC Scotland has the option to show two ties per round, with Premier Sports also showing two ties per round; Premier Sports show both semi-finals live with one of them also on BBC Scotland, and both channels screen the final live.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286342-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Cup, Media coverage\nThe following matches are to be broadcast live on UK television:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286343-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Junior Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Scottish Junior Cup was the 133rd season of the Scottish Junior Cup, the national knockout tournament for member clubs of the Scottish Junior Football Association (SJFA). The competition was sponsored by Macron in the first year of a three-year deal and is known as the Macron Scottish Junior Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286343-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Junior Cup\nA total of 129 clubs entered the competition, which was 28 fewer than the previous season. This was due to 25 teams leaving the Junior ranks for the East of Scotland League along with Cruden Bay, Inverness City, and Lewis United not entering the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286343-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Junior Cup\nAuchinleck Talbot were the defending champions. They successfully defended their title with a 2\u20130 win over Largs Thistle in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286343-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Junior Cup, Calendar\nThe dates for each round of the 2018\u201319 tournament are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286343-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Junior Cup, Calendar\nDrawn matches are replayed and replays that end in a draw proceed direct to a penalty shootout, there is no extra time. Semi-finals are played home and away over two legs with the winner on aggregate progressing to the final. If the aggregate score is tied at the end of the second leg, the match will also proceed direct to a penalty shootout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286343-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Junior Cup, First round\nThe four Junior clubs competing in the Scottish Cup were not included in the draw for the first round:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286343-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Junior Cup, First round\nAlso qualified automatically for the second round were Banks O'Dee, who achieved national club licensing requirements, and Girvan, who qualify automatically as historic full members of the Scottish Football Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286343-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Junior Cup, First round\nThe first and second round draws took place at Hampden Park, Glasgow on 23 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286343-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Junior Cup, Second round\n1 Tie awarded to Cumnock Juniors as Coupar Angus unable to raise side. 2 Tie played at Victoria Park, Newmains after Rosyth's Fleet Grounds deemed unsuitable to host match. 3 Tie played at Valefield Park, Kilbirnie after Gartcairn's MTC Park deemed unsuitable to host match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286343-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Junior Cup, Third round\nThe third round draw took place at the offices of the Scottish Sun newspaper in Glasgow on 9 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286343-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Junior Cup, Third round\n4 Tie played at Petershill Park, Glasgow after Gartcairn's MTC Park deemed unsuitable to host match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286343-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Junior Cup, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the semi finals took place on 7 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286343-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Junior Cup, Final\nThe Final of the Macron Scottish Junior Cup was played at New Douglas Park, Hamilton on Sunday 2 June with a 4.10pm kick off. The game was televised live by BBC Alba. Both teams wore their away strips.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286344-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup (also known as the Betfred Cup for sponsorship reasons) was the 73rd season of Scotland's second-most prestigious football knockout competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286344-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup\nThe format for the 2018\u201319 competition was the same as the previous two seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286344-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup\nIt began with eight groups of five teams which included all Scottish Professional Football League (SPFL) clubs, excluding those competing in Champions League and Europa League qualifiers, as well as the top teams from the 2017\u201318 Highland Football League (Cove Rangers) and the 2017\u201318 Lowland Football League (Spartans).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286344-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup, Format\nThe competition began with eight groups of five teams. The four clubs competing in the UEFA Champions League (Celtic) and Europa League (Aberdeen, Hibernian and Rangers) qualifying rounds were given a bye through to the second round. The 40 teams competing in the group stage consisted of the other eight teams that competed in the 2017\u201318 Scottish Premiership, and all of the teams that competed in the 2017\u201318 Scottish Championship, 2017\u201318 Scottish League One and 2017\u201318 Scottish League Two, as well as the 2017\u201318 Highland Football League and the 2017\u201318 Lowland Football League champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286344-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup, Format\nThe winners of each of the eight groups, as well as the four best runners-up progressed to the second round (last 16), which included the four UEFA qualifying clubs. At this stage, the competition reverted to the traditional knock-out format. The four group winners with the highest points total and the clubs entering at this stage were seeded, with the four group winners with the lowest points unseeded along with the four best runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286344-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup, Format, Bonus point system\nIn December 2015, the SPFL announced that alongside the new group stage format, a bonus point system would be introduced to provide greater excitement and increase the number of meaningful games at this stage. The traditional point system of awarding three points for a win and one point for a draw is used, however, for each group stage match that finishes in a draw, a penalty shoot-out takes place, with the winner being awarded a bonus point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286344-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup, Group stage\nThe group stage was made up of eight teams from the 2017\u201318 Scottish Premiership, and all ten teams from each of the 2017\u201318 Scottish Championship, 2017\u201318 Scottish League One and 2017\u201318 Scottish League Two, as well as the winners of the 2017\u201318 Highland Football League and 2017\u201318 Lowland Football League. The 40 teams were divided into two sections \u2013 North and South \u2013 with each section containing four top seeds, four second seeds and 12 unseeded teams. Each section was drawn into four groups with each group comprising one top seed, one second seed and three unseeded teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286344-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup, Group stage\nThe draw for the group stages took place on 25 May 2018 and was broadcast live on BT Sport 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286344-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup, Knockout phase, Second round, Draw and seeding\nAberdeen, Celtic, Hibernian and Rangers entered the competition at this stage, after receiving a bye for the group stage due to their participation in UEFA club competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286344-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup, Knockout phase, Second round, Draw and seeding\nThe draw for the second round took place at Tynecastle Park following the conclusion of the Heart of Midlothian-Inverness Caledonian Thistle match on 29 July 2018. The four UEFA-qualifying clubs and the four group winners with the best record were seeded for the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286344-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup, Knockout phase, Quarter-finals, Draw\nThe draw for the quarter-finals took place on 19 August 2018 following the conclusion of the Kilmarnock-Rangers match. The draw was unseeded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286344-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup, Knockout phase, Semi-finals, Draw\nThe draw for the semi-finals took place on 26 September 2018 following the conclusion of the final three quarter-final matches. The draw was unseeded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286344-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup, Knockout phase, Semi-finals, Semi-final controversy\nThe semi-finals were due to take place at Hampden Park on 27 and 28 October 2018, but due to Celtic and Rangers participating in the 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League group stage, the team who would play on the Saturday would have less than 48 hours rest before the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 80], "content_span": [81, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286344-0012-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup, Knockout phase, Semi-finals, Semi-final controversy\nAs a result, the SPFL - who had previously committed to using Hampden as the venue for the League Cup semi-finals and final - consulted with the four clubs involved, competition broadcaster BT Sport and Police Scotland to find a solution which may have included playing one match at Murrayfield Stadium or a change in date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 80], "content_span": [81, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286344-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup, Knockout phase, Semi-finals, Semi-final controversy\nThe SPFL announced on 27 September 2018 that both matches will be played at Hampden Park on the Sunday (28 October), with first match starting at noon and the other being played in the evening. The following day, SPFL chief executive Neil Doncaster said the decision was \"the best solution\" despite the \"regrettable inconvenience\" to supporters. The SPFL are contractually obliged to use Hampden Park as the venue for the semi-finals of the League Cup when Rangers or Celtic are involved or an attendance of over 20,000 is expected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 80], "content_span": [81, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286344-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup, Knockout phase, Semi-finals, Semi-final controversy\nAberdeen and Heart of Midlothian both criticised the SPFL for the decision saying they were \"appalled\" and \"astonished\". Aberdeen released a statement to confirm their \"dismay\" that their match would kick-off at a \"completely unacceptable\" time for their supporters. The first train leaving Aberdeen on 28 October 2018 would not arrive in Glasgow until 12:14, 14 minutes after kick-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 80], "content_span": [81, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286344-0014-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup, Knockout phase, Semi-finals, Semi-final controversy\nHeart of Midlothian manager Craig Levein said that playing both semi-finals at Hampden on the same day is the \"craziest thing\", \"beyond belief\" and \"madness\" and, in a statement released by the club, chairwoman Ann Budge said she had asked the SPFL if they could be released from their contract with Hampden Park Ltd as a result of the \"very special circumstances\" and was then told a formal request by the SPFL had been unsuccessful.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 80], "content_span": [81, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286344-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup, Knockout phase, Semi-finals, Semi-final controversy\nOn 2 October 2018, Police Scotland Assistant Chief Constable Bernard Higgins said that they were \"aware of issues and concerns\" regarding the semi-final arrangements. As a result, the SPFL are reported to be considering moving the Heart of Midlothian-Celtic semi-final to Murrayfield Stadium pending a meeting with Police Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 80], "content_span": [81, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286344-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup, Knockout phase, Semi-finals, Semi-final controversy\nOn 3 October 2018, the SPFL confirmed that venues and kick-off times had been switched to 13:30 at Murrayfield and 16:30 at Hampden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 80], "content_span": [81, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286344-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup, Media coverage\nThe domestic broadcasting rights for the competition are held exclusively by BT Sport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286344-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup, Media coverage\nThe following matches will be broadcast live on UK television:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286345-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup group stage\nThe 2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup group stage was played from 14\u201328 July 2018. A total of 40 teams competed in the group stage. The winners of each of the eight groups, as well as the four best runners-up progressed to the second round (last 16) of the 2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286345-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup group stage, Format\nThe group stage consisted of eight groups of five teams. The four clubs competing in the Champions League (Celtic) and Europa League (Aberdeen, Hibernian and Rangers) qualifying rounds were given a bye through to the second round. The 40 teams competing in the group stage consisted of the other eight teams that competed in the 2017\u201318 Scottish Premiership, and all of the teams that competed in the 2017\u201318 Scottish Championship, 2017\u201318 Scottish League One and 2017\u201318 Scottish League Two, as well as the 2017\u201318 Highland Football League and the 2017\u201318 Lowland Football League champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286345-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup group stage, Format\nThe teams were divided into two sections \u2013 North and South \u2013 with each section containing four top seeds, four second seeds and twelve unseeded teams. Each section was then drawn into four groups with each comprising one top seed, one second seed and three unseeded teams. The winners of each of the eight groups, as well as the four best runners-up progressed to the second round (last 16), which included the four UEFA qualifying clubs. At this stage, the competition reverted to the traditional knock-out format. The four group winners with the highest points total and the clubs entering at this stage were seeded, with the four group winners with the lowest points unseeded along with the four best runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 763]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286345-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup group stage, Format\nThe draw for the group stages took place on 25 May 2018 and was broadcast live on BT Sport 2. Seedings for the draw were confirmed two days in advance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286345-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup group stage, Teams, North, Seeding\n17. Brechin City18. Raith Rovers19. Alloa Athletic20. Arbroath21. East Fife22. Forfar Athletic", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 62], "content_span": [63, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286345-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup group stage, Teams, North, Seeding\n23. Montrose24. Peterhead25. Stirling Albion26. Elgin City27. Cowdenbeath28. Cove Rangers", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 62], "content_span": [63, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286345-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup group stage, Teams, South, Seeding\n13. St Mirren14. Livingston15. Queen of the South16. Greenock Morton", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 62], "content_span": [63, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286345-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup group stage, Teams, South, Seeding\n29. Dumbarton30. Ayr United31. Stranraer32. Airdrieonians33. Queen's Park34. Albion Rovers", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 62], "content_span": [63, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286345-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup group stage, Teams, South, Seeding\n35. Stenhousemuir36. Clyde37. Annan Athletic38. Berwick Rangers39. Edinburgh City40. Spartans", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 62], "content_span": [63, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286346-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League One\nThe 2018\u201319 Scottish League One (known as the Ladbrokes League One for sponsorship reasons) was the 24th season in the current format of 10 teams in the third-tier of Scottish football. The fixtures were published on 15 June 2018 and the season began on 4 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286346-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League One\nTen teams contested the league: Airdrieonians, Arbroath, Brechin City, Dumbarton, East Fife, Forfar Athletic, Montrose, Raith Rovers, Stenhousemuir and Stranraer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286346-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League One\nArbroath won the league following a 1\u20131 draw at Brechin City on 13 April 2019. Brechin were relegated after a 1\u20131 draw with Stenhousemuir on the final day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286346-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League One, Teams\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286346-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League One, League summary, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches. In order to preserve chronological progress, any postponed matches are not included in 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286346-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League One, Results\nTeams play each other four times, twice in the first half of the season (home and away) and twice in the second half of the season (home and away), making a total of 36 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286346-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League One, League One play-offs\nThe second bottom team (Stenhousemuir) entered into a four-team playoff with the second, third, and fourth placed teams in League Two (Clyde, Edinburgh City and Annan Athletic). Clyde were promoted to League One after defeating Annan 2\u20130 in the final. Stenhousemuir were relegated to League Two after defeat to Annan in the semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286347-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Two\nThe 2018\u201319 Scottish League Two (known as Ladbrokes League Two for sponsorship reasons) was the 24th season in the current format of 10 teams in the fourth-tier of Scottish football. The fixtures were published on 15 June 2018 and the season began on 4 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286347-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Two\nThe bottom team entered a two-legged play-off against the winners of the Pyramid play-off between the Highland League and Lowland League champions, to determine which team competes in League Two in the 2019\u201320 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286347-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Two\nTen teams contested the league: Albion Rovers, Annan Athletic, Berwick Rangers, Clyde, Cowdenbeath, Edinburgh City, Elgin City, Peterhead, Queen's Park and Stirling Albion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286347-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Two\nPeterhead lifted the title after a 2\u20130 win at Queen's Park on the final day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286347-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Two, League summary, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches. In order to preserve chronological progress, any postponed matches are not included in 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286347-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Two, Results\nTeams play each other four times, twice in the first half of the season (home and away) and twice in the second half of the season (home and away), making a total of 180 games, with each team playing 36.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286347-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish League Two, League Two play-offs\nThe Pyramid play-off was contested between the champions of the 2018\u201319 Highland Football League (Cove Rangers) and the 2018\u201319 Lowland Football League (East Kilbride). Cove were victorious 5\u20131 on aggregate and faced the bottom club (Berwick Rangers) in the League Two play-off final, being promoted to League Two for the 2019\u201320 season after a 7\u20130 aggregate win. As Berwick Rangers lost the play-off, they were relegated to the Lowland League since they were south of 56.4513N latitude (middle of the Tay Road Bridge).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286348-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Premiership\nThe 2018\u201319 Scottish Premiership (known as the Ladbrokes Premiership for sponsorship reasons) was the sixth season of the Scottish Premiership, the highest division of Scottish football. The fixtures were published on 15 June 2018 and the season began on 4 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286348-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Premiership\nTwelve teams contested the league: Aberdeen, Celtic, Dundee, Hamilton Academical, Heart of Midlothian, Hibernian, Kilmarnock, Livingston, Motherwell, Rangers, St Johnstone and St Mirren.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286348-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Premiership\nOn 4 May 2019, Celtic won their eighth consecutive title and 50th overall after a 3\u20130 win over Aberdeen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286348-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Premiership, Teams\nSt Mirren secured the Championship title and promotion to the Premiership on 14 April 2018 after a goalless draw with Livingston, who were also promoted after winning the play-off final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286348-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Premiership, Teams\nRoss County were relegated to the Championship on 12 May 2018 after a 1\u20131 draw with St Johnstone. Partick Thistle were also relegated following a 3\u20131 aggregate defeat to Livingston in the play-off final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286348-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Premiership, Format\nIn the initial phase of the season, the 12 teams will play a round-robin tournament whereby each team plays each one of the other teams three times. After 33 games, the league splits into two sections of six teams, with each team playing every other team in their section once. The league attempts to balance the fixture list so that teams in the same section have played each other twice at home and twice away, but sometimes this is impossible. A total of 228 matches will be played, with 38 matches played by each team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286348-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Premiership, League summary, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches. In order to preserve chronological progress, any postponed matches are not included in 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 64], "content_span": [65, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286348-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Premiership, Results, Matches 1\u201322\nTeams play each other twice, once at home and once away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286348-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Premiership, Results, Matches 34\u201338\nAfter 33 matches, the league splits into two sections of six teams i.e. the top six and the bottom six, with the teams playing every other team in their section once (either at home or away). The exact matches are determined by the position of the teams in the league table at the time of the split.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286348-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Premiership, Season statistics, Scoring, Hat-tricks\n4 Player scored four goals; (H) = Home, (A) = Away", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 68], "content_span": [69, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286348-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Premiership, Premiership play-offs\nThe quarter-final was contested by Ayr United and Inverness Caledonian Thistle, with Inverness Caledonian Thistle advancing to the semi-final where they lost to Dundee United. Dundee United faced St Mirren in the final, with the Saints securing the last place in the 2019\u201320 Premiership after victory in a penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286348-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Premiership, Broadcasting, Live Matches\nThe SPFL allows Sky Sports and BT Sport to broadcast up to six live home matches (combined) for each club, although this is only four for Celtic and Rangers. The TV deal allows the broadcasters to show 30 games each (and the play-offs for BT Sport) and provides approximately \u00a321m to the SPFL per season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286348-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Premiership, Broadcasting, Highlights\nSky Sports hold the rights to Saturday night highlights and show the Premiership goals on Sky Sports News in their Goals Express programme. Gaelic-language channel BBC Alba can broadcast in full the repeat of 38 Saturday 3pm matches \"as live\" at 5.30pm. The main Premiership highlights programme is BBC Scotland's Sportscene programme, which shows in-depth highlights of all six Premiership matches every weekend. STV show the goals on Monday nights during the Sport section of their News at Six programme. The SPFL also uploads the goals from every Premiership match onto its YouTube channel \u2014 available from 6pm on a Sunday for UK and Ireland viewers and 10pm on a Saturday for those worldwide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286349-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Professional Football League\nStatistics of the Scottish Professional Football League (SPFL) in season 2018\u201319.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286350-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Rugby Academy season\nThe Scottish Rugby Academy provides Scotland's up and coming rugby stars a dedicated focused routeway for development into the professional game. Entry is restricted to Scottish qualified students and both male and female entrants are accepted into 4 regional academies. The 2018-19 season sees the fourth year of the academy, now sponsored by Fosroc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286350-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Rugby Academy season, Season overview\nThis was the fourth year of the Scottish Rugby Academy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286350-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Rugby Academy season, Regional Academies\nThe Scottish Rugby Academy runs four regional academies in Scotland:- Glasgow and the West, Borders and East Lothian, Edinburgh and Caledonia. These roughly correspond to the traditional districts of Glasgow District, South, Edinburgh District and North and Midlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286350-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Rugby Academy season, Academy Players, Stage 3 players\nStage 3 players are assigned to a professional team. Nominally, for the men, Glasgow Warriors receive the Stage 3 players of Glasgow and the West and Caledonia regions, while Edinburgh Rugby receive the Stage 3 players of the Edinburgh and Borders and East Lothian regions. The women are integrated into the Scotland women's national rugby sevens team and the Scotland women's national rugby union team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 71], "content_span": [72, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286350-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Rugby Academy season, Academy Players, Stage 3 players\nThis season some of the Stage 3 players were additionally loaned out to Stade Ni\u00e7ois for their development.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 71], "content_span": [72, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286350-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Rugby Academy season, Academy Players, Stage 3 players\nA second intake will be announced after the age-grade championships conclude in August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 71], "content_span": [72, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286350-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Rugby Academy season, Academy Players, Stage 3 players, Borders and East Lothian\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, 37], "section_span": [39, 97], "content_span": [98, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286350-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Rugby Academy season, Academy Players, Stage 3 players, Caledonia\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, 37], "section_span": [39, 82], "content_span": [83, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286350-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Rugby Academy season, Academy Players, Stage 3 players, Edinburgh\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, 37], "section_span": [39, 82], "content_span": [83, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286350-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Rugby Academy season, Academy Players, Stage 3 players, Glasgow and the West\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, 37], "section_span": [39, 93], "content_span": [94, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286350-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Rugby Academy season, Academy Players, Stage 3 players, Stade Ni\u00e7ois\nStade Ni\u00e7ois is a French rugby union side. In season 2018-19 they play in the French third tier, in F\u00e9d\u00e9rale 1. They have a partnership agreement with the SRU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 85], "content_span": [86, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286350-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Rugby Academy season, Academy Players, Stage 3 players, Stade Ni\u00e7ois\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, 37], "section_span": [39, 85], "content_span": [86, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286350-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scottish Rugby Academy season, Academy Players, Supported players\nThe inductees for the 2018-19 season are split into their regional academies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286351-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scunthorpe United F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Scunthorpe United's 120th season in their existence and their fifth consecutive season in League One. Along with competing in League One, the club will also participate in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286351-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scunthorpe United F.C. season, Competitions, Pre-season friendlies\nThe Iron revealed pre-season fixtures against Winterton Rangers, Alfreton Town, SV Seekirchen, SV Wals-Gr\u00fcnau, Nottingham Forest and Lincoln City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286351-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scunthorpe United F.C. season, Competitions, League One, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League One fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 72], "content_span": [73, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286351-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scunthorpe United F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October. The draw for the second round was made live on BBC and BT by Mark Schwarzer and Glenn Murray on 12 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286351-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scunthorpe United F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286351-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Scunthorpe United F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286352-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Seattle Redhawks men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Seattle Redhawks men's basketball team represents Seattle University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Redhawks, led by second-year head coach Jim Hayford, play their home games at the Redhawk Center, with two home games at the ShoWare Center, as members of the Western Athletic Conference. They finished the season 18\u201315, 6\u201310 in WAC play to finish in a tie for seventh place. They were defeated by Grand Canyon in the quarterfinals of the WAC Tournament. They received an invitation to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they lost in the first round to Presbyterian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286352-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Seattle Redhawks men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Redhawks finished the 2017\u201318 season 20\u201314, 8\u20136 in WAC play to finish in fourth place. It was the Redhawks' first 20-win season since 2008 and first 20-win season in Division I play since the 1960s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286352-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Seattle Redhawks men's basketball team, Previous season\nIn the postseason, they defeated Texas\u2013Rio Grande Valley to advance to the semifinals of the WAC Tournament where they lost to New Mexico State. They received an invitation to the College Basketball Invitational where they lost in the first round to Central Arkansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286353-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Seattle Redhawks women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Seattle Redhawks women's basketball team represents Seattle University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Redhawks, led by third year head coach Suzy Barcomb, play their home games at the Redhawk Center and were members of the Western Athletic Conference. They finished the season 3\u201327, 3\u201313 in WAC play to finish in eighth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the WAC Women's Tournament to Texas\u2013Rio Grande Valley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286354-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Second Men's League of Serbia (basketball)\nThe 2018\u201319 Second Men's League of Serbia is the 13th season of the Second Basketball League of Serbia, the 2nd-tier men's professional basketball league in Serbia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286354-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Second Men's League of Serbia (basketball), Teams, Suspensions\nIn July 2018, the Basketball Federation of Serbia did not issued the competitions licenses to Klik and KK Zlatar for competing in the 2018\u201319 season due to unfulfilled requirements of the competition. Thus, KK Plana and OKK Konstantin were to stay in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 70], "content_span": [71, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286355-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Second Professional Football League (Bulgaria)\nThe 2018\u201319 Second League is the 64th season of the Second League, the second tier of the Bulgarian football league system, and the 3rd season under this name and current league structure. In June 2018, the Executive Committee of the Bulgarian Football Union decided to increase the participating teams to 18 for the 2019\u201320 season; as a result, only two teams will be relegated to Third League. The fixture list was released on 8 June 2018. The participating teams were confirmed on the same day. FC Tsarsko Selo Sofia became champions of the second league and were promoted directly to the first division. FC Dobrudzha Dobrich and PFC Nesebar were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286355-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Second Professional Football League (Bulgaria), Teams\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 61], "content_span": [62, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286355-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Second Professional Football League (Bulgaria), Personnel and sponsorship\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, 54], "section_span": [56, 81], "content_span": [82, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286355-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Second Professional Football League (Bulgaria), Personnel and sponsorship\nNote: Individual clubs may wear jerseys with advertising. However, only one sponsorship is permitted per jersey for official tournaments organised by UEFA in addition to that of the kit manufacturer (exceptions are made for non-profit organisations). Clubs in the domestic league can have more than one sponsorship per jersey which can feature on the front of the shirt, incorporated with the main sponsor or in place of it; or on the back, either below the squad number or on the collar area. Shorts also have space available for advertisement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 81], "content_span": [82, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286356-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Segona Divisi\u00f3\nThe 2018\u201319 Segona Divisi\u00f3, also known as Lliga Segona Divisi\u00f3 S\u00e8nior, was the 20th season of second-tier football in Andorra. The season began on 15 September 2018 and ended on 19 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286356-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Segona Divisi\u00f3\nAfter winning the league in the previous season, Ordino were promoted to the 2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286356-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Segona Divisi\u00f3, Format\nEleven clubs competed for the league title. The clubs played each other twice for a total of 18 matches for each club. The three \"B\" teams could not be promoted. Six clubs then advanced to a play-off to determine which would earn promotion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286357-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n\nThe 2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n season, also known as LaLiga 1|2|3 for sponsorship reasons, was the 88th season of the Spanish football second division since its establishment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286357-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, Summary\nOn 18 January 2019, just one day before the start of the second half of the season, the LFP expelled Reus, due to their failure to pay their players. On 1 June 2019, Extremadura UD player Jos\u00e9 Antonio Reyes was killed in a car crash in his native hometown Utrera ahead of the last matchday 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286357-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, Team changes\nThis was the first edition without reserve teams since the 2002\u201303 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286357-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286357-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, Season statistics, Zamora Trophy\nThe Zamora Trophy was awarded by newspaper Marca to the goalkeeper with the least goals-to-games ratio. Keepers had to play at least 28 games of 60 or more minutes to be eligible for the trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286357-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, Season statistics, Hat-tricks\n4 Player scored 4 goals; (H) \u2013 Home\u00a0; (A) \u2013 Away", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286357-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, Average attendances\nSource: Notes:1: Team played last season in La Liga.2: Team played last season in Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B.3: Rayo Majadahonda played seven games at Wanda Metropolitano during the renovations works of Cerro del Espino.4: Reus was excluded after the round 21 and only played 11 home matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286358-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n (women)\nThe 2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n Femenina de F\u00fatbol was the 18th edition of the Spanish women's football second-tier league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286358-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n (women), Competition format\nThe Segunda Divisi\u00f3n was divided into seven inter-regional groups. Each group played their season as home and away round-robin format. The seven group champions (for group 6, the winner of the Canarian final) and the best runner-up qualified for the promotion playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286358-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n (women), Competition format\nIn the promotion playoffs, the eight teams were divided by draw into two groups of four teams that played a double-leg knockout format. The two winners promoted to the Primera Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286358-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n (women), Competition format\nThe top four teams of each group and the two best fifth qualified teams stay in the division for the 2019\u201320 season, together with the two relegated teams from Primera Divisi\u00f3n, as there will only be 32 teams next season. All others fall into Primera Nacional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286358-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n (women), Group 6, Canarian final\nThe winner of the Canarian final qualified to the promotion stage. After the refusal of Granadilla B, Tacuense was allowed to play the playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286359-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B\nThe 2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B season was the 42nd since its establishment. Eighty teams participated, distributed across four groups of twenty clubs each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286359-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B, Overview before the season\n80 teams joined the league, including three relegated from the 2017\u201318 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, 18 promoted from the 2017\u201318 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n and Ibiza, that replaced Lorca FC after the latter did not fulfill the economic requirements and was banned from playing in Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286359-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B, Average attendances\nThis is a list of attendance data of the teams that give an official number. They include playoffs games:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286359-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B, Average attendances\nNotes:1: Team played last season in Segunda Divisi\u00f3n. 2: Team played last season in Tercera Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286360-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n de F\u00fatbol Salvadore\u00f1o\nThe 2018\u201319 season (officially known as Liga de Plata and also as Torneo Luis Baltazar Ram\u00edrez) will be El Salvador's Segunda Divisi\u00f3n de F\u00fatbol Salvadore\u00f1o. The season will be split into two championships, Apertura 2018 and Clausura 2019. 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.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286360-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n de F\u00fatbol Salvadore\u00f1o, Changes from the 2017\u201318 seasons\nTeams promoted to 2018\u201319 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de F\u00fatbol Profesional season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286360-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n de F\u00fatbol Salvadore\u00f1o, Changes from the 2017\u201318 seasons\nTeams relegated to Segunda Divisi\u00f3n de F\u00fatbol Salvadore\u00f1o - Apertura 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286360-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n de F\u00fatbol Salvadore\u00f1o, Changes from the 2017\u201318 seasons\nTeams relegated to Tercera Division de F\u00fatbol Salvadore\u00f1o - Apertura 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286360-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n de F\u00fatbol Salvadore\u00f1o, Changes from the 2017\u201318 seasons\nTeams promoted from Tercera Division De F\u00fatbol Profesional - Apertura 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286360-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n de F\u00fatbol Salvadore\u00f1o, Changes from the 2017\u201318 seasons\nNew Teams or teams that purchased a spot in the Segunda division", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286360-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n de F\u00fatbol Salvadore\u00f1o, Notable events, Teams failure to register\nTopiltzin, Alacranes 33, Independiente FC and Dragon failed to register for Clausura 2019 season, due to outstanding debt owed to players and staff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 89], "content_span": [90, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286360-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n de F\u00fatbol Salvadore\u00f1o, Notable events, Notable death from Apertura 2018 season and 2019 Clausura season\nThe following people associated with the Primera Division have died in end of 2018 and mid 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 128], "content_span": [129, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286361-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Senegal Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Senegal Premier League is the 54th season (and 11th professional season) of the Senegal Premier League, the top-tier football league in Senegal. The season started on 3 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286362-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Senior Women's Challenger Trophy\nThe 2018\u201319 Senior Women's Challenger Trophy was the ninth edition of the women's List-A tournament in India. It was played from 3 January to 6 January 2019. The participating teams were India Blue, India Green and India Red. It was played in a round robin format, with the top two progressing to the final. India Red defeated India Blue by 15 runs in the final to win the Challenger Trophy for the 3rd time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286362-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Senior Women's Challenger Trophy, Standings\nThe top two teams qualified for the final. Last updated: 5 January 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286363-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Senior Women's National Football Championship\nThe 2018\u201319 Senior Women's National Football Championship is the 24th edition of the Senior Women's National Football Championship, the premier competition in India for women's teams representing regional and state football associations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286363-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Senior Women's National Football Championship\nTamil Nadu are currently the defending champions, having defeated Manipur in the final during the 2017\u201318 edition of the tournament. The tournament is being hosted in Odisha and is running from 18 September to 1 October 2018 at the Barabati Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286363-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Senior Women's National Football Championship\nManipur won the championship beating Odisha 2\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286363-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Senior Women's National Football Championship, Format\nThe 27 teams in the tournament are split into 8 groups of 3\u20134 teams each. On 27 September, there will be four quarter-final matches and on 29 September there will be two semi-final matches. The Final itself will occur on 1 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 61], "content_span": [62, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286364-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Senior Women's One Day League\nThe 2018\u201319 Senior Women's One Day League was the 13th edition of the women's List A cricket competition in India. It was played from 1 December 2018 to 31 December 2018 in a round-robin format, with 36 teams were divided in 4 groups. Bengal won the tournament, beating Andhra in the final by 10 runs. Himachal Pradesh and Odisha gained promotion from Elite Group C, whilst Uttarakhand gained promotion from the Plate Group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286364-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Senior Women's One Day League\nThe tournament's scheduling conflict with Ranji Trophy led to a shortage of umpire and match officials. The knockouts for the competition were therefore delayed and moved from December 24\u201329 to December 26\u201331.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286364-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Senior Women's One Day League, Competition format\nThe 36 teams competing in the tournament were divided into the Elite Group and the Plate Group, with the 27 teams in the Elite Group further divided into Groups A, B and C and the 10 remained teams competing in one Plate Group. The tournament operated on a round-robin format, with each team playing every other team in their group once.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286364-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Senior Women's One Day League, Competition format\nAt the end of the group stage, the Elite Group A and Elite Group B tables were combined, with the top five in the combined table progressing to the quarter-finals, joined by the top two teams from Elite Group C and the top team from the Plate Group. The top two teams from Elite Group C were also promoted to Elite Group A/B for the following season, with the bottom two teams from the combined table relegated. The winner of the Plate Group was also promoted, with the bottom team from Elite Group C relegated. Matches were played using a 50 over format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286364-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286364-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Senior Women's One Day League, Competition format\nWin: 4 points. Tie: 2 points. Loss: 0 points. No Result/Abandoned: 2 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286364-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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 Net Run Rate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286365-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Senior Women's T20 Challenger Trophy\nThe 2018\u201319 Senior Women's T20 Challenger Trophy was the second edition of the women's T20 tournament in India, and the first time the tournament had been played since 2009\u201310. It was played from 14 August to 21 August 2018. The participating teams were India Blue, India Green and India Red. It was played in double round-robin format followed by a final. India Blue defeated India Red by 4 runs in the final to win their first T20 title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286365-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Senior Women's T20 Challenger Trophy, Squads\nFatima Jaffer was replaced by Krutika Chaudhari due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286365-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Senior Women's T20 Challenger Trophy, Standings\nThe top two teams qualified for the finals. Last updated: 18 August 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 55], "content_span": [56, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286366-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Senior Women's T20 League\nThe 2018\u201319 Senior Women's T20 League was the 11th edition of the women's Twenty20 cricket competition in India. It was held from 20 February to 13 March 2019. Delhi were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286366-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Senior Women's T20 League\nThe tournament had five groups, with four groups containing seven teams and one group with eight teams. The top two teams in each group qualified for the Super League stage of the tournament, with the teams split into two further groups of five teams. Delhi and Himachal from Group A, Assam and Maharashtra from Group B, Railways and Jharkhand from Group C, Karnataka and Punjab from Group D and Madhya Pradesh and Odisha from Group E qualified for the Super League stage. The top team from each Super League group, Punjab from Super League Group A and Karnataka from Super League Group B progressed to the final. Punjab beat Karnataka by 4 runs to win the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286366-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Senior Women's T20 League\nIn Group E's Round 2 fixture between Mizoram and Madhya Pradesh, Mizoram was all out for 9 runs with 9 batters scoring ducks. Apurwa Bhardwaj was the only batter to get off the mark for Mizoram.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286367-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sepahan F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Sepahan's 18th season in the Pro League, and their 25nd consecutive season in the top division of Iranian Football and 65nd year in existence as a football club. They competed in the Hazfi Cup. Sepahan was captained by Hossein Papi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286367-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sepahan 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-00286367-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sepahan F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nFor recent transfers, see List of Iranian football transfers winter 2018\u201319.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286367-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sepahan F.C. season, Players, First-team squad, Loan list\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, 65], "content_span": [66, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286368-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sepsi OSK Sf\u00e2ntu Gheorghe season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Asocia\u021bia Club Sportiv Sepsi OSK Sf\u00e2ntu Gheorghe's 8th season in existence and the 2nd season in Liga I. Sepsi will compete in the Liga I and Cupa Rom\u00e2niei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286368-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sepsi OSK Sf\u00e2ntu Gheorghe season, Players, Squad information\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 7 October 2018.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, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286368-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sepsi OSK Sf\u00e2ntu Gheorghe season, Competitions, Liga I\nThe Liga I fixture list was announced on 5 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286368-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sepsi OSK Sf\u00e2ntu Gheorghe season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nLast updated: 22 December 2018Source: 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, 40], "section_span": [42, 73], "content_span": [74, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286369-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serbian Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Serbian Cup season was the twelfth season of the Serbian national football cup competition. It started on 12 September 2018, and ended on 23 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286370-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serbian First League\nThe Serbian First League (Serbian: Prva Liga Srbija) is the second-highest football league in Serbia. The league is operated by the Serbian FA. 16 teams compete in the league for the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286370-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serbian First League, Format 2018\u201319\nAs of the 2018-19 season, the league reverted to its previous playoff system, whereby the top 8 placed teams compete in the promoted round at the end of the season and the 8 lowest placed teams play in the relegation playoff round. The four bottom placed teams are relegated to the serbian league. The Fourteenth team from Super Liga is then sent to a playoff against the winner of the Prva Liga play off. At the end of the season, the top two teams and the winner of the play-offs are promoted to the Super Liga. The Prva liga play-offs is a knock-out competition for the teams finishing the season in third to sixth place with the winner being promoted to the Super Liga. In the play-offs, the third-placed team plays against the sixth-placed team and the fourth-placed team plays against the fifth-placed team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 858]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286370-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serbian First League, Team changes\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286370-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serbian First League, Transfers\nFor the list of transfers involving First League clubs during 2018\u201319 season, please see: List of Serbian football transfers summer 2018 and List of Serbian football transfers winter 2018\u201319.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286370-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serbian First League, Play-offs, Promotion round\nThe top eight teams advanced from the regular season. Points from the regular season were halved with half points rounded up. Teams played each other once.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286370-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serbian First League, Play-offs, Relegation round\nThe bottom eight teams from the regular season play in the relegation round. Points from the regular season are halved with half points rounded up. Teams play each other once.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 57], "content_span": [58, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286371-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serbian League Belgrade\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Jolicnikola (talk | contribs) at 09:56, 3 April 2020 (\u2192\u200eLeague table). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286371-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serbian League Belgrade\nThe Serbian League Belgrade (Serbian: Srpska Liga Beograd) is one of four sections of the Serbian League, the third national tier. The league is operated by the Belgrade FA. 16 teams compete in the league for the 2018\u201319 season. Top team will be promoted to the Serbian SuperLiga. Two bottom teams will be relegated to the Belgrade Zone League, the fourth-highest division overall in the Serbian football league system, while the team in 14th position will be participating in the playoff against the 3rd placed team from the Belgrade Zone League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286371-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serbian League Belgrade, Team changes\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286372-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serbian League East\nThe 2018\u201319 Serbian League East was the 16th season of one of the four third level leagues in Serbian football. The league consists of 18 teams. A higher level of competition is the First League, while the lower three Zone Leagues are West, East and South.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286372-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serbian League East, Clubs\nJagodina withdrew from the Serbian League East for financial difficulties and inability to register players, and Tabane will play instead, from the full name FK Tabane-Jagodina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286373-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serbian SuperLiga\nThe 2018\u201319 Serbian SuperLiga was the thirteenth season of the Serbian SuperLiga since its establishment. Red Star was the defending champions from the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286373-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serbian SuperLiga, Teams\nThe league consisted of 16 teams: fourteen teams from the 2017\u201318 Serbian SuperLiga and two new teams from the 2017\u201318 Serbian First League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286373-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serbian SuperLiga, Teams\nThe first club to be promoted was Proleter Novi Sad, following their 3\u20131 win against Radni\u010dki 1923 on 20 May 2018. Proleter will play in the Serbian SuperLiga for the first time in their history. It will also be first time ever that two teams from Novi Sad are members of top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286373-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serbian SuperLiga, Teams\nThe second club to be promoted was Dinamo Vranje, following their 1\u20131 draw with Novi Pazar on 26 May 2018. Dinamo will play in the Serbian SuperLiga for the first time in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286373-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serbian SuperLiga, Teams\nThe first club to be relegated was Borac \u010ca\u010dak, who were relegated on 5 May 2018 following a 2\u20131 defeat against Rad, ending their 4-year stay in the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286373-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serbian SuperLiga, Teams\nThe second and final club to be relegated was Javor Ivanjica, who were relegated on 17 May 2018 following their 1\u20131 draw with Rad, ending their 3-year stay in the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286373-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286373-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serbian SuperLiga, Transfers\nFor the list of transfers involving SuperLiga clubs during 2018\u201319 season, please see: List of Serbian football transfers summer 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286373-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serbian SuperLiga, Play-offs, Championship round\nThe top eight teams advanced from the regular season. Points from the regular season were halved with half points rounded up. Teams played each other once.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286373-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serbian SuperLiga, Play-offs, Relegation round\nThe bottom eight teams from the regular season play in the relegation round. Points from the regular season are halved with half points rounded up. Teams play each other once.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286373-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serbian SuperLiga, Relegations play-off\nTwo legged relegation play-off match will be played between team placed 14th at the end of relegation round and winner of Serbian First League promotion play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286373-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serbian SuperLiga, Individual statistics, Top goalscorers\n1 Vukanovi\u0107 has played for Napredak until matchday 21 and scored 12 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 65], "content_span": [66, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286374-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A\nThe 2018\u201319 Serie A (known as the Serie A TIM for sponsorship reasons) was the 117th season of top-tier Italian football, the 87th in a round-robin tournament, and the 9th since its organization under a league committee separate from Serie B. Juventus were the seven-time defending champions and defended their title following their victory against Fiorentina on 20 April 2019. The season was run from 18 August 2018 to 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286374-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A, Events\nHellas Verona and Benevento immediately returned to Serie B after finishing 19th and 20th while Crotone, finishing in 18th place, were relegated after two seasons in the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286374-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A, Events\nOn 28 April, Empoli earned the right to come back to Serie A after one year of relegation. On 18 May 2018, Parma achieved promotion having finished second in the 2017\u201318 Serie B season, just three seasons after their bankruptcy relegation to Serie D. The last team promoted, after 2 years of absence, was Frosinone, who defeated Palermo in the Serie B play-off finals 3\u20132 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286374-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A, Events\nOn 23 July, Parma were handed a 5-point deduction for the 2018\u201319 Serie A season, following text messages from Parma player Emanuele Calai\u00f2 \"eliciting a reduced effort\" from two players of Spezia during the 2017\u201318 season, a match Parma won 2\u20130 to secure promotion to this season. On 9 August, Parma had the 5-point deduction expunged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286374-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A, Events\nOn 14 August, the day of the Ponte Morandi bridge collapse in Genoa, the Italian Football Federation announced a minute's silence would be added for the victims of the collapse before all Serie A matches during the opening weekend that succeeded the incident. On 16 August, the Lega Serie A postponed the opening matches for both Genoese clubs Genoa and Sampdoria that were originally scheduled for 19 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286374-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A, Events\nOn 13 September, Chievo was deducted 3 points after being found guilty of false accounting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286374-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A, Events\nOn 14 April 2019, Chievo was relegated from Serie A after a 3\u20131 defeat by Napoli, ending an eleven-year spell in the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286374-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A, Events\nOn 20 April, Juventus won their 35th title and their eighth in a row with a win over Fiorentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286374-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A, Events\nOn 5 May, Frosinone was relegated from Serie A after a 2\u20132 draw away at Sassuolo, going down after just one season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286374-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A, Events\nOn 26 May, Atalanta finished third and secured a place in the Champions League group stage, both for the first time in their history. Meanwhile, Empoli which were one point above the relegation zone ahead of Genoa, were eventually relegated to Serie B after they were defeated by Internazionale, while Genoa drew with Fiorentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286374-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A, Events\nThis was also the last season of iconic Roma captain Daniele De Rossi that left the team after 18 seasons, while veterans Sergio Pellissier (from Chievo), Andrea Barzagli (from Juventus) and Emiliano Moretti (from Torino) retired from professional football at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286374-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A, League table, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches. In order to preserve chronological evolvements, any postponed matches are not included to the round at which they were originally scheduled, but added to the full round they were played immediately afterwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 49], "content_span": [50, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286374-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A, Season statistics, Top goalscorers\n1 Pi\u0105tek played for Genoa until matchday 20 and scored 13 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 51], "content_span": [52, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286374-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A, Season statistics, Hat-tricks\n4 Player scored four goals\u00a0; (H) \u2013 Home (A) \u2013 Away", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 46], "content_span": [47, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286374-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A, Awards\nIn 2019, Serie A introduced the Serie A Awards for the first time, using calculations from Opta Sports and Netco Sports to determine the best players of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286375-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A (women)\nThe 2018\u201319 Serie A (women) is the 52nd season of the women's football top level league in Italy. Juventus is the defending champions. The season is scheduled to run from 15 September 2018 to 20 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286375-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A (women), Teams\nTwo teams finished at the bottom of the league and were relegated at the end of the 2017-18 season: Empoli and San Zaccaria", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286375-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A (women), Teams\nBrescia, who finished second in Serie A last season, and Res Roma, who finished eighth, sold their licenses respectively to Milan and Roma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286376-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A1 (men's water polo)\nThe 2018\u201319 Serie A1 is the 100th season of the Serie A1, Italy's premier Water polo league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286376-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A1 (men's water polo), Team information\nThe following 14 clubs compete in the Serie A1 during the 2018\u201319 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286376-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A1 (men's water polo), Regular season\nPld - Played; W - Won; D - Drawn; L - Lost; GF - Goals for; GA - Goals against; Diff - Difference; Pts - Points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286376-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A1 (men's water polo), Playoffs\nThe final six was held on 23\u201326 May 2019 at the Bruno Bianchi Swimming Stadium in Trieste.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286377-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A2 Basket\nThe 2018\u201319 Serie A2 season, known for sponsorship reasons as the Serie A2 Old Wild West, was the 45th season of the Italian basketball second league Serie A2 Basket. The season started on October 5, 2018, and ended on June 17, 2019, with the last game of the promotion playoffs finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286377-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A2 Basket\nLavoropi\u00f9 Fortitudo Bologna won their 1st title by beating Virtus Roma in the game 2 of the A2 Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286377-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A2 Basket, Rules\nThe season was composed of 32 teams with a regional subdivision in two equal groups of sixteen, East and West. Each team played twice each team in its subgroup, the second ranked team of each group then plays the 9th ranked team of the other group (e.g. East No. 2 against West No. 9), then the third best against the 8th, and so on, to form a promotion playoffs (for one place) of sixteen teams. Two more teams (1st ranked of each group) were promoted directly without going through the playoffs", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286377-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A2 Basket, Coppa Italia\nAt the half of the league, the four first teams of each group in the table played the LNP Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286377-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A2 Basket, Playout\nThe league play-out was played between the 14th and 15th placed teams of each group in two elimination rounds. The series was played in a best-of-three format: the first, the second and the eventual fifth game were played at home of the team that got the better ranking at the end of the regular season, the third and the eventual fourth were played at home the lower ranked team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286377-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A2 Basket, Playoffs\nThe league's playoffs were played between the second and the 9th of each group in four rounds: eightfinals, quarterfinals, semifinals and final. All series were played in a best-of-five format: the first, the second and the eventual fifth match were played at home of the best-placed team, the second, the third and the fourth, at the end of the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286377-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie A2 Basket, Serie A2 Finals\nSince this season the Playoffs winner was the third promoted team to LBA. The two other promoted clubs, which were also the top seeded on the League Table at the end of the Regular Season, faced a final of two matches to decide the winner of the Serie A2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286378-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie B\nThe 2018\u201319 Serie B (known as Serie BKT for sponsorship reasons) was the 87th season of Serie B in Italy since its establishment in 1929.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286378-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie B\nA total of 19 teams contested in the 2018\u201319 season, instead of the usual 22 teams, due to the exclusion of Bari, Cesena and Avellino. There are 12 teams returning from the 2017\u201318 Serie B season, 4 promoted from 2017\u201318 Serie C (Livorno, Padova, Lecce, Cosenza) and 3 relegated from 2017\u201318 Serie A (Crotone, Hellas Verona, Benevento).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286378-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie B, Teams\nThe list of teams for the season was originally expected to feature 15 teams from the 2017\u201318 Serie B, as well as three teams who were relegated from the 2017\u201318 Serie A (Crotone, Verona and Benevento) and four promoted from the 2017\u201318 Serie C: league winners Livorno, Padova and Lecce, plus national playoff winners Cosenza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286378-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie B, Teams\nLater in July, Bari and Cesena renounced on their participation to the league due to serious financial issues, whereas Avellino was excluded due to financial irregularities. Foggia was admitted, but it had eight points deducted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286378-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie B, Teams\nFollowing these event, the Serie B league assembly voted in favour of reducing the number of teams from 22 to 20; this move was promptly revoked by the Italian Football Federation due to bureaucratic issues who would not allow to change the league format for the current season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286378-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie B, Teams\nOn 7 August, Avellino was finally excluded from the Serie B after losing on their appeal verdict to be readmitted in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286378-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie B, Teams\nAlthough it was expected that the three vacancies were to be filled by Catania, Novara and Siena, however Pro Vercelli and Ternana disagreed, and on 10 August, the Lega B announced the 2018\u201319 season would go ahead with 19 teams instead of the regular 22. The Italian Football Federation formalized the change of format for the Serie B from 22 to 19 teams later on 13 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286378-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie B, League table, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches. In order to preserve chronological evolvements, any postponed matches are not included to the round at which they were originally scheduled, but added to the full round they were played immediately afterwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 49], "content_span": [50, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286378-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie B, Promotion play-offs\nSix teams could contest the promotion play-offs depending on the point differential between the third and fourth-placed teams. It began with a preliminary one-legged round played at the home venue of the higher placed team, involving the teams placed fifth to eight. The two winning teams advanced to play the third and fourth-placed teams in the two-legged semi-finals. Those winning teams advanced to the two-legged final, where the winner was promoted to play in Serie A the following season. In the two-legged rounds, the higher seeded team played the second game at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286378-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie B, Relegation play-out\nThe relegation play-out was originally scheduled to be played between the 15th and the 16th placed teams in the table \u2014 Venezia and Salernitana. However, following the relegation of Palermo to the bottom of the table due to administrative offense (financial irregularities), the Lega B announced no relegation play-off would be held, thus effectively relegating Foggia directly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286378-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie B, Relegation play-out\nHowever, on 23 May 2019, the Regional Administrative Tribunal (TAR) of Lazio declared void the procedure followed by the Lega B, provisionally reintroducing the play-out, this time between Salernitana (15th) and Foggia (16th), in accordance with the new standings after Palermo were subsequently placed at the bottom of the league table due to financial irregularities. The decision was upheld by the Guarantee College of Sports (Collegio di garanzia dello sport) on 27 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286378-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie B, Relegation play-out\nFinally, on 29 May, the Court of Appeal of the Italian Football Federation (Corte d'Appello della FIGC) annulled the relegation of Palermo, who were sanctioned with 20 points of penalization instead, and hence changed the composition of the matches, causing the immediate relegation of Foggia, and the re-admission to the play-out of Venezia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286378-0011-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie B, Relegation play-out\nNevertheless, the players of both teams threatened to boycott the challenge, regarding it as late in the calendar (25 days after the last match), problematic for holidays and recesses of players, and conflicting with the FIFA International Calendar and a resolution of Lega B, according to which Serie B matches could not be held during the national team period (3\u201311 June).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286378-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie B, Relegation play-out, Matches\nThe higher-placed team played at home for the second leg. If tied on aggregate, extra time and a penalty shoot-out would be played because both teams ended up with the same number of points in the table. The losers would be relegated to Serie C for the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 45], "content_span": [46, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286378-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie B, Relegation play-out, Matches, Second leg\nOn 12 July, the FIGC retired the professional license of Palermo. According to the new regulations enacted by the FIGC in January 2019, the relegation play-out was consequently considered null and void, and both Venezia and Salernitana were allowed to remain in Serie B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 57], "content_span": [58, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286378-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie B, Season statistics, Top goalscorers\n1Player scored 1 goal in the play-offs. 2Player scored 2 goals in the play-offs. 3Player scored 3 goals in the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 51], "content_span": [52, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286378-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie B, Season statistics, Clean sheets\n1Player had 1 clean sheet in the play-offs. 2Player had 2 clean sheets in the play-offs. 3Player had 3 clean sheets in the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 48], "content_span": [49, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286378-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie B, Attendance data of regular season\nSource: Stadia Postcards Notes:A Team played last season in Serie A. C Team played last season in Serie C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 50], "content_span": [51, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286379-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie C\nThe 2018\u201319 Serie C was the fifth season of the unified Serie C division, the third tier of the Italian football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286379-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie C, Teams\nThe league originally featured 60 teams. However, it saw the bankruptcy and subsequent withdrawal of Andria, Mestre, Reggiana and Vicenza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286379-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie C, Teams\nTo fill the vacancies in Serie B, Novara, Catania and Siena became the repechage candidates from Serie C, to the objection of Pro Vercelli and Ternana. However, on 10 August Lega B announced that a 19-team calendar would be commissioned for the 2018\u201319 and no repechage would take place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286379-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie C, Teams\nThe first team of Bassano Virtus was relocated to Vicenza as L.R. Vicenza Virtus. While its owner, had also acquired some assets from the liquidators of Vicenza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286379-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie C, Teams\nOn 3 August 2018, it was officially announced by the Italian Football Federation (FIGC) that Juventus Under 23 would take part in Serie C, making it the first \"B Team\" in Italy to do so since 1934. Also, Cavese and Imolese were admitted from Serie D to fill the vacancies created.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286379-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie C, Teams\nDue to several issues regarding vacancies and trials at both Serie B and Serie C level, the Serie C league committee delayed the season kickoff day to September, also hinting at the possibility of an indefinite delay because of the unclear situation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286379-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie C, Teams\nThe season eventually kicked off on Saturday 15 September, but saw all games of Novara, Pro Vercelli, Ternana, Siena and Catania delayed indefinitely due to their judicial requests to be admitted to Serie B, as well as Viterbese, after the club threatened not to participate in Serie C due to their opposition to being admitted to the Southern group. Virtus Entella's second game was also delayed after the club was accepted on appeal for being readmitted to Serie B by the Regional Administrative Court of Lazio (Italian: Tribunale Amministrativo Regionale del Lazio, TAR Lazio).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286379-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie C, Teams\nOn 14 February 2019, Matera were excluded from Serie C for missing four consecutive matches which was followed by the exclusion of Pro Piacenza on 18 February 2019 after missing several games and presenting a makeshift team composed of teenagers and a physiotherapist in their final game, where they were beaten 20-0 by Cuneo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286379-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie C, Teams, Promotion and relegation rule changes\nOn 30 January 2019, it was announced that five teams rather than the usual four would be promoted to Serie B for the 2019-20 season, after FIGC decided to incorporate an extra club in Serie B to bring the league up to 20 teams. The decision also meant that only seven clubs would be relegated to Serie D rather than the original eight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 61], "content_span": [62, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286379-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie C, Teams, Promotion and relegation rule changes\nDue to the exclusions of Pro Piacenza and Matera from the league, the football league committee, in accordance with the Italian Football Federation, agreed on 2 April 2019 to a change in the relegation rules, by decreasing the number of relegations to five as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 61], "content_span": [62, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286379-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie C, Teams, Stadia and locations, Group A (North & Central West)\n7 teams from Tuscany, 6 teams from Piedmont, 2 teams from Emilia-Romagna, 2 teams from Sardinia, 2 teams from Liguria and 1 team from Lombardy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 76], "content_span": [77, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286379-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie C, Teams, Stadia and locations, Group B (North & Central East)\n5 teams from Lombardy, 4 teams from Marche, 3 teams from Emilia-Romagna, 2 teams from Friuli-Venezia Giulia, 2 teams from Umbria, 2 teams from Veneto, 1 team from Abruzzo and 1 team from Trentino-Alto Adige.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 76], "content_span": [77, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286379-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie C, Teams, Stadia and locations, Group C (South)\n4 teams from Calabria, 4 teams from Campania, 4 teams from Sicily, 3 teams from Apulia, 2 teams from Basilicata, 2 teams from Lazio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 61], "content_span": [62, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286379-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie C, Promotion play-offs, Finals\nIf tied on aggregate, the winner is decided by extra-time and penalty shootout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286379-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie C, Relegation play-outs, First Round\nHigher-placed team plays at home for second leg. If tied on aggregate, lower-placed team is relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 50], "content_span": [51, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286379-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie C, Relegation play-outs, Final\nIf tied on aggregate, extra time and eventually penalty shoot-out are played. Losers are relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286379-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie C, Top goalscorers\n1Player scored 1 goal in the play-offs. 3Player scored 3 goals in the play-offs. 4Player scored 4 goals in the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286380-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie D\nThe 2018\u201319 Serie D was the seventy-first edition of the top level Italian non-professional football championship. It represents the fourth tier in the Italian football league system. A total of 168 teams, divided on geographical grounds into six groups of 18 teams each and three groups of 20 teams each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286380-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie D, Changes from 2017\u201318\nThe 2018\u201319 Serie D season was one of the most competitive and prestigious in the league's history, due to the presence of several teams with longstanding history in the professional leagues, which were refounded after going bankrupt in 2018. These teams include former Serie A clubs Bari, Modena, Cesena, Avellino and Reggio Audace (formerly known as Reggiana).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 37], "content_span": [38, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286380-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie D, Teams\nThe composition of the league's nine groups was announced on 30 August 2018. Gozzano, Pro Patria, Virtus Verona, Rimini, Imolese, Albissola, Vis Pesaro, Rieti, Potenza, Cavese and Vibonese all depart Serie D, having been promoted to Serie C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286380-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie D, Teams, Teams relegated from Serie C\nPrato, Gavorrano and Santarcangelo joined the league, having been relegated from Serie C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286380-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie D, Teams, Teams relegated from Serie C\nAkragas was relegated from Serie C to Serie D, but the club did not register and was put into liquidation due to financial difficulties. Fondi was relegated from Serie C, but the club merged with F.C. Aprilia. Owner Antonio Pezone transferred Fondi's sporting title to Aprilia Racing, ending Fondi's existence. F.C. Aprilia played in Serie D the previous season and earned the right to return. The merged club took the name F.C. Aprilia Racing Club and registered with the league for the current season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286380-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie D, Teams, Teams relegated from Serie C\nAfter the end of the previous season, Mestre attempted to enroll in Serie C for 2018\u201319, at the last minute. However, anticipated new financial backers walked away, citing concerns over infrastructure, and the Serie C registration was rejected. Mestre was left with no better option but to play the 2018\u201319 season at the Eccellenza level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286380-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie D, Teams, Refounded former professional teams\nAs part of the Article 52 of N.O.I.F. legislation, newborn clubs that explicitly represent the continuity of professional clubs who were excluded from their league can be admitted to Serie D under specific circumstances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286380-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie D, Teams, Refounded former professional teams\nA record three Serie B clubs failed to register in the Italian second division for the new season and thus were readmitted as newborn clubs with different ownerships. Bari, probably the most successful one of the three, was refounded under new owner Aurelio De Laurentiis, president of Napoli after the original club renounced participation in Serie B due to financial issues. Cesena also voluntarily renounced registration at Serie B level. Since another club from Cesena, Romagna Centro, was already playing at Serie D level, it was forbidden for a newborn club to be founded and registered with the league. In order for Cesena to continue playing, Romagna Centro renamed itself A.S.D. Romagna Centro Cesena and merged with Cesena. Avellino was also excluded after losing an appeal regarding their exclusion from Serie B, and a newborn club was subsequently admitted to Serie D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 940]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286380-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie D, Teams, Refounded former professional teams\nOther refounded teams admitted to Serie D include Modena, which started the 2017\u201318 season in Serie C but was excluded later on 6 November 2017, due to falling behind on bills, getting locked out of its stadium and missing four consecutive Serie C matches, because of its players being on strike after not being paid for several months, thus effectively dissolving the club and ending its 105-year history. A refounded version of the club, named Modena FC 2018, was allowed to join the Serie D as a phoenix club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286380-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie D, Teams, Refounded former professional teams\nAfter the 2017\u201318 season, Reggiana failed to register the team in 2018\u201319 Serie C, after an unsuccessful attempt by owner Mike Piazza to sell a majority interest in the debt-ridden club. Reggio Audace F.C. enters Serie D as a reincarnation of A.C. Reggiana 1919.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286380-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie D, Teams, Refounded former professional teams\nFollowing the 2017\u201318 season, Vicenza Calcio merged with Bassano Virtus 55 S.T. with the merged club playing as L.R. Vicenza Virtus and retaining the sporting title of Bassano Virtus, resulting in the loss of Vicenza's sporting title and the dissolution of the club. A newly formed company, A.C. Vicenza 1902, requested the sporting title of Vicenza Calcio and entry into Serie D. Both requests were rejected by the Italian Football Federation, which said the club could only apply to play in Terza Categoria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286380-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie D, Teams, Refounded former professional teams\nFidelis Andria was denied registration for the 2018\u201319 Serie C, based on Covisoc's assessment of the club's debt situation. On the date of the deadline for Serie D registration, a group of investors led by Marco Di Vincenzo formed S.S.D. Fidelis Andria 1928 as a reincarnation of S.S. Fidelis Andria 1928 and to assume the former club's sporting title. The reborn club was admitted to Serie D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286380-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie D, Teams, Teams promoted from Eccellenza\nReal Giulianova, Rotonda, Locri, Castrovillari, Savoia, Sorrento, Nola, Axys Zola, Savignanese, Classe, Chions, Vis Artena, Citt\u00e0 di Anagni, Ladispoli, Fezzanese, Fanfulla, Sondrio, Adrense, Villa d'Alm\u00e8, Calvina Sport, Montegiorgio, Isernia, Stresa, Pro Dronero, Citt\u00e0 di Fasano, Castiadas, Torres, Marsala, Citt\u00e0 di Messina, Sangimignano, Aglianese, Sinalunghese, Virtus Bolzano, St. Georgen, Bastia, Cannara, Cartigliano, Sandon\u00e0 and Villafranca joined Serie D after earning promotion from Eccellenza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 54], "content_span": [55, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286380-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie D, Teams, Teams relegated to Eccellenza\nVaresina, Varese Calcio, Derthona, Castellazzo Bormida, Lumezzane, Grumellese, Dro Alto Garda, Romanese, Montebelluna, Calvi Noale, Liventina, Abano, Castelvetro, Vivi Altotevere Sansepolcro, Correggese, Colligiana, Rignanese, Finale, Argentina, Valdinievole Montecatini, Jesina, Monticelli, Fabriano Cerreto, Nerostellati, Nuorese, Anziolavinio, Tortoli, San Teodoro, San Severo, Aversa Normanna, Manfredonia, Sporting Fulgor Molfetta, Ebolitana, Palazzolo, Paceco and Isola Capo Rizzuto departed Serie D after being relegated to Eccellenza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 53], "content_span": [54, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286380-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie D, Teams, Previous season's team not returning\nVillabiagio participated in Serie D during the previous season and earned the right to return for this season, but the club did not register to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 60], "content_span": [61, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286380-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie D, Teams, Merger\nNerostellati Frattese merged with Ercolanese and the combined organization played under the Ercolanese name. San Nicol\u00f2 merged into Notaresco. Newly promoted Omnia Bitonto merged into Bitonto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 30], "content_span": [31, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286380-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Serie D, Scudetto Serie D\nThe nine group winners enter a tournament which determines the overall Serie D champions and the winner is awarded the Scudetto Serie D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286381-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Seton Hall Pirates men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Seton Hall Pirates men's basketball team represented Seton Hall University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They were led by ninth-year head coach Kevin Willard. The Pirates played their home games at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey and Walsh Gymnasium in South Orange, New Jersey as members of the Big East Conference. They lost to Wofford in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286381-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Seton Hall Pirates men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Pirates finished the 2017\u201318 season 22\u201312, 10\u20138 in Big East play to finish in a three-way tie for third place. In the Big East Tournament, they lost to Butler in the quarterfinals. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as the No. 8 seed in the Midwest region. There they defeated NC State in the First Round before losing to Kansas in the Second Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286382-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Seton Hall Pirates women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Seton Hall Pirates women's basketball team represented Seton Hall University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Pirates, led by sixth year head coach Anthony Bozzella, played their home games in South Orange, New Jersey at the Walsh Gymnasium as members of the Big East Conference. They finished the season 15\u201316, 7\u201311 in Big East play to finish in a tie for eighth place. They lost in the first round of the Big East Women's Tournament to St. John's. They received an at-large bid to the WNIT where they lost to Toledo in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286383-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sevilla FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 112th season in existence of Sevilla FC and the club's 18th consecutive season in La Liga, the top league of Spanish football. Sevilla competed in La Liga, the Supercopa de Espa\u00f1a, the Copa del Rey and the UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286383-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sevilla FC season, Kit\nOn 21 May 2018, Sevilla announced a new three-year kit supply contract with American sportswear giant Nike from 2018\u20132021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 30], "content_span": [31, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286383-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sevilla FC 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286383-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sevilla FC season, Players, Current Squad, From youth squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 67], "content_span": [68, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286383-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sevilla FC season, Competitions, La Liga\nOn 24 July 2018, the La Liga fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286383-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sevilla FC season, Competitions, Copa del Rey\nSevilla entered the competition as the 2017\u201318 Copa del Rey runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286383-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sevilla FC season, Competitions, Supercopa de Espa\u00f1a\nAs Barcelona were winners of both the 2017\u201318 Copa del Rey and 2017\u201318 La Liga, Sevilla qualified as the Copa del Rey runners-up and faced Barcelona for the season opening Supercopa de Espa\u00f1a. For the first time in the tournament history, it was a single match hosted in a neutral venue at the Stade Ibn Batouta in Tangier, Morocco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286383-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sevilla FC season, Competitions, UEFA Europa League\nSpain received three bids to the UEFA Europa League. The fifth-placed team in La Liga and the Copa del Rey winner qualify for the Europa League group stage. The sixth-placed team in La Liga begins in the Second qualifying round. As Barcelona qualified for both the Champions League (1st in La Liga) and the Europa League (Copa del Rey winner), their Europa League place is vacated. As a result, the highest-placed team in the league which have not yet qualified for European competitions (seventh-placed team, Sevilla) qualify for the Europa league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286383-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sevilla FC season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nLast updated: 29 May 2019Source: 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286384-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sheffield Shield season\nThe 2018\u201319 Sheffield Shield season was the 117th season of the Sheffield Shield, the domestic first-class cricket competition in Australia. The season started on 16 October 2018. For the first time in six seasons, the competition featured no day/night matches. The first five rounds took place prior to the international Test series against India, and in addition the season breaks for the Big Bash League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286384-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sheffield Shield season\nQueensland were the defending champions. The final will include the use of the bonus point system that is used during the rest of the competition, in the event that the match ends in a draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286384-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sheffield Shield season\nNew South Wales faced Victoria in the Sheffield Shield final at Junction Oval in Melbourne. Victoria beat New South Wales by 177 runs to win their 32nd title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286384-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sheffield Shield season, Broadcasting\nAll Sheffield Shield regular season matches were exclusively streamed live and free on Cricket Australia's official website, with the final broadcast live on Fox Sports' new Fox Cricket channel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286385-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sheffield United F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Sheffield United's 130th season in their history and second consecutive in the Championship. Along with the Championship, the club also competed in the FA Cup and EFL Cup. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019. They were promoted to the Premier League during this season, after a long battle with Leeds United. A 2\u20130 home victory vs Ipswich Town sealed their first promotion to the top flight since 2005-06.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286385-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sheffield United F.C. season\nTheir season started poorly after they fell to bottom of the league after 2 defeats to Swansea City and Middlesbrough respectively. They bounced back with 4 wins in a row between games 3 and 6. They had mixed form until Christmas, but after the halfway point they suffered just 2 defeats in 23 games. 2 draws to Birmingham City and Millwall late on in the season made it look a hard task for Sheffield United to finish 2nd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286385-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sheffield United F.C. season\nHowever, Leeds United somewhat bottled the season in the late stages and Sheffield United were presented with a chance to seal promotion against Ipswich Town on Matchday 45. They won the game 2\u20130 and were all but promoted to the Premier League. Their victory was arithmetically confirmed after Leeds United drew 1\u20131 at home to Aston Villa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286385-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sheffield United F.C. season, Competitions, Friendlies\nSheffield United announced, on 16 May 2018, that a friendly away to Stocksbridge Park Steels was scheduled for 7 July. Three fixtures, against Bradford City, Mansfield Town and Doncaster Rovers, were revealed on 18 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286385-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sheffield United F.C. season, Competitions, Championship, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the Championship fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 73], "content_span": [74, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286385-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sheffield United F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286385-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sheffield United F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286386-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Sheffield Wednesday's seventh consecutive season in the Championship. Along with competing in the Championship, the club will also participate in the FA Cup and EFL Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286386-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286386-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Competitions, Friendlies\nAs of 13 June 2018, Sheffield Wednesday have announced three pre-season friendlies against Lincoln City, Mansfield Town and Villarreal CF", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286386-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nIn the FA Cup, Sheffield Wednesday entered the competition in the third round and were drawn home to Luton Town. The fourth round draw was made live on BBC by Robbie Keane and Carl Ikeme from Wolverhampton on 7 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286386-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam. The second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 62], "content_span": [63, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286387-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Shirak SC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Shirak's 28th consecutive season in the Armenian Premier League, in which they finished the season in 7th place, their worst positioning since the 2011 season. Shirak also took part in the Armenian Cup, where they were knocked out by Artsakh in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286388-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Shrewsbury Town F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Shrewsbury Town's 133rd year in existence and their fourth consecutive season in League One. The club also participated in the FA Cup, the EFL Cup and the EFL Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286388-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Shrewsbury Town F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286388-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Shrewsbury Town F.C. season, Pre-season, Friendlies\nShrewsbury Town announced their first pre-season matches on 4 June 2018, with away trips to local rivals AFC Telford United and Port Vale. A home friendly was subsequently arranged with Brentford. The club's pre-season schedule was completed with an away fixture at Bristol City, and matches against Kidderminster Harriers and Burnley to be played behind closed doors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286388-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Shrewsbury Town F.C. season, Competitions, League One, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League One fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286388-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Shrewsbury Town F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October. The draw for the second round was made live on BBC and BT by Mark Schwarzer and Glenn Murray on 12 November. The third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018. The fourth round draw was made live on BBC by Robbie Keane and Carl Ikeme from Wolverhampton on 7 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286388-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Shrewsbury Town F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286388-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Shrewsbury Town F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced. The draw for the second round was made live on Talksport by Leon Britton and Steve Claridge on 16 November. On 8 December, the third round draw was drawn by Alan McInally and Matt Le Tissier on Soccer Saturday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286389-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Siena Saints men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Siena Saints men's basketball team represented Siena College during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at the Times Union Center in Albany, New York as members of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference and were led by first-year head coach Jamion Christian. They finished the 2018\u201319 season 17\u201316 overall, 11\u20137 in MAAC play to finish in a four-way tie for second place. As the 5th seed in the 2019 MAAC Tournament, they defeated No. 4 seed Rider in the quarterfinals 87\u201381 before falling to No. 1 seed Iona 57\u201373 in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286389-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Siena Saints men's basketball team\nOn March 21, 2019, head coach Jamion Christian left his job with Siena to become the new head coach at George Washington. The school promoted assistant coach Carmen Maciariello to fill the vacancy on March 26.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286389-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Siena Saints men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Saints finished the 2017\u201318 season 8\u201324, 4\u201314 in MAAC play to finish in a tie for tenth place. They lost in the first round of the MAAC Tournament to Quinnipiac.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286389-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Siena Saints men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn April 13, 2018, head coach Jimmy Patsos resigned amid an investigation regarding abusive conduct and financial improprieties within the program. On May 2, the Saints hired Mount St. Mary's head coach Jamion Christian for the job.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286390-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sint Maarten Senior League\nThe 2018\u201319 Sint Maarten Senior League is the 42nd season of the Sint Maarten Senior League, the top-tier football league in Sint Maarten. The season began on 28 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286391-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Six Day Series\nThe 2018\u201319 Six Day Series (also known as the Six Day Cycling Series is a multi six-day track cycling race tournament over a season. It is the 3rd series organised by the Madison Sports Group (MSG). This season consists of 7 events across 5 countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286391-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Six Day Series\nIt will be the first edition of the World Cup to feature countries in Asia-Pacific. Two events will be held in Melbourne and Brisbane as the final in Australia. In January 2019, Hong Kong was announced as a new stage to introduce 6-day racing in Asia as the latest frontier. Those three stages will race during 3-day weekends instead of the standard 6-day format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286391-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Six Day Series, Series\nIn August 2018 the MSG revealed the location and dates of the Six Day Series meetings for the season. Six rounds were scheduled in London, United Kingdom; Berlin, Germany; Copenhagen, Denmark; Melbourne, Australia; Manchester and Brisbane. In January, a round in Hong Kong was added into the schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286391-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Six Day Series, Series, London, United Kingdom\nRound 1 was held at the Lee Valley VeloPark, on October 23-28 October 2018. Completed in 2011, the velodrome was the site of the 2012 Olympic Games and 2012 Paralympic Games track events. It has hosted the UCI Track Cycling World Cup (2011-12, 2014-15), and the 2016 UCI Track Cycling World Championships. The 6750-capacity velodrome has also been used for the British Revolution track series, British National Track Championships and was the site of Sir Bradley Wiggins' successful Hour Record ride in 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286391-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Six Day Series, Series, Berlin, Germany\nRound 2, to be held in Velodrom from January 24-29 January 2019. The velodrome was designed by internationally-renowned French architect Dominique Perrault for Berlin's 2000 Olympic Games bid. It was built in 1997 on the site of the former Werner-Seelenbinder-Halle. Since opening, it has played host to the 2017 European Track Championships, the 1998 UCI Track Cycling World Cup Classics and the 1999 UCI Track Cycling World Championships. Since 1997, the traditional Six Days of Berlin has also taken place here. In preparation for the 2017 European Track Championships, the track was rebuilt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286391-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Six Day Series, Series, Copenhagen, Denmark\nDenmark's Ballerup Super Arena is situated in the capital. It will host the third round, on January 31-February 5. The velodrome was completed in 2001 and hosted the 2002 UCI Track Cycling World Championships and 2010 UCI Track Cycling World Championships. It can hold 6,500 spectators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286391-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Six Day Series, Series, Melbourne, Australia\nThe fourth round will be hosted on between 7-9 February at the Melbourne Arena. It hosted the UCI Track Cycling World Championships (2004, 2012), in addition to the 2006 Commonwealth Games track events and numerous rounds of the UCI Track World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286391-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Six Day Series, Series, Hong Kong\nThe fifth round of this Six Day Series will be hosted in Hong Kong between 8-10 March at the Hong Kong Velodrome. Opened in 2013, the velodrome hosted the final round of the UCI Track Cycling World Cup (2015-16, 2018-19), as well as the 2017 UCI Track Cycling World Championships, which is the first one in Asia in the 21st Century. It has permanent seating for 2,000 spectators, expandable to 3,000 for events such as the World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286391-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Six Day Series, Series, Manchester, United Kingdom\nThe sixth round was hosted in Manchester, a big northwestern city of the United Kingdom. This round will be held between 22-24 March. The Manchester Velodrome was completed in 1994 and is the home of British Cycling's National Cycling Centre. The Manchester Velodrome already hosted the 2002 Commonwealth Games, UCI Track Cycling World Championships (1996, 2000, 2008), British National Track Championships and Revolution Cycling series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 58], "content_span": [59, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286391-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Six Day Series, Series, Brisbane, Australia\nThe final would be held in Brisbane, Eastern city in Queensland during 12-14 April. Anna Meares Velodrome was completed in 2016 and named after Olympic gold medallist Anna Meares. It hosted the track cycling events at the 2018 Commonwealth Games. Offices of Cycling Queensland are incorporated in the velodrome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286391-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Six Day Series, Format\nThe men compete in teams of two across the six days and women\u2019s event across three days for the first three rounds. Sprinters will also compete for 6 days. There are certain differences in the races between 6 Day Series and UCI Track Cycling World Cup and UCI Track Cycling World Championships", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286391-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Six Day Series, Series Standings\nAt the end of each Six Day event the Series Standings are updated. Riders are aiming to secure enough points throughout the Series to reach the Six Day Final in Brisbane and a chance to be crowned 2018/19 Series Champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286392-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Skeleton World Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Skeleton World Cup was a multi-race series over a season for skeleton. The season started on 3 December 2018 in Sigulda, Latvia, and finished on 23 February 2019 in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. The World Cup was organised by the International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation, who also run World Cups and Championships in bobsleigh. The title sponsor of the World Cup was again BMW.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286393-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovak Basketball League\nThe 2018\u201319 Slovak Basketball League season will be the 27th season of the top-tier basketball competition in Slovakia. Levick\u00ed Patrioti are the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286393-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovak Basketball League, Competition format\nTen teams joined the regular season, consisted in playing against each other four times home-and-away in double a round-robin format. The eight first qualified teams advance to the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286393-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovak Basketball League, Teams\nAfter the resignation of Ko\u0161ice, runner-up of the previous season, to continue playing in the league, Lu\u010denec, champion of the 1.Liga, replaced them. Also, V\u0160EMvs Karlovka Bratislava resigned to the league thus reducing the number of teams to nine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286393-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovak Basketball League, Playoffs\nSeeded teams played games 1, 3, 5 and 7 at home. Quarterfinals were played in a best-of-five games format while semifinals and final with a best-of-seven one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286394-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovak Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Slovak Cup was the 50th edition of the competition. This tournament began on 15 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286394-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovak Cup\nSlovan Bratislava were the defending champions having won the previous season's Cup by defeating MFK Ru\u017eomberok in the final by a score of 3\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286394-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovak Cup, Format\nThe Cup this season was a knockout tournament contested between 236 clubs. Matches which were level after regulation advanced to penalties to determine a winner. Each round of the cup was contested over one leg with the exception of the semi-finals which were contested over two legs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286394-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovak Cup, Second round\nSixty-four matches in the second round were played from 7 August 2018 to 6 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286394-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovak Cup, Third round\nThirty-two matches in the third round were played from 29 August 2018 to 26 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286394-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovak Cup, Fourth round\nSixteen matches in the fourth round were played from 2 October 2018 to 23 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286394-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovak Cup, Round of 16\nEight matches in the sixth round were played from 23 October 2018 to 16 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286394-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovak Cup, Quarter-finals\nFour matches in the quarter-finals were played on 12\u201313 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286394-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovak Cup, Semi\u2013finals\nFor the semi-finals, the first legs were played on 2 and 3 April and the second legs on 16 and 17 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286395-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovak Extraliga season\nThe 2018\u201319 Slovak Extraliga season was the 26th season of the Slovak Extraliga, the highest level of ice hockey in Slovakia. HK Orange 20 is a project to prepare the Slovakia junior ice hockey team for the IIHF World U20 Championship. The team does not play a complete regular season and cannot advance to the playoffs or get relegated. Since the 2018\u201319 season, the league also includes two teams from Hungary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286395-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovak Extraliga season, Regular season, Standings\nEach team played 55 games, playing each of the other eleven teams five times. Points were awarded for each game, where three points are awarded for winning in regulation time, two points for winning in overtime or shootout, one point for losing in overtime or shootout, and zero points for losing in regulation time. At the end of the regular season, the team that finishes with the most points was crowned the league champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286395-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovak Extraliga season, Regular season, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nThe following players led the league in points, at the conclusion of the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286395-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovak Extraliga season, Regular season, Statistics, Leading goaltenders\nThe following goaltenders led the league in goals against average, provided that they have played at least 40% of their team's minutes, at the conclusion of the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 80], "content_span": [81, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286395-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovak Extraliga season, Relegation series\nRelegation series will be played between MsHK \u017dilina, the 12th team in regular season, and HK Dukla Michalovce, the winner of 1.liga. The winner of best-of-seven series will play in Extraliga in 2019\u201320 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286395-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovak Extraliga season, Relegation series, PlayOut\nMichalovce wins the series 4-3 and will play in 2019\u201320 Slovak Extraliga season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286395-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovak Extraliga season, Playoffs\nTen teams qualify for the playoffs: the top six teams in the regular season have a bye to the quarterfinals, while teams ranked seventh to tenth meet each other (7 versus 10, 8 versus 9) in a preliminary playoff round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286396-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovak First Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 Slovak First Football League (known as the Fortuna Liga for sponsorship reasons) was the 26th season of first-tier football league in Slovakia since its establishment in 1993.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286396-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovak First Football League\nSpartak Trnava were the defending champions after winning their first Slovak title in the previous season. Slovan Bratislava won their first title since 2014, their record-extending ninth Slovak title overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286396-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovak First Football League, Teams\nA total of 12 teams are contesting the league, including 11 sides from the 2017\u201318 season and one promoted from the 2. liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286396-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovak First Football League, Regular season, Results\nEach team plays home-and-away against every other team in the league, for a total of 22 matches played each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286396-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovak First Football League, Relegation group, Results\nEach team plays home-and-away against every other team in the league, for a total of 22 matches played each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286396-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovak First Football League, Europa League play-offs\nShould one of the top 3 teams have won the 2018\u201319 Slovak Cup, Europa League qualification playoffs would have been held among the 4th, 5th, 6th team in the championship group and the top team of the relegation round. The 4th team played the top team of the relegation group and the 5th played the 6th in the semifinals. Winners of the semifinals would play the final to determine the Europa League qualification spot. Europa League qualification playoff games would be one-leg and played at the home pitch of the higher-ranked team. The winners would qualify for the first qualifying round of the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League. On 1 May 2019, Spartak Trnava, who didn't qualify for the championship group, won the cup, thus eliminating the need of playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 817]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286396-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovak First Football League, Relegation play-offs\nTeam placed 11th in the relegation match faced 2nd team from 2. Liga 2018\u201319 for one spot in the next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286397-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovenian Basketball League\nThe 2018\u201319 Slovenian Basketball League, also known as Liga Nova KBM due to sponsorship reasons, is the 28th season of the Premier A Slovenian Basketball League. Olimpija are the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286397-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovenian Basketball League, Format, Regular season\nIn the first phase, ten teams competed in a home-and-away round-robin series (18 games total). All teams advanced from the regular season to one of two postseason stages, depending on their league position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286397-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovenian Basketball League, Format, Second phase\nThe top six teams from the regular season advanced to the championship phase. These teams started the second phase from scratch, with no results carrying over from the regular season. Each team played a total of 10 games in this phase; as in the regular season, a home-and-away round-robin was used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286397-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovenian Basketball League, Format, Second phase\nThe bottom four teams entered a home-and-away round-robin mini-league where two best teams qualify to quarterfinals. Each teams plays 9 games in this phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286397-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovenian Basketball League, Playoffs\nSeeded teams played at home games 1, 3 and, in the finals, 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286398-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovenian Football Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Slovenian Football Cup was the 28th edition of the football knockout competition in Slovenia. The winners of the cup earned a place in the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League first qualifying round. The tournament began on 14 August 2018 and ended on 30 May 2019 with the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286398-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovenian Football Cup\nOlimpija Ljubljana were the defending champions after defeating Aluminij by a score of 6\u20131 in the previous season's final. They successfully defended the title by defeating their \"eternal rivals\" Maribor 2\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286398-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovenian Football Cup, Competition format\nTeams that have qualified from the same regional cup could not be drawn against each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286398-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovenian Football Cup, Competition format\nThe twelve winners were decided over one leg, with extra time and penalties if scores were level. Lower level teams were the hosts. If both teams from a pair were from the same level, the home team was determined by the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286398-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovenian Football Cup, Competition format\nTeams that have qualified from the same regional cup could not be drawn against each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286398-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovenian Football Cup, Competition format\nThe eight winners were decided over one leg, with extra time and penalties if scores were level. Lower level teams were the hosts. If both teams from a pair were from the same level, the home team was determined by the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286398-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovenian Football Cup, Competition format\nThe four winners were decided over two legs on home and away basis with away goals rule being used. In case of a tie, extra time and penalties were used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286398-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovenian Football Cup, Competition format\nThe two winners were decided over two legs on home and away basis with away goals rule being used. In case of a tie, extra time and penalties were used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286398-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovenian Football Cup, Competition format\nThe winners have qualified for the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League first qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286399-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovenian PrvaLiga\nThe 2018\u201319 Slovenian PrvaLiga (also known as the Prva liga Telekom Slovenije for sponsorship reasons) was the 28th edition of the Slovenian PrvaLiga since its establishment in 1991. The season began on 20 July 2018 and ended on 25 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286399-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovenian PrvaLiga, Competition format\nEach team played 36 matches (18 home and 18 away). Teams played four matches against each other (2 home and 2 away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286399-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovenian PrvaLiga, Teams\nA total of ten teams contested the league, including nine from the 2017\u201318 Slovenian PrvaLiga and one promoted from the 2017\u201318 Slovenian Second League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286399-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovenian PrvaLiga, PrvaLiga play-off\nA two-legged play-off between the ninth-placed team in the PrvaLiga and the second-placed team in the 2. SNL was played. The winner (Tabor Se\u017eana) secured a place in the 2019\u201320 PrvaLiga season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286400-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovenian Second League\nThe 2018\u201319 Slovenian Second League season was the 28th edition of the Slovenian Second League. The season began on 4 August 2018 and ended on 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286400-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovenian Second League, Competition format\nEach team has played a toal of 30 matches (15 home and 15 away). Teams played two matches against each other (1 home and 1 away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286400-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovenian Second League, Teams\nThe key for the 16 teams contesting the league was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286400-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovenian Second League, Teams, Stadiums and locations\nNote: \"Capacity\" includes seating capacity only. Most stadiums also have standing areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286400-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovenian Second League, Season statistics, Attendances\nNote 1:Team played the previous season in the Slovenian PrvaLiga. Note 2:Team played the previous season in the Slovenian Third League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286401-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovenian Third League\nThe 2018\u201319 Slovenian Third League was the 27th edition of the Slovenian Third League. The season began on 17 August 2018 and ended on 2 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286401-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovenian Third League, Competition format and rules\nIn the 2018\u201319 season, the Slovenian Third League (3. SNL) was divided into four regional groups with a total of 38 participating clubs. The three groups (North, Centre, East) were composed of ten clubs, while the West group consisted of eight clubs. The group winners played a two-legged play-off for promotion to the Slovenian Second League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286401-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovenian Third League, 3. SNL Centre\nZarica Kranj withdrew and were replaced by \u017diri one week before the start of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286401-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovenian Third League, 3. SNL East, Clubs\nA total of ten teams competed in the league, including nine sides from the 2017\u201318 season and one team relegated from the 2017\u201318 Slovenian Second League (Ver\u017eej).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286401-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Slovenian Third League, Play-offs\nA two-legged play-offs between the group winners for promotion to the Slovenian Second League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286402-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Africa national rugby sevens team season\nIn 2018\u201319, the South Africa national rugby sevens team participated in the 2018\u201319 World Rugby Sevens Series, the 20th edition of the competition since its inception in 1999\u20132000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286402-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Africa national rugby sevens team season, Squad\nThe following players were named in the South Africa national rugby sevens squad for the 2018\u201319 World Rugby Sevens Series:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 61], "content_span": [62, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286402-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Africa national rugby sevens team season, Tournaments, Dubai Sevens\nThe 2018 Dubai Sevens took place from 30 November to 1 December 2018. South Africa were drawn in Pool A of the competition, alongside Argentina, Samoa and Zimbabwe. They beat Zimbabwe and Samoa, and \u2014 despite losing their final match to Argentina \u2014 finished top of Pool A. They lost to England in their Cup quarter final to drop into the 5th-place play-off. They beat Scotland in the semi-final of that competition, but lost to Fiji in the final to finish sixth in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 81], "content_span": [82, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286402-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Africa national rugby sevens team season, Tournaments, Cape Town Sevens\nThe 2018 Cape Town Sevens took place from 8 to 9 December 2018. South Africa were drawn in Pool A of the competition, alongside New Zealand, Samoa and Zimbabwe. They beat Zimbabwe and Samoa, and \u2014 despite losing their final match to New Zealand \u2014 finished top of Pool A. They beat Scotland in the Cup quarter final, before losing to Fiji in the semi-final. They finished in third place after beating New Zealand in the bronze final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 85], "content_span": [86, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286402-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Africa national rugby sevens team season, Tournaments, Hamilton Sevens\nThe 2019 Hamilton Sevens took place from 26 to 27 January 2019. South Africa were drawn in Pool C of the competition, alongside France, Kenya and Scotland. They won all three matches in the pool stage to finish top of Pool C. They beat Samoa in their Cup quarter final, but lost to Fiji in the semi-finals, and to New Zealand in the bronze final to finish fourth in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 84], "content_span": [85, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286402-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Africa national rugby sevens team season, Tournaments, Sydney Sevens\nThe 2019 Sydney Sevens took place from 2 to 3 February 2019. South Africa were drawn in Pool D of the competition, alongside Argentina, Australia and Tonga. They beat Tonga and Argentina, and \u2014 despite losing their final match to Australia \u2014 finished top of Pool D. They lost to England in their Cup quarter final to drop into the 5th-place play-off. They beat Spain in the semi-final of that competition and beat Australia in the final to finish fifth in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 82], "content_span": [83, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286402-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Africa national rugby sevens team season, Tournaments, Las Vegas Sevens\nThe 2019 Las Vegas Sevens took place from 1 to 3 March 2019. South Africa were drawn in Pool C of the competition, alongside Chile, England and Japan. They beat Japan and England and drew against Chile to finish top of Pool C. They lost to the United States in their Cup quarter final to drop into the 5th-place play-off. They lost to Fiji in the semi-final of that competition to finish seventh/eighth in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 85], "content_span": [86, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286402-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Africa national rugby sevens team season, Tournaments, Vancouver Sevens\nThe 2019 Vancouver Sevens took place from 9 to 10 March 2019. South Africa were drawn in Pool A of the competition, alongside Chile, the United States and Wales. They beat Chile, Wales and the United States to finish top of Pool A. They beat Argentina in their Cup quarter final, Fiji in their Cup semi-final and France in the final to win the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 85], "content_span": [86, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286402-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Africa national rugby sevens team season, Tournaments, Hong Kong Sevens\nThe 2019 Hong Kong Sevens took place from 5 to 7 April 2019. South Africa were drawn in Pool A of the competition, alongside Japan, Samoa and Scotland. They beat all three teams to finish top of Pool A. They lost to the United States in their Cup quarter final to drop into the 5th-place play-off. They lost to Argentina in the semi-final of that competition to finish seventh/eighth in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 85], "content_span": [86, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286402-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Africa national rugby sevens team season, Tournaments, Singapore Sevens\nThe 2019 Singapore Sevens took place from 13 to 14 April 2019. South Africa were drawn in Pool A of the competition, alongside Canada, Fiji and Scotland. They beat all three sides to finish top of Pool A. They beat Samoa in their Cup quarter final, the United States in their Cup semi-final and Fiji in the final to win the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 85], "content_span": [86, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286402-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Africa national rugby sevens team season, Tournaments, London Sevens\nThe 2019 London Sevens took place from 25 to 26 May 2019. South Africa were drawn in Pool A of the competition, alongside Argentina, Canada and Japan. They beat all three teams to finish top of Pool A. They lost to Australia in their Cup quarter final to drop into the 5th-place play-off. They lost to New Zealand in the semi-final of that competition to finish seventh/eighth in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 82], "content_span": [83, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286402-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Africa national rugby sevens team season, Tournaments, Paris Sevens\nThe 2019 Paris Sevens took place from 1 to 2 June 2019. South Africa were drawn in Pool B of the competition, alongside Australia, Kenya and Wales. They beat all three sides to finish top of Pool B. They beat Samoa in their Cup quarter final, but lost to New Zealand in their Cup semi-final. They finished in third place after beating the United States in the bronze final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 81], "content_span": [82, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286402-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Africa national rugby sevens team season, Player statistics\nThe appearance record for players that represented the South Africa national rugby sevens team in 2018\u201319 is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 73], "content_span": [74, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286403-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South African Premier Division\nThe 2018\u201319 South African Premier Division season (known as the ABSA Premiership for sponsorship reasons) was the 23rd season of the Premier Soccer League since its establishment in 1996. The season began in August 2018 and concluded in May 2019. Mamelodi Sundowns are the champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286403-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South African Premier Division, Team Changes\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 52], "content_span": [53, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286404-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Alabama Jaguars men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 South Alabama Jaguars men's basketball team represents the University of South Alabama during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Jaguars are led by first-year head coach Richie Riley and play their home games at the Mitchell Center in Mobile, Alabama as members in the Sun Belt Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286404-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Alabama Jaguars men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Jaguars finished the 2017\u201318 season 14\u201318, 7\u201311 in Sun Belt play to finish in ninth place. They lost to Troy in the first round of the Sun Belt Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286405-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Alabama Jaguars women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 South Alabama Jaguars women's basketball team represented the University of South Alabama during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Jaguars were led by sixth year head coach Terry Fowler and played their home games at the Mitchell Center as members in the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 25\u201311, 9\u20139 in Sun Belt play to finish in a tie for sixth place. They advanced to the championship game of the Sun Belt Women's Tournament where they lost to Little Rock. They received an at-large bid to the WNIT where they defeated Lamar in the first round before losing to Wyoming in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286406-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Carolina Gamecocks men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 South Carolina Gamecocks men's basketball team represented the University of South Carolina during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team's head coach, Frank Martin, was in his seventh season at South Carolina. The team played its home games at 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, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286406-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Carolina Gamecocks men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Gamecocks finished the 2017\u201318 season finished the season 17\u201316, 7\u201311 in SEC play to finish in a tie for 11th place. They had 3 wins against ranked teams; No. 10 Auburn, No. 18 Kentucky, and No. 20 Florida. They defeated Ole Miss in the first round of the SEC Tournament before losing in the second round to Arkansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 71], "content_span": [72, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286407-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Carolina Gamecocks women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 South Carolina Gamecocks women's basketball team represents the University of South Carolina during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Gamecocks, led by eleventh year head coach Dawn Staley, play their home games at the Colonial Life Arena and were members of the Southeastern Conference. They finished the season 23\u201310, 13\u20133 in SEC play to finish in second place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the SEC Women's Tournament to Arkansas. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Women's Tournament where they defeated Belmont and Florida State in the first and second rounds before losing to Baylor in the Sweet Sixteen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286407-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Carolina Gamecocks women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Gamecocks finished the 2017\u201318 season 29\u20137, 12\u20134 in SEC play to finish in a tie for second place. They defeated Tennessee, Georgia and Mississippi State to win the SEC Women's Tournament to earn an automatic bid to the NCAA Women's Tournament. They defeated North Carolina A&T and Virginia in the first and second rounds, Buffalo in the sweet sixteen before losing to Connecticut in the elite eight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 73], "content_span": [74, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286407-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Carolina Gamecocks women's basketball team, Schedule\n\u2020Colonial Life Arena was being used for the First and Second Rounds of the 2019 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, so South Carolina hosted their games at Dale F. Halton Arena in Charlotte, North Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286407-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Carolina Gamecocks women's basketball team, Rankings\n^Coaches' Poll did not release a second poll at the same time as the AP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286408-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Carolina State Bulldogs basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 South Carolina State Bulldogs basketball team represented South Carolina State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at SHM Memorial Center in Orangeburg, South Carolina, and were led by 6th-year head coach Murray Garvin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286408-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Carolina State Bulldogs basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bulldogs finished the 2017\u201318 season 10\u201322, 6\u201310 in MEAC play to finish in 10th place. They lost to Morgan State in the first round of the MEAC Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286409-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Challenge Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 SFA South Region Challenge Cup was the 12th edition of the annual cup competition for senior non-league clubs in the central and southern regions of Scotland. This season saw the competition increase to 69 teams from the 42 who took part in 2017\u201318, thanks to the addition of 26 clubs to the East of Scotland Football League and the return of Wigtown and Bladnoch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286409-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Challenge Cup\nThe defending champions were Civil Service Strollers, who beat BSC Glasgow 2-1 after extra time in the final on 20 May 2018. However they were eliminated in the fourth round by Newtongrange Star.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286409-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Challenge Cup\nEast Kilbride won 2-1 against Bonnyrigg Rose Athletic in the final to secure the South Challenge Cup for a second time, completing a double with the Lowland League title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286409-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Challenge Cup, Format\nThe competition featured 69 teams from the Lowland Football League (16), East of Scotland Football League (38), South of Scotland Football League (14), as well as SFA member club Glasgow University of the Caledonian Amateur Football League. The reserve teams of Stirling University, Annan Athletic, and Stranraer do not take part.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286409-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Challenge Cup, Format\nThe draw is unseeded, with matches proceeding to extra time and penalties if they are tied after 90 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286409-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Challenge Cup, First round\nThe first round took place on Saturday 25 August 2018. The draw for the first and second rounds took place at the East of Scotland Football Association's AGM on Thursday 7 June 2018. 59 clubs received a bye to the second round, with 10 taking part in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286409-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Challenge Cup, Second round\nThe second round took place on the weekend of Saturday 15 September 2018. The four winners from the first round, along with Upper Annandale who progressed after Selkirk withdrew, joined the 59 clubs who received a bye.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286409-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Challenge Cup, Third round\nThe third round took place on Saturday 13 October 2018, although five matches were postponed until the fourth round date. The draw was made at Hampden Park on Friday 21 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286409-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Challenge Cup, Fourth round\nThe fourth round took place on Saturday 10 November 2018, although due to postponements three ties were held at a later date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286409-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Challenge Cup, Fourth round, Draw\nThe draw was made at Hampden Park on 17 October 2018 by John Gold of the Scottish Schools Football Association and Fiona McIntyre of the Scottish Womens Football Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286409-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Challenge Cup, Fourth round, Draw\nTeams in Italics were not known at the time of the draw. Teams in Bold advanced to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286409-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Challenge Cup, Quarter-finals, Draw\nThe draw was made at Hampden Park on 14 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286409-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Challenge Cup, Quarter-finals, Draw\nTeams in Italics were not known at the time of the draw. Teams in Bold advanced to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286409-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Challenge Cup, Final\nThe final was played on Sunday 26 May 2019 at Meggetland Stadium in Edinburgh, between the champions of the Lowland League and East of Scotland League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286410-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Dakota Coyotes men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 South Dakota Coyotes men's basketball team represents the University of South Dakota during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Coyotes, led by first-year head coach Todd Lee, will play their home games at the Sanford Coyote Sports Center in Vermillion, South Dakota as members of the Summit League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286410-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Dakota Coyotes men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Coyotes finished the 2017\u201318 season finished the season 26\u20139, 11\u20133 in Summit League play to finish in second place. They defeated Omaha and Denver to advance to the championship game of the Summit League where they lost to South Dakota State. They were invited to the College Basketball Invitational where they lost in the first round to North Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286411-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Dakota Coyotes women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 South Dakota Coyotes women's basketball represent University of South Dakota in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Coyotes, led by third year head coach Dawn Plitzuweit, compete in the Summit League. They play home games in Sanford Coyote Sports Center in Vermillion, South Dakota.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286411-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Dakota Coyotes women's basketball team, Previous Season\nThe Coyotes went 29\u20137 overall and 14\u20130 in conference play finishing first in The Summit League. The Coyotes lost in the championship game of the 2018 Summit League Tournament to South Dakota State 50\u201365.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286411-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Dakota Coyotes women's basketball team, Previous Season\nWith the loss to South Dakota State in the conference tournament, the Coyotes automatically qualified to the 2018 WNIT. The Coyotes won their first three games against Houston, Colorado State, and Michigan State. But, would lose to TCU in the quarterfinals 71\u201379.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286412-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Dakota State Jackrabbits men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 South Dakota State Jackrabbits men's basketball team represents South Dakota State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Jackrabbits, led by third-year head coach T. J. Otzelberger, play their home games at Frost Arena in Brookings, South Dakota as members of the Summit League. They finished the season 24\u20139, 14\u20132 in Summit League play to win the regular season championship. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Summit League Tournament to Western Illinois. As a regular season league champion who failed to win their league tournament, they received an automatic bid to the National Invitation Tournament where they lost in the first round to Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 763]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286412-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Dakota State Jackrabbits men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Jackrabbits finished the season 28\u20137, 13\u20131 in Summit League play to win the Summit League regular season championship. In the Summit League Tournament, they defeated Western Illinois, North Dakota State, and South Dakota to become Summit League Tournament champions. They received the Summit League's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament where they lost in the First Round to Ohio State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 77], "content_span": [78, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286413-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Dakota State Jackrabbits women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 South Dakota State Jackrabbits women's basketball represent South Dakota State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Jackrabbits, led by nineteenth year head coach Aaron Johnston, compete in the Summit League. They play home games in Frost Arena in Brookings, South Dakota. They finished the season 28\u20137, 15\u20131 in Summit League play to win the Summit League regular season. They were champions of The Summit League Women's Tournament and earn an automatic trip to the NCAA Women's Tournament where defeated Quinnipiac and upset Syracuse in the first and second rounds to advanced to their first sweet sixteen appearance in the Division I where they lost to Oregon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286413-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Dakota State Jackrabbits women's basketball team, Previous Season\nThe Jackrabbits went 26\u20137 overall and 12\u20132 in conference play finishing second. The Jackrabbits won the 2018 Summit League Tournament defeating North Dakota State in the quarterfinals, Western Illinois in the semifinals, and South Dakota in the Summit League Championship 65\u201350 earning the Jackrabbits an automatic bid to the 2018 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 79], "content_span": [80, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286413-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Dakota State Jackrabbits women's basketball team, Previous Season\nDuring the selection show, the Jackrabbits received an 8 seed in the Spokane region facing the Villanova Wildcats, but lost in overtime 81\u201374.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 79], "content_span": [80, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286414-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Florida Bulls men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 South Florida Bulls men's basketball team represented the University of South Florida during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The season marked the 47th basketball season for USF, the sixth as a member of the American Athletic Conference, and the second season under head coach Brian Gregory. The Bulls played their home games at Yuengling Center on the university's Tampa, Florida campus. They finished the season 24\u201314, 8\u201310 in AAC play to finish in a tie for seventh place. They lost in the first round of the AAC Tournament to UConn. They were invited to the College Basketball Invitational where they defeated Stony Brook, Utah Valley, and Loyola Marymount to advance to the best-of-three finals vs DePaul. They defeated DePaul 2 games to 1 to become CBI champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 852]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286414-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Florida Bulls men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bulls finished the 2017\u201318 season 10\u201322, 3\u201315 in AAC play to finish in last place. As the No. 12 seed in the AAC Tournament, they lost in the first round to Memphis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286415-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Florida Bulls women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 South Florida Bulls women's basketball team will represent the University of South Florida in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Bulls, coached by Jose Fernandez in his eighteenth season, play their home games at Yuengling Center in Tampa, Florida. This will be USF's sixth season as a member of the American Athletic Conference, known as The American or AAC. They finished the season 19\u201316, 7\u20139 in AAC play to finish in a tie for fifth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the American Athletic Conference Women's Tournament, where they lost to Connecticut. They received at-large bid to the WNIT where defeated Stetson in the first round before losing to James Madison in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 784]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286415-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Florida Bulls women's basketball team, Media\nAll Bulls games will air on or CBS 1010 AM. Conference home games will rotate between ESPN3, , and Bullscast. Road games will typically be streamed on the opponents website, though conference road games could also appear on ESPN3 or AAC Digital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 58], "content_span": [59, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286416-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Pacific cyclone season\nThe 2018\u201319 South Pacific cyclone season was a below-average season that produced 5 tropical cyclones, 2 of which became severe tropical cyclones. The season officially runs from November 1, 2018 to April 30, 2019; however, a tropical cyclone could have formed at any time between July 1, 2018 and June 30, 2019 and would count towards the season total. During the season, tropical cyclones were officially monitored by the Fiji Meteorological Service, Australian Bureau of Meteorology, and New Zealand's MetService.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286416-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Pacific cyclone season\nThe United States Armed Forces through the Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) also monitored the basin and issued warnings for American interests. RSMC Nadi attaches a number and an F suffix to tropical disturbances that form in or move into the basin, while the JTWC designates significant tropical cyclones with a number and a P suffix. The FMS, the BoM and MetService all use the Australian Tropical Cyclone Intensity Scale and estimate wind speeds over a period of ten minutes, while the JTWC estimates sustained winds over a 1-minute period, which are subsequently compared to the Saffir\u2013Simpson hurricane wind scale (SSHWS).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286416-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Pacific cyclone season, Seasonal forecasts\nAhead of the cyclone season formally starting, the Fiji Meteorological Service (FMS), Australian Bureau of Meteorology (BoM), New Zealand's MetService and 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 2018. The outlook took into account the ENSO neutral conditions that had been observed across the Pacific and analogue seasons that had ENSO neutral and El Ni\u00f1o conditions occurring during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286416-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Pacific cyclone season, Seasonal forecasts\nThe outlook called for a near-average number of tropical cyclones for the 2018\u201319 season, with seven to eleven named tropical cyclones, predicted to occur between 135\u00b0E and 120\u00b0W compared to an average of about 10. At least three of the tropical cyclones were expected to intensify further and become severe tropical cyclones, while it was noted that a Category 5 severe tropical cyclone could occur during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286416-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Pacific cyclone season, Seasonal forecasts\nIn addition to contributing towards the Island Climate Update outlook, the FMS and the BoM issued their own seasonal forecasts for the South Pacific region. The BoM issued two seasonal forecasts for the Southern Pacific Ocean, for their self-defined eastern and western regions of the South Pacific Ocean. They predicted that the Western region between 142.5\u00b0E and 165\u00b0E, had a 48% chance of seeing activity above its average of 7 tropical cyclones. The BoM also predicted that the Eastern Region between 165\u00b0E and 120\u00b0W, had a 55% chance of seeing activity above its average of 4 tropical cyclones. Within their outlook the FMS predicted that between seven and nine tropical cyclones, would occur within the basin compared to an average of around 7.1 cyclones. At least two of the tropical cyclones were expected to intensify further and become Category 3 or higher severe tropical cyclones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 949]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286416-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Pacific cyclone season, Seasonal forecasts\nBoth the Island Climate Update and the FMS tropical cyclone outlooks assessed the risk of a tropical cyclone affecting a certain island or territory. The Island Climate Update Outlook predicted that the Austral Islands, American Samoa, the Cook Islands and Samoa had an elevated chance, while the Northern Cook Islands had a normal to elevated chance of being impacted by a tropical cyclone. They also predicted that Fiji, Niue, Papua New Guinea, Tonga, Tokelau, Tuvalu, Wallis and Futuna, the Society and the Solomon Islands all had a near-normal risk of being impacted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286416-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Pacific cyclone season, Seasonal forecasts\nThe outlook noted that Vanuatu and New Caledonia had a normal to reduced risk of being impacted by multiple tropical cyclones while it was considered unlikely that the Pitcairn Islands, Kiribati and parts of French Polynesia such as the Marquesas Islands and the Tuamotu Archipelago would be impacted by a tropical cyclone. The FMS's outlook predicted that Tuvalu, Wallis and Futuna, Tokelau, Samoa, Niue, the Cook, Society and Austral Islands had an increased chance of being impacted by a tropical cyclone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286416-0003-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Pacific cyclone season, Seasonal forecasts\nTheir outlook also predicted that the Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, Fiji, Tonga, the Pitcairn Islands and Tuamotu Archipelago and the Gambier Islands had a normal chance of being impacted by a tropical cyclone. It was also noted that New Caledonia had a reduced chance of being affected by a tropical cyclone, while tropical cyclone activity near Kiribati and the Marquesas Islands was considered unlikely.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286416-0003-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Pacific cyclone season, Seasonal forecasts\nIt was thought by the FMS that there was an increased risk of Wallis & Futuna, the Cook, Society and the Austral Islands being impacted by at least one severe tropical cyclone, while other areas such as Fiji, New Caledonia, Niue, the Solomon Islands, Tokelau, Samoa, Tonga and Niue had a normal to reduced chance of being impacted by a severe tropical cyclone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286416-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Liua\nA disturbance which initially formed in the Australian region basin crossed into the South Pacific basin on September 26 and strengthened, and was designated as Tropical Depression 01F by RSMC Nadi. Late on September 26, the storm intensified into a tropical cyclone, and was given the name Liua. Liua is the earliest-forming named tropical cyclone in the South Pacific basin since reliable records began, surpassing Cyclone Lusi in 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286416-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Depression 03F\nDuring December 28, the FMS reported that Tropical Disturbance 03F had developed within a trough of low pressure, about 685\u00a0km (425\u00a0mi) to the east of Honiara in the Solomon Islands. The disturbance was located within a favourable environment for further development to the south of an upper-level ridge, while deep atmospheric convection persisted over the systems elongated low-level circulation. During the next day, as the organisation of the system improved, the FMS relocated the system to be located near the Solomon Island of San Cristobal. The system subsequently moved eastwards through Temotu Province and gradually developed further, before it was classified as a tropical depression during December 30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286416-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Mona\nMona entered this basin as a tropical low from the Australian region basin. The system then intensified into Tropical Depression 04F on January 3. Later that day, it intensified into a Category 1 cyclone on the Australian scale. On January 7, the system dissipated. About 2,000 people took shelter in 40 evacuation centers over the weekend, and thirty roads were closed, mostly due to floods and some landslides. People in the Lau group have been warned to expect gale-force and heavy rain as Mona tracked south, before arching south west over Fiji over the next 24 hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286416-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Depression 06F\nOn February 3, Tropical Depression 06F formed to the north of Fiji. The system moved in a south-easterly direction and was predicted to reach Category 1 status while the system was located to the NNW of Niua Fo'ou Island. However, due to strong wind shear and cool air flowing from the south of the system, 06F was not named. Tonga was largely affected by TD 06F. On the island, gale-force winds flattened banana plantations and crops, especially the casava plant. The system disrupted schools and transportation. All schools were cancelled on Friday, February 8 and all sea and air transportation was disrupted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286416-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Depression 06F\nOn Saturday, the Cyclone Alert and Gale warning that was issued for Tonga regarding TD 06F was lifted. However, another Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert was issued together with new warnings was issued regarding the thread from TD 07F (which later become Neil) which recently formed north of Fiji. TD 06F was one of 4 tropical systems to directly impact the island nation (the others are Tropical Cyclone Neil, Tropical Depression 08F and Tropical Depression 10F) within 1 week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286416-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Neil\nOn February 8, a tropical low developed into Tropical Depression 07F. The system intensified into a Category 1 tropical cyclone on February 9, 2019, and was assigned the name Neil. The system reached its peak intensity later that day with 10-minute sustained winds of 65\u00a0km/h (40\u00a0mph). On February 10, Neil weakened into a tropical depression, before dissipating soon afterward. Tonga issued warnings for Neil while it was active, but lifted those warnings once the storm weakened. No structural damage was reported from the storm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286416-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Oma\nOn February 7, a tropical low developed within an active monsoon trough, along the coast of Vanuatu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 74], "content_span": [75, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286416-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Oma\nThe low crossed into the South Pacific Basin and began intensifying into a tropical cyclone on February 11, earning the name Oma, and quickly reaching Category 2 tropical cyclone intensity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 74], "content_span": [75, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286416-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Oma\nIt then strengthened into a severe tropical cyclone on February 15, reaching its initial peak intensity on February 16, as a Category 3 tropical cyclone on the Australian region scale. Oma then briefly weakened on February 17, before it restrengthened into a severe tropical cyclone and reached its peak intensity on February 19. Oma exited the South Pacific basin and returned to the Australian Region as a tropical cyclone on February 21. Oma weakened to a Category 2 tropical cyclone while approaching the Australian coast. On February 22, Tropical Cyclone Oma crossed over into the South Pacific basin once again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 74], "content_span": [75, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286416-0012-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Oma\nLate on February 22, Oma transitioned into an subtropical cyclone, while turning to the northeast. For the next several days, Oma continued drifting northeastward, weakening further into a subtropical depression on February 25. On February 27, Oma turned eastward, while situated over Vanuatu, and the storm subsequently dissipated on February 28.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 74], "content_span": [75, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286416-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Oma\nPersistent heavy rain, damaging surf, and strong winds battered the northern provinces of Malampa, Sanma, Torba in Vanuatu for several days. Storm surge inundated coastal communities on February 17, extending up to 50\u00a0m (160\u00a0ft) inland in some areas. Multiple traditionally constructed homes were destroyed while flooding from swollen rivers washed out roads. The strong winds downed trees across the affected region. Communications with Torba were disrupted, with authorities unable to reach the Torres Islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 74], "content_span": [75, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286416-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Oma\nDamaging winds up to 140\u00a0km/h (87\u00a0mph) and heavy rain from the cyclone had battered New Caledonia, leaving thousands of residents without power and isolating some villages. Agriculture was particularly hard-hit with losses reported in all provinces. The French government declared a state of calamity, directed at agriculture, for the entire island which freed \u20a3150\u00a0million (US$1.43\u00a0million) for recovery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 74], "content_span": [75, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286416-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Oma\nOma sunk a bulk carrier\u00a0near the Solomon Islands, and it resulted in an oil spill. The cleaning cost were about US$50\u00a0million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 74], "content_span": [75, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286416-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Pola\nDuring February 23, the FMS reported that Tropical Disturbance 11F had developed, about 525\u00a0km (325\u00a0mi) to the northwest of Apia, Samoa. The system gradually organized while slowly moving southward. Situated in an environment with sea surface temperatures of 28-30 degrees Celsius and low vertical wind shear, the system intensified into Tropical Cyclone Pola on February 26. Later that day, Pola intensified into a Category 2 tropical cyclone, before becoming a severe tropical cyclone on February 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286416-0016-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Pola\nOn February 28, the system reached its peak intensity, as a Category 4 tropical cyclone on the Australian scale, with 10-minute sustained winds of 105\u00a0mph (170\u00a0km/h) and a minimum central pressure of 950\u00a0hPa (mbar). On March 1, Pola began to weaken while turning eastward, as a result of cooler sea surface temperatures and shear from a high-pressure system over New Zealand. Early on March 2, Pola weakened into a subtropical depression, before dissipating later that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286416-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Depression 12F\nOn May 16, the FMS started tracking a disturbance for possible cyclone development north of Fiji, in an environment of moderate wind shear and sea surface temperatures of 30\u00a0\u00b0C (86\u00a0\u00b0F). By May 18, the FMS classed the system as a tropical depression, giving it the identifier 12F, and they forecast the system to reach tropical cyclone intensity within 12\u201324 hours, and to ultimately attain 10-minute sustained winds of 85\u00a0km/h (55\u00a0mph). Later the same day, 12F began to move towards the southeast, and the FMS reported that the system was unlikely to intensify further, due to moderately-high wind shear in the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286416-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nDuring November 11, the FMS reported that Tropical Disturbance 02F had developed about 340\u00a0km (210\u00a0mi) to the north-northeast of Honiara in the Solomon Islands. At this stage the system was located within an area of low vertical windshear, while deep convection surrounding the system's low level circulation was poorly organised. Over the next few days, the system's organization slightly improved as it moved south-eastwards, before it was last noted during November 16, while located about 575\u00a0km (355\u00a0mi) to the northeast of Port Vila in Vanuatu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286416-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nOn May 7, the Bureau of Meteorology (BOM) reported that a weak tropical low had developed within a low-pressure trough, to the east of the Solomon Islands. Over the next couple of days, the system gradually moved south-westwards and moved into the Australian region during May 10, where it later developed into a Category 2 tropical cyclone, and received the name Ann from the BOM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286416-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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 2018\u201319 season. It includes their intensity on the Australian tropical cyclone intensity scale, duration, name, landfalls, deaths, and damages. All data is taken from the FMS and/or MetService, and all of the damage figures are in 2018 USD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286417-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South West Peninsula League\nThe 2018\u201319 South West Peninsula League season was the twelfth 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 (Step 6).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286417-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South West Peninsula League\nThe constitution was announced on 25 May 2018. At the end of this season, significant restructuring of the league was to take place. With this in mind, it was decided not to transfer clubs between Division One East and Division One West just for one season, solely in order to balance the numbers in each division for this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286417-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South West Peninsula League\nFor 2019\u201320, the league will consist of two Step 6 divisions of twenty clubs each. These two divisions will be made up of the 2018\u201319 Step 6 (Premier Division) clubs, plus others promoted from Step 7 and below. There will be two new Step 7 leagues below the South West Peninsula League in 2019\u201320, the Devon League and the St Piran League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286417-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South West Peninsula League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 20 teams, the same as the previous season, after Plymouth Parkway were promoted to the Western League Premier Division, and Stoke Gabriel were demoted to Division One East.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286417-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South West Peninsula League, Premier Division\nReserve sides are not eligible for promotion to Step 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286417-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South West Peninsula League, Division One East\nDivision One East featured 19 clubs, increased from 18 the previous season, after Totnes & Dartington and Galmpton & Roselands resigned from the league, and three new clubs joined:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286417-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South West Peninsula League, Division One West\nDivision One West featured 15 clubs, reduced from 18 the previous season, after Millbrook and Elburton Villa were promoted to the Premier Division, Illogan RBL were relegated, and Penryn Athletic left the league. One new club joined:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286417-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South West Peninsula League, Division One West, Other applicants for Step 6\nTwo other clubs from outside the league applied for Step 6 status for 2019\u201320. They are Dartmouth of the South Devon League, and Torrington of the North Devon League. Both were accepted for promotion to the Premier East.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286418-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South of Scotland Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 South of Scotland Football League was the 73rd season of the South of Scotland Football League, and the 5th season as the sixth tier of the Scottish football pyramid system. The season began on 28 July 2018 and ended on 10 May 2019. Threave Rovers are the reigning champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286418-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South of Scotland Football League\nThe league increased to a 16 team division as Wigtown & Bladnoch returned to the league after a one season absence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286418-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South of Scotland Football League\nStranraer reserves won the league on 10 April 2019. As a reserve team they are ineligible for promotion to the Lowland League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286418-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South of Scotland Football League, Teams, To South of Scotland League\nClub has an SFA Licence (as of 20 December 2017) and are eligible to participate in the Lowland League promotion play-off should they win the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 77], "content_span": [78, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season\nThe 2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season was the costliest and the most active season ever recorded since reliable records began in 1967. Additionally, it is also the deadliest cyclone season recorded in the South-West Indian Ocean, surpassing the 1891\u201392 season in which the 1892 Mauritius cyclone devastated the island of Mauritius. The season was an event of the annual cycle of tropical cyclone and subtropical cyclone formation in the South-West Indian Ocean basin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season\nIt officially began on 15 November 2018, and ended on 30 April 2019, with the exception for Mauritius and the Seychelles, which it ended on 15 May 2019. These dates conventionally delimit the period of each year when most tropical and subtropical cyclones form in the basin, which is west of 90\u00b0E and south of the Equator. Tropical and subtropical cyclones in this basin are monitored by the Regional Specialised Meteorological Centre in R\u00e9union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season\nTwo tropical cyclones existed outside the conventional bounds of the season, with Moderate Tropical Storm 01 in September and the remnants of Tropical Cyclone Lorna in May. From all of these cyclones during the season, all but Haleh and Savannah produced impacts on land, with Idai causing at least 1,303 deaths and leaving at least 2,262 people missing, and causing US$2.2\u00a0billion in damages in Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Malawi, and Madagascar. The season set a new record of nine intense tropical cyclones, the largest number since the start of reliable satellite coverage in 1967, surpassing the 2006\u201307 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Seasonal summary\nThe first tropical cyclone was an unnamed moderate tropical storm that formed northeast of Madagascar on 13 September 2018, two months before the official start of the season. Two cyclones formed in the month of November, with Intense Tropical Cyclone Alcide forming on 5 November, and Severe Tropical Storm Bouchra entering the basin from the Australian region on 9 November. Two tropical cyclones formed in the month of December, Cilida and Kenanga. Intense Tropical Cyclone Kenanga crossed into the basin from the Australian region, retaining its name assigned by TCWC Jakarta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 64], "content_span": [65, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Seasonal summary\nTwo moderate tropical storms formed in January, Desmond and Eketsang. Five more intense tropical cyclones formed during February and March: Funani, Gelena, Haleh, Idai, and Joaninha. In addition, Savannah crossed into the basin from the Australian basin as an intense tropical cyclone in March. On 21 April 2019, final two storms of the season formed at the same time, Kenneth and Lorna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 64], "content_span": [65, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Moderate Tropical Storm 01\nOn 11 September, a disturbance formed in the open waters of Indian Ocean. On the next day, the system intensified to a tropical depression formed to the southwest of Diego Garcia. The system tracked west-southwestward, organizing slowly over marginally warm waters of 26\u201327 degrees Celsius and moderate wind shear. On 16 September, the tropical depression began to quickly weaken after encountering unfavorable conditions. On the next day, both the MFR and the JTWC issued their final warnings, and the system was downgraded to an extratropical low. The remains of the system dissipated a few hours later north of Madagascar. In post-storm analysis, the system was upgraded into a moderate tropical storm, although it remained unnamed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 83], "content_span": [84, 819]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Alcide\nOn 6 November, a tropical depression formed well to the east-northeast of Madagascar. The system continued to track generally west-southwestward into more favorable conditions for the next few hours, before strengthening into a Moderate Tropical Storm and was named Alcide later that day. On 7 November at 06:00 UTC, Alcide strengthened into a tropical cyclone, or a Category 1-equivalent tropical cyclone on the Saffir\u2013Simpson hurricane wind scale (SSHWS)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 88], "content_span": [89, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Alcide\nOn 8 November at 06:00 UTC, Alcide strengthened into an intense tropical cyclone, or a Category 3-equivalent tropical cyclone on the SSHWS, with maximum 10-minute sustained winds of 90 knots (165\u00a0km/h; 105\u00a0mph) and a minimum central pressure of 965 hPa(mbar). It was downgraded to a tropical cyclone 6 hours later, mostly due to cooler sea temperatures and generally less favorable conditions. Alcide continued to weaken as it began an anticyclonic loop east of the northern tip of Madagascar, falling to tropical storm status at 12:00 UTC on 9 November. The system rapidly deteriorated thereafter, falling to tropical depression status at 00:00 UTC on 11 November; M\u00e9t\u00e9o-France discontinued advisories at noon that day. The system continued east as a remnant low until 13 November, when the remaining convection vanished due to wind shear.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 88], "content_span": [89, 929]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Bouchra\nA weak low-pressure system developed in the equatorial Indian Ocean in M\u00e9t\u00e9o-France's area of responsibility on November 1 and moved slowly eastwards over the following few days while showing little signs of intensification. Late on November 9, as the developing precursor depression to Very Severe Cyclonic Storm Gaja in the Bay of Bengal moved further away and the competing low-level airflow convergence associated with it diminished, which was earlier associated with the westerly wind burst on either side of Indian Ocean. the system's structure organised sufficiently to be classified as a tropical disturbance by M\u00e9t\u00e9o-France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 86], "content_span": [87, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Bouchra\nVery shortly afterwards, the system crossed the 90th meridian east and entered the Australian region, where it was classified by TCWC Jakarta as a tropical depression on November 10 local time. Later the same day, the JTWC assessed the developing low as having attained tropical storm status on the Saffir\u2013Simpson hurricane wind scale, and assigned the system the unofficial designation 04S. A few hours later, at 10:00 UTC, the system moved back westwards and returned to the South-West Indian Ocean basin, where it gained the name 'Bouchra' from M\u00e9t\u00e9o-France and underwent a twelve-hour phase of rapid intensification to severe tropical storm status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 86], "content_span": [87, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Bouchra\nOver the following days, Bouchra fought increasingly unfavorable atmospheric conditions, and underwent a gradual weakening trend. During this time, the cyclone proceeded to track in a slow cyclonic loop just to the west of the border of the Australian region in weak overall steering influences, and was often quasi-stationary. After meandering here for a number of days, the system re-entered the Australian region late on November 12. By this stage, the system had weakened significantly from its peak intensity, and was only at tropical depression strength.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 86], "content_span": [87, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Bouchra\nThe period of residence in the Australian basin proved to be short-lived once again, however, with M\u00e9t\u00e9o-France indicating that Ex-Tropical Storm Bouchra had returned to the far eastern part of their area of responsibility early on November 13. In the early hours of November 14, the Australian Bureau of Meteorology noted that the system had crossed back into the Australian region basin. However, on November 17, Bouchra crossed back over into the South-West Indian Ocean basin, as the storm began taking a southwestward trajectory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 86], "content_span": [87, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Kenanga\nOn December 14, a tropical low formed southwest of Sumatra in the Australian region basin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 89], "content_span": [90, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Kenanga\nIt slowly strengthened and on the next day, the system was officially named Kenanga as it tracked roughly southwestward. Continuing on this course, Kenanga entered the South-West Indian basin on December 16. On the next day, the system quickly intensified into an intense tropical cyclone, and Kenanga maintained this intensity for another day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 89], "content_span": [90, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Kenanga\nThe storm reached peak intensity on December 17, with 10-minute sustained wind speeds of 115 miles per hour (185\u00a0km/h), and a minimum central pressure of 942 mbar (hPa). On the morning of the next day, the system encountered high wind shear and started weakening, and Kenanga was downgraded to a Moderate Tropical Storm by the evening of that day. The system was finally downgraded to an extratropical low on December 19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 89], "content_span": [90, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Kenanga\nOn the next day, Kenanga re-intensified into tropical depression status. On December 22, Kenanga lost its remaining convection and dissipated. The system did not affect any land areas, and caused no damage or fatalities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 89], "content_span": [90, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Cilida\nOn December 16, M\u00e9t\u00e9o-France tracked a low-pressure which had a chance of possible tropical cyclone development. While tracking southwest, it then intensified to tropical storm status and then cyclone status. On December 23, it passed east of Mauritius, bringing beneficial rainfall and gusting winds that knocked down tree branches. It then turned southeast and weakened, later dissipating in the far southern reaches of the basin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 88], "content_span": [89, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Moderate Tropical Storm Desmond\nA tropical depression formed near the east coast of Mozambique on January 17. During the next couple of days, the storm made a counterclockwise loop towards the west, before turning northward. The system intensified into a moderate tropical storm on January 19 and was named Desmond. The system gradually intensified as it drifted northward. The storm reached peak intensity on January 20, as a moderate tropical storm with 10-minute sustained winds of 65\u00a0km/h (40\u00a0mph) wind and a minimum central pressure of 995 mbar. On the next day, Desmond made landfall in Mozambique. Afterward, the storm rapidly weakened and was downgraded to a remnant low on January 22. Later that day, Desmond turned eastward back towards the coast, while continuing to weaken. A few hours later, Desmond lost all of its remaining convection and dissipated on January 22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 88], "content_span": [89, 936]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Moderate Tropical Storm Eketsang\nA disturbance formed over Madagascar on January 21. On the next day, the storm emerged into the Mozambique Channel and organized into a tropical depression. On January 23, the system strengthened into a moderate tropical storm and was named Eketsang. The system tracked southwestward while strengthening, reaching its peak intensity later that day, with 10-minute sustained winds of 75\u00a0km/h(45\u00a0mph) and a minimum central pressure of 993 mbar. On the same day, the storm turned to the southeast, back towards Madagascar. On January 24, the storm curved around the south coast of Madagascar and weakened into a subtropical depression. Afterward, the storm began accelerating southeastward, before dissipating on January 26. 27 deaths were reported from the storm, and 1 person went missing, mostly due to landslides.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 89], "content_span": [90, 904]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Funani\nOn February 2, a disturbance formed in the open Indian Ocean. The system in countered favorable conditions and began to rapidly intensify, reaching moderate tropical storm status on February 3 and further intensified into an intense tropical cyclone the next day. The storm recurved east and degan to move southwestwards. The system accelerated as it moved into an area of low sea surface temperature on February 7. The next day, it was downgraded to moderate tropical storm two days later. The storm transitioned to an extratropical cyclone on February 10 before dissipating later that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 88], "content_span": [89, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Gelena\nGelena was the second storm to affect the island of Rodrigues in a week, following Intense Tropical Cyclone Funani. Gelena brought strong winds that destroyed 90% of the electric grid on the island. Overall damage on the island were about US$1\u00a0million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 88], "content_span": [89, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Haleh\nOn February 28, Tropical Depression 10 formed in the south central Indian Ocean, south of the Maldives. On March 2, the system strengthened into Moderate Tropical Storm Haleh, before intensifying further into a severe tropical storm later that day. On March 3, Haleh intensified into a tropical cyclone. Finding itself in favourable conditions, Haleh continued to intensify and reached its peak intensity on March 4, as a Category 4-equivalent intense tropical cyclone, with 1-minute sustained winds of 215\u00a0km/h (135\u00a0mph). On March 5, Haleh meandered into hostile conditions with low sea surface ocean heat content and medium vertical wind shear, and the system weakened back to a Category 1 tropical cyclone. Haleh gradually weakened over the next couple of days, eventually degenerating into a post-tropical low late on March 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 87], "content_span": [88, 918]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Idai\nTropical Depression 11 formed off the east coast of Mozambique on March 4. Afterward, the tropical depression drifted northeastward very slowly, making landfall on Mozambique later that day. On March 6, Tropical Depression 11 was given a yellow tropical cyclone development warning by the Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC). On March 7, the storm turned west-southwestward, while continuing to retain its tropical identity overland. On March 8, Tropical Depression 11 weakened and turned back towards the east. Early on March 9, the tropical depression emerged into the Mozambique Channel and began to organize.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 86], "content_span": [87, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0017-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Idai\nOn the same day, the JTWC stated that the system had a high probability for genesis into a tropical cyclone, and later on the same day, the system strengthened into a moderate tropical storm and received the name Idai. On March 10, Idai began to rapidly intensify, strengthening into a tropical cyclone near Madagascar, and the system made yet another turn westward, moving to the southwest. On the next day, the storm intensified into the seventh intense tropical cyclone of the season, and soon reached its peak intensity as a Category 4-equivalent tropical cyclone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 86], "content_span": [87, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0017-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Idai\nOn March 12, Idai began to weaken, as the system underwent an eyewall replacement cycle. On March 13, Idai began accelerating westward. At 00:00 UTC on March 15, the MFR reported that Idai had made landfall near Beira, Mozambique, with 10-minute sustained winds of 165\u00a0km/h (105\u00a0mph). Idai quickly weakened after landfall, degenerating into a tropical depression later that day. Afterward, Idai slowly moved inland while dumping large amounts of rain, resulting in flash flooding. Late on March 16, Idai degenerated into a remnant low, but the storm's remnant continued dumping rain across the region. On March 17, Idai's remnant turned eastward once again, eventually re-emerging into the Mozambique Channel a second time on March 19. On March 21, Idai's remnants dissipated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 86], "content_span": [87, 863]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Idai\nAs a tropical depression, Idai affected Malawi and Mozambique, during its first landfall. At least 56\u00a0people died, and 577 others were injured due to flooding in Malawi. About 83,000\u00a0people were displaced. The southern districts of Chikwawa and Nsanje became isolated by floodwaters. In Mozambique, 66\u00a0people were killed by the flooding, and affected 141,000\u00a0people. The Council of Ministers required 1.1\u00a0billion metical (US$17.6\u00a0million) to help those who were affected by the flooding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 86], "content_span": [87, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0018-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Idai\nIn total, Idai killed at least 1,297 people and left thousands more missing, becoming one of the deadliest tropical cyclones in the modern history of Africa and the Southern Hemisphere as a whole. With this death toll, Idai is the deadliest tropical cyclone recorded in the South-West Indian Ocean basin, and the second-deadliest tropical cyclone overall in the Southern Hemisphere, behind only Cyclone Flores in 1973. In addition, the total damages from the cyclone are expected to exceed US$2\u00a0billion (2019 USD), which would make Idai the costliest cyclone on record in the basin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 86], "content_span": [87, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Savannah\nOn March 18, Severe Tropical Cyclone Savannah crossed over from the Australian region basin into the South-West Indian basin, shortly after reaching its peak intensity. Savannah was classified as an tropical cyclone on the South-West Indian Ocean scale after it entered the basin. Savannah weakened soon after reaching its peak intensity. On March 19, Savannah transitioned into a post-tropical cyclone, with the system continuing southwestward. On the next day, Savannah's remnant looped eastward, before turning westward on March 21. The system weakened afterward, with Savannah's remnant dissipating on March 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 82], "content_span": [83, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Joaninha\nOn March 18, Tropical Depression 13 formed to the east of Madagascar. After a few days of meandering to the west and then the southeast, the system intensified into Moderate Tropical Storm Joaninha on March 22, turning southward as it did so. On March 23, Joaninha strengthened into a severe tropical storm. Early on March 24, Joaninha strengthened further into a tropical cyclone on the MFR scale. On the next day, Joaninha intensified into an intense tropical cyclone. After moving over cooler waters, Joaninha slowly began to weaken, dropping to severe tropical storm intensity on the MFR scale on March 29. On March 30, Joaninha became post-tropical shortly after merging with an upper-level low.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 90], "content_span": [91, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Joaninha\nJoaninha passed within approximately 80\u00a0km\u00a0(50\u00a0mi) of the Mauritian island of Rodrigues, producing wind gusts on the northern side of the island at Port Mathurin up to 161\u00a0km/h\u00a0(100\u00a0mph), including gusts in excess of 100\u00a0km/h\u00a0(60\u00a0mph) for 33 hours. Nearly 200\u00a0mm\u00a0(8\u00a0in) of rain fell across the island during the passage of the system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 90], "content_span": [91, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Kenneth\nOn April 21, M\u00e9t\u00e9o-France (MFR) initiated advisories on Tropical Disturbance 14, which was situated to the northeast of Madagascar. The system drifted westward, organizing as it did so. Early on April 23, the system strengthened into a tropical depression. Later that day, at 12:00 UTC, the tropical depression strengthened into a moderate tropical storm as was named Kenneth, becoming the fourteenth tropical storm of the season. Early on April 24, Kenneth strengthened into a tropical cyclone. Kenneth rapidly organized while approaching Mozambique, reaching Category 3-equivalent tropical cyclone intensity within several hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 89], "content_span": [90, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0022-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Kenneth\nOn the same day, Kenneth was projected to strike Mozambique within a day and bring more flooding and wind damage to the nation, about a month after Cyclone Idai had devastated the region, raising fears that the ongoing humanitarian crisis there could be worsened by the storm. On the next day, Kenneth reached its peak intensity, becoming a Category 4-equivalent intense tropical cyclone, as the storm began to near landfall in Mozambique. However, at about that time, Kenneth initiated an eyewall replacement cycle and gradually began to weaken, just prior to landfall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 89], "content_span": [90, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0022-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Kenneth\nLater that day, at 18:15 UTC, Kenneth made landfall as a Category 4-equivalent intense tropical cyclone in Mozambique, with 1-minute sustained winds of 220\u00a0km/h (135\u00a0mph), just north of Pemba. This made Kenneth the most intense landfalling storm in Mozambique's recorded history. Kenneth's landfall also marked the second time in Mozambique's recorded history in which two storms have made landfall during the same season at tropical cyclone intensity or higher.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 89], "content_span": [90, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Kenneth\nKenneth underwent extremely rapid weakening upon making landfall, despite the relatively favorable atmospheric environment and flat terrain of northern Mozambique. The system's maximum ten-minute sustained winds decreased from 205\u00a0km/h (125\u00a0mph) to just 65\u00a0km/h (40\u00a0mph) in just ten hours after landfall, weakening the storm to tropical storm intensity. On April 26, Kenneth weakened to tropical depression intensity, while continuing its southward motion. On April 27, Kenneth began drifting northward, also developing some thunderstorms off the coast of Mozambique. Kenneth continued to weaken, dissipating by 12:00 UTC on April 29.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 89], "content_span": [90, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Kenneth\nKenneth killed at least 52 people; seven on the island of Comoros, and at least 45 people in Mozambique. In Mozambique, Kenneth caused widespread damage in the city of Pemba, including extensive power outages and numerous felled trees. Kenneth is estimated to have caused at least $100 million in damages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 89], "content_span": [90, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Lorna\nOn April 21, Tropical Depression 15 formed to the southeast of the Maldives. The system moved southeastward, before turning south-southeastward on April 22, while slowly strengthening. On the next day, the system intensified into Moderate Tropical Storm Lorna, making the 2018\u201319 season the most active cyclone season recorded in the South-West Indian Ocean in the satellite era, surpassing the previous record set by the 1993\u201394 season. Lorna resumed a southeasterly direction on April 24, while continuing to organise. On April 25, Lorna then intensified into a severe tropical storm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 79], "content_span": [80, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0025-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Lorna\nOn the same day, Lorna began to interact with a smaller tropical low to the east, in the Australian region basin, before absorbing the weaker system early on the next day. On April 26, the JTWC upgraded Lorna to Category 1 status, while Lorna began turning towards the south. Soon afterward, Lorna encountered relatively strong vertical wind shear and steadily decreasing sea temperatures as it continued to track southwards, causing its gradual intensification trend to halt, and the JTWC to downgrade the system to a high-end tropical storm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 79], "content_span": [80, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Lorna\nOn 28 April, somewhat unexpectedly, and contradicting forecasts by MFR and the JTWC, the system developed a clearly defined eye and underwent steady intensification. Consequently, MFR upgraded the system to a tropical cyclone, and the JTWC upgraded Lorna to Category 2 status on the Saffir\u2013Simpson scale. Around this time, Lorna deviated from its predominantly southwards motion, and assumed a track to the south-southeast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 79], "content_span": [80, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0026-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Lorna\nDue to the system being located on the very eastern edge of the South-West Indian Ocean basin during the previous two days, this slight easterly motion caused the cyclone to become centred directly over the 90th meridian east\u2014the boundary of the Australian Bureau of Meteorology's area of responsibility. Lorna strengthened to peak intensity while tracking southwards along the boundary between the two regions, attaining ten-minute sustained winds of 150\u00a0km/h (95\u00a0mph) by 18:00 UTC on April 28.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 79], "content_span": [80, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Lorna\nBy 29 April, the structure of the cyclone had degraded significantly, primarily due to strong vertical wind shear and resulting dry air intrusion. As a result, the system was downgraded by the MFR to a severe tropical storm. Very strong vertical wind shear, analysed at 40 knots (75\u00a0km/h; 45\u00a0mph) at 09:00 UTC on April 29, caused Lorna to become devoid of deep convection later that day. Having lost tropical characteristics, the system was downgraded by the MFR at 12:00 UTC to a powerful storm-force post-tropical depression. Gale-force winds ceased by 12:00 UTC on April 30, and Ex-Tropical Cyclone Lorna exited the basin into the Australian region by 06:00 UTC on May 1. Soon afterward, Lorna became an extratropical low, before merging with another low-pressure system in the central southern Indian Ocean later that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 79], "content_span": [80, 906]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0028-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Storm names\nThe Sub-Regional Tropical Cyclone Advisory Center in Mauritius names a storm should it intensify into a moderate tropical storm between 55\u00b0E and 90\u00b0E. If instead a cyclone intensifies 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. Beginning from the 2016\u201317 season, name lists within the South-West Indian Ocean will be rotated on a triennial basis. Storm names are only used once, so any storm name used this year will be removed from rotation and replaced with a new name for the 2021\u201322 season. The unused names are expected to be reused in the list for the 2021\u201322 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 59], "content_span": [60, 754]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Storm names\nKenanga entered this basin as a moderate tropical storm from the Australian region on December 16, retaining its name assigned by TCWC Jakarta. Similarly, Savannah entered this basin as an intense tropical cyclone from the Australian region on March 17, retaining its name assigned by TCWC Perth. Furthermore, Moderate Tropical Storm 01 which formed in September was not assigned a name because it was not classified as a moderate tropical storm until the post-analysis was completed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 59], "content_span": [60, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Storm names\nAfter the season, the twelve names used were automatically retired and were replaced with Ana, Batsirai, Cliff, Damako, Emnati, Fezile, Gomba, Halima, Issa, Jasmine, Karim and Letlama, respectively for the 2021\u201322 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 59], "content_span": [60, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286419-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Seasonal effects\nThis table lists all of the tropical cyclones and subtropical cyclones that were monitored during the 2018\u20132019 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season. Information on their intensity, duration, name, areas affected, primarily comes from RSMC La R\u00e9union. Death and damage reports come from either press reports or the relevant national disaster management agency while the damage totals are given in 2018 or 2019\u00a0USD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 64], "content_span": [65, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286420-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southampton F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 Southampton F.C. season was the club's 20th season in the Premier League and their 42nd in the top division of English football. In addition to the Premier League, the club also competed in the FA Cup and the EFL Cup. Southampton finished the season 16th in the Premier League table with 9 wins, 12 draws and 17 losses. The club were knocked out of the third round of the FA Cup by Championship side Derby County, and were knocked out of the EFL Cup in the fourth round by fellow Premier League team Leicester City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286420-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southampton F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Southampton's last with manager Mark Hughes, who departed on 3 December 2018 with the club in the relegation zone with only one win from fourteen games. Former RB Leipzig manager Ralph Hasenh\u00fcttl was appointed as his replacement the next day, after Kelvin Davis took charge of the team's next game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286420-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southampton F.C. season\nFollowing the end of the 2017\u201318 season, Southampton released a number of players, including first-team defenders Florin Gardo\u0219 and J\u00e9r\u00e9my Pied. The club also sold Serbian midfielder Du\u0161an Tadi\u0107 to Dutch club Ajax for \u00a310 million. Several players were also brought in during the summer \u2013 Scottish midfielder Stuart Armstrong from Premiership champions Celtic for \u00a37 million, Norwegian winger Mohamed Elyounoussi from Swiss side Basel for \u00a316 million, goalkeeper Angus Gunn from Premier League champions Manchester City for \u00a313.5 million, and Danish centre-back Jannik Vestergaard from German club Borussia M\u00f6nchengladbach. In August, Liverpool striker Danny Ings joined on an initial loan, with a permanent move planned for the following summer. A number of players were loaned out, including striker Guido Carrillo, playmaker Sofiane Boufal, and midfielder Jordy Clasie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 903]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286420-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southampton F.C. season\nIn the January transfer window, the club sold out-of-favour striker Manolo Gabbiadini to Italian side Sampdoria for an undisclosed fee. Midfielder Steven Davis also returned to his former club Rangers on loan until the end of the season, while Wesley Hoedt and C\u00e9dric Soares moved to Celta Vigo and Inter Milan on loan until the end of the season respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286420-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southampton F.C. season, Pre-season\nSouthampton begun their 2018\u201319 pre-season preparations with a short tour of China, including matches against German club Schalke 04 and local side Jiangsu Suning. The first game ended in a 3\u20133 draw, with Nathan Redmond, Harrison Reed and Jake Hesketh scoring for the Saints. In the second, the Premier League side edged a 3\u20132 victory, thanks to goals from Manolo Gabbiadini, Redmond and Sam Gallagher. Returning to England, the club faced Championship side Derby County at Pride Park on 21 July. The lower league hosts subjected the Premier League visitors to their first pre-season defeat with a 3\u20130 win, goals coming from Tom Lawrence (two) and Mason Bennett. A week later, Southampton beat French side Dijon FCO 2\u20130, with Shane Long and Gabbiadini securing the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 813]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286420-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southampton F.C. season, Pre-season\nThe club's final two pre-season games took place at St Mary's Stadium. The first, against Spanish club Celta Vigo, ended 3\u20132 after a late winner from new signing Mohamed Elyounoussi completed a second-half comeback. Celta Vigo took a 2\u20130 lead in the first 45 minutes, with goals from Pione Sisto and Iago Aspas giving the hosts a disadvantage to overcome. Shortly after the break, Charlie Austin and Stuart Armstrong struck in a five-minute period to bring the game level, before Elyounoussi's finish gave the Saints the win. The second match took place three days later against German side Borussia M\u00f6nchengladbach. The visitors won the game comfortably, with two goals from Patrick Herrmann and a third from Denis Zakaria (both brought on as substitutes) giving them a 3\u20130 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 827]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286420-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013September 2018\nSouthampton picked up just one point from their first three games of the 2018\u201319 Premier League campaign, holding Burnley to a goalless draw in their opening fixture. The club lost their following two games 2\u20131. In the first, against Everton, the Saints were down by two goals within 31 minutes following goals from Theo Walcott and Richarlison. New signing Danny Ings scored his first goal for the club after the break, but the hosts held on for the three points, with Walcott almost doubling his tally late on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286420-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013September 2018\nThe second, against Leicester City, saw few chances for either side in the first 45 minutes. Ryan Bertrand opened the scoring shortly after the break, but his side's lead was cancelled out by Demarai Gray within a few minutes. After Pierre-Emile H\u00f8jbjerg was sent off, the visitors secured the win in injury time through Harry Maguire. The Saints picked up their first win of the season the following week, beating Crystal Palace 2\u20130 thanks to second-half goals from Ings and H\u00f8jbjerg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286420-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013September 2018\nTwo weeks later, a second consecutive win of the season at home to Brighton & Hove Albion was denied by a penalty in injury time at the end of the game. H\u00f8jbjerg opened the scoring before half-time with a strike from long range, with Ings adding a second after the break from a penalty awarded for a foul on the striker. Shane Duffy brought the Seagulls back into the game, with Glenn Murray converting an injury time penalty to secure a point for the visitors. The draw with Brighton was followed by three consecutive losses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286420-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013September 2018\nFirst, the Saints were beaten 3\u20130 by a Liverpool side at the top of the league table, with goals from centre-back Jo\u00ebl Matip and striker Mohamed Salah following a tenth-minute own goal by Wesley Hoedt. Next was a 2\u20130 loss at recently promoted Wolverhampton Wanderers, with goals scored by Ivan Cavaleiro (his first touch in the Premier League) and Jonny Castro Otto within the last 11 minutes of the game. The run left Southampton 16th in the Premier League table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286420-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, October\u2013December 2018\nOctober started off with another 3\u20130 loss, at home to title challengers Chelsea. Winger Eden Hazard opened the scoring after half an hour, with Ross Barkley and \u00c1lvaro Morata contributing in the second half to the convincing win which left Southampton just two points above the relegation zone and Chelsea second in the table. Southampton's poor form continued, although they remained clear of the drop zone, with a point each from two goalless draws later in October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286420-0007-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, October\u2013December 2018\nThe first at Bournemouth, featured few chances for either side; the second, at home to Newcastle United, saw the Saints dominate proceedings with 22 shots compared to the Magpies' six. The following week, the Saints suffered their worst defeat in Premier League history, when they lost 6\u20131 to league champions and leaders Manchester City. Another Hoedt own goal put the visitors down within six minutes, and by the 20th the hosts were three ahead after Sergio Ag\u00fcero and David Silva added to the scoreline. Ings pulled one back with a first-half penalty, but two goals from Raheem Sterling and one from Leroy San\u00e9 ensured a convincing win for the league leaders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286420-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, October\u2013December 2018\nSouthampton continued their winless run in the next two games, drawing 1\u20131 with Watford and losing 3\u20132 to recently promoted Fulham. In the former, the Saints led through Manolo Gabbiadini's first-half strike, but were denied a two-goal cushion when a goal scored by Charlie Austin was \"incorrectly\" denied due to offside. Jos\u00e9 Holebas equalised in the last ten minutes to secure a point for the visitors. Against Fulham, a first goal for Stuart Armstrong put his side ahead, but one from Aleksandar Mitrovi\u0107 and one from Andr\u00e9 Sch\u00fcrrle before the break put the hosts up at half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286420-0008-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, October\u2013December 2018\nArmstrong scored a second time to equalise for the Saints, but Mitrovi\u0107 responded in kind to secure the win. In their first game of December, Southampton hosted Manchester United and shared the points in a 2\u20132 draw. The Saints took an unlikely lead within 20 minutes, as Armstrong and C\u00e9dric Soares put the hosts two up against the struggling visitors. United responded before half-time, however, with Romelu Lukaku and Ander Herrera levelling the game going into the break. A second half of few chances left both sides picking up a point for the game, and Southampton without a win in three months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286420-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, October\u2013December 2018\nOn 3 December 2018, Mark Hughes was sacked as the manager of Southampton. Assistant first-team coach Kelvin Davis took charge of the team at Wembley Stadium against Tottenham Hotspur two days later, which ended 3\u20131 to the hosts. Despite Harry Kane opening the scoring within the first ten minutes, it took until the second half for Spurs to score again, which they did through Lucas Moura and Son Heung-min within ten minutes of the restart to go three up. Austin scored a consolation goal for the Saints in injury time, but the loss left them in the relegation zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286420-0009-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, October\u2013December 2018\nFormer Leipzig boss Ralph Hasenh\u00fcttl was named as Southampton's new manager before the Tottenham game, with his first match in charge to be the fixture against Cardiff City on 8 December. Hasenh\u00fcttl's first game at the club ended in a loss, with Callum Paterson scoring the only goal of the match late on to send the Saints down to 19th in the league table, three points away from safety.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286420-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, October\u2013December 2018\nIn Hasenh\u00fcttl's first home game, Southampton beat Arsenal 3\u20132. Danny Ings headed in a cross from Matt Targett within 20 minutes, although Henrikh Mkhitaryan responded with an equalising header just eight minutes later. Before half-time, Ings scored a second to put the hosts back in front, although less than ten minutes after the break Mkhitaryan responded in kind to level it for the visitors again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286420-0010-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, October\u2013December 2018\nShane Long saw a late goal disallowed, but later set up Charlie Austin to score the winner in the 85th minute; Southampton's first win since September saw them move out of the relegation zone for the first time in three weeks. The following week, the Saints beat fellow strugglers Huddersfield Town 3\u20131 away to pick up a second consecutive league win for the first time since April 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286420-0010-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, October\u2013December 2018\nNathan Redmond opened the scoring with his first goal of the season after 15 minutes, and Ings doubled the lead just before half-time with a penalty after being brought down in the box. Within 15 minutes of the restart, a long-range effort from Philip Billing brought the hosts back into the game, however a first goal for young striker Michael Obafemi just five minutes after coming on gave Southampton back their two-goal lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286420-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, October\u2013December 2018\nOn 27 December, the club lost 2\u20131 at home to West Ham United. After a first half of few chances, Nathan Redmond scored for the second game running just after the break to put the hosts ahead. However, within ten minutes the Hammers had responded twice through Felipe Anderson, ending Southampton's short winning run. In their final game of 2018, Southampton hosted Premier League champions Manchester City, losing 3\u20131. David Silva opened the scoring after ten minutes, but Pierre-Emile H\u00f8jbjerg responded 25 minutes later to equalise for the hosts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286420-0011-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, October\u2013December 2018\nOn the stroke of half-time, however, a shot from Raheem Sterling was deflected into his own goal by James Ward-Prowse, and in injury time a back-post header from Sergio Ag\u00fcero made it 3\u20131. Southampton were unable to mount a comeback in the second half, and H\u00f8jbjerg was shown a straight red card five minutes from full-time for a tackle on Fernandinho. The loss left the Saints out of the relegation zone on goal difference only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286420-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013March 2019\nIn their first fixture of 2019, Southampton were held to a goalless draw by Chelsea. The hosts dominated possession throughout the game, but despite 17 shots were unable to find a way through the defence. In the best chances of the game, Eden Hazard saw his shot saved by Angus Gunn, while \u00c1lvaro Morata's second-half goal was disallowed for offside. Two weeks later, the Saints picked up a 2\u20131 win over Leicester City. The visitors opened the scoring early through a James Ward-Prowse penalty, after Nampalys Mendy fouled Shane Long in the box. On the stroke of half-time, however, Yan Valery was sent off for a second yellow card after a foul on Marc Albrighton. Long doubled Southampton's lead in injury time before the break, before Wilfred Ndidi scored a consolation goal for the hosts in the second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 878]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286420-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southampton F.C. season, FA Cup\nSouthampton will enter the 2018\u201319 FA Cup in the third round against Championship side Derby County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286420-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southampton F.C. season, EFL Cup\nSouthampton entered the 2018\u201319 EFL Cup in the second round, beating fellow Premier League side Brighton & Hove Albion by a single late goal on 28 August. The game was closely fought, with Angus Gunn twice denying Viktor Gy\u00f6keres for the hosts. Substitute Charlie Austin had a shot blocked on the line by Bernardo late on, but scored in the 88th minute to secure the first win of the season for the visitors. In the third round, the Saints travelled again to face Everton, to whom they had lost in the league a few weeks prior.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286420-0014-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southampton F.C. season, EFL Cup\nAnother win looked to be likely for the South Coast club, after a lead secured by Danny Ings before the break remained for most of the second half, however a late response from Theo Walcott sent the game to penalties. Southampton won the penalty shootout 4\u20133, with C\u00e9dric Soares converting the decisive spot kick after Walcott saw his effort saved by Gunn (Richarlison also missed his penalty, while Matt Targett missed for the Saints).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286420-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southampton F.C. season, EFL Cup\nIn the fourth round, Southampton travelled again to face Leicester City, another side who had already beaten them in the league. Initially due to take place on 30 October, the fixture was postponed following the death of Leicester's chairman Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha. The visitors enjoyed the majority of chances, most of which came in the second half, with Nathan Redmond and Manolo Gabbiadini both coming close to breaking the goalless deadlock, and Steven Davis seeing a goal disallowed by the video assistant referee due to a handball by Redmond. The game went to penalties, with both sides scoring all five of their initial spot kicks. Gabbiadini failed to score his sudden death penalty, allowing Nampalys Mendy to secure the win for the Foxes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286421-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southeast Missouri State Redhawks men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Southeast Missouri State Redhawks men's basketball team represented Southeast Missouri State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Redhawks, led by fourth-year head coach Rick Ray, played their home games at the Show Me Center in Cape Girardeau, Missouri as members of the Ohio Valley Conference. They finished the season 10\u201321 overall, 5\u201313 in OVC play, finishing in 11th place. Only the top eight teams can play in the OVC Tournament, so the Redhawks did not qualify this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286421-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southeast Missouri State Redhawks men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Redhawks finished the 2017\u201318 season 14\u201317, 8\u201310 in OVC play to finish in seventh place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 80], "content_span": [81, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286421-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southeast Missouri State Redhawks men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe team was ineligible for postseason play this season due to APR violations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 80], "content_span": [81, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286422-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southeastern Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 Southeastern Conference men's basketball season began with practices in October 2018, followed by the start of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season in November. Conference play started in early January 2019 and will end in March, after which 14 member teams will participate in the 2019 SEC Tournament at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, Tennessee. The tournament champion is guaranteed a selection to the 2019 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286422-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southeastern Conference men's basketball season, Head coaches\nNote: Stats shown are before the beginning of the season. Overall and SEC records are from time at current school.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 69], "content_span": [70, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286422-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southeastern Conference men's basketball season, Regular season, SEC regular season\nThis table summarizes the head-to-head results between teams in conference play. Results updated through January 5, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 91], "content_span": [92, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286423-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southeastern Conference women's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 SEC women's basketball season began with practices in October 2018, followed by the start of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season in November. Conference play started in early January 2019 and concluded in February, followed by the 2019 SEC Women's Basketball Tournament at the Bon Secours Wellness Arena in Greenville, South Carolina, in March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286423-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southeastern Conference women's basketball season, Head coaches\nNote: Stats shown are before the beginning of the season. Overall and SEC records are from time at current school.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 71], "content_span": [72, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286424-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southeastern Louisiana Lady Lions basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Southeastern Louisiana Lady Lions basketball team represented Southeastern Louisiana University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Lady Lions were led by second year head coach Ayla Guzzardo, and played their home games at the University Center as members of the Southland Conference. They finished the season 9\u201320, 4\u201314 in Southland play to finish in a tie for last place. They failed to qualify for the Southland Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286424-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southeastern Louisiana Lady Lions basketball team, Previous season\nThe Lady Lions finished the 2017\u201318 season with an 8\u201321 overall record and a 7\u201311 record in Southland play to finish in ninth place. They failed to qualify for the Southland Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 74], "content_span": [75, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286425-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southeastern Louisiana Lions basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Southeastern Louisiana Lions basketball team represented Southeastern Louisiana University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Lions were led by fifth-year head coach Jay Ladner, and played their home games at the University Center in Hammond, Louisiana as members of the Southland Conference. They finished the season 17\u201316 overall, 12\u20136 in Southland play to finish in a three-way tie for third place. As the No. 3 seed in the Southland Tournament, they advanced to the semifinals, where they lost to Abilene Christian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286425-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southeastern Louisiana Lions basketball team, Previous season\nThe Lions finished the 2017\u201318 season 22\u201312, 15\u20133 in Southland play to finish in a tie for the Southland regular season championship with Nicholls State. As the No. 1 seed in the Southland Tournament, they defeated Sam Houston State in the semifinals before losing in the championship game to Stephen F. Austin. As a regular season champion, and No. 1 seed in their conference tournament, who failed to win their conference tournament, they received an automatic bid to the National Invitation Tournament where they lost in the first round to Saint Mary's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286426-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southend United F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Southend United's 113th year in existence and their fourth consecutive season in League One. Along with competing in League One, the club participated in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286426-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southend United F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286426-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southend United F.C. season, Competitions, Friendlies\nPre -season friendlies with Great Wakering Rovers and Leyton Orient were announced on 21 May 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286426-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southend United F.C. season, Competitions, League One, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League One fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286426-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southend United F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October. The draw for the second round was made live on BBC and BT by Mark Schwarzer and Glenn Murray on 12 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286426-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southend United F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286426-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southend United F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced. The draw for the second round was made live on Talksport by Leon Britton and Steve Claridge on 16 November. On 8 December, the third round draw was drawn by Alan McInally and Matt Le Tissier on Soccer Saturday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286427-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Combination Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 Southern Combination Football League season was the 94th in the history of the competition, which lies at levels 9 and 10 of the English football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286427-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Combination Football League\nThe provisional club allocations for steps 5 and 6 were announced by the FA on 25 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286427-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Combination Football League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division consisted of 20 clubs, the same as last season, after Worthing United and Littlehampton Town were relegated to Division One, and Haywards Heath Town and Three Bridges were promoted to Isthmian League Division One South.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 62], "content_span": [63, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286427-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Combination Football League, Division One\nDivision One remained at 18 clubs after Little Common, Langney Wanderers and Lingfield were promoted to the Premier Division, and Ringmer left the league. Four new clubs joined:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286427-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Combination Football League, Division Two\nDivision Two featured three new clubs after Alfold and Sidlesham were promoted to Division One, and Lancing United resigned from the league:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286427-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Combination Football League, Division Two\nPromotion from this division depends on ground grading as well as league position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286428-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 Southern Conference men's basketball season began with practices in October 2018, followed by the start of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season in November. Conference play will begin in January 2019 and conclude in February 2019. The season marked the 97th season of Southern Conference basketball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286428-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Conference men's basketball season, Preseason, Coaching changes\nOn March 3, 2018, Western Carolina head coach Larry Hunter resigned after 13 seasons. On March 27, Winthrop associate head coach Mark Prosser, son of the late Skip Prosser, was named head coach of the Catamounts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 80], "content_span": [81, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286429-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Counties East Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 Southern Counties East Football League season was the 53rd in the history of the Southern Counties East Football League, a football competition in England, and the third year the competition has two divisions, the Premier Division and Division One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286429-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Counties East Football League\nThe provisional club allocations for steps 5 and 6 were announced by the FA on 25 May. These are subject to ratification by the league at its AGM on 23 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286429-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Counties East Football League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division consisted of 17 clubs from the previous season along with three new clubs, promoted from Division One:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 64], "content_span": [65, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286429-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Counties East Football League, Division One\nDivision One consisted of 14 clubs from the previous season along with four new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286430-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 season is the 116th in the history of the Southern League since its establishment in 1894. The league (known as Evo-Stik League Southern, following a sponsorship deal with Evo-Stik) has two Premier divisions (Central and South) at step 3 of the National League System (NLS) and two Division One divisions (Central and South) at step 4 of the NLS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286430-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Football League\nThis is the first season to consist of four divisions in the league, following a shakeup of the Southern, Isthmian, and Northern Premier Leagues divisions by geographical region. The Southern League was chosen to create a new division at Step 3; the 21 clubs remaining from the Premier Division the previous season were split into two new Premier divisions; Central and South. The league constitution was announced in May 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286430-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Football League, Premier Division Central, Team changes\nThe Premier Division Central at step 3 of the NLS featured ten clubs from the previous season Premier Division and 12 new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286430-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Football League, Premier Division South, Team changes\nThe Premier Division South at step 3 of the NLS featured 10 clubs from the previous season Premier Division and 12 new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286430-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Football League, Division One Central, Team changes\nDivision One Central at step 4 of the NLS featured eight clubs from the previous season West Division and twelve new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 68], "content_span": [69, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286430-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Football League, Division One South, Team changes\nDivision One South at step 4 of the NLS featured thirteen clubs from the previous season East Division and seven new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286430-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Football League, League Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Southern League Cup was the 81st edition 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, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286431-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Illinois Salukis men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Southern Illinois Salukis men's basketball team represented Southern Illinois University Carbondale during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Salukis, led by seventh-year head coach Barry Hinson, played their home games at the SIU Arena in Carbondale, Illinois as members of the Missouri Valley Conference. They finished the season 17\u201315 overall, 10\u20138 in MVC play, finishing in a tie for third place. As the No. 3 seed in the MVC Tournament, the Salukis were upset by No. 6 seed Northern Iowa in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286431-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Illinois Salukis men's basketball team\nIn an emotional news conference following the game, Southern Illinois head coach Barry Hinson, announced he was stepping down as the coach of the Salukis. On March 20, 2019, the school hired former SIU star point guard and Loyola assistant coach Bryan Mullins as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286431-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Illinois Salukis men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Salukis finished the 2017\u201318 season 20\u201313, 11\u20137 in MVC play to finish in second place. In the MVC Tournament, they defeated Missouri State in the quarterfinals before losing to Illinois State in the semifinals. Despite winning 20 games, the Salukis did not participate in a postseason tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 72], "content_span": [73, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286432-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Illinois Salukis women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Southern Illinois women's basketball team represents Southern Illinois University Carbondale during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Salukis were led by sixth year head coach Cindy Stein. They play their home games at SIU Arena and were members of the Missouri Valley Conference. They finished the season 15\u201315, 8\u201310 in MVC play to finish in sixth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Missouri Valley Women's Tournament to Northern Iowa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286433-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Jaguars basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Southern Jaguars basketball team represents Southern University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Jaguars, led by head coach Sean Woods, play their home games at the F. G. Clark Center in Baton Rouge, Louisiana as members of the Southwestern Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286433-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Jaguars basketball team, Previous season\nThe Jaguars finished the 2017\u201318 season 15\u201318, 10\u20138 in SWAC play to finish in fifth place. Due to Grambling State's Academic Progress Rate violations and subsequent postseason ineligibility, the Jaguars received the No. 4 seed in the SWAC Tournament. They defeated Jackson State in the quarterfinals before losing to Arkansas\u2013Pine Bluff in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286433-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Jaguars basketball team, Previous season\nOn April 12, 2018, Southern hired Stetson assistant coach and former Morehead State/Mississippi Valley State head coach Sean Woods for the full-time job.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286434-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Kings season\nIn the 2018\u201319 rugby union season, the Southern Kings participated in the 2018\u201319 Pro14 competition, their second appearance since joining the competition in 2017\u201318. They remained in Conference B of the competition, along with Irish sides Leinster and Ulster, Italian side Benetton, Scottish side Edinburgh and Welsh sides Dragons and Scarlets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286434-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Kings season, Personnel, Coaches and management\nThe following coaching team was announced for the 2018\u201319 Pro14 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286434-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Kings season, Personnel, Player movements\nPlayer movements between the 2017\u201318 Pro14 season and the end 2018\u201319 Pro14 season are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286434-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Kings season, Standings, Round-by-round\nThe table below shows the Southern Kings' progression throughout the season. For each round, their cumulative points total is shown with the conference position:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286434-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Kings season, Player statistics\nThe Pro14 appearance record for players that represented the Southern Kings in 2018\u201319 is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286435-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Lady Jaguars basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Southern Lady Jaugars basketball team represented Southern University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Lady Jaugars, led by first year head coach Carlos Funchess, played their home games at the F. G. Clark Center, as members of the Southwestern Athletic Conference. They finished the season 20\u201313, 12\u20134 in SWAC play to win the SWAC regular season championship. They also won the SWAC Women's Tournament, earning them an automatic bid to the NCAA Women's Tournament. They were seeded sixteenth, and lost to No. 1 seed Mississippi State in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286436-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Miss Golden Eagles basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Southern Miss Golden Eagles men's basketball team represented the University of Southern Mississippi during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Golden Eagles, led by fifth-year head coach Doc Sadler, played their home games at Reed Green Coliseum in Hattiesburg, Mississippi as members of Conference USA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286436-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Miss Golden Eagles basketball team, Previous season\nThe Golden Eagles finished the 2017\u201318 season 16\u201318, 7\u201311 in C-USA play to finish in a tie for ninth place. They defeated FIU and Middle Tennessee before losing to Marshall in the semifinals of the C-USA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286436-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Miss Golden Eagles basketball team, Schedule and results\n* Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses. All times are in Central Time", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 73], "content_span": [74, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286437-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Miss Lady Eagles basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Southern Miss Lady Eagles basketball team represented the University of Southern Mississippi during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Lady Eagles, led by fifteenth year head coach Joye Lee-McNelis, played their home games at Reed Green Coliseum and were members of Conference USA. They finished the season 18\u201314, 9\u20137 in C-USA play to finish in a tie for seventh place. They lost in the first round of the C-USA Women's Tournament to North Texas. They received an invitation to the WBI where they defeated Nicholls in the first round before losing to North Alabama in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286438-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Utah Thunderbirds men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Southern Utah Thunderbirds basketball team represented Southern Utah University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Thunderbirds were led by third-year head coach Todd Simon and played their home games at the America First Events Center in Cedar City, Utah as members of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 17\u201317, 9\u201311 in Big Sky play to finish in seventh place. They defeated Idaho State and Northern Colorado to advance to the semifinals of the Big Sky Tournament where they lost to Eastern Washington. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they defeated Drake in the first round before losing in the second round to Cal State Bakersfield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 774]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286438-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Utah Thunderbirds men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Thunderbirds finished the 2017\u201318 season 13\u201319, 5\u201313 in Big Sky play to finish in tenth place. In the Big Sky Tournament they defeated Idaho State and Idaho to advance to the semifinals where they lost to Eastern Washington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 73], "content_span": [74, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286439-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southern Utah Thunderbirds women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Southern Utah Thunderbirds women's basketball team represented Southern Utah University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Thunderbirds are led by first-year head coach Tracy Sanders and play their home games at America First Events Center. They are members of the Big Sky Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286440-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southland Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 Southland Conference men's basketball season, the conference's 56th, began with practices in October 2018, followed by the start of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season on November 6, 2018. Conference play began on January 2, 2019 concluding on March 9, 2019. The Sam Houston State Bearkats won the regular season championship with a conference record of 16\u20132. The 2019 Southland Conference Men's Basketball Tournament was held in Katy, Texas at the Merrell Center from March 13\u201317, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286440-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southland Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2nd seeded Abilene Christian Wildcats won the conference tournament championship and received the conference automatic bid to the NCAA tournament. Two other teams also received bids to post season tournaments. Conference regular season champion, Sam Houston State, received the conference automatic bid to the NIT tournament. New Orleans received a bid to the CIT tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286440-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southland Conference men's basketball season, Preseason, Coaching changes\nMcNeese State University announced that it would not renew the contract of former head coach Dave Simmons on March 4, 2018. Heath Schroyer was named head coach on March 15, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 81], "content_span": [82, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286440-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southland Conference men's basketball season, Preseason, Coaching changes\nIncarnate Word announced that Ken Burmeister would not return on March 6, 2018. Carson Cunningham was named as men's basketball head coach on March 23, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 81], "content_span": [82, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286440-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southland Conference men's basketball season, Preseason, Preseason All-Conference Teams\nShannon Bogues (Stephen F. Austin)Kevon Harris (Stephen F. Austin)T. J. Holyfield (Stephen F. Austin)Ishmael Lane (Northwestern State)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 95], "content_span": [96, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286440-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southland Conference men's basketball season, Preseason, Preseason All-Conference Teams\nJalone Friday (Abilene Christian)Josh Nzeakor (Lamar)Jaren Lewis (Abilene Christian)Marcus Harris (Sam Houston State)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 95], "content_span": [96, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286440-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southland Conference men's basketball season, Postseason, NCAA tournament\nAbilene Christian, winner of the conference tournament, was awarded an automatic bid to the NCAA Division I Basketball Tournament. Abilene Christian's season ended losing to Kentucky in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 81], "content_span": [82, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286440-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southland Conference men's basketball season, Postseason, National Invitation Tournament\nSam Houston State received the conference automatic bid to the NIT tournament. The Bearkats lost in the first round of the tournament to TCU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 96], "content_span": [97, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286440-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Southland Conference men's basketball season, Postseason, CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament\nNew Orleans received a bid to the CIT. The Privateers lost in an overtime game to Texas Southern in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 106], "content_span": [107, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286441-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Spartan South Midlands Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 Spartan South Midlands Football League season was the 22nd 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, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286441-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Spartan South Midlands Football League\nThe provisional club allocations for steps 5 and 6 were announced by the FA on 25 May. The constitution is subject to ratification by the league at its AGM on 23 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286441-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Spartan South Midlands Football League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 16 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with four new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 64], "content_span": [65, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286441-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Spartan South Midlands Football League, Division One\nDivision One featured 20 clubs in the division for this season, of which there are three new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286441-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Spartan South Midlands Football League, Division Two\nDivision Two featured 13 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with two clubs joined from the Herts County League:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286441-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Spartan South Midlands Football League, Division Two\nAlso, Loughton Manor relocated and were renamed New Bradwell St Peter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286442-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting CP season\nThe 2018\u201319 Sporting CP season was the club's 113th season in existence and 85th consecutive season in the top flight of Portuguese football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286442-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting CP season, Overview, August\nSporting CP began the domestic season on 12 August 2018 with a 3\u20131 away win against Moreirense through two goals from Bas Dost and one from Bruno Fernandes. The first Lisbon derby against Benfica was played on 25 August (matchday 3), where a penalty goal from Nani was not enough for a win as the match finished 1\u20131 at Est\u00e1dio da Luz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Real Sporting's 113th season in existence and the club's 47th season in the second flight of Spanish football, the second one since its last relegation. It covers a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, Pre-season\nOn 12 June 2018, Alberto Lora announced he would leave Real Sporting after spending 12 seasons in the club. The board of directors, players and supporters went to his farewell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, Pre-season\nTwo days later, Miguel Torrecilla, director of football, announced that after the great success of the reserve team in the previous season, six players would promote to the first team: Nacho M\u00e9ndez, Juan Rodr\u00edguez, Dani Mart\u00edn, Isma Cerro, Cristian Salvador and \u00c1lvaro Traver.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, Pre-season\nOn 4 July 2018, Portuguese midfielder Andr\u00e9 Sousa became the first new player of the season. He came loaned from Belenenses, with a buy-option for Real Sporting. Five days later, Isma L\u00f3pez rescinded with the club for signing with Cypriot AC Omonia. The Navarrese player left the team after five seasons with 130 league games played and eight goals scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, Pre-season\nAlso in that week, Carlos Castro was transferred to Mallorca for an undisclosed fee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, Pre-season\nOn 11 July, right back Francisco Molinero arrived to Gij\u00f3n from Getafe for signing with the club the next day. Only one day later, another new right back arrived to Mareo: Portuguese Andr\u00e9 Geraldes came loaned from Sporting CP after spending the last season with Andr\u00e9 Sousa at Belenenses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, Pre-season\nOn 18 July, Real Sporting played their first match of the preseason at Villaviciosa. Despite receiving a first goal, they beat homers Lealtad by 2\u20131. Gorka Santamar\u00eda, signed for the reserves, and Pablo Fern\u00e1ndez scored the two goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, Pre-season\nOn 23 July, the club signed Finnish international winger Robin Lod for two seasons. Two days later, after requesting to leave the club for playing in La Liga, Sergio \u00c1lvarez was transferred to Eibar. The Asturian midfielder spent 13 seasons in the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, Pre-season\nBefore these two transfers, Diego Mari\u00f1o received the Molin\u00f3n de Plata award for the best player of the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, Pre-season\nOn 27 July, Real Sporting beat Langreo by 2\u20130 in a match where striker Neftali Manzambi, that is in the club as a test player, made a notable performance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, Pre-season\nOn 2 August, the day after a win against Cultural Leonesa, Real Sporting announced French defender Mathieu Peybernes, who came on loan from Lorient. Five days later, Manzambi agreed to remain in the B-side with a one-year loan from Basel and on the next day, Ghanain Isaac Cofie signed a two-year contract with the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, Pre-season\nOn 14 August, Federico Barba left Real Sporting for coming back to Italy after Chievo Verona paid the termination clause of the player. One day later, English striker Nick Blackman joined the club on a season-long loan from Derby County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, August\nOn 18 August, as in the previous season, Real Sporting started the season with a draw at Alcorc\u00f3n. This time, Real Sporting rescued one point thanks to a great shot of Andr\u00e9 Sousa in the 93rd minute. 17-year-old player Pelayo Morilla made his debut with the first side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, August\nAfter this match, left back Javi Noblejas signed for the club, as Serbian striker Uro\u0161 \u0110ur\u0111evi\u0107, who, for a fee of about \u20ac2 million became the most expensive transfer in the club's history, and winger \u00c1lvaro, loaned from Getafe after he could not sign with M\u00e1laga, that had problems their salary cap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, August\nThe second match of the season was played on 26 August, and Real Sporting defeated Gimn\u00e0stic by 2\u20130 with goals of Hern\u00e1n Santana and Robin Lod, both players scoring for the first time with the Asturian team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, September\nReal Sporting continued unbeaten after the third round, by beating debutants Extremadura 2\u20130. This win allowed the team to reach the direct promotion positions for the first time in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, September\nThe first loss arrived on 9 September, at Riazor, with a goal of Pablo Mar\u00ed for Deportivo La Coru\u00f1a in the 94th minute, in a very criticized match by the local media due to not shooting on target in the whole game. Robin Lod, called up for playing the UEFA Nations League with Finland, missed the game. Rub\u00e9n Baraja and the rest of the technical staff were worried about his presence with the national team as he was recently recovered from an injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, September\nAfter the disappointment at Coru\u00f1a, Real Sporting faced the Copa del Rey and beat Numancia by 1\u20132. Pelayo Morilla, with only 17 years old, netted the second goal for the team. However, in the league match played four days later at El Molin\u00f3n, the rojiblancos only could earn one point after a 1\u20131 due to a controversial goal for Numancia, where an offside was claimed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, September\nOn 22 September, Sporting extended their streak without wins with a 1\u20130 loss at El Sadar against Osasuna. The performance was again heavily criticized, as after the match at Riazor, due to not shooting again on target during the 90 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, September\nThe month of September ended with a 1\u20130 win against Las Palmas, and showed the differences of the team depending on playing at home and away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, October\nOctober was not a good month for Real Sporting. They started it with a loss at Wanda Metropolitano against Rayo Majadahonda in a match where the first shouts of \"Baraja out\" were heard. The bad streak continued at home, where the team only earned one point against Reus Deportiu thanks to a penalty kick scored by Carlos Carmona in the 93rd minute (previously, Uro\u0161 \u0110ur\u0111evi\u0107 missed another one) and the shouts against Rub\u00e9n Baraja continued.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, October\nIn a decisive week for the coach, Real Sporting won in the third round of the 2018\u201319 Copa del Rey after a penalty shootout against Rayo Majadahonda. Ten players that previously played for the B-side participated in the match. The bad streak continued at home with a goalless draw against C\u00f3rdoba. Again, people protested against the board of directors and the manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, November\nThe streak without winning continued at Estadio Mediterr\u00e1neo, where Real Sporting lost 1\u20132 to Almer\u00eda in a match with a controversial penalty kick for the homers to tie the game and a not allowed legal goal of Cristian Salvador with 1\u20131 in the scoreboard, and just before the second goal for Almer\u00eda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, November\nBefore the Asturian derby, Real Sporting saved one point in the 94th minute in their home match against M\u00e1laga, that ended with a 2\u20132 draw. Again, the crowd shouted against Baraja and shouted the name of Jos\u00e9 Alberto, manager of the B-side. Finally, Baraja was sacked after losing the derby against Oviedo and Jos\u00e9 Alberto took the helm of the team. In that match, Isma Cerro suffered an injury that forced him to miss the rest of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, November\nIn his first match, Jos\u00e9 Alberto managed the team to the club's first win ever at Granada, beating the homers by 2\u20131 with a free kick shot of \u00c1lvaro Traver in the 92nd minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, December\nThe month started with a 2\u20131 win at El Molin\u00f3n against Tenerife, in the debut of Jos\u00e9 Alberto at home. Finally and after 14 league matches, Uro\u0161 \u0110ur\u0111evi\u0107 scored his first league goal with the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, December\nFive days later, Real Sporting qualified for the first time in ten years to the Copa del Rey's round of 16 after eliminating Eibar thanks to the 2\u20132 draw at Ipurua. The rojiblancos were the only non-first-tier team to qualify to this round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, December\nJos\u00e9 Alberto ended the year unbeaten after achieving one more win against Mallorca and a goalless draw at Lugo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, January\nOn 6 January, Real Sporting lost its first match at home, after the come back of Zaragoza at El Molin\u00f3n. Three days later, the team would achieve another win at the Copa del Rey, by defeating top-tier Valencia by 2\u20131. Javi Noblejas scored his first goal with Real Sporting and Nick Blackman made a header-goal for the win. However, the team would be eliminated after being defeated 0\u20133 at Mestalla.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, January\nThe month of January ended with three new signs and one player leaving the club on loan made during the winter transfer window. Ivi, \u00c1lex Alegr\u00eda and Aitor Garc\u00eda signed for the club while Neftali Manzambi was loaned to C\u00f3rdoba after transferring the player from Basel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, February\nWith the three new signs making their debut with Real Sporting, the team started the month by widely beating Extremadura at Almendralejo, with \u0110ur\u0111evi\u0107 scoring a brace. However, despite this good match, the month would be disastrous after losing the next three matches with Osasuna, Las Palmas, Rayo Majadahonda, being the team, specially the defense, strongly criticized.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, March\nMarch would see the club's reaction to the bad streak starting with an away win against Numancia, followed by three more, specially important the one against Oviedo at the Asturian derby thanks to an own goal of Christian Fern\u00e1ndez. Sporting would progress slowly positions in the table as they only earn one point in their visit to M\u00e1laga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, April\nReal Sporting recovered the winning streak in the next week at Tenerife and at home against Granada with two goals of Uro\u0161 \u0110ur\u0111evi\u0107. In the match against Granada, the Serbian striker would score the fastest goal in the club's history after earning the only goal of the match with only ten seconds played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0033-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, April\nThese would be the end of the winning streak for starting a last outrageous break, with two draws against last qualified Gimn\u00e0stic and Elche, despite a starting goal of Jean-Sylvain Babin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0034-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, May and June\nA loss in the last play of the match against Mallorca, where Diego Mari\u00f1o got injured for the rest of the season, would practically mean the end of the possibilities of Real Sporting to qualify for the playoffs, and these would definitively disappear with a goalless home draw against Lugo and two consecutive losses at Zaragoza and against Albacete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0035-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Season overview, May and June\nThe season finished with a 1\u20130 win against C\u00e1diz, with a goal of Nacho M\u00e9ndez. This was the last match of captain Roberto Canella, who would leave Real Sporting after spending twelve seasons in the club. Just after the match, Jean-Sylvain Babin announced he would extend his contract for three more years, being this confirmed by the club the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0036-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Players, From the 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286443-0037-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286444-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sports Academy Tirur season\nThe 2017\u201318 season was the second season for Sports Academy Tirur in the Kerala Premier League. They are competing group stage from Group A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286444-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sports Academy Tirur season, Kerala Premier League, Review and events\nSports Academy Tirur started their 2018\u201319 Kerala Premier League campaign with a victory over SBI Kerala on 19 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 77], "content_span": [78, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286445-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sri Lanka Champions League\nThe 2018\u201319 Sri Lanka Champions League, known as the 2018\u201319 Dialog Champions League due to sponsorship reasons, was the 34th season of the Sri Lanka Champions League, the top-tier football league in Sri Lanka. The season started on 21 October 2018, rather than original scheduled date of June, due to the 2018 SAFF Championship, and ended on 24 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286445-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sri Lanka Champions League, Teams\nA total of 18 teams competed in the league. Colombo were the defending champions, having won the previous three titles. Police and Moragasmulla were relegated from last season, and were replaced by promoted teams Red Stars and Ratnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286446-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St Johnstone F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the club's sixth season in the Scottish Premiership and their tenth consecutive season in the top flight of Scottish football. St Johnstone also competed in the Scottish Cup and the League Cup, where they were knocked out of both by Celtic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286446-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St Johnstone F.C. season, Season Summary\nTommy Wright remained as manager for the season. After getting through the Group stages of the League Cup (and losing to Kilmarnock in the first match of the season), Saints had a 4 match unbeaten run, although by the end of September they went on a 4 match win less run, which included being knocked out of the League Cup by Celtic. They were then unbeaten in the League through much of October, November and into December. They ended the year with a couple of home defeats and a couple of away wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286446-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 St Johnstone F.C. season, Season Summary\nAfter losing to Hearts in league at the end of January however, the Saints went on an 8 match win less run, which included being knocked out of the Scottish Cup, again by Celtic. The win less run came to an end in a rearranged match at home to St. Mirren. They ended the regular season in seventh, therefore in the bottom six for the post-split for the second season in a row. Tony Watt announced he rejected a deal and would be leaving the club at the end of the season. The Saints finished the League season in Seventh place, claiming the best of the bottom six.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286446-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St Johnstone F.C. season, Transfers, In\nDrey Wright, Tony Watt, Matty Kennedy, Conor Mitchell (6 month loan), Tristan Nydam (6 month loan), Danny Swanson, Ross Callachan, Michael O'Halloran, Niall Keown (on loan), Sean Goss (on loan), Cammy Bell (on loan)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286446-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St Johnstone F.C. season, Transfers, Out\nSteven MacLean, Chris Millar, Keith Watson, Alan Mannus, Callum Hendry (6 month loan), Steven Anderson (on loan), David McMillan (on loan), Stefan Scougall", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286447-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St Mirren F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is the club's first season of play back in the top tier of Scottish football since 2015, having been promoted from the Scottish Championship at the end of the previous season. The club had been relegated from the Premiership at the end of the 2014\u201315 season. St Mirren will also compete in the League Cup and the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286447-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St Mirren F.C. season, Month by month review, May\nAlso on this day, Saints signed defender Paul McGinn on a two-year deal from relegated Partick Thistle. McGinn is the brother of Saints captain Stephen McGinn, and previously left Saints in 2013 without playing a game for the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286447-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St Mirren F.C. season, Month by month review, May\nAlso on this day, Saints were drawn against Kilmarnock, Dumbarton, Queen's Park and Spartans in the group stage of the Betfred Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286447-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St Mirren F.C. season, Month by month review, August\nAlso on this day, youngster Ethan Erhahon signed a three-year extension with the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286447-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St Mirren F.C. season, Month by month review, January\nAlso on this day midfielder Cammy Smith joined Dundee United for an undisclosed fee, after stating that he wanted to play first team football, and defender Adam Eckersley joined Scottish League One side Forfar Athletic on loan until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286447-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St Mirren F.C. season, Month by month review, January\nAlso on this day, defender Anton Ferdinand extends his contract until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286447-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St Mirren F.C. season, Month by month review, January\nAlso on this day the club signed Haitian striker Duckens Nazon from Belgian side Sint-Truiden and Romanian defender Lauren\u021biu Corbu from Dinamo Bucure\u0219t, both on loans until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286448-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Bonaventure Bonnies men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 St. Bonaventure Bonnies men's basketball team represented St. Bonaventure University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bonnies, led by 12th-year head coach Mark Schmidt, played their home games at the Reilly Center in Olean, New York as members of the Atlantic 10 Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286448-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Bonaventure Bonnies men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bonnies finished the 2017\u201318 season 26\u20138, 14\u20134 in A-10 play to finish in second place. They defeated Richmond in the quarterfinals of the A-10 Tournament before losing in the semifinals to Davidson. They received one of the last four at-large bids to the NCAA Tournament where they defeated UCLA in the First Four before losing in the First Round to Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286449-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Bonaventure Bonnies women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 St. Bonaventure Bonnies women's basketball team represents the St. Bonaventure University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Bonnies, led by third year head coach Jesse Fleming, play their home games at Reilly Center and were members of the Atlantic 10 Conference. They finished the season 8\u201322, 5\u201311 in A-10 play to finish in a tie for twelfth place. They lost in the first round of the A-10 Women's Tournament to Davidson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286449-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Bonaventure Bonnies women's basketball team, Media\nAll non-televised Bonnies home games air on the A-10 Digital Network. WGWE continue to be the radio broadcaster for the team. Chris Russell is the team's play-by-play voice; no color commentator is used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 62], "content_span": [63, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286450-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Francis Brooklyn Terriers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 St. Francis Brooklyn Terriers men's basketball team represented St. Francis College during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Terrier's home games are played at the Generoso Pope Athletic Complex. The team has been a member of the Northeast Conference since 1981. They are coached by Glenn Braica, who was in his ninth year at the helm of the Terriers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286450-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Francis Brooklyn Terriers men's basketball team\nThe Terriers Northeast Conference record was 9\u20139, earning them the 5th seed in the NEC Tournament. In the opening round of the tournament, they lost to the 4th seeded Robert Morris Colonials, 65\u201369 in overtime. The Terriers 17 wins in the 2018\u201319 campaign were the most since the 2013\u201314 season when they won 18 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286450-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Francis Brooklyn Terriers men's basketball team\nOn March 13, it was announced that the Terriers were selected to participate in the 2019 CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament. They lost in the first round to Hampton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286450-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Francis Brooklyn Terriers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Terriers finished the 2017\u201318 season 13\u201318, 10\u20138 in NEC play. It marked a return to the NEC Tournament as the Terriers gained the #5 seed and lost on the road to #4 LIU Brooklyn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 76], "content_span": [77, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286450-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Francis Brooklyn Terriers men's basketball team, Offseason\nThe Terriers unveiled a new basketball floor located in the Pope Physical Education Center. The new court replaces the original one that was installed in 1969.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 70], "content_span": [71, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286450-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Francis Brooklyn Terriers men's basketball team, Regular season\nSt. Francis Brooklyn completed the non-conference portion of their schedule with an 8\u20137 record. The Terriers had road wins against Lafayette, Niagara, and a tough Presbyterian squad that finished the season 20\u201316. At home the Terriers defeated Manhattan, Saint Peter's, and UMass Lowell. The eight non-conference wins were one shy of tying the NEC non-conference wins record which the Terriers set back in 2013-14. The eight non-conference wins were one shy of tying the NEC non-conference wins record which the Terriers set back in 2013-14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 75], "content_span": [76, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286450-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Francis Brooklyn Terriers men's basketball team, Regular season\nThe Terriers Northeast Conference schedule resulted in a 9\u20139 record, which was good for a fifth-place finish. The St. Francis margin of victory over the course of their 18 NEC contests was only 0.5 points (70.3 to 69.8).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 75], "content_span": [76, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286450-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Francis Brooklyn Terriers men's basketball team, Postseason\nAfter finishing the regular season 17-15 the Terriers were selected to participate in the 2019 CIT. This was their first winning season since 2014\u201315 when they went 23-12 and were invited to the 2015 NIT. In the tournament, St. Francis Brooklyn faced Hampton, their first game against each other in history. The Terriers lost to Hampton 72\u201381 in the opening round of the CIT.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 71], "content_span": [72, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286451-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Francis Brooklyn Terriers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 St. Francis Brooklyn Terriers women's basketball team represented St. Francis College during the 2018\u201319 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 is coached by Linda Cimino, who was in her first year at the helm of the Terriers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286451-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Francis Brooklyn Terriers women's basketball team\nThe Terriers finished the season 18\u201313 overall and 12\u20136 in conference play. The 12 conference victories are the most in program history, the previous best was 10 set by the 2013\u201314 squad. The Terriers were the 3 seed in the NEC Tournament and hosted 6 seed Mount St. Mary's. The Terriers lost 74\u201380 in the opening round of the NEC Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286451-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Francis Brooklyn Terriers women's basketball team\nOf note, Amy O'Neill became the first Terrier to record a triple-double. She did so twice during the season, first at Sacred Heart (2/2/19) and again at home against LIU Brooklyn (2/16/19).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286452-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. John's Red Storm men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 St. John's Red Storm men's basketball team represented St. John's University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They were coached by alumnus and Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame member Chris Mullin, in his fourth year at the school. They played their home games at Carnesecca Arena and Madison Square Garden as members of the Big East Conference. They finished the season 21\u201313, 8\u201310 in Big East Play to finish in seventh place. They defeated DePaul in the first round of the Big East Tournament before losing Marquette in the quarter finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286452-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. John's Red Storm men's basketball team\nOn April 9, 2019, head coach Chris Mullin resigned after four seasons. On April 19, the school announced it had hired former Arkansas head coach Mike Anderson as the team's new coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286452-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. John's Red Storm men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Red Storm finished the 2017\u201318 season with a record of 16\u201317, 4\u201314 in Big East play to finish in ninth place in conference. They defeated Georgetown in the first round of the Big East Tournament before losing to Xavier in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286453-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. John's Red Storm women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 St. John's Red Storm women's basketball team represented St. John's University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Red Storm, led by seventh-year head coach Joe Tartamella, played their games at Carnesecca Arena with 1 game at Madison Square Garden and were members of the Big East Conference. They finished the season 15\u201316, 7\u201311 in Big East play to finish in a tie for eighth place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the Big East Women's Basketball Tournament to Creighton where they lost to Marquette.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286454-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Louis Blues season\nThe 2018\u201319 St. Louis Blues season was the 52nd season for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on June 5, 1967. The Blues were in last place in the league in January, but rallied to make the playoffs. They advanced to the finals against the Boston Bruins and won in seven games for the first Stanley Cup in the franchise's 52-year history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286454-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Louis Blues season\nThe Blues were the fourth St. Louis-based pro sports team to win a major championship, joining the eleven-time World Series Champion St. Louis Cardinals of Major League Baseball, the 1957\u201358 St. Louis (now Atlanta) Hawks of the NBA, and the 1999\u20132000 St. Louis (now Los Angeles) Rams of the NFL. This made St. Louis the eighth city to win a championship in each of the four major U.S. sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286454-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Louis Blues season, Off-season\nOn May 30, 2018, the Blues named Mike Van Ryn as assistant coach, replacing Darryl Sydor, who stepped down to spend more time with his family. Van Ryn played the first three seasons (2000\u20132003) of his eight years in the NHL with the Blues, scoring 13 points in 69 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286454-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Louis Blues season, Off-season\nThe Blues extended their affiliation with the Tulsa Oilers of the ECHL on May 31.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286454-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Louis Blues season, Season summary\nThe Blues started the season sluggish, and head coach Mike Yeo was fired on November 19 with the team's record at 7\u20139\u20133. Craig Berube, who had served as assistant coach with the Blues since 2017, was named the interim head coach. St. Louis began the 2019 calendar year with the worst record in the league; 15\u201318\u20134 and 34 points recorded. Soon after, rookie goaltender Jordan Binnington joined the team. On January 7, he won his first game in a shutout and took over as the team's starting goaltender. The Blues then went on a franchise-record 11-game winning streak and had a 30\u201310\u20135 run to finish the season. They clinched a playoff spot on March 29, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286454-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Louis Blues season, Season summary\nIn the playoffs, the Blues defeated the Winnipeg Jets, Dallas Stars, and San Jose Sharks to advance to the 2019 Stanley Cup Finals, where they faced the Boston Bruins. It was their first Finals appearance since 1970. On May 29, 2019, St. Louis won a Stanley Cup Finals series' game for the first time in franchise history after getting swept in three previous series (1968\u20131970), as they defeated the Bruins 3\u20132 in overtime in game 2. On June 12, 2019, they defeated the Bruins in seven games to win the first Stanley Cup title in franchise history. Until then, they were the oldest franchise to have never won a Stanley Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286454-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Louis Blues season, Season summary\nRyan O'Reilly, who had been acquired in a trade during the previous offseason, was the Blues' top regular season scorer with 77 points. He then had a franchise-record 23 playoff points and won the Conn Smythe Trophy as the most valuable player in the playoffs. O'Reilly also won the Frank J. Selke Trophy for the league's best defensive forward during the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286454-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Louis Blues season, \"Gloria\"\nSt. Louis had been in last place in the NHL on January 3. On the night of January 6, a few Blues players were in a Philadelphia bar watching the National Football League \"Double Doink\" wildcard game between the Philadelphia Eagles and Chicago Bears. The DJ played the 1982 Laura Branigan song \"Gloria\", and according to defenceman Joel Edmundson, \"this one guy looked at the DJ and said, 'Keep playing \"Gloria\"!' so they kept playing it. Everyone would get up and start singing and dancing. We just sat back and watched it happen. Right there we decided we should play the song after our wins.\" The following day, goaltender Jordan Binnington made his first start for the Blues that season and won the game with a shutout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 763]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286454-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Louis Blues season, \"Gloria\"\nThe team played it after every win for the rest of the regular season and playoffs, and as their hot streak continued, the song became popular in the city of St. Louis. \"Gloria\" was written on signs and t-shirts. The St. Louis radio station KYKY-FM played it for 24 hours straight after series victories in the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286454-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Louis Blues season, Schedule and results, Preseason\nNotes: Game was played at Wells Fargo Arena in Des Moines, Iowa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286454-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Louis Blues season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was released on June 21, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 68], "content_span": [69, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286454-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Louis Blues 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-00286454-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Louis Blues season, Schedule and results, Playoffs\nThe Blues faced the Winnipeg Jets in the First Round of the playoffs and defeated them in six games. Nest up, they faced the Dallas Stars in the Second Round of the playoffs, defeating them in seven games. Then, they faced the San Jose Sharks in the Conference Finals of the playoffs, defeating them in six games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286454-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Louis Blues season, Schedule and results, Playoffs\nFinally, they faced the Boston Bruins in the Stanley Cup Finals, defeating them in seven games to win their first Stanley Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286454-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Louis Blues season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Blues. Stats reflect time with the Blues only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Blues only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286454-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Louis Blues season, Transactions\nThe Blues were involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286454-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 St. Louis Blues season, Draft picks\nBelow are the St. Louis Blues' selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286455-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stade Brestois 29 season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 69th season in the existence of Stade Brestois 29 and the club's sixth consecutive season in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Brest participated in this season's editions of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286455-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stade Brestois 29 season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286455-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stade Brestois 29 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286456-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stade Malherbe Caen season\nThe 2018\u201319 Stade Malherbe Caen season was the 106th season of the club since its creation in 1913, the 18th, in Ligue 1. Caen competed in three domestic competitions - Ligue 1, the Coupe de France, and the Coupe de la Ligue. The club finished the league season in 18th place and were relegated to Ligue 2 for the 2019\u201320 campaign, ending a spell of five consecutive seasons in the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286456-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stade Malherbe Caen 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286457-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stade Rennais F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 Stade Rennais F.C. season was the 117th professional season of the club since its creation in 1901. During this campaign the club competed in the following competitions: Ligue 1, Coupe de France, Coupe de la Ligue, UEFA Europa League. In 2018-19, Rennes competed in the European competition for the first time since 2008-09, when the club made the qualifying rounds of the UEFA Cup. This time around the club enjoyed greater success, reaching the Round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286457-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stade Rennais F.C. season, Players\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286457-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stade Rennais 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286458-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stade de Reims season\nThe 2018\u201319 Stade de Reims season is the 87th professional season of the club since its creation in 1931.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286458-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stade de Reims season, 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, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286458-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stade de Reims season, Squad information, 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, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286459-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stanbic Bank 20 Series\nThe 2018\u201319 Stanbic Bank 20 Series was the eighth edition of the Stanbic Bank 20 Series, a Twenty20 cricket tournament in Zimbabwe. It took place from 11 to 17 March 2019. The tournament featured four teams, instead of the five that were scheduled to take part in the previous edition, with the Rising Stars being disbanded. There was no defending champion, as the previous edition of the tournament was cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286459-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stanbic Bank 20 Series\nFollowing the conclusion of the group stage, Mashonaland Eagles and Mid West Rhinos advanced to the third-place play-off match. Matabeleland Tuskers and Mountaineers progressed to the final. The final finished as a no result due to rain, so Matabeleland Tuskers were declared the winners, after finishing highest in the group stage of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286460-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Standard Li\u00e8ge season\nDuring the 2018\u201319 Belgian football season, Standard Li\u00e8ge competed in the Belgian Pro League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286460-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Standard Li\u00e8ge 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-00286460-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Standard Li\u00e8ge 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286461-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stanford Cardinal men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Stanford Cardinal men's basketball team represented Stanford University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Cardinal, led by third year head coach Jerod Haase, played their home games at Maples Pavilion as a member of the Pac-12 Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286461-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stanford Cardinal men's basketball team, Previous Season\nThe Cardinal finished the 2017-18 season 19-16, 11-7 in Pac-12 play to finish in a three-way tie for third place; this was their most conference wins in a decade (since 2008). They lost in the quarterfinals of the Pac-12 Tournament to UCLA. They qualified for the NIT beating BYU in the first round, but lost to Oklahoma State in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286462-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stanford Cardinal women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Stanford Cardinal women's basketball team represented Stanford University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Cardinal, led by thirty-third year head coach Tara VanDerveer, played their home games at the Maples Pavilion and are members of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season 31\u20135, 15\u20133 in Pac-12 play to finish in second place. They won the Pac-12 Women's Tournament by defeating Oregon and earns an automatic the NCAA Women's Tournament where they defeated UC Davis and BYU in the first and second rounds, Missouri State in the sweet sixteen before losing to Notre Dame in the elite eight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286463-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stephen F. Austin Ladyjacks basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Stephen F. Austin Ladyjacks basketball team represented Stephen F. Austin University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Ladyjacks were led by fourth year head coach Mark Kellogg and played their home games at the William R. Johnson Coliseum. They are members of the Southland Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286463-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stephen F. Austin Ladyjacks basketball team\nThe Ladyjacks finished the 2018\u201319 season 25\u20137, 16\u20132 in Southland play to finish in second place. They lost to Texas A&M\u2013Corpus Christi in the semifinal round of the Southland Women's Tournament. They received an at-large bid to the WNIT where they lost in the first round to UT Arlington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286463-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stephen F. Austin Ladyjacks basketball team, Previous season\nThe Ladyjacks finished the 2017\u201318 season 25\u20137, 12\u20136 in Southland play to finish in second place. They advanced to the championship game of the Southland Women's Tournament where they lost to Nicholls State. They received an at-large bid to the WNIT where they lost in the first round to George Mason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286464-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stephen F. Austin Lumberjacks basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Stephen F. Austin Lumberjacks basketball team represented Stephen F. Austin State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Lumberjacks were led by third-year head coach Kyle Keller and played their home games at the William R. Johnson Coliseum in Nacogdoches, Texas as members of the Southland Conference. They finished the season 14\u201316 overall, 7\u201311 in Southland play to finish in a tie for ninth place. Since only the top eight teams are eligible to play in the Southland Tournament, the Lumberjacks failed to qualify this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286464-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stephen F. Austin Lumberjacks basketball team\nOn May 20, 2020, following the discovery of an administrative error in certifying eligibility for student-athletes, Stephen F. Austin reached an agreement with the NCAA to vacate hundreds of wins across multiple sports from 2013 to 2019, including all 117 men's basketball wins from the 2014\u201315 to 2018\u201319 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286464-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stephen F. Austin Lumberjacks basketball team, Previous season\nThe 2017\u201318 Stephen F. Austin Lumberjacks basketball team finished the season 28\u20137, 14\u20134 in Southland play to finish in third place. They defeated Central Arkansas, Nicholls State, and Southeastern Louisiana to become champions of the Southland Tournament. They received the Southland's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament where they lost in the First Round to Texas Tech.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286465-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stetson Hatters men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Stetson Hatters men's basketball team represented Stetson University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Hatters, led by sixth-year head coach Corey Williams, played their home games at the Edmunds Center in DeLand, Florida as members of the Atlantic Sun Conference. They finished the season 7\u201324 overall, 3\u201313 in ASUN play to finish in a tie for 8th place, but after tiebreakers, they missed the conference tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286465-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stetson Hatters men's basketball team\nFollowing the conclusion of the season, Stetson fired head coach Corey Williams, who finished his time at Stetson with a six season record of 58 wins and 133 losses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286465-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stetson Hatters men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Hatters finished the 2017\u201318 season 12\u201320, 4\u201310 in ASUN play to finish in seventh place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the ASUN Tournament to Lipscomb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286466-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stetson Hatters women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Stetson Hatters women's basketball team represents Stetson University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Hatters, led by eleventh year head coach Lynn Bria, play their home games at Edmunds Center and are members of the Atlantic Sun Conference. They finished the season 16\u201316, 11\u20135 in A-Sun play to finish in second place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the A-Sun Women's Tournament to Kennesaw State. They were automatic bid to the WNIT where they lost to South Florida in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286466-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stetson Hatters women's basketball team, Media\nAll home games and conference road are shown on ESPN3 or A-Sun.TV. Non conference road games are typically available on the opponents website. Audio broadcasts of Hatters games can be found on WSBB AM 1230/1490 with Ryan Rouse on the call.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 54], "content_span": [55, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286467-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stevenage F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Stevenage's fifth consecutive season in League Two and their 43rd year in existence. Along with competing in League Two, the club participated in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286467-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stevenage F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286467-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stevenage F.C. season, Competitions, Friendlies\nStevenage announced pre-season fixtures with St Albans City, Portsmouth and St Neots Town on 15 May 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286467-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stevenage F.C. season, Competitions, League Two, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League Two fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286467-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stevenage F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286467-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stevenage F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286467-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stevenage F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Stoke City's 102nd season in the Football League, the 42nd in the second tier and fifth in the Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season\nFollowing last season's relegation from the Premier League, Stoke replaced Paul Lambert with Gary Rowett who was tasked with mounting a promotion challenge. Inevitably there were a large number of departures and new arrivals during the summer, Stoke spending over \u00a330 million on Benik Afobe, Sam Clucas, Peter Etebo, Tom Ince and James McClean. However Stoke made a bad start to the campaign losing against Leeds United, Wigan Athletic and West Bromwich Albion. Stoke struggled to close the gap on the play-off positions despite going on a ten-game unbeaten run of which six were draws and ended 2018 in mid-table. Rowett was sacked at the beginning of January 2019 and was replaced by Luton Town's Nathan Jones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season\nDespite an early victory over Leeds United it soon became apparent that a squad re-build would be required so Jones experimented with his squad for the remainder of the campaign with Stoke eventually finishing in 16th position after drawing a record 22 times (of which nine were 0\u20130).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season, Pre-season\nStoke were relegated from the Premier League after a 2\u20131 defeat to Crystal Palace on 5 May 2018. Following relegation, Jack Butland and Charlie Adam criticised the club's transfer policy and the behaviour of some of their teammates. John Coates and Peter Coates released a joint statement where they admitted that a major overhaul is required and that they should have dismissed Mark Hughes earlier. Paul Lambert left Stoke on 18 May 2018 by mutual consent after winning just two of his 15 games in charge. The board decided to go for Derby County manager Gary Rowett, and he signed a three-year contract on 22 May after the clubs agreed compensation. He brought with him four coaches, Callum Davidson, Rory Delap, Kevin Phillips & Mark Sale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 785]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season, Pre-season\nFollowing relegation there was as expected major transfer activity made by the club prior to the start of the season. Going out were, Lee Grant to Manchester United, Stephen Ireland and Glen Johnson both released, Xherdan Shaqiri to Liverpool, Ramadan Sobhi to Huddersfield Town and Kevin Wimmer on loan to Hannover 96. Arriving at Stoke were goalkeeper Adam Federici, experienced centre back Ashley Williams, Nigerian midfielder Peter Etebo, wingers Tom Ince and James McClean and forward Benik Afobe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season, Pre-season\nStoke returned to training in late June and played a behind close doors match against Macclesfield Town on 10 July, winning 5\u20132. City's first public outing was against Walsall at the Bescot Stadium. Goals from Ibrahim Afellay, Bojan and Peter Crouch gave Stoke a 3\u20130 win. The squad then spent a week at a training camp in Herzlake, Germany. They played three matches against VfL Bochum, SV Meppen and Hamburger SV, City losing all three games. Stoke then played out a goalless draw at home to Wolverhampton Wanderers. Stoke ended their pre-season with a 2\u20130 defeat at FC St. Pauli.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season, Championship, August\nStoke began the campaign away at Leeds United and made a terrible start, being well beat 3\u20131. Stoke were 2\u20130 down at half time with goals from Mateusz Klich and Pablo Hern\u00e1ndez. Stoke pulled one back with Benik Afobe scoring a penalty but a Liam Cooper header ensured a Leeds win. City's first home match ended in a 1\u20131 draw against Brentford. Afobe scored for Stoke capitalising on a mistake from Chris Mepham and keeper Daniel Bentley. Stoke were unimpressive throughout the match and Brentford earned a deserved point thanks to an Ollie Watkins strike.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season, Championship, August\nAfter the match Rowett said that some of his players \"need to wake up\". Stoke drew again this time 2\u20132 at Preston North End. Preston took the lead through a Paul Gallagher penalty after Tom Edwards had handled in the area. Stoke responded immediately with Erik Pieters scoring a rare goal however Graham Burke fired North End back in front just before half time. Peter Crouch rescued a point for Stoke with a towering header. Stoke were then easily beaten 3\u20130 at home by Wigan Athletic. Rowett made several changes to his team for the visit of Hull City. Stoke were able to gain their first win of the season with goals from James McClean and an own goal from Tigers defender Jordy de Wijs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season, Championship, September\nPrior to the match against West Bromwich Albion Rowett trimmed his squad by loaning out Badou Ndiaye, Geoff Cameron, Giannelli Imbula and Julien Ngoy whilst Eric Maxim Choupo-Moting joined Paris Saint-Germain on a free transfer. Stoke were beaten 2\u20131 by the Baggies with a brace from Dwight Gayle and a consolation strike by Pieters. Rowett was again critical of his players following the match calling them \"dopey\". After the international break Stoke traveled to Hillsborough to take on Sheffield Wednesday. Stoke made a good start to the match with Afobe scoring twice early on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0007-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season, Championship, September\nHowever The Owls earned a 2\u20132 draw with goals from Marco Matias and Barry Bannan. Stoke then went on to beat Swansea City 1\u20130 with Joe Allen scoring the only goal against his former club. The Potters then faced Tony Mowbray's Blackburn Rovers where another awful defensive display saw them 3\u20130 down after 46 minutes. Stoke pulled two goals back through Saido Berahino and Tom Ince and did have a chance to draw level but Berahino missed a late penalty and it finished 3\u20132 to Rovers. Stoke's defensive woes continued in the final match of September at Rotherham United. Despite dominating the first half The Millers scored twice within minutes of the restart with a Ryan Manning penalty and Richie Towell's close-range finish. Stoke made a comeback with goals from Ince and Bojan and the match finished in a 2\u20132 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 872]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season, Championship, October\nStoke opened October by defeating Phil Parkinson's Bolton Wanderers 2\u20130 with goals from Ince and a rare header from Bruno Martins Indi. City then won back to back matches for the first time since January 2017 with a 1\u20130 away success at Norwich City, Timm Klose scoring an own goal. After the international break Stoke lost 1\u20130 at home to Birmingham City with Rowett being sent to the stands after Stoke were denied a late penalty. Stoke then drew 1\u20131 at Sheffield United with a Joe Allen free kick cancelling out a goal from Leon Clarke. The Potters ended October with a hard-fought win away at Bristol City with Darren Fletcher volleying in the only goal. In the second half Jack Butland made a number of fine saves to deny the Robins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season, Championship, November\nFormer manager Tony Pulis brought his Middlesbrough side to Stoke on 3 November which saw both sides cancel each other out in a goalless draw. City again drew 0\u20130 the following week away at midlands rivals Nottingham Forest. There was some controversy in the match as Forest keeper Costel Pantilimon avoided a red card after rushing out of his area and bringing down Afobe. Following the final international break of 2018 Stoke returned to league football with a visit from Queens Park Rangers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0009-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season, Championship, November\nAfter going 1\u20130 down through an early \u00c0ngel Rangel header Stoke turned the game around with goals from Berahino and Allen. However Stoke were unable to see out the victory as Rangel scored again to earn QPR a 2\u20132 draw. Stoke then came up against manager Gary Rowett's former team Derby County whose supporters were unhappy with the way he left them, which gave the match a spiky atmosphere. Sam Clucas scored his first goal for the club after 24 minutes before Peter Etebo was sent off for a high tackle on Richard Keogh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0009-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season, Championship, November\nA scuffle broke out between Joe Allen and Bradley Johnson where Johnson appeared to try and bite Allen. Johnson was later given a retrospective ban by the FA. Harry Wilson equalized for the Rams just after half time via a free-kick but Stoke won 2\u20131 with former Derby player Tom Ince getting the winning goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season, Championship, December\nStoke then missed the opportunity to close the gap on the play-off positions against lowly Reading. Stoke were guilty of wasteful finishing before Marc McNulty headed the Royals in front just before half time. City turned the game around in the second half with Afobe ending a ten-game run without a goal and a fine volley from Tom Ince, however Modou Barrow fired in a stoppage time equaliser.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0010-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season, Championship, December\nStoke faced Paul Lambert's rock bottom Ipswich Town on 8 December and won 2\u20130 with goals from Ince and Allen, although the team came in criticism from supporters for a poor display against weak opposition. Stoke extended their unbeaten run to nine games with another 2\u20132 draw this time away at Aston Villa. Stoke were leading twice through Allen and then an Afobe penalty and on both occasions Villa responded with a penalty from Tammy Abraham and a late header from Jonathan Kodjia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0010-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season, Championship, December\nStoke then labored to a 1\u20130 home win over relegation threatened Millwall, Berahino heading in the only goal on 61 minutes. Stoke's ten match unbeaten run was ended by Birmingham City on boxing day with goals from Jacques Maghoma and Omar Bogle. Stoke ended a forgettable 2018 with a drab 0\u20130 draw at relegation threatened Bolton Wanderers which prompted an angry reaction by the traveling supporters who chanted against Rowett.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season, Championship, January\nStoke began 2019 with a 2\u20130 home defeat against Bristol City with Famara Diedhiou scoring twice after Afobe had missed an early penalty which lead to more angry reactions towards Rowett from supporters. Inevitably Rowett was sacked by the club the following week. The Stoke board moved quickly to appoint Luton Town's Welsh manager Nathan Jones. Jones's first match in charge was away at Thomas Frank's Brentford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0011-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season, Championship, January\nThe size of the re-building job quickly became apparent to Jones as the Bees rushed into a 2\u20130 lead before Afobe pulled one back for Stoke, however Rico Henry ensured three points for Brentford. The buildup to Nathan Jones' first home match took a bizarre twist as Leeds United manager Marcelo Bielsa admitted that he had been sending members of his staff to spy on Championship opponents training sessions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0011-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season, Championship, January\nTo counter this Jones set Stoke up in a 3\u20135\u20132 formation with 19-year-old Tyrese Campbell given his first league start and Charlie Adam and Moritz Bauer returning to the team after being outcast by Rowett. Stoke produced their best display of the season against the league leaders, winning 2\u20131 with goals from Clucas and Allen, whilst Ezgjan Alioski scored a consolation for Leeds who had Pontus Jansson sent-off. Stoke ended January with a 2\u20130 home defeat against Preston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season, Championship, January\nJones began to trim his squad in the January transfer window, departing the club were Ibrahim Afellay who had his contract terminated, Cuco Martina's loan spell cancelled, Erik Pieters going out on loan and most notably the long serving Peter Crouch joining Burnley. Jones brought in two players, defender Danny Batth from Wolverhampton Wanderers and striker Sam Vokes from Burnley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season, Championship, February\nStoke's new additions Batth and Vokes both started away at in-form Hull City, Stoke again losing 2\u20130 with goals from Jarrod Bowen and Kamil Grosicki, with Vokes missing a penalty. City then lost a third in a row without scoring, going down 1\u20130 to promotion hopefuls West Bromwich Albion. On 12 February Gordon Banks died at the age of 81, he helped Stoke win the 1972 League Cup and England the 1966 FIFA World Cup, supporters paid tribute to him at his statue outside the bet365 Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0013-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season, Championship, February\nStoke then kept a first clean sheet under Jones away at Wigan Athletic but failed to find the net for a fourth match in a drab goalless draw. Stoke's barren run continued as they could only muster a 1\u20131 draw away at bottom of the table, Ipswich Town. Stoke paid their respects to Gordon Banks before the match against Aston Villa with Jack Butland wearing a special classic green goalkeeping top. The match itself ended in another 1\u20131 draw, Sam Vokes' first goal for the club being cancelled out by Albert Adomah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season, Championship, March\nThe following week Stoke ended a run of six games without a win against play-off chasing Nottingham Forest, with fine strikes from Afobe and Peter Etebo's first for the club. City then travelled to Loftus Road to face fellow mid-table side Queens Park Rangers. Sam Clucas was sent-off inside the opening 10 minutes of the match for stamping on Josh Scowen. The team produced a dogged defensive performance from then on and frustrated Rangers who had Grant Hall dismissed for two bookable offenses and the match ended goalless.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0014-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season, Championship, March\nFour days later Stoke ground out another drab goalless draw this time at play-off contenders Derby County. The Potters began their next match at home to Reading brightly hitting the woodwork twice through Ince and then Vokes but that was as good as it got as Stoke played out yet another goalless draw. Following the international break Stoke took on Sheffield Wednesday and played out a fourth consecutive goalless draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season, Championship, April\nStoke ended their barren run in front of goal with a 1\u20130 success away at Blackburn Rovers, Peter Etebo scoring the only goal after 14 minutes. Stoke were then easily beaten away at Swansea City 3\u20131, with Martins Indi and Tom Edwards both being sent-off. Stoke followed this up with another poor performance this time against Rotherham United blowing a 2\u20130 half time lead to draw 2\u20132. Stoke lost 1\u20130 away at Middlesbrough on Good Friday with Britt Assombalonga scoring after only two minutes. On Easter Monday Stoke played against top of the table Norwich City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0015-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season, Championship, April\nOnel Hernandez gave the Canaries a first half lead before a much improved second half display from Stoke saw Ashley Williams and Tom Edwards score their first goals for the club either side of a Teemu Pukki header. Stoke ended April with a ninth goalless draw of the season away at Millwall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season, Championship, May\nStoke ended a hugely disappointing 2018\u201319 campaign against promoted Sheffield United. Sam Vokes volleyed Stoke in front after 19 minutes which was cancelled out by Kieran Dowell. Shawcross scored a rare goal to restore City's lead but Enda Stevens ensured Stoke would draw a 22nd match of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season, FA Cup\nStoke were draw away against EFL League One side Shrewsbury Town in the third round and could only manage a 1\u20131 draw with Peter Crouch cancelling out Oliver Norburn's penalty, sending the tie to a replay. In the replay Stoke took a 2\u20130 lead through Tyrese Campbell's first senior goals before a second half capitulation saw them beaten 3\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286468-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stoke City F.C. season, EFL Cup\nStoke were draw at home to Huddersfield Town in the second round of the EFL Cup. Stoke won 2\u20130 against the Terriers with goals from Saido Berahino, ending his 48-game run without scoring and a bizarre own goal from Juninho Bacuna. Stoke exited the EFL Cup in the third round, losing 3\u20132 away at Nottingham Forest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286469-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stony Brook Seawolves men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Stony Brook Seawolves men's basketball team represented Stony Brook University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at the Island Federal Credit Union Arena in Stony Brook, New York and were led by third-year head coach Jeff Boals. The team won 24 regular season games, a school record as a Division I program, including a nation-leading 13 road wins and received the No. 2 seed in the America East Tournament. However, they lost in the quarterfinals to Binghamton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286469-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stony Brook Seawolves men's basketball team\nOn March 17, 2019, Boals left the school to accept the head coaching position at his alma mater, Ohio. Assistant coach Geno Ford was named interim head coach of the team in the College Basketball Invitational Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286469-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stony Brook Seawolves men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Seawolves finished the 2017\u201318 season 13\u201319, 7\u20139 in the America East Conference play to finish in fifth place. In the America East Tournament, they upset Albany on the road before losing to Vermont in the semifinals. Freshman Elijah Olaniyi was named America East Rookie of the Year, while sophomore Akwasi Yeboah was named All-America East Second Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286469-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stony Brook Seawolves men's basketball team, Season\nIn their season opener at George Washington, Stony Brook fell behind 22\u20130 but rallied all the way back to force overtime and win, 77\u201374 in one of the largest comebacks in NCAA Division I history. The Seawolves then upset South Carolina to win their first game against an SEC opponent in program history. Stony Brook started 6\u20131 for the first time as a Division I program. Stony Brook won 12 non-conference games, a new school record as a Division I program. The team's seven true road wins led the nation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 59], "content_span": [60, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286469-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stony Brook Seawolves men's basketball team, Season\nIn the America East regular season, the Seawolves began 5\u20130 in conference play, including a comeback against Maine that came after an 18\u2013point deficit. They lost control of first place in the America East after a 72\u201353 defeat against Vermont at home. The conference regular-season title was on the line in Stony Brook's second matchip at Vermont in March, and after falling down by 13, a 20\u20132 Stony Brook run gave them the lead only to fall by a final score of 50\u201356. A 68\u201363 road victory at Hartford secured the No. 2 seed in the America East Tournament for Stony Brook; a loss would have dropped them to fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 59], "content_span": [60, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286469-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stony Brook Seawolves men's basketball team, Season\nIn the quarterfinals of the America East Tournament, Stony Brook played seventh-seeded Binghamton. In a stunning upset, the Seawolves fell down by 24 points in the second half but would have cut the deficit to one after a Jaron Cornish layup and foul. However, the call was reversed to an offensive foul, sending the deficit back to four and sending Stony Brook home in an improbable loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 59], "content_span": [60, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286469-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stony Brook Seawolves men's basketball team, Season\nThe Seawolves were invited to the 2019 College Basketball Invitational, where they travelled to Tampa to play South Florida. Although Stony Brook had a 25-point lead in the first half (48\u201323), they collapsed down the stretch and ultimately lost, 82\u201379, in overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 59], "content_span": [60, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286470-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stony Brook Seawolves women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Stony Brook Seawolves women's basketball team represented Stony Brook University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Seawolves, led by fifth-year head coach Caroline McCombs, play their home games at the Island Federal Credit Union Arena and were members in the America East Conference. They finished the season 23\u20138, 11\u20135 in America East play to finish in third place. They defeated Vermont in the quarterfinals before losing to Hartford in the semifinals of the America East Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286470-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Stony Brook Seawolves women's basketball team, Media\nAll non-televised home games and conference road games will stream on either ESPN3 or AmericaEast.tv. Most road games will stream on the opponents website. All games will have an audio broadcast streamed online through the .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 60], "content_span": [61, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286471-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sudan Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Sudan Premier League is the 48th season of the Sudan Premier League, the top-tier football league in Sudan. The season started on 22 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286472-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sultan Qaboos Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Sultan Qaboos Cup is the 46th season of the Sultan Qaboos Cup, the national football cup competition of Oman. The winners of the competition will earn a spot in the 2020 AFC Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286472-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sultan Qaboos Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs were played on 6 November, and the second legs were played on 4\u20135 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286472-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sultan Qaboos Cup, Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 6 March, and the second legs were played on 17 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286473-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sumgayit FK season\nThe Sumgayit FK 2018-19 season was Sumgayit's eight Azerbaijan Premier League season, and ninth season in their history. It is their first season with Nazim Suleymanov as manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286474-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Summit League men's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 Summit League men's basketball season began with practices in October 2018, followed by the start of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season in November. Conference play begins in January 2019 and concludes in February 2019. The season marked the 36th season of Summit League basketball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286474-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Summit League men's basketball season\nOn December 7, 2018, Mike Daum became the Summit League\u2019s all-time leading scorer. In a 42-point outing against Southern, Daum passed former Oral Roberts forward Caleb Green\u2019s conference record 2,504 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286474-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Summit League men's basketball season, Preseason, Preseason All-Conference Teams\nSummit League Preseason Player of the Year: Mike Daum (South Dakota State)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 88], "content_span": [89, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286475-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sunderland A.F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Sunderland's 140th season in existence, and their first season in the third tier of English football since 1987, after relegation from the Championship the previous season. Along with competing in League One, the club also participated in the FA Cup and EFL Cup as well as the EFL Trophy. The season covered the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286475-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sunderland A.F.C. season, Pre-season friendlies\nAs of 18 July 2018, Sunderland have announced five pre-season friendlies against Darlington, Hartlepool United, Grimsby Town, St Mirren, and Middlesbrough.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286475-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sunderland A.F.C. season, Competitions, League One, Matches\nThe fixtures for the 2018\u201319 season were released on 21 June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286475-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sunderland A.F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nOn 22 October 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Hitchin. The draw for the second round was made live on BBC and BT by Mark Schwarzer and Glenn Murray on 12 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286475-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sunderland A.F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286475-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sunderland A.F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced. The draw for the second round was made live on Talksport by Leon Britton and Steve Claridge on 16 November. On 8 December, the third round draw was drawn by Alan McInally and Matt Le Tissier on Soccer Saturday. The Quarter-final draw was made conducted on Sky Sports by Don Goodman and Thomas Frank on 10 January 2019. The draw for the semi-finals took place on 25 January live on Talksport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286476-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sunshine Tour\nThe 2018\u201319 Sunshine Tour was the 19th season of professional golf tournaments since the southern Africa-based Sunshine Tour was relaunched in 2000. The Sunshine Tour represents the highest level of competition for male professional golfers in the region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286476-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sunshine Tour\nThe tour is based predominantly in South Africa with other events being held in Zimbabwe, Swaziland, Zambia, Mauritius and Kenya.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286476-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sunshine Tour, Schedule\nThe table below shows the schedule of events for the 2018\u201319 Sunshine Tour season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286476-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sunshine Tour, Schedule\nPrize funds shown do not count directly towards the Order of Merit. The number in brackets after each winner's name is the number of official money Sunshine Tour events he had won up to and including that tournament. This information is only shown for Sunshine Tour members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286477-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Super League Greece\nThe 2018\u201319 Super League Greece, or Super League Souroti for sponsorship reasons, was the 83rd season of the highest tier in league of Greek football and the 13th under its current name. The season started on 25 August 2018 and concluded on 22 May 2019 with the relegation play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286477-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Super League Greece\nAEK Athens were the defending champions. OFI and Aris Thessaloniki joined as the promoted clubs from the 2017\u201318 Football League, replacing Platanias and Kerkyra who were relegated to the 2018\u201319 Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286477-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Super League Greece\nPAOK won their third championship and their first one in 34 years, by beating Levadiakos on the penultimate round of the league. They also clinched the championship without a defeat, thus becoming the second club to do so in Greek football, after Panathinaikos in 1963\u201364.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286477-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Super League Greece\nPAS Giannina, Levadiakos and Apollon Smyrnis finished in the bottom 3 and were relegated to Super League 2, while OFI, who finished 13th, faced Platanias who were runners-up of the 2018-19 Football League in the relegation play-offs on May 19 and May 22 for a place in the 2019\u201320 Super League. OFI won the play-offs with 3\u20132 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286477-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Super League Greece\nThis was the last season with a 16-team championship. From the 2019\u201320 season, the league teams are going to be reduced to 14, and a playoff tournament will be introduced between the first six teams of the regular season, for a total of 36 games, in the style of the Cypriot First Division. Three teams relegated directly instead of the usual two and a fourth spot was decided between the 13th placed Super League team and the runner-up of the 2018\u201319 Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286477-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Super League Greece\nThe fourth spot was a cause of controversy between the Super League and Greek Football Federation (EPO), however, the sporting court decided in favour of the play-off match in order to not completely diminish the chance for the second division runner-up to be promoted, as they would normally be promoted automatically in a normal season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286477-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Super League Greece, Teams\nSixteen teams will compete in the league \u2013 the top fourteen teams from the previous season, and two teams promoted from the Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286477-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Super League Greece, Teams\nThe first club to be promoted was OFI, after beating 1\u20130 Apollon Pontus on 29 April 2018. OFI will play in the Super League for the first time since the 2014\u201315 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286477-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Super League Greece, Teams\nThe second and final club to be promoted was Aris Thessaloniki, after beating 2\u20130 Karaiskakis on 29 April 2018. Aris Thessaloniki will play in the Super League for the first time since the 2013\u201314 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286477-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Super League Greece, Teams\nThe first club to be relegated was Platanias, who were relegated on 4 April 2018 following Apollon Smyrnis' 1\u20130 victory against PAS Giannina, ending their 6-year stay in the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286477-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Super League Greece, Teams\nThe second and final club to be relegated was Kerkyra, who were relegated on 29 April 2018 following Lamia's 2\u20131 victory against PAS Giannina, ending their 2-year stay in the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286477-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Super League Greece, 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 in the round at which they were originally scheduled, but added to the full round they were played immediately afterwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286477-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Super League Greece, Relegation play-offs\nOFI won 3\u20132 on aggregate and retained their spot in 2019\u201320 Super League; Platanias placed in 2019\u201320 Super League 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286477-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Super League Greece, Average attendances\nAverage ticket sales (not total attendances) counted officially without games played behind closed doors from Super League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286477-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Super League Greece, Average attendances\nUpdated to games played on 5 May 2019Source: Notes:1: Team played last season in Football League2: Games played behind closed doors AEK Athens 2 games3: Games played behind closed doors Panathinaikos 2 games", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286478-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Super Smash\nThe 2018\u201319 Burger King Super Smash (named after the competition's sponsor Burger King) was the fourteenth season of the Super Smash Twenty20 cricket tournament in New Zealand. It took place from 22 December 2018 to 17 February 2019. Northern Knights were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286478-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Super Smash\nOn 1 January 2019, in the match between Auckland Aces and Canterbury Kings, Canterbury's Kyle Jamieson took the best figures by a bowler in a T20 match in New Zealand, and the third-best figures ever, when he took six wickets for seven runs from his four overs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286478-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Super Smash\nOn 25 January 2019, Northern Knights were the first team to reach the final of the tournament, after they beat Central Stags by 131 runs, securing a home final in the process. On 2 February 2019, the Auckland Aces beat the Northern Knights by six wickets to confirm their spot in the playoffs. The Central Stags became the third and final team to reach the playoffs. In the Preliminary Final, Central Stags beat Auckland Aces by 44 runs to progress to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286478-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Super Smash\nIn the final, Central Stags beat the defending champions, Northern Knights, by 67 runs to win their third title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286479-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SuperLiga season\nThe 2018\u201319 SuperLiga (also known as the CEC Bank SuperLiga for sponsorship reasons) is the 105th season of premier club rugby in Romania. Starting with this edition the number of participating teams is increased to eight, with addition of the 2017\u201318 champions and runners-up of the second tier championship DNS - Divizia Nationala de Seniori.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286479-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 SuperLiga season\nThe eventual champions of the SuperLiga which are CSM \u0218tiin\u021ba Baia Mare have the right to participate in the European Rugby Continental Shield and no team will relegate to the Divizia Na\u021bional\u0103 de Seniori, Romiania's 2nd level rugby union competition as CS N\u0103vodari didn't apply to play in the SuperLiga next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286479-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SuperLiga season, Fixtures & Results, Play-off Semifinals\nThe semi-finals were held on 18 May 2019 12:00 and 14:30 at Stadionul Olimpia and Stadionul Dan P\u0103ltini\u0219anu respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 65], "content_span": [66, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286479-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SuperLiga season, Fixtures & Results, Play-off Semifinals\nBoth finals were held on 25 May 2019, 1 week after the semi-finals at Stadionul Rulmental.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 65], "content_span": [66, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286479-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SuperLiga season, Fixtures & Results, Play-out Semifinals\nThe semi-finals were held on 18 May 2019 09:00 at Stadionul Mihai Naca and Stadionul Prin\u021bul \u0218erban Ghica respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 65], "content_span": [66, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286479-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 SuperLiga season, Fixtures & Results, Play-out Semifinals\nBoth finals were held on 26 May 2019, 1 week and 1 day after the semi-finals at Stadionul Olimpia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 65], "content_span": [66, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286480-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Svenska Cupen\nThe 2018\u201319 Svenska Cupen was the 63rd season of the Svenska Cupen and the seventh season with the current format. The winners of the competition will secure a spot in the second qualifying round of the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League, unless they had already qualified for European competition in the 2019\u201320 season, in which case the qualification spot will go to fourth-placed team of the 2018 Allsvenskan. A total of 96 clubs will enter the competition, 64 teams from district sites and 32 from the Allsvenskan and the Superettan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286480-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Svenska Cupen\nThe first rounds will be played between 15 May and 4 July 2018. The first round draw was announced on 25 April 2018. Times up to 27 October 2018 and from 31 March 2019 are CEST (UTC+2). Times from 28 October 2018 to 30 March 2019 are CET (UTC+1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286480-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Svenska Cupen, Round 1\n64 teams from the third tier or lower of the Swedish league system competed in this round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286480-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Svenska Cupen, Round 2\n64 teams will compete in this round. 32 winners from Round 1, and all 32 teams from the 2018 Allsvenskan and the 2018 Superettan. The draw was held on July 7, 2018 with games scheduled to be played on August 21\u201323, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286480-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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 group and the 16 remaining winners were unseeded in the draw. The ranking of the 16 seeded teams was decided by league position in the 2018 season. All teams in the group stage will play each other once, the highest ranked teams from the previous rounds and teams from tier three or lower will have the right to play two home matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286481-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swansea City A.F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Swansea City's 99th season in the English football league system, and their first season back in the Championship since 2010\u201311 following relegation from the Premier League in the previous season. Along with competing in the Championship, the club would compete in the FA Cup and EFL Cup. The season covered the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286481-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swansea City A.F.C. 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286481-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swansea City A.F.C. season, Pre-season\nAs of 18 June 2018, Swansea City have confirmed to take part in the Interwetten Cup in Germany against Magdeburg and Genoa before travelling to Austria for a six-day training camp to face Eibar and Freiburg. Prior to the tour Swansea City will face Yeovil Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286481-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swansea City A.F.C. season, Competitions, Championship, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, Swansea City's 2018-2019 Championship fixtures were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 71], "content_span": [72, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286481-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swansea City A.F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018. The fourth round draw was made live on BBC by Robbie Keane and Carl Ikeme from Wolverhampton. The fifth round draw was broadcast on 28 January 2019 live on BBC, Alex Scott and Ian Wright conducted the draw. Draw for the quarter-final was made on 18 February by Darren Fletcher & Wayne Bridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286481-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swansea City A.F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nThe second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286482-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swindon Town F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Swindon Town's 140th season in their existence, and second season back in League Two following relegation from League One. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 through to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286482-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swindon Town F.C. season, Competitions, Friendlies\nSwindon Town have announced they will face Cirencester Town, Melksham Town, West Bromwich Albion, Chippenham Town, Portsmouth and Swindon Supermarine as part of their pre-season preparations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286482-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swindon Town F.C. season, Competitions, League Two, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League Two fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286482-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swindon Town F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October. The draw for the second round was made live on BBC and BT by Mark Schwarzer and Glenn Murray on 12 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286482-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swindon Town F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286482-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swindon Town F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy, Group stage\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286482-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swindon Town F.C. season, Statistics, Top scorers\nThe list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286482-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swindon Town F.C. season, Statistics, Clean sheets\nThe list is sorted by shirt number when total appearances are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286483-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swiss Basketball League\nThe 2018\u201319 Swiss Basketball League (SBL) season is the 88th season of the top tier basketball league in Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286483-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swiss Basketball League\nFribourg Olympic defended successfully their league and conquered their 18th league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286483-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swiss Basketball League, Competition format\nAll teams will play two times against each other for completing 20 games per team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286483-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swiss Basketball League, Competition format\nThe six first qualified teams will join the group for places 1 to 6 while the other six teams will play the group for places 7 to 11. These two groups will be played with a one-legged round-robin format, where all teams from group 1 to 6 and the two first qualified teams from the group for the seventh position will be qualified for the playoffs. In this intermediate stage, teams start with the points accumulated by the winnings achieved in the first stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286483-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swiss Basketball League, Competition format\nThe quarterfinals and the semifinals will be played as a best-of-five series while the final in a best-of-seven series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286483-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swiss Basketball League, Teams\nWinterthur was relegated to the NLB after finishing the previous season in the last position. Monthey-Chablais achieved the licence A in second instance after being firstly rejected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286483-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swiss Basketball League, Playoffs\nSeeded teams played at home games 1, 2 and 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286484-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swiss Challenge League\nThe 2018\u201319 Swiss Challenge League (referred to as the Brack.ch Challenge League for sponsoring reasons) was the 16th season of the Swiss Challenge League, the second tier of competitive football in Switzerland, under its current name. The season started on 20 July 2018 and ended on 26 May 2019. The winter break was scheduled between 16 December 2018 and 1 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286484-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swiss Challenge League, Participating teams\nA total of 10 teams participated in the league. 2017\u201318 Swiss Challenge League champions Neuch\u00e2tel Xamax were promoted to the 2018\u201319 Swiss Super League. They were replaced by FC Lausanne-Sport, who got relegated after finishing last-placed in the 2017\u201318 Swiss Super League. FC Wohlen was relegated after finishing 10th. They were replaced by SC Kriens, who won promotion from the 2017\u201318 Swiss Promotion League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286484-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swiss Challenge League, Promotion play-offs\nNinth placed team of 2018\u201319 Swiss Super League, Xamax, faced Aarau, the runner-up of 2018\u201319 Swiss Challenge League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286484-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swiss Challenge League, Promotion play-offs, Second leg\nNeuch\u00e2tel Xamax won on penalties after drawing 4\u20134 on aggregate and will stay in the Swiss Super League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286485-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swiss Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Swiss Cup was the 94th season of Switzerland's annual football cup competition. The competition began on 18 August 2018 with the first games of Round 1 and ended on 19 May 2019 with the final. The Super League side Z\u00fcrich were the defending champion but they were eliminated by Basel in the semi-final on 25 April 2019 and bring the Basel won their 13th Swiss Cup title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286485-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swiss Cup, Participating clubs\nAll teams from 2017\u201318 Super League and 2017\u201318 Challenge League as well as the top 4 teams from 2017\u201318 Promotion League automatically entered this year's competition. The remaining 41 teams had to qualify through separate qualifying rounds within their leagues. Reserve teams and teams from Liechtenstein are not allowed in the competition, the latter only enter the 2018\u201319 Liechtenstein Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 38], "content_span": [39, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286485-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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. Teams in bold continue to the next round of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286485-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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. Teams in bold continue to the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286485-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swiss Cup, Round 3\nThe winners of Round 2 played in this round. No team was seeded, the home advantage was granted to the team from the lower league, if applicable. Teams in bold continue to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286485-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swiss Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe winners of Round 3 played in this round. No team was seeded, the home advantage was granted to the team from the lower league, if applicable. Teams in bold continue to the Semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286486-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swiss Super League\nThe 2018\u201319 Swiss Super League (referred to as the Raiffeisen Super League for sponsoring reasons) was the 122nd season of top-tier competitive football in Switzerland and the 16th under its current name and format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286486-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swiss Super League\nA total of 10 teams competed in the league: the 9 best teams from the 2017\u201318 season and the 2017\u201318 Swiss Challenge League champion Xamax. The season started on the weekend of 21\u201322 July 2018 and concluded on 25 May 2019 with a break between 17 December 2018 and 2 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286486-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swiss Super League\nIn May 2018, the Swiss Football League voted in favor of reintroducing the relegation play-offs, starting from the 2018\u201319 season. At the end of the season, the 9th-placed team of the Swiss Super League will face the 2nd-placed team of the Swiss Challenge League in a two-legged play-off to determine which of the two will compete in the Super League the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286486-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swiss Super League, Relegation play-offs\nNinth placed Xamax faced Aarau, the runner-up of 2018\u201319 Swiss Challenge League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286486-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swiss Super League, Relegation play-offs, Second leg\nNeuch\u00e2tel Xamax won on penalties after drawing 4\u20134 on aggregate and will stay in the Swiss Super League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286486-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Swiss Super League, Attendances\nUpdated to games played on 28 April 2019Source: Notes:1: Played last season in Challenge League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286487-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sydney FC W-League season\nThe 2018\u201319 Sydney FC W-League season was the club's eleventh season in the W-League, the premier competition for women's football in Australia. This season the team played their home games at Seymour Shaw Park, Jubilee Oval, Leichhardt Oval and WIN Stadium. The club is managed by Ante Juric.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286487-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sydney FC 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286487-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sydney FC W-League season, W-League, Results summary\nLast updated: February 2019, end of regular season. Source: Competitive Matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286488-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sydney FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 Sydney FC season was the club's 14th season since its establishment in 2004. The club participated in the A-League for the 14th time and the AFC Champions League for the fifth time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286488-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sydney 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286488-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sydney FC season, End-of-season awards\nOn 1 June 2019, Sydney FC hosted their annual Sky Blue Ball and presented ten awards on the night.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286489-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sydney Sixers WBBL season\nThe 2018\u201319 Sydney Sixers Women's season was the fourth in the team's history. Coached by Ben Sawyer, they finished the regular season of WBBL|04 on top of the ladder to claim their third-consecutive minor premiership while captain Ellyse Perry set a new Women's Big Bash League record for most runs in a single campaign and was named Player of the Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286489-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sydney Sixers WBBL season\nIn the semi-finals, the Sixers won a \"miracle\" encounter against the Melbourne Renegades which was notable for a last-ball run out that forced the game into a super over. In the championship decider, the Sixers fell short of achieving a three-peat, losing a \"classic\" contest to the Brisbane Heat by three wickets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286489-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sydney Sixers WBBL season, Squad\nEach 2018\u201319 squad featured 15 active players, with an allowance of up to five marquee signings including a maximum of three from overseas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286489-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sydney Sixers WBBL season, Squad\nUnder a new rule, Australian marquees were classed as players who held a national women's team contract at the time of signing on for their WBBL|04 team. This, combined with the introduction of two-year contracts ahead of the previous season, meant that the Sixers would inadvertently exceed their marquee player limit in 2018\u201319. To address this inequity, an injured or unavailable Sixers marquee could only be replaced by a domestic player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286489-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sydney Sixers WBBL season, Squad\nThe table below lists the Sixers players and their key stats (including runs scored, batting strike rate, wickets taken, economy rate, catches and stumpings) for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286489-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sydney Sixers WBBL season, Fixtures, Knockout phase\nIn the Renegades' first finals appearance, with three runs required off the last ball for an upset victory, Sophie Molineux was found short of her ground attempting the winning run due to a \"miracle\" piece of team fielding by Sixers players Erin Burns, Sarah Aley and Alyssa Healy. In the resulting super over, Sixers captain Ellyse Perry hit a six off Molly Strano to eliminate the Renegades from the tournament. The match, in conjunction with the other semi-final played earlier in the day, was hailed as a showcase of \"the irrefutable rise of women's cricket\" and \"sport with drama, skill and unpredictability \u2013 a potent recipe for success\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286489-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sydney Sixers WBBL season, Fixtures, Knockout phase\nIn front of the league's first-ever sellout crowd, the visiting Brisbane Heat pulled off an upset victory to win their maiden championship and deny a Sixers three-peat. Requiring 34 runs with 36 balls remaining, the Heat looked to be in control of the chase until the 15th over when Dane van Niekerk struck twice\u2014including the removal of linchpin Beth Mooney for 65 through a forward-diving catch by Ellyse Perry in the outfield. Although Brisbane would continue to lose wickets, Laura Harris did enough to steady the ship, eventually hitting the winning runs with three wickets and four deliveries to spare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286489-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sydney Sixers WBBL season, Fixtures, Knockout phase\nPlayer of the Final Mooney, who had been receiving on-field medical treatment for the flu and heat stroke, revealed in a post-match interview that her ongoing game delays instigated sledging from several opponents: \"It was kind of nice to know while I wasn't feeling well, I was going well enough to piss them off and they were getting frustrated at how long I was taking to face up... I've played enough cricket against (the Sixers) to know what gets under their skin and we definitely won that battle.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286490-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sydney Thunder WBBL season\nThe 2018\u201319 Sydney Thunder Women's season was the fourth in the team's history. Coached by Joanne Broadbent and captained by Alex Blackwell, the Thunder finished second in the regular season of WBBL|04 and qualified for the playoffs. In an \"incredible\" semi-final, notable for a catch taken by Haidee Birkett on the last ball of the game to dismiss Nicola Carey, Sydney suffered a four-run defeat at the hands of the Brisbane Heat and were consequently eliminated from the tournament. It was thus the second-straight year in which they lost a knockout game to a lower-ranked opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286490-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sydney Thunder WBBL season, Squad\nEach 2018\u201319 squad featured 15 active players, with an allowance of up to five marquee signings including a maximum of three from overseas. Under a new rule, Australian marquees were classed as players who held a national women's team contract at the time of signing on for their WBBL|04 team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286490-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sydney Thunder WBBL season, Squad\nThe Thunder made just one change to their squad from the previous season, adding Saskia Horley as their only new inclusion. Indian marquee Harmanpreet Kaur returned for her third campaign with the Thunder, but she was unavailable to play the first match and the semi-final due to national team commitments. In November 2019, the recurring issue of conflicting schedules with overseas players prompted newly appointed Cricket Australia board member Mel Jones to call for greater cooperation between nations to give the league a clearer window.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286490-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sydney Thunder WBBL season, Squad\nThe table below lists the Thunder players and their key stats (including runs scored, batting strike rate, wickets taken, economy rate, catches and stumpings) for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286490-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sydney Thunder WBBL season, Fixtures, Regular season\nThe Thunder were catapulted to a score of 5/179 by a late 49-run partnership between Harmanpreet Kaur and Stafanie Taylor (which included 21 runs off the 18th over against the bowling of Taneale Peschel, who had taken 1/12 in her first three overs). Eight overs into the second innings, Meg Lanning had scored 71 of the Scorchers' 83 runs. Although Lanning was run out for 76 in the tenth over, Elyse Villani went on to score 66 not out, guiding the Scorchers to a six-wicket victory with one ball remaining. In doing so, the Scorchers set a new WBBL record for highest successful run chase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286490-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sydney Thunder WBBL season, Fixtures, Regular season\nResponding to the Thunder's first innings total of 7/171, Heat opener Beth Mooney recorded her maiden WBBL century but was then dismissed in the 17th over. With Brisbane still requiring 19 runs off the last twelve balls, Harmanpreet Kaur\u2014having already claimed two wickets, including the stumping of Mooney, for just ten runs\u2014came on to bowl her third over. The Heat, primarily through Delissa Kimmince, scored 13 runs off the over to swing the momentum once more. Laura Harris then hit the winning runs against the bowling of Nicola Carey with three wickets in hand and three balls remaining, making it Brisbane's highest successful run chase. The result helped to set up a semi-final encounter between the two teams on the following weekend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 804]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286490-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sydney Thunder WBBL season, Fixtures, Knockout stage\nThe lower-ranked Heat posted a first innings total of 7/140, recovering from 5/78 after 12 overs through an unbeaten knock of 32 from 25 by Laura Harris. After struggling through the middle overs of the run chase, a late charge by the Thunder brought the hosts back into the contest to leave a required five runs off the final delivery for victory. The last ball, sent down by spinner Jess Jonassen, was struck flat and cleanly to deep square leg by batter Nicola Carey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286490-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Sydney Thunder WBBL season, Fixtures, Knockout stage\nJonassen immediately signalled disappointment as the ball set sail for beyond the boundary rope, therefore scoring six runs and clinching the match for Sydney... However, Brisbane fielder Haidee Birkett made enough ground in time to take a \"miracle\" catch just inside the field of play to knock the Thunder out of the tournament. The match, in conjunction with the other semi-final played later in the day, was hailed as a showcase of \"the irrefutable rise of women's cricket\" and \"sport with drama, skill and unpredictability \u2013 a potent recipe for success\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286491-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy\n2018\u201319 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy was the tenth edition of Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, a Twenty20 competition in India. It took place between 21 February and 14 March 2019. Delhi were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286491-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy\nThe tournament had five groups, with three groups containing seven teams and two groups with eight teams. The top two teams in each group qualified for the Super League section of the tournament, with the teams split into two further groups of five teams. The top two teams, one from each of the Super League groups, progressed to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286491-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy\nIn the opening round fixture between Mumbai and Sikkim, Mumbai's Shreyas Iyer scored 147 runs, the highest total by an Indian batsman in a T20 match. The second round saw Andhra beat Nagaland by 179 runs, the biggest winning margin by runs in a Twenty20 cricket match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286491-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy\nJharkhand and Delhi from Group A, Vidarbha and Gujarat from Group B, Railways and Mumbai from Group C, Karnataka and Bengal from Group D, and Maharashtra and Uttar Pradesh from Group E all progressed to the Super League phase of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286491-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy\nIn the Super League stage of the tournament, Maharashtra won Group A and Karnataka won Group B to advance to the final. With their win in their final Super League match, Karnataka won a total of thirteen consecutive T20 matches, a record for an Indian state team. Karnataka won the tournament, after beating Maharashtra by eight wickets in the final. With the victory, Karnataka equalled the record for a winning streak for an India-based team with fourteen matches, tied with the Kolkata Knight Riders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286492-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy Group A\nThe 2018\u201319 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy was the tenth season of the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, a Twenty20 cricket tournament in India. It was contested by the 37 domestic cricket teams of India, with eight teams in Group A. The group stage started on 21 February 2019, with the top two teams progressing to the Super League section of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286492-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy Group A\nJharkhand won the group, with Delhi finishing second to progress to the Super League stage of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286493-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy Group B\nThe 2018\u201319 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy was the tenth season of the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, a Twenty20 cricket tournament in India. It was contested by the 37 domestic cricket teams of India, with eight teams in Group B. The group stage started on 21 February 2019, with the top two teams progressing to the Super League section of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286493-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy Group B\nVidarbha won the group, with Gujarat finishing second to progress to the Super League phase of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286494-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy Group C\nThe 2018\u201319 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy was the tenth season of the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, a Twenty20 cricket tournament in India. It was contested by the 37 domestic cricket teams of India, with seven teams in Group C. The group stage started on 21 February 2019, with the top two teams progressing to the Super League section of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286494-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy Group C\nRailways won the group, with Mumbai finishing second to progress to the Super League phase of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286495-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy Group D\nThe 2018\u201319 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy was the tenth season of the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, a Twenty20 cricket tournament in India. It was contested by the 37 domestic cricket teams of India, with seven teams in Group D. The group stage started on 21 February 2019, with the top two teams progressing to the Super League section of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286495-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy Group D\nKarnataka won the group, with Bengal finishing second to progress to the Super League phase of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286496-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy Group E\nThe 2018\u201319 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy was the tenth season of the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, a Twenty20 cricket tournament in India. It was contested by the 37 domestic cricket teams of India, with seven teams in Group E. The group stage started on 21 February 2019, with the top two teams progressing to the Super League section of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286496-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy Group E\nMaharashtra won the group, with Uttar Pradesh finishing second to progress to the Super League phase of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286497-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syracuse Orange men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Syracuse Orange men's basketball team represented Syracuse University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Orange, led by 43rd-year head coach Jim Boeheim, played their home games at the Carrier Dome in Syracuse, New York as sixth-year members of the Atlantic Coast Conference. Syracuse received a bid to the 2019 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament as the number eight seed in the West region, where they lost in the round of 64 to ninth seeded Baylor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286497-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syracuse Orange men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Orange finished the 2017\u201318 season 23\u201314, 8\u201310 in ACC play to finish in a tie for tenth place. They defeated Wake Forest in the first round of the 2018 ACC Tournament before losing in the second round to North Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286497-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syracuse Orange men's basketball team, Previous season\nThey received one of the final four at-large bids to the NCAA Tournament where, as a No. 11 seed, they defeated Arizona State in the First Four, and upset No. 6 seed TCU in the First Round and No. 3 seed Michigan State in the Second Round before losing in the Sweet Sixteen to fellow ACC member and No. 2 seed Duke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286497-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syracuse Orange men's basketball team, Schedule and results\n\u2020 Record for the largest on-campus attendance in college basketball history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286497-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syracuse Orange men's basketball team, Rankings\n*AP does not release post-NCAA Tournament rankings^Coaches did not release a Week 2 poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286498-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syracuse Orange women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Syracuse Orange women's basketball team represents Syracuse University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Orange, led by twelfth year head coach Quentin Hillsman. The Orange were sixth year members of the Atlantic Coast Conference and play their home games at the Carrier Dome. They finished the season 25\u20139, 11\u20135 in ACC play to finish in fifth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the ACC Women's Tournament where they lost to Notre Dame. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Women's Tournament, receiving a No. 3 seed in the Portland regional, where they defeated Fordham in the first round before being upset by South Dakota State in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286498-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syracuse Orange women's basketball team, Previous season\nFor the 2017\u201318 season, the Orange finished 10\u20136 in ACC play and 22\u20139 overall. Their record achieved a tie for sixth in the ACC. Syracuse was eliminated in the second round of the ACC Tournament by Virginia Tech. The Orange received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as an eight-seed, they lost in the first round to Oklahoma State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286498-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syracuse Orange women's basketball team, Rankings\nThe Coaches Poll releases a final poll after the NCAA tournament, but the AP Poll does not release a poll at this time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 57], "content_span": [58, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286499-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syracuse Orange women's ice hockey season\nThe Syracuse Orange women represented Syracuse University in CHA women's ice hockey during the 2018-19 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season. The Orange earned the first trip to the NCAA Tournament in program history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286499-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syracuse Orange women's ice hockey season, Offseason\nCaptain Allie Munroe participated on Hockey Canada's National Women's Development Team Selection Camp and the Hockey Canada's National Women's Team Fall Festival.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 60], "content_span": [61, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286500-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syrian Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 version of the Syrian Cup is the 49th edition to be played. It is the premier knockout tournament for football teams in Syria. Al-Jaish are the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286500-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syrian Cup\nThe competition has been disrupted because of the ongoing Syrian Civil War, where some games have been awarded as 3:0 victories due to teams not being able to compete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286500-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syrian Cup\nThe winners of the competition will enter the 2020 AFC Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 78]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286501-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syrian Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Syrian Premier League season is the 47th since its establishment. This season's league featured one stage. It pitted one group of 14 teams and kicked off on 21 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286501-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Syrian Premier League\nAl-Jaish are the defending champions, having won the previous season championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286502-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Szombathelyi Halad\u00e1s season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Szombathelyi Halad\u00e1s's 63rd competitive football season, 11th consecutive season in the OTP Bank Liga and 99th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286502-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Szombathelyi Halad\u00e1s season, Players\nAs of 6 June 2018. 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, 44], "content_span": [45, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286502-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Szombathelyi Halad\u00e1s season, Players\nPlayers transferred during the seasonNote: 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, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286502-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Szombathelyi Halad\u00e1s season, Players, 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, 52], "content_span": [53, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286502-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Szombathelyi Halad\u00e1s season, Players, 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, 52], "content_span": [53, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286502-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Szombathelyi Halad\u00e1s season, Players, 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, 52], "content_span": [53, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286502-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Szombathelyi Halad\u00e1s season, Players, 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, 52], "content_span": [53, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286502-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286502-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286503-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 S\u00fcper Lig\nThe 2018\u201319 S\u00fcper Lig, officially called the Spor Toto S\u00fcper Lig Lefter K\u00fc\u00e7\u00fckandonyadis season, was the 61st season of the S\u00fcper Lig, the highest tier football league of Turkey. The season began on 10 August 2018 and concluded in May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286503-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 S\u00fcper Lig\nThe season was named after Lefter K\u00fc\u00e7\u00fckandonyadis, a former Turkish national team player and Fenerbah\u00e7e legend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286503-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 S\u00fcper Lig\nThis season the VAR was introduced in all games of S\u00fcper Lig competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286503-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 S\u00fcper Lig, Teams\nA total of 18 teams contest the league, including 15 sides from the 2017\u201318 season and three promoted from the 2017\u201318 TFF First League. It includes Rizespor and Ankarag\u00fcc\u00fc, the two top teams from the TFF First League, and Erzurum BB, the winners of the 2017\u201318 TFF First League playoffs. Gen\u00e7lerbirli\u011fi, Osmanl\u0131spor, and Karab\u00fckspor were relegated to 2018\u201319 TFF First League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286503-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 S\u00fcper Lig, Positions by round\nThe following table represents the teams' positions after each round in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286504-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 TCU Horned Frogs men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 TCU Horned Frogs men's basketball team represented Texas Christian University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, led by head coach Jamie Dixon in his third season at TCU. The Horned Frogs competed as members of the Big 12 Conference and played their home games at Schollmaier Arena in Fort Worth, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286504-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 TCU Horned Frogs men's basketball team, Previous season\nThey finished the season 21\u201312, 9\u20139 in Big 12 play to finish in fifth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big 12 Tournament to Kansas State. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 1998 as the No. 6 seed in the Midwest region where they lost in the First Round to Syracuse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286505-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 TCU Horned Frogs women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 TCU Horned Frogs women's basketball team represents Texas Christian University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The 2018\u201319 season is head coach Raegan Pebley's fifth season at TCU. The Horned Frogs were members of the Big 12 Conference and played their home games in Schollmaier Arena. They finished the season 24\u201311, 10\u20138 in Big 12 play to finish in sixth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big 12 Women's Tournament to Texas. They received an at-large bid to the Women's National Invitation Tournament where they defeated Prairie View A&M, UT Arlington, Arkansas in the first, second and third rounds, Cincinnati in the quarterfinals before losing to Arizona in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 776]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286506-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 TFF First League\nThe 2018\u201319 TFF First League is the 18th season since the league was established in 2001 and 56th season of the second-level football league of Turkey since its establishment in 1963\u201364.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286506-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 TFF First 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.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286507-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 TSG 1899 Hoffenheim season\nThe 2018\u201319 TSG 1899 Hoffenheim season is the 120th season in the football club's history and 11th consecutive and overall season in the top flight of German football, the Bundesliga, having been promoted from the 2. Bundesliga in 2008. In addition to the domestic league, 1899 Hoffenheim also are participating in this season's editions of the domestic cup, the DFB-Pokal, and the first-tier continental cup, the UEFA Champions League. This is the 11th season for Hoffenheim in the Wirsol Rhein-Neckar-Arena, located in Sinsheim, Baden-W\u00fcrttemberg, Germany. The season covers a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286507-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 TSG 1899 Hoffenheim 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286508-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tahiti Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Tahiti Cup (also known as Coupe Tahiti Nui) was the 80th edition of the national cup in Tahitian football. AS Dragon were the defending champions. The winner, A.S. V\u00e9nus, earned the right to represent Tahiti in the 2019\u201320 Coupe de France, entering at the seventh round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286508-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tahiti Cup, Semi finals\nThe semi finals took place consecutively on 1 May 2019, at Stade Pater in Pirae. All times are local TAHT (UTC-10)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286508-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tahiti Cup, Final\nThe final took place on 14 September 2019 at Stade Pater in Pirae", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286509-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tahiti Ligue 1\nThe 2018\u201319 Tahiti Ligue 1 is the 72nd season of the Tahiti Ligue 1, the top-flight football league in Tahiti. The season started on 28 September 2018. A.S. Central Sport are the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286509-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tahiti Ligue 1, Teams, 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286509-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tahiti Ligue 1, League table\nNote: 4 points for a win, 2 points for a draw, 1 point for a defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286509-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tahiti Ligue 1, Relegation playoff\nThe winner of the relegation playoff between Arue (Ligue 1 9th place) and Olympique de Mahina (Ligue 2 2nd place) earned a place in the 2019\u201320 Tahiti Ligue 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286510-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tahiti Ligue 2\nThe 2018\u201319 Tahiti Ligue 2 was the second highest division of the Tahitian football league. The competition is organized and administered by F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Tahitienne de Football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286510-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tahiti Ligue 2, Participating Teams\nDuring the 2018\u201319 season, ten teams registered to play, however, only nine teams participated in the competition, after AS Teva FC withdrew from the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season\nThe 2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season was the 27th season for the National Hockey League (NHL) franchise that was established on December 16, 1991. The team clinched a playoff spot on March 8, 2019, when the Montreal Canadiens lost 8\u20132 to the Anaheim Ducks. This season marked the first time that Tampa won the Presidents' Trophy in franchise history, winning the Atlantic Division for the second consecutive year as well, their fourth division title overall. They also became the second team in league history to win 62 games, matching the record set by the 1995\u201396 Detroit Red Wings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season\nTheir record-setting season ended abruptly when they became the first Presidents' Trophy winner to get swept in the first round of the Playoffs, losing to the Columbus Blue Jackets. This was also the first time since 2014 that the Lightning were eliminated from the Stanley Cup playoffs in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Off-season, May\nOn May 23, 2018, the Lightning's 2017\u201318 season ended when they were defeated by the eventual Stanley Cup champion Washington Capitals in game seven of the Eastern Conference finals. The loss was a 4-0 defeat at Amalie Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Off-season, May\nOn May 31, 2018, the Lightning announced that it was parting ways with assistant coaches Rick Bowness and Brad Lauer. Bowness had been an assistant since 2013. He was responsible for the defense and the penalty kill. Lauer had been a member of the Lighting's coaching staff since 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Off-season, June\nOn June 7, 2018, the Lightning announced the re-signing of defensive prospect Daniel Walcott to a one-year contract extension. Walcott spent the entire season with the Syracuse Crunch of the American Hockey League (AHL). Walcot appeared in 62-games, recording five goals and 16 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Off-season, June\nOn June 12, 2018, the Lightning announced the re-signing of forward prospect Carter Verhaeghe to a one-year contract extension. Verhaeghe spent his season with the Crunch, where he played in 58 games and scored 17 goals and 48 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Off-season, June\nOn June 13, 2018, the Lightning announced backup goaltender Peter Budaj had been traded to the Los Angeles Kings in exchange for forward Andy Andreoff. Andreoff has appeared in 159 NHL games over the last four seasons. During that time, he has 13 goals and 262 career hits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Off-season, June\nOn June 18, 2018, the Lighting announced the signing of Edward Pasquale to a one-year contract. Pasquale split his season in the AHL between the Syracuse Crunch and the Bakersfield Condors. He was originally acquired by the Lightning via trade with the Edmonton Oilers during the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Off-season, June\nOn June 20, 2018, Victor Hedman won the James Norris Memorial Trophy for the 2017\u201318 NHL season. The award is given annually to the top defenseman that season, which is based upon the votes of the Professional Hockey Writers' Association. Hedman was the first defenseman in Lightning history to win the award. Additionally, Hedman and Nikita Kucherov were named as First Team All-Stars for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Off-season, June\nOn June 22, 2018, the Lightning announced the re-signing of backup goaltender Louis Domingue to a two-year contract extension. Domingue went 7\u20133\u20131 over 11 starts with the Lightning. He was acquired by the Lightning during the 2017\u201318 season in a trade from the Arizona Coyotes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Off-season, June\nOn the same day, the Lightning named Jeff Halpern as an assistant coach. During the last two seasons, Halpern worked as an assistant coach with the Syracuse Crunch. It was unknown at the time whether the Lightning would be hiring an additional assistant to replace the last remaining vacancy left by the departure of assistants Rick Bowness and Brad Lauer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Off-season, June\nOn June 24, 2018, the Lightning released the roster for its 2018 Development Camp Roster. The roster consisted of 27 players, which included six of the seven players selected in the 2018 NHL Entry Draft. Six players participating played for the Crunch last season. There were also five forwards participating in the camp as invitees. Notable camp attendees include Cal Foote, Connor Ingram, Boris Katchouk and Taylor Raddysh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Off-season, June\nOn June 25, 2018, the Lightning issued qualifying offers to Adam Erne, Slater Koekkoek, J. T. Miller and Cedric Paquette, allowing the Lightning to retain those players' playing rights. These rights entail the right match any contract offered to those players after the free agency period begins or draft compensation if the team declines to match the contract offered to the player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Off-season, June\nOn June 26, 2018, the Lightning announced it had signed forward prospect Ross Colton to a two-year contract. Colton spent the past two seasons playing for the University of Vermont. During that time, Colton led Vermont in goals, scoring 28 goals and 50 points in 69 games. Colton was originally drafted by the Lightning in the fourth round of the 2016 NHL Entry Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Off-season, June\nIt was announced Tom Kurvers had left the Lightning after ten years to become the new assistant general manager of the Minnesota Wild. The last seven years of his tenure with the team had been as a senior advisor to general manager Steve Yzerman. In that capacity, he was based out of Minnesota where he often was at the Wild's arena scouting for the Lightning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Off-season, June\nThe Lightning announced it had re-signed forward J. T. Miller to a five-year, $26.25 million contract extension. The contract carries a cap hit of $5.25\u00a0million per season. Miller skated in 19 games with the Lightning last season, scoring 10 goals and 18 points. Miller was acquired in a trade with the New York Rangers during the 2017\u201318 season prior to the trade deadline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Off-season, June\nLater that day, the Hockey Hall of Fame committee announced the members of the 2018 Hall of Fame class, with former Lightning captain Martin St. Louis announced as a first-ballot induction. St. Louis is the Lightning's record holder in assists (588), points (953), power-play points (300), shorthanded goals (28), shorthanded points (44), game-winning goals (64), overtime goals (10), playoff goals (33) and playoff points (68). He also won the Hart Trophy, Art Ross Trophy (two times), Ted Lindsay Award, NHL Plus-Minus Award, Lady Byng Trophy (three times) and the Stanley Cup while a member of the Lightning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Off-season, July\nOn July 1, 2018, the Lightning announced that it had signed Ryan McDonagh to a 7-year contract extension, which was valued at $47 million. McDonagh had the second highest ice time among Lightning players during the team's trip to the Eastern Conference Final. McDonagh was originally acquired by the Lightning in a trade at the deadline from the New York Rangers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Off-season, July\nThat same day, the Lightning announced the signing of defenseman Cameron Gaunce to a one-year contract. Guance was originally a draft pick of the Colorado Avalanche in the 2008 draft. Over the course of his career he has appeared in 32 NHL games. Last season he skated in 67 games with the Cleveland Monsters of the American Hockey League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Off-season, July\nOn July 2, 2018, the Lightning announced the re-signing of defenseman Slater Koekkoek to a one-year contract extension. The contract was valued at $865,000. Koekkoek was originally selected by the Lightning in the 2012 NHL Entry Draft. Koekkoek had four goals and four assists last season for the Lightning in 35-games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Off-season, July\nOn July 10, 2018, the Lightning announced the re-signing of forward Nikita Kucherov to an eight-year contract extension. The contract is valued at $76 million with an annual cap hit of $9.5 million. The contract is the richest contract in franchise history. Kucherov led the team last season in points (100), goals (39), and assists (61). Kucherov was an NHL-All star last season and was named a first team all-star.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Off-season, July\nOn July 11, 2018, the Lightning announced the re-signing of forward Adam Erne to a one-year contract extension. The contract is valued at $800,000. Last season Erne skated in 23-games with the Lightning, recording three goals and an assist. Erne missed the last half of the season and all of the playoffs due to a lower-body injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Off-season, July\nOn July 12, 2018, the Lightning announced the hiring of assistant coach Derek Lalonde. Lalonde served as the head coach of the Iowa Wild of the American Hockey League. Lalonde had previously worked with Lightning head coach Jon Cooper while he was the head coach of the Green Bay Gamblers of the United States Hockey League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Off-season, September\nOn September 11, 2018, Steve Yzerman unexpectedly announced that he was resigning as General Manager after eight seasons, however, he was remaining with the team in an advisory role for the final year of his contract. Assistant General Manager Julien BriseBois replaced Yzerman as general manager. BriseBois had served as assistant general manager since 2010. In that capacity BriseBois also served as general manager of the Norfolk Admirals while they were the Lightning's American Hockey League affiliate, and its current affiliate the Syracuse Crunch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Training camp, September\nOn September 14, 2018, the Lightning placed defenseman Jake Dotchin on unconditional waivers with the purpose of terminating his contract. The team said it was due to a material breach of contract. It is believed that the team was unhappy with Dotchin's conditioning at the start of training camp. Dotchin's agent declined to comment, and said they would look to the CBA for any potential remedy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Training camp, September\nOn September 15, 2018, Jake Dotchin cleared waivers. With no team claiming Dotchin, the Lightning can move forward in the process in terminating his contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Training camp, September\nOn September 19, 2018, reports began to surface concerning Jake Dotchin. Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet reported that Dotchin showed up to camp with his body fat up to as high as 25 percent. Hockey Insider Bob McKenzie of TSN reported the BMI of Dotchin was unconfirmed, but that it was being reported that he showed up to training camp 30 pounds over his playing weight last season. Additionally, McKenzie reported that the National Hockey League Players' Association had become involved in the process. The dispute is set to be heard before an impartial arbitrator to determine whether the Lightning can terminate Dotchin's contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Training camp, September\nThat same day the Lightning announced its first round of training camp cuts. All five of the Lightning's training camp invitees were part of the initial cuts. Additionally, the Lightning cut 2018 second-round pick Gabriel Fortier and seventh-round pick Radim Salda. Fortier will re-join the Baie-Comeau Drakkar of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League. Fortier has played for the Drakkar the past two seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Training camp, September\nOn September 22, 2018, the Lightning claimed forward Danick Martel via waivers from the Philadelphia Flyers. Martel originally joined the Flyers as an undrafted free agent. Martel scored 20+ goals in each of his three seasons in the AHL playing for the Lehigh Valley Phantoms. Last season Martel made his NHL debut with the Flyers, which came over a 4-game stint with the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Training camp, September\nOn September 23, 2018, the Lightning made its second round of roster cuts for training camp. The roster cuts brought the Lightning's roster down to 28-players. Of the cuts Gabriel Dumont and Michael Bournival saw limited action with the Lightning last season. Forwards Andy Andreoff, Dumont, Carter Verhaeghe, defenseman Cameron Gaunce, and goaltender Edward Pasquale have to pass through waivers for assignment to the Syracuse Crunch. Prospects Adam Erne, Mathieu Joseph, Alexander Volkov, and Erik Cernak are still with the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Training camp, September\nThat same day the team announced that forward Tyler Johnson is considered day-to-day with a lower body injury. Lightning General Manager Julien BriseBois stated that the team was optimistic that Johnson would be ready for the season opener against the Florida Panthers. However, he did concede that it was not a guarantee that Johnson would be ready for that game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Training camp, September\nOn September 30, 2018, the Lightning announced its third round of roster cuts. Defenseman Eric Cernak and forwards Alexander Volkov and Mitchell Stephens were assigned to the Crunch. The team has not made its official opening night roster announcement. However, it appears that newly acquired forward Danick Martel and 2015 4th round draft pick Mathieu Joseph have made the opening night roster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Training camp, October\nOn October 3, 2018, the Lightning announced its opening night roster. The forward group consists of Anthony Cirelli, Cory Conacher, Adam Erne, Yanni Gourde, Tyler Johnson, Mathieu Joseph, Alex Killorn, Nikita Kucherov, Danick Martel, J. T. Miller, Ondrej Palat, Cedric Paquette, Brayden Point, and Steven Stamkos. The defensemen are Braydon Coburn, Dan Girardi, Victor Hedman, Slater Koekkoek, Ryan McDonagh, Mikhail Sergachev, and Anton Stralman. Andrei Vasilevskiy and Louis Domingue are the Lightning's goaltending tandem.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286511-0033-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Player stats, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining Tampa Bay. Stats reflect time with Tampa Bay only. \u2021Traded from Tampa Bay mid-season. Bold/italics denotes franchise record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0034-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Transactions\nThe Lightning have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286511-0035-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Draft picks\nBelow are the Tampa Bay Lightning's selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286512-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tanzanian Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Tanzanian Premier League is the 54th season of the Tanzanian Premier League, the top-tier football league in Tanzania (mainland only), since its establishment in 1965. The season started on 22 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286513-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a da Liga\nThe 2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a da Liga was the twelfth edition of the Ta\u00e7a da Liga (also known as Allianz Cup for sponsorship reasons), a football cup competition organised by the Liga Portuguesa de Futebol Profissional (LPFP) and contested exclusively by clubs competing in the top two professional tiers of Portuguese football. It began on 21 July 2018 and concluded with the final in Braga on 26 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286513-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a da Liga\nThe competition's semi-finals (Benfica v Porto, and Braga v Sporting CP) were marked by controversy involving the video assistant referee (VAR).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286513-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a da Liga\nIn the final, Sporting defeated Porto 3\u20131 in a penalty shoot-out after a 1\u20131 draw, becoming the second team (after Benfica) to both defend their title and win the competition multiple times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286513-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a da Liga, Format\nThe 11 teams placed 4th-16th in the 2017\u201318 LigaPro (reserve teams from Primeira Liga clubs are excluded) take part in the first round; one-legged ties are played between ten teams, with one team receiving a bye to the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286513-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a da Liga, Format\nIn the second round, the six teams advancing from the previous round (five winners plus the one team with a bye) are joined by the 14 teams placed 5th\u201318th in the 2017\u201318 Primeira Liga, by the two teams promoted to 2018\u201319 Primeira Liga and the team placed third in the 2017\u201318 LigaPro. Again, one-legged ties were played between 22 teams, with one team receiving a bye to the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286513-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a da Liga, Format\nThe third round features the twelve teams advancing from the previous round (eleven winners plus the one team with a bye) and the four best-placed teams in the 2017\u201318 Primeira Liga. The 16 teams are drawn into four groups that will be contested in a single round-robin format, with each team playing at least one game at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286513-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a da Liga, Format\nThe four group winners qualify for the semi-finals, which are played as single-legged ties. The semi-finals and final are played at a neutral venue, set to be in Braga until 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286513-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a da Liga, Format, Tiebreakers\nIn the third round, teams are ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss). If two or more teams are tied on points on completion of the group matches, the following criteria are applied to determine the rankings:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286513-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a da Liga, Format, Tiebreakers\nIn all other rounds, teams tied at the end of regular time contest a penalty shootout to determine the winner. No extra-time is played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286513-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a da Liga, Teams\nThirty-two teams competing in the two professional tiers of Portuguese football for the 2018\u201319 season are eligible to participate in this competition. For teams in both leagues, the final position in the previous league season determined in which round they enter the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286513-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a da Liga, First round\nThe 11 non-reserve teams competing in the 2018\u201319 LigaPro entered the competition in this round. Ten teams were paired against each other for five single-legged ties, while the eleventh team (Oliveirense) was given a bye to the next round. The draw took place on 11 July 2018, and matches were played on 21 and 22 July 2018. Games tied at the end of regular time were decided by a penalty shootout with no extra-time being played. The first team drawn in each fixture played at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286513-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a da Liga, Second round\nIn the second round, the five first-round winners and Oliveirense, who was given a bye to this round, joined the 14 teams ranked 5th\u201318th in the 2017\u201318 Primeira Liga, the team ranked 3rd and the two teams promoted from the 2017\u201318 LigaPro. Twenty two teams were paired against each other for eleven single-legged ties, while Vit\u00f3ria de Set\u00fabal was given a bye to the next round. The draw took place on 11 July 2018, and matches were played between 28 July 2018 and 6 August 2018. Games tied at the end of regular time were decided by a penalty shootout with no extra-time being played. The first team drawn in each fixture played at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286513-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a da Liga, Third round\nIn the third round, the 11 second-round winners plus Vit\u00f3ria de Set\u00fabal, who were given a bye to this round, joined the four top-ranked teams from the 2017\u201318 Primeira Liga: Porto (1st), Benfica (2nd), Sporting CP (3rd) and Braga (4th). These 16 teams were drawn into four groups of four, each group containing one of the four top-ranked Primeira Liga teams who each host their first two group matches. Group matches were played in a single round-robin format, ensuring that each team played at least one match at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286513-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a da Liga, Third round\nFor the draw, the teams were seeded into four pots based on their league position in the previous season, with the teams participating in the 2017\u201318 Primeira Liga being seeded higher regardless of any relegation. The fixtures and match dates were decided by an additional draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286513-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a da Liga, Knockout phase\nThe knockout phase was contested as a final-four tournament by the four third-round group winners in one-legged semi-finals and final. All matches were played in a neutral venue, decided before the competition starts. As in the first and second round, games tied at the end of regular time were decided by a penalty shootout with no extra-time being played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286513-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a da Liga, Knockout phase\nThe first semi-final was played between the winners of Groups A (Benfica) and C (Porto), while the second was played between Group B (Braga) and D (Sporting CP) winners. Groups A and B winners (Benfica and Braga, respectively) were designated as the \"home\" teams (for administrative purposes) in their semi-final clashes as was the winner of the first semi-final in the final. If the team that played at home in the appointed neutral stadium was still in competition, in this case Braga, they were designated the home team regardless of which group or semi-final they played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286513-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a da Liga, Knockout phase\nAll matches were played at Est\u00e1dio Municipal de Braga, in Braga, with the semi-finals played on 22 and 23 January, and the final on 26 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286514-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal\nThe 2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal (also known as Ta\u00e7a de Portugal Placard for sponsorship reasons) was the 79th edition of the Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, the premier knockout competition in Portuguese football. The competition began with first-round matches on 8 September 2018 and concluded with the final on 25 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286514-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal\nThis edition was contested by 144 clubs, including teams from the top three tiers of the Portuguese football league system and representatives of the fourth-tier District leagues and cups. This was the first season to allow a fourth substitution during extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286514-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal\nPrimeira Liga side Desportivo das Aves were the defending champions, but they were eliminated by Braga in the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286514-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Teams\nA total of 144 teams will compete in the 2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal: 18 teams from Primeira Liga, 14 teams from the LigaPro, 71 teams from the Campeonato de Portugal and 41 teams from the district championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286514-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Schedule\nAll draws are held at the FPF headquarters at Cidade do Futebol, in Oeiras. Match kick-off times are in WET (UTC\u00b10) from the fourth round to the semi-finals, and in WEST (UTC+1) during the rest of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286514-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, First round\nTimes are WEST (UTC+1) (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286514-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Second round\nThe following 22 first-round losing teams were selected to compete in the second round:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286514-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Second round\nTimes are WEST (UTC+1) (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286514-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Third round\nTimes are WEST (UTC+1) (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286514-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Fourth round\nTimes are WET (UTC\u00b10) (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286514-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Television rights\nThe following matches were or broadcast live on Portuguese television:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286515-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Temple Owls men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Temple Owls basketball team represented Temple University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Owls, led by head coach Fran Dunphy in his 13th and final season with the Owls, played their home games at the Liacouras Center in Philadelphia as members of the American Athletic Conference. They finished the season 23\u201310, 13\u20135 in AAC play to finish in a tie for third place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the AAC Tournament to Wichita State. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they lost in the First Four to Belmont.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286515-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Temple Owls men's basketball team\nThis was Fran Dunphy's final season as Temple head coach, as the school announced on April 13, 2018 that he would step down at the end of the season with top assistant and former Owls star Aaron McKie succeeding him in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286515-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Temple Owls men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Owls finished the 2017\u201318 season 17\u201316, 8\u201310 in AAC play to finish in seventh place. In the AAC Tournament, they defeated Tulane before losing to Wichita State in the quarterfinals. They received a bid to the National Invitation Tournament where they lost to Penn State in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286515-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Temple Owls men's basketball team, Previous season\nShortly after the season, head coach Fran Dunphy announced that the 2018\u201319 season would be his last at Temple. Top assistant and former Owls star Aaron McKie was named as his designated successor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286516-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Temple Owls women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Temple Owls women's basketball team will represent Temple University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The season marks the sixth for the Owls as members of the American Athletic Conference. The Owls, led by eleventh year head coach Tonya Cardoza, play their home games at McGonigle Hall and the Liacouras Center. They finished the season 11\u201319, 7\u20139 in AAC play to finish a tie for fifth place. They lost in the first of the American Athletic Conference Women's Tournament to Memphis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286516-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Temple Owls women's basketball team, Media\nAll Owls home games will have video streaming on , ESPN3, or . Road games will typically be streamed on the opponent's website, though conference road games could also appear on ESPN3 or AAC Digital. There are no radio broadcasts for Owls women's basketball games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286517-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tennessee Lady Volunteers basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Tennessee Lady Volunteers basketball team represented the University of Tennessee in the 2018\u201319 college basketball season. The Lady Vols, led by seventh-year head coach Holly Warlick, played their games at Thompson\u2013Boling Arena and are members of the Southeastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286517-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tennessee Lady Volunteers basketball team\nThe Lady Vols finished the season 19\u201313, 7\u20139 for a seventh-place tie in SEC play. They lost in the quarterfinals of the SEC Tournament to Mississippi State. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they lost to UCLA in the first round. At the completion of the season, Warlick was fired as head coach. Missouri State's Kellie Harper, who was a point guard during Tennessee's 3-peat from 1996 to 1998, was hired as her replacement on April 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286517-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tennessee Lady Volunteers basketball team, Rankings\n^Coaches' Poll did not release a second poll at the same time as the AP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286518-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tennessee State Tigers basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Tennessee State Tigers basketball team represented Tennessee State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Tigers, led by first-year head coach Brian Collins, played their home games at the Gentry Complex in Nashville, Tennessee as members of the Ohio Valley Conference. They finished the season 9\u201321 overall, 6\u201312 during OVC play, and finishing in a four-way tie for seventh place. Since only the top eight teams in the conference qualify for the OVC Tournament, tiebreakers left Tennessee State as the No. 9 seed, preventing them from participating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286518-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tennessee State Tigers basketball team, Previous season\nThe Tigers finished the 2017\u201318 season 15\u201315, 10\u20138 in OVC play to finish in a tie for fifth place. They lost in the first round of the OVC Tournament to Eastern Illinois.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286518-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tennessee State Tigers basketball team, Previous season\nOn March 21, 2018, head coach Dana Ford left Tennessee State for the head coaching job at Missouri State. He finished at Tennessee State with a four-year record of 57\u201365. On March 26, the school announced that former Illinois State assistant coach Brian Collins had been hired as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286519-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tennessee Tech Golden Eagles men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Tennessee Tech Golden Eagles men's basketball team represented Tennessee Technological University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Golden Eagles, led by eighth-year head coach Steve Payne, played their home games at the Eblen Center in Cookeville, Tennessee as members of the Ohio Valley Conference. They finished the season 8\u201323 overall, 4\u201314 in OVC play to finish in last place and missed the conference tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286519-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tennessee Tech Golden Eagles men's basketball team\nOn March 3, 2019, the school announced that Payne resigned after 8 seasons as Tennessee Tech head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286519-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tennessee Tech Golden Eagles men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Eagles finished the season 19\u201314, 10\u20138 in OVC play to finish in a tie for fifth place. They defeated SIU Edwardsville in the first round of the OVC Tournament to advance to the quarterfinals where they lost to Jacksonville State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 75], "content_span": [76, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286520-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tennessee Volunteers basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Tennessee Volunteers basketball team represented the University of Tennessee in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Volunteers were led by fourth-year head coach Rick Barnes. The team played its home games at Thompson\u2013Boling Arena in Knoxville, Tennessee, as a member of the Southeastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286520-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tennessee Volunteers basketball team, Previous season\nThe Vols finished the 2017\u201318 NCAA Division I men's basketball season 26\u20139, 13\u20135 in SEC play to earn a share of the SEC regular season championship. As the No. 2 seed in the SEC Tournament, they defeated Mississippi State and Arkansas before losing to Kentucky in the championship game. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as the No. 3 seed in the South region. There the Volunteers defeated Wright State before being upset by Loyola\u2013Chicago in the Second Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286520-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tennessee Volunteers basketball team, Rankings\n^Coaches' Poll did not release a second poll at the same time as the AP. *AP does not release post-NCAA Tournament rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286521-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n\nThe 2018\u201319 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n was the fourth tier in Spanish football. It began in August 2018 and ended in late June 2019 with the promotion play-off finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286521-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n, Controversy in Group 8\nAfter being relegated, Real Burgos sued the Castile and Le\u00f3n Football Federation arguing that the postponement of their match in the previous season against Arandina forced them to play three games in seven days with few rounds left, harming their performance and finishing the league in relegation positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286521-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n, Controversy in Group 8\nInitially, they were admitted in Tercera Divisi\u00f3n, in application of the precautionary measures by the Judgement, but later the Royal Spanish Football Federation revoked the decision commenting in a statement that the responsibility of organising the competition is theirs and not of the Regional federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286522-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas A&M Aggies men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Texas A&M Aggies men's basketball team represented Texas A&M University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team's head coach Billy Kennedy was in his eighth and final season at Texas A&M. The Aggies played their home games at Reed Arena in College Station, Texas in their seventh season as members of the Southeastern Conference. They finished the season 14\u201318, 6\u201312 in SEC play to finish in 11th place. They defeated Vanderbilt in the first round of the SEC Tournament before losing to Mississippi State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286522-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas A&M Aggies men's basketball team\nOn March 15, 2019, the school fired head coach Billy Kennedy after eight seasons. On April 3, the school hired Virginia Tech head coach Buzz Williams as the team's next head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286522-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas A&M Aggies men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Aggies finished the 2017\u201318 season 22\u201313, 9\u20139 in SEC play to finish in a tie for seventh place. They lost in the second round of the SEC Tournament to Alabama. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they defeated Providence and North Carolina to advance to the Sweet Sixteen where they lost to Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286522-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas A&M Aggies men's basketball team, Offseason, 2018 recruiting class\nThere were no recruiting class of 2018 for Texas A&M.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286523-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas A&M Aggies women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Texas A&M Aggies women's basketball team represented Texas A&M University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The team's head coach is Gary Blair, in his sixteenth season at Texas A&M. The team played their home games at the Reed Arena in College Station, Texas and was in its seventh season as a member of the Southeastern Conference. They finished the season with a record of 26-8 (12-4 SEC). They advanced to the semifinals of the SEC Women's Tournament where they were upset by Arkansas. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Women's Tournament where they defeated Wright State and Marquette in the first and second rounds, before losing to Notre Dame in the Sweet Sixteen for the 2nd straight year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286523-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas A&M Aggies women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Aggies finished the 2017\u201318 season 26\u201310, 11\u20135 in SEC play to finish in a four-way tie for fourth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the SEC Women's Tournament where they lost to Mississippi State. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament where they defeated Drake and DePaul in the first and second rounds before losing to Notre Dame in the sweet sixteen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286523-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas A&M Aggies women's basketball team, Rankings\n^Coaches' Poll did not release a second poll at the same time as the AP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286524-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas A&M\u2013Corpus Christi Islanders men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Texas A&M\u2013Corpus Christi Islanders men's basketball team represented Texas A&M University\u2013Corpus Christi in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Islanders were led by head coach Willis Wilson, in his eighth season at Texas A&M\u2013Corpus Christi, as members of the Southland Conference. They played all their home games at the American Bank Center, except for two games at the Dugan Wellness Center. They finished the season 14\u201318 overall, 9\u20139 in Southland play to finish in sixth place. As the No. 6 seed in the Southland Tournament, they were defeated in the first round by Central Arkansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286524-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas A&M\u2013Corpus Christi Islanders men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Islanders finished the 2017\u201318 season 11\u201318, 8\u201310 in Southland play to finish in a three-way tie for eighth place. Due to tiebreakers, they received the No. 8 seed in the Southland Tournament where they lost to New Orleans in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 81], "content_span": [82, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286525-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas A&M\u2013Corpus Christi Islanders women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Texas A&M\u2013Corpus Christi Islanders women's basketball team represented Texas A&M University\u2013Corpus Christi in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Islanders were led by seventh-year head coach Royce Chadwick, and played their home games at the American Bank Center and the Dugan Wellness Center, as members of the Southland Conference. They finished the season 17\u201316 overall, 8\u201310 in Southland play to finish in a tie for sixth place. As the No. 6 seed in the Southland Women's Tournament, they defeated New Orleans in the first round, Nicholls in the quarterfinals, Stephen F. Austin in the semifinals, before losing a close game to No. 4 seed Abilene Christian, 68\u201369 in the championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 796]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286525-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas A&M\u2013Corpus Christi Islanders women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Islanders finished the 2017\u201318 season 19\u201312, 11\u20137 in Southland play to finish in a three way tie for fourth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Southland Women's Tournament where they lost to Nicholls State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 83], "content_span": [84, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286525-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas A&M\u2013Corpus Christi Islanders women's basketball team, Media\nVideo streaming of all non-televised home games and audio for all road games is available at GoIslanders.com.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 73], "content_span": [74, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286526-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas Longhorns men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Texas Longhorns men's basketball team represented the University of Texas at Austin in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They were led by fourth-year head coach Shaka Smart and played their home games at the Frank Erwin Center in Austin, Texas as members of the Big 12 Conference. The team won the 2019 National Invitational Tournament with Senior Forward Dylan Osetkowski being named MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286526-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas Longhorns men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Longhorns finished the 2017\u201318 season 19\u201315, 8\u201310 in Big 12 play play to finish in seventh place. They defeated Iowa State in the first round of the Big 12 Tournament before losing to Texas Tech in the quarterfinals. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as the No. 10 seed in the South region where they lost to Nevada in the First Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286526-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas Longhorns men's basketball team, Rankings\n*AP does not release post-NCAA Tournament rankings^Coaches did not release a Week 2 poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286527-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas Longhorns women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Texas Longhorns women's basketball team represented the University of Texas at Austin in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. It was head coach Karen Aston's seventh season at Texas. The Longhorns were members of the Big 12 Conference and played their home games at the Frank Erwin Center. They finished the season 23\u201310, 12\u20136 in Big 12 play to finish in third place. They advanced to the championship game of the Big 12 Women's Basketball Tournament where they lost to Iowa State. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament, as a 10th seed in the Portland Regional, where they lost to 7th seed Indiana in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286527-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas Longhorns women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Longhorns finished the season 28\u20137, 15\u20133 in Big 12 play to finish in second place. They advanced to the championship game of the Big 12 Women's Basketball Tournament where they lost to Baylor. They received an at-large bid of the NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament where they defeated Maine and Arizona State in the first and second rounds before losing to UCLA in the sweet sixteen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286527-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas Longhorns women's basketball team, 2018\u201319 media, Television and radio information\nMost University of Texas home games were shown on the Longhorn Network, with national telecasts on the Big 12 Conference's television partners. On the radio, women's basketball games aired on KTXX-HD4 \"105.3 The Bat\", with select games on KTXX-FM 104.9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 96], "content_span": [97, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286528-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas Southern Tigers basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Texas Southern Tigers basketball team represents Texas Southern University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Tigers, led by first-year head coach Johnny Jones, play their home games at the Health and Physical Education Arena in Houston, Texas as members of the Southwestern Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286528-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas Southern Tigers basketball team, Previous season\nThe Tigers finished the 2017\u201318 season 16\u201320, 12\u20136 in SWAC play to finish in a three-way tie for second place. Due to Grambling State's Academic Progress Rate violations and subsequent postseason ineligibility, they received the No. 3 seed in the SWAC Tournament where they defeated Alabama State, Prairie View A&M and Arkansas\u2013Pine Bluff to become SWAC Tournament champions. They received the SWAC's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament where they defeated North Carolina Central in the First Four before losing in the First Round to Xavier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286528-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas Southern Tigers basketball team, Previous season\nOn June 5, 2018, head coach Mike Davis announced he would step down as head coach to become the head coach at Detroit, which was made official on June 13. On June 25, the school hired Nevada associate head coach and former North Texas and LSU head coach Johnny Jones for the job.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286529-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas State Bobcats men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Texas State Bobcats men's basketball team represents Texas State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bobcats, led by sixth-year head coach Danny Kaspar, play their home games at Strahan Coliseum in San Marcos, Texas as members of the Sun Belt Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286529-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas State Bobcats men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bobcats finished the 2017-2018 season 15\u201318, 7\u201311 in Sun Belt play to finish in a tie for ninth place. As the No. 9 seed in the Sun Belt Tournament, they defeated Coastal Carolina before losing to Louisiana in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286530-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas State Bobcats women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Texas State Bobcats women's basketball team represents Texas State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Bobcats, led by seventh year head coach Zenarae Antoine, play their home games at Strahan Coliseum and were members of the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 14\u201317, 9\u20139 in Sun Belt play to finish in a tie for sixth place. They lost in the second round of the Sun Belt Women's Tournament to South Alabama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286531-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas Tech Lady Raiders basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Texas Tech Lady Raiders basketball team represents Texas Tech University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Lady Raiders are led by first year head coach Marlene Stollings. They play their homes games at United Supermarkets Arena and are members of the Big 12 Conference. They finished the season 14\u201317, 4\u201314 in Big 12 play to finish in a tied for eighth place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the Big 12 Women's Tournament where they lost to Baylor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286531-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas Tech Lady Raiders basketball team, Media, Television & Radio information\nSelect Lady Raiders games will be shown on FSN affiliates throughout the season, including FSSW, FSSW+, and FCS Atlantic, Central, and Pacific. All games will be broadcast on the Lady Raiders Radio Network on either KLZK or KJTV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 86], "content_span": [87, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286532-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas Tech Red Raiders basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Texas Tech Red Raiders basketball team represented Texas Tech University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season as a member of the Big 12 Conference. The Red Raiders were led by third-year coach Chris Beard. They played their home games at the United Supermarkets Arena in Lubbock, Texas. They finished the season 31\u20137, 14\u20134 in Big 12 play to win the Big 12 regular season title with Kansas State. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big 12 Tournament to West Virginia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286532-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas Tech Red Raiders basketball team\nThey received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they defeated Northern Kentucky, Buffalo, Michigan and Gonzaga to advance to their first Final Four in school history. In the Final Four they defeated Michigan State to advanced to the National Championship Game, in which they were defeated by Virginia in overtime. With 31 wins, they finished with most wins in school history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286532-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas Tech Red Raiders basketball team, Previous season\nThey finished the season 27\u201310, 11\u20137 in Big 12 play to finish in a tie for second place. They defeated Baylor in the quarterfinals of the Big 12 Tournament before losing in the semifinals to West Virginia. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they defeated Stephen F. Austin, Florida, and Purdue to advance to the Elite Eight for the first time in school history. In the Elite Eight, they were eliminated by Villanova.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286533-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas\u2013Rio Grande Valley Vaqueros men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Texas\u2013Rio Grande Valley Vaqueros men's basketball team represented the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Vaqueros, led by third-year head coach Lew Hill, played their home games at the UTRGV Fieldhouse, with one home game at Bert Ogden Arena, as members of the Western Athletic Conference. With their win on February 28, the Vaqueros clinched a winning regular season record for the first time since the 2007\u201308 season. They finished the season 20\u201317, 9\u20137 in WAC play to finish in fourth place. They defeated Cal State Bakersfield in the quarterfinals of the WAC Tournament before losing in the semifinals to New Mexico State. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they defeated Grambling State in the first round before losing in the second round to Texas Southern.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 932]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286533-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas\u2013Rio Grande Valley Vaqueros men's basketball team, Previous season\nThey finished the 2017\u201318 season 15\u201318, 6\u20138 in WAC play to finish in fifth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the WAC Tournament to Seattle. They were invited to the College Basketball Invitational where they lost in the first round to New Orleans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 79], "content_span": [80, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286533-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas\u2013Rio Grande Valley Vaqueros men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nThe Vaqueros's schedule was released on August 7, 2018. The team played a two-game foreign exhibition series in Costa Rica in August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 84], "content_span": [85, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286534-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Texas\u2013Rio Grande Valley Vaqueros women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Texas\u2013Rio Grande Valley Vaqueros women's basketball team represented the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. This was head coach Lane Lord's first season along with the third under the UTRGV label. The Vaqueros played their home games at the UTRGV Fieldhouse and were members of the Western Athletic Conference. They finished 18\u201315 overall, 10\u20136 in WAC to finish in third place. They advanced to the championship game of the WAC Women's Tournament where they lost New Mexico State. They received an invitation of the WBI where they lost to North Texas in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286535-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 The Citadel Bulldogs basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 The Citadel Bulldogs basketball team represented The Citadel, The Military College of South Carolina in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bulldogs, led by fourth-year head coach Duggar Baucom, played their home games at McAlister Field House as members of the Southern Conference, as they have since 1936\u201337. The Bulldogs finished the season 12\u201318, 4\u201314 in SoCon play to finish in a three-way tie for eighth place. As the No. 10 seed in the SoCon Tournament, they lost in the first round to Samford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286535-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 The Citadel Bulldogs basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bulldogs finished the 2017\u201318 season 11\u201321, 5\u201313 in SoCon play to finish in eighth place. They defeated VMI in the first round of the SoCon Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to UNC Greensboro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286536-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tigres UANL (women) season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was UANL's second competitive season and second season in the Liga MX Femenil, the top flight of Mexican women's football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286536-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tigres UANL (women) season\nUANL classified to the playoffs on both Apertura 2018 and Clausura 2019 tournaments, reaching the final twice. On the Apertura, Tigres lost the final in penalties against Am\u00e9rica. On the Clausura, UANL won the championship defeating Monterrey in a rematch of the Clausura 2018 final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286537-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tigres UANL season\nThe 2018\u201319 Tigres UANL season was the 51st season in the football club's history and the 21st consecutive season in the top flight of Mexican football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286537-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tigres UANL season, Players, Squad information\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 2 December 2018.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, 54], "content_span": [55, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286538-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Togolese Championnat National\nThe 2018\u201319 Togolese Championnat National is the 49th season of the Togolese Championnat National, the top-tier football league in Togo, since its establishment in 1961 following independence. The season started on 22 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286539-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toledo Rockets men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Toledo Rockets men's basketball team represented the University of Toledo during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Rockets were led by eighth-year head coach Tod Kowalczyk, and played their home games at Savage Arena, as members of the West Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 25\u20138, 13\u20135 in MAC play to be champions of the West Division. They lost in the quarterfinals of the MAC Tournament to Northern Illinois. They received an at-large bid to the National Invitation Tournament where they lost in the first round to Xavier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286539-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toledo Rockets men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Rockets finished the 2017\u201318 season 23\u201311, 13\u20135 in MAC play to win the MAC West division championship. As the No. 2 seed in the MAC Tournament, they defeated Miami and Eastern Michigan before losing to Buffalo in the tournament championship. Despite winning 23 games, they did not participate in a postseason tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286540-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toledo Rockets women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Toledo Rockets women's basketball team represents University of Toledo during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Rockets, led by eleventh year head coach Tricia Cullop, play their home games at Savage Arena, as members of the West Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 21\u201312, 11\u20137 in MAC play to finish in second place in the West Division. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the MAC Women's Tournament where they lost to Miami (OH). They received an at-large bid to the Women's National Invitation Tournament where they defeated Seton Hall in the first round before losing to Northwestern in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286541-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top 14 season\nThe 2018\u201319 Top 14 competition was the 120th season of the French domestic rugby union club competition operated by the Ligue Nationale de Rugby (LNR). Two new teams from the 2017\u201318 Pro D2 season were promoted to Top 14 (Perpignan and Grenoble) in place of the two relegated teams, Oyonnax and Brive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286541-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top 14 season\nOn 27 April 2019, Perpignan were relegated after they lost at home to La Rochelle, condemning the newly promoted side to the drop with three games still to play. It was a truly dreadful season for Perpignan and one of the worst ever by a club in the history of the Top 14 - at one point it even looked like they might go through the whole season without a win but mercifully they finally achieved a victory on 16 February 2019 against Montpellier. They will be joined in 2018\u201319 Rugby Pro D2 by Grenoble, who lost the relegation playoff game, 22-28, to Brive. Brive and Rugby Pro D2 champions, Bayonne, will play in the 2019\u201320 Top 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286541-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top 14 season\nThe Top 14 final was contested between the top two teams in the league stage \u2013 Toulouse (1st) and Clermont (2nd) \u2013 who both won their semi-finals with relative ease. In the end it was Toulouse who triumphed at the Stade de France, seeing out a 24-18 victory to win its 20th title and the clubs first since 2012. It was a well deserved victory for Le Stade, who were head and shoulders the best team in the league, finishing 15 points clear of Clermont and beating them twice out of three meetings (the other result was a draw). Despite missing out on the title, it was a still excellent season for Clermont, who massively improved on 2017-18 when they finished 9th, and also won the 2018\u201319 European Rugby Challenge Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286541-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top 14 season\nIn terms of attendances, the Top 14 once again proved to be the most popular rugby union league in the world, with over 2.7 million supporters watching games that season. This was an average of 14,624 per game, slightly higher than the second best supported league - the 2018\u201319 English Premiership - which had an average of 14,507.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286541-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top 14 season, Competition format\nThe top six teams at the end of the regular season (after all the teams played one another twice, once at home, once away) enter a knockout stage to decide the Champions of France. This consists of three rounds: the teams finishing third to sixth in the table play quarter-finals (hosted by the third and fourth placed teams). The winners then face the top two teams in the semi-finals, with the winners meeting in the final at the Stade de France in Saint-Denis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286541-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top 14 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, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286541-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top 14 season, Table\nIf 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, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286541-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top 14 season, Relegation\nStarting from the 2017\u201318 season forward, only the 14th placed team will be automatically relegated to Pro D2. The 13th placed team will face the runner-up of the Pro D2 play-off, with the winner of that play-off taking up the final place in Top 14 for the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286541-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top 14 season, Relegation playoff\nThe team finishing in 13th place faces the runner-up of the Pro D2, with the winner of this match playing in the 2019\u201320 Top 14 and the loser in the 2019\u201320 Pro D2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286541-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top 14 season, Leading scorers\nNote: Flags to the left of player names indicate national team as has been defined under World Rugby eligibility rules, or primary nationality for players who have not yet earned international senior caps. Players may hold one or more non-WR nationalities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286542-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League\nThe 2018\u201319 Top League was the 16th season of Japan's top-tier domestic rugby union competition, the Top League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286542-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League, Competition rules\nThe sixteen Top League teams were divided into two conferences for the first stage of the competition; each team played the seven other teams in their conferences once.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286542-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League, Competition rules\nAll sixteen teams then progressed to a play-off stage; the top four teams in each conference advanced to the title play-offs and the bottom four teams in each conference to the 9th-place play-offs, which determined the final positions for the season. The title play-offs doubled up as the All-Japan Rugby Football Championship, which would no longer include university teams. The bottom four teams in the 9th-place play-off all played in relegation play-off matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286542-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League, Teams\nThe following teams took part in the 2018 Top League competition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286542-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League, First Stage\u00a0: Red Conference, Standings\nThe current standings for the 2018 Top League First Stage Red Conference are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 59], "content_span": [60, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286542-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League, First Stage\u00a0: Red Conference, Matches\nThe 2018 Top League First Stage Red Conference fixtures are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 57], "content_span": [58, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286542-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League, First Stage\u00a0: White Conference, Standings\nThe current standings for the 2018 Top League First Stage White Conference are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 61], "content_span": [62, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286542-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League, First Stage\u00a0: White Conference, Matches\nThe 2018 Top League First Stage White Conference fixtures are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 59], "content_span": [60, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286542-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League, Second Stage, Title play-offs\nThe four quarter final winners qualified for the semi-finals, while the losers qualified for the 5th-place semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 49], "content_span": [50, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286542-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League, Second Stage, Title play-offs\nThe two semi-final winners qualified for the final, while the losers qualified for the 3rd-place match. The two 5th-place semi-final winners qualified for the 5th-place match, while the losers qualified for the 7th-place match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 49], "content_span": [50, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286542-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League, Second Stage, 9th-place play-offs\nThe four 9th-place quarter final winners qualified for the 9th-place semi-finals, while the losers qualified for the 13th-place semi-finals and the relegation play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 53], "content_span": [54, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286542-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League, Second Stage, 9th-place play-offs\nThe two 9th-place semi-final winners qualified for the 9th-place final, while the losers qualified for the 11th-place match. The two 13th-place semi-final winners qualified for the 13th-place match, while the losers qualified for the 15th-place match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 53], "content_span": [54, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286543-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Top League Cup was the inaugural edition of the Top League Cup, a cup competition for Japan's Top League teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286543-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League Cup, Competition rules\nThe sixteen Top League teams were divided into four pools for the first stage of the competition; each team played the three other teams in their pools once.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286543-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League Cup, Competition rules\nAll sixteen teams then progressed to a play-off stage; the top teams in each pool advanced to the cup play-offs, the second-placed teams in each pool to the 5th-place play-offs, the third-placed teams in each pool to the 9th-place play-offs and the bottom teams in each pool to the 13th-place play-offs, which determined the final positions for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286543-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League Cup, Teams\nThe following teams took part in the 2018\u201319 Top League Cup competition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286543-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League Cup, First Stage\u00a0: Pool A, Standings\nThe current standings for the 2018\u201319 Top League Cup First Stage Pool A are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286543-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League Cup, First Stage\u00a0: Pool A, Matches\nThe 2018\u201319 Top League Cup First Stage Pool A fixtures are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 53], "content_span": [54, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286543-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League Cup, First Stage\u00a0: Pool B, Standings\nThe current standings for the 2018\u201319 Top League Cup First Stage Pool B are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286543-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League Cup, First Stage\u00a0: Pool B, Matches\nThe 2018\u201319 Top League Cup First Stage Pool B fixtures are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 53], "content_span": [54, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286543-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League Cup, First Stage\u00a0: Pool C, Standings\nThe current standings for the 2018\u201319 Top League Cup First Stage Pool C are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286543-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League Cup, First Stage\u00a0: Pool C, Matches\nThe 2018\u201319 Top League Cup First Stage Pool C fixtures are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 53], "content_span": [54, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286543-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League Cup, First Stage\u00a0: Pool D, Standings\nThe current standings for the 2018\u201319 Top League Cup First Stage Pool D are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286543-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League Cup, First Stage\u00a0: Pool D, Matches\nThe 2018\u201319 Top League Cup First Stage Pool D fixtures are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 53], "content_span": [54, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286543-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League Cup, Second Stage, Standings\nThe final standings for the 2018\u201319 Top League Cup were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286543-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League Cup, Second Stage, Standings, Cup Play-offs\nThe two semi-final winners qualified for the final, while the losers qualified for the 3rd-place match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 62], "content_span": [63, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286543-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League Cup, Second Stage, Standings, 5th-place Play-offs\nThe two 5th-place semi-final winners qualified for the 5th-place match, while the losers qualified for the 7th-place match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 68], "content_span": [69, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286543-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League Cup, Second Stage, Standings, 9th-place Play-offs\nThe two 9th-place semi-final winners qualified for the 9th-place match, while the losers qualified for the 11th-place match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 68], "content_span": [69, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286543-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Top League Cup, Second Stage, Standings, 13th-place Play-offs\nThe two 13th-place semi-final winners qualified for the 13th-place match, while the losers qualified for the 15th-place match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 69], "content_span": [70, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286544-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Torino F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Torino Football Club's 108th season of competitive football, 91st season in the top division of Italian football and 74th season in Serie A. The club competed in Serie A and in the Coppa Italia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286544-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Torino F.C. season\nThe season was coach Walter Mazzarri's first full campaign in charge of Torino, after replacing Sini\u0161a Mihajlovi\u0107 following his sacking during the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286545-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Torneo Federal A\nThe 2018\u201319 Argentine Torneo Federal A, is the 6th season of the third tier of the Argentine football league system. The tournament is reserved for teams indirectly affiliated to the Asociaci\u00f3n del F\u00fatbol Argentino (AFA), while teams affiliated to AFA have to play the Primera B Metropolitana, which is the other third tier competition. The champion is promoted to Primera B Nacional. 36 teams are competing in the league, 29 returning from the 2017\u201318 season, 3 teams that were relegated from Primera B Nacional and 4 teams promoted from Federal B. The regular season began on September 8, 2018 and will end in June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286545-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Torneo Federal A, Format, First Stage\nThe teams were divided into four zones with nine teams (a total of 36 teams) in each zone and it was played in a round-robin tournament whereby each team played each one of the other teams two times. The teams placed 1st to 4th from each zone qualified for the Second Stage. The remaining twenty three teams qualify for the Revalida Stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286545-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Torneo Federal A, Format, Championship Stages, Second Stage\nThe teams were divided into two zones with eight teams each and it was played in a round-robin tournament whereby each team played each one of the other teams one time. The teams first and second place and the best third place team from the two zones qualified for the Third Stage or Pentagonal Final. The remaining third place team qualify for the Third Phase of the Revalida Stage. The other ten teams qualify for the Second Phase of the Revalida Stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 67], "content_span": [68, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286545-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Torneo Federal A, Format, Championship Stages, Third Stage\nThe five teams that qualified for the third stage or Pentagonal Final play in a round-robin tournament whereby each team played each one of the other teams one time. The winner was declared champion and automatically promoted to the Primera B Nacional. The other four teams qualify for the Fourth Phase of the Revalida Stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 66], "content_span": [67, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286545-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Torneo Federal A, Format, Revalida Stages\nThe Revalida Stage is divided in several phases: First, the twenty teams that did not qualify for the Championship Stages were divided into the same four zones of the First Stage and it was played in a round-robin tournament whereby each team played each one of the other teams two times. The first place team of each zone qualified for the Second Phase. The second phase is played between the four teams that qualified from the First Phase and the ten teams that qualified from the Second Stage of the Championship Stage. The seven winners qualify for the Third Phase. The Third Phase is played between the seven teams that qualified from the Second Phase and the team that qualified from the Second Stage of the Championship Stage. The four winners qualify for the Fourth Phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 830]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286545-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Torneo Federal A, Format, Revalida Stages\nThe Fourth Phase is played between the four teams that qualified from the Third Phase and the four teams that qualified from the Third Stage of the Championship Stage. The four winners qualify for the Fifth Phase. The Fifth and Sixth Phase is played between the remaining teams and aims to get the Second promotion to the Primera B Nacional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286545-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Torneo Federal A, Format, Relegation\nAfter the First Phase of the Revalida Stage a table was drawn up with the average of points obtained in the First Stage and the First Phase of the Revalida Stage. It is determined by dividing the points by the number of games played and the bottom team of each four zones was relegated to the Torneo Regional Federal Amateur. Following the Revalida Stage, another table was drawn up with the remaining teams that played the Revalida Stage and the bottom four teams were relegated to the Torneo Regional Federal Amateur, giving a total of eight teams relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286545-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Torneo Federal A, Club Information, Zone A\n1 Play their home games at Estadio Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda Minella.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286546-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toronto Maple Leafs season\nThe 2018\u201319 Toronto Maple Leafs season was the 102nd season for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on November 22, 1917. The Maple Leafs forward group changed significantly before the season, losing team veterans Tyler Bozak, James van Riemsdyk and Leo Komarov while adding all-star centre John Tavares in free agency, which many publications called one of the biggest signings in NHL history. On April 1, 2019, the Maple Leafs clinched a playoff spot after a 2\u20131 win over the New York Islanders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286546-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toronto Maple Leafs season\nThe Maple Leafs faced the Boston Bruins in the first round of the playoffs for the second straight year, where they lost in seven games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286546-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toronto Maple Leafs 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-00286546-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toronto Maple Leafs season, Schedule and results, Playoffs\nThe Maple Leafs faced the Boston Bruins in the First Round of the playoffs, and were defeated in seven games. They played against each other in the 2018 Stanley Cup playoffs, where the Maple Leafs lost to the Bruins in the First Round in seven games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286546-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toronto Maple Leafs season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n(a) Player currently playing for the minor league affiliate Toronto Marlies of the AHL (b) Player is no longer with the Maple Leafs organization (c) Player previously played with another team before being acquired by TorontoBold/italics denotes franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286546-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toronto Maple Leafs season, Transactions\nThe Maple Leafs have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286546-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toronto Maple Leafs season, Draft picks\nBelow are the Toronto Maple Leafs' selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas. The Leafs drafted a total of nine players. They held on to only three (rounds 4, 5, 7) of their own seven picks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286546-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toronto Maple Leafs season, Draft picks\nOn the first day of the draft they exchanged their first-round pick for a lower first-round pick held by the St. Louis Blues but did receive the Blues' third-round pick as well, their second round pick had been traded to the Montreal Canadiens in the Tomas Plekanec deal in February 2018, their third-round pick was given to the New Jersey Devils as compensation for signing general manager Lou Lamoriello in 2015, and their sixth-round pick had been traded to the Vegas Golden Knights in the Calvin Pickard deal in October 2017. Through various trades they acquired an additional six picks, including the first-round pick originally held by St. Louis mentioned above.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286547-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toronto Raptors season\nThe 2018\u201319 Toronto Raptors season was the 24th season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA). During the off-season, the Raptors acquired small forward Kawhi Leonard from the San Antonio Spurs after trading franchise star DeMar DeRozan. The season ended with the franchise's first NBA Finals appearance and first NBA championship, ending the City of Toronto's, Province of Ontario's, and Canada's 26-year championship drought if not counting Toronto FC\u2019s 2017 MLS championship or Toronto Argonauts multiple Grey Cup Championships. The Raptors had the fifth best team defensive rating in the NBA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286547-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toronto Raptors season\nOn May 11, 2018, the Raptors fired Dwane Casey after the team was swept by the Cleveland Cavaliers for the second consecutive time in the postseason. On June 14, the Raptors promoted assistant coach Nick Nurse as their head coach. The Raptors played their home games at newly renamed Scotiabank Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286547-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toronto Raptors season\nFor the first time since 2008\u201309, DeMar DeRozan (who spent his first nine seasons in the NBA with the Raptors) did not play for the Raptors, as he was traded, along with Jakob Poeltl and a protected 2019 first-round draft pick, to the San Antonio Spurs for Kawhi Leonard and Danny Green. Later, on February 7, 2019, at the trade deadline, the Memphis Grizzlies traded Marc Gasol to the Raptors for Jonas Valan\u010di\u016bnas, Delon Wright and C. J. Miles. The Raptors later signed Jeremy Lin. They finished the regular season with a 58\u201324 record, one less win than their franchise best the previous season, second best in the league for the second consecutive season, earning the second seed in the Eastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286547-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toronto Raptors season\nIn the playoffs, the Raptors defeated the Orlando Magic in five games in the first round. They edged the Philadelphia 76ers in seven games in the semifinals to make their first Eastern Conference Finals appearance since 2016, with Kawhi Leonard's buzzer-beater over Joel Embiid, giving the Raptors a 92\u201390 victory in the series-clinching game 7. The series was a rematch of the 2001 Eastern Conference Semifinals, where the Allen Iverson-led 76ers defeated the Vince Carter-led Raptors in seven games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286547-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toronto Raptors season\nThe Raptors defeated the Milwaukee Bucks in the Eastern Conference Finals 4\u20132, winning the last four games of the series after being down 0\u20132 to become the sixth team to overcome that deficit. They won the Finals against the two-time defending NBA champion Golden State Warriors, also the first NBA Finals series that was played outside the United States. They beat the Warriors 4\u20132, becoming the first non-US team to win the NBA title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286547-0002-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toronto Raptors season\nThe Raptors were the first Atlantic Division team since the 2007\u201308 Boston Celtics and the first Eastern Conference team since the 2015\u201316 Cleveland Cavaliers to win the championship. Prior to the Raptors victory, the Atlantic Division had had the second longest title drought in the league. The Northwest Division will hold the record for having the longest championship drought of all divisions in the league, with the 1978\u201379 Seattle Supersonics being the last champion. This is also Toronto's first major sports championship since the Toronto Blue Jays won the 1993 World Series when not counting Toronto FC\u2019s 2017 MLS championship or Toronto Argonauts multiple Grey Cup Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286547-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toronto Raptors season, Draft\nThe Raptors did not have a pick in the 2018 NBA draft. They had previously traded their selections to the Brooklyn Nets, who ended up drafting D\u017eanan Musa, and to the Phoenix Suns, who ended up drafting George King.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286547-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toronto Raptors season, Player statistics, Regular season\nAfter all games. \u2021Waived during the season\u2020Traded during the season\u2260Acquired during the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286548-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Total League season\nThe 2018\u201319 Total League season, is the 66th season of the first division of the professional basketball in Luxembourg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286548-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Total League season, Competition format\nThe regular season consisted in a double-legged round robin tournament where the six first qualified teams advanced to the group for the title, while the other four teams played for avoiding relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286548-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Total League season, Competition format\nIn the second stage, all wins from the regular season count for the standings, while the points are reset. The four first qualified teams in the group for the title, advanced to the playoffs, played in a format of best-of-three-games series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286548-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Total League season, Competition format\nTeams of the relegation group play twice against themselves and twice against the four first qualified teams of the first stage of the Nationale 2. The two worst teams would be relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286548-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Total League season, Playoffs\nQuarterfinals are played in a best-of-three format, while semifinals and finals in a best-of-five (1-1-1-1-1) format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286549-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toto Cup Al\nThe 2018\u201319 Toto Cup Al is the 34th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 13th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286549-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toto Cup Al, Format changes\nThe four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Haifa) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of the group winners will qualify to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286549-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toto Cup Al, Format changes\nHapoel Be'er Sheva and Hapoel Haifa will play (in the 2018 Israel Super Cup match) for a place in one of the semi-finals (meeting the group winner with the fewest points accumulated), while Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem will play for a place in the other semi-final (meeting the group winner with the most points accumulated). All the clubs will participate in classification play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286549-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toto Cup Al, Group stage\nGroups were allocated according to geographic distribution of the clubs, with the northern clubs allocated to Group A, and the southern clubs allocated to Group B. Each club will play the other clubs once.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286549-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toto Cup Al, Group stage\nThe matches are scheduled to start on 28 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286550-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toto Cup Leumit\nThe 2018\u201319 Toto Cup Leumit was the 29th season of the second tier League Cup (as a separate competition) since its introduction. It was divided into two stages. First, sixteen Liga Leumit teams were divided into four regionalized groups, with the winners advancing to the semi-finals, while the rest of the clubs were scheduled to play classification play-offs. However, the classification matches were only partly played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286550-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toto Cup Leumit\nIn the final, played on 25 December 2018, Hapoel Katamon Jerusalem defeated Hapoel Marmorek 1\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286550-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toto Cup Leumit, Group stage\nGroups were allocated according to geographic distribution of the clubs. The groups were announced by the IFA on 19 June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286551-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tottenham Hotspur F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Tottenham Hotspur's 27th season in the Premier League and 41st successive season in the top division of the English football league system. Along with the Premier League, the club competed in the Champions League. They finished fourth in the Premier League, gaining qualification for the 2019/20 UEFA Champions League. In the FA Cup Spurs were eliminated by Crystal Palace in the fourth round. Tottenham made it to the semi-finals of the EFL Cup with a face-off against Chelsea. After two legs the aggregate score was 2\u20132, however Spurs were eliminated 4-2 on penalties. For the first time in the club's history, they played in the final of the Champions League. In an all English affair Tottenham lost 2\u20130 to Liverpool at the Wanda Metropolitano in Madrid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 818]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286551-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tottenham Hotspur F.C. season, Friendlies, Pre-season\nTottenham took part in the 2018 International Champions Cup with scheduled games against A.C. Milan, Barcelona and Roma. After the three games played by all teams taking part Tottenham was declared champions having accumulated seven points and the best goal difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286551-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tottenham Hotspur F.C. season, Competitions, Premier League, Fixtures\nOn 14 June 2018, the Premier League fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced. Owing to delays in the completion of the club's new stadium, the first fourteen home Premier League games of the season were played at Wembley. Some fixtures were updated after Sky Sports announced their live TV coverage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 77], "content_span": [78, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286551-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tottenham Hotspur F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nTottenham entered the competition in the third round and were handed a tie away to either Tranmere Rovers or Southport. Tranmere Rovers won the replay 2\u20130 claiming the home draw to play Spurs. The fourth round draw was made live on BBC by Robbie Keane and Carl Ikeme from Wolverhampton on 7 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286551-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tottenham Hotspur F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nThe third round draw was made on 30 August 2018 by David Seaman and Joleon Lescott. Due to Wembley Stadium not being available, and their new stadium not being complete, the third-round tie against Watford took place at Stadium MK, the home of Milton Keynes Dons. The fourth round draw was made live on Quest by Rachel Yankey and Rachel Riley on 29 September. The draw for the quarter-final was made live on Sky Sports by Jamie Redknapp and Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink on 31 October. The semi-final draw was made live on Sky Sports by Piers Morgan and Peter Crouch on 19 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286551-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286551-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286552-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toulouse FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 Toulouse FC season is the 48th professional season of the club since its creation in 1970.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286552-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toulouse 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286552-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286553-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tour de Ski\nThe 2018\u201319 Tour de Ski was the 13th edition of the Tour de Ski and part of the 2018\u201319 FIS Cross-Country World Cup. The World Cup stage event began in Toblach, Italy on 29 December 2018 and concluded with the Final Climb stage in Val di Fiemme, Italy, on 6 January 2019. The tour was the first tour starting in Toblach. The overall tours were won for the first time by Ingvild Flugstad \u00d8stberg (Norway) and Johannes H\u00f8sflot Kl\u00e6bo (Norway).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286553-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tour de Ski\nThe opening stage was won by Stina Nilsson of Sweden and Johannes H\u00f8sflot Kl\u00e6bo of Norway. Natalia Nepryaeva won the ladies' second stage and took over the lead in the overall standings. The men's second stage was won by Sergey Ustiugov, with fellow Russian Alexander Bolshunov taking over the leader's blue bib. The third stage was the second and last sprint race of the tour, again won by Nilsson and Kl\u00e6bo. Kl\u00e6bo's second victory of his Tour de Ski debut put him in the blue bib which he held for the rest of the tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286553-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tour de Ski\nJessie Diggins of USA skied the fourth stage in the blue bib, but four consecutive wins on the four last stages for Norwegian Ingvild Flugstad \u00d8stberg made her the overall winner of the tour, with a record winning margin of 2 minutes 42 seconds. Johannes H\u00f8sflot Kl\u00e6bo won four of the seven stages and won the overall Tour de Ski on his first attempt. 22 years and 76 days old, Kl\u00e6bo became the youngest ever winner of the overall standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286553-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tour de Ski, Overall leadership\nTwo main individual competitions were contested in the 2018\u201319 Tour de Ski, as well as a team competition. The most important was the overall standings, calculated by adding each rider's finishing times on each stage. The skiers collect bonus seconds due to their finishing positions in every stage apart from the Final Climb. In the sprint stages, the winners were awarded 60 bonus seconds, while on distance stages the top three finishers would get 15, 10 and 5 seconds respectively. In mass start races, time bonuses were awarded to the ten first skiers to cross the intermediate sprint points. The skier with the lowest cumulative time would be the overall winner of the Tour de Ski. The skier leading the overall standings would wear a blue bib.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286553-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tour de Ski, Overall leadership\nThe second competition was the sprint standings. The skiers who received the highest number of bonus seconds during the Tour would win the sprint standings. The bonus seconds available for each stage finish were determined by the stage's type. The leader was identified by a grey bib.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286553-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tour de Ski, Overall leadership\nThe final competition was a team competition. This was calculated using the finishing times of the best two skiers of both genders per team on each stage; the leading team was the team with the lowest cumulative time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286553-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tour de Ski, Overall leadership\nA total of CHF 560,000, both genders included, was awarded in cash prizes in the race. The overall winners of the Tour de Ski received CHF 55,000, with the second and third placed skiers getting CHF 40,000 and CHF 27,500 respectively. All finishers in the top 20 were awarded money. The holders of the overall and sprint standings would benefit on each stage they led; the final winners of the sprint standings would be given CHF 6,000. CHF 3,000 was given to the winners of each stage of the race, with smaller amounts given to places 2 and 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286553-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tour de Ski, Stages, Stage 7\nThe race for \"Fastest of the Day\" counts for 2018\u201319 FIS Cross-Country World Cup points. No bonus seconds were awarded on this stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286554-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Towson Tigers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Towson Tigers men's basketball team represented Towson University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Tigers, led by eighth-year head coach Pat Skerry, played their home games at the SECU Arena in Towson, Maryland as members of the Colonial Athletic Association. They finished the season 10\u201322 overall, 6\u201312 during CAA play to finish in a tie for eighth place. Awarded the No. 9 seed in the CAA Tournament, they lost to No. 8 seed James Madison 73\u201374 in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286554-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Towson Tigers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Tigers finished the 2017\u201318 season 18\u201314, 8\u201310 in CAA play to finish in fifth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the CAA Tournament to William & Mary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286555-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Towson Tigers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Towson Tigers women's basketball team represented Towson University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Tigers, led by second year head coach Diane Richardson, played their home games at SECU Arena and were members of the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA). They finished the season 20\u201313, 11\u20137 CAA play to finish in a 3 way tie for third place. Towson won the CAA conference tournament championship game over Drexel, 53\u201349 to send Towson to their first ever NCAA tournament. They lost in the first round of the NCAA Women's Tournament to Connecticut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286556-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toyota Finance 86 Championship\nThe 2018\u20132019 Toyota Finance 86 Championship is the sixth running of the Toyota Finance 86 Championship. The championship began on 2 November 2018 at Pukekohe Park Raceway and will conclude on 10 March 2019 at Hampton Downs Motorsport Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286556-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toyota Finance 86 Championship, Race calendar and results\nAll rounds are to be held in New Zealand. The first round in Pukekohe Park Raceway will be held in support of the Supercars Championship. Rounds 3, 4 and 5 are to be held with the Toyota Racing Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286556-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Toyota Finance 86 Championship, Championship standings\nIn order for a driver to score championship points, they had to complete at least 75% of the race winner's distance, and be running at the finish. All races counted towards the final championship standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286557-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Trabzonspor season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Trabzonspor's 51st year in existence. In addition to the domestic league, the club participated in the Turkish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286558-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tractor S.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the Tractor Sports Club\u2019s 11th season in the Iran Pro League, and their 10th consecutive season in the top division of Iranian football. They will also be competed in the Hazfi Cup, and 48th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286559-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tranmere Rovers F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Tranmere Rovers' 135th season of existence and their first back in EFL League Two following promotion from the 2017\u201318 National League. Along with competing in League Two, the club participated in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286559-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tranmere Rovers F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286559-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tranmere Rovers F.C. season, Competitions, Friendlies\nTranmere Rovers announced friendlies with Dunfermline Athletic, Liverpool, Wigan Athletic, Warrington Town, Fleetwood Town, Chorley and Rochdale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286559-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tranmere Rovers F.C. season, Competitions, EFL League Two, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League Two fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 74], "content_span": [75, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286559-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tranmere Rovers F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October. The draw for the second round was made live on BBC and BT by Mark Schwarzer and Glenn Murray on 12 November. The third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286559-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tranmere Rovers F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286559-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tranmere Rovers F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286560-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Troy Trojans men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Troy Trojans men's basketball team represents Troy University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Trojans, led by sixth-year head coach Phil Cunningham, play their home games at Trojan Arena in Troy, Alabama as members of the Sun Belt Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286560-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Troy Trojans men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Trojans finished the 2017\u201318 season 16\u201317, 9\u20139 in Sun Belt play to finish in a three-way tie for fifth place. They defeated South Alabama in the first round of the Sun Belt Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Georgia State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286561-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Troy Trojans women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Troy Trojans women's basketball team represents Troy University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Trojans, led by sixth year head coach Chanda Rigby, play their home games at Trojan Arena and were members of the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 22\u20139, 13\u20135 in Sun Belt play to finish in third place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Sun Belt Tournament to South Alabama. They received an at-large bid to the WNIT where they lost to UAB in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286561-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Troy Trojans women's basketball team, Preseason, Sun Belt coaches poll\nOn October 24, 2018, the Sun Belt released their preseason coaches poll with the Trojans predicted to finish in second place in the conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 78], "content_span": [79, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286562-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tulane Green Wave men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Tulane Green Wave men's basketball team represented Tulane University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Green Wave, led by third-year head coach Mike Dunleavy Sr., played their home games at Devlin Fieldhouse in New Orleans, Louisiana as fifth-year members of the American Athletic Conference. They finished the season 4\u201327, 0\u201318 in AAC play to finish in 12th place. They lost in the first round of the AAC Tournament to Memphis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286562-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tulane Green Wave men's basketball team\nOn March 16, 2019, Tulane announced Dunleavy would not return for the 2019\u201320 season. He finished 24\u201369 in three seasons at Tulane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286562-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tulane Green Wave men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Green Wave 14\u201317, 5\u201313 in AAC play to finish in 10th place. They lost in the first round of the AAC Tournament to Temple.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286563-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tulane Green Wave women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Tulane Green Wave women's basketball team will represent Tulane University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Green Wave, led by twenty-fifth year head coach Lisa Stockton, play their home games at Devlin Fieldhouse and were fifth year members of the American Athletic Conference. They finished the season 15\u201315, 5\u201311 in AAC play to finish in a 4 way tie for ninth place. They lost in first round of the American Athletic Women's Tournament to South Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286563-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tulane Green Wave women's basketball team, Media\nAll Green Wave games will be broadcast on WRBH 88.3 FM. A video stream for all home games will be on , ESPN3, or . Road games will typically be streamed on the opponents website, though conference road games could also appear on ESPN3 or AAC Digital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 56], "content_span": [57, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286564-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tulsa Golden Hurricane men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Tulsa Golden Hurricane men's basketball team represented the University of Tulsa during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Golden Hurricane, led by fifth-year head coach Frank Haith, played their home games at the Reynolds Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma as members of the American Athletic Conference. They finished the season 18\u201314, 8\u201310 in AAC play to finish in a tie for seventh place. They lost in the first round of the AAC Tournament to SMU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286564-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tulsa Golden Hurricane men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Golden Hurricane finished the 2017\u201318 season 19\u201312, 12\u20136 in AAC play to finish in fourth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the AAC Tournament to Memphis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286565-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tulsa Golden Hurricane women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Tulsa Golden Hurricane women's basketball team will represent the University of Tulsa during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The season marks the fifth season for the Golden Hurricane as members of the American Athletic Conference. The Golden Hurricane, led by eighth year head coach Matilda Mossman, plays their home games at the Reynolds Center. They finished the season 13\u201318, 6\u201310 in AAC play to finish in a tie for seventh place. They defeated Wichita State in the first round before losing to UCF in the quarterfinals of the American Athletic Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286565-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tulsa Golden Hurricane women's basketball team, Media\nAll Golden Hurricane games will be broadcast on KTGX CHROME 95.3 FM and KWTU 88.7 FM HD3. The audio broadcast can also be heard on . A video stream for all home games will be on Hurricane Vision, ESPN3, or . Road games will typically be streamed on the opponents website, though conference road games could also appear on ESPN3 or AAC Digital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 61], "content_span": [62, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286566-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tunisian Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Tunisian Cup (Coupe de Tunisie) or Beji Caid Essebsi Cup is the 87th season of the football cup competition of Tunisia. The competition is organized by the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Tunisienne de Football (FTF) and open to all clubs in Tunisia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286567-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tunisian Ligue Professionnelle 1\nThe 2018\u201319 Tunisian Ligue Professionnelle 1 (Tunisian Professional League) season was the 93rd season of top-tier football in Tunisia. The defending champions from the previous season are Esp\u00e9rance de Tunis. The competition began on 18 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286568-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tunisian Ligue Professionnelle 2\nThe 2018\u201319 Tunisian Ligue Professionnelle 2 (Tunisian Professional League) is the 64th season since Tunisia's independence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286569-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Turkish Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Turkish Cup (Turkish: T\u00fcrkiye Kupas\u0131) was the 57th season of the tournament. Ziraat Bankas\u0131 was the sponsor of the tournament, thus the sponsored name was Ziraat Turkish Cup. The winners will earn a berth in the group stage of the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League, and also qualify for the 2019 Turkish Super Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286569-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Turkish Cup, First round\nAL: Regional Amateur League. Ranks are determined by the guidelines in 2018\u201319 Turkish Cup Regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286569-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Turkish Cup, Second round\n3L: Third League, AL: Regional Amateur League. Ranks are determined by the guidelines in 2018\u201319 Turkish Cup Regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286569-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Turkish Cup, Third round\nSL: Super League, 1L: First League, 2L: Second League, 3L: Third League, AL: Regional Amateur League. Ranks are determined by the guidelines in 2018\u201319 Turkish Cup Regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286569-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Turkish Cup, Fourth round\nSL: Super League, 1L: First League, 2L: Second League, 3L: Third League, AL: Regional Amateur League. Ranks are determined by the guidelines in 2018\u201319 Turkish Cup Regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286569-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Turkish Cup, Fifth round\nSL: Super League, 1L: First League, 2L: Second League, 3L: Third League. Ranks are determined by the guidelines in 2018\u201319 Turkish Cup Regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286569-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Turkish Cup, Round of 16\nSL: Super League, 1L: First League, 2L: Second League. Ranks are determined by the guidelines in 2018\u201319 Turkish Cup Regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286570-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Turkish Women's Basketball League\nThe 2018\u201319 Turkish Women's Basketball League (also known as Turkish Women's Basketball Super League) (Turkish: Kad\u0131nlar Basketbol S\u00fcper Ligi, KBSL) was the 39th edition of the top-flight professional women's basketball league in Turkey. Fenerbah\u00e7e are the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286571-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Turkish Women's First Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 season of the Turkish Women's First Football League is the 23rd season of Turkey's premier women's football league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286571-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Turkish Women's First Football League\nThe league season started with the first week matches on 21 October 2018. The regular season concluded with the 18th week matches on 28 April. 2019. Ten teams competed with two promoted teams, ALG Spor of Gaziantep and Hakkarig\u00fcc\u00fc Spor from Hakkari, which replace the relegated teams 1207 Antalyaspor and \u0130lkad\u0131m Belediyesi Yabanc\u0131lar Pazar\u0131 Spor from Samsun. Four teams from Istanbul continued to take part in the 2018\u201319 season. As the teams Be\u015fikta\u015f J.K. and ALG Spor finished the regular season equal on points, a play-off match was scheduled at aneutral venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286571-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Turkish Women's First Football League\nBe\u015fikta\u015f J.K. became champion after defeating ALG Spor in the play-off match with 1\u20130. According to the reglement change by the Turkish Football Federation on 1 October 2019, the number of teams in the Women's First League was increased from ten to twelve. Contrary to former reglement, no teams should relegate in the upcoming season. However, Trabzon \u0130O relegated as they did not show up in the entire season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286572-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Turkish Women's Volleyball League\nThe 2018\u201319 Turkish Women's Volleyball League is the 36th edition of the top-flight professional women's volleyball league in Turkey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286572-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Turkish Women's Volleyball League, Play-offs\nThe eight teams that finished in the places 1 to 8 in the Regular season, compete in the Play-off (1-8).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 52], "content_span": [53, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286573-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tweede Divisie\nThe 2018\u201319 Tweede Divisie season is the third edition of the Dutch third tier since on hiatus from 1970-71 season and the 18th edition using Tweede Divisie name. Thirteen teams competed from the last season along with one relegated team from the Eerste Divisie and four promoted teams from the Derde Divisie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286573-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tweede Divisie\nAt an extraordinary KNVB federation meeting on 2 October 2017, representatives of the amateur and professional football reached an agreement about the route to be taken to renew the football pyramid. Part of this agreement was that no promotion/relegation will take place between the Eerste and Tweede Divisie for the current season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286573-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tweede Divisie\nAt another extraordinary KNVB federation meeting on 7 June 2018, an agreement was reached about the number of reserves teams allowed in each division as of season 2019\u201320. For the Tweede Divisie it will be 2 teams. Since there are currently 3 reserve teams (Jong Almere, Jong Sparta and Jong Vitesse) in the Tweede Divisie, the reserve team which ends lowest of the three will relegate to the Derde Divisie. In case a reserve team becomes champion in one of the Derde Divisies, the second best reserve team in the Tweede divisie will relegate as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286573-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Tweede Divisie\nOn 18 December 2018 FC Lienden withdrew from the competition due to financial difficulties. On 6 January 2019 FC Lienden succeeded in making a restart with the help of their manager Hans van de Haar. The club found a new sponsor and will start working together with two football academies to complement the first team for the second half of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286574-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Twenty20 Blaze\nThe 2018\u201319 Twenty20 Blaze was the fifth season of the women's Twenty20 cricket competition played in the West Indies. It ran from March to April 2019, with 6 teams taking part and all matches taking place at Providence Stadium in Guyana. Barbados won the tournament, winning all five of their matches to claim their second T20 title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286574-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Twenty20 Blaze, Competition format\nTeams played in a round-robin in a group of six, therefore playing 5 matches overall. Matches were played using a Twenty20 format. The top team in the group were crowned the Champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286574-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Twenty20 Blaze, 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286575-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 U.C. Sampdoria season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Unione Calcio Sampdoria's 62nd season in Serie A, and their 7th consecutive season in the top-flight. The club competed in Serie A and in the Coppa Italia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286575-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 U.C. Sampdoria season\nThe season was the third in charge for coach Marco Giampaolo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286576-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Unione Sportiva Citt\u00e0 di Palermo's 2nd consecutive season in Serie B, the second-highest division of Italian football. By the end of the 2018\u201319 Serie B, Palermo were originally the third-placed team with 63 points, but were relegated to Serie D because the club failed to register in Serie B for financial issues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286576-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Players, Squad information\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 1 March 2019.Appearances and goals are counted for domestic leagues (Serie A and Serie B) and national cup (Coppa Italia) and correct as of 11 May 2019.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, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286577-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 U.S. Lecce season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is U.S. Lecce's first season in Serie B since 2010 after their relegation from Serie A to Lega Pro at the end of the 2011\u201312 season. The club competes in Serie B and the Coppa Italia. [ jago][seun]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286577-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 U.S. Lecce season, Players\nPlayers in italics left the club during the season. Players with a * joined the club during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286577-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 U.S. Lecce 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-00286577-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 U.S. Lecce season, Players\n** Left the club (shirt no. 9) on loan in August 2019, but came back from loan in January 2019. * ** from the Primavera team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286577-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 U.S. Lecce 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286578-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 U.S. Sassuolo Calcio season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Unione Sportiva Sassuolo Calcio's sixth consecutive season in the top-flight of Italian football. The club competed in Serie A and the Coppa Italia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286578-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 U.S. Sassuolo Calcio season\nCoach Giuseppe Iachini left the club on 5 June; he was replaced by former Palermo and Benevento coach Roberto De Zerbi on 13 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286579-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 U.S. Virgin Islands Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 U.S. Virgin Islands Premier League was the first season of the U.S. Virgin Islands Premier League, and the 15th season of the U.S. Virgin Islands Soccer Championship, the top division soccer competition in the United States Virgin Islands. The season began on 14 October 2018 and ended on 17 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286579-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 U.S. Virgin Islands Premier League, Teams\nFor the first time, teams from the two main islands, Saint Croix and Saint Thomas, competed together in the same league (previously, they played in their own leagues in St. Croix and St. Thomas respectively before the top teams of the two leagues advanced to the playoffs). A total of eight teams, with four teams from each island, competed in the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286579-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 U.S. Virgin Islands Premier League, Teams\nTeams played those of same island twice and of other island once in the regular season. The top four teams, regardless of island, advanced to the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286580-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UAB Blazers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UAB Blazers basketball team represented the University of Alabama at Birmingham during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Blazers, led by third-year head coach Robert Ehsan, played their home games at the Bartow Arena as members of Conference USA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286580-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UAB Blazers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Blazers finished the 2017\u201318 season 20\u201313, 10\u20138 C-USA play to finish in sixth place. They defeated Florida Atlantic in the first round of the C-USA Tournament before losing to Western Kentucky. Despite winning 20 games, they did not participate in a postseason tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286581-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UAB Blazers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UAB Blazers women's basketball team represents the University of Alabama at Birmingham during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Blazers, led by sixth year head coach Randy Norton, play their home games at the Bartow Arena and are members of Conference USA. They finished the season 26\u20137, 12\u20134 in C-USA play to finish in second place. They advanced to the semifinals of the C-USA Women's Tournament where they lost to Middle Tennessee. They received an automatic bid to the Women's National Invitation Tournament where they defeated Troy in the first round before losing to Arkansas in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286582-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UAE Division 1\n2018\u201319 UAE Division one (stylized as UAE Division 1) was the 43rd Division one season. Team changes for the season include Al Taawon who joined the league to replace Ras Al Khaimah who withdrew due to financial reasons, while Hatta was relegated from the UAE Pro League last year and the top 3 teams of last year's season (Baniyas, Kalba and Fujairah), were all promoted to the Pro League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286582-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UAE Division 1, 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, 42], "content_span": [43, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286583-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UAE League Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 UAE League Cup or 2018\u201319 Arabian Gulf Cup for sponsorship reasons, was the 11th season of the UAE League Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286583-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UAE League Cup\nAl Wahda were the defending champions, after defeating Al Wasl 2\u20131 in the finals of 2017\u201318 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286583-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UAE League Cup\nShabab Al Ahli won their fourth UAE League Cup, first since renaming to their current name after defeating the defending champions, Al Wahda 3\u20131 in the finals in the extra-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286584-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UAE President's Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 UAE President's Cup was the 43rd edition of the UAE President's Cup, a football cup competition of the United Arab Emirates. The winner qualified for the 2020 AFC Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286584-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UAE President's Cup, Preliminary round\nIn the preliminary round, ten teams were divided into two groups of five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286585-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UAE Pro League\nThe 2018\u201319 UAE Pro League was the 45th edition with Al Ain being the defending champions after winning their 13th title last year. Both Baniyas and Kalba returned to the pro league after getting relegated back at 2017. After losing Al Shabab and Dubai last season the league has been reduced to 12 teams. This year they needed to get back to 14 teams so they held a relegation play off between bottom two teams of last year and the 3rd and 4th placed teams of the 2nd division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286585-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 UAE Pro League\nSharjah set a record of the longest unbeaten run in a UAE Pro League season for 23 games before losing to Al Wasl 3\u20132. On 15 May 2019, Sharjah won their first title since 1996 after beating Al Wahda 3\u20132, this is the first time a team outside of Dubai and Abu Dhabi has won the league since the 1996. On the 26 May, Emirates and Dibba Al Fujairah were relegated after a fixed match between Shabab Al Ahli and Fujairah favoured Fujairah and got them out of relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286585-0000-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 UAE Pro League\nThe Emirates demanded that the UAEFA investigate on the match between Shabab Al Ahli and Fujairah, questioning the legitimacy of the two penalties that was rewarded to Fujairah and the two goals that was disallowed for Shabab Al Ahli. However the UAE court has later rejected their complaint and the team got relegated", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286585-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UAE Pro League, Stadia and locations\n* = Dibba Al Fujairah Stadium doesn't fit UAE Pro League requirements, therefore Dibba Al-Fujairah shares Fujairah Club Stadium with Fujairah club", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286585-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UAE Pro League, 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, 42], "content_span": [43, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286585-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UAE Pro League, Personnel and kits, Foreign players\nAll teams could register as many foreign players as they want, but could only use four on the field each game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 59], "content_span": [60, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286586-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UC Davis Aggies men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UC Davis Aggies men's basketball team represented the University of California, Davis in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Aggies were led by eighth-year head coach Jim Les and competed at The Pavilion. UC Davis was a member of the Big West Conference, and participated in their 12th consecutive season in that league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286586-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UC Davis Aggies men's basketball team, Before the season\nThe Aggies finished 22\u201311 overall, and 12\u20134 in the conference. During the season, the Aggies participated in the Las Vegas Classic under the visitors division, which was held in San Francisco, California, Reno, Nevada, and Las Vegas, Nevada. The Aggies finished in 2nd place by defeating Lamar but losing to Radford. Prior to the tournament, UC Davis lost at San Francisco and at Nevada as friendly matches. UC Davis also defeated rival Sacramento State in the in Sacramento, California.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286586-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 UC Davis Aggies men's basketball team, Before the season\nIn the postseason, UC Davis defeated UC Riverside but lost to Cal State Fullerton in the semifinals of the 2018 Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament in Anaheim, California. In addition, the Aggies participated in the 2018 National Invitation Tournament, where they lost to Utah in Salt Lake City, Utah in the First Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286587-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UC Davis Aggies women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UC Davis Aggies women's basketball team represents University of California, Davis during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Aggies, led by ninth year head coach Jennifer Gross, play their home games at The Pavilion as members of the Big West Conference. They finished the season 25\u20137, 15\u20131 in Big West play to win the Big West Regular Season. They also won the Big West Women's Tournament and earned an automatic trip to the NCAA Women's Tournament for the first time since 2011. They lost to Stanford in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286588-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UC Irvine Anteaters men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UC Irvine Anteaters men's basketball team represented the University of California, Irvine in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Anteaters were led by ninth-year head coach Russell Turner competing in the Bren Events Center. UC Irvine is a member of the Big West Conference, and participated in their 41st consecutive season in that league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286588-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 UC Irvine Anteaters men's basketball team\nThe team finished the season with many new records that included a new school record of 31-6, longest game winning streak (17), and first ever NCAA Tournament win over Kansas State in the South Region 1st Round before falling to Oregon in the 2nd Round. Jonathan Galloway became the new program record holder of rebounds (969), career games won (95), career games played (146).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286588-0000-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 UC Irvine Anteaters men's basketball team\nMax Hazzard broke the Bren Events Center record for most three pointers made in a game on December 15 against Denver (10) and the team broke the school record for most threes made in a game that night with 18. Evan Leonard set a school record of 44 consecutive free throws made that ended in the NCAA Tournament 2nd Round vs Oregon. The team finished 2nd in the 2018 Asia-Pacific University Basketball Challenge prior to the season and the 2019 Gulf Coast Showcase during the regular season. The team won its 4th regular season title in 6 seasons on March 2, 2019 in a win over UC Riverside. The team won its second Big West Tournament title with wins over UC Riverside, Long Beach State, and Cal State Fullerton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 763]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286588-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UC Irvine Anteaters men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Anteaters finished the season 18\u201317 overall, and 11\u20135 in the conference. During the season, the Anteaters participated in the Las Vegas Invitational, which was held in Manhattan, Kansas, Tempe, Arizona, and Paradise, Nevada. UC Irvine finished 7th place by defeating Northern Arizona and losing to Rider. Prior to the tournament, UC Irvine lost at Kansas State and at Arizona State. UC Irvine also defeated Idaho in the in Boise, Idaho. In the postseason, UC Irvine defeated Hawaii and UC Santa Barbara but lost to Cal State Fullerton in the championship of the 2018 Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament in Anaheim, California.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286588-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UC Irvine Anteaters men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Anteaters competed from August 5 through August 12 in the 2018 Asia-Pacific University Basketball Challenge, hosted by the KBA and Yonsei University. This is the 5th edition of the tournament and UC Irvine is the 1st NCAA Division I school invited. Gonzaga were the original invitees but could not make the tournament and they along with the KBA offered the spot to UC Irvine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286588-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 UC Irvine Anteaters men's basketball team, Previous season\nIn the competition, UC Irvine faced hosts Yonsei University, De La Salle University from the Philippines, the Japanese national university team, the Chinese Taipei national university selection team, and the Russian national university team in a round-robin format. The competition was played under FIBA rules, which differ from NCAA rules. UC Irvine was defeated in the final game of the round robin tournament to Russia 92\u201391. Both teams had a 4\u20131 record, but Russia took the Gold Medal by winning the head to head match up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286588-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UC Irvine Anteaters men's basketball team, Previous season\nIncoming freshman Aiden Krause did not partake in this tournament as he represented the Australia U-18 team in the 2018 FIBA Asia U-18 Championship in the same period. Australia won the competition and qualified for the 2019 FIBA Under-19 Basketball World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286589-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UC Riverside Highlanders men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UC Riverside Highlanders men's basketball team represented the University of California, Riverside in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Highlanders, led by first-year head coach David Patrick, competed at the SRC Arena. UC Riverside was a member of the Big West Conference, and participated in their 18th consecutive season in that league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286589-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UC Riverside Highlanders men's basketball team, Before the season\nThe Highlanders finished 9\u201322 overall, and 4\u201312 in the conference. In the postseason, UC Riverside lost to UC Davis in the quarterfinals of 2018 Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament in Anaheim, California.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 73], "content_span": [74, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286590-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UC Santa Barbara Gauchos men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UC Santa Barbara Guachos men's basketball team represented the University of California, Santa Barbara in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Gauchos were led by second-year head coach Joe Pasternack and competed in The Thunderdome. UC Santa Barbara was a member of the Big West Conference, and participated in their 48th season in that league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286590-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UC Santa Barbara Gauchos men's basketball team, Before the season\nThe Gauchos finished the season 23\u20139 overall, and 11\u20135 in the conference. During the season, the Gauchos participated in the Legends Classic under the subregionals division, which was held in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, College Station, Texas, and Las Vegas, Nevada. The Gauchos finished as champions by defeating Pepperdine and Montana. Prior to the tournament, UC Santa Barbara lost at Pittsburgh and at Texas A&M as friendly matches. In the postseason, UC Santa Barbara defeated rival Cal Poly but lost to UC Irvine in the semifinals of the 2018 Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament in Anaheim, California.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 73], "content_span": [74, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286591-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCF Knights men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UCF Knights men's basketball team represented the University of Central Florida during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Knights were members of the American Athletic Conference. The Knights, in the program's 50th season of basketball, were led by third-year head coach Johnny Dawkins and played their home games at the CFE Arena on the university's main campus in Orlando, Florida. They finished the season 24\u20139, 13\u20135 in AAC play to finish in a tie for third place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the AAC Tournament to Memphis. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they defeated VCU in the First Round before losing in the Second Round to Duke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286591-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCF Knights men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Knights finished the 2017\u201318 season 19\u201313 overall and 9\u20139 in AAC play to finish in sixth place. In the AAC Tournament, they defeated East Carolina in the first round before losing to Houston in the quarterfinals. Despite having 19 wins, they did not participate in a postseason tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286591-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCF Knights men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nOn March 2, UCF defeated (#8 AP Poll/#6 Coaches Poll) Houston at Fertitta Center stopping the nation's longest home winning streak at 33. With the win UCF entered the AP Poll for the first time since the 2010\u201311 UCF Knights spent four weeks in the poll peaking at 19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286591-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCF Knights men's basketball team, Rankings\n*AP does not release post-NCAA Tournament rankings^Coaches did not release a Week 2 poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286592-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCF Knights women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UCF Knights women's basketball team will represent the University of Central Florida during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I basketball season. The Knights compete in Division I of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and the American Athletic Conference (The\u00a0American). The Knights, in the program's 42nd season of basketball, were led by third-year head coach Katie Abrahamson-Henderson, and play their home games at the CFE Arena on the university's main campus in Orlando, Florida. They finished the season 26\u20137, 13\u20133 in AAC play to finish in second place. They advanced to the championship game of the American Athletic Women's Tournament where they lost to Connecticut. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Women's Tournament which was their first trip since 2011, where they lost to Arizona State in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 894]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286592-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCF Knights women's basketball team, Media\nAll UCF games will have an audio or video broadcast available. For conference play, UCF games will typically be available on ESPN3, , or . Road games not on ESPN3 or AAC Digital will have an audio broadcast available on the . All non-conference home games will be streamed exclusively on UCF Knights All-Access. Select non-conference road games will have a stream available through the opponents website. The audio broadcast for home games will only be available through UCF Knights All-Access.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286593-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCI Cyclo-cross World Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Telenet UCI Cyclo-cross World Cup was a season long cyclo-cross competition, organised by the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI). The UCI Cyclo-cross World Cup took place between 23 September 2018 and 27 January 2019, over a total of nine events. The defending champions were Mathieu van der Poel in the men's competition and Sanne Cant in the women's competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286593-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCI Cyclo-cross World Cup\nThree of the five titles were secured at the penultimate round in France; with her fourth race victory, seven-time world champion Marianne Vos clinched her first World Cup title, leaving the round 132 points clear of her next closest competitor, compatriot Annemarie Worst. With his fourth win in five starts, British rider Tom Pidcock took the under-23 men's title for the second consecutive season \u2013 sealing a maximum possible points tally of 240 \u2013 while a second-place finish was enough for Belgium's Witse Meeussen to claim the junior men's title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286593-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCI Cyclo-cross World Cup\nAt the final event in the Netherlands, home rider Ceylin del Carmen Alvarado sealed the women's under-23 ranking victory, finishing in seventh place overall in the elite standings. The back-and-forth battle between Belgians Toon Aerts and Wout van Aert in the elite men standings was decided in the favour of Aerts \u2013 with 615 points, to van Aert's 613; the two riders took three victories between them as van der Poel won all six races he started in the World Cup season, finishing third overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286593-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCI Cyclo-cross World Cup, Points distribution\nPoints were awarded to all eligible riders each race. The top ten finishers received points according to the following table:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286593-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCI Cyclo-cross World Cup, Events\nIn comparison to last season, the races in Bogense, Nommay and Zeven were replaced by Bern, Pontch\u00e2teau and T\u00e1bor. The race in Bern will be the first Cyclo-cross World Cup race in Switzerland since the 2010\u201311 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286594-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCI Track Cycling World Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 UCI Track Cycling World Cup (also known as the Tissot UCI Track Cycling World Cup for sponsorship reasons) was a multi-race tournament over a track cycling season. It was the 27th series of the UCI Track Cycling World Cup organised by the UCI.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286594-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCI Track Cycling World Cup\nIt will be the first edition of the World Cup to feature para-cycling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286594-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCI Track Cycling World Cup, Series\nOn 12 February 2018 the UCI revealed the location and dates of the World Cup meetings for the season. Six rounds were scheduled in Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines, France; Milton, Canada; Berlin, Germany; London, Great Britain; Cambridge, New Zealand and Hong Kong. It was the first time Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines hosting a round of World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286594-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCI Track Cycling World Cup, Series, Montigny-le-Bretonneux, France\nFrance's National V\u00e9lodrome de Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines is near the city of Versailles, west of Paris. It hosted the opening round, on 19\u201321 October. The velodrome was completed in 2014 and hosted the 2015 UCI Track Cycling World Championships, where a number of world records were set. The velodrome also played host to the 2016 European Track Championships and will be the site of the track cycling events for the 2024 Olympic Games. It can hold 6,000 spectators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 75], "content_span": [76, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286594-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCI Track Cycling World Cup, Series, Milton, Canada\nThe second round was hosted in Milton. The racing was held on three full days between 26 and 28 October 2018 at the Mattamy National Cycling Centre. The venue was built for the 2015 Pan and Parapan American Games held in Toronto. It is the only UCI Class 1 homologated indoor velodrome in Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286594-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCI Track Cycling World Cup, Series, Berlin, Germany\nRound 3, to be held in Berlin from 30 November to 2 December. The velodrome was designed by internationally renowned French architect Dominique Perrault for Berlin's 2000 Olympic Games bid. It was built in 1997 on the site of the former Werner-Seelenbinder-Halle. Since opening, it has played host to the 2017 European Track Championships, the 1998 UCI Track Cycling World Cup Classics and the 1999 UCI Track Cycling World Championships. Since 1997, the traditional Six Days of Berlin has also taken place here. In preparation for the 2017 European Track Championships, the track was rebuilt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286594-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCI Track Cycling World Cup, Series, London, United Kingdom\nRound 4 was held at the Lee Valley VeloPark, on 14\u201316 December. Completed in 2011, the velodrome was the site of the 2012 Olympic Games and 2012 Paralympic Games track events. It has hosted the 2011-12 UCI Track Cycling World Cup and 2014-15 UCI Track Cycling World Cup, and the 2016 UCI Track Cycling World Championships. The 6750-capacity velodrome has also been used for the British Revolution track series and was the site of Sir Bradley Wiggins' successful Hour Record ride in 2015. For the first time in the history of the UCI World Cup, and in line with the UCI's integration objectives, para-cycling events will also be raced during the London stopover.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286594-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCI Track Cycling World Cup, Series, Cambridge, New Zealand\nThe fifth round was hosted in Cambridge, which is a small town in the North Island of New Zealand. It is 24 kilometers away from the closest city Hamilton. This round was held between 18 and 20 January 2019. The Avantidrome was completed in 2014 and is the home of Cycling New Zealand's high-performance programme. The Avantidrome already hosted the 2015-16 UCI Track Cycling World Cup, as well as the Oceania Continental Track Championships and World Masters Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286594-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCI Track Cycling World Cup, Series, Hong Kong\nThe last round of this World Cup series will be hosted in Hong Kong between 25 and 27 January 2019 at the Hong Kong Velodrome. Opened in 2013, the velodrome hosted the final round of the 2015-16 UCI Track Cycling World Cup, as well as the 2017 UCI Track Cycling World Championships, which is the first one in Asia in the 21st Century. It has permanent seating for 2,000 spectators, expandable to 3,000 for events such as the World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286594-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCI Track Cycling World Cup, Standings, Overall Team Standings\nOverall team standings are calculated based on total number of points gained by the team's riders in each event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286595-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCLA Bruins men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UCLA Bruins men's basketball team represented the University of California, Los Angeles during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bruins played their home games at Pauley Pavilion as members in the Pac-12 Conference. They were led by sixth-year head coach Steve Alford until he was fired mid-season and assistant Murry Bartow was named the interim head coach. Their lineup featured three former McDonald's All-Americans: sophomores Jaylen Hands and Kris Wilkes were both named second-team All-Pac-12, while first-year player Moses Brown was voted to the Pac-12 All-Freshman Team. UCLA finished the season 17\u201316, and lost in the second round of the Pac-12 Tournament. They missed the postseason for the second time in four years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 804]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286595-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCLA Bruins men's basketball team\nRanked No. 21 in the preseason AP Poll, the Bruins began the season 4\u20130 and climbed to No. 17. However, they lost six of the next nine and finished with a 7\u20136 record in nonconference play, closing it out with four straight losses, the last of which was a 73\u201358 defeat to Liberty. They committed a season-high 24 turnovers in the game, and the 15-point setback was the most lopsided home loss in Alford's tenure with UCLA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286595-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCLA Bruins men's basketball team\nCombined with an earlier home loss to mid-major program Belmont, it was the first time the Bruins had lost consecutive home games to non-Power Five schools since 2012\u201313. Four days after Belmont, they lost by 29 at Cincinnati, their largest margin of defeat since 2014\u201315. UCLA had not lost four straight since the end of 2015\u201316, when they finished the season under .500. They had not suffered four consecutive nonconference losses since 2010\u201311. On December 31, 2018, two days after the Bruins' loss to Liberty, UCLA fired Alford and named Bartow the interim head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286595-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCLA Bruins men's basketball team\nThe Bruins were inconsistent under Bartow, logging as many three-game winning streaks as three-game losing streaks. They opened conference play 2\u20130 at home against San Francisco Bay Area schools Stanford and California. Emphasizing the team's speed and athleticism, he had the Bruins play more aggressive, trapping and applying pressure on defense and attacking on offense by running on both missed and made baskets. Six Bruins scored in double figures against Cal after five reached the threshold against the Cardinal. In their 13 non-conference games under Alford, UCLA never had more than four double-figure scorers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286595-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCLA Bruins men's basketball team\nThe Bruins won the following game in overtime 87\u201384 at Oregon after rallying from 17 points down with less than seven minutes left in the second half, and later trailing by nine with 51 seconds remaining. It was the largest comeback in the final minute of a Pac-12 game and tied the sixth-largest deficit overcome in the last minute in Division I history. UCLA's 3\u20130 start in the conference was their best since starting 5\u20130 in the Pac-12 in 2012\u201313, the last time they claimed a conference regular-season title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286595-0002-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCLA Bruins men's basketball team\nHowever, they lost their next three games, falling to 3\u20137 in their last 10, and 10\u20139 overall. After wins over Arizona and Washington State, during which they set season-highs in field goal percentage of 57.9 and 58.8 percent, respectively, they lost to Washington after committing 23 turnovers. The Bruins were 5\u20134 halfway through the conference schedule. While Bartow was pushing for a faster pace, an unintended consequence was UCLA's conference-leading 17.3 turnovers per game, almost four more than they committed during non-conference play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286595-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCLA Bruins men's basketball team\nEntering the second half, UCLA had a favorable schedule with seven of their last nine regular-season games against schools that were ranked in the bottom half of the Pac-12. However, they lost their third straight game on February 9 after blowing a 22-point lead with 12:10 remaining in a 93\u201392 loss to Utah, which won on a buzzer-beating three-point field goal. The Bruins allowed 61 points in the second half, the most they had surrendered in a half since allowing 64 points in a win against Cal State Northridge in 1998.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286595-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCLA Bruins men's basketball team\nThe Bruins dropped into a four-way tie for seventh place in the Pac-12. Combined with a loss earlier in the week to Colorado, it was the first time that UCLA had been swept in a home series since 2015\u201316. However, UCLA won four of their next five. The four wins consisted of two overtime games, a one-point victory, and a 19-point comeback. They entered the final week of the regular season with a chance to finish as high as third place in the conference, but lost their final two games to fall to seventh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286595-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCLA Bruins men's basketball team\nIn their opening game of the Pac-12 Tournament, UCLA switched to a man-to-man defense after having played predominantly zone under Bartow, and they defeated Stanford 79\u201372. Bruins freshman guard David Singleton broke his foot in the final minute, ending his season. The Bruins lost their next game 83\u201372 to second-seeded Arizona State in the quarterfinals. They were down by two points with 3:59 remaining before halftime. However, they were outscored 14\u20130 to end the half, and trailed by double-digits throughout most of the rest of the game. Afterwards, Bartow stated that he was not interested in having his interim tag removed, and expressed optimism that UCLA would \"hire a very good coach\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286595-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCLA Bruins men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bruins finished the 2017\u201318 season 21\u201312, 11\u20137 in Pac-12 play to finish in a three-way tie for third place. They defeated Stanford in the quarterfinals of the Pac-12 Tournament to advance to the semifinals where they lost to Arizona. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they lost in the First Four to St. Bonaventure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286595-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCLA Bruins men's basketball team, Rankings\n*AP does not release post-NCAA Tournament rankings^Coaches did not release a Week 2 poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286596-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCLA Bruins women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UCLA Bruins women's basketball team represented the University of California, Los Angeles during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Bruins, led by eighth year head coach Cori Close, played their home games at the Pauley Pavilion. They were members of the Pac-12 Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286596-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCLA Bruins women's basketball team\nThe Bruins started the season 3\u20135, their worst start since the 2014\u201315 season, before going on a 6-game winning streak. The Bruins then lost their next four, including a 72\u201367 home loss on January 20 to a USC team that had failed to win any of its first five conference games. The loss dropped the Bruins to 0\u20133 in Pac-12 home games on the season; in the previous three seasons, they had only lost one Pac-12 home game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286596-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCLA Bruins women's basketball team\nThe Bruins' next game following the USC loss was an upset road win over No. 16 Arizona State. The Bruins then traveled to Arizona and defeated the Wildcats 98\u201393 in three overtimes; the game was the first three-overtime game in UCLA women's basketball history, as well as the longest Pac-12 women's basketball game in over a decade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286596-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCLA Bruins women's basketball team\nOn February 10, 2019, the Bruins upset No. 17 Utah, 100\u201390, in Salt Lake City. The Bruins' 40 points in the fourth quarter was the highest single-quarter point tally in UCLA women's basketball history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286596-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCLA Bruins women's basketball team\nOn February 22, 2019, the Bruins upset No. 2 Oregon, 74\u201369, in Eugene. This was the Bruins' first win over a top five opponent since 2013. The Bruins erased a 22-point deficit in the comeback victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286596-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCLA Bruins women's basketball team\nThe Bruins finished the regular season with a 19\u201311 overall record and a 12\u20136 record in Pac-12 play (5\u20134 at home and 7\u20132 on the road), having won 10 of their last 12 regular season games. UCLA's only two losses during that 12-game span were against No. 10 Stanford at home and No. 12 Oregon State on the road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286596-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCLA Bruins women's basketball team\nOn March 6, 2019, Pac-12 media members voted head coach Cori Close Pac-12 Coach of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286596-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCLA Bruins women's basketball team\nThe Bruins secured a (4) seed and a first-round bye to the Pac-12 Tournament. They defeated (5) Arizona State in the quarterfinals before losing to (1) Oregon in overtime in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286596-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UCLA Bruins women's basketball team\nThe Bruins secured a (6) seed in the NCAA Women\u2019s Tournament. They defeated (11) Tennessee 89\u201377 in the first round and defeated (3) Maryland 85\u201380 in the second round before losing to (2) Connecticut 69\u201361 in the Sweet Sixteen. The Bruins concluded the season with a 22\u201313 overall record. They won 13 of their last 17 games after starting the season 9\u20139.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286597-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UConn Huskies men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UConn Huskies men's basketball team represented the University of Connecticut in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Huskies were led by first-year head coach Dan Hurley and participated as members of the American Athletic Conference. The Huskies split their home games between the XL Center in Hartford, Connecticut, and the Harry A. Gampel Pavilion on the UConn campus in Storrs, Connecticut. They finished the season 16\u201317, 6\u201312 in AAC play to finish in a tie for ninth place. They defeated South Florida in the first round of the AAC Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Houston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286597-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UConn Huskies men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Huskies finished the 2017\u201318 season 14\u201318, 7\u201311 in AAC play to finish in eighth place. They lost in the first round of the AAC Tournament to SMU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286597-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UConn Huskies men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe school announced on January 26, 2018 that the NCAA was investigating recruitment of at least three basketball players for possible recruiting violations. On March 10, the school fired head coach Kevin Ollie for just cause related to the NCAA investigation. On March 22, 2018, it was announced that the school had hired Rhode Island head coach Dan Hurley as coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286597-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UConn Huskies men's basketball team, Roster\nAkok Akok joined the team as a redshirt walkon for the spring semester.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286598-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UConn Huskies women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UConn Huskies women's basketball team represented the University of Connecticut (UConn) during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Huskies, led by Hall of Fame head coach Geno Auriemma in his 34th season at UConn, played their home games at Harry A. Gampel Pavilion and the XL Center and were sixth year members of the American Athletic Conference. They finished the season 35\u20133, 16\u20130 in AAC play to win the AAC regular season championship. They defeated East Carolina, South Florida, and UCF to win the AAC Women's Tournament title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286598-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 UConn Huskies women's basketball team\nAs a result, they received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Women's Tournament. As the No. 2 seed, they defeated Towson and Buffalo to advance to the Sweet Sixteen. They defeated UCLA in the Sweet Sixteen and Louisville in the Elite Eight to reach their 20th Final Four. In the National Semifinal, they lost in the rematch of last year's national semifinal game to Notre Dame.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286598-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UConn Huskies women's basketball team, Media\nEvery Connecticut women's game was televised. Excluding exhibitions, most Connecticut games aired on SNY, an ESPN network, or a CBS network. Exhibition games and games that aired on SNY were also streamed on . Every game was broadcast on the UConn IMG Sports Network with an extra audio broadcast available online to listen to through Husky Vision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 52], "content_span": [53, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286598-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UConn Huskies women's basketball team, Roster\nAlexis Gordon was only on the roster for the fall semester, after which she transferred from UConn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286598-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UConn Huskies women's basketball team, Games, Exhibition, Vanguard\nThe Huskies opened their exhibition schedule against Vanguard, a team they played as an exhibition in the 2015\u201316 season. Freshman Christyn Williams scored the first four points Connecticut and had 10 points by halftime. seniors Katie Lou Samuelson and Napheesa Collier scored 26 points each. are dominating first half, coach Auriemma gave more playing time to the bench, who were outscored 15\u20130 in the fourth quarter. The final score was 96\u201330.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 74], "content_span": [75, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286598-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UConn Huskies women's basketball team, Games, Exhibition, Southern Connecticut State\nAfter scoring 26 points in the opening exhibition game against Vanguard, Katie Lou Samuelson repeated that feat in the second exhibition game against Southern Connecticut. All 11 Huskies played in the game. Christyn Williams and Crystal Dangerfield were also double-digit scorers with 18 and 10 points respectively. The Huskies won the game 99\u201345.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 92], "content_span": [93, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286598-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UConn Huskies women's basketball team, Games, Regular season, Ohio State\nUConn opened the regular season with a game against Ohio State. Four Huskies recorded double digit scoring, led by Samuelson with 19, Dangerfield with 18, Collier was 17 and Walker with 15. Connecticut scored off the opening tip and never trailed, when the game 85\u201353.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 80], "content_span": [81, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286599-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UD Almer\u00eda season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was UD Almer\u00eda's twentieth eighth season of existence and the fourth consecutive in Segunda Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League\nThe 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League was the 64th season of Europe's premier club football tournament organised by UEFA, and the 27th season since it was renamed from the European Champion Clubs' Cup to the UEFA Champions League. For the first time, the video assistant referee (VAR) system was used in the competition from the round of 16 onward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League\nThe final was played at the Wanda Metropolitano in Madrid, Spain, between Tottenham Hotspur and Liverpool, in the second all-English final after Manchester United beat Chelsea in Moscow in 2008. Liverpool won the match 2\u20130 to claim their sixth European Cup \u2013 becoming the third ever team to do so, behind Real Madrid in 1966, and Milan in 2003. The win gave Liverpool automatic qualification for the 2019\u201320 UEFA Champions League group stage and the right to play in the 2019 UEFA Super Cup and the 2019 FIFA Club World Cup, the latter two of which they won. As Chelsea and Arsenal also reached the 2019 UEFA Europa League Final, this was the first season to have multiple finals of major European club competitions featuring teams from a single nation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 783]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League\nReal Madrid, who had won four of the last five titles, including each of the last three, were eliminated by Ajax in the round of 16. Although Ajax was eliminated in the semi-finals, they had played more matches than any other team before, as they had to play six Champions League qualifying matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Format changes\nOn 9 December 2016, UEFA confirmed the reforming plan for the UEFA Champions League for the 2018\u20132021 cycle, which was announced on 26 August 2016. As per the new regulations, the previous season's UEFA Europa League winners will qualify automatically for the UEFA Champions League group stage (previously they would qualify for the play-off round, but would be promoted to the group stage only if the Champions League title holder berth was vacated, although this promotion to the group stage had been made in all three seasons since it was established from 2015\u201316). Meanwhile, the top four teams from the leagues of the four top-ranked national associations in the UEFA country coefficients list will qualify automatically for the group stage as well. Only six teams will qualify for the group stage via the qualification rounds, down from ten in the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 916]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Association team allocation\n79 teams from 54 of the 55 UEFA member associations participated in the 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League (the exception being Liechtenstein, which did not organise a domestic league). The association ranking based on the UEFA country coefficients was used to determine the number of participating teams for each association:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Association team allocation, Association ranking\nFor the 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, the associations were allocated places according to their 2017 UEFA country coefficients, which took into account their performance in European competitions from 2012\u201313 to 2016\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 79], "content_span": [80, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Association team allocation, Association ranking\nApart from the allocation based on the country coefficients, associations could have additional teams participating in the Champions League, as noted below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 79], "content_span": [80, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Association team allocation, Distribution\nIn the default access list, the Champions League title holders qualified for the group stage. However, since Real Madrid already qualified for the group stage via their domestic league (as third place of the 2017\u201318 La Liga), the following changes to the access list were made:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Association team allocation, Distribution\nIn addition, the Europa League title holders qualified for the group stage. However, since Atl\u00e9tico Madrid, the Europa League champions, already qualified for the group stage via their domestic league (as second place of the 2017\u201318 La Liga), the following changes to the access list were made:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Association team allocation, Teams\nLeague positions of the previous season shown in parentheses (TH: Champions League title holders; EL: Europa League title holders).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Round and draw dates\nThe schedule of the competition was as follows (all draws were held at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland, unless stated otherwise).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Round and draw dates\nFrom this season, there were staggered kick-off times in the group stage at 18:55 CET and 21:00 CET. Kick-off times starting from the knock-out phase were 21:00 CET.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Preliminary round\nIn the preliminary round, teams were divided into seeded and unseeded teams based on their 2018 UEFA club coefficients, and then drawn into one-legged semi-final and final ties. The draw for the preliminary round was held on 12 June 2018. The semi-final round was played on 26 June, and the final round was played on 29 June 2018, both at the Victoria Stadium in Gibraltar. The losers of both semi-final and final rounds entered the 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League second qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Preliminary round\nDrita's win on 26 June 2018 was the first time that a team representing Kosovo had won a game in any UEFA competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Qualifying rounds\nIn the qualifying and play-off rounds, teams were divided into seeded and unseeded teams based on their 2018 UEFA club coefficients, and then drawn into two-legged home-and-away ties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Qualifying rounds, First qualifying round\nThe draw for the first qualifying round was held on 19 June 2018. The first legs were played on 10 and 11 July, and the second legs were played on 17 and 18 July 2018. The losers entered the 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League second qualifying round, except one team were drawn to receive a bye to the 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League third qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Qualifying rounds, Second qualifying round\nThe second qualifying round was split into two separate sections: Champions Path (for league champions) and League Path (for league non-champions). The draw for the second qualifying round was held on 19 June 2018. The first legs were played on 24 and 25 July, and the second legs were played on 31 July and 1 August 2018. The losers from both Champions Path and League Path entered the 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League third qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Qualifying rounds, Third qualifying round\nThe third qualifying round was split into two separate sections: Champions Path (for league champions) and League Path (for league non-champions). The draw for the third qualifying round was held on 23 July 2018. The first legs were played on 7 and 8 August, and the second legs were played on 14 August 2018. The losers from Champions Path entered the 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League play-off round, while the losers from League Path entered the 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Play-off round\nThe play-off round was split into two separate sections: Champions Path (for league champions) and League Path (for league non-champions). The draw for the play-off round was held on 6 August 2018. The first legs were played on 21 and 22 August, and the second legs were played on 28 and 29 August. The losers from both Champions Path and League Path entered the 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 30 August 2018 at the Grimaldi Forum in Monaco. The 32 teams were drawn into eight groups of four, with the restriction that teams from the same association could not be drawn against each other. For the draw, the teams were seeded into four pots based on the following principles (introduced starting this season):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nIn each group, teams played against each other home-and-away in a round-robin format. The group winners and runners-up advanced to the round of 16, while the third-placed teams entered the 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League round of 32. The matchdays were 18\u201319 September, 2\u20133 October, 23\u201324 October, 6\u20137 November, 27\u201328 November, and 11\u201312 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nThe youth teams of the clubs that qualified for the group stage also participated in the 2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League on the same matchdays, where they competed in the UEFA Champions League Path (the youth domestic champions of the top 32 associations competed in a separate Domestic Champions Path until the play-offs).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nA total of fifteen national associations were represented in the group stage. 1899 Hoffenheim, Red Star Belgrade (1991 European champions) and Young Boys made their debut appearances in the group stage (although Red Star Belgrade had appeared in the European Cup group stage).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nTeams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria were applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings (Regulations Articles 17.01):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Knockout phase\nThe mechanism of the draws for each round was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Knockout phase, Round of 16\nThe draw for the round of 16 was held on 17 December 2018. 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 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Knockout phase, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the quarter-finals was held on 15 March 2019. The first legs were played on 9 and 10 April, and the second legs were played on 16 and 17 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Knockout phase, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the semi-finals was held on 15 March 2019 (after the quarter-final draw). The first legs were played on 30 April and 1 May, and the second legs were played on 7 and 8 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Knockout phase, Semi-finals\nLiverpool's improbable 4\u20130 comeback win against Barcelona in a return leg fixture at Anfield, having lost the first leg to the Spanish side 3\u20130 at the Camp Nou, is considered one of the greatest Champions League comebacks of all time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Knockout phase, Final\nThe final was played on 1 June 2019 at the Wanda Metropolitano in Madrid. The \"home\" team (for administrative purposes) was determined by an additional draw held after the quarter-final and semi-final draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Statistics, Squad of the season\nOn 2 June 2019, the UEFA technical study group selected the following 20 players as the squad of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286600-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, Statistics, Players of the season\nVotes were cast for players of the season by coaches of the 32 teams in the group stage, together with 55 journalists selected by the European Sports Media (ESM) group, representing each of UEFA's member associations. The coaches were not allowed to vote for players from their own teams. Jury members selected their top three players, with the first receiving five points, the second three and the third one. The shortlist of the top three players was announced on 8 August 2019. The award winners were announced and presented during the 2019\u201320 UEFA Champions League group stage draw in Monaco on 29 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286601-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League group stage\nThe 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League group stage began on 18 September and ended on 12 December 2018. A total of 32 teams competed in the group stage to decide the 16 places in the knockout phase of the 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286601-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League group stage, Draw\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 30 August 2018, 18:00 CEST, at the Grimaldi Forum in Monaco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 47], "content_span": [48, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286601-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League group stage, Draw\nThe 32 teams were drawn into eight groups of four, with the restriction that teams from the same association could not be drawn against each other. For the draw, the teams were seeded into four pots based on the following principles (Regulations Article 13.06):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 47], "content_span": [48, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286601-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League group stage, Draw\nOn 17 July 2014, the UEFA emergency panel ruled that Ukrainian and Russian clubs would not be drawn against each other \"until further notice\" due to the political unrest between the countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 47], "content_span": [48, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286601-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League group stage, Draw\nMoreover, the draw was controlled for teams from the same association in order to split the teams evenly into the two sets of four groups (A\u2013D, E\u2013H) for maximum television coverage. On each matchday, one set of four groups played their matches on Tuesday, while the other set of four groups played their matches on Wednesday, with the two sets of groups alternating between each matchday. The following pairings were announced by UEFA after the group stage teams were confirmed:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 47], "content_span": [48, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286601-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League group stage, Draw\nThe fixtures were decided after the draw, using a computer draw not shown to public, with the following match sequence (Regulations Article 16.02):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 47], "content_span": [48, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286601-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League group stage, Draw\nNote: Positions for scheduling do not use the seeding pots, e.g. Team 1 is not necessarily the team from Pot 1 in the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 47], "content_span": [48, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286601-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League group stage, Draw\nThere were scheduling restrictions: for example, teams from the same city (e.g. Real Madrid and Atl\u00e9tico Madrid) in general were not scheduled to play at home on the same matchday (to avoid them playing at home on the same day or on consecutive days, due to logistics and crowd control), and teams from \"winter countries\" (e.g. Russia) were not scheduled to play at home on the last matchday (due to cold weather).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 47], "content_span": [48, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286601-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League group stage, Teams\nBelow are the participating teams (with their 2018 UEFA club coefficients), grouped by their seeding pot. They include:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286601-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League group stage, Format\nIn each group, teams played against each other home-and-away in a round-robin format. 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, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286601-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League group stage, Format, Tiebreakers\nTeams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria were applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings (Regulations Articles 17.01):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 62], "content_span": [63, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286601-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League group stage, Groups\nThe matchdays were 18\u201319 September, 2\u20133 October, 23\u201324 October, 6\u20137 November, 27\u201328 November, and 11\u201312 December 2018. The scheduled kickoff times were 21:00 CET/CEST, with two matches on each Tuesday and Wednesday scheduled for 18:55 CET/CEST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286601-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League group stage, Groups\nTimes are CET/CEST, as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286602-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League knockout phase\nThe 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League knockout phase began on 12 February and ended on 1 June 2019 with the final at the Metropolitano Stadium in Madrid, Spain, to decide the champions of the 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League. A total of 16 teams competed in the knockout phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286602-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League knockout phase\nFor the first time, the video assistant referee (VAR) system was used in the Champions League knockout phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286602-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League knockout phase\nTimes are CET/CEST, as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286602-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League knockout phase, Round and draw dates\nThe schedule was as follows (all draws were held at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286602-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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 scored more goals on aggregate over the two legs advanced to the next round. If the aggregate score was level, the away goals rule was applied, i.e. the team that scored more goals away from home over the two legs advanced. If away goals were also equal, then extra time was played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286602-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 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 advanced by virtue of more away goals scored. If no goals were scored during extra time, the winners were decided by a penalty shoot-out. In the final, which was played as a single match, if the score was level at the end of normal time, extra time was played, followed by a penalty shoot-out if the score was still level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286602-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286602-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League knockout phase, Format\nFor the quarter-finals and semi-finals, teams from the same city (e.g., Manchester City and Manchester United) were not scheduled to play at home on the same day or on consecutive days, due to logistics and crowd control. To avoid such scheduling conflict, if the two teams were drawn to play at home for the same leg, the order of legs of the tie involving the team with the lower domestic ranking in the qualifying season (e.g., Manchester United for this season) was reversed from the original draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286602-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League knockout phase, Qualified teams\nThe knockout phase involved the 16 teams which qualified as winners and runners-up of each of the eight groups in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286602-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League knockout phase, Round of 16\nThe draw for the round of 16 was held on 17 December 2018, 12:00 CET.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286602-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League knockout phase, Round of 16\nManchester United became the first team in UEFA Champions League history to advance after losing at home by two goals or more in the first leg. Including the European Cup era, only Ajax managed this feat, winning a play-off match they forced in the 1968\u201369 European Cup quarter-finals against Benfica after losing 1\u20133 in the first leg at home and winning 3\u20131 in the second leg away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286602-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League knockout phase, Round of 16, Summary\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 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286602-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League knockout phase, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the quarter-finals was held on 15 March 2019, 12:00 CET.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286602-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League knockout phase, Quarter-finals, Summary\nThe first legs were played on 9 and 10 April, and the second legs were played on 16 and 17 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 69], "content_span": [70, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286602-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League knockout phase, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the semi-finals was held on 15 March 2019, 12:00 CET (after the quarter-final draw).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286602-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League knockout phase, Semi-finals, Summary\nThe first legs were played on 30 April and 1 May, and the second legs were played on 7 and 8 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286602-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League knockout phase, Final\nThe final was played on 1 June 2019 at the Metropolitano Stadium in Madrid. The \"home\" team (for administrative purposes) was determined by an additional draw held after the quarter-final and semi-final draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round\nThe 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round began on 26 June and ended on 29 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round\nA total of 53 teams competed in the qualifying system of the 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, which includes the qualifying phase and the play-off round, with 43 teams in Champions Path and 10 teams in League Path. The six winners in the play-off round (four from Champions Path, two from League Path) advanced to the group stage, to join the 26 teams that entered in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round\nTimes are CEST (UTC+2), as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Teams, Champions Path\nThe Champions Path includes all league champions which do not qualify directly for the group stage, and consists of the following rounds:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 88], "content_span": [89, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Teams, Champions Path\nAll teams eliminated from the Champions Path enter the Europa League:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 88], "content_span": [89, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Teams, Champions Path\nBelow are the participating teams of the Champions Path (with their 2018 UEFA club coefficients), grouped by their starting rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 88], "content_span": [89, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Teams, League Path\nThe League Path includes all league non-champions which do not qualify directly for the group stage, and consists of the following rounds:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 85], "content_span": [86, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Teams, League Path\nAll teams eliminated from the League Path enter the Europa League:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 85], "content_span": [86, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Teams, League Path\nBelow are the participating teams of the League Path (with their 2018 UEFA club coefficients), grouped by their starting rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 85], "content_span": [86, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Format\nEach tie, apart from the preliminary round, is played over two legs, with each team playing one leg at home. The team that scores more goals on aggregate over the two legs advance to the next round. If the aggregate score is level, the away goals rule is applied, i.e. the team that scores more goals away from home over the two legs advances. If away goals are also equal, then extra time is played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 73], "content_span": [74, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0009-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, 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 advances by virtue of more away goals scored. If no goals are scored during extra time, the tie is decided by penalty shoot-out. In the preliminary round, where single-match semi-finals and final are hosted by one of the participating teams, if scores are level at the end of normal time, extra time is played, followed by penalty shoot-out if scores remain tied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 73], "content_span": [74, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Format\nIn the draws for each round, teams are seeded based on their UEFA club coefficients at the beginning of the season, with the teams divided into seeded and unseeded pots containing the same number of teams. A seeded team is drawn against an unseeded team, with the order of legs (or the administrative \"home\" team in the preliminary round matches) in each tie decided by draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 73], "content_span": [74, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0010-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Format\nAs the identity of the winners of the previous round is not known at the time of the draws, the seeding is carried out under the assumption that the team with the higher coefficient of an undecided tie advances to this round, which means if the team with the lower coefficient is to advance, it simply take the seeding of its opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 73], "content_span": [74, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0010-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 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 are purely for convenience of the draw and do not resemble any real groupings in the sense of the competition. Teams from associations with political conflicts as decided by UEFA may not be drawn into the same tie. After the draws, the order of legs of a tie may be reversed by UEFA due to scheduling or venue conflicts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 73], "content_span": [74, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Schedule\nThe schedule is as follows (all draws are held at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 75], "content_span": [76, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Preliminary round\nThe draw for the preliminary round was held on 12 June 2018, 12:00 CEST, to determine the matchups of the semi-finals and the administrative \"home\" team of each semi-final and final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 84], "content_span": [85, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Preliminary round, Seeding\nA total of four teams were involved in the preliminary round draw. Two teams were seeded and two teams were unseeded for the semi-final round draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 93], "content_span": [94, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Preliminary round, Summary\nThe semi-final round was played on 26 June, and the final round on 29 June 2018, both at the Victoria Stadium in Gibraltar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 93], "content_span": [94, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, First qualifying round\nThe draw for the first qualifying round was held on 19 June 2018, 12:00 CEST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 89], "content_span": [90, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, First qualifying round, Seeding\nA total of 32 teams were involved in the first qualifying round draw: 31 teams entering in this round, and the winners of the preliminary round. They were divided into three groups: two of ten teams, where five teams were seeded and five teams were unseeded, and one of twelve teams, where six teams were seeded and six teams were unseeded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 98], "content_span": [99, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, First qualifying round, Summary\nThe first legs were played on 10 and 11 July, and the second legs on 17 and 18 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 98], "content_span": [99, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Second qualifying round\nThe draw for the second qualifying round was held on 19 June 2018, 14:00 CEST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 90], "content_span": [91, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Second qualifying round, Seeding\nA total of 24 teams were involved in the second qualifying round draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 99], "content_span": [100, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Second qualifying round, Summary\nThe first legs were played on 24 and 25 July, and the second legs on 31 July and 1 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 99], "content_span": [100, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Third qualifying round\nThe draw for the third qualifying round was held on 23 July 2018, 12:00 CEST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 89], "content_span": [90, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Third qualifying round, Seeding\nA total of 20 teams were involved in the third qualifying round draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 98], "content_span": [99, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Third qualifying round, Summary\nThe first legs were played on 7 and 8 August, and the second legs on 14 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 98], "content_span": [99, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Play-off round\nThe draw for the play-off round was held on 6 August 2018, 12:00 CEST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 81], "content_span": [82, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Play-off round, Seeding\nA total of 12 teams were involved in the play-off round draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 90], "content_span": [91, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Play-off round, Summary\nThe first legs were played on 21 and 22 August, and the second legs on 28 and 29 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 90], "content_span": [91, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Play-off round, Champions Path\n2\u20132 on aggregate. Red Star Belgrade won on away goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 97], "content_span": [98, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286603-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Top goalscorers\nThere were 211 goals scored in 91 matches in the qualifying phase and play-off round, for an average of 2.32 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 82], "content_span": [83, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League\nThe 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League was the 48th season of Europe's secondary club football tournament organised by UEFA, and the 10th 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, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League\nThe final was played at the Olympic Stadium in Baku, Azerbaijan, between English sides Chelsea and Arsenal \u2013 which was the first Europa League final to feature two teams from one city. Chelsea defeated Arsenal 4\u20131 and have earned the right to play against Liverpool, the winners of the 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, in the 2019 UEFA Super Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League\nAs winners, Chelsea would also have been qualified for the 2019\u201320 UEFA Champions League group stage; however, since they had already qualified after finishing third in the Premier League, the berth reserved was given to the third-placed team of the 2018\u201319 Ligue 1 (Lyon) \u2013 the 5th-ranked association according to next season's access list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League\nFor the first time, the video assistant referee (VAR) system was used in the competition, where it was implemented in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League\nAs the title holders of the Europa League, Atl\u00e9tico Madrid qualified for the 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, although they had already qualified before the final through their league performance. They were unable to defend their title as they advanced to the Champions League knockout stage, and were eliminated by Juventus in the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Format changes\nOn 9 December 2016, UEFA confirmed the reforming plan for the UEFA Champions League for the 2018\u20132021 cycle, which was announced on 26 August 2016. As per the new regulations, all teams that are eliminated in the UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds will get a second chance in the Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Association team allocation\nA total of 213 teams from all 55 UEFA member associations participated in the 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League. The association ranking based on the UEFA country coefficients was used to determine the number of participating teams for each association:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Association team allocation, Association ranking\nFor the 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, the associations were allocated places according to their 2017 UEFA country coefficients, which took into account their performance in European competitions from 2012\u201313 to 2016\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 76], "content_span": [77, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Association team allocation, Association ranking\nApart from the allocation based on the country coefficients, associations could have additional teams participating in the Champions League, as noted below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 76], "content_span": [77, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Association team allocation, Distribution\nIn the default access list, originally 17 losers from the Champions League first qualifying round were transferred to the Europa League second qualifying round (Champions Path). However, one fewer loser would be transferred since the Champions League title holders already qualified for the group stage via their domestic league. Therefore, only 19 teams entered the Champions Path second qualifying round (one of the losers from the Champions League first qualifying round would be drawn to receive a bye to the third qualifying round).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 69], "content_span": [70, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Association team allocation, Distribution\nIn addition, originally three losers from the Champions League second qualifying round (League Path) were transferred to the Europa League third qualifying round (Main Path). However, one fewer loser would be transferred since the Europa League title holders already qualified for the group stage via their domestic league. As a result, the following changes to the access list was made:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 69], "content_span": [70, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Association team allocation, Distribution, Redistribution rules\nA Europa League place was vacated when a team qualified for both the Champions League and the Europa League, or qualified for the Europa League by more than one method. When a place was vacated, it was redistributed within the national association by the following rules:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 91], "content_span": [92, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286604-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Association team allocation, Teams\nNotably one team that was not playing a national top division took part in the competition; Vaduz (representing Liechtenstein) played in 2017\u201318 Swiss Challenge League, which is Switzerland's second tier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 62], "content_span": [63, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Round and draw dates\nThe schedule of the competition was as follows (all draws were held at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland, unless stated otherwise).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Round and draw dates\nMatches in the qualifying (including preliminary and play-off) and knockout rounds could 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, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Round and draw dates\nFrom this season, the kick-off times starting from the group stage were slightly changed to 18:55 CET and 21:00 CET. Kick-off times starting from the quarter-finals were 21:00 CEST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Preliminary round\nIn the preliminary round, teams were divided into seeded and unseeded teams based on their 2018 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. The draw for the preliminary round was held on 12 June 2018. The first legs were played on 26 and 28 June, and the second legs were played on 5 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Qualifying rounds\nIn the qualifying and play-off rounds, teams are divided into seeded and unseeded teams based on their 2018 UEFA club coefficients (for Main Path), or based on which round they qualified from (for Champions Path), and then drawn into two-legged home-and-away ties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Qualifying rounds, First qualifying round\nThe draw for the first qualifying round was held on 20 June 2018. The first legs were played on 10, 11 and 12 July, and the second legs were played on 17, 18 and 19 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 69], "content_span": [70, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Qualifying rounds, Second qualifying round\nThe second qualifying round is split into two separate sections: Champions Path (for league champions) and Main Path (for cup winners and league non-champions). The draw for the second qualifying round (Champions Path) was held on 19 June, and the draw for the second qualifying round (Main Path) was held on 20 June 2018. The first legs were played on 26 July, and the second legs were played on 31 July, 1 and 2 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Qualifying rounds, Third qualifying round\nThe third qualifying round is split into two separate sections: Champions Path (for league champions) and Main Path (for cup winners and league non-champions). The draw for the third qualifying round was held on 23 July 2018. The first legs were played on 7 and 9 August, and the second legs were played on 16 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 69], "content_span": [70, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Play-off round\nThe play-off round is split into two separate sections: Champions Path (for league champions) and Main Path (for cup winners and league non-champions). The draw for the play-off round was held on 6 August 2018. The first legs were played on 23 August, and the second legs were played on 30 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Group stage\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 31 August 2018 at the Grimaldi Forum in Monaco. The 48 teams were drawn into twelve groups of four, with the restriction that teams from the same association cannot be drawn against each other. For the draw, the teams are seeded into four pots based on their 2018 UEFA club coefficients.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Group stage\nIn each group, teams played against each other home-and-away in a round-robin format. The group winners and runners-up advance to the round of 32 where they are joined by the eight third-placed teams of the 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League group stage. The matchdays are 20 September, 4 October, 25 October, 8 November, 29 November, and 13 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Group stage\nA total of 27 national associations were represented in the group stage. Akhisarspor, Chelsea, F91 Dudelange, Jablonec, Rangers, RB Leipzig, Sarpsborg 08, Spartak Moscow and Spartak Trnava made their debut appearances in the UEFA Europa League group stage (although Chelsea, Rangers, RB Leipzig and Spartak Moscow had already competed in the UEFA Europa League knockout phase after a third place in the UEFA Champions League group stage, while Rangers and Spartak Moscow had appeared in the UEFA Cup group stage). Akhisarspor and Sarpsborg 08 made their debuts in any European football. F91 Dudelange were the first team from Luxembourg to play in either the Champions League or Europa League group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Group stage\nTeams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria were applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings (Regulations Articles 16.01):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, 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.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Knockout phase\nThe mechanism of the draws for each round is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Knockout phase, Round of 32\nThe draw for the round of 32 was held on 17 December 2018. The first legs were played on 12 and 14 February, and the second legs were played on 20 and 21 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Knockout phase, Round of 16\nThe draw for the round of 16 was held on 22 February 2019. The first legs were played on 7 March, and the second legs were played on 14 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Knockout phase, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the quarter-finals was held on 15 March 2019. The first legs were played on 11 April, the second legs were played on 18 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Knockout phase, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the semi-finals was held on 15 March 2019 (after the quarter-final draw). The first legs were played on 2 May, and the second legs were played on 9 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Knockout phase, Final\nThe final was held on 29 May 2019 at the Olympic Stadium in Baku. The \"home\" team (for administrative purposes) was determined by an additional draw held after the quarter-final and semi-final draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0033-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Statistics, Squad of the season\nThe UEFA technical study group selected the following 18 players as the squad of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286604-0034-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, Statistics, Player of the season\nVotes were cast by coaches of the 48 teams in the group stage, together with 55 journalists selected by the European Sports Media (ESM) group, representing each of UEFA's member associations. The coaches were not allowed to vote for players from their own teams. Jury members selected their top three players, with the first receiving five points, the second three and the third one. The shortlist of the top three players was announced on 8 August 2019. The award winner was announced during the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League group stage draw in Monaco on 30 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286605-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League group stage\nThe 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League group stage began on 20 September and ended on 13 December 2018. A total of 48 teams competed in the group stage to decide 24 of the 32 places in the knockout phase of the 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286605-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League group stage, Draw\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 31 August 2018, 13:00 CEST, at the Grimaldi Forum in Monaco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 44], "content_span": [45, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286605-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League group stage, Draw\nThe 48 teams were drawn into twelve groups of four, with the restriction that teams from the same association could not be drawn against each other. For the draw, the teams were seeded into four pots based on their 2018 UEFA club coefficients.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 44], "content_span": [45, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286605-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League group stage, Draw\nOn 17 July 2014, the UEFA emergency panel ruled that Ukrainian and Russian clubs would not be drawn against each other \"until further notice\" due to the political unrest between the countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 44], "content_span": [45, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286605-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League group stage, Draw\nMoreover, the draw was controlled for teams from the same association in order to split the teams evenly into the two sets of six groups (A\u2013F, G\u2013L) for maximum television coverage. On each matchday, one set of six groups played their matches at 18:55 CET/CEST, while the other set of six groups played their matches at 21:00 CET/CEST, with the two sets of groups alternating between each matchday. The following pairings were announced by UEFA after the group stage teams were confirmed:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 44], "content_span": [45, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286605-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League group stage, Draw\nThe fixtures were decided after the draw, using a computer draw not shown to public, with the following match sequence (Regulations Article 15.02):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 44], "content_span": [45, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286605-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League group stage, Draw\nNote: Positions for scheduling do not use the seeding pots, e.g., Team 1 is not necessarily the team from Pot 1 in the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 44], "content_span": [45, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286605-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League group stage, Draw\nThere were scheduling restrictions: for example, teams from the same city (e.g., Arsenal and Chelsea) in general were not scheduled to play at home on the same matchday (to avoid them playing at home on the same day, due to logistics and crowd control), and teams from \"winter countries\" (e.g., Russia) were not scheduled to play at home on the last matchday (due to cold weather).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 44], "content_span": [45, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286605-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League group stage, Teams\nBelow were the participating teams (with their 2018 UEFA club coefficients), grouped by their seeding pot. They included:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286605-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League group stage, Format\nIn each group, teams played against each other home-and-away in a round-robin format. The group winners and runners-up advanced to the round of 32, where they were joined by the eight third-placed teams of the Champions League group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286605-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League group stage, Format, Tiebreakers\nTeams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria were applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings (Regulations Articles 16.01):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286605-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League group stage, Groups\nThe matchdays were 20 September, 4 October, 25 October, 8 November, 29 November, and 13 December 2018. The scheduled kickoff times were 18:55 and 21:00 CET/CEST, except for a few matches whose kickoff times were 16:50 CET/CEST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286605-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League group stage, Groups\nTimes are CET/CEST, as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286606-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League knockout phase\nThe 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League knockout phase began on 12 February and ended on 29 May 2019 with the final at the Olympic Stadium in Baku, Azerbaijan, to decide the champions of the 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League. A total of 32 teams competed in the knockout phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286606-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League knockout phase\nFor the first time, the video assistant referee (VAR) system was used in the competition, where it was implemented in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286606-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League knockout phase\nTimes are CET/CEST, as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286606-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League knockout phase, Round and draw dates\nThe schedule was as follows (all draws were held at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286606-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286606-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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 scores more goals on aggregate over the two legs advance to the next round. If the aggregate score is level, the away goals rule is applied, i.e. the team that scores more goals away from home over the two legs advances. If away goals are also equal, then extra time is played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286606-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 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 advances by virtue of more away goals scored. If no goals are scored during extra time, the tie is decided by penalty shoot-out. In the final, which is played as a single match, if the score is level at the end of normal time, extra time is played, followed by penalty shoot-out if the score remains tied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286606-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286606-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League knockout phase, Format\nFor the round of 16, quarter-finals and semi-finals, teams from the same city (e.g., Chelsea and Arsenal) are not scheduled to play at home on the same day, due to logistics and crowd control. To avoid such scheduling conflict, an adjustment had to be made by UEFA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286606-0007-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League knockout phase, Format\nFor the round of 32, since both teams were drawn to play at home for the second leg, the home match of the team which were not domestic cup champions in the qualifying season, or the team with the lower domestic ranking (if neither team were the domestic cup champions, e.g. Arsenal FC for this season), was moved to an earlier time on Thursday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286606-0007-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League knockout phase, Format\nFor the round of 16, quarter-finals and semi-finals if the two teams are drawn to play at home for the same leg, the order of legs of the tie involving the team with the lower priority \u2013 in this case Arsenal FC because Chelsea won the FA Cup last season \u2013 is reversed from the original draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286606-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League knockout phase, Format\nOn 17 July 2014, the UEFA emergency panel ruled that Ukrainian and Russian clubs would not be drawn against each other \"until further notice\" due to the political unrest between the countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286606-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League knockout phase, Qualified teams\nThe knockout phase involved 32 teams: the 24 teams which qualified as winners and runners-up of each of the twelve groups in the group stage, and the eight third-placed teams from the Champions League group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286606-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League knockout phase, Round of 32\nThe draw for the round of 32 was held on 17 December 2018, 13:00 CET.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286606-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League knockout phase, Round of 32, Summary\nThe first legs were played on 12 and 14 February, and the second legs were played on 20 and 21 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286606-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League knockout phase, Round of 16\nThe draw for the round of 16 was held on 22 February 2019, 13:00 CET.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286606-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League knockout phase, Round of 16, Summary\nThe first legs were played on 7 March, and the second legs were played on 14 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286606-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League knockout phase, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the quarter-finals was held on 15 March 2019, 13:00 CET.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 57], "content_span": [58, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286606-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League knockout phase, Quarter-finals, Summary\nThe first legs were played on 11 April, and the second legs were played on 18 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 66], "content_span": [67, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286606-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League knockout phase, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the semi-finals was held on 15 March 2019, 13:00 CET (after the quarter-final draw).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286606-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League knockout phase, Semi-finals, Summary\nThe first legs were played on 2 May, and the second legs were played on 9 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286606-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League knockout phase, Final\nThe final was played on 29 May 2019 at the Olympic Stadium in Baku. The \"home\" team (for administrative purposes) was determined by an additional draw held after the quarter-final and semi-final draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round\nThe 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round began on 26 June and ended on 30 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round\nA total of 178 teams competed in the qualifying system of the 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, which includes the qualifying phase and the play-off round, with 35 teams in Champions Path and 143 teams in Main Path. The 21 winners in the play-off round (8 from Champions Path, 13 from Main Path) advanced to the group stage, to join the 17 teams that entered in the group stage, the 6 losers of the Champions League play-off round (4 from Champions Path, 2 from League Path), and the 4 League Path losers of the Champions League third qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Teams, Champions Path\nThe Champions Path included all league champions which were eliminated from the Champions Path qualifying phase of the Champions League, and consisted of the following rounds:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 85], "content_span": [86, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Teams, Champions Path\nBelow are the participating teams (with their 2018 UEFA club coefficients), grouped by their starting rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 85], "content_span": [86, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Teams, Main Path\nThe Main Path included all cup winners and league non-champions which did not qualify directly for the group stage, and consisted of the following rounds:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 80], "content_span": [81, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Teams, Main Path\nBelow are the participating teams (with their 2018 UEFA club coefficients), grouped by their starting rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 80], "content_span": [81, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Format\nEach tie is played over two legs, with each team playing one leg at home. The team that scores more goals on aggregate over the two legs advance to the next round. If the aggregate score is level, the away goals rule is applied, i.e. the team that scores more goals away from home over the two legs advances. If away goals are also equal, then extra time is played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 70], "content_span": [71, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, 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 advances by virtue of more away goals scored. If no goals are scored during extra time, the tie is decided by penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 70], "content_span": [71, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Format\nFor the Champions Path, in the draws for each round, teams (whose identity is not known at the time of the draws) are divided into seeded and unseeded pots, which may contain different numbers of teams, based on the following principles:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 70], "content_span": [71, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Format\nIn the beginning of the draws, a seeded team is drawn against an unseeded team, with the order of legs in each tie decided by draw, until one of the pots is empty. Afterwards, the remaining teams from the non-empty pot are drawn against each other, with the order of legs in each tie decided by draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 70], "content_span": [71, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Format\nFor the Main Path, in the draws for each round, teams are seeded based on their UEFA club coefficients at the beginning of the season, with the teams divided into seeded and unseeded pots containing the same number of teams. A seeded team is drawn against an unseeded team, with the order of legs in each tie decided by draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 70], "content_span": [71, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0009-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Format\nAs the identity of the winners of the previous round is not known at the time of the draws, the seeding is carried out under the assumption that the team with the higher coefficient of an undecided tie advances to this round, which means if the team with the lower coefficient is to advance, it simply take the seeding of its opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 70], "content_span": [71, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa 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 are purely for convenience of the draw and do not resemble any real groupings in the sense of the competition. Teams from the same association or from associations with political conflicts as decided by UEFA may not be drawn into the same tie. After the draws, the order of legs of a tie may be reversed by UEFA due to scheduling or venue conflicts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 70], "content_span": [71, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Schedule\nThe schedule was as follows (all draws were held at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 72], "content_span": [73, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Schedule\nMatches may also be played on Tuesdays or Wednesdays instead of the regular Thursdays due to scheduling conflicts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 72], "content_span": [73, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Preliminary round\nThe draw for the preliminary round was held on 12 June 2018, 13:00 CEST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 81], "content_span": [82, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Preliminary round, Seeding\nA total of 14 teams were involved in the preliminary round draw. Seven teams were seeded and seven teams were unseeded. Teams from the same association could not be drawn into the same tie, and if such a pairing was drawn or was set to be drawn in the final tie, the second team drawn in the current tie would be moved to the next tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 90], "content_span": [91, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Preliminary round, Matches\nThe first legs were played on 26 and 28 June, and the second legs on 5 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 90], "content_span": [91, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, First qualifying round\nThe draw for the first qualifying round was held on 20 June 2018, 12:00 CEST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 86], "content_span": [87, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, First qualifying round, Seeding\nA total of 94 teams were involved in the first qualifying round draw: 87 teams entering in this round, and the seven winners of the preliminary round. They were divided into nine groups: seven of ten teams, where five teams were seeded and five teams were unseeded, and two of twelve teams, where six teams were seeded and six teams were unseeded. Numbers were pre-assigned for each team by UEFA so that the draw could be held in one run for all groups with ten teams and one run for all groups with twelve teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 95], "content_span": [96, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, First qualifying round, Matches\nThe first legs were played on 10, 11 and 12 July, and the second legs on 17, 18 and 19 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 95], "content_span": [96, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Second qualifying round\nThe draw for the second qualifying round Champions Path was held on 19 June 2018, 16:00 CEST, and the draw for the second qualifying round Main Path was held on 20 June 2018, 14:50 CEST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 87], "content_span": [88, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Second qualifying round, Seeding\nA total of 18 teams were involved in the second qualifying round Champions Path draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 96], "content_span": [97, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Second qualifying round, Seeding\nThey were divided into three groups of six teams, where five teams were seeded and one team were unseeded. Teams from Serbia and Kosovo, and Bosnia Herzegovina and Kosovo, could not be drawn into the same tie, and if such a potential pairing was drawn, the second team drawn in the current tie would be moved to the next tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 96], "content_span": [97, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Second qualifying round, Seeding\nA total of 74 teams were involved in the second qualifying round Main Path draw: 27 teams entering in this round, and the 47 winners of the first qualifying round. They were divided into seven groups: five of ten teams, where five teams were seeded and five teams were unseeded, and two of twelve teams, where six teams were seeded and six teams were unseeded. Numbers were pre-assigned for each team by UEFA so that the draw could be held in one run for all groups with ten teams and one run for all groups with twelve teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 96], "content_span": [97, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Second qualifying round, Matches\nThe first legs were played on 26 July, and the second legs on 31 July, 1 and 2 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 96], "content_span": [97, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Third qualifying round\nThe draw for the third qualifying round Champions Path was held on 23 July 2018, 12:45 CEST, and the draw for the third qualifying round Main Path was held on 23 July 2018, 14:00 CEST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 86], "content_span": [87, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Third qualifying round, Seeding\nA total of 20 teams were involved in the third qualifying round Champions Path draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 95], "content_span": [96, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Third qualifying round, Seeding\nThey were divided into two groups of ten teams, where five teams were seeded and five teams were unseeded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 95], "content_span": [96, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Third qualifying round, Seeding\nA total of 52 teams were involved in the third qualifying round Main Path draw: 13 teams entering in this round, the 37 winners of the second qualifying round Main Path, and the two Champions League losers of the second qualifying round League Path. They were divided into five groups: four of ten teams, where five teams were seeded and five teams were unseeded, and one of twelve teams, where six teams were seeded and six teams were unseeded. Numbers were pre-assigned for each team by UEFA so that the draw could be held in one run for all groups with ten teams and one run for all groups with twelve teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 95], "content_span": [96, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Third qualifying round, Matches\nThe first legs were played on 7 and 9 August, and the second legs on 16 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 95], "content_span": [96, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Play-off round\nThe draw for the play-off round was held on 6 August 2018, 13:30 CEST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 78], "content_span": [79, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Play-off round, Seeding\nA total of 16 teams were involved in the play-off round Champions Path draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 87], "content_span": [88, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Play-off round, Seeding\nThey were divided into two groups of eight teams, where three teams were seeded and five teams were unseeded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 87], "content_span": [88, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Play-off round, Seeding\nA total of 26 teams, all winners of the third qualifying round Main Path, were involved in the play-off round Main Path draw. They were divided into three groups: two of eight teams, where four teams were seeded and four teams were unseeded, and one of ten teams, where five teams were seeded and five teams were unseeded. Numbers were pre-assigned for each team by UEFA so that the draw could be held in one run for all groups with eight teams and one run for all groups with ten teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 87], "content_span": [88, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0033-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Play-off round, Matches\nThe first legs were played on 23 August, and the second legs on 30 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 87], "content_span": [88, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286607-0034-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round, Top goalscorers\nThere were 848 goals scored in 314 matches in the qualifying phase and play-off round, for an average of 2.7 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 79], "content_span": [80, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286608-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round (Champions Path)\nThis page summarises the Champions Path matches of 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 79], "section_span": [79, 79], "content_span": [80, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286608-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round (Champions Path)\nTimes are CEST (UTC+2), as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 79], "section_span": [79, 79], "content_span": [80, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286609-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round (Main Path)\nThis page summarises the Main Path matches of 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 74], "section_span": [74, 74], "content_span": [75, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286609-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase and play-off round (Main Path)\nTimes are CEST (UTC+2), as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 74], "section_span": [74, 74], "content_span": [75, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League\nThe 2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League was the 33rd edition of Europe's premier club futsal tournament, and the 18th edition organized by UEFA. It was also the first edition since the tournament was rebranded from \"UEFA Futsal Cup\" to \"UEFA Futsal Champions League\". The final tournament took place at the Almaty Arena in Almaty, Kazakhstan on 26\u201328 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League\nTwo-time defending champions Inter FS were unable to defend their title as they succumbed 5\u20133 to Sporting CP in the semi-finals. Appearing in their third consecutive final, Sporting CP defeated final tournament hosts Kairat 2\u20131 to claim their first title in the competition. Barcelona beat Inter FS 3\u20131 to finish in the third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League, Association team allocation\nThe format remained the same as the previous season, as the top three-ranked associations according to the UEFA Futsal National Team coefficient rankings can enter two teams. The title holders qualified automatically, and thus their association could also enter a second team. If the title holders were from the top three-ranked associations, the fourth-ranked association can also enter two teams. All other associations could enter one team (the winners of their regular top domestic futsal league, or in special circumstances, the runners-up).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League, Association team allocation, Association ranking\nFor this season, the associations were allocated places according to the coefficient ranking of their men's senior national teams, calculated based on the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 86], "content_span": [87, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League, Association team allocation, Association ranking\nSince the winners of the 2017\u201318 UEFA Futsal Cup, Inter FS, were from the top three-ranked associations, the fourth-ranked association could also enter two teams. As a result, Spain, Portugal, Russia and Kazakhstan entered two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 86], "content_span": [87, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League, Association team allocation, Distribution\nFollowing expansion of the tournament, the top-ranked teams no longer receive byes to the elite round, and the number of teams in the main round is increased from 24 to 32. Teams are ranked according to their UEFA club coefficients, computed based on results of the last three seasons, to decide on the round they enter:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 79], "content_span": [80, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League, Association team allocation, Distribution\nThe elite round remains to be contested by 16 teams (twelve teams from Path A and four teams from Path B), drawn into four groups of four, where the group winners and runners-up from main round Path A are seeded into the top two pots and kept apart if they are from the same group. The winners of each group advance to the final tournament, which is played in the same knockout format between four teams as before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 79], "content_span": [80, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League, Association team allocation, Teams\nA record total of 57 teams from 53 associations entered this season's competition. Two associations had no league as of 2017\u201318 (Faroe Islands, Liechtenstein).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 72], "content_span": [73, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League, Association team allocation, Teams\nThe 23 highest-ranked teams entered the main round, while the 34 lowest-ranked teams entered the preliminary round. The coefficient ranking was also used for seeding in the preliminary round and main round draws, where each team was assigned a seeding position according to their ranking for the respective draw. Nine teams were pre-selected as hosts for the preliminary round and eight teams were pre-selected as hosts for the main round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 72], "content_span": [73, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League, Association team allocation, Teams\nThe draws for the preliminary round and main round were held on 5 July 2018, 14:15 CEST (UTC+2), at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland. The mechanism of the draws for each round is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 72], "content_span": [73, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League, Format\nIn the preliminary round, main round, and elite round, each group was played as a round-robin mini-tournament at the pre-selected hosts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League, Format\nIn the final tournament, the four qualified teams played in knockout format (semi-finals, third place match, and final), either at a host selected by UEFA from one of the teams, or at a neutral venue if none of the teams wished to host.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League, Format, Tiebreakers\nIn the preliminary round, main round, and elite round, teams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria were applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings (Regulations Articles 14.01 and 14.02):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League, Schedule\nIn the preliminary round, main round and elite round, the schedule of each group is as follows, with one rest day between matchdays 2 and 3 for four-team groups, and no rest days for three-team groups (Regulations Articles 19.04, 19.05 and 19.06):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League, Schedule\nNote: For scheduling, the hosts are considered as Team 1, while the visiting teams are considered as Team 2, Team 3, and Team 4 according to their coefficient rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League, Preliminary round\nThe winners of each group advance to the main round Path B to join the seven teams which receive byes (another 16 teams receive byes to the main round Path A).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League, Preliminary round\nTimes are CEST (UTC+2), as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League, Main round\nTimes are CEST (UTC+2), as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League, Main round, Path A\nThe top three teams of each group in Path A advance to the elite round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League, Main round, Path B\nThe winners of each group in Path B advance to the elite round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League, Elite round\nThe draw for the elite round was held on 12 October 2018, 14:00 CEST (UTC+2), at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland. The 16 teams were drawn into four groups of four, containing one Path A group winners (seeding position 1), one Path A group runners-up (seeding position 2), and two teams which were either Path A group third-placed teams or Path B group winners (seeding positions 3 or 4).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0020-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League, Elite round\nFirst, the four teams which were pre-selected as hosts (marked by (H) below) were drawn from their own designated pot and allocated to their respective group as per their seeding positions. Next, the remaining 12 teams were drawn from their respective pot which were allocated according to their seeding positions (teams, including hosts, which were neither Path A group winners nor runners-up were allocated to first seeding position 4, then seeding position 3). Winners and runners-up from the same Path A group could not be drawn in the same group, but third-placed teams could be drawn in the same group as winners or runners-up from the same Path A group. Teams from the same association could be drawn against each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League, Elite round\nThe winners of each group advance to the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League, Elite round\nTimes are CET (UTC+1), as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League, Final tournament\nThe hosts of the final tournament were selected from the four qualified teams. Kairat were chosen as hosts at the UEFA Executive Committee meeting in Dublin, Republic of Ireland on 3 December 2018, with the final tournament taking place at the Almaty Arena in Almaty, Kazakhstan, on 26 and 28 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League, Final tournament, Qualified teams\nIn the following table, all final tournaments were in the Futsal Cup era. Only final tournaments in four-team format starting from 2007 are shown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League, Final tournament, Final draw\nThe draw for the final tournament was held on 1 February 2019, at half-time of the Kazakhstan v Croatia friendly (kick-off 19:30 local time), at the Baluan Sholak Sports Palace in Almaty. The four teams were drawn into two semi-finals without any restrictions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League, Final tournament, Bracket\nIn the semi-finals and final, extra time and penalty shoot-out were used to decide the winner if necessary; however, no extra time was used in the third place match (Regulations Article 17.01 and 17.02).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286610-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Futsal Champions League, Final tournament, Bracket\nTimes are CEST (UTC+2), as listed by UEFA (local times are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League\nThe 2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League was the inaugural season of the UEFA Nations League, an international association football competition involving the men's national teams of the 55 member associations of UEFA. The league phase of the competition was played between September and November 2018, with the finals tournament for the group winners from League A taking place in Portugal in June 2019. Team performances in the league phase were used to seed teams for the qualifying group stage of UEFA Euro 2020, and awarded berths in the play-offs, which decided four of the twenty-four final tournament slots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, Format\nThe format and schedule of the UEFA Nations League was formally approved by the UEFA Executive Committee on 4 December 2014. According to the approved format, the 55 UEFA national teams were divided into four divisions (called \"leagues\"): 12 teams in League A, 12 teams in League B, 15 teams in League C, and 16 teams in League D. For the 2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, teams were divided according to their UEFA national team coefficients after the conclusion of the 2018 FIFA World Cup qualifiers (play-off results were not included), with the highest-ranked teams playing in League A, etc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, Format\nEach league was divided into four groups of three or four teams, so each team played four or six matches within their group (using the home-and-away round-robin format), on double matchdays in September, October and November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, Format\nIn the top division, League A, teams competed to become the UEFA Nations League champions. The four group winners of League A qualified for the Nations League Finals in June 2019, which was played in a knockout format, consisting of the semi-finals, third place play-off, and final. The semi-final pairings, along with the administrative home teams for the third place play-off and final, were determined by means of an open draw on 3 December 2018. Host country Portugal was selected among the four qualified teams on 3 December 2018 by the UEFA Executive Committee, with the winners of the final crowned as the Nations League champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, Format\nTeams also competed for promotion and relegation to a higher or lower league. In each league, the four group winners (except League A) were promoted, while the last-placed teams of each group (except League D) were initially to be relegated; the exception was in League C, where due to different sized groups, the three fourth-placed teams and the lowest-ranking third-placed team were initially to be relegated. However, due to a revamp of the format for the 2020\u201321 UEFA Nations League, no teams were eventually relegated, and some second-placed and third-placed teams were also promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, Format, Tiebreakers for group ranking\nIf two or more teams in the same group were equal on points on completion of the league phase, the following tie-breaking criteria were applied:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, Format, Tiebreakers for group ranking\nTo determine the worst third-placed team in League C, the results against the teams in fourth place were discarded. The following criteria were applied:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, Format, Criteria for league ranking\nIndividual league rankings were established according to the following criteria:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 64], "content_span": [65, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, Format, Criteria for league ranking\nIn order to rank teams in leagues composed of different sized groups, the following procedure applied:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 64], "content_span": [65, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, Format, Criteria for league ranking\nThe ranking of the top four teams in League A was determined by their finish in the Nations League Finals (first to fourth).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 64], "content_span": [65, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, Format, Criteria for overall ranking\nFor the purposes of the European Championship qualifying group stage draw and the European qualifying play-offs, overall UEFA Nations League rankings were established as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, Format, UEFA Euro 2020 qualifying\nThe 2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League was linked with UEFA Euro 2020 qualifying, providing teams another chance to qualify for UEFA Euro 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, Format, UEFA Euro 2020 qualifying\nThe main qualifying process began in March 2019 instead of immediately in September 2018 following the 2018 FIFA World Cup, and ended in November 2019. The format remained largely the same, although only 20 of the 24 spots for the finals tournament were decided from the main qualifying process, leaving four spots still to be decided.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0012-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, Format, UEFA Euro 2020 qualifying\nThe 55 teams were drawn into 10 groups after the completion of the UEFA Nations League (five groups of five teams and five groups of six teams, with the four UEFA Nations League Finals participants guaranteed to be drawn into groups of five teams), with the top two teams in each group qualifying. The draw seeding was based on the overall rankings of the Nations League. The qualifiers were played on double matchdays in March, June, September, October and November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, Format, UEFA Euro 2020 qualifying\nFollowing the qualifying group stage, the qualifying play-offs took place in October and November 2020. Unlike previous editions, the participants of the play-offs were not decided based on results from the qualifying group stage. Instead, 16 teams were selected based on their performance in the Nations League. These teams were divided into four paths, each containing four teams, with one team from each path qualifying for the final tournament. Each league had its own play-off path if at least four teams were available. The Nations League group winners automatically qualified for the play-off path of their league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0013-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, Format, UEFA Euro 2020 qualifying\nIf a group winner had already qualified through the conventional qualifying group stage, they were replaced by the next best-ranked team in the same league. However, if there were not enough teams in the same league, then the spot would go to the next best team in the overall ranking. However, group winners could not face teams from a higher league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, Format, UEFA Euro 2020 qualifying\nEach play-off path featured two single-leg semi-finals, and one single-leg final. The best-ranked team hosted the fourth-ranked team, and the second-ranked team hosted the third-ranked team. The host of the final was decided by a draw, with semi-final winner 1 or 2 hosting the final. The four play-off path winners joined the 20 teams which had already qualified for UEFA Euro 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, Schedule\nBelow was the schedule of the 2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, Schedule\nThe fixture list was confirmed by UEFA on 24 January 2018 following the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, Seeding\nAll 55 UEFA national teams were eligible to compete in the 2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League. The 55 members at the time were divided into the four \"Leagues\" (12 teams in League A, 12 teams in League B, 15 teams in League C, and 16 teams in League D) according to their UEFA national team coefficients after the conclusion of the 2018 FIFA World Cup qualifiers (not including the play-offs), with the highest-ranked teams playing in League A, etc. The seeding pots for the draw were announced on 7 December 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, Seeding\nThe draw for the league phase took place at the SwissTech Convention Center in Lausanne, Switzerland on 24 January 2018, 12:00 CET.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, Seeding\nFor political reasons, Armenia and Azerbaijan (due to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict), as well as Russia and Ukraine (due to the Russian military intervention in Ukraine), could not be drawn in the same group. Due to winter venue restrictions, a group could contain a maximum of two of the following teams: Norway, Finland, Estonia, Lithuania. Due to excessive travel restrictions, any group could contain a maximum of one of the following pairs: Andorra and Kazakhstan, Faroe Islands and Kazakhstan, Gibraltar and Kazakhstan, Gibraltar and Azerbaijan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, League A, Nations League Finals\nThe host of the Nations League Finals, Portugal, was selected from the four qualified teams. The semi-finals pairings were determined by means of an open draw, along with the administrative home teams for the third place play-off and final. The draw took place on 3 December 2018, 14:30 CET (13:30 local time), at the Shelbourne Hotel in Dublin, Republic of Ireland. For scheduling purposes, the semi-final pairing involving the host team was considered to be semi-final 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, League A, Nations League Finals\nTimes are CEST (UTC+2), as listed by UEFA (local times are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, Overall ranking\nThe overall ranking was used for seeding in the UEFA Euro 2020 qualifying group stage draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, Prize money\nThe prize money to be distributed was announced in March 2018, with a total of \u20ac76.25\u00a0million in solidarity and bonus fees due to be distributed to the 55 participating national teams. However, in October 2018, the solidarity fees and bonus payments for group winners were increased by 50%, while the bonuses for the teams appearing in the Nations League Finals also increased, resulting in a total of \u20ac112.875\u00a0million in prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, Prize money\nIn addition, the group winners of each league received the following bonus fees:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, Prize money\nThe four group winners of League A, which participated in the Nations League Finals, also received the following bonus fees based on performance:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, Prize money\nThis meant that the maximum amount of solidarity and bonus fees was \u20ac10.5\u00a0million for a team from League A, \u20ac3\u00a0million for a team from League B, \u20ac2.25\u00a0million for a team from League C, and \u20ac1.5\u00a0million for a team from League D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, Euro 2020 qualifying play-offs\nTeams who failed in the UEFA Euro 2020 qualifying group stage could still qualify for the final tournament via the play-offs. Each league in the UEFA Nations League was allocated one of the four remaining UEFA Euro 2020 places. Four teams from each league who had not already qualified for the European Championship finals competed in the play-offs of their league, which were played in October and November 2020. The play-off berths were first allocated to each group winner, and if any of the group winners had already qualified for the European Championship finals, then to the next best ranked team of the league, etc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286611-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League, Euro 2020 qualifying play-offs\nThe team selection process determined the 16 teams that competed in the play-offs based on a set of criteria. Teams in bold advanced to the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286612-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League A\nThe 2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League A was the top division of the 2018\u201319 edition of the UEFA Nations League, the inaugural season of the international football competition involving the men's national teams of the 55 member associations of UEFA. League A culminated with the Nations League Finals in June 2019, which crowned Portugal as the inaugural champions of the UEFA Nations League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286612-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League A, Format\nLeague A consisted of the top 12 ranked UEFA members, split into four groups of three. The winners of each group advanced to the UEFA Nations League Finals. The third-placed team of each group was initially to be relegated to the 2020\u201321 UEFA Nations League B, but remained in League A following UEFA's reformatting of the next edition's groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286612-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League A, Format\nThe Nations League Finals took place in June 2019 and was played in a knockout format, consisting of the semi-finals, third place play-off, and final. The semi-final pairings, along with the administrative home teams for the third place play-off and final, were determined by means of an open draw on 3 December 2018. Host country Portugal was selected among the four qualified teams on 3 December 2018 by the UEFA Executive Committee, with the winners of the final crowned as the inaugural champions of the UEFA Nations League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286612-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League A, Format\nThe four group winners were drawn into groups of five teams for the UEFA Euro 2020 qualifying competition (in order to accommodate for the Nations League Finals). In addition, League A was allocated one of the four remaining UEFA Euro 2020 places. Four teams from League A which had not already qualified for the European Championship finals competed in the play-offs, which were played in October and November 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286612-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League A, Format\nThe play-off berths were first allocated to the group winners, and if any of the group winners had already qualified for the European Championship finals, then to the next best ranked team of the league, etc. If there were fewer than four teams in League A which had not already qualified for the European Championship finals, the play-off berths would be allocated to the next best ranked team of the following league, etc. The play-offs consisted of two \"one-off\" semi-finals (best-ranked team vs. fourth best-ranked team and second best-ranked team vs. third best-ranked team, played at home of higher-ranked teams) and one \"one-off\" final between the two semi-final winners (venue drawn in advance between semi-final 1 and 2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286612-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League A, Format, Seeding\nTeams were allocated to League A according to their UEFA national team coefficients after the conclusion of the 2018 FIFA World Cup qualifying group stage on 11 October 2017. Teams were split into three pots of four teams, ordered based on their UEFA national team coefficient. The seeding pots for the draw were announced on 7 December 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286612-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League A, Format, Seeding\nThe group draw took place at the SwissTech Convention Center in Lausanne, Switzerland on 24 January 2018, 12:00 CET.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286612-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League A, Groups\nThe fixture list was confirmed by UEFA on 24 January 2018 following the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286612-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League A, Groups\nTimes are CET/CEST, as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286612-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League A, Nations League Finals\nThe host of the Nations League Finals, Portugal, was selected from the four qualified teams. The semi-finals pairings were determined by means of an open draw, along with the administrative home teams for the third place play-off and final. The draw took place on 3 December 2018, 14:30 CET (13:30 local time), at the Shelbourne Hotel in Dublin, Republic of Ireland. For scheduling purposes, the semi-final pairing involving the host team was considered to be semi-final 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286612-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League A, Nations League Finals\nTimes are CEST (UTC+2), as listed by UEFA (local times are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286612-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League A, Goalscorers\nThere were 81 goals scored in 28 matches, for an average of 2.89 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286612-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League A, Overall ranking\nThe 12 League A teams were ranked 1st to 12th overall in the 2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League according to the following rules:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286612-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League A, Prize money\nThe prize money to be distributed was announced in March 2018. Each team in League A received a solidarity fee of \u20ac1.5 million. In addition, the four group winners received double this amount via a \u20ac1.5M bonus fee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286612-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League A, Prize money\nThe four group winners of League A, which participated in the Nations League Finals, also received the following fees based on performance:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286612-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League A, Prize money\nThis meant that the maximum amount of solidarity and bonus fees for a team from League A was \u20ac7.5M.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286612-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League A, Qualifying play-offs\nThe four best teams in League A according to the overall ranking that did not qualify for UEFA Euro 2020 through the qualifying group stage were set to compete in the play-offs, with the winners qualifying for the final tournament. As Iceland were the only team in League A that did not qualify, the remaining three slots were allocated to teams from another league, according to the overall ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286613-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League B\nThe 2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League B was the second division of the 2018\u201319 edition of the UEFA Nations League, the inaugural season of the international football competition involving the men's national teams of the 55 member associations of UEFA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286613-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League B, Format\nLeague B consisted of 12 UEFA members ranked from 13 to 24, split into four groups of three. The winners of each group were promoted to the 2020\u201321 UEFA Nations League A. The third-placed team of each group was initially to be relegated to the 2020\u201321 UEFA Nations League C, but remained in League B following UEFA's reformatting of the next edition's groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286613-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League B, Format\nIn addition, League B was allocated one of the four remaining UEFA Euro 2020 places. Four teams from League B which had not already qualified for the European Championship finals competed in the play-offs for each division, which were played in October and November 2020. The play-off berths were first allocated to the group winners, and if any of the group winners had already qualified for the European Championship finals, then to the next best ranked team of the division, etc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286613-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League B, Format\nIf there were fewer than four teams in League B which had not already qualified for the European Championship finals, the play-off berths would be allocated via one of two methods. If League B had a group winner selected for the play-offs, the next best team in the overall ranking from a lower league would be selected. If League B had no group winner available, the best team in the overall ranking would be selected. The play-offs consisted of two \"one-off\" semi-finals (best-ranked team vs. fourth best-ranked team and second best-ranked team vs. third best-ranked team, played at home of higher-ranked teams) and one \"one-off\" final between the two semi-final winners (venue drawn in advance between semi-final 1 and 2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 763]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286613-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League B, Format, Seeding\nTeams were allocated to League B according to their UEFA national team coefficients after the conclusion of the 2018 FIFA World Cup qualifying group stage on 11 October 2017. Teams were split into three pots of four teams, ordered based on their UEFA national team coefficient. The seeding pots for the draw were announced on 7 December 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286613-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League B, Format, Seeding\nThe group draw took place at the SwissTech Convention Center in Lausanne, Switzerland on 24 January 2018, 12:00 CET. For political reasons, Russia and Ukraine could not be drawn into the same group (due to the Russian military intervention in Ukraine).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286613-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League B, Groups\nThe fixture list was confirmed by UEFA on 24 January 2018 following the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286613-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League B, Groups\nTimes are CET/CEST, as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286613-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League B, Goalscorers\nThere were 48 goals scored in 24 matches, for an average of 2 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286613-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League B, Overall ranking\nThe 12 League B teams were ranked 13th to 24th overall in the 2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League according to the following rules:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286613-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League B, Prize money\nThe prize money to be distributed was announced in March 2018. Each team in League B received a solidarity fee of \u20ac1 million. In addition, the four group winners received double this amount with a \u20ac1M bonus fee. This meant that the maximum amount of solidarity and bonus fees for a team from League B was \u20ac2M.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286613-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League B, Qualifying play-offs\nThe four best teams in League B according to the overall ranking that did not qualify for UEFA Euro 2020 through the qualifying group stage competed in the play-offs, with the winners qualifying for the final tournament. If there had been fewer than four teams in League B that had not qualified, the remaining slots would have been allocated to teams from another league, according to the overall ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286614-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League C\nThe 2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League C was the third division of the 2018\u201319 edition of the UEFA Nations League, the inaugural season of the international football competition involving the men's national teams of the 55 member associations of UEFA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286614-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League C, Format\nLeague C consisted of 15 UEFA members ranked from 25 to 39, which were split into four groups (one group of three and three groups of four). The top two teams of each group were promoted to the 2020\u201321 UEFA Nations League B, and the bottom four ranked teams were initially relegated to the 2020\u201321 UEFA Nations League D (the bottom teams of Group 2, 3, and 4, along with the lowest ranked third-placed team of League C). However, following UEFA announcement of format changes for the next edition's groups in September 2019, none of the 2018\u201319 League C teams were relegated to League D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286614-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League C, Format\nIn addition, League C was allocated one of the four remaining UEFA Euro 2020 places. The play-off berths were first allocated to each Nations League group winner, and if any of the group winners had already qualified for the European Championship finals, then to the next best ranked team of the league, etc. As Finland already qualified for the European Championship finals through regular qualifiers, the seven best ranked teams from League C competed in the play-offs, played in October and November 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286614-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League C, Format, Seeding\nTeams were allocated to League C according to their UEFA national team coefficients after the conclusion of the 2018 FIFA World Cup qualifying group stage on 11 October 2017. Teams were split into four pots (three pots of four teams and one pot of the three lowest teams), ordered based on their UEFA national team coefficient. The group with three teams contained teams only from pots 1, 2, and 3. The seeding pots for the draw were announced on 7 December 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286614-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League C, Format, Seeding\nThe group draw took place at the SwissTech Convention Center in Lausanne, Switzerland on 24 January 2018, 12:00 CET. Due to winter venue restrictions, a group could only contain a maximum of two of the following teams: Norway, Finland, Estonia, Lithuania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286614-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League C, Groups\nThe fixture list was confirmed by UEFA on 24 January 2018 following the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286614-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League C, Groups\nTimes are CET/CEST, as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286614-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League C, Goalscorers\nThere were 92 goals scored in 42 matches, for an average of 2.19 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286614-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League C, Overall ranking\nThe 15 League C teams were ranked 25th to 39th overall in the 2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League according to the following rules:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286614-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League C, Prize money\nThe prize money to be distributed was announced in March 2018. Each team in League C received a solidarity fee of \u20ac750,000. In addition, the four group winners received double this amount with a \u20ac750,000 bonus fee. This meant that the maximum amount of solidarity and bonus fees for a team from League C was \u20ac1.5 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286614-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League C, Qualifying play-offs\nThe seven best teams in League C according to the overall ranking that did not qualify for UEFA Euro 2020 through the qualifying group stage competed in the play-offs, with the winners qualifying for the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286615-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League D\nThe 2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League D was the fourth and lowest division of the 2018\u201319 edition of the UEFA Nations League, the inaugural season of the international football competition involving the men's national teams of the 55 member associations of UEFA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286615-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League D, Format\nLeague D consisted of the lowest 16 UEFA members ranked from 40\u201355, who were split into four groups of four. The top two teams of each group, as well as the best ranked third-place team, were promoted to the 2020\u201321 UEFA Nations League C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286615-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League D, Format\nIn addition, League D was allocated one of the four remaining UEFA Euro 2020 places. Four teams from League D which had not already qualified for the European Championship finals competed in the play-offs for each division, which were played in October and November 2020. The play-off berths were first allocated to the group winners, and if any of the group winners had already qualified for the European Championship finals, then to the next best ranked team of the division, etc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286615-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League D, Format\nIf there were fewer than four teams in League D which had not already qualified for the European Championship finals, and League D had no group winner available, the best team in the overall ranking would be selected. The play-offs consisted of two \"one-off\" semi-finals (best-ranked team vs. fourth best-ranked team and second best-ranked team vs. third best-ranked team, played at home of higher-ranked teams) and one \"one-off\" final between the two semi-final winners (venue drawn in advance between semi-final 1 and 2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286615-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League D, Format, Seeding\nTeams were allocated to League D according to their UEFA national team coefficients after the conclusion of the 2018 FIFA World Cup qualifying group stage on 11 October 2017. Teams were split into four pots of four teams, ordered based on their UEFA national team coefficient. The seeding pots for the draw were announced on 7 December 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286615-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League D, Format, Seeding\nThe group draw took place at the SwissTech Convention Center in Lausanne, Switzerland on 24 January 2018, 12:00 CET. For political reasons, Armenia and Azerbaijan could not be drawn into the same group (due to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict). Due to excessive travel restrictions, any group could only contain a maximum of one of the following pairs: Andorra and Kazakhstan, Faroe Islands and Kazakhstan, Gibraltar and Kazakhstan, Gibraltar and Azerbaijan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286615-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League D, Groups\nThe fixture list was confirmed by UEFA on 24 January 2018 following the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286615-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League D, Groups\nTimes are CET/CEST, as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286615-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League D, Goalscorers\nThere were 121 goals scored in 48 matches, for an average of 2.52 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286615-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League D, Overall ranking\nThe 16 League D teams were ranked 40th to 55th overall in the 2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League according to the following rules:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286615-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League D, Prize money\nThe prize money to be distributed was announced in March 2018. Each team in League D received a solidarity fee of \u20ac500,000. In addition, the four group winners received double this amount with a \u20ac500,000 bonus fee. This meant that the maximum amount of solidarity and bonus fees for a team from League D was \u20ac1 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286615-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Nations League D, Qualifying play-offs\nThe four best teams in League D according to the overall ranking that did not qualify for UEFA Euro 2020 through the qualifying group stage competed in the play-offs, with the winners qualifying for the final tournament. If there had been fewer than four teams in League D that had not qualified, the remaining slots would have been allocated to teams from another league, according to the overall ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286616-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League\nThe 2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League was the 18th edition of the European women's club football championship organised by UEFA, and the 10th edition since being rebranded as the UEFA Women's Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286616-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League\nThe final was held at the Groupama Arena in Budapest, Hungary. This was the first time since the final was played as a single match that a host city for the Women's Champions League final was not automatically assigned by which city won the bid to host the men's Champions League final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286616-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League\nLyon were the defending champions and won the final against Barcelona 4\u20131, to win their sixth overall and fourth straight title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286616-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League, Association team allocation\nA maximum of 68 teams from 55 UEFA member associations were eligible to participate in the 2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League. The association ranking based on the UEFA league coefficient for women was used to determine the number of participating teams for each association:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286616-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League, Association team allocation, Association ranking\nFor the 2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League, the associations were allocated places according to their 2017 UEFA league coefficients for women, which took into account their performance in European competitions from 2012\u201313 to 2016\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 87], "content_span": [88, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286616-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League, Association team allocation, Association ranking\nFor the first time Switzerland had two entries, replacing Scotland in the top 12 associations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 87], "content_span": [88, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286616-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League, Association team allocation, Distribution\nThe format of the competition remained unchanged from previous years, starting from the qualifying round (played as mini-tournaments with four teams in each group), followed by the knockout phase starting from the round of 32 (played as home-and-away two-legged ties except for the one-match final).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 80], "content_span": [81, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286616-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League, Association team allocation, Distribution\nUnlike the men's Champions League, not every association entered a team, and so the exact number of teams entering in each round (qualifying round and round of 32) could not be determined until the full entry list was known. In general, the title holders, the champions of the top 12 associations, and the runners-up of highest-ranked associations (exact number depending on the number of entries) received a bye to the round of 32. All other teams (runners-up of lowest-ranked associations and champions of associations starting from 13th) entered the qualifying round, with the group winners and a maximum of two best runners-up advancing to the round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 80], "content_span": [81, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286616-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League, Association team allocation, Teams\nA total of 60 teams from 48 associations entered the competition, with the entries confirmed by UEFA on 8 June 2018. An association must have an eleven-a-side women's domestic league (or in special circumstances, a women's domestic cup) to enter a team. Among the entrants:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286616-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League, Association team allocation, Teams\nAs K\u00cd Klaksv\u00edk failed to win the Faroe Islands league, their streak of having participated in every edition of the UEFA Women's Cup/Champions League have ended after 17 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286616-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League, Round and draw dates\nUEFA has scheduled the competition as follows (all draws were held at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286616-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League, Qualifying round\nThe draw of the qualifying round was held at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland on 22 June 2018, 13:30 CEST. The teams were allocated into four seeding positions based on their UEFA club coefficients at the beginning of the season. They were drawn into groups of four containing one team from each of the four seeding positions. First, the teams which were pre-selected as hosts were drawn from their own designated pot and allocated to their respective group as per their seeding positions. Next, the remaining teams were drawn from their respective pot which were allocated according to their seeding positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286616-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League, Qualifying round\nIn each group, teams played against each other in a round-robin mini-tournament at the pre-selected hosts. The group winners and the two runners-up with the best record against the teams finishing first and third in their group advanced to the round of 32 to join the 20 teams which received a bye.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286616-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League, Qualifying round\nThe matches were played on 7, 10 and 13 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286616-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League, Qualifying round\nTeams are ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria are applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings (Regulations Articles 14.01 and 14.02):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286616-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League, Qualifying round\nTo determine the best runners-up, the results against the teams in fourth place are discarded. The following criteria are applied (Regulations Article 14.03):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286616-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League, Qualifying round, Ranking of second-placed teams\nTo determine the best two second-placed teams from the qualifying round which advanced to the knockout phase, only the results of the second-placed teams against the first and third-placed teams in their group were taken into account, while results against the fourth-placed team not included. As a result, two matches played by each second-placed team counts for the purposes of determining the ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 87], "content_span": [88, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286616-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League, Knockout phase\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 scores more goals on aggregate over the two legs advanced to the next round. If the aggregate score was level, the away goals rule was applied, i.e. the team that scoredmore goals away from home over the two legs advanced. If away goals were also equal, then extra time was played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286616-0017-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League, Knockout phase\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 advanced by virtue of more away goals scored. If no goals were scored during extra time, the tie was decided by penalty shoot-out. In the final, which was played as a single match, if the score was level at the end of normal time, extra time was played, followed by penalty shoot-out if the score remained tied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286616-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League, Knockout phase\nThe mechanism of the draws for each round is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286616-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League, Knockout phase, Round of 32\nThe draw for the round of 32 was held on 17 August 2018, 14:00 CEST, at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland. The first legs were played on 12 and 13 September, and the second legs on 26 and 27 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286616-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League, Knockout phase, Round of 16\nThe draw for the round of 16 was held on 1 October 2018, 13:00 CEST, at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland. The first legs were played on 17 and 18 October, and the second legs on 31 October and 1 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286616-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League, Knockout phase, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the quarter-finals was held on 9 November 2018, 13:00 CET, at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland. The first legs were played on 20 and 21 March, and the second legs on 27 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 69], "content_span": [70, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286616-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League, Knockout phase, Quarter-finals\nDuring the Chelsea - PSG tie a number of arrests were made by the Metropolitan Police of travelling supporters of PSG who were arrested for possession of illegal drugs, weapons and vandalism. This was after disorder was reported at Waterloo and Wimbledon Train stations and a bus carrying PSG supporters being searched and barred entry to Kingsmeadow Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 69], "content_span": [70, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286616-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League, Knockout phase, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the semi-finals was held on 9 November 2018, 13:00 CET (after the quarter-final draw), at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland. The first legs were played on 21 April, and the second legs on 28 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286616-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League, Knockout phase, Final\nThe final was played on 18 May 2019 at the Groupama Arena in Budapest. The \"home\" team for the final (for administrative purposes) was determined by an additional draw held after the quarter-final and semi-final draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286616-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League, Statistics, Squad of the season\nThe following players were named in the squad of the season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 70], "content_span": [71, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286617-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League knockout phase\nThe 2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League knockout phase began on 12 September 2018 and ended on 18 May 2019 with the final at Groupama Arena in Budapest, Hungary, to decide the champions of the 2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League. A total of 32 teams competed in the knockout phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286617-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League knockout phase\nTimes are CET/CEST, as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286617-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League knockout phase, Qualified teams\nThe knockout phase involved 32 teams: 20 teams which received a bye, and the 12 teams which advanced from the qualifying round (ten group winners and two best runners-ups).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286617-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League knockout phase, Qualified teams\nBelow are the 32 teams which participated in the knockout phase (with their 2018 UEFA club coefficients, which take into account their performance in European competitions from 2013\u201314 to 2017\u201318 plus 33% of their association coefficient from the same time span).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286617-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's 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 scores more goals on aggregate over the two legs advanced to the next round. If the aggregate score was level, the away goals rule was applied, i.e. the team that scoredmore goals away from home over the two legs advanced. If away goals were also equal, then extra time was played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 60], "content_span": [61, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286617-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's 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 advanced by virtue of more away goals scored. If no goals were scored during extra time, the tie was decided by penalty shoot-out. In the final, which was played as a single match, if the score was level at the end of normal time, extra time was played, followed by penalty shoot-out if the score remained tied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 60], "content_span": [61, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286617-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League knockout phase, Format\nThe mechanism of the draws for each round is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 60], "content_span": [61, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286617-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League knockout phase, Format\nOn 17 July 2014, the UEFA emergency panel ruled that Ukrainian and Russian clubs would not be drawn against each other \"until further notice\" due to the political unrest between the countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 60], "content_span": [61, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286617-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League knockout phase, Schedule\nThe schedule of the knockout phase is as follows (all draws are held at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286617-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League knockout phase, Round of 32\nThe draw for the round of 32 was held on 17 August 2018, 14:00 CEST, at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 65], "content_span": [66, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286617-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League knockout phase, Round of 32, Overview\nThe first legs were played on 12 and 13 September, and the second legs on 26 and 27 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 75], "content_span": [76, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286617-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League knockout phase, Round of 16\nThe draw for the round of 16 was held on 1 October 2018, 13:00 CEST, at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 65], "content_span": [66, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286617-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League knockout phase, Round of 16, Overview\nThe first legs were played on 17 and 18 October, and the second legs on 31 October and 1 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 75], "content_span": [76, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286617-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League knockout phase, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the quarter-finals was held on 9 November 2018, 13:00 CET, at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 68], "content_span": [69, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286617-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League knockout phase, Quarter-finals, Overview\nThe first legs were played on 20 and 21 March, and the second legs on 27 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 78], "content_span": [79, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286617-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League knockout phase, Quarter-finals, Overview\nDuring the Chelsea - PSG tie a number of arrests were made by the Metropolitan Police of travelling supporters of PSG who were arrested for possession of illegal drugs, weapons and vandalism. This was after disorder was reported at Waterloo and Wimbledon Train stations and a bus carrying PSG supporters being searched and barred entry to Kingsmeadow Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 78], "content_span": [79, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286617-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League knockout phase, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the semi-finals was held on 9 November 2018, 13:00 CET (after the quarter-final draw), at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 65], "content_span": [66, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286617-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League knockout phase, Semi-finals, Overview\nThe first legs were played on 21 April, and the second legs on 28 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 75], "content_span": [76, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286617-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League knockout phase, Final\nThe final was played on 18 May 2019 at the Groupama Arena in Budapest. The \"home\" team for the final (for administrative purposes) was determined by an additional draw held after the quarter-final and semi-final draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 59], "content_span": [60, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286618-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League qualifying round\nThe 2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League qualifying round was played between 7 and 13 August 2018. A total of 40 teams competed in the qualifying round to decide 12 of the 32 places in the knockout phase of the 2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286618-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League qualifying round, Draw\nThe draw of the qualifying round was held at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland on 22 June 2018, 13:30 CEST. The teams were allocated into four seeding positions based on their UEFA club coefficients at the beginning of the season. They were drawn into groups of four containing one team from each of the four seeding positions. First, the teams which were pre-selected as hosts were drawn from their own designated pot and allocated to their respective group as per their seeding positions. Next, the remaining teams were drawn from their respective pot which were allocated according to their seeding positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 60], "content_span": [61, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286618-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League qualifying round, Draw\nBased on the decision taken by the UEFA Emergency Panel at its meeting in Paris on 9 June 2016, teams from Serbia or Bosnia and Herzegovina would not be drawn against teams from Kosovo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 60], "content_span": [61, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286618-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League qualifying round, Draw\nBelow are the 40 teams which participate in the qualifying round (with their 2018 UEFA club coefficients, which take into account their performance in European competitions from 2013\u201314 to 2017\u201318 plus 33% of their association coefficient from the same time span), with the ten teams which are pre-selected as hosts marked by (H).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 60], "content_span": [61, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286618-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League qualifying round, Format\nIn each group, teams played against each other in a round-robin mini-tournament at the pre-selected hosts. The group winners and the two runners-up with the best record against the teams finishing first and third in their group advanced to the round of 32 to join the 20 teams which received a bye.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 62], "content_span": [63, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286618-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League qualifying round, Format, Tiebreakers\nTeams are ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria are applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings (Regulations Articles 14.01 and 14.02):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 75], "content_span": [76, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286618-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League qualifying round, Format, Tiebreakers\nTo determine the best runners-up, the results against the teams in fourth place are discarded. The following criteria are applied (Regulations Article 14.03):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 75], "content_span": [76, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286618-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League qualifying round, Groups\nThe matches were played on 7, 10 and 13 August 2018. The schedule of each group was as follows, with two rest days between each matchday (Regulations Article 19.05):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 62], "content_span": [63, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286618-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League qualifying round, Groups\nTimes are CEST (UTC+2), as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 62], "content_span": [63, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286618-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League qualifying round, Ranking of second-placed teams\nTo determine the two best second-placed teams from the qualifying round which advance to the knockout phase, only the results of the second-placed teams against the first and third-placed teams in their group were taken into account, while results against the fourth-placed team were not included. As a result, two matches played by each second-placed team counted for the purposes of determining the ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 86], "content_span": [87, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286619-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League\nThe 2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League was the sixth season of the UEFA Youth League, a European youth club football competition organised by UEFA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286619-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League\nThe final was played on 29 April 2019 at the Colovray Stadium in Nyon, Switzerland, between English side Chelsea and Portuguese side Porto. In their first appearance in the final, Porto won 3\u20131 and secured their first title in the competition, the first ever for a Portuguese team. Barcelona were the defending champions, but were eliminated by Chelsea in the semi-finals, in a rematch of the previous season's final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286619-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League, Teams\nA total of 64 teams from at least 32 of the 55 UEFA member associations may enter the tournament. They are split into two sections, each with 32 teams:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286619-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League, Squads\nPlayers must be born on or after 1 January 2000, with a maximum of five players born between 1 January 1999 and 31 December 1999 allowed in the 40-player squad, and a maximum of three of these players allowed per each match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286619-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League, Squads\nStarting from this season, up to five substitutions are permitted per team in each match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286619-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League, Round and draw dates\nThe schedule of the competition is as follows (all draws are held at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland, unless stated otherwise).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286619-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League, UEFA Champions League Path\nFor the UEFA Champions League Path, the 32 teams were drawn into eight groups of four. There was no separate draw held, with the group compositions identical to the draw for the 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League group stage, which was held on 30 August 2018, 18:00 CEST, at the Grimaldi Forum in Monaco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286619-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League, UEFA Champions League Path\nIn each group, teams play against each other home-and-away in a round-robin format. The eight group winners advance to the round of 16, while the eight runners-up advance to the play-offs, where they were joined by the eight second round winners from the Domestic Champions Path.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286619-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League, UEFA Champions League Path\nThe matchdays are 18\u201319 September, 2\u20133 October, 23\u201324 October, 6\u20137 November, 27\u201328 November, and 11\u201312 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286619-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League, UEFA Champions League Path\nTeams are ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria are applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings (Regulations Articles 14.03):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286619-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League, Domestic Champions Path\nFor the Domestic Champions Path, the 32 teams were drawn into two rounds of two-legged home-and-away ties. The draw for both the first round and second round was held on 4 September 2018, 14:00 CEST, at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland. There were no seedings, but the 32 teams were split into groups defined by sporting and geographical criteria prior to the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286619-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League, Domestic Champions Path\nIn both rounds, if the aggregate score is tied after full time of the second leg, the away goals rule is used to decide the winner. If still tied, the match is decided by a penalty shoot-out (no extra time is played). The eight second round winners advance to the play-offs, where they are joined by the eight group runners-up from the UEFA Champions League Path (group stage).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286619-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League, Domestic Champions Path, First round\nThe first legs were played on 2, 3 and 4 October 2018, and the second legs on 23 and 24 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 63], "content_span": [64, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286619-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League, Domestic Champions Path, Second round\nThe first legs were played on 6 and 7 November 2018, and the second legs were played on 27 and 28 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286619-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League, Play-offs\nThe draw for the play-offs was held on 17 December 2018, 14:15 CET (UTC+1), at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland. The eight second round winners from the Domestic Champions Path were drawn against the eight group runners-up from the UEFA Champions League Path, with the teams from the Domestic Champions Path hosting the match. Teams from the same association could not be drawn against each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286619-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League, Play-offs\nEach tie was played over a single match. If the score was tied after full time, the match was decided by a penalty shoot-out (no extra time was played).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286619-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League, Play-offs\nThe play-offs were played on 19 and 20 February 2019. The eight play-off winners advanced to the round of 16, where they were joined by the eight group winners from the UEFA Champions League Path.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286619-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League, Knockout phase\nThe draw for the round of 16 onwards was held on 22 February 2019, 14:00 CET (UTC+1), at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland. The mechanism of the draws for each round was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286619-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League, Knockout phase\nEach tie was played over a single match. If the score was tied after full time, the match was decided by a penalty shoot-out (no extra time was played).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286619-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League, Knockout phase, Round of 16\nThe round of 16 matches were played on 6, 12 and 13 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286619-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League, Knockout phase, Quarter-finals\nThe quarter-finals were played on 2 and 3 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286619-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League, Knockout phase, Semi-finals\nThe semi-finals were played on 26 April 2019 at Colovray Stadium, Nyon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286619-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League, Knockout phase, Final\nThe final was played on 29 April 2019 at Colovray Stadium, Nyon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286620-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League Domestic Champions Path\nThe 2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League Domestic Champions Path began on 2 October and ended on 28 November 2018. A total of 32 teams competed in the Domestic Champions Path to decide 8 of the 24 places in the knockout phase (play-offs and the round of 16 onwards) of the 2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286620-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League Domestic Champions Path\nTimes are CET/CEST, as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286620-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League Domestic Champions Path, Draw\nThe youth domestic champions of the top 32 associations according to their 2017 UEFA country coefficients enter the Domestic Champions Path. If there is a vacancy (associations with no youth domestic competition, as well as youth domestic champions already included in the UEFA Champions League path), it is first filled by the title holders should they have not yet qualified, and then by the youth domestic champions of the next association in the UEFA ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 55], "content_span": [56, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286620-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League Domestic Champions Path, Draw\nFor the Domestic Champions Path, the 32 teams were drawn into two rounds of two-legged home-and-away ties. The draw for both the first round and second round was held on 4 September 2018, 14:00 CEST, at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland. There were no seedings, but the 32 teams were split into groups defined by sporting and geographical criteria prior to the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 55], "content_span": [56, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286620-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League Domestic Champions Path, Format\nIn both rounds, if the aggregate score is tied after full time of the second leg, the away goals rule is used to decide the winner. If still tied, the match is decided by a penalty shoot-out (no extra time is played). The eight second round winners advance to the play-offs, where they are joined by the eight group runners-up from the UEFA Champions League Path (group stage).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 57], "content_span": [58, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286620-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League Domestic Champions Path, First round\nThe first legs were played on 2, 3 and 4 October 2018, and the second legs on 23 and 24 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 62], "content_span": [63, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286620-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League Domestic Champions Path, Second round\nThe first legs were played on 6 and 7 November 2018, and the second legs were played on 27 and 28 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 63], "content_span": [64, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286621-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League group stage\nThe 2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League UEFA Champions League Path (group stage) began on 18 September and concluded on 12 December 2018. A total of 32 teams competed in group stage of the UEFA Champions League Path to decide 16 of the 24 places in the knockout phase (play-offs and the round of 16 onwards) of the 2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286621-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League group stage, Draw\nThe youth teams of the 32 clubs which qualify for the 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League group stage enter the UEFA Champions League Path. If there is a vacancy (youth teams not entering), it is filled by a team defined by UEFA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 43], "content_span": [44, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286621-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League group stage, Draw\nFor the UEFA Champions League Path, the 32 teams were drawn into eight groups of four. There was no separate draw held, with the group compositions identical to the draw for the 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League group stage, which was held on 30 August 2018, 18:00 CEST, at the Grimaldi Forum in Monaco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 43], "content_span": [44, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286621-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League group stage, Format\nIn each group, teams play against each other home-and-away in a round-robin format. The eight group winners advance to the round of 16, while the eight runners-up advance to the play-offs, where they were joined by the eight second round winners from the Domestic Champions Path.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286621-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League group stage, Format, Tiebreakers\nTeams are ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria are applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings (Regulations Articles 14.03):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 58], "content_span": [59, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286621-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League group stage, Groups\nThe matchdays are 18\u201319 September, 2\u20133 October, 23\u201324 October, 6\u20137 November, 27\u201328 November, and 11\u201312 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286621-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League group stage, Groups\nTimes are CET/CEST, as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286622-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League knockout phase\nThe 2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League knockout phase (play-offs and round of 16 onwards) began on 19 February and concluded on 29 April 2019 with the final at Colovray Stadium in Nyon, Switzerland. It decided the champions of the 2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League. A total of 24 teams competed in the knockout phase (play-offs and round of 16 onwards).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286622-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League knockout phase\nTimes are CET/CEST, as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286622-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League knockout phase, Format\nThe knockout phase (play-offs and round of 16 onwards), played as a single-elimination tournament, involved 24 teams: 16 teams which qualified from the UEFA Champions League Path (eight group winners and eight group runners-up), and eight teams which qualified from the Domestic Champions Path (eight second round winners):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286622-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League knockout phase, Format\nEach tie was played over a single match. If the score was tied after full time, the match was decided by a penalty shoot-out (no extra time was played).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286622-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League knockout phase, Format\nOn 17 July 2014, the UEFA emergency panel ruled that Ukrainian and Russian clubs would not be drawn against each other \"until further notice\" due to the political unrest between the countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286622-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League knockout phase, Schedule\nThe schedule is as follows (all draws are held at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286622-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League knockout phase, Play-offs\nThe draw for the play-offs was held on 17 December 2018, 14:15 CET (UTC+1), at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland. The eight second round winners from the Domestic Champions Path were drawn against the eight group runners-up from the UEFA Champions League Path, with the teams from the Domestic Champions Path hosting the match. Teams from the same association could not be drawn against each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286622-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League knockout phase, Play-offs\nThe play-offs were played on 19 and 20 February 2019. The eight play-off winners advanced to the round of 16, where they were joined by the eight group winners from the UEFA Champions League Path.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286622-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League knockout phase, Bracket (round of 16 onwards)\nThe draw for the round of 16 onwards was held on 22 February 2019, 14:00 CET (UTC+1), at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland. The mechanism of the draws for each round was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286622-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League knockout phase, Round of 16\nThe round of 16 matches were played on 6, 12 and 13 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286622-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League knockout phase, Quarter-finals\nThe quarter-finals were played on 2 and 3 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286622-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League knockout phase, Semi-finals\nThe semi-finals were played on 26 April 2019 at Colovray Stadium, Nyon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286622-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UEFA Youth League knockout phase, Final\nThe final was played on 29 April 2019 at Colovray Stadium, Nyon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286623-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UIC Flames men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UIC Flames men's basketball team represented the University of Illinois at Chicago in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Flames, led by fourth-year head coach Steve McClain, played their home games at Credit Union 1 Arena as members of the Horizon League. They finished the season 16\u201316, 10\u20138 in Horizon League play to finish in a tie for fourth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Horizon League Tournament to Green Bay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286623-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UIC Flames men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Flames finished the 2017\u201318 season 20\u201316, 12\u20136 in Horizon League play to finish in third place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Horizon League Tournament to Milwaukee. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they defeated Saint Francis (PA), Austin Peay, and Liberty to advance to the championship game where they lost to Northern Colorado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286624-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UMBC Retrievers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UMBC Retrievers men's basketball team represented the University of Maryland, Baltimore County in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at the UMBC Event Center in Catonsville, Maryland, with one game being played at their former home, the Retriever Activities Center, and were led by third-year head coach Ryan Odom. They were members of the America East Conference. They finished the season 21\u201313, 11\u20135 in America East play to finish in third place. They defeated Albany and Hartford to advance to the championship game of the America East Tournament where they lost to Vermont. Despite having 21 wins, they did not participate in a postseason tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286624-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UMBC Retrievers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Retrievers finished the 2017\u201318 season 25\u201311, 12\u20134 in the America East Conference play to finish in second place. In the America East Tournament, they beat UMass Lowell and Hartford to advance to the championship, where they defeated Vermont. As a result, the Retrievers received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. As the No. 16 seed in the South region, they defeated the No. 1 overall seed Virginia by 20 points, becoming the first 16th-seeded team to beat a No. 1 seed. The win is considered either the biggest, or second-biggest, upset in NCAA Tournament history depending on seedings or point spreads. The Retrievers lost to Kansas State in the Second Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286625-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UMBC Retrievers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UMBC Retrievers women's basketball team represents the University of Maryland, Baltimore County during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Retrievers, initially led by seventeenth year head coach Phil Stern, play their home games at UMBC Event Center and are members of the America East Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286625-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UMBC Retrievers women's basketball team\nOn February 22, 2019, Stern, who had been on administrative leave since December 13, 2018, announced his resignation from UMBC. Assistant coach Carlee Cassidy-Dewey served as interim head coach during Stern's initial leave, and continued in that role following his resignation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286625-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UMBC Retrievers women's basketball team, Media\nAll non-televised home games and conference road games will stream on either ESPN3 or AmericaEast.tv. Most road games will stream on the opponents website. Select games will be broadcast on the radio on WQLL-1370 AM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 54], "content_span": [55, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286626-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UMKC Kangaroos men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UMKC Kangaroos men's basketball team represented the University of Missouri\u2013Kansas City during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Kangaroos, led by sixth-year head coach Kareem Richardson, played their home games at the Swinney Recreation Center and Municipal Auditorium as members of the Western Athletic Conference. They finished the season 11\u201321, 6-10 in WAC play to finish in a tie for seventh place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the WAC Tournament to Utah Valley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286626-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UMKC Kangaroos men's basketball team\nThis was the team's final season as the UMKC Kangaroos. On July 1, 2019, the athletic department announced its rebranding as the Kansas City Roos. The university name did not change.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286626-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UMKC Kangaroos men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Kangaroos finished the 2017\u201318 season 10\u201322, 5\u20139 in WAC play to finish in a tie for sixth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the WAC Tournament to Grand Canyon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286627-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UMass Lowell River Hawks men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UMass Lowell River Hawks men's basketball team represented the University of Massachusetts Lowell in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The River Hawks split their home games between the Costello Athletic Center and the Tsongas Center, both of which are located in Lowell, Massachusetts, and they were led by sixth-year head coach Pat Duquette. They were members of the America East Conference. They finished the season 15\u201317, 7\u20139 in America East play to finish in a tie for fifth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the America East Tournament to Hartford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286627-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UMass Lowell River Hawks men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe River Hawks finished the 2017\u201318 season 12\u201318, 6\u201310 in the America East Conference play to finish in a tie for sixth place. In the America East Tournament, they were defeated by UMBC in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 71], "content_span": [72, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286628-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UMass Lowell River Hawks women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UMass Lowell River Hawks women's basketball team will represent the University of Massachusetts Lowell during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The River Hawks are led by first year head coach Tom Garrick and will once again play most their home games in the Costello Athletic Center while select games will be played in the Tsongas Center at UMass Lowell and were members of the America East Conference. They finished the season 7\u201322, 3\u201313 in America East play to finish in a tie last place. Due to a tie breaker loss to New Hampshire and UMBC they failed to qualify for the America East Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286628-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UMass Lowell River Hawks women's basketball team, Media\nAll non-televised home games and conference road games will stream on either ESPN3 or AmericaEast.tv. Most road games will stream on the opponents website.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 63], "content_span": [64, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286629-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UMass Minutemen basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UMass Minutemen basketball team represented the University of Massachusetts Amherst during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Minutemen were led by second-year head coach Matt McCall and played their home games at the William D. Mullins Memorial Center in Amherst, Massachusetts as members of the Atlantic 10 Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286629-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UMass Minutemen basketball team, Previous season\nThe Minutemen finished the 2017\u201318 season 13\u201320, 5\u201313 in A-10 play to finish in 13th place. They beat La Salle in the first round of the A-10 Tournament before losing in the second round to George Mason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286630-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UMass Minutewomen basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UMass Minutewomen basketball team represents the University of Massachusetts Amherst during the 2018\u201319 college basketball season. The Minutewomen, led by third year head coach Tory Verdi, were members of the Atlantic 10 Conference and play their home games at the William D. Mullins Memorial Center. They finished the season 16\u201316, 7\u20139 in A-10 play to finish in a 3 way tie for eighth place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the A-10 Women's Tournament where they lost Duquesne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286630-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UMass Minutewomen basketball team, Media\nAll non-televised Minutewomen home games and conference road games stream on the A-10 Digital Network. WMUA carries Minutewomen games with Mike Knittle on the call.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286631-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UNC Asheville Bulldogs men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UNC Asheville Bulldogs men's basketball team represented the University of North Carolina at Asheville during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bulldogs, led by first-year head coach Mike Morrell, played their home games at Kimmel Arena as members of the Big South Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286631-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UNC Asheville Bulldogs men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bulldogs finished the season 21\u201313, 13\u20135 in Big South play to win the Big South regular season championship. They defeated Charleston Southern in the quarterfinals of the Big South Tournament before being upset in the semifinals by Liberty. As a regular season conference champion who failed to win their conference tournament, they received an automatic bid to the National Invitation Tournament where they lost in the first round to USC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286631-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UNC Asheville Bulldogs men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn March 24, 2018, head coach Nick McDevitt accepted the head coaching job at Middle Tennessee. He finished at UNC Asheville with a five-year record of 98\u201365.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286631-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UNC Asheville Bulldogs men's basketball team, Schedule and results\n* Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses. All times are in Eastern Time", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 74], "content_span": [75, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286632-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UNC Greensboro Spartans men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UNC Greensboro Spartans men's basketball team represented the University of North Carolina at Greensboro during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Spartans finished the season 29\u20137, 15\u20133 in SoCon play, and were the SoCon regular season runners-up. They defeated Samford and Furman before falling to regular season champion Wofford in the title game of the SoCon Tournament. They received an at-large bid to the National Invitation Tournament where they beat Campbell in the First Round before losing to eventual tournament runners-up Lipscomb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286632-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UNC Greensboro Spartans men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Spartans finished the 2017\u201318 season 27\u20138, 15\u20133 in SoCon play, and were the SoCon regular season champions. They defeated The Citadel, Wofford, and East Tennessee State to become champions of the SoCon Tournament. They received the SoCon's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament where they lost in the First Round to Gonzaga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286633-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UNC Wilmington Seahawks men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UNC Wilmington Seahawks men's basketball team represented the University of North Carolina at Wilmington during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Seahawks, led by second-year head coach C. B. McGrath, played their home games at the Trask Coliseum as members of the Colonial Athletic Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286633-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UNC Wilmington Seahawks men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Seahawks finished the 2017\u201318 season 11\u201321, 7\u201311 in CAA play to finish in sixth place. They defeated Hofstra in the quarterfinals of the CAA Tournament before losing in the semifinals to Northeastern.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286634-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UNC Wilmington Seahawks women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UNC Wilmington Seahawks women's basketball team represents the University of North Carolina Wilmington during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Seahawks, led by second year head coach Karen Barefoot, play their home games at the Trask Coliseum and were members of the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA). They finished the season 18\u201312, 11\u20137 CAA play to finish in a 3 way tie for third place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the CAA Women's Tournament to Northeastern.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286635-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UNLV Lady Rebels basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UNLV Lady Rebels basketball team will represent the University of Nevada, Las Vegas during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Lady Rebels, led by eleventh year head coach Kathy Olivier. They play their home games at the Cox Pavilion, attached to the Thomas & Mack Center on UNLV's main campus in Paradise, Nevada. They were a member of the Mountain West Conference. They finished the season 12\u201318, 10\u20138 in Mountain West play to finish in a tie for fifth place. They lost in the quarterfinals Mountain West Women's Tournament to Fresno State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286636-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UNLV Runnin' Rebels basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UNLV Runnin' Rebels basketball team represented the University of Nevada, Las Vegas during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Runnin' Rebels were led by third-year head coach Marvin Menzies and played their home games at the Thomas & Mack Center in Paradise, Nevada as members of the Mountain West Conference. They finished the season 17\u201314, 11\u20137 in Mountain West play to finish in a tie for fourth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Mountain West Tournament to San Diego State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286636-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UNLV Runnin' Rebels basketball team\nOn March 15, head coach Marvin Menzies was fired. He finished at UNLV with a three-year record of 48\u201348.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286636-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UNLV Runnin' Rebels basketball team\nOn March 27, UNLV hired South Dakota State head coach T. J. Otzelberger as their next head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286636-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UNLV Runnin' Rebels basketball team, Previous season\nThe Runnin' Rebels finished the 2017\u201318 season 20\u201313, 8\u201310 in Mountain West play to finish in a tie for seventh place. They defeated Air Force in the first round of the Mountain West Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Nevada. Despite having 20 wins, they did not participate in a postseason tournament after declining an invite to the CBI Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286637-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 US SuperTour\nThe 2018\u201319 US SuperTour was a season of the US SuperTour, a Continental Cup season in cross-country skiing for men and women. The season began on 1 December 2018 in West Yellowstone, Montana and concluded with on 30 March 2019 in Presque Isle, Maine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286638-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 USA Team Handball rankings\nThis is the second season a team handball ranking for the women's clubs and the men's college exist and the third for men's clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286638-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 USA Team Handball rankings, Collegiate Top 5\nThe record at the college ranking is only against other college teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286639-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 USC Trojans men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 USC Trojans men's basketball team represented the University of Southern California during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Led by sixth-year head coach Andy Enfield, they played their home games at the Galen Center in Los Angeles, California as members of the Pac-12 Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286639-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 USC Trojans men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Trojans finished the season 24\u201312, 12\u20136 in Pac-12 play to finish in second place. As the No. 2 seed in the Pac-12 Tournament, they defeated Oregon State in the quarterfinals and Oregon in the semifinals before losing to Arizona in the championship game. They were one of the last four teams not selected for the NCAA Tournament and as a result earned a No. 1 seed in the National Invitation Tournament, where they defeated UNC Asheville in the first round before losing to Western Kentucky in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286640-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 USC Trojans women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 USC Trojans women's basketball team represents the University of Southern California during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Trojans, led by second year head coach, 7th overall Mark Trakh, play their home games at the Galen Center and were members of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season 17\u201313, 7\u201311 in Pac-12 play to finish in a tie for eighth place. They lost in the first round of the Pac-12 Women's Basketball Tournament to Arizona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286641-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 USC Upstate Spartans men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 USC Upstate Spartans men's basketball team represented the University of South Carolina Upstate during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Spartans, led by first-year head coach Dave Dickerson, played their home games at the G. B. Hodge Center in Spartanburg, South Carolina as first-year members of the Big South Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286641-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 USC Upstate Spartans men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Spartans finished the 2017\u201318 season 7\u201325, 2\u201312 in ASUN play to finish in last place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the ASUN Tournament to Florida Gulf Coast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286641-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 USC Upstate Spartans men's basketball team, Previous season\nAfter the season, USC Upstate fired head coach Kyle Perry on March 1, less than five months after being named full-time head coach of the Spartans. On March 30, the school hired former Tulane head coach Dave Dickerson for the job.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286641-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 USC Upstate Spartans men's basketball team, Previous season\nThis season marked the final season for USC Upstate as members of the Atlantic Sun Conference, as the school announced on November 15, 2017 that they will be moving to the Big South Conference for the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286641-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 USC Upstate Spartans men's basketball team, Schedule and results\n* Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses. All times are in Eastern Time", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 72], "content_span": [73, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286641-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 USC Upstate Spartans men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nDespite both being members of the Big South, their meeting with Gardner\u2013Webb on November 28 will be considered a non-conference game. The game was scheduled prior to USC Upstate joining the conference. Their meeting on January 12 will be a conference game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 72], "content_span": [73, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286642-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 USHL season\nThe 2018\u201319 USHL season was the 40th season of the United States Hockey League as an all-junior league. The regular season ran from September 27, 2018, to April 13, 2019. The Tri-City Storm were awarded the Anderson Cup as regular season champions for accumulating 95 points over 62 games. The season concluded with the Sioux Falls Stampede defeating the Chicago Steel in the Clark Cup Final series 3\u20130 on May 17, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286642-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 USHL season, League changes\nAfter serving as the interim commissioner since November 2017, Tom Garrity was named the ninth commissioner in league history. He replaced Bob Fallen who had served as commissioner since 2014. On April 5, 2018, the league announced the annual Fall Classic in partnership with the National Hockey League would count towards the regular season standings, with all member clubs playing two games between September 27 and 30 at the UPMC Lemieux Sports Complex in Pittsburgh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286642-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 USHL season, Regular season, Western Conference\nx = clinched playoff berth; y = clinched conference title; z = clinched regular season title", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 55], "content_span": [56, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286643-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 USM Alger season\nIn the 2018\u201319 season, USM Alger competed in the Ligue 1 for the 41st season, as well as the Confederation Cup, Club Championship, and the Algerian Cup. It was their 24th consecutive season in the top flight of Algerian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286643-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 USM Alger season, Season summary\nWith the end of the 2017\u201318 season USM Alger started looking for a new coach and the squad saw the departure of many players, most notably Ayoub Abdellaoui, who joined the Swiss club FC Sion. and striker Oussama Darfalou, who joined Dutch club Vitesse. finally, after a month of research, the team contracted with French technical Thierry Froger to be the new coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286643-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 USM Alger season, Season summary\nThis season USM Alger is competing on four fronts Ligue 1, Algerian Cup, Confederation Cup and Arab Club Champions Cup, The first goals was to win the Confederation Cup, but they are eliminated in the quarter-finals against the Egyptian club Al-Masry. Then in the Arab Club Champions Cup was the ambition to win, especially that the value of financial prizes exceed 15 million dollars. more than the CAF Champions League, but the march of The Reds and Blacks stopped in the second round against the Sudanese Al-Merrikh 4\u20133 on aggregate. then moved USM Alger's attention to the Ligue 1 Leader in the standings, the USMA counts 33 units and ensures at the same time to finish first at the end of the first phase of the championship Followed by JS Kabylie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 794]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286643-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 USM Alger season, Season summary\nThe season was tough on all counts and I took my responsibilities to the end. Now it's time for me to pull out and officially announce it: I will not be the CEO of USMA next year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286643-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 USM Alger season, Season summary\nAfter the outbreak of protests in Algeria and the arrest of club owner Ali Haddad on corruption charges. affected the results of USM Alger where he was defeated in three consecutive games, all Darby matches against Paradou AC, MC Alger and CR Belouizdad to shrink the difference to one point from the runner-up four games before the end of the season. On April 30, 2019 The board of the SSPA USMA met and noted the vacancy of the post of president of the company since the incarceration of Ali Haddad there is nearly a month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286643-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 USM Alger season, Season summary\nIt was Boualem Chendri who was unanimously elected to succeed him while ETRHB Haddad remains the majority shareholder of the club. On May 26, 2019 And after the victory outside the home against CS Constantine 3\u20131 achieved the eighth Ligue 1 title, one point behind JS Kabylie. immediately after the end of the game Abdelhakim Serrar announced his resignation from his office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286643-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286643-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286643-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 USM Alger season, Squad list\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 26 May 2019.Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286644-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 USM Bel Abb\u00e8s season\nIn the 2018\u201319 season, USM Bel-Abb\u00e8s competed in the Ligue 1 for the 24th season, as well as the Confederation Cup, and the Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286644-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 USM Bel Abb\u00e8s season, Squad list\nAs of August 11, 2018. 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, 40], "content_span": [41, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286645-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UT Arlington Mavericks men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UT Arlington Mavericks men's basketball team represented the University of Texas at Arlington during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Mavericks, led by first-year head coach Chris Ogden, played their home games at the College Park Center as members of the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 17\u201316, 12\u20136 in Sun Belt play to finish a three-way tie for second place. As the No. 2 seed in the Sun Belt Tournament, they defeated Georgia Southern in the semifinals before losing to Georgia State in the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286645-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UT Arlington Mavericks men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Mavericks finished the 2017\u201318 season 21\u201313, 10\u20138 in Sun Belt play to finish in fourth place. They defeated Appalachian State and Louisiana to advance to the championship game of the Sun Belt Tournament where they lost to Georgia State. Despite having 21 wins, they did not participate in a postseason tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286645-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UT Arlington Mavericks men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn March 26, 2018, head coach Scott Cross was fired after 12 seasons at UT Arlington, along with his entire staff, with UTA's Athletic Director citing a change in the program's leadership. On April 6, the school hired former Texas Tech assistant Chris Ogden as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286646-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UT Arlington Mavericks women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UT Arlington Mavericks women's basketball team represents the University of Texas at Arlington in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Mavericks, led by sixth year head coach Krista Gerlich, play their home games at the College Park Center and were members of the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 24\u20138, 15\u20133 in Sun Belt play to share the Sun Belt regular season title with Little Rock. They lost in the semifinals of the Sun Belt Women's Tournament to South Alabama. They received an automatic bid to the WNIT where they defeated Stephen F. Austin in the first round before losing to TCU in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286647-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UT Martin Skyhawks men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UT Martin Skyhawks men's basketball team represented the University of Tennessee at Martin during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Skyhawks, led by third-year head coach Anthony Stewart, played their home games at Skyhawk Arena as members of the Ohio Valley Conference. They finished the season 12\u201319, 6\u201312 in OVC play to finish in a four-way tie for seventh place. As the No. 7 seed in the OVC Tournament they defeated Eastern Illinois in the first round before losing in the quarterfinals to Jacksonville State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286647-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UT Martin Skyhawks men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Skyhawks finished the 2017\u201318 season 10\u201321, 5\u201313 in OVC play to finish in a three-way tie for ninth place. They failed to qualify for the OVC Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286648-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UTEP Miners men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UTEP Miners basketball team represented the University of Texas at El Paso during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Miners, led by first year head coach Rodney Terry, played their home games at the Don Haskins Center as members of Conference USA. UTEP finished the season 8\u201321, 3\u201315 in C-USA play to finish in last place. They failed to qualify for the C-USA Tournament. UTEP averaged 4,677 fans per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286648-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UTEP Miners men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Miners finished the 2017\u201318 season 11\u201320, 6\u201312 in C-USA play to finish in a tie for 11th place. They lost in the first round of the C-USA Tournament to UTSA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286648-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UTEP Miners men's basketball team, Previous season\nFollowing a loss to Lamar on November 27, 2017 that saw the Miners drop to 1\u20135 on the season, head coach Tim Floyd announced that he was retiring effective immediately. The school had previously announced a new athletic director, Jim Senter, a week prior, but Floyd said that had nothing to do with his decision. Assistant Phil Johnson was named interim head coach of the Miners the next day. Following the season, it was announced that Johnson would not return.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286648-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UTEP Miners men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn March 12, 2018, the school hired Fresno State head coach Rodney Terry as the new head coach of the Miners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286649-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UTEP Miners women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UTEP Miners women's basketball team represents the University of Texas at El Paso during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Miners, led by second year head coach Kevin Baker, play their home games at Don Haskins Center and were members of Conference USA. They finished the season 9\u201322, 5\u201311 in C-USA play to finish in eleventh place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the C-USA Women's Tournament where they lost to Middle Tennessee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286650-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UTSA Roadrunners men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UTSA Roadrunners men's basketball team represented the University of Texas at San Antonio during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Roadrunners, led by third-year head coach Steve Henson, played their home games at the Convocation Center as members of Conference USA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286650-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UTSA Roadrunners men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Roadrunners finished the 2017\u201318 season 20\u201315, 11\u20137 in C-USA play to finish in fifth place. They defeated UTEP in the first round of the C-USA Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Marshall. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where they defeated Lamar in the first round and received a second round bye before losing in the quarterfinals to Sam Houston State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286651-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 UTSA Roadrunners women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 UTSA Roadrunners women's basketball team represents the University of Texas at San Antonio during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Roadrunners, led by second year head coach Kristen Holt, play their home games at the Convocation Center and were members of Conference USA. They finished the season 7\u201321, 2\u201314 in Conference USA play to finish in a 3 way tie for twelfth place. Due to a tie breaker loss to Florida Atlantic and FIU they failed to qualify for the Conference USA Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286652-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Udinese Calcio season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Udinese Calcio's 39th season in Serie A and their 24th consecutive season in the top-flight. The club competed in Serie A, finishing 12th, and the Coppa Italia, where they were eliminated in the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286652-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Udinese Calcio season\nSpanish coach Julio Vel\u00e1zquez was appointed to manage the club on 7 June, replacing former Juventus player and Croatia international Igor Tudor, who left the club after only one month in charge. However, Vel\u00e1zquez would be sacked 13 November 2018 and replaced by former Crotone manager Davide Nicola.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286653-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Uganda Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Uganda Premier League was the 52nd season of the Uganda Premier League, the top-tier football league in Uganda. The season started on 28 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286653-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Uganda Premier League\nKCCA FC won the championship with two games left to play in the home and away season, after drawing 1\u20131 with Ndejje University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286653-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Uganda Premier League, Participating teams\nUPDF, Proline FC and Masavu FC Entebbe were relegated from the 2017\u201318 Uganda Premier League. They were replaced by Nyamityobora FC, who won the Rwenzori group of the 2017\u201318 FUFA Big League, Ndejje University, and Paidha Black Angels, who won the promotion playoff. All three promoted teams would be relegated this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286653-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Uganda Premier League, Participating teams\nSome of the Kampala clubs may on occasions also play home matches at the Mandela National Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286654-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Amateur Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Ukrainian Amateur Cup season was scheduled to start on August 22, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286654-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Amateur Cup\nThe cup holders FC LNZ-Lebedyn were defeated by FC Dnipro in quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286654-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Amateur Cup, Participated clubs\nIn bold are clubs that are active at the same season AAFU championship (parallel round-robin competition).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286654-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Amateur Cup, Competition schedule, Preliminary round\nFirst games will be played on 22 August and seconds on 29 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 70], "content_span": [71, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286654-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Amateur Cup, Competition schedule, Preliminary round\nFirst games will be played on 22 August and seconds on 5 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 70], "content_span": [71, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286654-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Amateur Cup, Competition schedule, Preliminary round\nFirst games will be played on 29 August and seconds on 5 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 70], "content_span": [71, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286654-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Amateur Cup, Competition schedule, Preliminary round\nTwenty two other teams will join 10 winners of the preliminary round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 70], "content_span": [71, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286654-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Amateur Cup, Competition schedule, Round of 32\nFirst games will be played on 12 September and seconds on 19 September. The draw results were announced on 6 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286654-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Amateur Cup, Competition schedule, Round of 16\nFirst games will be played on 3 October and seconds on 10 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286654-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Amateur Cup, Competition schedule, Quarterfinals\nFirst games will be played on 24 October and seconds on 31 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286654-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Amateur Cup, Competition schedule, Semifinals\nFirst games will be played on 24 April 2019 and seconds on 1 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286654-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Amateur Cup, Competition schedule, Final\nFirst games will be played on 18 May 2019 and seconds on 8 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286655-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Basketball SuperLeague\nThe 2018\u201319 Ukrainian Basketball SuperLeague was the 2018\u201319 edition of the Ukrainian top-tier basketball championship. Cherkaski Mavpy were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286655-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Basketball SuperLeague\nKhimik won its third domestic title, its first one since 2016, after beating Kyiv-Basket in the finals. Khimik's Deon Edwin was named the USL Most Valuable Player this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286655-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Basketball SuperLeague, Teams\nEight teams joined the competition. Budivelnyk and BIPA Odessa were replaced by Kyiv-Basket and Odesa respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286655-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Basketball SuperLeague, Teams\nOn 21 June 2018, the Ukrainian federation announced that Budivelnyk would not participate because of its open debts to its players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286655-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Basketball SuperLeague, Playoffs\nQuarterfinals will be played in a best-of-three games format, while semifinals and final in a best-of-five (2\u20132\u20131) format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286656-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Ukrainian Cup was the 28th annual season of Ukraine's football knockout competition. The competition started on 18 July 2018 and concluded on 15 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286656-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Cup\nAll competition rounds consist of a single game with a home field advantage granted to a team from lower league. Qualification for the competition is granted to all professional clubs and finalists of the Ukrainian Amateur Cup as long as those clubs will be able to pass the season's attestation (licensing).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286656-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Cup\nFC Shakhtar Donetsk is the defending winner for the last two seasons. The Donetsk club has reached the competition finals in the last eight years winning six of them. There were around 300 clubs over the history of competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286656-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Cup, Competition schedule, First Preliminary round (1/64)\nIn this round sixteen clubs from the Second League and both finalists of the 2017\u201318 Ukrainian Amateur Cup played. The draw for this round was held on 10 July 2018 at the House of Football in Kyiv. The round matches were played on 18 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 75], "content_span": [76, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286656-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Cup, Competition schedule, Second Preliminary round (1/32)\nIn this round all the 16 clubs will enter from the First League, two other recently relegated clubs of the Second League, nine winners of the previous round and one team which received a bye. The draw for this round was held 20 July 2018 at the House of Football in Kyiv. The round matches were played on 22 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 76], "content_span": [77, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286656-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Cup, Competition schedule, Third Preliminary round (1/16)\nIn this round lower placed 6 clubs from the Premier League will enter along with 14 winners of the previous round including 7 clubs from the First League and 7 clubs from the Second League. The draw for this round was held 31 August 2018 at the House of Football in Kyiv. The round matches were played on 26 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 75], "content_span": [76, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286656-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Cup, Competition schedule, Round of 16 (\u215b)\nIn this round the other 6 clubs from the Premier League will enter along with 10 winners of the previous round including 4 more clubs from the Premier League, 2 clubs from the First League and 4 clubs from the Second League. The draw for this round was held 28 September 2018 at the House of Football in Kyiv. The round matches was played on 31 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 60], "content_span": [61, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286656-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Cup, Competition schedule, Quarterfinals (\u00bc)\nIn this round advanced 6 representatives from the Premier League and 2 teams from the First League. The draw for this round was held on 2 November 2018 at the House of Football in Kyiv. The round matches will be played on 3 April 2019. Due to the 2019 Ukrainian presidential election, quarterfinal games of tournament were changed to 7 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 62], "content_span": [63, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286656-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Cup, Competition schedule, Semifinals (\u00bd)\nIn this round advanced 2 representatives from the Premier League and 2 teams from the First League. The draw for this round was held on 8 April 2019 at the House of Football in Kyiv. The round matches were originally expected to be played on 24 April 2019, but due to the 2019 Ukrainian presidential election, were scheduled to 17 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 59], "content_span": [60, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286656-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Cup, Bracket\nThe following is the bracket which the Ukrainian Cup resembled. Numbers in parentheses next to the match score represent the results of a penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286657-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League\nThe 2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League is the 28th since its establishment. The competition began on 21 July 2018 with the match between Prykarpattia Ivano-Frankivsk and Balkany Zorya. The competition was in recess for a winter break which started after the completion of Round 18 on 18 November 2018. The competition resumed on 24 March 2019 and expected to end 25 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286657-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League, Format\nThe format of the league was approved at the PFL Conference on 27 June 2018. In some aspects it was similar to previous, but it was adopted in two versions in case if there will be decision to expand the Ukrainian Premier League back to 16 clubs for 2019\u201320 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286657-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League, Format\nAs in the previous season the season winner will earn direct promotion to the top division, while two runners-up (2nd and 3rd places) will contest additional promotion berths through play-off games with weaker club of the UPL (10th and 11th places). At the same time in case of the UPL possible expansion the first four teams will earn promotion with the fifth team qualifying for play-off games with the UPL wooden spoon team. In regards to relegation it was decided that the last three teams will be relegated to the Second League, but in case of the UPL possible expansion only two teams will be relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286657-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League, Format\nIn mid-July 2018, due to withdrawal of FC Naftovyk-Ukrnafta Okhtyrka and FC Stal Kamianske (FC Feniks Bucha), the PFL adopted 16 teams league format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286657-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League, Format\nOn 15 November 2018, in interview to Sport Arena the president of the PFL Ukraine Serhiy Makarov stated that teams that will place 16th and 15th places will be replaced with both winners of Druha Liha groups winners, while 13th and 14th place will contest their relegation with Druha Liha groups runners-up. If there will be an expansion of the UPL to 16 teams, the exchange between Persha and Druha leagues changes as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286657-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League, Format\nThe first and second places in each groups of Druha Liha will be promoted, while third places will play-off the other two promotional berths with the 15th and the 16th places of Persha Liha. The president pointed that with withdrawal of Kobra (Helios) and with expansion of the UPL, one of the third placed clubs in Druha Liha will be promoted to Persha Liha without play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286657-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League, Teams, Promoted teams\nThe following teams have been promoted from the 2017\u201318 Ukrainian Second League:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286657-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League, Teams, Relegated teams\nThe following teams have been relegated from the 2017\u201318 Ukrainian Premier League:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286657-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League, Stadiums\nThe following stadiums are considered home grounds for the teams in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286657-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League, Post season play-offs, Relegation play-offs\nThe drawing for relegation playoff took place on 20 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 75], "content_span": [76, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286657-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League, Post season play-offs, Second leg\nAhrobiznes Volochysk won 4\u20131 on aggregate and has preserved its berth for the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League. Metalurh Zaporizhia has kept its berth for the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Second League, but later gained promotion due to withdrawal of Arsenal-Kyiv from professional ranks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286657-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League, Post season play-offs, Second leg\nCherkashchyna-Akademiya won 7\u20131 on aggregate and was promoted to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League. PFC Sumy was relegated to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Second League. Later following the PFL Conference PFC Sumy were excluded from professional competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286658-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League Reserves\nThe 2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League U\u201319 Championship is the 3rd season of the Ukrainian Junior Under 19 Championship in First League. The competition involved participation of several junior teams of the Professional Football League of Ukraine as well as some other football academies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286658-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League Reserves\nDirect administration of the competition belonged to the Youth Football League of Ukraine. The tournament was conducted in cooperation between both Youth Football League and Professional Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286659-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Football Amateur League\nThe 2018\u201319 Ukrainian Football Amateur League season will be the 23rd since it replaced the competition of physical culture clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286659-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Football Amateur League\nOn 23 June 2018, the AAFU at its website published information about the upcoming its conference where AAFU plans to adopt its decision about the upcoming season including championship and cup competitions. The AAFU also provided a preliminary list of clubs that expressed their interest in the 2018-19 competitions. The format of the upcoming season was adopted at a conference on 29 June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286659-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Football Amateur League, Teams, Debut\nList of teams that are debuting this season in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 55], "content_span": [56, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286659-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Football Amateur League, Teams, Debut\nFC Uzhhorod, Avanhard Bziv, FC Kryvyi Rih, Motor Zaporizhia, LNZ-Lebedyn, Kobra Ostroh, FC Halych, Ahron Velyki Hayi, Chaika Vyshhorod, Alians Lypova Dolyna, Ahrodim Bakhmach, Skoruk Tomakivka, Peremoha Dnipro, Kobra Kharkiv,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 55], "content_span": [56, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286659-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Football Amateur League, Teams, Withdrawn teams\nList of clubs that took part in last year competition, but chose not to participate in 2018\u201319 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 65], "content_span": [66, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286659-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Football Amateur League, Play-offs\nThe first couple of stages (quarterfinals and semifinals) will be conducted home and away, the final will take place on a neutral field. The quarterfinals games are scheduled for 8 and 12 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 52], "content_span": [53, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286659-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Football Amateur League, Play-offs, Semifinals\nThe draw for the semifinal round took place on 13 June 2019. Games are scheduled for 17 and 23 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 64], "content_span": [65, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286660-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League season is the 28th top level football club competitions since the fall of the Soviet Union and the eleventh since the establishment of the Ukrainian Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286660-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League\nThe tournament started on 21 July 2018 with the competition set to end on 25 May 2019. The league took its winter intermission after Round 18 on 8 December 2018 and resumed its competition of the Championship with Round 19 on 16 February 2019. The first stage ended with Round 22 games on 17 March 2019. The draw for the second stage was announced for 5 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286660-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League, Teams, Shuffled teams\nOn completion of the 2017\u201318 Ukrainian Premier League season, Veres Rivne, who had moved their operations to Lviv during the season announced the merging with FC Lviv who competed in the 2017\u201318 Ukrainian Second League and retain their name. This is the first time of such \"swap\" that has occurred with a team from the Ukrainian Premier League. Its certification the club passed on 5 June 2018. Along with that the FFU certification committee is consulting with the UEFA in regards of the \"clubs swap\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286660-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League, Teams, Shuffled teams\nOn 6 June 2018, it was announced that it is too early speculate composition of the league for the next season as the UEFA will make its final decision by allowing or not participation of FC Lviv. It is possible that some of already relegated clubs might be given a second chance if UEFA will insist on impossibility of the Lviv-Veres team swap. On 12 June 2018, Ukrainian Premier League updated its website removing any mentioning of NK Veres Rivne ever competing in the league and its record being awarded to FC Lviv.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286660-0002-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League, Teams, Shuffled teams\nFew days later the league recovered the Veres' record. More to the story, in interview to \"Tribuna\" a head of the FFU Attestation Committee Viktor Bezsmernyi explained that it was Veres that received certificate for the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League and then the club changed its name. At same time the old-new president of Veres Khakhlyov demonstrated the club's certificate for the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian Second League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286660-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League, Teams, Withdrawn teams\nOn 22 June 2018, the UPL published an official announcement about situation with FC Poltava, and while shocked with the club's decision the league is confirming that the club is withdrawing and that the league will be seeking its replacement. Following withdrawal of FC Poltava, a crisis has seemed to ripen in the league as there is no other team can replace Poltava due to financing or infrastructure issues. Based on the voting conducted among the UPL members, on 26 June 2018, the league picked FC Chornomorets Odesa for the Poltava's replacement and submitted its selection for approval by the FFU Executive Committee. On 3 July 2018, Chornomorets was officially approved by FFU as 2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League participant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 789]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286660-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League, Teams, Stadiums\nThree teams play their matches outside of home towns. The minimum threshold for the stadium's capacity in the UPL is 5,000 (Article 10, paragraph 7.2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286660-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League, First stage, First stage results\nTeams play each other twice on a home and away basis, before the league split into two groups \u2013 the top six and the bottom six.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286660-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League, First stage, First stage positions by round\nThe following table represents the teams position after each round in the competition played chronologically.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286660-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League, Relegation play-offs\nTeams that placed 10th and 11th in the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League play two-leg play-off with the second and third teams of the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League. The draw for play-offs took place on 24 May 2019 and the games will be played on 4 and 8 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286660-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League, Relegation play-offs, Second leg\nKolos Kovalivka won 2\u20130 on aggregate and were promoted to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Chornomorets Odesa were relegated to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286660-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League, Relegation play-offs, Second leg\nKarpaty Lviv won 3\u20130 on aggregate and retained their spot in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Volyn Lutsk remained in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286660-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League, Relegation play-offs, Second leg\nDue to fan violence at the game and attack on referee, the original score 1\u20133 was scratched and replaced with technical score 0\u20133 loss to Volyn and win for Karpaty. Additionally, the Lutsk department of police started criminal proceedings on the fact of intentional damage to property during the game by the Karpaty fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286660-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League, Awards, The 2018 Coach of the Year award\nThe best coaches were identified by the All-Ukrainian Football Coaches Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 74], "content_span": [75, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286661-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League Under-21 and Under-19\nThe 2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League Reserves and Under 19 season are competitions between the reserves of Ukrainian Premier League Clubs and the Under 19s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286662-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Second League\nThe 2018\u201319 Ukrainian Second League was the 28th since its establishment. The competition started on 21 July 2018 with the match between Myr and FC Nikopol.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286662-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Second League\nThe competition entered in recess for a winter break which started after the completion of Round 17 on 11 November 2018 and resumed on 31 March 2019. The season competitions were scheduled to be completed on 1 June 2019 (later ending on 25 May 2019 due to reduction of participants) culminating with a two legged play-off for promotion held between the two second place from both groups and the 13th and 14th placed teams from the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League on 29 May and 2 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286662-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Second League, Format\nThe PFL composition of the league was approved at the PFL Conference on 27 June 2017, yet the final composition with the competition regulations will be approved later by the FFU Executive Committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286662-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Second League, Format\nThe competition is conducted in a triple round robin format. The PFL reinstated direct promotion and relegation between the Second League and the Ukrainian Amateur Football Championship. Some other administrative changes will be introduced for the season in Second League, such as names on jerseys, the PFL emblem, others. In addition, the FFU approved a list of stadiums for each league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286662-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Second League, Format\nEach winner of group earns a direct promotion, while each runner will contest additional promotion with 13/14thth places of the First League. In case of the Ukrainian Premier League expansion for the next season, winners and second placed teams will get direct promotion, while in play-off will participate third placed teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286662-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Second League, Format\nOne team from each group with the worst record will be relegated. Those two teams will be swapped with four teams from the Ukrainian Amateur Football Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286662-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Second League, Teams, Promoted teams\nThe final composition of the league was adopted at the PFL Conference on 27 June 2018. In the midst of the previous season some several amateur teams expressed their intention to play in Druha Liha. The following teams have been admitted from the 2017\u201318 Ukrainian Football Amateur League:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286662-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Second League, Teams, Relegated teams\nThere were two teams relegated from the 2017\u201318 Ukrainian First League:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286662-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Second League, Teams, Location map\nThe following map displays the location of teams. Group A teams marked in red. Group B teams marked in green.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286662-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Second League, Post season play-offs\nThe second places of each group will play-off for the third promotion for the First League. Later with withdrawal of several clubs, the format changed (see 2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League#Format). The second place runners-up will play with the Persha Liha thirteenth and fourteenth places, yet with expansion of the UPL those teams will receive direct promotion and the third placed teams will be contesting promotion in play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286662-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Second League, Post season play-offs, Championship game\nOn 7 May 2019 it was announced that the final game between group winners of the Second League will take place in Kropyvnytskyi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286662-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Ukrainian Second League, Post season play-offs, Championship game\nKremin Kremenchuk are crowned Champions of the Ukrainian Second League for the 2018\u201319 season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286663-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Under 20 Elite League\nThe 2018\u201319 Under 20 Elite League (sometimes referred to as the European Elite League) was an age-restricted association football tournament for national Under-20 teams. It was the second edition of the Under 20 Elite League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286664-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 United Counties League\nThe 2018\u201319 United Counties League season (known as the 2018\u201319 Future Lions United Counties League for sponsorship reasons) was the 112th 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, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286664-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 United Counties League\nThe provisional club allocations for steps 5 and 6 were announced by the FA on 25 May. The constitution is subject to ratification by the league at its AGM on 16 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286664-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 United Counties League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 18 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with two new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286664-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 United Counties League, Division One\nDivision One featured 14 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with six new clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286665-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 United States national rugby sevens team season\nThe United States national rugby sevens team got off to a strong start in the 2018\u201319 World Rugby Sevens Series. The team reached the finals in Dubai, South Africa, New Zealand, and Australia, the first time the U.S. had reached four consecutive finals and was ranked joint first in the overall Series after the first four legs. In the fifth leg, the U.S. won beating Samoa 27\u20130. This was the U.S.\u2019s second straight USA Sevens win, giving them sole possession of first place in the Sevens World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286665-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 United States national rugby sevens team season\nThe U.S. remained in first place for several more tournaments, but consecutive semifinal losses to Fiji in the last two tournaments in London and Paris meant that Fiji won the Series with the U.S. finishing second. The U.S. overall had its best season ever \u2014 the second-place finish beating their previous best of fifth. Additionally, qualifying for five consecutive tournament finals as well as reaching the semifinals in all ten tournaments were U.S. records. Carlin Isles scored 52 tries, ranked first overall among all players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286665-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 United States national rugby sevens team season, Standings\nThe following shows the standings for the 2018\u201319 series for the 15 core teams. The top four finish by the U.S. qualified the team for the 2020 Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 66], "content_span": [67, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286665-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 United States national rugby sevens team season, U.S. vs Fiji\nFiji and the U.S. were the top two teams at the end of the Series and during the final rounds of the Series. The teams met during seven of the ten Series tournaments. All their matchups were during the knockout rounds; they never met during pool play. The U.S. won the first matchup, and Fiji winning all of the other six matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 69], "content_span": [70, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286665-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 United States national rugby sevens team season, Player season statistics\nThe following table shows the leading players for the U.S. at the conclusion of the 2018\u201319 World Rugby Sevens Series. Carlin Isles led all players on the Series with 52 tries and 48 clean breaks. Madison Hughes ranked second in the Series with 299 points. Ben Pinkelman ranked third with 191 carries. Stephen Tomasin ranked fifth with 101 tackles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 81], "content_span": [82, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286665-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 United States national rugby sevens team season, Player and coach Series awards\nThree U.S. players made the seven-man World Series Dream Team:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 87], "content_span": [88, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286665-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 United States national rugby sevens team season, Player and coach Series awards\n2018\u201319 Coach of the World Series: Mike Friday, U.S. head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 87], "content_span": [88, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286665-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 United States national rugby sevens team season, 2019 USA Sevens\nThe United States won the 2019 USA Sevens by beating Samoa 27\u20130 in the final. This was the first second time that the United States won its home tournament (2018 was the first). USA's Ben Pinkelman was named Player of the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 72], "content_span": [73, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286666-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 United States network television schedule\nThe 2018\u201319 network television schedule for the five major English-language commercial broadcast networks in the United States covers the prime time hours from September 2018 to August 2019. The schedule is followed by a list per network of returning series, new series, and series canceled after the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286666-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 United States network television schedule\nNBC was the first to announce its fall schedule on May 13, 2018, followed by Fox on May 14, ABC on May 15, CBS on May 16, and The CW on May 17, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286666-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 United States network television schedule\nOn May 29, 2018, ABC removed Roseanne from its Tuesday lineup due to a controversial statement made by Roseanne Barr on Twitter about Valerie Jarrett, and replaced it with The Conners on June 21 for the fall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286666-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 United States network television schedule\nPBS is not included, as member television stations have local flexibility over most of their schedules and broadcast times for network shows may vary. Ion Television and MyNetworkTV are also not included since both networks' schedules comprise syndicated reruns. The CW does not air network programming on Saturday nights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286666-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 United States network television schedule\nBeginning with this season, The CW returned to programming a Sunday evening schedule for the first time since the 2008\u201309 season as of October 7 (the network commenced its regular Sunday schedule the following week, on October 14); programming airs on that night from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. ET/PT, making it the only broadcast television network to not program the Sunday 7 p.m. ET/PT hour since that hour was given to the broadcast networks through the implementation of a 1975 amendment to the since-repealed Prime Time Access Rule (PTAR).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286666-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 United States network television schedule\nAll times are U.S. Eastern and Pacific Time (except for some live sports or events). Subtract one hour for Central, Mountain, Alaska, and Hawaii-Aleutian times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286666-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286667-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 United States network television schedule (daytime)\nThe 2018\u201319 daytime network television schedule for four of the five major English-language commercial broadcast networks in the United States covers the daytime hours from September 2018 to August 2019. The schedule is followed by a list per network of returning series, and any series canceled after the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286667-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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. Fox does not offer daytime network programming nor network news on weekdays; as such, schedules are only included for Saturdays and Sundays. Also not included are 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, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286668-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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, starting September, 2018. 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, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286669-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Utah Jazz season\nThe 2018\u201319 Utah Jazz season was the 45th season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA), and the 40th season of the franchise in Salt Lake City. On March 28, the Jazz qualified the playoffs for the third straight season. The Jazz had the second best team defensive rating in the NBA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286669-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Utah Jazz season\nIn the playoffs, the Jazz lost to the Houston Rockets in the First Round in five games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286669-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Utah Jazz season, Player statistics, Regular season\nAfter all games. \u2021Waived during the season\u2020Traded during the season\u2260Acquired during the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 59], "content_span": [60, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286670-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Utah State Aggies men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Utah State Aggies men's basketball team represented Utah State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Aggies, led by first-year head coach Craig Smith, played their home games at the Smith Spectrum in Logan, Utah as members of the Mountain West Conference. The Aggies shared the regular-season Mountain West title with Nevada, and defeated New Mexico, Fresno State, and San Diego State to win the Mountain West Tournament to earn the Mountain West's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament for their first appearance since 2011. They lost in the First Round of the NCAA Tournament to Washington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286670-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Utah State Aggies men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Aggies finished the 2017\u201318 season 17\u201317 overall and 8\u201310 in conference play, finishing tied for 7th. In the Mountain West Conference Tournament, they defeated Colorado State in the first round and Boise State in the quarterfinals before losing to New Mexico in the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286670-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Utah State Aggies men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn March 11, 2018, head coach Tim Duryea was fired after three seasons. He finished at Utah State with a three-year record of 47\u201349. On March 25, reports indicated that the school had hired South Dakota head coach Craig Smith as head coach, which was confirmed the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286671-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Utah State Aggies women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Utah State Aggies women's basketball team represents Utah State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Aggies were led by seventh year head coach Jerry Finkbeiner. The Aggies played their home games at the Smith Spectrum and were members of the Mountain West Conference. They finished the season 17\u201316, 10\u20138 in Mountain West play to finish in a tie for fifth place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the Mountain West Women's Tournament where they lost to Wyoming. They revived an invitation to the WBI where they defeated UC Riverside before losing to North Texas in the quarterfinals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286672-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Utah Utes men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Utah Runnin' Utes men's basketball team represented the University of Utah during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team, led by eighth-year head coach Larry Krystkowiak, played their home games at the Jon M. Huntsman Center in Salt Lake City, Utah as members of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season 17\u201314, 11\u20137 in Pac-12 play to finish in third place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Pac-12 Tournament to Oregon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286672-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Utah Utes men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Utes finished the 2017\u201318 season 23\u201312, 11\u20137 in Pac-12 play to finish in a three-way tie for third place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Pac-12 Tournament to Oregon. They were invited to the National Invitation Tournament where they defeated UC Davis, LSU, Saint Mary's, and Western Kentucky to advance to the championship game. In the NIT championship, they were routed by Penn State, losing 82\u201366.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286673-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Utah Utes women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Utah Utes women's basketball team represents the University of Utah during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Utes, led by fourth year head coach Lynne Roberts, play their home games at the Jon M. Huntsman Center and are members of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season 20\u201310, 9\u20139 in Pac-12 play to finish in a tie for sixth place. They lost in the first round of the Pac-12 Women's Tournament to Washington. They would have clinched the automatic berth to the 2019 Women's National Invitation Tournament, but they declined to participate despite having 20 wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286674-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Utah Valley Wolverines men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Utah Valley Wolverines men's basketball team represented Utah Valley University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Wolverines, led by fourth-year head coach Mark Pope, played their home games at the UCCU Center in Orem, Utah as members of the Western Athletic Conference. They finished the season 25\u201310, 12\u20134 in WAC play to finish in second place. They defeated UMKC in the quarterfinals of the WAC Tournament before losing in the semifinals to Grand Canyon. They were invited to the College Basketball Invitational where they defeated Cal State Northridge in the first round before losing in the quarterfinals to South Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286674-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Utah Valley Wolverines men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Wolverines finished the 2017\u201318 season 23\u201311, 10\u20134 in WAC play to finish in second place. They defeated Cal State Bakersfield in the quarterfinals of the WAC Tournament before losing in the semifinals to Grand Canyon. They were invited to the College Basketball Invitational where they defeated Eastern Washington in the first round before losing in the quarterfinals to San Francisco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286675-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 V-League (South Korea)\nThe 2018\u201319 V-League season is the 15th season of the V-League, the highest professional volleyball league in South Korea. The season started on 13 October 2018 and is scheduled to finish in April 2019. Incheon Korean Air Jumbos are the defending champions in the men's league and Gyeongbuk Gimcheon Hi-pass the defending female champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286675-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286676-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Men's\nThe Volleyball 2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Men's will be the 25th tournament year and the 1st top level men's tournament of the newly branded and reorganized V.League (Japan). It will be held from October 26, 2018 \u2013 April 14, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286676-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Men's, Clubs, Foreign players\nThe total number of foreign players is restricted to one per club. Player from Asian Volleyball Confederation (AVC) nations are exempt from these restrictions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286676-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Men's, Stadiums\nPark Arena KomakiKanaoka Park GymnasiumMatsumoto City GymnasiumOta City General GymnasiumFukui Prefectural GymnasiumKure City General Gymnasium", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286676-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Men's, Stadiums\nWing Arena KariyaSumida City GymnasiumMishima Citizen GymnasiumOsaka Municipal GymnasiumKusanagi General GymnasiumOita Prefectural General Stadium", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286676-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Men's, Stadiums\nPanasonic ArenaPark Arena KomakiTokushima GymnasiumKomazawa GymnasiumSumida City GymnasiumKitakyushu General Stadium", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286676-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Men's, Stadiums\nOkinawa City GymnasiumRose Arena Indoor StadiumHiroshima Prefectural CenterKusanagi General GymnasiumOita Prefectural General StadiumMatsue City General Gymnasium", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286676-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Men's, Stadiums\nWing Arena KariyaKanaoka Park GymnasiumMatsumoto City GymnasiumOta City General GymnasiumKumamoto Prefectural GymnasiumWakayama Prefectural Gymnasium", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286676-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Men's, Stadiums\nPanasonic ArenaJTEKT Arena NaraBeppu B-con PlazaMishima Citizen GymnasiumHimi Municipal Sports CenterHigashi-Hiroshima Sports Park", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286676-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Men's, Statistics leaders, Regular round, Individual\nThe statistics of each group follows the vis reports. The statistics include 4 volleyball skills; serve, reception, spike, and block. The table below shows the top 10 ranked players in each skill plus top scorers at the completion of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 80], "content_span": [81, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286677-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Men's squads\nThis article shows the roster of all participating clubs at the 2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Men's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286677-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Men's squads, Panasonic Panthers\nThe following is Panasonic Panthers roster in the 2018\u201319 V.League Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286677-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Men's squads, Toyoda Gosei Trefuerza\nThe following is Toyoda Gosei Trefuerza roster in the 2018\u201319 V.League Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286677-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Men's squads, Toray Arrows\nThe following is Toray Arrows roster in the 2018\u201319 V.League Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 54], "content_span": [55, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286677-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Men's squads, JT Thunders\nThe following is JT Thunders roster in the 2018\u201319 V.League Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286677-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Men's squads, Suntory Sunbirds\nThe following is Suntory Sunbirds roster in the 2018\u201319 V.League Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 58], "content_span": [59, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286677-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Men's squads, JTEKT Stings\nThe following is JTEKT Stings roster in the 2018\u201319 V.League Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 54], "content_span": [55, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286677-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Men's squads, Osaka Blazers Sakai\nThe following is Osaka Blazers Sakai roster in the 2018\u201319 V.League Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286677-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Men's squads, FC Tokyo\nThe following is FC Tokyo roster in the 2018\u201319 V.League Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286678-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Women's\nThe Volleyball 2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Women's was the 25th tournament year and the 1st top level women's tournament of the newly branded and reorganized V.League (Japan). It was held from November 3, 2018 \u2013 April 13, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286678-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Women's, Clubs, Foreign players\nThe total number of foreign players is restricted to one per club. Player from Southeast Asia nations are exempt from these restrictions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286678-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Women's, Stadiums\nNices ArenaUkaruchan ArenaKobe Green ArenaWing Arena KariyaZIP Arena OkayamaIshikawa Sports CenterKomazawa Gymnasium", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286678-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Women's, Stadiums\nTsu City Sports CenterYKK Kurobe GymnasticsAgeo Citizen GymnasiumBeikomu Total GymnasticsOsaka Municipal GymnasiumOta City General GymnasiumKanazawa General Gymnasium", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286678-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Women's, Stadiums\nWink GymnasiumSakura Ward HallKurobe-shi General CenterHitachinaka City GymnasiumSaga Sunrise Park GymnasiumKawasaki City Todoroki ArenaHasuda-shi Citizen Gymnasium", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286678-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Women's, Stadiums\nFunabashi ArenaIkenokawa Sakura ArenaEhime Prefecture BudokanNishio Municipal GymnasiumFukaya City General StadiumHoraiya Koriyama GymnasiumNippon Steel Sakai Gymnasium", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286678-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Women's, Final standing\nLibero: 10 Kotoki Zayasu, 15 Yuka Taura(OH), 20 Sayaka Tsustui, 18 Mana ToeMB: 4 Nana Iwasaka(C), 13 Kiyora Obikawa, 14 Fumika Moriya, 16 Foluke Akinradewo, 17 Asuka Hamamtsu, 21 Haruka KanamoriOH: 3 Risa Shinnabe(OP), 6 Yuki Ishii, 8 Rika Nomoto, 12 Yuka Imamura, 22 Arisa Inoue, 24 Miyu Nakagawa, 25 Hikari Kato", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286678-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 V.League Division 1 Women's, Statistics leaders, Regular round\nThe statistics of each group follows the vis reports. The statistics include 4 volleyball skills; serve, reception, spike, and block. The table below shows the top 10 ranked players in each skill plus top scorers at the completion of the Regular Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286679-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 VCU Rams men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 VCU Rams men's basketball team represented Virginia Commonwealth University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Rams were led by Mike Rhoades in his second season as head coach at VCU. The Rams played their home games at Stuart C. Siegel Center in Richmond, Virginia as members of the Atlantic 10 Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286679-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 VCU Rams men's basketball team\nThe Rams surpassing preseason conference polling, won the Atlantic 10 regular season, posting a 25\u20138 record and earning an at-large bid into the 2019 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament. There they lost to UCF in the opening round of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286679-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 VCU Rams men's basketball team, Background\nThe previous season was Mike Rhoades' first season as head coach. The Rams finished the 2017\u201318 season 18\u201315, 9\u20139 in A-10 play to finish tied for fifth place. VCU defeated Dayton in the A-10 Tournament to advance to the quarterfinals, where they lost to Rhode Island. The Rams, for the first time since 2010 failed to earn an at-large bid into the NCAA Tournament or NIT. The Rams had been invited to play in the CBI and CIT tournaments, but declined. It was the first time since 2006 the Rams failed to have a 20-win season, and the first time since that same year the Rams did not play in a postseason tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286680-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 VCU Rams women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 VCU Rams women's basketball team represents Virginia Commonwealth University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Rams were led by fifth year head coach Beth O'Boyle. The Rams were members of the Atlantic 10 Conference and play their home games at the Stuart C. Siegel Center. They finished the season 24\u201310, 13\u20133 in A-10 play to share the regular season title with Fordham. They advanced to the championship game of the A-10 Women's Tournament where they lost to Fordham. They received an automatic bid to the WNIT where they defeated Charlotte in the first round before losing to Virginia Tech in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286681-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 VMI Keydets basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 VMI Keydets basketball team represented the Virginia Military Institute in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Keydets were led by fourth-year head coach Dan Earl and played their home games out of Cameron Hall in Lexington, Virginia, their home since 1981, as members of the Southern Conference. The Keydets finished the season 11\u201321, 4\u201314 in SoCon play to finish in a three-way tie for eighth place. As the No. 8 seed in the SoCon Tournament, they defeated Western Carolina in the first round before losing to top-seeded Wofford in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286681-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 VMI Keydets basketball team, Previous season\nThe Keydets finished the 2017\u201318 campaign with a 9\u201321 overall record, and a 4\u201314 mark in SoCon play to finish in ninth place. The nine wins were three more than the previous season under Earl. They lost in the first round of the SoCon Tournament to The Citadel. It was the fourth consecutive season that VMI had failed to advance in the Southern Conference tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286681-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 VMI Keydets basketball team, Preseason, Departures\nThe Keydets lost only two seniors from the previous year's team in Fred Iruafemi and Armani Branch. Iruafemi was the team's fourth-leading rebounder and averaged 2.4 points per game. Branch did not play the entire year as he was sidelined with an injury and received a medical redshirt. He chose to transfer and spend his final season of eligibility at Norfolk State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286681-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 VMI Keydets basketball team, Preseason, Coaching changes\nOn July 3, 2018, VMI head coach Dan Earl announced the addition of Steve Enright as an assistant coach. Enright came from Bridgewater College where he had served for three years on the Eagles' coaching staff. He was also an assistant under head coach Dan Hurley at Rhode Island. Enright replaced Steve Lepore, who left for an assistant coaching position with Eastern Kentucky after three years of service under Earl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286682-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 VTB United League\nThe 2018\u201319 VTB United League was the 10th complete season of the VTB United League. It was also the sixth season that the league functions as the Russian domestic first tier level. It started in October 2018 with the first round of the regular season and end in June 2019 with the last game of the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286682-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 VTB United League, Format changes\nFrom this season, the top eight teams qualify for the playoffs. All series are played in a best-of-five format with a 2\u20132\u20131 structure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286682-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 VTB United League, Teams\nA total of 14 teams from six countries contest the league, including nine sides from Russia, one from Belarus, one from Estonia, one from Kazakhstan, one from Latvia and one from Poland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286682-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 VTB United League, Teams\nZielona G\u00f3ra made their debut in the competition. Polish teams returned to the competition four years after.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286682-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 VTB United League, Regular season\nIn the regular season, teams play against each other twice (home-and-away) in a round-robin format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286682-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 VTB United League, Playoffs\nAll series are played in a best-of-five series, with a 2\u20132\u20131 format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286683-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Valencia CF season\nThe 2018\u201319 Valencia CF season was the club's 99th in its history and 84th in La Liga. Valencia qualified for the UEFA Champions League for the first time since 2015\u201316, entering and being eliminated at the group stage. Valencia competed at the UEFA Europa League, entering at the round of 32 and eliminated at the semi-finals. Valencia competed and won the Copa del Rey achieving its 8th title overall, and the first since 2008 after entering at the round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286683-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Valencia CF 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286683-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Valencia CF 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286683-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Valencia CF season, Transfers, Out\n* *Valencia originally received \u20ac5,000,000 for Maksimovi\u0107 on 16 July 2018, with the club retaining a buy-back option for 3 years. At the end of the season, Getafe paid Valencia an additional \u20ac5,000,000 to retain the player, with Valencia rescinding their buy-back rights and instead receiving 30% of any future transfer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286683-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Valencia CF season, Club, Kit information\nAdidas supplied their last kit for Valencia this season, which saw an end to 5 years of contract. Puma became the club's new kit supplier starting in July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286683-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Valencia CF season, Competitions, La Liga\nValencia made a very poor start to the season with five draws and a loss in their first six matches, leaving them perilously close to the relegation places. After beating Real Sociedad, they were winless again for a further four games before beating Getafe, and at the mid-point of the season they had only amassed 23 points. Thereafter, they made a remarkable comeback, going 12 consecutive matches undefeated to put themselves in contention for a place in the Champions League. They clinched fourth place with a victory over Real Valladolid on the last day of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286684-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Valparaiso Crusaders men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Valparaiso Crusaders men's basketball team represented Valparaiso University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Crusaders, led by third-year head coach Matt Lottich, played their home games at the Athletics\u2013Recreation Center as second-year members of the Missouri Valley Conference. They finished the season 15\u201318, 7\u201311 in MVC play to finish in a tie for eighth place. As the No. 9 seed in the MVC Tournament, they defeated Indiana State in the first round before losing to Loyola in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286684-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Valparaiso Crusaders men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Crusaders finished the 2017\u201318 season 15\u201317, 6\u201312 in MVC play to finish in last place in their first season as members of the MVC. They lost in the first round of the Missouri Valley Tournament to Missouri State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286685-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Valparaiso Crusaders women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Valparaiso Crusaders women's basketball team represents Valparaiso University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Crusaders, led by first-year head coach Mary Evans, play their home games at the Athletics\u2013Recreation Center as members of the Missouri Valley Conference. They seek to finish their first NCAA Tournament since 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286686-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vancouver Canucks season\nThe 2018\u201319 Vancouver Canucks season was the 49th season for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on May 22, 1970. On July 25, 2018, president of hockey operations, Trevor Linden left the organization and his role was assumed by general manager Jim Benning. The Canucks were eliminated from playoff contention on March 29, 2019, after the Colorado Avalanche's overtime win against the Arizona Coyotes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286686-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vancouver Canucks season, Off season\nOn June 22, the Canucks drafted Quinn Hughes with the seventh overall pick in the 2018 NHL Entry Draft. They also selected Jett Woo, Tyler Madden, Toni Utunen, Artyom Manukyan and Matthew Thiessen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286686-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vancouver Canucks season, Schedule and results, Pre-season\nThe Canucks released their pre-season schedule on June 13, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286686-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vancouver Canucks season, Schedule and results, Pre-season\nNotes: Game was played at Vivint Smart Home Arena in Salt Lake City, Utah. Game was played at Prospera Place in Kelowna, British Columbia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286686-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vancouver Canucks season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was released on June 21, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286686-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286686-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vancouver Canucks season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Canucks. Stats reflect time with the Canucks only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Canucks only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286686-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vancouver Canucks season, Transactions\nThe Canucks have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286686-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vancouver Canucks season, Draft picks\nBelow are the Vancouver Canucks' selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286687-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vanderbilt Commodores men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Vanderbilt Commodores men's basketball team represented Vanderbilt University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They were coached by Bryce Drew in his third season at Vanderbilt. The Commodores played their home games at Memorial Gymnasium in Nashville, Tennessee as members of the Southeastern Conference. They finished the season 9\u201323, 0\u201318 to finish in last place in SEC play. They were the first SEC team to go winless in a season since the 1954 Georgia Tech team, and the first team ever in the 18-game conference schedule. They lost in the first round of the SEC Tournament to Texas A&M.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286687-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vanderbilt Commodores men's basketball team\nOn March 22, 2019, the school fired Drew as head coach after three years in Nashville. On April 5, the school hired former NBA player and NBA assistant coach Jerry Stackhouse as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286687-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vanderbilt Commodores men's basketball team, Previous season\nThey finished the season 12\u201320, 6\u201312 in SEC play to finish in 13th place. They lost in the first round of the SEC Tournament to Georgia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286688-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vanderbilt Commodores women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Vanderbilt Commodores women's basketball team represents Vanderbilt University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Commodores, led by third-year head coach Stephanie White, play their home games at Memorial Gymnasium and were members of the Southeastern Conference. They finished the season 7\u201323, 2\u201314 in SEC play to finish in last place. They lost in the first round of the SEC Women's Tournament to Alabama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286688-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vanderbilt Commodores women's basketball team, Previous season\nThey finished the 2017\u201318 season 7\u201324, 3\u201313 in SEC play to finish in a three-way tie for 11th place. They lost in the first round of the SEC Women's Tournament to Arkansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286689-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vegas Golden Knights season\nThe 2018\u201319 Vegas Golden Knights season was the second season for the National Hockey League franchise that started playing in the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286689-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vegas Golden Knights season\nThe Golden Knights bolstered their lineup during the offseason with the signing of Paul Stastny, as well as the acquisition former Montreal Canadiens captain Max Pacioretty. They also acquired goal-scoring forward Mark Stone from the Ottawa Senators at the 2019 NHL Trade Deadline, and subsequently signed him to an 8-year contract extension.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286689-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vegas Golden Knights season\nPrior to the season, the NHL suspended defenseman Nate Schmidt for 20 regular season games for violating the terms of the NHL/NHLPA Performance Enhancing Substances Program. On March 29, 2019, the Golden Knights clinched a playoff spot after the Arizona Coyotes' 3\u20132 overtime loss to the Colorado Avalanche.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286689-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vegas Golden Knights season\nDespite leading the series against the San Jose Sharks 3\u20131 in the First Round of the Stanley Cup playoffs, the Golden Knights were eliminated in seven games, after blowing a 3\u20130 3rd period lead in the deciding game following a controversial major penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286689-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vegas Golden Knights season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was released on June 21, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286689-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vegas Golden Knights 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286689-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vegas Golden Knights season, Schedule and results, Playoffs\nThe Golden Knights faced the San Jose Sharks in the First Round of the playoffs, and were defeated in seven games. They played against each other in the 2018 Stanley Cup playoffs, where the Golden Knights defeated the Sharks in the Second Round in six games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286689-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vegas Golden Knights season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Golden Knights. Stats reflect time with the Golden Knights only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Golden Knights only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286689-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vegas Golden Knights season, Transactions\nThe Golden Knights have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286689-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vegas Golden Knights season, Draft picks\nBelow are the Vegas Golden Knights' selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286690-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Verbandspokal\nThe 2018\u201319 Verbandspokal, (English: 2018\u201319 Association Cup) consisted of twenty-one regional cup competitions, the Verbandspokale, the qualifying competition for the 2019\u201320 DFB-Pokal, the German Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286690-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Verbandspokal\nAll clubs from the 3. Liga and below could enter the regional Verbandspokale, subject to the rules and regulations of each region. Clubs from the Bundesliga and 2. Bundesliga could not enter but were instead directly qualified for the first round of the DFB-Pokal. Reserve teams were not permitted to take part in the DFB-Pokal or the Verbandspokale. The precise rules of each regional Verbandspokal are laid down by the regional football association organising it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286690-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Verbandspokal\nAll twenty-one winners qualified for the first round of the German Cup in the following season. Three additional clubs were also qualified for the first round of the German Cup, these being from the three largest state associations, Bavaria, Westphalia and Lower Saxony. The Lower Saxony Cup was split into two paths, one for teams from the 3. Liga and the Regionalliga Nord and one for the teams from lower leagues. The winners of both paths qualified for the DFB-Pokal. In Bavaria the best-placed Regionalliga Bayern non-reserve team qualified for the DFB-Pokal while in Westphalia a play-off was conducted to determine this club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286690-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Verbandspokal, Competitions\nThe finals of the 2018\u201319 Verbandspokal competitions (winners listed in bold):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286691-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Verbandspokal (women)\nThe 2018\u201319 Verbandspokal, (English: 2018\u201319 Association Cup) consisted of twenty-one regional cup competitions, the Verbandspokale, the qualifying competition for the 2019\u201320 DFB-Pokal, the German Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286691-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Verbandspokal (women)\nAll clubs from the Regionalliga and below could enter the regional Verbandspokale, subject to the rules and regulations of each region. Clubs from the Bundesliga and 2. Bundesliga could not enter but were instead directly qualified for the first round of the DFB-Pokal. Reserve teams are not permitted to take part in the DFB-Pokal. The precise rules of each regional Verbandspokal are laid down by the regional football association organising it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286691-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Verbandspokal (women)\nThe winners qualified for the first round of the German Cup in the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286691-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Verbandspokal (women), Competitions\nThe finals of the 2018\u201319 Verbandspokal competitions (winners listed in bold):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286692-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vermont Catamounts men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Vermont Catamounts men's basketball team represented the University of Vermont in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at the Patrick Gym in Burlington, Vermont and were led by 8th-year head coach John Becker. They finished the season 27\u20137, 14\u20132 in America East play to win the regular season championship. They defeated Maine, Binghamton, and UMBC to be champions of the America East Tournament. They earned the America East's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament where they lost in the First Round to Florida State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286692-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vermont Catamounts men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Catamounts finished the 2017\u201318 season 27\u20138, 15\u20131 in the America East Conference play to finish in first place. In the America East Tournament, they defeated Maine and Stony Brook to advance to the championship game, where they lost to UMBC. As a regular season conference champion who failed to win their conference tournament, the Catamounts received an automatic bid to the National Invitation Tournament, where they lost to Middle Tennessee in the First Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286693-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vermont Catamounts women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Vermont Catamounts women's basketball team will represent the University of Vermont during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Catamounts, led by interim head coach Alisa Kresge, play their home games in the Patrick Gym are members in the America East Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286693-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vermont Catamounts women's basketball team, Media\nAll non-televised home games and conference road games will stream on either ESPN3 or AmericaEast.tv. Select home games will be televised by the . Most road games will stream on the opponents website. All games will be broadcast on WVMT 620 AM and streamed online through with Rob Ryan calling the action.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 57], "content_span": [58, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286694-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 VfB Stuttgart season\nThe 2018\u201319 VfB Stuttgart season was the 126th season in the football club's history and 2nd consecutive and 53rd overall season in the top flight of German football, the Bundesliga, having been promoted from the 2. Bundesliga in 2017. In addition to the domestic league, VfB Stuttgart also participated in this season's edition of the domestic cup, the DFB-Pokal. This was the 86th season for Stuttgart in the Mercedes-Benz Arena, located in Stuttgart, Baden-W\u00fcrttemberg, Germany. The season covers a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286694-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 VfB Stuttgart 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-00286695-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 VfL Bochum season\nThe 2018\u201319 VfL Bochum season is the 81st season in club history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286695-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 VfL Bochum season, Review and events\nAnthony Losilla set a new record for the number of 2. Bundesliga appearances for Bochum. After Losilla tied Marcel Maltritz's old record of 156 appearances on 4 May 2019 against Magdeburg, he broke it on 12 May 2019 with his appearance against St. Pauli.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286696-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 VfL Wolfsburg season\nThe 2018\u201319 VfL Wolfsburg season was the 74th season in the football club's history and 22nd consecutive and overall season in the top flight of German football, the Bundesliga, having been promoted from the 2. Bundesliga in 1997. In addition to the domestic league, VfL Wolfsburg also participated in the season's edition of the domestic cup, the DFB-Pokal. This was the 17th season for Wolfsburg in the Volkswagen Arena, located in Wolfsburg, Lower Saxony, Germany. The season covers a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286696-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 VfL Wolfsburg 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-00286697-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Videoton FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season will be MOL Vidi FC's 51st competitive season, 20th consecutive season in the OTP Bank Liga and 78th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286697-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286697-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286697-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286697-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286697-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286697-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286697-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286698-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vijay Hazare Trophy\nThe 2018\u201319 Vijay Hazare Trophy was the 17th season of the Vijay Hazare Trophy, a List A cricket tournament in India. Karnataka were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286698-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vijay Hazare Trophy\nIt was contested by 37 domestic cricket teams of India, starting on 19 September 2018, ahead of the 2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy. In April 2018, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) reinstated Bihar for the competition, bringing the total teams to 29. In July 2018, the BCCI increased the total number of teams to 37, with the addition of Arunachal Pradesh, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland, Puducherry, Sikkim and Uttarakhand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286698-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vijay Hazare Trophy\nThe tournament has four groups, with nine teams in Groups A and B, and ten teams in Group C. All the new teams were placed in the Plate Group. The top two teams from Group C and the top team in the Plate Group progressed to the quarter-finals of the tournament, along with five best-ranked teams across Groups A and B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286698-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vijay Hazare Trophy\nIn the Group C fixture between Rajasthan and Jharkhand, Jharkhand's Shahbaz Nadeem set a new List A cricket record, taking eight wickets for ten runs from ten overs. In the Plate Group fixture between Bihar and Sikkim, Sikkim were bowled out for 46 runs, with Bihar winning by 292 runs, the biggest margin of defeat by runs in Indian domestic cricket. In the Plate Group fixture between Uttarakhand and Sikkim, Uttarakhand's Karn Kaushal made the first double-century in the history of the Vijay Hazare Trophy, scoring 202 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286698-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vijay Hazare Trophy\nMumbai and Maharashtra from Group A, Delhi, Andhra and Hyderabad from Group B and Bihar from the Plate Group all qualified for the quarter-finals of the competition. They were joined with Haryana and Jharkhand from Group C. The draw for the quarter-finals took place on 11 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286698-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vijay Hazare Trophy\nIn the first quarter-final match, between Bihar and Mumbai, Bihar were bowled out for 69 runs, with Mumbai going on to win by nine wickets. In the second match, Delhi beat Haryana by five wickets, with Delhi's Gautam Gambhir scoring his 10,000th run in List A cricket. In the third fixture, Jharkhand beat Maharashtra by two wickets in a rain-affected match. In the fourth and final quarter-final match, Hyderabad beat Andhra by 14 runs to progress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286698-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vijay Hazare Trophy\nThe first semi-final was also a rain-affected match, with Mumbai beating Hyderabad by 60 runs via the VJD method. In the second semi-final, Delhi beat Jharkhand by two wickets to join Mumbai in the final. Mumbai won the final, beating Dehli by four wickets. Afterwards Mumbai's captain, Shreyas Iyer, said that \"we are a perfect team, and that is why we have won\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286699-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vijay Hazare Trophy Group A\nThe 2018\u201319 Vijay Hazare Trophy was the 17th season of the Vijay Hazare Trophy, a List A cricket tournament in India. It was contested by the 37 domestic cricket teams of India, with nine teams in Group A. The group stage started on 19 September 2018, with the top five teams across Group A and Group B progressing to the quarter-finals of the competition. Mumbai and Maharashtra both progressed from Group A to the knock-out phase of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286700-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vijay Hazare Trophy Group B\nThe 2018\u201319 Vijay Hazare Trophy was the 17th season of the Vijay Hazare Trophy, a List A cricket tournament in India. It was contested by the 37 domestic cricket teams of India, with nine teams in Group B. The group stage started on 19 September 2018, with the top five teams across Group A and Group B progressing to the quarter-finals of the competition. Delhi, Andhra and Hyderabad all progressed from Group B to the knock-out phase of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286701-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vijay Hazare Trophy Group C\nThe 2018\u201319 Vijay Hazare Trophy was the 17th season of the Vijay Hazare Trophy, a List A cricket tournament in India. It was contested by the 37 domestic cricket teams of India, with ten teams in Group C. The group stage started on 19 September 2018, with the top two teams from Group C progressing to the quarter-finals of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286701-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vijay Hazare Trophy Group C\nIn the Round 2 fixture between Rajasthan and Jharkhand, Jharkhand's Shahbaz Nadeem set a new List A cricket record, taking eight wickets for ten runs from ten overs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286701-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vijay Hazare Trophy Group C\nHaryana and Jharkhand both progressed from Group C to the knock-out phase of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286702-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vijay Hazare Trophy Plate Group\nThe 2018\u201319 Vijay Hazare Trophy was the 17th season of the Vijay Hazare Trophy, a List A cricket tournament in India. It was contested by the 37 domestic cricket teams of India, with nine teams in the Plate Group. The group stage was started on 19 September 2018, with the top team from the Plate Group progressing to the quarter-finals of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286702-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vijay Hazare Trophy Plate Group\nOn 20 September 2018, after Puducherry's first-round match, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) reversed its decision of allowing extra outstation players for the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286702-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vijay Hazare Trophy Plate Group\nIn the Round 8 fixture between Bihar and Sikkim, Sikkim were bowled out for 46 runs, with Bihar winning by 292 runs, the biggest margin of defeat by runs in Indian domestic cricket. In the Round 11 fixture between Uttarakhand and Sikkim, Uttarakhand's Karn Kaushal made the first double-century in the history of the Vijay Hazare Trophy, scoring 202 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286702-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vijay Hazare Trophy Plate Group\nBihar progressed from the Plate Group to the knock-out phase of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286703-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Villanova Wildcats men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Villanova Wildcats men's basketball team represented Villanova University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Led by head coach Jay Wright in his 18th year, the Wildcats played their home games at the Finneran Pavilion on the school's campus in the Philadelphia suburb of Villanova, Pennsylvania and Wells Fargo Center as members of the Big East Conference. They finished the season 26\u201310, 13\u20135 in Big East play to finish in first place. They defeated Providence, Xavier, and Seton Hall to win the Big East Tournament. As a result, the Wildcats received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament as the No. 6 seed in the South region. There they defeated Saint Mary's before losing to Purdue in the Second Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 805]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286703-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Villanova Wildcats men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Wildcats finished the 2017\u201318 season 36\u20134, 14\u20134 in Big East play to finish in second place. They defeated Marquette, Butler, and Providence to win the Big East Tournament championship. As a result, they received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament as the No. 1 seed in the East region, their third No. 1 seed in four years. They defeated Radford, Alabama, West Virginia, and Texas Tech to advance to the Final Four for the second time in three years. In the National Semifinal, they defeated Kansas before defeating Michigan in the National Championship game to win their second national championship in three years. They won every game of the tournament by a double-digit margin and the team's tournament run has been called among the most dominant ever.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 843]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286703-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Villanova Wildcats men's basketball team, Offseason, Coaching changes\nFollowing the season, longtime assistant coach Ashley Howard left the Wildcats to become the head coach at La Salle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 77], "content_span": [78, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286703-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Villanova Wildcats men's basketball team, Rankings\n*AP does not release post-NCAA Tournament rankings^Coaches did not release a Week 1 poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286704-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Villanova Wildcats women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Villanova Wildcats women's basketball team represented Villanova University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Wildcats, led by 41st-year head coach Harry Perretta, returned to play home games at the newly updated Finneran Pavilion after a 1-year renovation and were members of the Big East Conference. They finished the season 19\u201313, 9\u20139 in Big East play to finish in a tie for fourth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big East Women's Tournament to Georgetown. They received an at-large bid to the WNIT where they defeated Old Dominion in the first round before losing to West Virginia in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286705-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Villarreal CF season\nDuring the 2018\u201319 season, Villarreal CF participated in La Liga, the Copa del Rey and the UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286705-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Villarreal 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286705-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Villarreal CF season, Players, Reserve team\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286705-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Villarreal 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286706-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vinoo Mankad Trophy\nThe 2018\u201319 Vinoo Mankad Trophy is the current season of the Vinoo Mankad Trophy, an Under-19s Limited overs cricket tournament in India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286706-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vinoo Mankad Trophy\nIt is being contested by 35 domestic cricket teams of India, starting on 5 October 2018, ahead of the 2018\u201319 Ranji Trophy. The tournament has four groups, with nine teams in Elite Groups A and B, and eight teams in Elite Group C. All the new teams were placed in the Plate Group. All the Elite Group A matches is being hosted in Surat by Surat District Cricket Association, affiliated to Gujarat Cricket Association from 5\u201324 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286707-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Virginia Cavaliers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Virginia Cavaliers men's basketball team represented the University of Virginia during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team was led by head coach Tony Bennett in his tenth year, and played their home games at John Paul Jones Arena in Charlottesville, Virginia as members of the Atlantic Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286707-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Virginia Cavaliers men's basketball team\nUVA opened the season with consecutive wins over ranked Big Ten teams, No. 25 Wisconsin (Battle 4 Atlantis) and No. 24 Maryland (ACC\u2013Big Ten Challenge), the latter of which improved Bennett's record in the Challenge to 8\u20132. An unheralded two-star recruit, 5'9\" Kihei Clark from Los Angeles, California, started both games as a true freshman. The team then started the season 16\u20130 before falling to No. 1 Duke, 72\u201370. The game was just the fourth in college basketball history between two teams both ranked No. 1, as the No. 4 Cavaliers were voted atop the Coaches Poll before the loss. After a 16\u20132 ACC record, Virginia won a share of their fourth ACC regular season title in the past six years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286707-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Virginia Cavaliers men's basketball team\nIn the ACC tournament, the Cavaliers defeated NC State 76\u201356, before falling to Florida State in the conference semifinals. Virginia was then awarded the No. 1 seed in the South region and dispatched Gardner-Webb and Oklahoma by healthy margins in the first two rounds in Columbia, South Carolina. They advanced to a Sweet 16 matchup with Oregon and beat Oregon 53\u201349 to advance to their 2nd Elite 8 under Bennett. In the Elite Eight, they beat Purdue 80\u201375 in overtime to secure a trip to their first Final Four since 1984.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286707-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Virginia Cavaliers men's basketball team\nOn April 6, 2019, they defeated Auburn in their Final Four matchup by a score of 63\u201362 on 3 last-second free throws by Kyle Guy, cementing the program's first ever trip to the national championship game. On April 8, 2019, Virginia beat Texas Tech 85\u201377 in overtime, winning its first national championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286707-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Virginia Cavaliers men's basketball team, Previous season\nUnranked by the AP in the preseason poll, the Cavaliers surprisingly finished the 2017\u201318 season 31\u20133, and 17\u20131 in ACC play to win both ACC Regular Season and tournament titles. The Cavaliers received an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament as the No. 1 seed in the South region, where they were upset by No. 16 UMBC in the First Round. This was the first time in NCAA tournament history that a No. 1 seed was upset by a No. 16 seed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286707-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Virginia Cavaliers men's basketball team, Offseason\nVirginia's offseason started on the night of March 16, 2018, and ended on the evening of November 6, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 59], "content_span": [60, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286707-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Virginia Cavaliers men's basketball team, Rankings\n*AP does not release post-NCAA Tournament rankings^Coaches did not release a Week 2 poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286708-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Virginia Cavaliers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Virginia Cavaliers women's basketball team represented the University of Virginia during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Cavaliers, led by first year head coach Tina Thompson, played their home games at John Paul Jones Arena and were members the Atlantic Coast Conference. They finished the season 12\u201319, 5\u201311 in ACC play to finish in twelfth place. They advanced to the second round of the ACC Women's Tournament where they lost to Syracuse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286708-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Virginia Cavaliers women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe 2017\u201318 Cavaliers finished the season 19\u201314, 10\u20136 in ACC play to finish in a 3-way tie for sixth place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the ACC Women's Tournament where they lost to Notre Dame. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Women's Tournament which was their first trip since 2009, where they defeated California first round before losing to South Carolina in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286708-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Virginia Cavaliers women's basketball team, Previous season\nOn March 20, Boyle announced her retirement, initially citing an unspecified family matter. She would later reveal that she retired because of snags in her ongoing attempt to finalize the adoption of her Senegalese daughter. Boyle finished at Virginia with a record of 129\u201398.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286708-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Virginia Cavaliers women's basketball team, Previous season\nOn April 16, 2018 Tina Thompson was named as her replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286709-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Virginia Tech Hokies men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Virginia Tech Hokies men's basketball team represented Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Hokies were led by fifth-year head coach Buzz Williams and played their home games at Cassell Coliseum in Blacksburg, Virginia as members of the Atlantic Coast Conference. They finished the 2018\u201319 season 26\u20139, 12\u20136 in ACC play to finish in fifth place. They defeated Miami (FL) in the second round of the ACC Tournament before losing to Florida State. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they defeated Saint Louis and Liberty to advanced to the sweet sixteen for the first time since 1965 where they lost to ACC member Duke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286709-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Virginia Tech Hokies men's basketball team\nOn April 3, Williams left Virginia Tech to take the Texas A&M head coaching job. The Hokies hired Wofford head coach Young as his replacement on April 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286709-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Virginia Tech Hokies men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Hokies finished the 2017\u201318 season 21\u201312, 10\u20138 in ACC play to finish in seventh place. They lost in the second round of the ACC Tournament to Notre Dame. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they lost in the first round to Alabama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286710-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Virginia Tech Hokies women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Virginia Tech Hokies women's basketball team represented Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Hokies, led by third year head coach Kenny Brooks, played their home games at Cassell Coliseum as members of the Atlantic Coast Conference. They finished the season 22\u201312, 6\u201310 in ACC play to finish in a tie for tenth place. They advanced to the second round of the ACC Women's Tournament where they lost to Clemson. They received an automatic bid to the Women's National Invitation Tournament where they defeated Furman and VCU in the first and second rounds before losing to James Madison in the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286710-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Virginia Tech Hokies women's basketball team, Previous season\nThey finished the season 23\u201314, 6\u201310 in ACC play to finish in a tie for ninth place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the ACC Women's Tournament where they lost to Louisville. They received an automatic bid to the Women's National Invitation Tournament where they defeated Navy, George Mason and Fordham in the first, second and third rounds respectively, Alabama in the quarterfinals, West Virginia in the semifinals to advanced to the championship game where they lost to Indiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286710-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Virginia Tech Hokies women's basketball team, Roster\nShaniya Jones transferred after appearing in 5 games for the Hokies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 60], "content_span": [61, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286711-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Volleyleague (Greece)\nThe Greek Volley League 2018\u201319 championship is the 51st National championship and the 9th under the Volleyleague name. The championship started on Saturday 20 October 2018 and the Regular season is scheduled to complete on Saturday 30 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286711-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Volleyleague (Greece), Teams\nTen teams participate in 2018-19 Volleyleage. Teams in positions 1\u22128 from 2017\u201318, the two winning teams from 2017-18 Volleyleagur Play outs and two teams promoted from 2017-18 A2 EthnikiSpecifically:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286711-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Volleyleague (Greece), Regular season\nRegular season takes place in round robin format with each team playing all other teams twice. Teams in positions 1-8 advance in Play offs positions 1\u22128, while teams in positions 9-10 will play each other to avoid relegation", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286711-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Volleyleague (Greece), Play offs positions 1-8\nThe teams that finish in the top eight after the regular season advance to the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286712-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vyshcha Liha (women)\nThe 2018\u201319 season of the Ukrainian Championship Higher League is the 28th season of Ukraine's top women's football league. It runs from 3 August 2018 to 1 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286712-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vyshcha Liha (women), Vyshcha Liha, Relegation play-offs\nThe drawing for relegation playoff took place on 13 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 64], "content_span": [65, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286712-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vyshcha Liha (women), Vyshcha Liha, Relegation play-offs\nZlahoda-Dnipro-1 won on walkover and has preserved its berth in the Ukrainian Women's League. SC Vyshneve withdrew from league competitions. Later SC Dnipro-1 informed the Ukrainian Association of Football that it will not field its female team next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 64], "content_span": [65, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286712-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vyshcha Liha (women), Persha Liha, Play-offs, Semifinals\nVO DYuSSh Vinnytsia and Mariupolchanka Mariupol gained promotion to the Ukrainian Women's League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 64], "content_span": [65, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286712-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Vyshcha Liha (women), Persha Liha, Play-offs, Final\nMariupolchanka Mariupol was crown as the champions of the 2018\u201319 Persha Liha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286713-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 W-League\nThe 2018\u201319 W-League season was the eleventh season of the W-League, the Australian national women's association football competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286713-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 W-League, Clubs, Foreign players\nThe following do not fill a Visa position:A Australian citizens who have chosen to represent another national team;G Guest Players", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286713-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 W-League, Regular season\nThe regular season was played between 25 October 2018 and 6 February 2019, over 14 rounds, with each team playing twelve matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286713-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 W-League, NAB Young Footballer of the Year Award\nThe NAB Young Footballer of the Year Award is awarded to the finest performance of an under-23 player from Australia throughout the season. Each month a panel of experts, headed by Graham Arnold, vote for a monthly nomination using a 3\u20132\u20131 points basis. At the end of the season fans vote online for the overall winner, which was awarded to Ellie Carpenter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 56], "content_span": [57, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286713-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 W-League, End-of-season awards\nThe following end of the season awards were announced at the 2018\u201319 Dolan Warren Awards night on 13 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286714-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 WABA League\nThe 2018\u201319 BTravel WABA League was the 18th season of the Adriatic League. Competition included eight teams from six countries. In this season participating clubs from Serbia, Croatia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria and Slovenia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286714-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 WABA League, Regular season\nIn the Regular season was played with 8 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 3 October 2018 and it will end on 6 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286714-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 WABA League, Final Four\nFinal Four to be played from 23\u201324 March 2019 in the Celje, Slovenia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286715-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 WABA League Final Four\nFinal Four of the Adriatic League to be played from 23\u201324 March 2019 in the Celje, Slovenia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286716-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 WABA League Regular season\nThe WABA League is a top-level regional basketball league, featuring female teams from Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Slovenia and Croatia. In the Regular season was played with 8 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 3 October 2018 and it will end on 6 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286716-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 WABA League Regular season, Fixtures/Results\nAll times given below are in Central European Time (for the matches played in Bulgaria is time expressed in Eastern European Time).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286717-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 WCBA season\nThe 2018\u201319 WCBA season was the 17th season of the Women's Chinese Basketball Association. Beijing Great Wall were the defending champions. The league was expanded from 14 teams to 18 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286718-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 WHL season\nThe 2018\u201319 WHL season is the 53rd season of the Western Hockey League (WHL). The regular season began on September 21, 2018, and ended on March 17, 2019. The regular season was shortened from 72 games to 68 games; the league had a 72-game schedule since the 1975\u201376 season. The playoffs began on March 22, 2019 and ended on May 13; the winning team, the Prince Albert Raiders, were awarded the Ed Chynoweth Cup and a berth in the 2019 Memorial Cup to be held at the Scotiabank Centre in Halifax, Nova Scotia, from May 17 to 26.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286718-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 WHL 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; z = clinched conference title", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286718-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 WHL season, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts. = Points; PIM = Penalty minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286718-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 WHL season, Statistics, Goaltenders\nThese are the goaltenders that lead the league in GAA that have played at least 1500 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286718-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 WHL season, Statistics, 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, 43], "content_span": [44, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286718-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 WHL season, Conference Quarter-finals, Eastern Conference, (C2) Lethbridge Hurricanes vs. (C3) Calgary Hitmen\n* Note: Games 5 and 7 were played at the Nicholas Sheran Arena in Lethbridge due to the 2019 World Men's Curling Championship taking place at the ENMAX Centre from March 30 to April 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 117], "content_span": [118, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286718-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286718-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286719-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 WNBL season\nThe 2018\u201319 WNBL season is the 39th season of the competition since its establishment in 1981. The Townsville Fire were the defending champions, however they failed to qualify for the finals. Canberra Capitals won their record eighth championship, defeating Adelaide in the grand final series, 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286719-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 WNBL season\nChemist Warehouse was announced as the WNBL's naming rights partner for this season, after signing a three-year deal in July 2018. Spalding again provided equipment including the official game ball, alongside iAthletic supplying team apparel for a second year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286720-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 WPBL season\nThe 2018\u201319 WPBL season was the 28th season of the Russian Women's Basketball Premier League. UMMC Ekaterinburg were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286721-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 WPI Engineers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 WPI Engineers men's basketball team represents Worcester Polytechnic Institute during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division III men's basketball season. The Engineers, led by 18th-year head coach Chris Bartley, played their home games at Harrington Auditorium in Worcester, Massachusetts as members of the New England Women's and Men's Athletic Conference (NEWMAC). They finished the regular season 19\u20139, 8\u20136 in the NEWMAC play to finish in fifth place. They lost in the championship game of the NEWMAC Tournament for the second consecutive year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286721-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 WPI Engineers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Engineers finished the 2017\u201318 season 16-11, 8-6 in NEWMAC play to finish in fourth place. In the NEWMAC Tournament, they lost to the MIT in the Championship game and failed to qualify for the 2017 NCAA Men's Division III Basketball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286722-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 WRU Championship\nThe 2018\u201319 WRU Championship was the seventh season of the WRU Championship, the second tier of club rugby in Wales run by the Welsh Rugby Union. It was be the third season to feature 12 teams, reduced from 14 in previous seasons. For this season, \"ring-fencing\" was abolished and the winner would play-off against the 12th placed team in the 2018\u201319 Principality Premiership at a neutral venue to determine the 12th team for the 2019\u201320 season. The competition was won by Pontypool for the third consecutive year and completed the season unbeaten for the second year running. The bottom four clubs relegated were Bedlinog, Newcastle Emlyn, Newbridge and Rhydyfelin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286722-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 WRU Championship, Structure\nEach team in the Championship will play each other twice on a home and away basis for a total of 22 matches played each. The team with the most points at the end of the season will be declared the winners. Provided that the champion club holds an 'A-License', they will play-off against the 12th placed team in the 2018-19 Principality Premiership at a neutral venue to determine the 12th team for the 2019-20 season. The bottom four clubs at the end of the season will be relegated to Division 1 (based on geographical location).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286722-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 WRU Championship, Teams\nAt the end of last season, Skewen and Glynneath were both relegated to Division 1 West Central. The winners of each Division 1 entered into play offs to decide the remaining two places. The winners of the two Eastern divisions faced each other as did the winners of the two Western divisions. The winners were East Central champions Ystrad Rhondda and West Central champions Maesteg Quins who beat Brynmawr and Felinfoel respectively. Both clubs were making their debuts in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286722-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 WRU Championship, Promotion Play-offs\nOrange = Newport Gwent DragonsBlue = Cardiff BluesBlack = Ospreys", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286723-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wadi Degla SC season\nThe 2018\u201319 Wadi Degla season is the 16th season in the football club's history and 7th consecutive and overall season in the top flight of Egyptian football, the Egyptian Premier League, having been promoted from the Egyptian Second Division in 2010. In addition to the domestic league, Wadi Degla also are participating in this season's editions of the domestic cup, the Egypt Cup. The season covers a period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286723-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wadi Degla SC 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286723-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wadi Degla SC 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286724-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wagner Seahawks men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Wagner Seahawks men's basketball team represented Wagner College during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Seahawks were led by seventh-year head coach Bashir Mason. They played their home games at Spiro Sports Center on the school's Staten Island campus as members of the Northeast Conference. They finished the season 13\u201317 overall, 8\u201310 in NEC play to finish in seventh place. As the No. 7 seed in the NEC Tournament, they were defeated in the quarterfinals by the eventual tournament champion, Fairleigh Dickinson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286724-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wagner Seahawks men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Seahawks finished the 2017\u201318 season, 23\u201310, 14\u20134 in NEC play to win the NEC regular season championship. In the NEC Tournament, they defeated Central Connecticut and Robert Morris before losing to LIU Brooklyn in the championship game. As a regular season conference champion who did not win their conference tournament, they received an invitation to the National Invitation Tournament, where they lost in the first round to Baylor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286725-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wake Forest Demon Deacons men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Wake Forest Demon Deacons men's basketball team represented Wake Forest University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Demon Deacons were led by fifth-year head coach Danny Manning and played their home games at the Lawrence Joel Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Winston-Salem, North Carolina as members of the Atlantic Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286725-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wake Forest Demon Deacons men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Demon Deacons finished 2017\u201318 season 11\u201320, 4\u201314 in ACC play to finish in 14th place. They lost in the first round of the ACC Tournament to Syracuse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 72], "content_span": [73, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286726-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wake Forest Demon Deacons women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Wake Forest Demon Deacons women's basketball team represents Wake Forest University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Demon Deacons, led by seventh year head coach Jen Hoover, were members of the Atlantic Coast Conference and play their home games at the Lawrence Joel Veterans Memorial Coliseum. They finished the season 10\u201320, 1\u201315 in ACC play in last place. They lost in the first round of the ACC Women's Tournament to Virginia Tech.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286726-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wake Forest Demon Deacons women's basketball team, Previous season\nThey finished the season 14\u201317, 5\u201311 in ACC play in eleventh place. They defeat Pittsburgh in the first round before losing in the second round of the ACC Women's Tournament to Miami (FL). The Demon Deacons were not invited to a post-season tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 74], "content_span": [75, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286727-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Walsall F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Walsall's 131st season in their existence and their 12th consecutive season in League One. Along with competing in League One, the club will also participate in the FA Cup, League Cup and EFL Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286727-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Walsall F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286727-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Walsall F.C. season, Competitions, Pre-season friendlies\nThe Saddlers pre-season schedule includes matches against Rushall Olympic, Stoke City, Aston Villa, Ajax and Cheltenham Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 64], "content_span": [65, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286727-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Walsall F.C. season, Competitions, League One, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the League One fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286727-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Walsall F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe first round draw was made live on BBC by Dennis Wise and Dion Dublin on 22 October. The draw for the second round was made live on BBC and BT by Mark Schwarzer and Glenn Murray on 12 November. The third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286727-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Walsall F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam. The second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286727-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Walsall F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced. The draw for the second round was made live on Talksport by Leon Britton and Steve Claridge on 16 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286728-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Capitals season\nThe 2018\u201319 Washington Capitals season was the 45th season for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on June 11, 1974. It was the first season with new head coach Todd Reirden. They entered the season as the defending Stanley Cup champions. The Capitals clinched a playoff spot on March 28, 2019, after a 3\u20132 win over the Carolina Hurricanes. On April 4, the team defended their division title in a 2\u20131 win against the Montreal Canadiens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286728-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Capitals season\nThe Capitals faced the Carolina Hurricanes in the 2019 Stanley Cup playoffs, where they lost in seven games. With losing the series after taking a 2\u20130 series lead, this was the eleventh time the Capitals have lost a playoff series after taking a 2\u2013game lead in their franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286728-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Capitals season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was released on June 21, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 72], "content_span": [73, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286728-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Capitals 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-00286728-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Capitals season, Schedule and results, Playoffs\nThe Capitals faced the Carolina Hurricanes in the First Round of the playoffs, and were defeated in seven games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286728-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Capitals season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Capitals. Stats reflect time with the Capitals only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Capitals only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286728-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Capitals season, Transactions\nThe Capitals have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286728-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Capitals season, Draft picks\nBelow are the Washington Capitals' selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286729-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Huskies men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Washington Huskies men's basketball team represented the University of Washington in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Huskies, led by second-year head coach Mike Hopkins, played their home games at Alaska Airlines Arena at Hec Edmundson Pavilion in Seattle, Washington as members of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season 27\u20139, 15\u20133 in Pac-12 play to win the regular season championship. They advanced to the championship game of the Pac-12 Tournament where they lost to Oregon. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where, as a No. 9 seed, they defeated No. 8 seed Utah State in the First Round before losing to No. 1 seed North Carolina in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286729-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Huskies men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Huskies finished the 2017\u201318 season 21\u201313, 10\u20138 in Pac-12 play to finish in a tie for sixth place. They lost to Oregon State in the first round of the Pac-12 Tournament. They received an invitation to the National Invitation Tournament where they defeated Boise State in the first round before losing to Saint Mary's in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286729-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Huskies men's basketball team, Rankings\n*AP does not release post-NCAA Tournament rankings^Coaches did not release a Week 2 poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286730-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Huskies women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Washington Huskies women's basketball team represented University of Washington during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Huskies are led by second-year head coach Jody Wynn. The Huskies play their home games at Alaska Airlines Arena at Hec Edmundson Pavilion in Seattle, Washington as members of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season 11\u201321, 2\u201315 in Pac-12 play to finish in eleventh place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Pac-12 Women's Basketball Tournament where they lost to Stanford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286731-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington State Cougars men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Washington State Cougars men's basketball team represented Washington State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team was led by fifth-year head coach Ernie Kent. The Cougars played their home games at the Beasley Coliseum in Pullman, Washington as members in the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season 11\u201321, 4\u201314 in Pac-12 play to finish in 11th place. They lost in the first round of the Pac-12 Tournament to Oregon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286731-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington State Cougars men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Cougars finished the 2017\u201318 season 12\u201319, 4\u201314 in Pac-12 play to finish in 11th place. They lost in the first round of the Pac-12 Tournament to Oregon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 71], "content_span": [72, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286732-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington State Cougars women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Washington State Cougars women's basketball team represents Washington State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Cougars, led by first year head coach Kamie Ethridge, play their home games at the Beasley Coliseum and were members of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season 9\u201321, 4\u201314 in the Pac-12 to finish in tenth place. They lost in the first round of the Pac-12 Women's Tournament to California.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286733-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Wizards season\nThe 2018\u201319 Washington Wizards season was the 58th season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA) and 46th in the Washington, D.C. area. On March 28, 2019, they were eliminated from playoff contention after the Milwaukee Bucks' victory over the Los Angeles Clippers, missing the playoffs for the first time since 2015-16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286733-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Wizards season\nThis season would also mark the end of the John Wall era in Washington, as he played his last game as a Wizard on December 26, 2018 and would undergo a season-ending surgery on his left heel and then later an Achilles injury from slipping and falling in his home that would cause him to miss the entire 2019-20 season. Wall would get traded to the Houston Rockets for Russell Westbrook and a 2023 first round draft pick following that season. Wall was reunited with his former college teammate DeMarcus Cousins in Houston, both of whom played for the Kentucky Wildcats from 2009-2010. On April 2, the Wizards fired long-standing team president and general manager Ernie Grunfeld, replacing him with longtime assistant Tommy Sheppard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286733-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Wizards season, Background, Off-season\nShortly after the Washington Wizards exited the 2018 NBA Playoffs in late April, General Manager Ernie Grunfeld was quietly granted a two-year extension for his incumbent role with the team. In May, Jason Smith exercised his player option to stay with the team. Jodie Meeks also exercised his player option nearly a month later, despite having to serve the remainder of his 25-game suspension in the 2018-19 NBA season for violating the NBA's Anti- Drug Program in April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286733-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Wizards season, Background, Off-season\nThe Wizards made several moves over the summer to overhaul their roster. On June 27th, the team traded their starting center Marcin Gortat to the Los Angeles Clippers for Austin Rivers, as both players were entering the final year of the respective contracts and were growing increasingly disgruntled with their teams. The Wizards then boosted their depth by acquiring veterans Thomas Bryant, Jeff Green and Dwight Howard in free agency. Meanwhile, the team chose not to re-sign five players whose contracts had expired and became unrestricted free agents: Mike Scott, Tim Frazier, Ty Lawson, Chris McCullough, and Ramon Sessions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286733-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Wizards season, Background, Off-season\nUnlike in the previous two years, the Wizards did not trade away their picks in the 2018 NBA draft. Instead, they used the draft to acquire two additional players: Troy Brown Jr., a Freshman from Oregon who traditionally played at Small Forward, was acquired with the Wizards' 15th pick in the first round. Issuf Sanon, a Ukrainian Guard, was selected with the team's 44th pick in the second round. Brown later joined the team, while Sanon was chosen as a \"draft-and-stash\" player, who would be allowed to continue playing with the professional Slovenian basketball team Olimpija Ljubljana while the Wizards retained his draft rights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286733-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Wizards season, Background, Off-season\nThe Wizards rounded out their roster by signing Jordan McRae to a two-way contract, officially adding him to the team in September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286733-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Wizards season, Background, Capital City Go-Go\nOn August 7, 2018, the Wizards unveiled the new management team behind their first ever NBA G League franchise to be directly affiliated with the team, the Capital City Go-Go, as they were set to play their inaugural season in 2018. Pops Mensah-Bonsu was chosen as the Go-Go's General Manager, and Jarell Christian as their Head Coach. The Go-Go also held open tryouts in September to fill the remaining spots on their roster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286733-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Wizards season, Background, Preseason\nThe Wizards opened their preseason with an overtime loss to the New York Knicks, 124\u2013121. The game was notable for the combined 83 fouls, resulting in 90 shots, accumulated by both teams over the course of the game. Among those fouls, Markieff Morris was ejected in the second quarter after picking up a second technical foul from a verbal altercation with Knicks rookie Mitchell Robinson. The Wizards would later go on to win the rest of their matches in the preseason. Meanwhile, Howard stayed out of preseason play entirely, as he dealt with a recurring back injury throughout the preseason, leading to speculation he would miss the team's season opener on October 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286733-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Wizards season, Background, Preseason\nAs the preseason drew to a close, the Wizards made a couple additional personnel changes: On October 15, the team sent Meeks along with a future conditional second-round draft pick to the Milwaukee Bucks in a salary dump, receiving nothing more than the Bucks future conditional second-round draft pick in return. The next day, the team announced that they had hired Washington Mystics player Kristi Toliver as an assistant coach for player development.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286733-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Wizards season, Background, October: The Season Begins\nThe Wizards opened their season at Capital One Arena against the Miami Heat. McRae was called up to fill the empty roster spot left by Meeks' departure, and Ian Mahinmi was tabbed to start in place of Howard, who was still recovering from his injury. The team ended up losing the match 113\u2013112, thanks to a last-second shot by Kelly Olynyk. The following Saturday against the Toronto Raptors, Bradley Beal broke the Wizards' franchise record for all-time three-point shots made, surpassing Gilbert Arenas who previously held the record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 73], "content_span": [74, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286733-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Wizards season, Background, October: The Season Begins\nThe team finally got their first win of the regular season in a close matchup with the Portland Trail Blazers on October 22, winning 125\u2013124 in overtime thanks to some exceptional three-point shooting from Morris. However, it would be their only win in October, as the team finished the month with a 1\u20136 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 73], "content_span": [74, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286733-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Wizards season, Background, November: Roster Shuffling and Howard's Injury\nHoward continued to be sidelined from his injury, and the Wizards were approaching a deadline to add another active player to their roster before being penalized by the league. The team decided to sign Chasson Randle, who trained with the team in the preseason and was playing with the Go-Go, to a one-year contract. The team then assigned him back to the Go-Go in time for their season opener. The Wizards would shuffle him back and forth between the first team roster and the Go-Go before officially waiving him two weeks later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 93], "content_span": [94, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286733-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Wizards season, Background, November: Roster Shuffling and Howard's Injury\nHoward finally got his first start with the Wizards on November 2, getting 20 points in a loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder. He would go on to start at Center for nine games, leading the team in rebounding for seven of them, including the team's first winning streak between November 10\u201314. However, Howard's injury returned and forced him to exit the first half of the November 18 game against Portland that the team would eventually lose. Tempers reportedly flared at a team practice as members of the Wizards blamed each other, the coaching staff, and even Grunfeld for their team's woes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 93], "content_span": [94, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286733-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Wizards season, Background, November: Roster Shuffling and Howard's Injury\nCoach Scott Brooks announced a change to the starting lineup for the next game against the Los Angeles Clippers, recalling Thomas Bryant from the Go-Go shortly after he had been sent down to get playing time and putting him at the starting Center position while Howard continued to recover. He also moved Otto Porter Jr. to the Power Forward slot and put Kelly Oubre Jr. on the starting lineup in the Small Forward position, sending Morris to the bench. The change started off poorly, as the Wizards were down by 24 at one point during the first half, but the team rallied and pulled off a 125\u2013118 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 93], "content_span": [94, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286733-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Wizards season, Background, November: Roster Shuffling and Howard's Injury\nShortly after the game, the team sent down Brown to the Go-Go, and signed Okaro White to a one-year contract to avoid being penalized after waiving Randle earlier. The team shuffled White back and forth between the main roster and the Go-Go as needed to give him some playing time. Meanwhile, Brooks largely kept to his new starting lineup, sometimes giving Morris more playing time at Center than Bryant even as Bryant would open the game at that position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 93], "content_span": [94, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286733-0013-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Wizards season, Background, November: Roster Shuffling and Howard's Injury\nIt was an arrangement that would continue after Howard announced he would be getting spinal surgery to heal his injury, keeping him sidelined for an additional 2\u20133 months. Despite being healthy enough to play at Center, Mahinmi's poor performance saw him languish on the bench, collecting DNP-CDs for most of November and December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 93], "content_span": [94, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286733-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Wizards season, Background, December: Desperate Trades and Loss of Wall\nDespite reports from the previous month that the Wizards were open to any trade offers involving any player on their roster, including their star players, there seemed to be few takers around the league, as even the team's highly skilled players were considered too pricey to touch. However, in December, the team managed to successfully trade away some lower-priced players for relief. On the 7th, the team inserted itself into a three-team trade with the Cavaliers and the Bucks. The team ended up trading away Smith and \"cash considerations\" to the Bucks and acquired Sam Dekker from the Cavaliers in this trade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 90], "content_span": [91, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286733-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Wizards season, Background, December: Desperate Trades and Loss of Wall\nAbout a week later, the team nearly pulled off another three-team trade involving themselves, the Memphis Grizzlies, and the Phoenix Suns that would see them acquire Trevor Ariza from the Suns in exchange for Austin Rivers, with Oubre going to the Grizzlies for two second round picks. However, the trade fell apart when the Grizzlies did not clarify which of MarShon Brooks or Dillon Brooks would be going to the Suns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 90], "content_span": [91, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286733-0015-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Wizards season, Background, December: Desperate Trades and Loss of Wall\nSoon after the trade fell through, the Wizards decided to deal with the Suns directly, getting Ariza in exchange for Oubre and Rivers, who was waived by the Suns shortly after the trade was accepted. The Wizards re-signed Randle to the roster from the Go-Go to fill the spot vacated by Rivers after the trade. While the Wizards looked to remain competitive, their playoff contention hopes were dashed on December 29, when it was announced that John Wall was out for the rest of the season due to a chronic Achilles tendon injury relating to Haglund's syndrome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 90], "content_span": [91, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286733-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Wizards season, Background, January/February: Further turmoil and rebuilding trades\nIn spite of their hardships relating to the team around this time, which included John Wall's first surgery resulting in an infection, throughout the month of January, the Wizards performed fairly well to acquire an 8\u20136 record for the month without Wall. However, the Wizards were still looking for moves to help rebuild the team for the future while also trying to see if the playoffs were still possible in the Eastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 102], "content_span": [103, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286733-0016-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Wizards season, Background, January/February: Further turmoil and rebuilding trades\nOn February 5, potential plans for their next season were already hindered without John Wall playing, as it was announced that Wall suffered a ruptured left Achilles tendon injury through slipping and falling down in his home. That injury would hinder his playing time for 12 months. alongside his previous injury leaving him out for the rest of this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 102], "content_span": [103, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286733-0016-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Wizards season, Background, January/February: Further turmoil and rebuilding trades\nA day later, the Wizards also traded one of their highest paid players, Otto Porter Jr., to the Chicago Bulls in exchange for the expiring contracts of Jabari Parker and Bobby Portis, as well as a protected 2023 second round pick. At the NBA trade deadline on February 7, Washington also traded Markieff Morris and a 2021 second round pick to the New Orleans Pelicans for Wesley Johnson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 102], "content_span": [103, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286733-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Wizards season, Player statistics\nAfter all games. \u2021Waived during the season\u2020Traded during the season\u2260Acquired during the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286733-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Washington Wizards season, Transactions, Trades\nJabari Parker Bobby Portis 2023 protected second round draft pick", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286734-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Watford F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Watford's 120th year in their history and fourth consecutive season in the Premier League. They also participated in the FA Cup and EFL Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286734-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Watford F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286734-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Watford F.C. season, Friendlies\nWatford confirmed pre-season friendlies with 1. FC K\u00f6ln, Fortuna D\u00fcsseldorf, Stevenage, Brentford and Sampdoria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286734-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Watford F.C. season, Competitions, Premier League, Matches\nOn 14 June 2018, the Premier League fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286734-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Watford F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018. The fourth round draw was made live on BBC by Robbie Keane and Carl Ikeme from Wolverhampton on 7 January 2019. The fifth round draw was broadcast on 28 January 2019 live on BBC, Alex Scott and Ian Wright conducted the draw. The draw for the quarter-finals was made on 18 February by Darren Fletcher & Wayne Bridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286734-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Watford F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nThe second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August. The third round draw was made on 30 August 2018 by David Seaman and Joleon Lescott.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286735-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wearside Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 Wearside Football League season is the 127th in the history of Wearside Football League and the first season that the Durham & Wearside Development Division is part of the system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286735-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wearside Football League, Wearside Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 season consists of 16 clubs from South Tyneside, Gateshead, Sunderland, County Durham, Teesside, Cumbria and North Yorkshire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286735-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wearside Football League, Wearside Football League\nThe following 4 clubs left the Wearside League before the season -", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286735-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wearside Football League, Wearside Football League\nThe following 3 clubs joined the Wearside League before the season -", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286735-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wearside Football League, Durham & Wearside Development Division\nNewly created division which will act as a feeder to the Wearside League. Many of the teams in the league moved from the Durham Alliance Combination League when it was closed in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286736-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Weber State Wildcats men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Weber State Wildcats men's basketball team represented Weber State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Wildcats were led by 13th-year head coach Randy Rahe and played their home games in the Dee Events Center in Ogden, Utah as members of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 18\u201315, 11\u20139 in Big Sky play to finish in a three-way tie for fourth place. They defeated Portland State in the quarterfinals of the Big Sky Tournament to advance to the semifinals where they lost to Montana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286736-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Weber State Wildcats men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Wildcats finished the 2017\u201318 season 20\u201311, 13\u20135 in Big Sky play to finish in a tie for third place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big Sky Tournament to Northern Colorado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286737-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Weber State Wildcats women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Weber State Wildcats women's basketball team represents Weber State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Wildcats are led by first year head coach Bethann Ord and play their home games at the Dee Events Center. They are members of the Big Sky Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286737-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Weber State Wildcats women's basketball team, Radio Broadcasts\nAll Wildcats games are heard on KWCR with Nick Bailey calling the action. All home games and conference road games are also streamed with video live online through .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 70], "content_span": [71, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286738-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wellington Phoenix FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 Wellington Phoenix season was the club's 12th season since its establishment in 2007. The club participated in the A-League for the 12th time, the FFA Cup for the fifth time, and fielded a reserves squad in the ISPS Handa Premiership for the fifth time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286738-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wellington Phoenix FC season, Review\nThis season marked the club surpassing its record of 7 games unbeaten to 9 games unbeaten. Roy Krishna became Wellington Phoenix's all time leading goal scorer overtaking Paul Ifill's record of 33 and also broke the record for most goals in a single season for the club with 19. The club also broke its record of biggest home attendance for a non-final match with 23,648 people against Melbourne Victory in Eden Park on 15 February 2019. This season was the first time since 2015 the Phoenix played in the Finals Series. However, they lost 3-1 in the elimination final to Melbourne Victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286738-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wellington Phoenix 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286739-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh Alliance League\nThe 2018\u201319 Welsh Alliance League, known as the Lock Stock Welsh Alliance League for sponsorship reasons, was the 35th season of the Welsh Alliance League, which consisted 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, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286739-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh Alliance League\nThere were fifteen teams in each division, with the champions of Division 1 promoted to the new FAW Championship North & Mid and the bottom two were relegated to Division 2. In Division 2, the champions and runners-up were promoted to Division 1. No team was relegated from Division 2 as Meliden resigned from the Welsh Alliance League at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286739-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh Alliance League\nThe season began on 11 August 2018 and concluded on 18 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286739-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh Alliance League, Division 1, Teams\nConwy Borough were champions in the previous season and were promoted to the Cymru Alliance. They were replaced by Llandudno Junction who were relegated from the Cymru Alliance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286739-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh Alliance League, Division 1, Teams\nThe bottom two teams from the previous season, Pwllheli and Trearddur Bay, were relegated to Division 2 for 2018\u201319. However, Trearddur Bay resigned from the league in August 2018. Division 2 champions, Prestatyn Sports and runners-up, Bodedern Athletic were promoted in their place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286739-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh Alliance League, Division 2, Teams\nPrestatyn Sports were champions in the previous season and were promoted to Division 1 along with runners-up, Bodedern Athletic. They were replaced by Pwllheli who were relegated from Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286739-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh Alliance League, Division 2, Teams\nThe bottom two teams from the previous season were Llannerch-y-medd and Llanfairpwll. However, Llannerch-y-medd were not relegated and Llanfairpwll resigned from the league in August 2018. Gwynedd League champions, Holyhead Town and Vale of Clwyd and Conwy Football League Premier Division champions, Kinmel Bay were promoted in their place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286740-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 FAW Welsh Cup was the 131st season of the annual knockout tournament for competitive football teams in Wales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286741-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh Football League Division One\nThe 2018\u201319 Welsh Football League Division One (known as the Nathaniel Cars Welsh Football League Division One for sponsorship reasons) was the 2018\u201319 season of the top football league in South Wales. The champions at the end of the season were Penybont.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286741-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh Football League Division One\nTogether with its North Wales counterpart, the Cymru Alliance, the 16-team division formed the second tier of the Welsh football league system, one level below the nationwide Welsh Premier League. The season began on 10 August 2018 and concluded in April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286741-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh Football League Division One\nThis was the last season as the 'Welsh League Division One' at Tier 2 with FAW Championship South & Mid instead being this level from the 2019\u201320 season. The First Division will instead be at Tier 3 level for the 2019\u201320 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286741-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh Football League Division One, Teams\nLlanelli Town were champions in the previous season and were promoted to the 2018\u201319 Welsh Premier League. There was no relegation from the Premier League to Division One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286741-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh Football League Division One, Teams\nMonmouth Town and Caerau (Ely) were relegated and replaced by the promoted teams from 2017-18 Welsh Football League Division Two. They were Llantwit Major, Pontypridd Town and Ammanford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286742-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh League Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Welsh League Cup (known for sponsorship purposes as The Nathaniel MG Cup) was the 27th season of the Welsh League cup competition, which was established in 1992.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286742-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh League Cup\nPlayed under a regionalised, knock-out format, the 2018\u201319 competition was the fifth to be held since the tournament was expanded to include clubs from outside the Welsh Premier League. As well as the 12 Welsh Premier League clubs from the previous season, the top five qualifying clubs from the northern and southern feeder leagues would enter the tournament, along with a number of wildcard entrants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286742-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh League Cup\nThe trophy was won by Premier League side Cardiff Met. who defeated second tier Cambrian & Clydach Vale B. & G.C. 2\u20130 in Barry. It was the first time Met had won the cup and the first final appearance for Cambrian, who upset four-time defending champions The New Saints in the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286742-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh League Cup, First round\nThe semi-finalists from the previous season, The New Saints, Cardiff Met, Connah's Quay and Newtown received a bye to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286742-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh League Cup, Second round\nThe draw for this round was made on 31 August. Ties were played between 25 September and 3 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286742-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh League Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for this round was made on 3 October, just prior to the last Second Round match between Prestatyn and The New Saints. Ties were played on 30 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286742-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh League Cup, Semi-finals\nThe draw for this round was made on 31 October. Ties were played on 23 and 24 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286742-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh League Cup, Final\nThe match was played on Saturday 19 January 2019 at Jenner Park, Barry and was shown live on S4C. This was the first time that the final was held at that ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286743-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Welsh Premier League was the 27th and final season of the Welsh Premier League, the highest football league within Wales since its establishment in 1992. The New Saints are the defending champions. The season fixtures were announced on 27 June 2018. The season began on 10 August 2018. Teams play each other twice on a home and away basis, before the league split into two groups at the end of January 2019 \u2013 the top six and the bottom six.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286743-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh Premier League, Teams\nThe bottom placed team from the previous season, Prestatyn Town, and Bangor City, were relegated to the Cymru Alliance for the 2018\u201319 season. Despite finishing 2nd the FAW Club Licensing Appeals Body decided to revoke Bangor City's Tier 1 and UEFA licence meaning that they would automatically drop down to the second level of Welsh football. This meant a reprieve for Carmarthen Town who had finished second bottom and would otherwise have been relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286743-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh Premier League, Teams\nBangor and Prestatyn were replaced by Llanelli Town and Caernarfon Town, champions of the 2017\u201318 Welsh Football League Division One and 2017\u201318 Cymru Alliance respectively. Caernarfon Town are playing in the Welsh Premier League for the first time since the 2008\u201309 season, while Llanelli Town are a new side, replacing the original Llanelli AFC who were relegated at the end of the 2012\u201313 season and then wound up in the high court. The arrival of Barry Town United the previous season means that both of the former South Wales 'giants' are now back in the Welsh top-flight. In addition, Cardiff Met remain and Carmarthen Town were reprieved, so the balance of power is slowly shifting from what was for a while, an almost predominantly North Wales-based league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 801]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286743-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh Premier League, Results\nTeams play each other twice on a home and away basis, before the league split into two groups \u2013 the top six and the bottom six.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286743-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh Premier League, UEFA Europa League play-offs\nTeams that finish in positions third to seventh at the end of the regular season will participate in play-offs to determine the third participant for the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League, who will qualify for the preliminary round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286744-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh Premier Women's League\nThe 2018\u201319 Welsh Premier League was the tenth season of the Women's Welsh Premier League, the top level women's football league in Wales. The season began on 2 September 2018 and ended on 28 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286744-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh Premier Women's League\nCardiff Metropolitan Ladies completed the domestic treble after winning the league title, the FAW Women's Cup and the Welsh Premier Women's Cup. This was their sixth league title and an unbeaten season, winning 14 and drawing 2 of their 16 games. It was their second consecutive league title. It was also the third time they had won the FAW Women's Cup and the third time they had won the Welsh Premier Women's Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286744-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh Premier Women's League\nMadison Schupbach of Cardiff Metropolitan won both the Golden Boot after scoring 18 goals and Player of the Season in her first year in the league. Young Player of the Season was awarded to Shaunna Jenkins of Swansea City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286744-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh Premier Women's League, Clubs\nAfter finishing in the bottom two in the 2017\u201318 season, Caernarfon Town ended up remaining in the top division after the North Wales Women's League winners Northop Hall did not apply for promotion. However, in November Caernarfon Town withdrew from the league with immediate effect and their results up until that point were expunged. The league continued with nine teams competing. After relegation in the 2016\u201317 season, Briton Ferry Llansawel made an immediate return to the top flight for the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286744-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Welsh Premier Women's League, League Cup\nThis was the sixth season of the WPWL Cup. The previous season's winners Cyncoed Ladies were drawn first out of the hat, meaning they were one of four teams who would play in the first round, as the rest of the teams received a bye into the quarter finals. However, they made it no further than the quarter finals as they were knocked out by eventual winners Cardiff Metropolitan. Cardiff Metropolitan beat Swansea City 3\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286745-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wessex Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 Wessex Football League season (known as the Sydenhams Football League (Wessex) for sponsorship reasons) is the 33rd in the history of the Wessex Football League since its establishment in 1986. The league consists of two divisions: the Premier Division and Division One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286745-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wessex Football League\nThe constitution was announced on 25 May 2018. Only one promotional spot from the Premier Division, to the Southern League Division One South and West, was available.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286745-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wessex Football League\nSholing won the league with eight matches remaining, eventually breaking several records on the way, including biggest points gap to the runners up (31 points), and record points per game ratio (2.763).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286745-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wessex Football League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division is reduced from 22 clubs to 20 after Blackfield & Langley were promoted to the Southern League, Amesbury Town, Newport (IOW) and Petersfield Town were relegated to Division One, and Andover Town were demoted to Division One for refusing promotion to the Southern League. Three teams joined the division:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286745-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wessex Football League, Division One\nDivision One remains at 19 clubs after Christchurch, Andover New Street and Tadley Calleva were promoted to the Premier Division, and Weymouth Reserves left the league. Four clubs joined the division:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286746-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Bank Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 West Bank Premier League is the 16th season of the West Bank Premier League, the top football league in the West Bank of Palestine. The season started on 30 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286746-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Bank Premier League, Teams, Pre-season\nA total of 12 teams compete in the league. Hilal Al-Quds are the defending champions. Shabab Al-Khadr and Duwwara were relegated from last season, and were replaced by promoted teams Markaz Shabab Al-Am'ari and Markaz Tulkarem.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286747-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Bromwich Albion F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is West Bromwich Albion's first season in the Championship since 2009\u201310 and their 141st year in existence. In this season the club participated in the Championship, FA Cup and League Cup. On 18 May 2018, caretaker manager and former player Darren Moore was given the permanent job, after earning 11 points from 6 games in the previous season. He was sacked on 9 March 2019, despite the club sitting fourth in the table, a series of poor results forced the board to make the decision and the club 'will always hold Darren in such high regard'. First team coach James Shan took over as caretaker manager, who has been working for the club academy from under-7s age group all the way to under-23s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286747-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Bromwich Albion F.C. season\nThey lost to local rivals Aston Villa on penalties in the play-offs semi-final on 14th May, failing to make an immediate return to the Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286747-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Bromwich Albion F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019, with competitive matches played between August and May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286747-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Bromwich Albion F.C. season, Background\nAlbion unveiled new kits for the season, manufactured by Puma. The home kit featured the team's traditional navy blue and white vertical striped shirts, white shorts and white socks. The wide vertical stripes on the jersey and italic WBA lettering on the socks were designed as a tribute to the club's \"iconic\" kit of the late 1970s. Two change kits were produced, which the club intended to be worn \"as much as possible in equal measure\" throughout the season. One of the change kits featured yellow and green stripes, while an alternative change kit had a black and cyan design.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286747-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Bromwich Albion F.C. season, Background\nThe goalkeeper kit was black with grey trim at home and purple for away matches. Ideal Boilers were the club's main shirt sponsor, in the first year of a two-year deal; this led to the introduction of a new mascot, a combi boiler character nicknamed \"Boiler Man\" by fans, though \"Baggie Bird\" remained Albion's main mascot. 10Bet provided secondary shirt sponsorship worth \u00a31\u00a0million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286747-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Bromwich Albion F.C. season, Background\nGraeme Jones left his position with the Belgium national team to join Albion as assistant head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286747-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Bromwich Albion F.C. season, Background\nImmediately prior to the start of the season, most bookmakers listed Albion as second favourites (behind Stoke City) to win promotion, quoting odds of promotion between 2/1 and 10/3. Odds of the club being relegated were between 22/1 and 40/1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286747-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Bromwich Albion F.C. season, Competitions, Pre-season\nAlbion faced Barnet, Swindon Town, Aberdeen, Barnsley and Coventry City in pre-season friendly matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286747-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Bromwich Albion F.C. season, Competitions, Championship\nWest Bromwich Albion will compete in the 2018\u201319 EFL Championship, the third season of English football's second division under the EFL Championship name. It was Albion's first season back in the Championship following the club's relegation from the Premier League in 2017\u201318, their 39th season in the second tier of English football and their 120th season of league football in all. West Brom's provisional fixture list was announced on 21 June 2018, but a number of matches were subsequently rescheduled for live broadcast on Sky Sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286747-0007-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Bromwich Albion F.C. season, Competitions, Championship\nThe away matches at Middlesbrough, Birmingham City, Ipswich Town and Sheffield United, as well as the home match against Aston Villa, were moved from a Saturday afternoon to the preceding Friday night. The home games versus Leeds United and Brentford were also moved from Saturday afternoon, the former to a Saturday early evening kickoff and the latter to Monday night. The away games at Nottingham Forest and Sheffield Wednesday and the home match against Derby County were televised by Sky Sports on their originally scheduled dates, with the Derby game changed to an 8pm kickoff. In addition, all midweek games were made available live via the red button.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286747-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Bromwich Albion F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018. The fourth round draw was made live on BBC by Robbie Keane and Carl Ikeme from Wolverhampton on 7 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286747-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Bromwich Albion F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam. The second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August. The third round draw was made on 30 August 2018 by David Seaman and Joleon Lescott.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286748-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Coast Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 West Coast Conference men's basketball season began with practices in September 2018 and will end with the 2019 West Coast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament March 2019. This is the 68th season for WCC men's basketball, and the 30th under its current name of \"West Coast Conference\". The conference was founded in 1952 as the California Basketball Association, became the West Coast Athletic Conference in 1956, and dropped the word \"Athletic\" in 1989.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286748-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Coast Conference men's basketball season, Head coaches, Coaching changes\nOn February 13, 2018, Pepperdine announced that head coach Marty Wilson would not return following the end of the season. He finished at Pepperdine with a seven-year record of 88\u2013129 (91\u2013139 when including his 3\u201310 record as interim head coach in 1995\u201396). On March 12, the school hired Lorenzo Romar as head coach. Romar returned to Pepperdine where he started his coaching career in 1996.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 85], "content_span": [86, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286748-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Coast Conference men's basketball season, Head coaches, Coaching changes\nOn March 8, 2018, San Diego head coach Lamont Smith, who had been placed on administrative leave following an arrest for domestic violence 10 days earlier, resigned as head coach. Assistant coach Sam Scholl took over as interim head coach for the Toreros during the WCC Tournament and the CIT. On April 2, the school announced Scholl would remain the head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 85], "content_span": [86, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286748-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Coast Conference men's basketball season, WCC regular season, Conference matrix\nThis table summarizes the head-to-head results between teams in conference play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 92], "content_span": [93, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286749-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Ham United F.C. Women season\nThe 2018\u201319 West Ham United F.C. Women season was the club's 28th season in existence and their first in the FA Women's Super League, the highest level of the football pyramid and their first as a fully professional team. Along with competing in the WSL, the club also contested two domestic cup competitions: the FA Cup and the League Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286749-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Ham United F.C. Women season\nOn 28 May 2018, it was announced that West Ham United Ladies had been granted a WSL licence, promoting the team from the third-tier FA Women's Premier League. Rosie Kmita and Vyan Sampson were the only players to remain with the club and sign on professional terms following promotion. Former WSL winner Matt Beard was appointed head coach on 7 June 2018. They changed their name to West Ham United F.C. Women in July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286749-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Ham United F.C. Women season\nThe season was also notable as the subject of the BBC behind-the-scenes documentary Britain's Youngest Football Boss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286749-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Ham United F.C. Women 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, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286749-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Ham United F.C. Women season, Squad statistics, Appearances\nStarting appearances are listed first, followed by substitute appearances after the + symbol where applicable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 72], "content_span": [73, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286750-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Ham United F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was West Ham United's seventh consecutive campaign in the Premier League since being promoted in the 2011\u201312 season. It was West Ham's 23rd Premier League campaign overall and their 61st top flight appearance in their 124th year in existence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286750-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Ham United F.C. season\nAside of the Premier League, West Ham United participated in the FA Cup and League Cup, entering at the third round in the FA Cup and the second round in the EFL Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286750-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Ham United F.C. season, Competitions, Friendlies\nThe club arranged an 11-day pre-season trip to Switzerland, where they played Challenge League side Winterthur. They followed this with a number of other friendlies against English clubs, before travelling to Austria for two games, including the season's Betway Cup fixture, against Mainz 05. In November 2018, the club arranged a friendly against Brentford to coincide with that month's international break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286750-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Ham United F.C. season, Competitions, Premier League, Matches\nOn 14 June 2018, the Premier League fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 74], "content_span": [75, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286750-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Ham United F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe third round draw was made live on the BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018. The fourth round draw was made live on the BBC by Robbie Keane and Carl Ikeme from Molineux on 7 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286750-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Ham United F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nWest Ham United entered the competition in the second round and were drawn away to AFC Wimbledon. It was the first competitive meeting between the clubs since AFC Wimbledon were formed in 2002. The third round draw was made on 30 August 2018 by David Seaman and Joleon Lescott. West Ham were drawn at home against Macclesfield Town, only the third senior meeting between the two teams. The 8\u20130 win was West Ham's biggest victory for 35 years. The fourth round draw was made live on Quest by Rachel Yankey and Rachel Riley on 29 September. West Ham lost the subsequent fourth round tie 1\u20133 at home against rivals Tottenham Hotspur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286751-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Midlands (Regional) League\nThe 2018\u201319 West Midlands (Regional) League season was the 119th in the history of the West Midlands (Regional) League (WMRL), a football competition in England which was formed in 1889. The league operates three divisions: the Premier Division, see below, at level 10 in the English football league system, Division One at level 11, and Division Two. The Premier Division is one of three divisions which feed into the Midland League Premier Division, the other two being the East Midlands Counties League and the Midland League's own Division One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286751-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Midlands (Regional) League\nThe provisional constitution for Step 5 and Step 6 divisions for 2018\u201319 was announced by the FA on 25 May 2018; the WM(R)L constitution was later ratified by the league at its AGM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286751-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Midlands (Regional) League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 16 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with four new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286752-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Region Premiership\nThe 2018\u201319 West Region Premiership was the first season of the West Region Premiership the newly named and expanded top tier of league competition for SJFA West Region member clubs, and the 17th season since the West Region began in 2002. It was the first season after the reconstruction of the West Region into four regionwide divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286752-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Region Premiership\nThe league consisted of 16 clubs, 10 from the 2017\u201318 West of Scotland Super League Premier Division, four from the 2017\u201318 West of Scotland Super League First Division and the two play-off winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286752-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Region Premiership\nAuchinleck Talbot won the title on 15 May 2019 after a 5\u20130 win over Troon. As champions they entered the Preliminary Round of the 2019\u201320 Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286752-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Region Premiership, Teams, Member clubs for the 2018\u201319 season\nPetershill, Cambuslang Rangers, Largs Thistle and Renfrew were promoted from the old West of Scotland Super League First Division to allow the new division to expand from 12 to 16 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286752-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Region Premiership, Teams, Member clubs for the 2018\u201319 season\nIrvine Meadow and Troon claimed the final spots after beating Arthurlie and Girvan respectively in the West Region League play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286753-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Virginia Mountaineers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 West Virginia Mountaineers men's basketball team represented West Virginia University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Mountaineers were coached by Bob Huggins, in his 12th season as WVU's head coach, and played their home games at the WVU Coliseum in Morgantown, West Virginia as members of the Big 12 Conference. In a season of bad records, the team finished with the most losses in a season in school history and also had its first last-place finish in Big 12 Conference play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286753-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Virginia Mountaineers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Mountaineers finished the 2017\u201318 season 26\u201311, 11\u20137 in Big 12 play to finish in a tie for second place. They defeated Baylor and Texas Tech to advance to the championship game of the Big 12 Tournament where they lost to Kansas. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they defeated Murray State and Marshall to advance to the Sweet Sixteen where they lost to Villanova.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 73], "content_span": [74, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286753-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Virginia Mountaineers men's basketball team, Roster\nOn Feb 11, 2019 Esa Ahmad and Wesley Harris were dismissed from the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 64], "content_span": [65, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286754-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Virginia Mountaineers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 West Virginia Mountaineers women's basketball team representes West Virginia University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Mountaineers were coached by eighteenth-year head coach Mike Carey, play their home games at WVU Coliseum and were members of the Big 12 Conference. They finished the season 22\u201311, 11\u20137 in Big 12 play to finish in a tie for fourth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big 12 Women's Tournament to Kansas State. They received an automatic bid to the Women's National Invitation Tournament where they defeated Rider and Villanova in the first and second rounds before losing to Northwestern in the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286754-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Virginia Mountaineers women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Mountaineers finished the season 25\u201312, 8\u201310 in Big 12 play to finish in sixth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Big 12 Women's Tournament where they lost to Texas. They received an automatic bid to the Women's National Invitation Tournament where they defeated Bucknell, Saint Joseph's and James Madison in the first, second and third rounds, St. John's in the quarterfinals before losing to Virginia Tech in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 75], "content_span": [76, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286754-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 West Virginia Mountaineers women's basketball team, Rankings\n^Coaches' Poll did not release a second poll at the same time as the AP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 68], "content_span": [69, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286755-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Athletic Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2018\u201319 Western Athletic Conference men's basketball season began with practices in September 2018 and ended with the 2019 WAC Men's Basketball Tournament March 2019 at the Orleans Arena in Las Vegas, NV. The season marks 56th season of Western Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286755-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Athletic Conference men's basketball season, Pre-season\nThe WAC conducted a media teleconference on October 10, 2018 and released the media and coaches poll, as well as the preseason All-WAC teams and player of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 71], "content_span": [72, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286755-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Athletic Conference men's basketball season, Regular season, 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, 59], "section_span": [61, 94], "content_span": [95, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286756-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Carolina Catamounts men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Western Carolina Catamounts men's basketball team represented Western Carolina University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Catamounts, led by first-year head coach Mark Prosser, played their home games at the Ramsey Center in Cullowhee, North Carolina as members of the Southern Conference. They finished the season 7-25, 4-14 in Southern Conference play to finish in a three-way tie for eighth place. In the Southern Conference Tournament, they were defeated by VMI in the First Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286756-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Carolina Catamounts men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Catamounts finished the 2017\u201318 season 13\u201319, 8\u201310 in Southern Conference play to finish in sixth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Southern Conference Tournament to Furman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 74], "content_span": [75, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286756-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Carolina Catamounts men's basketball team, Previous season\nFollowing the loss to Furman, head coach Larry Hunter resigned. He finished his coaching career at Western Carolina with a record of 193\u2013229 over 13 seasons. Winthrop associate head coach, Mark Prosser, son of the late Skip Prosser, was named Hunter's successor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 74], "content_span": [75, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286757-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Football League\nThe 2018\u201319 Western Football League season (known as the 2018\u201319 Toolstation Western Football League for sponsorship reasons) is the 117th in the history of the Western Football League, a football competition in England. Teams are divided into two divisions; the Premier and the First.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286757-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Football League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division consists of 20 clubs, the same as last season, after Street and Melksham Town were promoted to Southern League Division One South & West, and Longwell Green Sports and Wells City were relegated to the First Division. Four new clubs joined:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286757-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Football League, First Division\nThe First Division consists of 20 clubs, reduced from 22 the previous season, after Roman Glass St George and Westbury United were promoted to the Premier Division, and Almondsbury and Malmesbury Victoria were transferred to the Hellenic League Division One West. Two new clubs joined:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286757-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Football League, Les Phillips Cup\nPreliminary Round ties were played from 25 September until 2nd October 2018. 16 clubs from the First Division and Premier Division, entered at this stage of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286757-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Football League, Les Phillips Cup\nFirst Round ties were played from 30 October until 4 November 2019. All remaining clubs from the First Division and Premier Division, entered at this stage of the competition. December", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286757-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Football League, Les Phillips Cup\nThird Round ties were played from 26 November 2019 until 22 January 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286757-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Football League, Les Phillips Cup\nQuarter Final ties were played from 5 March 2019 until 26 March 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286757-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Football League, Les Phillips Cup\nThe 2018/19 Les Phillips Cup Final was played at a neutral venue. On this occasion, Raleigh Grove was selected. The home of Sherborne Town. The tie was played on 6 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286758-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Illinois Leathernecks men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Western Illinois Leathernecks men's basketball team represented Western Illinois University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Leathernecks, led by fifth-year head coach Billy Wright, played their home games at Western Hall in Macomb, Illinois as members of the Summit League. They finished the season 10-21, 4\u201312 in Summit League play to finish in 8th place. They beat top-seeded South Dakota State in the quarterfinals of the Summit League Tournament, before losing to North Dakota State in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286758-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Illinois Leathernecks men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Leathernecks finished the season 12\u201316, 3\u201311 in Summit League play to finish in last place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Summit League Tournament to South Dakota.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 76], "content_span": [77, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286759-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Illinois Leathernecks women's basketball team\nThe 2015\u201316 Western Illinois Leathernecks women's basketball represent Western Illinois University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Leathernecks, led by eighth-year head coach JD Gravina, play their home games at the Western Hall and were members of The Summit League. They finished the season 12\u201318, 8\u20138 in Summit League play to finish in fifth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Summit League Women's Tournament to Oral Roberts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286760-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Kentucky Hilltoppers basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Western Kentucky Hilltoppers men's basketball team represented Western Kentucky University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Hilltoppers, led by head coach Rick Stansbury in his third season, played their home games at E. A. Diddle Arena in Bowling Green, Kentucky as fifth-year members of Conference USA. The team finished the season tied for 2nd place in the conference and were defeated in the championship game of the conference tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286760-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Kentucky Hilltoppers basketball team, Previous season\nThe Hilltoppers finished the 2017\u201318 season with 27\u201311, 14\u20134 in C-USA play to finish in third place. They defeated UAB and Old Dominion to advance to the championship game of the C-USA Tournament where they lost to Marshall. They received an at-large bid to the National Invitation Tournament where they defeated Boston College, USC, and Oklahoma State to advance to the semifinals where they lost to Utah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286761-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Kentucky Lady Toppers basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Western Kentucky Lady Toppers basketball team represents Western Kentucky University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Lady Toppers were led by first year head coach Greg Collins. They play their home games at E. A. Diddle Arena and were members of Conference USA. They finished the season 20\u201315, 11\u20135 in C-USA play to finish in a tie for third place. They advanced to the semifinals of the C-USA Women's Tournament where they lost to Rice. They received an at-large bid to the Women's National Invitation Tournament where they defeated Miami (OH) and Morehead State in the first and second rounds before losing to Ohio in the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286762-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Michigan Broncos men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Western Michigan Broncos men's basketball team represented Western Michigan University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Broncos were led by 16th-year head coach Steve Hawkins, and played their home games at University Arena as members of the West Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 8\u201324 overall, 2\u201316 in MAC play to finish in last place in the West Division. As the No. 12 seed in the MAC Tournament, they lost in the first round to Central Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286762-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Michigan Broncos men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Broncos finished the 2016\u201317 season 17\u201315, 9\u20139 in MAC play to finish fourth in the West Division. As the No. 8 seed in the MAC Tournament, they lost in the first round to Akron.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 71], "content_span": [72, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286763-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Michigan Broncos women's basketball team\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by PrimeBOT (talk | contribs) at 23:22, 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, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286763-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Michigan Broncos women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Western Michigan Broncos women's basketball team represents Western Michigan University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Broncos, led by seventh year head coach Shane Clipfell, play their home games at University Arena as members of the West Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 10\u201320, 4\u201314 in MAC play to finish in fifth place of the West division. They lost in the first round of the MAC Women's Tournament to Northern Illinois.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286764-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Sydney Wanderers FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 Western Sydney Wanderers FC season was the club's seventh season since its establishment in 2012. The club participated in the A-League for the seventh time and the FFA Cup for the fifth time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286764-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Sydney Wanderers 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, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286765-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Sydney Wanderers W-League season\nThe 2018\u201319 Western Sydney Wanderers W-League season was their seventh season in the W-League, the premier competition for women's football in Australia. The team played home games both at Marconi Stadium and ANZ Stadium and was managed by Dan Barrett.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286765-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Sydney Wanderers W-League 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, 48], "section_span": [50, 72], "content_span": [73, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286765-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Western Sydney Wanderers W-League season, W-League, Results summary\nLast updated: February 2019, end of regular season. Source: Competitive Matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 75], "content_span": [76, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286766-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wichita State Shockers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Wichita State Shockers men's basketball team represented Wichita State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at Charles Koch Arena in Wichita, Kansas and were led by 12th-year head coach Gregg Marshall as members of the American Athletic Conference. Samajae Haynes-Jones and Dexter Dennis have, in total, three notable buzzer-beaters at SMU, UConn and Tulane. This season was the first time not making the NCAA field of 68 since the 2010\u201311 season. They finished the season 22\u201315 overall, 10\u20138 in AAC play to finish in sixth place. As a No. 6 seed in the AAC Tournament, they advanced to the semifinals, where they were defeated by Cincinnati.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286766-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wichita State Shockers men's basketball team\nWith a 19\u201314 record, they were awarded an at-large bid to the NIT Tournament. As a No. 6 seed, they were winners of the Indiana bracket when they defeated No. 3 seed Furman in the first round, No. 2 seed Clemson in the second round, and No. 1 seed Indiana in the quarterfinals. In the semifinal matchup at Madison Square Garden, they were defeated by the winners of the UNC Greensboro bracket, Lipscomb, 64\u201371.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286766-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wichita State Shockers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Shockers finished the 2017\u201318 season 25\u20138, 14\u20134 in AAC play to finish a tie for second place. As the No. 2 seed in the AAC Tournament, they defeated Temple in the quarterfinals before losing to Houston in the semifinals. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament for the seventh straight season. As the No. 4 seed in the East region, they were upset in the First Round by Marshall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286766-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wichita State Shockers men's basketball team, Offseason, Departures\nIn addition to the departing players, two of the three assistants in the 2017\u201318 season left during the offseason. Kyle Lindsted left after three seasons on the Shockers' staff to take the same position at Minnesota under Richard Pitino. Donnie Jones left after one season to join the Dayton staff under Anthony Grant, who had been his colleague from 1996 to 2006 as part of Billy Donovan's staff at Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 75], "content_span": [76, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286767-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wichita State Shockers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Wichita State Shockers women's basketball team will represent Wichita State University in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. They play their home games at Charles Koch Arena, which has a capacity of 10,506. The Shockers, led by second year head coach Keitha Adams, were second year members of the American Athletic Conference. They finished the season 12\u201318, 5\u201311 in AAC play to finish in a 4 way tie for ninth place. They lost in first round of the American Athletic Women's Tournament to Tulsa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286768-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wigan Athletic F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Wigan Athletic's 87th year in existence and their first back in the Championship, after gaining promotion the previous season. Along with competing in the league, the club also participated in the FA Cup and EFL Cup. The season covered the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286768-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wigan Athletic F.C. season, Change in ownership\nDuring the season International Entertainment Corporation (IEC) completed their acquisition of the club, stadium and training grounds in a \u00a322m deal. Chairman David Sharpe stepped down following the completion of the takeover along with other board members and was replaced by Darren Royle, his father Joe Royle and Thomas Chan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286768-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wigan Athletic F.C. season, Competitions, Pre-season friendlies\nWigan Athletic announced they would face Tranmere Rovers in a pre-season friendly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 71], "content_span": [72, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286768-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wigan Athletic F.C. season, Competitions, Championship, Matches\nOn 21 June 2018, the Championship fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 71], "content_span": [72, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286768-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wigan Athletic F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe third round draw was made live on BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286768-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wigan Athletic F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nOn 15 June 2018, the draw for the first round was made in Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286769-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 William & Mary Tribe men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 William & Mary Tribe men's basketball team represented the College of William & Mary during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Tribe, coached by 16th-year head coach Tony Shaver, played their home games at Kaplan Arena in Williamsburg, Virginia as members of the Colonial Athletic Association. Street & Smith's preseason basketball preview rated William & Mary with the toughest schedule in the CAA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286769-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 William & Mary Tribe men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Tribe finished the 2017\u201318 season 19\u201312, 11\u20137 in CAA play to finish in fourth place. They defeated Towson in the quarterfinals of the CAA Tournament before losing in the semifinals to College of Charleston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286770-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 William & Mary Tribe women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 William & Mary Tribe women's basketball team represents The College of William & Mary during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Tribe, led by sixth year head coach Ed Swanson, play their home games at Kaplan Arena and were members of the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA). They finished the season 14\u201317, 7\u201311 in CAA play to finish in seventh place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the CAA Women's Tournament where they lost to Drexel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286771-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Winnipeg Jets season\nThe 2018\u201319 Winnipeg Jets season was the 20th season for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on June 25, 1997, and the eighth in Winnipeg, Manitoba, since the franchise relocated from Atlanta prior to the start of the 2011\u201312 NHL season. The Jets clinched a playoff spot of March 23, 2019, after a 5\u20130 win against the Nashville Predators. The Jets faced the St. Louis Blues in the first round of the playoffs, where they lost to the eventual Stanley Cup champions in six games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286771-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Winnipeg Jets season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe regular season schedule was released on June 21, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 66], "content_span": [67, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286771-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Winnipeg Jets season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nLegend:\u00a0\u00a0Win (2 points)\u00a0\u00a0Loss (0 points)\u00a0\u00a0Overtime/shootout loss (1 point)Note: Game was played at Hartwall Arena in Helsinki, Finland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 66], "content_span": [67, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286771-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Winnipeg Jets season, Schedule and results, Playoffs\nThe Jets faced the St. Louis Blues in the First Round of the playoffs, and were defeated in six games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286771-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Winnipeg Jets season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Jets. Stats reflect time with the Jets only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Jets only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286771-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Winnipeg Jets season, Transactions\nThe Jets have been involved in the following transactions during the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286771-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Winnipeg Jets season, Draft picks\nBelow are the Winnipeg Jets' selections at the 2018 NHL Entry Draft, which was held on June 22 and 23, 2018, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286772-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Winthrop Eagles men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Winthrop Eagles men's basketball team represented Winthrop University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Eagles, led by seventh-year head coach Pat Kelsey, played their home games at the Winthrop Coliseum in Rock Hill, South Carolina as members of the Big South Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286772-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Winthrop Eagles men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Eagles finished the 2017\u201318 season 19\u201312, 12\u20136 in Big South play to finish in a tie for second place. They defeated Gardner\u2013Webb in the quarterfinals of the Big South Tournament before losing in the semifinals to Radford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286773-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wisconsin Badgers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Wisconsin Badgers men's basketball team represented the University of Wisconsin\u2013Madison in the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Badgers were led by fourth-year head coach Greg Gard and played their home games at the Kohl Center in Madison, Wisconsin as members of the Big Ten Conference. They finished the season 23\u201311, 14\u20136 in Big Ten play to finish in fourth place. In the Big Ten Tournament, the Badgers defeated Nebraska in the quarterfinals before losing to Michigan State in the semifinals. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as the No. 5 seed in the South Region, their 24th trip to the NCAA Tournament. They were upset in the First Round by No. 12-seeded Oregon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286773-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wisconsin Badgers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Badgers finished the 2017\u201318 season 15\u201318, 7\u201311 in Big Ten play to finish in ninth place. They defeated eighth-seeded Maryland in the Big Ten Tournament, but lost to top-seeded Michigan State in the next round. They failed to reach the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 1998.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286773-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wisconsin Badgers men's basketball team, Offseason, Returning players\nRedshirt junior forward Ethan Happ announced his intent to enter the NBA draft on April 2, 2018 without hiring an agent. He withdrew himself from the draft on May 30 after not being invited to the combine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 77], "content_span": [78, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286773-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wisconsin Badgers men's basketball team, Rankings\n^Coaches did not release a Week 1 poll. *AP does not release post-NCAA tournament rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 57], "content_span": [58, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286774-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wisconsin Badgers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Wisconsin Badgers women's basketball team represented University of Wisconsin at Madison during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Badgers, led by third-year head coach Jonathan Tsipis, played their home games at the Kohl Center as members of the Big Ten Conference. They finished the season 15\u201318, 4\u201314 in Big Ten play to finish in 13th place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the Big Ten Women's Tournament where they lost to Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286774-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wisconsin Badgers women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Badgers finished the 2017\u201318 season 9\u201321, including 2\u201314 in Big Ten play to finish in 13th place. They lost in the first round of the Big Ten Women's Tournament to Northwestern.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286775-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wisconsin Badgers women's ice hockey season\nThe Wisconsin Badgers represented the University of Wisconsin in WCHA women's ice hockey during the 2018-19 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season. Defeating the Minnesota Golden Gophers in the 2019 NCAA National Collegiate Women's Ice Hockey Tournament, it was the fifth national championship in program history and their first national title since 2011. Goaltender Kristen Campbell recorded 27 saves, recording her 11th shutout of the season. Of note, seniors Sophia Shaver and Annie Pankowski scored for the Badgers in the national championship game. During the 2019 postseason, Pankowski amassed 11 goals in seven games. With her goal in the national championship game, a shorthanded marker in the second period, she set a new program record for most shorthanded goals in Badgers history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 847]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286776-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wis\u0142a Krak\u00f3w season\nThe 2018\u201319 Wis\u0142a Krak\u00f3w season is the 79th season in the Ekstraklasa and the 65th season in the Polish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286776-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wis\u0142a Krak\u00f3w season, Awards, Wis\u0142a Player of the Month award\nAwarded monthly to the player that was chosen by fans voting on", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286777-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wofford Terriers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Wofford Terriers men's basketball team represented Wofford College during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Terriers, led by 17th-year head coach Mike Young, played their home games at the newly opened Jerry Richardson Indoor Stadium in Spartanburg, South Carolina as members of the Southern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286777-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wofford Terriers men's basketball team\nOn February 25, 2019, the Terriers entered the AP Poll at No. 24. This was Wofford's first AP Poll appearance in program history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286777-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wofford Terriers men's basketball team\nThey finished the season 30\u20135, and 18\u20130 in SoCon play, to win the regular season championship. They defeated VMI, East Tennessee State, and UNC Greensboro to be champions of the SoCon Tournament. They received the SoCon's automatic-bid to the NCAA Tournament where they defeated Seton Hall in the First Round before losing in the Second Round to Kentucky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286777-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wofford Terriers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Terriers finished the 2017\u201318 season 21\u201313, 11\u20137 in SoCon play to finish in a tie for fourth place. They defeated Mercer in the quarterfinals of the SoCon Tournament to advance to the semifinals where they lost to UNC Greensboro. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament where, after a first round bye, they lost in the second round to Central Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286778-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 141st season in the history of English football club Wolverhampton Wanderers. The club competed in the Premier League, the highest level of English football, for the first time since being relegated in 2012. This was their second season under head coach Nuno Esp\u00edrito Santo, with whom they won promotion as champions of the Football League Championship in the previous campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286778-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season\nThe team finished in 7th place, their highest position in the English league system since 1979\u201380, and of any newly-promoted team since Ipswich Town finished 5th in the 2000\u201301 season. In addition, they reached their first cup semi-final in 21 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286778-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season\nAs a result of the FA Cup being won by league champions Manchester City, Wolves' league position gained them a place in the UEFA Europa League second qualifying round. This became the club's first European participation since the 1980\u201381 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286778-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Matches, Premier League\nA total of 20 teams competed in the Premier League in the 2018\u201319 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, 68], "content_span": [69, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286778-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Matches, Premier League, Results\nThe provisional fixture list was released on 14 June 2018, 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, 77], "content_span": [78, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286778-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Matches, FA Cup\nThe third round draw was made live on the BBC by Ruud Gullit and Paul Ince from Stamford Bridge on 3 December. The fourth round draw was made live on the BBC by Robbie Keane and Carl Ikeme following Wolves' third round victory on 7 January. The fifth round draw was made live on the BBC by Ian Wright and Alex Scott on 28 January. The draw for the quarter-final was made on 18 February by Darren Fletcher and Wayne Bridge. The draw for the semi-finals was made live on the BBC on 17 March by Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink and Leon Osman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286778-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Matches, EFL Cup\nThe second round draw was made from the Stadium of Light on 16 August. The third round draw was made on 30 August 2018 by David Seaman and Joleon Lescott.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 61], "content_span": [62, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286778-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Matches, EFL Trophy\nWolves were one of the sixteen teams from outside the bottom two divisions of the Football League to be invited to field their academy team in the competition due to it holding Category 1 academy status. They were drawn into Group H in the Northern section. In matches level at the end of 90 minutes, a penalty shoot-out was held with the winner earning a bonus point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286778-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 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-00286778-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Players, Statistics\nCorrect as of end of the 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, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286779-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Basketball League of Serbia\nThe 2018\u201319 Women's Basketball League of Serbia (Serbian Cyrillic: \u0416\u0435\u043d\u0441\u043a\u0430 \u043a\u043e\u0448\u0430\u0440\u043a\u0430\u0448\u043a\u0430 \u043b\u0438\u0433\u0430 \u0421\u0440\u0431\u0438\u0458\u0435 2018\u201319.) is the 13th season of the Women's Basketball League of Serbia, the highest professional basketball league in Serbia. Also, it's the 75th national championship played by Serbian clubs inclusive of nation's previous incarnations as Yugoslavia and Serbia & Montenegro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286779-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Basketball League of Serbia\nThe first half of the season consists of 12 teams and 132-game regular season (22 games for each of the 12 teams).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286780-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Big Bash League season\nThe 2018\u201319 Women's Big Bash League season or WBBL|04 was the fourth season of the Women's Big Bash League (WBBL), the semi-professional women's Twenty20 domestic cricket competition in Australia. The tournament ran from 1 December 2018 to 26 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286780-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Big Bash League season\nDouble-defending champions, the Sydney Sixers, ended the regular season on top of the ladder, while captain Ellyse Perry broke the scoring record for a sole WBBL campaign and was named Player of the Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286780-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Big Bash League season\nIn the two semi-finals at Drummoyne Oval on 19 January, the Brisbane Heat eliminated the Sydney Thunder before the Sydney Sixers knocked out the Melbourne Renegades. Both matches, notable for their \"miracle\" endings, were hailed as a showcase of \"the irrefutable rise of women's cricket\" and \"sport with drama, skill and unpredictability \u2013 a potent recipe for success\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286780-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Big Bash League season\nIn the final, also at Drummoyne Oval, the Heat caused an upset by defeating the Sixers with three wickets in hand and four balls remaining to claim their maiden title. Despite suffering from the flu and heat stroke, Beth Mooney managed to play a pivotal innings of 65 runs from 46 balls and was named Player of the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286780-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Big Bash League season, Teams\nEach squad featured 15 active players, with an allowance of up to five marquee signings including a maximum of three from overseas. Under a new rule, Australian marquees were defined as players who held a national women's team contract at the time of signing on for their WBBL|04 team. This, combined with the introduction of two-year contracts ahead of the previous season, meant that the Sydney Sixers would inadvertently exceed their marquee player limit in 2018\u201319. To address this inequity, an injured or unavailable Sixers marquee could only be replaced by a domestic player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286780-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Big Bash League season, Teams, Personnel changes, Local players\nThe table below lists local player movements made ahead of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 79], "content_span": [80, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286780-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Big Bash League season, Teams, Personnel changes, Overseas players\nThe table below lists changes to overseas player allocations made ahead of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286780-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Big Bash League season, Win\u2013loss table\nBelow is a summary of results for each team's fourteen regular season matches, plus finals where applicable, in chronological order. A team's opponent for any given match is listed above the margin of victory/defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286780-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Big Bash League season, Awards, Player of the tournament\nPlayer of the Tournament votes are awarded on a 3-2-1 basis by the two standing umpires at the conclusion of every match, meaning a player can receive a maximum of six votes per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286780-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Big Bash League season, Awards, Team of the tournament\nA twelve-player honorary squad recognising the standout performers of WBBL|04 was named by :", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286780-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Big Bash League season, Awards, Young gun award\nPlayers under 21 years of age at the start of the season are eligible for the Young Gun Award. Weekly winners are selected over the course of the season by a panel of Cricket Australia officials based on match performance, on-field and off-field attitude, and their demonstration of skill, tenacity and good sportsmanship. Each weekly winner receives a $500 Rebel gift card and the overall winner receives a $5000 cash prize, as well as access to a learning and mentor program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286780-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Big Bash League season, Awards, Young gun award\nMelbourne Renegades leg-spinner Georgia Wareham was named the Young Gun of WBBL|04 after claiming 11 wickets and finishing the regular season with the best economy rate in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286780-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Big Bash League season, Attendance\nA total of 135,861 fans attended WBBL|04\u2014an average of 2,384 per match (excluding the two games abandoned due to rain). This included some double-headers with men's BBL matches, such as the crowd of 14,983 reported for the match between Perth and Brisbane on Boxing Day played at Optus Stadium, and the crowd of 11,136 reported for the New Year's Day match at the Melbourne Cricket Ground between the Stars and Renegades.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286780-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Big Bash League season, Attendance\nA new record for the highest attendance at a standalone WBBL match was set on 5 January when the Brisbane Heat played the Adelaide Strikers at Harrup Park in front of 5,650 spectators. A total of 8,735 people attended the knockout stage of the tournament across two weekends at Drummoyne Oval, with all ticket proceeds donated to . The final was announced as a sellout and attracted a crowd of 5,368.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286780-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Big Bash League season, Audience\nA total of twenty-three matches were televised on Seven Network and Fox Cricket The remaining 36 matches were live streamed on the as well as the for mobile.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286780-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Big Bash League season, Audience\nBelow are the television ratings for every game that was broadcast by Seven Network and Fox Cricket during the season. The semi-final super over between the Sixers and Renegades was watched by a combined average audience of 423,000 (196,000 metro; 133,000 regional; 94,000 subscription). The final was the most-watched WBBL game ever with a combined average audience of 479,000 and peaking at 812,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286780-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Big Bash League season, Audience\nCricket Australia reported over 3.8 million highlight views on their YouTube channel and almost 10 million minutes viewed on the Cricket Network's live stream, with a 38 per cent rise of minutes viewed in Australia compared to the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286781-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's CEV Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Women's CEV Cup was the 47th 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, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286781-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's CEV Cup, Format\nThe tournament is played on a knockout format, with 27 teams participating. Initially 20 teams were allocated direct vacancies to enter the competition, with another 7 teams joining the competition via Champions League qualification. On 29 June 2018, a drawing of lots in Luxembourg City, Luxembourg, determined the team's pairing for each match. Each team plays a home and an away match with result points awarded for each leg (3 points for 3\u20130 or 3\u20131 wins, 2 points for 3\u20132 win, 1 point for 2\u20133 loss).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286781-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's CEV Cup, Format\nAfter two legs, the team with the most result points advances to the next round. In case the teams are tied after two legs, a Golden Set is played immediately at the completion of the second leg. The Golden Set winner is the team that first obtains 15 points, provided that the points difference between the two teams is at least 2 points (thus, the Golden Set is similar to a tiebreak set in a normal match).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286781-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's CEV Cup, Participating teams\nThe number of participants on the basis of ranking list for European Cup Competitions:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286782-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Challenge Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Women's EHF Challenge Cup was the 22nd edition of the European Handball Federation's third-tier competition for women's handball clubs, running from 10 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286782-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Challenge Cup, Overview, Team allocation\nThere were no matches in Round 1 and 2 and all 30 teams started in Round 3 with the first leg scheduled for 10/11 November and second leg for 17/18 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286782-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Challenge Cup, Overview, Round and draw dates\nAll draws were held at the European Handball Federation headquarters in Vienna, Austria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286782-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Challenge Cup, Qualification stage, Round 3\nThere were 30 teams participating in round 3. The draw seeding pots were composed as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286782-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Challenge Cup, Qualification stage, Round 3\nTeams listed first played the first leg at home. Some teams agreed to play both matches in the same venue. The first legs were playeded on 10\u201311 November and the second legs were played on 17\u201318 November 2018. Some teams agreed to play both matches in the same venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286782-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Challenge Cup, Last 16\nThe European Handball Federation has decided the last season\u2019s runners-up and the 2016 winners Rocasa Gran Canaria ACE will be the only team, who are directly seeded for the Last 16 round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286782-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Challenge Cup, Last 16\nThere are 16 teams participating in Last 16 round. The draw seeding pots were composed as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286782-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Challenge Cup, Last 16\nThe draw for the Last 16 took place at the EHF Office in Vienna on Thursday 22 November 2019. Teams listed first played the first leg at home. The first legs were played on 2-3 February and the second legs were played on 9-10 February 2019.Some teams agreed to play both matches in the same venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286782-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Challenge Cup, Quarterfinals\nThe draw event was held at the EHF Office in Vienna on Tuesday 12 February 2019. The draw determined the quarter-final and also the semi-final pairings. Teams listed first will play the first leg at home. For the quarter-finals, there will be no seeding as all eight teams will be drawn from the same pot one after another. There will also be no country protection applied in the draw. The semi-final draw followed using the quarter-final pairings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286782-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Challenge Cup, Quarterfinals\nThe first legs were played on 2\u20133 March and the second legs were played on 9\u201310 March 2019. Some teams agreed to play both matches in the same venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286782-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Challenge Cup, Semifinals\nThe first legs were played on 6\u20137 April and the second legs were played on 13\u201314 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286782-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Challenge Cup, Final\nThe first leg was played on 4\u20135 May and the second legs was played on 11\u201312 May 2019. The final home rights draw was held on 16 April 2019 in Vienna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286783-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League\nThe 2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League was the 26th edition of the Women's EHF Champions League, the competition for top women's clubs of Europe, organized and supervised by the European Handball Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286783-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League\nGy\u0151ri ETO defended their title by defeating Rostov-Don 25\u201324 in the final, to win their fifth overall and third straight title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286783-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League, Competition format\n16 teams participated in the competition, divided in four groups who played in a round robin, home and away format. The top three teams in each group qualified for the main round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286783-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League, Competition format\nThe 12 qualified teams were divided in two groups who played in a round robin, home and away format. The points and the goal difference gained against the qualified teams in the first round were carried over. The top four teams in each group qualified for the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286783-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League, Competition format\nAfter the quarterfinals, the culmination of the season, the Women's EHF Final four, continued in its existing format, with the four top teams from the competition competing for the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286783-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League, Qualification stage\nThe draw was held on 27 June 2018. The two winners of the qualification tournaments advanced to the group stage. The second and third placed teams were translate to the third round of EHF Cup; the fourth places entered in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286783-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League, Group stage\nThe draw was held on 29 June 2018. In each group, teams play against each other in a double round-robin format, with home and away matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286783-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League, Group stage\nIf the ranking of one of these teams is determined, the above criteria are consecutively followed until the ranking of all teams is determined. If no ranking can be determined, a decision shall be obtained by EHF through drawing of lots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286783-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League, Group stage\nDuring the group stage, only criteria 4\u20135 apply to determine the provisional ranking of teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286783-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League, Main round\nIn each group, teams played against each other in a double round-robin format, with home and away matches. Points against teams from the same group are carried over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286783-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League, Knockout stage\nThe top four placed teams from each of the two main round groups advanced to the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286783-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League, Awards and statistics, All-Star Team\nThe all-star team and awards were announced on 10 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 74], "content_span": [75, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286784-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League group stage\nThe 2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League group stage began on 5 October and was concluded on 18 November 2018. A total of 16 teams competed for 12 places in the main round of the 2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286784-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League group stage, Draw\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 29 June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 54], "content_span": [55, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286784-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League group stage, Format\nIn each group, teams played against each other in a double round-robin format, with home and away matches. After completion of the group stage matches, the top three teams advanced to the main round. Teams were not able to face opponents from the same country in the group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 56], "content_span": [57, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286784-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League group stage, Tiebreakers\nIn the group stage, teams were ranked according to points (2 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss). After completion of the group stage, if two or more teams had scored the same number of points, the ranking was determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 61], "content_span": [62, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286784-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League group stage, Tiebreakers\nIf the ranking of one of these teams is determined, the above criteria are consecutively followed until the ranking of all teams is determined. If no ranking can be determined, a decision shall be obtained by EHF through drawing of lots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 61], "content_span": [62, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286784-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League group stage, Groups\nThe matchdays were 5\u20137 October, 12\u201314 October, 19\u201321 October, 2\u20134 November, 9\u201311 November, 16\u201318 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 56], "content_span": [57, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286785-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League knockout stage\nThis article describes the knockout stage of the 2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286785-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League knockout stage, Qualified teams\nThe top four placed teams from each of the two main round groups advanced to the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286785-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League knockout stage, Format\nThe first-placed team of each group faced the fourth-placed team, and the second-placed team played against the third-placed team from the other group. After that a draw was held to determine the pairings for the final four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 59], "content_span": [60, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286785-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League knockout stage, Final four\nThe final four was held at the L\u00e1szl\u00f3 Papp Budapest Sports Arena in Budapest, Hungary on 11 and 12 May 2019. The draw took place on 16 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286786-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League main round\nThe 2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League main round began on 25 January and was concluded on 10 March 2019. A total of twelve teams competed for eight places in the knockout stage of the 2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286786-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League main round, Format\nIn each group, teams played against each other in a double round-robin format, with home and away matches. After completion of the group stage matches, the top four teams advanced to the knockout stage. Points against teams from the same group were carried over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286786-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League main round, Tiebreakers\nIn the group stage, teams were ranked according to points (2 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss). After completion of the group stage, if two or more teams have scored the same number of points, the ranking was determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 60], "content_span": [61, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286786-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League main round, Tiebreakers\nIf the ranking of one of these teams is determined, the above criteria are consecutively followed until the ranking of all teams is determined. If no ranking can be determined, a decision shall be obtained by EHF through drawing of lots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 60], "content_span": [61, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286786-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League main round, Groups\nThe matchdays were 25\u201327 January, 1\u20133 February, 8\u201310 February, 22\u201324 February, 1\u20133 March, 8\u201310 March 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286787-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League qualifying\nThis article describes the qualifying of the 2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286787-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Champions League qualifying, Draw\nThe draw was held on 27 June 2018 in Vienna, Austria. The eight teams were split in two groups and played a semifinal and final to determine the last participants. Matches were played on 8 and 9 September 2018. The matches from each tournament were played in one venue with two semi-finals, where teams from Pot 4 met teams from Pot 1 and teams from Pot 3 will faced teams from Pot 2, followed by finals. The right to organize the qualification tournaments was also drawn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 53], "content_span": [54, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286788-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Women's EHF Cup was the 38th edition of EHF's second-tier women's handball competition. It started on 8 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286788-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Cup, Round and draw dates\nThe schedule of the competition was as follows (all draws are held at the EHF headquarters in Vienna, Austria).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286788-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Cup, Qualification stage, Round 1\nThere were 28 teams participating in round 1. The draw seeding pots were composed as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286788-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Cup, Qualification stage, Round 1\nThe first legs were played on 8\u20139 and the second legs were played on 15\u201316 September 2018. Some teams agreed to play both matches in the same venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286788-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Cup, Qualification stage, Round 2\nThere were 32 teams participating in round 2. 14 teams who qualified from round 1 and 18 teams joining the draw. The first legs was played on 13\u201314 October and the second legs was played on 20\u201321 October 2018. Some teams agreed to play both matches in the same venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286788-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Cup, Qualification stage, Round 3\nA total of 24 teams entered the draw for the third qualification round, which will held on Tuesday, 23 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286788-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Cup, Qualification stage, Round 3\nThe first legs were played on 10\u201311 November and the second legs were played on 17\u201318 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286788-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Cup, Group stage\nThe draw for the group phase was held on Thursday, 22 November 2018. In each group, teams played against each other in a double round-robin format, with home and away matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286788-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Cup, Group stage\nIf the ranking of one of these teams is determined, the above criteria are consecutively followed until the ranking of all teams is determined. If no ranking can be determined, a decision shall be obtained by EHF through drawing of lots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286788-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Cup, Group stage\nDuring the group stage, only criteria 4\u20135 apply to determine the provisional ranking of teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286788-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Cup, Knockout stage\nThe draw event was held at the EHF Office in Vienna on Tuesday 12 February 2019. The draw determined the quarter-final and also the semi-final pairings. The country protection rule was not applied in the draw, which means the four Danish teams can face their domestic rivals in the quarter-finals. However, teams from the same group could not meet in the next stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286788-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Cup, Knockout stage, Quarterfinals, Seeding\nThe first quarter-final leg was scheduled for 2\u20133 March 2019, while the second leg followed one week later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 63], "content_span": [64, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286788-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Cup, Knockout stage, Semifinals\nThe semi-finals first legs were played on 6\u20137 April 2019, while the second leg was scheduled for 13\u201314 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286788-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Cup, Knockout stage, Final\nThe first leg was played on 4\u20135 May and the second legs was played on 11\u201312 May 2019. The final home rights draw was held on 16 April in Vienna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 46], "content_span": [47, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286789-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Cup group stage\nThis article describes the group stage of the 2018\u201319 Women's EHF Cup, a women's handball competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286789-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Cup group stage, Draw\nThe draw of the Women's EHF Cup group stage took place on Thursday, 22 November 2018. The 16 teams allocated into four pots were drawn into four groups of four teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 41], "content_span": [42, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286789-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Cup group stage, Format\nIn each group, teams played against each other in a double round-robin format, with home and away matches. After completion of the group stage matches, the top three teams advanced to the Quarter-finals. Teams were not able to face opponents from the same country in the group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286789-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Cup group stage, Tiebreakers\nIn the group stage, teams were ranked according to points (2 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss). After completion of the group stage, if two or more teams had scored the same number of points, the ranking will be determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286789-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Cup group stage, Tiebreakers\nIf the ranking of one of these teams is determined, the above criteria are consecutively followed until the ranking of all teams is determined. If no ranking can be determined, a decision shall be obtained by EHF through drawing of lots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286789-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's EHF Cup group stage, Groups\nThe matchdays were 5\u20136 January, 12\u201313 January, 19\u201320 January, 26\u201327 January, 2\u20133 February and 9\u201310 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286790-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's England Hockey League season\nThe 2018\u201319 Women's England Hockey League season or Investec Hockey League (for sponsorship reasons) was the 2018-19 season of England's field hockey league structure. The regular season started on 22 September 2018 until 30 March 2019, with a winter break in December and January for the Indoor season. The play offs took place on 13 and 14 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286790-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's England Hockey League season\nHolcombe topped the regular season table but Surbiton sealed the Championship after winning the play offs. Clifton Robinsons won the season ending Cup competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286791-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's FA Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Women's FA Cup (also known as the SSE Women's FA Cup for sponsorship reasons) was the 49th staging of the Women's FA Cup, a knockout cup competition for women's football teams in England. Chelsea were the defending champions, having beaten Arsenal 3\u20131 in the previous final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286791-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's FA Cup, Teams\nA total of 293 teams had their entries to the tournament accepted by The Football Association. 199 teams entered in the preliminary round or first round qualifying. Teams that played in the FA Women's National League Division One were given exemption to the second round qualifying, while teams in the Northern and Southern Premier Divisions entered in the second round proper. Teams in the FA Women's Super League and FA Women's Championship were exempted to the fourth round proper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286791-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's FA Cup, Teams\nThe Preliminary Round saw six ties cancelled due to the withdrawal of one of the teams with one additional tie cancelled due to Woodley United not being able to field a team. The First Round Qualifying saw five ties cancelled as a result of withdrawals with one additional tie cancelled due to the disqualification of Wealdstone. The Second Round Qualifying saw one tie cancelled due to the withdrawal of St Nicholas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286791-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's FA Cup, Preliminary round\nThere was no preliminary round in the original schedule of the competition. It was added by The Football Association as a result of increased entries into the competition. Fifty three matches were scheduled for the preliminary round, to be played by Sunday 26 August 2018. The first match was played on Friday 17 August 2018, with six more on Sunday 19 August 2018. One match was postponed from 26 August 2018, with another abandoned and replayed the following Sunday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286791-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's FA Cup, First round qualifying\nSeventy three matches were scheduled for the first qualifying round. The 146 teams taking part consisted of 93 teams with a bye to this stage, plus 53 match winners from the previous round. Matches were played on the scheduled date of Sunday 2 September 2018, except two delays caused by matches from the previous round not yet having taken place and Swindon Spitfires v Southampton FC Women delayed due to the removal of Moneyfields from the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286791-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's FA Cup, Second round qualifying\nSixty matches were scheduled for the second qualifying round. The 120 teams taking part consisted of 47 FA Women's National League Division One teams exempted to this stage, plus the 73 match winners from the previous round. Most matches were played on Sunday 23 September, except seven which were postponed to the following week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286791-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's FA Cup, Third round qualifying\nThirty matches were scheduled for the third qualifying round. All were played on Sunday 7 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286791-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's FA Cup, First round proper\nFifteen matches were scheduled for the first round proper. Most matches were played on Sunday 11 November 2018, the only exception being New London Lionesses v AFC Wimbledon which were postponed from the original scheduled date to the following week due to a waterlogged pitch. Cambridge City v Cambridge United was replayed on 25 November 2018 after the initial match took place on a pitch that was too small.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286791-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's FA Cup, Second round proper\nTwenty matches were scheduled for the second round proper. The 40 teams taking part consisted of 25 FA Women's National League Northern and Southern Division teams exempted to this stage, plus the 15 match winners from the previous round. Matches were played on Sunday 2 December, except three which were postponed to the following week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286791-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's FA Cup, Third round proper\nTen matches were scheduled for the third round proper. All were played on Sunday 6 January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286791-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's FA Cup, Fourth round proper\nSixteen matches were scheduled for the fourth round proper. The 32 teams taking part consists of 22 FA Women's Super League and FA Women's Championship teams exempted to this stage, plus the ten match winners from the previous round. Half of the matches were played on the weekend of Saturday 2 and Sunday 3 February, with the other half postponed to the following week as a result of bad weather.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286791-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's FA Cup, Fifth round proper\nEight matches were scheduled for the fifth round proper. All were played on Sunday 17 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286791-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's FA Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe four matches of the quarter-finals were played on Sunday 17 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286792-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's FIH Series Finals\nThe 2018\u201319 Women's FIH Series Finals were the second stage of the 2018\u201319 edition of the Hockey Series. It was held in June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286792-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's FIH Series Finals\nThe top two teams from each event qualified for the 2019 FIH Olympic Qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286792-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's FIH Series Finals, Qualification\nThe following 24 teams, shown with pre-tournament World Rankings as of December 2018, when the pools were composed, qualified for the FIH Series Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286792-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's FIH Series Finals, Banbridge\nThe tournament was originally scheduled to take place in Dublin but the venues, where it would be held, would not be finished in time, so the tournament was moved to Banbridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286792-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's FIH Series Finals, Banbridge, Awards\nThe following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286792-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's FIH Series Finals, Hiroshima, Awards\nThe following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286792-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's FIH Series Finals, Valencia, Awards\nThe following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286792-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's FIH Series Finals, Goalscorers\nThere were 308 goals scored in 60 matches, for an average of 5.13 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286793-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Hockey Series\nThe 2018\u201319 Women's Hockey Series was the inaugural season of the Hockey Series, a field hockey championship for women's national teams. The tournament started in June 2018 and finished in June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286793-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Hockey Series, Format\nThe Hockey Series was open to national teams that were not playing in the Pro League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286793-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Hockey Series, Format\nThe Hockey Series took place in two rounds, the Open and the Finals. The nine highest-ranked teams in the FIH World Rankings (as of 9 June 2017) skipped the Open and advanced directly to the Finals. All other national teams played in the Hockey Series Open, which features six regional events with up to six teams each. Fifteen teams qualified from the Hockey Series Open to the Hockey Series Finals, for a total of 24 teams in the Finals. Those teams played in three events, with eight teams per event (three automatic qualifiers and five that advanced from the Open).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286793-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Hockey Series, Format\nThe top two placed teams in each of the Finals events qualified for the 2019 FIH Olympic Qualifiers. In this qualification event, they were joined by the top four placed teams from the Pro League, and the two highest ranked teams not already qualified. The teams were drawn and played a two-legged tie to determine six qualified nations for the Olympic Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286793-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Hockey Series, Schedule, Finals events\nThe pools and venues were announced on 23 October 2018 with one team from Africa still to qualify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286794-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Hockey Series Open\nThe 2018\u201319 Women's Hockey Series Open was an international field hockey competition held from June to December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286794-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Hockey Series Open, Vilnius, Results\nThe game was stopped after 40 minutes due to heavy rain and continued on 09:30 the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286795-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's LEN Trophy\nThe 2018\u201319 Women's LEN Trophy was the 20th edition of the European second-tier tournament for women's water polo clubs. It was contested in Kirishi, Russia, on 12 and 13 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286795-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's LEN Trophy\nItaly's Orizzonte Catania defeated Hungary's UVSE in the final match. Orizzonte won the title for the first time in its history, gaining the only trophy that was still missing from its list of Honours. It was also the first time that a female head coach (former player Martina Miceli, gold medalist at the Athens 2004 Olympic Games) led a club to a European cup victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286795-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's LEN Trophy, Teams\nThe participants were the four teams eliminated from the Euro League's quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286795-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's LEN Trophy, Final Four\nThe draw of the semifinals and the allocation of the Final 4 to Kirishi were announced by LEN on 13 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286796-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's National Cricket League season\nThe 2018\u201319 Women's National Cricket League season was the 23rd season of the Women's National Cricket League, the women's domestic limited overs cricket competition in Australia. The tournament started on 21 September 2018 and finished on 9 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286796-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's National Cricket League season\nThe New South Wales Breakers were both defending champions and eventual winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286797-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Super Smash\nThe 2018\u201319 Burger King Super Smash was the twelfth season of the women's Super Smash Twenty20 cricket competition played in New Zealand. It ran from October 2018 to January 2019, with 6 provincial teams taking part. Wellington Blaze beat Canterbury Magicians in the final to win the tournament, their 5th Super Smash title, and second in two seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286797-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Super Smash, Competition format\nTeams played in a double round-robin in a group of six, therefore playing 10 matches overall. Matches were played using a Twenty20 format. The top two in the group advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286797-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Super Smash, 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286798-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Super50 Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 Women's Super50 Cup was a 50-over women's cricket competition that took place in the West Indies. It took place in March 2019, with 6 teams taking part and all matches taking place in Guyana. Barbados won the tournament, winning all five of their matches to claim their third 50-over title in five seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286798-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Super50 Cup, Competition format\nTeams played in a round-robin in a group of six, therefore playing 5 matches overall. Matches were played using a one day format with 50 overs per side. The top team in the group were crowned the Champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286798-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Super50 Cup, 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286798-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Super50 Cup, Competition format\nWin: 4 pointsTie: 2 pointsLoss: 0 points. Abandoned/No Result: 2 points. Bonus Point: 1 bonus point available per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286799-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Volleyball Thailand League\nThe 2018\u201319 Women's Volleyball Thailand League is the 14th season of the Women's Volleyball Thailand League, the top Thai professional league for women's volleyball clubs, since its establishment in 2005, also known as CP Women's Volleyball Thailand League due to the sponsorship deal with Charoen Pokphand. A total of 8 teams will compete in the league. The season will begin on 27 October 2018 and is scheduled to conclude in 2019. This season will be organized by the Thailand Volleyball Association (TVA) instead Thailand Volleyball Co.,Ltd. The season started.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286799-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Volleyball Thailand League\nSupreme Chonburi are the defending champions, also the reigning Asian club champions, while the 2018 Pro Challenge champion will has entered as the promoted team from the 2018 Volleyball Pro Challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286799-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Volleyball Thailand League, Format, Regular season, Regular 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, 42], "section_span": [44, 101], "content_span": [102, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286799-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Volleyball Thailand League, Finals series, Venue\nThe final series matches are played at the MCC Hall The Mall Bang Kapi in Bangkok.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286799-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Women's Volleyball Thailand League, Statistics leader\nThe statistics of each group follows the vis reports P2 and P5. The statistics include 6 volleyball skills; serve, reception, set, spike, block, and dig. The table below shows the top 5 ranked players in each skill plus top scorers at the completion of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 61], "content_span": [62, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286800-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Boxing Super Series \u2013 Super lightweight division\nThe 2018\u201319 World Boxing Super Series \u2013 Super lightweight division is a World Boxing Super Series professional boxing tournament that took place between October 2018 and October 2019 in several countries. The Super Series features eight top-rated super lightweight boxers in a single-elimination tournament. The tournament was organized by Comosa AG.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286800-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Boxing Super Series \u2013 Super lightweight division, Quarter-finals\nThe quarterfinals were held between 7 October and 3 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 78], "content_span": [79, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286800-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Boxing Super Series \u2013 Super lightweight division, Semi-finals\nThe semifinals will be held in 27 April and 18 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 75], "content_span": [76, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286801-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Boxing Super Series \u2013 bantamweight division\nThe 2018\u201319 World Boxing Super Series \u2013 bantamweight division is a World Boxing Super Series professional boxing tournament taking place between October 2018 and November 2019 in several countries. The Super Series features 8 top-rated bantamweight boxers in a single-elimination tournament. The tournament was organized by Comosa AG.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286801-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Boxing Super Series \u2013 bantamweight division, Brackets\n* Zolani Tete withdrew from the semi-final due to an injury and was replaced by Stephon Young.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 67], "content_span": [68, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286801-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Boxing Super Series \u2013 bantamweight division, Quarter-finals\nThe quarterfinals are held from 7 October to 3 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 73], "content_span": [74, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286801-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Boxing Super Series \u2013 bantamweight division, Semi-finals\nThe semifinals will be held in 27 April and 18 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 70], "content_span": [71, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286802-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Rugby Sevens Series\nThe 2018\u201319 World Rugby Sevens Series, known for sponsorship reasons as the HSBC World Rugby Sevens Series, was the 20th annual series of rugby sevens tournaments for national men's rugby sevens teams. The Sevens Series has been run by World Rugby since 1999\u20132000. This series also, for the second time, doubled as a qualifier for the 2020 Summer Olympics, with the top four countries qualifying automatically.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286802-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Rugby Sevens Series\nFiji finished first in the Series, winning five of the ten tournaments. The United States finished in a best-ever second place, reaching the semifinals in all ten tournaments. The relegation battle was a three-way competition going into the final rounds involving Japan, Kenya, and Wales, with Japan finishing last to be relegated from the Series next season. The World Series Qualifier tournament saw Ireland promoted to core status for the first time for the 2019\u201320 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286802-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Rugby Sevens Series, Core teams\nJapan was promoted to core team status for the season after winning the 2018 Hong Kong Sevens qualifier. They replaced Russia, which was relegated after finishing as the last place core team on the 2017\u201318 World Rugby Sevens Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286802-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Rugby Sevens Series, Tour venues\nThe official schedule for the 2018\u201319 World Rugby Sevens Series was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286802-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Rugby Sevens Series, Placings summary\nTallies of top four tournament placings during the 2018\u201319 series, by team:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286803-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Rugby Sevens Series squads\nThis is a list of the complete squads for Series XX of World Rugby Sevens for men's teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286803-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Rugby Sevens Series squads\nCaptains for a tournament have their jersey numbers marked in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286803-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Rugby Sevens Series squads, United States\nAt Singapore, the United States had a late injury to Martin Iosefo which ruled him out of the team. Ben Broselle was elevated to the twelve. Pat Blair joined the squad as the thirteenth man.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286803-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Rugby Sevens Series squads, Non-core teams\nOne place in each tournament of the series is allocated to a national team based on performance in the respective continental tournaments within Africa, Asia, Europe, Oceania, and the Americas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286804-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Rugby Women's Sevens Series\nThe 2018\u201319 World Rugby Women's Sevens Series was the seventh edition of the global circuit for women's national rugby sevens teams, organised by World Rugby. There were six tournament events scheduled on the 2018\u201319 circuit with twelve teams competing in each tournament. The series also, for the second time, doubled as an Olympic qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286804-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Rugby Women's Sevens Series\nThe series was won by New Zealand who won four tour events on their way to claiming their fifth World Series title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286804-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Rugby Women's Sevens Series, Format\nTwelve teams compete at each event. The top-ranked teams at each tournament play off for a Cup, with gold, silver and bronze medals also awarded to the first three teams. Lower-ranked teams at each tournament play off for a Challenge Trophy. The overall winner of the series was determined by points gained from the standings across all events in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286804-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Rugby Women's Sevens Series, Teams\nThe \"core teams\" qualified to participate in all series events for the 2018\u201319 series were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286804-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Rugby Women's Sevens Series, Teams\nOne additional core team qualified through winning the 2018 Hong Kong Women's Sevens:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286804-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Rugby Women's Sevens Series, Teams\nThe twelfth team in each tournament is allocated based on performance in the respective continental competitions within Africa, Asia, Europe, Oceania, and the Americas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286804-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Rugby Women's Sevens Series, Placings summary\nTallies of top four tournament placings during the 2018\u201319 series, by team:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 59], "content_span": [60, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286805-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Rugby Women's Sevens Series squads\nThis is a list of the complete squads for the 2018\u201319 World Rugby Women's Sevens Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286805-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Rugby Women's Sevens Series squads\nCaptains for a tournament have their jersey number marked in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286805-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Rugby Women's Sevens Series squads, Invitational teams\nOne place in each tournament of the series is allocated to a national team based on performance in the respective continental tournaments within Africa, Asia, Europe, Oceania, and the Americas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 68], "content_span": [69, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286806-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Skate Europe Cup\nThe 2018\u201319 World Skate Europe Cup was the 39th season of the World Skate Europe Cup, the first one with the new name of the formerly known as CERS Cup, Europe's second club roller hockey competition organized by World Skate Europe. Lleida Llista Blava won its second title in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286806-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Skate Europe Cup, Teams\n28 teams from seven national associations qualified for the competition. League positions of the previous season shown in parentheses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286806-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Skate Europe Cup, Bracket\nThe draw was held at World Skate Europe headquarters in Lisbon, Portugal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286806-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Skate Europe Cup, Round of 32\nThe first leg was played on 20 October and the second leg on 17 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286806-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Skate Europe Cup, Round of 16\nThe first leg was played on 1 December 2018 and the second leg on 19 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286806-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Skate Europe Cup, Quarterfinals\nThe first leg was played on 16 February and the second leg on 9 March 2019 (with exception Valdagno-Viareggio on 16 March).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286806-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 World Skate Europe Cup, Final Four\nThe Final Four was played on 27 and 28 April in Lleida, Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286807-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wright State Raiders men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Wright State Raiders men's basketball team represented Wright State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Raiders, led by third-year head coach Scott Nagy, played their home games at the Nutter Center in Fairborn, Ohio, as members of the Horizon League. They finished the season 21\u201314, 13\u20135 in Horizon League to be regular season co-champions with Northern Kentucky. They defeated IUPUI and Green Bay to advance to the championship game of the Horizon League Tournament where they lost to Northern Kentucky. As regular season league champion, and number 1 seed in their league tournament, who failed to win their league tournament, they received an automatic bid to the National Invitation Tournament where they lost in the first round to Clemson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 847]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286807-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wright State Raiders men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Raiders finished the 2017\u201318 season 25\u201310, 14\u20134 in Horizon League play to finish in second place. In the Horizon League Tournament, they defeated Green Bay, Milwaukee, and Cleveland State to become Horizon League Tournament champions. This received the Horizon League's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament, where they lost to Tennessee in the First Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286808-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wright State Raiders women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Wright State Raiders women's basketball team represents Wright State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Raiders, led by third year head coach Katrina Merriweather, play their home games at the Nutter Center in Fairborn, Ohio, as members of the Horizon League. They finished the season 27\u20137, 16\u20132 in Horizon League play win the Horizon regular season title. They won the Horizon Women's Tournament and earn an received automatic bid of the NCAA Women's Tournament for the first time since 2014, where they lost to Texas A&M in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286809-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wycombe Wanderers F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Wycombe Wanderers' 132nd season in existence and their 26th consecutive season in the Football League. This was their first season in EFL League One since the 2011\u201312 season. They achieved automatic promotion after winning their game against Chesterfield on 28 April 2018 the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286809-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wycombe Wanderers F.C. season, Competitions, Pre-season\nWycombe Wanderers announced on 16 May 2018 that they will face Brentford during their pre-season run-in. On 21 May 2018, two friendlies were announced: the first against Maidenhead United and the second against Havant & Waterlooville. A fourth friendly, a home match against West Ham United, was announced on 12 June. Their final fixture, away to Chesham United, was added on 27 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286809-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wycombe Wanderers F.C. season, Competitions, League One, Matches\nThe EFL League One fixtures were announced on 21 June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 72], "content_span": [73, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286809-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wycombe Wanderers F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe First Round draw was made on 22 October 2018 at Hitchin Town's home ground Top Field, where Wycombe Wanderers were drawn away to Luton Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286809-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wycombe Wanderers F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Cup\nThe draw for the first round was made on 15 June 2018, in which Wycombe Wanderers were drawn against Northampton Town. After winning their first round tie 7\u20136 on penalties after drawing 1\u20131, Wycombe Wanderers were drawn at home to Forest Green Rovers on 16 August 2018. The third round draw was made on 30 August 2018 by David Seaman and Joleon Lescott, and Wycombe were drawn to face Norwich City at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286809-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wycombe Wanderers F.C. season, Competitions, EFL Trophy\nOn 13 July 2018, the initial group stage draw bar the U21 invited clubs was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286810-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wydad AC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season is Wydad AC's 79th season in existence and the club's 63rd consecutive season in the top flight of Moroccan football. They will be competing in Botola, the Champions League, Arab Club Champions Cup, and the Throne Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286810-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wydad AC season, Squad information, Goalscorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted alphabetically by surname when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 55], "content_span": [56, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286811-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wyoming Cowboys basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Wyoming Cowboys basketball team represented the University of Wyoming during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They were led by Allen Edwards in his third year as head coach at Wyoming. The Cowboys played their home games at the Arena-Auditorium in Laramie, Wyoming as members of the Mountain West Conference. They finished the season 8\u201324, 4\u201314 in Mountain West play to finish in tenth place. They lost in the first round of the Mountain West Tournament to New Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286811-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wyoming Cowboys basketball team, Previous season\nThe Cowboys finished the 2017\u201318 season 20\u201313, 10\u20138 in Mountain West play to finish in sixth place. They defeated San Jose State in the first round of the Mountain West Tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to New Mexico. They did not compete in a post-season tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286812-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Wyoming Cowgirls basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Wyoming Cowgirls basketball team will represent the University of Wyoming in the 2018\u201319 college basketball season. The Cowgirls are led by head coach Joe Legerski in his 16th and final season. The Cowgirls will play their home games at the Arena-Auditorium and were members of the Mountain West Conference. They finished the season 25\u20139, 13\u20135 in Mountain West play to finish in third place. They advanced to the championship game of the Mountain West Tournament where they lost to Boise. They received an at-large to the 2019 Women's National Invitation Tournament where they defeated Northern Colorado, South Alabama and Pepperdine in the first, second and third rounds before losing to Arizona in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286813-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Xavier Musketeers men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Xavier Musketeers men's basketball team represented Xavier University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season as a member of the Big East Conference. Led by first-year head coach Travis Steele, they played their home games at the Cintas Center in Cincinnati, Ohio. Xavier finished the season with a 19\u201316 record, 9\u20139 in Big East play, to finish in third place. In the Big East Tournament, Xavier beat Creighton in the quarterfinals before losing to Villanova in the semifinals. The Musketeers failed to receive a bid to the NCAA Tournament and but did receive a bid as a No. 3 seed in the National Invitation Tournament. There they defeated Toledo in the first round before losing in overtime to Texas in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 801]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286813-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Xavier Musketeers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Musketeers finished the 2017\u201318 season 29\u20136, 15\u20133 in Big East play to win the Big East championship. In the Big East Tournament, they defeated St. John's before losing to Providence in the semifinals. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as a No. 1 seed in the West region. In the First Round, they defeated Texas Southern before being upset by Florida State in the Second Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286813-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Xavier Musketeers men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn March 27, 2018, Chris Mack was hired as the new head coach of Louisville, leaving Xavier after nine seasons. Four days later, longtime assistant coach Travis Steele was named the new head coach of the Musketeers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286814-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Xavier Musketeers women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Xavier Musketeers women's basketball team represents Xavier University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Musketeers, led by eighth-year head coach Brian Neal, play their games at the Cintas Center and are members of the Big East Conference. They finished the season 11\u201319, 2\u201316 in Big East play to finish in last place. They lost in the first round of the Big East Women's Tournament to Providence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286814-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Xavier Musketeers women's basketball team\nOn March 10, Brian Neal was fired. He finished at Xavier with a 8 year record of 76\u2013108.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286815-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Y-League\nThe 2018\u201319 Y-League season (also known as the 2018\u201319 Foxtel Y-League season for sponsorship reasons) was the eleventh season of the Australian Y-League, the premier national competition for youth football in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286815-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Y-League, Teams\nThe competition featured the same ten teams as the previous season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286815-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Y-League, Teams, Conference A\nConference A contains teams from outside of New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286815-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Y-League, Teams, Conference B\nConference B contains teams from New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286816-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Yale Bulldogs men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Yale Bulldogs men's basketball team represented Yale University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bulldogs, led by 20th-year head coach James Jones, played their home games at John J. Lee Amphitheater of the Payne Whitney Gymnasium in New Haven, Connecticut as members of the Ivy League. They made the NCAA Tournament where they lost to LSU in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286816-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Yale Bulldogs men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Bulldogs finished the 2017\u201318 season 16\u201315, 9\u20135 in Ivy League play to finish in third place. In the Ivy League Tournament, they lost to Penn in the semifinal round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286817-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Yale Bulldogs men's ice hockey season\nThe 2018\u201319 Yale Bulldogs Men's ice hockey season was the 124th season of play for the program and the 58th season in the ECAC Hockey conference. The Bulldogs represented Yale University and were coached by Keith Allain, in his 13th season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286817-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Yale Bulldogs men's ice hockey season, Season\nYale began the season well, rising up their conference standings and earning a top-20 ranking after a 5-game winning streak. The Bulldogs would slowly drop out of the rankings with several up and down weeks but looked like they had recovered some of their early season success after defeating #8 Cornell. After that match, however, Yale lost its final 4 games of the regular season and missed a chance to earn a first-round bye for the ECAC Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286817-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Yale Bulldogs men's ice hockey season, Season\nThe Bulldogs took care of Rensselaer fairly easily, however, in the quarterfinals they were defeated by Clarkson and ended the season with a .500 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286817-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Yale Bulldogs men's ice hockey season, Season\nDuring the year, goaltenders Sam Tucker and Corbin Kaczperski shared the net. They produced similar numbers and had roughly equal success in net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286818-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Yale Bulldogs women's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Yale Bulldogs women's basketball team represented Yale University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Bulldogs, led by fourth year head coach Allison Guth, played their home games at John J. Lee Amphitheater of the Payne Whitney Gymnasium as members of the Ivy League. They finished the season at 16\u201313, 6\u20138 to finish in a 3 way tie for fourth place. Due to a tie breaker loss to Cornell and Dartmouth they failed to qualify for the Ivy League Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286819-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Yeovil Town F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 Yeovil Town F.C. season was the 16th season in the Football League played by Yeovil Town Football Club, an English football club based in Yeovil, Somerset. It was a part of the 2018\u201319 English football league season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286819-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Background\nThe 2017\u201318 season was the club's third consecutive in the fourth tier of the English football league system, it was Darren Way's second full season in charge as manager. After losing their opening game by a record 8\u20132 score line away at Luton Town. The club's league season had few highpoints as they spent all but one week of the season in the lower half of the table and was typified by indiscipline with the club receiving ten red cards during the course of the season and on three occasions being reduced to nine men.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286819-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Background\nThe Glovers did record their record away victory in the Football League in April with a 6\u20132 win at Coventry City. Despite indifferent form safety was confirmed with two matches to spare as Yeovil finished the season in 19th place. In cup competitions Yeovil had more success reaching the fourth round of the FA Cup for only the fourth time in their history, beating two League One sides to get there, before losing at home to eventual runners-up Manchester United. In the EFL Cup the Glovers lost in the first round against Championship side Wolverhampton Wanderers, while in the EFL Trophy the club reached the semi-finals, losing to Shrewsbury Town having beaten three League One sides to reach that stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 752]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286819-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Background\nThe end of the season saw Way release four players, including the experienced trio of Artur Krysiak, Ryan Dickson and Nathan Smith. Three players were offered new contracts, with goalkeeper Stuart Nelson quickly agreeing a new two-year contract. While midfielder Oscar Gobern rejected the offer of a new deal to sign for National League side Eastleigh, The summer also saw goalkeeper Jonny Maddison agree to terminate his contract to sign for National League North side Darlington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286819-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Background\nIn late June, the club received a bid in the region of \u00a3100,000 which met the release clause of attacking midfielder Otis Khan from fellow League Two side Mansfield Town, Khan subsequently signed a two-year contract with the Nottinghamshire side. Defender Omar Sowunmi returned to the club for pre-season training having still not signed a new contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286819-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nThe first day of pre-season saw the arrival of four new signings, defenders Carl Dickinson and Gary Warren arrived on two-year contracts following their release from Notts County and Inverness Caledonian Thistle. While goalkeeper Nathan Baxter joined on loan from Chelsea and forward Diallang Jaiyesimi signed on loan until the end of the season from Norwich City. On 5 July, Yeovil confirmed that defender Omar Sowunmi had signed a new two-year contract ending transfer speculation, while midfielder Connor Smith agreed to terminate his contract before signing for National League side Boreham Wood.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286819-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nPrior to Yeovil's first match of pre-season the club confirmed the return of former midfielder Paul Terry as the club's new first-team coach. Yeovil's first friendly of the season saw the visit of Championship side Swansea City, on 10 July. The Glovers' squad included eight trialists, including recently released full back Daniel Alfei, Yeovil took the lead through Green but eventually lost the match 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286819-0003-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nFollowing the match the club confirmed that captain James Bailey would be out for the foreseeable future after having more surgery following medial ligament damage on Boxing Day, and midfielder Jake Gray would be missing until September due to ruptured ankle ligaments. On 13 July, Yeovil confirmed the signing of Beninese international midfielder Sessi D'Almeida on a one-year contract with an option to extend it for a further year following a successful trial period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286819-0003-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nThe squad then headed to South Wales for a short training camp, on 14 July, Yeovil played a Bristol City XI side behind closed doors drawing 1\u20131 with trialist Korrey Henry scoring Yeovil's goal. The Glovers followed this up with a further 1\u20131 draw at home against League One side Bristol Rovers with Bevis Mugabi giving Yeovil the lead. The Glovers then faced another League One side Plymouth Argyle at Huish Park. Loanee Diallang Jaiyesimi scored the opener, before braces from Rhys Browne and Alex Fisher saw Yeovil run out 5\u20131 victors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286819-0003-0004", "contents": "2018\u201319 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nAmong the trialists in the Yeovil side was former Notts County winger and Martiniquais international Yoann Arquin, another of the trialists former West Ham United forward Korrey Henry signed an initial one-year contract. Yeovil then travelled the short distance to face Southern League Premier South side Dorchester Town, on 24 July. Goals from Aqruin and Henry earned the Glovers a 2\u20130 victory. On 27 July, Yeovil confirmed the signing of Brentford midfielder Reece Cole on loan until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286819-0003-0005", "contents": "2018\u201319 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nThe first team concluded pre-season with a 3\u20130 victory over Southern League Division One Central side Corby Town, before a team consisting primarily of the club's under-18 beat local side Gillingham Town by the same scoreline. After a pre-season of rumours surrounding the future of versatile Welsh defender Tom James, the club confirmed they had accepted an undisclosed bid in the region of \u00a3400,000 from Championship side West Bromwich Albion. The move fell through the following day after James failed to agree personal terms with the Championship club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286819-0003-0006", "contents": "2018\u201319 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nOn 2 August, the club confirmed the signing of Martiniquais international Yoann Arquin on a six-month contract following a successful trial. The following day, Yeovil signed two more players with winger Wes McDonald signing following his release from Birmingham City and midfielder Alex Pattison on loan until the end of the season from Middlesbrough.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286819-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, August\nYeovil started their League Two season with an away trip to relegated Bury, on 4 August. Before the match both goalkeeper Stuart Nelson and winger Rhys Browne suffered injuries which caused them to miss the start of the 2018\u201319 season. The Glovers were reduced to nine men, following the dismissals of Tom James for a second bookable offence and Jordan Green for serious foul play, and suffered a 1\u20130 defeat. On 11 August, Yeovil faced Mansfield Town in their first home match of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286819-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, August\nYeovil took the lead twice through Diallang Jaiyesimi and Yoann Arquin's first goals for the club but the Glovers were twice pegged back to draw 2\u20132 with all four goals scored in the first 26 minutes. Yeovil then faced Championship side Aston Villa in the EFL Cup first round, Yeovil thought they had taken the lead just before half-time when Jaiyesimi poked in at the back post but it was disallowed for a \"foul\" in the build-up and saw striker Alex Fisher have his penalty saved by Villa goalkeeper Andr\u00e9 Moreira.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286819-0004-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, August\nVilla's Conor Hourihane knocked Yeovil out with a late winner. The match also saw the Glovers give a debut to youth player Gabriel Rogers who became the first player born in the 2000s to play for the Yeovil senior team. On 17 August, Yeovil secured their first win of the season with a 4\u20130 victory away at Notts County, courtesy of a hat-trick from Alex Fisher and a fourth from former Notts County player Yoann Arquin. Yeovil extended their unbeaten run to three league matches with a goalless draw against Oldham Athletic, on 21 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286819-0004-0003", "contents": "2018\u201319 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, August\nAfter only featuring in two matches for the club Brentford loanee Reece Cole's loan was terminated by mutual consent. On 25 August, Yeovil won their first home match since February with a 2\u20130 victory over previously unbeaten Stevenage, with first-half goals from Alex Fisher and Sessi D'Almeida securing the victory. In the days prior to the closing of the loan transfer window, Yeovil secured the signing of forward Omari Patrick on loan from Bradford City on loan until January, Luxembourg international defender Enes Mahmutovic on a season-long loan deal from Middlesbrough. Finally, forward Olufela Olomola returned to the club on loan until January from Scunthorpe United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286819-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, September\nThe start of September, saw the club announce the postponement of their clash with Milton Keynes Dons due to international call-ups, with midfielder Sessi D'Almeida receiving a call-up to the Benin national team for the first time since 2015, defenders Enes Mahmutovic called up to Luxembourg and Shaun Donnellan called up to the Republic of Ireland U21 side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286820-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Yeovil Town L.F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Yeovil Town Ladies Football Club's second consecutive season in the top-flight of English women's football, the Women's Super League, in which they finished bottom. They also competed in the Women's FA Cup and Women's League Cup, in which they were eliminated in the fourth round and group stage respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286820-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Yeovil Town L.F.C. season, Season summary\nIn June 2018, Lee Burch was appointed as head coach, after Jamie Sherwood stood down at the end of the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286820-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Yeovil Town L.F.C. season, Season summary\nIn March 2019, the club was reported to have entered administration. They were deducted 10 points during the 2018\u201319 season, finishing 15 points adrift and getting relegated. However, in May 2019, they were denied an operating licence for the Championship and would have to contest the following season as a third tier club instead. In June 2019, owner Steve Allinson announced his intention to relinquish ownership of the team free of charge in order to find investors capable of sustaining the team. Burch left the club in June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286821-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Youngstown State Penguins men's basketball team\nThe 2018\u201319 Youngstown State Penguins men's basketball team represented Youngstown State University during the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Penguins, led by second-year head coach Jerrod Calhoun, played their home games at the Beeghly Center as members of the Horizon League. They finished the season 12\u201320, 8\u201310 in Horizon League play to finish in a three-way tie for sixth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Horizon League Tournament to Oakland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286821-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Youngstown State Penguins men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Penguins finished the 2017\u201318 season 8\u201324, 6\u201312 in Horizon League play to finish in a tie for eighth place. They lost in the first round of the Horizon League Tournament to Cleveland State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 72], "content_span": [73, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286821-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Youngstown State Penguins men's basketball team, Schedule and results\n* Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses. All times are in Eastern Time", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 77], "content_span": [78, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286822-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Zanzibar Premier League\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Uziel302 (talk | contribs) at 15:26, 25 November 2019 (18.Hard->18. Hard - Fix a typo in one click). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286822-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Zanzibar Premier League\nThe 2018\u201319 Zanzibar Premier League is the 37th season of the Zanzibar Premier League, the top-tier football league in Zanzibar. The season started on 20 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286823-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Zira FK season\nThe Zira FK 2017-18 season was Zira's fourth Azerbaijan Premier League season, and fifth season in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286823-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Zira FK season, Season events\nOn 29 August, Aykhan Abbasov resigned as Zira's manager, with Samir Abbasov being appointed as his replacement the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286824-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Zob Ahan F.C. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was Zob Ahan Football Club's 18th season in the Iran Pro League, and their 23rd consecutive season in the top division of Iranian football. They also competed in the Hazfi Cup and AFC Champions League, and had their 48th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286824-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Zob Ahan 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286824-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Zob Ahan F.C. season, Statistics, Top scorers\nFriendlies and pre-season goals are not recognized as competitive match goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286824-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Zob Ahan F.C. season, Statistics, Top assistors\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total assistors are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286824-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Zob Ahan F.C. season, Statistics, Top assistors\nFriendlies and Pre season goals are not recognized as competitive match assist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286824-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 Zob Ahan F.C. 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-00286825-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 curling season\nThe 2018\u201319 curling season began in August 2018 and ended in May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286825-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 curling season\nNote: In events with two genders, the men's tournament winners will be listed before the women's tournament winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286826-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 figure skating season\nThe 2018\u201319 figure skating season began on July 1, 2018, and ended on June 30, 2019. During this season, elite skaters competed at the ISU Championship level in the 2019 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, and the ISU Challenger Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286826-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 figure skating season, Season notes, Age eligibility\nSkaters are eligible to compete in ISU events at the junior or senior levels according to their age:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286826-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 figure skating season, Changes\nIf skaters of different nationalities team up, the ISU requires that they choose one country to represent. Date refers to date when the change occurred or, if not available, the date when the change was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286826-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 figure skating season, International medalists, Ice dance\n* Anastasia Shakun / Daniil Ragimov were disqualified for Shakun's violation of anti-doping rules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286827-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Algerian football\nThe 2018\u201319 season will be the 56th season of competitive association football in Algeria. The national team became African champions for the second time, by winning the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations helds in Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286828-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Armenian football\nThe following article is a summary of the 2018\u201319 football season in Armenia, which is the 27th season of competitive football in the country and runs from August 2018 to May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286829-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Australian soccer\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 50th season of competitive association football in Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286829-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Australian soccer, National teams, Australia men's national soccer team, Friendlies\nThe following is a list of friendlies played by the men's senior national team in 2018\u201319.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 94], "content_span": [95, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286829-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Australian soccer, National teams, Australia men's national under-23 soccer team, Friendlies\nThe following is a list of friendlies played by the men's under 23 national team in 2018\u201319.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 103], "content_span": [104, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286829-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Australian soccer, National teams, Australia men's national under-20 soccer team, Friendlies\nThe following is a list of friendlies played by the men's under 20 national team in 2018\u201319.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 103], "content_span": [104, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286829-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Australian soccer, National teams, Australia men's national under-17 soccer team, Friendlies\nThe following is a list of friendlies played by the men's under 17 national team in 2018\u201319.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 103], "content_span": [104, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286829-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Australian soccer, National teams, Australia women's national soccer team, Friendlies\nThe following is a list of friendlies played by the women's senior national team in 2018\u201319.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 96], "content_span": [97, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286829-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Australian soccer, National teams, Australia women's national under-17 soccer team, Friendlies\nThe following is a list of friendlies played by the women's under 17 national team in 2018\u201319.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 105], "content_span": [106, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286829-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Australian soccer, Men's football, National Premier Leagues\nThe Final Series featured the winner of each Member Federation's league competition in the National Premier Leagues, with the overall winner qualifying directly for the 2019 FFA Cup Round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 70], "content_span": [71, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286829-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Australian soccer, Men's football, State club winners\nThese are the winners for each top-tier state competition in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 64], "content_span": [65, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286830-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Belgian football\nThe following article is a summary of the 2018\u201319 football season in Belgium, which is the 116th season of competitive football in the country and runs from July 2018 until June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286830-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Belgian football, National teams, Belgium national football team\nFollowing the success at the 2018 FIFA World Cup, Belgium was expected to perform well in the inaugural UEFA Nations League competition but collapsed in their final match against Switzerland, losing 5\u20132 despite a 0\u20132 lead, to miss out on the Nations League Finals. The UEFA Euro 2020 qualifying Group I campaign was however started with four straight wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286830-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Belgian football, Men's football, League season, Promotion and relegation\nThe following teams had achieved promotion or suffered relegation going into the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 84], "content_span": [85, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286830-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Belgian football, UEFA competitions\nChampions Club Brugge qualified directly for the group stage of the Champions League, while runners-up Standard Li\u00e8ge started in the qualifying rounds. As Standard Li\u00e8ge also had won the Belgian Cup, third placed Anderlecht qualified directly for the group stage of the Europa League, while Gent and Genk started in the qualifying rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286830-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Belgian football, Managerial changes\nThis is a list of changes of managers within Belgian professional league football (Belgian First Division A and Belgian First Division B):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286831-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Croatian football\nThe following article presents a summary of the 2018\u201319 football season in Croatia, which will be the 28th season of competitive football in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286832-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Cypriot football\nThe following article is a summary of the 2018\u201319 football season in Cyprus, which is the 77th season of competitive football in the country and runs from August 2018 to May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football\nThe 2018\u201319 season is the 129th season of competitive football in the Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Eerste Divisie\nTen teams, two from the Eredivisie and eight from the Eerste Divisie, play for two spots in the 2019\u201320 Eredivisie, the remaining eight teams playing in the 2019\u201320 Eerste Divisie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Derde Divisie, Saturday League\nThe numbers 15 and 16 of each of the 2018\u201319 Derde Divisies (2 times 2 teams) and the 3 (substitute) period winners of each of the 2018\u201319 Hoofdklassen (4 times 3 teams), making 16 teams, decide in a 3-round 2-leg knockout system, which 3 teams play next season in the 2019\u201320 Derde Divisie leagues. The remaining 13 teams play next season in the 2019\u201320 Hoofdklasse leagues. Contrary to previous seasons, the play-offs for Saturday and Sunday teams are not fully separated any more.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Derde Divisie, Saturday League\nThe 4 Derde Divisie teams and the 4 highest ranked (substitute) period winners (HPWs) from the Hoofdklassen are released from playing the first round. Teams are paired in such a way that the 2 middle ranked (substitute) period winners (MPWs) from the Saturday Hoofdklassen play against the lowest ranked (substitute) period winners (LPWs) from the other Saturday Hoofdklasse. The same applies for the Sunday MPWs and LPWs. So at this stage there will be no matches yet between Saturday and Sunday teams. The lowest ranked teams (LPWs) will play the first match at home, and the highest ranked teams (MPWs) the second match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Derde Divisie, Saturday League\nIn the second round there're still no matches between Saturday and Sunday teams. The following applies identical for the Saturday as well as Sunday teams. The highest ranked Derde Divisie team (H3D) will play against the winner of the match between the LPW of the A league against the MPW of the B league. The lowest ranked Derde Divisie team (L3D) will play against the HPW of the A league. The HPW of the B league will play against the winner of the match between the LPW of the B league against the MPW of the A league. The lowest ranked teams will play the first match at home, and the highest ranked teams the second match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Derde Divisie, Saturday League\nThe first final is between the winners of the 2 matches in which the Derde Divisie Saturday teams play. The second final is between the winners of the 2 matches in which the Derde Divisie Sunday teams play. The consequence is that at least 1 Saturday and at least 1 Sunday Derde Divisie team will relegate. The third final is between the winners of the 2 remaining matches. This is the only play-offs match in which a Saturday and a Sunday team will face each other and for sure both teams will be Hoofdklasse period winners. Therefore, at least 1 Hoofdklasse team will promote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Results\nSparta Nijkerk, Gemert and Hoogland promoted to the 2019-20 Derde Divisie. Eemdijk, SJC, JVC Cuijk and OJC Rosmalen relegated to the 2019-20 Hoofdklasse. The other teams remained in the 2019-20 Hoofdklasse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Results, Sunday League\nThe numbers 15 and 16 of each of the 2018\u201319 Derde Divisies (2 times 2 teams) and the 3 (substitute) period winners of each of the 2018\u201319 Hoofdklassen (4 times 3 teams), making 16 teams, decide in a 3-round 2-leg knockout system, which 3 teams play next season in the 2019\u201320 Derde Divisie leagues. The remaining 13 teams play next season in the 2019\u201320 Hoofdklasse leagues. Contrary to previous seasons, the play-offs for Saturday and Sunday teams are not fully separated any more.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Results, Sunday League\nThe 4 Derde Divisie teams and the 4 highest ranked (substitute) period winners (HPWs) from the Hoofdklassen are released from playing the first round. Teams are paired in such a way that the 2 middle ranked (substitute) period winners (MPWs) from the Saturday Hoofdklassen play against the lowest ranked (substitute) period winners (LPWs) from the other Saturday Hoofdklasse. The same applies for the Sunday MPWs and LPWs. So at this stage there will be no matches yet between Saturday and Sunday teams. The lowest ranked teams (LPWs) will play the first match at home, and the highest ranked teams (MPWs) the second match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Results, Sunday League\nIn the second round there're still no matches between Saturday and Sunday teams. The following applies identical for the Saturday as well as Sunday teams. The highest ranked Derde Divisie team (H3D) will play against the winner of the match between the LPW of the A league against the MPW of the B league. The lowest ranked Derde Divisie team (L3D) will play against the HPW of the A league. The HPW of the B league will play against the winner of the match between the LPW of the B league against the MPW of the A league. The lowest ranked teams will play the first match at home, and the highest ranked teams the second match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Results, Sunday League\nThe first final is between the winners of the 2 matches in which the Derde Divisie Saturday teams play. The second final is between the winners of the 2 matches in which the Derde Divisie Sunday teams play. The consequence is that at least 1 Saturday and at least 1 Sunday Derde Divisie team will relegate. The third final is between the winners of the 2 remaining matches. This is the only play-offs match in which a Saturday and a Sunday team will face each other and for sure both teams will be Hoofdklasse period winners. Therefore, at least 1 Hoofdklasse team will promote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Results\nSparta Nijkerk, Gemert and Hoogland promoted to the 2019-20 Derde Divisie. Eemdijk, SJC, JVC Cuijk and OJC Rosmalen relegated to the 2019-20 Hoofdklasse. The other teams remained in the 2019-20 Hoofdklasse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Saturday\nThe numbers 13 and 14 from each of the 2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse Saturday leagues (2 times 2 teams) and 3 (substitute) period winners of each of the 2018\u201319 Eerste Klasse Saturday leagues (5 times 3 teams), making 19 teams, decide in a 3-round single match knockout system, which 3 teams play next season in the 2019\u201320 Hoofdklasse Saturday leagues. The remaining 16 teams play next season in the 2019\u201320 Eerste Klasse Saturday leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Saturday\nThe 2 highest ranked Hoofdklasse teams (numbers 13) are released from playing the first round. Out of the 2 lowest ranked Hoofdklasse teams (numbers 14) and the 5 highest ranked (substitute) period winners (HPWs), 3 more teams are by draw released from playing the first round. The remaining 14 teams are paired by draw in such a way that, a HK or HPW team will always play a lowest ranked (substitute) period winner (LPW), and the highest ranked team gets the home advantage. The ranking order is HPW, HK, middle ranked (substitute) period winner (MPW) and LPW teams. If 2 equally ranked teams face each other, the order in which the 2 teams are drawn decides on the home advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Saturday\nThe 7 winners of the first round and the 5 teams released from playing the first round, making 12 teams, are paired by draw. The highest ranked team gets the home advantage. The ranking order is identical as in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Saturday\nThe 6 winners of the second round are paired by draw. Matches are played on neutral ground and the 3 winners play next season in the 2019\u201320 Hoofdklasse Saturday leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Saturday, Results\nARC promoted to the 2019-20 Hoofdklasse Saturday. Spijkenisse and DETO Twenterand maintained in the 2019-20 Hoofdklasse Saturday. CSV Apeldoorn and Nootdorp relegated to the 2019-20 Eerste Klasse Saturday. The other teams remained in the 2019-20 Eerste Klasse Saturday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday\nThe numbers 13 and 14 from each of the 2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse Sunday leagues (2 times 2 teams) and 3 (substitute) period winners of each of the 2018\u201319 Eerste Klasse Sunday leagues (6 times 3 teams), making 22 teams, decide in a 4-round single match knockout system, which 2 teams play next season in the 2019\u201320 Hoofdklasse Sunday leagues. The remaining 20 teams play next season in the 2019\u201320 Eerste Klasse Sunday leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday\nThe Hoofdklasse teams and 6 highest ranked (substitute) period winners (HPWs) are released from playing the first round. The 12 remaining (substitute) period winners are paired by draw in such a way that, a middle (substitute) period winner (MPW) will always play a lowest ranked (substitute) period winner (LPW). The MPW teams also get the home advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday\nThe 6 winners of the first round and the 10 teams released from playing the first round, making 16 teams, are paired by draw in such a way that, two HPW teams can never face each other. The highest ranked team gets the home advantage. The ranking order is HPW, highest ranked Hoofdklasse (HHK) teams (numbers 13), lowest ranked Hoofdklasse (LHK) teams (numbers 14), MPW and LPW teams. If 2 equally ranked teams face each other, the order in which the 2 teams are drawn decides on the home advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday\nThe 8 winners of the first round are paired by draw. The highest ranked team gets the home advantage. The ranking order is identical as in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday\nThe 4 winners of the third round are paired by draw. Matches are played on neutral ground and the 2 winners play next season in the 2019\u201320 Hoofdklasse Sunday leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday, Results\nMoerse Boys and JOS Watergraafsmeer promoted to the 2019-20 Hoofdklasse Sunday. De Bataven, Vlissingen and Fortuna Wormerveer relegated to the 2019-20 Eerste Klasse Sunday. VKW and Leonidas played an extra match. The other teams remained in the 2019-20 Eerste Klasse Sunday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday, Extra match\nBecause JVC Cuijk, relegated from the Derde Divisie, decided to stop playing football at top amateur levels completely, due to lack of the necessary funds, an extra spot became available in the Hoofdklasse Sunday leagues. Therefore the two teams who lost in the fourth round of the play-offs were given a second chance. In an extra match, on neutral ground, these teams competed for the spot that became available.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 61], "content_span": [62, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday, Extra match\nLeonidas maintained in the 2019-20 Hoofdklasse Saturday Sunday. VKW remained in the 2019-20 Eerste Klasse Sunday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 61], "content_span": [62, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Saturday\nThe numbers 13 and 14 from each of the 2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse Saturday leagues (2 times 2 teams) and 3 (substitute) period winners of each of the 2018\u201319 Eerste Klasse Saturday leagues (5 times 3 teams), making 19 teams, decide in a 3-round single match knockout system, which 3 teams play next season in the 2019\u201320 Hoofdklasse Saturday leagues. The remaining 16 teams play next season in the 2019\u201320 Eerste Klasse Saturday leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Saturday\nThe 2 highest ranked Hoofdklasse teams (numbers 13) are released from playing the first round. Out of the 2 lowest ranked Hoofdklasse teams (numbers 14) and the 5 highest ranked (substitute) period winners (HPWs), 3 more teams are by draw released from playing the first round. The remaining 14 teams are paired by draw in such a way that, a HK or HPW team will always play a lowest ranked (substitute) period winner (LPW), and the highest ranked team gets the home advantage. The ranking order is HPW, HK, middle ranked (substitute) period winner (MPW) and LPW teams. If 2 equally ranked teams face each other, the order in which the 2 teams are drawn decides on the home advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Saturday\nThe 7 winners of the first round and the 5 teams released from playing the first round, making 12 teams, are paired by draw. The highest ranked team gets the home advantage. The ranking order is identical as in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Saturday\nThe 6 winners of the second round are paired by draw. Matches are played on neutral ground and the 3 winners play next season in the 2019\u201320 Hoofdklasse Saturday leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Saturday, Results\nARC promoted to the 2019-20 Hoofdklasse Saturday. Spijkenisse and DETO Twenterand maintained in the 2019-20 Hoofdklasse Saturday. CSV Apeldoorn and Nootdorp relegated to the 2019-20 Eerste Klasse Saturday. The other teams remained in the 2019-20 Eerste Klasse Saturday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday\nThe numbers 13 and 14 from each of the 2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse Sunday leagues (2 times 2 teams) and 3 (substitute) period winners of each of the 2018\u201319 Eerste Klasse Sunday leagues (6 times 3 teams), making 22 teams, decide in a 4-round single match knockout system, which 2 teams play next season in the 2019\u201320 Hoofdklasse Sunday leagues. The remaining 20 teams play next season in the 2019\u201320 Eerste Klasse Sunday leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday\nThe Hoofdklasse teams and 6 highest ranked (substitute) period winners (HPWs) are released from playing the first round. The 12 remaining (substitute) period winners are paired by draw in such a way that, a middle (substitute) period winner (MPW) will always play a lowest ranked (substitute) period winner (LPW). The MPW teams also get the home advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday\nThe 6 winners of the first round and the 10 teams released from playing the first round, making 16 teams, are paired by draw in such a way that, two HPW teams can never face each other. The highest ranked team gets the home advantage. The ranking order is HPW, highest ranked Hoofdklasse (HHK) teams (numbers 13), lowest ranked Hoofdklasse (LHK) teams (numbers 14), MPW and LPW teams. If 2 equally ranked teams face each other, the order in which the 2 teams are drawn decides on the home advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0033-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday\nThe 8 winners of the first round are paired by draw. The highest ranked team gets the home advantage. The ranking order is identical as in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0034-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday\nThe 4 winners of the third round are paired by draw. Matches are played on neutral ground and the 2 winners play next season in the 2019\u201320 Hoofdklasse Sunday leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0035-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday, Results\nMoerse Boys and JOS Watergraafsmeer promoted to the 2019-20 Hoofdklasse Sunday. De Bataven, Vlissingen and Fortuna Wormerveer relegated to the 2019-20 Eerste Klasse Sunday. VKW and Leonidas played an extra match. The other teams remained in the 2019-20 Eerste Klasse Sunday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0036-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday, Extra match\nBecause JVC Cuijk, relegated from the Derde Divisie, decided to stop playing football at top amateur levels completely, due to lack of the necessary funds, an extra spot became available in the Hoofdklasse Sunday leagues. Therefore the two teams who lost in the fourth round of the play-offs were given a second chance. In an extra match, on neutral ground, these teams competed for the spot that became available.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 61], "content_span": [62, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0037-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday, Extra match\nLeonidas maintained in the 2019-20 Hoofdklasse Saturday Sunday. VKW remained in the 2019-20 Eerste Klasse Sunday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 61], "content_span": [62, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0038-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Saturday\nThe numbers 13 and 14 from each of the 2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse Saturday leagues (2 times 2 teams) and 3 (substitute) period winners of each of the 2018\u201319 Eerste Klasse Saturday leagues (5 times 3 teams), making 19 teams, decide in a 3-round single match knockout system, which 3 teams play next season in the 2019\u201320 Hoofdklasse Saturday leagues. The remaining 16 teams play next season in the 2019\u201320 Eerste Klasse Saturday leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0039-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Saturday\nThe 2 highest ranked Hoofdklasse teams (numbers 13) are released from playing the first round. Out of the 2 lowest ranked Hoofdklasse teams (numbers 14) and the 5 highest ranked (substitute) period winners (HPWs), 3 more teams are by draw released from playing the first round. The remaining 14 teams are paired by draw in such a way that, a HK or HPW team will always play a lowest ranked (substitute) period winner (LPW), and the highest ranked team gets the home advantage. The ranking order is HPW, HK, middle ranked (substitute) period winner (MPW) and LPW teams. If 2 equally ranked teams face each other, the order in which the 2 teams are drawn decides on the home advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0040-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Saturday\nThe 7 winners of the first round and the 5 teams released from playing the first round, making 12 teams, are paired by draw. The highest ranked team gets the home advantage. The ranking order is identical as in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0041-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Saturday\nThe 6 winners of the second round are paired by draw. Matches are played on neutral ground and the 3 winners play next season in the 2019\u201320 Hoofdklasse Saturday leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0042-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Saturday, Results\nARC promoted to the 2019-20 Hoofdklasse Saturday. Spijkenisse and DETO Twenterand maintained in the 2019-20 Hoofdklasse Saturday. CSV Apeldoorn and Nootdorp relegated to the 2019-20 Eerste Klasse Saturday. The other teams remained in the 2019-20 Eerste Klasse Saturday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0043-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday\nThe numbers 13 and 14 from each of the 2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse Sunday leagues (2 times 2 teams) and 3 (substitute) period winners of each of the 2018\u201319 Eerste Klasse Sunday leagues (6 times 3 teams), making 22 teams, decide in a 4-round single match knockout system, which 2 teams play next season in the 2019\u201320 Hoofdklasse Sunday leagues. The remaining 20 teams play next season in the 2019\u201320 Eerste Klasse Sunday leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0044-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday\nThe Hoofdklasse teams and 6 highest ranked (substitute) period winners (HPWs) are released from playing the first round. The 12 remaining (substitute) period winners are paired by draw in such a way that, a middle (substitute) period winner (MPW) will always play a lowest ranked (substitute) period winner (LPW). The MPW teams also get the home advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0045-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday\nThe 6 winners of the first round and the 10 teams released from playing the first round, making 16 teams, are paired by draw in such a way that, two HPW teams can never face each other. The highest ranked team gets the home advantage. The ranking order is HPW, highest ranked Hoofdklasse (HHK) teams (numbers 13), lowest ranked Hoofdklasse (LHK) teams (numbers 14), MPW and LPW teams. If 2 equally ranked teams face each other, the order in which the 2 teams are drawn decides on the home advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0046-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday\nThe 8 winners of the first round are paired by draw. The highest ranked team gets the home advantage. The ranking order is identical as in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0047-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday\nThe 4 winners of the third round are paired by draw. Matches are played on neutral ground and the 2 winners play next season in the 2019\u201320 Hoofdklasse Sunday leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0048-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday, Results\nMoerse Boys and JOS Watergraafsmeer promoted to the 2019-20 Hoofdklasse Sunday. De Bataven, Vlissingen and Fortuna Wormerveer relegated to the 2019-20 Eerste Klasse Sunday. VKW and Leonidas played an extra match. The other teams remained in the 2019-20 Eerste Klasse Sunday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0049-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday, Extra match\nBecause JVC Cuijk, relegated from the Derde Divisie, decided to stop playing football at top amateur levels completely, due to lack of the necessary funds, an extra spot became available in the Hoofdklasse Sunday leagues. Therefore the two teams who lost in the fourth round of the play-offs were given a second chance. In an extra match, on neutral ground, these teams competed for the spot that became available.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 61], "content_span": [62, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0050-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday, Extra match\nLeonidas maintained in the 2019-20 Hoofdklasse Saturday Sunday. VKW remained in the 2019-20 Eerste Klasse Sunday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 61], "content_span": [62, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0051-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Saturday\nThe numbers 13 and 14 from each of the 2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse Saturday leagues (2 times 2 teams) and 3 (substitute) period winners of each of the 2018\u201319 Eerste Klasse Saturday leagues (5 times 3 teams), making 19 teams, decide in a 3-round single match knockout system, which 3 teams play next season in the 2019\u201320 Hoofdklasse Saturday leagues. The remaining 16 teams play next season in the 2019\u201320 Eerste Klasse Saturday leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0052-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Saturday\nThe 2 highest ranked Hoofdklasse teams (numbers 13) are released from playing the first round. Out of the 2 lowest ranked Hoofdklasse teams (numbers 14) and the 5 highest ranked (substitute) period winners (HPWs), 3 more teams are by draw released from playing the first round. The remaining 14 teams are paired by draw in such a way that, a HK or HPW team will always play a lowest ranked (substitute) period winner (LPW), and the highest ranked team gets the home advantage. The ranking order is HPW, HK, middle ranked (substitute) period winner (MPW) and LPW teams. If 2 equally ranked teams face each other, the order in which the 2 teams are drawn decides on the home advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0053-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Saturday\nThe 7 winners of the first round and the 5 teams released from playing the first round, making 12 teams, are paired by draw. The highest ranked team gets the home advantage. The ranking order is identical as in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0054-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Saturday\nThe 6 winners of the second round are paired by draw. Matches are played on neutral ground and the 3 winners play next season in the 2019\u201320 Hoofdklasse Saturday leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0055-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Saturday, Results\nARC promoted to the 2019-20 Hoofdklasse Saturday. Spijkenisse and DETO Twenterand maintained in the 2019-20 Hoofdklasse Saturday. CSV Apeldoorn and Nootdorp relegated to the 2019-20 Eerste Klasse Saturday. The other teams remained in the 2019-20 Eerste Klasse Saturday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0056-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday\nThe numbers 13 and 14 from each of the 2018\u201319 Hoofdklasse Sunday leagues (2 times 2 teams) and 3 (substitute) period winners of each of the 2018\u201319 Eerste Klasse Sunday leagues (6 times 3 teams), making 22 teams, decide in a 4-round single match knockout system, which 2 teams play next season in the 2019\u201320 Hoofdklasse Sunday leagues. The remaining 20 teams play next season in the 2019\u201320 Eerste Klasse Sunday leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0057-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday\nThe Hoofdklasse teams and 6 highest ranked (substitute) period winners (HPWs) are released from playing the first round. The 12 remaining (substitute) period winners are paired by draw in such a way that, a middle (substitute) period winner (MPW) will always play a lowest ranked (substitute) period winner (LPW). The MPW teams also get the home advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0058-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday\nThe 6 winners of the first round and the 10 teams released from playing the first round, making 16 teams, are paired by draw in such a way that, two HPW teams can never face each other. The highest ranked team gets the home advantage. The ranking order is HPW, highest ranked Hoofdklasse (HHK) teams (numbers 13), lowest ranked Hoofdklasse (LHK) teams (numbers 14), MPW and LPW teams. If 2 equally ranked teams face each other, the order in which the 2 teams are drawn decides on the home advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0059-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday\nThe 8 winners of the first round are paired by draw. The highest ranked team gets the home advantage. The ranking order is identical as in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0060-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday\nThe 4 winners of the third round are paired by draw. Matches are played on neutral ground and the 2 winners play next season in the 2019\u201320 Hoofdklasse Sunday leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0061-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday, Results\nMoerse Boys and JOS Watergraafsmeer promoted to the 2019-20 Hoofdklasse Sunday. De Bataven, Vlissingen and Fortuna Wormerveer relegated to the 2019-20 Eerste Klasse Sunday. VKW and Leonidas played an extra match. The other teams remained in the 2019-20 Eerste Klasse Sunday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0062-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday, Extra match\nBecause JVC Cuijk, relegated from the Derde Divisie, decided to stop playing football at top amateur levels completely, due to lack of the necessary funds, an extra spot became available in the Hoofdklasse Sunday leagues. Therefore the two teams who lost in the fourth round of the play-offs were given a second chance. In an extra match, on neutral ground, these teams competed for the spot that became available.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 61], "content_span": [62, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0063-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, League season, Sunday, Extra match\nLeonidas maintained in the 2019-20 Hoofdklasse Saturday Sunday. VKW remained in the 2019-20 Eerste Klasse Sunday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 61], "content_span": [62, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0064-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, National teams, Netherlands national football team, UEFA Euro 2020 Qualification\nThe fixtures were released by UEFA the same day as the draw, which was held on 2 December 2018 in Dublin. Times are CET/CEST, as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 107], "content_span": [108, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286833-0065-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Dutch football, Diary of the season\nIn May 2019, the referee scored a goal for HSV Hoek against Harkemase Boys in the fourth tier. The goal was all the more noteworthy because it occurred on the last weekend possible before rules changes came into effect from 1 June to stop this kind of activity on the part of the referee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286834-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Egyptian football\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 101st season of competitive association football in Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 139th season of competitive association football in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, National teams, England U-21 national football team, 2019 UEFA European Under-21 Championship\nThe final draw was held on 23 November 2018, 18:00 CET (UTC+1), in Bologna. The 12 teams are drawn into three groups of four teams. Hosts Italy are assigned to position A1 in the draw, while the other teams are seeded according to their coefficient ranking following the end of the qualifying stage, calculated based on the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 122], "content_span": [123, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, National teams, England women's national under-20 football team, 2018 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup\nThe official draw was held on 8 March 2018 at the Rennes Opera House in Rennes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 126], "content_span": [127, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, UEFA competitions, UEFA Champions League, Knockout phase\nThe final was played on 1 June 2019 at the Wanda Metropolitano in Madrid. The \"home\" team (for administrative purposes) was determined by an additional draw held after the quarter-final and semi-final draws. It was the second all-English final in the competition's history and the first since 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 85], "content_span": [86, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, UEFA competitions, UEFA Europa League, Knockout phase\nThe final was played on 29 May 2019 at the Olympic Stadium in Baku. The \"home\" team (for administrative purposes) was determined by an additional draw held after the quarter-final and semi-final draws. It was the second all-English final in the competition's history and the first since 1972, when it was first known as the UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 82], "content_span": [83, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, UEFA competitions, UEFA Youth League, Knockout phase\nThe final was played on 29 April 2019 at Colovray Stadium, Nyon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 81], "content_span": [82, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, Premier League\nIn one of the closest title races since the formation of the Premier League, with a new points total set for finishing second, Manchester City became the first top-flight team in a decade to retain their title in part thanks to a late run that saw them win their last 14 games \u2013 despite falling short in the Champions League, the Sky Blues became the first team in English football to complete a domestic treble, by once again retaining the League Cup and securing their first FA Cup since 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, Premier League\nLiverpool finished second, missing out on ending their wait for a league title once again, despite pushing City all the way to the final day and once again finishing their league campaign unbeaten at Anfield as well as having been top at Christmas; however, it was in Europe that the Reds enjoyed more success as they made it to a second successive Champions League final against the odds, including a stunning 4-0 victory at home to Barcelona - and ultimately made amends for the previous season's loss, winning their sixth European title and their first under manager Jurgen Klopp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, Premier League\nThe battle for the top four also proved to be a close-run battle, with each of Tottenham Hotspur, Arsenal, Chelsea and Manchester United fighting for the last two Champions League spots \u2013 in the end, securing the spots for Europe's elite competition were Chelsea, who also reached the final of the League Cup and won the Europa League to at least ensure a trophy but endured another disappointing league campaign that saw talk of a potential third title in five seasons rapidly fade away in the New Year, and Tottenham Hotspur, who also saw talk of a potential title win diminish owing in part to a poor run of league form from March onwards; however, the North London side more than made up for this by also reaching their first ever Champions League final in a European run that saw them narrowly edge past both Manchester City and Dutch front-runners Ajax, ultimately falling to fellow English side Liverpool in a tight final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 989]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0007-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, Premier League\nArsenal and Manchester United were forced to settle for fifth and sixth respectively, the Gunners missing out on Champions League qualification once again on two different fronts, falling to Chelsea in the Europa League final to mark a disappointing end to Unai Emery's first season in charge, whilst the Red Devils endured a problematic season across all tournaments with even the sacking of manager Jos\u00e9 Mourinho and then the temporary appointment of United legend Ole Gunnar Solskj\u00e6r (an act later made permanent) failing to provide much spark to the Manchester side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, Premier League\nWolverhampton Wanderers enjoyed the best top-flight season for a newly promoted side since Ipswich Town in 2001, finishing 7th; this represented their best finish in the English pyramid since finishing 6th in 1980. 7th was also enough for the Europa League qualifying rounds, and this, added to a run to the semi-finals of the FA Cup - their longest such run in 21 years - earned Portuguese manager Nuno Esp\u00edrito Santo and his team plenty of praise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0008-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, Premier League\nLeicester City endured a troubling season both on and off the pitch, first suffering tragedy with the death of club owner Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha in a helicopter crash shortly after a 1-1 home draw with West Ham United \u2013 with the Foxes then enduring a run of poor results against lesser sides in 2019, including a third-round FA Cup exit at the hands of League Two side Newport County, resulting in the dismissal of manager Claude Puel; however, the appointment of former Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers helped push the club back up the table and to a top-ten finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, Premier League\nWatford finished not far behind the Foxes, also enjoying their greatest top-flight season since finishing 2nd in 1984, the Hornets breaking the 50 point barrier and narrowly missing out on the top ten on top of reaching the final of the FA Cup for the first time in over 30 years, ultimately failing at the hands of Manchester City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0009-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, Premier League\nHaving successfully qualified for the qualifying rounds of the Europa League the previous season, Burnley endured a troublesome first half of the campaign that saw them first narrowly miss out on a Europa League group stage spot and then find themselves firmly in the relegation zone at Christmas; however, the return of influential goalkeeper Tom Heaton after Boxing Day saw the Clarets fight their way out of the bottom three with games to spare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0009-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, Premier League\nA very poor start to the season saw Southampton stuck in a relegation battle for the second season running, resulting in the dismissal of Mark Hughes in early December \u2013 despite the threat of the drop hanging over them until the closing months, a resurgence under former RB Leipzig manager and Austrian Ralph Hasenh\u00fcttl saw the Saints climb away from the bottom three and towards safety with games to spare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, Premier League\nAt the bottom of the table, both Huddersfield Town and Fulham endured early relegations \u2013 the two clubs never really looking like escaping the drop; whilst the Terriers (who arguably found themselves suffering from second season syndrome) saved some face by narrowly avoiding breaking the records for the most defeats and most goals conceded in a 38-game season, the London side fell back into the Championship at the first time of asking in almost similar fashion to their previous top-flight season by having three different managers throughout the campaign and conceding more goals than anyone else.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0010-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, Premier League\nThe fight to avoid the final spot proved to be much closer, with Cardiff City once again falling back into the second tier after just one season \u2013 a consequence of a poor start to the season and several defeats from winnable games, though the Bluebirds at least went down fighting in a season also marked with off-field tragedy, with the death of club record signing Emiliano Sala on his way to joining the team for the first time; in addition, as a result of Cardiff's relegation and Swansea's failure to mount a real promotion charge, it meant that the Premier League would not have a Welsh presence for the first time in eight seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, Championship\nDespite making a slow start to the season on top of losing star player James Maddison to Leicester City in the summer, Norwich City secured their third promotion to the Premier League in eight seasons \u2013 whilst a late run of draws in April threatened to derail the Canaries' hopes, the Norfolk side never looked like falling out of the top two and secured promotion in German head coach Daniel Farke's second season in charge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0011-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, Championship\nThe battle for second place went down to the wire between Yorkshire sides Leeds United and Sheffield United \u2013 but it was ultimately the Blades who won the fight, securing their second promotion in three seasons and returning to the top-flight for the first time since 2007, earning manager Chris Wilder his first taste of the top-flight; as with the previous few seasons, a horrendous late-season run ultimately proved costly to Leeds, to the point where they only even managed to finish as high as third due to West Bromwich Albion failing to win their own final game of the season; both teams were subsequently knocked out in the play-off semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0011-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, Championship\nInstead taking the final promotion spot were Aston Villa in what proved to be a roller coaster campaign, the Villans making amends for their play-off final loss the previous season and ending a three-year absence from the top-flight in Dean Smith's first season as manager - at the expense of Derby County, who none-the-less enjoyed a fantastic season under new manager Frank Lampard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, Championship\nSwansea City's first season in the Championship since 2011 saw them stuck mostly in mid-table \u2013 with growing fan protests off-field towards the running of the club that had seen them relegated resulting in the resignation of the Swans' long-time chairman Huw Jenkins in early 2019. Likewise, having been widely tipped to win promotion back to the top-flight at the first attempt, Stoke City endured a largely mediocre league season that saw them fight more to avoid relegation rather than win promotion, draw a staggering 22 times and change managers twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0012-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, Championship\nHaving made a strong start to their league season, a collapse in form nearly saw Wigan Athletic relegated from the second tier for the third time in five seasons; however, the Manchester-based club recovered enough in the second half of the season to escape the drop and ensure a second successive season on the second level of league football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, Championship\nAfter 17 consecutive seasons in the second tier and a succession of mid-table finishes, Ipswich Town's luck finally gave out and they endured relegation to the third tier for the first time in 62 years, the Tractor Boys never really looking like escaping the drop after falling to the foot of the table in early October and with only five wins all season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0013-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, Championship\nBolton Wanderers finished just above them, falling back into League One on Good Friday after two seasons and in a campaign full of struggle both on and off the pitch, amid severe financial problems on top of nearly having their last run of home games cancelled altogether (and then actually having their last home game against Brentford cancelled); to make matters worse, the Trotters were then forced into administration after the season ended, becoming the first club to have the increased 12-point deduction imposed on them for the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0013-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, Championship\nTaking the final spot were Rotherham United, who gave themselves a decent chance of escaping the drop, but eventually fell back into the third tier for the second time in three seasons, the Yorkshire club ultimately being let down once again by their atrocious away record - just one win on the road, and one win in their last 48 second tier away games - and a failure to turn any one of their 16 draws into wins or take advantage of their relegation rivals slipping up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, League One\nIn one of the most remarkable campaigns of the season and in spite of losing influential manager Nathan Jones to Stoke City in January, Luton Town defied their critics and stormed their way to promotion for the second season running, returning to the Championship for the first time since 2007 and going up as champions \u2013 whilst remaining unbeaten at their home ground in the league for the entire season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0014-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, League One\nThe fight for the second spot went all the way to the penultimate game with Barnsley, Football League Trophy winners Portsmouth and Sunderland fighting it out; the spot ultimately went to Barnsley, who secured an immediate return to the second-tier in German head coach Daniel Stendel's first season in charge, also impressing with an unbeaten league home record as well. Taking the final promotion place were Charlton Athletic, who dramatically scored in the last minute of normal time against Sunderland in the playoff final to end a 3-year exile from the Championship and consign the Black Cats to another season in League One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, League One\nDespite being widely tipped for a top-six finish, Burton Albion endured a largely mixed season that saw them in the bottom half of the table more often than the top, failing to really challenge for an immediate return to the second tier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0015-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, League One\nBlackpool's league season proved to be mediocre, with the Lancashire club failing to mount a real promotion challenge but also not being remotely threatened with relegation \u2013 however, it was off the pitch that proved to be more important for the Seasiders, with the removal of Owen Oyston after over 30 years as owner and after years of fan protests and legal battles with former chairman Val\u0113rijs Beloko\u0146s, an act widely celebrated by Blackpool fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0015-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, League One\nDespite making a reasonable start to their first ever season in the third tier, Accrington Stanley endured a sharp drop in form after the new year, with only a run of late wins pushing the side away from the threat of relegation \u2013 still a remarkable effort for the Lancashire side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, League One\nThe second half of the season saw one of the tightest relegation battles in the history of the third tier, with 12 teams remaining in the mix from January onwards \u2013 but ultimately, it was Bradford City, Scunthorpe United, Walsall and Plymouth Argyle who fell into League Two; whilst Bradford's relegation came just two years after narrowly missing out on promotion to the Championship and in a season where they had three different managers and Scunthorpe United fell back into the fourth tier after five years in League One, Walsall had actually spent the first couple of weeks challenging for promotion before results rapidly declined and Plymouth Argyle again looked like masterminding an unlikely escape from the drop like they had done the previous campaign, only for results to go against them in the final games of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 889]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0016-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, League One\nHaving been in bottom position for nearly the entire season and 10 points from avoiding relegation after 31 games, a late run of 7 wins and 27 points in their last 15 games ensured that AFC Wimbledon would remain in League One for a fourth consecutive campaign, narrowly surviving on goal difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, League Two\nJust two seasons after returning to the Football League as fifth tier champions and only one year after victory in the Football League Trophy, Lincoln City ended their season with another success to their name with promotion to League One and earning their first promotion to the third tier in over 20 years \u2013 despite the closeness of the promotion race, the Lincolnshire side remained in the top two for practically the entire season and mathematically secured first place on Easter Monday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0017-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, League Two\nThe race for the remaining automatic promotions was a close-ran battle between Mansfield Town, Bury and Milton Keynes Dons; Bury were the second team to ensure promotion, returning to League One at the first attempt, whilst Milton Keynes Dons took the final spot in the last game of the campaign in a winner-takes-all match against Mansfield Town, also securing an immediate return to the third tier and finally giving new manager Paul Tisdale promotion after two unsuccessful play-off final attempts with Exeter City. Taking the final spot through the play-offs were Tranmere Rovers, whose return to the Football League saw the North West club successfully challenge for a second consecutive promotion, winning out against Newport County in the final at Wembley in the dying seconds of extra-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 854]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, League Two\nDespite narrowly missing out on ending a 32-year exile from the third tier, Newport County enjoyed what proved to be a great season; having looking like missing out on the play-offs altogether, the Welsh side made a late rally and edged their way into the top seven in their final game, a big achievement in a season where they also enjoyed an impressive FA Cup run that saw them make it to the fifth round \u2013 beating top-flight Leicester City and second-tier promotion-chasers Middlesbrough \u2013 before ultimately falling to Manchester City at Rodney Parade. Oldham Athletic made a strong start to their season before results rapidly fell aware and they fell into mid-table, with not even the appointment of former player Paul Scholes as manager (who then promptly resigned after 7 games) having much impact on the Latics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 875]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, League Two\nIn spite of having made a very poor start on their return to the Football League and then only narrowly avoiding breaking the record for the longest winless run, Macclesfield Town defied their critics and scraped their way to safety, in parts thanks to the surprise appointment of former England defender Sol Campbell as manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0019-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, League Two\nSuffering relegation instead were Yeovil Town and Notts County \u2013 the Glovers falling out of the Football League just six years after winning promotion to the Championship and sixteen years after entering the fourth tier for the first time, a strong start to the season rapidly falling away in stunning fashion and the Magpies becoming the oldest club in English football to fall into non-league football, having been a member of the Football League since its inception 131 years previously and having never fallen out of the fourth tier before. This also made them the first of the Football League's founder members to suffer automatic relegation from the league, albeit with several of the others having lost (and later regained) their places under the previous election system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 835]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, National League Top Division\nIn one of the tightest promotion races in the history of the fifth tier and just two seasons after their spectacular fall into non-league football, Leyton Orient finally returned to the Football League, never looking like falling out of the promotion race and narrowly edging the automatic promotion spot in manager Justin Edinburgh's first full season as manager; the season ended in tragedy, however, following Edinburgh's death from cardiac arrest the following month. In their first season in the fifth tier, Salford City narrowly missed out on automatic promotion - but made up for it by winning the play-offs, earning promotion to League Two and the Football League for the first time in their 79-year history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 73], "content_span": [74, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, National League Top Division\nDespite languishing near the bottom of the table for most of the season, a late surge in results saved Dover Athletic, while Chesterfield almost suffered a third consecutive relegation after a long winless run in the league stretching from August to December, before the appointment of veteran manager John Sheridan in the new year helped the club find form and move away from the bottom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 73], "content_span": [74, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Men's football, National League Top Division\nAt the bottom of the table, all four relegated teams were confirmed with at least three games to go \u2013 Aldershot Town, Braintree Town, Havant and Waterlooville and Maidstone United. While both Braintree and Havant suffered immediate relegation back to the National League South, the second time in three seasons for the former, Aldershot Town's relegation came only six seasons after they had dropped out of League Two. Maidstone United had played at the highest level of the National League for three years. However, Aldershot were granted a reprieve from relegation when Gateshead were demoted two divisions (later reduced to one on appeal) for breaching the league's financial regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 73], "content_span": [74, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Managerial changes\nThis is a list of changes of managers within English league football:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n3 August 2018: The first match of the Football League season pits Frank Lampard's Derby County against Reading. Jon Dadi Bodvarsson scores the first goal of the new season, but goals from Chelsea loanee Mason Mount and an injury-time winner from Tom Lawrence gives the Rams a 2\u20131 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n4 August 2018: The first Saturday of the Football League season sees newly relegated West Brom lose 2\u20131 to a Bolton Wanderers side who were nearly relegated themselves last year. Among other Championship action, newly-promoted Wigan defeat Sheffield Wednesday 3\u20132, and Graham Potter makes a winning start as Swansea manager by beating Sheffield United 2\u20131 away. In League One, Sunderland come from behind to defeat Charlton 2\u20131 in their first game at this level in 30 years, and in League Two, Swindon Town stun newly-promoted Macclesfield 3\u20132 with two stoppage-time penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n6 August 2018: Blackpool manager Gary Bowyer becomes the first managerial casualty of the new season when handing in his resignation after just one game played. The Seasiders had travelled to Wycombe Wanderers for their season opener just a few days before and shared out a goalless draw in Buckinghamshire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n31 August 2018: The first month of the new season sees Liverpool leading the Premier League on goal difference; three games in, the Merseysiders, Tottenham Hotspur, Chelsea, and Watford all hold 100% records. Reigning champions Manchester City are in fifth, ahead of Bournemouth on goal difference, and Leicester City are seventh. West Ham United, the only Premier League team without a point, prop up the table. Newcastle United and Southampton are clear ahead of Burnley and Huddersfield Town in the relegation zone on goal difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0027-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\nNone of the teams relegated from the Premier League last season - Swansea City, West Bromwich Albion, and Stoke City - have managed to join the Championship promotion race yet and stand 10th, 11th, and 17th respectively. Leeds United and Middlesbrough take an early lead in the Championship and stand three points clear of third-placed Bolton Wanderers. Aston Villa, newly-promoted Blackburn Rovers, Derby County, and Sheffield United hold fourth to seventh place on 9 points each, with Derby only ahead of United because of alphabetical order. Reading (23rd) and Ipswich Town share joint bottom, while Birmingham City stand above Queens Park Rangers out of the relegation zone on goal difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n30 September 2018: September closes with Manchester City leading Liverpool at the top of the Premier League, with goal difference still the margin between the leaders. Chelsea are third, Spurs and Arsenal are contesting fourth, and Watford and Bournemouth complete the top seven. Newcastle, Cardiff, and Huddersfield (20th) stand in the relegation zone with 2 points each. Championship top scorers West Brom have seized the lead in the second division, and stand a point in front of Leeds, Middlesbrough, and Sheffield United. Norwich City are fifth, and Brentford hold sixth over Swansea, Wigan Athletic, and Derby on goal difference. Preston North End have fallen to the bottom of the table, a point behind Millwall and Ipswich.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n27 October 2018: Following a draw with West Ham United, Leicester City chairman Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha's helicopter crashed in a car park outside of King Power Stadium, Leicester City's home stadium. None of the five passengers survived, including Srivaddhanaprabha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n31 October 2018: As Halloween arrives, the top seven remains unchanged, save for Spurs and Arsenal exchanging places. Goal difference continues to be the difference between Manchester City and Liverpool. Cardiff have climbed out of the relegation zone, ahead of Fulham on goal difference, Newcastle have dropped to 19th, and Huddersfield remain bottom. Sheffield United have seized the lead of a congested Championship, with Leeds still second with two points less than their Yorkshire rivals. Middlesbrough and Norwich are behind Leeds only on goal difference, with West Brom and Derby two points behind them. However, six other teams are all within 3 points of the play-off places, including newly-promoted Blackburn and early strugglers QPR. Ipswich return to the foot of the table, 3 points behind Hull City (23rd) and Reading.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 880]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n30 November 2018: Manchester City now hold a two-point lead over Liverpool, despite both teams remaining unbeaten. Spurs have climbed above Chelsea, who have only won 3 of their past 8 league games. Arsenal are fifth, 5 points clear of Everton, and it appears increasingly likely those 5 teams will be the contenders for Champions League qualification. Despite winning only once in November, Manchester United have climbed to 7th. Improved form has seen Newcastle and Huddersfield escape the bottom 3, and now Southampton (19th)and Fulham are joint bottom, with Burnley below Crystal Palace on goal difference to stand 18th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0031-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\nA competitive promotion race continues to gather pace in the Championship, with 3 points separating Norwich (1st), Leeds, Middlesbrough, West Brom, and Sheffield United (5th). Nottingham Forest have claimed 6th place ahead of arch-rivals Derby on goal difference. Despite appointing former Norwich boss Paul Lambert as manager, Ipswich remain bottom, 6 points adrift of safety. Reading (20th) and Millwall are out of the relegation zone ahead of Hull and Bolton on goal difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n8 December 2018: Manchester City lose 2\u20130 at Chelsea, resulting their first defeat of the season. This also meant that Liverpool go top of the league after defeating Bournemouth 4\u20130 away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0033-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n18 December 2018: Jos\u00e9 Mourinho is sacked as manager of Manchester United after a poor start to the season left them in seventh place, nineteen points behind rivals Liverpool. Former Manchester United player Ole Gunnar Solskj\u00e6r takes over as caretaker manager until the end of the season, on loan from Norwegian club Molde.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0034-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n31 December 2018: 2018 ends with defending champions Manchester City dropping points and losing to Chelsea, Crystal Palace and Leicester City to give Liverpool a 7 point gap lead after winning every game in December. Tottenham Hotspur remains third despite losing to Arsenal and Wolverhampton Wanderers, and Chelsea drop to fourth, despite defeating Manchester City. Arsenal stays at fifth, and Ole Gunnar Solskj\u00e6r's Manchester United rise to sixth in the table. In the Championship, Leeds United have a 3 point lead at the top above second-place Norwich City. West Bromwich Albion, Sheffield United, Middlesbrough and Derby County complete the promotion play off spots, with Middlesbrough ahead of Derby County only on goal difference. Ipswich Town remain bottom of the table, 5 points behind 23rd placed Reading and 7 points behind 22nd placed Rotherham United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 912]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0035-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n3 January 2019: The last undefeated team in England's top five divisions, Liverpool, lose 2\u20131 to Manchester City, preserving Arsenal's Invincibles record from the 2003\u201304 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0036-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n11 January 2019: A spy was discovered at Derby County\u2019s training ground before their game at Leeds. The whites won 2-0 later on the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0037-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n21 January 2019: Cardiff City's record signing, Emiliano Sala was on board a Piper Malibu that disappeared near Alderney in the Channel Islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0038-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n31 January 2019: The first month of 2019 concludes with Liverpool still top of the Premier League, though now only 5 points ahead of Manchester City. Spurs remain third, while Arsenal climb to fourth, with 2 points and a +4 goal difference the margin between them, Chelsea, and Manchester United. Wolves' return to the top flight continues to be a successful once as the Midlanders stand 7th, though only 4 points separate them from West Ham in 12th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0038-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\nHuddersfield are rooted to the foot of the table, 12 points adrift of 17th-placed Burnley, and look destined for a return to the Championship. Fulham (19th) and Cardiff are also some distance from safety. A tier below, Leeds still hold their 3-point buffer over Norwich. The top six in unchanged, except for Sheffield United climbing above West Brom. Meanwhile, Ipswich are still stuck at rock bottom, Reading are now in 22nd, a point behind Rotherham, and Bolton has dropped to 23rd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0039-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n22 February 2019: Chelsea are handed a transfer embargo by FIFA for the next two transfer windows for breaching rules in relation to youth players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0040-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n24 February 2019: Leicester City sack Claude Puel after losing 4\u20131 to Crystal Palace at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0041-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n24 February 2019: Manchester City win the EFL Cup 4\u20133 on penalties against Chelsea. The final was overshadowed by Kepa Arrizabalaga refusing to be subbed out by Maurizio Sarri.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0042-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n28 February 2019: Liverpool's lead has been cut to 1 point by Manchester City as February ends. Consecutive losses for Tottenham have thwarted their title ambitions and it now appears that they are in a race for Champions League qualification, with Arsenal, Manchester United and Chelsea all within 7 points of them. Wolves continue to hold the coveted 7th place, with Watford behind them only on goal difference. The bottom 3 remains unchanged, though Southampton and Brighton & Hove Albion are not far away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0042-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\nNorwich are now 2 points in front of the Championship title race, Leeds dropping to 3rd behind Sheffield United on goal difference. West Brom and Middlesbrough continue their play-off chase, but now they are joined by Bristol City in 6th, following a run of 7 wins in a row. Reading and Rotherham swap positions in an otherwise unchanged relegation zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0043-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n3 March 2019: Liverpool\u2019s 0\u20130 draw with Everton in the Merseyside derby, coupled with Manchester City\u2019s win at Bournemouth a day earlier, means that The Reds are not top of the League for the first time since December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0044-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n9 March 2019: West Brom, 4th in the Championship, sack Darren Moore after drawing 1\u20131 with bottom-club Ipswich.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0045-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n10 March 2019: Jack Grealish is punched by a Birmingham City supporter during the Second City derby. Grealish scores the winner later on as Aston Villa won 1\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0046-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n17 March 2019: Liverpool win 2\u20131 at Fulham to go top again, but City now have a game in hand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0047-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n22 March 2019: Birmingham City were given a 9-point penalty deduction for breaching Financial rules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0048-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n30 March 2019: Huddersfield Town become the first side in the top four divisions of English football to be relegated this season, after losing 2\u20130 to Crystal Palace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0049-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n31 March: Liverpool\u2019s late victory over Tottenham puts them top of the league again by 2 points, but Manchester City still have a game in hand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0050-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n31 March 2019: As April arises, Liverpool remain top of the Premier League, but now have played a game more than Manchester City, who have the Manchester derby as their game in hand. Spurs, now very vulnerable, and Manchester United, now appointed Ole Gunnar Solkjaer permanently, complete the top four. Leicester, now managed by Brendan Rodgers, are closer to 7th placed Wolves and are alongside Watford for the race for that place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0050-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\nHuddersfield have become the second ever side (first since Derby in 2008) to get relegated from the Premier League before the end of March, and Fulham look likely in joining them in the Championship. Only Cardiff City have a realistic chance of surviving, while Burnley, Southampton, and Brighton aren\u2019t safe yet. In the Championship, Norwich remain top, but Leeds reclaim 2nd place from Sheffield United after the Blades lost 3\u20132 at home to Bristol City and Leeds beat Millwall 3\u20132. Managerless West Brom were not too far off for promotion, but would have to hope both Yorkshire sides drop points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0050-0002", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\nMiddlesbrough have had a rotten month after losing nearly all of their matches in March, resulting them being outside the top six for the first time in 7 months. Aston Villa, meanwhile, have had a perfect March as their 5 wins in a row saw them in the playoffs for the first time since August. Completing the top six were Derby. The bottom three were still unchanged, but Ipswich look likely to go out of the Championship. Millwall are also in real danger of being sucked into the relegation zone, while Reading are now above the dotted line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0051-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n2 April 2019: Fulham join Huddersfield into the Championship after a 4\u20131 loss to Watford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0052-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n3 April 2019: The new Tottenham Hotspur Stadium finally hosts a football match as Crystal Palace became the first visitors to Spurs\u2019 new ground. Heung-Ming Son was the first goalscorer on the new stadium as Tottenham won 2\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0053-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n13 April: With promotion rivals, Mansfield and MK Dons dropping points, Lincoln City became the first EFL team to achieve promotion thanks to a 1\u20131 draw with Cheltenham. On the same day, Ipswich were relegated to the 3rd tier for the first time since 1957 after drawing 1\u20131 with Birmingham City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0054-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n19 April 2019: Bolton are relegated to League One after losing 2\u20130 to Aston Villa, who were on a club equalling 9 wins in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0055-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n22 April 2019: Aston Villa, who won 10 games in a row for the first time ever, and West Brom confirm their places in the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0056-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n24 April 2019: Manchester City defeat United 2\u20130 in the derby to go top again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0057-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n26 April 2019: The Football League confirm that the EFL Championship game between Bolton Wanderers and Brentford, scheduled to take place the following day at the University of Bolton Stadium, has been postponed due to a PFA approved strike by the Bolton players over unpaid wages owed to them by owner Ken Anderson. It is the first case of a game being postponed due to industrial action by the players in the 131-year history of the Football League. The EFL later confirmed Wanderers must fulfill their remaining fixtures against Brentford and Nottingham Forest, even if it means using U23 or U18 players. Few days later, on 3 May, Brentford were awarded a 1-0 win by the EFL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0058-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n27 April 2019: Rotherham are relegated after a year being promoted as they lost 2\u20131 at West Brom and Millwall drew with Stoke City. At the top, Sheffield United are all but promoted to the Premier League after a 2\u20130 win against relegated Ipswich. A few hours later, Norwich confirmed theirs with a 2\u20131 home victory over Blackburn. In the National League, Leyton Orient return to the EFL after drawing 0\u20130 with Braintree.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0059-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n28 April 2018: Leeds\u2019 1\u20131 draw with Aston Villa confirms Sheffield United\u2019s promotion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0060-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n30 April 2019: Luton Town and Barnsley are promoted without kicking a ball after Portsmouth and Sunderland both lost their games in hand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0061-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n4 May 2019: Cardiff are relegated to the Championship after losing 3\u20132 to Crystal Palace at home. This meant that the Premier League would be all English for the first time since 2011. Elsewhere, Liverpool win 3\u20132 at Newcastle to push the title race to the final day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0062-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n5 May 2019: Derby County beat Middlesbrough to the final playoff spot by defeating West Brom 3\u20131 on the final day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0063-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n6 May 2019: Vincent Kompany scores a rocket of a goal as Manchester City defeat Leicester to go to the final day top of the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0064-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n12 May 2019: Manchester City win the Premier League after defeating Brighton 4\u20131 away, despite going behind and Liverpool winning 2\u20130 against Wolverhampton Wanderers. City become the first team to defend the title and win the league away from home since the 2008-09 and 2007-08 seasons respectively and also become the 13th team to do so to do the aforementioned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0065-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n18 May 2019: Manchester City complete the first ever English domestic quadruple of trophies (the Premier League, FA Cup, EFL Cup and Community Shield) by winning the FA Cup final at Wembley Stadium by beating Watford 6\u20130. That matches the record set by Bury against Derby County (also 6\u20130) as the biggest win margin in the final of the competition's history, back in 1903. This confirms next season's FA Community Shield to be between treble winners City and league runners-up Liverpool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286835-0066-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in English football, Diary of the season\n1 June 2019: In the second ever all English UEFA Champions League final, Liverpool defeats Tottenham Hotspur 2\u20130 to win their sixth European Cup/UEFA Champions League and their first trophy since winning the EFL Cup in 2011-12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286836-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in French football\nThe following article is a summary of the 2018\u201319 football season in France, which was the 85th season of competitive football in the country and runs from July 2018 to June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286836-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in French football, UEFA competitions, UEFA Women's Champions League, Knockout phase\nThe final was played on 18 May 2019 at the Groupama Arena in Budapest. The \"home\" team for the final (for administrative purposes) was determined by an additional draw held after the quarter-final and semi-final draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 92], "content_span": [93, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286837-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in German football\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 109th season of competitive football in Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286837-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in German football, League season, Men, Bundesliga\n2\u20132 on aggregate. Union Berlin won on away goals and are promoted to the Bundesliga, while VfB Stuttgart are relegated to the 2. Bundesliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286837-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in German football, League season, Men, 2. Bundesliga\n4\u20134 on aggregate. Wehen Wiesbaden won on away goals and are promoted to the 2. Bundesliga, while FC Ingolstadt are relegated to the 3. Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 61], "content_span": [62, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286838-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Honduran football\nThe 2018\u201319 season is the 71st season of competitive association football in Honduras.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286839-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Indian football, National teams, India women's national football team, 2020 AFC Olympic Qualifying Tournatment\nThough India won first two matches against Indonesia and Nepal and was able to draw against Myanmar but due to Myanmar's goal difference is greater than that of India's, India could not move to the third round of the qualification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 121], "content_span": [122, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286840-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Italian football\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 117th season of competitive football in Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286840-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Italian football, National teams, Men, Italy national football team\nThe previous season, on 13 November 2017, Italy failed to qualify for the 2018 FIFA World Cup after a 1\u20130 aggregate loss to Sweden for the first time since the 1958 FIFA World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 78], "content_span": [79, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286841-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Libyan football\nThe 2018\u201319 season is the 46th season of competitive association football in Libya.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286842-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Pakistani football\nThe 2018\u201319 season will be the 71st in Pakistani football. It was the first season in Pakistan football after FIFA lifted its ban on Pakistan from all footballing activities which was implemented on 10 October 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286843-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Polish football\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 94th season of competitive football in Poland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286844-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Portuguese futsal, Men's futsal, Campeonato Nacional da I Divis\u00e3o\nThe 2018-19 season of the Campeonato Nacional da I Divis\u00e3o de Futsal will be the 29th season of top-tier futsal in Portugal. It will be named Liga Sport Zone for sponsorship reasons. The regular season started on September 15, 2018, and will end in April 2019. After the end of the regular season, the top eight teams will play the championship playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 76], "content_span": [77, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286844-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Portuguese futsal, Men's futsal, Campeonato Nacional da I Divis\u00e3o\nViseu 2001 and El\u00e9ctrico FC will participate for the first time in their history in the Liga Portuguesa de Futsal after being promoted from the II Divis\u00e3o de Futsal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 76], "content_span": [77, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286845-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Scottish football\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Tassedethe (talk | contribs) at 19:35, 17 July 2021 (v2.04 - Repaired 1 link to disambiguation page - (You can help) - Jim Brogan (footballer)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286845-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Scottish football\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 122nd season of competitive football in Scotland. The domestic season began on 14 July 2018, with the first round of matches in the 2018\u201319 Scottish League Cup. The 2018\u201319 Scottish Professional Football League season commenced on 4 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286845-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Scottish football, Transfer deals\nCeltic sold striker Moussa Demb\u00e9l\u00e9 to Lyon for \u20ac22 million (about \u00a319.7 million), a record transfer fee received by a Scottish club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286845-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Scottish football, League competitions, SPFL Reserve League\nIn 2018, the Development League was abolished and replaced by a reserve team competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 70], "content_span": [71, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286845-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Scottish football, Scottish clubs in Europe, Celtic\nCeltic started in the first qualifying round of the 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, and were drawn against Armenian club Alashkert.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 62], "content_span": [63, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286845-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Scottish football, Scottish clubs in Europe, Celtic\nHaving lost in the third qualifying round of the Champions League, Celtic dropped into the play-off round of the 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 62], "content_span": [63, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286845-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Scottish football, Scottish clubs in Europe, Celtic\nCeltic finished second in Group B, and progressed to the knockout rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 62], "content_span": [63, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286845-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Scottish football, Scottish clubs in Europe, Aberdeen\nHaving finished second in the 2017\u201318 Scottish Premiership, Aberdeen started in the second qualifying round of the 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 64], "content_span": [65, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286845-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Scottish football, Scottish clubs in Europe, Rangers\nRangers started in the first qualifying round of the 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, where they were drawn to play Macedonian club Shkupi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286845-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Scottish football, Scottish clubs in Europe, Hibernian\nHibernian started in the first qualifying round of the 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League, and were paired with Faroese club Runav\u00edk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 65], "content_span": [66, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286845-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Scottish football, Women's football, UEFA Women's Champions League, Glasgow City\nGlasgow City entered the Champions League in the qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 91], "content_span": [92, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286845-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Scottish football, Women's football, Scotland women's national team\nWith a 2\u20131 win against Albania in the final round of group fixtures, Scotland qualified for their first World Cup finals tournament by winning UEFA Group 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 78], "content_span": [79, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286846-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Spanish football\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 117th season of competitive association football in Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286846-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Spanish football, UEFA competitions, 2018\u201319 UEFA Women's Champions League, Knockout phase\nThe final was played on 18 May 2019 at the Groupama Arena in Budapest. The \"home\" team for the final (for administrative purposes) was determined by an additional draw held after the quarter-final and semi-final draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 101], "content_span": [102, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286847-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Swiss football\nThe following is a summary of the 2018\u201319 season of competitive football in Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286848-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Turkish football\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 114th season of competitive football in Turkey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286849-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Ukrainian football\nThe 2018\u201319 season was the 28th season of competitive association football in Ukraine since dissolution of the Soviet Union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286849-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Ukrainian football, Men's club football\nNote: For all scratched clubs, see section Clubs removed for more details", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286849-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Ukrainian football, Men's club football, Premier League\nTeams that placed 10th and 11th in the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian Premier League play two-leg play-off with the second and third teams of the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian First League. The draw for play-offs took place on 24 May 2019 and the games will be played on 4 and 8 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286849-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Ukrainian football, Men's club football, Second leg\nKolos Kovalivka won 2\u20130 on aggregate and were promoted to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Chornomorets Odesa were relegated to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286849-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Ukrainian football, Men's club football, Second leg\nKarpaty Lviv won 3\u20130 on aggregate and retained their spot in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Premier League. Volyn Lutsk remained in the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286849-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Ukrainian football, Men's club football, Second leg\nDue to fan violence at the game and attack on referee, the original score 1\u20133 was scratched and replaced with technical score 0\u20133 loss to Volyn and win for Karpaty. Additionally, the Lutsk department of police started criminal proceedings on the fact of intentional damage to property during the game by the Karpaty fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286849-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Ukrainian football, Men's club football, League 1\nThe drawing for relegation playoff took place on 20 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286849-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Ukrainian football, Men's club football, Second leg\nAhrobiznes Volochysk won 4\u20131 on aggregate and has preserved its berth for the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League. Metalurh Zaporizhia has kept its berth for the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Second League, but later gained promotion due to withdrawal of Arsenal-Kyiv from professional ranks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286849-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Ukrainian football, Men's club football, Second leg\nCherkashchyna-Akademiya won 7\u20131 on aggregate and was promoted to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian First League. PFC Sumy was relegated to the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Second League. Later following the PFL Conference PFC Sumy were excluded from professional competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286849-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Ukrainian football, Men's club football, League 2\nOn 7 May 2019 it was announced that the final game between group winners of the Second League will take place in Kropyvnytskyi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286849-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Ukrainian football, Men's club football, League 2\nKremin Kremenchuk are crowned Champions of the Ukrainian Second League for the 2018\u201319 season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286849-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Ukrainian football, Women's club football\nNote: For all scratched clubs, see section Clubs removed for more details", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286849-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Ukrainian football, Women's club football, Higher League\nThe drawing for relegation playoff took place on 13 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286849-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Ukrainian football, Women's club football, Higher League\nZlahoda-Dnipro-1 won on walkover and has preserved its berth in the Ukrainian Women's League. SC Vyshneve withdrew from league competitions. Later SC Dnipro-1 informed the Ukrainian Association of Football that it will not field its female team next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286849-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 in Ukrainian football, Managerial changes\nThis is a list of managerial changes among Ukrainian professional football clubs (top two leagues):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286850-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 national figure skating championships\nNational figure skating championships of the 2018\u201319 season are taking place mainly between December 2018 and January 2019. They are held to crown national champions and may serve as part of the selection process for international events such as the 2019 ISU Figure Skating Championships and the 2019 Winter Universiade. Medals may be awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing. A few countries chose to organize their national championships together with their neighbors; the results were subsequently divided into national podiums.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286851-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 snooker season\nThe 2018\u201319 snooker season was a series of professional snooker tournaments played between 10\u00a0May\u00a02018 and 6\u00a0May\u00a02019. The season was made up of ranking tournaments, non-ranking tournaments and variant tournaments. In total, 46 events were competed in the 2018\u201319 season, beginning with the pro\u2013am 2018 Vienna Open, and ending with the 2019 World Snooker Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286851-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 snooker season\nTo be eligible to play in most tournaments, players had to have qualified to play on the World Snooker Tour, however, some wildcard former professional, and amateur players were eligible in certain competitions. The season also saw four events strictly for over 40s, as a part of the World Seniors Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286851-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 snooker season, Players\nThe Main Tour consists of 128 professional players for the 2018/2019 season. The top 64 players from the prize money rankings after the 2018 World Championship and the 34 players earning a two-year card the previous year (excluding Lyu Haotian, who already climbed into the top 64 of the world rankings following the first year of his two-year tour card) automatically qualified for the season. Next, eight places were allocated from the top 8 on the One Year Ranking List, who had not already qualified for the Main Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286851-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u201319 snooker season, Players\nAnother two players came from the EBSA Qualifying Tour Play-Offs, two players came from the CBSA China Tour and a further 12 places were available through the Q School (four Event 1 winners, four Event 2 winners, and four Event 3 winners). The six remaining entries on to the tour were allocated from the international amateur events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286851-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 snooker season, Players\nDue to the disputes between the IBSF and the WPBSA, the WPBSA decided that the winners of the tournaments organised by the IBSF or any continental confederations which were not affiliated to the World Snooker Federation would not be awarded tour cards. The only exception was the IBSF World Under-21 Snooker Championship, which had been concluded before the decision was made.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286851-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 snooker season, Players, New professional players\nAll players listed below received a tour card for two seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 57], "content_span": [58, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286851-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 snooker season, Calendar\nThe following table outlines the dates and results for all the ranking and major invitational events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286852-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 \u00dajpest FC season\nThe 2018\u201319 season will be \u00dajpest FC's 138th competitive season, 127nd consecutive season in the OTP Bank Liga and 126th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286852-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 \u00dajpest FC season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286852-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 \u00dajpest FC season, Squad, Out on loan\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286853-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 \u00darvalsdeild karla (basketball)\nThe 2018\u201319 \u00darvalsdeild karla was the 68th season of the \u00darvalsdeild karla, the top tier men's basketball league in Iceland. The season started on 4 October 2018 and ended on 4 May 2019. KR won its sixt title in a row by defeating \u00cdR 3\u20132 in the Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286853-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 \u00darvalsdeild karla (basketball), Competition format\nThe participating teams first played a conventional round-robin schedule with every team playing each opponent once home and once away for a total of 22 games. The top eight teams qualified for the championship playoffs whilst the two last qualified were relegated to Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 58], "content_span": [59, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286853-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 \u00darvalsdeild karla (basketball), Playoffs\nThe playoffs are played between the eight first qualified teams with a 1-1-1-1-1 format, playing seeded teams games 1, 3 and 5 at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286854-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 \u00darvalsdeild kvenna (basketball)\nThe 2018\u201319 \u00darvalsdeild kvenna was the 62nd season of the \u00darvalsdeild kvenna, the top tier women's basketball league on Iceland. The season started on 3 October 2018 and concluded on 27 April 2019 with Valur winning their first title after beating Keflav\u00edk 3\u20130 in the \u00darvalsdeild finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286854-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 \u00darvalsdeild kvenna (basketball), Competition format\nThe participating teams first play a conventional round-robin schedule with every team playing each opponent twice \"home\" and twice \"away\" for a total of 28 games. The top four teams qualify for the championship playoffs whilst the bottom team will be relegated to 1. deild kvenna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286854-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 \u00darvalsdeild kvenna (basketball), Playoffs\nThe playoffs are played between the four first qualified teams with a 1-1-1-1-1 format, playing seeded teams games 1, 3 and 5 at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286855-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 \u0130stanbul Ba\u015fak\u015fehir F.K. season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was \u0130stanbul Ba\u015fak\u015fehir's fifth consecutive season in the S\u00fcper Lig and their 29th year in existence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286855-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 \u0130stanbul Ba\u015fak\u015fehir F.K. season, Season summary\nBa\u015fak\u015fehir sat at the top of the S\u00fcper Lig table for most of the season and the club looked to be on their way to clinching their first major trophy before losing out to city rivals Galatasaray following defeat to the same club in May 2020. Playmaker Edin Vi\u0161\u0107a was named the S\u00fcper Lig player of the season at the end of season awards ceremony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286855-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 \u0130stanbul Ba\u015fak\u015fehir F.K. 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-00286855-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 \u0130stanbul Ba\u015fak\u015fehir F.K. season, Squad, U21 players\nOnly professional players and/or players with first team numbers are listed. 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, 59], "content_span": [60, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286855-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 \u0130stanbul Ba\u015fak\u015fehir F.K. 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286855-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 \u0130stanbul Ba\u015fak\u015fehir F.K. season, Squad, Other players under contract\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, 76], "content_span": [77, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286855-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 \u0130stanbul Ba\u015fak\u015fehir F.K. season, Competitions, S\u00fcper Lig, Positions by round\nThe following table represents Ba\u015fak\u015fehir's positions after each round in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 84], "content_span": [85, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286856-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 \u015al\u0105sk Wroc\u0142aw season\nThe 2018\u201319 Ekstraklasa season was \u015al\u0105sk's 73rd since their creation, and their 11th continuous season in the top league of Polish football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286856-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 \u015al\u0105sk Wroc\u0142aw season\nThe season covered the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286856-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 \u015al\u0105sk Wroc\u0142aw 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-00286857-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 \u0160K Slovan Bratislava season\nThe 2018\u201319 season was \u0160K Slovan Bratislava's 13th consecutive in the top flight of Slovak football. After five years, Slovan managed to win the league title. Having won the 2017\u201318 Slovak Cup, Slovan were the defending champions, but they were eliminated after the first match due to breaching the rules of the competition. Slovan also competed in the UEFA Europa League, but they were eliminated in the third qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286857-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 \u0160K Slovan Bratislava season\nThe season was exceptional for the club in several ways. On 3 March 2019, Slovan opened its new stadium and returned home after more than nine years. On 3 May 2019, the club celebrated 100 years since its founding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286857-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 \u0160K Slovan Bratislava season\nSlovan clinched the title on 14 April 2019, six rounds before the end of the competition. Andra\u017e \u0160porar became the league's best goalscorer, scoring 29 goals and tying the record for most goals scored in a season in the Slovak Super Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286857-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u201319 \u0160K Slovan Bratislava season\nThe season covers the period from 1 June 2018 to 31 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286858-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Bangladesh protests\nThe 2018\u20132019 Bangladesh protests, also known as the Bangladeshi Social Revolution, was a series of public social unrest and Strike actions by Garment workers and Trade unions against low wages and high unemployment and demanded the resignation of the government. Over 50,000 protesters participated in the nonviolent movement. Anti -wages and anti-fee hike demonstrations loomed in Factories and Company buildings in Ashulia and Rajshahi, where most protesters staged their protest and sit-ins. Dhaka and other minor areas with factories experienced massive increasingly violent and severe street demonstrations while growing street opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286858-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Bangladesh protests\nCivil disobedience and massive labour unrest rocked the country as Garment workers and Farmers demonstrated nationwide against the results of the 2018 Bangladeshi general election, the ousting and sacking of workers in Factories, harsh working conditions and deteriorating wage conditions. Police brutality and deadly clashes was met at protest movement sites and many people were killed in the strikes and Nonviolent resistance and Civil resistance movement at towns and regions nationwide. The protests was suppressed by the military on 13 January, 2019 after a wave of crackdowns for 7 days and clampdowns on the 2018 Bangladesh election violence. The result of the massive movement was mobs were arrested and 1500+ workers are sacked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286859-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Bosnian protests\nThe 2018\u20132019 Bosnian protests were daily peaceful demonstrations and protests in the Republic of Srpska after the Death of David Dragi\u010devi\u0107, a young Serb student who drowned himself, according to local police, however, his family suggest he was forced to drown himself by local authorities. This incident triggered an anti-police brutality protest movement and swelled into an anti-government uprising, demanding the end of the minister of Republic of Srpska.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286859-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Bosnian protests, Background\nMass unrest erupted in Bosnia in 2013 against the government, but the initial public protests were the JMBG protests, against a law on babies. Another wave of violent demonstrations were in the 2014 unrest in Bosnia and Herzegovina by workers against low payments and unemployment. After a death in 2016, Bosnians were fed up and led a wave of rallies for a month. The movement was peaceful but protesters were angry. They even got angrier after the Death of David Dragi\u010devi\u0107 so larger crowds came and protested, demanding justice and daily, they come and lit candles in vigils in support and memory of David. Serbs are also feeling a bit discriminated and disappointed with the regional government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286859-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Bosnian protests, Protests\nAfter the news broke out, mass protests and peaceful demonstrations, demanding justice took place surrounding the area he had been murdered. Thousands marched daily and chanted slogans against the president and government, demanding democratic reforms and free elections, in reference to the upcoming 2018 Bosnian general election. Thousands protested again in April, demanding an investigation and apology over the death. In September, after a wave of anger in March\u2013April, rallies by students and families against the government and police brutality erupted and boiled into a movement nationwide, starting in Banja Luka, then Zenica, Tuzla, Mostar and Sarajevo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286859-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Bosnian protests, Protests\nA popular series of bloodless protests and mass strikes by workers took place in December\u2013January, while protests were taking place in Mongolia and Sudanese Revolution. These demonstrators were demanding the arrests of the policemen involved in the incident and not to cover-up the death. The rounds of demonstrations are the longest yet largest yet most bloodless protests Bosnia has seen since the Bosnian War. Mass protests re-erupted in June\u2013July and October\u2013November against abuses and use of force by police, demanding an end to the government as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286859-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Bosnian protests, Further Protests and Dzenan Memic protests\nMass protests took place in rallies in Sarajevo, demanding justice over the death of Dzenan Memic, who died in 2016. The protests took place days before the 2018 Bosnian general election. They were suppressed by force from policemen. In November 2019, police brutality rioting and popular demonstrations after an orphanage scandal erupted, when children were Locked up and were threatened to death. Many of them were subjected to police brutality so protesters took to the streets, protesting in street protests fighting for justice. One of the slogans were \u2018Too late, I want Justice\u2019!", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286860-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Comoran protests\nThe 2018\u20132019 Comoran protests were a series of mass protests and a deadly uprisings consisting of strikes, riots, demonstrations, and marches in opposition to president Azali Assoumani in Comoros in 2018\u20132019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286860-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Comoran protests\nIn June\u2013July 2018, mass protests and demonstrations occurred led by the opposition against a referendum on constitutional terms. Rioting erupted and police arrested three protesters in the city of Moroni. One week of protests occurred in the country. Protesters wereas met with police repression and force.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286860-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Comoran protests\nIn March, daily protests by tens of thousands of Comorans occurred in Mayotte demanding the sending of Comoran civilians of Mayotte to Comoros and Comorans demonstrated the next month against the protests and called on the national government to take action. It also called on the re-claim of the French territory of Mayotte. The island was gripped by protests and unrest for weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286860-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Comoran protests\nIn May-June, violent protests rocked the areas of Mayotte and Anjouan, calling on an independence referendum. Political unrest, anti-government demonstrations led by opposition activists calling on the government to step down was dispersed by Riot police, who used Tear gas to disperse angry protests and demonstrations in Moroni.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286860-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Comoran protests\nA popular rebellion occurred between armed rebels and the army of Comoros in a Mysterious Uprising in Anjouan, an island state. 3 weeks of fighting took place in October, but the rebels were defeated in the country. Shootings, killings and violence was reported during the unrest and conflict on the island and the rebels were defeated in the armed uprising.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286860-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Comoran protests\nThe 2019 Comorian presidential election took place in March 2019 amid street protests and anger. Popular protests was on a rise after the results of the elections was announced, 2 were killed in clashes with Soldiers and demonstrators, while escalating tensions and anti-government rioting was a frequent occurrence. The crackdown left 2 demonstrators killed. Civil disobedience campaigns, boycotts, nonviolent demonstrations, frequent anti-government acts of disorder was taking place in March-April and riots was quelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests\nThe 2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, by the organiser called the Great March of Return (Arabic: \u0645\u0633\u06cc\u0631\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0648\u062f\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0643\u0628\u0631\u0649\u200e, romanized:\u00a0Mas\u012bra al-\u02bfawda al-kubr\u0101), were a series of demonstrations held each Friday in the Gaza Strip near the Gaza-Israel border from 30 March 2018 and onwards. The demonstrators demanded that the Palestinian refugees must be allowed to return to lands they were displaced from in what is now Israel. They also protested against Israel's Gaza blockade and United States recognition of Jerusalem as capital of Israel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests\nThe first demonstrations were organized by independent activists, but the initiative was soon endorsed by Hamas, the de facto rulers of the Gaza Strip, as well as other major factions in Gaza. The activists who planned the Great March of Return intended it to last only from 30 March 2018 (Land Day) to 15 May (Nakba Day) but the demonstrations continued for almost 18 months until Hamas on 27 December 2019 announced that they would be postponed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests\nThirty thousand Palestinians participated in the first demonstration on 30 March. Larger protests took place on the following Fridays, 6 April, 13 April, 20 April, 27 April, 4 May, and 11 May \u2014 each of which involved at least 10,000 demonstrators \u2014 while smaller numbers attended activities during the week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests\nMost of the demonstrators demonstrated peacefully far from the border fence. Peter Cammack, a fellow with the Middle East Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, argued that the march indicated a new trend in Palestinian society and Hamas, with a shift away from violence towards non-violent forms of protest. Nevertheless, groups consisting mainly of young men approached the fence and committed acts of violence directed towards the Israeli side. Israeli officials said the demonstrations were used by Hamas as cover for launching attacks against Israel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests\nAt least 110 Palestinians were killed between 30 March to 15 May 2018, a number of whom were members of various Palestinian militant organizations: an independent United Nations commission set the number of known militants killed at 29 out of the 183. Other sources claim a higher figure, of at least 40. Israeli soldiers fired tear gas and live ammunition. According to Robert Mardini, head of Middle East for the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), more than 13,000 Palestinians were wounded as of 19 June 2018, the majority severely, with some 1,400 struck by three to five bullets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests\nNo Israelis were physically harmed from 30 March to 12 May, until one Israeli soldier was reported as slightly wounded on 14 May, the day the protests peaked. The same day, 59 or 60 Palestinians were shot dead at twelve clash points along the border fence, Hamas claimed 50 of them as its militants, and Islamic Jihad claimed 3 of the 62 killed as members of its military wing. Some 35,000 Palestinians protested that day, with thousands approaching the fence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests\nIsrael's use of deadly force was condemned on 13 June 2018 in a United Nations General Assembly resolution. Condemnations also came from human rights organizations, including Human Rights Watch, B'Tselem, and Amnesty International, and by United Nations officials. Kuwait proposed two United Nations Security Council statements, both blocked by the United States, which called for investigations into Israel's killing of Palestinian protesters. The Israeli government has praised Israeli troops for protecting the border fence. Media coverage of the demonstrations, and what has been termed the \"PR battle\", has been the object of analysis and controversy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests\nIn late February 2019, a United Nations Human Rights Council's independent commission found that of the 489 cases of Palestinian deaths or injuries analyzed only two were possibly justified as responses to danger by Israeli security forces, deeming the rest illegal, and concluded with a recommendation calling on Israel to examine whether war crimes or crimes against humanity had been committed, and if so, to bring those responsible to trial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Background\nIn 2005, Israel withdrew its forces from the Gaza Strip and allowed the Palestinian authority to take control. Despite the withdrawal, Israel still maintains direct external control over everyday life in Gaza, such as the territory's air and maritime space, most of its land crossings, electricity and water supply and other utilities. According to Human Rights Watch (HRW), Palestinians in Gaza still remain protected persons under the articles of the Geneva Conventions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Background\nFollowing the Battle of Gaza in 2007, Hamas took full control over the strip and expelled its rival and current ruler of the West Bank, Fatah. The takeover by Hamas led Israel and Egypt to impose a land, air and sea blockade on the Gaza Strip. The blockade has had disastrous effects on Gaza's population.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Background\nAfter the 2014 Gaza war, the humanitarian situation in Gaza worsened. Hamas struggled to manage civil life in Gaza, and the new leadership under Yahya Sinwar hoped to get the Fatah-led Palestinian Authority to take control of Gaza's civil issues, through the 2017 Fatah\u2013Hamas Agreement, but the agreement failed. According to Israeli journalist Amos Harel, Hamas, which failed to lift the blockade for years, sought to use the demonstrations as a means to get out its strategical crisis, as it found armed conflict with Israel to be ineffective.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Background\nThe principal demand of the protests was the right of return for Palestinian refugees and their descendants to present-day Israel. A majority of Gaza's population consists of refugees from the 1948 Palestine War and their descendants. Israel rejected any right of return, fearing that Jews would become a minority in Israel if too many Palestinians returned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Background, Gaza's \"no-go zone\" and border barrier\nIn late 2005, after the Israeli disengagement from Gaza, the Israeli military imposed a \"no-go zone\" on the interior side of the Israel-Gaza border in response to rocket fire from Gaza falling on Israeli towns. This zone restricts Palestinians from entering \"about 17 percent of Gaza's territory, including a third of its agricultural lands\", according to HRW. According to the Israel Defense Force (IDF), this is done \"to prevent the concealment of improvised explosives and to disrupt and prevent the use of the area for destructive purposes.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 82], "content_span": [83, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Background, Gaza's \"no-go zone\" and border barrier\nThe border fence between Gaza and Israel (the separation barrier) is composed of a crude barbed-wire barrier, a brief gap, and then a 10 feet (3.0\u00a0m) high \"smart fence\" with sensors to detect infiltrators. A crowd surging towards the fence could cross the fence in some 30 seconds, according to one of the contractors who built it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 82], "content_span": [83, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Idea, organization, and strategy\nIn 2011, Ahmed Abu Ratima (or Rteima), whose family originate from Ramle, conceived the idea of Palestinians going peacefully to the border fence to demand their right of return to the homes from which they had been displaced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Idea, organization, and strategy\nIn early 2018, Gazan journalist Muthana al-Najjar, whose family originate from Salama, pitched a tent near the border, where he stayed for over a month, while others began planting olive tree seedlings in the area. He and others tried to keep the protest independent from Hamas and other political groups, but were overruled when Hamas took over the protest by mass mobilization of Gazans to join the March. Recruitment included calls on television, local media, social media and by word of mouth. Hamas reportedly planned to keep the peace by having plain clothed security personnel move among the protestors to ensure no violence would occur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Idea, organization, and strategy\nThe March gained support from Gazan intellectuals like Atef Abu Saif and graduates of Gazan universities, who were said to have drawn inspiration from the examples of Martin Luther King Jr. and Mahatma Gandhi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Idea, organization, and strategy\nBy March 2018, Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and the faction of Muhammad Dahlan (who was expelled from Fatah in 2011) had endorsed the protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Idea, organization, and strategy\nThe organizers of the event, including the local government authority, Hamas and various Palestinian factions, encouraged thousands of Palestinians to converge on the Israeli border for the 42nd anniversary,. While multiple factions endorsed the protests, they all participated under the shared symbol of the Palestinian national flag.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, Prior incidents\nIn February 2018, four IDF soldiers were injured by an explosive device concealed in a Palestinian flag placed on the Gazan border fence during a Palestinian protest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, Prior incidents\nOn 25 March, the IDF fired some ten Iron Dome missiles to intercept what the IDF sensors interpreted to be rockets, but which later turned out to be high-trajectory machine-gun fire during Hamas military exercises conducted in Gaza, which early reports said was directed towards Zikim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, Prior incidents\nIn the week prior to 30 March, the IDF arrested a suspect who crossed into Israeli territory from northern Gaza; 2 Palestinians were seen near the now-defunct Karni crossing container port trying to set fire to army engineering equipment close to the border fence; a group of four Palestinians infiltrated Israel near Kissufim; and 3 Gazans, armed with grenades and knives, crossed the border and were captured some 20 kilometers (12\u00a0mi) from the border, near Tze'elim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 30 March 2018\nThe first protest took place on 30 March 2018, during the Land Day. Some 30,000 Palestinians took part in the protests which were launched from five tent camps that were set up 500 to 700 metres (1,600 to 2,300\u00a0ft) from the Israel\u2013Gaza barrier, near the 300 metres (980\u00a0ft) no-go zone imposed by Israel. The majority of the demonstrators in the encampments were away from the border security and did not engage in violence. Hundreds of young Palestinians, however, ignored warnings issued by the organizers and the Israeli military to avoid the border zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0020-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 30 March 2018\nWhen some Palestinians began throwing stones and Molotov cocktails, Israel responded by declaring the Gaza border zone a closed military zone and opening fire at them. The events of the day were some of the most violent in recent years. In one incident, two Palestinian gunmen approached the fence, armed with AK-47 assault rifles and hand grenades, and exchanged fire with IDF soldiers. They were killed and their bodies were recovered by the IDF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 30 March 2018\nThat day, 15 Palestinians were killed by the IDF, in addition to one farmer who was allegedly killed by artillery fire in the morning prior to the protests. The IDF said a tank fired at two men who \"acted suspiciously\" near the border fence and did not confirm if one of them was killed. The profile of the 15 men who were killed by the IDF was a subject of debate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0021-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 30 March 2018\nThe IDF published an infographic with the pictures of ten of those killed, saying they were members of militant-terrorist organizations, of the seven were Hamas militants and activists, one was a \"global jihad activist\" and one was a member of the al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades militant group. Some of them appear in military uniform in their pictures. Hamas, however, said that only five of its members were killed that day, and one of the men the IDF said was a Hamas operative, was a member of the al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, according to the organization itself.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0021-0002", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 30 March 2018\nAccording to the IDF, among those Hamas confirmed were its members were a company commander and an operative in Hamas' tunnel warfare project. Three other Palestinians who were shot on 30 March succumbed to their wounds in the following days. One of them was a member Palestinian Islamic Jihad. The organization said he was unarmed when he was shot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 30 March 2018\nOne notable casualty, and an example of this debate, is a 19-year-old Palestinian who was seen in footage from the protest being shot in his back while holding a tire and running away from the fence. The IDF said he was a member of Hamas, a claim Hamas did not confirm and his family denied, stating he was a restaurant worker. The IDF described the footage as \"edited and fabricated\". His funeral did not involve the honors usually given to slain Palestinian fighters. Another 20-year-old man was shot, according to his brother, in the head, while smoking a cigarette while standing behind a group of stone throwers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 30 March 2018\nDisagreement exists also about the number of those injured that day. According to the Gaza Health Ministry, over 1,400 Palestinians suffered injuries. According to various Palestinian medical sources, around 800 were wounded with live ammunition, while the remaining were injured by rubber-coated projectiles and tear gas. The IDF, on the other hand, estimated only a few dozens were injured with live fire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 30 March 2018\nProtests continued on a lower scale throughout the week following the 30 March events. The IDF continued to fire at Palestinians along the border fence. A video was published in social media on Sunday, 2 April, showing a 19-year-old man among a group of protesters, placing a tire on another burning tire, to make it catch on fire, then waving his hands in celebration. He is then seemingly shot in the head by Israeli soldiers. Palestinian sources reported he was critically wounded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 30 March 2018\nDuring the week of 30 March 2018, two Palestinians were killed in two different incidents. In the first, a Palestinian member of the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine (DFLP) was shot by Israeli forces after he breached the fence and entered Israel. The IDF published a video from an observation camera, showing the man hitting the fence with what seems to be a metal pipe when four other people stand behind him. He then breaches the fence and enters along with another man, which is when warning shots were probably fired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0025-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 30 March 2018\nThe video cuts before the man was shot and it is unclear in what circumstances was he shot and killed. In another incident, an Israeli aircraft attacked an allegedly armed Palestinian who approached the fence. The IDF published a video from an observance camera, showing the man walking slowly towards the fence, holding what appears to be an assault rifle. The army also said he was equipped with grenades and a suicide vest. The incident took place before dawn. In addition to these events, on 1 April the IDF arrested four unarmed Palestinians who entered into Israel illegally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 6 April\nProtest organizers and Hamas called for renewed demonstrations on the Israel-Gaza border the following Friday, 6 April. The IDF stated that it intended to use the same force as the preceding week to prevent infiltrations of Israeli territory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 6 April\nBetween 31 March and 6 April, demonstrators gathered tires in Gaza to be burnt on 6 April, in preparation for what was dubbed the \"Day of the Tire\" (Arabic: Jumat al-Kawshook) Israeli officials have cautioned that the mass burning of tires along the border can produce environmental harm, calling on the World Health Organization to prevent, what they termed, an \"ecological catastrophe\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 6 April\nThousands of Palestinians joined in 6 April demonstrations; the IDF estimated their number at 20,000 people. Palestinian medical sources reported that 9 Palestinians were killed, 1,350 were injured, and 25 were in critical condition; and that approximately 400 of those injured were hit by live ammunition. Another Palestinian who was shot that day succumbed to his wounds on 9 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 6 April\nAmong those killed was Yaser Murtaja, a 30-year-old Palestinian photographer, who, according to Palestinian Health Ministry, was shot in the stomach by an Israeli sniper despite wearing a jacket emblazoned with 'press' to identify him as a journalist. According to the Palestinian Journalists' Syndicate, seven other Palestinian journalists were injured by the Israelis during that day's protest. Israeli Defense Minister, Avigdor Lieberman, said in response that \"anyone who flies drones over IDF soldiers puts himself at risk.\" According to Israeli security sources, Murtaja was an officer in Hamas security apparatus and attempted to smuggle a drone to Gaza in 2015. Hamas, as well as Murtaja's family, denied the allegation. In addition to Murtaja, five other journalists were injured on 6 April, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists: five from live fire and one from a shrapnel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 946]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 8 April\nOn the evening of 8 April, according to the IDF, three Palestinians infiltrated the fence in the Northern Gaza strip, planted two explosive devices, and then quickly returned to Gaza. The IDF fired at the Palestinians with tank fire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 9 April\nIn the early morning of 9 April, the IDF said it attacked a military compound belonging to Hamas in the northern Gaza strip in response to the attempted infiltration with explosives. The IDF said Hamas \"is solely responsible for what is happening in the Gaza Strip from above and below the ground\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 11 April\nOn the morning of 11 April, Palestinians set off a bomb near an Israeli construction vehicle adjacent to the Gaza fence. The IDF fired tank shells at positions that it said belonged to Hamas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0033-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 12 April\nOn 12 April, Israeli aircraft attacked Hamas targets in the northern Gaza Strip in retaliation for the previous days' bomb attack close to the border fence. Hamas fighters east of Shuja'iyya targeted the aircraft with machine gun fire, and several of the bullets fell on a home in Israel. An Israeli airstrike targeted them, killing one Hamas fighter and wounding another. The Hamas fighter who was killed was identified as Mohammed Hamada Hijila. It was subsequently reported that he had taken part in an infamous raid on an Israeli border post in which five Israeli soldiers had been killed during the 2014 Israel-Gaza conflict.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0034-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 13 April\nProtests on a third consecutive Friday were smaller than prior weeks. The IDF estimated that 10,000 people protested on 13 April. Palestinians attempted to breach the border fence, hurled molotov cocktails and explosive devices, and attempted to fly firebomb kites into Israeli territory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0035-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 13 April\nThe Gaza Ministry of Health reported that 969 people were injured by Israeli forces, among them were 67 children, and 223 people hit by live ammunition. Fifteen of the people sustaining live-fire injuries were in critical condition late on 13 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0036-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 14 April\nOn 14 April, four Palestinians were killed in a blast near one of the protest camps, the Islamic Jihad Movement in Palestine said that they were members of the organization and that they died during \"preparations\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0037-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 14 April\nSeveral kites with firebombs attached were flown by Palestinians into Israeli territory, sparking several fires, with at least 3 fire bomb kites located on 14 April. No injuries were caused.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0038-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 15 April\nThe IDF said it destroyed a tunnel that crossed the Gaza-Israel border.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0039-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 16 April\nAdditional fire bomb kites were flown from the Gaza strip. One kite started a fire that burned a wheat field on the Israeli side of the border.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0040-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 20 April\nProtests on Friday, 20 April, have been labeled the \"Women's March of Gaza\" and were intended to highlight the active role women are playing in the protest. The IDF estimates that 10,000 people participated in protests. At least four Palestinians were killed on 20 April, among them a 15-year-old boy, and over four dozen were injured by Israeli soldiers. Another Palestinian later died of wounds sustained that day. Before the expected protests, the IDF dropped leaflets over Gaza Strip warning anyone against approaching the fence or attempting to damage it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0041-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 20 April\nFive Palestinians were fatally shot on by Israeli live fire on 20 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0042-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 20 April\nThe Gaza Health Ministry reported that 445 people were injured in protests, including 96 who were shot with live ammunition. 174 people were hospitalized while the remainder were treated at clinic tents at the protest sites.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0043-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 27 April\nAccording to Israeli military estimates, over 10,000 people gathered to join the day's protest, themed the \"Day of Rebellious Youth.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0044-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 27 April\nFor the first time in the five-week campaign, protesters reached the electrified border fence, having passed a smaller barbed wire barrier; Israeli soldiers fired shots and threw a hand grenade at a group of twelve men climbing the fence, hitting several in the head. A large crowd (the IDF reported \"several hundred\"; The New York Times, \"thousands\") of people rushed toward the Karni border crossing, after a speech by Hamas leader Ismail Radwan. The IDF launched tear gas and opened fire with live ammunition at the crowd, injuring several people. Israeli military sources state that at least two armed Palestinians, among the large crowd, approached the border and fired at least seven rounds at Israeli soldiers. According to The New York Times, retaliatory Israeli fire, which included a hand grenade, wounded two unarmed protesters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 890]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0045-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 27 April\nThe Gaza Ministry of Health initially reported that three Palestinians were killed, all of them by bullets to the head. Two more Palestinians later died of wounds suffered on 27 April. Overall, Palestinian reports stated that 884 protesters had been wounded, some 174 by live Israeli fire. Four medical staff and six journalists were among those wounded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0046-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 27 April\nOn the night of 27 April, the Israeli Air Force attacked six targets in the Port of Gaza belonging to Hamas naval commando forces, injuring four people. The Israeli army said it was responding to \"terror acts and the major attempt to infiltrate the border into Israeli territory earlier in the day.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0047-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 29 April\nThree separate incidents along the fence occurred during the evening of 29 April between the IDF and Palestinians. In the first incident, the IDF said that two men \"attempted to infiltrate\" Israel from the southern strip, one was killed and the other captured after being wounded. In the second incident, the IDF said that two men who had crossed the fence \"hurled explosive devices\" at IDF soldiers before they shot and killed them. In a third incident, two Palestinians with breaching tools and knives were arrested while attempting to breach the fence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0048-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 2 May\nA firebomb kite launched from Gaza caused a large fire in the Be'eri Forest, burning hundreds of dunams of woodland. Ten firefighter teams toiled to extinguish and contain the forest fire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0049-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 4 May\nProtesters organized for 4 May as the \"Friday of the Palestinian Worker,\" in honor of International Workers' Day earlier in the week. Israeli officials estimated that 10,000 people participated in the protests. Shortly after noon, confrontations began between protesters, who threw stones, burned tires, and launched flammable kites, and Israeli soldiers, who fired tear gas and live ammunition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0050-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 4 May\nBy evening, medical officials estimated that 1,100 protesters were injured, including 82 shot with live ammunition, and 800 suffering from the effects of tear gas. Two off-the-shelf drones used by IDF were shot down by Palestinian slingshots. Protesters entered and damaged property used by Israeli forces at Kerem Shalom border crossing; Israeli officials said the property was on the Palestinian side of the border. The damage included burning a pipeline that Israel uses to supply fuel to Gaza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0051-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 4 May\nPalestinians had prepared hundreds of firebomb kites, intending to fly them as swarms into Israel exploiting the heavy heat wave to ignite fires, however since the wind was blowing in the wrong direction to the west. The wind also blew tear gas and smoke from burning tires westwards into the Palestinian crowd chasing many away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0052-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 5 May\nSix Hamas operatives were killed in an explosion in Deir al-Balah. A statement by Hamas' military wing blamed Israel \u2013 stating that it was a \"heinous crime that has been committed against [its] fighters\". The IDF spokesperson stated that \"the IDF is not involved in this incident in any way\". A Palestinian, a source for Haaretz, said that it was \"an explosion resulting from the handling of explosives inside a building\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0053-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 5 May\nThe IDF struck a Hamas outpost in northern Gaza which was used to launch burning objects at Israeli territory. Maj Avichai Adraee tweeted \"Attack kites are not a kids' game and we don't see it that way.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0053-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 5 May\nHamas is using you [Gazans] and is pushing you toward the circle of terrorism,\" while Shai Hajaj, head of Merhavim Regional Council in southern Israel, said \"When the courts in Jerusalem are discussing petitions from left-wing organizations to tie the hands of the soldiers standing in front of the Gaza protesters who want to break through the fence, the arson continues in the field of farmers... We demand that the IDF stop this [Palestinian] violence immediately\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0054-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 6 May\nThree Palestinians were killed at the southern end of the Gaza border fence. According to the IDF, they were carrying petrol bombs, an ax, wire cutters, an oxygen mask and gloves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0055-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 7 May\nIncendiary balloons launched from the Gaza strip set fire to a wheat field near Mefalsim and to the Be'eri Forest. Similar to the firebomb kites, the incendiary balloon lofted an already-lit Molotov cocktail. The normally prevailing westerly winds propel the balloons to Israel, and the burning Molotov cocktail causes the balloons to explode in midair, with burning material falling to the ground below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0056-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 7 May\nIt was reported by Haaretz that Hamas found itself in an \"unprecedented\" crisis and \"dire\" situation, and attempting to enter negotiations with Israel about establishing a long-term truce in order to ease the siege of the enclave, and lower tensions, without, as far as it is known, obtaining any clear response from Israel. The Israeli reluctance might, according to defense correspondent Amos Harel, lead to an explosion of rage on the forthcoming occasion of Nakba Day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0057-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 11 May\n15,000 demonstrators took part in Friday protests on 11 May. Some of them burned tires, in the hope the smoke would provide cover for saboteurs to destroy and cross the border fence, and threw grenades, pipe bombs and stones at Israeli troops. A 40-year-old Palestinian was killed and 973 were injured, seven of them critically. The IDF used new, small remote-controlled aircraft with knives on their wings to counter incendiary kites launched from Gaza, downing more than 40 kites.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0058-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 11 May\nPalestinians broke into the Kerem Shalom border crossing, the main conduit of goods in and of the strip, setting a gas pipeline alight, damaging a fuel pipe, and torching a conveyor belt. The Israeli air force destroyed an underground attack tunnel that reached just a few meters away from the border.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0059-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 12 May\nIsrael announced that the Kerem Shalom border crossing \"will remain closed until the damage caused by the riots are repaired and will reopen in accordance with a situation assessment,\" opening only for humanitarian cases until such a decision is made.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0060-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 13 May\nIsraeli soldiers fired at Palestinians approaching within 75 feet (23\u00a0m) of the fence. Alaa Asawafiri, a 26-year-old woman who was part of a group of women shouting towards the fence, was shot in the stomach and hospitalised in critical condition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0061-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 14 May\nProtests and violence on 14 May coincided with the ceremony marking the relocation of the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem, which international media regarded as the reason for increased tensions. Both events were timed to mark 70 years since the foundation of Israel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0062-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 14 May\nDuring the protests, the IDF used live fire, leading to 52 Gazan fatalities and injuring more than 1200 (according to Gaza health officials), making it \"the bloodiest day in Gaza since the end of the 2014 war.\" By the end of the day, at least 60 Palestinians were reported to have been killed, when Hamas claim 50 of them as its militants, and Islamic Jihad claimed 3 members of its military wing. Palestinian sources said that about 2700 were injured. Some of those who were killed or injured included health care workers providing medical care to the protesters. One of the wounded subsequently died on 13 August. One Israeli sniper later stated that on this day he and his locator broke the standing record for knee-shots that day, managing to make 42 hits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 809]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0063-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 14 May\nThe Israel Defense Forces (IDF) reported that during the day, a Hamas squad attempted to breach the border fence with Israel and opened fire on Israeli forces. All eight attackers were killed by Israeli troops in the exchange of gunfire. The IDF released video of the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0064-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 14 May\nThe IDF said three of those killed had attempted to plant explosives at the border fence, and that in two incidents Israeli troops opened fire after they were shot at. The Israeli Air Force attacked five Hamas targets in a Jabalia training camp in response to the attempt at planting explosives and shooting at IDF troops. Israel said that \"Most of the people killed belonged to the Hamas terror group, and some to the Palestinian Islamic Jihad\" and that \"at least 24\" of the people killed were later identified as known members of terrorist organizations . One Israeli soldier was lightly wounded by what was believed to be a stone thrown by a Palestinian. Likud's Avi Dichter reassured the Knesset that he was not concerned about any possible breach of the border fence since \"the IDF has enough bullets for everyone.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 870]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0065-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 14 May\nHamas political bureau member Salah al-Bardawi said that 50 of the 62 killed in the protests from 14 to 15 May were Hamas members \u2013 adding that these were \"official numbers\", though he did not specify whether they were members of Hamas' armed or political wing. Speaking to CNN, a Hamas spokesman, Abdel Latif Quanau, said he could not confirm or deny these numbers, and that \"The protests are peaceful and include all political and military factions.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0065-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 14 May\nAmira Hass, an Israeli journalist for Haaretz, received al-Bardawi's statement with skepticism saying that one her friends in Gaza told her that \"this [figure of 50] is another typical exaggeration of ours\". Islamic Jihad said three members of its Saraya al-Quds military wing were among those killed. An Islamic Jihad official said those killed were unarmed and participating in a legitimate protest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0066-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 14 May\nA spokesperson for the United Nations Human Rights Commission, Rupert Colville, called the killings an \"outrageous human rights violation\" by Israel. Zeid Ra'ad al-Hussein, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, said \"those responsible for outrageous human rights violations must be held to account\". Numerous countries expressed concern with the killings, including Russia, France, Germany, and the UK. Germany, the UK, Ireland, and Belgium called for an independent inquiry. The United States said the deaths were tragic and placed responsibility on Hamas, stating that Israel has the right to defend its borders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0066-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 14 May\nSouth Africa withdrew its ambassador to Israel, citing \"the indiscriminate and grave manner of the latest Israeli attack\". Turkey's president Recep Tayyip Erdo\u011fan, addressing Turkish students in London in a speech broadcast by Turkey's state television, said that Turkey would recall its ambassadors from Israel and the U.S, and said that Israel's action against Palestinian protesters was \"genocide\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0067-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 14 May\nThis statement started a diplomatic row between Turkish and Israeli leaders, causing the Knesset to propose that Israel officially recognize the killing of over a million Armenians by Ottoman Turkey in the early 20th century as an act of genocide, which modern-day Turkey has never acknowledged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0068-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 15 May\nProtest organizers declared a day of mourning for those killed on the prior day. Fewer people attended protests at the border. One protester was killed, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0069-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 16 May\nSeveral houses in the Israeli city of Sderot were hit by machine gun fire from Gaza, causing damage but no injuries. Israel said Hamas curbed Gaza protests after pressure from Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0070-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 22 May\nA group of Palestinians crossed the border fence on 22 May and set fire to an abandoned IDF post near Bureij. Following the incident, IDF tanks fired at a Hamas post in the area of the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0071-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 25 May\nSome 1,600 Gazans attended the weekly Friday protests in two locations on 25 May. In one of the locations, dozens of youth reached less than 300 meters from the fence and burnt tires. East of the Gaza city reached the fence and tried to open it. The IDF Spokesperson's unit reported Palestinians threw an improvised explosive device towards soldiers. The IDF responded to the events with crowd-control means and live ammunition, hurting at least 109 Palestinians, ten of whom from live ammunition, according to medical sources in Gaza. Firebomb kites were also flown by the Palestinians towards Israel and were shot down by Israeli soldiers. Ismail Haniyeh and Yahya Sinwar visited one of the protest camps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0072-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 1 June\nThe Gaza Ministry of Health stated that 100 protesters were injured, 40 with live ammunition, and that among the casualties, Razan Ashraf al-Najjar, a young female paramedic dressed in medical staff uniform was shot dead by snipers who had opened fire on a group of five paramedics as they moved to assist wounded demonstrators near the fence. Numerous protests continued, Israeli firefighters were called in to douse fires on their side of the border, tires were burned, some attempts were made to damage the border fence, military vehicles were fired on and one infiltrator entered Israel, set off a grenade, and returned to the Strip.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0073-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 22 June\nOn the afternoon on 22 June, an estimated 7,000 participants protested at the border. By evening 200 people had suffered injuries, including 8 minors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0074-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 29 June\nOn 29 June, Yasser Abu al-Najja died of wounds to the head near eastern Khan Younis, while Muhammad Fawzi Muhammad al-Hamaydeh died of wounds to his stomach and legs east of Rafah. According to the Gaza Ministry of Health, further 415 suffered injuries, from gunfire or tear-gas inhalation, with three in a critical condition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0075-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 6\u201315 July (March of Return)\n3,000 Gazans took part in the regular Friday protest. 396 were injured, 57 by live fire. Zahadia Haniyeh (38), a niece of Hamas leader, Ismael Haniyeh, was reportedly shot in the stomach, while Mohammed Abu Halima (22) was shot dead with a bullet wound to the chest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 69], "content_span": [70, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0076-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 13 July\nTwo youths, Othman Rami Halas and Muhammad Nasser Sharab were killed by Israeli live fire, the former near eastern Gaza City, the latter near in eastern Khan Younis. During the day's demonstrations, a further 68 to 200 Gazans were reportedly injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0077-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 13 July\nAn IDF officer was wounded by a hand grenade that was hurled at him by Palestinian assailants during clashes at the border fence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0078-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 14 July\nTwo Palestinians were killed in an Israeli airstrike and four Israelis were wounded by mortar fire from Gaza in what has been hailed as \"the most severe exchange of fire between Israel and Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip since the 2014 war\" commenced on Saturday night, and continued throughout most of the day. According to an IDF spokesman, \"Saturday's operation aimed to stop arson attacks, attempted border breaches, and assaults on soldiers from Gaza that have grown increasingly violent.\" Hamas and allied Islamic militant groups fired 100 to 174 projectiles from Gaza into Israel, one mortar struck a synagogue in Sderot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0079-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 16 July\nIsraeli news media outlets announced that, in response to Firebomb kites flown by Gaza militants, the Israeli government will temporarily suspend deliveries of gas and petrol through the Kerem Shalom border crossing into Gaza, and will also limit offshore fishing to half the previous maritime limit, in a bid to restore order. Food and medicinal supplies would, however, be allowed to pass through the crossing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0080-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 16 July\nPalestinians outfitted a falcon with a harness with a flammable material strung at the end of a steel wire and sent the bird across the border to start a fire in Israel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0081-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 20 July\nFour Palestinians were killed and an estimated 120 Gazans were injured, including a 14 year old with a bullet shot to the head.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0082-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 20 July\nPalestinian snipers fired and threw a number of explosives at Israeli troops during protests along the border fence in southern Gaza Strip, killing an Israeli soldier with a bullet to the chest. In response the Israeli army retaliated with air attacks and tanks fire aimed at eight military Hamas posts east of Khan Yunis and near the southern Rafah, as result three Hamas military wing members were killed in the exchange of fire. Then Israeli Air Force expand its air strike raising the death toll to four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0082-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 20 July\nFollowing the strikes, three rockets fired into Israeli communities around Gaza, two projectiles intercepted by Iron Dome and another fell in open field. United Nations Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process Nickolay Mladenov tweeted \"everyone in Gaza needs to step back from the brink. Not next week. Not tomorrow. Right NOW! Those who want to provoke Palestinians and Israelis into another war must not succeed.\" According to Hamas, there was a ceasefire agreed upon afterwards, but Israel did not comment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0083-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 21 July\nSeveral Palestinian infiltrators crossed the border fence into Israel, then returned to Gaza's territory. An IDF tank fired at a Hamas post in northern Gaza in response.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0084-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 27 July\nTwo Palestinians, Majdi Ramzi Kamal al-Satri and Ghazi Muhammad Abu Mustafa were shot dead with bullets to the head, east of Rafah and east of Khan Younis respectively. A further 246 were reportedly injured. Three paramedics among the injured sustained moderate wounds, at eastern Jabaliya.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0085-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 3 August\n8 Palestinians were reportedly shot, east of Khan Younis in 19 March, which was conducted under the slogan of \"Martyr of Jerusalem, Muhammad Youssef,\" a 17 year old killed earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0086-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 7 August\nIsrael killed two Hamas members in Gaza on 7 August. Hamas said that the two men were snipers taking part in an live-fire exercise in Gazan territory. Israel stated that the gunmen fired on its soldiers and an Israeli tank shelled them in response.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0087-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 8 August\nGaza militants fired rockets into Israel and the Israeli military responded with air strikes on 8 August. The Washington Post reported than 180 rockets and other rounds of munition were fired into Israel with the Israeli air force firing at about 150 targets in the Gaza Strip. A pregnant Palestinian woman and her daughter, a toddler, were killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0088-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 10 August\nAbdullah Al-Qatati, a Palestinian medic, died after being shot in the head by a sniper. Ahmad Jamal Abu Luli died after being shot in the pelvis. Ali Said al-Aloul was the third fatality in the shootings. 307 Palestinians were reportedly injured, 70, including 28 children, five paramedics and two journalists, were wounded by live fire, five critically. One attempt was made to cross the border, and a grenade was reportedly thrown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0089-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 17 August\n241 Palestinians were reportedly wounded, some 40 by live fire. 18 minors were among those injured. Two Palestinians were shot dead one identified as Karim Abu Fatayir east of al-Bureij refugee camp and the other identified as Saadi Akram Muammar east of Rafah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0090-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 24 August\n189 Palestinians were reportedly injured, 50 by live ammunition, and the others by rubber-coated steel bullets or tear-gas inhalation. 73 were hospitalized.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0091-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Timeline, 12 October\nSeven Palestinians were killed in violent protests along the border fence, in a continuation of the \"March of Return\" protests. According to the IDF, \"The rioters are burning tires and are hurling rocks, explosive devices, firebombs and grenades at IDF troops and the security fence\". The demonstrations were arranged by Hamas, with the aid of special units formed to expand the protests. Four Palestinians were shot dead after they crossed into Israeli territory and approached a sniper's post.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0092-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Casualties\nOne Israeli soldier has been injured due to shrapnel from a grenade thrown by a Palestinian from inside Gaza and one Israeli soldier has been killed by Palestinian sniper fire near the fence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0093-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Casualties\nThe head of WHO's office in Gaza, Gerald Rockenschaub, described the casualties as overwhelming an already weak health care system: \"the deteriorating humanitarian situation is extremely worrying. Hospitals in Gaza are overwhelmed with the influx of injured patients. With further escalations expected during the coming weeks, the increasing numbers of injured patients requiring urgent medical care is likely to devastate Gaza's already weakened health system, placing even more lives at risk.\" According to the Ministry of Health in Gaza, 69 ambulances were partly damaged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0094-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Casualties\nDoctors Without Borders released a statement on 14 May 2018 calling the Israeli response \"inhuman and unacceptable\" saying that the hospitals in Gaza were overwhelmed and in a chaotic situation comparable to the 2014 Israel-Gaza conflict. It stated that \"most of the wounded will be condemned to suffer lifelong injuries\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0095-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Casualties\nHRW observers stated, with regard to 30 March, \"while some protesters near the border fence burned tires and threw rocks, [HRW] could find no evidence of any protester using firearms or any IDF claim of threatened firearm use at the demonstrations.\" The organization said there is evidence of Palestinians who did not pose any threat to Israeli guards being shot. B'Tselem said that \"shooting unarmed demonstrators is illegal and the command that allows it is manifestly illegal.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0096-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Casualties\nOn 29 April, with the death toll at 44, an Israeli officer stated that most of the deaths were unintentional, that the snipers aimed for the legs but sometimes missed, or the bullets ricocheted or the protesters suddenly bent over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0097-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Casualties, Characterization of the injuries caused by Israeli fire\nThe Commissioner General of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) stated that the ammunition used by Israel caused severe internal damage to internal organs, muscle tissue and bones. A Palestinian doctor interviewed by CNN stated that about a half of the wounded people would never walk normally again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 99], "content_span": [100, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0097-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Casualties, Characterization of the injuries caused by Israeli fire\nThe head of plastic and reconstructive surgery at Shifa Hospital in Gaza wrote a letter to The British Medical Journal stating that \"from the appearance of the wounds there appears to have been systematic use by [IDF] snipers of ammunition with an expanding 'butterfly' effect. \", and stated that since the surgical procedures and rehabilitation facilities are not available in Gaza due to 2014 conflict and the blockade of Gaza, \"mass lifelong disability is now the prospect facing Gazan citizens, largely young.\" The Israeli military stated that they only used normal sniper ammunition, and fired at the feet and legs to minimize civilian casualties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 99], "content_span": [100, 752]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0098-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Casualties, Characterization of the injuries caused by Israeli fire\nAccording to Amnesty International, who interviewed military experts and a forensic pathologist, \"many of the wounds observed by doctors in Gaza are consistent with those caused by high-velocity Israeli-manufactured Tavor rifles using 5.56mm military ammunition. Other wounds bear the hallmarks of US-manufactured M24 Remington sniper rifles shooting 7.62mm hunting ammunition, which expand and mushroom inside the body. The nature of these injuries shows that Israeli soldiers are using high-velocity military weapons designed to cause maximum harm to Palestinian protesters who do not pose an imminent threat to them.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 99], "content_span": [100, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0099-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Casualties, Killing of medical personnel\nThere have been several accusations of Israel attacking medical personnel. On 18 April, the Palestinian human rights organization Al-Haq accused Israel of shooting at civilians who were providing medical assistance to the wounded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 72], "content_span": [73, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0100-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Casualties, Killing of medical personnel\nThe Gaza-based human rights organization Al Mezan stated on 25 April that Israel had shot two paramedics working with the Palestinian Red Crescent Society. It also stated that the situation has been compounded by Israel's refusal to allow personal safety equipment into Gaza including respirators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 72], "content_span": [73, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0101-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Casualties, Killing of medical personnel\nA Canadian doctor, Tarek Loubani, was one of 19 medical personnel shot on 14 May. He stated that he was clearly marked, and believed that he was targeted by the Israeli military. One of the paramedics who treated Loubani was killed later on the same day. Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he was \"appalled\" at the shooting of Loubani and called for \"an immediate independent investigation to thoroughly examine the facts on the ground \u2013 including any incitement, violence, and the excessive use of force\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 72], "content_span": [73, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0102-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Casualties, Killing of medical personnel\nIn June 2018, Palestinian nurse Razan al-Najjar was fatally shot in the chest as she, reportedly with her arms raised to show she was unarmed, tried to help evacuate the wounded near Israel's border fence with Gaza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 72], "content_span": [73, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0103-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Casualties, Other notable casualties\nAn eight-month-old child, Leila al-Ghandour was widely reported, following an initial statement by the Gaza Health ministry, to have been a victim of tear-gas at the border. The following day, the Gaza Health Ministry announced that it was not certain of the cause of death and two weeks later struck her name off the official list of people killed during the protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 68], "content_span": [69, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0103-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Casualties, Other notable casualties\nIn a court case against a Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades militant, who had been captured on the border, the indictment stated that man in question was a relative of the deceased's parents, and had stated the latter had been paid by Yahya Sinwar, the head of Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades in Gaza, about US$2,200 to report to the media that she had died of tear gas inhalation rather than from a pre-existing medical condition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 68], "content_span": [69, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0104-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Casualties, Prevalence of militants among the killed\nIsraeli defense sources claimed that a large fraction of those killed were members or otherwise affiliated with Palestinian militant organizations. According to Israel, the demonstrations provided cover for attacks by militants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 84], "content_span": [85, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0105-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Casualties, Prevalence of militants among the killed\nOn 11 April, the military-affiliated Israeli Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center (ITIC) published a report in which it stated that 26 of the 32 persons killed belonged to or were affiliated with Palestinian militant groups. The report identified thirteen of these as belonging to the military wings of these organizations, and six as members of the Gaza security forces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 84], "content_span": [85, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0106-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Casualties, Prevalence of militants among the killed\nOn 14 May, when 59 to 62 Palestinians were killed, Hamas claimed 50 of them and Palestinian Islamic Jihad claimed three as members of its military wing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 84], "content_span": [85, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0107-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Casualties, Prevalence of militants among the killed\nOn 8 June, ITIC stated that it had identified 124 of the 127 Gazans reportedly killed in demonstrations since March. It reported that 102 of the killed were affiliated with either the militant or civilian wings of Fatah, Hamas, PIJ, the DFLP, or the PFLP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 84], "content_span": [85, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0108-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Legal cases\nTwo Palestinians, Yousef Karnaz and Mohammad Al-Ajouri, each had to have one of their legs amputated after Israeli authorities denied their requests to receive medical treatment at a better-equipped hospital in the West Bank. Israeli authorities issued a statement claiming that \"The main consideration for the refusal stems from the fact that their medical condition is a function of their participation in the disturbances.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0109-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Legal cases\nThe Israeli Arab minority rights organization Adalah and Al Mezan petitioned the Israeli Supreme Court to grant an emergency hearing to consider the request on 12 April, but as the Court decided to give the Israeli government three days to respond and due to this delay, doctors were forced to amputate their legs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0110-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Legal cases\nOn 15 April, four Israeli human rights organizations, Yesh Din, Gisha, HaMoked, and the Association for Civil Rights in Israel jointly petitioned the Israeli Supreme Court to revoke the rules of engagement used by the IDF in response to the protests. They argued that \"there is no prohibition on demonstrating in Gaza and that if incidents of violence or attempts to cross the fence occur during demonstrations, they alone constitute civil disturbances of the peace. In such disturbances, the law permits live fire only in cases of immediate mortal danger.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0110-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Legal cases\nIn response, the Israeli government refused to disclose its rules of engagement publicly, but said they \"comply with Israeli law and with international law.\" The government indicated that it views the protests as \"part of the armed conflict between the Hamas terror organization and Israel, with all that this implies.\" On 24 May 2018, the Supreme Court rejected the petition, ruling that the protests were not unarmed protests but a part of an armed conflict which were used as a cover to carry out terror attacks against Israel and risk Israeli lives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0111-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Legal cases\nOn 16 April, the Supreme Court ruled that Karnaz must be allowed to exit Gaza to receive medical treatment in the West Bank to save his remaining leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0112-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Investigations\nOn 5 April 2018, the IDF announced that its Southern Command would conduct an internal investigation into the deaths of civilians during the prior week. Brigadier General Moti Baruch was appointed to lead a second government investigation. Press reports indicate that Baruch's investigation will focus on incidents which appear to have a cause for inquiry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0113-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Investigations\nOn 18 March 2019, a three-person United Nations commission urged Israeli authorities to \"step up\" their investigations into Israeli troops shootings of Palestinian demonstrators during the protests. The U.N. investigators believe that the shootings \"may have constituted war crimes and crimes against humanity.\" The commission of inquiry presented the United Nations Human Rights Council a full 252-page report.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0114-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Tactics, Palestinian tactics\nObservers from the International Rescue Committee and the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs reported that the majority of protesters acted nonviolently on 30 March and 6 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0115-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Tactics, Palestinian tactics\nOn both of the larger protest days, hundreds of primarily young men approached or entered the 300-metre \"exclusion zone\" declared by Israeli military forces, thrown stones, hurled Molotov cocktails, and attempted to plant Palestinian flags. A The New York Times account described the purpose of approaching the fence as \"a powerful statement of defiance, bravery and national pride\" among Palestinians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0116-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Tactics, Palestinian tactics\nThe Israeli military accused Hamas of using the protests as a guise to launch attacks against Israel, and warned about further reprisals. Israeli sources said that Hamas was forcing bus companies to transport people to the border for 6 April protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0117-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Tactics, Palestinian tactics\nIsraeli politicians repeated their accusations that Hamas utilizes protesters as human shields. The United States' Special Representative for International Negotiations Jason Greenblatt stated, with regards to the planned 6 April protest, that \"[they] condemn leaders and protestors who call for violence or who send protestors \u2013 including children \u2013 to the fence, knowing that they may be injured or killed\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0118-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Tactics, Palestinian tactics\nSenior Hamas official Mahmoud al-Zahar admitted in an interview to Al Jazeera \"when we talk about 'peaceful resistance' we are deceiving the public. This is a peaceful resistance bolstered by a military force and by security agencies, and enjoying tremendous popular support.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0119-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Tactics, Palestinian tactics, Tent encampment\nOrganizers set up five tents 500 to 700 metres (1,600 to 2,300\u00a0ft) from the border and during the campaign their number grew to several dozen. Each tent was labeled with the town or village from which its occupants were expelled. The encampment allowed protesters to sleep, eat, and live on the site which hosted religious gatherings, weddings, and often had a festive atmosphere. Protests near the camps were large, diverse in participation, and peaceful. Many engaged in sit-in protests organized around their tents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0120-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Tactics, Palestinian tactics, Tent encampment\nEarthen embankments were erected near the 300\u00a0m (980\u00a0ft) mark to try to shield those further away from Israeli sniper fire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0121-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Tactics, Palestinian tactics, Tire burning\nPalestinians frequently burned tires and t-shirts which produced thick smoke and obstructed the sightlines of Israeli snipers. Often young men would roll burning tires towards the fence to create smokescreens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0122-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Tactics, Palestinian tactics, Mask usage\nPalestinian protesters wore masks to protect themselves both from tear gas inhalation and to obscure their faces as it was speculated that the Israeli military was identifying and targeting known militants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 72], "content_span": [73, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0123-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Tactics, Palestinian tactics, Incendiary kites and balloons\nIn April 2018, Palestinians begun launching homemade incendiary kites and balloons. They would drift over the border and set fire to Israeli crop fields and forests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0124-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Tactics, Palestinian tactics, Incendiary kites and balloons\nAs of early June, roughly 5,000 dunams of Israeli crop fields had been burned by kites launched from Gaza, with an estimated economic loss of US$1.4 million, in addition to 2,100 dunams of Jewish National Fund forests in the area and 4,000 to 5,000 dunams in the Besor Forest Nature Reserve. The New York Times reported one of its journalists sighting \"vast stretches of scorched earth,\" with \"losses to Israeli agriculture from flaming kites [being] immense.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0125-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Tactics, Palestinian tactics, Compensation for casualties\nHamas said on 5 April 2018 that it would offer compensation for people injured or killed by Israeli soldiers while participating in the demonstrations. Hamas spokesperson Hazem Qasem stated that families to those killed would receive $3,000 and families to severely injured $500. Lightly injured persons would receive $200.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 89], "content_span": [90, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0126-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Tactics, Israeli tactics\nThe Israeli military deployed soldiers, including snipers and tanks, to the border. Soldiers opened fire on Palestinians approaching the fence with tear gas, rubber bullets, and live ammunition. Soldiers fired from artificial sand berms that overlooked the protests. Israeli tear gas canisters penetrated more than 300 metres (980\u00a0ft) into the Gaza Strip. An investigation by B'Tselem found that Israeli soldiers launched tear gas to the family tents, located 400 to 600 metres (1,300 to 2,000\u00a0ft) from the fence, causing hundreds of people to suffer injuries. Protest participants interviewed by B'Tselem reported cases of suffering from tear gas inhalation and injury from tear gas canister impacts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0127-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Tactics, Israeli tactics\nWhile the IDF has not publicly disclosed its rules of engagement, press reports indicate that soldiers are permitted to shoot armed Palestinians within 300 metres (980\u00a0ft) of the fence and unarmed Palestinians within 100 metres (330\u00a0ft). The IDF has stated that its soldiers are advised to first fire warning shots, then wounding shots, before taking fatal shots. On 6 April, the IDF used industrial-sized fans to disperse the smoke and then water cannons in unsuccessful attempts to douse fires from burning tires.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0128-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Worldwide protests\nDemonstrations expressing solidarity with the protesters and condemning the use of lethal force by Israeli forces, were held in Israel, the US, the UK, and Australia. Thousands of protesters gathered in Tel Aviv, Washington D.C., Boston, London, Manchester, Sheffield, Bristol, and Melbourne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0129-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Worldwide protests\nAlong with 250 others at a Tel Aviv protest, Michael Sfard, a human rights lawyer and political activist, said: \"As an Israeli, my duty is to protest against the evils that are done in my name.\" On 31 March, 150 Israelis gathered in Yad Mordechai near the Israel-Gaza border to protest the IDF's use of deadly force, holding banners reading \"Free Gaza,\" \"Stop the Massacre\", and \"Gaza is Dying\". On 2 April, 300 Israelis gathered in Tel Aviv outside Likud's party headquarters to protest, and a small group of Arab Israelis protested in Jaffa as well. There was a minor counter-protest, where people chanted \"Israel belongs to Jews\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0130-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Worldwide protests\nIn Boston, Massachusetts, eight protesters, who chained themselves to the exterior door of the Israeli Consulate, were arrested by police for disorderly conduct, disturbing the peace, and trespassing. Naturei Karta anti-Zionist protesters joined some thousands in London, UK, to show solidarity with Palestinians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0131-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Reactions, States\nThe escalation of violence in Gaza concerned the entire Arab world. Jordan and Egypt condemned Israel's use of force, considering recent developments as harmful to brokering peace. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdo\u011fan and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu exchanged heated remarks over the border clashes; Erdo\u011fan labeled the Israeli response an \"inhumane attack\" amid growing international criticism of the Israeli military. Erdo\u011fan accused Israel of committing a \"genocide\", calling Israel a \"terrorist state\". In response to anti-Israeli comments and actions by Erdo\u011fan, the Knesset discussed the possibility of recognizing the Armenian genocide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0132-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Reactions, States\nAustralia and United States voiced support for Israel's right to defend itself. Costa Rica, Egypt, France, Germany, Indonesia, Iran, Jordan, Morocco, South Africa, Sweden, Turkey, and Vatican have criticized the actions of Israel or both sides of the conflict.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0133-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Reactions, States\nOn 15 May, British Prime Minister Theresa May said, speaking alongside Turkish President Erdo\u011fan, that \"There is an urgent need to establish the facts of what happened yesterday through an independent and transparent investigation, including why such a volume of live fire was used and what role Hamas played in events.\" U.S. Ambassador to the UN, Nikki Haley, said that \"Anyone who truly cares about children in Gaza should insist that Hamas immediately stop using children as cannon fodder in its conflict with Israel.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0134-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Reactions, NGOs\nAmnesty International: On 27 April, the organization called for worldwide arms embargo on Israel for its \"disproportionate response\" to the protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0135-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Reactions, NGOs\nThe Israeli law center Shurat HaDin filed a complaint in the International Criminal Court against Hamas leaders Khaled Mashal, Saleh al-Arouri, and Zahar Jabarin for the use of children as human shields in the conflict along the border based on a clause in the Rome Statute that prohibits recruitment of children under the age of 15 to a militant organization. According to Shurat Hadin Director Nitzana Darshan-Leitner \"The death of a 15-year-old boy near the Gaza border last week was a direct result of the war crimes committed by Hamas leaders against their own people\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0136-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Reactions, Individuals\nOn 8 April, Defense Minister of Israel Avigdor Lieberman said: \"You have to understand, there are no innocent people in the Gaza Strip. Everyone has a connection to Hamas. Everyone receives a salary from Hamas. Those who are trying to challenge us at the border and breach it belong to Hamas' military wing.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0137-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Reactions, Individuals\nOn 15 May, Israel's ambassador to the UK, Mark Regev, said Israel \"did everything we could\" to avoid the bloodshed at the border with Gaza. He told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: \"We use live fire only in a very measured way, in a very surgical way and only when there is no alternative.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0138-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Reactions, Individuals\nRetired British Colonel Richard Kemp said it was not a peaceful demonstration, but \"a deliberate and specific intent by terrorist organizations to penetrate the State of Israel and kill civilians and the IDF has no option except to use lethal force to stop such a dangerous threat.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0139-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Reactions, Individuals\nThe legal scholar, English and European Court of Human Rights judge Sir Stephen Sedley opined that the use of live fire against unarmed protesters was \"without much question a major crime\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0140-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Reactions, Individuals\nThe Israeli Prime Minister's Arabic-language spokesman Ofir Gendelman tweeted, in response to a video showing a flag with a swastika lying between two Palestinian flags, \"Hamas terrorists have planted today right on the Gaza-Israel border this Nazi flag which was flying [between] Palestinian flags. Hamas proudly declares that its aim is to annihilate Israel & the Jewish people. The genocidal message has been received. We will defend our country.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0141-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Reactions, Individuals\nIsraeli historian Zeev Sternhell wrote, \"the weekly killing on the Gaza Strip border is a campaign of barbarism, exposing the mentality of the society in whose name the army acts: We can do anything we like.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0142-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Reactions, Individuals\nFive former IDF snipers, assisted by Breaking the Silence, published a letter expressing \"shame and sorrow\" for the killings and stating, \"instructing snipers to shoot to kill unarmed demonstrators who pose no danger to human life is another product of the occupation and military rule over millions of Palestinian people, as well as of our country's callous leadership, and derailed moral path.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0143-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Reactions, Individuals\nAmerican columnist Peter Beinart, reflecting on the succession of incidents marking the Land Day protests of 2018, wrote that Palestinians were rushing towards Israeli snipers because their land was fast becoming \"uninhabitable\", with the UN predicting it would be unliveable by 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0144-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Reactions, Individuals\nOn 15 May, a group of nine prominent Israelis wrote a letter to The Guardian in which they compared the killings on the previous day to the Sharpeville massacre, and called for international intervention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0145-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Reactions, Individuals\nSenior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, Elliott Abrams said, \"The leaders of Hamas view the citizens [of Gaza] as cannon fodder who are useful for the global media strategy, and from that point of view, Hamas leaders are happy when people die because they think it looks good on European TV screens.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0146-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Criticism of media coverage\nThe area of the conflict is subject to intense monitoring. On the Israeli side of the border, IDF observers watch film and videotape events like the protests by availing themselves of telescopes, long lenses, and feeds from the cameras, drones, quadcopters and tethered surveillance balloons hovering over the sites. Israeli journalists were not permitted by the IDF to approach the area of conflict, but kept two kilometres (1.2\u00a0mi) away. Almost from the outset, journalist Isabel Kershner observed that the March had given rise to a \"war of words\" between the involved parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0147-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Criticism of media coverage\nSurveying the media reaction just after the events of 14 May, Haaretz noted that the events were covered extensively, with the violence in Gaza juxtaposed with the opening of the US embassy in Jerusalem. The headlines focused on the death toll in Gaza and the pictures were split between Palestinian protesters wounded and killed, together with pictures of the opening ceremony in Jerusalem. South African media skipped the embassy opening and focused on the pictures from Gaza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0148-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Criticism of media coverage\nIn the aftermath of the conflict, the way a number of mainstream newspaper outlets, including The New York Times, covered the events has become the object of analysis, criticism and challenge. The political scientist Norman Finkelstein takes exception to what he perceives to be The New York Times portrayal of the March as one in which the protests were described as \"armed confrontations in which Israeli snipers return the fire of protesters,\" notwithstanding the fact that human rights NGOs have stated the demonstrations were \"overwhelmingly peaceful.\" In particular, he mentions articles by David Halbfinger, who was embedded among the Israeli snipers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0149-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Criticism of media coverage\nAn IDF spokesman, Brig. Gen. Ronen Manelis, wrote for The Wall Street Journal that the world's media had fallen for what he said was \"a well-funded terrorist propaganda operation\" consisting of lies crafted to win \"the international propaganda war.\" The protests were staged, the demonstrators paid actors, and Hamas orchestrated the violence to capture the headlines. \"If,\" he concluded, \"I need to lie like Hamas, then I prefer to tell the truth and lose.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0149-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Criticism of media coverage\nThe IDF social media chief, Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus thought that graphics from the Palestinian side of the border had allowed Hamas to win a PR battle \"by a knockout,\" and attributed the result to an Israeli failure to minimize Palestinian casualties. Likewise, reacting to events just after the first March, retired brigadier-general Shlomo Brom declared: \"I categorize what happened as a failure. The Palestinian aim was to raise international consciousness, and to put the Palestinian issue back on the international and Israeli agenda. It succeeded.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0150-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Criticism of media coverage\nVeteran Israeli war correspondent Ron Ben-Yishai complained that Hamas had won the media battle partially because the IDF kept local journalists away from the border, thereby hindering Israeli journalists from documenting \"the crowds of Gazans sent by Hamas to commit suicide on the fence.\" While massive video reportage was available on the Palestinian side of the fence, the IDF only provided the press with a \"thin drizzle\" of visual evidence, consisting of several dozen unclear images and short clips taken from its security camera coverage of the zone. Critics like Shehada, Stern-Weiner and Finkelstein wonder why, given its visual and video intelligence, the IDF did not buttress its claims over armed Hamas activity by providing footage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 806]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0151-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Criticism of media coverage\nOn an 8 April, BBC News anchor Andrew Marr said \"lots of Palestinian kids\" were killed by Israeli forces. Jonathan Sacerdoti complained that the statement was misleading and false. BBC management ruled that Marr breached editorial guidelines, that the statement lacked any evidence and \"risked misleading audiences on a material point\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286861-0152-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Gaza border protests, Criticism of media coverage\nOn an 22 July, Israel's Foreign Ministry spokesman, Emmanuel Nahshon, slammed CNN for \"unbalanced coverage of recent events in Gaza\" in its tweet \"indicating killing of four Palestinians preceded deadly shooting of IDF soldier\" and quoted Senator Ted Cruz, who criticized the BBC for \"misrepresenting recent events in Gaza\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286862-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Ingushetia protests\nThe 2018-2019 protests in Ingushetia are thousands of people, initially unauthorized round-the-clock protest in Magas against the Agreement on Securing the Border Between Regions, signed by the head of Ingushetia Yunus-Bek Yevkurov and the head of Chechnya Ramzan Kadyrov on September 26, 2018, as well as its ratification by the deputies of the People's Assembly of the Republic of Ingushetia. The protest began on October 4, 2018 and was declared indefinite. On the fifth day, the rally was sanctioned by the authorities until October 15. The break of the round-the-clock protest lasted from 18 to 31 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286862-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Ingushetia protests\nThe next rally took place on November 27, 2018, on the day of the consideration by the Constitutional Court of the Russian Federation of the request of the head of the Republic of Ingushetia, Yunus-Bek Yevkurov, on the compliance of the Constitution of the Russian Federation with the Agreement on the Establishment of the Administrative Boundary between Ingushetia and Chechnya. After a four-month break on March 26, 2019, the rally in Magas was resumed and declared indefinite.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286862-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Ingushetia protests, Background\nAt the end of August 2018, some public and human rights organizations in Ingushetia announced construction work on the territory of Ingushetia near the administrative border with Chechnya in the region of the Fortanga River, carried out by Chechen road organizations accompanied by Chechen security officials without the consent of the Ingush authorities, as well as with the leadership of the state nature reserve Erzi, to which this territory belongs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286862-0001-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Ingushetia protests, Background\nAccording to the press secretary of the head of Chechnya, Alvi Karimov, near the border with Ingushetia, the Chechen side began reconstruction work on the road, which, as he noted, was previously destroyed in connection with military actions, and that residents of both republics will be able to use it in the future.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286862-0001-0002", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Ingushetia protests, Background\nRepresentatives of the Ingush side who visited the site noted that the Chechen road workers carried out work on cutting down valuable tree species, destroying the fertile soil layer, changing the natural landscape on the territory of Ingushetia, and also that the Chechen security forces made an attempt to establish a traffic police post of the Ministry of Internal Affairs in Chechnya in the area of the village of Arshty, Sunzhensky district of the Republic of Ingushetia, two kilometers from borders, deep into Ingushetia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286862-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Ingushetia protests, Background\nA week later, the inhabitants of Ingushetia were outraged by the fact that road work on the Ingush territory (the Erzi reserve) not only did not stop, but also advanced 15 kilometers deep into Ingushetia. Indignation was also caused by the silence of the Ingush authorities about the events carried out by the Chechen road organizations and security forces. On September 25, the head of the Sunzhensky region of Ingushetia, Isa Khashagulgov, announced his voluntary resignation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286862-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Ingushetia protests, Background\nOn the same day, a spontaneous gathering of about 70 people took place near the building of the district administration, outraged by the upcoming signing of the agreement by the heads of Ingushetia and Chechnya and the possible transfer of a part of the Sunzhensky district of Ingushetia to the Chechen Republic. However, the leaders of both republics kept this information and the fact of reaching agreements on the border secret.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286862-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Ingushetia protests, Agreement\nOn September 26, the day of the signing of the Agreement on the Establishment of the Border Between Ingushetia and Chechnya, about 50 people gathered in Sunzha and over a hundred people in Magas. The entrances to the city were blocked by concrete blocks, a Rosgvardia column was introduced, in addition, the Internet was turned off during a protest in Magas and Nazran. However, despite the protests, the signing of the agreement between Yevkurov and Kadyrov took place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286862-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Ingushetia protests, Agreement\nThe leadership of the Republic of Ingushetia announced that by signing this agreement with the head of Chechnya, they made an equivalent exchange of land. However, the Ingush public was outraged by the fact that the Head of Ingushetia promoted agreements on the borders with the leadership of Chechnya secretly from society, as well as the fact that part of the Sunzhensky region of Ingushetia, according to agreements between the heads of the republics, departs to Chechnya.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286862-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Ingushetia protests, Agreement\nThe fact that according to the agreement between Yevkurov and Kadyrov, the exchange of lands is unequal, was confirmed by independent expert cartographers. Thus, under the agreement between Yevkurov and Kadyrov, more than 25 times more land is transferred to Chechnya than Ingushetia. On September 27, Russian presidential press secretary Dmitry Peskov, answering a question about possible consultations with the Kremlin in the process of signing an agreement on fixing the administrative border between the republics of Chechnya and Ingushetia, said that it was held on the initiative of the subjects themselves. They made an equivalent exchange of land.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286862-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Ingushetia protests, Protests\nOn October 4, early in the morning, citizens began to gather near the building of the Parliament of Ingushetia. Thus began the protest of the Ingush against the Agreement on Securing the Border, signed by the heads of Ingushetia and Chechnya, as well as its ratification by the deputies of the Parliament of Ingushetia. An examination of the relevant was scheduled for that date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286862-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Ingushetia protests, Protests\nIn turn, the Constitutional Court of the Republic of Ingushetia in its response to the draft law \u201cOn approval of the Agreement on the establishment of the border between the Republic of Ingushetia and the Chechen Republic\u201d ruled that the draft law under consideration is not subject to consideration by the People's Assembly of the Republic of Ingushetia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286862-0005-0002", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Ingushetia protests, Protests\nIn accordance with Article 111 of the Constitution of the Republic of Ingushetia, education, the abolition of administrative-territorial units and formations, the establishment and change of borders between them, their name and renaming, other issues of the administrative-territorial structure of the Republic of Ingushetia are resolved in accordance with federal laws and laws of the Republic of Ingushetia, taking into account the opinion of the population of the corresponding territory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286862-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Ingushetia protests, Protests\nOn October 5, a rally in the capital of Ingushetia Magas against the border agreement with Chechnya gathered, according to various estimates, from 10 to 60 thousand people. On October 6, the authorities of Ingushetia agreed on a rally, the participants of which oppose the definition of the administrative border with Chechnya with the transfer of part of the territory to the neighboring republic. The promotion was approved from 8 to 15 October. The document also states that, in accordance with the law, a public event cannot start earlier than 7:00 and end later than 22:00.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286862-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Ingushetia protests, Protests\nOn October 7, Ruslan Aushev, the first president of Ingushetia, came to the rally in Magas. He stated that the current leadership of Ingushetia made a mistake by not agreeing with the people on the transfer of land. On October 13, the Government of Ingushetia agreed to hold a rally against the agreement on the border with Chechnya in Magas for two days - October 16 and 17, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286862-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Ingushetia protests, Protests\nOn October 17, the Constitutional Court of the Republic of Ingushetia accepted for consideration the request of the deputies of the People's Assembly of the Republic of Ingushetia on the verification of the constitutionality of the Law of the Republic of Ingushetia dated October 4, 2018 No. 42-RZ \"On approval of the Agreement on the establishment of the border between the Republic of Ingushetia and the Chechen Republic\", as well as complaints from residents of the republic on violation of rights and freedoms by this law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286862-0007-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Ingushetia protests, Protests\nOn October 24, at about ten o'clock in the evening on October 24, 2018, representatives of the authorities of the Chechen Republic again visited Ingushetia. The Chairman of the Parliament of the Chechen Republic Magomed Daudov arrived in the village of Novy Redant with a visit to Elder Akhmed Barakhoev, the leader of the organizing committee of the protest rally [33]. A crowd of a huge number of people formed in the courtyard of Akhmed Barakhoev for an hour \u2014\u2014 The Ingush, worried about Barakhoev's safety, gathered to support him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286862-0007-0002", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Ingushetia protests, Protests\nAccording to the elder, Magomed Daudov called him in advance and asked permission to come. Daudov notified Barakhoev that Ramzan Kadyrov was inviting him to the Sharia court in Chechnya. The invitation also concerned the former Minister of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Republic of Ingushetia, Akhmed Pogorov, who spoke out to the head of the Chechen Republic at the rally. Akhmed Barakhoev refused the invitation. As it turned out later, Magomed Daudov, before meeting with Akhmed Barakhoev, visited the house of the Mufti of Ingushetia Isa Khamkhoev, but did not find him there. Daudov recorded a video against the background of Khamkhoev's court, commenting on the absence of the mufti. According to Magomed Daudov, Khamkhoev did not answer his calls. Daudov suggested that the mufti is deliberately hiding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 860]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286862-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Ingushetia protests, Protests\nOn October 27, the Mufti of Ingushetia Isa Khamkhoev condemned Magomed Daudov's visit to his home and declared: \"If you come to me again, then I am not responsible for my youth!\" On October 29, two deputies of the People's Assembly of the Republic of Ingushetia withdrew from the Constitutional Court of the Republic of Ingushetia a request to check the Law on the approval of the border with Chechnya; a petition was also filed to disqualify the chairman of the Constitutional Court of Ingushetia Ayup Gagiev.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286862-0008-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Ingushetia protests, Protests\nHowever, this is not a reason to cancel the court hearing on this issue. The Constitutional Court of Ingushetia confirmed that the meeting on the legality of the Law on approving the border agreement with Chechnya will be held on Tuesday October 30, 2018, the meeting is scheduled to begin at 10:00 a.m. Gunfire was heard during demonstrations in Magas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286862-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Ingushetia protests, Protests\nIn response to complaints from residents of the Republic of Ingushetia, Roskomnadzor reported that operators of the \"Big Three\" disabled mobile Internet in Ingushetia for the period from October 4 to 17, 2018 due to \"a reasoned decision of law enforcement agencies\". On November 17, the Government of the Republic of Ingushetia agreed to hold a rally against the Agreement on the Establishment of the Administrative Boundary between Ingushetia and the Chechen Republic on November 27, 2018 in the city of Nazran. The holding of the action was agreed upon subject to the requirements of federal and republican legislation on meetings, rallies, demonstrations, processions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286862-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Ingushetia protests, Protests\nOn December 6, at 10:00 am, a session of the Constitutional Court of the Russian Federation was held to announce the Court's Resolution on the constitutionality of the Agreement on the Establishment of the Administrative Boundary between Ingushetia and the Chechen Republic. A live broadcast from the courtroom was again organized on the official website of the Constitutional Court of the Russian Federation and on its official YouTube channel. Yunus-Bek Yevkurov, commenting on the decision of the Constitutional Court, said that the issue of establishing the border between Ingushetia and Chechnya had been finished, while Ramzan Kadyrov expressed the opinion that the Ingush and Chechen peoples, despite everything, will remain fraternal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286862-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Ingushetia protests, Protests\nOn March 26, 2019, the protests continued - in Magas, an agreed rally was held in front of the building of the state television and radio company Ingushetia, which, according to various estimates, gathered from 2 to 30 thousand people. According to eyewitnesses, the square was surrounded by the police, and mobile internet was turned off in the area where the rally was held. Single pickets were held in Moscow. Despite the fact that the rally was approved by the authorities only on March 26, the protesters refused to disperse and remained in the square overnight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286862-0011-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Ingushetia protests, Protests\nOn March 27, the rally in Magas was again declared indefinite. On the morning of March 27, Rosgvardia officers began dispersing the protest action, protesters threw stones and chairs at the security forces, and clashes occurred. After that, the authorities made concessions and allowed the protesters to hold a new rally in five days, people began to disperse. The protesters later entered the Caucasus federal highway, blocking it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286862-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Ingushetia protests, Protests\nOn April 23, at the Mineralnye Vody airport (Stavropol Territory), the applicant for a new rally in Ingushetia, activist Khasan Katsiyev, was detained, and in Magas, activist Akhmed Nalgiev. The Nalchik City Court of Kabardino-Balkaria arrested Khasan Katsiev and Akhmed Nalgiyev, suspects under part 2 of Article 318 of the Criminal Code (use of violence against government officials) for two months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests\nThe 2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes were a series of protests that took place across Iran against the country's economic situation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2018, April\nOn 14 April 2018, Baneh shopkeepers started strikes which continued for twenty days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2018, May\nIn late May, Iranian truckers staged a major nationwide strike over low wages and poor working conditions. It lasted until mid June and was the first in series of strikes that continued until late 2018 (see below).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 67], "content_span": [68, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2018, June\n25 June:On 25 June 2018, shops were shut and thousands gathered in the Bazaar area of Tehran to protest the economic situation. This was met with security forces firing tear gas at the protestors. Protests against the economic situation also occurred in Shahriar, Karaj, Qeshm, Bandar Abbas, and Mashhad. Some of the stores were closed enforcedly by unknown individuals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2018, June\n26 June:People in Tehran took to the streets for the third straight day on 26 June, with many shops in Tehran's Bazaar remaining closed. Videos from social media showed the crowd in downtown Tehran chanting \"Death to the dictator\" and \"Death to Palestine\". Security forces clamped down on the protesters once again, arresting a large number of people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2018, June\nStrikes and protests were also seen in Kermanshah, Arak and Tabriz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2018, June\n27 June:Protests continued for a third day in Tehran, despite a heavy security presence, Reuters referred to the three days as \"the biggest unrest since the start of the year\". Iran's Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei, addressed the protests for the first time and called on the judiciary to punish those who disrupted economic security. Many of the protests involved traders in the Grand Bazaar in Tehran, who complained that the devaluation of the Iranian rial had forced them to stop trading.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2018, June\n28 June:On 28 June, sources told Radio Farda that merchants had closed down the Bazaar in the city of Arak. Tehran's prosecutor general stated that a large number of protesters had been arrested and would likely face trial. Jafar Dolatabadi also stated in an interview that the protesters grievances are not only economic, and that \"people are grappling with political and social concerns\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2018, September\nOn 11 September 2018, shopkeepers in Iranian Kurdistan initiated a one-day strike in response to the missile attack by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps on the headquarters of the Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran, and the execution of Ramin Panahi and two other Kurd activists. In response to the strikes, the security forces arrested five Kurdish activists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2018, September\nOn 22 September 2018, truckers across several Iranian cities restarted their strikes against the rising expenses of their jobs. On 26 September, the strikes continued and were seen in Ahvaz, Qazvin, Shahreza, Borujerd, and Urmia. 40 to 70 truckers in Fars, Tehran, and Qazvin province were arrested on 27 September, as strikes continued into their fifth day. The Free Truckers Union announced that the strike had spread to 31 provinces across the country. The judiciary stated that those arrested could face the death penalty. On 29 September, on the eight day of the strikes, the number of truckers arrested reached 89.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2018, October\nOn 1 October, the truckers strikes reached their 10th straight day and were seen in Bukan, Khosrowshah, Arak, Fooladshahr, Nishapur, Tiran, Takestan, Kermanshah, Sanandaj, Qazvin, Karaj, Bandar Abbas, Ardabil, Dezful, Yazd, and Najafabad. The number of arrested also reached 156. By the 13th straight day of the strike over 230 truckers were arrested. The strikes continued into 8 October, and reached their 17th consecutive day. Security forces responded by arresting a number of truckers, which increased the number of people arrested to 256.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 71], "content_span": [72, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0010-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2018, October\nOn the same day, Bazaaris in multiple cities across Iran closed their shops and went on strike in protest to the economic situation. Strikes were seen in Sanandaj, Bukan, Saqqez, Marivan, Baneh, Miandoab, Tehran, Isfahan, Mashhad, Tabriz, and Chabahar. The strikes continued into 9 October, although they were reduced in size from the previous day, and were seen in Tabriz, Shahriar, Shahreza, and Sanandaj.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 71], "content_span": [72, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2018, October\nOn 13 October 2018, teachers across Iran started a two-day nationwide strike in protest to high expenses and inflation. Teachers in Tehran, Mashhad, Tabriz, Isfahan, Shiraz, Kermanshah, Ilam, Yasuj, Sanandaj, Simorgh, Hamedan, Amol, Zarrin Shahr, Gonabad, Eslamabad, Torbat-e Heydarieh, Marivan, Sarvabad, and Garmeh, went on strike. At least two teachers were arrested on the first day of the strike.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 71], "content_span": [72, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2018, October\nTeachers went on strike for a second day on 14 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 71], "content_span": [72, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2018, November\nOn 1 November 2018, truckers in Tehran, Zanjan, Isfahan, Asaluyeh, Nahavand, and Shahrud went on strike for the fourth time this year in protest to the arrest of hundreds of truckers in October. Workers from several factories in Iran have been on constant strikes due to unpaid wages and inflation. On 2 November 2018, workers at the Haft Tappeh Cane Sugar Company's factory in Shush start their own strikes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 72], "content_span": [73, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2018, November\nOn 13 and 14 November, Iranian teachers in most provinces went on strike for the second time in 2018. Thirteen teachers were arrested during this strike.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 72], "content_span": [73, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2018, November\nOn 15 November, the workers strikes escalated and protests spilled onto the streets of Shush. Some workers in Shush called for the factory to be operated by a workers council. The following day, the workers disrupted the Friday Prayer service of the city. They chanted \"Hossein, Hossein is their cry, theft is their pride\", \"Death to oppressors, long live workers\", and \"Workers are willing to die, but will not accept oppression\". Protests continued in the streets of Shush on 17 November, despite the presence of the security forces and riot police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 72], "content_span": [73, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2018, November\nOn the same day, hundreds of workers of the Foolad Company in Ahvaz protested in front of the Governor's office. Protestors in Ahvaz chanted \"Let go of Kashoggi, think of us\", and \"Inflation, increasing prices, be responsible Rouhani\". On 18 November, nineteen protestors were arrested in Shush. By 21 November , thirteen of the protesters in Shush were released from prison, the arrested protestors faced charges of \"acting against the regime\". On 24 November, workers joined by ordinary citizens, protested in Ahvaz and clashed with the security forces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 72], "content_span": [73, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0016-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2018, November\nOn the same day, workers of the vegetable oil factory of Zanjan protested in front of the governor's office in Zanjan due to unpaid wages. On 28 November, workers protested for the 24th consecutive day in Shush, despite the city's police commander stating that any gatherings were against the law. Protests occurred in Ahvaz on the same day, as thousands of workers took to the streets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 72], "content_span": [73, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2018, November\nOn 18 November 2018 Workers Syndicate at the Haft Tappeh sugar mill in Iran\u2019s Khuzestan province announced that the security forces had arrested two of their representatives, Esmail Bakhshi and Mohsen Armand. The syndicate also announced that on 29 November 2018 government forces arrested its senior member Ali Nejati in his house.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 72], "content_span": [73, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2018, December\nOn 4 December, workers in Ahvaz protested for the 25th straight day, and chanted \"Palestine and Syria are the root of our problems\". On 17 December, the security forces cracked-down and arrested 31 workers in Ahvaz whom they i/refdentified as the leaders of the protests. The day before workers had gathered in Ahvaz and declared that they would take their protest to the capital Tehran, if their demands were not met. On 13 December, Ali Nejati, was transferred to hospital, after long and distressing interrogations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 72], "content_span": [73, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2018, December\nOn 18 December, a lone protester on the island of Kish, stood in front of the main square of the city and graffitied anti-regime and pro-worker slogans, which included: \"Imprisoned workers must be freed\", and \"long live the Shah\". On 18 and 19 December 2018 the security forces stormed the houses of Foolad workers in Khuzestan province and arrested up to 41 workers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 72], "content_span": [73, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2018, December\n15 workers at Ilam Petrochemical Plant in central western Iran were convicted to six months\u2019 imprisonment and 74 lashes by a state court after they gathered in protest outside the factory for their fellow experienced workers being laid off. The court charged them with \u201cdisrupting public order and peace\u201d.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 72], "content_span": [73, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2018, December\nOn 21 December, truck drivers across the country started their fifth round of nationwide strikes in protest to inflation and rising expenses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 72], "content_span": [73, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2018, December\nOn 27 December 2018 Security forces attacked with tear gas a teachers gathering outside the education office in Isfahan, central Iran. Teachers were protesting their low salary and the arrest of their colleagues who were now in jail.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 72], "content_span": [73, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2019, January\nFarmers gathered in Isfahan on 2 January to protest the lack of water in the Zayanderud. The protestors were met by security forces who fired tear gas and live rounds into the air to disperse the crowds. On 22 January, retirees gathered in front of the parliament building in Tehran and chanted \"Torture and forced confessions, have no effect anymore\". Two days later, on 24 January, teachers gathered in five provinces to protest their current living and teaching conditions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 71], "content_span": [72, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2019, February\nOn 14 February, teachers in Ardabil, Mashhad, Marivan, Sanandaj, Orumieh, and Kermanshah gathered outside of the offices of the Ministry of Education and protested the arrest of teachers, and unfavourable living and teaching conditions. On the same day a teacher's rights activist was arrested in Sanandaj.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 72], "content_span": [73, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2019, February\nOn 26 February, railway workers in Tabriz and Shahroud went on strike. Earlier that day, a large group of retirees gathered in front of the parliament building in Tehran to protest low pensions. Protesters chanted \"no nation has seen such a dishonourable parliament\" and \"shame on those who claim to be the upholders of justice\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 72], "content_span": [73, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2019, March\nOn 3 March, teachers across Iran started a three-day nationwide sit in, in protest to low living wages and unfavourable job conditions. This is the third sit in this year by teachers across Iran. The same day, railway workers in Andimeshk went on strike to protest unpaid wages and blocked the Ahvaz to Mashhad train from running its route. The families of Esmail Bakhshi and Sepideh Gholian also gathered in front of the judiciary in Shush to protest their arrest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2019, March\nThe following day on 4 March, mobile bazars in Tehran, Tabriz, Ahvaz, Mashhad, and Isfahan went on strike to protest the new initiative started by the Ministry of Communications which prevents them from registering the smartphones they want to sell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2019, March\nOn 5 March, workers of Chamshir Dam in Gachsaran went on strike and gathered outside the governorate to protest 14 months of unpaid wages. On the same day, workers of the Ministry of Agriculture gathered in front of the parliament building in Tehran and protested their low wages. Railway strikes also continued in Tabriz and Lorestan province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2019, March\nOn 6 March, Foolad retirees took to the streets in Isfahan due to low pensions. The protestors chanted \"Our revolution was a mistake\" and \"Rouhani the liar, resign\". Teachers again took the streets on 7 March in multiple cities across Iran. Protests were reported in Kermanshah, Urmia, Ardabil, Mashhad, and Isfahan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2019, May\nOn 1 May (May day), workers, students, and teachers gathered in front of the parliament building in Tehran to protest poor economic conditions, and lack of individual rights. Protesters chanted \"Workers, teachers, students, unite\" and \"High costs and inflation are hurting people's lives\". The security forces clamped down on the protests and 40 demonstrators were arrested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 67], "content_span": [68, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2019, May\nOn 2 May, teachers across 13 provinces in Iran protested their poor work and living conditions. The security forces arrested at least 3 teachers in Tehran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 67], "content_span": [68, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Timeline, 2019, June\nOn 23 June, protestors in Kermanshah can be seen wearing yellow vests in inspiration by the French Yellow vests movement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0033-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Casualties, Torture allegations\nOn 29 November 2018, it was reported by various news outlets that Esmail Bakhshi, one of the leaders of the strikes in Shush, had been severely tortured during his detention and transferred to a hospital in Ahvaz. Officials in Khuzestan province quickly denied the news. On 4 December, members of the Haft Tape Union, warned that the health of Bakhshi and Sepideh Qolian was in a dire state, as they could not tell what time of day it was. It was later revealed that while in custody, Bakhshi was attacked repeatedly with a baton, to the point where he now has difficulty walking, sitting, and sleeping. He was also given unspecified drugs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 79], "content_span": [80, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0034-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Casualties, Torture allegations\nOn 20 December 2018, Human Rights Watch urged the regime in Iran to investigate and find an explanation for the death of Vahid Sayadi Nasiri who had been jailed for insulting the Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. According to his family Nasiri had been on hunger strike but he was denied medical attention before he died.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 79], "content_span": [80, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0035-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Casualties, Torture allegations\nBakhshi and Qolian were arrested again in January 2019. In February 2019, it was reported that Bakhshi's health was in serious condition while in jail.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 79], "content_span": [80, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286863-0036-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Iranian general strikes and protests, Suppression\nAddressing students in Qom, in early March 2019, Musa Ghazanfarabadi, an Iranian official and head of the Islamic Courts in Tehran, said that if needed they can bring Hashd al-Shaabi militias from Iraq, Houthis from Yemen and others from Pakistan and Afghanistan to suppress the demonstrations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 59], "content_span": [60, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286864-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Israel Football League season\nThe 2018\u20132019 Israel Football League season was the 12th season of the Israel Football League. The season began on November 15, 2018 and concluded on February 28, 2019 with IsraBowl XII. This season was the first to feature full eleven-man games after previously playing nine-man football. The season also marked the return of the Ramat HaSharon Hammers, who were on hiatus during the 2017\u20132018 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286864-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Israel Football League season\nThe Jerusalem Lions defeated the Petah Tikva Troopers in IsraBowl XII to secure their third straight championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286865-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Japanese protests\nThe 2018\u20132019 Japanese protests was a series of peaceful demonstrations and anti-government protests nationwide between May 2018 and June 2019 against the government of Shinzo Abe. The protests would be the most massive and biggest countryside and countrywide uprisings in Japan. The first protests in Japan was against the government of Shinzo Abe and the economic grievances of poorer areas in Japan. Thousands were taking part in the mass protests in May-July 2018 and the anti-rape national protest movement in October 2018-July 2019 after a rape of a girl in 2018. Hundreds were beaten or injured in the clashes in 2019 and is the most peaceful however in Japan since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286866-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Mongolian protests\nThe 2018\u20132019 Mongolian protests was a series of mass demonstrations and popular protests against the president and the government after a leak which showed scandals and links of embezzlement with parliament speaker and corruption scandals also unleashed. This triggered the popular uprising and plunged the country into the 2019 Mongolian constitutional crisis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286866-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Mongolian protests, Background\nCorruption has been tranquil in the country, since mass demonstrations against the results of 2017 Mongolian presidential election. In a 2016 corruption case, a lot of government officials and loyal policemen and security forces were embezzling and did fraud.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286866-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Mongolian protests, Protests\nThe rallies erupted in September, with serene anger over the government and president. Anti -scandal and anti-corruption demonstrations soon turned into anti-govt and worker demonstrations and rallies by journalists and pensioners, students and workers and continued strongly throughout the month of October. In September, the first traces of public anger was put into place as small demonstrations broke out. These demonstrations turned into an uprising demanding for justice and elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286866-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Mongolian protests, Further protests\nIn February, the daily protests turned violent, but the danger soon diminished. The unrest was witnessed by hundreds of thousands of others in Ulaanbaatar. The democratic reforms movement was dwindling while the 2019 Mongolian constitutional crisis was taking place. In April and May of 2019, a series of votes was held for a new speaker in parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286867-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Nigerian protests\nThe 2018\u20132019 Nigerian protests was a series of Shiite-led protests against the discrimination of Shia Muslims in Nigeria in October\u2013November 2018 and July\u2013August 2019. A wave of popular protests, civil violence and Strikes, called by Shiites led to wild fighting between Muslims, Christians and Police. Tens of thousands of protesters marched throughout Shia-majority streets in cities surrounding the capital Lagos. Street protests and growing opposition to president Muhammad Buhari in 2019, as part of the #RevolutionNow movement In July 2019 but however, initial protests began after an organisation's leader was arrested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286867-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Nigerian protests\nIn October\u2013November, after popular demonstrations and street unrest, police used Live ammunition to disperse the demonstrators, killing 45 demonstrators. Troops was deployed to patrol the streets in case of protests after 3 days of protests. A new wave of protests in July re-ignited into violence as demonstrators marched against Discrimination of Shia Muslims. Tens of thousands rallied in #RevolutionNow rallies throughout Abuja during a week of protests in late-July and early-August 2019. Mass protests were held in Abuja by Muslims against Police brutality acting the movement. The security forces and Riot police forcefully broke up the demands and protests on 5 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286868-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Oman protests\nThe 2018\u20132019 Omani protests were nationwide protests and rallies in which tens of thousands of protesters marched, against skyrocketing unemployment and inflation in Oman. Mass protests began in January 2018, when police clashed with demonstrators chanting anti-government slogans and demanded an end to the government. Anti -unemployment riots occurred throughout Oman in December, when a wave of protests hit Muscat and Sohar in Oman. Protest and dissent swept Oman while police brutality was increasing, triggering protests and clashes. On 3-8 January 2019, national general strikes began, leading to promises of reforms by Sultan Qaboos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286869-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Saudi crackdown on feminists\nThe 2018\u20132019 Saudi crackdown on feminists consisted of waves of arrests of women's rights activists in Saudi Arabia involved in the women to drive movement and the Saudi anti male-guardianship campaign and of their supporters during 2018 and 2019. The crackdown was described in June 2018 by a United Nations special rapporteur as taking place \"on a wide scale across\" Saudi Arabia; the special rapporteur called for the \"urgent release\" of the detainees. Six of the women arrestees were tortured, some in the presence of Crown Prince advisor Saud al-Qahtani.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286869-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Saudi crackdown on feminists, Background\nAccording to Clarence Rodriguez, the 2018\u20132019 crackdown can be considered as following from a wave of arrests in September 2017 of intellectuals and clerics, including the arrests of Abdulaziz al-Shubaily, a founding member of the Saudi Civil and Political Rights Association (ACPRA); Mustafa al-Hassan, an academic and novelist; and Essam al-Zamel, an entrepreneur. Rodriguez described the September 2017 arrests as constituting a campaign of political repression by Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman (MBS), in reaction to which Jamal Khashoggi left Saudi Arabia for exile in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286869-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Saudi crackdown on feminists, Arrest waves\nRodriguez described the 2018 arrests of the women activists as a \"detonator\" of the reputation of MBS as a reformer, arguing that MBS aimed to claim the credit for dropping the women driving ban.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 52], "content_span": [53, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286869-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Saudi crackdown on feminists, Arrest waves, January\u2013June 2018\nNoha al-Balawi was detained in January 2018, the first in a 2018 wave of arrests of women's right activists involved in the women to drive movement and the anti male-guardianship campaign. She was questioned during her detention about her women's rights activities. In mid-May 2018, all three of Aziza al-Yousef, Loujain al-Hathloul and Eman al-Nafjan, together with Aisha al-Mana, Madeha al-Ajroush and two male activists, were arrested by Saudi authorities. As of 22\u00a0May\u00a02018, more anti male-guardianship campaigners had been arrested, bringing the total to 13. As of 25\u00a0May\u00a02018, four of the women had been released.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286869-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Saudi crackdown on feminists, Arrest waves, January\u2013June 2018\nNouf Abdelaziz was arrested on 6 June 2018 after expressing support for seven of the activists arrested in May. Mayaa al-Zahrani was arrested later in May after she published online a letter written by Abdelaziz for release if arrested. Hatoon al-Fassi, a women's rights activist and an associate professor of women's history, was arrested around 27 June, not long after she had driven a car following the official lifting of the women's driving ban.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286869-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Saudi crackdown on feminists, Arrest waves, January\u2013June 2018\nThe wave of political arrests in 2018 extended beyond women's rights groups to other individuals making political statements against Mohammad bin Salman's policies. Economist Essam al-Zamil was charged with terrorism as a result of questioning plans involving the national oil company. Political prisoners were held without trial, and public figures, such as Salman al-Awdah, were \"wanted dead\", according to The Economist. Mohammed Saleh al-Bejadi, co-founder of the Saudi Arabian human rights organisation Saudi Civil and Political Rights Association (ACPRA), who had already been held in prison from 2011\u20132015, was arrested on 24 May 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286869-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Saudi crackdown on feminists, Arrest waves, January\u2013June 2018\nAs of 27\u00a0June\u00a02018, Al Jazeera English stated that nine of the activists, out of a total of 17, remained under arrest without contact with their families or lawyers. Al-Yousef was released from prison, without the charges against her being dropped, in late March 2019. As of 2\u00a0August\u00a02019, Loujain al-Hathloul, Samar Badawi and Nassima al-Sada remained under arrest, while several of the other detained women had been released while their trials continued.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286869-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Saudi crackdown on feminists, Arrest waves, April 2019\nTwelve people, a pregnant woman and eleven men, involved in women's rights activities or supportive of the imprisoned activists were arrested on or around 4 April 2019. The arrestees, including two United States (US)\u2013Saudi binational citizens, Badr al-Ibrahim and Salah al-Haidar, son of Aziza al-Yousef, were seen as not being \"front-line activists\", in the sense that they were not politically active on Twitter and were rarely quoted in non-Saudi media.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286869-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Saudi crackdown on feminists, Arrest waves, April 2019\nOther April detainees included writers Khadijah al-Harbi and her husband Thumar al-Marzouqi, Mohammed al-Sadiq, Andhullah al-Dehailan, Naif al-Hendas, Ayman al-Drees, Abdullah al-Shehri and Moqbel al-Saqqar. Fahal Abalkhail, who had supported the women to drive movement was also among the arrestees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286869-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Saudi crackdown on feminists, Arrest waves, April 2019\nKing Saud University lecturer Anas al-Mazraoui was earlier arrested in March after having stated the names of some of the imprisoned women's rights activists during a human-rights panel discussion at a book fair.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286869-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Saudi crackdown on feminists, Arrest waves, April 2019\nAs of 2\u00a0August\u00a02019, a total of 14 of the March/April detainees remained imprisoned without charge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286869-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Saudi crackdown on feminists, Torture\nSamar Badawi, al-Yousef, al-Nafjan, al-Hathloul, Shadan al-Onezi and Nouf al-Dosari were tortured during the detention, with Crown Prince advisor Saud al-Qahtani present at some of the torture sessions. Physical torture techniques included beating the women on their feet, giving them electric shocks and whipping them. The torture location was referred to as \"the hotel\" or \"the officer's guesthouse\". One of the women was photographed naked, one was sexually harassed, beaten and groped, one was stripped naked in front of interrogators. Several had black eyes, suffered from trembling, and were unable to walk or stand normally. One was told falsely that a family member had died. Testimony of torture was obtained independently by ALQST, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 835]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286869-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Saudi crackdown on feminists, Torture\nSome of the women have testified about their torture in court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286869-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Saudi crackdown on feminists, Aims of the crackdown\nHuman Rights Watch (HRW) interpreted the arrests as being aimed at frightening the activists, stating, \"The message is clear that anyone expressing skepticism about the crown prince's [human] rights agenda faces time in jail.\" The arrested campaigners were severely criticised in semi-official media as \"traitors\". Social anthropologist Madawi al-Rasheed interpreted the May arrests as being part of Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman's aim to keep all the credit for allowing women to drive starting from 24 June 2018. Rothna Begum of HRW said that since the arrests and the public smearing of the activists' reputations, women's Twitter activity was quiet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286869-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Saudi crackdown on feminists, Aims of the crackdown\nALQST described the series of arrests as \"unprecedented targeting of women human rights defenders\". In June 2018, United Nations special rapporteurs described the detentions and arrests taking place as a \"crackdown\" taking place \"on a wide scale across\" Saudi Arabia and called for the \"urgent release\" of the detainees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286869-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Saudi crackdown on feminists, International support for the detainees\nOn 2 January 2019, a group of UK members of parliament and international lawyers requested permission to visit the women detainees. However, there was no response from the Saudi ambassador Prince Mohammed bin Nawwaf bin Abdulaziz. The UK panel that included former Conservative chair of the foreign affairs select committee Crispin Blunt concluded that the female detainees had been subjected to cruel and inhumane treatment, including assault, threats to life and solitary confinement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 79], "content_span": [80, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286869-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Saudi crackdown on feminists, International support for the detainees\nOn 14 May 2019, one year after the women human rights activists were arrested by the Saudi authorities, Amnesty International criticised Saudi Arabia's western allies, including the US, the UK and France for not doing anything for the \"immediate and unconditional release\" of the activists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 79], "content_span": [80, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286870-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 South Korean protests\nThe President Moon Jae-in's resignation movement is a civic resistance movement calling for the resignation of Moon Jae-in, the 19th President of the Republic of Korea. It started to take place in earnest by the organizers who led the protest against the impeachment of President Park Geun-hye. A wave of anti-government protests swept South Korea throughout October 2019, when millions of demonstrators marched in downtown Seoul in street protests and 2-week long movement against the corruption scandals involving president Moon Jae-in and former justice minister Cho-Kuk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286870-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 South Korean protests\nAfter a long period of unprecedented demonstrations, the minister resigned and a new justice minister was put into place. Although protests took place in October 2019, more known as the South Korean October Revolution , protests against the refugee crisis occurred in June 2018, the large pro-Japan trade and anti-restrictions street protests between May\u2013August 2019, anti-North Korea riots in February 2018. 1 was suspected killed in clashes in February 2018 but is has not been confirmed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286871-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Swedish government formation\nIn the 2018 Swedish general election, no political group or party won an outright majority, resulting in a hung parliament. On 9 September, the Red-Greens, led by Stefan L\u00f6fven's Social Democrats (S), emerged as the main political force in the Riksdag, while the centre-right Alliance led by Ulf Kristersson's Moderate Party only got one seat less. The right-wing populist party Sweden Democrats, led by Jimmie \u00c5kesson, came third. As a result, protracted negotiations were required before a new government could be formed. On 18 January 2019, L\u00f6fven was re-elected as prime minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286871-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Swedish government formation, Parties and number of seats\nThe table below lists parties' 2018 representation in the Riksdag.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286871-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Swedish government formation, Parties and number of seats, Groups\nUnder the principle of negative parliamentarism, a government needs at least 175 members of parliament to not vote against it (such members should either vote 'yes' or abstain).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 75], "content_span": [76, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286871-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Swedish government formation, Potential governments\nThe Swedish constitution creates a system known as \"negative parliamentarianism\", wherein \"a prime ministerial candidate does not need to have the support of a majority, they only need to show that they do not have a majority of parliament against them.\" In other words, the vote of confidence in Sweden is in practice a vote of no confidence, wherein the burden of proof is on the opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286871-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Swedish government formation, Potential governments\nPolitical parties can symbolically \"abstain\" from the vote, which in practice acts as a yes vote and shows that the party tolerates, or tacitly approves, a government formation without the associated baggage that comes with outright support. Thus, the status quo is to seek a government agreement that is tolerable by a majority of the parties, rather than a polarizing agreement that is liked by one side and hated by the other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286871-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Swedish government formation, Potential governments\nWith no political group or party having an outright majority, as well as a tangled web of conflicting interests among the parties, speculations were made around a number of possible compromises:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286871-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Swedish government formation, Formation process, Ousting of L\u00f6fven\nNorl\u00e9n was elected the Speaker of the Riksdag on 24 September 2018, following the first sitting of the Riksdag since the elections with 203 to 145 votes against \u00c5sa Lindestam, who became First Deputy Speaker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286871-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Swedish government formation, Formation process, Ousting of L\u00f6fven\nPrime Minister Stefan L\u00f6fven lost the motion of no confidence against him and his cabinet on 25 September 2018, with 142 members of parliament voting to retain L\u00f6fven's cabinet and 204 voting against. L\u00f6fven stated in a subsequent press conference that he would not step down as Social Democratic party leader and that he was willing to partake in talks regarding the formation of a new government, but insisted that it was ultimately up to the Speaker of the Riksdag. L\u00f6fven also stated that he found it completely unbelievable that the Alliance could ever form a government if they keep their promise of not co-operating with the Sweden Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286871-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Swedish government formation, Formation process, Ousting of L\u00f6fven\n2 days later party negotiations for forming a new government commenced. and on 2 October the Speaker of the House, Andreas Norl\u00e9n, announced that he had tasked Moderate Party leader Ulf Kristersson with forming a government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286871-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Swedish government formation, Formation process, Ousting of L\u00f6fven\nOn 14 October, Ulf Kristersson held a press conference, stating that he had notified the Speaker of the Riksdag that he is giving up his attempt at forming a government. Kristersson maintained that he still has the intention of becoming Prime Minister and leading a government consisting of \"the entire Alliance, solely the Moderates or those Alliance parties that would be willing to enter into an Alliance government led by myself.\" He informed the Speaker of the Riksdag that \"there is currently no basis for any of these options at this time\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286871-0008-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Swedish government formation, Formation process, Ousting of L\u00f6fven\nThe reason for the failure was that the Alliance had fewer seats than the red-greens, so the Sweden Democrats (or the Social Democrats) must support government propositions or they would fail: such need for Sweden Democrat support was not tolerated by the Centre and Liberal parties. They proposed a government including the Social Democrats, which the Moderates rule out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286871-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Swedish government formation, Formation process, Ousting of L\u00f6fven\nStefan L\u00f6fven was tasked with forming a government on 15 October 2018, giving him two weeks to construct a stable government coalition. On 29 October, L\u00f6fven announced that he too had failed to create a stable government. Norl\u00e9n then took over the process of government formation directly, though he did not announce a deadline. As the budget must be renewed by 15 November, Swedish Government's finance ministry has been working on a \"politically neutral\" emergency bill that would avert a second budget crisis if the government is not formed by then.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286871-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Swedish government formation, Formation process, First Riksdag vote\nOn 5 November, Norl\u00e9n nominated Moderate leader Ulf Kristersson to lead the government. A nomination, in this case, means that the Riksdag will have a confidence vote, rather than merely continuing talks. Centre leader Annie L\u00f6\u00f6f was critical of the decision, as she had expected to become the third person tasked with forming a stable government coalition. L\u00f6\u00f6f was also critical of the Moderates as well as the Christian Democrats, accusing them of taking her opportunity of forming a government away (the Speaker is a Moderate), thus disrupting an already fragile Alliance. The vote was set to take place during the week of 12 November, before the budget debate on 15 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 77], "content_span": [78, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286871-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Swedish government formation, Formation process, First Riksdag vote\nOn 14 November, Kristersson's proposed minority government of Moderates + Christian Democrats supported by Sweden Democrats failed the Riskdag confidence vote 195\u2013154. The Center and Liberal parties broke their alliance, as they refused to accept a government that relied on the Sweden Democrats. The vote was marked the first time a candidate for Prime Minister was rejected by the Riksdag since the abolition of the bicameral legislature in 1971. The Swedish constitution stipulates that the Riksdag will have four chances to pass a confidence vote, after which a new election will be mandatory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 77], "content_span": [78, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286871-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Swedish government formation, Formation process, Second Riksdag vote and budget vote\nOn 15 November, Norl\u00e9n tasked L\u00f6\u00f6f with forming a government, and gave her a one-week extendable deadline. Norl\u00e9n did not announce a date for a second Riksdag vote, stating only that there would be \"one or more votes this autumn.\" L\u00f6\u00f6f stated that she wanted to construct a centrist government, and that she wanted the centre-right (M, KD, and L) and the centre-left (S and MP) to agree to negotiate with her about the possibility of forming a new government, excluding the parties that are far-left (V) and far-right (SD).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 94], "content_span": [95, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286871-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Swedish government formation, Formation process, Second Riksdag vote and budget vote\nL\u00f6\u00f6f announced on 22 November that she would concede her attempt to form a government, blaming the Moderates and Social Democrats for being unwilling to compromise. The next day, Norl\u00e9n nominated L\u00f6fven to be the prime minister, without a formally-set date for the vote. He also set the budget vote to occur on 12 December. The Centre Party stated that they may back L\u00f6fven (and thus give the red-greens 31 seats, exactly enough for a majority) if L\u00f6fven's cabinet agrees to some economic compromises. Soon after, the Liberal Party head Jan Bj\u00f6rklund made a similar statement, although the party was internally divided on the matter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 94], "content_span": [95, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286871-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Swedish government formation, Formation process, Second Riksdag vote and budget vote\nOn 12 December, Norl\u00e9n formally nominated L\u00f6fven. As the Centre and Liberals had stated earlier in the week that they were not satisfied with L\u00f6fven's negotiations, the outcome of the vote remained uncertain. On the same day, the provisional budget was submitted by the caretaker government, but was defeated by an alternative budget created by the Moderates and Christian Democrats, as the Sweden Democrats supported it, and the Centre and Liberal parties decided to abstain from the final vote. On 14 December, L\u00f6fven lost the confidence vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 94], "content_span": [95, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286871-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Swedish government formation, Formation process, Third Riksdag vote and re-election of L\u00f6fven\nNorl\u00e9n stated after the vote that he would restart negotiations between the parties, while at the same time preparing for the possibility of a snap election. Norl\u00e9n then created a finalized timeline for forming a government, and urged Kristersson and L\u00f6fven to find a compromise. Without nominating a new candidate, he set the next vote for a Prime Minister on 16 January, and a final vote on 23 January if the first vote fails. If neither vote succeeds, a snap election will be called immediately, and would likely take place on 7 April according to the Swedish Election Authority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 103], "content_span": [104, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286871-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Swedish government formation, Formation process, Third Riksdag vote and re-election of L\u00f6fven\nOn 11 January 2019, it was reported that the Social Democrats, Greens, Centre and Liberals had reached a deal to support L\u00f6fven as Prime Minister in order to end the deadlock. These cooperating parties have only 167 members of Riksdag, and need support from one more party. It was assumed that the Left party would back a Social Democrat coalition by default, but the agreement text specifically excluded the Left party from participation on matters covered by the agreement, and left the party out of future coalition negotiations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 103], "content_span": [104, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286871-0016-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Swedish government formation, Formation process, Third Riksdag vote and re-election of L\u00f6fven\nThe Left party criticized being expected to back a government which would leave them without a voice, and on 14 January, Left Party leader Jonas Sj\u00f6stedt stated that they would not back the agreement as it stood, calling for further negotiations. Consequently, the speaker deferred the third prime ministerial vote scheduled for 16 January to instead take place on 18 January to allow L\u00f6fven and Sj\u00f6stedt to reach their own compromise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 103], "content_span": [104, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286871-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Swedish government formation, Formation process, Third Riksdag vote and re-election of L\u00f6fven\nOn 16 January, Sj\u00f6stedt told reporters his party would abstain from voting against L\u00f6fven but threatens to initiate a no-confidence vote against him in the future if he supports policies that threaten worker's rights or if he puts forward proposals that further deregulate the rental market. That same day, the Speaker again formally nominated L\u00f6fven as a Prime Ministerial candidate, scheduling a vote in the Riksdag for 18 January. During the vote, L\u00f6fven was elected Prime Minister with 115 Riksdag members voting for him and 77 members who abstained (total of 192 votes). Due to the low number of yes votes L\u00f6fven received, he has the third weakest government since the end of World War II as at the time of his election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 103], "content_span": [104, 829]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286871-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Swedish government formation, Formation process, Third Riksdag vote and re-election of L\u00f6fven\nThe speaker of the Riksdag, Norl\u00e9n, declared he would nominate Ulf Kristersson for prime minister had the investiture vote failed. This forced the Centre party and the Left party to choose between L\u00f6fven, Kristersson (with \u00c5kesson support), and a snap election. The Left party did not want to risk Kristersson becoming the prime minister, and the Centre and Liberal parties did not want a snap election, which, according to polls, could send the Liberals out of the Riksdag and give M+KD+SD a majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 103], "content_span": [104, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286871-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Swedish government formation, Formation process, Third Riksdag vote and re-election of L\u00f6fven\nOn 21 January 2019, L\u00f6fven unveiled the members of his cabinet and presented his statement of government (regeringsf\u00f6rklaringen) to parliament. As was the case with his first government, the second one consisted of Social Democrats and Greens. They include the following ministers:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 103], "content_span": [104, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown\nThe United States federal government shutdown from midnight EST on December 22, 2018, until January 25, 2019 (35 days) was the longest U.S. government shutdown in history and the second and final federal government shutdown involving furloughs during the presidency of Donald Trump. It occurred when the 116th United States Congress and President Donald Trump could not agree on an appropriations bill to fund the operations of the federal government for the 2019 fiscal year, or a temporary continuing resolution that would extend the deadline for passing a bill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0000-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown\nThe Antideficiency Act prohibits federal departments or agencies from conducting non-essential operations without appropriations legislation in place. As a result, nine executive departments with around 800,000 employees had to shut down partially or in full, affecting about one-fourth of government activities and causing employees to be furloughed or required to work without being paid. The Congressional Budget Office estimated the shutdown cost the American economy at least $11 billion USD, excluding indirect costs that were difficult to quantify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown\nThe shutdown stemmed from an impasse over Trump's demand for $5.7 billion in federal funds for a U.S.\u2013Mexico border wall. In December 2018, the Senate unanimously passed an appropriations bill without wall funding, and the bill appeared likely to be approved by the Republican-controlled House of Representatives and Trump. After Trump faced heavy criticism from some right-wing media outlets and pundits for appearing to back down on his campaign promise to \"build the wall\", he announced that he would not sign any appropriations bill that did not fund its construction. As a result, the House passed a stopgap bill with funding for the wall, but it was blocked in the Senate by the threat of a Democratic filibuster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 772]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown\nIn January 2019, representatives elected in the November 2018 election took office, giving the Democrats a majority in the House of Representatives. The House immediately voted to approve the appropriations bill that had previously passed the Senate unanimously (which included no funding for the wall). For several weeks, Trump continued to maintain that he would veto any bill that did not fund an entire border wall, and Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell blocked the Senate from considering any appropriations legislation that Trump would not support, including the bill that had previously passed. Democrats and some Republicans opposed the shutdown and passed multiple bills to reopen the government, arguing that the government shutdown amounted to \"hostage-taking\" civil servants and that negotiations could only begin once the government was reopened.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 927]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown\nOn January 25, 2019, Trump agreed to endorse a stopgap bill to reopen the government for three weeks up until February 15 to allow for negotiations to take place to approve an appropriations bill that both parties could agree on. However, Trump reiterated his demand for the border wall funding and said that he would shut down the government again or declare a national emergency and use military funding to build the wall if Congress did not appropriate the funds by February 15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown\nTrump's approval rating decreased during the shutdown. A majority of Americans opposed exploitation of the shutdown as a negotiating strategy and held Trump responsible for the shutdown: A CBS News poll found that 71% of Americans considered the border wall \"not worth the shutdown\" and a The Washington Post/ABC News poll found that 53% of Americans blamed Trump and Republicans for the shutdown, compared to 34% who blamed Democrats and 10% who blamed both parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown\nOn February 15, 2019, Trump declared a national emergency in order to fund the wall and bypass the United States Congress, after being unsatisfied with a bipartisan border bill that had passed the House of Representatives and the Senate a day before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Background\nDuring his 2016 campaign, then-candidate Trump promised to build a wall along the Mexico\u2013United States border for which Mexico would pay. The president of Mexico rejected the idea of providing any funding for a U.S. border wall. In 2018, Trump requested $18.2\u00a0billion in federal funding for some 700 miles (1,100\u00a0km) of barrier on the border, mostly to replace 654 miles (1,053\u00a0km) of aging fence built under the Secure Fence Act of 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Background\nOn December 25, 2018, Trump reversed course, suggesting that he might accept 500 to 550 miles (800 to 890\u00a0km) of either mostly refurbished barrier (rather than new barriers in locations that did not previously have them) by November 2020. Trump's proposals and public statements on the wall have shifted widely over time, with varied proposals as to the design, material, length, height, and width of a wall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Background\nIn September 2018, Congress passed two \"minibus\" appropriations bills for the 2019 United States federal budget, which began on October 1, 2018. These bills combined five of the 12 regular appropriations bills covering 77% of federal discretionary funding, and included a continuing resolution until December 7 for the remaining agencies. On December 6, Congress passed a second continuing resolution to December 21, to give more time for negotiations on Trump's proposed border wall, which had been delayed due to the funeral of George H. W. Bush.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Background\nA Senate Homeland Security appropriations bill, negotiated by both parties and reported by the committee to the Senate, provided for $1.62\u00a0billion for border security, including funds for \"approximately 65 miles of pedestrian fencing along the southwest border in the Rio Grande Valley Sector\". The bill did not receive a vote on the Senate floor, although House Democratic Whip Steny Hoyer indicated that such a proposal could be acceptable to House Democrats. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) said the Democratic Party would not support $5.87\u00a0billion for the border wall. At a press conference before the government shutdown, he noted \"the $1.6 billion for border security negotiated by Democrats and Republicans is our position. We believe that is the right way to go.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 847]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Background, Beginning of shutdown\nOn December 11, President Trump held a televised meeting with Speaker-designate Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer in the Oval Office and asked them to support an appropriation of $5.7 billion for funding of a border wall along the U.S. southern border with Mexico. They refused, resulting in an argument between Trump and both Congressional leaders. During the contentious discussion, Trump remarked, \"I am proud to shut down the government for border security\u00a0... I will be the one to shut [the government] down. I'm not going to blame you for it\u00a0... I will take the mantle. I will be the one to shut it down.\" Schumer replied, \"We shouldn't shut down the government over a dispute.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 86], "content_span": [87, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Background, Beginning of shutdown\nThree days later, Politico reported that Trump was willing to sign a bill with no funding for a border wall that delayed a government shutdown into 2019 and the new Congress. On December 18, following a meeting with Trump, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said that the government would not shut down on December 22 and that Trump was \"flexible\" over funding for a border wall. Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Richard Shelby commented that the most likely resolution was a bill that funded the government until early February. Schumer added that his caucus would \"very seriously\" consider such a bill and Senate Majority Whip John Cornyn said \"I don't know anybody on the Hill that wants a shutdown, and I think all the president's advisers are telling him this would not be good.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 86], "content_span": [87, 883]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Background, Beginning of shutdown\nOn December 19, the Senate passed a second continuing resolution () that would fund the government until February 8, 2019. Pelosi announced that House Democrats would support the measure, meaning it would overcome opposition from conservative Republicans and pass the House. On December 20, following increased criticism from conservative media, pundits, and political figures, Trump reversed his position and declared that he would not sign any funding bill that did not include border wall funding. The same day, the House passed a continuing resolution that included $5 billion for the wall and $8 billion in disaster aid. This bill failed in the Senate. Trump's changing position caused consternation among Senate Republicans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 86], "content_span": [87, 817]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown\nThe shutdown started December 22 and Trump announced that he would cancel his planned trip to Mar-a-Lago for Christmas and stay in Washington, D.C. The meaning of the term \"wall\" was expected to be an aspect of the negotiations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Legislation, 115th Congress\nCongress adjourned on December 22 for the Christmas and holiday season, with many predicting that the shutdown would not be resolved until the start of the 116th Congress. The Senate reconvened on December 27 for four minutes, with Republican Senator Pat Roberts (R-KS) presiding over the session. The House briefly reconvened as well, with Republican Majority Whip Steve Scalise (R-LA) saying that members should not expect any further votes for the rest of 2018. Representative Jim McGovern (D-MA) went to the House floor to try to force consideration of a short-term funding bill to end the shutdown that the Senate had already passed, but the Republican Speaker-pro-tem refused to let him speak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 90], "content_span": [91, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Legislation, 115th Congress\nCongress then adjourned again until December 31, 2018, for a pro forma session. On January 2, 2019, the last full day of the 115th United States Congress, there was a pro forma session scheduled to last several minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 90], "content_span": [91, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Legislation, 116th Congress\nThe new Congress was sworn in on January 3, 2019, and one of the first orders of business in the House after electing the Speaker and swearing in the new members was a continuing resolution to fund the Department of Homeland Security until February 8 (), which passed by a vote of 239\u2013192; and a package combining five appropriation bills funding the rest of the government for the remainder of the fiscal year (), passed by a vote of 241\u2013190. The bills contained $1.3 billion of funding for border security, but no additional funding for a border wall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 90], "content_span": [91, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Legislation, 116th Congress\nBeginning on January 9, the Democratic-controlled House voted on four appropriations bills individually:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 90], "content_span": [91, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Legislation, 116th Congress\nThis strategy has been compared to one used by Republicans during the 2013 shutdown in the form of a series of fourteen mini-continuing resolutions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 90], "content_span": [91, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Legislation, 116th Congress\nSenate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell vowed that the Senate would not consider the House bills to reopen the government, indicating that Senate Republicans would not support any bill unless it had Trump's support. In January 2019, McConnell and Senate Republicans came under increased pressure to break the impasse and reopen the government. Three Republican Senators\u2014Susan Collins of Maine, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, and Cory Gardner of Colorado\u2014called for an end to the shutdown. Senators Collins and Gardner said they supported the House's budget bills to end the shutdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 90], "content_span": [91, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0018-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Legislation, 116th Congress\nWest Virginia Senator Shelley Moore Capito said that she could support ending the shutdown provided border wall talks continued. Pat Roberts of Kansas said that shutdowns \"never work\" and only turned affected federal workers into \"pawns\" and that, although the time had not yet come for Senate Republicans to override any possible Trump veto and end the shutdown, \"we're getting pretty close.\" Johnny Isakson of Georgia echoed that sentiment, saying that support for McConnell's refusal to support bills that do not include funding for a wall would not last indefinitely: \"There's a time when that may run out.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 90], "content_span": [91, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Legislation, 116th Congress\nOn January 16, McConnell again blocked the House appropriation bills to reopen the government from being considered on the Senate floor. The following day, McConnell blocked consideration of bills to reopen most of the closed government agencies for a third time. On January 23, McConnell blocked a bill to reopen most of the government for the fourth time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 90], "content_span": [91, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Legislation, 116th Congress\nOn January 22, McConnell stated that the Senate would be voting on two different bills to end the shutdown on January 24. The first vote is on a bill to reopen the government which includes Trump's proposal to provide $5.7 billion for a border wall and temporary protections to some immigration classes. The other bill is a three-week continuing resolution to fund 25% of the government through February 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 90], "content_span": [91, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Legislation, 116th Congress\nOn January 22, Senator Mark Warner introduced a bill to keep the federal government running in the event of future shutdown events. The bill is called the \"Stop Shutdowns Transferring Unnecessary Pain and Inflicting Damage in the Coming Years Act\" or the \"Stop STUPIDITY Act\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 90], "content_span": [91, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Legislation, Late January legislative votes\nOn January 24, the Senate held two votes on competing Democratic and Republican proposals to end the shutdown. The Democratic proposal was largely similar to the measure that had previously passed the Senate unanimously in the 115th Congress, and then been passed by the Democratic-controlled House in the 116th Congress. It provided funding for the government with no money for the border wall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 106], "content_span": [107, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0022-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Legislation, Late January legislative votes\nThe Republican proposal incorporated Trump's proposal, which would fund a border wall; temporarily extend TPS and DACA for three years, but would substantially narrow eligibility for DACA; and make significant legal changes to make it more difficult for persons escaping violence and persecution to be granted asylum in the United States. Neither proposal was able to attain the 60 votes needed for passage. The Trump plan failed in a 50\u201347 vote. The Democratic plan failed in a 52\u201344 vote. Most Republicans voted for Trump's plan and against the Democratic plan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 106], "content_span": [107, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0022-0002", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Legislation, Late January legislative votes\nMost Democrats voted for the Democratic plan and against Trump's plan. Republicans Tom Cotton and Mike Lee voted against both plans. Democrat Joe Manchin and Republicans Lamar Alexander, Susan Collins, Cory Gardner, Johnny Isakson, Lisa Murkowski and Mitt Romney voted for both plans. Not voting on either were Republicans Rand Paul and Jim Risch and Democrat Jacky Rosen. Republican Richard Burr voted for Trump's plan and did not vote on the Democratic plan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 106], "content_span": [107, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Legislation, Late January legislative votes\nOn January 25, House Democrats prepared a compromise proposal to reopen the government, which would provide $5 billion for border security but no wall construction. However, the shutdown ended the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 106], "content_span": [107, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Negotiations\nOn January 4, after the new Congress was sworn-in and Pelosi regained the speakership, she and Schumer, as well as congressional Republican leadership met with Trump at the White House. Pelosi and Schumer argued that the shutdown needed to end and reported that Trump refused. They said that Trump threatened to \"keep the government closed for a very long period of time. Months or even years.\" Later that day, Trump admitted to \"absolutely\" making that threat, adding, \"I'm very proud of doing what I'm doing.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 75], "content_span": [76, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0024-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Negotiations\nTrump then said that he was considering declaring a national emergency to use military funding for the wall. At the meeting, Trump reprimanded his acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney for attempting to propose a compromise between Trump's $5.7 billion demand for a border wall and the Democrats' proposal of $1.3 billion for border security.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 75], "content_span": [76, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Negotiations\nTrump addressed the nation from the Oval Office at 9 p.m. EST on January 8, in a nationally televised address broadcast on both network and cable television. In his speech, Trump asserted that there was a \"growing humanitarian and security crisis\" on the Mexico\u2013United States border that could only be solved by appropriating $5.7 billion for construction of a steel wall. Trump did not make any new proposals in his speech to break the impasse. Immediately after Trump's speech, Schumer and Pelosi delivered a response on behalf of the Democrats, in which they demanded an end to the shutdown and said: \"President Trump must stop holding the American people hostage, must stop manufacturing a crisis and must reopen the government.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 75], "content_span": [76, 809]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Negotiations, January 9 meeting\nTrump met with congressional leadership again on January 9, in a meeting lasting 14 minutes. Trump asked Pelosi, \"Will you agree to my wall?\" and when she replied that she would not, Trump said \"bye- bye\" and walked out of the meeting, later declaring it \"a total waste of time\". Schumer accused Trump of throwing a \"temper tantrum\" and slamming his hands on the table. Trump rebuked Schumer's comments on Twitter. Vice President Mike Pence and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy said that Trump remained calm and never raised his voice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 94], "content_span": [95, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0026-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Negotiations, January 9 meeting\nOn January 10, Pelosi described the preceding day's meeting with Trump as \"a setup\" staged by White House aides so that Trump could walk out of the meeting. Pelosi described Trump as \"un-presidential\"; accused him of \"exploiting this situation in a way that enhances his power\"; and said: \"I don't think he really wants a solution. I think he loves the distraction.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 94], "content_span": [95, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Negotiations, January 9 meeting\nAfter Trump walked out of the January 9 meeting with congressional Democratic leaders, no further negotiations were conducted. Several Republican senators met in the office of South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham, a close Trump ally, after the meeting to discuss a compromise to end the shutdown. They discussed agreeing to Trump's demand for border wall funding and offering the Democrats help for Dreamers, refugee protections and extensions to H-2B visas. On January 13, Graham proposed that Trump agree to a congressional vote to reopen the government pending the resumption of negotiations. Graham suggested that if Trump and congressional Democrats did not come to an agreement at that time, Trump could declare a national emergency. Trump rejected this proposal the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 94], "content_span": [95, 878]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Negotiations, Trump's proposal\nOn January 19, Trump proposed a temporary extension of the two programs that protect about 700,000 immigrants from deportation\u2014Temporary Protected Status (TPS) and Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA)\u2014in exchange for funding for the border wall. The protections would be temporary, with no path to citizenship. Trump had previously revoked TPS for people from a number of Latin American and African countries, and taken steps to rescind DACA. In his remarks at the White House, Trump referred to a \"barrier\" rather than a \"wall\" and indicated that he aimed to erect \"steel barriers in high priority locations\" rather than \"a 2,000-mile concrete structure from sea to sea.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 93], "content_span": [94, 775]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Negotiations, Trump's proposal\nIn addition to funding a border wall, the 1,300-page Republican bill released after Trump made his proposal would make major changes to U.S. immigration policy (which were not included in Trump's public announcement). The legislation would severely restrict the ability of children from Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador to apply for asylum in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 93], "content_span": [94, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0029-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Negotiations, Trump's proposal\nSpecifically, participation in the Central American Minors Program would be subject to an annual cap and migrant children would be barred from applying for asylum in person at the border, and only migrant children with a \"qualified\" parent in the U.S. would be eligible to apply. The bill would also create a new, more burdensome application process for TPS holders, and would exclude TPS holders from Sudan, Somalia, and Yemen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 93], "content_span": [94, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0029-0002", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Negotiations, Trump's proposal\nThe American Immigration Lawyers Association government relations director said that the proposal \"would categorically block tens of thousands of children from ever applying for asylum,\" while a Cato Institute immigration analyst wrote that the proposal would not extend DACA, but rather replace it with \"a totally different program that will exclude untold thousands of Dreamers who would have been eligible under DACA.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 93], "content_span": [94, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Negotiations, Trump's proposal\nDemocrats rejected Trump's proposal. In a speech on the Senate floor, Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said: \"The president's proposal is one-sided, harshly partisan and was made in bad faith. The asylum changes are a poison pill, if there ever was one.\" House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said extending the DACA proposal temporarily was \"unacceptable\" and a \"non-starter\" because it did not \"represent a good faith effort to restore certainty to people's lives.\" Analysts pointed out that Trump had previously rejected a deal that would have provided funding for the border wall in exchange for further protection for DACA recipients. Conversely, Republicans reacted positively to Trump's proposal, and Mitch McConnell said he would bring it to a vote in the Senate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 93], "content_span": [94, 851]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Related disputes, Trump's threat to declare national emergency\nDuring the shutdown, on January 8 in a press conference, a reporter asked Trump if he was considering declaring a national emergency, to which Trump replied, \"I have the absolute right to do national emergency if I want\" and suggested that he could declare an emergency. After this, Trump repeatedly threatened to declare a national emergency to unilaterally order wall construction without congressional authorization. Some of Trump's advisors, including his son-in-law Jared Kushner, reportedly attempted to dissuade him from doing so. Administration officials considered diverting hurricane-relief and wildfire-relief funds from a $13.9 billion February 2018 emergency supplemental appropriations bill (for disaster relief in Puerto Rico, Florida, Texas and California, among other places) in order to fund a wall, and directed the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to look into this possibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 125], "content_span": [126, 1020]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Related disputes, Trump's threat to declare national emergency\nAn attempt by Trump to invoke emergency powers would almost certainly have prompted a lengthy legal challenge in court. Democrats responded that Trump lacked the authority to declare a national emergency; Representative Adam Schiff called it a \"non-starter\" and said that \"if Harry Truman couldn't nationalize the steel industry during wartime, this President doesn't have the power to declare an emergency and build a multibillion dollar wall on the border.\" Democratic Representative Nydia Vel\u00e1zquez said the notion of redirecting disaster-relief funds to a border wall was \"beyond appalling\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 125], "content_span": [126, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0032-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Related disputes, Trump's threat to declare national emergency\nPresidents have declared emergencies in the past, but none has \"involved funding a policy goal after failing to win congressional approval\". Yale Law School professor Bruce Ackerman wrote that the declaration of a national emergency to build a wall as Trump suggested would be unconstitutional and illegal. Other scholars, such as Elizabeth Goitein of the Brennan Center for Justice, believed that Trump could make a colorable argument that diverting military-construction appropriations for border-wall construction was legal, but that doing so would be an abuse of power. Law professor Ilya Somin stated that in the unlikely case that Trump succeeded in using the emergency powers in this way, it would set a dangerous precedent, which Republicans would come to regret next time the president was a Democrat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 125], "content_span": [126, 936]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0033-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Related disputes, Trump's threat to declare national emergency\nOn January 11, Trump\u2014while maintaining he has the authority to do so anytime\u2014said he was not in any rush to declare a national emergency to secure wall funding, saying he would rather see Congress \"do its job\" and that the Democrats \"should come back and vote.\" The next day he again threatened to use emergency powers if Democrats did not \"come to their senses.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 125], "content_span": [126, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0034-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Related disputes, State of the Union Address\nOn January 16, Pelosi sent a letter to Trump that indicated the House would be unavailable for the 2019 State of the Union Address that was scheduled for January 29. Pelosi wrote, \"Sadly, given the security concerns and unless government reopens this week, I suggest that we work together to determine another suitable date after government has reopened for this address or for you to consider delivering your State of the Union address in writing to the Congress on Jan. 29.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 107], "content_span": [108, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0034-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Related disputes, State of the Union Address\nThe delivery of the State of the Union address had been delayed or substantially changed on only two occasions since 1913. In a letter sent to the Speaker the next day, Trump said she would not be allowed to take military transport aircraft on scheduled visits to Brussels, Egypt, and Afghanistan. Trump replied, \"We will reschedule this seven-day excursion when the shutdown is over.\" Pelosi and a congressional delegation had planned on visiting overseas American military personnel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 107], "content_span": [108, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0035-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Related disputes, State of the Union Address\nOn January 23, Trump sent a letter to Pelosi insisting that there were no security concerns and that he would hold the State of the Union Address as scheduled. Trump wrote, \"Therefore, I will be honoring your invitation, and fulfilling my Constitutional duty, to deliver important information to the people and Congress of the United States of America regarding the State of our Union.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 107], "content_span": [108, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0035-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Related disputes, State of the Union Address\nIn a letter sent in reply, Pelosi stated that the House would not consider a concurrent resolution to authorize the State of the Union Address in the House Chamber until the shutdown ended, writing, \"Again, I look forward to welcoming you to the House on a mutually agreeable date for this address when government has been opened.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 107], "content_span": [108, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0036-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Related disputes, State of the Union Address\nTrump later stated he would look for an alternative, but then retracted that statement in a pair of tweets announcing that he would wait until the end of the shutdown to give the address in the House Chamber.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 107], "content_span": [108, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0037-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Resolution\nOn January 25, Trump announced his support for a three-week funding measure that would reopen the government until February 15. The deal, which also moved forward with long-term Department of Homeland Security funding, did not include funds for a wall. As expected, the agreement provided federal employees with back pay. Both the Senate and House of Representatives passed the funding measure by voice vote, sending the resolution to the President's desk. Trump signed the bill the same day, ending the shutdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 73], "content_span": [74, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0038-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Shutdown, Resolution\nLater in January, Republican senators voted unanimously against a bill to provide back pay to federal contractors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 73], "content_span": [74, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0039-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Aftermath\nWithout legislation enacted by February 15, a new partial shutdown would have begun, three weeks after the last ended. A bipartisan group of senators and representatives reached an agreement \"in principle\" on February 11, but Trump did not say whether he would sign it. Included was $1.375 billion for 55 miles of steel border fencing. On February 13, it was reported that, against the wishes of Democratic leaders and many Republicans, Trump was blocking the provision of back pay to federal contractors who were still out of pocket from the shutdown. Both houses passed the bill February 14 with enough votes to override a veto if that happened.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 62], "content_span": [63, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0040-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Aftermath\nOn February 15, at the White House Rose Garden, Trump announced that he had signed the spending bill to keep the government open. He also declared a national emergency, hoping to get access to $8 billion to use for border security.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 62], "content_span": [63, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0041-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects\nAgencies funded by two \"minibus\" appropriations bills passed in September 2018 were not affected by the shutdown. About 380,000 federal employees were furloughed, and an additional 420,000 employees for the affected agencies were expected to work with their pay delayed until the end of the shutdown, totaling 800,000 workers affected out of 2.1 million civilian non-postal federal employees. As only about a quarter of the government was shut down, many people who are not federal employees did not fully realize the effects of the shutdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 60], "content_span": [61, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0042-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, On federal employees\nJobs affected included staff throughout the United States, not just DC area employees. FBI agents, federal corrections officers, FDA inspectors, NASA employees, TSA staff, Border Patrol staff and CBP officers, census staff, National Park Service staff, members of the Coast Guard, and Federal Aviation Administration air traffic controllers either worked without pay or were furloughed, with increasing numbers of unpaid essential employees failing to show up for work.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 82], "content_span": [83, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0043-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, On federal employees\nOn January 11, 800,000 workers for agencies shutdown or furloughed missed their first paycheck. Federal workers normally receive pay on federal holidays, which include Christmas, New Year's Day and potentially Martin Luther King Jr. Day. The shutdown affected the employees' entitlement to paid holidays due to the shutdown. Unemployment assistance to federal workers furloughed under the government shutdown varied by locality. Only non-reporting workers were eligible for assistance, whereas furloughed workers who still reported to work were not. Workers who received unemployment assistance were required pay it back after the shut down ended and they received backpay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 82], "content_span": [83, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0043-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, On federal employees\nSome furloughed workers sought other employment opportunities while they were idled. However, external employment must meet agency-specific ethics guidelines, and mandatory reviews of external employment were also curtailed as most ethics officials were also furloughed. Federal employees were not able to use vacation or sick leave during the shutdown so scheduled holiday vacation time either became unpaid if the worker was deemed non-essential or was cancelled if the worker was deemed essential.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 82], "content_span": [83, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0043-0002", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, On federal employees\nIn many cases unused leave over a certain threshold expired at year-end, but employees who had leave scheduled in advance of the shutdown did not have \"use or lose\" leave balances deducted from their accrued leave. Many furloughed employees took to crowd-funding campaigns to raise cash to replace missed paychecks, but these types of solicitations also run afoul of government ethics rules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 82], "content_span": [83, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0044-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, On federal employees\nAs furloughed federal workers and their families shared stories of their hardships, such as not being able to meet rent or mortgage payments and missed bills, the hashtag \"#ShutdownStories\" went viral on social media. The federal government's Office of Personnel Management (OPM) responded by publishing sample letters that employees could send to their creditors. One read, in part, \"I am a Federal employee who has recently been furloughed due to a lack of funding of my agency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 82], "content_span": [83, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0044-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, On federal employees\nBecause of this, my income has been severely cut and I am unable to pay the entire cost of my mortgage, along with my other expenses.\" Other federal workers reached out to other news outlets to share stories about having to stretch their budgets and the impact of the shutdown on their families. In addition to being unable to meet rent or pay bills, many federal workers around the country were unable to pay for groceries and turned to food banks. One federal prison guard in Louisiana attempted suicide after posting about the financial pressures of the shutdown on Facebook.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 82], "content_span": [83, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0045-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, On federal employees\nThe OPM also suggested that employees who had landlords write: \"I would like to discuss with you the possibility of trading my services to perform maintenance (e.g. painting, carpentry work) in exchange for partial rent payments\" and suggested those who lacked funds to pay bills should hire personal attorneys to assist them. Other organizations also posted advice on how to \"find supplemental income\"; the Coast Guard suggested that Coast Guard members \"have a garage sale, offer to watch children, walk pets or house sit\" while furloughed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 82], "content_span": [83, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0046-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, On federal employees\nOn January 4, The Washington Post reported that because the shutdown was triggered by the failure to enact spending bills that continued a federal government pay freeze, hundreds of senior Trump administration political appointees would receive a roughly $10,000 pay raise the following day. White House press secretary Sarah Sanders said the pending pay raise was an \"unnecessary byproduct of the shutdown.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 82], "content_span": [83, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0047-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, On federal employees\nOn January 10, the Senate approved by unanimous consent a bill (S.24, the Government Employee Fair Treatment Act of 2019) providing that furloughed federal employees would receive back pay for the period of the furlough once appropriations were restored; the bill was approved the next day by the House on a vote of 411\u20137. Trump signed the bill into law on January 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 82], "content_span": [83, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0048-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, On Native Americans\nNative American tribes were not paid for treaties negotiated with the United States government. These treaties specified that the federal government must provide funding for health clinics, employee salaries, education, infrastructure and other services, which were not paid during the shutdown. Native lands are \"owned, managed and maintained by the federal government.\" Native Americans who receive a per capita check for profits from oil and gas sales from tribal land did not receive check for the month of February. Roads were not plowed on tribal land, and some areas received significant snowfall. This caused people of the Navajo Nation to become trapped inside their homes. Food services, which fed 90,000 Native Americans in 2017, were halted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 81], "content_span": [82, 836]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0049-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, On Native Americans\nNative American communities had a high percentage of individuals who worked for the federal government and lost income during the shutdown. In North and South Dakota, one of the largest employers is the Indian Health Service. The Chippewa tribe reported an economic loss of nearly $100,000 daily in funds that the federal government was supposed to provide as a treaty obligation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 81], "content_span": [82, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0050-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, On Native Americans\nThe Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) was closed for the shutdown. However, 60 percent of the Indian Health Service (IHS) continued to work without pay. IHS provides care for 2.2 million Native Americans and on January 23, began to deny care that was not considered \"life threatening.\" The Bureau of Indian Education was able to stay open because it was funded on a different schedule. Unlike other government shutdowns, there was little outreach from the Trump Administration to Native Americans and the Chippewa tribe in Michigan was given a 24-hour notice that the shutdown would take place and affect the tribe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 81], "content_span": [82, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0051-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, On the military\nThe only military branch that was affected by the shutdown was the Coast Guard because it was part of the Department of Homeland Security, while the Navy, Army, Air Force, and Marine Corps were all funded through the Department of Defense. Officials were able to fund payment on December 31, 2018, but were not able to do so for the paychecks of January 15 and 30, 2019, along with the pay and benefits for civilian workers and retirees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 77], "content_span": [78, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0051-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, On the military\nDuring the shutdown, the Coast Guard continued to engage in patrolling the American coastline and carrying out overseas missions in locations such as the Persian Gulf along with the Navy and in the Caribbean. Other issues arose in the payment processes for Coast Guard members Tricare Health and Dental Program payments, although the individuals were still covered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 77], "content_span": [78, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0052-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, On the military\nMilitary schools, such as the Coast Guard Academy and the National War College, lost funding due to the shutdown and the schools had to work to find funds to pay professors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 77], "content_span": [78, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0053-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, On the military\nAlthough the Department of Defense was not shut down, the February 4, 2019, date for release of the Pentagon's 2020 budget was delayed by at least one month. This had repercussions on the interim period which is usually used by Pentagon planners for adjustments before the 2020 fiscal year which will begin in October 2019. The White House Office of Management and Budget, which oversees the Pentagon request, was shut down when the Pentagon budget arrived in December, and remained inactive, so no work was done on the budget.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 77], "content_span": [78, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0054-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, On the military\nOn February 25, 2019, the Pentagon's counter-drug (interdiction) funding has up to $85 million not yet obligated, but that money was planned for the known corridors in El Paso, Tucson, Yuma, and El Centro for border fencing, lighting, and road projects, so any funds which might possibly be intended for additional projects elsewhere along the border must be obligated by September 30, 2019, in order not to affect the known corridors. Otherwise appropriations above the $85 million not yet obligated for additional interdiction border projects will have to be approved by additional Congressional appropriations, to reach the $2 billion target.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 77], "content_span": [78, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0055-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Economic impact\nA January 28, 2019 Congressional Budget Office report estimated that the 35-day partial government shutdown cost the American economy at least $11 billion, including $3 billion in permanent losses; the CBO estimate excluded indirect costs that were difficult to quantify. The furloughing of 145,000 federal workers and 112,500 federal contractors in the Washington Metropolitan Area cost the regional economy $119 million each day, or 7.3% of the region's total output. That reduced GDP by over $2.8 billion in the Washington DC area alone. The shutdown also had a noticeable impact on hunger in the national capital region: food pantries in Washington DC and Northern Virginia reported an increase of around 10% in the number of people coming to pick up groceries, with most of that increase coming from federal workers and contractors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 77], "content_span": [78, 915]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0056-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Economic impact\nFitch Ratings warned that an extended shutdown might lead to a downgrade in the U.S.'s Triple-A credit rating if lawmakers were unable to pass a budget or manage the debt ceiling. That in turn would make borrowing more costly for companies and American households, because it is the benchmark for many other lines of credit. The only time the U.S. credit rating has been downgraded by S&P was during the United States debt-ceiling crisis of 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 77], "content_span": [78, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0057-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Economic impact\nSome economists believed that an extended shutdown would weaken consumer confidence and heighten the risk of pushing the U.S. economy into a recession. Between 800,000 federal government employees and some 4 million federal contractors, the shutdown directly affected nearly 3% of the labor force of the United States; in a typical recession, unemployment increases 2\u20134%. The reduction in spending by those households combined with the reduction of government services could have macroeconomic results similar to a typical recession. The shutdown had an adverse effect on the budgets of state and local governments, as states covered some federal services (particularly the most vulnerable) during the shutdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 77], "content_span": [78, 789]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0058-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Economic impact\nBy mid-January 2019, the White House Council of Economic Advisors estimated that each week of the shutdown reduced GDP growth by 0.1 percentage points, the equivalent of 1.2 points per quarter. CEA chairman Kevin Hassett later acknowledged that GDP growth could decline to zero in the first quarter of 2019 if the shutdown lasted the entire quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 77], "content_span": [78, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0059-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Economic impact, Taxes\nAs tax season began in the United States on January 28, some 46,000 Internal Revenue Service workers were called back to work to ensure tax refunds and returns were not affected by the shutdown. The recalled workers allowed the department to continue operations that were automatic and those deemed necessary for the safety of human life or protection of government property, such as processing electronic returns, returns with payments, mailing tax forms, appeals, criminal law enforcement investigations and technical support.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 84], "content_span": [85, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0060-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Food stamps, inspections, and school lunches\nDuring the shutdown, 95% of federal staff for the USDA's Food and Nutrition Services were furloughed. The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), the food-stamp program, could be funded through a $3 billion contingency fund appropriated by Congress in 2018; if the shutdown had continued through March 2019, those funds would have been exhausted, leaving some 38 million Americans without food stamps and endangering food security. Concerns were raised that continuation of the shutdown could delay the issuance of some $140 billion in tax refunds from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 106], "content_span": [107, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0061-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Food stamps, inspections, and school lunches\nThe Food and Drug Administration (FDA) oversees most of the food supply in the U.S. In early January, Dr. Scott Gottlieb, the FDA commissioner, reported that the FDA suspended food inspections. He noted that inspection of foreign food was continuing as \"almost normal,\" because they are considered vital. Around January 14, \"high-risk\" food inspections resumed. As of January 22, 2019, 46 percent of the FDA were working, though 20 percent of them were working without pay. During the shutdown, two new recalls for contamination with Listeria or Salmonella took place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 106], "content_span": [107, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0061-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Food stamps, inspections, and school lunches\nConsumer advocacy groups advised of food safety issues during the shutdown. Food safety attorney, Bill Marler, advocated against eating \"fresh, uncooked products on the market place.\" Because there was a shortage of FDA inspectors, many imported perishable items, such as produce or flowers, were at risk of spoilage. Meat and some egg products are inspected by the USDA's Food Safety and Inspection Service. Federal legislation required those inspectors to remain working without pay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 106], "content_span": [107, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0062-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Food stamps, inspections, and school lunches\nSchool administrations raised concern about how to feed children who purchase food at the schools for lunch, as funding concerns caused some districts to conserve food and funding. Many limited the amount or variation of foods available for the children to purchase, and alerted parents to the concerns and the limited availability of some of the items. Most schools affected were in high-poverty areas, and depended on federally funded lunch programs, such as the Community Eligibility Provision (CEP) a federal grant established by the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010 and operated through the Department of Agriculture. Some 22 million students in nearly 100,000 schools received school meals through that operation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 106], "content_span": [107, 831]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0063-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, National parks and capital museums\nAs with the January 2018 shutdown, national parks were expected to be open to the extent practical, though there would be no staff and buildings would be closed. The shutdown affected national parks unevenly, some were accessible with bare-bones staffing levels, some operated with money from states or charitable groups, and others were locked off. Diane Regas, president and chief executive of the Trust for Public Land, called upon Trump to close all national parks to protect the public: by the third week of the shutdown, three people had died in national parks. This number was reported as being within 'usual' levels. At Yosemite National Park, on January 4, 2019, a death from a fall went unreported for a week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 96], "content_span": [97, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0064-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, National parks and capital museums\nBy January 1, 2019, the problems of neglected trash pileup, overflowing public toilets, and access to first aid were repeated across the Park system. Health and safety concerns were raised, with concerns by scientists that the expansive amount of garbage and human waste could impact water and soil quality, or cause damage to animals in the parks. Other issues that arose due to the shutdown included illegal campsites, protected agriculture being damaged, damaging of government property and trespassing on foot and by vehicle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 96], "content_span": [97, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0065-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, National parks and capital museums, Closures or limited access\nNew York kept the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island open, as it did during the January 2018 shutdown. Arizona and Utah were able to keep Grand Canyon National Park, Zion National Park, Arches National Park, and Bryce Canyon National Park open and provided services including public restrooms, shuttles and trash collection. Utah's funding included visitor centers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 124], "content_span": [125, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0065-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, National parks and capital museums, Closures or limited access\nThe sites closed outright in the southwest alone included Bandelier National Monument and Valles Caldera National Preserve in northern New Mexico, White Sands National Monument in southern New Mexico, Petrified Forest National Park in northern Arizona and Casa Grande Ruins National Monument in south-central Arizona. Access to major parts of Sequoia and Kings Canyon parks were closed, and at Joshua Tree National Park, the administration policy of leaving parks open to visitors despite the staff furloughs resulted in park damage, including the toppling of protected trees. In Texas, Big Bend National Park had no visitor services, such as restrooms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 124], "content_span": [125, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0065-0002", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, National parks and capital museums, Closures or limited access\nSome trailheads were closed. Regulations continued to be enforced, as the park remained open. Visitors were reminded to remove their own trash and toilet paper. The Alamo remained open but no NPS services were available at the San Antonio Missions National Historical Park. Channel Islands National Park remained open to public access, although services normally provided by the national park service were instead provided by Island Packers Cruises, the company normally in charge of ferries to the islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 124], "content_span": [125, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0066-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, National parks and capital museums, Closures or limited access\nThe National Archives and Records Administration closed immediately on December 22, 2018. The Library of Congress, the U.S. Botanic Garden, the Capitol Visitor Center, and the U.S. Capitol Building remained open as they were funded by the 2019 Legislative Branch appropriations bill. The Smithsonian Institution operated on \"prior-year funds\" through January 1, 2019. On January 2, 2019, the Smithsonian Institution initiated an orderly shutdown of all its facilities, including 19 museums in Washington, D.C., and New York City, the National Zoo, and the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute. The following day, the National Gallery of Art was closed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 124], "content_span": [125, 783]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0066-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, National parks and capital museums, Closures or limited access\nThe National Zoo also closed on January 3, 2019. Tourism attendance on the National Mall was affected. On January 5, 2019, acting Interior Secretary David Bernhardt directed the diversion of fee revenue defined by the Federal Lands Recreation Enhancement Act to be used to fund minimal maintenance activities so as to preserve access to highly visited parks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 124], "content_span": [125, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0067-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Airspace and aviation workers\nAccording to a January 12, 2019, article in The Economist, on January 11, the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) was unable to pay its workers who had not been paid since December 22; 55% more of them called in sick than in January 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 91], "content_span": [92, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0068-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Airspace and aviation workers\nAs the air traffic controllers were deemed essential employees, they were required to work without pay. The National Air Traffic Controllers Association, the union that represents air traffic controllers, filed a lawsuit against the federal government for the shutdown on January 11, 2019, claiming that requiring 16,000 air traffic controllers to work without being paid violated their constitutional rights and federal minimum wage law. That was the third lawsuit filed against the federal government since the beginning of the shutdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 91], "content_span": [92, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0069-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Airspace and aviation workers\nAirline and aircraft safety inspectors, on the other hand, were deemed nonessential and furloughed. A news report on January 12, 2019 stated that the Federal Aviation Administration had returned 500 furloughed safety inspectors back to work and would return more to work in the following weeks. As the airline and aircraft safety inspectors were furloughed, the certification process of the Airbus A220 in the US was stalled. Delta Air Lines was forced to delay the launch of the new aircraft, and to use other models of aircraft to serve those routes that was supposed to be served with A220. Many TSA employees also called out sick, most of them because they were trying to find other jobs that would provide immediate paychecks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 91], "content_span": [92, 823]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0070-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Airspace and aviation workers\nThe shutdown initially prevented the National Transportation Safety Board from assisting the Mexican government's investigation of the 2018 Puebla helicopter crash that killed a state governor and senator; an exception allowed the NTSB to assist with the Mexican government in the investigation along with the Transportation Safety Board of Canada. The NTSB also had to delay several investigations until the government reopened and only continued investigations into accidents that were considered the most serious. Issues in receiving certification and oversight from the FAA led to a month-long delay in the commencement of passenger service at Paine Field in Everett, Washington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 91], "content_span": [92, 775]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0071-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Airspace and aviation workers\nAs the shutdown continued into its fourth week, the unions representing airline pilots, flight attendants and air traffic controllers issued a statement asserting, \"we cannot even calculate the level of risk currently at play\" because of the shutdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 91], "content_span": [92, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0072-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Airspace and aviation workers, On airports\nSome airports such as the Philadelphia International Airport, launched food and item donations for federal employees who were affected by the shutdown. Other airports such as the Miami International Airport, and the George Bush International Airport, closed down terminals in order to spread out the TSA workers that were available.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 104], "content_span": [105, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0073-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Airspace and aviation workers, On airports\nOn January 25, flights destined for LaGuardia Airport in New York were halted to a groundstop by FAA officials due to staffing shortages directly as a result of the shutdown. As a result, several flights to and from neighboring airports in the Northeast, specifically Philadelphia and Newark, suffered significant delays of their own. Soon after that, appropriations passed and the government reopened.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 104], "content_span": [105, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0074-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Airspace and aviation workers, On airports\nThe shutdown delayed software updates to the Boeing 737 MAX airplane which may have caused the crash of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 104], "content_span": [105, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0075-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Judiciary and law enforcement\nDuring the shutdown, court-appointed private lawyers who represent indigent defendants worked without pay. The Federal Judiciary initially had a goal of sustaining paid operations through January 18, 2019. It said it would run out of money to sustain court operations no earlier than January 25, but perhaps as late as February 1. Failing funding, the Judiciary would operate under the terms of the Antideficiency Act. This Act does not allow federal agencies to expend federal funds before an appropriation, nor to accept any voluntary services. The judiciary had 33,000 employees nationwide. Under the Constitution, Supreme Court Justices, appeals court judges and district judges would continue to be paid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 91], "content_span": [92, 801]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0076-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Judiciary and law enforcement\nThe shutdown caused many delays and disruptions in cases. Budgets were watched carefully to be able to pay public defenders, DNA testing, informants, and travel costs to interview victims and witnesses. Staffing issues also brought about concerns and constraints with prisons lacking the staff to safely hold attorney-client visits, and caused a delay in bail hearings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 91], "content_span": [92, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0077-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Judiciary and law enforcement, Investigation and enforcement\nAgents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) revealed in a report released on January 22, 2019, by the FBI Agents Association, that several different investigations were compromised by the shutdown. The report was called \"Voices from the Field\" and was 72 pages long. FBI agents were unable to pay Confidential Human Sources which risks losing that informant permanently. Some FBI divisions no longer have Spanish-speaking staff on hand and could not work with informants who only speak Spanish. Some agents reported that they did not have the funds to assist in joint operations with local law enforcement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 122], "content_span": [123, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0078-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Judiciary and law enforcement, Investigation and enforcement\nFederal law enforcement agencies working on Native American land worked without pay through the shutdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 122], "content_span": [123, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0079-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Judiciary and law enforcement, Homeland security\nThe Department of Homeland Security (DHS) was forced to cancel a trip to the United States/Mexico border in early January due to the shutdown. DHS was also unable to inspect Immigration Customs Enforcement (ICE) facilities during the shutdown to ensure that immigrants were being held in facilities appropriately. During the shutdown, the federal government's e-Verify system\u2014a system for employers to check the eligibility of their employees to work in the United States\u2014was halted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 110], "content_span": [111, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0080-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Judiciary and law enforcement, Homeland security\nDuring the shutdown, a wave of Domain Name System (DNS) attacks on government sites was detected by Homeland Security. The attacks were serious because these Internet sites could be hijacked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 110], "content_span": [111, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0081-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Other agencies\nOfficial websites for agencies were rendered insecure or inaccessible through the shutdown, as the expired digital certificates were not renewed. On January 23, DHS asked all government agencies to secure their DNS records; however, many agencies were not able to respond quickly to this request.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 76], "content_span": [77, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0082-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Other agencies\nExecutive and legislative affairs of the local government of the District of Columbia continued operating through the shutdown, due to a provision previously enacted as part of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2017. The District's local court system, including the Superior Court of the District of Columbia and the District of Columbia Court of Appeals, are part of the federal judiciary. Thus, they were partially shut down, preventing District residents from accessing services such as marriage licensing. The District of Columbia government said it would take over trash collection and snow plowing operations for National Park Service facilities in Washington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 76], "content_span": [77, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0083-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Other agencies\nThe shutdown also interfered with the response to the 2018 Sunda Strait tsunami, as the U.S. Embassy in Jakarta's Twitter account was unable to tweet updates, and the United States Geological Survey was unable to provide data on the tsunami. The American weather model, the GFS, suffered a significant drop in forecast quality when a data format change during the shutdown prevented certain weather data from being recognized by the GFS, and the shutdown prevented the bug from being corrected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 76], "content_span": [77, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0084-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Other agencies\nBy mid-day Thursday, January 3, 2019, the FCC had suspended operations. FCC Chairman Ajit Pai canceled his trip to the Consumer Electronics Show. The FTC also suspended certain online operations. The EPA and Department of Energy's Energy Star website was not available for the duration of the shutdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 76], "content_span": [77, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0085-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Other agencies\nMakers of alcoholic beverages were unable to receive approval from the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau for new labels and recipes during the shutdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 76], "content_span": [77, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0086-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Other agencies\nBased on the recalculation of their operating reserves, the US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) would have had to cease patent operations in the second week of February. A cadre of personnel was allocated to continue receiving patent applications, receive payments, and maintain the IT infrastructure. Even though the USPTO is self-funded, a Congressional appropriation is required to permit the USPTO to spend money. The pipeline of patent applications at the time took 15.8 months for a response from an examiner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 76], "content_span": [77, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0087-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Effects, Other agencies\nThe Smithsonian Institution shortened to two days and downscaled its scheduled ten-day 2019 Folklife Festival on the National Mall because of the shutdown's effects. Sabrina Motley, the director of the festival, said that initially, crucial funding for the June\u2014July event arrived later than expected, slowing preparations. Motley stated: \"The government opened back up, but it took a while for systems to come back online. ... We looked at our production schedule, and it became clear we would need more time than we had.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 76], "content_span": [77, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0088-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Reactions, Protests and lawsuits\nOn January 10, the American Federation of Government Employees, along with several other unions, announced plans to protest the government shutdown at 1:00pm EST in Washington, DC. Leaders of the National Federation of Federal Employees stated they had hoped that bringing federal workers to the President's doorstep would show him that it was the individual workers that the shutdown was hurting the most. President Trump had left to visit the US\u2013Mexican border in Texas earlier in the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 85], "content_span": [86, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0089-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Reactions, Protests and lawsuits\nSimilar protests took place in Philadelphia and St. Louis, among other cities. On January 15, representatives for Veterans of Foreign Wars, Disabled American Veterans, and Vietnam Veterans of America along with others called for an end to shutdown, but avoided placing any blame on political parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 85], "content_span": [86, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0090-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Reactions, Protests and lawsuits\nShortly after the protests, the American Federation of Government Employees sued the Trump administration to challenge the arrangements for work without pay during the shutdown. A similar suit was raised and won during the 2013 Federal Government shutdown. The Air Traffic Controllers Association also sued the Trump administration, as the shutdown allegedly violated the Fair Labor Standards Act by failing to pay the workers at least a minimum wage during the shutdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 85], "content_span": [86, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0091-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Reactions, Members of Congress donating or refusing salary\nAs the salaries for members of Congress are written into permanent law and not funded through annual appropriations, the government shutdown did not affect their salaries. Senators and Representatives were still paid their biweekly salaries of $6,700 towards at least $174,000 a year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 111], "content_span": [112, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0092-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Reactions, Members of Congress donating or refusing salary\nSeveral Democratic and Republican Senators and Representatives said they would donate or refuse their salary during the shutdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 111], "content_span": [112, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0092-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Reactions, Members of Congress donating or refusing salary\nTexas Congressman Dan Crenshaw stated that he would refuse his salary, Senator Catherine Cortez Masto indicated she would donate hers to a Nevada charity, Senator Mazie Hirono said she would donate her salary to Hawaii food banks, Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren said she would give hers to refugee non-profit HIAS, New York Congressman Max Rose stated that he would give his salary to charity and outgoing Senator Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota pledged hers to charity, along with her Republican colleague John Hoeven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 111], "content_span": [112, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0092-0002", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Reactions, Members of Congress donating or refusing salary\nRepublican senator Kevin Cramer, who defeated Heidi Heitkamp in the 2018 midterm elections, refused to donate his salary, calling the move \"gimmicky\". Representative Brian Fitzpatrick urged all members of Congress to decline their paychecks. He said, \"If you're in Congress, don't just delay your pay -- forfeit it, write a check back to the US Treasury. Then you'll feel the pain of federal workers.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 111], "content_span": [112, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0093-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Reactions, Members of Congress donating or refusing salary\nBy January 17, 2019, 102 members of Congress\u201420 Senators and 82 Representatives\u2014 chose to decline their paychecks or were donating their paychecks to charity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 111], "content_span": [112, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0094-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Reactions, Aid for federal employees\nDuring the shutdown, many federal workers used food banks and food pantries in order to feed themselves and their families. Many food pantries waived certain restrictions in order to help government workers have access to food. During the shutdown, the Salvation Army Emergency Disasters Services program provided meals for federal workers. Chef Jose Andres created the #ChefsForFeds program to feed federal workers in Washington, D.C. and by January 21, made announcements to expand the program nationwide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 89], "content_span": [90, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0095-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Reactions, Aid for federal employees\nSome states such as California, offered furloughed employees unemployment benefits, although the Trump administration allegedly told states that they could not do so with federal funds. Organizations such as state Attorney Generals offices, and credit card companies posted statements to their websites to offer a means to help to consolidate debt, meet mortgages or other payments such as child support or tuition. An employment law firm offered pro bono legal advice to furloughed federal employees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 89], "content_span": [90, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0095-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Reactions, Aid for federal employees\nSchool districts opened up free or reduced lunch options for children of federal employees, and looked into other options to aid parents amid concerns that financial stress at home would adversely affect families and children. Every mainline denomination in America has contributed to efforts to provide relief. One Baptist church emptied its entire disaster fund to aid federal employees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 89], "content_span": [90, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0096-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Reactions, Statements by Trump administration officials and family members\nOn January 24, Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross downplayed the financial difficulties faced by the 800,000 federal workers affected by the shutdown, stating that they should borrow money to \"tide them over\" until the shutdown ends. Critics and Democrats criticized the statement as inappropriate, noting that Ross' own net worth is estimated at almost $700 million, accusing him of being out of touch with the workers. Ross also said that he \"did not understand\" why people who were not getting paid due to the shutdown were visiting food banks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 127], "content_span": [128, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0096-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Reactions, Statements by Trump administration officials and family members\nWhen asked about Ross' statement, Trump, suggested that grocery stores will \"work along\" with the government by voluntarily extending credit to those who are out of funds to buy food. National Economic Council director Larry Kudlow characterized the shutdown as a \"glitch\" and suggested that federal workers who were required to work without pay were \"volunteering\" to work for their love of the country and \"presumably their allegiance to President Trump.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 127], "content_span": [128, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0097-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Reactions, Statements by Trump administration officials and family members\nIn a video message to staff, FBI director Christopher Wray stated, \"Making some people stay home when they don\u2019t want to, and making others show up without pay, it\u2019s mind-boggling, it\u2019s shortsighted and it\u2019s unfair. It takes a lot to get me angry, but I\u2019m about as angry as I\u2019ve been in a long, long time.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 127], "content_span": [128, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0098-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Reactions, Statements by Trump administration officials and family members\nLara Trump, a daughter-in-law of the President, drew outrage after an interview in which she stated that while \"It's not fair to you...\" the shutdown was \"...a little bit of pain, but it's going to be for the future of our country, and their children and their grandchildren and generations after them will thank them for their sacrifice right now.\" Her comments drew criticism by politicians, celebrities, and the general public who felt the advisor and spokeswoman for the Trump 2020 campaign was out of touch, however Lara Trump later claimed the comments were taken out of context.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 127], "content_span": [128, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0099-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Reactions, Public opinion\nIn January 2019, a CNN poll conducted by SSRS found that 56% of the responding public opposed a wall while 39% favored it, and 45% viewed the situation at the border as a crisis. The numbers were similar to the poll in December 2018 yet a later poll by ABC news showed that as the partial shutdown entered its fourth week support for building a wall was increasing. A poll done through YouGov between December 23\u201325, 2018, reported that 51% of respondents thought Trump deserved \"a lot\" of the blame, 44% thought congressional Democrats and 39% thought congressional Republicans. Similar results were reported by a December 21\u201325 survey done by Reuters and Ipsos in which 47% of respondents said that the shutdown was the President's fault and 33% blamed Congressional Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 78], "content_span": [79, 858]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0100-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Reactions, Public opinion\nOver the course of the shutdown, Trump's approval rating marginally declined while his disapproval rating marginally increased. His net approval rating was by the middle of January 2019 at its lowest point since February 2018. On December 27, 2018, it was reported that Trump's approval rating of registered voters was at 39%, with 56% disapproval. Broken down the rating was split across party lines, with Republicans reporting an 80% approval rate while Democrats and independents reported a 90% and 57% disapproval rating, respectively. The poll was conducted through Morning Consult between December 21\u201323.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 78], "content_span": [79, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0100-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Reactions, Public opinion\nThe poll also reported that 43% of respondents blamed Trump for the shutdown, with 31% blaming congressional Democrats and 7% congressional Republicans. Another poll through The New York Times Upshot/Siena College reported that 89% of voters' views on Trump and the wall were aligned, suggesting that support for the wall was a function of support for Trump.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 78], "content_span": [79, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286872-0101-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 United States federal government shutdown, Reactions, Public opinion\nThe Washington Post\u2013ABC News poll published on January 13, 2019, found that a larger number of Americans blamed Trump and congressional Republicans than congressional Democrats for the shutdown. A PBS NewsHour\u2013Marist poll found that on January 15, 2019, a majority of Americans thought that President Trump was to blame for the shutdown. A January 2019 poll conducted by telephone for CBS News found that 70% of Americans polled did not want a government shutdown over the issue of building a border wall; 66% believed that Trump should agree to a budget without wall funding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 78], "content_span": [79, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286873-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Zimbabwe cholera outbreak\nThe 2018\u20132019 Zimbabwe cholera outbreak began on 1 September 2018, and the last reported case occurred on 12 March 2019. The Zimbabwean government declared a national emergency on 6 September 2018. The cholera outbreak originated in Glenview, a suburb in Harare, Zimbabwe's capital city, and then spread to the following provinces in Zimbabwe: Manicaland, Mashonaland East, Mashonaland West, Bulawayo, Mashonaland Central, Midlands, Masvingo and Matebeleland South. The last report from the World Health Organization (WHO) Afro regional office has listed the outbreak as a closed event with the outbreak running from 6 September 2018 to 12 March 2019. They were a total of 10,421 cases, and 69 people died as a result of the outbreak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286873-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Zimbabwe cholera outbreak\nThere were several risk factors associated with the outbreak described by the WHO, including intermittent supplies in Harare, particularly in high-density suburbs such as Glenview, the epicenter of the outbreak. The city council was also unable to supply enough water for Harare, creating shortages due to the increasing urban population.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286873-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Zimbabwe cholera outbreak\nThese shortages led to sanitation issues as people began to use unregulated wells and boreholes, leading people in Harare drinking contaminated water. The deteriorating sanitation infrastructure is leading to issues such as raw sewage flowing in areas of Harare. Another sanitation issue was the informal traders selling items such as fruit exacerbating the outbreak. Four cholera treatment centers were set up in Harare to deal with the initial outbreaking cholera. The WHO began a campaign to vaccinate 1.4 million people in Harare against cholera for people living in areas at most risk of contracting the disease in October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286873-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 Zimbabwe cholera outbreak\nTo address the water supply issues in key hotspots affected by cholera through increasing water supply through water trucking, adding water tanks, and repairing existing water infrastructure. To address sanitation issues, items such as soap and chlorination tablets were distributed to households in hotspot areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286874-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 education workers' strikes in the United States\nThe 2018\u20132019 education workers' strikes in the United States began on February 22, 2018, after local activists compelled the West Virginia state leadership of the West Virginia branches of the American Federation of Teachers and the National Education Association into holding a strike vote. The strike\u2014which ended when teachers returned to their classrooms on March 7\u2014inspired similar, statewide strikes in Oklahoma and Arizona. It also inspired smaller-scale protests by school staff in Kentucky, North Carolina, Colorado, and led to a school bus driver strike in Georgia. Additionally, around this time, adjunct professors at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, Virginia protested over pay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 762]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286874-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 education workers' strikes in the United States\nThe strikes continued in the fall of 2018 when there was a collective bargaining shortcoming between the United Teachers Los Angeles union and the Los Angeles Unified School District in September 2018, prompting a strike that began in January 2019. This also resulted in a teachers' walkout in Virginia, a long-time right-to-work state, as well as in Denver and Oakland, California. The national wave of strikes has been referred to as Red for Ed or #RedforEd, with striking workers often wearing red shirts to show solidarity. Reasons given for the choice of the color red range from the fact that many of the initial strikes were in red (Republican-controlled) states to the idea that public school budgets are in the red.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286874-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 education workers' strikes in the United States\nMotivations for the strikes included desire for increased wages for teachers and support staff, larger school budgets, smaller classrooms, and other issues. The strikes varied in their levels of success, with the West Virginia strike considered mostly successful, where Oklahoman teachers received relatively few concessions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286874-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 education workers' strikes in the United States, Origins and overview\nDiscussions of a strike in West Virginia began in early 2018. In the first week of February, teachers staged \"walk-ins\" at schools and some protested at the West Virginia Capitol. The strike proved successful, and inspired those in other states to strike as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 79], "content_span": [80, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286874-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 education workers' strikes in the United States, Origins and overview\nIn early April, Oklahoma became the second state to strike, making it the first time a teacher's strike was held in the state since 1990. The strike lasted for 10 days, from April 2-12, after teacher salaries were increased by $6,000 and support staff salaries were increased by $1,250.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 79], "content_span": [80, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286874-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 education workers' strikes in the United States, Origins and overview\nIn late April, teachers in Arizona and in Colorado went on strike. The Colorado strike began on April 27 and ended on May 12, while the Arizona Strike lasted from April 26 to May 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 79], "content_span": [80, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286874-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 education workers' strikes in the United States, Origins and overview\nIn May 2018, it was reported that teachers in North Carolina could be next to strike, making it the fifth state to have a teachers' strike. This was due to the state being ranked 41st in the nation in salaries for teachers, and per pupil spending at negative 12 percent. Further, it was reported that teachers in North Carolina have seen a five percent decrease in salaries since 2008. Furthermore, teachers hired after January 1, 2021, will not receive health benefits, along with teachers having to pay $10,000 per year in out of pocket health insurance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 79], "content_span": [80, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286874-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 education workers' strikes in the United States, Origins and overview\nBecause of a majority of the strikes being in predominantly Republican Party-controlled, conservative states, the strikes have been referred to as the \"Red State Revolt\". This has prompted several Republican politicians to concede to their demands, in the run-up to the 2018 mid-term elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 79], "content_span": [80, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286874-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 education workers' strikes in the United States, Origins and overview, Pension costs\nOne of the largest reasons for decreasing teacher pay and less funding for schools is the large amount of money diverted from current budgets to pay educators' unfunded pension liabilities. For example: \"In Colorado, school district payments to the public pension fund have roughly doubled since 2006, from about 10 percent of payroll to 20 percent.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 94], "content_span": [95, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286874-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 education workers' strikes in the United States, Origins and overview, Pension costs\nA 2016 study found that only 30% of the money that school districts pay towards the retirement benefits of an educator actually go toward that educator's pension, with 70% being used to pay off unfunded debt in that pension system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 94], "content_span": [95, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286874-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 education workers' strikes in the United States, Origins and overview, Demands\nUniversally, demands included raising pay. In Oklahoma and West Virginia, respectively sources of oil and coal, demands included financing the increased spending on education through taxation focused on these industries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 88], "content_span": [89, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286874-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 education workers' strikes in the United States, Origins and overview, Demands\nOriginal reason for the strike included the state's plan to force teachers to use fitbit to be allowed to keep subscribing to the same healthplan or face a $500 annual fine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 88], "content_span": [89, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286874-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 education workers' strikes in the United States, Strikes, Summary of strikes and protests by location\nNegotiations ongoing. Metro Nashville Public Schools has requested increased funding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 111], "content_span": [112, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286875-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 student protest in Albania\nThe 2018\u20132019 student protests in Albania were a series of street protests, demonstrations and online activism events held by the students of the public universities from December 2018 until February 2019, to oppose the high tuition rates. Students across Albania rallied against the moves that were made by the Albanian government to increase the cost of university education, by introducing new fees for exams. The fee comes on top of the dramatically risen university fees, which have failed to lead to any improvement in public education.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286875-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 student protest in Albania, The protest\nProtests started on 4 December by the students of the Faculty of Architecture and Urbanistics of the Polytechnic University of Tirana and many other joined during the third day of the protest on 7 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286875-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 student protest in Albania, The protest\nThe aim of the protest was to pressure the government to ratify and fulfill the eight demands proposed by the Albanian Student Council in order to alleviate the high cost of education and improve the miserable state in which the public dormitories are established and rest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286875-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 student protest in Albania, The protest\nThousands of students across Tirana boycotted the lessons and marched from their faculties towards the Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports' Building demanding the Ministry to cut of the tuition fees and the annulment of the government's decision on the additional fee for resit exams, together with other requirements like better living conditions in dormitories and a bigger involvement of students in the decision-making process. It was the biggest protest the country had seen in years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286875-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 student protest in Albania, The protest\nStudents from the public universities in other cities like Durr\u00ebs, Shkodra, Elbasan and Kor\u00e7a also joined the student protests that started in Tirana by boycotting the lectures and rallying in the streets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286875-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 student protest in Albania, The protest\nOn the 2nd day of the protest, the Education Minister Lindita Nikolla declared that the government's decision on higher fees would be nullified, but the students decided to continue the protests for their other demands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286875-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 student protest in Albania, The protest\nThe protest continued in the following weeks and the students, organized through social media, sent an official letter to the government with 8 non-negotiable demands. The protest started to get massive, with many citizens joining and all students in Albania boycotting the lessons. The protest was also supported by professors of public universities and other public figures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286875-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 student protest in Albania, The protest\nThe students demanded the abrogation of the law for higher education, considering it as the main source of most problems they face today. At first, the Prime Minister offered some concessions regarding the abolition of tuition fees for excellent students and those from families in need and also employment opportunities in the public administration, which were immediately rejected. According to protesters, it does not make sense to provide alternative concessions instead of addressing the root cause.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286875-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 student protest in Albania, Government changes\nThe Prime Minister started a tour of public universities, to talk with students about their problems. He started his tour in the Agricultural University of Tirana. Most students rejected the meetings and many of them left the room while the Prime Minister was talking. His request for dialogue was also rejected during the protest and in many television shows.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286875-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 student protest in Albania, Government changes\nOn 28 December, Edi Rama reshuffled his cabinet with half of his ministers out, including the Education Minister, in response to the protests that have exposed the scale of popular discontent with his rule. The National Assembly of his governing Socialist Party gathered and there, Rama insisted that the changes were \"not the result of failures\". He blamed a \"weak opposition\" for many problems together with the media, which he has also previously called \"garbage bins\" for not seeing the economic success achieved by his government and blamed his own party officials for creating what he called \"a caste\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286875-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 student protest in Albania, Plagiarism scandal\nOne of the reasons why students continued to protest, was also the huge plagiarism scandal that involved many public figures, mainly politicians and professors of public universities. The denouncement of cases of plagiarism started in October, when Taulant Muka, a young epidemiologist educated in the Netherlands, has waged a crusade against the \"fake\" PhDs held by many politicians and government functionaries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286875-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 student protest in Albania, Plagiarism scandal\nIn spite of the media attention to this phenomenon, which for years had been informally known, only one official involved has been dismissed. The scandal also accused the Minister of Education of having an average grade of 5.8 out of 10, which is really low for students in Albania. Some receipts of her high school diploma were leaked and no action was taken.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286875-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 student protest in Albania, Public universities occupation\nAfter resuming their protests in January, students decided to continue boycotting the lesson and to occupy their faculties, organizing debate forums and reading groups, until their requirements would be met. On 9 January, students of two faculties, the Faculty of Law and the Faculty of Economics, spent the night inside the auditoriums.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286875-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 student protest in Albania, Public universities occupation\nOn 11 January, the police entered inside the faculties and there were cases of physical confrontation between the students and police officers. The boycott continued during January in most Faculties, with professors joining the protests and approving the students' requests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286875-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132019 student protest in Albania, Outcomes\nThe Government after reshuffling the cabinet and annulling the laws, which raised tuition for students who had to retake exams, cut the tuition fees in half for all students for the following academic year and announced that it would continue to help excellent students through a monthly pay and through reducing fees in the future. Some dormitories went through renovations while many requests were still left unanswered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286876-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 AVC Beach Volleyball Continental Cup\nThe 2018\u20132020 AVC Beach Volleyball Continental Cup was a beach volleyball double-gender event for teams representing Asian countries. The winners of the event qualified for the 2020 Summer Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286877-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 CAVB Beach Volleyball Continental Cup\nThe 2018\u20132020 CAVB Beach Volleyball Continental Cup were a beach volleyball double-gender event. Teams representing African countries were split into groups of four, where an elimination bracket determined the 2 teams to advance to the next stage from the sub-zones. The winners of the event qualified for the 2020 Summer Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286878-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 CEV Beach Volleyball Continental Cup\nThe 2018\u20132020 CEV Beach Volleyball Continental Cup were a beach volleyball double-gender event. Teams representing European countries were split into groups of four, where an elimination bracket determined the two teams to advance to the next stage from the sub-zones. The winners of the event qualified for the Volleyball at the 2020 Summer Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286878-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 CEV Beach Volleyball Continental Cup, Women, Ranking\nOrganizer of the Final (3rd Phase), \u00a0Netherlands, qualifies directly to the 3rd Phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 62], "content_span": [63, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286878-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 CEV Beach Volleyball Continental Cup, Women, Ranking\nThe top 8 in CEV Country Ranking as of 30 September 2018 qualified to the 2nd Phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 62], "content_span": [63, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286879-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 CSV Beach Volleyball Continental Cup\nThe 2018\u20132020 CSV Beach Volleyball Continental Cup were a beach volleyball double-gender event. Teams from South American countries were split into groups of four, where an elimination bracket determined the 2 teams to advance to the next stage from the sub-zones. The winners of the event qualified for the 2020 Summer Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests\nThe 2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests were a series of civil protests that took place in cities across Kazakhstan, commencing in May 2018 and gaining a traction after a fire in Nur-Sultan (formerly named Astana) killed five children in February 2019. Some commentators attribute President of Kazakhstan Nursultan Nazarbayev's decision to dismiss the government of Prime Minister Bakhytzhan Sagintayev later that month in part to the protests. Nazarbayev later himself resigned on 19 March 2019 and was replaced as president by Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, the speaker of the upper house of parliament. Nazarbayev continued to hold several political positions. Tokayev called a snap election, the 2019 Kazakh presidential election, which saw him elected with over 70% of the vote. Both the run-up to and the aftermath of the election saw further protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 866]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests\nProtests continued to be reported in the rest of the year, including protests marking Independence Day in Nur-Sultan and Almaty on 16 December. Public rallies that have not been permitted by the government are illegal in Kazakhstan, although Tokayev has stated he intends to liberalize the laws governing public protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests\nA public poll released in October suggested that a plurality of Kazakhs, 43%, viewed public demonstrations positively, with 16% expressing a negative view and another 41% not expressing an opinion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Background\nProtest movements in Kazakhstan include the December 1986 Jeltoqsan protests while Kazakhstan was part of the Soviet Union and the December 2011 Zhanaozen massacre in which 14 protesters were killed. In April and May 2016, Kazakhs protested in relation to changes in the law in relation to land ownership. Two hundred activists and protesters were arrested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Party and civil society groups\nGroups associated with the protests include an illegal political party, Democratic Choice of Kazakhstan (QDT), the civil rights organisation Oyan, Qazaqstan (Wake up, Kazakhstan), Respublika, Erkindik Kanaty and a mother's association created following the protests against the February fire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Chronology, 2018\nQDT leader Mukhtar Ablyazov called for rallies to be held on 10 May 2018 to coincide with the visit to Kazakhstan of the official mission of the European Parliament which was to assess how the country is fulfilling its obligations to respect human rights. Unauthorized protests took place that day in the cities of Astana, Almaty, Oral, Aktobe, Atyrau, Semey and Shymkent where the participants demanded the release and an end of torture of political prisoners. According to observers and participants, the number of police officers in Almaty and Astana was comparable to the number of participants in the protests. An estimated of 50 people were detained in Almaty while the news agency Present Time put an estimate of 80. The Ministry of Internal Affairs did not give the exact number of those detained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 849]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Chronology, 2018\nAnother rally was set to take place in 23 June by the QDT. A video published on YouTube on 12 June named \"Teachers go to Ablyazov's rally\" was received condemnation by the Prosecutor General's Office which stated that the \"content of the videos does not correspond to reality and is aimed at inciting social hatred and enmity in Kazakhstani society.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Chronology, 2018\nThe Prosecutor General's Office also accused of Ablyazov hiring professional actors and models with Asian appearance in videos whom were not Kazakhstani citizens\u2013but in fact\u2013Kyiv residents and warned that Kazakhstanis willing to participate in an unsanctioned rallies would violate the provisions of the law \"On the Procedure for Organizing and Conducting Peaceful Assemblies, Rallies, Processions, Pickets and Demonstrations\" and that participants would face up 15 days of arrest. On the day of protests, dozens of people were detained in cities of Almaty, Astana, and Shymkent of which none of them expressed any demands nor did not hold banners in their hands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Chronology, 2018\nOn 16\u201317 December, detentions took place in Kazakhstan such as in Almaty where activists attempted to honor the memory of the victims of Zhanaozen massacre and Jeltoqsan in the Republic Square. The police department of the Bostandyq District commented on situation saying that all detainees after 1 PM were all released.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Chronology, 2019, February protests\nOn 4 February 2019, five sisters were killed by a house fire in Astana (later, Nur-Sultan) that broke out at night, while both their parents were working night shifts. The fire sparked a controversy on social media and led to some small-scale protests. Paul Stronski of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace wrote:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 62], "content_span": [63, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Chronology, 2019, February protests\nThe house fire, however, epitomizes many of the country\u2019s social problems, as well as the widening gap between the government and the governed. Despite the frigid climate of northern Kazakhstan, this family lived in a new part of town that that had yet to have city gas pipes installed, leaving them no option but to turn on the stove to keep their children warm. But, like many things in the country, that stove apparently did not meet safety standards. Citizens now often blame the country\u2019s pervasive culture of corruption and wasteful spending for such horrific deaths. This anger about lax oversight \u2013 of the country\u2019s financial resources, of its rapid urbanization, and of its poor \u2013 exposes a lack of public confidence in state structures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 62], "content_span": [63, 809]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Chronology, 2019, February protests\nBy 15 February, the outrage had led to protests reported as numbering in the hundreds. A protest in Nur-Sultan at a public event where Mayor Bakhyt Sultanov was speaking resulted in him being shouted off the stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 62], "content_span": [63, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Chronology, 2019, February protests\nOn 21 February, President Nursultan Nazarbayev issued a statement announcing he had dismissed the government led by Prime Minister Bakytzhan Sagintayev. The Diplomat reported: \"Many reports (such as those in RFE/RL and Eurasianet) regarding Nazarbayev's decision point squarely to recent protests as a triggering factor\" for the government's dismissal. On 19 March, Nazarbayev unexpectedly resigned as president, leading to the appointment of Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, the speaker of the upper house of parliament, as the new President of Kazakhstan. Nazarbayev retained his status in several powerful positions, such as being Chairman of the Security Council and Chairman of the ruling party Nur Otan and in October 2019 gained the right to veto appointments of most ministers, of provincial governors and of some other senior officials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 62], "content_span": [63, 898]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Chronology, 2019, 2019 presidential election\nProtests broke out in the cities of Nur-Sultan and Almaty on 9 June 2019. The protest itself was organized by a banned opposition group the Democratic Choice of Kazakhstan which is led by a former, now-exiled Kazakh banker Mukhtar Ablyazov. The Ministry of Internal Affairs reported that in Nur-Sultan, the protesters used throwing stones, objects that came to hand, and used pepper spray, which caused three police officers to be injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0012-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Chronology, 2019, 2019 presidential election\nAccording to official reports, the units of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the police and the National Guard took measures to ensure public safety and law and order, the squares and streets were cleared of protesters by dispersal and detentions. According to the statement of the First Deputy of the Ministry of Internal Affairs Marat Kojaev, on 9 June, during the protests, about 500 people were detained among which were journalists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Chronology, 2019, 2019 presidential election\nOn 10 June, at an unauthorized protest, Rinat Zaitov, a Kazakh musician and poet who was a supporter of Amirjan Qosanov, was detained in Almaty, where his speech was filmed by Channel 31, who also recorded his arrest on video. Soon after the legal interview, Zaitov was allowed to go home. However, late in the evening, in front of the building of the police department, citizens gathered in search of Zaitov and demanded his release. After they were informed that Zaitov was at home, they did not want to leave.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0013-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Chronology, 2019, 2019 presidential election\nAt the request of law enforcement agencies, Zaitov was taken from home at night to the gathering place of citizens, where he urged people not to violate the law by complying with the legal requirements of law enforcement officers. Zaitov asked the crowd to go home and not succumb to the provocations. The remaining protesters then held a march on T\u00f6le Bi Street which was accompanied by drivers honking their horns, causing an overflow in traffic. In response to the situation, law enforcement including the riot police closed off the street and conducted arrests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0013-0002", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Chronology, 2019, 2019 presidential election\nA Tengrinews journalist Shoqan Alhabaev was knocked to the ground and hit several times by the officers. Other protesters, fleeing the pursuing police, hid in residential areas. According to the adviser of the Ministry of Internal Affairs Nurdilda Oraz, about 200 people were detained, in which 150 of them were brought to justice. President-elect Kassym-Jomart Tokayev called on the protesters to dialogue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Chronology, 2019, 2019 presidential election\nBy 18 June, there were reports of the detainees of about 4,000 people in all cities of Kazakhstan. The operator of the online news Vlast.kz Yekaterina Suvorova, the journalist of Azattyq Pyotr Trotsenko and political scientist Dimash Aljanov, who worked at the NGO Center for Legal Policy Research, were arrested. British journalist Chris Rickleton, who worked for Agence France-Presse, said on Twitter that he was also detained. Rickleton and his colleague spent two hours at the local police department before Deputy Foreign Minister Roman Vasilenko intervened. He called the journalists and apologized, after which they were released.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Chronology, 2019, August\u2013December\nProtestors held a march calling for constitutional reform on 30 August. None were detained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Chronology, 2019, August\u2013December\nOn 21 September, people in Almaty and Nur-Sultan protested against the economic role of China in Kazakhstan, with banner slogans including \"Let's not give way to Chinese expansion\" and an anti-Nazarbayev slogan \"The old man is the enemy\" and called for political prisoners to be released. Security forces detained 57 protesters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Chronology, 2019, August\u2013December\nAblyazov and the Democratic Choice of Kazakhstan initiated further protests in both Nur-Sultan and Almaty in October 2019, which police said resulted in 26 people being arrested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Chronology, 2019, August\u2013December\nProtests took place in Nur-Sultan and Almaty on 9 November calling for \"freedom for political prisoners, a parliamentary republic, and fair elections\", coordinated by Respublika and Oyan, Qazaqstan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Chronology, 2019, August\u2013December\nAnother round of protests in both cities, involving \"up to 100 anti-government protesters\" was held on 16 December, timed to mark Independence Day. Reuters reported that \"dozens\" of protesters were taken into custody. The protest was held to commensurate the victims of Jeltoqsan and Zhanaozen massacre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Chronology, 2020, January\u2013February protests\nAround 50 female protesters gathered in front of the Labour and Social Protection Ministry on 13 January demanding an increase in financial support to single mothers, mothers taking care of handicapped children, and those with low incomes. The protesters were invited to the building by the representative of akim's office, Elnur Beisenbaev. The women refused after the journalists were not allowed to accompany them. The women then marched to the presidential administration but were stopped by the police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 70], "content_span": [71, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Chronology, 2020, January\u2013February protests\nOn 16\u201317 January, protests were held by car owners in different cities, protesting the high cost of fees to register the vehicles imported from other countries in the EEU. The fees are around the same price as the cars themselves. The law had been in effect for more than year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 70], "content_span": [71, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Chronology, 2020, January\u2013February protests\nOn 22 February, multiple protests were held across the country. Two of them were held in Almaty. The first one was organized by the Democratic Party of Kazakhstan (QDP), led by Janbolat Mamai, who was detained by the police earlier on Friday night and faced 3 days of detention. Another one was held later that same day by the Democratic Choice of Kazakhstan (QDT). Around 200 protesters were detained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 70], "content_span": [71, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Chronology, 2020, January\u2013February protests\nOn 25 February, a demonstration was held in front of the Interior Ministry building in Nur-Sultan over the death of Kazakh political activist Dulat Agadil while he was held in a detention center. According to the Internal Affairs Minister Erlan Turgymbaev, Agadil's death was caused by \"heart problems\". The protesters demanded a detailed information about his death as well as the officials to come out of the building to speak to them. After receiving no response, the activists then blocked a street which resulted in police violently detaining the protesters into the police buses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 70], "content_span": [71, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Chronology, 2020, January\u2013February protests\nOn 27 February, the day of Agadil's funeral, a protest was held in front of the Astana Concert Hall in Nur-Sultan, to demand the creation of an independent commission including the participation of civil society representatives to investigate Agadil's death. The police dispersed the rally, and loaded about 20 people into police buses. In Almaty, 80 people gathered in Republic Square to mourn Agadil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 70], "content_span": [71, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Chronology, 2020, January\u2013February protests\nPresident Kassym-Jomart Tokayev made a public statement on Agadil's death in an interview to Informburo.kz on 29 February saying that \"given the great public outcry, I carefully studied this case. I can say with confidence that, unfortunately, the Agadil activist died as a result of heart failure. To say otherwise is to go against the truth.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 70], "content_span": [71, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Chronology, 2020, January\u2013February protests\nCalls for protests to be held on 1 March 2020 were met with blocked access to main city squares and detainment dozens of people. In Almaty, dozens of protesters reached the Republic Square in front of the \u00c4kimat building until being arrested by the police who every corner of the neighborhood around the building. Members of the Oyan Qazaqstan were detained at a coffee shop, where around 30 of them, including three journalists, were whisked away into police vans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 70], "content_span": [71, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286880-0026-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Kazakh protests, Chronology, 2020, January\u2013February protests\nOther members of Oyan and as well as the opposition groups were reported to have been stopped at their doorsteps as they left their homes. According to the Internal Affairs Minister Erlan Turgymbaev, around 80 citizens were detained of which only four were brought to justice while the rest were released.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 70], "content_span": [71, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286881-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 NORCECA Beach Volleyball Continental Cup\nThe 2018\u20132020 NORCECA Beach Volleyball Continental Cup were a beach volleyball double-gender event. NORCEA is the North, Central America and Caribbean Volleyball Confederation. The winners of the event qualified for the 2020 Summer Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286882-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Serbian protests\nIn late 2018, a series of largely peaceful protests (called Stop Bloody Shirts, Serbian: \u0421\u0442\u043e\u043f \u043a\u0440\u0432\u0430\u0432\u0438\u043c \u043a\u043e\u0448\u0443\u0459\u0430\u043c\u0430, romanized:\u00a0Stop krvavim ko\u0161uljama; or One of Five Million, 1 of 5 Million, #1of5million, Serbian: \u0408\u0435\u0434\u0430\u043d \u043e\u0434 \u043f\u0435\u0442 \u043c\u0438\u043b\u0438\u043e\u043d\u0430, 1 \u043e\u0434 5 \u043c\u0438\u043b\u0438\u043e\u043d\u0430, #1\u043e\u04345\u043c\u0438\u043b\u0438\u043e\u043d\u0430, romanized:\u00a0Jedan od pet miliona, 1 od 5 miliona, #1od5miliona) over the rise of political violence and against the authoritarian rule of Serbian President Aleksandar Vu\u010di\u0107 and his governing Serbian Progressive Party (SNS) began to take place in the Serbian capital of Belgrade, soon spreading to cities across the country, as well as in cities with the Serbian diaspora. The demonstrations have lasted more than a year and they become the most prolonged mass anti-government demonstrations in Serbia since the time of the Bulldozer Revolution and some of the longest-running in Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 874]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286882-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Serbian protests\nThe protests were precipitated by an assault on an opposition non-parliamentary politician Borko Stefanovi\u0107 in November 2018. The protests were also triggered by many scandals of ruling party members, such as sexual harassment at work, assaults on investigative journalists, a plagiarism scandal, the arrest of whistleblower who uncovered the arms trade that allegedly ended up in the hands of ISIS fighters in Yemen, as well as the smear campaign and the unsolved murder of Kosovo Serb opposition leader Oliver Ivanovi\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286882-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Serbian protests\nParallel to the protests, Vu\u010di\u0107 launched a campaign \"Future of Serbia\", organizing rallies in all districts of Serbia, while the pro-government media have constantly demonized protesters and opposition leaders, linking them to fascism as well, spreading misinformation to their readers. Twitter announced that they shut down the network of 8,500 spam accounts that wrote 43 million tweets \u2014 acted in concert to cheerlead for president Vu\u010di\u0107 and his party and attack his opponent, including those involved in the protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286882-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Serbian protests\nThe non-partisan expert group formulated the demands of the protests, concluded there were no conditions for free and fair elections, and drafted a comprehensive document with demands and recommendations. The protest resulted in inter-party European Parliament-mediated negotiations, but the largest opposition parties announced a boycott of the coming elections due to lack of press freedom and fair electoral conditions. Since February 2020, protests have continued with more significant involvement of opposition parties with key messages to boycott the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286882-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Serbian protests\nProtests were suspended in March 2020 over the coronavirus pandemic. Some further and more sporadic gatherings, with heterogeneous demands started in April 2020. Many opposition parties boycotted the elections in June, while less than half the electorate turned out and ruling parties won more than two-thirds of the votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286882-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Serbian protests, Background\nSince the 2000 mass unrests that ended Milo\u0161evi\u0107's rule, major opposition protests had been relatively rare in Serbia. The protests commencing in 2018 have been the third series of such mass demonstrations in three years. The previous series of protests took place in 2017 and were also directed at Vu\u010di\u0107 and his party, denouncing SNS's perceived domination of the media and voicing concern regarding claims of voter intimidation. The 2016 protests were similarly in part also directed against Vu\u010di\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286882-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Serbian protests, Background\nVu\u010di\u0107 became Prime Minister after a snap election was called in 2014. He was a longtime member of the ultra-nationalist Serbian Radical Party, leading to fears that he would \"succumb to the temptations of authoritarianism\" after his accession to the premiership in 2014. As head of SNS, Vu\u010di\u0107 however tended to embrace more politically moderate conservative populist and pro-European values, steering government policy toward an eventual entry into the European Union while also maintaining close ties with Russia and China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286882-0006-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Serbian protests, Background\nHowever, particularly since being elected President in 2017, Vu\u010di\u0107 had \"amassed more power, silenced the press, and undermined opposition\", displaying increasingly authoritarian tendencies. Furthermore, Serbia's press freedom rankings decreased sharply during Vu\u010di\u0107's rule, with the European parliament admonishing the government to \"improve the situation regarding freedom of expression and freedom of the media\". Serbia is ranked 90th out of 180 countries in the 2019 Press Freedom Index report compiled by Reporters Without Borders, declining its ranking by fourteen if compared to 2018 and 24 places if compared to 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286882-0006-0002", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Serbian protests, Background\nIn 2018, International Research & Exchanges Board described the situation in the media in Serbia as the worst in recent history, and that Media Sustainability Index dropped because the most polarized media in almost 20 years, an increase in fake news and editorial pressure on media. Freedom House reported that Serbia's status declined from Free to Partly Free due to deterioration in the conduct of elections, continued attempts by the government and allied media outlets to undermine independent journalists through legal harassment and smear campaigns, and Vu\u010di\u0107's accumulation of executive powers that conflict with his constitutional role.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286882-0006-0003", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Serbian protests, Background\nObservers have described Vu\u010di\u0107's rule as authoritarian or autocratic. Data from the Transparency International showed that a significant increase in perceived corruption was seen exactly from 2012, when Vu\u010di\u0107 came into power. According to research conducted by the Centre for Investigative Journalism, the battle against corruption in practice comes down to media announcements and arrests in front of cameras.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286882-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Serbian protests, Background\nDuring 2017, Oliver Ivanovi\u0107, Kosovo Serb opposition politician, was the target of a smear campaign led by Serb List, Serbian Progressive Party and pro-government Serbian media prior local elections. In July 2017, his car was burned down by unknown perpetrators. On 16 January 2018, Ivanovi\u0107 was shot in a drive-by shooting, while entering his office in North Mitrovica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286882-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Serbian protests, Background\nThe protests were prompted by an assault on Borko Stefanovi\u0107, one of the leaders of the strongest opposition coalition Alliance for Serbia. Stefanovi\u0107 was attacked by multiple assailants wielding steel rods on 23 November 2018. Stefanovi\u0107, speaking to a New York Times reporter, said he was struck in the head from behind and knocked unconscious, after which the attackers continued battering him with strikes to the head, leading him to conclude the attack was in fact a failed assassination attempt. A day after the attack, Stefanovi\u0107 displayed his bloodied shirt from the night of the attack at a press conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286882-0008-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Serbian protests, Background\nThe image later became a symbol of the protests, with protesters carrying signs and rallying under the slogan \"No More Bloody Shirts\" / \"Stop the Bloody Shirts\". Following the assault, members of the opposition asserted that the attackers (multiple suspects were arrested shortly thereafter but denied any involvement) had ties to the ruling party, or that the assault was a result of hateful and vitriolic rhetoric used by the government against its opponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286882-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Serbian protests, Background\nOn 8 December, thousands of protesters had rallied in downtown Belgrade to voice concern about the incident while also condemning the government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286882-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Serbian protests, Background\nOn 11 December, the house of investigative journalist Milan Jovanovi\u0107 was shot up and bombarded with Molotov cocktails. The attack on the journalist (who \"narrowly escaped\") further fueled the protests. Jovanovi\u0107 believes that the attack was related to his reporting on corruption in the municipality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286882-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Serbian protests, Background\nIn Belgrade, the crowds have regularly numbered over 10,000, making them the largest in two decades. Protests have taken place on every consecutive Saturday since the initial rally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286882-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Serbian protests, Background\nThe protests have been organised by various students and activists, along with the Alliance for Serbia, a loose alliance of various opposition parties and organisations. Prominent leaders of the protests have included actor Branislav Trifunovi\u0107, and Jelena Anasonovi\u0107, a political science student. Bo\u0161ko Obradovi\u0107, a hard-right opposition politician, has also emerged as a leading figure of the protests. The political background of protesters and organizers is diverse, with both far-left, liberal, moderate, and far-right nationalist factions voicing opposition to the government. The protests are formally headed by the group Protest Against Dictatorship which also organised similar protests in 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286882-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Serbian protests, Background\nThe protests have been non-partisan in nature (despite opposition parties providing some logistical support), but some protesters and supporters have voiced consternation over the inefficacy of the political opposition, expressing concern that without a viable electoral outlet, the momentum of the protests will simply fizzle out. Notably, the magazine Foreign Policy argued that demonstrations against Vucic\u2019s authoritarian government won\u2019t achieve anything until the opposition can present a coherent alternative. This is a similar concern voiced by experts who argue that Vucic's opposition is too fragmented and its leaders too different to work in unison against Vucic. The survey conducted among the protesters showed that about half of the protesters do not support any political party, but to protest against the suppression of media freedom and corruption. The vast majority of protesters (77%) were made by highly educated citizens and students.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 995]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286882-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Serbian protests, Background, Demands\nThe protesters have called for greater press freedom, greater political freedom and plurality, electoral reform, new elections, and more government transparency, and condemned what they perceive as Vu\u010di\u0107's increasingly authoritarian tendencies (with manifestations including \"hate speech\" against opponents, suppression of dissenting voices, and mounting control over the country's media), while also accusing him of creating a climate of fear and violence, and the party he heads of being corrupt. Some protesters and prominent figures also called for Vu\u010di\u0107's resignation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286882-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Serbian protests, Timeline, Later gatherings\nAlthough there have been some sporadic gatherings since then, regular Saturday protests have not been re-established, even though the state of emergency was abolished in early May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286882-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Serbian protests, Timeline, August 2020\nThey've also supported the \"United Against Covid\" petition of over 2,900 Serbian doctors who demanded the resignation of the COVID Crisis Team for their incompetence and allowing themselves to make decisions based on political influence from the ruling party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286882-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Serbian protests, Government response\nResponding to the protests, Vu\u010di\u0107 said that he would not compromise with the protesters \"even if there were 5 million people in the street\" (prompting protesters to adopt the slogan \"One of Five Million\" (\"#1od5miliona\")) but saying he would be willing to call a snap election. Both Vu\u010di\u0107 and his Serbian Progressive Party maintain popularity of over 50% in spite of the protests, and opposition leaders have responded to Vu\u010di\u0107's suggestions of an early election by committing to a boycott due to what they describe as \"unfair conditions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286882-0017-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Serbian protests, Government response\nOne of the political opposition leaders justified the boycott plans by saying that no election can be considered legitimate until \"normal conditions for elections and living are created\". Instead, many of them have called for the institution of a technocratic transitional government which would serve for a period of 1 year after which elections would be held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286882-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Serbian protests, Government response\nIn an interview in late December, Vu\u010di\u0107 declared he was ready to discuss the protesters' demands, saying \"I am ready to look at what causes dissent of the people\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286882-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Serbian protests, Government response\nIn late January, Vu\u010di\u0107 announced the arrest a mayor (and a member of Vu\u010di\u0107's SNS party) in connection to the attack on the journalist's home, saying \"A party membership card will not save anyone from responsibility. Journalists will be protected no matter for whom they work for [sic] ... No one will be protected because of being a politician\" while also promising a fiercer fight against political violence and cronyism, including legislative actions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286882-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Serbian protests, Government response\nAfter several months of protests, President Vu\u010di\u0107 and the ruling party members have labelled protesters \"fascists, hooligans and thieves\" and accuse them of violence. Goran Vesi\u0107, Belgrade\u2019s Deputy Mayor, linked the protests to the \"celebration of the day that Adolf Hitler invaded Belgrade\", as well as alleged support by Ramush Haradinaj, Prime Minister of Kosovo whom Serbia charges of war crimes, with the ultimate goal of overthrowing Aleksandar Vu\u010di\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286882-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Serbian protests, Government response, Putin visit\nOn 17 January 2019, President Vu\u010di\u0107 received visiting Russian President Vladimir Putin in a \"lavish welcome\" and a showing of friendship and mutual support. Tens of thousands of attendants were bused to Belgrade from across Serbia for an event that critics labelled a \"popularity stunt\" and a purposeful distraction from the protests. Many of those in the cheering crowd of 100,000 were said to have been \"offered incentives to attend, including five liters of milk\", while others were said to have been threatened with firing by bosses should they choose not to attend, according to media reports. It was also speculated that the reception was an attempt by Vu\u010di\u0107 to placate and shore up support of conservative pro-Russian sections of the population who are concerned about the pro-European tendencies of the President and his government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 901]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286882-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 Serbian protests, Government response, Putin visit\nThe ceremony was staged at the same location where, just a day prior, tens of thousands of protesters marched for a candlelight vigil to honour the death of Oliver Ivanovi\u0107, a moderate Serb politician that was assassinated in broad daylight in Kosovo in 2018. The vigil was organised by the same groups that were spearheading the ongoing anti-Vu\u010di\u0107 protests; the unsolved murder had become a \"rallying point\" for the protesters, signifying the repressive and sometimes violent political atmosphere of the region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes\nThe University and College Union (UCU), a trade union representing 110,000 staff at UK universities, ran a major series of connected strikes in 2018, 2019, and 2020. The action has been characterised as \"something of a milestone\" for \"impending service sector strikes of the 21st century\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes\nIn 2018, the dispute concerned proposed changes to the Universities Superannuation Scheme (USS). In 2019\u201320, strike action on USS continued, and action on a parallel dispute over pay equality, workload, casualisation, and pay levels was added.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes\nThe first strike began in February 2018. This strike escalated over fourteen strike days between 22 February and 20 March, and took place at sixty-four universities across the UK, represented by Universities UK (UUK). This was the longest ever strike in UK higher-education history. The Office for National Statistics found that in 2018, 66% of all working days lost to strike action were accounted for by the education sector, \"due mainly to disputes involving employees of universities\". An estimated 42,000 staff went on strike with 575,000 teaching hours being lost. By 28 March, over 700 external examiners had also recorded their resignations in a UCU document. The strikes coincided with an exceptional level of snow and ice from the 2018 British Isles cold wave which added further disruption to education.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 852]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes\nAs of 28 March 2018, more than a million students were estimated to have been affected, with 126,000 students signing petitions calling for fee refunds. Students also occupied campus buildings in support of striking staff at more than a dozen universities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes\nFrom 25 November to 4 December 2019, and on fourteen days between 20 February and 13 March 2020, UCU undertook further strikes, partly in a continuation of the pensions dispute which triggered the strikes in 2018, and partly in a parallel dispute over pay equality, workload, casualisation, and pay levels. In this second dispute, universities were represented by the Universities and Colleges Employers Association (UCEA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes\nDuring the period covered by this article, strikes also took place on local disputes at individual universities, covered in the table of all strike action below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Background to the strikes\nThe United Kingdom has 130 universities. Staff at 68 universities founded before 1992 are members of the USS pension scheme. (Most academic staff at institutions which became universities after 1992 are members of the Teachers' Pension Scheme, which is unaffected by this dispute.) In January 2018, UCU members at 61 universities (initially) balloted in favour of action over the proposed pension changes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Background to the strikes\nAs reporting, both in the UK and abroad, noted, the strikes took place in the context of other tensions over higher education and pension provision in the UK, as follows.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Background to the strikes, Pensions, The USS pension scheme\nThe USS scheme was created in 1974 to provide sector-wide pensions for UK university staff (focusing on academic staff). Its terms changed little until 2011, when major reforms were implemented, followed by further changes in 2014\u201315. These changes left scheme members markedly worse off: one academic study concluded that the reduced wealth of post-2011 entrants was equivalent to an 11% drop in their total compensation or a 13% drop in their salaries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 98], "content_span": [99, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Prior to industrial action\nIn July 2017, USS reported a technical deficit (i.e. a gap between the fund's assets and its liabilities) of \u00a317.5\u00a0billion, reported as the largest such shortfall in the UK at that time. USS's deficit evaluation was based on suggestions that although the fund's assets had grown (reaching \u00a360\u00a0billion, a one-fifth increase on the previous year), its liabilities had also grown (reaching \u00a378\u00a0billion, a one-third increase over the previous year). Following negotiations regarding the calculation of the deficit, the USS Joint Negotiating Committee accepted a technical deficit of \u00a36.1\u00a0billion in November 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 126], "content_span": [127, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Prior to industrial action\nThe key change proposed by UUK was to close USS's defined benefit scheme (possibly temporarily), replacing it with a defined contribution scheme.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 126], "content_span": [127, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Prior to industrial action\nSpecifically, the USS Joint Negotiating Committee therefore made the following proposals, to be introduced after 1 April 2019:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 126], "content_span": [127, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Prior to industrial action\nThe closure of defined benefits was presented as a red line by UCU, which argued in favour of finding ways to sustain defined benefits, or to introduce a collective defined contribution scheme (the primary legislation for which was introduced in the UK in 2015, but which had not as of March 2018 been advanced to secondary legislation).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 126], "content_span": [127, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Prior to industrial action, Arguments for the changes\nUSS argued that market conditions had simply proven less favourable than previous valuations had assumed, with the chief executive, Bill Galvin, arguing that 'the unavoidable fact is that market conditions have changed since 2014. Real interest rates have fallen since 2014, relative to inflation, and asset prices have soared ... We are now having to pay more \u2013 to get less in return \u2013 than we expected in the past'. Moreover, USS emphasised that its room for manoeuvre was constrained by the Pensions Regulator.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 153], "content_span": [154, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Prior to industrial action, Arguments for the changes\nIn theory, the deficit could have been resolved through higher contribution rates. However, UUK argued that defined benefit schemes were becoming prohibitively expensive. They said they had a legal duty to put in place a credible plan to reduce the deficit by the summer of 2018. Otherwise, pension contributions from employers and staff would have to sharply increase, potentially resulting in redundancies and cuts to other areas of teaching, research and student support. UUK stated the defined contributions proposal would compare well with private-sector competitors, with employer contributions double the private sector average.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 153], "content_span": [154, 789]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Prior to industrial action, Arguments for the changes\nUSS had a legal responsibility to satisfy the UK pensions regulator that the scheme was sound, and the regulator was requiring change.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 153], "content_span": [154, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Prior to industrial action, Arguments against the changes\nUCU stated that UUK's proposal would \"leave a typical lecturer almost \u00a310,000 a year worse off in retirement than under the current set-up\", with younger staff the worst affected, with some losing up to half their anticipated pensions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 157], "content_span": [158, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Prior to industrial action, Arguments against the changes\nCritics of the changes offered the following main arguments against implementing the changes to the scheme promoted by UUK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 157], "content_span": [158, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, UCU ballots for industrial action (29 January 2018)\nOn 29 January, UCU announced that 88% of UCU members had voted to back strike action and 93% backed action short of a strike. The turnout was 58%, meeting the 50% minimum set by the Trade Union Act 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 151], "content_span": [152, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, UCU ballots for industrial action (29 January 2018)\nShortly after, on 13 February, the trade union UNISON, many of whose members in the Higher Education sector were also USS members, began a consultative ballot on striking alongside UCU. On 20 February, UNISON wrote to vice-chancellors in support of UCU's position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 151], "content_span": [152, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Strike action commences (23 February 2018) and new negotiations follow\nStrikes commenced on 23 February, whereupon UUK agreed to meet UCU for further negotiations on 27 February. Leaked emails suggested they would not negotiate on UCU's key issue, retaining defined benefits. The meeting led to an agreement to undergo conciliation through Acas, the UK's national industrial dispute conciliation body. UCU tabled and published a set of proposals which it argued was consistent with the majority of UUK members' positions in USS's earlier consultation, but strikes were not called off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 170], "content_span": [171, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Strike action commences (23 February 2018) and new negotiations follow\nA spokesperson for Universities UK said: \"Both sides are currently engaged in serious and constructive talks at Acas. We are committed to seeking a viable, affordable and mutually acceptable solution to the current challenges facing USS pensions.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 170], "content_span": [171, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, UCU's proposal (27 February 2018)\nUCU tabled an alternative proposal at the first round of talks with UUK which UCU stated would involve universities accepting some increased risk and small increased contributions from employers and scheme members. UUK's response was that they would need time to cost the union's proposal which it feared would require \"very substantial increases in contributions\". However, some vice-chancellors voiced support for UCU's plan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 133], "content_span": [134, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, UCU's proposal (27 February 2018)\nThe parties held inconclusive talks on 5 March, scheduling the next talks for 7 March. However, a bizarre Twitter spasm from UUK on the night of 5 March insisted that the group was available for talks on 6 March, and this led to talks at noon on 6 March. Talks continued on 7 March, inconclusively. On 8 March, UCU's Higher Education Committee agreed that it would call further strikes if necessary after the Easter vacation, between April and June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 133], "content_span": [134, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Joint UUK and UCU proposal (12 March 2018)\nOn the evening of Monday 12 March UCU and UUK issued a joint agreement, arrived at through ACAS, to be put to their respective members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 142], "content_span": [143, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Joint UUK and UCU proposal (12 March 2018)\nThe agreement was specifically for a three-year \"transitional benefit arrangement\" lasting from 1 April 2019, maintaining defined benefits up to a salary threshold of \u00a342,000, reducing the accrual rate to 1/85, but raising contributions to 19.3% of salaries for employers and 8.7% for members. The next valuation was to be informed by an \"independent expert group\", 'aiming to promote greater transparency and understanding' of the methodologies, assumptions, and viability of the scheme. Indexation and revaluation was to be measured using CPI and capped at up to 2.5% p.a.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 142], "content_span": [143, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0025-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Joint UUK and UCU proposal (12 March 2018)\n(meaning that if inflation, measured by CPI, rose above 2.5%, the pension would lose value in real terms). UCU was to suspend industrial action and \"encourage\" branches to reschedule any classes disrupted by the strike. The agreement stated that \"there is commitment between both sides to engage in meaningful discussions as soon as possible to explore risk sharing alternatives for the future from 2020, in particular Collective Defined Contributions\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 142], "content_span": [143, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Joint UUK and UCU proposal (12 March 2018)\nVice-chancellors were to inform UUK whether they would back this deal by the end of day on Wednesday 14 March while UCU representatives consulted with their members on whether to reject the deal or not the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 142], "content_span": [143, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Acas agreement withdrawn by UCU (13 March 2018)\nLocal branch meetings were held on Tuesday 13 March to consider the ACAS agreement. These meetings informed a meeting of elected and branch representatives the same day. This agreement was rejected by UCU's membership on the grounds that it failed to address members' concerns. Many UCU members used the Twitter hashtag #NoCapitulation to express their disapproval of the agreement, helping to co-ordinate a strong response to the proposals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 147], "content_span": [148, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Acas agreement withdrawn by UCU (13 March 2018)\nUCU general secretary Sally Hunt said that preparations for strikes during the exam period would be made, while urgently seeking further talks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 147], "content_span": [148, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Acas agreement withdrawn by UCU (13 March 2018)\nIt is hugely disappointing that students' education will be further disrupted through continued strike action. We have engaged extensively with UCU negotiators to find a mutually acceptable way forward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 147], "content_span": [148, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Acas agreement withdrawn by UCU (13 March 2018)\nIn some places, the decision was followed the next day by rallies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 147], "content_span": [148, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Developments 14\u201323 March 2018\nAs of 14 March, UUK's consultation with its members remained ongoing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 129], "content_span": [130, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Developments 14\u201323 March 2018\nA statutory 64-day consultation by USS on pension changes had been due to commence on 19 March, but as of 15 March, USS were declaring an unspecified delay to the commencement of consultations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 129], "content_span": [130, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0033-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Developments 14\u201323 March 2018\nOn 16 March, UCU called on members employed as external examiners to resign until the dispute was resolved. By 23 March over 600 resignations had occurred.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 129], "content_span": [130, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0034-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Developments 14\u201323 March 2018\nOn 18 March, UUK announced that it would convene an \"independent panel\", featuring an independent chair and involving academics and pension professionals, to \"consider issues of methodology, assumptions and monitoring, aiming to promote greater transparency and understanding of the USS valuation\". The panel would invite UCU \"to play a full role in providing evidence to the panel\" and would also liaise with USS and the pensions regulator. UCU's response was that \"UCU will of course look at any proposals UUK makes but our members have made it quite clear that what is needed is a much improved offer\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 129], "content_span": [130, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0035-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Developments 14\u201323 March 2018\nOn 22 March, UCU sanctioned fourteen further strike days to fall in the April to June 2018 exam period should the talks fail to come to a resolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 129], "content_span": [130, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0036-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Developments 14\u201323 March 2018\nOn 23 March, UNISON announced that its consultative ballot of its USS members had returned 91% support for industrial action, and that it would begin a formal ballot for strike action in April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 129], "content_span": [130, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0037-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, UUK makes a new offer (23 March 2018)\nOn 23 March, UCU announced a new offer from UUK. This proposed the creation of a formal \"Joint Expert Panel\" to reconsider how valuations should be undertaken, leaving open the possibility of maintaining the status quo not only for the statutory period up to April 2019, but possibly beyond. The panel would", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 137], "content_span": [138, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0038-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, UUK makes a new offer (23 March 2018)\ntake into account the unique nature of the HE sector, inter-generational fairness and equality considerations, the need to strike a fair balance between ensuring stability and risk. Recognising that staff highly value Defined Benefit provision, the work of the group will reflect the clear wish of staff to have a guaranteed pension comparable with current provision whilst meeting the affordability challenges for all parties, within the current regulatory framework.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 137], "content_span": [138, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0039-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, UUK makes a new offer (23 March 2018)\nThe Financial Times noted that this would be \"a far more comprehensive review of the current structure and valuation of the Universities Superannuation Scheme\" than previously considered, but also noted that \"the new agreement avoids any mention of increases in contributions by either employers or employees to plug the hole in the scheme\". UCU was due to consult members' representatives at a formal meeting on 28 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 137], "content_span": [138, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0040-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, UUK makes a new offer (23 March 2018)\nMeanwhile, on 26 March, the UK's Joint Negotiating Committee for Higher Education Staff began its round of negotiations for pay in the sector for 2018/19, with unions demanding a large pay uplift.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 137], "content_span": [138, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0041-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, New strike dates announced as UCU members balloted on proposal (28 March 2018)\nUCU announced that members would be electronically balloted on the new offer in April to decide on the proposal for the Joint Expert Panel. UUK pledged to maintain the current contributions and retirement benefits until at least April 2019 while the review by the panel of experts took place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 178], "content_span": [179, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0042-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, New strike dates announced as UCU members balloted on proposal (28 March 2018)\nAt the same time, UCU gave formal notice of a five-day strike action, aimed at disrupting the exams and assessments period, at some universities for 16 to 20 April 2018, potentially to be called off if there was progress in the negotiations. 13 universities including Manchester, Cardiff, Oxford, St Andrews, Leeds and Southampton would be affected by this next round of strikes with the prospect of industrial action at the other 52 universities to take place later in April and continuing into July if no agreement was reached. However, staff would not take part in additional strike action if UCU members vote to accept the UUK proposal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 178], "content_span": [179, 819]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0043-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, New strike dates announced as UCU members balloted on proposal (28 March 2018)\nAs of 28 March, nearly 700 external examiners had recorded their resignations in a UCU document. The Guardian reported that \"students at the end of their courses could find themselves unable to graduate if crucial exams cannot be invigilated, marked or assessed\" as a worst-case scenario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 178], "content_span": [179, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0044-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, New strike dates announced as UCU members balloted on proposal (28 March 2018)\nDebate followed among UCU members as to whether to accept the proposals or not. As of 4 April, some branches had decided to recommend that their members reject the proposals as they stood, and prominent discontent with the proposals continued to be registered in the run-up to the ballot closing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 178], "content_span": [179, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0045-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, UCU accepts UUK proposal (13 April 2018) and Joint Expert Panel is formed\nThe result of the ballot was the UCU members accepted UUK proposal. Industrial action was suspended and the impending strikes of 16 April were called off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 173], "content_span": [174, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0046-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, UCU accepts UUK proposal (13 April 2018) and Joint Expert Panel is formed\nOn 18 April, UCU confirmed that it was ending its call for external examiners to stand down. Commentary suggested that scrutiny of the pension negotiations by the union membership was nonetheless ongoing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 173], "content_span": [174, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0047-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, UCU accepts UUK proposal (13 April 2018) and Joint Expert Panel is formed\nOn 18 May, UUK and UCU announced that the Joint Expert Panel would be chaired by Joanne Segars. On 21 May UCU announced three nominations to the panel. Other members were later determined as Ronnie Bowie, Sally Bridgeland, and Chris Curry (appointed by UUK) and Catherine Donnelly, Saul Jacka, and Deborah Mabbett (appointed by UCU). The Joint Expert Panel was scheduled to report in September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 173], "content_span": [174, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0048-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, UCU accepts UUK proposal (13 April 2018) and Joint Expert Panel is formed\nOn 1\u20133 June, a tumultuous UCU congress included calls for the general secretary, Sally Hunt, to resign over what was perceived to be undemocratic practice within the Union's prosecution of the dispute. Much of the congress's proceedings had to be aborted, and a new congress was proposed for the future. (On 18 October a recalled congress saw the withdrawal of motions to call for resignation, but a motion of censure was passed complaining at a lack of transparency and accountability in Hunt's representation of UCU members during the dispute.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 173], "content_span": [174, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0049-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, USS plans contribution increases (25 July 2018)\nWhile the Joint Expert Panel deliberated, USS announced that, given that the legal deadline for addressing the fund's deficit had passed, it would, in accordance with statutory procedure, act already to raise both staff and employer contributions, following a statutory consultation period, to maintain the scheme's benefits. The proposed rises (as a percentage of salary) were to be phased in over a year:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 147], "content_span": [148, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0050-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, USS plans contribution increases (25 July 2018)\nThese plans were announced against a backdrop of USS's annual report calculations of the deficit falling, due to changing assumptions about factors such as returns on corporate bonds and mortality. On different measures, the 2018 annual report showed a 2014 deficit of 12.6bn falling to a 2018 deficit of 12.1bn; or a \u00a317.5bn deficit falling to \u00a38.4 billion deficit. Though this plan was criticised by UCU and UUK, as of 22 November 2018, USS continued to plan to implement it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 147], "content_span": [148, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0051-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Joint Expert Panel releases first report (13 September 2018)\nOn 13 September, the Joint Expert Panel that had been convened to re-examine the valuation of the USS scheme issued its first report.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 160], "content_span": [161, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0051-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Joint Expert Panel releases first report (13 September 2018)\nThe Panel's press release recommended a number of adjustments to the methodology and data used in the 2017 valuation of the USS scheme, and stated that \"it is the Panel's belief, based on independent actuarial analysis, that the full implementation of these adjustments could mean total required contributions estimated at 29.2% to fund current benefits [...] This compares to the current rate of 26% (18% of salary paid by employers, 8% by employees) and the rate of 36.6% from April 2020 which is proposed by USS, based on the valuation as it stands\". It was suggested that this proposal might entail raising employees' contributions to 9.1% of salary, and employers' by 2.1%, taking their contribution to 20.1%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 160], "content_span": [161, 875]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0052-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Joint Expert Panel releases first report (13 September 2018)\nOn 15 October Sam Marsh, of the University of Sheffield, reported in detail on his own analysis of data obtained from USS after a long period of requesting the information. He found that the methodologies by which USS's 'test 1' measures the pension scheme's viability were flawed, and that by maintaining previous investment strategies, USS would have the surplus it would require to meet its future liabilities. UUK asked the USS trustee to investigate Marsh's arguments. Marsh's commentary had also attracted prominent support from Michael Otsuka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 160], "content_span": [161, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0052-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Joint Expert Panel releases first report (13 September 2018)\nUSS defended its position the next day, accepting that Marsh's reanalysis was 'not wrong in isolation', but arguing that de-risking was necessary anyway. In response, UCU commissioned an independent report by First Actuarial which on 16 November 2018 supported Marsh's arguments and levelled a number of criticisms at USS's valuations and reasoning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 160], "content_span": [161, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0053-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Joint Expert Panel releases first report (13 September 2018)\nOn 8 November, UUK reported on a consultation of its members, which found them, like UCU, to support the Joint Expert Panel's recommendations. The news was welcomed by UCU. This suggested that a consensus position between these parties had been more or less achieved, meaning that the main faultline in the dispute now ran between USS on the one side, and UCU and UUK on the other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 160], "content_span": [161, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0054-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, USS declares 2017 valuation complete but agrees to a new 2018 valuation (22 November 2018)\nOn 22 November, USS declared that 'as member and employer representatives on the Joint Negotiating Committee could not agree on an alternative outcome to the 2017 valuation', it would maintain the defined benefits scheme but implement contribution increases using the Scheme's default rules for cost-sharing between members and employers, as published on 25 July (starting with a small increase in contributions in April 2019). The 2017 valuation was eventually signed off on 29 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 190], "content_span": [191, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0055-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, USS declares 2017 valuation complete but agrees to a new 2018 valuation (22 November 2018)\nHowever, USS agreed to undertake a new valuation of the fund as it stood at 31 March 2018, which the Joint Expert Panel had suggested would indicate a far smaller deficit. It was thought that this new valuation might forestall further requirements for contribution increases after April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 190], "content_span": [191, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0056-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Consultation on 2018 USS valuation closes (28 February 2019)\nOn 2 January 2019, USS began a consultation with UUK on its 2018 valuation, which closed 28 February. USS proposed that it should be possible to increase overall contributions from 26% of salary (the contribution level that obtained from April 2016 to April 2019) to 29.7% of salary, rather than the higher increases planned in response to the 2017 valuation\u2014but only if scheme members agreed to a system of 'trigger contributions' (additional contributions that would be triggered if short-term measures of deficit exceeded a certain level). UUK members, however, expressed scepticism at the necessity and appropriateness of this arrangement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 160], "content_span": [161, 804]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0056-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Consultation on 2018 USS valuation closes (28 February 2019)\nIn response, on 9 May 2019, USS proposed three options 'for finalising the 2018 valuation', retaining the scheme's previous benefits, and requiring lower contributions than the arrangement that the scheme had defaulted to in the absence of an agreement, but requiring much higher contributions than the proposals put forward by the JEP:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 160], "content_span": [161, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0057-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Consultation on 2018 USS valuation closes (28 February 2019)\nMeanwhile, on 15 March the Council of Trinity College, Cambridge voted to withdraw the college unilaterally from USS as of 31 May 2019, in a move that came to be called Trexit. By October 2019, the college had replaced the USS scheme with a defined benefits scheme to avoid the college bearing any responsibility for other pensions in the UK higher education system in the event of foreclosures in the sector. The move sparked protests, resignations, and a boycott.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 160], "content_span": [161, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0058-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Consultation on 2018 USS valuation closes (28 February 2019)\nOn 21 May 2019, it was revealed that Jane Hutton, in her capacity as a non-executive director on the USS board of trustees, had in March 2018 complained to the Pensions Regulator, alleging that her efforts in 2017 to check whether the USS deficit had been miscalculated had been frustrated by delays and obstructions to providing her with data to which she needed access to fulfil her fiduciary duties. As of May 2019, the Pensions Regulator and Financial Reporting Council were investigating the allegations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 160], "content_span": [161, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0058-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Consultation on 2018 USS valuation closes (28 February 2019)\nOn 14 June 2019, as the investigation continued, the Regulator rebuked USS for claiming that aspects of USS policy were mandated by the Regulator when in fact they were not. On 11 October 2019, it was reported that Hutton had been dismissed as a director of USS on the grounds that, according to an independent investigation, \"she had breached a number of her director's duties owed under company law and contract\". USS said that the dismissal was independent of Hutton's whistleblowing and the ongoing investigation; Hutton said she did not view the decision as valid and was considering further action.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 160], "content_span": [161, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0059-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Consultation on 2018 USS valuation closes (28 February 2019)\nOn 22 August 2019, the Joint Negotiating Committee, representing UCU and UUK, met to determine the position that they would put to the USS trustees. The independent chair, Andrew Cubie, used his deciding vote to support UUK's preferred plan. In this scheme, total contributions per member would be 30.7% of salary, with 9.6% being paid by the employee and 21.1% by the employer. A further valuation would follow in 2020 and in the absence of an alternative agreement, the contribution rate would rise to 34.7% in October 2021 with members paying 11% and employers 23.7%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 160], "content_span": [161, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0059-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action, Consultation on 2018 USS valuation closes (28 February 2019)\nUCU argued that employees' contributions should not rise above 8%, and that the Joint Expert Panel had suggested alternative paths to achieving this that had been agreeable to both UCU and UUK. UUK offered to limit staff contributions to 9.1% instead of 9.6% if UCU would agree to hold no strikes on pensions for two years, an offer which UCU rejected. The 21.1%:9.6% contribution rates were ratified on 12 September by the USS trustee board.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 160], "content_span": [161, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0060-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Changes in UK law\nThe strike brought to the attention of unions and the UK government a potential ambiguity in UK legislation: migrant workers on Tier 2 and 5 visas have an annual 20-day limit on unpaid absence from work. As some universities had seen local strike action during 2017\u201318 in addition to the 14 days of national strike action, fears arose that staff members who were on strike for more than 20 days in a year might have their visas revoked, and that this might in turn impinge on their legal rights to take industrial action.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 95], "content_span": [96, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0060-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Changes in UK law\nOn 12 July, the home secretary Sajid Javid declared that it was \"not the government's policy to prevent migrant workers from engaging in legal strike action\" and that he would introduce changes to the rules and guidelines on immigration to be explicit that strike action did not count as \"unpaid absence\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 95], "content_span": [96, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0061-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Staff\nIn the ballot for the strike, UCU achieved an unusually high turnout and strong support for industrial action, and membership grew by about 15,000 between the beginning of 2018 and 12 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 83], "content_span": [84, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0062-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Staff\nStaff organised \"teach-outs\" off campus at \"every university with a substantial picket line\"; these featured education sessions which tended to be left-wing or critical of recent changes in UK higher education, apparently led by the University of Leeds, whose UCU branch had tested the model during a local dispute in autumn 2017. Some pickets also featured staff singing rewrites of popular songs, among them Leeds University UCU's Strike Up Your Life (based on the Spice Girls' hit Spice Up Your Life) or dance routines, prominently including Cambridge University UCU's performance to Public Enemy's Fight the Power. Geographers at the University of Nottingham produced a 'strike zine'. A Cambridge researcher working in the UK under a visa made an art installation reflecting their precarious situation. Meanwhile, Southampton University UCU's 'Dinosaur of Solidarity', a person in a dinosaur costume, became a minor social-media sensation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 83], "content_span": [84, 1027]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0063-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Staff\nAs the strikes commenced, academics at Oxford and Cambridge began using those universities' democratic structures to change the universities' position on pension reform. Oxford staff's attempts to use the university's supreme governing body, Congregation, to effect a change of policy failed due to procedural problems on 5 March, but the next day Oxford's vice-chancellor Louise Richardson declared that the University would nonetheless heed the wishes of staff to \"reverse its response to the UUK survey\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 83], "content_span": [84, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0064-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Staff\nAs the strikes developed, university staff increasingly called into question the governance structures of UUK, individual universities, and USS, along with the marketisation of the UK higher education sector and its increasingly precarious workforce. By 13 April, over 12,000 people had signed a petition calling for UUK to be made subject to the Freedom of Information Act 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 83], "content_span": [84, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0065-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Staff\nStaff also made extensive use of social media (see below).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 83], "content_span": [84, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0066-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Universities\nHowever, some vice-chancellors expressed support for UCU's position before the strike. Anthony Forster, vice-chancellor at the University of Essex, described a staff consultation process that led Essex to support retaining defined benefits via increased pension contributions. The University of Warwick's Stuart Croft publicly stated that \"I am sure that I am not alone in being mystified at this [proposed] change\", and argued, in line with the position of the Liberal Democrats, that the UK government should underwrite USS pensions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 90], "content_span": [91, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0067-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Universities\nAfter the strike began, other vice chancellors voiced concern about UUK's position, and by the second day of strike action, 18 were being reported as calling for renewed negotiations, or as supporting UCU's position. Some joined staff on picket lines, among them Anton Muscatelli (Glasgow), Keith Burnett (Sheffield) and Robert Allison (Loughborough).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 90], "content_span": [91, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0067-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Universities\nIn a letter to The Times of 16 March, the vice-chancellor of Cambridge University, Stephen Toope, expressed sympathy with the concerns of staff and students about not only pensions, but also marketisation of UK universities, and held a wide-ranging public meeting with around 550 staff and students in Great St Mary's Church, scheduling a further such meeting for 26 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 90], "content_span": [91, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0068-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Universities\nSome universities decided to cushion the financial impact of strike action on their staff by deducting pay for the days not worked over several months. These included Glasgow, Leicester, Cardiff, Cambridge, and York.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 90], "content_span": [91, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0069-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Universities\nVideo recording of lectures had become widespread in UK universities by 2016, and some universities sought to use lectures recorded in previous years to substitute for teaching missed during the strikes. This prompted renewed debates about what rights universities should claim in the intellectual output of their staff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 90], "content_span": [91, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0070-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Universities, Threatened pay deductions for not rescheduling teaching\nConversely, many universities demanded that staff reschedule teaching that had not been delivered during the strike, noting their right to deduct pay for partial performance if staff did not. However, a smaller number appeared to be committed to implementing deductions. Examples which attracted media attention included:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 147], "content_span": [148, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0071-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Universities, Threatened pay deductions for not rescheduling teaching\nIn Sheffield's case, pay deduction of 25% for partial performance, rising to 100% after five days, was initially threatened, provoking alumni to threaten to withdraw donations. The University then explained that it would not implement deductions for partial performance. Similar developments occurred at St Andrews, with the Principal, Sally Mapstone, writing that \"having considered all matters in the round, I believe that our current policy to deduct pay at 100% for failure to reschedule classes cancelled due to strike action is inconsistent with this University's values and the store we place on our shared sense of community\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 147], "content_span": [148, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0071-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Universities, Threatened pay deductions for not rescheduling teaching\nAt Leeds, a number of external examiners resigned in protest at the university's plans, ongoing as of 10 March, to deduct pay for partial performance, while Alice Goodman, widow of the university's noted professor Geoffrey Hill, addressed an open letter to the university's vice chancellor asking the University to reconsider its stance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 147], "content_span": [148, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0072-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Students, Polls\nA Yougov poll of 738 undergraduate students conducted for UCU between 13 and 20 February 2018 found that nationally, 61% of students said they supported the strikes, with 19% opposed and the remainder unsure. At striking institutions, support was 66%, with 18% opposed. In February 2018, a poll of 1,500 students for Times Higher Education magazine found over half (51.8%) would support their lecturer in a walk-out and just under a third (29.3%) would not. Support for the national strike was evenly balanced, with 38.4% in favour and 38.4% against.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 93], "content_span": [94, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0073-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Students, Polls\nBy 8 March, extensive student support for the strikes was still being reported, observing that students were joining with staff in solidarity against the marketisation of UK higher education.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 93], "content_span": [94, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0074-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Students, Occupations and other activism\nOn the first day of the strikes the UUK head office in London was occupied by students. Students undertook occupations of university buildings in support of the strike at various institutions, including University College London (26 February), the University of Liverpool (28 February) and the University of Bristol (5 March), along with students at Leicester, Bath, Exeter, Southampton, Sussex, and Reading. A fresh wave of occupations began on 12 March, following the publication of the first ACAS-brokered joint agreement between UCU and UUK, which UCU members rejected. Universities with occupations during that week included Reading, Cambridge (in the Old Schools), Dundee, York (in Heslington Hall), Sheffield (in the Arts Tower), Stirling, Aberdeen, Surrey, Sussex, Glasgow, and, Queen Mary University of London (in the Octagon).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 118], "content_span": [119, 955]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0075-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Students, Occupations and other activism\nThe purpose of the occupations extended into other issues: on 19 March, University of London students occupied Senate House in support of a strike called for 25\u201326 April by outsourced worked including cleaners, porters and receptionists. At one point during the occupation, students were locked into a room by staff members of the university.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 118], "content_span": [119, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0076-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Students, Occupations and other activism\nIn the wake of the February\u2013March strikes, the students' union at SOAS called on its members to refuse to submit work with deadlines before 23 March, arguing that deadlines so soon after the end of the strikes would negatively affect students' work.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 118], "content_span": [119, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0077-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Students, Compensation\nStudents, who in England had since 2012 paid fees covering most of the cost of their education, responded by demanding compensation from their universities, explicitly in support of the striking staff: by 20 February 2018, 70,000 had signed letters and petitions of this kind, rising to around 126,000 by 5 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 100], "content_span": [101, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0078-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Students, Compensation\nOn 4 March 2018, it was reported that King's College London had become the first university to offer to use money not spent on striking staff's salaries to compensate students. Robert Liow, a third-year law student at the university, told the BBC that if universities did not refund students part of their fees, they would be profiting from the dispute, as they would gain the money not paid to striking university staff:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 100], "content_span": [101, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0079-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Students, Compensation\nI don't want a consumerist education service. I believe education is a public good and not a service to be sold. But if we are going to be treated as consumers we are going to ask for our money back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 100], "content_span": [101, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0080-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Students, Compensation\nOn 23 March 2018, it was reported that the international disputes lawyers Asserson had begun co-ordinating a no-win no-fee suit for compensation for students affected by the strikes, inviting students to sign up to participate online. On 24 April 2018, it was announced that over 1,000 students had signed up: enough to apply for a group litigation order. By 17 June, over 5,000 had joined. Asserson estimated that one million students had been affected by the strike, with 575,000 teaching hours lost. They suggested that universities might be liable for \u00a320m compensation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 100], "content_span": [101, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0081-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Students, Compensation\nBy May 2019, the Office of the Independent Adjudicator for Higher Education (designated under the Higher Education Act 2004 to run the higher education student complaints scheme within England and Wales) has issued a number of adjudications in response to student complaints, asking universities to offer partial refunds of fees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 100], "content_span": [101, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0082-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Students, In media\nOn 25 November 2019, Joshua Curiel, a student at the University of Kent, wrote an article for The Guardian encouraging fellow students to support their lectures. Curiel argued that \"This strike will have a greater impact if universities see that the lecturers have the full support of their students and understand that changes must be made. We have a part to play in these strikes, to keep the pressure up to ensure fairer working conditions.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 96], "content_span": [97, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0083-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Politicians\nOn 29 November 2017, Carol Monaghan (Scottish National Party) tabled an Early Day Motion in the House of Commons entitled \"Defending Academic Pensions\", noting \"with concern the proposal by Universities UK to close the defined benefit portion of the Universities Superannuation Scheme (USS) to all future service\". The motion was sponsored by Caroline Lucas (Green Party), Martyn Day and Pete Wishart (SNP), and Jim Cunningham, and Mary Glindon (Labour). As of 19 March, it had been signed by 133 MPs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 89], "content_span": [90, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0084-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Politicians\nDuring the first week of industrial action, UCU's stance was explicitly supported by the Labour and Green Parties. The Liberal Democrats argued that the government should underwrite the USS pension scheme, easing its assessment of risk. The Conservative universities minister Sam Gyimah encouraged the parties to negotiate, and encouraged universities to compensate students for missed education.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 89], "content_span": [90, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0085-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Politicians\nThe Chinese embassy in the UK also made representations to the Department for Education, expressing concern for the situation of Chinese students in the UK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 89], "content_span": [90, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0086-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, UCU\nThe \"intense infighting\" experienced by parts of UCU during and following the 2018 pension strikes and negotiations led UCU to establish a 'democracy commission' to recommend ways to improve participatory democracy within the Union. Among its recommendations was the suggestion that the office of General Secretary should be held for three-year terms, and for a maximum of three terms. The commission suggested introducing a mechanism for members to recall general secretaries. Its recommendations were put to a special congress of the union of 7 December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 81], "content_span": [82, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0087-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Scholarly societies\nSome scholarly societies issued statements supporting the strike or its goals. They included History UK, which said it 'believes universities should try to maintain the conditions of employment under which academics were originally employed. That includes pensions'; the Engineering Professors' Council; and the British Dental Association. Others did not take a position but did publicly discuss the issues, among them the British Psychological Society.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 97], "content_span": [98, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0088-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Media, Traditional media\nThe action attracted national television coverage, and supportive editorials from newspapers including the Observer and the Financial Times, which opined that \"the universities must increase their pensions offer, and lecturers should give a fair hearing to any new proposals. Failing that, students should be compensated by the colleges\". Support for UUK, meanwhile, was offered in The Times, with Daniel Finkelstein, for example, arguing that \"the pension fund is a pot of money shared between current and past staff. All that the trustees and the regulator are trying to do is to make sure it is fairly shared out. They are ensuring the money hasn't all been given away while there are people with future claims against it\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 102], "content_span": [103, 829]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0089-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Media, Traditional media\nA number of commentators expressed exasperation at a tendency in the media, and on social media, to refer to the strike as a \"lecturers' strike\", when it involved a wide range of staff, academic and non-academic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 102], "content_span": [103, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0090-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Media, Social media\nUCU members made extensive use of social media during the dispute. They were used to disseminate activists' research on the changes to pensions. Social media were also used to satirise universities' senior management: for example, the hashtag #FindMyProvost was used to mock vice-chancellors who did not engage with staff, and the 'UCU Strikeposting' meme page on Facebook, which was run by students and staff who supported the strike, and quickly amassed over 6,000 likes in 4 weeks. Hashtags were also a powerful organising tool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 97], "content_span": [98, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0090-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, Responses to the 2018 pension strikes, Media, Social media\nA prominent example was the Twitter hashtag #NoCapitulation, which emerged as the unifying message university staff rallied behind twenty hours after the Acas agreement of 12 March. Dr Ed Rooksby, a tutor at Ruskin College Oxford, said \"the leadership saw this wave of hostility coming towards them and backed down ... I'm sure there wouldn't have been as much momentum without Twitter, and without someone coming up with that hashtag.\" Dr. Jo Grady, a senior lecturer in employment relations at Sheffield University, stated her belief that Twitter had helped people connect \"outside of traditional union frameworks\" and that this was ironic as their employers were the ones who encouraged staff to use social media as a tool for self-promotion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 97], "content_span": [98, 843]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0091-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights'\nConcern about pay and conditions, particularly in relation to high senior pay and expenditure on new buildings in the face of declining staff pay, the gender pay gap, precarious contracts and casualisation, and workloads were all expressed as part of the wider context of the pensions dispute, but also formed the basis of ballots for industrial action across all UK higher education unions (UNISON, Unite, EIS, GMB and UCU) during the period of the pensions strikes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 101], "content_span": [102, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0092-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights'\nAccordingly, from September to October 2019, UCU balloted members for industrial action in two disputes: renewed industrial action on pensions (for those institutions participating in USS), and new industrial action on pay and conditions (which UCU called the 'four fights'\u2014pay inequality, job insecurity, rising workloads, and pay deflation\u2014for all higher education branches).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 101], "content_span": [102, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0092-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights'\nBallots were undertaken separately for each institution in the belief that turnout might pass the 50% of members required by the Trade Union Act 2016 at a sufficient number of institutions to enable meaningful industrial action, while averting the risk of an aggregated national ballot falling below the 50% threshold. It was argued that it was necessary to make industrial action possible on both issues at once to avoid gains to overall remuneration made via one channel being negated by losses on the other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 101], "content_span": [102, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0093-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Ballot on USS pensions (31 October 2019)\nOn 26 May 2019, UCU's Higher Education Sector Conference voted to commence a further dispute with USS employers. UCU wrote to relevant vice-chancellors on 7 June asking them to avert possible industrial action by committing \"to uphold the level of contributions no higher than 26% (8% for members)\", in the first instance by seeking to influence USS policy via employers' representatives on the Employers' Pension Forum (EPF) and the UUK nominees to USS's joint negotiating committee. The Union asked that, failing that, employers \"must cover any increases in full that are needed to maintain current benefits until USS's governance and valuation methods and assumptions have been overhauled\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 143], "content_span": [144, 837]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0094-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Ballot on USS pensions (31 October 2019)\nOn 31 October 2019, UCU reported that of 64 branches balloted, at least 43 had passed the 50% turnout threshold or were otherwise able to take industrial action. The national aggregate of votes (with four institutions still to be counted) achieved a 53% turnout with 79% voting for strike action.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 143], "content_span": [144, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0095-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Ballots concerning joint higher education trade union national pay claim (31 October 2019), 2018-19 pay negotiations\nIn March 2018, the UK's Joint Negotiating Committee for Higher Education Staff began its round of negotiations for pay in the sector for 2018/19, with unions demanding a large pay uplift. Citing long-term real-term declining pay, on 26 March 2018 the unions submitted a pay claim seeking a 7.5% pay increase or \u00a31,500, whichever was greater; a \u00a310 minimum wage to make all higher education institutions \"living wage\" employers; and gender pay equality by 2020. In April 2018, the Universities and Colleges Employers Association proposed a 1.7% pay increase for 2018\u201319, raising the offer to 2% (and 2.8% for the lowest paid) in May. These figures were both below inflation, which in March 2018 stood at 2.7%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 219], "content_span": [220, 928]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0096-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Ballots concerning joint higher education trade union national pay claim (31 October 2019), 2018-19 pay negotiations\nOn 6 June 2018, UCU commenced a consultative ballot to determine whether to conduct a formal ballot for industrial action in relation to the UK Joint Negotiating Committee for Higher Education Staff's negotiations over 2018-19 pay. The ballot closed on 27 June 2018, with 82% of participating members voting to reject the offer from the University and Colleges Employers' Association of a minimum pay rise of 2 per cent, rising to 2.8 per cent for the lowest paid. UCU formally declared a trade dispute on 24 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 219], "content_span": [220, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0096-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Ballots concerning joint higher education trade union national pay claim (31 October 2019), 2018-19 pay negotiations\nOn 21 August 2018, UCU served statutory notice of its intention to ballot members for industrial action regarding the 2018-19 national pay dispute. The ballot opened on 30 August 2018. On 22 October 2018 UCU announced the results of the ballot. Although the majority of Union members who voted elected to take industrial action, the turnout only passed the 50% of members required by the Trade Union Act 2016 at seven universities (alongside which three Northern Irish universities, unaffected by the legislation, also voted to strike).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 219], "content_span": [220, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0096-0002", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Ballots concerning joint higher education trade union national pay claim (31 October 2019), 2018-19 pay negotiations\nLikewise, on 29 October Unison reported that although a majority of voting members had supported strike action, the vote was frustrated by insufficient turnout. On 7 November, UCU's special higher education sector conference decided to run another ballot, this time aggregating votes across the sector rather than running a different ballot for each university. On 23 November, the ballot was scheduled to run from 14 January to 22 February 2019. This ballot achieved a turnout of only 41%, so again led to no industrial action.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 219], "content_span": [220, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0097-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Ballots concerning joint higher education trade union national pay claim (31 October 2019), 2019-20 pay negotiations\nOn 1 May 2019, employers' final offer in the 2019-20 pay negotiations was 1.8%, rising to 3.65% for the lowest paid (deleting the lowest point on the pay scale to ensure a living wage for all staff). For most members, the offered raise was below inflation (then 2.4% RPI), and unions called for an increase of RPI+3% or of \u00a33,349 \u2013 whichever was greater. Later that month, the UCU congress resolved to campaign to win an industrial action ballot on this offer, with a campaign naming the 'four fights' of pay, equality, casualisation, and workload. Unite and Unison also resolved to ballot on pay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 219], "content_span": [220, 817]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0098-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Ballots concerning joint higher education trade union national pay claim (31 October 2019), 2019-20 pay negotiations\nOn 31 October 2019, Unison reported that although around 66% of members voting had voted for strike action, turnout had not passed the 50% threshold. Likewise, Unite announced that 73.3% of members had voted to take action, but that turnout had been 32.1%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 219], "content_span": [220, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0099-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Ballots concerning joint higher education trade union national pay claim (31 October 2019), 2019-20 pay negotiations\nOn the same day, UCU reported that of 148 branches balloted, at least 54 had passed the 50% turnout threshold or were otherwise able to take industrial action. The national aggregate of votes achieved a 49% turnout with 74% voting for strike action (with four institutions still to be counted).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 219], "content_span": [220, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0100-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', UCU announces eight days of strikes (5 November 2019)\nOn 5 November 2019, UCU announced that at those institutions with a legal mandate to strike, eight consecutive strike days would be held from Monday 25 November to Wednesday 4 December, 'unless', in the words of UCU's general secretary Jo Grady, 'the employers start talking to us seriously about how they are going to deal with rising pension costs and declining pay and conditions'. Following 4 December, Union members were also to begin action short of a strike (such as 'working to contract'). 60 universities were to be affected (43 regarding both pensions and pay, 14 regarding pay only, and 3 regarding pensions only).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 156], "content_span": [157, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0101-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', UCU announces eight days of strikes (5 November 2019)\nIt was estimated that the strikes would affect over a million students.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 156], "content_span": [157, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0102-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', UCU announces eight days of strikes (5 November 2019)\nSpokespeople for UUK and Universities & Colleges Employers Association argued that UCU did not have a strong mandate for action given that the majority of branches had not qualified to take strike action. The UUK spokesperson expressed hopes that the industrial dispute could be resolved without strike action and that UCU 'will now join us to consider governance reforms and alternative options for future valuations' regarding USS. The UCea spokesperson argued that the 2019-20 national pay negotiations had delivered a pay deal 'at the very limit of what is affordable'. Opinion among university leaders was not uniform, however: on 15 November, the vice-chancellor of the University of Essex argued that 'the University of Essex is willing to increase contributions to the scheme to sustain critical features of the USS, including defined benefits'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 156], "content_span": [157, 1010]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0103-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', UCU announces eight days of strikes (5 November 2019)\nOn 19 November, UUK and UCEA jointly wrote an open letter 'to staff impacted by the UCU pensions and pay disputes', partly arguing that 'the publication of the JEP's second report will present UUK and UCU with the opportunity to develop a valuable and sustainable future for USS' and that while universities 'simply cannot afford to put more into this year's pay increases than they already have', UCEA had invited negotiations on 'workload, gender pay/equality and casual employment arrangements'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 156], "content_span": [157, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0103-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', UCU announces eight days of strikes (5 November 2019)\nUCU's response included the argument that 'you cannot refuse to talk about pay yet say you want to talk about closing pay gaps that exist for women and BME staff' and that 'we are always keen to negotiate and will attend talks to try and avert the disruption the strikes will inevitably cause'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 156], "content_span": [157, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0104-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Strikes take place (25 November\u20134 December 2019)\nStrikes began on 25 November. According to figures subsequently gathered by UCEA, 29.2% of UCU members at the affected universities took strike action, representing 5% of all staff at those universities (not all of whom were in the constituency represented by UCU), though around 26% reported pockets of high impact on teaching.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 151], "content_span": [152, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0105-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Strikes take place (25 November\u20134 December 2019)\nAs in 2018, striking staff at a number of universities ran educational 'teach-outs' off campus, which were open to students affected by the strikes. On 27 November, negotiators from UCU and UCEA met, with UCEA pledging to consult its members on 'gender and ethnicity pay gaps, casual employment arrangements and workload' ahead of a meeting the next week, while stating that it had no mandate to alter the pay increase that had been implemented for the 2019\u201320 academic year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 151], "content_span": [152, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0106-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Strikes take place (25 November\u20134 December 2019)\nEmployers' organisations continued to argue that the strike represented a minority of staff in a minority of universities, with Oxford Brookes University's vice-chancellor Alistair Fitt arguing further that 'the call for more money comes at a time when universities are operating in a challenging environment amid increased competition, a freeze on tuition fees, and prolonged uncertainty over the implications of Brexit'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 151], "content_span": [152, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0106-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Strikes take place (25 November\u20134 December 2019)\nA few universities were reported as being heavy-handed in their response to the strikes, with the University of Liverpool attracting criticism for telling its students they must not join picket lines; Sheffield Hallam putting a form online for students to record which lecturers were on strike (which attracted a large number of satirical submissions); and the University of Birmingham telling its staff that picketing on campus would be trespass (which attracted a large petition in opposition).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 151], "content_span": [152, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0106-0002", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Strikes take place (25 November\u20134 December 2019)\nAn attempted occupation at the University of Reading in support of the strikes resulted in clashes with \"heavy handed\" security staff and injuries to the would-be occupiers. The university took disciplinary action against the students involved, banning an undergraduate and a postgraduate student from campus, as well as suspending the undergraduate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 151], "content_span": [152, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0107-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Strikes take place (25 November\u20134 December 2019)\nAs the strikes began, the Guardian published an editorial arguing that the strikes represented \"a battle for the soul of the campus\" and that \"the market model in higher education has created an intellectual precariat who are right to fight back\". Soon after, the Financial Times ran en editorial arguing that \"while academics and universities might not want to hear it, if the USS is to continue operating, the money has to come from them\", and also saying that \"the current industrial action carries wider significance than the fate of a disputed retirement plan. It has exposed the precariousness of Britain's higher education system as it has become more of a marketplace\", and calling for an \"independent inquiry\" into the handling of the USS valuation \"by all key players, including the Pensions Regulator\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 151], "content_span": [152, 965]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0108-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Strikes take place (25 November\u20134 December 2019)\nThe National Union of Students supported the strikes, as did the Labour shadow secretary for education, Angela Rayner. Support from individual university students' unions was less clear, with some, such as the University of Birmingham Guild of Students, taking an explicitly neutral stance. Reading University Students Union voted to support the strikes, but was unusual in doing so. The Times reported that 'by and large' students 'support their lecturers and their anger is with universities and vice-chancellors'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 151], "content_span": [152, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0108-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Strikes take place (25 November\u20134 December 2019)\nIn Edinburgh, students occupied David Hume Tower in solidarity with the strike, while students at Strathclyde University occupied a lecture theatre (both in support of the strikes and in protest at what they called 'rampant mismanagement, alleged corruption and irresponsible fossil fuel investment at the University of Strathclyde'). Students at the University of Stirling occupied a management building for two weeks, later receiving an eight-week suspension in punishment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 151], "content_span": [152, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0109-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Strikes take place (25 November\u20134 December 2019)\nSome scholarly societies, such as the American Studies Association, expressed support for the strike.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 151], "content_span": [152, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0110-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Strikes take place (25 November\u20134 December 2019)\nThe 2019 strikes took place in a somewhat different regulatory and legal environment from the 2018 ones, due to the establishment of the Office for Students and the emergence of a body of case-law from the Office of the Independent Adjudicator on the compensation of students for lost teaching in the wake of the 2018 strikes. Growing anxiety about the position of international students whose visa requirements for class attendance might be affected by the strikes, in the context of the UK Home Office's hostile environment policy towards migrants, was also in evidence. The University of Liverpool and Goldsmiths University attracted particular attention for telling international students that missing classes on account of refusing to cross picket lines might jeopardise their visas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 151], "content_span": [152, 940]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0111-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Following strike action (5\u201312 December 2019)\nIn the wake of the strike action, UCU called for 'action short of a strike' in the form of 'working to contract', interpreted primarily as working only the hours notionally required and not rescheduling teaching missed during the strikes. As in 2018, universities' responses to this varied, with some threatening pay deductions for 'partial performance' in the event of staff not rescheduling teaching and others not planning to deduct pay. Press coverage included mentioning the University of Liverpool for threatening partial pay deductions and Reading for threatening 100% pay deductions, whereas Cambridge offered to reimburse lecturers for pay lost during the strikes if they rescheduled teaching.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 147], "content_span": [148, 850]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0112-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Following strike action (5\u201312 December 2019)\nOn 4 December, UCU began reballoting thirteen branches which had nearly succeeded in achieving the 50% voter turnout necessary to take strike action, in the belief that the strike action at other branches would galvanise members into voting. It was believed that this would strengthen the threat of further industrial action.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 147], "content_span": [148, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0113-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Second report of the Joint Expert Panel on pensions (13 December 2019)\n13 December saw the publication of the Joint Expert Panel's second report. This recommended changes to the governance of USS, to build on \"the establishment of a new, jointly agreed purpose statement and shared valuation principles\". Reporting focused on the Panel's proposal to introduce a dual discount rate into the USS pension scheme, whereby the fund supporting members who had retired would be put into low-risk, low-return investments, but the remainder of the fund (accruing to working members who had not yet retired) would be free to be invested in higher-risk, higher-return holdings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 173], "content_span": [174, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0113-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Second report of the Joint Expert Panel on pensions (13 December 2019)\nThe report was welcomed by UUK and UCU and media reporting suggested that negotiations in its wake could lead to the cessation of impending industrial action; as strikes loomed in February, however, the UCU general secretary Jo Grady commented that 'most importantly, employers have not yet offered to cover the unfair contribution increases that are pricing members out of the scheme', implying that this was a key sticking point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 173], "content_span": [174, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0114-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Second report of the Joint Expert Panel on pensions (13 December 2019)\nThe report also recommended three-way talks between UCU, UUK and USS on the governance of USS to lead to future pension policies being more satisfactory to scheme stakeholders. The 'tripartite group' first met on 17 January 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 173], "content_span": [174, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0115-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Second report of the Joint Expert Panel on pensions (13 December 2019)\nIn mid-January 2020, the University of Sussex launched an \"industrial action ex gratia scheme\" to compensate students up to \u00a3100 for inconvenience caused by the ongoing industrial action. It this became the first UK university to offer compensation while industrial action was still in process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 173], "content_span": [174, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0116-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Second report of the Joint Expert Panel on pensions (13 December 2019)\nOn 15 January, the Wellcome Trust published the report 'What Researchers Think About the Culture They Work In', which found that 29% of respondents felt secure in their jobs. On 20 January, UCU published a report on 'the dehumanising effects of casualisation in higher education' that noted that '67,000 research staff were on fixed-term contracts, making up two-thirds of the total research staff employed at universities, alongside 30,000 contracted teaching staff, many paid by the hour. A further 69,000 academic staff were on \"atypical contracts\" and so are not counted in the main staff record, while an estimated 6,500 were on zero-hours contracts'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 173], "content_span": [174, 830]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0117-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', UCEA publish negotiating position (27 January 2020)\nOn 27 January, UCEA published a document 'offered as part of a potential composite JNCHES settlement for 2019-20' addressing the Four Fights issues, with the exception of pay (where the pay rise offered remained at 1.8%). UCEA noted that it had been 'given the scope to go further than ever before as a national employer representative body', proposed to set 'expectations' for the employment practices of individual institutions, and summarised its offer at sector-level thus:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 154], "content_span": [155, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0118-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', UCEA publish negotiating position (27 January 2020)\nUCU welcomed these offers as progress but criticised the lack of an improved offer on pay and argued that UCEA needed to provide universities with 'a clear set of mechanisms for policing and enforcing the expectations which they are signing up to'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 154], "content_span": [155, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0119-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Fourteen more universities ballot for strike action (29 January 2020)\nOn 29 January 2020, UCU announced results from the December\u2013January reballots of selected universities that had failed to secure a 50% turnout in the 2019 ballots. As a result, two further universities joined the disputes on pensions and pay/conditions; nine joined the dispute on pay/conditions alone; and three joined the dispute on pensions alone; and two that had been on strike about pensions only added pay/conditions to their disputes. The number of institutions with a mandate to strike at this point stood at 74 in total: 47 for pay/conditions and pensions, 22 for pay/conditions only, and 5 for pensions only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 172], "content_span": [173, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0120-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Strikes recommence (20 February 2020), Before the strikes\nOn 3 February 2020, following consultation with branch representatives at the union's Higher Education Committee, UCU announced fourteen days of strike action, escalating over a period running from 20 February to 13 March: 20\u201321 February, 24\u201326 February, 2\u20135 March and 9\u201313 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 160], "content_span": [161, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0121-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Strikes recommence (20 February 2020), Before the strikes\nDuring February, UUK consulted its members on the possibility of making a new offer in the pensions dispute, responding to UCU's request that employers shoulder more of the burden of rising pensions contributions. 84% opposed the idea of making a new offer. Meanwhile, UCEA did not alter the offer it had made on 27 January. During the same period, the Times Higher Education reported restiveness among some UCU members about the desirability of further strikes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 160], "content_span": [161, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0122-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Strikes recommence (20 February 2020), Weeks 1-2 (20\u201326 February)\nStrikes began on 20 February, with 74 universities affected, and news reporting on the day focusing on the determination of striking staff picketing in rainy weather. Following a few days with little apparent progress, UCEA resumed negotiations with UCU on Monday 24 February, and UUK resumed negotiations on Tuesday 25th. Negotiations continued throughout that week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 168], "content_span": [169, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0123-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Strikes recommence (20 February 2020), Week 3 (2\u20135 March)\nNegotiations went on. and, following the leaking of minutes from a Russell Group meeting about casualisation, the Russell Group issued a statement pledging to address casualisation in that part of the university sector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 160], "content_span": [161, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0124-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Strikes recommence (20 February 2020), Week 3 (2\u20135 March)\nBy the end of the third week of strike action (Friday 6 March), UCU summarised the position of negotiations as showing good progress on achieving a UK-wide, sector level framework to address casualisation, gender pay-gaps, and workload, with continued debate concerning the pay deal. Regarding pensions, the Union represented UUK as putting more pressure on USS for reform, but little progress on convincing employers to shoulder a higher proportion of rising pension contributions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 160], "content_span": [161, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0125-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Strikes recommence (20 February 2020), Week 4 (9\u201313 March)\nLittle news emerged from negotiations, and on 11 March UCU negotiators on the Four Fights made it clear that good progress had been made on three, but that the sticking point for them was pay, and argued that UCU members would need to continue industrial action to achieve improvements in that area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 161], "content_span": [162, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0126-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Strikes recommence (20 February 2020), Week 4 (9\u201313 March)\nMeanwhile, debate on USS was complicated by USS beginning their 2020 valuation, with UCU criticising USS's valuation methods and calling on UUK for support. No significant change appeared to have come about in employers' willingness to shoulder more of the rising costs of the pension scheme.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 161], "content_span": [162, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0127-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Strikes recommence (20 February 2020), Week 4 (9\u201313 March)\nAs the strikes came to an end, UK universities found themselves under a relatively sudden set of pressures as the COVID-19 pandemic led to falling projections for international student recruitment, and UK universities rapidly switching their teaching to online modes. UCU cancelled rallies on the last day of strikes to reduce the risk of infection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 161], "content_span": [162, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0128-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Strikes recommence (20 February 2020), Responses to the strike\nStudent support at the outset of the strike was estimated at 47% by an unscientific poll reported by the BBC. With continued NUS support for the strikes, twenty-six students' unions wrote to the Minister of State for Universities, the chairs of the UCEA and USS trustee boards and the Chief Executive of Universities UK, expressing support for UCU and urging a swift resolution to the strikes. As in previous strikes, there was a student occupation, in this case of the Old Schools in Cambridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 165], "content_span": [166, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0129-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', Strikes recommence (20 February 2020), Responses to the strike\nUCU members continued to find innovative ways to picket, with developments including a group of picketing runners circumnavigating the University of Leeds campus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 165], "content_span": [166, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0130-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', After the strikes\nThe prospect of convulsive changes to university staff workload and working conditions caused by universities' responses to the pandemic increased the complexities and tensions surrounding the dispute. To continue legally constituted industrial action, most branches at this time needed to reballot for action; however, the reballots were postponed due to the crisis, and the legal mandate for industrial action expired on 28 April 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 120], "content_span": [121, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0131-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', After the strikes\nAgainst the backdrop of the closure of UK campuses and an improvised sector-wide shift to online teaching, negotiations on the disputes continued. On 1 April 2020, UCEA tabled a new offer regarding the Four Fights dispute. As before, there was no increase in UCEA's previous pay increase offer of 1.8%, but the offer did include more explicit resolutions to establish sector-wide 'expectations' and 'recommendations' that all employers should implement through action and negotiation with unions at a local level. On 16 May UCU announced that it would convene representatives from its branches on 26 May with a decision about the Union's next step to be taken by its Higher Education Committee the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 120], "content_span": [121, 828]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286883-0132-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 UK higher education strikes, 2019\u201320 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights', After the strikes\nThe dispute over the USS pension was also cast into a new light by the economic shock of the pandemic and fears over the short-time financing of the UK higher education sector; the fund breached a self-sufficiency measure on 12 March and reported itself to The Pensions Regulator accordingly. Fears were made more acute by the fact that USS's statutory annual valuation date fell on 31 March, in the midst of the economic crash. In April 2020, UCU and UUK issued a joint statement on their position in relation to USS, in this respect presenting a united front against the pension trustees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 120], "content_span": [121, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286884-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 World Boxing Super Series \u2013 cruiserweight division\nThe 2018\u201320 World Boxing Super Series \u2013 cruiserweight division is a World Boxing Super Series professional boxing tournament taking place between October 2018 and September 2020 in several countries. The Super Series features eight top-rated cruiserweight boxers in a single-elimination tournament. The tournament was organized by Comosa AG.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286884-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 World Boxing Super Series \u2013 cruiserweight division\nThis tournament will be the second World Boxing Super Series held at cruiserweight, following the 2017\u201318 edition, which saw Oleksandr Usyk unify all four major world titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286884-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 World Boxing Super Series \u2013 cruiserweight division, Quarter-finals\nThe quarterfinals are held from 13 October to 10 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 76], "content_span": [77, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286884-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 World Boxing Super Series \u2013 cruiserweight division, Semi-finals\nBoth semifinal fights were held on 15 June 2019, at Ar\u0113na R\u012bga, Riga, Latvia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 73], "content_span": [74, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286884-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132020 World Boxing Super Series \u2013 cruiserweight division, Final\nThe final originally was to be held on 16 May 2020 at Ar\u0113na R\u012bga, Riga, Latvia, the same place as the semi-finals, for the IBF and The Ring titles, but was postponed to 26 September 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic and will be played behind closed doors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 67], "content_span": [68, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests\nThe 2018\u20132021 Arab protests, known as Arab Spring 2.0, were a series of anti-government protests in several Arab countries, including Morocco, Tunisia, Jordan, Sudan, Algeria, Egypt, Iraq, Lebanon, and Syria. Economic protests also took place in the Gaza Strip.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests\nThe deadliest incident of civil unrest in Iraq since the fall of Saddam Hussein resulted in its Prime Minister being replaced. Sustained civil disobedience in Sudan resulted in the overthrow of president Omar al-Bashir in a military coup d'\u00e9tat, the Khartoum massacre, and the transfer of power from a military junta to a combined military\u2013civilian Sovereignty Council that is legally committed to a 39-month transition to democracy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests\nThe alternative names \"New Arab Spring\", \"Arab Spring 2.0\", \"Second Arab Spring\", and \"Arab Summer\" refer to similarity with the preceding Arab Spring wave of pro-democracy protests which took place in 2010\u20132013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Context and background\nTesbih Habbal and Muzna Hasnawi, Syrian editors writing in The Nation in October 2019, argued that the 2018\u20132019 sustained street protests in the Arab world starting with Sudan in December 2018, Algeria in February 2019, Egypt and Iraq in September and October 2019, Syria and Lebanon in October 2019, constituted a second wave of the process that started with the 2010\u20132011 Arab Spring. Syrian protestors in October held signs stating, \"Syria\u2014Egypt\u2014Iraq: You've revived the spirit of the Arab people, from the [Atlantic] Ocean to the [Persian] Gulf!\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Context and background\nHabbal and Hansawi described the process as having \"profoundly changed the political consciousness of the region\", overcoming fear of political activity and \"setting a crucial precedent for challenging the persistence of authoritarianism\". Habbal and Hansawi argued that the October protests in Syria \"[proved] that even ruthless repression and tyranny cannot deter the resistance.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Context and background\nHabbal and Hansawi argued that the new wave of protests frequently included usage of the slogan \"Al-shab yurid isqat al- nizam!\" (The people want the fall of the regime!) used during the 2010\u20132011 Arab Spring. The protests have often been described as being inherently \"anti-systemic\" to the entirety of the political establishment instead of opposition to a single policy, fueling this is large scale unemployment specifically youth unemployment. As well as frustration towards many Arab government policies, reliance on international aid for basic necessities, corruption and reliance of hydrocarbons (fossil fuels) has all led to discontent towards the often chronyistic system of the middle east.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Timeline by country, Morocco\nMoroccan protests during this period were not isolated and stemmed from problems that have existed since the Arab Spring came to Morocco. Riots and civil unrest specifically resulted from the Hirak Rif Movement in 2016 and 2017 followed by a lack of reform on behalf of King Mohammed VI of Morocco. The aftermath of the Hirak Rif protests in 2016 and 2017 has led to the imprisonment, detainment and trial of what is thought to be more than 400 protesters, journalists and political activists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Timeline by country, Morocco\nAfter a lengthy trial period, which took until April 2019, to uphold the prison sentences of dozens of activists for up to 20 years. Several activists were sentenced to 20 years in prison including the leader of the protests Nasser Zefzafi. The upholding of these sentences sparked outrage among the relatives of the accused and brought thousands to the streets in protest of corruption and government indifference for the current standard of living.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0005-0002", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Timeline by country, Morocco\nIn May 2019 after renewed protests and demonstrations over the sentencing of Hirak Rif protesters the King pardoned an unknown number of protesters as a part of a royal pardon. It was the Kings way of marking 20 years on the throne but many see this as an excuse to suppress demonstrations and cool tensions with the protesters but give the impression that he is not making any concessions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Timeline by country, Morocco\nThe internet has allowed Moroccan citizens to express their discontent with the government and recently soccer stadiums have become a major outlet for the . One such chant: has gone viral since erupting from numerous stadium protests and has gained worldwide attention. The mostly young football crowds gather in the tens of thousands in Moroccan soccer club stadiums. Football stadiums offer protesters a sort of free haven to voice their cries for the injustices they face. Fbladi Delmouni literally translates to: \"In my country they oppress me.\" There are a number of different chants with lyrics that sometimes change significantly from one parody to the other, however the reoccurring them of criticizing the government and the poor standard of living is present.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 824]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Timeline by country, Morocco\nProtests in Jerada against the deaths of two people and impoverishment took place from 2017 to 2018. Protests in July 2018 saw tens of thousands of protesters demonstrate against the jailing of Hirak Rif Movement leaders. Police used tear gas in them. Social protests took place in June 2018, October\u2013December 2018 and January 2019. Renewed demonstrations in April\u2013May 2019 against the sentencing of leaders of the Hirak Rif Movement led to the king pardoning the leaders. Protests in 2020 against Israel in June and impoverishment in February led to repression.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Timeline by country, Morocco\nThese issues at their core, while exacerbated by the death of Mouhcine Fikri, are due to the lack of a suitable standard of living for the Moroccan people. Massive projects have been taken underway to improve the infrastructure and development of the country but young and poor people feel that their needs are still being ignored. Projects that have been undertaken include Africa's first high speed train running from Casablanca to Tangier, as well as extensive renovations to the Rabat airport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0008-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Timeline by country, Morocco\nHowever, Moroccans living in poverty, many of whom reside in rural areas in the countryside, are unable to benefit from such projects. Many in particular still suffer from the poor quality of transportation within major cities like the bus system in Casablanca, and connecting smaller cities and towns within Morocco. Most poorer Moroccans lack basic access to food and water and 22% of the country is unemployed. These recent projects have exacerbated the economic disparity between social classes in Morocco and generate more social unrest among the poor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0008-0002", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Timeline by country, Morocco\nOne recent protest started in late 2017 and continued strong into 2018 over the lack of food and water. During this period, a stampede occurred in Sidi Boulaalam, a small village outside Essaouira, when supplies arrived to a marketplace, resulting in the trampling and deaths of at least 15 people. It is worse in the interior of Morocco in places like Zagora, a small village in the southeastern desert of Morocco, where for the past 15 years people have been surviving off drinking imported bottled water.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Timeline by country, Jordan\nThe 2018 Jordanian protests started as a general strike organized by more than 30 trade unions on the 31st of May 2018 after the government of Hani Mulki submitted a new tax law to Parliament. The bill followed IMF-backed austerity measures adopted by Mulki's government since 2016 that aimed to tackle Jordan's growing public debt. Although Jordan had been relatively unscathed from the violence that swept the region following the 2011 Arab Spring, its economy had taken a hit from the surrounding turmoil and from an influx of a large number of Syrian refugees into the country. Jordan also hosts a large contingent of Iraqi and Palestinian refugees, further straining its finances. The UNHCR places Jordan as the world's second largest host of refugees per capita.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 52], "content_span": [53, 821]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Timeline by country, Jordan\nThe day following the strike on May 31, the government raised fuel and electricity prices responding to an increase in international oil prices. This led to crowds of protesters pouring onto the 4th circle, in Amman, near the Prime Ministry's offices that night. Other Jordanians also gathered across the country in protest of the measure in unprecedented large numbers. On 1 June King Abdullah intervened and ordered the freeze of the price hikes; the government acquiesced but said the decision would cost the treasury $20 million. The protests continued for four days until Mulki submitted his resignation to the King on 4 June, and Omar Razzaz, his Education Minister, became Prime Minister. Protests only ceased after Razzaz announced his intention of withdrawing the new tax bill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 52], "content_span": [53, 839]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Timeline by country, Jordan\nThe protests have not been led by traditional opposition groups like the Muslim Brotherhood or leftists, but by diverse crowds from the middle and poor classes. Although some protesters set aflame tires and blocked roads multiple nights, protests were largely peaceful and few casualties were reported. They were staged after daylight hours as it was during the month of Ramadan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 52], "content_span": [53, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Timeline by country, Tunisia\nThe 2018 Tunisian protests were a series of protests occurring throughout Tunisia. Beginning January 2018, protests erupted in multiple towns and cities across Tunisia over issues related to the cost of living and taxes. As of 9 January, the demonstrations had claimed at least one life, and revived worries about the fragile political situation in Tunisia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Timeline by country, Tunisia\nThe Popular Front, an alliance of leftist opposition parties, called for continued protests against the government's \"unjust\" austerity measures while Tunisian Prime Minister Youssef Chahed denounced the violence and called for calm, claiming that he and his government believe 2018 \"would be the last difficult year for Tunisians\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Timeline by country, Tunisia\nA new series of protests started on 15 January 2021, amidst the 10th anniversary of the Tunisian Revolution. Thousands rioted in cities and towns across Tunisia, which saw looting, arson, as well as mass deployment of police and army in several cities and the arrests of hundreds of people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Timeline by country, Iraq\nThe 2018\u20132019 Iraqi protests over deteriorating economic conditions and state corruption started in July 2018 in Baghdad and other major Iraqi cities, mainly in the central and southern provinces. During the nationwide protests erupting in October 2019, Iraqi security forces killed over 500 people and over 27,000 have been injured, leading Iraq's president Barham Salih to call the actions of security forces \"unacceptable.\" Some police have also been killed in the protests. The protests are the deadliest unrest in Iraq since the fall of Saddam Hussein, with the death toll reaching 511 by 2 January 2020 and 669 by 13 January 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Timeline by country, Algeria\nThe 2019 Algerian protests, also called Revolution of Smiles or Hirak Movement, began on 16 February 2019, ten days after Abdelaziz Bouteflika announced his candidacy for a fifth presidential term in a signed statement. These protests, without precedent since the Algerian Civil War, have been peaceful and led the military to insist on Bouteflika's immediate resignation, which took place on 2 April 2019. By early May, a significant number of power-brokers close to the deposed administration, including the former president's younger brother Sa\u00efd, had been arrested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Timeline by country, Egypt\nThe 2019 Egyptian protests consisted of protests by thousands of people in Cairo, Alexandria, Damietta and five other Egyptian cities starting on 20 and 21 September 2019 in which the protestors called for President of Egypt Abdel Fattah el-Sisi to be removed from power. Security forces responded with tear gas, rubber bullets and live bullets and, as of 6\u00a0October\u00a02019, 3000 arrests had been made, based on data from the Egyptian Center for Economic and Social Rights, the Egyptian Commission for Rights and Freedoms and the Arabic Network for Human Rights Information.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0017-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Timeline by country, Egypt\nProminent arrestees included human rights lawyer Mahienour el-Massry, journalist and former leader of the Constitution Party Khaled Dawoud and two professors of political science at Cairo University, Hazem Hosny and Hassan Nafaa. The wave of arrests was the biggest in Egypt since Sisi formally became president in 2014. Human Rights Watch called for all those arrested for peacefully expressing their opinions to be released immediately. Amnesty International described the Sisi government being \"shaken to its core\" by 20\u201321 September protests and that the authorities had \"launched a full-throttle clampdown to crush demonstrations and intimidate activists, journalists and others into silence\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0017-0002", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Timeline by country, Egypt\nTwo thousand people, including Sudanese Professionals Association (SPA) representatives, protested in Khartoum on 26 September in support of Waleed Abdelrahman Hassan, a Sudanese anti-Islamist student detained by Egyptian authorities, who gave a forced confession on MBC Masr television. The SPA stated, \"the era when Sudanese citizens were humiliated inside or outside their country has gone and will never return\". The Sudanese Foreign Ministry summoned the Egyptian ambassador and Waleed Abdelrahman Hassan was freed on 2 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Timeline by country, Gaza\nThe 2019 Gaza economic protests, dubbed as We Want to Live protests, began on February, initiating with the popular call \"We want to live\" by a group of politically unaffiliated media activists. The group has been nicknamed the 14 March movement. The protests aim at high costs of living and tax hikes in the Gaza Strip. The protests were violently suppressed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Timeline by country, Lebanon\nThe Lebanese protests were a series of protests that constitute a reaction against sectarian rule, stagnant economy, unemployment, endemic corruption in the public sector, legislation (such as banking secrecy) that is perceived to shield the ruling class from accountability. It is suspected that the direct trigger to the protests were due to the planned imposed taxes on gasoline, tobacco and online phone calls such as through WhatsApp, as protests started breaking out right after unanimous Cabinet approval of the WhatsApp taxes, due to be ratified by 22 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Timeline by country, Lebanon\nIn contrast to the 2005 Cedar Revolution, and similarly to a process started in the 2015\u20132016 Lebanese protests, the 2019 protests were non-sectarian, crossing the Sunni\u2013Shia Muslim sociological and religious divide and bypassing traditional political party alignments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Timeline by country, Libya\nStreet protests took place in August and September 2020 over issues of poor provision of services in several cities in Libya, including both cities controlled by the Government of National Accord (GNA) in the west (Tripoli, Misrata, Zawiya) and by the Libyan National Army (LNA) in the east of Libya (Benghazi). The de facto LNA-associated government led by Abdullah al-Thani offered its resignation on 13 September 2020 in response to the protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Timeline by country, Sudan, Revolution\nThe Sudanese Revolution was a major shift of political power in Sudan that started with street protests throughout Sudan on 19 December 2018 and continued with sustained civil disobedience for about eight months, during which the 11 April 2019 Sudanese coup d'\u00e9tat deposed President Omar al-Bashir after thirty years in power, the 3 June Khartoum massacre took place under the leadership of the Transitional Military Council (TMC) that replaced al-Bashir, and in July and August 2019 the TMC and the Forces of Freedom and Change alliance (FFC) signed a Political Agreement and a Draft Constitutional Declaration legally defining a planned 39-month phase of transitional state institutions and procedures to return Sudan to a civilian democracy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 63], "content_span": [64, 808]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0022-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Timeline by country, Sudan, Revolution\nIn August and September 2019, the TMC formally transferred executive power to a mixed military\u2013civilian collective head of state, the Sovereignty Council of Sudan, and to a civilian prime minister (Abdalla Hamdok) and a mostly civilian cabinet, while judicial power was transferred to Nemat Abdullah Khair, Sudan's first female Chief Justice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 63], "content_span": [64, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286885-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Arab protests, Timeline by country, Syria\nIn southwest Syria, worsening economic conditions led to rare anti-government protests in the city of Suweida, where demonstrators called for the removal of President Bashar al-Assad, as well as the withdrawal of Iran-backed militias and Russian troops from the region. The protests led to Assad dismissing Prime Minister Imad Khamis. In addition, counter-demonstrations in support of the Assad government were also held. Both Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch condemned the use of \"arbitrary detentions\", beatings and arrests by Syrian security forces, and called on the government to \"immediately release\" those detained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests\nProtests began in cities throughout Haiti on 7 July 2018 in response to increased fuel prices. Over time, these protests evolved into demands for the resignation of Jovenel Mo\u00efse, the president of Haiti. Led by opposition politician Jean-Charles Mo\u00efse (no relation), protesters state that their goal is to create a transitional government, provide social programs, and prosecute allegedly corrupt officials. The protests and civil unrest that paralysed Haiti hit hard. Since the 14 January protest, hundreds of thousands have taken part in weekly protests calling for the government to resign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, Background and origins\nReleased in November 2017, a Senate probe of the period 2008\u20132016 (concerning the Ren\u00e9 Pr\u00e9val and Michel Martelly administrations as well as the chief of staff of then-sitting President Jovenel Mo\u00efse) revealed significant corruption had been funded with Venezuelan loans through the Petrocaribe program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, Background and origins\nA new round of protests broke out in February 2021 amid a dispute over Mo\u00efse's presidential term. The protesters claimed that Mo\u00efse's term officially ended on 7 February 2021 and demanded that he step down. Mo\u00efse said that Haitian presidents have five years to serve according to the constitution and he has one more year to serve since he became president in February 2017. Protesters have also expressed concerns about the 2021 Haitian constitutional referendum, a referendum proposed by Mo\u00efse which would reportedly scrap the ban on consecutive presidential terms and enable Mo\u00efse to run again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, Background and origins\nMonique Clesca of the Americas Quarterly described it as \"a three-year protest movement led by young people that has its roots in 2018 riots over high fuel prices and a lack of jobs and health care. They have made state corruption and President Jovenel Mo\u00efse the target of escalating protests.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, History, 2018 protests\nWhen Venezuela stopped shipping oil to Haiti in March 2018, this led to fuel shortages. With the removal of government subsidies in July, kerosene prices went up over 50 percent, with similarly steep hikes on other fossil fuels. These rises in taxes on gasoline, diesel, and kerosene that went into effect on 7 July 2018 brought Haitians into the streets. Flights were canceled into and out of Haiti by U.S. airlines. The government backed down on the tax increases, and the President accepted the resignation of the inexperienced Jack Guy Lafontant as Prime Minister on 14 July 2018, replaced one month later by Jean-Henry C\u00e9ant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, History, 2018 protests\nIn mid-August 2018, Gilbert Mirambeau Jr. tweeted a photo of himself blindfolded holding a cardboard sign with \"Kot k\u00f2b PetwoCaribe a\u00a0?\" (\"Where did the PetroCaribe money go?\") written on it. The hashtag petrocaribechallenge was soon widely circulated on social media.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, History, 2018 protests\nAnger over the revelations and accusations from the continuing investigation simmered through social media into the autumn and boiled over again, first in October 2018, with tense scenes and violence in Les Cayes, in Jacmel, and in Saint-Marc. A week of protests in November 2018 led to 10 deaths, including several killed when a government car \"lost a wheel and plowed into a crowd.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, History, 2019 protests, February\nSignificant protests broke out again in February 2019 following a report from the court investigating the Petrocaribe Senate probe. Economic problems and the increased cost of living helped fuel the protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, History, 2019 protests, February\nOn 7 February, protesters targeted and damaged wealthy Haitians' luxury vehicles. The following day, the mayors of Petion-ville and Port-au-Prince announced the cancellation of pre-Haitian Carnival events. Two days later protestors clashed with police, with demonstrators throwing stones at the home of President Mo\u00efse, after one of his allies' security personnel struck a woman's car and began to beat her. On 12 February, protesters burned down a popular market, looted stores and assisted with a prison break in Aquin that freed all of the facility's prisoners. In Port-au-Prince, the building housing the Italian and Peruvian consulates was looted by protesters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, History, 2019 protests, February\nPresident Mo\u00efse addressed the country on 14 February, saying he would not step down and \"give the country up to armed gangs and drug traffickers.\" During a funeral procession on 22 February, Haitian police fired tear gas at a crowd of about 200 people carrying the casket of a man killed during protests days earlier. Opposition leader Schiller Louidor called for future protests, though the overall size of protests began to subside that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, History, 2019 protests, March\nThree days after the lower house voted a censure motion against Prime Minister Jean-Henry C\u00e9ant's government on 18 March 2019, President Mo\u00efse replaced C\u00e9ant with Jean-Michel Lapin. As of mid-November 2019, this change had not been ratified by the Haitian Parliament. Lacking a government because of the impasse between the President and the Parliament, Haiti has had hundreds of millions in international aid\u2014for which having a sitting government was a prerequisite\u2014suspended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, History, 2019 protests, June\nDuring escalating protests on 10 June, journalist Rospide Petion was shot in a company car on his way home from Radio Sans Fin in Port-au-Prince, where he had criticized the government on air before leaving the station.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, History, 2019 protests, October\nOn 4 October, thousands protested across Haiti. In Port-au-Prince, the mayor joined the protestors in calling for President Mo\u00efse to step down. Two days earlier, the opposition sent a letter by delegation to the UN Secretary General denouncing the sitting President's role in the Petrocaribe affair, and the government's role in a massacre in La Saline. Lyonel Trouillot wrote in L'Humanit\u00e9 that \"[w]ithout dipping into conspiracy theory, there is something worrying about the international community's silence about the Haitian situation.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, History, 2019 protests, October\nOn 11 October, N\u00e9h\u00e9mie Joseph, a second radio journalist critical of the government, was found dead in the trunk of his car in Mirebalais. On 22 October, thousands of Catholics demonstrated in the capital. Archbishop Max Leroy M\u00e9sidor asked Haitian leaders to heed the people who \"cannot go on any longer. We are fed up.\" Energy crises, road blockages, and widespread unrest have led to massive drops in tourism, causing the closure of hotels in Petion-ville, where the Best Western Premier closed permanently, and in Cap-Ha\u00eftien, where Mont Joli was closed. Two people were killed in protests in Port-au-Prince on 27 October. Masked police officers were themselves out on the streets demonstrating that day because of low salaries and lack of health insurance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 821]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, History, 2019 protests, October\nAlthough the Haitian constitution calls for legislative elections in October, none were held in October 2019. The United Nations announced they had counted 42 deaths and 86 injuries since mid-September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, History, 2019 protests, November\nPeyi lok (\"country lockdown\") is how the situation was described in Haitian Creole in November 2019 after two and a half months with schools, courts, businesses, public services, and economic production largely shut down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, History, 2019 protests, December\nAlthough parents and school directors still felt uneasy amidst barricades and gunfire, schools across the country began to reopen in December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, History, 2019 protests, December\nThe U.S. Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs (David Hale) visited Haiti on 6 December, following up on U.S. Ambassador to the UN Kelly Craft's November visit. During his visit, he met with the administration and with leaders from several opposing political parties, some of whom, including Fanmi Lavalas and Fusion-Mache Kontre, refused any collaboration with President Mo\u00efse. On 10 December, the U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee began hearings on the situation in Haiti, which Frederica Wilson had pushed for. At the hearing, Maxine Waters was sharply critical of U.S. support for President Mo\u00efse. Neither the State Department nor USAID was present at the hearings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, History, 2020 protests\nIn September and October 2020, more protests occurred throughout the country. The protesters criticized the government's response to the COVID-19 pandemic in Haiti, alleging it did not provide enough to those who lost their jobs because of the virus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, History, 2020 protests\nPolice held protests demanding better pay and working conditions. The police exchanged fire with Haitian soldiers outside the National Palace where police were protesting working conditions in February. In early 2020, a United Nations report said the Haitian police was corrupt, and failing to protect the population.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, History, 2021 protests\nOn 14 January, hundreds demonstrated in Port-au-Prince, Cap-Ha\u00eftien, Jacmel, Saint-Marc, and Gonaives against President Mo\u00efse. Most of the demonstrations were peaceful, but some violence was reported. On 20 January, hundred again demonstrated in Port-au-Prince and Cap-Haitien to protest against President Mo\u00efse. One woman was shot by Rubber bullets and several others were wounded during protests. On 28 January, journalists, lawmakers, police officers, retirees, former police officers, and human rights judges led protests against human rights abuses and police brutality, violence, and repression against protesters and chanted \"When they don\u2019t get paid, we're the ones they call!\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, History, 2021 protests\nOn 7 February 2021, supporters of the opposition against incumbent President Mo\u00efse allegedly attempted a coup d'\u00e9tat. Mo\u00efse ordered the arrest of 23 people. Hundreds of people marched through the streets of Port-au-Prince on 9 February, chanting \"Down with kidnapping! Down with dictatorship!\" They bolstered opposition demands for President Mo\u00efse to resign. The police fired tear gas and shot in the air in an attempt to disperse protesters, who pelted the security officials with rocks. On 8\u20139 February, clashes with protesters and security forces occurred in Port-au-Prince, in which protesters threw stones and chanted \"Out with dictators\" while the riot police fired tear gas at the demonstrators who were protesting killings, disputed term limits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 804]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, History, 2021 protests\nProtesters calling for President Mo\u00efse to step down clashed with police in the capital, Port-au-Prince, on 7 February. The police fired tear gas to disperse the demonstrators. According to the opposition, Mo\u00efse's term as president was supposed to end on 7 February 2021, but Mo\u00efse stated that his term doesn't end until 2022. On 10 February, the police used tear gas and shot into the air to disperse a rock-throwing crowd of protesters. Twenty-three people were arrested and two journalists were injured during the incident. Protesters shouted \"We are back to dictatorship! Down with Mo\u00efse!", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0022-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, History, 2021 protests\nDown with Sison\", a reference to the U.S. Ambassador Michele J. Sison, who supports Mo\u00efse. On 15 February, tens of thousands of protesters rallied again in Port-au-Prince, accusing the government of trying to establish a new dictatorship and denouncing international support for President Mo\u00efse and waves the national flag. Chants like \"Down with the dictatorship\" were chanted during mass protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, History, 2021 protests\nOn 21 February, the opposition movement launched large protests in Jacmel and Port-au-Prince against President Mo\u00efse, and fought with the security forces. It is the third general strike, after the nationwide strike on 2 February and 8 February. On 25 February, at least 25 were dead and many injured during a prison break at Croix-des-Bouquets Civil Prison, during which gang leader Arnel Joseph escaped. Joseph was later found and killed in L'Est\u00e8re. On 28 February, protesters took to the streets targeting offices and throwing stones at the police, despite a bloody crackdown on the widespread street opposition demonstrations. \"We are back to dictatorship! Down with Mo\u00efse!\" was chanted during protests on 28 February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, History, 2021 protests\nThousands of Haitians filled the streets of the capital, Port-au-Prince, the manifestations, demonstrations and remonstrances were peaceful, doctors and handicapped lawyers participated in the protest on 7 and 9 March, under the slogan #FreeOurCountry. The protesters called for President Mo\u00efse, Prime Minister Joseph Jouthe to resign and called for a crackdown on kidnappers. The hastag FreeHaiti led opposition demonstrations across Haiti on 15 March, to protest the killing of four police officers in a village in Port-au-Prince, calling for the government to resign and demanded a crackdown on gang-led violence on innocent civilians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0024-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, History, 2021 protests\nCitizens also voiced their opposition to corruption and armed gangs controlling cities. On 17 March, thousands wave tree branches and flags in protests against kidnapping and President Mo\u00efse. Tens of thousands of protesters and police officers protested across the capital and held a Haitian flag in protest at corruption and police arrests. Trainee police officers joined in the jail break while citizens took to the street for a fifth day to block roads with vehicles, debris and burning tires, also vandalizing a car dealership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, History, 2021 protests\nIn the capital, thousands of people, some of whom carried the national flag, also chanted slogans against the UN representative in Haiti, whom they accused of downplaying the scale of the demonstrations. The pro-democracy protest on 1 March was non-violent and was attended by tens of thousands of protesters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0025-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, History, 2021 protests\nThousands of Haitians rallied in multiple cities and the capital Port-au-Prince protesters demanded respect for the current constitution and yelled \"Down with dictatorship\" as militants burned tires and tore down recently mounted billboards promoting the upcoming constitutional referendum scheduled for 27 June ahead of legislative, local and presidential elections scheduled for the fall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, History, 2021 protests\nOn 3 April, thousands of women protesters marched on the 35th anniversary of the 1986 Haitian women's protests, defying a spike in kidnappings and called on President Mo\u00efse to deplore investigations into violence against women in Port-au-Prince. Workers of private businesses endorsed a nationwide work stoppage that occurred on 15 April to protest Haiti's security crisis. In April, protesters targeted areas surrounding government buildings, with eggs, colours, Easter Chick messages and Voodoo symbols to persuade President Mo\u00efse to resign ahead of elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0026-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, History, 2021 protests\nOn 22 April, white symbols were drawn during chalk street protests, a battle tactic to call on President Mo\u00efse to step down in Jericho and Port-au-Prince. On 7 April, protesters circled the national palace seven times, met with police firing tear gas; the same happened on 22 April, when nuns clashed with police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, Actions, Mo\u00efse government\nPresident Mo\u00efse called for his opposition to participate in peaceful dialogue, saying that \"the country's problems aren't solely political. The country\u2019s problems are social, economic and political.\" The national police stated that there are \"malicious individuals\" who had interrupted peaceful protests in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, Actions, Opposition\nThe opposition has been led by Jean-Charles Mo\u00efse. This opposition declined offers for dialogue, demanded Mo\u00efse's resignation, and organized a nationwide general strike to attempt to force him to resign from office. Alongside opposition lawmakers, he called for a transitional government to replace Mo\u00efse: \"If Jovenel Mo\u00efse does not want to step down from power, we are going to name an interim president in the coming days.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, Actions, Arrest of foreign mercenaries\nThe Port-au-Prince newspaper Le Nouvelliste reported on 18 February 2019 that a Haitian citizen and seven non-Haitians were arrested in the city. At the time of their arrest, they were carrying rifles, pistols, drones, and satellite phones in their vehicle, which did not have any license plates. Haitian Foreign Minister Bocchit Edmond confirmed that among them were five Americans. According to the editor of Haiti Libert\u00e9, the group included two former Navy SEALs, a former Blackwater employee, and two Serbian mercenaries living in the US. They were tasked with protecting the former head of the National Lottery, who intended to transfer US$80 million from a PetroCaribe bank account\u2014controlled jointly by the President, the Prime Minister, and the President of the Central Bank\u2014to a bank account solely controlled by President Jovenel Mo\u00efse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 66], "content_span": [67, 914]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, Violence towards the press\nAccording to the Committee to Protect Journalists, some reporters have been targeted by protesters. Reuters journalist Robenson Sanon was wounded during the protests in February 2019 but believes that it was coincidental because he was caught in-between clashes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286886-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Haitian protests, Violence towards the press\nJournalist Rospide Petion was killed on his way home from the Radio Sans Fin in Port-au-Prince on 10 June 2019 by an unknown gunman. Some correspondents filming protests on 9\u201310 June were targeted by both police and the crowds. On 11 October, N\u00e9h\u00e9mie Joseph, another radio journalist critical of the government, was found dead in Mirebalais after complaining about receiving death threats. Freelance journalist Vladjimir Legagneur is presumed to have been killed in March 2018 while reporting on gang activity in Grande Ravine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests\nThe 2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests began on 18 April 2018 when demonstrators in several cities of Nicaragua began protests against the social security reforms decreed by President Daniel Ortega that increased taxes and decreased benefits. After five days of unrest in which nearly thirty people were killed, Ortega announced the cancellation of the reforms; however, the opposition has grown through the 2014\u20132018 Nicaraguan protests to denounce Ortega and demand his resignation, becoming one of the largest protests in his government's history and the deadliest civil conflict since the end of the Nicaraguan Revolution. On 29 September 2018, political demonstrations were declared illegal by President Ortega. More than 2,000 protests were part of this significant mobilization.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Background, Pensions for small contributors\nThe 2013\u20132018 Nicaraguan protests began in June 2013 when some elderly people with only a small contribution (less than 750 weeks) demanded a reduced pension from the Nicaraguan Social Security Institute. Soon, students and young people joined their protests. After a week of demonstration, the peaceful protesters were attacked by paramilitary groups associated with the Sandinista Youth, while police had moved back only moments before. Later, to calm down the protests, concessions to the pensioners were made by president Daniel Ortega to supply a reduced pension.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 74], "content_span": [75, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Background, Proposed canal\nOver a year later protests started again, this time opposing the construction of a proposed Chinese-funded inter-oceanic canal through Nicaragua, with environmental impact, land use, and indigenous rights, as well as Nicaraguan sovereignty among the chief concerns of demonstrators. By February 2018, the project was widely viewed as defunct, though a 60% absent vote to revoke the 2013 legislation creating the project, the Chinese company (HKND) granted the concession to develop the canal maintains legal rights to it as well as to ancillary infrastructure projects.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Background, Forest fires\nIn early April 2018, demonstrators marched in Managua, the country's capital, to protest what they regarded as an insufficient government response to forest fires that burned 13,500 acres (5,500 hectares) of the Indio Ma\u00edz Biological Reserve, a tropical nature preserve that is home to Rama and Kriol indigenous people, as well as significant biodiversity and endangered species. There were suspicions that the government had an interest in the fire, as it is the largest natural reserve through which the Nicaraguan Canal is planned to make. Counterprotests also occurred at the time in support of the Sandinista Front government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Background, INSS crisis\nIn 2013, the Nicaraguan Social Security Institute was in a deficit situation that had been grown annually, reaching 2,371 million Nicaraguan c\u00f3rdobas by the end of 2017. This deficit has increased by over 50% annually for the last two years. The IMF alerted Nicaragua in 2017 that in the absence of the reform, the cash reserves would be depleted by 2019. The government of Daniel Ortega prepared a reform plan for the INSS based on the IMF's report.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Background, INSS crisis\nThe government rejected some of the proposed remedies, such as increasing the retirement age, arguing that older people have fewer possibilities of finding employment, and that the urgency of the reform required fast results to ensure the INSS's viability, as some measures suggested by the IMF would not yield results for three or four years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Background, INSS crisis\nIn early April 2018, the Superior Council for Private Enterprise (COSEP) announced the start of negotiations with the government to reform the INSS, declaring that the solution must include an increase to the contribution of the employers and employees, as well as fiscal reform. These negotiations excluded small and medium-sized enterprises. The reforms were announced on 16 April 2018, and published by presidential decree in March 2018 in La Gaceta (official government record) on 18 April 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Background, INSS crisis\nThe reform included an incremental increase of 0.75% (from 6.25% to 7%) on the employee contribution and 2% (from 19% to 21%) on the employers, starting July 2018. The employers' contribution would increase annually until reaching 22.5% in 2020. Pensions would also be taxed 5%. The 5% tax has been criticized as unconstitutional, since only the National Assembly has the power of taxation, and Law 160, signed by Ortega, indicates that pensions are not subject to any retentions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Background, INSS crisis\nThe government-aligned unions Workers' National Front and the Employees National Union supported the reform, while the COSEP rejected it, indicating it did not have consensus and filed a writ of amparo in an attempt to reverse it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, First protests\nCitizens protest on 18 April after already being angered by the handling of the fires in response to the Ortega administration's announcement of social security reforms that raised income and payroll taxes while reducing pension benefits by 5%. Demonstrations involving mostly elderly individuals, university students, and other activists broke out in Managua and six other cities, which were repressed by authorities reporting to President Ortega. Authorities were seen using live ammunition on protesters while also arming Sandinista Youth members with weapons. At least 26 people were killed, including journalist \u00c1ngel Gahona of the news program Meridiano, with Gahona being shot to death outside of the city hall in Bluefields while streaming on Facebook Live. Various forms of independent media were censored during the protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 901]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, First protests\nThe following day on 19 April, Vice President and first lady Rosario Murillo made a speech mocking the demonstrators and labeling them of \"small groups, small souls, toxic, full of hate\", bent on the destruction of the country, assaulting peace and development. She also labeled the demonstrators that had been attacked as \"aggressors\" and the attack by pro-Ortega groups and police as \"legitimate defense\". Protests began to intensify with confrontations occurring in Le\u00f3n, Managua, Granada, Boaco, Carazo, Estel\u00ed, Rivas, Matagalpa and Masaya.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0008-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, First protests\nTELCOR ordered the suspension of transmissions of four independent TV channels that were reporting the news: channels 12, 23, 51, and 100% Noticias. Also the Catholic Episcopal Conference's TV channel. The suspension lasted several hours, except for 100% Noticias, who was off the air until 25 April. Murillo accused the protesters of being manipulated and trying to \"destabilize\" and \"destroy\" Nicaragua.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, First protests\nTwo days after the beginning of protests and the subsequent crackdown by authorities, Ortega made his first public appearance on 21 April and announced he would hold negotiations for a possible revision of the reforms, planned to take effect on 1 July 2018; however, he stated he would meet only with business leaders and alleged that demonstrators were being manipulated by gangs and other political interests. Demonstrations increased in response, with protesters objecting to the repression of demonstrations and the exclusion of other sectors from the negotiations, as well as the reforms themselves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0009-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, First protests\nThe COSEP business chamber announced it would only participate in the negotiation if police violence ceased, detained protesters were released and free speech were restored. Nicaragua's Roman Catholic Conference of Bishops also called for an end to the police violence and criticized unilateral reforms; Pope Francis subsequently added his call for peace in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, Cancellation of social security reforms\nAs the press began to describe the unrest as the biggest crisis of Ortega's presidency, Ortega announced the cancellation of the social security reforms on 22 April, acknowledging they were not viable and had created a \"dramatic situation\". He again proposed negotiations on the issue, which would now include Catholic Cardinal Leopoldo Brenes as well as the business community.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 90], "content_span": [91, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, Cancellation of social security reforms\nOn 23 April, marches of citizens, businessmen and students were held in Managua demanding the end of violence in the country, the release of students arrested by the police, the cessation of censorship of television media, and a response from the government about the students who died during the protests. The protests were the largest seen during the Ortega administration, with tens to hundreds of thousands of demonstrators participating and calling for the president's resignation. The next day on 24 April 2018, detainees were released by Nicaraguan authorities as a result of dialogue between the government and other organizations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 90], "content_span": [91, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, Investigations and resignations\nNicaraguan Attorney General In\u00e9s Miranda announced on 26 April that a formal investigation into the deaths during the protests. On 27 April, President of the National Assembly Gustavo Porras announced a truth commission to examine the deaths and violence during the unrest. Head of the National Police Aminta Granera announced her resignation in face of the criticism of her handling of the unrest and alleged police repression of protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 82], "content_span": [83, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, Intensification of protests\nHundreds of thousands participated in marches for \"peace and justice\" organized on 28 April by the Catholic churches in Nicaragua in the cities of Managua, Matagalpa and Le\u00f3n. At the events, \"bishops, feminists, homosexuals, family members of those killed in the repression... and thousands of peasants\" gathered in unity to demonstrate. Peasants who lived in rural areas traveled to Managua by a caravan of trucks, arriving to protest against the Nicaragua Canal proposal by Chinese businessmen and the Ortega government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 78], "content_span": [79, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, Intensification of protests\nDays later on 30 April, tens of thousands of Ortega's supporters participated in a rally showing him support, though there were some reports of government workers being forced to join the pro-Ortega rally. The rally consisted mostly of singing and dancing to music of the 1960s and 1970s, popular to the former Sandinista guerrillas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 78], "content_span": [79, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, Intensification of protests\nOn 2 May, police in riot gear blocked a student march from Central American University (UCA) to the National Assembly, with students instead marching to the Polytechnic University of Nicaragua (UPOLI) to show solidarity with other groups entrenched there. After pro-Ortega groups appeared on their route, they cancelled another planned march, so students reinforced barricades surrounding UPOLI under the watch of authorities. Anonymous Nicaragua hacked the website of the National Police of Nicaragua, calling for them to support of anti-Ortega protesters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 78], "content_span": [79, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0015-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, Intensification of protests\nThe next day, elite troops of the Nicaraguan armed forces and police assaulted UPOLI in the early morning at about 01:00 CT, dispersing students stationed at the university. The incident left six students injured, one seriously. Student group Movimiento 19 de Abril responded to the incident stating that they would not participate in a dialogue with Ortega after he sent forces to attack them, placing peace talks in jeopardy. By 9 May, members of the independent press of Nicaragua condemned the killings, censorship and repression of the Government of Nicaragua.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 78], "content_span": [79, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, Intensification of protests\nMore than 10 cities were the scene of heavy fighting on 12 May in at least eight departments in the north, center, and Pacific areas of Nicaragua. The biggest clashes took place in Chinandega, Granada, Le\u00f3n, Managua, Masaya, and Rivas in the Pacific, as well as Estel\u00ed and Matagalpa in the north. In Masaya, the clashes lasted for more than 12 hours between demonstrators, anti-riot police and youth shock groups of the Sandinista party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 78], "content_span": [79, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0016-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, Intensification of protests\nThe following day, President Ortega called for a cessation of violence, reading a short statement, in which he called for \"an end to death and destruction, that does not continue to shed blood of Nicaraguan brothers\". The Military of Nicaragua assured that it would not engage in acts of repression against citizens who were protesting and advocated a dialogue to help resolve the crisis in the country, according to statements made by spokesman Colonel Manuel Guevara. In a demonstration, thousands of people arrived on 13 May from Managua to Masaya in a caravan to support that city for the loss of at least one life and 150 wounded in the past days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 78], "content_span": [79, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, National dialogue and clashes\nAfter weeks of conflict, the national dialogue began on 16 May 2018. When Ortega and Murillo arrived at the Seminary of Our Lady of Fatima, the site of the national dialogue, the presidential couple was greeted with shouts of \"assassins, murderers\" by people on the outskirts of the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 80], "content_span": [81, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, National dialogue and clashes\nA delegation from the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) arrived in Nicaragua on 17 May to observe in loco the situation of human rights in the country. The IACHR visit occurred as Nicaraguan human rights organizations were reporting between 61 and 67 people dead and more than 500 injured in the repression exercised against protesters. The delegation was headed by Antonia Urrejola, rapporteur for Nicaragua at the IACHR.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 80], "content_span": [81, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, National dialogue and clashes\nOn 18 May, the second day of dialogue, the IACHR now included in talks called \"on the State of Nicaragua to immediately cease the repression of the protest, the commission also calls on the State to guarantee the independence and functioning of the media in the country\", the rapporteur said, also indicating that the mission of the IACHR in the country will be the observation in the field in accordance with human rights. She indicated that she would meet with all sectors. There was friction between university students and members of the state-media press before the dialogue. The government and the Nicaraguan opposition agreed to a truce over the weekend, a month after having started demonstrations and protests. Several people appeared before the Inter-American Commission to lodge complaints against the violations carried out by the police forces and supporters of the Daniel Ortega government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 80], "content_span": [81, 985]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, National dialogue and clashes\nThe national dialogue continued on its third day on 21 May where the resignation of Ortega and his wife and the Nicaraguan government was requested in order to return the country to normality. The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR), issued a preliminary report on the investigations of what happened in the protests in Nicaragua. The IACHR counted at least 76 people killed in the protests in Nicaragua and more than 800 injured, and denounced serious events and violations of human rights by the Government of Nicaragua. It included the official visit of the IACHR to Nicaragua. The representatives of the organization were in Managua, Masaya, Le\u00f3n and Matagalpa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 80], "content_span": [81, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, National dialogue and clashes\nA week after beginning, the National Dialogue between the government of Nicaragua and students, the private sector and civil society was suspended indefinitely. The leader of the Nicaraguan Catholic Church, Bishop Leopoldo Brenes, who had acted as a mediator of this dialogue, explained that the lack of agreement on an agenda of issues to be discussed prevented negotiations from continuing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 80], "content_span": [81, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, National dialogue and clashes\nOn 30 May, the day on which the Nicaraguan mothers are celebrated, a march was held in honor of the victims killed during the protests. It was repressed by the national police in the company of paramilitary groups and pro-government mobs, leaving approximately 15 dead. Most of the victims died from accurate shots to the head, neck and chest. The march was led by the Mothers of April Movement, the Student Movement 19 April, Civil Society and Private Enterprise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 80], "content_span": [81, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, National dialogue and clashes\nIn the early hours of 1 June, there were reports in Masaya of a new wave of looting and robberies against businesses and stores in the city. Movements, associations of professionals and Nicaraguan social groups called for a civic-citizen national strike and civil disobedience since 1 June, as a means of pressure for President Daniel Ortega and his wife, Vice President Rosario Murillo, to leave power. Five banks have closed in Masaya for lootings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 80], "content_span": [81, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0023-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, National dialogue and clashes\nThe Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) condemned the deaths and new acts of violence that occurred in Nicaragua and urged the state to stop the repression of the protests. The IACHR also urges the government to investigate and punish the use of force by parapolitical actors, dismantle these groups, and seek a peaceful, constitutional and democratic solution to the current political crisis affecting the country. On 8 July, at least 38 were killed during skirmishes between protesters, authorities and pro-Sandinista paramilitary groups, raising the death toll to more than 300 Nicaraguans killed since the beginning of protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 80], "content_span": [81, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, National dialogue and clashes\nMobs, some hooded and armed, set out on 9 July surrounding and assaulted Catholic bishops, including Cardinal Leopoldo Brenes, Auxiliary Bishop Silvio Jos\u00e9 B\u00e1ez, and the ambassador of the pope in Nicaragua Waldemar Sommertag, after arriving in Diriamba, Carazo. Men in plain clothes, hooded and some armed, first verbally offended the religious and then attacked them physically, wounding some of them, while the journalists robbed and beat. The next day, Vice President of Nicaragua, Rosario Murillo, said that the government presiding over her husband, Daniel Ortega, is \"indestructible\" and that the opposition \"could not\" defeat him, while also justifying the actions of violence against the Nicaraguan bishops and the apostolic Nuncio in Diriamba.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 80], "content_span": [81, 833]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, National dialogue and clashes\nOn 11 July, the Nicaraguan opposition and academic Felix Maradiaga was attacked in the city of Le\u00f3n (northwest Nicaragua) by a group of Sandinista sympathizers of the government of President Daniel Ortega.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 80], "content_span": [81, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, Church of Divine Mercy incident\nPolice and paramilitaries attacked the Rub\u00e9n Dar\u00edo University Campus (RURD) of the UNAN Managua on 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 82], "content_span": [83, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0026-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, Church of Divine Mercy incident\nAfter hours of facing attacks, more than 100 students took refuge in the nearby Church of Divine Mercy where they were fired upon by police and paramilitaries, after the youths left the facilities the paramilitaries set fire to the university campus setting fire to a CDI and one of the pavilions of the college The Church of Divine Mercy was then the target of attacks and was besieged throughout the night of Friday the 13th and into the early morning of Saturday the 14th, leaving two students dead. The bullet holes in the walls, windows and religious objects in addition to the bloodstains were still visible in the days following the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 82], "content_span": [83, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, Church of Divine Mercy incident\nOn 14 July, clashes were reported in Granada, Masaya and Managua. Leaving two students killed by Nicaraguan police and pro-government paramilitary forces had to go with the presence of Cardinal Brenes, the apostolic Nuncio accompanied by members of the national and international organizations to rescue the wounded and besieged. Those rescued were received at the Cathedral of Managua, where they were received by ecclesiastical authorities and national and international human rights organizations. In the cathedral were also dozens of people waving flags of Nicaragua and UNAN to receive the students.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 82], "content_span": [83, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, Government crackdowns, national lockout, and ban on protests\nAs a result of crackdowns in July 2018, the government forced people from protest centers and established a more firm presence in Nicaragua, though protests still continued in the following months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 111], "content_span": [112, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, Government crackdowns, national lockout, and ban on protests\nThe international community intensified pressure on the Government of Nicaragua on 16 July in order to stop the repression and disarm the paramilitaries after nearly 300 deaths during three months of protests demanding the exit of President Daniel Ortega. The United States, 13 Latin American countries and the Secretary-General of the UN, Antonio Guterres, demanded Ortega to end the repression of the demonstration. The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights also denounced the Law on Terrorism that was recently approved by the pro-Ortega Parliament of Nicaragua, which it said can be used to criminalize peaceful protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 111], "content_span": [112, 763]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, Government crackdowns, national lockout, and ban on protests\nOn 17 July, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Nicaragua raised its \"strongest protest\" for the \"biased declarations\" of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, defending the Law on Terrorism. Days later on 24 July, President Ortega said that he will not resign from the presidency of Nicaragua before finishing his term in 2021, ignoring the demand of opponents who demand his immediate exit from power to overcome the crisis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 111], "content_span": [112, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, Government crackdowns, national lockout, and ban on protests\nAn early-September general lockout organized to demand the release of political prisoners saw 90% participation of businesses in Nicaragua. It was estimated that the national lockout cost the country $20 million to $25 million per day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 111], "content_span": [112, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, Government crackdowns, national lockout, and ban on protests\nOn 29 September 2018, President Ortega declared that political protests were \"illegal\" in Nicaragua, stating that demonstrators would \"respond to justice\" if they attempted to publicly voice their opinions. The United Nations condemned the actions as being a violation of human rights regarding freedom of assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 111], "content_span": [112, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0033-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, December raids\nIn December 2018, the government revoked the licenses of five human rights organizations, closed the offices of the cable news and online show Confidencial, and beat journalists when they protested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0034-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, December raids\nThe Confidential newspaper and other media were seized and taken by the government of Daniel OrtegaSeveral service stations of the Puma brand were closed in the afternoon of 20 December by representatives of the Nicaraguan Energy Institute (INE), a state entity that has the mandate to regulate, among others, the hydrocarbons sector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0034-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, December raids\nPuma Energy entered the Nicaraguan oil and fuel derivatives market at the end of March 2011, when it bought the entire network of Esso stations in Nicaragua as part of a regional operation that involved the purchase of 290 service stations and eight storage terminals of fuel in four countries of Central America.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0035-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, December raids\nOn 21 December 2018, the Nicaraguan police raided the offices of the 100% News Channel. They arrested Miguel Mora, owner of the Canal; Luc\u00eda Pineda, Head of Press of 100% Noticias; and Ver\u00f3nica Ch\u00e1vez, wife of Miguel Mora and host of the Ellas Lo Dicen Program. Subsequently, Ver\u00f3nica Ch\u00e1vez was released. Miguel Mora and Lucia Pineda were accused of terrorist crimes and provoking hatred and discrimination between the police and Sandinistas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0036-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Timeline of events, Application of the Democratic Charter\nThe Secretary General of the Organization of American States (OAS), Luis Almagro, announced that he will begin the steps for an eventual application of the Democratic Charter to the State of Nicaragua, which would isolate the country from the inter-American community.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0037-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Dialogue and IACHR resolution\nThe national dialogue began on 16 May. Ortega kicked off the \"dialogue for peace Wednesday\" saying, \"We all suffer the death of our loved ones, but we have the obligation not to respond to violence with more violence, because otherwise we have scales that end in wars, and the people are tired of that.\" Students led with a strong demand. \"We have decided to be at this table to demand them right now to order the immediate cessation of the attacks that are happening in the country,\" said student leader Lesther Alem\u00e1n, as protests continued throughout the country. After hearing the student, Ortega questioned the wave of protests, calling it \"irrational violence\". Monse\u00f1or Mata made three requests to Ortega.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0038-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Dialogue and IACHR resolution\nOn 23 May, the national dialogue was suspended. Archbishop Brenes suggested to create mixed commission of three representatives by each part to discuss an action plan to restore the table of the National Dialogue. The Nicaraguan Foreign Minister, Dennis Moncada Colindres, objected that the agenda of the National Dialogue involves 40 points that all lead to a single point; an agenda for a coup d'\u00e9tat for a change of government outside the constitution and violating the laws of the country. On the other hand, the university students, businessmen and civil society asked that a Framework Law be debated, which would allow to advance the elections, prohibit the presidential re-election and change the Supreme Electoral Council (CSE).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 797]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0039-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Dialogue and IACHR resolution\nFollowing the repression and over a dozen deaths in the 30 May protests, the Nicaraguan archbishops cancelled the National Dialogue and protests continued.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0040-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Dialogue and IACHR resolution\nThe Inter-American Commission on Human Rights adopted precautionary measures of protection for the entire leadership that make up the University Coalition in Nicaragua and that have led the civic protests against the government since 18 April. The US government urged Nicaragua to fully implement the recommendations of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) to prevent further violence in the protests against the government of President Daniel Ortega.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0041-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Protest violence and allegations\n325 people have been killed as of 6 February 2019, as a result of the Nicaraguan government's repression of protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0042-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Protest violence and allegations\nAt least 42 people were killed in the first week of protests in April, with most injured by bullet wounds. Nicaraguan authorities used live ammunition to fire upon demonstrators resulting in hundreds of injured. Government forces were also reported to have armed pro-Sandinista groups with weapons to use against protesters. Following the government crackdown, rioting and looting ensued. On 2 May 2018, The Miami Herald reported a total dead of \"At least 63 people, almost all of the student protesters\" since the start of the demonstrations. By the end of May, over 105 people killed. As of 4 April 2019, between 325 and 568 have died over the period of the protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0043-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Protest violence and allegations\nThe United Nations Human Rights Council condemned what they said may have been possible \"illegal executions\" performed by the Nicaraguan government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0044-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Protest violence and allegations\nIn July 2018, police arrested the mayor of Mulukuku and accused him of being involved in the deaths of three police officers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0045-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Protest violence and allegations\nIndividuals detained during protests alleged torture by the Nicaraguan authorities, with hundreds of prisoners later released by the roadside in the outskirts of Managua with shaved heads and bare feet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0046-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Protest violence and allegations\nThe Inter-American Human Rights Commission received allegations about some families being forced by the government not to file complaints about the deaths of their family members, mistreatment of detainees and threats against human rights defenders in the Central American country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0047-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Protest violence and allegations\nMany protesters tortured have reported hearing both Cuban and Venezuelan accents in the clandestine prisons operated by the Nicaraguan government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0048-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Protest violence and allegations\nPolice arrested 107 protestors at march in Managua on 16 March 2019. Following intervention by the Vatican, those prisoners were freed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0049-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Media\nThere were reports of media organizations being censored during the protests. Miguel Mora, the director of 100% Noticias de Nicaragua, stated that the Nicaraguan government censored his channel on cable networks in the country. The censorship of 100% Noticias was not lifted until 25 April. One journalist, \u00c1ngel Gahona, was shot and killed while reporting on the protests on Facebook Live. Radio Dar\u00edo, a radio station known for being critical of the Ortega government, was said to be attacked and burned down on 20 April 2018 by pro-Ortega groups, leaving the facility at a total loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0050-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Media\nThe United Nations Human Rights Council criticized the attacks on media and censorship performed by the Ortega government. The Inter-American Press Association also called on the Ortega administration to stop its efforts of censorship, with its president Gustavo Mohme Seminario stating that its actions toward the media \"unmasks the authoritarianism of a government that in its eleven years in power has only sought to dismantle the State for its benefit and that of his family members\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0051-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Cyberattacks\nAnonymous Nicaragua, a group of the Anonymous movement, joined the protests against the government and launched Operaci\u00f3n Nicaragua, or #OpNicaragua. The operation consists of a campaign of cyber attacks against Nicaragua's government web pages or accused to be related to it. The campaign started on 26 April with an attack that left the National Assembly website out of service. The attacks continued against the websites of Juventud Presidente, Canal 2, and the Office of the Attorney General of the Republic, the Nicaraguan Institute of Civil Aeronautics, Nicaraguan Institute of Culture, El 19 Digital or Canal 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0052-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Cyberattacks\nThe state agency Nicaraguan Institute of Telecommunications and Postal Services (TELCOR) cited the corporations that provide the internet service to see what actions to take to form unity against hackers. TELCOR summoned these providers to a meeting to address security measures to take around the cyber-attacks executed by the international hackers against web portals of the government and private corporations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0053-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Medical dismissals\nThe Nicaraguan Medical Association (AMN) denounced the alleged arbitrary dismissals of 146 doctors, specialists and subspecialists of the state health units, as a form of retaliation for their participation or support in the protests carried out in the last three months. With clashes, a medical march in Nicaragua has ended against the dismissals for treating the wounded during the protests against the Ortega government since last April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0054-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Teacher dismissals\nThe dismissal of state teachers who support the demonstrations against the government caused an act of \"student disobedience\" in the city of Condega, in the north of Nicaragua, which is going through a crisis that has left between 317 and 448 dead since last April. Marist Institute students refused to enter the classrooms, in rejection of the decision of the Ministry of Education (Mined) to dismiss several of their professors \"because they have their own criteria and do not support the murderers\", informed the Student Movement 19 of April-Condega.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0055-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Flight of Nicaraguan citizens\nSince the end of July and the beginning of August, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Worship and the Directorate of Immigration and Foreigners of Costa Rica reported a moderate increase in the entry of Nicaraguans into Costa Rican territory. According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), an average of 200 Nicaraguans per day apply for asylum in Costa Rica, overwhelming the country's immigration authorities. In addition, the Commissioner reported that about 8 000 Nicaraguan refuge requests have been reported since the beginning of the protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0056-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Flight of Nicaraguan citizens\nAmong the Nicaraguans who have sought refuge in Costa Rica are several university leaders, who fled Nicaragua after constant threats that forced them to leave the country. Among them the university leader Victor Cuadras Andino.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0057-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Flight of Nicaraguan citizens\nThe Vice President and Minister of Foreign Affairs of Costa Rica, Epsy Campbell, reported that more than 1,000 Nicaraguan refugee claims have been denied, in order to avoid an immigration crisis and to prevent the entry of illegal persons and maintain security in the region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0058-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Flight of Nicaraguan citizens\nOn 3 August 2018 Nicaraguan singer-songwriter Carlos Mej\u00eda Godoy reported that he left his country because his life is in danger as part of protests against the government of President Daniel Ortega, of whom he is critical and adding to the hundreds of Nicaraguans who have refuge request", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0059-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Flight of Nicaraguan citizens\nThe Nicaraguan Association for Human Rights (ANPDH), highlighted in the rescue of injured, detained or harassed protesters in the Nicaraguan Protests of 2018 announced on Sunday 5 August 2018 the temporary closure of their offices due to serious threats and siege by illegal armed groups sponsored and supported by the President of Nicaragua Daniel Ortega and Rosario Murillo. The flight from Nicaragua of the human rights activist \u00c1lvaro Leiva, after the popular singer-songwriter Carlos Mej\u00eda Godoy, for threats attributed to pro-government groups, triggered the alarms between humanitarian agencies, the UN and the OAS. Representatives of the Special Follow-up Mechanism for Nicaragua (Meseni) and the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (Acnudh) discussed this situation", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 864]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0060-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Budget\nNicaragua cut its spending budget for 2018 by $186.3 million, 1.3% of its GDP, in the midst of the crisis. An amendment sent urgently by President Daniel Ortega mainly affects public investment programs, health and education portfolios, and transfers to municipalities, according to the project approved by the FSLN deputies and their allies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0061-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, OAS working group and new protests\nThe Organization of American States (OAS) approved the creation of a 'working group' for Nicaragua, whose mission will be to support the national dialogue and contribute to the 'search for peaceful and sustainable solutions' for the crisis, the bloodiest since the 1980s. Nicaragua closed its doors to a Working Group of 12 countries created by the Permanent Council of the OAS, which seeks to support the national dialogue and contribute to the search for solutions to the crisis in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0061-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, OAS working group and new protests\nThe government of President Daniel Ortega declared the presence of that Working Group for Nicaragua unacceptable, which he described as an \"interventionist Commission.\" While so many protests continue in the capital and several departments of the Central American country. Affiliation to the INSS is in a tailspin: Nicaragua retreated to 2005 Villagers who were demonstrating in the municipality of Santa Mar\u00eda, in Nueva Segovia, were kidnapped by Sandinista paramilitaries. Citizens participated in a march against the government of Daniel Ortega.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0062-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Alleged household searches\nSeveral families claimed to have had their homes searched without a warrant from Nicaraguan Paramlitary and Police forces. Video footage of the alleged incident was released from their neighbours, which showed paramilitary groups exiting the premises and leaving on national police vehicles. The video does not make clear what those groups were doing prior to their exit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0063-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Expulsion of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights\nThe president of Nicaragua, Daniel Ortega, has expelled from the country a mission of the office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), which denounced the \"high degree of repression\" of the protests against the Government. announced the president of the Nicaraguan Center for Human Rights (CENIDH), Vilma N\u00fa\u00f1ez, who described as \"unprecedented\" the decision of the Government of Daniel Ortega, while the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Nicaragua said in a statement that \"they stopped the reasons\" they gave walk to that invitation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 97], "content_span": [98, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0064-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, NCHR legal personality cancellation\nThe National Assembly of Nicaragua, canceled the legal personality of the Nicaraguan Center for Human Rights (Cenidh), the main organization of its subject in this country, which has denounced the abuses and misuses of the Government since April when The demonstrations that demand the departure of the former Sandinista guerrilla began. This decision, considered a \"revenge\" by activists, is a blow to an organization with a long history in the defense of human rights in the Central American country, which has made it worthy of several international recognitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0064-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, NCHR legal personality cancellation\nThe legal personality of Hagamos Democracia was also canceled, an organization dedicated to, among other activities, overseeing the actions of the Nicaraguan Legislative Body. Previously, it had canceled the legal personality of the Institute for Strategic Studies and Public Policies (IEEPP), which directs Felix Maradiaga and the feminist organization Information and Health Advisory Services Center (CISAS), run by feminist Ana Quir\u00f3s, who three days earlier had been expelled to Costa Rica, by orders of the government of Nicaragua. Accusing them of terrorism and putschists fact that has outraged international organizations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0065-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, NCHR legal personality cancellation\nThe Sandinista parliamentary majority, composed of 70 deputies, has canceled the legal status of three Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs), including the Institute for the Development of Democracy (Ipade), which is headed by Mauricio Z\u00faniga. The other two organizations that have been canceled this morning are the Segovias Leadership Institute Foundation, led by Hayde Castillo and the Foundation for the Conservation and Development of the South East of Nicaragua (Fundaci\u00f3n del R\u00edo), directed by Amaro Ruiz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0066-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Expulsion of international human rights organizations\nThe Nicaraguan government headed by Daniel Ortega expelled two missions of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR), after accusing them of acting in an \"interventionist\" and biased manner in their assessment of the country's situation in the context of anti-government protests,The country remains \"practically without independent human rights bodies,\" declared the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Michelle Bachelet, claiming to be \"very alarmed\" because the Government of Nicaragua has expelled two MESENI institutions from the country. the GIEI * -established by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 84], "content_span": [85, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0067-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Interdisciplinary Group of Independent Experts report\nRepression, torture, and sexual assault \"among other crimes. It has been eight months since the last wave of protests against Daniel Ortega's government in Nicaragua began, and the crisis does not seem to subside. The demonstrations have already left at least 325 dead and hundreds injured and detained. On behalf of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (CIDH) and the Nicaraguan government itself, the Interdisciplinary Group of Independent Experts (GIEI) began an investigation six months ago to clarify the first deaths. The group presented a report this Friday, two days after being expelled from the country by the Nicaraguan authorities. The report focuses on the violent events that occurred between 18 April and 30 May 2018. In this period, the GIEI has 109 deaths (95 due to firearms), more than 1,400 injured and more than 690 detainees. Where the Nicaraguan government is held responsible for the violent acts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 84], "content_span": [85, 1015]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0068-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Nica Act\nOn 20 December 2018, U.S. President Donald Trump signed the Nica Act, a law that imposes a series of financial sanctions on the Nicaraguan government, and on migration to officials involved in acts of violation of human rights. Trump signed the law in the White House, according to information provided to journalists by the press office of former congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, one of the driving forces behind the project. The Nica Act was approved in the Senate on 27 November and in Congress on 11 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0068-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Nica Act\nThe Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America-Peoples Trade Treaty (ALBA-TCP) rejected the approval, by the United States Congress, of Nicaragua's Investment and Conditionality Law (Nica Act). Jorge Arreaza, the Venezuelan chancellor, explained that the mechanism limits the capacity of the Central American country to obtain financing from international organizations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0069-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Death of political prisoners\nThe Nicaraguan Ministry of the Interior reported the death of the 57-year-old political prisoner Eddy Antonio Montes Praslin due to a shot by a prison guard when they \"allegedly\" controlled a riot, the events happened during a visit of the Cross International Red. The death of this prisoner provoked protests at the head of the La Modelo Prison by relatives of political prisoners who want to know about the physical state of the detainees from the Sandinista government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0070-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Death of political prisoners\nOn 11 June, several political prisoners were released. Among them were the journalists Miguel Mora Barberena and Luc\u00eda Pineda Ubau, the peasant leader Medardo Mairena and the student leader Edwin Carcache.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0071-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Death of political prisoners\nOn Sunday 16 June, after a thanksgiving Mass for the release of political prisoners in the Managua Cathedral, there was a protest on the grounds of that temple which was attacked by the police with tear gas and rubber bullets. The protesters took refuge behind the perimeter wall of the cathedral.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0072-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, February 2020\nOn 4 February 2020, the end of the retention, at customs, of the paper and ink of the newspaper La Prensa was reported. This newspaper confirmed that, through the efforts of the apostolic nuncio, a communication channel was opened with the General Directorate of Customs (DGA) to deliver the retained material.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0073-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, February 2020\nOn 25 February various opposition sectors founded the National Coalition in an act held at the Hispamer Bookstore auditorium in Managua, despite the police siege outside.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0074-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, February 2020\nFrom the early hours of 25 February 2020, the Nicaraguan Police kept all the entrances to Managua taken on the same day that the opposition to Daniel Ortega's regime plans to demonstrate to demand the release of political prisoners. At the checkpoints, the officers requisition private vehicles, buses and detain people to question them about the reasons for their visit to the capital. In several places, the police attacked citizens who protested and showed their disagreement with the authoritarian government of Ortega and in these actions the police and civil or paramilitary groups related to Sandinismo attacked and threatened Journalists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0075-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, March 2020\nFollowers of the ruling Sandinista Front of Nicaragua desecrated on 3 March 2020 with insults, robberies and aggressions the mass present in honor of the late poet and revolutionary priest Ernesto Cardenal in the Cathedral of Managua, denounced the assistants. The attacks began when Bishop Rolando \u00c1lvarez spoke and intensified at the conclusion of the ceremony. At least one young opponent and four journalists were beaten, and some of the communicators were robbed of their equipment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0075-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, March 2020\nGovernment supporters occupied the benches on the left side and around the church, from where they shouted government slogans and expletives to relatives, friends and opponents who attended the ceremony, which was chaired by the apostolic nuncio Waldemar Stanislaw. Support coup d'\u00e9tat, criminals, free country or die, Long live Sandino! \", Shouted the Sandinista supporters carrying flags and handkerchiefs of the Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN, left), when the poet's family tried to get his coffin out of the cathedral behind end the mass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0075-0002", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, March 2020\nAt the end of the Mass, the relatives decided to remove the coffin of the poet as soon as possible from the church before the tension increased. They couldn't do it through the front door. They had to remove it from the side of the Cathedral. After the coffin was removed in the funeral carriage of the religious precinct, government supporters and media reporters harassed Gioconda Belli and other assistants. Diplomats and cultural personalities witnessed the embarrassing episodes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0076-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, March 2020\nOn 5 March 2020, the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) of the United States Department of the Treasury sanctioned the Nicaraguan National Police (NNP), the main law enforcement entity in Nicaragua, and three NNP commissioners because they are \"responsible for human rights abuses in Nicaragua\" according to the US Treasury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0077-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, March 2020\nOn 18 March 2020, Rosario Murillo confirmed Nicaragua's first case in a growing COVID-19 pandemic to be a Nicaraguan man who had recently traveled to Panama. Two days later, a second case of COVID-19 was confirmed for another Nicaraguan who had recently traveled to Colombia. Nicaragua took fewer government actions to address the pandemic than its neighbors. They notably allowed for major sporting events and the annual Easter celebrations to carry on as usual. The health minister justifies this decision by stressing the need to support the Nicaraguan economy, after the recession caused by the protests of the two previous years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0078-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020\nJos\u00e9 Luis Rugama Rizo was assassinated when leaving his house with a blue and white face mask and shouting \"Viva Nicaragua libre\" to a caravan after Ortega's speech this July 19 in Estel\u00ed. The murder occurred on Sunday night in the city of Estel\u00ed, in the north of Nicaragua, when Jorge Rugama Rizo was outside his house and the Sandinista caravan passed, according to the Nicaraguan Center for Human Rights (Cenidh) and the Nicaraguan Association for Human Rights (ANPDH), which received complaints from the victim's relatives and witnesses to the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0079-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020\nOn July 20, 2020, while burying the murdered opponent, the house of some relatives of the deceased was burned by Nicaraguan social networks, and a campaign was raised to collect funds to meet the main basic needs of the family. The Nicaraguan Police presents on Tuesday July 21, 2020 Abner Onell Pineda Castellon as the main person in charge of Jos\u00e9 Luis Rugama Rizo", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0080-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020\nThe family of the released prisoner and youth leader Bayron Estrada, continues to be besieged by the sanctioned Sandinista police, thus the young Estrada announced through his social networks. The family of the former political prisoner and youth leader Bayron Estrada, continues to be besieged by the sanctioned Sandinista police, thus the young Estrada announced through his social networks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0080-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020\nThe former political prisoner and professor Juan Bautista Guevara denounced in the Permanent Commission on Human Rights (CPDH) the escalation of the siege of the Nicaraguan police, as well as paramilitaries in his home since he was released under the Amnesty Law in 2019. According to Guevara, he and his relatives are subjected to police harassment \"every day and at all hours\", taking photographs of people entering and leaving the house and even pointing guns at them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0081-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020\nNicaraguan journalist Gerall Ch\u00e1vez denounced that he was threatened through an anonymous letter sent to his relatives in Carazo y de igual manera, le enviaron un v\u00eddeo en el que simulan c\u00f3mo lo van a matar. On the other hand, the journalist and sports reporter for Radio Corporaci\u00f3n, Julio \u00abEl Porte\u00f1o\u00bb Jarqu\u00edn denounced the police siege outside his home. Along the same lines, a police operation moved for hours outside the facilities of Radio Dar\u00edo in Le\u00f3n on the afternoon of July 25, 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0081-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020\nSince late afternoon, the police chief, Fidel Dom\u00ednguez located traffic agents in every corner leading to the station. A group of policemen from the Daniel Ortega and Rosario Murillo regime, under the command of the Le\u00f3n police chief, Fidel Dom\u00ednguez, stole a motorcycle and a vehicle from Radio Dar\u00edo collaborators in the hours of Saturday night, denounced the means of communication on their social networks. The station, located east of the \u00d3scar Danilo Rosales Arg\u00fcello Hospital (Heodra), in Le\u00f3n, spent more than nine hours under siege, before the occupation of the motor vehicles was recorded, according to the director of the media outlet, An\u00edbal Toru\u00f1o.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0082-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020\nThe Nicaraguan Independent Press forum demands the cessation of attacks, intimidations and attacks against the Independent Press by the Ortega Murillo dictatorship, in different parts of the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0083-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020\nNicaraguan Vice President Rosario Murillo confirmed that the 41st anniversary of the Sandinista revolution would take place virtually due to \"difficulties in these times\" (referring to the COVID-19 pandemic that is raging in the country), Murillo announced that virtual concerts and activities will be held for those who like to participate in caravans. Also in the mayoralty of Managua a platform would be placed for the celebration of the anniversary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0084-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020\nSubsequently, various users who opposed the regime proposed a counter-march for July 19, flooding with blue and white flags before the red and black government's withdrawal of the FSLN flag. Users seek to generate actions of rejection in the face of the political crisis in the country and to remember the victims of the anti-government protests that emerged in 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0085-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020, Attacks on the Catholic Church in Nicaragua, July 20\nA drunk man broke into a van in the Metropolitan Cathedral of Managua (Nicaragua), and destroyed part of its infrastructure, a fact that was condemned by the local church, which asked the faithful for prayers. In a statement, the Metropolitan Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception of Maria de Managua (Nicaragua) reported that on July 20 at dawn, a drunk man broke into a truck in the Cathedral Church and destroyed three interior doors, and then ran away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 94], "content_span": [95, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0086-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020, Attacks on the Catholic Church in Nicaragua, July 25\nThe Catholic priest of the Our Lord of Veracruz Catholic Church Pablo Antonio Villafranca Mart\u00ednez denounced the sacrilegious and robbery in the El Carmen Chapel \"this is our complaint we will not put any before anyone else. \"On the official website of the church, the priest informed the parishioners that criminals entered the chapel and caused damage to the temple \u201cwe will have to replace microphones, cables, amplifiers, speakers, locks, padlocks, piggy banks and repair everything. We have nothing but tears, helplessness, pain and frustration. \"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 94], "content_span": [95, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0087-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020, Attacks on the Catholic Church in Nicaragua, July 29\nThe Nuestra Se\u00f1ora del Perpetuo Socorro chapel in the municipality of Nindir\u00ed, in Masaya (Nicaragua), was desecrated with \"fury and hatred\", because the unknown individuals not only stole custody and the ciborium, but also broke images, trampled the hosts and made other damage. The event occurred this Wednesday, July 29. The priest Jes\u00fas Silva, parish priest of the Santa Ana parish, to which the chapel belongs, made the complaint on social networks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 94], "content_span": [95, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0088-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020, Attacks on the Catholic Church in Nicaragua, July 31\nAn unidentified man threw a firebomb into a chapel of Managua's Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, severely damaging the chapel and a devotional image of Christ more than three centuries old. A fact that has been described as an \"act of terrorism\" by Cardinal Leopoldo Brenes. The incident occurred in the morning hours, when only two people were inside the chapel. The vice president and first lady, Rosario Murillo, declared to official media that \"a fire\" occurred because \"our people are very devoted\" and there were many candles in the place, where a curtain caught fire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 94], "content_span": [95, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0088-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020, Attacks on the Catholic Church in Nicaragua, July 31\nHowever, Cardinal Leopoldo Brenes, archbishop of Managua and president of the Episcopal Conference, refuted Murillo, noting that on the site \"there is no candle and we also have no curtains, our chapel has no curtains and has no candles\tBrenes connected the fire with another event that occurred on the 20th, in which a man in a van destroyed the gates of the Cathedral, and with the theft of a fence, which served as an escape route for the person causing the fire. A woman who works in the temple told local television channel 14 that a young man asked where the chapel was and, after indicating the place, he heard an explosion and saw the stranger jumping over the walls that protect the place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 94], "content_span": [95, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0089-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020, Attacks on the Catholic Church in Nicaragua, July 31\nThe Sandinista Renovator Movement (MRS) party condemned the recent attacks against the Catholic Church in Nicaragua, such as the burning of the Chapel of the Blood of Christ in the Metropolitan Cathedral of Managua this Friday morning, \u201cWe absolutely condemn all terrorist attacks and vandalism against temples and churches, now against the Cathedral of Managua, which constitute a flagrant violation of religious freedom, enshrined in the Nicaraguan Constitution \u201d For his part, Jos\u00e9 Ad\u00e1n Aguerri, President of the Superior Council of Private Enterprise, expressed his solidarity through his Twitter account for this act of terrorism that occurred in the Cathedral of Managua \u201cfrom COSEP Nicaragua and personally, our solidarity and support for the archdiocese.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 94], "content_span": [95, 857]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0089-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020, Attacks on the Catholic Church in Nicaragua, July 31\nof Managua and the Nicaraguan Episcopal Conference, before the cowardly attack on the Cathedral of Managua that adds to the acts of vandalism in different chapels in the country in previous days. Intolerance will not succeed, \u201dsays the publication. National Unity blue and white in a statement condemned the acts of desecration, siege and harassment against the Catholic Church in Nicaragua and ensure that \"these acts violate freedom of religion provided for in our Constitution. These events, in addition to being targeted attacks, demonstrate the levels of insecurity experienced by the population at the national level. \u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 94], "content_span": [95, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0089-0002", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020, Attacks on the Catholic Church in Nicaragua, July 31\nHe also added that \"the evidence shows that the attacks are being committed by people related to the criminal dictatorship of Daniel Ortega, who maintains a permanent political campaign against priests and the Church. We stand in solidarity with the Catholic Church and the devout and Christian people of our country, in the face of such acts of desecration, \u201dthe UNAB statement continues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 94], "content_span": [95, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0089-0003", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020, Attacks on the Catholic Church in Nicaragua, July 31\nThe Nicaraguan Center for Human Rights (CENIDH) through a statement expressed its repudiation of what happened in the Chapel of the Blood of Christ of the Cathedral of Managua, burned by an unknown person who threw a Molotov bomb and then fled the scene without leaving trail.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 94], "content_span": [95, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0089-0004", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020, Attacks on the Catholic Church in Nicaragua, July 31\n\"We demand that the authorities INVESTIGATE THE FACTS WITH CELERITY AND FIND THE GUILTY, otherwise we will suppose that it was the Ortega Murillo regime who gave the order to burn down the temple to continue its campaign of hatred and terror against churches, religious and believers that adversity him \"expresses part of the Communiqu\u00e9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 94], "content_span": [95, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0089-0005", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020, Attacks on the Catholic Church in Nicaragua, July 31\nJuan Sebastian Chamorro member of the Civic Alliance for Justice and Democracy condemned the facts in a video via the social network Twitter and Father Edwin Roman condemned the attack and indicated that it can burn and destroy the image of the Lord but never Faith and dignity from his people. In this regard, the auxiliary bishop of Managua, Silvio B\u00e1ez, wrote on his Twitter account: \"We have cried together because of the fire that has occurred in the chapel of the venerated image of the Blood of Christ.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 94], "content_span": [95, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0089-0006", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020, Attacks on the Catholic Church in Nicaragua, July 31\n\"Terrorist act associated with paramilitaries of the regime burn down the chapel of the Blood of Christ,\" denounced the opposition Edipcia Dub\u00f3n. \"I urge your Holiness the Pope to denounce the attacks by Daniel Ortega and his paramilitaries against the Catholic Church, the bishops and priests and the terrorist acts against the Cathedral of Managua,\" demanded activist Bianca Jagger. The Evangelical Alliance of Nicaragua, the main organization of evangelical Christians in the Central American country, has rejected the attack on the Chapel of the Blood of Christ located in the Cathedral of Managua.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 94], "content_span": [95, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0090-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020, Attacks on the Catholic Church in Nicaragua, July 31\nPresident Ortega appeared through official means to commemorate the 41st anniversary of the Nicaraguan Army Air Force. In his message, Ortega avoided commenting on the suffering of hundreds of stranded Nicaraguans, as well as the terrorist act perpetrated against the Catholic Church.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 94], "content_span": [95, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0090-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020, Attacks on the Catholic Church in Nicaragua, July 31\nIn the act, Ortega highlighted the role of the Air Force during humanitarian emergencies or catastrophes produced by the impact of natural phenomena, but was silent on the humanitarian emergency that more than 500 compatriots have lived on the border of Pe\u00f1as Blancas for two weeks and on the complicity of the Sandinista Army that expelled several Nicaraguans to Costa Rica who tried to enter the country through blind spots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 94], "content_span": [95, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0090-0002", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020, Attacks on the Catholic Church in Nicaragua, July 31\nNine hours after the terrorist act in the cathedral of Managua, the Nicaraguan National Police issued a statement in which it suggested that an \"alcohol spray\" could have caused the fire that left the image of the blood of Christ in ashes.\" At the scene, a plastic spray bottle with alcohol (volatile easily combustion) was found, with one Nicaraguan observer from 100% Noticias stating that \"they relate among the findings. It is worth noting that the atomizer was in good physical condition, without being observed melted by the fire that burned the chapel of the blood of Christ in the cathedral.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 94], "content_span": [95, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0091-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020, Attacks on the Catholic Church in Nicaragua, July 31\nThe Sandinista regime led by Ortega continues its campaign of siege and intimidation against the independent media for showing its public mismanagement against the Nicaraguan population, on the morning of this Saturday, August 1, members of the Nicaraguan Police deployed patrols and riot police units at various points in Managua, including near El Diario La Prensa. From 8:30 in the morning, so too Radio La Coste\u00f1isima in Bluefields.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 94], "content_span": [95, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0092-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020, Attacks on the Catholic Church in Nicaragua, July 31\nThe Inter-American Press Association (IAPA) condemned the aggressions and intimidations of the \"authoritarian regime\" of Nicaragua against journalists, which, it said, have worsened during the coverage of the pandemic and called on regional governments to exert \"more pressure\". Faced with allegations of crimes against press freedom made by various journalists' organizations, IAPA President Christopher Barnes and the President of the Committee on Freedom of the Press and Information, Roberto Rock, condemned \"the new wave of censorship and attacks \"and particularly targeted\" public officials, police officers and members of parastatal groups, all motivated by the government of Daniel Ortega. \"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 94], "content_span": [95, 794]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0093-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020, International reactions\nThe Panamanian Episcopal Conference rejects the act of \"vandalism\" carried out in the Metropolitan Cathedral of Managua, Nicaragua. When on July 31, 2020, a man threw an explosive device, which caused the chapel that houses the \"Blood of Christ and the Most Holy\" to catch fire. It causes us deep pain and outrage, seeing how the sensitivity of the Nicaraguan people to such destruction caused by a bomb that burned the chapel of the Metropolitan Cathedral of Managua has been wounded, \"the Panamanian organization said in a statement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0093-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020, International reactions\nFor his part, the United States Ambassador to Nicaragua, Kevin K. Sullivan, \"condemned the attack\" and considered this fire to be \"one of the series of deplorable attacks on Catholic temples in different parts\" of the Central American country. Through a statement, the Latin American Episcopal Council (CELAM) expressed its voice of rejection against the recent events that affected the cathedral of the city of Managua, Nicaragua, where, through the activation of an explosive charge, an attempt was made against the main religious temple in the city, on July 31. \"We condemn this and any act of sacrilege or desecration that threatens the spiritual life of the faithful and the evangelizing work of the Church, especially in these difficult times of pandemic that we have to live,\" says the statement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 869]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0094-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020, International reactions\nThe OHCHR [Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights] condemns yesterday's incendiary attack against the Chapel of La Sangre de Cristo in the Cathedral of Managua, expresses its solidarity with the entire Catholic community and urges the authorities to thoroughly investigate what happened, \"said the institution in a message released through its official Twitter account.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0095-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, July 2020, International reactions\nThe Episcopal Conference of Costa Rica went even further by referring to the incident as a \"cowardly attack\", which, he noted, \"has resulted in the desecration of the sacred species contained in the Tabernacle, as well as the desecration of the venerated image of the Blood of Christ, so loved by the Catholic faithful in the sister Republic of Nicaragua. \"\" We consider that this criminal act constitutes a frontal attack on the Church in Nicaragua and on religious freedom in this beloved nation, \"added the bishops. Costa Ricans in a statement. In Spain, the media, journalists, theologians, religious orders and the Spanish Episcopal Conference expressed their rejection of these violent actions against the Nicaraguan Catholic Church.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 805]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0096-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, August 2020\nThe Sandinista regime led by Daniel Ortega continues its campaign of siege and intimidation against the independent media for showing its public mismanagement against the Nicaraguan population, on the morning of this Saturday, August 1, members of the Nicaraguan Police deployed patrols and riot police units at various points in Managua, including near El Diario La Prensa. From 8:30 in the morning, so too Radio La Coste\u00f1isima in Bluefields.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0097-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, August 2020\nMichael Kozak, Acting Assistant Secretary for U.S. Department of State's Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs, condemned the attacks and intimidation of the press that occurs in Nicaragua.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0098-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, August 2020\nPope Francis condemned the attack carried out by unknown persons last Friday, July 31, 2020, against the Chapel of the Blood of Christ in the Metropolitan Cathedral of Managua, Nicaragua. This Sunday, August 2, 2020, after saying the Sunday prayer for the Angelus, Pope Francis expressed solidarity with the Nicaraguan Christian people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0099-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, August 2020\nNew attack on another Catholic church. A subject burst into the middle of mass and threw stones on a glass urn and then returned and threw another stone at a Christ who was on the altar of the Church of Santa Rosa de Lima, in the municipality of Santa Rosa del Pe\u00f1\u00f3n, Le\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0100-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, August 2020\nAn opponent and custodian of the Virgin of Montserrat was killed in a beating in a small Pacific town in Nicaragua, the Catholic Church reported Thursday, whose temples suffer a wave of desecration that has spread since last July. Noel Hern\u00e1ndez, 24, died after 48 hours in critical condition after receiving a beating from unknown persons in the San Juan de La Concepci\u00f3n municipality, Masaya department, confirmed the Inmaculada Concepci\u00f3n de Mar\u00eda parish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0101-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, September 2020\nThe Valle family television channel 12 confirmed that they had a millionaire embargo applied to them. Carolina Valle, through a statement, reported that on September 11, Judge Luden Marti Quiros Garc\u00eda, Managua's third execution and embargo judge, appeared at the facilities to \"carry out an embargo for 21 million cordobas at the request of the Directorate General of Income, DGI \", declared Carolina Valle. According to Valle, the seizure request before the judge was made by the financial assistant attorney, Marlen Isabel Rami\u00edez Laguna, who imposed an \"arbitrary and illegal objection to our income tax returns for the years 2011, 2012 and 2012-2013. \"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0102-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, September 2020\nThe director of Radio Dar\u00edo in Le\u00f3n Anibal Toru\u00f1o denounced through his Twitter account the harassment and intimidation of this radio station by officials of the National Police of Nicaragua.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0103-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, October 2020\nMembers of the National Coalition are stoned in the city of Masaya where Ver\u00f3nica Ch\u00e1vez, wife of journalist Miguel Mora, was injured in her head and the tomographies certify that Ch\u00e1vez has a cranial fissure and suffered an internal hemorrhage that keeps him in the hospital. The perpetrators of this attack are supporters of President Daniel Ortega and with the complocity of the National Police. The UN condemned the attack", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0104-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, October 2020\nThe Nicaraguan Center for Human Rights (Cenidh) warned this Friday that the law on foreign agents approved by parliament the day before gives President Daniel Ortega \"totalitarian control\" and asked the international community for \"urgent action\" to reject it. The National Assembly of Nicaragua, with a pro-government majority, approved on Thursday the law regulating foreign agents aimed at controlling the resources that people and organizations receive from external sources. That includes board members, public relations, advertising agents, information service employers, and political consultants, among others. On the contrary, the international media and correspondents, as well as cooperation agencies, humanitarian organizations and accredited religious entities were exempted from the law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 845]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0105-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, October 2020\nSubjects and entities under this denomination must register with the Ministry of the Interior, report the receipt of funds and how they are spent. This exception would be revoked in the event that their activities derive into interference in internal affairs, according to the regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0106-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, October 2020\nOpponents to the regime of Daniel Ortega y Periodistas denounce the continuous harassment, attacks and threats of supporters and members of Sandinismo. The opposition National Coalition denounced that dozens of anti-riot agents were stationed this Saturday (10.17.2020) outside a capital hotel where they were holding an assembly with a view to the 2021 general elections, while the exiled journalist Mary\u00f3rit Guevara denounced that unknown persons marked his home with a phrase that he assumes \"as a death threat.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0107-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, October 2020\nNicaragua has lost 217,930 formal jobs and has been dragging two consecutive years of economic contraction since 2018, the year in which the civic rebellion against the Daniel Ortega regime began, according to a report released this Saturday by the Central Bank of Nicaragua (BCN ).Until last August, Nicaragua closed with 695,867 workers affiliated to the Nicaraguan Social Security Institute (INSS), a figure that represents 3.7% less than the previous year that registered 722,606, according to the Central Bank of Nicaragua.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0108-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, December 2020\nThe Nicaraguan opponent, F\u00e9lix Maradiaga, assured that during a struggle with the Nicaraguan National Police, which prevented him from leaving a house, he had a broken finger and two others dislocated. Maradiaga, a leading political scientist of the opposition Blue and White National Unit (UNAB), wanted to travel to Bilwi, capital of the northern Caribbean autonomous region, with a shipment of humanitarian aid to deliver to people affected by hurricanes Eta and Iota, which hit that area last month", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0109-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, December 2020\nThe National Assembly of Nicaragua, dominated by the ruling Sandinista Front, approved on December 21, 2020 by a large majority a law that prevents the participation of the opposition in the 2021 elections, while the United States announced new sanctions against three government officials by Daniel Ortega. In an extraordinary session, the bench of 70 Sandinista deputies approved the so-called \"Law for the defense of the rights of the people to independence, sovereignty and self-determination for peace.\" Fourteen deputies of the Liberal Constitutional Party (PLC) voted against it, considering it \"unconstitutional.\" The controversial norm, approved as a matter of urgency, prevents those who the government considers \"coup plotters\" or \"terrorists\" from running for public and popularly elected positions, despite the fact that the current constitution establishes full rights to political participation for all citizens without exception .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 991]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0110-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, December 2020\nTwo years after the occupation of the CONFIDENCIAL newsroom, the 100% Noticias channel, the Nicaraguan Center for Human Rights (Cenidh), the Institute for Development and Democracy (Ipade), the Center for Information and Advisory Services in Salud (Cisas) and the Popol Na Foundation, the regime of Daniel Ortega and Rosario Murillo notified \u2013through various signs on the buildings\u2013 that the properties now \u201cbelong to the Ministry of Health\u201d and were confiscated, without a prior court order", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0111-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, December 2020\nThe main management leadership of Nicaragua denounced this a \"de facto confiscation\" by the State of the private property of two media critical of President Daniel Ortega and of nine NGOs that were outlawed in the context of the socio-political crisis that he is experiencing the country since April 2018. In a statement, the Superior Council of Private Enterprise (Cosep) pointed out to the government of \"taking political decisions that violate the rights and constitutional guarantees of Nicaraguans\" and cause \"legal insecurity and economic and social instability in the country.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0111-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, December 2020\nThe Nicaraguan State ceded to the Ministry of Health (Minsa) the buildings where the 100% Noticias television channel operated and that of the digital magazines Confidencial and Ni\u00fa and the television programs \"Esta Semana\" and \"Esta Noche\", which are protected by police officers, as well as nine NGOs. The facilities of these media and those NGOs woke up on Wednesday with the label \"this property belongs to the Ministry of Health,\" according to Efe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0112-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Response, Domestic\nProtesters generally were spread across the political spectrum, and Murillo's statements angered the left-wing sector, which responded by destroying her metal \"Trees of Life\" public art pieces in Managua. The majority of those demonstrating do not see any negotiation without the results being Ortega's removal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0113-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Response, Domestic, Domestic NGOs\nThe NGO Nicaraguan Center for Human Rights (CENIDH) stated that President Ortega and his wife \"encouraged and directed\" the repression against protesters and that \"the demonstrations are legitimized by a social rejection of the authoritarian way of governing by President Ortega and his wife, Rosario Murillo\" and called for dialogue monitored by the United Nations and the Organization of American States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0114-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Response, International, Others\nSeveral protests abroad accompanied the development of the demonstrations against INSS reform in Nicaragua. There were protests held at the Nicaraguan Embassy in San Jos\u00e9 (Costa Rica), the consulates in Miami and Houston, and other cities like Ciudad de Guatemala, Madrid or Barcelona. A group of Nicaraguans residing in Panam\u00e1 demonstrated at the Cinta Costera of Panama's capital. In Spain, there have been at least eight demonstrations by the Nicaraguan community in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286887-0114-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Nicaraguan protests, Response, International, Others\nOne of the most active cities was Granada, where hundreds of Nicaraguans and Spaniards have come together to protest for peace, freedom, and democracy in Nicaragua by reading poems of Nicaraguan writers and a manifesto, demanding that the Ortega-Murillo family give up power in Nicaragua. There have also been protests in Berlin, Copenhagen, London, Australia, Vienna, Finland, Paris, San Francisco, New York, Washington, and Toronto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286888-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Southern African drought\nThe 2018\u20132021 Southern Africa drought is an ongoing period of drought taking place in Southern Africa. The drought began in late October 2018, and is negatively affecting food security in the region. As of mid-August 2019, the drought is classified as a level 2 Red-Class event by the Global Disaster Alert and Coordination System. The alert level was reduced to the Orange-1.7 by 12 December 2019, as the new wet season had started. As of September 2020, the drought is classified as a level 2 Red-Class event. The drought continued into early 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286888-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Southern African drought, Description, Background\nAs a region, Southern Africa has historically been at high risk of droughts; a probability due to several meteorological and sociological factors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286888-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Southern African drought, Description, Background\nThe Southern African climate is affected by strong seasonal rainfall patterns; the majority of the region's annual rainfall is deposited by storms from early November to March, forming what is considered Southern Africa's wet season. The wet months of rainfall saturate the region's soil, providing moisture that persists for the drier months of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286888-0002-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Southern African drought, Description, Background\nWhile this cycle is normally reliable, anomalies in the climate\u2014such as El Ni\u00f1o events\u2014disrupt the region's annual level of rainfall; this, in turn, causes the decline of the region's plant life, the lowering of water levels in bodies of water and a loss of moisture from the soil, with the latter effect causing a drought.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286888-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Southern African drought, Description, Background\nAs noted by sources, Southern Africa's low level of economic development and reliance on agriculture\u2014namely cereal crops and livestock\u2014leave the region highly susceptible to droughts. Though variations exist, the region's farmers tend to plant their next crop in late October\u2014this sowing is timed with the expected rains that begin to arrive in November. The next five-six months are considered the \"lean\" season, during which time stockpiled food is consumed while the concurrent \"wet\" season rains nourish the next year's crops.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286888-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Southern African drought, Description, Background\nHowever, if the usual rains are disrupted by a weather anomaly, planting is delayed until November or early December, resulting in a longer \"lean\" season before crops can be harvested. If the region's weather patterns are disrupted enough to cause drought, the lack of rainfall and eventual loss of moisture from soil often results in a noteworthy decline in Southern Africa's agricultural production; the resulting detrimental economic conditions lead to social unrest and a decline in the level of regional food security.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286888-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Southern African drought, Description, Background\nPeriods of drought effect Southern Africa's various biomes and wildlife, while reduced water levels in rivers can cause hydroelectric dams to operate at reduced capacity. El Ni\u00f1o events in Southern Africa also increase the likelihood of African armyworm outbreaks, further decreasing the region's agricultural output.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286888-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Southern African drought, Description, Previous droughts\nIn the late 2015 \u2013 early 2016 season, an El Ni\u00f1o event caused a drought in some parts of Southern Africa. As of the start of the 2018-19 ongoing El Ni\u00f1o-induced drought, some parts of Southern Africa had not yet recovered from the effects of the earlier drought.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286888-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Southern African drought, Description, Previous droughts\nIn Namibia, the drought of 2012/2013 was thought to be the worst of the decade as around 42% if the total population experienced food insecurity. The Namibian government declared a state of emergency in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286888-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Southern African drought, 2018\u20132021 drought, Initial warning\nIn August and September 2018, several organizations began to warn farmers about the possibility of an oncoming drought. In August 2018 the Southern African Development Community advised farmers to avoid selling some of their stockpiled food from the previous season, and in September 2018 the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) issued a warning to Southern African countries about the formation of conditions for a drought. Patrick Kormawa, the Sub-Regional Coordinator for FAO in Southern Africa, predicted a 40 percent chance the region would be impacted by an El Ni\u00f1o event in Fall 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286888-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Southern African drought, 2018\u20132021 drought, Current drought\nIn spring 2018, an El Ni\u00f1o event disrupted Southern Africa's annual rainfall. The first effect of this disruption was a delayed sowing date, which was pushed back from late October to early November. In November, a report by the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) reported an 80 percent likelihood of the El Ni\u00f1o event continuing until December; it also noted that 9.6 million people in Southern Africa were severely food-insecure as of the start of the 2019 lean season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286888-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Southern African drought, 2018\u20132021 drought, Current drought\nThe drought continued to 2019 with multiple regions in Southern Africa seeing significantly reduced levels of rainfall. A report from FAO noted that, while rainfall had picked up in late December 2018, several areas within the region were suffering from a severe drought and accompanying effects.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286888-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Southern African drought, 2018\u20132021 drought, Current drought\nAs of April 2019, parts of Southern Africa remain affected by the ongoing drought. Heavier than average rainfall during the first weeks of February in some locales have alleviated local droughts, but the area as a whole is expected to suffer from negatively impacted cropping conditions. Rates of hunger in the region have risen, and are expected to continue to rise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286888-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Southern African drought, 2018\u20132021 drought, Current drought\nThe drought was re-declared as national emergency in South Africa 4 March 2020. 17 March 2020 the black market of stolen water was reported in Nelson Mandela Bay Metropolitan Municipality amidst emergency-related corruption concerns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286888-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Southern African drought, 2018\u20132021 drought, Current drought\nIn May 2019, Namibia declared a state of emergency in response to the drought, and extended it by additional 6 months in October 2019. This is the third time in six years the government has declared a state of emergency. The drought of 2019 has been described as the worst in the last 90 years in the country, with the lowest recorded rainfall in Windhoek since 1891.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286888-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Southern African drought, 2018\u20132021 drought, Current drought\nThe agricultural sector is one of Namibia's primary industries and due to extremely low rainfall in 2019, production in the sector fell by 17.5%. Grazing land conditions were observed to have deteriorated to a very poor state in many parts of the country leading to severe pressure on the grazing and to a severe decline in livestock due to starvation. A combination of lack of rainfall and low soil moisture led to a severe and prolonged drought in 2019 which resulted in real hardship and significantly affected many livelihoods, especially among the most vulnerable communities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286888-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Southern African drought, 2018\u20132021 drought, Current drought\nIn August 2020 a vulnerability assessment conducted by the Namibian government found 427,905 Namibian people are currently food insecure. Factors that contribute to this insecurity includes the impact of droughts, floods, pests and worms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0000-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis\nThe 2018-21 Turkish currency and debt crisis (Turkish: T\u00fcrkiye d\u00f6viz ve bor\u00e7 krizi) is a financial and economic crisis in Turkey. It was characterized by the Turkish lira (TRY) plunging in value, high inflation, rising borrowing costs, and correspondingly rising loan defaults. The crisis was caused by the Turkish economy's excessive current account deficit and large amounts of private foreign-currency denominated debt, in combination with President Recep Tayyip Erdo\u011fan's increasing authoritarianism and his unorthodox ideas about interest rate policy. Some analysts also stress the leveraging effects of the geopolitical frictions with the United States and recently enforced tariffs by the Trump administration on some Turkish products such as steel and aluminum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 812]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0001-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis\nWhile the crisis was prominent for waves of major devaluation of the currency, later stages were characterised by corporate debt defaults and finally by contraction of economic growth. With the inflation rate stuck in the double digits, stagflation ensued. The crisis ended a period of overheating economic growth under Erdo\u011fan-led governments, built largely on a construction boom fueled by foreign borrowing, easy and cheap credit, and government spending.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0002-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis\nThe economic crisis caused a significant decline in Erdo\u011fan's and the AKP's popularity, which lost most of Turkey's biggest cities including Istanbul and Ankara in 2019 local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0003-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Current account deficit and foreign-currency debt\nA longstanding characteristic of Turkey's economy is a low savings rate. Since Recep Tayyip Erdo\u011fan assumed control of the government, Turkey has been running huge and growing current account deficits, $33.1 billion in 2016 and $47.3 billion in 2017, climbing to US$7.1 billion in the month of January 2018 with the rolling 12-month deficit rising to $51.6 billion, one of the largest current account deficits in the world. The economy has relied on capital inflows to fund private-sector excess, with Turkey's banks and big firms borrowing heavily, often in foreign currencies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 93], "content_span": [94, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0003-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Current account deficit and foreign-currency debt\nUnder these conditions, Turkey must find approximately $200 billion a year to fund its wide current account deficit and maturing debt, while being always at risk of inflows drying up; the state has gross foreign currency reserves of just $85 billion. The economic policy underlying these trends had increasingly been micro-managed by Erdo\u011fan since the election of his Justice and Development Party (AKP) in 2002, and strongly so since 2008, with a focus on the construction industry, state-awarded contracts and stimulus measures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 93], "content_span": [94, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0003-0002", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Current account deficit and foreign-currency debt\nAlthough, research and development expenditure of the country (% of GDP) and the government expenditure on education (% of GDP) are nearly doubled during AKP governments, the desired outcomes could not be achieved The motive for these policies have been described as Erdo\u011fan losing faith in Western-style capitalism since the 2008 financial crisis by the secretary general of the main Turkish business association, TUSIAD. Although not directly related in the conflict, the Turkish invasion of Afrin largely strained US-Turkish relations, and led to mass instability in Syria. This led to global view of Turkey as an unnecessary aggressor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 93], "content_span": [94, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0004-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Current account deficit and foreign-currency debt\nInvestment inflows had already been declining in the period leading up to the crisis, owing to Erdo\u011fan instigating political disagreements with countries that were major sources of such inflows (such as Germany, France, and the Netherlands). Following the 2016 coup attempt, the government seized the assets of those it stated were involved, even if their ties to the coup were attenuated. Erdo\u011fan has not taken seriously concerns that foreign companies investing in Turkey might be deterred by the country's political instability. Other factors include worries about the decreasing value of lira (TRY) which threatens to eat into investors' profit margins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 93], "content_span": [94, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0004-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Current account deficit and foreign-currency debt\nInvestment inflows have also declined because Erdo\u011fan's increasing authoritarianism has quelled free and factual reporting by financial analysts in Turkey. Between January and May 2017, foreign portfolio investors funded $13.2 billion of Turkey's $17.5 billion current account deficit, according to the latest available data. During the same period in 2018, they plugged just $763 million of a swollen $27.3 billion deficit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 93], "content_span": [94, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0005-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Current account deficit and foreign-currency debt\nBy the end of 2017, the corporate foreign-currency debt in Turkey had more than doubled since 2009, up to $214 billion after netting against their foreign-exchange assets. Turkey's gross external debt, both public and private, stood at $453.2 billion at the end of 2017. As of March 2018, $181.8 billion of external debt, public and private, was due to mature within a year. Non", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 93], "content_span": [94, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0005-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Current account deficit and foreign-currency debt\n-resident holdings of domestic shares stood at $53.3 billion in early March and at $39.6 billion in mid-May, and non-resident holdings of domestic government bonds stood at $32.0 billion in early March and at $24.7 billion in mid-May. Overall non-residents' ownership of Turkish equities, government bonds and corporate debt has plummeted from a high of $92 billion in August 2017 to just $53 billion as of 13 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 93], "content_span": [94, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0006-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Government's 'action plans' to tackle the crisis\nThe finance minister of the Turkish government, Albayrak unveiled a new economic program to stave off the recent financial crisis. The three-year plan aims to \"reign in inflation, spur growth and cut the current account deficit\". The plan includes reduction on the government expenditures by $10 billion and suspension of the projects whose tender have not been carried yet. The transformational phase of the plan will be focusing on value-added areas to increase the country's export volume and long-term production capacity with the goal of creating two million new jobs by 2021. The program is expected to lower economic growth substantially in the short term (from a previous forecast of 5.5% to 3.8% in 2018 and 2.3% in 2019) but with a gradual growth increase by 2021 towards 5%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 92], "content_span": [93, 878]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0007-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Presidential interference with the central bank\nTurkey has experienced substantially higher inflation than other emerging markets. In October 2017, inflation was at 11.9%, the highest rate since July 2008. In 2018, the lira's exchange rate accelerated deterioration, reaching a level of US$4.0/TRY by late March, US$4.5/TRY by mid-May, US$5.0/TRY by early August and 6.0 as well as US$7.0/TRY by mid-August. Among economists, the accelerating loss of value was generally attributed to Recep Tayyip Erdo\u011fan preventing the Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey from making the necessary interest rate adjustments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 91], "content_span": [92, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0008-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Presidential interference with the central bank\nErdo\u011fan, who said interest rates beyond his control to be \"the mother and father of all evil\", shared unorthodox interest rate theories in a 14 May interview with Bloomberg and said that \"the central bank can't take this independence and set aside the signals given by the president.\" Presidential interference with central bank policy comes with a general perception in international investment circles of a \"textbook institutional decline\" in Turkey, with Erdo\u011fan seen increasingly reliant on politicians whose main qualifications for their jobs is loyalty, at the expense of more qualified and experienced options. Erdo\u011fan also has a long history of voicing Islamist discourse of interest-based banking as \"prohibited by Islam\" and \"a serious dead-end\". He is also on record referring to interest rate increases as \"treason\". Despite Erdogan's opposition, Turkey's Central Bank made sharp interest rates increases.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 91], "content_span": [92, 1009]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0009-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Presidential interference with the central bank\nThe Financial Times quoted leading emerging markets financial analyst Timothy Ash analyzing that \"Turkey has strong banks, healthy public finances, good demographics, pro-business culture but [has been] spoiled over past four to five years by unorthodox and loose macroeconomic management.\" By mid-June, analysts in London suggested that with its current government, Turkey would be well advised to seek an International Monetary Fund loan even before the dwindling central bank foreign exchange reserves run out, because it would strengthen the central bank's hand against Erdo\u011fan and help gain back investor confidence in the soundness of Turkey's economic policies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 91], "content_span": [92, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0010-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Presidential interference with the central bank\nEconomist Paul Krugman described the unfolding crisis as \"a classic currency-and-debt crisis, of a kind we\u2019ve seen many times\", adding: \"At such a time, the quality of leadership suddenly matters a great deal. You need officials who understand what\u2019s happening, can devise a response and have enough credibility that markets give them the benefit of the doubt. Some emerging markets have those things, and they are riding out the turmoil fairly well. The Erdo\u011fan regime has none of that.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 91], "content_span": [92, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0011-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Consequences in Turkey\nDuring the emergence of the crisis, lenders in Turkey were hit by restructuring demands of corporations unable to serve their USD or EUR denominated debt, due to the loss of value of their earnings in Turkish lira. While financial institutions had been the driver of the Istanbul stock exchange for many years, accounting for almost half its value, by mid-April they accounted for less than one-third. By late-May, lenders were facing a surge in demand from companies seeking to reorganise debt repayments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0011-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Consequences in Turkey\nBy early-July, public restructuring requests by some of the country's biggest businesses alone already totalled $20,000,000,000 with other debtors not publicly listed or large enough to require disclosures. The asset quality of Turkish banks, as well as their capital adequacy ratio, kept deteriorating throughout the crisis. By June Halk Bankas\u0131, the most vulnerable of the large lenders, had lost 63% of its US dollar value since last summer and traded at 40% of book value. However, it is hard to say that this is mainly due to the economic developments in Turkey since the valuation of Halkbank was largely affected by the rumors over the possible outcomes of the US investigation about the bank's stated help to Iran in evading US sanctions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 813]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0012-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Consequences in Turkey\nBanks continuously raised interest rates for business and consumer loans and mortgage loan rates, towards 20% annually, thus curbing demand from businesses and consumers. With a corresponding growth in deposits, the gap between total deposits and total loans, which had been one of the highest in emerging markets, began to narrow. However, this development has also led to unfinished or unoccupied housing and commercial real estate littering the outskirts of Turkey's major cities, as Erdo\u011fan's policies had fuelled the construction sector, where many of his business allies are very active, to lead past economic growth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0012-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Consequences in Turkey\nIn March 2018, home sales fell 14% and mortgage sales declined 35% compared to a year earlier. As of May, Turkey had around 2,000,000 unsold houses, a backlog three times the size of the average annual number of new housing sales. In the first half of 2018, unsold stock of new housing kept increasing, while increases in new home prices in Turkey were lagging consumer price inflation by more than 10 percentage points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0013-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Consequences in Turkey\nWhile heavy portfolio capital outflows persisted, $883,000,000 in June, with official foreign exchange reserves declining by a $6,990,000,000 during June, the current account deficit started narrowing in June, due to the weakened exchange rate for the lira. This was perceived as a sign of getting balanced economy. Turkish Lira started recover its losses as of September 2018 and the current account deficit continued to shrink.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0014-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Consequences in Turkey\nAs a consequence of the earlier monetary policy of easy money, any newfound fragile short-term macroeconomic stability is based on higher interest rates, thus creating a recessionary effect for the Turkish economy. In mid-June, the Washington Post carried the quote from a senior financial figure in Istanbul that \"years of irresponsible policies have overheated the Turkish economy. High inflation rates and current account deficits are going to prove sticky. I think we are at the end of our rope.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0015-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Consequences in Turkey, Suicides\nIn January 2018, a worker burnt himself in the front of parliament. Another person also burnt himself in governor's office of Hatay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0016-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Consequences in Turkey, Suicides\nIn November 2019 four siblings were found dead in an apartment in Fatih, Istanbul, having committed suicide because they were unable to pay their bills. The price of electricity increased in 2019 around 57% and youth unemployment stood around 27%. The electricity bill for the apartment had not been paid for several months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0017-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Consequences in Turkey, Suicides\nA family of four including two children 9 and 5 years old was similarly found in Antalya. A note left behind detailed the financial difficulties the family was experiencing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0018-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Consequences in Turkey, Suicides\nIn mid-November The Guardian reported that an anonymous benefactor had paid off some debts at local grocery stores in Tuzla and left envelopes of cash on doorstops after the suicides.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0019-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Consequences in Turkey, Suicides\nAk Parti officials and media have denied that the recent deaths were caused by the rising cost of living.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0020-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, International consequences\nThe crisis has brought considerable risks of financial contagion. One aspect concerns risk to foreign lenders, where according to the Bank for International Settlements, international banks had outstanding loans of $224 billion to Turkish borrowers, including $83 billion from banks in Spain, $35 billion from banks in France, $18 billion from banks in Italy, $17 billion each from banks in the United States and in the United Kingdom, and $13 billion from banks in Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0020-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, International consequences\nAnother aspect concerns the situation of other emerging economies with high levels of debt denominated in USD or EUR, with respect to which Turkey may either be considered \"a canary in the coalmine\" or even by its crisis and the bad handling thereof increase international investors' retreat for increased perception of risk in such countries. On 31 May 2018, the Institute of Financial Research (IIF) reported that the Turkish crisis has already spread to Lebanon, Colombia and South Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0021-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Improvements\nOn 15 August 2018, Qatar pledged to invest $15 billion in the Turkish economy making the lira rally by 6%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0022-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Improvements\nOn 29 November 2018, the Turkish lira hit a 4-month high in value against the US Dollar. It recovered from 7.0738 against the dollar to 5.17 on 29 November, an increase of 36.8%. Reuters also reported in a response to a poll that it expects the inflation to decrease for the November month. The reasons that were given are the positive exchanges, discounts on products and tax cuts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0023-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Politics and corruption, Turkish government statements of a foreign plot\nFrom a background of a long history of promoting conspiracy theories by the Turkish government of Erdo\u011fan and the AKP, with the emergence of the financial crisis, members of the government have stated that the crisis were not attributable to the government's policies, but rather were the conspiratorial work of shadowy foreign actors, seeking to harm Turkey and deprive President Erdo\u011fan of support.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 116], "content_span": [117, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0023-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Politics and corruption, Turkish government statements of a foreign plot\nDuring the major lira sell-off on 23 May, Turkey's energy minister, Erdo\u011fan's son-in-law Berat Albayrak, told the media that the recent sharp drop in the value of the lira was the result of the machinations of Turkey's enemies. On 30 May, foreign minister Mevl\u00fct \u00c7avu\u015fo\u011flu said that the plunge of the lira would have been caused by an organized campaign masterminded abroad, adding that the conspiracy would include both \"the interest rate lobby\" and \"some Muslim countries\", which he however refused to name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 116], "content_span": [117, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0023-0002", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Politics and corruption, Turkish government statements of a foreign plot\nAt an election campaign rally in Istanbul on 11 June, Erdo\u011fan said that the recently published 7.4 percent GDP growth figure for the January to March period would demonstrate victory against what he called \"conspirators\" whom he blamed for May's heavy falls of the Turkish lira. In August, Erdo\u011fan started using the formula of \"the world fighting an economic war against Turkey\". Part of this idea likely had to do with a row with America regarding the case of U.S. citizen Andrew Brunson, which had a deleterious effect on Turkey-U.S. relations. Alongside sanctions on specific government figures, tariffs were also used by both countries to create economic pressure. Vox describes it as a \"trade spat\". Commentators such as Vox's Jen Kirby have pointed to the pivotal role Brunson's case plays in it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 116], "content_span": [117, 919]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0024-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Politics and corruption, Turkish government statements of a foreign plot\nA tariff on steel and other products was placed on Turkey by the United States. However, Sarah Sanders has described the American tariffs as related to \"national defense\", and thus not changeable by circumstances, noting that only the sanctions would be lifted upon the release of Brunson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 116], "content_span": [117, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0025-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Politics and corruption, Turkish government statements of a foreign plot\nErdogan describes these tariffs as an \"economic war\" against Turkey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 116], "content_span": [117, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0026-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Politics and corruption, Turkish government statements of a foreign plot\nIn retaliation, Turkey announced tariffs on US products, including the iPhone. The tariffs by Turkey cover products such as American cars, and coal. At a White House Press conference, Sanders described these as \"regrettable\". Sanders said that the Turkish economic trouble was part of a long-term trend that was not related to any actions America did.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 116], "content_span": [117, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0027-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Politics and corruption, Turkish government statements of a foreign plot\nOn 22 August 2018, John R. Bolton, speaking to Reuters, said \"the Turkish government made a big mistake in not releasing Pastor Brunson... [e]very day that goes by that mistake continues, this crisis could be over instantly if they did the right thing as a NATO ally, part of the West, and release pastor Brunson without condition.\" He went on to state that Turkey's membership in NATO was not as much of a major foreign policy issue for the US, but instead the American focus was on individuals that the United States said Turkey is holding for non-legitimate reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 116], "content_span": [117, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0027-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Politics and corruption, Turkish government statements of a foreign plot\nBolton also expressed skepticism in regard to Qatar's attempts to infuse money in the Turkish economy. Erdogan spokesman Ibrahim Kalin, in a written statement, described these remarks as an admission that, contra Sanders, the American tariffs were, in fact, in relation to the Brunson case and proof that the US intended them to economically war against Turkey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 116], "content_span": [117, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0028-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Politics and corruption, Turkish government statements of a foreign plot\nAccording to a poll from April 2018, 42 percent of Turks, and 59 percent of Erdo\u011fan's governing AKP voters, saw the decline in the lira as a plot by foreign powers. In another poll from July, 36 percent of survey respondents said it the AKP government was most responsible for the depreciation of the Turkish lira, while 42 percent said it was foreign governments. This was said to be caused by the government's far-reaching control over the media via the fact that those respondents mostly reading alternative views in the Internet were more likely to see their own government responsible, at 47 percent, than foreign governments, at 34 percent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 116], "content_span": [117, 763]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0029-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Politics and corruption, Crisis as a topic in the June 2018 elections\nOn 16 May, a day after president Erdo\u011fan had unsettled markets during his visit to London by suggesting he would curb the independence of the Central Bank of Turkey after the election, Republican People's Party (CHP) presidential candidate Muharrem \u0130nce and \u0130Y\u0130 Party presidential candidate Meral Ak\u015fener both vowed to ensure the independence of the central bank if elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 113], "content_span": [114, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0030-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Politics and corruption, Crisis as a topic in the June 2018 elections\nIn a 26 May interview on his campaign trail, CHP presidential candidate Muharrem \u0130nce said on economic policy that \"the central bank can only halt the lira\u2019s slide temporarily by raising interest rates, because it\u2019s not the case that depreciation fundamentally stems from interest rates being too high or too low. So, the central bank will intervene, but the things that really need to be done are in the political and legal areas. Turkey needs to immediately be extricated from a political situation that breeds economic uncertainty, and its economy must be handled by independent and autonomous institutions. My economic team is ready, and we have been working together for a long time.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 113], "content_span": [114, 803]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0031-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Politics and corruption, Crisis as a topic in the June 2018 elections\nIn a nationwide survey conducted between 13 and 20 May, 45 percent saw the economy (including the steadily-dropping lira and unemployment) as the greatest challenge facing Turkey, with foreign policy at 18 percent, the justice system at 7 percent and terror and security at 5 percent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 113], "content_span": [114, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0032-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Politics and corruption, Crisis as a topic in the June 2018 elections\n\u0130Y\u0130 Party presidential candidate Meral Ak\u015fener, supported by a strong economic team led by former Central Bank Governor Durmu\u015f Y\u0131lmaz, had on 7 May presented her party's economic program, saying that \"we will purchase the debts from consumer loans, credit card and overdraft accounts of 4.5 million citizens whose debts are under legal supervision of banks or consumer financing companies and whose debts have been sold to collection companies as of 30 April 2018. It is our duty to help our citizens with this condition, as the state has helped big companies in difficult situations.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 113], "content_span": [114, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0033-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Politics and corruption, Crisis as a topic in the June 2018 elections\nOn 13 June, CHP leader Kemal K\u0131l\u0131\u00e7daro\u011flu reiterated the opposition's view that the state of emergency in place since July 2016 were an impediment to Turkey's currency, investment and economy, vowing that it be lifted within 48 hours in case of an opposition victory in the elections. \u0130Y\u0130 Party leader and presidential candidate Ak\u015fener had made the same vow on 18 May, while CHP presidential candidate \u0130nce had said on 30 May: \"Foreign countries do not trust Turkey, thus they do not invest in our country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 113], "content_span": [114, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0033-0001", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Politics and corruption, Crisis as a topic in the June 2018 elections\nWhen Turkey becomes a country of the rule law, foreign investors will invest thus the lira will gain value.\" Early June, President Recep Tayyip Erdo\u011fan had suggested in an interview that the issue of lifting the emergency rule would be discussed the elections, however asked back: \"What's wrong with the state of emergency?\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 113], "content_span": [114, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0034-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Politics and corruption, Statements of corruption and insider trading\nIn early April, Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) presidential candidate Selahattin Demirta\u015f, writing in a letter from prison\u2014where he has been held without conviction since 2016, charged of inciting violence with words\u2014 saying that \"the biggest problem for the youth in Turkey is corruption which has accompanied with AKP governance.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 113], "content_span": [114, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0035-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Politics and corruption, Statements of corruption and insider trading\nIn late May, Republican People's Party (CHP) deputy chair Aykut Erdo\u011fdu called the Financial Crimes Investigation Board of Turkey (MASAK) to investigate exchange rate transactions made amid rapid decline and partial recovery in the value of the lira on 23 May, saying there was insider trading by market participants who knew of the 300 basis points interest rate hike by the Turkish central bank in advance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 113], "content_span": [114, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286889-0036-0000", "contents": "2018\u20132021 Turkish currency and debt crisis, Politics and corruption, Statements of corruption and insider trading\nIn early July, Turkey's Capital Markets Board (SPK) said that until the end of August share purchases on the Borsa Istanbul by people party to the relevant company's internal information, or by those close to them (insider trading), would not be subject to a stock market abuse directive. Amid a public outcry, it suspended the directive some days later, without giving a reason for the move.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 113], "content_span": [114, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286890-0000-0000", "contents": "2019\n2019 (MMXIX) was a common year starting on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar, the 2019th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 19th year of the 3rd\u00a0millennium, the 19th year of the 21st\u00a0century, and the 10th and last year of the 2010s decade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 4], "section_span": [4, 4], "content_span": [5, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286890-0001-0000", "contents": "2019\n2019 was designated as International Year of the Periodic Table of Chemical Elements by the United Nations General Assembly given that it coincides with the 150th anniversary of its creation by Dmitri Mendeleev in 1869.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 4], "section_span": [4, 4], "content_span": [5, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286891-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 (EP)\n2019 is a compilation extended play by American singer-songwriter Lucy Dacus. It was released on November 8, 2019 through Matador Records. The EP is a concept album that compiles seven singles released throughout the year to honor various holidays. 2019 went on to peak at number 22 on the US Billboard Heatseekers Albums chart, making it her first charting album in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286891-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 (EP), Songs\n\"La vie en rose\", originally by \u00c9dith Piaf, was released as the EP's first single on February 2, 2019 to celebrate Valentine's Day. \"My Mother & I\" was released on April 24, 2019 for Mother's Day, and is about Dacus's relationship to her own mother and their similarities as Taurus women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 16], "content_span": [17, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286891-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 (EP), Songs\nThe country-influenced \"Forever Half Mast\" was released on June 25, 2019 for the Fourth of July and sees the condemn American exceptionalism and asks listeners \"to consider their own complicity in American atrocities\" A cover of Bruce Springsteen's \"Dancing in the Dark\" was released on September 12, 2019 for the artist's birthday, which is also Dacus's father's birthday. \"In the Air Tonight\", originally by Phil Collins, was released on October 8, 2019 for Halloween, with Dacus calling the song \"the best eerie bop of all time\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 16], "content_span": [17, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286891-0001-0002", "contents": "2019 (EP), Songs\nThe same day, the album was made available for pre-order and the full tracklist was announced. A punk pop cover of \"Last Christmas\" by Wham! was released on November 1, 2019 to celebrate Christmas. \"Fool's Gold\" was released on November 9, 2019 for New Year's Eve, and sees Dacus \"alone and anxious in the ruins of the party she threw.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 16], "content_span": [17, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286891-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 (EP), Critical reception\n2019 received a score of 76 out of 100 on review aggregate site Metacritic, based on reviews from four critics, indicating \"generally favorable reviews\". In a review for DIY, Tom Sloman called \"My Mother & I\" one of the strongest songs of Dacus's career thus far and praised the original songs as a whole, but said that some of the covers miss the mark, specifically \"Dancing in the Dark\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 29], "content_span": [30, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286891-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 (EP), Critical reception\nMarcy Donelson of AllMusic similarly commended \"My Mother & I\", calling it \"spare and both comforting and yearning\" and said that the covers \"are bound to provide a lasting preferred version (or two) for fans.\" Peyton Thomas of Pitchfork applauded Dacus's songwriting, saying \"She treats her weighty subjects with careful concision: short lines, simple phrasing. These are among the best songs she\u2019s ever written.\" Thomas also named \"Dancing in the Dark\" the EP's best cover, and praised it for recontextualizing the original as celebration of lesbian love. Paste writer Clare Martin named \"La vie en rose\" the best cover, saying \"Dacus dives headfirst into romanticism\u2014a rare occasion on an album that tends to regard most special occasions with a winking knowingness\u2014with a persistently plucked guitar that will make your heart race.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 29], "content_span": [30, 866]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286892-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 1. deild karla\nThe 2019 1. deild karla (English: Men's First Division) was the 65th season of second-tier Icelandic football. Twelve teams contested the league. The season began on 4 May and concluded on 21 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286892-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 1. deild karla, Teams\nThe league was contested by twelve clubs. Eight remained in the division from the 2018 season, while four new clubs joined the 1. deild karla:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286893-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 1. deild kvinnur\nThe 2019 1. deild kvinnur (also known as Betri deildin kvinnur for sponsorship reasons) was the 35th season of women's league football in the Faroe Islands. EB/Streymur/Sk\u00e1la were the defending champions, having won their 2nd title the previous season. The season started on 9 March and ended on 28 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286893-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 1. deild kvinnur, Teams\nThe league was contested by five teams, a decrease from last season's six, as B68 joined \u00cdF/V\u00edkingur to compete as \u00cdF/V\u00edkingur/B68.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286893-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 1. deild kvinnur, Results\nEach team played four times (twice at home and twice away) against every other team for a total of 16 matches each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286894-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 1. divisjon\nThe 2019 1. divisjon (referred to as OBOS-ligaen for sponsorship reasons) was a Norwegian second-tier football league season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286894-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 1. divisjon\nAalesund set a new record for most points in a 1. divisjon season with 79. They surpassed IK Start's previous record of 74 points, from the 2004 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286894-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 1. divisjon, Season summary\nOn 20 October, Aalesund secured both promotion and league title with three games to spare by winning 1\u20130 away over Tromsdalen. The same day, Tromsdalen were the first team to be relegated as their defeat was coinciding with a victory for Str\u00f8mmen. On 2 November, Sandefjord secured promotion to the first tier with one match to spare after their 1\u20130 win over Jerv at Komplett Arena. On the same day, Skeid were the second team to be relegated as their draw against Notodden meant that survival was out of reach before the ultimate round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286894-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 1. divisjon, Teams\nIn the 2018 1. divisjon, Viking and Mj\u00f8ndalen were promoted to the 2019 Eliteserien, while \u00c5sane, Flor\u00f8 and Levanger were relegated to the 2019 2. divisjon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286894-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 1. divisjon, Teams\nStart and Sandefjord were relegated from the 2018 Eliteserien, while Raufoss, Skeid and KFUM Oslo were promoted from the 2018 2. divisjon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286894-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 1. divisjon, Play-offs, Promotion play-offs\nThe 3rd to 6th placed teams took part in the promotion play-offs; these were single-leg knockout matches. In the first round, the fifth-placed team played at home against the sixth-placed team. The winner of the first round then met the fourth-placed team on away ground in the second round. The winner of the second round then met the third-placed team on away ground. The winner of the third round advanced to play the 14th-placed team in Eliteserien over two legs in the Eliteserien play-offs for a spot in the top-flight next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 48], "content_span": [49, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286894-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 1. divisjon, Play-offs, Relegation play-offs\nThe 14th placed team took part in a two-legged play-off against the winners of the 2. divisjon play-offs to decide who would play in the 2020 1. divisjon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 49], "content_span": [50, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286894-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 1. divisjon, Season statistics, Attendances\nSource: Notes:1: Team played last season in Eliteserien.2: Team played last season in 2. divisjon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 48], "content_span": [49, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286895-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 1. divisjon (women)\nThe 2019 1. divisjon is the second tier of Norwegian women's football in 2019. The season kicked off on 13 April 2019 and is scheduled to finish on 3 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286895-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 1. divisjon (women)\nDue to a reduction of teams from 12 to 10 teams in both the first and the second tier, the top placed team will have to play promotion play-offs against the tenth-placed team in Toppserien to win promotion. Four teams are relegated directly to the 2. divisjon. The eighth-placed teams play relegation play-offs against a team from 2. divisjon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286895-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 1. divisjon (women), Promotion play-offs\nThe promotion play-offs will this season be contested by the 10th placed team in Toppserien, Lyn, and the winner of the 1. divisjon, IF Fl\u00f8ya.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286895-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 1. divisjon (women), Relegation play-offs\nThe relegation play-offs will this season be contested by the 8th placed team in 1. divisjon, Grand Bod\u00f8, and the winner of the 2. divisjon, KIL/Hemne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286896-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 1000 Miles of Sebring\nThe 2019 1,000 Miles of Sebring was an Endurance sportscar racing event held on the 15th of March 2019, as the sixth round of the 2018-19 FIA World Endurance Championship. This was the inaugural running of the race, a 268-lap event, and the first FIA WEC race to be held at Sebring International Raceway since the 2012 12 Hours of Sebring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286896-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 1000 Miles of Sebring, Background\nThe provisional calendar for the 2018-19 FIA World Endurance Championship, released on the 1st of September 2017 saw a raft of changes, with several races dropped, but included a return to Sebring for the first time since 2012. In the provisional calendar issued, the race was originally planned to be run as a second 12-hour race after the IMSA Mobil 1 12 Hours of Sebring on the same weekend, and would start at midnight after the conclusion of the IMSA 12 hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286896-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 1000 Miles of Sebring, Background\nOn 21 September 2017, the race became known as the 1500 Miles of Sebring, to avoid confusion between the 2 events, at the FIA World Motor Sport Council meeting in Paris. However, on 4 April 2018, it was announced that the race would become shortened to 1000 Miles or 268 laps, have a time limit of 8 Hours, and would take place on March 15 instead, prior to the start of the 12 Hours of Sebring, rather than after the race. In\u00a0addition, it was also announced that there would be a new pitlane built to accommodate the WEC teams, located on the Ulman Straight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286896-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 1000 Miles of Sebring, Entry list\nThe entry list released on the 8th of February 2019 saw a number of changes, with the #4 ByKolles Racing Team ENSO CLM P1/01 removed, after the team announced they would not compete due to an engine supply dispute with NISMO, and an additional Entry from the Corvette Racing team. Nathanael Berthon was added to the #3 Rebellion Racing Rebellion R13, while Mathias Beche moved to the #1, replacing Andre Lotterer, who was unable to attend due to a clashing simulator test for the DS Techeetah Formula E team. Jenson Button and Matevos Isaakyan were replaced in the #11 and #17 SMP Racing BR Engineering BR1s by Brendon Hartley and Sergey Sirotkin respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286896-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 1000 Miles of Sebring, Qualifying, Qualifying Results\nPole position winners in each class are marked in bold", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286896-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 1000 Miles of Sebring, Qualifying, Qualifying Results\n\u2013 Stephane Sarrazin had his best lap time deleted for ignoring blue flags. \u2013 Thomas Flohr and Motoaki Ishakawa both had their fastest lap times deleted for speeding under the red flag. \u2013 Only one driver of the No. 61 Clearwater Racing set a lap time. \u2013 The No. 61 Clearwater Racing withdrew due to Perez-Companc's crash in qualifying. \u2013 Michael Wainwright had his fastest lap time deleted for speeding under the red flag, resulting in only one driver of the No. 86 Gulf Racing UK being classified as setting a lap time. \u2013 All of Frits van Eerd's and Nyck de Vries' lap times were deleted for speeding in the pit lane, resulting in the No. 29 Racing Team Nederland having no times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286896-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 1000 Miles of Sebring, Race, Race Result\nThe minimum number of laps for classification (70% of the overall winning car's distance was 178 laps. Class winners are in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286897-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 1000Bulbs.com 500\nThe 2019 1000Bulbs.com 500 was a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race that was held on October 13\u201314, 2019 at Talladega Superspeedway in Lincoln, Alabama. Contested over 188 laps on the 2.66 mile (4.2\u00a0km) superspeedway, it was the 31st race of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season, the fifth race of the Playoffs, and second race of the Round of 12. Ryan Blaney scored his first win of the season and third of his career edging out Ryan Newman by .007 seconds becoming the 6th closest finish in NASCAR history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286897-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 1000Bulbs.com 500, Report, Background\nTalladega Superspeedway, originally known as Alabama International Motor Superspeedway (AIMS), is a motorsports complex located north of Talladega, Alabama. It is located on the former Anniston Air Force Base in the small city of Lincoln. The track is a tri-oval and was constructed in the 1960s by the International Speedway Corporation, a business controlled by the France family. Talladega is most known for its steep banking and the unique location of the start/finish line that's located just past the exit to pit road. The track currently hosts the NASCAR series such as the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, Xfinity Series and the Gander Outdoors Truck Series. Talladega is the longest NASCAR oval with a length of 2.66-mile-long (4.28\u00a0km) tri-oval like the Daytona International Speedway, which also is a 2.5-mile-long (4\u00a0km) tri-oval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 886]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286897-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 1000Bulbs.com 500, Practice, First practice\nDenny Hamlin was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 46.734 seconds and a speed of 204.904\u00a0mph (329.761\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286897-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 1000Bulbs.com 500, Practice, Final practice\nClint Bowyer was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 47.396 seconds and a speed of 202.042\u00a0mph (325.155\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286897-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 1000Bulbs.com 500, Qualifying\nChase Elliott scored the pole for the race with a time of 49.692 and a speed of 192.707\u00a0mph (310.132\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286897-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 1000Bulbs.com 500, Race\nNote: Stage 1 was held on Sunday, October 13, but the race was interrupted by rain after 57 laps. Stages 2 and 3 were completed on Monday, October 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 28], "content_span": [29, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286897-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 1000Bulbs.com 500, Race, Final stage results\n*\u00a0Matt Crafton replaced Paul Menard after Stage 1 of the race due to back problems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286897-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 1000Bulbs.com 500, Media, Television\nNBC Sports covered the race on the television side. Rick Allen, Jeff Burton and six-time Talladega winner Dale Earnhardt Jr. covered the race in the booth for NBC. Steve Letarte called from the NBC Peacock Pit Box on pit road. Dave Burns, Marty Snider and Kelli Stavast reported from pit lane during the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286897-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 1000Bulbs.com 500, Media, Radio\nMRN covered the radio call for the race, which was simulcast on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio. Alex Hayden, Jeff Striegle, and Rusty Wallace called the race for MRN when the field races thru the tri-oval. Dave Moody called the action from turn 1, Mike Bagley called the action for MRN when the field races down the backstraightaway, and Dan Hubbard called the race from the Sunoco tower just outside of turn 4. Winston Kelley, Kim Coon, Steve Post, and Dillon Welch called the race for MRN from pit road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286898-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 12 Hours of Sebring\nThe 67th Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring Presented by Advance Auto Parts was an endurance sports car racing event held at Sebring International Raceway near Sebring, Florida from 14\u201316 March 2019. The race was the second round of the 2019 WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, as well as the second round of the Michelin Endurance Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286898-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 12 Hours of Sebring\nAction Express Racing and Wayne Taylor Racing brought home a Cadillac 1-2-3 finish for the overall honours, with the win going to the #31 crew of Eric Curran, Felipe Nasr and Pipo Derani, who won the 12 Hour race for a third time in the previous four editions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286898-0000-0002", "contents": "2019 12 Hours of Sebring\nthe #911 Porsche GT Team won in the GTLM class over the #66 Ford GT of Chip Ganassi Racing, LMP2 was won by Performance Tech Motorsports, and the Grasser Racing Team took a second straight victory in the GTD class, winning over fellow Lamborghini GTD team Magnus Racing, who came 2nd in only their second start as a Lamborghini team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286898-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 12 Hours of Sebring, Background\nThe FIA World Endurance Championship returned to the venue for the same weekend for the first time since 2012, albeit with a few changes. The World Endurance Championship had a 1,000-mile standalone event of its own on Friday, March 15th, 2019, the day before the official 12 Hours of Sebring sanctioned by IMSA, on March 16th. Despite initial questions raised over whether or not two separate events of the same length could be held on the same weekend, the event was confirmed to be the sixth round of the 2018-19 FIA World Endurance Championship. Select drivers and teams, such as Corvette Racing and Chip Ganassi Racing, competed in both events back-to-back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286898-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 12 Hours of Sebring, Background\nOn 28 February 2019, IMSA released a technical bulletin regarding the Balance of Performance for the 12-hour race. In the Daytona Prototype international (DPi) class, most cars had reductions in power, with the exception of the Cadillac DPi. The Mazda RT24-P was made 10 kilograms heavier, and had fuel capacity reduction. In the GT Le Mans class (GTLM), the Ferrari 488 GTE was made 15 kilograms lighter. Despite being given a break, Ferrari GTLM team Risi Competizione decided to forgo Sebring, for concerns over the adjustment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286898-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 12 Hours of Sebring, Background\nOn March 6th, 2019, the official entry list for the 12 Hours was revealed, featuring 38 cars in total. There were 11 cars in the DPi class, eight entries in GT Le Mans, 17 in GT Daytona, and a mere two entrants in the LMP2 class. Following the retirement of Christian Fittipaldi, Le Mans winner Brendon Hartley joined the Action Express Racing team in the #5 car. Matthieu Vaxivi\u00e8re joined Wayne Taylor Racing in their #10 Cadillac, after Toyota Gazoo Racing drivers Kamui Kobayashi and Fernando Alonso were barred from taking part in IMSA's event. In the GT Daytona class, Black Swan Racing, who had confirmed a full endurance-event program for the 2019 IMSA Season, had withdrawn as a result of team owner and driver Tim Pappas sustaining injuries from February's Bathurst 12 Hour event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 826]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286898-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 12 Hours of Sebring, Report, Thursday practice\nDue to the World Endurance Championship event taking place on Friday, the first few practice sessions for the 12 Hours of Sebring were held on Thursday. In the first practice session, Felipe Nasr and the #31 Action Express Racing Cadillac team were quickest, setting a 1:46.996. They were 0.355 seconds faster than the #6 Team Penske Acura. In GT Le Mans, Porsche and Ford were at the top of the leaderboard, with Laurens Vanthoor setting the quickest time for the #911 Porsche 911 RSR, setting a 1:56.983.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286898-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 12 Hours of Sebring, Report, Thursday practice\nHe would be three tenths clear of the times from the Ford GT drivers Richard Westbrook and Joey Hand. In GT Daytona, Mario Farnbacher of the #86 Meyer-Shank Racing Acura team set the fastest time of 2:00.793, nearly half a second clear of the #73 Park Place Motorsport Porsche, driven by Patrick Long. PR1/Mathiasen Motorsports went fastest in the LMP2 class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286898-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 12 Hours of Sebring, Report, Thursday practice\nIn free practice two, after a low-risk session from Mazda Team Joest, Olivier Pla would give them the fastest time of the weekend so far in the #55 car, a 1:46.834. He would be 0.815 seconds faster than Pipo Derani of the #31 Action Express Racing Cadillac. Acura driver H\u00e9lio Castroneves completed the top three in the DPi class. In the GT Le Mans class, Porsche GT Team were fastest once again, with #911 driver Nick Tandy setting a 1:56.991. The team were once again fastest over the two Chip Ganassi Racing Ford GTs. In GT Daytona, Bill Auberlen set the pace in the #96 Turner Motorsport BMW M6, with a 2:00.583. PR1/Mathiasen Motorsports once again set the fastest LMP2 time, with 1:52.149.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286898-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 12 Hours of Sebring, Report, Qualifying Results\nPole positions in each class are indicated in bold and by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286899-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 2. divisjon\nThe 2019 2. divisjon (referred to as PostNord-ligaen for sponsorship reasons) was a Norwegian football third-tier league season. The league consisted of 28 teams divided into 2 groups of 14 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286899-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 2. divisjon\nThe league was played as a double round-robin tournament, where all teams played 26 matches. The season began on 13 April and concluded on 26 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286899-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 2. divisjon, Promotion play-offs\nThe teams who finished in second place in their respective group qualified for the promotion play-offs, where they faced each other over two legs. The winner, \u00c5sane, then played against the 14th placed team in 1. divisjon for a place in the 2020 1. divisjon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona\nThe 2019 24 Hours of Daytona (formally the 2019 Rolex 24 at Daytona) was an International Motor Sports Association (IMSA)-sanctioned endurance sports car race held at the Daytona International Speedway combined road course in Daytona Beach, Florida, on January 26\u201327, 2019. It was the 57th running of the race, and the first of 12 races in the 2019 IMSA WeatherTech Sportscar Championship, and the first of four rounds of the 2019 Michelin Endurance Cup. The race was ended ahead of the 22nd Hour, due to heavy rainfall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona\nThe race was won overall by Renger van der Zande, Jordan Taylor, Fernando Alonso, and Kamui Kobayashi in the #10 Wayne Taylor Racing Cadillac DPi-V.R. The LMP2 class was won by the #18 DragonSpeed Oreca 07, piloted by Pastor Maldonado, Roberto Gonzalez, Sebasti\u00e1n Saavedra and Ryan Cullen. The GTLM class was won by the #25 BMW Team RLL BMW M8 GTE of Connor de Phillippi, Augusto Farfus, Philipp Eng, and Colton Herta. The GTD class was won for a second consecutive year by the #11 GRT Grasser Racing Team Lamborghini Huracan GT3 Evo of Rolf Ineichen, Mirko Bortolotti, Rik Breukers, and Christian Engelhart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Background, Regulation changes\nPrior to the 2019 WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, a raft of regulation changes were made, which saw significant changes to both Prototypes and GT3 cars entered in the 2019 event. The Prototype class, which previously combined Daytona Prototype International cars, alongside Le Mans Prototype LMP2 cars was now split into 2 separate classes, the Daytona Prototype International (DPi) class, and the Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2) class. The DPi class would be the top class of the Championship, and will feature teams with full Professional Lineups running Daytona Prototype International cars, with its own class-based Balance of Performance (BoP).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Background, Regulation changes\nThe LMP2 class would be the lower prototype class of the 2, featuring Global Specification LMP2 cars, and Pro-Am lineups, with no BoP being applied to the class. The Pro-Am classes in the Championship (LMP2 and GTD) were also now required to adhere to driver rating requirements, with each car being allowed only 2 Platinum/Gold rated drivers for the Rolex 24, and one Platinum/Gold rated driver for the other Endurance Races, alongside the requirement of 1 Bronze/Silver rated driver for every Sprint race. Bronze or Silver rated drivers would also be required to start the race in these categories. Cars in the DPi, LMP2, as well as the GTD classes will also run on Michelin tyres, instead of Continentals while the GT Le Mans (GTLM) class would continue to be an open-tyre class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 839]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Background, Entry list\nAhead of the Roar Before the 24 tests at the track, IMSA released an entry list of the teams due to participate in the compulsory 3 day tests. The entry list listed 47 teams across the four classes: 11 entries in the DPi class, 4 in the LMP2 class, as well as 9 in the GTLM class, featuring Group GTE Cars, as well as 23 in the GT Daytona (GTD) class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Background, Entry list\nEach car was driven by two drivers who were to complete in the whole WeatherTech Sportscar Championship season, alongside 1\u20132 additional drivers, with one of the two additional drivers participating in the whole Michelin Endurance Cup season. These drivers came from a variety of categories, such as the FIA World Endurance Championship (Fernando Alonso, Kamui Kobayashi, Harry Tincknell), the IndyCar Series (Simon Pagenaud, Alexander Rossi), the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters (Ren\u00e9 Rast, Lo\u00efc Duval).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Testing, Pre-testing Balance of Performance (BoP)\nAhead of the Roar Before the 24 Tests, IMSA issued a pre-test BoP, on December 21, 2018, aiming to create parity in each class among the cars, as well as to separate the performances of cars in each class. The DPis were given a 10kg weight reduction, as well as increased boost pressure for Turbocharged Engines, while Naturally Aspirated Engines received a larger air restrictor. The LMP2 cars were given a 10kg weight addition, alongside a five-litre reduction in fuel capacity, and a 4 second increased refuelling time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 75], "content_span": [76, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Testing, Pre-testing Balance of Performance (BoP)\nChanges were also made to both the GTLM class, with the BMW M8 GTE, and the Porsche 911 RSR getting a weight break, with the Ferrari 488 GTE was given a 5kg weight increase, the Ford GT a 20kg weight increase, and the Corvette C7.R remaining unchanged. The GTD class saw several changes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 75], "content_span": [76, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Testing, Roar Before the 24 Tests\nThe Roar Before the 24 tests occurred from January 4 to 6, 2019, with all cars participating in the test. The first session on Friday morning saw the #77 Mazda RT-24P entered by Mazda Team Joest top timesheets with a 1:35.989 lap, while the #52 Oreca 07 entered by PR1/Mathiasen Motorsports topped the LMP2 category with a 1:39.828 by Gabriel Aubry. GTLM was topped by #911 911 RSR, with Patrick Pilet at the wheel setting a 1:44.866, while Jeroen Bleekemolen set a 1:47.188 in the #33 AMG GT3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 59], "content_span": [60, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Testing, Roar Before the 24 Tests\nThe second session on Friday afternoon had the #10 Cadillac DPi-V.R of Wayne Taylor Racing top the session with a 1:36.596 by Kamui Kobayashi, while Gabriel Aubrey topped the LMP2 category again with 1:39.575. Davide Rigon set a 1:44.718 in the #62 Risi Competizione Ferrari 488 GTE Evo, to top GTLM, while the #33 topped GTD once more with a 1:46.452 from Jeroen Bleekemolen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 59], "content_span": [60, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Testing, Roar Before the 24 Tests\nThe first session on Saturday morning saw the #55 Mazda RT-24P set the pace, with Harry Tincknell setting a 1:34.925. The #52 Oreca 07 topped the timesheet again in LMP2 with a 1:38.107 from Matt McMurry. The #912 Porsche 911 RSR topped GTLM, with a 1:43.862 from Mathieu Jaminet, while the #540 Black Swan Racing 911 GT3 R topped the GTD category with a 1:45.919 from Matteo Cairoli.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 59], "content_span": [60, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Testing, Roar Before the 24 Tests\nThe Afternoon session was led by the #10 Wayne Taylor Racing Cadillac DPi-V.R with Renger Van Der Zande setting a 1:34.534, with LMP2 being led once more by Gabriel Aubry in the #52 Oreca with a 1:37.083 lap. GTLM was led by the #67 Ford GT with Richard Westbrook setting a 1:43.148, with GTD being led by Trent Hindman in the #86 Meyer Shank Racing w/ Curb-Agajanian Acura NSX GT3, with a 1:45.533 lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 59], "content_span": [60, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0005-0002", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Testing, Roar Before the 24 Tests\nThe Night session saw Jonathan Bomarito set the pace in the #55 Mazda RT-24P, with a 1:34.533, while the #52 led LMP2 once more, with a 1:36.990 from Gabriel Aubry. GTLM saw Nick Tandy set a 1:43.402 in the #911 Porsche 911 RSR, with GTD led by the #13 Via Italia Racing Ferrari 488 GT3 Evo with a 1:45.842 from Victor Franzoni.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 59], "content_span": [60, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0005-0003", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Testing, Roar Before the 24 Tests\nGTD had a Qualifying session on the day itself, which was meant to allocate garages for the teams, with Ana Beatriz securing the top spot with a 1:45.537 in the #57 Meyer Shank Racing Acura NSX GT3, after P1 Motorsport was disqualified from the session for using a gold driver (Dominik Baumann), in spite of it setting the fastest time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 59], "content_span": [60, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Testing, Roar Before the 24 Tests\nThe morning session on Sunday saw Harry Tincknell top the lap times in the #55 Mazda RT-24P, with a 1:34.224, while Ben Hanley led LMP2 with a 1:35.975 in the 81 DragonSpeed Oreca 07, and GTLM was led by Richard Westbrook in the #67 Ford GT with a 1:43.083.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 59], "content_span": [60, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Testing, Roar Before the 24 Tests\nThe Last Session on Sunday, where only 14 cars ran, saw the #54 CORE Autosport Nissan-Onroak DPi top the times with a 1:35.176 from Loic Duval, while LMP2 was led by the #81 DragonSpeed Oreca 07, with a 1:36.188 from Nicolas Lapierre, and GTLM led by the #911 Porsche 911 RSR, with a 1:43.848 from Patrick Pilet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 59], "content_span": [60, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0006-0002", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Testing, Roar Before the 24 Tests\nThe Qualifying for DPi, LMP2 and GTLM saw Oliver Jarvis earn the top spot for Mazda Team Joest in the #77 Mada RT-24P, with a 1:33.398 which also unofficially broke the track record, while the #52 topped the LMP2 class with a 1:35.930 from Gabriel Aubry, while GTLM was led by the #3 Corvette C7.R with a 1:42.651 from Jan Magnussen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 59], "content_span": [60, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Testing, Post-testing Balance of Performance Adjustments\nOn January 16, 2019, IMSA released a technical bulletin with regards to the Balance of Performance of the cars competing in the Rolex 24. Unlike previous years. there were only minor tweaks to selected cars, and saw no significant performance related adjustments. In the Daytona Prototype International class, 3 of the 4 cars saw changes to their fuel capacity, with the Acura ARX-05 and Mazda RT24-P each losing 2 liters and the Cadillac DPi-V.R being reduced by 1 liter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 82], "content_span": [83, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Testing, Post-testing Balance of Performance Adjustments\nThe Nissan-Onroak DPi, meanwhile, has an adjusted Lambda, while the Mazda RT-24P was mandated to run its high downforce rear wing package instead of \u201c2019 Opt. 1\u201d that was outlined in the initial pre-testing BoP. In GT Le Mans, the BMW M8 GTE received a 2-liter fuel capacity increase, while an adjustment was made to the Ferrari 488 GTE\u2019s RPM redline. The GT Daytona class saw the Lamborghini Huracan GT3 Evo get a 1 mm larger air restrictor, along with a related 2-liter increase in fuel capacity, while the BMW M6 GT3 received a 15 kg weight break. Fuel capacities were also adjusted for the new-for-2019 Porsche 911 GT3 R (+3 liters) and Acura NSX GT3 Evo (\u22123 liters), while IMSA elected to not slow down the GTD Class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 82], "content_span": [83, 806]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Practice\nFour practice sessions were held before the start of the race on Saturday, three on Thursday and one on Friday. The first two sessions on Thursday morning and afternoon were 45 minutes and 75 Minutes in length, while third held later that evening ran for 90 minutes, and the fourth on Friday morning lasted an hour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Practice\nIn Practice 1, which was held in damp conditions, Felipe Nasr set the fastest lap, in the #31 Whelen Engineering Cadillac DPi-V.R, with a best of 1:36.108, in a session which saw just four of the eleven DPi cars set flying laps on slick tires during the damp session. Behind Nasr was Filipe Albuquerque, who gave the Action Express Racing a 1\u20132, in the #5 Mustang Sampling Cadillac, with a best of 1:36.707.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Practice\nTristan Vautier\u2019s 1:37.595 effort in the No. 85 JDC-Miller Motorsports Cadillac and Jonathan Bomarito\u2019s 1:38.561 in the No. 55 Mazda RT-24P were the only other competitive times set on Thursday morning. The 5th best time, and the top time in the GTLM class was set by Frederic Makowiecki, in the #911 Porsche 911 RSR on slick Michelins putting a gap of eight-tenths over Mathieu Jaminet in the German manufacturer\u2019s No. 912 car, whilst Joey Hand moved Ford Chip Ganassi Racing up to third late on, although his final effort was over a second off the Porsche pace up front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0009-0002", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Practice\nIn GTD, Corey Lewis ended the morning quickest with a 1:46.577 in the #48 Paul Miller Racing Lamborghini Huracan GT3 Evo. This lap came during the 15-minute extension of the event\u2019s first practice session dedicated to silver and bronze drivers in the secondary GT class. Henrik Hedman topped the charts in LMP2 for DragonSpeed with a 1:46.657 in the team\u2019s FIA World Endurance Championship Oreca 07 Gibson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Practice\nIn Practice 2, Jonathan Bomarito, driving the #55 Mazda RT24-P, setting a 1:34.672, was a full 0.711 seconds faster than second place Filipe Albuquerque in the No. 5 Mustang Sampling Racing Cadillac DPi-V.R. Colin Braun checked in with the third fastest time, set early in the session, in the #54 CORE Autosport Nissan Onroak DPi, while Ricky Taylor and Agustin Canapino completed the top five for Acura Team Penske and Juncos Racing, respectively. In LMP2, a late effort from James Allen put the No. 81", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Practice\nDragonSpeed Oreca 07 Gibson at the head of the four-car class by 0.257 seconds over Gabriel Aubry in the No. 52 from PR1/Mathiasen, with a 1:37.255. In GTLM, Nick Tandy was quickest in the GT Le Mans class in the #911 Porsche 911 RSR, with him setting a 1:43.475, followed by the #3 Corvette C7.R of Jan Magnussen with a 1:43.561, and the #67 Ford Chip Ganassi Racing Ford GT of Ryan Briscoe 1:43.755. Daniel Serra turned in the fastest lap in GTD, in the #51 Spirit of Race Ferrari 488 GT3 with a 1:45.936, while Trent Hindman and Ben Keating completed the top three in class for Meyer Shank Racing and Mercedes-AMG Team Riley Motorsports, setting a 1:46.184 and 1:46.244 respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Practice\nIn Practice 3, which was held at night, Loic Duval put the #54 CORE Autosport Nissan DPi at the top, with a 1:34.786, while a 1:34.905 was set by Filipe Albuquerque in the #5 Action Express Racing Cadillac DPi-V.R. None of the Mazda RT24-P prototypes turned laps in Thursday evening practice after the Joest Racing team elected to carry out separate planned engine changes. In LMP2, Ben Hanley led the class, with a 1:36.521 in the #81 Dragonspeed Oreca 07.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Practice\nIn GTLM, Augusto Farfus set the fastest lap, with a 1:43.315, just 0.002 seconds ahead of the 2nd placed #911 Porsche 911 RSR. In GTD, Bill Auberlen posted a 1:45.165 to put his #96 Turner Motorsport BMW M6 GT3 in the lead, with Daniel Serra coming in 2nd in the #51 Spirit of Race Ferrari 488 GT3, 0.109 seconds behind.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Qualifying\nOn Thursday's Qualifying session, which was divided into 3, with one session for the Prototypes, GTLM and GTD classes, which lasted for 15 minutes each, and a ten minute interval between the sessions. The rules dictated that all teams nominated a driver to qualify their cars, with the Pro-Am (LMP2/GTD) classes requiring a Bronze/Silver Rated Driver to qualify the car. The competitors' fastest lap times determined the starting order. IMSA then arranged the grid such that the Prototype and GTLM cars began ahead of the GTD field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Qualifying\nIn the Prototype Qualifying session, Oliver Jarvis, driving for Mazda Team Joest, broke the Daytona International Speedway Road Course lap record to clinch pole position for the race, bringing the #77 Mazda RT-24P to the top of the timing screens early in the 15-minute prototype qualifying session before shaving his best effort down to a 1:33.685. This was two tenths quicker than the previous record around the road course of the Daytona International Speedway, that had remained unbeaten for over 25 years, and had been set by P.J. Jones in 1993 behind the wheel of a GTP Toyota Eagle MkIII.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Qualifying\nThis pole position was the first ever for Mazda Team Joest, and the Mazda RT24-P. He was joined on the front row of the grid by Ricky Taylor in the #7 Acura Team Penske ARX-05, who interrupted a Joest 1\u20132 held by Jarvis and Jonathan Bomarito, until his Penske team-mate Juan Pablo Montoya jumped up to third shortly before the checkered flag. Bomarito\u2019s time of 1:34.212 however, held out as the fourth-best, while Felipe Nasr brought the highest-placed Cadillac DPi-V.R to fifth on the grid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0013-0002", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Qualifying\nHe was followed by another 4 more Cadillacs, with Jordan Taylor going sixth in the #10 Wayne Taylor Racing car, ahead of Juncos Racing\u2019s Agustin Canapino, and the JDC-Miller Motorsports cars driven by Tristan Vautier and Stephen Simpson, while Jon Bennett propped up the running DPi field in the CORE Autosport run Ligier Nissan DPi. The defending race winning #5 Mustang Sampling Cadillac DPi-V.R failed to post a time during the session, after Filipe Albuquerque radioed his crew about engine problems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Qualifying\nIn LMP2, James Allen took pole in the #81 DragonSpeed Oreca 07 Gibson, recording a time which was half a second quicker than the 2nd placed #52 PR1/Mathiasen Motorsports Oreca 07 driven by Gabriel Aubry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Qualifying\nIn GTLM, Nick Tandy set a new qualifying track record for the class, taking pole position for the Porsche GT Team, driving the #911 Porsche 911 RSR, with his best lap of 1:42.257 being a full 0.326 seconds faster than the effort by the previous year\u2019s GTLM pole sitter Jan Magnussen in the #3 Corvette Racing Corvette C7.R. Ryan Briscoe in the #67 Ford Chip Ganassi Racing team Ford GT finished 3rd, to bring three different manufacturers into the top 3 starting spots for the .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Qualifying\nDavide Rigon came in fourth fastest in the No. 62 Risi Competizione Ferrari 488 GTE, and was followed by Earl Bamber in the sister car to the #911, the #912. It was a tight qualifying session for the class, with all nine cars being covered by 0.982 seconds, and with the top four qualifiers in the class posting times under the previous class track record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Qualifying\nIn GTD, Marcos Gomes set a track record for the class, while en route to taking the class pole position in the #13 Via Italia Racing Ferrari 488 GT3. The Brazilian broke Daniel Serra\u2019s previous class qualifying record which had been set the previous year, while marking the third straight year that a Ferrari has taken the GTD class pole. Gomes\u2019 best lap of 1:45.257 was 0.067 seconds faster than that of the second placed #33 Mercedes-AMG Team Riley Motorsports Mercedes-AMG GT3, driven by Ben Keating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Qualifying\nTrent Hindman was came third in the #86 Acura NSX GT3 Evo for Meyer Shank Racing. Lamborghini then took the next two spots on the grid with Giacomo Altoe and Rolf Ineichen for Ebimotors and GRT Grasser Racing Team, respectively. The top 13 cars in the GTD class were covered by less than one second, making for a closely packed qualifying session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Qualifying, Notes\n\u2013 The #96 Turner Motorsports car had all its qualifying times forfeited as per Article 40.2.9. of the Sporting regulations (car was touched by the crew during qualifying without permission by the officials).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Race report\nAfter the green flag dropped on Saturday, Acura Team Penske held the advantage thanks to a strong performance from Juan Pablo Montoya, who passed Oliver Jarvis in the #77 Mazda RT24-P 30 minutes into the race. Though running strong, the Acura and Mazda cars faced pressure from the Action Express Racing Cadillacs in 5th and 6th two hours in. Kyle Masson and the #38 Performance Tech Motorsports team led the LMP2 class in their Oreca.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0018-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Race report\nIn GTLM, Porsche and Ford's early challenge suffered teething troubles, after a splitter issue had put the #912 Porsche 911 RSR a lap behind class leader, and a three lap loss due to mechanical failure for the #67 Ford GT. Regardless, the sister car of the former manufacturer, #911, held the lead in the opening hour. In the GTD class, the #86 Meyer Shank Racing Acura NSX assumed a lead over the #33 Riley Motorsports Mercedes in 2nd, and the GRT Grasser Racing Lamborghini Huracan in 3rd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Race report\nAfter a Full-Course Yellow, which was triggered from an engine explosion from the #99 NGT Motorsport Porsche 911 GT3, the standings in DPi shuffled, with Dane Cameron holding a small lead over Felipe Nasr in the #31 Whelen Engineering Cadillac. Behind them were both Mazdas, continuing to put pressure on the leaders. A similar shuffle occurred in GTLM, with the #66 Ford GT of Chip Ganassi Racing emerging the leader ahead of the #4 Corvette Racing C7.R in second and #911 Porsche RSR in third. In the GTD class, Rik Breukers of the #11 GRT Grasser Racing Team emerged the leader, but was handed a four-minute pitlane penalty for ignoring full course caution procedures. James Allen led a 1-2 for the DragonSpeed team in the LMP2 class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 775]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Race report\nThe defending overall winning team, the #5 Mustang Sampling Racing Cadillac had suffered a major blow to their challenge when, in the 3rd hour, an electrical issue had seen them initially out of the race. After 25 minutes in the garage, the #5 car returned to the track. The #6 Acura ARX-05 in the hands of Dane Cameron continued to lead in the DPi class, with the sister car in 3rd in the hands of H\u00e9lio Castroneves. Mazda driver Ren\u00e9 Rast set in between them in second, posing a challenge to Cameron's lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Race report\nAs evening fell, two-time Formula One World Driver's Champion Fernando Alonso began his first stint in the #10 Wayne Taylor Racing Cadillac. He muscled his way into the overall lead of the Rolex 24, after inheriting the car from Jordan Taylor in 7th position. Alonso took the lead from Rene Rast in the #77 Mazda. After a third Full-Course Yellow flag, Alonso maintained his overall lead, and handed the car over to Toyota Gazoo Racing team-mate Kamui Kobayashi with a 15-second advantage over the #77.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Race report\nThe #52 PR1/Mathiasen Motorsports Oreca 07 collided with the #85 Cadillac DPi-V.R. of JDC-Miller Motorsports, thus triggering a fourth Full-Course Yellow just before the 6-hour-mark of the race. Action Express Racing debutante Pipo Derani elected not to go to the pits when all other cars in the DPi class had, thus putting the #31 Cadillac in the lead. Prior to this, Kamui Kobayashi in the #10 Cadillac set the fastest lap of the race up to that point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0022-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Race report\nIn the GTLM class, Porsche GT Team driver Nick Tandy lost two places from pit stops after holding the lead, thus promoting the #4 Corvette C7.R to the lead, and the #62 Ferrari 488 GTE of Risi Competizione to an impressive second. The #33 Mercedes-AMG GT3 of Riley Motorsports held the lead in the GTD class, while DragonSpeed continued to be first and second in LMP2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Results, Notes\n\u2013 The #67 Ford Chip Ganassi Racing car was assessed a 1 min 48 sec time penalty post race, for violating emergency fuel obligations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Results, Notes\n\u2013 The #29 Montaplast by Land-Motorsport Audi R8 LMS was moved to the back of the class per Article 12.12C for a drive time infringement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286900-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Daytona, Results, Notes\n\u2013 The #63 Scuderia Corsa Ferrari 488 GT3 was moved to the back of the class per Article 12.12C for a drive time infringement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans\nThe 87th 24 Hours of Le Mans (French: 87e 24 Heures du Mans) was an 24 hour automobile endurance race for Le Mans Prototype and Le Mans Grand Touring Endurance cars held from 15 to 16 June 2019 at the Circuit de la Sarthe, close to Le Mans, France before approximately 252,500 people. It was the 87th running of the event, as organised by the automotive group, the Automobile Club de l'Ouest (ACO) since 1923. The round was the last in the 2018\u201319 FIA World Endurance Championship and the second time in the season that the series had visited Le Mans. A test day was held two weeks prior to the race on 2 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans\nA Toyota TS050 Hybrid shared by Mike Conway, Kamui Kobayashi and Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda L\u00f3pez started from pole position after Kobayashi set the overall fastest lap time in the second qualifying session. The race was won by the Toyota trio of Fernando Alonso, S\u00e9bastien Buemi and Kazuki Nakajima after L\u00f3pez slowed in the 23rd hour due to a wired tyre pressure sensor system, which incorrectly indicated a puncture on a tyre that was later found not to have any issues. It was Alonso, Buemi, Nakajima and Toyota's second consecutive Le Mans win. The No. 7 Toyota finished almost 17 seconds behind in second position. The No. 11 SMP Racing BR1 of Mikhail Aleshin, Vitaly Petrov and Stoffel Vandoorne was the highest-placed non-hybrid LMP1 car in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans\nThe Signatech Alpine team of Nicolas Lapierre, Andr\u00e9 Negr\u00e3o and Pierre Thiriet won the Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2) category with the Jackie Chan DC Racing Oreca 07 car of Ho-Pin Tung, Gabriel Aubry and St\u00e9phane Richelmi second. On the 70th anniversary of Ferrari's first overall Le Mans victory the AF Corse team won the Le Mans Grand Touring Endurance Professional (LMGTE Pro) class with James Calado's, Alessandro Pier Guidi's and Daniel Serra's 488 GTE Evo from a Porsche 911 RSR driven by Richard Lietz, Gianmaria Bruni and Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Makowiecki.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans\nThe Le Mans Grand Touring Endurance Amateur (LMGTE Am) category was led for most of the time by Keating Motorsports' Ford GT of Jeroen Bleekemolen, Felipe Fraga and Ben Keating which was the first to finish the race. It was later disqualified for an oversized fuel tank and Project 1 Racing's Porsche of J\u00f6rg Bergmeister, Patrick Lindsey and Egidio Perfetti inherited the class win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans\nThe result won Alonso, Buemi and Nakajima the LMP Drivers' Championship by 41 points over Conway, Kobayashi and L\u00f3pez. Thomas Laurent and Gustavo Menezes of the Rebellion Racing team finished third ahead of Aleshin and Petrov in fourth and the Rebellion duo of Neel Jani and Andr\u00e9 Lotterer in fifth. Porsche's Michael Christensen and K\u00e9vin Estre finished tenth in LMGTE Pro to claim the GTE Drivers' Championship with 155 points. LMGTE Pro class race winners Calado and Pier Guidi passed Bruni and Lietz to end the season in second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Background\nThe dates for the 2019 24 Hours of Le Mans were confirmed at a meeting of the FIA World Motor Sport Council in its headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland on 19 June 2017. It was the 87th Le Mans race, the final automobile endurance event of the 2018\u201319 FIA World Endurance Championship (FIA WEC), and was the second visit to Le Mans during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Background\nThe race was proposed in 1922 by the automotive journalist Charles Faroux to Georges Durand, the president of the automotive group, the Automobile Club de l'Ouest (ACO) and the industrialist Emile Coquile to test car reliability and fuel-efficiency. It is considered one of the world's most prestigious motor races and is part of the Triple Crown of Motorsport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Background\nAfter winning the 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps, Toyota drivers Fernando Alonso, S\u00e9bastien Buemi and Kazuki Nakajima led the LMP Drivers' Championship with 160 points, 31 ahead of their teammates Mike Conway, Kamui Kobayashi and Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda L\u00f3pez in second. 38 points were available for the final race, which meant Conway, Kobayashi and L\u00f3pez could win the LMP Drivers' Championship if they won and Alonso, Buemi and Nakajima finished eighth or lower. With 140 points, Porsche's Michael Christensen and K\u00e9vin Estre led the GTE Drivers' Championship by 36 points over their second-placed teammates Gianmaria Bruni and Richard Lietz. Christensen and Estre needed to finish eighth or better to claim the title as Bruni and Lietz needed to win at Le Mans and their teammates to attain a sub-par result. The LMP1 Teams' Championship and the GTE Manufacturers' Championship had already been won by Toyota and Porsche, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 960]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Regulation changes\nFollowing a two-lap victory for Porsche in the Le Mans Grand Touring Professional (LMGTE Pro) category in 2018, the ACO revised Le Mans' safety implementation system after team managers raised procedural concerns. Full course yellow flags mandating cars to slow to 80\u00a0km/h (50\u00a0mph) in the event of an accident were implemented for the first time at Le Mans. The system became the preferred method of slowing the race as opposed to deploying three safety cars and enforcing slow zones. The ACO also permitted drivers to enter the pit lane during safety car conditions and exit it before a second safety car passed by so that they could remain in the same group of vehicles when racing resumed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries\nThe ACO Selection Committee received 75 applications for entries between the LMP1 (Le Mans Prototype 1), LMP2 (Le Mans Prototype 2), LMGTE Pro and LMGTE Am (Le Mans Grand Touring Amateur) categories from 20 December 2018 to 30 January 2019. The automotive group initially planned to accept 60 cars into the race but wishing to not exclude applications of a \"high standard\" they allowed 62 to race. The ten-panel Selection Committee took steps to ensure that the two additional required pits would be operational in time for the 2019 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries, Automatic entries\nAutomatic entry invitations were earned by teams that won their class in the 2018 24 Hours of Le Mans. Teams who won championships in the European Le Mans Series (ELMS), Asian Le Mans Series (ALMS), and the Michelin Le Mans Cup were also invited. The second-place finisher in the ELMS LMGTE championship also earned an automatic invitation. The ACO chose two WeatherTech SportsCar Championship (WTSC) teams to be automatic entries regardless of their performance or category. As invitations were granted to teams, they were allowed to change their cars from the previous year to the next, but not their category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries, Automatic entries\nThe LMGTE class invitations from the ELMS and ALMS were allowed to choose between the Pro and Am categories. ELMS' LMP3 (Le Mans Prototype 3) champion was required to field an entry in LMP2 while the ALMS LMP3 champion was permitted to choose between LMP2 or LMGTE Am. The Michelin Le Mans Cup GT3 champion was limited to the LMGTE Am category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries, Automatic entries\nOn 11 February 2019, the ACO announced the initial list of automatic entries. Driver Misha Goikhberg, who was invited to the race by winning the Jim Trueman Award for being \"the top-placed gentleman driver\" in the WTSC's Daytona Prototype International category, transferred his automatic entry to WeatherTech Racing per an agreement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries, Entry list and reserves\nFor the 2019 event, the list of race entries was revealed in two stages: the first 42 cars were announced on 11 February with the rest of the field and 10 reserve cars in the LMP2 class and the two LMGTE categories announced on 1 March. The ACO attributed the 2018\u201319 FIA WEC's format as a reason for the alteration. In addition from the 34 guaranteed entries from the FIA WEC, 15 came from the ELMS, nine from the WTSC, five from the ALMS and a solitary one-off Le Mans specific entry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries, Entry list and reserves\nIn addition to the 62 entries given invitations for the race, 10 were put on a reserve list to replace any withdrawn or ungranted invitations. Reserve entries were ordered with the first replacing the first withdrawal from the race, regardless of the class and entry. The Spirit of Race team announced the withdrawal of their Ferrari 488 GTE Evo on 21 March, citing \"an unavoidable family commitment\" as the reason. Duqueine Engineering's Oreca 07-Gibson car was promoted to the race entry as a result. That same day, Michael Shank Racing withdrew its Algarve Pro Racing-run Oreca 07 car from the reserve list because the team was ninth in that list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries, Entry list and reserves\nOn 16 April, on the day that the ACO announced that two additional temporary pit garages would be constructed to raise the number of cars for the event to 62, the No. 32 United Autosports Ligier JS P217-Gibson and High Class Racing's No. 20 Oreca 07 were the two cars promoted from the reserve list to the race entry. With the subsequent withdrawal of the Ebimotors LMGTE Am car from the reserve entries, five reserves remained on the list: the Eurasia Motorsport, Panis-Barthez Comp\u00e9tition, IDEC Sport, Team Project 1 and TF Sport teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Pre-race balance of performance changes\nThe FIA Endurance Committee altered the LMP equivalence of technology and the LMGTE balance of performance to try to create parity within each category. All non-hybrid LMP1 cars had their maximum fuel flow increased from 108\u00a0kg/h (240\u00a0lb/h) to 115\u00a0kg/h (250\u00a0lb/h) with the Toyota TS050 Hybrid's unchanged at 80\u00a0kg/h (180\u00a0lb/h). The Toyota's minimum weight was set at 888\u00a0kg (1,958\u00a0lb), the turbocharged non-hybrid LMP1 vehicles at 833\u00a0kg (1,836\u00a0lb) and the non-turbocharged privateer LMP1 cars at 816\u00a0kg (1,799\u00a0lb).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 65], "content_span": [66, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Pre-race balance of performance changes\nFor the LMGTE Pro class, the Porsche 911 RSR and BMW M8 GTE had respective ballast increases of 2\u00a0kg (4.4\u00a0lb) and 9\u00a0kg (20\u00a0lb) and less turbocharger boost curve for lower performance. The Ford GT's weight was increased by 12\u00a0kg (26\u00a0lb) and its turbocharger boost curve altered to raise its top speed. Conversely, the Aston Martin Vantage, the Chevrolet Corvette C7.R, and the Ferrari 488 Evo had 7\u00a0kg (15\u00a0lb) of ballast removed and the Ferrari's turbocharger boost curve was made more powerful. In LMGTE Am, the Ford was made 13\u00a0kg (29\u00a0lb) heavier than the Ferrari 488 GTE. The 2017-specification Aston Martin Vantage had 4\u00a0kg (8.8\u00a0lb) of weight deducted while Porsche had no performance changes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 65], "content_span": [66, 762]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Testing\nA test day held on 2 June required all race entrants to participate in eight hours of driving divided into two sessions. Toyota led the morning session with a lap of 3 minutes, 21.875 seconds from Buemi. His teammate L\u00f3pez was second and led until Buemi's lap. Gustavo Menezes' No. 3 Rebellion R13 car followed in third, with Vitaly Petrov and St\u00e9phane Sarrazin's SMP Racing BR1 cars fourth and fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Testing\nFilipe Albuquerque's No. 22 United Autosports Ligier car led in LMP2 with a 3 minutes, 32.245 seconds lap, ahead of Pastor Maldonado's No. 31 DragonSpeed, the Graff of Tristan Gommendy and Nyck de Vries' Racing Team Nederland Dallara P217 cars. Billy Johnson's No. 66 Ford led LMGTE Pro for most of the session until Antonio Garc\u00eda's No. 63 Corvette overtook him. Francesco Castellacci's Spirit of Race Ferrari was the fastest car in LMGTE Am from Jeff Segal's JMW Motorsport Ferrari. Mechanical issues on Jordan King's No. 37 Jackie Chan DC Racing Oreca and Marco S\u00f8rensen's No. 95 Aston Martin and Paul-Loup Chatin's crash into a tyre barrier at Indianapolis corner disrupted the session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Testing\nBuemi was fastest early in the second session with a lap of 3 minutes, 20.068 seconds, which he later improved to a 3 minutes, 19.440 seconds to lead all entries. Conway improved the No. 7 Toyota's best lap for second. The fastest non-hybrid LMP1 entry was Andr\u00e9 Lotterer's No. 1 Rebellion in third, followed by Stoffel Vandoorne's No. 11 SMP BR1 and Nathana\u00ebl Berthon's No. 3 Rebellion cars. With a time of 3 minutes, 28.504 seconds, Ho-Pin Tung improved the fastest time in LMP2, moving Jackie Chan past Maldonado and Nicolas Lapierre's No. 36 Signatech Alpine car. The No. 63 Corvette continued to lead in LMGTE Pro with a 3 minutes, 54.001 seconds lap from Mike Rockenfeller, three-hundredths of a second faster than Harry Tincknell's No. 66 Ford and Tommy Milner's No. 64 Corvette. Toni Vilander's No. 62 WeatherTech Ferrari was fastest in LMGTE Am.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 888]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Testing, Post-testing balance of performance changes\nFollowing testing, the ACO again altered the LMP1 equivalence of technology. All normally aspirated cars had a maximum fuel level per stint of 50.8\u00a0kg (112\u00a0lb) and a limit of 48.4\u00a0kg (107\u00a0lb) for turbocharged cars. Toyota had a one-lap per stint advantage of fuel load from the 2018 race reinstated with pit stop fuel flow rate changes. The FIA changed the balance of performance to dictate all LMGTE vehicles have a fuel tank 1\u00a0l (0.22\u00a0imp\u00a0gal; 0.26\u00a0US\u00a0gal) larger than in testing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 78], "content_span": [79, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Practice\nA single, four-hour free practice session on 13 June was available to the teams and saw variable weather throughout as several cars spun. Vandoorne led from the final half-hour before Kobayashi went fastest with a lap of 3 minutes, 18.091 seconds with less than two minutes left of practice. The Rebellion team was third with a lap from Menezes, Alonso was fourth and Bruno Senna's No. 1 car fifth. Four Oreca vehicles led in LMP2, with Chatin's IDEC entry ahead of Maldonado's No. 31 DragonSpeed and Jean-\u00c9ric Vergne's No. 26 G-Drive cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0018-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Practice\nTwo Porsches led in LMGTE Pro; Christensen's No. 92 911 RSR was fastest with a lap of 3 minutes, 52.149 seconds. Mathieu Jaminet's No. 94 car was second and the fastest Ferrari was Sam Bird's third-placed No. 71 AF Corse car. Matt Campbell of the Dempsey-Proton team helped Porsche to be fastest in LMGTE Am ahead of Giancarlo Fisichella's Spirit of Race Ferrari and Pedro Lamy's No. 98 Aston Martin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Practice\nSatoshi Hoshino slid through a gravel trap in the Porsche Curves and crashed the No. 88 Dempsey-Proton car against a barrier, which necessitated a full course yellow flag to recover it to the pit lane. Tracy Krohn had an accident in the sister No. 99 car on the Mulsanne Straight and stopped the session for \u00be of an hour to clear debris and repair a barrier. Krohn was transported to The Centre Hospitalier Du Mans for observation and FIA medical personnel advised him to desist from racing for one week. The No. 99 Dempsey-Proton Porsche was later withdrawn because the team did not wish to elevate the car to the LMGTE Pro class with Krohn's co-drivers Patrick Long and Niclas J\u00f6nsson as a duo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nThe first qualifying session began late on Wednesday night under clear conditions and on a dry track. Toyota again led early on with a 3 minutes, 17.161 seconds lap from Kobayashi. The fastest two non-hybrid LMP1 vehicles were Egor Orudzhev's No. 17 SMP and Thomas Laurent's No. 3 Rebellion car in second and third. Alonso's No. 8 Toyota and Ben Hanley's No. 10 DragonSpeed car were fourth and fifth. Maldonado took provisional pole position for the DragonSpeed team in LMP2 with a 3 minutes, 26.804 seconds lap. Lapierre and Albuquerque were second and third in class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0020-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nWith 46 minutes to go, Roberto Gonz\u00e1lez spun the DragonSpeed car at the entry to the Ford Chicane. As he restarted the car to return to the pit lane, he and the left-hand side of Conway's unsighted Toyota collided, sending Conway airborne and over Gonz\u00e1lez's front bodywork. Both drivers were unhurt as debris littered the track. Repairs to the Toyota in the garage took 20 minutes to complete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nTincknell's No. 66 Ford led LMGTE Pro with a 3 minutes, 49.530 seconds time after a faster lap from Garc\u00eda's No. 64 Corvette was disallowed because he improved it under yellow flag conditions. Nick Tandy's No. 93 Porsche was 0.028 seconds slower in second and Alex Lynn's No. 97 Aston Martin was third. The No. 66 Ford had an earlier excursion when driver Olivier Pla spun into the gravel trap at the exit to the Porsche Curves and hit a tyre barrier. Recovery vehicles extricated the car and Pla drove slowly to the pit lane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0021-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nPorsches took the first three places in LMGTE Am, with Matteo Cairoli's No. 77 Dempsey-Proton vehicle fastest from J\u00f6rg Bergmeister's No. 56 Project 1 and Julien Andlauer's sister Dempsey-Proton cars. After the session, the No. 7 Toyota's monocoque was replaced due to a deep crack discovered during an inspection; Conway and Gonz\u00e1lez shared responsibility for the crash and the former incurred a suspended three-minute stop-and-go penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nThursday's first qualifying session saw faster lap times in every class. Kobayashi improved provisional pole position to a 3 minutes, 15.497 seconds lap and his teammate Nakajima moved to second. Mikhail Aleshin moved the No. 11 SMP car to third and Neel Jani set a lap that put the No. 1 Rebellion car fourth after its best time from the first session was deleted due to an incorrect fuel flow meter. Sarrazin could not improve and SMP's No. 17 car fell to fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0022-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nEarly in the session, Laurent's engine failed on the Mulsanne Straight and laid a large amount of oil on the track. The session was stopped for 20 minutes for track marshals to extricate the No. 3 Rebellion car from the side of the exit to Mulsanne corner and dry the oil. Maldonado improved his best lap to 3 minutes, 26.490 seconds to keep the DragonSpeed team ahead in LMP2. Jackie Chan's No. 38 car of St\u00e9phane Richelmi went faster to go second and Lapierre fell to third after his electrical system was repaired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0022-0002", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nIn LMGTE Pro, Christensen's lap of 3 minutes, 49.388 in the final ten minutes moved the No. 92 Porsche to the class lead. Garc\u00eda moved the No. 63 Corvette to second as Ticknell fell to third. Cairoli and Bergmeister retained the first two positions in LMGTE Am as Fisichella moved the Spirit of Racing team to third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nAs temperatures cooled in the final session, over half of the field improved their fastest laps, but Kobayashi's pole position lap went unchallenged. It was Toyota's third pole in a row at Le Mans since the 2017 race; Conway and Kobayashi's second and L\u00f3pez's first. Orudzhev led the session with a 3 minutes and 16.159 seconds lap for third. Menezes took fourth and Vandoorne fifth. Senna's engine failed and he stopped at Arnage corner after an hour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0023-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nIn LMP2, Oreca cars took the first six positions as Gommendy gave the Graff team pole position with a 3 minutes, 25.073 seconds lap. Lo\u00efc Duval was 0.282 seconds slower in second as Maldonado fell to third. Porsche, and later Ford, led in LMGTE Pro before S\u00f8rensen earned the 2018 Aston Martin Vantage its second class pole with a 3 minutes, 48 seconds lap. Tincknell and Garc\u00eda were second and third in class, respectively. Cairoli improved the No. 88 Dempsey-Proton Porsche's provisional pole lap in LMGTE Am to a 3 minutes, 51.439 seconds ahead of his teammate Campbell. Thomas Preining moved the No. 86 Gulf car to third in class. Lamy's No. 98 Aston Martin's got beached in a Mulsanne Straight chicane gravel trap and stopped the session for 25 minutes as it was extricated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying, Post-qualifying\nFollowing qualifying, the stewards deleted all of the Graff team's fastest lap times from the third session after driver Vincent Capillaire failed to stop at the scrutineering stand at the entry to the pit lane for a weight check. The team incurred a \u20ac1000 fine and fell from pole position to 14th in LMP2, elevating the IDEC squad to the class pole and the Signatech team to second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying, Post-qualifying\nThe ACO altered the balance of performance in both of the LMGTE categories. The Aston Martin's turbocharger boost was reduced and its fuel capacity lowered by 2\u00a0l (0.44\u00a0imp\u00a0gal; 0.53\u00a0US\u00a0gal) to reduce its performance. Every car bar the Chevrolet Corvette received a weight decrease of 5\u00a0kg (11\u00a0lb). In LMGTE Am Porsche had 10\u00a0kg (22\u00a0lb) of ballast added to their cars and the same amount removed from the Fords. The Ferrari and Aston Martin LMGTE Am cars had no performance changes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 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 with a gray background.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Warm-up\nA 45-minute warm-up session on Saturday morning took place in dry and sunny weather. Kobayashi set the fastest lap late on at 3 minutes, 19.647 seconds with his teammate Buemi in second. Laurent's No. 3 Rebellion was the fastest non-hybrid LMP1 car in third. SMP's two cars of Petrov and Sarrazin were fourth and fifth. Vergne recorded the fastest LMP2 lap at 3 minutes, 28.763 seconds, which was 1.4 seconds faster than Duval. Estre's No. 92 Porsche was the quickest car in LMGTE Pro while Ben Barker helped the marque to be fastest in LMGTE Am. While the session passed without a major incident, a brief full course yellow flag procedure was used to clear debris on the circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start and opening hours\nThe weather was dry and sunny before the race; the air temperature was between 14.5 to 21.2\u00a0\u00b0C (58.1 to 70.2\u00a0\u00b0F) and the track temperature 18.8 to 25.5\u00a0\u00b0C (65.8 to 77.9\u00a0\u00b0F). Approximately 252,500 spectators attended the event. The French tricolour was waved at 15:00 Central European Summer Time (UTC+02:00) by Charlene, Princess of Monaco to start the race, led by the starting pole sitter Conway. Menezes overtook Buemi and Petrov to move into second place on the first lap and held it until Buemi demoted him to third soon after.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0028-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start and opening hours\nConway reset the race track lap record on the fourth lap with a 3 minutes, 17.297 seconds time to lead his teammate Buemi by 15.5 seconds. At the close of the hour, Garc\u00eda, in Corvette's No. 63 car, took the lead of LMGTE Pro from Nicki Thiim's No. 95 Aston Martin on the inside before Indianapolis corner, as Lapierre and Fisichella moved to the front of LMP2 and LMGTE Am on pit stop rotation respectively. Senna's No. 1 Rebellion was forced to drive slowly to the pit lane to replace a puncture and the car fell down the race order.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start and opening hours\nIn the second hour, Conway continued to pull away from his teammate Buemi. Vergne ran in clear air to be less than a second behind Lapierre's LMP2 leading No. 36 Signatech car. Spirit of Race's No. 54 Ferrari, now driven by Thomas Flohr in lieu of Fisichella, relinquished its lead of LMGTE Am to Andlauer's No. 77 Dempsey-Proton Porsche and was behind Jeroen Bleekemolen's No. 85 Keating Ford after a second sequence of pit stops.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0029-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start and opening hours\nA full course yellow flag was activated 3 hours, 42 minutes in after the left-front tyre was punctured on de Vries' Racing Team Nederland Dallara car. This moved Gonz\u00e1lez's No. 31 DragonSpeed vehicle to third in LMP2 which he later lost to King's No. 37 Jackie Chan car at Mulsanne Corner. Job van Uitert's G-Drive entry, which had taken the lead of LMP2 from Lapierre's Signatech car, incurred a ten-second stop-and-go penalty taken at its next pit stop because his co-driver Vergne was observed speeding during the full course yellow flag. Van Uitert recovered the lost time he had lost in the pit lane and retook the lead from the Signatech car, now driven by Pierre Thiriet, into the first Mulsanne Straight chicane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 776]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start and opening hours\nThe LMGTE Pro class lead became a multi-car battle between representatives of four of the five manufacturers, with the first five positions separated by less than ten seconds. During the fifth hour, Berthon's No. 3 car fell behind the SMP duo of Aleshin and Sergey Sirotkin because of a two-minute pit stop. Further down the field, Daniel Serra's No. 51 AF Corse Ferrari passed Rockenfeller's LMGTE Pro class-leading No. 63 Corvette.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0030-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start and opening hours\nPorsche sought to conserve tyre wear and fuel usage rather than challenge for the lead in LMGTE Pro, promoting Laurens Vanthoor's No. 92 Porsche to the class lead from Serra on pit stop strategy. Felipe Fraga's No. 85 Keating car overtook Christian Ried's No. 77 Dempsey-Proton Porsche to lead LMGTE Am. Not long after, John Farano crashed the No. 43 RLR MSport car at Tetre Rouge corner and the safety cars were deployed to slow the race. When racing resumed, Andr\u00e9 Negr\u00e3o's Signatech car overtook Roman Rusinov's G-Drive car into the second Mulsanne Straight chicane for the LMP2 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start and opening hours\nSerra duelled Vanthoor and retook the lead of LMGTE Pro into Indianapolis corner. Earl Bamber moved the No. 93 Porsche past Rockenfeller for third in class. Shortly after, the right-rear corner of Marcel F\u00e4ssler's No. 64 Corvette and the left-front corner of Satoshi Hoshino's No. 88 Dempsey-Proton Porsche made contact in slower traffic in the Porsche Curves. F\u00e4ssler veered into an outside concrete barrier and his car was retired due to heavy damage. Hoshino brought his car into the garage for repairs to its front but it was later retired for safety reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0031-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start and opening hours\nF\u00e4ssler was unhurt and FIA personnel performed a precautionary CT scan on him at the circuit's medical centre. The safety cars were required once again as track marshals worked for 16 minutes to clear debris. As the safety cars were recalled, the gap to L\u00f3pez and Nakajima had fallen to ten seconds and Bleekemolen had extended the lead over Jeff Segal's No. 84 JMW Ferrari in LMGTE Am to three minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Sunset to night\nAt the start of the seventh hour, Laurent's No. 3 Rebellion overtook Aleshin's No. 11 SMP car on the outside in the Porsche Curves for third. Light rain began to fall soon after, catching out Laurent who spun after braking for the second Mulsanne Straight chicane and veered right into a barrier. The impact removed the front bodywork from the No. 3 Rebellion and a small chunk landed on the No. 11 SMP vehicle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0032-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Sunset to night\nThe accident led to a third safety car intervention to clear debris, during which repairs to the No. 3 Rebellion car took 3 minutes, 38 seconds, later rejoining in fifth position, behind the SMP entries. After racing resumed, L\u00f3pez used slower traffic through the second Mulsanne Straight chicane to pass his teammate Nakajima for the overall lead. The lead of LMGTE Pro changed to Estre's No. 92 Porsche from Alessandro Pier Guidi's No. 51 AF Corse Ferrari after a sequence of pit stops.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0032-0002", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Sunset to night\nIn LMP2, Vergne used his newer tyres to reclaim the lead of the class from Negr\u00e3o into Indianapolis corner. L\u00f3pez was forced to relinquish the overall lead to Nakajima in the eighth hour when he ran wide into the Mulsanne corner gravel trap. Garc\u00eda's No. 63 Corvette took second place in LMGTE Pro with successive passes on Tincknell's No. 67 Ford and Per Guidi's No. 51 Ferrari on the outside at Indianapolis corner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Sunset to night\nConway's No. 7 Toyota retook the race lead from Buemi's No. 8 after pit stops. James Calado moved the No. 51 AF Corse Ferrari past Christensen's No. 92 Porsche for the LMGTE Pro lead during the ninth hour. Wei Lu lost control of the No. 84 JMW Ferrari at the second Mulsanne Straight chicane but continued without losing second position in LMGTE Am. During hour ten, Lynn damaged the No. 97 Aston Martin's spoiler in the Porsche Curves and a local slow zone was employed to check for damage to the barriers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0033-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Sunset to night\nLynn returned to the pit lane and the car rejoined the race after half an hour of repairs. Not long after, S\u00f8rensen's No. 95 Aston Martin spun across a gravel trap and sustained heavy rear-end damage in an impact against the barrier at Indianapolis turn. Safety cars were required for the fourth time and caused the lead of multiple classes to grow. Conway increased his lead over Buemi to more than a minute and Van Uitert's G-Drive car was 1 minute, 21 seconds ahead of Thiriet's Signatech entry. The safety cars separated the LMGTE Pro field, leaving the No. 51 Ferrari and the No. 92 Porsche one minute ahead of the No. 93 Porsche, which passed the No. 63 Corvette for third in class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Sunset to night\nOrudzhev's third-placed SMP BR1 lost control on the exit to the Porsche Curves and crashed rearward into an outside tyre barrier at high speed. He was unhurt; the accident necessitated the car's retirement and a fifth safety car period. During the slow period, Conway relinquished the lead to his teammate Buemi because he made a pit stop and was required to stop at the exit of the pit lane until the nearest safety car passed by.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0034-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Sunset to night\nAfter the safety cars were withdrawn, Berthon's No. 3 Rebellion vehicle took third overall, while the lead of LMGTE Pro switched from Serra's No. 51 AF Corse Ferrari to Vanthoor's No. 92 Porsche. As the race approached its halfway point, Kobayashi relieved Conway in the No. 7 Toyota and a faster pit stop than Buemi returned him to the overall lead. Henning Enqvist went wide at Indianapolis corner and crashed the No. 49 ARC Bratislava Ligier car against a tyre barrier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0034-0002", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Sunset to night\nThe car was extricated from a gravel trap by a crane before he crashed for a second time, against an outside barrier entering the Porsche Curves. The damage to the car's front-right bodywork forced its retirement and the sixth deployment of the safety cars until the close of the 12th hour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Sunset to night\nWhen racing resumed, the two Toyota cars were less than two seconds from each other and Estre's lead over Serra in LMGTE Pro fell to 2.2 seconds. The No. 92 Porsche subsequently entered the garage for repairs to a defective exhaust system and a change of brakes. Repairs took 20 minutes to complete and Estre resumed in ninth position in LMGTE Pro. Serra's No. 51 Ferrari retook the lead of LMGTE Pro 90 seconds ahead of the No. 93 and No. 91 Porsches of Tandy and Bruni.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0035-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Sunset to night\nThe No. 4 ByKolles CLM P1/01 car of Tom Dillmann stopped after Arnage corner with a broken gear selection mechanism that necessitated its retirement, requiring a slow zone extending to the exit of the Porsche Curves as the car was extricated by recovery vehicles to behind a trackside wall. Kobayashi increased the No. 7 Toyota's lead over Alonso to more than a minute due to minor underbody damage to the No. 8 car. The two lead Porsche cars in LMGTE Pro drew to near half a minute behind Pier Guidi's Ferrari.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nIn the early morning, some LMGTE cars took the opportunity to change brake discs to ensure that they completed the race. Michael Wainwright crashed the No. 86 Gulf Porsche against a wall at Indianapolis corner and Sergio Pianezzola's No. 60 Kessel Racing Ferrari got beached in a gravel trap in the Porsche Curves at the same time. Both incidents promoted the activation of a full course yellow flag procedure. Recovery by track marshals allowed both cars to return to the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0036-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nKobayashi and later L\u00f3pez extended the lead over their teammates Alonso and then Buemi to 1 minute and 20 seconds. Calado's LMGTE Pro leading No. 51 car made a scheduled pit stop and ceded the class lead to Lietz's No. 91 Porsche as Serra relieved him. Not long after, Maldonado lost control of DragonSpeed's No. 31 car leaving Tetre Rouge corner and hit a barrier frontward. Maldonado was unhurt but the damage to the car necessitated its retirement. The safety cars were deployed for more than half an hour. Serra was able to retake the lead of LMGTE Pro with a one-minute lead because the three cars ahead of him made pit stops and were required to stop at the exit of the pit lane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nAfter the safety cars were withdrawn, Ben Keating's Ford ran into a gravel trap at the first Mulsanne Straight chicane, from which he escaped without damage to the car and retained the lead of LMGTE Am. Menezes' No. 3 Rebellion car incurred a three-minute stop-and-go penalty for a procedural error on the team's usage of tyre compounds, promoting Vandoorne's No. 11 SMP car to third overall. Just after Menezes rejoined the race, he spun into a gravel trap in the Porsche Curves and returned to the garage after vehicular assistance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0037-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\n17 hours and 25 minutes in, Tung's No. 38 Jackie Chan car slowed with a puncture and returned to the pit lane to retain third position in LMP2 from Fran\u00e7ois Perrodo's No. 28 TDS car. The G-Drive team continued to lead in LMP2 until Rusinov relinquished the position it had held for 171 consecutive laps to the Signatech car, when he could not start the car due to a starter motor problem that required the removal of the rear bodywork covering its engine. The team lost 20 minutes in the garage and four laps to fall to seventh in class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nTwo lengthy pit stops to rectify braking issues on Berthon's No. 3 Rebellion car dropped him to sixth and elevated the LMP2 leading Signatech car of Lapierre to fifth overall. In LMGTE Pro, diverging strategies for AF Corse's No. 51 Ferrari and the No. 63 Corvette created a difference of around five laps between both cars and changed the category lead several times. De Vries' Racing Team Nederland Dallara car had a straightline crash against a barrier on the entry to Indianapolis corner due to a possible broken right-front suspension arm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0038-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nIt damaged the car's front bodywork and de Vries required repairs in the garage. The safety cars were deployed for the eighth time as track marshals took 25 minutes to clear debris. In LMGTE Pro, the safety cars had again separated the field, leaving Calado's No. 51 Ferrari three minutes ahead of Jan Magnussen's No. 63 Corvette after the latter made a pit stop and had to stop at the exit to the pit lane. After the safety cars were recalled, Magnussen spun and damaged the left-front corner of his car in the Porsche Curves. Repairs in the garage lasted six minutes and he returned to the circuit eighth in LMGTE Pro. The crash elevated the No. 91 and No. 93 Porsche cars of Lietz and Tandy to second and third in class and provided Calado with a 11\u20442 minute lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 826]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Finish\nAlmost 23 hours into the event, the race leading No. 7 Toyota of L\u00f3pez slowed on course due to a wiring fault with the antenna on the car's tyre pressure sensor system, which indicated to the team that it had a front-right puncture. As it occurred late on the track, he was able to make a pit stop; Toyota switched only one tyre to lessen the time lost in the pit lane. Lopez rejoined the track ahead of Nakajima's No. 8 car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0039-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Finish\nHowever, the sensors on his car continued to notify Toyota that its front-right tyre was punctured, prompting the team to ask an tyre engineer from Michelin, to check its pressure; no issues were discovered. L\u00f3pez yielded the lead that the No. 7 car had held for 191 consecutive laps to Nakajima. Toyota had discussed and decided against invoking team orders to switch the positions of both vehicles. L\u00f3pez entered the pit lane for a second time to replace all four tyres. It transpired that the left-rear tyre was the punctured wheel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Finish\nNakajima achieved victory for the No. 8 Toyota, completing 385 laps, 16.972 seconds ahead of the No. 7 car. SMP, unable to equal Toyota's pace, were six laps behind in third position with its No. 11 car. The Rebellion team were fourth and fifth with the No. 1 and No. 3 entries. It was Alonso, Buemi, Nakajima and Toyota's second successive Le Mans win. The trio won the LMP Drivers' Championship; it was Buemi's second endurance championship since 2014, Alonso's third motor racing world championship and Nakajima became the first Japanese driver to win an FIA-sanctioned world title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0040-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Finish\nSignatech's Lapierre, Negr\u00e3o and Thiriet was unchallenged for the rest of the race to win in LMP2, earning the team and drivers the LMP2 Championships and Lapierre his fourth class win. The No. 38 Jackie Chan car finished 2 minutes, 22 seconds later in second position and the TDS team were third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Finish\nOn the 70th anniversary of Ferrari's first overall Le Mans victory, AF Corse won in LMGTE Pro, giving Calado and Guidi their first class victories and Serra's second. The car finished 49 seconds ahead of Porsche's No. 91 entry and its No. 93 car took third in class. Porsche's Christensen and Estre finished tenth in class to win the GTE World Drivers' Championship. The Keating Ford of Bleekemoen, Felipe Fraga and Ben Keating led for 273 consecutive laps in LMGTE Am to finish first in the category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0041-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Finish\nProject 1's Bergmeister, Patrick Lindsey and Egidio Perfetti followed 44 seconds later to finish second in class and win the Endurance Trophy for LMGTE Am Drivers and Teams. JMW's Ferrari completed the class podium in third. There were eleven outright lead changes amongst two cars during the race. The No. 7 Toyota's 339 laps led was the most of any car. The No. 8 Toyota led six times for a total of 46 laps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Post-race\nThe top three teams in each of the four classes appeared on the podium to collect their trophies and spoke to the media in a later press conference. Alonso and Buemi agreed that the No. 7 crew deserved to win the race. Buemi added, \"I was really happy to finish second but what happened to them is really hard. When [the mechanical issues] happened to me and Kazuki in \u201916, it was really hard too. I am really sorry for them. It's motorsport.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0042-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Post-race\nAlonso likened the No. 7 car's issue to its lost win on the final lap in 2016 and him finishing second in the Formula One World Championship three times, \"When you arrive at the last moment and you are unable to finish the job, you feel bad and I feel sad. I feel for my teammates because they are not only teammates but friends as well. They deserve it today.\" L\u00f3pez said that he was emotional driving to the pit lane to replace the Toyota's supposed puncture and that it was painful.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Post-race\nOne day after the event, the FIA imposed a penalty of 55.2 seconds on the LMGTE Am winning No. 85 Keating Ford for transgressing a regulation that dictated the minimum refuelling time at a pit stop be no less than 45 seconds. ACO scrutineers discovered that the car's refuelling pit stops were completed in 44.4 seconds, with a discrepancy of six-tenths of a second multiplied by its 23 pit stops, and further multiplied by four to give a number of 55.2 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0043-0001", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Post-race\nThe car was later disqualified because its fuel tank was discovered to be 0.1\u00a0l (0.022\u00a0imp\u00a0gal; 0.026\u00a0US\u00a0gal) more than the LMGTE Am maximum mandated capacity of 96\u00a0l (21\u00a0imp\u00a0gal; 25\u00a0US\u00a0gal). Keating Motorsports did not appeal the disqualification. The No. 59 Project 1 Porsche was promoted to the class victory, the No. 84 JMW Ferrari to second and the No. 62 WeatherTech Ferrari to third. Keating stated that a rubber bladder inside a fuel cell expanded by 0.4\u00a0l (0.088\u00a0imp\u00a0gal; 0.11\u00a0US\u00a0gal) during the race and the team's refuelling rig was made more efficient by six-tenths of a second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Post-race\nThe stewards deemed F\u00e4ssler responsible for the accident between the No. 64 Corvette and the No. 88 Dempsey-Proton Porsche in the Porsche Curves and issued a fine of \u20ac7,000 and six penalty points were added to his race licence. His co-driver, Oliver Gavin, said that Hoshino put F\u00e4ssler in a position to hit the barrier by unexpectedly changing his direction after allowing faster cars to pass him and called for such manoeuvres to be reviewed. Vergne said he felt disappointed due to his car's unreliability and noted that made the race interesting. Estre stated his belief that the No. 92 Porsche team could have challenged for the victory in LMGTE Pro had car issues not intervened.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Post-race\nThe role of the safety cars affecting LMGTE Pro received a mixed response. Andy Priaulx of the Ford team stated that the safety cars should have been used to close up the field, \"If you\u2019ve just pitted, which we needed to pit, it just messes it up so much. It just neutralizes the race and then you end up with this huge separation. For the second year in a row, it's kind of taken away the spectacle at the end.\" Lietz stated his belief that all of the safety car periods were correctly deployed for safety reasons. The Corvette Racing team manager, Ben Johnson, said he was unsure why some safety car periods were deployed in lieu of full course yellow flags to slow the race and called for clarity on when to use the procedure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Post-race\nAlonso, Buemi and Nakajima took the LMP Drivers' Championship with 198 points. They were 41 points ahead of their teammates Conway, Kobayashi and L\u00f3pez in second position. Laurent and Menezes followed in third place with 114 points, ahead of Aleshin and Petrov in fourth with 94 points and Neel Jani and Lotterer in fifth with 91 points. With 155 points, Estre and Christensen won the GTE Drivers' Championship, 181\u20442 ahead of Calado and Pier Guidi in second. Bruni and Lietz followed in third position with 131 points and Tincknell and Priaulx were fourth with 90 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286901-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, Post-race, Race classification\nThe minimum number of laps for classification (70 per cent of the overall winning car's race distance) was 270 laps. Class winners are in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286902-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of N\u00fcrburgring\nThe 2019 ADAC 24 Hours of N\u00fcrburgring was the 47th running of the 24 Hours of N\u00fcrburgring. It took place over 20\u201323 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286902-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of N\u00fcrburgring\nThe Phoenix Racing team won the race in an Audi R8 LMS Evo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286903-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Spa\nThe 2019 Total Spa 24 Hours was the 71st running of the Spa 24 Hours endurance race. It was also the fourth round of the 2019 Blancpain GT Series Endurance Cup and was held on 27 and 28 July at the Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, Belgium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286903-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Spa\nThe race was won by GPX Racing and drivers Kevin Estre , Michael Christensen and Richard Lietz. The trio's No. 20 Porsche 911 GT3 R finished only by 3.347 of Rowe Racing and their No. 998 Porsche 911 GT3 R driven by Nick Tandy, Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Makowiecki and Patrick Pilet. Third place went to the #4 Mercedes-AMG Team Black Falcon Mercedes-AMG GT3 shared by Maro Engel, Yelmer Buurman and Luca Stolz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286903-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 24 Hours of Spa, Entry List\nThe following drivers attended the 2019 24 Hours of Spa:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286904-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 24H GT Series\nThe 2019 24H GT Series powered by Hankook is the fifth season of the 24H Series with drivers battling for championship points and titles and the eleventh season since Creventic, the organiser and promoter of the series, organised multiple races a year. The races are contested with GT3-spec cars, GT4-spec cars, sports cars and 24H-Specials, like silhouette cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286905-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 24H Middle East Series\nThe 2019 24H Middle East Series is the first season of the 24H Middle East Series, presented by Creventic. The races are contested with GT3-spec cars, GT4-spec cars, 24H-Specials cars, along with LMP2 cars, LMP3 cars and Group CN prototype cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286906-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 24H TCE Series\nThe 2019 24H Touring Car Endurance Series powered by Hankook was the fourth season of the Touring Car Endurance Series (TCES). Creventic is the organiser and promoter of the series. The races will be contested with touring cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286907-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 3. divisjon\nThe 2019 3. divisjon (referred to as Norsk Tipping-ligaen for sponsorship reasons) is a fourth-tier Norwegian football league season. The league consists of 84 teams divided into 6 groups of 14 teams each and began on 13 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286907-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 3. divisjon\nThe league is played as a double round-robin tournament, where all teams play 26 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286907-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 3. divisjon, Team changes\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2018 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286908-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Shanghai\nThe 2019 4 Hours of Shanghai was an endurance sportscar racing event held on 10 November 2019, as the third round of the 2019-20 FIA World Endurance Championship. This was the inaugural running of the race, in a four-hour format, having previously been run as the 6 Hours of Shanghai. The race was won overall by Bruno Senna, Gustavo Menezes, and Norman Nato, in the #1 Rebellion Racing Rebellion R13, with the race being the first win on the road for a non hybrid LMP1 since the first ever WEC race, the 2012 12 Hours of Sebring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286908-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Shanghai, Background\nThe provisional calendar for the 2019\u201320 FIA World Endurance Championship was unveiled at the 2018 6 Hours of Silverstone, featuring eight races, on five continents, starting at Silverstone in September 2019 with a four-hour race, and ending with the Le Mans 24 Hours in June 2020. It was noted that for first time in the FIA World Endurance Championship, 4 hour races would be introduced, at the Silverstone Circuit, and the Shanghai International Circuit, following a fan survey which was conducted by the championship despite an overwhelming preference being shown for 6 hour, 12 hour, and 24 hour races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286908-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Shanghai, Entry list\nThe entry list for the race was released on 10 October 2019, with 31 cars being split across the four classes. All five full-season LMP1 entries were listed, alongside 8 LMP2s, 6 GTE-Pro cars, and 12 cars in GTE-Am, with GTE Am having the #78 Proton Competition Porsche 911 RSR as an additional entry. Majority of the driving seats were displayed as being filled, with the exception of both Team LNT Ginetta G60-LT-P1s, which had no drivers, and the #88 Dempsey-Proton Racing, which had 2 empty seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286908-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Shanghai, Entry list\nA 2nd entry list was released on 23 October 2019, with the Team LNT Ginetta seats being filled, with all drivers from the previous race returning, with the exception of Luca Ghiotto, who was replaced by Jordan King. On November 7, 2019, Will Bamber was announced to be driving in the #88 Dempsey-Proton Racing, alongside Thomas Preining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286908-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Shanghai, Qualifying, Qualifying Results\nPole position winners in each class are marked in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286908-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Shanghai, Race, Race Result\nThe minimum number of laps for classification (70% of the overall winning car's race distance) was 88 laps. Class winners in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone\nThe 2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, officially known as the 2019 WEC 4 Hours of Silverstone was an endurance sportscar racing event held on 1 September 2019, as the opening round of the 2019-20 FIA World Endurance Championship. This was the inaugural running of the race, in a 4 hours format, having previously been run as the 6 Hours of Silverstone. The race was won overall by Mike Conway, Kamui Kobayashi, and Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda L\u00f3pez, in the #7 Toyota TS050 Hybrid run by Toyota Gazoo Racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Background\nThe provisional calendar for the 2019\u201320 FIA World Endurance Championship was unveiled at the 2018 6 Hours of Silverstone, featuring eight races, on five continents, starting at Silverstone in September 2019 with a four-hour race, and ending with the Le Mans 24 Hours in June 2020. It was noted that for first time in the FIA World Endurance Championship, 4 hour races would be introduced, at the Silverstone Circuit, and the Shanghai International Circuit, following a fan survey which was conducted by the championship despite overwhelming preference shown for 6 hour, 12 hour, and 24 hour races. The race would mark the return of Goodyear to international motorsports, with the Goodyear brand replacing Dunlop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Entry List\nThe initial entry list for the event was released on 17 July 2019, with a total of 30 cars, split across 4 classes initially being set to compete in the event, with Rebellion Racing only entering one of its 2 full-season Rebellion R13 LMP1 cars. The final entry list for the event, which saw majority of the available seats filled, and was updated just ahead of the event saw the number of cars increase to 31, following the addition of a second car for Rebellion Racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Entry List\nThis final entry list saw a number of changes, with Pastor Maldonado withdrawing from the #38 Jota car, and being replaced by Ant\u00f3nio F\u00e9lix da Costa, Porsche Carrera Cup regular David Kolkmann being drafted to replace David Heinemeier Hansson in the #56 Team Project 1 car, former Audi works LMP1 driver Oliver Jarvis replacing Chris Dyson in the #6 Team LNT, as well as the withdrawals from the event by Anthony Davidson and Alexandre Coigny due to injuries, leaving the #38 Jota and the #42 Cool Racing Oreca 07s to compete as a 2 driver entry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Qualifying, Qualifying Report\nAs per WEC Regulations, Qualifying on Saturday, held after FP3 was split into 2 different sessions of 20 minutes each, with the first session being held for the LM GTE categories, and the second session being held for the Le Mans Prototype classes. In Qualifying, teams must nominate two drivers from each crew, who must at least set one timed lap in qualifying, with the reference for the starting grid being calculated on the average of the two fastest lap times (one per driver). In an instance where multiple teams set an identical average time, priority is given to the team who set the average earliest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Qualifying, Qualifying Report\nDuring the LMP Qualifying session, in the LMP1 class, the #7 Toyota TS050 piloted by the pair of Mike Conway and Kamui Kobayashi scored pole, with a 1:36.015 Averaged time, almost a second quicker than the previous year's average time, despite the cars now carrying more ballast, due to a new track surface. The #8 Toyota TS050, piloted by the pair of S\u00e9bastien Buemi and Kazuki Nakajima averaged 3 tenths behind the #7, to finish 2nd, while the leading privateer car, the #1 Rebellion R13, piloted by Gustavo Menezes and Bruno Senna averaged almost half a second behind the #7 to finish 3rd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Qualifying, Qualifying Report\nIn the LMP2 class, the #29 Racing Team Nederland Oreca 07, piloted by Giedo van der Garde and Job van Uitert, set an average of 1m37.220s, to go six tenths faster than the 2nd placed #22 United Autosports Oreca 07, which was piloted by Paul di Resta, and Philip Hanson, averaging a 1:41.683 lap time, which meant that Michelin-shod cars scored a 1-2. The highest placed Goodyear-shod team, the #37 Jackie Chan DC Racing piloted by Will Stevens, and Gabriel Aubry would set an average of 1:41.683, enough to earn 3rd on the LMP2 grid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Qualifying, Qualifying Report\nDuring the GTE Qualifying session, in the LMGTE Pro class, the AF Corse team scored a 1-2 in Qualifying, with the cars being over 5 tenths faster than the competition. The #51 Ferrari 488 GTE Evo piloted by Alessandro Pier Guidi and James Calado averaged 1:54.171, a tenth faster than the #71 piloted by Davide Rigon and Miguel Molina, which had a combined average of 1:54.302. The fastest non-Ferrari was the #97 Aston Martin Racing Aston Martin Vantage AMR GTE, which finished 3rd, and was piloted by Alex Lynn and Maxime Martin, who averaged a 1:54.992.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Qualifying, Qualifying Report\nIn the LMGTE Am class, the #90 TF Sport Aston Martin Vantage AMR GTE scored pole in the class, with Charlie Eastwood and Salih Yoluc piloting the car, and achieving an average of 1:56.034. The #56 Team Project 1 car secured P2, with Egidio Perfetti, and Matteo Cairoli at the wheel, setting an average of 1:56.371. The GTE-Am class had the sole qualifying non-starter, with the #57 Team Project 1 suffering from an engine failure towards the end of the third free practice session, that left mechanics scrambling to do an engine replacement, due to a flywheel failure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Qualifying, Post-Qualifying\nPorsche was fined \u20ac25,000 for a Homologation Error, which had been found on the #56 Team Project 1 during post-qualifying scrutineering. Porsche had provided an erratum to update the car\u2019s homologation papers during the WEC pre-season test, The Prologue, and while the erratum was valid on 1 August 2019, Porsche had failed to forward the updated homologation papers or relevant parts to its customer teams. Porsche cited a lack of parts for delivery as its reason for failing to issue the relevant updated parts to the teams, while simultaneously admitting its failure to inform the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de l'Automobile. The team was not penalized, as the issue was judged by the FIA to have been of no fault of the team, with the blame lying squarely with Porsche, and as the car did not gain any performance advantage from not using the updated parts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 916]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Qualifying, Qualifying Results\nPole position winners in each class are marked in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Race, Race Report\nAt the start of the race, following the rolling start, Mike Conway in the #7 TS050 Hybrid led the field, ahead of S\u00e9bastien Buemi, in the sister #8 car, with the two Toyota TS050 Hybrids remaining ahead of the field for the first 30 minutes of the race. This was in spite of a safety car being brought out, due to the #22 United Autosports stopping on track with an electronics failure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Race, Race Report\nThis lead would later be disrupted when a Full Course Yellow period occurred 30 minutes into the season-opening race, which was caused by the #6 Team LNT Ginetta G60-LT-P1 losing its right rear wheel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0010-0002", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Race, Race Report\nBoth Rebellion R13s, which were running third and fourth, pitted immediately as the yellow flags were raised, while the Toyotas waited until later in the intervention to come in, with the delayed pit stops costing Toyota GAZOO Racing the lead, as the Full Course Yellow was lifted when both cars pitted, easily handing the Rebellion Racing team a 1-2, with Bruno Senna in the #1 leading from Lo\u00efc Duval in the #3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0010-0003", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Race, Race Report\nThe Rebellion Racing 1-2 would not last long however, as the pace of the Rebellions were not match for that of the Toyota Hybrids, as S\u00e9bastien Buemi would swiftly overtake both Rebellions before the end of the first hour. Buemi in the #8 would later lead the Toyota 1-2, as Conway's #7 car fell behind in the pits. Conway would later overtake both Rebellions before he and Buemi opened up a commanding 30-second gap at the head of the field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0010-0004", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Race, Race Report\nTowards the end of the 1st hour, the #5 Ginetta G60-LT-P1 would fall off the lead lap, while the sister #6 found itself plagued by trouble, with the loss of the rear wheel causing the first Full Course Yellow, and a later collision with the #71 AF Corse Ferrari 488 GTE bringing out the second safety car, with the collision taking the Ferrari out of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Race, Race Report\nRainfall during the second hour would slightly close the gap between the hybrid-powered Toyotas and the non-hybrid Rebellions, after Toyota elected to delay its switch to wet tires. However, this would do little to reduce the gap, due to the sheer pace of the Toyotas when fitted with wets; a good pitstop for the #3, put new driver Pipo Derani in the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Race, Race Report\nThis lead however, would just last a mere six turns, with Kobayashi swiftly overtaking Derani in the #7 Toyota on the approach to Brooklands, using the Hybrid power to exit the corner ahead of Derani, while Hartley soon followed suit in the sister car. Norman Nato in the #1 Rebellion went for a pit stop but locked up the wheels when stopping, with the car skidding on its slicks, in the wet pitlane, hitting 3 crew members, with one of them hospitalised for a broken toe, and the car suffering damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0011-0002", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Race, Race Report\nIn the LMP2 Category, the #29 Racing Team Nederland Oreca 07 held a commanding lead at the 2 hours mark, following a great stint by Giedo van der Garde, with Job van Uitert building upon the lead built by his teammate's earlier stint, conquering the wet conditions. In the LM GTE Pro category, the Porsche GT Team held a 1-2 in the GTE-Pro class with Michael Christensen leading from Richard Lietz, while Maxime Martin sat third in the No. 97 Aston Martin Vantage AMR GTE. In the LM GTE Am class, the #56 Team Project 1 Porsche 911 RSR led the field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Race, Race Report\nIn the third hour, Hartley received a call from the team to allow Kobayashi by, with the Kiwi doing so at Brooklands. This order would remain throughout the race, even as the two cars pitted for the final driver swap, which saw Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda L\u00f3pez take the wheel of the #7, and Kazuki Nakajima receiving the #8. The pair would retain this order in a controlled fashion until the finish, separated by a 1.901-second gap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Race, Race Report\nRebellion Racing would ultimately finish on third step of the podium with the #3 R13, while the sister car, #1 had a late power steering failure 10 minutes from the end, that saw the car spend time in the garage, paired with a puncture earlier in the race, saw it finish in 10th overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0012-0002", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Race, Race Report\nThe #5 Team LNT Ginetta G60-LT-P1 would finish 4th, with the car having entered the gravel trap at one point mid race, and the car finishing 5 laps down, on the LMP2 lead lap, overtaking the #42 Cool Racing Oreca in the closing stages of the race. In LMP2, the class winner, the #42 Cool Racing car finished 5th overall, taking advantage of the early dramas in the race, and overcoming the handicap of a drive-through penalty to finish 5 laps down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0012-0003", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Race, Race Report\nThe #36 Signatech Alpine Oreca would finish 2nd, taking advantage of a missing gear on the #29 Racing Team Nederland in the closing laps, in a rather eventful race for the #29, even splitting the Ginettas in the early stages of the race, with the car holding a commanding lead in the initial stages in the LMP2 class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Race, Race Report\nIn the LM GTE Categories, in the GTE Pro class, the Porsche GT Team scored a 1-2, on the debut of the Porsche 911 RSR-19, with the pairing of Gianmaria Bruni and Richard Lietz in the #91 car leading the 1-2 finish, capitalizing on the troubles of the AF Corse Ferrari 488 GTE Evos, which had dominated qualifying the previous day. The #71 car retired after a clash with the #6 Ginetta G60-LT-P1, while the #51 was given a drive-through penalty for overtaking under a safety car, when leading the GTE Pro race, which allowed Porsche to regain a 1-2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Race, Race Report\nThe Drive Through assigned to the #51 was cancelled after it was served because stewards realized they made a mistake and the Ferrari did not made an infraction under the safety car regime. The Ferrari was denied by a victory chance and finish in 4th. Aston Martin Racing finished 3rd with the #97 entry, driven by Maxime Martin and Alex Lynn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0013-0002", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Race, Race Report\nThe #83 AF Corse 488 GTE Evo would win the GTE Am class, with the car shining from the competitors in what was a race of uncertainty, with the trio of Niklas Nielsen, Emmanuel Collard and Francois Perrodo performing brilliantly throughout the race, to bring the car to a win on its debut in the GTE Am class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Race, Post Race\nFollowing the race, Rebellion Racing announced that the #3 would not contest the remaining flyaway WEC races, and would likely only return at the 2020 6 Hours of Spa Francorchamps, with Rebellion CEO Calim Bouhadra citing budget and logistical reasons, and saying that the last-minute decision to run the second car at Silverstone resulted in the drastic measure of having to stop its Japan-bound sea freight, while in Greece in order to retrieve sufficient parts to run both cars for the season opening race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0014-0001", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Race, Post Race\nRace winner Mike Conway expressed his surprise at the lack of a challenge from Rebellion Racing, due to the sheer pace the cars had demonstrated in Free Practice, against Toyota\u2019s expectations going into the race, which were that Rebellion could likely challenge on outright pace, even if the non-hybrid cars\u2019 strength only fully came in traffic-free conditions, where the Toyotas would lose their Hybrid power advantages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Race, Post Race\nFerrari and Aston Martin Racing later expressed their displeasure with the race control, due to drive through penalties, which were later rescinded mid-race, after they had already been served, with Ferrari Competizioni GT technical director Ferdinando Cannizzo saying that it had effectively ended Ferrari's chances of victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286909-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, Race, Race Result\nThe minimum number of laps for classification (70% of the overall winning car's race distance) was 90 laps. Class winners in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286910-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 4. divisjon\nThe 2019 season of the 4. divisjon, the fifth highest association football league for men in Norway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286910-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 4. divisjon\nBetween 16 and 26 games (depending on group size) are played in 24 groups, with 3 points given for wins and 1 for draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286910-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 4. divisjon\nAccording to a proposal at the 2018 Football Convention, fewer teams would be relegated from the 2019 3. divisjon to the 2020 4. divisjon, and accordingly, fewer teams would be promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286910-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 4. divisjon\nThe groups affected would be the group 1 and 9 winners who would contest a single promotion spot; the group 2\u20134 winners who would contest two promotion spots; the group 6 and 7 winners who would contest a single promotion spot; the group 8 and 10 winners who would contest a single promotion spot; the group 17 and 18 winners who would contest a single promotion spot; and the group 21 and 22 winners who would contest a single promotion spot. The playoff between the group 21 and 22 winners was cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji\nThe 2019 6 Hours of Fuji was an endurance sports car race held on the 6th of October 2019, at the Fuji Speedway. It was the 2nd round of the 2019-20 FIA World Endurance Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji\nThe race was won overall by the #8 Toyota Gazoo Racing Toyota TS050 Hybrid, driven by Brendon Hartley, S\u00e9bastien Buemi, and Kazuki Nakajima, who had started from pole position. The #8 Toyota won the race in a dominant fashion, taking advantage of the reduced success handicap, compared to the sister #7 car, which had won the season opening round at Silverstone. In the Le Mans Prototype LMP2 class, the race was won by the #29 Oreca 07, run by Racing Team Nederland, and driven by Giedo van der Garde, Frits van Eerd and Nyck de Vries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji\nIn the LMGTE Pro class, the #95 Aston Martin Vantage GTE, run by Aston Martin Racing, and driven by Marco S\u00f8rensen and Nicki Thiim emerged victorious, after the duo dominated the second half of the race, to finish 1 lap ahead of the second placed #92 Porsche 911 RSR-19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji\nIn the LMGTE Am class, the #90 Aston Martin Vantage GTE, run by TF Sport, and driven by Jonathan Adam, Charlie Eastwood and Salih Yolu\u00e7 secured the race victory in a dominant fashion, the pole sitting car holding the lead from start to finish, with the trio managing to maintain a gap exceeding 30 seconds to the 2nd placed car throughout the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Entry List\nA provisional entry list was released on 5 September 2019, with the number of cars entered shrinking from 31 cars to 30 cars, due to the absence of the #3 Rebellion R13 which had been entered on a race-by-race basis, and was not entered for the flyaway rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Entry List\nAnthony Davidson and Alexandre Coigny returned to the championship, after both drivers withdrew from Silverstone due to injuries sustained, while Paul Di Resta will be replaced by Oliver Jarvis in the #22 United Autosports, as a result of Di Resta's DTM commitments with R-Motorsport. David Heinemeier Hansson, who missed Silverstone for the birth of his child, returns to the #56 Team Project 1, having been replaced by David Kolkmann in the No. 56 Porsche the previous round. A final entry list was later released on 19 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Balance of Performance and Success Ballast Changes\nThe success handicap system, which was just introduced to the WEC this season is a way of balancing the top prototype class, following the domination of Toyota the previous season, and operates on a formula based on a coefficient factor of 0.008, which when multiplied by the length of the circuit and the points difference to the last-placed LMP1 car, is used to generate a handicap of seconds per lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 72], "content_span": [73, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Balance of Performance and Success Ballast Changes, LMP1\nThe #7 Toyota TS050 Hybrid of Mike Conway, Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda L\u00f3pez and Kamui Kobayashi, which had emerged victorious at the 4 Hours of Silverstone season-opener would be made 1.4 seconds slower per lap at the 6 Hours of Fuji. The changes to slow down the car include reducing the deployable amount of hybrid power the per lap, and the rate of fuel burn, although its minimum weight of 932\u00a0kg will be retained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 78], "content_span": [79, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Balance of Performance and Success Ballast Changes, LMP1\nThe sister #8 car will also be slowed down, albeit by 1 second slower per lap, and 9.5 percent more hybrid energy available to it compared to its sister car. The #5 Ginetta G60-LT-P1 finished fourth overall at Silverstone and will therefore be made 0.66 seconds slower per lap, although it would receive the 3rd largest performance hit, due to the absence of the #3 Rebellion R13, which was entered on a race-by-race basis, and had scored 3rd overall. The #5 would receive a weight gain of 34\u00a0kg, with the weight increasing from 833\u00a0kg to 867\u00a0kg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 78], "content_span": [79, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0007-0002", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Balance of Performance and Success Ballast Changes, LMP1\nThe #1 Rebellion, which finished tenth overall and fourth-best out of the points-scoring LMP1s, will be slowed by 0.03s per lap. Only the #6 Ginetta will be unaffected by any Success handicap, as being the last car to finish in the class, it is used as a reference for the other handicaps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 78], "content_span": [79, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Balance of Performance and Success Ballast Changes, GTE Am\nAll cars in the class now have their base weight reduced by 20\u00a0kg, and will have ballast added from the new base weight. The class-winning #83 AF Corse Ferrari 488 GTE Evo of Emmanuel Collard, Francois Perrodo and Niklas Nielsen has earned the largest weight penalty, receiving a total 30\u00a0kg worth of ballast, with 15\u00a0kg for winning the race and 15\u00a0kg for leading the championship. The same rule has also been applied to the GTE Am podium finishers, with the 2nd placed #98 Aston Martin Vantage GTE and #70 MR Racing Ferrari 488 GTE set to run with a total of 20\u00a0kg and 10\u00a0kg of ballast in Fuji, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 80], "content_span": [81, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Qualifying, Qualifying Report\nAs per WEC Regulations, Qualifying on Saturday, held after FP3 was split into 2 different sessions of 20 minutes each, with the first session being held for the LM GTE categories, and the second session being held for the Le Mans Prototype classes. In Qualifying, teams must nominate two drivers from each crew, who must at least set one timed lap in qualifying, with the reference for the starting grid being calculated on the average of the two fastest lap times (one per driver). In an instance where multiple teams set an identical average time, priority is given to the team who set the average earliest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 51], "content_span": [52, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Qualifying, Qualifying Report\nDuring the LMP Qualifying Session, in the LMP1 class, the #8 Toyota TS050 Hybrid of Brendon Hartley, and Kazuki Nakajima scored pole position, finishing the session with an average time of 1:25.013, 0.79s clear of the sister #7 car, piloted by Kamui Kobayashi and Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda L\u00f3pez, with Nakajima beating Lopez by 0.8s in their first runs, while Hartley lapped over seven-tenths quicker than Kobayashi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 51], "content_span": [52, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Qualifying, Qualifying Report\nWhile Kobayashi had originally been quicker than Hartley, due to a spin by Charlie Robertson, in the #6 Team LNT Ginetta G60-LT-P1,a red flag was brought out towards the end of the session, resulting in Kobayashi's best lap time being deleted. The #6 Ginetta had originally qualified 3rd, due to Simpson's effort, but due to Robertson's spin causing him to be unable to set a lap, the car was shuffled to the back of the LMP1 grid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 51], "content_span": [52, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0010-0002", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Qualifying, Qualifying Report\nIn 3rd place, and first of the privateer LMP1s, the sole #1 Rebellion R13 set an average time of 1:26.163, with Gustavo Menezes and Norman Nato 1.15 seconds behind the #8 Toyota in the lead. The #5 Ginetta would qualify 4th, with a 1:26:820 average set by Ben Hanley and Egor Orudzhev.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 51], "content_span": [52, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Qualifying, Qualifying Report\nIn LMP2, the #37 Jackie Chan DC Racing Oreca would score pole position, its first of the season, and the first-ever WEC pole position for Goodyear with Gabriel Aubry and Ho-Pin Tung setting an average of 1:29.302. Goodyear had looked set to take a front-row lockout, with the sister #38 Jota Sport car of Roberto Gonzalez and Anthony Davidson being in 2nd place during the red flag. However, this 1-2 was disrupted when Filipe Albuquerque set a late lap, bringing the #22 United Autosports car he shared with Philip Hanson to 2nd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 51], "content_span": [52, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Qualifying, Qualifying Report\nIn 4th place was the #33 High Class Racing, with Anders Fjordbach being another driver to set a late lap following the Red Flag, bringing the #33 to 4th, ahead of the #42 Cool Racing, and #36 Signatech Alpine ELF Orecas. The sole non-Oreca car, the #47 Dallara P217 entered by Cetilar Racing finished the session last in the LMP2 class, with an average of 1:31.342", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 51], "content_span": [52, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Qualifying, Qualifying Report\nDuring the GTE Qualifying Session, the LM GTE Pro class, featured yet another tight qualifying session, with all 6 cars in the class separated by just 0.5 seconds. The pairing of Gianmaria Bruni and Richard Lietz in the #91 Porsche 911 RSR-19 set a 1:37.320 average, to score the first pole position for the car, in what was just its second race. The pair narrowly beat the #51 AF Corse Ferrari 488 GTE Evo of the James Calado and Alessandro Pier Guidi, who trailed the pair by just 0.041 seconds, with an average of 1:37.397. The #95 Aston Martin Vantage AMR GTE of Marco S\u00f8rensen and Nicki Thiim set a 1:37.466 to finish in 3rd place, rounding off the top 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 51], "content_span": [52, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Qualifying, Qualifying Report\nIn the LM GTE Am class, the #90 TF Sport Aston Martin Vantage AMR GTE of Jonny Adam and Salih Yoluc scored pole, with an average of 1:38.821, after the original polesitter, the #57 Team Project 1 of Ben Keating and Felipe Fraga was disqualified from the session. The #57 was disqualified due to an issue with regards to Porsche's door quick release system, which was discovered to not be in compliance with the car's homologation form, during post-qualifying scrutineering, which was later revealed to be a missing fixing screw on one of the side doors. As a result, the car was moved to the back of the grid, and the #83 AF Corse Ferrari 488 GTE Evo, which won the previous race, would start second, with the #98 Aston Martin Racing Aston Martin Vantage AMR GTE in third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 51], "content_span": [52, 824]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00286911-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Race, Race Report\nThe first hour of the race saw Toyota Gazoo Racing lead the race with a 1-2, after being split by Rebellion Racing\u2019s Bruno Senna early on. Senna had initially led Kamui Kobayashi in the #7 Toyota for the first 20 minutes, after an opportunistic lunge into Turn 3, successfully holding Kobayashi behind, in the Silverstone-winning Toyota, which had been slapped with a 1.4-second success handicap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Race, Race Report\nThe battle between the #1 Rebellion and the #7 Toyota saw Kobayashi repeatedly accelerate past Senna heading onto the long main straight at Fuji Speedway, only for the Rebellion to draft past the Toyota with its higher top-end speed, towards the end of the straight. The battle cost both drivers time against the sister #8 Toyota of S\u00e9bastien Buemi, who built up a clear advantage in the opening stint, ending hour 1 23 seconds ahead of Kobayashi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0015-0002", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Race, Race Report\nThe #5 Team LNT Ginetta trailed the duelling pair by 20 seconds, with Egor Orudzhev having made a good start, briefly moving up to second with a sweeping move around Senna and Kobayashi into Turn 1, but eventually lost ground in the following corners to the pair. In LMP2, Giedo van der Garde made a swift charge to put the Racing Team Nederland Oreca 07 Gibson into the class lead, from 7th of the 8 LMP2s on the starting grid, eventually holding a commanding 23 second lead over the 2nd placed High Class Racing car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0015-0003", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Race, Race Report\nGTE-Pro saw three changes of the lead in the 1st hour, with pole-sitter Gianmaria Bruni being overtaken by Alessandro Pier Guidi in the #51 Ferrari on lap one, only for Bruni to return to the place once more, diving underneath the Italian into Turn 1 half an hour in, with Marco Sorensen putting the No. 95 Aston Martin Vantage GTE out front later on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0015-0004", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Race, Race Report\nBefore the first round of pit stops took place, Sorensen led Bruni by less than a second, while Maxime Martin was third in the sister Aston Martin, ahead of Bruni\u2019s teammate Kevin Estre and the two AF Corse Ferrari 488 GTE Evos. Salih Yoluc, and the TF Sport Team dominated the opening hour in GTE-Am, with the #90 TF Sport Aston Martin driver working his way into a near half-minute lead. The class triggered a safety car on the first lap, when Satoshi Hoshino careered into the side of the No. 98 Aston Martin Vantage driven by Paul Dalla Lana, at the chicane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Race, Race Report\nFollowing the first hour of the race, in LMP1, the Toyotas built a clear lead ahead of the #1 Rebellion, with the #8 Toyota charging ahead of the sister #7 car. In the fourth hour however, the leading #8 car found its lead reduced, after having picked up a drive-through penalty for speeding in the pit lane, with the drive-through leading to its 50-second advantage over the #7, being trimmed to 24 seconds. This however did not affect the result of the race for the #8, with the car crossing the line 34 seconds ahead of the sister #7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Race, Race Report\nThroughout the race, the impact of the new LMP1 success ballast was visible, with the No. 8 constantly posting quicker lap times than the Silverstone winning #7 across the race. This was also seen on the #1 Rebellion during the early stages of the race, with its much smaller handicap from finishing down the order in Silverstone, which Senna had used to get past Kobayashi, before the #1 faded away during the race. completing the podium, albeit two laps adrift of the #8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0016-0002", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Race, Race Report\nThe 2 Team LNT Ginetta G60-LT-P1s rounded out the LMP1 class order, but finished behind the LMP2 leaders in the overall classification after encountering various issues, with the #5 Ginetta, which finished 16 laps down, making a trip to the garage for repairs after its left-front brake burst on approach to the Turn 1 hairpin. The sister #6 car, meanwhile, would experience a right-rear puncture, before being handed a six-minute stop and hold penalty for a technical infringement in the closing stages of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Race, Race Report\nIn LMP2, Racing Team Nederland squad scored its first WEC LMP2 class win with Nyck de Vries, Giedo van der Garde and Frits van Eerd triumphing in a four-way scrap for the win. The LMP2 race saw multiple lead changes between the Michelin shod Oreca 07s of RTN, against the Goodyear shod Oreca 07s of Jackie Chan DC Racing, Jota Sport and High Class Racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0017-0001", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Race, Race Report\nOn an alternate strategy, the RTN car took the lead in the final hour, as the Jackie Chan DCR and Jota cars pitted for the final time, with De Vries having an additional stop to make later than his Goodyear-shod rivals, but the recently-crowned FIA Formula 2 champion, and the pit crew of RTN performed it quickly, to maintain a six-second gap to Anthony Davidson in the No. 38 Jota Sport car. The 24-year-old then built up a lead of 25 seconds from Davidson, who shared the #38 Jota Sport with Antonio Felix da Costa and Roberto Gonzalez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0017-0002", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Race, Race Report\nJackie Chan DC Racing\u2019s Oreca, also run by the Jota Sport operation, finished third in the hands of Will Stevens, Gabriel Aubry and Ho-Pin Tung. The #37 car had led going into the final hour, but Tung was overtaken by Davidson in the pits. Tung had set the Jackie Chan car into the lead, following well-executed move on High Class Racing's Mark Patterson, who had taken over from Kenta Yamashita. The High Class Racing trio of Patterson, Yamashita and Anders Fjordbach finished fourth, ahead of the No. 22 Oreca of United Autosports. The High Class Racing Oreca had led on various occasions during the race, including the fifth hour when Yamashita out-braked Tung into Turn 1, but the order would become reversed after Yamashita handed over the car over to Patterson at the final driver swap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 832]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Race, Race Report\nIn the LM GTE classes, the Aston Martin Vantage AMR GTE would finish on the top step of the podium, in the hands of Marco S\u00f8rensen and Nicki Thiim for Aston Martin Racing in the GTE-Pro class, whilst Salih Yoluc, Charlie Eastwood and Jonny Adam brought home to TF Sport its inaugural WEC Race win with the 2nd Generation Vantage GTE in GTE-Am.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0018-0001", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Race, Race Report\nIn GTE-Pro, the #95 Aston Martin Vantage GTE would secure its first win since the previous year's 6 Hours of Shanghai, after a controlling second-half display, which followed what had been a busy start to the second round of the championship. Thiim had brought the car to the head of the pack, with a clean dive on his teammate Alex Lynn in the #97 while entering the chicane in the second hour, in what would be the race-deciding move.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0018-0002", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Race, Race Report\nThe #97 duo went on to control the GTE-Pro race, leading throughout the course of two Full Course Yellow periods in the fourth hour to take the win, nearly a full 18 seconds ahead of the 2nd placed #92 Porsche 911 RSR-19 of Kevin Estre and Michael Christensen, while the sister #97 car finished third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Race, Race Report\nThe Aston Martins had been running 1-2 in the middle portion of the race, until Maxime Martin had a wild moment in the braking zone at Turn 1, with his evasive action through the gravel runoff costing him a full 20 seconds to Sorensen, which enabled the #92 Porsche to close in, with Estre then getting ahead shortly, by pitting fully under the first Full Course Yellow, while the #97 Aston Martin didn\u2019t pit under the full duration of the intervention. Upon exiting the pits, Christensen maintained a gap that hovered around 20 seconds until the end of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Race, Race Report\nThe AF Corse Ferraris struggled throughout the race, despite initially posing a challenge for the lead in the early stages, as Alessandro Pier Guidi in the #51 snatched the lead on the opening lap from the pole-sitting #91 Porsche. However, the two AF Corse-run Ferrari 488 GTE Evos fell back significantly after that, with Pier Guidi being passed by both the Porsches and Aston Martins, while the sister #71 spent majority of the race at the back of the class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0020-0001", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Race, Race Report\nThe 2017 GT World Champions, Pier Guidi and Calado ended up finishing fourth, one place ahead of their AF Corse teammates, Davide Rigon and Miguel Molina, with the Ferraris having only gotten ahead of the pole-sitting No. 91 Porsche at the finish, due to the #91 serving a drive-through penalty caused by excessive track limits abuse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Race, Race Report\nTF Sport dominated the GTE-Am race from pole, with the trio of Salih Yolu\u00e7, Charlie Eastwood and Jonathan Adam taking the win, after TF Sport was handed pole in the wake of a penalty for the #57 Team Project 1 Porsche. The trio built up a massive lead up front, and were virtually untouchable throughout the race, with Yoluc establishing a large gap in the first stint. Eastwood and Adam consolidated the Yoluc\u2019s advantage over the next few stints, with the TF Sport car often being 50 seconds clear of second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0021-0001", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Race, Race Report\nAdam would take the checkered flag 33 seconds ahead of second placed Nicklas Nielsen, who had closed the gap slightly in the final hour in the #83 AF Corse Ferrari. Nielsen shared the Silverstone-winning Ferrari with Emmanuel Collard and Francois Perrodo, the trio finishing ahead of the #57 Project 1 car that started from the back of the grid after its post-qualifying penalty. Ben Keating worked his way through the pack in the opening stages, with the American driver passing the #77 of Christian Ried for third within the first 30 minutes of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0021-0002", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Race, Race Report\nJeroen Bleekemolen then promoted the #57 to second with a move on Perrodo into the chicane in hour three, but the positions were later swapped, when Nielsen overtook Felipe Fraga at the end of the fourth hour, with the cars remaining in 2nd and 3rd till the end of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286911-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Fuji, Race, Race Result\nThe minimum number of laps for classification (70% of the overall winning car's race distance) was 162 laps. Class winners in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286912-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps\nThe 2019 Total 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps was an endurance sports car racing event held at the Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, Stavelot, Belgium on 2\u20134 May 2019. Spa-Francorchamps served as the seventh race of the 2018\u201319 FIA World Endurance Championship, and was the eighth running of the event as part of the championship. The race was won by the #8 Toyota TS050 Hybrid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286912-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps, Qualifying, Qualifying results\nPole position winners in each class are marked in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286912-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps, Qualifying, Qualifying results\n\u2013 Motoaki Ishikawa crashed the No. 70 MR Racing car in qualifying, resulting in the car being unable to set a qualifying time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286912-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps, Race, Race result\nThe minimum number of laps for classification (70% of the overall winning car's race distance) was 114 laps. Class winners in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286913-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of The Glen\nThe 2019 Sahlen's Six Hours of the Glen was an endurance race sanctioned by the International Motor Sports Association (IMSA). The race was held at Watkins Glen International in Watkins Glen, New York on the June 30th, 2019. This race was the sixth round of the 2019 WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, as well as the third round of the 2019 Michelin Endurance Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286913-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of The Glen, Background\nIMSA released two separate technical bulletins regarding the Balance of Performance for the six-hour race. The first one was released on May 23rd, 2019, for the GT Le Mans (GTLM) class. This was done to allow IMSA teams who were preparing for the 24 Hours of Le Mans in three weeks time, notably Corvette Racing and Chip Ganassi Racing, to have the beforehand knowledge of the Balance of Performance for the race so they could prepare better.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286913-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of The Glen, Background\nIn this bulletin, the BMW M8 GTE received a 12 horsepower increase, as well as a six liter increase in fuel capacity and turbo boost increase. The second technical bulletin was released on June 19th, 2019, which regarded the Balance of Performance for the Daytona Prototype International (DPi) and GT Daytona (GTD) classes. In DPi, after winning the previous two events, Team Penske's Acura ARX-05 was given a 15 kilogram weight increase, giving it the same weight as the Nissan DPi. The Cadillac DPi-V.R was given a 1 liter reduction in fuel capacity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286913-0001-0002", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of The Glen, Background\nIn GT Daytona, despite no McLarens participating in the 6 Hour event, the McLaren 720S was given a power increase of 15 horsepower and made 25 kilograms lighter, in addition to a 12-liter fuel capacity increase. These adjustments made the McLaren 720S the lightest car in the class, as well as having the largest fuel capacity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286913-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of The Glen, Background, Entries\nOn June 19th, 2019, the entry list for the 6-hour-event was released, featuring 37 cars. There were 11 entries in Daytona Prototype international, eight cars in GT Le Mans, 16 in GT Daytona, and just two entrants in the Le Mans Prototype (LMP2) class. In GT Daytona, Sprint-race-only entrants Compass Racing and Lone Star Racing would not be taking part, while endurance-event-only entrants such as Land-Motorsport made their return. Black Swan Racing also returned to the grid after missing the 12 Hours of Sebring due to their team owner Tim Pappas sustaining an injury. As he was still recovering, Marc Miller took his place for The Glen. Joey Hand made a full recovery from suffering symptoms of the flu, and returned to the Chip Ganassi Racing team after being replaced by Sebastien Bourdais for the previous two rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 871]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286913-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 6 Hours of The Glen, Practice and qualifying, Qualifying Results\nPole positions in each class are indicated in bold and by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 69], "content_span": [70, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain\nThe 2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, formally known as the 2019 BAPCO 8 Hours of Bahrain, for sponsorship reasons, was an endurance sportscar racing event held on 14 December 2019, as the fourth round of the 2019\u201320 FIA World Endurance Championship. This would mark the return of the FIA WEC to the Bahrain International Circuit for the first time since 2017, and would also be the inaugural running of the race, in an extended 8 hours format, having previously been run as the 6 Hours of Bahrain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain\nThe race was won overall by the #7 Toyota TS050 Hybrid run by Toyota Gazoo Racing, and driven by Kamui Kobayashi, Mike Conway and Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda L\u00f3pez. The trio had benefited from the opening lap collision at Turn 2, between the front row starters, the #1 Rebellion R13 run by Rebellion Racing, and the #5 Ginetta G60-LT-P1 run by Team LNT, to take the lead from the first lap of the race, from fourth on the grid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain\nThe Le Mans Prototype LMP2 class was won by the #22 Oreca 07 run by United Autosports, and driven by Paul di Resta, Philip Hanson, Filipe Albuquerque. The trio had also benefited from the opening lap chaos, with the car holding the class lead on lap one, and even running second overall at one point, but later falling down the overall order, as the LMP1s climbed their way back up above the secondary class runners during the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Background\nThe provisional calendar for the 2019\u201320 FIA World Endurance Championship was unveiled at the 2018 6 Hours of Silverstone, featuring eight races, on five continents, starting at Silverstone in September 2019 with a four-hour race, and ending with the Le Mans 24 Hours in June 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Background\nIt was noted that for first time in the FIA World Endurance Championship, 4 and 8 hour races would be introduced, at the Silverstone Circuit, Shanghai International Circuit, and the Bahrain International Circuit, following a fan survey which was conducted by the championship despite there being an overwhelming preference being shown for races with durations of 6, 12 and 24 hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Entry list\nA provisional entry list was issued on the 12th of November 2019, with 31 cars split across 4 classes, with all 4 full season LMP1 entrants listed, alongside 9 LMP2 cars, up from the 8 full season cars due to the addition of the #26 G-Drive Racing Aurus 01, with a driver lineup for Jean-\u00c9ric Vergne, Roman Rusinov and Job van Uitert. The GTE Classes saw no additional cars entered, with all 6 full season GTE-Pro cars, and 11 GTE-Am cars being listed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Entry list\nMajority of the race seats were indicated to have been filled, with the exception of the 2 Team LNT Ginetta G60-LT-P1s, and the #88 Dempsey-Proton Racing Porsche 911 RSR. The list also saw changes to the driver lineup for the #57 Team Project 1 Porsche 911 RSR, with Larry ten Voorde returning for a second race, alongside Ben Keating and Jeroen Bleekemolen replacing Felipe Fraga, who would be competing in the Stock Car Brasil season finale, which clashed with the 8 Hours of Bahrain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0004-0002", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Entry list\nOn 26 November, Team LNT announced its driver lineup for the race, with the majority of its drivers continuing with the team, with the exception of Egor Orudzhev, who would make way for Chris Dyson, alongside a minor shakeup in the driver lineups for each car. On 10 December 2019, it was announced that Khaled Al Qubaisi and Adrien De Leeneer would complete the lineup for the #88 Dempsey-Proton Racing Porsche, replacing Angelo Negao and Will Bamber.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Qualifying, Qualifying Report\nIn LMP1, the #1 Rebellion Racing Rebellion R13 would score a 2nd consecutive Pole Position, once more piping another Team LNT Ginetta to pole position. Norman Nato and Bruno Senna set an average time of 1:42.979 that put the #1 Rebellion R13 0.144 seconds clear of the #5 Ginetta G60-LT-P1 of Charlie Robertson and Ben Hanley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Qualifying, Qualifying Report\nToyota Gazoo Racing's Toyota TS050 Hybrids occupied the second row of the grid with Brendon Hartley and Kazuki Nakajima out-qualifying their teammates from the #7 car, Mike Conway and Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda L\u00f3pez by less than a tenth of a second, with the average time achieved by Hartley and Nakajima in the #8 Toyota, being 0.863 seconds off the pole-sitting Rebellion. The #8 had also out-qualified the #7 in spite of the fact that it was running with a slightly larger success penalty than its sister car for the weekend. The #6 Team LNT finished 5th in the session, rounding out the LMP1 field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Qualifying, Qualifying Report\nIn LMP2, Paul di Resta and Philip Hanson handed United Autosports its maiden WEC pole, after setting an average lap time of 1:45.357 in the team's #22 Oreca 07. Di Resta had been the only driver to set a sub-1:45 lap time among the first set of drivers, while the silver-rated Hanson consolidated his co-driver's work, scoring the second-quickest time in the second set of drivers, resulting in the #22 United Autosports team pipping the second-placed #37 Jackie Chan DC Racing Oreca of Will Stevens and Gabriel Aubry to pole, by 0.292 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Qualifying, Qualifying Report\nGuest entry, G-Drive Racing finished 3rd in the session, with Jean-Eric Vergne and Job van Uitert qualifying the car, with the TDS-operated car starting alongside the Shanghai winning Jota Sport Oreca on the second row, whilst Cool Racing and High Class Racing would line up in fifth and sixth. The #35 Signatech Alpine would lineup on the fourth row, next to the #29 Racing Team Nederland Oreca. The sole non-Oreca in the LMP2 field, the #47 Cetilar Racing Dallara P217, run by AF Corse rounded out the LMP2 pack, with the car finishing nearly half a second behind the #29.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Qualifying, Qualifying Report\nIn GTE-Pro, Richard Lietz and Gianmaria Bruni finished the session on class pole, claiming Porsche's third consecutive GTE-Pro pole in 2019-20 FIA World Endurance Championship. This was also the 2nd pole of the season scored by the pair, who had also sat on pole for the 6 Hours of Fuji. The pair in the #91 Porsche 911 RSR combined for an average time of 1:56.485, narrowly outpacing their class championship-leading teammates in the #92, K\u00e9vin Estre and Michael Christensen by 0.060 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Qualifying, Qualifying Report\nThe pair of AF Corse Ferrari 488 GTE Evos qualified third and fourth, with the #51 entry of James Calado and Alessandro Pier Guidi leading the pair of Ferraris, the #51 pair still looking to bounce back following their exclusion from the 4 Hours of Shanghai. Aston Martin Racing struggled in the session, with the #95 entry of Marco S\u00f8rensen and Nicki Thiim qualifying fifth, nearly a second adrift of the pole-sitting Porsche, in what usually was a tightly spaced class, after struggling due a flat-spotted tire. The sister #97 car, would instead start last, after Maxime Martin's time was deleted due to him exceeding track limits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Qualifying, Qualifying Report\nIn GTE-Am, Ben Keating claimed his first WEC class pole, teaming with Larry ten Voorde to bring the #57 Team Project 1 Porsche 911 RSR to the class pole. The #54 AF Corse Ferrari qualified second, followed by the #88 Dempsey-Proton Racing Porsche 911 RSR in third, the #54 preventing a Porsche front row in the Pro-Am class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Qualifying, Qualifying Report\nThe #83 AF Corse Ferrari, which is in the title battle with the #90 TF Sport, would start from fourth, after Francois Perrodo was unable to replicate the performance of his teammate Nicklas Nielsen, the Dane having put the #83 atop the running order for the class before the driver swaps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Race Report\nThe #7 Toyota Gazoo Racing Toyota TS050 Mike Conway led the opening hour of the 8 Hours of Bahrain, benefiting from an incident between the two front-row cars of Bruno Senna and Charlie Robertson. Senna in the pole-sitting #1 Rebellion Racing R13 and Robertson in the 2nd placed #5 Ginetta G60-LT-P1 were spun around following contact between the pair, which allowed Conway to easily slip through the chaos, and swiftly take the lead of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Race Report\nDuring the incident, Robertson appeared to lose the rear of the #5 Team LNT Ginetta as the pack came into the Turn 2 left-hand kink, running into Senna. As both cars collided, the #5 bore most of the brunt of the impact, while Sebastien Buemi in the #8 Toyota was also caught up in the chaos, losing lost seven positions in the #8 Toyota TS050 Hybrid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0009-0002", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Race Report\nThe incident scattered the LMP1 field, and shuffled the order of the race, with the LMP2 class leader, the #22 United Autosports Oreca 07, with Paul di Resta in second overall, as Conway sped away in the lead of the race. Second in the LMP1 class was Mike Simpson in the #6 Ginetta, who was fifth overall, while Buemi and Senna were left further behind, with Robertson losing 2 laps owing to repairs to the Ginetta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0009-0003", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Race Report\nThe result of the carnage at Turn 1 meant that for the first half hour of the race, the LMP2 cars ran ahead of all P1s, bar the lead Toyota. In LMP2, di Resta made the best of his pole position, leading through the opening round of pit stops from Job van Uitert in G-Drive Racing's Aurus 01. Nicolas Lapierre was third for a while for Cool Racing, but the eventually fell back during towards the end of the opening stint as Andre Negrao, Kenta Yamashita and Anthony Davidson surged past in the #35, #33, and #37 Orecas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Race Report\nIn GTE Pro, Alessandro Pier Guidi led the first stint in GTE-Pro after a first-corner shuffle led to pole man Gianmaria Bruni dropping four positions in his #91 Porsche 911 RSR-19. Bruni was knocked out wide when Pier Guidi locked up slightly into Turn 1 and dropped down the order, as Kevin Estre, Marco S\u00f8rensen, and Miguel Molina overtook him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Race Report\nBy the end of hour one, Pier Guidi had built up a three-second gap to Estre while Bruni had charged back up to third, having overtaken Molina, before later gaining an additional place, when S\u00f8rensen brought the No. 95 Aston Martin Vantage GTE in for an early regular pit stop. Team Project 1 controlled the opening hour of the race in GTE-Am, with a 1\u20132, as Ben Keating in the #57 converted his pole position into a massive 15-second lead ahead of Egidio Perfetti in the #56. Third in class behind the two Porsches was the #98 Aston Martin of Paul Dalla Lana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Race Report\nIn the third hour of the race, Rebellion Racing lost its second place in the third hour, following a suspected driveline problem, which promoted Toyota into a commanding one-two position, which they would hold for the remainder for the race. At the time when the #1 was forced to pit, the driver at the time, Gustavo Menezes had held a 50-second gap over Brendon Hartley in the #8. While Hartley ascended into 2nd place, the Rebellion lost 3 laps, falling outside the top 10 in the process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Race Report\nThe #6 Ginetta also benefited from the suspected issue for the Rebellion, jumping into 3rd place, albeit being 1 lap down on the leading #7 Toyota, with Chris Dyson having spun early on during his first stint in the car. The sister #5 Team LNT car, which had been involved in a collision earlier with the #1 Rebellion had recovered, being ahead of all of the LMP2 cars, save for the leading car in the secondary prototype class, the #22 United Autosports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Race Report\nIn the GTE-Pro category, AF Corse's Alessandro Pier Guidi, in the #51 Ferrari 488 GTE Evo, overtook the #92 Porsche 911 RSR of Michael Christensen and the Aston Martin Vantage GTE of Nicki Thiim in the space of two laps, momentarily after the Rebellion incident. The #95 Aston Martin of Thiim and S\u00f8rensen had been the leader for much of the race, after an early first stop which had elevated it ahead of the rest of the field, but Thiim dropped to third in the second half of the third hour, when Christensen managed to overtake him. In GTE-Am, Gulf Racing took the lead after Andrew Watson overtook Paul Dalla Lana in the factory GTE-Am Aston Martin Vantage AMR GTE.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Race Report\nAt the end of the 4th hour, the #7 Toyota of Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda L\u00f3pez, who had taken over from Kamui Kobayashi, held an enormous gap over of over 1 minute against the second-placed sister #8 Toyota of Kazuki Nakajima, while Team LNT sat third with the #5 Ginetta G60-LT-P1 AER of Ben Hanley, while Gustavo Menezes had brought the #1 Rebellion R13 back to overall, having lost three laps earlier, with a suspected driveline problem. In LMP2, the #22 United Autosports built up a one-minute lead in LMP2, in the hands of Felipe Albuquerque ahead of the guest G-Drive Racing entry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Race Report\nIn GTE-Pro, Aston Martin Racing found itself at the head of the class, when the team elected not to stop the #97 Vantage GTE during a fourth-hour Full Course Yellow. The #92 Porsche 911 RSR of Kevin Estre, which had been second to the #51 Ferrari 488 GTE Evo prior to the FCY, suffered a setback when it suffered a damper failure, and had to been pushed into the garage, losing a handful of laps, and rejoining 27th outright.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0014-0001", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Race Report\nThe sister car of the #92 also saw itself struck with trouble, as the #91 Porsche, then piloted by Gianmaria Bruni limped to the pits with a right-front problem and also rapidly slid down the order. This gifted Alessandro Pier Guidi the GTE-Pro lead in the #51 AF Corse Ferrari 488 GTE Evo; however, he made a stop at the end of hour four, giving AMR a 1\u20132, with #97 ahead of the #95. In GTE-Am, Team Project 1's #57 Porsche 911 RSR led, following Larry ten Voorde's pass on the #86 Gulf Racing Porsche of Michael Wainwright.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Race Report\nFollowing the end of the fifth hour, the LMP1 class suffered its first casualty, with the #5 Ginetta being struck down due to a mechanical issue, grinding to a halt on the track. Its sister car, the #6 would pull into the garage at the penultimate hour, resulting in neither Ginetta making it to the end of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Race Report\nBy the end of the race, following the end of the 8th Hour, the #7 Toyota Gazoo Racing TS050 Hybrid, driven across the line by Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda L\u00f3pez, beat the sister #8 car to the finish by one lap, leading a 1\u20132 finish for the Japanese manufacturer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Race Report\nAt the finish, the race leader was 3 laps ahead of the remaining privateer, the #1 Rebellion Racing Rebellion R13, which had enjoyed a largely trouble-free second half of the race, after a drama-filled first half, which had first seen it punted at turn 2, and a later gearbox issue which saw it make a trip to the garage. In LMP2, the #22 United Autosports Oreca scored its first WEC class victory with a dominant performance from the trio of Paul di Resta, Philip Hanson and Filipe Albuquerque.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0016-0002", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Race Report\nThe Anglo-American team's Oreca had led for the majority of the race and reached the chequered flag 21 seconds ahead of the second-placed Jota Sport car of Ant\u00f3nio F\u00e9lix da Costa, Roberto Gonzalez and Anthony Davidson at the finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0016-0003", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Race Report\nA Full Course Yellow with 40 minutes remaining in the race helped a number of the leading cars in the class to reach the end without needing to stop for an extra splash of fuel, with a key beneficiary being the guest #26 G-Drive Racing Aurus 01, which held onto its fourth place behind the Jackie Chan DC Racing Oreca 07, driven by Ho-Pin Tung, Will Stevens and Gabriel Aubry. The #36 Signatech Alpine A470 of Andre Negrao, Pierre Ragues and Thomas Laurent rounded the top 5 in the LMP2 class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Race Report\nIn GTE-Pro, Aston Martin Racing claimed its second GTE-Pro win of the season, in what proved to be a hard-fought race in the desert. Marco S\u00f8rensen took the #95 Aston Martin Vantage GTE across the line, holding a 13.798s lead over the #71 AF Corse Ferrari 488 GTE Evo of Miguel Molina, with Molina being slapped with a late-race penalty, that severely impacted the #71's chances at victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0017-0001", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Race Report\nInitially, a quicker final stop for the Prodrive-run AMR team had put S\u00f8rensen out front of Molina in the final hour, following what had been a race-long duel in the desert, between the two manufacturers that went down to the wire, until the final hour. It was at the final hour, where AF Corse's and Molina's victory bid fell apart, when the Spaniard was served a drive-through penalty with just over 30 minutes left on the timer, for a spinning his wheels during his final scheduled stop, effectively handing over the win to Sorensen and his co-driver Nicki Thiim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0017-0002", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Race Report\nHowever, the #71 AF Corse Ferrari of Molina and Davide Rigon was still able deny Aston Martin Racing a 1\u20132 finish, with Maxime Martin rounding out the class podium in 3rd, in the #97 entry alongside co-driver Alex Lynn. Initially, it was thought that the #97 would be denied third, after Calado in the #51 Ferrari had done an overtake from the outside of Martin, after the restart following the race's second Full Course Yellow, which occurred during the final hour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0017-0003", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Race Report\nHowever, Calado's overtake was later reviewed by race officials, and as the overtake was deemed to have been made beyond track limits, the AF Corse driver was ordered to return the position with 20 minutes remaining on the timer. As a result, Calado and co-driver Alessandro Pier Guidi, were relegated to finishing fourth in class. The duo finished ahead of both Porsches, with the #91 Porsche 911 RSR of Gianmaria Bruni and Richard Lietz coming in fifth, falling behind the class pack in the fourth hour with a right-rear puncture, resulting in an unscheduled pit stop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0017-0004", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Race Report\nThe #92 Porsche, which had entered the weekend as GTE championship leaders, fell out of contention for the race win, with a left-rear damper failure just minutes before the issue on the sister car occurred. The #92 crew of Kevin Estre and Michael Christensen eventually finished sixth, and at the tail end of the Pro class, but seventh in the overall GTE classification in the race, behind the Am class #57 Team Project 1 Porsche.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Race Report\nIn GTE-Am, Team Project 1 claimed a dominant class victory, with Ben Keating scoring his first career WEC win in the #57, sharing top honors with his longtime co-driver Jeroen Bleekemolen and Dutchman Larry ten Voorde. The Dutchman finished more than 30s ahead of the factory team run #98 Aston Martin Vantage GTE of Ross Gunn, Paul Dalla Lana and Darren Turner in second. The #86 Gulf Racing Porsche, meanwhile, scored its first class podium of the 2019\u201320 season, after a relatively consistent run to third. Initially, Keating and teammate Egidio Perfetti, from the sister #56 car had run a 1\u20132 formation early, until exhaust issues struck the #56 in the second hour of the race, sending it to the garage, and later tumbling down the order.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 785]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Race Report\nGTE-Am championship leaders TF Sport, who had been seeking a hatrick of consecutive class wins, to further build up their lead in the standings, was one of just two retirements in the Pro-Am class, with the #90 Aston Martin dropping out of the race, having suffered from a fuel starvation issue with two hours to go to the end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Post-Race\nFollowing the race, 2 time FIA World Endurance Champion S\u00e9bastien Buemi said that the #8 crew were driving the car in a \"survival mode\", due to damage arising from various incidents during the race, including that from the opening-lap incident, where Buemi went off-course to avoid Bruno Senna's Rebellion R13, which initially resulted in a nose change in the first pit stop. This earlier setback was compounded later in the race, when Nakajima made contact while attempting to lap a Ferrari 488 GTE car, damaging the Toyota's floor and rear deck, costing the car downforce.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0020-0001", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Post-Race\nToyota GAZOO Racing technical director Pascal Vasselon also admitted that a 1-2 finish had been unlikely to occur initially, due to the success ballast, and that they had benefited from the LMP1 privateer misfortunes, for the result to be achieved. He also added that the reason the team opted against changing the floor of the car was due to the length of time required to replace it, which could have potentially cost the car its 2nd-placed finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Post-Race\nAlso in the LMP1 class, third-place finisher Bruno Senna expressed his regret at giving Charlie Robertson in the #5 Ginetta any space while the duo were at turn 2, and felt that he should have had forced Robertson off-track, which would have prevented the 2 from colliding, believing that the collision had destabilized the internal system of the cars, leading to the issue with the car's electronic shifting system, that had ultimately forced it to pit for a lengthy repair during Hour 3. Rebellion Racing team manager Bart Hayden however, appeared to disagree with his driver's opinion, stating that it was a very remote possibility, as the Electronic Shifting Motor had been on the side of the car, away from the Ginetta G60-LT-P1 of Robertson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 788]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0021-0001", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Post-Race\nSenna's co-driver, Gustavo Menezes did not comment on the possibility of the Electronic Shifting Motor failure and the turn 2 incident being linked, although he did agree that the Electronic Shifting Motor failure had cost the team the chance of winning the race, and that without the issue, the team could have caught up on the lost time from the collision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Post-Race\nMeanwhile, in LMP2, High Class Racing would drop Goodyear as its tyre supplier, with Michelin to supply the team from Lone Star Le Mans onwards. The Danish team would get its first running on Michelin tyres during the post-race test.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286914-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 8 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Race Result\nThe minimum number of laps for classification (70% of the overall winning car's race distance) was 180 laps. Class winners in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286915-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 A Lyga\nThe 2019 A Lyga was the 30th season of the A Lyga, the top-tier association football league of Lithuania. The season began on 2 March 2019 and ended on 27 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [11, 11], "content_span": [12, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286915-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 A Lyga\nS\u016bduva Marijampol\u0117 began the season as defending champions having won their second consecutive league title last year. They secured a third consecutive title in Auk\u0161taitija Stadium on 3 November, after they beat Panev\u0117\u017eys 5\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [11, 11], "content_span": [12, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286915-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 A Lyga\nOnly five league clubs survived throughout the year \u2013 Stumbras folded in the summer, while Atlantas and Palanga were disqualified in the off-season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [11, 11], "content_span": [12, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286915-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 A Lyga, Teams\nEight clubs competed \u2013 the top six of the 2018 season, the winner of the relegation play-offs and the champions of the 2018 LFF I Lyga. Palanga remained in the league having won the play-offs, while Panev\u0117\u017eys made their top-tier debut replacing relegated Jonava.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [13, 18], "content_span": [19, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286915-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 A Lyga, Teams\nTrakai changed their name to Riteriai during the preseason, for a better identification with Vilnius, where the main team has been located since 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [13, 18], "content_span": [19, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286915-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 A Lyga, 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, 11], "section_span": [13, 38], "content_span": [39, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286915-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 A Lyga, Relegation play-offs\nThe 7th placed team will face the runners-up of the 2019 LFF I Lyga for a two-legged play-off. The winner on aggregate score after both matches will earn entry into the 2020 A Lyga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [13, 33], "content_span": [34, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286915-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 A Lyga, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches. In order to preserve chronological progress, any postponed matches are not included in 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, 11], "section_span": [13, 31], "content_span": [32, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286915-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 A Lyga, Attendance\nUpdated to games played on 9 November 2019Source: , Notes:1: Team played last season in the I Lyga", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [13, 23], "content_span": [24, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286916-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 A-League Grand Final\nThe 2019 A-League Grand Final was the fourteenth A-League Grand Final, the championship-deciding match of the A-League in Australia and the culmination of the 2018\u201319 season. It was played on the 19 May 2019 at Optus Stadium in Perth between Perth Glory and Sydney FC, who finished the regular season first and second respectively. This was the first A-League grand final hosted in Perth and it is the highest attended grand final in A-League history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286916-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 A-League Grand Final\nSydney participated in their fifth grand final, winning three of the previous four played prior to this match. Perth participated in their sixth grand final overall and second in the A-League era, winning two of the previous five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286916-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 A-League Grand Final\nThe match ended 0\u20130 after extra time, with Sydney winning 4\u20131 on penalties to secure their fourth A-League title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286916-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 A-League Grand Final, Teams\nIn the following table, finals until 2004 were in the National Soccer League era, since 2006 were in the A-League era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286916-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 A-League Grand Final, Route to the final\nThe A-League Grand Final is the grand final for the A-League, a professional club soccer league that is based in Australia and New Zealand. The 2018\u201319 season was the fourteenth season in history and also the 42nd of top-flight football in Australia. Each team played against each other three times throughout the season for a total of twenty seven matches. After the regular season, the top six teams qualified to play in the finals with the teams placed between third and sixth playing in week one of the finals while the top two teams got an week off. This meant that playing in the first week was, Adelaide United, Melbourne City, Melbourne Victory and Wellington Phoenix while Perth Glory and Sydney FC having the bye for the first week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 788]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286916-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 A-League Grand Final, Route to the final\nThe grand final will be contested by Perth Glory and Sydney FC which respectively finished one and two after the regular season with Perth finishing ahead of Sydney by eight points. During the regular season, the two teams played three times with Sydney leading the head to head at two wins to one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286916-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 A-League Grand Final, Route to the final, Perth Glory\nDuring the pre-season, they acquired former Socceroos Tomislav Mrcela from Korean club Jeonnam Dragons, Matthew Spiranovic from Chinese club Zhejiang Greentown and Jason Davidson from Croatian side HNK Rijeka in what became a trio in the backline. In the opening game of the season, they drew with Western Sydney Wanderers 1-1 at home with Andy Keogh scoring the first goal for Perth in the 2018-19 season. After gaining win in Round 2 and 3, Perth went to the top of the table after knocking off Adelaide United with two goals in the second half from Andy Keogh and Chris Ikonomidis securing the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286916-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 A-League Grand Final, Pre-match, Venue\nThe Grand Final was held at Optus Stadium in Perth, and was the second time that a major soccer match was held at the stadium, after the friendly between Perth Glory and Chelsea on 23 July 2018. The stadium is mainly used as an Australian rules football ground for the West Coast Eagles and the Fremantle Dockers in the Australian Football League in the winter months, while in the summer it's used for cricket for the Perth Scorchers and occasionally the Australia national cricket team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286916-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 A-League Grand Final, Pre-match, Ticket details\nTicket sales started on the Monday prior to the event. In the first few hours over 35,000 tickets had been sold, of which 20,000 were from club members. Two days later tickets went on sale to the general public.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286916-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 A-League Grand Final, Match, Summary\nThe match started at 4:45pm AWST in Perth with Shaun Evans, receipt of the A-League Referee of the Year was the head referee for the match in what was his first A-League Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286916-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 A-League Grand Final, Broadcasting\nThe Grand Final was broadcast live throughout Australia on Fox Sports and Network Ten. The radio rights for the grand final was held by ABC with their grandstand coverage of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286917-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 A-Lyga (women)\nThe 2019 A-Lyga is the 27th edition of Lithuania's women's football league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286918-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AAA Texas 500\nThe 2019 AAA Texas 500 was a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race held on November 3, 2019, at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas. Contested over 334 laps on the 1.5 mile (2.4\u00a0km) intermediate quad-oval, it was the 34th race of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season, eighth race of the Playoffs, and second race of the Round of 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286918-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AAA Texas 500, Report, Background\nTexas Motor Speedway is a speedway located in the northernmost portion of the U.S. city of Fort Worth, Texas\u00a0\u2013 the portion located in Denton County, Texas. The track measures 1.5 miles (2.4\u00a0km) around and is banked 24\u00a0degrees in the turns, and is of the oval design, where the front straightaway juts outward slightly. The track layout is similar to Atlanta Motor Speedway and Charlotte Motor Speedway (formerly Lowe's Motor Speedway). The track is owned by Speedway Motorsports, Inc., the same company that owns Atlanta and Charlotte Motor Speedways, as well as the short-track Bristol Motor Speedway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286918-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AAA Texas 500, Practice, First practice\nClint Bowyer was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 28.620 seconds and a speed of 188.679\u00a0mph (303.649\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286918-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AAA Texas 500, Practice, Final practice\nAric Almirola was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 28.638 seconds and a speed of 188.561\u00a0mph (303.460\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286918-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AAA Texas 500, Qualifying\nKevin Harvick scored the pole for the race with a time of 28.465 and a speed of 189.707\u00a0mph (305.304\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286918-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AAA Texas 500, Media, Television\nNBC Sports covered the race on the television side. Rick Allen, Two\u2013time Texas winner Jeff Burton, Steve Letarte and 2000 Texas winner Dale Earnhardt Jr. had the call in the booth for the race. Dave Burns, Marty Snider and Kelli Stavast reported from pit lane during the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286918-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AAA Texas 500, Media, Radio\nPRN covered their final 2019 broadcast, which was simulcast on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio. Doug Rice & Mark Garrow covered the action for PRN when the field raced down the front straightaway. Doug Turnbull covered the action for PRN from a platform outside of Turns 1 &2, & Pat Patterson covered the action from a platform outside of Turns 3 &4 for PRN. Brad Gillie, Brett McMillan, Wendy Venturini and Heather DeBeaux had the call from pit lane for PRN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286919-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AAF season\nThe 2019 AAF season was the only season in the history of the Alliance of American Football (AAF), which began on February 9, 2019. A ten-week regular season was scheduled for each of the league's eight teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286919-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AAF season\nOn April 2, multiple sources indicated that Thomas Dundon, controlling owner of the AAF, had followed through on threats made in the previous week and suspended the AAF's operations, against the will of its founders. By the end of the week, the AAF front office had confirmed the suspension of operations and allowed players to opt-out of their contracts to sign with other leagues. The league filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy on April 17, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286919-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AAF season\nAt the time the season ended, eight out of ten scheduled weeks had been played, and the Orlando Apollos, with a league best 7\u20131 record two games ahead of its nearest competitors, had clinched no less than a share of the regular season's best record, regardless of how the rest of the schedule would have played out. A four-team playoff was scheduled to start on April 21, with a championship game on April 27. Initially scheduled for Sam Boyd Stadium on the outskirts of Las Vegas, Nevada, the title game was moved to the Ford Center at The Star in Frisco, Texas, before the league ceased operations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286919-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AAF season, Teams\nThe Alliance of American Football had eight teams competing during its inaugural season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286919-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AAF season, Final standings\nThe Orlando Apollos clinched a playoff berth on March 24, and top seed in the Eastern Conference on March 30. The Birmingham Iron clinched a playoff berth on March 31.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286919-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AAF season, Schedule\nEach team had a ten-game regular season schedule, consisting of six in-conference games (home-and-away against each of the other three teams) and four out-of-conference games (one game against each of four teams; two home and two away). Weeks 2, 4, 6, and 9 were scheduled with out-of-conference games. Each team played one preseason exhibition game against an out-of-conference opponent. All of the preseason scrimmage games were held January 27\u201328 at the Alamodome, in conjunction with the league's training camp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 25], "content_span": [26, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286919-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AAF season, Playoffs\nFollowing the 10-week regular season, the top two teams in each conference were due to face each other in conference championship games, hosted by the higher seeded team. These semifinals were scheduled for April 21. The winners would then meet in the league championship game on April 27 at a neutral site. Originally, the title game had been set for Sam Boyd Stadium near Las Vegas, Nevada announced October 23, 2018 , but was changed to Ford Center at The Star in Frisco, Texas on March 20, 2019, before the season was ended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 25], "content_span": [26, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286919-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AAF season, Attendance\nAnnounced attendance figures for each home game. In the weekly columns, dashes (\u2014) indicate away games, while bold font indicates the highest attendance of each team. Games marked \"N/A\" were not played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286919-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AAF season, Statistical leaders\nRecords reflect statistics through the eight regular season games played by all teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286919-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AAF season, Officials\nThe league used the eight-official system, also seen in NCAA college football. There were six officiating crews, staffed with officials from FBS conferences.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 26], "content_span": [27, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286919-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AAF season, Officials\nThe officiating crews included one former NFL official\u2014Jimmy DeBell, a back judge on the Smith crew\u2014and three former NFL players: Nate Jones (side judge, Cruse crew), Terry Killens (umpire, Blake crew), and Mike Morton (umpire, Cruse crew).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 26], "content_span": [27, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286919-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 AAF season, Broadcasting\nCBS Sports, Turner Sports and NFL Network served as the Alliance's broadcast partners for the 2019 season. The CBS Sports deal was announced at the time the league launched, while the Turner Sports and NFL Network contracts were announced less than two weeks before the season began.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286919-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 AAF season, Broadcasting, Viewership\nOne decimal place is shown in table but three decimal places are used in all calculations. None of CBS Sports Network's broadcasts register in the Nielsen Ratings and thus viewership estimates for those games are not available.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 41], "content_span": [42, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286919-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 AAF season, Broadcasting, Local radio coverage\nEach AAF team had a local radio partner, and Sirius XM Radio carried a game of the week package.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 51], "content_span": [52, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286919-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 AAF season, Signees to other professional leagues, NFL\nOn April 4, the AAF announced players could leave their contracts to sign with NFL teams following the reported suspension of league football operations. The following 99 players signed with NFL teams:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286919-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 AAF season, Signees to other professional leagues, NFL\nNine players who were under contract with AAF teams at the time the league ceased operations made initial NFL 53-man active rosters on August 31, 2019: offensive tackle Brandon Greene with the Carolina Panthers, quarterback Garrett Gilbert and running back D'Ernest Johnson with the Cleveland Browns, cornerback De'Vante Bausby and defensive tackle Mike Purcell with the Denver Broncos, long snapper Cole Mazza with the Los Angeles Chargers, kicker Taylor Bertolet with the New York Jets, cornerback Kameron Kelly with the Pittsburgh Steelers, and offensive tackle Daniel Brunskill with the San Francisco 49ers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286919-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 AAF season, Signees to other professional leagues, CFL\nThe following players signed with Canadian Football League (CFL) teams:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286919-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 AAF season, Signees to other professional leagues, CFL\nThe AAF reportedly blocked AAF players from signing with CFL teams, claiming their AAF contracts were \"assets in potential bankruptcy proceedings.\" Plummer, Gilchrist, and Braverman had signed contracts with AAF teams, but had not yet been activated to the roster from their respective teams' rights lists at the time that the AAF suspended football operations. By April 18, CFL players were allowed to sign AAF players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286919-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 AAF season, Signees to other professional leagues, AFL\nThe following players signed with Arena Football League (AFL) teams:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286919-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 AAF season, Signees to other professional leagues, AFL\nWide receiver Malachi Jones received first-team All-Arena, Receiver of the Year, and Offensive Player of the Year honors at the conclusion of the 2019 AFL season, which was also the AFL's final season before shutting down afterwards. Wide receiver Fabian Guerra was named co-Rookie of the Year as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286919-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 AAF season, Signees to other professional leagues, NAL\nThe following three players signed with National Arena League (NAL) teams:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286920-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ABA League First Division Playoffs\nThe 2019 ABA League Playoffs was the play-off tournament that decides the winner of the 2018\u201319 ABA League First Division season. The playoffs had started on March 23, 2019 and ended on April 22, 2019. The winner of the play-offs, Crvena zvezda mts, qualified for the 2019\u201320 EuroLeague.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286921-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ABA League Second Division Playoffs\nThe 2019 ABA League Second Division Playoffs is the play-off tournament that decided the winner of the 2018\u201319 ABA League Second Division season. The playoffs started on March 20, 2019 and ended on April 8, 2019. The winner of the play-offs qualified for the 2019\u201320 ABA League First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286922-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ABA League Supercup\nThe 2019 ABA League Supercup was the 3rd tournament of the ABA League Supercup, featuring teams from the Adriatic League First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286922-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ABA League Supercup, Qualified teams\nBased on the results in the 2018\u201319 ABA League First Division season and the 2018\u201319 ABA League Second Division Champion there are 8 participants at the 2019 Adriatic Supercup. Qualified teams are the seven best placed teams of the First Division season and the Second Division Champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286923-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ABL Finals\nThe 2019 ASEAN Basketball League (ABL) Finals was the best-of-5 championship series of the 2018\u201319 ABL season and the conclusion of the season's playoffs. BTN CLS Knights Indonesia and Singapore Slingers competed for the 9th championship contested by the league. After a decider Game 5, CLS Knights Indonesia eventually clinched the club's first franchise championship in its history, and the second ABL Championship that came from Indonesia. Maxie Esho was named as the Finals MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286923-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ABL Finals, Background, Head-to-head matchups\nThis is the first playoff and finals meeting between BTN CLS Knights Indonesia and Singapore Slingers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 50], "content_span": [51, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286924-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament\nThe 2019 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\u201317 February 2019. It was the 46th edition of the Rotterdam Open, and part of the ATP Tour 500 series of the 2019 ATP Tour. The tournament also included a Men's Wheelchair Tennis Singles and Doubles draw. The wheelchair tennis event was an ITF-1 level tournament, with a total of $32,000 prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286924-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw using a protected ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 81], "content_span": [82, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286924-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00286925-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament \u2013 Doubles\nPierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Mahut were the defending champions, but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286925-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament \u2013 Doubles\nJ\u00e9r\u00e9my Chardy and Henri Kontinen won the title, defeating Jean-Julien Rojer and Horia Tec\u0103u in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20135), 7\u20136(7\u20134).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286926-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament \u2013 Singles\nRoger Federer was the defending champion, but chose not to participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286926-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament \u2013 Singles\nGa\u00ebl Monfils won the title, defeating Stan Wawrinka in the final, 6\u20133, 1\u20136, 6\u20132. This was Wawrinka's first final in any ATP Tour event since the 2017 French Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286927-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ACB Playoffs\nThe 2019 ACB Playoffs, also known as 2019 Liga Endesa Playoffs for sponsorship reasons, was the postseason tournament of the ACB's 2018\u201319 season, which began on 27 September 2018. The playoffs started on 30 May 2019 and ended on 21 June 2019 with the Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286927-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ACB Playoffs\nReal Madrid defended successfully the title and conquered its second consecutive league, 35th overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286927-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ACB Playoffs, Format\nAt the end of the regular season, the eight teams with the most wins qualify for the playoffs. The seedings are based on each team's record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286927-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ACB Playoffs, Format\nThe bracket is fixed; there is no reseeding. The quarterfinals are best-of-three series; the team that wins two games advances to the next round. This round is in a 1\u20131\u20131 format. From the semifinals onward, the rounds are best-of-five series; the team that wins three games advances to the next round. These rounds, including the Finals, are in a 2\u20132\u20131 format. Home court advantage in any round belong to the higher-seeded team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286927-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ACB Playoffs, Playoff qualifying\nOn 31 March 2019, Bar\u00e7a Lassa became the first team to clinch a playoff spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286927-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 ACB Playoffs, Bracket\nTeams in bold advance to the next round. The numbers to the left of each team indicate the team's seeding, and the numbers to the right indicate the result of games including result in bold of the team that won in that game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286927-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 ACB Playoffs, Quarterfinals, Real Madrid v Baxi Manresa\nThis was the fourth playoff meeting between these two teams, with Real Madrid winning two of the first three meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 60], "content_span": [61, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286927-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 ACB Playoffs, Quarterfinals, Bar\u00e7a Lassa v Divina Seguros Joventut\nThis was the 12th playoff meeting between these two teams, with Bar\u00e7a Lassa winning eight of the first 11 meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 71], "content_span": [72, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286927-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 ACB Playoffs, Quarterfinals, Kirolbet Baskonia v Tecnyconta Zaragoza\nThis was the first meeting in the playoffs between Kirolbet Baskonia and Tecnyconta Zaragoza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 73], "content_span": [74, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286927-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 ACB Playoffs, Quarterfinals, Valencia Basket v Unicaja\nThis was the sixth playoff meeting between these two teams, with Unicaja winning three of the first five meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 59], "content_span": [60, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286927-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 ACB Playoffs, Semifinals, Real Madrid v Valencia Basket\nThis was the sixth playoff meeting between these two teams, with Real Madrid winning four of the first five meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 60], "content_span": [61, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286927-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 ACB Playoffs, Semifinals, Bar\u00e7a Lassa v Tecnyconta Zaragoza\nThis was the first meeting in the playoffs between Bar\u00e7a Lassa and Tecnyconta Zaragoza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 64], "content_span": [65, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286927-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 ACB Playoffs, Finals\nThis was the 19th playoff meeting between these two teams, with each team winning nine series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286928-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ACC Championship Game\nThe 2019 ACC Championship Game was a college football game played on December 7, 2019. It was the 15th annual ACC Championship Game, played to determine the 2019 champion of the Atlantic Coast Conference football season. The game was held at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, North Carolina. The Clemson Tigers defeated the Virginia Cavaliers, 62\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286928-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ACC Championship Game, History\nThe 2019 Championship Game was the 15th in the Atlantic Coast Conference's 67-year history. Last season, the ACC Championship Game featured the Clemson Tigers, champions of the Atlantic Division, and the Pitt Panthers, champions of the Coastal Division. This was Pitt's first appearance in the Championship Game, and they were the sixth different school to come out of the Coastal Division in the past six seasons. Clemson won the 2018 game 42\u201310 for their fourth consecutive ACC title, and went on to win the 2019 College Football Playoff National Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286928-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ACC Championship Game, Teams, Clemson\nClemson clinched the Atlantic division for the fifth consecutive year, and entered the game with an undefeated 12\u20130 record for the third time in that span. The Tigers entered the title game as the four-time-defending conference champions, and the defending national champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286928-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ACC Championship Game, Teams, Virginia\nVirginia clinched the Coastal division after defeating rival Virginia Tech in the regular season finale to finish the regular season at 9\u20133 (6\u20132 ACC). With the win, Virginia snapped a 15-game losing streak to their in-state rival. The Cavaliers made their first appearance in the ACC Championship Game, and also concluded a seven-year stretch in which all seven members of the Coastal division appeared in the title game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286929-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ACC Emerging Teams Asia Cup\nThe 2019 ACC Emerging Teams Asia Cup was the fourth edition of the ACC Emerging Teams Asia Cup held in Bangladesh between 14 and 23 November 2019. Eight teams participated in the tournament, including five under-23 age level teams of Test nations and the top three teams from the 2018 Asia Cup Qualifier. The tournament was organized by the Asian Cricket Council (ACC). Nepal replaced the United Arab Emirates, after they pulled out due to an unknown reason. Nepal qualified on virtue of being fourth in the Asia Cup qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286929-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ACC Emerging Teams Asia Cup\nPakistan won the tournament, beating Bangladesh by 77 runs in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286929-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ACC Emerging Teams Asia Cup, Squads\nPrior to the start of the tournament, India's Kamlesh Nagarkoti and Arshdeep Singh were ruled out of the tournament and were replaced by Aditya Thakare and Shivam Mavi respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286930-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament was the 66th annual postseason men's basketball tournament for the Atlantic Coast Conference, held March 12\u201316, 2019 at the Spectrum Center in Charlotte, North Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286930-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe Virginia Cavaliers and North Carolina Tar Heels entered the tournament as the top two seeds, both with 16\u20132 conference, and ranked #2 and #3 in the country respectively. Both teams were defeated in the semifinals, by the #4 Florida State Seminoles (ranked #12 nationally) and the #3 Duke Blue Devils (ranked #5 nationally). Duke defeated Florida State, 73\u201363, in the championship game, claiming their 21st ACC Tournament title and 15th during head coach Mike Krzyzewski's tenure. Duke's Zion Williamson was named the tournament's MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286930-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nAll 15 ACC teams participated in the tournament, seeded by their record within the conference, with a tiebreaker system to seed teams with identical conference records. The top 4 seeds (Virginia, North Carolina, Duke, and Florida State) received a double bye. Virginia Tech, Syracuse, NC State, Louisville, and Clemson receive single byes. Boston College, Miami, Georgia Tech, Wake Forest, Pittsburgh, and Notre Dame played in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286930-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament, Schedule\nGames were shown on over-the-air television in local media markets by the syndicated ACC Network. Games also aired nationally on various ESPN cable networks with separate telecasts and commentators. The tournament marked the formal end of Raycom Sports' long-term association with the conference; its event rights will now be held by ESPN as part of its new cable channel ACC Network.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286931-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ACC Men's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2019 Atlantic Coast Conference Men's Soccer Tournament was the 33rd edition of the ACC Men's Soccer Tournament. The tournament decided the Atlantic Coast Conference champion and guaranteed representative into the 2019 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament. The final was played at Sahlen's Stadium in Cary, NC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286931-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ACC Men's Soccer Tournament\nThe defending champions were the Louisville Cardinals. Louisville was unable to defend its crown, losing to Virginia Tech in the first round. The Virginia Cavaliers claimed their eleventh title by beating Clemson in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286931-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ACC Men's Soccer Tournament, Qualification\nAll twelve teams in the Atlantic Coast Conference earned a berth into the ACC Tournament. The top 4 seeds received first round byes and hosted the winner of a first round game. All rounds, with the exception of the final were held at the higher seed's home field. Seeding is determined by regular season conference record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286931-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ACC Men's Soccer Tournament, Bracket\n*Note: Home team listed first. Rankings shown are ACC Tournament Seeds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286932-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ACC Under-19 Asia Cup\nThe 2019 Under-19 Asia Cup was the 8th edition of ACC Under-19 Cup. The cricket tournament was held in Sri Lanka from 5 to 15 September 2019. 8 teams participated in the tournament, including 5 full members and three qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286933-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ACC Western Region T20\nThe 2019 ACC Western Region T20 was a Twenty20 International (T20I) cricket tournament held in Oman from 20 to 24 January 2019. The five participating teams were Bahrain, Kuwait, Maldives, Qatar and Saudi Arabia. The matches were all played at the Al Amerat Cricket Stadium in Muscat. All participating nations made their T20I debuts during the tournament, following the decision of the ICC to grant full Twenty20 International status to all its members from 1 January 2019. Saudi Arabia defeated Qatar \u2013 who had been unbeaten in the round-robin stage \u2013 in the final by 7 wickets. Qatar's Tamoor Sajjad was named the player of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286934-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ACC Women's Basketball Tournament\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Jweiss11 (talk | contribs) at 00:06, 13 March 2020 (rem parent cat). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286934-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ACC Women's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 Atlantic Coast Conference Women's Basketball Tournament, concluded the 2018\u201319 season of the Atlantic Coast Conference, which was held at Greensboro Coliseum in Greensboro, North Carolina, from March 6\u201310, 2019. Notre Dame, which finished atop the ACC regular-season table along with Louisville, won the tournament and with it the ACC's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Women's Division I Basketball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286934-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ACC Women's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nSeeding was determine based on the regular season. Each team played 16 regular season games, at least one versus each other team in the ACC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286934-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ACC Women's Basketball Tournament, Schedule\nAll games will be televised on the Raycom network within the ACC footprint and simulcast nationally on the ESPN networks denoted below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286934-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ACC Women's Basketball Tournament, All-Tournament Teams\nJackie Young - Notre Dame (MVP)Asia Durr - LouisvilleJessica Shepard - Notre DameTiana Magakahia - SyracuseElissa Cunane - NC State", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286934-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 ACC Women's Basketball Tournament, All-Tournament Teams\nTaylor Emery - Virginia TechArike Ogunbowale - Notre DameAliyah Collier - ClemsonParis Kea - North CarolinaSam Fuehring - Louisville", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286935-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ACC Women's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2019 Atlantic Coast Conference Women's Soccer Tournament was the 32nd edition of the ACC Women's Soccer Tournament. The tournament decided the Atlantic Coast Conference champion and guaranteed representative into the 2019 NCAA Division I Women's Soccer Tournament. The semifinals and final were played at Sahlen's Stadium in Cary, NC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286935-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ACC Women's Soccer Tournament\nThe defending champions were the Florida State Seminoles. The Seminoles fell in their title defense in the semifinals, losing to Virginia. North Carolina beat Virginia in the final, 2\u20131, to claim their twenty-second ACC title. It was coach Anson Dorrance's twenty-second title as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286935-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ACC Women's Soccer Tournament, Qualification\nThe top eight teams in the Atlantic Coast Conference earned a berth into the ACC Tournament. The quarterfinal round was held at campus sites, while the semifinals and final took place at Sahlen's Stadium in Cary, North Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286936-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ADAC Formula 4 Championship\nThe 2019 ADAC Formula 4 Championship was the fifth season of the ADAC Formula 4, an open-wheel motor racing series. It was a multi-event motor racing championship that featured drivers competing in 1.4 litre Tatuus-Abarth single seat race cars that conformed to the technical regulations for the championship. It began on 27 April at Oschersleben and finished on 29 September at Sachsenring after seven triple header rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286936-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ADAC Formula 4 Championship, Race calendar and results\nVenues for the 2019 season were announced with the first Hockenheim round as support event of the 2019 German Grand Prix, while other event are scheduled to support 2019 ADAC GT Masters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286936-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ADAC Formula 4 Championship, Championship standings\nPoints are awarded to the top 10 classified finishers in each race. No points are awarded for pole position or fastest lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286936-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ADAC Formula 4 Championship, Championship standings, Teams' Championship\nBefore each round, teams nominate two drivers to be eligible for Teams' Championship points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286937-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ADAC GT Masters\nThe 2019 ADAC GT Masters was the thirteenth season of the ADAC GT Masters, the grand tourer-style sports car racing founded by the German automobile club ADAC. The season began on 27 April at Oschersleben and ended on 29 September at the Sachsenring after seven double-header meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286937-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ADAC GT Masters, Race calendar and results\nOn 23 September 2018, the ADAC announced the 2019 calendar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 47], "content_span": [48, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286937-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ADAC GT Masters, Championship standings\nChampionship points are awarded for the first fifteen positions in each race. Entries are required to complete 75% of the winning car's race distance in order to be classified and earn points. Individual drivers are required to participate for a minimum of 25 minutes in order to earn championship points in any race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286938-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ADAC GT4 Germany\nThe 2019 ADAC GT4 Germany season is the inaugural season of the ADAC GT4 Germany, a sports car championship created and organised by the ADAC. The season began on 27 April at Oschersleben and ended on 29 September at the Sachsenring after six double-header meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286938-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ADAC GT4 Germany, Race calendar and results\nOn 23 September 2018, the ADAC announced the 2019 calendar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286938-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ADAC GT4 Germany, Championship standings\nChampionship points are awarded for the first fifteen positions in each race. Entries are required to complete 75% of the winning car's race distance in order to be classified and earn points. Individual drivers are required to participate for a minimum of 25 minutes in order to earn championship points in any race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 45], "content_span": [46, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286939-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ADAC TCR Germany Touring Car Championship\nThe 2019 ADAC TCR Germany Touring Car Championship will be the fourth season of touring car racing to be run by the German-based sanctioning body ADAC to the TCR regulations. The series will run predominately in ADAC's home nation Germany. As a support category to the ADAC GT Masters series, the championship will also take in races in the neighbouring nations of Austria, the Netherlands and the Czech Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286939-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ADAC TCR Germany Touring Car Championship\nOn 20 December 2018 it was announced a partnership between the series' promoter and Auto Sport Switzerland, the Swiss National Sporting Authority, which was going see all 7 rounds of the calendar as part of the 2019 TCR Swiss Trophy which was set to be in its second edition. The TCR Swiss Trophy was set be open to Swiss drivers as well as any driver with valid racing license, issued by Auto Sport Switzerland. On 23 April 2019 it was announced by Auto Sport Switzerland that the TCR Swiss Trophy will be postponed until 2020 due to lack of entries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286939-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ADAC TCR Germany Touring Car Championship\nHarald Proczyk will be the defending Drivers' champion, while HP Racing International will the defending Teams' champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286939-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ADAC TCR Germany Touring Car Championship, Teams and drivers\nYokohama is set to become the official tire supplier, taking over from Hankook.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 65], "content_span": [66, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286939-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ADAC TCR Germany Touring Car Championship, Calendar and results\nThe 2018 schedule was announced on 23 September 2018, with three events scheduled to be held outside Germany. The championship will again run in support of the ADAC GT Masters weekends as well as ADAC GT4 Germany and ADAC Formula 4 (with the exception at Autodrom Most).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286940-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFA Senior Male League\nThe 2019 AFA Senior Male League is the 20th season of the AFA Senior Male League, the men's football league in Anguilla.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286941-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Annual Awards\nThe 2019 AFC Annual Awards were the awards for football players and coaches of the year in Asia. The award ceremony was held in Hong Kong on 2 December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup\nThe 2019 AFC Asian Cup was the 17th edition of the AFC Asian Cup, the quadrennial international men's football championship of Asia organised by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC). It was held in the United Arab Emirates from 5 January to 1 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup\nFor the first time, the Asian Cup final tournament was contested by 24 teams, having been expanded from the 16-team format that was used from 2004 to 2015. Under this new format, the finalists would contest a group stage consisting of six groups of four teams, followed by a knockout stage of 16 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup\nThe host nation qualified for the final tournament automatically, while the remaining 23 places were determined among the other 45 national teams of the AFC through a qualifying competition running from 2015 to 2018, part of which also served as part of the 2018 FIFA World Cup qualification process for the confederation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup\nThe tournament was won for the first time by Qatar, who defeated Japan 3\u20131 in the final. This was also Qatar's first ever top 4 finish in the competition. The defending champions (Australia), were eliminated by the hosts (UAE) at the quarter-finals, who subsequently lost to the eventual champions in the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Host selection\nThe bidding procedure and timeline for the 2019 AFC Asian Cup was approved at the AFC congress on 28 November 2012. The winning bid was originally set to be announced at an AFC congress in June, then November 2014. However, at its 60th Anniversary celebrations at the end of 2014, AFC gave the date of 'summer 2015' to when an announcement would be made.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Host selection\nIn January 2015, AFC general secretary Alex Soosay said that Iran and the United Arab Emirates were the only two remaining bidders for the 2019 Asian Cup, and that the eventual hosts would be announced in March 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Host selection\nOn 9 March 2015, during an AFC Executive Committee meeting in Manama, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates was announced as the host. This was the second time the country hosted the tournament, after the 1996 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Teams, Qualification\nThe 2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification process determined the 24 participating teams for the tournament. In 2014, a proposal to merge the preliminary qualification rounds of the FIFA World Cup with those of the AFC Asian Cup was ratified by the AFC Competitions Committee. The new qualification structure took place in three stages, with the first two merging with the 2018 FIFA World Cup qualification In the first round, the lowest ranked teams played home-and-away over two legs to reduce the total number of teams to 40.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Teams, Qualification\nIn the second round, the 40 teams were divided into eight groups of five to play home-and-away round-robin matches, where the eight group winners and the four best group runners-up qualified for the 2019 AFC Asian Cup finals. In the third round, the next best 24 teams eliminated from second round were divided into six groups of four and competed for the remaining slots of the 2019 AFC Asian Cup. The first qualifying round of the qualification took place on 12 March 2015, and the final match of the third round took place on 27 March 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Teams, Qualified teams\nIndia, Syria, Thailand and Turkmenistan qualified to the tournament after being absent in several Asian Cup tournaments spanning from 2004 to 2015. Lebanon and Vietnam both qualified for the first time after hosting the tournaments, in 2000 and 2007 respectively. For Vietnam, this was the first time they qualified for the AFC Asian Cup as a unified nation, having participated as South Vietnam in the first two editions (1956 and 1960), outside of hosting the 2007 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Teams, Qualified teams\nThis was also the first time Yemen qualified for the AFC Asian Cup as a unified country, due to FIFA and AFC categorizing the participation of South Yemen in the 1976 as a distinct record not related to Yemen, who succeeded North Yemen. In addition to Yemen, the Philippines and Kyrgyzstan also marked this edition as their first times to qualify for an Asian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Teams, Qualified teams\nTajikistan, along with its fellow CAFA member nation Afghanistan, were the only two countries from their confederation who failed to qualify for the tournament. Iran qualified to the Asian Cup for the first time as a CAFA member, having qualified as part of the WAFF before. Malaysia and Indonesia were the only co-hosts of the 2007 edition that did not qualify for the Asian Cup, as Malaysia had ended their campaign in disaster with just one point out of six matches; while Indonesia was barred from entering the qualification due to tension inside the PSSI which led to FIFA suspension.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Teams, Qualified teams\nKuwait was the only Arab country not to qualify for the Asian Cup, as they were also barred from completing the qualification due to FIFA's sanction. India remained as the only South Asian team to qualify for the tournament. On 13 November 2018, the Asian Football Confederation warned the Iranian government to stop meddling in the country's football association, otherwise it would have faced sanctions before the Asian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Teams, Draw\nThe draw of the final tournament was held on 4 May 2018, 19:30 GST, at the Armani Hotel in the Burj Khalifa in Dubai. The FIFA rankings of April 2018 were used as basis for the seeding. The 12 teams that secured their place in the final tournament by the end of the second round of the qualification process were placed in Pots 1 and 2 while the remaining teams which qualified during the third round were allocated to the remaining pots. As hosts, the United Arab Emirates were seeded into Pot 1. The 24 teams were drawn into six groups of four teams, with the hosts placed in position A1. Four renowned Asian players: Ali Daei, Sun Jihai, Sunil Chhetri and Phil Younghusband were chosen to draw the teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Teams, Draw\nUnited Arab Emirates (81) (hosts)\u00a0Iran (36) \u00a0Australia (40) \u00a0Japan (60) \u00a0South Korea (61) \u00a0Saudi Arabia (70)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Teams, Draw\nChina PR (73)\u00a0Syria (76)\u00a0Uzbekistan (88)\u00a0Iraq (88)\u00a0Qatar (101)\u00a0Thailand (122)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Teams, Draw\nKyrgyzstan (75)\u00a0Lebanon (82)\u00a0Palestine (83)\u00a0Oman (87)\u00a0India (97)\u00a0Vietnam (103)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Teams, Draw\nNorth Korea (112)\u00a0Philippines (113)\u00a0Bahrain (116)\u00a0Jordan (117)\u00a0Yemen (125)\u00a0Turkmenistan (129)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Teams, Draw, Draw result\nTeams were drawn consecutively into Group A to F. Teams from each pot were assigned to the positions of their groups following by number orders of group stage, for example Pot 1 team were assigned to A1, and continued.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Teams, Squads\nEach team had to register a squad with a minimum of 18 players and a maximum of 23 players, at least three of whom must be goalkeepers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Match officials\nOn 5 December 2018, the AFC announced the list of 30 referees, 30 assistant referees, two stand-by referees and two stand-by assistant referees, including one referee and two assistant referees from CONCACAF for the tournament. Video assistant referees (VAR) would be used from the quarter-finals onwards. In each match, the referee and his assistants were accompanied by two additional assistant referees stationed next to each team's goalpost.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Venues\nAfter being awarded the bid, initially the UAE chose six stadiums to host the tournament. The six stadiums were Zayed Sports City Stadium and Mohammed Bin Zayed Stadium in Abu Dhabi, Hazza Bin Zayed Stadium and Khalifa bin Zayed Stadium in Al Ain, and Dubai's Al Ahli Stadium and DSC Stadium. Later, two stadiums in Dubai were dropped due to financial problems and were replaced by Al Maktoum Stadium and Rashid Stadium, which were also located in Dubai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Venues\nAfter the 2015 Asian Cup, the AFC agreed to increase the number of teams from 16 to 24, following the UEFA Euro 2016. Hence, more stadiums were about to be chosen and rebuilt, in which Sharjah and Abu Dhabi won the rights to have more stadiums for the tournament. Sharjah Stadium and Al Nahyan Stadium were chosen aftermath, finalized the number of stadium to eight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Venues\nThe eight venues used are Zayed Sports City Stadium, Mohammed Bin Zayed Stadium, and Al Nahyan Stadium in Abu Dhabi, Hazza Bin Zayed Stadium and Khalifa Bin Zayed Stadium in Al Ain, Al Maktoum Stadium and Rashid Stadium in Dubai, and Sharjah Stadium in Sharjah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Format\nThe tournament was expanded to 24 teams from the previous format of 16 teams, which had been used since 2004. Only the hosts will receive an automatic qualification spot, while the other 23 teams will qualify through a qualification tournament. At the finals, the 24 teams will be drawn into six groups of four teams each. The teams in each group play a single round robin. After the group stage, the top two teams and the four best third teams will advance to the knockout stage, beginning with the round of 16. For the first time since a knockout stage was added to the competition in 1972, there will be no third place play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Schedule\nThe AFC announced the official match schedule on 7 May 2018. Zayed Sports City Stadium, one of three stadiums in Abu Dhabi, staged both the opening match and the final. At least five matches were allocated to each venue, with every ground hosting at least one match in the knockout stage. The semi-finals were played on different days in Abu Dhabi and Dubai. No city hosted two matches on the same day \u2013 except in the final round of group stage matches when simultaneous kick-off is required.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Group stage\nThe top two teams of each group and the four best third-placed teams advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Group stage, Tiebreakers\nTeams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria were applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Group stage, Group A\nGroup A saw the opening match of the tournament which was a one-all draw between United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, with Ahmed Khalil getting the equaliser in the 88th minute after going one goal down only ten minutes prior. UAE and Thailand qualified as the top two nations in the group after a 1\u20131 draw at the Hazza bin Zayed Stadium, and Bahrain qualified in third place after a 1\u20130 win over India. India finished last in the group after they recorded their first win in the Asian Cup for 55 years over Thailand in their opening match, before losing their remaining two games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Group stage, Group B\nGroup B saw Jordan qualify top of the group after defeating the defending champions in the opening match from an Anas Bani Yaseen header. This was followed up by a 2\u20130 win over Syria which saw Syrian manager Bernd Stange sacked after the match and being replaced by Fajr Ibrahim. Joining them in the round of 16 was Australia, who after losing to Jordan in their opening match, got two wins over Palestine and Syria with that match only being won by a goal from Tom Rogic in injury time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Group stage, Group C\nGroup C saw South Korea and China qualify through as the top two seeds with the game between the two matches seeing South Korea on top of the group after a 2\u20130 win. This meant that South Korea finished without conceding a goal after previously getting two 1\u20130 wins over the Philippines and Kyrgyzstan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0026-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Group stage, Group C\nIn the battle for third place, it was between two newcomers to the competition, with Kyrgyzstan getting their first win in an Asian competition with a hat-trick from Vitalij Lux, securing a 3\u20131 win for the central Asian team despite a late consolation goal from Stephan Schr\u00f6ck, which was the first Philippine goal in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Group stage, Group D\nGroup D saw Iran and Iraq both qualify through to the round of 16 as the top two teams after both finished the group with seven points following their match finishing in a 0\u20130 draw at the Al Maktoum Stadium. Iran finished top of the group on goal difference, largely in part to their 5\u20130 defeat of debutantes Yemen in their first game, which included a double from Mehdi Taremi. A 2\u20130 win over Vietnam saw the team go through with three clean sheets from three. Iraq had a tougher game in their opener against Vietnam, with only a late 90th-minute goal from Ali Adnan securing them three points. This would later be followed with a 3\u20130 win over Yemen to qualify with Iran, with Vietnam qualifying in third place after a 2\u20130 victory over Yemen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 784]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Group stage, Group E\nGroup E witnessed Qatar and Saudi Arabia qualify to the round of 16. In the decisive match for first place, Qatar beat Saudi Arabia 2\u20130, thanks to a brace by Almoez Ali. Qatar began their campaign with a comfortable, albeit controversial, 2\u20130 win over Lebanon, before beating North Korea 6\u20130, sealing their place in the knockout stage. Ali was decisive in both games, scoring a goal against Lebanon, and four goals against North Korea. Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia opened their account with a 4\u20130 win over North Korea, before booking a place to the next round by beating Lebanon 2\u20130. In their last fixture, Lebanon beat North Korea 4\u20131 with a Hilal El-Helwe brace; the win was Lebanon's first in the competition. However, Lebanon missed out on the next round on fair play points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 815]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Group stage, Group F\nGroup F saw Japan and Uzbekistan progressing to the round of 16, with Japan defeating Uzbekistan 2\u20131 to finish in first place. Japan began their campaign with a 3\u20132 victory over Turkmenistan, before beating Oman 1\u20130 to qualify to the knockout stage. Uzbekistan, on the other hand, beat Oman 2\u20131 thanks to an 85th-minute goal by Eldor Shomurodov, before beating their neighbors Turkmenistan 4\u20130. Oman qualified to the next round for the first time, after winning 3\u20131 over Turkmenistan, with Mohammed Al-Musalami scoring a goal in the injury time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, extra time and penalty shoot-out were used to decide the winner if necessary. A fourth substitution could be made during extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 130 goals scored in 51 matches, for an average of 2.55 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Statistics, Discipline\nA player was automatically suspended for the next match for the following offences:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Statistics, Awards\nAccording to the AFC organization committee, eight players from the winning Qatari team and five players from the runner-up Japanese team were selected in the team of the tournament. Six players from teams which progressed to the semi-finals (Iran and the United Arab Emirates) were also selected. In addition, four players from teams which progressed to the quarter-finals were selected. Nguy\u1ec5n Quang H\u1ea3i became the second player from Southeast Asia to be included on the team of the tournament after Soh Chin Ann in 1980.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Statistics, Awards\nAbdelkarim Hassan Bassam Al-Rawi Boualem Khoukhi Yuto Nagatomo Maya Yoshida Bandar Al-Ahbabi Kim Min-jae", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Statistics, Awards\nAbdulaziz Hatem Hassan Al-Haydos Gaku Shibasaki Ashkan Dejagah Omid Ebrahimi Tom Rogic", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Statistics, Awards\nAlmoez Ali Akram Afif Yuya Osako Sardar Azmoun Ali Mabkhout Wu Lei Nguy\u1ec5n Quang H\u1ea3i", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Marketing, Logo and slogan\nThe official logo of the 2019 AFC Asian Cup was unveiled on 23 January 2017 in Abu Dhabi during the drawing ceremony for the third round of the 2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification. The colors used in the logo were derived from the flag of the UAE. The seven hexagons formed by colored ribbons represents the seven emirates of the host country. The interlacing hexagon pattern of the logo was inspired from Islamic art, as well as the old Emirati tradition of using palm leaves, locally known as saf, in weaving. The outer circle along with the geometric design within it symbolizes the sport of football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 46], "content_span": [47, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Marketing, Logo and slogan\nThe slogan \"Bringing Asia Together\" (Arabic: \u062c\u0645\u0639 \u0622\u0633\u064a\u0627 \u0645\u0639\u0627\u064b\u200e) was unveiled on 5 January 2018, a year before the tournament's kick-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 46], "content_span": [47, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Marketing, Match ball\nThe official match ball was provided by Molten Corporation. According from the AFC, the match ball would be known as Molten Acentec.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Marketing, Mascots\nDuring the final draw on 4 May 2018, two mascots, Mansour and Jarrah, were unveiled. Mansour is a typical Arab football kid, while Jarrah is an Arabian falcon with lightning speed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Marketing, Trophy\nAlso on the drawing day on 4 May 2018, an all new trophy made by Thomas Lyte was unveiled. It is 78 centimeters tall, 42 centimeters wide, and weighs 15 kilograms of silver. The trophy is modeled over lotus flower, a symbolically important aquatic Asian plant. Five petals of the lotus symbolized the five sub-confederations under the AFC. The winner names are engraved around the trophy base, which is separable from the trophy's main body.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Marketing, Prize money\nTotal prize money pool for the tournament was US$14,800,000. The champions would receive US$5 million, the runners-up will receive US$3 million, and the losing semi-finalists would receive US$1 million. All 24 participating teams would also receive US$200,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Marketing, Team bus slogans\nThe tournament organizers held a competition where fans got to choose and vote on slogans to be used on the team buses of the 24 participating national teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Broadcasting\nThe tournament was broadcast live by around 80 TV channels covering the whole world. 800 million people were expected to watch matches, with the tournament reaching a potential TV audience of more than 2.5 billion people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Broadcasting\nESPN5 made a \"competitive bid\" to broadcast the tournament on free-to-air television in the Philippines, but it was not accepted by the AFC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Broadcasting\nIn the Middle East, where Qatar-based BeIN Sports has rights to broadcast the Asian Cup in the region, BeoutQ (allegedly backed by Saudi Arabia) also illegally broadcast the tournament as part of a proxy conflict in a diplomatic crisis between Qatar and various Arab states. The AFC has noted BeoutQ's broadcast and condemned it for \"persistent and illegal screening\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Broadcasting\nFor the first time since the expulsion of Israel from the Asian Football Confederation, the UAE allowed Israeli TV channel Sport 5 to directly broadcast the tournament. This was seen as a sign of warming relations between Israel and the UAE. Sport 5 officially broadcast the opening match between the UAE and Bahrain, and had remained active until the end of the tournament. A year later in the following tournament, Israel and the United Arab Emirates officially normalised relations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0048-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Broadcasting\nAt the end of the tournament, AFC announced that the 2019 Asian Cup was the most engaging in history across all social platforms reaching 169.4 million impressions, an increase by more than fifteen times from the 11 million reach from 2015 AFC Asian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0049-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Broadcasting\nBroadcast rights are sold by Lagard\u00e8re Sports on behalf of the AFC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0050-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Controversies, Australia vs. Palestine\nMany ticket-holding fans were locked out of the Group B match between Palestine and Australia, with management closing a number of Rashid Stadium gates before the start of the match \u201cin the interests of fan safety\u201d. Rashid Stadium was one of the smallest stadiums in the tournament with only 12,000 seats and many non-ticket holding fans attempted to watch the match without buying tickets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 58], "content_span": [59, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0050-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Controversies, Australia vs. Palestine\nThe organizing committee issued a statement for the reasons of closure stating \u201cAhead of kick-off a large crowd of fans with and without tickets had gathered over a short period of time outside the stadium, which resulted in the need to secure the area.\" They then issued an apology to supporters who were \u201cinconvenienced or left disappointed\u201d and issued an investigative probe to insure it to be an isolated incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 58], "content_span": [59, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0051-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Controversies, Qatar travel complications\nAs a result of Qatar diplomatic crisis between Qatar and number of its neighbours since 5 June 2017, including the United Arab Emirates as the host country, the UAE suspended all direct flights between the two countries and initially banned Qatari citizens from entering their country, although the Emirati government later announced that it would permit Qatari citizens temporary entry into the country pending approval from Emirati authorities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 61], "content_span": [62, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0051-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Controversies, Qatar travel complications\nAccording to a report, Saoud al-Mohannadi, a Qatari national who is the AFC vice-president and chairman of the organizing committee for the Asian Cup, was unable to enter the UAE two days prior to the tournament's start because Emirati authorities had not yet cleared him. The director of the 2019 AFC Organizing Committee denied reports that Al Mohannadi was refused entry and declared that Al Mohannadi has arrived on Friday morning and was preparing for his meetings. The director stated that there was no evidence that shows he was unable to enter and stated that this news has \"political purposes\". He stated \"We try to keep sports away from politics.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 61], "content_span": [62, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0052-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Controversies, Qatar travel complications\nThe diplomatic crisis prevented many fans from attending Qatar matches in the UAE. This had affected attendance figures in Qatar matches, as little more than 450 people spectated the Group E clash between North Korea and Qatar on 13 January. The UAE government had confirmed previously that Qatari citizens may enter UAE with prior permission obtained directly through a hotline from UAE authorities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 61], "content_span": [62, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0053-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Controversies, Qatar travel complications\nAccording to Qatar's Sports Press Committee, five Qatar-based media representatives were denied entry into the UAE despite having entry visas and receiving assurances that they would be allowed to attend and report on the tournament by the AFC. The AFC Media Committee dismissed the Qatari reports and stated that some of the Qatar-based journalists confused visit visas with work visas and advised all journalists to contact them if they encounter any issues with the entry visa type.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 61], "content_span": [62, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0054-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Controversies, Qatar travel complications\nAccording to Al Jazeera, the final match, which was won by Qatar, was played \"almost entirely without\" Qatari support from the stands, due to the travel ban. However, according to Qatar-based The Peninsula large number of Omani fans supported the Qatari team in the stadium, stating \"The large number of fans who supported the Qatari team were wearing the logo of Al Annabi [The Maroons] with the background of the names of various players. Apart from their attendance, they carried flags in the stadium and continued to cheer for Al Annabi [The Maroons] players and sing songs throughout the game.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 61], "content_span": [62, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0055-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Controversies, Footwear-throwing incident\nDuring the semi-final match between Qatar and hosts United Arab Emirates, some UAE supporters threw bottles and footwear into the match after Qatari players scored their second goal; the latter is considered to be highly offensive in the Middle East. One of the Qatari players, Salem Al Hajri, was struck on the head with a shoe after Qatar scored its third goal. This conduct was preceded by booing the Qatari national anthem. The two countries had had a hostile relationship and had cut diplomatic ties due to the ongoing diplomatic crisis. Qatar won 4\u20130 despite the events, reaching their first Asian Cup final. Afterwards, the AFC declared that it would conduct an investigation into the proceedings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 61], "content_span": [62, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0056-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Controversies, Qatar player eligibility\nOn 30 January 2019, soon after the hosts lost to Qatar in the semi-finals, the United Arab Emirates Football Association lodged a formal appeal to the AFC over the eligibility of Sudanese-born Almoez Ali and Iraqi-born Bassam Al-Rawi, claiming that they did not qualify to play for Qatar on residency grounds per Article 7 of the Regulations Governing the Application of the FIFA statutes, which states a player is eligible to play for a representative team if he has \"lived continuously for at least five years after reaching the age of 18 on the territory of the relevant association\". It was alleged that Ali and Al-Rawi had not lived continuously in Qatar for at least five years over the age of 18, although the players claimed that their mothers were born in Qatar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 59], "content_span": [60, 831]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0057-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Controversies, Qatar player eligibility\nOnly hours prior to the start of the final on 1 February 2019, the AFC Disciplinary and Ethics Committee announced that it had dismissed the protest lodged by the UAEFA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 59], "content_span": [60, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0058-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Controversies, Qatar football shirt fan incident\nA British-Sudanese football fan claimed he was beaten and arrested for wearing a Qatar football shirt to a match in which Qatar was playing and then, after reporting to the police, arrested and accused of wasting police time and making false statements of being assaulted. In an interview with Sky News, he claimed he was beaten, starved, and deprived of sleep by the police for wearing Qatar shirt. The fan claims were denied by UAE authorities who stated the fan was arrested for wasting police time and making false assault claims to the police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 68], "content_span": [69, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286942-0059-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup, Controversies, Qatar football shirt fan incident\nThe police claimed that the fan had admitted to making false statements and his offense will be processed through the courts. An official in UAE embassy in London stated \u201cHe was categorically not arrested for wearing a Qatar football shirt. This is instead an instance of a person seeking media attention and wasting police time.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 68], "content_span": [69, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final\nThe 2019 AFC Asian Cup Final was a football match which determined the winner of the 2019 AFC Asian Cup, the 17th edition of the AFC Asian Cup, a quadrennial tournament contested by the men's national teams of the member associations of the Asian Football Confederation. The match was held at the Zayed Sports City Stadium in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, on 1 February 2019 and was contested by Japan and Qatar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final\nJapan had won in each of its four previous AFC Asian Cup finals, while Qatar were playing in their first, which they managed to reach without conceding a goal in the prior six matches. Qatar won the final 3\u20131 for their first AFC Asian Cup title, scoring twice in the first half and earning a late penalty in the second half. For Japan, this was their first defeat in an Asian Cup final. Qatari fans were largely unable to attend the tournament due to the ongoing Qatar diplomatic crisis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final, Venue\nZayed Sports City Stadium in Abu Dhabi, the largest stadium in the United Arab Emirates, hosted the Asian Cup Final. The 43,000-seat stadium was built in 1980 and is primarily used by the Emirati national football team. Zayed Sports City was the host of the 1996 Asian Cup Final and 2003 FIFA World Youth Championship final, as well as several FIFA Club World Cup finals, most recently in 2018. The Dubai Roads and Transport Authority solicited independent bids in 2015 to build a 60,000-seat stadium to host the Asian Cup final, but Zayed Sports City Stadium was announced in 2017 as the venue for the opening match and final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final, Route to the final, Japan\nJapan is the most successful nation at the Asian Cup, having won it a record four times\u2014most recently in 2011. They qualified for the 2019 tournament by topping Group E with an undefeated record of seven wins and one draw, scoring 27 goals and conceding none. After the team reached the round of 16 during the 2018 FIFA World Cup, head coach Akira Nishino was replaced by Hajime Moriyasu, who had assisted Nishino and served as coach of the under-23 team preparing for the 2020 Summer Olympics. Moriyasu elected to exclude several veteran players in his Asian Cup squad, including midfielder Shinji Kagawa and striker Shinji Okazaki, with the goal of exposing younger, in-form players to international competition. Under Moriyasu's tenure, Japan was undefeated in five matches before the start of the Asian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 863]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final, Route to the final, Japan\nIn their opening match of the Asian Cup, Japan faced Turkmenistan and conceded a goal in the 26th minute, a long-range strike by Arslanmyrat Amanow, and entered halftime trailing 1\u20130. Japan took the lead in the second half with a brace from Yuya Osako, who scored in the 56th and 60th minutes, and added a third goal by Ritsu Doan eleven minutes later. The lead was cut back to 3\u20132 by a penalty kick scored in the 78th minute by Ahmet Ata\u00fdew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final, Route to the final, Japan\nMoriyasu acknowledged that the team struggled in the match against Turkmenistan and praised their performance before adding that they would need to improve in order to advance from the group stage. In their second match against Oman, Japan had several early chances that they failed to convert into goals before earning a penalty in the 28th minute for a tackle on Genki Haraguchi, who scored. The 1\u20130 win, which came with Oman being denied a penalty for an alleged handball in the first half, saw Japan qualify for the knockout round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0004-0002", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final, Route to the final, Japan\nMoriyasu fielded an entirely new starting lineup, save for forward Koya Kitagawa, for the final group stage match against Uzbekistan. Japan and clinched a first-place finish in Group F through a come-from-behind 2\u20131 victory over Uzbekistan. After conceding a goal in the 40th minute, Japan responded with a header scored by Yoshinori Muto in the 43rd minute and a long-distance strike by Tsukasa Shiotani in the 58th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final, Route to the final, Japan\nThe Samurai Blue faced Saudi Arabia in the round of 16 and played defensively, fielding a lineup similar to their first two group stage matches. Japan advanced with a 1\u20130 victory over the Saudis on a 20th-minute header scored by Takehiro Tomiyasu and protected the lead against the majority of possession and shots held by the Saudis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final, Route to the final, Japan\nThe quarter-finals marked the debut of the video assistant referee (VAR) system at the Asian Cup and was used in the match between Japan and Vietnam, calling back a goal in the 25th minute for a handball and awarding Japan a penalty kick in the 57th minute, which was scored by Ritsu Doan to give the Samurai Blue a 1\u20130 win. Moriyasu defended the team's results after receiving criticism over the team's style of play, which relied on one-goal margins in the group stage and knockout rounds to reach the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0005-0002", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final, Route to the final, Japan\nPlaying in the semi-finals against the top-ranked Iranian team, who had yet to concede a goal, the two teams were kept to a scoreless draw in the first half. Japan made several halftime adjustments to its attack that produced a 3\u20130 victory and advancement to their fifth Asian Cup final. Yuya Osako netted a brace with a header in the 56th minute and a penalty kick in the 67th minute that was awarded by VAR for a handball; Genki Haraguchi then added a third goal in stoppage time to seal the team's win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final, Route to the final, Qatar\nQatar has participated in nine previous editions of the Asian Cup, advancing twice from the group stage in 2000 and 2011 before being eliminated in the quarter-finals. The country was selected to host the 2022 FIFA World Cup and earned a qualification berth, prompting the Qataris to begin preparing the national team for the world stage. Former Barcelona youth coach F\u00e9lix S\u00e1nchez was named the manager of the U-23 and senior national teams in 2017, cultivating an attack-oriented style and utilizing young talents who had emerged since the World Cup announcement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final, Route to the final, Qatar\nIn the second round of the Asian Cup qualification tournament, Qatar placed first with a record of seven wins and one loss\u2014including a 15\u20130 victory over Bhutan that broke their record for their largest margin of victory. While their performance in the second round qualified them for the Asian Cup, Qatar failed to clinch a berth for the 2018 FIFA World Cup, placing last in its third-round group with seven losses in ten matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final, Route to the final, Qatar\nS\u00e1nchez called up a young squad, including eleven members aged younger than 22, that was primarily pooled from the domestic league's Al-Sadd and Al-Duhail as well as members of the team who had won the 2014 AFC U-19 Championship under his tenure. In two warm-up friendlies, Qatar earned an upset 1\u20130 victory over Switzerland and drew 2\u20132 with Iceland. The team was affected by the ongoing diplomatic dispute between Qatar and a coalition of Middle Eastern and Muslim nations led by Saudi Arabia and including hosts United Arab Emirates, causing them to take indirect flights and being denied access to federation officials and journalists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final, Route to the final, Qatar\nQatar were drawn into Group E and opened their Asian Cup campaign against Lebanon, winning 2\u20130 on second-half goals by center-back Bassam Al-Rawi and forward Almoez Ali. It was the first time that Qatar had won an Asian Cup match hosted in another country. In their second match, facing North Korea in front of an announced attendance of 452 spectators at Khalifa bin Zayed Stadium, Qatar won 6\u20130 with four goals by Ali to reach the knockout round, which became Qatar's largest ever victory in their Asian Cup history. The final group stage match against Saudi Arabia was nicknamed the \"Blockade Derby\", referencing the land, air, and sea blockade, and was won 2\u20130 by Qatar with two goals scored by Almoez Ali to top their group comfortably.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final, Route to the final, Qatar\nThe team faced Iraq in the round of 16 and won 1\u20130, with the lone goal of the match coming from a free kick scored by Iraqi-born Bassam Al-Rawi in the 62nd minute. Qatar then played against 2015 runners-up South Korea, which had managed to eliminate Germany in the 2018 FIFA World Cup earlier before, in the quarter-finals and created the biggest shock in the tournament, a 1\u20130 win on a goal from Abdulaziz Hatem in the 78th minute, setting up a semi-finals match against hosts United Arab Emirates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final, Route to the final, Qatar\nThe semi-final, dubbed the second installment of the \"Blockade Derby\", was played in front of 38,646 spectators at the Mohammed bin Zayed Stadium in Abu Dhabi, where hostile Emirati supporters threw sandals and water bottles at Qatari players. Boualem Khoukhi scored the opening goal for Qatar in the 22nd minute and was followed by Almoez Ali, who scored his eighth goal of the tournament in the 37th minute and tied the record set by Ali Daei for Iran in 1996.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0009-0002", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final, Route to the final, Qatar\nA goal by Hassan Al-Haydos in the 80th minute and substitute Hamid Ismail in stoppage time gave Qatar a 4\u20130 win to help them reach their first Asian Cup final. Qatar also became the second team to advance to the final without conceding a goal, following South Korea's run in 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final, Pre-match, Officials\nUzbek referee Ravshan Irmatov was selected to lead the officiating team for the final, which was announced by the AFC on 30 January 2019. He previously officiated at three FIFA World Cups, the 2012 Summer Olympics, FIFA Club World Cup, and the FIFA Confederations Cup. The final is Irmatov's fifth match as referee during the tournament, having officiated two group stage matches and two knockout matches. His compatriots Abdukhamidullo Rasulov and Jakhongir Saidov were chosen as assistant referees, while Chinese referee Ma Ning was the fourth official. Italian Paolo Valeri was named the video assistant referee, presiding over the first use of the technology in the final of the Asian Cup. Muhammad Taqi of Singapore and Chris Beath of Australia were the assistant video assistant referees for the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 855]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final, Pre-match, Qatar player eligibility\nOn 30 January 2019, soon after the hosts lost to Qatar in the semi-finals, the United Arab Emirates Football Association (UAEFA) lodged a formal appeal to the AFC over the eligibility of Sudanese-born striker Almoez Ali and Iraqi-born defender Bassam Al-Rawi, claiming that they did not qualify to play for Qatar. The appeal was filed on residency grounds per Article 7 of the FIFA statutes, which states a player is eligible to play for a representative team if he has \"lived continuously for at least five years after reaching the age of 18 on the territory of the relevant association\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 61], "content_span": [62, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final, Pre-match, Qatar player eligibility\nIt was alleged by the UAEFA that Ali and Al-Rawi had not lived continuously in Qatar for at least five years over the age of 18, although the players claimed that their mothers were born in Qatar. On 1 February 2019, hours prior to the final, the AFC Disciplinary and Ethics Committee ruled in favour of Qatar national team and dismissed the protest lodged by the UAEFA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 61], "content_span": [62, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final, Match, Summary\nThe match kicked off at 18:00 local time in Abu Dhabi at Zayed Sports City Stadium, in front of an announced attendance of 36,776 spectators, including several thousand Omanis. Japan began the match with two set piece chances, but neither was able to provide a scoring chance. Qatar's Almoez Ali opened the scoring in the 12th minute with a bicycle kick from 15 yards (14\u00a0m) after juggling a ball received from Akram Afif.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final, Match, Summary\nWith his ninth goal of the tournament, Ali took the record for most goals scored during an Asian Cup that was previously held by Iranian Ali Daei. Abdulaziz Hatem scored Qatar's next goal in the 27th minute, shooting from 25 yards (75\u00a0ft) past Japanese goalkeeper Sh\u016bichi Gonda towards the top corner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final, Match, Summary\nJapan regained possession and found several scoring chances before and after halftime, including a missed header from Yoshinori Muto and several corner kicks, but were unable to produce a shot on goal. Qatar received an early chance to score their third goal in the 56th minute on a counterattack, but the shot by Hatem went over the crossbar. The lead was cut to 2\u20131 with a 69th-minute goal from close range by Takumi Minamino\u2014the first to be conceded by Qatar during the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final, Match, Summary\nQatar were awarded a penalty kick in the 82nd minute by the video assistant referee for a handball by Japanese captain Maya Yoshida, who blocked a shot from a corner kick. The penalty was converted by Akram Afif to give Qatar a 3\u20131 lead that they kept until the end of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final, Match, Details\nAssistant referees:Abdukhamidullo Rasulov (Uzbekistan)Jakhongir Saidov (Uzbekistan)Fourth official:Ma Ning (China PR)Reserve assistant referee:Huo Weiming (China PR)Video assistant referee:Paolo Valeri (Italy)Assistant video assistant referees:Muhammad Taqi (Singapore)Chris Beath (Australia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final, Post-match\nWith their victory over Japan, Qatar had earned its first Asian Cup title, having never previously advanced past the quarter-finals, and became the ninth country to win the tournament. The match was Japan's first loss in the tournament after a perfect record of six wins as well as their first loss in an Asian Cup final, having won the previous four final matches. Qatar finished the tournament with a perfect record, winning all seven matches en route to the title. The match also marked the debut of a new match ball and trophy for the Asian Cup, as well as the first use of a video assistant referee during the tournament final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final, Post-match\nAlmoez Ali, who was named the AFC Asian Cup MVP as the best player of the tournament, won the top scorer award after scoring nine of Qatar's 19 goals in the tournament, surpassing the Asian Cup record of eight goals set by Ali Daei of Iran in 1996. Goalkeeper Saad Al Sheeb kept six successive clean sheets, winning him the award for best goalkeeper of the tournament, and only conceded one goal during the entire tournament, to Takumi Minamino in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final, Post-match\nQatar's Akram Afif was selected as the final's man of the match, with one penalty goal and two assists in the match. Overall, he finished the tournament with ten assists, the most of any player. Runners-up Japan won the fair play award as the team with the tournament's best disciplinary record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final, Post-match\nQatar and Japan were both invited to also compete in the 2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica prior to the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286943-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Final, Post-match\nAccording to Qatar-based media outlet Al Jazeera, Emirati newspapers emphasized that Japan lost the final, reflecting the ongoing diplomatic rift between Qatar and the UAE.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286944-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group A\nGroup A of the 2019 AFC Asian Cup took place from 5 to 14 January 2019. The group consisted of tournament hosts United Arab Emirates, Thailand, India, and Bahrain. The top two teams, the United Arab Emirates and Thailand, along with the third-placed team, Bahrain (as one of the four best third-placed teams), advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286944-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group A, Matches, United Arab Emirates vs Bahrain\nWith six minutes played, Ali Mabkhout found Ismail Al Hammadi who fired narrowly wide of Bahrain goalkeeper Sayed Shubbar Alawi\u2019s far post. Mabkhout shot over the bar from 15 yards after an Ali Salmeen cross on 23 minutes. In the final moments of the first half, Kamil Al Aswad's free-kick from 25 yards flashed narrowly over the bar. Khalid Eisa then produced a double save to deny Bahrain in the 52nd minute by first palming away Ali Madan\u2019s drive and blocking Mohamed Al Romaihi\u2019s subsequent follow-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 68], "content_span": [69, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286944-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group A, Matches, United Arab Emirates vs Bahrain\nEight minutes after the hour mark, Bahrain failed to clear the lines at a corner and the ball was eventually deflected into the path of Mabkhout, who shot just wide of the post. On 78 minutes, defender Sayed Redha Isa crossed to Al Romaihi who saw his initial header cleared off the line before ramming home the rebound. Bahrain substitute Mohamed Marhoon, who had only just come on, handled in the area on 88 minutes and Ahmed Khalil having come off the bench for his 100th cap scored the resulting penalty to ensure his side a point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 68], "content_span": [69, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286944-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group A, Matches, United Arab Emirates vs Bahrain\nAssistant referees:Ahmad Al-Roalle (Jordan)Mohammad Al-Kalaf (Jordan)Fourth official:Mohammed Al-Abakry (Saudi Arabia)Additional assistant referees:Turki Al-Khudhayr (Saudi Arabia)Ahmed Al-Ali (Jordan)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 68], "content_span": [69, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286944-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group A, Matches, Thailand vs India\nThailand threatened first with captain Teerasil Dangda finding Thitipan Puangchan who shot an 11th minute drive which sailed narrowly wide of India goalkeeper Gurpreet Singh Sandhu\u2019s right-hand post. Ashique Kuruniyan\u2019s shot was saved by Chatchai Budprom, only for defender Theerathon Bunmathan to concede a penalty when he handled the subsequent rebound. Sunil Chhetri converted the resulting penalty to give India the lead in the 27th minute. Thailand were, however, to draw level just six minutes later, Teerasil heading home Theerathon\u2019s delivered set-piece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286944-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group A, Matches, Thailand vs India\nMoments after the restart, Kuruniyan and Udanta Singh combined to set up Chhetri who fired home past Chatchai from 15 yards to restore his side\u2019s advantage. In the 68th minute Udanta charged towards the goal before laying the ball back to Anirudh Thapa, who dinked the ball past both Chatchai and a recovering defender into the back of the net. With time running out, Thailand rallied briefly when Teerasil saw a goal-bound effort diverted to safety via the outstretched leg of the defender Anas Edathodika. With 10 minutes remaining, substitute Jeje Lalpekhlua scored a curling strike from the edge of the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286944-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group A, Matches, Thailand vs India\nThis became India's biggest ever win in their Asian Cup history, while it was also India's first ever win after 55 years. This hammered defeat to India prompted the FAT to sack Milovan Rajevac and appointed Sirisak Yodyardthai as interim coach. Sunil Chhetri passed beyond Lionel Messi to become the second-best scoring players still in active, behind Cristiano Ronaldo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286944-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group A, Matches, Thailand vs India\nAssistant referees:Huo Weiming (China PR)Cao Yi (China PR)Fourth official:Ronnie Koh Min Kiat (Singapore)Additional assistant referees:Ma Ning (China PR)Fu Ming (China PR)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286944-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group A, Matches, Bahrain vs Thailand\nThailand came close in the 20th minute when captain Teerasil Dangda\u2019s effort was blocked by Bahrain goalkeeper Sayed Shubbar Alawi. Bahrain had their chances too as they kept Thai goalkeeper Siwarak Tedsungnoen busy, with the custodian pulling off a double-save against Mohamed Marhoon and Sayed Dhiya Saeed in the 28th minute. Bahrain had a glimpse at goal four minutes from the end of the half with Marhoon sending in a cross but Mohamed Al Romaihi failed to keep his header down. In the 58th minute Tristan Do launched a cross into the Bahrain penalty box. The ball was deflected by Ahmed Juma but a surging Chanathip Songkrasin sent a left-footed shot past Alawi to give Thailand the advantage. Thailand came close to doubling their lead when Chanathip's pass found Adisak Kraisorn but his effort was denied by the upright in the 71st minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 903]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286944-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group A, Matches, Bahrain vs Thailand\nAssistant referees:Matthew Cream (Australia)Anton Shchetinin (Australia)Fourth official:Sergei Grishchenko (Kyrgyzstan)Additional assistant referees:Peter Green (Australia)Ryuji Sato (Japan)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286944-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group A, Matches, India vs United Arab Emirates\nIndia had the game's first chance when Ashique Kuruniyan darted into the area before unleashing a drive which forced goalkeeper Khalid Eisa into a fine save on 11 minutes. Eisa was called into action once again in the 23rd minute, this time reacting to repel a Sunil Chhetri header. Five minutes before half-time, Anas Edathodika made a mess of it and allowed Ali Mabkhout to set up Khalfan Mubarak to fire home past Indian custodian Gurpreet Singh Sandhu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 66], "content_span": [67, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286944-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group A, Matches, India vs United Arab Emirates\nIn the final moments of the first period, Chhetri came within inches of drawing his side level, but his effort fizzed just wide of Eisa's far post. After the break, India substitute Jeje Lalpekhlua thumped a shot narrowly off target and then Udanta Singh rattled the UAE bar with a drive from a narrow angle. Ismail Al Hammadi\u2019s 74th minute shot cannoned of a post and then Sandhu before rebounding to safety. The UAE duly doubled their advantage in the final moments when Mabkhout converted Ali Salmeen\u2019s pass to assure his side of the victory despite Mohamed Ahmed crashing the ball against his own woodwork deep into stoppage time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 66], "content_span": [67, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286944-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group A, Matches, India vs United Arab Emirates\nAssistant referees:Miguel Hern\u00e1ndez (Mexico)Alberto Mor\u00edn (Mexico)Fourth official:Rashid Al-Ghaithi (Oman)Additional assistant referees:Jumpei Iida (Japan)Hiroyuki Kimura (Japan)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 66], "content_span": [67, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286944-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group A, Matches, United Arab Emirates vs Thailand\nHosts the United Arab Emirates and Thailand both booked their places in the knockout stage as a 1\u20131 draw at Hazza bin Zayed Stadium was enough to ensure both nations progressed. Ali Mabkhout put Alberto Zaccheroni\u2019s side ahead after seven minutes but Thitiphan Puangjan struck four minutes from time to earn the Thais a point that sees them take second place in Group A, following India\u2019s late loss to Bahrain, thanks to a better head-to-head record. The hosts made the perfect start when, with many in the crowd of almost 18,000 still finding their seats, they hit the back of Siwarak Tedsungnoen\u2019s goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 69], "content_span": [70, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286944-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group A, Matches, United Arab Emirates vs Thailand\nIsmail Al Hammadi burst into the area and attempted to clip the ball over the Thai keeper, only for the ball to come back off the crossbar. But Mabkhout rose to head home the rebound from inside the six-yard box. Khalfan Mubarak sought to double the lead 11 minutes later when he twisted his way past the Thai defence only to send a weak shot trundling through to Siwarak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 69], "content_span": [70, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286944-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group A, Matches, United Arab Emirates vs Thailand\nWhile the UAE have qualified for the knockout phase for the second tournament in a row, Thailand will be featuring in the next round for the first time since reaching the semi-finals in 1972.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 69], "content_span": [70, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286944-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group A, Matches, United Arab Emirates vs Thailand\nAssistant referees:Hiroshi Yamauchi (Japan)Jun Mihara (Japan)Fourth official:Mohd Yusri Muhamad (Malaysia)Additional assistant referees:Jumpei Iida (Japan)Hiroyuki Kimura (Japan)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 69], "content_span": [70, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286944-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group A, Matches, India vs Bahrain\nJamal Rashid's penalty in added time secured Bahrain a 1\u20130 win over India, taking them into the knockout stage for the first time since 2004 edition. With United Arab Emirates and Thailand playing to a 1\u20131 draw, Bahrain finished third in Group A with their haul of four points confirming them as one of the best four third-placed teams who will advance to the Round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286944-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group A, Matches, India vs Bahrain\nIndia suffered early problems at the back when Anas Edathodika was forced off with an injury in the fourth minute and was replaced with Salam Ranjan Singh. Bahrain then applied pressure on the Blue Tigers\u2019 defence as goalkeeper Gurpreet Singh Sandhu was called into action three minutes later when he saved Sayed Dhiya Saeed\u2019s left footed shot from outside the box. India were able to calm their nerves and responded in the 20th minute with Sunil Chhetri coming close to scoring for Stephen Constantine\u2019s side but the striker failed to steer Gurpreet Singh's long pass home. Jamal Rashid and Sayed Dhiya Saeed both failed to find the mark with long-range efforts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286944-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group A, Matches, India vs Bahrain\nAssistant referees:Abdukhamidullo Rasulov (Uzbekistan)Sergei Grishchenko (Kyrgyzstan)Fourth official:Ronnie Koh Min Kiat (Singapore)Additional assistant referees:Ravshan Irmatov (Uzbekistan)Valentin Kovalenko (Uzbekistan)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286944-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group A, Discipline\nFair play points were used as tiebreakers if the head-to-head and overall records of teams were tied (and if a penalty shoot-out was not applicable as a tiebreaker). These were calculated based on yellow and red cards received in all group matches as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286944-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group A, Discipline\nOnly one of the above deductions was applied to a player in a single match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286945-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group B\nGroup B of the 2019 AFC Asian Cup took place from 6 to 15 January 2019. The group consisted of defending champions Australia, Syria, Palestine, and Jordan. The top two teams, Jordan and Australia, advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286945-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group B, Matches, Australia vs Jordan\nWith 10 minutes on the clock, Musa Al-Taamari turned in the area, only to shoot across the face of the goal. Robbie Kruse\u2019s through ball found Awer Mabil, whose first-time shot was kept out by Amer Shafi. At 26 minutes, Baha' Abdel-Rahman\u2019s corner found Anas Bani Yaseen who powered his header beyond Mathew Ryan. Minutes later Jordan almost doubled their lead after Trent Sainsbury\u2019s foul on Al-Taamari provided Abdel-Rahman the opportunity to go for goal from the edge of the area, only for Ryan to tip the free-kick onto the crossbar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286945-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group B, Matches, Australia vs Jordan\nAustralia were denied a penalty for Feras Shelbaieh's apparent handball shortly before the break. Early in the second half, Mabil drove a low ball across the face of goal that Shafi pushed to the feet of one of his own defenders, while Tom Rogic\u2019s dipping shot from range was also beaten away by the goalkeeper. At the other end, Yaseen Al-Bakhit\u2019s long range drive was just off target moments after beating two defenders and seeing the ball out for a corner. Twelve minutes from time, Mabil saw his low drive come back off the base of Shafi\u2019s left upright while substitute Jackson Irvine headed wide three minutes later. Australia continued to push and Shafi was forced into action in the final seconds of the game as Jordan recorded a historic result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286945-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group B, Matches, Australia vs Jordan\nAssistant referees:Abu Bakar Al-Amri (Oman)Rashid Al-Ghaithi (Oman)Fourth official:Taleb Al-Marri (Qatar)Additional assistant referees:Abdulrahman Al-Jassim (Qatar)Khamis Al-Marri (Qatar)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286945-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group B, Matches, Syria vs Palestine\nOmar Al Somah\u2019s run down the left caught Palestine off guard and his cross found Omar Kharbin in the area who fired his effort wide. Syria almost took the lead after seven minutes, when Palestine custodian Rami Hamadeh lost the ball in the area only for Kharbin to see his close-range effort cleared off the line by Abdullah Jaber. Syria continued to pile the pressure on Palestine as Hamadeh was called into action in the 29th minute when he produced an acrobatic save to deny Kharbin's header.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286945-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group B, Matches, Syria vs Palestine\nSyria then suffered a blow in the 39th minute when Osama Omari was stretchered off the pitch after picking up an injury and replaced by Youssef Kalfa. With a minute left in the half, Syria were given another opportunity but Al Somah couldn\u2019t convert his free-kick as the score remained 0\u20130 at half-time. Palestine went down to 10 men after Mohammed Saleh picked up his second yellow card in the 68th minute. However, Syria failed to capitalise on their one-man advantage, and both the teams settled for a share of the points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286945-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group B, Matches, Syria vs Palestine\nAssistant referees:Abdukhamidullo Rasulov (Uzbekistan)Jakhongir Saidov (Uzbekistan)Fourth official:Sergei Grishchenko (Kyrgyzstan)Additional assistant referees:Valentin Kovalenko (Uzbekistan)Ilgiz Tantashev (Uzbekistan)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286945-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group B, Matches, Jordan vs Syria\nThe opener came in the 26th minute when Yaseen Al-Bakhit cut the ball back from the left to Yousef Al-Rawashdeh and his low driven centre was steered home at pace by Musa Al-Taamari. Three minutes later Jordan came close to score their second as Al-Bakhit found Al-Taamari, only for his effort to bounce off the turf before clearing the crossbar. The second goal came two minutes before the interval, Baha' Abdel-Rahman\u2019s short corner to Al-Taamari was whipped into the area and Tareq Khattab held off the Syrian defence to head home at the near post.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286945-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group B, Matches, Jordan vs Syria\nOmar Kharbin headed just over the bar five minutes after the restart before shooting straight at Amer Shafi six minutes later. Kharbin was involved again in the 71st minute as the Jordanian defence made an error to gift him the ball 25 yards from goal, but this time Shafi was on hand to save, doing just enough to divert his shot wide of the left post. Jordan came close to score late as both Saeed Murjan and Ahmad Ersan narrowly missed. The Syrian coach Bernd Stange was sacked after this match, and replaced with former manager Fajr Ibrahim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286945-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group B, Matches, Jordan vs Syria\nAssistant referees:Yoon Kwang-yeol (South Korea)Park Sang-jun (South Korea)Fourth official:Yaser Tulefat (Bahrain)Additional assistant referees:Nawaf Shukralla (Bahrain)Ko Hyung-jin (South Korea)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286945-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group B, Matches, Palestine vs Australia\nJamie Maclaren headed in from Tom Rogic's cross to score his first international goal and give the holders a 1\u20130 lead in the 18th minute. Two minutes later, Australia doubled their lead when Awer Mabil found his way in behind the defence to side-foot home an angled pass from Chris Ikonomidis. Mabil was teed up by Maclaren in the dying moments of the first half, only for the winger to blaze his effort high and wide from close range.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286945-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group B, Matches, Palestine vs Australia\nAn attempted 54th-minute cross from Rhyan Grant caught the woodwork after a heavy deflection off Abdullah Jaber, while Palestine's Musab Al-Battat made a defensive intervention moments later. Australia sealed their win in the 90th minute, with substitute Apostolos Giannou rising high to head home an Ikonomidis cross following an Australian set-piece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286945-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group B, Matches, Palestine vs Australia\nAssistant referees:Abdukhamidullo Rasulov (Uzbekistan)Jakhongir Saidov (Uzbekistan)Fourth official:Mohamed Salman (Bahrain)Additional assistant referees:Ravshan Irmatov (Uzbekistan)Ilgiz Tantashev (Uzbekistan)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286945-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group B, Matches, Australia vs Syria\nChris Ikonomidis found the hands of Ibrahim Alma with his long range attempt before the Syrian keeper twice denied Jamie Maclaren. In the 41st minute, Awer Mabil's curling strike arced its way inside the keeper\u2019s right post. The lead was to last less than two minutes, however, as Moayad Ajan seared down the left flank beyond Rhyan Grant and sent in a cross that Omar Kharbin headed goalward. Mathew Ryan made the initial save, but Kharbin converted the rebound. Nine minutes after the restart, Australia were back in front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286945-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group B, Matches, Australia vs Syria\nTom Rogic\u2019s ball from the left slid past Hussein Jwayed to land at the feet of Ikonomidis, who steered his effort over the line. Substitute Apostolos Giannou then hit the post 15 minutes from time, and five minutes later Syria were level after the referee pointed to the spot and Omar Al Somah converted. Three minutes into added time, Rogic gave Australia the win after he scored with an effort from distance. For Syria, this defeat meant they had not progressed from the group stage for the sixth consecutive AFC Asian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286945-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group B, Matches, Australia vs Syria\nAssistant referees:Miguel Hern\u00e1ndez (Mexico)Alberto Mor\u00edn (Mexico)Fourth official:Palitha Hemathunga (Sri Lanka)Additional assistant referees:Liu Kwok Man (Hong Kong)Khamis Al-Marri (Qatar)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286945-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group B, Matches, Palestine vs Jordan\nPalestine came close to breaking the deadlock in the 17th minute when Amer Shafi produced a fingertip save to keep out Abdelatif Bahdari\u2019s flicked attempt from a Tamer Seyam corner. Baha' Abdel-Rahman then flashed a shot inches over the bar from distance, before, in the final moments of the first half, Shafi punched clear with striker Mahmoud Wadi lurking. Six minutes after the restart, Oday Dabbagh failed to find the target with a header from Musab Al-Battat\u2019s delivery. Moments later, Bahdari\u2019s header from another Seyam set-piece was gathered on his line by Shafi, and Ahmad Ersan\u2019s 68th minute shot at the other end was saved by Rami Hamadeh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286945-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group B, Matches, Palestine vs Jordan\nAssistant referees:Taleb Al-Marri (Qatar)Saud Al-Maqaleh (Qatar)Fourth official:Yoon Kwang-yeol (South Korea)Additional assistant referees:Ali Sabah (Iraq)Khamis Al-Kuwari (Qatar)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286945-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group B, Discipline\nFair play points were used as tiebreakers if the head-to-head and overall records of teams were tied (and if a penalty shoot-out was not applicable as a tiebreaker). These were calculated based on yellow and red cards received in all group matches as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286945-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group B, Discipline\nOnly one of the above deductions was applied to a player in a single match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286946-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group C\nGroup C of the 2019 AFC Asian Cup took place from 7 to 16 January 2019. The group consists of South Korea, China PR, Kyrgyzstan, and the Philippines. The top two teams, South Korea and China PR, along with the third-placed team, Kyrgyzstan (as one of the four best third-placed teams), advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286946-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group C\nSouth Korea was the only former champion in the group, having won both 1956 and 1960 editions. The Philippines and Kyrgyzstan both made debuts in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286946-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group C, Matches, China PR vs Kyrgyzstan\nKyrgyzstan and China last played against each other in a friendly which ended in a 2\u20130 win for China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286946-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group C, Matches, China PR vs Kyrgyzstan\nWu Lei had China's first effort at goal when he shot straight at Pavel Matyash in the 9th minute. Wu Xi shot just wide following a lay-off from Wu Lei before Gao Lin\u2019s lofted, curling delivery from the left skipped away from a sliding Yu Dabao at the far post and bounced to safety. Mirlan Murzaev\u2019s headed flick found Akhlidin Israilov on the edge of the area and the midfielder volleyed home via the inside of Yan Junling\u2019s left post.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286946-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group C, Matches, China PR vs Kyrgyzstan\nFive minutes into the second half, Valery Kichin's attempted headed clearance from a corner went straight up and Matyash, in trying to tip the ball over his crossbar, pushed it into his own net off the woodwork. Twelve minutes later, Wu Xi headed over the bar at the end of a move involving Zhang Linpeng and Gao Lin while Wu Lei also saw his headed attempt clear the goal in the 71st minute. With 12 minutes remaining China took the lead when Wu Xi\u2019s header directed Liu Yang\u2019s long ball from the back into Yu\u2019s path who slotted his shot beyond Matyash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286946-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group C, Matches, China PR vs Kyrgyzstan\nAssistant referees:Mohamed Al-Hammadi (United Arab Emirates)Hasan Al-Mahri (United Arab Emirates)Fourth official:Ahmad Al-Roalle (Jordan)Additional assistant referees:Ali Sabah (Iraq)Ammar Al-Jeneibi (United Arab Emirates)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286946-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group C, Matches, South Korea vs Philippines\nThis match was the first meeting between South Korea and the Philippines in 39 years with the last meeting in 1980 ending in an 8\u20130 win for the Koreans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 63], "content_span": [64, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286946-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group C, Matches, South Korea vs Philippines\nSouth Korea were awarded a free-kick after Luke Woodland fouled Koo Ja-cheol outside the box, Jung Woo-young\u2019s resulting strike missed the top left corner of the net by inches. Five minutes from the break, Lee Yong\u2019s pass into the penalty box found Hwang Ui-jo, who then turned to unleash a shot but Philippines goalkeeper Michael Falkesgaard made a save to deny him. Moments later, South Korea goalkeeper Kim Seung-gyu parried away Javier Pati\u00f1o\u2019s volley, that began from a counter-attack after Daisuke Sato intercepted a pass and released a cross to the forward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 63], "content_span": [64, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286946-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group C, Matches, South Korea vs Philippines\nTen minutes into the second half, Pati\u00f1o's shot was saved by Kim. South Korea sent on Hwang In-beom and Lee Chung-yong and less than three minutes later, Lee's pass found Hwang Hee-chan, whose back pass set Ui-jo to open the scoring from close range in the 67th minute. Phil Younghusband replaced John-Patrick Strau\u00df in the final minute of the game, but South Korea held on to claim the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 63], "content_span": [64, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286946-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group C, Matches, South Korea vs Philippines\nAssistant referees:Yaser Tulefat (Bahrain)Mohamed Salman (Bahrain)Fourth official:Mohammed Al-Abakry (Saudi Arabia)Additional assistant referees:Turki Al-Khudhayr (Saudi Arabia)Mohanad Qassim (Iraq)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 63], "content_span": [64, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286946-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group C, Matches, Philippines vs China PR\nThe last match played between the two sides, a friendly in 2017, concluded in an 8\u20131 win for the Chinese over the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286946-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group C, Matches, Philippines vs China PR\nThe Philippines threatened to break the deadlock in the 23rd minute when Patrick Reichelt and John-Patrick Strau\u00df combined to set-up Javier Pati\u00f1o whose goalbound effort was blocked by defender Feng Xiaoting. However, after Wu Xi had flashed a header narrowly wide, China went ahead on 40 minutes, Wu Lei received Hao Junmin\u2019s pass and finished from 12 yards past Michael Falkesgaard. In the final moments of the first half, China custodian Yan Junling made a fine save to deny Kevin Ingreso and maintain his side\u2019s slender advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286946-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group C, Matches, Philippines vs China PR\nAfter the break, Wu Lei\u2019s angled volley forced Falkesgaard into a save, before he bagged his second of the game with a finish from Hao\u2019s 66th minute free-kick. Falkesgaard then pulled off another stop to deny Wu Lei once again, only for Yu Dabao to add a third in the 80th minute when he headed home from a corner just 19 seconds after coming on as a substitute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286946-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group C, Matches, Philippines vs China PR\nAssistant referees:Mohd Yusri Muhamad (Malaysia)Jun Mihara (Japan)Fourth official:Mohamed Al-Hammadi (United Arab Emirates)Additional assistant referees:Ryuji Sato (Japan)Jumpei Iida (Japan)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286946-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group C, Matches, Kyrgyzstan vs South Korea\nTwelve minutes into the game, Kutman Kadyrbekov dropped to his left to keep out Koo Ja-cheol\u2019s low strike form 25 yards and Tamirlan Kozubaev blocked Hwang Ui-jo\u2019s attempt to slot home the rebound. Eleven minutes from the break, Bekzhan Sabynbaev's shot from close range was saved by Kim Seung-gyu. Lee Chung-yong fired over the bar in the 36th minute while Koo shot from distance, only for Kadyrbekov to make another save. The resulting corner by Hong Chul found Kim Min-jae who powered his downward header between Kadyrbekov\u2019s legs and over the line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 62], "content_span": [63, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286946-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group C, Matches, Kyrgyzstan vs South Korea\nIn the 68th minute, Hwang Ui-jo's header came back off the crossbar and bounced on the goal line before Kozubaev headed it to safety. Five minutes later, Hwang Ui-jo saw another attempt hit the woodwork, this time after Chung-yong\u2019s cross-field ball set him up to shoot, Kadyrbekov somehow touched the ball onto the crossbar. A minute later, Hwang Hee-chan managed to clip the top of the crossbar from a central position. But in the end, Min-jae\u2019s goal was enough to see off Kyrgyzstan and take the two-time champions into the next phase of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 62], "content_span": [63, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286946-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group C, Matches, Kyrgyzstan vs South Korea\nAssistant referees:Taleb Al-Marri (Qatar)Saud Al-Maqaleh (Qatar)Fourth official:Abu Bakar Al-Amri (Oman)Additional assistant referees:Abdulrahman Al-Jassim (Qatar)Khamis Al-Kuwari (Qatar)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 62], "content_span": [63, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286946-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group C, Matches, South Korea vs China PR\nChina goalkeeper Yan Junling denied Hwang Ui-jo in quick succession and Kim Min-jae headed Son Heung-min\u2019s corner narrowly wide on eight minutes. Five minutes later, South Korea were ahead, Son weaved his way into the Chinese penalty area before being brought down by Shi Ke\u2019s outstretched leg. Ui-jo scored from the spot to hand his side an early lead. China could have drawn level in the 19th minute when Jin Jingdao latched onto Zhao Xuri\u2019s pass but proceeded to sky his shot over the bar with only Kim Seung-gyu to beat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286946-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group C, Matches, South Korea vs China PR\nShortly after that, Hwang Hee-chan\u2019s effort forced Yan into another stop, and in the final chance of the first-half, Ui-jo hit an upright from a curling effort. Within six minutes of the restart, the Koreans had a second, Min-jae found the target with a header from a Son corner. Shortly before the hour mark, Jung Woo-young headed Son\u2019s free-kick only just over the bar and then, at the other end, Wu Xi flashed a shot off target when well-placed. Hee-chan sent a header wide of Yan\u2019s far post to leave the score unchanged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286946-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group C, Matches, South Korea vs China PR\nAssistant referees:Mohd Yusri Muhamad (Malaysia)Mohamad Zainal Abidin (Malaysia)Fourth official:Saud Al-Maqaleh (Qatar)Additional assistant referees:Khamis Al-Marri (Qatar)Khamis Al-Kuwari (Qatar)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286946-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group C, Matches, Kyrgyzstan vs Philippines\nVitalij Lux gave Kyrgyzstan the lead in the 24th minute from a side foot effort into the top corner following Akhlidin Israilov's low, hard cross. Israilov fired narrowly over the crossbar, and Lux hit the upright, but despite a tally of 15 shots at goal to their opponents' two, Kyrgyzstan were unable to add to their lead before the half-time whistle. Lux turned and fired the ball into the top corner from Bekzhan Sagynbaev's pass in the 51st minute to score his second of the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 62], "content_span": [63, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286946-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group C, Matches, Kyrgyzstan vs Philippines\nJavier Pati\u00f1o forced goalkeeper Kutman Kadyrbekov into a low save, and head coach Sven-G\u00f6ran Eriksson introduced Phil Younghusband and James Younghusband into the fray. Lux completed his hat-trick in the 77th minute when he struck Mirlan Murzaev's woodwork-bound initial effort from close range. Stephan Schr\u00f6ck scored from a long-range free-kick three minutes later to give Philippines their first ever goal at the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 62], "content_span": [63, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286946-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group C, Matches, Kyrgyzstan vs Philippines\nAssistant referees:Mohammed Al-Abakry (Saudi Arabia)Ronnie Koh Min Kiat (Singapore)Fourth official:Palitha Hemathunga (Sri Lanka)Additional assistant referees:Muhammad Taqi (Singapore)Hettikamkanamge Perera (Sri Lanka)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 62], "content_span": [63, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286946-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group C, Discipline\nFair play points were used as tiebreakers if the head-to-head and overall records of teams were tied (and if a penalty shoot-out was not applicable as a tiebreaker). These were calculated based on yellow and red cards received in all group matches as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286946-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group C, Discipline\nOnly one of the above deductions was applied to a player in a single match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286947-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group D\nGroup D of the 2019 AFC Asian Cup took place from 7 to 16 January 2019. The group consisted of Iran, Iraq, Vietnam, and Yemen. The top two teams, Iran and Iraq, along with the third-placed team, Vietnam (as one of the four best third-placed teams), advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286947-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group D\nThe group contained two former champions, Iran (3 titles) and Iraq (1 title). Yemen made its debut in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286947-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group D, Matches, Iran vs Yemen\nYemen had the first chance of the game, Ahmed Al-Sarori ran into the penalty area and flashed a seventh minute shot narrowly over the bar. Mehdi Taremi opened Iran\u2019s account in the 12th minute when he converted the rebound after Yemen goalkeeper Saoud Al-Sowadi pushed Sardar Azmoun\u2019s long-range effort back into his path. At 23 minutes, Ashkan Dejagah\u2019s free-kick found the back of the net via a combination of both the woodwork and Al-Sowadi, before Taremi bagged his second of the night by heading home Ramin Rezaeian\u2019s cross moments later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286947-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group D, Matches, Iran vs Yemen\nIn the second half, after Al-Sowadi had repelled two Azmoun headers, the forward finished from close-range on 53 minutes to further extend Iran\u2019s lead. Azmoun was later denied by Mudir Al-Radaei\u2019s challenge when through on goal, and his shot struck the bar with 14 minutes remaining. Substitute Saman Ghoddos added a fifth from the edge of the area shortly after, while Mehdi Torabi\u2019s drive struck the post in added time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286947-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group D, Matches, Iran vs Yemen\nAssistant referees:Hiroshi Yamauchi (Japan)Jun Mihara (Japan)Fourth official:Palitha Hemathunga (Sri Lanka)Additional assistant referees:Jumpei Iida (Japan)Hiroyuki Kimura (Japan)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286947-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group D, Matches, Iraq vs Vietnam\nIraq and Vietnam have only met once in the Asian Cup history, back in 2007 edition when Iraq beat Vietnam 2\u20130 on its road to the first Asian title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286947-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group D, Matches, Iraq vs Vietnam\nAfter a slow start to the proceedings, Iraq came closest to breaking the deadlock through Hussein Ali's shot from distance which \u0110\u1eb7ng V\u0103n L\u00e2m tipped around his left-hand post on 14 minutes. Vietnam took the lead 10 minutes later, Nguy\u1ec5n Quang H\u1ea3i\u2019s attempted pass saw defender Ali Faez turn the ball past the onrushing Jalal Hassan and into his own net. Iraq scored the equaliser shortly after the half-hour mark when \u0110\u1ed7 Duy M\u1ea1nh\u2019s defensive lapse saw Mohanad Ali surge into the area and fire home past a diving V\u0103n L\u00e2m.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286947-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group D, Matches, Iraq vs Vietnam\nWith three minutes of the first period remaining, Vietnam regained the lead as Nguy\u1ec5n C\u00f4ng Ph\u01b0\u1ee3ng bundled home the rebound after Nguy\u1ec5n Tr\u1ecdng Ho\u00e0ng\u2019s shot had been parried into his path by Hassan. After the break, Safaa Hadi was denied by V\u0103n L\u00e2m and on the other end Hassan dived to smother a C\u00f4ng Ph\u01b0\u1ee3ng effort. In the 60th minute, substitute Humam Tariq smashed the ball into the roof of the net after Vietnam had failed to clear Mohanad Ali\u2019s close-range effort. Ali Adnan curled home a 90th minute free-kick from 20 yards to seal victory for Iraq.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286947-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group D, Matches, Iraq vs Vietnam\nAssistant referees:Taleb Al-Marri (Qatar)Saud Al-Maqaleh (Qatar)Fourth official:Abu Bakar Al-Amri (Oman)Additional assistant referees:Khamis Al-Marri (Qatar)Khamis Al-Kuwari (Qatar)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286947-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group D, Matches, Vietnam vs Iran\nIran had the first chance of the game, Vahid Amiri failed to apply a finishing touch at the far post following Ashkan Dejagah\u2019s 11th minute corner. Vietnam goalkeeper \u0110\u1eb7ng V\u0103n L\u00e2m then denied Saman Ghoddos, before the custodian produced another stop to repel a Sardar Azmoun drive shortly before the half-hour mark. The breakthrough came on 38 minutes, Azmoun headed home a Ghoddos cross and sent his side into the half-time break holding a slender lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286947-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group D, Matches, Vietnam vs Iran\nIn the 52nd minute, substitute Nguy\u1ec5n V\u0103n To\u00e0n's pass found Nguy\u1ec5n C\u00f4ng Ph\u01b0\u1ee3ng, whose shot from 12 yards was parried to safety by the advancing Alireza Beiranvand. Moments later, Azmoun forced V\u0103n L\u00e2m into another save only to see Mehdi Taremi lash the subsequent rebound wide of the target. At 68 minutes, Azmoun gathered a Mehdi Torabi pass and fired past V\u0103n L\u00e2m to extend his side\u2019s advantage and register his third goal of the tournament. Nguy\u1ec5n Quang H\u1ea3i curled a late effort narrowly off target, and Iran held on to register a record ninth successive AFC Asian Cup group stage victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286947-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group D, Matches, Vietnam vs Iran\nAssistant referees:Ronnie Koh Min Kiat (Singapore)Sergei Grishchenko (Kyrgyzstan)Fourth official:Palitha Hemathunga (Sri Lanka)Additional assistant referees:C\u00e9sar Ramos (Mexico)Hettikamkanamge Perera (Sri Lanka)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286947-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group D, Matches, Yemen vs Iraq\nIraq took the lead in the 11th minute when Mohanad Ali beat the Yemen defence before unleashing a shot from outside the box into the bottom right corner. Yemen had their first look at goal from a set-piece five minutes later, but Abdulwasea Al-Matari sent his header just above the bar. Yemen goalkeeper Saoud Al-Sowadi soon conceded the second goal in the 19th minute when Bashar Resan\u2019s strike from the top of the box bounced off the right post before settling in the net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286947-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group D, Matches, Yemen vs Iraq\nIn the second half, both teams came close to finding the net with Ahmed Abdulrab\u2019s right-footed shot from outside the box just being kept out by Iraq goalkeeper Jalal Hassan in the 59th minute. Iraq responded five minutes later, with Mohanad coming close to getting his second but his lob was denied by the post and Ahmed Yasin missed the chance to tuck the rebound home. Iraq ended proceedings on a high note as Alaa Abbas scored with a left-footed shot from the centre of the box and into the net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286947-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group D, Matches, Yemen vs Iraq\nAssistant referees:Huo Weiming (China PR)Cao Yi (China PR)Fourth official:Mohamad Zainal Abidin (Malaysia)Additional assistant referees:Ma Ning (China PR)Liu Kwok Man (Hong Kong)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286947-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group D, Matches, Vietnam vs Yemen\nMudir Al-Radaei involved himself in an altercation with Nguy\u1ec5n C\u00f4ng Ph\u01b0\u1ee3ng to concede a free-kick, picking up a yellow card from referee Ahmed Al-Kaf, and from the resultant free-kick the Vietnamese took the lead. Nguy\u1ec5n Quang H\u1ea3i sent a left-foot strike from 25 yards curling away from Salem Al-Harsh and into the top corner of the goal. Ten minutes into the second half, a move started by \u0110\u1ed7 H\u00f9ng D\u0169ng\u2019s angled ball down the right allowed Nguy\u1ec5n Tr\u1ecdng Ho\u00e0ng to pull his cross back to C\u00f4ng Ph\u01b0\u1ee3ng, only for his shot to be blocked by the Yemeni defence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286947-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group D, Matches, Vietnam vs Yemen\nSeconds later, H\u00f9ng D\u0169ng\u2019s shot was collected by Al-Harsh. Ahmed Al-Sarori outpaced \u0110o\u00e0n V\u0103n H\u1eadu before firing a right foot shot that flew across the face of goal. Four minutes after the hour mark, though, Vietnam added the second from the penalty spot. Phan V\u0103n \u0110\u1ee9c burst past Abdulaziz Al-Gumaei, surging into the box before the Yemeni defender wrestled him to the ground. Qu\u1ebf Ng\u1ecdc H\u1ea3i calmly slid the spot kick home to give Vietnam the win. However, as Vietnam was unable to score more than two goals, Vietnam had been forced to wait until the final group stage matches, in which Vietnam managed to become the last team to qualify for the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286947-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group D, Matches, Vietnam vs Yemen\nAssistant referees:Abu Bakar Al-Amri (Oman)Rashid Al-Ghaithi (Oman)Fourth official:Hiroshi Yamauchi (Japan)Additional assistant referees:Jumpei Iida (Japan)Hiroyuki Kimura (Japan)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286947-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group D, Matches, Iran vs Iraq\nIran had the first chance at goal in the 12th minute when Vahid Amiri sent a cross into the box but Sardar Azmoun\u2019s header was just off the mark. Three minutes from the half-time whistle, Alireza Jahanbakhsh latched on to Azmoun\u2019s deflected attempt but couldn\u2019t get his left-footed strike on target. Iran, in a bid to break down the Iraq defence, boosted their attacking prowess by bringing on Mehdi Taremi and Mehdi Torabi in the 63rd and 75th minutes respectively. However, it was Iraq who nearly took the lead in the 77th minute when substitute Alaa Abbas\u2019s header was tipped over the bar by Alireza Beiranvand. As the minutes ticked away, neither team was able to make headway as they settled for a share of the spoils.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286947-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group D, Matches, Iran vs Iraq\nAssistant referees:Abdukhamidullo Rasulov (Uzbekistan)Jakhongir Saidov (Uzbekistan)Fourth official:Sergei Grishchenko (Kyrgyzstan)Additional assistant referees:Valentin Kovalenko (Uzbekistan)Ilgiz Tantashev (Uzbekistan)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286947-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group D, Discipline\nFair play points were used as tiebreakers if the head-to-head and overall records of teams were tied (and if a penalty shoot-out was not applicable as a tiebreaker). These were calculated based on yellow and red cards received in all group matches as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286947-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group D, Discipline\nOnly one of the above deductions was applied to a player in a single match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286948-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group E\nGroup E of the 2019 AFC Asian Cup took place from 8 to 17 January 2019. The group consisted of Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Lebanon, and North Korea. The top two teams, Qatar and Saudi Arabia, advanced to the round of 16. The third-placed team, Lebanon missed out qualification to the knockout stage by fair play points to Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286948-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group E\nSaudi Arabia was the only former champion in the group, having won three Asian Cup titles (1984, 1988 and 1996).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286948-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group E, Matches, Saudi Arabia vs North Korea\nThe first chance of the game came in the 13th minute through Abdulaziz Al-Bishi\u2019s left-footed strike which just missed the target. In the 28th minute, Hattan Bahebri dribbled past Ri Il-jin and sent a curler from the left to give Saudi Arabia the lead. Housain Al-Mogahwi\u2019s free-kick from just outside the box sailed into the box and Mohammed Al-Fatil diverted it into the net with a back heel to double Saudi Arabia's advantage. Just a minute before the break Han Kwang-song received a second yellow card for a tackle on Al-Mogahwi, and North Korea were reduced to 10 men.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286948-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group E, Matches, Saudi Arabia vs North Korea\nNorth Korea came close in the 64th minute through skipper Jong Il-gwan but the Saudi defenders regrouped to deny him. Moments later, Saudi Arabia had a missed opportunity with Fahad Al-Muwallad sidestepping defender Kim Chol-bom and goalkeeper Ri Myong-guk, but his shot flew wide. In the 70th minute, Salem Al-Dawsari was left unmarked and the Saudi captain made no mistake from the centre of the box to make it 3\u20130. In the 87th minute, defender Kim Song-gi failed to clear Hamdan Al-Shamrani\u2019s cross into the box, and Al-Muwallad slammed the ball into the back of the net to seal Saudi Arabia's first opening AFC Asian Cup match win since they emerged champions in 1996.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286948-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group E, Matches, Saudi Arabia vs North Korea\nAssistant referees:Matthew Cream (Australia)Anton Shchetinin (Australia)Fourth official:Sergei Grishchenko (Kyrgyzstan)Additional assistant referees:Valentin Kovalenko (Uzbekistan)Chris Beath (Australia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286948-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group E, Matches, Qatar vs Lebanon\nIn the 37th minute, Ali Hamam raced off to celebrate with his teammates after slotting Hassan Maatouk\u2019s corner into the Qatari goal, only for the referee to controversially blow the whistle for a foul on Tarek Salman. Maatouk pulled the trigger on an effort of his own just before half-time, but his scissor kick flew high over the bar. Two minutes after the hour mark, the 2018 AFC Player of the Year, Abdelkarim Hassan was introduced from the bench for Abdulkarim Al-Ali and within three minutes the Qataris took the lead from Bassam Al-Rawi's strike from a free kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286948-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group E, Matches, Qatar vs Lebanon\nThe defender sent a dipping curling right-footed effort over the wall and beyond the outstretched hand of Mehdi Khalil. Qatar added a second with 11 minutes remaining. Hassan\u2019s driving run created space for Akram Afif and, when the winger received the ball, his centre found Abdulaziz Hatem, whose shot was saved by Khalil. But Almoez Ali was on hand to roll the ball into the empty net to ensure a winning start to the campaign for Qatar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286948-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group E, Matches, Qatar vs Lebanon\nAssistant referees:Huo Weiming (China PR)Cao Yi (China PR)Fourth official:Ronnie Koh Min Kiat (Singapore)Additional assistant referees:Fu Ming (China PR)Liu Kwok Man (Hong Kong)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286948-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group E, Matches, Lebanon vs Saudi Arabia\nSaudi Arabia found their breakthrough in the 12th minute when they latched onto a defensive mistake. Lebanon\u2019s Joan Oumari\u2019s back pass deflected off teammate Alexander Michel Melki\u2019s left boot, and the ball landed near Saudi Arabia\u2019s Fahad Al-Muwallad, who half-volleyed home from close range. Oumari failed to keep his header down in the 16th minute, while Felix Michel Melki just missed Hassan Maatouk\u2019s free-kick eight minutes later. After the break, Hattan Bahebri took a chance from almost 30 yards out which forced a save from goalkeeper Mehdi Khalil. Bahebri turned provider in the 67th minute when his cross into the box found Housain Al-Mogahwi who made it 2\u20130. This win earned Saudi Arabia a ticket to the round of sixteen for the first time since the 2007 edition, in which Saudi Arabia finished runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 879]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286948-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group E, Matches, Lebanon vs Saudi Arabia\nAssistant referees:Abu Bakar Al-Amri (Oman)Rashid Al-Ghaithi (Oman)Fourth official:Abdukhamidullo Rasulov (Uzbekistan)Additional assistant referees:Mohanad Qassim (Iraq)Mohd Amirul Izwan Yaacob (Malaysia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286948-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group E, Matches, North Korea vs Qatar\nQatar were in front in the ninth minute when Akram Afif glided past Sim Hyon-jin before delivering a low cross to Almoez Ali that he struck past Ri Myong-guk. Qatar doubled their lead two minutes later, Abdelkarim Hassan\u2019s ball found Hassan Al-Haydos, and his low centre was struck in the goal from close range by Ali. Ri Un-chol tried from outside the area and his drive narrowly failed to find the top corner. With just two minutes remaining in the first half, Afif lifted the ball high over the advancing Myong-guk and Boualem Khoukhi headed in from close range.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286948-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group E, Matches, North Korea vs Qatar\nAli completed his hat trick 10 minutes into the second half with a finish from Afif\u2019s through ball. Five minutes later, Afif led a counterattack before rolling the ball through to Ali and he smashed his shot across Myong-guk and inside the far post. Ali turned provider in the 68th minute when his pass allowed Hassan to storm through the North Korea defence and slot home Qatar\u2019s sixth and the east Asian side\u2019s misery was compounded in the last minute when Jong Il-gwan was sent off for a second bookable offence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286948-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group E, Matches, North Korea vs Qatar\nIt was North Korea's heaviest ever defeat in the Asian Cup, surpassing their previous 0\u20134 defeat to Saudi Arabia in their opening 2019 AFC Asian Cup match. Qatar's win enabled them to progress to the knock-out stages for the first time since the 2011 edition they hosted. Controversy rose around the empty stadium as very few fans were allowed to enter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286948-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group E, Matches, North Korea vs Qatar\nAssistant referees:Palitha Hemathunga (Sri Lanka)Jakhongir Saidov (Uzbekistan)Fourth official:Matthew Cream (Australia)Additional assistant referees:Valentin Kovalenko (Uzbekistan)Ilgiz Tantashev (Uzbekistan)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286948-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group E, Matches, Saudi Arabia vs Qatar\nMohammed Al-Owais parried away Boualem Khoukhi\u2019s drive on 16 minutes in the first genuine threat to either goal. Housain Al-Mogahwi shot over the bar for Saudi Arabia following Yahya Al-Shehri\u2019s probing run and cross, before Fahad Al-Muwallad struck an upright with Qatar goalkeeper Saad Al Sheeb beaten. Hassan Al-Haydos' 42nd minute penalty was saved by Al-Owais however minutes later Abdulaziz Hatem\u2019s through ball found Almoez Ali who converted to open the scoring on the stroke of half-time. Within five minutes of the restart Hattan Bahebri forced Al Sheeb into a save. Bahebri's effort from 15 yards fizzed narrowly over the bar on 73 minutes. Qatar extended their lead with 10 minutes remaining, Ali leaped to thump home a header from Hatem\u2019s corner. It proved to be the final genuine goalmouth action, as Qatar held on to seal another three points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 916]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286948-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group E, Matches, Saudi Arabia vs Qatar\nThe encounter between Saudi Arabia and Qatar was dubbed the \"Blockade Derby\", in reference to the diplomatic disputes between the two nations. However, there was no incident in the game, with the match ending in a friendly atmosphere despite political tensions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286948-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group E, Matches, Saudi Arabia vs Qatar\nAssistant referees:Yoon Kwang-yeol (South Korea)Park Sang-jun (South Korea)Fourth official:Cao Yi (China PR)Additional assistant referees:Ko Hyung-jin (South Korea)Fu Ming (China PR)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286948-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group E, Matches, Lebanon vs North Korea\nPak Kwang-ryong converted his free-kick in the ninth minute to give North Korea an early advantage. Lebanon, however levelled the score just before the half hour mark when Hassan Maatouk dribbled down the left before laying off for Felix Michel Melki, who smashed the ball into the back of the net. Hilal El-Helwe\u2019s effort was cleared off the line in the 32nd minute. Felix came close to scoring his second in the 57th minute but angled his header across the bar. In the 65th minute, Mohamad Haidar\u2019s cross found El-Helwe who turned to score from close range.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286948-0014-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group E, Matches, Lebanon vs North Korea\nNorth Korea conceded a penalty after Rabih Ataya was brought down in the danger area. Maatouk converted the spot-kick in the 80th minute, sending goalkeeper Ri Myong-guk the wrong way, with a fourth coming in the eighth minute of added time through Hilal El-Helwe as Lebanon won their first ever Asian Cup encounter. However, Lebanon was edged by Vietnam in the third-place ranking on fairplay points due to receiving more yellow cards, and were eliminated from the tournament. This loss extended North Korea's winless streak, with their last win dating back to their fourth place finish in the 1980 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286948-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group E, Matches, Lebanon vs North Korea\nAssistant referees:Matthew Cream (Australia)Anton Shchetinin (Australia)Fourth official:Ronnie Koh Min Kiat (Singapore)Additional assistant referees:Muhammad Taqi (Singapore)Liu Kwok Man (Hong Kong)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286948-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group E, Discipline\nFair play points were used as tiebreakers if the head-to-head and overall records of teams were tied (and if a penalty shoot-out was not applicable as a tiebreaker). These were calculated based on yellow and red cards received in all group matches as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286948-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group E, Discipline\nOnly one of the above deductions was applied to a player in a single match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286949-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group F\nGroup F of the 2019 AFC Asian Cup took place from 9 to 17 January 2019. The group consisted of Japan, Uzbekistan, Oman, and Turkmenistan. The top two teams, Japan and Uzbekistan, along with the third-placed team, Oman (as one of the four best third-placed teams), advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286949-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group F\nJapan was the only former champion, and also the team which won the most titles in the Asian Cup (1992, 2000, 2004 and 2011).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286949-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group F, Matches, Japan vs Turkmenistan\nIn the 12th minute, Japan had the first chance of the game, with Ritsu Doan failing to beat Mammet Orazmuhammedow with a close-range header following a Takehiro Tomiyasu pass. Wahyt Orazs\u00e4hedow forced Sh\u016bichi Gonda into a fine save, and Mekan Saparow headed over from the resulting corner. Turkmenistan continued to press, and took the lead on 27 minutes when captain Arslanmyrat Amanow unleashed a long-range effort which flew into the net. Yuya Osako then saw a lashed effort fizz narrowly wide, before Orazmuhammedow denied Tomiyasu with a fingertip save.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286949-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group F, Matches, Japan vs Turkmenistan\nAs half-time approached, Turkmenistan came close to doubling their advantage, this time Ahmet Ata\u00fdew stinging Gonda's palms with an angled drive. A flicked Genki Haraguchi header sailed inches wide of the target, however in the 56th minute, Osako turned in the area and fired home to equalise the scoreline. Four minutes later Japan took the lead when Saparow's blunder allowed Yuto Nagatomo to find Osako who converted to bag his second of the match. Shortly after, Takumi Minamino found Doan who spun away from his marker and fired into the bottom corner beyond Orazmuhammedow's dive. On 79 minutes Ata\u00fdew converted from the spot after Gonda had upended substitute Altymyrat Annadurdy\u00fdew in the area. Japan held the scoreline to get the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 802]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286949-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group F, Matches, Japan vs Turkmenistan\nAssistant referees:Reza Sokhandan (Iran)Mohammadreza Mansouri (Iran)Fourth official:Mohamad Zainal Abidin (Malaysia)Additional assistant referees:Muhammad Taqi (Singapore)Mohd Amirul Izwan Yaacob (Malaysia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286949-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group F, Matches, Uzbekistan vs Oman\nIn the 14th minute, Oman came close to scoring through Ahmed Kano\u2019s header which was saved by Uzbek goalkeeper Ignatiy Nesterov. In the 25th minute, Saad Al-Mukhaini\u2019s delivery from the right flank sailed for Raed Ibrahim Saleh but the forward failed to connect. Uzbekistan found the back of the net through Odil Ahmedov\u2019s free-kick from 25 yards out, the Uzbekistan captain picked up his 18th international goal after he curled his effort past goalkeeper Faiz Al-Rushaidi. Nesterov blocked Mohammed Al-Musalami\u2019s low drive as Uzbekistan took a 1\u20130 lead into the break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286949-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group F, Matches, Uzbekistan vs Oman\nOman came close to scoring when Ali Al-Busaidi sent a cross which found Al-Mukhaini who wasted the opportunity. Two minutes later, the defender was in goal-scoring range but saw his effort blocked. Oman finally beat Nesterov in the 72nd minute after substitute Muhsen Al-Ghassani, beat the offside trap to score past the Uzbekistan shot stopper. Five minutes from time, Eldor Shomurodov burst into the box and tried a left-footed shot that Al-Rushaidi got a hand to but failed to keep out as he was beaten at his near post. Uzbekistan, however, suffered a blow when Egor Krimets was sent off deep in stoppage time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286949-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group F, Matches, Uzbekistan vs Oman\nAssistant referees:Yoon Kwang-yeol (South Korea)Park Sang-jun (South Korea)Fourth official:Mohd Yusri Muhamad (Malaysia)Additional assistant referees:Kim Dong-jin (South Korea)Hettikamkanamge Perera (Sri Lanka)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286949-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group F, Matches, Oman vs Japan\nGenki Haraguchi diverted Ritsu Doan\u2019s cross onto the bar from six yards inside the first two minutes. On 20 minutes, Salaah Al-Yahyaei found Muhsen Al-Ghassani who rounded Sh\u016bichi Gonda but was unable to finish from a tight angle. Japan broke the deadlock in the 28th minute, Haraguchi picked himself up after being upended in the area by Raed Ibrahim Saleh to ram home the resulting spot-kick beyond Faiz Al-Rushaidi\u2019s dive. With half-time approaching, Al-Yahyaei\u2019s drive was diverted to safety by defender Yuto Nagatomo as Japan maintained their slender lead going into the break. In the second period, Saad Al-Mukhaini\u2019s effort on 70 minutes was gathered by Gonda. An acrobatic Saleh attempt from an Al-Mukhaini cross 10 minutes later and Al-Rushaidi\u2019s last gasp save from substitute Junya Ito proved to be the final goalmouth action of the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 899]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286949-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group F, Matches, Oman vs Japan\nAssistant referees:Mohd Yusri Muhamad (Malaysia)Mohamad Zainal Abidin (Malaysia)Fourth official:Anton Shchetinin (Australia)Additional assistant referees:Peter Green (Australia)Ko Hyung-jin (South Korea)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286949-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group F, Matches, Turkmenistan vs Uzbekistan\nThe two Turkic neighbors have met each other in 2004 edition, where Uzbekistan prevailed with a 1\u20130 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 63], "content_span": [64, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286949-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group F, Matches, Turkmenistan vs Uzbekistan\nDostonbek Khamdamov\u2019s header hit the ground before rebounding over the crossbar in the fifth minute. In the 16th minute, a string of passes ended with Javokhir Sidikov sliding the ball into an unguarded goalmouth. Eight minutes later, Otabek Shukurov sent a through pass down the middle to Eldor Shomurodov, whose effort made its way past goalkeeper Mammet Orazmuhammedow. Five minute before the break, Gurbangeldi Batyrow\u2019s poor clearance allowed Jaloliddin Masharipov to let fly a half-volley to make it 3\u20130. Less than two minutes later, Masharipov turned provider with his pass finding Shomurodov, who scored his second of the night. Khamdamov's 44th minute strike was denied by the upright. Orazmuhammedow made a double save in the 55th minute to maintain the scoreline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 63], "content_span": [64, 838]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286949-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group F, Matches, Turkmenistan vs Uzbekistan\nAssistant referees:Mohamed Al-Hammadi (United Arab Emirates)Hasan Al-Mahri (United Arab Emirates)Fourth official:Mohammed Al-Abakry (Saudi Arabia)Additional assistant referees:Mohammed Abdulla Hassan Mohamed (United Arab Emirates)Turki Al-Khudhayr (Saudi Arabia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 63], "content_span": [64, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286949-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group F, Matches, Oman vs Turkmenistan\nIn the sixth minute, Muhsen Al-Ghassani's left-footed shot from the centre of the box was saved by goalkeeper Mammet Orazmuhammedow. In the 20th minute, Ahmed Kano scored a screamer with a free-kick from 25 yards out. In the 31st minute, Myrat \u00ddag\u015fy\u00fdew's header was tipped over by goalkeeper Faiz Al-Rushaidi. Turkmenistan equalised in the 41st minute with Altymyrat Annadurdy\u00fdew evading several Oman players before unleashing his shot from the left into the top left corner. Oman came close in the 55th and 56th minutes - through a header by Mohammed Al-Musalami and a shot by Khalid Al-Hajri respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286949-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group F, Matches, Oman vs Turkmenistan\nMuhsen went for the spectacular in the 68th minute with an overhead kick which Orazmuhammedow saved and the goalkeeper stood tall again just seconds later to deny Kano on the left, with the ball seemingly headed for the top of the net. Orazmuhammedow, however, was finally beaten in the 84th minute with Muhsen sweeping the ball in after the goalkeeper had parried an initial effort. Three minutes into added time, Al-Musalami jumped high to head home Oman's third goal of the day to gain the win, and more importantly, guiding Oman to the round of sixteen for the first time ever in the country's football history, having failed in three previous editions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286949-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group F, Matches, Oman vs Turkmenistan\nAssistant referees:Yaser Tulefat (Bahrain)Mohamed Salman (Bahrain)Fourth official:Miguel Hern\u00e1ndez (Mexico)Additional assistant referees:C\u00e9sar Ramos (Mexico)Khamis Al-Kuwari (Qatar)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286949-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group F, Matches, Japan vs Uzbekistan\nKoya Kitagawa forced Ignatiy Nesterov into action 10 minutes before the break when his shot on the turn was tipped over by the keeper. With five minutes left in the half, Uzbekistan took the lead, Eldor Shomurodov latched on to Dostonbek Khamdamov\u2019s through ball to outpace Tomoaki Makino before stepping inside Genta Miura and clipping the finish into the top corner with the outside of his right boot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286949-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group F, Matches, Japan vs Uzbekistan\nThe lead, though, was to last only three minutes as Sei Muroya turned on the left touchline before outstripping Farrukh Sayfiev and sending over a cross towards Yoshinori Muto, who rose to power his header home. Nesterov parried Junya Ito\u2019s shot nine minutes after the restart while Muto went close seconds later, shooting just over the bar. Two minutes before the hour mark Tsukasa Shiotani's left-foot strike from distance curled away from Nesterov to put Japan in front. Davron Khashimov forced Daniel Schmidt to tip his long-range drive over the bar in the final minutes as Japan closed out the game to take their third win in a row and advance to the next round with a perfect record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286949-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group F, Matches, Japan vs Uzbekistan\nAssistant referees:Mohamed Al-Hammadi (United Arab Emirates)Hasan Al-Mahri (United Arab Emirates)Fourth official:Huo Weiming (China PR)Additional assistant referees:Ammar Al-Jeneibi (United Arab Emirates)Ali Sabah (Iraq)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286949-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group F, Discipline\nFair play points were used as tiebreakers if the head-to-head and overall records of teams were tied (and if a penalty shoot-out was not applicable as a tiebreaker). These were calculated based on yellow and red cards received in all group matches as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286949-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup Group F, Discipline\nOnly one of the above deductions was applied to a player in a single match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286950-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup bids\nThe bidding process for the 2019 AFC Asian Cup was the process by which the location for the 2019 AFC Asian Cup that United Arab Emirates was chosen as the hosts. The process officially began on 15 December 2012 and ended on 2 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286950-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup bids\nThe AFC Competitions Committee confirmed on 12 March 2013 that 11 countries expressed interest in hosting the 2019 AFC Asian Cup: Bahrain, China, Iran, Kuwait, Lebanon, Malaysia, Myanmar, Oman, Saudi Arabia, Thailand and the United Arab Emirates. Lebanon, Malaysia and Myanmar pulled out before the deadline to submit all documents on 31 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286950-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup bids\nThe tournament will be expanded from 16 to 24 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 76]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286950-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup bids, Bidding process\nThe bidding procedure and timeline was approved at the AFC congress that was held on 28 November 2012. Presentation files of each bid have to be submitted by 1 May 2013. Following this, inspections of facilities and infrastructure of the bidding nations is expected to be conducted between October and December 2013. Bidding nations will then have to prepare their final presentation by May 2014, the final deadline. The winning bid was originally set to be announced at an AFC congress in June, then November of 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286950-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup bids, Bidding process\nAt its 60th Anniversary celebrations at the end of 2014, a date of 'summer 2015' was given to when an announcement would be made.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286950-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup bids, Bids, Iran\nAfter their unsuccessful bid to host the 2011 AFC Asian Cup, Iranian Football Federation president Ali Kafashian stated the renewed intentions for the country to host the 2019 AFC Asian Cup. Iran has previously hosted editions in 1968 and 1976, in which Iran won in both editions. The federation has proposed the use of stadia: Shahid Bahonar Stadium in Kerman, Nagshe Jahan Stadium in Isfahan, Imam Reza Stadium in Mashhad, Sahand Stadium in Tabriz, Azadi Stadium and Takhti Stadium in Tehran, and Shiraz Stadium in Shiraz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286950-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup bids, Bids, United Arab Emirates\nThe United Arab Emirates Football Association also confirmed their bid by handing in their formal bid papers on the final day the Asian Football Confederation would accept applications. If selected, it would be the second time the UAE has hosted the AFC Asian Cup, having hosted the event in 1996. On 29 May 2014, a delegation from the UAE visited the AFC to submit their bid book. The nominated stadiums are Mohammed Bin Zayed Stadium and Zayed Sports City Stadium in Abu Dhabi, Sheikh Khalifa International Stadium and Hazza Bin Zayed Stadium in Al Ain, Dubai International Cricket Stadium, and a new stadium to be built by 2018, which would be located in Dubai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286950-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup bids, Cancelled bids, Saudi Arabia\nSaudi Arabia also confirmed they would be competing to host the competition, with Prince Nawaf bin Faisal (president of Youth Welfare), saying authorities had approved the Saudi Arabian Olympic Committee\u2019s plan. This is the first time it has made a bid to host the Asian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286950-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup bids, Cancelled bids, Thailand\nThailand was the venue for 1972 edition and last hosted in 2007, serving as co-hosts with Malaysia, Vietnam and Indonesia. 5 cities have sent hosting requests to the FAT, including Bangkok, Nonthaburi, Pathumthani, Chiang Mai and Nakhon Ratchasima.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage\nThe knockout stage of the 2019 AFC Asian Cup was the second and final stage of the competition, following the group stage. It began on 20 January with the round of 16 and ended on 1 February with the final match, held at the Zayed Sports City Stadium in Abu Dhabi. A total of 16 teams (the top two teams from each group, along with the four best third-placed teams) advanced to the knockout stage to compete in a single-elimination style tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Format\nIn the knockout stage, if a match is level at the end of 90 minutes of normal playing time, extra time will be played (two periods of 15 minutes each). If still tied after extra time, the match will be decided by a penalty shoot-out to determine the winner. The video assistant referee (VAR) system will be used from the quarter-finals onwards. For the first time since a knockout stage was added to the competition in 1972, there will be no third place play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Format\nThe AFC set out the following schedule for the round of 16:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Format, Combinations of matches in the round of 16\nThe specific match-ups involving the third-placed teams depended on which four third-placed teams qualified for the round of 16:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 85], "content_span": [86, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Qualified teams\nThe top two placed teams from each of the six groups, plus the four best-placed third teams, qualified for the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Jordan vs Vietnam\nThe two had already faced each other in earlier 2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification, all games ended in draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Jordan vs Vietnam\nJordan came close in the 20th minute when Musa Al-Taamari lured three defenders out of position before his back-heel pass found Feras Shelbaieh, whose cross to Yaseen Al-Bakhit saw his effort going wide. In the 35th minute, \u0110o\u00e0n V\u0103n H\u1eadu left-footed strike was parried away by Amer Shafi. Jordan took the lead in the 38th minute after \u0110\u1ed7 H\u00f9ng D\u0169ng brought Salem Al-Ajalin down just outside the box, and Baha' Abdel-Rahman scored from the resultant free-kick into the top right corner of the net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Jordan vs Vietnam\nSix minutes into the second half, Nguy\u1ec5n Tr\u1ecdng Ho\u00e0ng sent in a curling cross in front of the goal mouth which Nguy\u1ec5n C\u00f4ng Ph\u01b0\u1ee3ng squeezed past the Jordanian defenders for the equaliser. Neither side managed to find a route to goal in the remaining minutes, forcing the first ever AFC Asian Cup last-16 tie to go into extra-time. Neither side was willing to take unnecessary risks in extra-time, as penalties were needed to decide the tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Jordan vs Vietnam\nJordan were the first to miss with Baha' Faisal striking the crossbar which was then followed by Ahmed Samir's effort saved by Vietnam goalkeeper \u0110\u1eb7ng V\u0103n L\u00e2m. Vietnam's Tr\u1ea7n Minh V\u01b0\u01a1ng then failed to put the game to bed with Vietnam's fourth effort but B\u00f9i Ti\u1ebfn D\u0169ng I made no mistake as the Southeast Asians sealed their first knockout stage's win and marched into the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Jordan vs Vietnam\nThe win meant that since reunification, Vietnam had reached the quarter-finals in all their two Asian Cups they participated, but this was also the country's first ever win in the knockout stage, though technically it was a draw. For Jordan, the loss meant they have never won any competitive knockout stage games in their Asian Cup history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Jordan vs Vietnam\nAssistant referees:Reza Sokhandan (Iran)Mohammadreza Mansouri (Iran)Fourth official:Abu Bakar Al-Amri (Oman)Additional assistant referees:Mohanad Qassim (Iraq)Liu Kwok Man (Hong Kong)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Thailand vs China PR\nChina has only faced Thailand once in the AFC Asian Cup, back in 1992 which ended in a 1\u20131 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Thailand vs China PR\nIn the 31st minute, Thitipan Puangchan\u2019s shot ended up at Supachai Jaided\u2019s feet who turned and scored from seven yards out to open the scoring. Yu Dabao made way for Xiao Zhi and, within three minutes, China were level as Zheng Zhi clipped his cross in from the right and Xiao scored on the rebound after Siwarak Tedsungnoen had saved the striker\u2019s initial downward header.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Thailand vs China PR\nBy the 71st minute China were in front when Gao Lin scored from the spot after having his heels clipped in the area by Tanaboon Kesarat, the forward fired high into the top corner to give his team the lead. A flying save from Yan Junling deep into injury time following Pansa Hemviboon\u2019s shot ensured the East Asians to win their first knockout stage's match since 2004 and progressed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Thailand vs China PR\nAssistant referees:Mohamed Al-Hammadi (United Arab Emirates)Hasan Al-Mahri (United Arab Emirates)Fourth official:Palitha Hemathunga (Sri Lanka)Additional assistant referees:Ammar Al-Jeneibi (United Arab Emirates)Hettikamkanamge Perera (Sri Lanka)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Iran vs Oman\nIran and Oman had only met once in the tournament, a 2\u20132 draw back in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Iran vs Oman\nOman were awarded a penalty in the third minute when Majid Hosseini brought down Muhsen Al-Ghassani, only for Iran goalkeeper Alireza Beiranvand to tip Ahmed Kano\u2019s effort from 12 yards around the post. Iran broke the deadlock in the 32nd minute, Alireza Jahanbakhsh fired home after Mohammed Al-Musalami had failed to cut out Milad Mohammadi\u2019s long ball. Nine minutes later, Mehdi Taremi was brought down in the area by Saad Al-Mukhaini and Ashkan Dejagah stepped up to convert the resulting penalty. Eight minutes after the restart, Sardar Azmoun missed the target from 12 yards when Taremi\u2019s long throw arrived at his feet. Harib Al-Saadi fizzed a 77th minute shot inches over Beiranvand\u2019s bar. Iran held firm to confirm their place in the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 819]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Iran vs Oman\nAssistant referees:Miguel Hern\u00e1ndez (Mexico)Alberto Mor\u00edn (Mexico)Fourth official:Matthew Cream (Australia)Additional assistant referees:Chris Beath (Australia)Ali Sabah (Iraq)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Japan vs Saudi Arabia\nJapan and Saudi Arabia have met each other in four previous Asian Cup editions, with Japan holds the better record, edging Saudi Arabia with only one loss and four wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Japan vs Saudi Arabia\nMohammed Al-Fatil sneaked in a header from the centre of the box from a set-piece situation, but the defender placed it wide of the mark. Japan came close six minutes later with Ritsu Doan finding space in the danger area after collecting Takumi Minamino\u2019s pass but saw his effort blocked by the Saudi defence. Japan scored the opening goal in the 20th minute as Takehiro Tomiyasu rose the highest to nod the ball home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0017-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Japan vs Saudi Arabia\nWith five minutes left in the half, Hattan Bahebri muscled his way into the box, but his curling shot flew past the right post, as Japan stayed ahead going into the break. In the second half, Maya Yoshida connected with a header from Gaku Shibasaki\u2019s delivery but Saudi Arabia goalkeeper Mohammed Al-Owais collected it safely. In the 73rd minute, Abdullah Otayf found Housain Al-Mogahwi lurking in the box but the midfielder sent his header high above the bar as Japan soaked up the pressure to seal their quarter-final spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Japan vs Saudi Arabia\nAssistant referees:Abdukhamidullo Rasulov (Uzbekistan)Jakhongir Saidov (Uzbekistan)Fourth official:Sergei Grishchenko (Kyrgyzstan)Additional assistant referees:Valentin Kovalenko (Uzbekistan)Nawaf Shukralla (Bahrain)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Australia vs Uzbekistan\nEldor Shomurodov\u2019s change of pace left Trent Sainsbury flat-footed in the penalty area, only for Mathew Ryan to deny the striker\u2019s effort when in on the Australian goal. Two minutes before the half hour, Uzbekistan went close as Javokhir Sidikov let fly from distance, the ball going narrowly wide of Ryan\u2019s right post. In the second half, Jamie Maclaren\u2019s blocked shot looped up for Rhyan Grant to head into the hands of Ignatiy Nesterov while the full-back was also on the end of Milos Degenek\u2019s diagonal ball, sending his header over the bar from an acute angle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0019-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Australia vs Uzbekistan\nNesterov was on hand to push away Tom Rogic\u2019s deflected effort 10 minutes from time. With the 90 minutes finishing goalless, the game went into extra-time and Chris Ikonomidis, Mathew Leckie and Rogic all failed to break the deadlock for the defending champions, leaving the game to drift towards a shootout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Australia vs Uzbekistan\nNesterov saved Aziz Behich's penalty in the second round of the shootout before Islom Tukhtakhodjaev was denied by Ryan and, with Dostonbek Khamdamov missing in the penultimate round, Leckie struck to take Australia through.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Australia vs Uzbekistan\nAssistant referees:Taleb Al-Marri (Qatar)Saud Al-Maqaleh (Qatar)Fourth official:Palitha Hemathunga (Sri Lanka)Additional assistant referees:Khamis Al-Marri (Qatar)Ahmed Al-Kaf (Oman)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, United Arab Emirates vs Kyrgyzstan\nThe Emiratis went ahead in the 13th minute through a Khamis Esmaeel header from Ismail Matar\u2019s corner. Kyrgyzstan bounced back shortly before the half-hour mark, Akhlidin Israilov\u2019s pass found Mirlan Murzaev who rounded UAE goalkeeper Khalid Eisa and finished to draw his side level. Matar threatened to restore the UAE\u2019s lead when he fizzed a shot from distance narrowly over as the first half drew to a close. After the break, Ali Mabkhout headed Bandar Al-Ahbabi\u2019s cross inches wide of the post, before a curling Valery Kichin delivery thudded against Eisa\u2019s crossbar with the custodian beaten. In the 64th minute, the UAE went ahead once again, this time Mabkhout collected Amer Abdulrahman\u2019s pass and shot the ball beyond Kutman Kadyrbekov. Tursunali Rustamov headed home a last gasp equaliser following Anton Zemlianukhin\u2019s cross to send the match into extra-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 82], "content_span": [83, 953]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, United Arab Emirates vs Kyrgyzstan\nMabkhout spurned an early chance in the second minute of the additional 30, before \u2013 just 60 seconds later \u2013 the striker was brought down in the area by Bekzhan Sagynbaev. Substitute Ahmed Khalil stepped up to convert the resulting penalty and put his side ahead yet again. Bakhtiyar Duyshobekov\u2019s header then brushed an upright and Rustamov crashed a shot against the bar in the final seconds. However, the UAE held firm to seal their ticket through to the last eight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 82], "content_span": [83, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, United Arab Emirates vs Kyrgyzstan\nAssistant referees:Huo Weiming (China PR)Cao Yi (China PR)Fourth official:Yoon Kwang-yeol (South Korea)Additional assistant referees:Ma Ning (China PR)Ko Hyung-jin (South Korea)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 82], "content_span": [83, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, South Korea vs Bahrain\nMohamed Marhoon forced Korean goalkeeper Kim Seung-gyu into a dive but his effort flew wide in the fourth minute. Two minutes from the half-time whistle, Son Heung-min laid a pass to Lee Yong on the right flank, who then sent the ball into the box which was blocked by goalkeeper Sayed Shubbar Alawi, only for it to land at Hwang Hee-chan\u2019s feet who then tapped it into the net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0025-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, South Korea vs Bahrain\nIn the 70th minute, the Korean defenders failed to cleanly clear a corner kick, allowing Jamal Rashid to fire a shot which seemed heading into the top right corner, only for Seung-gyu to palm it out. The Korean defence was breached for the first time in the tournament when Mohamed Al Romaihi slammed the ball into the net after Hong Chul had made a last ditch clearance of Mahdi Al-Humaidan\u2019s attempt. Hwang Ui-jo intercepted a poor back pass in added time but his attempt to curl the ball past an onrushing Alawi went wide. The tie was then subsequently forced into extra-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, South Korea vs Bahrain\nBahrain were caught off guard when Yong sent in a cross from the right which Kim Jin-su met with a header to seal his team's place in the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, South Korea vs Bahrain\nAssistant referees:Hiroshi Yamauchi (Japan)Jun Mihara (Japan)Fourth official:Anton Shchetinin (Australia)Additional assistant referees:Jumpei Iida (Japan)Turki Al-Khudhayr (Saudi Arabia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Qatar vs Iraq\nQatar spurned the first opportunity of the game when Abdelkarim Hassan rattled the bar with a shot from close-range following Abdulaziz Hatem\u2019s cross in the fourth minute. Hatem came close to connecting with Abdelkarim\u2019s whipped delivery, only for goalkeeper Saad Al Sheeb to then dive at the feet of an onrushing Mohanad Ali to repel Iraq\u2019s opening attack of the tie. Abdelkarim\u2019s deflected cross brushed an upright and Bassam Al-Rawi headed Akram Afif\u2019s corner wide of the target. Qatar went ahead on 62 minutes after Al-Rawi curled home a free-kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0028-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Qatar vs Iraq\nMoments later, Jalal Hassan spread himself well to deny Abdelkarim, before producing another fine stop to keep out a Hatem drive from distance. Ali Adnan flashed a free-kick inches past the post and then Ahmad Ibrahim's 80th minute header missed by a similarly fine margin. Qatar held firm despite late Iraqi pressure to win their first ever knockout stage's match and moved on to the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Qatar vs Iraq\nAssistant referees:Ronnie Koh Min Kiat (Singapore)Sergei Grishchenko (Kyrgyzstan)Fourth official:Rashid Al-Ghaithi (Oman)Additional assistant referees:Hettikamkanamge Perera (Sri Lanka)Ahmed Al-Ali (Jordan)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Quarter-finals, Vietnam vs Japan\nKoya Kitagawa\u2019s pass to Genki Haraguchi in the 23rd minute was slid out of play by Vietnam defender \u0110\u1ed7 Duy M\u1ea1nh. The resulting corner saw Haraguchi send in a curler that found Maya Yoshida, who headed the ball into the back of the net. However, VAR was called into action for the first time in the history of the AFC Asian Cup and much to Vietnam\u2019s relief, the referee disallowed the goal as Yoshida\u2019s header had deflected off his arm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 67], "content_span": [68, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0030-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Quarter-finals, Vietnam vs Japan\nSh\u016bichi Gonda was forced into making his first save of the game as Phan V\u0103n \u0110\u1ee9c came close with a 37th minute strike, before being called into action again a minute later to deny another close-range attempt from the V\u0103n \u0110\u1ee9c. Ritsu Doan\u2019s run was blocked by B\u00f9i Ti\u1ebfn D\u0169ng I and the referee, after referring to the VAR, awarded a penalty which the Japanese midfielder converted in the 57th minute. Substitute Nguy\u1ec5n Phong H\u1ed3ng Duy came close in the 73rd minute as his low drive missed the upright by mere inches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 67], "content_span": [68, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Quarter-finals, Vietnam vs Japan\nAssistant referees:Mohamed Al-Hammadi (United Arab Emirates)Hasan Al-Mahri (United Arab Emirates)Fourth official:Ammar Al-Jeneibi (United Arab Emirates)Video assistant referee:Chris Beath (Australia)Assistant video assistant referees:Muhammad Taqi (Singapore)Paolo Valeri (Italy)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 67], "content_span": [68, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Quarter-finals, China PR vs Iran\nIn the 18th minute, Sardar Azmoun robbed Feng Xiaoting before squaring the ball to Mehdi Taremi who fired home to give Iran the lead. The Iranians then spurned a chance to double their advantage when Hossein Kanaanizadegan found Taremi from Ashkan Dejagah\u2019s free-kick only to somehow miss the target from only three yards. Azmoun out-muscled Liu Yiming and rounded goalkeeper Yan Junling to score shortly after the half-hour mark. After the break, Taremi and Kanaanizadegan looped headers narrowly over the bar, before Alireza Jahanbakhsh curled an effort narrowly wide of Yan\u2019s left-hand upright on 58 minutes. Substitute Yu Dabao missed from close-range with 10 minutes remaining leaving Karim Ansarifard to net another for Iran after yet another defensive error. The victory allowed Iran to play in the semi-finals for the first time since 2004 edition where they finished third-place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 67], "content_span": [68, 956]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Quarter-finals, China PR vs Iran\nAssistant referees:Taleb Al-Marri (Qatar)Saud Al-Maqaleh (Qatar)Fourth official:C\u00e9sar Ramos (Mexico)Video assistant referee:Danny Makkelie (Netherlands)Assistant video assistant referees:Khamis Al-Marri (Qatar)Ravshan Irmatov (Uzbekistan)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 67], "content_span": [68, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Quarter-finals, South Korea vs Qatar\nAkram Afif brought a save out of goalkeeper Kim Seung-gyu shortly after the half-hour mark. Moments later, midfielder Hwang In-beom curled a shot narrowly wide from the edge of the area after Qatar had failed to adequately deal with Lee Yong\u2019s free-kick. In the second half, Hwang Ui-jo controlled the ball before bringing a fine save out of Qatar custodian Saad Al Sheeb. Kim Jin-su grazed the outside of an upright with a free-kick, before Qatar took the lead minutes later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0034-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Quarter-finals, South Korea vs Qatar\nGathering possession some 25 yards from goal, Abdulaziz Hatem sent the ball past Seung-gyu\u2019s dive and into the bottom corner. Within seconds Ui-Jo had a goal ruled out by the VAR for offside, while Boualem Khoukhi\u2019s overhead kick was repelled by Seung-gyu. Late and intense South Korea pressure failed to find the equaliser, leaving Qatar to progress to the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Quarter-finals, South Korea vs Qatar\nAssistant referees:Abdukhamidullo Rasulov (Uzbekistan)Jakhongir Saidov (Uzbekistan)Fourth official:Ma Ning (China PR)Video assistant referee:Paolo Valeri (Italy)Assistant video assistant referees:Muhammad Taqi (Singapore)Fu Ming (China PR)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Quarter-finals, United Arab Emirates vs Australia\nMathew Ryan denied the hosts at the 20 minute mark when Ismail Al Hammadi stepped inside Trent Sainsbury to fire off an effort that the Socceroos keeper pushed away. With five minutes left in the half, Apostolos Giannou's shot on goal was swatted clear by Khalid Eisa. At the other end, Ali Mabkhout headed over from close range. In the second half, Giannou had the ball in the net following the introduction of Mathew Leckie for Jamie Maclaren, but his effort was ruled out for offside.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 84], "content_span": [85, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0036-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Quarter-finals, United Arab Emirates vs Australia\nIn the 68th minute, Mabkhout put the UAE ahead with their first opening of the second period, the forward stepped in to intercept Milos Degenek\u2019s backpass before rounding Ryan to score. Australia attempted to claw back an equaliser but the Socceroos came up short to end their reign as Asian champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 84], "content_span": [85, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Quarter-finals, United Arab Emirates vs Australia\nAssistant referees:Yaser Tulefat (Bahrain)Jun Mihara (Japan)Fourth official:Turki Al-Khudhayr (Saudi Arabia)Video assistant referee:Danny Makkelie (Netherlands)Assistant video assistant referees:Nawaf Shukralla (Bahrain)C\u00e9sar Ramos (Mexico)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 84], "content_span": [85, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Semi-finals, Iran vs Japan\nIran and Japan have faced each other in three previous Asian Cup editions, with Japan won one and drew two other games. Iran has also never scored a goal on Japan in every Asian Cup they met.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Semi-finals, Iran vs Japan\nYuya Osako\u2019s ball found space behind Alireza Jahanbakhsh and the advancing Yuto Nagatomo sent in a low cross that Takumi Minamino steered wide. Maya Yoshida headed wide from Gaku Shibasaki\u2019s corner while Ritsu Doan dragged his attempt just wide of goal. In the opening minutes of the second half, Ashkan Dejagah and Ehsan Hajsafi both saw their attempts miss the target. Moments later, Hossein Kanaanizadegan turned to protest to the referee following a collision with Minamino and, while the official ignored the Iranian pleas, Minamino sent in a cross which was headed home by Osako.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0039-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Semi-finals, Iran vs Japan\nJahanbakhsh almost restored parity five minutes later, only for Sh\u016bichi Gonda to tip his free-kick over the bar while Morteza Pouraliganji headed just off target moments later. Minamino's pass into the centre struck the sliding Pouraliganji on the arm. The resulting penalty saw Osako send Alireza Beiranvand the wrong way to double Japan's lead. In added time, Genki Haraguchi added the third with a burst through the defence before smashing his shot past Beiranvand to confirm Japan\u2019s progress to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Semi-finals, Iran vs Japan\nThe loss, for Iran, meant that the country's Asian Cup thirst has been extended to 47 years, since the last win back in 1976 when Iran hosted the competition. For Japan, since professionalization of football in 1990s, Japan has made into the final in five editions out of eight, which remains as a record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Semi-finals, Iran vs Japan\nAssistant referees:Matthew Cream (Australia)Anton Shchetinin (Australia)Fourth official:Kim Dong-jin (South Korea)Video assistant referee:Paolo Valeri (Italy)Assistant video assistant referees:Muhammad Taqi (Singapore)Ko Hyung-jin (South Korea)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Semi-finals, Qatar vs United Arab Emirates\nQatar took the lead at the 22nd minute, Boualem Khoukhi\u2019s angled drive from 18 yards found its way under Khalid Eisa\u2019s dive and into the net. The UAE responded through an Ismail Al Hammadi header which was saved by Saad Al Sheeb, and a similar effort from Ali Mabkhout that fizzed wide of the target shortly before the half-hour mark. Qatar doubled their lead in the 38th minute. Akram Afif found Almoez Ali who advanced into the area before firing home via a post to equal Ali Daei\u2019s record for the most goals by a player at Asia\u2019s premier event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0042-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Semi-finals, Qatar vs United Arab Emirates\nShortly after, Al Sheeb was on hand to deny Ahmed Khalil. Qatar added a third in the 81st minute when captain Hassan Al-Haydos manoeuvred past Bandar Al-Ahbabi and clipped the ball over Eisa. After the UAE\u2019s Ismail Ahmed was shown a straight red card late on for dangerous play, substitute Hamid Ismail rounded off the scoring to confirm Qatar's place in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Semi-finals, Qatar vs United Arab Emirates\nThe match was marred by bottle and footwear-throwing incidents committed by the UAE supporters. This conduct was preceded by booing the Qatari national anthem. The two countries have had a hostile relationship and had cut ties due to the ongoing diplomatic crisis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Semi-finals, Qatar vs United Arab Emirates\nAssistant referees:Miguel Hern\u00e1ndez (Mexico)Alberto Mor\u00edn (Mexico)Fourth official:Ravshan Irmatov (Uzbekistan)Video assistant referee:Paolo Valeri (Italy)Assistant video assistant referees:Muhammad Taqi (Singapore)Chris Beath (Australia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Final\nJapan began the match with two set piece chances, but neither was able to provide a scoring chance. Qatar's Almoez Ali opened the scoring in the 12th minute with a bicycle kick from 15 yards (14\u00a0m) after juggling a ball received from Akram Afif. With his ninth goal of the tournament, Ali took the record for most goals scored during an Asian Cup that was previously held by Iranian Ali Daei. Abdulaziz Hatem scored Qatar's next goal in the 27th minute, shooting from 25 yards (75\u00a0ft) past Japanese goalkeeper Sh\u016bichi Gonda towards the top corner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Final\nJapan regained possession and found several scoring chances before and after halftime, including a missed header from Yoshinori Muto and several corner kicks, but were unable to produce a shot on goal. Qatar received an early chance to score their third goal in the 56th minute on a counterattack, but the shot by Hatem went over the crossbar. The lead was cut to 2\u20131 with a 69th-minute goal from close range by Takumi Minamino\u2014the first to be conceded by Qatar during the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0046-0001", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Final\nQatar were awarded a penalty kick in the 82nd minute by the video assistant referee for a handball by Japanese captain Maya Yoshida, who blocked a shot from a corner kick. The penalty was converted by Akram Afif to give Qatar a 3\u20131 lead that they kept until the end of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286951-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup knockout stage, Final\nAssistant referees:Abdukhamidullo Rasulov (Uzbekistan)Jakhongir Saidov (Uzbekistan)Fourth official:Ma Ning (China PR)Reserve assistant referee:Huo Weiming (China PR)Video assistant referee:Paolo Valeri (Italy)Assistant video assistant referees:Muhammad Taqi (Singapore)Chris Beath (Australia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286952-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification\nThe 2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification was the qualification process organized by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) to determine the participating teams for the 2019 AFC Asian Cup, the 17th edition of the international men's football championship of Asia. For the first time, the Asian Cup final tournament was contested by 24 teams, having been expanded from the 16-team format that was used from 2004 to 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286952-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification\nThe qualification process involved four rounds, where the first two doubled as the 2018 FIFA World Cup qualification for Asian teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286952-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification, Format\nThe proposal to merge the preliminary qualification rounds for FIFA World Cup qualifiers with those for the Asian Cup was ratified by the AFC Competitions Committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286952-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification, Format\nThe play-off round represented a change from the initially announced qualification format \u2013 which saw the remaining fourth-placed teams and the four best group fifth-placed teams also advance to the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286952-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification, Entrants\n46 FIFA-affiliated nations from the AFC entered qualification. In order to determine which nations would compete in the first round and which nations would receive a bye through to the second round, the FIFA World Rankings of January 2015 were used (shown in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286952-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification, Entrants\nDue to the joint format of the FIFA World Cup qualifiers and AFC Asian Cup qualifiers, the hosts of the 2019 AFC Asian Cup, the United Arab Emirates also entered the second round of AFC Asian Cup qualifiers despite having qualified automatically.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286952-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification, Entrants\nNorthern Mariana Islands, which is not a FIFA member, were not eligible to enter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286952-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification, First round\nThe draw for the first round was held on 10 February 2015, 15:30 MST (UTC+8), at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286952-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification, First round\nThe six teams eliminated from this stage progressed to the 2016 AFC Solidarity Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286952-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification, Second round\nThe draw for the second round was held on 14 April 2015, 17:00 MST (UTC+8), at the JW Marriott Hotel in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286952-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification, Second round, Ranking of runner-up teams\nTo determine the four best runner-up teams, the following criteria are used:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 74], "content_span": [75, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286952-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification, Second round, Ranking of runner-up teams\nAs a result of Indonesia being disqualified due to FIFA suspension, Group F contained only four teams compared to five teams in all other groups. Therefore, the results against the fifth-placed team were not counted when determining the ranking of the runner-up teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 74], "content_span": [75, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286952-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification, Second round, Ranking of fourth-placed teams\nTo determine the four best fourth-placed teams, the following criteria were used:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 78], "content_span": [79, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286952-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification, Second round, Ranking of fourth-placed teams\nAs a result of Indonesia being disqualified due to FIFA suspension, Group F contained only four teams compared to five teams in all other groups. Therefore, the results against the fifth-placed team are not counted when determining the ranking of the fourth-placed teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 78], "content_span": [79, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286952-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification, Play-off round\nAt an AFC Competition Committee meeting in November 2014, it was decided that two rounds of play-off matches would be introduced into the qualification procedure to determine the final eight teams for the main qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286952-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification, Play-off round\nA total of eight slots for the third round were available from this round (five from round 1, three from round 2). The three teams eliminated from this stage progressed to the 2016 AFC Solidarity Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286952-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification, Play-off round\nThe draw for the play-off round was held on 7 April 2016, 15:00 MYT (UTC+8), at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286952-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification, Play-off round, Round 1\nThe lowest seeded team, Bhutan, received a bye, and the remaining ten teams were drawn into five pairs. Each pair played two home-and-away matches, with the winners qualifying for the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286952-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification, Play-off round, Round 1\nNote: Timor-Leste were ordered by the AFC to forfeit both matches against Malaysia due to the use of falsified documents for their players. Both matches originally ended as 3\u20130 wins to Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286952-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification, Play-off round, Round 2\nThe five losers from round 1 joined Bhutan in this round. The six teams were drawn into three pairs. Each pair played two home-and-away matches, with the winners qualifying for the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286952-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification, Third round\nA total of 24 teams competed in the third round of AFC Asian Cup qualifiers. Since the 2019 hosts United Arab Emirates advanced to the third round of the 2018 FIFA World Cup qualifiers, the automatic slot for the hosts was no longer necessary, and a total of 12 slots for the AFC Asian Cup were available from this round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286952-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification, Third round\nDue to the withdrawal of Guam and the suspension of Kuwait, the AFC decided to invite both Nepal and Macau, the top two teams of the 2016 AFC Solidarity Cup, to re-enter 2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification as replacements in order to maintain 24 teams in the third round of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286952-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification, Third round\nThe draw for the third round was held on 23 January 2017, 16:00 GST, in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. The 24 teams were drawn into six groups of four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286953-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Play-off Round\nThe play-off round of the 2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification was played from 2 June to 11 October 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286953-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Play-off Round, Format\nA total of 11 teams (the four lowest-ranked fourth-placed teams and the seven fifth-placed teams of the Asian Cup qualifying second round) competed in the play-off round. Originally, 12 teams were supposed to compete, but there were only seven instead of eight fifth-placed teams after Indonesia were disqualified due to FIFA suspension.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 57], "content_span": [58, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286953-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Play-off Round, Format\nThe play-off round consisted of two rounds of home-and-away two-legged play-off matches to determine the final eight qualifiers for the Asian Cup qualifying third round:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 57], "content_span": [58, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286953-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Play-off Round, Format\nThe five Round 1 winners and three Round 2 winners joined the 16 teams which advanced directly from the Asian Cup qualifying second round to the third round, to compete for the final 12 slots in the 2019 AFC Asian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 57], "content_span": [58, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286953-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Play-off Round, Format\nThe three Round 2 losers joined the six teams which lost in the Asian Cup qualifying first round, to compete for the 2016 AFC Solidarity Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 57], "content_span": [58, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286953-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Play-off Round, Seeding\nThe draw for the play-off round was held on 7 April 2016, 15:00 MYT (UTC+8), at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 58], "content_span": [59, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286953-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Play-off Round, Seeding\nThe teams were seeded based on their results in the Asian Cup qualifying second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 58], "content_span": [59, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286953-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Play-off Round, Seeding\nIn Round 1, each tie contained a team from Pot 1 and a team from Pot 2, with the team from Pot 1 hosting the first leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 58], "content_span": [59, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286953-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Play-off Round, Seeding\nIn Round 2, there were no seeding. As the draw was held before Round 1 was played, the identities of the Round 1 losers were not known at the time of the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 58], "content_span": [59, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286953-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Play-off Round, Matches\nEach 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 (Regulations Article 10.3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 58], "content_span": [59, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286953-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Play-off Round, Matches, Round 1\nThe first legs were played on 2 June, and the second legs were played on 6\u20137 June 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 67], "content_span": [68, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286953-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Play-off Round, Matches, Round 1\nNote: Timor-Leste were ordered by the AFC to forfeit both matches against Malaysia due to the use of falsified documents for their players. Both matches originally ended as 3\u20130 wins to Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 67], "content_span": [68, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286953-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Play-off Round, Matches, Round 1\nCambodia won 4\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the Asian Cup qualifying third round. Chinese Taipei entered round 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 67], "content_span": [68, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286953-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Play-off Round, Matches, Round 1\nYemen won 4\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the Asian Cup qualifying third round. Maldives entered round 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 67], "content_span": [68, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286953-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Play-off Round, Matches, Round 1\nTajikistan won 6\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the Asian Cup qualifying third round. Bangladesh entered round 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 67], "content_span": [68, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286953-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Play-off Round, Matches, Round 1\nMalaysia won 6\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the Asian Cup qualifying third round. Timor-Leste entered round 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 67], "content_span": [68, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286953-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Play-off Round, Matches, Round 1\nIndia won 7\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the Asian Cup qualifying third round. Laos entered round 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 67], "content_span": [68, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286953-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Play-off Round, Matches, Round 2\nThe first legs were played on 6 September and 8 October, and the second legs were played on 10 and 11 October 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 67], "content_span": [68, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286953-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Play-off Round, Matches, Round 2\nMaldives won 5\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the Asian Cup qualifying third round. Laos were eligible to enter the Solidarity Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 67], "content_span": [68, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286953-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Play-off Round, Matches, Round 2\nBhutan won 3\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the Asian Cup qualifying third round. Bangladesh were eligible to enter the Solidarity Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 67], "content_span": [68, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286953-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Play-off Round, Matches, Round 2\nChinese Taipei won 4\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the Asian Cup qualifying third round. Timor-Leste were eligible to enter the Solidarity Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 67], "content_span": [68, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286953-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Play-off Round, Goalscorers\nThere were 46 goals scored in 16 matches, for an average of 2.88 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 62], "content_span": [63, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286954-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Third Round\nThe third round of the 2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification was played from 26 March 2017 to 27 March 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286954-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Third Round, Format\nA total of 24 teams (16 teams which advanced from the second round and eight teams which advanced from the play-off round) compete in the third round to compete for the final 12 slots in the 2019 AFC Asian Cup. Since the hosts United Arab Emirates advanced to the third round of the 2018 FIFA World Cup qualification, the automatic slot for the hosts is no longer necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 54], "content_span": [55, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286954-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Third Round, Format\nThe 24 teams were divided into six groups of four teams to play home-and-away round-robin matches. The top two teams of each group will qualify for the 2019 AFC Asian Cup, where they are joined by the 12 teams which qualified directly from the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 54], "content_span": [55, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286954-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Third Round, Qualified teams\nDue to the withdrawal of Guam and the suspension of Kuwait, the AFC invited both Nepal and Macau, the top two teams of the 2016 AFC Solidarity Cup, to re-enter 2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification as replacements in order to maintain 24 teams in the third round of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286954-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Third Round, Draw\nThe draw for the third round was held on 23 January 2017, 16:00 GST (UTC+4), in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. It was initially scheduled for 18 January 2017, but was delayed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 52], "content_span": [53, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286954-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Third Round, Draw\nThe 24 teams were drawn into six groups of four. They were seeded using the January 2017 FIFA World Rankings (indicated in parentheses below).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 52], "content_span": [53, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286954-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Third Round, Draw\nThe national teams which eventually qualified are presented in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 52], "content_span": [53, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286954-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Third Round, Groups\nThe teams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, tiebreakers were applied in the following order (Regulations Article 9.3):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 54], "content_span": [55, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286954-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification \u2013 Third Round, Goalscorers\nThere were 243 goals scored in 72 matches, for an average of 3.38 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 59], "content_span": [60, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286955-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup squads\nThe 2019 AFC Asian Cup was an international football tournament that was held in the United Arab Emirates from 5 January to 1 February 2019. The 24 national teams involved in the tournament were required to register a squad with a minimum of 18 players and a maximum of 23 players, at least three of whom must be goalkeepers. Only players in these squads were eligible to take part in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286955-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup squads\nBefore announcing their final squads, several teams named a provisional squad of 18 to 50 players; each country's final squad had to be submitted at least ten days prior to the first match of the tournament. Replacement of players was permitted until six hours before the team's first Asian Cup game. The AFC published the final lists with squad numbers on 27 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286955-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup squads\nThe position listed for each player is per the official squad list published by AFC. The age listed for each player is as of 5 January 2019, the first day of the tournament. The numbers of caps and goals listed for each player do not include any matches played after the start of tournament. The nationality for each club reflects the national association (not the league) to which the club is affiliated. A flag is included for coaches that are of a different nationality than their own national team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286955-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup squads, Group A, United Arab Emirates\nThe final squad was announced on 23 December 2018. Mahmoud Khamees was replaced by Al Hassan Saleh on 25 December. Rayan Yaslam was replaced by Mohammed Khalfan on 31 December due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286955-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup squads, Group A, Thailand\nCoach: Milovan Rajevac (6 January 2019) / Sirisak Yodyardthai (from 10 January 2019)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286955-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup squads, Group A, Thailand\nThe 27-man provisional squad was announced on 14 December 2018. The squad was reduced to 26 players on 26 December as Kawin Thamsatchanan was ruled out due to injury. The final squad was announced on 27 December 2018. Following the opening match, coach Milovan Rajevac was sacked and replaced by Sirisak Yodyardthai on 7 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286955-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup squads, Group A, India\nThe 34-man provisional squad was announced on 12 December 2018. The squad was reduced to 28 players on 19 December. The final squad was announced on 26 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286955-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup squads, Group A, Bahrain\nThe 28-man provisional squad was announced on 7 December 2018. The final squad was announced on 27 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286955-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup squads, Group B, Australia\nThe final squad was announced on 20 December 2018. On 24 December 2018, James Jeggo was called up instead of the injured Aaron Mooy. On 2 January 2019, Martin Boyle was replaced by Apostolos Giannou due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286955-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup squads, Group B, Syria\nCoach: Bernd Stange (6\u201310 January 2019) / Fajr Ibrahim (from 15 January 2019)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286955-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup squads, Group B, Syria\nThe final squad was announced on 23 December 2018. Bernd Stange was sacked and replaced by Fajr Ibrahim, following the team's loss to Jordan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286955-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup squads, Group B, Palestine\nThe 28-man provisional squad was announced on 5 December 2018. The final squad was announced on 26 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286955-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup squads, Group B, Jordan\nThe 29-man provisional squad was announced on 13 December 2018. The final squad was announced on 26 December 2018. Yazan Thalji was replaced by Ihsan Haddad on 5 January 2019 due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286955-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup squads, Group C, South Korea\nThe final squad was announced on 20 December 2018. Na Sang-ho was replaced by Lee Seung-woo on 6 January 2019 due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286955-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup squads, Group C, China PR\nThe 25-man provisional squad was announced on 17 December 2018. The squad was reduced to 24 players on 26 December as Li Xuepeng was ruled out due to injury. The final squad was announced on 27 December 2018. Guo Quanbo was replaced by Zhang Lu on 5 January 2019 due to Zhang's recover from his injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286955-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup squads, Group C, Kyrgyzstan\nThe 35-man provisional squad was announced on 3 December 2018. The final squad was announced on 27 December 2018. Viktor Maier was replaced by Pavel Sidorenko on 2 January 2019 due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286955-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup squads, Group C, Philippines\nThe final squad was announced on 27 December 2018. Paul Mulders was replaced by Amani Aguinaldo on 6 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286955-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup squads, Group D, Iran\nThe 35-man provisional squad was announced on 10 December 2018. The squad was reduced to 34 players on 25 December as Saeid Ezatolahi was ruled out due to injury. The final squad was announced on 26 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286955-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup squads, Group D, Iraq\nThe 27-man provisional squad was announced on 4 December 2018. The final squad was announced on 27 December 2018. On 30 December 2018, Mahdi Kamel was replaced by Mohammed Dawood.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286955-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup squads, Group D, Vietnam\nThe 27-man provisional squad was announced on 18 December 2018. On 25 December 2018, L\u1ee5c Xu\u00e2n H\u01b0ng was replaced by H\u1ed3 T\u1ea5n T\u00e0i due to injury. On 26 December 2018, the squad was reduced to 24 players. The final squad was announced on 27 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286955-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup squads, Group D, Yemen\nThe 35-man provisional squad was announced on 4 December 2018. The final squad was announced on 27 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286955-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup squads, Group E, Saudi Arabia\nThe final squad was announced on 20 December 2018. Salman Al-Faraj was replaced by Nooh Al-Mousa on 6 January 2019 due to injury. Abdullah Al-Khaibari was replaced by Sultan Al-Ghanam on 7 January 2019 due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286955-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup squads, Group E, Qatar\nThe 27-man provisional squad was announced on 12 December 2018. The final squad was announced on 27 December 2018. Ahmed Moein was replaced by Khaled Mohammed on 3 January 2019 due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286955-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup squads, Group E, Lebanon\nThe 27-man provisional squad was announced on 18 December 2018. The final squad was announced on 26 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286955-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup squads, Group F, Japan\nThe final squad was announced on 13 December 2018. Takuma Asano was replaced by Yoshinori Muto on 19 December 2018 due to injury. Shoya Nakajima was replaced by Takashi Inui and Hidemasa Morita was replaced by Tsukasa Shiotani on 5 January 2019 due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286955-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup squads, Group F, Uzbekistan\nThe 27-man provisional squad was announced on 15 December 2018. The final squad was announced on 24 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286955-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup squads, Group F, Oman\nThe 26-man provisional squad was announced on 18 December 2018. Ali Al-Habsi was replaced by Ammar Al-Rushaidi due to an injury on 25 December 2018. The final squad was announced on 26 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286955-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Asian Cup squads, Group F, Turkmenistan\nThe 29-man provisional squad was announced on 20 December 2018. The final squad was announced on 27 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286956-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Beach Soccer Championship\nThe 2019 AFC Beach Soccer Championship was the ninth edition of the AFC Beach Soccer Championship (second official edition), the premier beach soccer tournament contested by Asian men's national teams, organised by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286956-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Beach Soccer Championship\nThe tournament took place in Pattaya, Thailand between 7\u201317 March 2019. The championship also acts as the qualification tournament for Asian teams to the 2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup in Paraguay; the top three teams qualify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286956-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Beach Soccer Championship\nIran were the defending champions but failed to defend the title after losing Japan in the quarter-final. Japan becomes the champion after beating UAE in final, becoming the first team to win the tournament three times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286956-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Beach Soccer Championship, Draw\nThe draw of the tournament was held on 3 December 2018 in Pattaya, Thailand. The 15 teams were drawn into three groups of four teams and one group of three teams. The teams were seeded according to their performance in the 2017 AFC Beach Soccer Championship final tournament, with the hosts Thailand automatically seeded and assigned to Position A1 in the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 40], "content_span": [41, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286956-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Beach Soccer Championship, Squads\nEach team must register a squad of 12 players, minimum two of whom must be goalkeepers (Regulations Articles 26.1 and 26.2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286956-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Beach Soccer Championship, Group stage\nEach team earns three points for a win in regulation time, two points for a win in extra time, one point for a win in a penalty shoot-out, and no points for a defeat. The top two teams of each group advanced to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286956-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Beach Soccer Championship, Group stage\nTeams are ranked according to points, and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria are applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings (Regulations Article 10.5):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286956-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Beach Soccer Championship, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, extra time and penalty shoot-out were used to decide the winner if necessary, except for the third place match where penalty shoot-out (no extra time) was used to decide the winner if necessary (Regulations Articles 14.1 and 15.1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286956-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Beach Soccer Championship, Awards\nThe following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286956-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Beach Soccer Championship, Goalscorers\nThere were 211 goals scored in 29 matches, for an average of 7.28 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286956-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Beach Soccer Championship, Qualified teams for FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup\nThe following three teams from AFC qualify for the 2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 83], "content_span": [84, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286957-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League\nThe 2019 AFC Champions League was the 38th edition of Asia's premier club football tournament, organized by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC), and the 17th under the current AFC Champions League title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286957-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League\nAl-Hilal defeated Urawa Red Diamonds 3\u20130 on aggregate in the final to earn a record third Champions League title. As winners, they qualified for the 2019 FIFA Club World Cup in Qatar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286957-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League\nKashima Antlers were the defending champions, but were eliminated by Guangzhou Evergrande in the quarter-finals on away goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286957-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League, Association team allocation\nThe 46 AFC member associations (excluding the associate member Northern Mariana Islands) were ranked, based on their national team's and clubs' performance over the last four years in AFC competitions, with the allocation of slots for the 2019 and 2020 editions of the AFC club competitions determined by the 2017 AFC rankings (Entry Manual Article 2.3):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286957-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League, Association team allocation, Association ranking\nFor the 2019 AFC Champions League, the associations were allocated slots according to their association ranking which was published on 15 December 2017, which took into account their performance in the AFC Champions League and the AFC Cup, as well as their national team's FIFA World Rankings, between 2014 and 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286957-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League, Teams\nThe following 51 teams from 22 associations entered the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286957-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 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. TH means title holders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286957-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League, Qualifying play-offs\nIn the qualifying play-offs, each tie was played as a single match. Extra time and penalty shoot-out were used to decide the winner if necessary (Regulations Article 9.2). The eight winners of the play-off round (four each from both West Region and East Region) advanced to the group stage to join the 24 direct entrants. All losers in each round from associations with only play-off slot entered the AFC Cup group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286957-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League, Qualifying play-offs\nThe bracket of the qualifying play-offs for each region, determined based on the association ranking of each team, with the team from the higher-ranked association hosting the match, was officially announced by the AFC prior to the group stage draw on 22 November 2018. Teams from the same association could not be placed into the same tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286957-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League, Group stage\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 22 November 2018, 16:30 MYT (UTC+8), at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The 32 teams were drawn into eight groups of four: four groups each in the West Region (Groups A\u2013D) and the East Region (Groups E\u2013H). Teams from the same association could not be drawn into the same group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286957-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League, Group stage\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 of the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286957-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League, Group stage\nThe teams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, tiebreakers were applied in the following order (Regulations Article 10.5):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286957-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, the 16 teams played a single-elimination tournament, with the teams split into the two regions until the final. Each tie is 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 (Regulations Article 11.3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286957-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League, Knockout stage, Bracket\nThe bracket was decided after the draw for the quarter-finals, which was held on 2 July 2019, 16:00 MYT (UTC+8), at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286957-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 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 from the same region, with the group winners hosting the second leg, and the matchups determined by the group stage draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286957-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League, Knockout stage, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the quarter-finals was held on 2 July 2019. In the quarter-finals, the four round of 16 winners from the West Region (whose identity was not known at the time of the draw) played in two ties, and the four round of 16 winners from the East Region played in two ties, with the matchups and order of legs decided by draw, without any seeding or country protection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286957-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League, Knockout stage, Semi-finals\nIn the semi-finals, the two quarter-final winners from the West Region played each other, and the two quarter-final winners from the East Region played each other, with the order of legs determined by the quarter-final draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286957-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League, Knockout stage, Final\nIn the final, the two semi-final winners played each other, with the order of legs (first leg hosted by team from the West Region, second leg hosted by team from the East Region) reversed from the previous season's final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286957-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League, Top scorers\nNote: Goals scored in the qualifying play-offs are not counted when determining top scorer (Regulations Article 64.4).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286958-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League Final\nThe 2019 AFC Champions League Final was the final of the 2019 AFC Champions League, the 38th edition of the top-level Asian club football tournament organized by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC), and the 17th under the current AFC Champions League title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286958-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League Final\nThe final was contested in two-legged home-and-away format between Saudi Arabian team Al-Hilal and Japanese team Urawa Red Diamonds. The first leg was hosted by Al-Hilal at the King Saud University Stadium in Riyadh on 9 November 2019, while the second leg was hosted by Urawa Red Diamonds at the Saitama Stadium 2002 in Saitama on 24 November 2019. The final was a rematch of the 2017 final, which Urawa Red Diamonds won 2\u20131 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286958-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League Final\nAl-Hilal won their third Asian club championship, tying the record set by the Pohang Steelers for most in the competition's history. They won 3\u20130 on aggregate, having defeated the Urawa Red Diamonds 1\u20130 in the first leg and 2\u20130 in the second. This marked the first time in eight years that a team from West Zone won the competition since Al Sadd won it in 2011. As winners, Al-Hilal earned the right to represent the AFC at the 2019 FIFA Club World Cup, entering at the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286958-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League Final, Teams\nIn the following table, finals until 2002 were in the Asian Club Championship era, since 2003 were in the AFC Champions League era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286958-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League Final, Venues\nThis was the first time that an Asian club final took place at the King Saud University Stadium. Saitama Stadium 2002 hosted an Asian club final for the third time, having previously hosted the second legs of 2007 and 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286958-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League Final, Road to the final\nNote: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first (H: home; A: away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286958-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League Final, Format\nThe final was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis, with the order of legs (first leg hosted by team from the West Region, second leg hosted by team from the East Region) reversed from the previous season's final. The away goals rule, extra time (away goals do not apply in extra time) and penalty shoot-out would have been used to decide the winning side if necessary (Regulations, Section 3. 11.2 & 11.3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286958-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League Final, Matches, First leg, Summary\nPeruvian Andr\u00e9 Carrillo scored the only goal of the match for Al-Hilal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286958-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League Final, Matches, First leg, Details\nAssistant referees:Ali Ubaydee (Iraq)Ameer Hussein (Iraq)Fourth official:Watheq Al-Swaiedi (Iraq)Additional assistant referees:Mohanad Qasim Sarray (Iraq)Omar Al-Yaqoubi (Oman)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286958-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League Final, Matches, Second leg, Summary\nSalem Al-Dawsari scored for Al-Hilal after 74 minutes before Baf\u00e9timbi Gomis made his eleventh goal of the tournament, earning him the top goalscorer and best player titles aside of the AFC Champions League trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286958-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League Final, Matches, Second leg, Details\nAssistant referees:Andrey Tsapenko (Uzbekistan)Timur Gaynullin (Uzbekistan)Fourth official:Ruslan Seratzidinov (Uzbekistan)Additional assistant referees:Aziz Asimov (Uzbekistan)Ilgiz Tantashev (Uzbekistan)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286959-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League group stage\nThe 2019 AFC Champions League group stage was played from 4 March to 29 May 2019. A total of 32 teams competed in the group stage to decide the 16 places in the knockout stage of the 2019 AFC Champions League. The postponement of Group A fixture between Zob Ahan and Al-Nassr made the group stage conclude a week behind schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286959-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League group stage, Draw\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 22 November 2018, 16:30 MYT (UTC+8), at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The 32 teams were drawn into eight groups of four: four groups each in the West Region (Groups A\u2013D) and the East Region (Groups E\u2013H). 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, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286959-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League group stage, Draw\nThe following 32 teams entered into the group stage draw, which included the 24 direct entrants and the eight winners of the play-off round of the qualifying play-offs, whose identity was not known at the time of the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 43], "content_span": [44, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286959-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 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 of the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286959-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League group stage, Format, Tiebreakers\nThe teams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, tiebreakers were applied in the following order (Regulations Article 10.5):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 58], "content_span": [59, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286960-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League knockout stage\nThe 2019 AFC Champions League knockout stage was played from 18 June to 24 November 2019. A total of 16 teams competed in the knockout stage to decide the champions of the 2019 AFC Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286960-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League knockout stage, Qualified teams\nThe winners and runners-up of each of the eight groups in the group stage advanced to the round of 16, with both West Region (Groups A\u2013D) and East Region (Groups E\u2013H) having eight qualified teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286960-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League knockout stage, Format\nIn the knockout stage, the 16 teams played a single-elimination tournament, with the teams split into the two regions until the final. Each tie is 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 (Regulations Article 11.3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286960-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League knockout stage, Schedule\nThe schedule of each round was as follows. Up to the semi-finals, matches in the West Region were played on Mondays and Tuesdays, while matches in the East Region were played on Tuesdays and Wednesdays.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286960-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League knockout stage, Bracket\nThe bracket of the knockout stage was determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286960-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League knockout stage, Bracket\nThe bracket was decided after the draw for the quarter-finals, which was held on 2 July 2019, 16:00 MYT (UTC+8), at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286960-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League knockout stage, Round of 16, Summary\nIn the round of 16, the winners of one group played the runners-up of another group from the same region, with the group winners hosting the second leg, and the matchups determined by the group stage draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286960-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League knockout stage, Quarter-finals, Summary\nThe draw for the quarter-finals was held on 2 July 2019. In the quarter-finals, the four round of 16 winners from the West Region (whose identity was not known at the time of the draw) played in two ties, and the four round of 16 winners from the East Region played in two ties, with the matchups and order of legs decided by draw, without any seeding or country protection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 65], "content_span": [66, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286960-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League knockout stage, Quarter-finals, East Region\n3\u20133 on aggregate. Urawa Red Diamonds won on away goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286960-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League knockout stage, Semi-finals, Summary\nIn the semi-finals, the two quarter-final winners from the West Region played each other, and the two quarter-final winners from the East Region played each other, with the order of legs determined by the quarter-final draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286960-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League knockout stage, Final\nIn the final, the two semi-final winners played each other, with the order of legs (first leg hosted by team from the West Region, second leg hosted by team from the East Region) reversed from the previous season's final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286961-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League qualifying play-offs\nThe 2019 AFC Champions League qualifying play-offs were played from 5 to 19 February 2019. A total of 27 teams competed in the qualifying play-offs to decide eight of the 32 places in the group stage of the 2019 AFC Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286961-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League qualifying play-offs, Teams\nThe following 27 teams, split into two regions (West Region and East Region), entered the qualifying play-offs, consisting of three rounds:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 53], "content_span": [54, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286961-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League qualifying play-offs, Format\nIn the qualifying play-offs, each tie was played as a single match. Extra time and penalty shoot-out were used to decide the winner if necessary (Regulations Article 9.2). The eight winners of the play-off round (four each from both West Region and East Region) advanced to the group stage to join the 24 direct entrants. All losers in each round from associations with only play-off slot entered the AFC Cup group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 54], "content_span": [55, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286961-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League qualifying play-offs, Bracket\nThe bracket of the qualifying play-offs for each region, determined based on the association ranking of each team, with the team from the higher-ranked association hosting the match, was officially announced by the AFC prior to the group stage draw on 22 November 2018. Teams from the same association could not be placed into the same tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 55], "content_span": [56, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286961-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League qualifying play-offs, Preliminary round 1, Summary\nA total of six teams played in the preliminary round 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286961-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League qualifying play-offs, Preliminary round 2, Summary\nA total of 16 teams played in the preliminary round 2: 13 teams which entered in this round, and three winners of the preliminary round 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286961-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Champions League qualifying play-offs, Play-off round, Summary\nA total of 16 teams played in the play-off round: eight teams which entered in this round, and eight winners of the preliminary round 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 71], "content_span": [72, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286962-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup\nThe 2019 AFC Cup was the 16th edition of the AFC Cup, Asia's secondary club football tournament organized by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286962-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup\nAl-Ahed won the title for the first time, defeating April 25 in the final. Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya were the title holders, having won the previous three editions of the tournament. However, they were unable to defend the title as Iraqi teams played in the AFC Champions League instead of the AFC Cup in the 2019 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286962-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup, Association team allocation\nThe 46 AFC member associations (excluding the associate member Northern Mariana Islands) are ranked based on their national team's and clubs' performance over the last four years in AFC competitions, with the allocation of slots for the 2019 and 2020 editions of the AFC club competitions determined by the 2017 AFC rankings (Entry Manual Article 2.3):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 41], "content_span": [42, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286962-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup, Association team allocation, Association ranking\nFor the 2019 AFC Cup, the associations are allocated slots according to their association ranking which was published on 15 December 2017, which takes into account their performance in the AFC Champions League and the AFC Cup, as well as their national team's FIFA World Rankings, between 2014 and 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 62], "content_span": [63, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286962-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup, Teams\nThe following 43 teams from 26 associations entered the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 19], "content_span": [20, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286962-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup, Schedule\nThe schedule of the competition is as follows (W: West Asia Zone; C: Central Asia Zone; S: South Asia Zone; A: ASEAN Zone; E: East Asia Zone).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 22], "content_span": [23, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286962-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup, Qualifying play-offs\nIn the qualifying play-offs, 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 (Regulations Article 9.3). The four winners of the play-off round (one each from West Asia Zone, Central Asia Zone, South Asia Zone, East Asia Zone) advanced to the group stage to join the 32 direct entrants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 34], "content_span": [35, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286962-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup, Qualifying play-offs\nThe bracket of the qualifying play-offs for each zone, determined based on the association ranking of each team, with the team from the higher-ranked association hosting the second leg, was officially announced by the AFC prior to the group stage draw on 22 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 34], "content_span": [35, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286962-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup, Group stage\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 22 November 2018, 14:00 MYT (UTC+8), at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The 36 teams were drawn into nine groups of four: three groups each in the West Asia Zone (Groups A\u2013C) and the ASEAN Zone (Groups F\u2013H), and one group each in the Central Asia Zone (Group D), the South Asia Zone (Group E), and the East Asia Zone (Group I). Teams from the same association in the West Asia Zone and ASEAN Zone could not be drawn into the same group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 25], "content_span": [26, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286962-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup, Group stage\nIn the group stage, each group was played on a home-and-away round-robin basis. The following teams advanced to the knockout stage:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 25], "content_span": [26, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286962-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup, Group stage\nThe teams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, tiebreakers were applied in the following order (Regulations Article 10.5):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 25], "content_span": [26, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286962-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, the 11 teams played a single-elimination tournament. Each tie was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis, except the final which 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 winners if necessary (Regulations Article 11.3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 28], "content_span": [29, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286962-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup, Knockout stage, Bracket\nThe bracket was decided after the draw for the Zonal finals and the Inter-zone play-off semi-finals, which was held on 2 July 2019, 15:00 MYT (UTC+8), at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 37], "content_span": [38, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286962-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup, Knockout stage, Zonal semi-finals\nIn the Zonal semi-finals, the four qualified teams from the West Asia Zone (Groups A\u2013C) played in two ties, and the four qualified teams from the ASEAN Zone (Groups F\u2013H) played in two ties, with the matchups and order of legs determined by the group stage draw and the identity of the best runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 47], "content_span": [48, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286962-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup, Knockout stage, Zonal finals\nThe draw for the Zonal finals was held on 2 July 2019. In the Zonal finals, the two winners of West Asia Zonal semi-finals play each other, and the two winners of ASEAN Zonal semi-finals play each other, with the order of legs decided by draw. The winners of the West Asia Zonal final advanced to the final, while the winners of the ASEAN Zonal final advanced to the Inter-zone play-off semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 42], "content_span": [43, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286962-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup, Knockout stage, Inter-zone play-off semi-finals\nThe draw for the Inter-zone play-off semi-finals was held on 2 July 2019. In the Inter-zone play-off semi-finals, the four zonal winners other than the West Asia Zone play in two ties, i.e., the winners of the Central Asia Zone (Group D), the winners of the South Asia Zone (Group E), the winners of the East Asia Zone (Group I), and the winners of the ASEAN Zonal final (whose identity was not known at the time of the draw), with the matchups and order of legs decided by draw, without any seeding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 61], "content_span": [62, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286962-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup, Knockout stage, Inter-zone play-off final\nIn the Inter-zone play-off final, the two winners of the Inter-zone play-off semi-finals play each other, with the order of legs determined by the Inter-zone play-off semi-final draw. The winners of the Inter-zone play-off final advance to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 55], "content_span": [56, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286962-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup, Knockout stage, Final\nIn the final, the winners of the West Asia Zonal final and the winners of the Inter-zone play-off final played each other, with the host team (winners of the Inter-zone play-off final) alternated from the previous season's final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 35], "content_span": [36, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286962-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup, Knockout stage, Final\nThe match was originally to be hosted by April 25 at the Kim Il-sung Stadium in Pyongyang, North Korea on 2 November 2019. However, on 22 October 2019, due to North Korea's decision to ban television transmission of football games, the AFC announced that the final would be held in Shanghai, China in order for the match to be transmitted. On 25 October 2019, the match was rescheduled from 2 November to 4 November and the host city was shifted from Shanghai to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 35], "content_span": [36, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286962-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup, Top scorers\nNote: Goals scored in the qualifying play-offs are not counted when determining top scorer (Regulations Article 64.4).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 25], "content_span": [26, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286963-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup Final\nThe 2019 AFC Cup Final was the final match of the 2019 AFC Cup, the 16th edition of the AFC Cup, Asia's secondary club football tournament organized by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286963-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup Final\nThe final was contested as a single match between April 25 from North Korea and Al-Ahed from Lebanon. The match was played at the Kuala Lumpur Stadium in Kuala Lumpur on 4 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286963-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup Final\nAl-Ahed won 1\u20130 by a goal from Ghanaian player Issah Yakubu. This was Al-Ahed's first continental title, as well as the first for a Lebanese team. April 25 became the first North Korean men's football club to qualify for an Asian final, while Al-Ahed were the third Lebanese side to do so (after Nejmeh in 2005 and Safa in 2008).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286963-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup Final, Venue\nThe match was originally to be hosted by April 25 at the Kim Il-sung Stadium in Pyongyang, North Korea on 2 November 2019. However, on 22 October 2019, due to North Korea's decision to ban television transmission of football games, the AFC announced that the final would be held in Shanghai, China in order for the match to be transmitted. On 25 October 2019, the match was rescheduled from 2 November to 4 November and the host city was shifted from Shanghai to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286963-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup Final, Road to the final\nNote: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first (H: home; A: away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286963-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup Final, Format\nThe final was played as a single match, with the host team (winners of the Inter-zone play-off final) alternated from the previous season's final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286963-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup Final, Format\nShould it tied after regulation time, extra time and, if necessary, penalty shoot-out would have been used to decide the winning team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286963-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup Final, Match, Details\nMan of the Match:Issah Yakubu (Al-Ahed)Assistant referees:Deniye Gedara Palitha Parakkrama Hemathunga (Sri Lanka)Wellabada Hewage Don Senjeewa Premalal (Sri Lanka)Fourth official:Omar Al-Yaqoubi (Oman)Fifth official:Abdullah Al-Jardani (Oman)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286964-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup group stage\nThe 2019 AFC Cup group stage was played from 25 February to 26 June 2019. A total of 36 teams competed in the group stage to decide the 11 places in the knockout stage of the 2019 AFC Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286964-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup group stage, Draw\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 22 November 2018, 14:00 MYT (UTC+8), at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The 36 teams were drawn into nine groups of four: three groups each in the West Asia Zone (Groups A\u2013C) and the ASEAN Zone (Groups F\u2013H), and one group each in the Central Asia Zone (Group D), the South Asia Zone (Group E), and the East Asia Zone (Group I). Teams from the same association in the West Asia Zone and ASEAN Zone could not be drawn into the same group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286964-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup group stage, Draw\nThe following 36 teams entered into the group stage draw, which included the 32 direct entrants and the four winners of the play-off round of the qualifying play-offs, whose identity was not known at the time of the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286964-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup group stage, Format\nIn the group stage, each group was played on a home-and-away round-robin basis. The following teams advanced to the knockout stage:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286964-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup group stage, Format\nIn the event that a group contains only three teams, it might be played on a double round-robin basis hosted by two of the teams if at least two of the three teams agree to this format (Regulations Article 10.1.7).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286964-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup group stage, Format, Tiebreakers\nThe teams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, tiebreakers were applied in the following order (Regulations Article 10.5):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286964-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup group stage, Schedule\nThe schedule of each matchday is as follows (W: West Asia Zone; C: Central Asia Zone; S: South Asia Zone; A: ASEAN Zone; E: East Asia Zone).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286965-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup knockout stage\nThe 2019 AFC Cup knockout stage was played from 17 June to 4 November 2019. A total of 11 teams competed in the knockout stage to decide the champions of the 2019 AFC Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286965-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup knockout stage, Format\nIn the knockout stage, the 11 teams played a single-elimination tournament. Each tie was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis, except the final which 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 winners if necessary (Regulations Article 11.3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286965-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup knockout stage, Schedule\nThe schedule of each round is as follows (W: West Asia Zone; A: ASEAN Zone). Matches in the West Asia Zone were played on Mondays and Tuesdays, while matches in the ASEAN Zone and the Inter-zone play-offs were played on Tuesdays and Wednesdays.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286965-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup knockout stage, Bracket\nThe bracket of the knockout stage was determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286965-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup knockout stage, Bracket\nThe bracket was decided after the draw for the Zonal finals and the Inter-zone play-off semi-finals, which was held on 2 July 2019, 15:00 MYT (UTC+8), at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286965-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup knockout stage, Zonal semi-finals, Summary\nIn the Zonal semi-finals, the four qualified teams from the West Asia Zone (Groups A\u2013C) played in two ties, and the four qualified teams from the ASEAN Zone (Groups F\u2013H) played in two ties, with the matchups and order of legs determined by the group stage draw and the identity of the best runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286965-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup knockout stage, Zonal semi-finals, ASEAN Zone\n2\u20132 on aggregate. Becamex B\u00ecnh D\u01b0\u01a1ng won on away goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286965-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup knockout stage, Zonal finals, Summary\nThe draw for the Zonal finals was held on 2 July 2019. In the Zonal finals, the two winners of West Asia Zonal semi-finals play each other, and the two winners of ASEAN Zonal semi-finals play each other, with the order of legs decided by draw. The winners of the West Asia Zonal final advanced to the final, while the winners of the ASEAN Zonal final advanced to the Inter-zone play-off semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286965-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup knockout stage, Inter-zone play-off semi-finals, Summary\nThe draw for the Inter-zone play-off semi-finals was held on 2 July 2019. In the Inter-zone play-off semi-finals, the four zonal winners other than the West Asia Zone play in two ties, i.e., the winners of the Central Asia Zone (Group D), the winners of the South Asia Zone (Group E), the winners of the East Asia Zone (Group I), and the winners of the ASEAN Zonal final (whose identity was not known at the time of the draw), with the matchups and order of legs decided by draw, without any seeding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286965-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup knockout stage, Inter-zone play-off final, Summary\nIn the Inter-zone play-off final, the two winners of the Inter-zone play-off semi-finals play each other, with the order of legs determined by the Inter-zone play-off semi-final draw. The winners of the Inter-zone play-off final advance to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286965-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup knockout stage, Final\nIn the final, the winners of the West Asia Zonal final and the winners of the Inter-zone play-off final played each other, with the host team (winners of the Inter-zone play-off final) alternated from the previous season's final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286965-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup knockout stage, Final\nThe match was originally to be hosted by April 25 at the Kim Il-sung Stadium in Pyongyang, North Korea on 2 November 2019. However, on 22 October 2019, due to North Korea's decision to ban television transmission of football games, the AFC announced that the final would be held in Shanghai, China in order for the match to be transmitted. On 25 October 2019, the match was rescheduled from 2 November to 4 November and the host city was shifted from Shanghai to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286966-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup qualifying play-offs\nThe 2019 AFC Cup qualifying play-offs were played from 5 February to 13 March 2019. A total of 11 teams competed in the qualifying play-offs to decide four of the 36 places in the group stage of the 2019 AFC Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286966-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup qualifying play-offs, Teams\nThe following 11 teams, split into five zones (West Asia Zone, Central Asia Zone, South Asia Zone, ASEAN Zone, East Asia Zone), entered the qualifying play-offs, consisting of two rounds:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286966-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup qualifying play-offs, Format\nIn the qualifying play-offs, 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 (Regulations Article 9.3). The four winners of the play-off round (one each from West Asia Zone, Central Asia Zone, South Asia Zone, East Asia Zone) advanced to the group stage to join the 32 direct entrants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286966-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup qualifying play-offs, Bracket\nThe bracket of the qualifying play-offs for each zone, determined based on the association ranking of each team, with the team from the higher-ranked association hosting the second leg, was officially announced by the AFC prior to the group stage draw on 22 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286966-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup qualifying play-offs, Preliminary round, Summary\nA total of six teams played in the preliminary round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286966-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Cup qualifying play-offs, Play-off round, Summary\nA total of eight teams played in the play-off round: five teams which entered in this round, and three winners of the preliminary round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286967-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship\nThe 2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship was the 10th edition of the AFC Futsal Club Championship, an annual international futsal club tournament in Asia organised by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC). It was held in Bangkok, Thailand between 7\u201317 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286967-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship\nMes Sungun were the defending champions, and were defeated by Nagoya Oceans in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286967-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship, Teams\nOf the 47 AFC member associations, a total of 16 associations teams entered the competition, each entering one team. There was no qualification, and all entrants advanced to the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286967-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship, Teams\nFifteen of the sixteen associations which participated in the 2018 AFC Futsal Club Championship returned for 2019, with Kuwait entering a representative for the first time since 2015, and replacing the Australian representatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286967-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship, Draw\nThe draw was held on 27 June 2019, 15:30 MYT (UTC+8), at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The teams were seeded according to their association's performance in the 2018 AFC Futsal Club Championship, with the team from hosts Thailand automatically seeded and assigned to Position A1 in the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 39], "content_span": [40, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286967-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship, Squads\nEach team had to register a squad of 14 players, minimum two of whom must have been goalkeepers (Regulations Articles 30.1 and 30.2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286967-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship, Group stage\nThe top two teams of each group advanced to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286967-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship, Group stage\nTeams are ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria are applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings (Regulations Article 10.5):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286967-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, extra time and penalty shoot-out are used to decide the winner if necessary, except for the third place match where penalty shoot-out (no extra time) is used to decide the winner if necessary (Regulations Articles 14.1 and 15.1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286968-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship squads\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Tsaroceanaugyst (talk | contribs) at 14:10, 14 April 2020 (\u2192\u200eBank of Beirut). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286968-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship squads\nThe 2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship was an international futsal tournament held in Thailand from 7 to 17 August 2019. The 16 clubs involved in the tournament were required to register a squad of 14 players, minimum two of whom must be goalkeepers (Regulations Articles 30.1 and 30.2). Only players in these squads were eligible to take part in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286968-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship squads\nThe position listed for each player is per the squad list in the official match reports by the AFC. Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality. A flag is included for coaches that are of a different nationality than their own club's nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286968-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship squads, Group A, Port FC\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, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286968-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship squads, Group A, Osh EREM\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-00286968-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship squads, Group A, Shenzhen Nanling Tielang\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, 75], "content_span": [76, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286968-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship squads, Group A, FS Seoul\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-00286968-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship squads, Group B, Th\u00e1i S\u01a1n Nam\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, 63], "content_span": [64, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286968-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship squads, Group B, Naft Al-Wasat\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-00286968-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship squads, Group B, Al-Rayyan\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, 60], "content_span": [61, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286968-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship squads, Group B, AGMK\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-00286968-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship squads, Group C, Bank of Beirut\nThe 15-man preliminary squad was announced on 31 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 65], "content_span": [66, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286968-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship squads, Group C, Bank of Beirut\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, 65], "content_span": [66, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286968-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship squads, Group C, Vamos Mataram\nThe 15-man preliminary squad was announced on 1 August 2019. The final squad was announced on 8 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286968-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship squads, Group C, Vamos Mataram\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-00286968-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship squads, Group C, Soro Company\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, 63], "content_span": [64, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286968-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship squads, Group C, Victoria University College\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, 78], "content_span": [79, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286968-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship squads, Group D, Mes Sungun\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, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286968-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship squads, Group D, Nagoya Oceans\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-00286968-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship squads, Group D, Al-Dhafrah\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, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286968-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Futsal Club Championship squads, Group D, Kazma\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-00286969-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship\nThe 2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship was the 8th edition of the AFC U-16 Women's Championship, the biennial international youth football championship organised by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) for the women's under-16 national teams of Asia. The tournament was held in Thailand between 15 and 28 September 2019, with a total of eight teams competing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286969-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship\nThe top two teams of the tournament would have qualified for the 2021 FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup (originally 2020 but postponed due to COVID-19 pandemic) in India as the AFC representatives, besides India who would have automatically qualified as hosts. However, FIFA announced on 17 November 2020 that this edition of the World Cup would be cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286969-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship\nThis edition was the last to be played as an under-16 tournament, as the AFC have agreed to the proposal for switching the tournament from under-16 to under-17 starting from 2022.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286969-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship\nNorth Korea were the defending champions, but were defeated 2\u20131 in the final by Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286969-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship, Qualification\nFour teams qualified directly for the final tournament: the hosts and the top three of 2017. The other four spots were determined by the qualifying stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286969-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship, Qualification\nA total of 30 teams entered the qualifying stage. Due to the increased number of teams, two qualification rounds were scheduled for the first time. The first round was scheduled for 15\u201323 September 2018, and the second round was scheduled for 23 February \u2013 3 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286969-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship, Venues\nThe matches are played at two venues, both at the Mueang Chonburi District in Chonburi Province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286969-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship, Draw\nThe draw was held on 23 May 2019, 15:30 ICT (UTC+7), at the Oakwood Hotel in Chonburi, Thailand. The eight teams were drawn into two groups of four teams. The teams were seeded according to their performance in the 2017 AFC U-16 Women's Championship final tournament and qualification, with the hosts Thailand automatically seeded and assigned to Position A1 in the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 40], "content_span": [41, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286969-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship, Squads\nPlayers born between 1 January 2003 and 31 December 2005 are eligible to compete in the tournament. Each team must register a squad of minimum 16 players and maximum 23 players, minimum two of whom must be goalkeepers (Regulations Articles 24.1 and 24.2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286969-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship, Group stage\nThe top two teams of each group advance to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286969-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship, Group stage\nTeams are ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria are applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings (Regulations Article 9.3):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286969-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, penalty shoot-out (no extra time) was used to decide the winner if necessary (Regulations Articles 12.1 and 12.2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286969-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship, Awards\nThe following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286969-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship, Qualified teams for FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup\nThe following three teams from AFC would have qualified for the 2021 FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup before the tournament was cancelled, including India who would have qualified automatically as host.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 83], "content_span": [84, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286969-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship, Goalscorers\nThere were 63 goals scored in 16 matches, for an average of 3.94 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286970-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship qualification\nThe 2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship qualification is a women's under-16 football competition which decides the participating teams of the 2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286970-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship qualification\nA total of eight teams qualify to play in the final tournament held in Thailand, four of which are decided by qualification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286970-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship qualification, Teams\nOf the 47 AFC member associations, a total of 33 teams entered the competition, with North Korea, South Korea, and Japan, automatically qualified for the final tournament by their position as the top three teams of the 2017 AFC U-16 Women's Championship and thus not participating in qualification. The final tournament hosts Thailand, despite having automatically qualified for the final tournament, entered to participate in qualification. As a result, a total of 30 teams entered qualification. Due to the increased number of teams, two qualification rounds were scheduled for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 55], "content_span": [56, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286970-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship qualification, Teams\nThe draw for the first round of the qualifiers was held on 30 May 2018, 15:00 MYT (UTC+8), at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. For the first round, the 30 teams were drawn into six groups of five teams. The teams were seeded according to their performance in the 2017 AFC U-16 Women's Championship final tournament and qualification. The following restrictions were also applied:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 55], "content_span": [56, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286970-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship qualification, Player eligibility\nPlayers born between 1 January 2003 and 31 December 2005 are eligible to compete in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 68], "content_span": [69, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286970-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship qualification, Format\nIn each group, teams play each other once at a centralised venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 56], "content_span": [57, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286970-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship qualification, Format, Tiebreakers\nTeams are ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria are applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings (Regulations Article 9.3):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286970-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship qualification, First round\nThe first round was played between 15 and 23 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 61], "content_span": [62, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286970-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship qualification, First round, Ranking of second-placed teams\nDue to groups having different number of teams (after the withdrawal of Syria from Group E), the results against the fifth-placed teams in five-team groups are not considered for this ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 93], "content_span": [94, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286970-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship qualification, Second round\nThe draw for the second round of the qualifiers was held on 7 November 2018, 11:00 MYT (UTC+8), at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. For the second round, the eight teams were drawn into two groups of four teams. The teams were seeded according to their performance in the 2017 AFC U-16 Women's Championship final tournament and qualification. The following restrictions were also applied:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 62], "content_span": [63, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286970-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship qualification, Second round\nThe second round was played between 27 February \u2013 7 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 62], "content_span": [63, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286970-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship qualification, Goalscorers\nIn total there were 397 goals scored in 68 matches, for an average of 5.84 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 61], "content_span": [62, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286971-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship squads\nThe following is a list of squads for each national team competing at the 2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship. The tournament took place in Thailand, between 15\u201328 September 2019. It was the 8th U-16 age group competition organised by the Asian Football Confederation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286971-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship squads\nPlayers born between 1 January 2003 and 31 December 2005 are eligible to compete in the tournament. Each team had to register a squad of minimum 16 players and maximum 23 players, minimum two of whom must have been goalkeepers (Regulations Articles 24.1 and 24.2). The full squad listings are below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286971-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship squads, Group A, Japan\nThe final squad was named on 28 August 2019. Yuna Hazekawa was replaced by Mahiro Asayama on 8 September due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 57], "content_span": [58, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286971-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-16 Women's Championship squads, Group B, Vietnam\nThe preliminary squad was named on 7 September 2019. The final squad was announced on 12 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 59], "content_span": [60, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286972-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship\nThe 2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship was the 10th edition of the AFC U-19 Women's Championship, the biennial international youth football championship organised by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) for the women's under-19 national teams of Asia. The tournament was held in Thailand between 27 October and 9 November 2019, with a total of eight teams competing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286972-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship\nThe top three teams of the tournament would have qualified for the 2021 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup (originally 2020 but postponed due to COVID-19 pandemic) in Costa Rica as the AFC representatives. However, FIFA announced on 17 November 2020 that this edition of the World Cup would be cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286972-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship\nThis edition was the last to be played as an under-19 tournament, as the AFC had agreed to the proposal for switching the tournament from under-19 to under-20 starting from 2022.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286972-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship, Qualification\nFour teams qualified directly for the final tournament: the hosts and the top three of 2017. The other four spots were determined by the qualifying stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286972-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship, Qualification\nA total of 27 teams entered the qualifying stage. Due to the increased number of teams, two qualification rounds were scheduled for the first time. The first round was scheduled for 20\u201328 October 2018, and the second round was scheduled for 22\u201330 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286972-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship, Venues\nThe matches were played at two venues, both at the Mueang Chonburi District in Chonburi Province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286972-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship, Draw\nThe draw was held on 23 May 2019, 16:30 ICT (UTC+7), at the Oakwood Hotel in Chonburi, Thailand. The eight teams were drawn into two groups of four teams. The teams were seeded according to their performance in the 2017 AFC U-19 Women's Championship final tournament and qualification, with the hosts Thailand automatically seeded and assigned to Position A1 in the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 40], "content_span": [41, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286972-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship, Squads\nPlayers born between 1 January 2000 and 31 December 2004 were eligible to compete in the tournament. Each team had to register a squad of minimum 18 players and maximum 23 players, minimum three of whom must be goalkeepers (Regulations Articles 24.1 and 24.2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286972-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship, Group stage\nThe top two teams of each group advanced to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286972-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship, Group stage\nTeams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria are applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings (Regulations Article 9.3):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286972-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, extra time and penalty shoot-out were used to decide the winner if necessary, except for the third place match where there was no extra time and penalty shoot-out was used to decide the winner if necessary (Regulations Articles 12.1, 12.2 and 12.3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286972-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship, Awards\nThe following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286972-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship, Qualified teams for FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup\nThe following three teams from AFC would have qualified for the 2021 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup before the tournament was cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 83], "content_span": [84, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286972-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship, Goalscorers\nThere were 64 goals scored in 16 matches, for an average of 4 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286973-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship qualification\nThe 2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship qualification is a women's under-19 football competition which decides the participating teams of the 2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286973-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship qualification\nA total of eight teams qualify to play in the final tournament held in Thailand, four of which are decided by qualification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286973-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship qualification, Teams\nOf the 47 AFC member associations, a total of 30 teams entered the competition, with Japan, North Korea, and China PR, automatically qualified for the final tournament by their position as the top three teams of the 2017 AFC U-19 Women's Championship and thus not participating in qualification. The final tournament hosts Thailand, despite having automatically qualified for the final tournament, entered to participate in qualification. As a result, a total of 27 teams entered qualification. Due to the increased number of teams, two qualification rounds were scheduled for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 55], "content_span": [56, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286973-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship qualification, Teams\nThe draw for the first round of the qualifiers was held on 30 May 2018, 16:00 MYT (UTC+8), at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. For the first round, the 27 teams were drawn into six groups: three groups of five teams and three groups of four teams. The teams were seeded according to their performance in the 2017 AFC U-19 Women's Championship final tournament and qualification. The following restrictions were also applied:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 55], "content_span": [56, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286973-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship qualification, Teams, Re-draw\nDue to the withdrawal of Afghanistan and Northern Mariana Islands after the draw, there were only three teams left in Group E, but still five teams in Groups B and C. As a result, AFC decided to hold a re-draw for the qualification first round to maintain the balance of number of teams across all groups (one group of five teams and five groups of four teams). The re-draw was held at the AFC House on 30 August 2018. In the re-draw, unranked teams from Group B (Pakistan, Nepal, Singapore) and Group C (United Arab Emirates, Guam, Maldives) were placed in a pot and the first ball drawn would be moved to Group E. Singapore was drawn and as a result moved from Group B to Group E.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 64], "content_span": [65, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286973-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship qualification, Player eligibility\nPlayers born between 1 January 2000 and 31 December 2004 are eligible to compete in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 68], "content_span": [69, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286973-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship qualification, Format\nIn each group, teams play each other once at a centralised venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 56], "content_span": [57, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286973-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship qualification, Format, Tiebreakers\nTeams are ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria are applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings (Regulations Article 9.3):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286973-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship qualification, First round\nThe first round was played between 20 and 28 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 61], "content_span": [62, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286973-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship qualification, First round, Ranking of second-placed teams\nDue to groups having different number of teams after withdrawals, the results against the fourth-placed and fifth-placed teams in four-team and five-team groups are not considered for this ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 93], "content_span": [94, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286973-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship qualification, Second round\nThe draw for the second round of the qualifiers was held on 13 February 2019, 15:00 MYT (UTC+8), at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. For the second round, the eight teams were drawn into two groups of four teams. The teams were seeded according to their performance in the 2017 AFC U-19 Women's Championship final tournament and qualification. The following restrictions were also applied:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 62], "content_span": [63, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286973-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship qualification, Second round\nThe second round was played between 26 and 30 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 62], "content_span": [63, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286973-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship qualification, Goalscorers\nIn total, there were 310 goals scored in 49 matches, for an average of 6.33 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 61], "content_span": [62, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286974-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship squads\nThe following is a list of squads for each national team competing at the 2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship. The tournament took place in Thailand, between 27 October\u20139 November 2019. It was the 10th U-19 age group competition organised by the Asian Football Confederation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286974-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship squads\nPlayers born between 1 January 2000 and 31 December 2004 are eligible to compete in the tournament. Each team had to register a squad of minimum 16 players and maximum 23 players, minimum two of whom must have been goalkeepers (Regulations Articles 24.1 and 24.2). The full squad listings are below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286974-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-19 Women's Championship squads, Group A, Vietnam\nThe preliminary squad was named on 6 October 2019. The final squad was announced on 21 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 59], "content_span": [60, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286975-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship\nThe 2019 was AFC U-20 Futsal Championship the biennial international the championships organised Asian Football Confederation (AFC) for men's youth national futsal teams off Asia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286975-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship\nThe tournament was hosted by Iran between 14 and 22 June 2019. A total the of 12 teams participated of tournament. were the defending champion but failed to defend the title after losing to Japanese in the semi-final. Japanese became the champions after beating Afghanistan in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286975-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship, Qualification\nUnlike the previous tournament where all teams entered the final tournament, qualifiers were held from 1 to 10 December 2018. The draw for the qualifiers was held on 30 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286975-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship, Venue\nThe matches were played at the Shahid Poursharifi Arena in Tabriz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286975-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship, Draw\nThe final draw was held on 11 April 2019, 15:30 MYT (UTC+8), at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur. The 12 teams were drawn into four groups of three teams. The teams were seeded according to their performance in the 2017 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship final tournament, with the hosts automatically seeded and assigned to Position A1 in the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 39], "content_span": [40, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286975-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship, Squads\nPlayers born after 1 January 1999 were eligible to compete in the tournament. Each team must register a squad of 14 players, minimum two of whom must be goalkeepers (Regulations Articles 27.1 and 27.2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286975-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship, Group stage\nThe top two teams of each group advanced to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286975-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship, Group stage\nTeams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria were applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings (Regulations Article 11.5):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286975-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, extra time and penalty shoot-out were used to decide the winner if necessary, except for the third place match where penalty shoot-out (no extra time) was used to decide the winner if necessary (Regulations Articles 15.1 and 16.1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286975-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship, Awards\nThe following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286975-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship, Goalscorers\nThere were 128 goals scored in 20 matches, for an average of 6.4 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286976-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship qualification\nThe 2019 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship qualification is the qualification process organized by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) to determine the participating teams for the 2019 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship. Players born after 1 January 1999 were eligible to compete in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286976-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship qualification\nA total of 12 teams qualify to play in the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286976-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship qualification, Draw\nOf the 47 AFC member associations, a total of 23 teams entered the competition. The qualification process is divided into four zones: ASEAN Zone, Central Zone, East Zone and West Zone (no teams from South Zone entered qualification). The 12 spots in the final tournament are distributed as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 53], "content_span": [54, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286976-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship qualification, Draw\nAs the final tournament hosts had not been announced at the time of the qualifying draw, the hosts were also included in the draw. Despite having automatically qualified for the final tournament, they may still decide to participate in qualification, and if they finish in one of the qualification spots, the next best team in their zone also qualifies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 53], "content_span": [54, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286976-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship qualification, Draw\nThe draw for the qualifiers was held on 30 August 2018, 15:00 MYT (UTC+8), at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The mechanism of the draw for each zone is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 53], "content_span": [54, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286976-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship qualification, Draw\nThe teams were seeded according to their performance in the 2017 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 53], "content_span": [54, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286976-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship qualification, Format\nIn each group, teams play each other once at a centralised venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286976-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship qualification, Format, Tiebreakers\nTeams are ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria are applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings (Regulations Article 11.5):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 68], "content_span": [69, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286976-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship qualification, Central Zone, Play-off\nAs Iran were confirmed as the final tournament hosts on 5 December 2018, loser also qualifies for 2019 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 71], "content_span": [72, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286976-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship qualification, West Zone, Play-off\nSaudi Arabia later withdrew and were replaced by Hong Kong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 68], "content_span": [69, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286976-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship qualification, Qualified teams\nThe following 12 teams qualified for the final tournament. Saudi Arabia, which originally qualified, withdrew and were replaced by Hong Kong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286976-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship qualification, Goalscorers\nThere were 204 goals scored in 30 matches, for an average of 6.8 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 60], "content_span": [61, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286977-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Women's Club Championship\nThe 2019 AFC Women's Club Championship was the first edition of the Asia's women's club football competition organised by AFC, held in South Korea between 26 and 30 November 2019. Four clubs from four associations competed in this edition, which was also known as 2019 FIFA\u2013AFC Pilot Women's Club Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286977-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFC Women's Club Championship, Venue\nAll matches were played at Yongin Citizen Sports Park, Yongin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286978-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF Beach Soccer Championship\nThe 2019 AFF Beach Soccer Championship is the third edition of the AFF Beach Soccer Championship, the premier regional beach soccer championship. This edition will features three of the members of the ASEAN Football Federation (AFF) and two invited teams inside Asia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286978-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF Beach Soccer Championship\nOrganised by the AFF, the tournament takes place between 13 and 17 November in Chonburi, Thailand, featuring five teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286979-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF Futsal Championship\nThe 2019 AFF Futsal Championship will be the 16th edition of the tournament. The tournament was held in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286979-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF Futsal Championship\nSame as the previous tournament which were held in odd years, the tournament serves as AFC Futsal Championship qualification. Top 3 teams of the tournament will qualify for 2020 AFC Futsal Championship in Turkmenistan as AFF's representative.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286979-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF Futsal Championship, Entrants\nThere was no qualification, and all entrants advanced to the final tournament. The following 8 teams from member associations of the ASEAN Football Federation entered the tournament. Australia came back for this tournament after 4 years of absence since their last appearance in 2015 AFF Futsal Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286979-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF Futsal Championship, Venue\nAll matches are held in Ph\u00fa Th\u1ecd Indoor Stadium, Ho Chi Minh City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286980-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF Futsal Club Championship\n2019 AFF Invitational Futsal Club Championship is the fifth edition of AFF Futsal Club Championship. The tournament was held in Nakhon Ratchasima, Thailand from 18 to 23 June 2019. The title of the tournament was also changed into AFF Futsal Cup. The defending champion is Bangkok BTS but they didn't take part in this edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286981-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-15 Championship\nThe 2019 AFF U-15 Championship is the fourteenth edition of the AFF U-16 Championship (second edition of the under-15 era), the annual international youth association football championship organised by the ASEAN Football Federation for men's under-15 national teams of Southeast Asia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286981-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-15 Championship\nA total of 12 teams play in the tournament, with players born on or after 1 January 2004 eligible to participate. Each match is scheduled to have a duration of 80 minutes, consisting of two halves of 40 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286981-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-15 Championship\nMalaysia beat Thailand 2\u20131 in the final for their second title in the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286981-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-15 Championship, Qualified teams\nThere was no qualification, and all entrants advanced to the final tournament. The following 12 teams from member associations of the ASEAN Football Federation entered the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286981-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-15 Championship, Venues\nThe competition is being played at two venues in Chonburi, Chonburi Province: Chonburi Campus Stadium and Chonburi Stadium (in Mueang Chonburi).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286981-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-15 Championship, Group stage\nThe top two teams of each group advance to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286981-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-15 Championship, Group stage\nThe teams are ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 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, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286981-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-15 Championship, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, the penalty shoot-outs are used to decide the winner if necessary (extra time is not used).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286981-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-15 Championship, Goalscorers\nThere were 109 goals scored in 34 matches, for an average of 3.21 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286981-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-15 Championship, Incidents and controversies\nOn 29 July 2019, the ASEAN Football Federation (AFF) received official protest from two participating teams regarding the eligibility of an East Timorese player in the ongoing tournament. The protest was subsequently admitted upon compliance of the procedural requirements set out in the 2019 Tournament Regulations with the AFF began to carrying out the necessary investigation and have requested the parties involved to collaborate to establish the facts. On 3 August, the AFF further state that the relevant documents requested from the player and his team have been delivered and acknowledged by the AFF secretariat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286981-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 AFF U-15 Championship, Incidents and controversies\nIn accordance to the tournament regulations, the conclusion of the investigation will be decided by the AFF Disciplinary and Ethics Committee. On 4 August, the AFF announced their findings that the said player is deemed to be eligible to participate in the tournament in accordance with Article 5.1 as stated in the tournament regulations and ruled the protest lodged by two countries as unfounded and dismissed it accordingly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286981-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-15 Championship, Incidents and controversies\nOn 9 August, the final match between Thailand and Malaysia was marred with ugly incident that resulting Thai player Kongpop Sroirak and Malaysian player Khairil Zain were both issued a red card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286982-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-16 Girls' Championship\nThe 2019 AFF U-15 Girls' Championship was the 4th edition of the AFF U-16 Girl's Championship, an international women's football tournament organised by the ASEAN Football Federation (AFF). The tournament was hosted by Thailand from 9 to 21 May 2019.The defending champion was Thailand. They managed to retain their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286982-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-16 Girls' Championship, Group stage\nThe top two teams of each group advanced to the semi-finals. All times listed are Thai Standard Time (UTC+07:00)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286982-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-16 Girls' Championship, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, the penalty shoot-outs are used to decide the winner if necessary (extra time is not used).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286982-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-16 Girls' Championship, Goalscorers\nThere were 117 goals scored in 20 matches, for an average of 5.85 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286983-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-18 Youth Championship\nThe 2019 AFF U-18 Youth Championship is the 17th edition of the AFF U-19 Youth Championship, organised by ASEAN Football Federation. It is hosted by Vietnam during August 2019. Twelve member associations of the ASEAN Football Federation take part in the tournament featuring two groups of six teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286983-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-18 Youth Championship\nAustralia beat Malaysia 1\u20130 in the final for their fifth title in the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286983-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-18 Youth Championship, Participant teams\nAll of 12 teams from member associations of the ASEAN Football Federation are eligible for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286983-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-18 Youth Championship, Participant teams\nA total of 12 teams from 12 member associations entered the tournament, listed below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286983-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-18 Youth Championship, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, the penalty shoot-out is used to decide the winner if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286983-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-18 Youth Championship, Goalscorers\nThere were 127 goals scored in 34 matches, for an average of 3.74 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286984-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-22 Youth Championship\nThe international exhibition association football tournament organised by LG Electronics even though the same name tournament", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286984-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-22 Youth Championship\nThe 2019 AFF U-22 Youth Championship or AFF U-22 LG Cup 2019 was the 2nd edition of the AFF U-22 Youth Championship, organised by ASEAN Football Federation (AFF). The tournament was sponsored by Korean LG Corporation as the \"social marketing experiment\" campaign since 2003 by the ASEAN Club Championship. LG Electronics also sponsored the Indonesian club from Banten, Persita Tangerang, in the 2003 (ninth season) Indonesian league. Indonesia won the tournament after beating Thailand 2\u20131 in the final. The tournament was held from 17 to 26 February in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286984-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 AFF U-22 Youth Championship\nThis was its first as an under-22 tournament, with the previous edition an under-23 tournament. 2005 AFF U-23 Youth Championship winners Thailand were the defending champions, as there was no competition from 2006 to 2018, as the 2011 edition has been cancelled. The 2003 ASEAN Club Championship invited the Indian club, East Bengal, till they become a champions, but this tournament not invited Australian National U-22 Team to participated here as the outside-Southeast Asia participant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286984-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-22 Youth Championship, Qualified teams\nThere was no qualification, and all entrants advanced to the final tournament. The following teams from member associations of the AFF entered the tournament (excluding Australia). Singapore withdrew from the tournament in order to focus on the 2020 AFC U-23 Championship qualification tournament in March. Brunei and Laos also withdrew from the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286984-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-22 Youth Championship, Draw\nThe top six teams from the 2005 AFF U-22 Championship were seeded in Pot 1, the remaining teams were in Pot 2. Cambodia were assigned to position B1 as hosts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 38], "content_span": [39, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286984-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-22 Youth Championship, Squads\nA final squad of 23 players (three of whom must be goalkeepers) must be registered one day before the first match of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286984-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-22 Youth Championship, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, the penalty shoot-out was used to decide the winner if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286984-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-22 Youth Championship, Broadcasters\nAll 16 matches are broadcast live and free to access in Cambodia, some ASEAN countries, and internationally via Football Federation of Cambodia (FFC) official Facebook page, in Khmer language.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286985-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF U-22 Youth Championship squads\nBelow are the squads for the 2019 AFF U-22 Youth Championship, which takes place between 17 to 26 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286986-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF Women's Championship\nThe 2019 AFF Women's Championship was the 10th edition of the AFF Women's Championship, an international women's football tournament organised by the ASEAN Football Federation (AFF). The tournament was hosted by Thailand from 15 to 27 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286986-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF Women's Championship\nVietnam beat Thailand 1\u20130 in the final for their third title in the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286986-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF Women's Championship, Goalscorers\nThere were 110 goals scored in 20 matches, for an average of 5.5 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286987-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF\u2013EAFF Champions Trophy\n2019 AFF\u2013EAFF Champions Trophy would have been the first edition of the AFF\u2013EAFF Champions Trophy, a biennial football tournament that was founded in 2018. The tournament match was to be between Vietnam, the defending champion of 2018 AFF Championship and South Korea, the defending champion of 2017 EAFF E-1 Football Championship. The representative of ASEAN Football Federation (AFF), Vietnam, would have hosted the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286987-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF\u2013EAFF Champions Trophy, Background\nThe trophy is to be contested biennially starting 2019, with AFF and East Asian Football Federation (EAFF) rotating the host venue duties and the former staging the first-ever Champions Trophy. Vietnam automatically won the hosting rights to the inaugural trophy match on 15 December 2018 after beating Malaysia 3\u20132 on aggregate score in the 2018 AFF Championship Final. A memorandum of understanding (MoU) for the organisation of the AFF\u2013EAFF Champions Trophy was signed in Hanoi, Vietnam on 15 December 2018 by AFF Deputy President, Maj General Khiev Sameth, and EAFF President, Chung Mong-gyu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286987-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFF\u2013EAFF Champions Trophy, Background, Timing issue\nThe first AFF\u2013EAFF Champions Trophy match, to be played on a single-match format, was scheduled to be held on 26 March 2019 at the M\u1ef9 \u0110\u00ecnh National Stadium in Hanoi, Vietnam between the national football teams of Vietnam and South Korea. However, the plan for this match was hindered by its coinciding with the 2020 AFC U-23 Championship qualification schedule as the 2020 AFC U-23 Championship in Thailand decided on the eligibility to enter the 2020 Summer Olympics in Japan. The Korea Football Association (KFA) also asked to move the 2019 AFF\u2013EAFF Champions Trophy to another date in 2019. The VFF finally decided to postponed the match until 2020, but it was not played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286988-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Grand Final\nThe 2019 AFL Grand Final was an Australian rules football game contested between the Richmond Football Club and Greater Western Sydney Giants at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on 28 September 2019. It was the 123rd annual grand final of the Australian Football League (formerly Victorian Football League), staged to determine the premiers for the 2019 AFL season. The match, attended by 100,014 spectators, was won by Richmond by a margin of 89 points, marking the club's twelfth VFL/AFL premiership and their second in three seasons. Richmond's Dustin Martin won the Norm Smith Medal as the player judged best on ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286988-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Grand Final\nIt was the eighth consecutive grand final which featured one Victorian team and one non-Victorian team, and it was only the second grand final in VFL/AFL history (and the first since 1980) that did not feature either team that finished first or second on the ladder at the conclusion of the home-and-away season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286988-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Grand Final, Background\nAfter ending a 37-year premiership drought in 2017, then winning the 2018 minor premiership but being eliminated by Collingwood in the preliminary final, Richmond still entered the season considered a strong chance at the premiership, after retaining the core of its 2017 team and adding key forward Tom Lynch from Gold Coast. Richmond suffered misfortune during the first half of the season, with several of their star players sidelined due to injury \u2013 including star defender Alex Rance, and young stars in Jack Higgins, Sydney Stack and Jack Graham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286988-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 AFL Grand Final, Background\nAt the conclusion of Round 14, the Tigers were ninth on the ladder with an average 7\u20136 win-loss record; however, they did not lose again in the home-and-away season, winning their last nine games to finish third with a 16\u20136 record. The Tigers advanced directly to the preliminary final after a 47-point victory over Brisbane in the qualifying final; then, in the preliminary final, overcame a 21-point half time deficit to defeat Geelong by 19 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286988-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Grand Final, Background\nGreater Western Sydney started season 2019 having been eliminated from the 2018 season in the semi-finals. The club lost co-captain Callan Ward to an ACL injury early in the season, a season-ending injury to star midfielder Stephen Coniglio later in the year. A strong start to the year saw the Giants placed second after Round 11, but indifferent form and a 5\u20136 record in the second half of the year, saw the Giants qualify for the finals in sixth with a 13\u20139 win-loss record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286988-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 AFL Grand Final, Background\nHowever, strong form in September saw the Giants win three finals to qualify for the grand final: a dominant win against Western Bulldogs by 58 points in the elimination final, then two thrilling victories \u2013 a three-point win over Brisbane in the semi-final, and a four-point win against Collingwood in the preliminary final. It was just the second time since the introduction of the AFL final eight system in 2000 that a team reached the grand final without finishing inside the top four, after the Bulldogs' 2016 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286988-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Grand Final, Background\nThe teams met twice during the home-and-away season; first in Round 3 at Giants Stadium when the Giants thrashed Richmond by 49 points, and then in Round 17 at the MCG when the Tigers won by 27 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286988-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Grand Final, Background\nIt was Richmond's 23rd grand final appearance, and second in three years; and it was the first grand final appearance for Greater Western Sydney. The sides had previously contested one final, the 2017 preliminary final won by Richmond by 36 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286988-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Grand Final, Background\nAs the higher-ranked team, Richmond wore its full home kit, and GWS wore its predominantly white clash guernsey with white shorts. Richmond was an overwhelming favourite to win, with bookmakers offering odds of $1.44 for a Richmond win compared with $3.25 for a Giants win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286988-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Grand Final, Background\nWith an average audience of 2.197 million across the five major capital cities, this was the lowest rating AFL Grand Final on free-to-air television since OzTAM began recording television ratings in 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286988-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Grand Final, Entertainment\nTones and I performed \"The Kids Are Coming\" and \"Dance Monkey\", and was followed by Dean Lewis, who performed \"Be Alright\" and \"Waves\". John Williamson also performed Waltzing Matilda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286988-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Grand Final, Entertainment\nPaul Kelly performed \"Leaps and Bounds\" and \"Dumb Things\". Mike Brady also performed \"Up There Cazaly\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286988-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Grand Final, Entertainment\nConrad Sewell performed the Australian National Anthem \"Advance Australia Fair\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286988-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Grand Final, Entertainment\nRichmond chose Maureen Hafey \u2013 the widow of legendary Richmond coach Tom Hafey \u2013 as their ambassador to carry the premiership cup onto the field, while GWS chose Kevin Sheedy \u2013 their first ever coach. Hafey also presented the trophy to Trent Cotchin and Damien Hardwick during the on-field award ceremony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286988-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, First quarter\nThe opening term of the grand final was a tough and low-scoring battle of attrition, with neither team scoring a goal in the first twenty minutes of the match. Giants spearhead Jeremy Cameron scored the opening goal of the grand final at the 20-minute mark before two late goals\u2014from Dustin Martin at the 24-minute mark and Daniel Rioli right on the quarter-time siren\u2014saw the Tigers take a seven-point lead at the first break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286988-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Second quarter\nRichmond began to pull away from the Giants in the second quarter. They scored five unanswered goals in a dominant quarter; Jack Riewoldt goaled at the four-minute mark of the term, followed by Martin's second goal at the seven-and-a-half minute mark. Tom Lynch scored two minutes later before Riewoldt finished the half with another two majors. Greater Western Sydney were held to just four behinds in the second term, and the Tigers headed to the halftime break with an ominous 35-point lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 51], "content_span": [52, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286988-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Third quarter\nRichmond sealed the premiership with an equally uncompromising third quarter. They scored five goals to one in the term; Lynch kicked his second goal at the five-minute mark before Martin slotted his third seven-and-a-half minutes into the term. Marlion Pickett, the first Grand Final debutant since Keith Batchelor for Collingwood in 1952, scored his only goal of the afternoon at the 11th minute, and Kane Lambert scored two minutes after.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286988-0014-0001", "contents": "2019 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Third quarter\nThe Giants finally broke a run of 11 consecutive Richmond goals with a Jacob Hopper major at the 25-minute mark of the quarter, but Ivan Soldo goaled right on the three-quarter-time siren. The margin was 62 points in favour of the Tigers at the final break, and the premiership was now beyond doubt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286988-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Fourth quarter\nWith the flag under lock and key, the final quarter was a celebration for the Tigers. It was practically a carbon copy of the second and third quarters, with Richmond again scoring five goals and conceding only one. The Giants scored their third and final goal of the game early in the final quarter, with Harry Himmelberg saluting before the second minute, but the Tigers did not allow them to save face and ran away with their most lopsided premiership victory in club history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 51], "content_span": [52, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286988-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Fourth quarter\nShai Bolton scored his first major of the day at the ninth minute, followed by Riewoldt's fourth goal. Richmond skipper Trent Cotchin goaled at the 23-minute mark and was followed soon after by Martin, who also scored his fourth goal of the Grand Final. Riewoldt put the exclamation mark on a supremely emphatic victory, goaling only moments before the siren to increase the final margin to 89 points, the third-highest margin in a Grand Final. It was Richmond's most lopsided Grand Final victory of all time, surpassing their 81-point victory against Collingwood in 1980.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 51], "content_span": [52, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286988-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Norm Smith Medal\nBy unanimous selection \u2013 15 out of 15 possible votes \u2013 Dustin Martin was awarded his second Norm Smith Medal after having won it in 2017 (when he had become the first to win the premiership/Brownlow Medal/Norm Smith Medal treble), making him the fourth player to win multiple Norm Smith Medals after Gary Ayres, Andrew McLeod and Luke Hodge. No other player garnered more than 6 votes, but Bachar Houli finished second as he did in 2017. Chaired by Alastair Lynch, the voters and their choices were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 53], "content_span": [54, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286988-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Grand Final, Teams\nThe teams were announced on 26 September 2019. Richmond made one change to the side, with Jack Graham dropping out of the side due to a shoulder injury he suffered in the preliminary final victory over Geelong. Pickett was announced to be taking his spot; having previously been picked up from South Fremantle in the WAFL during the midseason draft following the retirement of 2017 Premiership player Shaun Grigg, he had won the Norm Goss Medal in Richmond's VFL Grand Final victory over Williamstown. Ultimately, Pickett, Tom Lynch, Shai Bolton, Ivan Soldo, Jayden Short and Liam Baker in for Rance, Grigg, Graham, Jacob Townsend, Dan Butler and Kamdyn McIntosh were the six changes from the Richmond team that beat Adelaide two years beforehand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 775]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286988-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Grand Final, Teams\nGreater Western Sydney, meantime, recalled Toby Greene and Lachie Whitfield, who both missed their preliminary final win over Collingwood due to suspension and injury respectively, into their side, with Lachlan Keeffe and Ian Hill both making way. GWS also was missing former Richmond Rising Star Brett Deledio after he had been injured earlier in the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286988-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Grand Final, Teams\nThe umpiring panel, comprising three field umpires, four boundary umpires, two goal umpires and an emergency in each position is given below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286988-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Grand Final, Teams\nNumbers in brackets represent the number of grand finals umpired, including 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286989-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Rising Star\nThe NAB AFL Rising Star award is given annually to a standout young player in the Australian Football League (AFL). The award was won by Carlton's Sam Walsh, marking the fourth time that a player taken first in the draft had won the award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286989-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Rising Star, Eligibility\nEvery round, a nomination is given to a standout young player who performed well during that particular round. To be eligible for nomination, a player must be under 21 on 1 January of that year and have played ten 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.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286990-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Under 18 Championships\nThe 2019 NAB AFL Under 18 Championships was the 24th edition of the AFL Under 18 Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286990-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Under 18 Championships\nThe tournament was played between five teams - Allies, South Australia, Vic Country, Vic Metro and Western Australia - playing each other across five rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286990-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Under 18 Championships\nWestern Australia won the tournament for the first time since 2009, Western Australia captain and midfielder Deven Robertson won the Larke Medal as the tournament's best player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286991-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's All-Australian team\nThe 2019 AFL Women's All-Australian team represents the best-performed players of the 2019 AFL Women's season. It was announced on 2 April 2019 as a complete women's Australian rules football team of 21 players. The team is honorary and does not play any games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286991-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's All-Australian team, Initial squad\nThe initial 40-woman All-Australian squad was announced on 21 March. Adelaide had the most players selected in the initial squad with nine, and every team had at least two representatives. Nine players from the 2018 team were among those selected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286991-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's All-Australian team, Final team\nThe final team was announced on 2 April. Premiers Adelaide had the most selections with five, and every team except Greater Western Sydney had at least one representative. Four players from the 2018 team were selected, three of whom \u2013 Adelaide co-captain Chelsea Randall, Melbourne's Karen Paxman and North Melbourne captain Emma Kearney \u2013 achieved selection for the third consecutive year. Adelaide's other co-captain, Erin Phillips, was announced as the All-Australian captain and Randall, the previous year's All-Australian captain, was announced as the vice-captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286991-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's All-Australian team, Final team\nNote: the position of coach in the AFL Women's All-Australian team is traditionally awarded to the coach of the premiership-winning team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286992-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's Grand Final\nThe 2019 AFL Women's Grand Final was an Australian rules football match held at Adelaide Oval on 31 March 2019 to determine the premiers of the league's third season. Admission was free to the general public, and the match between Adelaide and Carlton was contested before a crowd of 53,034 \u2013 which at that time was the record for a stand-alone women's sporting event in Australia. It was won by Adelaide, 10.3 (63) to 2.6 (18), and Adelaide claimed its second premiership in three years. Its co-captain Erin Phillips was voted best on ground, despite suffering an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury in the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286992-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's Grand Final, Background\nTwo new teams, Geelong and North Melbourne, joined the AFL Women's (AFLW) competition in 2019, bringing the total number of teams to ten. The league retained a seven-round home-and-away season. This was achieved by splitting the competition into two conferences, with one of the new teams in each. Each team played four games against their fellow conference members and three \"cross-over\" matches against teams from the other conference. Conference membership was based on the final ladder positions of the 2018 season. As it turned out, the competition was unbalanced, with Conference A teams winning 14 of the 16 cross-over matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286992-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's Grand Final, Background\nThe finals series was expanded to include preliminary finals for the first time. The two teams that finished the highest in each conference at the end of the home-and-away season qualified for the preliminary finals, with the team that finished highest in Conference A playing the team that finished second in Conference B and vice versa. The winners of these matches then played in the AFL Women's Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286992-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's Grand Final, Background\nAfter winning the 2017 AFL Women's Grand Final, the Adelaide Crows finished a disappointing fifth in 2018. The Carlton Blues, which were also expected to perform well in 2018, did much worse, ultimately battling Fremantle for the wooden spoon \u2013 and getting it. In 2019, both Adelaide and Carlton had new coaches \u2013 Matthew Clarke and Daniel Harford respectively. The Crows retained much of their team from 2017 and 2018, but lacked a ruckman after Rhiannon Metcalfe was sidelined for an ACL reconstruction and Jasmyn Hewett suffered an ankle injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286992-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's Grand Final, Background\nFormer Opals basketball player Jess Foley was pressed into the ruck role at the last minute. The Crows went on to an impressive season, notching up seven games by an average of 40 points, and finishing on top of Conference A. Their only loss for the season was by a single point in the first round match against the Western Bulldogs, when they kicked an inaccurate 1.11. Carlton got off to a slow start, losing to North Melbourne in round one and then Adelaide in round two, before winning five of the last six games to finish on top of Conference B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286992-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's Grand Final, Background\nIn their preliminary final, the Crows conducted a 66-point demolition of Geelong before a home crowd of 13,429 at the Adelaide Oval, not allowing the visitors to score until late in the final quarter. In an answer to critics of the women's game that complained about it being low scoring, the Crows outscored nine of the men's teams that weekend (including their own men's team, as well as reigning premiers West Coast), despite the fact that AFLW only plays 15-minute quarters (instead of 20), and has less time on. The conference system ensured that Carlton, which finished at the top of Conference B, also hosted the preliminary finals. This was seen as disadvantaging Fremantle, which had won two more games than Carlton, and had a far better percentage (141.2 per cent compared with 99.6 per cent).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 844]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286992-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's Grand Final, Background\nIn the lead up to the preliminary final, an image of Carlton's star forward Tayla Harris demonstrating her on-field athleticism that was posted online by the Seven Network came under attack by misogynist internet trolls. Rather than suppressing their comments, Seven took the image down, resulting in a chorus of outrage. In the preliminary final, Harris went on to demonstrate her kicking style, slotting Carlton's first goal from 45 metres out. The Blues went on to win by 36 points, setting up a grand final clash with Adelaide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286992-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's Grand Final, Venue\nAs the highest-ranked team across the two conferences, Adelaide won the right to host the grand final. The match was scheduled for Sunday, 31 March 2019 at Adelaide Oval, which AFLW Chief Executive Nicole Livingstone conceding this timeslot would clash with a men's game between North Melbourne and the Brisbane Lions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286992-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's Grand Final, Venue\nThe AFLW considered a Saturday game, but getting the ground ready for a Port Adelaide game later that afternoon meant that the Grand Final would have to start at 10:30 am (Adelaide time) to have the signage and advertising changed for the men's game, a proposition that was rejected outright by the clubs and Adelaide Oval management.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286992-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's Grand Final, Venue\nAdmission was free to the general public, and the AFL hoped for a crowd of around 25,000. In the event, the crowd of 53,034 was the largest ever for an AFLW match, the fifth highest ever at Adelaide Oval, and a record for a stand-alone women's sporting event in Australia, surpassing a record set in 1920. Extra seating was hurriedly opened in the upper grandstands. The unanticipated large crowd put the city's public transport under strain. Its record as the highest women's sports crowd in Australian history was surpassed in March 2020 by the 2020 ICC Women's T20 World Cup Final, but as of 2020 retains the record for highest crowd at a women's football match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286992-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's Grand Final, Teams\nTeams were announced on 29 March 2019. Both clubs had unchanged lineups from the preliminary finals the week before:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286992-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's Grand Final, Match summary\nThe Blues started well, with Madison Prespakis scoring an early first goal off a 50-metre penalty on Adelaide co-captain Erin Phillips. The Crows were quick to respond with quick ball movement in the centre square from Foley to Ebony Marinoff to Anne Hatchard, who notched up their first score. A second 50-metre penalty gave Carlton another chance but was rushed through by Adelaide for a behind by Sarah Allan. The Crows were soon back on the attack, with Phillips marking just inside the 50-metre arc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286992-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's Grand Final, Match summary\nHer kick fell short, but Irish recruit Ailish Considine put it through for a second goal. A third soon followed with Eloise Jones passing the ball to Hannah Martin for a goal from point-blank range. An attempt at the other end by Sarah Hosking resulted only in a behind, and yet another 50-metre penalty gave the Blues an opportunity on the siren, but the ball fell well short of the goal line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286992-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's Grand Final, Match summary\nAt quarter time, Carlton felt they were dominating everywhere but on the scoreboard, but this feeling would soon pass. The second quarter opened with an Adelaide goal. An overhead mark in the centre by Jones was handed off to Phillips, who booted it forward to the advantage of Stevie-Lee Thompson, who marked it and sprinted towards the goal line. Thompson proved too fast for the Carlton defenders, who were caught too far out from goal, and a goal resulted. A couple of minutes later, Phillips earned a free kick from a high tackle by Sarah Hosking. One accurate kick later, and Phillips had ten goals for the season, and Adelaide, five for the match. A mark by Renee Forth off a delivery from Deni Varnhagen nearly made it six, but she missed, scoring only a behind.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 814]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286992-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's Grand Final, Match summary\nThe next opportunity came a few minutes later. A Carlton turnover saw Allan boot the ball forward to Chloe Scheer, who took a specky over the top of Blues defender Kerryn Harrington. She played on and delivered it to Danielle Ponter for an easy first goal. Soon after though, Scheer went down with a suspected anterior cruciate ligament injury, and was out of the game. It did not halt Adelaide, as Ponter marked a delivery from Jones inside the goal square for her second. A third followed, bringing her to twelve for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286992-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's Grand Final, Match summary\nTayla Harris attempted to score one against the flow of play, but it was touched on the line by Allan. It fell to Carlton captain Bri Davey to put the Blues' second goal on the scoreboard. Jones had a free kick at goal after the siren that sailed through, and Adelaide took a forty-point lead into the half time break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286992-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's Grand Final, Match summary\nWhen play resumed after the long break, Harris started in the ruck, possibly in an attempt to get her into the game. This backfired, as she immediately collided with Davey, and went off clutching her knee. Thompson also hobbled off the ground, with an ankle injury. Both would return, but not for some time. Phillips marked a pass from Forth 40 metres out, and had her second goal of the match. Soon after, Phillips went down, clutching her knee, and had to be stretchered off the ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286992-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's Grand Final, Match summary\nThe crowd gave her a standing ovation, and even the Carlton players looked upset. In the final quarter, the players had less to show for their efforts. Foley missed a shot from 35 metres out, scoring only a behind, as did Chloe Dalton at the other end. Hosking was awarded a free kick after being crunched in a tackle by Foley, but missed everything. A final effort by the Crows could not score before the final siren sounded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286992-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's Grand Final, Match summary, Best on Ground Medal\nPhillips's injury cast a pall over the Crows' win. \"It's an ACL,\" she confirmed, \"something I have done before in my other leg. This was supposed to be the good leg.\" Despite only playing for three-quarters, Phillips, who had 18 disposals and two goals, was named best on ground, as she had been when Adelaide previously won the flag in 2017. The following night she won the AFLW Players' Association's Most Valuable Player award, which she had also previously won in 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 65], "content_span": [66, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286992-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's Grand Final, Match summary, Best on Ground Medal\nOn 2 April, she was awarded the AFLW best and fairest award for second time, having previously won it in 2017, and was named the captain of the 2019 AFL Women's All-Australian team. Her Adelaide co-captain Chelsea Randall was named the vice captain, and Hatchard, Thompson and Marinoff were also part of the squad, as were Carlton's Prespakis, Harrington and Gabriella Pound.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 65], "content_span": [66, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286992-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's Grand Final, Media coverage\nThe game was broadcast live on Channel Seven, Fox Footy, womens.afl and the AFLW Official App. ARIA Award winner Amy Shark performed songs from her debut album Love Monster. She said that the Tayla Harris photo incident made her more determined to perform, saying that \"[J]ust being a female in music, I'll do anything I can to help highlight any other woman trying to make it in the professional world, no matter what that field is\". The match was watched live by a television audience of 409,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286993-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's Rising Star\nThe 2019 NAB AFL Women's Rising Star award was presented to the player adjudged the best young player during the 2019 AFL Women's season. Madison Prespakis of the Carlton Football Club won the award with 49 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286993-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's Rising Star, Eligibility\nEvery round, two nominations were given to standout young players who performed well during that particular round. To be eligible for nomination, players must have been under 21 years of age on 1 January 2019, not have been suspended during the season and never previously been nominated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286994-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's Under 18 Championships\nThe 2019 NAB AFL Women's Under 18 Championships was played between May and July 2019, with six teams competing in the main 'Series 2' round robin tournament and with a further four playing in a two-match on-on-one exhibition as the competition's initial 'Series 1'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286994-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's Under 18 Championships, Format\nThe competition was opened with 'Series 1', a set of closed competitions between four pairs of teams representing the country's eight largest states and territories. In 'Series 2' teams representing Vic Country, Vic Metro, Queensland and Western Australia were joined by Central and Eastern Allies teams representing teams of the combined regions of Northern Territory and South Australia (Central) as well as New South Wales, ACT and Tasmania (Eastern). Each team played a total of three matches in that series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286994-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's Under 18 Championships, Format\nVic Metro finished the round-robin 'Series 2' as the only team undefeated in that series, making them the de facto tournament winners. The competition's best player award was won by Vic Metro's Georgia Patrikios.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286994-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's Under 18 Championships, All-Australian team\nThe 2019 Women's All-Australian team was selected by a panel of experts including the AFL's Brett Munro and AFL Women's club list managers Katrina Gill (Adelaide), Wade Spilcker (Fremantle), Rhys Harwood (North Melbourne) and Ben Waller (Geelong).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286994-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's Under 18 Championships, Team MVPs\nAt the conclusion of the tournament each competing team named their best player for the tournament. The winner of these 'most valuable player' awards are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 50], "content_span": [51, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286995-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's best and fairest\nThe 2019 AFL Women's best and fairest was the award presented to the player adjudged the best and fairest player during the 2019 AFL Women's season. Erin Phillips of the Adelaide Football Club won the award for the second time, winning with 19 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286995-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's best and fairest, Voting procedure\nThe three field umpires (the umpires who control the flow of the game, as opposed to goal or boundary umpires) confer after each match and award three votes, two votes and one vote to the players they regard as the best, second-best and third-best in the match, respectively. The votes are kept secret until the awards night, and are read and tallied on the evening.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286996-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's draft\nThe 2019 AFL Women's draft consisted of the various periods when the 14 clubs in the AFL Women's competition can recruit players prior to the competition's 2020 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286996-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's draft\nAt the conclusion of the period clubs were required to have 27 senior-listed and three rookie-listed players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286996-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's draft, Expansion club signing period, First period\nPrior to the completion of the 2019 season, future expansion clubs Gold Coast, Richmond, St Kilda and West Coast were permitted to pre-list up to 10 players from their women's academies or designated development zones. A maximum of seven of these players could be open-age signings who had nominated for the 2018 AFL Women's draft but not been selected. A final three spots were reserved for three junior players of minimum draft age (born in 2001) and who hailed from the clubs' designated development regions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 67], "content_span": [68, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286996-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's draft, Expansion club signing period, Second period\nFrom 8 April expansion clubs Gold Coast, Richmond, St Kilda and West Coast will have an 11-day window until 18 April to sign players who played for existing clubs during the 2019 season. These clubs can sign a maximum of 12 players each through this mechanism. All existing clubs other than Brisbane and Fremantle could lose no more than four players to the mechanism while Brisbane and Fremantle can each lose a maximum of eight due to the entry of Gold Coast and West Coast into their previously exclusive state-zones. No compensation will be offered to those clubs losing players under this process, but the player's existing club are permitted to negotiate to re-sign the player. Players can be signed under this mechanism to one or two year contracts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 68], "content_span": [69, 825]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286996-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's draft, Signing and trading period\nConcurrently to the expansion club signing period, all 14 clubs were able to sign and trade players. Players can be signed during this period are eligible for one or two year contracts. A second stage to the trade period will open from 23 April and run until 26 April, with only the 10 established clubs able to take part.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 50], "content_span": [51, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286996-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's draft, Signing and trading period, Free agency\nA free agency period was held between the end of the trading and signing period on April 26 and until April 30 in which clubs were permitted to sign delisted or uncontracted players. At the conclusion of the period, clubs are permitted to have retained no more than 22 senior players and two rookies. Team lists matching those requirements must be submitted on May 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 63], "content_span": [64, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286996-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's draft, Signing and trading period, Rookie signings\nIn the absence of a rookie draft, each club was required to sign two rookie players, either new or retained from their rookie list the year prior. New players to this list must not have played Australian rules football within the previous three years or been involved in an AFLW high-performance program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 67], "content_span": [68, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286996-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's draft, Draft\nA draft was held on October 22, 2019. Players nominated for a single selection pool, aligned to a state or metropolitan region, with players only being eligible to be drafted by clubs operating in that region. An indicative draft order was published in early April while the final draft order was published by the AFL in the wake of the expansion signing period on 23 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286996-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's draft, Post-Draft, Undrafted free agency\nA final free agency period opened after the conclusion of the draft, allowing clubs that passed on a draft selection to recruit from outside their state-based zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 57], "content_span": [58, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286996-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's draft, Post-Draft, Train-on list\nBefore the opening round of the season, clubs were permitted to replace players who had suffered a long-term injury or for whom personal circumstances had ruled them out for playing in any match that year. The replacement players are signed to a train-on list and are considered semi-eligible for section. Though they are eligible to train with the club, they cannot be selected for match play until further injuries to player on the club's list mean a club has fewer than 23 players available for any single match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286997-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's season\nThe 2019 AFL Women's season was the third season of the elite women's Australian rules football competition. Ten teams competed in the league, two more than the previous season, all of which are associated with existing Australian Football League (AFL) clubs. To accommodate the extra teams a conference system was implemented.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286997-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's season\nThe first game was played on the 2nd of February and the season concluded with the 2019 AFL Women's Grand Final between Adelaide and Carlton on the 31st of March. Adelaide won by a margin of 45 to win their second premiership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286997-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's season, Reforms, New teams\nTwo new teams, Geelong and North Melbourne, joined the competition, bringing the total number of teams to ten. The North Melbourne team has a strong Tasmanian focus; some players are based in Tasmania and some home games were held in the state. The introduction of the new teams is the first stage of a two-year expansion that will take the league to fourteen teams for the 2020 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286997-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's season, Reforms, Conferences\nDespite the introduction of new teams, the league retained a seven-round home-and-away season. This was achieved by splitting the competition into two conferences. Each team play four games against their fellow conference members and three \"cross-over\" matches against teams from the other conference. Conference membership was based on the final ladder positions of the 2018 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286997-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's season, Reforms, Conferences\nThe finals series was expanded to include preliminary finals for the first time; the two teams who finish the highest in each conference at the end of the home-and-away season qualified for the preliminary finals. The winners of these games played in the AFL Women's Grand Final. The make-up of the conferences, along with the fixture, was released in October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286997-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's season, Reforms, Conferences\nThe conference system proved controversial as the teams in Conference A consistently outplayed the teams on Conference B, resulting in the first, second, fifth and sixth best overall teams making the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286997-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's season, Reforms, Rule changes\nThere were 11 rule changes brought in for the 2019 AFLW season (three AFLW specific).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 46], "content_span": [47, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286997-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's season, Premiership season\nThe full fixture and make-up of the conferences was released on 26 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286997-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL Women's season, Win/Loss table\nBold\u00a0\u2013 Home gameX\u00a0\u2013 ByeOpponent for round listed above marginThis table can be sorted by margin, winners are represented in the first half of each column, and losers are represented in the second half of each column once sorted", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286998-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL draft\nThe 2019 AFL draft consists of the various periods where the 18 clubs in the Australian Football League (AFL) can trade and recruit players following the completion of the 2019 AFL season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286998-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL draft, Mid-season rookie draft\nThe first mid-season draft since 1993 was held after Round 10 of the 2019 AFL season on 27 May. The draft was only open to clubs with inactive players on their list and vacancies available, such as long term injuries or retirements. Players recruited during the mid-season draft earned a contract for the remainder of the season, though had the option of negotiating terms for an extension at any period throughout the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 39], "content_span": [40, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286998-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL draft, Previous trades\nSince 2015, clubs have been able to trade future picks in the next year's national draft during the trade period. As a result, a total of 34 selections for the 2019 draft were traded during the 2018 trade period, including (for the first time) at the 2018 National Draft, where 14 picks were traded. The selection order for each of these picks is tied to the original club's finishing position in the 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 31], "content_span": [32, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286998-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL draft, Previous trades\nOn-traded to Western Bulldogs (Pick swap at the 2018 National Draft)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 31], "content_span": [32, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286998-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL draft, Gold Coast concessions\nDue to poor on-field results and issues with player retention, prior to the draft, the AFL announced a \"rescue package\" for Gold Coast which included:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 38], "content_span": [39, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286998-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL draft, 2019 national draft, Rookie elevations\nClubs were able to promote any player who was listed on their rookie list in 2019 to their 2020 primary playing list prior to the draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 54], "content_span": [55, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286998-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL draft, 2020 pre-season draft\nThe 2020 pre-season draft was held on the morning of Friday, 29 November 2019 prior to the commencement of the rookie draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 37], "content_span": [38, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286998-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL draft, 2020 rookie draft, Category B rookie selections\nClubs were able to nominate category B rookies to join their club in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 63], "content_span": [64, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286999-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL finals series\nThe 2019 Australian Football League finals series was the 123rd annual edition of the VFL/AFL final series, the Australian rules football tournament staged to determine the winner of the 2019 AFL Premiership season. The series ran over four weekends in September 2019, culminating with the 2019 AFL Grand Final at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on 28 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286999-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL finals series\nThe top eight teams from the 2019 AFL Premiership season qualify for the finals series. AFL finals series have been played under the current format since 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286999-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL finals series, Venues\nThe matches of the 2019 AFL finals series were contested at four venues around the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286999-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL finals series, Venues\nFor the first time since 2009, Brisbane hosted a final, while the Melbourne Cricket Ground hosted five finals, including the 2019 AFL Grand Final. Other finals took place at Perth\u2019s Optus Stadium and at Giants Stadium in Sydney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286999-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL finals series, Matches\nThe system used for the 2019 AFL finals series is a final eight system. The top four teams in the eight receive the \"double chance\" when they play in week-one qualifying finals, such that if a top-four team loses in the first week it still remains in the finals, playing a semi-final the next week against the winner of an elimination final. The bottom four of the eight play knock-out games \u2013 only the winners survive and move on to the next week. Home-state advantage goes to the team with the higher ladder position in the first two weeks, to the qualifying final winners in the third week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286999-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL finals series, Matches\nIn the second week, the winners of the qualifying finals receive a bye to the third week. The losers of the qualifying final plays the elimination finals winners in a semi-final. In the third week, the winners of the semi-finals from week two play the winners of the qualifying finals in the first week. The winners of those matches move on to the Grand Final at the MCG in Melbourne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286999-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL finals series, Matches, Week one (qualifying and elimination finals), First elimination final (West Coast vs Essendon)\nThe opening match of the 2019 AFL finals series saw fifth-placed West Coast host eighth-placed Essendon in the first elimination final at Optus Stadium. This marked the sixth final between the two sides, having previously met in a preliminary final in 1990, a qualifying final in 1995, semi-finals in 1993 and 1996 and an elimination final in 2002 - with Essendon winning all five. West Coast comfortably beat Essendon by 55 points to advance to the first semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 127], "content_span": [128, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286999-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL finals series, Matches, Week one (qualifying and elimination finals), First qualifying final (Geelong vs Collingwood)\nThe first qualifying final saw minor premier Geelong host fourth placed Collingwood at the MCG. This marked the twenty-fourth final between the two sides - having met in six grand finals in 1925, 1930, 1937, 1952, 1953 and 2011. In addition they had contested a qualifying final in 1981, semi finals in 1901, 1927, 1951, 1952, 1953, 1967, and preliminary finals in 1930, 1938, 1955, 1964, 1980, 2007, 2009 and 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 126], "content_span": [127, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286999-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL finals series, Matches, Week one (qualifying and elimination finals), Second elimination final (Greater Western Sydney vs Western Bulldogs)\nThe second elimination final saw sixth placed Greater Western Sydney host seventh placed Western Bulldogs at Giants Stadium. The two teams had met in the finals three years previously, with the Bulldogs winning the 2016 First Preliminary Final by six points en route to their drought-breaking premiership win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 148], "content_span": [149, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286999-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL finals series, Matches, Week one (qualifying and elimination finals), Second qualifying final (Brisbane Lions vs Richmond)\nThe second qualifying final saw second placed Brisbane Lions host third placed Richmond at The Gabba. Brisbane surged up the ladder in 2019, finishing in the top two for the first time in fifteen years and earning their first finals berth in a decade. This marked the second time the two teams met in a final, having previously clashed in a preliminary final eighteen years prior - which Brisbane won by 68 points en route to their maiden premiership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 131], "content_span": [132, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286999-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL finals series, Matches, Week two (semi-finals), First semi-final (Geelong vs West Coast)\nThe first semi-final saw Geelong host West Coast at the MCG. This was the sixth meeting between the two clubs in finals, meeting previously in two Grand Finals in 1992 and 1994, a semi-final in 1992, and two preliminary finals in 1991 and 2011. West Coast have won four of the five meetings between the clubs, losing the 2011 preliminary final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 97], "content_span": [98, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286999-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL finals series, Matches, Week two (semi-finals), Second semi-final (Brisbane Lions vs Greater Western Sydney)\nThe second semi-final saw Brisbane Lions host Greater Western Sydney at The Gabba. The two clubs have never met in a final before as the two clubs have never been in a finals series together.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 117], "content_span": [118, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286999-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL finals series, Matches, Week three (preliminary finals), Second preliminary final (Richmond vs Geelong)\nThe second preliminary final saw Richmond host Geelong at the MCG on Friday, 20 September. This was the eleventh final between the two sides and second in three years, having previously met in the finals in 1921, 1931, 1933, 1934, 1967, 1969, 1980, and 1995 and 2017, including grand finals in 1931 and 1967. Head to head in finals it was 8-2 in Richmond's favour, despite Geelong's more recent successes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 112], "content_span": [113, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286999-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL finals series, Matches, Week three (preliminary finals), First preliminary final (Collingwood vs Greater Western Sydney)\nThe first preliminary final saw Collingwood host Greater Western Sydney at the MCG on Saturday, 21 September. This marked the second final between the two teams, having previously clashed in a semi final the previous season - which was won by Collingwood.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 129], "content_span": [130, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00286999-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL finals series, Matches, Week four (Grand Final)\nThis is the first time that Greater Western Sydney has qualified for the grand final. It was only the second time in AFL/VFL history where neither of the two top qualifying teams made the grand final. The last and only other time this has occurred was in 1980 when Richmond defeated Collingwood.. This is the second time that Richmond met Greater Western Sydney in a final. The two teams previously met in a preliminary final in 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 56], "content_span": [57, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287000-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL season\nThe 2019 Australian Football League season was the 123rd season of the elite Australian rules football competition and the 30th under the name 'Australian Football League', having switched from 'Victorian Football League' after 1989. Eighteen teams competed in the league, the same as the previous seven seasons. The first game was played on Thursday, 21 March, and the season concluded with the 2019 AFL Grand Final on Saturday, 28 September. Richmond defeated Greater Western Sydney by 89 points in the grand final, marking their 12th premiership. 2019 marked the first year of games being broadcast in 4K resolution, with a total of 46 ultra-high-definition games being shown on Foxtel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287000-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL season, Rule changes\nThere were several alterations to the laws of the game in 2019:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287000-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL season, Pre-season, AFLX\nThe AFL confirmed in December 2018 that the modified version of the sport, known as AFLX, would return in the 2019 pre-season. Unlike the 2018 competition, no AFL clubs took part in the event, with four all-star teams being picked by four high-profile players: Patrick Dangerfield (captain of the Bolts), Eddie Betts (Deadlys), Nat Fyfe (Flyers) and Jack Riewoldt (Rampage). The tournament occurred at Marvel Stadium, Melbourne on 22 February 2019 and was won by the Rampage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287000-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFL season, Pre-season, JLT Community Series\nThe pre-season series of games returned as the 2019 JLT Community Series, with teams playing two games each. The games were stand-alone, with no overall winner of the series. Each team played two games, many at suburban or regional venues, while all games were televised on Fox Footy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 49], "content_span": [50, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287000-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287001-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFLHCC season\nThe 2019 AFLHCC season was the 19th season of senior Australian rules football in the Newcastle, Hunter and Central Coast regions, and the first year that the league was renamed from Black Diamond AFL to AFL Hunter Central Coast, under the AFL NSW/ACT banner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287001-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFLHCC season\nThe Grand Final was played on September 7th 2019, with Terrigal-Avoca beating Newcastle City by 10 points following their Grand Final defeat from the previous season. This is the 5th time that these two clubs have faced off in a Grand Final. The number of teams in the Black Diamond Cup (First Grade) competition was reduced to 10 teams after Lake Macquarie decided to field only one senior men's team to compete in the Black Diamond Plate (Reserves) competition after a winless 2018 season competing in the Black Diamond Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287001-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFLHCC season\nThe Representative Game was played on May 20th against AFL South Coast. AFL Hunter Central Coast won the game by 41 points, 12.16 (88) to 6.11 (47).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287002-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AFLX tournament\nThe 2019 AFLX tournament was the second Australian Football League (AFL) pre-season series of matches, played under the laws of AFLX, a variation of Australian rules football. The tournament took place on 22 February 2019 at Melbourne's Marvel Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287002-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AFLX tournament, Background\nThe league abandoned the format adopted for the inaugural series which featured all 18 AFL clubs, and instead appointed four high-profile players as captain of their respective teams. Geelong midfielder and Brownlow Medallist Patrick Dangerfield captained the Bolts, Fremantle captain and fellow Brownlow winner Nat Fyfe captained the Flyers, Adelaide forward Eddie Betts captained the Deadlys, and Richmond forward and three-time Coleman Medallist Jack Riewoldt captained the Rampage. The teams had 14 players each, with eight on the field and six on the bench.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287002-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AFLX tournament, Background, Rule Changes\nA new rule was added to the competition where teams could nominate one of their players on the field to be the Gatorade Game Changer for the last five minutes of the game. The Game Changer had the ability to score double the points of any other player; a behind scored by him would be worth two points, a goal would be worth 12 points, and a super goal would be worth 20 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287002-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AFLX tournament, Draft\nA draft of 48 selections was broadcast on Wednesday 6 February by Network Seven and Fox Footy after being held in secret the previous day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287002-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AFLX tournament, Draft\nThe draft featured 12 selections by each captain with a snake draft order determined by random draw on the night of the draft. No more than four players from each AFL club, inclusive of the pre-selected captains and vice-captains, were eligible to play in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287003-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AG2R La Mondiale season\nThe 2019 season for the AG2R La Mondiale cycling team will begin in January at the Tour Down Under. As a UCI WorldTeam, they will be 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, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287004-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AHF Men's Central Asia Cup\nThe 2019 AHF Men's Central Asia Cup was the first edition of the AHF Men's Central Asia Cup, the international men's field hockey championship of Central Asia. It was held in Taldykorgan, Kazakhstan from 2 to 8 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287004-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AHF Men's Central Asia Cup, Teams\nThe following four teams, shown with pre-tournament FIH World Rankings, participated in the tournament. Afghanistan withdrew before the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287005-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AIBA Women's World Boxing Championships\nThe 2019 AIBA Women's World Boxing Championships were held in Ulan-Ude, Russia from 3 to 13 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287006-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AIBA Women's World Boxing Championships \u2013 Bantamweight\nThe Bantamweight competition at the 2019 AIBA Women's World Boxing Championships was held between 4 and 13 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287007-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AIBA Women's World Boxing Championships \u2013 Featherweight\nThe featherweight competition at the 2019 AIBA Women's World Boxing Championships was held from 3 to 13 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287008-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AIBA Women's World Boxing Championships \u2013 Flyweight\nThe flyweight competition at the 2019 AIBA Women's World Boxing Championships was held from 3 to 13 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287009-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AIBA Women's World Boxing Championships \u2013 Heavyweight\nThe Heavyweight competition at the 2019 AIBA Women's World Boxing Championships was held between 10 and 13 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287010-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AIBA Women's World Boxing Championships \u2013 Light flyweight\nThe light flyweight competition at the 2019 AIBA Women's World Boxing Championships was held from 3 to 13 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287011-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AIBA Women's World Boxing Championships \u2013 Light heavyweight\nThe Light heavyweight competition at the 2019 AIBA Women's World Boxing Championships was held between 6 and 13 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287012-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AIBA Women's World Boxing Championships \u2013 Light welterweight\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Almagestas (talk | contribs) at 06:50, 1 March 2020. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287012-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AIBA Women's World Boxing Championships \u2013 Light welterweight\nThe Light welterweight competition at the 2019 AIBA Women's World Boxing Championships was held between 7 and 13 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287013-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AIBA Women's World Boxing Championships \u2013 Lightweight\nThe Lightweight competition at the 2019 AIBA Women's World Boxing Championships was held between 4 and 13 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287014-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AIBA Women's World Boxing Championships \u2013 Middleweight\nThe Middleweight competition at the 2019 AIBA Women's World Boxing Championships was held between 5 and 13 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287015-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AIBA Women's World Boxing Championships \u2013 Welterweight\nThe Welterweight competition at the 2019 AIBA Women's World Boxing Championships was held between 4 and 13 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287016-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AIBA World Boxing Championships\nThe 2019 AIBA World Boxing Championships were held in Yekaterinburg, Russia from 9 to 21 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287016-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AIBA World Boxing Championships\nWeight classes have been adjusted to match those confirmed for the 2020 Olympic boxing tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287017-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AIBA World Boxing Championships \u2013 Featherweight\nThe Featherweight competition at the 2019 AIBA World Boxing Championships was held from 11 to 21 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287018-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AIBA World Boxing Championships \u2013 Flyweight\nThe Flyweight competition at the 2019 AIBA World Boxing Championships was held from 12 to 21 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287019-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AIBA World Boxing Championships \u2013 Heavyweight\nThe Heavyweight competition at the 2019 AIBA World Boxing Championships was held from 10 to 21 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287020-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AIBA World Boxing Championships \u2013 Light heavyweight\nThe Light heavyweight competition at the 2019 AIBA World Boxing Championships was held from 10 to 21 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287021-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AIBA World Boxing Championships \u2013 Light welterweight\nThe light welterweight competition at the 2019 AIBA World Boxing Championships was held from 12 to 21 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287022-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AIBA World Boxing Championships \u2013 Middleweight\nThe Middleweight competition at the 2019 AIBA World Boxing Championships was held from 9 to 21 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287023-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AIBA World Boxing Championships \u2013 Super heavyweight\nThe Super heavyweight competition at the 2019 AIBA World Boxing Championships was held from 16 to 21 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287024-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AIBA World Boxing Championships \u2013 Welterweight\nThe Welterweight competition at the 2019 AIBA World Boxing Championships was held from 13 to 21 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287025-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AIHL season\nThe 2019 AIHL season is the 20th season of the Australian Ice Hockey League (AIHL). It ran from 20 April 2019 until 25 August 2019, with the Goodall Cup finals following on 31 August and 1 September 2019. The CBR Brave won the H Newman Reid Trophy after finishing the regular season with the most points in league history for the second time. The Sydney Bears won the Goodall Cup for the third time by defeating the Perth Thunder in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287025-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AIHL season, Teams\nIn 2019 the AIHL had 8 teams competing in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 77]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287025-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AIHL season, League business\nIn January the Newcastle Northstars signed a three-year naming rights deal with Newcastle Rescue and Consultancy. Proski, the former naming rights holder, will continue to sponsor the club at a lower level. In March the Newcastle Northstars unveiled a new red-coloured third jersey design featuring an alternative logo. The logo is made up an upper-case letter N on top of a five pointed star. On 19 March the Adelaide Adrenaline signed a naming rights deal with Agile Group. The deal starts in the 2019 season and runs through to the end of the 2021 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 33], "content_span": [34, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287025-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 AIHL season, League business\nOn 28 March it was announced that the CBR Brave had been acquired by the Canberra Cavalry, a baseball team that plays in the Australian Baseball League. Cavalry management took over operations of the Brave immediately while full ownership is expected to be transferred later in the year. 3 April 2019, O\u2019Brien Group announced the completion of upgrades to their Melbourne stadium including 1,361 solar panels, two water tanks and an environmentally-friendly heating system. The new facilities would generate 400Kw of power, providing a 25% saving on the stadium's power bill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 33], "content_span": [34, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287025-0002-0002", "contents": "2019 AIHL season, League business\nTo mark the completion of the new upgrades the stadium was renamed O\u2019Brien Icehouse, invoking and recognising the stadium's original name. On 19 April the CBR Brave signed a naming rights deal with the Signal Co. Wireless for the 2019 season. The deal increases The Signal Co. Wireless' level of sponsorship having been a major sponsor in 2018. On 31 May it was announced that the Melbourne Mustangs had signed an affiliation with the Melbourne Chargers of the Australian Women's Tier 2 Show Case Series, Australia's second highest women's ice hockey league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 33], "content_span": [34, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287025-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AIHL season, League business, Exhibition games\nOn 30 and 31 March the Melbourne Ice hosted Hockey X 2019 at the O'Brien Icehouse. Hockey X, previously known as the Hockey Festival, included the CBR Brave, Melbourne Ice, Melbourne Mustangs and an All-Star team from Queensland. Day one of the festival saw each team compete in a round-robin competition to determine the playoff spots on day two. The Melbourne Mustangs finished the round-robin at the top of the standings, three points ahead of the Melbourne Ice. The CBR Brave finished in third and the Queensland All-Stars in last place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 51], "content_span": [52, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287025-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 AIHL season, League business, Exhibition games\nDay two included two games, a final between first and second and a placement game for third place. The Melbourne Mustangs defeated the Melbourne Ice 3\u20131 in the final to claim the Warrior Cup, while the CBR Brave beat the Queensland All-Stars 3\u20130 to finish third. On 13 April the Melbourne Ice and Melbourne Mustangs held their annual exhibition match at the O'Brien Icehouse. The Mustangs defeated the Ice 4\u20132. On the same day the Adelaide Adrenaline held an exhibition game against a South Australian All Stars team which the Adrenaline won 4\u20133. The following day the Newcastle Northstars held a practice match against their affiliate club, the Newcastle North Stars ECSL at the Hunter Ice Skating Stadium. The Northstars won the match 10\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 51], "content_span": [52, 794]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287025-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AIHL season, League business, Personnel changes\nOn 23 November the Melbourne Ice announced the signing of Johan Steenberg to the position of Director of Operations. Steenberg returns to the Ice after a year with the CBR Brave where he acted as their Director of Player Development and Player Personnel. Steenberg was previously the Ice's goaltender coach from 2014 to 2017. The following month the Melbourne Ice appointed Australian men's national team head coach Brad Vigon to the position of head coach. Vigon replaces interim head coach Sandy Gardner who had been in the role since June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 52], "content_span": [53, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287025-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 AIHL season, League business, Personnel changes\nGardner was subsequently appointed an assistant coach role along with Brent Laver and Glen Mayer Laver moves into the role having been the development coach for the last two seasons and Mayer was previously an assistant coach at the Ice from 2014 to 2016. On 7 December the AIHL announced that Rob Bannerman had stepped down as commissioner due to a career move in the United States. Bannerman had been in the position for the past six years. In March the Melbourne Ice appointed Mark Smith to the position of general manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 52], "content_span": [53, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287025-0004-0002", "contents": "2019 AIHL season, League business, Personnel changes\nSmith is currently head coach of the Melbourne Ice Women's team. On 28 February the Newcastle Northstars announced the signing of John Kennedy as head coach following his retirement as a player. Kennedy will be assisted by associated coaches Joe Theriault and Ray Sheffield. On 10 April the CBR Brave announced the signing of former Ligue Magnus player Max Ross to the position of assistant coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 52], "content_span": [53, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287025-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AIHL season, Regular season\nThe regular season began on 20 April 2019 and will run through to 25 August 2019 before the top four teams advance to compete in the Goodall Cup playoff series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287025-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AIHL season, Regular season, Skater statistics\n2019 AIHL season top-ten lists for the following four skater statistical categories: Points, Goals, Assists and Penalty minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287025-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AIHL season, Regular season, Goaltender statistics\n2019 AIHL season top-ten lists for the following two goaltender statistical categories: Goals against average and Save percentage", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 55], "content_span": [56, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287025-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AIHL season, Goodall Cup playoffs\nThe 2019 playoffs are scheduled to begin on 31 August with the Goodall Cup final held on 1 September. Following the end of the regular season the top four teams advance to the playoff series which is to be held at the Hunter Ice Skating Stadium in Newcastle, New South Wales. The series is a single game elimination with the two winning semi-finalists advancing to the Goodall Cup final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287025-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AIHL season, All-Star weekend\nThe 2019 AIHL All-Star Weekend was held at the International Convention Centre Sydney on 14 and 15 June 2019. The format of the weekend is unchanged from 2018 with a skills competition on 14 June and an all-stars game on 15 June. The teams however were re-aligned on a North/South basis. Team North included players from the CBR Brave, Newcastle Northstars, Sydney Bears and Sydney Ice Dogs. Team South included players from the Adelaide Adrenaline, Melbourne Ice, Melbourne Mustangs and Perth Thunder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 34], "content_span": [35, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287025-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 AIHL season, All-Star weekend\nSydney Bears' Michael Schlamp and Perth Thunder's Jamie Woodman were initially announced as the team captains for Team North and Team South respectively. Schlamp was later replaced by Brian Funes of the Sydney Bears due to injury. The Sydney Bears' Ron Kuprowsky was named as Team North coach and Perth Thunder's David Ruck as coach of Team South. The weekend ran alongside the 2019 Ice Hockey Classic, an exhibition series featuring players from Canada and the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 34], "content_span": [35, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287025-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AIHL season, All-Star weekend\nThe skills competition, originally organised for Friday 14 June was cancelled along with the Ice Hockey Classic match between the United States and Canada. As such, a cut down version of the skills competition involving just two of the originally planned events was contested on Saturday 15 June before the start of the 2019 All-Stars match. Jesse Gabrielle of the CBR Brave won the fastest skater competition. Danick Gauthier of the Sydney Bears won the hardest shot competition. Team North defeated Team South 11-9 in the All-Stars match and Perth Thunder's Keven Veilleux claimed the Mick McCormack Cup after being named the most valuable player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 34], "content_span": [35, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287026-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AIK Fotboll season\nThe 2019 season was AIK's 128th in existence, their 91st season in Allsvenskan and their 14th consecutive season in the league. The team was competing in Allsvenskan, Svenska Cupen and UEFA Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287026-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AIK Fotboll season, Current squad, 2019 squad\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-00287026-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AIK Fotboll season, Current squad, Current youth players with first-team experience\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, 88], "content_span": [89, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287026-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AIK Fotboll 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287026-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AIK Fotboll season, Current squad, Players in/out, 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 59], "content_span": [60, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287027-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AMA National Motocross Championship\nThe 2019 AMA Motocross Championship season is the 47th AMA Motocross National Championship season, the premier motocross series in USA. Eli Tomac goes into the season as the defending champion in the 450 class, after taking his second 450 national title in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287028-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AMA National Speedway Championship\nThe 2019 AMA National Speedway Championship Series was staged over three rounds, held at Ventura (June 15), Industry (August 10), and Auburn (September 21). It was won by Billy Janniro, who beat Max Ruml and Gino Manzares. It was the tenth title of Janniro's career, and his seventh in-a-row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287028-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AMA National Speedway Championship, Event format\nOver the course of 20 heats, each rider races against every other rider once. The top eight scorers then reach the semi-finals, with first and second in those semi-finals reaching the final. Points are scored for every ride taken, including the semi-finals and final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 53], "content_span": [54, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287029-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AMA Supercross Championship\nThe 2019 AMA Supercross Championship was an American motorcycle racing championship that took place from January 5, 2019 - May 4, 2019 over 17 rounds at various stadiums across the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287029-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AMA Supercross Championship\nCooper Webb, riding a KTM, won the championship in the 450cc class while Dylan Ferrandis won in the 250cc Western Regional class and Chase Sexton won in the 250cc Eastern Regional class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287029-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AMA Supercross Championship, Season Report\nThe first round of the 2019 AMA Supercross Championship was held in wet conditions in Angel Stadium in Anaheim, California on January 5. Dean Wilson led most of the 450cc Main Event but was passed for the win by Justin Barcia, who won his first race since 2013. Colt Nichols led the entirety of the 250cc Western Regional Main Event to take his first career win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287029-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AMA Supercross Championship, Season Report\nGlendale, Arizona played host to Round 2 one week later where Ken Roczen led the 450cc Main Event early until Malcolm Stewart had a crash, bringing out the red flag. After the restart, the lead changed hands twice, from Roczen to defending champion Jason Anderson and then to Blake Baggett, who took his first career 450cc Main Event win. Adam Cianciarulo cruised to victory in the 250cc Western Regional Main Event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287029-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AMA Supercross Championship, Season Report\nEventual champion Cooper Webb took his first 450cc career win at Anaheim 2 one week after Glendale, finishing 1st, 1st and 3rd in the three 450cc Main Events in Supercross\u2019s first \u201cTriple Crown\u201d event of the season. The 250cc Western Regional class also saw its third winner in as many races with Shane McElrath placing 3rd, 2nd and 1st in the three 250cc Main Events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287029-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AMA Supercross Championship, Season Report\nThe fourth round of the season saw the first repeat winners of 2019 in the 450cc and 250cc Western Regional classes, as Cooper Webb and Adam Cianciarulo took the wins respectively. Webb beat his KTM teammate Marvin Musquin by 0.7 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287029-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AMA Supercross Championship, Season Report\nHeavy rain before the fifth race at San Diego led to a track that was \u201ca miserable mess of standing water and deep mud for the racers, and just completing a lap without falling or getting stuck was an accomplishment in itself\u201d. Eli Tomac won the 450cc Main Event while Adam Cianciarulo won the 250cc Main Event. Some riders suffered skin irritation and some bikes were damaged following the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287029-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 AMA Supercross Championship, Season Report\nFeld Entertainment released a statement following the race explaining that \u201cthe track crew\u2026. Applied a drying agent, a lime and sand mixture, to treat two areas on the track to try and remove moisture from the dirt\u2026 the unprecedented amount of rain on Saturday prevented the lime from mixing with the soil as usual.\u201d Feld offered privateer riders that competed in San Diego $5,000 each as compensation and started looking at other options for drying agents going forward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287029-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AMA Supercross Championship, Season Report\nMinneapolis marked the start of the 250cc Eastern Regional season. Cooper Webb won the 450cc Main Event while Austin Forkner won the 250cc Eastern Regional Main Event at both Minneapolis and the next race in Arlington, Texas. The 450cc Main Event in Arlington was particularly memorable as it featured a last-corner pass for the win and the closest finish in Supercross history with Webb edging Ken Roczen to the line by 0.028 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287029-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AMA Supercross Championship, Season Report\nDetroit played host to the second Triple Crown race of the 2019 season, with Eli Tomac winning the 450cc event with finishes of 1st, 1st and 6th. The race also saw the 132nd career podium for 36-year-old Chad Reed, his first since 2017. Austin Forkner remained undefeated in 2019 in the 250cc Eastern Regional class, winning all three 250cc Main Events during the night\u2019s show.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287029-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 AMA Supercross Championship, Season Report\nOn March 2, the next round was held in Atlanta where Cooper Webb won the 450cc Main Event and Adam Cianciarulo won overall in the 250cc East/West Shootout. It was the first of two times during the season that the 250cc Eastern and Western Regional classes would race together. While Austin Forkner didn\u2019t win the 250cc Main Event, he remained undefeated in the 250cc Eastern Regional division, beating all of the other East class competitors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287029-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 AMA Supercross Championship, Season Report\nThe Daytona Supercross was held on a racetrack designed by former Supercross champion Ricky Carmichael on the frontstraight of the Daytona International Speedway. Eli Tomac dominated the 450cc Main Event for his third win of the year, while Austin Forkner returned to his winning ways in the 250cc Eastern Regional Main Event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287029-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 AMA Supercross Championship, Season Report\nRound 11 saw Marvin Musquin take his first win of 2019 in Indianapolis in the 450cc Main Event, ending an 11-month dry spell, while Austin Forkner won again in the 250cc Eastern Regional class. Musquin would win again at the next round in Seattle, but amid controversy. A crash claiming Chad Reed and Justin Brayton led to a section being lined with red cross flags.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287029-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 AMA Supercross Championship, Season Report\nRiders are not allowed to jump through red cross flags and, as stated under section 4.16 of the rulebook \u201cduring a main event race, if no positions were gained, the penalty will be the points and purse equal to two positions in the final results for that race plus two additional points\u201d. This cost Musquin seven points, but he kept the victory. Dylan Ferrandis took his first career 250cc Main Event win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287029-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 AMA Supercross Championship, Season Report\nCooper Webb won the third Triple Crown race of the season in the 450cc class with finishes of 2nd, 1st and 3rd in Houston. Webb was also claimed the 2019 Triple Crown Champion. Webb and KTM teammate Marvin Musquin had battled hard during the first main event, with Webb coming out on top. Following his penalty the previous round in Seattle, this result further hurt Musquin\u2019s championship chances. Dylan Ferrandis, fresh off of his first career win in Seattle, followed it up with another win in the 250cc Western Regional class Main Event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287029-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 AMA Supercross Championship, Season Report\nEli Tomac was the winner of Round 14 of the 450cc season in Nashville, while Martin Davalos won the 250cc Eastern Regional class Main Event, his first win in three years. Davalos\u2019 win came after Austin Forkner - who had been undefeated in 2019 up to that point - crashed in practice and was unable to put weight on his knee. Colorado native Tomac went on to win the next event at his home race in Denver, much to the approval of the crowd, and narrowing the points gap to the championship leader Cooper Webb. The championship battle in the 250cc Western Regional class opened back up a bit though, with Adam Cianciarulo returning to the top step of the podium and extending his points lead over Dylan Ferrandis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287029-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 AMA Supercross Championship, Season Report\nMistakes led to the lead changing hands many times during the 450cc Main Event in East Rutherford, New Jersey. When the checkered flag finally flew, it was Cooper Webb taking the win, extending his points lead to 23 points with just one race left to go. Forkner came into the race still suffering with a torn ACL from his Nashville crash, but he was able to compete in the 250cc Eastern Regional Main Event. However, he didn\u2019t make it to the finish after jumping and landing into the face of a jump, causing further distress to his knee. This allowed Chase Sexton to go on to take his first 250cc Eastern Regional career win and take the points lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287029-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 AMA Supercross Championship, Season Report\nThe final race of the season was held in Las Vegas on May 4, 2019, with all three championships on the line. For the second time during the season, the 250cc Eastern and Western Regional class riders would compete against each other on track in an East/West Shootout. Chase Sexton finished fourth in the 250cc East/West Shootout to take the 250cc Eastern Regional Championship, while Dylan Ferrandis won the 250cc Western Regional Championship by winning while his championship rival Adam Cianciarulo crashed late in the race. Cooper Webb merely needed a 20th-place finish to clinch the 450cc championship. Tomac won while Webb finished third, giving Webb the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287030-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AMF Futsal Men's World Cup\nThe 2019 AMF Futsal Men's World Cup was the 12th edition of the AMF Futsal World Cup. The tournament was held in Argentina from 31 March to 7 April in the cities of Montecarlo, Posadas, Eldorado and Ober\u00e1. Sixteen national teams from all confederations participated in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287031-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AMJ Campbell Shorty Jenkins Classic\nThe 2019 AMJ Campbell Shorty Jenkins Classic was held September 10 to 15 in Cornwall, Ontario. The total purse for the event was $59,000 for the Men's and $34,500 for the Women's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287031-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AMJ Campbell Shorty Jenkins Classic\nIn the Men's final, John Epping defeated Brad Jacobs 5\u20133 in an all Ontario matchup. In the Women's final, Jennifer Jones defeated Tracy Fleury 6\u20134 in an all Manitoba affair.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287032-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ANA Inspiration\nThe 2019 ANA Inspiration was the 48th ANA Inspiration LPGA golf tournament, held April 4\u20137 at the Dinah Shore Tournament Course of Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage, California. It was its 37th year as a major championship, and Golf Channel televised the event for the ninth consecutive year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287032-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ANA Inspiration\nPernilla Lindberg missed the cut, the first defending champion not to play the weekend in six years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287032-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ANA Inspiration\nKo Jin-young won her first major by three strokes over Lee Mi-hyang.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287032-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ANA Inspiration, Field\nPlayers who have qualified for the event are listed below. Players are listed under the first category in which they qualified; additional qualifying categories are shown in parentheses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287032-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ANA Inspiration, Field\n1. Active LPGA Tour Hall of Fame members (must have participated in ten official LPGA Tour tournaments within the 12 months prior to the commitment deadline)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287032-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 ANA Inspiration, Field\nLydia Ko (4,5,6,8,9), Stacy Lewis (5), Brittany Lincicome (5,8), Pernilla Lindberg (5,6,8), Inbee Park (3,5,6,8,9), Morgan Pressel, Ryu So-yeon (5,7,8,9), Lexi Thompson (5,6,7,8,9), Yani Tseng, Karrie Webb", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287032-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 ANA Inspiration, Field\n3. Winners of the U.S. Women's Open, Women's PGA Championship, and Women's British Open in the previous five years", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287032-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 ANA Inspiration, Field\nChun In-gee (4,8,9), Georgia Hall (5,7,8,9,10-LET), Brooke Henderson (5,8,9), Ariya Jutanugarn (5,6,7,8,9), Danielle Kang (5,7,8,9), In-Kyung Kim (5,8,9), Brittany Lang (5), Mo Martin (7,8), Park Sung-hyun (5,6,8,9), Michelle Wie (5,8)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287032-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 ANA Inspiration, Field\n4. Winners of The Evian Championship in the previous five years", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287032-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 ANA Inspiration, Field\n5. Winners of official LPGA Tour tournaments from the 2016 ANA Inspiration through the week immediately preceding the 2019 ANA Inspiration", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287032-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 ANA Inspiration, Field\nMarina Alex (8,9), C\u00e9line Boutier (8), Carlota Ciganda (7,8,9), Shanshan Feng (8,9), Nasa Hataoka (7,8,9), Charley Hull (6,8,9), Ji Eun-hee (8,9), Moriya Jutanugarn (6,8,9), Cristie Kerr (8), Kim Sei-young (7,8,9), Katherine Kirk (8), Ko Jin-young (8,9,12), Nelly Korda (6,8,9), Jessica Korda (6,7,8,9), Lee Mi-hyang (8), Minjee Lee (8,9), Mirim Lee (8), Gaby L\u00f3pez (8), Caroline Masson (6,8), Haru Nomura, Annie Park (8), Jenny Shin (8), Thidapa Suwannapura (8), Amy Yang (8,9)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287032-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 ANA Inspiration, Field\n6. All players who finished in the top-20 in the previous year's ANA Inspiration", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287032-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 ANA Inspiration, Field\nBrittany Altomare (8), Jodi Ewart Shadoff (8), Hannah Green (8), Lee Jeong-eun (9,10-KLPGA), Azahara Mu\u00f1oz (8), Amy Olson (7,8), Ryann O'Toole (8), Pornanong Phatlum (7,8), Beatriz Recari, Jennifer Song (8), Ayako Uehara (8)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287032-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 ANA Inspiration, Field\n7. All players who finished in the top-5 of the previous year's U.S. Women's Open, Women's PGA Championship, Women's British Open and The Evian Championship", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287032-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 ANA Inspiration, Field\nAustin Ernst (8,9), Mamiko Higa, Wei-Ling Hsu (8), Sarah Jane Smith (8), Patty Tavatanakit (a,15), Angel Yin (8)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287032-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 ANA Inspiration, Field\n8. Top-80 on the previous year's season-ending LPGA Tour official money list", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287032-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 ANA Inspiration, Field\nAditi Ashok, Ashleigh Buhai, Pei-Yun Chien, Chella Choi, Jacqui Concolino, Lindy Duncan, Sandra Gal, Jaye Marie Green, Haeji Kang, Megan Khang, Bronte Law, Lee Jeong-eun, Yu Liu, Ally McDonald, Su-Hyun Oh, Jane Park, Park Hee-young, Madelene Sagstr\u00f6m, Lizette Salas (9), Mariah Stackhouse, Emma Talley, Pannarat Thanapolboonyaras, Maria Torres, Mariajo Uribe, Sakura Yokomine", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287032-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 ANA Inspiration, Field\n9. Top-30 on the Women's World Golf Rankings as of a March 11, 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287032-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 ANA Inspiration, Field\n10. Top-2 players from the previous year's season-ending Ladies European Tour Order of Merit, LPGA of Japan Tour money list and LPGA of Korea Tour money list", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287032-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 ANA Inspiration, Field\n11. Top-20 players plus ties on the current year LPGA Tour official money list at the end of the last official tournament prior to the current ANA Inspiration, not otherwise qualified above, provided such players are within the top-80 positions on the current year LPGA Tour official money list at the beginning of the tournament competition", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287032-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 ANA Inspiration, Field\nKristen Gillman, M. J. Hur, Kim Kaufman, Sarah Kemp, Alison Lee, Lin Xiyu, Nanna Koerstz Madsen, Sarah Schmelzel, Alena Sharp, Marissa Steen, Lauren Stephenson, Linnea Strom, Charlotte Thomas, Jing Yan", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287032-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 ANA Inspiration, Field\n12. Previous year's Louise Suggs Rolex Rookie of the Year", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287032-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 ANA Inspiration, Field\n13. Previous year's U.S. Women's Amateur champion, provided she is still an amateur at the beginning of tournament competition", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287032-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 ANA Inspiration, Field\nKristen Gillman turned professional, forfeiting this exemption, but she qualified under category 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287032-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 ANA Inspiration, Field\n14. Any LPGA Member who did not compete in the previous year's ANA Inspiration major due to injury, illness or maternity, who subsequently received a medical/maternity extension of membership from the LPGA in the previous calendar year, provided they were otherwise qualified to compete in the previous year's ANA Inspiration", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287032-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 ANA Inspiration, Field\n15. Up to six sponsor invitations for top-ranked amateur players", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287032-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 ANA Inspiration, Field\nRachel Heck (a), Frida Kinhult (a), Xin Kou (a), Albane Valenzuela (a)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287032-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 ANA Inspiration, Round summaries, First round\nAlly McDonald shot a 4-under-par 68 to take a one-stroke lead over four players, including 2014 champion Lexi Thompson. Defending champion Pernilla Lindberg was tied for 42nd at +1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287033-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ANO 2011 leadership election\nA leadership election for ANO 2011 was held on 17 February 2019. Incumbent Andrej Babi\u0161 was the only candidate. He won another term when he received 206 votes of 238.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287033-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ANO 2011 leadership election, Background\nAndrej Babi\u0161 announced on 29 November 2018 that he will seek another term as the leader of ANO 2011. Babi\u0161 confirmed his candidacy on 2 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287034-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ANZ Premiership season\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Djln (talk | contribs) at 15:30, 14 March 2020 (\u2192\u200eExternal links). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287034-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ANZ Premiership season\nThe 2019 ANZ Premiership season was the third season of the ANZ Premiership, the premier domestic netball league in New Zealand. The league was contested by six teams from around New Zealand, with a total of 47 matches played between February and June. Southern Steel were the defending premiers, though were knocked out of contention in the elimination final. The premiership was won by Central Pulse, who defeated the Northern Stars by four goals in the Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287034-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ANZ Premiership season\nThe season was brought forward by two months to ensure it did not clash with the Netball World Cup, played in Liverpool in July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287034-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ANZ Premiership season, Format\nThe 2019 ANZ Premiership season followed the same format as the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287034-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ANZ Premiership season, Format\nTeams played 15 matches spread over 13 rounds for a 47 match season, ensuring each team played each other three times in the regular season. The second and third place teams qualified for the elimination final at the end of the season, with the winner of that match meeting the first place team in the Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287035-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AON Open Challenger\nThe 2019 AON Open Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the sixteenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Genoa, Italy between 2 and 8 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287035-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287035-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AON Open Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as alternates:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287036-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AON Open Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nKevin Krawietz and Andreas Mies were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287036-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AON Open Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nAriel Behar and Gonzalo Escobar won the title after defeating Guido Andreozzi and Andr\u00e9s Molteni 3\u20136, 6\u20134, [10\u20133] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287037-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AON Open Challenger \u2013 Singles\nLorenzo Sonego was the defending champion and successfully defended his title, defeating Alejandro Davidovich Fokina 6\u20132, 4\u20136, 7\u20136(8\u20136) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287038-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AQ3\n2019 AQ3 is an inclined near-Earth object of the small Atira group from the innermost region of the Solar System, estimated to measure 1.4 kilometers (0.9 miles) in diameter. Among the hundreds of thousands known asteroids, 2019 AQ3's orbit was thought to have likely the smallest semi-major axis (0.589\u00a0AU) and aphelion (0.77\u00a0AU), that is, the orbit's average distance and farthest point from the Sun, respectively. The object was first observed on 4 January 2019, by astronomers at Palomar's Zwicky Transient Facility in California, with recovered images dating back to 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [8, 8], "content_span": [9, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287038-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AQ3\nThe record for smallest semi-major axis was beaten by another asteroid, 2019 LF6, with 0.555 AU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [8, 8], "content_span": [9, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287038-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AQ3, Orbit and classification\n2019 AQ3 orbits the Sun at a distance of 0.40\u20130.77\u00a0AU once every 5 months (165 days; semi-major axis of 0.589\u00a0AU). Its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.31 and an inclination of 47\u00b0 with respect to the ecliptic. The body's observation arc begins with a precovery taken by Pan-STARRS at Haleakala Observatory in October 2015, more than 3 years prior to its official first observation at the Zwicky Transient Facility on 4 January 2019. It has a minimum orbit intersection distance with Earth of 0.22\u00a0AU or 88 lunar distances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 34], "content_span": [35, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287038-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AQ3, Orbit and classification, Aphelion\n2019 AQ3's orbit has the third-smallest aphelion of any known asteroid in the Solar System, never distancing itself more than 0.774\u00a0AU from the Sun (77% of Earth's average orbital distance). Before its discovery, the record was held by (418265) 2008 EA32 at an aphelion of 0.804\u00a0AU, which is notably larger. 2019 AQ3's orbit also has a semi-major axis below that of Venus (0.723\u00a0AU) and an orbital period of 165 days, which is the third shortest among all asteroids.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 44], "content_span": [45, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287038-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 AQ3, Orbit and classification, Atira class\n2019 AQ3 is a member of the small class of Atira asteroids, which are also known as Apoheles or interior-Earth objects, as their orbits are confined inside that of Earth's. This makes their discovery difficult, as they stay relatively close to the Sun when observed from Earth, never reaching a Solar elongation of more than 90\u00b0, often much less. Only 19 such asteroids are known, 14 of which still reach 90% Earth's distance from the Sun over the course of their orbit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 47], "content_span": [48, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287038-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 AQ3, Orbit and classification, Inclination\nThe asteroid's orbit is also highly inclined with respect to the plane of the Solar System, at more than 47\u00b0, the highest inclination of any known Atira asteroid, although there are many near-Earth asteroids with even higher inclinations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 47], "content_span": [48, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287038-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 AQ3, Orbit and classification, Perturbations\nOn the short-term, 2019 AQ3 has a fairly quickly-changing orbit. Between 1600 AD and 2500 AD its aphelion distance lowers slightly from 0.7746 to 0.7725\u00a0AU, its perihelion distance increases slightly from 0.4025 to 0.4046\u00a0AU, and its inclination increases slightly from 47.19 to 47.25\u00b0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 49], "content_span": [50, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287038-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 AQ3, Orbit and classification, Perturbations\nIt is not subjected to a Kozai resonance because although its eccentricity and inclination oscillate in synchrony (when the eccentricity reaches its maximum value, the inclination is at its lowest and vice versa) over a long period of time, the value of the argument of perihelion circulates; the Earth-Moon system and Jupiter are its dominant perturbers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 49], "content_span": [50, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287038-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 AQ3, Numbering and naming\nAs of 2019, this minor planet has neither been numbered nor named by the Minor Planet Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 30], "content_span": [31, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287038-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 AQ3, Physical characteristics\nThe object's diameter is estimated at 1.4 kilometers (0.87 miles), which corresponds to an assumed geometric albedo of 0.08 for an absolute magnitude of 17.6. The Minor Planet Center also considers 2019 AQ3 to be larger than 1 kilometer. However, these are estimates with apparently no published measurement confirming the body's diameter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 34], "content_span": [35, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287038-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 AQ3, Physical characteristics\nBased on a generic magnitude-to-diameter conversion, the asteroid could measure anywhere between 500 meters and 2 kilometers for an extreme albedo of 0.45 (brighter than the E-types of the Hungaria population) and 0.04 (very dark carbonaceous D- and P-types of some members in the Hildian and Jupiter trojan population), respectively. As of 2019, less than 900 large (kilometer-sized) near-Earth asteroids have been discovered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 34], "content_span": [35, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287039-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ARCA Menards Series\nThe 2019 ARCA Menards Series was the 67th season of the ARCA Menards Series. Christian Eckes of Venturini Motorsports won the championship over teammate Michael Self. Eckes became the first champion since Tim Steele in 1997 to win the title after missing a race during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287039-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ARCA Menards Series\nOn February 9, 2019, hours before the season-opening Lucas Oil 200, ARCA announced that the series would be renamed to the ARCA Menards Series for at least 2019 and 2020. Menards had previously been a presenting sponsor for ARCA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287039-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ARCA Menards Series, Schedule\nThe full schedule was released on November 21st, 2018. The schedule remains largely unchanged from 2018. Although some tracks swapped dates throughout the season, the only track from 2018 to be excluded in 2019 was Berlin Raceway. In turn, the only track to be added to the schedule was Five Flags Speedway. For the first time in series history, every race was aired live. 12 races were broadcast on MAVTV, while 6 were covered by FS1 and the last 2 was covered by FS2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287039-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ARCA Menards Series, Results and standings, Drivers' championship\n(key) Bold\u00a0\u2013 Pole position awarded by time. Italics\u00a0\u2013 Pole position set by final practice results or rainout. *\u00a0\u2013 Most laps led.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 70], "content_span": [71, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287040-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AS5\n2019 AS5 is a near-Earth asteroid that passed close by the Earth on 8 January 2019. It passed within 0.04 lunar distances or 15,000 kilometers of the center of the Earth, 8600\u00a0km from the surface. It was discovered by the Mt. Lemmon Survey 9 hours after closest approach. It is estimated to be about 1\u20132 metres (3\u20137 feet) in diameter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [8, 8], "content_span": [9, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287040-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AS5\nAs of July\u00a02019, it is the closest approach of a non-impacting asteroid in 2019. 2019 MO impacted Earth on 22 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [8, 8], "content_span": [9, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287041-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ASB Classic\nThe 2019 Auckland Open (sponsored by ASB Bank) was a joint ATP and WTA tennis tournament, played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 34th edition of the women's event, and the 43rd edition of the men's event. It took place at the ASB Tennis Centre in Auckland, New Zealand, from 31 December 2018 to 6 January 2019 for the women, and from 7 to 12 January 2019 for the men.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287041-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ASB Classic, Points and prize money, Prize money\n1 Qualifiers' prize money is also the Round of 32 prize money* per team", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 53], "content_span": [54, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287041-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ASB Classic, 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-00287041-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ASB Classic, 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-00287041-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ASB Classic, 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-00287041-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 ASB Classic, WTA 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-00287042-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ASB Classic \u2013 Men's Doubles\nOliver Marach and Mate Pavi\u0107 were the defending champions, but lost to Ben McLachlan and Jan-Lennard Struff in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287042-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ASB Classic \u2013 Men's Doubles\nMcLachlan and Struff went on to win the title, defeating Raven Klaasen and Michael Venus in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287043-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ASB Classic \u2013 Men's Singles\nRoberto Bautista Agut was the defending champion, but withdrew before the tournament began.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287043-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ASB Classic \u2013 Men's Singles\nTennys Sandgren won his first title on the ATP Tour, defeating Cameron Norrie in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287043-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ASB Classic \u2013 Men's Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287044-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ASB Classic \u2013 Women's Doubles\nSara Errani and Bibiane Schoofs were the defending champions, but Errani was unable to participate due to her doping suspension. Schoofs played alongside Desirae Krawczyk, but lost in the first round to Han Xinyun and Darija Jurak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287044-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ASB Classic \u2013 Women's Doubles\nEugenie Bouchard and Sofia Kenin won the title, defeating Paige Mary Hourigan and Taylor Townsend in the final, 1\u20136, 6\u20131, [10\u20137].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287045-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ASB Classic \u2013 Women's Singles\nJulia G\u00f6rges successfully defended her title, defeating Bianca Andreescu in the final, 2\u20136, 7\u20135, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287045-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ASB Classic \u2013 Women's Singles\nThis was the first time since 2006 that no New Zealand player was in the main draw, with all three wildcards being given to Americans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287046-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ASEAN Grand Prix\nThe 2019 ASEAN Grand Prix is the inaugural edition of the ASEAN Grand Prix, a new annual international women's volleyball tournament which is contested by 4 national teams that are the members of the Southeast Asian Zonal Volleyball Association (SEAZVA), the sport's regional governing body affiliated to Asian Volleyball Confederation (AVC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287046-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ASEAN Grand Prix\nThe first leg was held in Thailand on September while the second leg was held in the Philippines on October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287046-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ASEAN Grand Prix, Teams\nFour national teams featured in the 2019 ASEAN Grand Prix. Indonesia was decided not to participate in the second leg, and a selection team from the Philippine Super Liga planned to replace. However, Indonesia decided to participate in the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287046-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ASEAN Grand Prix, Venues\nThe first leg was played at the Terminal 21 Korat, Nakhon Ratchasima, Thailand, and the second leg was played at the Santa Rosa Sports Complex, Santa Rosa, Laguna, Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287047-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ASEAN Grand Prix \u2013 First Leg\nThe 2019 ASEAN Grand Prix \u2013 First Leg was the first tournament of the 2019 ASEAN Grand Prix, an annual series of international women's volleyball tournaments contested by 4 national teams that are the members of the Southeast Asian Zonal Volleyball Association (SEAZVA), the sport's regional governing body affiliated to Asian Volleyball Confederation (AVC). Games were played at the Terminal 21 Korat, Nakhon Ratchasima, Thailand", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287047-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ASEAN Grand Prix \u2013 First Leg, Teams\nFour national teams featured in the 2019 ASEAN Grand Prix \u2013 First Leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287047-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ASEAN Grand Prix \u2013 First Leg, Venue\nThe list of host city and venue was announced on September 20\u201322, 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287047-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ASEAN Grand Prix \u2013 First Leg, League results, Final standings\nTeam roster\u00a0:Piyanut Pannoy, Pornpun Guedpard, Thatdao Nuekjang, Pleumjit Thinkaow, Onuma Sittirak, Watchareeya Nuanjam, Wanitchaya Luangtonglang, Wilavan Apinyapong, Malika Kanthong, Pimpichaya Kokram, Chatchu-on Moksri, Kullapa Piampongsan, Tichakorn Boonlert, Tikamporn Changkeaw ,. Head Coach: Danai Sriwatcharamethakul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287048-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ASEAN Grand Prix \u2013 First Leg squads\nThese are the official line ups for the 2019 ASEAN Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287048-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ASEAN Grand Prix \u2013 First Leg squads, First Leg, Indonesia\nThe following is the Indonesian roster in the 2019 ASEAN Grand Prix - First Leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287048-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ASEAN Grand Prix \u2013 First Leg squads, First Leg, Philippines\nThe following is the Filipino roster in the 2019 ASEAN Grand Prix - First Leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287048-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ASEAN Grand Prix \u2013 First Leg squads, First Leg, Thailand\nThe following is the Thai roster in the 2019 ASEAN Grand Prix - First Leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287048-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ASEAN Grand Prix \u2013 First Leg squads, First Leg, Vietnam\nThe following 14 players of Vietnam in the 2019 ASEAN Grand Prix - First Leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287049-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ASEAN Grand Prix \u2013 Second Leg\nThe 2019 ASEAN Grand Prix - Second Leg is the second tournament of the 2019 ASEAN Grand Prix, an annual series of international women's volleyball tournaments contested by 4 national teams that are the members of the Southeast Asian Zonal Volleyball Association (SEAZVA), the sport's regional governing body affiliated to Asian Volleyball Confederation (AVC). Games are set to be played at Santa Rosa, Laguna, Philippines from 4 to 6 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287049-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ASEAN Grand Prix \u2013 Second Leg, Teams\nFour national teams featured in the 2019 ASEAN Grand Prix - First Leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287049-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ASEAN Grand Prix \u2013 Second Leg, League results, Final standings\nTeam roster: Piyanut Pannoy, Pornpun Guedpard, Pleumjit Thinkaow, Onuma Sittirak, Watchareeya Nuanjam, Wanitchaya Luangtonglang, Wilavan Apinyapong, Chitaporn Kamlangmak, Malika Kanthong, Pimpichaya Kokram, Chatchu-on Moksri, Supattra Pairoj, Kullapa Piampongsan, Tichakorn Boonlert,. Head Coach: Danai Sriwatcharamethakul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287050-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ASUN Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2019 ASUN Conference Baseball Tournament was held at Melching Field at Conrad Park, home field of the Stetson Hatters baseball team in DeLand, Florida from May 22 through 25. The winner of the tournament, Liberty, claimed the ASUN Conference's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287050-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ASUN Conference Baseball Tournament, Format and seeding\nThe 2019 tournament was a double-elimination tournament in which the top six conference members participated. Seeds were determined based on conference winning percentage from the round-robin regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287051-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ASUN Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 ASUN Men's Basketball Tournament was the conference postseason tournament for the ASUN Conference. The tournament was the 40th year the league has conducted a postseason tournament. The tournament was held March 4, 7, and 10, 2019 at campus sites of the higher seeds. Liberty upset top-seeded Lipscomb 74\u201368 in the championship game to win the tournament, and the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287051-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ASUN Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nBecause North Alabama is in the first year of a four-year transition from NCAA Division II to Division I, it will not be eligible to compete in either the NCAA Tournament or the NCAA-operated NIT. Should the Lions win the ASUN tournament final, the ASUN's automatic NCAA Tournament bid goes either to Lipscomb or to Liberty if Liberty advances further than Lipscomb in the A-Sun tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287052-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ASUN Men's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2019 ASUN Men's Soccer Tournament, the 41st edition of the ASUN Men's Soccer Tournament, determined the ASUN Conference's automatic berth for the 2019 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament. The tournament began on November 8 and concluded on November 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287052-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ASUN Men's Soccer Tournament\nNJIT, the ASUN regular season champion, won the tournament for the first and only time in program history; the Highlanders would join the America East Conference on July 1, 2020. They defeated Florida Gulf Coast in the finals, 2\u20131. NJIT earned their first-ever berth to the NCAA Tournament, where they were defeated in the first round by Providence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287052-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ASUN Men's Soccer Tournament, All Tournament Team\nRegsan Watkins, NJITShak Adams, FGCUThomas Delplace, FGCUO'Vonte Mullings, FGCUIvan Rosales, FGCUNoah Gulden, LipscombBen Locke, LipscombAlejandro Rabell, NJITThomas Radon, NJITRene White, NJITSebastian Chalbaud, Stetson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287053-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ASUN Women's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 ASUN Women's Basketball Tournament was the 33re edition of the ASUN Conference championship. It took place from March 8, 13 and 17, 2019 in several arenas at campus sites. Florida Gulf Coast won the conference tournament championship game over Liberty, 72\u201349.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287053-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ASUN Women's Basketball Tournament, Format\nThe ASUN Championship is a three-day single-elimination tournament. Eight teams will compete in the championship, with the higher seeded team in each matchup hosting the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287054-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ASUN Women's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2019 ASUN Women's Soccer Tournament was the postseason women's soccer tournament for the ASUN Conference held from November 1 through November 9, 2019. The first round of the tournament was hosted at the first and second seed's home stadium. Then the remaining rounds of the tournament were hosted by the higher seed. The six-team single-elimination tournament consisted of three rounds based on seeding from regular season conference play. The Lipscomb Bison were the defending tournament champions, and successfully defended their crown, defeating Florida Gulf Coast in the final. It was the second consecutive title, and second title in program history for Lipscomb and coach Kevin O'Brien.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287055-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AT&T strike\nThe 2019 AT&T strike was a labor strike involving about 20,000 employees of AT&T in the Southern United States. Members of the Communications Workers of America (CWA) went on strike from August 24 to August 28, following the failure to agree to new employment contracts. Following several days of protest across nine states, the strike ended with a tentative deal reached between CWA and AT&T.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287055-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 AT&T strike, Background\nOn August 3, 2019, employment contracts between 20,000 members of the Communications Workers of America (CWA) and AT&T Southeast were set to expire. These workers primarily consisted of customer service representatives and technicians from AT&T's wired phone and Internet division. Leading up to this, discussions between the two parties regarding future contract agreements were proving to be unfruitful, and leading up to the expirations the CWA began to prepare for the possibility of a labor strike. The previous month, members of the CWA voted to authorize a strike if an agreement regarding contracts could not be made.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287055-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 AT&T strike, Background\nOn August 3, hundreds of telecommunications workers held a rally outside AT&T Midtown Center (AT&T Southeast's headquarters) in Atlanta. On August 10, the workers began to work without a contract. A meeting on August 20 between AT&T and union officials again proved fruitless, with the union alleging that proposals by the company would have reduced paid sick time, among other unwanted effects.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287055-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 AT&T strike, Course of the strike\nOn August 23, the CWA announced a strike that would begin at midnight. They also filed a charge with the National Labor Relations Board alleging that AT&T was not bargaining \"in good faith\" and that they had failed to send proper representatives to contract discussions. A day prior on August 21, CWA locals 3120, 3121 and 3122 went on a Unfair labor practice protest in South Florida and walked out over issues associated with violations of the National Labor Relations Act]]. However, these actions were unrelated to and did not prompt the mass strike the following day. In total, the strike involved workers in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287055-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 AT&T strike, Course of the strike\nOn August 25, Senator and 2020 Democratic Party Presidential candidate Bernie Sanders met with strikers in Louisville, Kentucky ahead of one of his campaign rallies. On August 28, following an agreement between CWA and AT&T, CWA announced the strike had ended and workers could return to their jobs that day. As part of the agreement, the two parties agreed to a 5-year contract that included increases in wages and enhancements for workers' 401(k) and pensions. In general, the agreement was considered to be favorable to the labor union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287056-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Challenger China International \u2013 Nanchang\nThe 2019 ATP Challenger China International \u2013 Nanchang was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the fifth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Nanchang, China between 22 and 28 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287056-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Challenger China International \u2013 Nanchang, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 94], "content_span": [95, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287056-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Challenger China International \u2013 Nanchang, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as alternates:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 94], "content_span": [95, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287056-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Challenger China International \u2013 Nanchang, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 94], "content_span": [95, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287057-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Challenger China International \u2013 Nanchang \u2013 Doubles\nGong Maoxin and Zhang Ze were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287057-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Challenger China International \u2013 Nanchang \u2013 Doubles\nSander Arends and Tristan-Samuel Weissborn won the title after defeating Alex Bolt and Akira Santillan 6\u20132, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287058-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Challenger China International \u2013 Nanchang \u2013 Singles\nQuentin Halys was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287058-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Challenger China International \u2013 Nanchang \u2013 Singles\nAndrej Martin won the title after defeating Jordan Thompson 6\u20134, 1\u20136, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287059-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Challenger Tour\nThe Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) Challenger Tour in 2019 was the secondary professional tennis circuit organized by the ATP. The 2019 ATP Challenger Tour calendar had 158 tournaments scheduled, with prize money ranging from $54,160 up to $162,480. It was the 42nd edition of challenger tournaments cycle, and 11th under the name of Challenger Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287059-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Challenger Tour, Schedule\nThis was the complete schedule of events on the 2019 calendar, with player progression documented from the quarterfinals stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287059-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287059-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287060-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals\nThe 2019 ATP Finals (also known as the 2019 Nitto ATP Finals for sponsorship reasons) was a men's tennis tournament played at the O2 Arena on indoor hard courts in London, United Kingdom, from 10 to 17 November 2019. It was the season-ending event for the highest-ranked singles players and doubles teams on the 2019 ATP Tour and was the 50th edition of the tournament (45th in doubles). The singles event was won by Stefanos Tsitsipas over Dominic Thiem in three sets. In doubles, Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Mahut defeated Raven Klaasen and Michael Venus in straight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Champions, Doubles\nPierre-Hugues Herbert / Nicolas Mahut def. Raven Klaasen / Michael Venus 6\u20133, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 35], "content_span": [36, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Format\nThe ATP Finals group stage had a round-robin format, with eight players/teams divided into two groups of four and each player/team in a group playing the other three in the group. The eight seeds were determined by the ATP Rankings and ATP Doubles Team Rankings on the Monday after the last ATP Tour tournament of the calendar year. All singles matches, including the final, were best of three sets with tie-breaks in each set including the third. All doubles matches were two sets (no ad) and a Match Tie-break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Format\nIn deciding placement within a group, the following criteria were used, in order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Format\nCriteria 4\u20136 were used only in the event of a three-way tie; if one of these criteria decided a winner or loser among the three, the remaining two would have been ranked by head-to-head result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Format\nThe top two of each group advanced to semifinals, with the winner of each group playing the runner-up of the other group. The winners of the semifinals then played for the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualification, Singles\nEight players competed at the tournament, with two named alternates. Players received places in the following order of precedence:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualification, Singles\nIn the event of this totaling more than 8 players, those lower down in the selection order become the alternates. If further alternates are needed, these players are selected by the ATP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualification, Singles\nProvisional rankings were published weekly as the ATP Race to London, coinciding with the 52-week rolling ATP rankings on the date of selection. Points were accumulated in Grand Slam, ATP Tour, ATP Challenger Tour and ITF Futures tournaments from the 52 weeks prior to the selection date, with points from the previous years Tour Finals excluded. Players accrued points across 18 tournaments, usually made up of:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualification, Singles\nAll players must include the ranking points for mandatory Masters tournaments for which they are on the original acceptance list and for all Grand Slams for which they would be eligible, even if they do not compete (in which case they receive zero points).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualification, Singles\nFurthermore, players who finished 2018 in the world's top 30 are commitment players who must (if not injured) include points for the 8 mandatory Masters tournament regardless of whether they enter, and who must compete in at least 4 ATP 500 tournaments (though the Monte Carlo Masters may count to this total), of which one must take place after the US Open. Zero point scores may also be taken from withdrawals by non-injured players from ATP 500 tournaments according to certain other conditions outlined by the ATP. Beyond these rules, however, a player may substitute his next best tournament result for missed Masters and Grand Slam tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualification, Singles\nPlayers may have their ATP Tour Masters 1000 commitment reduced by one tournament, by reaching each of the following milestones:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualification, Singles\nIf a player satisfies all three of these conditions, their mandatory ATP Tour Masters 1000 commitment is dropped entirely. Players must be in good standing as defined by the ATP as to avail of the reduced commitment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualification, Doubles\nEight teams compete at the tournament, with one named alternates. The eight competing teams receive places according to the same order of precedence as in Singles. The named alternate will be offered first to any unaccepted teams in the selection order, then to the highest ranked unaccepted team, and then to a team selected by the ATP. Points are accumulated in the same competitions as for the Singles tournament. However, for Doubles teams there are no commitment tournaments, so teams are ranked according to their 18 highest points scoring results from any tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nOn 10 July, Rafael Nadal became the first qualifier to the event, qualifying for the 15th time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nRafael Nadal began his season at the Australian Open and got through the final without dropping a set, However, he lost to Novak Djokovic in the final in straight sets. He then competed in the Mexican Open but was upset by Nick Kyrgios in the second round after losing two tiebreak sets after claiming the first set. At the Indian Wells Masters, he withdrew prior to his semifinal match against Roger Federer due to a knee injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0014-0001", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nHe began his clay court season being the 3-time defending champion at the Monte-Carlo Masters and Barcelona Open but lost to Fabio Fognini and Dominic Thiem in the semifinals, respectively. He then lost his fourth semifinal in a row at the Madrid Open, this time to Stefanos Tsitsipas. He won his first title of the year at the Italian Open defeating Novak Djokovic in the final in three sets. At the French Open, he won his 12th Roland Garros title defeating Dominic Thiem in the final in four sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nAt Wimbledon, he reached his 6th slam semifinal in a row but lost to Federer in four sets. He then claimed his third title of the year at the Rogers Cup defeating Daniil Medvedev in the final dropping only 3 games in the match. He claimed his 19th slam title at the US Open once again defeating Medvedev in the final but this time, he was pushed to a deciding set. At the Laver Cup, he won his singles match against Milos Raonic and then pulled out, citing a hand injury. Team Europe won the event. He then played at the Paris Masters and withdrew prior to the semifinal encounter against Denis Shapovalov. Despite the loss, he returned to the number 1 ranking for the first time in a year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nNovak Djokovic started his 2019 at the Qatar Open but lost in the semifinals losing to Roberto Bautista Agut. At the Australian Open, he won his 15th slam title defeating Rafael Nadal in the final in straight sets. At the Sunshine Double, Djokovic's results were mediocre, losing in the third round of the Indian Wells Masters to Philipp Kohlschreiber and in the fourth round of the Miami Open once again to Bautista Agut. His results continued to be mediocre at the Monte-Carlo Masters losing in the quarterfinals to Medvedev.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nHe bounced back at the Madrid Open when he claimed the title defeating Tsitsipas in the final. He continued his good form at the Italian Open, reaching the final but losing to Nadal in three sets. At the French Open, he reached his 10th consecutive quarterfinal and he then reached the semifinal where his 26-match slam win streak and his quest for his 4th consecutive slam ended when he lost to Thiem.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nAt Wimbledon, he won his sixteenth Grand Slam, defending his title to win the tournament for a fifth time by defeating Federer in an epic five set final that lasted four hours and fifty seven minutes, the longest in Wimbledon history. Djokovic saved two championship points and the match also marked the first time a fifth set tiebreak was played in the men's singles of Wimbledon at 12 games all. Djokovic then played at the Cincinnati Masters as the defending champion and reached the semifinal where he lost to eventual champion Medvedev in three sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0017-0001", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nAt the US Open, Djokovic was unable to defend his title, falling to Stan Wawrinka in the fourth round, while down two sets and a break before retiring due to injury. Djokovic then won the Japan Open where he defeated John Millman in straight sets in the final. At the Shanghai Masters, Djokovic reached the quarterfinal stage, but lost to Tsitsipas in three sets. Djokovic reached the final of the Paris Masters, where he claimed his fifth title there after a straight set win over Canadian Shapovalov.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nRoger Federer opened his campaign by retaining the Hopman Cup alongside Belinda Bencic, becoming the first player to win the mixed-gender event three times. Federer was seeded third at the Australian Open, entering as the two-time defending champion and reached the fourth round, where he faced 14th seed Stefanos Tsitsipas. In a stunning upset, Tsitsipas defeated Federer in four close sets. Critically, Federer was unable to convert any of the twelve break points he held throughout the match, including four set points in the second set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0018-0001", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nAt the Dubai Tennis Championships, Federer won his 100th career singles title, beating Tsitsipas in straight sets in the final. Federer then reached the final of the Indian Wells Masters where he lost to Thiem in three sets. He then defeated John Isner at the Miami Open in straights sets to win his 4th Miami Open title and 28th Masters 1000 title. Federer then played his first clay court tournament in three years at the Madrid Masters but lost in the quarterfinals to Thiem, despite having two match points. At the Italian Open, he reached the quarterfinals but was forced to withdraw due to a right leg injury. Federer next played at the French Open for the first time in 4 years and reached the semifinals, where he lost to 11-time champion Rafael Nadal in straight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 821]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nFederer then began his grass court season at the Halle Open where he won his tenth title at the event, defeating David Goffin in the final in straight sets. At the Wimbledon Championships, Roger Federer reached his record 12th final at the tournament after ousting Nadal in four sets in the semifinal. Federer then faced Novak Djokovic in the final, against whom he lost in a five set thriller lasting four hours and fifty seven minutes, despite having two championship points on serve in the fifth set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0019-0001", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nThe match also marked the first time a fifth set tiebreaker was played at 12 games all in the men's singles and was the longest men's singles final in Wimbledon history. At the Cincinnati Masters, he reached the third round where he lost in straight sets to Andrey Rublev. At the US Open, he was seeded third. He faced Grigor Dimitrov in the quarterfinals but lost the match in five sets. At the Laver Cup, Federer won both of his singles matches against Nick Kyrgios and John Isner. Team Europe won the event. At the Shanghai Masters, he lost in the quarterfinals to Alexander Zverev in three sets. Federer advanced to the Swiss Indoors as the two-time defending champion. He defeated Alex de Minaur in straight sets for a tenth Swiss Indoors and a 103rd overall ATP singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 826]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nOn 3 September, Daniil Medvedev sealed qualification to the tour finals for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nDaniil Medvedev started the 2019 season strongly by reaching the final of the Brisbane International, where he lost to Kei Nishikori. At the Australian Open, he reached the fourth round for the first time, where he was defeated by eventual champion Djokovic in four sets. He then helped his country qualify for the Davis Cup Finals by defeating Henri Laaksonen. Medvedev won his fourth ATP title at the Sofia Open beating M\u00e1rton Fucsovics in the final in straight sets. [ 19] The following week, Medvedev lost in the semifinals of the Rotterdam Open against Ga\u00ebl Monfils.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0021-0001", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nAt the Dubai Tennis Championships, he was upset in the first round by Ri\u010dardas Berankis. At the Sunshine Double, he lost in the third round to Filip Krajinovi\u0107 at the Indian Wells Masters and the fourth round to Federer at the Miami Masters. Medvedev entered the Monte Carlo Masters, his run ended in the semifinals against Du\u0161an Lajovi\u0107 in straight sets. At the Barcelona Open, Medvedev reached the final, where he was defeated by Thiem in straight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0021-0002", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nHe then lost his first match in his next four tournaments: in the Madrid Open to Guido Pella, the Italian Open to Nick Kyrgios, the French Open to Pierre-Hugues Herbert and the Stuttgart Open to Lucas Pouille. He ended his streak at the Queen's Club Championships, reaching the semifinals where he lost to Gilles Simon. Medvedev made his top 10 debut after reaching the third round of Wimbledon, losing to David Goffin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nThe North American hard-court swing proved to be another turning point in Medevdev's career, as he reached four tournament finals (in Washington, Montreal, Cincinnati and New York City), becoming only the third man in tennis history to do so (after Ivan Lendl and Andre Agassi). Medvedev started the swing by reaching the final of the Citi Open, where he was defeated by Kyrgios. He followed this up with a strong performance at the Rogers Cup, reaching his first Masters final, where he was defeated by Nadal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0022-0001", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nMedvedev would reach a second consecutive Masters final at the Cincinnati Open, where he defeated Goffin in straight sets for his first Masters title. Medvedev entered the US Open, where he reached his first Grand Slam final after beating former world No. 3 Grigor Dimitrov in the semifinals in straight sets. In the final, Medvedev was defeated by Nadal in five sets. Medvedev followed up his success by winning the St. Petersburg Open by defeating Borna \u0106ori\u0107 in the final. Medvedev then won a second consecutive title at the Shanghai Masters, defeating Alexander Zverev in final. His 6 final streak ended at the Paris Masters when he lost to J\u00e9r\u00e9my Chardy in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nOn 5 October, Dominic Thiem secured his place at the season finale for the fourth consecutive year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nDominic Thiem began his season at the Qatar Open, but was upset in the first round by Pierre-Hugues Herbert. At the Australian Open, he was on the other end of a shock loss to Alexei Popyrin in the second round (by retirement). He failed to defend his title at the Argentina Open losing to Diego Schwartzman in the semifinals and was knocked out of the Rio Open by Laslo \u0110ere in the first round. At the Indian Wells Masters, he reached the final, where he defeated Roger Federer in three sets to claim his first ATP Masters 1000 title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0024-0001", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nHowever, the following week he was upset by Hubert Hurkacz in the second round of the Miami Masters. After a slow start to the clay-court swing at the Rolex Monte Carlo Masters where he lost to eventual finalist Lajovi\u0107 in the third round, Thiem went to the Barcelona Open, where he captured his third career ATP 500 title defeating Russian Medvedev in the final. He then competed at the Madrid Open, where he reached the semifinals before losing to Djokovic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0024-0002", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nAt the Italian Open, he faced Fernando Verdasco in the second round and lost, which meant he still stayed winless against the Spaniard in 4 encounters. At the French Open, he reached his fourth consecutive semifinal at the tournament. Thiem defeated Djokovic in five sets, advancing to his second major final. In the final, he again faced Nadal and lost in four sets. At the Wimbledon Championships, Thiem lost in the first round to Sam Querrey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nThiem played at the Hamburg Open as the top seed, losing in the quarterfinals to Andrey Rublev. The following week he won the 14th title of his career at the Austrian Open defeating Albert Ramos Vi\u00f1olas in straight sets in the final. At the Rogers Cup, he reached the quarterfinals before losing to Medvedev. He then competed at the US Open and was upset by Thomas Fabbiano in the first round. In the Davis Cup he won one singles rubber and lost the other as Austria won the tie against Finland 3\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0025-0001", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nAt the Laver Cup, he won against Denis Shapovalov, but lost to Taylor Fritz. Team Europe won the event. At the China Open, Thiem defeated Stefanos Tsitsipas to win his first title in Asia. At the Shanghai Masters Thiem reached the quarterfinals before being bested by Matteo Berrettini. Thiem triumphed over Schwartzman to claim the Vienna Open trophy for the first time in nine attempts. At the Paris Masters, he lost to Dimitrov in the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nOn 11 October, Stefanos Tsitsipas qualified for the first time to the Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nStefanos Tsitsipas began the season at the Hopman Cup alongside Maria Sakkari, but lost during the round robin stage. At the Sydney International, he lost in the quarterfinals to Andreas Seppi. At the Australian Open, Tsitsipas reached his first major semifinal, despite only having won five Grand Slam singles matches in total the previous year, where he lost to Nadal. He then reached the quarterfinals of the Sofia Open where he lost to Monfils and was upset in the first round of the Rotterdam Open by Damir D\u017eumhur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0027-0001", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nHe then reached back-to-back finals, won his second career title at the Open 13 over Mikhail Kukushkin but lost in the final of the Dubai Tennis Championships to Federer. At the Sunshine Double, he lost early in both events to Canadians, in the second round of the Indian Wells Masters to F\u00e9lix Auger-Aliassime and the fourth round of the Miami Masters to Shapovalov. He began the clay season with back-to-back 3rd round losses at the Monte Carlo Masters to Medvedev and to Jan-Lennard Struff at the Barcelona Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nHe won his first career clay court title at the Estoril Open after defeating Pablo Cuevas in the final. He reached a second successive clay court final at the Madrid Open, only to lose to Djokovic, after defeating Nadal in the semifinals. He reached the semifinals at the Italian Open, but this time he lost to Nadal in straight sets. As the 6th seed, Tsitsipas reached the fourth round at the French Open before losing to Stan Wawrinka in a 5 set thriller lasting over 5 hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0028-0001", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nHe struggled during the grass season losing in the second round of the Rosmalen Grass Court Championships to Nicol\u00e1s Jarry, quarterfinals of the Queen's Club Championships to Auger-Aliassime and the first round of the Wimbledon Championships to Thomas Fabbiano. He then competed at the Citi Open, where he lost to Kyrgios in the semifinals in a third set tiebreak. However, his poor form continued with losses in his first matches at the Rogers Cup, Cincinnati Masters and US Open to Hurkacz, Struff and Rublev respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0028-0002", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nIn the Davis Cup, he won all four of his singles matches as Greece finished second in their group and won the 3rd place play-off against Latvia. At the Laver Cup, he won his singles match against Taylor Fritz. He continued his losing streak in ATP matches at the Zhuhai Championships retiring in his second round match against Adrian Mannarino. He broke his slump at the China Open, reaching the final where he lost to Dominic Thiem in 3 sets. At the Shanghai Masters, Tsitsipas lost to Medvedev in straight sets in the semifinals. In the European indoor season, he reached the semifinals at the Swiss Indoors, losing to Federer and the quarterfinals of the Paris Masters losing to Djokovic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nOn 30 October, the defending champion Alexander Zverev qualified to the tour finals for the third consecutive year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nAlexander Zverev opened his 2019 season at the Hopman Cup, playing with Angelique Kerber. They once again reached the final and lost to Switzerland. At the Australian Open, he lost to Milos Raonic in straight sets in the fourth round. He then played in the Davis Cup qualifiers, winning both of his singles matches as Germany defeated Hungary. Zverev next played at the Mexican Open and finished runner-up to Kyrgios.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0030-0001", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nHe then failed to win back-to-back matches in his next six events losing in the third round of the Indian Wells Masters to Struff, the second round of the Miami Open to David Ferrer, the second round of the Grand Prix Hassan II to Jaume Munar, the third round of the Monte-Carlo Masters to Fognini, the second round of the Barcelona Open to Jarry and the quarterfinals of the BMW Open to Cristian Gar\u00edn. He broke his slump by advancing to the quarterfinals of the Madrid Open, where he lost to Tsitsipas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0030-0002", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nAt the Italian Open, Zverev lost to Matteo Berrettini in the second round. Zverev won his first 2019 title at the Geneva Open, defeating Nicol\u00e1s Jarry in the final after saving two match points. He reached his second consecutive quarterfinal at the French Open, where he lost to Novak Djokovic in straight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nAt the Stuttgart Open, Zverev was upset in three sets by Dustin Brown in the second round. He then reached the quarterfinals of the Halle Open, where he lost to Goffin. At the Wimbledon Championships, he was upset in the first round by Ji\u0159\u00ed Vesel\u00fd. At the Hamburg European Open in his hometown, he reached the semifinals, losing to defending and eventual champion Nikoloz Basilashvili in a third set tiebreak. At the Rogers Cup, he was defeated by Karen Khachanov in the quarterfinals. Zverev then was upset by Miomir Kecmanovi\u0107 in the second round of the Cincinnati Masters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0031-0001", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nAt the US Open, Zverev reached the fourth round and lost to 20th seeded Diego Schwartzman in four sets. At the Laver Cup, he lost to John Isner, but then defeated Milos Raonic. Team Europe won the event. At the China Open, he reached he semifinals before losing to Tsitsipas in two close sets. At the Shanghai Masters, Zverev reached his first Masters final of the season but lost the final to an in-form Daniil Medvedev in straight sets. At the Swiss Indoors, he lost in the first round to Taylor Fritz. He followed it up with a third round loss to Shapovalov at the Paris Masters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nOn 1 November, Matteo Berrettini qualified for the first time to the Finals, to complete the field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nMatteo Berrettini did not begin his year well with a first round loss at the Qatar Open to Bautista Agut. This followed with a second round loss at the Auckland Open to Leonardo Mayer and a first round loss at the Australian Open to Tsitsipas. In the Davis Cup, he beat Prajnesh Gunneswaran as Italy won the tie against India. He then reached the semifinals of the Sofia Open, where he fell to M\u00e1rton Fucsovics but lost to Rublev in the second round of the Open 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0033-0001", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nThis was followed wth first round losses at the Dubai Tennis Championships to Denis Kudla and at the Indian Wells Masters to Querrey. He then competed at a Challenger event, the Arizona Tennis Classic and won the title over Mikhail Kukushkin. However, his losing streak at ATP events continued with first round losses to Hurkacz at the Miami Open and to Dimitrov at the Monte Carlo Masters. At the Hungarian Open, Berrettini won his second ATP singles title, beating Filip Krajinovi\u0107 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0033-0002", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nBerrettini continued his form into the following week as he reached the final at the BMW Open, but lost to Cristian Gar\u00edn in a third set tie-breaker. At the Italian Open, Berrettini lost to Schwartzman in the third round. At the French Open, he lost in the second round to Casper Ruud.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nHe then claimed his third singles title at the Stuttgart Open, defeating F\u00e9lix Auger-Aliassime in the final. During the tournament, Berrettini didn't lose a service game, thereby becoming only the fifth man since 1999 to win two tournaments without dropping serve. The following week, Berrettini reached his first ATP 500 semifinal at the Halle Open where he was defeated by David Goffin. At the Wimbledon Championships, Berrettini lost to Federer in the fourth round. His next event were the Cincinnati Masters but lost in the first round to Juan Ignacio Londero.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0034-0001", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nAt the US Open, Berrettini managed to reach his first major quarterfinal. In the quarterfinals, he beat Ga\u00ebl Monfils in a fifth set tiebreak to become the first Italian man to reach the US Open semifinals since 1977. Berrettini's run ended in the semifinals against Rafael Nadal in straight sets after he was unable to capitalize on two set points in the opening set tiebreaker. At the St. Petersburg Open, he reached the quarterfinals losing to Egor Gerasimov. At the China Open, he was upset by a returning Andy Murray in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0034-0002", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nHe achieved his best Masters result yet at the Shanghai Masters by reaching the semifinals, losing to Zverev. He then reached the semifinals of the Vienna Open losing to Thiem. At the Paris Masters he was on the receiving end of an upset, when he lost to Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Doubles\nOn 16 August, the Colombian pairing of Juan Sebasti\u00e1n Cabal and Robert Farah became the first qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Qualified players, Doubles\nOn 11 October, \u0141ukasz Kubot and Marcelo Melo qualified for the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Points breakdown, Singles\n\u2020 Mandatory zero-point penalty for Top 30 commitment player who did not play four ATP Tour 500 events during the year, or at least one such event after the US Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 42], "content_span": [43, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287060-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals, Head-to-head\nBelow are the head-to-head records as they approached the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287061-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals \u2013 Doubles\nMike Bryan and Jack Sock were the defending champions, but Sock did not qualify this year. Bryan qualified alongside his brother Bob, but they withdrew before the tournament began.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287061-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals \u2013 Doubles\nPierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Mahut won the title, defeating Raven Klaasen and Michael Venus in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287061-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals \u2013 Doubles, Draw, Group Jonas Bj\u00f6rkman\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-players-ties, head-to-head results; 4) In three-players-ties, percentage of sets won, then head-to-head result (if two players tied in percentage of sets won and third one is \"different\") or percentage of games won if all three players have same percentage of sets won, then head-to-head results; 5) ATP rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287062-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals \u2013 Singles\nStefanos Tsitsipas defeated Dominic Thiem in the final, 6\u20137(6\u20138), 6\u20132, 7\u20136(7\u20134) to win the Singles title at the 2019 ATP Finals. Tsitsipas was making his debut at the event, alongside Daniil Medvedev and Matteo Berrettini. It was the first instance since 2005, and only the fourth instance overall, that the ATP Finals champion was determined via a final set tiebreak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287062-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals \u2013 Singles\nAlexander Zverev was the defending champion, but lost to Thiem in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287062-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals \u2013 Singles\nRafael Nadal secured the year-end No. 1 singles ranking for the fifth time after Novak Djokovic was eliminated during the round robin stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287062-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Finals \u2013 Singles, Draw, Group Bj\u00f6rn Borg\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-players-ties, head-to-head results; 4) In three-players-ties, percentage of sets won, then head-to-head result (if two players tied in percentage of sets won and third one is \"different\") or percentage of games won if all three players have same percentage of sets won, then head-to-head results; 5) ATP rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287063-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Lyon Open\nThe 2019 Lyon Open (also known as the Open Parc Auvergne-Rh\u00f4ne-Alpes Lyon) was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the third edition of the Lyon Open and part of the ATP Tour 250 series of the 2019 ATP Tour. It took place in the city of Lyon, France, from 19 May through 25 May 2019. Unseeded Beno\u00eet Paire won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287063-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Lyon 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-00287063-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Lyon Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry using a protected ranking into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287063-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Lyon 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-00287064-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Lyon Open \u2013 Doubles\nNick Kyrgios and Jack Sock were the defending champions, but chose not to participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287064-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Lyon Open \u2013 Doubles\nIvan Dodig and \u00c9douard Roger-Vasselin won the title, defeating Ken and Neal Skupski in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287065-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Lyon Open \u2013 Singles\nDominic Thiem was the defending champion, but he chose not to defend his title this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287065-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Lyon Open \u2013 Singles\nBeno\u00eet Paire won the title, defeating F\u00e9lix Auger-Aliassime in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287065-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Lyon Open \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-00287066-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Tour\nThe 2019 ATP Tour was the global elite men's professional tennis circuit organised by the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) for the 2019 tennis season. The 2019 ATP Tour calendar comprised the Grand Slam tournaments (supervised by the International Tennis Federation (ITF)), the ATP Tour Masters 1000, the ATP Finals, the ATP Tour 500 series, the ATP Tour 250 series and Davis Cup (organised by the ITF). Also included in the 2019 calendar were the Hopman Cup, the Laver Cup and the Next Gen ATP Finals which do not distribute ranking points. For the Masters series events the ATP introduced a shot clock. Players had a minute to come on court, 5 minutes to warmup, and then a minute to commence play, as well as 25 seconds between points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287066-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Tour, Schedule\nThis was the complete schedule of events on the 2019 calendar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 23], "content_span": [24, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287066-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP 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 2019 ATP Tour: the Grand Slam tournaments, the ATP Finals, the ATP Tour Masters 1000, the ATP Tour 500 series, and the ATP Tour 250 series. The players/nations are sorted by:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 38], "content_span": [39, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287066-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Tour, Statistical information, Titles information\nThe following players won their first main circuit title in singles, doubles or mixed doubles:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 58], "content_span": [59, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287066-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Tour, Statistical information, Titles information\nThe following players defended a main circuit title in singles, doubles, or mixed doubles:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 58], "content_span": [59, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287066-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Tour, Statistical information, Best ranking\nThe following players achieved a career-high ranking this season in the top 50 (bold indicates players who entered the top 10 for the first time):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 52], "content_span": [53, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287066-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Tour, ATP ranking\nThese are the ATP Rankings and yearly ATP Race Rankings of the top 20 singles players, doubles players and doubles teams at the current date of the 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 26], "content_span": [27, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287066-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Tour, Prize money leaders\nPrize money given in US$ as of November 25, 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 35], "content_span": [36, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287066-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Tour, Retirements\nFollowing is a list of notable players (winners of a main tour title, and/or part of the ATP Rankings top 100 [singles] or top 100 [doubles] for at least one week) who returned from retirement, announced their retirement from professional tennis, became inactive (after not playing for more than 52 weeks), or were permanently banned from playing, during the 2019 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 26], "content_span": [27, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287066-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Tour, Comebacks\nFollowing are notable players who came back after retirements during the 2019 ATP Tour season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 24], "content_span": [25, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287067-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ATP Tour Masters 1000\nThe thirtieth edition of the ATP Masters Series. The champion of each Masters event is awarded a 1,000 rankings points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287068-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Abancay landslide\nA landslide on 27 January 2019 in Abancay, Peru, killed at least 15 people and injured 34 more when it destroyed part of a hotel during a wedding celebration. The celebration at the Alhambra Hotel was attended by 100 people at the time of the landslide, which caused the building to collapse. The landslide was triggered by heavy rains from earlier in the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287069-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Abia State gubernatorial election\nThe 2019 Abia State gubernatorial election occurred on March 9, 2019. Incumbent PDP Governor Okezie Ikpeazu won re-election for a second term, defeating APC's Uchechukwu Sampson Ogah, and several minor party candidates. The major contenders for the race signed a peace accord agreement in January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287069-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Abia State gubernatorial election\nIkpeazu won in 11 LGAs with a total of 60.26% of popular vote, while Ogah won in four of the state's 17 LGAs with a total of 22.98% of popular vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287069-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Abia State gubernatorial election\nOkezie Ikpeazu emerged unopposed in the PDP gubernatorial primary election. His running mate was Ude Oko Chukwu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287069-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Abia State gubernatorial election\nOf the 32 candidates who aspired for the governorship seat, 30 were male, two were female.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287069-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Abia State gubernatorial election, Electoral system\nThe Governor of Abia State is elected using the plurality voting system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 56], "content_span": [57, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287069-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Abia State gubernatorial election, Primary election, PDP primary\nThe PDP primary election was held on 30 September 2018. Okezie Ikpeazu, the incumbent governor, who was the party sole aspirant, emerged winner with 1,991 delegate votes. The chairperson of the PDP gubernatorial primary elections in Abia State, Chief Raymond Dokpesi, announced there was a total of 2,350 registered delegates from the 17 LGAs of the state, 2,207 used ballots, with 23 invalid votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287069-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Abia State gubernatorial election, Primary election, APC primary\nThe All Progressives Congress (APC) primary election earlier slated to be were held on Sunday 30 September 2018 was rescheduled for Monday 1 October 2018 to be witnessed by the party's National Executive Committee (NEC) coming from Abuja.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287069-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Abia State gubernatorial election, Primary election, APC primary\nHowever, the Dr. Emmanuel Ndukwe faction of state's APC declared Emenike winner of the contest they went ahead to organise on 30 September 2018, in which he was said to have polled 274,133 votes, defeating six other contenders in the contest. But his name, nevertheless, got omitted from the list forward to the INEC by the party's National Working Committee (NWC). Emenike secured an Abuja court injunction which affirmed Emenike as the party's candidate for the upcoming governorship race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287069-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Abia State gubernatorial election, Primary election, APC primary\nThe official primary election was held Tuesday, October 2, 2018, and the results announced at about 3.45 a.m, on Wednesday by the Chairman of the electoral committee, David Iyoha, announcing Uche Ogah, said to have polled 86,875 votes winner ahead of six other aspirants, including: Chief Martins Azubuike with 10,889 votes, Chief Friday Nwosu with 3,529 votes, Chris Akomas with 2,143 votes, Amb. Okey Emuchey with 1,270 votes, Paul Ikonne with 999 votes, and Chief Ikechi Emenike with 455 votes. A total of 106,160 votes were reportedly cast according to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in the state's 184 wards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287069-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Abia State gubernatorial election, Primary election, APC primary\nSubsequently, a court ruling in January 2019 affirmed Ogah as winner of the election instead of Emenike. Ogah picked Martins Azubuike, thereafter, as his running mate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287069-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Abia State gubernatorial election, Results\nA total of 32 candidates registered with the Independent National Electoral Commission to contest in the election. PDP Governor Okezie Ikpeazu won re-election for a second term, defeating APC Uchechukwu Sampson Ogah, and several minor party candidates. Ikpeazu polled 261,127 votes representing 60.26% of total vote cast, and Ogah 99,574 votes representing 22.98%. Both Ogah and Otti rejected this result. Earlier on, Okezie won at the popular opinion polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287069-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Abia State gubernatorial election, Results\nThe total number of registered voters in the state was 1,932,892. Total number of votes cast was 444,376, while total number of valid votes was 433,315. Total rejected votes were 11,061. There we're low voters' turnout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287069-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Abia State gubernatorial election, Results, By local government area\nHere are the results of the election from the local government areas of the state for the two major parties. The total valid votes of 433,315 represents the 32 political parties that participated in the election. Green represents LGAs won by Ikpeazu. Blue represents LGAs won by Ogah. White represents LGAs won by Otti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 73], "content_span": [74, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287070-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Abierto Mexicano Telcel\nThe 2019 Mexican Open was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 26th edition of the men's Mexican Open (19th for the women), and was part of the 2019 ATP Tour and the 2019 WTA Tour. It took place in Acapulco, Mexico between 25 February and 2 March 2019, at the Princess Mundo Imperial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287070-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Abierto Mexicano Telcel, Points and prize money, Prize money\n1 Qualifiers prize money is also the Round of 32 prize money* per team", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 65], "content_span": [66, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287070-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Abierto Mexicano Telcel, ATP doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 76], "content_span": [77, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287070-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Abierto Mexicano Telcel, WTA doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pair received a wildcard into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 76], "content_span": [77, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287071-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Abierto Mexicano Telcel \u2013 Men's Doubles\nJamie Murray and Bruno Soares were the defending champions, but lost in the first round to Robert Lindstedt and Frances Tiafoe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287071-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Abierto Mexicano Telcel \u2013 Men's Doubles\nMischa and Alexander Zverev won the title, defeating Artem Sitak and Austin Krajicek in the final, 2\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20134), [10\u20135].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287072-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Abierto Mexicano Telcel \u2013 Men's Singles\nJuan Mart\u00edn del Potro was the defending champion, but withdrew due to injury after accepting a wildcard before the tournament began.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287072-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Abierto Mexicano Telcel \u2013 Men's Singles\nNick Kyrgios won the title, defeating Alexander Zverev in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134. Kyrgios saved three match points in the third-set tiebreaker of his second round match against Rafael Nadal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287073-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Abierto Mexicano Telcel \u2013 Women's Doubles\nTatjana Maria and Heather Watson were the defending champions, but only Maria chose to defend her title, partnering Christina McHale. The pair lost in the quarterfinals to Cornelia Lister and Renata Vor\u00e1\u010dov\u00e1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287073-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Abierto Mexicano Telcel \u2013 Women's Doubles\nVictoria Azarenka and Zheng Saisai won the title, defeating Desirae Krawczyk and Giuliana Olmos in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287074-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Abierto Mexicano Telcel \u2013 Women's Singles\nLesia Tsurenko was the two-time defending champion, but chose not to defend her title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287074-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Abierto Mexicano Telcel \u2013 Women's Singles\nWang Yafan won her first WTA singles title, defeating Sofia Kenin in the final, 2\u20136, 6\u20133, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287075-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Abierto Zapopan\nThe 2019 Abierto Zapopan was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 1st edition of the tournament and part of the 2019 WTA 125K series, offering a total of $125,000 in prize money. It took place in Guadalajara, Mexico on 11\u201316 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287075-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Abierto Zapopan, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received a wildcard into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287075-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Abierto Zapopan, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the main draw as lucky losers:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287075-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Abierto Zapopan, Doubles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pair received a wildcard into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 54], "content_span": [55, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287076-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Abierto Zapopan \u2013 Doubles\nMaria Sanchez and Fanny Stoll\u00e1r won the title, defeating Cornelia Lister and Renata Vor\u00e1\u010dov\u00e1 in the final, 7\u20135, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287077-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Abierto Zapopan \u2013 Singles\nUnseeded Veronika Kudermetova won the title, defeating Marie Bouzkov\u00e1 6\u20132, 6\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287078-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Abilene Christian Wildcats football team\nThe 2019 Abilene Christian Wildcats football team represents Abilene Christian University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season as a member of the Southland Conference. The Wildcats are led by third-year head coach Adam Dorrel and play their home games at Anthony Field at Wildcat Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287078-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Abilene Christian Wildcats football team, Previous season\nThe Wildcats finished the 2018 season with a 6\u20135 overall record, and a 5\u20134 record in Southland play to finish in a four-way tie for fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287078-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Abilene Christian Wildcats football team, Preseason, Preseason poll\nThe Southland Conference released their preseason poll on July 18, 2019. The Wildcats were picked to finish in seventh place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 72], "content_span": [73, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287078-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Abilene Christian Wildcats football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013Southland Teams\nThe Wildcats placed five players on the preseason all\u2013Southland teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 87], "content_span": [88, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287079-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Abkhazian Cup\nThe 2019 Abkhazian Cup was the 25th edition of Abkhazian Cup organized by Football Federation of Abkhazia. The competition was held in the month of May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287079-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Abkhazian Cup, Participating Teams\nThis edition of the competition was attended by 8 teams:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287079-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Abkhazian Cup, Participating Teams\nThe Abkhazia Cup champion team qualifies for the Abkhazia Super Cup final and face the Abkhazian Premier League champion team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287079-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Abkhazian Cup, Participating Teams\nThe final of the Abkhazia Cup took place on May 14, 2019. The two teams qualified for the grand final match were Nart Sukhum and Ritsa FC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287079-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Abkhazian Cup, Participating Teams\nNart Sukhum's team won by the score of 4x0 and became champion of the Abkhazia Cup 2020. With this victory, the club already has eleven Abkhazia Cup trophies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287080-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Abkhazian Premier League\nThe 2019 Abkhazian Premier League was canceled as there were only four teams registered. For this reason, the Football Federation of Abkhazia created the Victory Cup, to replace this edition of the Abkhazian Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287080-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Abkhazian Premier League, Participating Teams\nThis edition of the competition was attended by 4 teams:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287081-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Abkhazian presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in the partially recognized Republic of Abkhazia in 2019. As no candidate gathered more than 50% of the votes in the first round 25 August, a second was held on 8 September between the top two candidates, incumbent President Raul Khajimba of the Forum for the National Unity of Abkhazia and Alkhas Kvitsinia of Amtsakhara. Khajimba was subsequently re-elected with a margin of less than 2% in the second round. On September 20, the Supreme Court in Abkhazia declared the decision of the Central Election Commission to recognize incumbent Raul Khajimba\u2019s victory in the second round of the presidential election as legal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287081-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Abkhazian presidential election\nIn January 2020 the Abkhazian Supreme Court annulled the results, following protests against Khajimba. Khajimba resigned the presidency on 12 January, and new elections were called for 22 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287081-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Abkhazian presidential election, Background\nThe People's Assembly had originally set a date for 21 July. In May 2019, the opposition demanded rescheduling the elections after the main opposition candidate Aslan Bzhania appeared to have been poisoned in Russia. The elections were subsequently postponed to 25 August 2019 under pressure from supporters of the Bzhania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287081-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Abkhazian presidential election, Candidates\nRegistration for candidates officially opened on 26 June 2019. Ten candidate initially registered; but it was later determined that one candidate, Astamur Otirba, had not presented a Vice-President in time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287081-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Abkhazian presidential election, Bzhaniya\u2019s withdrawal from the election\nOpposition leader Aslan Bzhania withdrew from the election on 15 July due to an apparent poisoning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 77], "content_span": [78, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287081-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Abkhazian presidential election, Aftermath\nFollowing the second round, Alkhas Kvitsinia contested the results in court. After the elections, Khajimba re-appointed Valery Bganba as Prime Minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287081-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Abkhazian presidential election, Aftermath\nProtests against Khajimba began on 9 January 2020, and on 10 January the Abkhazian Supreme Court annulled the results of the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287082-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Abruzzo regional election\nThe 2019 Abruzzo regional election took place on 10 February 2019. The election was for all 29 elected seats of the Regional Council of Abruzzo as well as the President of the region who, along with the second placed presidential candidate, would also become members of the Regional Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287082-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Abruzzo regional election\nThe ballot resulted in the election of Marco Marsilio, the centre-right candidate, as President of the Regional Council with 48% of the votes. Moreover, the League won a plurality of seats in the Regional Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287082-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Abruzzo regional election, Electoral law\nThe candidate who obtains the majority of valid votes at the regional level becomes president. Every candidate must be linked to a party list or a coalition running for the regional council. A majority of 60% to 65% of the seats is then allocated to the party (or coalition) of the elected president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287082-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Abruzzo regional election, Electoral law\nThe election of the Council occurs on a regional basis within the four districts of Abruzzo, coinciding with the four provinces of the Region. The district of Chieti elects eight councilors, while Pescara, L'Aquila and Teramo each elect seven councillors. The President of the Council and the presidential candidate, who received the second largest number of votes, also become members of the regional council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287082-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Abruzzo regional election, Electoral law\nThe electoral system is proportional to the share of the votes each party revives, with an electoral threshold of 4% of the vote for parties that are not members of coalitions and 2% for those included in a coalition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287082-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Abruzzo regional election, Campaign\nDuring the campaign, Marco Marsilio (member of FdI) was criticized for not being native to the region, with opponents accusing him of lacking knowledge about the specific regional issues. However Marsilio's parents are both natives of Abruzzo. Members of the Democratic Party (PD) also accused the League of violating Italian campaigning laws, after Matteo Salvini posted a tweet calling on voters to go and vote for his party, during the period of time in which the electoral campaign is officially closed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287083-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix\nThe 2019 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix (formally known as the Formula 1 Etihad Airways Abu Dhabi Grand Prix 2019) was a Formula One motor race that was held on 1 December 2019 at the Yas Marina Circuit in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. The race was the twenty first and final round of the 2019 Formula One World Championship and marked the eleventh running of the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix and the eleventh time that the race was run as a World Championship event since the inaugural event in 2009. This was also the first time that a race was held in December since the 1963 South African Grand Prix. It was the final race for Toro Rosso, as the team was rebranded to AlphaTauri for the 2020 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287083-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Background, Championship standings before the race\nHeading into the race weekend the top two places in the World Drivers' Championship had already been determined with Lewis Hamilton as champion ahead of team mate Valtteri Bottas. However third place was yet to be decided between Max Verstappen, 260 points and Charles Leclerc, 249 points, with Sebastian Vettel, 230 points, still able to overtake Leclerc for fourth place in the standings but too far behind Verstappen to take third. The top four places in the World Constructors' Championship were decided with Mercedes in first ahead of Ferrari, Red Bull and McLaren. Fifth place was still undecided with Renault eight points ahead of Toro Rosso.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 77], "content_span": [78, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287083-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Background, Entries\nThe drivers and teams entered were the same as those for the previous race with no additional stand-in drivers for the race or practice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287083-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Practice\nThe first session saw the red flag come out twice. The first time when Daniel Ricciardo suffered an engine failure and a second time after Sebastian Vettel crashed his car at turn 19 in the closing minutes of the session, after which the session was not restarted. The session ended with Valtteri Bottas fastest followed by Max Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton. The second practice session saw one red flag after Bottas and Romain Grosjean collided at turn 11, Bottas would later receive a reprimand for the incident. Bottas finished the session fastest ahead of Hamilton and Charles Leclerc. The third practice session ran uninterrupted and ended with Verstappen fastest followed by Hamilton and Bottas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287083-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Race\nPrior to the race, it was announced that the fuel mass in Charles Leclerc's car as declared by Ferrari was \"significantly different\" to the amount measured by the FIA. It was decided that this would be investigated by the stewards after the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287083-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Race\nThe front-runners all maintained their positions into the first corner, with Lewis Hamilton leading from pole position. Further back down the grid, Lance Stroll collided with the rear of Pierre Gasly, causing Gasly to make contact with Sergio P\u00e9rez in front of him and resulting in Gasly losing his front wing. Gasly was forced to pit for a replacement which caused him to drop to the back of the grid, over a minute behind 19th place. The incident was not investigated by the stewards. Max Verstappen lost 2nd place to Leclerc on the straight between turns 7 and 8, meanwhile Valtteri Bottas had made up five places on the first lap after starting in last place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287083-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Race\nOn lap 4 it was announced that DRS was disabled for all cars due to a technical issue. It was later revealed that the system was deliberately disabled by the race director after a server crash caused communications with the cars to be disrupted, meaning that it could not be ensured that cars only used DRS in the permitted zones of the track. Shortly after, Stroll complained of difficulties caused by damage from his first lap collision with Gasly. Stroll would later go on to retire from a brake problem after running near the back for most of the race. Lando Norris was the first driver to make a scheduled pit stop on lap 8. Ferrari brought both drivers in for pit stops on lap 12, with Sebastian Vettel suffering with a slow stop causing him to be stationary for nearly 7 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 818]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287083-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Race\nDRS was eventually enabled on lap 18. Bottas passed Nico H\u00fclkenberg on the same lap to clear the midfield after starting from the back. Robert Kubica and Antonio Giovinazzi both suffered floor damage after colliding during an overtake attempt by Giovinazzi. Verstappen pitted from 2nd on lap 25, followed by Hamilton a lap later who maintained the lead upon exiting the pits. Bottas was the last of the front-runners to pit on lap 29. No positions were gained or lost amongst the top six after the round of pit stops.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287083-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Race\nOn lap 32, Verstappen retook 2nd place from Leclerc going into turn 8, having lost the position on the first lap. The Ferrari drivers made a second round of pit stops on lap 38, with Leclerc maintaining 3rd and Vettel dropping from 4th to 6th. Bottas passed Alexander Albon for 4th place soon afterwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287083-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Race\nOn lap 41, Carlos Sainz Jr. made a second pit stop from 9th place after he was concerned that his ageing tyres would cause him to be overtaken towards the end of the race, losing a points-scoring position and handing 6th place in the World Drivers' Championship to Gasly. Sainz exited the pits in 14th place. The final two laps saw multiple overtakes; Vettel passed Albon for 5th place, Lando Norris lost 7th place to P\u00e9rez, and Sainz successfully passed H\u00fclkenberg to take 10th place and claim a point, securing 6th place in the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287083-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Race\nHamilton crossed the line to win the race, taking his 11th victory of the season and the 84th of his career. Having also led every lap, taken pole position and recorded the fastest lap of the race, this marked Hamilton's sixth \"grand slam\", his last of which came at the 2017 British Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287083-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Race\nPost-race, Ferrari were handed a \u20ac50,000 fine for the pre-race fuel infringement, although Leclerc was allowed to keep his 3rd-place finish. In an interview, Gasly said he was \"disgusted\" by the collision with Stroll at the start of the race, as his car \"clearly had the potential to keep sixth place [in the drivers' championship]\". Gasly ended the season in 7th place with 95 points, one short of Sainz's 96.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287084-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Acrobatic Gymnastics European Championships\nThe 29th Acrobatic Gymnastics European Championships was held in Holon, Israel from October 30 to November 3, 2019. The competition took place at the Holon Toto Hall. This was the first time that Israel has hosted an acrobatic gymnastics competition at an international level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287085-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Acropolis International Basketball Tournament\nThe Acropolis International Tournament 2019 is a basketball tournament held in OAKA Olympic Indoor Hall in Athens, Greece, from August 16 until August 18, 2019. It was the 29th edition of the Acropolis International Basketball Tournament. The competition is played under FIBA rules as a round-robin tournament. The four participating teams were Greece, Italy, Serbia, and Turkey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287086-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach\nThe 2019 Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach was the fourth round of the 2019 IndyCar season and the 45th annual running of the Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach. The 85 lap race was held on April 14, 2019, in Long Beach, California. Alexander Rossi dominated the race from the pole position scoring his sixth career IndyCar victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287086-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach, Results, Race\nNotes: Points 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287087-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Adamawa State gubernatorial election\nThe 2019 Adamawa State gubernatorial election occurred in Nigeria on March 9, 2019. PDP candidate Ahmadu Umaru Fintiri won the election, defeating Bindo Jibrilla of the APC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287087-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Adamawa State gubernatorial election\nAhmadu Umaru Fintiri emerged PDP gubernatorial candidate after scoring 1,656 votes and defeating his closest rival, Mohammed Jameel who received 465 votes. He picked Martins Babale as his running mate. Bindo Jibrilla was the APC candidate with Crowther Seth as his running mate. 29 candidates contested in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287087-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Adamawa State gubernatorial election, Electoral system\nThe Governor of Adamawa State is elected using the plurality voting system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 59], "content_span": [60, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287087-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Adamawa State gubernatorial election, Primary election, PDP primary\nThe PDP primary election was held on September 30, 2018. Ahmadu Umaru Fintiri won the primary election polling 1,656 votes against 4 other candidates. His closest rival was Mohammed Jameel, who came second with 465 votes, Bala Ngilari scored 78 votes, Aliyu Umar scored 8 votes, while Garba Dankani had 1 vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 72], "content_span": [73, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287087-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Adamawa State gubernatorial election, Primary election, APC primary\nThe APC primary election was held on October 4, 2018. Bindo Jibrilla won the primary election polling 193,656 votes against 2 other candidates. His closest rival was Halilu Ahmed who came second with 15,738 votes,while Malam Nuhu Ribadu came third with 8,364 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 72], "content_span": [73, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287087-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Adamawa State gubernatorial election, Results\nA total number of 29 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-00287087-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Adamawa State gubernatorial election, Results\nThe total number of registered voters in the state was 1,973,083, while 905,346 voters were accredited. Total number of votes cast was 899,097, while number of valid votes was 871,307. Rejected votes were 27,790.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287087-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Adamawa State gubernatorial election, Results, By local government area\nHere are the results of the election by local government area for the two major parties. The total valid votes of 871,307 represents the 29 political parties that participated in the election. Green represents LGAs won by Ahmadu Umaru Fintiri. Blue represents LGAs won by Bindo Jibrilla.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 76], "content_span": [77, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287088-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Adelaide 500\nThe 2019 Adelaide 500 (known for commercial reasons as the 2019 Superloop Adelaide 500) is a motor racing event for the Supercars Championship held on Thursday 28 February through to Sunday 3 March 2019. The event was held at the Adelaide Street Circuit in Adelaide, South Australia, and marked the twenty-first running of the Adelaide 500. It wasl the first event of fifteen in the 2019 Supercars Championship and consisted of two races of 250 kilometres. The race was supported by the opening round of the 2019 Super2 Series, a championship for older models of Supercars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287088-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Adelaide 500\nThe race saw the competitive d\u00e9but of the Ford Mustang GT, which replaced the FG X Falcon. The Adelaide 500 was the first time that a Mustang had competed in a round of the Australian Touring Car Championship since 1990.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287088-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Adelaide 500\nMcLaughlin's win in Race One was the first time that the Ford Mustang had won a race in the Australian Touring Car Championship since Allan Moffat won the final round of the 1972 season at Oran Park Raceway 46 years earlier - in that instance won in a Boss 302 Mk.1 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287089-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Adriatica Ionica Race\nThe 2019 Adriatica Ionica Race was a five-stage men's professional road cycling race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287089-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Adriatica Ionica Race\nIt was the second edition of the Adriatica Ionica Race. The race started on 24 July and finished on 28 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287089-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Adriatica Ionica Race\nThe race is part of the UCI Europe Tour, and is categorised by the UCI as a 2.1 race. The previous edition was won by the Colombian rider Iv\u00e1n Sosa (Androni Giocattoli\u2013Sidermec), who, after his transfer to Team Sky, did not return to defend his title. In his absence, Ukrainian Mark Padun (Bahrain\u2013Merida) won the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287089-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Adriatica Ionica Race, Teams\nNineteen teams of up to seven riders took part in the race:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287089-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Adriatica Ionica Race, Route\nThe race consisted of five stages totalling 815.3\u00a0km (507\u00a0mi).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287089-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Adriatica Ionica Race, Stages, Stage 1\n24 July 2019 - Mestre, Venice, 83.7\u00a0km (52\u00a0mi), criterium", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287089-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Adriatica Ionica Race, Stages, Stage 1\nThe criterium on stage 1 featured riders racing a 2.7\u00a0km (2\u00a0mi) lap, with the best-placed riders completing 31 laps for a total of 83.7\u00a0km (52\u00a0mi). Though jerseys were awarded after the stage, the times and points accrued during this stage did not count towards the classifications.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287089-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Adriatica Ionica Race, Stages, Stage 2\n25 July 2019 - Venice (Favaro Veneto) to Grado, 189\u00a0km (117\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287089-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Adriatica Ionica Race, Stages, Stage 3\n26 July 2019 - Palmanova to Lake Misurina, 204.6\u00a0km (127\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287089-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Adriatica Ionica Race, Stages, Stage 4\n27 July 2019 - Padola to Corm\u00f2ns (Monte Quarin), 204.5\u00a0km (127\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287089-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Adriatica Ionica Race, Stages, Stage 5\n28 July 2019 - Corm\u00f2ns to Trieste, 133.5\u00a0km (83\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287089-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Adriatica Ionica Race, Classification leadership\nIn the 2019 Adriatica Ionica Race, five jerseys were awarded. The general classification was calculated by adding each cyclist's finishing times on each stage. Time bonuses were awarded to the first three finishers on all stages apart from the time trial stage. The first three riders would get 10, 6, and 4 seconds, respectively. The leader of the general classification received a blue jersey sponsored by Geo&tex2000. This classification was considered the most important of the 2018 Adriatica Ionica, 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, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287089-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Adriatica Ionica Race, Classification leadership\nThe second classification was the points classification. Riders were awarded points for finishing in the top ten in a stage. Points were also won in intermediate sprints; ten points for crossing the sprint line first, six points for second place, three for third, two for fourth, and a single point for fifth. The leader of the points classification was awarded a red jersey sponsored by Full Speed Ahead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287089-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Adriatica Ionica Race, Classification leadership\nThe third classification was the mountains classification. Points were awarded to the riders that reached the summit of the most difficult climbs first. The climbs were categorized, in order of increasing difficulty, as third-, second-, and first-category and hors cat\u00e9gorie (read: \"beyond category\"). The leadership of the mountains classification was marked by a green sponsored by Dolomiti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287089-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Adriatica Ionica Race, Classification leadership\nThe fourth jersey represented the young rider classification, marked by a white jersey sponsored by Gabetti. Only riders born after 1 January 1993 were eligible; the young rider best placed in the general classification was the leader of the young rider classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287089-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Adriatica Ionica Race, Classification leadership\nThe final classification was the \"Fighting Spirit Prize\" given after each stage to the rider considered, by a jury, to have \"who struggled in order to achieve results in all the competitive moments of the race or the one who take action to start or carry out the longest breakaway\". The winner wore an orange jersey sponsored by Suzuki. There was also a classification for teams, in which the times of the best three cyclists in a team on each stage were added together; the leading team at the end of the race was the team with the lowest cumulative time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287090-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Advance Auto Parts Clash\nThe 2019 Advance Auto Parts Clash was the 42nd edition of the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race held on February 10, 2019, at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida. Contested over 59 laps, shortened from 75 due to rain, it was the first exhibition race of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287090-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Advance Auto Parts Clash, Report, Background\nThe track, Daytona 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\u2013turn superspeedway that is 2.5-mile (4.0\u00a0km) The track's turns are banked at 31 degrees, while the front stretch, the location of the finish line, is banked at 18 degrees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287090-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Advance Auto Parts Clash, Report, Format and eligibility\nThe race is 75 laps in length, and is divided into two segments; the first is 25 laps and the second is 50 laps. The race is open to those drivers who won a pole in the 2018 season or had won \"The Clash\" previously.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287090-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Advance Auto Parts Clash, Report, Format and eligibility\nThe 2019 Clash at Daytona will not be a predetermined number of cars; rather, the field is limited to drivers who meet more exclusive criteria. Only drivers who were 2018 Pole Award winners, former Clash race winners, former Daytona 500 champions, former Daytona 500 pole winners who competed full\u2013time in 2018 and drivers who qualified for the 2018 Playoffs are eligible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287090-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Advance Auto Parts Clash, Practice\nJoey Logano was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 45.735 seconds and a speed of 196.786\u00a0mph (316.696\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287090-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Advance Auto Parts Clash, Starting lineup\nThe lineup was determined by random draw, with Paul Menard drawing the top spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287090-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Advance Auto Parts Clash, Race\nThe race, scheduled for 75 laps, was run in two segments, one of 25 laps and one of 50 laps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 35], "content_span": [36, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287090-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Advance Auto Parts Clash, Race\nPrior to the start, Chase Elliott and Denny Hamlin, both of whom were involved in practice incidents, were sent to the rear for backup cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 35], "content_span": [36, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287090-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Advance Auto Parts Clash, Race\nKyle Busch held the lead for the first lap before the Team Penske tandem of Paul Menard (in a satellite) and Brad Keselowski overtook him, holding the lead into the first safety car on Lap 8 for weather, resulting in a red flag of 21:31. The race restarted on Lap 12 and the Penske dominance continued. The strategy, similar to another Ford team (Stewart-Haas Racing) dominance at the previous Cup race at Talladega Superspeedway, continued until all but five cars pitted on Lap 25 to beat the competition caution safety car period. Those five -- Austin Dillon, Alex Bowman, Jamie McMurray, Kevin Harvick, and Martin Truex, Jr. -- were the top five at the end of session break on Lap 26. After the five non-pitting cars pitted under the safety car, the race restarted on Lap 33 with Menard continuing his dominance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 35], "content_span": [36, 851]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287090-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Advance Auto Parts Clash, Race\nRain struck again for the third safety car session, the second for rain, on Lap 40. After another red flag session of 8:05, the race restarted on Lap 48. Teams were warned of a longer rain cell that could end the race at any time, leading to a more aggressive race in the final laps, knowing that the race could end at any time. With the weather, the fairly single-file high side racing moved to two-lane racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 35], "content_span": [36, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287090-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Advance Auto Parts Clash, Race\nOn Lap 56, the aggressive racing began. Off a well-timed push from Hendrick Motorsports-affiliated driver Kurt Busch, Jimmie Johnson was able to pull up aside Menard. Menard attempts the overtly aggressive \"side draft\" blocking maneuver to slow Johnson, but the two cars make contact. With the field bunched, a massive pileup ensues, with Keselowski, Austin Dillon, Harvick, Ryan Newman, Elliott, Aric Almirola, Denny Hamlin, Clint Bowyer, Kyle Busch, Martin Truex, Jr., Erik Jones, McMurray, Kyle Larson, and Alex Bowman also involved. Johnson and are first and second when the safety car was called as a result of the Turn 3 crash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 35], "content_span": [36, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287090-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Advance Auto Parts Clash, Race\nThe rains came while cleanup from this incident was taking place, and the race was called. Johnson was declared the winner, his final NASCAR-sanctioned (but non-championship) race win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 35], "content_span": [36, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287090-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Advance Auto Parts Clash, Media\nFS1 covered the race on the television side; Mike Joy, Darrell Waltrip, and Jeff Gordon handled the call in the booth for the race; Vince Welch and Matt Yocum handled pit road for the television side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287091-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Advantage Cars Prague Open\nThe 2019 Advantage Cars Prague Open was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the sixth (men) and fifth (women) editions of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour and the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Prague, Czech Republic between 22 and 28 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287091-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Advantage Cars Prague 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-00287091-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Advantage Cars Prague Open, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287091-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Advantage Cars Prague Open, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287091-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Advantage Cars Prague 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-00287091-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Advantage Cars Prague Open, Women's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry to the draw as Lucky Losers:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 83], "content_span": [84, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287092-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Advantage Cars Prague Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nSander Gill\u00e9 and Joran Vliegen were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287092-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Advantage Cars Prague Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nAriel Behar and Gonzalo Escobar won the title after defeating Andrey Golubev and Aleksandr Nedovyesov 6\u20137(4\u20137), 7\u20135, [10\u20138] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287093-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Advantage Cars Prague Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nLuk\u00e1\u0161 Rosol was the defending champion but lost in the quarterfinals to Carlos Taberner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287093-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Advantage Cars Prague Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nMario Vilella Mart\u00ednez won the title after defeating Tseng Chun-hsin 6\u20134, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287094-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Advantage Cars Prague Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nCornelia Lister and Nina Stojanovi\u0107 were the defending champions, but both players chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287094-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Advantage Cars Prague Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nNicoleta Dasc\u0103lu and Raluca \u0218erban won the title, defeating Lucie Hradeck\u00e1 and Johana Markov\u00e1 in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287095-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Advantage Cars Prague Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nRich\u00e8l Hogenkamp was the defending champion, but retired in the semifinals against Tamara Korpatsch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287095-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Advantage Cars Prague Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nKorpatsch won the title, defeating Denisa Allertov\u00e1 in the final, 7\u20135, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287096-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Aerobic Gymnastics European Championships\nThe 11th Aerobic Gymnastics European Championships took place in Baku, Azerbaijan from May 24 to 26, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287097-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Aesthetic Group Gymnastics World Cup series\nThe 2019 IFAGG World Cup series in Aesthetic Group Gymnastics is a series of competitions officially organized and promoted by the International Federation of Aesthetic Group Gymnastics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287098-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Afghan Premier League\nThe 2019 Afghan Premier League was the eighth season of Afghan Premier League, the Afghan league for association football clubs, since its establishment in 2012. The season commenced on 20 August 2019. Toofan Harirod F.C successfully defended their title by defeating Shaheen Asmayee F.C in the final, 1-0 a.e.t.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287098-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Afghan Premier League, Teams\nThe following eight teams, which represent the country's eight main regions, participate in the 2019 Afghan Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287098-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Afghan Premier League, Group stage\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 15 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287099-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Afghan presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in Afghanistan on 28 September 2019. According to preliminary results, which runner-up Abdullah Abdullah appealed against, incumbent Ashraf Ghani was re-elected with 923,592 votes, 50.64% of the vote. After delays over disputed votes, Ghani was declared the winner in the final results on 18 February 2020. Abdullah Abdullah rejected the results and moved to set up his own parallel government and separate inauguration. However, Ghani was officially sworn in for a second term on 9 March 2020. The ensuing political crisis was not resolved until 16 May 2020, when Ghani and Abdullah signed a power-sharing deal in which Ghani would remain president and Abdullah would lead the peace talks with the Taliban when they start. Voter turnout was less than 20%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 823]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287099-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Afghan presidential election, Background\nThe elections were originally scheduled for 20 April, but the Independent Election Commission announced on 26 December 2018 that they would be postponed until 20 July, in order to resolve problems that became apparent during the October 2018 parliamentary elections. The additional time will be used to verify voter lists and train election workers on the new biometric identification system. On 20 March 2019, the IEC once again delayed the election, this time by two months from 20 July to 28 September. A spokesman blamed the delay on changes in election laws along with management and technical problems \u2212 the presidential vote then coincided with local council votes and delayed parliamentary elections in Ghazni Province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287099-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Afghan presidential election, Electoral system\nPresidential elections in Afghanistan are conducted using a two-round system. If no candidate receives a majority of the vote in the first round, a second round is held featuring the top two candidates from the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287099-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Afghan presidential election, Campaign\nOne of the leading candidates, Mohammad Hanif Atmar, suspended his campaign in August 2019. Atmar's campaign said that the suspension was due to the poor security situation and the ongoing peace process. The Taliban carried out attacks to disrupt the campaign. On 17 September 2019, a suicide bomber attacked the campaign rally of President Ashraf Ghani, killing 26 people and wounding 42. Less than an hour later, the Taliban carried out another suicide bomb attack near the US Embassy and the Afghan Defense Ministry, killing 22 people and wounding around 38.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287099-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Afghan presidential election, Voting\nOn 28 September 2019, several people headed to cast their vote despite the direct threats to the civilians from the Taliban. However, the turnout was a historical low, where only around 1.6 million showed up from the 9.7 million registered voters. Despite low turnout, voting during election day was described by Reuters as being held in a \"relative calm\" situation, with 3 deaths and 37 injuries occurring due to \"small-scale\" Taliban attacks. Al Jazeera also noted that in spite of the low voter turnout, violence was only \"sporadic.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287099-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Afghan presidential election, Voting\nHowever, a tally held by The New York Times, which was based on conversations with local officials, found a death toll of \"at least 30 security personnel and 10 civilians\", and a number of \"at least 40 security forces and 150 civilians\" injured\u2014which, according to the Times, was \"much higher than the official reports, but in line with the average daily toll of the country\u2019s long-running war.\" Reports of low casualties were also backed by The Washington Post and Arab News. Arab News journalist Sayed Salahuddin even stated that \"the death toll was lower than on previous election days\" and that conversations with Afghan residents suggested that \"there was less violence than at last year\u2019s parliamentary election.\" Salahuddin also stated that \"at some polling centers, security forces outnumbered voters.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 852]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287099-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Afghan presidential election, Voting\nThe election commission also resorted to biometric voter verification machines for the first time, which took the fingerprints and picture of every voter and recorded the time they cast their ballot. The technical system was opted to combat the growing fraudulent instances during elections in Afghanistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287099-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Afghan presidential election, Voting\nViolence, Taliban threats, and widespread allegations of mismanagement and abuse marred the election. Turnout on election day was low.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287099-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Afghan presidential election, Opinion polls\nThe 2019 presidential election was the first in Afghanistan where opinion polls were funded and conducted by Afghan institutions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287099-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Afghan presidential election, Results\nOn 27 October 2019 Hawa Alam Nuristani, chief of the Independent Election Commission (IEC), announced that the preliminary presidential election results would be made public on 14 November, and that consultations with the other election commissioners which were taken to make the results more transparent had been completed. She also stated that the publication of the election results was delayed for two reasons: an attempt to hack the commission's server and the picking of the digital lock of the commission's digital center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287099-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Afghan presidential election, Results\nOn 13 November, the commission announced that the results were being delayed a second time, indefinitely.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287099-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Afghan presidential election, Results\nThe preliminary results were announced on 22 December, and the definitive ones on 18 February 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287099-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Afghan presidential election, Aftermath\nThe announcement of the results triggered a political crisis. Abdullah Abdullah rejected the results and called for the formation of a parallel government in northern Afghanistan. On 22 February Abdullah appointed a new governor loyal to himself in Sar-e Pol Province. American diplomat Zalmay Khalilzad attempted to mediate between Ghani and Abdullah, but the two were unable to reach an agreement and both of them took the presidential oath of office at separate inauguration ceremonies on 9 March, with Ghani being sworn in for a second term. Shortly afterwards, Ghani abolished the office of Chief Executive, held by Abdullah, and Abdullah issued a statement saying that \"Ghani is no longer president,\" and his decrees were invalid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287099-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Afghan presidential election, Aftermath\nOn 23 March 2020, the United States announced that as a result of the political crisis it would reduce aid to Afghanistan by $1 billion. If Ghani and Abdullah do not reach an agreement, it may reduce aid further. The political crisis was brought to an end on 17 May 2020, when Ghani and Abdullah signed a power-sharing deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287099-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Afghan presidential election, Aftermath\nOn 15 August 2021, Ashraf Ghani's presidency came to an end after Taliban entered Kabul during the 2021 Taliban offensive and Ghani fled Afghanistan. Vice President Amrullah Saleh declared himself transitional president in Bazarak, capital of Panjshir Province and the last region under government control, however, he was forced to leave after Panjshir was captured altogether by the Taliban on 8 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287100-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Afghanistan Provincial Challenge Cup\nThe 2019 Afghanistan Provincial Challenge Cup was a List A cricket competition that took place in Afghanistan between 31 July and 10 August 2019. It was the third year of domestic List A cricket to be played in Afghanistan, following the announcements by the International Cricket Council (ICC) in February and May 2017. Eight teams qualified for the tournament, and were divided into two groups of four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287100-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Afghanistan Provincial Challenge Cup\nNangarhar Province won the tournament, after beating Kabul Province by six wickets in the final, with Najeeb Tarakai scoring a century.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287101-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Afif attack\nThe 2019 Afif attack occurred in May of that year and was an attempt by the Houthi military power to harm Saudi Arabia's economic interests, specifically the East\u2013West Crude Oil Pipeline. The Houthis flew seven drones in the attack on a pumping station at Afif, which is located in the greater region of Riyadh, 250 miles away from the capital. The targets are 800 kilometers north of the Saudi border with Yemen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287101-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Afif attack\nThe attack was noted in a report issued by UN Secretary-General Ant\u00f3nio Guterres on 9 June 2020 as part of his Iran arms embargo duties to the UNSC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations\nThe 2019 Africa Cup of Nations (abbreviated as AFCON 2019 or CAN 2019), known as the Total 2019 Africa Cup of Nations for sponsorship reasons, was the 32nd edition of the Africa Cup of Nations, the biennial international men's football championship of Africa organized by the Confederation of African Football (CAF). The tournament was hosted by Egypt. The competition was held from 21 June to 19 July 2019, as per the decision of the CAF Executive Committee on 20 July 2017 to move the Africa Cup of Nations from January/February to June/July for the first time. It was also the first Africa Cup of Nations expanded from 16 to 24 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations\nThe tournament was initially scheduled to be hosted by Cameroon. Cameroon would have hosted the competition for the first time since 1972. They were also the title holders after winning the previous edition. On 30 November 2018, Cameroon was stripped of hosting the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations due to delays in the delivery of infrastructure, the Boko Haram insurgency and the Anglophone Crisis. On 8 January 2019, Egypt was chosen by the CAF Executive Committee as the host nation of the competition. The tournament was also moved from the original dates of 15 June \u2013 13 July to 21 June \u2013 19 July due to Ramadan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations\nCameroon were the defending champions, but were eliminated in the round of 16 by Nigeria. The hosts Egypt were eliminated at the same stage after losing 0\u20131 to South Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations\nAlgeria defeated Senegal 1\u20130 in the final, winning their second title and first since 1990, while Nigeria came third after beating Tunisia 1\u20130 in their third-place play-off match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Host selection\nAfter the CAF Executive Committee meeting on 24 January 2014, it was announced that there were six official candidates for the 2019 edition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Host selection\nThis list was different from the list of the host nation bids for both the 2019 and 2021 edition of the Cup of Nations as announced by CAF in November 2013, with Gabon also on the original list, but Cameroon not on it. Among the six official candidates, Algeria, Guinea and Ivory Coast also bid for hosting the 2021 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Host selection\nDemocratic Republic of the Congo had originally put themselves forward as host candidates but withdrew in July 2014. Security concerns and threats from various militant groups particularly in the eastern part of the country were an early issue with a Congolese bid. Before bidding solo Guinea was part of a four-way joint bid with Guinea-Bissau, Sierra Leone and Liberia, similarly Zambia was originally part of a joint bid with Malawi and Zimbabwe. Other nations who expressed early interest in hosting were 2013 champions Nigeria, Senegal, and a joint bid of Kenya and Uganda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Host selection\nThe decision of the host country was postponed from early 2014 to grant each bidding country adequate time to receive the inspection delegation. After the final vote at the CAF Executive Committee meeting, on 20 September 2014, the CAF announced the hosts for the 2019, 2021 and 2023 AFCON tournaments: 2019 to Cameroon, 2021 to Ivory Coast, and 2023 to Guinea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Host selection, New bid process\nIt was expected that Cameroon would host this edition but it was sidelined by the CAF on 30 November 2018 in Accra, Ghana for non-compliance with the specifications, CAF announced that they would be receiving applications for the new hosts until 14 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Host selection, New bid process\nThe organization of the competition was finally awarded to Egypt on 8 January 2019 by the CAF Executive Committee meeting in Dakar, Senegal. Voters had a choice between two countries after Morocco's sports minister confirmed that his country was not interested in hosting: Egypt and South Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Host selection, New bid process\nNorth Africa will host the tournament for the first time in 13 years after being hosted by Egypt also in 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Host selection, New bid process\nThis is the fifth time that Egypt will host the African Cup after 1959, 1974, 1986 and the 2006 to become the country that has hosted it for the most times in the continent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Prize money\nThe CAF increased in 2019, the prize money to be shared among the teams participating in the Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Sponsorship\nIn July 2016, Total secured an eight-year sponsorship package from the Confederation of African Football (CAF) to support 10 of its principal competitions. Total started with the Africa Cup of Nations that was held in Gabon in 2017 therefore renaming it to Total Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Mascot\nThe organizing board of the 2019 African Cup of Nations revealed the AFCON 2019 Mascot; \"Tut\", which was inspired by the Egyptian Pharaoh Tutankhamun. His kit bears resemblance to Egypt's home colors, with the map of Africa visible on his shirt as well as the tournament's logo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Match ball\nUmbro replaced Mitre as the official match ball supplier for the Africa Cup of Nations. The official match ball, named Neo Pro, was unveiled on 29 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Qualification\nDue to Morocco withdrawing from being hosts of the 2015 edition, CAF banned the national team of Morocco from entering the 2017 and 2019 Africa Cups of Nations. However, the ban was overturned by the Court of Arbitration for Sport, meaning Morocco, having qualified for this edition of the African Cup of Nations, could participate in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Qualification\nDue to the withdrawal of Chad during 2017 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, they were banned from entering the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Venues\nWith the Africa Cup of Nations expanded from 16 to 24 teams, at least six venues were expected to be used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Venues\nAfter being awarded the bid, initially Egypt chose eight stadiums to host the tournament. The eight stadiums were Cairo International Stadium and Al Salam Stadium in Cairo, Alexandria Stadium and Haras El Hodoud Stadium in Alexandria, Egyptian Army Stadium and Suez Stadium in Suez, Ismailia Stadium in Ismailia and Al Masry Club Stadium in Port Said. Later, Al Salam Stadium was replaced with 30 June Stadium, which was another stadium located in Cairo. It was expected that the famous Borg El Arab Stadium in Alexandria and Osman Ahmed Osman Stadium in Cairo would be used in the tournament, but they weren't selected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Venues\nOn 17 February 2019, it was confirmed that only six stadiums would be used. The six venues were Cairo International Stadium and 30 June Stadium in Cairo, Alexandria Stadium in Alexandria, Suez Stadium in Suez, Ismailia Stadium in Ismailia and Al Masry Club Stadium in Port Said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Venues\nHowever, on 13 March 2019, Al Masry Club Stadium in Port Said was replaced by Al Salam Stadium in Cairo after discovering a problem with one of the stadium's main stands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Match officials\nThe following referees were chosen for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Match officials, Video assistant referees\nThe EFA announced the video assistant referees (VARs) would be introduced during the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations, starting from the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 69], "content_span": [70, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Squads\nEach team had to register a squad of 23 players (Regulations Article 72).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Format\nOnly the hosts received an automatic qualification spot, with the other 23 teams qualifying through a qualification tournament. At the finals, the 24 teams were drawn into six groups of four teams each. The teams in each group played a single round robin. After the group stage, the top two teams and the four best third-placed teams advanced to the round of 16. The winners advanced to the quarter-finals. The winners of the quarter-finals advanced to the semi-finals. The losers of the semi-finals played in a third place play-off, while winners of the semi-finals played in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Draw\nThe draw took place on 12 April 2019, 20:00 CAT (UTC+2), facing the Sphinx and the Pyramids in Giza, Egypt. The 24 teams were drawn into six groups of four teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Draw\nThe draw procedure was approved by the CAF Executive Committee on 11 April 2019. For the draw, the teams were allocated to four pots based on the FIFA World Rankings of April 2019 (shown in brackets). Hosts Egypt were automatically assigned to position A1. Defending champions Cameroon were also automatically placed into Pot 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Draw\nEgypt (57) (hosts)\u00a0Cameroon (54) (title holders)\u00a0Senegal (23)\u00a0Tunisia (28)\u00a0Nigeria (42)\u00a0Morocco (45)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Draw\nDR Congo (46)\u00a0Ghana (49)\u00a0Mali (65)\u00a0Ivory Coast (65)\u00a0Guinea (68)\u00a0Algeria (70)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Draw\nSouth Africa (73)\u00a0Uganda (79)\u00a0Benin (91)\u00a0Mauritania (103)\u00a0Madagascar (107)\u00a0Kenya (108)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Draw\nZimbabwe (110)\u00a0Namibia (113)\u00a0Guinea-Bissau (118)\u00a0Angola (122)\u00a0Tanzania (131)\u00a0Burundi (136)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Group stage\nThe top two teams of each group, along with the best four third-placed teams, advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Group stage, Tiebreakers\nTeams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria were applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings (Regulations Article 74):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, extra time and a penalty shoot-out were used to decide the winner if necessary, except for the third place match, where a direct penalty shoot-out, without any extra time, was used to decide the winner if necessary (Regulations Article 75).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 102 goals scored in 52 matches, for an average of 1.96 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287102-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations, Awards\nThe following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287103-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Final\nThe 2019 Africa Cup of Nations Final was a football match which determined the winner of the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations. The match was held at the Cairo International Stadium in Cairo, Egypt, on 19 July 2019 and was contested by Senegal and Algeria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287103-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Final\nAlgeria won the final 1\u20130 for their second Africa Cup of Nations title, and their first since 1990.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287103-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Final, Background\nThis is the first time in the history both teams face each other in the final of the Africa Cup of Nations, having previously faced each other in the group stage of the edition three times and in the semi-finals once. Overall record is favorable for Algeria, having won three, draw one and never lost to Senegal in the AFCON history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287103-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Final, Background\nBoth Senegal and Algeria were grouped in Group C of the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations. Senegal entered the group stage with an easy 2\u20130 win over Tanzania. However, Senegal suffered a big setback after losing 0\u20131 defeat to the Algerians when Sadio Man\u00e9 made his debut in the tournament. Senegal soon bounced back by a 3\u20130 win over Kenya, thus qualified to the round of sixteen with the Algerians. Senegal managed to beat both Uganda and Benin in the round of sixteen and quarter-finals with the same 1\u20130 results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287103-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Final, Background\nSenegal, in the semi-finals against Tunisia, struggled harder due to Tunisia's defensive style of play and almost got led by the Tunisians until Ferjani Sassi missed the penalty; Henri Saivet also failed to convert from the spot after his side got the same opportunity, but the Senegalese got a lucky own goal by Dylan Bronn to finally obtain another 1\u20130 win after 120' to march to the final for the second time, having done it so in 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287103-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Final, Background\nAlgeria, also shared similar group with Senegal, began with a 2\u20130 easy win over Kenya, before managed to defeat its largest opponent, Senegal, 1\u20130. The Algerians easily ended the group stage with a 3\u20130 to Tanzania with three goals in the first 45 minutes. Algeria continued its rampant performance with a 3\u20130 win over Guinea in the round of sixteen, but struggled harder against Ivory Coast, being held 1\u20131 after 120' before overcame the Ivorians 4\u20133 in penalty shootout. The Algerians then put up an outstanding performance, beating African powerhouse Nigeria 2\u20131, with a late minute goal by Riyad Mahrez in a free kick spot to reach their first ever final since winning at home at 1990.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287103-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Final, Pre-match, Officials\nAlthough Victor Gomes from South Africa was chosen at first to officiate the final, the CAF decided to change official referee and replaced Gomes by Sidi Alioum, who officiated the opening match between Egypt and Zimbabwe. CAF staff later admitted they had mistaken referee to officiate the final, as they planned to call Sidi Alioum but later turned into Victor Gomes. Sidi Alioum himself had officiated in a number of matches, including 2014 and 2018 FIFA World Cups, as well as a number of CAF Champions League matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287103-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Final, Match, Summary\nThe only goal of the game was scored in the 2nd minute when Baghdad Bounedjah cut in from the left and shot with his right foot from just outside the penalty area with the ball taking a huge deflection off defender Salif San\u00e9 and looping over the goalkeeper and down into the right corner of the net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287103-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Final, Match, Details\nAssistant referees:Evarist Menkouande (Cameroon)Nguegoue Elvis Guy Noupue (Cameroon)Fourth official:Eric Otogo-Castane (Gabon)Reserve assistant referee:Waleed Ahmed Ali (Sudan)Video assistant referee:Beno\u00eet Millot (France)Assistant video assistant referees:Bakary Gassama (Gambia)Zakhele Thusi Siwela (South\u00a0Africa)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287104-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group A\nGroup A of the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations took place from 21 to 30 June 2019. The group consisted of DR Congo, hosts Egypt, Uganda and Zimbabwe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287104-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group A\nEgypt and Uganda as the top two teams, along with DR Congo as one of the four best third-placed teams, advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287104-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group A, Matches, Egypt vs Zimbabwe\nAssistant referees:Evarist Menkouande (Cameroon)El Hadji Samba (Senegal)Fourth official:Maguette N'Diaye (Senegal)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287104-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group A, Matches, DR Congo vs Uganda\nAssistant referees:Azgaou Lahcen (Morocco)Mustapha Akarkad (Morocco)Fourth official:Noureddine El Jaafari (Morocco)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 63], "content_span": [64, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287104-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group A, Matches, Egypt vs DR Congo\nAssistant referees:Zakhele Siwela (South Africa)Souru Phatsoane (Lesotho)Fourth official:Joshua Bondo (Botswana)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287104-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group A, Matches, Uganda vs Egypt\nAssistant referees:Nguegoue Elvis Guy Noupue (Cameroon)Seydou Tiama (Burkina Faso)Fourth official:Helder Martins de Carvalho (Angola)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287104-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group A, Matches, Zimbabwe vs DR Congo\nAssistant referees:Abdelhak Etchiali (Algeria)Mokrane Gourari (Algeria)Fourth official:Ahmad Imetehaz Heeralall (Mauritius)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 65], "content_span": [66, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287105-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group B\nGroup B of the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations took place from 22 to 30 June 2019. The group consisted of Burundi, Guinea, Madagascar and Nigeria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287105-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group B\nMadagascar and Nigeria as the top two teams, along with Guinea as one of the four best third-placed teams, advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287105-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group B, Matches, Guinea vs Madagascar\nAssistant referees:Mahmoud Abou El-Regal (Egypt)Tahssen Abo El Sadat (Egypt)Fourth official:Ibrahim Nour El Din (Egypt)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 65], "content_span": [66, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287105-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group B, Matches, Nigeria vs Guinea\nAssistant referees:Jerson dos Santos (Angola)Ars\u00e9nio Maringule (Mozambique)Fourth official:Beida Dahane (Mauritania)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287105-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group B, Matches, Madagascar vs Nigeria\nAssistant referees:Zakhele Thusi Siwela (South Africa)El Hadji Malick Samba (Senegal)Fourth official:Issa Sy (Senegal)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287106-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group C\nGroup C of the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations took place from 23 June to 1 July 2019. The group consisted of Algeria, Kenya, Senegal and Tanzania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287106-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group C, Matches, Senegal vs Algeria\nAssistant referees:Waleed Ahmed Ali (Sudan)Berhe O'Michael (Eritrea)Fourth official:Bernard Camille (Seychelles)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 63], "content_span": [64, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287106-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group C, Matches, Kenya vs Tanzania\nAssistant referees:Seydou Tiama (Burkina Faso)Mahamadou Gado (Niger)Fourth official:Louis Hakizimana (Rwanda)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287106-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group C, Matches, Kenya vs Senegal\nAssistant referees:Abouelregal Mahmoud (Egypt)Ahmed Hossam Taha (Egypt)Fourth official:Amin Omar (Egypt)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287107-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group D\nGroup D of the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations took place from 23 June to 1 July 2019. The group consisted of Ivory Coast, Morocco, Namibia and South Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287107-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group D\nMorocco and Ivory Coast as the top two teams, along with South Africa as one of the four best third-placed teams, advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287107-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group D, Matches, Morocco vs Ivory Coast\nAssistant referees:Evarist Menkouande (Cameroon)Elvis Nguegoue (Cameroon)Fourth official:Jean Ndala (DR Congo)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287107-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group D, Matches, South Africa vs Namibia\nAssistant referees:El Hadji Malick Samba (Senegal)Sidibe Sidiki (GuineaFourth official:Beida Dahane (Mauritania)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287107-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group D, Matches, South Africa vs Morocco\nAssistant referees:Oliver Safari (DR Congo)Soulaimane Almadine (Comoros)Fourth official:Janny Sikazwe (Zambia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287108-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group E\nGroup E of the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations took place from 24 June to 2 July 2019. The group consisted of Angola, Mali, Mauritania and Tunisia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287108-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group E, Matches, Tunisia vs Angola\nAssistant referees:Waleed Ahmed Ali (Sudan)Samuel Temesgin (Ethiopia)Fourth official:Peter Waweru (Kenya)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287108-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group E, Matches, Mali vs Mauritania\nAssistant referees:Olivier Safari (DR Congo)Soulaimane Amaldine (Comoros)Fourth official:Andofetra Rakotojaona (Madagascar)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 63], "content_span": [64, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287108-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group E, Matches, Mauritania vs Angola\nAssistant referees:Tahssen Abo El Sadat (Egypt)Ahmed Hossam Taha (Egypt)Fourth official:Gehad Grisha (Egypt)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 65], "content_span": [66, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287108-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group E, Matches, Angola vs Mali\nAssistant referees:Waleed Ahmed Ali (Sudan)Tesfagiorghis Berhe (Eritrea)Fourth official:Bernard Camille (Seychelles)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287109-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group F\nGroup F of the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations took place from 25 June to 2 July 2019. The group consisted of Benin, defending champions Cameroon, Ghana and Guinea-Bissau.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287109-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group F\nGhana and Cameroon as the top two teams, along with Benin as one of the four best third-placed teams, advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287109-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group F, Matches, Ghana vs Benin\nMan of the Match:Jordan Ayew (Ghana)Assistant referees:Yamen Mellouchi (Tunisia)Ahmed Taha (Egypt)Fourth official:Amin Omar (Egypt)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287109-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations Group F, Matches, Guinea-Bissau vs Ghana\nAssistant referees:Jerson dos Santos (Angola)Issa Yaya (Chad)Fourth official:Beida Dahane (Mauritania)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287110-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations knockout stage\nThe knockout stage of the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations was the second and final stage of the competition, following the group stage. It began on 5 July with the round of 16 and ended on 19 July 2019 with the final, held at the Cairo International Stadium in Cairo. A total of 16 teams (the top two teams from each group, along with the four best third-placed teams) advanced to the knockout stage to compete in a single-elimination style tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287110-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations knockout stage, Format\nIn the knockout stage, except for the third place play-off, if a match was level at the end of 90 minutes of normal playing time, extra time was played (two periods of 15 minutes each). If still tied after extra time, the match was decided by a penalty shoot-out to determine the winner. In the third place play-off, if the scores remain level after 90 minutes the match would go directly to a penalty shoot-out, without any extra time being played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287110-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations knockout stage, Format\nCAF set out the following schedule for the round of 16:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287110-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations knockout stage, Format, Combinations of matches in the round of 16\nThe specific match-ups involving the third-placed teams depended on which four third-placed teams qualified for the round of 16:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 93], "content_span": [94, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287110-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations knockout stage, Qualified teams\nThe top two placed teams from each of the six groups, plus the four best-placed third teams, qualified for the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287110-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations knockout stage, Round of 16, Morocco vs Benin\nAssistant referees:Jerson dos Santos (Angola)Tesfagiorghis Berhe (Eritrea)Fourth official:Maguette Ndiaye (Senegal)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 72], "content_span": [73, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287110-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations knockout stage, Round of 16, Nigeria vs Cameroon\nAssistant referees:Oliver Safari (DR Congo)Arsenio Maringule (Mozambique)Fourth official:Youssef Essrayri (Tunisia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 75], "content_span": [76, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287110-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations knockout stage, Round of 16, Mali vs Ivory Coast\nAssistant referees:Waleed Ahmed Ali (Sudan)Gilbert Cheruiyot (Kenya)Fourth official:Bakary Gassama (Gambia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 75], "content_span": [76, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287110-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations knockout stage, Round of 16, Ghana vs Tunisia\nAssistant referees:Zakhele Siwela (South Africa)Souru Phatsoane (Lesotho)Fourth official:Jean-Jacques Ngambo (DR Congo)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 72], "content_span": [73, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287110-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations knockout stage, Quarter-finals, Senegal vs Benin\nAssistant referees:Abouelregal Mahmoud (Egypt)Mokrane Gourari (Algeria)Fourth official:Gehad Grisha (Egypt)Fifth official:Anouar Hmila (Tunisia)Video assistant referee:Pol van Boekel (Netherlands)Assistant video assistant referees:Bakary Gassama (Gambia)Zakhele Siwela (South Africa)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 75], "content_span": [76, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287110-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations knockout stage, Quarter-finals, Nigeria vs South Africa\nAssistant referees:Azgaou Lahcen (Morocco)Mustapha Akarkad (Morocco)Fourth official:Bernard Camille (Seychelles)Fifth official:Issa Yaya (Chad)Video assistant referee:Beno\u00eet Millot (France)Assistant video assistant referees:Janny Sikazwe (Zambia)El Hadji Malick Samba (Senegal)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 82], "content_span": [83, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287110-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations knockout stage, Quarter-finals, Ivory Coast vs Algeria\nAssistant referees:Waleed Ahmed Ali (Sudan)Oliver Safari (DR Congo)Fourth official:Victor Gomes (South Africa)Fifth official:Lionel Andrianantenaina (Madagascar)Video assistant referee:Bakary Gassama (Gambia)Assistant video assistant referees:Pol van Boekel (Netherlands)Zakhele Siwela (South Africa)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 81], "content_span": [82, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287110-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations knockout stage, Quarter-finals, Madagascar vs Tunisia\nAssistant referees:Evarist Menkouande (Cameroon)Elvis Nguegoue (Cameroon)Fourth official:Eric Otogo-Castane (Gabon)Fifth official:Seydou Tiama (Burkina Faso)Video assistant referee:Beno\u00eet Millot (France)Assistant video assistant referees:Mustapha Ghorbal (Algeria)El Hadji Malick Samba (Senegal)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 80], "content_span": [81, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287110-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations knockout stage, Semi-finals, Senegal vs Tunisia\nAssistant referees:Waleed Ahmed Ali (Sudan)Oliver Safari (DR Congo)Fourth official:Bernard Camille (Seychelles)Fifth official:Lionel Andrianantenaina (Madagascar)Video assistant referee:Beno\u00eet Millot (France)Assistant video assistant referees:R\u00e9douane Jiyed (Morocco)Abouelregal Mahmoud (Egypt)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 74], "content_span": [75, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287110-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations knockout stage, Semi-finals, Algeria vs Nigeria\nAssistant referees:El Hadji Malick Samba (Senegal)Seydou Tiama (Burkina Faso)Fourth official:Victor Gomes (South Africa)Fifth official:Issa Yaya (Chad)Video assistant referee:Pol van Boekel (Netherlands)Assistant video assistant referees:Janny Sikazwe (Zambia)Zakhele Siwela (South Africa)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 74], "content_span": [75, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287110-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations knockout stage, Third place play-off\nAssistant referees:Abouelregal Mahmoud (Egypt)Issa Yaya (Chad)Fourth official:Joshua Bondo (Botswana)Fifth official:Lionel Andrianantenaina (Madagascar)Video assistant referee:Pol van Boekel (Netherlands)Assistant video assistant referees:Janny Sikazwe (Zambia)El Hadji Malick Samba (Senegal)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287110-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations knockout stage, Final\nAssistant referees:Evarist Menkouande (Cameroon)Nguegoue Elvis Guy Noupue (Cameroon)Fourth official:Eric Otogo-Castane (Gabon)Reserve assistant referee:Waleed Ahmed Ali (Sudan)Video assistant referee:Beno\u00eet Millot (France)Assistant video assistant referees:Bakary Gassama (Gambia)Zakhele Thusi Siwela (South\u00a0Africa)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287111-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification\nThe 2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification matches were organized by the Confederation of African Football (CAF) to decide the participating teams of the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations, the 32nd edition of the international men's football championship of Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287111-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification\nAs per the decision of the CAF Executive Committee on 20 July 2017, a total of 24 teams qualified to play in the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287111-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Draw\nA total of 51 teams entered the tournament, including Cameroon which would have qualified automatically for the final tournament as the hosts before their hosting rights were stripped. The draw for the qualifications stage took place on 12 January 2017, 19:30 UTC+1, in Libreville, Gabon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 46], "content_span": [47, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287111-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Draw, Seeding\nFor seeding, the teams were ranked using CAF's own system which were calculated based on the team's performance in the three most recent editions the Africa Cup of Nations final tournaments, the three most recent editions the Africa Cup of Nations qualifying campaigns, and the 2014 FIFA World Cup final tournament and qualifying campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287111-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Draw, Seeding\nThe teams ranked 1\u201345 (Pots 1\u20134) directly entered the group stage, while the teams ranked 46\u201351 (Pot 5) entered the preliminary round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287111-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Draw, Procedure\nThe nine teams from Pot 4 were drawn in Groups D to L, while the twelve teams from each of the Pots 3, 2 and 1 were drawn in Groups A to L. Then, the six teams from Pot 5 were drawn into three pairings, which would play in the preliminary round. The three winners would advance to Groups A, B and C of the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287111-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Schedule\nMatchday 2 was postponed at the request of the 2018 FIFA World Cup qualified teams so that they could play friendly matches in March 2018 to prepare for the World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287111-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Preliminary round\nThe six teams were drawn into three ties, played in home-and-away two-legged format. The three winners advanced to the group stage to join the 45 teams which entered directly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287111-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Group stage\nThe 48 teams were drawn into 12 groups of four teams (from Group A to Group L). They consisted of the 45 teams which entered directly, plus the three winners of the preliminary round whose identity was not known at the time of the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287111-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Group stage\nThe original host Cameroon was drawn into Group B. With the team guaranteed a spot in the finals regardless of its ranking in the group, its matches would have counted in determining the qualification of the other teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287111-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Group stage\nAll group winners plus three best runners-up would have qualified for the finals. From Group B, if Cameroon had finished first or second, the other team placed in the top 2 would have qualified too and no other team would have been eligible to qualify, while if Cameroon had finished third or fourth, the group winner would have qualified and the runner-up would have been eligible to qualify as one of the three best runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287111-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Group stage\nOn 20 July 2017, when the first round of the qualifying group stage had already been played, the final tournament was expanded from 16 to 24 teams. Under the new format, the best-placed team other than Cameroon would have qualified from Group B, while the group winners and runners-up would have qualified from all other groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287111-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Group stage\nOn 30 November 2018 Cameroon was stripped of the hosting rights. The team lost its automatic spot for the finals but still could qualify through the qualification process, which it eventually did. On 8 January 2019 Egypt was named as the replacement host. As at that point Egypt had already been assured of a top 2 finish in Group J, the winners and runners-up from all qualification groups would now qualify for the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287111-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Group stage\nThe teams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, tiebreakers were applied in the following order (Regulations Article 14):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287111-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Goalscorers\nThere were 348 goals scored in 146 matches, for an average of 2.38 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287112-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group A\nGroup A of the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification tournament was one of the twelve groups to decide the teams which qualified for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations finals tournament. The group consisted of four teams: Senegal, Equatorial Guinea, Sudan, and Madagascar (winners of the preliminary round).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287112-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group A\nThe teams played against each other in home-and-away round-robin format between June 2017 and March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287112-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group A\nSenegal and Madagascar, the group winners and runners-up respectively, qualified for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287112-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group A, Goalscorers\nThere were 30 goals scored in 12 matches, for an average of 2.5 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 61], "content_span": [62, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287113-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group B\nGroup B of the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification tournament was one of the twelve groups to decide the teams which qualified for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations finals tournament. The group consisted of four teams: Cameroon, Morocco, Malawi, and Comoros (winners of the preliminary round).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287113-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group B\nThe teams played against each other in home-and-away round-robin format between June 2017 and March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287113-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group B\nOn 12 March 2017, the Football Association of Malawi announced their senior national football team would withdraw from the competition due to the lack of funding. However, they later announced its reversal of this decision and would continue to compete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287113-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group B\nMorocco and Cameroon, the group winners and runners-up respectively, qualified for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287113-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group B\nCameroon were the original hosts of the final tournament and would have been guaranteed of qualification regardless of their ranking; the matches of the team would have counted in determining the qualification of the other teams, and only the top team apart from Cameroon would have qualified for the final tournament. However, on 30 November 2018, Cameroon were stripped of hosting the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations. due to the Boko Haram insurgency and the Anglophone Crisis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287113-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group B, Goalscorers\nThere were 21 goals scored in 12 matches, for an average of 1.75 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 61], "content_span": [62, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287114-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group C\nGroup C of the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification tournament was one of the twelve groups to decide the teams which qualified for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations finals tournament. The group consisted of four teams: Mali, Gabon, Burundi, and South Sudan (winners of the preliminary round).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287114-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group C\nThe teams played against each other in home-and-away round-robin format between June 2017 and March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287114-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group C\nMali and Burundi, the group winners and runners-up respectively, qualified for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287114-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group C, Goalscorers\nThere were 30 goals scored in 12 matches, for an average of 2.5 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 61], "content_span": [62, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287115-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group D\nGroup D of the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification tournament was one of the twelve groups to decide the teams which qualified for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations finals tournament. The group consisted of four teams: Algeria, Togo, Benin, and Gambia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287115-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group D\nThe teams played against each other in home-and-away round-robin format between June 2017 and March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287115-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group D\nAlgeria and Benin, the group winners and runners-up respectively, qualified for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287115-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group D, Goalscorers\nThere were 24 goals scored in 12 matches, for an average of 2 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 61], "content_span": [62, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287116-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group E\nGroup E of the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification tournament was one of the twelve groups to decide the teams which qualified for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations finals tournament. The group consisted of four teams: Nigeria, South Africa, Libya, and Seychelles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287116-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group E\nThe teams played against each other in home-and-away round-robin format between June 2017 and March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287116-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group E\nNigeria and South Africa, the group winners and runners-up respectively, qualified for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287116-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group E, Goalscorers\nThere were 44 goals scored in 12 matches, for an average of 3.67 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 61], "content_span": [62, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287117-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group F\nGroup F of the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification tournament was one of the twelve groups to decide the teams which qualified for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations finals tournament. The group consisted of four teams: Ghana, Ethiopia, Sierra Leone, and Kenya, before Sierra Leone's disqualification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287117-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group F\nThe teams played against each other in home-and-away round-robin format between June 2017 and March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287117-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group F\nGhana and Kenya, the group winners and runners-up respectively, qualified for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287117-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group F, Goalscorers\nNote: Goals scored in annulled matches counted. There were 16 goals scored in 8 matches, for an average of 2 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 61], "content_span": [62, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287118-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group G\nGroup G of the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification tournament was one of the twelve groups to decide the teams which qualified for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations finals tournament. The group consisted of four teams: DR Congo, Congo, Zimbabwe, and Liberia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287118-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group G\nThe teams played against each other in home-and-away round-robin format between June 2017 and March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287118-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group G\nZimbabwe and DR Congo, the group winners and runners-up respectively, qualified for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287118-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group G, Goalscorers\nThere were 29 goals scored in 12 matches, for an average of 2.42 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 61], "content_span": [62, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287119-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group H\nGroup H of the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification tournament was one of the twelve groups to decide the teams which qualified for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations finals tournament. The group consisted of four teams: Ivory Coast, Guinea, Central African Republic, and Rwanda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287119-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group H\nThe teams played against each other in home-and-away round-robin format between June 2017 and March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287119-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group H\nGuinea and Ivory Coast, the group winners and runners-up respectively, qualified for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287119-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group H, Goalscorers\nThere were 29 goals scored in 12 matches, for an average of 2.42 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 61], "content_span": [62, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287120-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group I\nGroup I of the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification tournament was one of the twelve groups to decide the teams which qualified for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations finals tournament. The group consisted of four teams: Burkina Faso, Angola, Botswana, and Mauritania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287120-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group I\nThe teams played against each other in home-and-away round-robin format between June 2017 and March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287120-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group I\nAngola and Mauritania, the group winners and runners-up respectively, qualified for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287120-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group I, Goalscorers\nThere were 25 goals scored in 12 matches, for an average of 2.08 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 61], "content_span": [62, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287121-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group J\nGroup J of the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification tournament was one of the twelve groups to decide the teams which qualified for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations finals tournament. The group consisted of four teams: Tunisia, Egypt, Niger, and Eswatini (formerly Swaziland).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287121-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group J\nThe teams played against each other in home-and-away round-robin format between June 2017 and March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287121-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group J\nTunisia and Egypt, the group winners and runners-up respectively, qualified for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287121-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group J, Goalscorers\nThere were 34 goals scored in 12 matches, for an average of 2.83 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 61], "content_span": [62, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287122-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group K\nGroup K of the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification tournament was one of the twelve groups to decide the teams which qualified for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations finals tournament. The group consisted of four teams: Zambia, Mozambique, Guinea-Bissau, and Namibia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287122-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group K\nThe teams played against each other in home-and-away round-robin format between June 2017 and March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287122-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group K\nGuinea-Bissau and Namibia, the group winners and runners-up respectively, qualified for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287122-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group K, Goalscorers\nThere were 28 goals scored in 12 matches, for an average of 2.33 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 61], "content_span": [62, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287123-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group L\nGroup L of the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification tournament was one of the twelve groups to decide the teams which qualified for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations finals tournament. The group consisted of four teams: Cape Verde, Uganda, Tanzania, and Lesotho.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287123-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group L\nThe teams played against each other in home-and-away round-robin format between June 2017 and March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287123-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group L\nUganda and Tanzania, the group winners and runners-up respectively, qualified for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287123-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group L, Goalscorers\nThere were 20 goals scored in 12 matches, for an average of 1.67 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 61], "content_span": [62, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287124-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification preliminary round\nThe preliminary round of the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification tournament decided three teams which advanced to the group stage of the qualification tournament. The preliminary round consisted of the six lowest-ranked teams among the 51 entrants: Madagascar, S\u00e3o\u00a0Tom\u00e9\u00a0and\u00a0Pr\u00edncipe, South Sudan, Comoros, Djibouti, and Mauritius.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287124-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification preliminary round\nThe six teams were drawn into three ties, played in home-and-away two-legged format between 22 and 28 March 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287124-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification preliminary round\nThe three winners advanced to the group stage to join the 45 teams which entered directly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287124-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification preliminary round, Matches\nIf the aggregate score was tied after the second leg, the away goals rule was applied, and if still tied, extra time was not played, and a penalty shoot-out was used to determine the winner (Regulations Article 15).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 67], "content_span": [68, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287124-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification preliminary round, Matches\nMadagascar won 4\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to qualification Group A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 67], "content_span": [68, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287124-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification preliminary round, Matches\nComoros won 3\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to qualification Group B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 67], "content_span": [68, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287124-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification preliminary round, Matches\nSouth Sudan won 6\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to qualification Group C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 67], "content_span": [68, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287124-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification preliminary round, Goalscorers\nThere were 18 goals scored in 6 matches, for an average of 3 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 71], "content_span": [72, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287125-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations squads\nThe 2019 Africa Cup of Nations was an international football tournament that was held in Egypt from 21 June to 19 July 2019. The 24 national teams involved in the tournament were required to register a squad of 23 players, including three goalkeepers. Only players in these squads were eligible to take part in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287125-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations squads\nThe position and date of birth listed for each player is per the official squad list published by CAF. The age listed for each player is on 21 June 2019, the first day of the tournament. The numbers of caps and goals listed for each player do not include any matches played after the start of tournament. The club listed is the club for which the player last played a competitive match prior to the tournament. The nationality for each club reflects the national association (not the league) to which the club is affiliated. A flag is included for coaches that are of a different nationality than their own national team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287125-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations squads, Group A, Egypt\nEgypt's 25-man preliminary squad was announced on 21 May 2019. The final squad was announced on 11 June. Amr Warda was excluded from the squad for disciplinary reasons on 26 June. However, the Egyptian Football Association recalled him to the national team on 28 June after the player posted an apology video on his official account on Facebook.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287125-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations squads, Group A, DR Congo\nDR Congo's 32-man preliminary squad was announced on 22 May 2019. The final squad was announced on 11 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287125-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations squads, Group A, Uganda\nUganda's 29-man preliminary squad was announced on 22 May 2019. The final squad was announced on 11 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287125-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations squads, Group A, Zimbabwe\nZimbabwe's 34-man preliminary squad was announced on 14 May 2019. The final squad was announced on 10 June. Tafadzwa Kutinyu withdrew injured and was replaced by Lawrence Mhlanga on 19 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287125-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations squads, Group B, Nigeria\nNigeria's 31-man preliminary squad was announced on 14 May 2019. The final squad was announced on 10 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287125-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations squads, Group B, Guinea\nGuinea's 25-man preliminary squad was announced on 27 May 2019. The final squad was announced on 13 June. Ba\u00efssama Sankoh withdrew injured and was replaced by Lass Bangoura on 19 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287125-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations squads, Group B, Madagascar\nMadagascar's 26-man preliminary squad was announced on 16 May 2019. The final squad was announced on 12 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287125-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations squads, Group B, Burundi\nBurundi's 26-man preliminary squad was announced on 14 May 2019. The final squad was announced on 12 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287125-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations squads, Group C, Senegal\nSenegal's 25-man preliminary squad was announced on 31 May 2019. The final squad was announced on 13 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287125-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations squads, Group C, Algeria\nAlgeria's final squad was announced on 30 May 2019, with no preliminary squad released prior to it. Haris Belkebla was excluded from the squad for disciplinary reasons and was replaced by Andy Delort on 13 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287125-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations squads, Group C, Kenya\nKenya's 30-man preliminary squad was announced on 14 May 2019. The final squad was announced on 11 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287125-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations squads, Group C, Tanzania\nTanzania's 39-man preliminary squad was announced on 2 May 2019. The final squad was announced on 13 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287125-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations squads, Group D, Morocco\nA 27-man provisional squad was announced on 27 May 2019. Anas Zniti replaced Abdelali Mhamdi on 5 June due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287125-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations squads, Group D, Morocco\nThe final squad was announced on 11 June 2019. On 19 June 2019 it was announced that Abdelkrim Baadi will officially replace Abderrazak Hamdallah injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287125-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations squads, Group D, South Africa\nA 23-man final squad was announced on 9 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287125-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations squads, Group D, Namibia\nA 23-man final squad was announced on 10 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287125-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations squads, Group E, Tunisia\nThe following players were called up for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287125-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations squads, Group E, Mali\nThe final squad was announced on 15 June 2019. Two players named Adama Traor\u00e9 were selected; to avoid confusion, the older player from US Orl\u00e9ans was widely known as Adama Traor\u00e9 I and the younger of Cercle Brugge as Adama Traor\u00e9 II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287125-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations squads, Group E, Angola\nA 23-man final squad was announced on 12 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287125-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations squads, Group F, Cameroon\nA 34-man provisional squad was announced on 10 May 2019. On 15 May, Jean-Charles Castelletto, Tristan Dingom\u00e9, St\u00e8ve Mvou\u00e9 were added to the provisional squad. The list was reduced to 29 names on 10 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287125-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations squads, Group F, Guinea-Bissau\nGuinea-Bissau's 29-man preliminary squad was announced on 3 June 2019. The final squad was announced on 12 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287125-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations squads, Player representation, By club nationality, By club confederation\nNations in bold are represented by their national teams in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 100], "content_span": [101, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287126-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Men's Sevens\nThe 2019 Africa Men's Sevens was a rugby sevens tournament held in Johannesburg on 8\u20139 November 2019. It was the seventh championship in Africa Men's Sevens, a series that began in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287126-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Men's Sevens\nThis tournament also served as a qualifying tournament for the 2020 Summer Olympics, with the champion team Kenya advancing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287126-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Men's Sevens\nThe next two best-placed teams, Uganda and Zimbabwe were eligible to compete at a final Olympic qualifier tournament, as well as the 2020 World Rugby Sevens Challenger Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287126-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Men's Sevens, 2018 Africa Regional Sevens \u2013 West\nOn 15\u201316 September 2018, eight teams took part in a regional tournament at Abidjan, Ivory Coast. The highest ranking teams, Ivory Coast and Nigeria, advanced based on their top two finishes. All times in Greenwich Mean Time (UTC\u00b100:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 60], "content_span": [61, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287126-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Men's Sevens, Main tournament, Teams\nThe order of teams is based upon seeding from the prior year's tournament's placement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287126-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Men's Sevens, Main tournament, Pool Stage\nThe teams were allocated to pools according to the results of the opening round:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287126-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Men's Sevens, Main tournament, Pool Stage\nPool A: Winners of matches 1, 4, and 5, and the losing team with the smallest losing margin", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287126-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Men's Sevens, Main tournament, Pool Stage\nPool B: Winners of matches 2, 3, 6, and 7", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287126-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Men's Sevens, Main tournament, Pool Stage\nPool C: The losing teams with the 2nd, 5th, and 6th smallest losing margins", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287126-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Men's Sevens, Main tournament, Pool Stage\nPool D: The losing teams with the 3rd, 4th, and 7th smallest losing margins", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287127-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations\nThe 2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations was the 13th edition of the Africa U-17 Cup of Nations (18th edition if tournaments without hosts are included), the biennial international youth football tournament organized by the Confederation of African Football (CAF) for players aged 17 and below. In May 2015, it was decided that the tournament would be hosted by Tanzania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287127-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations\nFour teams of the tournament qualified for the 2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup in Brazil as the CAF representatives. Cameroon won their second title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287127-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations\nAngola and Nigeria qualified for finishing third and fourth in the competition respectively. Defending champions Mali failed to qualify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287127-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations\nFollowing completion of the tournament, CAF ejected Guinea from the competition, and deleted its results from the records, for fielding players with passports which had a different date of birth to those the players had used in the U-16 age restricted 'International Dream Cup' in Japan. Senegal were given the remaining place at the U-17 World Cup as they had placed behind Guinea during the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287127-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations, Qualification\nThe CAF decided in July 2017 that the format of the qualifying competition should be changed and split according to zones. The qualifiers were played between 19 July and 18 September 2018. At the end of the qualification phase, seven teams joined the hosts Tanzania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287127-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations, Qualification, Player eligibility\nPlayers born 1 January 2002 or later were eligible to participate in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287127-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations, Qualification, Qualified teams\nNote: All appearance statistics count only those since the introduction of final tournament in 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287127-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations, Draw\nThe draw of the final tournament was held on 20 December 2018, 19:30 EAT (UTC+3), at the Mlimani City Conference Centre in Dar es Salaam. The eight teams were drawn into two groups of four teams. The hosts Tanzania were seeded in Group A and allocated to position A1, while 2017 third place Guinea were seeded in Group B and allocated to position B1 (2017 champions and runners-up Mali and Ghana did not qualify). The remaining six teams were seeded based on their results in the 2017 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations (final tournament and qualifiers), and drawn to any of the remaining three positions in each group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287127-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations, Match officials\nA total of 13 referees and 14 assistant referees were appointed for the tournament, including one women referee and two women assistant referees, which is the first time women officials were appointed in a CAF men's tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287127-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations, Group stage\nThe top two teams of each group advance to the semi-finals and qualify for the 2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287127-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations, Group stage\nTeams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria were applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings (Regulations Article 72):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287127-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, penalty shoot-out (no extra time) was used to decide the winner if necessary (Regulations Article 73).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287127-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations, Awards\nThe following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287127-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations, Goalscorers\nThere were 36 goals scored in 16 matches, for an average of 2.25 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287127-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations, Qualified teams for FIFA U-17 World Cup\nThe following four teams from CAF qualified for the 2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 72], "content_span": [73, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287127-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations, Concerns and controversies, Guinean Football Federation punishment\nCAF imposed the following penalties on the Guinean Football Federation:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 99], "content_span": [100, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287128-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations qualification\nThe 2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations qualification was a men's under-17 football competition which decided the participating teams of the 2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287128-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations qualification\nPlayers born 1 January 2002 or later were eligible to participate in the competition. A total of eight teams qualified to play in the final tournament, including Tanzania who qualified automatically as hosts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287128-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations qualification, Teams\nIn July 2017, the Confederation of African Football decided that the qualifying competition should be split into regional competitions. To qualify, 49 of the 54 CAF members entered the qualifying tournament of their zone, including the hosts Tanzania, which also participated in qualification despite automatically qualified for the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 52], "content_span": [53, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287128-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations qualification, Teams\nApart from the hosts, each of the six zones received one spot in the final tournament, and the zone of the defending champions received an additional spot. Since Mali won the 2017 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations, West A Zone received two spots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 52], "content_span": [53, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287128-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations qualification, Format\nThe qualification format is determined by each zone (Regulations Article 13).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287128-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations qualification, North Zone\nTunisia hosted the 2018 UNAF U-17 Tournament, the 15th edition of the UNAF U-17 Tournament under the auspices of the UNAF, which also served as a qualifiers for the Africa U-17 Cup of Nations, between 20\u201328 August 2018. The matches were played at Monastir (Stade Mustapha Ben Jannet) and Sousse (Stade Olympique de Sousse).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287128-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations qualification, North Zone\nThe draw for the fixtures was held on 14 May 2018. The four teams were placed in one group, with the winner qualifying for the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287128-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations qualification, West A Zone\nSenegal would host the WAFU-UFOA Zone A U-17 Championship between 9\u201318 September 2018. The matches were played at Pikine (Stade Al Djigo) and Rufisque (Stade Ngalandou Diouf).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 58], "content_span": [59, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287128-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations qualification, West A Zone, Group stage\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 30 July 2018. The nine teams were drawn into three groups of three teams. The winners of each group and the best runners-up advanced to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287128-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations qualification, West B Zone\nThe WAFU-UFOA Zone B qualifiers for the Africa U-17 Cup of Nations were held in Niger between 2\u201315 September 2018. It was originally to be hosted at Ghana, but a new host was appointed. The matches were played at Niamey (Stade G\u00e9n\u00e9ral Seyni Kountch\u00e9; Stade Municipal would originally also host matches).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 58], "content_span": [59, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287128-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations qualification, West B Zone, Group stage\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 24 July 2018. The seven teams were drawn into two groups, one of three teams and one of four teams. The winners and runners-up of each group advanced to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287128-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations qualification, Central Zone\nThe UNIFFAC qualifiers for the Africa U-17 Cup of Nations were held in Equatorial Guinea between 3\u201312 August 2018. It was originally to be hosted at DR Congo, but a new host was appointed. The matches were played at Bata (Estadio de Bata and Estadio La Libertad) and Malabo (Nuevo Estadio de Malabo).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 59], "content_span": [60, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287128-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations qualification, Central Zone, Group stage\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 30 July 2018. The seven teams were drawn into two groups, one of four teams and one of three teams. The winners and runners-up of each group advanced to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 72], "content_span": [73, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287128-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations qualification, Central-East Zone\nThe CECAFA qualifiers for the Africa U-17 Cup of Nations were held in Tanzania between 11\u201326 August 2018. The matches were played at Dar es Salaam (National Stadium and Chamazi Stadium).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287128-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations qualification, Central-East Zone, Group stage\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 5 July 2018. The ten teams were drawn into two groups of five teams. The winners and runners-up of each group advanced to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 77], "content_span": [78, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287128-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations qualification, South Zone\nCOSAFA announced that the COSAFA U-17 Championship hosted by Mauritius between 19\u201329 July 2018 would be the region's qualifying tournament. The matches were played at Port Louis (St. Fran\u00e7ois Xavier Stadium) and Belle Vue Maurel (Anjalay Stadium).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287128-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations qualification, South Zone, Group stage\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 31 May 2018. The twelve teams were drawn into three groups of four teams. The winners of each group and the best runners-up advanced to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 70], "content_span": [71, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287128-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations qualification, Goalscorers\nIn total, there were 279 goals scored in 78 matches, for an average of 3.58 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 58], "content_span": [59, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287129-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations squads\nThe 2019 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations is an international age-restricted football tournament which is currently being held in Tanzania from 14\u201328 April. The 8 representative teams involved in the tournament were required to register a squad of 21 players, including three goalkeepers. Only players born or after 1 January 2002 are eligible to be registered in these squads, only players registered in the squads are eligible to take part in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287130-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-20 Cup of Nations\nThe 2019 Africa U-20 Cup of Nations was the 15th edition of the Africa U-20 Cup of Nations (22nd edition if tournaments without hosts are included), the biennial international youth football tournament organized by the Confederation of African Football (CAF) for players aged 20 and below. In May 2015, it was decided that the tournament would be hosted by Niger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287130-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-20 Cup of Nations\nThe top four teams of the tournament qualified for the 2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup in Poland as the CAF representatives. Mali won their first title, while the other qualified teams which finished second to fourth were Senegal, South Africa and Nigeria. Defending champions Zambia failed to qualify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287130-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-20 Cup of Nations, Qualification\nThe qualifiers were played between 30 March and 12 August 2018. At the end of the qualification phase, seven teams joined the hosts Niger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287130-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-20 Cup of Nations, Qualification, Player eligibility\nPlayers born 1 January 1999 or later are eligible to participate in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287130-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-20 Cup of Nations, Qualification, Qualified teams\nNote: All appearance statistics count only those since the introduction of final tournament in 1991.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287130-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-20 Cup of Nations, Draw\nThe draw of the final tournament was held on 13 December 2018, 21:00 WAT (UTC+1), at the Centre Technique de La Fenifoot in Niamey. The eight teams were drawn into two groups of four teams. The hosts Niger were seeded in Group A and allocated to position A1, while 2017 runners-up Senegal were seeded in Group B and allocated to position B1 (2017 champions Zambia did not qualify). The remaining six teams were seeded based on their results in the 2017 Africa U-20 Cup of Nations (final tournament and qualifiers), and drawn to any of the remaining three positions in each group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287130-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-20 Cup of Nations, Match officials\nA total of 12 referees and 12 assistant referees were appointed for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287130-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-20 Cup of Nations, Group stage\nThe top two teams of each group advance to the semi-finals and qualify for the 2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287130-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-20 Cup of Nations, Group stage\nTeams are ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria are applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings (Regulations Article 71):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287130-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-20 Cup of Nations, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, extra time and penalty shoot-out are used to decide the winner if necessary, except for the third place match where penalty shoot-out (no extra time) is used to decide the winner if necessary (Regulations Article 72).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287130-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-20 Cup of Nations, Qualified teams for FIFA U-20 World Cup\nThe following four teams from CAF qualified for the 2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 72], "content_span": [73, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287131-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-20 Cup of Nations qualification\nThe 2019 Africa U-20 Cup of Nations qualification was a men's under-20 football competition which decided the participating teams of the 2019 Africa U-20 Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287131-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-20 Cup of Nations qualification\nPlayers born 1 January 1999 or later are eligible to participate in the competition. A total of eight teams qualified to play in the final tournament, including Niger who qualified automatically as hosts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287131-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-20 Cup of Nations qualification, Teams\nApart from Niger, the remaining 53 members of CAF were eligible to enter the qualifying competition, and a total of 40 national teams were in the qualifying draw, which was announced on 26 February 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 52], "content_span": [53, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287131-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-20 Cup of Nations qualification, Format\nQualification ties are played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If the aggregate score is tied after the second leg, the away goals rule is applied, and if still tied, the penalty shoot-out (no extra time) is used to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287131-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-20 Cup of Nations qualification, Bracket\nThe bracket of the draw was announced by the CAF on 26 February 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 54], "content_span": [55, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287131-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-20 Cup of Nations qualification, Bracket\nThe seven winners of the third round qualify for the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 54], "content_span": [55, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287132-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-20 Cup of Nations squads\nThe 2019 Africa U-20 Cup of Nations is an international association football tournament held in Niger. The eight national teams involved in the tournament were required to register a squad of 21 players; only players in these squads are eligible to take part in the tournament. Each player had to have been born after 1 January 1999. All ages as of start of the tournament. The squads for the 2019 Africa U-20 Cup of Nations were announced on 30 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287133-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations\nThe 2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations was the third edition of the Africa U-23 Cup of Nations, the quadrennial international age-restricted football championship organised by the Confederation of African Football (CAF) for the men's under-23 national teams of Africa. It was hosted by Egypt between 8 and 22 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287133-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations\nThe tournament was initially scheduled to take place in Zambia, but they withdrew from hosting in July 2017. Egypt was announced as the new host nation of the tournament by CAF on 23 September 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287133-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations\nSame as previous editions, the tournament served as African qualifying for the Olympic football tournament, with the top three teams of the tournament qualifying for the 2020 Summer Olympic men's football tournament in Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287133-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations\nNigeria were the defending champions, but were eliminated in the group stage. Egypt defeated Ivory Coast 2\u20131 at extra time in the final, winning the title for the first time in their history, while South Africa came third for the second times in a row after beating Ghana 6\u20135 on penalties after the match ended 2\u20132 in their third-place play-off match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287133-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations, Qualification\nEgypt qualified automatically as hosts, while the remaining seven spots were determined by the qualifying rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287133-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations, Venues\nThe tournament used two venues, Cairo International Stadium and Al Salam Stadium, both in Cairo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287133-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations, Squads\nEach team had to register a squad of 21 players. Only players born on or after 1 January 1997 were eligible to compete in the tournament (Regulations Article 45).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287133-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations, Draw\nThe draw of the final tournament was held on 2 October 2019, 19:00 CAT (UTC+2), at the Haramlek Palace of Montaza Complex in Alexandria. The eight teams were drawn into two groups of four teams. The hosts Egypt were seeded in Group A (position A1), and the defending champions Nigeria were seeded in Group B (position B1). The remaining teams were allocated to two pots based on the results of the 2015 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations, and were drawn to the remaining positions in their group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287133-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations, Match officials\nOn 31 October 2019, CAF released the list of 12 referees and 13 assistant referees selected to oversee matches. This is the first time CAF appointed female match officials for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287133-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations, Group stage\nThe top two teams of each group advanced to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287133-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations, Group stage\nTeams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria were applied in the order given, to determine the rankings (Regulations Article 68):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287133-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, extra time and penalty shoot-out were used to decide the winner if necessary, except for the third place match where a direct penalty shoot-out, without any extra time, would be used to decide the winner if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287133-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations, Awards\nThe following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287133-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations, Awards, Team of the tournament\nThe team of the tournament was announced by CAF after the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287133-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations, Qualified teams for Summer Olympics\nThe following three teams from CAF qualified for the 2020 Summer Olympic men's football tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287133-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations, Goalscorers\nThere were 35 goals scored in 16 matches, for an average of 2.19 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287134-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations qualification\nThe 2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations qualification was a men's under-23 football competition which decided the participating teams of the 2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287134-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations qualification\nPlayers born 1 January 1997 or later were eligible to participate in the competition. A total of eight teams qualified to play in the final tournament, including Egypt who qualified automatically as hosts. These matches also served as the first stage of the CAF qualifiers for the 2020 Summer Olympics men's football tournament in Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287134-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations qualification, Teams\nApart from Egypt, the remaining 53 members of CAF were eligible to enter the qualifying competition, and a total of 43 national teams were in the qualifying draw, which was announced on 2 October 2018. The 13 teams which had the best performance in the 2015 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations final tournament and qualifying competition were given a bye to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 52], "content_span": [53, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287134-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations qualification, Format\nQualification ties were played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If the aggregate score was tied after the second leg, away goals rule was applied, and if still tied, penalty shoot-out (no extra time) was used to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287134-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations qualification, Schedule\nThe schedule of the qualifying rounds was as follows. All matches were played during the FIFA International Window. The third round was originally scheduled for 3\u201311 June 2019, but was rescheduled to 2\u201310 September 2019 due to the proximity of its initial dates to the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations between 21 June and 19 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287134-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations qualification, Bracket\nThe bracket of the draw was announced by the CAF on 2 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 54], "content_span": [55, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287134-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations qualification, Bracket\nThe seven winners of the third round qualified for the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 54], "content_span": [55, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287134-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations qualification, Second round\nCameroon won on walkover due to FIFA's suspension of the Sierra Leone Football Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 59], "content_span": [60, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287134-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations qualification, Second round\nDR Congo won 2\u20131 on aggregate. However, they were later disqualified for fielding an ineligible (overaged) player, and Morocco won on walkover.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 59], "content_span": [60, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287134-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations qualification, Goalscorers\nThere were 157 goals scored in 66 matches, for an average of 2.38 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 58], "content_span": [59, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287135-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations squads\nThe following is a list of squads for each national team competing at the 2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations. The tournament took place in Egypt, between 8\u201322 November 2019. It was the third U-23 age group competition organised by the Confederation of African Football (CAF).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287135-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations squads\nThe 8 national teams involved in the tournament were required to register a squad of 21 players, including three goalkeepers. Only players in these squads were eligible to take part in the tournament. Players born on or after 1 January 1997 were eligible to compete in the tournament. On 5 November 2019, CAF published the final lists with squad numbers on their website.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287135-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations squads\nThe full squad listings are below. The position listed for each player is per the official squad list published by CAF. The age listed for each player is on 8 November 2019, the first day of the tournament. The nationality for each club reflects the national association (not the league) to which the club is affiliated. A flag is included for coaches who are of a different nationality than their own national team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287135-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations squads, Group A, Egypt\nThe preliminary squad was announced on 23 October 2019. The final squad was announced on 29 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287135-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations squads, Group A, Cameroon\nThe preliminary squad was announced on 2 October 2019. The final squad was announced on 29 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287135-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations squads, Group A, Ghana\nThe preliminary squad was announced on 9 October 2019. The final squad was announced on 1 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287135-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations squads, Group B, Zambia\nThe preliminary squad was announced on 5 October 2019. The squad was then trimmed-down on 21 October 2019. The final squad was announced on 29 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287136-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Women's Sevens\nThe 2019 Africa Women's Sevens was a women's rugby sevens tournament held in Monastir, Tunisia on 12\u201313 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287136-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Women's Sevens\nThe tournament acted as qualification for the 2020 Hong Kong Women's Sevens, which in turns serves as a qualification tournament for the World Rugby Women's Sevens Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287136-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Women's Sevens\nThe tournament also acted as qualification for the 2020 Summer Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287136-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Women's Sevens\nSouth Africa won the tournament and qualified for the Hong Kong Sevens along with Kenya. South Africa declined Olympics qualification so Kenya earned the automatic qualifying spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287136-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Africa Women's Sevens, Pool Stage\nThe top two teams in each pool as well as the two best 3rd ranked teams qualify for the cup quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287137-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 African Badminton Championships\nThe 2019 African Badminton Championships was the continental badminton championships to crown the best players and teams across Africa. The tournament was held at the Alfred Diete-Spiff Centre in Port Harcourt, Nigeria, from 22\u201328 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287137-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 African Badminton Championships, Medalists\nIn November 2019, Badminton World Federation released a statement regarding doping test failure of Kate Foo Kune in this championships and decided to disqualify her result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287137-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 African Badminton Championships, Tournament\nThe 2019 African Badminton Championships were held in two separate events. The team event, officially All Africa Mixed Team Championships 2019, was a continental tournament to crown the best team in Africa holding from 22\u201325 April. The individual event, officially All Africa Individual Championships 2019, was a continental tournament to crown the best players in Africa holding from 26\u201328 April. A total of 18 countries across Africa registered their players to compete at this event. This year's edition served as the first qualifier for African player to compete at the 2020 Summer Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287137-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 African Badminton Championships, Tournament\nThe tournament was sponsored by the Rivers State Government and organized by the Badminton Federation of Nigeria; the federation prepared a mascot, Alabo The Shuttler, as a reflection of the culture of the people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287137-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 African Badminton Championships, Tournament, Venue\nThis tournament was held at the Alfred Diete-Spiff Centre (Civic Centre), Moscow road, Port Harcourt with six courts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287137-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 African Badminton Championships, Tournament, Point distribution\nThe individual event of this tournament was graded based on the BWF points system for the BWF International Challenge event. Below is the table with the point distribution for each phase of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287138-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 African Baseball Championship\nThe 2019 African Baseball Championship was the fourth Africa Baseball Championship, after 1999, 2003, and 2007. The Championship was held from May 1 to May 5, 2019, at the Boksburg Baseball Club in Johannesburg, South Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287138-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 African Baseball Championship\nSeventeen national baseball teams in Africa were originally divided into four zones for the 2020 Olympics qualifiers. Ultimately, there were three regional qualifiers leading up to the 2019 African Baseball Championship, starting in March 2019 at the Labone Secondary School in Labone, a suburb of Accra, in Ghana with ones in Kenya and South Africa in April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287138-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 African Baseball Championship\nBurkina Faso competed in Zone West 1 against Team Ghana, Team Nigeria, Team Tunisia, and Team Cote d\u2019Ivoire. In April 2019 at the first African West One pre-qualifier for the 2020 Olympics, Team Burkina Faso defeated Team Nigeria (13-3) and Team Ghana (14-4). Burkina Faso was the first team to qualify, followed by Nigeria, Kenya, Uganda, South Africa and Zimbabwe. Nigeria and Kenya withdrew before the Championship began. Burkina Faso lost in the semi-final in May to Team South Africa, 16-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287138-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 African Baseball Championship\nThe winner of the 2019 African Baseball Championship, Team South Africa, advanced to the 2019 Europe-Africa Qualifier for the 2020 Olympics in Italy in September 2019 to face the top five teams from the 2019 European Baseball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287139-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 African Beach Games\nThe 2019 African Beach Games were the inaugural edition of the international beach sports competition between the nations of Africa, organised by the Association of National Olympic Committees of Africa (ANOCA). The first Games were held on the island of Sal, Cape Verde in June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287139-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 African Beach Games\nIn the ten-day competition, a total of 45 nations competed in 28 events across 11 sports. Teqball was also included as a demonstration sport on 18 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287139-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 African Beach Games\nThe Games were awarded to the Cabo Verdean Olympic Committee (COC) at the ANOCA General Assembly in Djibouti in May 2017. The host contract was signed in March 2018 between the City Hall of Sal, the Association of National Olympic Committees of Africa (ANOCA) and the Cabo Verdean Olympic Committee (COC), to carry out of the first African Beach Games 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287139-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 African Beach Games, Branding\nThe logo is the silhouette of the African continent, while the mascot is a tortoise named Krexteu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287139-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 African Beach Games, Participating nations\n45 out of 54 nations participated. Chad, Comoros, Eritrea, Eswatini, Ethiopia, Gabon, S\u00e3o Tom\u00e9 and Pr\u00edncipe, Somalia and South Africa did not participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287140-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 African Entertainment Awards USA\nThe 5th African Entertainment Awards USA was held at the New Jersey Institute of Technology in Newark, New Jersey on October 19, 2019 and was televised on Sahara TV. Nominees were revealed on August 23, 2019. The 5th ceremony honors African excellence as it marks 5 years as an NGO and the show host were; Eric Omondi, and Anita Fabiola.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287140-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 African Entertainment Awards USA, Nominations and winners\nThe following is a list of nominees and the winners are listed highlighted in boldface.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 62], "content_span": [63, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287140-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 African Entertainment Awards USA, Special Recognition Awards\nOn 18 September 2019, at the pre-show, AEAUSA honors; Sbusiso Leope, Oliver Mtukudzi, and Ms. Bodega.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287141-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 African Games\nThe 12th African Games was held from 19 to 31 August 2019 in Rabat, Morocco. This was the first time that the African Games were hosted by Morocco following the country's readmission to the African Union in January 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287141-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 African Games, Bidding process\nThe 12th African Games was schedule in September 2019. Accra, Nairobi and Lusaka announced that they would bid for these Games, but none of them were selected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287141-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 African Games, Bidding process\nMalabo, Equatorial Guinea was initially chosen to organise the 2019 African Games at the Second Ordinary Session of the Specialist Technical Committee on Youth, Culture and Sports, which was held at the headquarters of the African Union, in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia from 13 to 17 June 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287141-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 African Games, Bidding process\nHowever, Equatorial Guinea was unable to host the Games due to economic problems. Lusaka, the capital of Zambia was later speculated to host the Games but refused, citing lack of facilities. In July 2018, Rabat, Morocco was selected to replace Malabo, Equatorial Guinea as host of the 2019 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287141-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 African Games, Branding\nThe logo is a door with Moroccan mosaic, while the mascot is an Atlas lion or a Barbary lion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287141-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 African Games, Calendar\nThe schedule of the games was as follows. The calendar was completed with event finals information.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287142-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 African Handball Super Cup\nThe 2019 African Handball Super Cup (25th edition), also known as Babacar Fall Super Cup, in honour of the first chairman of the African Handball Confederation, was a handball competition organized by the African Handball Confederation, under the auspices of the International Handball Federation, the handball sport governing body.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287142-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 African Handball Super Cup\nThe matches, held on 4 April 2019 at the Salle Omnisport Al Inbi\u00e2at, in Oudja, Morocco, were contested by Zamalek, the 2018 African Handball Champions League winner and Al Ahly, the 2018 African Handball Cup Winners' Cup winner, on the man's side and Clube Desportivo Primeiro de Agosto, the 2018 African Women's Handball Champions League winner and Petro de Luanda, the 2018 African Women's Handball Cup Winners' Cup winner. Zamalek, on the man's side and Primeiro de Agosto, on the woman's side, were the winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287143-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 African Judo Championships\nThe 2019 African Judo Championships was the 40th edition of the African Judo Championships, organised by the African Judo Union. It took place in Cape Town, South Africa from 25\u201328 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287143-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 African Judo Championships, Participating nations\nThere were a total of 179 participants from 28 nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287144-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 African Netball Championships\nThe 2019 African Netball Championships was held in Cape Town from 18-23 October 2019. The tournament featured seven nations including hosts South Africa, defending champions Uganda along with Kenya, Malawi, Zambia, Lesotho and Zimbabwe in 2 pool categories. Tanzania pulled out of the tournament due to financial issues, just a day before the tournament opener against Zimbabwe. The tournament was originally supposed to have its scheduled opening match between defending champions Uganda and Zimbabwe but was called off due to the last minute withdrawal by Tanzania. The authorities later revealed that the match between hosts South Africa and Zimbabwe to be the opening match of the tournament while the tournament was later modified with round robin format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287144-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 African Netball Championships\nSouth Africa defeated Zambia 72-53 to win the tournament with a perfect 100 percentage winning record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287144-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 African Netball Championships, Squads\nMalawi and Uganda announced their preliminary squads in September 2019. Malawi revealed a list of 24 players in the squad and later cropped the list to 12 members. Malawi's national captain Joanna Kachilika and Thandie Galleta were rested for the tournament who were earlier named in the preliminary squad while Caroline Mtukule was appointed as stand in captain for Malawi. Uganda released a squad consisting of 22 players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287144-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 African Netball Championships, Squads\nIn September 2019, just three weeks prior to the start of the tournament, Ugandan captain Peace Proscovia was ruled out of the tournament due to a knee injury which she sustained while playing at the Australian league. In October 2019, Dorette Badenhorst was appointed as the new head coach for South Africa following the exit of Norma Plummer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287144-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 African Netball Championships, Squads\nJust a day prior to the tournament opener, Zimbabwean head coach Lloyd Makunde was sacked due to pay disputes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287145-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 African Rally Championship\nThe 2019 African Rally Championship was the 39th season of the African Rally Championship (ARC), the FIA regional zone rally championship for the African continent. The season began on February 21 in the C\u00f4te d'Ivoire, and ended on October 10 in Rwanda, after seven events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287145-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 African Rally Championship\nSkoda Fabia driver Manvir Singh Baryan won his third consecutive title. Baryan again won three of the seven rallies, taking victory in the Rallye C\u00f4te d'Ivoire, Zambia International Rally and Pearl of Africa Uganda Rally. Baryan dominated the title, winning with 201 points compared to Zambian Ford driver Leeroy Gomes 88 points. Baryan's title extended the run of Kenyan success to five consecutive years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287145-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 African Rally Championship\nKenyan Mitsubishi driver and winner of the Safari Rally, Baldev Chager was third in the championship on 56 points, six points ahead of South African Toyota driver Hergen Fekken. Fekken won the Rally of South Africa. Baryan wrapped up the title early in August after winning the Pearl of Africa Uganda Rally. The two subsequent rallies in Tanzania and Rwanda were won by local drivers who were not chasing the African title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287145-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 African Rally Championship, Event calendar and results\nThere were seven rallies in the 2019 African Rally Championship. The only change from the 2018 schedule was the Safari Rally that moved from March to July:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287146-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 African U18 and U20 Championships in Athletics\nThe 2019 African U20 Championships in Athletics was the fourteenth edition of the biennial, continental athletics tournament for African athletes aged 19 years or younger, for the first time held jointly with the African U18 Championships in Athletics. It was held at the Stade F\u00e9lix Houphou\u00ebt-Boigny in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, between 16 and 20 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287147-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 African Weightlifting Championships\nThe 2019 African Weightlifting Championships was held in Cairo, Egypt from 25 to 29 April 2019. It was the 29th men's and 18th women's championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287147-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 African Weightlifting Championships, Medal table\nRanking by all medals: Big (Total result) and Small (Snatch and Clean & Jerk)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287148-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 African Women's Handball Champions League\nThe 2019 African Women's Handball Champions League was the 41st 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 4\u201313, 2019 at the Pavilh\u00e3o Vav\u00e1 Duarte and Pavilh\u00e3o Craveiro Lopes in Praia, Cape Verde, contested by 8 teams and won by Clube Desportivo Primeiro de Agosto of Angola.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287149-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 African Women's Handball Cup Winners' Cup\nThe 2019 African Women's Handball Cup Winners' Cup 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 April 5\u201314, 2019, at the salles Prince Heritier Moulay El Hassan and 16 Aout in Oujda, Morocco, contested by 8 teams and won by Primeiro de Agosto of Angola.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287150-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 African Women's Junior Handball Championship\nThe 2019 African Women's Junior Handball Championship was held in Niamey, Niger from 5 to 14 September 2019. It also acted as qualification tournament for the 2020 Women's Junior World Handball Championship to be held in Romania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287150-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 African Women's Junior Handball Championship, Draw\nThe draw was held on 14 August 2019 at the CAHB Headquarters in Abidjan, Ivory Coast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 55], "content_span": [56, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287151-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 African Women's Youth Handball Championship\nThe 2019 African Women's Youth Handball Championship was the 14th edition of the championship held in Niamey, Niger from 16 to 24 September 2019. It also acted as qualification tournament for the 2020 Women's Youth World Handball Championship to be held in China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287151-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 African Women's Youth Handball Championship, Participating teams\nNote: Bold indicates champion for that year. Italic indicates host for that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287152-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 African Wrestling Championships\nThe 2019 African Wrestling Championships was held in Hammamet, Tunisia from 29 to 31 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287153-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ahmad Shah Abdali 4-day Tournament\nThe 2019 Ahmad Shah Abdali 4-day Tournament was an edition of the Ahmad Shah Abdali 4-day Tournament, a cricket tournament in Afghanistan. It was the third edition of the competition to be played with first-class status. The tournament was split into two phases, with the first half of the competition taking place in April and May 2019, and the second half taking place during November and December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287153-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ahmad Shah Abdali 4-day Tournament\nSix regional teams competed in the tournament, with Band-e-Amir Region being the defending champions. The first round of the tournament started on 4 April 2019 and finished on 2 May 2019. Following the conclusion of the first round of fixtures, Speen Ghar Region were leading the tournament, finishing three points ahead of Amo Region. Kabul Region did not take part in the second round of matches in the tournament. After the completion of the second round of matches, Speen Ghar Region maintained their lead at the top of the table to win the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287154-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Aichi gubernatorial election\nA gubernatorial election was held on 3 February 2019 to elect the Governor of Aichi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287155-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Air Dynasty helicopter crash\nOn February 27, 2019, Air Dynasty's Eurocopter AS350 B3e carrying six passengers and one pilot was scheduled to travel on a domestic flight from Pathibhara Devi Temple in Taplejung to Chuhandanda in Tehrathum, Nepal. The aircraft crashed at approximately 1.30\u00a0p.m. (NPT) due to bad weather in Taplejung. All seven people on board died in the crash, including Rabindra Prasad Adhikari, Nepal's Minister for Tourism and Civil Aviation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287155-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Air Dynasty helicopter crash, Background\nMinister of Culture, Tourism and Civil Aviation of Nepal Rabindra Prasad Adhikari came to Taplejung to inspect the under-construction airport at Chuhandanda. After inspecting the airport, the fellow passengers and crew went to see one of the most significant temples in Nepal, Pathibhara Devi Temple by helicopter. After visiting the temple Adhikari and other passengers were returning to Chuhandanda in Tehrathum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287155-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Air Dynasty helicopter crash, Aircraft\nThe aircraft involved was a Eurocopter AS350 B3e bearing the registration 9N-AMI. It was built by Airbus Helicopters in 2017 and delivered to Air Dynasty brand new.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287155-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Air Dynasty helicopter crash, Passengers and crew\nOn board the helicopter were, among the minister Adhikari, Ang Tshering Sherpa, managing director of Yeti Airlines and Air Dynasty, an aid to Prime Minister Khadga Prasad Sharma Oli, two representatives of the Civil Aviation Authority of Nepal, a security personnel and the Captain of the aircraft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287155-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Air Dynasty helicopter crash, Incident\nThe helicopter crash occurred due to critical weather in Taplejung, Nepal. The crash killed all seven people on board, including Nepalese Tourism and Civil Aviation Minister Rabindra Prasad Adhikari. The pilot of the helicopter reported heavy snowfall in the area of the airport and stated that he was unable to remain airborne, according to The Kathmandu Post. After the incident Air Dynasty was informed at 1:30\u00a0p.m. Nepal Standard Time (NPT).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287155-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Air Dynasty helicopter crash, Incident\nThe helicopter crashed at Sisne Khola, Pathibhara, Taplejung, Nepal. Nepalese police reported that Rabindra Adhikari and another passenger were in an identifiable state. Moments after the helicopter went missing, Taplejung residents reported to the police that they had heard a loud bang and seen smoke and fire in the area. Suraj Bhattarai, a witness also reported to the police \"The helicopter is in pieces, and scattered all over\". The helicopter caught fire after hitting Chuchche Dada and falling down to Sisne Khola.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287155-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Air Dynasty helicopter crash, Aftermath\nThe Office of the Prime Minister declared 28 February 2019 to be national mourning day in Nepal to pay respect to those who died in the helicopter crash. Nepal's Home Minister Ram Bahadur Thapa said \"All educational institutes, government offices, diplomatic missions will remain closed with a national flag lowered half-mast to mourn the death.\" Thapa also said that \"The national flag will be hoisted at half-staff to mourn the departed souls.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287155-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Air Dynasty helicopter crash, Aftermath\nThe bodies of four people were brought to Suketar Airport on Wednesday afternoon. Chief District Officer of Taplejung District Anuj Bhandari said \"There has been heavy snowfall. We could not take out all the bodies. We will try again tomorrow\", he also added that recovering bodies in the crash site is difficult due to helicopter crash site being at the slope of a hill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287155-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Air Dynasty helicopter crash, Aftermath\nNepal's prime minister Khadga Prasad Oli and Pushpa Kamal Dahal told the media \"The country has lost a dependable youth leader with abundant possibilities in the demise of Minister for Culture, Tourism and Civil Aviation Rabindra Adhikari\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287155-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Air Dynasty helicopter crash, Aftermath\nMourning the loss of their managing director, Yeti Airlines, and Tara Air cancelled all flights on 1 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287155-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Air Dynasty helicopter crash, Aftermath\nThe bodies of the passengers and the pilot were brought to Kathmandu on February 28 at 12:10\u00a0p.m. Nepal Communist Party (NCP) said all of the bodies would be cremated with state honours at Ramghat in Nepal. Before the funeral Adhikari's body would be kept at Exhibition Centre at local Nayabazar to pay respect toward him and his body would be cremated at Pokhara, Nepal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287155-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Air Dynasty helicopter crash, Investigation\nOn 28 February, the Government of Nepal opened an investigation into the accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287155-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Air Dynasty helicopter crash, Investigation\nFour months after the accident, the investigation committee released a preliminary report which blamed violations of operating procedures, such as a misbalance of weights and an inexperienced pilot, and the weather conditions for causing the crash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287156-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Air Force Falcons football team\nThe 2019 Air Force Falcons football team represented the United States Air Force Academy in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Falcons were led by thirteenth-year head coach Troy Calhoun and played their home games at Falcon Stadium in Colorado Springs, Colorado. They competed as members of the Mountain West Conference in the Mountain Division. They finished the season 11\u20132, 7\u20131 in Mountain West play to finish in second place in the Mountain Division. Following the season they were invited to the Cheez-It Bowl where they defeated Washington State by a score of 31\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287156-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 Air Force Falcons football team\nThe 2019 Falcons' 11 wins were the most in a single season under head coach Troy Calhoun, their third 10+ win season during his tenure, their eighth in program history, and the most wins achieved in a single season since the 1998 team who finished ranked #13 in the AP Poll and #10 in the Coaches' Poll with a record of 12\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287156-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Air Force Falcons football team, Previous season\nThe Falcons finished the 2018 season 5\u20137, 3\u20135 in Mountain West play to finish in fourth place in the Mountain Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287156-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Air Force Falcons football team, Preseason, Mountain West media days\nThe Mountain West media days were held from July 23\u221224, 2019 at Green Valley Ranch in Henderson, NV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 73], "content_span": [74, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287156-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Air Force Falcons football team, Preseason, Mountain West media days, Media poll\nThe preseason poll was released at the Mountain West media days on July 23, 2019. The Falcons were predicted to finish in third place in the MW Mountain Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 85], "content_span": [86, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287156-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Air Force Falcons football team, Preseason, Mountain West media days, Preseason All\u2212Mountain West Team\nThe Falcons had two players selected to the preseason All\u2212Mountain West Team, both from the defensive side of the ball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 107], "content_span": [108, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287156-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Air Force Falcons football team, Personnel, Roster\nThe Air Force football roster prior to 2019 fall camp (as of July 17, 2019):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287157-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Airmarine Cup\nThe AIRMARINE Cup 2019 is the first edition of the AIRMARINE Cup, an international football tournament with four countries participating. It is played on 20 and 23 March 2019 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Ananth S. Nathan, Executive Chairman of AIRMARINE (Malaysia) Sdn. Bhd. takes the tournament as a national social responsibility of a corporate entity to step forward for the Malaysian national football team to gain more international break for the exposure and to advance in their FIFA ranking points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287157-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Airmarine Cup\nFaiz Nasir, made his first international goal debut in the Malaysia versus Afghanistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287157-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Airmarine Cup\nOman won the tournament after beating Singapore 5\u20134 through penalty shoot-out for their first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287157-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Airmarine Cup, Participating nations\nIn earlier February 2019, it was announced that Oman,Singapore and Solomon Islands had been invited to participated in the 2019 Airmarine Cup hosted by the Football Association of Malaysia (FAM). On 1 March 2019, Solomon Islands announcing their withdrawal as the tournament date is coinciding with their league schedule, leading FAM to calling Afghanistan as a potential replacement candidate. The same day, Afghanistan confirmed their participation and the draw are being announced on 4 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287157-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Airmarine Cup, Match officials\nThe following referees and their assistants were chosen for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287158-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Akita Masters\nThe 2019 Akita Masters (officially known as the Yonex Akita Masters 2019 for sponsorship reasons) was a badminton tournament which took place at CNA Arena Akita in Japan from 13 to 18 August 2019 and had a total purse of $75,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287158-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Akita Masters, Tournament\nThe 2019 Akita Masters was the sixth Super 100 tournament of the 2019 BWF World Tour and also part of the Akita Masters championships, which had been held since 2018. This tournament was organized by the Nippon Badminton Association and sanctioned by the BWF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287158-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Akita Masters, Tournament, Venue\nThis international tournament was held at CNA Arena Akita in Akita, Akita Prefecture, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287158-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Akita Masters, Tournament, Point distribution\nBelow is the point distribution table for each phase of the tournament based on the BWF points system for the BWF Tour Super 100 event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 50], "content_span": [51, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287158-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Akita Masters, Tournament, Prize money\nThe total prize money for this tournament was US$75,000. Distribution of prize money was in accordance with BWF regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287159-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Akron Zips football team\nThe 2019 Akron Zips football team represented the University of Akron during the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Zips were led by first-year head coach Tom Arth and played their home games at InfoCision Stadium in Akron, Ohio. They competed as members of the East Division of the Mid-American Conference (MAC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287159-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Akron Zips football team\nThe 2019 Zips lost every single game on their schedule, finished with an 0\u201312 overall record and an 0\u20138 record in MAC play, and were outscored by their opponents by a total of 435 to 126. They finished in last place in the conference's East Division. CBS Sports rated Akron dead last, at 130th, in their season's-end ranking of all 130 FBS teams. The Zips were the only Division I FBS team to go winless in the 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287159-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Akron Zips football team, Preseason, Coaching changes\nFollowing the firing of seven-year head coach Terry Bowden at the end of the 2018 season, Akron announced the hiring of Tom Arth on December 14, 2018. Arth had spent the previous two seasons as the head coach at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, leading them to records of 3\u20138 and 6\u20135 in 2017 and 2018, respectively. Before Chattanooga, he was the head coach at John Carroll University, where he led the team to an upset victory over No. 1 Mount Union to claim an Ohio Athletic Conference title in 2016 and was named D3football.com Coach of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287159-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Akron Zips football team, Preseason, Coaching changes\nTom Arth announced the members of his coaching staff in January and March 2019. Among them were defensive coordinator Matt Feeney and offensive coordinator Tommy Zagorski, who both served in the same roles on Arth's staff at Chattanooga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287159-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Akron Zips football team, Preseason, MAC media poll\nThe MAC released their preseason media poll on July 23, 2019, with the Zips predicted to finish in fifth place in the East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287159-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Akron Zips football team, Schedule\nAkron's non-conference slate will consist of home games against UAB of Conference USA and Troy of the Sun Belt Conference, and road games against Illinois of the Big Ten Conference and UMass, a football independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287159-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Akron Zips football team, Schedule\nIn Mid-American Conference play, the Zips hosted Kent State, Buffalo, Eastern Michigan, and Ohio, and traveled to Central Michigan, Northern Illinois, Bowling Green, and Miami. They did not play West Division members Ball State, Toledo, or Western Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287160-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Akron Zips men's soccer team\nThe 2019 Akron Zips men's soccer team represented The University of Akron during the 2019 NCAA Division I men's soccer season. The Zips, played in the Mid-American Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287160-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Akron Zips men's soccer team\nThe 2019 season was one of the most infamous starts to the season in program history. After being ranked atop the nation and projected to win the Mid-American Conference, Akron lost the first seven matches of the season, a program worst, and the most losses since 2001. It was the first time in the program's 65-year history, the team lost more than three games in a row to start the season. Following the seven-match losing streak, Akron earned its first win against VCU, and subsequently went on a 6\u20132\u20132 run, ultimately winning the Mid-American regular season championship. The Zips were eliminated in the first round of the 2019 MAC Men's Soccer Tournament, and failed to qualify for the 2019 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament, the first year since 2003 they missed the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 824]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287160-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Akron Zips men's soccer team, Background\nAkron finished the 2018 season by reaching the NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship Game for the third time in program history, and for the first time since their College Cup triumph in 2010. Akron began the season ranked fourth in the nation in the United Soccer Coaches poll and second in the nation in the TopDrawer Soccer poll. A slow start to the season saw the Zips fall to a 1\u20133\u20131 record and slip out of the national rankings. Following the early skid, the Zips rebounded to win their next three straight matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287160-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Akron Zips men's soccer team, Background\nThis was hallmarked by a 10\u20130 victory of Canisius, making it the program's largest win in history. Akron earned a pair of subsequent road wins at Grand Canyon and at VCU. Akron began conference play with a scoreless draw at Bowling Green. A chain of inconsistent performances saw the Zips lose at home to West Virginia and Syracuse, but nab victories against Michigan State and Creighton, who were both ranked in the USC Top 10 at the time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287160-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Akron Zips men's soccer team, Background\nAkron finished the Mid-American Conference regular season in fourth place, making it the programs poorest regular season performance in MAC play since joining the conference. In the MAC Tournament, the Zips had a resurgence in form, winning all three of their tournament matches, en route to their 7th straight Mid-American Conference Men's Soccer Tournament title, and their 11th MAC title in the last 14 years. The championship was a rematch of last year's championship, where the Zips took on Western Michigan. The win guaranteed that the Zips would return to the NCAA Tournament, where their chances prior to the tournament had been on the bubble.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287160-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Akron Zips men's soccer team, Background\nThe Zips did not earn a seed in the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2013. In the first round, Akron hosted Rider, where they won 3\u20131. The victory led to a rematch against Syracuse. The match, played at nearby Colgate University, was a triumph for Akron, as they won by the same 3\u20131 score. The Zips then took on top-seed Wake Forest in the Sweet Sixteen, and earned a 1\u20130 away victory. In the Elite Eight, Akron took on Stanford, the three-time defending NCAA champions. Akron had been eliminated in penalties for the last 2 tournaments by Stanford. In the match, Akron avenged their losses, and won 3\u20132 at Stanford booking their spot in the College Cup. There, the Zips prevailed 5\u20131 against Michigan State, making it the most lopsided semifinal match in nearly 20 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 826]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287160-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Akron Zips men's soccer team, Background\nIn the NCAA Championship match, Akron took on 11th-seeded Maryland, where they lost 0\u20131 in regulation thanks to a 57th-minute penalty kick from Amar Sejdi\u010d. Following the 2018 NCAA Division I men's soccer season, Akron goalkeeper, Ben Lundt was drafted by FC Cincinnati in the 2nd round, 37th pick of the 2019 MLS SuperDraft. Defender Abdi Mohamed was drafted by New York City FC in the second round as well with the 43rd pick. Striker Marcel Zajac signed a pro contract with Canadian Premier League outfit, Forge FC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287160-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Akron Zips men's soccer team, Background\nAhead of the 2019 season, Leo Chappell and T.J. Kolba left the program, while Jared Embick's contract was extended. To replace Chappell, Michael Nanchoff was hired as an assistant coach. Ger Coppinger remained on Embick's coaching staff and Drew Crawford was promoted to the Director of Soccer Operations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287160-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Akron Zips men's soccer team, Squad, First 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287161-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Akwa Ibom State gubernatorial election\nThe 2019 Akwa Ibom State gubernatorial election occurred on March 10, 2019. Incumbent PDP Governor Udom Gabriel Emmanuel won re-election for a second term, defeating Nsima Ekere of the APC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287161-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Akwa Ibom State gubernatorial election\nUdom Gabriel Emmanuel won the primary election after he was returned as the sole candidate. He picked Moses Ekpo as his running mate. Nsima Ekere was the APC candidate with Amadu Jackson Attai as his running mate. 45 candidates contested in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287161-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Akwa Ibom State gubernatorial election, Electoral system\nThe Governor of Akwa Ibom State is elected using the plurality voting system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 61], "content_span": [62, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287161-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Akwa Ibom State gubernatorial election, Primary election, PDP primary\nUdom Gabriel Emmanuel won the primary election after he was returned as the sole candidate. He picked Amadu Jackson Attai as his running mate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 74], "content_span": [75, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287161-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Akwa Ibom State gubernatorial election, Primary election, APC primary\nThe APC primary election was held on September 30, 2018. Nsima Ekere won the primary election polling 160,458 votes against 3 other candidates. His closest rival was Dan Abia who came second with 4,189 votes, Akpanudoedehe came third with 2,015 votes, while Edet Efretuei had 1,234 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 74], "content_span": [75, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287161-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Akwa Ibom State gubernatorial election, Results\nA total number of 45 candidates registered with the Independent National Electoral Commission to contest in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287161-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Akwa Ibom State gubernatorial election, Results\nThe total number of registered voters in the state was 2,119,727, while 720,064 voters were accredited. Total number of votes cast was 712,037, while number of valid votes was 696,245. Rejected votes were 15,792.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287161-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Akwa Ibom State gubernatorial election, Results, By local government area\nHere are the results of the election by local government area for the two major parties. The total valid votes of 696,245 represents the 45 political parties that participated in the election. Green represents LGAs won by Udom Gabriel Emmanuel. Blue represents LGAs won by Nsima Ekere.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 78], "content_span": [79, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287162-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Al Habtoor Tennis Challenge\nThe 2019 Al Habtoor Tennis Challenge was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the twenty-first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Dubai, United Arab Emirates between 9 and 15 December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287162-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Al Habtoor Tennis Challenge, 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-00287163-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Al Habtoor Tennis Challenge \u2013 Doubles\nAlena Fomina and Valentina Ivakhnenko were the defending champions, but lost in the semifinals to Georgina Garc\u00eda P\u00e9rez and Sara Sorribes Tormo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287163-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Al Habtoor Tennis Challenge \u2013 Doubles\nLucie Hradeck\u00e1 and Andreja Klepa\u010d won the title, defeating Garc\u00eda P\u00e9rez and Sorribes Tormo in the final, 7\u20135, 3\u20136, [10\u20138].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287164-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Al Habtoor Tennis Challenge \u2013 Singles\nPeng Shuai was the defending champion, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287164-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Al Habtoor Tennis Challenge \u2013 Singles\nAna Bogdan won the title, defeating Daria Snigur in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287165-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama A&M Bulldogs football team\nThe 2019 Alabama A&M Bulldogs football team represents Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Bulldogs are led by second-year head coach Connell Maynor and play their home games at Louis Crews Stadium in Huntsville, Alabama as members of the East Division of the Southwestern Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287165-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama A&M Bulldogs football team, Previous season\nThe Bulldogs finished the 2018 season 6\u20135, 4\u20133 in SWAC play to finish in second place in the East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287165-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama A&M Bulldogs football team, Preseason, Preseason polls\nThe SWAC released their preseason poll on July 16, 2019. The Bulldogs were picked to finish in second place in the East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287165-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama A&M Bulldogs football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013SWAC teams\nThe Bulldogs placed five players on the preseason all\u2013SWAC teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 76], "content_span": [77, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287165-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama A&M Bulldogs football team, Postseason\nBentley broke several Alabama A&M records: Single-season rushing yards, career rushing yards (3,204), single-game rushing yards (245), rushing touchdowns (18), career touchdowns (43), single-season points (122) and career points (260). Ibrahim finished the season with 1,004 receiving yards and 11 touchdowns on 59 receptions. Cushine, a 6-2 and 220-pound defensive end from Broward County, Fla., emerged this season as one of the conference's top pass rushers, leading Alabama A&M with seven sacks and 13 tackles for loss. Corey finished the season 49 of 50 on extra point attempts, and he made 5-of-9 field goal attempts, including a 44-yarder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287165-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama A&M Bulldogs football team, Postseason\nGlass led the SWAC in passing while setting a new Alabama A&M records with 3,600 passing yards and 32 passing touchdowns. Zabrian Moore led the SWAC in receiving with 1,057 yards and nine touchdowns on 58 receptions. Johnson finished the season with 275 yards and four touchdowns on 24 receptions. Holloway set a new Alabama A&M record with 114 tackles, averaging 9.5 tacklers per game and led the team with 14 tackles for loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287166-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama Crimson Tide baseball team\nThe 2019 Alabama Crimson Tide baseball team represented the University of Alabama in the 2019 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Crimson Tide played their home games at Sewell\u2013Thomas Stadium. This season is the second under head coach Brad Bohannon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287166-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama Crimson Tide baseball team, Preseason, SEC media poll\nThe SEC media poll was released on February 7, 2019 with the Crimson Tide predicted to finish in last place in the Western Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287166-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama Crimson Tide baseball team, Schedule\n\u2020 Indicates the game does not count toward the 2019 Southeastern Conference standings. Rankings are based on the team's current ranking in the Collegiate Baseball poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287167-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama Crimson Tide football team\nThe 2019 Alabama Crimson Tide football team represented the University of Alabama in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. This was the Crimson Tide's 125th overall season, 86th as a member of the Southeastern Conference (SEC), and 28th within the SEC's Western Division. They played their home games at Bryant\u2013Denny Stadium in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, and were led by 13th-year head coach Nick Saban.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287167-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama Crimson Tide football team\nThe defending national runners-up, Alabama began the season ranked second in the AP Poll, and were the favorites to repeat as SEC Champions. The Crimson Tide won their first seven games of the year handily, and rose to first in the AP Poll. They were ranked third in the season's first College Football Playoff rankings heading into an anticipated match-up against second-ranked LSU, which Alabama lost 46\u201341. The next week, Alabama lost starting quarterback Tua Tagovailoa to a season-ending hip injury in the game against Mississippi State. They finished the regular season with a 48\u201345 upset loss to cross-state rival Auburn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287167-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama Crimson Tide football team\nWith a regular season record of 10\u20132, Alabama was not selected for the College Football Playoff for the first time since the inception of the format in 2014. The Crimson Tide were also not invited to a New Year's Six bowl game, making this the first season since 2010 that Alabama was not selected to a NY6 or BCS bowl. They were instead invited to the Citrus Bowl, where they defeated Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287167-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama Crimson Tide football team\nTagovailoa, at the time of his injury, was considered a candidate for the Heisman Trophy and was on pace to break his own NCAA FBS passer rating record. He was replaced by backup Mac Jones for the remainder of the season. Running back Najee Harris led the team with 1,224 rushing yards and 20 total touchdowns, tied for the SEC lead. Receivers Jerry Jeudy and DeVonta Smith were both named All-SEC. On defense, the team was led by first-team all-conference players linebacker Anfernee Jennings and safety Xavier McKinney. Nine Alabama players were selected in the 2020 NFL Draft, including No. 5 overall selection Tua Tagovailoa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287167-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Previous season\nIn 2018, Alabama went undefeated in the regular season and won the 2018 SEC Championship Game over Georgia. The Crimson Tide entered the College Football Playoff as the number one seed, winning the semi-final played at the Orange Bowl over Oklahoma before falling to Clemson in the 2019 College Football Playoff National Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287167-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Offseason, Offseason departures\nSeven Alabama players with remaining eligibility declared early for the 2019 NFL Draft. In addition, 14 seniors from the 2018 team graduated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 72], "content_span": [73, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287167-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Offseason, Recruiting\nAlabama's 2019 recruiting class consisted of 27 recruits, 15 of which enrolled early. Alabama had the highest ranked class in the nation according to 247Sports.com and ESPN, and had the second best class behind Georgia according to Rivals.com. The class was ranked No. 1 by the 247Sports Composite, which aggregates the ratings of the major recruiting services. Headlining the class were consensus top-10 recruits Antonio Alfano (defensive end), Trey Sanders (running back), and Evan Neal (offensive tackle).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 62], "content_span": [63, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287167-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Offseason, Spring game\nThe 2019 Crimson Tide held spring practices in March and April. The 2019 Alabama football spring game, \"A-Day\" took place in Tuscaloosa, AL on April 13, 2019, at 1 p.m. CST with the White team beating the Crimson team 31\u201317. Freshman WR John Metchie III was named A-Day MVP after hauling in five catches for a game-high 133 receiving yards. White team QB Mac Jones led all passers, completing 19 of 23 passes for 271 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287167-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Preseason, SEC media days\nThe 2019 SEC Media Days were held July 15\u201318 in Birmingham, Alabama. In the preseason media poll, Alabama was voted the overwhelming favorite to repeat as West Division Champion and SEC Champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287167-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Preseason, Preseason All-SEC teams\nThe Crimson Tide had 13 players at 14 positions selected to the preseason all-SEC teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287167-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Schedule\nAlabama announced its 2019 football schedule on September 18, 2018. The 2019 Crimson Tide' schedule consists of 7 home games, 4 away games, and 1 neutral site game for the regular season. Alabama will host four SEC conference opponents Ole Miss (rivalry), Arkansas, Tennessee (Third Saturday of October) and LSU (rivalry) and will travel for four SEC opponents to South Carolina, Texas A&M, Mississippi State (rivalry) and arch-rival Auburn for the 84th Iron Bowl to close out the SEC regular season on the road. Alabama is not scheduled to play SEC East opponents Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Missouri and Vanderbilt in the 2019 regular season. The Crimson Tide\u2019s bye week comes during week 6 (on October 5) and week 10 (on November 2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287167-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Schedule\nAlabama's out of conference opponents represent the ACC, C-USA, Independents and Southern. The Crimson Tide will host three non\u2013conference games which are against New Mexico State of the FBS independents, Southern Miss of the Conference USA and Western Carolina of the SoCon to close out the regular season and travel to Atlanta, GA for Chick-fil-A Kickoff to host Duke from the ACC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287167-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama Crimson Tide 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, PD: Passes Defended, FF: Forced Fumbles, FR: Fumbles Recovered, BLK: Kicks or Punts Blocked, SAF: Safeties", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287167-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Postseason, Bowl game\nAlabama was selected to face Michigan in the 2020 Citrus Bowl on New Year's Day. The last time Alabama faced Michigan was during the regular season in 2012 when the Tide beat Michigan 41-14. Alabama defeated Michigan 35-16 in the 2020 VRBO Citrus Bowl on January 1, 2020 to close out the season at 11-2 overall. For nine straight seasons, the Crimson Tide has won 11 or more games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 62], "content_span": [63, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287167-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, 2020 NFL Draft\nThe 2020 NFL Draft was held virtually on April 23\u201325, 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287167-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, 2020 NFL Draft\nCrimson Tide who were picked in the 2020 NFL Draft:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287168-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama Crimson Tide softball team\nThe 2019 Alabama Crimson Tide softball team is an American softball team, representing the University of Alabama for the 2019 NCAA softball season. The Crimson Tide play their home games at Rhoads Stadium. After losing in the 2018 NCAA Super Regionals, the 2019 team looks to make the postseason for the 21st straight year, and the Women's College World Series for twelfth time. This season represents the 23rd season of softball in the school's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287169-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama State Hornets football team\nThe 2019 Alabama State Hornets football team represents Alabama State University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Hornets are led by second-year head coach Donald Hill-Eley and play their home games at the New ASU Stadium in Montgomery, Alabama as members of the East Division of the Southwestern Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287169-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama State Hornets football team, Previous season\nThe Hornets finished the 2018 season 4\u20137, 3\u20134 in SWAC play to finish in fourth place in the East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287169-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama State Hornets football team, Preseason, Preseason polls\nThe SWAC released their preseason poll on July 16, 2019. The Hornets were picked to finish in fourth place in the East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287169-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Alabama State Hornets football team, Preseason, Preseason all\u2013SWAC teams\nThe Hornets placed five players on the preseason all\u2013SWAC teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 77], "content_span": [78, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287170-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Alamo Bowl\nThe 2019 Alamo Bowl was a college football bowl game played on December 31, 2019, with kickoff at 7:30\u00a0p.m. EST (6:30\u00a0p.m. local CST) on ESPN. It was the 27th edition of the Alamo Bowl, and was one of the 2019\u201320 bowl games concluding the 2019 FBS football season. Sponsored by Valero Energy, the game was officially known as the Valero Alamo Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287170-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Alamo Bowl, Teams\nThe game was played between the Texas Longhorns of the Big 12 Conference and the Utah Utes of the Pac-12 Conference. This was second time that the two programs have met; their prior meeting was in 1982, won by Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287170-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Alamo Bowl, Teams, Texas Longhorns\nTexas entered the game with a 7\u20135 record (5\u20134 in conference). They finished in a four-way tie for third place in the Big 12. The Longhorns were 1\u20133 against ranked opponents; losing to LSU, Oklahoma, and Baylor while defeating Kansas State. This was Texas' fourth Alamo Bowl, tying the Longhorns with Iowa and Oklahoma State for the most appearances. Texas entered the game with a 2\u20131 record in prior Alamo Bowl appearances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287170-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Alamo Bowl, Teams, Utah Utes\nUtah entered the game with an 11\u20132 record (8\u20131 in conference), and ranked 12th in the AP Poll. They finished the regular season atop the Pac-12's South Division, having only lost to USC. In the Pac-12 Championship Game, the Utes faced Oregon and were defeated, 37\u201315. Utah was 1\u20131 against ranked opponents, defeating Arizona State and losing to Oregon. This was the first appearance for the Utes in the Alamo Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287171-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Alaska Aces season\nThe 2019 Alaska Aces season is the 33rd season of the franchise in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287172-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Alaska ferry workers strike\nThe 2019 Alaska ferry workers strike was a labor strike involving workers on the Alaska Marine Highway. Starting July 24, the strike involved over 400 members of the Inlandboatmen's Union of the Pacific, with the main causes of the strike being issues regarding scheduling, working conditions, and wage increases. The strike ended on August 2 following Federal mediation, with a compromise agreement between the union and ferry service.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287172-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Alaska ferry workers strike, Background\nThe Alaska Marine Highway (AMH) is a ferry service operated by the U.S. state of Alaska. Along with the state capital of Juneau, the AMH services many areas of Alaska where the only means of transportation is by air travel or sea travel, such as Kodiak Island. The largest union representing workers on the AMH is the Inlandboatmen's Union of the Pacific (IBU), an affiliated union of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union, which represents approximately 430 ferry workers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287172-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Alaska ferry workers strike, Background\nIn 2017, the employment contract between the union and AMH expired, with union members continuing to work under interim agreements as the union and AMH entered negotiations for new contracts. However, negotiations stalled as neither side could come to an agreement over issues including scheduling, wage increases, and working conditions. In particular, the union sought a 9% annual wage increase spread out over three years, as well as increased state funding for workers' health insurance and the elimination of a rule that allowed the AMH to pay out-of-state workers less than Alaskans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287172-0001-0002", "contents": "2019 Alaska ferry workers strike, Background\nBy July 2019, with no agreement reached under either Governors Bill Walker or Mike Dunleavy, the union moved towards a strike. A 2019 contract proposal by the state government that did not include wage increases was rejected by union members, who then voted to authorize a strike. On July 23, the government of Alaska sent a letter to IBU officials stating that a strike by the state employees would most likely not be protected under state collective bargaining laws, with union officials responding that they were acting legally. On July 24, the union announced a strike. This was the first strike experienced by the AMH since a 20-day strike by the IBU in 1977.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287172-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Alaska ferry workers strike, Course of the strike\nOn July 24, about 420 union members walked off their post. Pilots and engineers, represented by the International Organization of Masters, Mates & Pilots and the Marine Engineers' Beneficial Association, respectively, did not participate in the strike, but agreed to not cross picket lines for the duration of the strike. On July 26, 2020 Democratic Party presidential candidates Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders voiced their support for the strikers. On July 27, union and state officials met with an arbitrator from the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service to discuss an end to the strike. However, by July 29, the mediator had suspended discussions. On August 3, an agreement between the two parties was reached, with representatives of the state announcing a return to operations starting the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 863]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287172-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Alaska ferry workers strike, Outcomes\nOver the course of the strike, over 8,500 passengers and almost 2,500 vehicles were affected. The strike cost the AMH between $3.2 and $3.3 million in lost revenue and reimbursements to customers. As part of the agreement, the IBU and AMH agreed to a three-year labor contract that included a 3% pay increase spread over 2020 and 2021. Union members would start paying into their health insurance programs starting in 2021, with increased coverage. Additionally, union members would no longer be required to pay out-of-pocket for hotel rooms while working. However, the union failed to amend the rule allowing the AMH to pay out-of-state workers less than Alaskan residents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287173-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Alaska mid-air collision\nOn May 13, 2019, a de Havilland Canada DHC-2 Beaver floatplane operated by Mountain Air Service collided with a Taquan Air de Havilland Canada DHC-3 Turbine Otter floatplane over George Inlet, Alaska, United States. The DHC-2 broke up in mid-air with the loss of the single pilot and all four passengers. The DHC-3 pilot was able to maintain partial control, but the aircraft sustained substantial damage in the collision and the subsequent forced landing; the pilot suffered minor injuries, nine passengers suffered serious injuries, and one passenger was killed. Both aircraft were conducting sightseeing flights under visual flight rules, which states that the pilot of each aircraft is responsible for visually ensuring adequate separation from other air traffic, commonly known as \"see and avoid\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 832]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287173-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Alaska mid-air collision\nIn April 2021, the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) attributed the accident to \"'the inherent limitations of the see-and-avoid concept\", along with the absence of alerts from both airplanes' traffic display systems.\" Due to the angle of approach, the DHC-2 pilot's view was obscured by the aircraft structure and the passenger sitting in the right-hand seat, while the DHC-2 was blocked from the DHC-3 pilot's view by the left front window post.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287173-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Alaska mid-air collision\nBoth aircraft were equipped with Automatic Dependent Surveillance\u2013Broadcast (ADS-B) traffic alert systems, but the DHC-3 automatic alert feature had been disabled by a past equipment change, while the alert features of the DHC-2 system did not trigger because avionics in the DHC-3 were not broadcasting the aircraft's altitude. The NTSB also identified Taquan's inadequate preflight checklist and the Federal Aviation Administration's failure to require Taquan to implement a safety management system as contributing factors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287173-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Alaska mid-air collision, Aircraft and crew\nThe first accident aircraft was a de Havilland Canada DHC-2 Beaver floatplane, Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) aircraft registration number N952DB, serial number 237, owned and operated by Mountain Air Service LLC since 2012. It was manufactured in 1951, was equipped with Edo floats, and had 16,452 total flight hours at the time of its most recent annual inspection in on April 16, 2019. The second accident aircraft was a de Havilland Canada DHC-3 Turbine Otter floatplane, FAA number N959PA, serial number 159, manufactured in 1956, owned by Pantechnicon Aviation Ltd. since 2012, and operated by Taquan Air since 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287173-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Alaska mid-air collision, Aircraft and crew\nIt was also equipped with Edo floats, and had logged 30,297 hours of operation at its last annual inspection on April 30, 2019. Both aircraft were conducting local sightseeing flights of the Misty Fjords National Monument area for the benefit of passengers of a Princess Cruises cruise ship docked in Ketchikan, Alaska and were operating under the provisions of 14 CFR Part 135 as on-demand sightseeing flights under visual flight rules (VFR). Neither aircraft carried, or was required to carry, a cockpit voice recorder or flight data recorder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287173-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Alaska mid-air collision, Aircraft and crew\nThe DHC-2 pilot was 46 years old and held a commercial pilot certificate and a flight instructor certificate, ratings for seaplanes with single or multiple engines, and a valid second-class medical certificate with no limitations. His personal flight records could not be located but he had reported around 11,000 flight hours during his last medical exam. He was the owner and sole pilot for Mountain Air Service.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287173-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Alaska mid-air collision, Aircraft and crew\nThe DHC-3 pilot was 60 years old and held an airline transport pilot certificate and a flight instructor certificate, a rating for single-engine seaplanes, and a valid first-class medical certificate with a limitation requiring corrective lenses. He had been hired by Taquan Air in 2018 and flew for the airline primarily during the summer months. According to Taquan records, he had about 25,000 flight hours, with about 15,000 hours as pilot-in-command.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287173-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Alaska mid-air collision, Crash\nBoth aircraft were returning to Ketchikan Harbor Seaplane Base approximately 7\u00a0mi (11\u00a0km) southwest. The DHC-2 was flying at 107 knots (198\u00a0km/h) at an altitude of about 3,350 feet (1,020\u00a0m) mean sea level (MSL) while the DHC-3 was gradually descending at 126 knots (233\u00a0km/h) from an altitude of 3,700 feet (1,100\u00a0m) MSL. Visual meteorological conditions prevailed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287173-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Alaska mid-air collision, Crash\nThe DHC-3 was equipped with an Automatic dependent surveillance \u2013 broadcast (ADS-B) collision warning system, but the pilot did not perceive any ADS-B collision warnings before he saw a \"flash\" to his left, and the two aircraft collided at 12:21 PM local time at an altitude of about 3,350 feet (1,020\u00a0m) MSL. One of the passengers in the DHC-3 reportedly saw the other aircraft before the collision and yelled \"Pull up! Pull up!\" before impact. The collision broke the windshield and separated the left rear door from the DHC-3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287173-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Alaska mid-air collision, Crash\nThe DHC-2 broke up in mid-air, creating an approximately 2,000\u00a0ft by 1,000\u00a0ft (610 m by 305 m) debris field about 1.75\u00a0mi (2.82\u00a0km) southwest of the DHC-3 crash site. The DHC-2 fuselage, empennage, and cabin structure were separated from one another, and the right wing showed damage consistent with propeller impacts. The pilot and all 4 passengers were killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287173-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Alaska mid-air collision, Crash\nThe DHC-3 pitched about 40 degrees nose down, but the pilot was able to maintain partial control and perform a landing flare before touching down in George Inlet. On landing, the aircraft shuddered violently, the floats separated from the aircraft, and the cabin immediately flooded through the left rear door opening and broken windshield and began to sink. The pilot suffered head injuries in the collision and landing but was able to open the right rear door and help passengers exit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287173-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Alaska mid-air collision, Crash\nAlthough the pilot had briefed the passengers about the location and use of the onboard life preservers before the flight, only one passenger retrieved her life preserver before evacuating. The pilot and surviving passengers were rescued by a nearby boater in a small skiff, who immediately called the United States Coast Guard and ferried the survivors to shore before a Coast Guard boat and helicopter arrived. The female passenger in the right front seat was severely injured and was seen motionless and slumped over in her seat as the aircraft sank.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287173-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Alaska mid-air collision, Crash\nThe DHC-3 came to rest under about 80\u00a0ft (24 m) of water. The fuselage forward of the bulkhead separating the passenger cabin from the cockpit was found mostly broken away from the rear fuselage, and the left side of the forward fuselage was more heavily damaged than the right side. Two propeller blades were partially broken off, while all three were bent and gouged in a manner consistent with heavy rotational contact with a solid object, and were smeared with white paint.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287173-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Alaska mid-air collision, Passengers\nNine passengers in the DHC-3 sustained serious injuries and one passenger sustained fatal injuries; four passengers in the DHC-2 suffered fatal injuries. Six injured victims were admitted to a local hospital and four others were evacuated to Seattle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287173-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Alaska mid-air collision, Passengers\nThe bodies of three occupants of the DHC-2 were recovered from the water soon after the accident and the other two bodies were found in a wooded area near the shoreline the following day. The medical examiner determined the cause of death of all five DHC-2 occupants to have been blunt force trauma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287173-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Alaska mid-air collision, Passengers\nThe front-seat passenger in the DHC-3 was found underwater, still strapped into her seat in the aircraft wreckage; her primary cause of death was determined to have been blunt force trauma with drowning being a contributing factor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287173-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Alaska mid-air collision, Aftermath\nThe deceased DHC-2 pilot was the owner and sole pilot for Mountain Air Service, and the company ceased operations after the crash. Taquan Air Flight 20 crashed one week later on 20 May and the airline suspended all flights the following day. Amid increased oversight by the FAA, Taquan resumed limited cargo service on 23 May, scheduled passenger flights on 31 May, and on-demand sightseeing tours on June 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287173-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Alaska mid-air collision, Investigation\nThe National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) immediately began an investigation of the accident. A preliminary NTSB accident report was published on May 22, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287173-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Alaska mid-air collision, Investigation\nIn a meeting held on April 20, 2021, the NTSB attributed the accident to \"'the inherent limitations of the see-and-avoid concept\" along with the absence of alerts from both airplanes' traffic display systems.\" The NTSB examined Automatic Dependent Surveillance\u2013Broadcast (ADS-B) aircraft position data, recorded data from the accident aircraft avionics, and photos taken by passengers in the accident aircraft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287173-0014-0001", "contents": "2019 Alaska mid-air collision, Investigation\nThe NTSB found that the DHC-2 had been gradually climbing and had leveled off at an altitude of 3,350\u00a0ft (1,020\u00a0m) and a heading of about 255\u00b0, while the DHC-3 was descending from 4,000\u00a0ft (1,200\u00a0m) at a track ranging from 224\u00b0 and 237\u00b0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287173-0014-0002", "contents": "2019 Alaska mid-air collision, Investigation\nThe agency determined that the DHC-2 pilot would have been unable to see the DHC-3 approaching from his right due to the DHC-2 cockpit structure, the right-hand wing, and the passenger sitting in the right-hand front seat, while the left front window post in the DHC-3 obscured the DHC-2 from the pilot's view for 11 seconds leading up to the collision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287173-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Alaska mid-air collision, Investigation\nBoth aircraft were equipped with ADS-B based Cockpit Display of Traffic Information (CDTI). However, an FAA-provided equipment upgrade to the Garmin GSL 71 system in the DHC-3, implemented due to the phaseout of the FAA Capstone Program, had disabled the auditory traffic alert feature. Furthermore, the pressure altitude broadcasting feature of the GSL 71 was disabled because the control knob was set to the OFF position, and the Taquan Air preflight checklist (which listed the name of a different operator) did not require the pilot to set the knob to the appropriate position to broadcast pressure altitude.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287173-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 Alaska mid-air collision, Investigation\nAccording to data records examined by the NTSB, the DHC-3 had not broadcast pressure altitude since April 29, 2019. The absence of pressure altitude broadcasts effectively disabled the automatic alert features in the ForeFlight mobile app CDTI used by the DHC-2 pilot, which was not designed to provide alerts when the target aircraft is not broadcasting pressure altitude. The lack of dedicated auditory or visual warnings left both pilots dependent on visually checking their CDTI display screens periodically.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287173-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Alaska mid-air collision, Investigation\nThe NTSB recommended that the FAA require Part 135 operators to implement safety management systems, which could have mitigated the lack of alerting capability of the CDTI in the Taquan DHC-3, and prompted the airline to update its preflight checklist to include appropriate CDTI settings. Additionally, the NTSB recommended that ForeFlight upgrade their software such that automatic alerts are provided by default when the target aircraft is not broadcasting pressure altitude.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake\nNorthwestern Albania was struck by a 6.4-magnitude earthquake with an epicentre 16 kilometres (9.9\u00a0mi) west-southwest of Mamurras, at 03:54 CET (UTC+1) on 26 November 2019. The earthquake lasted at least 50 seconds and was felt in Albania's capital Tirana, and in places as far away as Bari, Taranto and Belgrade, 370 kilometres (230\u00a0mi) northeast of the epicentre. The maximum felt intensity was VIII (Severe) on the Modified Mercalli intensity scale. A total of 51 people were killed in the earthquake, with about 3,000 injured. It was the second earthquake to strike the region in the space of three months. It was the strongest earthquake to hit Albania in more than 40 years, its deadliest earthquake in 99 years and the world's deadliest earthquake in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Tectonic setting\nAlbania lies across the convergent boundary between the Eurasian Plate and the Adriatic Plate, part of the complex collision zone with the African Plate. The structure of the western part of Albania is dominated by active thrust tectonics. The region is seismically active, with several M \u2265 6 earthquakes in the last hundred years. In 1979, the largest of these events struck 70 kilometres (43\u00a0mi) further north, in Montenegro, killing 136 people (101 in Montenegro and 35 in Albania).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Earthquake\nThe earthquake had magnitude of 6.4 Mww, according to the ANSS Comprehensive Catalog. The observed focal mechanism is consistent with reverse movement on a NW-SE trending fault, parallel to the known thrust faults in the area. The maximum perceived intensity was VIII (severe) on the Modified Mercalli intensity scale (MMI). Modelling using a combination of data from the global navigation satellite system (GNSS) and interferometric synthetic-aperture radar (InSAR) provides further constraints on the fault that moved during the earthquake. This suggests that the rupture plane had a dip of 23\u00b0 to the east-northeast at a depth of about 16.5\u00a0km.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Earthquake\nThe estimated displacement on this thrust fault is 0.55 m over a rupture with dimensions 22\u00a0km x 13\u00a0km. The east-dipping Shirak Fault is considered the structure likely to be responsible for the earthquake. The mainshock was detected also via crowdsourcing by the European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre, where seismologists observed a surge in the LastQuake app launches and lately collected up to 58,125 reports on the event from the earthquake eyewitnesses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Earthquake, Foreshocks\nThe largest foreshock was the Mw\u202f5.6 earthquake that occurred on 21 September 2019, with an epicenter approximately 20 km south of the mainshock, ENE of Durr\u00ebs, which was at the time the most powerful in 30 years and damaged 500 houses. Two further foreshocks of M>4, were recorded with epicentres to the south, in the six hours before the mainshock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Earthquake, Aftershocks\nBy 1 December, there had been 1,300 aftershocks. As of 02:00 (UTC) 27 January 2020 there had been five aftershocks that were greater than M 5.0 and a further forty-five between M 4 and 5. The largest aftershock occurred at 07:08 CET (UTC+1), less than four hours after the mainshock, with a magnitude of M 5.4. This event caused shaking of intensity VII (very strong).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Damage\nThe damage was mostly in the large port city of Durr\u00ebs and the village of Kod\u00ebr-Thuman\u00eb, which are near the epicentre of the earthquake. Two hotels and two apartment blocks collapsed in Durr\u00ebs. Four buildings, including a five-storey apartment block, collapsed in Kod\u00ebr-Thuman\u00eb and the town was hardest hit from the earthquake. The town of La\u00e7 was extensively damaged. A state of emergency lasting 30 days was declared by the Albanian government for Durr\u00ebs, Thuman\u00eb and Tirana and later extended to Lezh\u00eb and La\u00e7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Damage\nIn accordance with the Albanian constitution regarding an emergency situation, the Albanian parliament granted Prime Minister Edi Rama state of emergency powers to deal with earthquake aftermath. Aftershocks followed that shook structures ruined during the earthquake and caused concern among locals. Subsequently numerous homes were no longer safe to reside in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Damage\nEmergency tents prepared for displaced people at the stadium in Durr\u00ebs", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Damage\nAlbanian soldiers, numbering in the hundreds, and some 2,000 Albanian police officers were dispatched to the earthquake affected localities of Thuman\u00eb, Durr\u00ebs, and the nearby wider area. They were tasked to assist with the rescue operation and the installation of shelter facilities for displaced people. Three hundred emergency tents to shelter some 1,000 people were erected at a sportsfield within Thuman\u00eb and close to a stadium in Durr\u00ebs. Albanian troops working with limited resources rescued people from debris of collapsed structures and they were assisted by 250 troops from the United States and various European countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Damage\nAs the last severe earthquake in Albania was in 1979, it lacked expertise in rescue operations. Subsequently, rescue crews with specialised equipment, sniffer dogs and emergency supplies came to Albania from neighbouring countries and other European nations to help in the search efforts and provide for those left homeless. In total, people from foreign countries involved in search and rescue numbered 670. Many homeless people in Kod\u00ebr-Thuman\u00eb spent two nights in tents, refusing to stay in hotels on the Adriatic Sea. Special forces (RENEA) continued searching for several people that were reported missing, and at least 45 individuals were rescued alive from the rubble.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Damage\nThe aftershocks, some of which were quite large, made it difficult for the search and rescue teams. Albania's Minister of Health Ogerta Manastirliu initially announced over 900 injuries, of which 731 were treated at the hospitals in Tirana and Durr\u00ebs alone. Reports from the Ministry of Health stated that care was provided for 62 injured people who were in a stable condition, with the exception of 3 people in intensive care. Later, official information from the government confirmed 51 people were killed in the earthquake - 25 in Durr\u00ebs, 25 in Thuman\u00eb, and 1 in Lezh\u00eb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Damage\nAmong the deceased were 7 children aged between 2-8. Following the earthquake an additional 2 people from Kurbin died, one from their injuries in hospital and another through suicide, due to posttraumatic stress. In the aftermath of the event, 5,200 locals were without any shelter. Forty five people trapped in earthquake debris were rescued.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Damage\nAn Albanian military owned dwelling in Durr\u00ebs, social centres in Tirana and various privately owned buildings such as 90 gyms in Kruj\u00eb, Tirana, Lezh\u00eb, Durr\u00ebs and numerous hotels in Vlor\u00eb, Durr\u00ebs and Tirana were adapted and opened to shelter displaced people. Some 2,500 displaced people have been housed in hotels, another 2,100 are in tents, whereas others affected by the earthquake slept in gyms or their cars. In Durr\u00ebs, authorities distributed food throughout the city and reports of complaints emerged that some people had not yet obtained supplies. Due to safety concerns and aftershocks, some people were not allowed to reenter their own homes and became dependent on food donations until engineers checked buildings. Stemming from concerns caused by the earthquake, there were locals who did not want to return to their homes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 867]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Damage\nDisplaced people have been relocated to Kosovo with 500 residing in a former German NATO military base in Prizren refitted as a temporary camp by the Kosovo government. Some displaced people are housed in the Kosovan municipalities of Lipjan numbering 3 families, 11 families with 48 members in Podujev\u00eb, 70 people in Malishev\u00eb, 150 people in Pristina and others in Gjakova. Other people have gone to eastern Albania. Albanian physicians assisted in relief efforts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Damage\nAlbanian President Ilir Meta, Prime Minister Rama and opposition leader Lulzim Basha visited the earthquake epicentre to see firsthand the situation and damage. The often fraught political rivalry between Meta, Rama and Basha was put aside as all three were involved in relief efforts. National operational centres were established by the Albanian government along with a phone line for people affected by the earthquake needing clothes or food.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Damage\nIn the immediate aftermath, 2,500 people became displaced by the earthquake and are temporarily being accommodated either in the Niko Dovana Stadium of Durr\u00ebs in tents or in hotels. Turkey evacuated 23 of its citizens from Albania to a hospital located in Izmir province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Damage\nSearch and rescue team from Italy working on a collapsed building", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Damage\nSearch and rescue team from Romania working on a collapsed building", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Damage\nOn 30 November Prime Minister Rama announced the end of the search and rescue operation, as no more bodies were expected to be under the rubble. According to his statement, about 2,000 people were injured from the earthquake in total, with more than 4,000 being left homeless in the disaster's aftermath. Preliminary figures showed that more than 1,465 buildings in the capital Tirana suffered serious damage, in addition to about 900 in nearby Durr\u00ebs. The first funeral for the deceased was held on Friday with hundreds of people in attendance including President Meta and Prime Minister Rama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Damage\nEarthquake damage is being checked by civil engineers from the European Union, United States and local experts to assess whether buildings are structurally sound, unsafe and required demolition or just needed replastering. Demolition of damaged structures deemed unsafe, some through remote control explosions by the Albanian army began, with others to follow suit in future. The Prosecutor's office ordered on 3 December that it needed lists of damaged buildings from police and municipal authorities before permission was granted for demolition, due to pending investigations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Damage\nThe EU office in Albania estimated that some 1.9 million people out of a total population of 2.8 million have been affected by the earthquake. Of those, more than 3,000 people were injured, 14,000 became homeless and throughout Albania 14,000 buildings were damaged of which 2,500 are rendered uninhabitable. According to the Albanian government, in mid 13 December 000 people were \"accommodated\" in shelter, of whom 5,000 were placed in hotels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0018-0001", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Damage\nA fortnight after the event, some rural earthquake victims in the impact zone stated that government aid was either inadequate to non-existent and that they were still living in a dire situation. Official data in early January stated that 10,000 people were still sheltering in tents. In late January 2020, 48,000 dwellings and structures have undergone inspection and the government has identified 35 areas in 10 municipalities for future rebuilding work.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Damage\nIn early February 2020, the Albanian government publicised figures that earthquake damage to private and public properties cost \u20ac844 million. Full reconstruction costs are estimated at \u20ac1.07 billion, with \u20ac800 million devoted to the rebuilding of homes and the rest allocated for repairing health centres, schools and infrastructure damaged by the earthquake. Other structures, such as 321 kindergartens and schools sustained \u20ac72 million worth of damage. A total of 11,490 homes were rendered damaged or destroyed and another 83,000 are in need of repairs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Aftermath\nA national day of mourning was declared in Albania and neighbouring Kosovo where two of the victims were from and which has an ethnic Albanian majority population. In North Macedonia, the Albanian majority municipalities of Tetovo, Struga and \u010cair held days of mourning for the earthquake victims. Albanian Independence Day celebrations, held annually on 28 November were cancelled in Albania, Kosovo and in majority Albanian municipalities of North Macedonia and Montenegro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Aftermath, Albanian civilian and state response\nIn Albania, volunteers, along with some small organisations established drop off points for donations of food, clothing, blankets and hygiene products at prominent landmarks throughout Tirana and used social media to mobilise people to provide assistance. Three humanitarian organisations sorted and packed the items and sent them through several truckloads for distribution among displaced people of the earthquake zone. As demand was high, citizens were urged to donate over coming days. Hundreds of Albanians in Albania and Kosovo opened their homes to people displaced by the earthquake. Some students from Tirana went to assist relief efforts in Durr\u00ebs and delivered hundreds of meals to earthquake affected people. Residents of Tirana held a candle light vigil in the city centre in honour of the deceased.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 72], "content_span": [73, 885]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Aftermath, Albanian civilian and state response\nThe Albanian state initiated an online fundraising campaign for donations, raising 156 million leks, \u20ac1,600,000 and $25,000. The Socialist party in parliament and members of the Albanian government along with 60 mayors donated their November salary to the aid effort. The Muslim Community of Albania organised nationwide fundraising for monetary, food and material supplies and opened its mosques and madrasas as a place of shelter for earthquake victims. The Orthodox Church of Albania under Archbishop Anastasios opened the local monasteries and churches to people displaced by the earthquake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 72], "content_span": [73, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0022-0001", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Aftermath, Albanian civilian and state response\nThe Catholic Church in Albania held mass in its churches on 27 and 28 November for earthquake victims and coordinated its relief efforts through local branches of the Catholic charity Caritas. Football fan groups such as \"Kuq e Zi\" of the Albanian national team set up an emergency fund and sent volunteers from throughout the country to assist in relief operations. Fan groups from local teams such as \"Tirona Fanatics\" KF Tirana, \"Guerrils\" FK Partizani Tirana, KF Vllaznia Shkod\u00ebr and players from clubs such as FK Kuk\u00ebsi sent food and clothing supplies and expressed solidarity with victims during matches following the first weekend after the earthquake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 72], "content_span": [73, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Aftermath, Albanian civilian and state response\nThe Albanian government established a monetary compensation scheme that would give families of deceased people scholarships to children, pensions for the elderly and 1 million lek ($9,000) for a family. Prime Minister Rama said that the state budget was being reconfigured to manage the situation following the earthquake. Rama stated that the draft budget of 2020 would provide funds for the construction of homes and cost some 7 billion leke ($63.10 million) or 0.4% of Gross Domestic Product (GDP). The exact final amount is unknown and apart from the aim of getting displaced people into homes, Rama wants reconstruction to expand economic growth, jobs and consumption.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 72], "content_span": [73, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Aftermath, Albanian civilian and state response\nApart from costs and planned projects already factored in, the government committed itself to no new budgetary expenditure except for irrigation, so as to accumulate funds for reconstruction. Rama has called for additional expert assistance and monetary aid geared toward recovery from the international community stating that Albania lacks the capacity \"to do this [reconstruction] alone.\" By mid December, 13 billion leks ($171 million) were allocated for future reconstruction by the Albanian government. In late January 2020, the government budget placed a total of 20 billion Lek in a fund for the future rebuilding process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 72], "content_span": [73, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Aftermath, Albanian civilian and state response\nIn Albania, a large proportion of the earthquake damage has been blamed on corruption, violations of the building code and substandard construction following the demise of communism during the early 1990s. The Albanian state has drafted a law in the aftermath of the earthquake that would see investors, supervisors and architects go to prison for a period of 7\u201315 years if proper construction practices are violated. Albanian prosecutors have begun proceedings to investigate violations of regulations and illegal building within the construction industry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 72], "content_span": [73, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0025-0001", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Aftermath, Albanian civilian and state response\nOn 14 December, Albanian prosecutors and police detained nine people on charges of murder and abuse of power, including two owners of collapsed hotels. A further eight individuals are being sought who are also suspected of failing to follow safety regulations. In mid December, Prime Minister Rama was criticised by NGOs, human rights organisations and parts of the media of misusing the situation to pass controversial legislation after he sought a three-month extension for his state of emergency powers from parliament. A new government portfolio was established and on 20 December, Arben Ahmetaj became the Minister of State for Reconstruction to oversee the rebuilding process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 72], "content_span": [73, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Aftermath, Kosovo Albanian civilian assistance\nIn Kosovo, its ethnic Albanian population reacted to the earthquake in Albania with sentiments of solidarity, moved in part by memories of solidarity and sanctuary the Albanians of Albania provided them when they fled ethnic cleansing by Serb forces during the 1999 Kosovo war. Kosovo Albanians undertook fundraising initiatives and appeals, collected money, food, clothing and shelter donations. In Pristina, volunteers established a drop off point in the central square for donations of supplies and several truckloads were sent to displaced people affected by the earthquake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 71], "content_span": [72, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0026-0001", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Aftermath, Kosovo Albanian civilian assistance\nVolunteers and humanitarian aid in trucks, buses and hundreds of cars from Kosovo traveled to Albania to assist in the situation and people were involved in tasks such as the operation of mobile kitchens and gathering financial aid. Kosovo Albanian school children donated clothes, food, and books. By 29 November, more than 100 tons of supplies donated by Kosovo businesses and civilians reached Albania. Candle light vigils were held in parts of Kosovo in honour of the deceased.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 71], "content_span": [72, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0026-0002", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Aftermath, Kosovo Albanian civilian assistance\nVarious football fan groups and their clubs such as\"Intelektual\u00ebt\" FC Drita, \"Skifterat\" SC Gjilani, \"Plisat\" FC Prishtina, \"Stuhia e Kuqe\" KF Arb\u00ebria, \"Tigrat\" KF Ulpiana, \"Legjendat\" FC Llapi, \"Gladiator\u00ebt\" KF Vushtrria and from KF KEK were involved in collecting donations, mobilising and sending busloads of volunteers to assist in relief efforts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 71], "content_span": [72, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Aftermath, Kosovo Albanian civilian assistance\nThe Islamic Community of Kosovo organised a fundraising effort on 29 November after Friday prayers across all its mosques within the country and sent several convoys of aid to earthquake victims. The Catholic Church in Kosovo sent members from the local branch of the Catholic charity Caritas to assist in Albania. In Kosovo, the Catholic Church held mass on 1 December across the country and it collected charitable donations by parishioners for earthquake victims and their families. President Hashim Tha\u00e7i was part of a presidential delegation that visited the earthquake epicentre and expressed his condolences on behalf of Kosovo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 71], "content_span": [72, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0027-0001", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Aftermath, Kosovo Albanian civilian assistance\nOn 29 November, outgoing Kosovo Prime Minister Ramush Haradinaj and his successor Albin Kurti visited Durr\u00ebs to survey the damage and expressed Kosovan commitment to relief efforts and the need for institutional cooperation between both countries. In Serbia, ethnic Albanians of the Pre\u0161evo valley donated aid and sent it through several convoys to earthquake victims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 71], "content_span": [72, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Aftermath, Albanian civilian assistance from Montenegro and North Macedonia\nAlbanians from North Macedonia responded in large numbers to the Albanian government's appeal for financial assistance through donations to various humanitarian organisations and special bank accounts fundraising for aid. The Islamic Religious Community of Macedonia organised a fundraising effort on 29 November after Friday prayers across all its mosques within North Macedonia. Parliamentary speaker Talat Xhaferi, Deputy Prime Minister Bujar Osmani and leader of DUI Ali Ahmeti were part of a delegation of Albanian politicians from North Macedonia visiting the earthquake epicentre that expressed their condolences to President Meta. The mayor of \u010cair, Visar Ganiu visited the earthquake epicentre and brought fans known as \"Shvercerat\" from the football club FK Shkupi to volunteer assistance. Other football fan groups \"Ballist\u00ebt\" KF Shk\u00ebndija and \"Ilir\u00ebt\" KF Bashkimi collected donations and sent busloads of volunteers to assist in relief efforts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 100], "content_span": [101, 1057]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Aftermath, Albanian civilian assistance from Montenegro and North Macedonia\nIn Montenegro, ethnic Albanians from Ulcinj were involved in a major relief effort sending items such as food, blankets, diapers and baby milk through a local humanitarian organisation Amaneti and in Tuzi through fundraising efforts. A blood donation effort for earthquake victims was organised by the Bosniak Youth Forum of Montenegro with hundreds of Albanians from Ulcinj partaking in the initiative. In Ulcinj, the Islamic Community of Montenegro collected aid for earthquake victims in all mosques of the city and surrounding area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 100], "content_span": [101, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Aftermath, Local business and International civilian assistance\nVarious prominent businesses owned by ethnic Albanians and charities in Albania and Kosovo along with notable members of the Albanian community in the Balkans including businessmen, politicians, journalists, actors and socialites made large financial contributions for humanitarian aid. Businesses that made large donations include the International Albanian Airport (\u20ac1,000,000) and Balfin Group (\u20ac1,200,000), the charities Fundjav\u00eb Ndryshe ($1,400,000) and Shqiptar\u00ebt p\u00ebr Shqiptar\u00ebt ($590,000), along with individuals such as Kosovo politician Behgjet Pacolli (\u20ac1,000,000) and Albanian businessman Shefqet Kastrati (\u20ac1,500,000).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 88], "content_span": [89, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Aftermath, Local business and International civilian assistance\nGlobally, the Albanian diaspora expressed its solidarity and held multiple fundraisers to send money to Albania and assist people impacted by the earthquake. In the United States, an Albanian-American organisation named Albanian Roots raised $1,300,000 for earthquake victims. Global celebrities of Albanian descent such as Bebe Rexha, Rita Ora, and Dua Lipa pledged support, sent donations, and made visits to the country's most quake-ravaged regions in hopes to rebuild some of the affected areas' infrastructure. In all, these non-state donations by Albanians from the Balkans and global diaspora totaled some 13 million dollars of humanitarian assistance to Albania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 88], "content_span": [89, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Aftermath, Local business and International civilian assistance\nIndividual donations by people from 76 countries were also made through online fundraising on the websites GoFundMe and Facebook totaling $3,600,000. Money from the Albanian diaspora continued to arrive in Albania and Prime Minister Rama tasked a group of fundraisers, that includes a Muslim imam experienced in housing the needy, to combine the donations and maintain oversight of their usage. By early December, all donations for humanitarian assistance totaled $92 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 88], "content_span": [89, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Aftermath, International donors conferences and reconstruction efforts\nThe European Union, the Catholic Pope, the Ecumenical Patriarch, the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation Secretary General, presidents of Azerbaijan, China, Armenia, Serbia, Montenegro, United States and Greece, the German Chancellor, the monarchs of Qatar, Jordan and Saudi Arabia, the Bulgarian Prime Minister and the Iranian and Estonian foreign ministers expressed their condolences to the people of Albania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 95], "content_span": [96, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Aftermath, International donors conferences and reconstruction efforts\nTurkish President Recep Tayyip Erdo\u011fan expressed his condolences, called for aid from other Muslim countries and stated he will lobby them to give assistance to Albania for future reconstruction. Prime Minister Rama contacted President Erdogan and asked for the creation of an international donors conference with one involving western countries and the other with states from the east. Rama also wrote to US President Donald J. Trump and other countries such as Sweden, Malaysia, Japan, Great Britain, Germany and Australia asking for assistance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 95], "content_span": [96, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Aftermath, International donors conferences and reconstruction efforts\nPresident Erdogan, citing close Albanian-Turkish relations, committed Turkey to reconstructing 500 earthquake destroyed homes in Albania. The Turkish reconstruction effort will focus on La\u00e7 and Kod\u00ebr-Thuman\u00eb where the homes will be built, along with civic structures such as gardens, parks, shopping centers, parking lots and religious buildings. The Turkish government will administer reconstruction in La\u00e7 and cooperate with the Albanian government on building designs and getting earthquake affected people quickly into homes. Qatar committed itself to the future reconstruction effort.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 95], "content_span": [96, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Aftermath, International donors conferences and reconstruction efforts\nAt the NATO 2019 London summit (3\u20134 December), constructive discussions were held by Prime Minister Rama with French President Emmanuel Macron, President Trump, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and other European leaders over establishing an international conference for financial aid. German chancellor Angela Merkel has stated that Germany would provide future assistance. In Istanbul, Turkey held a donors conference (8 December) for Albania that was organised and attended by President Erdogan and included Turkish businessmen, investors and Prime Minister Rama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 95], "content_span": [96, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Aftermath, International donors conferences and reconstruction efforts\nOn 12 December, Italian Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio made calls for the establishment of an international conference for financial aid to Albania. Following the completion of the earthquake damage report by Albanian authorities, the European Council announced on 13 December that the European Union will organise an international donors conference for January 2020 in Tirana. A Post-Disaster Needs Assessment (PDNA) was established by the United Nations (UN), World Bank and EU to assess the situation and to provide information for the donors' conference regarding efforts toward rehabilitation and reconstruction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 95], "content_span": [96, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0037-0001", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, Aftermath, International donors conferences and reconstruction efforts\nOn 10 January the EU announced that it had organised a donors\u2019 conference for Albania to take place on 17 February. Apart from the EU and its member countries, delegates from other states, international organisations and financial institutions such as the UN and World Bank are expected to partake in the conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 95], "content_span": [96, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287174-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Albania earthquake, International assistance\nA number of countries and businesses have offered assistance for relief:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287175-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Albanian Basketball Cup\nThe Albanian Basketball Cup 2019 is the 63rd edition of the Albanian Basketball Cup, the top annual basketball cup competition played by Albanian teams and organized under the authority of the Albanian Basketball Association (FSHB).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287175-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Albanian Basketball Cup\nTirana was the defending champion, while Teuta won the competition after 52 years, 1965 was the last time Teuta won the Albanian Basketball Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287175-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Albanian Basketball Cup, Competition Format\nThe Basketball Cup 2019 is played at the middle of the season, when the league is paused for the cup. The mid-season standing is taken into account to pair the matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287175-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Albanian Basketball Cup, Competition Format\nAll the Albanian teams from the Superliga and First Division compete for the Cup. Each game is played once in a single knock-out game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287175-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Albanian Basketball Cup, Competition Format\nThere is a first round of qualification played by the teams from the First Division, from which only two teams qualify to the final bracket phase played against the teams from the First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287175-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Albanian Basketball Cup, Competition Format\nThe qualification and quarter finals rounds are hosted in the court of the higher ranked team, while the Final 4 are played in a neutral court, in two consecutive days (1st and 2 February 2019) in Tirana, at the Feti Borova Sport Hall in the Tirana Olympic Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287175-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Albanian Basketball Cup, Teams and ranking\nAt the middle (10 games played of 20 total) of the season the following teams will play the championship as ranked in the Superliga and First Division:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287175-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Albanian Basketball Cup, Final\nThe final is played between Teuta and Goga Basket, both from Durr\u00ebs. Goga Basket was at its first participation in the competition, as the team has participated to the Albanian Albanian Superlica for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287176-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Albanian Cup Final\nThe 2019 Albanian Cup Final was a football match played on 2 June 2019 to decide the winner of the 2018\u201319 Albanian Cup, the 67th edition of Albania's primary football cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287176-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Albanian Cup Final\nThe match was played between Kuk\u00ebsi and Tirana at the Elbasan Arena in Elbasan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287176-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Albanian Cup Final\nKuk\u00ebsi won the match 2-1, their second time winning the Albanian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287177-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Albanian Futsal Championship\nThe 2019 season of the Albanian Futsal Championship was the 16th season of top-tier futsal in Albania. The regular season started on 21 April 2019, and ended on 27 May 2017. After the end of the regular season, all four teams played in the championship playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287178-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Albanian Supercup\nThe 2019 Albanian Supercup was the 26th edition of the Albanian Supercup, an annual Albanian football match. The teams were decided by taking the winner of the previous season's Albanian Superliga and the runner-up of the Albanian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287178-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Albanian Supercup\nThe match was contested by Partizani, champions of the 2018\u201319 Albanian Superliga, and Kuk\u00ebsi, the 2018\u201319 Albanian Cup winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287178-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Albanian Supercup, Details\nMatch officials:Assistant referees:Ilir Tartari (Albania)Nertil Bregasi (Albania)Fourth official:Ridiger \u00c7okaj (Albania)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287179-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Albanian local elections\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by 104.56.129.27 (talk) at 16:39, 5 January 2020 (Grammar). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287179-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Albanian local elections\n2019 Albanian local elections were a set of highly contested elections in Albania held on 30 June 2019. Voters were asked to elect mayors, municipal council members, municipal unit mayors and municipal unit members. These were the second local elections in Albania since substantial administrative reforms legislated in 2014 reduced the number of municipalities in the country to 61.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287179-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Albanian local elections\nThe Central Election Commission of Albania was responsible for administrating the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287179-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Albanian local elections\nFollowing months of political crisis, the opposition parties refused to participate in the election accusing the government and the Prime Minister of vote buying, voters intimidation and links with criminal organizations that led to a Socialist Party majority in the previous elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287179-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Albanian local elections\nThe President had originally postponed the election date to October 13th after many protests organized by the opposition parties, some of which turned out violent, but it was not accepted by the government and the CEC, which decided to continue with the process on the original date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287179-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Albanian local elections\nThe Socialists ran uncontested in 31 municipalities, facing smaller parties and independent candidates in the other 30 municipalities, including the newly formed Bindja Demokratike, resulting in an absolute win by the Socialists in all municipalities except Finiq, and resulted in the Socialists gaining the most votes in all city council elections except Finiq and Puk\u00eb. In most areas, turnout was low, ranging between under 10% in Shkodra to around 38% in Librazhd. Only one municipality, Pustec, was outside of this range, and had a turnout of over 50%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287180-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Albanian protests\nThe 2019 Albanian protests was massive demonstrations and violent protests led by the opposition, who staged massive rallies in Albania between February-June, calling for the cancellation of the 2019 Albanian local elections, fresh elections, resignation of prime minister Edi Rama and his entire cabinet and the installation of a new technocrat government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287180-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Albanian protests, Background\nAlbania has been plagued by civil unrest since the 2011 Albanian opposition demonstrations and the 2017 Albanian opposition protest. Massive protests erupted after allegations that prime minister Edi Rama had most of his votes rigged, and corruption, organised crime in the government triggered almost daily protest actions. After the leaks, thousands took to the streets and waved the Albanian flag and posters denouncing Rama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287180-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Albanian protests, Revolution\nDespite heavy police presence and brutality during previous uprisings, the protesters came in their hundreds of thousands, demonstrating and calling for the resignation of the government in Tirana. Protesters attacked the prime minister's residence and was met with Tear gas. Opposition protesters clashed with riot police during the next couple of days of anti-government street rallies. Rioting played a major role during the movement, violence had flared during weekly marches. Marches, rallies, picketing, rioting and protest movement, demonstrations, general strike actions and unrest would have turned into a conflict, but it managed to prevent that. Violent protests and opposition rallies erupted in March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287180-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Albanian protests, Revolution\nCountrywide protests turned violent as police quelled stone-throwing protesters who attempted to strip parliament and demanded democratic reforms and better conditions, calling and chanting for the resignation of the government of Edi Rama and new elections, led by opposition leader Lulzim Basha between March 21-March 28. However, episodes of nonviolent rallies occurred in Tirana, where thousands then tens of thousands of protesters participated in nonviolent protests, with police presence scarce. Looting, labour strikes and peaceful protest became an unprecedented national protest movement and protests become increasingly popular.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287180-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Albanian protests, Revolution\nWidespread protests and popular demonstrations however turned violent again as protesters used stones, banners, projectiles, gates, labour protests urged the government to resign in Shkodra and Vandalism was on the rise. Symbols and human chains was linked as a way of nonviolence, however, it is broken up by Water cannon. In Late-May and June, violent protests occurred during political chaos and rallies, marches turned into increasingly violent protests characterised by crackdown and violence. Police and the army fired Tear gas, Rubber bullets and Water cannon at every protest calling for the resignation of the government. Crowds with Phonelights and candles marched in downtown streets in Tirana for the first week of July, the last week of protest actions in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 809]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287180-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Albanian protests, Revolution\nDisputed protests and protesters called for the resignation of the government was increasing, while the opposition chanted ouster slogans. In July, popular protests ended with violence and clashes. Street battles occurred when protesters threw Petrol bombs and hurled broken brikcs at police, who responded with Tear gas, Water cannon, Stun grenade, Rubber bullets and Flash grenade. Demonstrators threw bottles and flared slogans during the scuffles. One of the demonstrator's main demands was fresh elections and the cancellation of the 2019 Albanian local elections, the elections was scheduled for June 30 but was annulled and cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287181-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Albany Empire season\nThe 2019 Albany Empire season was the second season for the Albany Empire in the Arena Football League. The Empire played at the Times Union Center and were coached by Rob Keefe for the 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287181-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Albany Empire season\nIn just their second season of existence, the Empire finished with the best regular season record and advanced to ArenaBowl XXXII, where they defeated the Philadelphia Soul to win their first league championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287181-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Albany Empire season, Standings\ny - clinched regular season titlex - clinched playoff berth", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287181-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Albany Empire season, Schedule, Regular season\nThe 2019 regular season schedule was released on February 13, 2019. All times Eastern.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287181-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Albany Empire season, Roster\nRookies in italics updated May 16, 201924 Active, 12 Inactive", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287182-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Albany Great Danes football team\nThe 2019 Albany Great Danes football team represented the University at Albany, SUNY in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by Greg Gattuso, in his sixth season as head coach, and played their home games at Bob Ford Field at Tom & Mary Casey Stadium. The Great Danes played as members of the Colonial Athletic Association for the sixth season. They finished the season 9\u20135, 6\u20132 in CAA play to finish in second place. They received an at-large bid to the FCS Playoffs where they defeated Central Connecticut in the first round before losing in the second round to Montana State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287182-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Albany Great Danes football team, Previous season\nThe Great Danes finished the 2018 season 3\u20138, 1\u20137 in CAA play to finish in last place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287182-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Albany Great Danes football team, Preseason, CAA poll\nIn the CAA preseason poll released on July 23, 2019, the Great Danes were predicted to finish in twelfth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 58], "content_span": [59, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287182-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Albany Great Danes football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013CAA team\nThe Great Danes did not have any players selected to the preseason all-CAA team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 72], "content_span": [73, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287182-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Albany Great Danes football team, FCS Playoffs\nThe Great Danes were selected for the postseason tournament, with a first-round pairing against Central Connecticut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 51], "content_span": [52, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections\nAlbay local elections were held on May 13, 2019 as part of the 2019 Philippine general election. Voters selected their candidates of choice for all local positions: municipal or city mayor, vice mayor and councilors, as well as members of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan, the vice-governor, governor and representatives for the three districts of Albay in the House of Representatives. These elections were held following the first-past-the-post voting system, in which the candidate with the highest number (but not necessarily a majority) of votes is elected for the position he or she is seeking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, Gubernatorial and Vice Gubernatorial election\nAs with other provinces in the Philippines, the governor, and vice governor of Albay are elected separately. Therefore, they may be of different parties when elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 73], "content_span": [74, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, Gubernatorial and Vice Gubernatorial election, Governor\nOne-term consecutive, four-term non-consecutive incumbent Governor Al Francis Bichara ran for reelection. Bichara's opponents included broadcast journalist Hermogenes Alegre Jr., self-claimed general Galma Arcilla, Vice Governor Harold Imperial, and retired COMELEC Bicol Regional Director Zacarias Zaragoza. The three perrenial candidates who faced Bichara in 2016, Paul Aguilar, Mario Baquil, and Jaime Hernandez, Jr., also ran again. Bichara won reelection to a second consecutive, fifth non-consecutive term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 83], "content_span": [84, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, Gubernatorial and Vice Gubernatorial election, Vice Governor\nIncumbent Vice-Governor Harold Imperial is term-limited. He ran for governor instead. Running to replace him are former Quezon City Councilor and Albay First District Representative Edcel Greco Lagman, and Legazpi City Councilor and Albay Councilors League President and ex-officio Board Member Alan Ra\u00f1ola. Bonifacio Regidor withdrew his candidacy for this position. Lagman won the election for this office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 88], "content_span": [89, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, Congressional elections, 1st District\nOne-term consecutive, seven-term non-consecutive Representative Edcel Lagman is running for reelection. Facing him is Santo Domingo Mayor Herbie Aguas. Lagman won reelection to a second consecutive, eighth non-consecutive term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 65], "content_span": [66, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, Congressional elections, 2nd District\nOne-term consecutive, four-term non-consecutive Representative Jose Maria Clemente Salceda sought reelection. He was reelected to this position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 65], "content_span": [66, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, Congressional elections, 3rd District\nIncumbent Fernando Gonzalez is term-limited. His party nominated his chief of staff, Fernando Cabredo. Former Representative Reno Lim is trying to reclaim this seat. Other candidates are Mario Marcos and Elmer Felix Pornel. Cabredo was elected to represent this district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 65], "content_span": [66, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, Sangguniang Panlalawigan Elections\nAll three legislative districts of Albay will members of the Albay Provincial Board. The first and second districts send three board members each, while the third district sends four board members each. The election is via plurality-at-large voting; a voter can vote up to the maximum number of board members his district is sending as apportioned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 62], "content_span": [63, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, Sangguniang Panlalawigan Elections, 1st District\nFreshmen incumbent Board Members Reynaldo Bragais and Victor Ziga, Jr. ran for reelection. Board Member Job Belen is term-limited and ran for Malilipot Vice Mayor. Also vying for this position are multi-level marketing company head Jose Betito, former Board Member Baby Glenda Bongao, and Tabaco City Councilor Sheina Onrubia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 76], "content_span": [77, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, Sangguniang Panlalawigan Elections, 2nd District\nOne-term incumbent Board Member Raul Rosal ran for reelection. Board Member Ralph Andes is term-limited while two-term Senior Board Member Richard Benjamin Imperial retired. Also vying for this position are Legazpi City Councilors Melissa Abadeza and Jesus Chito Baldo, Political dynasty candidates Ivan Andes and Maria Paz Salud Imperial, and Daraga Councilor and former board member Neil Montallana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 76], "content_span": [77, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, Sangguniang Panlalawigan Elections, 3rd District\nNeophyte incumbent Board Members Dante Arandia, Howard Sim Imperial, Eva Josephine Ribaya, and Jesus Salceda, Jr. ran for reelection. Libon Councilor Mark Ian Cortes also ran for this position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 76], "content_span": [77, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections\nAll cities and municipalities of Albay will elect its mayor and vice-mayor this election. The candidates for mayor and vice mayor with the plurality of votes wins the seat. The mayor and vice mayor are elected separately; therefore, they may be of different parties when they are elected. However, these candidates may form a de facto coalition wherein a mayoral and vice mayoral candidate of different party affiliation will campaign together with a slate of candidates for councilors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Tabaco City\nOne-term consecutive, three-term nonconsecutive incumbent Mayor Cielo Krisel Lagman-Luistro is running for reelection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 83], "content_span": [84, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Tabaco City\nOne-term incumbent Vice Mayor Nestor San Pablo is unopposed for reelection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 83], "content_span": [84, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Bacacay\nOne-term Incumbent Armando Romano is running for reelection. Running against him are Gil Bea, and topnotcher Councilor Edsel Belleza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 79], "content_span": [80, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Bacacay\nOne-term incumbent Vice Mayor Divina Gracia Bonavente is challenged for reelection by former Mayor Tobias Betito.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 79], "content_span": [80, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Malilipot\nOne-term Incumbent Cenon Volante is running for reelection. Former Mayor Roli Volante, whom Cenon unseated in the 2016 election, sought a rematch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Malilipot\nOne-term incumbent Vice Mayor Johanes Ampig is challenged for reelection by Board Member Job Belen and dynastic candidate Rolando Volante.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Malinao\nOne-term consecutive, three-term nonconsecutive incumbent Mayor Avelino Ceriola had been dismissed from his position by the Office of the Ombudsman. This is in connection with the graft and administrative cases filed against him for the alleged illegal construction and operation of a cockpit arena that he owned; but he refused to step down. He was later unseated and his 2016 opponent, former Mayor Alicia Morales took over this office. Mayor Morales will face former Mayor Emiliana Kare and Councilor Lenybelle Santos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 79], "content_span": [80, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Malinao\nTwo-term incumbent Vice Mayor Sheryl Bilo is running for reelection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 79], "content_span": [80, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Santo Domingo\nIncumbent Herbie Aguas is term-limited and is running for representative. Former Councilor Joseling Aguas, Jr. is his party's nominee. Vice Mayor Nomar Banda and resort owner Noel Estillomo are also seeking the mayoralty position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 85], "content_span": [86, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Santo Domingo\nOne-term incumbent Vice Mayor Nomar Banda is running for mayor. Councilor Marvin Oringo is running for this position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 85], "content_span": [86, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Tiwi\nOne-term consecutive, four term nonconsecutive incumbent Mayor Jaime Villanueva is facing a rematch with former Mayor Leo Templado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 76], "content_span": [77, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Tiwi\nTwo-term incumbent Vice Mayor David Beato is being challenged for this office by topnotcher Councilor Rebecca Lizardo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 76], "content_span": [77, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 2nd District, Legazpi City\nTwo-term consecutive, five-term nonconsecutive incumbent Mayor Noel Rosal is running for reelection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 84], "content_span": [85, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 2nd District, Legazpi City\nOne-term incumbent Vice Mayor Oscar Robert Cristobal is unopposed for reelection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 84], "content_span": [85, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 2nd District, Camalig\nOne-term incumbent Mayor Maria Ahrdail Baldo is swapping posts with one-term incumbent Vice Mayor Carlos Irwin Baldo, Jr. Both of them are running unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 79], "content_span": [80, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 2nd District, Daraga\nThree-term consecutive, five-term nonconsecutive Mayor Gerry Jaucian died on May 4, 2018. Then Vice Mayor Carlwyn Baldo ascended to this office. Baldo is seeking a full term in this position. He sought this office in 2010 and 2013, losing both times to Jaucian. He won as Vice Mayor in a fractured field in 2016, defeating the then, two-term consecutive, five-term nonconsecutive incumbent vice mayor. He is facing off with three-term Ako Bicol Representative Rodel Batocabe and elevated Vice Mayor Victor Perete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 78], "content_span": [79, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 2nd District, Daraga\nOn December 22, 2018, Batocabe was attending a gift-giving event for senior citizens and persons with disabilities in the rural barangay of Burgos of the municipality when two men approached and shot him. His police escort, Senior Police Officer 2 Orlando Diaz, was also killed, while seven elderly attendees were also wounded in the attack. Batocabe and Diaz were taken to a hospital in Legazpi City, where both were pronounced dead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 78], "content_span": [79, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 2nd District, Daraga\nOn January 3, 2019, Philippine National Police Director General Oscar Albayalde announced in a press conference that Mayor Carlwyn Baldo is the suspected mastermind for the murder of Representative Batocabe. According to the police, Baldo hired six men to kill Batocabe and set up $95,000 in funds to pay for the murder. The plot had allegedly been in the works since August 2018, when Baldo supplied $4,600 to one of the hitmen to purchase guns and motorcycles. Mayor Carlwyn Baldo denied the allegations in a statement read over the phone to local radio stations, calling himself \" a convenient scapegoat.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 78], "content_span": [79, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 2nd District, Daraga\nOn January 6, 2019, Lakas\u2013CMD said that it has revoked its Certificate of Nomination and Acceptance (CONA) for Baldo. Batocabe's party, the National Unity Party named his widow, Gertrudes, as his substitute. However, Representative Batocabe's name is going to remain on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 78], "content_span": [79, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 2nd District, Daraga\nOn May 6, 2019, the Legazpi City Regional Trial Court ordered the arrest of Baldo for the murder of Batocabe and his police escort. While the police said that Baldo has sent word that he would immediately surrender when he is served arrest warrants, he was declared by the police as a \"wanted person\" after failure to serve his warrant of arrest two days after its issuance. Baldo surrendered on May 10, 2019, four days after the court issued the warrant for his arrest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 78], "content_span": [79, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 2nd District, Daraga\nOne-term incumbent Vice Mayor Carlwyn Baldo assumed the Office of the Mayor after the death of Mayor Gerry Jaucian. Topnotcher Councilor Victor Perete was then elevated into the position of Vice Mayor. Vice Mayor Perete forwent election for a full term and is running for Mayor instead. Former Councilor Joseph Espinas and incumbent Councilors Gerry Raphael Jaucian, Jr. and Joey Marcellana are facing off for this post.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 78], "content_span": [79, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 2nd District, Manito\nOne-term incumbent Joshua Mari Daep is running for reelection. Challenging him is 2016 mayoral candidate Rebecca Chen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 78], "content_span": [79, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 2nd District, Manito\nOne-term incumbent Vice Mayor Carlito Belludo is running for reelection. His challengers include former Councilor Marjun Dagsil, Councilor Arly Guiriba and Diego Lopez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 78], "content_span": [79, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 2nd District, Rapu-rapu\nTwo-term incumbent Mayor Ronald Galicia is running for reelection. He is being challenged by Fiel Vizcaya.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 2nd District, Rapu-rapu\nTwo-term incumbent Vice Mayor Nora O\u00f1ate is vying for a final consecutive term in office. Her challenger is Amando de la Cruz, Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 3rd District, Ligao City\nIncumbent Mayor Patricia Alsua is running for a third term in office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 82], "content_span": [83, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 3rd District, Ligao City\nOne-term incumbent Vice Mayor Sherwin Quising is running for city councilor. Running to replace him are City Councilors Manuel Garcia, and Teodorico Residilla, Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 82], "content_span": [83, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 3rd District, Guinobatan\nIncumbent Mayor Ann Ongjoco is unopposed for a final, consecutive term in office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 82], "content_span": [83, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 3rd District, Guinobatan\nTwo-term incumbent Vice Mayor Julio Tingzon, IV is challenged for reelection by topnotcher Councilor Rolando Palabrica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 82], "content_span": [83, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 3rd District, Jovellar\nIncumbent Mayor Jorem Arcangel is term-limited and is running for Vice Mayor. His party nominated topnotcher Councilor Joseph Arcangel, who will run unopposed for this position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 3rd District, Jovellar\nIncumbent Vice Mayor Jose Nobleza, Jr. is term-limited and is running for municipal councilor. Mayor Jorem Arcangel will run unopposed for this position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 3rd District, Libon\nOne-term incumbent Vice Mayor Markgregor Edward Sayson is unopposed for reelection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 77], "content_span": [78, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 3rd District, Oas\nOne-term incumbent Mayor Domingo Escoto, Jr. is running for reelection. His opponents are former Mayor Gregorio Ricarte and Vice Mayor Antonio Yuchongco, II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 3rd District, Oas\nOne-term incumbent Vice Mayor Antonio Yuchongco, II is running for mayor. His party nominated municipal Councilor Reene Raro. He will be facing Barangay Chairman of San Isidro, and concurrent Oas ABC President, ex-officio municipal Councilor Joseph Rentosa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 3rd District, Pio Duran\nIncumbent Mayor Alan Arandia is unopposed for a second term in office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 3rd District, Pio Duran\nOne-term incumbent Vice Mayor Marvin Quiroz is challenged for reelection by former Mayor Henry Callope.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0048-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 3rd District, Polangui\nIncumbent Mayor Cherilie Sampal is term-limited. Her party nominated political dynasty candidate Norman Sampal. Vice Mayor Herbert Borja, and Councilor Andy Mariscotes are also running for this open seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0049-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, 3rd District, Polangui\nOne-term incumbent Vice Mayor Herbert Borja is running for mayor. Running for this position are former Vice Mayor Renato Borja, municipal Councilor Restituto Fernandez, and Dexter Salinel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0050-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, Maps\nResults of 2019 Mayoral Elections in Albay by Municipality and City", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 62], "content_span": [63, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287183-0051-0000", "contents": "2019 Albay local elections, City and municipal elections, Maps\nResults of 2019 Vice Mayoral Elections in Albay by Municipality and City", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 62], "content_span": [63, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287184-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta Scotties Tournament of Hearts\nThe 2019 Jiffy Lube Alberta Scotties Tournament of Hearts, the provincial women's curling championship for Alberta, was held January 23\u201327 at the Stettler Recreaction Centre in Stettler, Alberta. The winning Chelsea Carey team went on to win the 2019 Scotties Tournament of Hearts in Sydney, Nova Scotia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election\nThe 2019 Alberta general election was held on April 16, 2019, to elect 87 members to the 30th Alberta Legislature. In its first general election contest, the Jason Kenney-led United Conservative Party (UCP) won 54.88% of the popular vote and 63 seats, reducing Premier Rachel Notley's governing Alberta New Democratic Party (NDP) to Official Opposition with 24 seats. The United Conservative Party was formed in 2017 from a merger of the Progressive Conservative Party and the Wildrose Party after the NDP's victory in the 2015 election ended nearly 44 years of Progressive Conservative rule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election\nThe NDP won 24 seats in total: including nineteen seats in Edmonton, three seats in Calgary (Calgary-Buffalo, Calgary-McCall and Calgary-Mountain View), and the seats of Lethbridge-West and St. Albert, a total of 24. The UCP won the remaining 63 seats in the province. Two other parties that won seats in the 2015 election, the Alberta Party and the Alberta Liberals, failed to win any seats, making this election the first Alberta general election since 1993 where only two parties won seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election\nThe Election Act fixes the election date to a three-month period, between March 1 and May 31 in the fourth calendar year after the preceding election day which in this case was May 5, 2015. However, this did not affect the powers of the Lieutenant Governor to dissolve the Legislative Assembly before this period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election\nThis election resulted in the highest voter turnout since 1982 at 64%, rising from 57% in the last general election held in 2015. It marked only the fifth change of government since Alberta became a province in 1905, and also the first time an incumbent government failed to win a second term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election, Background\nThe 2015 Alberta general election resulted in a New Democratic majority government headed by Rachel Notley. The New Democrats surprise victory ended the 44-year government led by the Progressive Conservative Association of Alberta, becoming the fourth change in governing party in Alberta's 110 year history. The Wildrose Party formed the Official Opposition under leader Brian Jean, while the incumbent Progressive Conservatives came third place, but were left without a leader after Jim Prentice resigned as leader and disclaimed his seat. The Alberta Liberal Party elected one member with interim leader David Swann capturing his seat, while the Alberta Party elected its first candidate to the Legislature in leader Greg Clark.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election, Background\nMajor changes in leadership of opposition parties occurred over the next four years. Former Conservative Party of Canada Member of Parliament and Minister Jason Kenney was elected in the 2017 Progressive Conservatives leadership election on a platform of uniting the right wing parties in Alberta which occurred after Wildrose members voted 95 per cent in favour of merging into the new United Conservative Party and forming the Official Opposition. Later the 2017 United Conservative Party leadership election saw Jason Kenney elected as party leader and leader of the Opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election, Background\nThe interim leader of the Alberta Liberal Party and sole Member of the Legislative Assembly declined to contest the 2017 Alberta Liberal Party leadership election, which saw David Khan elected leader of the party. The Alberta Party saw two Members of the Legislative Assembly cross the floor over the four year period. Party leader Greg Clark resigned as leader in 2017, and the 2018 Alberta Party leadership election saw former Progressive Conservative MLA and Edmonton Mayor Stephen Mandel elected as party leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election, Background, Election finance changes\nFollowing the NDP's election in 2015 the new government's first bill An Act to Renew Democracy in Alberta which amended the Election Finances and Contributions Disclosure Act was passed by the Legislature. The bill banned corporate and union donations to political parties, set rules for political parties accessing loans and reinforced that only Albertans are able to make political contributions. The next year the government introduced further amendments reducing political contributions from $15,000 per year to a total of $4,000 per year (inclusive of parties, constituency associations, candidates, leadership contests, and nominations).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election, Background, Election finance changes\nThe election reforms were supported by the Wildrose opposition, but commentators pointed out the changes hurt the Progressive Conservatives which relied on large corporate donations. Reforms also limited party expenses to $2 million between the writ and when polls close, limiting candidates to $50,000 per general election and $23,000 for by-elections. Third party advertisers were limited to $150,000 during the official election period, and limited to $3,000 for supporting or opposing a candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election, Background, 2017 electoral boundary commission\nUnder the Electoral Boundaries Commission Act requires that a Commission be appointed during the first session of the Legislature following every second general election. The Commission requires a non-partisan chair, two government members recommended by the Premier, and two opposition members. Due to the decision by Premier Jim Prentice to call an early election in 2015, the Commission was required to be formed before the prescribed date in time for the next election in 2019. Previous Commissions had provided for modest redistributions in favour of Alberta's cities which according to Political Scientist Roger Epp brought forward \"deep rural anxieties\" regarding declining population and influence in Alberta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 77], "content_span": [78, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election, Background, 2017 electoral boundary commission\nThe Commission was provided with a mandate which kept the size of the Legislature fixed at 87 seats. The Commission was appointed, led by Justice Myra Bielby made only incremental changes adding one new seat in Calgary and Edmonton, as well as a seat in the Airdrie area. The Commission did however make significant statements on the rural-urban divide in Alberta, noting \"Alberta is no longer entirely or primarily rural in nature\" and a \"disproportionate preservation of the rural voice\" was no longer acceptable or feasible under law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 77], "content_span": [78, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election, Background, 2017 electoral boundary commission\nWhile the Electoral Boundaries Commission Act permits up to four districts to be formed with a population 50 per cent lower than the average population, the Commission only recommended that two of these districts be formed. The districts include Central Peace-Notley which had a population of 28,993 and area of 47,311\u00a0km2 (18,267\u00a0sq\u00a0mi), and Lesser Slave Lake which had a population of 27,818, compared to the average population of electoral districts of 46,803 following redistribution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 77], "content_span": [78, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election, Background, 2017 electoral boundary commission\nA minority opinion was presented by Commission members appointed by the opposition, arguing that Alberta's rate of growth was a threat to \"a critical part of our history, culture, and primary economic voice\" which is at risk of being lost through continued redistribution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 77], "content_span": [78, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election, Background, 2017 electoral boundary commission\nThe previous redistribution occurred in 2010 when an additional four constituencies were added, increasing the number from 83 to the present 87. Following the 2016 Canadian census the largest constituency Calgary-South East had grown to 79,034, while the smallest constituency Dunvegan-Central Peace-Notley had a population of 25,192.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 77], "content_span": [78, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election, Results\nThe United Conservative Party made a small improvement in its overall share of the popular vote compared to the combined vote of the Progressive Conservative and Wildrose parties which preceded it. The party won 63 seats. The UCP finished no lower than second place in any constituency. UCP leader Jason Kenney won re-election in his constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election, Results\nThe Alberta New Democratic Party lost about one-fifth of its vote share, although due to the considerably higher turnout compared to 2015 it actually gained votes. The NDP with 24 seats formed the opposition in the Alberta legislature. The NDP finished first or second in 85 out of 87 ridings. NDP leader and outgoing premier Rachel Notley won re-election in her constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election, Results\nNo other party elected any MLAs, with the centrist Alberta Party being the only other party to run a full slate of candidates. The Alberta Party more than quadrupled its overall popular vote, but failed to win any seats. All three Alberta Party incumbents were defeated, with former leader Greg Clark (the only MLA previously elected under the Alberta Party banner) being the only Alberta Party candidate to finish as high as second place. Current Alberta Party leader Stephen Mandel, a former mayor of Edmonton and PC cabinet minister, finished third in his own riding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election, Results\nThe Alberta Liberal Party finished fourth in the overall popular vote, with its vote share falling by more than three quarters. They were shut out of the legislature for the first time since 1982. Liberal Leader David Khan placed fourth in his constituency, which was formerly represented by his retiring predecessor David Swann.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election, Results\nA number of minor parties, including several running to the right of the UCP, contested the election, but none came close to winning any seats. The Alberta Independence Party (which fielded the most candidates after the UCP, NDP and AP) finished fifth in the overall popular vote. The Freedom Conservative Party finished sixth, although they ran fewer candidates compared to the other parties. On average, FCP candidates polled the most votes outside the three largest parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election, Results\nThe FCP's only incumbent (party founder and leader Derek Fildebrandt), who had been originally elected as a representative for the now defunct Wildrose Party, finished a distant third in his own riding. The Green Party of Alberta finished seventh in the overall popular vote and the Alberta Advantage Party finished eighth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election, Results\nThe last time only two parties took all of the seats was in 1993, and the only time before that was in 1913 after the defeat of Socialist Party MLA Charles O'Brien and before the rise of farmer and labour parties. Incumbent Independent MLA Rick Strankman - previously a UCP MLA - finished second place in his riding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election, Results\nThis was the first provincial election in which eligible voters could cast ballots at any advance poll in the province, not just at stations in a persons riding the program was called \"Vote Anywhere\" by Elections Alberta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election, Results\nNotley's 24-member caucus is the largest Official Opposition caucus since the Liberals won 32 seats in 1993. The overall result for the NDP (both in total seats and share of the vote) was the second best in the party's history after its 2015 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election, Results, Campaign finance\nFor the 2019 Alberta general election all parities cumulatively raised a total of $7.9 million and spent $11.3 million. At the constituency level, Calgary-Mountain View had the highest expenses at a total of $212,354, including four candidates which exceed $40,000. Of the 38 candidates which exceeded $45,000 in expenses, 21 were elected. Third party advertisers raised a total of $2.1 million and spent $1.9 million during the election. Unions contributed 46 per cent of the revenue for third party advertisers, corporations contributed 39 per cent, and individuals contributed 15 per cent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election, Opinion polling\nThe following is a list of scientific opinion polls of published voter intentions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election, Incumbent MLAs not seeking re-election\nThe following MLAs have announced that they would not run in the 2019 provincial election:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election, Results by riding\nThe final list of candidates was published by Elections Alberta on March 29, 2019. The official results were published on May 14, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election, Results by riding\nParty leaders are in bold. Candidate names appear as they appeared on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election, Results by riding\n\u2020 = Not seeking re-election\u2021 = Running for re-election in different riding", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287185-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta general election, Results by riding, Edmonton\n27 Edmonton constituenciesSix Central Edmonton constituenciesSeven North Edmonton constituenciesSeven South Edmonton constituenciesSeven Suburban Edmonton constituencies", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287186-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287186-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta municipal censuses\nAlberta began the year of 2019 with 351 municipalities. Of these, at least 18 (5.1%) have published their intentions to conduct a municipal census in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287186-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta municipal censuses\nSome municipalities achieved population milestones as a result of their 2019 censuses. Lethbridge both exceeded 100,000 residents and surpassed Red Deer as Alberta's third largest city after counting 101,482 residents. Airdrie, now the fifth-largest city in the province after passing Grande Prairie (which last calculated its population in the 2018 Alberta municipal censuses), grew beyond the 70,000-mark.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287186-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta municipal censuses, Municipal census results\nThe following summarizes the results of the numerous municipal censuses conducted in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287186-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta municipal censuses, Breakdowns, Hamlets\nThe following is a list of hamlet populations determined by 2019 municipal censuses conducted by Lac La Biche County and Sturgeon County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires\nThe 2019 Alberta wildfires have been described by NASA as part of an extreme fire season in the province. In 2019 there were a total of 803,393.32 hectares (1,985,228 acres), which is over 3.5 times more land area burned than in the five-year average burned. The five year average is 747 fires destroying 146,360.08 hectares (361,664 acres). There were 644 wildfires recorded in Alberta. By May 31, 10,000 people had been evacuated, 16 homes, and the Steen River CN railway bridge, had been destroyed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires\nThe department of Agriculture and Forestry's Forest Protection Division reported that by May 31, there were 29 wildfires still burning with nine out-of-control fires. As of June 20, there are a total of 27 wildfires burning with 6 being considered out of control. Of these, five were caused by humans and two by lightning with 20 still under investigation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires\nOn May 30, NASA reported that the Terra satellite's Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) had collected satellite images of five large \"hot spots\" on May 29. The fire danger level of four of these five areas\u2014the Steen River wildfire HWF066, the Chuckegg Creek wildfire HWF042, the Peace River area, and the Slave Lake area\u2014was extreme. The fifth, at Wood Buffalo National Park was designated as very high.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires\nOne fire, described as a fast growing \"monster\", the Chuckegg Creek Fire HWF042\u2014unofficially known as the High Level fire\u2014had forced the evacuation of 5,000 people in the High Level Forest Area, northern Alberta, and had burned 2,300\u00a0km2 (570,000 acres) by May 30 and 237,000 hectares by the evening of May 31.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires\nAccording to Alberta's Department of Agriculture and Forestry (AAF), the Forest Resource Improvement Association of Alberta (FRIAA) FireSmart program, Alberta communities are under an increased risk of forest fires because fifty per cent of Alberta is covered in forests and because of Alberta's \"wildland/urban interface\"\u2014where many communities are nested into forests with buildings and forested areas intertwined. The province's designated Forest Protection Area stretches from north to south of the province along the western border with British Columbia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires\nFor purposes of monitoring, the Alberta's wildfire status map subdivides the Forest Protection Area into these areas: , , , , , , , , and .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires\nThere was smoke from Alberta's wildfires over southern Alberta, southern B.C. Interior and the Lower Mainland, including the city of Vancouver as well as the U.S. Pacific Northwest, reaching as far south as Denver, Colorado. Air quality in cities such as Edmonton and Calgary, reached 10+ out of 10 rating, which is considered to be a severe risk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Historical comparison\nIn 2019, there have been 644 wildfires in the Forest Protection Area with a total of 798,380.75 hectares (1,972,842 acres) burned as of June 20. The current 5-year average is 664 wildfires with 146,164.76 hectares (361,181 acres) burned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Progression\nBy May 30, in the Forest Protection Area of Alberta, there were 27 wildfires, ten of which that were out of control, 2 were being held, 9 were under control and 6 were \"turned over to the responsible parties\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Progression\nBy May 30, with three major wildfires spreading quickly overnight on May 29, there were about 10,000 wildfire evacuees. Thousands more were waiting on evacuation alerts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Progression\nThe Department of Agriculture and Forestry's Forest Protection Division reported that by May 31, there were 29 wildfires still burning with nine out-of-control fires. Of these, ten were caused by humans and one by lightning with 20 still under investigation. The total number of hectares burned was 496,739.19 or 4,967.4\u00a0km2 (1,227,500 acres). There were nine fires that were out of control. compared to six on May 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Progression\nBy early morning on June 1, the area had increased to 528,842.99 hectare or 5,288.4299\u00a0km2 (1,306,799.5 acres). increasing to 571,770.49 hectare or 5,717.7\u00a0km2 (1,412,900 acres) within several hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Progression\nBy May 31, 10,000 people had been evacuated, 16 homes, and the Steen River CN railway bridge, had been destroyed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Progression\nIn terms of the number of wildfires alone, from March 1 to May 30, the number of fires in 2019 was \"slightly under the five-year average\" but the \"amount of land burned is more than 3.5 times higher.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Progression, Weather conditions\nIn an Edmonton Journal interview in the afternoon of May 30, Alberta Wildfire's information unit lead, Christie Tucker, said that from the evening of May 29 through to late afternoon May 30, multiple wildfires were moving faster than they normally would\", \"even at night when they wouldn't traditionally be moving so quickly\" because of the \"ongoing dry windy conditions\" with \"very low humidity\", creating a challenge for firefighters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Progression, Weather conditions\nAlberta's Minister of Agriculture and Forestry, Devin Dreeshen, said on May 30 that there were nine out-of-control fires. He said that this \"fight is going to be a tough one\" as the weather was \"not co-operating for the long-distance forecast for the next two weeks. It's more of the same, of hot, dry and windy conditions. Albertans need to prepare themselves for this situation for the foreseeable future.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Edson District\nIn the Edson Forest Area, the wildfire that is officially named EWF043, which was detected on May 29 and has burned 2.05\u00a0km2 (510 acres), was categorized as out-of-control by May 30, 2019. EWF043, which was moving south west, was about 40 kilometres (25\u00a0mi) south east of Edson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Fort McMurray District\nBy May 30, the Fort McMurray Forest Area had one fire, MWF012, which is within 10 kilometres (6.2\u00a0mi) CNRL Albian, that is expected to be under control by the first week in June. MWF012 had burned 0.106\u00a0km2 (26 acres) by May 30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, High Level District\nIn the High Level Forest Area, by May 30, 2019 there were two active and out-of-control (OC) wildfires. The largest is the Chuckegg Creek wildfire, officially named HWF042 which burned 818.27\u00a0km2 (202,200 acres). The second was the Jackpot Creek Wildfire HWF066 in the Steen River area which had burned 247.3\u00a0km2 (61,100 acres).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, High Level District\nAccording to the federal Minister of Public Safety Ralph Goodale, on the evening of May 31, the province of Alberta requested assistance with \"the massive forest fires\" near High Level and Slave Lake. In response the Canadian Armed Forces were mobilized to support evacuations, medical assistance, among other things.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, High Level District, Chuckegg Creek wildfire HWF042\nThe High Level wildfire, officially known as the Chuckegg Creek wildfire HWF042, started on May 12, 2019 due to a lightning strike. At first it burned northwest, reaching a size of 350 hectares before its status was changed to Being Held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 75], "content_span": [76, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, High Level District, Chuckegg Creek wildfire HWF042\nOn May 17, the wildfire breached containment due to gusty winds from the southeast. The wildfire reached a size of 1,817 hectares by that evening. By May 18, the wildfire had grown to a size of 25,300 hectares. On May 19, the Chuckegg Creek wildfire was about 25\u00a0km (16\u00a0mi) southwest of High Level, a town with about 4,000 residents. The fire almost tripled in size to 690\u00a0km2 (69,000 hectares) overnight on May 19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 75], "content_span": [76, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0021-0001", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, High Level District, Chuckegg Creek wildfire HWF042\nOn May 20, with the fire within 5 kilometres (3.1\u00a0mi) of the town High Level, a state of local emergency and an evacuation alert were issued. Due to the fire's proximity to High Level, and the dry weather forecasted for the coming days, the town was placed under an evacuation order on May 20 at 4:00 p.m.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 75], "content_span": [76, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, High Level District, Chuckegg Creek wildfire HWF042\nBy May 28, Global News described it as a \"monster.\" According to Alberta Wildfire's Christie Tucker, between 12:00 noon on May 29 and 4 a.m. on May 30, the Chuckegg Creek fire grew by 80,000 hectares 80\u00a0km2 (8,000 hectares) to 230,000 hectares 2,300\u00a0km2 (230,000 hectares). Tucker said that it was unusual for a wildfire to move so quickly especially at night.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 75], "content_span": [76, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, High Level District, Chuckegg Creek wildfire HWF042\nHWF042 spread northwest near Watt Mountain, and south towards Paddle Prairie in the Peace River Forest Area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 75], "content_span": [76, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, High Level District, Chuckegg Creek wildfire HWF042\nThe Paddle Prairie Metis Settlement, which is about 72\u00a0km (45\u00a0mi) south of the High Level on the Mackenzie Highway, had to evacuate without much warning. Fifteen homes in the community were completely destroyed. Concerns were raised about the lack of outside support from structural firefighters. According to Christi Tucker, the heavy smoke made it difficult for outside structural firefighters and structural protection units to fly into the settlement so local structural firefighters were protecting buildings and infrastructure. Tucker also said that the fire was moving so fast it was hard to get ahead of it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 75], "content_span": [76, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Grande Prairie District\nThe Grande Prairie Area was categorized as very high danger of wildfires on May 30, 2019. No large wildfires were reported in the region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Lac La Biche Area\nFrom March to the end of August 2019, there were 142 wildfires in the Lac La Biche Area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Peace River District\nThe Peace River Forest Area was categorized as in extreme danger of wildfires on May 30, 2019. Of the 70 wildfires in the Peace River Forest Area in 2019, only five fires were still burning. The Battle Complex (Notikewin and Battle River wildfires) known as PWF052 had already burned 52,322 hectares in size in the Notikewin Area remains out-of-control at 52,322 hectares was out of control. In the Battle River area, the 0.7423\u00a0km2 (183.4 acres) 74.23-hectares PWF054 was under control. Near Keg River, PWF070 2.51\u00a0km2 (620 acres) had burned 251 hectares. PWF064 burned 0.01 hectares, PWF066 in the Three Creeks area, burned 10.50 hectares.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Peace River District\nThe High Level Forest Area wildfire, Chuckegg Creek Fire (HWF042), had spread into the Paddle Prairie area in the Peace River Forest Area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Slave Lake District\nSince March 1, 2019 when the wildfire season began in the Slave Lake Forest Area, 818.27\u00a0km2 (202,200 acres) were burned and 79 wildfires reported. By May 30 gusty north winds were causing the wildfires in the Slave Lake area to spread.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Slave Lake District\nWildfires SWF049 which started on May 18 is part of the McMillan Wildfire Complex. It was out of control by May 30 having grown considerably on May 29. It has burned 133,952 hectares.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Slave Lake District\nThe Maria Lake wildfire, SWF069, 13.8 kilometres (8.6\u00a0mi) southeast of Trout Lake, was classified as out-of-control on May 30 as it had rapidly grown to 45,845 hectares. It joined McMillan wildfire SWF049. By June 1, the out-of-control SWF069 fire covered 58,579 hectares. The community of Trout Lake, which is approximately 500 kilometres (310\u00a0mi) was issued an emergency alert by May 27, when the fire was 300 hectares in size. On May 31, the evacuation order was issued for Trout Lake as \"early-morning southeast winds pushed\" the 211,869-hectare fires\u2014SWF049 and SWF069 (Maria Lake fire)\u2014that make up the McMillan Complex were \"rapidly toward the area\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Whitecourt District\nTwo of the three wildfires in the Whitecourt Forest Area Wildfire Update, WWF028, which burned 20.30 hectares, and the 3.60 hectares WWF033, were under control. The third wildfire, WWF032 is northeast of the Sakwatamau River had already burned 51.9 hectares by May 28, 2019 and was out of control. There were firefighters, airtankers and heavy equipment working to control it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Evacuations\nVoluntary evacuation alerts were issued for High Level and immediate surrounding area on May 19th, followed by evacuation orders issued for High Level and Bushe River Reserve on May 20th, as a result of the Chuckegg Creek Fire. The community of Steen River was evacuated on May 28th. On May 29, further evacuation orders for certain areas such as the La Crete Ferry Campground, Mackenzie County east of the Peace River, County of Northern Lights north of Manning, Paddle Prairie Metis Settlement and the Twin Lakes campground. Later in the day, more evacuation orders were issued for the Hamlet of Wabasca, and Bigstone Cree Nation. The following day, the Hamlet of Sandy Lake was placed under an evacuation order.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Evacuations\nBy May 30, 5,000 High Level area residents were still unable to return home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Evacuations\nOn May 30, a new wildfire forced the evacuation of the Chipewyan Lake Village, which is 130 kilometres (81\u00a0mi) west of Fort McMurray.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Evacuations\nThe Municipal Affairs Minister Kaycee Madu said that by May 29 there were 9,500 people who had already been evacuated. Additional evacuation orders had been issued on May 30. Madu announced that financial assistance of over 6 million was processed and over 6,200 people had already applied for relief payments. Two days later, on May 31, Global News reported that over 10,000 people had been evacuated and that 16 homes had been destroyed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Evacuations\nOn June 3, the evacuation orders for High Level and Bushe River were lifted. The evacuation orders in place for Wabasca and Bigstone Cree Nation were lifted on June 11th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Evacuations\nOn June 17, a new evacuation order was put in place for the hamlet of La Crete, and an evacuation alert was issued for High Level. Evacuation orders were also issued for the settlement of Indian Cabins, Trout Lake and Peerless Lake the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Buildings and structures destroyed\nIn the Paddle Prairie M\u00e9tis Settlement in the High Level Forest Area, 11 homes were destroyed by May 30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 58], "content_span": [59, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Buildings and structures destroyed\nThe Steen River CN Rail bridge was destroyed by the Steen River wildfire HWF066 on May 29.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 58], "content_span": [59, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Smoke\nBy May 30, NASA reported that with high north northwest winds, the Chuckegg Creek Fire HWF042 was quickly growing \"in a south to southeast direction\" and the massive smoke from the fire has reduced visibility and resulted in Environment Canada, Alberta Environment and Parks, Alberta Health and Alberta Health Services issuing air quality warnings with the index reaching dangerous levels in some areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Smoke\nThe government of the Yukon Territory issued a smoke advisory for Watson Lake on May 21 and by May 23 the smoke plume had reached Dawson City. By the end of May there were already eighteen wildfires in Yukon but these fires were not responsible for the smoke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Smoke\nBy the early morning of May 30, Alberta Air Quality Health Index had rated the air quality in the Edmonton metro region at 7 out of 10, which is high risk and 5 out of 10 later in the morning. Environment Canada issued a special air quality statement for Edmonton, St. Albert and Sherwood Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Smoke\nBy May 30, smoke from Alberta's forest fires had reached as far south as Denver, Colorado. In some cities, such as Minneapolis and Milwaukee in Minnesota, Chicago, Illinois, Detroit, Michigan and Kansas City, Missouri the \"sun was obscured by smoke\" from Alberta's wildfires, according to the National Weather Service's Twin Cities Branch. By May 31 the smoke plume had reached Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Washington and Wyoming. Three cities in Montana had air quality warnings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Smoke\nBy early evening May 30 Calgary's air quality was rated as 8 out of 10, which is high risk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Smoke\nBy the morning of May 31, the Air Quality Health Index for Calgary was registered at 10+ which is a very high risk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Smoke\nBy May 28, smoke had flowed to southern Alberta, southern B.C. Interior, to the Lower Mainland, including \"Metro Vancouver and much of the U.S. Pacific Northwest\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0048-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Smoke, Aerosols\nAccording to NASA, aerosols have been \"growing more dense\" in the area affected by the smoke from Chuckegg Creek fire with particulates rising into the atmosphere. By May 23, NASA had published an \"image of the aerosols stretching from Alaska to the Atlantic\". May 23 images captured by the Suomi NPP satellite's Ozone Mapping and Profiler Suite (OMPS) sensor and the Visible and Infrared Imaging Sensor (VIIRS) showed that aerosol levels Chuckegg Creek fire near High Level showed \"medium to high level amounts of pollution, particulates in the form of smoke, dust, and ash\". The \"higher levels of smoke coincide with the areas of red on the aerosols image and the areas where the smoke is less dense coincide with the lighter yellow areas of the aerosols image as would be expected.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 825]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0049-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Smoke, Fire Radiative Power (FRP)\nAccording to Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service (CAMS)'s senior scientist, Mark Parrington, the 2019 Alberta wildfires's Fire Radiative Power (FRP) up to May 29, placed fifth in the list of the \"most intense annual FRP totals since 2003.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 57], "content_span": [58, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0050-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Causes\nBy May 30, the cause of 20 fires was still under investigation (UI). One was caused by lightning and 10 were caused by humans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0051-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Climate change\nUniversity of Alberta professor Mike Flannigan, said the extended wildfire season, which used to start April 1 and now officially starts on March 1, and that he and his colleagues \"attribute that to human-caused climate change.\" The Calgary Herald reported that because of climate change, in the coming years, the prairie provinces would \"see a longer fire season, more frequent wildfires, heat and drought.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0052-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Fire-fighting\nBy the evening of May 30, there were 600 firefighters in Alberta and more on the way, from other provinces, including British Columbia, Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Northwest Territories, and Prince Edward Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0053-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Fire-fighting\nThe managing director of Alberta Emergency Management Agency, Shane Schreiber, said in a May 30 interview that the government had raised the Emergency Operations Center to level four. Level four means that all provincial government departments as well as federal departments such as the Department of National Defence and Public Safety Canada, Indigenous Services Canada, some industrial organizations such as CN Rail, and NGOs are helping to coordinate support. Schreiber said that by May 30 approximately \"200 structural firefighters and structural protection units\" arrived in the affected areas from Albertan communities to protect buildings and infrastructure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0054-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Fire-fighting\nBy May 31, across northern Alberta, there were 737 people working in 61 wildland Firefighting Crews (WFC) with 6 Airtankers (A/T), 11 Rotor Wing Lights (LIT), 38 Rotor Wing Intermediates (INT), 63 Rotor Wing Mediums (MED), 10 Water Trucks (WT), 44 Dozers (DZ), and 3 Skidders (SKD) fighting the fires.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0055-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Fire-fighting\nOn May 31, Alberta requested assistance from the federal government with the huge forest fires that threatened High Level and Slave Lake. The Canadian Armed Forces will help support evacuations, including airlifting evacuees, transporting supplies and providing medical assistance, among other things.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0056-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Agencies\nThe Department of Agriculture and Forestry (AAF), is responsible for \"fire bans, FireSmart, wildfire compliance and enforcement, wildfire maps and data, wildfire operations, wildfire prevention, and wildfire status\". Devin Dreeshen was named as AAF minister on April 30, 2019 by the newly elected Alberta Premier, Jason Kenney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0057-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Agencies\nAt the provincial level, the Emergency response and recovery is responsible for \"emergency and disaster response, recovery, legislation and supports\". The Alberta Emergency Management Agency (AEMA) is responsible for \"fire reporting, and search and rescue\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0058-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Agencies\nThe Forest Resource Improvement Association of Alberta (FRIAA) FireSmart program which operates under the AAF department, reported that Alberta communities are under an increased risk of forest fires because fifty per cent of Alberta is covered in forests. Alberta's \"wildland/urban interface\" means that in many communities buildings and forested areas intertwined. The province's designated Forest Protection Area stretches from north to south of the province along the western border with British Columbia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0059-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Agencies\nAs of 2017, Alberta's designated Forest Protection Area stretched from north to south of the province along the western border with British Columbia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0060-0000", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Agencies\nAt the federal level, Natural Resources Canada on May 30, announced a $500,000 grant to the Canmore-based Rockies Institute, to develop a \"multi-partner, multi-year\" \"wildfire resilience project\" called \"Fire With Fire\". The Rockies Institute plan to build on a \"pilot project undertaken with the Kainai Nation in southern Alberta. In the fall of 2018, the Institute submitted their project for funding under the federal government's Building Regional Adaption Capacity and Expertise (BRACE) program, which is \"under the umbrella of the federal government's $18 million strategic investment program\u2014Adaptation and Climate Resilience.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287187-0060-0001", "contents": "2019 Alberta wildfires, Agencies\nThe collaborative approach uses scientific knowledge of fire management that includes the best practices based on scientific knowledge which incorporates \"Indigenous scientific knowledge of fire management\" \"for local, regional and provincial climate change adaptations.\" For example, indigenous communities, that have for many years managed used the methodology of \"prescribed\", \"deliberately set\" smaller burns at different times of the year. Australia has incorporated this methodology since at least 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287188-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Albirex Niigata Singapore FC season\nThe 2019 season is Albirex Niigata Singapore FC's 16th consecutive season in the top flight of Singapore football and in the S.League, having joined the Sleague in 2004. Along with the 2019 Singapore Premier League, the club will also compete in Singapore Cup and the Singapore League Cup. They are the defending champions in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287188-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Albirex Niigata Singapore FC season, Transfer, Pre-season transfer, In\nNote 1: Tatsuya Morita was released before the season start.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 75], "content_span": [76, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287189-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Alcorn State Braves football team\nThe 2019 Alcorn State Braves football team represented Alcorn State University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Braves were led by fourth-year head coach Fred McNair and played their home games at Casem-Spinks Stadium. They were members of the East Division of the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287189-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Alcorn State Braves football team, Preseason, Preseason polls\nThe SWAC released their preseason poll on July 16, 2019. The Braves were picked to finish in first place in the East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287189-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Alcorn State Braves football team, Preseason, Preseason all\u2013SWAC teams\nThe Braves placed thirteen different players on the preseason all\u2013SWAC teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 75], "content_span": [76, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287190-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Algarve Cup\nThe 2019 Algarve Cup was the 26th edition of the Algarve Cup, an invitational women's football tournament held annually in Portugal. It took place from 27 February to 6 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287190-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Algarve Cup\nNorway defeated Poland 3\u20130 in the final to win their fifth title, and their first since the 1998 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287190-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Algarve Cup, Format\nThe twelve invited teams were split into four groups to play a round-robin tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287190-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Algarve Cup, Format\nPoints awarded in the group stage followed the standard formula of three points for a win, one point for a draw and zero points for a loss. In the case of two teams being tied on the same number of points in a group, their head-to-head result determine the higher place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287190-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Algarve Cup, Group stage, Tie-breaking criteria\nFor the group stage of this tournament, where two or more teams in a group tied on an equal number of points, the finishing positions were determined by the following tie-breaking criteria in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 52], "content_span": [53, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287190-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Algarve Cup, Group stage, Ranking of teams for placement matches\nThe ranking of the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd placed teams in each group to determine the placement matches:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 69], "content_span": [70, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287190-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Algarve Cup, Goalscorers\nThere have been 42 goals scored in 16 matches, for an average of 2.62 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287191-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Algarve Cup squads\nThis article lists the squads for the 2019 Algarve Cup, the 26th edition of the Algarve Cup. The cup consisted of a series of friendly games, and was held in the Algarve region of Portugal from 27 February to 6 March 2019. The twelve national teams involved in the tournament registered a squad of 23 players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287191-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Algarve Cup squads\nThe age listed for each player is as of 27 February 2019, the first day of the tournament. The numbers of caps and goals listed for each player do not include any matches played after the start of tournament. The club listed is the club for which the player last played a competitive match prior to the tournament. The nationality for each club reflects the national association (not the league) to which the club is affiliated. A flag is included for coaches that are of a different nationality than their own national team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287191-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Algarve Cup squads, Group A, Scotland\nThe squad was announced on 13 February 2019. Zoe Ness replaced Emma Mitchell after her withdrawal from the squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287191-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Algarve Cup squads, Group B, Netherlands\nThe squad was announced on 20 February 2019. Victoria Pelova sustained a shoulder injury during training on 28 February 2019 and was replaced by Siri Worm. On 2 March 2019, Stefanie van der Gragt was replaced by Katja Snoeijs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287191-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Algarve Cup squads, Group B, Poland\nThe squad was announced on 19 February 2019. On 25 February 2019, Anna R\u0119dzia withdrew due to injury and was replaced by Klaudia Olejniczak. On 28 February 2019, Jolanta Siwi\u0144ska withdrew due to injury and was replaced by Dagmara Grad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287191-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Algarve Cup squads, Group B, Spain\nThe squad was announced on 18 February 2019. On 24 February 2019, Amanda Sampedro and Andrea Falc\u00f3n withdrew due to injury and were replaced by Olga Garc\u00eda and Aitana Bonmat\u00ed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287191-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Algarve Cup squads, Group C, Denmark\nThe squad was announced on 12 February 2019. On 19 February 2019, Nanna Christiansen withdrew due to injury and was replaced by Julie Tavlo Petersson. On 24 February 2019, Rikke Sevecke withdrew due to injury and was replaced by Emilie Henriksen. Katrine Veje withdrew due to injury and was replaced by Cecilie Sandvej.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287191-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Algarve Cup squads, Group C, Norway\nThe squad was announced on 13 February 2019. On 24 February 2019, Kristine Minde withdrew from the squad and was replaced by Heidi Elisabeth Ellingsen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287191-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Algarve Cup squads, Group D, Portugal\nThe squad was announced on 21 February 2019. On 4 March 2019, Carolina Mendes withdrew and was replaced by Laura Lu\u00eds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287191-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Algarve Cup squads, Group D, Switzerland\nThe squad was announced on 9 February 2019. On 22 February 2019, Viola Calligaris, Seraina Friedli, and Julia Stierli withdrew due to injuries and were replaced by Carola Fasel and Lesley Ramseier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287192-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Algerian Cup Final\nThe 2019 Algerian Cup Final was the 55th final of the Algerian Cup. The final took place on June 8, 2019, at Mustapha Tchaker Stadium in Blida with kick-off at 17:00 between CR Belouizdad and JSM B\u00e9ja\u00efa, The latter is the first club from a bottom leval to reach the final since 2005\u201306. CR Belouizdad achieved their eighth title in their history with a 2\u20130 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287192-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 Algerian Cup Final\nDue to the difficult political conditions in Algeria and for the first time in the history of the Algerian cup final, the president of the country does not hand over the cup to the winning team, where he was handed over by the Minister of Youth and Sports Raouf Salim Bernaoui.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287193-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Algerian Super Cup\nThe 2019 Algerian Super Cup will be the 13rd edition of the Algerian Super Cup, a football match contested by the winners of the 2018\u201319 Algerian Ligue Professionnelle 1 and 2018\u201319 Algerian Cup competitions. It is known as the Mobilis Supercoupe d'Alg\u00e9rie 2019 due to the start of a sponsorship deal with Mobilis ATM The match will played on November 21, 2020 at Stade du 5 Juillet in Algeirs. between 2018\u201319 Ligue 1 winners USM Alger and 2018\u201319 Algerian Cup winners CR Belouizdad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287193-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Algerian Super Cup, Match, Pre-match\nThe match between the two teams are the first of its kind in the Super Cup USM Alger looking for the third in the fifth final and the CR Belouizdad for the third final looking for the first title, as a whole season play on November 1, But because it coincides with Friday, it was delayed 24 hours FAF was chosen Stadium of Algeirs Stade du 5 Juillet, This is the sixth time the final has been played on this Stadium and the first since 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287193-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Algerian Super Cup, Match, Pre-match\nOn October 21, LFP decided to postpone the final to another date because of a match on the same stadium on 3 November between Paradou AC and KCCA in the CAF Confederation Cup. After the recent push and pull, the head of the Ligue de Football Professionnel, Abdelkrim Medouar, announced the date of May 1, 2020 as the date for the final on a Ramadan evening.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287193-0001-0002", "contents": "2019 Algerian Super Cup, Match, Pre-match\ndue to the COVID-19 pandemic in Algeria, the final has become threatened with cancellation On October 4, The Federal Bureau decided that the final play before the start of the 2020\u201321 season on November 21, 2020. Each team was allowed to make five substitutes with no extra time, Also for the first time in Algeria there will be a woman as a referee she is Lamia Athmane as fourth official referee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287193-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Algerian Super Cup, Match, Summary\nIn the first match in Algeria after nine months due to COVID-19 pandemic in Algeria, the level was fine and the start was strong on the part of CR Belouizdad, to get a penalty kick in the 8th minute After obstruction of Mustapha Bouchina, Amir Sayoud scored the first goal, then CR Belouizdad continued to dominate in the first half and in the 33rd minute after a mistake Marcellin Koukpo scored the second goal for Al Shabab.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287193-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Algerian Super Cup, Match, Summary\nAt the beginning of the second half Abderrahim Hamra entered where USM Alger\u2019s performance improved Aymen Mahious scored the first goal for USM Alger in the 60th minute, and end with winning the title for the second time in its history. to also receive a prize of 150 million dinars about 100 thousand euros. After losing the final USM Alger decided to dismiss Fran\u00e7ois Ciccolini from his post because he did not rise to the podium to receive the medal, which was considered an insult to an official body Where was the Prime Minister Abdelaziz Djerad present.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287194-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Algerian presidential election\nMember State of the African Union Member State of the Arab League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287194-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Algerian presidential election\nThe 2019 Algerian presidential election was held in Algeria on 12 December 2019. The election had originally been scheduled for 18 April, but was postponed due to sustained weekly protests against plans by the incumbent president Abdelaziz Bouteflika to run for a fifth term. Bouteflika resigned on 2 April and Abdelkader Bensalah was elected acting president by parliament a week later. On 10 April the election was rescheduled for 4 July. On 2 June the Constitutional Council postponed the elections again, citing a lack of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287194-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Algerian presidential election\nA new electoral authority, Autorit\u00e9 nationale ind\u00e9pendante des \u00e9lections (ANIE), was created in mid-September as an alternative to the existing Haute instance ind\u00e9pendante de surveillance des \u00e9lections (HIISE) defined by the 2016 constitution. The election was rescheduled for 12 December 2019 and ANIE, of disputed constitutional validity, announced five valid candidates on 2 November. In their 200000 strong protest on 1 November, Algerian protestors rejected the 12 December election and called for a radical change in the system to take place first. The Forces of the Democratic Alternative (FDA) alliance and the Justice and Development Front also called for boycotting the 12 December election, and the FDA called for creating a constituent assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 794]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287194-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Algerian presidential election, Electoral system\nThe President of Algeria is elected using the two-round system; if no candidate receives a majority of the vote in the first round, a second round will be held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287194-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Algerian presidential election, Electoral system, Electoral bodies\nThe Algerian Constitution of 2016 created the Haute instance ind\u00e9pendante de surveillance des \u00e9lections (HIISE) to have overall responsibility for organising elections. For the third attempt to organise the 2019 presidential election, the Algerian lower and upper houses of parliament created the Independent National Elections Authority (ANIE). Lawyer Fa\u00efz Moussi and constitutional expert Ahmed Betatache described the procedures for creating ANIE as rushed and unconstitutional. Fouad Makhlouf, secretary-general of HIISE, had stated earlier, in April 2019, that the replacement of HIISE's role by an alternative electoral body would be unconstitutional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287194-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Algerian presidential election, Background, Early 2019 protests and internet censorship\nPlans for a presidential election in Algeria in 2019 were a major factor motivating the start of the 2019 Algerian protests, with protestors objecting to the reelection of Abdelaziz Bouteflika.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 92], "content_span": [93, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287194-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Algerian presidential election, Background, Early 2019 protests and internet censorship\nOn 22 February 2019, protests took place in Algiers, Oran, S\u00e9tif, Annaba and other Algerian cities over Bouteflika's bid to continue for a fifth term. Algerians reported difficulty accessing online services and the NetBlocks internet observatory published technical evidence of multiple targeted internet disruptions at demonstration flashpoints in Tizi Ouzou and around Algiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 92], "content_span": [93, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287194-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Algerian presidential election, Candidates\nBensalah is not eligible to participate in the presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287194-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Algerian presidential election, Candidates, 18 April 2019 cancelled election\nOn 3 March 2019, a day after his 82nd birthday and while undergoing medical tests in Switzerland, President Abdelaziz Bouteflika formally submitted his candidacy, but said in a statement read on state TV that he would not serve a full term if re-elected. Instead, he promised to organise a national conference and set a date for an early election which he would not participate in. The announcement followed weeks of protests against his plan to seek a fifth term in office. A week later, on 11 March 2019, Bouteflika withdrew from the race and postponed the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 81], "content_span": [82, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287194-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Algerian presidential election, Candidates, 18 April 2019 cancelled election\nOn 1 November 2018, journalist Ghani Mahdi announced that he would be a candidate in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 81], "content_span": [82, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287194-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Algerian presidential election, Candidates, 18 April 2019 cancelled election\nOn 4 April 2019, Ali Ghediri, a former Director of Human Resources at the Ministry of Defense, announced his candidacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 81], "content_span": [82, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287194-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Algerian presidential election, Candidates, 4 July 2019 cancelled election\nThe 4 July 2019 election had two candidates who applied: Abdelhakim Hamadi from Jijel, born 23 August 1965, who trained as a vet, worked in the state sector and became a businessman; and Hamid Touahri, an aeronautical mechanical engineer who worked in medical sales and construction and managed an audiovisual production firm. Both candidates' applications were lodged on 25 May, and later rejected by the Constitutional Council, which cancelled the election due to what it called the \"impossibility\" of organising the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 79], "content_span": [80, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287194-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Algerian presidential election, Candidates, 12 December 2019 election\nPotential candidates Ahmed Gaid Salah and Noureddine Bedoui won't run. Former prime minister Abdelaziz Belkhadem was expected to be a candidate. The Tajamou Amel El-Djaza\u00efr former minister Amar Ghoul (in prison at the time) announced his participation in the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 74], "content_span": [75, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287194-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Algerian presidential election, Candidates, 12 December 2019 election, Candidates submitting nominations\nThis list includes all the candidates who have deposited their candidacy file with the Independent National Elections Authority:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 109], "content_span": [110, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287194-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Algerian presidential election, Candidates, 12 December 2019 election, Final candidates\nThe list below is the final list of candidates for the presidentials of 12 December 2019, after the Constitutional Council rejected all the appeals submitted for failure to establish and not to fulfill the essential requirements contained in Articles 139 and 142 of the Organic Law related to the electoral system, amended and supplemented. The candidates whose appeals were rejected (09) are: Belkacem Sahili, Ali Skouri, Abdel Hakim Hammadi, Noui Kharchi, Muhammad Dhaif, Abdelhakim Hamadi, Mohammed BouAouina, Fares Mesdour, Raouf Ayeb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 92], "content_span": [93, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287194-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Algerian presidential election, Candidates, 12 December 2019 election, Final candidates\nAl Jazeera English described the five candidates as \"all part of the political establishment\", whose departure from power is one of the main aims of the 2019 Algerian protests. Thomson Reuters described the candidates as \"men on the ballot [who] all have close links with the establishment, and though some of them pushed for reforms, many still see them as part of an entrenched, unchanging elite.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 92], "content_span": [93, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287194-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Algerian presidential election, Election schedule\nThe timetable for the presidential elections, and the following is an illustrative schedule for the dates and procedures for the presidential elections, 12 December 2019:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287194-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Algerian presidential election, Boycott, Protestors\nIn the weekly protests that continued the early 2019 protests that led to Bouteflika dropping his candidacy for the initially scheduled election and resigning from the presidency, twenty thousand protestors called for the 12 December election to be boycotted on the grounds that the system of people in power under Bouteflika remained in place. In the 1 November 2019 demonstration of two hundred thousand demonstrators, on the 37th Friday weekly protest, demonstrators called for all members of the system of power in place to be dismissed and for a radical change in the political system. They rejected the 12 December election, with slogans describing it as \"an election with the gangs\" and as an \"election organised by a corrupt power [which] is a trap for idiots\" (French: les \u00e9lections d\u2019un pouvoir corrompu est un pi\u00e8ge \u00e0 cons).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 892]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287194-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Algerian presidential election, Boycott, Prominent individuals and organisations\nFormer prime minister Ahmed Benbitour, former minister Abdelaziz Rahabi, Ali Fawzi Rebaine, Mohamed Said and Rachid Nekkaz, announced that they are not candidates because of the political climate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 85], "content_span": [86, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287194-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Algerian presidential election, Boycott, Prominent individuals and organisations\nOn 28 September, Abdallah Djaballah, president of the Justice and Development Front, announced that his party will not take part in the elections. This was followed by the Society for Peace Movement, which made a similar decision for the same reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 85], "content_span": [86, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287194-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Algerian presidential election, Boycott, Prominent individuals and organisations\nThe Forces of the Democratic Alternative, a coalition including the Socialist Forces Front (FFS), the Rally for Culture and Democracy (RCD), the Workers' Party (PT), the Socialist Workers Party (PST), the Union for Change and Progress (UCP), the Democratic and Social Movement (MDS), the Party for Secularism and Democracy (PLD) and the Algerian League for the Defense of Human Rights (LADDH), announced their refusal to participate in the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 85], "content_span": [86, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287194-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Algerian presidential election, Boycott, Mayors\nIn September, 56 mayors in Kabylie stated that they would refuse to organise the practical aspects of the 12 December election in their municipalities and would do everything in their power to prevent the election taking place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287194-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Algerian presidential election, Results\nPreliminary results showed that former Prime Minister and Minister of Housing Abdelmadjid Tebboune won the election in the first round, leading his nearest opponent (Abdelkader Bengrina of the Islamist El Binaa party) by over 40% of the valid votes. The official estimate of the turnout of just under 40% of eligible voters was the lowest of any Algerian presidential election held since independence, primarily due to boycotts by citizens and political parties alike. The Rally for Culture and Democracy estimated the turnout five times lower, at 8%. The low turnout, as well as the relatively high number of spoiled ballots out of those who did participate, was seen as a continuation of the pro-democracy protests that preceded the resignation of Abdelaziz Bouteflika, as all approved candidates in the election were seen as members of the political establishment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 912]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287195-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 All England Open\nThe 2019 All England Open (officially known as the Yonex All England Open Badminton Championships 2019 for sponsorship reasons) was a badminton tournament which took place at Arena Birmingham in England from 6 to 10 March 2019. It had a total purse of $1,000,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287195-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 All England Open, Tournament\nThe 2019 All England Open was the sixth tournament of the 2019 BWF World Tour and also part of the All England Open championships, which had been held since 1899. This tournament was organized by Badminton England and sanctioned by the BWF. Ticket price for 2019 All England Open started at \u00a316 for adults and at \u00a35 for children.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287195-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 All England Open, Tournament, Venue\nThis international tournament was held at Arena Birmingham in Birmingham, England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287195-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 All England Open, Tournament, Point distribution\nBelow is the point distribution for each phase of the tournament based on the BWF points system for the BWF World Tour Super 1000 event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 53], "content_span": [54, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287195-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 All England Open, Tournament, Prize money\nThe total prize money for this year's tournament was US$1,000,000. Distribution of prize money was in accordance with BWF regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287196-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 All Stars match\nThe 2019 All Stars match was the eighth annual representative exhibition All Stars match of Australian rugby league. The match was played between the Indigenous All Stars and the M\u0101ori All Stars and for the first time, the match was played in Victoria's AAMI Park. The match was held on 15 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287196-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 All Stars match, Teams\n1 - Ryan James was originally selected to play but withdrew due to injury. Leilani Latu was moved from the bench to Prop and James was replaced by Josh Kerr. 2 - Ben Barba was originally selected to play but was withdrawn after his contract with the North Queensland Cowboys was terminated. Alex Johnston was moved from the bench to Fullback and Barba was replaced by Bevan French. 3 - Jordan McLean was originally selected to play but withdrew. James Tamou was moved from the bench to Prop and McLean was replaced by Kenny Bromwich. 4 - Tyrell Fuimaono was originally selected to play but withdrew. He was replaced by Craig Garvey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287196-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 All Stars match, Women's All Stars match\nFor the seventh time, a Women's All Stars match was held. The match, like the men's one will be held on 15 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287197-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 All Thailand Golf Tour\nThe 2019 All Thailand Golf Tour was the 21st season of the All Thailand Golf Tour, the main professional golf tour in Thailand since it was established in 1999. It was the first season in which world rankings points were given.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287198-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Australian team\nThe 2019 Virgin Australia All-Australian team represents the best performed Australian Football League (AFL) players during the 2019 season. It was announced on 28 August 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, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287198-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Australian team, Selection panel\nThe selection panel for the 2019 All-Australian team consisted of chairman Gillon McLachlan, Kevin Bartlett, Luke Darcy, Danny Frawley, Steve Hocking, Glen Jakovich, Chris Johnson, Cameron Ling, Matthew Richardson and Warren Tredrea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287198-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Australian team, Team, Initial squad\nThe initial 40-man All-Australian squad was announced on 26 August. West Coast had the most players selected in the initial squad with seven, while minor premiers Geelong had six. Essendon, Gold Coast and St Kilda were the only clubs not to have a single player nominated in the squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287198-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Australian team, Team, Final team\nGeelong and West Coast each had the most selections with four. Fremantle captain Nat Fyfe was announced as the All-Australian captain, with West Coast captain Shannon Hurn announced as vice-captain. The team saw nine players selected in an All-Australian team for the first time in their careers and only ten clubs were represented.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287198-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287199-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Big 12 Conference football team\nThe 2019 All-Big 12 Conference football team consists of American football players chosen as All-Big 12 Conference players for the 2019 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-00287199-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287200-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Big Ten Conference football team\nThe 2019 All-Big Ten Conference football team consists of American football players chosen as All-Big Ten Conference players for the 2019 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-, second- and third-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-, second- and third-team players (the \"Media\" team).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287200-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287201-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship\nThe 2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship was the GAA's premier inter-county Gaelic football competition for under seventeens. Thirty-two county teams from Ireland competed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship\n2018 was the first minor competition for under 17-year-olds \u2013 previously the competition had an under eighteen age limit. The under seventeen championship with a new format was introduced after a vote at the GAA Congress on 26 February 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship\nA league format is followed in Connacht and Leinster. Munster introduced a double league format in 2019 with the winners of an initial Phase 1 league containing weaker teams advancing to a Phase 2 league where they play in a 3-team league with Cork and Kerry. Ulster still plays a knockout championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Teams\nThirty-two teams from Ireland contested the championship. New York and London did not participate in this competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Competition Format\nConnacht, Leinster, Munster and Ulster each organised provincial championship. Each province decided its own rules for determining their champions. The formats for the 2019 provincial championships are explained in the sections below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Competition Format\nThe four provincial winners play the four provincial runners-up in the All-Ireland quarterfinals. Two semi-finals and a final follow. All matches are played in a single knockout format. The minor final is normally played before the All-Ireland senior final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Connacht Minor Football Championship, Connacht Format\nAll five Connacht counties compete in a single round robin format. The top three teams in the round robin table meet again in the Connacht semi-final and final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 125], "content_span": [126, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Leinster Minor Football Championship, Leinster Format\nLeinster teams competed in 3 groups, each of 4 teams. Each team in a group plays a single match against the other teams. The first two teams in each group progress to the Leinster semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 125], "content_span": [126, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Munster Minor Football Championship, Munster Format\nThe four weakest Munster teams compete in a league known as Phase 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 123], "content_span": [124, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Munster Minor Football Championship, Munster Format\nThe winner of Phase 1 competes in a further league known as Phase 2", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 123], "content_span": [124, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Munster Minor Football Championship, Munster Phase 1 League Rounds 1 to 4\nPhase 1 Round 1\tClare\t3-15\tLimerick\t0-10\t10/4\tNewcastlewest\tBrendan Griffin (Kerry)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 145], "content_span": [146, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Munster Minor Football Championship, Munster Phase 1 League Rounds 1 to 4\nPhase 1 Round 1\tTipperary\t4-13\tWaterford\t0-7\t10/4\tSean Treacy Park Tipperary Town\tJohn Ryan (Cork)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 145], "content_span": [146, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Munster Minor Football Championship, Munster Phase 1 League Rounds 1 to 4\nPhase 1 Round 2\tClare\t1-10\tTipperary\t0-6\t17/4\tCusack Park Ennis\tSeamus Mulvihill (Kerry)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 145], "content_span": [146, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Munster Minor Football Championship, Munster Phase 1 League Rounds 1 to 4\nPhase 1 Round 2\tWaterford\t1-7\tLimerick\t0-10\t17/4\tFraher Field Dungarvan\tSean Lonergan (Tipperary)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 145], "content_span": [146, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Munster Minor Football Championship, Munster Phase 1 League Rounds 1 to 4\nPhase 1 Round 3\tTipperary\t0-10\tLimerick\t0-10\t24/4\tSean Treacy Park Tipperary Town\tChris Maguire (Clare)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 145], "content_span": [146, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Munster Minor Football Championship, Munster Phase 1 League Rounds 1 to 4\nPhase 1 Round 3\tWaterford\t2-7\tClare\t1-9\t24/4\tFraher Field Dungarvan\tJonathan Hayes (Limerick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 145], "content_span": [146, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Munster Minor Football Championship, Munster Phase 1 League Rounds 1 to 4\nPhase 1 Final\tClare\t3-12\tTipperary\t0-6\t8/5\tLIT Gaelic Grounds\tSean Joy (Kerry)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 145], "content_span": [146, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Munster Minor Football Championship, Munster Phase 1 League Rounds 1 to 4\nTeam\tPlayed\tWon\tDrawn\tLost\tScores For\tScores Against\tScore Difference\tPoints", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 145], "content_span": [146, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Munster Minor Football Championship, Munster Phase 1 League Rounds 1 to 4\nClare\t3\t2\t0\t1\t5-34 (49)\t2-23 (29)\t+20\t4", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 145], "content_span": [146, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Munster Minor Football Championship, Munster Phase 1 League Rounds 1 to 4\nTipperary\t3\t1\t1\t1\t4-29 (41)\t1-27 (30)\t+11\t3", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 145], "content_span": [146, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Munster Minor Football Championship, Munster Phase 1 League Rounds 1 to 4\nWaterford\t3\t1\t1\t1\t3-21 (30)\t5-32 (47)\t-17\t3", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 145], "content_span": [146, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Munster Minor Football Championship, Munster Phase 1 League Rounds 1 to 4\nLimerick\t3\t0\t2\t1\t0-30 (30)\t4-32 (44)\t-14\t2", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 145], "content_span": [146, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Munster Minor Football Championship, Munster Phase 2\nPhase 2 Round 1\tKerry\t3-19\tCork\t1-9\t7/5\tP\u00e1irc U\u00ed Rinn\tAlan Kissane (Waterford)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 124], "content_span": [125, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Munster Minor Football Championship, Munster Phase 2\nPhase 2 Round 2\tCork\t3-9\tClare\t0-14\t15/5\tCusack Park Ennis\tBrendan Griffin (Kerry)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 124], "content_span": [125, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Munster Minor Football Championship, Munster Phase 2\nPhase 2 Round 3\tKerry\t1-16\tClare\t0-11\t23/5\tAustin Stack Park Tralee\tDonnacha O\u2019Callaghan (Limerick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 124], "content_span": [125, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Munster Minor Football Championship, Munster Phase 2\nTeam\tPlayed\tWon\tDrawn\tLost\tScores For\tScores Against\tScore Difference\tPoints", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 124], "content_span": [125, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Munster Minor Football Championship, Munster Phase 2\nKerry\t2\t2\t0\t0\t4-35 (47)\t1-20 (23)\t+24\t4", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 124], "content_span": [125, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Munster Minor Football Championship, Munster Phase 2\nCork\t2\t1\t0\t1\t4-18 (30)\t3-33 (42)\t-12\t2", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 124], "content_span": [125, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Munster Minor Football Championship, Munster Phase 2\nClare\t2\t0\t0\t2\t0-25 (25)\t4-25 (37)\t-12\t0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 124], "content_span": [125, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Ulster Minor Football Championship, Ulster Format\nIn 2018 the Ulster Championship changed to a double-elimination format, which replaced the straight knockout style of previous years. Every team who lost a match before the semi-finals re-entered the competition via the Qualifiers Round 1 (R1), Qualifiers Round 2 (R2) or Qualifiers Round 3 (R3). This ensured that all teams played at least two games. The semi-finals and final were knockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 121], "content_span": [122, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Ulster Direct Route, Ulster Preliminary Round\nTwo of the nine teams were drawn to play in the preliminary round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 117], "content_span": [118, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Ulster Direct Route, Ulster Round 1\nThe seven teams who avoided the preliminary round plus the winners of the preliminary round competed in four matches in round 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 107], "content_span": [108, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Ulster Direct Route, Ulster Round 2\nThe four winning teams from round 1 met in two matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 107], "content_span": [108, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Ulster Qualifier Route, Ulster Qualifiers R1\nTwo of the five teams beaten in the preliminary round or round 1 met in a playoff match. The losing team was eliminated from the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 116], "content_span": [117, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Ulster Qualifier Route, Ulster Qualifiers R2\nThe four remaining teams who lost only one match in the preliminary round or round 1 met in two matches with the two losing teams being eliminated,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 116], "content_span": [117, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Ulster Qualifier Route, Ulster Qualifiers R3\nThe two losing teams from round 2 (who lost only one match) met the two winning teams from the qualifiers R2. The two losing teams were eliminated from the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 116], "content_span": [117, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287201-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Ulster Qualifier Route, Ulster Knockout Stage\nThe two winning teams from round 2 met the two winning teams from the qualifiers R3. The two losing teams were eliminated from the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 117], "content_span": [118, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287202-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship\nThe 2019 All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship was the 89th staging of the All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Gaelic Athletic Association in 1928. The championship began on 27 April 2019 and ended on 18 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287202-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship\nOn 18 August 2019, Galway won the championship after a 3-14 to 0-12 defeat of Kilkenny in the All-Ireland final. This was their 13th title overall and their third title in succession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287202-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship, Competition Format\nThe championship begins on a provincial basis in only two of the four provinces \u2013 Munster and Leinster. There is no Ulster Championship as Ulster teams participate in the Leinster Championship. Galway are the sole Connacht representatives and enter the competition at the All-Ireland quarter-final group stage with the beaten Leinster and Munster finalists. This ensures that Galway have at least two championship games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287203-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship\nThe 2019 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship \u2013 known as the Liberty Insurance Camogie Championship for sponsorship reasons \u2013 is the premier inter-county competition of the 2019 camogie season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287203-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship\nThe winners receive the O'Duffy Cup. The championship began on 15 June. It was won by Galway, who defeated Kilkenny in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287203-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship, Teams\nEleven county teams compete in the Senior Championship. 19 lower-ranked county teams compete in the Intermediate and Junior Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287203-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship, Format\nThe eleven teams are drawn into two groups of five and six. Each team plays each other team in its group once. Three points are awarded for a win and one for a draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287203-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship, Group Stage\nGroup games took place 15 June \u2013 24 July, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287203-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship, Group Stage, Relegation Playoff\nMeath are relegated to the All-Ireland Intermediate Camogie Championship for 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 77], "content_span": [78, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287204-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship Final\nThe 2019 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship Final, the 88th event of its kind and the culmination of the 2019 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship, was played at Croke Park in Dublin on 8 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287204-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship Final\nDeferred coverage of the final was broadcast by Sky Sports for the first time. Galway were the winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287204-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship Final, Background\nGalway were aiming for their third camogie All-Ireland; they previously won in 1996 and 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 62], "content_span": [63, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287204-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship Final, Background\nKilkenny aimed for their fourteenth title, their first since 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 62], "content_span": [63, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287204-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship Final, Background\nThe two teams had only met in the final once before \u2014 in 2013, when Galway won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 62], "content_span": [63, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287205-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship Final\nThe 2019 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship final was a hurling match which was played at Croke Park on 17 March 2019 to determine the winners of the 2018-19 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship, the 49th 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 St. Thomas' of Galway and Ballyhale Shamrocks of Kilkenny, with Ballyhale Shamrockswinning by 2-28 to 2-11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287205-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship Final\nThe All-Ireland final between Ballyhale Shamrocks and St. Thomas's was a unique occasion as it was the first ever championship meeting between the two teams. Ballyhale Shamrocks were hoping to win their seventh All-Ireland title, while St. Thomas's were bidding to win their second title after previously winning in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287205-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship Final\nBallyhale Shamrocks threatened to streak clear from the start. A nervous-looking St Thomas's hit a poor wide and overplayed a handpass when well placed while Shamrocks were far more clinical, moving three clear thanks to a point from Adrian Mullen either side of a free and first from play for T. J. Reid. The Kilkenny champions led 2-10 to 1-08 after an entertaining first period that saw Colin Fennelly raise two green flags, the second from an audacious piece of skill, but St Thomas's hit back with a penalty from Conor Cooney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287205-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship Final\nIt was all one-way traffic after the break, however, as Thomas's only managed four scores \u2013 including a late consolation goal from Darragh Burke - and Ballyhale sent over a relentless stream of points. The sight of Conor Cooney going for goal from a 20m free with 15 minutes to play \u2013 it was blocked \u2013 was indicative of Thomas's already being resigned to their fate. Darragh Burke got Thomas's second goal, swiping a Shane Cooney delivery past Mason, six minutes into injury-time but even that only reduced the lead to 16 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship\nThe 2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship was the 132nd edition of the GAA's premier inter-county Gaelic football tournament since its establishment in 1887.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship\nThirty-three teams took part \u2013 thirty-one of the thirty-two Counties of Ireland, London and New York. Kilkenny, as in previous years, did not enter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship\nDublin were the defending champions. In 2018 they won a record-equalling fourth consecutive title, becoming only the fourth team to achieve this feat (the other four-in-a-row champions were Wexford in 1915\u201318 and Kerry in 1929\u201332 and 1978\u201381). They won the 2019 final, defeating Kerry in a replay, and became the GAA's first ever five-in-a-row All-Ireland senior champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Competition format, Provincial Championships format\nConnacht, Leinster, Munster and Ulster each organise a provincial championship. Most teams who lose a match in their provincial championship enter the All-Ireland qualifiers \u2013 New York does not enter the qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 98], "content_span": [99, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Competition format, Provincial Championships format\nAll provincial matches are knock-out. If the score is level at the end of the normal seventy minutes, two periods of ten minutes each way are played. If the score is still level the tie goes to a replay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 98], "content_span": [99, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Competition format, Provincial Championships format\nCould be London and New York final year part of the Connacht championship unless COVID-19 is over from 2022. Sligo were exculuded too from 2020 championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 98], "content_span": [99, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Competition format, Qualifiers format\nTwenty eight of the twenty nine teams beaten in the provincial championships enter the All-Ireland qualifiers, which are knock-out. Sixteen of the seventeen teams (New York do not enter the qualifiers) eliminated before their provincial semi-finals play eight matches in round 1 of the qualifiers, with the winners of these games playing the eight beaten provincial semi-finalists in round 2. The eight winning teams from round 2 play-off against each other in round 3, with the four winning teams playing the four beaten provincial finalists in round 4. This completes the double-elimination format as the four round 4 winners re-enter the main competition at the Super 8 stage (officially named The All-Ireland Quarter-Final Group Stage). Further details of the format are included with each qualifier round listed below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 84], "content_span": [85, 908]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Competition format, Qualifiers format\nIn rounds one to three, teams from divisions three and four of the National Football League have home advantage if drawn against teams from divisions one and two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 84], "content_span": [85, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Competition format, Qualifiers format\nAll qualifier matches are knockout with \"Winner On The Day\" rules being applied if a match is level at the end of the normal seventy minutes. Initially two extra time periods of ten minutes each way are played. If the score is still level two further periods of five minutes each way are played. If the score is still level, the winner is determined by a penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 84], "content_span": [85, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Competition format, All-Ireland format\nSignificant changes to the format of the All-Ireland championship were made at the GAA's Annual Congress in February 2017 and introduced in 2018. The major change was the creation of the All-Ireland Quarter-Final Group Stage commonly known as \"The Super 8s\", which replaced the four knockout quarter-finals. Two groups of four teams compete in three rounds (officially referred to as phases) in the Super 8s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 85], "content_span": [86, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Competition format, All-Ireland format\nThe top two teams in each group contest the semi-finals on a weekend in early August. The All-Ireland final is played \"by the 35th Sunday of the year\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 85], "content_span": [86, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Competition format, All-Ireland format\nThe semi-finals and final are knock-out. If the score is level at the end of the normal seventy minutes in a semi-final, two periods of ten minutes each way are played. If the score is still level the semi-final is replayed. If the score is level at the end of the normal seventy minutes in the final, the match is replayed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 85], "content_span": [86, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Competition format, All-Ireland format\nThe changes will be trialed for three years before being reviewed by the GAA in late 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 85], "content_span": [86, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Live Gaelic Football On TV\nRT\u00c9, the national broadcaster in Ireland, will provide the majority of the live television coverage of the football championship in the second year of a five-year deal running from 2017 until 2021. Sky Sports will also broadcast live games and have exclusive rights to a number of matches including some All-Ireland football super 8 matches. Both RT\u00c9 and Sky Sports televise the two All-Ireland semi-finals and final live.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 73], "content_span": [74, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Live Gaelic Football On TV\nAs of May\u00a02019, BBC Northern Ireland planned to air four Ulster Championship games live: the Antrim\u2013Tyrone quarter-final, the two semi-finals, and the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 73], "content_span": [74, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Leinster Senior Football Championship\nThe four teams who won their quarter-finals in the previous year are given byes to this year's quarter-finals. Six of the seven remaining teams play-off in the preliminary round with the seventh team also receiving a bye to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 110], "content_span": [111, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Munster Senior Football Championship\nThe two teams who won the semi-finals in the previous year are given byes to this year's semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 109], "content_span": [110, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Ulster Senior Football Championship\nAn un-seeded draw determined the fixtures for all nine teams. In April 2018 the Ulster GAA Competitions Control Committee introduced a rule that the two teams who play in the preliminary round are exempt from playing in the preliminary round in the following two years. Derry and Tyrone were therefore awarded byes to the quarter-finals in 2020 and 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 108], "content_span": [109, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, All-Ireland Qualifiers, Qualifiers Round 1\nIn the first round of the qualifiers sixteen of the seventeen teams beaten in the preliminary rounds or quarter-finals of the provincial championships compete. New York does not enter the qualifiers. The round 1 draw is unrestricted \u2212 if two teams have played each other in a provincial match they can be drawn to meet again. The eight winners of these matches play the eight beaten provincial semi-finalists in round 2 of the qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, All-Ireland Qualifiers, Qualifiers Round 2\nIn the second round of the qualifiers the eight winning teams from round 1 play the eight beaten provincial semi-finalists. The round 2 draw is unrestricted \u2212 if two teams have played each other in a provincial match they can be drawn to meet again. The eight winners of these matches play each other in four matches in round 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, All-Ireland Qualifiers, Qualifiers Round 3\nIn the third round of the qualifiers the eight winning teams from round 2 play off in four matches. Round 3 draw rules do not allow two teams that have played each other in a provincial match to meet again if such a pairing can be avoided. In 2019 only Laois and Westmeath had played each other and this pairing was prevented in the draw. The four winners of these matches play the four beaten provincial finalists in round 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, All-Ireland Qualifiers, Qualifiers Round 4\nIn the fourth round of the qualifiers, the four winning teams from round 3 play the four beaten provincial finalists. Round 4 draw rules do not allow two teams that have played each other in a provincial match to meet again if such a pairing can be avoided. The matches are normally held in neutral venues (unless the two teams involved have an arrangement or agree to a coin toss to decide who has home advantage). The four winners of these matches play in the round robin All-Ireland Super\u00a08s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, All-Ireland, All-Ireland Quarter-Finals Group Stage, Structure\nThe four provincial champions and the four winning teams from round four of the All-Ireland qualifiers are divided into two groups of four teams. Each group consists of two provincial champions and the two losing provincial finalists of the other two provinces or the team that beats them in round four of the qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 109], "content_span": [110, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, All-Ireland, All-Ireland Quarter-Finals Group Stage, Structure\nThere are three rounds of two games in each group. Teams have one home game, one away game and one game in Croke Park:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 109], "content_span": [110, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, All-Ireland, All-Ireland Quarter-Finals Group Stage, Structure\nPhase 1 - Weekend of 13/14 July - Each of the two provincial champions play one of the two qualifiers with both provincial champions having home advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 109], "content_span": [110, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, All-Ireland, All-Ireland Quarter-Finals Group Stage, Structure\nPhase 2 - Weekend of 20/21 July - The provincial champions play each other and the two qualifiers play each other. All round 2 matches are in Croke Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 109], "content_span": [110, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, All-Ireland, All-Ireland Quarter-Finals Group Stage, Structure\nPhase 3 - Weekend of 3/4 August - Both qualifiers have home advantage when they play the provincial champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 109], "content_span": [110, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, All-Ireland, All-Ireland Quarter-Finals Group Stage, Structure\nDublin, if they qualify, will play their home game at Croke Park meaning that they will have two \"Super 8\" games in Croke Park. Some counties criticised the use of Croke Park as a home venue for Dublin. At the GAA Congress on 23 February 2019 Donegal proposed that Dublin be limited to playing one \"Super 8\" game at Croke Park. The motion failed as it only received 36% of the available votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 109], "content_span": [110, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, All-Ireland, All-Ireland Quarter-Finals Group Stage, Structure\nSuper 8 games are played in the four weeks beginning in early July and ending in the first weekend in August (which is also the bank holiday weekend in the Republic of Ireland). Two points are awarded for a win and one point for a draw. The top two teams in each group advance to the All-Ireland semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 109], "content_span": [110, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, All-Ireland, All-Ireland Quarter-Finals Group Stage, Structure\nIf only two teams are level on group points -", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 109], "content_span": [110, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, All-Ireland, All-Ireland Quarter-Finals Group Stage, Structure\nIf three or more teams are level on group points, score difference is used to rank the teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 109], "content_span": [110, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, All-Ireland, All-Ireland Semi-Finals\nThe winners of Super 8s Group 1 play the runners-up of Super 8s Group 2 and the winners of Super 8s Group 2 play the runners-up of Super 8s Group 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 83], "content_span": [84, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287206-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, All-Ireland, All-Ireland Final\nThe Central Competitions Control Committee of the GAA decided in October 2018 that, in future, the final should be played \"by the 35th Sunday of the year\". Traditionally the final was held on the third Sunday in September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 77], "content_span": [78, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final\nThe 2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final was the 132nd final of the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship and the culmination of the 2019 tournament, the top level of competition in Gaelic football. Reigning All-Ireland champions Dublin took on Munster champions Kerry, with Dublin bidding to become the first Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) male team to win five consecutive editions of the competition. The last time a football team had this chance was in 1982; however, Kerry failed, their own winning streak being brought to an end by a last-minute goal. By coincidence, Kerry provided the opposition for Dublin on this occasion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final\nThe first game was played at Croke Park in Dublin on 1 September 2019, featuring goals by Jack McCaffrey (top scorer from open play with 1\u20133) and Killian Spillane and a red card for Jonny Cooper. It finished in a draw, so a replay was held on 14 September. Dublin replaced M. D. MacAuley with Eoin Murchan for the replay, while RT\u00c9 replaced Joe Brolly with Stephen Rochford. Murchan scored a goal straight from the second half throw-in as Dublin defeated Kerry by a scoreline of 1\u201318 to 0\u201315 in the replay to become the first male team to win five consecutive GAA All-Ireland titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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 Joanne Cantwell (for the first time) from Croke Park, with studio analysis from Joe Brolly, Pat Spillane, and Ciar\u00e1n Whelan. The play-by-play announcer was Ger Canning, assisted by colour commentator Kevin McStay. The game was also televised internationally by Sky Sports, presented by Rachel Wyse and Brian Carney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final\nOn television, the drawn game received a 76.5% audience share. The replay received a 72.3% audience share.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Background\nDublin went into the final aiming for an unprecedented five-in-a-row of All-Ireland titles. Kerry twice came close to a five-in-a-row, winning the All-Ireland in 1929\u201332 and losing the 1933 semi-final; and winning the All-Ireland in 1978\u201381 and losing the 1982 final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Background\nKerry and Dublin had met in 13 previous All-Ireland finals, with Kerry winning eight of these and Dublin five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Background\nBetween them, the two counties had won half of the All-Ireland championships played once the 2019 final was completed: Kerry having 37 wins (the last in 2014) and Dublin having 28 ahead of the 2019 final. Adding in 2019, this gave a total of 66, out of 132 years in which the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship has been completed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Background\nDublin were 1/5 in the betting odds going into the first game, unprecedented odds against Kerry in an All-Ireland final. Pundits from outside the counties involved, such as Martin McHugh, tipped Dublin to win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Background\nThis was also only the third championship replay between the teams since their rivalry began in 1892. Yet the other two were not All-Ireland finals, nor were they played at Croke Park, making 2019 the first such replay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Paths to the final, Dublin, Leinster Championship\nDublin won the Leinster Championship and so advanced directly to the quarter-final group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 102], "content_span": [103, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Paths to the final, Dublin, All-Ireland Quarter-Final Group Stage (Super 8)\nDublin finished first in Group 2 and advanced to the All-Ireland semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 128], "content_span": [129, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Paths to the final, Kerry, Munster Championship\nKerry won the Munster Championship and so advanced directly to the quarter-final group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 100], "content_span": [101, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Paths to the final, Kerry, All-Ireland Quarter-Final Group Stage (Super 8)\nKerry finished first in Group 1 and advanced to the All-Ireland semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 127], "content_span": [128, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Match 1, Summary\nCork played Galway in the All-Ireland Minor Football Championship final which took place before the senior final. Cork won the game on a 3\u201320 to 3\u201314 scoreline after extra-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Match 1, Summary\nThe Down team that won the 1994 All-Ireland Final were presented to the crowd before the senior match to mark the 25th anniversary of their win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Match 1, Summary\nPeter Keane's decision to bring in Jack Barry instead of Killian Spillane limited the effectiveness of Dublin's Brian Fenton. Dublin played facing the Railway End in the first half. Nevertheless, Paul Mannion had pointed to put Dublin into the lead within 17 seconds. A David Clifford miss for Kerry was followed by Se\u00e1n O'Shea equalising for the Kingdom. By the fifth minute Dublin were in the lead by 0\u20133 to 0\u20131, Dean Rock having scored one from play and one free.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Match 1, Summary\nPaul Geaney had a goal chance for Kerry in the seventh minute, beating Stephen Cluxton in the Dublin goal only for James McCarthy to clear the ball off the line. Clifford missed again. Then he scored a point. Jonny Cooper conceded a penalty to Kerry while holding onto Clifford. Having stepped off his line in advance of Geaney striking the ball, Cluxton saved; and Sean O'Shea levelled the game from the resulting '45. Stephen O'Brien and Mannion exchanged scores before referee David Gough showed Cooper the yellow card for persistent fouling, after another tangle with Clifford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0015-0002", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Match 1, Summary\nSean O'Shea put Kerry ahead with the free. Then Jack McCaffrey scored his fourth championship goal to give Dublin a 1\u20134 to 0\u20135 lead. Dublin's Rock and Kerry's O'Shea continued to exchange points until the end of the half (Con O'Callaghan's score being the only exception). Then, with the break approaching, Cooper fouled Clifford once more and received a second yellow card and then a red, reducing Dublin to 14 players. Sean O'Shea sent the resulting free between the posts to leave the half-time score at Dublin 1\u20139 Kerry 0\u20138.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Match 1, Summary\nKerry's Se\u00e1n O'Shea scored the opening point of the second half from a '45. Cluxton then tipped a Paul Murphy strike on goal against the Dublin crossbar. O'Shea scored another point for Kerry, swiftly followed by McCaffrey fisting the ball over the bar for Dublin. Kerry's Gavin Crowley then scored his first championship point. A score from another Rock free was followed by another McCaffrey point. With the score at Dublin 1\u201312 Kerry 0\u201312, Dublin's Paul Mannion kicked the ball wide in the fiftieth minute. Rock scored another free and McCaffrey scored another point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Match 1, Summary\nKillian Spillane then netted a goal for Kerry to reduce Dublin's lead to two points. Kerry substitute Tommy Walsh reduced the deficit to one point. Sean O'Shea brought the sides level with his ninth point of the game (second from play) with eight minutes of regulation time remaining. Clifford sent a shot straight into the arms of Cluxton. With three minutes of regulation time remaining, Kerry led thanks to a point from Killian Spillane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0016-0002", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Match 1, Summary\nIn the closing stages, and with Dublin behind and in danger of losing their five-in-a-row bid, Hawk-Eye ruled out what had been thought to be an equalising point from Dublin's Cormac Costello in between uncharacteristically wild and inaccurate shots from distance by both Brian Howard and Diarmuid Connolly (a substitute for Howard), before Rock brought Dublin level for the last time. The match finished level, requiring a replay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Match 1, Summary\nMcCaffrey finished top scorer from open play with 1\u20133. The three points were also a classic hat-trick, sent over with fist and both feet. Defensively, he forced eight turnovers of possession. McCaffrey won the man of the match award, his second consecutive award after the one from the 2018 final; \"RT\u00c9 veterans\" were reported to be finding it difficult to recall such an occurrence over previous finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Match 2, Summary\nThe replay took place at Croke Park on 14 September. Dublin replaced M. D. MacAuley with Eoin Murchan; Kerry brought in Diarmuid O'Connor in place of team captain Gavin White. Paul Murphy took on the captain's role. The coin toss was won by Dublin; they opted to play facing the Railway End in the first half. Con O'Callaghan opened the scoring for Dublin within seconds of the throw-in. Eoin Murchan then handpassed to Ciar\u00e1n Kilkenny, who sent Dublin into a two-point lead. A Se\u00e1n O'Shea free gave Kerry their opening point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0018-0001", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Match 2, Summary\nPaul Mannion then restored Dublin's two-point lead, with Kilkenny then increasing the lead to three and Mannion (again) to four. Paul Geaney scored Kerry's second point of the game. A third Kerry point followed from David Clifford, before O'Callaghan scored another for Dublin. Then Dublin's David Byrne scored the second championship point of his career. Adrian Spillane scored for Kerry, Clifford following suit with two points in quick succession. Then Kilkenny and Geaney traded scores. Then O'Callaghan scored for Dublin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0018-0002", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Match 2, Summary\nThen Dublin's Jack McCaffrey lost the ball and Kerry's Clifford, Brian \u00d3 Beaglaoich and Tadhg Morley raced through on goal, only for O'Callaghan to haul the Kerryman down and O'Shea to hit the resulting free over the bar. Michael Fitzsimons was wrongly adjudged to have committed the foul by the referee. Dublin then scored a point of their own before O'Shea sent another free over for Kerry. Geaney brought the teams level with a point for Kerry as half-time approached. McCaffrey, meanwhile, fell, apparently struggling with injury. The half-time score was level with ten points apiece: Dublin 0\u201310 Kerry 0\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Match 2, Summary\nMcCaffrey did not take to the field for the second half. Diarmuid Connolly came on in his place. Dublin's Eoin Murchan reacted to the throw-in by racing straight for the Kerry goal, hitting the ball into the right corner of the net. Joe Brolly later described Murchan's goal as \"arguably the most important moment in the history of Dublin football\". O'Callaghan then pointed for Dublin. Clifford and Geaney each scored a point for Kerry. Paul Mannion sent the ball wide in the 43rd minute - this was Dublin's first wide of the game. Then Se\u00e1n O'Shea scored for Kerry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0019-0001", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Match 2, Summary\nThen Connolly struck the ball directly at Kilkenny from distance; Kilkenny simply gathered the ball and converted it into another point for Dublin. Mannion sent Dublin into a three-point lead in the 51st minute, a minute before Connolly sent the ball wide. Dublin goalkeeper Stephen Cluxton then saved a Stephen O'Brien shot. Mannion scored again for Dublin. Clifford reduced Dublin's lead to three points. Then a Connolly pass found Niall Scully, who sent the ball over the bar instead of at the goal; it proved to be Scully's last involvement as he was then replaced by Cormac Costello. Geaney missed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0019-0002", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Match 2, Summary\nKillian Spillane came on for Paul Murphy. Jack Barry added to Kerry's wide tally before being replaced by James O'Donoghue. Dean Rock sent Dublin into a five-point lead with two minutes of regulation time remaining. Connolly had a shot on goal saved; O'Callaghan gathered the rebound but his effort was also saved. Rock sent the resulting '45 between the posts to give Dublin a six-point lead. As the seconds ticked away, Kerry resorted to Hail Mary passes, with Stephen O'Brien sending the ball wide. Dublin defeated Kerry on a scoreline of 1\u201318 to 0\u201315. They became the first male team in GAA history to win five consecutive All-Ireland titles at this level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Match 2, Summary\nCiar\u00e1n Kilkenny was named as man of the match in the replay, becoming the first forward since 2013's Bernard Brogan the Second to win the award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Post-match\nDublin goalkeeper Stephen Cluxton celebrated \u2014 by taking out a broom and sweeping the changing room floor. Stewards later witnessed him mopping the floor too, when all the other players had left. Cluxton was later named All Stars Footballer of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Post-match\nLord Mayor of Dublin Paul McAuliffe proposed Dublin manager Jim Gavin for the Freedom of the City of Dublin; all members of Dublin City Council \"warmly welcomed\" McAuliffe's proposal and the motion was passed in a vote taken on the evening of 23 September 2019. The last time the award was given was in 2016. The last GAA figure to receive the award was Kevin Heffernan in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287207-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Post-match\nDean Rock, Ciar\u00e1n Kilkenny and Paddy Andrews spent a week in New York. Brian Fenton went on holiday to Marbella with his girlfriend for a few days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287208-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship\nThe 2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship was the 132nd staging of the All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, the Gaelic Athletic Association's premier inter-county hurling tournament, since its establishment in 1887. The draw for the 2019 fixtures took place on 11 October 2018. The championship began on 11 May 2019 and concluded on 18 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287208-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship\nCarlow returned to the Leinster Championship for the first time since 2016, replacing Offaly who were relegated in 2018. Carlow lost all their four games in 2019 and were automatically relegated to the 2020 Joe McDonagh Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287208-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Competition format\nThe current All-Ireland hurling championship format featuring five-team groups in both Leinster and Munster and the two Joe McDonagh Cup finalists was introduced in 2018 for an initial three-year period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287208-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Competition format\nIn the Leinster and Munster provincial championships, five teams compete in single round-robin matches, home or away. The top two teams in each provincial group contest the provincial final, with the provincial winners advancing to the two All-Ireland semi-finals and the losing provincial finalists advancing to the two quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287208-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Competition format\nThe third-placed teams in Leinster and Munster compete in All-Ireland preliminary quarter-finals against the two Joe McDonagh Cup finalists with the Joe McDonagh Cup teams having home advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287208-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Competition format\nIf a non-Munster team wins the Joe McDonagh Cup, the bottom team in the Leinster championship is relegated to next year's Joe McDonagh Cup and is replaced in next year's Leinster championship by the Joe McDonagh Cup winners. This arrangement allows teams from Connacht and Ulster to gain promotion to the tier 1 championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287208-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Competition format\nIf a Munster team wins the Joe McDonagh Cup, they playoff against the team that finished bottom in the Munster championship for the right to play in next year's Munster championship, thereby ensuring that only Munster teams compete in the Munster hurling championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287208-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Teams\nA total of twelve teams compete in the championship \u2013 five in the Leinster championship, five in the Munster championship, and the two Joe McDonagh Cup finalists who enter at the preliminary quarter-final stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287208-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Teams, Teams and venues\nEach team has a nominal home stadium for the round-robin series of the provincial championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 69], "content_span": [70, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287208-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Teams, Teams and venues\nIn the knockout stage, teams from the provincial round-robin series will not have home advantage, if avoidable. The only teams to play knockout games at home are the two Joe McDonagh Cup finalists, who have home advantage in the preliminary quarter-finals. The Munster final was held at a neutral venue which was decided based on the qualifying teams, while the locations of the two quarter-finals were decided based on similar considerations. The Leinster final, and the semi-finals and final of the All-Ireland series are held in the 82,300-capacity Croke Park in Dublin, headquarters of the GAA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 69], "content_span": [70, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287208-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Provincial Championships, Leinster Senior Hurling Championship\nCarlow are relegated to the Joe McDonagh Cup for 2020, because the winners of the 2019 Joe McDonagh Cup were from Leinster (Laois).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 108], "content_span": [109, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287208-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Provincial Championships, Munster Senior Hurling Championship\nWaterford did not need to play a relegation-playoff to avoid relegation to the Joe McDonagh Cup for 2020, because the winners of the 2019 Joe McDonagh Cup were from Leinster (Laois).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 107], "content_span": [108, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287208-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Joe McDonagh Cup\nThe second ever Joe McDonagh Cup, the second tier of senior inter-county championship hurling, was contested by Antrim, Kerry, Laois, Offaly and Westmeath in 2019. Each team plays the other four teams once in a round-robin format. The top two teams compete in the Joe McDonagh Cup final and also advance to the two All-Ireland preliminary quarter-finals, where they play the teams that finish third in the Leinster and Munster championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 62], "content_span": [63, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287208-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Joe McDonagh Cup\nLaois defeated fellow Leinster county Westmeath in the 2019 Joe McDonagh Cup final. Laois were promoted to the 2020 Leinster Championship, while both teams advanced to the All-Ireland preliminary quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 62], "content_span": [63, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287208-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, All-Ireland preliminary quarter-finals\nThe third-placed teams in the Leinster and Munster championships play the two teams who competed in the Joe McDonagh Cup Final, with the two Joe McDonagh finalists having home advantage. The Joe McDonagh champions, Laois, face third-placed Leinster team, Dublin, in the first preliminary quarter final, while the runners-up, Westmeath, meet Cork, the third-placed team from Munster, in the other preliminary quarter final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 125], "content_span": [126, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287208-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, All-Ireland quarter-finals\nThe beaten Leinster and Munster finalists play the winners of the two preliminary quarter-finals. If a third-place finisher from a provincial round-robin wins their preliminary quarter-final, they will be kept apart from the team they have already met in the round-robin phase to prevent a repeat fixture. Both games are held at neutral venues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 113], "content_span": [114, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287208-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, All-Ireland semi-finals\nThe Leinster and Munster champions play the winners of the two quarter-finals. The semi-finals take place in Croke Park in the last weekend of July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 110], "content_span": [111, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287208-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Live televised games\nRT\u00c9, the national broadcaster in Ireland, will provide the majority of the live television coverage of the hurling championship in the third year of a five-year deal running from 2017 until 2021. Sky Sports will also broadcast a number of matches and will have exclusive rights to some games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287208-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Awards\nThe Sunday Game team of the year was picked on 18 August, which was the night of the final. The panel consisting of Brendan Cummins, Cyril Farrell, Jackie Tyrell, Ursula Jacob, Graeme Mulcahy, Derek McGrath and Enda Rowland picked Noel McGrath as the Sunday game player of the year while Kilkenny\u2019s Adrian Mullen was selected as Young Hurler of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287208-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Awards\nOn 1 November, the 2019 PwC All-Stars winners were presented at Dublin's Convention Centre. S\u00e9amus Callanan was named as the All Stars Hurler of the Year with Adrian Mullen named the All Stars Young Hurler of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287209-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final\nThe 2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, the 132nd event of its kind and the culmination of the 2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, was played at Croke Park in Dublin on 18 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287209-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final\nThe match was televised live on RT\u00c92 as part of the Sunday Game presented by Joanne Cantwell from the Croke Park studio with analysis by Anthony Daly, Donal \u00d3g Cusack and Henry Shefflin. Commentary on the game was provided by Marty Morrissey alongside Michael Duignan. The match was also live on Sky Sports presented by Rachel Wyse and Brian Carney with analysis from Ollie Canning, Jamesie O'Connor and J. J. Delaney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287209-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final\nAn average of 804,500 viewers tuned in to watch the final on RTE with a peak audience of 901,900 just after 5pm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287209-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Background\nThis was the ninth time since 2009 that the counties have played each other in the championship, with Kilkenny winning 5 times. Kilkenny went into the final having won 36 All Ireland titles, 11 titles in the last 18 years (2000, 2002, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2011, 2012, 2014, and 2015), with Tipperary on 27 titles, 3 titles over the same period (2001, 2010, and 2016).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 62], "content_span": [63, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287209-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Background\nThe teams had played each other 27 times in the championship, the first time being in 1887, with Kilkenny winning 12 times and Tipperary winning on 14 occasions with one draw in the final in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 62], "content_span": [63, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287209-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Background\nKilkenny had played in 66 All-Ireland finals, winning 36, losing 26 and drawing 4, with Tipperary having appeared in 41 All-Ireland finals, winning 27, losing 12 and drawing 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 62], "content_span": [63, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287209-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Background\nThis was only the third occasion, since the introduction of the \"back door\" in 1997, that neither the Leinster Senior Hurling Championship winners (2019: Wexford) nor the Munster Senior Hurling Championship winners (2019: Limerick) have reached the final. This previously occurred in:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 62], "content_span": [63, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287209-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Paths to the final, Kilkenny, Leinster Championship\nKilkenny finished first in the Leinster round-robin and so went into the Leinster Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 103], "content_span": [104, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287209-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Paths to the final, Tipperary, Munster Championship\nTipperary finished first in the Munster round-robin and so went into the Munster Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 103], "content_span": [104, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287209-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Pre-match, Ticketing\nWith a stadium capacity of 82,300, the 32 individual county boards received 60,000 tickets. Schools and third level colleges got 2,500 tickets, while season ticket holders were entitled to 5,500 tickets. 1,000 tickets were given to overseas clubs. The Camogie, Ladies' Football, Handball and Rounders Associations were each allocated about 200 tickets, as were the jubilee teams and mini-7s which play at half-time. Demand for tickets was very high in both counties with Tipperary and Kilkenny having received around 32,000 tickets between. Stand tickets were priced at \u20ac90 with terrace at \u20ac45.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 72], "content_span": [73, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287209-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Pre-match, Related events\nThe 2019 All-Ireland Minor Hurling Final was played between Galway and Kilkenny as a curtain-raiser to the senior final with Galway winning their third title in a row and 13th overall on a 3-14 to 0-12 scoreline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 77], "content_span": [78, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287209-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Pre-match, Jubilee team\nThe Offaly team that won the 1994 All-Ireland Final was presented to the crowd before the match to mark 25 years. RTE commentator Michael Duignan was part of the Offaly team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 75], "content_span": [76, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287209-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match Summary, Officials\nOn 6 August 2019 the officials were chosen for the final by the GAA, with Wexford's James Owens being named as the referee in what was his third senior final after being the referee in 2015 and 2018. Paud O\u2019Dwyer from Carlow was the standby referee with the other linesman being Johnny Murphy from Limerick and the sideline official was Liam Gordon from Galway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 76], "content_span": [77, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287209-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match Summary, Team news\nThe Tipperary team named for the match on the Friday night was the same that lined out in the semi-final against Wexford. Kilkenny brought Cillian Buckley into the team instead of Richie Leahy from the team that defeated Limerick in the semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 76], "content_span": [77, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287209-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match Summary, Summary\nIn wet and showery conditions, Kilkenny opened the scoring in the first minute with a free from TJ Reid. Michael Breen got Tipperary's first point after 3 minutes to make the score 2-1. A torrential downpour came after around 5 minutes of the game with many heading for cover under the stands. Tipperary playing into the Davin end in the first half might have had a penalty after 9 minutes when Seamus Callanan was pulled down inside the square with the referee awarding a free instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 74], "content_span": [75, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287209-0014-0001", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match Summary, Summary\nAfter 16 minutes Cathal Barrett caught Richie Hogan high across the faceguard with his hurley with Kilkenny being awarded a free which they scored to make it 6-3. Three minutes later Tipperary goalkeeper Brian Hogan caught John Donnelly\u2019s shot from over his crossbar with HawkEye awarding the point. Tipperary scored their first goal of the match after 25 minutes when Niall O'Meara turned past Conor Fogarty before shooting low to the right corner of the net to make the score 0-8 to 1-5. After 33 minutes Cathal Barrett was caught high with a right shoulder to the head near the sideline from Richie Hogan with the referee showing a straight red card to Hogan. Tipperary had a one point lead at half-time with the score 1-9 to 0-11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 74], "content_span": [75, 809]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287209-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match Summary, Summary\nKilkenny leveled the match with the first point of the second half. After 38 minutes Tipperary got a second goal, with Seamus Callanan getting his eighth goal of the championship when he followed up after John McGrath\u2019s effort was half blocked to scramble the ball low to the left of the net. Five minutes later they got their third goal when Seamus Callanan found John O'Dwyer with a cross-field pass from the right to the left edge of the box with O'Dwyer firing powerfully to the net to put Tipperary into an eight point lead on 3-12 to 0-13. Tipperary eased to victory after that and the full time score was 3-25 to 0-20 to win their 28th All-Ireland title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 74], "content_span": [75, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287209-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match Details, Trophy presentation\nTipperary captain S\u00e9amus Callanan accepted the Liam MacCarthy Cup from GAA president John Horan in the Hogan Stand. The Tipperary team then did a victory lap around Croke Park with the trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 86], "content_span": [87, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287209-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match Details, Reaction\nTipperary captain Seamus Callanan speaking to RTE after the match said \"It\u2019s everything we f...ing dreamed of, we put in so much work and to finally get there in the end of it is such an unbelievable feeling, I\u2019m so proud of that group there.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 75], "content_span": [76, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287209-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match Details, Reaction\nTipperary manager Liam Sheedy speaking to RTE Radio singled out his family for special praise on the day of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 75], "content_span": [76, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287209-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match Details, Reaction\nKilkenny manager Brian Cody was amazed that a red card was shown to Richie Hogan, saying \"We were beaten well in the final score but it is a huge decision to make, to issue a red card\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 75], "content_span": [76, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287209-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match Details, Reaction\nFormer Kilkenny hurler Henry Shefflin speaking on the Sunday Game argued that the red card issued to Richie Hogan for the high tackle on Cathal Barrett should not have been red. Also former Kilkenny hyrler Jackie Tyrrell speaking on the Sunday Game on the night of the final also thought that a red card should not have been shown. Richie Hogan speaking two days after the final insisted that it should never have been a red card. Kilkenny appealed the one match suspension given to Hogan but on 6 November the suspension was upheld.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 75], "content_span": [76, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287209-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match Details, 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 match analysis from Brendan Cummins, Cyril Farrell, Jackie Tyrell, Ursula Jacob, Graeme Mulcahy, Derek McGrath and Enda Rowland. On the man of the match award shortlist were Ronan Maher, Noel McGrath and Barry Heffernan with Noel McGrath winning the award which was presented by GAA president John Horan at the post match Tipperary function at the Clayton Burlington Hotel in Dublin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 75], "content_span": [76, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287209-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match Details, Celebrations\nThe Tipperary team made the traditional visits to Our Lady's Children's Hospital in Crumlin and Temple Street hospital on 19 August before returning home by train where the homecoming event was held at Semple Stadium in Thurles. The Tipperary senior back-room team and players were introduced to a crowd of over 30,000 at 8.00\u00a0pm, with captain Seamus Callanan addressing the crowd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 79], "content_span": [80, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287210-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship\nThe 2019 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship is the 46th edition of the Ladies' Gaelic Football Association's premier inter-county Ladies' Gaelic Football tournament. It is known for sponsorship reasons as the TG4 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287210-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship\nIt was won by Dublin, who defeated Galway in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287210-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship, Competition Format, Provincial championships\nConnacht, Leinster and Ulster each organise their provincial championship. All matches are knockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 99], "content_span": [100, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287210-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship, Competition Format, Provincial championships\nIn Munster there are three teams in the provincial championship. They play each other in a round-robin phase, with two teams progressing to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 99], "content_span": [100, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287210-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship, Competition Format, All-Ireland\nThe 12 teams are drawn into four groups of three teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 86], "content_span": [87, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287210-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship, Competition Format, All-Ireland\nThe winners of each group and the runners-up compete in the four All-Ireland quarter-finals. Two semi-finals and a final follow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 86], "content_span": [87, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287210-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship, Provincial Championships, Munster Championship, Group stage\nGames take place on 11 May, 25 May, and 1 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 114], "content_span": [115, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287210-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship, All-Ireland Group Stage, All-Ireland Group Stage\nThe 12 teams are drawn into four groups of three teams, with each group containing one provincial champion, one provincial finalist, and one other team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 103], "content_span": [104, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287210-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship, All-Ireland Group Stage, All-Ireland Group Stage\nThree group points are awarded for a win and one for a draw. The winners and runners-up in each group compete in the four All-Ireland quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 103], "content_span": [104, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287210-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship, All-Ireland Knockout, All-Ireland Quarter-Finals\nEach of the four winners from the group stage play one of the four runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 103], "content_span": [104, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287210-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship, Relegation Play-Offs\nThe last-placed team in each group contest the relegation playoffs. Note that the provincial champions are exempt from relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 75], "content_span": [76, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287210-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship, Relegation Play-Offs\nThe losers of the relegation play-offs play in the 2020 intermediate championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 75], "content_span": [76, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287210-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship, Relegation Play-Offs\nWestmeath are relegated to the All-Ireland Intermediate Ladies' Football Championship for 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 75], "content_span": [76, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287211-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship Final\nThe 2019 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship Final featured Dublin and Galway. Dublin defeated Galway in a low scoring game, hindered by poor weather conditions. It rained throughout most of the game. Dublin led 1-00 to 0-01 at half-time. Hannah O'Neill provided the assist as Sin\u00e9ad Goldrick scored a goal for Dublin in the 22nd minute. Galway remained competitive throughout the game and three minutes later, Sarah Conneally scored their opening point. Just fifteen seconds into the second half, Lyndsey Davey scored Dublin's first point. Davey would also provide the assist when Hannah O'Neill scored Dublin's second goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287211-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship Final\nGalway continued to remain in touch with Dublin thanks to two points via free kicks from their captain, Tracey Leonard. A point from her cousin, Rois\u00edn Leonard, made it a one-score game in the 54th minute. However a point each from Sin\u00e9ad Aherne and No\u00eblle Healy subsequently secured the win for Dublin. Having started the decade without a single title, the result saw Dublin complete a three-in-a-row, winning their fourth title during the 2010s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287211-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship Final, Attendance record\nThe 2019 final was watched by a record breaking attendance of crowd of 56,114. After the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final with 57,900, it was second largest attendance at any women's sporting final during 2019. For the seventh year in a row the attendance increased, with the figures more than doubling since 2013. It was also claimed that the record attendance was the largest ever attendance at a women's amateur sporting event in Europe. Despite this, it was not held to be an enjoyable spectacle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 78], "content_span": [79, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287211-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship Final, TV audience\nThe 2019 final was broadcast live by TG4. 666,000 tuned in to watch TG4's coverage, with an average audience of 252,500 watching the final. This was an increase of more than 70,000 compared to 2018. This represented the second highest viewing figure for an All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship final on TG4 since it first started to broadcast the fixture in 2001. The numbers of viewers peaked at 5.19pm with 358,400 tuning in. In addition to TG4's live coverage, on 16 September Sky Sports broadcast a full replay of the final for the first time. It featured commentary by Mike Finnerty and Angela Walsh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 72], "content_span": [73, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287211-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship Final, Teams\nDublin1 Ciara Trant2 \u00c9abha Rutledge3 Niamh Collins4 Martha Byrne5 Aoife Kane6 Sin\u00e9ad Goldrick 7 Olwen Carey8 Lauren Magee9 Siobh\u00e1n McGrath10 Carla Rowe11 Niamh McEvoy12 Lyndsey Davey13 Sin\u00e9ad Aherne (c)24 Hannah O'Neill15 Jennifer Dunne", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 66], "content_span": [67, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287211-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship Final, Teams\nSubstitutes:14 No\u00eblle Healy for Jennifer Dunne (HT) 19 Caoimhe O'Connor for Niamh McEvoy (42)22 Oonagh Whyte for Hannah O'Neill (51)18 Rachel Ruddy for Aoife Kane (64)23 Niamh Hetherton for Carla Rowe (60)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 66], "content_span": [67, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287211-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship Final, Teams\nGalway1 Lisa Murphy2 Sin\u00e9ad Burke3 Nicola Ward4 Sarah Lynch5 Orla Murphy6 Barbara Hannon 7 Shauna Molloy8 Louise Ward9 \u00c1ine McDonagh10 Olivia Divilly11 Megan Glynn 12 Mair\u00e9ad Seoighe13 Tracey Leonard (c)14 Sarah Conneally15 Rois\u00edn Leonard", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 66], "content_span": [67, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287211-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship Final, Teams\nSubstitutes:19 Fabienne Cooney for Sarah Conneally (42)22 Charlotte Cooney for Orla Murphy (46)20 Leanne Coen (Corofin) for Mairead Seoighe (48)29 Andrea Trill for Roisin Leonard (66)18 Mairead Coyne for Barbara Hannon (67)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 66], "content_span": [67, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287212-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Under-20 Football Championship\nThe 2019 All-Ireland Under-20 Football Championship was the second staging of the All-Ireland Under-20 Championship and the 56th staging overall of a Gaelic football championship for players between the minor and senior grades. The championship began on 22 June 2019 and ended on 3 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287212-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Under-20 Football Championship\nKildare entered the championship as the defending champions, however, they were beaten by Laois in the Leinster Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287212-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Under-20 Football Championship\nThe All-Ireland final was played on 3 August 2019 at O'Moore Park in Portlaoise, between Cork and Dublin, in what was their first meeting in a final in 39 years. Cork won the match by 3-16 to 1-14 to claim their 12th championship title overall and a first title since 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287212-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Under-20 Football Championship\nDublin's Ciar\u00e1n Archer was the championship's top scorer with 9-35.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287213-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Under-20 Hurling Championship\nThe 2019 All-Ireland Under-20 Hurling Championship was the inaugural staging of the All-Ireland Under-20 Championship and the 56th staging overall of a hurling championship for players between the minor and senior grades. Prior to 2019 an All-Ireland Under-21 Championship was held. The championship began on 25 May 2019 and ended on 24 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287213-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Under-20 Hurling Championship\nOn 24 August 2019, Tipperary won the championship following a 5-17 to 1-18 defeat of Cork in the All-Ireland final. This was their 11th All-Ireland title overall and their second title in succession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287213-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Under-20 Hurling Championship\nOffaly's Cathal Kiely was the championship's top scorer with 0-44.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287213-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Under-20 Hurling Championship, All-Ireland Under-20 Hurling Championship\nThe Leinster champions play the Munster beaten finalists and the Munster champions play the Leinster beaten finalists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 89], "content_span": [90, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287214-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Under-20 Hurling Championship Final\nThe 2019 All-Ireland Under-20 Hurling Championship final is a hurling match that was played on 24 August 2019 to determine the winners of the 2019 All-Ireland Under-20 Hurling Championship - the inaugural season of the All-Ireland Under-20 Hurling Championship and the 56th season overall - a tournament organised by the Gaelic Athletic Association for the champion and runner-up teams of Leinster and Munster. The final will be contested by Cork and Tipperary, who both represent the province of Munster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287214-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Under-20 Hurling Championship Final\nThe final was the second time that teams from the same province played each other in a decider. It was also the second successive All-Ireland final to feature both Cork and Tipperary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287214-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Ireland Under-20 Hurling Championship Final\nThe final was broadcast live as part of GAA Beo on TG4, presented by M\u00edche\u00e1l \u00d3 Domhnaill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287215-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Pro Team\nThe 2019 All-Pro teams were named by the Associated Press (AP), Pro Football Writers of America (PFWA), and Sporting News (SN) for performance in the 2019 NFL season. While none of the All-Pro teams have the official imprimatur of the NFL (whose official recognition is nomination to the 2020 Pro Bowl), they are included in the NFL Record and Fact Book and also part of the language of the 2011 NFLPA Collective Bargaining Agreement. Any player selected to the first-team of any of the teams can be described as an \"All-Pro.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287215-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 All-Pro Team\nThe AP team, with first-team and second-team selections, was chosen by a national panel of fifty NFL writers and broadcasters. The Sporting News All-NFL team was voted on by NFL players and executives. 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, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287215-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 All-Pro Team, Teams\nPFWA and SN did not separate the tackles and guards into more specific positions as the AP or PFF did.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287216-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 All-SEC football team\nThe 2019 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 2019 Southeastern Conference football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287216-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 All-SEC football team\nLSU won the conference, beating Georgia 37\u201310 in the SEC Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287216-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 All-SEC football team\nLSU quarterback Joe Burrow was voted the AP SEC Offensive Player of the Year. Auburn defensive tackle Derrick Brown was voted the AP SEC Defensive Player of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287216-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287217-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Allan Cup\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by 2001:1970:4e19:1a00:38d4:9669:c589:8d75 (talk) at 13:42, 19 March 2020 (\u2192\u200eResults: Fixed typos of Madawaska). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287217-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Allan Cup\nThe 2019 Allan Cup was the 2019 Canadian Grand National Championship of Senior ice hockey and the 111th year the trophy was awarded. The tournament played in Lacombe, Alberta from April 8\u201313, 2019. The Lacombe Generals defeated the Innisfail Eagles 5\u20132 in the final to win the national championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287217-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Allan Cup, Information\nHockey Canada named the Lacombe Generals and city of Lacombe, Alberta and the host team and city of the 2019 Allan Cup on January 17, 2018. The Generals previously hosted the 2013 Allan Cup in Red Deer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 27], "content_span": [28, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287218-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Allerdale Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Allerdale Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019, to elect all 49 members of Allerdale Borough Council in Cumbria, United Kingdom. The number of councillors had been reduced from 56 at the previous election, meaning several seats were combined. Four seats were uncontested, all of which were won by members of the Conservative Party. The result was a change in administration of the council, from a Labour Party minority to a coalition of Conservatives and independents. However, the council technically remains in No Overall Control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287218-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Allerdale Borough Council election, Results\nResults shown above are compared to the results of the previous election in 2015 and may not take into account by-elections, crossing the floor, and other changes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287219-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Allied Steel Buildings 200\nThe 2019 Allied Steel Buildings 200 was a NASCAR Xfinity Series race held on May 4, 2019, at Dover International Speedway in Dover, Delaware. Contested over 200 laps on the 1-mile (1.6\u00a0km) concrete speedway, it was the 10th race of the 2019 NASCAR Xfinity Series season. This was the season's fourth and final Dash 4 Cash race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287219-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Allied Steel Buildings 200, Background, Track\nDover International Speedway is an oval race track in Dover, Delaware, United States that has held at least two NASCAR races since it opened in 1969. In addition to NASCAR, the track also hosted USAC and the NTT IndyCar Series. The track features one layout, a 1 mile (1.6\u00a0km) concrete oval, with 24\u00b0 banking in the turns and 9\u00b0 banking on the straights. The speedway is owned and operated by Dover Motorsports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287219-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Allied Steel Buildings 200, Background, Dash 4 Cash\nFor the final Dash 4 Cash race, Tyler Reddick, Gray Gaulding, Christopher Bell, and Chase Briscoe had qualified for prize eligibility at the previous race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287219-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Allied Steel Buildings 200, Practice, First practice\nTyler Reddick was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 23.089 seconds and a speed of 155.918\u00a0mph (250.926\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287219-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Allied Steel Buildings 200, Practice, Final practice\nAustin Cindric was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 23.568 seconds and a speed of 152.749\u00a0mph (245.826\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287219-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Allied Steel Buildings 200, Qualifying\nCole Custer scored the pole for the race with a time of 22.882 seconds and a speed of 157.329\u00a0mph (253.196\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287219-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Allied Steel Buildings 200, Race, Summary\nCole Custer started on the pole and dominated the two stages, leading the first 156 laps. Kaz Grala spun after a bump by John Hunter Nemechek with 47 laps to go, causing a caution. Custer lost the race on pit road to Christopher Bell, and was unable to retake the lead due to dirty air. After restarting on the bottom lane, Custer was overtaken by Tyler Reddick and struggled to recover.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287219-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Allied Steel Buildings 200, Race, Summary\nRiley Herbst spun and brought out the next caution. On the restart, Bell pulled away while Reddick and Justin Allgaier nearly wrecked battling for second place. The final caution occurred when Gray Gaulding spun out shortly afterwards, also collecting Vinnie Miller. Bell managed to pull away on the restart and held off Allgaier to win the race and Dash 4 Cash prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287220-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Allsvenskan\nThe 2019 Allsvenskan, part of the 2019 Swedish football season, was the 95th season of Allsvenskan since its establishment in 1924. A total of 16 teams participated. AIK were the defending champions after winning the title in the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287220-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Allsvenskan\nDjurg\u00e5rdens IF won the Allsvenskan title, their first since 2005, their 8th overall and their 12th Swedish championship overall, in the 30th and final round on 2 November 2019 by playing a 2\u20132 tie in their away fixture against IFK Norrk\u00f6ping. This was also the second consecutive year that a team from Stockholm clinched the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287220-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Allsvenskan, Teams\nA total of sixteen teams are contesting the league, including thirteen sides from the previous season, two promoted teams from the 2018 Superettan and one team from the 2018 Allsvenskan play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287220-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Allsvenskan, Teams\nDalkurd FF and Trelleborgs FF were relegated at the end of the 2018 season after finishing in the bottom two places of the table, and were replaced by the 2018 Superettan champions Helsingborgs IF and runners-up Falkenbergs FF. Helsingborg make their return to Allsvenskan after a two-year absence, this will be their 67th season in the top flight. Falkenberg will take part in Allsvenskan for the fourth time, returning to Allsvenskan after a two-year absence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287220-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Allsvenskan, Teams\nThe play-off spot was taken by AFC Eskilstuna, replacing IF Brommapojkarna. The team made it back to Allsvenskan after just one season in the second division, having been relegated in 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287220-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Allsvenskan, Relegation play-offs\nThe 14th-placed team of Allsvenskan met the third-placed team from 2019 Superettan in a two-legged tie on a home-and-away basis with the team from Allsvenskan finishing at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287221-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Almaty Challenger\nThe 2019 Almaty Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the fourth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Almaty, Kazakhstan between 3 and 9 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287221-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Almaty Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as wildcards:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287221-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Almaty Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287221-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Almaty Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Rankings:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287222-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Almaty Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nZden\u011bk Kol\u00e1\u0159 and Luk\u00e1\u0161 Rosol were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287222-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Almaty Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nAndrej Martin and Hans Podlipnik Castillo won the title after defeating Gon\u00e7alo Oliveira and Andrei Vasilevski 7\u20136(7\u20134), 3\u20136, [10\u20138] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287223-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Almaty Challenger \u2013 Singles\nDenis Istomin was the defending champion but lost in the third round to Federico Coria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287223-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Almaty Challenger \u2013 Singles\nLorenzo Giustino won the title after defeating Coria 6\u20134, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287224-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Alpine Elf Europa Cup\nThe 2019 Alpine Elf Europa Cup was the second season of the Alpine Elf Europa Cup, the one-make sports car racing series organized by Alpine for Alpine A110 Cup cars. It began on 20 April at Nogaro and finished on 13 October, at Le Castellet after six double-header meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287224-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Alpine Elf Europa Cup, Championship Standings, Drivers' Championship\nPoints are awarded to the top 20 drivers. If less than 75% of the race distance is completed then half points are awarded. If less than two laps are completed then no points are given.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 73], "content_span": [74, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287225-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Alps Tour\nThe 2019 Alps Tour was the 19th season of the Alps Tour, one of four third-tier tours recognised by the European Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287225-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Alps Tour, Schedule\nThe season started with a \"winter series\" featuring five tournaments in Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 24], "content_span": [25, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287225-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Alps Tour, Graduates\nThe top five players (not otherwise exempt) on the Order of Merit earned Challenge Tour cards for 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 25], "content_span": [26, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287226-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Alsco 300 (Bristol)\nThe 2019 Alsco 300 is a NASCAR Xfinity Series race held on April 6, 2019, at Bristol Motor Speedway in Bristol, Tennessee. Contested over 300 laps on the 0.533 miles (0.858\u00a0km) concrete short track, it was the seventh race of the 2019 NASCAR Xfinity Series season. This was also the season's first Dash 4 Cash race, which would award extra money to the race winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287226-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Alsco 300 (Bristol), Background, Track\nBristol Motor Speedway, formerly known as Bristol International Raceway and Bristol Raceway, is a NASCAR short track venue located in Bristol, Tennessee. Constructed in 1960, it held its first NASCAR race on July 30, 1961. Despite its short length, Bristol is among the most popular tracks on the NASCAR schedule because of its distinct features, which include steep banking, an all concrete surface, two pit roads, and stadium-like seating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287226-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Alsco 300 (Bristol), Background, Dash 4 Cash\nThe Dash 4 Cash is a series of races in the NASCAR Xfinity Series. The 2019 format included four races where only the top four points eligible drivers in the previous race could be eligible to win a $100,000 bonus on top of their race winnings if they won the race. In addition, Cup Series regulars were not permitted to compete in the races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287226-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Alsco 300 (Bristol), Background, Dash 4 Cash\nFor this race, Michael Annett, Christopher Bell, Chase Briscoe and Tyler Reddick were eligible for Dash 4 Cash as they placed in the top four in the 2019 My Bariatric Solutions 300 amongst regular season drivers. The highest-finishing Dash 4 Cash eligible driver at Bristol would receive the bonus and move on to have a shot at the prize at the next race, along with the top three finishing series regulars from this race. This format continued for the two races afterwards at Talladega and Dover.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287226-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Alsco 300 (Bristol), Practice, First practice\nJohn Hunter Nemechek was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 15.632 seconds and a speed of 122.748\u00a0mph (197.544\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287226-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Alsco 300 (Bristol), Practice, Final practice\nCole Custer was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 15.509 seconds and a speed of 123.722\u00a0mph (199.111\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287226-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Alsco 300 (Bristol), Qualifying\nCole Custer scored the pole for the race with a time of 15.168 seconds and a speed of 126.503\u00a0mph (203.587\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287226-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Alsco 300 (Bristol), Race, Summary\nCole Custer began on pole, but Justin Allgaier overtook him and would dominate the first two stages and lead the most laps. In Stage 1, Jeff Green got loose under Ross Chastain, causing heavy damage and eliminating both cars. Allgaier would later suffer from mechanical problems and crash out of the race despite his early dominance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287226-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Alsco 300 (Bristol), Race, Summary\nA caution with 40 laps to go occurred after Harrison Burton cut a tire in his first Xfinity series race. Brandon Jones stayed out and assumed the lead. Christopher Bell, sporting newer tires, passed Jones with 17 laps to go and battled with Tyler Reddick. In the end, Bell would win the race and extra prize money after holding off Reddick, who would finish second for the second consecutive race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287226-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Alsco 300 (Bristol), Race, Summary\nAt the next race, Bell, Reddick, Custer, and Briscoe would have the chance at the extra prize money for placing in the top 4 for this race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287226-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Alsco 300 (Bristol), Race, Final Stage Results\n. \u2013 Won the Dash 4 Cash prize money and subsequently qualified for the Dash 4 Cash prize money in the next race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287226-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Alsco 300 (Bristol), Race, Final Stage Results\n. \u2013 Qualified for Dash 4 Cash prize money in the next race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287227-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Alsco 300 (Charlotte)\nThe 2019 Alsco 300 was a NASCAR Xfinity Series race held on May 25, 2019, at Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord, North Carolina. Contested over 200 laps on the 1.5-mile (2.4\u00a0km) asphalt speedway, it was the 11th race of the 2019 NASCAR Xfinity Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287227-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Alsco 300 (Charlotte), Background, Track\nThe race was held at Charlotte Motor Speedway, which is located in Concord, North Carolina. The speedway complex includes a 1.5-mile (2.4\u00a0km) quad-oval track, as well as a dragstrip and a dirt track. The speedway was built in 1959 by Bruton Smith and is considered the home track for NASCAR, as many race teams are based in the Charlotte metropolitan area. The track is owned and operated by Speedway Motorsports Inc. (SMI), with Marcus G. Smith serving as track president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287227-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Alsco 300 (Charlotte), Practice, First practice\nTyler Reddick was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 30.000 seconds and a speed of 180.000\u00a0mph (289.682\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287227-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Alsco 300 (Charlotte), Practice, Final practice\nTyler Reddick was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 29.911 seconds and a speed of 180.536\u00a0mph (290.545\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287227-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Alsco 300 (Charlotte), Qualifying\nChristopher Bell scored the pole for the race with a time of 29.298 seconds and a speed of 184.313\u00a0mph (296.623\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287228-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Alsco 300 (Kentucky)\nThe 2019 Alsco 300 is a NASCAR Xfinity Series race held on July 12, 2019, at Kentucky Speedway in Sparta, Kentucky. Contested over 200 laps on the 1.5-mile (2.4\u00a0km) tri-oval speedway, it was the 17th race of the 2019 NASCAR Xfinity Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287228-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Alsco 300 (Kentucky), Background, Track\nThe track is a 1.5-mile (2.4\u00a0km) tri-oval speedway in Sparta, Kentucky, which has hosted ARCA, NASCAR and Indy Racing League racing annually since it opened in 2000. The track is currently owned and operated by Speedway Motorsports. The speedway has a grandstand capacity of 69,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287228-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Alsco 300 (Kentucky), Practice, First practice\nChristopher Bell was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 30.409 seconds and a speed of 177.579\u00a0mph (285.786\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287228-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Alsco 300 (Kentucky), Practice, Final practice\nCole Custer was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 29.965 seconds and a speed of 180.210\u00a0mph (290.020\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287228-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Alsco 300 (Kentucky), Qualifying\nAustin Cindric scored the pole for the race with a time of 29.995 seconds and a speed of 180.030\u00a0mph (289.730\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287228-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Alsco 300 (Kentucky), Race, Summary\nAustin Cindric started on pole. Christopher Bell overtook him and remained in the lead. Tyler Reddick got loose next to Brandon Jones, but managed to save it. The first caution occurred after Jairo Avila Jr. slammed the wall hard. Bell retook the lead after the caution and won Stage 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287228-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Alsco 300 (Kentucky), Race, Summary\nJustin Haley exited pit road first after only taking two tires as opposed to four. He was unable to hold the lead and was passed by Jones. Cindric got loose next to Haley, turning the rear of Cindric's car into the wall and causing damage to Haley's car. Bell took the lead from Jones until Ronnie Bassett Jr. spun out and brought out the next caution. Bell charged to the front and won Stage 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287228-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Alsco 300 (Kentucky), Race, Summary\nJones was leading the race with half of the race completed when his engine blew, eliminating him from the race and giving the lead to Chase Briscoe. Later, Cole Custer and Bell passed Briscoe and remained in their positions. Custer continued his dominating lead, lapping the majority of the field. He won the race with a one second lead over Bell. Custer's strong run resulted in only five cars finishing on the lead lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287229-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Altamira prison riot\nThe Altamira prison riot occurred on 29 July 2019, when a riot broke out at the Centro de Recupera\u00e7\u00e3o Regional de Altamira prison in Altamira, Par\u00e1, Brazil, due to drug turf disputes between rival gangs within the prison.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287229-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Altamira prison riot\nOver the five-hour conflict, 62 people died. Sixteen people were beheaded, and a fire lit at the beginning of the riot killed 46 more people due to smoke inhalation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287229-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Altamira prison riot, Background\nGang violence in Brazilian prisons is common. However, officials reported that the inmates had shown no signs prior to the riot that they would start something of such magnitude.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287229-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Altamira prison riot, Background\nThe Altamira prison is supposed to hold 200 inmates, but was reportedly holding over 450 at the time of the riot. It was later revealed that the prison only had 33 guards, with the municipality admitting this was nowhere near enough to ensure security. A new structure at the prison was being built to house the excess prisoners, though prison officials deny there was overcrowding, and many inmates were held in old container units. The design of these supposedly made the fire worse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287229-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Altamira prison riot, Background\nThe gangs involved were Comando Classe A (CCA) and Comando Vermelho (CV), with CCA attacking CV. Comando Vermelho is a large Rio de Janeiro-based gang that has a longstanding history of violent confrontation with Primeiro Comando da Capital (PCC), another large national group. Comparatively, the CCA is a small regional gang in Par\u00e1. According to The Guardian, the attack was part of a longstanding drug trade turf war that is ultimately between CV and PCC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287229-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Altamira prison riot, Attack\nAt around 07:00, while breakfast was being served, violence broke out after members from the CCA gang housed in one block set fire to another block, which housed members of the Comando Vermelho gang, according to local official Jarbas Vasconcelos. Two prison guards were initially taken hostage, but released soon after the fire had been lit; the gang intended to stop the officers from preventing their targeted attack, but did not want to harm them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287229-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Altamira prison riot, Attack\nPolice forces could not enter the building due to the fire. The violence lasted five hours, ending at noon. During prison searches, no firearms were found, only homemade blades. It was reported that gunshots could be heard at the nearby Altamira Airport, with one worker saying that the shooting lasted 30 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287229-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Altamira prison riot, Attack\nFifty-seven people were initially reported dead. Sixteen of these were beheaded, while the others died as a result of smoke inhalation from the fire. The prison's poor design meant the fire could spread more rapidly. A charred body was later found buried under the rubble by the Institute of Forensic Medicine of Par\u00e1. The death toll rose to 62 after officials found four suffocated inmates inside a prison bus. The bus had been carrying the prison's most violent inmates, who were being transferred to a new prison after the riots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287229-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Altamira prison riot, Response\nThe Ministry of Justice told media that the main perpetrators will be moved to secure prisons. The total number to be transferred is supposedly 46, with 10 of these going to high-security facilities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287230-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Amangeldi Taspihov presidential campaign\nAmangeldi Taspihov, Chairman of the West Kazakhstan Region's Trade Unions and former MP of Mazhilis was nominated by the Federation of Trade Unions of Kazakhstan (QRKF) to be the presidential candidate on 24 April 2019. On 4 May 2019, Taspihov became registered candidate by the Central Election Commission after gathering about 120,000 signatures. On 13 May, Taspihov's campaign published their own electoral platforms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287230-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Amangeldi Taspihov presidential campaign, Campaign\nThroughout the campaign, Taspihov's campaign emphasized on protecting the rights and interests of working Kazakhstanis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287230-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Amangeldi Taspihov presidential campaign, Campaign\nOn 27 May 2019, he proposed amendments to the labor code, saying \u201cthese are people who received education, were born here, became specialists. When there should be a return for their homeland, they are forced to leave for other countries, as they are in demand in other countries, they do not receive a decent salary - this is a big problem, I think this problem can be solved. This issue should be dealt with especially by local executive bodies, akims in order to create better conditions in rural areas, create jobs.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287230-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Amangeldi Taspihov presidential campaign, Campaign\nDuring the presidential debates, Taspihov talked about being from large family and didn't attend rallies but worked and wasn't a life-long Mazhilis MP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires\nThe 2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires season saw a year-to-year surge in fires occurring in the Amazon rainforest and Amazon biome within Brazil, Bolivia, Paraguay, and Peru during that year's Amazonian tropical dry season. Fires normally occur around the dry season as slash-and-burn methods are used to clear the forest to make way for agriculture, livestock, logging, and mining, leading to deforestation of the Amazon rainforest. Such activity is generally illegal within these nations, but enforcement of environmental protection can be lax. The increased rates of fire counts in 2019 led to international concern about the fate of the Amazon rainforest, which is the world's largest terrestrial carbon dioxide sink and plays a significant role in mitigating global warming.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 811]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires\nThe increasing rates were first reported by Brazil's National Institute for Space Research (Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais, INPE) in June and July 2019 through satellite monitoring systems, but international attention was drawn to the situation by August 2019 when NASA corroborated INPE's findings, and smoke from the fires, visible from satellite imagery, darkened the city of S\u00e3o Paulo despite being thousands of kilometers from the Amazon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires\nAs of August\u00a029, 2019, INPE reported more than 80,000 fires across all of Brazil, a 77% year-to-year increase for the same tracking period, with more than 40,000 in the Brazil's Legal Amazon (Amaz\u00f4nia Legal or BLA), which contains 60% of the Amazon. Similar year-to-year increases in fires were subsequently reported in Bolivia, Paraguay and Peru, with the 2019 fire counts within each nation of over 19,000, 11,000 and 6,700, respectively, as of August\u00a029, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0001-0002", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires\nIt is estimated that over 906\u00a0thousand hectares (2.24\u00d710^6 acres; 9,060\u00a0km2; 3,500\u00a0sq\u00a0mi) of forest within the Amazon biome has been lost to fires in 2019. In addition to the impact on global climate, the fires created environmental concerns from the excess carbon dioxide (CO2) and carbon monoxide (CO) within the fires' emissions, potential impacts on the biodiversity of the Amazon, and threats to indigenous tribes that live within the forest. Ecologists estimated that the dieback from the Amazon rainforest due to the fires could cost Brazil US$957 billion to US$3.5 trillion over a 30-year period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires\nThe increased rate of fires in Brazil has raised the most concerns as international leaders, particularly French president Emmanuel Macron, and environmental non-government organizations (ENGOs) attributed these to Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro's pro-business policies that had weakened environmental protections and have encouraged deforestation of the Amazon after he took office in January 2019. Bolsonaro initially remained ambivalent and rejected international calls to take action, asserting that the criticism was sensationalist. Following increased pressure at the 45th G7 summit and a threat to reject the pending European Union\u2013Mercosur free trade agreement, Bolsonaro dispatched over 44,000 Brazilian troops and allocated funds to fight the fires, and later signed a decree to prevent such fires for a sixty-day period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 868]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires\nOther Amazonian countries have been affected by the wildfires in higher or lesser degree. The number of hectares of Bolivian rainforest affected by the wildfires were roughly equal to those of Brazil, being the area of Bolivia only about one-eighth of Brazil's. Bolivian president Evo Morales was similarly blamed for past policies that encouraged deforestation, Morales has also taken proactive measures to fight the fires and seek aid from other countries. At the G7 summit, Macron negotiated with the other nations to allocate US$22 million for emergency aid to the Amazonian countries affected by the fires.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Amazon forest and deforestation\nThere are 670\u00a0million\u00a0ha (1.7\u00a0billion acres; 6.7\u00a0million\u00a0km2; 2.6\u00a0million\u00a0sq\u00a0mi) of Amazon rainforest. Human-driven deforestation of the Amazon rainforest has been a major concern for decades as the rainforest's impact on the global climate has been measured. From a global climate perspective, the Amazon has been the world's largest carbon dioxide sink, and estimated to capture up to 25% of global carbon dioxide generation into plants and other biomass. Without this sink, atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations would increase and contribute towards higher global temperatures, thus making the viability of the Amazon a global concern.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Amazon forest and deforestation\nFurther, when the forest is lost through fire, additional carbon dioxide is released to the atmosphere, and could potentially contribute significantly to the total carbon dioxide content. The flora also generates significant quantities of water vapor through transpiration which travel large distances to other parts of South America via atmospheric rivers and contribute to the precipitation in these areas. Due to ongoing global climate change, environmental scientists have raised concerns that the Amazon could reach a \"tipping point\" where it would irreversibly die out, the land becoming more savanna than forest, under certain climate change conditions which are exacerbated by anthropogenic activities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 776]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Amazon forest and deforestation\nHuman-driven deforestation of the Amazon is used to clear land for agriculture, livestock, and mining, and for its lumber. Most forest is typically cleared using slash-and-burn processes; huge amounts of biomass are removed by first pulling down the trees in the Amazon using bulldozers and giant tractors during the wet season (November through June), followed by torching the tree trunks several months later in the dry season (July through October). Fires are most common in July through August. In some cases, workers performing the burn are unskilled, and may inadvertently allow these fires to spread. While most countries in the Amazon do have laws and environmental enforcement against deforestation, these are not well enforced, and much of the slash-and-burn activity is done illegally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 862]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Amazon forest and deforestation\nDeforestation leads to a large number of observed fires across the Amazon during the dry season, usually tracked by satellite data. While it is possible for naturally-occurring wildfires to occur in the Amazon, the chances are far less likely to occur, compared to those in California or in Australia. Even with global warming, spontaneous fires in the Amazon cannot come from warm weather alone, but warm weather is capable of exacerbating the fires once started as there will be drier biomass available for the fire to spread.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Amazon forest and deforestation\nAlberto Setzer of INPE estimated that 99% of the wildfires in the Amazon basin are a result of human actions, either on purpose or accidentally. Man-made fires in the Amazon also tend to elevate their smoke into the higher atmosphere due to the more intense burn of the dry biomass, compared with naturally occurring wildfires. Further evidence of the fires being caused by human activity is due to their clustering near roads and existing agricultural areas rather than remote parts of the forest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Amazon forest and deforestation\nOn November 18, 2019 Brazilian authorities announced the official deforestation figures, based on the PRODES satellite monitoring system for the 2019 forest year \u2014 from August 1, 2018 to July 31, 2019. The rate of deforestation was the \"worst in more than a decade\" with 970,000 hectares (2,400,000 acres) lost.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Amazon forest and deforestation\nIn August 2020 Brazil's National Institute for Space Research reported that satellite data shows that the number of fires in the Amazon increased by 28% to ~6,800 fires in July compared to the ~5,300 wildfires in July 2019. This indicated a, potentially worsened, repeat of 2019's accelerated destruction of one of the world's largest protectable buffers against global warming in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Broad types of fire in the Amazon\nAmazon fires can be separated into three broad categories. First, deforestation-related fires are those used to prepare the area for agriculture after a primary forest being felled and the vegetation left to dry. Second, there are those agricultural burns, when fires are used to clear existing pastureland and/or by smallholders and traditional people in rotational agriculture. Finally, the previous fire types can escape beyond intended limits and invade standing forests. When a forest burns for the first time, fire intensity is usually low and flames are mostly restricted to the understory while repeated fire events have higher intensity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Broad types of fire in the Amazon\nForest fires are a threat to the Amazonian biodiversity and jeopardize the ability of forest trees to mitigate climate change by storing carbon. When studying Amazonian fires, it is important to consider the marked spatial differences in precipitation patterns across the Amazon Basin, which does not have a single dry season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Past deforestation and fires in Brazil\nBrazil's role in deforestation of the Amazon rainforest has been a significant issue since the 1930s, as 60% of the Amazon is contained within Brazil, designated as the Brazil's Legal Amazon (Amaz\u00f4nia Legal, BLA). Since the 1970s, Brazil has consumed approximately 12 percent of the forest, representing roughly 77.7\u00a0million\u00a0ha (192\u00a0million acres)\u2014an area larger than that of the US state of Texas. Most of the deforestation has been for natural resources for the logging industry and land clearing for agricultural and mining use.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 89], "content_span": [90, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Past deforestation and fires in Brazil\nForest removal to make way for cattle ranching was the leading cause of deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon from the mid-1960s on. The Amazon region has become the largest cattle ranching territory in the world. According to the World Bank, some 80% of deforested land is used for cattle ranching. Seventy percent of formerly forested land in the Amazon, and 91% of land deforested since 1970, is used for livestock pasture.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 89], "content_span": [90, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0010-0002", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Past deforestation and fires in Brazil\nAccording to the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), \"between 1990 and 2001 the percentage of Europe's processed meat imports that came from Brazil rose from 40 to 74 percent\" and by 2003 \"for the first time ever, the growth in Brazilian cattle production, 80 percent of which was in the Amazon[,] was largely export driven.\" The Brazilian states of Par\u00e1, Mato Grosso, and Rond\u00f4nia, located along the southern border of the Amazon rainforest, are in what is called the \"deforestation arc\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 89], "content_span": [90, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Past deforestation and fires in Brazil\nDeforestation within Brazil is partially driven by growing demand for beef and soy exports, particularly to China and Hong Kong. In the first seven months of 2019, soy exports to China rose by 18% due to trading tensions between the United States and China. Brazil is one of the largest exporters of beef, accounting for more than 20% of global trade of the commodity. Brazil exported over 1.6 million tonnes of beef in 2018, the highest volume in recorded history. Brazil's cattle herd has increased by 56% over the last two decades.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 89], "content_span": [90, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Past deforestation and fires in Brazil\nRanchers wait until the dry season to slash-and-burn to give time for the cattle to graze. Soybean production has increased from 75.32 million metric tons in 2010/11 to 118.8 million metric tons in 2018/19. The Amazon accounts for 14 million of the 284 million acres of soy plantations in Brazil. While slash-and-burn can be controlled, unskilled farmers may end up causing wildfires. Wildfires have increased as the agricultural sector has pushed into the Amazon basin and spurred deforestation. In recent years, \"land-grabbers\" (grileiros) have been illegally cutting deep into the forest in \"Brazil's indigenous territories and other protected forests throughout the Amazon\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 89], "content_span": [90, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Past deforestation and fires in Brazil\nPast data from INPE has shown the number of fires with the BLA from January to August in any year to be routinely higher than 60,000 fires from 2002 to 2007 and as high as 90,000 in 2003. Fire counts have generally been higher in years of drought (2007 and 2010), which are often coupled with El Ni\u00f1o events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 89], "content_span": [90, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Past deforestation and fires in Brazil\nWithin international attention on the protection of the Amazon around the early 2000s, Brazil took a more proactive approach to deforestation of the Amazon rainforest. In 2004, the Brazilian government had established the Federal Action Plan for Prevention and Control of Deforestation in the Amazon (PPCDAM), with the goal to reduce the rate of deforestation through land use regulation, environmental monitoring, and sustainable activities, promoted through partnerships at the federal and private level, and legal penalties for violations. Brazil also invested in more effective measures to fight fires, including fire-fighting airplanes in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 89], "content_span": [90, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Past deforestation and fires in Brazil\nBy 2014, USAID was teaching the indigenous people how to fight fires. As a result of enforcement of PPCDAM, the rate of deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon dropped 83.5% of their 2004 rates by 2012. However, in 2014, Brazil fell into an economic crisis, and as part of that recovery, pushed heavily on its exports of beef and soy to help bolster its economy, which caused a reversal in the falling deforestation rates. The Brazilian government has been defunding scientific research since the economic crisis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 89], "content_span": [90, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Past deforestation and fires in Brazil\nTo support PPCDAM, the INPE began developing systems to monitor the Amazon rainforest. One early effort was the Amazon Deforestation Satellite Monitoring Project (PRODES), which is a highly detailed satellite imagery-based approach to calculate wildfires and deforestation losses on an annual basis. In 2015, INPE launched five complementary projects as part of the Terra Brasilis project to monitor deforestation closer to real-time. Among these include the Real-Time Deforestation Detection System (DETER) satellite alert system, allowing them to capture incidents of wildfires in 15-day cycles. The daily data is published on the regularly updated Brazilian Environmental Institute government website, and later corroborated with the annual and more accurate PRODES data.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 89], "content_span": [90, 864]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Past deforestation and fires in Brazil\nBy December 2017, INPE had completed a modernization process and had expanded its system to analyze and share data on forest fires. It launched its new TerraMA2Q platform\u2014software which adapts fire-monitoring data software including the \"occurrence of irregular fires\". Although the INPE was able to provide regional fire data since 1998, the modernization increased access. Agencies that monitor and fight fires include the Brazilian Federal Environment and Renewable Resources Agency (IBAMA), as well as state authorities. The INPE receives its images daily from 10 foreign satellites, including the Terra and Aqua satellites\u2014part of the NASA's Earth Observation System (EOS).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 89], "content_span": [90, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Past deforestation and fires in Brazil\nCombined, these systems are able to capture the number of fires on a daily basis, but this number does not directly measure the area of forest lost to these fires; instead, this is done with fortnightly imaging data to compare the current state of the forest with reference data to estimate acreage lost.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 89], "content_span": [90, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Past deforestation and fires in Brazil\nJair Bolsonaro was elected as President of Brazil in October 2018 and took office in January 2019, after which he and his ministries changed governmental policies to weaken protection of the rainforest and make it favorable for farmers to continue practices of slash-and-burn clearing, thus accelerating the deforestation from previous years. Land-grabbers had used Bolsonaro's election to extend their activities into cutting in the land of the previously isolated Apurin\u00e3 people in Amazonas where the \"world's largest standing tracts of unbroken rainforest\" are found.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 89], "content_span": [90, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Past deforestation and fires in Brazil\nUpon entering office, Bolsonaro cut US$23 million from Brazil's environmental enforcement agency, making it difficult for the agency to regulate deforestation efforts. Bolsonaro and his ministers had also segmented the environmental agency, placing part of its control under the agricultural ministry, which is led by the country's farming lobby, weakened protections on natural reserves and territories belonging to indigenous people, and encouraged businesses to file counter-land claims against regions managed by sustainable forestry practices.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 89], "content_span": [90, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, 2019 Brazil dry season fires\nINPE alerted the Brazilian government to larger-than-normal growth in the number of fires through June to August 2019. The first four months of the year were wetter-than-average, discouraging slash-and-burn efforts. However, with the start of the dry season in May 2019, the number of wildfires jumped greatly. Additionally, NOAA reported that, regionally, the temperatures in the January\u2013July 2019 period were the second warmest year-to-date on record. INPE reported a year-to-year increase of 88% in wildfire occurrences in June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 79], "content_span": [80, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0017-0001", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, 2019 Brazil dry season fires\nThere was further increase in the rate of deforestation in July 2019, with the INPE estimating that more than 1,345 square kilometres (519\u00a0sq\u00a0mi; 134,500\u00a0ha; 332,000 acres) of land had been deforested in the month and would be on track to surpass the area of Greater London by the end of the month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 79], "content_span": [80, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, 2019 Brazil dry season fires\nThe month of August 2019 saw a large growth in the number of observed wildfires according to INPE. By August 11, Amazonas had declared a state of emergency. The state of Acre entered into an environmental alert on August 16. In early August, local farmers in the Amazonian state of Par\u00e1 placed an ad in the local newspaper calling for a queimada or \"Day of Fire\" on August 10, 2019, organizing large scale slash-and-burn operations knowing that there was little chance of interference from the government. Shortly after, there was an increase in the number of wildfires in the region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 79], "content_span": [80, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, 2019 Brazil dry season fires\nINPE reported on August 20 that it had detected 39,194 fires in the Amazon rainforest since January. This represented a 77 percent increase in the number of fires from the same time period in 2018. However, the NASA-funded NGO Global Fire Emissions Database (GFED) shows 2018 as an unusually low fire year compared to historic data from 2004\u20132005 which are years showing nearly double the number of counted fires. INPE had reported that at least 74,155 fires have been detected in all of Brazil, which represents an 84-percent increase from the same period in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 79], "content_span": [80, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0019-0001", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, 2019 Brazil dry season fires\nNASA originally reported in mid-August that MODIS satellites reported average numbers of fires in the region compared with data from the past 15 years; the numbers were above average for the year in the states of Amazonas and Rond\u00f4nia, but below average for Mato Grosso and Par\u00e1. NASA later clarified that the data set they had evaluated previous was through August 16, 2019. By August 26, 2019, NASA included more recent MODIS imagery to confirm that the number of fires were higher than in previous years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 79], "content_span": [80, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, 2019 Brazil dry season fires\nBy August 29, 80,000 fires had broken out in Brazil which represents a 77% rise on the same period in 2018, according to BBC. INPE reported that in the period from January 1 to August 29, across South America, and not exclusive to the Amazon rainforest, there were 84,957 fires in Brazil, 26,573 in Venezuela, 19,265 in Bolivia, 14,363 in Colombia, 14,969 in Argentina, 10,810 in Paraguay, 6,534 in Peru, 2,935 in Chile, 898 in Guyana, 407 in Uruguay, 328 in Ecuador, 162 in Suriname, and 11 in French Guiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 79], "content_span": [80, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, First media reports\nWhile INPE's data had been reported in international sources earlier, news of the wildfires were not a major news story until around August 20, 2019. On that day, the smoke plume from the fires in Rond\u00f4nia and Amazonas caused the sky to darken at around 2 p.m. over S\u00e3o Paulo\u2014which is almost 2,800 kilometres (1,700\u00a0mi) away from the Amazon basin on the eastern coast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0021-0001", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, First media reports\nNASA and US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) also published satellite imagery from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA's Terra satellite in alignment with INPE's own, that showed smoke plumes from the wildfires were visible from space. INPE and NASA data, along with photographs of the ongoing fires and impacts, caught international attention and became a rising topic on social media, with several world leaders, celebrities, and athletes expressing their concerns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, First media reports\nAccording to Vox, of all the concurrent wildfires elsewhere in the world, the wildfires in the Amazon rainforest in Brazil were the most \"alarming\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Responses of the Brazilian government\nIn the months prior to August 2019, Bolsonaro mocked international and environmental groups that felt his pro-business actions enabled deforestation. At one point in August 2019, Bolsonaro jokingly calling himself \"Captain Chainsaw\" while asserting that INPE's data was inaccurate. After INPE announced an 88% increase of wildfires in July 2019, Bolsonaro claimed \"the numbers were fake\" and fired Ricardo Magnus Os\u00f3rio Galv\u00e3o, the INPE director. Bolsonaro claimed Galv\u00e3o was using the data to lead an \"anti-Brazil campaign\". Bolsonaro had claimed that the fires had been deliberately started by environmental NGOs, although he provided no evidence to back up the accusation. NGOs such as WWF Brasil, Greenpeace, and the Brazilian Institute for Environmental Protection countered Bolsonaro's claims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 88], "content_span": [89, 888]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Responses of the Brazilian government\nBolsonaro, on August 22, argued that Brazil did not have the resources to fight the fires, as the \"Amazon is bigger than Europe, how will you fight criminal fires in such an area? \".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 88], "content_span": [89, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Responses of the Brazilian government\nHistorically, Brazil has been guarded about international intervention into the BLA, as the country sees the forest as a critical part of Brazil's economy. Bolsonaro and his government have continued to speak out against any international oversight of the situation. Bolsonaro considered French President Emmanuel Macron's comments to have a \"sensationalist tone\" and accusing him of interfering in what he considers is a local problem. Of Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Bolsonaro stated: \"They still haven't realized that Brazil is under new direction. That there's now a president who is loyal to [the] Brazilian people, who says the Amazon is ours, who says bad Brazilians can't release lying numbers and campaign against Brazil.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 88], "content_span": [89, 835]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Responses of the Brazilian government\nBolsonaro's foreign minister Ernesto Ara\u00fajo has also condemned the international criticism of Bolsonaro's reaction to the wildfires, calling it \"savage and unfair\" treatment towards Bolsonaro and Brazil. Ara\u00fajo stated that: \"President Bolsonaro's government is rebuilding Brazil\", and that foreign nations were using the \"environmental crisis\" as a weapon to stop this rebuilding. General Eduardo Villas B\u00f4as, former commander of the Brazilian Army, considered the criticism of world leaders, like Macron and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, to be directly challenging \"Brazilian sovereignty\", and may need to be met with military response.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 88], "content_span": [89, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Responses of the Brazilian government\nWith increased pressure from the international community, Bolsonaro appeared more willing to take proactive steps against the fires, saying by August 23, 2019, that his government would take a \"zero tolerance\" approach to environmental crimes. He engaged the Brazilian military to help fight the wildfires on August 24, which Joint Staff member Lt. Brig. Raul Botelho stated was to create a \"positive perception\" of the government's efforts. Among military support included 43,000 troops as well as four firefighting aircraft, and an allocated US$15.7 million for fire-fighting operations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 88], "content_span": [89, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0027-0001", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Responses of the Brazilian government\nInitial efforts were principally located in the state of Rond\u00f4nia, but the Defense Ministry stated they plan to offer support for all seven states affected by the fires. On August 28, Bolsonaro signed a decree banning the setting of fires in Brazil for a period of 60 days, making exceptions for those fires made purposely to maintain environmental forest health, to combat wildfires, and by the indigenous people of Brazil. However, as most fires are set illegally, it is unclear what impact this decree could have.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 88], "content_span": [89, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Responses of the Brazilian government\nRodrigo Maia, president of the Chamber of Deputies, announced that he would form a parliatary committee to monitor the problem. In addition, he said that the Chamber will hold a general commission in the following days to assess the situation and propose solutions to the government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 88], "content_span": [89, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Responses of the Brazilian government\nAfter a report from Globo Rural reveal that a WhatsApp group of 70 people was involved with the Day of Fire, Jair Bolsonaro determined the opening of investigations by Federal Police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 88], "content_span": [89, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Responses of the Brazilian government\nIn a webcast issued November 28, 2019, President Jair Bolsonaro blamed actor and environmentalist Leonardo DiCaprio for the rainforest wildfires, alleging NGOs set the fires in return for donations. DiCaprio, Global Wildlife Conservation, and IUCN Species Survival Commission condemn Bolsonaro's accusations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 88], "content_span": [89, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Responses of the Brazilian government\nBrazil banned clearing land by setting fire to it on 29 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 88], "content_span": [89, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Responses of the Brazilian government\nMore measures taken by the Brazilian government of Jair Bolsonaro to stop the fires include:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 88], "content_span": [89, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Protests against Brazilian government policies\nIn regards to the displacement of the indigenous people, Amnesty International has highlighted the change in protection of lands belonging to the indigenous people, and have called on other nations to pressure Brazil to restore these rights, as they are also essential to protecting the rainforest. Ivaneide Bandeira Cardoso, founder of Kanind\u00e9, a Porto Velho-based advocacy group for indigenous communities, said Bolsonaro is directly responsible for the escalation of forest fires throughout the Amazon this year. Cardoso said the wildfires are a \"tragedy that affects all of humanity\" since the Amazon plays an important role in the global ecosystem as a carbon sink to reduce the effects of climate change.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 97], "content_span": [98, 808]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Protests against Brazilian government policies\nThousands of Brazilian citizens held protests in several major cities from August 24, 2019, onward to challenge the government's reaction to the wildfires. Protesters around the world also held events at Brazilian embassies, including in London, Paris, Mexico City, and Geneva.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 97], "content_span": [98, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Impact on the indigenous peoples of Brazil\nIn addition to environmental harm, the slash-and-burn actions leading to the wildfires have threatened the approximately 306,000 indigenous people in Brazil who reside near or within the rainforest. Bolsonaro had spoken out against the need to respect the demarcation of lands for indigenous people established in the 1988 Constitution of Brazil. According to a CBC report on Brazil's wildfires, representatives of the indigenous people have stated that farmers, loggers, and miners, emboldened by the Brazilian government's policies, have forced these people out of their lands, sometimes through violent means, and equated their methods with genocide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 93], "content_span": [94, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0035-0001", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Impact on the indigenous peoples of Brazil\nAdditionally, some indigenous groups that have traditionally used fire management practices for agricultural livelihoods are being criminalized. Some of these tribes have vowed to fight back against those engaged in deforestation to protect their lands. Kerexu Yxapyry, a leader from Santa Catarina's Kerexu tribe, describes this conflict as, \"We know our struggle will be arduous. Maybe many of our leaders will be killed, but we are organized. And we are going to defend our rights.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 93], "content_span": [94, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, International responses\nInternational leaders and environmental NGOs have condemned President Bolsonaro for the extent of the wildfires within the Brazilian portion of the Amazon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 74], "content_span": [75, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, International responses\nSeveral international governments and environmental groups raised concerns at Bolsonaro's stance on the rainforest and the lack of attempts by his government to slow the wildfires. Among the most vocal was Macron, given the proximity of French Guiana to Brazil. Macron called the Amazon wildfires an \"international crisis\", while claiming the rainforest produces \"20% of the world's oxygen\"\u2014a statement disputed by academics. He said, \"Our house is burning. Literally.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 74], "content_span": [75, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, International responses\nDiscussion about the fires came into the final negotiations of the EU\u2013Mercosur Free Trade Agreement between the EU and Mercosur, a trade bloc of Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay, and Paraguay. With the wildfires on-going, both Macron and Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar have stated they will refuse to ratify the trade deal unless Brazil commits to protecting the environment. However, they have both been accused of using the fires as a pretext to scuttle an agreement that they already opposed on protectionist grounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 74], "content_span": [75, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, International responses\nFinance minister of Finland Mika Lintil\u00e4 suggested the idea of an EU ban on Brazilian beef imports until the country takes steps to stop the deforestation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 74], "content_span": [75, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, International responses\nThe Secretary-General of the Rainforest Foundation Norway (RFN), \u00d8yvind Eggen, said that neither the \"official deforestation figures\" published by Brazilian authorities on November 18, 2019 nor the number of wildfires in Amazon in 2019, were normal. According to the RFN,\"We are approaching a potential tipping point, where large parts of the forest will be so damaged that [the rainforest] collapses.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 74], "content_span": [75, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Brazil, Preserving the Amazon: A Shared Moral Imperative\nOn September 10, 2019, the US House Foreign Affairs Committee held a hearing in Washington, DC entitled \"Preserving the Amazon: A Shared Moral Imperative\". In her testimony presented to the hearing, Peterson Institute for International Economics (PIIE) economist, Monica de Bolle likened the rainforest to a \"carbon bomb\", as the fires lit for deforestation \"may release as much as 200 million tons of carbon into the atmosphere a year, which would spur climate change at a much faster rate, not to mention associated changes in rainfall patterns that may result from deforestation.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 99], "content_span": [100, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Bolivia, Background\nIn Bolivia, chaqueo is an annual seasonal agricultural practice and commonly relies on the controlled use of fire. Is was first authorized in 2001 during the government of Hugo Banzer Suarez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 62], "content_span": [63, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Bolivia, Background\nBolivia has 7.7 percent of the Amazon rainforest within its borders. The Bolivian Amazon covers 19.402\u00a0million hectares (47.94\u00a0million acres) which comprise 37.7 percent of Bolivia's forests and 17.7 percent of Bolivia's land mass. Bolivia's forests cover a total of 51.407\u00a0million hectares (127.03\u00a0million acres), including the Chiquitano dry forests which is part of the Amazon biome and a transition zone between the Amazon rainforest and the drier forests of the southern Chaco region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 62], "content_span": [63, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Bolivia, Background\nBy September 14, 2019, Bolivia\u2014which is one-eighth the size of Brazil\u2014lost nearly 6\u00a0million acres (2.4\u00a0million hectares) of \"forest and savanna\". The fires destroyed about the same area of rainforest than in Brazil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 62], "content_span": [63, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Bolivia, Santa Cruz Department\nBy August 16, Bolivia's Santa Cruz had declared a departmental emergency because of the forest fires. From August 18 to August 23, approximately 800\u00a0thousand hectares (2.0\u00a0million acres) of the Chiquitano dry forests were destroyed, more than what was lost over a typical two-year period. By August 24, the fires had already affected 1,011\u00a0thousand hectares (2.50\u00a0million acres) of forestland in the Santa Cruz and were burning near Santa Cruz, Bolivia. By August 26, wildfires had reached over 728\u00a0thousand hectares (1.80\u00a0million acres) of Bolivia's savanna and tropical forests, according to the Bolivian Information Agency (BIA). Over a period of five days, from August 18 to August 22, 450\u00a0thousand hectares (1.1\u00a0million acres) of forest near Robor\u00e9 were burned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 840]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Bolivia, Santa Cruz Department\nOn August 25, 4,000 state employees and volunteers were fighting the fires. By August 25, the Chiquitano regions has seen 650\u00a0thousand hectares (1.6\u00a0million acres) of tropical forest burned within both the Amazon and the dry forests, mostly within the Santa Cruz province; like the Brazil fires, such fires occur during the dry season, but the number of fires in 2019 were larger than in previous years. Throughout August, wildfires have been spreading across four states. [ By August 26, fires in the Dionisio Foianini Triangle\u2014the Brazil-Bolivia-Paraguay triangle had reached savannah and tropical forest \"near Bolivia's border with Paraguay and Brazil\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Bolivia, Santa Cruz Department\nThe Bolivian government intervened after it was clear that the fires had surpassed local and regional response capabilities. In the week of August 18, Morales dispatched soldiers and three helicopters to fight fires in an area about the size of Oregon. On August 22, Morales contracted the Colorado-based Boeing 747 Supertanker (also known as Global SuperTanker) to conduct firefighting missions over the Bolivian Amazon. The 747 Supertanker is the largest firefighting aircraft in the world, which can hold approximately 19,000 gallons of water per trip. Morales has stated that the governments of many countries including Spain, Chile, Per\u00fa, France, the EU, among others have reached out to him to provide help for fighting the fires.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0048-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Bolivia, Santa Cruz Department\nThe government had been trying to determine the cause of the fires, with the Bolivian land management authority attributing 87% of the fires present in areas without authorization. Multiple NGOs assert that deforestation rates in Bolivia increased 200 percent after the government quadrupled available land for deforestation to small farmers in 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0049-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Bolivia, Santa Cruz Department\nPolitical opponents of Morales alleged that the August 25, 2019, at the Wayback Machine, a mandate to further beef production in the Amazon region, is a major cause of the Bolivian fires. However, this Supreme Decree only extends the authorized but regulated use of fire already legal in Santa Cruz to the Beni Department, where forest fire issues are not a significant issue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0050-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Bolivia, Santa Cruz Department\nBy September 9, total forests that had been affected by fires in Bolivia was estimated as 1,700\u00a0thousand hectares (4.2\u00a0million acres), more than double from estimates two weeks prior, but far less extended than the forest fires that occurred in 2004 and 2010. While some local government officials and opposition leaders have pled with Morales to update the situation from national emergengy to national disaster, but minister of communication Manuel Canelas said that Bolivia \"is not overwhelmed\" by fires to make this declaration, and that national emergency is sufficient to receive any type of foreign cooperation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0051-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Paraguay's Pantanal\nBy August 22, fire emergencies in Paraguay's Alto Paraguay district and the UNESCO protected Pantanal region were issued by its federal government. Paraguay President Mario Abdo Ben\u00edtez was in close contact with Bolivia's Morales to coordinate response efforts. By August 17, as wind direction changed, flames from fires in Bolivia began to enter northern Paraguay's Three Giants natural reserve in the Paraguayan Pantanal natural region. By August 24, when the situation had stabilized, Paraguay had lost 39,000 hectares (96,000 acres) in the Pantanal. An Universidad Nacional de Asunci\u00f3n representative lamented the disaster failed to attract as much media attention as the fires in the Amazon rainforest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 62], "content_span": [63, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0052-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Paraguay's Pantanal\nWhile most of the Pantanal regions\u2014140,000 and 195,000 square kilometres (54,000 and 75,000\u00a0sq\u00a0mi)\u2014is within Brazil's borders in the state of Mato Grosso do Sul, the natural region also extends into Mato Grosso and portions of Bolivia. It sprawls over an area estimated at between 140,000 and 195,000 square kilometres (54,000 and 75,000\u00a0sq\u00a0mi). Within the Pantanal natural region, which is located between Brazil and Bolivia, is the \"world's largest tropical wetland area\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 62], "content_span": [63, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0052-0001", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Paraguay's Pantanal\nAccording one of the engineers charged with monitoring satellite data showing the \"evolution of the fires\", the Pantanal is a \"complex, fragile, and high-risk ecosystem because it's being transformed from a wetland to a productive system\". The Pantana is bounded by the Humid Chaco to the south, the Arid Chaco dry forests to the southwest, Cerrado savannas lie to the north, east and southeast, and the Chiquitano dry forests, to the west and northwest, where thousands of hectares burned in Bolivia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 62], "content_span": [63, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0053-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Paraguay's Pantanal\nA national parks researcher said that outsiders only know the Amazon, which is a \"shame because the Pantanal is a very important ecological place\". The Paran\u00e1 River, which flows through Argentina, Brazil and Paraguay, is the \"second largest river system in South America\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 62], "content_span": [63, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0054-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Fires in Peru\nPeru had nearly twice the growth in the number of fires in 2019 than Brazil, with most believed to be illegally set by ranchers, miners, and coca growers. Much of the fires are in the Madre de Dios which borders Brazil and Bolivia, though the fires there are not a result of those started in the other countries, according to the regional authority. However, they are still concerned about the impact of downwind emissions, particularly carbon monoxide, on residents of Madre de Dios. There were 128 forest fires reported in Peru in August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0055-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Environmental impacts of the fires, Emissions\nBy August 22, NASA's AIRS published maps of increased carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide resulting from Brazil's wildfires. On the same day, the European Union's Copernicus Climate Change Service reported a \"discernible spike\" in emissions of carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide generated by the fires.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 79], "content_span": [80, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0056-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Environmental impacts of the fires, Emissions\nAreas downwind of the fires have become covered with smoke, which can potentially last upwards of months at a time if the fires are left to burn out. Hospitals in cities like Porto Velho had reported over three times the average number of cases of patients suffering from the effects of smoke over the same year-to-year period in August 2019 than in other previous years. Besides hindering breathing, the smoke can exacerbates patients with asthma or bronchitis and have potential cancer risk, generally affecting the youth and elderly the most.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 79], "content_span": [80, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0057-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Environmental impacts of the fires, Biodiversity\nAccording to the World Wildlife Fund, the jaguar, for example, is already \"near threatened\" and the loss of food supplies and habitat due to the fires make the situation more critical.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 82], "content_span": [83, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0058-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Environmental impacts of the fires, Biodiversity\nScientists at the Natural History Museum in London described how while some forests have adapted to fire as \"important part of a forest ecosystem's natural cycle\", the Amazon rainforest\u2014which is \"made up of lowland, wetland forests\"\u2014is \"not well-equipped to deal with fire\". Other Amazon basin ecosystems, like the Cerrado region, with its \"large savannah, and lots of plants there have thick, corky, fire-resistant stems\", is \"fire-adapted\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 82], "content_span": [83, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0059-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Environmental impacts of the fires, Biodiversity\nMazeika Sullivan, associate professor at Ohio State University's School of Environment and Natural Resources, explained that the fires could have a massive toll on wildlife in the short term as many animals in the Amazon are not adapted for extraordinary fires. Sloths, lizards, anteaters, and frogs may unfortunately perish in larger numbers than others due to their small size and lack of mobility. Endemic species, like Milton's titi and Mura's saddleback tamarin, are believed to be beset by the fires. Aquatic species could also be affected due to the fires changing the water chemistry into a state unsuitable for life.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 82], "content_span": [83, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0059-0001", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Environmental impacts of the fires, Biodiversity\nLong-term effects could be more catastrophic. Parts of the Amazon rainforest's dense canopy were destroyed by the fires, therefore, exposing the lower levels of the ecosystem, which then alters the energy flow of the food chain. The fires affect water chemistry (such as decreasing the amount of dissolved oxygen in the water), temperature, and erosion rates, which in turn affects fish and mammals that depend on fish, such as the giant otter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 82], "content_span": [83, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0060-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, International actions\nOn August 22, the Bishops Conference for Latin America called the fires a \"tragedy\" and urged the UN, the international community, and governments of Amazonian countries, to \"take serious measures to save the world's lungs\". Colombian President Ivan Duque stated he wanted to lead a conservation pact with the other nations that share the Amazon rainforest with plans to present this to the UN General Assembly. Duque said, \"We must understand the protection of our Mother Earth and our Amazon is a duty, a moral duty.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0061-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, International actions\nUnited Nations Secretary General Ant\u00f3nio Guterres stated on August 23, that: \"In the midst of the global climate crisis, we cannot afford more damage to a major source of oxygen and biodiversity.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0062-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, International actions, G7 Summit and emergency aid\nAttention to the wildfires increased in the week prior to the G7 summit discussions on August 24\u201326 in Biarritz, France, led by President Macron. Macron stated his intent to open discussions related to the wildfires in the Brazilian part of the Amazon and Bolsonaro's response to them. Merkel has also backed Macron's statements and planned to make the issue a part of the G7 discussions; via a spokesperson, Merkel stated: \"The extent of the fires in the Amazon area is shocking and threatening, not only for Brazil and the other affected countries, but also for the whole world.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 84], "content_span": [85, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0062-0001", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, International actions, G7 Summit and emergency aid\nMacron further stated that possible international statute to protect the rainforest may be needed \"if a sovereign state took concrete actions that clearly went against the interest of the planet\". Bolsonaro expressed concern to United States president Donald Trump, that with Brazil not part of the G7, the country would be unrepresented in any such debate. Trump offered to take the position of the Brazilian government to the meeting and said that the US government did not agree to discuss the issue without Brazil's presence. Trump himself was absent from the environmental portion of the summit held on August 26, 2019, that discussed the fires and climate change, though members of his advisory team were in attendance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 84], "content_span": [85, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0063-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, International actions, G7 Summit and emergency aid\nDuring the summit, Macron and Chilean president Sebasti\u00e1n Pi\u00f1era negotiated with the other nations to authorize US$22 million in emergency funding to Amazonian countries to help fight the fires. The Trump administration did not approve of the measure as the funding set certain requirements on its use. When the final negotiations were completed, Bolsonaro stated that he would refuse those funds for Brazil, claiming that Macron's interests were about protecting France's agricultural business in French Guiana from Brazil's competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 84], "content_span": [85, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0063-0001", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, International actions, G7 Summit and emergency aid\nBolsonaro also criticised Macron by comparing the Amazon fires to the Notre-Dame de Paris fire earlier in 2019, suggesting Macron should take care of their internal fires before reaching out internationally. The governors of the states of Brazil most affected by the fires pressured Bolsonaro to accept the aid given. Bolsonaro later clarified that he would accept foreign aid for the fires, but only if Brazil has the authority to determine how it is used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 84], "content_span": [85, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0064-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, International actions, Amazon country summit\nBrazil's Bolsonaro stated on August 28, 2019, that the countries sharing the Amazon rainforest, excluding Venezuela, will hold a summit in Colombia on September 6, 2019, to discuss the ongoing Amazon fire situation. Representatives from seven countries attended: Brazil, Colombia, Peru, Ecuador, Bolivia, Guyana and Suriname. The countries signed a pact to coordinate monitoring of the Amazon forest and disaster response, and a better information network to coordinate their responses. The pact will also seek cooperative efforts to reduce the need for illegal deforestation in their countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 78], "content_span": [79, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0065-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, 2019 wildfires in the media\nThe media coverage had also broadly overshadowed the Amazon fires in Bolivia, Peru, and Paraguay by the fires and international impact of those in the BLA. The Amazon wildfires also occurred shortly after major wildfires reported in Greenland and Siberia after a globally hotter-than-average June and July, drawing away coverage of these natural disasters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0066-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, 2019 wildfires in the media\nSome of these photographs shared on social media were from past fire events in the Amazon or from fires elsewhere. Agence France-Presse and El Comercio published guides to help people \"fact-check\" on misleading photos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0067-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Celebrity responses to Amazon wildfires\nAmerican actor Leonardo DiCaprio said his environmental organization Earth Alliance is donating $5 million to local groups and indigenous communities to help protect the Amazon. In a webcast on November 28, 2019, President Jair Bolsonaro said DiCaprio's donations encourage NGOs to set the fires in return for donations, a charge DiCaprio, Global Wildlife Conservation, and IUCN Species Survival Commission vehemently denied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0068-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Celebrity responses to Amazon wildfires\nInstagram has been a platform for many celebrities who have spoken out about the wildfires such as Cara Delevingne, who posted a picture of the wildfires with the caption \"#PrayForAmazonia\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0069-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Celebrity responses to Amazon wildfires\nOther celebrities who made public contributions include actresses Vanessa Hudgens and Lana Condor, and Japanese musician Yoshiki.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0070-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Celebrity responses to Amazon wildfires\nOn August 26, 2019, Europe's richest man, Bernard Arnault, declared that his LVMH group will donate $11 million to aid in the fight against the Amazon rainforest wildfires.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287231-0071-0000", "contents": "2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires, Celebrity responses to Amazon wildfires\nAmerican restaurateur Eddie Huang said he is going vegan as a result of the 2019 Amazon fires. Khlo\u00e9 Kardashian urged her 98 million Instagram followers to adopt a plant-based diet for the same reason. Leonardo DiCaprio told his Instagram followers to \"eliminate or reduce consumption of beef\" as \"cattle ranching is one of the primary drivers of deforestation.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287232-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambazonian leadership crisis\nThe Ambazonian leadership crisis is an ongoing internal conflict within the Interim Government of Ambazonia. The crisis started on May 2, 2019, when a document signed by the first president of Ambazonia, Sisiku Julius Ayuk Tabe, acting from detention in Yaounde and in contact with Cameroon interior ministry officials, declared the dissolution of the cabinet of interim president Samuel Ikome Sako and restored its predecessor led by Ayuk himself. The move surprisingly sidelined the outcome of the election of interim president Sako in an expanded electoral college on 4 February 2018, combining the predecessor cabinet, country and regional representatives of Ambazonia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287232-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambazonian leadership crisis, Background\nFollowing the arrest of the Ayuk Tabe cabinet in January 2018 in Nigeria, Samuel Ikome Sako was elected the acting president of the Interim Government. His presidency saw attempts to unite the separatist camp under one roof (notably the creation of the Southern Cameroons Liberation Council in April 2019), but faced criticism for alleged incompetence, divisiveness and misappropriation of funds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287232-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambazonian leadership crisis, Leadership crisis\nOn May 2, 2019, Ayuk Tabe - still in prison - declared that the Sako-led cabinet had been dissolved, and that the cabinet led by himself had been restored. While the document recognized the Sako cabinet for its sincere efforts, it claimed that it was ultimately not fit to continue;", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287232-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambazonian leadership crisis, Leadership crisis\nConsidering that despite all efforts by well-meaning Ambazonians responding to my appeals to keep the Interim Government afloat by accommodating the caretaker cabinet while these issues of infighting in the struggle involving grave improprieties both in the management of material and human resources are sorted out, the caretaker cabinet has lost the ability to reconcile our people and, in doing so, has imperiled the identity and mission of the interim government to complete the decolonization of Southern Cameroons through advancing our collective national interests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287232-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambazonian leadership crisis, Leadership crisis\nIt is incumbent on me as a servant-leadership fiduciary to bring redress to the Southern Cameroons-Ambazonians, to their struggle and their nation, from their slow descent into a footnote of our own history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287232-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambazonian leadership crisis, Leadership crisis\nI hereby declare and direct that the caretaker cabinet is forthwith dissolved and that, the cabinet as was in office on January 5th 2018, when myself and parts of the leadership were abducted be reconstituted, restored and reactivated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287232-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambazonian leadership crisis, Leadership crisis\nAt some point after making this declaration, Ayuk Tabe reached out to former SDF parliamentarian Wirba Joseph, asking him to assume leadership of the revolution. Wirba declined the request, believing the Interim Government to be an \"imaginary structure\" and detrimental to the cause.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287232-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambazonian leadership crisis, Leadership crisis\nHowever, the Sako-led cabinet did not recognize Ayuk Tabe's authority to dismiss the interim cabinet, and consequently refused to step down. In June 2019, the Ambazonia Restoration Council \"impeached\" Ayuk Tabe for \"treasonous misconduct\", and declared that he had lost his mandate to speak on behalf of Ambazonia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287232-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambazonian leadership crisis, Leadership crisis\nThe leadership crisis complicated the already delicate allegiances among Ambazonian separatist movements. The Ambazonia Governing Council (AGovC), which traditionally has had a complicated relationship with the Interim Government, voiced support for Ayuk Tabe. Wirba Joseph called the impeachment of Ayuk Tabe \"absurd\". In November 2019, pro-separatist sources reported that Sako and his supporters had changed his title from Acting Interim President to President, aiming to permanently replace Ayuk Tabe even if the latter would ever be released.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287232-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambazonian leadership crisis, Consequences\nThe leadership conflict led to the seeming emergence of two governments, an elected leadership under president Sako in the Diaspora and a putative leadership under AyukTabe in Yaounde, each claiming legitimacy. This paradigm shift may have complicated and delayed the prospect of direct talks with the Cameroonian government. During the later half of 2019, Switzerland emerged as mediator for peace talks between Ambazonian nationalists and the Cameroonian government. These talks in Switzerland were boycotted by the Ayuk Tabe faction which threatened to derail an initiative supported by the United Nations, African Union and European Union except France. In July 2020, Cameroonian officials met with Ayuk Tabe to discuss a ceasefire absent any international mediator or guarantor. The Sako-led government responded to the meeting by declaring that prisoners cannot negotiate. The AGovC, which had supported Ayuk Tabe against Sako, took a similar stance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 1004]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287232-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambazonian leadership crisis, Ambazonian Coalition Team\nOn September 22, 2019, the interim government of Dr Sako brought together leaders and representatives of 10 Ambazonian nationalist movements to create the Ambazonia Coalition Team (ACT), or Team Ambazonia and a \u201cjoint platform for negotiations\u201d with the Cameroon government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287232-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambazonian leadership crisis, Attempts at resolution\nOn 13 October 2020, Ayuk Tabe called from prison in Yaounde to settle the dispute and cooperating against Cameroon. President Ikome Sako reiterated his refusal to recognize Ayuk Tabe's cabinet, stating that \"there is only one Interim Government\". He further insisted that Ayuk Tabe declare the dissolution of his cabinet before any reconciliation could take place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287232-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambazonian leadership crisis, Later developments\nThe leadership crisis resurfaced in mid-2021, when pro-Auyk Tabe AGovC announced an alliance with the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), a Biafran independence movement. Sako denounced the alliance on grounds of the importance of goodwill from Nigeria, and argued that AGovC had put the hundreds of thousands of Anglophone refugees in Nigeria at danger. The Sako-led government preferred instead to repair relations between Ambazonia and Nigeria. The AGovC fired back, stating that \"those who liberated Rwanda came from refugee camps in Uganda\" and that \"Nigeria has shown itself not to be our friend\". IPOB also dencounced Sako's claim to the Ambazonian presidency, declaring him one of many \"traitors and selfish fellows\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287233-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Amber Valley Borough Council election\nElections to Amber Valley Borough Council in Derbyshire, England took place on Thursday 2 May 2019. One third of the council seats were up for election. The Labour Party gained overall control of the council, taking a total of five seats from the Conservatives. In addition, the Green Party gained representation for the first time. After the election, the composition of the council was:-", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287233-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Amber Valley Borough Council election, Ward results\nPercentage change in party votes are from wards contested during the previous election cycle, which was 2015. Percentages might not add up to 100 percent due to rounding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287233-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Amber Valley Borough Council election, Ward results, Belper Central\nCandidate Neil Ploughman was suspended by the Labour Party when alleged anti-Semitic Facebook posts were discovered, however he remained on the ballot. After being elected, he initially sat as an independent on the authority. He was subsequently reinstated by the party with no charge to answer, and sits as a Labour councillor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 72], "content_span": [73, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287234-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambon earthquake\nOn 26 September 2019, a strong magnitude 6.5 earthquake struck Seram Island in Maluku, Indonesia, near the provincial capital of Ambon. The earthquake struck at 07:46:44 Eastern Indonesia Time (23:46:44 on 25 September UTC) with a shallow depth of 18\u00a0km. The tremor could be felt throughout the island, with an intensity of very strong (VII) reportedly felt in the provincial capital of Ambon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287234-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambon earthquake\nIn the aftermath of the quake, severe damages were reported throughout the island. More than 6,000 structures were damaged or destroyed throughout Maluku. A total of 41 people were killed by the quake and another 1,578 people were injured. More than 150,000 people evacuated and set makeshift camps due to aftershocks and fear of building collapse. As of 6 October, more than a week after the earthquake, approximately 1,105 aftershocks had been recorded by local geological stations in Maluku.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287234-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambon earthquake, Earthquake\nAccording to the Indonesian Meteorology, Climatology, and Geophysical Agency (BMKG), the earthquake's epicenter was located inland of Seram Island, some 42 kilometres (26\u00a0mi) northeast of the city of Ambon, the capital of Maluku and 10\u00a0km from the town of Kairatu. BMKG reported a magnitude of Mw\u202f 6.8, while the United States Geological Survey (USGS) reported a Mw\u202f 6.5 earthquake. It struck at 23:46:44 UTC, with a depth of 18.2 kilometres (11.3\u00a0mi) according to the USGS. BMKG later revised the magnitude of the earthquake to Mw\u202f 6.5. The agency reported that the earthquake was caused by a strike slip fault mechanism.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287234-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambon earthquake, Earthquake\nIndonesian National Earthquake Centre reported that the fault that was responsible for the quake hadn't been previously mapped by scientists. They stated that the fault had \"shifted\" due to deformation on the fault. The fault, however, was not considered as a new fault. The Indonesian Institute of Sciences stated that energy released by the earthquake was equivalent to that released in the 1945 nuclear bombing of Hiroshima.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287234-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambon earthquake, Earthquake\nStrong shaking were felt in the provincial capital of Ambon and in several other regencies in Maluku. Following the earthquake, roads were jammed with vehicles as mass panic occurred throughout Ambon. Panicked residents of Ambon had attempted to rush to higher ground due to tsunami fears, though BMKG stated that there was no risk of a tsunami. Several people were injured in the chaos and a woman was reportedly killed after she fell from her motorcycle during the evacuation. Road accidents reportedly occurred due to the mass panic. A man was apprehended by police for yelling \"tsunami\" out loud in the midst of a crowd of evacuees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287234-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambon earthquake, Earthquake\nThe Indonesian BMKG disclosed the information of the intensity of the earthquake felt by the resident in Maluku, with an intensity of V (moderate) in the provincial capital of Ambon and II (weak) in Banda Islands. The USGS, however, reported that the intensity of the earthquake was VII (very strong) in Ambon and its surrounding area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287234-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambon earthquake, Earthquake, Aftershocks\nBy morning of 27 September, BMKG reported that they have detected 239 aftershocks. On 6 October, the agency reported that more than 1,000 aftershocks had been recorded, of which the strongest was a magnitude 5.6, which struck Ambon at a depth of 10\u00a0km, less than an hour after the mainshock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287234-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambon earthquake, Earthquake, Aftershocks\nOn 11 October, a 5.2 magnitude earthquake struck Ambon at a depth of 10\u00a0km. The quake struck with a strike-slip mechanism, with its epicenter located offshore, approximately 16\u00a0km east of the city. The powerful quake managed to damage several buildings in Ambon. Several buildings including a music shop and an ICU suffered significant damages and a high school reportedly collapsed, killing a student. A government-owned office building also reportedly collapsed due to the aftershock. A total of 8 people were injured in the aftershock. Due to the powerful aftershock, shops were closed and dozens of people evacuated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287234-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambon earthquake, Damage\nIn the immediate aftermath of the earthquake, significant damages were reported in the provincial capital Ambon. Ambon's iconic Merah Putih Bridge, then the longest bridge in Eastern Indonesia, suffered cracks on its expansion joint. Buildings in Pattimura University, Ambon's oldest university, suffered cracks on the walls and caved ceilings. State Islamic University of Ambon reported cracks and wall collapse. The university's auditorium and library were also damaged in the quake. A lecturer and a student were injured and taken to the hospital, while another lecturer and another student were reportedly killed due to fallen debris. A major fire was also reported in a neighborhood in Ambon. Malls and public institutions reported slight damages. Places of worship such as churches and mosques also reportedly suffered slight damages", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 869]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287234-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambon earthquake, Damage\nIn Tulehu, a floating market collapsed onto the sea due to the shaking. Patients in Tulehu Hospital were evacuated to Darussalam University due to the damages in the hospital. In Central Maluku Regency, the main hospital, dr. H. Ishak Umarella Regional Hospital, suffered significant damages. Fearing that the hospital might collapse, emergency tents were set up outside of the hospital, with patients treated outside. Hundreds of houses were severely damaged in Central Maluku Regency. At least 4 villages reported moderate to heavy damages to many homes and structures in the villages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287234-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambon earthquake, Damage\nSoil liquefaction was reported in a village in Ambon, with mud and \"coral\" spewing out from the ground. There were also reports on multiple sand boil in the village. Rockfalls and landslides were also reported in the region. At least one person was killed after a landslide struck an elementary school in Ambon. Another 8 people were killed after a mine collapse onto miners in Ambon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287234-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambon earthquake, Damage\nAmbon's local disaster mitigation agency reported 25,000 people in temporary shelters following the earthquake, with 224 houses reported damaged. On 3 October, the figure rose to 6,000 damaged houses, of which nearly 2,000 were severely damaged or destroyed. Further examination revealed that more than 6,700 structures across the region were damaged or destroyed in the quake. Preliminary report showed that a total of 21 schools were damaged in Ambon. As of 9 October, at least 172 schools and campus were damaged, most of which reportedly suffered moderate damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287234-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambon earthquake, Casualties\nBy the evening of 27 September, local time, 23 fatalities had been confirmed from the earthquake, primarily due to falling rubble from damaged buildings. Over a hundred people were reportedly wounded. A majority of the casualties occurred in the Central Maluku Regency, where 14 deaths were reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287234-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambon earthquake, Casualties\nOn 29 September 2019, seven other people were found dead or had succumbed to their injuries, bringing the death toll to 30. Four more deaths were announced on September 30. The death toll rose to 36 on October 2 and 38 on October 4. On October 8, at least 39 people were declared dead, with 1,578 reported injuries. 41 deaths were finally reported on October 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287234-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambon earthquake, Response\nPresident of Indonesia Joko Widodo expressed his condolences for the earthquake, and stated that affected victims would have their medical fees covered by the government. At least 2,000 emergency packages were sent to Maluku. The Indonesian National Board for Disaster Management released Rp 1 billion (c. USD 70,000) in immediate funding and Rp 515 million in logistical support. The Ministry of Social Affairs released a further Rp 1.1 billion in funds, later announced that those who had relatives killed by the quake would be compensated with a total of Rp15 million rupiah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287234-0014-0001", "contents": "2019 Ambon earthquake, Response\nThe Indonesian Ministry of Public Works and Public Housing provided sanitation and gallons of drinkable water to Maluku. The Ministry announced that \"habitable houses\" will be built in Maluku to those who had lost their homes in the quake. Approximately 3,000 houses will be built across 11 cities and regencies in Maluku.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287234-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambon earthquake, Response\nImmediately after the disaster, the provincial government of Maluku declared a state of emergency for 14 days. It later made a plea to Jakarta to help with the rehabilitation process. Four days after the earthquake, Ambon local government declared a disaster declaration for 2 weeks. On 9 October, due to the increasing number of evacuee, the provincial government of Maluku extended the state of emergency to an unspecified time amount. The local government of Ambon, however, stated that they would not extend the state of emergency , effectively ending the state of emergency period in Ambon on 9 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287234-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambon earthquake, Response\nDue to the \"unusual\" number and \"aggressiveness\" of earthquakes and aftershocks in the region, the Indonesian National Disaster Mitigation Agency announced that it would conduct a joint study with experts from Bandung Institute of Technology (ITB) on the seismic zone and the fault mechanism in the area. Consequently, a total of 11 seismographs were installed in the region. The study later proposed an earthquake-proof structural design for educational institutions in Indonesia. The agency also announced that a total of Rp 2 billion rupiah of emergency funds would be provided to ease the relief efforts in Maluku. It also provided economic relief programs to the evacuees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287234-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambon earthquake, Response\nThe Indonesian National Police sent logistics and essential supplies to the evacuees. The Regional Police of Maluku provided trauma healing and counseling to treat PTSD, with check-ups routinely held every day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287234-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambon earthquake, Response\nMultiple political parties, community organisations and universities also sent aids to Maluku. Perempuan Bangsa (Nation's Women), which is under the affiliation of Indonesian National Awakening Party, assisted with emotional counseling for the affected. National Democrat Party (Nasdem) sent a team of medical health professionals to Maluku. Government-owned health insurance company BPJS and major aid organisation Rumah Zakat sent hundreds of logistics to Maluku. Meanwhile, University of Indonesia sent the local government of Ambon an Earthquake Warning Alert System (EWAS). Fundraisers were also set up by youth organisations in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287234-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambon earthquake, Response\nMoluccan community in Waalwijk, Netherlands made a plea to the local government to send aid to Ambon. The majority of the council members overwhelmingly accepted the motion. Ex-senator from Netherlands' GroenLinks Party Samuel Richard Pormes stated that he hoped for the willingness of the Indonesian National Disaster Mitigation Agency to cooperate for the aids distribution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287234-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambon earthquake, Response\nThere were many complaints from evacuees that they had not received aids, donations and logistics from the government. Maluku's government admitted that relief effort and aids delivery were hampered due to the inaccessibility of some villages in the region. They later added that there was a shortage of blankets, tarps and tents in some evacuation centres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287234-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Ambon earthquake, Response\nOn 29 October, 9 days after his second inauguration, Indonesian President Joko Widodo visited several evacuation centres in Maluku to check with the evacuees. He stated that the government would send more aids and emergency funds and that houses that had been either damaged or destroyed would be rebuilt or repaired. A total compensation of Rp50 million would be handed to those who had their houses heavily damaged by the quake, while a total of Rp25 million and Rp10 million would be handed to those with moderate and slight damages, respectively. He later promised that the aid funds would be available for the evacuees in 6 months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287235-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 America East Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2019 America East Conference Baseball Tournament was held from May 22 to 25, 2019. The top six teams out of the league's seven members met in the double-elimination tournament held at Varsity Field in Vestal, New York, the home park of Binghamton. The tournament champion, Stony Brook, received the conference's automatic bid into the 2019 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287235-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 America East Conference Baseball Tournament, Seeding and format\nThe top six teams from the regular season were seeded one through six based on conference winning percentage only. The No. 1 and No. 2 seeds received a first-round bye. The teams then played a double-elimination tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 68], "content_span": [69, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287236-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 America East Conference Women's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2019 America East Conference Women's Soccer Tournament was the postseason women's soccer tournament for the America East Conference held from November 3 through November 10, 2019. The five-match tournament took place at campus sites, with the higher seed hosting. The six-team single-elimination tournament consisted of three rounds based on seeding from regular season conference play. The defending champions were the Albany Great Danes, who were unable to defend their title after losing in the Quarterfinals to Hartford. Stony Brook won their second tournament in three years after a 2\u20131 victory in the final. It was the first victory for first year head coach Tobias Bischof.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287237-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 America East Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 America East Men's Basketball Tournament was the postseason men's basketball tournament for the America East Conference, which was held on March 9, 12, and 16, 2019. All tournament games were played on home arenas of the higher-seeded school. Vermont defeated UMBC 66\u201349 in the championship game and received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. This was the seventh time Vermont has won the America East tournament championship, which ties them with former member Northeastern for the most all time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287237-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 America East Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nThe top eight teams in the conference standings qualified for the tournament. The teams were seeded by record in conference, with a tiebreaker system to seed teams with identical conference records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 52], "content_span": [53, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287237-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 America East Men's Basketball Tournament, Bracket and results\nTeams are reseeded after each round with highest remaining seeds receiving home court advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287238-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 America East Men's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2019 America East Men's Soccer Tournament was the 31st edition of the tournament. The tournament decided the America East Conference champion and guaranteed representative into the 2019 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament. The tournament began on November 9 and concluded on November 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287238-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 America East Men's Soccer Tournament\nDefending champion, New Hampshire, was the number one seed coming into the tournament. Both New Hampshire and Vermont were statistically tied for first place in the conference. New Hampshire broke the tie by defeating Hartford twice, while Vermont split their games with Hartford. New Hampshire was seeking a consecutive tournament win since UMBC 2013-2015 seasons. In the final round of the tournament, New Hampshire played #3 seed Hartford, and the first and only goal of the game was kicked in by New Hampshire 3:27 into the game. This was New Hampshire's second America East conference title in school history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287238-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 America East Men's Soccer Tournament\nNew Hampshire was the conference's lone bid into the NCAA Tournament. They hosted Fairleigh-Dickinson in the first round, defeating Fairleigh-Dickinson 1-0 at home. They would then travel to 10 seed #13 Virginia Tech where they fell 1-4. This was New Hampshire's fourth appearance in NCAA Men's Soccer Tournament. New Hampshire finished the season nationally ranked 22nd by the United Soccer Coaches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287239-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 America East Women's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 America East Women's Basketball Tournament began on March 6 and concluded with the championship game on March 15. Maine won the championship game over Hartford to earn the automatic bid to the NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287239-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 America East Women's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nTeams are seeded by record within the conference, with a tiebreaker system to seed teams with identical conference records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 54], "content_span": [55, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287239-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 America East Women's Basketball Tournament, Schedule\nAll tournament games are nationally televised on an ESPN network:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 57], "content_span": [58, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287239-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 America East Women's Basketball Tournament, Bracket and Results\nTeams are reseeded after each round with highest remaining seeds receiving home court advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 68], "content_span": [69, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287240-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2019 American Athletic Conference Baseball Tournament was held at Spectrum Field in Clearwater, Florida from May 21 through May 26. The event, held at the end of the conference regular season, determined the champion of the American Athletic Conference for the 2019 season. The winner of the double-elimination tournament, Cincinnati, will receive the conference's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287240-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference Baseball Tournament, Format and seeding\nThe top eight baseball teams in The American were seeded based on their records in conference play. The tournament used a two bracket double-elimination format, leading to a single championship game between the winners of each bracket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 73], "content_span": [74, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287241-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference Football Championship Game\nThe 2019 American Athletic Conference Football Championship Game was a college football game played on December 7, 2019, at Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium in Memphis, Tennessee, to determine the 2019 champion of the American Athletic Conference. The conference's 5th championship game featured the champion of its East Division, the Cincinnati Bearcats, against the West Division champion, the Memphis Tigers. The game was televised on ABC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287241-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference Football Championship Game\nThe game is hosted by the divisional champion with the better winning percentage in conference games. Memphis claimed hosting rights with a 34\u201324 home win over Cincinnati to close out the regular season on November 29. This left both teams with a 7\u20131 conference record, with Memphis holding the tiebreaker due to the Tigers' head-to-head win. Navy ultimately tied Memphis for the West Division crown, but the Tigers also held that tiebreaker due to a head-to-head win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287241-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference Football Championship Game, Teams, Cincinnati\nThe Cincinnati Bearcats clinched the AAC East, and a berth in the Championship Game, with a win over Temple on November 23. This is Cincinnati's first-ever Championship Game appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 79], "content_span": [80, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287241-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference Football Championship Game, Teams, Memphis\nMemphis clinched at least a share of the West Division title with their November 29 win over Cincinnati, and also claimed hosting rights by virtue of holding all possible tiebreakers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 76], "content_span": [77, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287242-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Tewapack (talk | contribs) at 20:46, 16 March 2020 (Reverted edits by Yahboijonsnow45 (talk) to last version by Editorofthewiki). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287242-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 American Athletic Conference Men's Basketball Tournament was the postseason men's basketball tournament for the American Athletic Conference. It was held from March 14 through March 17, 2019 at the FedEx Forum in Memphis, Tennessee. Cincinnati defeated Houston 69\u201357 in the championship to earn the American Athletic Conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. It was the second consecutive tournament championship for Cincinnati.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287242-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nAll 12 conference teams will participate in the conference tournament. The top four teams receive a bye into the quarterfinals. Teams are seeded by record within the conference, with a tiebreaker system to seed teams with identical conference records. Tiebreakers: win/loss record, head-to-head record, record against the highest ranked team outside of the tied teams, record against the second highest ranked team outside of the tied teams, etc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 68], "content_span": [69, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287243-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference Men's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2019 American Athletic Conference Men's Soccer Tournament was the 7th edition of the American Athletic Conference Men's Soccer Tournament. The tournament decided the American Athletic Conference champion and guaranteed representative into the 2019 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament. The tournament began on November 9 and concluded on November 16. For the first time in tournament history the six teams in the field were identical to the same teams that played in the previous year's tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287243-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference Men's Soccer Tournament\nTwo-time defending champions, SMU, successfully three-peated in the AAC Tournament, defeating UCF 1\u20130 in the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287244-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference Softball Tournament\nThe 2019 American Athletic Conference Softball tournament was held at Cougar Softball Stadium on the campus of University of Houston in Houston, Texas from May 9 through May 12, 2019. The tournament was to determine the champion of the American Athletic Conference for the 2019 NCAA Division I softball season. The tournament winner would have earned the American Athletic Conference's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Division I Softball Tournament. All games of the tournament aired on American Digital Network. Due to Weather conditions the last quarterfinal game between Houston and UConn, along with the two semifinal games, and championship game were canceled. Therefore the Automatic bid was awarded to the regular season champion South Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 804]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287244-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference Softball Tournament\nEntering the event, Tulsa had won three straight championships, while UCF had won in 2015. Former member Louisville won the first Tournament in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287244-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference Softball Tournament, Format and seeding\nThe American's eight teams were seeded based on conference winning percentage from the round-robin regular season. They then played a single-elimination tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 73], "content_span": [74, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287245-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference Women's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 American Athletic Conference Women's Basketball Tournament was a postseason tournament held from March 8 through 11, 2019 in the Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Connecticut. UConn was the winner of the American Athletic Tournament and earned an automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287245-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference Women's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nAll teams in the American Athletic Conference qualified for the tournament. Teams were seeded based on conference record, and then a tiebreaker system was used. Teams seeded 5\u201312 played in the opening round, and teams seeded 1\u20134 received a bye to the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 70], "content_span": [71, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287245-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference Women's Basketball Tournament, Schedule\nAll tournament games are nationally televised on an ESPN network:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 73], "content_span": [74, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287246-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference Women's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2019 American Athletic Conference Women's Soccer Tournament was the postseason women's soccer tournament for the American Athletic Conference held from November 3 to November 10, 2019. The first round was hosted by the higher seed, and the Semifinals and Final took place at the home field of the regular season champion. Memphis. The six-team single-elimination tournament consisted of three rounds based on seeding from regular season conference play. The Memphis are the defending tournament champions. Memphis was unable to defend its title, losing 2\u20130 to South Florida in the final. USF's win was the program's second and also the second for coach Denise Schilte-Brown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287247-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference football season\nThe 2019 American Athletic Conference football season is the 28th NCAA Division I FBS Football season of the American Athletic Conference (The American). The season is the seventh since the former Big East Conference dissolved and became the American Athletic Conference and the sixth season of the College Football Playoff in place. The American is considered a member of the Group of Five (G5) together with Conference USA (C\u2013USA), the Mid-American Conference (MAC), the Mountain West Conference and the Sun Belt Conference. The entire schedule was released on February 7, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287247-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference football season, Previous season\nAfter winning their first twelve games of the season, UCF extended their school record winning streak to 25 consecutive games, dating back to the start of the 2017 season. The Knights also secured their second consecutive undefeated regular season and American Athletic Conference title by defeating Memphis in the 2018 AAC Championship game, a rematch of the 2017 game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287247-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference football season, Previous season\nSeven teams participated in bowl games during the 2018 season; the league went 2-5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287247-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference football season, Previous season\nTulane defeated Louisiana 41\u201324 in the 2018 Cure Bowl. USF lost to Marshall, 38-20, in the Gasparilla Bowl. Memphis lost to Wake Forest 38\u201335 in the 2018 Birmingham Bowl. Houston lost to Army 70\u201314 in the Armed Forces Bowl. In this game, Army tied records for the largest victory margin and most points scored in an FBS bowl game. Temple lost to Duke 56\u201327 in the Independence Bowl. Cincinnati defeated Virginia Tech 35\u201331 in the Military Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287247-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference football season, Previous season\nIn the New Year's Six Game, No. 8 UCF lost to No. 11 LSU 40\u201332 in the Fiesta Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287247-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference football season, Preseason, Impending departure of UConn\nThe most significant development in the conference during the 2019 preseason was the announcement that UConn would leave The American after the 2019\u201320 school year to join several of its former conference rivals in the current non-football iteration of the Big East Conference. The move was first reported on June 21, 2019 by a Boston-area sports news website and quickly picked up by national media outlets. On June 27, the Big East and UConn jointly confirmed the Huskies' impending conference move, but that announcement did not specify a date. The Huskies' Big East entrance date was confirmed for July 1, 2020 after UConn and The American reached a buyout agreement. At the time this agreement was announced, UConn also announced that its football team would become an FBS independent once it joined the Big East.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 90], "content_span": [91, 909]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287247-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference football season, Preseason, American Athletic Conference Media Days\nThe American Athletic Conference conducted its 2019 American Athletic Conference media day on July 17 in Newport, Rhode Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 101], "content_span": [102, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287247-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference football season, Preseason, American Athletic Conference Media Days, Preseason Media Poll\nThe preseason Poll was released at the 2019 American Media Day on July 16, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 123], "content_span": [124, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287247-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference football season, Head coaches, Coaching changes\nOn November 29, 2018, East Carolina fired head coach Scottie Montgomery. On December 3, 2018 ECU hired James Madison head coach Mike Houston as their new head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 81], "content_span": [82, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287247-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference football season, Head coaches, Coaching changes\nOn December 7, 2018, Geoff Collins left Temple to become head coach at Georgia Tech. On December 13, 2018, The Owls initially named Miami defensive coordinator Manny Diaz as the new head coach. However, on December 30, 2018 Diaz left to return to Miami as head coach after Mark Richt's retirement. On January 10, 2019 Temple announced Rod Carey as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 81], "content_span": [82, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287247-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference football season, Head coaches, Coaching changes\nOn December 30, 2018 Major Applewhite was fired after a blowout loss in the 2018 Armed Forces Bowl. Houston replaced Applewhite by hiring Dana Holgorsen from West Virginia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 81], "content_span": [82, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287247-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference football season, Head coaches, Coaches\nNote: All stats current through the completion of the 2019 season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 72], "content_span": [73, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287247-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference football season, Schedule, Regular season\nThe regular season began on August 29, 2019, and will end on December 14. As a result of the calendar, all teams except Navy will have two bye weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 75], "content_span": [76, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287247-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference football season, Schedule, Regular season, Week 6\n*Note: The UConn/USF Kickoff was moved to noon as a safety precaution after receiving guidance from the Connecticut Department of Public Health regarding the mosquito-borne eastern equine encephalitis virus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 83], "content_span": [84, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287247-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference football season, The American vs other conferences, The American vs Power 5 matchups\nThis is a list of games The American has scheduled versus power conference teams (ACC, Big 10, Big 12, Pac-12, Notre Dame and SEC). Although the NCAA does not consider BYU a \"Power Five\" school, the ACC considers games against BYU as satisfying its \"Power Five\" scheduling requirement. Though the American does not consider BYU a power 5 team they consider them an equally strength opponent. All rankings are from the current AP Poll at the time of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 118], "content_span": [119, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287247-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference football season, The American vs other conferences, The American vs Group of Five matchups\nThe following games include The American teams competing against teams from the C-USA, MAC, Mountain West or Sun Belt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 124], "content_span": [125, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287247-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference football season, The American vs other conferences, The American vs FBS independents matchups\nThe following games include The American teams competing against FBS independents other than Notre Dame, which is universally considered a Power Five program, or BYU, which some but not all Power Five leagues consider to be a Power Five opponent for non-conference scheduling purposes. Of the remaining four independents, two are on American member schedules\u2014Army and UMass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 127], "content_span": [128, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287247-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference football season, Awards and honors, American Athletic Individual Awards\nThe following individuals received postseason honors as voted by the American Athletic Conference football coaches at the end of the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 105], "content_span": [106, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287247-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference football season, Awards and honors, All-Americans\nThe 2019 College Football All-America Teams are 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), FOX Sports (FOX) College Football News (CFN), Bleacher Report (BR), Scout.com, Phil Steele (PS), SB Nation (SB), Athlon Sports, Pro Football Focus (PFF) and Yahoo! Sports (Yahoo! ).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 83], "content_span": [84, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287247-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference football season, Awards and honors, All-Americans\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. Any player named to the First Team by all five of the NCAA-recognized selectors is deemed a Unanimous All-American.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 83], "content_span": [84, 947]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287247-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference football season, NFL Draft\nThe following list includes all AAC players who were drafted in the 2020 NFL draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 60], "content_span": [61, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287248-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference men's soccer season\nThe 2019 American Athletic Conference men's soccer season was the 7th season of men's varsity soccer in the conference. The season began on August 30, 2019, and concluded on November 5, 2019. The regular season culminated with the 2019 American Athletic Conference Men's Soccer Tournament, which was held from November 9 to November 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287248-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference men's soccer season\nThe defending regular season and tournament champions, UCF and SMU, respectively, successfully defended their title. Both UCF, SMU, as well as South Florida were selected by the NCAA Selection Committee to the 2019 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament. SMU reached the quarterfinals before losing to eventual national runners-up, Virginia. UCF lost to SMU in the Sweet Sixteen, and South Florida lost to Louisville in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287248-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference men's soccer season, Background, Previous season\nThe 2018 regular season was won by UCF, who finished conference play with a 5\u20131\u20131 record, and won on tiebreakers against SMU. SMU won the 2018 American Tournament, defeating UCF 5\u20134 in penalty kicks following a 1\u20131 draw in regulation and overtime. SMU earned the conference's automatic berth into the NCAA Tournament, while UCF and Connecticut received at-large berths into the tournament. In the NCAA Tournament, SMU lost in the first round to Oregon State. Connecticut beat rivals, Rhode Island, in the first round, before losing to Indiana in the second round. UCF was one of the 16 seeded teams (seeded 14th), allowing them to earn a bye into the second round. There, they lost in overtime to Lipscomb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 82], "content_span": [83, 789]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287248-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference men's soccer season, Background, Previous season\nFollowing the season, Cal Jennings won the Offensive MVP award for the conference. Jacob Hauser-Ramsey of Connecticut won the Defensive MVP. Fellow UCF players, Louis Perez, Yannik Oettl, and Scott Calabrese won the AAC Midfielder, Goalkeeper, and Coach of the Year awards, respectively. Perez and Jennings were also named All-Americans by United Soccer Coaches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 82], "content_span": [83, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287248-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference men's soccer season, Background, Previous season\nEmil Cuello was the first AAC player to be drafted in the 2019 MLS SuperDraft, when he was selected by the LA Galaxy with the 19th overall pick in the first round of the draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 82], "content_span": [83, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287248-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference men's soccer season, Preseason, Preseason poll\nThe preseason poll was released on August 20, 2019. UCF was picked to win the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 80], "content_span": [81, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287248-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference men's soccer season, Preseason, Preseason national rankings\nThe preseason national rankings were announced in August 2019. United Soccer Coaches, Soccer America, and TopDrawerSoccer.com do a Top-25 preseason poll. CollegeSoccerNews.com do a Top-30 preseason poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 93], "content_span": [94, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287248-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference men's soccer season, Postseason, AAC Tournament\nThe 2019 Tournament will be held at the home ground of the regular season winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 81], "content_span": [82, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287248-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference men's soccer season, Postseason, Postseason awards and honors, Conference honors\nYannik Oettl, UCFCal Jennings, UCFGarrett McLaughlin, SMUHarris Partain, TulsaYoni Sorokin, UCFDayonn Harris, UConnGabriel Costa, SMUYanis Leerman, UCFJavain Brown, South FloridaAvionne Flanagan, South FloridaEddie Munjoma, South FloridaSam Ashton, Memphis", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 114], "content_span": [115, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287248-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference men's soccer season, Postseason, Postseason awards and honors, Conference honors\nSimon Lefebvre, TempleLouis Perez, UCFDonovan Segree, CincinnatiRobin Lapert, UConnFelix Metzler, UConnBen Roberts, MemphisGurman Sangha, MemphisAdrian Billhardt, South FloridaKnut Ahlander, SMULukas Fernandes, TemplePierre Cayet, TempleMitchell Cashion, Tulsa", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 114], "content_span": [115, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287248-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference men's soccer season, Postseason, Postseason awards and honors, Conference honors\nGlademir Mendoza, UCFGino Vivi, UCFMo Williams, CincinnatiBen Awashie, UConnMoussa Wade, UConnPeter Chang, MemphisFord Hunt, MemphisJavain Brown, South FloridaSal Mazzaferro, South FloridaHenrik Bredeli, SMUSean Karani, Temple", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 114], "content_span": [115, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287248-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference men's soccer season, MLS SuperDraft, Homegrown contracts\nThe Homegrown Player Rule is a Major League Soccer program that allows MLS teams to sign local players from their own development academies directly to MLS first team rosters. Before the creation of the rule in 2008, every player entering Major League Soccer had to be assigned through one of the existing MLS player allocation processes, such as the MLS SuperDraft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 90], "content_span": [91, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287248-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 American Athletic Conference men's soccer season, MLS SuperDraft, Homegrown contracts\nTo place a player on its homegrown player list, making him eligible to sign as a homegrown player, players must have resided in that club's home territory and participated in the club's youth development system for at least one year. Players can play college soccer and still be eligible to sign a homegrown contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 90], "content_span": [91, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series\nThe 2019 American League Championship Series was a best-of-seven series between the two winners of the 2019 American League Division Series, the Houston Astros and New York Yankees, for the American League (AL) pennant and the right to play in the 2019 World Series. The Astros defeated the Yankees in six games, advancing to face the 2019 National League champions, the Washington Nationals, who they lost to in seven games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series\nThe series was played in a 2\u20133\u20132 format, with the Astros hosting the first two and last two (if necessary) games at Minute Maid Park due to them having the best record MLB. The series was the 50th in league history, with Fox/Fox Sports 1 televising all games in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series\nFor the third straight year, Major League Baseball sold presenting sponsorships to all of its postseason series; as with the NLCS, this ALCS was sponsored by GEICO and officially known as the 2019 American League Championship Series presented by GEICO.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Background\nThe best-of-five American League Division Series were scheduled for October 4\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Background\nThe top-seeded Houston Astros won their first two games against the Tampa Bay Rays, winner of the American League Wild Card Game. The Rays won the next two games to force a deciding Game 5, which Houston won to advance to their third straight ALCS; each game of the series was won by the home team. Houston was 1\u20131 in prior ALCS appearances. When they competed in the National League, Houston was 1\u20133 in NLCS appearances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Background\nThe second-seeded New York Yankees swept their series against the third-seeded Minnesota Twins to clinch their 17th ALCS appearance. New York was 11\u20135 in prior ALCS appearances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Background\nThis series was a sequel to the 2017 ALCS, which the Astros won in seven games, and the third overall postseason meeting between the two teams. The Astros and Yankees faced each other seven times during the 2019 regular season, with the Astros winning four of those games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 1\nGame 1 starting pitchers were Masahiro Tanaka for the Yankees and Zack Greinke for the Astros. The Yankees scored first with Gleyber Torres driving in DJ LeMahieu in the top of the fourth inning. They added two runs in the top of the sixth, on home runs by Torres and Giancarlo Stanton, and added two more runs in the top of the seventh, via four consecutive two-out singles, with Torres collecting two more RBIs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 1\nIn the top of the ninth, the Yankees extended their lead to 7\u20130, via a leadoff homer by Gio Urshela and another RBI by Torres, this one coming on a fielder's choice, as LeMahieu scored from third on a groundout. Jonathan Lo\u00e1isiga concluded matters, pitching the bottom of the ninth, with the game ending on a Michael Brantley fly out to Cameron Maybin as the Yankees took a 1\u20130 series lead. Tanaka earned the win, allowing just one hit while striking out four and facing the minimum in his six innings (18 batters). Greinke was charged with the loss, allowing three runs on seven hits in six innings while striking out six.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nGame 2 starting pitchers were James Paxton for New York and Justin Verlander for Houston. Houston scored first, as Carlos Correa doubled in Alex Bregman who had singled to lead off the bottom of the second inning. Yankees manager Aaron Boone removed Paxton after 2+1\u20443 innings\u2014Paxton had allowed one run on four hits while striking out three. The Yankees took a 2\u20131 lead in the fourth, with Aaron Judge homering after DJ LeMahieu had walked. Houston tied the game in the fifth, on a home run by George Springer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nVerlander departed after 6+2\u20443 innings, having allowed two runs on five hits while striking out seven. With no further scoring through regulation, the game went to extra innings. After a scoreless tenth inning, Correa led off the 11th with a home run off J. A. Happ to give the Astros a 3\u20132 win and tie the series at 1, going into Yankee Stadium for the next three games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 3\nGame 3 starting pitchers were Gerrit Cole for the Astros and Luis Severino for the Yankees. The Astros scored first on a home run by Jos\u00e9 Altuve in the first inning. Josh Reddick followed with another homer in the second. The game was delayed by 20 minutes before the top of the fifth inning, as home plate umpire Jeff Nelson had to leave the game, due to the effects of being hit by a foul ball during the top of the fourth inning; Kerwin Danley, who had been the second base umpire, took over behind the plate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 3\nSeverino left the game in the fifth inning after allowing two runs on five hits, walking three and striking out six in 4+1\u20443 innings. Houston added two runs in the seventh on a wild pitch by Yankee relief pitcher Zack Britton that allowed Altuve to score, and a sacrifice fly by Yuli Gurriel that scored Michael Brantley. Cole pitched seven shutout innings for the Astros, allowing four hits with five walks and seven strikeouts. Gleyber Torres put the Yankees on the board in the eighth inning with a home run off Joe Smith. Houston closer Roberto Osuna pitched a perfect ninth inning for his first save of the postseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 4\nGame 4 was originally scheduled for October 16, but was postponed and rescheduled to October 17 due to the \"bomb cyclone\" that hit the Northeast. Umpire Jeff Nelson was removed from the umpiring crew after tests indicated he suffered a concussion during Game 3; he was replaced by Mike Everitt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 4\nThe Yankees scored once in the first inning, forcing in a run with two walks after having runners on first and second with two out. The Astros took a 3\u20131 lead in the third inning, via a three-run home run by George Springer. Houston starting pitcher Zack Greinke exited after 4+1\u20443 innings, having allowing one run on three hits and striking out five. New York starter Masahiro Tanaka was removed one batter into the sixth inning; he was replaced by Chad Green, who gave up a three-run home run to Carlos Correa three batters later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 4\nTanaka was charged with four runs on four hits, while striking out one. A two-run home run by Gary S\u00e1nchez in the bottom of the sixth cut the Astros' lead to 6\u20133. A double by Alex Bregman followed by two Yankee errors gave the Astros a run in the eighth. With runners on first and third and nobody out, Yankee left-hander CC Sabathia entered the game in relief of Adam Ottavino and threw 20 pitches to five batters, retiring two, before leaving with a shoulder injury to a standing ovation from fans and players on both teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0011-0002", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 4\nThe Yankees removed Sabathia from their roster the next day, rendering him ineligible to pitch in the World Series and ending his storied 19-year career. Houston extended their lead to 8\u20133 in the ninth inning, on an error, wild pitch, and single. The Yankees were unable to score in the bottom of the ninth, as Roberto Osuna concluded matters by retiring Gleyber Torres on a flyout to Springer and the Astros were a victory away from playing Washington in the World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 5\nGame 5 was originally scheduled for October 17, but was rescheduled to October 18 when Game 4 was postponed. Pitcher CC Sabathia, who had left Game 4 with a shoulder injury, was removed from the Yankees' postseason roster and replaced by Ben Heller.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 5\nThe Astros took an early 1\u20130 lead, as George Springer led off the game with an infield single, went to second on a passed ball, advanced to third on a ground out, and then scored on a wild pitch. DJ LeMahieu tied the game with a home run to lead off the bottom of the first, followed four batters later by an Aaron Hicks three-run homer that hit the right-field foul pole to give the Yankees a 4\u20131 lead. New York starting pitcher James Paxton left after six innings, having allowed one run on four hits while striking out nine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 5\nHouston starter Justin Verlander went seven innings, striking out nine while allowing four runs on five hits, and suffered the loss. With no scoring other than in the first inning, Aroldis Chapman set down the side in order in the top of the ninth, earning his second save this postseason, as he retired Springer on a groundout to Gio Urshela to send the series back to Houston and extend the Yankees' season. This was the first game in MLB postseason history (1,609 games) that both teams scored in the first inning, then were held scoreless the rest of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 6\nIn a \"bullpen game\", the starting pitchers were Brad Peacock, who had pitched a scoreless eighth inning in Game 5 for Houston, and Chad Green for New York. Yuli Gurriel gave Houston an early lead, with a three-run homer in the bottom of the first inning. Green left after the first inning, having allowed three runs on two hits, while recording one strikeout. The Yankees closed to 3\u20131 in the second inning, after Didi Gregorius doubled and Gary S\u00e1nchez hit an RBI single with two out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0014-0001", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 6\nPeacock left after 1+2\u20443 innings, having allowed a run on two hits while striking out two batters. A Gio Urshela home run in the top of the fourth inning trimmed Houston's lead to 3\u20132. In the bottom of the sixth, Alex Bregman hit into a fielder's choice, scoring the fourth run for the Astros. In the top of the ninth inning, an Urshela single was followed two batters later by a DJ LeMahieu home run that tied the game at 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0014-0002", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 6\nAfter George Springer extended the bottom of the ninth with a two-out walk, Jos\u00e9 Altuve hit a walk-off two-run home run off Aroldis Chapman to win the game and send the Astros to their second World Series in three years. Altuve's pennant-winning homer was the fifth to end any LCS, after Chris Chambliss (1976 ALCS), Aaron Boone (2003 ALCS), Magglio Ordonez (2006 ALCS), and Travis Ishikawa (2014 NLCS).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 6\nAltuve was named series MVP for Houston, while with this loss the 2010s became the first decade since the 1910s not to have the Yankees play in a World Series, as their last appearance (and title) was in 2009, and the second decade that the Yankees did not win at least one World Series (lost to the Dodgers in 1981 in their only appearance in the World Series in the 1980s).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Aftermath\nDuring clubhouse celebrations after the Astros won Game 6 of the 2019 ALCS, Astros assistant general manager Brandon Taubman taunted a group of nearby female reporters by aggressively praising Astros relief pitcher Roberto Osuna, an alleged domestic abuser. The Astros had received backlash after trading for Osuna near the 2018 trade deadline as he was serving a 75-game suspension after serious domestic violence accusations. Taubman, who was involved in the acquisition of Osuna, was defensive of Osuna's performance as a reliever and overall presence on the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Aftermath\nTaubman had previously complained about the fact that one of the reporters in the group had a practice of tweeting out a domestic violence hotline number whenever Osuna took the mound for the Astros. After the season, Taubman was placed on MLB's ineligible list through at least the end of the 2020 season as a result of his behavior.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Aftermath\nThe Astros would go on to lose the 2019 World Series to the National League Champion Washington Nationals in 7 games with the road team winning all seven games, Washington won 1, 2, 6, and the deciding Game 7 at Minute Maid Park in Houston and Houston won all 3 games at Nationals Park in Washington, D.C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Aftermath\nOn December 18, 2019, the Yankees signed free agent pitcher Gerrit Cole away from the Astros, only sparking the recent rivalry between the two clubs which started during the 2017 American League Championship Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Aftermath\nThe animosity between the two teams only grew stronger in January of the next year, due to the revelations of the Houston Astros sign stealing scandal during the 2017 and 2018 seasons. Hours after MLB announced its findings, Astros owner Jim Crane fired Luhnow and Hinch, while a day later the Red Sox fired Alex Cora, who had been the bench coach for the 2017 Astros.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0019-0001", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Aftermath\nA week later, the New York Mets and Carlos Beltr\u00e1n, who was hired as their manager in the 2019\u20132020 offseason, mutually agreed to part ways, as he was the only then-Astros player called out by name for his involvement in the scheme. It was speculated by fans, the media, and even Yankees players that the Astros possibly cheated during the 2019 ALCS, but those allegations were denied by the Astros and Commissioner Rob Manfred.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Aftermath\nWhile the Yankees signed a current ace in Gerrit Cole during the off-season, their former ace C.C. Sabathia retired at season\u2019s end. His Game 4 relief appearance was last of his career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287249-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Championship Series, Aftermath\nThe Astros and Yankees nearly met again for a chance at the American League pennant for the third time in four years, but the Yankees lost to the Rays in a winner-take-all elimination game in the 2020 American League Division Series. In that series, Aroldis Chapman also gave up a game and series clinching home run to Rays outfielder Mike Brosseau in the 8th inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287250-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Division Series\nThe 2019 American League Division Series were two best-of-five-games series in Major League Baseball (MLB) to determine the participating teams of the 2019 American League Championship Series. The three divisional winners, seeded first through third, and a fourth team\u2014determined by the AL Wild Card Game\u2014played in two series. These matchups were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287250-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Division Series\nThe higher seeded team of each series hosted Games 1, 2, and (if necessary) 5, while the lower seeded team hosted Game 3 and (if necessary) 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287250-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Division Series\nFor the third straight year, Major League Baseball sold presenting sponsorships to all of its postseason series. This ALDS was sponsored by Doosan and officially known as the 2019 American League Division Series presented by Doosan. The Yankees and Astros won their series to advance to the American League Championship Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287250-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Division Series\nThe Astros defeated the Yankees in the ALCS, then lost the 2019 World Series to the National League champion Washington Nationals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287250-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Division Series, Background\nSeeds one through three were determined by regular season winning percentages among division-winning teams. Those seeds were locked in as of the completion of games of September 27. The final seed was the winner of the American League Wild Card Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287250-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Division Series, Background\nThe top seed, the Houston Astros (winner of the American League West), had home advantage against the fifth-seeded Tampa Bay Rays, who defeated the Oakland Athletics in the Wild Card Game. In the regular season, Tampa Bay won the season series against Houston 4\u20133, with three of their four wins coming at home to open the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287250-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Division Series, Background\nThe second seed, the New York Yankees (winner of the American League East), had home advantage against the third seed, the Minnesota Twins (winner of the American League Central). The Yankees won four of six games against the Twins in the regular season. In a three-game series in Minneapolis in July, the teams combined for 57 total runs and 20 home runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287250-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Division Series, Background\nThe Yankees and Astros both appeared in the ALDS the prior season, while the Twins made their first ALDS appearance since 2010, and the Rays made their first ALDS appearance since 2013. Overall, this was the Yankees' 21st ALDS appearance, the Twins' seventh, the Rays' fifth, and the fourth for the Astros (who had seven NLDS appearances during their time in the National League). This was the second straight year the ALDS featured three 100-win teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287250-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Division Series, Houston vs. Tampa Bay\nThis was the first time that the Astros and Rays met in the postseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287250-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Division Series, Houston vs. Tampa Bay, Game 1\nJustin Verlander and Tyler Glasnow traded scoreless frames for the first four innings before Jos\u00e9 Altuve broke the tie with a two-run home run in the bottom of the fifth inning. It was Altuve's fifth home run in an ALDS Game 1 in the last three seasons. He hit three in Game 1 of the 2017 ALDS and one in Game 1 of the 2018 ALDS. Two more runs would score in the inning on a dropped pop-up error on Rays' second baseman Brandon Lowe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287250-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 American League Division Series, Houston vs. Tampa Bay, Game 1\nVerlander would keep the Rays bats silent for the next two innings, striking out the side in the top of the seventh to put the finishing touches on seven innings of one-hit baseball with eight strikeouts. The Astros would tack on two more runs in the bottom of the seventh on back-to-back doubles by Yordan \u00c1lvarez and Yuli Gurriel. Ryan Pressly would relieve Verlander in the eighth but would surrender two runs on consecutive hits by Eric Sogard and Austin Meadows before Will Harris got Ji-man Choi to ground out to end the inning. Roberto Osuna pitched a perfect ninth inning to seal the Game 1 win for Houston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287250-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Division Series, Houston vs. Tampa Bay, Game 2\nGerrit Cole and Blake Snell, like Justin Verlander and Tyler Glasnow in Game 1, traded scoreless innings for the first three innings before Alex Bregman broke the tie with a solo home run in the bottom of the fourth inning. Cole kept the Rays bats silent for 72\u20443 innings and struck out 15 batters, the most in a postseason game since Roger Clemens in the 2000 ALCS. Meanwhile, the Astros tacked on another run in the seventh inning on a bloop single from Mart\u00edn Maldonado and then scored their final run on a Carlos Correa single.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287250-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 American League Division Series, Houston vs. Tampa Bay, Game 2\nRoberto Osuna relieved Gerrit Cole with two outs in the eighth and retired Yandy D\u00edaz. Osuna started the ninth inning and ran into trouble immediately. He gave up back to back singles to Austin Meadows and Tommy Pham to start the inning and walked Ji-man Choi to load the bases. Osuna got Avisa\u00edl Garc\u00eda to ground into a forceout that scored Meadows from third. He then walked Brandon Lowe to load the bases again and was subsequently relieved by Will Harris with one out in the ninth inning. Harris then retired Travis d'Arnaud and Kevin Kiermaier to end the game and seal the Game 2 victory for Houston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287250-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Division Series, Houston vs. Tampa Bay, Game 3\nZack Greinke was given the ball to try and help the Astros sweep the Rays. Charlie Morton was his mound opponent. The Astros got to work early on Morton, with Jos\u00e9 Altuve hitting a solo homer to get the Astros on the board. Greinke retired the Rays in order to begin his outing, but in the second inning, it went sour for Greinke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287250-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 American League Division Series, Houston vs. Tampa Bay, Game 3\nHe retired Ji-man Choi to start the second, allowed a single to Avisa\u00edl Garc\u00eda, got Brandon Lowe to ground out, hit Travis d'Arnaud with a pitch and Kevin Kiermaier hit a three-run home run that gave the Rays their first lead in the series. Morton settled into his outing after the first, throwing five innings of one-run baseball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287250-0011-0002", "contents": "2019 American League Division Series, Houston vs. Tampa Bay, Game 3\nMeanwhile, the Rays kept scoring runs, adding a run in the third inning with a Choi home run, and they broke the game in the 4th inning, getting a home run from Lowe, an Austin Meadows two-run double and a Tommy Pham single to put the Rays up 8\u20131 and chased Greinke from the game. The Astros would chip away at the deficit with a Yuli Gurriel two-run single that made it 8\u20133. That would end the scoring for the Astros. Meanwhile, the Rays added to their lead, with a Willy Adames solo home run and a d'Arnaud sacrifice fly to capped the scoring for the Rays. Colin Poche retired the Astros in order and allowed the Rays to play a Game 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287250-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Division Series, Houston vs. Tampa Bay, Game 4\nThe Rays struck first against Justin Verlander who was pitching on three days rest. Tommy Pham hit a home run with Travis d'Arnaud and Joey Wendle adding RBI base hits all in the first inning. Willy Adames added another solo shot off Verlander, ending his night in the fourth. Robinson Chirinos spoiled the Rays' shutout with a home run of his own. With the tying run at the plate in the top of the ninth and one out, Blake Snell struck out Yordan Alvarez and induced a ground ball out from Yuli Gurriel to force the decisive Game 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287250-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Division Series, Houston vs. Tampa Bay, Game 5\nWith the series tied at two games apiece, this was the second ALDS Game 5 for both teams; Tampa Bay lost their prior Game 5 appearance in 2010, and Houston lost their Game 5 appearance in 2015. Houston had only one NLDS Game 5 appearance when they competed in the National League, a win in 2004. The Astros struck early on an RBI single by Altuve, a two-run double by Bregman, and an RBI single by Yuli Gurriel in the span of five batters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287250-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 American League Division Series, Houston vs. Tampa Bay, Game 5\nEric Sogard would lead off the next inning with a solo home run and would be the final time the Rays had an extra base hit in the game. Cole would pitch eight innings while striking out ten. It was his 11th consecutive game with 10+ strikeouts including the regular season. Michael Brantley and Jose Altuve went back-to-back in the bottom of the 8th inning to bring the lead to 6\u20131. Altuve's home run was the 11th in his postseason career, the most by any second baseman in baseball history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287250-0013-0002", "contents": "2019 American League Division Series, Houston vs. Tampa Bay, Game 5\nRoberto Osuna came on to close out the game in the ninth, striking out Ji-man Choi swinging to end the series. The 6\u20131 win sent Houston on to the ALCS to face the New York Yankees. The Astros became the first team since the 2011\u201313 Detroit Tigers to appear in the ALCS in three consecutive seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287250-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Division Series, Houston vs. Tampa Bay, Game 5\nCombined with his Game 2 start, Cole struck out 25 hitters during the series, setting a new Major League Division Series record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287250-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Division Series, New York vs. Minnesota\nThis was the sixth postseason match-up between Minnesota and New York. The previous five meetings were the 2003 ALDS, 2004 ALDS, 2009 ALDS, 2010 ALDS, and the 2017 AL Wild Card Game\u2014with the Yankees winning each of those prior meetings. This was just the second time the ALDS featured a match-up of two 100-win teams, following the Boston Red Sox and Yankees meeting during the 2018 ALDS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287250-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Division Series, New York vs. Minnesota, Game 1\nThis match-up featured two of the best home run hitting teams in major league baseball history. With 307 home runs by their hitters, the Twins set a new major league record for most home runs by a team in a season, narrowing beating out the Yankees, who hit 305 this season themselves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287250-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Division Series, New York vs. Minnesota, Game 1\nWith their loss to the Yankees in Game 1, the Twins took sole possession of the record for the longest postseason losing streak in MLB history, at 14 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287250-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Division Series, New York vs. Minnesota, Game 2\nRandy Dobnak, making his postseason debut, allowed an opening double to DJ LeMahieu and a walk to Aaron Judge. He got Brett Gardner to fly out but gave up a single to Edwin Encarnaci\u00f3n to give the Yankees a 1\u20130 lead. Things would go very wrong for the Twins in the bottom of the third, as Dobnak allowed a single to Judge, a walk to Gardner, a single to Encarnacion to load the bases and was relieved by Tyler Duffey. Giancarlo Stanton hit a sacrifice fly to give the Yankees a 2\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287250-0018-0001", "contents": "2019 American League Division Series, New York vs. Minnesota, Game 2\nDuffey then gave a single to Gleyber Torres to make it 3\u20130 Yankees. Duffey proceeded to hit Gary S\u00e1nchez with a pitch to load the bases again and then gave up a grand slam to Didi Gregorius to blow the game open. Masahiro Tanaka went five innings and gave up one run. Jonathan Lo\u00e1isiga gave up the second Twins run and struck out Miguel San\u00f3 to end the game and send the Yankees to Minneapolis with a 2\u20130 series lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287250-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Division Series, New York vs. Minnesota, Game 3\nGleyber Torres opened the scoring with a solo home run to left in the second, followed by a Brett Gardner single in the next frame which drove in Gio Urshela. Didi Gregorius continued to haunt the Twins with another RBI single, making the score 3\u20130 in the seventh. Eddie Rosario homered off Zach Britton to pull the Twins within two, but the Yankees added two insurance runs in the ninth on a Cameron Maybin homer and Gregorius scoring Torres on another hit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287250-0019-0001", "contents": "2019 American League Division Series, New York vs. Minnesota, Game 3\nLuis Severino labored through four scoreless innings, getting out of a bases loaded no out jam in the second, before giving way to the bullpen. Aroldis Chapman, who entered in the eighth, got the save. Chapman was aided by Gregorius leaping to catch a Jorge Polanco line drive for the second out of the ninth before Nelson Cruz struck out looking to end the series and send the Yankees to their 17th ALCS. The loss gave Minnesota its 16th straight postseason defeat, 13 of those in games against the Yankees; and their 28th straight year without winning the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287251-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Wild Card Game\nThe 2019 American League Wild Card Game was a play-in game during Major League Baseball's (MLB) 2019 postseason contested between the American League's two wild card teams, the Oakland Athletics and Tampa Bay Rays. It was played on October 2, with Tampa Bay advancing to the American League Division Series to face the Houston Astros. The game was televised nationally by ESPN, and was sponsored by Hankook Tire for the second straight year. An alternate telecast, featuring Statcast analytics and sponsored by Amazon Web Services, aired on ESPN2. The game set the record for the highest attendance at a wild card game with an attendance of 54,005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287251-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Wild Card Game\nFor the third straight year, Major League Baseball sold presenting sponsorships to all of its postseason series; as with the 2019 NL Wild Card Game, this wild-card game was again presented by sponsor Hankook Tire and officially known as the 2019 American League Wild Card Game presented by Hankook Tire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287251-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Wild Card Game, Background\nOakland entered the game with a 97\u201365 record, while Tampa Bay was 96\u201366. They met seven times during the regular season, with Oakland winning the season series 4\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287251-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Wild Card Game, Background\nThe Oakland Athletics secured a berth in the Wild Card Game on September 27. The Athletics finished second in the American League West, behind the Houston Astros. Oakland secured home field advantage on September 28. This was Oakland's third postseason appearance as a wild card team. They previously appeared in the 2014 and 2018 Wild Card Games, losing both.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287251-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Wild Card Game, Background\nThe Tampa Bay Rays also secured a Wild Card berth on September 27. They finished second in the American League East, behind the New York Yankees. This was Tampa Bay's third postseason appearance as a wild card team. They previously appeared in one Wild Card Game, a win in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287251-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 American League Wild Card Game, Game results, Line score\nThe Rays took an early lead in the first inning courtesy of a leadoff home run by Yandy D\u00edaz off Oakland starter Sean Manaea. Manaea gave up a single to Matt Duffy to begin the second inning, and Avisa\u00edl Garc\u00eda promptly homered to extend Tampa Bay's lead to 3\u20130. When Manaea gave up another home run to D\u00edaz in the third inning, he was lifted in favor of Yusmeiro Petit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287251-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 American League Wild Card Game, Game results, Line score\nThe Athletics scored their lone run of the game in the bottom of the third, when a throwing error by Mike Brosseau allowed Marcus Semien to reach third base and Ram\u00f3n Laureano drove him in with a sacrifice fly. However, Tommy Pham's fifth inning home run off Petit again gave the Rays a four-run lead. Charlie Morton was relieved after the bottom of the fifth by Diego Castillo, Nick Anderson, and Emilio Pag\u00e1n, who combined for four scoreless innings to seal the victory for Tampa Bay. For Oakland, it was their 30th straight year without a title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287252-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 American Society of Cinematographers Awards\nThe 34th American Society of Cinematographers Awards were held on January 25, 2020, at the Hollywood & Highland Ray Dolby Ballroom, honoring the best cinematographers of film and television in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287252-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 American Society of Cinematographers Awards, Nominees, Film, Spotlight Award\nThe Spotlight Award recognizes outstanding cinematography in features and documentaries that are typically screened at film festivals, in limited theatrical release, or outside the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 81], "content_span": [82, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287253-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 American Ultimate Disc League season\nThe 2019 American Ultimate Disc League season was the eighth season for the league. It began on April 5, 2019, and concluded on August 11, 2019, when the New York Empire defeated the Dallas Roughnecks to earn the team's first title. Ben Jagt of the Empire won his first league MVP award after the season. The season marked Steve Hall's first as league commissioner, and was the first with an all-star game for the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287253-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 American Ultimate Disc League season, Offseason\nIn early October 2018, AUDL franchise owners selected Steve Hall, a co-owner of the Atlanta Hustle, to be the new league commissioner for a three-year term. He succeeds previous commissioner Steve Gordon. Around the same time, the league announced tentative plans for a women's ultimate league to be started as early as 2020. Adding to the new endeavors, AUDL added an all-star game for the first time in league history and accordingly shortened the schedule from 14 to 12 regular-season games. 2019 marked the second year of the league's television agreement with Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 52], "content_span": [53, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287253-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 American Ultimate Disc League season, Offseason\nTwo teams folded over the offseason, the San Francisco FlameThrowers and the Nashville NightWatch. No new teams joined the league for the 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 52], "content_span": [53, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287253-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 American Ultimate Disc League season, Regular season\nEach team played twelve games, contested over fifteen weeks in the regular-season schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 57], "content_span": [58, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287253-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 American Ultimate Disc League season, Regular season, Week 2\nThe Austin Sol beat Texas rival Dallas Roughnecks for the first time in franchise history, snapping a twelve-game skid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 65], "content_span": [66, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287253-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 American Ultimate Disc League season, Regular season, Week 10\nNo regular season games were held in week 10; instead, the inaugural AUDL All-Star contest was held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 66], "content_span": [67, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287253-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 American Ultimate Disc League season, Regular season, Week 14\nCameron Brock of the Indianapolis AlleyCats became the first player in AUDL history to score 500 career goals, a feat he accomplished in the Week 14 matchup against the Chicago Wildfire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 66], "content_span": [67, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287253-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 American Ultimate Disc League season, Regular season, Standings, Midwest Division\nThe Madison Radicals did not participate in the postseason for the first time in franchise history, having made playoff appearances from 2013 to 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 86], "content_span": [87, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287253-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 American Ultimate Disc League season, All-Star Game\nThe inaugural AUDL All-Star game was held on June 8, 2019, at Breese Stevens Field in Madison, Wisconsin. The league opted not to go with conference all-star teams and instead utilized a draft format, with Rowan McDonnell of the DC Breeze and Kevin Petit-Scantling of the Madison Radicals serving as captains. It was regarded by those within the league as one of the highest-level games of Ultimate ever played. The game was televised live on Stadium as part of the network's deal with the league. Team KPS won 28 \u2013 27 after being tied at the end of regulation and overtime, with Max Sheppard of the Pittsburgh Thunderbirds being named MVP. A 2020 edition of the game was later confirmed to be taking place in Washington, D. C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 56], "content_span": [57, 784]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287253-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 American Ultimate Disc League season, Postseason, Divisional final\nThe Indianapolis AlleyCats advanced to their first Championship Weekend since the inaugural season of the AUDL in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 71], "content_span": [72, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287253-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 American Ultimate Disc League season, Postseason, Championship Weekend 8\nChampionship Weekend 8 took place at Foothill College in San Jose, California from August 10\u201311, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 77], "content_span": [78, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287253-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 American Ultimate Disc League season, Postseason, Championship Weekend 8\nThe New York Empire won their first title, and Beau Kittredge won his fifth title overall. New York joined the 2016 Dallas Roughnecks and 2013 Toronto Rush as the only AUDL teams in history to finish a season undefeated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 77], "content_span": [78, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287254-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Americas Challenge\nThe 2019 Americas Challenge is a curling challenge that took place from November 28 to 30 at Curl Mesabi in Eveleth, Minnesota. This challenge determined the second team from the Americas Zone to qualify for the 2020 World Men's Championship and the 2020 World Women's Championship. It was held as part of the 2019 Curl Mesabi Classic World Curling Tour event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287254-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Americas Challenge\nThe United States won both the men's and women's events, with Mexico having a successful debut, finishing second in both events. The men's US team, skipped by Rich Ruohonen went on to the finals of the Curl Mesabi Classic where they lost to a fellow American rink skipped by Korey Dropkin. The women's US team went on to the semifinals of the Curl Mesabi Classic, losing to Canada's Laura Walker rink.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287254-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Americas Challenge, Background\nThe World Curling Federation allots two men's and two women's spots for the Americas Zone at the World Curling Championships. For the 2020 Championships Canada has automatically claimed the first slot for both men's, due to having the best final ranking of the Zone in the 2019 Championship, and women's, due to being the host country. If Canada was not hosting the Women's Championship the United States would have received the automatic berth due to finishing one spot higher in the 2019 Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287254-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Americas Challenge, Background\nMexico and Brazil challenged the United States, who would have otherwise qualified automatically due to their finish at the 2019 Championships, for the second Americas Zone slot for both men and women at the 2020 Championships. This was the seventh men's challenge and second women's challenge to be held, but the first men's and women's challenges to include Mexico. The winning team earned the second Americas Zone slot at the World Championships and the runner-up earned the one Americas Zone slot at the 2020 World Qualification Event, giving them another attempt to qualify for the Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287254-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Americas Challenge, Men, Results\nAll draw times are listed in Central Standard Time (UTC\u221206:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287254-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Americas Challenge, Women, Results\nAll draw times are listed in Central Standard Time (UTC\u221206:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287255-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Americas Rallycross Championship\nThe 2019 Americas Rallycross Championship was the second and final season of the Americas Rallycross Championship, a feeder championship to the FIA World Rallycross Championship representing North America. The season consists of six rounds across two categories; Supercar and ARX2. The season commenced on 8 June at the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course in Lexington, Ohio and finished on the 6 October at the same location.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287256-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Americas Rugby Challenge\nThe 2019 Americas Rugby Challenge or ARCh 2019 was the second edition of the Americas Rugby Challenge, a men's rugby union international tournament for tier 2 teams in North and South America. The second edition was confirmed in June 2019, to be played at the Estadio Cincuentenario in Medell\u00edn, Colombia from August 25 to 31.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287256-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Americas Rugby Challenge\nThe competition brings together Rugby Americas North (RAN) and Sudam\u00e9rica Rugby, following the example of the Americas Rugby Championship (ARC). The Americas Rugby Challenge is officially the \u2018B\u2019 competition for the ARC. For the 2019 edition, the host nation, Colombia, was joined by Sudam\u00e9rica Rugby rivals Paraguay while the Cayman Islands and Mexico represented Rugby Americas North. The Cayman Islands joined the competition after winning a playoff against Guyana, 58\u201314 in George Town in February 2019. Columbia won the tournament achieving bonus point victories in all three of their matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287256-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Americas Rugby Challenge, Format\nAll four nations play each other once in a single-round robin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287257-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Americas Rugby Championship\nThe 2019 Americas Rugby Championship is the fourth series of the Americas Rugby Championship, the top level rugby union competition for Americas nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287257-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Americas Rugby Championship, Fixtures\nThe tournament was played in a round-robin format, with each team playing the five others once. The fixtures were announced on 5 November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287257-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Americas Rugby Championship, Fixtures, Week 1\nTouch judges:Frank M\u00e9ndez (FERUCHI)Luis D\u00edaz (FERUCHI)Television Match OfficialGabriel Pinter (UAR)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287257-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Americas Rugby Championship, Fixtures, Week 1\nTouch judges: Esteban Filipanics (UAR) Juan Manuel Mart\u00ednez (UAR)Television Match Official Mart\u00edn Gonz\u00e1lez Deibe (UAR)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287257-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Americas Rugby Championship, Fixtures, Week 1\nTouch judges: Francisco Gonz\u00e1lez (URU) Santiago Romero (URU)Television Match Official Alejandro Longres (URU)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287257-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Americas Rugby Championship, Fixtures, Week 2\nTouch judges: Joaqu\u00edn Montes (URU) Santiago Romero (URU)Television Match Official Francisco Pesce (URU)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287257-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Americas Rugby Championship, Fixtures, Week 2\nTouch judges: Esteban Filipanics (UAR) Juan Manuel Mart\u00ednez (UAR)Television Match Official Marcelo Pilara (UAR)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287257-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Americas Rugby Championship, Fixtures, Week 2\nTouch judges: Victor Hugo Barbosa (CBRu) Braz Magaldi (CBRu)Television Match Official Diego Pazman (UAR)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287257-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Americas Rugby Championship, Fixtures, Week 2\nNotes:Theo Sauder was originally named in the starting team m pulling out due to injury during the warm up. Nick Blevins coming into the starting team & Giuseppe du Toit coming onto the bench.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287257-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Americas Rugby Championship, Fixtures, Week 3\nTouch judges: Robin Kaluzniak (RC) Chris Assmus (RC)Television Match Official: David Smortchevsky (RC)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287257-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Americas Rugby Championship, Fixtures, Week 3\nTouch judges: Pali Deluca (UAR) Juan Pablo Federico (UAR)Television Match Official Santiago Borsani (UAR)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287257-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Americas Rugby Championship, Fixtures, Week 3\nNotes:Joaqu\u00edn Jaunsolo, Santiago Civetta, Santiago Pi\u00f1eyr\u00faa, Mateo Mari, and Ignacio Rodr\u00edguez (all Uruguay) made their international debuts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287257-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Americas Rugby Championship, Fixtures, Week 4\nTouch judges: Chris Assmus (RC) Harry Mason (RC)Television Match OfficialAndrew Hosier (RC)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287257-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Americas Rugby Championship, Fixtures, Week 4\nTouch judges: Phil Akroyd (USAR) Josh Houston (USAR)Television Match Official Davey Ardey (USAR)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287257-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Americas Rugby Championship, Fixtures, Week 4\nTouch judges: Victor Hugo Barbosa (CBRu) Renato Scalercio (CBRu)Television Match Official Diego Pasman (UAR)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287257-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Americas Rugby Championship, Fixtures, Week 5\nTouch judges: Scott Green (USAR) Denny Russell (USAR)Television Match Official Davey Ardrey (USAR)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287257-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Americas Rugby Championship, Fixtures, Week 5\nTouch judges: Frank M\u00e9ndez (FERUCHI) Juan Ignacio Calle (FERUCHI)Television Match Official Gabriel Pinter (FERUCHI)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287258-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Amex-Istanbul Challenger\nThe 2019 Amex-Istanbul Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 32nd edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Istanbul, Turkey between 9 and 15 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287258-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Amex-Istanbul 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-00287258-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Amex-Istanbul Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as alternates:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287259-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Amex-Istanbul Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nRameez Junaid and Purav Raja were the defending champions but lost in the quarterfinals to Andrey Golubev and Aleksandr Nedovyesov.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287259-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Amex-Istanbul Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nGolubev and Nedovyesov won the title after Marek Gengel and Luk\u00e1\u0161 Rosol withdrew before the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287260-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Amex-Istanbul Challenger \u2013 Singles\nCorentin Moutet was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287260-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Amex-Istanbul Challenger \u2013 Singles\nUgo Humbert won the title after defeating Denis Istomin 6\u20132, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287261-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Amirjan Qosanov presidential campaign\nAmirjan Qosanov, a Kazakh journalist and opposition politician expressed his interest on 9 April 2019 in joining the race, believing a chance of possible fair election being held under Acting President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev. On 26 April, Qosanov announced his bid for presidency for the Ult Tagdyry political association where he was unanimously nominated by the group. Qosanov became a registered candidate by the Central Election Commission. On 12 May 2019, Qosanov's campaign officially published the electoral platforms on the website.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287261-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Amirjan Qosanov presidential campaign, Foreign policy\nIn regards towards foreign policy, Qosanov stated that \"I am one of the organizers of the republican meeting, which was against the entry of Kazakhstan into the Eurasian Economic Union. We believe this union is unequal. For all economic and military parameters, one country dominates there - Russia. We have always advocated good-neighborly relations with Russia, but on equal terms. Therefore, being in a single alliance with a country that is much larger than us cannot be effective and useful for our country. Speaking about rapprochement with the European Union, we are talking primarily about the European Western standards of democracy, competitive political life, turnover of power, freedom of speech, control of government institutions, and a civilized liberal economy.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 837]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287261-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Amirjan Qosanov presidential campaign, Campaign\nQosanov visited several regions and cities such as Petropavl, Karaganda, Almaty, and Kostanay. In his official visit to Pavlodar, he called it an industrial region where it has economic potential. \"Therefore, such issues as employment and social protection are relevant here. Many questions were asked about the role of educators in the modern world\" he said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287261-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Amirjan Qosanov presidential campaign, Campaign\nDespite being considered as an opposition, many other groups and parties called for boycott in the elections and accused of Qosanov being compromised by the government. In responds to those complains Qosanov responded that \"First, every citizen has the right to boycott. But every political organization is not a citizen. This is an organization with its own burden of responsibility [which] must measure it out, cut it off once before making a boycott. I would understand if it was a collective, solidarity, organized, powerful boycott. Perhaps I would then join as one of the participants in the democratic process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287261-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Amirjan Qosanov presidential campaign, Campaign\nI don\u2019t see that. More I see a desire to get away from routine campaigning work, a lack of finance and appropriate resources to participate in this. More I see something personal about me. Now my former comrades-in-arms, with whom I went to the rallies, are mocking and burning me. I personally do not understand this. Perhaps I can admit that there is some kind of envy and jealousy, because whether they like it or not, this campaign allows me to consolidate the protest electorate. People turn to me - from super radicals to centrists, from hawks from opposition to doves from opposition. I get satisfaction, pleasure from this work, because I haven't worked with the electorate so purposefully for a long time.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287261-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Amirjan Qosanov presidential campaign, Campaign\nThroughout his campaign, Qosanov held live streams on social media where spoke in Russian and Kazakh about his platforms to the public.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287261-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Amirjan Qosanov presidential campaign, Campaign\nIn an interview to the Current Time, Qosanov already expressed doubts that the election would be conducted fairly, in which he promised of his condemnation of results if any violations were reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287262-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Amstel Gold Race\nThe 2019 Amstel Gold Race is a road cycling one-day race that took place on 21 April 2019 in the Netherlands. It was the 54th edition of the Amstel Gold Race and the 18th event of the 2019 UCI World Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287262-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Amstel Gold Race, Teams\nAs the Amstel Gold Race was a UCI World Tour event, all eighteen UCI WorldTeams were invited automatically and obliged to enter a team in the race. Seven UCI Professional Continental teams competed, completing the 25-team peloton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287262-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Amstel Gold Race, Pre-race favourites\nThe main bookmakers' favourites before the race were Mathieu van der Poel, who was set to make his debut in the Amstel Gold Race, and Julian Alaphilippe. Both cyclists had already been successful in the early season, with Van der Poel winning Dwars door Vlaanderen and the Brabantse Pijl and Alaphilippe taking the victory in Strade Bianche and Milan\u2013San Remo. Other riders seen as contenders included Michael Matthews, Peter Sagan, Maximilian Schachmann, Alejandro Valverde and Jakob Fuglsang, as well as former winners Philippe Gilbert and Micha\u0142 Kwiatkowski. Defending champion Michael Valgren also participated, but was not seen as a favourite due to his disappointing start of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287262-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Amstel Gold Race, Race summary\nEarly in the race, a breakaway group of 11 riders escaped the peloton. Their lead would grow to eight minutes before Jakob Fuglsang's Astana team increased the pace in the peloton. Mathieu van der Poel was the first of the favourites to attack at 43\u00a0km to the finish together with Gorka Izagirre, but their attempt was brought back by the peloton soon after. Julian Alaphilippe was the next to attack after the early breakaway was caught, joined by Fuglsang and Matteo Trentin. Trentin was unable to follow the other two and would be joined by Micha\u0142 Kwiatkowski, with a chase group containing most of the favourites following shortly behind them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287262-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Amstel Gold Race, Race summary\nAfter the final ascent of the Cauberg, Alaphilippe and Fuglsang had a lead of 30 seconds over the two chasers and nearly a minute over the group behind. With 3\u00a0km to go their lead was up to 40 seconds over Kwiatkowski, who had left Trentin behind. At that point, the two in front stopped collaborating with each other, attempting to conserve energy for their final sprint. However, they were then caught in the last kilometer, first by Kwiatkowski and then by the other chase group led by Van der Poel. In the ensuing sprint, Van der Poel proved to be the strongest, while the other podium places were taken by Simon Clarke and Fuglsang.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287263-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Amstel Gold Race (women's race)\nThe sixth edition of the Amstel Gold Race for Women was a road cycling one-day race held on 21 April 2019 in the Netherlands. It was the seventh event of the 2019 UCI Women's World Tour. The race started in Maastricht and finished in Berg en Terblijt, containing 19 categorised climbs and covering a total distance of 127 km. It was won by Katarzyna Niewiadoma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287263-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Amstel Gold Race (women's race), Teams\nEighteen teams participated in the race. Each team has a maximum of six riders:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287264-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly election\nThe 2019 Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly elections were held in the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh on 11 April 2019 for constituting the fifteenth Legislative Assembly in the state. They were held alongside the 2019 Indian general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287264-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly election\nThe YSR Congress Party won the election in a landslide, winning 151 of the 175 seats, with the incumbent Telugu Desam Party winning just 23. The Jana Sena Party entered the legislature, and the Congress and BJP both failed to win any seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287264-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly election\nY. S. Jaganmohan Reddy was unanimously voted as Legislature leader of the YSR Congress Party, and was invited to form the government by the Governor of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, E. S. L. Narasimhan. This was the second assembly in Andhra Pradesh after the bifurcation of the state into Andhra Pradesh and Telangana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287264-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly election, Previous Assembly\nIn the 2014 Andhra Pradesh Assembly election, the Telugu Desam Party, led by chief N. Chandrababu Naidu, in alliance with the Jana Sena Party, led by chief Pawan Kalyan, and the Bharatiya Janata Party, emerged as the single largest party. With 88 seats required to win a majority, the alliance won 103 out of the available 175 seats. Mr. Naidu was invited to form the government as part of the fourteenth chief minister of Andhra Pradesh by the then Governor of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana E. S. L. Narasimhan. It was the first Assembly in Andhra Pradesh after the bifurcation of the state into Andhra Pradesh and Telangana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287264-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly election, Background\nY S Jaganmohan Reddy launched his 3,648-km-long Praja Sankalpa Yatra on 6 November 2017. In this Padayatra, Y S Jagan Mohan Reddy launched an attack on the failed promises and corruption of the ruling Telugu Desam Party. He covered more than 130 out of the 175 assembly constituencies in the state, from YSR Ghat in Idupulapaya in Kadapa to Icchapuram in Srikakulam district. During his Padayatra, he addressed 124 public meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287264-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly election, Background\nMeanwhile, Jana Sena Party leader Pawan Kalyan hurled allegations of corruption against the TDP and Andhra minister Nara Lokesh, son of N. Chandrababu Naidu and BJP for injustice meant to the state on Special Category status and broke the alliance. Taken aback by criticism from its ally, the ruling Telugu Desam Party (TDP) contested the 2019 assembly elections on its own. The TDP also withdrew from the National Democratic Alliance in March 2018 following disputes between the TDP and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) regarding the misuse of funds. This resulted in competition between the Jana Sena, Telugu Desam, and YSR Congress parties. A few weeks later, BJP announced that they will contest in all 175 assembly constituencies in the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287264-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly election, Election Day\nThe election was held in a single phase on 11 April for 175 assemblies and 25 parliamentary constituencies. A 79.88% voter turnout was recorded by the end of the election day, which was 1.92% higher than the 2014 Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly election. 1,55,45,211 Male and 1,57,87,759 Female voters cast their votes in the election. Overall 3,13,33,631 of a possible 3,93,45,717 voters participated in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 63], "content_span": [64, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287264-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly election, Election Day\nThe highest turnout of 85.93% was recorded in Prakasam district followed by Guntur district with 82.37%, while Visakhapatnam district recorded the lowest turnout of 73.67%. Addanki (Assembly constituency) recorded the highest voter turnout of 89.82% voting and Visakhapatnam West (Assembly constituency) registered the lowest turnout of 58.19%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 63], "content_span": [64, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287264-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly election, Candidates\nBelow is a list of constituencies of the Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly. Contesting candidates from each party are arranged with respect to their districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287264-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly election, Results\nThe results were announced on 23 May 2019, the day of the counting of ballots. YSRCP won the polls by winning a record 151 seats out of 175 seats, their best poll performance to date. YSRCP won all MLA seats in the districts of Kadapa, Kurnool, Nellore, and Viazayanagram. Furthermore, they lost only 3 seats (Kuppam, Hindupur, Uravakonda) in the Rayalaseema region. From the 26 ministers in the ruling TDP Cabinet only 3 ministers, Nimmakayala Chinarajappa, Ganta Srinivasa Rao, and Kinjarapu Atchannaidu, were able to win. The JSP+ alliance won only a single seat of Razole, while the leader of the alliance Pawan Kalyan lost both the seats in Gajuwaka and Bhimavaram. The national parties - INC and BJP - were not able to win a single seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 58], "content_span": [59, 802]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287265-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ando Securities Open\nThe 2019 Ando Securities Open was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the fourth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Tokyo, Japan between 11 and 17 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287265-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ando Securities 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-00287266-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ando Securities Open \u2013 Doubles\nRika Fujiwara and Yuki Naito were the two-time defending champions, having won the previous editions in 2016 and 2017, however both players chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287266-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ando Securities Open \u2013 Doubles\nChoi Ji-hee and Han Na-lae won the title, defeating Haruka Kaji and Junri Namigata in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287267-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ando Securities Open \u2013 Singles\nZhang Shuai was a three-time defending champion, having won the previous editions from 2015 to 2017 and successfully defended her title, defeating Jasmine Paolini in the final, 6\u20133, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287268-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Andorran local elections\nThe 2019 Andorran local elections were held on 15 December, to elect all councillors in the seven parishes of Andorra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287268-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Andorran local elections, Electoral system\nVoters elected the members of the municipal councils (consells de com\u00fa in Catalan). The Electoral Law allows the municipal councils to choose their numbers of seats, which must be an even number between 10 and 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287268-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Andorran local elections, Electoral system\nAll city council members were elected in single multi-member districts, consisting of the whole parish, using closed lists. Half of the seats were allocated to the party with the most votes. The other half of the seats were allocated using the Hare quota (including the winning party). With this system the winning party obtained an absolute majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287268-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Andorran local elections, Electoral system\nThe c\u00f2nsol major (mayor) and the c\u00f2nsol menor (deputy mayor) will be elected indirectly by the municipal councillors after the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287268-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Andorran local elections, Parties and leaders\nA total of 21 lists were contesting the election. In Encamp, Ordino and Escaldes-Engordany there were 4 candidacies; in Andorra la Vella and Sant Juli\u00e0 de L\u00f2ria, 3; in Canillo, 2; and in la Massana only one list was contesting the election. For first time since the 2007 election, two lists were contesting the election in Canillo. In Sant Juli\u00e0 de L\u00f2ria, the incumbent mayor was unable to form a candidacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287268-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Andorran local elections, Results\nFinal turnout was 56.54%, four percentual points lower than in the 2015 election. Abstention was over 50% in Andorra la Vella.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287268-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Andorran local elections, Results\nCandidacies supported by Democrats for Andorra won the election in five out of seven parishes, while in Sant Juli\u00e0 de L\u00f2ria, the candidacy formed by Third Way and Lauredian Union won. The Social Democrats won in Escaldes-Engordany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287269-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Andorran parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Andorra on 7 April 2019, electing all 28 seats of the General Council. Although they remained the largest party, the Democrats for Andorra lost their parliamentary majority after losing four seats. The Social Democratic Party gained four seats, becoming the second-largest party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287269-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Andorran parliamentary election, Background\nDemocrats for Andorra secured an absolute majority in the 2015 election and Antoni Mart\u00ed was re-elected Prime Minister of Andorra. In December 2017, Josep Pintat, together with the two members of the Lauredian Union and two members of Committed Citizens, left the Liberal group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287269-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Andorran parliamentary election, Background\nAntoni Mart\u00ed was unable to stand for reelection, as the Constitution limits the office to two complete consecutive terms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287269-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Andorran parliamentary election, Electoral system\nTwenty-eight general councillors (Catalan: consellers generals) are elected, based on closed party lists:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287269-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Andorran parliamentary election, Electoral system\nThe parish lists and the national list are independent of one another: the same person cannot appear on both the national list and on a parish list, and voters cast two separate ballots. There is no requirement to vote for the same party for both lists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287269-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Andorran parliamentary election, Parties and leaders, Nationwide constituency\nThe following parties or coalitions are running in the election:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 82], "content_span": [83, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287269-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Andorran parliamentary election, Parties and leaders, Parish constituencies\nThe following table displays the parties or coalitions running at each parish:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 80], "content_span": [81, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287269-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Andorran parliamentary election, Government formation\nThree parties eventually formed a governing coalition, composed of the Democrats, the Liberal Party and Committed Citizens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287270-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Angola Cup\nThe 2019 Ta\u00e7a de Angola was the 37th edition of the Ta\u00e7a de Angola, the second most important and the top knock-out football club competition in Angola following the Girabola. The competition returns after having not been played in 2018 due to the transitional calendar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287271-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Angola Super Cup\nThe 2019 Superta\u00e7a de Angola (30th edition) was contested by Primeiro de Agosto, the 2018\u201319 Girabola champion and Desportivo da Hu\u00edla, the 2019 Angola cup winner, in the return of the two leg format. On home court. D'Agosto beat Desportivo 2\u20130 to secure their 10th title, following a 0-1 defeat in the first leg match in Lubango.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287272-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ankara mayoral election\nMayoral elections were held in the Turkish province of Ankara as part of nationwide local elections on 31 March 2019. A total of 26 mayors, one for each of the 25 districts of Ankara and one for the Ankara Metropolitan Municipality, were be elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287272-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ankara mayoral election\nInitial results suggested that opposition candidate Mansur Yava\u015f was elected with 50% of the vote, compared to the government candidate Mehmet \u00d6zhaseki's 47%. Although the AKP challenged the results and forced recounts in several districts, they were unable to overturn Yava\u015f's majority. Yava\u015f's victory was confirmed on 8 April 2019, when he was officially inaugurated mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287272-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Ankara mayoral election, Candidates\nOn 27 November 2018, the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) announced their metropolitan mayoral candidate to be Mehmet \u00d6zhaseki, the former mayor of Kayseri and former Minister of Environment and Urban Planning. Due to the People's Alliance agreement, \u00d6zhaseki has the support of the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287272-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Ankara mayoral election, Candidates\nOn 18 December, the main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP) announced their candidate to be Mansur Yava\u015f, their candidate in the previous election in 2014. Yava\u015f had narrowly lost the previous election to AKP candidate Melih G\u00f6k\u00e7ek despite accusations of widespread electoral fraud, with many commentators arguing that Yava\u015f was the true winner of the election. Yava\u015f has the support of the \u0130Y\u0130 Party and declared himself to be the 'Nation Alliance candidate'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287273-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Antalya Open\nThe 2019 Antalya Open (also known as the Turkish Airlines Open Antalya for sponsorship reasons) was a men's tennis tournament played on grass courts. It was the 3rd edition of the event, and part of the ATP Tour 250 series of the 2019 ATP Tour. It took place at the Kaya Palazzo Resort in Belek, Antalya Province, Turkey, from June 23\u201329.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287273-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Antalya 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-00287273-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Antalya Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry using a protected ranking into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 61], "content_span": [62, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287273-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Antalya 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-00287274-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Antalya Open (pool)\nThe 2019 Antalya Open (also known as the 2019 Dynamic Billiard Antalya Open) was a professional nine-ball pool tournament held from 7 to 10 November 2019 in the Limak Atlantis Resort in Antalya, Turkey. The event was the sixth and final Euro Tour event of 2019, following the Klagenfurt Open. The men's event was won by Estonia's Denis Grabe, who won his third Tour win, defeating Eklent Ka\u00e7i 9\u20132. The women's event was won by Poland's Oliwia Zalewska, who won her first Tour event. She defeated Tina Vogelmann in the final 7\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287274-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Antalya Open (pool), Tournament format\nThe 2019 Antalya Open was a professional nine-ball event, the sixth and final Euro Tour event held in 2019. The event featured two brackets, held from 7 to 9 November 2019 for the men's event, and 8 to 10 November for the women's event. Both events were first played as a double-elimination tournament. It was held at the Limak Atlantis Resort in Antalya, Turkey. The men's event became a single-elimination bracket at the round-of-32, while the women's event remained a double-elimination tournament until the round-of-16. All matches were played as race-to-nine racks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287274-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Antalya Open (pool), Tournament format\nThe tournament was the first Euro Tour event held in Turkey since the 1999 Turkish Open won by Germany's Ralph Eckert.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287274-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Antalya Open (pool), Tournament format, Prize fund\nBoth the men's and women's event's prize fund was similar to those of other Euro Tour events, totalling \u20ac38,000, of which \u20ac4,500 was awarded to both of the winners of the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287274-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Antalya Open (pool), Tournament summary, Men's event\nThe men's event was held from 7\u20139 November 2019 with 181 participants. The double-elimination stage featured nine rounds. Nick Malai defeated former winner Ruslan Chinachov 9\u20131 in the opening round, however, both players won their remaining matches and reached the single-elimination round. British players Mark Gray and Darren Appleton also met in the first round; the 2012 WPA World Nine-ball Championship winner Appleton won 9\u20135. Gray commented post-match that his break was to blame, and that the \"better player undoubtedly won\". Having won, Appleton qualified for the winner's third round, but decided to sleep prior to the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 57], "content_span": [58, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287274-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Antalya Open (pool), Tournament summary, Men's event\nInstead of waking in time for his 4:30\u00a0pm GMT match with Albin Ouschan, Appleton overslept, forfeited the match, and also his loser's qualification round match, scheduled to also be against Gray. Two several-time Euro Tour winners Mario He and Thorsten Hohmann met in the loser's qualification round. Hohmann led 6\u20133, before He won five of the next six racks to lead 8\u20137, however Hohmann won the next two frames to eliminate He.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 57], "content_span": [58, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287274-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Antalya Open (pool), Tournament summary, Men's event\nThe single-elimination round was played on the 8 and 9 November. Hohmann met fellow German player and reigning WPA World Nine-ball champion Joshua Filler. Filler outplayed Hohmann, and won 9\u20133. Mark Gray defeated Tomasz Kap\u0142an 9\u20132 to meet Filler in the last 16, where Filler won 9\u20137. Francisco Sanchez-Ruiz defeated Albin Ouschan 9\u20132 in the last 32 before defeating Wiktor Zielinski 9\u20131 to reach the quarter-finals. At the quarter-final stage, Sanchez-Ruiz was defeated by Russian youngster Fedor Gorst 5\u20139. Elsewhere, Denis Grabe defeated Mieszko Fortunski 9\u20136, Eklent Ka\u00e7i defeated Sanjin Pehlivanovic 9\u20135 and David Alcaide defeated Joshua Filler 9\u20137. The first semi-final saw Kaci defeat Alcaide 9\u20134, whilst Grabe defeated Gorst 9\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 57], "content_span": [58, 794]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287274-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Antalya Open (pool), Tournament summary, Men's event\nThe final was held at 5:30\u00a0pm GMT between Grabe and Kaci. Grabe was playing in his fourth Tour final, having won two prior events in 2014, whilst Kaci was playing in his fifth final, having won two prior events including the 2019 Austria Open prior in the season. With Grabe leading 4\u20131, Kaci missed a shot on the 2-ball and conceded the rack in frustration. Referee Nikola Pe\u0161o deemed the act as unsportsmanlike and awarded both rack six and an additional rack to Grabe. Leading 6\u20131, Grabe won three of the next four racks to win the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 57], "content_span": [58, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287274-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Antalya Open (pool), Tournament summary, Women's event\nThe women's event took place from 8 to 10 November, with 34 participants. The double-elimination round lasted six rounds. The top four ranked players on the Tour all reached the last 16. Russia's Kristina Tkach (first seed) won her matches 7\u20131 and 7\u20133 to draw Veronika Ivanovskaia in the knockout round. Tkach won the match 7\u20136 to reach the quarter-finals. Belorussian player Marharyta Fefilava (second seed) won her two qualifying matches 7\u20130 and 7\u20132 to meet Kamila Khodjaeva in the last 16. Fefilava defeated Khodjaeva 7\u20134 to reach the quarter-finals. Both Ana Gradi\u0161nik (third seed) and Kateryna Polovinchuk (fourth seed) also reached the last 16 round, but lost to Christine Steinlage and Oliwia Zalewska respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 59], "content_span": [60, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287274-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Antalya Open (pool), Tournament summary, Women's event\nThe quarter-finals started with Tkach defeating Pia Filler 7\u20134, whilst Zalewska defeated Melanie Suessenguth 7\u20134. The bottom half of the draw featured Steinlage defeating Diana Stateczny 7\u20133, and Tina Vogelmann defeating Fefilava 7\u20134. In the semi-finals, Zalewska defeated Tkach 7\u20135, whilst Vogelmann defeated Steinlage 7\u20133. The final was played between Tina Vogelmann and Oliwia Zalewska. Vogelmann was playing in her first Euro Tour final, whereas Zalewska had won three events prior, including the preceding event, the Klagenfurt Open. Vogelmann took an early lead in the match, leading 4\u20132 after six racks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 59], "content_span": [60, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287274-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Antalya Open (pool), Tournament summary, Women's event\nZalewska won the next three racks to lead, but the match became tied at 6\u20136. Vogelmann broke for the match, but had a dry break. Zaleska chose to push out, but Vogelmann left the table safe after her shot. With no clear shot, Zaleska fluked both the 1-ball and 2-ball, and ran the rack to win the match and tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 59], "content_span": [60, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287274-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Antalya Open (pool), Results, Men's competition\nBelow is the results from the round of 32 (Last 32) onward with positions were determined by performance in the double-elimination round. Players in bold denote match winners:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287274-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Antalya Open (pool), Results, Women's event\nThe following results are from the knockout stages following the round of 16. Players in bold denote match winners:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287275-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Antalya Open \u2013 Doubles\nMarcelo Demoliner and Santiago Gonz\u00e1lez were the defending champions, but chose not to participate together. Demoliner played alongside Divij Sharan, but lost in the quarterfinals to Denys Molchanov and Igor Zelenay. Gonz\u00e1lez teamed up with Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi, but lost in the first round to Ivan Dodig and Filip Pol\u00e1\u0161ek.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287275-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Antalya Open \u2013 Doubles\nJonathan Erlich and Artem Sitak won the title, defeating Dodig and Pol\u00e1\u0161ek in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287276-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Antalya Open \u2013 Singles\nDamir D\u017eumhur was the defending champion, but retired from his quarterfinal match against Jordan Thompson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287276-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Antalya Open \u2013 Singles\nLorenzo Sonego won his first ATP Tour title, defeating Miomir Kecmanovi\u0107 in the final, 6\u20137(5\u20137), 7\u20136(7\u20135), 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287276-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Antalya 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-00287277-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Antenna Awards\nThe 2019 Antenna Awards were held on 5 October 2019 at the Deakin Edge at Federation Square in Melbourne. The ceremony was announced on 4 July 2019, and recognised excellence in Australian community television of the eligibility period, running between 1 July 2014 and 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287277-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Antenna Awards\nIt was hosted by comedian and former Live on Bowen presenter Dilruk Jayasinha. The ceremony was broadcast live from 8:00pm AEST on C31 Melbourne, Channel 44 Adelaide and WTV Perth, and was streamed live on Facebook. On 9 October, the ceremony was made available to stream on YouTube.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287277-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Antenna Awards\nAwards were presented in 24 categories. Program of the Year was awarded to The Leak with Pat McCaffrie, while Personality of the Year was awarded to Emmylou Loves presenter Emmylou McCarthy. A special award, the Stella Young Contribution to Community TV Award, was presented to Nimal Alwis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287277-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Antenna Awards\nThis was the 9th Antenna Awards ceremony \u2013 the first since 2014 \u2013 and marked 25 years since the first broadcast of C31 Melbourne. Nominations were accepted from producers of programs that aired on terrestrial community television \u2013 including the now-defunct Television Sydney and 31 Brisbane \u2013 as well as satellite and cable channels Aurora and ICTV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287278-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Antigua Guatemala mayoral election\nThe 2019 Antigua Guatemala mayoral election was held on 16 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287278-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Antigua Guatemala mayoral election\nThe elections will be held next to the presidential, legislative, municipal and Central American Parliament elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287278-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Antigua Guatemala mayoral election\nThe current mayor Susana Asensio is not running for re-election. She does not have the legal requirements to qualify for re-election. Asensio was elected mayor in 2015 with a civic committee called \"Antigua en Buenas Manos\" (English: Antigua in Good Hands).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287279-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Antipolo local elections\nAntipolo held its local elections on Monday, May 13, 2019, as a part of the 2019 Philippine general election. Voters elected candidates for the local elective posts in the city: the mayor, the vice mayor, the two district congressmen, the two provincial board members of Rizal (one for each district) and the sixteen councilors (eight for each district).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287279-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Antipolo local elections\nThere are a total of 336,773 people who voted out of the 482,062 registered voters. Andrea Ynares and Josefina Gatlabayan won the elections undefeated as mayor and vice mayor (for the second time) respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287279-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Antipolo local elections, Mayoral and Vice Mayoral elections, Mayor\nIncumbent mayor Casimiro \"Jun\" Ynares III is not running. His wife and Bong Revilla's sister Andrea Bautista-Ynares is his party's nominee and is running unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287279-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Antipolo local elections, District representatives, 1st District\nChiqui Roa-Puno is not running. Her husband, former Congressman Roberto Puno, will run in her stead and will be challenged by Macario Aggarao.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287279-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Antipolo local elections, District representatives, 2nd District\nRomeo Acop is term-limited as he has reached the maximum three-term limit for any elective official. His wife, Doktora Acop, will run in his stead unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287279-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Antipolo local elections, Board Members, 1st District\nRico De Guzman is running for councilor of the said district. Roberto Puno's son, Randy Puno, will run in his stead unopposed, since Delfin Bacon withdrew his candidacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287279-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Antipolo local elections, Board Members, 2nd District\nJoel Huertas is term-limited and is running for councilor of the said district. Former councilor Bobot Marquez will run in his stead and will be challenged by Edelberto Coronado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287279-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Antipolo local elections, City Council, By ticket\nWith Ynares & Gatlabayan running unopposed, Team Ynares is the only ticket for this election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287280-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Antrim Senior Football Championship\nThe 2018 Antrim Senior Football Championship is the 117th official edition of Antrim GAA's premier club gaelic football tournament for senior clubs in County Antrim. 13 teams compete with the winners receiving the Padraig McNamee Cup and representing Antrim in the Ulster Senior Club Football Championship. The Antrim championship has a straight knock-out format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287280-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Antrim Senior Football Championship\nNaomh \u00c9anna and Gort na M\u00f3na returned to the S.F.C. this year after claiming the 2018 I.F.C. and I.F.L. titles respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287280-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Antrim Senior Football Championship\nErin's Own Cargin were the defending champions after they defeated Creggan Kickhams in the 2018 final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287280-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Antrim Senior Football Championship\nSt. Mary's Ahoghill and St. Teresa's were relegated after finishing 11th and 12th respectively in the S.F.L. They'll be replaced in 2020 by St. James' (I.F.C. Champions) and O'Donovan Rossa (I.F.L. Champions).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287280-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Antrim Senior Football Championship\nOn 12 October 2019, Erin's Own Cargin claimed their 9th S.F.C. and successfully defended their crown when defeating L\u00e1mh Dhearg 3-16 to 0-23 after extra time in the final replay at Corrigan Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287280-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Antrim Senior Football Championship, Round 1\n7 of the 13 senior clubs play in this round. The 4 winners and the 4 teams who received byes compete in the Quarter-Finals. The 4 losing teams exit the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287280-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Antrim Senior Football Championship, Quarter-Finals\nThe four 2018 S.F.C. Semi-Finalists received a bye to this years Quarter-Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287281-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Antrim and Newtownabbey Borough Council election\nElections to Antrim and Newtownabbey Borough Council, part of the Northern Ireland local elections on 2 May 2019, returned 40 members to the council using Single Transferable Vote. The Democratic Unionist Party were the largest party in both first-preference votes and seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287281-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Antrim and Newtownabbey Borough Council election, Results by party\nThe overall turnout was 49.16% with a total of 47,989 valid votes cast. A total of 537 ballots were rejected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 71], "content_span": [72, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287281-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Antrim and Newtownabbey Borough Council election, Results by electoral area, Airport\n2014: 2 x UUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP, 1 x DUP2019: 1 x UUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP, 1 x DUP, 1 x Alliance2014-2019 Change: Alliance gain one seat from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 89], "content_span": [90, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287281-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Antrim and Newtownabbey Borough Council election, Results by electoral area, Antrim\n2014: 2 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x SDLP2019: 2 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x SDLP2014-2019 Change: No change", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 88], "content_span": [89, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287281-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Antrim and Newtownabbey Borough Council election, Results by electoral area, Ballyclare\n2014: 2 x UUP, 2 x DUP, 1 x TUV2019: 2 x UUP, 2 x DUP, 1 x Independent2014-2019 Change: Independent gain one seat from TUV", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 92], "content_span": [93, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287281-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Antrim and Newtownabbey Borough Council election, Results by electoral area, Dunsilly\n2014: 2 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP2019: 1 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Alliance2014-2019 Change: Alliance gain one seat from DUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 90], "content_span": [91, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287281-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Antrim and Newtownabbey Borough Council election, Results by electoral area, Glengormley Urban\n2014: 2 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x Alliance, 1 x SDLP2019: 2 x DUP, 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x UUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x SDLP2014-2019 Change: Sinn F\u00e9in gain one seat from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 99], "content_span": [100, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287281-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Antrim and Newtownabbey Borough Council election, Results by electoral area, Macedon\n2014: 3 x DUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 X UUP, 1 x TUV2019: 3 x DUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x UUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in2014-2019 Change: Sinn F\u00e9in gain one seat from TUV", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 89], "content_span": [90, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287281-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Antrim and Newtownabbey Borough Council election, Results by electoral area, Three Mile Water\n2014: 3 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x Alliance2019: 3 x DUP, 2 x Alliance, 1 x UUP2014-2019 Change: Alliance gain one seat from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 98], "content_span": [99, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287282-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Aomori gubernatorial election\nA gubernatorial election was held on 2 June 2019 to elect the next Governor of Aomori.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287283-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Aphrodite Women Cup\nThe 2019 Aphrodite Women Cup was the 4th edition of Aphrodite Women Cup, a friendly association football tournament played in Cyprus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287283-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Aphrodite Women Cup, Goalscorers\nThere have been 5 goals scored in 4 matches, for an average of 1.25 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287284-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Appalachian State Mountaineers football team\nThe 2019 Appalachian State Mountaineers football team represented Appalachian State University during the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Mountaineers were led by first-year head coach Eliah Drinkwitz through the team's win in the Sun Belt Conference Championship Game, after which he left to fill the head coaching vacancy at Missouri. Shawn Clark led the team during their bowl game appearance. Appalachian State played their home games at Kidd Brewer Stadium on the school's Boone, North Carolina, campus, and competed as a member of the East Division of the Sun Belt Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287284-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Appalachian State Mountaineers football team, Previous season\nThe Mountaineers finished the 2018 season 12\u20131, 7\u20131 in Sun Belt play to be co-champions of the East Division with Troy. Due to their head-to-head win over Troy, they represented the East Division in the inaugural Sun Belt Championship Game where they defeated West Division champion Louisiana to become Sun Belt Champions for the third consecutive year and first time outright. They were invited to the New Orleans Bowl where they defeated Middle Tennessee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287285-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Arab Athletics Championships\nThe 2019 Arab Athletics Championships was the twentieth edition of the international athletics competition between Arab countries that took place from 5\u20138 April 2019 at Cairo, Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287285-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Arab Athletics Championships\nThe medal table was topped by Bahrain followed by Morocco and the host nation Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287286-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Arab Club Champions Cup Final\nThe 2019 Arab Club Champions Cup Final was the final match of the 2018\u201319 Arab Club Champions Cup, the 28th season of the Arab League's main club football tournament organised by UAFA, and the 1st season since it was renamed from the Arab Club Championship to the Arab Club Champions Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287286-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Arab Club Champions Cup Final\nThe match was played by \u00c9toile Sportive du Sahel of Tunisia and Al Hilal SFC of Saudi Arabia, and held at the Hazza bin Zayed Stadium in Al Ain, United Arab Emirates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287286-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Arab Club Champions Cup Final\n\u00c9toile Sportive du Sahel defeated Al-Hilal SFC 2\u20131 in the final and won the title for the first time in their history, becoming the third Tunisian team to win the competition in the last five editions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287286-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Arab Club Champions Cup Final, Venue\nThe Hazza bin Zayed Stadium is a multi-purpose stadium, located in the City of Al Ain, Emirate of Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. It is the home stadium of Al Ain FC of the UAE Pro-League. The stadium holds 22,717 spectators and opened in 2014. The stadium was named after the chairman of the club, Sheikh Hazza bin Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287286-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Arab Club Champions Cup Final, Venue\nThe 45,000 m2 (480,000 sq ft) Hazza bin Zayed stadium is split over seven levels, and is one of the most modern sporting venues in the Middle East. It is one of the most sophisticated sports venues in the region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287287-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Arab Youth Athletics Championships\nThe 2019 Arab Youth Athletics Championships was the seventh edition of the international athletics competition for under-18 athletes from Arab countries. Organised by the Arab Athletic Federation, it took place in Tunisia Rad\u00e8s from 4\u20137 July. A total of forty events were contested, of which 20 by male and 20 by female athletes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287288-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Aragon motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2019 Aragon motorcycle Grand Prix was the fourteenth round of the 2019 MotoGP season. It was held at the Ciudad del Motor de Arag\u00f3n in Alca\u00f1iz on 22 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287289-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Aragonese regional election\nThe 2019 Aragonese regional election was held on Sunday, 26 May 2019, to elect the 10th Cortes of the autonomous community of Aragon. All 67 seats in the Cortes were up for election. The election was held simultaneously with regional elections in eleven other autonomous communities and local elections all throughout Spain, as well as the 2019 European Parliament election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287289-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Aragonese regional election\nThe election resulted in the most fragmented parliament to date, with up to eight parliamentary groups being formed. The Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) emerged as the largest political party and was able to retain government throughout a diverse coalition agreement including Podemos, the Aragonese Party (PAR) and the Aragonese Union (CHA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287289-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Aragonese regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nThe Cortes of Aragon were the devolved, unicameral legislature of the autonomous community of Aragon, having legislative power in regional matters as defined by the Spanish Constitution and the Aragonese Statute of Autonomy, as well as the ability to vote confidence in or withdraw it from a regional president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287289-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Aragonese regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nVoting for the Cortes was on the basis of universal suffrage, which comprised all nationals over eighteen, registered in Aragon and in full enjoyment of their political rights. Additionally, Aragonese people abroad were required to apply for voting before being permitted to vote, a system known as \"begged\" or expat vote (Spanish: Voto rogado). The 67 members of the Cortes of Aragon were elected using the D'Hondt method and a closed list proportional representation, with an electoral threshold of three percent of valid votes\u2014which included blank ballots\u2014being applied in each constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287289-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Aragonese regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nSeats were allocated to constituencies, corresponding to the provinces of Huesca, Teruel and Zaragoza, with each being allocated an initial minimum of 13 seats and the remaining 28 being distributed in proportion to their populations (provided that the seat-to-population ratio in the most populated province did not exceed 2.75 times that of the least populated one).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287289-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Aragonese regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nThe use of the D'Hondt method might result in a higher effective threshold, depending on the district magnitude.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287289-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Aragonese regional election, Overview, Election date\nThe term of the Cortes of Aragon expired four years after the date of their previous election, unless they were dissolved earlier. The election decree was required to be issued no later than the twenty-fifth day prior to the date of expiry of parliament and published on the following day in the Official Gazette of Aragon (BOA), with election day taking place on the fifty-fourth day from publication. The previous election was held on 24 May 2015, which meant that the legislature's term would have expired on 24 May 2019. The election decree was required to be published in the BOA no later than 30 April 2019, with the election taking place on the fifty-fourth day from publication, setting the latest possible election date for the Assembly on Sunday, 23 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 828]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287289-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Aragonese regional election, Overview, Election date\nThe president had the prerogative to dissolve the Cortes of Aragon and call a snap election, provided that no motion of no confidence was in process and that dissolution did not occur before one year had elapsed since the previous one. In the event of an investiture process failing to elect a regional president within a two-month period from the first ballot, the Cortes were to be automatically dissolved and a fresh election called.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287289-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Aragonese regional election, Parliamentary composition\nThe Cortes of Aragon were officially dissolved on 2 April 2019, after the publication of the dissolution decree in the Official Gazette of Aragon. The table below shows the composition of the parliamentary groups in the Cortes at the time of dissolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287289-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Aragonese regional election, Parties and candidates\nThe electoral law allowed for parties and federations registered in the interior ministry, coalitions and groupings of electors to present lists of candidates. Parties and federations intending to form a coalition ahead of an election were required to inform the relevant Electoral Commission within ten days of the election call, whereas groupings of electors needed to secure the signature of at least one percent of the electorate in the constituencies for which they sought election, disallowing electors from signing for more than one list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287289-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Aragonese regional election, Parties and candidates\nBelow is a list of the main parties and electoral alliances which contested the election:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287289-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Aragonese regional election, Opinion polls\nThe table below lists voting intention estimates in reverse chronological order, showing the most recent first and using the dates when the survey fieldwork was done, as opposed to the date of publication. Where the fieldwork dates are unknown, the date of publication is given instead. The highest percentage figure in each polling survey is displayed with its background shaded in the leading party's colour. If a tie ensues, this is applied to the figures with the highest percentages. The \"Lead\" column on the right shows the percentage-point difference between the parties with the highest percentages in a given poll. When available, seat projections are also displayed below the voting estimates in a smaller font. 34 seats were required for an absolute majority in the Cortes of Aragon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 842]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287289-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Aragonese regional election, Opinion polls\nPoll conducted after legal ban on opinion polls\u00a0\u00a0Exit poll", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287290-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ArbCom election RfC notifications\nAfter the 2018 ArbCom Election, multiple users requested to be notified when the 2019 ArbCom Election RfC would take place. I have generated this list based on the one .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287291-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Archery World Cup\nThe 2019 Archery World Cup, also known as the Hyundai Archery World Cup for sponsorship reasons, was the 14th edition of the international archery circuit organised annually by World Archery. The 2019 World Cup consisted of five events, and ran from 22 April to 7 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287291-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Archery World Cup, Calendar\nThe calendar for the 2019 World Cup, announced by World Archery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287292-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Arctic Race of Norway\nThe 2019 Arctic Race of Norway was a four-stage cycling stage race that took place in Norway between 15 and 18 August. It was the seventh edition of the Arctic Race of Norway and is rated as a 2.HC event as part of the UCI Europe Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287292-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Arctic Race of Norway, Teams\nTwenty teams of up to six riders were invited to take part in the race. Of these teams, four were UCI WorldTeams, thirteen were UCI Professional Continental teams, and three were UCI Continental teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287292-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Arctic Race of Norway, Classifications\nThe race included four main classifications: the general classification (represented by a yellow and orange jersey), the points classification (represented by a green jersey), the mountains classification (represented by a salmon jersey) and the youth classification (represented by a white jersey). There was also an award for the most aggressive rider on each stage and a team classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287293-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ards and North Down Borough Council election\nThe second election to Ards and North Down Borough Council, part of the Northern Ireland local elections on 2 May 2019, returned 40 members to the council via Single Transferable Vote. The Democratic Unionist Party once again won a plurality of seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287293-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ards and North Down Borough Council election, Results by party\nThe overall turnout was 43.80% with a total of 50,206 valid votes cast. A total of 660 ballots were rejected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 67], "content_span": [68, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287293-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Ards and North Down Borough Council election, Results by electoral area, Ards Peninsula\n2014: 3 x DUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x UUP, 1 x Alliance2019: 3 x DUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x UUP, 1 x Alliance2014-2019 Change: No change", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 92], "content_span": [93, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287293-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Ards and North Down Borough Council election, Results by electoral area, Bangor Central\n2014: 2 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x Greens2019: 2 x DUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x Greens, 1 x UUP, 1 x Independent 2014-2019 Change: Independent gains one seat from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 92], "content_span": [93, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287293-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Ards and North Down Borough Council election, Results by electoral area, Bangor East and Donaghadee\n2014: 3 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x Independent2019: 2 x UUP, 2 x DUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x Independent2014-2019 Change: UUP gain one seat from DUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 104], "content_span": [105, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287293-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Ards and North Down Borough Council election, Results by electoral area, Bangor West\n2014: 2 x DUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x UUP, 1 x Green2019: 2 x Alliance, 1 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x Green2014-2019 Change: Alliance gain one seat from DUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 89], "content_span": [90, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287293-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Ards and North Down Borough Council election, Results by electoral area, Comber\n2014: 2 x DUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x UUP, 1 x TUV2019: 2 x DUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x UUP, 1 x TUV2014-2019 Change: No change", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 84], "content_span": [85, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287293-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Ards and North Down Borough Council election, Results by electoral area, Holywood and Clandeboye\n2014: 2 x DUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x Green, 1 x UUP2019: 2 x Alliance, 1 x Green, 1 x DUP, 1 x UUP2014-2019 Change: Alliance gain one seat from DUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 101], "content_span": [102, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287293-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Ards and North Down Borough Council election, Results by electoral area, Newtownards\n2014: 3 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x Independent2019: 3 x DUP, 2 x Alliance, 1 x UUP, 1 x Independent2014-2019 Change: Alliance gain one seat from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 89], "content_span": [90, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287293-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Ards and North Down Borough Council election, Changes during the term, \u2013 Suspensions\nColin Kennedy (DUP) was suspended from the council for six weeks from Friday 18 June 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 89], "content_span": [90, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287294-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Arema F.C. season\nThe 2019 Arema F.C. season is Arema's 32nd competitive season. The club will compete in Indonesia League 1, Piala Indonesia and Indonesia President's Cup. Arema Football Club a professional football club based in Malang, East Java, Indonesia. The season covers the period from 1 January 2019 to 31 December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287294-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Arema F.C. season, Squad information, 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-00287294-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Arema F.C. season, Statistics, Top scorers\nThe list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287295-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Arena Football League season\nThe 2019 Arena Football League season was the 32nd and final season in the history of the Arena Football League (AFL). Prior to the start of the season, the league expanded from four to six teams with two added expansion teams. The 12-game regular season began on April 26 and ended on July 21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287295-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Arena Football League season, League business, Teams\nFor the first time since 2011, the AFL entered the season with more teams than it had the previous season, adding an expansion team and reactivating another that had been dormant for over a decade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287295-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Arena Football League season, League business, Teams\nThe league announced the Atlantic City Blackjacks expansion team on January 22, 2019, that is operated by the same ownership group as the Albany Empire. On February 7, 2019, the league re-added the Columbus Destroyers as another expansion team to bring the league back to six teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287295-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Arena Football League season, League business, Schedule and playoff changes\nThe 2019 season consisted of a 13-week schedule during which each team played 12 games and had one bye week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 80], "content_span": [81, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287295-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Arena Football League season, League business, Schedule and playoff changes\nAt the end of the regular season, the top four teams participated in the ArenaBowl playoffs, in which the top seed faced the fourth seed while the second seed faced the third seed in a home-and-home series. The team in each series with the highest aggregate score advanced to the ArenaBowl. If the aggregate score in either series was tied after the second game in the home-and-home semifinals, the game would have continued in the AFL's standard overtime format. While the semifinals consisted of two games in each pairing, ArenaBowl XXXII was still one game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 80], "content_span": [81, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287295-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Arena Football League season, League business, Closure\nThe AFL announced it had closed its teams' local operations on October 29, following that with a Chapter 7 bankruptcy liquidation filing November 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287295-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Arena Football League season, Final season standings\ny - clinched regular season titlex - clinched playoff berth", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287295-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Arena Football League season, Attendance\nAnnounced attendance figures for each home game. In the weekly columns, dashes (\u2014) indicate away games or a bye week, while bold font indicates the highest attendance of each team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287296-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentina Open\nThe 2019 Argentina Open was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 22nd edition of the ATP Buenos Aires event, and part of the ATP Tour 250 series of the 2019 ATP Tour. It took place in Buenos Aires, Argentina, from February 11 through 17, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287296-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentina 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-00287296-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentina 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-00287297-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentina Open \u2013 Doubles\nAndr\u00e9s Molteni and Horacio Zeballos were the defending champions, but chose not to participate together. Molteni played alongside Roman Jebav\u00fd, but lost in the quarterfinals to Marco Cecchinato and Du\u0161an Lajovi\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287297-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentina Open \u2013 Doubles\nZeballos successfully defended the title alongside M\u00e1ximo Gonz\u00e1lez, defeating Diego Schwartzman and Dominic Thiem in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287298-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentina Open \u2013 Singles\nDominic Thiem was the defending champion, but lost to Diego Schwartzman in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287298-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentina Open \u2013 Singles\nMarco Cecchinato won the title, defeating Schwartzman in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287298-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentina Open \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287299-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentina Women's Hockey National Tournament\nThe 2019 Argentina Women's Hockey National Tournament was the 11th edition of the women's national tournament. It was going to be held from 3 to 6 October 2019 in Mendoza, Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287299-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentina Women's Hockey National Tournament\nMendoza achieved its third title after beating Cordoba 3-0 at the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287299-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentina Women's Hockey National Tournament, Squads\nPlayers followed with a country flag are those involved in its senior national team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 57], "content_span": [58, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287300-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay blackout\nOn 16 June 2019, a large-scale power outage struck most of Argentina, all of Uruguay, and parts of Paraguay, leaving an estimated total of 48 million people without electrical supply.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287300-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay blackout\nBy the following day it was confirmed that power had been restored to most of Argentina and Uruguay, and Argentine President Mauricio Macri promised a full investigation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287300-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay blackout\nThe blackout is believed to have been caused by an operational misbehavior from Transener, a transmission lines operator in Argentina. A 500 kV line running from Colonia El\u00eda to Campana, crossing the Paran\u00e1 Guaz\u00fa river, was down on undergoing maintenance to repair the tower number 412, whose base had been suffering from erosion by the river.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287300-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay blackout\nThe company made a bypass for this tasks, using a nearby overhead line, but missed to reflect that network grid change in the Automatic Generation Shutdown system (in spanish: DAG), which is designed to alert energy generators of network changes that would require a lower of energy generation. This caused, after a short circuit which lowered demand, an excess of power generation in the grid, a lack of synchronization of power plants, loss of balance, and a low frequency in the network.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287300-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay blackout\nIn about 30 seconds, a succession of automatic disconnections from the grid caused a blackout that came to affect 50 million users in the continent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287300-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay blackout, Timeline\nAt 7:07 a.m. (UTC-3) on 16 June 2019, Argentina's power grid \"collapsed\", according to Gustavo Lopetegui, the country's Energy Secretary. The failure occurred in the Argentine Interconnection System. In total, an estimated 48 million people lost power. The blackout affected most of Argentina (Tierra del Fuego in the country's far south was not affected) and Uruguay, along with parts of Paraguay. Although some media reported blackouts in parts of Chile and parts of southern Brazil, this claim was denied by the Chilean and Brazilian national authorities. Argentina's President Mauricio Macri called it \"unprecedented\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287300-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay blackout, Timeline\nArgentine distributor of electricity Edesur announced on Twitter at 7:50 a.m. that all of Argentina and Uruguay had lost power as a result of the incident. It caused disruptions in subways and trains, but did not affect electric and non-electric airborne transport. According to Edesur, power had already been restored to some parts of Buenos Aires by 10 a.m.; Edesur reported that it might take many hours to restore power to all affected customers. By 1:30 p.m. power had been restored across 75% of Uruguay. By mid-afternoon 50,000 people had power restored in Argentina; north of R\u00edo Negro, coastal cities and the metropolitan areas of Uruguay also had power restored, as confirmed via Twitter by Uruguay's government-owned power company UTE. By the evening, it was announced that power had been restored to 98% of Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 885]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287300-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay blackout, Timeline\nBy 17 June, it was confirmed that power had been restored to most of Argentina and Uruguay. Argentine President Macri promised a full investigation. Citing official sources, Argentine media reported that the outage was linked to a failure in the transmission of electricity from the Yacyret\u00e1 hydroelectric dam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287300-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay blackout, Impact\nBecause the distribution of drinking water was affected by the power outage, Agua y Saneamientos Argentinos, one of Argentina's biggest water companies, warned people without power to limit their use of water.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287300-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay blackout, Impact\nThe blackout had an impact on local gubernatorial elections taking place in Argentina, where the lack of power forced voters to fill out ballots in the dark, using their mobile phones as flashlights. In some regions of the country, the elections were postponed by authorities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287300-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay blackout, Impact\nMedical patients who were dependent upon home equipment were urged to attend local hospitals, where similar devices were still operational, as they were powered by backup generators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287300-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay blackout, Investigation\nInvestigations into the cause of the outage are being undertaken by both Edesur and the Argentine government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287300-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay blackout, Investigation\nAn independent energy expert in Argentina attributed a role in the blackout to \"systemic operational and design errors\" in the country's energy infrastructure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287300-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay blackout, Investigation\nArgentine Energy Secretary Gustavo Lopetegui said it was unlikely to have been caused by a cyberattack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287300-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay blackout, Investigation\nPreliminary reports suggested that the blackout likely originated from a fault in a 500\u00a0kV circuit from the municipality of Colonia El\u00eda to Belgrano, a suburb of Buenos Aires. A second 500\u00a0kV circuit from Colonia El\u00eda to Mercedes subsequently tripped under automatic action; the cause of that trip is still under investigation. A third 500\u00a0kV line from Colonia El\u00eda to Nueva Campana was out of service at the time owing to construction work.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287300-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay blackout, Aftermath\nThe Ente Nacional Regulador de la Electricidad will apply fines to the wholesaler energy distributor Transener. According to regulations, the maximum fine can be either 10% of the annual earnings or 50% of the monthly ones; Transener earned $9,838.5 million in 2018. Distributors Edenor and Edesur turned off 38% of the service, which harmed the situation as it was required a 52% to compensate the outage. Cammesa, the institution that regulates those distributors, explained that this was an automatic process, and that this failure was a consequence of badly programmed systems. Cammesa would redirect the money of the fees to the users, who would get a tax credit as compensation. Those credits would be of a uniform amount, unrelated to the actual time each user was without energy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 56], "content_span": [57, 844]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287301-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentine general election\nGeneral elections were held in Argentina on 27 October 2019, to elect the president of Argentina, members of the national congress and the governors of most provinces. Former Cabinet Chief Alberto Fern\u00e1ndez of Frente de Todos defeated incumbent president Mauricio Macri of Juntos por el Cambio, exceeding the threshold to win the presidency in a single round. Macri became the first incumbent president in Argentine history to be defeated in his reelection bid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287301-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentine general election, Electoral system\nThe election of the president was conducted under the ballotage system, a modified version of the two-round system. A candidate can win the presidency in a single round by either winning 45% of the vote, or if they win 40% of the vote while finishing 10 percentage points ahead of the second-place candidate. If no candidate meets either threshold, a runoff takes place between the top two candidates. Voting is compulsory for citizens between 18 and 70 years old. Suffrage was also extended to 16- and 17-year-olds, though without compulsory voting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287301-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentine general election, Electoral system\nThere are a total of 257 seats of the Chamber of Deputies. They are elected from 24 electoral districts\u2013the 23 provinces, plus the federal district of Buenos Aires, which elects its own executive and legislature and is represented in the national Congress like all other provinces. The number of seats are distributed in relation to the population of the province. One-third of the seats in the Chamber of Deputies are reserved for women. The 130 seats of the Chamber of Deputies up for election were elected from 24 multi-member constituencies based on the 23 provinces and Buenos Aires. Seats were allocated using the D'Hondt method of proportional representation, with an electoral threshold of 3%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287301-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentine general election, Electoral system\nThe 24 seats in the Senate up for election were elected in three-seat constituencies using the closed list system. Each district is represented by three senatorial seats. Each party is allowed to register up to two candidates; one of those registered must be female. The party receiving the most votes wins two seats, and the second-placed party wins one. The third senatorial seat was established in the Constitution of 1994 in order to better represent the largest minority in each district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287301-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentine general election, Electoral system, Congress, Chamber of Deputies\nThe 257 members of the Chamber of Deputies are elected by proportional representation in 24 multi-member constituencies based on the provinces (plus the City of Buenos Aires). Seats are allocated using the d'Hondt method with a 3% electoral threshold. In this election, 130 of the 257 seats are up for renewal for a 4-year term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 80], "content_span": [81, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287301-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentine general election, Electoral system, Congress, Senate\nThe 72 members of the Senate are elected in the same 24 constituencies, with three seats in each. The party receiving the most votes in each constituency wins two seats, with the third seat awarded to the second-placed party. The 2019 elections will see one-third of Senators renewed, with eight provinces electing three Senators for a 6-year term; Buenos Aires City, Chaco, Entre R\u00edos, Neuqu\u00e9n, R\u00edo Negro, Salta, Santiago del Estero and Tierra del Fuego.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287301-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentine general election, Candidates\nThe following candidates successfully registered their nominations before the limit date of 22 June 2019, and went on to compete in the Open, Simultaneous and Mandatory Primaries (PASO) on 11 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287301-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentine general election, Results, Primary elections\nOpen primary elections for the Presidency were held nationwide on 11 August. With this system, all parties run primary elections on a single ballot. All parties must take part in it, both the parties with internal factions and parties with a single candidate list. Citizens may vote for any candidate of any party, but may only cast a single vote. The most voted candidate of parties gaining 1.5% or higher of the valid votes advances to the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287301-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentine general election, Results, Primary elections\nFern\u00e1ndez came top with 47.8% of the vote, with Macri trailing behind with 31.8%. Lavagna, del Ca\u00f1o, G\u00f3mez Centuri\u00f3n and Espert all received enough valid votes to participate in the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287301-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentine general election, Results, President\nFern\u00e1ndez owed his victory mostly to Buenos Aires Province swinging over dramatically to support him; he carried it by over 1.6 million votes over Macri, accounting for almost all of his nationwide margin of 2.1 million votes. By comparison, Daniel Scioli only carried the province by 219,000 votes in 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287302-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Argentine motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2019 Argentine motorcycle Grand Prix was the second round of the 2019 MotoGP season. It was held at the Aut\u00f3dromo Termas de R\u00edo Hondo in Santiago del Estero on 31 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287303-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Bowl\nThe 2019 Arizona Bowl was a college football bowl game played on December 31, 2019, with kickoff at 4:30\u00a0p.m. EST (2:30\u00a0p.m. local MST) on CBS Sports Network. It was the 5th edition of the Arizona Bowl, and one of the 2019\u201320 bowl games concluding the 2019 FBS football season. Sponsored by the Nova Home Loans mortgage broker company, the game was officially known as the Nova Home Loans Arizona Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287303-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Bowl, Teams\nThe game was played between the Wyoming Cowboys from the Mountain West Conference and the Georgia State Panthers from the Sun Belt Conference. This was the first time that the two programs met, and the first Arizona Bowl appearance for both programs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287303-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Bowl, Teams, Wyoming Cowboys\nWyoming entered the game with a 7\u20135 record (4\u20134 in conference), having lost three of four games to end their regular season. They finished in fourth place in Mountain West's Mountain Division. The Cowboys lost to the only ranked FBS team they faced, Boise State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287303-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Bowl, Teams, Georgia State Panthers\nGeorgia State also entered the game with a 7\u20135 record (4\u20134 in conference), also having lost three of four games to end their regular season. They finished in third place in the Sun Belt's East Division. The Panthers also lost to the only ranked FBS team they faced, Appalachian State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287304-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Cardinals season\nThe 2019 season was the Arizona Cardinals' 100th in the National Football League (NFL), their 32nd in Arizona and their first under head coach Kliff Kingsbury, following the firing of former head coach Steve Wilks the previous season. During the offseason, the Cardinals' home stadium was renamed from University of Phoenix Stadium to State Farm Stadium. The Cardinals were one of two current teams, along with the Chicago Bears, who were among the 14 charter members of the American Professional Football Association, which later became the NFL, that celebrated its 100th season in 2019. The Cardinals improved on their 3\u201313 campaign in 2018. However, they were mathematically eliminated from playoff contention for the fourth straight season after a Week 13 loss to the Los Angeles Rams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 820]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287304-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Cardinals season\nBill Bidwill, who had owned the team since 1972, died on October 2, 2019, at the age of 88.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287304-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Cardinals season, Offseason, Draft\nThe Cardinals selected Washington State safety Jalen Thompson in the fifth round of the 2019 supplemental draft that was held on July 10. As a result, the Cardinals will forfeit their fifth-round selection during the 2020 draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287304-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Cardinals season, Offseason, Draft\nIn addition to receiving the number one overall draft pick, the Cardinals also have the top spot on the waiver wire by virtue of having the worst record in the NFL during the 2018 season. The Cardinals picked up Pharoh Cooper (wide receiver, previously from the Los Angeles Rams), D. J. Swearinger (safety, previously from the Washington Redskins), Tanner Vallejo (linebacker, previously from the Cleveland Browns), Robert Alford (cornerback, previously from the Atlanta Falcons), Brooks Reed (outside linebacker, previously from the Atlanta Falcons), and Charles Clay (tight end, previously from the Buffalo Bills).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287305-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Diamondbacks season\nThe 2019 Arizona Diamondbacks season was the franchise's 22nd season in Major League Baseball and their 22nd season at Chase Field in Phoenix, Arizona as members of the National League West Division. They were managed by Torey Lovullo in his third season with the franchise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287305-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Diamondbacks season\nThe 2019 Diamondbacks were the first team in Major League history to have their road opener against one reigning pennant winner (Dodgers) and their home opener against the other (Red Sox) in the same season. Despite improving upon their 82\u201380 record from last season, the Diamondbacks were eliminated from postseason contention for the second consecutive year after a loss to the Cardinals on September 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287305-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Diamondbacks season\nThe 2019 Diamondbacks were by one measure the \"most average team\" in baseball history. For 60 games, the Diamondbacks were within two games of .500 (plus or minus), an MLB record that surpassed a 56-game streak by the 2007 Oakland Athletics. The stretch lasted from June 18, when the Diamondbacks lost to the Colorado Rockies to fall to 38-36, through August 30, when they beat the Los Angeles Dodgers to improve to 69-66.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287305-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Diamondbacks season\nThe Diamondbacks broke a league record alongside the Philadelphia Phillies this season for most home-runs in one game, smashing a franchise record 8 home-runs out of 13 total in a 13\u20138 win on June 10. Additionally, the Diamondbacks set a franchise record on September 24/25, when their game against the Cardinals lasted 19 innings, the longest game by innings played in Diamondbacks' history and, at 6 hours and 53 minutes from start to finish, the longest game ever played at Chase Field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287305-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Arizona Diamondbacks season\nHaving used 30 players in this game, the Diamondbacks set another franchise record in that respect, and, with 25 strikeouts by Diamondbacks pitchers and 21 by Cardinals pitchers, both teams tied a Major League Baseball record for most strikeouts in a single game at 46, the game also marking only the second time in baseball history that two teams struck out 21 or more opponents in the same game. The Diamondbacks won the game, 3\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287306-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona State Sun Devils baseball team\nThe 2019 Arizona State Sun Devils baseball team represents Arizona State University in the 2019 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Sun Devils played their home games at Phoenix Municipal Stadium, off campus in Phoenix, Arizona. Tracy Smith is in his fifth season as the Arizona State Sun Devils baseball head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287306-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona State Sun Devils 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-00287307-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona State Sun Devils football team\nThe 2019 Arizona State Sun Devils football team represented Arizona State University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. They were led by second-year head coach Herm Edwards and played their home games at Sun Devil Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287307-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Preseason, Pac-12 Media Days, Pac-12 media poll\nIn the 2019 Pac-12 preseason media poll, Arizona State was voted to finish tied for third place with UCLA in the South Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 92], "content_span": [93, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287307-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Schedule\nArizona State will open its 2019 schedule with three non-conference games against Kent State of the Mid-American Conference, Sacramento State of the Big Sky Conference, and Michigan State of the Big Ten Conference. In Pac-12 Conference play, the Sun Devils will play the other members of the South Division and draws California, Oregon, Oregon State, and Washington State from the North Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287307-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Oregon\nJayden Daniels broke Rudy Carpenter's record for passing yards in a season for a freshman quarterback.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 67], "content_span": [68, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287308-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Tennis Classic\nThe 2019 Arizona Tennis Classic was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Phoenix, United States between 11 and 17 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287308-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Tennis Classic, 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-00287308-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Tennis Classic, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as alternates:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287309-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Tennis Classic \u2013 Doubles\nJamie Murray and Neal Skupski won the title after defeating Austin Krajicek and Artem Sitak 6\u20137(2\u20137), 7\u20135, [10\u20136] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287310-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Tennis Classic \u2013 Singles\nMatteo Berrettini won the title after defeating Mikhail Kukushkin 3\u20136, 7\u20136(8\u20136), 7\u20136(7\u20132) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287311-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Wildcats baseball team\nThe 2019 Arizona Wildcats baseball team represented the University of Arizona in the 2019 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Wildcats played their home games for the 8th season at Hi Corbett Field. The team was coached by Jay Johnson in his 4th season at Arizona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287312-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Wildcats football team\nThe 2019 Arizona Wildcats football team represented the University of Arizona in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The season marked the Wildcats' 120th season. They played their home games at Arizona Stadium in Tucson, Arizona (for the 91st year) and competed as members of the South Division (9th season) in the Pac-12 Conference (42nd overall season). They were led by second-year head coach Kevin Sumlin. They finished the season 4\u20138, 2\u20137 in Pac-12 play to finish in last place in the South Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287312-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Wildcats football team\nDefensive coordinator Marcel Yates was fired after eight games. He was hired to be the defensive backs coach at California in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287312-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Wildcats football team, Previous season, Offseason\nThe Wildcats have 12 senior graduates only graduated players noted until spring practice. As well as one junior who would choose to forgo their senior season in pursuit of an early NFL career. The Wildcats would lose 14 more players from the 2018 team due to various reasons. Notable departures from the 2018 squad included.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287312-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Wildcats football team, Previous season, Recruiting\nThe 2019 football recruiting cycle was the first in which the NCAA authorized two signing periods for high school seniors in that sport. In addition to the traditional spring period starting with National Signing Day in February 2019, a new early signing period was introduced, with the first such period falling from December 19, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287312-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Wildcats football team, Previous season, Returning starters\n\u2020 Indicates player was a starter in 2018 but missed all of 2019 due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287312-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Wildcats football team, Previous season, Spring game\nThe 2019 Wildcats had spring practice in March 2019. The 2019 Arizona football spring game took place in Tucson, AZ on April 13, 2019 at 6:00 pm MT with the Defense team beating the Offense team 87\u201330.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287312-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Wildcats football team, Preseason, Pac-12 Media Day\nThe 2019 Pac-12 Media Day was held on July 24, 2019 in Hollywood, California. Arizona head coach Kevin Sumlin, quarterback Khalil Tate, and running back J. J. Taylor were in attendance to field questions from the media.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287312-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Wildcats football team, Preseason, Pac-12 Media Day\nIn the 2019 Pac-12 preseason media poll, Arizona was voted to finish in fifth place in the South Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287312-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Wildcats football team, Preseason, Preseason All-Pac-12 teams\nThe Wildcats had 2 players at 2 positions selected to the preseason All-Pac-12 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 74], "content_span": [75, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287312-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Wildcats football team, Schedule\nArizona announced its 2019 football schedule on December 4, 2018. The 2019 Wildcats' schedule consists of 6 home and 6 away games for the regular season. Arizona host 4 Pac-12 opponents Oregon State, UCLA, Utah and Washington, host 5 Pac-12 opponents on the road to arch-rival Arizona State for the 92nd annual Territorial Cup to close out the regular season, Colorado, Oregon, Stanford and USC. Arizona is not scheduled to play Pac-12 North opponents California and Washington State for the 2019 Pac-12 regular season. The Wildcats has 3 bye weeks comes during Week 1 (on August 31), Week 4 (on September 21) and Week 11 (on November 9).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287312-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Wildcats football team, Schedule\nArizona's out of conference opponents represent the Big Sky, Big 12 and Mountain West conferences. The Wildcats will host two non\u2013conference games which are against Northern Arizona from the (Big Sky) and Texas Tech (Big 12) and travel to Hawaii from the (Mountain West).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287312-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Wildcats football team, Statistics, Offense\nNote: G = Games played; ATT = Attempts; YDS = Yards; AVG = Average yard per carry; LG = Longest run; TD = Rushing touchdowns", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287312-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Wildcats football team, Statistics, Offense\nNote: G = Games played; COMP = Completions; ATT = Attempts; COMP\u00a0% = Completion percentage; YDS = Passing yards; TD = Passing touchdowns; INT = Interceptions; EFF = Passing efficiency", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287312-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Wildcats football team, Statistics, Offense\nNote: G = Games played; REC = Receptions; YDS = Yards; AVG = Average yard per catch; LG = Longest catch; TD = Receiving touchdowns", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287312-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Wildcats football team, Statistics, Defense\nNote: G = Games played; Solo = Solo tackles; Ast = Assisted tackles; Total = Total tackles; TFL-Yds = Tackles for loss-yards lost; Sack = Sacks; INT = Interceptions; PD = Passes defended; FF = Forced fumbles; FR = Forced recoveries", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287312-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Wildcats football team, Statistics, Special teams\nNote: G = Games played; PR = Punt returns; PYDS = Punt return yards; PLG = Punt return long; KR = Kick returns; KYDS = Kick return yards; KLG = Kick return long; TD = Total return touchdowns", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287312-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Wildcats football team, Statistics, Special teams\nNote: G = Games played; FGM = Field goals made; FGA = Field goals attempted; LG = Field goal long; XPT = Extra points made; XPT ATT = XPT attempted; In20 = Kicking inside the 20; 20-29 = Kicking inside the 20-29; 30-39 = Kicking inside the 30-39; 40-49 = Kicking inside the 40-49; 50 = Kicking inside the 50; TP = Total points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287312-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Wildcats football team, Statistics, Special teams\nNote: G = Games played; P = Punts; YDS = Yards; AVG = Average per punt; LG = Punt long; In20 = Punts inside the 20; TB = Touchbacks", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287312-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Arizona Wildcats football team, Postseason, 2020 NFL Draft\nThe 2020 NFL Draft will be held on April 23\u201325, 2020 in Paradise, Nevada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287313-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas Razorbacks baseball team\nThe 2019 Arkansas Razorbacks baseball team represents the University of Arkansas in the 2019 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Razorbacks were coached by Dave Van Horn, in his 17th season with the Razorbacks, and played home games at Baum\u2013Walker Stadium. Arkansas ended the 2018 season as runners-up in the College World Series (CWS). Five starting fielders and two starting pitchers from the 2018 team had moved on to professional baseball or graduation. Expectations were high for the 2019 team, picked to finished third in the SEC West and ranked between #12-25 in preseason polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287313-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas Razorbacks baseball team\nArkansas finished with a 46\u201318 (20\u201310 SEC) record, winning the SEC West and entering the postseason ranked #4-6 nationally. The Razorbacks swept the Fayetteville Regional and defeated Ole Miss in the Fayetteville Super Regional to clinch the school's tenth CWS, making back-to-back trips for the first time in school history. Arkansas lost two one-run games in Omaha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287313-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas Razorbacks baseball team, Preseason\nArkansas scheduled two preseason exhibition games in Fall 2018 following a rule change by the NCAA. The first was scheduled against Oklahoma at L. Dale Mitchell Park on September 22, but was cancelled due to rain. The Razorbacks played Wichita State (coached by longtime Arkansas assistant coach Todd Butler) at home on October 5, playing 14 innings. The Razorbacks traveled to Little Rock to play the Little Rock Trojans for a second exhibition game. The exhibition match-up at Gary Hogan Field was the first for the Razorbacks against an in-state opponent in program history. The final week of fall practice was a best-of-five annual intrasquad Fall World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287313-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas Razorbacks baseball team, Preseason\nIn November, it was announced pitching coach Wes Johnson has been hired by the Minnesota Twins. Arkansas hired Matt Hobbs, who had coached the previous four seasons at Wake Forest. Head coach Dave Van Horn was inducted into the Arkansas Sports Hall of Fame in January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287313-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas Razorbacks baseball team, Preseason, SEC media poll\nThe SEC media poll was released on February 7, 2019 with the Razorbacks predicted to finish in third place in the Western Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287313-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas Razorbacks baseball team, Schedule and results\n\u2022 Rankings based on the teams' current ranking in the D1Baseball poll", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287313-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287314-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas Razorbacks football team\nThe 2019 Arkansas Razorbacks football team represented the University of Arkansas in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Razorbacks played their home games at Donald W. Reynolds Razorback Stadium in Fayetteville, Arkansas, with one home game at War Memorial Stadium in Little Rock. Arkansas played as a member of the Western Division of the Southeastern Conference (SEC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287314-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas Razorbacks football team\nOn November 10, 2019, a day after the Razorbacks' loss to Western Kentucky, second-year head coach Chad Morris was fired. He finished at Arkansas with a record of 4\u201318, going 0\u201314 in SEC play. Tight ends coach Barry Lunney Jr. finished the season as interim head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287314-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas Razorbacks football team\nThe Razorbacks lost their last nine games of the season and finished the season on a 19-game losing streak against SEC opponents, dating back to the 2017 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287314-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas Razorbacks football team, Previous season\nThe Razorbacks finished the 2018 season 2\u201310, 0\u20138 in SEC play to finish in last place in the Western Division. This was the worst season in program history, as the Razorbacks had never before lost ten games in one season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287314-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas Razorbacks football team, Preseason, SEC media poll\nThe SEC media poll was released on July 19, 2019 with the Razorbacks predicted to finish in last place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287314-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas Razorbacks football team, Preseason, Preseason All-SEC teams\nThe Razorbacks had two players selected to the preseason all-SEC teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 74], "content_span": [75, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287314-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas Razorbacks football team, Schedule\nThe Razorbacks' 2019 schedule will consist of 7 home games, 4 away games, and 1 neutral game in the regular season. The Razorbacks will host SEC foes Auburn and Mississippi State in Fayetteville, and Missouri in Little Rock. The Hogs will travel to face Ole Miss, Kentucky, Alabama, and LSU. Arkansas will face Texas A&M in Arlington, Texas for the sixth year in a row, and the ninth time in the last eleven games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287314-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas Razorbacks football team, Schedule\nArkansas will host all four of its non-conference games: against Portland State from the Big Sky Conference, Colorado State and San Jose State from the Mountain West Conference, and Western Kentucky from Conference USA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287315-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas Razorbacks women's soccer team\nThe 2019 Arkansas Razorbacks women's soccer team represents the University of Arkansas during the 2019 NCAA Division I women's soccer season. This season is the 34th in program history. The Razorbacks play their home games at Razorback Field in Fayetteville and are led by eighth-year head coach Colby Hale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287315-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas Razorbacks women's soccer team, Previous season\nIn 2018, the Razorbacks finished the regular season 11\u20134\u20133, 6\u20133\u20131 in SEC play, and were seeded fourth in the SEC Tournament, where they defeated 5-seed Ole Miss and 8-seed Florida en route to the championship game, where they fell in penalties to 7-seed LSU. The Razorbacks were selected as an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament, where they defeated Little Rock in the first round of the North Carolina bracket before being defeated in extra time by Virginia Tech. The Hogs finished their season with a record of 14\u20136\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods\nBetween May and June\u00a02019, an extended sequence of heavy rainfall events over the South Central United States caused historic flooding along the Arkansas River and its tributaries. Major and record river flooding occurred primarily in northeastern Oklahoma, and the elevated flows continued downstream into Arkansas where the caused additional inundation. Antecedent soil moisture levels and water levels in lakes and streams were already high from previous rains, priming the region for significant runoff and flooding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods\nThe prolonged combination of high atmospheric moisture and a sustained weather pattern extending across the continental United States led to frequent high-yield rainfall over the Arkansas River watershed. The overarching weather pattern allowed moisture levels to quickly rebound after each sequential rainfall episode. With soils already saturated, the excess precipitation became surface runoff and flowed into the already elevated lakes and streams. Most rainfall occurred in connection with a series of repeated thunderstorms between May\u00a019\u201321, which was then followed by additional rains that kept streams within flood stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods\nFlooding in the Arkansas River basin caused an estimated $3\u00a0billion in damage and killed five people. The initial episode of torrential rainfall prompted the issuance of two flash flood emergencies for several counties in eastern Oklahoma on May\u00a020, with numerous water rescues occurring during the event. Several reservoirs in eastern Oklahoma filled over capacity and reached record levels, requiring large releases of water to alleviate the dangerously high storage of water. Repeated rains continued to keep the reservoirs filled, necessitating further releases of water.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods\nThe prolonged release of reservoir water combined with surface runoff to cause near-record to record flooding along the Arkansas River. Parts of the Tulsa metropolitan area and entire towns near swollen rivers were inundated. In some locations the Arkansas River backed upstream into its tributaries, causing major flooding. The bulge of elevated water levels that began in Oklahoma flowed downstream into Arkansas by May\u00a023, breaching three levees along the Arkansas River and inundating numerous buildings. In Van Buren, the flood was assessed by the United States Geological Survey as a 1 in 200 year flood event. Federal major disaster declarations and statewide states of emergencies were declared for Oklahoma and Arkansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Meteorological history\nAcross the continental United States, 12\u00a0months preceding May\u00a02019 were the wettest in 124\u00a0years of recordkeeping, in line with a longer-term trend of increasing precipitation and heavy rainfall events due to climate change. Soil moisture and water levels in lakes and streams across the Southern Plains were high heading into May. During the latter half of May\u00a02019, an active weather pattern became established over the United States, characterized by the juxtaposition of pronounced trough over the western half of the country and ridging over the southern and southeastern United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Meteorological history\nThis configuration was favorable for frequent rainfalls over the Southern Plains, placing the jet stream in a position to draw the warm and moist air mass atop the Gulf of Mexico northward. Atmospheric moisture was also atypically high during this period, with precipitable water content persisting between 1.5\u20132\u00a0in (38\u201351\u00a0mm), thereby increasing the precipitation potential of each individual shower and thunderstorm. The first rains associated with the flood occurred on May\u00a018, when a squall line moved across eastern Oklahoma and western Arkansas. Additional showers immediately preceding and succeeding the squall enhanced rainfall totals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Meteorological history\nBetween May\u00a020\u201321, another storm system moved from the Rocky Mountains into Oklahoma. A warm front associated with the complex moved across the state during the daytime on May\u00a020, followed by a cold front that swept eastwards across the state between the evening of May\u00a020 into the following morning. This produced several episodes of severe thunderstorms enhanced by the confluence of the moist, warm, and unstable airmass ahead of the storm system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Meteorological history\nInitially isolated thunderstorms over eastern Oklahoma coalesced into a line, with new storm cells training repeatedly tracking over the same locations as the line slowly moved east. The complex combined with another cluster of storms over central Oklahoma and tracked northeast, causing further rainfall before dissipating. Another squall line was generated by the storm system as the associated upper-level low moved into Kansas, sweeping through eastern Oklahoma and northwestern Arkansas on the morning of May\u00a021 with its heaviest rains overlapping the same areas affected by the earlier storms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0003-0002", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Meteorological history\nMost of the rainfall associated with the flood event occurred during a 36-hour period between May\u00a019\u201321 in a region spanning from northeastern Oklahoma to northwestern Arkansas. Lesser rainfall events followed the primary rainfall event, keeping rivers in flood stage into June\u00a02019. On May\u00a022, the approach of an upper-level trough allowed moisture levels to quickly rebound in the wake of the previous day's storms. Several thunderstorms rapidly organized along Interstate 44 in Oklahoma during the late afternoon and moved towards the east-northeast. A surge of warm air and strengthening low-level winds during the nighttime hours instigated additional storm formation over the same areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Meteorological history\nTwo rounds of showers and thunderstorms affected eastern Oklahoma and the Ozarks between May\u00a024\u201325, reaping a moist atmosphere characterized by precipitable water levels at least two standard deviations above normal over north-central Oklahoma and south-central Kansas. Widespread 1.5\u20134\u00a0in (38\u2013102\u00a0mm) rainfalls occurred across the upper Arkansas River basin. The dominant trough over the western United States persisted, maintaining a southwesterly wind across the Southern Plains along which storms would travel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Meteorological history\nIn the pre-dawn hours of May\u00a026, a bow echo tracked across Oklahoma into Kansas, primarily affecting areas north of Interstate 40 and the Tulsa metropolitan area with severe weather and 1\u20133\u00a0in (25\u201376\u00a0mm) of rainfall. Two more periods of rainfall occurred on May\u00a026, producing 0.5\u20133\u00a0in (13\u201376\u00a0mm) of rainfall along the Kansas\u2013Oklahoma border. More rain fell ahead of a slow-moving cold front between May\u00a028\u201330 over Oklahoma and Arkansas, with localized totals of 2\u20134\u00a0in (51\u2013102\u00a0mm); this event was concentrated further southeast of the earlier rains, primarily affecting southeastern and east-central Oklahoma and northwestern Arkansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Impact and aftermath\nThe National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI) estimated that flooding in the Arkansas River basin caused $3\u00a0billion in damage, with a 95% confidence interval between $1.8\u2013$5.3\u00a0billion. Five people were killed by the floods. Between May\u00a018\u201330, 6\u201316\u00a0in (150\u2013410\u00a0mm) of rain fell along and northwest of a line from Okmulgee, Oklahoma to near Bentonville, Arkansas, with 3\u20135\u00a0in (76\u2013127\u00a0mm) of rain occurring at points southeast of this region. The rains also extended into southern Kansas and southwestern Missouri. Rainfall totals of 10\u201316\u00a0in (250\u2013410\u00a0mm) were widespread across southern Kansas and northern Oklahoma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Impact and aftermath\nSome areas of Oklahoma received 22\u00a0in (560\u00a0mm) of rainfall in total, representing the highest accumulated rainfall during the flood event. Talala, Oklahoma, recorded more than twice its average May rainfall in a single week. While most of the contributing rains fell between May\u00a019\u201321, river flood crests occurred between May\u00a026\u2013June\u00a04. Within the warning region of the National Weather Service office in Tulsa, Oklahoma, at least one river was at flood stage between the evening of May\u00a020 and the morning of June\u00a013. Kansas and Missouri ultimately had their wettest Mays on record, with Oklahoma experiencing its second-highest May totals and Arkansas recording its ninth-highest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Impact and aftermath, Oklahoma\nSix United States Army Corps of Engineers reservoirs in northeastern Oklahoma set records for water volume during the floods: Birch Lake, Lake Hudson, Kaw Lake, Keystone Lake, Oologah Lake, and Skiatook Lake. The National Weather Service cataloged 31\u00a0river flood events at 22\u00a0river forecast points in eastern Oklahoma. Two of these instances were at record flood stage, including the Arkansas River near Ponca City; 25 of the 31\u00a0flood events were classified as major floods.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Impact and aftermath, Oklahoma\nSeveral river gauges recorded flooding conditions lasting for more than a week; the longest flood was documented along the Arkansas River near Muskogee, which remained above flood stage for 22\u00a0days and 5\u00a0hours. Numerous state and U.S. highways were closed by the Oklahoma Department of Transportation at various points due to flooding. Over a thousand homes were affected by flooding associated with the Arkansas River. Throughout the state, 4\u00a0people were killed and 87\u00a0others were injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Impact and aftermath, Oklahoma\nPrior to the primary flood event, water levels along the Arkansas River at Muskogee had remained just below flood stage. The first round of rainfall on May\u00a018 produced widespread totals of 0.5\u20131\u00a0in (13\u201325\u00a0mm) across eastern Oklahoma and western Arkansas, raising the Arkansas River into flood stage. With the threat of flood and a tornado outbreak looming, many events scheduled for the evening of May\u00a020 were cancelled or rescheduled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Impact and aftermath, Oklahoma\nThat evening, heavy and persistent rainfall from a slow-moving line of thunderstorms caused widespread flash flooding primarily along a line from Bristow to Miami and areas northwest, submerging roadways and leading to several evacuations and water rescues. At 11:14\u00a0p.m. CDT on May\u00a020, National Weather Service Tulsa issued a flash flood emergency for southern Osage, Pawnee, northwestern Tulsa County, Oklahoma, and Washington counties. Another flash flood emergency was issued 30\u00a0minutes later for western Mayes, southeastern Osage, Rogers, northern Wagoner, and Tulsa counties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Impact and aftermath, Oklahoma\nBy 7\u00a0a.m. CDT on May\u00a021 between 4\u20138\u00a0in (100\u2013200\u00a0mm) had fallen across north-central and northeastern Oklahoma. A station in Pawnee recorded the highest 24-hour total with 9.52\u00a0in (242\u00a0mm). More than 6\u00a0in (150\u00a0mm) of rain fell in a 24-hour period of May\u00a021 over parts of Tulsa and Stillwater. Atop saturated soils, the rainfall became surface runoff which flowed into streams and the United States Army Corps of Engineers's flood control pools. Flooding affected the watersheds of the upper Arkansas, Neosho, and Verdigris rivers, which all reach a confluence in Muskogee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Impact and aftermath, Oklahoma\nThe submarine USS Batfish (SS-310) at the Muskogee War Memorial Park briefly took on water due to the swollen Arkansas River. Flash flooding and broader areal flooding caused Bird Creek to inundate areas around Skiatook. Near Avant, the creek rose 30.5\u00a0ft (9.3\u00a0m) in 12\u00a0hours, cresting at 36.52\u00a0ft (11.13\u00a0m) on the morning of May\u00a021. Water releases were necessary to relieve dangerously high lake levels in the absence of surcharge capacity, worsening flooding downstream of Pensacola Dam and Kerr Dam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0008-0002", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Impact and aftermath, Oklahoma\nResidents were forced to evacuate Webbers Falls on May\u00a022 as the flooded river began to overtake homes. A voluntary evacuation was declared for residents of Broken Arrow living within the 100-year floodplain near the Arkansas River. Flash flooding following 6\u00a0in (150\u00a0mm) of rain in El Reno led to six water rescues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Impact and aftermath, Oklahoma\nThe water levels in Kaw, Keystone, and Oologah lakes began to exceed their flood control limits after the May\u00a022\u201323 rainfall. Kaw Lake's depth reached 112.16% of its flood pool capacity on May\u00a024, causing the associated surcharge pool to completely fill; similar circumstances were present at Keystone and Ooologah lakes, prompting releases of the excess water downstream. Releases at the Keystone Dam into the Arkansas River reached flow rates more than double the flow rates at Niagara Falls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Impact and aftermath, Oklahoma\nThe Keystone Dam water release was its second largest on record and contributed to the Arkansas River reaching major flood stage in Tulsa during the afternoon of May\u00a023. Tulsa city officials recommended that people living west of Downtown Tulsa evacuate in acknowledgement of the old age of the levees protecting the city from the swollen Arkansas River. The town of Braggs, approximately 55\u00a0mi (89\u00a0km) southeast of Tulsa, lost power and was fully enveloped by floodwaters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0009-0002", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Impact and aftermath, Oklahoma\nWidespread flooding occurred across numerous streams as the May\u00a022\u201323 rains further exacerbated the elevated river stages from the earlier extreme rainfall event. The entire stretch of the Arkansas River within the warning region of National Weather Service Tulsa\u2014spanning 396\u00a0mi (637\u00a0km)\u2013experienced a major flood. All barge traffic along the McClellan\u2013Kerr Arkansas River Navigation System was suspended on May\u00a022. Two unoccupied barges tethered together broke free from their moorings at the Port of Muskogee that evening, haphazardly floating downstream.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0009-0003", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Impact and aftermath, Oklahoma\nThey were briefly obstructed by rocks before continuing downstream as the river rose, eventually colliding with the lock and dam system at Webbers Falls Lake and capsizing at around noon on May\u00a023. All residents in Moffett along the Arkansas River were ordered to evacuate on May\u00a024. The Neosho River crested at 25.5\u00a0ft (7.8\u00a0m) in Miami on May\u00a024. Southern parts of the city were submerged, with some roads under 4\u00a0ft (1.2\u00a0m) underwater. Thirty water rescues took place in Miami during the floods.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Impact and aftermath, Oklahoma\nBy May\u00a025, the excess surface runoff flowing into the Arkansas River caused the river to begin piling water upstream into its tributaries. The Poteau River flooded in this manner near Panama and rises were documented upstream to Lake Wister. Lake Hudson reached a record height on May\u00a024 despite concurrent water releases at Kerr Dam. Fort Gibson Lake crested a day later while excess water was being released via Fort Gibson Dam. Widespread runoff from the May\u00a026 caused Keystone Lake to rise further, reaching a record elevation of 757.19\u00a0ft (230.79\u00a0m) two days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Impact and aftermath, Oklahoma\nA second water release from the dam took place on May\u00a029, causing a 23.41\u00a0ft (7.14\u00a0m)-crest on the Arkansas River in Tulsa; this was the river's second highest crest in the city on record. A neighborhood on the western side of Sand Springs were flooded by both water releases from Keystone Lake. Homes in southern Tulsa and Bixby were also inundated. Two people drowned in Tulsa on May\u00a026 to the floodwaters along the Arkansas River. Other locations along the Arkansas River downstream also set records or near-records for river heights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0010-0002", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Impact and aftermath, Oklahoma\nIn addition to Keystone, six other lakes crested between May\u00a025\u201327, with three setting new pools of record. Releases from Oologah Lake caused major flooding along the Verdigris River near Claremore. Saturated soils and high river levels quickened the development of flash flooding, leading to the issuance of a flash flood emergency for northwestern Muskogee, central Okfuskee, and Okmulgee counties on May\u00a029 following another round of heavy rainfall. Although some lakes and streams had begun to recede, the new rains caused water levels to rise once more along the Arkansas River and Poteau River. Birch Lake exceeded its flood control pool for a second time while Lake Eufaula did so for its first time, requiring another water release into the Arkansas River.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 823]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Impact and aftermath, Oklahoma\nGovernor of Oklahoma Kevin Stitt declared a state of emergency for all 77\u00a0counties on May\u00a024, augmenting an earlier state of emergency that had been in place for 52\u00a0counties since the beginning of the month. U.S. President Donald Trump approved a Major Disaster Declaration for Oklahoma on June\u00a01 with an incident period from May\u00a07\u2013June\u00a09. United States National Guard helicopters dropped 4,000\u00a0lb (1,800\u00a0kg) sandbags to reinforce strained levees. The City of Tulsa began allowing flood-stricken evacuees back to their homes on June\u00a01, following over a week of displacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Impact and aftermath, Arkansas\nThe swollen streams in northeastern Oklahoma led to record flows in Arkansas throughout the Arkansas River Valley as the elevated bulge of water moved downstream, combining both surface runoff and large releases of water from upstream dams. On May\u00a022, officials from the Army Corps of Engineers warned of potentially record-breaking flood levels and flow rates in Arkansas, and urged people in floodplains and other flood-prone areas to relocate livestock and other belongings. The floods reached Fort Smith along the Arkansas\u2013Oklahoma border on May\u00a023.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Impact and aftermath, Arkansas\nSix of seven streamgages along the Arkansas River surveyed by the United States Geological Survey (USGS) in Arkansas recorded their highest streamflows on record. The flooding was considered a 1 in 200 year event near Van Buren, Arkansas, where the river reached a peak streamflow of 570,000\u00a0cu\u00a0ft/s (16,000\u00a0m3/s). The river at Van Buren reached 40.79\u00a0in (1.036\u00a0m), topping the previous record of 38.1\u00a0ft (11.6\u00a0m). Water from the Arkansas River backed upstream into Lee Creek, causing major flooding. At Dardanelle, the flooding reached magnitudes with return periods exceeding 200\u00a0years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Impact and aftermath, Arkansas\nAt least three levees were breached along the Arkansas River between Fort Smith and Little Rock, with another five sustaining substantial damage. The breach of a 40\u00a0ft (12\u00a0m)-section of levee near Dardanelle in Yell County prompted evacuations, threatening 300\u2013400\u00a0homes and 5,700\u00a0people. While the homes were ultimately not affected, the flooding significantly impacted adjacent farmland. Arkansas Highway 155 sustained major damage. Other highways were also flooded, including Arkansas Highway 22, where one person died on May\u00a028 after circumnavigating a flood barricade. Highway\u00a022 remained closed until June\u00a04, three days after the Arkansas River initially crested. Parks, homes, and businesses in Fort Smith were overtaken by the river, leaving parts of the city accessible only by boat. In total, 500\u00a0homes in Fort Smith were affected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 900]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Impact and aftermath, Arkansas\nEvacuations occurred in Faulkner County due to the rise of Lake Conway and the potential breach of the Lollie Levee. The lake flooded shoreline homes while the Lollie Levee maintained integrity. Mandatory evacuations were also ordered in parts of Jefferson County. On May\u00a028, a partition of levee 80\u00a0ft (24\u00a0m) wide and 12\u00a0ft (3.7\u00a0m) high in Crawford County slumped against the rising Arkansas River, threatening 250\u00a0people in 152\u00a0residences; the levee remained intact as the river crested on June\u00a01.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287316-0014-0001", "contents": "2019 Arkansas River floods, Impact and aftermath, Arkansas\nGovernor of Arkansas Asa Hutchinson declared a state of emergency for the entire state on May\u00a021. Hutchinson estimated that flooding caused the state economy to lose $23\u00a0million per day. On May\u00a029, $350,000 in state financial assistance was committed towards flood mitigation. President Donald Trump approved a Major Disaster Declaration for Kansas on June\u00a08 with an incident period from May\u00a021\u2013June\u00a014. The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development disbursed $9\u00a0million in recovery fund grants to twelve Arkansas counties in December\u00a02019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287317-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas State Red Wolves football team\nThe 2019 Arkansas State Red Wolves football team represented Arkansas State University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Red Wolves played their home games at Centennial Bank Stadium in Jonesboro, Arkansas, and competed in the West Division of the Sun Belt Conference. They were led by sixth-year head coach Blake Anderson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287317-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas State Red Wolves football team, Schedule\nArkansas State announced its 2019 football schedule on March 1, 2019. The 2019 schedule consists of 6 home and away games in the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287318-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas\u2013Pine Bluff Golden Lions football team\nThe 2019 Arkansas\u2013Pine Bluff Golden Lions football team represents the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Golden Lions are led by second-year head coach Cedric Thomas and play their home games at Simmons Bank Field in Pine Bluff, Arkansas as members of the West Division of the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287318-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas\u2013Pine Bluff Golden Lions football team, Previous season\nThe Golden Lions finished the 2018 season 2\u20139, 1\u20136 in SWAC play to finish in a tie for last place in the West Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287318-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas\u2013Pine Bluff Golden Lions football team, Preseason, Preseason polls\nThe SWAC released their preseason poll on July 16, 2019. The Golden Lions were picked to finish in fifth place in the West Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 79], "content_span": [80, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287318-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Arkansas\u2013Pine Bluff Golden Lions football team, Preseason, Preseason all\u2013SWAC teams\nThe Golden Lions placed four players on the preseason all\u2013SWAC teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 88], "content_span": [89, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287319-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Arlington mayoral election\nA mayoral election took place in Arlington, Texas, on May 4, 2019. The election was officially non-partisan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287319-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Arlington mayoral election\nJeff Williams, the incumbent mayor, was elected to a third and final term in office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287320-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon Borough Council election\nElections to Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon Borough Council, part of the Northern Ireland local elections on 2 May 2019, returned 40 members to the council using Single Transferable Vote. The Democratic Unionist Party were the largest party in both first-preference votes and seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287320-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon Borough Council election, Results by electoral area, Armagh\n2014: 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 2 x SDLP, 1 x UUP, 1 x DUP2019: 3 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 2 x SDLP, 1 x UUP2014-2019 Change: Sinn F\u00e9in gain one seat from DUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 101], "content_span": [102, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287320-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon Borough Council election, Results by electoral area, Banbridge\n2014: 3 x UUP, 2 x DUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP2019: 3 x UUP, 2 x DUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x Alliance2014-2019 Change: Alliance gain one seat from SDLP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 104], "content_span": [105, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287320-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon Borough Council election, Results by electoral area, Craigavon\n2014: 2 x DUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x UUP2019: 2 x SDLP, 1 x DUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x UUP2014-2019 Change: SDLP gain one seat from DUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 104], "content_span": [105, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287320-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon Borough Council election, Results by electoral area, Cusher\n2014: 2 x UUP, 1 x DUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Independent2019: 2 x UUP, 1 x DUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x Independent2014-2019 Change: Sinn F\u00e9in gain one seat from SDLP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 101], "content_span": [102, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287320-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon Borough Council election, Results by electoral area, Lagan River\n2014: 3 x DUP, 2 x UUP2019: 3 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x Alliance2014-2019 Change: Alliance gain one seat from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 106], "content_span": [107, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287320-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon Borough Council election, Results by electoral area, Lurgan\n2014: 3 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 2 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x SDLP2019: 3 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Alliance2014-2019 Change: Alliance gain one seat from DUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 101], "content_span": [102, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287320-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon Borough Council election, Results by electoral area, Portadown\n2014: 2 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x UKIP2019: 3 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP2014-2019 Change: DUP and SDLP gain one seat each from UUP and UKIP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 104], "content_span": [105, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287320-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon Borough Council election, Changes during the term, \u2013 Suspensions\nCurrent composition: see Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon Borough Council", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 106], "content_span": [107, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287321-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Armagh Senior Football Championship\nThe 2019 Armagh Senior Football Championship is the 119th edition of Armagh GAA's premier gaelic football tournament for senior clubs in County Armagh, Northern Ireland. The winners represent Armagh in the Ulster Senior Club Football Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287321-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Armagh Senior Football Championship\nThe championship begins with sixteen teams competing in four groups of four teams before proceeding to a knock-out format with the overall winners receiving the Gerry Fegan Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287321-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Armagh Senior Football Championship\nCrossmaglen Rangers were the defending champions after they defeated Ballymacnab in the 2018 final. They successfully defended their title when defeating the same opposition in the final on 20 October at the Athletic Grounds to claim their record 45th title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287321-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Armagh Senior Football Championship\nThis was St. Peter's Lurgan's and Cullaville Blues' return to the senior grade after they claimed the 2017 I.F.C./I.A.F.L. titles and second in I.A.F.L., respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287321-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Armagh Senior Football Championship\nHigh Moss Sarsfields and Cullaville Blues were relegated to the I.F.C. and I.A.F.L. for 2020 after they finished seventh and eighth in the S.B.F.L. respectively. They will be replaced by the I.F.C. champions Grange St. Colmcille's as well as I.A.F.L. champions Mullaghbawn Cuchulainn's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287321-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Armagh Senior Football Championship, Team Changes\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2019 championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 54], "content_span": [55, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287321-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Armagh Senior Football Championship, Group stage\nAll 16 teams enter the competition at this stage. The top 2 teams in each group go into the quarter-finals while the bottom team of each group enter the relegation playoffs. The team named first in each round listed below received home advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287322-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Armenian Cup Final\nThe 2019 Armenian Cup Final was the 28th Armenian Cup Final, and the final match of the 2018\u201319 Armenian Cup. It was played at the Banants Stadium in Yerevan, Armenia, on 8 May 2019, and was contested by Alashkert and Lori. It was Alashkert's second Cup final appearance, having lost on penalties to Gandzasar Kapan the previous year, whilst it was Lori's first appearance in the final. Alashkert defeated Noah 1\u20130 thanks to an own goal by Ubong Friday in the 65th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287322-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Armenian Cup Final, Match\nThe match was refereed by Spanish referee Alberto Undiano Mallenco, and his two assistants I\u00f1igo Prieto L\u00f3pez and Roberto Alonso Fernandez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287322-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Armenian Cup Final, Match, Details\nAssistant referees:I\u00f1igo Prieto L\u00f3pez (Spain)Roberto Alonso Fernandez (Spain)Fourth official:Erik Arevshatyan (Yerevan)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287323-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Army Black Knights football team\nThe 2019 Army Black Knights football team represented the United States Military Academy as an independent in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Black Knights were led by sixth-year head coach Jeff Monken and played their home games at Michie Stadium. Due to playing an away game at Hawaii and the NCAA's \"Hawaii Exemption\", the Black Knights played a 13-game regular season in 2019. They finished the season with a record of 5\u20138, finishing in third place for the Commander-in-Chief's Trophy following losses to Air Force and Navy, and missing out on a bowl game for the first time since the 2015 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287323-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Army Black Knights football team, Previous season\nThe Black Knights finished the 2018 season with a record of 11\u20132 and finished ranked No. 19 in the AP Poll and No. 20 in the Coaches' Poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287323-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Army Black Knights football team, Previous season\nThey won the Commander-in-Chief's Trophy for a second year in a row (first time ever), defeated archrival Navy for the third year in a row (first time since 1992-1996 seasons), played in and won their third straight bowl game (first time ever), finished with consecutive 10-win seasons (first time ever), finished with a second straight unbeaten record (6\u20130) at home to extend their home winning streak to 13 in a row, won the Lambert Trophy (first time since 1958), and finished with their first 11-win season ever.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287323-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Army Black Knights football team, Previous season\nQuarterback Kelvin Hopkins Jr. tied the academy records for total number of rushing touchdowns (17) and total number of touchdowns responsible for (23), as well as becoming the first Army player to rush and pass for over 1,000 yards each in a single season (1,017 and 1,026 respectively). Coach Monken was awarded the George Munger Collegiate Coach of the Year Award by the Maxwell Football Club, the Vince Lombardi College Football Coach of the Year Award by the Lombardi Foundation, and the President's Award by the Touchdown Club of Columbus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287323-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Army Black Knights football team, Preseason, Offseason\nDefensive coordinator Jay Bateman announced in December 2018 that he would be leaving to become the co-defensive coordinator and safeties coach at North Carolina under newly hired coach Mack Brown. Weeks later, head football strength and conditioning coach Brian Hess was announced as joining Bateman at North Carolina. Assistant football strength and conditioning coach Maurice Sims would also leave for North Carolina within the month. Safeties coach John Loose, after serving as the interim defensive coordinator for the 2018 Lockheed Martin Armed Forces Bowl victory over Houston, was announced as the full-time replacement at defensive coordinator on January 10, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287323-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Army Black Knights football team, Preseason, Offseason\nOn January 14, 2019, Army West Point announced a new multi-year contract extension for head coach Jeff Monken through the 2024 season. On the same day Army beat writer for the Times Herald-Record, Sal Interdonato, broke the news that Kansas Wesleyan head coach Matt Drinkall had joined the Army football staff as an offensive analyst. On January 18, Interdonato revealed that defensive line coach Chad Wilt had taken the same position with the Cincinnati Bearcats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287323-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Army Black Knights football team, Preseason, Offseason\nOn January 31, the West Point athletics department announced that Matt Hachmann would be joining the football staff as the outside linebackers coach. He had spent the past two years as the linebackers coach at Stony Brook, and before that eight years as defensive coordinator at Towson. Because of his posting as linebackers coach, several defensive assistant coaches changed positions of responsibility. Coach Daryl Dixon, the former outside linebackers coach, is now responsible for cornerbacks, and Coach Christian-Young, the former cornerbacks coach, is now responsible for safeties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287323-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Army Black Knights football team, Preseason, Offseason\nAdditionally, assistant strength and conditioning coach Conor Hughes was promoted to head football strength and conditioning coach. On February 5, Coach Monken's last assistant coach position was filled with the announcement of the hire of Kevin Lewis as defensive line coach. Lewis had spent the previous five seasons as the defensive line coach at William & Mary", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287323-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Army Black Knights football team, Preseason, Offseason\nOn February 19 it was announced that Rusty Whitt and GC Yerry had been hired to serve as the two assistant football strength and conditioning coaches, filling out the remaining open positions on Monken's staff. Whitt joined the staff after serving as the head football strength and conditioning coach at Texas Tech from 2016\u22122018, while Yerry joined after serving as the director of athletic performance at Stony Brook, also from 2016\u22122018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287323-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Army Black Knights football team, Preseason, Offseason\nOn March 19, the West Point athletics department announced that Jim Collins would join the staff as the new Director of Player Personnel. Collins brings 25 years of head coaching experience at the Division II and Division III levels, including tenures as the head coach at the University of Dubuque from 1994\u22121996, Capital University (OH) from 1997\u22122007, and most recently at Saginaw Valley State from 2008\u22122018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287323-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Army Black Knights football team, Preseason, Offseason\nThe Black Knights began their spring football session on March 7 and concluded it on April 12th with the annual Black and Gold Spring Game, where the Black team completed a fourth quarter comeback to win 35\u221228 in overtime. Following the conclusion of spring ball, rising firsties Kelvin Hopkins Jr. and Elijah Riley were named team captains in addition to returning 2018 captain Cole Christiansen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287323-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Army Black Knights football team, Preseason, Offseason\nThe Black Knights' fall camp began on August 1 and consisted of 14 practices, finishing on August 17 with an intrasquad scrimmage in Michie Stadium. Following the completion of camp, the Black Knights shifted their preparation to their Week 1 matchup with Rice. During August, the Black Knights received votes for the preseason AP and Coaches Polls, just missing out on starting within the Top 25 for the first time since 1959. They received a total of 94 points in the AP Poll and 91 points in the Coaches Poll, placing 2nd and 5th respectively in each poll's 'Also Receiving Votes' category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287323-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Army Black Knights football team, Personnel, Roster\nThe Army football roster for the Week 1 game versus Rice (as of August 26, 2019):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287323-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Army Black Knights football team, Personnel, Depth chart\nThe Army football depth chart for the 120th Army-Navy Game (as of December 9, 2019):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287324-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Arnold Palmer Cup\nThe 2019 Arnold Palmer Cup was a team golf competition held from June 7\u20139, 2019 at Alotian Golf Club, Roland, Arkansas. It was the 23rd time the event had been contested and the second under the new format in which women golfers played in addition to men and an international team, representing the rest of the world, replaced the European team. The international team won the match 33\u00bd\u201326\u00bd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287324-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Arnold Palmer Cup, Format\nThe contest was played over three days. On Friday, there were 12 mixed four-ball matches. On Saturday there were 12 mixed foursomes matches in the morning and 12 fourball matches in the afternoon, six all-women matches and six all-men matches. 24 singles matches were played on Sunday. In all, 60 matches were played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287324-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Arnold Palmer Cup, Format\nEach of the 60 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 30\u00bd points won the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287324-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Arnold Palmer Cup, Michael Carter award\nThe Michael Carter Award winners were Alex Scott and Leonie Harm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287325-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Arnold Strongman Classic\nThe 2019 Arnold Strongman Classic was a strongman contest that took place in Ohio, Columbus from 1\u20132 March 2019 at the Greater Columbus Convention Center. The Arnold Strongman Classic is the finale of the Arnold Strongman Tour and is seen as one of the biggest and most prestigious strongmen events on the circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287325-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Arnold Strongman Classic, Qualifying\nTo qualify for the Arnold Strongman Classic athletes have to either win a sanctioned event on the Arnold Classic Tour or gain enough points to be invited through a wildcard system. Athletes that qualified and their method for qualification are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287325-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Arnold Strongman Classic, Event Results, Event 1: Elephant Bar Deadlift\n^ Haf\u00fe\u00f3r J\u00fal\u00edus Bj\u00f6rnsson's lift of 474 kilograms (1,045\u00a0lb) is a new world record for the elephant deadlift bar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 76], "content_span": [77, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287325-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Arnold Strongman Classic, Event Results, Event 1: Elephant Bar Deadlift\n^ JF Caron sustained an injury in this event and took no further part in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 76], "content_span": [77, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287325-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Arnold Strongman Classic, Event Results, Event 1: Elephant Bar Deadlift\n^ Brian Shaw sustained an injury in this event however he completed all further events in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 76], "content_span": [77, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287325-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Arnold Strongman Classic, Event Results, Event 4: Austrian Oak\n^ Oleksii Novikov sustained an injury in this event however he completed the remaining event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287325-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Arnold Strongman Classic, Event Results, Event 5: Stone to Shoulder\n^ Brian Shaw did not take part in this event because of an injury he sustained earlier in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287325-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Arnold Strongman Classic, Event Results, Event 5: Stone to Shoulder\n^ Jerry Pritchett did not take part in this event because of an injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287326-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Artsakh Football League\nThe 2019 Artsakh Football League is the 2nd official professional season of the Artsakh Football League. It started on the March 9th, 2019 and is composed of twelve clubs which will compete for the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287326-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Artsakh Football League, Participants\nTwelve teams will take part in this year's competition. No team was relegated in the previous season, but 4 more were added this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287326-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Artsakh Football League, Results\nThe league will be played in two stages, one home and one away, for a total of 22 matches played per team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287327-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Arun District Council election\nThe Arun District Council elections, 2019 took place on Thursday 2 May 2019, electing all 54 members of the council, and taking place alongside the other local elections in England and Northern Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287327-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Arun District Council election, Ward results, Aldwick West\nMartin Smith was previously elected at a by-election, gaining one of the Conservative seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287327-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Arun District Council election, Ward results, Courtwick with Toddington\nVictoria Rhodes was elected in 2015 as a UKIP councillor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287327-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Arun District Council election, Ward results, Marine\nMatthew Stanley was previously elected in a by-election, gaining the Conservative seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287327-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Arun District Council election, Ward results, Yapton\nDerek Ambler was elected in 2015 as a UKIP councillor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287328-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Arunachal Pradesh Legislative Assembly election\nLegislative Assembly elections were held in Arunachal Pradesh on April 11 to elect the 60 members of Legislative Assembly. The term of Arunachal Pradesh Legislative Assembly ends on June 1, 2019. This results in a landslide victory for Bharatiya Janata Party and its allies. Pema Khandu took oath as Arunachal Pradesh Chief Minister on 29 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287328-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Arunachal Pradesh Legislative Assembly election, Results, By constituency\nThree-member of the Bharatiya Janata Party, Phurpa Tsering from Dirang, Taba Tedir from Yachuli and Kento Jini from Along East were elected unopposed after others' candidature was rejected or the candidates withdrew themselves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 78], "content_span": [79, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287329-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ascension general election\nGeneral elections were held on Ascension Island on 26 September 2019 to elect the Island Council, following the dissolution of the previous Council on 1 September. Seven candidates ran for five available Councillor positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287329-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ascension general election, Electoral system\nThe Island Council consists of either five or seven elected members, depending on the number of candidates. If there are eight or more candidates, seven members would be elected; if there were fewer than eight candidates, only five would be elected. With only seven candidates running, five seats were available.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287329-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Ascension general election, Electoral system\nThe five seats were elected for three years terms by first-past-the-post plurality-at-large voting. Voters were able to cast up to five votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series\nThe 2019 Ashes series (officially the Specsavers Ashes Series for sponsorship reasons) was a series of Test cricket matches played between England and Australia for The Ashes in August and September 2019. The venues were Edgbaston, Lord's, Headingley, Old Trafford and The Oval. Australia were the defending holders of the Ashes going into the series, having won in 2017\u201318. It was the first Test series of the inaugural 2019\u20132021 ICC World Test Championship. During the second Test match a concussion substitute was used for the first time in international cricket. Ben Stokes' game-winning 135* in the third Test has been hailed by many as the greatest Test innings of all time. Australia retained the Ashes after winning the fourth Test, with England levelling the series 2\u20132 in the final test, resulting in the first drawn Ashes series since 1972.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 869]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Background\nThe 2019 Ashes series began with Australia leading England by 33 series to 32, with five drawn series. Australia had won four of the last 10 Ashes series, including winning the most recent series 4\u20130 in 2017\u201318, but the 2015 series, the most recent to be held in England, was won 3\u20132 by the home side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Background\nNo visiting team had won an Ashes series and/or retained the Ashes since England defeated Australia 3\u20131 away in 2010\u201311. Furthermore, Australia last won an Ashes series in England in 2001. The two teams previously met in one warm-up game and two ODI matches in the Cricket World Cup held in England and Wales in the previous months, with Australia winning the warm-up game at the Rose Bowl by 12 runs and the group stage match convincingly by 64 runs at Lord's. In their semi final rematch, England had their own convincing win by eight wickets with 107 balls to spare, en route to winning the tournament for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Background\nAustralia's last two Test series before the Ashes were played against India and Sri Lanka during the home summer season of 2018\u201319. Although India won their tour series 2\u20131, the first time India had won a Test series in Australia, Australia recovered to win the Test series against Sri Lanka 2\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Background\nPrior to the Ashes series, Australia had its top-order batsmen David Warner, Steve Smith and Cameron Bancroft available for international selection, who were banned from playing international cricket for 9\u201312 months due to the 2018 Australian ball-tampering scandal in Cape Town against South Africa. All three cricketers were named in Australia's squad for the 2019 Ashes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Background\nMeanwhile, England warmed up for the 2019 Ashes with a Test series earlier in the year against the West Indies and a one-off Test against Ireland in July. The tour of the West Indies comprised three matches and was won 2\u20131 by the West Indies. England then improved to win the one-off Test against Ireland, by 143 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Background\nAhead of the series, it was announced that the second day of the Lord's Test would benefit the Ruth Strauss Foundation to fight cancer. Born Ruth Macdonald in Australia, and the wife of England's Ashes-winning captain Andrew Strauss, had died on 29 December 2018 from a rare form of lung cancer. Both teams wore red caps, with the stumps also red, and fans were also encouraged to wear red.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Background\nAustralia already had a similar tradition \u2013 the Jane McGrath Day is the third day of the Sydney Test during the traditional New Years Test time slot, in honour of the English-born wife of Australian fast bowler Glenn McGrath, who died from breast cancer, only with pink replacing red, and the proceeds benefiting the McGrath Foundation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Squads\nOn 26 July 2019, Australia announced a 17-man touring party for the Ashes series. England announced their squad for the first Test on 27 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Squads\n1 Jack Leach was added to England's squad for the second Test, with Moeen Ali being dropped.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Squads\n2 Ahead of the fourth Test, James Anderson was ruled out of England's squad for the rest of the series, with Craig Overton named as replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Day one\nThe first morning of the Ashes saw Stuart Broad take the wickets of both openers, David Warner and Cameron Bancroft, who (along with Steve Smith) were returning to the Test format for the first time since their suspension for a ball-tampering incident in 2018. Warner was the first gone, leg before wicket in the fourth over, while Bancroft was caught behind just four overs later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Day one\nDespite the early breakthrough, all was not tidy for England as James Anderson, recovering from an injury, bowled only four overs in the session, and while he came back onto the field, it was reported at the lunch interval that he was suffering from tightness in his right calf, and he left the field for a scan in the afternoon. Usman Khawaja was given out after drinks thanks to a review, caught by Bairstow off a thin edge. Despite this setback, Steve Smith and Travis Head managed to hold on until lunch, leaving Australia 83/3 at the break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Day one\nThe first hour after lunch saw the fall of four wickets, due to good efforts by Broad and Woakes, with Head the first to go, leg before wicket to Woakes after a not out decision was referred to the third umpire, the fourth-wicket partnership having stood for 64 runs. Matthew Wade was the next man in, but he was soon dismissed in similar fashion. Tim Paine was caught at deep square leg after a \"horror shot\", and James Pattinson fell two balls later for a duck, leaving Australia 112/7 at the end of the 40th over. Pat Cummins fell shortly thereafter with the total at 122, but Australia scampered through to tea at 154/8, Smith unbeaten on 66.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Day one\nThe final session's start was delayed by 20 minutes because of the weather. Peter Siddle and Smith then shared an 88-run partnership, before Siddle was dismissed six runs short of a half-century.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Day one\nSmith then managed to keep the strike for the better part of a dozen overs, reaching a century in the process as the fielders were spread out on the boundary, but he was dismissed with the first over of the new ball, having reached 144 runs on his return to Test cricket, lifting Australia to a respectable 284 all out after being 122/8, with Nathan Lyon unbeaten on 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Day one\nThis left England's openers two overs to navigate before the close of play, which they batted out to a score of 10 without loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Day two\nThe morning of the second day saw the wicket of Jason Roy fall, caught behind in the slips off a delivery from Pattinson. Joe Root and Rory Burns managed to play out the rest of the session without loss, despite a scare after drinks, as Root was beaten by a ball that hit his off stump but failed to dislodge the bails; he was initially given out after the ball was caught behind, but a review showed the only contact was with the stump. This left England on 71/1 at the break, wearing down Australia's bowlers but getting little return for their troubles in terms of runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Day two\nAfter lunch, both English batsmen piled on the runs on a pitch that was becoming more batsman-friendly. Root was then given out leg before wicket to Siddle, but the review this time showed he made contact, and the on-field decision was overturned. Burns soon reached a half-century, Root following suit shortly afterwards. He was finally out caught and bowled to Siddle before tea, having stood for a 132-run third-wicket partnership. The new man in, Joe Denly, stuck around until the end of the session, England reaching 170/2 with Burns 18 runs away from a maiden Test century.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Day two\nThe evening session saw the umpires decide to replace the ball after the 60th over. The replacement ball saw off Denly and Buttler, England now 194/4. A few overs later, Burns reached his century, becoming the first English opener to score a hundred in the first Test of an Ashes series since Graham Gooch in 1993.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Day two\nBurns and Ben Stokes survived the remainder of the extended final session, building a 73-run partnership, as Travis Head and Matthew Wade were brought in to bowl a few overs before the new ball, which claimed no victims by the close of play; England were 267/4, trailing Australia by 17 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Day three\nAs play resumed on the third morning, England caught up to Australia's total, Stokes reaching a half-century before edging to the wicket-keeper on the next ball he faced from Cummins, the fifth wicket having stood for 88 runs. Shortly after drinks, Nathan Lyon was the next man to strike for Australia, taking Burns' wicket and dismissing Moeen Ali for a duck in the same over. Bairstow was out to Siddle in the next over, Australia having taken three wickets in the space of 11 balls. Woakes and Broad survived the half-hour left until lunch to put England on 328/8, the game in the balance as Australia had limited their first-innings deficit to only 44 runs at that point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Day three\nDuring the break, there was good news for England, as it was confirmed that Anderson, injured on the first day, would be able to bat, and had bowled in the nets during the interval. Broad and Woakes built a 65-run partnership, surviving until drinks, after which Broad was caught on a short delivery from Cummins. Anderson came in to bat, but made just three runs, England all out for 374 (a lead of 90), leading to an early tea interval. Concerns over Anderson's fitness were again apparent as he \"wasn't moving well between the wickets\", and when the teams returned to the field for the final session, he was absent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Day three\nWith 44 overs scheduled, the evening session began with the early wicket of Warner, after a review saw him caught behind off Broad in the third over; his aggregate total of 10 runs for the match was his third-lowest in Tests when batting twice. Ali was the next to strike, removing Bancroft and almost getting Khawaja in the same over, only for the latter to be dropped by Jos Buttler at second slip.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0019-0001", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Day three\nKhawaja was finally out off Ben Stokes' second ball, having stood for a 48-run third-wicket partnership with Smith, who again looked in top form despite being struck by a bouncer later on, which prompted the intervention of team doctors in light of new concussion protocols. Bad light stopped play just after 6\u00a0p.m., 31 overs having been bowled, with Australia 124/3 at the close, leading by 34 runs with Smith unbeaten on 46 and Travis Head also contributing 21 runs to the total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Day four\nThe following morning saw a good session for Australia as Smith and Head put up a century partnership before drinks, Smith already with a half-century. England's potential chase became more and more uncomfortable throughout the session, despite a few scares for the batsmen. Head fell just before lunch, having put up a half-century of his own in the 130-run fourth-wicket stand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0020-0001", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Day four\nEngland's bowling attack, lacking Anderson, who was out of it for the remainder of the match, did not pick up another wicket by the interval and Australia were in a strong position at 231/4, having extended their lead to 141 runs, and Smith two runs short of a second century in the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Day four\nThe afternoon session began with Smith reaching his century, becoming only the fifth Australian to get two in an Ashes Test. With the 80th over approaching, Wade managed his own half-century as England was \"out of options\", with Root, Denly and Ali having spells that resulted in a few close calls, and a leg before wicket appeal against Smith that was deemed not out after an England review. In the first over of the new ball, Wade was given out, but his successful review saw the decision overturned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0021-0001", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Day four\nAustralia finally lost a wicket in the next over as Smith was caught for 142, becoming only the fourth batsmen to score more than 140 in both innings of a Test. The fifth wicket having stood for 126 runs, skipper Tim Paine was the man in for the few overs left until tea, by which point Australia were 356/5, giving them a comfortable lead of 266.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Day four\nThe evening session saw Wade get a century of his own, the Australian lead now extended to over 300 runs. Paine was found not out after an England review for leg before wicket, but the sixth-wicket partnership, having stood for 76 runs, was broken in the next over as Wade was caught at deep backward square. Paine was bowled by Ali an over later, offering hints of a collapse, but Pattinson and Cummins, both unbeaten, then added 78 runs before the Australian side declared on 487/7, leaving England a target of 398.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Day four\nWith seven overs left in the day, England's openers were brought out to bat, safely going through them for 13 runs. Although their chances of winning were slim, a draw was still feasible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Day five\nThe final morning saw Burns become only the fourth England batsmen to bat on all five days of a Test, but this accolade meant little when he was dismissed early, caught by Lyon at gully off Cummins' bowling. Joe Root was then given out leg before wicket twice, but the decision was overturned on review both times, marking yet further poor umpiring decisions in the match. Root then stood with Roy until drinks, but the partnership was ended at 41 runs after the latter was bowled playing a rash shot at a delivery from Lyon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0024-0001", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Day five\nDenly was in and out before lunch, the review not saving him this time, as Lyon struck again and had him caught at short leg. Buttler came in and survived an lbw review by Australia, but Root was dismissed by Lyon 10 minutes before lunch, England 85/4 at the break, after a session that was deemed to be \"Australia's morning\", thanks mostly to Lyon's contribution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Day five\nThe afternoon was again fruitful for Australia, as Buttler was bowled by Cummins in the first over after the interval. Bairstow was next to fall, gloving the ball behind to become Cummins' 100th Test wicket after an unsuccessful review. Lyon struck with the next ball, removing Stokes for his 350th Test wicket, becoming the fourth Australian to reach that landmark, joining Shane Warne, Glenn McGrath and Dennis Lillee as England were in the midst of a collapse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0025-0001", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Day five\nChris Woakes managed to slow Australia's progress until after drinks, striking boundaries and surviving a review for lbw, but Ali was then dismissed for Lyon's fifth wicket of the innings, falling to the Australian spinner for the ninth time in 11 innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0025-0002", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Day five\nBroad was then out for a golden duck, England now 136/9, giving Lyon the chance to win the match with a hat-trick ball against Anderson; the English batsman survived the delivery, and Woakes was dropped by Smith at second slip a few overs later on a ball that rolled on to the boundary, as dark clouds loomed over the ground; however, Smith made amends two overs later, catching Woakes off the bowling of Cummins to end the match before tea, Australia coming back from 122/8 in their first innings to win by 251 runs and take a 1\u20130 Ashes lead. It was their first Test win at Edgbaston since 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Day five\nSteve Smith was named man of the match after scoring a century in each innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Aftermath\nAfter the match, it was confirmed that, because of his calf injury, James Anderson would be ruled out of the second Test, and would also be likely to miss the third Test. Any further participation in the series was also uncertain, with Jofra Archer expected to replace him. England captain Joe Root nevertheless refused to blame anybody, saying that Anderson had passed all fitness tests before the match and that his selection had been unanimous. England's pace bowling options remained limited for further Tests, however, as potential replacement Olly Stone was also injured in training.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0027-0001", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Aftermath\nDespite troubling performances by other members of the side, including Buttler, Bairstow and Ali, Root did not wish to make any \"shotgun decisions\" and noted that, despite the team's inconsistency, England were far from being out of contention. England's prioritisation of white-ball cricket was also put in a bad light after disappointing performances by players more accustomed to One Day Internationals than Tests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Aftermath\nAustralian skipper Tim Paine noted that Anderson's exclusion had deprived England of one of the world's best bowlers, and that his side's confidence grew as a result. However, he also warned against becoming complacent, making parallels with Australia's performance in preceding tours against India, South Africa and Pakistan, where they \"[jumped] the gun with an emphatic win only to surrender a high-profile series\". In the meantime, Australia played a three-day tour match against Worcestershire, which, as a result of rain washing out most of the final day, was drawn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, First Test, Aftermath\nCriticism was directed at umpires Aleem Dar and Joel Wilson, who had 10 of their decisions overturned over the course of the game, with former Australia captain Ricky Ponting suggesting that the ICC's requirements of neutral umpires should be waived in the future, to reduce umpire workload and fatigue. Root, however, noted that players and umpires, both under pressure to perform, make mistakes, and that over-criticism and blame games should be avoided. The idea, which had already surfaced before, had also been opposed by the umpires themselves, who \"[were] happier to accept criticism of their decision-making on a basis of skills, conditions, eyesight \u2013 just about anything so long as they are not regarded as biased towards one side\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Second Test, Day one\nThe first day of the second Test was washed out because of intermittent rain that prevented the ground from drying and the toss from taking place, leaving four extended days, weather permitting, to complete the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Second Test, Day two\nPlay began on the second day with England's openers sent in to bat in the morning session. Australia struck in the second over, Jason Roy out for a three-ball duck, caught by Paine off Hazlewood's bowling, the latter returning to the Test side after not being selected for Edgbaston. Joe Root then came in, but he was trapped leg before wicket by Hazlewood, leaving England at 26/2. Denly, the new man in, was hit by a bouncer in the next over, leading to an early drinks break. Nevertheless, he and Rory Burns survived until lunch, contributing a 50-run partnership to rebuild England's innings after the early wickets. This left the home team at 76/2 at the interval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Second Test, Day two\nThe second session saw Denly caught behind by Tim Paine off Hazlewood, before Burns reached a half-century. His wicket fell shortly thereafter, however, thanks to a splendid catch by Bancroft at short leg, off the bowling of Cummins. Jos Buttler and Ben Stokes were the next to fall, leaving England on 138/6 with less than an hour to go until tea. Australia reviewed for lbw against Bairstow a few overs before the interval, but this turned out to be a poor decision and the England batsmen did not lose any more wickets before the break, by which point they were 201/6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Second Test, Day two\nThe extended evening session, with 37 overs scheduled over two-and-a-half hours, first saw Woakes caught behind on a ball that grazed his glove, the review confirming the on-field decision. England's remaining wickets then fell quickly, with Archer and Broad the next victims. Bairstow reached the 50-run milestone, but he was soon gone, England all out for 258.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Second Test, Day two\nThis left England's bowlers a theoretical 18 overs in just under an hour before the close. Warner fell first in the fifth over, for his third single-digit score of the series; however, Bancroft and Khawaja survived eight more overs before play was brought to a close with Australia on 30/1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Second Test, Day three\nThe third morning saw 24.1 overs of play, the second wicket pushing the score to 60 before Bancroft was leg before wicket to Archer. Khawaja edged behind off Woakes in the next over, and Head did not last long as he was lbw to Broad, Australia 71/4. Stokes then thought he had Wade trapped for another lbw, but the on-field decision was overturned and Australia lost no further wickets before rain brought an early lunch, the total now 80/4. The weather remained inclement throughout the afternoon and the evening, and no further play was possible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 50], "content_span": [51, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Second Test, Day four\nPlay resumed on the fourth day with Smith and Wade at the crease. Wade was caught at slip off a delivery by Broad shortly before drinks, but Paine survived with Smith until lunch, the latter reaching a half-century to bring Australia's total to 155/5 at the break, England failing to make any further breakthroughs despite a few close calls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Second Test, Day four\nThe sixth-wicket partnership was broken after the interval as Paine edged the ball to Buttler off Archer. Smith was then hit on the arm by a short delivery from Archer a few overs later, but was given the green light to continue after examination by team doctors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0037-0001", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Second Test, Day four\nA review for lbw against Cummins was soon struck down as Archer continued to put pressure on the Australian batsmen, including hitting Smith directly in the neck with a bouncer; the batsman fell to the ground briefly, but had to retire hurt, though he was able to walk off the field unassisted after a chat with the team doctor. The new man in, Siddle, lasted only a few overs, failing to reach a double-digit score, at which point Smith was brought back in; however, he was soon out leg before wicket to Woakes after an unsuccessful review. Australia's tailenders were out before tea, giving them a total of 250, trailing by eight runs with England's second innings to begin after the interval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Second Test, Day four\nCummins struck early by removing Roy and then getting Root for a golden duck, but Denly survived the hat-trick ball. This led to a 55-run fourth-wicket partnership, which ended with Denly caught and bowled by Siddle. Burns fell next, but Buttler survived until late in the session, when rain stopped play for the day with England on 96/4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Second Test, Day five\nThe final day was again affected by rain as the start was delayed until just after noon. As the players came back on the field, there was confirmation that Steve Smith, struck by a bouncer the previous day, would not come back to the match. He was substituted by Marnus Labuschagne, who became the first concussion substitute in Test cricket after the ICC's decision to allow such replacements. Smith was later ruled out of the third Test at Headingley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Second Test, Day five\nEngland's fifth wicket stood for the remainder of the morning session as Ben Stokes reached a half-century, unbeaten on 51 at the interval with England at 157/4. Buttler was caught by Hazlewood off Cummins soon after lunch, but Bairstow played on with Stokes until the latter reached a century, at which point England declared on 258/5. This left Australia a target of 267 runs to win off a scheduled 50 overs, albeit leaving England with an outside chance to bowl their opposition out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0040-0001", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Second Test, Day five\nEngland made an early breakthrough, Archer removing both Warner and Khawaja inside the first six overs, before Leach trapped Bancroft lbw with the final ball of the 14th over; however, Labuschagne and Head proved obstinate at the crease, putting on 85 runs for the fourth wicket before Labuschagne was caught by a diving Root at midwicket for 59 at the end of the 36th over. Labuschagne also went onto become the first concussion substitute to score a test fifty during the process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0040-0002", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Second Test, Day five\nWade was next to go seven balls later, out for one, before Denly produced a diving catch to remove Paine for four off the bowling of Archer, Australia now 149/6. Nevertheless, Head continued to stick around at the other end, farming the strike from Cummins and managing 42 runs to help Australia see out the final eight overs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Second Test, Day five\nBen Stokes was named man of the match after scoring a century in the second innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Third Test, Day one\nRain delayed the toss in the morning and play started shortly after noon with lunch delayed to 1:30\u00a0p.m. Only four overs could be completed before rain again interrupted play after the wicket of Harris, Australia 12/1. Lunch was taken early, but rain did not allow for resumption of play until 2\u00a0p.m. Khawaja was then caught after England referred the decision to the video umpire, but only 9.5 overs were possible before rain again prevented continuation. A few more overs were possible before bad light stopped play, with Australia on 54/2 at the early tea interval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Third Test, Day one\nThe evening session was unaffected by rain, and Australia's third wicket stood for 111 runs before Warner, having previously successfully overturned an on-field decision, was caught off Archer. After this, Australia, on 136/3, collapsed to 179 all out by the close. Archer claimed five more victims to end the innings with figures of 6/45 in his second Test match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Third Test, Day two\nThe second day was played in sunny conditions, but this did not prevent England from struggling with the bat; Denly was the only batsman to reach double digits, scoring 12 after surviving an lbw review. England were 54/6 at the interval, with the Ashes \"hanging by a thread\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Third Test, Day two\nThe England debacle continued after lunch, with Woakes out on the first ball of the afternoon session, the final three wickets then falling in quick succession as the home side was all out for 67, with Hazlewood picking up a five-wicket haul for the visitors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Third Test, Day two\nThe dismal batting performance of both teams, the previous 18 wickets having fallen for 110 runs, appeared to continue into the second Australia innings as Warner was lbw for a duck in the second over. Harris and Khawaja added 26 runs to the total, surviving a review for lbw, before Harris was bowled by Leach. Khawaja was soon caught by Roy at second slip off Woakes, and Australia were 82/3 at tea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Third Test, Day two\nAfter the interval, the fourth wicket stood for 46 runs before losing Head with the total at 97/4, only for Wade and Labuschagne to build a 66-run partnership after surviving multiple reviews. Wade and Paine were given out shortly before stumps, as Labuschagne reached a half-century to put Australia on 171/6, a lead of 283.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0048-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Third Test, Day three\nThe third day was played in similar sunny conditions to the second. Labuschagne and Pattinson returned to the crease, with the former resuming on 53 not out. Their partnership eventually reached 51 before Pattinson was caught behind by Root off Archer's bowling. Cummins came in to join Labuschagne but his innings was short-lived, as he made just six runs before being caught in the slips by Burns off Stokes. Shortly after, Labuschagne was run out by Denly and finished on 80 runs, with Australia at 237/9 and leading by 349 runs. The final wicket fell half an hour before lunch as Lyon was bowled out by Archer and Australia finished with a lead of 358, setting what would be England's highest ever run chase in Test cricket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0049-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Third Test, Day three\nEngland's second innings began shortly before lunch and openers Burns and Roy saw out the opening overs to go in 11/0 at the break. Shortly after play resumed, England lost both their opening batsmen in quick succession. Burns fell first, caught behind off Hazlewood before Roy was bowled by Cummins. Root and Denly came to the crease at 15/2 with just under two sessions until the close of play. The pair built a solid partnership and moved to 140/2 with both reaching half-centuries before Denly was given out caught behind off Hazlewood. Stokes was the next batsman in and was able to see out the rest of the day with Root. England finished on 156/3, requiring 203 more runs for victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0050-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Third Test, Day four\nThe fourth day of the Test started poorly for England. The first 25 balls were dots and the new ball was due to be available to Australia in another four overs. Root eventually opened the scoring for the day before being caught behind by Warner off Lyon's bowling, having made 77 runs. This wicket took Lyon to 356 in Test cricket and saw him go third in Australia's list of all-time highest Test wicket-takers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0050-0001", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Third Test, Day four\nBairstow joined Stokes at the crease with the score 159/4 and the partnership made 79 runs before lunch to bring England to 238/4, needing 121 more runs to win. At this stage, it seemed as though if Stokes and Bairstow could continue batting as sensibly as they had, then victory was a very real possibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0051-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Third Test, Day four\nHowever, soon after play resumed, England suffered a string of quick wickets. Bairstow was the first to fall, caught behind by Labuschagne off Hazlewood for 36. Buttler was in next but made only 1 before confusion between him and Stokes left him well short of his crease when Head hit the stumps to run him out. Similarly, Woakes came in next and added just one run before driving a ball from Hazlewood straight to Wade. At this point, England were 261/7 and needed 98 more runs to win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0051-0001", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Third Test, Day four\nArcher came to the crease and added 15 to the score with a few boundaries before picking out Head at deep midwicket off Lyon. Broad survived just one ball before being given out lbw, which was confirmed after his review, and England had just one wicket remaining with 73 more runs needed for victory. Since the lunch interval, they had lost 5 wickets for just 48 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0052-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Third Test, Day four\nJack Leach was the final man in for England with the score at 286/9 and their game plan soon became apparent. Stokes took the brunt of the Australian attack, never allowing Leach to face more than the final couple of balls of any over so that Stokes could keep the strike. Stokes started well, hitting Lyon for a six in the first over of the partnership. He then made a few runs from the next over from Pattinson before hitting Lyon for two sixes in the next over, the second a reverse sweep, finishing the over with England at 310/9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0052-0001", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Third Test, Day four\nTwo overs later, he hit Cummins for another six before pulling Hazlewood for four to reach his century. He then hit two more sixes from Hazlewood's bowling \u2013 making 16 from just three balls \u2013 and moved England to 338/9. Stokes was then dropped by Harris, although it was a tough catch to take, before hitting consecutive fours off Cummins to move the score to 350/9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0052-0002", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Third Test, Day four\nLeach then had to face the final two balls of Cummins' over and an lbw shout off the final ball was reviewed by Australia after umpire Chris Gaffaney gave it not out; the ball was found to have pitched outside leg, confirming umpire Gaffaney's decision, and the review was lost. Lyon continued the attack and was smacked down the ground for six more by Stokes. England needed just two runs to win and one run to tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0052-0003", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Third Test, Day four\nTwo balls later, Lyon fumbled what would have been a certain run-out with Leach well out of his crease before hitting Stokes on the pad to huge cries for lbw. Umpire Joel Wilson gave it not out and Australia had no reviews left; had the decision been reviewed, it would have been given out. This was the final ball of the over so Stokes was unable to rotate the strike and Leach potentially had to face a full over from Cummins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287330-0052-0004", "contents": "2019 Ashes series, Matches, Third Test, Day four\nHe scored a single from the third ball of the over to ensure England could not lose the game and gave Stokes the strike with England needing just one run to win. Stokes promptly cut the next ball from Cummins through the covers for four to give England the most unlikely victory imaginable, completing their highest ever run chase in Tests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287331-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashfield District Council election\nThe 2019 Ashfield District Council election took place on 2 May 2019, to elect all members of Ashfield District Council in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287331-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashfield District Council election\nThe election resulted in the Ashfield Independents gaining control of the council with a large majority, winning 30 of the 35 seats up for election. The Labour Party suffered heavy losses, winning just 2 seats, a decrease of 20 compared with the last election in 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287332-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashford Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Ashford Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Ashford Borough Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287333-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ashleigh Barty tennis season\nThe 2019 Ashleigh Barty tennis season officially began on 7 January 2019 as the start of the 2019 WTA Tour. Ashleigh Barty entered the season as world number 15 in singles and finished as world number 1. The season saw Barty won her first single's major at the French Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287334-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Championship\nThe 2019 Asia Rugby Championship is the fifth annual rugby union series for the top-level Asia Rugby nations. Hong Kong, South Korea and Malaysia shall compete in the 2019 series. The Asia Rugby Championship in 2019 does not include Japan who is hosting the 2019 Rugby World Cup. Other Asian nations played in the lower division tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287334-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Championship\nThe format of the tri-nations series is a double round-robin where the three teams play each other twice on a home and away basis. The team finishing on top of the standings at the end of the series is declared the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287334-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Championship, Teams\nThe teams involved, with their world rankings prior to the 2019 tournament in brackets:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287335-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Championship division tournaments\nThe 2019 Asia Rugby Championship division tournaments refers to the divisions played within the annual international rugby union tournament for the Asian region. The Asia Rugby Championship (ARC) replaced the Asian Five Nations tournament in 2015. The main tournament is now contested by the top three teams in Asia. The other national teams in Asia compete in three divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287335-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Championship division tournaments, Teams\nThe following teams were announced as playing the 2019 tournaments:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 56], "content_span": [57, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287335-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Championship division tournaments, Division 1\nThe Division 1 Tournament was held from 29 May to 1 June at Taipei Municipal Stadium in Taipei, Taiwan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287335-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Championship division tournaments, Division 2\nThe Division 2 Tournament was held from 15\u201318 May at Bang Bon Sport Center in Bangkok, Thailand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287335-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Championship division tournaments, Division 3 West\nThe Division 3 West tournament was held from 2\u20135 April in Doha, Qatar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287335-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Championship division tournaments, Division 3 West\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).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287335-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Championship division tournaments, Division 3 Central\nThe Division 3 Central tournament was held from 7\u201310 April in Lahore, Pakistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 69], "content_span": [70, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287335-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Championship division tournaments, Division 3 Central\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).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 69], "content_span": [70, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287335-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Championship division tournaments, Division 3 East-South\nThe Division 3 East-South tournament was held from 23\u201329 June in Jakarta, Indonesia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 72], "content_span": [73, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287335-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Championship division tournaments, Division 3 East-South\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).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 72], "content_span": [73, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287336-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Sevens Olympic Qualifying Tournament\nThe 2019 Asia Rugby Sevens Olympic Qualifying Tournament is a rugby sevens tournament scheduled to be held in Incheon on the 23-24 November 2019. This tournament serves as the 2020 Olympic Rugby Sevens regional qualifier, the winner of the tournament will collect direct qualification to the 2020 Summer Olympics, whilst the runner-up and third place finisher will advance to the Olympic repechage tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287336-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Sevens Olympic Qualifying Tournament, Main Tournament, Teams\nThe teams rankings is based on where they finished in the 2019 Asia Rugby Sevens Series", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 76], "content_span": [77, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287336-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Sevens Olympic Qualifying Tournament, Main Tournament, Pool Stages\nTeams were placed into each pool following their seeding in the 2019 Asia Rugby Sevens Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 82], "content_span": [83, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287337-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Sevens Series\nThe 2019 Asia Rugby Sevens Series was the eleventh edition of Asia's continental sevens circuit. The lower-tier Trophy tournament, hosted in Indonesia, served as a qualifier, with the top team qualifying for the main series hosted in South Korea, China, and Sri Lanka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287337-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Sevens Series, Schedule\nThe official schedule for the 2019 Asia Rugby Sevens Series was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287337-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Sevens Series, Trophy\nThe men's trophy event was held on 10\u201311 August at the Gelora Bung Karno Sports Complex in Jakarta, Indonesia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287337-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Sevens Series, Series standings\nFinal standings over the three legs of the 2019 Asia Rugby Sevens Series:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287337-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Sevens Series, Incheon\nThe Korean leg of the series was held from 31 August to 1 September in Incheon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287337-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Sevens Series, Huizhou\nThe China leg of the series was held on 14\u201315 September in Huizhou.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287337-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Sevens Series, Colombo\nThe Sri Lanka leg of the series was held on 28\u201329 September in Colombo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287338-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Women's Sevens Olympic Qualifying Tournament\nThe 2019 Asia Rugby Women's Sevens Olympic Qualifying Tournament was held on 9\u201310 November at Guangzhou Higher Education Mega Center Central Stadium in Guangzhou. Japan, as host, prequalified for the Olympic Games, and did not take part in this competition. The champion of the tournament, hosts China, qualify for the Asian continental berth in the 2020 Summer Olympics. The second and third-placed teams, Hong Kong and Kazakhstan, qualify to take part in a 2020 Olympic repechage tournament for one of two final berths in Tokyo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287339-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Women's Sevens Series\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by John of Reading (talk | contribs) at 12:51, 5 April 2020 (\u2192\u200eFinal Standings: Typo fixing, replaced: Qualifers \u2192 Qualifiers). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287339-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Women's Sevens Series\nThe 2019 Asia Rugby Women's Sevens Series was the twentieth edition of Asia's continental sevens tournament. The series was played over three legs in South Korea, China, and Sri Lanka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287339-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Women's Sevens Series\nThe top three teams earned qualification to the 2020\u201321 World Series Qualifier for a chance to earn core team status for the following World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287339-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Women's Sevens Series, Teams\nThe eight \"core teams\" qualified to participate in all series events for 2019 are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287339-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Women's Sevens Series, Teams\nMalaysia was promoted to core team status after winning the 2018 SevensTrophy in Singapore, replacing South Korea who were relegated after finishing as the lowest-placed core team in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287339-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Women's Sevens Series, Tour venues\nThe official schedule for the 2019 Asia Rugby Women's Sevens Series is:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 50], "content_span": [51, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287339-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Women's Sevens Series, Tournaments, South Korea\nThe tournament was held 31 August \u2013 1 September in South Korea. All times in Korea Standard Time (UTC+09:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287339-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Women's Sevens Series, Tournaments, China\nThe tournament was held 14\u201315 September in Huizhou. All times in China Standard Time (UTC+08:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287339-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Women's Sevens Series, Tournaments, Sri Lanka\nThe tournament was held 28\u201329 September in Colombo. All times in Sri Lanka Standard Time (UTC+05:30).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287339-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Women's Sevens Series, Sevens Trophy\nThe Sevens Trophy tournament acts as a qualifier for the 2020 main series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287339-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia Rugby Women's Sevens Series, Sevens Trophy, Teams\nSouth Korea were relegated after finishing as the lowest-placed team in 2018 main series, replacing the 2018 Sevens Trophy winners Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287340-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia-Pacific Rally Championship\nThe 2019 Asia-Pacific Rally Championship was an international rally championship sanctioned by the FIA. It was the 32nd championship and underwent a major format change. For the first time the two Cups, the Asian Cup and the Pacific Cup, acted as qualifying events for a \"Grand Final\" at the China Rally Longyou where the highest qualified winner becomes the Asia-Pacific champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287340-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia-Pacific Rally Championship\nThe championship was contested by a combination of regulations with Group R competing directly against Super 2000 cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287340-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia-Pacific Rally Championship\nThe Pacific Cup began in New Zealand on 12 April and finished in Australia on 25 August after four rallies. The Asia Cup began in Japan on 6 June and finished on 27 October in China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287340-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia-Pacific Rally Championship\nNew Zealanders won both Cups, Hyundai driver Hayden Paddon won the Pacific Cup while Toyota driver Mike Young won the Asia Cup. Young raced for the Asia-Pacific title and Paddon did not. A mechanical problem delayed Young on the first day of the deciding rally. Taiwanese Subaru driver Dewei Lin won the rally and the championship ahead of another New Zealander, Mazda driver Andrew Hawkeswood and Japanese Citro\u00ebn driver, Suguru Kawana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287340-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia-Pacific Rally Championship, Championship standings, Pacific Cup\nThe 2019 APRC Pacific Cup for Drivers points was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 73], "content_span": [74, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287340-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Asia-Pacific Rally Championship, Championship standings, Asia Cup\nThe 2019 APRC Asia Cup for Drivers points was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287341-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Acrobatic Gymnastics Championships\nThe 2019 Asian Acrobatic Gymnastics Championships were the 11th edition of the Asian Acrobatic Gymnastics Championships, and were held in Tashkent, Uzbekistan from October 10 to 12, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287342-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Airgun Championships\nThe 2019 Asian Airgun Championships were held at Gongxi Shooting Range, Taoyuan, Taiwan between 25 March and 2 April, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287343-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Amateur Boxing Championships\nThe 30th edition of the Asian Amateur Boxing Championships was held from April 19 to 26, 2019 in Bangkok, Thailand. It was the first time in the tournament's history that men and women fought in the same championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287344-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Archery Championships\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Mohsen1248 (talk | contribs) at 10:18, 27 November 2019 (logo). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287344-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Archery Championships\nThe 2019 Asian Archery Championships were the 21st edition of the Asian Archery Championships, and were held in Bangkok, Thailand from November 22, 2019 to November 28, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287345-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Artistic Gymnastics Championships\nThe 2019 Asian Artistic Gymnastics Championships was the eighth edition of the Asian Artistic Gymnastics Championships, and were held in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia from 19 to 22 June, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287346-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships\nThe 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was the 23rd edition of the Asian Athletics Championships. It was held from 21 to 24 April 2019 at the Khalifa International Stadium in Doha, Qatar. During the closing ceremony of the 22nd Asian Athletics Championships in Bhubaneswar India, President of Asian Athletics Association (AAA) Dahlan Al Hamad officially handed over the AAA Flag to Qatar Olympic Committee Secretary-General and Qatar Athletics Federation President Thani Abdulrahman Al Kuwari. The event was at the Khalifa International Stadium and served as the test event for the 2019 athletics World Championships which are being held at the same venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287347-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 10,000 metres\nThe men's 10,000 metres at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 21 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287348-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metres\nThe men's 100 metres event at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 21 and 22 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287348-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metres, Results, Heats\nQualification rule: First 4 in each heat (Q) and the next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287348-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metres, Results, Heats\nWind:Heat 1: +1.2 m/s, Heat 2: +0.8 m/, Heat 3: +0.9 m/s, Heat 4: +0.5 m/, Heat 5: -0.2 m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287348-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metres, Results, Semifinals\nQualification rule: First 2 in each heat (Q) and the next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 74], "content_span": [75, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287348-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metres, Results, Semifinals\nWind:Heat 1: +1.2 m/s, Heat 2: +1.4 m/, Heat 3: +1.7 m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 74], "content_span": [75, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287349-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 110 metres hurdles\nThe men's 110 metres hurdles event at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 23 and 24 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287349-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 110 metres hurdles, Results, Heats\nQualification rule: First 2 in each heat (Q) and the next 3 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 77], "content_span": [78, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287349-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 110 metres hurdles, Results, Heats\nWind:Heat 1: +2.1 m/s, Heat 2: +1.0 m/s, Heat 3: +1.6 m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 77], "content_span": [78, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287350-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 metres\nThe men's 1500 metres at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 23 and 24 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287350-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 metres, Results, Heats\nQualification rule: First 4 in each heat (Q) and the next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 70], "content_span": [71, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287351-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres\nThe men's 200 metres event at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 23 and 24 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287351-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres, Results, Heats\nQualification rule: First 4 in each heat (Q) and the next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287351-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres, Results, Heats\nWind:Heat 1: +1.3 m/s, Heat 2: +0.8 m/s, Heat 3: +2.7 m/s, Heat 4: +1.1 m/, Heat 5: +2.0 m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287351-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres, Results, Semifinals\nQualification rule: First 2 in each heat (Q) and the next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 74], "content_span": [75, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287351-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres, Results, Semifinals\nWind:Heat 1: +1.3 m/s, Heat 2: +0.7 m/s, Heat 3: +1.3 m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 74], "content_span": [75, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287352-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 3000 metres steeplechase\nThe men's 3000 metres steeplechase at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 21 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287353-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay\nThe men's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay event at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 22 and 23 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287354-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay event at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 24 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287355-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres\nThe men's 400 metres at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 21 and 22 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287355-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres, Results, Heats\nQualification rule: First 3 in each heat (Q) and the next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287355-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres, Results, Semifinals\nQualification rule: First 3 in each heat (Q) and the next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 74], "content_span": [75, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287356-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres hurdles\nThe men's 400 metres hurdles at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 21 and 22 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287356-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres hurdles, Results, Heats\nQualification rule: First 3 in each heat (Q) and the next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 77], "content_span": [78, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287357-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 5000 metres\nThe men's 5000 metres at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 24 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287358-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres\nThe men's 800 metres at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 21 and 22 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287358-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres, Results, Heats\nQualification rule: First 3 in each heat (Q) and the next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287358-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres, Results, Semifinals\nQualification rule: First 3 in each heat (Q) and the next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 74], "content_span": [75, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287359-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's decathlon\nThe men's decathlon at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 22 and 23 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287360-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's discus throw\nThe men's discus throw at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 21 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287361-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's hammer throw\nThe men's hammer throw at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 23 and 24 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287361-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's hammer throw, Results, Qualification\nQualification rule: Qualifying performance 70.00 (Q) or at least 12 best performers (q) qualify for the final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 79], "content_span": [80, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287362-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's high jump\nThe men's high jump at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 22 and 24 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287362-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's high jump, Results, Qualification\nQualification rule: Qualifying performance 2.22 (Q) or at least 12 best performers (q) qualify for the final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 76], "content_span": [77, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287363-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's javelin throw\nThe men's javelin throw at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 22 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287364-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's long jump\nThe men's long jump at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 23 and 24 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287364-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's long jump, Results, Qualification\nQualification rule: Qualifying performance 8.00 (Q) or at least 12 best performers (q) qualify for the final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 76], "content_span": [77, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287365-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's pole vault\nThe men's pole vault at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 21 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287366-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's shot put\nThe men's shot put at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 22 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287367-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's triple jump\nThe men's triple jump at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 21 and 22 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287367-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's triple jump, Results, Qualification\nQualification rule: Qualifying performance 16.50 (Q) or at least 12 best performers (q) qualify for the final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 78], "content_span": [79, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287368-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Mixed 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe mixed 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay event at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 23 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287369-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 10,000 metres\nThe women's 10,000 metres at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 23 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287370-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres\nThe women's 100 metres at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 21 and 22 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287370-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres, Results, Heats\nQualification rule: First 4 in each heat (Q) and the next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 71], "content_span": [72, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287370-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres, Results, Heats\nWind:Heat 1: -0.3 m/s, Heat 2: +0.4 m/, Heat 3: -0.2 m/s, Heat 4: -0.1 m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 71], "content_span": [72, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287370-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres, Results, Semifinals\nQualification rule: First 3 in each heat (Q) and the next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 76], "content_span": [77, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287371-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres hurdles\nThe women's 100 metres hurdles event at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 23 and 24 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287371-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres hurdles, Results, Heats\nQualification rule: First 3 in each heat (Q) and the next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 79], "content_span": [80, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287372-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 1500 metres\nThe women's 1500 metres at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 24 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287373-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 200 metres\nThe women's 200 metres event at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 23 and 24 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287373-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 200 metres, Results, Heats\nQualification rule: First 2 in each heat (Q) and the next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 71], "content_span": [72, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287373-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 200 metres, Results, Heats\nWind:Heat 1: +1.0 m/s, Heat 2: +0.6 m/s, Heat 3: +2.3 m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 71], "content_span": [72, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287374-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 3000 metres steeplechase\nThe women's 3000 metres steeplechase at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 23 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [69, 69], "content_span": [70, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287375-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay\nThe women's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay event at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 23 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287376-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe women's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay event at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 24 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287377-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres\nThe women's 400 metres at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 21 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287377-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres, Results, Heats\nQualification rule: First 3 in each heat (Q) and the next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 71], "content_span": [72, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287378-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres hurdles\nThe women's 400 metres hurdles at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 21 and 22 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287378-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres hurdles, Results, Heats\nQualification rule: First 3 in each heat (Q) and the next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 79], "content_span": [80, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287379-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 5000 metres\nThe women's 5000 metres at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 21 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287380-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres\nThe women's 800 metres at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 21 and 22 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287380-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres, Results, Heats\nQualification rule: First 3 in each heat (Q) and the next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 71], "content_span": [72, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287381-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's discus throw\nThe women's discus throw at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 24 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287382-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's hammer throw\nThe women's hammer throw at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 22 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287383-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's heptathlon\nThe women's heptathlon event at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 22 and 23 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287384-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's high jump\nThe women's high jump at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 23 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287385-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's javelin throw\nThe women's javelin throw at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 21 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287386-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's long jump\nThe women's long jump at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 22 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287387-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's pole vault\nThe women's pole vault at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 23 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287388-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's shot put\nThe women's shot put at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 21 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287389-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's triple jump\nThe women's triple jump at the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships was held on 23 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287390-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Baseball Championship\nThe 29th 2019 Asian Baseball Championship was the international baseball competition for Asian men's national teams. It was held in Taichung, Taiwan, on October 14-20, 2019. Chinese Taipei and China, the top two finishers, excluding Japan, qualified to compete in the Olympic Final Qualifying Tournament which will take place in March or April 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287390-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Baseball Championship, Group stage\nThe first stage consisted of each team playing against each other team in its group once.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287391-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Development Tour\nThe 2019 Asian Development Tour was the ninth season of the Asian Development Tour, a second-tier tour operated by the Asian Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287391-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Development Tour, Order of Merit\nThe top seven players on the Order of Merit earned Asian Tour cards for 2020. Wang Wei-lun of Taiwan had already secured his card by finishing in the top-60 of the Asian Tour Order of Merit, allowing Park Seung to earn his card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287392-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Fencing Championships\nThe 2019 Asian Fencing Championships was held in Chiba, Japan from 13 to 18 June 2019 at the Chiba Port Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287393-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Formula Renault Series\nThe 2019 Asian Formula Renault Series (aka AFR Series) was the 20th season of the AFR Series since its creation in 2000 by FRD. The season began on 23 March at the Zhuhai International Circuit and ended at the same venue on 8 December after five events. Joey Alders won the 2019 Championship in his debut season with his team BlackArts Racing Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287393-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Formula Renault Series\nStarting from 2015, drivers and teams compete in two classes, Pro (Class A) for drivers and teams competing with the 2013 FR2.0 car, and Elite (Class B) for drivers and teams using the FR2.0 old spec cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287393-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Formula Renault Series, Championship standings\nPoints are awarded to the top 14 classified finishers. Drivers in Pro and Elite classes are classified separately.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287394-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Junior and Cadet Table Tennis Championships\nThe 2019 Asian Junior and Cadet Table Tennis Championships were held in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, from 2 to 7 September 2019. It was organised by the Mongolian Table Tennis Association under the authority of Asian Table Tennis Union (ATTU).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287395-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Karate Championships\nThe 2019 Asian Karate Championships were the 16th edition of the Asian Karate Championships, and were held in Tashkent, Uzbekistan from July 19 to July 21, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287396-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's Club League Handball Championship\n\u200cThe 2019 Asian Club League Handball Championship was the 22nd edition of the championship held under the aegis of Asian Handball Federation. The championship was hosted by Korea Handball Federation at Indoor Handball Hall, Samcheok (South Korea) from 7 to 17 November 2019. It was the official competition for men's handball clubs of Asia crowning the Asian champions whose winner will also qualify for the 2020 IHF Super Globe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287396-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's Club League Handball Championship, Draw\nThe draw was held on Saturday, 7 September 2019 in the Millennium Hotel & Convention Centre, Salmiya, Kuwait at 19:00 hours in the presence of representatives of the participating clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 56], "content_span": [57, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287396-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's Club League Handball Championship, Draw, Seeding\nTeams were seeded according to the AHF COC regulations and rankings of the previous edition of the championship. Teams who had not participate in the previous edition were in Pot 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 65], "content_span": [66, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287396-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's Club League Handball Championship, Draw, Seeding\n\u25cf Doosan Handball Club withdraw from the championship before the final draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 65], "content_span": [66, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287397-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's Club Volleyball Championship\nThe 2019 Asian Men's Club Volleyball Championship will be the tenth edition of the Asian Men's Club Volleyball Championship, an annual international volleyball club tournament organised by the Asian Volleyball Confederation (AVC) with Chinese Taipei Volleyball Association (CTVA). The tournament was held in Taipei, Taiwan, from 18 to 26 April 2019. The winner of this tournament will be qualified to 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Club World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287397-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's Club Volleyball Championship, Qualification\nFollowing the AVC regulations, The maximum of 16 teams in all AVC events will be selected by", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287397-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's Club 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, 45], "section_span": [47, 70], "content_span": [71, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287397-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's Club 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, 45], "section_span": [47, 70], "content_span": [71, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287398-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's U23 Volleyball Championship\nThe 2019 Asian Men's U23 Volleyball Championship is the third edition of the Asian Men's U23 Volleyball Championship, a biennial international volleyball tournament organised by the Asian Volleyball Confederation (AVC) with Myanmar Volleyball Association. It is held in Naypyitaw, Myanmar from 3 to 11 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287398-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's U23 Volleyball Championship, Pools composition\nTeams were seeded in the first two positions of each pool following the Serpentine system according to their final standing of the 2017 edition. All teams not seeded were drawn. Final standing of the 2017 edition are shown in brackets except the host.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287398-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's U23 Volleyball Championship, Pool standing procedure\nMatch won 3\u20130 or 2\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, 44], "section_span": [46, 69], "content_span": [70, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287399-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship\nThe 2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship was the 20th edition of the Asian Men's Volleyball Championship, a biennial international volleyball tournament organised by the Asian Volleyball Confederation (AVC) with Islamic Republic of Iran Volleyball Federation (IRIVF). The tournament was held in Tehran, Iran from 13 to 21 September 2019. Top eight teams which had not yet qualified to the 2020 Summer Olympics qualified for the 2020 Asian Olympic Qualification Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287399-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship, Qualification\nFollowing the AVC regulations, The maximum of 16 teams in all AVC events will be selected by", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287399-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship, Pools composition, Preliminary round\nTeams were seeded in the first two positions of each pool following the serpentine system according to their final standing of the 2017 edition. AVC reserved the right to seed the hosts as head of Pool A regardless of the final standing of the 2017 edition. All teams not seeded were drawn in Bangkok, Thailand on 19 February 2019. Final standings of the 2017 edition are shown in brackets except the hosts who ranked 5th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 78], "content_span": [79, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287399-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's 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, 40], "section_span": [42, 65], "content_span": [66, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287400-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship squads\nThis article shows the rosters of all participating teams at the 2019 Asian Championship in Iran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287400-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship squads, Pool A, Australia\nThe following is the Australian roster in the 2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 66], "content_span": [67, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287400-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship squads, Pool A, Iran\nThe following is the Iranian roster in the 2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 61], "content_span": [62, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287400-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship squads, Pool A, Sri Lanka\nThe following is the Sri Lankan roster in the 2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 66], "content_span": [67, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287400-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship squads, Pool A, Qatar\nThe following is the Qatari roster in the 2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287400-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship squads, Pool B, Chinese Taipei\nThe following is the Chinese Taipei roster in the 2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 71], "content_span": [72, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287400-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship squads, Pool B, Hong Kong\nThe following is the Hong Kong roster in the 2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 66], "content_span": [67, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287400-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship squads, Pool B, Japan\nThe following is the Japanese roster in the 2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287400-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship squads, Pool B, Thailand\nThe following is the Thai roster in the 2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 65], "content_span": [66, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287400-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship squads, Pool C, China\nThe following is the Chinese roster in the 2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287400-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship squads, Pool C, India\nThe following is the Indian roster in the 2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287400-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship squads, Pool C, Kazakhstan\nThe following is the Kazakhstan roster in the 2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 67], "content_span": [68, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287400-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship squads, Pool C, Oman\nThe following is the Omani roster in the 2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 61], "content_span": [62, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287400-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship squads, Pool D, Indonesia\nThe following is the Indonesian roster in the 2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 66], "content_span": [67, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287400-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship squads, Pool D, Kuwait\nThe following is the Kuwaiti roster in the 2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 63], "content_span": [64, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287400-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship squads, Pool D, South Korea\nThe following is the Korean roster in the 2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 68], "content_span": [69, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287400-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship squads, Pool D, Pakistan\nThe following is the Pakistani roster in the 2019 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 65], "content_span": [66, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287401-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Muaythai Championships \u2013 Men's bantamweight\nThe men's bantamweight is a competition featured at the 2019 Asian Muaythai Championships, and was held at the Abu Dhabi Sailing and Yacht Club in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates from 18 to 21 December. bantamweight were limited to a maximum of 54 kilograms in body mass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287402-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Muaythai Championships \u2013 Men's cruiserweight\nThe men's cruiserweight is a competition featured at the 2019 Asian Muaythai Championships, and was held at the Abu Dhabi Sailing and Yacht Club in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates from 18 to 21 December. Cruiserweight were limited to a maximum of 86 kilograms in body mass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287403-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Muaythai Championships \u2013 Men's featherweight\nThe men's featherweight is a competition featured at the 2019 Asian Muaythai Championships, and was held at the Abu Dhabi Sailing and Yacht Club in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates from 18 to 21 December. Featherweight were limited to a maximum of 57 kilograms in body mass. It was a qualification point event for the Muaythai at the 2021 World Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287404-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Muaythai Championships \u2013 Men's lightweight\nThe men's lightweight is a competition featured at the 2019 Asian Muaythai Championships, and was held at the Abu Dhabi Sailing and Yacht Club in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates from 17 to 21 December. Lightweight were limited to a maximum of 60 kilograms in body mass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287405-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Muaythai Championships \u2013 Women's featherweight\nThe women's featherweight is a competition featured at the 2019 Asian Muaythai Championships, and was held at the Abu Dhabi Sailing and Yacht Club in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates from 18 to 21 December. Featherweights were limited to a maximum of 57 kilograms in body mass. It was a qualification point event for the Muaythai at the 2021 World Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287406-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Muaythai Championships \u2013 Women's light welterweight\nThe women's light welterweight is a competition featured at the 2019 Asian Muaythai Championships, and was held at the Abu Dhabi Sailing and Yacht Club in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates from 18 to 21 December. Light welterweights were limited to a maximum of 60 kilograms in body mass. It was a qualification point event for the Muaythai at the 2021 World Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287407-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships\nThe 11th Rhythmic Gymnastics Asian Championships was held in Pattaya, Thailand from June 20 to 23, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287408-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Road Cycling Championships\nThe 2019 Asian Road Cycling Championships was held in Tashkent, Uzbekistan from 23 to 28 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287409-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Rowing Championships\nThe 2019 Asian Rowing Championships were the 19th Asian Rowing Championships and took place from October 23\u201327, 2019, in Tangeum Lake International Rowing Regatta, Chungju, South Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287410-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Shooting Championships\nThe 2019 Asian Shooting Championships were the 14th Asian Shooting Championships and took place from 5 to 13 November 2019, at Lusail Shooting Complex, Doha, Qatar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287410-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Shooting Championships\nIt acts as the Asian qualifying tournament for the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287411-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Shotgun Championships\nThe 2019 Asian Shotgun Championships was the 9th Asian Shotgun Championships which took place from 20 to 30 September 2019, at Asanov Shooting Club, Almaty, Kazakhstan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287412-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Table Tennis Championships\nThe 2019 Asian Table Tennis Championships were held in Yogyakarta, Indonesia from 15 to 22 September 2019. Around 128 males and 100 females table tennis players competed in the singles, doubles and team events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287413-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Table Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's singles\nThe men's singles in table tennis at the 2019 Asian Table Tennis Championships in Yogyakarta is the twenty-fourth edition of the event in this tournament. It was held at Among Rogo Sports Hall from 19 to 22 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287414-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Tour\nThe 2019 Asian Tour was the 25th 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-00287414-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287415-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Track Cycling Championships\nThe 2019 Asian Track Cycling Championships took place at the Jakarta International Velodrome in Jakarta, Indonesia from 9 to 13 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287416-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian U23 Wrestling Championship\nThe 2019 U23 Senior Asian Wrestling Championship was the 1st edition of Asian U23 Wrestling Championships of combined events, and took place from March 21 to 24 in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287417-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Weightlifting Championships\nThe 2019 Asian Weightlifting Championships were held in Ningbo, China from 20 to 28 April 2019. It was the 48th men's and 29th women's championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287417-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287418-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Women's Club League Handball Championship\nThe 2019 Asian Women's Club League Handball Championship was the 4th edition of the Asian Women's Club League Handball Championship held from 16 to 22 June 2019 at Almaty, Kazakhstan under the aegis of Asian Handball Federation. It was third time in history that championship was organised in\u00a0Kazakhstan by the\u00a0Kazakhstan Handball Federation. It also acts as the qualification tournament for the 2019 IHF Women's Super Globe with one quota place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287419-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Women's Club Volleyball Championship\nThe 2019 Asian Women's Club Volleyball Championship is the tenth edition of the Asian Women's Club Volleyball Championship, an annual international volleyball club tournament organised by the Asian Volleyball Confederation (AVC) with Chinese Volleyball Association (CVA). The tournament was held in Tianjin, China, from 27 April to 5 May 2019. The winner of this tournament qualified to 2020 FIVB Volleyball Women's Club World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287419-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Women's Club Volleyball Championship, Qualification\nFollowing the AVC regulations, The maximum of 16 teams in all AVC events were be selected by", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287420-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Women's Club Volleyball Championship squads\nThis article shows the rosters of all participating teams at the 2019 Asian Women's Club Volleyball Championship in Tianjin, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287420-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Women's Club Volleyball Championship squads, Pool A, Altay VC\nThe following is the roster of the Kazakhstani club Altay VC in the 2019 Asian Club Championship. Head coach: Iurii Panchenko", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 72], "content_span": [73, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287420-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Women's Club Volleyball Championship squads, Pool B, Supreme Chonburi\nThe following is the roster of the Thai club Supreme Chonburi in the 2019 Asian Club Championship. Head coach: Nataphon Srisamutnak", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 80], "content_span": [81, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287420-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Women's Club Volleyball Championship squads, Pool B, Hisamitsu Springs\nThe following is the roster of the Japanese club Hisamitsu Springs in the 2019 Asian Club Championship. Head coach: Shingo Sakai", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 81], "content_span": [82, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287420-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Women's Club Volleyball Championship squads, Pool B, VTV B\u00ecnh \u0110i\u1ec1n Long An\nThe following is the roster of the Vietnamese club VTV B\u00ecnh \u0110i\u1ec1n Long An in the 2019 Asian Club Championship. Head coach: Nguy\u1ec5n Qu\u1ed1c V\u0169", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 85], "content_span": [86, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287421-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Women's Junior Handball Championship\nThe 2019 Asian Women's Junior Handball Championship was the 15th edition of the championship held from 20 to 29 July 2019 at Beirut, Lebanon under the aegis of Asian Handball Federation. It was the first time in history that championship was organised in Lebanon by the Lebanese Handball Federation. It also acted as the qualification tournament for the 2020 Women's Junior World Handball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287421-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Women's Junior Handball Championship, Draw\nThe draw was held on 13 April 2019 at Lebanese Handball Federation Headquarters in Beirut, Lebanon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 53], "content_span": [54, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287422-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Women's Softball Championship\nThe 2019 Asian Women's Softball Championship was an international softball tournament which featured ten nations and was held from 1\u20137 May 2019 in Jakarta, Indonesia. Matches were held at the Gelora Bung Karno Softball Stadium", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287422-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Women's Softball Championship\nThe tournament also serves as the qualifiers for the WBSC Softball Asia/Oceania 2019 Qualifying Event for the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo. The top six teams aside from the Olympic hosts, Japan, advanced to the final Olympic qualifier to be hosted in Shanghai, China. The top three nations also qualified for the 2021 Women's World Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287423-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Women's U23 Volleyball Championship\nThe 2019 Asian Women's U23 Volleyball Championship was the 3rd edition of the Asian Women's U23 Volleyball Championship, a biennial international volleyball tournament organised by the Asian Volleyball Confederation (AVC). It was held in Hanoi, Vietnam from July 13 to 21, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287423-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Women's U23 Volleyball Championship, Pool standing procedure\nMatch won 3\u20130 or 3\u20131: 3 match points for the winner, 0 match points for the loser. Match won 3\u20132: 2 match points for the winner, 1 match point for the loser.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 71], "content_span": [72, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287424-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Women's Volleyball Championship\nThe 2019 Asian Women's Volleyball Championship was the twentieth edition of the Asian Women's Volleyball Championship, a biennial international volleyball tournament organised by the Asian Volleyball Confederation (AVC) with Korea Volleyball Association (KVA). The tournament was held in Seoul, South Korea, from 18 to 25 August 2019. South Korea played host to this event for the very first time. The top eight teams of this tournament qualified for the 2020 AVC Women's Volleyball Olympic Qualification Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287424-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Women's Volleyball Championship, Qualification\nFollowing the AVC regulations, The maximum of 16 teams in all AVC events were selected by:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287424-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Women's Volleyball Championship, Pools composition, Preliminary round\nTeams were seeded in the first two positions of each pool following the Serpentine system according to their previous edition. AVC reserved the right to seed the hosts as heads of pool A regardless of the previous ranking. All teams not seeded were drawn to take other available positions in the remaining lines. Each pool had no more than three teams from the same zonal association. The draw was held in Bangkok, Thailand on 19 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287424-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Women's Volleyball Championship, Pools composition, Preliminary round\nRanking from the 2017 Asian Women's Volleyball Championship was shown in brackets except the host (who ranked 3rd) and the teams who did not participate, which were denoted by (\u2013).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287424-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Women's 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, 42], "section_span": [44, 67], "content_span": [68, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287424-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Women's Volleyball Championship, Final standings\nSetter: Nanami Seki, Tamaki MatsuiMiddle Blocker: Mai Irisawa, Nichika Yamada, Shion Hirayama, Kotomi OsakaOutside Hitters: Miwako Osanai, Yuri Yoshino, Mayu Ishikawa, Yuki NishikawaOpposite: Miyu Nakagawa, Haruna SogaLibero: Rena Mizusugi, Minami Nishimura", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287425-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Women's Youth Handball Championship\nThe 2019 Asian Women's Youth Handball Championship was the 8th edition of the championship held from 21 to 30 August 2019 at Jaipur, India under the aegis of Asian Handball Federation. It was the second time in history that championship was organised in India by the Handball Federation of India. It also acted as the qualification tournament for the 2020 Women's Youth World Handball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287425-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Women's Youth Handball Championship, Draw\nThe draw was held on 20 April 2019 in Jaipur, India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 52], "content_span": [53, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287425-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Women's Youth Handball Championship, Draw\nIran withdrew from the tournament before the draw and was substituted by Bhutan. Bhutan withdrew from the tournament after the draw, therefore AHF Executive Committee has decided to substitute Mongolia in Group B in place of Bhutan to balance the number of teams in each group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 52], "content_span": [53, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287426-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Wrestling Championships\nThe 2019 Asian Wrestling Championships was held in Xi'an, China. The event took place from April 23 to April 28, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287427-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Youth Athletics Championships\nThe 2019 Asian Youth Athletics Championships was the third edition of the biennial, continental athletics competition for Asian athletes aged 15 to 17. It was held at the Tseung Kwan O Sports Ground in Hong Kong from 15 to 17 March. Organised by the Hong Kong Amateur Athletic Association, a total of forty events will be contested with the events divided evenly between the sexes. The host was announced in January 2019 by Asian Athletics Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287427-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Youth Athletics Championships\nEach Federation can enter maximum of 2 athletes in each individual event, while host team can enter maximum of 3 athletes in each individual event. For relay event, each Federation can only enter 1 team to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287427-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian Youth Athletics Championships\nThis championship was the first large scale competition situated in Hong Kong since the 2009 East Asian Games. Kwan Kee, the Chairman of Hong Kong Amateur Athletics Association was satisfied with the performance of Hong Kong team (1 gold medal and 2 silver medals) and planned to bid for more international track and field events to promote the growth of this sport in Hong Kong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287428-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asian-Pacific Judo Championships\nThe 2019 Asian Judo Championships were the 24th edition of the Asian Judo Championships, and were held in Fujairah, United Arab Emirates from April 20 to April 23, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287429-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Aspria Tennis Cup\nThe 2019 Aspria Tennis Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the fourteenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Milan, Italy between 24 and 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287429-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Aspria 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-00287429-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Aspria Tennis Cup, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287430-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Aspria Tennis Cup \u2013 Doubles\nJulian Ocleppo and Andrea Vavassori were the defending champions but chose to defend their title with different partners. Ocleppo partnered Andrea Pellegrino but lost in the first round to David Marrero and Roberto Mayt\u00edn. Vavassori partnered Andrei Vasilevski but lost in the final to Tomislav Brki\u0107 and Ante Pavi\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287430-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Aspria Tennis Cup \u2013 Doubles\nBrki\u0107 and Pavi\u0107 won the title after defeating Vasilevski and Vavassori 7\u20136(8\u20136), 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287431-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Aspria Tennis Cup \u2013 Singles\nLaslo \u0110ere was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287431-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Aspria Tennis Cup \u2013 Singles\nHugo Dellien won the title after defeating Danilo Petrovi\u0107 7\u20135, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287432-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Assam alcohol poisonings\nIn February 2019, at least 168 people died after drinking toxic bootleg alcohol in Golaghat and Jorhat districts in Indian state of Assam. The incident occurred two weeks after 100 people died by drinking toxic alcohol in the northern states of Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287432-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Assam alcohol poisonings, Incident\nThe poisonings first came to attention on 21 February 2019, when 42 people died shortly after drinking the illegal alcohol. Over the following days, more people died from the poisoning and many more were admitted to local hospitals. On 24 February 2019, it was reported that a total of 144 people had died and more than 300 were admitted in hospitals making it one of the deadliest alcohol poisonings in the country. The next day, the death toll had risen to 156.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287432-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Assam alcohol poisonings, Incident\nThe incident occurred at tea plantations in the districts. Most of the victims were labourers in these plantations. They might have bought the liquor to drink after a day's work in the plantation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287432-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Assam alcohol poisonings, Incident\nI had bought half a liter of wine and drank it before eating. Initially, everything was normal, but after some time my head started hurting. The headache grew so much that I could not eat or sleep.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287432-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Assam alcohol poisonings, Aftermath\nAssam Government has announced ex-gratia of \u20b9 200,000 for the dead and \u20b9 50,000 to those undergoing treatment. The Government is also planning to ban and seize all illicit liquor in the state. Chief Minister Sarbananda Sonowal has ordered probe over the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287433-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Astana season\nThe 2019 season for the Astana cycling team began in January with the Tour Down Under. As a UCI WorldTeam, 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, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287434-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Asturian regional election\nThe 2019 Asturian regional election was held on Sunday, 26 May 2019, to elect the 11th General Junta of the Principality of Asturias. All 45 seats in the General Junta were up for election. The election was held simultaneously with regional elections in eleven other autonomous communities and local elections all throughout Spain, as well as the 2019 European Parliament election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287434-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Asturian regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nThe General Junta of the Principality of Asturias was the devolved, unicameral legislature of the autonomous community of Asturias, having legislative power in regional matters as defined by the Spanish Constitution and the Asturian Statute of Autonomy, as well as the ability to vote confidence in or withdraw it from a regional president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287434-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Asturian regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nVoting for the General Junta was on the basis of universal suffrage, which comprised all nationals over eighteen, registered in Asturias and in full enjoyment of their political rights. Additionally, Asturians abroad were required to apply for voting before being permitted to vote, a system known as \"begged\" or expat vote (Spanish: Voto rogado). The 45 members of the General Junta of the Principality of Asturias were elected using the D'Hondt method and a closed list proportional representation, with an electoral threshold of three percent of valid votes\u2014which included blank ballots\u2014being applied in each constituency. Seats were allocated to constituencies, which were established as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287434-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Asturian regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nEach constituency was allocated an initial minimum of two seats, with the remaining 39 being distributed in proportion to their populations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287434-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Asturian regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nThe use of the D'Hondt method might result in a higher effective threshold, depending on the district magnitude.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287434-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Asturian regional election, Overview, Election date\nThe term of the General Junta of the Principality of Asturias expired four years after the date of its previous election. Elections to the General Junta were fixed for the fourth Sunday of May every four years. The previous election was held on 24 May 2015, setting the election date for the General Junta on Sunday, 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287434-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Asturian regional election, Overview, Election date\nThe president had the prerogative to dissolve the General Junta and call a snap election, provided that no motion of no confidence was in process, no nationwide election was due and some time requirements were met: namely, that dissolution did not occur either during the first legislative session or within the legislature's last year ahead of its scheduled expiry, nor before one year had elapsed since a previous dissolution under this procedure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287434-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Asturian regional election, Overview, Election date\nIn the event of an investiture process failing to elect a regional president within a two-month period from the first ballot, the General Junta was to be automatically dissolved and a fresh election called. Any snap election held as a result of these circumstances would not alter the period to the next ordinary election, with elected deputies merely serving out what remained of their four-year terms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287434-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Asturian regional election, Parliamentary composition\nThe General Junta of the Principality of Asturias was officially dissolved on 2 April 2019, after the publication of the dissolution decree in the Official Gazette of the Principality of Asturias. The table below shows the composition of the parliamentary groups in the General Junta at the time of dissolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287434-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Asturian regional election, Parties and candidates\nThe electoral law allowed for parties and federations registered in the interior ministry, coalitions and groupings of electors to present lists of candidates. Parties and federations intending to form a coalition ahead of an election were required to inform the relevant Electoral Commission within ten days of the election call, whereas groupings of electors needed to secure the signature of at least one percent of the electorate in the constituencies for which they sought election, disallowing electors from signing for more than one list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287434-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Asturian regional election, Parties and candidates\nBelow is a list of the main parties and electoral alliances which contested the election:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287434-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Asturian regional election, Opinion polls\nThe table below lists voting intention estimates in reverse chronological order, showing the most recent first and using the dates when the survey fieldwork was done, as opposed to the date of publication. Where the fieldwork dates are unknown, the date of publication is given instead. The highest percentage figure in each polling survey is displayed with its background shaded in the leading party's colour. If a tie ensues, this is applied to the figures with the highest percentages. The \"Lead\" column on the right shows the percentage-point difference between the parties with the highest percentages in a given poll. When available, seat projections are also displayed below the voting estimates in a smaller font. 23 seats were required for an absolute majority in the General Junta of the Principality of Asturias.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 870]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287434-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Asturian regional election, Aftermath\nJust after the election, Asturias Forum candidate Carmen Moriy\u00f3n renounced to take her seat in the General Junta, but continued as president of the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287434-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Asturian regional election, Aftermath\nOn 24 June 2019, the day of the constitution of the 11th General Junta, Juan V\u00e1zquez resigned as regional Cs spokesman due to divergences with the national leadership of the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287435-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Athens earthquake\nThe earthquake occurred at 2:13\u00a0p.m. on Friday, July 19, 2019, and affected millions of Athenians in the middle of the day. Several seismologial institutes determined a magnitude of about Mw = 5.1 and the epicentral region appeared to be south of Mt Parnitha, \u223c20\u00a0km NW of the Athens metropolitan area. Nearly 20 years before, on the 7th September 1999, Athens was struck by a Mw = 6 earthquake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287435-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Athens earthquake\nThe earthquake engendered power cuts and communication problems for at least two hours around Athens and the emergency responders reported receiving calls about people being trapped in elevators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287435-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Athens earthquake, Setting\nGreece is located in the South-East of Europe and is characterized by a complex tectonic structure, with major mountain ranges and a high seismic activity, concentrated in the Hellenic Arc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287435-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Athens earthquake, Setting\nThere is historical evidence of several earthquakes located at distances between 30 and 70\u00a0km outside the city of Athens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287435-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Athens earthquake, Macroseismicity and vulnerability\nTo determine the perceived intensity of the 2019 earthquake, the Macroseismic Field Investigation Team of the Department of Geology and Geoenvironment of the University of Athens (NKUA), surveyed citizens from the suburbs of Athens and several towns near the epicentre within a few hours after the earthquake and in the following week. They could gather 63 questionnaire which reported the felt shaking based on the EMS-98 intensity scale and 48 damage photos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 57], "content_span": [58, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287435-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Athens earthquake, Data from the European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre (EMSC)\nThe EMSC is among the international seismological institutes that use citizens' perceived shaking to determine an estimate of the felt intensity of the earthquake. The EMSC surveys people who just experienced an earthquake through a set of cartoons depicting the 12 levels of the EMS-98 intensity scale. This procedure is very fast and is essential to rapid situational awareness.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 88], "content_span": [89, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287435-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Athens earthquake, Data from the European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre (EMSC)\nIn the case of the 2019 Athens earthquake, 76% of felt reports received by the EMSC were gathered within the first hour following the earthquake onset, allowing for a quasi real-time information. Most responses came from Attica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 88], "content_span": [89, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287436-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Athletissima\nThe 2019 Athletissima was the 43rd edition of the annual outdoor track and field meeting in Lausanne, Switzerland. Held from 4\u20135 July primarily at the Stade Olympique de la Pontaise, it was the eighth leg of the 2019 IAAF Diamond League \u2013 the highest level international track and field circuit. The women's pole vault (the City Event) was held on 4 July at the esplanade of the Le Flon district, with the other events following the next day at the Stade Olympique. 28 events total were contested with 14 of them being point-scoring Diamond League disciplines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287436-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Athletissima\nThe last race of the meet staged the eighth fastest men's 200\u00a0m performance in history by Noah Lyles, who broke Usain Bolt's meeting record with world-leading time of 19.50 seconds. That made him the fourth fastest man over 200\u00a0m in history, and the second fastest American ever after former world record holder Michael Johnson. Meeting records and world leads were also set in the men's 1500\u00a0m and pole vault events by Timothy Cheruiyot (3:28.77) and Piotr Lisek (6.01\u00a0m) respectively, the latter also a Polish record. Hagos Gebrhiwet notably finished and celebrated one lap early in the men's 5000\u00a0m, causing him to fall back to tenth place once he realized his mistake and to cede the race to Ethiopian teammate Yomif Kejelcha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287436-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Athletissima\nOn the women's side, Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce finished the Diamond League 100\u00a0m with a time of 10.74 seconds, winning by a 0.17-second margin ahead of last year's joint-fastest women Dina Asher-Smith and Marie-Jos\u00e9e Ta Lou. It was Fraser-Pryce's 13th race under 10.80 seconds in her career and tied Marion Jones' record for the most races under the same time. In the Diamond League 400\u00a0m, Salwa Eid Naser almost handed Aminatou Seyni a win while relaxing in the home straight, but Naser was able to narrowly hold off Seyni (49.17 to 49.19) after Naser realized her mistake. Naser's time broke Marie-Jos\u00e9 P\u00e9rec's 23-year-old meeting record of 49.45 seconds, and Seyni's new Nigerien record was the second fastest ever run by an African woman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287436-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Athletissima, Diamond League results\nAthletes competing in the Diamond League disciplines earned extra compensation and points which went towards qualifying for one of two Diamond League finals (either Z\u00fcrich or Brussels depending on the discipline). First place earned 8 points, with each step down in place earning one less point than the previous, until no points are awarded in 9th place or lower.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287437-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Blaze season\nThe 2019 Atlanta Blaze season will be the fourth season for the Atlanta Blaze of Major League Lacrosse. Liam Banks enters his second season as head coach, after leading the Blaze to their best record in franchise history (7\u20137) in 2018. It will be the team's first year at Grady Stadium in downtown Atlanta, after spending its first three years at Fifth Third Bank Stadium in Kennesaw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287437-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Blaze season\nOn July 28, due to maintenance at Grady Stadium, the Blaze announced they would be playing their last three home games at Atlanta Silverbacks Park", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287437-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Blaze season\nOn September 7, the Blaze clinched their first playoff berth with a 15-14 win over the Dallas Rattlers. It also gave them a franchise-best eighth win of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287437-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Blaze season, Collegiate Draft\nThe 2019 Collegiate Draft was held on March 9 in Charlotte, North Carolina at the NASCAR Hall of Fame. Inside Lacrosse gave the Blaze a \"C\" in their team-by-team draft grades.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287437-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Blaze season, Collegiate Draft\nThe Blaze began their rookie signings with a bang on May 15 with the announcement that #1 overall draft pick (who they acquired when the Ohio Machine folded in April) Alex Woodall, face-off specialist from Towson had chosen the Blaze over Whipsnakes Lacrosse Club and the Premier Lacrosse League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287437-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Blaze season, Collegiate Draft\nThe next day, the Blaze announced four of their top six draft picks, Brendan Sunday, Dylan Gaines, Colton Jackson, and Eddie Bouhall had agreed to contracts. This group joined other rookies TJ Comizio, Brett Craig, and Jack Mangan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287438-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Braves season\nThe 2019 Atlanta Braves season was the Braves' 54th season in Atlanta, 149th overall, and third season at SunTrust Park. The Braves clinched a playoff spot for the second consecutive year on September 14. They clinched their second consecutive National League East championship on September 20 but lost to the St. Louis Cardinals in the Division Series. On October 9, they became the first team to allow 10 runs in the first inning of an MLB playoff game, essentially clinching their tenth straight postseason series loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287439-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Dream season\nThe 2019 WNBA season was the 12th season for the Atlanta Dream of the Women's National Basketball Association. The team began its season on May 24, 2019 against the Dallas Wings and concluded the season on September 8 against the New York Liberty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287439-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Dream season\nOn December 13, 2018 the Atlanta Dream announced that they would return to State Farm Arena, formerly Philips Arena, after playing the previous two seasons at Georgia Tech's McCamish Pavilion while State Farm Arena underwent a $192.5 million renovation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287439-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Dream season\nThe Dream endured a season without start Angel McCoughtry, who missed time with a knee ligament injury sustained in 2018. The Dream started slowly only winning 2 games of their first ten. Early July brought some hope to the team, with the Dream winning three of four games between July 5 and July 12. However, the streak would not continue as the Dream lost twelve games in a row from July 14 to August 20. The Dream won three of their last 7 games to finish with an 8\u201326 record, last in the WNBA. It was the Dream's second worst season in franchise history. For the first time in franchise history, the Dream did not have a player selected to the All-Star Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287439-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Dream season, Transactions, WNBA Draft\nThe Dream made the following selections in the 2019 WNBA Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287440-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Falcons season\nThe 2019 season was the Atlanta Falcons' 54th in the National Football League (NFL), their third playing their home games at Mercedes-Benz Stadium and their fifth under and final full season under head coach Dan Quinn, as he would be fired during their next season. They tried to improve on their 7\u20139 season from 2018, and return to the playoffs for the first time since 2017. However, the Falcons stumbled out of the gate and had their worst start for the first time in 16 years with a 1\u20137 record to begin the campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287440-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Falcons season\nAfter a loss at home to the rival New Orleans Saints, the Falcons suffered their second consecutive losing season and were mathematically eliminated from playoff contention for the second year in a row. However, the Falcons went 6\u20132 over the final half of the season, tied for the best record in the NFC during that span, to finish the season with a 7\u20139 record for the second straight year and 2nd in the NFC South.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287440-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Falcons season, Preseason\nThe Falcons played the Denver Broncos in the Pro Football Hall of Fame Game on Thursday, August 1, at Tom Benson Hall of Fame Stadium in Canton, Ohio. The Falcons were represented by tight end Tony Gonzalez, who spent the final five seasons of his career with the Falcons from 2009\u20132013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season\nThe 2019 Atlanta Reign season was the first season of the Atlanta Reign's existence in the Overwatch League as one of eight expansion franchises added for the 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season\nThe Reign's first ever regular season OWL match resulted in a 4\u20130 victory against Florida Mayhem on February 15. Atlanta finished Stage 1 with a 4\u20133 record and secured a spot in the Stage 1 playoffs, but a 1\u20133 loss in the quarterfinals by the Philadelphia Fusion ended their playoff run. Prior to Stage 2, multiple roster changes took place, including the retirement of Daniel \"dafran\" Francesca. The Reign struggled throughout Stages 2 and 3, posting a combined 5\u20139 record and no stage playoff appearances. The team hit their stride in Stage 4, when the league implemented a 2-2-2 role lock. A 4\u20130 victory over the Boston Uprising on August 25 gave the Reign a perfect 7\u20130 record in Stage 4, a 16\u201312 record for the season, and the sixth seed in the season playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season\nAtlanta's first playoff match resulted with a 4\u20133 victory over the San Francisco Shock on September 6. However, the team fell 2\u20134 to the New York Excelsior the following match, sending them to the lower bracket. A 0\u20134 loss to the Hangzhou Spark in the following match ended the Reign's playoff run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Preceding offseason\nOn September 9, 2018, Atlanta announced the hiring of former San Francisco Shock head coach Brad \"Sephy\" Rajani as the team's head coach. On October 28, 2018, the Reign announced their full roster, consisting of eight players. It did not include any player that had previously competed in the Overwatch League; instead, the team signed the following players from various Overwatch Contenders scenes:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Preceding offseason\nOn November 7, initial roster signee Daniel \"dafran\" Francesa announced via Twitter that he would be leaving the Overwatch League; however, the resignation was short-lived, as just two days later, dafran decided to remain a member of the Atlanta Reign. On February 11, Reign promoted Dusttin \"Dogman\" Bowerman from ATL Academy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Regular season, Stage 1\nThe Reign's first regular season OWL match was against the Florida Mayhem on February 15. Atlanta swept Florida 4\u20130 with the help of some well-timed Gravitation Surge eats from flex tank Dong-hyeong \"DACO\" Seo and strong L\u00facio play from Petja \"Masaa\" Kantanen. The Reign's next match was a 2\u20133 tiebreaker loss to the Philadelphia Fusion on February 17. The following week, Atlanta took on fellow expansion franchise Toronto Defiant on February 22. After dropping the first map on Busan, Reign grabbed the next three maps to win 3\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Regular season, Stage 1\nIn their only match of week three, Atlanta faced Paris Eternal on March 2. On the second map of Hollywood, DPS Daniel \"Dafran\" Francesca on Zarya and support Petja \"Masaa\" Kantanen on L\u00facio worked together to send Dafran over the roof of the second choke point; Dafran deployed his Gravitation Surge on to five of the Eternal's players and wiped the team en route to taking all three points of the map and, ultimately, sweeping Paris 4\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Regular season, Stage 1\nFor their only match of week four, the Reign faced the Los Angeles Gladiators. Atlanta lost the match, getting swept 0\u20134 for the first time in the season. For their first match of the fifth, and final, week of Stage 1, Atlanta faced the Chengdu Hunters. While Atlanta was able to force a tiebreaker map after winning map four, the team could not overcome the Hunters DPS-heavy composition in map five and lost 2\u20133. The next day, Atlanta took on Houston Outlaws, needing a win to qualify for the Stage 1 playoffs. The Reign took the match 3\u20131 to finish the stage with a 4\u20133 record and claim the fifth seed in the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Regular season, Stage 1\nThe Reign took on Philadelphia Fusion in the Stage 1 Quarterfinals on March 22. Although the match was tied 1\u20131 at halftime, the Atlanta dropped the final two maps to lose the match 1\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Regular season, Stage 2\nMultiple roster changes occurred prior to the beginning of Stage 2. Five days after Reign's Stage 1 playoff loss, Dafran announced that he was, again, officially retiring from the Overwatch League and became an official Atlanta Reign streamer. On March 31, the team announced that British main support player Daniel \"FunnyAstro\" Hathaway had been signed to the Atlanta Reign and ATL Academy on a two-way contract. Two days later, the team announced that American DPS player Andrej \"babybay\" Francisty had been transferred to the Reign from the San Francisco Shock. On April 3, Atlanta acquired off-tank player Nathan \"frd\" Goebel from the Los Angeles Gladiators academy team Gladiators Legion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Regular season, Stage 2\nAtlanta began Stage 2 with a match against the Boston Uprising on April 4. Despite winning the first two maps of the match, the Reign yielded a reverse sweep to the Uprising, losing the match 2\u20133. Three days later, the Reign took on the 2018 champions London Spitfire. Atlanta could not find get much going in the match and was swept 0\u20134. Atlanta's struggles continued into the first match of week two with a 2\u20133 loss to the previously winless Los Angeles Valiant on April 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Regular season, Stage 2\nThe Reign yielded the first map Lijiang Tower but quickly turned it around by setting a record for fastest completion of the assault map Paris and not giving up any progress on the third map Blizzard World. However, the Reign struggled to adjust to the DPS-based defense that the Valiant used on Junkertown and ultimately lost the final two maps. Atlanta's first win in Stage 2 was a 3\u20131 victory against the Washington Justice two days later, which snapped the team's three-game losing streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Regular season, Stage 2\nThe Reign's next match was against the undefeated New York Excelsior on April 19. Despite being heavy underdogs, as ESPN reported that the Reign had a 5.6% win probability, Atlanta took the match 3\u20131, with many attributing the surprise victory due to the return of off-tank Daco back into the lineup. The team faced the Guangzhou Charge the two days later. Charge took the match 3\u20131; with a combined total score of 33 points, the match became the highest scoring game in Overwatch League history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Regular season, Stage 2\nAfter a week off, Atlanta's final match of Stage 2 was rematch against the New York Excelsior on May 4. The teams split the first two and second two maps to bring the match into a tiebreaker map; with strong performances from Babybay and Daco, Atlanta took the match 3\u20132 and handed New York their second loss of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Regular season, Stage 2\nAtlanta finished Stage 2 with a 3\u20134 record, giving the team an overall record if 7\u20137, and did not qualify for the Stage 2 playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Regular season, Stage 3\nAtlanta began Stage 3 with a match against the Stage 2 champions San Francisco Shock on June 6. While the Reign were able to take the first map, which snapped Shock's OWL record regular season 28-map win streak, and build that to a 2\u20131 lead heading into the fourth map, the team lost the final two maps to lose the match 2\u20133. Two days later, Atlanta took on the Stage 2 runners-up and regular-season-undefeated Vancouver Titans. While the Reign were able to tie up the match 1\u20131 going into halftime, they dropped the final to maps to lose the match 3\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Regular season, Stage 3\nFor their third match of the stage, Atlanta faced Shanghai Dragons on June 14. The Reign were able to jump out to a quick 1\u20130 lead in part due to strong, aggressive support play from Dusttin \"Dogman\" Bowerman, the Reign yielded three of the last four maps to the Dragons and lost the match 2\u20133. A day later, the team fell to Seoul Dynasty in a 0\u20134 sweep.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Regular season, Stage 3\nThe Reign's struggles continued into their only match in week three against the Philadelphia Fusion. Atlanta was able to force the match into a tiebreaker map after taking map four of Havana, thanks in part to a strong performance from Babybay, but lost the final map to lose the match 2\u20133, marking the third time in the stage that Atlanta lost in a five-map match. The loss officially eliminated Atlanta from Stage 3 playoff contention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Regular season, Stage 3\nAfter a week off, Reign headed to the Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre in Atlanta to host the \"Atlanta Reign Homestand Weekend\". Their first match at the homestand was against the Toronto Defiant on July 6. Dogman and Babybay put on strong offensive performances in the match, as Atlanta went on to win the match 3\u20131, giving the team their first win of Stage 3. The next day, Atlanta faced the Florida Mayhem. The Reign closed out Stage 3 on a high note, sweeping the Mayhem 4\u20130 to post a perfect record in front of their home crowd in Atlanta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Regular season, Stage 3, Homestand Weekend\nWeek five saw the \"Atlanta Reign Homestand Weekend\" \u2013 the second of three Overwatch League \"Homestand Weekends\" of the 2019 season. The two-day event, which took tale place at the Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre in Atlanta, Georgia on July 6\u20137, featured four matches per day among eight Overwatch League teams. The Homestand, which saw a sold-out crowd of 2,700 attendees for both days, was smaller than the Dallas Fuel Homestand, as the Allen Event Center in Dallas, Texas. Sponsors for the event included Bud Light and Atlanta-based company Coca-Cola.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 69], "content_span": [70, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Regular season, Stage 3, Homestand Weekend\nIn reference to the League's plan to hold matches in the 2020 season locally, Activision-Blizzard Esports Leagues President & CEO Pete Vlastelica said, \"It's showing us the model can work. If these were just fun events that fans were attending because they love the Overwatch game, it would be less exciting. But what we saw in Dallas (in April) and are seeing here is these are home events. At the Dallas event, when the Dallas team took the stage, the whole crowd of 4,500 people started screaming, 'Let\u2019s go Dallas.' \u2026 That gives us a lot of optimism going into next season to see the demand for these events to fill pretty nice sized arenas.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 69], "content_span": [70, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Regular season, Stage 4\nThe Reign's first match of Stage 4, along with the first match with a 2-2-2 role lock, was against the Hangzhou Spark on July 27; Atlanta won the match 3\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Regular season, Stage 4\nThe following week, Atlanta faced the Paris Eternal on August 3. DPS Jun \"Erster\" Jeong put on a strong performance in the match, as the Reign swept the Eternal 4\u20130. The next day, Atlanta took on the Houston Outlaws. Erster, again, performed at a high level, as the Reign did not lose a point on Lijiang Tower and full-held the Outlaws on Blizzard World en route to defeat Houston by a score of 3\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Regular season, Stage 4\nAfter a week off, the Reign took on the Washington Justice, who were undefeated in Stage 4, on August 16. Atlanta took the first map, Busan, and tied on the second map, Hanamura, to enter halftime up 1\u20130. Washington struck back on Hollywood, full-holding Atlanta on their attack, to tie the series heading into Junkertown. Erster, again, shined in the map, leading the Reign to a win on the map and a 2\u20131 victory in the match. Two days later, the team faced the London Spitfire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0019-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Regular season, Stage 4\nAtlanta took the first map Busan, as the team got far more value out of their ultimates and did not allow London to claim a single point. For map two, Hanamura, the Reign were to complete both points and held London from claiming a point on their attack, as they went up 2\u20130 going into halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0019-0002", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Regular season, Stage 4\nMap three, Blizzard World, played out similarly to Hanamura, as Atlanta was able to complete the map and London could not cap the first point; with the match already won, the Reign yielded two points on the fourth map, Havana, but were able to push the payload further to take the map and claim a 4\u20130 sweep over London.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Regular season, Stage 4\nFor their final week of regular season play, the Reign headed to The Novo in Los Angeles to play in the Kit Kat Rivalry Weekend, hosted by the Los Angeles Valiant. Their first match was against the Dallas Fuel on August 24. After the Reign took the first map with little resistance, both teams completed Volskaya Industries twice, to push the map to a second overtime round, but Dallas came out victorious, tying the series 1\u20131. Coming out of halftime, close wins on King's Row and Havana gave Atlanta a 3\u20131 match victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0020-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Regular season, Stage 4\nThe Reign's final regular season match was against the Boston Uprising a day later. Claiming both points on Lijiang Tower and winning two of three on Volskaya Industries, the Reign entered halftime up 2\u20130. The team completed both King's Row and Junkertown after halftime, while preventing Boston from doing the same, to complete a 4\u20130 sweep. The win give Atlanta a perfect 7\u20130 record in Stage 4 and a 16\u201312 record for the season. Additionally, the team's +19 map differential put them just ahead of the London Spitfire, who had the same record, in the regular season standings to give them the sixth seed in the season playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Playoffs\nAtlanta opened the double-elimination season playoffs with a match against the third-seeded San Francisco Shock on September 6. The two teams traded blows throughout the entirety of the match, with Atlanta winning maps one, three, and five, and San Francisco winning maps two, four, and six. For the final map of the series, the Reign sent the match to Rialto, while the Shock opted to attack first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0021-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Playoffs\nOn their attack, the Shock managed to reach the first two checkpoints, but the Reign held them from completing the map as the cart stopped at the choke near the end of the map. On defense, San Francisco yielded the first two checkpoints to Atlanta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0021-0002", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Playoffs\nWith about 30 seconds remaining on their attack and the payload only a few meters away from the Shock's distance pushed, the Reign engaged the Shock at the choke; Atlanta's DPS, and former Shock player, Andrej \"babybay\" Francisty eliminated San Francisco's main tank Yoo \"smurf\" Myeong-hwan, who was the only Shock player preventing the payload from advancing. With all of the other Shock players focused on other engagements, none of them were near the payload, and the cart rolled forward far enough for Atlanta to take the map claim a 4\u20133 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Playoffs\nMoving on the first round of the winners' bracket, the Reign next faced the second-seeded New York Excelsior two days later. New York jumped to a quick lead, winning on Busan and King's Row in the first to matches, but Atlanta closed the gap after the match break, claiming a win on Hanamura. For map four, New York selected Rialto, and while the Reign nearly took that map to even the score, excellent defensive Bastion play by New York's Park \"Saebyeolbe\" Jong-ryeol ensured that the Reign would fall short. The Reign selected Lijiang Tower for map five and won it in two rounds, again closing the gap. However, the Excelsior closed out the series with a win on Numbani. The 2\u20134 loss sent the Reign to the lower bracket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Playoffs\nAtlanta's next match was against the forth-seeded Hangzhou Spark on September 12 in the second round of the lower bracket. Like their two previous matches, the Spark jumped out to an early 1\u20130 lead after winning on Busan. For map two, the Reign selected Numbani \u2013 a map that the Reign had performed historically well on. After both teams completed the map on their respective attacks, the map went to overtime rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0023-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Playoffs\nWith only one minute in the time bank, the Spark rolled on their second attack, completing the map second time; Atlanta failed to complete the same feat and took the map loss. The Spark carried their momentum into the following to maps, winning them both, as the Reign were swept, 4\u20130, ending their playoff run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Final roster, Transactions\nTransactions of/for players on the roster during the 2019 regular season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287441-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta Reign season, Awards\nOn May 8, Dusttin \"Dogman\" Bowerman was named as a reserve for the 2019 Overwatch League All-Star Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287442-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta United 2 season\nThe 2019 Atlanta United 2 season is the team's second year of existence, their second season in the USL which is now rebranded as the USL Championship, the second tier of the American soccer pyramid. This is the first season they will play their home matches at Fifth Third Bank Stadium in Kennesaw, Georgia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287442-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta United 2 season, Players\nAs of September 20, 2019. The squad of Atlanta United 2 will be composed of an unrestricted number of first-team players on loan to the reserve team, players signed to ATLUTD2, and Atlanta United Academy players. Academy players who appear in matches with ATLUTD2 will retain their college eligibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287443-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta United FC season\nThe 2019 Atlanta United FC season was the third season of Atlanta United FC's existence, and the eleventh year that a professional soccer club from Atlanta, Georgia competed in the top division of American soccer. Atlanta United played their home matches at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Outside of MLS, the team made their first appearance in the CONCACAF Champions League and the Campeones Cup (beating Club Am\u00e9rica to become the first MLS team to win the latter) and won the 2019 U.S. Open Cup by beating Minnesota United 2\u20131. This marked the team's first year without former head coach Gerardo \"Tata\" Martino, who was replaced with Frank de Boer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287443-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta United FC season, Club, International roster slots\nAtlanta had seven International Roster Slots for use at the end of the season. Jos\u00e9 Hern\u00e1ndez did not occupy an international slot while he was on loan to Atlanta United 2. Julian Gressel and Gordon Wild received green cards in May, making them domestic players for MLS roster purposes. On July 1, Atlanta traded an international slot to FC Dallas until the end of the 2020 season as part of a package for Emerson Hyndman's discovery rights. On August 21, Luiz Fernando was added to the senior team roster, occupying Atlanta's last international slot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287443-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlanta United FC season, Player movement, In, SuperDraft picks\nDraft picks are not automatically signed to the team roster. Only trades involving draft picks and executed after the start of 2019 MLS SuperDraft will be listed in the notes. Atlanta had three selections in the draft, but declined to use their fourth round pick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287444-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic 10 Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2019 Atlantic 10 Conference Baseball Tournament took place from May 22 to 25. The top seven regular season finishers of the league's twelve teams met in the double-elimination tournament held at Jim Houlihan Park at Jack Coffey Field, the home field of Fordham in The Bronx. The winner, Fordham, earned the conference's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287444-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic 10 Conference Baseball Tournament, Seeding and format\nThe tournament used the same format adopted in 2014, with the top seven finishers from the regular season 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, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287445-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic 10 Conference Women's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2019 Atlantic 10 Conference Women's Soccer Tournament was the postseason women's soccer tournament for the Atlantic 10 Conference held from November 2 through November 10, 2019. The quarterfinals of the tournament were held at campus sites, while the semifinals and final took place at Hermann Stadium in St.Louis, Missouri. The eight-team single-elimination tournament consisted of three rounds based on seeding from regular season conference play. The defending tournament champions were the Saint Louis Billikens, who successfully defended their championship and regular season crown. This was the Billikens' fourth overall tournament title, and coach Katie Shields' second title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287446-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic 10 Conference men's soccer season\nThe 2019 Atlantic 10 Conference men's soccer season was the 33rd season of men's college soccer in the Atlantic 10 Conference. The season began on August 30, 2019 and concluded on November 2, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287446-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic 10 Conference men's soccer season\nThe regular season and tournament was won by Rhode Island. Rhode Island bested VCU for the regular season championship and Dayton for the tournament championship. Rhode Island earned the Atlantic 10's automatic, and only, berth into the 2019 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament, where they lost in the opening round to Syracuse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287446-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic 10 Conference men's soccer season\nDayton's Jonas Fjeldberg won the Atlantic 10 Offensive Player of the Year, while Joergen Oland won the Atlantic 10 Defensive Player of the Year Award. Gareth Elliott won the Atlantic 10 Coach of the Year Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287446-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic 10 Conference men's soccer season, Background, Previous season\nUMass entered the season as the defending regular season and tournament champions. The Minutemen finished eighth in the regular season and were eliminated in the quarterfinals of the A-10 Tournament by VCU. VCU won the regular season championship, giving the Rams their first A-10 regular season title, and their first regular season championship overall since 2004. Rhode Island won the tournament, given them their first A-10 tournament title since 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 76], "content_span": [77, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287446-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic 10 Conference men's soccer season, Background, Previous season\nRhode Island at the A-10 Tournament champions, earned the conference's automatic berth into the NCAA Tournament. They were the only berth the A-10 sent to the NCAA Tournament. There they were defeated by their rivals, Connecticut, 3\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 76], "content_span": [77, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287446-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic 10 Conference men's soccer season, Background, Coaching changes\nFordham head coach, Jim McElderry, resigned at the end of the 2018 season to accept the head coaching job at Rutgers University. On January 30, 2019 Fordham hired Carlo Acquista as the program's head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 77], "content_span": [78, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287446-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic 10 Conference men's soccer season, Preseason, Preseason national polls\nThe preseason national polls will be released in July and August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 84], "content_span": [85, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287446-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic 10 Conference men's soccer season, Regular season, Early season tournaments\nFive teams participated in early season soccer tournaments hosted either by themselves or other nearby universities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 89], "content_span": [90, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287446-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic 10 Conference men's soccer season, Postseason, Atlantic 10 Tournament\nThe 2019 A-10 Tournament was be held from November 9 to November 17. Fordham University hosted the tournament from the semifinals onwards. Rhode Island defended their A10 Tournament title and earned the conference's automatic berth into the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 83], "content_span": [84, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287446-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic 10 Conference men's soccer season, Postseason, NCAA Tournament\nThe NCAA Tournament began on November 17, 2019 and concluded on December 15, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 76], "content_span": [77, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287446-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic 10 Conference men's soccer season, Awards and honors, Postseason honors\nJonas Fjeldberg, DaytonFillippo Tamburini, Rhode IslandStavros Zarokostas, Rhode IslandLeo Novaes, Saint LouisKingsford Adjei, DaytonManel Busquets, DuquesneEdvin Akselsen, Rhode IslandJ\u00f8rgen Oland, FordhamPeder Kristiansen, Rhode IslandRyo Shimazaki, VCUFederico Barrios, Dayton", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 85], "content_span": [86, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287446-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic 10 Conference men's soccer season, Awards and honors, Postseason honors\nToluwalase Oladeinbo, DaytonPat McCarthy, La SalleBiska Biyombo, VCUDevin Boyce, Saint LouisMatteo Kidd, Saint LouisFortia Munts, VCUElias Harryson, DaytonNiklas Middrup, Rhode IslandKipp Keller, Saint LouisUlrik Edvardsen, VCUStefan Schmidt, Rhode Island", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 85], "content_span": [86, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287446-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic 10 Conference men's soccer season, Awards and honors, Postseason honors\nJustin Stone, DavidsonToluwalase Oladeinbo, DaytonAndy Sanchez, DaytonXavier Zengue, DaytonNate Dragisich, DuquesneLiam Emson, George WashingtonFranc Gamiz Quer, La SalleJoshua Pulla, St. BonaventureKipp Keller, Saint LouisMujeeb Murana, Saint LouisPatrick Schulte, Saint Louis", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 85], "content_span": [86, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287446-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic 10 Conference men's soccer season, Awards and honors, Postseason honors\nJohannes Pieles, FordhamRyan Mingachos, George MasonHaukur Hilmarsson, George WashingtonNoah Lubin, George WashingtonRyan Saul, MassachusettsPeder Kristiansen, Rhode IslandNiklas Middrup, Rhode IslandStefan Schmidt, Rhode IslandShea Curry, St. BonaventureDavid Grana, Saint Joseph'sDavid Viox, Saint LouisSimon Fitch, VCU", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 85], "content_span": [86, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287446-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic 10 Conference men's soccer season, 2020 MLS Draft\nThe 2020 MLS SuperDraft was held on January 9, 2020. Three players from the conference were drafted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 63], "content_span": [64, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287446-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic 10 Conference men's soccer season, Homegrown players\nThe Homegrown Player Rule is a Major League Soccer program that allows MLS teams to sign local players from their own development academies directly to MLS first team rosters. Before the creation of the rule in 2008, every player entering Major League Soccer had to be assigned through one of the existing MLS player allocation processes, such as the MLS SuperDraft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 66], "content_span": [67, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287446-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic 10 Conference men's soccer season, Homegrown players\nTo place a player on its homegrown player list, making him eligible to sign as a homegrown player, players must have resided in that club's home territory and participated in the club's youth development system for at least one year. Players can play college soccer and still be eligible to sign a homegrown contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 66], "content_span": [67, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287446-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic 10 Conference men's soccer season, Homegrown players\nNo players from the Atlantic 10 Conference signed homegrown contracts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 66], "content_span": [67, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287447-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic 10 Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 Atlantic 10 Men's Basketball Tournament was the postseason men's basketball tournament for the Atlantic 10 Conference's 2018\u201319 season. It was held from March 13th through March 17th, 2019 at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. Saint Louis defeated St. Bonaventure 55\u201353 in the championship game to win the tournament, and received the A10's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287447-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic 10 Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nAll 14 A-10 schools will participate in the tournament. Teams will be seeded by record within the conference, with a tiebreaker system to seed teams with identical conference records. The top 10 teams receive a first-round bye and the top four teams receive a double bye.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287448-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic 10 Men's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2019 Atlantic 10 Men's Soccer Tournament, was the 22nd edition of the Atlantic 10 Men's Soccer Tournament. It determined the Atlantic 10 Conference's automatic berth into the 2019 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament. The tournament was be held from November 9 to November 17, 2019. The semifinal and finals will be hosted by Fordham University with matches being played at Coffey Field in The Bronx, New York.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287448-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic 10 Men's Soccer Tournament\nRhode Island are the defending tournament champions, and successfully defended their title, beating Dayton, 1\u20130, in the championship. Rhode Island would go on to be eliminated by Syracuse in the opening round of the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287448-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic 10 Men's Soccer Tournament, Seeds\nAfter the regular season games concluded, five teams were in a tie for seventh place in the conference, all with 3-5 records. A series of tiebreakers involving wins and loss records in matches played among the subgroup determined the last two bids into the A10 Tournament as George Mason and Davidson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287449-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic 10 Women's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 Atlantic 10 Women's Basketball Tournament was a postseason tournament that conclude the 2018\u201319 season of the Atlantic 10 Conference. It was played at campus sites on March 5 for the first round, with the remaining games held on March 8\u201310 at the Palumbo Center in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Fordham defeated VCU, 62\u201347, to win the tournament championship and earn the automatic bid to the NCAA tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287449-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic 10 Women's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nTeams were seeded by record within the conference, with a tiebreaker system to seed teams with identical conference records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 53], "content_span": [54, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287450-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Championship\nThe 2019 Atlantic Championship Series season was the sixth season of the revived Atlantic Championship. The series was organized by Formula Race Promotions and sanctioning returned to SCCA Pro Racing after two years with USAC. Dario Cangialosi won the short four round, 8 race, championship by 82 points over Keith Grant. Cangialosi won three races to Grant's four. Flinn Lazier won a single race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287451-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic City Blackjacks season\nThe 2019 Atlantic City Blackjacks season was the only season for the Atlantic City Blackjacks in the Arena Football League. The Blackjacks played their home games at Boardwalk Hall and were coached by Ron James for the 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287451-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic City Blackjacks season, Roster\nRookies in italics updated May 16, 201924 Active, 6 Inactive", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287451-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic City Blackjacks season, Standings\ny - clinched regular season titlex - clinched playoff berth", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287451-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic City Blackjacks season, Schedule, Regular season\nThe 2019 regular season schedule was released on February 13, 2019. All times Eastern.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287452-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2019 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held from May 21 through May 26 at Durham Bulls Athletic Park in Durham, North Carolina. The annual tournament determined the conference champion of the Division I Atlantic Coast Conference for college baseball. The tournament champion, North Carolina, received the league's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. This was the last of 19 athletic championship events held by the conference in the 2018\u201319 academic year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287452-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe tournament has been held every year but one since 1973, with Clemson winning ten championships, the most all-time. Georgia Tech has won nine championships, and defending champion Florida State has won eight titles since their entry to the league in 1992. Charter league member Duke, along with recent entrants Virginia Tech, Boston College, Pittsburgh, Notre Dame and Louisville have never won the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287452-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament, Format and seeding\nThe winner of each seven team division and the top ten other teams based on conference winning percentage, regardless of division, from the conference's regular season were seeded one through twelve. Seeds one and two were awarded to the two division winners. Teams were then divided into four pools of three teams each, with the winners advancing to single elimination bracket for the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 70], "content_span": [71, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287452-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament, Format and seeding\nIf a 1-1 tie were to occur among all three teams in a pool, the highest seeded team would have advanced to the semifinals. Because of this, seeds 5-12 must win both pool play games to advance to the single-elimination bracket, and seeds 1-4 must only win the game against the winner of the game between the other two teams in the pool to advance. For example, if the 12 seed beats the 8 seed in the first game, then the winner of the 12 seed versus 1 seed advances, and the 8 seed versus 1 seed game has no effect on which team advances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 70], "content_span": [71, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287453-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference Softball Tournament\nThe 2019 Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) Softball tournament was held at JoAnne Graf Field on the campus of Florida State University in Tallahassee, Florida May 8 through May 11, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287453-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference Softball Tournament\nThis is the second year of a 10-team tournament. The 1st Round, quarterfinals and semifinals will be shown on the ACC RSN's with a simulcast on ACC Extra. The championship game will be broadcast by ESPN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287454-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference football season\nThe 2019 Atlantic Coast Conference football season, part of the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season, is the 67th season of college football play for the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). It began on August 29, 2019, and ended on January 13, 2020. The ACC consists of 14 members in two divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287454-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference football season\nThe entire 2019 schedule was released on January 16, 2019. The new cable/satellite television channel ACC Network debuted this season, and broadcast 40 regular season games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287454-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference football season, Previous season\nClemson defeated Pittsburgh 42\u201310 in the ACC Football Championship Game. The victory, along with a 12\u20130 regular season record, earned Clemson a berth in the College Football Playoff. The Tigers were the number two seed in the playoff and faced Notre Dame in the Cotton Bowl. The Tigers won this game 30\u20133 and advanced to the National Championship game where they defeated Alabama 44\u201316. With this victory Clemson earned the 2019 College Football National Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287454-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference football season, Preseason, ACC Kickoff\nThe 2019 ACC Kickoff was held on July 17 & 18 at the Westin Hotel in Charlotte, North Carolina. On July 2, 2019, the ACC announced that 28 athletes from the 14 ACC teams would be available for press questions at the Kickoff event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 70], "content_span": [71, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287454-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference football season, Preseason, ACC Kickoff\nThe Preseason Poll was released on July 22, 2019, after the Kickoff Event. Clemson was elected an overwhelming favorite to repeat as ACC Champions, receiving 170 of 173 Championship votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 70], "content_span": [71, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287454-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference football season, Preseason, ACC Kickoff, Preseason ACC Player of the Year\n1 Trevor Lawrence, QB, Clemson \u2013 1272 Travis Etienne, RB, Clemson \u2013 243 A. J. Dillon, RB, Boston College \u2013 154 Bryce Perkins, QB, Virginia \u2013 65 Cam Akers, RB, Florida State \u2013 1", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 104], "content_span": [105, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287454-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference football season, Coaches, Coaching changes\nIn 2019 the ACC Conference will have 4 new head coaches for the 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287454-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference football season, Schedule\nThe regular season will begin on August 24 and will end on November 30. The ACC Championship game is scheduled for December 7, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 56], "content_span": [57, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287454-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference football season, Schedule, Regular season, Week three\nThe game between North Carolina and Wake Forest is being played as a non-conference game and will therefore not count in the conference standings. This was done because the two rivals otherwise only play once every six years due to conference divisional alignment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287454-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference football season, ACC vs other conferences, ACC vs Power 5 matchups\nThis is a list of the power conference teams (Big 10, Big 12, Pac-12, Notre Dame and SEC). Although the NCAA does not consider BYU a \"Power Five\" school, the ACC considers games against BYU as satisfying its \"Power Five\" scheduling requirement. The designated non-conference game between North Carolina and Wake Forest is not included in this list. All rankings are from the current AP Poll at the time of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 97], "content_span": [98, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287454-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference football season, ACC vs other conferences, ACC vs Group of Five matchups\nThe following games include ACC teams competing against teams from the American, C-USA, MAC, Mountain West or Sun Belt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 103], "content_span": [104, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287454-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference football season, ACC vs other conferences, ACC vs FBS independents matchups\nThe following games include ACC teams competing against FBS Independents, which includes Army, Liberty, New Mexico State, or UMass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 106], "content_span": [107, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287454-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference football season, Postseason, Bowl games\nRankings are from CFP rankings. All times Eastern Time Zone. ACC teams shown in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 70], "content_span": [71, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287454-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference football season, Awards and honors, All-Americans, Associated Press\nTravis Etienne \u2013 ClemsonJohn Simpson \u2013 ClemsonJaylen Twyman \u2013 Pittsburgh", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 98], "content_span": [99, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287454-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference football season, Awards and honors, All-Americans, Associated Press\nA. J. Dillon \u2013 Boston CollegeNick Sciba \u2013 Wake ForestTanner Muse \u2013 ClemsonSterling Hofrichter \u2013 Syracuse", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 98], "content_span": [99, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287454-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference football season, Awards and honors, All-Americans, Walter Camp\nJohn Simpson \u2013 ClemsonIsaiah Simmons \u2013 ClemsonJoe Reed \u2013 Virginia", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 93], "content_span": [94, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287454-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference football season, Awards and honors, All-Americans, FWAA\nTravis Etienne \u2013 ClemsonGregory Rousseau \u2013 MiamiJaylen Twyman \u2013 PittsburghNick Sciba \u2013 Wake ForestSterling Hofrichter \u2013 Syracuse", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 86], "content_span": [87, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287455-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference men's soccer season\nThe 2019 Atlantic Coast Conference men's soccer season was the 66th season of men's varsity soccer in the conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287455-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference men's soccer season\nThe Wake Forest Demon Deacons are the defending champions of the Atlantic Conference and the North Carolina are the defending champions of the Coastal Conference. Wake Forest are the defending ACC Tournament Champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287455-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference men's soccer season, Changes from 2018\nAfter the 2018 season, Louisville Cardinals coach Ken Lolla resigned after 13 years and a 155\u201377\u201339 record with the team. He was replaced by John Michael Hayden on December 27, 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 69], "content_span": [70, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287455-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference men's soccer season, Teams, Stadiums and locations\n1. Florida State, Georgia Tech and Miami do not sponsor men's soccer", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 81], "content_span": [82, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287455-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference men's soccer season, Preseason, Hermann Trophy\nPrior to the season five ACC men's soccer players were selected to the MAC Hermann Trophy watch list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 77], "content_span": [78, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287455-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference men's soccer season, Preseason, Preseason Poll\nThe 2019 ACC Preseason Poll was announced on August 19, 2019. The league's 12 head coaches voted North Carolina as the preseason favorite, with 9 of the 12 votes. Full results of the preseason poll are shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 77], "content_span": [78, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287455-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference men's soccer season, Preseason, Preseason national polls\nPreseason polls will come out in August 2019. CollegeSoccerNews.com and Hero Sports use a Top 30 ranking throughout the season, while United Soccer, Soccer America, and Top Drawer Soccer use a Top 25 ranking throughout the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 87], "content_span": [88, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287455-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference men's soccer season, Postseason, NCAA Tournament\nTen teams from the ACC were selected to the NCAA Tournament, a record number from one conference. All ten teams were also selected to host their first matches of the tournament. Four teams received seeds, including three of the top four seeds, and first round byes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 79], "content_span": [80, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287455-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference men's soccer season, Awards, Postseason awards\nThe Atlantic Coast Conference post season awards were announced on November 13, 2019, the same day as the Semifinals of the ACC Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 77], "content_span": [78, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287455-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference men's soccer season, Awards, Postseason awards, All-ACC awards and teams\nPhilip Mayaka, Fr., M, ClemsonMalick Mbaye, Sr., D, ClemsonRobbie Robinson, Jr., F, ClemsonKimarni Smith, Jr., F, ClemsonDaniele Proch, Sr., M, DukeMauricio Pineda, Sr., M, North CarolinaEdward Kizza, Jr., F, PittsburghRyan Raposo, So., M, SyracuseJoe Bell, Jr., M, VirginiaColin Shutler, Jr., GK, VirginiaBruno Lapa, Sr., M, Wake Forest", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 103], "content_span": [104, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287455-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference men's soccer season, Awards, Postseason awards, All-ACC awards and teams\nGrayson Barber, So., F, ClemsonTanner Dieterich, Sr., M, ClemsonGeorge Marks, So., GK, ClemsonCherif Dieye, Sr., M, LouisvilleDavid Loera, Jr., M, NC StateJeremy Kelly, Sr., M, North CarolinaJack Skahan, Sr., M, North CarolinaJack Lynn, So., F, Notre DameDaryl Dike, So., F, VirginiaHenry Kessler, Jr., D, VirginiaKristo Strickler, Jr., M, Virginia Tech", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 103], "content_span": [104, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287455-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference men's soccer season, Awards, Postseason awards, All-ACC awards and teams\nStefan Sigurdarson, Fr., F, Boston CollegeFelicien Dumas, Gr., D, Notre DameVeljko Petkovi\u0107, Fr., M, PittsburghSito Sena, Jr., D, PittsburghRobin Afamefuna, Sr., D/M, VirginiaIrakoze Donasiyano, Jr., F, VirginiaAndreas Ueland, Fr., D, VirginiaMachop Chol, Jr., F, Wake ForestAlistair Johnston, Sr., D, Wake ForestAndrew Pannenberg, So., GK, Wake ForestIsaiah Parente, So., M, Wake Forest", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 103], "content_span": [104, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287455-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference men's soccer season, Awards, Postseason awards, All-ACC awards and teams\nAmos Shapiro-Thompson, M, Boston CollegeStefan Sigurdarson, F, Boston CollegeVictor Souza, D, Boston CollegeOskar \u00c5gren, D, ClemsonPhilip Mayaka, M, ClemsonValentin Noel, M, PittsburghArturo Ordonez, D, PittsburghVeljko Petkovic, M, PittsburghAndreas Ueland, D, VirginiaDaniel Pereira, M, Virginia TechCalvin Harris, F, Wake Forest", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 103], "content_span": [104, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287455-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference men's soccer season, MLS SuperDraft\nEight players from the ACC were selected in the first round of the 2020 MLS SuperDraft, which ties a record set by the ACC in 2016 and 2018. The eight players were twice as many as any other conference had in the first round. This is the first time the ACC has had the number one overall pick since 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 66], "content_span": [67, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287455-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference men's soccer season, MLS SuperDraft, Notable undrafted players\nThe following players went pro after the 2019 season despite not getting drafted in the 2020 MLS draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 93], "content_span": [94, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287456-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference women's soccer season\nThe 2019 Atlantic Coast Conference women's soccer season was the 31st season of women's varsity soccer in the conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287456-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference women's soccer season\nThe North Carolina Tar Heels were the defending regular season champions. The Florida State Seminoles were the defending ACC Tournament champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287456-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference women's soccer season, Pre-season, Hermann Trophy Watchlist\nThe ACC had 12 players named to the MAC Hermann Trophy preseason watch list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 90], "content_span": [91, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287456-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference women's soccer season, Pre-season, Pre-season poll\nThe 2019 ACC Preseason Poll was be announced on August 8, 2019. The defending regular season champions, North Carolina were voted to repeat their regular season crown. Florida State was voted in second place, even though they received two more first place votes than North Carolina. The leagues 14 head coaches also voted on a preseason All-ACC team. Full results for the coaches poll and preseason team are shown below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 81], "content_span": [82, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287456-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference women's soccer season, Regular season, Conference matrix\nThe table below shows head-to-head results between teams in conference play. Each team plays 10 matches. Each team does not play every other team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 87], "content_span": [88, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287456-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference women's soccer season, Awards and Honors, All-Americans\nMalia Berkley, DF, Florida StateEmily Fox, DF, North CarolinaBrianna Pinto, MF, North CarolinaAlessia Russo, FW, North Carolina", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 86], "content_span": [87, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287456-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference women's soccer season, Awards and Honors, All-Americans\nAmanda McGlynn, GK, Virginia TechDeyna Castellanos, MF, Florida StateEmina Ekic, MF, Louisville", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 86], "content_span": [87, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287456-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference women's soccer season, Awards and Honors, All-Americans\nMaycee Bell, DF, North CarolinaTziarra King, MF, NC StateMeghan McCool, FW, Virginia", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 86], "content_span": [87, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287456-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference women's soccer season, Awards and Honors, ACC Awards\nMalia Berkely, Jr., D, Florida StateDeyna Castellanos, Sr., M, Florida StateJaelin Howell, So., M, Florida StateYujie Zhao, So., M, Florida StateEmina Ekic, Jr., M, LouisvilleEmily Fox, Jr., D, North CarolinaBrianna Pinto, So., M, North CarolinaAlessia Russo, Jr., F, North CarolinaTziarra King, Sr., M, NC StateMeghan McCool, Sr., F, VirginiaAmanda McGlynn, Sr., GK, Virginia Tech", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 83], "content_span": [84, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287456-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference women's soccer season, Awards and Honors, ACC Awards\nDelaney Graham, So., D, DukeElla Stevens, Sr., M, DukeGabrielle Kouzelos, Jr., GK, LouisvilleMaycee Bell, Fr., D, North CarolinaLotte Wubben-Moy, Jr., D, North CarolinaPhoebe McClernon, Sr., D, VirginiaDiana Ordonez, Fr., F, VirginiaCourtney Petersen, R-Sr., D, VirginiaAlexa Spaanstra, So., M, VirginiaTaryn Torres, Jr., M, VirginiaMadison Hammond, Sr., D, Wake Forest", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 83], "content_span": [84, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287456-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference women's soccer season, Awards and Honors, ACC Awards\nOlivia Vaughn, Sr., F, Boston CollegeBrooklynn Rivers, Sr., F, LouisvilleLulu Guttenberger, R-So., D, NC StateKrissi Schuster, Sr., D, NC StateRicci Walkling, Sr., M, NC StateTaylor Otto, R-Jr., M, North CarolinaSammi Fisher, Jr., M, Notre DameEva Hurm, Jr., F, Notre DameAmanda West, Fr., F, PittsburghLaurel Ivory, Jr., GK, VirginiaKelsey Irwin, R-Sr., D, Virginia Tech", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 83], "content_span": [84, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287456-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference women's soccer season, Awards and Honors, ACC Awards\nSam Smith, Fr., F, Boston CollegeHal Hershfelt, Fr., M, ClemsonMaliah Morris, Fr., F, ClemsonSophie Jones, Fr., M, DukeHeather Payne, Fr., D, Florida StateJenna Nighswonger, Fr., F, Florida StateJameese Joseph, Fr., F, NC StateMaycee Bell, Fr., D, North CarolinaIsabel Cox, Fr., F, North CarolinaAmanda West, Fr., F, PittsburghDiana Ordonez, Fr., F, Virginia", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 83], "content_span": [84, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287457-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Heritage Cup\nThe 2019 Atlantic Heritage Cup is the first edition of the Atlantic Heritage Cup, and acts as a qualification tournament for the 2020 CONIFA World Football Cup in Skopje, North Macedonia. Yorkshire were announced as hosts in March 2019, with Parishes of Jersey, Ellan Vannin and Kernow also originally set to participate. All 4 teams are either part of the United Kingdom, or are Crown dependencies. However, Ellan Vannin and Kernow both pulled out for undisclosed reasons, being replaced by Chagos Islands and reducing the tournament to a 3 team format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287457-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Heritage Cup, Format\nThe tournament is a round-robin, with each team playing each other once. This means a total of 3 games to be played over 3 days, at two stadiums (Ingfield Stadium, the home of Ossett United, and the CNG Stadium, home of Harrogate Town. The winner was due to be offered a place at the 2020 CONIFA World Football Cup, which in the event was cancelled due to the coronavirus pandemic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287457-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Heritage Cup, Controversy\nThe decision by CONIFA to host the 2020 World Football Cup in Somaliland was met with criticism by some, with James Scott, the president of Parishes of Jersey FC, telling the Jersey Evening Post that he would not accept the place at the final tournament if his side won the Atlantic Heritage Cup. The comments were met with a backlash from CONIFA, who criticised inaccurate reporting and defended the decision to host the World Football Cup in Somaliland. The hosting of the 2020 World Football Cup was later transferred to Skopje, North Macedonia, with Parishes of Jersey and Chagos Islands due to participate, before the event was cancelled due to the coronavirus pandemic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287458-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Hockey Tournament\nThe 2019 Atlantic Hockey Tournament is the 15th Atlantic Hockey Tournament. It was played between March 8 and March 23, 2019 at home campus locations and at the HarborCenter in Buffalo, New York. By winning the tournament, American International earned Atlantic Hockey's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287458-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Hockey Tournament, Format\nThe tournament features four rounds of play. In the first round the sixth and eleventh, seventh and tenth, and eighth and ninth seeds, as determined by the conference regular season standings, will play a best-of-three series with the winners advancing to the quarterfinals. The top five 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, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287458-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic Hockey Tournament, Format\nThere, the first seed and lowest-ranked first-round winner, the second seed and second-highest-ranked first-round winner, the third seed and highest-ranked first-round winner, and the fourth seed and the fifth seed will 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 remaining seeds will play a single game each, with the winners advancing to the championship game. The tournament champion will receive an automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season\nThe 2019 Atlantic hurricane season was the fourth consecutive above-average and damaging season dating back to 2016. However, many were weak and short-lived, especially towards the end of the season. Six of those named storms achieved hurricane status, while three intensified into major hurricanes. Two storms became Category\u00a05 hurricanes, marking the fourth consecutive season with at least one Category\u00a05 hurricane, the third consecutive season to feature at least one storm making landfall at Category 5 intensity, and the seventh on record to have multiple tropical cyclones reaching Category 5 strength.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season\nThe season officially began on June\u00a01 and ended on November\u00a030. These dates historically describe the period each year when most tropical cyclones form in the Atlantic basin and are adopted by convention. However, tropical cyclogenesis is possible at any time of the year, as demonstrated by the formation of Subtropical Storm Andrea on May\u00a020, marking the record fifth consecutive year where a tropical or subtropical cyclone developed before the official start of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season\nThe season's first hurricane, Barry, formed in mid-July in the northern Gulf of Mexico and struck Louisiana. Barry caused two deaths and produced flooding in Arkansas, Alabama, Louisiana, and Mississippi, with damage totaling about $600\u00a0million (2019\u00a0USD). Hurricane Dorian, the most intense tropical cyclone of the season, proved to be the costliest natural disaster in the history of the Bahamas, becoming the strongest hurricane to strike the country. Overall, Dorian caused about $5.1\u00a0billion in damage and 84\u00a0fatalities, mostly in the Bahamas. The 2019 season was the record fourth consecutive season to feature at least one Category 5 hurricane. Tropical Storm Fernand left flooding in Mexico, with approximately $11.3\u00a0million in damage and one\u00a0death. Hurricane Humberto produced extensive damage in Bermuda, totaling at least $25\u00a0million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 876]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season\nDrifting over Texas, Tropical Storm Imelda resulted in a devastating flood in the eastern portions of the state, with about $5\u00a0billion in damage and five fatalities. Lorenzo, which became the easternmost Category 5 Atlantic hurricane on record, caused 14\u00a0deaths after sinking the French tugboat Bourbon Rhode and 8\u00a0other fatalities from rough surf along the East Coast of the United States. With Dorian and Lorenzo both intensifying into Category 5 hurricanes, the season became one of seven seasons to feature multiple Category 5 hurricanes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season\nAdditionally, Tropical Storm Nestor caused a tornado outbreak across west Florida in mid-October, leaving $125\u00a0million in damage, while a car crash in South Carolina killed three people. Tropical Storm Olga caused moderate damage and heavy flooding over the central Gulf Coast and generated hurricane-force wind gusts as far north as Tennessee. The storm left one\u00a0dead and around $400\u00a0million in damage. Hurricane Pablo became the easternmost hurricane formation on record, beating 2005's Hurricane Vince. The season concluded with Tropical Storm Sebastien, which became extratropical on November\u00a024.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season\nMost forecasting agencies projected a near-average or slightly above season, with many expecting near-normal sea surface temperatures but expressing uncertainty about the intensity of El Ni\u00f1o. Ultimately, activity in regards to number of named storms exceeded all forecasts, but the number of hurricanes and major hurricanes remained within the predicted range.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts\nAhead of and during the hurricane season, several national meteorological services and scientific agencies forecast how many named storms, hurricanes, and major hurricanes (Category 3 or higher on the Saffir\u2013Simpson scale) are likely to form during a season and/or how many tropical cyclones will affect a particular country. These agencies include the Tropical Storm Risk (TSR) Consortium of University College London, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and 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, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts\nSome of these forecasts also take into consideration what happened in previous seasons and the state of the El Ni\u00f1o\u2013Southern Oscillation (ENSO). On average, an Atlantic hurricane season between 1981 and 2010 contained twelve tropical storms, six hurricanes, and three major hurricanes, with an accumulated cyclone energy (ACE) index of between 66 and 103\u00a0units. ACE is, broadly speaking, a measure of the power of a hurricane multiplied by the length of time it existed; therefore, long-lived storms and particularly strong systems result in high levels of ACE. The measure is calculated at full advisories for cyclones at tropical storm strength\u00a0\u2014 storms with winds in excess of 39\u00a0mph (63\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts, Pre-season outlooks\nThe first forecast for the year was released by TSR on December\u00a011, 2018, which predicted a slightly below-average season in 2019, with a total of 12\u00a0named storms, 5\u00a0hurricanes, and 2\u00a0major hurricanes, due to the anticipated presence of El Ni\u00f1o conditions during the season. CSU released their first forecast on April\u00a04, 2019, predicting a near-average season with 13\u00a0named storms, 5\u00a0hurricanes and 2\u00a0major hurricanes, citing the persistence of the weak El Ni\u00f1o and slightly colder than average sea surface temperatures. On April\u00a05, TSR released an updated forecast that reiterated their earlier predictions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts, Pre-season outlooks\nNorth Carolina State University released their forecast on April\u00a016, predicting slightly-above average activity with 13\u201316\u00a0named storms, 5\u20137\u00a0hurricanes and 2\u20133\u00a0major hurricanes. On May\u00a06, the Weather Company predicted a slightly-above average season, with 14\u00a0named storms, 7\u00a0hurricanes, and 3\u00a0major hurricanes. The UK Met Office released their forecast on May\u00a021, predicting 13\u00a0named storms, 7\u00a0hurricanes, 3\u00a0major hurricanes, and an accumulated cyclone energy of 109\u00a0units. On May\u00a023, NOAA released their first prediction, calling for a near-normal season with 9\u201315\u00a0named systems, 4\u20138\u00a0hurricanes, and 2\u20134\u00a0major hurricanes. TSR released an updated forecast on May\u00a030, which increased the number of forecast hurricanes from 5 to 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 801]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts, Mid-season outlooks\nOn June\u00a04, CSU updated their forecast to include a total of 14\u00a0named storms, 6\u00a0hurricanes, and 2\u00a0major hurricanes, including Subtropical Storm Andrea. CSU noted continuing uncertainty about the intensity of the El Ni\u00f1o, but also increasing ocean temperatures, which were near-normal by then. The University of Arizona (UA) predicted on June\u00a011 that the season would feature above-average activity \u2013 16\u00a0named storms, 8\u00a0hurricanes, 3\u00a0major hurricanes, and accumulated cyclone energy index of 150\u00a0units. On July\u00a04, the TSR released their first mid-season outlook, still retaining their numbers from the previous forecast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts, Mid-season outlooks\nCSU released their second mid-season outlook on July\u00a09, with the same remaining numbers from their previous forecast. On August\u00a05, the CSU released their third mid-season outlook, still retaining the same numbers from their previous forecast, albeit slightly revising the numbers of hurricanes from 6 to 7. TSR released their second and final mid-season outlook on August\u00a06, with the only changes of increasing the number of named storms from 12 to 13. On August\u00a08, NOAA released their second prediction with increasing the chances for 10\u201317\u00a0named storms, 5\u20139\u00a0hurricanes, and 2\u20134\u00a0major hurricanes, suggesting above-average activity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nThe 2019\u00a0Atlantic hurricane season officially began on June\u00a01. The season featured twenty tropical depressions, eighteen of which became tropical or subtropical storms. With eighteen named storms, the season was at the time, along with 1969, the fourth most active since records began. Six of those intensified into hurricanes, with three further strengthening into major hurricanes. It was the fourth consecutive Atlantic hurricane season with above average activity, which last occurred from 1998\u20132001. Five systems developed in the Gulf of Mexico, tying with 1957 and 2003 for highest number of tropical cyclones forming in the region in a season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nFactors contributing to abnormally high activity included a stronger west-African monsoon, warmer than average ocean temperatures, and low wind shear, particularly over the western Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico. Overall, the Atlantic tropical cyclones of 2019 collectively resulted in 116\u00a0deaths and around $11.62\u00a0billion in damage. The season officially ended on November\u00a030.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nActivity began before the official start of the season when Subtropical Storm Andrea formed on May\u00a020. This marked the fifth consecutive year with a pre-season named storm, surpassing the previous record of four between 1951 and 1954. No storms formed in the month of June, but activity resumed in July when Hurricane Barry developed on July\u00a011 and Tropical Depression Three formed on July\u00a022. Thereafter, tropical cyclogenesis ceased again for nearly one month, until Tropical Storm Chantal developed on August\u00a020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nThe month of August featured two other systems, Hurricane Dorian and Tropical Storm Erin, with the former being the most intense tropical cyclone of the season. Dorian peaked as a Category\u00a05 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 185\u00a0mph (295\u00a0km/h) and a minimum barometric pressure of 910\u00a0mbar (27\u00a0inHg). The 2019 season also marked the fourth consecutive year with at least one Category\u00a05 hurricane in the Atlantic basin, exceeding the previous record of three seasons between 2003 and 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nSeptember was the most active month of the season, featuring seven named storms, including Fernand, Gabrielle, Humberto, Imelda, Jerry, Karen, and Lorenzo. On September\u00a029, Lorenzo became the easternmost Category\u00a05 hurricane on record. The season became only the seventh to feature multiple Category\u00a05 hurricanes, the others being 1932, 1933, 1961, 2005, 2007, and 2017. October featured above average activity, with the formation of Melissa, Nestor, Olga, Pablo, and Rebekah, though none remained a tropical or subtropical cyclone for more than three days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nPablo became the easternmost hurricane on record, reaching that intensity east of the previous record-holder, Vince in 2005. Aside from Rebekah persisting into November, the month featured one other system, Tropical Storm Sebastien. Activity during the 2019 Atlantic hurricane season concluded when Sebastien transitioned into an extratropical cyclone on November\u00a024. The seasonal activity was reflected with an Accumulated Cyclone Energy (ACE) index value of 132\u00a0units.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Subtropical Storm Andrea\nAn upper-level trough originating in the mid-latitudes cut off into a broad upper-level low over Florida on May\u00a017. The low moved eastward over the western Atlantic during the next day as a large area of convection formed to its east. It began interacting with low-level vorticity along the western edge of a dissipating cold front on May\u00a019, with the two systems coalescing into a broad area of low pressure by 12:00\u00a0UTC on May\u00a020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Subtropical Storm Andrea\nConvection associated with the low became better organized throughout that day as the system moved northward, with an Air Force reconnaissance later that day flight finding that the system had acquired a well-defined center of circulation, and was producing gale-force winds well away from the center. Based on the aircraft data and the structure of the system, the system became Subtropical Storm Andrea at 18:00\u00a0UTC on May\u00a020 about 370\u00a0mi (595\u00a0km) southwest of Bermuda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0010-0002", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Subtropical Storm Andrea\nHowever, the cyclone soon began to entrain dry air into its circulation while southwesterly wind shear increased, resulting in a rapid waning of the convection. By 12:00\u00a0UTC on May\u00a021, the cyclone had degenerated into a remnant low after convection diminished. The remnant low moved east-northeastward through the following day until being absorbed by a cold front about 24\u00a0hours later roughly 70\u00a0mi (115\u00a0km) southwest of Bermuda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Barry\nA mesoscale convective vortex formed over the Central United States on July\u00a02 and moved slowly eastward, southeastward, and then southwestward, reaching the Gulf of Mexico about a week later. The low, which had a large area of deep convection, gradually organized, becoming a tropical depression around 00:00\u00a0UTC on July\u00a011 roughly 190\u00a0mi (305\u00a0km) south of Mobile, Alabama. With an increase in convective banding on the south side of the cyclone's circulation, the system quickly intensified into Tropical Storm Barry just six hours later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Barry\nThe cyclone moved westward and then west-northwestward along the periphery of a low- to mid-level ridge. Barry's convective structure remained asymmetrical, with nearly all of the convection location south of the circulation due to wind shear and dry air. Around 12:00\u00a0UTC on July\u00a013, Barry intensified into a hurricane and peaked with winds of 75\u00a0mph (120\u00a0km/h). Three hours later, Barry made landfall near Intracoastal City, Louisiana. The system weakened to a tropical storm later on July\u00a013 and to a tropical depression early on July\u00a015, before transitioning into a remnant low over Arkansas by 12:00\u00a0UTC on July\u00a015. The low continued north-northeastward until degenerating into a trough over Missouri on the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Barry\nBarry caused two fatalities: a man was killed by a rip current off the coast of the Florida Panhandle on July\u00a015, and another man was killed in Connecticut from fallen trees and wires. In Mississippi, abnormally high tides caused minor coastal flooding in the vicinity of Biloxi. Widespread but minor wind and flood damage occurred across southern Louisiana. However, dozens of homes received extensive flood damage in Calcasieu Parish, where more than 20\u00a0people were rescued from floodwaters. Over 300,000\u00a0people throughout the state lost electricity. In Arkansas, the storm dropped 16.59\u00a0in (421\u00a0mm) of precipitation in Dierks. As a result, Barry became the rainiest tropical cyclone in the state's history. Flooding damaged a number of homes, businesses, and roads in a narrow swath of southwestern Arkansas, while several roadways were closed, including a portion of Interstate 30. Damage from Barry totaled roughly $600\u00a0million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 990]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Depression Three\nA tropical wave moved off the west coast of Africa on July\u00a012, producing minimal convection as it moved westward across the tropical Atlantic for several days thereafter. The wave fractured as it approached the Lesser Antilles on July\u00a018, with the northern portion turning northwestward and the southern portion continuing westward across the Caribbean Sea. The northern portion of the wave produced intermittent disorganized convection until reaching the southeastern Bahamas on July\u00a021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Depression Three\nEarly the following day, a concentrated area of deep convection developed, resulting in the formation of a tropical depression just east of Andros at 12:00\u00a0UTC on July\u00a022. However, environmental conditions caused deep convection to decrease substantially shortly after formation. Although a small area of convection re-developed on July 23, it was insufficient to maintain the cyclone, and it degenerated into an open trough at 12:00\u00a0UTC on July\u00a023 about 35\u00a0mi (55\u00a0km) east-northeast of Cape Canaveral, Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Depression Three\nNumerous thunderstorms developed across South Florida on July\u00a023 in association with the tropical depression. A woman was injured by a lightning strike in Aventura by one such storm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Chantal\nOn August\u00a014, a cold front moved across the Southeastern United States, becoming nearly stationary over subsequent days. The interaction between the stalled cold front and a high-pressure system led to the formation of a low-pressure area near Savannah, Georgia, on August\u00a017. By 18:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a020, the small system gained enough organization to be declared a tropical depression about 370\u00a0mi (595\u00a0km) southeast of Halifax, Nova Scotia. Six hours later, the depression intensified into Tropical Storm Chantal. The system failed to intensify further and soon encountered colder waters and increasing southwesterly wind shear. Instead, Chantal weakened to a tropical depression early on August\u00a022 and ultimately degenerated to a remnant low by 18:00\u00a0UTC the next day. The remnant low executed a clockwise loop and dissipated three days later about 830\u00a0mi (1,335\u00a0km) southeast of Cape Race, Newfoundland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 970]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Dorian\nA tropical wave exited the west coast of Africa on August\u00a019 and organized as it moved westward, becoming a tropical depression early on August\u00a024 approximately 805\u00a0mi (1,295\u00a0km) east-southeast of Barbados. The depression quickly developed curved banding features and intensified into Tropical Storm Dorian later that day while heading west-northwestward. Dry air prevented any significant further intensification and organization for several days. Early on August\u00a027, Dorian struck Barbados as a very compact cyclone with winds of 50\u00a0mph (85\u00a0km/h) and then passed over Saint Lucia later that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Dorian\nThe mountainous terrain of Saint Lucia disrupted the storm's circulation, though a new circulation formed farther to the north. Dorian resumed organizing while moving northeastward over the Caribbean, with a partial eyewall and inner core developing by August\u00a028. The cyclone reached hurricane intensity at 15:30\u00a0UTC on August\u00a028 while striking the eastern tip of Saint Croix in the U.S. Virgin Islands; another landfall occurred on Saint Thomas a few hours later. After emerging into the Atlantic on August\u00a028, Dorian eventually began moving west-northwestward due to an upper-level low moving to the south and a subtropical ridge expanding westward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Dorian\nEncountering very warm water temperatures, ample moisture, and low wind shear, Dorian began rapidly intensifying on August\u00a030, reaching major hurricane intensity around 18:00\u00a0UTC that day. Strengthening further, the cyclone became a Category\u00a05 hurricane at 12:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a01, a few hours prior to making landfall on Elbow Cay in the Abaco Islands with winds of 185\u00a0mph (295\u00a0km/h); Dorian became the strongest tropical cyclone on record to strike the Bahamas. A weakening high pressure area to the north and collapsing steering currents caused Dorian to move very slowly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0017-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Dorian\nThe cyclone struck Grand Bahama early on September\u00a02 while still a Category\u00a05 hurricane. The storm weakened due to land interaction and upwelling, falling below major hurricane late on September\u00a03. An eastward-moving, large mid-level trough forced Dorian to move north-northwestward and then northward, causing it to remain offshore Florida. The cyclone re-strengthened into a Category\u00a03 hurricane over the Gulf Stream on September\u00a05, but weakened back to a Category\u00a02 later that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0017-0002", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Dorian\nDorian then curved northeastward and scraped the Outer Banks of North Carolina on September\u00a06 before moving ashore at Cape Hatteras with winds of 100\u00a0mph (155\u00a0km/h). Embedded within the mid-latitude flow, the cyclone accelerated northeastward and transitioned into an extratropical cyclone late on September\u00a07. The remnant extratropical storm struck Nova Scotia and later Newfoundland before being absorbed by an extratropical cyclone on September\u00a09.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Dorian\nThroughout the Windward Islands, the storm produced wind gusts up to 61\u00a0mph (98\u00a0km/h), observed on Martinique. Approximately 4,000\u00a0homes lost electricity and many streets became impassable due to flooding. Mostly minor damage occurred in Barbados. Some areas of the U. S. Virgin Islands reported hurricane-force winds, with Buck Island observing sustained winds of 82\u00a0mph (132\u00a0km/h). Winds from Dorian left island-wide blackouts on Saint Thomas and Saint John, while 25,000\u00a0customers lost power on Saint Croix. In the British Virgin Islands, the storm caused flood and wind damage in the outskirts of Road Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0018-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Dorian\nOne death occurred in Puerto Rico during preparations for the storm. Gusty winds left roughly 23,000\u00a0households without electricity across the island. Dorian inflicted catastrophic damage in some regions of the Bahamas. Approximately 87\u00a0percent of the damage nationwide occurred in the Abaco Islands, where the storm struck at peak intensity and generated winds of at least tropical storm-force for more than three days. Around 75\u00a0percent of homes there were damaged to some degree. Further, Dorian damaged about 90\u00a0percent of infrastructure in Marsh Harbour and obliterated shanty-type homes in the town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0018-0002", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Dorian\nGrand Bahama also experienced extreme impacts, with storm surge submerging at least 60\u00a0percent of the island. The hurricane severely damaged or destroyed around 300\u00a0homes on the island. Throughout the Bahamas, an estimated 13,000\u00a0homes suffered severe damage or were completely destroyed, while at least 70,000\u00a0people were left homeless. Dorian killed at least 70\u00a0people and caused at least $3.4\u00a0billion in damage, making it the costliest hurricane in the country's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Dorian\nOver 160,000\u00a0electrical customers in Florida lost power during the storm. Dorian caused coastal flooding in some areas, especially in immediate oceanfront or riverfront sections of St. Augustine and Jacksonville. Six deaths occurred in the state. Strong winds in South Carolina downed numerous trees and power lines, leaving more than 270,000\u00a0residences and workplaces without power. Coastal flooding and flash flooding impacted the Charleston and Georgetown areas. Three tornadoes in Horry County also caused damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0019-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Dorian\nThe eastern portions of the state experienced storm surge ranging from 4 to 7\u00a0ft (1.2 to 2.1\u00a0m), wind gusts up to 110\u00a0mph (180\u00a0km/h), rainfall totals between 5 and 10\u00a0in (130 and 250\u00a0mm), and 25\u00a0tornadoes. Dare County was particularly hard hit, with 1,126\u00a0structures damaged. The storm also destroyed 20-25\u00a0percent of the state's tobacco crop. Three deaths were reported in North Carolina. Gusty winds and beach erosion occurred in other states along the East Coast, especially in Delaware and New Jersey. Damage in the United States totaled roughly $1.6\u00a0billion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0019-0002", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Dorian\nIn Canada, the extratropical remnants of Dorian left about 412,000\u00a0customers without power in Nova Scotia and another 80,000\u00a0in New Brunswick, with the former representing approximately 80\u00a0percent of the province. The storm damaged homes, buildings, and boats, as well as downed trees, across Canadian Maritimes, though the worst impacts occurred in Halifax, Moncton, and much of Prince Edward Island. Insured damage alone reached $78.9\u00a0million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Erin\nOn August\u00a020, a large upper-level trough with a large area of disorganized convection formed over the southwestern Atlantic. As the trough weakened, a shortwave moved into the western side of the trough over the Gulf of Mexico, resulting in the formation of a broad area of low pressure on August\u00a022. The low drifted northwestward, moving over southeastern Florida on August\u00a024 and degenerating into a trough of low pressure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0020-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Erin\nHowever, deep convection increased along the trough early on August\u00a026, and a new low developed, with a tropical depression forming at 12:00\u00a0UTC that day about 345\u00a0mi (555\u00a0km) south-southeast of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina. The depression moved southwestward in response to a mid-level high-pressure area near Florida. Initially poorly-organized due to northwesterly wind shear, the depression strengthened into Tropical Storm Erin late on August\u00a027 following the development of a large burst of convection. Erin then turned sharply northwestward as the mid-level high weakened and a subtropical ridge strengthened to its northeast. Strong upper-level winds weakened the storm to a tropical depression late on August\u00a028. Accelerating northeastward, Erin became extratropical at 12:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a029, and was absorbed by a larger extratropical low 12\u00a0hours later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 927]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Erin\nIn Nova Scotia, precipitation from the remnants of Erin was higher than for all of July and August combined before the storm. According to the Meteorological Service of Canada, the Annapolis Valley and the Bay of Fundy region received the most precipitation with a maximum of 6.4\u00a0in (162\u00a0mm) at Parrsboro and 5.0\u00a0in (127\u00a0mm) at Greenwood. Several stations reported rates greater than 1.2\u00a0in (30\u00a0mm), resulting in increased runoff, causing flash floods and the wash out of roads.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0021-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Erin\nRain affected the southern part of New Brunswick with maximum totals of 2.2\u00a0in (56\u00a0mm) in Fredericton, 2.0\u00a0in (50\u00a0mm) in Moncton, and 1.7\u00a0in (44\u00a0mm) in Saint John. In Prince Edward Island, accumulations reached 2.6\u00a0in (66\u00a0mm) in Summerside. In Quebec, regions near the Gulf of St. Lawrence observed about 2.0\u00a0in (50\u00a0mm) of rain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Fernand\nThroughout the second half of August, an upper-level low progressed eastward from the southeastern United States to Bermuda, southward to Puerto Rico, and westward across Hispaniola and Cuba. A weak and broad area of low pressure formed near western Cuba on August\u00a030 and drifted slowly west across the Gulf of Mexico. Deep convection coalesced within curved bands around the center, leading to the formation of Tropical Storm Fernand around 12:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a03.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0022-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Fernand\nDespite the influence of moderate east-southeasterly wind shear, the cyclone attained peak winds of 50\u00a0mph (85\u00a0km/h) by early on September\u00a04 before beginning a steady weakening trend. Fernand progressed south of a ridge over the south-central United States, making landfall about 30\u00a0mi (50\u00a0km) north-northeast of La Pesca, Tamaulipas, at 15:30\u00a0UTC on September\u00a04. It weakened quickly once inland and dissipated over the rugged terrain of Mexico by 06:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a05.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Fernand\nFernand brought torrential rainfall to the Mexican states of Coahuila, Nuevo Le\u00f3n, Tamaulipas, and San Luis Potos\u00ed. Fernand also dumped heavy rainfall over South Texas. In preparation for the storm, the Mexican government activated Plan DN-III-E, sending 4,000 troops to the northeastern states to assist in disaster relief. In Nuevo Le\u00f3n, schools and public transport lines were closed on September 5 but resumed operations the next day. In some areas six months of rain fell in six hours. Landslides were reported near the state's capital, Monterrey. Homes, roads, bridges, and at least 400 schools were damaged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0023-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Fernand\nIn Garc\u00eda, a Venezuelan man died after he was swept away by floodwaters while attempting to clear a drain; the two people he was working with managed to escape. On September 7, governor of Nuevo Le\u00f3n, Jaime Rodr\u00edguez Calder\u00f3n, declared a state of emergency to request for state funds to address the damage. Elsewhere, in Tamaulipas, 12\u00a0in (300\u00a0mm) of rain fell in 48\u00a0hours, leading to some localized flooding. Damage throughout Mexico totaled approximately $11.3\u00a0million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Gabrielle\nA tropical wave moved westward from Africa on August\u00a030, organizing into a tropical depression around 18:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a03 about 455\u00a0mi (730\u00a0km) west of the northern Capo Verde Islands. Though the nascent tropical cyclone tracked northwest in an environment of moderate southwesterly wind shear and dry mid-level air, it intensified into Tropical Storm Gabrielle six hours after genesis. Interaction with an upper-level low further compounded negative environmental factors, causing the system to lose a majority of its convection for nearly a day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0024-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Gabrielle\nAs the steering regime transitioned to be dictated by a break in the subtropical ridge, Gabrielle curved west-northwest and then north. A decrease in upper-level winds led to the formation of a well-defined inner core, and Gabrielle attained peak winds of 65\u00a0mph (100\u00a0km/h) on September\u00a08. Thereafter, the influence of mid-latitude westerlies caused the cyclone to turn northeast and begin extratropical transition, completing it by 12:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a010 490\u00a0mi (790\u00a0km) northwest of the western Azores islands. The post-tropical cyclone persisted for a day before degenerating to an open trough.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Humberto\nA tropical wave left Africa on August\u00a027 and moved steadily westward for several days. Throughout early September, the wave underwent prolonged interaction with an upper-level trough in the central and southwestern Atlantic that culminated in the formation of a tropical depression at 18:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a013 east of Eleuthera in The Bahamas. The depression intensified into Tropical Storm Humberto six hours later and tracked northwest, where steadily improving environmental conditions allowed it to become a hurricane by September\u00a016. After turning sharply northeast, the storm continued to intensify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0025-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Humberto\nAt 00:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a018, Humberto attained peak winds of 125\u00a0mph (205\u00a0km/h), and the Category\u00a03 hurricane passed about 65\u00a0mi (100\u00a0km) northwest of Bermuda at that intensity. High wind shear and dry air caused Humberto to embark on a weakening trend thereafter, and it transitioned into an extratropical cyclone by 00:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a020 about 575\u00a0mi (925\u00a0km) south-southwest of Cape Race after being stripped of its convection. The extratropical low was absorbed by a larger non-tropical feature eighteen hours later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Humberto\nBreezy winds and light rainfall were recorded in The Bahamas, where Dorian caused devastation two weeks prior. Humberto's large size caused choppy seas along the East Coast of the United States for several days; rip currents killed one person in Florida and a second in North Carolina. In addition, 21 water rescues were performed in St. Johns County, Florida. Tropical storm-force wind gusts, light rainfall, and minor storm surge were felt along the eastern shores of the state. Extensive beach erosion and minor structural damage were reported along the northwestern coast of Puerto Rico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0026-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Humberto\nOn Bermuda, the most significant impacts were wrought by sustained winds up to 110\u00a0mph (177\u00a0km/h), causing widespread damage to trees, roofs, crops, and power lines. As many as 600 buildings\u2014including L.F. Wade International Airport, Royal Naval Dockyard, and the Bermuda Weather Service\u2014suffered damage, around 28,000\u00a0customers were left without power, and the island's banana crop suffered a 90\u00a0percent loss. Overall, Bermuda reported at least $25\u00a0million in damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Jerry\nA tropical wave crossed Africa's western coast late on September\u00a011. It spawned an elongated area of low pressure four days later, and that feature gradually organized into a tropical depression by 06:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a017 while located about 1,100\u00a0mi (1,770\u00a0km) east of the Windward Islands. A strong ridge steered the system west-northwest for several days. Although moderate northeasterly wind shear initially hampered its development, the depression intensified into Tropical Storm Jerry by 06:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a018 and began rapid intensification eighteen hours later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0027-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Jerry\nJerry attained hurricane strength early on September\u00a019 and reached its peak at Category\u00a02 intensity, with winds of 105\u00a0mph (165\u00a0km/h), early on September\u00a020; this peak was attained despite a fairly asymmetric cloud pattern. Shortly thereafter, increasing upper-level winds and dry air caused the cyclone to weaken while it curved northwest. Jerry fell to tropical storm intensity early on September\u00a021, and it degenerated to a post-tropical cyclone by 18:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a024 roughly 280\u00a0mi (450\u00a0km) west-southwest of Bermuda, having lost organized deep convection over its center. The remnants of Jerry passed near Bermuda before dissipating northeast of the island on September\u00a028.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Imelda\nAn upper-level low detached from a broader trough over the eastern United States in early September, moving southwestward into the eastern Gulf of Mexico by September\u00a012. A weak trough formed in the vicinity of this feature and moved toward the west, ultimately leading to the formation of a tropical depression around 12:00\u00a0UTC a short distance southwest of Freeport, Texas, despite the NHC estimating a low chance of tropical cyclone development.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0028-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Imelda\nThe depression quickly intensified into Tropical Storm Imelda three hours later and peaked with maximum sustained winds of 45\u00a0mph (75\u00a0km/h) before striking Freeport at 17:45\u00a0UTC. Imelda drifted slowly northward once inland, weakening to a tropical depression by 00:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a018 and degenerating into a trough 24\u00a0hours later. The remnants of Imelda drifted over Texas and Oklahoma for several days before dissipating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Imelda\nImelda brought catastrophic flooding to Southeast Texas, with a peak total of 44.29\u00a0in (1,125\u00a0mm) near Fannett. The storm ranks as the fifth-wettest tropical cyclone to strike the continental United States. Numerous roadways in Greater Houston and eastward became submerged, including Interstate 10, with floodwaters entering thousands of cars. In Jefferson County, flooding resulted in several hundreds of high-water rescues. Approximately 5,100\u00a0homes suffered water damage in Jefferson County alone, while roughly 3,100\u00a0others were damaged in Harris, Liberty, and Montgomery counties combined.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0029-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Imelda\nAn EF1 tornado in Harris County ripped off a metal roof and a few tree branches while destroying a barn. Damage from Imelda totaled close to $5\u00a0billion. Heavy rainfall also extended eastward into Louisiana, though flooding impact was mostly minor. In Cameron Parish, an EF0 tornado damaged two recreational vehicles and toppled several trees. The storm caused at least five deaths, all in Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Karen\nOn September\u00a014, a tropical wave emerged into the Atlantic from the west coast of Africa. By early on September\u00a021, a low developed along the axis of the wave, resulting in an increase in deep convection. The system developed a closed center of circulation and became a tropical depression around 00:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a022 roughly 115\u00a0mi (185\u00a0km) east of Trinidad. About six hours later, the depression intensified into Tropical Storm Karen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0030-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Karen\nThe cyclone moved west-northwestward around the southwestern periphery of an Atlantic subtropical ridge and passed through the Windward Islands as a minimal tropical storm late on September\u00a022. Dry air and strong wind shear weakened Karen back to a tropical depression early on September\u00a023 as it turned northward, before re-intensifying into a tropical storm about 24\u00a0hours later after encountering favorable conditions again. Late on September\u00a024, Karen struck the Puerto Rican islands of Culebra and Vieques before entering the Atlantic. Tracking north-northeastward, the cyclone eventually began interacting with a surface trough and encountered strong wind shear again. As a result, Karen weakened to a tropical depression on September\u00a027 and dissipated about six hours later approximately 345\u00a0mi (555\u00a0km) southeast of Bermuda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 894]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Karen\nWith the formation of Karen, tropical storm warnings and red alerts were issued for Trinidad and Tobago. Karen brought severe flash floods to Tobago, trapping some people in their houses, as well as uprooting trees and causing several power outages. Several roads were blocked due to mudslides and downed trees. In addition, seven boats in Plymouth sank after a jetty broke. It was also announced that all schools would be closed on September\u00a023. Swells generated by Karen in Venezuela caused flooding and power outages in Caracas and La Guaira.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0031-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Karen\nTropical storm watches were issued for Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands in anticipation of Karen. Puerto Rico governor Wanda V\u00e1zquez Garced declared a state of emergency on September\u00a023 and ordered schools and government offices. The Virgin Islands also closed their schools as the storm approached. People who were living in flood-prone areas were asked to seek shelter. The U.S. Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico experienced heavy rains, mudslides, and power outages, with more than 29,000\u00a0people losing power in the latter. Mudslides and runoff blocked several roads in Puerto Rico, especially in Barranquitas, Cayey, and Guayama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Lorenzo\nA tropical wave emerged into the Atlantic from the west coast of Africa on September\u00a022. The wave rapidly organized into a tropical depression around 00:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a023 about 320\u00a0mi (515\u00a0km) southwest of Dakar, Senegal. Six hours later, the depression strengthened into Tropical Storm Lorenzo. A subtropical ridge to the north initially steered the storm westward to west-northwestward. Wind shear interrupted further strengthening on September\u00a024. However, decreasing wind shear on the following day allowed rapid intensification to commence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0032-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Lorenzo\nLorenzo attained hurricane intensity early on September\u00a025 and then reached an initial peak as a Category\u00a04 hurricane with winds of 145\u00a0mph (230\u00a0km/h). The system then curved northwestward due to a break in the subtropical ridge. An eyewall replacement cycle and intruding dry air caused the storm to weaken to a Category\u00a03 hurricane late on September\u00a027. The storm then curved northward across the western end of the subtropical ridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Lorenzo\nAfter completing the eyewall replacement cycle, Lorenzo underwent a second bout of rapid intensification. At 03:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a029, the cyclone peaked as a Category\u00a05 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 160\u00a0mph (260\u00a0km/h). This made Lorenzo the easternmost Category 5 Atlantic hurricane on record. After reaching peak intensity, Lorenzo began weakening due to upwelling and rapidly increasing southwesterly wind shear. Lorenzo dropped below major hurricane intensity at 18:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a029, only 15\u00a0hours after its peak intensity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0033-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Lorenzo\nLorenzo then slowly weakened and its windfield expanded as the storm began an extratropical transition while passing northwest of the Azores. The storm became fully extratropical at 12:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a02 roughly 240\u00a0mi (385\u00a0km) north of Graciosa. On October\u00a03 and October\u00a04, the system impacted the British Isles before dissipating entirely.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Lorenzo\nThe French tugboat Bourbon Rhode sank on September\u00a026 near the storm's center with 14\u00a0crew members. Three people were rescued due to search and rescue operations, while four bodies were found; the other seven people were presumed to have drowned. Although the storm remained more than 2,000\u00a0mi (3,220\u00a0km) offshore the United States, swells and rip currents resulted in eight deaths, with one in Florida, four in North Carolina, two in New York, and one in Rhode Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0034-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Lorenzo\nIn the Azores, Lorenzo caused the worst impacts on Corvo and Flores, with both islands reporting many downed trees and power lines. On the latter, the storm destroyed the commercial port at Lajes Field. Corvo recorded sustained winds of 74\u00a0mph (119\u00a0km/h) and gusts reaching 101\u00a0mph (163\u00a0km/h). Rough seas resulted in the evacuations of about 100\u00a0people from their homes throughout the Azores, with waves approaching streets and homes in the city of Horta. In Ireland, the remnants of Lorenzo produced wind gusts up to 66\u00a0mph (105\u00a0km/h) at the Mace Head Atmospheric Research Station. Downed trees and power lines left roughly 20,000\u00a0customers without electricity throughout Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Melissa\nA potent nor'easter, which originated from the tail-end of a cold front across the southwestern Atlantic on October\u00a06, detached from the frontal boundary and attained maximum 1-minute winds of 65\u00a0mph (100\u00a0km/h) by October\u00a010. Deep convection formed north of the low's center, leading to the formation of Subtropical Storm Melissa by 06:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a011 about 205\u00a0mi (330\u00a0km) south-southeast of Nantucket, Massachusetts. Although the system's peak winds decreased over the next day, the radius of tropical storm-force winds contracted significantly while thunderstorm activity became concentrated over the center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0035-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Melissa\nThis marked Melissa's transition into a tropical storm by 12:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a012. As the system moved east-northeast, it lost its associated convection under the influence of moderate westerly shear and colder water temperatures early on October\u00a014. Melissa soon merged with a nearby front and became extratropical by 12:00\u00a0UTC about 370\u00a0mi (595\u00a0km) south of Cape Race. The post-tropical low degenerated into a trough a few hours later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Melissa\nThe nor'easter and subsequent (sub)tropical storm caused heavy surf and storm surge along the coast of the Mid-Atlantic States. In Maryland, flooding from increased high tides from the storm forced street closures in Crisfield and Salisbury. In Delaware, waves from the storm caused beach erosion and flooded streets in Bethany Beach while homes and streets were flooded in Dewey Beach. Waves from the storm caused coastal flooding in various parts of the Jersey Shore, including Long Beach Island and Atlantic City. The flooding forced the cancellation of the first day of the LBI International Kite Festival. Rainfall accumulations from the system peaked at 3.43\u00a0in (87\u00a0mm) in Nantucket, Massachusetts. Parts of southeastern Massachusetts experienced sustained tropical-storm-force winds, with a peak sustained wind of 49\u00a0mph (80\u00a0km/h) and a peak gust of 66\u00a0mph (106\u00a0km/h) recorded at Wellfleet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 961]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Depression Fifteen\nA vigorous late-season tropical wave, accompanied by a broad area of low pressure and a large mass of deep convection, moved off the west coast of Africa on October 13. The broad low separated from the parent wave, moving slowly northwestward as the wave continued westward across the tropical Atlantic. Thunderstorm activity associated with the low became better organized early the following day, resulting in the formation of a tropical depression at 12:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a014 roughly 345\u00a0mi (555\u00a0km) southeast of the Cabo Verde Islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 68], "content_span": [69, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0037-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Depression Fifteen\nAs the depression moved northwestward toward the Cape Verde islands, it encountered a hostile environment of high wind shear and abundant dry air, which prevented further strengthening. The depression quickly became poorly organized, and it degenerated into a broad area of low pressure by 06:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a016. The remnant low continued northwestward, producing intermittent convection until its dissipation late on October\u00a017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 68], "content_span": [69, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Nestor\nA tropical wave exited the west coast of Africa on October\u00a03. Convection increased slightly as the wave entered the eastern Caribbean on October\u00a08. Another increase in convection occurred as the wave crossed Central America, partially due to interaction with the Central American gyre. The wave split, with the southern portion becoming Tropical Storm Priscilla in the eastern Pacific basin and the northern portion reaching the Bay of Campeche. A gale-force low formed over the Gulf of Mexico on October\u00a017, which became Tropical Storm Nestor late on October\u00a018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0038-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Nestor\nWith sustained winds already at 60\u00a0mph (95\u00a0km/h), the storm moved rapidly northeastward toward the Florida Panhandle. However, an approaching mid- to upper-level trough and associated frontal system caused Nestor to become elongated and left little convection near the center. As a result, Nestor became extratropical around 12:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a019. About five hours later, the extratropical storm made landfall near St. Vincent Island. The remnants of Nestor continued northeastward across the Southeastern United States before dissipating offshore the Delmarva Peninsula on October\u00a021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Nestor\nRainfall and storm surge from Nestor caused coastal flooding and flash flooding across the Florida Panhandle and the state's gulf coast. Freshwater flooding inundated several roads in the St. Petersburg area. However, tornadoes also caused significant damage, with the storm spawning four in the state. The strongest was rated EF2 and remained on the ground for roughly 30\u00a0minutes for a distance of about 11.45\u00a0mi (18.43\u00a0km)\u2014an uncommonly long track for the region\u2014through western Polk County, from the Lakeland Linder International Airport to northwest Polk County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0039-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Nestor\nThe tornado caused modest damage to homes, overturned a semi-truck on Interstate 4, and ripped off a large portion of a roof of a middle school. In Pinellas County, an EF0 tornado damaged several mobile parks and downed trees in Seminole. An EF1 tornado briefly touched down in northwest Cape Coral, causing damage to 18\u00a0homes and vehicles. The fourth tornado, rated EF0, caused no damage in Brevard County. Heavy rains from Nestor caused a car crash in South Carolina, which killed three people and left five injured. The storm inflicted approximately $125\u00a0million in damage throughout the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Pablo\nOn October\u00a022, a baroclinic low developed over the central Atlantic. The low soon generated gale-force winds, while vorticity centers formed by the following day. The easternmost center became dominant, with convection developing around it by early on October\u00a025. As a result, the low became Subtropical Storm Pablo approximately 405\u00a0mi (650\u00a0km) west-southwest of the western Azores. Pablo moved east-northeastward and acquired tropical characteristics, becoming a tropical storm late on October\u00a025 after developing central dense overcast and anticyclonic outflow. An eye-like feature also briefly appeared on satellite imagery around this time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0040-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Pablo\nThe system then curved east-southeastward early on October\u00a026, before turning east-northeastward later that day and then northeastward by October\u00a027. After passing just southeast of the Azores, the storm intensified further and developed more convection and a small eye. Pablo reached hurricane intensity on October\u00a027 and peaked with maximum sustained winds of 80\u00a0mph (130\u00a0km/h). Pablo reached hurricane intensity at 18.8\u00b0W, farther east than any other Atlantic hurricane, beating Hurricane Vince's record of 18.9\u00b0W. Pablo then weakened due to cold sea surface temperatures, falling to tropical storm intensity early on October\u00a028. The storm then became extratropical after merging with a cold front about 720\u00a0mi (1,160\u00a0km) north-northeast of the Azores, before dissipating completely on October\u00a029.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 857]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Olga\nA well-organized tropical wave crossed the west coast of Africa on October\u00a08 and entered the Atlantic Ocean. The wave headed westward with intermittent convection, reaching the Caribbean on October\u00a017 and Central America by October\u00a022. After reaching the Gulf of Mexico, a low-pressure formed on October\u00a024. After scatterometer data and satellite imagery indicated the presence of a closed circulation, the system developed into Tropical Storm Olga at 12:00\u00a0UTC the following day roughly 390\u00a0mi (630\u00a0km) south-southwest of Lake Charles, Louisiana. Olga moved north-northeastward and peaked with winds of 45\u00a0mph (75\u00a0km/h). However, the storm transitioned into an extratropical cyclone by 00:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a026 after becoming embedded within a cold front. The remnants of the cyclone struck central Louisiana about seven hours later and continued across the Eastern United States and into Ontario, where they dissipated on October\u00a028.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 995]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Olga\nIn Louisiana, the remnants of Olga produced sustained winds of 55\u00a0mph (89\u00a0km/h) and gusts up to 72\u00a0mph (116\u00a0km/h), the former observed in Baton Rouge and the latter in Mendeville. Gusty winds resulted in 132,000\u00a0customers losing electricity. Louisiana also reported up to 10.24\u00a0in (260\u00a0mm) of precipitation near Ponchatoula, with lesser amounts elsewhere in the state. Hurricane-force wind gusts impacted parts of Mississippi, where the remnants of Olga damaged or destroyed 772\u00a0homes, 26\u00a0businesses, and 27\u00a0roads; Tupelo was particularly hard hit. At least 154,000\u00a0power outages occurred in Mississippi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0042-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Olga\nOne person died in Newton County when a tree struck him while he while cleaning-up debris. In Tennessee, a wide swath of winds up to 96\u00a0mph (154\u00a0km/h) caused almost 65,000\u00a0power outages, forcing school closures for up to two weeks in several counties. Falling trees resulted in one death in Adamsville. Total damage along the path of the cyclone was estimated at $400\u00a0million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Subtropical Storm Rebekah\nOn October\u00a027, a large extratropical cyclone formed about 460\u00a0mi (760\u00a0km) south of Cape Race. Moving eastward, the cyclone quickly gained hurricane-force winds, before weakening as it turned north and west in a large counterclockwise loop, making another smaller loop on its way. A smaller low-pressure area formed on near the center of the original extratropical cyclone on October\u00a029, possessing a small wind field more characteristic of a tropical cyclone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0043-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Subtropical Storm Rebekah\nDeep convection formed around the center of the new low on October\u00a030 due to increased atmospheric instability despite sea surface temperatures of only 70\u00a0\u00b0F (21\u00a0\u00b0C), leading to the development of Subtropical Storm Rebekah at 12:00\u00a0UTC. The system was designated as a subtropical storm due to a lack of both separation with the parent upper-level low and significant outflow, which are common characteristic of tropical cyclones. At this time, Rebekah possessed sustained winds of 50\u00a0mph (85\u00a0km/h), representing the system's peak intensity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0043-0002", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Subtropical Storm Rebekah\nOn October\u00a031, Rebekah turned to the east then east-northeast, entering a region of low relative humidity, increasing wind shear, and even colder sea surface temperatures. The system rapidly weakened as a result of these unfavorable environmental factors. Rebekah became extratropical once again on November\u00a01 at 06:00\u00a0UTC and dissipated later that day about 115\u00a0mi (185\u00a0km) north of the Azores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Sebastien\nIn late November, a series of mid- to upper-level troughs progressed across the central subtropical Atlantic, giving way to a large area of disturbed weather. Enhanced by a convectively-coupled kelvin wave, the disturbance coalesced over the next few days and was designated as Tropical Storm Sebastien around 06:00\u00a0UTC on November\u00a019 to the northeast of the Leeward Islands. The system, initially moving west-northwest, curved toward the east-northeast ahead of an approaching upper-level trough. At the same time, Sebastien gradually intensified despite an impinging cold front and moderate wind shear.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0044-0001", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Sebastien\nThe cyclone attained peak winds of 70\u00a0mph (110\u00a0km/h) early on November\u00a023, when it exhibited a mid-level eye feature. Significantly colder waters and strong shear soon took their toll on Sebastien, causing it to become an extratropical cyclone by 00:00\u00a0UTC on November\u00a025. The post-tropical cyclone continued northeast, crossing southwestern Ireland before turning southeast into the Irish Sea and across western England by November\u00a027. The low dissipated just west of London around 18:00\u00a0UTC that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Storm names\nThe following list of names was used for named storms that formed in the North Atlantic in 2019. The names not retired from this list will be used again in the 2025 season. This was the same list used in the 2013 season, with the exception of the name Imelda, which replaced Ingrid. The names Imelda, Nestor, and Rebekah were used for the first time this year. The name Nestor replaced Noel after 2007, but was not used in 2013, while the name Rebekah replaced Roxanne after 1995, but was not used in previous seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Storm names, Retirement\nOn March 17, 2021, during the joint 42nd and 43rd Sessions of the RA IV Hurricane Committee, the World Meteorological Organization retired the name Dorian from its rotating name lists due to damages it caused, and it will never be used again for another Atlantic hurricane. It will be replaced with Dexter for the 2025 season. Originally, any names retired from the 2019 list were to have been announced in the Spring of 2020, but this was delayed to the following year due to the COVID-19 pandemic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287459-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 Atlantic hurricane season, Season effects\nThis is a table of the tropical cyclones that formed in the 2019 Atlantic hurricane season. It includes their duration, names, affected areas, 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 tropical wave, or a low, and all the damage figures are in USD. Potential tropical cyclones are not included in this table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287460-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Auburn Tigers baseball team\nThe 2019 Auburn Tigers baseball team represented Auburn University in the 2019 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Tigers played their home games at Plainsman Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287460-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Auburn Tigers baseball team, Preseason, SEC media poll\nThe SEC media poll was released on February 7, 2019 with the Tigers predicted to finish in fourth place in the Western Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287460-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Auburn Tigers baseball team, Schedule and results\n\u2020 Indicates the game does not count toward the 2019 Southeastern Conference standings. *Rankings are based on the team's current ranking in the D1Baseball poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287460-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Auburn 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287461-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Auburn Tigers football team\nThe 2019 Auburn Tigers football team represented Auburn University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Tigers played their home games at Jordan\u2013Hare Stadium in Auburn, Alabama, and competed in the Western Division of the Southeastern Conference (SEC). They were led by seventh-year head coach Gus Malzahn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287461-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Auburn Tigers football team, Previous season\nThe Tigers finished the 2018 season 8\u20135, 3\u20135. They were invited to the Music City Bowl where they defeated Purdue 63\u201314 to become the Music City Bowl champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287461-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Auburn Tigers football team, Offseason, Offseason departures\nThree Auburn players with remaining eligibility declared early for the 2019 NFL Draft. In addition, 17 seniors from the 2018 team graduated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287461-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Auburn Tigers football team, Spring game\nThe A-Day spring game was held on Saturday, April 13. The Orange Team (first team) defeated the Blue Team (second team) 28\u201310. Both quarterbacks competing for the starting position, Bo Nix and Joey Gatewood, had strong performances. Wide receiver Seth Williams was named Offensive MVP, Derrick Brown was named Defensive MVP, and Anders Carlson was named Special Teams MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287461-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Auburn Tigers football team, Preseason, SEC media poll\nThe SEC media poll was released on July 19, 2019 with the Tigers predicted to finish in fourth place in the West Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287461-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Auburn Tigers football team, Preseason, Preseason All-SEC teams\nThe Tigers had eight players selected to the preseason all-SEC teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 68], "content_span": [69, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287462-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Auckland local elections\nThe 2019 Auckland local elections took place between September and October 2019 by postal vote as part of nation-wide local elections. The elections were the fourth 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.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287462-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Auckland local elections, Mayoral election\nThe incumbent mayor, Phil Goff, sought a second term and was re-elected ahead of second highest polling candidate John Tamihere.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287462-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Auckland local elections, Governing body elections\nTwenty members were elected to the Auckland Council, across thirteen wards, using the first past the post vote system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287462-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Auckland local elections, Governing body elections\nThe Auckland Future ticket, holding four local body seats since 2016, announced in March 2019 that it would not field candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287462-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Auckland local elections, Governing body elections\nMike Lee, sitting councillor for Waitemata and Gulf ward, unexpectedly announced in late-June 2019 that he would run again, splitting the vote. The City Vision ticket, which had endorsed Lee in 2016 by not fielding a candidate, had selected Pippa Coom as its candidate in March 2019 on the understanding that he would not stand again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287462-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Auckland local elections, Governing body elections, Albany ward (2)\nIncumbents Walker and Watson both ran for re-election under the ticket \"Putting People First\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287462-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Auckland local elections, Governing body elections, Wait\u0101kere Ward (2)\nOf the two incumbents, Linda Cooper sought re-election and Penny Hulse retired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 75], "content_span": [76, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287462-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Auckland local elections, Governing body elections, Manurewa-Papakura ward (2)\nOf the two incumbents, Daniel Newman sought re-election and John Walker retired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 83], "content_span": [84, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287462-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Auckland local elections, Licensing Trust elections\n35 Members were elected to 5 licensing trusts across Auckland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287463-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Auckland mayoral election\nThe 2019 Auckland mayoral election was held on 12 October 2019 to determine who would serve as Mayor of Auckland for the next three years. Nominations opened on 19 July 2019 and closed on 16 August 2019. Incumbent Mayor Phil Goff won the election with 48% of the vote to secure a second term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287463-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Auckland mayoral election, Background\nPhil Goff was the incumbent mayor of Auckland. Goff became mayor at the 2016 election in which the previous mayor, Len Brown, did not stand. Goff announced in March 2019 that he would stand again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287463-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Auckland mayoral election, Background\nThe election was conducted by postal vote, and used the first past the post vote system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287463-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Auckland mayoral election, Candidates, Prospective candidates who did not stand\nThe following people indicated they might, or would, run for mayor in this election, but ultimately did not.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 84], "content_span": [85, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287463-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Auckland mayoral election, Policies and campaigning\nThe campaign included a number of debates. One debate between Goff, Tamihere, Lord, and Henry discussed issues such as infrastructure, public transport, climate change, parking, and inequality, among other topics. The last debate was on 1 October. Candidate Phil Goff compared the campaign to the previous one saying: \"It's a lot different from last time, we had a lot of meetings last time, it's been a more aggressive campaign from his [John Tamihere's] side.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287463-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Auckland mayoral election, Policies and campaigning\nCandidate John Tamihere faced controversy for using the term \"Sieg Heil\" during a debate. After Goff stated \"We won't put up with the sort of nonsense that we get from racists coming into this country to tell us that multiculturalism doesn't work,\" Tamihere responded, \"I say sieg heil to that.\" After the debate, Tamihere initially denied using the term, then stated his comments were a criticism of Goff's actions around a decision to bar controversial Canadian speakers Stefan Molyneux and Lauren Southern from using an Auckland Council venue in 2018, calling Goff \"a dictator\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287463-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Auckland mayoral election, Policies and campaigning\nTamihere made a complaint over three social media posts posted by Phil Goff, but the complaints were rejected by the Advertising Standards Authority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287463-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Auckland mayoral election, Policies and campaigning\nSome voting booklets contained two incorrect photographs, including showing mayoral candidate Tricia Cheel as a man.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287463-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Auckland mayoral election, Turnout\nTurnout was expected to be lower than in previous elections. Initial counts, while voting was still open, showed turnout to be lower compared with the same time in the 2016 election. The final turnout for Auckland was predicted to be around 35%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287464-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Audi Cup\nThe 2019 Audi Cup was the sixth 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 featured the hosts Bayern Munich, Spanish side Real Madrid, English side Tottenham Hotspur, and Turkish side Fenerbah\u00e7e.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287464-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Audi Cup\nThis was Tottenham's second participation in the tournament since 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287464-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Audi Cup\nThe competition was won by Tottenham Hotspur, who defeated hosts Bayern Munich in the final 6\u20135 on penalties after a 2\u20132 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287464-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Audi Cup, Competition format\nThe competition had the format of a regular knockout competition. The winners of each of the two matches on the first day competed against each other for the Audi Cup, while the two losing sides played in a third-place match. The trophy was contested over two days, with each day seeing two matches played back-to-back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287465-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Aurora Games\nThe 2019 Aurora Games was a female international multi-sport event that was held between 20\u00a0and 25\u00a0August 2019 in Albany, New York, United States of America. Planned to be a biennial event, the Times Union Center served as host venue. Albany shall also serve as host city for the 2021 and 2023 Aurora Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287465-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Aurora Games\nIn addition, the Aurora Games featured musical performances, food tastings, sports clinics, autograph sessions and the \u201cConversations with Champions\u201d series of seminars. The keynote speaker for the Aurora Games was Judge Rosemarie Aquilina, who presided over the case of the disgraced USA Gymnastics doctor Larry Nassar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287465-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Aurora Games, The Games, Sports\nThe 2019 Aurora Games programme featured seven sports. Team and individual competitions consisted of athletes from 15 countries participating as part of All-star teams known as Team Americas and Team World. Said teams were led by honorary captains Jackie Joyner Kersee and Nadia Comaneci with the teams competing for the Babe Didrikson Zaharias Trophy. Team Americas captured the first Trophy, defeating Team World in six of the seven events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 36], "content_span": [37, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287465-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Aurora Games, Athlete Advisory Committee\nThe Athlete Advisory Committee is chaired by Donna de Varona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 45], "content_span": [46, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287465-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Aurora Games, Broadcasting\nDuring May 2019, ESPN announced that it was to serve as the exclusive broadcast home for the inaugural Aurora Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287466-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Aurora, Colorado mayoral election\nThe 2019 Aurora, Colorado mayoral election was held on November 5, 2019 to elect the mayor of Aurora, Colorado. It saw the election of Mike Coffman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287466-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Aurora, Colorado mayoral election\nIncumbent mayor Bob LeGare, who assumed the office following the death in office of Steve Hogan, did not seek reelection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287466-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Aurora, Colorado mayoral election, General election\nThe results were not immediately clear on election night, as more than 1,000 ballots had unsettled signature discrepancies. This was enough that Coffman's apparent margin of victory over Montgomery could be overcome. The counting of ballots ended on November 14, and Montgomery formally conceded on November 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 56], "content_span": [57, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287467-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 AusTiger International Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 AusTiger International Basketball Tournament, also known as the 2019 Austiger Cup, is a men's international basketball competition between national teams, scheduled to be held from 23\u201327 August 2019 in Shenyang, China. The tournament is organized prior to the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup hosted by China. The competition is played under FIBA rules as a round-robin tournament. National teams of France, Italy, New Zealand, and Serbia will play at the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287468-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Austin Bold FC season\nThe 2019 Austin Bold FC season is the inaugural season for Austin Bold FC in the USL Championship, the second-tier professional soccer league in the United States and Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287468-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Austin Bold FC season, Competitions, USL Championship, Match results\nThe 2019 USL Championship season schedule for the club was announced on December 19, 2018. Win\u00a0\u00a0Draw\u00a0\u00a0Loss\u00a0\u00a0Upcoming fixtureJuly 3", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 73], "content_span": [74, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287468-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Austin Bold FC season, Competitions, U.S. Open Cup\nAs a member of the USL Championship, Austin Bold FC will enter the tournament in the Second Round, to be played May 14-15, 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287469-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Austin Peay Governors football team\nThe 2019 Austin Peay Governors football team represents Austin Peay State University during the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Governors, led by first-year head coach Mark Hudspeth, play their home games at Fortera Stadium as members of the Ohio Valley Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287469-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Austin Peay Governors football team, Previous season\nThe Governors finished the 2018 season 5\u20136, 3\u20135 in OVC play to finish in a tie for sixth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287469-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Austin Peay Governors football team, Preseason, Preseason coaches' poll\nThe OVC released their preseason coaches' poll on July 22, 2019. The Governors were picked to finish in fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 76], "content_span": [77, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287469-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Austin Peay Governors football team, Preseason, Preseason All-OVC team\nThe Governors had two players at two positions selected to the preseason all-OVC team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 75], "content_span": [76, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287469-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Austin Peay Governors football team, FCS Playoffs\nThe Governors, even though the team shared the OVC title, APSU held the tiebreaker due to defeating SEMO in the regular season therefore receiving the automatic bid for the postseason tournament, with a first-round pairing against Furman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 54], "content_span": [55, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287470-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australia Day Honours\nThe Australia Day Honours 2019 are appointments to various orders and honours to recognise and reward good works by Australian citizens. The list was announced on 26 January 2019 by the Governor General of Australia, Sir Peter Cosgrove.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287470-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australia Day Honours\nThe Australia Day Honours are the first of the two major annual honours lists, the first announced to coincide with Australia Day (26 January), with the other being the Queen's Birthday Honours, which are announced on the second Monday in June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287471-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australia national soccer team season\nThis page summarises the Australia men's national soccer team fixtures and results in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287471-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australia national soccer team season, Summary\nAustralia participated as title-holders in the 2019 AFC Asian Cup held in United Arab Emirates in January. The draw took place in Dubai on 4 May 2018. Australia qualified for the tournament after topping the group in the second round of the World Cup qualification campaign. Australia was hit by injuries ahead of the Cup with upcoming teenager Daniel Arzani and starting midfielder Aaron Mooy injured before the cup, and recently-debuted Scot-born Martin Boyle being injured in the final friendly match against Oman before the cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287471-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Australia national soccer team season, Summary\nAustralia's Asian Cup title defence commenced against Jordan and despite a pretence of favouritism due to being defending champions, Australia lost 1\u20130 after a headed goal from Jordan's Anas Bani Yaseen in the 26th minute. In their second match of the group, Australia bounced back from the loss, beating Palestine 3\u20130, with Jamie Maclaren scoring his first goal for Australia and Awer Mabil and Apostolos Giannou scoring too. Australia advanced from the group stage after beating Syria 3\u20132, with Tom Rogic scoring in injury time, following goals by Mabil and Chris Ikonomidis which put Australia in the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287471-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Australia national soccer team season, Summary\nAfter the first two Australian goals, Syria equalized with goals by Omar Kharbin and Omar Al Somah. In the round of 16 match against Uzbekistan, neither team scored after 90 minutes of regulation time and after 30 minutes of extra-time. In the penalty shootout following the game, Australia progressed with a 4\u20132 score, after Mathew Ryan saved 2 penalties. In the quarter-final match against hosts United Arab Emirates, Australia were knocked-out of the Asian Cup after losing 1\u20130 with Ali Mabkhout scoring following a defensive error by Milos Degenek.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287471-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Australia national soccer team season, Summary\nOn 7 June 2019, Australia played an inexperienced side against South Korea in a friendly match in Busan. South Korea won 1\u20130 with Hwang Ui-jo scoring the only goal in the 76th minute. Australia had 4 players debuting for the senior national team, with Andrew Redmayne and Brandon O'Neill starting while Brandon Borrello and Ryan Williams were substituted on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287471-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Australia national soccer team season, Summary\nIn September 2019, Australia commenced the qualification process for the 2022 FIFA World Cup. Australia started in the second round of AFC qualification which doubles as the second round of qualifiers for the 2023 AFC Asian Cup. The draw for the second round was held on 17 July 2019 at AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Australia were placed in pot 1 and were drawn against Jordan, Kuwait, Chinese Taipei and Nepal. Australia started the qualification process with a 3\u20130 away win over Kuwait, with stand-in skipper Mathew Leckie scoring a brace and Mooy scoring the third goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287471-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Australia national soccer team season, Summary\nA month later, in their first home match of the qualification process, Australia beat Nepal 5\u20130, with Maclaren scoring a hat-trick and Scottish-born debutant Harry Souttar scoring a brace. 5 days later, Australia travelled to Taiwan and beat Chinese Taipei 7\u20131, with Adam Taggart, and Jackson Irvine scoring braces while Souttar and Maclaren scored their fourth international goals in a week. Australia finished the year in Jordan, where they had not previously beaten the hosts. An early Adam Taggart goal was the only one of the match to leave Australia with a perfect record after 4 matches of World Cup qualifying and 4 to play in the first half of 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287471-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Australia national soccer team season, Player statistics\nCorrect as of 14 November 2019 (v. \u00a0Jordan). Numbers are listed by player's number in Asian Cup or last match played", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 61], "content_span": [62, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287472-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Formula 3 Championship\nThe 2019 Australian Formula 3 Championship was an Australian open-wheel racing series for FIA Formula 3 cars constructed and conforming to the regulations before and including 2011. The series began on 10 March 2019 at Winton Motor Raceway and concluded on 3 November 2019 at Queensland Raceway. Organized by Formula Three Management Pty Ltd, it was the 21st consecutive year of Australian Formula 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287472-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Formula 3 Championship\nThe championship was won by John Magro, winner of all the races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287472-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Formula 3 Championship, Teams and drivers\nThe following teams and drivers contested the 2019 Australian Formula 3 Championship. All teams and drivers are Australian-registered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287472-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Formula 3 Championship, Calendar & race results\nThe series was contested over six rounds. All rounds were held in Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287473-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Formula 4 Championship\nThe 2019 CAMS Australian Formula 4 Championship (initially known for sponsorship purposes as the CAMS Jayco Australian Formula 4 Championship and later as the CAMS Payce Australian Formula 4 Championship) was the fifth and final Australian Formula 4 Championship, a motor racing competition for open-wheel racing cars complying with Formula 4 regulations, which were created by the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) for entry-level open-wheel championships. Teams and drivers competed in eighteen races at four venues, starting on 14 March and ending on 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287473-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Formula 4 Championship, Calendar\nAll rounds were held in Australia. For the first time the series supported the Formula 1 Australian Grand Prix. The remaining events supported the Shannons Nationals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287473-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Formula 4 Championship, Championship standings\nBold\u00a0\u2013 PoleItalics\u00a0\u2013 Fastest lap\u2020\u00a0\u2014 Did not finish, but classified", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287474-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian GT Championship\nThe 2019 Australian GT Championship is the 23rd running of the Australian GT Championship, a CAMS-sanctioned Australian motor racing championship open to FIA GT3 cars, FIA GT4 cars and similar cars as approved for the championship. The championship will commence on 14 March 2018 at the Melbourne Grand Prix Circuit and conclude on 10 November at Sandown Raceway. The championship will be contested over seven rounds. Each race, with the exception of the Australian Grand Prix round, will include at least one compulsory timed pit stop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287475-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Grand Prix\nThe 2019 Australian Grand Prix (formally known as the Formula 1 Rolex Australian Grand Prix 2019) was a Formula One motor race that was held on 17 March 2019 in Melbourne, Victoria. The race was contested at the Melbourne Grand Prix Circuit and was the first round of the 2019 FIA Formula One World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287475-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 Australian Grand Prix\nThe race marked the 84th race in the combined history of the Australian Grand Prix \u2013 which dates back to the 100 Miles Road Race of 1928 \u2013 the 24th time the event was held at the Albert Park circuit and the 35th time the Australian Grand Prix had been a part of the Formula One World Championship. This was the last Grand Prix held on this configuration of the Albert Park Circuit that had been in use since 1996 with the 2020 and 2021 events being cancelled and the 2022 event being run on an adjusted layout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287475-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Grand Prix\nLewis Hamilton entered the round as the defending World Drivers' Champion and his team, Mercedes, are the defending World Constructors' Champions. Hamilton got pole position for the race equalling the record for most poles at one Grand Prix (8), but it was his Mercedes team mate Valtteri Bottas who won the Grand Prix from second on the grid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287475-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Grand Prix, Background\nThe Australian Grand Prix was officially confirmed as the first of twenty-one races of the 2019 Formula One World Championship at an FIA World Motor Sport Council meeting in Paris in December 2018. The race took place at the fifteen-turn, 5.303\u00a0km (3.295\u00a0mi) Melbourne Grand Prix Circuit in Melbourne, Victoria on 17 March 2019. Melbourne's Federation Square hosted a season launch event, the first of its kind for the sport, in the week before the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287475-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Grand Prix, Background\nRace Director Charlie Whiting died suddenly in the week before the race, so Deputy Race Director Michael Masi was named as Whiting's temporary successor. Local officials were appointed to fill Whiting's additional roles until a long-term appointment could be made ahead of the Bahrain Grand Prix. Since then, Masi remained the Race Director.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287475-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Grand Prix, Background, Entrants\nTwenty drivers representing ten teams entered the race. Alfa Romeo Racing made their return to the sport, replacing the Sauber F1 Team as part of a sponsorship deal that started in 2018. Racing Point also made their d\u00e9but as an independent constructor, having acquired the assets of Sahara Force India team and having competed under the Force India name in 2018. Alexander Albon, Lando Norris and George Russell all made their competitive d\u00e9buts. Meanwhile Antonio Giovinazzi, Robert Kubica and Daniil Kvyat all returned to the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287475-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Grand Prix, Background, Entrants\nMission Winnow, the title sponsor of Ferrari, was banned from the race as it did not comply with local laws governing tobacco sponsorship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287475-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Grand Prix, Background, Tyres\nTyre supplier Pirelli provided teams with an intermediate range of tyres for the race. Under rules introduced in 2019, Pirelli changed the designations of their tyres to rate the hardness of the compounds, with \"C1\" being the hardest and \"C5\" the softest. The colour-coding system used in previous years was simplified so that the white-coloured tyre wall represents the hardest compound available at any Grand Prix, a yellow tyre wall the medium compound and the red tyre wall the softest tyre. Pirelli nominated the C2 tyre as the white-banded hard compound, C3 as the yellow-banded medium and C4 as the red-banded soft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287475-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Grand Prix, Background, Points system change\nThe race saw the introduction of a change to the points system. The system in use since 2010 will be retained, but drivers who set the fastest lap could be awarded a bonus point provided that they finish the race inside the top ten. The bonus point is also awarded to the constructor of the driver that set the fastest lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287475-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Grand Prix, Practice\nLewis Hamilton was fastest in all three practice sessions. The sessions ran uninterrupted apart from an incident that saw Alexander Albon spinning out at turn 2 and hitting the wall during the first practice session. Albon was able to return to the pits for repairs. In the third practice session McLaren released Lando Norris into the path of Robert Kubica which resulted in the McLaren team receiving a fine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287475-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Grand Prix, Qualifying\nThe first qualifying session passed without incident until the final couple of minutes when Robert Kubica hit the wall coming out of turn 10 giving him a puncture, he later attributed this to a sudden increase in grip. The drivers knocked out in Q1 and finishing qualifying in sixteenth to twentieth respectively were Lance Stroll, Pierre Gasly, Carlos Sainz, George Russell and Robert Kubica with Charles Leclerc setting the fastest lap time of the session. Gasly being knocked out came as a particular surprise and put his early exit down to unexpected track evolution. Sainz was also disappointed with his early exit from qualifying, especially considering his team mate qualified in eighth, Sainz attributed his early exit to having to slow down after Kubica got a puncture in front of him forcing him to slow down on his qualifying lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 880]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287475-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Grand Prix, Qualifying\nThe second qualifying session passed without incident and resulted with Nico H\u00fclkenberg, Daniel Ricciardo, Alexander Albon, Antonio Giovinazzi and Daniil Kvyat being knocked out and finishing qualifying ranked eleventh to fifteenth respectively with Lewis Hamilton setting a qualifying lap record to end the session fastest. The surprises came from the two Renaults of Ricciardo and H\u00fclkenberg being knocked out after being considered as the fourth fastest team following pre season testing and from Lando Norris getting in to the top ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287475-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Grand Prix, Qualifying\nFor the third qualifying session all of the teams were able to have two attempts to set the fastest time, after the first attempt it was Valtteri Bottas who was leading having beaten the qualifying lap record which Hamilton had set in Q2, Bottas was followed by Hamilton and Sebastian Vettel. During the second attempt in Q3 Hamilton improved his time by half a second to beat Bottas's lap record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287475-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Australian Grand Prix, Qualifying\nAs no one else improved their time sufficiently to beat any of top three it was Lewis Hamilton who took pole position followed by Valtteri Bottas and Sebastian Vettel completing the top three. The top ten was completed by Max Verstappen, Charles Leclerc, Romain Grosjean, Kevin Magnussen, Lando Norris, Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and Sergio P\u00e9rez. In his post qualifying interview Leclerc confessed that he wasn't happy with his performance in saying that he thought he was able to get into the top three but was unable to due to a untidy lap. Meanwhile Haas said they were delighted with their performance getting their cars into sixth and seventh positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287475-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Grand Prix, Race\nValtteri Bottas started the race well from second place, and had the lead going into turn one. Further back, Daniel Ricciardo was contesting a position with Sergio P\u00e9rez, in which Ricciardo had to drive on the grass on the right side of the track to avoid P\u00e9rez, however Ricciardo drove over a sunken bit of tarmac causing his front wing to fall apart, spilling debris around that part of the track and causing him to drop to last as he drove round with no front wing before pitting for a replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287475-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 Australian Grand Prix, Race\nMax Verstappen was passed by Charles Leclerc who then proceeded to battle his teammate Sebastian Vettel, Vettel kept Leclerc at bay in 5th and Leclerc was reovertaken by Verstappen. Robert Kubica also came into the pits on lap 1 after losing his front wing at the start following contact with Pierre Gasly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287475-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Grand Prix, Race\nOn lap 9, Carlos Sainz pulled over in his McLaren at the entrance to the pits, with a large plume of smoke emerging from the rear of his car, which was followed by an onboard fire. Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen pitted on lap 13 whilst Pierre Gasly struggled to make progress from P17, moving up only to P12 despite being in a significantly faster car than those in front of him. Nico H\u00fclkenberg and P\u00e9rez then pulled into the pits in search of an undercut, followed by Vettel who put on the medium tyres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287475-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 Australian Grand Prix, Race\nLewis Hamilton pitted a lap later onto the same tyre compound, and he emerged ahead of Vettel. Romain Grosjean then pitted but an issue on the front left tyre caused him to lose three positions during his pit stop. Antonio Giovinazzi went wide on the approach to turn 13, allowing Grosjean to pass through. Bottas, the race leader, made his pit stop on lap 23, Verstappen followed suit three laps later and Leclerc pitted from second place on lap 29. Daniel Ricciardo retired as a precaution following the lap 1 incident. Verstappen passed Vettel on lap 31.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287475-0013-0002", "contents": "2019 Australian Grand Prix, Race\nGrosjean pulled over on to the run off area on the penultimate corner, after his front left wheel came loose. Daniil Kvyat went wide trying to pass Lance Stroll at turn 3 on lap 38. Bottas retook the fastest lap and won the Grand Prix by over 20 seconds to his teammate Hamilton. They were followed by Verstappen in third and the two Ferrari cars trailing in fourth and fifth. Bottas became the first driver to win a bonus point for the fastest lap of the race since Maurice Trintignant at the 1959 United States Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287476-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian International Basketball series\nThe 2019 Australian International Basketball series, was a men's international basketball competition between national teams, scheduled to be held from 23\u201327 August 2019 in various venues in Australia. The tournament is organized prior to the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup hosted by China. The competition is played under FIBA rules. National teams of Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and United States played at the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287477-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Labor Party (New South Wales Branch) leadership election\nAn election for the leadership of the New South Wales branch of the Australian Labor Party was held between 7 and 29 June 2019. The election was triggered by the resignation of Leader Michael Daley on 25 March 2019. The election was a combined vote by the party membership and the Labor members of the Parliament of New South Wales, with each component weighted equally. The party members were sent their ballots on 7 June and had until 21 June to return them, while the parliamentary caucus met on 29 June to cast their votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [72, 72], "content_span": [73, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287477-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Labor Party (New South Wales Branch) leadership election\nOn 29 June, Jodi McKay was announced as the victor of the contest, winning 60.5% of the combined vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [72, 72], "content_span": [73, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287477-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Labor Party (New South Wales Branch) leadership election, Background\nFollowing Labor's loss in the 2019 state election, then-leader Michael Daley resigned under pressure from the party caucus after initially declaring he would remain as head of the party and leader of the opposition. This triggered a leadership election to be held at an undetermined future date. Daley initially declared his intention to nominate for the leadership in the election, but on 26 March walked back on this statement. The contest was scheduled for after the 2019 federal election to avoid conflicting with Labor's federal campaign. Deputy leader Penny Sharpe served as interim leader after Daley's resignation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [74, 84], "content_span": [85, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287477-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Labor Party (New South Wales Branch) leadership election, Campaign\nOn 23 May, Chris Minns announced he would contest the leadership. The following day, Jodi McKay announced she would also contest the leadership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [74, 82], "content_span": [83, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287477-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Labor Party (New South Wales Branch) leadership election, Campaign\nA leadership debate was held on 3 June between the two candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [74, 82], "content_span": [83, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287478-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Labor Party leadership election\nA leadership election was held in May 2019 to determine the successor to Bill Shorten as leader of the Australian Labor Party and Leader of the Opposition. Shorten announced his pending resignation on 18 May, following Labor's surprise defeat in the 2019 federal election. The leadership was confirmed unopposed; Anthony Albanese was elected as Leader, with Richard Marles elected Deputy Leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287478-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Labor Party leadership election\nThe day after the election, Albanese, a member of the party's left-faction, announced his candidacy for the leadership. He had run for the role in the party's previous leadership election in 2013 though was defeated by Shorten. On 21 May Chris Bowen announced he would also contest the ballot; however the next day he announced his withdrawal, citing lack of support among the party membership. Several other Labor MPs such as Tanya Plibersek and Jim Chalmers considered nominating for the leadership, though decided not to stand. Albanese was the only person to have declared his candidacy at the time when nominations closed on 27 May 2019. Consequently, he was formally appointed to the role when the Labor Party caucus met later on 30 May; at which point Shorten's leadership expired and Albanese's term commenced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 866]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287478-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Labor Party leadership election, Process\nUnder party rules implemented by then-Prime Minister Kevin Rudd after the June 2013 leadership spill, candidates had one week after the formal declaration to nominate themselves for the election. In cases where the election is held as a result of vacancy, candidates were required to receive the support of 20% of the federal Labor caucus to be eligible for nomination. If two or more candidates are successfully nominated, ballot papers are issued to party members who have two weeks to return them, at which point Labor MPs and Senators cast their votes for the position. According to the party's rules the two voting blocs are weighted equally, with the parliamentary caucus and the party members each representing 50%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 56], "content_span": [57, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287478-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Labor Party leadership election, Process\nAs Albanese was the only candidate to have declared when nominations closed at 10:00am on Monday, 27 May, he was formally elected to the leadership alongside deputy leader Richard Marles later that week when the party caucus met to confirm the new Shadow Ministry. Victorian MP Clare O'Neil considered running for the deputy leadership in competition with Marles, though later announced she would not run for the position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 56], "content_span": [57, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287479-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open\nThe 2019 Australian Open was a Grand Slam tennis tournament that took place at Melbourne Park from 14 to 27 January 2019. It was the 107th edition of the Australian Open, the 51st in the Open Era, and the first Grand Slam of the year. The tournament consisted of events for professional players in singles, doubles and mixed doubles. Junior and wheelchair players competed in singles and doubles tournaments. The 2019 Australian Open was the first Australian Open to feature final set tie-breaks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287479-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open\nRoger Federer and Caroline Wozniacki were the defending men's and women's singles champions, but were unsuccessful in their respective title defenses; Federer lost to Stefanos Tsitsipas in the fourth round and Wozniacki lost to Maria Sharapova in the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287479-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open\nNovak Djokovic of Serbia won the men's singles title at the 2019 Australian Open, defeating Rafael Nadal of Spain in straight sets in the men's final. Naomi Osaka of Japan defeated Petra Kvitov\u00e1 of the Czech Republic in three sets to win the women's singles title. The tournament had a record attendance of 796,435 spectators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287479-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open, Tournament\nThe 2019 Australian Open was the 107th edition of the Australian Open. The tournament was run by the International Tennis Federation (ITF) and was part of the 2019 ATP Tour and the 2019 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 the mixed doubles events. There were singles and doubles events for both boys and girls (players under 18), which are part of the Grade A category of tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287479-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Australian Open, Tournament\nThere were also singles, doubles and quad 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 hard courts at Melbourne Park, including three main show courts: Rod Laver Arena, Melbourne Arena and Margaret Court Arena. As in previous years, the tournament's main sponsor was Kia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287479-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open, Tournament\nFinal set tie-breaks were introduced for all match formats for the first time at the 2019 Australian Open. If a match reached 6\u20136 in the final set, the first player to score 10 points and be leading by at least 2 points won the match. Katie Boulter and Ekaterina Makarova were the first players in a main draw to compete in the new tie-break format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287479-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open, Tournament\nFor the first time in the men's singles competition, a 10-minute break due to heat was allowed after the third set when the Australian Open Heat Stress Scale reached 4.0 or higher. Hawkeye line-calling technology was extended to be included on all courts. A shot clock was introduced for the first time into the main draw, having been limited to qualifying only in 2018. Women gained parity in the qualifying competition as the draw was increased to 128 players in line with the men's draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287479-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open, Tournament\nIn a five-year deal starting at the 2019 tournament, Dunlop took over from Wilson as the suppliers of the tennis balls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287479-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open, Tournament\nDomestically, this was the first Australian Open to be broadcast by the Nine Network, after they secured the rights to televise the tournament from 2019 until 2024. Initially, the broadcast deal was to have started from 2020, however, the Seven Network, which had previously televised the event between 1973 and 2018, agreed to relinquish the rights to the 2019 tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287479-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open, Point and prize money distribution, Point distribution\nBelow is a series of tables for each of the competitions showing the ranking points offered for each event:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 76], "content_span": [77, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287479-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open, Point and prize money distribution, Prize money\nThe Australian Open total prize money for 2019 was increased by 14% to a tournament record A$62,500,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 69], "content_span": [70, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287479-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open, Point and prize money distribution, Prize money\n1Qualifiers prize money was also the Round of 128 prize money. *per team", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 69], "content_span": [70, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287479-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open, Singles seeds\nThe following are the seeded players. Seedings are based on ATP and WTA rankings on 7 January 2019, while ranking and points before are as of 14 January 2019. Points after are as of 28 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287479-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open, Singles seeds, Men's singles\n\u2020 The player did not qualify for the tournament in 2018. Accordingly, points for his 18th best result are deducted instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287479-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open, Singles seeds, Men's singles\nThe following players would have been seeded, but they withdrew from the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287479-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open, Protected ranking\nThe following players have been accepted directly into the main draw using a protected ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287479-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open, Withdrawals\nThe following players were accepted directly into the main tournament, but withdrew due to injuries or other reasons", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287480-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open (badminton)\nThe 2019 Australian Open (officially known as the Crown Group Australian Open 2019 for sponsorship reasons) was a badminton tournament which took place at Quaycentre in Sydney, Australia, from 4 to 9 June 2019 and had a total purse of $150,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287480-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open (badminton), Tournament\nThe 2019 Australian Open was the twelfth tournament of the 2019 BWF World Tour and was also a part of the Australian Open championships which has been held since 1975. This tournament was organized by the Badminton Australia and sanctioned by the BWF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287480-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open (badminton), Tournament, Venue\nThis international tournament was held at Quaycentre in Sydney, Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287480-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open (badminton), Tournament, Point distribution\nBelow is the point distribution table for each phase of the tournament based on the BWF points system for the BWF World Tour Super 300 event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287480-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open (badminton), Tournament, Prize money\nThe total prize money for this tournament was US$150,000. Distribution of prize money was in accordance with BWF regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287480-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open (badminton), Men's singles, Wild card\nBadminton Australia awarded a wild card entry to Daniel Fan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287480-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open (badminton), Women's singles, Wild card\nBadminton Australia awarded a wild card entry to Wendy Chen Hsuan-yu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287480-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open (badminton), Men's doubles, Wild card\nBadminton Australia awarded a wild card entry to Simon Leung / Mitchell Wheller.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287480-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open (badminton), Mixed doubles, Wild card\nBadminton Australia awarded a wild card entry to Simon Leung / Gronya Somerville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287481-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Boys' Doubles\nJon\u00e1\u0161 Forejtek and Dalibor Svr\u010dina won the Boys' Doubles tennis title at the 2019 Australian Open, defeating Cannon Kingsley and Emilio Nava in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20135), 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287481-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Boys' Doubles\nHugo Gaston and Cl\u00e9ment Tabur were the defending champions, but both players were no longer eligible to participate in junior tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287482-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Boys' Singles\nLorenzo Musetti won the Boys' Singles tennis title at the 2019 Australian Open, defeating Emilio Nava in the final, 4\u20136, 6\u20132, 7\u20136(14\u201312).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287482-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Boys' Singles\nSebastian Korda was the defending champion but was no longer eligible to participate in junior tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287482-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Boys' Singles, Seeds\nClick on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287482-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Boys' Singles, Qualifying\nThis article displays the qualifying draw for Boys' singles at the 2019 Australian Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287483-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries\nThe 2019 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-00287483-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 4 (17 January)\nHistory was created when Garbi\u00f1e Muguruza and Johanna Konta played out a three-set thriller which ended at 3.12 am. It was the latest start of a match in the history of the Australian Open, with play starting at 12.30 am after Alexander Zverev's marathon win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287484-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Girls' Doubles\nNatsumi Kawaguchi and Adrienn Nagy won the Girls' Doubles tennis title at the 2019 Australian Open, defeating Chloe Beck and Emma Navarro in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287484-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Girls' Doubles\nLiang En-shuo and Wang Xinyu were the defending champions. However, Liang was no longer eligible to participate in junior tournaments, and Wang chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287485-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Girls' Singles\nClara Tauson won the Girls' Singles tennis title at the 2019 Australian Open, defeating Leylah Fernandez in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287485-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Girls' Singles\nLiang En-shuo was the defending champion but was no longer eligible to participate in junior tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287485-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Girls' Singles, Seeds\nClick on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287486-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Main Draw Wildcard Entries\nThe 2019 Australian Open Wildcard Playoffs and Entries are a group of events and internal selections to choose the eight men and eight women singles wildcard entries for the 2019 Australian Open, as well as seven male and seven female doubles teams plus eight mixed-doubles teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287486-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Main Draw Wildcard Entries, American Wildcard Challenge\nThe USTA awarded a wildcard to the man and woman that earned the most ranking points across a group of three ATP/Challenger hardcourt events in the October and November 2018. For the men, the events included ATP Paris, $75K Canberra, $75K Charlottesville, $75K+H Shenzhen, \u20ac106K+H Bratislava, \u20ac85K+H Mouilleron-le-Captif, $150K+H Bangalore, $150K+H Houston, $75K Champaign and $50K+H Kobe events. For the women, the events included $80K Macon, $80K Tyler and $80K Las Vegas and $150K+H Houston. For men, only the best two results from the three weeks of events were taken into account. While for women only the best three results from the four weeks of events were taken into account. The winners of the wildcard challenge were Jack Sock and Whitney Osuigwe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 837]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287486-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Main Draw Wildcard Entries, Australian Women's Wildcard Challenge\nTennis Australia awarded a singles wildcard and a doubles wildcard to the Australian women that earned the most ranking points across a group of two ITF hardcourt events in the October and November 2018. The events included the 2018 Bendigo Women's International and the 2018 Canberra Tennis International. The winner of the wildcards were Priscilla Hon, and Ellen Perez and Arina Rodionova.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 88], "content_span": [89, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287486-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Main Draw Wildcard Entries, Asia-Pacific Wildcard Playoff\nThe Asia-Pacific Australian Open Wildcard Play-off featured 16-players in the men's and women's singles draws and took place from 26 November to 2 December 2018 at Hengqin International Tennis Centre in Zhuhai, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 80], "content_span": [81, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287486-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Main Draw Wildcard Entries, Australian Wildcard Playoff\nThe December Showdown is held annually for two weeks in December. The Showdown includes age championships for 12/u, 14/u, 16/u and 18/u age categories. It also hosts the 2019 Australian Wildcard Playoff which will be held from 10 to 16 December 2018 at Melbourne Park, offering a main draw singles wildcard for men and women and a main draw women's doubles wildcard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287487-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nPierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Mahut won the Men's Doubles tennis title at the 2019 Australian Open, defeating Henri Kontinen and John Peers in the final, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20131). They are the first French players to achieve the Career Grand Slam as well as only the 8th Men's Doubles pair to achieve this feat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287487-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nOliver Marach and Mate Pavi\u0107 were the defending champions, but lost to M\u00e1ximo Gonz\u00e1lez and Nicol\u00e1s Jarry in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287487-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Doubles, Seeds\nClick on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287488-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Legends' Doubles\nMansour Bahrami and Mark Philippoussis won the title, defeating Jonas Bj\u00f6rkman and Thomas Johansson in the final, 4\u20133(5\u20133), 4\u20132. The Men's Legends' Doubles was competed in the 2019 Australian Open in Melbourne Park. \"Doubles tennis can be enjoyed by players of all levels and of all ages\", from children beginning tennis lessons through to the level of the Australian Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287489-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nNovak Djokovic defeated Rafael Nadal in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20132, 6\u20133 to win the Men's Singles tennis title at the 2019 Australian Open. It was Djokovic's record-breaking seventh Australian Open title and 15th major title overall, surpassing Pete Sampras for third place on the all-time list, behind Roger Federer and Nadal. Djokovic and Nadal were also in contention for the ATP no. 1 singles ranking; Djokovic retained the top ranking by reaching the fourth round. Nadal attempted to become the first man in the Open Era to achieve a double career Grand Slam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287489-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nFederer was the two-time defending champion, and was also seeking a record-breaking seventh Australian Open title, but he lost in the fourth round to Stefanos Tsitsipas. Federer's loss meant that he would drop out of the top 5 in the ATP Rankings for the first time since April 2017. Tsitsipas became the first Greek player to reach the semifinals at a major singles tournament, after becoming the first man representing Greece to win a main draw singles match at the Australian Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287489-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nThis was the first Australian Open since 1976 to feature a final set tie-break. Upon reaching 6\u20136 in the fifth set, a long tie-break is played where the winner is the first to both reach ten points and lead by two points. The first men's singles main draw match to feature the ten-point tiebreak was the first round match between J\u00e9r\u00e9my Chardy and Ugo Humbert.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287489-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nThis tournament was expected to be the last Australian Open appearance of five-time finalist Andy Murray, who lost to Roberto Bautista Agut in the first round in five sets. Murray had previously stated his intention to retire from the sport following the 2019 Wimbledon Championships. However, five months after an operation on his hip Murray returned to competitive tennis, initially playing doubles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287489-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Singles, Seeds\nClick on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287490-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Singles Qualifying\nThis article displays the qualifying draw for men's singles at the 2019 Australian Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287491-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Mixed Doubles\nBarbora Krej\u010d\u00edkov\u00e1 and Rajeev Ram won the Mixed Doubles tennis title at the 2019 Australian Open, defeating Astra Sharma and John-Patrick Smith in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20133), 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287491-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Mixed Doubles\nGabriela Dabrowski and Mate Pavi\u0107 were the defending champions, but lost in the quarterfinals to Mar\u00eda Jos\u00e9 Mart\u00ednez S\u00e1nchez and Neal Skupski.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287492-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Wheelchair Men's Doubles\nSt\u00e9phane Houdet and Nicolas Peifer were the defending champions, but Peifer chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287492-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Wheelchair Men's Doubles\nHoudet partnered alongside Ben Weekes, but they lost in the final to Joachim G\u00e9rard and Stefan Olsson, 6\u20133, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287493-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Wheelchair Men's Singles\nShingo Kunieda was the defending champion, but lost to Stefan Olsson in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287493-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Wheelchair Men's Singles\nGustavo Fern\u00e1ndez won the title, defeating Olsson in the final, 7\u20135, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287494-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Wheelchair Quad Doubles\nDylan Alcott and Heath Davidson were the defending champions, and successfully defended the title, defeating Andy Lapthorne and David Wagner in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20137(6\u20138), [12\u201310].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287495-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Wheelchair Quad Singles\nDylan Alcott was the four-time defending champion and successfully defended his title, defeating David Wagner in the final, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20132).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287496-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Wheelchair Women's Doubles\nMarjolein Buis and Yui Kamiji were the defending champions, but chose to participate with different partners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287496-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Wheelchair Women's Doubles\nKamiji partnered Giulia Capocci, but lost in the first round to Diede de Groot and Aniek van Koot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287496-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Wheelchair Women's Doubles\nBuis played alongside Sabine Ellerbrock, but lost to de Groot and van Koot in the final, 5\u20137, 7\u20136(7\u20134), [10\u20138].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287497-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Wheelchair Women's Singles\nDiede de Groot was the defending champion and successfully defended her title, defeating Yui Kamiji in the final, 6\u20130, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287498-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nSamantha Stosur and Zhang Shuai won the Women's Doubles tennis title at the 2019 Australian Open, defeating defending champions T\u00edmea Babos and Kristina Mladenovic in the final 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287498-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nKate\u0159ina Siniakov\u00e1 retained the WTA no. 1 doubles ranking after reaching the third round with Barbora Krej\u010d\u00edkov\u00e1. Barbora Str\u00fdcov\u00e1 was also in contention for the top ranking at the start of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287498-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Women's Doubles, Seeds\nClick on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287499-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nNaomi Osaka defeated Petra Kvitov\u00e1 7\u20136(7\u20132), 5\u20137, 6\u20134 in the final to win the Women's Singles tennis title at the 2019 Australian Open. By winning the tournament, Osaka took over the WTA no. 1 singles ranking from Simona Halep and also became the first player since Jennifer Capriati to win their first two Grand Slam titles in consecutive fashion. Eleven players had a theoretical chance of becoming no. 1 at the start of the tournament (ten if Halep played her first match). In addition to Kvitov\u00e1 and Osaka, Sloane Stephens, Karol\u00edna Pl\u00ed\u0161kov\u00e1, Angelique Kerber, Elina Svitolina, Kiki Bertens, Aryna Sabalenka and Daria Kasatkina were also in contention for the no. 1 ranking at the start of this tournament, but were eliminated from contention as the tournament progressed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 815]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287499-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nCaroline Wozniacki was the defending champion, but lost in the third round to Maria Sharapova.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287499-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nAmanda Anisimova became the first player born in the 21st century to advance to the fourth round of a Grand Slam singles tournament. Ashleigh Barty also became the first Australian to reach the quarterfinals since Jelena Dokic in the 2009 Australian Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287499-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nThis was the first Australian Open to feature a final set tiebreak. When the score in a final set reaches 6\u20136, the first player to reach 10 points and be leading by at least 2 points wins the set (and the match). Katie Boulter and Ekaterina Makarova became the first players to contest this tiebreak in the main draw, with Boulter emerging victorious. This was also the first Grand Slam main draw appearance of Poland's first Grand Slam singles champion Iga \u015awi\u0105tek. She lost to Camila Giorgi in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287499-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nFor the first time since 2009 Wimbledon, all of the top eight seeds reached the third round at a Grand Slam women's singles event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287499-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nClick on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287500-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Open \u2013 Women's Singles Qualifying\nThis article displays the qualifying draw for women's singles at the 2019 Australian Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287501-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Parliament infiltration plot\nIn late 2019, various media outlets around the world have reported on alleged efforts by the People's Republic of China to infiltrate the Parliament of Australia by \"recruiting a spy\" to run in a constituency during an election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287501-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Parliament infiltration plot, Alleged plot\nThe alleged plot was made public during the November 24 airing of 60 Minutes on Australia's Nine Network, citing sources with knowledge of the plot. It was suggested that Chinese spies offered $1 million to fund a man's campaign for the Division of Chisholm. The Division of Chisholm is noted to contain many voters of Chinese heritage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287501-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Parliament infiltration plot, Alleged plot\nIn 2018, the incident was reported by the man who was approached with the offer to the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO). Neither the Nine Network, which airs 60 Minutes, nor the ASIO have confirmed when the approach to Zhao took place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287501-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Parliament infiltration plot, Parties reportedly involved, Bo \"Nick\" Zhao\nThe target of the plot was reported to be Bo \"Nick\" Zhao, who once owned a number of car dealerships and lived in Glen Iris with a wife and daughter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 89], "content_span": [90, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287501-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Parliament infiltration plot, Parties reportedly involved, Bo \"Nick\" Zhao\nZhao's former business associates have described him as an ambitious man who got ahead of himself and wanted to make money quick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 89], "content_span": [90, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287501-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Parliament infiltration plot, Parties reportedly involved, Bo \"Nick\" Zhao\nAccording to court records, Zhao was charged with obtaining financial advantage by deception in 2017, due to accusations he obtained loans via fraudulent means in order to buy luxury vehicles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 89], "content_span": [90, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287501-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Parliament infiltration plot, Parties reportedly involved, Bo \"Nick\" Zhao\nZhao was in jail in October 2018, when preselection for the 2019 federal election was being held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 89], "content_span": [90, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287501-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Parliament infiltration plot, Parties reportedly involved, Bo \"Nick\" Zhao\nAdministrators began to pursue Zhao in 2019 over the collapse of a car dealership in Brighton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 89], "content_span": [90, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287501-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Parliament infiltration plot, Parties reportedly involved, Bo \"Nick\" Zhao\nBy early 2019, Zhao had a fallout with his wife over debts Zhao owed to Chinese investors that were described as \"shadowy\". Reports say Zhao owed millions to people who, over time, became increasingly angry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 89], "content_span": [90, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287501-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Parliament infiltration plot, Parties reportedly involved, Bo \"Nick\" Zhao\nIn March 2019, Zhao was found dead in a hotel room in the Mount Waverley area of Melbourne. The death happened just days prior to him intending to plead guilty in court to various fraud offenses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 89], "content_span": [90, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287501-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Parliament infiltration plot, Parties reportedly involved, Bo \"Nick\" Zhao\nZhao's death has prompted a coroner's inquiry into the incident. In September 2020, a coroner in Victoria ruled that Zhao died of suicide, having apparently overdosed on medication while under intense financial pressure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 89], "content_span": [90, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287501-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Parliament infiltration plot, Parties reportedly involved, Bo \"Nick\" Zhao, Involvement with the Liberal Party\nRecords kept by the Liberal party show Zhao as a party member in the Division of Chisholm from 2015 until his death. Andrew Hastie, a Liberal MP who chairs the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security , describe Zhao as a paid-up member of the Liberal Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 125], "content_span": [126, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287501-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Parliament infiltration plot, Parties reportedly involved, Bo \"Nick\" Zhao, Involvement with the Liberal Party\nSources familiar with Zhao's activities, however, describe him as a low-profile member of the local Liberal Party branch. They say Zhao attended at least one branch gathering with members of his immediate family before the 2016 Federal election, but did not otherwise agitate to become an MP himself. They say Zhao stopped attending party events in 2016 amidst personal problems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 125], "content_span": [126, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287501-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Parliament infiltration plot, Parties reportedly involved, Bo \"Nick\" Zhao, Involvement with the Liberal Party\nA senior Liberal Party member with knowledge of membership lists also said Zhao was not known to senior party members, by any measure. Scott Yung, a Chinese-Australian Liberal Party member, said he does not believe Zhao was ever \"active\" within the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 125], "content_span": [126, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287501-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Parliament infiltration plot, Parties reportedly involved, Brian Chen Chunsheng\nSome media reports have identified the person who approached Zhao as Melbourne businessperson Brian Chen Chunsheng.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 95], "content_span": [96, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287501-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Parliament infiltration plot, Parties reportedly involved, Brian Chen Chunsheng\nThe Age has reported that Chen is flagged as a suspected senior Chinese intelligence operative by various Western security sources, and that Chen has posed for pictures in People's Liberation Army military uniforms, in addition to posing as a journalist during certain international political summits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 95], "content_span": [96, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287501-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Parliament infiltration plot, Parties reportedly involved, Brian Chen Chunsheng\nChen is known to have made political donations to Australia's two major political parties, and his company is known to be promoting China's Belt and Road Initiative, leading to accusations he is using the Belt and Road Initiative as a cover to conduct intelligence operations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 95], "content_span": [96, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287501-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Parliament infiltration plot, Parties reportedly involved, Brian Chen Chunsheng\nChen himself has denied the allegations, claiming photos of him donning Chinese military uniforms were merely him borrowing a friend's military uniform to show off, and that he was given journalist accreditation by a media outlet owner in order for him to attend international political summits. Chen has also denied knowing Zhao, in addition to denying reports that he is involved in Chinese intelligence activities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 95], "content_span": [96, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287501-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Parliament infiltration plot, Parties reportedly involved, Brian Chen Chunsheng\nThere is no suggestion of Chen having any knowledge or involvement in Zhao's death. Chen has reportedly not returned to Australia since leaving the country in March of 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 95], "content_span": [96, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287501-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Parliament infiltration plot, Aftermath\nIn the 2019 Federal election, Gladys Liu was elected as a Liberal Party MP for the Division of Chisholm, beating out a Labor Party candidate of Taiwanese heritage in a surprise victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 55], "content_span": [56, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287501-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Parliament infiltration plot, Aftermath\nEven prior to details of the infiltration plot being made public, Liu was accused of being a member of the China Overseas Exchange Association, which belonged to the State Council of the People's Republic of China at the time of her membership. In addition, Liu has been accused of being an honorary chair of overseas Chinese trade and commerce bodies that are believed to be linked to the Chinese Communist Party's United Front Work Department. Reports on this incident has brought renewed attention to allegations against Liu, especially since at least two photos show Liu and Zhao at a meeting that was held in Liu's former home during Australia Day in 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 55], "content_span": [56, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287501-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Parliament infiltration plot, Aftermath\nLiu said she has \"no recollection\" of having met Zhao. There are no suggestions that Liu was involved in the infiltration plot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 55], "content_span": [56, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287501-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Parliament infiltration plot, Reactions, Australia\nASIO's Director-General, Mike Burgess, refused to comment on the matter in depth due to \"long-standing practice\", but did say the agency was previously aware of the incident, and there is an active investigation underway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287501-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Parliament infiltration plot, Reactions, Australia\nPrime Minister Scott Morrison described the allegations as \"deeply disturbing and troubling\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287501-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Parliament infiltration plot, Reactions, People's Republic of China\nMinistry of Foreign Affairs spokesperson Geng Shuang have decried the accusations as \"nothing but lies\", and accused Australia of \"a state of hysteria and extreme nervousness\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 83], "content_span": [84, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287501-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Parliament infiltration plot, Potential impact\nIt was noted that Zhao's legal and financial troubles would have made it almost impossible for him to be selected by the Liberals as a candidate in the first place, let alone win the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 62], "content_span": [63, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287501-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Parliament infiltration plot, Potential impact\nMonash University lecturer Sow Keat Tok said while the repercussions would have been huge if the allegations are true and Zhao was elected, it would still have taken Zhao years, if not decades, to get into the inner circle of the Australian decision-makers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 62], "content_span": [63, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287501-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Parliament infiltration plot, Potential impact\nAustralian Strategic Policy Institute analyst Alex Joske said it may be possible that any approach made on behalf of the Chinese Communist Party was not to target a particular election, but as part of a long-term strategy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 62], "content_span": [63, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287502-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Swimming Championships\nThe 2019 Australian Swimming Championships were held from 7 to 12 April 2019 at the South Australia Aquatic and Leisure Centre in Adelaide, South Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287502-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Swimming Championships\nFollowing Australia's performance at the 2016 Rio Olympics where 29 medals were won and finishing 10th on the medal tally, Swimming Australia announced in the February 2017 that the timing of the selection trails would be modified. Historically, the trails were held in April several months before the Olympics were held. This will be now changed to follow the American model where the trails are held six weeks before. The 2019 Australian World Swimming Trials will be held at the Brisbane Aquatics Centre in June 2019 and will be selection trails for the 2019 World Aquatics Championships in Gwangju, South Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287502-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Swimming Championships\nThis event doubled up as the national trials for the 2019 World Para Swimming Championships in London, the 2019 Summer Universiade in Naples, Italy and the 2019 FINA World Junior Swimming Championships in Budapest, Hungary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287502-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Swimming Championships\nThere was an increase in the number of events contested from 63 to 64 from the 2018 National Championships with addition of the mixed 4 \u00d7 100 m medley relay. This was due to the IOC announcing in June 2017 that this event as well as the men's 800 m freestyle and the women's 1500 m freestyle events will be added to the Olympic swimming program at the Tokyo 2020 Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287502-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Swimming Championships\nEmily Seebohm chose to miss this meet to participate in the inaugural FINA Champions Swim Series event in Guangzhou, China, while Thomas Fraser-Holmes was away competing at the Helsinki Swim Meet and Bergen Swim Festival. Mack Horton was forced out due to a shoulder injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287502-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Swimming Championships\nDuring night three of the championships, Cate Campbell on behalf of Swimming Australia paid tribute to Kenneth To who died a few weeks prior.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287502-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Swimming Championships\nDefending women's 200 metre backstroke champion Kaylee McKeown was disqualified during the heats of the event. She was permitted to swim a time trail where she stopped the clock at 2:08.56 well ahead of Minna Atherton's winning time of 2:11.18 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287502-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Swimming Championships\nThe legends relay was a mixed 4 \u00d7 50 m freestyle event swum on the penultimate night of the meet. The team were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287502-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Swimming Championships\nThe event was won by Team Bramham in a time of 1:47.14, followed by Team Schipper (1:49.72), Team Trickett (1:50.01) and Team Klim (1:52.54).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287502-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Swimming Championships, Medal winners, Mixed multiclass 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; MR \u2013 Meet record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 78], "content_span": [79, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287502-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Swimming Championships, Records broken\nDuring the 2019 Australian Swimming Championships the following records were set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287502-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Swimming Championships, World Para Swimming Championships team\nOn 12 April 2019, the team for the 2019 World Para Swimming Championships was announced. 34 members were named with the nine making their international debut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 78], "content_span": [79, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287502-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Swimming Championships, Club points scores\nThe final club point scores are below. Note: Only the top ten clubs are listed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 58], "content_span": [59, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287502-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Swimming Championships, Broadcast\nThe morning sessions were streamed live on the website of Swimming Australia. The evening sessions were broadcast live on 7TWO. This was the fourth national championships to be screen by Seven after securing the broadcast rights with Swimming Australia in September 2015. The commentary team consisted of Basil Zempilas, Ian Thorpe, Giaan Rooney with poolside interviews conducted by Nathan Templeton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287503-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian Women in Music Awards\nThe 2019 Australian Women in Music Awards was the second Australian Women in Music Awards. The event took place on 9 October 2019. 15 award categories were presented, including new awards for Excellence in Classical Music, Excellence in Image Making and Music Journalism. The Educator Award, Auriel Andrew Memorial Award and Musical Excellence Award were retired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287504-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian World Swimming Trials\nThe 2019 Australian World Swimming Trials are current being held from 9 to 14 June 2019 at the Brisbane Aquatic Centre in Brisbane, Queensland. The event is the selection trails for the 2019 World Aquatics Championships in Gwangju, South Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287504-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian World Swimming Trials\nFollowing Australia's performance at the 2016 Rio Olympics where 29 medals were won and finishing 10th on the medal tally, Swimming Australia announced in the February 2017 that the timing of the selection trails would be modified. Historically, the trails were held in April several months before the Olympics were held. This will be now changed to follow the American model where the trails are held six weeks before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287504-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian World Swimming Trials\nA Para Grand Prix will be held in conjunction with the trials on the 13 to 14 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287504-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian World Swimming Trials\nThe legends relay was a mixed 4 \u00d7 50 m freestyle event swam on the fourth night of the meet. The team were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287504-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian World Swimming Trials\nThe event was won by Team Flouch in a time of 1:57.99, followed by Team Gallen (2:02.86) and Team FFrost where Nick Ffrost swam the backstroke and freestyle legs (2:17.02).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287504-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian World Swimming Trials, Medal winners, Women's multiclass 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, 37], "section_span": [39, 79], "content_span": [80, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287504-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian World Swimming Trials, Records broken\nDuring the 2019 Australian World Swimming Trails the following records were set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287505-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal budget\nThe 2019 Australian federal budget was the federal budget to fund government services and operations for the 2019\u201320 financial year. The budget was presented to the House of Representatives by Treasurer Josh Frydenberg on 2 April 2019. It was the sixth budget to be handed down by the Liberal/National Coalition since their election to government at the 2013 federal election, and the first budget to be handed down by Frydenberg and the Morrison Government. All of the figures below are estimates published in the 2019-20 budget documents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287505-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal budget, Forecasts, Revenues, Memorandum\nNote: Capital gains tax is part of gross other individuals, company tax and superannuation fund taxes, while the Medicare Levy is included in income taxes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287505-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal budget, Debt and deficit\nThe Budget deficit for 2018/19 is expected to be $4.162 billion, falling from $10.141 billion in 2017/18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287505-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal budget, Debt and deficit\nThe surplus for 2019-20 is expected to be around $7 billion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287505-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal budget, Debt and deficit\nThe government's debt level was forecast to be $629 billion in 2019/20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election\nThe 2019 Australian federal election was held on Saturday 18 May 2019 to elect members of the 46th Parliament of Australia. The election had been called following the dissolution of the 45th Parliament as elected at the 2016 double dissolution federal election. All 151 seats in the House of Representatives (lower house) and 40 of the 76 seats in the Senate (upper house) were up for election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election\nThe second-term incumbent minority Liberal/National Coalition Government, led by Prime Minister Scott Morrison, won a third three-year term by defeating the opposition Australian Labor Party, led by Opposition Leader Bill Shorten. The Coalition claimed a three-seat majority with 77 seats, Labor finished with 68, whilst the remaining six seats were won by the Australian Greens, Centre Alliance, Katter's Australian Party and three independents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election\nThe electoral system of Australia enforces compulsory voting and uses full-preference instant-runoff voting in single-member seats for the House of Representatives and optional preferential single transferable voting in the Senate. The election was administered by the Australian Electoral Commission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election\nThe result was considered an upset as polling had placed the Coalition consistently behind for almost three years. It was the first time since 2001 that a Federal government in Australia won a third consecutive term in office. The Coalition benefited from a stronger-than-expected showing in Queensland. The Liberal National Party of Queensland won 23 of the state's 30 seats with a statewide primary vote of 43%. Indeed, the net two-seat swing to the LNP in Queensland was enough to allow the Coalition to regain its majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election\nOn election night, Shorten declared his intention to stand down as leader of his party, but to remain in parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Results, House of Representatives\nIndependents: Andrew Wilkie (Clark), Helen Haines (Indi), Zali Steggall (Warringah).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Results, House of Representatives, Divisions changing party\nMembers in italics did not re-contest their House of Representatives seats at this election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 93], "content_span": [94, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Results, Senate\nOut of 40 Senate seats up for election, the Coalition won 19, while Labor won 13 seats. The Greens won 6 seats, while the only other minor party candidates elected were former senator Malcolm Roberts for One Nation in Queensland, and Jacqui Lambie (JLN) in Tasmania. The Senate crossbench became substantially smaller, with incumbent senators Derryn Hinch, Duncan Spender, Peter Georgiou, Brian Burston, and Fraser Anning, as well as former parliamentarians Clive Palmer and Skye Kakoschke-Moore, failing in their bids to win Senate seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Background, Previous election\nThe outcome of the 2016 federal election could not be determined on election night, with too many seats in doubt. After a week of vote counting, neither the incumbent Turnbull Government led by Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull of the Liberal/National Coalition nor the Shorten Opposition led by Opposition Leader Bill Shorten of the Australian Labor Party had won enough seats in the 150-seat House of Representatives to form a majority government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Background, Previous election\nDuring the uncertain week following the election, Turnbull negotiated with the crossbench and secured confidence and supply support from Bob Katter and from independents Andrew Wilkie and Cathy McGowan in the event of a hung parliament and resulting minority government. During crossbench negotiations, Turnbull pledged additional staff and resources for crossbenchers, and stated \"It is my commitment to work in every way possible to ensure that the crossbenchers have access to all of the information they need and all of the resources they need to be able to play the role they need in this parliament\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Background, Previous election\nOn 10 July, eight days after the election took place and following Turnbull's negotiations with the crossbench where he secured sufficient confidence and supply support, Shorten conceded defeat, acknowledging that the incumbent Coalition had enough seats to form either a minority or majority government. Turnbull claimed victory later that day. In the closest federal majority result since the 1961 election, the ABC declared on 11 July that the incumbent Coalition would be able to form a one-seat majority government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Background, Previous election\nIt was the first election result since federation where the post-election opposition won more seats than the post-election government in both of Australia's two most populous states, New South Wales and Victoria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Background, Previous election, Result\nIn the 150-seat House of Representatives, the one-term incumbent Liberal/National Coalition government suffered a 14-seat swing, reducing it to 76 seats\u2014a bare one-seat majority. With a national three-point two-party swing against the government, the Labor opposition picked up a significant number of previously government-held seats to gain a total of 69 seats. On the crossbench, the Greens, the Nick Xenophon Team, Katter's Australian Party, and independents Wilkie and McGowan won a seat each. On 19 July, the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC) announced a re-count for the Coalition-held but provisionally Labor-won Division of Herbert. At the start of the Herbert re-count, Labor led by eight votes. The AEC announced on 31 July that Labor had won Herbert by 37 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 850]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Background, Previous election, Result\nThe final outcome in the 76-seat Senate took more than four weeks to determine, despite significant voting changes. Earlier in 2016, legislation changed the Senate voting system from a full-preference single transferable vote with group voting tickets to an optional-preferential single transferable vote. The final Senate result was announced on 4 August: Liberal/National Coalition 30 seats (\u22123), Labor 26 seats (+1), Greens 9 seats (\u22121), One Nation 4 seats (+4) and Nick Xenophon Team 3 seats (+2). Derryn Hinch won a seat, while Jacqui Lambie, Liberal Democrat David Leyonhjelm and Family First's Bob Day retained their seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Background, Previous election, Result\nThe number of crossbenchers increased by two to a record 20. The Liberal/National Coalition will require at least nine additional votes to reach a Senate majority, an increase of three. The Liberal and Labor parties agreed to support a motion in the parliament that the first six senators elected in each state would serve a six-year term, while the last six elected would serve a three-year term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Background, Changes in parliamentary composition\nSince the 2016 election, a number of parliamentarians resigned from their seats, while some were disqualified by the High Court of Australia in the parliamentary eligibility crisis as a result of the dual citizenship of some MPs. However, in the cases of disqualified House of Representatives MPs, most of these were returned in resulting by-elections. Some MPs changed their party affiliation or their independent status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 82], "content_span": [83, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Background, Changes in parliamentary composition\nFollowing the parliamentary eligibility crisis, the AEC's form for nomination was updated to ask detailed questions on whether candidates are disqualified under Section 44 of the Constitution of Australia. Three Victorian Liberal candidates had to withdraw based on section 44 issues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 82], "content_span": [83, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Background, Change of Prime Minister\nFollowing the Liberal Party leadership spill on 24 August 2018, Malcolm Turnbull was replaced as Prime Minister by Scott Morrison. Turnbull resigned from parliament on 31 August, triggering a by-election in his former seat of Wentworth. The by-election was won by independent Kerryn Phelps. This, combined with National MP Kevin Hogan's move to the crossbench and the resignation of MP Julia Banks from the Liberal Party, reduced the government to 73 seats going into the election; a net three-seat deficit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Background, Change of Prime Minister\nFurther dissatisfaction within the Liberal Party saw a number of centrist and economically-liberal candidates announce that they would nominate as independents in wealthy electorates, with a specific focus on \"addressing climate change\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Candidates\nThere were 1,514 candidates in total (1,056 for the House of Representatives and 458 for the Senate).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, State of electorates\nAfter effects of boundary redistributions for the next election, and the 2018 Wentworth by-election, the Mackerras pendulum had the Liberal/National Coalition government on 73 of 151 seats with the Labor opposition on 72 seats and a crossbench of six seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, State of electorates\nAssuming a theoretical nationwide uniform swing, the Labor opposition needed at least 50.7% of the two-party vote (at least a 1.1-point two-party swing) to win 76 seats and majority government. The incumbent Coalition government no longer held a majority, and required at least 51.1% of the two-party vote (at least a 0.7-point two-party swing) to regain it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Retiring members\nMembers of Parliament and Senators who chose not to renominate for the 2019 election are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Opinion polls, Assessment of polling accuracy\nThe result of the 2019 election was in stark contrast to the aggregation of opinion polls conducted over the period of the 45th parliament and the 2019 election campaign. Apart from a few outliers, Labor had been ahead for the entire period, by as much as 56% on a two-party-preferred basis after Scott Morrison took over the leadership of the Liberal Party in August 2018\u2014although during the campaign, Labor's two-party estimate was between 51 and 52%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 79], "content_span": [80, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Opinion polls, Assessment of polling accuracy\nDuring the ABC's election coverage, election analyst Antony Green stated, \"at the moment, on these figures, it's a bit of a spectacular failure of opinion polling\", with the election results essentially a mirror image of the polls with the Coalition's two-party vote at around 51%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 79], "content_span": [80, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Opinion polls, Assessment of polling accuracy\nThe former director of Newspoll, Martin O'Shannessy, cited changes in demographics and telephone habits which have changed the nature of polling from calling random samples of landlines to calling random mobile numbers and automated \"robocalls\"\u2014with the ensuing drop in response rates resulting in lower quality data due to smaller samples and bias in the sample due to who chooses to respond.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 79], "content_span": [80, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Opinion polls, Assessment of polling accuracy\nSeveral analysts and statisticians found the lack of variance of the two-party preferred estimates concerning\u2014truly random poll sampling would see the results \"bounce around\" within each poll's margin of error, but the differences between figures in the final few weeks of the campaign were so consistently small as to be highly improbable to happen under random chance. Some analysts suspected the phenomenon of \"herding\" had occurred\u2014as polling companies attempted to adjust for bias, they had \"massaged\" their results to be similar to other polls, resulting in an artificial closeness.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 79], "content_span": [80, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Election date\nAn election for the House of Representatives can be called at any time during the maximum three-year parliamentary term. The term of the House of Representatives starts on the first sitting day of the House following its election, which in the case of the 45th Parliament was 30 August 2016. The House therefore would expire on 29 August 2019, unless it were dissolved earlier. In this case, the Parliament was dissolved on 11 April and an election called for 18 May 2019. This occurred after Prime Minister Scott Morrison visited the Governor-General advising him to prorogue Parliament and dissolve the House of Representatives. The Governor-General accepted Morrison's recommendations, as is the custom in Australia's Westminster system of government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 802]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Election date\nThe Constitution of Australia does not require simultaneous elections for the Senate and the House of Representatives, but it has long been preferred that elections for the two houses take place simultaneously. The most recent House-only election took place in 1972, and the most recent Senate-only election took place in 1970. However, the writs for a half-Senate election could not be issued earlier than 1 July 2018. Section 13 of the Constitution requires that the election of senators must take place within one year before the terms expire for half-Senate elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0027-0001", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Election date\nSince the previous election was a double dissolution, half of the senators were allocated three-year terms that end on 30 June 2019, while the other half were allocated six-year terms that end on 30 June 2022. Senators from the territories serve terms timed with House elections. Since campaigns are for a minimum of 33 days, the earliest possible date for a simultaneous House/half-Senate election was 4 August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0027-0002", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Election date\nThe latest that a half-Senate election could be held must allow time for the votes to be counted and the writs to be returned before the newly elected senators take office on 1 July 2019. This took over a month in 2016, so practically the last possible date for a half-Senate election to take place before the three-year terms expire is 18 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Election date\nAn election for the House of Representatives needed to be held on or before 2 November 2019. The latest date for the election is calculated from the Constitution and the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 (CEA). Section 28 of the Constitution provides that a term of the House of Representatives expires three years from the first sitting of the House, unless dissolved earlier. The last federal election was held on 2 July 2016. The 45th Parliament opened on 30 August 2016 and its term would expire on 29 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0028-0001", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Election date\nWrits for election can be issued up to ten days after a dissolution or expiry of the House. Up to 27 days can be allowed for nominations, and the actual election can be set for a maximum of 31 days after close of nominations, resulting in the latest election date for the House of Representatives of Saturday, 2 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Election date\nA double dissolution cannot take place within six months before the date of the expiry of the House of Representatives. That meant that any double dissolution of the 45th Parliament had to have been granted by 28 February 2019. Allowing for the same stages indicated above, the last possible date for a double dissolution election would have been 4 May 2019. This could only have occurred if a bill that had passed the House of Representatives was rejected by the Senate twice, at least three months apart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Election date, Constitutional and legal provisions\nThe constitutional and legal provisions which impact on the choice of election dates include:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 84], "content_span": [85, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Election timeline\nOn 11 April 2019, the office of the Governor-General released documents relating to the calling of the election. The documents set out a timeline of key dates for the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Election timeline\nThe election period included three national public holidays: Good Friday (19 April), Easter Monday (22 April) and Anzac Day (25 April), as well as May Day and Labour Day in Northern Territory and Queensland, respectively, both falling on 6 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Redistributions\nSince the previous election in 2016, there was a reapportionment of seats of the House of Representatives, as well as three scheduled redistributions of electoral boundaries. On 31 August 2017, the Australian Electoral Commission announced a reapportionment of seats based on calculation of each state and territory's entitlement determination: Victoria gained one seat to 38, the Australian Capital Territory gained a seat to 3, and South Australia lost one seat to 10. The total number of members of the House of Representatives increased from 150 to 151.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Redistributions\nFollowing the reapportionment, which applied to the 2019 election, the allocation of seats was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Redistributions, Northern Territory\nOn 7 December 2016, the Electoral Commission for the Northern Territory announced the results of its deliberations into the boundaries of Lingiari and Solomon, the two federal electoral divisions in the Northern Territory. New boundaries gazetted from 7 February 2017 saw the remainder of the Litchfield Municipality and parts of Palmerston (the suburbs of Farrar, Johnston, Mitchell, Zuccoli and part of Yarrawonga) transferred from Solomon to Lingiari.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Redistributions, Tasmania\nA scheduled redistribution began in Tasmania on 1 September 2016, with the determinations announced on 27 September 2017. In addition to boundary changes, the Division of Denison was renamed the Division of Clark after Andrew Inglis Clark.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Redistributions, Queensland\nA scheduled redistribution began in Queensland on 6 January 2017, and was finalised on 27 March 2018. Changes were made to the boundaries of 18 of Queensland's 30 electoral divisions, and no division names were changed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Redistributions, Australian Capital Territory\nA redistribution of federal electoral divisions in the Australian Capital Territory commenced on 4 September 2017, due to changes in the territory's representation entitlement. The AEC released a proposed redistribution on 6 April 2018, and the final determination on 3 July 2018. The redistribution resulted in the creation of a third ACT electoral division named Bean (notionally fairly safe Labor), after historian Charles Bean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 79], "content_span": [80, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Redistributions, Victoria\nA redistribution of federal electoral divisions in Victoria commenced on 4 September 2017, due to changes in the state's representation entitlement. The determinations were announced on 20 June 2018, and created a 38th electoral division named Fraser (notionally safe Labor), named after prime minister Malcolm Fraser.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Redistributions, Victoria\nThe commission also renamed several divisions: Batman to Cooper (after William Cooper), McMillan to Monash (after Sir John Monash), Melbourne Ports to Macnamara (after Dame Jean Macnamara) and Murray to Nicholls (after Sir Douglas and Lady Nicholls). A proposal to rename Corangamite to Cox (after swimming instructor May Cox) did not proceed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Redistributions, Victoria\nThe Coalition notionally lost the seats of Dunkley and Corangamite to Labor in the redistribution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Redistributions, South Australia\nA South Australian seat was abolished due to population changes having occurred since the state's last redistribution in 2011. Although South Australia's population was still increasing, faster increases in other states saw a reduction in South Australia's representation from 11 to 10 seats in the 151-seat House of Representatives. This was the third time South Australia had lost a seat since the 1984 enlargement of the parliament, with Hawker abolished in 1993 and Bonython in 2004. South Australia is the least-populated state where the current number of seats can decrease, as Tasmania's current representation is the minimum guaranteed by the Constitution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Redistributions, South Australia\nA redistribution of federal electoral divisions in South Australia commenced on 4 September 2017, due to changes in the state's representation entitlement. The proposed redistribution report was released on 13 April 2018, and the final determination on 26 June 2018. The commission abolished the division of Port Adelaide. The hybrid urban-rural seat of Wakefield became the entirely urban seat of Spence, after Catherine Helen Spence. The more rural portions of Wakefield transferred to Grey and Barker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Newspaper endorsements\nThe Sunday and daily editions of Australian newspapers traditionally provide editorial endorsement for parties contending both federal and state elections. Alternative newspapers have in recent times also provided backing for minor parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Newspaper endorsements, Sunday editions\nAll four newspapers published by News Corp Australia (Melbourne's Sunday Herald Sun, Adelaide's Sunday Mail, Brisbane's The Sunday Mail and Sydney's The Sunday Telegraph) endorsed the Coalition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0045-0001", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Newspaper endorsements, Sunday editions\nThe Sunday Telegraph compared the major parties as a choice between Labor, which \"seeks to present an agenda for social change, a generational correction for people doing it tough: pensioners, the unemployed, the working poor\" and a Coalition \"government that presents itself as being responsible in its spending, determined to return the budget to the black, eliminate waste and take a forward but steady approach to the broader social issues, such as climate change\", ultimately describing Morrison a \"safer pair of hands\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Newspaper endorsements, Sunday editions\nBoth the Nine Publishing newspapers (Melbourne's The Sunday Age and Sydney's The Sun-Herald) stopped short of endorsing a party, with The Sunday Age calling for bipartisan action on climate change. The Sun-Herald praised Morrison as \"the former advertising executive has come into his own, appearing more sure-footed and on message than in the early days of his as leader\" but warned that \"his single-focus strategy needs some enhancement if he has a chance of pulling off victory\", while contrasting it with Labor which has \"overwhelmed us with its vision and plans. The party presents itself as a viable alternative government, with bold policy announcements across a variety of sectors, but they carry some risk for the disadvantage they may cause to some sections of the electorate. It runs the risk of hubris should reality not conform with voter expectations\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 940]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Newspaper endorsements, Sunday editions\nSeven West Media's newspaper (Perth's The Sunday Times) also made no endorsement, but urged readers not to give the balance of power to \"micro parties with wacky, divisive and extreme agendas\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0048-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Newspaper endorsements, Daily editions\nThe majority of News Corp Australia's daily mastheads \u2013 The Australian, Sydney's The Daily Telegraph, Melbourne's Herald Sun, Brisbane's The Courier-Mail, Adelaide's The Advertiser and the Geelong Advertiser \u2013 endorsed the Coalition. The Australian wrote that \"Mr Morrison\u2019s plan errs on the side of being safe but deliverable; his policies, consistent with traditional values, do not unduly raise expectations as Mr Shorten has done\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0048-0001", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Newspaper endorsements, Daily editions\nHobart's The Mercury stopped short of endorsing a party, remarking that with \"polls indicating that a hung Parliament remains a possible scenario ... having [Independent candidate for Clark, Andrew] Wilkie advocating for Tasmania in Canberra would not be a terrible outcome\". In Darwin, the NT News endorsed Labor, arguing the Morrison Government had \"shown little to no interest\" in Aboriginal affairs, an issue \"which seriously threatens the future prosperity of the Northern Territory and Australia\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0049-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Newspaper endorsements, Daily editions\nTwo of Nine Publishing's mastheads \u2013 The Sydney Morning Herald and Melbourne's The Age endorsed Labor. The Sydney Morning Herald called for voters to bring an end to the \"cycle of instability\". It emphasised Shorten's \"united team that looks like it will stick together\", and contrasted this with the \"blood feuds\" within the Coalition cabinet, stating that \"the ALP has used its time in the wilderness of opposition to sort out its factional differences and produce an unusually detailed agreed program\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0049-0001", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Newspaper endorsements, Daily editions\nIt expressed doubts with some aspects of Labor's economic policy, warning that \"with the economy facing headwinds, people want solid, sensible government \u2013 not a revolution.\" It concluded that if Labor could overcome economic challenges and deliver \"three years of normal government... it will be better than a continuation of instability under the Coalition\". While critical of its stance on climate change and energy policy, its broadsheet The Australian Financial Review endorsed the Coalition, arguing the party \"does at least grasp that Australia needs a growth policy in order to lift incomes and sustainably pay for the services government provides\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0050-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Newspaper endorsements, Daily editions\nThe Guardian Australia also endorsed Labor, arguing that \"the climate emergency is the most pressing issue of our time\" and that \"the Coalition appears deaf to the rising clamour from the electorate...[while] it clings to an obviously deficient emissions reduction target\". Concluding that \"the Coalition has neither credible policies nor a competent team\", it finds that \"Labor is the only party with a credible climate policy and a chance of forming government\", but also giving qualified support to The Greens as its \"climate policy is more ambitious than Labor\u2019s and its tax and spending policies more redistributive\". It also wrote positively of \"credible independent candidates who could make positive contributions in the parliament\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 814]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0051-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Newspaper endorsements, Daily editions\nIn Perth, the Seven West Media-owned The West Australian endorsed the Coalition as having \"proved they will listen to Western Australia with their historic shakeup of the GST\", and commending the Western Australian Liberal Party for \"a proven track record of being powerful advocates for [the] state\". The Canberra Times provided no endorsement, but concluded that the choice between the two major parties was \"for changes that may benefit [Canberrans] personally\" or \"for change that has the potential to benefit those less fortunate than they are\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0052-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Aftermath and reactions, Domestic reactions\nMorrison stated that \"the quiet Australians ... have won a great victory tonight\". Although he described the outcome as a miracle, colleagues said that Morrison had been certain that he would win the election, unlike many other politicians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287506-0053-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election, Aftermath and reactions, Domestic reactions\nFollowing the results Shorten announced his resignation as leader of the Labor Party, triggering the 2019 Australian Labor Party leadership election. Former Deputy Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, who ran in the October 2013 spill, announced his candidacy, and was elected unopposed to the role later that month. Albanese's path to the leadership was cleared after Chris Bowen, Shadow Treasurer in the Shorten Ministry and a member of the more fiscally-conservative Labor Right, withdrew his candidacy shortly after nominating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287507-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election debates and forums\nThe Australian federal election debates of 2019 were a series of leaders' debates between the leaders of the two main parties contesting the 2019 Australian federal election: Scott Morrison, Prime Minister and leader of the Liberal Party; and Bill Shorten, Leader of the Opposition and Labor Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287507-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election debates and forums, Leaders' debates, 29 April \u2013 The 7NEWS Leaders' Debate\nThe first leaders' debate was held in Perth, Western Australia on 29 April 2019. The debate was run by Seven West Media, and broadcast on the Seven Network's secondary free-to-air channel, 7TWO. It was hosted by Basil Zempilas and moderated by Seven News political editor Mark Riley and Lanai Scarr from The West Australian newspaper. Morrison and Shorten started with an opening address, then were guided to give their views on the topics of climate change, wages growth, immigration and border security, Clive Palmer, franking credits, and finally a closing statement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 107], "content_span": [108, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287507-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election debates and forums, Leaders' debates, 29 April \u2013 The 7NEWS Leaders' Debate\nOf the 48 audience members, 25 voted that Shorten had won the debate, 12 that Morrison had won, with 11 undecided. SBS World News said that Morrison had swayed the audience with his questioning of the lack of detailed costings for Labor's climate change policies, but that Shorten had performed better on climate change in general, and by highlighting the Coalition's preference deal with Clive Palmer's United Australia Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 107], "content_span": [108, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287507-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election debates and forums, Leaders' debates, 29 April \u2013 The 7NEWS Leaders' Debate\nThe format of the debate was criticised by other media outlets and viewers on social media. Katherine Murphy of Guardian Australia called it \"beyond terrible\", citing the split-screen broadcast which showed the leaders on screen at all times. news.com.au compiled a list of viewers' complaints about the debate's \"weird\" format and lack of clear direction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 107], "content_span": [108, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287507-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election debates and forums, Leaders' debates, 29 April \u2013 The 7NEWS Leaders' Debate\nRMIT ABC Fact Check gave their verdicts on the veracity of some of the claims made on the night, including Morrison's statements on hospital funding (\"fair call\"), Kyoto Protocol targets (\"misleading\"), and boat arrivals (\"more to the story\"); and Shorten's statements on the costs of seeing a doctor (\"broadly checked out\"), the number of apprenticeships and traineeships (\"correct\") and broadband speed (\"correct\").", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 107], "content_span": [108, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287507-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election debates and forums, Leaders' debates, 3 May \u2013 Sky News Australia\nThe second leaders' debate was held at The Gabba in Brisbane, Queensland on 3 May. The debate was aired on Sky News Australia and hosted by David Speers. The leaders were asked questions by a crowd of 109 undecided voters. They answered questions concerning tax plans, mental health, education, religious freedom, and climate change. They then gave a closing statement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 97], "content_span": [98, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287507-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election debates and forums, Leaders' debates, 3 May \u2013 Sky News Australia\n43% of audience members said Shorten won the debate, while 41% said Morrison had won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 97], "content_span": [98, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287507-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election debates and forums, Leaders' debates, 3 May \u2013 Sky News Australia\nIn one heated moment, Morrison physically approached the Opposition Leader to question him on tax policy. Shorten noted Morrison's movements, saying: \"You right there? You're a classic space invader,\" which was received with laughter from the audience. This was widely reported, with some outlets likening it to former Labor leader Mark Latham's infamous handshake with Prime Minister John Howard during the 2004 election campaign. When questioned about the incident, Morrison said: \"Bill Shorten doesn't like it when you look him in the eye and ask him to tell you the truth. I was simply trying encourage him to tell the truth and to look me in the eye and tell me the truth and he couldn't do that either. He scurried away.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 97], "content_span": [98, 825]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287507-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election debates and forums, Leaders' debates, 3 May \u2013 Sky News Australia\nRMIT ABC Fact Check gave their verdicts on the veracity of some of the claims made on the night, including Morrison's statements on capital gains and negative gearing (\"misleading\"), franking credits (\"misleading\"), and carbon emissions (\"misleading\"); and Shorten's statements on social media (\"wishful thinking\"), apprenticeships and traineeships (\"correct\"), health (\"correct\"), carbon emissions (\"broadly correct\"), and wage growth (\"correct\").", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 97], "content_span": [98, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287507-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election debates and forums, Leaders' debates, 8 May \u2013 National Press Club\nThe third and final leaders' debate was held at the National Press Club in Canberra. The debate was aired on ABC and Sky News Live and moderated by NPC president Sabra Lane. The studio audience was split half-and-half between Labor and Liberal supporters, and as such there was no audience polling for the debate. The leaders were asked questions regarding unpopular decisions they had made in political life, the respective leadership spills they had each participated in against sitting Prime Ministers, budget deficits, franking credits, religion freedom and freedom of speech, climate change policy, and national security.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 98], "content_span": [99, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287507-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Australian federal election debates and forums, Leaders' debates, 8 May \u2013 National Press Club\nThe leaders were also permitted to ask each other two questions during the debate. Morrison asked Shorten about tax policy and negative gearing, while Shorten asked Morrison about his support for Labor's cancer plan and about Morrison's childcare policy. Finally, they were asked about their vision for the country in ten years' time. They were then asked a simple \"yes or no\" question about whether they supported the creation of an independent debate commission for the next election; both leaders responded in the affirmative.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 98], "content_span": [99, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287508-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2019 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix was the seventeenth round of the 2019 MotoGP season. It was held at the Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit in Phillip Island on 27 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287509-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Austria Open\nThe 2019 Dynamic Billard St. Johann im Pongau Open was a professional nine-ball pool tournament and the third Euro Tour event of 2019. The event was held from 13 to 16 June 2019, at the Alpina, Wellness & Sporthotel in Sankt Johann im Pongau, Austria. The event followed the Treviso Open, won by Poland's Konrad Juszczyszyn, and preceded the Veldhoven Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287509-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Austria Open\nThe St. Johann im Pongau Open final was contested between the top two ranked players, Eklent Ka\u00e7i and Joshua Filler. Ka\u00e7i won the event, defeating Filler 9\u20136. Alexander Kazakis was the defending champion, having defeated Denis Grabe in the 2018 Austria Open final (9\u20135). However, Kazakis lost twice in the double-elimination round and did not reach the knockout round. Jasmin Ouschan was the defending champion of the women's event, after defeating Marharyta Fefilava in the 2018 final (7\u20132). In a rematch of the previous year's event, Ouschan defended her championship by defeating Fefilava 7\u20131 in this year's final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287509-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Austria Open, Format\nThe St. Johann im Pongau Open was played as a double-elimination knockout tournament, until the round of 32. From that point on, the event continued as a single elimination bracket. All matches were played as a race-to-nine-racks under the alternative break format. The event had a total of 196 players competing in the double elimination round. The women's event had 49 participants in a different double-elimination bracket until the round of 16, also continuing as a single elimination tournament form.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287509-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Austria Open, Format\nThe previous years' women's champion Jasmin Ouschan competed in both the men's and women's event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287509-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Austria Open, Format, Prize fund\nThe tournament prize fund was similar to that of other Euro Tour events; \u20ac4,500 was awarded to the winner of the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287509-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Austria Open, Summary\nThe event began on 13 June 2019. Matches were played on 24 tables, across the Alpina Alpendorf & Sporthotel Pre-event, International Billiard Promotion Foundation (IPBF) president David Morris signed a contract with venue owner Theo Riedlecke for the event to be held in the resort for the following three years. Matches were broadcast live via the Euro Tour website, with some matches streamed via Facebook and pool website Kozoom. The event also had guest commentary for matches by players such as Joshua Filler. The defending champion was Alexander Kazakis, after defeating Denis Grabe 9\u20135 in the previous year's final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287509-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Austria Open, Summary, Double-elimination\nThe double-elimination round began with 196 participants; players were eliminated after losing two matches. On the first day, multiple time champion, Thorsten Hohmann was defeated by Niels Feijen. Feijen took an early 3\u20131 lead, despite both players making errors. Feijen then extended his advantage to lead 7\u20132. Both players made a golden break before Feijen won rack 12 to defeat Hohmann 9\u20133. Hohmann failed to progress to the knockout round, being eliminated in the third losers' round to Sanjin Pehlivanovic 9\u20132. Fifth-ranked Mark Gray also lost on the first day to Fabio Petroni.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287509-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Austria Open, Summary, Double-elimination\nPetroni and Gray remained level at 3\u20133 before Petroni won six of the next seven racks to progress 9\u20134. Gray would be defeated again in the third losers' round, 9\u20134 to Alex Montpellier to be eliminated. Three-time world champion Oliver Ortmann was also defeated by Imran Majid 2\u20139, before being eliminated in the second losers' round to Mariusz Skoneczny.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287509-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Austria Open, Summary, Double-elimination\nDefending champion Kazakis also failed to qualify for the round of 32. He lost his second match to Damianos Giallourakis 9\u20137. He then defeated Nick Malai on a deciding rack 9\u20138 in the losers' fourth round. In his decisive play-off match, Kazakis lost to Daniel Maciol 9\u20136, and he was thus eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287509-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Austria Open, Summary, Knockout\nThe last 32 players competed on a single elimination bracket, with the round-of-32 played on 14 June. The top two ranked players Eklent Ka\u00e7i and Joshua Filler both qualified for the round-of-16, with wins over David Alcaide and Christian Froehlich respectively. Third-ranked Mateusz \u015aniegocki was defeated by 55th ranked Tim De Ruyter 6\u20139. Wojciech Szewczyk qualified for the round-of-16 after completing a whitewash of Stefan Huber.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 36], "content_span": [37, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287509-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Austria Open, Summary, Knockout\nThe round-of-16 to the final was played on 15 June. Two round-of-16 matches were decided on a final rack: Ralf Souquet defeated Rados\u0142aw Babica and Ka\u00e7i defeated Wojciech Szewczyk, both 9\u20138. Mario He, who missed the 2019 Leende Open due to a drugs offence, was ranked seventh for the tournament because he had two tournament wins in 2018. He defeated Marc Bijsterbosch in the round-of-16, 9\u20131. In the quarter-finals, He lost to Giallourakis, who reached his first Euro Tour semi-final. Elsewhere, the two Treviso Open finalists Ivo Aarts and Konrad Juszczyszyn lost to Filler and Ka\u00e7i respectively. In the semi-finals, Ka\u00e7i defeated Souquet 9\u20135 and Filler defeated Giallourakis 9\u20136; both reaching the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 36], "content_span": [37, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287509-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Austria Open, Summary, Knockout\nIn the final, the two highest ranked players for the tournament faced each other. Ka\u00e7i had finished as the runner up in both the 2018 Veldhoven Open and the 2018 Leende Open, ending up as the highest in the rankings. Filler having won the 2019 Leende Open and was ranked second. The winner of the final would take the first place in the Euro Tour rankings. The final started with racks being won in line with the break, until Ka\u00e7i took a 3\u20132 lead. However, Filler brought the match to 5\u20135, before Ka\u00e7i went ahead again at 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 36], "content_span": [37, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287509-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Austria Open, Summary, Knockout\nFiller won the next rack, but Ka\u00e7i won the next to take him to the hill at 8\u20136. Breaking to remain in the match, Filler's attempt was illegal, handing the table to Ka\u00e7i, who ran the rack to win the match 9\u20136. As a result, Ka\u00e7i remained the number one Euro Tour player, and Filler retained his second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 36], "content_span": [37, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287509-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Austria Open, Women's event\nThe women's event took place on 15 and 16 June 2019, with matches being held as a race-to-seven racks; 49 players participated. The defending champion was Jasmin Ouschan, who won the previous year's event, defeating Marharyta Fefilava in the final 7\u20132. Kristina Tkach, ranked first in the Euro Tour women's ranking, did not appear at the event. The double-elimination round started on 15 June, with 16 players qualifying for the knockout round. Despite not competing since 2016, Kamila Khodjaeva won all three of her opening matches, including wins over Kinga Rauk, Ewa Bak and Fefilava to reach the knockout round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 32], "content_span": [33, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287509-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Austria Open, Women's event\nAfter reaching the round of 16, the event continued as a single elimination tournament. Ouschan defeated Ana Gradi\u0161nik 7\u20131, Ina Kaplan 7\u20131, and Sara Rocha 7\u20135 to reach the final. Fefilawa also reached the final, defeating Pia Filler 7\u20133, Monika Margeta 7\u20135, and Veronika Hubrtova 7\u20134. The same players faced each other as the 2018 final; Ouschan defeated Fafilawa to win her 14th Euro Tour title. Fefilawa won the opening rack despite missing the 9-ball, but lost the remaining racks and ultimately finished at 1\u20137. After the victory, Ouschan said: \"I feel really comfortable here, although playing in Austria always means a bit more pressure for me ... My success story here in St. Johann is something very special.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 32], "content_span": [33, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287509-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Austria Open, Results, Men's event\nBelow is the results from the round of 32 (Last 32) onward with positions were determined by performance in the double elimination round. Players in bold denote match winners:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287509-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Austria Open, Results, Women's event\nThe following results are from the knockout stages following the round of 16 (Last 16). Players in bold denote match winners:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287510-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian Darts Championship\nThe 2019 Austrian Darts Championship was the tenth of thirteen PDC European Tour events on the 2019 PDC Pro Tour. The tournament took place at the Multiversum Schwechat, Vienna, Austria, from 30 August\u20131 September 2019. It featured a field of 48 players and \u00a3140,000 in prize money, with \u00a325,000 going to the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287510-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian Darts Championship\nMensur Suljovi\u0107 won his third European Tour title, and his first in his home country, with an 8\u20137 win against Michael van Gerwen in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287510-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian Darts Championship, Qualification and format\nThe top 16 entrants from the PDC ProTour Order of Merit on 11 June will automatically qualify for the event and will be seeded in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287510-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian Darts Championship, Qualification and format\nThe remaining 32 places will go to players from six qualifying events \u2013 18 from the UK Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 21 June), six from the European Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 21 June), two from the West & South European Associate Member Qualifier (held on 29 August), four from the Host Nation Qualifier (held on 29 August), one from the Nordic & Baltic Qualifier (held on 9 March), and one from the East European Qualifier (held on 24 August).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287510-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian Darts Championship, Qualification and format\nFrom 2019, the Host Nation, Nordic & Baltic and East European Qualifiers will only be available to non-Tour Card holders. Any Tour Card holders from the applicable regions will have to play the main European Qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287510-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian Darts Championship, Qualification and format\nCorey Cadby withdrew prior to the tournament, which meant an extra place was made available in the Host Nation Qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287511-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian Darts Open\nThe 2019 Austrian Darts Open was the fifth of thirteen PDC European Tour events on the 2019 PDC Pro Tour. The tournament took place at Steiermarkhalle, Premst\u00e4tten, Austria, from 3\u20135 May 2019. It featured a field of 48 players and \u00a3140,000 in prize money, with \u00a325,000 going to the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287511-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian Darts Open\nJonny Clayton was the defending champion after defeating Gerwyn Price 8\u20135 in the final of the 2018 tournament, but he was defeated 6\u20132 in the second round by Tytus Kanik.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287511-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian Darts Open\nMichael van Gerwen won his third Austrian Darts Open title (and his 32nd in total on the European Tour) with an 8\u20137 win over Ian White in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287511-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian Darts Open, Qualification and format\nThe top 16 entrants from the PDC ProTour Order of Merit on 4 April will automatically qualify for the event and will be seeded in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287511-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian Darts Open, Qualification and format\nThe remaining 32 places will go to players from six qualifying events \u2013 18 from the UK Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 12 April), six from the European Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 12 April), two from the West & South European Associate Member Qualifier (held on 2 May), four from the Host Nation Qualifier (held on 2 May), one from the Nordic & Baltic Associate Member Qualifier (held on 1 February) and one from the East European Associate Member Qualifier (held on 9 March).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287511-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian Darts Open, Qualification and format\nFrom 2019, the Host Nation, Nordic & Baltic and East European Qualifiers will only be available to non-tour card holders. Any tour card holders from the applicable regions will have to play the main European Qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287512-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian Grand Prix\nThe 2019 Austrian Grand Prix (formally known as the Formula 1 myWorld Gro\u00dfer Preis von \u00d6sterreich 2019) was a Formula One motor race held on 30 June 2019 at the Red Bull Ring in Spielberg, Austria. The race was the 9th round of the 2019 FIA Formula One World Championship. The race marked the 33rd running of the Austrian Grand Prix and the 32nd time it had been held as a round of the Formula One World Championship since the series inception in 1950. The victory of Max Verstappen in the Red Bull Racing RB15 was the first win for a Honda-powered F1 car since Jenson Button in the 2006 Hungarian Grand Prix and he also became the first non-Mercedes driver to win a race in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287512-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian Grand Prix, Background, Championship standings before the race\nHeading into the race Lewis Hamilton had a 36-point advantage over team mate Valtteri Bottas in the Drivers' Championship. In the Constructors' Championship Mercedes held a 140-point advantage over Ferrari.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 76], "content_span": [77, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287512-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian Grand Prix, Background, Entrants\nThe drivers and teams entered were the same as those on the season entry list with no additional stand-in drivers for either the race or practice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287512-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian Grand Prix, Background, Penalties\nPrior to the start of the weekend Carlos Sainz Jr. and Alexander Albon exceeded their quotas for power unit components and were required to start from the back of the grid. Nico H\u00fclkenberg and Kevin Magnussen received five-place grid penalties for exceeding their quota for power unit components and for a gearbox change, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287512-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian Grand Prix, Free practice\nLewis Hamilton set the fastest time in first practice with Sebastian Vettel second. Valtteri Bottas was third ahead of Ferrari\u2019s Charles Leclerc in fourth. Second practice was eventful as Vettel spun and both Bottas and Max Verstappen crashed. Leclerc was fastest ahead of Bottas, Pierre Gasly and Hamilton. In third practice Leclerc was fastest again ahead of Hamilton, Bottas and Vettel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287512-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian Grand Prix, Race, Race summary\nWhilst Charles Leclerc started the race well from pole position, Max Verstappen encountered an issue with his anti-stall, dropping from 2nd down to 8th place by turn 2. Lando Norris briefly battled Lewis Hamilton for 3rd place, and Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen ran as high as 4th. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen held the position until lap 7, when he was passed by Sebastian Vettel, who had started 9th. By lap 9, Verstappen had recovered after his poor start, passing R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and Norris.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287512-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Austrian Grand Prix, Race, Race summary\nKevin Magnussen pitted on lap 12, dropping him to the back, but was handed a drive-through penalty soon afterwards after the stewards found he had over-stepped his grid line at the beginning of the race and started too far forward. He would only recover one place during the race, and eventually crossed the finish line in 19th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287512-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian Grand Prix, Race, Race summary\nValtteri Bottas and Sebastian Vettel pitted on lap 22, with Bottas emerging in clear air in 4th, but with Vettel stuck behind Norris, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and Pierre Gasly in 8th after a communication issue saw his pit-stop take longer than expected. Leclerc pitted on the following lap, handing the lead of the race to Hamilton. At this stage of the race, the Mercedes cars were suffering from the high air and track temperatures. Hamilton repeatedly ran wide at turn 1, driving over the sausage kerb. This eventually caused damage to his front wing, forcing him to pit for a replacement on lap 31 and dropping him to 5th place. Verstappen inherited the lead, but pitted on the following lap; Leclerc thus regained 1st place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287512-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian Grand Prix, Race, Race summary\nVerstappen emerged from the pits in 4th place, and began his charge towards the front. He passed Vettel on Lap 50, on the straight after turn 2. Vettel subsequently pitted on the following lap. Verstappen then passed Bottas into turn 2 on lap 56. Finally, he caught up with Leclerc at the front, passing him into turn 2 with three laps to go. On lap 69, Verstappen took a wide line through the corner on the inside of Leclerc, making contact and resulting in Leclerc leaving the track and driving over the kerb. Verstappen held on to his lead until the chequered flag, and the stewards later deemed his overtake legal. Vettel passed Hamilton on the final lap to take 4th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287512-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian Grand Prix, Race, Race summary\nVerstappen's victory marked the first win for a Honda-powered F1 car since Jenson Button in the 2006 Hungarian Grand Prix. The race was also the first race in the season not to be won by a Mercedes driver, as Valtteri Bottas finished in third and Lewis Hamilton fifth. Antonio Giovinazzi scored his first ever career points in Formula One by finishing tenth place. This also marked the first race in which every driver saw the chequered flag since the 2016 Japanese Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election\nLegislative elections were held in Austria on 29 September 2019 to elect the 27th National Council, the lower house of Austria's bicameral parliament. The snap election was called in the wake of the Ibiza affair in May, which caused the resignation of Vice Chancellor Heinz-Christian Strache and the collapse of the governing coalition of the Austrian People's Party (\u00d6VP) and Freedom Party of Austria (FP\u00d6). The government subsequently lost a motion of no confidence in parliament, and \u00d6VP Chancellor Sebastian Kurz was replaced by non-partisan Brigitte Bierlein on an interim basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election\nThe conservative \u00d6VP achieved its best result since 2002, improving its vote share six percentage points. The centre-left Social Democratic Party (SP\u00d6) won just 21.2%, its worst result in over a century. The FP\u00d6 suffered a substantial loss of almost ten points. The Greens re-entered the National Council after falling out in 2017, and achieved their best ever result with 13.9% and 26 seats. NEOS improved from 2017, rising from 10 to 15 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election\nWith the \u00d6VP in a clear position to lead the new government, it held talks with all other parties. By early November, a coalition with The Greens was seen as the most likely outcome. Negotiations continued through December, and on 1 January, \u00d6VP leader Kurz and Greens leader Werner Kogler announced the formation of a coalition government between their two parties. The government was sworn in on 7 January 2020 as Second Kurz government, with Sebastian Kurz returning as Chancellor and Kogler taking office as Vice Chancellor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Background\nThe 2017 legislative election was called four years into a grand coalition between the Social Democratic Party of Austria (SP\u00d6) and Austrian People's Party (\u00d6VP), prompted by the demand of newly elected \u00d6VP leader Sebastian Kurz for a snap election. Although the SP\u00d6 won 52 seats, as it did in the 2013 election, the \u00d6VP and FP\u00d6 both made large gains, increasing their strength by 15 seats to 62 and by 11 to 51, respectively, making the former the largest party at the federal level. The Peter Pilz List entered the National Council with 8 seats, while the NEOS gained one seat and the Greens lost all of their 24 seats because they failed to clear the 4% threshold of the vote, which is required to qualify for the proportional allocation of seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 797]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Background\nFollowing the election, President Alexander Van der Bellen asked Kurz to form the next government, and the \u00d6VP initiated exploratory talks with the other parties represented in the National Council. The \u00d6VP officially started coalition negotiations with the FP\u00d6 on 25 October 2017, agreeing on a five-point roadmap. Negotiations drew towards a close in late November, and the parties announced a coalition agreement on 15 December, with the coalition government led by Kurz sworn in on 18 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Background\nOn 4 November 2017, Peter Pilz announced that he would not take his seat, following accusations of sexual harassment. On 11 June 2018, Pilz returned to the National Council and was sworn in after charges of sexual harassment were dropped by the state prosecution. His return was made possible by the resignation of another member of the National Council, Peter Kolba, who stepped down after significant disputes within the List Pilz. The swearing-in ceremony of Pilz was met with heavy resistance. Almost all female representatives walked out of the parliament room as he was about to take the oath.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Background\nOn 7 May 2018, Matthias Strolz announced that he would step down as leader of NEOS and hand over the party leadership in June, citing personal reasons and a successful period for the party since it was founded in 2012, with steady electoral gains during his term. On 23 June 2018, party delegates elected Beate Meinl-Reisinger as their new leader in a meeting that took place in Vienna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Background\nOn 20 August 2018, Maria Stern was elected new party leader of the List Pilz during a party meeting in Vienna. Participants also agreed to rename the list, for which a PR agency was hired. On 19 November 2018, the List Pilz presented their new name: \"JETZT\" (or \"NOW\", in English).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Background\nOn 18 September 2018, opposition leader Christian Kern announced that he would resign as leader of the Austrian Social Democrats. Four days later, former Minister of Health Pamela Rendi-Wagner was designated as the new chairwoman of the Social Democratic Party. She was officially confirmed as party leader through a delegate vote at a party convention held on 24 November 2018. Rendi-Wagner is the first female leader of the SP\u00d6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Background, Ibiza affair and snap election announcement\nOn 17 May 2019, a secretly recorded video was published of a July 2017 meeting in Ibiza, Spain, which appeared to show the then opposition politicians Heinz-Christian Strache and Johann Gudenus discussing their party's underhanded practices and intentions. In the video, both politicians appeared receptive to proposals by a woman posing as the niece of a Russian oligarch, discussing providing the FP\u00d6 positive news coverage in return for government contracts. Strache and Gudenus also hinted at corrupt political practices involving other wealthy donors to the FP\u00d6 in Europe and elsewhere.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 91], "content_span": [92, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Background, Ibiza affair and snap election announcement\nOn 18 May, Strache announced that he would resign as FP\u00d6 leader and vice chancellor, with Norbert Hofer replacing him as FP\u00d6 leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 91], "content_span": [92, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Background, Ibiza affair and snap election announcement\nOn 19 May, Kurz tore up the coalition agreement and announced his intention to seek a snap election in September with President Alexander Van der Bellen also signalling an election early that month. Just eight days later, the Kurz government was toppled in the first successful no-confidence vote in modern Austrian history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 91], "content_span": [92, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Background, Ibiza affair and snap election announcement\nOn 3 June, Brigitte Bierlein and her independent technocratic interim government was sworn into office by President Alexander Van der Bellen. Her government consisted of 12 members, instead of the 16 in the first Kurz government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 91], "content_span": [92, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Background, Ibiza affair and snap election announcement\nOn 12 June 2019, the election date was eventually set for 29 September with the votes of SP\u00d6 and FP\u00d6, while the \u00d6VP was opposed, having favoured an early September poll date instead. The prevailing view was that the snap election should not be held during the summer holiday season, and that it should not coincide with state elections in Vorarlberg, to be held on 13 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 91], "content_span": [92, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Electoral system\nThe 183 members of the National Council are elected by open list proportional representation at the level of one federal constituency consisting of all of Austria, 9 state constituencies, and 39 regional constituencies. Seats in the National Council are apportioned to the regional constituencies based on the results of the most recent census. Following elections, seats are allocated to the candidates of successful parties and lists in a three-stage process: from regional constituencies to state constituencies to the federal constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Electoral system\nFor parties to receive any representation in the National Council, they must either win at least one seat in a constituency directly, or clear a 4 percent national electoral threshold. Seats are distributed according to the Hare method in the first two stages, at the level of regional and state constituencies, with any remaining seats allocated using the D'Hondt method at the federal level, to ensure overall proportionality between a party's national vote share and its share of parliamentary seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Electoral system\nDeviations from near-perfect proportionality can nevertheless occur when a smaller party fails to clear the 4% hurdle and receives no seats, a fate the Green Party suffered in 2017. The rationale for the threshold is to discourage parties from splintering, and thereby prevent parliament from fragmenting into numerous small parties, which would complicate coalition formation in the first instance, and would undermine their stability once they are formed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Electoral system\nIn addition to voting for a political party, voters may cast three preferential votes for specific candidates of that party, but are not required to do so. These additional votes do not affect the proportional allocation based on the vote for the party or list, but can change the rank order of candidates on a party's lists at the federal, state, and regional level. The threshold to increase the position of a candidate on a federal party list is 7 percent, compared to 10 percent at the state level, and 14 percent at the regional level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Electoral system\nThe names of candidates on regional party lists are printed on the ballot and can be marked with an \"x\" to indicate the voter's preference. Preference votes for candidates on party lists at the state and federal level, however, must be written in by the voter, either by writing the name or the rank number of the candidate in a blank spot provided for that purpose. Austria still uses paper ballots, rather than electronic voting machines or online voting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0016-0002", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Electoral system\nBecause the names of candidates on the regional lists are printed on the ballot, and because more parties and lists compete today than was the case in earlier decades of the Second Republic, today's ballots are much larger in size than was the case before the introduction of preferential voting. Voting by placing an \"x\" in the circle provided next to party name on the top of the ballot, or marking a specific candidate name on the regional list of a party at the bottom, is the most common method, but other markings other than \"x\" are also allowed. A voter may not cross party-lines to cast a preference vote for a candidate of another party, however. Such preference votes are invalid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Electoral system, Date\nPer Article 26 and 27 of the Federal Constitutional Law, the National Council must be convened by the President no later than 30 days after the most recent election. The standard duration of the legislative period of the National Council is five years, by the end of which it must be renewed through an election on a Sunday or a public holiday. Because the inaugural meeting of the 26th National Council took place on 9 November 2017, as determined by President Alexander Van der Bellen, the latest date on which the next legislative election could have been held would be 6 November 2022.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Contesting parties\nThe table below lists parties represented in the 26th National Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Contesting parties, Ballot access requirements\nIn order to contest the election nationwide, a party (or list) must have the support of three members of parliament or collect 2,600 valid signatures from eligible voters ahead of the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 82], "content_span": [83, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Contesting parties, Ballot access requirements\nParties may contest the election in individual states only, if they so chose. To do so, they must submit a minimum number of voter signatures that varies by state as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 82], "content_span": [83, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Contesting parties, Ballot access requirements\nFor the 2019 elections, parties had less than a month (9 July and 2 August) to collect signatures. The state and federal election commissions then validated the signatures and announced the list of parties that qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 82], "content_span": [83, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Contesting parties, Parties that collected enough signatures\nIn addition to the parties already represented in the National Council, eight parties collected enough signatures to be placed on the ballot. Three 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, 96], "content_span": [97, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Contesting parties, Failed to achieve ballot access\nAnother eight parties or lists sought ballot access, but failed to collect enough signatures to meet the 2 August 2019 deadline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 87], "content_span": [88, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287513-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Results, Maps\nMap showing the results of the election on the sub-constituency level", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation\nAlthough the \u00d6VP under Sebastian Kurz won a large plurality, it came up 21 seats short of a majority and thus needed the support of a junior partner in order to return Kurz to the chancellorship. Several coalition options were mathematically possible based on the distribution of parliamentary seats among the other parties, which reflected their respective shares of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0026-0001", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation\nThe Green Party achieved their best electoral results ever, in part at the expense of the SP\u00d6, and was viewed as a potentially viable coalition partner, although such a conservative-green alliance would have unprecedented at the national level in Austria and would have required compromise on policy positions by both sides.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, Exploratory coalition talks\nPresident Van der Bellen met with Kurz on Monday, 7 October 2019 to charge him with the task of forming a new government. Kurz had committed himself to hold talks with all parties. The Green Party leadership had already voted in favor of exploratory talks, and had avoided setting preconditions, though as of 29 September, a coalition with the \u00d6VP was backed by only 1/3 of Green party members. The Green Party leader, Werner Kogler, is a veteran of coalition talks with the \u00d6VP that failed on an earlier occasion after the 2002 election. However, 4 in 10 \u00d6VP voters prefer FP\u00d6, whereas only 1 in 5 could imagine cooperation with the Green Party. The party leaders of SP\u00d6, FP\u00d6 and NEOS also agreed to take part in the exploratory talks, which are the first step to form a new government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 85], "content_span": [86, 873]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, Exploratory coalition talks\nAfter the conclusion of the first round of talks, the FP\u00d6 told Kurz that they would not continue the exploratory talks, but would consider re-entering negotiations should talks with other parties fail. Another round of exploratory talks with SP\u00d6, the Greens, and NEOS was then scheduled for Thursday, 17 October and Friday, 18 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 85], "content_span": [86, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, State elections in Vorarlberg\nMeanwhile, regional elections to the state legislature were held in Vorarlberg, Austria's westernmost constituent Bundesland (state) on 13 October 2019. The outcome of the election to this state legislature was closely watched because it came on the heels of the National Council elections, and because the state had already established a precedent for a workable conservative-green coalition government at the sub-national level in the previous election cycle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 87], "content_span": [88, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0029-0001", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, State elections in Vorarlberg\nBased on the final election results, all parties represented in the Vorarlberg state legislature increased their share of the vote - except for the scandal-plagued FP\u00d6, which sustained heavy losses, just as it did in the national parliamentary elections two weeks earlier. With 18.9% of the vote, the Greens emerged as the second-largest party after the\u00a0\u00d6VP, which garnered 43.5%. Based on the final election results, four parties represented in the 36-seat state legislature prior to the election gained one additional seat each, all at the expense of the FP\u00d6, which lost four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 87], "content_span": [88, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0029-0002", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, State elections in Vorarlberg\nAs is the case at the federal level, coalition talks were held to determine the composition of the new government. A renewal of the \u00d6VP-Green coalition was the most likely outcome after Governor Markus Wallner (\u00d6VP) invited the Greens once again to in-depth talks following a round of talks with other party leaders. The coalition negotiations between \u00d6VP and Greens were finalized on 5 November 2019, and the new Vorarlberg government was sworn in on 6 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 87], "content_span": [88, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, State elections in Vorarlberg\nKurz set a deadline for 8 November for exploratory talks with the Greens to end. Previously, SP\u00d6 and NEOS broke off talks with Kurz and told him they are only available for direct coalition talks. Kurz then agreed to schedule four more rounds of in-depth exploratory talks with the Green Party and told the media that he plans a decision about formal coalition talks for the days after 8 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 87], "content_span": [88, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, State elections in Vorarlberg\nAfter the final round of talks between \u00d6VP and Greens on 8 November, the Greens announced a party meeting for Sunday, 10 November and scheduled a subsequent vote on the approval of coalition talks with the \u00d6VP. Kurz announced that he would talk with key \u00d6VP party members, such as state governors, over the weekend and await a decision by the Greens before announcing his own decision. According to a poll by broadcaster ATV, published on 8 November, public support for a \u00d6VP-Green coalition increased to 55%, with 36% opposed. Among Green Party voters only, support rose to 96%, while among \u00d6VP voters only, 61% supported such a coalition, with 33% opposed. Support was also high among voters from the liberal NEOS (79%) and the SP\u00d6 (68%), with opposition only coming from the FP\u00d6 (71%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 87], "content_span": [88, 876]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, Formal coalition negotiations at the federal level\nAfter conferring with numerous \u00d6VP leaders around the country by phone over the weekend, Kurz announced his party's unity in favor of formal coalition negotiations with the Greens, rather than with the Social Democrats. He cited government stability as a key consideration for the choice, but cautioned that the outcome was still uncertain. Although unprecedented in Austria at the federal level, the idea of a coalition between the Christian-Democrats with the Greens was disproportionately favored by voters under 30 in both parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 108], "content_span": [109, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0032-0001", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, Formal coalition negotiations at the federal level\nAustria's younger generation has greater political clout than elsewhere because the voting age was lowered to 16, thus increasing their demographic share of the electorate. Born in 1986, Sebastian Kurz himself was one of the youngest heads of government on a global level when he first became Federal Chancellor in 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 108], "content_span": [109, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, Formal coalition negotiations at the federal level\nA Kurz-Kogler meeting was scheduled for Tuesday morning, 12 November 2019. Green leaders had unanimously approved opening coalition negotiations at a party meeting on Sunday. Kogler was quoted as saying that \"our hand is extended to the \u00d6VP\" but acknowledged that this undertaking had its risks. Major topics on which the two ideologically disparate parties had to strive to reach common ground are migration (refugees/immigration/integration), education, the economy, and transparency in government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 108], "content_span": [109, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, Formal coalition negotiations at the federal level\nPresident Van der Bellen and NEOS welcomed the breakthrough announced by Kurz Monday morning, while the FP\u00d6 criticized him for \"delivering Austria to the Greens\". The SP\u00d6 called for government formation to finish quickly. Kurz had not offered any particular reason why a coalition with the SP\u00d6 had been rejected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 108], "content_span": [109, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, Formal coalition negotiations at the federal level\nThe prospect of Austria being governed by a coalition of conservatives and greens was a novel development on the western European political landscape at a national level, and was watched with anticipation from the outside.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 108], "content_span": [109, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, Formal coalition negotiations at the federal level\nOn 15 November, \u00d6VP and Greens decided to create a negotiation team of more than 100 people combined, to negotiate in 6 major groups and 36 sub-groups, discussing different policy areas and issues. Group leaders from the two parties were named to oversee the comprehensive talks, which started on Monday, 18 November, involving all sub-groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 108], "content_span": [109, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, Formal coalition negotiations at the federal level\nOn 17 November, Hofer indicated he would say yes to a coalition agreement with Kurz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 108], "content_span": [109, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, State elections in Styria\nOn Sunday, 24 November 2019, legislative elections were held in Styria, Austria's fourth-largest state by population. The \u00d6VP won a resounding victory at the expense of both the Social Democrats and the FP\u00d6, which had done very well in the Styrian election of 2015. The \u00d6VP managed to re-establish itself as the historically dominant political force in the state. The Greens exceeded 10% of the vote statewide for the first time in history. With 6% the Communists did better than the NEOS who received 5%, but the NEOS had ground to celebrate nonetheless because they won enough votes to enter the Landtag for the first time, and with two seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 83], "content_span": [84, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, State elections in Styria\nBased on preliminary data reported as of 1700 on polling day, the breakdown by party is as follows: \u00d6VP 36.61% - SP\u00d6 22.89% - FP\u00d6 17.94% - GR\u00dcNE 11.43% - KP\u00d6 6.02% - NEOS 5.10%. The Greens did exceptionally well in Graz, Styria's capital, which is also the stronghold of the Communist Party, a unique facet in Styrian politics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 83], "content_span": [84, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, State elections in Styria\nStyria uses a slightly different version of PR to convert vote shares into seats than is used for elections to the national parliament. There is no 4% threshold. Instead, a party must win at least one seat (Grundmandat) by meeting a certain numerical requirement (Wahlzahl). Rather than being fixed, the number of votes necessary to meet this quota varies because it is computed based on all valid ballots cast in a district and the number of mandates allocated to that district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 83], "content_span": [84, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0040-0001", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, State elections in Styria\nFor the purpose of Landtag elections, Styria is divided into four districts (Wahlkreise) of unequal size, to which mandates (corresponding to seats in the Landtag) are apportioned based on the most recent census. The number of mandates per district is known going into the election, but the Wahlzahl is not known because it is affected by turnout, which this time was low by historical standards. As in national elections, the voting age is 16. Austria is an international outlier in giving youth in 16-18 age range the right to vote, and thus a stake in the political game and an ability to help shape their country's future. Voting used to be compulsory in several states, including, Styria, but that is no longer the case.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 83], "content_span": [84, 809]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, State elections in Styria\nAt the end of election day, the provisional distribution of seats in the 48-seat was projected as follows: \u00d6VP 18 seats (+4), SP\u00d6 12 (-3), FP\u00d6 8 (-6), GR\u00dcNE 6 (+3), KP\u00d6 2 (no change), NEOS 2 (+2). After all ballots were counted (including postal votes and those cast by voters outside their precincts using a voting card available for that purpose) one mandate that was projected for the Communists shifted to the SP\u00d6, whose leader had already resigned, following his party's sharp drop in voter support. The Communists and the Neos accordingly received two seats each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 83], "content_span": [84, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0041-0001", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, State elections in Styria\nEach won one basic mandate in the regional district that includes Graz, the capital, and a second one by aggregating their statewide votes. The Greens won five basic mandates outright, three of them in the Graz district, and received one more in the second stage of the seat-allocation process, bringing their total of 6, thereby doubling their strength in the Landtag. The turnout in this election was 64.5%, the lowest in history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 83], "content_span": [84, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0041-0002", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, State elections in Styria\nAs a result of the large shifts in voter support among the parties, the constellation of power in Styria came to mirror that at the federal level: Multiple variants of possible coalitions led by the \u00d6VP as the leading party were possible, but a coalition government with the Greens as a junior coalition partner would have required the inclusion of a third small party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 83], "content_span": [84, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, State elections in Styria\nWhile coalition negotiations between the \u00d6VP and the Greens were continuing at the federal level, they were concluded in Styria in only three weeks. On Monday, December 16, 2019, \u00d6VP and SP\u00d6 presented an agreement for a joint government dubbed \u201eKoalition wei\u00df-gr\u00fcn\u201c (White-Green Coalition), which eschewed reference to the two parties' traditional political colors (black and red, respectively). The newly formed coalition was also promoted as a \"Partnership for Reform\" and a \"Partnership for the Future.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 83], "content_span": [84, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, State elections in Styria\nNotwithstanding the novel branding, this pact was a new edition of a conventional \"grand coalition\" between Austria's traditional center-right and center-left parties. Reflecting the \u00d6VP election win, the new government was led by Hermann Sch\u00fctzenh\u00f6fer (\u00d6VP) as Governor. Anton Lang (SP\u00d6) was the deputy governor. Because of the shift in respective electoral support for the two parties, the \u00d6VP had one more seat in the provincial government, filled by ex-minister Juliane Bogner-Strau\u00df.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 83], "content_span": [84, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, State elections in Styria\nThe Styrian Landtag met on Tuesday, 17 December, for its inaugural session. The immediate task of the re-constituted body consisted of electing its three presiding officers (one each from the three largest parties), installing in the new state government pursuant to the coalition agreement, and designating Styria's nine representatives in the Bundesrat, the upper chamber of Austria's bicameral national parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 83], "content_span": [84, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, \u00d6VP-Green coalition agreement reached by party negotiating teams and leaders\nOn 29 December the \u00d6VP and the Greens informed the media that their coalition negotiations are close to coming to fruition. This followed a series of one-on-one talks between Kurz and Kogler that continued over the weekend and into the new week, with a few details remaining to be worked out. Prospective ministers were to pay courtesy calls to federal president Van der Bellen, who wished to confer with each one of them prior to them being sworn in. The public presentation of the coalition government was expected as early as 2 January 2020. According to the Salzburger Nachrichten, the post of ministers of the Interior, Foreign Relations, Finances, Economy, Instruction and Agriculture will be given to \u00d6VP\u00a0members, while the posts of ministers of Infrastructures, Environment, Justice, Health and Social Affairs will go to the Greens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 134], "content_span": [135, 975]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, \u00d6VP-Green coalition agreement reached by party negotiating teams and leaders\nThe coalition agreement on a joint government program and on the allocation of ministerial portfolios must, however, be approved by the rank and file of the Green party at a national party congress (Bundeskongress) called for that purpose, in keeping with the party's commitment to Basisdemokratie, which can be translated as bottom-up or grassroots democracy, here as an organizational principle within the party. The invitation to the Congress was delivered by email shortly before midnight on Saturday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 134], "content_span": [135, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0046-0001", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, \u00d6VP-Green coalition agreement reached by party negotiating teams and leaders\nThe party's internal rules required at least one week notice, and the delegates had yet to see the full text of the coalition agreement on which they were to vote. Therefore, the party's ratification of the negotiated coalition agreement through its 276 delegates at the party congress could not take place until 4 January 2020. The earliest swearing-in date could have been 7 January 2020 because the Monday the 6th is a national holiday in Austria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 134], "content_span": [135, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0046-0002", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, \u00d6VP-Green coalition agreement reached by party negotiating teams and leaders\nEven if approval was likely, the Green Party Congress (dubbed BuKo) was to give an idea of how unified the party is, and whether internal fissures will jeopardize its leadership's role and effectiveness as junior partner in the anticipated \u00d6VP\u2013Green coalition government, the first of its kind at the federal level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 134], "content_span": [135, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, \u00d6VP-Green coalition agreement reached by party negotiating teams and leaders\nOn New Year's Day, 22:00 local time, in a joint televised appearance, Sebastian Kurz and Werner Kogler announced the successful conclusion of their coalition talks and formation of a new joint government, with the formal government program to be released on 2 January. They complimented each other and thanked Austrians for their patience. Between them, the two parties had 97 seats, a five-seat majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 134], "content_span": [135, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0048-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, \u00d6VP-Green coalition agreement reached by party negotiating teams and leaders\nKurz said a very good result had been achieved; not just a deal based on the least common denominator. He again stressed that two parties had received their respective mandates from the voters for different reasons: Tax relief and a hard line against illegal immigration and \"political Islam\" in the case of the \u00d6VP; the imperative to fight climate change in the case of the Greens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 134], "content_span": [135, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0048-0001", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, \u00d6VP-Green coalition agreement reached by party negotiating teams and leaders\nKogler acknowledged that the negotiations were not easy, given the different orientations and policy positions of the two parties, and expressed a commitment to assume governing responsibility for the entirety of the Austrian \"population\", rather than just those who had voted Green or those who possess the right to vote. That larger constituency includes children and noncitizens. By expressing support for social policies to address child poverty and the challenges of other socially disadvantaged groups, such as the elderly, Kogler reaffirmed that the Green party stands for more than the environmental agenda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 134], "content_span": [135, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0048-0002", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, \u00d6VP-Green coalition agreement reached by party negotiating teams and leaders\nAlso invoked was another core issue associated with the Green Party: Transparenz. While this is easily translated as transparency, it is a somewhat more expansive concept in Austrian political discourse that encompasses open government, freedom of information, ethics in public life, and the fight against corruption. The need for the latter was highlighted by the Ibiza affair that precipitated the fall of the previous coalition (Kurz Government I) and necessitated premature national elections in 2019, following a vote of no-confidence in the National Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 134], "content_span": [135, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0049-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, \u00d6VP-Green coalition agreement reached by party negotiating teams and leaders\nThe joint announcement also paid homage to the idea that policymaking need not be a zero-sum game, and that the parties' divergent policy goals and priorities with respect to tax relief and environmental policy measures can be reconciled and pursued through compromise, with due consideration of their disparate impact on different income strata in the population, and ameliorative policy measures (Sozialausgleich). Kurz made an analogous point about protecting the country's border (\u00d6VP priority) and protecting the environment (Green priority).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 134], "content_span": [135, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0050-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, \u00d6VP-Green coalition agreement reached by party negotiating teams and leaders\nKogler echoed President van der Bellen's message of national unity by quoting him for the proposition that \"if you love your country, you don't split it.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 134], "content_span": [135, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0051-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, \u00d6VP-Green coalition agreement reached by party negotiating teams and leaders\nThe joint announcement was brief and cordial. No mention was made of a carbon tax or any specific policy measures or of the allocation of portfolios in the new government, at least half of which are expected to be assumed by women. No questions were entertained from members of the media.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 134], "content_span": [135, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0052-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, Green Party Congress ratifies coalition pact\nOn 4 January 2020, a national party convention cleared the way for the Greens to share governing power with the conservatives New People's Party (\u00d6VP) in a Kurz-Kogler Cabinet, to be sworn in next week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 102], "content_span": [103, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0053-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, Green Party Congress ratifies coalition pact\n276 Green Party delegates from across the country met in Salzburg for a party congress required by the party's charter to formally approve the party's participation with the \u00d6VP on the terms spelled out in the coalition pact hammered out by Kurz and Kogler, and their respective negotiating teams, over the course of three month following the snap elections of 2019. The vote, taken on the open floor by show of hands with voting cards, was overwhelmingly in favor: 205 votes out of 220 (or 93.18%), with only 15 voting against.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 102], "content_span": [103, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0054-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, Green Party Congress ratifies coalition pact\nThe floor vote followed an open-mic session in which speakers had two minutes each to make statements, which some delegates used to voice criticism about the party having made too many concessions on core Green principles and positions, such as with respect to expansion of police powers and pretrial detention of persons deemed public security risks, and policies that reflect a contempt for human rights. Lack of progress on the issue of non-discrimination against homosexuals was also invoked as a reason to oppose the alliance with the Conservatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 102], "content_span": [103, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0055-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, Green Party Congress ratifies coalition pact\nA motion for a secret convention vote was resoundingly rejected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 102], "content_span": [103, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0056-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, Green Party Congress ratifies coalition pact\nThe designation of the five Greens to assume positions in the new Government\u2014a selection that had been made and approved unanimously by the party's expanded executive committee\u2014was put to a convention floor vote separately, and received near-unanimous approval with 99.25% of the votes, with only one No vote and one abstention. Among the Green members of the new Government is a former refugee from Bosnia, who will head the ministry of justice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 102], "content_span": [103, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0057-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, Swearing-in of the new government\nOn Tuesday, 7 January 2020, President Van der Bellen swore in the new \u00d6VP-Green government at the Hofburg (11AM local time).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 91], "content_span": [92, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0058-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, First state elections following formation of \u00d6VP\u2013Green coalition\nRegional elections for the Landtag of Burgenland, Austria's easternmost and least populous state, were held on January 26, 2020, and yielded an unexpected outcome: An absolute majority for the Social Democrats (SP\u00d6), who had governed the State in a coalition with the FP\u00d6. Both parties are currently in opposition to the \u00d6VP-Green coalition government at the national level. The Burgenland elections were called ahead of schedule, following the Ibiza affair.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 122], "content_span": [123, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0058-0001", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, First state elections following formation of \u00d6VP\u2013Green coalition\nBoth FP\u00d6 and SP\u00d6 suffered major setbacks in the national parliamentary elections of 2019 and in the 2019 Landtag elections in neighboring Styria, but nevertheless became the junior partner in an \u00d6VP-SP\u00d6 coalition there. Burgenland uses a more personalized election system for Land election in which a preference vote for a candidate trumps the vote for a party list, with a 4% threshold to keep out the smallest parties. Of the six lists that competed, two did not surpass the threshold, including the NEOS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 122], "content_span": [123, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0059-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, First state elections following formation of \u00d6VP\u2013Green coalition\nAccording to preliminary results, the SP\u00d6 garnered close to 50% of the votes, which translates into a majority in the provincial legislature, making a coalition with another party unnecessary. SP\u00d6 leader and incumbent Governor Hans Peter Doskozil had steered pragmatic course, focusing on traditional Socialist objectives, such as higher wages, and had taken a more restrictive stance on immigration than the national SP\u00d6. He succeeded in his bid to demonstrate that the SP\u00d6 is still capable of winning elections if it stays attuned to what the people want. Doskozil benefited from high personal popularity and from the \"Governor-bonus\" despite being handicapped in his re-election campaigning by a subdued voice related to vocal cord problems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 122], "content_span": [123, 867]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287513-0060-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian legislative election, Government formation, First state elections following formation of \u00d6VP\u2013Green coalition\nThe New \u00d6VP received 30.6% of the vote while support for the FP\u00d6 dropped to 9.7%. The Greens held steady with 6.5% but performed worse than had been projected. Seventy-five percent of the 250,181 registered voters turned out. Commentators and pundits expected that the SP\u00d6's overwhelming victory under Doskozil in Burgenland would have repercussions for the SP\u00d6 at the national level, both with respect to the composition of its leadership, and the party's search for its place in Austria's evolving political landscape.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 122], "content_span": [123, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287514-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Austrian motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2019 Austrian motorcycle Grand Prix was the eleventh round of the 2019 MotoGP season. It was held at the Red Bull Ring in Spielberg on 11 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287515-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Auto Club 400\nThe 2019 Auto Club 400 was a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race that was held on March 17, 2019, at Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, California. Contested over 200 laps on the two-mile (3.2\u00a0km) D-shaped oval, it was the fifth race of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season. The race was won by Kyle Busch, his 200th win across all three of NASCAR's national divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287515-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Auto Club 400, Report, Background\nAuto Club Speedway (formerly California Speedway) is a 2 miles (3.2\u00a0km), low-banked, D-shaped oval superspeedway in Fontana, California which has hosted NASCAR racing annually since 1997. It is also used for open wheel racing events. The racetrack is located near the former locations of Ontario Motor Speedway and Riverside International Raceway. The track is owned and operated by International Speedway Corporation. The speedway is served by the nearby Interstate 10 and Interstate 15 freeways as well as a Metrolink station located behind the backstretch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287515-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Auto Club 400, First practice\nJimmie Johnson was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 40.137 seconds and a speed of 179.386\u00a0mph (288.694\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287515-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Auto Club 400, Qualifying\nAustin Dillon scored the pole for the race with a time of 39.982 and a speed of 180.081\u00a0mph (289.812\u00a0km/h) after no drivers completed a lap in the final round of qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287515-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Auto Club 400, Practice (post-qualifying), Second practice\nKevin Harvick was the fastest in the second practice session with a time of 40.940 seconds and a speed of 175.867\u00a0mph (283.031\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 63], "content_span": [64, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287515-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Auto Club 400, Practice (post-qualifying), Final practice\nBrad Keselowski was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 40.759 seconds and a speed of 176.648\u00a0mph (284.287\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287515-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Auto Club 400, Media, Television\nThe race was the 19th race Fox Sports covered at the Auto Club Speedway. Mike Joy, three-time Auto Club winner Jeff Gordon and Darrell Waltrip called the race in the booth for Fox. Jamie Little, Vince Welch and Matt Yocum handled the pit road duties for the television side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287515-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Auto Club 400, Media, Radio\nMRN had the radio call for the race which was also simulcasted on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio. Alex Hayden, Jeff Striegle and 2001 race winner Rusty Wallace called the race from the booth when the field raced their way down the front stretch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287515-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Auto Club 400, Media, Radio\nKyle Rickey called the race from a billboard outside turn 2 when the field raced their way through turns 1 and 2 & Dan Hubbard called the race from a billboard outside turn 3 when the field raced their way through turns 3 and 4. Winston Kelley, Steve Post and Dillon Welch had the pit road duties for MRN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287516-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ayawaso West by-election\nThe Ayawaso West by-election took place on 31 January 2019 after the death of the incumbent MP Emmanuel Kyeremateng Agyarko on 21 November 2018. Lydia Alhassan of the New Patriotic Party was elected with 69% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287516-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ayawaso West by-election, Violence\nViolence erupted in the area of the La-Bawaleshie polling station two hours after the election had started, though there was no death recorded there where casualties. Ningo-Prampram MP Sam George was assaulted and 18 people were wounded by gunshot. According to YEN.com, the perpetrators were masked men, and alleged to be National Security Operatives. YEN.com.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287516-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Ayawaso West by-election, Commission\nIn February 2020, a 3-member commission was established by the GoG to investigate into the violence during the by-election. It was claimed to be set-up by Mahamudu Bawumia with the permission of Nana Akufo-Addo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287517-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Azadi march\nThe 2019 Azadi march was a protest march led by Maulana Fazl-ur-Rehman of Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (F) in Islamabad, Pakistan from 28 October 2019. The march opposed Prime Minister Imran Khan, demanding his resignation, and new elections. No women were part of the protests. The protest involved tens of thousands of protesters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287517-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Azadi march, Background\nIslamists had accused the government of Imran Khan of Zionism, Qadianiat and authoritarianism ever since he delved into politics. These allegations would increase when Imran Khan's ex-wife Reham Khan herself claimed that he was a Zionist puppet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287517-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Azadi march, Background\nLater on further controversies would corroborate their allegations including accusations of 2018 general elections, appointment of Ahmadi economist Atif Mian as an advisor in the EAC on 1 September 2018, the alleged visit to Pakistan by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on 25 October 2019 and later acquitting of Asia Bibi who was convicted of Blasphemy, the arresting of Khadim Hussain Rizvi and other TLP leaders on 23 November 2018, arresting of members of the other two main opposition parties Maryam Nawaz(August 2019) and Asif Ali Zardari(June 2019) and accusations of bribing Members of the Parliament which were raised during a No confidence motion against Senate Chairperson Sadiq Sanjrani and Deputy Chairperson Saleem Mandviwalla in August 2019 when 64 parliamentarians of 53 parliamentarians required raised their hands yet 50 parliamentarians voted in the secret ballot. The country had also underwent a Debt crisis and Inflation in 2019 during his regime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 1008]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287517-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Azadi march, Background\nIn June 2019 the party had announced that it would hold a great march towards the capital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287517-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Azadi march, Background\nIt was decided that the Government, with its firm belief in upholding democratic ideals, would allow the proposed Azadi March, if it takes place within the ambit of law and the Constitution as interpreted in the decisions of the Supreme Court and Islamabad High Court", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287517-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Azadi march, Background\nOn 4 October 2019 Maulana Fazl-ur-Rehman announced that the Azadi March would commence on 27 October 2019 in order to force the Prime Minister to resign, it was to reach Islamabad by 31 October 2019, Fazl had said that the march will commence from karachi. On 11 October 2019 Maulana Fazl ur Rehman had an important meeting with Saudi Ambassador to Pakistan Nawaf bin Said al maliki regarding the political situation of the country and persuaded him to call of the Azadi March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287517-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Azadi march, Background\nThe two major Pakistani opposition parties, PPP and PML-N had said that although they would not join the Azadi March physically yet they would provide support to JUI-F in the Azadi March. After a meeting on 14 October 2019, ANP president Asfandyar Wali Khan said that he would lead the Azadi March if Maulana Fazl ur Rehman is arrested. On 21 October 2019 two JUI (F) leaders, Maulana Shafiq-ur-Rehman and Maulana Muhammad Irshad, were arrested when they were caught inciting people against the government to join the Azadi March in Shams Colony, Islamabad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287517-0004-0002", "contents": "2019 Azadi march, Background\nThe government would then form a seven member committee headed by Defence Minister Pervez Khattak consisting of Education minister Shafqat Mahmood, Religious Minister Noor-ul-Haq Qadri, Senate Chairman Sadiq Sanjrani, National Assembly Speaker Asad Qaiser, Speaker of Provincial Assembly of Punjab Chaudhry Pervaiz Elahi and Minister for planning development and special initiatives Asad Umar to negotiate with the opposition led Rehbar committee to end the Azadi March however the Committee demanded the resignation of Imran Khan. Once the Committee returned to Prime Minister Imran Khan the government allowed the Azadi March as long as it be held within ambit of law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287517-0004-0003", "contents": "2019 Azadi march, Background\nNACTA would later on alert the leaders of various political parties, especially those participating in the Azadi March regarding the danger of terrorist attacks. On 26 October 2019 JUI-F Islamabad General Secretary Mufti Muhammad Abdullah and Islamabad's Deputy Commissioner signed an agreement that the march will not enter the Red Zone in exchange for a NOC. At a news conference at Bannu Akram Durrani, the head of the Rehbar committee, announced that the participants of the Azadi March would not enter the Red Zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287517-0004-0004", "contents": "2019 Azadi march, Background\nThe government created a two-layer security ring for the protection of the Red Zone and had placed hundreds of containers at roadsides and greenbelts in case of need, the government also took additional security measures to protect the Faizabad Interchange and important entry points like Rawat and Tarnol. The protesters would ensure that the participants do not leave their designated value, public rights would not be violated and would hold responsibility for internal security. The government on the other hand would neither create hurdles for the protestors nor block their food supply.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287517-0004-0005", "contents": "2019 Azadi march, Background\nAccording to JUI-F plans after having a speech in Sohrab Goth regarding Kashmir the marchers will depart from the area after being joined by caravans from Hub, after being joined by more caravans at Rohri bus stand, Sukkur the marchers will enter Punjab through Ubauro. Marchers in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa would gather at meeting areas in Peshawar, Mardan, Charsadda, Nowshera and Buner for solidarity with Kashmir before joining at a meeting point on Grand Trunk Road. A JUI-F convoy lead by Maulana Abdul Wasey would also start from Baleli road, Quetta and reach Islamabad via the Loralai-Dera Ghazi Khan route, marchers would also come from Chaghi, Nushki, Gwadar and Turbat. Shortly before the Rally started on 27 October, JUI-F leader Mufti Kifayatullah was arrested in Islamabad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 809]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287517-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Azadi march, The March\nOn 27 October 2019 JUI (F)'s Azadi March left Karachi's Sohrab Goth area for Islamabad by using the M-9 motorway, thousands of people including seminary students participated in the march, additional convoys from the PPP, PML-N and ANP also joined the march.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 27], "content_span": [28, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287517-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Azadi march, The March\nMeanwhile thousands of people under the leadership of Maulana Abdul Wasey also left the Kuchlak area of Quetta to pass through Loralai then Dera Ghazi Khan to reach Islamabad and join the Azadi March, the party had also hired a large number of transportation vehicles including buses, according to a senior member of opposition the number of buses had already exceeded 400. Earlier the day of 27 October Maulana Fazl-ur-Rahman's container got stuck on an overhead bridge which caused a delay for a few hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 27], "content_span": [28, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287517-0005-0002", "contents": "2019 Azadi march, The March\nOther then JUI (F) leadership PPP leaders Raza Rabbani and Saeed Ghani who on 26 October 2019 had announced to join the march from Jamshoro, PML-N leaders Mohammad Zubair and Nehal Hashmi and ANP leaders Shahi Syed were also onboard the leading container. At 7:00pm the Caravan reached Hyderabad and after a short rest left for Sakrand to reach Sukkur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 27], "content_span": [28, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287517-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Azadi march, The March\nThe caravan then spend a night at Sukkur where they were joined by PPP leaders Syed Qaim Ali Shah, Nisar Khuhro and Nasir Hussain Shah before preparing for a large rally in that city. On 28 October 2019 Fazl-ur-Rahman along with Nisar Khuhro would criticize the government and in particular PEMRA for media censorship. On that day the general secretary of JUI (F) Abdul Ghafoor Haideri would reassure the government that the protesters would gather in a ground at Islamabad at H-9 but not enter the Red Zone after meeting Muhammad Hamza Shafqaat in Islamabad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 27], "content_span": [28, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287517-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Azadi march, The March\nOn the evening of 28 October 2019 the caravan reached Daharki to go to Multan. According to CPO(City Police Officer) of Multan Zubair Dreshak the marchers were preparing to raid the Fatima Jinnah Housing Scheme in Multan, CPO Zubair had claimed to arranged excellent security measures. The marchers coming from Dera Ghazi Khan and Muzaffargarh were to take bypass from Bahawalpur chowk to reach Multan. Meanwhile on the way to Multan three speeding vehicles crashed into each other at Ghotki, no casualties occurred.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 27], "content_span": [28, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287517-0006-0002", "contents": "2019 Azadi march, The March\nOnce the Azadi March caravan entered Punjab Maulana Fazal-ur-Rehman thanked Sindh leader Rashid Mahmood soomro for making good arrangements in Sindh for Azadi March, the Azadi March arrived at Multan on 28 October 2019. After an overnight stay at Multan the caravan then headed for Lahore where they were supposed to arrive at 29 October 2019. On the night of 29 October 2019 the March reached Sahiwal, which lied in between Lahore and Multan. The March was then expected to reach Lahore in the next four to five hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 27], "content_span": [28, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287517-0006-0003", "contents": "2019 Azadi march, The March\nMany political parties had set up camps at Lahore to welcome the Azadi March, JUI (F) had set camps at Data Darbar and Thokar Niaz Beg, Jamiat Ahle Hadith has set up a camp at Batti chowk on Ravi road. PML-N had set its camp at Chauburji while PPP had set its camp in Samanabad while the Traders community had its camp at Multan Chungi and Yateem Khana. On the wee hours of 30 October 2019 the Azadi March arrived at Lahore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 27], "content_span": [28, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287517-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Azadi march, The March\nLater on the March would enter Muridke in Sheikhupura where the PML-N Legislator Rana Tanveer Hussain welcomed the march, Maulana Fazl ur Rehman then did a speech there to pray for the health of Nawaz Sharif. The Azadi March then entered Kamoke in Gujranwala. The DC Islamabad then announced that metros will not be functional on 31 October 2019. According to the plans the march participants were to stay overnight at camps in Gujar Khan near Rawalpindi before marching to the capital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 27], "content_span": [28, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287517-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Azadi march, The March\nAccording to the plans by JUI-F Khyber Pakhtunkhwa chief Atta-ur-Rehman the JUI (F) caravan will depart from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa on 31 October 2019, Caravans will depart from Peshawar, Chitral, Dir, Kohistan, Shangla, Torghar, Bajaur and Mohmand to arrive at October 31 2pm at Rashakai Interchange. Caravans from South and North Waziristan, Kurram Agency, Orakzai and Kohat will arrive at Peshawar. Caravans from Abbottabad, Mansehra, Battagram and Haripur were expected to unite at Hasan Abdal at 4pm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 27], "content_span": [28, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287517-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Azadi march, Aftermath\nMedia censorship had reportedly increased and sources suggest that it had exceeded the media censorship of the Military regime of Zia-ul-Haq. The march was called-off on 13 November 2019 and was converted to a blockade of major roads as 'Plan-B'. After Nawaz Sharif left Pakistan for the UK on an air ambulance on 19 November 2019 for treatment the blockade 'Plan-B' was called-off as well. \u2018Plan C\u2019 of the Azadi march included opposition parties in Balochistan held rallies and protests across the region against the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf\u2019s government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 27], "content_span": [28, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287517-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Azadi march, Aftermath\nHowever, as of January 2020 Imran Khan remained the prime minister, with the march failing in its primary objective as Pakistan's powerful military backed the incumbent government, according to Reuters news agency. Analysts have divergent opinions on the march's failure, some say it failed as the military backed the government, while others argued that the opposition itself was divided, as the two main opposition parties had 'stayed away' from the sit-in protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 27], "content_span": [28, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287518-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Azerbaijan Grand Prix\nThe 2019 Azerbaijan Grand Prix (formally known as the Formula 1 SOCAR Azerbaijan Grand Prix 2019) was a Formula One motor race that took place on 28 April 2019 at the Baku City Circuit in Baku, Azerbaijan. The race was the 4th round of the 2019 Formula One World Championship, marked the 3rd time that the Azerbaijan Grand Prix had been run as a World Championship round, and the 4th time that the Baku circuit has been part of the Formula One World Championship (the 2016 race was run as the European Grand Prix).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287518-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Azerbaijan Grand Prix, Background, Championship standings before the race\nHeading into the race Lewis Hamilton held a 6-point advantage in the Drivers' Championship over Valtteri Bottas with Mercedes holding a 57-point advantage over Ferrari in the Constructors' Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 78], "content_span": [79, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287518-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Azerbaijan Grand Prix, Background, Entrants\nThe drivers and teams were the same as the season entry list with no additional stand in drivers for either the race or practice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287518-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Azerbaijan Grand Prix, Background, Penalties\nIn the lead up to the weekend it was announced that Alfa Romeo driver Antonio Giovinazzi would be receiving new control electronics for the Grand Prix. As this was his third set of control electronics he was given a 10 place grid penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287518-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Azerbaijan Grand Prix, Free practice\nThe first practice session ended after only 12 minutes (the session was scheduled for 90) after the Williams car driven by George Russell was badly damaged when it hit a loose drain cover. The cover, between turns two and three, appeared to be loosened when Charles Leclerc's Ferrari passed over it earlier. The truck towing Russell's car back to the pit lane then hit a pedestrian bridge, leaking hydraulic fluid onto the track and Russell's car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287518-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Azerbaijan Grand Prix, Free practice\nAs a result of these two incidents, race director Michael Masi cancelled the session, in order to check the other manholes on the circuit and to check the damage to the pedestrian bridge. Williams determined Russell's chassis needed replacing meaning he would not be allowed to run in the second practice session. The session therefore ended with only the two Ferraris setting lap times with Leclerc ahead of Sebastian Vettel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287518-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Azerbaijan Grand Prix, Free practice\nThe first major incident of second practice was Lance Stroll crashing 15 minutes into the session at turn 2. Daniil Kvyat also crashed at turn 7 with about 25 minutes to go. At the end of the session Pierre Gasly was instructed visually to bring the car to be weighed, however he missed the visual cue and continued to his garage where the mechanics performed work on the car, changing the tyres in a practice pit-stop. This was against the rules and as a result Gasly was forced to start the race from the pit lane. The session ended with the Ferrari of Leclerc fastest followed by his teammate Vettel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287518-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Azerbaijan Grand Prix, Free practice\nThird practice passed without incident with Leclerc finishing the session fastest ahead of Vettel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287518-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Azerbaijan Grand Prix, Qualifying\nThe first qualifying session ended when Robert Kubica's Williams crashed into the wall. During the session, Pierre Gasly had set the fastest lap ahead of Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton. Nico H\u00fclkenberg, Romain Grosjean, Lance Stroll, George Russell, and Robert Kubica were eliminated. In the second qualifying section, Charles Leclerc crashed exactly into the same wall Kubica had crashed earlier, ending his qualifying session. During the session, Max Verstappen had set the fastest lap, followed by Valtteri Bottas and Lewis Hamilton. Carlos Sainz, Daniel Ricciardo, Alexander Albon, Kevin Magnussen, and Pierre Gasly were eliminated in Q2. Valtteri Bottas took pole position after setting a lap time of 1:40.495, beating his teammate Lewis Hamilton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287518-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Azerbaijan Grand Prix, Race\nThe opening lap occurred without any accidents or incidents. Lewis Hamilton initially challenged Valtteri Bottas for the lead taking the inside line from his teammate into turns 1 and 2. Bottas retained his lead on the outside of both corners and had extended it by the end of the lap. Max Verstappen lost 4th place to Sergio P\u00e9rez whilst Charles Leclerc fell from 8th to 10th after being overtaken by Carlos Sainz Jr. and Daniel Ricciardo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287518-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Azerbaijan Grand Prix, Race\nVerstappen recovered 4th place on lap 6 and Leclerc passed P\u00e9rez to take 5th on the following lap. Leclerc then overtook Verstappen on the pit straight at the end of lap 9. Sebastian Vettel was the first of the front-runners to make a pit stop at the end of lap 11 entering in 3rd place and emerging in 5th. Race leader Bottas made his stop on the following lap exiting the pits in 4th place ahead of Vettel. Hamilton, who had inherited the lead, made his pit stop a lap later emerging in 4th place behind his teammate and handing the race lead to Leclerc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287518-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Azerbaijan Grand Prix, Race\nOn lap 14 Robert Kubica was issued with a drive-through penalty. The stewards found that Williams had released Kubica into the pit lane earlier than permitted at the start of the race, a rule the team were not aware of. Verstappen made his pit stop from 2nd place at the end of the same lap emerging from the pits in 6th behind teammate Pierre Gasly who was yet to stop. Verstappen later passed Gasly on lap 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287518-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Azerbaijan Grand Prix, Race\nOn lap 25 Romain Grosjean locked up his brakes at turn 15 and went up the escape road before rejoining the track dropping him from 11th down to 15th place. On lap 31 Bottas retook the lead of the race from Leclerc who was still yet to make his pit stop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287518-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Azerbaijan Grand Prix, Race\nShortly afterwards an incident occurred between Daniil Kvyat and Daniel Ricciardo, who were running in 10th and 11th respectively, at turn 3. Ricciardo attempted an overtake on Kvyat on the inside of the corner but locked up his brakes sending him down the escape road. Kvyat was forced to miss the corner to avoid turning into the Renault and came to a stop before his car hit the wall. Ricciardo then reversed into Kvyat whilst attempting to rejoin the track causing damage to both cars which was sufficient to retire them from the race. Both cars were able to return to the pits avoiding the need for a safety car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287518-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Azerbaijan Grand Prix, Race\nBy lap 34 Leclerc had been passed by Hamilton and Vettel as his tyres degraded. He made his pit stop at the end of the lap emerging in 6th place behind Pierre Gasly and almost 20 seconds behind Verstappen after having been ahead of both Red Bulls before Verstappen's first stop. A lap later Leclerc made it past Gasly to take 5th. The order of the top five was now Bottas, Hamilton, Vettel, Verstappen and Leclerc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287518-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 Azerbaijan Grand Prix, Race\nLap 39 saw both Gasly and Grosjean retire from the race with driveshaft and brake issues respectively, this marked Grosjean's third retirement in four races. Grosjean made it back to the pits but Gasly pulled into an escape road causing a brief virtual safety car whilst his Red Bull was recovered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287518-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Azerbaijan Grand Prix, Race\nValtteri Bottas crossed the line to take his fifth career victory. Lewis Hamilton finished in second place securing Mercedes' fourth consecutive one-two finish of the season with Sebastian Vettel taking third place. Charles Leclerc set the fastest lap and was awarded Driver of the Day. After the race Ricciardo was issued with a three-place grid penalty for the following race in Spain for causing the accident with Kvyat. Ricciardo stated that his reversing manoeuvre was \"just a sense of urgency and a bit of panic\" and that he was not aware of the Toro Rosso behind him. Kvyat responded by saying \"These things happen, it's racing\" and that he would \"buy [Ricciardo] a rear view mirror for the next race!\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287519-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 B&L Transport 170\nThe 2019 B&L Transport 170 is a NASCAR Xfinity Series race held on August 10, 2019, at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course in Lexington, Ohio. Contested over 75 laps on the 2.26-mile (3.64\u00a0km) road course, it was the 21st race of the 2019 NASCAR Xfinity Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287519-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 B&L Transport 170, Background, Track\nThe track is a road course auto racing facility located in Troy Township, Morrow County, Ohio, United States, just outside the village of Lexington. Mid -Ohio has also colloquially become a term for the entire north-central region of the state, from south of Sandusky to the north of Columbus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287519-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 B&L Transport 170, Background, Track\nThe track opened as a 15-turn, 2.4 mile (3.86\u00a0km) road circuit run clockwise. The back portion of the track allows speeds approaching 180\u00a0mph (290\u00a0km/h). A separate starting line is located on the backstretch to allow for safer rolling starts. The regular start / finish line is located on the pit straight. There is grandstand seating for 10,000 spectators and three observation mounds alongside the track raise the capacity to over 75,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287519-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 B&L Transport 170, Practice, First practice\nJustin Haley was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 85.386 seconds and a speed of 95.201\u00a0mph (153.211\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287519-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 B&L Transport 170, Practice, Final practice\nJack Hawksworth was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 85.383 seconds and a speed of 95.204\u00a0mph (153.216\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287519-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 B&L Transport 170, Qualifying\nAustin Cindric scored the pole for the race with a time of 84.231 seconds and a speed of 96.506\u00a0mph (155.311\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287519-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 B&L Transport 170, Race, Summary\nAustin Cindric started on pole and dominated Stage 1 despite Ray Black Jr. causing a caution on lap 4 for stalling and Jack Hawksworth spinning on the frontstretch. Cindric pitted with two laps remaining in the stage, giving the Stage 1 win to Chase Briscoe. On lap 28, Brandon Brown spun into a sand pit and got stuck. In the restart, Chris Dyson ran into Cole Custer, heavily damaging Dyson's car and forcing him to leave the race. For the next restart, Justin Allgaier and Noah Gragson spun simultaneously and collected numerous cars before Stephen Leicht lost a wheel and ended up ripping the door off David Starr's car. Hawksworth managed to win Stage 2 in his first NASCAR start.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287519-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 B&L Transport 170, Race, Summary\nScott Heckert went off-course and crashed into the tire wall with 19 laps remaining. Briscoe, Regan Smith, and Will Rodgers stayed out while the leaders pitted. When the green flag waved, Briscoe quickly passed Smith but was soon caught by Cindric and Christopher Bell. Cindric soon pulled away, and ultimately took the win with a 3 second lead over Bell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287520-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BAUHAUS-galan\nThe 2019 BAUHAUS-galan was the 52nd edition of the annual outdoor track and field meeting in Stockholm, Sweden. Held on 30 May 2019 at Stockholm Olympic Stadium, it was the third leg of the 2019 IAAF Diamond League \u2013 the highest level international track and field circuit. 38 events were contested with 13 of them being point-scoring Diamond League disciplines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287520-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BAUHAUS-galan, Diamond League results\nAthletes competing in the Diamond League disciplines earned extra compensation and points which went towards qualifying for one of two Diamond League finals (either Z\u00fcrich or Brussels depending on the discipline). First place earned eight points, with each step down in place earning one less point than the previous, until no points are awarded in ninth place or lower.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287521-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BB&T Atlanta Open\nThe 2019 BB&T Atlanta Open was a professional tennis tournament to be played on hard courts. It was the 32nd edition of the tournament, and part of the 2019 ATP Tour. It took place at Atlantic Station in Atlanta, United States between July 22 and 29, 2019. It was the first men's event of the 2019 US Open Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287521-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BB&T Atlanta Open, ATP singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 70], "content_span": [71, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287521-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BB&T Atlanta 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-00287522-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BB&T Atlanta Open \u2013 Doubles\nNicholas Monroe and John-Patrick Smith were the defending champions, but chose not to participate together. Monroe played alongside Frances Tiafoe, but lost in the first round to Marcelo Ar\u00e9valo and Miguel \u00c1ngel Reyes-Varela. Smith teamed up with Ben McLachlan but lost in the quarterfinals to Jack Sock and Jackson Withrow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287522-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BB&T Atlanta Open \u2013 Doubles\nDominic Inglot and Austin Krajicek won the title, defeating Bob and Mike Bryan in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20137(5\u20137), [11\u20139].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287523-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BB&T Atlanta Open \u2013 Singles\nJohn Isner was the two-time defending champion and had won the title five times in the last six years, but he lost in the second round to Reilly Opelka. This was only the second time out of ten in the Atlanta Open's history that Isner failed to reach the singles final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287523-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BB&T Atlanta Open \u2013 Singles\nAlex de Minaur won the title, defeating Taylor Fritz in the final, 6\u20133, 7\u20136(7\u20132).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287523-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BB&T Atlanta Open \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287524-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award\nThe BBC Sports Personality of the Year 2019 took place on 15 December 2019 at the P&J Live in Aberdeen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287524-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award\nThe event was broadcast live on BBC One, and hosted by Gary Lineker, Clare Balding and Gabby Logan. Lewis Capaldi performed \"Hold Me While You Wait\" and \"Someone You Loved\" during the memorial to those sportspeople who died in the past year and Emeli Sand\u00e9 performed \"Shine\" to commemorate the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup in France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287524-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award, Nominees\nThe nominees for the award were revealed on 25 November 2019. On the night of the final, the public were allowed to vote for one of only six contenders pre-selected by \"an expert independent panel\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287524-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award, Nominees\nThe winner of this award was Ben Stokes with Lewis Hamilton in second and Dina Asher-Smith in third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287524-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 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 presented:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 59], "content_span": [60, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287525-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BBL Playoffs\nThe 2019 BBL Playoffs were the concluding postseason of the 2018\u201319 Basketball Bundesliga season. The Playoffs started on 18 May and ended 23 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287525-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BBL Playoffs, Quarterfinals\nThe quarterfinals were played in a best of five format from 18 to 28 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 32], "content_span": [33, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287525-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BBL Playoffs, Semifinals\nThe semifinals were played in a best of five format from 2 to 9 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287525-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 BBL Playoffs, Finals\nThe finals were played in a best of five format from 16 to 23 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287526-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BBVA Open Ciudad de Valencia\nThe 2019 BBVA Open Ciudad de Valencia was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the fourth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Valencia, Spain between 23 and 29 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287526-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BBVA Open Ciudad de Valencia, 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-00287527-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BBVA Open Ciudad de Valencia \u2013 Doubles\nIrina Khromacheva and Nina Stojanovi\u0107 were the defending champions, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287527-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BBVA Open Ciudad de Valencia \u2013 Doubles\nIrina Bara and Rebeka Masarova won the title, defeating Andrea G\u00e1miz and Seone Mendez in the final, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20132).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287528-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BBVA Open Ciudad de Valencia \u2013 Singles\nPaula Badosa was the defending champion, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287528-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BBVA Open Ciudad de Valencia \u2013 Singles\nVarvara Gracheva won the title, defeating Tamara Korpatsch in the final, 3\u20136, 6\u20132, 6\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287529-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BC Lions season\nThe 2019 BC Lions season was the 62nd season for the team in the Canadian Football League (CFL) and their 66th overall. The Lions were eliminated from post-season contention following a week 18 loss to the Edmonton Eskimos on October 12, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287529-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BC Lions season\nThe Lions played without Wally Buono as head coach or general manager for the first time since the 2002 season following his final appearance last year. Buono was replaced as head coach by DeVone Claybrooks, who entered his first season as a head coach and is the 26th head coach in franchise history. Current general manager, Ed Hervey, who was in his second season in that role.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287529-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BC Lions season\nThe Lions held their training camp at Hillside Stadium in Kamloops, British Columbia for the tenth straight year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287529-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 BC Lions season\nClaybrooks was fired as head coach after one season on November 6, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287529-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 BC Lions season, Offseason, Foreign drafts\nFor the first time in its history, the CFL held drafts for foreign players from Mexico and Europe. Like all other CFL teams, the Lions held three non-tradeable selections in the 2019 CFL\u2013LFA Draft, which took place on January 14, 2019. The 2019 European CFL Draft took place on April 11, 2019 where all teams held one non-tradeable pick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 47], "content_span": [48, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287529-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 BC Lions season, Offseason, CFL Draft\nThe 2019 CFL Draft took place on May 2, 2019. The Lions traded their first-round pick in 2019 to Winnipeg for a first round pick in 2018. The Lions exchanged their second-round pick for Tyrell Sutton and a third-round pick and they traded their third-round pick for Davon Coleman and a sixth-round pick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287529-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 BC Lions season, Team, Roster\nItalics indicate American playersBold indicates global players updated 2019-11-02 \u2022 45 Active, 9 One-game Injured,7 Six-game Injured, 11 Practice", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287530-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BC Men's Curling Championship\nThe 2019 BC Men's Curling Championship presented by Barkerville Historic Town & Park and Nufloors the provincial men's curling championship for British Columbia, was held January 29 to February 3 at the West Fraser Centre in Quesnel. The winning Jim Cotter team represented British Columbia at the 2019 Tim Hortons Brier in Brandon, Manitoba.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287531-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BDO & WDF calendar\n2019 BDO & WDF season of darts comprises every tournament of British Darts Organisation and World Darts Federation. The category or prize money of the tournaments may be vary depending on darts organization.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287531-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BDO & WDF calendar\nBDO and WDF most important tournaments are the BDO World Darts Championship and WDF World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287532-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BDO World Darts Championship\nThe 2019 BDO World Professional Darts Championship was the 42nd World Championship organised by the British Darts Organisation, and the 34th and final staging at the Lakeside Country Club at Frimley Green.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287532-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BDO World Darts Championship\nGlen Durrant was the two-time defending men's champion after beating Mark McGeeney, 7\u20136 in the previous year's final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287532-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BDO World Darts Championship\nDurrant successfully defended his title to become the first three times consecutive BDO Men's World Champion since Eric Bristow in 1986, and the first male player in history to win his first three world championship finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287532-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 BDO World Darts Championship\nLisa Ashton was the two-time defending women's champion, after winning her fourth world title, with a 3\u20131 win over Anastasia Dobromyslova in 2018, but was defeated in the first round by Mikuru Suzuki.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287532-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 BDO World Darts Championship\nSuzuki went on to become the fifth BDO Women's World Champion, after defeating Lorraine Winstanley 3\u20130 in the final. In doing so, she hit the highest ever average in a Women\u2019s World Championship Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287532-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 BDO World Darts Championship\nThree-time champion Martin Adams missed out on the event for the first time since his debut appearance in 1994.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287532-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 BDO World Darts Championship, TV coverage\nEurosport and Quest began a three-year deal to cover the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287533-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BDO World Trophy\nThe 2019 BDO World Trophy was a major darts tournament run by the British Darts Organisation. It was held between 30 August and 1 September 2019 at King George's Hall, Blackburn, England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287533-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BDO World Trophy\nGlen Durrant and Fallon Sherrock were the defending champions, after beating Michael Unterbuchner (10\u20137) and Lorraine Winstanley (6\u20133) respectively in the finals of last year's edition. However, Durrant was unable to defend his title after his switch to the PDC, while Sherrock lost 4\u20133 to Mikuru Suzuki in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287533-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BDO World Trophy\nJim Williams claimed his maiden major title by beating Richard Veenstra 8\u20136 in the men's final, while Lisa Ashton won her third World Trophy after a 6\u20132 win over Anastasia Dobromyslova in the women's final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287533-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 BDO World Trophy, Competitors, Draw bracket\nThe draws were made on 4 August 2019 at the BDO AGM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287534-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BE5\n2019 BE5 is a sub-kilometer near-Earth asteroid classified under the Aten group. It was discovered on 31 January 2019, by the Zwicky Transient Facility at the Palomar Observatory. The asteroid was discovered one day after it had made a close approach to Earth from a distance of 0.00784\u00a0AU (1.173\u00a0million\u00a0km; 3.05\u00a0LD).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [8, 8], "content_span": [9, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287534-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BE5, Orbit and classification\n2019 BE5 orbits the Sun at an average distance of approximately 0.61 astronomical units (0.0913\u00d710^9\u00a0km; 0.0567\u00d710^9\u00a0mi), taking 0.48 years or 174 days to complete one full orbit. It has an orbital eccentricity of 0.659 and a low inclination of 1.44 degrees to the ecliptic. The orbit of 2019 BE5 extends from 0.21\u00a0AU at perihelion to 1.01\u00a0AU at aphelion, crossing the orbits of Mercury, Venus, and Earth. As a result, it frequently makes close passes to these planets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 34], "content_span": [35, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287534-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BE5, Orbit and classification\n2019 BE5 is classified as an Aten asteroid, which means that it is an Earth-crossing asteroid that has an orbital semi-major axis less than 1\u00a0AU but a aphelion distance greater than Earth's perihelion distance of 0.983\u00a0AU. Its orbit has a very small minimum orbit intersection distance (MOID) with Earth, estimated to be approximately 0.00001043\u00a0AU (0.00406\u00a0LD), or 1,560\u00a0km (970\u00a0mi). Despite this small Earth MOID, a possible collision with Earth in the next 100 years has been ruled out by NASA's Sentry impact prediction system. With an absolute magnitude of 25.1, 2019 BE5 is too small to be classified as a potentially hazardous object.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 34], "content_span": [35, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287534-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 BE5, Orbit and classification, Close approaches\nOn 30 January 2019, one day prior to its discovery, 2019 BE5 made a close pass by the Moon and Earth from within 0.01\u00a0AU (3.9\u00a0LD). The asteroid made its closest approach to the Moon from a distance of 0.00830\u00a0AU (1.242\u00d710^6\u00a0km; 3.23\u00a0LD) at 09:38 UTC, and then made its closest approach to Earth ten hours later, from a distance of 0.00784\u00a0AU (1.173\u00d710^6\u00a0km; 3.05\u00a0LD) at 19:36 UTC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 52], "content_span": [53, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287534-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 BE5, Physical characteristics\nGiven an absolute magnitude of 25.1 and an assumed geometric albedo of 0.05\u20130.25, 2019 BE5 is estimated to have a diameter between 25\u201355 metres (0.016\u20130.034\u00a0mi).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 34], "content_span": [35, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287535-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BET Hip Hop Awards\nThe 2019 BET Hip Hop Awards was a recognition ceremony held on TV on October 9, 2019 from the Atlanta's Cobb Energy Center. The nominations were announced on September 12, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287535-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BET Hip Hop Awards\nAfter notching four wins at the previous year's festivities, Cardi B lead with 10 nominations in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287535-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BET Hip Hop Awards\nThere was a three-way tie for second most nominations as DJ Khaled, Travis Scott and J. Cole each nabbed eight nominations. Despite his passing earlier the year, Nipsey Hussle received five nominations. As for newcomers, Megan Thee Stallion snagged five, while DaBaby garnered four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287535-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 BET Hip Hop Awards, Winners and nominees, Single of the Year\nOnly the producer of the track nominated in this category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 65], "content_span": [66, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287536-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BFF U-18 Football Tournament\nThe 2019 BFF U-18 Football Tournament (also known as Walton U-18 Football Tournament for sponsorship reason), It was the 3rd edition of BFF U-18 Football Tournament, a youth club football tournament in Bangladesh hosted by the Bangladesh Football Federation. The main goal of this tournament to produce future football players for Bangladesh national football team and clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287536-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BFF U-18 Football Tournament, Draw\nThe draw cremony were held at BFF house at Motijheel, Dhaka on 31 July 2019. The 12 teams were divided into 4 groups. Top two teams from each group will qualified for Quarter-Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 39], "content_span": [40, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287536-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BFF U-18 Football Tournament, Goalscorers\nThere have been 55 goals scored in 19 matches, for an average of 2.89 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287537-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BGL Luxembourg Open\nThe 2019 BGL BNP Paribas Luxembourg Open was a professional women's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts sponsored by BNP Paribas. It was the 24th edition of the Luxembourg Open, and part of the WTA International tournaments category of the 2019 WTA Tour. It was held in Kockelscheuer, Luxembourg from 14 to 20 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287537-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BGL Luxembourg Open, Points and prize money, Prize money\n1 Qualifiers prize money is also the Round of 32 prize money* per team", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 61], "content_span": [62, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287537-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BGL Luxembourg Open, Singles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287537-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 BGL Luxembourg Open, Singles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry using a protected ranking into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287537-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 BGL Luxembourg Open, Doubles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received a wildcard into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287538-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BGL Luxembourg Open \u2013 Doubles\nGreet Minnen and Alison Van Uytvanck were the defending champions, but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287538-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BGL Luxembourg Open \u2013 Doubles\nCoco Gauff and Caty McNally won the title, defeating Kaitlyn Christian and Alexa Guarachi in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287539-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BGL Luxembourg Open \u2013 Singles\nJe\u013cena Ostapenko won the title, defeating defending champion Julia G\u00f6rges in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287540-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BK H\u00e4cken season\nThe 2019 BK H\u00e4cken season is BK H\u00e4cken's 79th season of existence, and its 19th season competing in the Allsvenskan, the top tier of football in Sweden. The club has been a fixture in the Allsvenskan each season since 2009. In addition to the 2019 Allsvenskan, BK H\u00e4cken will compete in the Svenska Cupen, and the UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287540-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BK H\u00e4cken season, Transfers and loans\nFrom January 1, 2019. Arrivals include players returning from loans. Departures include players out on loan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287541-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BMW Open\nThe 2019 BMW Open (also known as the BMW Open by FWU for sponsorship reasons) was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 104th edition of the event and part of the ATP Tour 250 series of the 2019 ATP Tour. It took place at the MTTC Iphitos complex in Munich, Germany, from 29 April until 5 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287541-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287542-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BMW Open \u2013 Doubles\nIvan Dodig and Rajeev Ram were the defending champions, but Dodig chose not to participate and Ram chose to compete in Estoril instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287542-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BMW Open \u2013 Doubles\nFrederik Nielsen and Tim P\u00fctz won the title, defeating Marcelo Demoliner and Divij Sharan in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287543-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BMW Open \u2013 Singles\nAlexander Zverev was the two-time defending champion, but lost to Cristian Gar\u00edn in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287543-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BMW Open \u2013 Singles\nGar\u00edn went on to win the title, defeating Matteo Berrettini in the final, 6\u20131, 3\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20131).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287543-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BMW Open \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287544-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BMW PGA Championship\nThe 2019 BMW PGA Championship was the 65th edition of the BMW PGA Championship, an annual golf tournament on the European Tour, held 19\u201322 September at the West Course of Wentworth Club in Virginia Water, Surrey, England, a suburb southwest of London.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287544-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BMW PGA Championship\nDanny Willett, co-leader after three rounds with Jon Rahm, won by three strokes from Rahm with Christiaan Bezuidenhout in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287544-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BMW PGA Championship, Round summaries, Second round\nPlay was suspended because of darkness with 5 players still to complete their second round. They completed their second round early on Saturday morning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287544-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 BMW PGA Championship, Round summaries, Third round\nOvernight co-leaders Jon Rahm and Danny Willett both scored 68 and they extended their lead over the rest of the field from two strokes to three. Three players were tied for third place: Christiaan Bezuidenhout and Justin Rose who both scored 69 while Shubhankar Sharma scored 66. Ross Fisher scored 66, finishing with an albatross 2 at the final hole, coming home in 29. Rory McIlroy scored 65, the best round of the day, but was still 9 strokes behind the leaders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 55], "content_span": [56, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287545-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Open\nThe 2019 BNP Paribas Open (also known as the 2019 Indian Wells Masters) was a professional tennis tournament played at Indian Wells, California in March 2019. It was the 46th edition of the men's event and 31st of the women's event, and was classified as an ATP Tour Masters 1000 event on the 2019 ATP Tour and a Premier Mandatory event on the 2019 WTA Tour. Both the men's and the women's events took place at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden in Indian Wells, California, from March 4 through March 17, 2019, on outdoor hard courts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287545-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Open\nAll top 75 ranked WTA and ATP Tour singles players were included in the initial entry list, but two-time champion Maria Sharapova announced her withdrawal three weeks before the tournament due to a right shoulder injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287545-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Open\nJuan Mart\u00edn del Potro and Naomi Osaka were the defending champions in the men's and women's draw respectively. Del Potro withdrew before the tournament began due to a knee injury. Osaka lost in the fourth round to Belinda Bencic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287545-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Open, ATP singles main draw entrants, Seeds\nThe following are the seeded players. Rankings and seedings are based on ATP rankings as of March 4, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 60], "content_span": [61, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287545-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Open, ATP singles main draw entrants, Seeds\n\u2020 The player did not qualify for the tournament in 2018, but was defending points from an ATP Challenger Tour tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 60], "content_span": [61, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287545-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Open, ATP singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 69], "content_span": [70, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287545-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Open, ATP doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 69], "content_span": [70, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287545-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Open, WTA singles main draw entrants, Seeds\nThe following are the seeded players. Seedings are based on WTA rankings as of February 25, 2019. Rankings and points before are as of March 4, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 60], "content_span": [61, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287545-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Open, WTA singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 69], "content_span": [70, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287545-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Open, WTA singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry using a protected ranking into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 69], "content_span": [70, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287545-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Open, WTA doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 69], "content_span": [70, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287546-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nJohn Isner and Jack Sock were the defending champions, but Sock could not participate due to injury. Isner played alongside Sam Querrey, but lost in the first round to Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Mahut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287546-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nNikola Mekti\u0107 and Horacio Zeballos won the title, defeating \u0141ukasz Kubot and Marcelo Melo in the final, 4\u20136, 6\u20134, [10\u20133].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287547-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nDominic Thiem defeated Roger Federer in the final, 3\u20136, 6\u20133, 7\u20135, to win the Men's Singles title at the 2019 Indian Wells Masters. It was his first ATP Tour Masters 1000 title. Thiem became the first Austrian to win a Masters 1000-level title since Thomas Muster won the 1997 Miami Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287547-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nJuan Mart\u00edn del Potro was the defending champion, but withdrew due to a knee injury before the tournament began.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287547-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Open \u2013 Men's Singles, Seeds\nClick on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287548-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nHsieh Su-wei and Barbora Str\u00fdcov\u00e1 were the defending champions, but lost in the quarterfinals to Chan Hao-ching and Latisha Chan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287548-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nElise Mertens and Aryna Sabalenka won the title, defeating Barbora Krej\u010d\u00edkov\u00e1 and Kate\u0159ina Siniakov\u00e1 in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287549-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nNaomi Osaka was the defending champion, but lost to Belinda Bencic in the fourth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287549-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nBianca Andreescu won her first WTA Tour title, defeating Angelique Kerber in the final, 6\u20134, 3\u20136, 6\u20134. Andreescu became the first wildcard to win the title in the tournament's history and the youngest Indian Wells champion since Serena Williams in 1999. This also marked the second year in a row where a player won the tournament without having won a WTA singles title prior.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287549-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nOsaka retained the WTA no. 1 singles ranking despite failing to defend her title. Petra Kvitov\u00e1, Simona Halep, Sloane Stephens and Karol\u00edna Pl\u00ed\u0161kov\u00e1 were also in contention for the top ranking at the beginning of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287549-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Open \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nClick on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287550-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Primrose Bordeaux\nThe 2019 BNP Paribas Primrose Bordeaux is a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It is the twelfth edition of the tournament and part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It takes place in Bordeaux, France between 29 April and 5 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287550-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287550-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Primrose Bordeaux, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as a special exempt:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287550-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Primrose Bordeaux, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287551-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Primrose Bordeaux \u2013 Doubles\nBradley Klahn and Peter Polansky were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287551-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Primrose Bordeaux \u2013 Doubles\nGr\u00e9goire Barr\u00e8re and Quentin Halys won the title after defeating Romain Arneodo and Hugo Nys 6\u20134, 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287552-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Primrose Bordeaux \u2013 Singles\nReilly Opelka was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287552-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Primrose Bordeaux \u2013 Singles\nLucas Pouille won the title after defeating Mikael Ymer 6\u20133, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287553-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Sopot Open\nThe 2019 BNP Paribas Sopot Open is a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It will be the 2nd edition of the tournament which is part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It will take place in Sopot, Poland between 29 July and 4 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287553-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Sopot 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-00287553-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Sopot Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as a special exempt:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287553-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Sopot Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw using a protected ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287553-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Sopot Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287554-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Sopot Open \u2013 Doubles\nMateusz Kowalczyk and Szymon Walk\u00f3w were the defending champions but chose to defend their title with different partners. Kowalczyk partnered Karol Drzewiecki but lost in the final to Andre Begemann and Florin Mergea. Walk\u00f3w partnered Marcin Matkowski but lost in the first round to Jeremy Jahn and Pedro Mart\u00ednez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287554-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Sopot Open \u2013 Doubles\nBegemann and Mergea won the title after defeating Drzewiecki and Kowalczyk 6\u20131, 3\u20136, [10\u20138] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287555-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Sopot Open \u2013 Singles\nPaolo Lorenzi was the defending champion but lost in the quarterfinals to Aslan Karatsev.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287555-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas Sopot Open \u2013 Singles\nStefano Travaglia won the title after defeating Filip Horansk\u00fd 6\u20134, 2\u20136, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287556-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas de Nouvelle-Cal\u00e9donie\nThe 2019 BNP Paribas de Nouvelle-Cal\u00e9donie was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the sixteenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Noum\u00e9a, New Caledonia between 31 December 2018 and 6 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287556-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas de Nouvelle-Cal\u00e9donie, 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-00287556-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas de Nouvelle-Cal\u00e9donie, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287557-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas de Nouvelle-Cal\u00e9donie \u2013 Doubles\nHugo Nys and Tim P\u00fctz were the defending champions but only Nys chose to defend his title, partnering Elliot Benchetrit. Nys lost in the first round to Salvatore Caruso and Kenny de Schepper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287557-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas de Nouvelle-Cal\u00e9donie \u2013 Doubles\nDustin Brown and Donald Young won the title after defeating Andr\u00e9 G\u00f6ransson and Sem Verbeek 7\u20135, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287558-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas de Nouvelle-Cal\u00e9donie \u2013 Singles\nNoah Rubin was the defending champion but lost in the final to Mikael Ymer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287558-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BNP Paribas de Nouvelle-Cal\u00e9donie \u2013 Singles\nYmer won the title after defeating Rubin 6\u20133, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287559-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BO\n2019 BO is a tiny near-Earth asteroid of the Apollo group. It was first observed by the Catalina Sky Survey at the Mount Lemmon Observatory on 7 January 2019. It passed within 0.18 lunar distances, or 69,192 kilometres (42,994\u00a0mi) from Earth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 7], "section_span": [7, 7], "content_span": [8, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287560-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BOSS GP Series\nThe 2019 BOSS GP season is the 25th season of the BOSS GP series. The championship begun on 28 April at Hockenheim and finished on 13 October at Imola.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287561-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BRDC British Formula 3 Championship\nThe 2019 BRDC British Formula 3 Championship is a motor racing championship for open wheel, formula racing cars held across England, with one round in Belgium. The 2019 season is the fourth organised by the British Racing Drivers' Club in the United Kingdom. The championship features a mix of professional motor racing teams and privately funded drivers, and also features the 2-litre 230-bhp Tatuus-Cosworth single seat race car in the main series. The season will commence at Oulton Park on 20 April and end on 15 September at Donington Park, after eight triple header events for a total of twenty-four races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287561-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BRDC British Formula 3 Championship, Race calendar and results\nThe calendar was revealed on 8 November 2018. The series supports British GT at all events, excluding the 17-18 August round at Silverstone Circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287561-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BRDC British Formula 3 Championship, Championship standings\nPoints were awarded to the top 20 classified finishers in races one and three, with the second race awarding points to only the top 15. Race two, which reversed the order of the race one finishers, providing they set a lap time within 103% of the fastest driver, will be awarded extra points for positions gained from drivers' respective starting positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287562-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BSL Playoffs\n2019 Basketbol S\u00fcper Ligi (BSL) Playoffs will be the final phase of the 2018\u201319 Basketbol S\u00fcper Ligi season. The playoffs starts on 21 May 2019. Fenerbah\u00e7e Beko were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287562-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BSL Playoffs\nThe eight highest placed teams of the regular season qualified for the playoffs. In the quarter-finals a best-of-three was played, in the semi-finals a best-of-five and in the finals a best-of-seven playoff format was used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287562-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BSL Playoffs\nAnadolu Efes competed against Fenerbah\u00e7e Beko in the finals, won the series 4-3 and got their 14th championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287563-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BSWW Mundialito\nThe 2019 BSWW Mundialito was a beach soccer tournament that took place at Praia da Nazar\u00e9 in Nazar\u00e9, Portugal, from 13 August to 15 August 2019. This competition with 4 teams was played in a round-robin format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287564-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BUBBA Burger Sports Car Grand Prix\nThe 2019 BUBBA Burger Sports Car Grand Prix was a sports car race sanctioned by the International Motor Sports Association (IMSA). It was held at Long Beach street circuit in Long Beach, California on 13 April 2019. The race was the third round of the 2019 WeatherTech SportsCar Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287564-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BUBBA Burger Sports Car Grand Prix, Background\nThis event was run in conjunction with the Grand Prix of Long Beach in the IndyCar Series, held a day after the IMSA event, on 14 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287564-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BUBBA Burger Sports Car Grand Prix, Background\nOn 4 April 2019, IMSA released a technical bulletin regarding the Balance of Performance for the race. In the Daytona Prototype International (DPi) class, the Acura ARX-05 was made 20 kilograms lighter, and received an increase in turbo boost, along with the Nissan DPi. The Mazda RT24-P was restricted in its boost, while being made five kilograms lighter. The Cadillac DPi-V.R, which won the previous two events of the 2019 season, was given a 10 kilogram increase. In GT Le Mans (GTLM), there were less significant changes. The Porsche 911 RSR was lightened by 10 kilograms, while the Ford GT had a slight reduction in boost.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287564-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 BUBBA Burger Sports Car Grand Prix, Background, Entries\nOn 3 April 2019, the entry list for the event was released, featuring 19 cars in total. There were 11 cars in the Daytona Prototype International class, and eight entries in GT Le Mans (GTLM). The Le Mans Prototype (LMP2) and GT Daytona (GTD) classes would not be participating in the event. There were few changes to the full-season lineups in either class. Kyle Kaiser, who joined the #50 Juncos Racing Cadillac DPi-V.R for the 24 Hours of Daytona, returned to the car alongside full-season driver Will Owen on a one-race deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287564-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 BUBBA Burger Sports Car Grand Prix, Background, Entries\nThe Thursday before the race, it was announced one of Ford Chip Ganassi Racing's full-season drivers, Joey Hand, would be unable to compete due to suffering symptoms of the flu. His place would be taken by one of their endurance-event drivers, S\u00e9bastien Bourdais, who would also be competing in the IndyCar event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287564-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 BUBBA Burger Sports Car Grand Prix, Practice and qualifying, Qualifying Results\nPole positions in each class are indicated in bold and by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 84], "content_span": [85, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287565-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF International Challenge\nThe 2019 BWF International Challenge is the thirteenth season of the BWF International Challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287566-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF International Series\nThe 2019 BWF International Series is the twelfth season of the BWF International Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287567-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF Para-Badminton World Championships\nThe 2019 BWF Para-Badminton World Championships was held from 20 to 25 August 2019 in Basel, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287567-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF Para-Badminton World Championships, Host city selection\nAfter Basel was selected to be the host of 2019 BWF World Championships in March 2019, the organizing team proposed to hold the able-bodied badminton world championships together the para-badminton world championships. The proposal was approved by Badminton World Federation thus marking the first time Para-Badminton World Championships is held together with World Badminton Championships in the same venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287568-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF Para-Badminton World Championships \u2013 Men's singles SL3\nThe men's singles SL3 tournament of the 2019 BWF Para-Badminton World Championships took place from 20 to 25 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287569-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF Para-Badminton World Championships \u2013 Men's singles WH1\nThe men's singles WH1 tournament of the 2019 BWF Para-Badminton World Championships took place from 20 to 25 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287570-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF Para-Badminton World Championships \u2013 Men's singles WH2\nThe men's singles WH2 tournament of the 2019 BWF Para-Badminton World Championships took place from 20 to 25 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287571-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Championships\nThe 2019 BWF World Championships was a badminton tournament which was held from 19 to 25 August 2019 at St. Jakobshalle in Basel, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287571-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Championships, Host city selection\nBasel was chosen to be the host of the 2019 edition of the championships over 2020 Summer Olympics host city, Tokyo. The bid were approved by the Badminton World Federation during a council meeting in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287572-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Championships qualification\nThese are the lists of entries of 2019 BWF World Championships qualification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287572-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Championships qualification, Overview, Events\nThis event holds men's singles and doubles, women's singles and doubles, and mixed doubles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 60], "content_span": [61, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287572-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Championships qualification, Overview, Number of players/member association quota\nThis event's total limit of eligibility players is 400 players, the following charts are the rules and the distribution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 96], "content_span": [97, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287572-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Championships qualification, Participating players, Men's singles\nDue to the phase 2 updated by BWF, the following chart is the invitation results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287572-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Championships qualification, Participating players, Women's singles\nDue to the phase 2 updated by BWF, the following chart is the invitation results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 82], "content_span": [83, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287572-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Championships qualification, Participating players, Men's doubles\nDue to the phase 2 updated by BWF, the following chart is the invitation results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287572-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Championships qualification, Participating players, Women's doubles\nDue to the phase 2 updated by BWF, the following chart is the invitation results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 82], "content_span": [83, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287572-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Championships qualification, Participating players, Mixed doubles\nDue to the phase 2 updated by BWF, the following chart is the invitation results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287573-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Championships \u2013 Men's doubles\nThe men's doubles tournament of the 2019 BWF World Championships takes place from 19 to 25 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287573-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Championships \u2013 Men's doubles, Seeds\nThe seeding list is based on the World Rankings from 30 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287573-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287574-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Championships \u2013 Men's singles\nThe men's singles tournament of the 2019 BWF World Championships took place from 19 to 25 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287574-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Championships \u2013 Men's singles, Seeds\nThe seeding list is based on the World Rankings from 30 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287574-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287575-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Championships \u2013 Mixed doubles\nThe mixed doubles tournament of the 2019 BWF World Championships takes place from 19 to 25 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287575-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Championships \u2013 Mixed doubles, Seeds\nThe seeding list is based on the World Rankings from 30 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287575-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287576-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Championships \u2013 Women's doubles\nThe women's doubles tournament of the 2019 BWF World Championships takes place from 19 to 25 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287576-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Championships \u2013 Women's doubles, Seeds\nThe seeding list is based on the World Rankings from 30 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 53], "content_span": [54, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287576-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287577-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Championships \u2013 Women's singles\nThe women's singles tournament of the 2019 BWF World Championships takes place from 19 to 25 August. The Badminton World Federation has conducted a re-draw of the women's singles event in 9 August, because a player had mistakenly been included in the entry list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287577-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Championships \u2013 Women's singles, Seeds\nThe seeding list is based on the World Rankings from 30 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 53], "content_span": [54, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287577-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287578-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Junior Championships\nThe 2019 BWF World Junior Championships was the twenty-first edition of the BWF World Junior Championships. It was held in Kazan, Russia at the Kazan Gymnastics Center from 30 September to 13 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287578-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Junior Championships, Host city selection\nThe original winner of the bid was Prague, Czech Republic, which was awarded the event in November 2017 during Badminton World Federation meeting at Jamaica, with Tipsport Arena as the proposed venue. Prague later withdrew and the Badminton World Federation later re-awarded the event to Kazan in November 2018 during the announcement of 18 major badminton event hosts from 2019 to 2025.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287579-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Boys' doubles\nThe boys' doubles of the tournament 2019 BWF World Junior Championships will be held from 7 to 13 October 2019. The defending champions is Di Zijian/Wang Chang from China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287579-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Boys' doubles, Seeds\nClick on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 58], "content_span": [59, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287580-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Boys' singles\nThe boys' singles of the tournament 2019 BWF World Junior Championships will be held from 7 to 13 October 2019. The defending champions is Kunlavut Vitidsarn from Thailand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287580-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Boys' singles, Seeds\nClick on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 58], "content_span": [59, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287581-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Girls' doubles\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by 103.81.134.19 (talk) at 14:31, 13 October 2019 (\u2192\u200eSeeds). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287581-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Girls' doubles\nThe girls' doubles of the tournament 2019 BWF World Junior Championships will be held from 7 to 13 October 2019. The defending champions is Liu Xuanxuan/Xia Yuting from China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287581-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Girls' doubles, Seeds\nClick on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 59], "content_span": [60, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287582-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Girls' singles\nThe girls' singles of the tournament 2019 BWF World Junior Championships held from 7 to 13 October 2019. Goh Jin Wei from Malaysia was the champion in the last edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287582-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Girls' singles, Seeds\nClick on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 59], "content_span": [60, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287583-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Mixed doubles\nThe mixed doubles of the tournament 2019 BWF World Junior Championships will be held from 7 to 13 October 2019. The defending champions is Leo Rolly Carnando/Indah Cahya Sari Jamil from Indonesia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287583-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Mixed doubles, Seeds\nClick on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 58], "content_span": [59, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287584-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Teams event\nThe teams event of the 2019 BWF World Junior Championships was held from 30 September to 5 October 2019. The event was also known as the 2019 Suhandinata Cup. China was the champion of the last edition held in Markham, Canada, and also 13-time defending champion in this event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287584-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Teams event\n43 countries representing all five continental federations competed in this event. The group draw was done on 8 September. First seed, Indonesia were drawn with Finland and Uganda in group A1. Russia as the host were drawn with Canada, Macau, Hong Kong and Malaysia in group B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287585-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Teams event group stage\nThe group stage of the 2019 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Teams event is the first stage of the competition. It will hold at Kazan Gymnastics Center in Kazan, Russia, from 30 September to 5 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287585-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Teams event group stage, Group composition\nThe draw for 41 teams competing in the tournament were announced on 4 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 80], "content_span": [81, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287586-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Senior Championships\nThe 2019 BWF World Senior Championships, officially YONEX BWF World Senior Badminton Championships Katowice 2019, was a badminton tournament which was held from 4 to 11 August 2019 at Spodek in Katowice, Poland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287587-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Senior Championships \u2013 35+\nThese are the results of 2019 BWF World Senior Championships' 35+ events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287588-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Senior Championships \u2013 40+\nThese are the results of 2019 BWF World Senior Championships' 40+ events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287589-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Senior Championships \u2013 45+\nThese are the results of 2019 BWF World Senior Championships' 45+ events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287590-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Senior Championships \u2013 50+\nThese are the results of 2019 BWF World Senior Championships' 50+ events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287591-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Senior Championships \u2013 55+\nThese are the results of 2019 BWF World Senior Championships' 55+ events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287592-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Senior Championships \u2013 60+\nThese are the results of 2019 BWF World Senior Championships' 60+ events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287593-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Senior Championships \u2013 65+\nThese are the results of 2019 BWF World Senior Championships' 65+ events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287594-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Senior Championships \u2013 70+\nThese are the results of 2019 BWF World Senior Championships' 70+ events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287595-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Senior Championships \u2013 75+\nThese are the results of 2019 BWF World Senior Championships' 75+ events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287596-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Tour\nThe 2019 BWF World Tour (officially known as the 2019 HSBC BWF World Tour for sponsorship reasons) was the second season of the BWF World Tour of badminton, a circuit of 26 tournaments which led up to the World Tour Finals tournament. The 27 tournaments were divided into five levels: Level 1 was the said World Tour Finals, Level 2 called Super 1000 (three tournaments), Level 3 called Super 750 (five tournaments), Level 4 called Super 500 (seven tournaments) and Level 5 called Super 300 (11 tournaments). Each of these tournaments offered different ranking points and prize money. The highest points and prize pool was offered at the Super 1000 level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287596-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Tour\nOne other category of tournament, the BWF Tour Super 100 level 6, also offered BWF World Tour ranking points. Although this level was not part of the BWF World Tour, it was an important part of the pathway and entry point for players into the BWF World Tour tournaments. When the 10 Level 6 grade tournaments of the BWF Tour Super 100 were included, the complete tour consisted of 37 tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287596-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Tour, Statistics, Performance by countries\nBelow are the 2019 BWF World Tour performances by country. Only countries who have won a title are listed:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 57], "content_span": [58, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287596-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Tour, Statistics, Performance by categories\nAccurate as of the MD final (5/5 matches) of the BWF World Tour Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 58], "content_span": [59, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287597-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Tour Finals\nThe 2019 BWF World Tour Finals (officially known as the HSBC BWF World Tour Finals 2019 for sponsorship reasons) was the final tournament of the 2019 BWF World Tour. It was held from 11 to 15 December 2019 in Guangzhou, China and had a total prize of $1,500,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287597-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Tour Finals, Tournament\nThe 2019 BWF World Tour Finals was the second edition of the BWF World Tour Finals and was organized by the Guangzhou Sports Bureau, Guangzhou Sports Competitions Centre, Guangzhou Badminton Administrative Centre, and Guangzhou Badminton Association. It was hosted by the Chinese Badminton Association and Guangzhou Municipal Government with sanction from the BWF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287597-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Tour Finals, Tournament, Venue\nThis international tournament was held at the Tianhe Gymnasium in Tianhe, Guangzhou, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287597-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Tour Finals, Tournament, Point distribution\nBelow is the point distribution for each phase of the tournament based on the BWF points system for the BWF World Tour Finals event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287597-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Tour Finals, Tournament, Prize money\nThe total prize money for this tournament was US$1,500,000. Distribution of prize money was in accordance with BWF regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287597-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Tour Finals, Representatives, Eligible players\nBelow are the eligible players for World Tour Finals. Final ranking used was released on 26 November 2019, and not counting the results from the Syed Modi International. Players who won titles at the 2019 BWF World Championships are marked in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 61], "content_span": [62, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287597-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF World Tour Finals, Representatives, Representatives by nation\n\u00a7: Yuta Watanabe from Japan was the only player who played in two categories (men's doubles and mixed doubles).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287598-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF season\nThe 2019 BWF season was the overall badminton circuit organized by the Badminton World Federation (BWF) for the 2019 badminton season to publish and promote the sport. The world badminton tournament in 2019 consisted of:1. BWF Tournaments (Grade 1; Major Events)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287598-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF season\n3. Continental Circuit (Grade 3) BWF Open Tournaments: BWF International Challenge, BWF International Series, and BWF Future Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287598-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF season\nThe Sudirman Cup were teams event. The others \u2013 Super 1000, Super 750, Super 500, Super 300, Super 100, International Challenge, International Series, and Future Series are all individual tournaments. The higher the level of tournament, the larger the prize money and the more ranking points available.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287598-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF season\nThe 2019 BWF season calendar comprises these six levels of BWF tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287598-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF season, Schedule\nThis is the complete schedule of events on the 2019 calendar, with the Champions and Runners-up documented.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 25], "content_span": [26, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287598-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF season, BWF Player of the Year Awards\nThe followings are the nominees of the BWF Player of the Year Awards 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 46], "content_span": [47, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287598-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 BWF season, Retirements\nFollowing is a list of notable players (winners of a main tour title, and/or part of the BWF Rankings top 100 for at least one week) who announced their retirement from professional badminton, during the 2019 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287599-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars baseball team\nThe 2019 BYU Cougars baseball team represents Brigham Young University in the 2019 NCAA Division I baseball season. Mike Littlewood acts in his seventh season as head coach of the Cougars. After being picked to finish first in the conference in 2018, BYU suffered through a season with many injuries on both sides of play. The end result was a 22\u201328 season with BYU finishing tied with Pacific at 11\u201317 for ninth place in conference play. The result led Littlewood to clean house in the off-season, and BYU enters 2019 with 20 new players on the roster: 17 newcomers and 3 returning missionaries. The Cougars were picked to finish sixth in the WCC Pre-season poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287599-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars baseball team, Rivalries\nBYU has two main rivalries on their schedule- the Deseret First Duel vs. Utah and the UCCU Crosstown Clash vs. Utah Valley. The Cougars will also participate in the Kleberg Bank College Classic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287599-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars baseball team, Radio Information\nFor the second consecutive season BYU Baseball will be broadcast as part of the NuSkin BYU Sports Network, and for the first time ever every BYU Baseball game will be broadcast on radio. Brent Norton returns to provide play-by-play for his 27th consecutive season, with Jason Shepherd or Greg Wrubell subbing in when Brent is unavailable. Tuckett Slade will provide analysis for most games, but a small selection of former players will also be used. Games will once again be carried on KOVO and BYU Radio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287599-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars baseball team, Radio Information\nKOVO will have five exclusives (Gm. 1 Feb. 16, Mar. 8, Mar. 12, Mar. 23, and Apr. 6), BYU Radio's KUMT will have one exclusive (Feb. 21), and BYU Radio will carry three others exclusively across all their stations (Gm. 2 Feb. 16, Mar. 7, and Mar. 19). The Mar. 5 game will have hour one only on KOVO before BYU Radio JIP's the game at 7 PM MST. All other games will air on both KOVO and BYU Radio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287600-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars football team\nThe 2019 BYU Cougars football team represented Brigham Young University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Cougars were led by fourth-year head coach Kalani Sitake, and played their home games at LaVell Edwards Stadium. This was the eighth year that BYU competed as an NCAA Division I FBS independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287600-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars football team, Before the season, Coaching changes\nOn January 14, 2019 Ryan Pugh was announced as the new offensive coordinator at Troy leaving a vacancy on the offensive staff. On February 14, 2019 Eric Mateos was named the offensive line coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 67], "content_span": [68, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287600-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars football team, Schedule\nFollowing their win over Idaho State on November 16, the Cougars accepted an invitation to the 2019 Hawaii Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287600-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, Utah\nUniform combination: white helmet, royal blue jersey, white pants w/ royal blue accents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287600-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, at Tennessee\nUniform combination: white helmet, white jersey, navy pants w/ white accents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287600-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, USC\nUniform combination: white helmet, navy jerseys, white pants w/ navy accents", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287600-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, Washington\nUniform combination: (Throwbacks) white helmet, white jerseys, royal blue pants w/ white accents", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287600-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, at Toledo\nUniform combination: white helmet, white jersey, navy pants w/ white accents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287600-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, at South Florida\nUniform combination: white helmet, white jerseys, white pants w/ navy accents", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287600-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, Boise State\nUniform combination: white helmet, royal blue jerseys, white pants w/ royal blue accents", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287600-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, at Utah State\nUniform combination: white helmet, white jerseys, white pants w/ royal blue accents", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287600-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, Liberty\nUniform combination: white helmet, navy jerseys, white pants w/ navy accents", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287600-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, Idaho State\nUniform combination: white helmet, royal blue jerseys, white pants w/ royal blue accents", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287600-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, at UMass\nUniform combination: white helmet, white jerseys, navy pants w/ white accents", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287600-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, at San Diego State\nUniform combination: white helmet, white jerseys, royal blue pants w/ white accents", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287600-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, Hawai'i\nUniform combination: white helmet, royal blue jerseys, white pants w/ royal blue accents", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287601-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's soccer team\nThe 2019 BYU Cougars women's soccer team represents BYU during the 2019 NCAA Division I women's soccer season. The Cougars are coached for a 25th consecutive season by Jennifer Rockwood, who was co-coach in 1995 and became the solo head coach in 1996. Before 1995 BYU women's soccer competed as a club team and not as a member of the NCAA. Overall the Cougars have made the NCAA tournament in 19 of the 24 seasons that Rockwood has been the head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287601-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's soccer team\nJoining Rockwood as assistant coaches are Brent Anderson (3rd season) and Steve Magleby (2nd season) with volunteer assistants Rachel Jorgensen (6th season) and McKinzie Young (8th season). The Cougars came off of a season where they were first in the WCC and went 13\u20135\u20131, 8\u20131\u20130 in the WCC. The Cougars were picked to finish as co-champs by the WCC media.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287601-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's soccer team, Media, Television & Internet Streaming\nMost BYU women's soccer will have a TV broadcast or internet video stream available. BYUtv and WCC Network (the new name for TheW.tv) will once again serve as the primary providers. Information on these television broadcasts can be found under each individual match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287601-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's soccer team, Media, Nu Skin BYU Sports Network\nFor a sixth consecutive season the BYU Sports Network will air BYU Cougars women's soccer games. Greg Wrubell will provide play-by-play for most games with Jason Shepherd filling-in when Wrubell has football duties. Analysts will rotate. ESPN 960 and BYU Radio will act as the flagship stations for women's soccer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287601-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's soccer team, Schedule, xz-Alabama\nSeries History: First MeetingBroadcasters: & Hayley MacDonald (SEC+)Greg Wrubell & Avery Walker (BYUR 107.9 FM/ESPN 960)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287601-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's soccer team, Schedule, xz-Mississippi State\nSeries History: First MeetingBroadcasters: & (SEC+)Greg Wrubell & Avery Walker (BYUR 107.9 FM/ESPN 960)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287601-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's soccer team, Schedule, xz-Southern Utah\nSeries History: BYU leads series 2\u20130\u20130Broadcasters: Greg Wrubell & Avery Walker (WCC Network & BYUR 107.9 FM/ESPN 960)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287601-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's soccer team, Schedule, xy-Utah\nGame Name: Deseret First DuelSeries History: BYU leads series 22\u20137\u20132Broadcasters: & (BYUtv) & Avery Walker (BYUR 107.9 FM/ESPN 960)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287601-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's soccer team, Schedule, xy-Texas A&M\nSeries History: Texas A&M leads series 1\u20130\u20130Broadcasters: & Carla Haslam (BYUtv)Greg Wrubell & Avery Walker (BYUR 107.9 FM/ESPN 960)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287601-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's soccer team, Schedule, xz-Utah Valley\nGame Name: UCCU Crosstown ClashSeries History: BYU leads series 4\u20130\u20130Broadcasters: & (UVUtv/WAC DN) Greg Wrubell & Avery Walker (BYUR 107.9 FM/ESPN 960)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287601-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's soccer team, Schedule, xz-Kansas\nSeries History: BYU leads series 3\u20131\u20131Broadcasters: & (ESPN+) Greg Wrubell & Avery Walker (BYUR 107.9 FM/ESPN 960)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287601-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's soccer team, Schedule, xz-Kansas State\nSeries History: First MeetingBroadcasters: , , & (ESPN+) Jason Shepherd & Avery Walker (BYUR 107.9 FM/ESPN 960)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287601-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's soccer team, Schedule, xz-Long Beach State\nSeries History: BYU leads series 7\u20133\u20130Broadcasters: Jacob Hughey & Carlos Hernandez (Big West TV) Greg Wrubell & BJ Pugmire (BYUR 107.9 FM/ESPN 960)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287601-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's soccer team, Schedule, xy-UC Irvine\nSeries History: BYU leads series 3\u20131\u20130Broadcasters: Jarom Jordan & Carla Haslam (BYUtv) Jason Shepherd & Avery Walker (BYUR 107.9 FM/ESPN 960)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287601-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's soccer team, Schedule, xz-Santa Clara*\nSeries History: Santa Clara leads series 7\u20132\u20134Broadcasters: (WCC Network) Greg Wrubell & Avery Walker (ESPN 960)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287601-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's soccer team, Schedule, xz-Pepperdine*\nSeries History: Pepperdine leads series 6\u20134\u20130Broadcasters: Spencer Linton, Brian Dunseth, & Jason Shepherd (byutv.org)Greg Wrubell & Avery Walker (BYUR 107.9 FM/ESPN 960)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287601-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's soccer team, Schedule, xy-Pacific*\nSeries History: BYU leads series 6\u20131\u20130Broadcasters: Jarom Jordan & Carla Haslam (BYUtv)Jason Shepherd & Avery Walker (BYUR 107.9 FM/ESPN 960)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287601-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's soccer team, Schedule, xz-Saint Mary's*\nSeries History: BYU leads series 8\u20130\u20131Broadcasters: Greg Wrubell & (WCC Network & BYUR 107.9 FM/ESPN 960)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287601-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's soccer team, Schedule, xz-Portland*\nSeries History: BYU leads series 9\u20134\u20130Broadcasters: (WCC Network) Greg Wrubell & Elena Medeiros (BYUR 107.9 FM/ESPN 960)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287601-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's soccer team, Schedule, xy-San Diego*\nSeries History: BYU leads series 8\u20133\u20130Broadcasters: Spencer Linton & Carla Haslam (BYUtv) Greg Wrubell & Elena Medeiros (BYUR 107.9 FM/ESPN 960)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287601-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's soccer team, Schedule, xz\u2013San Francisco*\nSeries History: BYU leads series 7\u20132\u20130Broadcasters: & Jim Duggan (WCC Network) Jason Shepherd & Avery Walker (BYUR 107.9 FM/ESPN 960)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287601-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's soccer team, Schedule, xz-Gonzaga*\nSeries History: BYU leads series 11\u20130\u20130Broadcasters: Mark (WCC Network) Greg Wrubell & Elena Medeiros (BYUR 107.9 FM/ESPN 960)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287601-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's soccer team, Schedule, xz-Loyola Marymount*\nSeries History: BYU leads series 8\u20131\u20131Broadcasters: Jason Shepherd & Avery Walker (WCC Network & BYUR 107.9 FM/ESPN 960)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287601-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's soccer team, Schedule, xy-NCAA 1st Round: Boise State\nSeries History: First MeetingBroadcasters: Spencer Linton & Carla Haslam (BYUtv) Greg Wrubell & Avery Walker (BYUR 107.9 FM)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 78], "content_span": [79, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287601-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's soccer team, Schedule, xy-NCAA 2nd Round: Louisville\nSeries History: First MeetingBroadcasters: Spencer Linton, Carla Haslam, & Jason Shepherd (BYUtv) Greg Wrubell & Avery Walker (BYUR 107.9 FM)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 77], "content_span": [78, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287601-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's soccer team, Schedule, xy-NCAA Sweet 16: NC State\nSeries History: First MeetingBroadcasters: Jarom Jordan & Carla Haslam (BYUtv) Jason Shepherd & Avery Walker (BYUR 107.9 FM)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 74], "content_span": [75, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287601-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's soccer team, Schedule, xy-NCAA Elite 8: Stanford\nSeries History: Stanford leads series 4\u20133Broadcasters: & (P12+ STAN) Greg Wrubell & Avery Walker (BYUR 107.9 FM/ESPN 960)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 73], "content_span": [74, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287602-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's volleyball team\nThe 2019 BYU Cougars women's volleyball team represents Brigham Young University in the 2019 NCAA Division I women's volleyball season. The Cougars are led by fifth year head coach Heather Olmstead and play their home games at the Smith Fieldhouse. The Cougars are members of the WCC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287602-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's volleyball team\nBYU comes off a season where they won the WCC regular season championship and once again participated in the NCAA Tournament before falling to Stanford in the national semifinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287602-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's volleyball team\nThe Cougars would put together another impressive season with a 25-4 record. However two losses in conference play caused the Cougars to finish second in the WCC. The Cougars were granted an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament and were given the #14 seed, allowing them to host the first two rounds. BYU would be swept by Utah in the 2nd Round to finish the season at 26-5. After the tournament was completed BYU finished ranked #17 in the nation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287602-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 BYU Cougars women's volleyball team, Announcers for televised games\nAll home games will be on BYUtv or WCC Network (formerly TheW.tv). Most road game will also be televised or streamed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 72], "content_span": [73, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287603-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BZ3\n2019 BZ3 is a very small near-Earth asteroid of the Apollo group, approximately 6 meters (20 feet) in diameter. It was first observed by the Mount Lemmon Survey on 28 January 2019, just hours after the asteroid's sub-lunar flyby of Earth at less than 0.12 lunar distance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [8, 8], "content_span": [9, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287603-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BZ3, Orbit and classification\n2019 BZ3 is an Apollo asteroid, the largest subgroup of near-Earth objects. It orbits the Sun at a distance of 0.96\u20133.6\u00a0AU once every 3 years and 6 months (1,268 days; semi-major axis of 2.29\u00a0AU). Its orbit has a high eccentricity of 0.58 and an inclination of 11\u00b0 with respect to the ecliptic. The body still has a high orbital uncertainty of 5 and 7, respectively. Its observation arc of only 8 days begins with its official first observation at Mount Lemmon Observatory on 28 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 34], "content_span": [35, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287603-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BZ3, Orbit and classification, Close approaches\n2019 BZ3 has an Earth minimum orbital intersection distance of 0.000457\u00a0AU (68,000\u00a0km), which corresponds to 0.18 lunar distances (LD). Due to its very small size, however, 2019 BZ3 is not a potentially hazardous asteroid, which are required to be approximately 140 meters (460\u00a0ft) in diameter, that is, to be brighter than an absolute magnitude of 22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 52], "content_span": [53, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287603-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 BZ3, Orbit and classification, Close approaches\nOn 27 January 2019 at UTC 23:29, 2019 BZ3 passed Earth at a nominal distance of 48,130\u00a0km (0.125\u00a0LD) with a relative velocity of 11.37\u00a0km. Six hours later, it flew by the Moon at 350400\u00a0km. The object's next close approaches will occur on 17 December 2025 at a much greater distance of 56\u00a0LD (0.143\u00a0AU), and on 29 January 2085 at 5.5\u00a0LD (0.0142\u00a0AU).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 52], "content_span": [53, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287603-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 BZ3, Numbering and naming\nThis minor planet has not yet been numbered by the Minor Planet Center and remains unnamed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 30], "content_span": [31, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287603-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 BZ3, Physical characteristics\n2019 BZ3 has an undetermined spectral type. Based on a generic magnitude-to-diameter conversion, the asteroid measures approximately 6 meter in diameter for an assumed albedo of 0.15 and absolute magnitude 28.8. The estimated diameter may vary between 5 and 10 meters depending on whether an albedo for a dark carbonaceous (0.05) or a bright stony (0.25) asteroid is assumed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 34], "content_span": [35, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287604-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Babergh District Council election\nThe 2019 Babergh District Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Babergh District Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287605-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Badminton Asia Championships\nThe 2019 Badminton Asia Championships, was a badminton tournament which took place at the Wuhan Sports Center Gymnasium in China from 23 to 28 April 2019 and had a total purse of $400,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287605-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Badminton Asia Championships, Tournament\nThe 2019 Badminton Asia Championships was the 38th edition of the Badminton Asia Championships. This tournament was hosted by the Chinese Badminton Association, with the sanction of Badminton Asia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287605-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Badminton Asia Championships, Tournament, Venue\nThis international tournament was held at the Wuhan Sports Center Gymnasium in Wuhan, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287605-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Badminton Asia Championships, Tournament, Point distribution\nThis tournament is graded based on the BWF points system for the BWF World Tour Super 500 event. Below is the table with the point distribution for each phase of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287605-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Badminton Asia Championships, Tournament, Prize money\nThe total prize money for this year tournament is US$400,000. Distribution of prize money is in accordance with BWF regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287606-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Badminton Asia Championships group stage\nThe following results are for the 2019 Badminton Asia Championships group stage, which decide who will advance to the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287607-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Badminton Asia Junior Championships\nThe 2019 Badminton Asia Junior Championships was the 22nd edition of the Asia continental junior championships to crown the best U-19 badminton players across Asia. This tournament was held in Suzhou, China from 20 to 28 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287607-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Badminton Asia Junior Championships, Tournament\nThe 2019 Badminton Asia Junior Championships was organized by Chinese Badminton Association, with sanction from the Badminton Asia. This tournament consists of team and individual events. There were 14 teams competing in the mixed team event, which had been held from 20 to 23 July, while the individual events will be held from 24 to 28 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287607-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Badminton Asia Junior Championships, Tournament, Venue\nThis international tournament was held at Suzhou Olympic Sports Centre in Suzhou, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287608-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Badminton Asia Junior Championships \u2013 Boys' doubles\nThe boys' doubles tournament of the 2019 Badminton Asia Junior Championships will be held from 24 to 28 July. Di Zijian / Wang Chang from China clinched this title in the last edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287609-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Badminton Asia Junior Championships \u2013 Boys' singles\nThe boys' singles tournament of the 2019 Badminton Asia Junior Championships will be held from 24 to 28 July. Lakshya Sen from India clinched this title in the last edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287610-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Badminton Asia Junior Championships \u2013 Girls' doubles\nThe girls' doubles tournament of the 2019 Badminton Asia Junior Championships will be held from 24 to 28 July. Febriana Dwipuji Kusuma / Ribka Sugiarto from Indonesia clinched this title in the last edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287611-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Badminton Asia Junior Championships \u2013 Girls' singles\nThe girls' singles tournament of the 2019 Badminton Asia Junior Championships will be held from 24 to 28 July. Wang Zhiyi from China clinched this title in the last edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287612-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Badminton Asia Junior Championships \u2013 Mixed doubles\nThe mixed doubles tournament of the 2019 Badminton Asia Junior Championships will be held from 24 to 28 July. Guo Xinwa / Liu Xuanxuan from China clinched this title in the last edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287613-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Badminton Asia Mixed Team Championships\nThe 2019 Badminton Asia Mixed Team Championships were the second edition of the Badminton Asia Mixed Team Championships which was held at the Queen Elizabeth Stadium in Hong Kong from 19 to 24 March 2019. It was organised by Badminton Asia and Hong Kong Badminton Association. The event was also known as the Tong Yun Kai Cup 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287613-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Badminton Asia Mixed Team Championships, Tournament\nThe 2019 Badminton Asia Mixed Team Championships officially crowned the best mixed national badminton teams in Asia. 11 teams, lacking two teams from previous edition entered the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287613-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Badminton Asia Mixed Team Championships, Tournament, Venue\nThe tournament was held at Queen Elizabeth Stadium in Hong Kong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287613-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Badminton Asia Mixed Team Championships, Tournament, Draw\nThe draw was held at World Trade Centre Club on 28 February 2019. The group stage consisted of one group with two teams and three groups each with three teams. The first seeded team, Japan, was preassigned to Group A, while the second seeded team, China, was preassigned to Group D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 62], "content_span": [63, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287614-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Badminton Asia Mixed Team Championships squads\nThis article lists the squads lists for badminton's 2019 Badminton Asia Mixed Team Championships. Rankings stated are per tournament prospectus based on BWF World Ranking for 19 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287615-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bagram Airfield attack\nIn the early morning of December 11, 2019, the Taliban attacked Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan, which at the time was controlled by the United States. The attackers used two car bombs which killed two civilians and injured 80 others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287615-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bagram Airfield attack, The attack\nTaliban insurgents attacked the western part of the base following the explosion. The attack was repelled by a US-led NATO forces. At 5:50 AM a 22,500 lb VBIED (Vehicle Borne IED) was detonated at Bagram Airfield abandoned medical facility that was walled off separate from the rest of the base. Six people were wounded from the blast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287615-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bagram Airfield attack, American military response\nJust minutes after the attacks, Marine advisors and their Georgian military counterparts responded to the attacks. The Marines and Georgians were in charge of perimeter security for Bagram Airfield Security Forces (BAFSECFOR). At the time of the attack BAFSECFOR was headquartered by the 307th Airborne Engineer Battalion, and organized as Task Force Cobalt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287615-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bagram Airfield attack, American military response\nTask Force Cobalt pushed more combat power to the site of the initial attack, mainly elements of the 348th Route Clearance Company, focusing on containing taliban fighters from entering the main portion of the base. Heavy small arms fire and rockets could be heard In the area of the initial car bomb but taliban fighters were unsuccessful from entering the main portion of the base. 16 hours after the initial attack US fighter aircraft bombed the area outside of the military base colloquially known as the Korean hospital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287615-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bagram Airfield attack, American military response\nFollowing the attack HHC, 307th AEB coordinated the closing of the breach in the perimeter created by the initial blast and subsequent bombings by US Forces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287616-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Baguio local elections\nLocal elections were held in Baguio on Monday, May 13, 2019, as a part of the 2019 Philippine general election. Voters elected candidates for the local elective posts in the city: the mayor, vice mayor, the congressman, and the twelve councilors", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287616-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Baguio local elections\nRetired police general Benjamin Magalong won the mayoralty race, beating outgoing vice mayor Edison Bilog, while outgoing mayor Mauricio Domogan lost to incumbent representative Mark Go, marking the first defeat in his political career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287616-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Baguio local elections\nThere are a total of 113,899 people who voted out of the 164,125 registered voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287616-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Baguio local elections, Mayoral and Vice Mayoral elections, Mayor\nIncumbent mayor Mauricio Domogan is ineligible to run for a fourth term. He ran for the lone congressional seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 70], "content_span": [71, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287616-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Baguio local elections, Mayoral and Vice Mayoral elections, Vice Mayor\nIncumbent vice mayor Edison Bilog is not term-limited but is running for City Mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287616-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Baguio local elections, District representative\nIncumbent Representative Mark Go is running for a second term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287617-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bahamas Bowl\nThe 2019 Bahamas Bowl was a college football bowl game played on December 20, 2019, with kickoff at 2:00 p.m. EST on ESPN. It was the 6th edition of the Bahamas Bowl, and the first of the 2019\u201320 bowl games concluding the 2019 FBS football season. Sponsored by the Chicago suburb of Elk Grove Village, Illinois, the game was officially known as the Makers Wanted Bahamas Bowl. Behind 173 rushing yards from Bulls running back Jaret Patterson, Buffalo defeated Charlotte, 31\u20139.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287617-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bahamas Bowl, Teams\nThe game was played between the Charlotte 49ers from Conference USA (C\u2013USA) and the Buffalo Bulls from the Mid-American Conference (MAC). This was the first time the Bulls and 49ers played against each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287617-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bahamas Bowl, Teams, Buffalo Bulls\nBuffalo entered the bowl with a 7\u20135 record (5\u20133 in conference). The Bulls finished their regular season in a three-way tie for second place in the East Division of the MAC. This was Buffalo's fourth appearance in a bowl game; they were 0\u20133 in prior bowls, most recently appearing in the 2018 Dollar General Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287617-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bahamas Bowl, Teams, Charlotte 49ers\nCharlotte entered the bowl with a 7\u20135 record (5\u20133 in conference). The 49ers finished their regular season in fourth place in the East Division of C\u2013USA. This was Charlotte's first postseason game in school history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287618-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bahrain Grand Prix\nThe 2019 Bahrain Grand Prix (officially known as the Formula 1 Gulf Air Bahrain Grand Prix 2019) was a Formula One motor race that took place on 31 March 2019 at the Bahrain International Circuit in Sakhir, Bahrain. The race was the second round of the 2019 FIA Formula One World Championship and marked the 15th time that the Bahrain Grand Prix had been run as a round of the Formula One World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287618-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bahrain Grand Prix, Background, Championship standings before the race\nHeading into the Grand Prix, Valtteri Bottas led the World Drivers' Championship by 8 points over teammate Lewis Hamilton. Their team, Mercedes, was holding a 22-point lead over Ferrari in the World Constructors' Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 75], "content_span": [76, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287618-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bahrain Grand Prix, Background, Entrants\nThe drivers and teams were the same as the season entry list with no additional stand in drivers for either the race or practice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287618-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bahrain Grand Prix, Background, Entrants\nThe main title sponsor of Ferrari, Mission Winnow, returned from this race, after it was not used by the Scuderia at the previous race in Australia for legal reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287618-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bahrain Grand Prix, Background, DRS\nBefore the race, it was announced that an extra drag reduction system (DRS) zone would be added to the circuit. In addition to the DRS zones between turns 15 and 1 and between turns 10 and 11 an extra DRS zone was added between turns 3 and 4. This change was expected to increase the number of overtakes and promote more pit stops during the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287618-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bahrain Grand Prix, Free practice\nThe first practice session happened without major incident and ended with a Ferrari one-two with Charles Leclerc leading Sebastian Vettel with Leclerc comfortably beating the next fastest constructor by nearly one second. The second and third practice sessions also ended with a comfortable Ferrari one-two although it was Leclerc who was leading Vettel in third practice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287618-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bahrain Grand Prix, Qualifying\nCharles Leclerc got his first pole position of his Formula 1 career in the 2019 Bahrain Grand Prix Weekend with his Ferrari teammate Sebastian Vettel in second with a time 0.3 seconds slower. After Ferrari looked substantially ahead of Mercedes in free practice, Mercedes did manage to close the gap to the Italian team, but still qualified on the second row for the race on Sunday, with Lewis Hamilton ahead of teammate Valtteri Bottas. Max Verstappen was 0.5 seconds adrift from Valtteri Bottas in 4th place with Kevin Magnussen only 0.005 seconds slower than the Dutchman. Carlos Sainz Jr. split the two Haas cars in 7th and Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen continuing his longest streak of Q3's in Formula 1, qualifying ninth just ahead of Lando Norris\u2019 McLaren in 10th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287618-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bahrain Grand Prix, Qualifying\nPierre Gasly missed out on Q3 once again in Bahrain in the Red Bull, qualifying 13th behind Daniel Ricciardo in 11th and Alexander Albon in 12th, Sergio P\u00e9rez qualified 14th, 0.3 seconds quicker than Daniil Kvyat in 15th in his Toro Rosso.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287618-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Bahrain Grand Prix, Qualifying\nNico H\u00fclkenberg (Renault) was the shock exit in Q1 in 17th place behind Antonio Giovinazzi\u2019s Alfa Romeo and ahead of Lance Stroll, who qualified 18th. Williams once again qualify on the back row, the lead Williams George Russell 1.5 seconds away from Stroll and Robert Kubica qualified in last place with a 1:31.799 compared to the fastest time of 1:28.495.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287618-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Bahrain Grand Prix, Race\nCharles Leclerc started from pole position but lost two positions to his teammate Sebastian Vettel and the Mercedes of Valtteri Bottas, who managed to get ahead of his teammate Lewis Hamilton in the first corner. Romain Grosjean and Lance Stroll tangled on the first lap with Stroll hitting Grosjean, giving the Haas damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287618-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Bahrain Grand Prix, Race\nBy the end of the first lap, Leclerc was on Bottas' tail and passed the Finn into turn 1 on lap 2, which also allowed Lewis Hamilton to take third place from Bottas. On lap 4, Carlos Sainz Jr. attacked Max Verstappen on the outside in turn 4 but the two collided, giving Sainz a puncture. On lap 6, Charles Leclerc overtook Vettel for the lead of the race into turn 1 and began to pull away quickly. Antonio Giovinazzi sent Daniil Kvyat into a spin at turn 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287618-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Bahrain Grand Prix, Race\nHamilton was catching Vettel throughout the race and eventually caught up to him on lap 38, making a move around the outside at turn 4. Vettel went into a spin on corner exit, saying he got surprised and lost the rear of the car. In the process he flat-spotted his tires, causing severe vibration leading to a front wing failure. Pitting to replace the front wing dropped him to 9th place. The Renaults were running 6th and 7th and made contact while battling for position into turn 1, with Daniel Ricciardo left with front wing damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287618-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Bahrain Grand Prix, Race\nOn lap 46, Leclerc was cruising in the lead but then reported an engine issue and slowed significantly, being several seconds slower than his immediate rivals, and being unlapped by cars he previously lapped. It was later revealed that one of his engine cylinders had stopped working. On lap 48 he was caught by Hamilton, who took the lead. On lap 54 Leclerc was passed by Bottas, dropping him to 3rd with Verstappen closing rapidly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287618-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 Bahrain Grand Prix, Race\nHowever, with four laps remaining, the two Renaults retired with mechanical issues and brought out the safety car, which stayed out until the end of the race. As a result, Leclerc managed to hold on to 3rd place and claimed his first ever podium in Formula 1. Leclerc also had the fastest lap of the race, giving him and Ferrari one extra point for their respective championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287619-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bahraini protests\nThe 2019 protests in Bahrain was mass protests and civil unrest and popular disturbances that culminated into an uprising and violent demonstrations after mass protests against the executions by the authorities of 2 Shia men for terrorism-related charges in Bahrain in July 2019. Rioting erupted after thousands of civilians participated in popular rallies, marches, rioting, demonstrations, strikes, unrest, protests, picketing, clapping and chanting slogans against president and the Sunni-led regime, reviving the same demands of the 2011 Bahraini uprising.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287619-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 Bahraini protests\n1 was killed after two days of nonviolent protests after he inhaled Tear gas and canisters was fired directly at him in Manama from the Police. Protesters used placards, slogans and participated in civilian-led opposition strikes to the government. Demonstrations was suppressed on July 30. On the anniversary of the 2011 Bahraini uprising, nationwide protests occurred in support of the movement and held marches like they do annually. The unrest and movement would be the largest and bloodiest since the 2017 uprising.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287620-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Baja California state election\nElections were held in the Mexican state of Baja California in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287621-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Baku Formula 2 round\nThe 2019 Baku FIA Formula 2 round was a pair of motor races for Formula 2 cars that took place on 27 and 28 April 2019 at the Baku Street Circuit in Baku, Azerbaijan as part of the FIA Formula 2 Championship. It was the second round of the 2019 FIA Formula 2 Championship and was run in support of the 2019 Azerbaijan Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287622-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Baku protests\nThe 2019 Baku protests were a series of nonviolent rallies on 8, 19 and 20 October in Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan. The protests on 8 and 19 October were organized by the National Council of Democratic Forces (NCDF), an alliance of opposition parties, and called for the release of political prisoners and for free and fair elections. They were also against growing unemployment and economic inequality. Among those detained on 19 October was the leader of the Azerbaijani Popular Front Party, Ali Karimli.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287622-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Baku protests, Background\nAlthough the Constitution of Azerbaijan allows peaceful assembly after notifying the relevant government body in advance, in practice Azerbaijani government requires such assemblies to have a permission from local municipalities. The women's request for a rally was rejected by the authorities on the grounds that the proposed site had many shops and restaurants and was therefore unsuitable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287622-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Baku protests, Protests\nOn 8 October NCDF organized a protest in support of the freedom of assembly. The participants gathered in front of the Baku mayor\u2019s office, protesting against the decision of city officials to deny permission for a rally at the Mahsul Stadium in central Baku. The protesters were instead offered an area in Lokbatan, around 20 km away from Baku. Some fifty demonstrators were allowed to protest at the venue, while several dozen more who were barred from joining the protest tried to break through the police cordon. They were dispersed and some of them were detained. News media were also not allowed to cover the event. According to police, seventeen protesters were reprimanded for violating the \"mass demonstrations law,\" while four received administrative protocols for the same reason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 820]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287622-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Baku protests, Protests\nBefore the 19 October protest police cordoned off several streets in central Baku, the operation of three metro stations (28 May, Jafar Jabbarly and Shah Ismail Khatai) was suspended and the internet access was restricted. The Baku Police Department declared the 19 October protest \"unlawful\". Hundreds of members of the Rapid Police Unit were deployed. On that day Ali Karimli was arrested and detained by police shortly after he began joining the protest in central Baku. He was released late in the evening. According to police, sixty protesters were detained, of them forty-two were released with a \"warning\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287622-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Baku protests, Protests\nOn 20 October protesting women gathered near a statue of Khurshidbanu Natavan on Baku's Nizami Street and were met with police, who demanded they leave the site. Apart from posters, the protesters also wrote the same slogans on their clothes, fearing that the posters would be torn apart by police. Several protesters wore slogans commemorating Elina Hajiyeva, a teenager who had committed suicide in Baku earlier that year because of school bullying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287622-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Baku protests, Reactions\nIn a statement on 19 October, the European Union called \"on the authorities to release peaceful protesters remaining in detention\", noting that \"freedom of assembly is a fundamental human right and we expect Azerbaijan to ensure that it can be fully exercised, in line with the country\u2019s international obligations\". Member of the European Parliament Kati Piri stated that \"the violence was accompanied by a state-run smear campaign against the opposition and civil society activists, including an unprecedented attack on the EU diplomats fulfilling their professional tasks\". Another Member of the European Parliament Tonino Picula urged Federica Mogherini and the European Commission \"to suspend further negotiations on the new agreement between the EU and Azerbaijan until the Azerbaijani government commits itself fully to the respect of fundamental rights\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 891]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287622-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Baku protests, Reactions\nThe US embassy in Baku called on \"the government to credibly investigate reports of police violence, hold accountable those responsible, and release expeditiously those who remain in detention\". The embassy also noted that \"freedom of assembly and freedom of speech are universal human rights guaranteed in Azerbaijan\u2019s Constitution\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287622-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Baku protests, Reactions\nFormer Ambassador of Azerbaijan to Benelux Arif Mammadov staunchly criticized Azerbaijani authorities for violent crackdown of the 19 October protest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287622-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Baku protests, Reactions\nHuman Rights Watch criticized the Azerbaijani authorities for refusing to allow the peaceful assembly of opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike\nThe 2019 Balakot airstrike was conducted by India in the early morning hours of 26 February when Indian warplanes crossed the de facto border in the disputed region of Kashmir and dropped bombs in the vicinity of the town of Balakot in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province in Pakistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike\nPakistan's military, the first to announce the airstrike in the morning of 26 February, described the Indian planes as dropping their payload in an uninhabited wooded hilltop area near Balakot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike\nIndia, confirming the airstrike later the same day, characterized it to be a preemptive strike directed against a terrorist training camp, and causing the deaths of a \"large number\" of terrorists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike\nThe following day, 27 February, in a tit-for-tat airstrike, Pakistan retaliated, causing an Indian warplane to be shot down and its pilot to be taken prisoner by the Pakistan military before being returned on 1 March. An Indian Mi-17 helicopter was brought down by friendly fire in which all six airmen on board were killed; this was acknowledged by India on 4 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike\nAnalysis of open-source satellite imagery by the Atlantic Council's Digital Forensics Laboratory, San Francisco-based Planet Labs, European Space Imaging, and the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, has concluded that India did not hit any targets of significance on the Jaba hilltop site in the vicinity of Balakot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike\nOn 10 April 2019, 47 days after the airstrike, some international journalists, who were taken to the Jaba hilltop in a tightly controlled trip arranged by Pakistani government, found the largest building of the site to show no evidence of damage or recent rebuilding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike\nThe airstrikes were the first time since the India-Pakistan war of 1971 that warplanes of either country crossed the Line of Control and also since both states have become nuclear powers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, Background\nThe Kashmir insurgency has been occurring since 1989, but a new wave of violence was witnessed during 2016 when Burhan Wani then commander of Hizbul Mujahideen was killed in an encounter. In 2018, more than 500 people (including civilians, soldiers and militants) were killed in the violence. On 14 February 2019, a convoy of vehicles carrying security personnel on the Jammu Srinagar National Highway was attacked by a vehicle-borne suicide bomber at Lethpora in the Pulwama district, Jammu and Kashmir, India. The attack resulted in the deaths of 46 Central Reserve Police Force personnel and the attacker. The perpetrator of the attack was from Indian-administered Kashmir. The responsibility for the attack was claimed by the Pakistan-based Islamist militant group Jaish-e-Mohammed. Pakistan condemned the attack, and denied any connection to it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 885]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, Background\nThe airstrike occurred ahead of the 2019 Indian general election. On 19 February, Pakistan's PM attributed Indian government's desire to attack Pakistan to the upcoming election. The Indian government rejected the allegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, Incident\nOn 26 February 2019, Pakistan announced the intrusion of Indian aircraft into its airspace, but asserted that the Indian fleet was intercepted, causing them to retreat, to release their bombs which hit an open area, and to dump their fuel. In a press briefing, Pakistan's Director-General Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), Major General Asif Ghafoor, stated that three IAF teams were spotted approaching the Pakistan border from various sectors in the early hours of 26 February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, Incident\nHe added that the two of these teams did not cross the border following a challenge from Pakistani aircraft flying combat air patrol, but the third one crossed the Line of Control from the Kiran Valley near Muzaffarabad before being intercepted by Pakistani Air Force (PAF) jets within three minutes of the incursion. Pervez Khattak, Pakistani Defence Minister, stated that the Pakistani Air Force did not retaliate at that time because \"they could not gauge the extent of the damage\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, Incident\nLater on 26 February 2019, India confirmed the airstrike, stating that the Indian Air Force conducted them in retaliation to the Pulwama attack. The strikes were subsequently claimed to be \"non-military\" and \"preemptive'' in nature; targeting a Jaish-e-Mohammed facility within Pakistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, Incident\nThe airstrike was the first time since the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971 that attacking warplanes had crossed the Line of Control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, Incident\nIndian media claimed to have confirmed from official sources that twelve Mirage 2000 jets were involved in the operation. The Indian Express further reported that the Mirage 2000s were carrying SPICE 2000 & Popeye precision-guided munitions and that they were supported by four Sukhoi Su-30MKI, Netra and Phalcon airborne early warning and control aircraft, an IAI Heron UAV and two Ilyushin Il-78 aerial refuelling aircraft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, Incident\nFurthermore Indian officials claim that four SU-30MKIs were launched from their South Punjab base and headed towards Jodhpur and on to Barmer, Rajasthan before turning West towards Jaish-e-Mohammed headquarters in Pakistan located in the populous town of Bahawalpur. These four aircraft, tasked as decoys, successfully drew PAF fighters way south of the main attack force.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, Incident\nAfter releasing the bombs, the jets returned into Indian airspace unharmed and the Indian media claimed that whilst Pakistan scrambled its F-16 jets, they could not engage the Indian planes. Retired PAF Air Marshall Masood Akhtar opined that the air forces of both countries may have been instructed not to attack each other to avoid further escalation of conflict.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, The target\nThere has been ambiguity among the sources as to what the exact target was, and about whether the madrassa \u2013 Taleem ul-Quran run by Masood Azhar's brother-in-law, Muhammad Yusuf Azhar, was an active JeM camp or not.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, The target\nAccording to WikiLeaks, a 2004 United States Department of Defence interrogation report stated that Balakot had \"a training camp that offers both basic and advanced terrorist training on explosives and artillery.\" In contrast, military analysts asserted that whilst the area used to host militant camps, they dispersed after the 2005 Pakistan earthquake to avoid detection by the international aid groups providing relief in the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, The target\nIndian intelligence sources claim that the camp was located in a hilltop forest, 20\u00a0km (12\u00a0mi) from Balakot, and that it was a resort-style facility, with space and room for 500\u2013700 militants, including a swimming pool, cooks and cleaners. The New York Times mentioned western security officials of having doubted the existence of such large-scale training camps, asserting that Pakistan no longer runs them and that \"militant groups are spread out in small groups around the country\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, The target\nThe local people varied as to the purpose of the facility. In the immediate aftermath of the strikes, whilst some claimed of it being an active Jaish training camp, others asserted it to have been a mere school for the local children and that such militant camps used to exist far earlier. On later visits by Reuters, the locals claimed that the school had been shut down about a year back and was no longer operational.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, Damage\nNeutral sources have asserted that the munitions dropped by Indian warplanes appeared to have hit several trees in a wooded area but caused no other damage, nor any casualties in the area where the attack took place. Some Western diplomats also stated that they did not believe Indian Air Force had hit any militant camp. Western security officials have cast doubt over Indian claims and asserted that there are no longer any such large scale militant camps in Pakistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, Damage\nIndia has asserted that \"a very large number of JeM terrorists, trainers, senior commanders and groups of jihadis,\" who were preparing for launching another suicide attack targeting Indian assets, were killed. Indian media reported that the camp was leveled, and about 200\u2013350 JeM militants were killed though the exact figures varied across media-houses. The National Technical Research Organisation had located about 300 active mobile phones in the camp; prior to the strike. In contrast, Pakistan asserted that there were no casualties or infrastructure damage as a result of the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, Damage\nVillagers from the area spoke of four bombs striking a nearby forest and field around 3\u00a0am, damaging a building, and injuring a local man. Journalists associated with the Associated Press visited the area on 26 February and saw craters and damaged trees. The villagers they met reported no casualties. A team from Al Jazeera visited the site two days after the strikes and noted \"splintered pine trees and rocks\" which were strewn across the four blast craters. The local hospital officials and residents asserted that they did not come across any casualty or wounded people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0020-0001", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, Damage\nThe reporters located the facility, a school run by Jaish-e-Mohammed, at around a kilometre to the east of one of the bomb craters, atop a steep ridge but were unable to access it. Reporters from Reuters were repeatedly denied access to the madrassa by the military citing security issues but they noted the structure (and its vicinity) to be intact from the back. The press wing of the Pakistan military had twice postponed scheduled visits to the site. However, on 29 March 2019, Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) took journalists to the site where the strike took place. There were around 375 students present in the Madrasa. Journalists were allowed to interview the students. They were also allowed to take photos and record videos of the site.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 785]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, Damage, Satellite data assessments\nSatellite-data analysis by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute's Nathan Ruser concluded that there is \"no apparent evidence of more extensive damage and on the face of it does not validate Indian claims regarding the effect of the strikes.\" Michael Sheldon, a digital forensics analyst from Atlantic Council did another independent investigation on the issue which asserted that no damage was inflicted to any infrastructure around the target-site. It concluded that \"something appeared to have gone wrong in the targeting process\" and that the botch-up was mysterious in light of the autonomous nature of the supposedly used missiles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 58], "content_span": [59, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0021-0001", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, Damage, Satellite data assessments\nA Reuters investigation based on high-resolution satellite imagery by Planet Labs noted an unchanged landscape when compared to an April 2018 satellite photo. It noted that \"there were no discernible holes in the roofs of buildings, no signs of scorching, blown-out walls, displaced trees around the madrasa or other signs of an aerial attack\". Even higher quality imagery, taken from the WorldView-2 satellite, was later also analysed by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute and showed \"that all three weapons missed by similar (but not identical) distances\" suggesting \"that the misses were caused by a systematic targeting error\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 58], "content_span": [59, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, Damage, Satellite data assessments\nEuropean Space Imaging also provided high-resolution image of the site where the strike took place. The satellite imagery was from 27 February 2019, a day after the strike took place. The image showed that buildings were unharmed and there was no sign of casualties at the site. Managing director Adrian Zevenbergen, claimed that \"there were no signs of scorching, no large distinguishable holes in the buildings and no signs of stress to the surrounding vegetation\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 58], "content_span": [59, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, Damage, Indian officials claims\nIn contrast, Indian officials said that analysis of before and after images from the synthetic aperture radar (SAR) carried by an airborne platform showed that four buildings had been destroyed but did not release those images. The official stated that SAR images from the first day after the attack showed that the roofs of the building (made of corrugated galvanized iron (CGI) sheets) were missing, and were repaired after two days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0023-0001", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, Damage, Indian officials claims\nAccording to the official the presence of new roofs had made the assessment by technical intelligence difficult and it was up to the Indian Government to decide on the release of the classified SAR images. The Indian Air Force showed the reporters of India Today and other media houses, the high-resolution satellite pictures possessed by the IAF which according to India Today showed three holes in the roof of one of the buildings. These holes were reported as a \"classic signature of a SPICE bomb strike\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, Damage, Media reports\nReuters journalists were prevented from coming near the site of the attack, three times in nine days by the Pakistani security officials. Business Today India stated that the area around Balakot had been cordoned off by the Pakistan Army and evidence such as the dead bodies were being cleared from the area. Praveen Swami writing for Firstpost claimed that Indian intelligence estimated a figure of about 20 casualties and that there were five confirmed kills per burial records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0024-0001", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, Damage, Media reports\nHe also noted a JeM rally in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa on 28 February, wherein Masood Azhar's brother, Abdul Rauf Rasheed Alvi mentioned India's attack of their headquarters and vowed revenge. In another piece he state that RAW analysts estimated 90 casualties including three Pakistani Army trainers, based on intercepted communications in the immediate. Swami though noted a lack of witness testimony to independently assess the validity of above claims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0024-0002", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, Damage, Media reports\nUSA State Department acknowledged reports of Pakistan misusing the F-16s, although undersecretary of State for Arms Control and International Security Affairs didn't mention concerns about the use of F-16s in shooting down Indian fighter jets since acknowledging it in formal State Department transmission would be a clear violation of Congress approved terms for selling the fighters as it would trigger formal procedures to reprimand Islamabad when Trump administration wants to repair bilateral diplomatic relations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0024-0003", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, Damage, Media reports\nIn 2021, multiple Indian news sources, including India Today, Times of India, Hindustan Times, Swarajya, Deccan Herald, LiveMint, and NDTV reported that former Pakistani diplomat, Zafar Hilaly had allegedly admitting to 300 casualties following the air strike, based on a story shared by Asian News International (ANI) and Republic TV. Alt News, an independent fact-checker, reported that Republic TV had shared a doctored video altering Hilaly's original speech, in which he stated that the air strike was intended to cause casualties, but did not kill anyone. Following this, several of the sources, including News18, NDTV, and Times of India published a retraction of their reports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, Aftermath\nThe IAF put air defence systems on alert along the international border and Line of Control to respond to any possible retaliation by the Pakistan Air Force.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, Aftermath\nPakistan's foreign minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi summoned an emergency meeting in Islamabad, Pakistan to discuss the security situation and asserted that Pakistan reserved the right to retaliate. The prime minister of Pakistan, Imran Khan, convened an emergency meeting to review the situation. At the end of this meeting, the National Security Council (NSC) released a statement denying the Indian claims of the destruction of any terrorist camp and described the attack as \"uncalled for\" whilst adding that retaliation would be forthcoming after a joint parliamentary session. He also stated that Pakistan will take international media to the area of strikes but were delayed due to adverse weather conditions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, Aftermath\nANI claimed to have released photos of the alleged JeM camp and weapons cache sourced from intelligence sources.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, Reactions, India\nForeign diplomats from the United States, United Kingdom, Russia, Australia, Indonesia, Turkey, China, and six ASEAN nations were briefed by Indian foreign secretary Vijay Gokhale on the strike conducted. Arun Jaitley, the Indian cabinet minister of Finance stated two reasons, for Pakistan denying the effectiveness of the airstrike stating, \"There are two plausible reasons. First, the Pakistan army had created a big aura about its prowess among Pakistanis, and it did not want its image dented.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287623-0028-0001", "contents": "2019 Balakot airstrike, Reactions, India\nJaitley noted that the second reason was more important, and stated \"Had the Pakistan army admitted that our fighters bombed its buildings, the first question to be raised would have been: What was the extent of damage? Experts would have come for a survey of the buildings and asked about the people staying inside... then Pakistan would have had to reveal names of the Jaish fighters who died there.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287624-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Balearic Island Council elections\nThe 2019 Balearic Island Council elections were held on Sunday, 26 May 2019, to elect the 11th Island Councils of Mallorca and Menorca and the 4th Island Councils of Formentera and Ibiza. All 76 seats in the four Island Councils were up for election. The elections were held simultaneously with regional elections in twelve autonomous communities and local elections all throughout Spain, as well as the 2019 European Parliament election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287624-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Balearic Island Council elections, Island Council control\nThe following table lists party control in the Island Councils. Gains for a party are displayed with the cell's background shaded in that party's colour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287625-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Balearic regional election\nThe 2019 Balearic regional election was held on Sunday, 26 May 2019, to elect the 10th Parliament of the autonomous community of the Balearic Islands. All 59 seats in the Parliament were up for election. The election was held simultaneously with regional elections in eleven other autonomous communities and local elections all throughout Spain, as well as the 2019 European Parliament election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287625-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Balearic regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nThe Parliament of the Balearic Islands was the devolved, unicameral legislature of the autonomous community of the Balearic Islands, having legislative power in regional matters as defined by the Spanish Constitution and the Balearic Statute of Autonomy, as well as the ability to vote confidence in or withdraw it from a regional president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287625-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Balearic regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nVoting for the Parliament was on the basis of universal suffrage, which comprised all nationals over eighteen, registered in the Balearic Islands and in full enjoyment of their political rights. Additionally, Balearic people abroad were required to apply for voting before being permitted to vote, a system known as \"begged\" or expat vote (Spanish: Voto rogado). The 59 members of the Parliament of the Balearic Islands were elected using the D'Hondt method and a closed list proportional representation, with an electoral threshold of five percent of valid votes\u2014which included blank ballots\u2014being applied in each constituency. Seats were allocated to constituencies, corresponding to the islands of Mallorca, Menorca, Ibiza and Formentera, with each being allocated a fixed number of seats: 33 for Mallorca, 13 for Menorca, 12 for Ibiza and 1 for Formentera.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 920]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287625-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Balearic regional election, Overview, Election date\nThe term of the Parliament of the Balearic Islands expired four years after the date of its previous election, unless it was dissolved earlier. The election decree was required to be issued no later than the twenty-fifth day prior to the date of expiry of parliament and published on the following day in the Official Gazette of the Balearic Islands (BOIB), with election day taking place on the fifty-fourth day from publication. The previous election was held on 24 May 2015, which meant that the legislature's term would have expired on 24 May 2019. The election decree was required to be published in the BOIB no later than 30 April 2019, with the election taking place on the fifty-fourth day from publication, setting the latest possible election date for the Parliament on Sunday, 23 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 858]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287625-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Balearic regional election, Overview, Election date\nThe president had the prerogative to dissolve the Parliament of the Balearic Islands and call a snap election, provided that no motion of no confidence was in process and that dissolution did not occur before one year had elapsed since the previous one. In the event of an investiture process failing to elect a regional president within a sixty-day period from the first ballot, the Parliament was to be automatically dissolved and a fresh election called.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287625-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Balearic regional election, Background\nThe previous election saw a left-wing majority in the Parliament of the Balearic Islands for the first time. After the election, on 30 June 2015, Francina Armengol was elected president, forming a government with the Socialist Party of the Balearic Islands (PSIB), More for Mallorca (M\u00e9s) and More for Menorca (MpM), with the external support of We Can (Podemos) and the representative of People for Formentera (GxF). Xelo Huertas, of Podem, took office as the Parliament's speaker, the second authority of the region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287625-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Balearic regional election, Background\nIn November 2016, Podemos decided to cease two party deputies, including Huertas, for trying to benefit another party member's personal interests. On 25 January 2017, Huertas resigned as Speaker, although she continued in the Mixed Group as an independent deputy, along with Montse Seijas, the other expelled Podemos deputy. The parties of the pact, with some disputes, agreed to vote for Podemos deputy Baltasar Picornell to become new Speaker on 14 February 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287625-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Balearic regional election, Background\nIn March 2017, a fraudulent contract to the campaign manager of M\u00e9s made by the regional vice president, Gabriel Barcel\u00f3, appeared in the media. This fact created a crisis in the Government and ended up with the resignation of transparency minister Ruth Mateu and the withdrawal of her party, MpM, from the government, although remaining as an outer supporter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287625-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Balearic regional election, Background\nIn June 2017, the People's Party (PP) member \u00c1lvaro Gij\u00f3n resigned from the party but continued as a deputy in the Mixed Group. The cause was a fraudulent contract for a municipal company in Palma made by the time Gij\u00f3n was deputy mayor, also involving part of his family.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287625-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Balearic regional election, Background\nIn December 2017, Barcel\u00f3 was accused of accepting a personal travel as a gift. This fact, along with controversies and internal disputes since March, made him resign as regional vice president and tourism minister. Barcel\u00f3 was relieved by Bel Busquets, of M\u00e9s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287625-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Balearic regional election, Parliamentary composition\nThe Parliament of the Balearic Islands was officially dissolved on 2 April 2019, after the publication of the dissolution decree in the Official Gazette of the Balearic Islands. The table below show the composition of the parliamentary groups in the Parliament at the time of dissolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287625-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Balearic regional election, Parties and candidates\nThe electoral law allowed for parties and federations registered in the interior ministry, coalitions and groupings of electors to present lists of candidates. Parties and federations intending to form a coalition ahead of an election were required to inform the relevant Electoral Commission within ten days of the election call, whereas groupings of electors needed to secure the signature of at least one percent of the electorate in the constituencies for which they sought election, disallowing electors from signing for more than one list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287625-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Balearic regional election, Parties and candidates\nBelow is a list of the main parties and electoral alliances which contested the election:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287625-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Balearic regional election, Parties and candidates\nThe main opposition party, the People's Party (PP), held its regional congress in March 2017, electing Biel Company as new party leader over former regional president Jos\u00e9 Ram\u00f3n Bauz\u00e0, who had resigned as the PP leader after the 2015 election. On 23 January 2019, Bauz\u00e0 announced his withdrawal as PP member, resigning from his senator post, accusing his former party of \"sowing and watering a [Catalan] nationalism\" allegedly \"exploited\" by left-wing parties. It was later revealed that Bauz\u00e0 would be running for Citizens (Cs) in the 2019 European Parliament election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287625-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Balearic regional election, Parties and candidates\nIn May 2017, More for Minorca (MpM) was transformed into a party, electing 2015 candidate Nel Mart\u00ed as its coordinator. In December 2018, Josep Castells was elected as its 2019 candidate. In June 2018, president of the Island Council of Mallorca Miquel Ensenyat won the More for Mallorca (M\u00e9s) primaries to become its candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287625-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Balearic regional election, Parties and candidates\nIn November 2018, We Can (Podemos) chose that its candidate would be Juan Pedro Yllanes, who was member of the Congress of Deputies at the time. In March 2019, Cs held its primaries, having Marc P\u00e9rez-Ribas winning over the regional leader and 2015 candidate Xavier Pericay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287625-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Balearic regional election, Opinion polls\nThe table below lists voting intention estimates in reverse chronological order, showing the most recent first and using the dates when the survey fieldwork was done, as opposed to the date of publication. Where the fieldwork dates are unknown, the date of publication is given instead. The highest percentage figure in each polling survey is displayed with its background shaded in the leading party's colour. If a tie ensues, this is applied to the figures with the highest percentages. The \"Lead\" column on the right shows the percentage-point difference between the parties with the highest percentages in a given poll. When available, seat projections are also displayed below the voting estimates in a smaller font. 30 seats were required for an absolute majority in the Parliament of the Balearic Islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 859]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287626-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Balestier Khalsa FC season\nThe 2019 season is Balestier Khalsa's 24th consecutive season in the top flight of Singapore football and in the Singapore Premier League and the Singapore Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287626-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Balestier Khalsa FC season, Transfer, Pre-season transfer, Retained\nNote 1: Noor Akid Nordin moved to Albirex Niigata (S) despite signing a 2 years contract in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 72], "content_span": [73, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287627-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bali United F.C. season\nThe 2019 season was the fifth season of competitive association football and fourth season in the Liga 1 played by Bali United Football Club, a professional football club based in Gianyar, Bali, Indonesia. Their 11th-place finish in 2018 meant it was their fourth successive season in Liga 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287627-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bali United F.C. season\nThis season would be Bali United's first with head coach Stefano Cugurra, who stepped in for Widodo Cahyono Putro. Coming into the season, Bali United were in the round of 32 of the Piala Indonesia for the first time in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287627-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bali United F.C. season\nThe season would see the departures of original players such as I Made Wardana, I Gede Sukadana, Yandi Munawar, Novan Sasongko, Taufik Hidayat, Syaiful Cahya, Junius R. Bate, and Feby Eka Putra, as well as foreign recruits Nick van der Velden, Mahamadou N'Diaye, and Demerson. Players such as Haudi Abdillah, Samuel Reimas, Michael Orah, Willian Pacheco, Leonard Tupamahu, Fahmi Al-Ayyubi, Anan Lestaluhu, and Paulo S\u00e9rgio were brought in as replacements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287627-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bali United F.C. season\nOn 2 December 2019, the club won their first official title since the club formed, after second place Borneo draw to PSM and followed by a 2\u20130 win at Semen Padang to give Bali United mathematical certainty of the title with four games to spare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287627-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bali United F.C. season, Background\nThe 2018 season was Widodo Cahyono Putro's second start to a season as head coach of Bali United, having taken charge in May 2017. The club had their first ever Asian competitions appearances as they competed in AFC Champions League, where they knocked out in the preliminary round 2 by Thailand's side Chiangrai United. That result made them got a consolation place in the AFC Cup, where they had poor results, finishing last in their group. Bali United reached the round of 32 in the Piala Indonesia, which would be held in 2019 season. Widodo resigned as head coach in November 2018 with Bali United was in 7th place of the table. He was replaced by Eko Purdjianto who acted as caretaker and finished the season in 11th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287627-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bali United F.C. season, Review and events, January\u2013April\nBali United started the season by playing away to Liga 2 team Blitar United in the round of 32 of the Piala Indonesia. Ilija Spasojevi\u0107 gave Bali United the lead with a header from Fadil Sausu's free kick in the 9th minute. Bali United doubled the lead when Melvin Platje taped Spasojevi\u0107's pass into the net. They sealed the game in the 63rd minute when Platje scored with a penalty and secured a 3\u20130 win in the first leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 62], "content_span": [63, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287627-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bali United F.C. season, Review and events, January\u2013April\nOn the first day of the new month, a brace from Spasojevi\u0107 and goals from Irfan Bachdim and Platje secured Bali United's place in round of 16 of Piala Indonesia in a 4\u20130 win over Blitar United and 7\u20130 win on aggregate. The winning streak continues when Bali United won away against Persela. Jairo Rodrigues scored an own goal and failed to convert the penalty that was given after being saved by Wawan Hendrawan sealed 1\u20130 victory in the first leg. Four days later, Fadil scored a brace in the second leg at home secured a 3\u20130 win on aggregate against Persela and Bali United through to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 62], "content_span": [63, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287627-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bali United F.C. season, Review and events, January\u2013April\nAfter almost two-month break because of pre-season tournament Piala Presiden, Piala Indonesia continues with the first leg of quarter-finals when they faced Persija. Shahar Ginanjar saved a penalty from Stefano Lilipaly in the 12th minute, made the score goalless in the first half. Eight minutes into the second half, Lilipaly paid for his failure with a goal after receiving a pass from Bachdim. He scored his second goal in this match in the 80th minute, before Bambang Pamungkas narrow the margin and made the score 2\u20131 for Bali United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 62], "content_span": [63, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287627-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Bali United F.C. season, Review and events, May\u2013August\nBali United were beaten 1\u20130 away by Persija in the second leg of Piala Indonesia quarter-finals, with Ismed Sofyan scored from a penalty and ended their journey in Piala Indonesia as they lose on away goals. Bali United then kicked off their league season with a home game against Persebaya on 16 May 2019. Bali United took a lead when Ilija Spasojevi\u0107 successfully scored after receiving a pass from Stefano Lilipaly. However, 15 minutes before the half time, Mokhamad Syaifuddin unleashed a right-foot shot and equalized for Persebaya.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287627-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Bali United F.C. season, Review and events, May\u2013August\nIn the second half, Paulo S\u00e9rgio secured their first win of the season with a kick that hit one of the Persebaya defender and scored his first goal in his official debut. Bali United played the next game against 2017 Liga 1 champions, Bhayangkara. Yabes Roni's kick in 70th minute was enough for Bali United to got their first ever win over Bhayangkara since 2016. In their third consecutive home games after Persija requested an exchange of home status due to security reasons after the 2019 Indonesian general election in Jakarta, they got their third consecutive win after Paulo S\u00e9rgio scored a chip shot over Andritany Ardhiyasa in the 82nd minute making the score 1\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287627-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Bali United F.C. season, Review and events, May\u2013August\nBali United flagged June off with their fourth consecutive home game against PSIS on 22 June 2019 after the week 4 match against Kalteng Putra was postponed to 26 June 2019. They also secure their fourth consecutive win after Spasojevi\u0107 scored with a header in the 70th minute. In the first away game of the season, Bali United played Kalteng Putra. The match was postponed from its original date of 15 June due to the FIFA international friendly match agenda for Indonesia national football team and Lebaran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287627-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Bali United F.C. season, Review and events, May\u2013August\nRicky Fajrin scored an early lead with a header from the corner kick of Paulo S\u00e9rgio. However, Kalteng Putra scored a quick goal, three minutes in the second half when Yohanes Pahabol put a pass from free-kick situation in the net and equalized. Both teams played with 10 men after Leonard Tupamahu and Diogo Campos was sent off in the 60th minute. Bali United took advantage when Willian Pacheco scored. But Antoni Nugroho equalized once again and the match ended in 2\u20132 draw, ended their consecutive win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287627-0009-0002", "contents": "2019 Bali United F.C. season, Review and events, May\u2013August\nBali United got their first win in away games after won 3\u20130 against 10-men Liga 1 debutant Badak Lampung. Spasojevi\u0107 scored in the 33rd minute after receiving a long pass from Fadil Sausu. Fadil again made a beautiful pass for Pacheco's goal in 66th minute. Two minutes after that, Melvin Platje scored his first goal since came back from injury with a drive shot and finished the month at the top of the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287627-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Bali United F.C. season, Review and events, May\u2013August\nWith the match against Borneo on 4 July was postponed, Bali United started July on the road against Barito Putera on 14 July with a 0\u20131 lost after Rafael Silva scored the goals 10 minutes before the game ended, while two of Bali United's goal were disallowed. This lost ended Bali United's five unbeaten run. Bali United again lost 2\u20130 at away to Persela, who took the lead in the first half through Alex Gon\u00e7alves in 15th and 45th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287627-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Bali United F.C. season, Review and events, May\u2013August\nOn 22 July, they finally played at home after four consecutive away games when they faced Liga 1 debutant and 2018 Liga 2 champions, PSS. Bali United took the early lead when Spasojevi\u0107 scored from a penalty. Asyraq Gufron scored to his own goal made the home team lead 2\u20130 in the first half. Yevhen Bokhashvili narrow the score after converted a penalty in 65th minute. The third penalty was awarded to this match in the 82nd minute and Platje successfully sealed the game 3\u20131, ended the two losing streak. Bali United's last match of the month was played at away on the 26th against Persib. A late goal from Spasojevi\u0107 secured Bali United a 2\u20130 away victory after Lilipaly scored the other goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287627-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Bali United F.C. season, Review and events, May\u2013August\nOn the first day of August, they beat the newly crowned Piala Indonesia winner, PSM 1\u20130 at home, in which Platje scored in the 60th minute with a header. In the next home game, Bali United faced Semen Padang. Semen Padang were leading 1\u20130 with an own goal from Pacheco, before Bali United pulled a comeback within 2 minutes with a goal each from Fajrin and Platje just before the half-time. Bali United finished the game 4\u20131 with two more goals in the second half from Platje and substitutes Irfan Bachdim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287627-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Bali United F.C. season, Review and events, May\u2013August\nOn 15 August, Bali United beat league leaders TIRA-Persikabo 2\u20131 at Pakansari as Lilipaly scored a brace. This result made Bali United became the first team to beat TIRA-Persikabo this season and seized the top spot of the table once again. They went on to win their sixth match in a row on 20 August in a 1\u20130 away match against Madura United. Spasojevi\u0107 scored the only goal in the second half, while the home team finished the match with 10-men after Jaimerson Xavier was sent off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287627-0011-0002", "contents": "2019 Bali United F.C. season, Review and events, May\u2013August\nFour days later, Bali United resumed their winning streak after beating Arema 2\u20131 at home. Pacheco scored the opening goal in the 27th minute with a header. Makan Konat\u00e9 scored an equalizer for Arema on 44th minute, before Spasojevi\u0107 scored the winning goal in the 57th minute, with a header. Bali United closed the last match at home for the first half of the season after beating Borneo in the delayed week 7 match. Spasojevi\u0107 opened the scoring with a shot from Platje's pass on 6th minute, and he doubled the lead in the 55th minute with a rebound shot from Fadil's free kick, before Renan Silva scored a consolation goal for Borneo in the 79th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287627-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Bali United F.C. season, Review and events, September\u2013December\nAs the match against Persipura on 1 September was postponed due to riot in Jayapura, Bali United started their September with the first match in the second half of the season as they away to Bhayangkara. Goalless draw became the final outcome of this match when one shots each from Ilija Spasojevi\u0107 and Stefano Lilipaly hit the crossbar. It also ended their eight winning streak. A goal from Melvin Platje earned Bali United a 1\u20130 win six days later, at away to the defending champions Persija.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 67], "content_span": [68, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287627-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 Bali United F.C. season, Review and events, September\u2013December\nTIRA-Persikabo's defeat a day after meant the win for Bali United was enough to bring them a 10-point lead at the top of the table. Bali United's unbeaten streak nearly ended when Persebaya led 1\u20130 until in the 88 minute, before a free-kick from captain Fadil Sausu leveled and maintained their lead at the top of the table. They finished September with a narrow 2\u20131 win over 10-man Kalteng Putra after former Bali United's player I Gede Sukadana receive a second yellow card at the end of the first half. A header from Platje and Spasojevi\u0107 scored from penalty spot, extend their lead at the top of the table with 12 points and their unbeaten streak to 12 match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 67], "content_span": [68, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287627-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Bali United F.C. season, Review and events, September\u2013December\nAfter nearly three weeks off due to match postponement and international breaks, Bali United started their October horribly as their 12 unbeaten streak came to an end when they were destroyed by Borneo six goals without reply at Segiri where Lerby Eliandry, Renan Silva (2), Terens Puhiri (2), and Rifal Lastori scored the goals for the home team. This big lost also set their worst record defeat in their history so far. Bali United managed to rise from a painful defeat with a landslide 3\u20130 victory against Badak Lampung four days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 67], "content_span": [68, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287627-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 Bali United F.C. season, Review and events, September\u2013December\nA free-kick goal from captain Fadil and brace from Spasojevi\u0107 gave them an 11th win at home this season. The five-goals drama came in the 3\u20132 victory over Barito Putera. Penalty from Spasojevi\u0107 leveled the score after Barito's goal inside the 10th minute. Willian Pacheco's header from Paulo S\u00e9rgio's corner kick made the score 2\u20131 before the half time whistle. S\u00e9rgio again made the assist from corner kick as Platje scored the third goal of Serdadu Tridatu. Rizky Pora managed to narrowed the score to 3\u20132 via counterattack. This result maintained their 100% win at home and their lead at the top of the table. Their perfect record at home this season came to an end as Persela equalized after Platje scored in the first half and Pacheco was red carded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 67], "content_span": [68, 823]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287627-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Bali United F.C. season, Review and events, September\u2013December\nBali United got their first point in November when they draw in away game against PSS. It was their first match of the four away matches in a row. They were again dropped two points against Persipura. Yohanis Tjoe scored to put Persipura in front in the 33rd minute. Bali United replied with two goals from Platje and Lilipaly, but todd Ferre in stoppage time equalized for the home team. Bali United dropped point even more where they lost 0\u20131 to PSIS and PSM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 67], "content_span": [68, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287627-0014-0001", "contents": "2019 Bali United F.C. season, Review and events, September\u2013December\nWith Borneo, Persipura, and Madura United unable to won their respective matches in week 29, Bali United knew before their game against Persib that they need only four points to guarantee their status as champions. Kim Kurniawan opened the scoring for the visitors just before half-time, and in spite of Supardi Nasir's own goal equalized after Spasojevi\u0107 failed to converted a penalty, Persib led again with a quick counter. Bali United responded by scoring twice in six minute; Spasojevi\u0107 place the ball past I Made Wirawan with a back heel and Lilipaly shot after receiving long pass from Wawan Hendrawan. They closed November with only one points to clinch their first ever Liga 1 title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 67], "content_span": [68, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287627-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Bali United F.C. season, Review and events, September\u2013December\nBali United recorded a 2\u20130 win against Semen Padang on 2 December 2019 to secure their first league title, even though before the game ended they were confirmed to be champions because Borneo failed to win at away to PSM in a match that was completed 30 minutes earlier. Spasojevi\u0107, who was re-appointed captain in this match scored a brace ensuring a 17-point advantage in the standings. After clinched the title last week, Bali United went against Persipura at home without all of their foreign players and most were not regular players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 67], "content_span": [68, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287627-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 Bali United F.C. season, Review and events, September\u2013December\nMamadou Samassa scored the goal for the visitors with a free-kick, but Irfan Bachdim keep their unbeaten streak at home alive with his free-kick. TIRA-Persikabo really ended Bali United's unbeaten streak at home with a narrow 1\u20130 win over the home team. At Kanjuruhan Stadium, Bali United second-tier squad lost 3\u20132 to Arema. Aldino Herdianto scored his first ever goal for Bali United in this match. Bali United's final game of the league season was against Madura United. They conceded goal from Aleksandar Raki\u0107 and Beto Gon\u00e7alves that tarnishes the trophy presentation at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 67], "content_span": [68, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287628-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Balkan Athletics Championships\nThe 2019 Balkan Athletics Championships was the 74th edition of the annual track and field competition for athletes from the Balkans, organised by Balkan Athletics. It was held at the Pravets Sports Complex in Pravets, Bulgaria on 2 and 3 September. It was the first time that the city hosted the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287628-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Balkan Athletics Championships\nThree championship records were broken: both 200 metres records were improved (the men's by Ukraine's Serhiy Smelyk in 20.50 seconds, and the women's by Bulgarian Ivet Lalova-Collio, who ran 22.45 seconds), while Greek men's pole vaulter Emmanouil Karalis cleared a record height of 5.66 m. Lalova-Collio won a sprint double in the women's 100 metres and 200\u00a0m while Smelyk won golds for Ukraine in the 200\u00a0m and 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay. Ukraine was the most successful nation at the competition, topping the medal table with 18 medals (nine of them gold). Romania also won 18 medals, though only five golds. Greece, Turkey and host nation Bulgaria all won five or more gold medals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287628-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Balkan Athletics Championships\nRomanian men's throwers Andrei Gag and Alin Alexandru Firfiric\u0103 successfully defended their titles. In women's jumps Mirela Demireva (high jump), Buse Ar\u0131kazan (pole vault) and Paraskevi Papachristou (triple jump) all repeated their victories from 2018. Serbia's Teodora Simovi\u0107 (5000\u00a0m) was the sole individual to retain a track title while her compatriot Marija Vu\u010denovi\u0107 took her third straight javelin throw title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287629-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Balkan Athletics Indoor Championships\nThe 2019 Balkan Athletics Indoor Championships was the 24th edition of the annual indoor track and field competition for athletes from the Balkans, organised by Balkan Athletics. It was held on 16 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-00287629-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Balkan Athletics Indoor Championships\nIn a closely contested competition, Ukraine and the host nation Turkey each won four gold medals. Romania won the most medals overall, with a haul of 12, followed by Turkey on 11. Ukraine won the most women's events, with three, and Romanian won the most women's medals in total, with seven. Turkey was the most dominant in the men's side, having the highest medal total of seven and also the most gold medals, with three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287630-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ball Hockey World Championship\nThe 2019 Ball Hockey World Championship was the 13th ball hockey world championship, and was held in Ko\u0161ice, Slovakia. The tournament began on 14 June 2019, with the gold medal game to be played on 22 June 2019. The Canada women's national ball hockey team defeated the United States women's national ball hockey team in the women's final to capture the gold medal, while the Czech Republic emerged with the bronze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287631-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ball State Cardinals football team\nThe 2019 Ball State Cardinals football team represented Ball State University during the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Cardinals were led by fourth-year head coach Mike Neu and played their home games at Scheumann Stadium in Muncie, Indiana. They competed as members of the West Division of the Mid-American Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287631-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ball State Cardinals football team, Preseason, MAC media poll\nThe MAC released their preseason media poll on July 23, 2019, with the Cardinals predicted to finish in fifth place in the West Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287632-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ballon d'Or\nThe 2019 Ballon d'Or (French: Ballon d'Or) was the 64th annual ceremony of the Ballon d'Or, presented by France Football, and recognising the best footballers in the world for 2019. Lionel Messi won the men's award for a record sixth time in his career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287632-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ballon d'Or, Ballon d'Or\nThe nominees for the awards were announced on 6 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287632-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Ballon d'Or, Ballon d'Or F\u00e9minin\nMegan Rapinoe won the 2019 Ballon d'Or F\u00e9minin for best female player in the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287632-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Ballon d'Or, Kopa Trophy\nMatthijs de Ligt won the 2019 Kopa Trophy for the best player in the world under the age of 21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287632-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Ballon d'Or, Yashin Trophy\nAlisson won the inaugural Yashin Trophy as the best goalkeeper in the world in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 31], "content_span": [32, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287633-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltic Endurance Championship\nThe 2019 Baltic Endurance Championship was the fifth Baltic Endurance Championship season. It began at Bi\u0137ernieki Complex Sports Base on 10 May and ended at Auto24ring on 21 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287634-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltic Futsal Cup\nThe 2019 Baltic Futsal Cup was held on 2-4 December 2019 in Raasiku, Estonia. This edition featured the three Baltic teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287635-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltic Open\nThe 2019 Baltic Open was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the 1st edition of the Baltic Open as part of the WTA International tournaments of the 2019 WTA Tour. It took place at the National Tennis Centre Lielupe in J\u016brmala, Latvia, from 22 to 28 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287635-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltic Open\nThis tournament replaced the Moscow River Cup on the WTA Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 79]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287635-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltic 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-00287635-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltic Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry using a protected ranking into the main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 60], "content_span": [61, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287635-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltic 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-00287636-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltic Open \u2013 Doubles\nSharon Fichman and Nina Stojanovi\u0107 won the title, defeating Je\u013cena Ostapenko and Galina Voskoboeva in the final, 2\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20131), [10\u20136].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287637-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltic Open \u2013 Singles\nAnastasija Sevastova won the title, defeating Katarzyna Kawa in the final, 3\u20136, 7\u20135, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287638-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltic Touring Car Championship\nThe 2019 Baltic Touring Car Championship was the twenty-first Baltic Touring Car Championship season. It began at Bi\u0137ernieki Complex Sports Base on 10 May and ended at Auto24ring on 22 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287639-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Brigade season\nThe 2019 Baltimore Brigade season was the third season for the Baltimore Brigade in the Arena Football League. The Brigade played at the Royal Farms Arena and were coached by Omarr Smith for the 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287639-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Brigade season, Standings\ny - clinched regular season titlex - clinched playoff berth", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287639-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Brigade season, Schedule, Regular season\nThe 2019 regular season schedule was released on February 13, 2019. All times Eastern.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287639-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Brigade season, Roster\nRookies in italics updated May 16, 201924 Active, 21 Inactive", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287640-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Orioles season\nThe 2019 Baltimore Orioles season was the 119th season in Baltimore Orioles franchise history, 66th in Baltimore, and the 28th at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. The Orioles were managed by Brandon Hyde in his first season as Orioles manager. They finished 54\u2013108, 7 games better than their disastrous 47\u2013115 record from their 2018 season, but they missed the playoffs for a third straight season, as they were mathematically eliminated from playoff contention on August 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287640-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Orioles season\nThe season set several statistical records and quirks. The Orioles finished last in the AL East for a third consecutive season. The Orioles set a franchise record of a combined 101\u2013223 over the previous two seasons, the worst two-season span in franchise history. The 2019 Orioles became the first team in history to yield 300+ home runs in a season, a new MLB record. They were also the first team since the 1979 Blue Jays to lose 107 or more games and not earn the first overall pick in the subsequent year's draft, as the Detroit Tigers finished 47-114, 6 1/2 games worse than Baltimore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287640-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Orioles season\nBetween July 17 and 27, the Orioles hit multiple home runs in each of 10 consecutive games, an MLB record since 1901.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season\nThe 2019 season was the Baltimore Ravens' 24th in the National Football League (NFL) and their 12th under head coach John Harbaugh. This is the team's first season under general manager Eric DeCosta following the retirement of Ozzie Newsome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season\nThis season also marked the first year in which Terrell Suggs and Joe Flacco were not on the Ravens roster since 2002 and 2007, respectively, as Suggs went to the Arizona Cardinals (later released and signed by the eventual Super Bowl champion Kansas City Chiefs) and Flacco was traded to the Denver Broncos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season\nThe Ravens started the season as the only NFL team with three former Heisman Trophy winners on their roster: Lamar Jackson, Mark Ingram Jr., and Robert Griffin III. The Ravens were also the only NFL team to score at least 20 points in each of their games this year and the only team to score on more than half of their drives. By Week 13, the Ravens improved to 10\u20132 for the first time in franchise history and extended their winning streak to eight games, also a franchise record. After a win against the Buffalo Bills, the Ravens won their ninth consecutive game and improved on their 10\u20136 record from 2018. That win also clinched a second straight playoff berth for the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season\nAlso, Jackson became only the second quarterback in NFL history to run for over 1,000 yards, and the following week, he broke Michael Vick's all-time single season quarterback rushing record during the game against the New York Jets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season\nBy Week 15, the Ravens had scored more points (430) in a single season than any other team in franchise history. In Week 15, they clinched their second straight AFC North title with a 42\u201321 victory over the Jets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season\nOn December 17, the NFL announced the rosters of the 2020 Pro Bowl which included 12 Ravens, the most of any team in 2019. On January 15, 2020, Orlando Brown Jr. was added to the Pro Bowl roster, which tied the 2007 Dallas Cowboys for the NFL record for most Pro Bowlers in a single season at 13. With a Week 16 win over the Cleveland Browns, the Ravens clinched the AFC #1 seed, gaining home-field advantage throughout the AFC playoffs, and broke 500 total points, both for the first time in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season\nThe 28\u201310 Week 17 victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers gave the Ravens their best record in franchise history, surpassing 2006. The Ravens finished the regular season with 3,296 rushing yards, the most by any team in NFL history during a season. The Ravens became the first team in NFL history to average at least 200 passing yards and 200 rushing yards per game in the same season. The Ravens outscored their opponents by 249 points, the highest point differential in the NFL in 2019. On January 3, 2020, the Associated Press released its picks for the 2019 All-Pro Team. QB Lamar Jackson, OT Ronnie Stanley, CB Marlon Humphrey, CB Marcus Peters, and K Justin Tucker were named to the first team and G Marshal Yanda was named to the second team. The five Ravens selected to the first team were the most of any NFL team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 849]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season\nIn the playoffs, the Ravens were upset by the Tennessee Titans in the Divisional Round, 28\u201312. Prior to their defeat, FiveThirtyEight had the Ravens as the favorite to win the Super Bowl since before Week 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Schedule\nThe Ravens alternated home and away games every game of the season, becoming just the fourth team to do so since the NFL season expanded to 16 games in 1978.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: Baltimore Ravens 59, Miami Dolphins 10\nThe Ravens scored a franchise-high 42 points in the first half and Lamar Jackson threw five touchdown passes with no interceptions and became the youngest quarterback to achieve a perfect passer rating. All three of the Ravens' Heisman Trophy winners (Jackson, Mark Ingram Jr. and Robert Griffin III) were involved in scoring plays.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 108], "content_span": [109, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: Baltimore Ravens 59, Miami Dolphins 10\nThe Dolphins gave up 49 yards on the first play from scrimmage and a total of 643 yards in the game, the most yards any Dolphins team has surrendered in a single game in franchise history. The 59 points were also the most surrendered by any Dolphins team in a regular season game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 108], "content_span": [109, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: Baltimore Ravens 23, Arizona Cardinals 17\nLamar Jackson threw two touchdown passes, bringing him to seven through two games, setting a new franchise record for the most touchdown passes in the team's first two games of a season. Jackson also ran for a game high of 120 yards. Former Ravens' sack leader Terrell Suggs did not register a single sack against his former team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 111], "content_span": [112, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: Baltimore Ravens 23, Arizona Cardinals 17\nThe Cardinals were able to drive the ball within the Ravens' 5-yard line in each of the first three quarters, but the Ravens defense held them to a field goal each time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 111], "content_span": [112, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: Kansas City Chiefs 33, Baltimore Ravens 28\nThe Ravens started the game strong with a 14-play, 84-yard touchdown drive that included a critical fourth down conversion. The Ravens attempt at a two-point conversion failed, so the Ravens led 6\u20130. The Chiefs responded on their next possession with an 11-play, 75-yard touchdown drive that was aided by a Pernell McPhee roughing the passer penalty. The Chiefs took the lead, 7\u20136. The Ravens offense sputtered as the Chiefs added two more touchdowns, the second of which included an 83-yard touchdown pass from Patrick Mahomes to Mecole Hardman. The Chiefs added a field goal and led 23\u20136 at the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 112], "content_span": [113, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: Kansas City Chiefs 33, Baltimore Ravens 28\nThe Ravens started the second half strong with an eight-play, 75-yard touchdown drive with all 75 yards gained on the ground. But the Chiefs responded with another touchdown. The Ravens then mounted a 13 play touchdown drive but failed for the second time in the game on a two-point conversion attempt, cutting the Chiefs' lead to 30\u201319. After the teams exchanged field goals, the Ravens scored on a nine-play, 70-yard drive that ended with a Lamar Jackson 9-yard touchdown run, but again, the two-point conversion failed and the Chiefs ran out the clock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 112], "content_span": [113, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: Cleveland Browns 40, Baltimore Ravens 25\nThe Browns opened the scoring in the first quarter with a Baker Mayfield touchdown pass to Ricky Seals-Jones. However, the Ravens responded with a Lamar Jackson touchdown pass to Miles Boykin to tie the game at 7\u20137. An Austin Seibert field goal gave the Browns a 10\u20137 lead at halftime. In the second half, Nick Chubb had an 88-yard touchdown run to extend the Browns' lead just two plays after the Ravens had cut the score to 24\u201318. A Dontrell Hilliard touchdown run extended the Browns' lead to 40\u201318. The Ravens added a touchdown to make the final score 40\u201325.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 110], "content_span": [111, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: Baltimore Ravens 26, Pittsburgh Steelers 23 (OT)\nThe Ravens' 12 game winning streak started in Pittsburgh. They went up 3\u20130 with a Justin Tucker 27-yard field goal, then made it 10\u20130 after a 4-yard touchdown by Mark Ingram. The Steelers pulled it back to 10\u20137 after Mason Rudolph found JuJu Smith-Schuster for a 35-yard touchdown pass. In the second quarter, the Ravens increased their lead as Marquise Brown caught an 11-yard pass from Lamar Jackson. A pair of Chris Boswell field goals from 41 and 29 yards made it 17\u201313 going into halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 118], "content_span": [119, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: Baltimore Ravens 26, Pittsburgh Steelers 23 (OT)\nIn the third quarter, Steelers quarterback Mason Rudolph was knocked unconscious after being hit by Brandon Carr and Earl Thomas. With backup quarterback Devlin Hodges at the helm, the Steelers took the lead in the third quarter with a James Conner 1-yard touchdown. In the fourth quarter, the Ravens tied it up at 20 apiece with a Tucker 26-yard field goal. The Steelers retook the lead on a 33-yard Boswell field goal. The Ravens forced overtime when Tucker hit a 48-yard field goal with 10 seconds left in regulation. In overtime, after a fumble by Smith-Schuster, Tucker kicked the game-winning 46-yard field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 118], "content_span": [119, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: Baltimore Ravens 23, Cincinnati Bengals 17\nThe Bengals scored first when Brandon Wilson returned a kickoff 92 yards for a touchdown. The Ravens however took the lead with a Lamar Jackson 21-yard touchdown to tie the game at 7\u20137 followed by Mark Ingram's 1-yard touchdown run. In the second quarter, the Ravens made it 17\u20137 with a Justin Tucker 40-yard field goal. The Bengals followed with a Randy Bullock 22-yard field goal, to make it 17\u201310 at halftime. In the third quarter, the Ravens got a Tucker 49-yard field goal to make it 20\u201310, the quarter's only score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 112], "content_span": [113, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: Baltimore Ravens 23, Cincinnati Bengals 17\nIn the fourth quarter Tucker kicked a 21-yard field goal, and the Bengals scored on an Andy Dalton 2-yard touchdown. The Bengals' onside kick attempt failed, so the Ravens recovered the ball and ran out the clock. Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson became the first player in the Super Bowl era to throw for more than 200 yards and run for more than 150 yards in a regular season game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 112], "content_span": [113, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: Baltimore Ravens 30, Seattle Seahawks 16\nFive days after becoming a Raven, Marcus Peters intercepted a pass from Russell Wilson and returned it for a 67-yard pick six. Peters' interception was Wilson's first of the season, and Wilson's first interception in his last 207 pass attempts. The interception gave the Ravens a 13\u201310 lead but the Seahawks tied the game 13\u201313 by the end of the first half. Late in the fourth quarter, with the Ravens nursing a 10-point lead, the Ravens defense scored its second touchdown of the game as Marlon Humphrey returned a Seahawks fumble for 18 yards and a touchdown and put the game on ice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 110], "content_span": [111, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: Baltimore Ravens 37, New England Patriots 20\nThe Ravens hosted the unbeaten Patriots for the teams' first meeting since 2016, handing New England its first loss since Week 15 of the previous season as Baltimore rushed for 210 yards. On the game's first drive, the Ravens converted twice on 3rd down. Seven of the Ravens plays in the first drive were runs by Lamar Jackson, Mark Ingram, and Gus Edwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 114], "content_span": [115, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0018-0001", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: Baltimore Ravens 37, New England Patriots 20\nOn a crucial third down, the Patriots had held and the Ravens would have been forced to try a field goal but a neutral zone infraction by Shilque Calhoun gave the Ravens a first down which led to a 3-yard rushing touchdown by quarterback Lamar Jackson. On the Patriots' first possession, Tom Brady threw three straight incomplete passes, which led to a punt. The next drive the Patriots held the Ravens to a field goal. The Patriots, however had to punt again after Brady was sacked by Patrick Onwuasor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 114], "content_span": [115, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0018-0002", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: Baltimore Ravens 37, New England Patriots 20\nWith a 10\u20130 lead, the Ravens started the second quarter with another long drive, highlighted by a 53-yard run by Ingram and a 12-yard touchdown run by Gus Edwards. The Ravens then forced another Patriots three-and-out but Cyrus Jones muffed the punt and the Patriots got the ball back at the Baltimore 20-yard line, which led to a Brady to Mohamed Sanu touchdown. The Patriots added two field goals and ended the half trailing only by four, 17\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 114], "content_span": [115, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: Baltimore Ravens 37, New England Patriots 20\nOn the Patriots' first drive in the third quarter, the Ravens forced a Julian Edelman fumble which was returned 70 yards by Marlon Humphrey for a touchdown extending the Ravens lead to 24\u201313. The Patriots answered with a 4-yard rushing touchdown by James White. The Ravens then mounted an eight-minute, 14-play drive ending with a 5-yard pass to Nick Boyle to make the lead 30\u201320. In the fourth quarter, Earl Thomas intercepted a Brady pass and the Ravens mounted another 14 play drive ending with a Jackson 1-yard rushing touchdown, making the lead 37\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 114], "content_span": [115, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: Baltimore Ravens 37, New England Patriots 20\nMarlon Humphrey's 70-yard fumble return was the longest fumble return in Ravens history. Also, Nick Boyle's touchdown was the first of his career. This was also the Ravens' first win over the Patriots since the 2012 AFC Championship Game in Gillette Stadium. Lamar Jackson became the first second year or rookie quarterback to defeat the Patriots since 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 114], "content_span": [115, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: Baltimore Ravens 49, Cincinnati Bengals 13\nThe Ravens scored first when Lamar Jackson found Mark Andrews on a 2-yard touchdown pass. It was 14\u20130 after a Mark Ingram 1-yard touchdown run. In the second quarter, the Bengals got a Randy Bullock 42-yard field goal; but the Ravens then pulled away as Jackson found Andrews again on a 17-yard touchdown pass to make it 21\u20133. Marcus Peters then returned an interception 89 yards for a touchdown to make it 28\u20133. The Bengals came within 18 points at halftime when Ryan Finley found Tyler Boyd on a 6-yard touchdown pass. The Ravens scored three more touchdowns to open the second half. First, Jackson ran for one from 47 yards out, then Jackson found Marquise Brown for a 20-yard touchdown pass, and then Tyus Bowser returned a fumble 33 yards for a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 113], "content_span": [114, 874]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: Baltimore Ravens 49, Cincinnati Bengals 13\nWith the win, the Ravens won five consecutive regular season games for the first time since 2006 and also had a season sweep of the Bengals for the first time since 2011. Lamar Jackson finished with his second perfect passer rating on the season, making him the second player in NFL history to perform the feat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 113], "content_span": [114, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: Baltimore Ravens 41, Houston Texans 7\nJackson threw four touchdowns in the game, becoming the first quarterback in Ravens franchise history to throw four or more touchdowns in a game multiple times during the regular season. Jackson also rushed for 86 yards during the victory over the Texans making him the only quarterback in NFL history to rush for more than 60 yards in seven consecutive games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 108], "content_span": [109, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: Baltimore Ravens 45, Los Angeles Rams 6\nThe Ravens became the fourth team in the 21st century to score touchdowns on their first six drives in a game. During the game, Lamar Jackson became the first player in NFL history to rush for at least 1,500 yards and pass for more than 3,000 yards in his first two seasons. Jackson's five touchdown passes made him the NFL's first player with that many touchdown passes in a Monday Night Football debut and the youngest player ever (22 years old) with multiple five touchdown passing games. The Ravens also won seven straight games for the first time since their 2000 Super Bowl-winning season. Jackson was also named the AFC Player of the Month for the month of November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 110], "content_span": [111, 784]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: Baltimore Ravens 20, San Francisco 49ers 17\nThe 49ers opened the game with a touchdown on their first possession, which was the first time on the season that the Ravens had allowed an opponent a touchdown on the first drive. On the following drive, 49ers QB Jimmy Garoppolo was sacked and lost a fumble. Two plays later, the Ravens scored on a 20-yard pass from Lamar Jackson to Mark Andrews. This was the 48th touchdown of the season and the most touchdowns by any Ravens team in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 114], "content_span": [115, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0025-0001", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: Baltimore Ravens 20, San Francisco 49ers 17\nAfter a 49ers punt, Jackson orchestrated a 13-play drive culminating with him running the ball in from the 1-yard line for a touchdown. The 49ers answered with a touchdown, but the Ravens countered with a field goal and the half ended with the Ravens up by three. In the opening drive of the second half, Jackson was stripped of the ball by 49ers safety Marcell Harris at the 49ers' 20-yard line. The 49ers then completed a 14-play drive lasting almost eight-and-a-half minutes, but were forced to kick a field goal which tied the game at 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 114], "content_span": [115, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0025-0002", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: Baltimore Ravens 20, San Francisco 49ers 17\nNeither team could score in the fourth quarter until the 6:28 mark when the Ravens drove the ball down to the 49ers' 31 where Justin Tucker kicked a 49-yard game-winning field goal as time expired. With the win, the Ravens improved to 10\u20132 for the first time in franchise history and extend their winning streak to 8 games, also a franchise record. The Ravens were also the only AFC North team to defeat all four of their NFC West opponents in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 114], "content_span": [115, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: Baltimore Ravens 24, Buffalo Bills 17\nLamar Jackson became the second ever quarterback behind Michael Vick to reach 1,000 rushing yards. The Ravens improved to 11\u20132 for the first time in franchise history and extend their winning streak to nine games, also a franchise record. Also, a light moment in an otherwise competitive game occurred in the third quarter when some pages from Ravens special teams coach Randy Brown's playbook blew onto the field and Bills cornerback Tre'Davious White retrieved them. When the referee noticed that White was actually examining the pages, he ran over to White and snatched them from him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 108], "content_span": [109, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: Baltimore Ravens 42, New York Jets 21\nLamar Jackson threw 5 touchdown passes and broke the NFL record for rushing yards by a quarterback in a season as the Ravens won the AFC North title. Mark Andrews caught his eighth touchdown of the season, breaking a franchise record for most touchdowns by a Ravens tight end in a single season, previously held by Todd Heap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 108], "content_span": [109, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: Baltimore Ravens 31, Cleveland Browns 15\nThe Browns held the Ravens scoreless for the first 28 minutes of the game while they took a 6\u20130 lead. But with less than two minutes remaining in the half Lamar Jackson hit Mark Andrews with 2 touchdown passes and the Ravens took a 14\u20136 lead into the locker room at half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 111], "content_span": [112, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: Baltimore Ravens 31, Cleveland Browns 15\nIn the second half, Jackson tossed another touchdown, this time to Mark Ingram and then the Ravens running game sealed the victory with Mark Ingram and Justice Hill rushing touchdowns. Lamar Jackson's touchdown pass to Mark Andrews in the second quarter broke the Ravens single-season touchdown pass record with 34, a record previously held by Vinny Testaverde. With the win, the Ravens clinched home-field advantage for the entire AFC playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 111], "content_span": [112, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: Baltimore Ravens 31, Cleveland Browns 15\nThe Ravens defense limited the league's top rusher, Cleveland running back Nick Chubb, to 45 yards; his lowest output of the 2019 season. Chubb had gashed the Ravens' defense for 165 yards and 3 touchdowns in their week 4 match-up. On the day after the Ravens' victory over the Browns, and due to the Ravens' having clinched home-field advantage, head coach John Harbaugh announced that quarterback Lamar Jackson, guard Marshal Yanda, safety Earl Thomas III and defensive tackle Brandon Williams will be inactive for the Week 17 game against the Pittsburgh Steelers. Harbaugh also announced that running back Mark Ingram will not play; allowing him to recover from the calf injury he sustained in the Browns game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 111], "content_span": [112, 825]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: Baltimore Ravens 28, Pittsburgh Steelers 10\nOn a rain-soaked field, with Robert Griffin III at quarterback, the Ravens kept the ball on the ground for their first drive. The drive covered 40 yards, took 7 minutes off the clock and culminated with a 45-yard Justin Tucker field goal. After the Ravens defense forced a three-and-out, the Ravens offense, highlighted by a Gus Edwards 38-yard run, drove down the field again, this time settling for a Tucker 22-yard field goal. The Steelers took the lead early in the second quarter after a Benny Snell 4-yard touchdown run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 114], "content_span": [115, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0031-0001", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: Baltimore Ravens 28, Pittsburgh Steelers 10\nThe Ravens regained the lead, 9\u20137, with another Tucker field goal with 1:10 remaining in the half. The Ravens got the ball back with 54 seconds left in the half when Matt Judon sacked Steelers quarterback Devlin Hodges forcing him to fumble. Justice Hill's 8-yard touchdown run capped a 23-yard drive for the Ravens, who ended the half with a 16\u20137 lead. After the teams exchanged field goals, the Ravens defense, late in the fourth quarter, stripped the ball from Steelers punter Jordan Berry and recovered it in the end zone for a touchdown. On the next Steelers possession the Ravens were awarded 2 points after Devlin Hodges was called for intentional grounding in the end zone, making the final score 28\u201310 Ravens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 114], "content_span": [115, 833]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: Baltimore Ravens 28, Pittsburgh Steelers 10\nWith the win, the Ravens finished the season with a franchise best 14\u20132 record surpassing their 13\u20133 campaign in 2006. They also swept the Steelers for the first time since the 2015 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 114], "content_span": [115, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Postseason, Schedule\nThe Ravens clinched a playoff berth following their Week 14 win over the Buffalo Bills. They clinched the AFC North division following their Week 15 win over the New York Jets, guaranteeing at least one home playoff game. They clinched home-field advantage throughout the AFC playoffs with their Week 16 victory against the Cleveland Browns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Divisional Playoffs: Tennessee Titans 28, Baltimore Ravens 12\nTitans running back Derrick Henry accounted for most of the Tennessee offense, accounting for 205 of their 300 total yards. Meanwhile, Baltimore racked up 530 yards, but their three turnovers and four failed fourth-down conversion attempts proved too much to overcome. As a result, Baltimore became the first number 1 seed in the playoffs to lose to the number 6 seed since the New England Patriots lost to the New York Jets in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 123], "content_span": [124, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Divisional Playoffs: Tennessee Titans 28, Baltimore Ravens 12\nOn the Ravens' first drive of the game, Lamar Jackson threw a pass that bounced off the hands of Mark Andrews and was intercepted by safety Kevin Byard, who returned it 31 yards, with an unnecessary roughness penalty against Jackson for a horse-collar tackle adding another 15 yards and giving Tennessee a first down on the Ravens' 35-yard line. Henry then carried the ball 4 times for 22 yards on an 8-play drive that ended with Ryan Tannehill's 12-yard touchdown pass to tight end Jonnu Smith, who made a leaping one-handed catch in the back of the end zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 123], "content_span": [124, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0035-0001", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Divisional Playoffs: Tennessee Titans 28, Baltimore Ravens 12\nAfter getting the ball back, Baltimore drove to a 4th-and-1 on their own 45-yard line. Jackson attempted to convert with a quarterback sneak, but he was tackled by linebacker David Long Jr. for no gain on the last play of the first quarter. On the next play, Tannehill gave the team a 14\u20130 lead with a 45-yard touchdown pass to Kalif Raymond. Following a punt from each team, Jackson completed a 30-yard pass to Marquise Brown and a 16-yard pass to Andrews, setting up Justin Tucker's 49-yard field goal to make the score 14\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 123], "content_span": [124, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0035-0002", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Divisional Playoffs: Tennessee Titans 28, Baltimore Ravens 12\nThen after a Titans punt, Jackson completed a 26-yard pass to Seth Roberts, as well as two completions to Brown for gains of 16 yards and 38 yards on a 91-yard drive. Tucker finished it off with a 22-yard field goal as time expired in the half, making the score 14\u20136 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 123], "content_span": [124, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Divisional Playoffs: Tennessee Titans 28, Baltimore Ravens 12\nBaltimore took the second half kickoff and drove to a 4th-and-1 on the Titans' 18-yard line. Jackson again tried to convert with a run, but was stopped for no gain by linebacker Harold Landry. Two plays later on 3rd and 1, Henry took a handoff through the middle and ran for a 66-yard gain, to the Ravens' 6-yard line. Then when faced with 3rd and goal from the 3-yard line, Henry took a direct snap out of wildcat formation and threw a jump pass to Corey Davis for a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 123], "content_span": [124, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0036-0001", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Divisional Playoffs: Tennessee Titans 28, Baltimore Ravens 12\nThis gave Tennessee a 21\u20136 lead and made Henry the first running back to throw a touchdown pass in the postseason since Allen Rice in the 1987 season. On the first play of the Ravens' next possession, defensive end Jurrell Casey forced a fumble while sacking Jackson, which Jeffery Simmons recovered for Tennessee on the Baltimore 20-yard line. From there, the Titans drove to a 28\u20136 lead, scoring on a 6-play drive that ended with Tannehill's 1-yard touchdown run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 123], "content_span": [124, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0036-0002", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Divisional Playoffs: Tennessee Titans 28, Baltimore Ravens 12\nBaltimore responded with a drive to the Titans' 36-yard line, only to lose the ball again with a Jackson pass that was intercepted by safety Kenny Vaccaro. After forcing Tennessee to punt, the Ravens finally managed to score a touchdown, moving the ball 83 yards in 10 plays, the longest a 27-yard run by Jackson. Jackson finished the drive with a 15-yard touchdown pass to tight end Hayden Hurst, but his subsequent two-point conversion pass was incomplete, keeping the score at 28\u201312. Tennessee's defense then pinned down Baltimore for the rest of the game, forcing a turnover on downs on the Ravens' final two possessions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 123], "content_span": [124, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287641-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore Ravens season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Divisional Playoffs: Tennessee Titans 28, Baltimore Ravens 12\nHenry finished the game with 30 carries for 195 yards, while also catching two passes for 7 yards and throwing a 3-yard touchdown pass. He became the first player to rush for over 180 yards twice in the same postseason. Jackson completed 31 of 59 passes for 365 yards and a touchdown, with two interceptions, while also rushing 20 times for 143 yards. This made him the first quarterback to throw for 300 yards and rush for 100 yards in a playoff game. His top receiver was Brown, who caught seven passes for 126 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 123], "content_span": [124, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287642-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore ransomware attack\nDuring the Baltimore ransomware attack of May 2019, the American city of Baltimore, Maryland had its servers largely compromised by a variant of ransomware called RobbinHood. Baltimore became the second U.S. city to fall victim to this new variant of ransomware after Greenville, North Carolina and was the second major US city with a population of over 500,000 people to be hacked by ransomware in two years, after Atlanta was attacked the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287642-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore ransomware attack, Attack\nOn May 7, 2019, most of Baltimore's government computer systems were infected with the aggressive ransomware variant RobbinHood. All servers, with the exception of essential services, were taken offline. In a ransom note, hackers demanded 13 bitcoin (roughly $76,280) in exchange for keys to restore access. The note stated that if the demands were not met within four days, the price would increase and within ten days the city would permanently lose all of the data.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287642-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore ransomware attack, Attack\nThe attack had a negative impact on the real estate market as property transfers could not be completed until the system was restored on May 20. However, the restoration of all systems was, as of May\u00a020, 2019, estimated to take weeks more.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287642-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Baltimore ransomware attack, Attack\nBaltimore was susceptible to such an attack due to its IT practices, which included decentralized control of its technology budget and a failure to allocate money its information security manager wanted to fund cyberattack insurance. The attack has been compared to a ransomware attack on Atlanta the previous year, and was the second major use of the RobbinHood ransomware on an American city in 2019, as Greenville, North Carolina was also affected in April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287643-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bandipur forest fires\nIn February 2019, massive forest fires broke out in numerous places across the Bandipur National Park of the Karnataka state in India. The National Remote Sensing Centre of the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) carried out an assessment of the total area affected by the fire. On 25 February 2019, it estimated the extent of burnt area to be about 10,920 acres in the last five days since 21 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287643-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bandipur forest fires\nThough the major fire was brought under control by 24 February 2019, some areas continued to burn. The fire also spread to Mudumalai forest range in Tamil Nadu, causing damage in around 40 acres. The Tamil Nadu forest department took action to ensure that it did not spread further.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287643-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bandipur forest fires, Background\nOn 21 February 2019, wildfire broke out in the Bandipur Tiger Reserve. Unlike in previous years, this is the first time the wildfire in Bandipur flared up earlier due to the sudden climatic change and rapid growth of dry grass and Lantana. Officials reported that there appeared to have been no deaths of the larger mammals in the Park, such as bison, elephants, leopard and tiger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287643-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bandipur forest fires, Background\nOver 10,000 acres of forest in Bandipur area was destroyed. With the fire spreading rapidly due to winds, the authorities closed the Gundlupet-Ooty National highway and safaris in Bandipur National Park were also cancelled. Strong winds were making the job of firefighters, forest staff and volunteers more difficult.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287643-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bandipur forest fires, Background\nThe fire that destroyed Kundakere Range, spread to Barakatte and Guddakere, then to the Himavathi Gopalaswamy Hills. It also destroyed forests in Jarkal Kere and Gowri Kalu hills. Many smaller mammals and reptiles were killed, along with thousands of trees. There had been no forest-fire incidents noted in Bandipur National Park in the previous two years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287643-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bandipur forest fires, Firefighting\nTwo Mi-17 Indian Air Force helicopters were deployed on 25 February 2019 afternoon to douse the fire, which had been raging for three days in the Bandipur Tiger Reserve. The operation on 25 February 2019 was primarily limited to the Gopalaswamy Hills Range in Karnataka's Chamarajanagar district. The other two ranges that were seriously affected were Kundakere and Bandipur. The helicopters were deployed after Karnataka state Chief Minister HD Kumaraswamy called on the Indian Air Force for help. One proceeded towards Karadikal hill ranges while the other fought fires in the general area of Chammana halla top.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287643-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bandipur forest fires, Firefighting\nBolagudda and Kanive temple area were also subject to helicopter fire control A total of 10 sorties were flown, dropping approximately 30,000 litres of water.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287643-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bandipur forest fires, Damage assessment\nSatellite images shown the extent of the damage caused by the wildfire. The National Remote Sensing Centre of the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), Hyderabad, released a report based on Sentinel-2 satellite data, which reported that 15,443.27 acres of forest area damaged by the fire between 23 February 2019 and 25 February 2019 in Bandipur forest region alone. Nature Conservation Foundation's Wildlife Scientist Mysore Doreswamy Madhusudan estimated that 17,000 acres would have been affected since the National Remote Sensing Centre excluded the damage in administratively part of Bandipur (Revenue land).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287643-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Bandipur forest fires, Damage assessment\nNumber of casualties due to fire has not estimated yet. Wildlife officials say that small animals, reptiles, which are slow-moving, would have borne the brunt, while bigger mammals like leopards and tigers would have fled to the Bandipur Tiger Reserve and taken refuge in nearby areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287643-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Bandipur forest fires, Investigation\nKarnataka's top forest official confirmed that an \"act of sabotage\" had caused the blaze. Forest officials have arrested two shepherds for allegedly setting fire to the forest. Fearing tiger attacks on their cattle in Bandipur, on 22 February 2019 they had sparked the fire to chase away a tiger which was spotted in the area for a month or so, leading to massive fire, which destroyed thousands of acres of Bandipur forest area. The accused were booked under Indian section 27, 29, 30, 31, 50 and 51 of the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287643-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Bandipur forest fires, Gallery\nForest fire spreading across the forest region due to dry grass", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287643-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Bandipur forest fires, Gallery\nSmoke coming out of Bandipur Forest area in February 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287643-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Bandipur forest fires, Gallery\nBandipr Forest Fire satellite image taken by NASA's VIIRS sensor", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287643-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Bandipur forest fires, Gallery\nLarge smoke can be seen from distance due Bandipur forest fire", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287643-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Bandipur forest fires, Gallery\nThe effect forest fire that spread to Mudumalai destroying over 40 acres", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287644-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bandy World Championship\n2019 Bandy World Championship was held in V\u00e4nersborg, Sweden, between men's national teams among bandy playing nations. It was the XXXIXth Bandy World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287644-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bandy World Championship, Host selection\nThe tournament was supposed to be held in Irkutsk in Russia. However, the decision was reconsidered and the tournament was held in V\u00e4nersborg in Sweden instead. Irkutsk might get the right to host the 2020 tournament, if FIB is given guarantees that the planned indoor arena will be ready for use in time. The Russian government has expressed its support for the building of such a stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287644-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bandy World Championship, Qualified nations\nA total of 20 nations took part in the championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287645-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangamata U-19 Women's Gold Cup\nThe 2019 Bangamata U\u201319 Women's Gold Cup was the 1st edition of Bangamata U-19 Women's International Gold Cup, an annual international women's youth football tournament hosted by Bangladesh Football Federation. The main goal of this tournament to make strong pipeline of Bangladesh women's national football team in future. After the 4th edition of this tournament it will be National women's team tournament instead of Bangladesh women's national under-20 football team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287645-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangamata U-19 Women's Gold Cup, Draw\nThe draw was held at the Hotel Pan Pacific Sonargaon in Dhaka on 12 March 2019.The six teams were divided into two groups. The top two teams from each group qualified for the Semi-Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 42], "content_span": [43, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287645-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangamata U-19 Women's Gold Cup, Goalscorers\nThere were 33 goals scored in 8 matches, for an average of 4.12 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287645-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangamata U-19 Women's Gold Cup, Sponsorship\nLocal sports marketing company K-Sports bought the rights for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287646-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok Challenger\nThe 2019 Bangkok Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the eleventh edition of the tournament and was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Bangkok, Thailand between 11 and 17 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287646-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok 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-00287646-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287646-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287647-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok Challenger II\nThe 2019 Bangkok Challenger II was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Bangkok, Thailand between 18 and 24 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287647-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok Challenger II, 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-00287647-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok Challenger II, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287648-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok Challenger II \u2013 Doubles\nJames Cerretani and Joe Salisbury were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287648-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok Challenger II \u2013 Doubles\nLi Zhe and Gon\u00e7alo Oliveira won the title after defeating Enrique L\u00f3pez P\u00e9rez and Hiroki Moriya 6\u20132, 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287649-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok Challenger II \u2013 Singles\nMarcel Granollers was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287649-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok Challenger II \u2013 Singles\nJames Duckworth won the title after defeating Alejandro Davidovich Fokina 6\u20134, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287650-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nGerard and Marcel Granollers were the defending champions but chose not defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287650-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nGong Maoxin and Zhang Ze won the title after defeating Hsieh Cheng-peng and Christopher Rungkat 6\u20134, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287651-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok Challenger \u2013 Singles\nMarcel Granollers was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287651-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok Challenger \u2013 Singles\nHenri Laaksonen won the title after defeating Dudi Sela 6\u20132, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287652-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok United F.C. season\nThe 2019 season is Bangkok United Football Club's 11th in the new era since they took over from Bangkok University Football Club in 2009. It is the 4th season in the Thai League and the club's 9th (7th consecutive) season in the top flight of the Thai football league system since returning in the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287653-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok bombings\nOn 2 August 2019, series of small bombs have detonated over five locations throughout Bangkok Metropolitan Area. The blasts location included Chong Nonsi BTS Station, near the King Power Mahanakhon tower, the Chaengwattana Government Complex, the Royal Thai Armed Forces Headquarters, and inside a branch of Miniso; a utility goods store at Siam Square One. The blasts have resulted in total of seven injuries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287653-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok bombings\nThe initial investigation carried out by Thai police has reported that the suspect of the insurgent is related to the same group that has carried out similar attack during 2016. The bombings also coincided with an ASEAN summit that was taking place in the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287653-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok bombings, Attack\nOn 2 August 2019, at 04:45 Bangkok time (UTC+7.00), a minor bomb detonated at a branch of Miniso, a utility goods store, in Siam Square One shopping center, Pathum Wan District. The bomb was stuffed inside a doll from the We Bare Bears cartoon series. The shelves and goods in the store were damaged, no one was injured as the store was not yet opened. The security camera later revealed that the bomb was planted by a masked man covered in sunglasses the day before. The store remained closed for two days for maintenance on damaged shelves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287653-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok bombings, Attack\nAt 07:00 local time, four bombs at the Chaengwattana Government Complex has been reported to the local police station. The first two bombs has detonated in front of the entrance of the Government complex, while followed by the third bomb that has exploded in front of the Royal Thai Armed Forces Headquarters. The fourth bomb was successfully defused by the EOD at the building B of the government complex. There is no reported of death or injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287653-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok bombings, Attack\nAt 08:00 local time, two bomb has been detonated in front of the Chong Nonsi BTS Station, and at the entrance of the King Power Mahanakhon Tower, which is followed by a suspect object was reported that was located in front of the BTS entrance. The local police has destroyed the suspect bombing device by high pressure water gun. Two injuries has been reported, and no death was reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287653-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok bombings, Attack\nAt 8:50 local time, the seventh bomb has detonated in Rama Nine District yaek 57/1, which has resulted in total of 4 injuries and 2 serious injuries. Many false positive suspect of bombing device has been reported after the first 3 incidents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287653-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok bombings, Investigation\nThe initial investigation reported by Intelligence Agencies reported that this attacked could potentially be linked to an expansion of operations by the insurgents that were supported by the opposition leader of the government. However, the Royal Thai police lead by the police chief Chakthip Chaijinda reported that this incident is perpetrated by the same group of insurgents that has carried out similar attacked in seven southern district in 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287653-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok bombings, Investigation\nThe explosive devices reported by the Royal Thai Police was believed to be a homemade bomb that has a size of a tennis ball. Although the motives of this attack remain unknown, however it is appears to been an attack on the country's image as Bangkok hosted an ASEAN summit, where political leader from each southeast asian nation have attended the summit, while also other nation representatives, such as the UK foreign secretary, US secretary of State, and China's Diplomat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287653-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok bombings, Investigation\nThe Royal Thai Police has ordered the Crime Suppression Division (CSD) to further investigate the attacks that happened on the 2 August. The Crime Suppression Division has work closely with the Office of the Attorney-General (OAG) to gather intelligence and evidence on the attacks and has reported that the attacks was planned near the Thai-Malaysian border.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287653-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok bombings, Investigation\nOn 5 August, the Royal Thai Police has published a report regarding the attack, the attack was orchestrated by group of 15 people, where the evidence was drawn from inquiry of the 2 suspects that were arrested on the 2nd of August. While the inquiry, the police has examine the blasting site, and has gathered CCTV evidence and fingerprint and DNA sample from the site. The Office of Police Forensic Science has examined the sample and has crossed check with the criminal profile to narrow down the search for the other 13 suspects.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287653-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok bombings, Investigation\nOn 16 August, the Royal Thai Police led by Srivara Rangsibrahmanakul has issued arrest warrants to 9 different suspects, the authorities also has claim that some of the suspect may have criminal background. While the other 2 suspects that has been arrested on the 2nd of August has been temporary imprison with court order.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287653-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok bombings, Investigation\nOn 2 September at the Crime Suppression Division another 2 suspects that has been arrested in the Narathiwat province, the 2 suspects has denied all allegations against all of their alleged charged. The 2 suspects has been accused of handing over the explosive device to the bombers at various location on 2 August. The DNA and fingerprint samples have been collected by the Forensic Science Police officers to cross check with the sample that was collected at the blasting site.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287653-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok bombings, Investigation\nBy the 4th of September the Criminal Court has issued in total of 14 arrest warrants and has arrested in total of 3 suspects.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287653-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok bombings, Reaction\nThe military junta leader Prayut Chan-o-cha respond to this attack by condemning to those who planned the attack and has destroyed the peace and order to the country. While the Deputy Prime Minister Prawit Wongsuwan has told the reporter that the insurgent was orchestrated to create a situation to embarrassed the government as the city hosted ASEAN summit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287653-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok bombings, Reaction\nChief Police Chaktip Chaijinda also believe that the motives behind the attack was believed to be political related, as Thailand held its first general election in March since the 2014 Thai coup d'\u00e9tat. Nonetheless, many government opposition believe that this attacks was responsible by the government itself in order to divert the public attention on the current poor public image of the government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287653-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangkok bombings, Other arrests, detentions, and prosecutions\nOn August 2, two suspect were arrested in front of the Royal Thai Police headquarters, and sent to temporary confinement. Other two suspects that help orchestrated the attacks were also arrested in the southern province of Thailand on the 2nd of September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 66], "content_span": [67, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite\nThe 2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite was a two-part plebiscite held in Mindanao, Philippines that ratified the Bangsamoro Organic Law (BOL) and replaced the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) with the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM), as well as the scope of the said region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite\nUnder the organic law, the government would have to hold the plebiscite not more than 150 days from the signing of the BOL into law (July 26, 2018) but not earlier than 90 days from the law's signing. The first part of the plebiscite was held on January 21, 2019, where voters from the ARMM voted in regards of the BOL's ratification and residents of Cotabato City and Isabela City voted for or against their cities' inclusion to the then-proposed region. The second part was held on February 6 to potentially expand the BARMM; with voters from six municipalities in Lanao del Norte and 67 barangays in Cotabato province voting for or against their localities' inclusion to the BARMM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite\nOn January 25, 2019, the Commission on Elections (COMELEC) announced that the BOL was \"deemed ratified\" after results in the first part of the plebiscite showed majority support for the law's ratification. The election body also officially announced that majority of voters in Cotabato City voted in favor of joining the then-proposed autonomous region while voters of Isabela City rejected their inclusion. During the February 6 referendum, however, 63 of the 67 Cotabato barangays, and 9 of 22 towns in Lanao del Norte saw voters in favor of joining the then-proposed region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite\nDespite the fact that the six municipalities in Lanao del Norte which petitioned to join were among the 9 voting in favor of inclusion, a majority of support was required from not only from voters in the individual municipality, but also from voters throughout the rest of the province as well. As a result, no municipality in Lanao del Norte joined the autonomous region. All of the barangays in Cotabato province which saw voters vote in favor of joining, however, joined the region as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Scope, Bangsamoro 'core' territory\nVoters in localities referred to as the core territory of the proposed Bangsamoro Autonomous Region were eligible to participate in the plebiscite. The core territory covers:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Scope, Bangsamoro 'core' territory\nVoters in the whole provinces of Lanao del Norte and North Cotabato also had to vote if they consented to a locality's secession from their parent province to join the proposed Bangsamoro Autonomous Region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Scope, Other areas\nAdditionally, adjacent local government units bordering the localities above could opt for inclusion in the plebiscite through their local governments or a petition by its registered voters. The Comelec released guidelines regarding this concern on October 22, 2018 and gave local government units seeking this course of action until October 31, 2018 to comply. Voters or the local government of the petitioning locality had to pay a \u20b110,000 filing fee and a \u20b1100 research fee as imposed by the election body.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Scope, Other areas\nA total of 62 localities was initially announced to have made bids to participate in the plebiscite, although not all of them were contiguous to the defined Bangsamoro core territory. Fifty-six of these petitions were initiated by local governments while six were made by registered voters of the petitioning localities. The Comelec planned to decide on all of these petitions initially by mid-November 2018 but later moved their target to December 15, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Scope, Other areas\nDue to the large number of petitions, the Comelec decided on December 7, 2018 to schedule the planned plebiscite on two separate dates (January 21 and February 6, 2019) stating that they could not process all petitions by December 15 with localities with successful petitions taking part in the February vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Scope, Other areas\nA total of 103 petitions were filed, but only 28 were accepted. Petitions not accepted were either due to the petitioning locality not being adjacent to the defined core territory of the proposed Bangsamoro Autonomous Region or failure to submit sufficient requirements for their bid to get included in the plebiscite. Voters from the 28 accepted barangays were permitted to participate in the February polling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Scope, Other areas, Approved additional areas\nBy early January 2019, the Comelec has approved the petition of 20 barangays in North Cotabato:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 82], "content_span": [83, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Scope, Other areas, Approved additional areas\nOn January 11, 2019, the Comelec announced the final list of additional participating localities for the plebiscite. The petitions of eight more barangays, all from North Cotabato, were approved by the election body.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 82], "content_span": [83, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Scope, Other areas, Unapproved petitions\nAt least twelve localities in Zamboanga del Sur filed petitions for their participation in the plebiscite. Three island barangays of Zamboanga City also reportedly filed petitions, a supposed move which was condemned by city mayor Maria Isabelle Climaco. The barangay captains of the three Zamboanga City barangays later denied filing petitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 77], "content_span": [78, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Voters' registration\nThe Commission on Elections (Comelec) conducted a three-day satellite voter registration in select venues in the constituent provinces of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao as well as in the provinces of Lanao del Norte and North Cotabato, and in the cities of Cotabato and Isabela, Basilan from September 11 to 13, 2018. Alongside with voter's registration, residents were able to transfer, reactivate, or correct their registration, as well as have their records included or reinstated. Those who had registered for the most recent barangay and Sanggunian Kabataan elections were not required to undergo the registration process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Voters' registration\nFifteen satellites centers were set by the Comelec, one of which was in a camp controlled by the rebel group Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), which played a major part in the conception of the BOL. MILF members were also among those who registered for the plebiscite, some of whom lacked government-issued IDs such as birth certificates. Despite this, their own self-issued identification documents were accepted as valid IDs for the purpose of registration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Voters' registration\nThe Comelec recorded a total of 2,839,659 registered voters from 3,273 in certain areas in Mindanao and expected a 75% turn-out for the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Campaign and plebiscite period\nThe campaign period for the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region creation plebiscite began on December 7, 2018 and ended on January 19, 2019, while the plebiscite period was scheduled to be held between December 7, 2018 to February 5, 2019. The voting for the plebiscite took place on January 21, 2019 as per an en banc decision by the Commission on Elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 81], "content_span": [82, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Campaign and plebiscite period\nDuring the campaign period, a gun ban was imposed in localities set to participate in the plebiscite. During the same period, the following acts were also prohibited: the establishment of a new voting precinct or alteration of the territory of an existing one, the transfer or detail of officers and civil service employees, the organization and maintenance of \"strike forces\" or similar entities, and the suspension of any elective public official from the barangay to the provincial level including elective officials in independent cities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 81], "content_span": [82, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Campaign and plebiscite period\nThe Comelec was also tasked to aid in holding information campaigns in every participating local government unit as well as allow the conduct of information dissemination and public advocacy events by other government agencies, non-government organizations and private individuals in relation to the plebiscite. Every barangay was also directed to hold at least one assembly during the campaign period informing constituents on matters regarding the BOL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 81], "content_span": [82, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Campaign and plebiscite period\nOn January 6, 2019, a rally was organized in Jolo, Sulu as an expression of support to the ratification of the BOL which was attended by former Sulu governor Benjamin Loong as well as former and incumbent mayors of some of the towns of Sulu. Similar actions were planned in Basilan, Tawi-Tawi, and other parts of Sulu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 81], "content_span": [82, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Campaign and plebiscite period\nThere was also reluctance or opposition against the ratification of the BOL. In Basilan, officials of Isabela City actively campaigned against their city's inclusion in the proposed region. ARMM Governor Mujiv Hataman allayed concerns of Christians living in the city regarding potential marginalization should their city become part of the new autonomous region reasoning that the neighboring town of Lamitan has been governed by Christians despite being part of the ARMM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 81], "content_span": [82, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0017-0001", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Campaign and plebiscite period\nHataman also said that Christian practices such as fiestas and eating pork would not be made illegal should the BOL be ratified contrary to what people against the legislation is saying in their campaign. Basilan Governor Jim Hataman on his part claimed that the BOL is a \"sure win\" in his province. Meanwhile, Cotabato City Mayor Cynthia Guiani-Sayad expressed reservations on the potential inclusion of her city in the proposed region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 81], "content_span": [82, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Campaign and plebiscite period\nIn Sulu, Governor Abdusakur Tan Sr. was against the ratification of the BOL and questioned the law's constitutionality at the Supreme Court. However, some Sulu leaders voiced support for the law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 81], "content_span": [82, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Campaign and plebiscite period\nThe provincial government of Lanao del Norte campaigned for a \"No\" vote since it opposed the inclusion of six of its municipalities in the proposed Bangsamoro Autonomous Region. Lanao del Norte Governor Imelda Quibranza Dimaporo as well as her husband Abdullah and son Mohammad Khalid, who were both members of the House of Representatives lead the provincial government's campaign. Abdullah Makapaar, the leader of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front's North Western Mindanao Command, campaigned for a \"Yes\" vote \u2013 promising to double the salary of teachers and the establishment of orphanage centers in the province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 81], "content_span": [82, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Question\nThe crafting of the questions to be use in the plebiscite by the Comelec was already being finalized by mid-September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Question\nIn October 2018, it was reported that in the defined core territories of the proposed Bangsamoro Autonomous Region, voters will be asked to answer \"Yes\" or \"No\" if they approve the Bangsamoro Organic Law or not while in surrounding areas and non-core areas, voters will be presented a \"two-folded\" question.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Question\nThe plebiscite questions were be in Arabic and Filipino; both languages were used in the existing Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao areas while only Filipino was used in the rest of the plebiscite's scope. No ballots with English questions were printed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Question\nVoters in the existing ARMM had to answer one question:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Question\n\"Payag ba kayo na pagtibayin ang Batas Republika Blg. 11054 na kilala din bilang \"Organic Law for the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao\"?", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Question\n\u0647\u200d\u0644 \u0623\u0646\u062a \u062a\u0648\u064f\u062f \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0648\u0627\u0641\u0642\u0629 \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0627\u0644\u0642\u0631\u0627\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u062c\u0645\u0647\u200d\u0648\u0631\u0649 \u0631\u0642\u0645 \u0661\u0661\u0660\u0665\u0664 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0639\u0631\u0648\u0641 \u0628\u0627\u0633\u0645: \"\u0627\u0644\u0642\u0627\u0646\u0648\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0636\u0648\u0649 \u0644\u0644\u062d\u0643\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u0630\u0627\u062a\u0649 \u0627\u0645\u0646\u0637\u0642\u0629 \u0628\u0627\u0646\u062c\u0633\u0627\u0645\u0648\u0631\u0648 \u0641\u0649 \u0645\u0633\u0644\u0645\u0649 \u0645\u064a\u0646\u062f\u0627\u0646\u0627\u0648\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Question\nAre you willing to adopt the Republic Act No. 11054 also known as \"Organic Law for the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao\"?", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Question\nVoters in Basilan were asked whether they wanted to include the city of Isabela in the proposed Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in addition to the question above regarding their stance on the ratification of the BOL. The question was presented as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Question\n\"Payag ba kayo na isama ang Lungsod Isabela, Basilan sa Rehiyong Awtonomo ng Bangsamoro?\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Question\n\u0647\u0644 \u0627\u0646\u062a \u062a\u0648\u0627\u0641\u0642 \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0627\u062f\u0631\u0627\u062c \u0645\u062f\u064a\u0646\u0629 \u0627\u064a\u0633\u0627\u0628\u064a\u0644\u0627\u060c \u0628\u0627\u0633\u064a\u0644\u0627\u0646 \u0641\u0649 \u0627\u0644\u062d\u0643\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u062f\u0627\u062a\u0649 \u0644\u0645\u0646\u0637\u0642\u0629 \u0628\u0627\u0646\u062c\u0633\u0627\u0645\u0648\u0631\u0648\u061f", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Question\n\"Are you willing to include the city of Isabela, Basilan in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region?\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Question\nVoters in the cities of Isabela and Cotabato were asked one question: whether or not they were in favor of their locality's inclusion in the proposed Bangsamoro Autonomous Region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Organization\nThe Comelec held a simulation of the plebiscite on October 23, 2018 at its main office in Intramuros, Manila. Ballot printing started on December 7, 2018 and lasted for three days. Around 2.8 million ballots were printed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Organization\nThe plebiscite was originally planned to be held at a single date on January 21, 2019. However the Comelec announced on December 7, 2018 that the plebiscite would be held in two separate days instead; on January 21 and February 6, 2019. The election body reasoned that the move was to allow the resolution of pending petitions for voluntary inclusion of additional local government units in the plebiscite.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Organization\nVoters in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao including Cotabato City and Isabela City in Basilan would take part in the January 21 vote while the rest of the named participating localities in the BOL as well as additional localities which successfully petitioned for their inclusion would take part in the February 6 vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Organization\nFor both dates, the Comelec had allotted eight hours of voting. Voting was set to start at 8:00\u00a0a.m. (UTC+8) and close at 3:00\u00a0p.m. Voters within 30 metres (98\u00a0ft) of the polling area would still be allowed to vote past 3:00\u00a0p.m. Voting was to be done manually with the ballot containing questions answerable by \"yes\" or \"no\" in English or its equivalent in Filipino or any other indigenous Philippine languages. Answers made with any other mark such as a check, a cross, or a thumb mark were not accepted as valid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Organization\nAt least 25 international observers were permitted to oversee the plebiscite in order to establish credibility of the plebiscite. A few restrictions and regulations were to be imposed such as the requirement for the observer to identify themselves to election authorities at the site and for them to provide copies of their report to the government. They would not be allowed to interfere in the process of the plebiscite itself. Their reports would also be used by the Comelec as a reference to improve the process of future elections and plebiscites.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Budget\nIt was estimated that the plebiscite would require \u20b1857 million pesos. By mid-September 2018, the proposed national budget for 2019 still did not include the budget for the January 2019 plebiscite.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Budget\nIn an event that the Congress failed to appropriate part of the 2019 national budget for the holding of the plebiscite, it was proposed that funds acquired by Comelec in the 2018 barangay elections be used to partially satisfy the financial needs of the plebiscite.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Preparations, Budget\nBy November 2018, budget for the plebiscite had been allocated. The Department of Budget and Management stated that the funds would be drawn from the fund allocation of the Comelec.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Legal challenges\nGovernor Abdusakur Tan II, the provincial governor of Sulu questioned the constitutionality of the Bangsamoro Organic Law before the Supreme Court of the Philippines through a petition filed in October 2018. He asked the high court to rule the BOL unconstitutional and for the stoppage of the planned plebiscite. According to the petition, the BOL which sought to replace the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao with the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region was illegal, citing a view that the constitution provided for only one organic act for the establishment of an autonomous region in Muslim Mindanao.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0040-0001", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Legal challenges\nIt also argued that only a constitutional amendment could legally abolish the ARMM and not legislation by the congress. In addition, it questioned the provision that the ARMM would be considered as \"one geographical area\" for the purpose of the plebiscite as well as the Moro Islamic Liberation Front's lead role in the Bangsamoro Transition Commission to the prejudice of other Muslims who are affiliated with other rebel groups and non-Muslims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Legal challenges\nThe Philippine Constitutional Association (Philconsa) also filed a similar petition against the BOL while an intervention was filed by the Philippine Association of Islamic Accountants (PAIA) seeking for the dismissal of the two petitions filed by the Philconsa and the Sulu provincial government. The two petitions were ordered to be consolidated by the Supreme Court on January 8, 2019. Associate Justice Mario Victor Leonen would handle the cases.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Opinion polling\nThe International Alert (IA) conducted a survey in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao with 614 respondents aged 18\u201335 regarding their position on the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region creation plebiscite. Of the respondents, 89.4 percent reported that they would vote in favor of the ratification of the Bangsamoro Organic Law, while 2.5 percent said that they would vote against; the rest were unsure. However, in the same survey, respondents in the Sulu archipelago were largely undecided compared to their counterparts in mainland Mindanao.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Results, Ratification of the BOL\nOn January 25, the Commission on Elections, as the National Plebiscite Board of Canvassers, declared the ratification of the Bangsamoro Organic Law creating the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM), after a majority of votes from the present Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) approved its creation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Results, Ratification of the BOL\nOn the ratification of the BARMM from the then components of the ARMM, the entire ARMM voted as one; therefore, Sulu's rejection of the BARMM does not remove them from the BARMM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Results, Inclusion to the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region, Cotabato City and Isabela, Basilan\nResidents of Cotabato City and Isabela City, the latter of which is part of Basilan province but not the ARMM, voted on January 21 regarding their inclusion in the proposed Bangsamoro Autonomous Region. Isabela being a part of Basilan province, the residents of the other towns of Basilan had to consent if they were in favor of Isabela's potential inclusion in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region. Cotabato City, as an independent component city, only needed a majority of its voters to vote in favor or against.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 127], "content_span": [128, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Results, Inclusion to the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region, Cotabato City and Isabela, Basilan\nOn January 25, the Commission on Elections, as the National Plebiscite Board of Canvassers, announced that a majority of voters in Cotabato City voted in favor of inclusion in the BARMM. In Isabela City, a majority of voters rejected their city's inclusion in the proposed BARMM while a majority of voters in the rest of the province agreed to the potential inclusion. Lacking a double majority, Isabela remains a part of the Zamboanga Peninsula region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 127], "content_span": [128, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Results, Inclusion to the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region, Municipalities in Lanao del Norte\nA majority of voters in the six Lanao del Norte towns voted in favor of their municipality's inclusion in the Bangsamoro, and in the cases of Munai and Tangcal, overwhelmingly, to join the BARMM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 126], "content_span": [127, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0048-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Results, Inclusion to the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region, Municipalities in Lanao del Norte\nLike in the case of Isabela in Basilan, the six towns' inclusion in the proposed Bangsamoro Autonomous Region also needed consent from the rest of the towns in Lanao del Norte. Each town needed to secure consent individually. The city of Iligan, a highly urbanized city not under the jurisdiction of Lanao del Norte, did not participate in the plebiscite.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 126], "content_span": [127, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0049-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Results, Inclusion to the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region, Municipalities in Lanao del Norte\nThe other towns in Lanao del Norte rejected to allow the towns petitioning to be a part of the BARMM from joining. Because of this, the six towns that voted in favor of their inclusion would not join the proposed region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 126], "content_span": [127, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0050-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Results, Inclusion to the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region, Barangays in Cotabato\nOut of 67 barangays of Cotabato that were included in the plebiscite, 63 voted for inclusion. The four that rejected the measure were Galidan in Tulunan, Balatican in Pikit, and Pagangan and Lower Mingading in Aleosan; these four would not be joining the BARMM. Meanwhile, each municipality consented to its barangays in joining the BARMM. In Pikit, only one barangay that voted in the plebiscite declined to join. The 22 barangays that voted to join the BARMM included Barangay Fort Pikit, which was the site of the Municipal Hall. The municipal government declared that they would ask that the hall and adjacent plaza be annexed by neighboring Barangay Poblacion, one of the 20 barangays that are remaining in Cotabato.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 114], "content_span": [115, 836]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0051-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Results, Inclusion to the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region, Barangays in Cotabato\nThe barangays in Aleosan and Tolonan voted in favor of their inclusion but majority of voters in the rest of their parent municipalities voted against the barangays' inclusion. Barangay Baltican in Pikit rejected their inclusion while the rest of Pikit consented the barangay's inclusion and would have been part of the new autonomous region if Baltican voters also voted for their inclusion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 114], "content_span": [115, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0052-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Reactions to the results, To the January 21 vote\nDiscrepancies were noted regarding the actual number of votes cast in Cotabato City: a total of 39,027 votes were recorded but 6,682 \"yes\" votes were recorded and 24,994 \"no\" votes with the combined total of the yes and no votes at 61,676. The National Plebiscite Board of Canvassers ordered a re-tabulation of the votes from Cotabato City to validate the votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 85], "content_span": [86, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0053-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Reactions to the results, To the January 21 vote\nThe mayor of Cotabato City, Guiani Sayaidi, was to file a protest because of the results. She alleged harassment of voters who were not supportive of the BOL and \"flying voters\" or non-residents voting in another precinct. Sayaidi later alleged a conspiracy between the national government and the MILF for the result of the plebiscite in her city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 85], "content_span": [86, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0053-0001", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Reactions to the results, To the January 21 vote\nShe said that the military did not respond to her pleas to disperse MILF members which she claimed were harassing voters and also mentioned an alleged detention of a barangay chief at the headquarters of the Philippine Army's 6th Infantry Division after being told to attend a seminar in relation to the plebiscite on the eve of the plebiscite voting date. The claim has been denied by the Armed Forces of the Philippines, and Sayaidi was told to bring the matter to a \"proper forum\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 85], "content_span": [86, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0054-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Reactions to the results, To the January 21 vote\nLess than a week after the plebiscite, the Our Lady of Mount Carmel Cathedral in Jolo of Sulu Province was bombed on January 27, one inside the church and another outside after the first bombing when the armed forced responded. Around 18 people were killed, while 82 others were injured. The Armed Forces of the Philippines blamed the Ajang-Ajang group of the Abu Sayyaf as the perpetrators. Sulu narrowly rejected inclusion in the BARMM, but since the old ARMM voted for inclusion, Sulu could not opt out of inclusion. The military stated that it had received reports that the Abu Sayyaf, with foreign collaboration, had been planning to attack an urban area for a \"long time\" and insisted that it had yet to establish a connection between the bombings and the plebiscite itself.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 85], "content_span": [86, 866]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0055-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Reactions to the results, To the January 21 vote\nThe United Nations and the European Union acknowledged the Bangsamoro Organic Law and the result of the plebiscite as a significant achievement in the Mindanao peace process. The government of Turkey issued a statement with the same message. while Japan has pledged continued support for aiding developments in Mindanao in accordance with the peace process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 85], "content_span": [86, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0056-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Reactions to the results, To the February 6 vote\nFollowing unofficial results, that the majority of voters in Lanao del Norte voted against the inclusion of six municipalities of the province in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region, the Philippine National Police decided to keep officers stationed in various parts of the province for election duties for the plebiscite to remain in anticipation of adverse reaction to the defeat of the \"Yes\" votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 85], "content_span": [86, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0057-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Aftermath\nThe Commission on Elections announced on January 25, 2019 that the BOL was \"deemed ratified\", which meant that the ARMM would be abolished and that the process of the formal establishment of the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region would begin. The election body also announced that Cotabato City would be part of this new autonomous region while Isabela City in Basilan, which was never part of the ARMM, would remain outside of the new autonomous region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0057-0001", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Aftermath\nThe election body also confirmed on February 14, 2019, that all six Lanao del Norte municipalities which could then-potentially be part of the new region voted in favor of their inclusion but failed to gain approval from voters in other towns in the province. 63 out of 67 barangays were also announced to form part of the proposed autonomous region after they verified that voters in this barangays voted in favor of their inclusion while the rest of the voters from their respective parent municipalities consented their inclusion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0058-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Aftermath\nThe barangays that would be part of the BARMM did not immediately secede from their parent municipalities and province once the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region was effectively established. They were expected to vote for municipal officials of their parent municipalities and North Cotabato provincial officials in the 2019 Philippine general election in May if the barangays were not reorganized into a new municipality or merged with any of the neighboring municipalities of Maguindanao in time before the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287654-0059-0000", "contents": "2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, Aftermath\nThe members of an interim regional government of the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region, the Bangsamoro Transition Authority took their oaths on February 20, 2019 along with the ceremonial confirmation of the plebiscite results of both the January 21, and February 6, 2019 votes. The official turnover from the ARMM to the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region took place on February 25, 2019, thereby abolishing the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao after 30 years of existence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287655-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Banja Luka Challenger\nThe 2019 Banja Luka Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the eighteenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina from 9 to 15 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287655-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287655-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Banja Luka Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287656-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Banja Luka Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nAndrej Martin and Hans Podlipnik Castillo were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287656-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Banja Luka Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nSadio Doumbia and Fabien Reboul won the title after defeating Sergio Gald\u00f3s and Facundo Mena 6\u20133, 7\u20136(7\u20134) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287657-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Banja Luka Challenger \u2013 Singles\nAlessandro Giannessi was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287657-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Banja Luka Challenger \u2013 Singles\nTallon Griekspoor won the title after defeating Sumit Nagal 6\u20132, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287658-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bank of America Roval 400\nThe 2019 Bank of America Roval 400 was a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race that was held on September 29, 2019, at Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord, North Carolina. Contested over 109 laps on the 2.28-mile (3.67\u00a0km) road course, it was the 29th race of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season, the third race of the Playoffs, and final race of the Round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287658-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bank of America Roval 400, Report, Background\nSince 2018, deviating from past NASCAR events at Charlotte, the race will utilize a road course configuration of Charlotte Motor Speedway, promoted and trademarked as the \"Roval\". The course is 2.28 miles (3.67\u00a0km) in length and features 17 turns, utilizing the infield road course and portions of the oval track. The race will be contested over a scheduled distance of 109 laps, 400 kilometres (250\u00a0mi).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287658-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bank of America Roval 400, Report, Background\nDuring July 2018 tests on the road course, concerns were raised over drivers \"cheating\" the backstretch chicane on the course. The chicanes were modified with additional tire barriers and rumble strips in order to encourage drivers to properly drive through them, and NASCAR will enforce drive-through penalties on drivers who illegally \"short-cut\" parts of the course. The chicanes will not be used during restarts. In the summer of 2019, the bus stop on the backstretch was changed and deepened, becoming a permanent part of the circuit, compared to the previous year where it was improvised.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287658-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bank of America Roval 400, Report, Background\nIf a driver fails to legally make the backstretch bus stop, the driver must skip the frontstretch chicane and make a complete stop by the dotted line on the exit before being allowed to continue. A driver who misses the frontstretch chicane must stop before the exit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287658-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bank of America Roval 400, First practice\nJimmie Johnson was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 80.968 seconds and a speed of 103.152\u00a0mph (166.007\u00a0km/h). Michael McDowell was replaced by Austin Cindric for the session while he was treating a kidney stone, but returned for qualifying later in the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287658-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bank of America Roval 400, Qualifying\nWilliam Byron scored the pole for the race with a time of 80.932 and a speed of 103.198\u00a0mph (166.081\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287658-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bank of America Roval 400, Practice (post-qualifying), Second practice\nRyan Blaney was the fastest in the second practice session with a time of 81.977 seconds and a speed of 101.882\u00a0mph (163.963\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 75], "content_span": [76, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287658-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bank of America Roval 400, Practice (post-qualifying), Final practice\nChase Elliott was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 81.801 seconds and a speed of 102.101\u00a0mph (164.316\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287658-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Bank of America Roval 400, Media, Television\nNBC Sports covered the race on the television side. Rick Allen, Jeff Burton, Steve Letarte and Dale Earnhardt Jr. had the call in the booth for the race. Dave Burns, Marty Snider, and Kelli Stavast reported from pit lane during the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287658-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Bank of America Roval 400, Media, Radio\nThe Performance Racing Network, with talent and production assistant from the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio Network, had the radio call for the race, which was simulcast on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio. Doug Rice, Mark Garrow, and Jeff Hammond called the race from the booth when the field raced down the front straightaway. IMS Radio's Nick Yeoman was assigned the entrance to the road course and into the Bank of America bridge (Turns 1-3). Voice of the Indianapolis 500 Mark Jaynes was assigned the action from the Bank of America bridge to the middle of the infield section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287658-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Bank of America Roval 400, Media, Radio\nDoug Turnbull called the action exiting in infield into the oval Turn 1 banking (Turns 7-9). Pat Patterson called the action on the backstretch and into the bus stop. Rob Albright was assigned to the oval Turn 3-4 end. (Turns 13-15). Brad Gillie, Brett McMillan, Steve Richards, and Wendy Venturini had the call from the pit area for PRN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287659-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Barangay Ginebra San Miguel season\nThe 2019 Barangay Ginebra San Miguel season is the 40th season of the franchise in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287660-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona City Council election\nThe 2019 Barcelona City Council election, also the 2019 Barcelona municipal election, was held on Sunday, 26 May 2019, to elect the 11th City Council of the municipality of Barcelona. All 41 seats in the City Council were up for election. The election was held simultaneously with regional elections in twelve autonomous communities and local elections all throughout Spain, as well as the 2019 European Parliament election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287660-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona City Council election, Electoral system\nThe City Council of Barcelona (Catalan: Ajuntament de Barcelona, Spanish: Ayuntamiento de Barcelona) was the top-tier administrative and governing body of the municipality of Barcelona, composed of the mayor, the government council and the elected plenary assembly. Elections to the local councils in Spain were fixed for the fourth Sunday of May every four years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287660-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona City Council election, Electoral system\nVoting for the local assembly was on the basis of universal suffrage, which comprised all nationals over eighteen, registered and residing in the municipality of Barcelona and in full enjoyment of their political rights, as well as resident non-national European citizens and those whose country of origin allowed Spanish nationals to vote in their own elections by virtue of a treaty. Local councillors were elected using the D'Hondt method and a closed list proportional representation, with an electoral threshold of five percent of valid votes\u2014which included blank ballots\u2014being applied in each local council. Councillors were allocated to municipal councils based on the following scale:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287660-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona City Council election, Electoral system\nThe mayor was indirectly elected by the plenary assembly. A legal clause required that mayoral candidates earned the vote of an absolute majority of councillors, or else the candidate of the most-voted party in the assembly was to be automatically appointed to the post. In the event of a tie, the appointee would be determined by lot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287660-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona City Council election, Electoral system\nThe electoral law allowed for parties and federations registered in the interior ministry, coalitions and groupings of electors to present lists of candidates. Parties and federations intending to form a coalition ahead of an election were required to inform the relevant Electoral Commission within ten days of the election call, whereas groupings of electors needed to secure the signature of a determined amount of the electors registered in the municipality for which they were seeking election, disallowing electors from signing for more than one list of candidates. For the case of Barcelona, as its population was over 1,000,001, at least 8,000 signatures were required.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287660-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona City Council election, Council composition\nThe table below shows the composition of the political groups in the City Council at the time of dissolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287660-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona City Council election, Campaign budget\nAccording to a report from the Catalan newspaper Diari Ara, Manuel Valls, the candidate of Citizens, would have received funds from a group of businessmen to prepare the campaign, that would have included a salary of \u20ac20,000 monthly for him. Valls rejected those accusations and said all funds he received for the campaign were declared.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287660-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona City Council election, Opinion polls\nThe table below lists voting intention estimates in reverse chronological order, showing the most recent first and using the dates when the survey fieldwork was done, as opposed to the date of publication. Where the fieldwork dates are unknown, the date of publication is given instead. The highest percentage figure in each polling survey is displayed with its background shaded in the leading party's colour. If a tie ensues, this is applied to the figures with the highest percentages. The \"Lead\" column on the right shows the percentage-point difference between the parties with the highest percentages in a given poll. When available, seat projections are also displayed below the voting estimates in a smaller font. 21 seats are required for an absolute majority in the City Council of Barcelona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 854]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287661-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Formula 2 round\nThe 2019 Barcelona FIA Formula 2 round was a pair of motor races for Formula 2 cars that took place on 11 and 12 May 2019 at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya in Catalonia, Spain as part of the FIA Formula 2 Championship. It was the third round of the 2019 FIA Formula 2 Championship and ran in support of the 2019 Spanish Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287662-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Formula 3 round\nThe 2019 Barcelona FIA Formula 3 round was a motor racing event held on 11 and 12 May 2019 at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya in Spain. It was the first round of the 2019 FIA Formula 3 Championship, and ran in support of the 2019 Spanish Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287662-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Formula 3 round, Summary, Background\nFollowing the 2018 GP3 Series, the series became the FIA Formula 3 Championship after merging with the FIA Formula 3 European Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287662-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Formula 3 round, Summary, Background\nThe round saw the d\u00e9but of the new Dallara F3 2019 chassis. The new chassis uses the same Mecachrome 3.4 litre (207 cu in) naturally-aspirated V6 engine that powered its predecessor, the GP3/16, but the power output is slightly reduced. The chassis also uses Pirelli tyres, as its predecessor GP3 did, and features the \"halo\" device used for cockpit protection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287662-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Formula 3 round, Summary, Background\nTen teams were listed to compete in the inaugural season; Reigning GP3 champions ART Grand Prix, Campos Racing, Jenzer Motorsport, MP Motorsport and Trident were chosen from the GP3 Series teams, while Carlin, Hitech Grand Prix, and reigning European F3 champions Prema Racing were chosen from the Formula 3 European Championship. Both Carlin and Prema Racing had entries in the championship's sister series Formula 2, as did Charouz Racing System, who later formed a partnership with former Formula 1 team Sauber. The final entry went to HWA Racelab, who joined the championship after Mercedes-Benz left the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters touring car championship to focus on their Formula E entry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287662-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Formula 3 round, Summary, Qualifying\nPrema Racing's and Ferrari Driver Academy member Robert Shwartzman became the first pole sitter of the series, ahead of ART's Christian Lundgaard and Prema teammate Marcus Armstrong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287662-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Formula 3 round, Summary, Race 1\nAt the start, Christian Lundgaard took the lead into turn one from Robert Shwartzman, with Marcus Armstrong in third place. Lundgaard led for the entire race and became the first race winner of the new championship, with Shwartzman and fellow Ferrari junior Marcus Armstrong completing the podium in third, giving Prema a double podium finish. However, on the cool-down lap, Lundgaard would be awarded a penalty for exceeding the Full Course Yellow speed limit, which would hand the win to Russian driver Shwartzman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287662-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Formula 3 round, Summary, Race 1\nThe only retirement of the race was Campos Racing's Alessio Deledda, who spun off on lap 14 at turn 12. Liam Lawson would also not be classified following a late pit-lane start having suffered a mechanical failure on the warm-up lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287662-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Formula 3 round, Summary, Race 2\nNiko Kari, who returned to the championship with Trident after racing for MP Motorsport in GP3 and Formula 2 in 2018, qualified in reverse grid pole after finishing eighth in the first race. He was immediately overtaken at the start by the third Prema driver Jehan Daruvala, who competed in both GP3 and European F3 in 2018. The start saw four drivers eliminated following a collision at turns 1 and 2; Raoul Hyman, Ye Yifei, Jake Hughes, and Artem Petrov, which brought out the safety car. On lap 9, Fabio Scherer made contact with Bent Viscaal at turn 2 and Simo Laaksonen and Alex Peroni collided at the same turn, putting an end to both the Charouz and MP Motorsport drivers' respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287662-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Formula 3 round, Summary, Race 2\nAs Lundgaard did in the first race, Daruvala led the entire race and brought home a victory for Prema, with Red Bull Junior J\u00fcri Vips in second and Kari third for Trident. The result gave Prema a 32 point lead over ART in the teams' championship, and Robert Shwartzman a 13 point lead over Lundgaard in the drivers' championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287662-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Formula 3 round, Classification, Race 1\nDriver awarded a five-second penalty for exceeding the VSC delta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287663-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Open Banco Sabadell\nThe 2019 Barcelona Open Banc Sabadell (also known as the Torneo God\u00f3) was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 67th edition of the event and part of the ATP Tour 500 series of the 2019 ATP Tour. It took place at the Real Club de Tenis Barcelona in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain, from April 22 through April 28, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287663-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287664-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Open Banco Sabadell \u2013 Doubles\nFeliciano L\u00f3pez and Marc L\u00f3pez were the defending champions, but chose not to participate together. Feliciano L\u00f3pez played alongside Pablo Carre\u00f1o Busta, but lost in the semifinals to Juan Sebasti\u00e1n Cabal and Robert Farah. Marc L\u00f3pez teamed up with Marcel Granollers, but lost in the first round to Raven Klaasen and Joe Salisbury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287664-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Open Banco Sabadell \u2013 Doubles\nCabal and Farah went on to win the title, defeating Jamie Murray and Bruno Soares in the final, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20134).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287665-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Open Banco Sabadell \u2013 Singles\nDominic Thiem defeated Daniil Medvedev in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20130, to win the Singles title at the 2019 Barcelona Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287665-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Open Banco Sabadell \u2013 Singles\nRafael Nadal was the three-time defending champion, but lost in the semifinals to Thiem.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287665-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Open Banco Sabadell \u2013 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-00287665-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Open Banco Sabadell \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nNote: Diego Schwartzman, who would have been placed in the entry list on the initial entry cutoff date of 11 March 2019 and seeded 11th, entered late and played in the qualifying tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287666-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Sporting Club season\nThe 2019 season was Barcelona Sporting Club's 94th season in existence and the club's 61st season in the top flight of Ecuadorian football. Barcelona was involved in three competitions: the main national tournament Liga Pro, the national cup called Copa Ecuador, and the international tournament Copa Libertadores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287666-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Sporting Club season\nIn their Copa Libertadores campaign, Barcelona played the second qualifying phase against the Uruguayan Defensor Sporting. Barcelona won the first leg match 2-1 away from home, but Defensor Sporting claim CONMEBOL for an infraction of Barcelona. CONMEBOL awarded Defensor Sporting a 3\u20130 win as a result of Barcelona fielding an ineligible player. In the second leg match, Barcelona won 1-0 at home but Defensor won 3-1 on aggregate, so Barcelona was eliminated from the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287666-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Sporting Club season\nIn their Copa Ecuador campaign Barcelona started playing in the round of 32. Barcelona won 3\u20131 on aggregate against Mineros SC and advanced to the round of 16. Then Barcelona won the key by the away goals rule (the aggregate score ended up in 2\u20132) against Santa Rita and advanced to quarterfinals. Barcelona also won in their quarterfinals key against El Nacional by the away goals rule (the aggregate score ended up 1\u20131) and advanced to semifinals. However, in their semifinals key, Barcelona tied 4-4 on aggregate but lost by the away goals rule against Delf\u00edn SC and was eliminated from the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287666-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Sporting Club season\nIn their Liga Pro campaign, Barcelona was one of the sixteen fighting for the championship. In the first stage Barcelona won 17 matches, had 4 draws and 9 losses obtaining 55 points at the end of the stage and a +18 of goal difference. Barcelona ended up in the second place of the table, qualifying to 2020 Copa Libertadores first stage and the playoffs. In the quarterfinals Barcelona lost the key against Aucas 0-1 on aggregate and was eliminated from the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287666-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Sporting Club season, Season overview, February\nOn 6 February, Barcelona started their season and their Copa Libertadores campaign defeating Defensor Sporting 1-2 away from home. Ely Esterilla scored the first goal of the 2019 Barcelona season. \u00c1lvaro Navarro scored for the Uruguayan club getting a temporary draw, but Barcelona took the lead again by a goal from Xavier Arreaga near the end of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287666-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Sporting Club season, Season overview, February\nOn 9 February, Barcelona started their Liga Pro campaign defeating El Nacional 5\u20132 at home. Fidel Mart\u00ednez scored the first goal of the match by penalty kick. Two goals scored by Mart\u00ednez and another more by Stalin Caicedo made Barcelona taking the lead in the first half. In the second half, El Nacional scored two goals by Jordy Caicedo, but Barcelona expanded their score by two more goals from Ayrton Cisneros y \u00c1ngel Qui\u00f1\u00f3nez in the last minutes of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287666-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Sporting Club season, Season overview, February\nOn 11 February, CONMEBOL awarded Defensor Sporting a 3\u20130 win as a result of Barcelona fielding the ineligible player Sebasti\u00e1n P\u00e9rez Cardona in the first leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287666-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Sporting Club season, Season overview, February\nOn 12 February, Barcelona defeated Uruguayan Defensor Sporting again 1-0 at home, but due to the CONMEBOL punishment Defensor Sporting won 3\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the third stage of the 2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287666-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Sporting Club season, Season overview, February\nIn their second Liga Pro match held on 16 February, Barcelona drew 0-0 against Macar\u00e1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287666-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Sporting Club season, Season overview, February\nOn 24 February, Barcelona defeated Mushuc Runa 2-0 away from home. Oscar Estupi\u00f1an and \u00c1ngel Qui\u00f1onez scored for Barcelona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287666-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Sporting Club season, Season overview, March\nBarcelona lost their two first matches in March: the first one was held on 3 March against Independiente with a 3-0 lost away from home, ad the second one was against Universidad Cat\u00f3lica with a 2-1 at home held on 10 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287666-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Sporting Club season, Season overview, March\nOn 17 March, Barcelona defeated Fuerza Amarilla 0-3 away from home. Barcelona goals were scored by Pedro Pablo Velasco, Fidel Mart\u00ednez and Christian Alem\u00e1n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287666-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Sporting Club season, Season overview, March\nIn the seventh round of the Liga Pro first stage, Barcelona drew 1-1 against Liga de Quito in a match played on 30 March. Barcelona goal was scored by Fidel Mart\u00ednez in the 25th minute, but in the last minutes of the match Rodrigo Aguirre scored for L.D.U.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287666-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Sporting Club season, Season overview, April\nBarcelona started April with a draw against Am\u00e9rica de Quito in a match played on 6 April which ended 2-2 away from home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287666-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Sporting Club season, Season overview, April\nBarcelona's biggest win of this season was held on 12 April against Deportivo Cuenca which was defeated 6-2 at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287666-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Sporting Club season, Season overview, April\nOn 21 April, Barcelona defeated Delf\u00edn 3-1 at home. Barcelona goals were scored by Fidel Mart\u00ednez, Robert Herrera and Leonardo Campana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287666-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Sporting Club season, Season overview, April\nOn 24 April, Barcelona started their Copa Ecuador campaign with drew match against Mineros SC with a 1-1 away from home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287666-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Sporting Club season, Season overview, April\nAlso Aucas was defeated by Barcelona in a match played on 27 April which ended 3-4 away from home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287666-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Sporting Club season, Season overview, May\nOn 5 May, Barcelona defeated Guayaquil City 1-0 at home. Barcelona's only goal was scored by Leo Campana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287666-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Sporting Club season, Season overview, May\nOn 12 May, Barcelona defeated their big rival Emelec 0-1 away from home. In the first official Cl\u00e1sico del Astillero of the year, Barcelona's only goal was scored by Fidel Mart\u00ednez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287666-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Sporting Club season, Season overview, May\nOn 16 May, Barcelona played the second leg match of the Copa Ecuador Round of 32 against Mineros SC winning with a 2-0. Osbaldo Lastra and Ely Esterilla scored for the Canarios. Barcelona won 3-1 on aggregate and advanced to Round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287666-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Sporting Club season, Competitions, Liga Pro, Playoffs\nAucas won 0\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the Semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287666-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Sporting Club season, Competitions, Copa FEF Ecuador, Round of 16\nThe aggregate score ended up in 2\u20132, but Barcelona won the key by the away goals rule and advanced to quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287666-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Sporting Club season, Competitions, Copa FEF Ecuador, Quarter-finals\nThe aggregate score ended up in 1\u20131, but Barcelona won the key by the away goals rule and advanced to semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287666-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Sporting Club season, Competitions, Copa FEF Ecuador, Semi-finals\nThe aggregate score ended up in 4\u20134, but Barcelona lost the key by the away goals rule and Delf\u00edn advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287666-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Sporting Club season, Competitions, Copa CONMEBOL Libertadores\nBarcelona joined the competition in the second stage of the 2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 77], "content_span": [78, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287666-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Barcelona Sporting Club season, Competitions, Copa CONMEBOL Libertadores, Second stage\nDefensor Sporting won 3\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the third stage of the 2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 91], "content_span": [92, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287667-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Barnsley Metropolitan Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Barnsley Metropolitan Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Barnsley Metropolitan Borough Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287668-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Barrow Raiders season\nThis article details the Barrow Raiders rugby league football club's 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287669-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Barrow-in-Furness Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Barrow-in-Furness Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Barrow-in-Furness Borough Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287669-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Barrow-in-Furness Borough Council election\nThe Labour Party held their control of the council, even though their majority decreased to 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287670-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting\nElections to the National Baseball Hall of Fame for 2019 proceeded according to rules most recently amended in 2016. As in the past, the Baseball Writers' Association of America (BBWAA) voted by mail to select from a ballot of recently retired players. The results were announced on January 22, 2019, with the BBWAA electing Mariano Rivera, Roy Halladay, Edgar Mart\u00ednez and Mike Mussina to the Hall of Fame. Rivera and Halladay were elected in their first year of eligibility, while Mart\u00ednez was elected in his last year of eligibility. Rivera became the first player to be unanimously elected, appearing on all 425 ballots; he broke Ken Griffey Jr.'s record of 99.32 percent (437 out of 440), set in 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287670-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting\nThe Today's Game Era Committee, one of four voting panels that since 2016 have taken over the role of the more broadly defined Veterans Committee, convened on December 9, 2018, to select from a ballot of retired players and non-playing personnel who made their greatest contributions to the sport after 1987, with Harold Baines and Lee Smith elected by this body. The formal induction ceremony was held at the Hall's facilities in Cooperstown, New York, on July 21, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287670-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, BBWAA election\nThe BBWAA election rules remained identical to those that were in effect for the most recent elections. The most recent rules change, announced in 2015, tightened the qualifications for the BBWAA electorate. Beginning with the 2016 election, eligible voters must not only have 10\u00a0years of continuous BBWAA membership, but also be currently active members, or have held active status within the 10\u00a0years prior to the election. A BBWAA member who has not been active for more than 10\u00a0years can regain voting status by covering MLB in the year preceding the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287670-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, BBWAA election\nEdgar Mart\u00ednez and Fred McGriff were on the ballot for their final time; McGriff dropped off the ballot, while Mart\u00ednez was the sixth player to be elected in his final ballot, after Red Ruffing, Joe Medwick, Ralph Kiner, Jim Rice, and Tim Raines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287670-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, BBWAA election\n319 votes were needed for election; a total of 425 ballots were cast, with 3404 votes for individual players, an average of 8.01 names per ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287670-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, BBWAA election\nPlayers who were eligible for the first time in 2019 but were not on the ballot included Wilson Betemit, Henry Blanco, Tim Byrdak, Jamey Carroll, Jos\u00e9 Contreras, Jesse Crain, Ryan Dempster, Mark DeRosa, Matt Diaz, Octavio Dotel, Chad Durbin, Chad Gaudin, \u00c9dgar Gonz\u00e1lez, Mike Gonzalez, Jerry Hairston Jr., Ram\u00f3n Hern\u00e1ndez, Eric Hinske, Brandon Inge, C\u00e9sar Izturis, Austin Kearns, Casey Kotchman, Mark Kotsay, Ryan Langerhans, Brandon Lyon, Corky Miller, Brett Myers, Laynce Nix, Ram\u00f3n Ortiz, Cody Ransom, Jon Rauch, Chris Snyder, Yorvit Torrealba, Jake Westbrook, Ty Wigginton and DeWayne Wise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287670-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, BBWAA election\nRivera's unanimous election was not the only significant historic milestone from the 2019 BBWAA voting results. Halladay, who died in a plane crash in November 2017, became the first player to have been elected posthumously on the first ballot in a regular BBWAA election since Christy Mathewson in the first BBWAA election of 1936. Roberto Clemente was voted in via a special BBWAA election in 1973, shortly after his death in a plane crash, and before he would have been eligible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287670-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Today's Game Era Committee\nOn July 23, 2016, the Hall of Fame announced changes to the Era Committee system. The system's timeframes were restructured to place a greater emphasis on the modern game, and to reduce the frequency at which individuals from the pre-1970 game (including Negro league baseball figures) will have their careers reviewed. Considering candidates whose greatest contributions occurred in 1988 and later, the Today's Game Era Committee met in 2018 as part of the elections for the next calendar year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287670-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Today's Game Era Committee\nThe Hall announced the 10 candidates for the Today's Game Era Committee ballot on November 5, 2018, with the committee scheduled to meet and vote at the 2018 winter meetings. Voting results were announced immediately after the committee meeting adjourned on December 9. The cutoff for election and induction remains the standard 75%, or 12 of 16 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287670-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Today's Game Era Committee\nAll candidates except George Steinbrenner were living when the ballot and results were announced. Harold Baines, being considered by the committee for the second time, received the necessary votes for election to the Hall of Fame in this balloting. Lee Smith, being considered by the committee for the first time, was also elected, unanimously. Lou Pinella missed election by a single vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287670-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Today's Game Era Committee\nNote: Piniella, Baines, Belle, Clark, Hershiser, Johnson and Steinbrenner were on the previous Today's Game Era Committee ballot in 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287670-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287670-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, J. G. Taylor Spink Award\nThe three finalists for the 2019 award were announced on July 18, 2018 during the All-Star break:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287670-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, J. G. Taylor Spink Award\nStark was announced as the recipient during the 2018 winter meetings on December 11. Stark received 270 of the 463 ballots cast (including 2 blank ballots) to Reeves' 111 and Reusse's 80.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287670-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Ford C. Frick Award\nVarious changes in July 2016 were also made to the annual Ford C. Frick Award elections, presented annually to a preeminent baseball broadcaster since 1978. According to the Hall, the new criteria for selection are \"Commitment to excellence, quality of broadcasting abilities, reverence within the game, popularity with fans, and recognition by peers.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287670-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Ford C. Frick Award\nAdditionally, a ballot of eight candidates is now set, down from 10 in years past. The three ballot slots previously determined by fan voting on Facebook are now filled by a committee of historians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287670-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Ford C. Frick Award\nA new election cycle has been established, rotating annually between Current Major League Markets (team-specific announcers) with the 2017 Frick Award; National Voices (broadcasters whose contributions were realized on a national level) with the 2018 Frick Award; and Broadcasting Beginnings (early team voices and pioneers of baseball broadcasting) with the 2019 Frick Award. This cycle will repeat every three years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287670-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Ford C. Frick Award\nThe Hall announced the following finalists for the 2019 Ford C. Frick Award on October 22, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287670-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Ford C. Frick Award\nAll finalists had been deceased for at least 30 years when the ballot was announced, the most recently deceased being Hoyt in 1984. Two finalists, Heilmann and Hoyt, are members of the Hall of Fame as players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287670-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Ford C. Frick Award\nThe Hall announced Al Helfer as the recipient on December 12, 2018. Helfer (1911\u20131975) called games for eight MLB teams in a career that spanned more than 30 years. He was most notable as forming one of MLB's first play-by-play teams in the 1930s alongside fellow Frick Award recipient Red Barber, and also as the lead announcer for the Mutual Broadcasting System's Game of the Day in the 1950s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287671-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bashkir head election\nThe 2019 Bashkir head election was held on 8 September 2019 in the autonomous republic of Bashkortostan. The result was a victory for Radiy Khabirov who won 82.02% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287671-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bashkir head election, Background\nSince July 2010, Bashkortostan was headed by President Rustem Khamitov. First, he was appointed as an acting president by Dmitry Medvedev after the early resignation of Bashkir President Murtaza Rakhimov, and a few days later, on 19 July 2010, Khamitov was confirmed as the new president of the republic for a 5 year term through the procedure of approval by the deputies of the State Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287671-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bashkir head election, Background\nIn early May 2012, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev signed a law returning direct elections for heads of regions to Russia. The law came into force on 1 June 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287671-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bashkir head election, Background\nOn 27 February 2014, amendments were made to the Constitution of the Republic of Bashkortostan, according to which, from 1 January 2015, the post of the President was changed to the Head of the Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287671-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bashkir head election, Background\nIn early 2014, Khamitov sought for re-election for presidency. On 30 May 2014, he resigned ahead of schedule and was immediately appointed by Russian President Vladimir Putin as the acting president of Bashkortostan and also received permission to participate in the elections. Snap presidential elections were held on 14 September 2014. From there, Khamitov won 81.8% of the vote with a turnout of 74.9%. He was elected for a 5 year term which was set to expire in September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287671-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bashkir head election, Background\nOn 11 October 2018, at the Day of the Republic of Bashkortostan, Khamitov resigned ahead of the elections, citing as a \"personal decision\" noting that he wouldn't run for re-election. The acting head of the republic was appointed 54 year old Radiy Khabirov, whom prior to that, was the head of the Krasnogorsk City District in Moscow Oblast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287672-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Basildon Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Basildon Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Basildon Borough Council in Essex. This was on the same day as other local elections. The Conservative Party lost control of the council. which fell under no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287672-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Basildon Borough Council election, Result summary\nAll comparisons in vote share are to the corresponding 2016 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287673-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Basilicata regional election\nThe 2019 Basilicata regional election took place on 24 March 2019. The election was for all 20 members of the Regional Council of Basilicata, as well as for the President of the Region, who is also a member of the council. This election was the last one in Italy before the European election of 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287673-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Basilicata regional election\nThe original election date was 26 May 2019, but a snap election was called upon the resignation of the incumbent president Marcello Pittella, a member of the Democratic Party (PD), on 24 January 2019. After the subsequent dissolution of the Regional Council, Vice President Flavia Franconi (PD) became acting president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287673-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Basilicata regional election\nThe centre-left coalition had won each regional election in Basilicata since 1995 with a large margin. However, in the general election of 4 March 2018 both the centre-right coalition and the M5S substantially improved their performance: the center-right, for the first time, tied with the center-left (including LeU, which in 2018 was not a member of the coalition led by PD) and the M5S won about double the votes gained by the PD and LeU combined.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287673-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Basilicata regional election, Electoral law\nIn addition to the newly elected president, the candidate for president of the coalition who ranks second automatically gains one seat (the first of his coalition or single party list), in the Regional Council, according to the Tatarella Law of 1995. The remaining 19 seats will be assigned on a province basis, proportionally with respect to the population of the provinces of Potenza and Matera.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287673-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Basilicata regional election, Electoral law\nThe new electoral law follows proportional representation with a threshold of 3% for party lists and 4% for lists in coalitions that failed to reach the 8% threshold. If the first coalition wins 30% of the vote, the parties collectively receive 11 (55%) to 14 seats (67%). For the presidential election, a candidate needs to win by a simple majority (first-past-the-post). To cast his vote, the voter can make a single mark on the name of a presidential candidate, and in this case the vote is not transmitted to any party list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287673-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Basilicata regional election, Electoral law\nIf the voter marks the symbol of one of the lists, the vote is automatically transferred to the candidate supported by that list. Since the approval of the new regional electoral law in 2018, split voting is not possible, i.e. voting on a list and a candidate who is not supported by it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287673-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Basilicata regional election, Electoral law\nThe voter can express two preferences, reserving the second to a candidate of a different sex, otherwise the second preferences will not be valid. Among the innovations there is the introduction of gender equality (each party list cannot have more than 60% of candidates of the same sex), and the abolition of the price list and of the split vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287673-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Basilicata regional election, Campaign\nOn 20 February 2019, governor Marcello Pittella announced he would not run for a second term and decided to support Carlo Trerotola (PD), the new centre-left candidate. With the retirement of Pittella, the majority of the left-wing Free and Equal (LeU) returned in the centre-left coalition with the list Progressives for Basilicata. A joint list of left-wing parties ran alone with Valerio Tramutoli as its presidential candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287673-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Basilicata regional election, Campaign\nThe presidential candidate of the centre-right coalition is Vito Bardi, an independent, former General of Guardia di Finanza, who later joined Silvio Berlusconi's Forza Italia. The presidential candidate of the Five Star Movement (M5S) is Antonio Mattia. The presidential candidate of Lega Sud Ausonia (a regional party who usually run alone) Antonio Postorivo was excluded due to bureaucratic issues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287674-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Basingstoke and Deane Borough Council election\nElections to Basingstoke and Deane Borough Council took place on Thursday 2 May 2019, alongside other local elections across the country. Elections took place in 20 of the 60 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287674-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Basingstoke and Deane Borough Council election, Results\nThe Conservative Party lost two seats to the Liberal Democrats, whilst Labour held their incumbent seats. Whilst Labour remained the second largest party (and largest opposition party), the Liberal Democrats won more votes for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 60], "content_span": [61, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287674-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Basingstoke and Deane Borough Council election, Results\nThe table below only tallies the votes of the highest polling candidate for each party within each ward. This is known as the top candidate method and is often used for multi-member plurality elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 60], "content_span": [61, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287675-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Basketball Champions League Final\n2019 Basketball Champions League Final was the concluding game of the 2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League season, the 3rd season of FIBA's premier basketball league in Europe. The final and the Final Four were played in the Sportpaleis in Antwerp, Belgium. The game was held 5 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287675-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Basketball Champions League Final\nVirtus Bologna from Italy won its first BCL title and its first European title in ten years. Canarias played in its second final and finished second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287675-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Basketball Champions League Final, Background, Virtus Bologna\nVirtus' 2018\u201319 season began with the appointment of Alessandro Dalla Salda as new club's CEO and the hire of Stefano Sacripanti as new head coach. Aradori and Filippo Baldi Rossi were confirmed and the club signed, among others, Tony Taylor, Kevin Punter, Amath M'Baye and Brian Qvale, to participate in the Basketball Champions League, which was Virtus's first European competition after ten years. The team reached a record of seven wins in the first seven games of the continental competition, which had never been achieved before. In March 2019, the team signed Mario Chalmers, two-time NBA champion with the Miami Heat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287675-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Basketball Champions League Final, Background, Canarias\nCanarias, playing as Iberostar Tenerife for sponsorship reasons, had another successful BCL season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287676-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Basketball Champions League Final Four\nThe 2019 Basketball Champions League (BCL) Final Four was the third concluding Basketball Champions League Final Four tournament. It was the concluding phase of the 2018\u201319 Basketball Champions League season, which marked the second season of Basketball Champions League (BCL). The Final Four took place on 3\u20135 May 2019. The tournament is hosted by the Sportpaleis in Antwerp, Belgium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287676-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Basketball Champions League Final Four\nVirtus Bologna won its first ever Champions League title, Iberostar Tenerife were runners-up. Antwerp Giants took the third place over Brose Bamberg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287676-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Basketball Champions League Final Four, Draw\nThe draw for the final four pairings was held on 10 April in Antwerp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 49], "content_span": [50, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287676-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Basketball Champions League Final Four, Teams, Background, Telenet Giants Antwerp\nAntwerp qualified for its first ever final phase of a European competition and were the second team ever to reach the final four after playing all qualifying rounds, after Riesen Ludwigsburg in 2018. In its domestic Pro Basketball League (PBL), Antwerp was having a terrific year as it was in second position. In 2018\u201319, Antwerp also won its first Belgian Basketball Cup in history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287676-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Basketball Champions League Final Four, Teams, Background, Segafredo Virtus Bologna\nBologna qualified for the Champions League as the ninth best team in the Italian Lega Basket Serie A (LBA). In its 2018\u201319 domestic season, it was in eleventh position as of 16 April 2019. Leading scorer Kevin Punter won the Champions League in 2018, while playing for AEK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 88], "content_span": [89, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287676-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Basketball Champions League Final Four, Teams, Background, Brose Bamberg\nAfter playing in EuroLeague Basketball competitions for years, Bamberg made its debut in the Champions League. It also won the 2019 BBL-Pokal in the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287676-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Basketball Champions League Final Four, Teams, Background, Iberostar Tenerife\nTenerife made its return to the Final Four for the second time, after winning the tournament in 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 82], "content_span": [83, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287677-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Basketball League of Serbia playoffs\nThe 2019 Basketball League of Serbia playoffs is the play-off tournament that decides the winner of the 2018\u201319 Basketball League of Serbia season. The playoffs is scheduled to start on 2 June and end on 20 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287678-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Basque foral elections\nThe 2019 Basque foral elections were held on Sunday, 26 May 2019, to elect the 11th Juntas Generales of \u00c1lava, Biscay and Gipuzkoa. All 153 seats in the three Juntas Generales were up for election. The elections were held simultaneously with regional elections in twelve autonomous communities and local elections all throughout Spain, as well as the 2019 European Parliament election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287678-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Basque foral elections, Foral deputation control\nThe following table lists party control in the foral deputations. Gains for a party are displayed with the cell's background shaded in that party's colour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287679-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race\nThe 2019 Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race presented by Wendy's was a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race held on August 17, 2019 at Bristol Motor Speedway in Bristol, Tennessee. Contested over 500 laps on the .533-mile (0.858\u00a0km) short track, it was the 24th race of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287679-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race, Report, Background\nThe Bristol Motor Speedway, formerly known as Bristol International Raceway and Bristol Raceway, is a NASCAR short track venue located in Bristol, Tennessee. Constructed in 1960, it held its first NASCAR race on July 30, 1961. Despite its short length, Bristol is among the most popular tracks on the NASCAR schedule because of its distinct features, which include extraordinarily steep banking, an all concrete surface, two pit roads, and stadium-like seating. It has also been named one of the loudest NASCAR tracks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287679-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race, Report, Background\nDuring driver introductions, a unique tradition is held where drivers are allowed to introduce themselves with a song of their choosing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287679-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race, Report, Background, Entry list\n\u2020 - Bayley Currey was entered for the No. 52 but was suspended by NASCAR on Thursday before the race due to violating the substance abuse policy. Kyle Weatherman will replace Currey in the No. 52 as a result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287679-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race, Practice, First practice\nDenny Hamlin was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 14.920 seconds and a speed of 128.606\u00a0mph (206.971\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287679-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race, Practice, Final practice\nMatt DiBenedetto was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 14.892 seconds and a speed of 128.848\u00a0mph (207.361\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287679-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race, Qualifying\nDenny Hamlin scored the pole for the race with a time of 14.848 and a speed of 129.230\u00a0mph (207.976\u00a0km/h). It was the first pole for Toyota in the Cup Series in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287679-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race, Media, Television\nNBC Sports covered the race on the television side. Rick Allen, 2008 Food City 500 winner Jeff Burton, and Steve Letarte called the race in the booth for the race. Dave Burns, Parker Kligerman, Marty Snider and Kelli Stavast reported from pit lane during the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287679-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race, Media, Television\nNBC Sports relieved Dale Earnhardt Jr. of duties for this race after an incident at Elizabethton Municipal Airport where a bounced landing led to the Earnhardts' private plane crashing. He, his wife Amy, daughter Isla, and dog Gus were not severely injured, but he was kept out as a precaution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287679-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race, Media, Radio\nThe Performance Racing Network had the radio call for the race, which was simulcast on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio. Doug Rice and Mark Garrow called the race from the broadcast booth when the field raced down the front straightaway. Rob Albright called the race when the field raced down the backstretch. Brad Gillie, Brett McMillan, Jim Noble and Wendy Venturini handled the action on pit road for PRN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287680-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bassetlaw District Council election\nThe 2019 Bassetlaw District Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect all 48 members of Bassetlaw District Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287680-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bassetlaw District Council election\nThe election resulted in the Labour Party retaining its control of the council with an increased majority. The Conservative Party suffered its worst defeat in Bassetlaw since 1973, winning only 5 seats of the 12 seats it was defending. Both Independents and Labour gained seats from the Conservatives. The Liberal Democrats gained a seat from Labour in East Retford West, the first Liberal Democrat elected in Bassetlaw since 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287680-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bassetlaw District Council election\nThe Conservative Party have won 4 by elections in 2021, taking 2 seats from Labour Party and 1 seat from Independents . These by election results returned the Conservative Party to be the official opposition on Bassetlaw District Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287680-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bassetlaw District Council election, Background\nBassetlaw is a shire district in Nottinghamshire, England. It is predominantly rural, with two towns: Worksop and Retford. The district was formed in 1974 by the Local Government Act 1972. Local Government in Nottinghamshire is organised on a two-tier basis, with local district councils responsible for local services such as housing, local planning and refuse collection and Nottinghamshire County Council responsible for \"wide-area\" services, including education, social services and public transport. Bassetlaw District Council has been controlled by Labour for most of its existence, except for a brief period from 2006 to 2011 when it was controlled by the Conservatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287680-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bassetlaw District Council election, Background\nBassetlaw District Council held local elections on 2 May 2019 along with other councils in England as part of the 2019 local elections. Bassetlaw is divided into 25 wards for electoral purposes, with each ward electing between one and three councillors. Until 2015, the council was elected by thirds, with district elections being held every year except the year in which elections to Nottinghamshire County Council took place. The council resolved in 2014 to hold all-out elections from 2015 onwards, with all 48 councillors elected in all-out elections every four years. Councillors defending their seats in this election were previously elected in 2015. At that election, Labour won a majority of seats and retained its control of the council, which it has controlled since 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 835]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287680-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bassetlaw District Council election, Result\nThe election resulted in the Labour Party retaining its control of the council", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287681-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Batanes earthquake\nThe 2019 Batanes earthquake was a magnitude 5.9 earthquake which struck Batanes, Philippines on July 27, 2019. It was preceded by a 5.4 magnitude foreshock. Nine people were killed by the combined effects of the earthquakes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287681-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Batanes earthquake, Earthquake\nThe main shock of the 2019 Batanes earthquake was the 5.9 magnitude earthquake which had a depth of focus of 43 kilometers (27\u00a0mi). The Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (PHILVOLCS) earlier recorded the tectonic earthquake as a magnitude 6.4 but later revised their records. The earthquake occurred at 7:38 a.m. (UTC+8) on July 27, 2019 near Itbayat, Batanes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287681-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Batanes earthquake, Earthquake\nA noted foreshock of the earthquake was the magnitude 5.4 earthquake which struck the same town at 4:16 a.m. (UTC+8). It had a depth of focus of 12 kilometers (7.5\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287681-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Batanes earthquake, Earthquake\nOne of the stronger aftershocks was a magnitude 5.8 earthquake which occurred at 9:24 a.m. (UTC+8).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287681-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Batanes earthquake, Earthquake\nAccording to the PHIVOLCS Earthquake Intensity Scale, the earthquake was most felt in the town of Itbayat, Batanes at Intensity VII while the other towns of the same province reported a lesser intensity; Basco at Intensity V, Sabtang and Ivana at Intensity IV. According to the United States Geological Survey, the earthquake had a maximum intensity of VI or has caused \"Strong\" shaking according to the Modified Mercalli intensity scale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287681-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Batanes earthquake, Casualties and damages\nAt least 9 people were killed and 60 injured due to the earthquakes. The historic, Santa Maria de Mayan Church in Itbayat, built in 1888, sustained heavy damage from the earthquake with its bell tower falling off. Several stone houses, two schools, and two health centers were also damaged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287681-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Batanes earthquake, Casualties and damages\nAccording to the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC), 911 families or 2,963 individuals were affected by the Batanes earthquakes. The Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) on their part made an estimate that the damage caused by the earthquake costed at least \u20b1292 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287681-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Batanes earthquake, Response\nPresident Rodrigo Duterte made a visit to Batanes on July 28, 2019 to personally check the situation in the province. He also made a pledge for the government to release \u20b140 million for the construction of a new clinic with Duterte citing the uncertainty regarding the integrity of the still functional Itbayat District Hospital which sustained minimal cracks. Vice President Leni Robredo also visited the island province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287681-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Batanes earthquake, Response\nThe NDRRMC also provided tents and other relief goods to people displaced due to earthquake via C-130. Other provinces and private organizations also provided aid to Batanes. The agency also shipped construction materials for new houses meant for the victims of the earthquake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287681-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Batanes earthquake, Response\nBy August 1, 2019, the whole province of Batanes has been placed under a state of calamity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287681-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Batanes earthquake, Response\nChina through its embassy in Manila donated \u20b110 million as aid following the earthquake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287682-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas City local elections\nBatangas City held its local elections on Monday, May 13, 2019, as a part of the 2019 Philippine general election. The voters will elect candidates for the elective local posts in the city: the mayor, vice mayor, the congressman (which will represent Batangas' fifth district which is composed of just the city), two provincial board members, and the 12 members of its city council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287682-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas City local elections, Candidates, Mayor\nIncumbent Mayor Beverley Rose Dimacuha is running for reelection unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287682-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas City local elections, Candidates, Vice Mayor\nIncumbent Emilio Francisco Berberabe, Jr. is running for reelection unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections\nBatangas held its local elections on May 13, 2019 as part of the 2019 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 for the six districts of Batangas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, Provincial elections, Vice Governor\nIncumbent Sofronio Ona, Jr. ran for Mayor of Calaca, Batangas. Running for the position were Reynan Bool and former Vice Governors Jose Antonio Leviste II and Richard Recto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, Provincial elections, Congressional Elections, 1st District\nEileen Ermita-Buhain was the incumbent. Her opponent was former congressman Conrado Apacible", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 90], "content_span": [91, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, Provincial elections, Congressional Elections, 3rd District\nIncumbent Ma. Theresa Collantes ran for reelection. Her main opponents were Nestor Burgos, former Board Member Ma. Chona Dimayuga and Jose Gabriel Reyes. Collantes and Dimayuga ran under two factions of PDP-Laban. Collantes ran under the Pimentel Wing while Dimayuga was under the Garcia Wing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 90], "content_span": [91, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, Provincial elections, Congressional Elections, 4th District\nLianda Bolilia was the incumbent. Her opponent was former representative Mark Llandro Mendoza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 90], "content_span": [91, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, Provincial elections, Congressional Elections, 6th District (Lipa City)\nIncumbent Vilma Santos-Recto ran for reelection. Her main opponent was incumbent Lipa Mayor Meynardo Sabili.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 102], "content_span": [103, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287683-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Balayan\nIncumbent Emmanuel Salvador Fronda II is running for reelection. His opponent is incumbent Vice Mayor Joel Arada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 82], "content_span": [83, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Balayan\nIncumbent Joel Arada is running for mayor. His party nominated Francisco Ramos. His opponent is Rita Abiad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 82], "content_span": [83, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Calaca\nIncumbent Sofronio Manuel Ona is not running. His brother, incumbent Vice Governor Sofronio Ona, Jr. is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 81], "content_span": [82, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Tuy\nIncumbent Mayor Jose Jecerell Cerrado is term-limited and is running for Vice Mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 78], "content_span": [79, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 2nd District, Bauan\nMayor Julian Casapao who elevates the Mayorship after the death of Mayor Herminigildo Dolor is opted to run as Vice Mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 80], "content_span": [81, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 2nd District, Bauan\nVice Mayor Ronald Cruzat who elevates the Vice Mayorship after the death of Mayor Herminigildo Dolor is opted to run as councilor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 80], "content_span": [81, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 2nd District, Lobo\nIncumbent Gaudioso Manalo is running for reelection. His opponent is former Mayor Efren Diona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 79], "content_span": [80, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 2nd District, San Luis\nIncumbent Samuel Noel Ocampo is running for reelection. However, Mayor Samuel Noel Ocampo died on June 17, 2019, days before he was about to take oath. The winning Vice Mayor Danilo Medina will assume as Mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 83], "content_span": [84, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 2nd District, San Luis\nIncumbent Danilo Medina is running for reelection. However, due to the death of the winning Mayor Samuel Noel Ocampo, the winning Vice Mayor Danilo Medina will assume as Mayor. The winning first councilor Oscarlito Hernandez will assume the post of Vice Mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 83], "content_span": [84, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 3rd District, Tanauan City\nIncumbent Mayor Jhoanna Corona-Villamor, who assumed office following the assassination of Mayor Antonio Halili, is running for Provincial Board Member, switching places with his father, incumbent Board Member Alfredo Corona. His opponents are former Mayor Sonia Torres-Aquino, former DFA Lipa Director Jesusa \"Nancy\" Garcia, Mary Angeline Halili, the daughter of the slain Mayor Antonio Halili, and Marcos Valdez. Pedrito Carandang withdrew from the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 87], "content_span": [88, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 3rd District, Tanauan City\nIncumbent Vice Mayor Benedicto Corona, who assumed office following the assassination of Mayor Antonio Halili, is running for City Councilor. His party nominated former Vice Mayor Julius Caesar Platon II, the son of slain former Mayor Cesar Platon; however, Platon died due to heart attack on November 19, 2018. Marissa Tabing, wife of incumbent councilor Lim Tabing, withdrew her candidacy for councilor to become Platon's substitute. Her opponents are former City Administrator Herminigildo Trinidad, Jr., Mary Jane Reyes, and Salvador Quimo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 87], "content_span": [88, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 3rd District, Balete\nIncumbent Wilson Maralit assumed office after the assassination of former Mayor Leovino Hidalgo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 81], "content_span": [82, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 3rd District, Laurel\nIncumbent Randy James Amo is term-limited and is running for Board Member.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 81], "content_span": [82, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 3rd District, Malvar\nIncumbent Cristeta Reyes is running for reelection. Her opponent is incumbent Vice Mayor Alberto Lat. Lat assumed office after the Office of the Ombudsman dismissed Mayor Cristeta Reyes. Former Mayor Carlito Reyes originally ran for the position since Reyes was perpetually disqualified from holding public office. But, he withdrew from his candidacy and substituted by his wife who reassumed the mayorship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 81], "content_span": [82, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 3rd District, Malvar\nIncumbent Alberto Lat is running for Mayor. He assumed the mayorship after the dismissal of Mayor Cristeta Reyes. But he reassumed the position of Vice Mayor. His party nominated incumbent Senior Councilor Matt Louie Aranda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 81], "content_span": [82, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 3rd District, Mataasnakahoy\nIncumbent Janet Ilagan is running for Mayor. Her husband, former Mayor Jay Ilagan is her party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 3rd District, Santa Teresita\nIncumbent Ma. Aurea Segunial is term-limited and is running for Vice Mayor. Her husband, Norberto is her party's nominee. His opponent is incumbent Vice Mayor Carlos Bathan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 89], "content_span": [90, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 3rd District, Santa Teresita\nIncumbent Carlos Bathan is term-limited and is running for Mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 89], "content_span": [90, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 4th District, Ibaan\nIncumbent Mayor Juan Toreja is term-limited. His party nominated former Mayor Artemio Chua. His main opponent is incumbent Vice Mayor Edralyn Joy Salvame.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 80], "content_span": [81, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 4th District, Ibaan\nIncumbent Edralyn Joy Salvame is running for Mayor. Her party nominated incumbent Councilor Juvy Mendoza. Her opponents are incumbent councilors Socrates Arellano, Cesar Marasigan and Pio Roberto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 80], "content_span": [81, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 4th District, Padre Garcia\nIncumbent Michael Angelo Rivera is not running. His wife, Celsa is his party's nominee. Her opponent is former ABC President Nicetas Amante.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 87], "content_span": [88, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 4th District, Rosario\nBoth Mayor Manuel Alvarez and Vice Mayor Leovigildo Morpe will stand unopposed for reelection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 82], "content_span": [83, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 4th District, San Juan\nIncumbent Mayor Rodolfo Manalo is term-limited. His wife, Teresita is his party's nominee. Her opponents are Pastor Noel Castillo and incumbent Vice Mayor Ildebrando Salud.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 83], "content_span": [84, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 4th District, San Juan\nIncumbent Ildebrando Salud is running for Mayor. His party nominated incumbent councilor Florencio De Chavez. His opponents are Ruel Carandang and former Vice Mayor Octavio Antonio Marasigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 83], "content_span": [84, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 4th District, Taysan\nIncumbent Grande Gutierrez is running for reelection. His opponent is former Mayor Victor Portugal, Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 81], "content_span": [82, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287683-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 5th District, Batangas City\nIncumbent Mayor Beverley Rose Dimacuha and Vice Mayor Emilio Francisco Berberabe, Jr. will stand unopposed for reelection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287684-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bath and North East Somerset Council election\nThe 2019 Bath and North East Somerset Council election was held on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Bath and North East Somerset Council in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287684-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bath and North East Somerset Council election\nThe Liberal Democrats took control of the council in 2019, winning thirty-seven seats with a working majority of seven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287684-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bath and North East Somerset Council election, Background\nBath and North East Somerset Council held local elections on 2 May 2019 along with councils across England as part of the 2019 local elections. The council elects its members in all-out elections, with all its councillors up for election every four years. Councillors defending their seats in this election were previously elected in 2015. In that election, thirty-seven Conservative councillors, fifteen Liberal Democrat councillors, six Labour councillors, five independent councillors and two Green councillors were elected. In subsequent by-elections, the Liberal Democrats gained one seat from the Conservatives and one seat from the Green Party. Conservative councillor Martin Veal resigned from his party in March 2019 to run as an independent after his party did not select him as a candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 62], "content_span": [63, 864]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287684-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bath and North East Somerset Council election, Background\nFollowing the 2015 election, the council was controlled by the Conservative Party, although previously the council had been under no overall control since its creation in 1996. In the New Statesman, the journalist Stephen Bush wrote that if the Conservatives maintained control of Bath and North East Somerset in 2019, it would represent a strong national performance for the party. Conservative peer Robert Hayward predicted that the Liberal Democrats would gain several seats on the council from the Conservatives due to a \"Brexit penalty\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 62], "content_span": [63, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287684-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bath and North East Somerset Council election, Background\nA boundary change in 2018 meant that the number of councillors fell to 59 from the 65 under previous boundaries, and the number of electoral wards reduced from 37 to 33. Most retained electoral wards have their boundaries adjusted so the number of electors per councillor is roughly similar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 62], "content_span": [63, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287684-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bath and North East Somerset Council election, Background\nThe election was contested by full slates of Conservatives and Liberal Democrats, with 49 Labour candidates, 29 Green Party candidates, 12 independent candidates (including one candidate with no description), 11 candidates for the Bath North East Somerset Independent Group, and five UK Independence Party candidates. Two of the independent councillors re-elected in 2019 identified as \"No politics, just Peasedown\" when elected in 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 62], "content_span": [63, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287684-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bath and North East Somerset Council election, Council composition\nAfter the previous election the composition of the council was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 71], "content_span": [72, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287684-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bath and North East Somerset Council election, Council composition\nPrior to the election the composition of the council was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 71], "content_span": [72, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287684-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Bath and North East Somerset Council election, Ward results\nAs the wards were newly created, comparisons with previous elections are not possible. All percentages are calculated as the proportion of valid votes won by each councillor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 64], "content_span": [65, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287685-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bathurst 1000\nThe 2019 Bathurst 1000 (formally known as the 2019 Supercheap Auto Bathurst 1000) was a motor racing event for Supercars that was held on the weekend of 10\u201313 October 2019. It was held at the Mount Panorama Circuit in Bathurst, New South Wales, Australia and featured a single 1000 kilometre race. The event was the eleventh of fourteen in the 2019 Supercars Championship and incorporates Race 20 of the series. It was also the opening round of the 2019 Enduro Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287685-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bathurst 1000\nDJR Team Penske drivers Scott McLaughlin and Alexandre Pr\u00e9mat won the race from pole position, marking their first Bathurst 1000 win. It was also the first time Dick Johnson Racing\u2014which merged with Team Penske in 2015\u2014won the race since 1994. The Triple Eight Race Engineering pair of Shane van Gisbergen and Garth Tander finished second, with Walkinshaw Andretti United's James Courtney and Jack Perkins completed the podium in third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287685-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bathurst 1000, Report, Background\nThe event was the 62nd running of the Bathurst 1000, which was first held at the Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit in 1960 as a 500-mile race for Australian-made standard production sedans, and marks the 59th time that the race was held at Mount Panorama. It was the 23rd running of the Australian 1000 race, which was first held after the organisational split between the Australian Racing Drivers Club and V8 Supercars Australia that saw two \"Bathurst 1000\" races contested in both 1997 and 1998. It was scheduled as the 21st race held as part of the Supercars Championship and the seventh time it forms part of the Enduro Cup. The defending winners of the race are Craig Lowndes and Steven Richards, who are competing with Jamie Whincup and Mark Winterbottom in 2019 respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 822]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287685-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bathurst 1000, Report, Background\nScott McLaughlin lead the Drivers' Championship leading into the event, leading second-placed Shane van Gisbergen by just under two events' worth of points. Chaz Mostert sits in third ahead of McLaughlin's DJR Team Penske team-mate Fabian Coulthard. In the Teams' Championship, DJR Team Penske hold an 855-point lead over Triple Eight Race Engineering.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287685-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bathurst 1000, Report, Entry list\nTwenty-six cars were entered in the event \u2013 16 Holden Commodores, 6 Ford Mustangs and 4 Nissan Altimas. In addition to the 24 regular-season entries, there were two 'Wildcards' \u2013 one for Super2 Series team Kostecki Brothers Racing with cousins Jake and Brodie Kostecki, and another from Walkinshaw Andretti United for IndyCar drivers Alexander Rossi and James Hinchcliffe. A third wildcard from Team Kiwi Racing, who last appeared in 2008, was also announced, featuring Chris van der Drift and Jaxon Evans as drivers \u2013 however this failed to materialise. Six drivers made their debut in the race; all four 'Wildcard' drivers, as well as Super2 Series competitors Thomas Randle and Jack Smith. It was the last start for five-time winner Steven Richards and 2017 winner Luke Youlden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 820]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287685-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bathurst 1000, Report, Entry list\nEntries with a grey background are wildcard entries which do not compete in the full championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287685-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bathurst 1000, Report, Summary, Thursday and Friday practice\nJamie Whincup topped the opening session with the fastest time for an opening session in Bathurst 1000 history. Macauley Jones had the first incident of the weekend, and the only one of the session, backing his Holden Commodore ZB into the wall at the Cutting. As well as doing damage to the rear bumper and chassis rail, the impact bizarrely popped the rivets out of the roof, which subsequently folded back on the car as the Tim Blanchard Racing driver stopped at Reid Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 65], "content_span": [66, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287685-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bathurst 1000, Report, Summary, Thursday and Friday practice\nThe first co-driver session was smattered with incidents, starting with multiple drivers running through the grass at the Chase. Twenty minutes into the session, the Mountain claimed its first major scalp with Luke Youlden hitting the wall at Sulman Park and ripping the front-right suspension out of the car, resigning it to the garage for the rest of the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 65], "content_span": [66, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287685-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Bathurst 1000, Report, Summary, Thursday and Friday practice\nJake Kostecki in the Kostecki Brothers Racing wildcard would make the same error at the end of the session, with Ashley Walsh bringing out the only other red flag of the session having locked up and run into the sandtrap at Murray's Corner. Jack Smith had a baptism of fire, brushing the tyre wall at Griffin's Bend in the Matt Stone Racing entry fifteen minutes in. James Moffat overtook DJR Team Penske's Alexandre Pr\u00e9mat in the dying seconds to set the fastest time in the GT Mustang.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 65], "content_span": [66, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287685-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Bathurst 1000, Report, Summary, Thursday and Friday practice\nThursday's running ended with an incident-free third session, as championship leader McLaughlin broke his own Top Ten Shootout record by a tenth of a second on the first day of practice. The damaged #9 and #56 Commodores sat out the session, and all six Mustangs finished inside the top seven positions \u2013 the top six covered by less than three-tenths of a second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 65], "content_span": [66, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287685-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Bathurst 1000, Report, Summary, Thursday and Friday practice\nFriday began with a co-driver session, topped by Will Brown in the second Erebus Motorsport Commodore. The session was stopped a matter of seconds after it began with Jake Kostecki running straight into the fence at Griffins' Bend after a steering rack stop was left in the car, for which the team received an AU$5,000 fine. Debutant Thomas Randle ran wide at Forrest's Elbow and lightly brushed the outside wall, but did not bring out the red flags. Garth Tander in Shane van Gisbergen's Triple Eight Race Engineering Commodore also ran wide at the first corner, nearly rejoining into the path of Moffat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 65], "content_span": [66, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287685-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Bathurst 1000, Report, Summary, Thursday and Friday practice\nThe final practice session before qualifying saw another big-name driver in strife, with Whincup crashing at the Esses in an attempt to avoid the already stranded Richie Stanaway. Elsewhere it was a struggle for the international drivers, as both Simona de Silvestro and Alexander Rossi found the sandtrap at Hell Corner in separate incidents. McLaughlin once again lowered the lap record by 0.3sec, with Andre Heimgartner producing the first sub 2:04 time for a Nissan Altima to finish second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 65], "content_span": [66, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287685-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Bathurst 1000, Report, Summary, Provisional qualifying\nThe weather turned against crews ahead of the forty-minute qualifying session, and the circuit remained wet throughout. McLaughlin and Chaz Mostert traded fastest times, with the New Zealander ending the session on top. Van Gisbergen finished the session third ahead of Will Davison, with both Brad Jones Racing entries of Tim Slade and Nick Percat also making the ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 59], "content_span": [60, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287685-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Bathurst 1000, Report, Summary, Provisional qualifying\nHaving struggled for the majority of the session, Whincup put in a late time to elevate him to 7th from 23rd \u2013 whilst 8th placed Cameron Waters also had an interrupted session having spent most of it in the garage with an engine sensor issue. Rounding out the top-ten would be Mark Winterbottom and Anton de Pasquale, with the latter's team-mate and 2018 pole-sitter David Reynolds finishing the session 22nd. Another big name to struggle was Fabian Coulthard; the DJR Team Penske driver finishing 16th. Both 'Wildcard' entries ended the session down the back, with Brodie Kostecki beating Alexander Rossi to 24th by 0.03sec. Rounding out the field was Jack Le Brocq of Tekno Autosports, struggling heavily with the wet conditions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 59], "content_span": [60, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287685-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Bathurst 1000, Report, Summary, Saturday practice\nSaturday begun under grey skies. Will Davison set an early benchmark that would not be beaten, with only two other drivers setting a time under 2:05. The session stayed green throughout, however late in the piece James Hinchcliffe lost the rear of his Walkinshaw Andretti United Commodore on the exit of the Cutting and dragged the right-rear corner along the wall. All teams except DJR Team Penske elected to run both main and co-drivers in the session, Pr\u00e9mat proving the exception in the #17 Mustang. The Waters/Caruso entry continued to be plagued with mechanical issues; a stuck throttle leaving them on the sidelines for the early running.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 54], "content_span": [55, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287685-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Bathurst 1000, Report, Summary, Top Ten Shootout\nThe field went out in reverse order from qualifying, with De Pasquale setting the benchmark of 2:04.3. Mark Winterbottom went out next, with lock-ups at the Cutting and Forrest's Elbow leaving him six-tenths down on the Erebus driver. Cameron Waters moved to provisional pole with the first sub 2:04 of the session despite a moment at Sulman Park, before Jamie Whincup's attempt left him 0.03sec shy of the #6. The Brad Jones Racing pair did not challenge the top order, surpassing only Winterbottom with Percat ahead of Slade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 53], "content_span": [54, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287685-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 Bathurst 1000, Report, Summary, Top Ten Shootout\nWill Davison dropped in behind Whincup having felt he did not maximise his run, and Van Gisbergen dropped between the pair. Chaz Mostert, the penultimate runner, bettered Waters' time by a tenth \u2013 but McLaughlin proved unbeatable, beating Mostert's benchmark by four-tenths to claim his second pole position at the Bathurst 1000, and fifteenth of the 2019 championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 53], "content_span": [54, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287685-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Bathurst 1000, Report, Summary, Race\nThe race start was delayed as Brodie Kostecki stopped the Kostecki Brothers Racing wildcard entry at the exit of Forrest's Elbow on the original warm-up lap, complaining of breathing difficulties. The teams' Commodore ZB was towed back to the pits where it was discovered Kostecki's helmet fan was blowing dry ice from the drivers' cool box into his face and causing carbon monoxide poisoning. Brodie's cousin Jake jumped in the car to restart the race from the pit-lane, with Jake's older brother Kurt on standby should Brodie be ruled unfit to continue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287685-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Bathurst 1000, Report, Summary, Race\nMcLaughlin got the jump on Mostert heading into Hell Corner on the opening lap, with Michael Caruso slipping past his Tickford team-mate into second. As the field climbed the mountain for the first time, Tim Slade found himself on the wrong end of a mid-field battle with Scott Pye \u2013 a slight bump at Quarry Corner (Turn 5) sending the Brad Jones Racing Commodore into the outside wall and bringing out the safety car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287685-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Bathurst 1000, Report, Summary, Race\nA safety car was deployed on Lap 135 in response to the stricken Commodore of Hinchcliffe and Rossi, which caused Coulthard, who was third at the time, to dramatically slow down the rest of the field. This happened as McLaughin and Whincup, who were first and second at the time respectively, headed into the pits. During this time the gap between Whincup and Coulthard, which was originally three seconds, extended out to over forty seconds. This caused a shuffle in positions, with several teams being better off, while others were worse off. Initially Coulthard was given a drive-through penalty for breaching safety car procedures, but when Ryan Story, Team Principal of DJR Team Penske, was interviewed about the issues, questions were raised that it was done by team orders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 822]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287685-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Bathurst 1000, Report, Summary, Post race\nThe actions of DJR Team Penske during the Lap 135 safety car received mixed reception from team owners and drivers. Race runner-up Van Gisbergen described Coulthard as a \"sacrificial lamb\" and added that it was \"pretty obvious\" as to what had happened. Erebus Motorsport boss Barry Ryan claimed that DJR Team Penske had \"blatantly cheated\" and wanted points from the team stripped. Walkinshaw Andretti United's James Courtney, who finished third alongside Jack Perkins defended the team, stating that penalising the drivers would be \"unfair\" and stating that stripping McLaughlin of his maiden win would be \"pretty harsh\". McLaughlin, team-mate to Coulthard, was initially unfazed about the incident, but then lashed out at fans after it was revealed that Coulthard had received death threats after the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 46], "content_span": [47, 859]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287685-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Bathurst 1000, Report, Summary, Post race\nDJR Team Penske were later charged for breach of team orders and had a hearing on 19 October. They were later found guilty and were fined $250,000, $100,000 suspended until 31 December 2021 and 300 points stripped from the teams' championship. Fabian Coulthard and Tony D'Alberto were both relegated to twenty-first position, the last running position, while Scott McLaughlin and Alex Pr\u00e9mat kept their first place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 46], "content_span": [47, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287685-0018-0001", "contents": "2019 Bathurst 1000, Report, Summary, Post race\nMcLaughlin and Pr\u00e9mat were not penalised because the stewards' investigation found that the team's orders were intended to benefit Coulthard and D'Alberto; by slowing the field down, the team hoped that Coulthard would keep his position as continuing to the pits at race speed would mean an extended stop waiting behind McLaughlin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 46], "content_span": [47, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287685-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Bathurst 1000, Report, Summary, Post race\nFurthermore, on the 10 November, DJR Team Penske were fined $30,000 and Scott McLaughlin's pole time was stripped, after it was found that the valve lift in a number of cylinders had exceeded the maximum permitted valve lift prescribed by the ESD. The stewards ruled that this did not offer McLaughlin a performance advantage and the violation was so slight that the team could not have been aware of it. The team accepted the penalty, attributing the issue to improperly-calibrated machinery being used in assembling the engine. The penalty carried a flow-on effect to Race 30 at Sandown, which saw McLaughlin relegated to last position on the grid. McLaughlin retained his race win as the engine used in qualifying was replaced ahead of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 46], "content_span": [47, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287686-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bathurst 12 Hour\nThe 2019 Liqui Moly Bathurst 12 Hour was an endurance race staged on the Mount Panorama Circuit near Bathurst, in New South Wales, Australia on 3 February 2019. The event was open to cars in GT and touring car classes, namely GT3 and GT4. It was the 17th running of the Bathurst 12 Hour, and the opening round of the 2019 Intercontinental GT Challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287686-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bathurst 12 Hour\n40 cars were entered and 38 cars started, with two entries withdrawn following crashes in practice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287686-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bathurst 12 Hour, Class structure\nNo entries were recorded for Class AAM (GT3 Am) for driver combinations including only bronze rated drivers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287687-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bauchi State gubernatorial election\nThe Bauchi 2019 Gubernatorial Election was held on 9 March 2019 and concluded on 25 March 2019. The incumbent governor Abubakar Muhammad has lost to the PDP Bala Muhammed in the 2019 Bauch state Governorship election. Mr Bala Mohammed, the former minister of FCT, polled a total votes of 475,888 votes to defeat the incumbent governor Abubakar Muhammad who polled 470,570 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287687-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bauchi State gubernatorial election, Results\nA total of 2,462,803 voters were registered in the state. While a total of 1,143,019 voters were accredited. A number of 1,111,406 were recorded as valid votes while 22,566 votes were annulled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287688-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bay of Plenty local elections\nThe 2019 Bay of Plenty local elections were part of the wider 2019 New Zealand local elections, to elect members to sub-national councils and boards. The Bay of Plenty elections cover one regional council (Bay of Plenty Regional Council), seven territorial authority (city and district) councils, two district health boards, and various local boards and licensing trusts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287689-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bayelsa State gubernatorial election\nThe 2019 Bayelsa State gubernatorial election occurred on November 16, 2019, the APC nominee David Lyon won the election, defeating Douye Diri of the PDP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287689-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bayelsa State gubernatorial election\nDavid Lyon emerged APC gubernatorial candidate after defeating his closest rival, Diseye Nsirim. He picked Biobarakuma Degi as his running mate. Douye Diri was the PDP candidate with Lawrence Ewrujakpor as his running mate. 45 candidates contested in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287689-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bayelsa State gubernatorial election, Electoral system\nThe Governor of Bayelsa State is elected using the plurality voting system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 59], "content_span": [60, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287689-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bayelsa State gubernatorial election, Primary election, APC primary\nThe APC primary election was held on September 4, 2019. David Lyon won the primary election polling 42,138 votes against 5 other candidates. His closest rival was Diseye Nsirim, who came a distant second with 1,533 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 72], "content_span": [73, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287689-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bayelsa State gubernatorial election, Primary election, PDP primary\nThe PDP primary election was held on September 3, 2019. Douye Diri won the primary election polling 561 votes against 20 other candidates. His closest rival was Timi Alaibe, a former managing director of the Niger Delta Development Commission, who came second with 365 votes, Gboribiogha Jonah, the incumbent deputy governor, scored 62 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 72], "content_span": [73, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287689-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bayelsa State gubernatorial election, Results\nA total number of 45 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-00287689-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bayelsa State gubernatorial election, Results\nThe total number of registered voters in the state was 922,562, while 517,883 voters were accredited. Total number of votes cast was 505,884, while number of valid votes was 499,551. Rejected votes were 6,333.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287689-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bayelsa State gubernatorial election, Results, By local government area\nHere are the results of the election by local government area for the two major parties. The total valid votes of 499,551 represents the 45 political parties that participated in the election.Blue represents LGAs won by David Lyon. Green represents LGAs won by Douye Diri.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 76], "content_span": [77, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287690-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Baylor Bears football team\nThe 2019 Baylor Bears football team represented Baylor University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Bears played their home games at the McLane Stadium in Waco, Texas, and competed in the Big 12 Conference. They were led by Matt Rhule in his third and final season as the program's head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287690-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Baylor Bears football team\nBaylor, only two years removed from a 1\u201311 season in 2017, began the year unranked and projected to finish in sixth in the Big 12 Conference. The Bears won their first nine games of the season and climbed to 13th in the College Football Playoff rankings, but did not play a ranked team in that span. The team then hosted then-No. 10 Oklahoma, but Baylor squandered a 25-point lead and lost 34\u201331.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287690-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Baylor Bears football team\nBaylor finished out the regular season with an 11\u20131 record, 8\u20131 in Big 12 play to finish tied atop the conference standings, earning them a spot in the Big 12 Championship Game, the school's first appearance in the game, to play a rematch against Oklahoma. There, the Bears lost to the Sooners again, this time in overtime, 30\u201323. Baylor received an invitation to the Sugar Bowl to play SEC runner-up Georgia, where they lost 26\u201314, to end the season at 11\u20133 and ranked 13th in the final AP Poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287690-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Baylor Bears football team\nBaylor's defense was led by defensive tackle James Lynch, who was a consensus All-American and the Big 12 Defensive Player of the Year. He led the conference with 13.5 sacks on the season. He was joined on the first-team all-conference by defensive tackle Bravvion Roy. Offensively, the Bears were led by 3,000-yard passer Charlie Brewer, and 1,000-yard receiver Denzel Mims. Head coach Matt Rhule was named Big 12 Coach of the Year, and, after the completion of the season, he departed to take the head coaching job with the Carolina Panthers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287690-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Baylor Bears football team, Previous Season\nThe Bears finished the 2018 season 7\u20136, 4\u20135 in Big 12 play to finish in a two-way tie for fifth place. The Bears were eligible for post-season play in which they defeated the Vanderbilt Commodores of the SEC 45-38 in the 13th edition of the Texas Bowl at NRG Stadium in Houston. This was Baylor's first winning season since 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287690-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Baylor Bears football team, Preseason, Big 12 media poll\nThe 2019 Big 12 media days were held July 15\u201316, 2019 in Frisco, Texas. In the Big 12 preseason media poll, Baylor was predicted to finish in sixth in the standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287690-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Baylor Bears football team, Schedule\nBaylor announced its 2019 football schedule on October 18, 2018. The 2019 schedule consists of 7 home and 5 away games in the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287690-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, Stephen F. Austin\nBaylor opened up the 2019 season by beating FCS Stephen F. Austin 56-17 in Waco. Trestan Ebner had three first half touchdowns for the Bears", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287690-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, at Kansas State\nBaylor's defense proved formidable and produced two turnovers, while their offense completed a blanced run game. Baylor remained undefeated with the 31-12 win over Kansas State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287690-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, Texas Tech\nFor the team's homecoming game, Baylor replaced their traditional interlocking 'BU' on their green helmet with the 'Sailor Bear' logo originally created by Arthur Evans for the second straight year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287690-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, Texas Tech\nTexas Tech traveled to Waco to play Baylor, the two teams had played one another at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, TX nearly every year from 2009-2018. The 2010 game was played at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas, TX, the only game in this stretch that was not played at AT&T Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287690-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, Texas Tech\nThe first half of the game was a defensive battle between the two teams. Texas Tech scored only 6 points in the half with two field goals from Trey Wolff while Baylor only scored 3 with a 37-yard field goal from John Mayers. The Red Raiders had 182 yards of offense in the first half while the Bears had 117. Baylor scored the first touchdown of the game for either team on its first drive of the half with a 4-yard run from Charlie Brewer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287690-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, Texas Tech\nAfter trailing for most of the half, the Red Raiders scored a touchdown with 1:37 left in regulation to take a 20\u201317 lead. The Bears marched down field with Mayers making a 19-yard field goal as time expired to tie the game. Baylor started overtime on offense with Texas Tech on defense. During the drive, center Jake Fruhmorgen appeared to have fumbled the ball on a snap with the ball being recovered by Jaylon Hutchings for the Red Raiders and the play was blown dead quickly. The fumble was overturned as Baylor was penalized for an illegal snap penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287690-0010-0002", "contents": "2019 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, Texas Tech\nThe call was heavily criticized and the following day Texas Tech athletic director Kirby Hocutt announced that the Big 12 had told him that the penalty was the wrong call and that Texas Tech should have gained possession. Hocutt was later fined by the conference for making the announcement in violation of league policy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287690-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, Texas Tech\nAfter winning in 2 overtime periods by a score of 33-30, Baylor moved up 4 spots in the AP poll from #22 to #18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287690-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, at TCU\nHeading into Week 11 of the college football season, Baylor is on top of the Big 12 conference standings with an undefeated 8-0 record. Recent victories over West Virginia and Texas Tech were close and TCU is looking to win a few more games to become eligible for a bowl game. Both teams have been able to score and the game is listed as one of the most \"compelling matchups\" for the week by MSN Sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287691-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Beach Soccer Intercontinental Cup\nThe 2019 Beach Soccer Intercontinental Cup was the ninth edition of the Beach Soccer Intercontinental Cup, an annual international beach soccer tournament contested by men's national teams. Held in Dubai, United Arab Emirates since its inception, this year's event occurs between 5 and 9 November. The tournament was organised by the Dubai Sports Council (DSC) and Beach Soccer Worldwide (BSWW). Unlike in previous editions, there was no lead sponsor this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287691-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Beach Soccer Intercontinental Cup\nThe Intercontinental Cup is typically seen as the biggest tournament in the current international beach soccer calendar after the FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup. Similar in nature to that of the FIFA Confederations Cup, eight nations took part.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287691-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Beach Soccer Intercontinental Cup\nThe tournament started with a round robin group stage. The winners and runners-up from each group advanced to the knockout stage, a series of single-elimination matches, beginning with the semi-finals and ending with the final. Consolation matches were also played to determine other final rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287691-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Beach Soccer Intercontinental Cup\nThe season-ending Beach Soccer Stars awards were also presented in Dubai as a conclusion to the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287691-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Beach Soccer Intercontinental Cup\nIran were the defending champions and successfully retained their title, winning a third Intercontinental Cup crown by beating Spain 6\u20133 in the final. Hosts UAE matched their best previous performance of third place for the first time since 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287691-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Beach Soccer Intercontinental Cup, Participating teams\nOverall, Europe and Asia were represented by three nations; Africa and North America, one nation each. Oceania, and for the first time, South America, did not enter any teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287691-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Beach Soccer Intercontinental Cup, Venue\nThe tournament took place in Dubai, United Arab Emirates; this edition was held at a purpose-built arena on Kite Beach, Jumeirah 3, for the second consecutive year with a capacity of 2,500.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287691-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Beach Soccer Intercontinental Cup, Draw\nThe draw to split the eight teams into two groups of four took place on 9 October at the Dubai Sports Council headquarters at 11:00 GST (UTC+4) and was conducted by former Real Madrid defender, M\u00edchel Salgado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 44], "content_span": [45, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287691-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Beach Soccer Intercontinental Cup, Draw\nFor the purposes of the draw, the nations were divided into two pots, shown in the table below; the teams were split based on their BSWW World Ranking \u2013 the top three teams plus the hosts were placed into Pot 1 whilst the lowest four teams of the ranking were placed in Pot 2. As each was drawn, the placement of the teams alternated back and forth between Groups A and B. The hosts, the United Arab Emirates, were automatically allocated to position A1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 44], "content_span": [45, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287691-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Beach Soccer Intercontinental Cup, Group stage\nMatches are listed as local time in Dubai, GST (UTC+4)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 51], "content_span": [52, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287691-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Beach Soccer Intercontinental Cup, 5th\u20138th place play-offs\nThe teams finishing in third and fourth place are knocked out of title-winning contention, receding to play in consolation matches to determine 5th through 8th place in the final standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287691-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Beach Soccer Intercontinental Cup, Knockout stage\nThe group winners and runners-up progress to the knockout stage to continue to compete for the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287692-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Beach Volleyball World Championships\nThe 2019 Beach Volleyball World Championships was held in Hamburg, Germany from 28 June to 7 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287693-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Beach Volleyball World Championships \u2013 Men's tournament\nThe men's tournament was held from 28 June to 7 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287693-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Beach Volleyball World Championships \u2013 Men's tournament\nOleg Stoyanovskiy and Viacheslav Krasilnikov defeated Julius Thole and Clemens Wickler to win the title, while Anders Mol and Christian S\u00f8rum captured the bronze medal by beating Tri Bourne and Trevor Crabb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287693-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Beach Volleyball World Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Qualification\nThere were 48 teams qualified for the tournament. Normally, the host country obtained two places in the competition as well as the top 23 teams from FIVB World ranking. But, there was a hosted team ranked among the 23 teams, so the next highest ranked team qualified. The next her 20 teams belonged to five continental confederation which got four spots each. The last three spots were appointed by FIVB.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 75], "content_span": [76, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287693-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Beach Volleyball World Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Preliminary round, Ranking of the third place teams\nThe four best third-placed teams advanced directly to the round of 32. The other eight third-placed teams will play in the lucky losers playoffs for the additional four spots in the Round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 113], "content_span": [114, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287694-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Beach Volleyball World Championships \u2013 Women's tournament\nThe women's tournament was held from 28 June to 7 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287694-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Beach Volleyball World Championships \u2013 Women's tournament\nSarah Pavan and Melissa Humana-Paredes defeated Alix Klineman and April Ross to win the title, while Taliqua Clancy and Mariafe Artacho del Solar captured the bronze medal by beating Nina Betschart and Tanja H\u00fcberli.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287694-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Beach Volleyball World Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Qualification\nThere were 48 teams qualified for the tournament. Normally, the host country obtained two places in the competition as well as the top 23 teams from FIVB World ranking. But, both of the hosted teams ranked among the 23 teams, so the two next highest ranked team qualified. The next 20 teams belonged to five continental confederation which got four spots each. The last three spots were appointed by FIVB.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 77], "content_span": [78, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287694-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Beach Volleyball World Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Preliminary round, Ranking of the third place teams\nThe four best third-placed teams advanced directly to the round of 32. The other eight third-placed teams played in the lucky losers playoffs for the additional four spots in the Round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 115], "content_span": [116, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287695-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bedford Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Bedford Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Bedford Borough Council in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287695-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bedford Borough Council election\nBedford Borough Council has been under no overall control since 2010. The Conservatives defended fifteen seats, Labour defended fourteen, the Liberal Democrats defended nine and independent councillors defended two seats. Bedford is run by the directly elected Mayor of Bedford, who has been Liberal Democrat Dave Hodgson since 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287695-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bedford Borough Council election, Background\nBedford Borough Council held local elections on 2 May 2019 along with councils across England as part of the 2019 local elections. The council elects its members in all-out elections, with all its councillors up for election every four years. Councillors defending their seats in this election were previously elected in 2015. In that election, fifteen Conservative councillors, fourteen Labour councillors, nine Labour councillors and two independent councillors were elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287695-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bedford Borough Council election, Background\nThe same day Dave Hodgson (Liberal Democrat) was re-elected mayor in the 2019 Bedford Mayoral election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287695-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bedford Borough Council election, Council Composition\nPrior to the election the composition of the council was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 58], "content_span": [59, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287696-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Beijing Renhe F.C. season\nThe 2019 Beijing Renhe F.C. season is Beijing Renhe's 2nd consecutive season in the Chinese Super League ever since it started back in the 2004 season and 2nd consecutive season in the top flight of Chinese football. This season Beijing Renhe participates in the Chinese Super League and Chinese FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287696-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Beijing Renhe 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-00287696-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Beijing Renhe 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-00287696-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Beijing Renhe F.C. season, Squad\nAs of 1 March 2019 Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287696-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Beijing Renhe F.C. season, Squad, Reserve squad\nAs of 1 March 2019Note: 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, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287697-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Beijing Sinobo Guoan F.C. season\nThe 2019 Beijing Sinobo Guoan F.C. season is the team's 16th consecutive season in the Chinese Super League since the league's founding in the 2004, and 29th consecutive season in the top flight of Chinese football. They compete in the Chinese Super League, Chinese FA Cup, Chinese FA Super Cup and AFC Champions League. They qualified for the AFC Champions League for the first time since the 2015 season, but failed to advance from the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287697-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Beijing Sinobo Guoan F.C. season\nThe team qualified for next year's AFC Champions League by securing at least a 2nd place finish in the Chinese Super League on November 26, 2019 after a 4-1 away victory against Guangzhou R&F. The team finished in 2nd place, scoring 70 points, the highest point tally in Guoan's history and as 2nd place in Chinese Super League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287697-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Beijing Sinobo 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, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287697-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Beijing Sinobo Guoan F.C. season, Statistics, Discipline\nLast updated: 31 December 2019Source: 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, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287698-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Beirut drone crash\nLebanese and Hezbollah officials reported that at 2:30\u00a0a.m. local time (23:30 GMT) on 25 August 2019, two drones crashed into the Dahieh district of Beirut, Lebanon. According to Lebanese officials, Israel launched a drone attack. Hezbollah denied exploding or targeting the drones. It was the first such incident between Israel and Lebanon since the 2006 Lebanon War.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287698-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Beirut drone crash, Background\nIn July 2019 Israel targeted the Iranian-backed Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) bases in Iraq. Several Iraqi, Iranian and Israeli officials have attributed the attacks to Israel, but Israel initially did not confirm nor deny its role. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hinted responsibility for the attacks on 20 August 2019, claiming that \"Iran is not immune anywhere\". Israel confirmed responsibility for the strikes on 22 August 2019, which was later followed by a US confirmation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287698-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Beirut drone crash, Background\nA senior researcher at the Israeli Institute for National Security Studies stated that an upcoming election and indications that the United States may start talks with Iran, could be reasons why Israel had \"stepped up the pressure\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287698-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Beirut drone crash, Reaction\nThe Israeli military said it does not comment on \"foreign reports\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287698-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Beirut drone crash, Reaction\nHezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah labeled the attack as a \"suicide mission\" and announced that other Israeli drones will be targeted over Lebanon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287698-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Beirut drone crash, Reaction\nRon Ben-Yishai reported for Ynet that the drones were Iranian-made, apparent by their models.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287698-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Beirut drone crash, Reaction\nAmos Harel, writing for Haaretz, stated that the attack was attributed to Israel and damaged an Iranian-supplied planetary mixer used for making \"propellants that can improve the engine performance of missiles and increase their accuracy.\" The Guardian cites sources saying that Israel sent the drones to \"disrupt efforts by Hezbollah to fit advanced guidance systems to rudimentary rockets.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287698-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Beirut drone crash, Aftermath\nIsraeli jets made low altitude flights over Sidon, according to the Lebanese National News Agency. Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah said he would down Israeli drones over Lebanon skies from now on. Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri said the drones amounted to an open attack on the country's sovereignty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287698-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Beirut drone crash, Aftermath\nAccording to the Lebanese National News Agency, Israeli aircraft attacked a PFLP-GC base in Qousaya Lebanon the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287699-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Belarusian First League\n2019 Belarusian First League is the 29th season of 2nd level football in Belarus. It started in April and ended in November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287699-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Belarusian First League, Team changes from 2018 season\nTwo best teams of 2018 Belarusian First League (Slavia Mozyr and Energetik-BGU Minsk) were promoted to Belarusian Premier League. They were replaced by two lowest placed teams of 2018 Belarusian Premier League table (Smolevichi and Dnepr Mogilev).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287699-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Belarusian First League, Team changes from 2018 season\nLast placed team of the last season (Chist) relegated to the Second League. They were replaced by two best teams of 2018 Second League (Rukh Brest and Krumkachy Minsk), and the league was expanded to 16 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287699-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Belarusian First League, Team changes from 2018 season\nKrumkachy Minsk were renamed to NFK Minsk during the winter break. In spring 2019, Dnepr Mogilev merged with Premier League team Luch Minsk, citing the willingness keep the city of Mogilev represented in top flight. The united club was named Dnyapro Mogilev. As a result, Dnepr Mogilev vacated their First League spot, and Sputnik Rechitsa (Second League 3rd-placed team) was additionally promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287699-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Belarusian First League, Team changes from 2018 season\nA few days before the start of the season, UAS Zhitkovichi were denied a First League license due to debts and withdrew to the Second League, leaving the tournament one team short.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287700-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Belarusian Mixed Doubles Curling Championship\nThe 2019 Belarusian Mixed Doubles Curling Championship was held from December 12 to 16, 2018 at the Minsk-Arena in Minsk, Belarus. The winners of this championship represented Belarus at the 2019 World Mixed Doubles Curling Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287701-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Belarusian Premier League\nThe 2019 Belarusian Premier League was the 29th season of top-tier football in Belarus. BATE Borisov were the defending champions, having won their 13th consecutive league title and 15th overall last year. Dynamo\u00a0Brest won the Belarusian Premier League title for the first time, ending the BATE Borisov streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287701-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Belarusian Premier League, Teams\nThe bottom two teams from the 2018 season (Smolevichi and Dnepr Mogilev) were relegated to the 2019 Belarusian First League. They were replaced by Slavia Mozyr and Energetik-BGU, champions and runners-up of the 2018 Belarusian First League respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287701-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Belarusian Premier League, Teams\nIn spring 2019, Luch Minsk merged with Dnepr Mogilev. The united club was named Dnyapro Mogilev. It inherited Luch's Premier League spot and licence, their sponsorships and most of the squad, while keeping only a few of Dnepr players and relocating to Mogilev. Dnepr continued its participation in youth tournaments independently from Luch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287701-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Belarusian Premier League, Results\nEach team plays home-and-away once against every other team for a total of 30 matches played each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287701-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Belarusian Premier League, Relegation play-offs\nThe 14th-place finisher of this season (Dnyapro Mogilev) played a two-legged relegation play-off against the third team of the 2019 Belarusian First League (Rukh Brest) for one spot in the 2020 Premier League. Rukh Brest won the series on penalties and got promoted, while Dnyapro Mogilev were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287702-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Belarusian Super Cup\nThe 2019 Belarusian Super Cup was held on 2 March 2019 between the 2018 Belarusian Premier League champions BATE Borisov and the 2017\u201318 Belarusian Cup winners Dinamo Brest. Dinamo Brest won the match 3\u20131 and won the trophy for the second time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287703-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Belarusian parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Belarus on 17 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287703-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Belarusian parliamentary election, Background\nParliamentary elections were required to be held no later than 6 September 2020. However, in his annual address to the nation on 19 April 2019, President Alexander Lukashenko announced that they would be held in 2019. Lukashenko suggested Sunday 7 November or October Revolution Day as possible dates, however the election was ultimately scheduled for 17 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287703-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Belarusian parliamentary election, Electoral system\nThe 110 members of the House of Representatives were elected from single-member constituencies by first-past-the-post voting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 56], "content_span": [57, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287703-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Belarusian parliamentary election, Campaign\nStreet agitation near the shopping mall for one of the candidates in the 92nd \"A\u016dtazavod\" constituency (Minsk)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287703-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Belarusian parliamentary election, Campaign\nInformation board with 4 candidates competing in the 91st \"\u0160abany\" constituency (Minsk)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287703-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Belarusian parliamentary election, Campaign\nMost opposition parties decided to contest the election but not all candidates were registered. The Conservative Christian Party and the Belarusian Social-Democratic Assembly decided to boycott the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287703-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Belarusian parliamentary election, Conduct\nOn 13 November, during preliminary voting, an observer in Brest published a video showing alleged ballot stuffing. Lidia Yermoshina, chief of the Central Election Commission of Belarus, denied fraud had taken place and stated that the observer's accreditation should be withdrawn as they were not allowed to film in a room with ballot boxes. On 15 November, the observer's accreditation was withdrawn by the local electoral commission. Another objection by the same observer concerning the number of preliminary votes was accepted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287703-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Belarusian parliamentary election, Conduct\nStudents from some universities claimed that they had been forced to participate in preliminary voting, or encouraged to do so by being allowed absences from classes on Saturday and Monday. The universities denied the claims. On 15 November Belarusian State Economic University students openly protested near the campus for similar reasons, citing the recently published video with one of their instructors (curators) demanding people participate in the preliminary voting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287703-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Belarusian parliamentary election, Conduct\nElection observers from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe said that \u201cfundamental freedoms were disregarded and the integrity of the election process was not adequately safeguarded\". A statement from the OSCE team cited concerns including what they described as the exclusion of many opposition candidates, limited opportunity for public campaigning and shortcomings during vote counting. OSCE observer Margaret Cederfeldt said the election had demonstrated \"an overall lack of respect for democratic commitments\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287703-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Belarusian parliamentary election, Conduct\nElection observers from the Commonwealth of Independent States described the elections as \"competitive, open, free [and] transparent\", adding that they considered them to be held in line with the country's Constitution and Electoral Code.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287703-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Belarusian parliamentary election, Results\nOnly 21 of the 110 elected deputies were members of political parties, with all belonging to pro-government parties; the Communist Party of Belarus emerged as the largest party in the House of Representatives with 11 MPs, the Republican Party of Labour and Justice came second with six seats, the Belarusian Patriotic Party won two and the Agrarian Party and Liberal Democratic Party won a seat each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287703-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Belarusian parliamentary election, Results\nUnlike in the previous elections in 2016, in which two opposition candidates were elected, the opposition did not win a single seat; the opposition United Civic Party lost its sole seat and the only pro-opposition independent MP failed to be re-elected. All 110 elected representatives were described as \"loyal\" to President Alexander Lukashenko. For all but one term since 2004, there have been no opposition MPs in the House of Representatives. However, since a 1996 referendum effectively concentrated all governing power in Lukashenko's hands, the House has been dominated by Lukashenko supporters even when opposition MPs have managed to get into the chamber, and the House has done little more than approve Lukashenko's policies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 783]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287703-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Belarusian parliamentary election, Results\n44 of the 110 elected MPs were women, two were under the age of 30 and thirty were members of the previous parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287703-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Belarusian parliamentary election, International reaction\nIn its report following the elections, the OSCE stated that the legal framework in Belarus \"does not adequately guarantee the conduct of elections in line with OSCE commitments and other international standards and obligations\". As to the voting, the OSCE stated that \" the lack of safeguards in election day and early voting procedures negatively impacted the integrity of the process.\" It also highlighted that \"over 1,000 complaints and applications were filed with the election commissions, local authorities and courts, mostly related to appointment of commission members and candidate registration and deregistration\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287703-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Belarusian parliamentary election, International reaction\nThe US State Department made a statement, referring to the decision by the OSCE: \"The Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR), the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Parliamentary Assembly, and the Council of Europe's conclusions and observations about these elections are deeply troubling. We regret that alternative voices will not be represented in parliament.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287703-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Belarusian parliamentary election, International reaction\nThe European Union noted that the election \"took place in an overall calm atmosphere\" but stated that \"there was an overall disregard for fundamental freedoms of assembly, association and expression\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287704-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Belfast City Council election\nThe 2019 election to Belfast City Council, part of the Northern Ireland local elections on 2 May 2019, returned 60 members to the council via Single Transferable Vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287704-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Belfast City Council election, Results by Electoral Area, Balmoral\n2014: 1 x DUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x Sinn Fein, 1 x UUP2019: 2 x DUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x Sinn Fein2014-2019 Change: DUP gain one seat from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 71], "content_span": [72, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287704-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Belfast City Council election, Results by Electoral Area, Black Mountain\n2014: 5 x Sinn Fein, 1 x People Before Profit, 1 x SDLP2019: 6 x Sinn Fein, 1 x People Before Profit2014-2019 Change: Sinn Fein gain one seat from SDLP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 77], "content_span": [78, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287704-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Belfast City Council election, Results by Electoral Area, Botanic\n2014: 1 x DUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x Sinn Fein, 1 x SDLP, 1 x UUP2019: 1 x DUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x Sinn Fein, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Green2014-2019 Change: Green gain one seat from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287704-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Belfast City Council election, Results by Electoral Area, Castle\n2014: 2 x DUP, 1 x Sinn Fein, 1 x Alliance, 1 x SDLP, 1 x UUP2019: 2 x DUP, 1 x Sinn Fein, 1 x Alliance, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Green2014-2019 Change: Green gain one seat from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287704-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Belfast City Council election, Results by Electoral Area, Collin\n2014: 5 x Sinn Fein, 1 x SDLP2019: 4 x Sinn Fein, 1 x SDLP, 1 x People Before Profit2014-2019 Change: People Before Profit gain one seat from Sinn Fein", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287704-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Belfast City Council election, Results by Electoral Area, Court\n2014: 2 x DUP, 2 x Sinn Fein, 1 x PUP, 1 x TUV2019: 3 x DUP, 2 x Sinn Fein, 1 x PUP2014-2019 Change: DUP gain one seat from TUV", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287704-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Belfast City Council election, Results by Electoral Area, Lisnasharragh\n2014: 2 x Alliance, 2 x DUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x UUP2019: 2 x Alliance, 2 x DUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Green2014-2019 Change: Green gain one seat from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 76], "content_span": [77, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287704-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Belfast City Council election, Results by Electoral Area, Oldpark\n2014: 3 x Sinn Fein, 1 x SDLP, 1 x DUP, 1 x PUP2019: 3 x Sinn Fein, 1 x SDLP, 1 x DUP, 1 x People Before Profit2014-2019 Change: People Before Profit gain one seat from PUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287704-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Belfast City Council election, Results by Electoral Area, Ormiston\n2014: 2 x Alliance, 2 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x Green2019: 3 x Alliance, 2 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x Green2014-2019 Change: Alliance gain one seat from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 71], "content_span": [72, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287704-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Belfast City Council election, Results by Electoral Area, Titanic\n2014: 2 x DUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x UUP, 1 x PUP, 1 x Sinn Fein2019: 2 x DUP, 2 x Alliance, 1 x UUP, 1 x PUP2014-2019 Change: Alliance gain one seat from Sinn Fein", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287705-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Athletics Championships\nThe 2019 Belgian Athletics Championships (Dutch: Belgische kampioenschappen atletiek 2019, French: Championnats de Belgique d'athl\u00e9tisme 2019) was the year's national outdoor track and field championships for Belgium. It was held on 31 August and 1 September at the King Baudouin Stadium in Brussels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287705-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Athletics Championships\nThe national championships in 10,000 metres and women's 3000 metres steeplechase took place on Saturday 4 May in Oudenaarde. Hammer throw events took place in Nivelles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287706-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Cup Final\nThe 2019 Belgian Cup Final, named Croky Cup after the sponsor, was the 64th Belgian Cup final and took place on 1 May 2019 between Gent and KV Mechelen. KV Mechelen was the first team from outside the top division to qualify for the cup final since the 2001 Belgian Cup Final when Belgian Second Division champions Lommel lost to Westerlo. KV Mechelen won the cup by two goals to one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287706-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Cup Final\nKV Mechelen qualified on 29 January 2019 and played its sixth final, losing on all previous occasions except for the 1987 Belgian Cup Final, where they beat RFC Li\u00e8ge by 1\u20130. Gent qualified one day later following a win on penalty kicks against Oostende. Gent played their fifth final, winning already on three occasions, most recently they won the 2010 Belgian Cup Final against Cercle Brugge with a convincing 3\u20130 result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287706-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Cup Final, Pre-match, Football fraud investigation\nIn the weeks prior the match, the 2017\u201318 Belgian football fraud investigation had come into full focus as KV Mechelen was being accused of match fixing, causing the Royal Belgian Football Association to penalise the team by not allowing them to promote (despite becoming champions in the 2018\u201319 Belgian First Division B just a few weeks earlier), prohibiting them to play European football for the coming season and deducting 12 points from the start of the 2019\u201320 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 63], "content_span": [64, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287706-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Cup Final, Pre-match, Football fraud investigation\nAs the winner of the 2019 Belgian Cup Final qualifies for the group stage of the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League, a win by KV Mechelen would also impact the European places distribution and cause a scheduling problem, as in this case the third-placed team in the Championship play-offs would enter at this stage instead with all other European places shifting down accordingly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 63], "content_span": [64, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287706-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Belgian Cup Final, Pre-match, Football fraud investigation\nAs a result, the fifth- rather than fourth-placed team from the Championship play-offs will have to play the Europa League play-off final against the winner of the Europa League play-offs, a match which is scheduled for 26 May 2019. The final ruling on the fraud investigation however is only scheduled for 27 and 28 May 2019, which could overturn the decision to prohibit KV Mechelen from playing in Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 63], "content_span": [64, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287706-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Cup Final, Pre-match, Bad form\nBesides the negative impact of the football froud investigation, both teams went into the final in bad spell. KV Mechelen had not played a competitive match for over six weeks as their season had already ended mid-March when winning the promotion play-offs against Beerschot Wilrijk. On top of that their central midfielder Onur Kaya was unavailable due to yellow card suspension. Gent on the other hand was still active in the Championship play-offs, but had only obtained one single point out of their last six matches at the time of the cup final. Gent players Roman Yaremchuk (suspension) and Giorgi Chakvetadze (injury) were unavailable for the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287706-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Cup Final, Match, Summary\nDespite a sunny afternoon and a packed stadium, both clubs looked uninspired in the early stages of the match, with the first opportunity coming only after fifteen minutes as Jonathan David's shot tested KV Mechelen goalkeeper Michael Verrips a first time. With just over half an hour on the clock the match opened up, starting with a long range free kick by Nikola Storm, who surprised everyone by aiming straight for goal. His shot hit the post, with replays showing Gent goalkeeper Thomas Kaminski had deflected the ball with his fingertips first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287706-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Belgian Cup Final, Match, Summary\nReferee Erik Lambrechts had not noticed and thus did not award a corner kick, allowing Gent to launch a counter-attack from which they scored. Initial shots by Nana Asare and Birger Verstraete were blocked causing a scramble in front of the KV Mechelen goal before Jean-Luc Domp\u00e9 was able to benefit and open the score. KV Mechelen, who were deemed underdogs, did not give up and managed to score just a few minutes later through Storm who volleyed in the equaliser, shooting the ball between the legs of Kaminski. Rob Schoofs had the opportunity to give KV Mechelen the lead just before the half-time break, but this time Kaminski was able to make a save.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287706-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Cup Final, Match, Summary\nIn the second half, Gent had more possession of the ball but failed to created any chances. On the hour mark, Kaminksi misjudged a free-kick by Storm, allowing Germ\u00e1n Mera to score through a header to put KV Mechelen in the lead. Gent took the match in control from that point on, crossing many balls into the box, with Verrips required to make several key saves, blocking shots from Vadis Odjidja-Ofoe, Roman Bezus and Alexander S\u00f8rloth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287706-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Belgian Cup Final, Match, Summary\nSeveral players of KV Mechelen started suffering from cramps as they had not played any competitive match for over six weeks and the team came under severe pressure. With just minutes on the clock however, a breakaway ended in a one-on-one situation between Tim Matthys and Kaminski, but Matthys' shot was saved, handing Gent a lifeline. Odjidja-Ofoe however placed a large opportunity wide just before the final whistle, handing KV Mechelen a second Belgian Cup win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287706-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Cup Final, Match, Summary\nWith KV Mechelen on trial for alleged match-fixing as part of the 2017\u201318 Belgian football fraud investigation, it remained uncertain whether they would be allowed to take part in the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League group stage for which they would normally qualify by virtue of winning the cup. The club was eventually found guilty and the European ticket moved to the third-placed finisher in the 2018\u201319 Belgian First Division A Championship play-offs, Standard Li\u00e8ge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287707-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Grand Prix\nThe 2019 Belgian Grand Prix (formally known as the Formula 1 Johnnie Walker Belgian Grand Prix 2019) was a Formula One motor race that was held on 1 September 2019 at the Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps in Stavelot, Belgium. The race was the 13th round of the 2019 Formula One World Championship and marked the 75th running of the Belgian Grand Prix, the 52nd time as a round of the World Championship and the 62nd time the race had been held at Spa-Francorchamps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287707-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Grand Prix\nCharles Leclerc won the race, becoming the first Monegasque driver to win a Formula One Grand Prix followed by the Mercedes drivers of Lewis Hamilton and Valtteri Bottas. Before and during the race there were several tributes in memory of French driver Anthoine Hubert who had died the previous day during the F2 feature race. Charles Leclerc, long time friend of Hubert, dedicated the victory to him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287707-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Grand Prix, Background, Entrants\nAlexander Albon and Pierre Gasly swapped their seats for the race, with Albon taking Gasly's place at Red Bull Racing and Gasly returning to Scuderia Toro Rosso to fill the seat vacated by Albon. The rest of the entrants remained unchanged from the Hungarian Grand Prix although Nicholas Latifi drove in the first practice session for Williams, replacing George Russell. Marcus Ericsson did not attend the IndyCar Grand Prix of Portland and travelled to Belgium in case he was needed to stand in for Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen who had suffered a leg injury over the summer break, but ultimately R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen was able to race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287707-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Grand Prix, Background, Championship standings before the race\nHeading into the weekend Lewis Hamilton and his team Mercedes held a 62-point and 150-point leads in their respective championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 75], "content_span": [76, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287707-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nThe death of Anthoine Hubert in the Formula 2 feature race on Saturday loomed over the race. A minute of silence was held for Hubert before the start of the race and a standing ovation was organised for lap 19, the same number as his car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287707-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nAt the start of the race Carlos Sainz suffered a power failure and did not get off the line. Whilst Charles Leclerc got away cleanly, third placed Lewis Hamilton was able to attack second placed Sebastian Vettel on the inside of turn one, pushing the Ferrari off the track, allowing Hamilton to take second place. However, a poor run through turn 5 and the higher top speed of the Ferrari meant that Vettel was able to recover the position on the straight that followed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287707-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Belgian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nAlthough he briefly threatened Vettel when the Ferrari was forced wide after turn 1, Valtteri Bottas settled into fourth behind Hamilton. Behind the first four, Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen was on the outside of Sergio P\u00e9rez on the start-finish straight and did not see Max Verstappen, who had a poor start, on inside and turned into the Red Bull driver at the first corner. Both drivers suffered damage with Verstappen suffering suspension damage, causing him to crash into the barriers on the outside of turn 4. The collision caused the safety car to be released.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287707-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nDue to the incident, the cars further back had to pick their way around the debris. Lando Norris, who had started eleventh, managed to move into fifth. Daniel Ricciardo was not so lucky as he was tagged on the rear right-hand side by Lance Stroll. The Verstappen-R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen incident led to the safety car being deployed and Sainz, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and Ricciardo all made pit stops. Sainz, suffering with a power issue, had a very slow stop, as did R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen when his pit crew could not secure his new front wing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287707-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Belgian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nR\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen then stopped again at the end of lap 2. Sainz continued to be slow and did not catch up the pack after his pit stop, eventually pulling off in the run off area at the final chicane at end of his second lap. This caused the safety car, which was about to be brought back into the pits, to stay out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287707-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nThe safety car came in for the start of lap 5 and the Ferraris managed to open a gap to Mercedes cars on the restart. Leclerc quickly managed to pull out of DRS range but Vettel stayed ahead of Hamilton who attacked several times before the first pit stops. Radio messages between Hamiton and his engineer revealed that Hamilton did not think Vettel was that quick. However, whilst the Mercedes cars were much stronger than the Ferraris in the second sector, they were not as fast in the first or third sectors, both of which contained the key overtaking spots of the turn 7 and turn 19 respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287707-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nWith Norris running in fifth and Romain Grosjean in sixth, Kevin Magnussen became embroiled in a fight with P\u00e9rez over seventh place. The two drivers battled over several laps but eventually P\u00e9rez overtook Magnussen on the Kemmel straight on lap 10 and the Haas of Magnussen then quickly fell backwards. Pierre Gasly overtook Magnussen towards end of Kemmel straight on the next lap with Stroll doing the same one lap later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287707-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nGasly pitted on lap 13 and was around a second faster than his new Toro Rosso teammate Daniil Kvyat, showing that undercut could be quite powerful. This led Ferrari to pit Vettel at end of lap 15 for medium tyres. There was a brief window for Mercedes to respond but they chose not to instead pushing on, as did Leclerc. Vettel then set a fastest lap on 17, which included an overtake on Norris, and started taking significant time out of Leclerc, Hamilton and Bottas who had still not pitted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287707-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Belgian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nThe top three were all on one stop strategies so instead were stretching their tyres. Leclerc pitted at end of 21, Hamilton at end of 22, and Bottas at end of 23. Hamilton lost a second during his stop due to a slow left rear tyre and emerged several seconds behind Leclerc. All three had been jumped by Vettel on pit stop strategy however Leclerc then set a fastest lap on lap 23 and, along with the Mercedes cars, started catching Vettel as tyre degradation took its toll. It quickly became clear that Vettel would likely end up stopping a second time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287707-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nAt the start of lap 27, Vettel allowed Leclerc to overtake. Hamilton quickly closed on Vettel but struggled to overtake due to the sector speed differences. Eventually, on lap 32, having closed up in sector three on the previous lap, Hamilton was able to make a move into turn seven and pass Vettel but Leclerc had opened a gap of more than six seconds. When Bottas caught up to Vettel as well, Vettel pitted at end of lap 33 for soft tyres, going for the extra point for fastest lap, which he gained on lap 36.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287707-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nBehind the leaders Alexander Albon, on his debut for Red Bull, carried out a fine recovery race. Having taken a penalty for exceeding his quota for power unit components, he started seventeenth on the grid. When the fifteenth placed Sainz failed to get away, Albon had to take evasive action leading to a loss of position. This was rectified almost immediately in the aftermath of Verstappen-R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen incident as he was able to overtake several slow and damaged cars. Pitting at end of lap 23 for soft tyres, Albon quietly gained places whilst the battle between the Mercedes and Ferraris unfolded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287707-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Belgian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nAfter passing Gasly for ninth place Albon tried to take Ricciardo on the outside of turn 10, on lap 34, but failed to overtake him. He then carried out a switch back move to pass the Renault driver the outside of turn 11. On lap 38, Albon then passed Kvyat at start of Kemmel straight to make it up to seventh leaving him more than ten seconds behind sixth placed P\u00e9rez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287707-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nBack with the leaders, Hamilton started making gains on Leclerc. The two drivers had to pick their way through traffic in the final laps, slowing both down. However, Hamilton managed to close to less than one second on final lap but was not close enough to make a move. As the leaders entered the second sector, Antonio Giovinazzi crashed and was buried in the wall at turn 12 bringing out yellow flags.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287707-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 Belgian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nLeclerc managed to survive the last few corners to become the first driver to claim a maiden win at Spa since Michael Schumacher at the 1992 Belgian Grand Prix. It was also Ferrari's first victory since R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen at the 2018 United States Grand Prix, with Leclerc the Scuderia's 39th winner and Monaco the 23rd nation to win an F1 race. Bottas finished third with Vettel in fourth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287707-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nLando Norris, who had run a quiet race after his first lap jump to fifth, stopped on start line on his final lap and ended up classified eleventh. At the end of their penultimate lap, Albon had closed onto the back of P\u00e9rez at the final chicane which led to an unusual turn 1 as the two drivers slowed down excessively to try and get DRS for the Kemmel straight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287707-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 Belgian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nP\u00e9rez stayed ahead so Albon was able to attack with DRS after Raidillon but had to go onto the grass partway down the Kemmel straight to pass the Racing Point car. The incident was investigated by the stewards after the race but no further action was taken. With Albon finishing fifth, P\u00e9rez was sixth, Kvyat seventh, Nico H\u00fclkenberg eight, Gasly ninth and Stroll tenth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287707-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nLeclerc dedicated his win to Anthoine Hubert. The podium finishers carried out a notably muted celebration and did not spray champagne on the podium in respect to Hubert.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287708-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Indoor Athletics Championships\nThe 2019 Belgian Indoor Athletics Championships (Dutch: Belgische kampioenschappen indoor atletiek 2019, French: Championnats de Belgique d'athl\u00e9tisme en salle 2019) was the year's national championship in indoor track and field for Belgium. It was held on Sunday 17 February at the Flanders Sports Arena in Ghent. A total of 25 events, 13 for men and 12 for women, were contested. It served as preparation for the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287709-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Road Cycling Cup\nThe 2019 Belgian Road Cycling Cup (known as the Bingoal Cycling Cup for sponsorship reasons) is the fourth edition of the Belgian Road Cycling Cup. Timothy Dupont is the defending champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287709-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Road Cycling Cup, Events\nSeveral changes were made to the calendar compared to the previous season: Le Samyn, Dwars door West\u2013Vlaanderen, the Heistse Pijl, the Grote Prijs Jef Scherens, the Eurom\u00e9tropole and Binche\u2013Chimay\u2013Binche no longer took part and were replaced by the Grote Prijs Jean-Pierre Monser\u00e9, the Circuit de Wallonie, the Schaal Sels and the Memorial Rik Van Steenbergen. As a result, the total number of races dropped from ten to eight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287710-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian Super Cup\nThe 2019 Belgian Super Cup was a football match that took place on 20 July 2019 between Genk, the winners of the 2018\u201319 Belgian First Division A, and Mechelen, the winners of the 2018\u201319 Belgian Cup. In its eighth appearance, Genk won its second Belgian Super Cup after already winning the 2011 edition, by a convincing 3\u20130 margin. Defender S\u00e9bastien Dewaest was twice able to score from a set piece delivery, with Dante Vanzeir scoring the final goal in the closing minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287710-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 Belgian Super Cup\nMechelen could have become only the ninth different club to win the Belgian Super Cup, but failed to win again after an earlier loss in the 1987 Belgian Super Cup. With the victory of Genk, the Belgian Super Cup was won for the 15th consecutive year by the league winners, as the 2004 Belgian Super Cup still marked the last year the cup winners overcame the league winners, when Club Brugge beat Anderlecht.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287711-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian federal election\nFederal elections were held in Belgium on 26 May 2019, alongside the country's European and regional elections. All 150 members of the Chamber of Representatives were elected from eleven multi-member constituencies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287711-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian federal election\nThe far-right Vlaams Belang (VB) saw a resurgence in Flanders, and with the New Flemish Alliance (NVA), parties subscribing to Flemish separatism and nationalism obtained nearly 50% of the vote in Flanders. The Swedish coalition of N-VA, CD&V, MR and Open VLD lost more than a quarter of its seats, the worst government punishment in 20 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287711-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian federal election\nIn addition, gains for the far-left Workers' Party of Belgium (PVDA-PTB), and the green Ecolo party in Wallonia occurred. Overall, traditional parties suffered losses in both regions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287711-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian federal election, Background\nFollowing the 2014 elections, a centre-right government consisting of N-VA, CD&V, Open Vld and MR was formed, led by Prime Minister Charles Michel (MR). The government coalition is unique in several aspects: the N-VA participates for the first time, the MR is the only French-speaking party, and the French-speaking Socialist Party is not part of the government for the first time in 25 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287711-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian federal election, Background\nLocal elections were held on 14 October 2018. As such, the 2019 simultaneous regional, federal and European elections were held only several months after the local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287711-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian federal election, Background\nIn early December 2018, a political crisis emerged regarding the Global Compact for Migration, which was supposed to be signed but sparked instead opposition from government party N-VA. As the three other government parties as well as a large majority in parliament supported the compact, N-VA left the government and the three other parties continued briefly as a minority cabinet (Michel II) with an unclear status. Prime Minister Michel ultimately offered his resignation to the King on 18 December 2018, who accepted it three days later. As regular elections were scheduled for May 2019 anyway, snap elections were only favoured by N-VA and Vlaams Belang and did not happen, and the minority cabinet continued as a caretaker government until the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 802]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287711-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian federal election, Electoral system\nThe 150 members of the Chamber of Representatives were elected in 11 multi-member constituencies, being the ten provinces and Brussels, with between 4 and 24 seats. Seats are allocated using the D'Hondt method, with an electoral threshold of 5% per constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287711-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian federal election, Electoral system\nRepresentatives elected from the five Flemish Region provinces, Antwerp (24), East Flanders (20), Flemish Brabant (15), Limburg (12) and West Flanders (16), automatically belonged to the Dutch-speaking language group in parliament, whereas those elected from the five provinces of Wallonia, Hainaut (18), Li\u00e8ge (15), Luxembourg (4), Namur (6) and Walloon Brabant (5), formed the French-speaking language group. The 15 members elected in Brussels could choose to join either group. Apportionment of seats is done every ten years in accordance with population data, last by royal order of 31 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287711-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian federal election, Electoral system\nThe 60-member Senate is composed of 50 representatives from the regional and community parliaments, plus 10 co-opted senators proportionally divided among parties based on the result of the federal election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287711-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian federal election, Electoral system\nAll Belgian citizens aged 18 or over were obligated to participate in the election. Non -Belgian citizens residing in Belgium (regardless of EU citizenship) couldn't vote, whereas Belgian citizens living abroad could register to vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287711-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian federal election, Date\nThe 2011\u201314 state reform changed several aspects regarding federal elections. Starting with the May 2014 election, which coincided with European Parliament and regional elections, the federal parliament is elected for a five-year term rather than a four-year term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 35], "content_span": [36, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287711-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian federal election, Date\nThe federal elections would from then on always coincide with the European Parliament elections; snap federal elections would trigger a parliamentary term lasting until the next European Parliament elections. However, as of 2017, a law needed for this to take effect has not been enacted. Given the five-year term for all three elections, they all coincided in 2019 regardless, as no snap federal elections were called.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 35], "content_span": [36, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287711-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian federal election, Date\nAdditionally, de facto practice is to formally dissolve parliament and trigger new elections by Declaration of Revision of the Constitution shortly before regular expiry of the parliamentary term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 35], "content_span": [36, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287711-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian federal election, Parties and leaders, Lead candidates\nThe following candidates are the first on the respective party list (lijsttrekker / t\u00eate de liste) per constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287711-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian federal election, Campaign\nDespite leaving the government coalition in late 2018, it was the explicit ambition of N-VA to continue governing after the May 2019 election. In January 2019, the party put forward ex-minister Jan Jambon as candidate for Prime Minister should the party enter a coalition. A continuation of the \"Swedish coalition\" (N-VA, MR, CD&V and Open Vld), potentially expanded with cdH, was a likely scenario. Outgoing Prime Minister Charles Michel (MR) was candidate to continue in his position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287711-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian federal election, Campaign\nMeanwhile, the French-speaking Socialist Party (PS) had the ambition to re-enter government as well, or \"re-conquer\" as formulated by leader Elio Di Rupo, after being in the opposition at federal level and being ousted from the Walloon government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287711-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian federal election, Campaign\nAdditionally, there was speculation that the Flemish liberal and green parties (Open Vld and Groen) would favour cooperating, given Groen's recent rise and their local governing coalitions in cities like Mechelen, Gent and Oostende. However, their French-speaking counterparts, MR and Ecolo, are politically and ideologically further apart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287711-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian federal election, Retiring incumbents\nThe following incumbent members of the Chamber of Representatives announced their retirement from (national) politics:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287711-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian federal election, Aftermath\nThe election once again exposed the deep linguistic, ethnic and regional divisions of Belgium, with the Dutch-speaking region of Flanders strongly voting for right-wing Flemish nationalist and separatist parties, and the French-speaking region of Wallonia strongly voting left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287711-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian federal election, Aftermath\nIn response to Vlaams Belang's surge in support there has been some speculation that the N-VA leader Bart De Wever may break the Cordon sanitaire imposed on the party, resulting in the two Flemish nationalist parties joining forces, by refusing to rule out talks with the VB, as their strong results could make forming a coalition more difficult.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287711-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian federal election, Aftermath\nThe People's Party, a small right-wing French-speaking party, dissolved on 18 June through an internal party vote in response to losing their only seat in the elections. Former party leader Mischa\u00ebl Modrikamen blamed the \"systematic exclusion of the People's Party from the political and media debate.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287711-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian federal election, Aftermath\nIn the days following the election, King Philippe held consultations with all main party leaders, including Vlaams Belang party leader Tom Van Grieken. According to British newspaper The Guardian, 1936 was the last time a far-right leader had an official meeting with the king.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287711-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian federal election, Aftermath\nOn 30 May, King Philippe appointed Johan Vande Lanotte (sp.a) and Didier Reynders (MR), two experienced politicians with a long period of service, as informateurs. They reported on their progress by 6 June as expected, after which they were given some more time, with a new deadline of 17 June. After this deadline passed, another extension was granted until 1 July, and again until 29 July and one more extension until 9 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287711-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian federal election, Aftermath\nOn 24 August the Belgian government decided to appoint Didier Reynders as European Commissioner. On 4 October 2019, King Philippe announced the end of the first phase of federal government formation talks, with the informateurs advising that a government of the N-VA, the Socialist Party and the Greens was the best option to pursue. The informateurs will report back to the king of the 4 November, following which a formateur will be appointed to introduce the third stage of government formation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287711-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian federal election, Aftermath\nOn 4 November, the two new informateurs, Rudy Demotte and Geert Bourgeois, offered their resignations to the King, as they could not break the political deadlock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287711-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian federal election, Aftermath\nOn 17 March 2020, the successor of Michel II Government, the Wilm\u00e8s Government, had its mandate extended. Most parliamentary parties provided them external support in order to manage the coronavirus pandemic. Informal talks on forming a new government began in June of 2020. Wilm\u00e8s II government was eventually replaced by the permanent seven-party coalition \u2014 De Croo Government in October, with Wilm\u00e8s becoming one of the deputy prime ministers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287712-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian regional elections\nThe 2019 Belgian regional elections took place on Sunday 26 May, the same day as the 2019 European Parliament election as well as the Belgian federal election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287712-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian regional elections\nIn the regional elections, new representatives were chosen for the Flemish Parliament, Walloon Parliament, Brussels Parliament and the Parliament of the German-speaking Community. The Parliament of the French Community was composed of all elected members of the Walloon Parliament (except German-speaking members) and 19 of the French-speaking members of the Brussels Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287712-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian regional elections\nThe elections followed the 2014 elections and were shortly after the 2018 local elections, which indicated voters' tendencies after an unusually long period of time without any elections in Belgium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287712-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian regional elections, Electoral system\nThe regional parliaments have limited power over their own election; federal law largely regulates this and the federal government organises the elections, which occur per Article 117 of the Constitution on the same day as the European Parliament elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287712-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian regional elections, Electoral system\nAs such, all regional parliaments were elected using proportional representation under the D'Hondt method. Only Belgian citizens in Belgium had the right to vote, and voting was mandatory for them. Belgians living abroad were allowed to vote in European and federal elections, but not in regional elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287712-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian regional elections, Electoral system\nThe following timetable is fixed for the simultaneous European, federal and regional elections:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287712-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian regional elections, Flemish Parliament\n124 members of the Flemish Parliament were elected. The five Flemish provinces (West Flanders, East Flanders, Antwerp, Flemish Brabant and Limburg) each were a constituency, plus the Brussels-Capital Region where those voting for a Dutch-language party could also vote in the Flemish election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287712-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian regional elections, Flemish Parliament\nThe incumbent Bourgeois Government was made up of a coalition of Flemish nationalists (N-VA), Christian democrats (CD&V) and liberals (Open Vld). The incumbent Minister-President was Geert Bourgeois (N-VA). The three-party centre-right government coalition had a comfortable majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287712-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian regional elections, Flemish Parliament\nIn the October 2018 local elections, no major shifts occurred, although N-VA and sp.a lost some support while Vlaams Belang and Groen generally gained votes. CD&V and Open Vld remained stable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287712-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian regional elections, Flemish Parliament\nIncumbent Minister-President Bourgois (N-VA) contended in the simultaneous European Parliament elections; N-VA president Bart De Wever (N-VA) was their party's candidate to succeed him as head of the Flemish Government. Minister Hilde Crevits was CD&V's candidate for Minister-President. Open Vld explicitly did not put forward a candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287712-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian regional elections, Flemish Parliament, Main candidates\nThe following candidates are the first on the respective party list (lijsttrekker) per constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287712-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian regional elections, Walloon Parliament\n75 members of the Walloon Parliament were elected. The members were elected in multi-member arrondissement-based constituencies; the Walloon Parliament is the only parliament in Belgium still using this geographical level for constituencies. A January 2018 law however reduced the constituencies from 13 to 11, following a successful challenge by Ecolo to the Constitutional Court that constituencies with too few seats are unrepresentative. Both Luxembourg constituencies were merged and the Hainaut constituencies were redrawn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287712-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian regional elections, Walloon Parliament\nAfter the 2014 elections, a coalition government of the Socialist Party (PS) and Christian democrats (cdH) was formed. In 2017 however, following major scandals involving mainly PS, cdH opted to continue governing with MR as the main party instead of PS. Willy Borsus (MR) succeeded Paul Magnette (PS) as Minister-President of Wallonia in July 2017. This was the first time a government majority changed during a legislative term of a Belgian regional government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287712-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian regional elections, Brussels Parliament\nAll 89 members of the Parliament of the Brussels-Capital Region were elected. They were elected at-large, but there were separate Dutch-language party lists (electing 17 members) and French-language party lists (electing 72 members). Those voting for a Dutch-language party could also cast a vote for the Flemish Parliament election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287712-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian regional elections, German-speaking Community Parliament\nAll 25 members of the Parliament of the German-speaking Community were elected in one constituency (at-large).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287712-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgian regional elections, German-speaking Community Parliament\nIn the 2014\u20132019 period, the government was made up of regionalist ProDG, the socialist party and the liberal PFF, headed by Minister-President Oliver Paasch (ProDG).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287713-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Belgium Tour\nThe 2019 Lotto Belgium Tour is the seventh edition of the Lotto Belgium Tour, previous called Lotto-Decca Tour, a women's cycle stage race in Belgium. The tour has an UCI rating of 2.1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287714-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Belizean territorial dispute referendum\nA referendum on the territorial dispute with Guatemala was held in Belize on 8 May 2019. Voters were asked whether the territorial dispute with neighbouring Guatemala should be referred to the International Court of Justice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287714-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Belizean territorial dispute referendum\nThe vote had originally been scheduled for 10 April but was delayed by a legal challenge. When it took place, the proposal was approved by 55% of voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287714-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Belizean territorial dispute referendum, Background\nA commitment to take the Belizean\u2013Guatemalan territorial dispute to the International Court of Justice was signed by the countries' governments in December 2008. A referendum was held in Guatemala on the proposal on 15 April 2018. As required by previous agreements, a referendum was required to be held in Belize within six months. Guatemalan Vice President Jafeth Cabrera stated that the Belizean vote would be held in May 2018, but the Belizean government released a statement denying the claim and stated that the referendum would be held after a voter re-registration process has occurred to ensure an accurate and fair vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287714-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Belizean territorial dispute referendum, Background, Delay\nThe referendum was challenged in court by the opposition People's United Party (PUP) on the grounds that it was based on the 2008 Special Agreement between Belize and Guatemala, which might lead to territorial changes that were inconsistent with Belize's constitution. That led to an injunction being issued by the Supreme Court, delaying the referendum. Following the issuing of the injunction, the Belizean government introduced legislation that it believed would address the injunction. However, the PUP claimed that an amendment to the constitution, requiring a two-thirds majority vote, was needed before the referendum could be held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287714-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Belizean territorial dispute referendum, Background, Delay\nThe Belizean government's new referendum legislation was passed by the House of Representatives on 12 April 2019, and by the Senate on 15 April. The PUP objected to the new referendum bill on the grounds that it was based on the 2008 Special Agreement, which was still the subject of the court proceedings under which the injunction delaying the referendum was issued. PUP attorney Kareem Musa stated that the PUP would have supported a referendum based on the pre-existing referendum legislation, which did reference the 2008 Special Agreement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287714-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Belizean territorial dispute referendum, Background, Delay\nThe European Union, the United Kingdom, and the United States issued a joint declaration, dated 11 April 2019, urging the Belizean government to hold a vote as soon as possible. Guatemalan president Jimmy Morales also urged the government to hold the referendum quickly. Meanwhile, Morales sparked controversy by drawing Belize as part of Guatemala during a visit to a school. On 15 April 2019, Guatemalan gunboats also prevented the Belizean coast guard from patrolling the Sarstoon River on the border between the two countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287714-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Belizean territorial dispute referendum, Background, Delay\nOn 15 April 2019, the Belizean government asked for the injunction to be set aside in light of the 10 April deadline for holding the referendum and introducing a new referendum bill had passed. The court refused to set aside the injunction before the substantive hearing, and set the hearing for 29 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287714-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Belizean territorial dispute referendum, Results\nThe referendum passed by more than 10 percent of the vote nationwide. Yes won 22 of the constituencies, with nine voting no.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287715-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Belk Bowl\nThe 2019 Belk Bowl was a college football bowl game played on December 31, 2019, with kickoff at 12:00\u00a0p.m. EST on ESPN. It was the 18th edition of the Belk Bowl, and was one of the 2019\u201320 bowl games concluding the 2019 FBS football season. The game was sponsored by department store chain Belk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287715-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Belk Bowl, Teams\nThe game was played between the Kentucky Wildcats from the Southeastern Conference (SEC) and the Virginia Tech Hokies from the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). This was the 20th meeting between the programs; Kentucky entered the game leading the all-time series, 11\u20136\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 21], "content_span": [22, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287715-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Belk Bowl, Teams, Kentucky Wildcats\nKentucky entered the bowl with a 7\u20135 record (3\u20135 in conference). They finished in the three-way tie for fourth place in the SEC's East Division. The Wildcats lost to both ranked FBS teams that they played, Florida and Georgia. This was Kentucky's first appearance in the Belk Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 40], "content_span": [41, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287715-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Belk Bowl, Teams, Virginia Tech Hokies\nVirginia Tech entered the bowl with an 8\u20134 record (5\u20133 in conference). They finished second in the ACC's Coastal Division. The Hokies were 1\u20131 against ranked FBS teams, defeating Wake Forest and losing to Notre Dame. This was Virginia Tech's second Belk Bowl; their 2016 team won that season's Belk Bowl over Arkansas, 35\u201324.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 43], "content_span": [44, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287716-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bella Cup\nThe 2019 Bella Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the twenty-fifth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Toru\u0144, Poland between 3 and 9 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287716-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bella Cup, 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-00287717-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bella Cup \u2013 Doubles\nMaja Chwali\u0144ska and Katarzyna Kawa were the defending champions, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287717-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bella Cup \u2013 Doubles\nRebeka Masarova and Rebecca \u0160ramkov\u00e1 won the title, defeating Robin Anderson and Anhelina Kalinina in the final, 6\u20134, 3\u20136, [10\u20134].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287718-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bella Cup \u2013 Singles\nBarbora Krej\u010d\u00edkov\u00e1 was the defending champion, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287718-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bella Cup \u2013 Singles\nRebecca \u0160ramkov\u00e1 won the title, defeating Marta Kostyuk in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287719-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Belmont Stakes\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Colonies Chris (talk | contribs) at 19:22, 9 September 2020 (minor fixes, replaced: U.S. \u2192 United States, Jose Ortiz \u2192 Jos\u00e9 Ortiz, - \u2192 \u2013 (2), 2019-2019 \u2192 2019\u20132019). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287719-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Belmont Stakes\nThe 2019 Belmont Stakes was the 151st running of the Belmont Stakes and the 108th time the event took place at Belmont Park. The 1\u00a01\u20442-mile (2,400\u00a0m) race, known as the \"test of the champion\", is the final leg in the American Triple Crown, open to three-year-old Thoroughbreds. Sir Winston won the race, with a time of 2:28.30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287719-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Belmont Stakes\nThe race took place on June 8, 2019, in Elmont, New York, with post time scheduled for 6:37\u00a0p.m. ET. It was a Grade I stakes race with a purse of $1.5 million, broadcast on NBC with coverage of the undercard on NBCSN. There was no chance of a Triple Crown winner, as Kentucky Derby winner Country House did not run in the Preakness Stakes, due to his trainer detecting a virus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287719-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Belmont Stakes, Results\nThe post position draw was held on June 4 at Citi Field, prior to that day's New York Mets game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287719-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Belmont Stakes, Results\nTimes: \u200b1\u20444 mile \u2013 23.92; \u200b1\u20442 mile \u2013 48.79; \u200b3\u20444 mile \u2013 1:13.54; mile \u2013 1:38.27; \u200b1\u00a01\u20444 miles \u2013 2:02.72; final \u2013 2:28.30. Splits for each quarter-mile: (23.92) (24.87) (24.75) (24.73) (24.45) (25.58)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287719-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Belmont Stakes, Results, Wagering\nWagering on the Belmont Stakes day totaled US$102.2 million, including US$53.2 million on the Belmont Stakes race, and the three-day Belmont Stakes Racing Festival had a total wagering handle of US$131.9 million. NYRA said it was the highest for an edition with no Triple Crown candidate; the 2018 Belmont Stakes day had a wagering handle of US$138.0 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287720-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bendigo Women's International\nThe 2019 Bendigo Women's International was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the thirteenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Bendigo, Australia between 21 and 27 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287720-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bendigo Women's International, 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-00287721-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bendigo Women's International \u2013 Doubles\nEllen Perez and Arina Rodionova were the defending champions, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287721-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bendigo Women's International \u2013 Doubles\nMaddison Inglis and Kaylah McPhee won the title, defeating Naiktha Bains and Tereza Mihal\u00edkov\u00e1 in the final, 3\u20136, 6\u20132, [10\u20132].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287722-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bendigo Women's International \u2013 Singles\nPriscilla Hon was the defending champion, but lost to Maddison Inglis in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287722-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bendigo Women's International \u2013 Singles\nLizette Cabrera won the title, defeating Inglis in an all-Australian final, 6\u20132, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287723-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Benin protests\nThe 2019 Benin protests was a widespread popular uprising and post-election conflict after the opposition was barred from running in the 2019 Beninese parliamentary election in Benin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287723-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Benin protests, Background\nPre -elections (February\u2013April), demonstrators called for the scrap of a new electoral law, however, a violent crackdown quashed the protests easily. On 1 May, the results of the elections was announced, leading to small protests and rallies in Cotonou that evening.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287723-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Benin protests, Protests\nTensions simmered when protests turned into riots after demonstrators came in their tens of thousands nationwide, throwing stones at tanks and the armed forces, who responded with Rubber bullets, Water cannon and Live ammunition in Cotonou, Porto-Novo and Parakou, the three largest cities. 2 were killed over the next 10 days of violent protests. After the president Patrice Talon condemned protesters and the popular uprising, saying it will plunge the country into war, thousands took to the streets in June, the result, Police opened fire wounding several.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287723-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Benin protests, Protests\nDue to the lack of safety during demonstrations, protesters marches ended without notice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287724-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Beninese parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Benin on 28 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287724-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Beninese parliamentary election, Background\nThe election date was set at a meeting of the Council of Ministers on 9 January 2019, with the term of the National Assembly elected in 2015 due to expire in March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287724-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Beninese parliamentary election, Electoral system\nThe 83 members of the National Assembly are elected by proportional representation in 24 multi-member constituencies, based on the country's departments. A controversial new electoral code introduced in July 2018 saw the creation of an electoral threshold of 10% of the national vote to enter parliament, whilst the deposit required for a parliamentary list was increased from 8.3 million francs to 249 million francs. The reforms were aimed at reducing the number of political parties, which numbered around 200.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287724-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Beninese parliamentary election, Campaign\nDue to the higher electoral threshold, several new parties and blocs were formed prior to the elections. The Progressive Union was formed by a merger of over 20 parties and alliances, including Union Makes the Nation, the Benin Rebirth Party, the Social Democratic Party, Key Force, the Congress of People for Progress, the United Democratic Forces, the Union for Relief, the Union for Democracy and National Solidarity, the Scout Alliance and the Union for Benin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287724-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Beninese parliamentary election, Campaign\nDespite a call from Cowry Forces for an Emerging Benin leader and former President Thomas Boni Yayi for unity amongst opposition parties, it was reported that several opposition parties appeared set to run alone, including the Democratic Renewal Party (PRD).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287724-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Beninese parliamentary election, Campaign\nAlthough it was announced on 16 January 2019 that the opposition would form a single bloc to participate in the elections, only two blocs were registered to contest the elections \u2013 the Republican Bloc and the Progressive Union, both of which were linked to President Patrice Talon. The election commission rejected the applications of five opposition groups, the PRD, Cowry Forces for the Development of Benin, Union for the Development of Benin, Moele-B\u00e9nin and the Social-Liberal Union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287724-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Beninese parliamentary election, Conduct\nProtests against the new electoral law were banned, with protesters defying the ban arrested. Former presidents Nic\u00e9phore Soglo and Thomas Boni Yayi both spoke at a protest event in Cotonou, at which police used tear gas. Prior to the elections, several opposition activists and political journalists were also arrested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287724-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Beninese parliamentary election, Conduct\nOn election day, NetBlocks reported the blocking of social media platforms and the subsequent disconnection of nearly all internet connectivity in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287724-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Beninese parliamentary election, Conduct\nThe turnout of only 23% was a significant drop from 65% from the previous election and the lowest in since Benin adopted democracy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287724-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Beninese parliamentary election, Results\nVoting did not take place in 39 of the country's 546 arrondissements due to local incidents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287725-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Benue State gubernatorial election\nThe 2019 Benue State gubernatorial election occurred on March 9, 2019. Incumbent PDP Governor Samuel Ortom won re-election for a second term, defeating APC Emmanuel Jime and several minor party candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287725-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Benue State gubernatorial election\nSamuel Ortom emerged PDP gubernatorial candidate after scoring 2,210 votes and defeating his closest rival, John Tondo, who received 475 votes. He picked Benson Abounu as his running mate. Emmanuel Jime was the APC candidate with Samuel Ode as his running mate. 33 candidates contested in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287725-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Benue State gubernatorial election, Electoral system\nThe Governor of Benue is elected using the plurality voting system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287725-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Benue State gubernatorial election, Primary election, PDP primary\nThe PDP primary election was held on September 30, 2018. Samuel Ortom won the primary election polling 2,210 votes against three other candidates. His closest rival was John Tondo, a former commissioner for lands who came second with 475 votes, while Felix Atume, came third with 44 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287725-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Benue State gubernatorial election, Primary election, APC primary\nThe APC primary election was held on October 1, 2018. Emmanuel Jime emerged the consensus candidate, after four other aspirants stepped down for him. He picked Samuel Ode as his running mate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287725-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Benue State gubernatorial election, Results\nA total number of 33 candidates registered with the Independent National Electoral Commission to contest in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287725-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Benue State gubernatorial election, Results\nThe total number of registered voters in the state was 2,471,894, while 858,947 voters were accredited. Total number of votes cast was 846,222, while number of valid votes was 830,954. Rejected votes were 15,268.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287725-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Benue State gubernatorial election, Results, By local government area\nHere are the results of the election by local government area for the two major parties. The total valid votes of 830,954 represents the 33 political parties that participated in the election. Green represents LGAs won by Samuel Ortom. Blue represents LGAs won by Emmanuel Jime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 74], "content_span": [75, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287726-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Berkeley Tennis Club Challenge\nThe 2019 Berkeley Tennis Club Challenge was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the second edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Berkeley, United States between 15 and 21 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287726-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Berkeley Tennis Club Challenge, 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-00287727-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Berkeley Tennis Club Challenge \u2013 Doubles\nNicole Gibbs and Asia Muhammad were the defending champions, but both players chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287727-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Berkeley Tennis Club Challenge \u2013 Doubles\nMadison Brengle and Sachia Vickery won the title, defeating Francesca Di Lorenzo and Katie Swan in the final, 6\u20133, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287728-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Berkeley Tennis Club Challenge \u2013 Singles\nSofia Kenin was the defending champion, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287728-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Berkeley Tennis Club Challenge \u2013 Singles\nMadison Brengle won the title, defeating Mayo Hibi in the final, 7\u20135, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287729-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Berlin Marathon\nThe 2019 Berlin Marathon was a marathon race held on 29 September 2019 in Berlin, Germany. It was the 46th edition of the annual Berlin Marathon. The marathon distance is just over 26 miles (42\u00a0km) in length and the course is run around the city and starts and finishes in the Tiergarten. The elite men's race was won by Kenenisa Bekele in 2:01:41, two seconds slower than the world record set by Eliud Kipchoge in 2018. The elite women's race was won by Ashete Bekere following a sprint finish in 2:20:14. The wheelchair men's and women's races were won by Marcel Hug and Manuela Sch\u00e4r in 1:28:09 and 1:38:07, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287729-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Berlin Marathon, Course\nThe marathon distance is officially 42.195 kilometres (26.219\u00a0mi) long as sanctioned by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) now known as World Athletics. The course starts at the Gro\u00dfer Stern in the Tiergarten and runs west on the Stra\u00dfe des 17. Juni before turning right at the Ernst-Reuter-Platz onto the Franklinstra\u00dfe. The course turns east and passes the Justizvollzugsanstalt Moabit before crossing the Spree via the Moltke Bridge, running along the southern side of the Spreebogenpark and crossing the river again via the Crown Prince Bridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287729-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Berlin Marathon, Course\nThe runners continue east through Mitte until 12 kilometres (7.5\u00a0mi) before turning south to cross the de:Michaelbr\u00fccke into Neuk\u00f6lln. At just before 17 kilometres (11\u00a0mi), the course turn east onto the Gneisenaustra\u00dfe where the course passes the halfway mark. The runners leave Sch\u00f6neberg in a south-westerly direction, passing the Rathaus Sch\u00f6neberg to enter Steglitz. The course runs west until just after 29 kilometres (18\u00a0mi), where it turns north-east onto Hohernzollerndamm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287729-0001-0002", "contents": "2019 Berlin Marathon, Course\nThe runners head in the direction of the finish, passing the Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church in the 35th kilometre before heading east along the Leipziger Stra\u00dfe to the Konzerthaus Berlin. The course turns back west and passes through the Brandenburg Gate in the 42nd kilometre before re-entering the Tiergarten to finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287729-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Berlin Marathon, Course\nThe course is very flat, starting at 38 metres (125\u00a0ft) above sea level, reaching a maximum elevation of 53 metres (174\u00a0ft) and minimum of 37 metres (121\u00a0ft). The course also has few corners and is run on asphalt instead of concrete which is easier for the runners' legs. The Berlin Marathon has been host to eight men's and three women's world records since the first race in 1974.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287729-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Berlin Marathon, Course\nThe 2019 edition took place on the 29 September. The title sponsor for the race was German automotive corporation BMW, with the main sponsors being sportswear company Adidas, healthcare and pharmaceutical Abbott Laboratories, and tire company Giti Tire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287729-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Berlin Marathon, Field\nAccording to World Athletics, the favourite in the women's elite race was Gladys Cherono. She had won the previous year's event in a time of 2:18:11, as well as the 2015 and 2017 editions. Vivian Cheruiyot had to withdraw from the race due to issues with her Achilles tendon. Cherono was due to face tough competition from Meseret Defar who had won the 5000 metres event at the 2004 and 2012 Summer Olympics and had a marathon personal best of 2:23:33.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287729-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Berlin Marathon, Field\nAlso racing were Mare Dibaba (2:19:52 personal best), Melat Kejeta, who was running her marathon debut and was aiming for the time of 2:22:00 having run a 1:08:41 in the half marathon, and three women who had run sub-2:22:00; Haftamnesh Tesfaye (2:20:13), Helen Tola (2:21:01), and Ashete Bekere (2:21:14). The race director, Mark Milde, called it \"one of the strongest women's fields in the history of the event\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287729-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Berlin Marathon, Field\nAccording to World Athletics, the favourite for the men's race was Kenenisa Bekele, who had won the 2016 edition in a personal best of 2:03:03. However, Bekele had struggled with an injury and had not raced since May of 2019, and since setting his personal best, had withdrawn from more races than he had finished. Three other runners, all Ethiopians, had personal bests under 2:05; Leul Gebresilase, winner of the 2018 Valencia Marathon and a personal best of 2:04:02, Sisay Lemma (2:04:08), and Birhanu Legese, winner of the 2019 Tokyo Marathon and a personal best of 2:04:15. The pacemakers aimed to run through halfway in 1:01:30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287729-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Berlin Marathon, Field\nThe men's wheelchair race featured 61-year-old Heinz Frei who had won the race 20 times. Brent Lakatos, winner of the 2018 race, returned to defend his title from Marcel Hug, who had lost to Lakatos in the sprint, and David Weir, the eight-time winner of the London Marathon. Also racing were 2014 winner Kota Hokinoue and Ernst van Dyk, who had won a gold medal at the 2016 Summer Paralympics. In the women's wheelchair race, four-time winner Manuela Sch\u00e4r returned to defend her 2018 title, which she won in a world record time of 1:36:53. She faced 2018 third place finisher Sandra Graf, and others including Madison de Rozario and Amanda McGrory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287729-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Berlin Marathon, Race summary\nIn the men's race, the lead group went through 5 kilometres (3.1\u00a0mi) in 14:24 and 10 kilometres (6.2\u00a0mi) in 28:53, 8 seconds quicker than Eliud Kipchoge's split at his world record run in the previous year's race. By 15 kilometres (9.3\u00a0mi), they were still 8 seconds ahead of the world record split and a group of five (Bekele, Legese, Gebresilase, Lemma, and Jonathan Korir) went through halfway in 1:01:05, one second ahead of the world record split.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287729-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Berlin Marathon, Race summary\nBy 25 kilometres (16\u00a0mi), Gebresilase dropped out of the group and was soon joined by Korir, as Legese made a move shortly before the 30-kilometre (19\u00a0mi) mark, dropping Bekele then Lemma. However, Bekele had reeled Lemma back in by 35 kilometres (22\u00a0mi) and was 13 seconds behind Legese, who had run a 14:09 5-kilometre (3.1\u00a0mi) split as opposed to Bekele's 14:20 split from 30 to 35 kilometres. Bekele closed the gap, easily passing by Legese in the 38th kilometre and continued on to pass through 40 kilometres (25\u00a0mi) two seconds faster than Kipchoge's split.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287729-0007-0002", "contents": "2019 Berlin Marathon, Race summary\nHowever, during his world record run, Kipchoge had increased the pace in the final two kilometres and Bekele was not able to match that. Despite sprinting down the final straight, he fell two seconds short of the world record in 2:01:41. Legese finished second in 2:02:48, the third-fastest marathon time ever, and Lemma was third in 2:03:36.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287729-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Berlin Marathon, Race summary\nThe women's race started with a pace that would have the lead pack finishing in the 2:20-2:22 range, with Cherono visible at the front. However, just before 30 kilometres (19\u00a0mi), Cherono dropped out of the race due to an infection. The race came down to a sprint finish where Bekere was able to win in 2:20:14 over Dibaba, who finished in 2:20:21. Sally Chepyego Kaptich was third in 2:21:06, with Tola in fourth. Sara Hall ran a four minute personal best to finish fifth and Melat Yisak Kejeta placed sixth in 2:23:57.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287729-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Berlin Marathon, Race summary\nIn the women's wheelchair race, Sch\u00e4r built up an early lead and was two and a half minutes ahead of the other competitors, a lead which she extended to four minutes by the end to win in 1:38:07. McGrory and Rozario finished second and third in 1:42:05 and 1:42:09, respectively. In the men's wheelchair race, Hug had pulled away from the other competitors by 5 kilometres (3.1\u00a0mi) and \"cruised\" through the rest of the race to win by over three and a half minutes in 1:28:09. Weir finished second in 1:31:45, with Lakatos third, one second behind.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287729-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Berlin Marathon, Results\nResults for the top ten in the running races and top three in the wheelchair races are listed below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287730-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Berlin ePrix\nThe 2019 Berlin ePrix (formally the 2019 BMW i Berlin E-Prix presented by CBMM Niobium) was a Formula E electric car race held at the Tempelhof Airport Street Circuit at Tempelhof Airport in the outskirts of Berlin on 25 May 2019. It was the tenth round of the 2018\u201319 Formula E season and the fifth edition of the event as part of the championship. The 37-lap race was won by Audi driver Lucas di Grassi after starting from third. S\u00e9bastien Buemi finished second in the Nissan e.dams, after starting from pole position. Jean-\u00c9ric Vergne, the championship leader going into Berlin, took third for Techeetah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287730-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Berlin ePrix, Report, Background\nThe Berlin ePrix was confirmed as part of Formula E's 2018\u201319 series schedule on June 7, 2018 by the FIA World Motor Sport Council. It's the tenth of thirteen scheduled single-seater electric car races of the 2018\u201319 season, and the fifth running of the event. The ePrix was held at the 2.375 km (1.476 mi) clockwise ten-turn Tempelhof Airport Street Circuit at Berlin Tempelhof Airport on 25 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287730-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Berlin ePrix, Report, Background\nEntering the race, Techeetah driver Jean-\u00c9ric Vergne was leading the Drivers' Championship with 87 points, followed by his teammate Andre Lotterer in second by only one point behind, and third placed Virgin Racing's driver Robin Frijns by just 6 points behind the championship leader. In the team's standings, Techeetah lead with 173 points, after both driver finished in the top 10, followed behind by Envision Virgin with 135 and defending constructors champions, Audi Sport Abt Schaeffler down in 3rd with 129 points, after both teams scoring no points in the last race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287730-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Berlin ePrix, Report, Background\nAfter the previous round in Monaco, two drivers received three place grid penalties for causing collisions. Alexander Sims who collided with Di Grassi, and Frijns who collided with Sims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287731-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Best of Nollywood Awards\nThe 2019 Best of Nollywood Awards was the 11th edition of the ceremony and took place in the Coronation Hall of the Kano State Government in Kano State on 14 December 2019. Dr. Abdullahi Umar Ganduje was the chief host of the event and the event was co-hosted by actress, Maryam Booth and Gbenga Adeyinka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287731-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Best of Nollywood Awards\nAbout 100 films were considered. The nomination list was revealed by the jury on 29 September 2019 where Gold Statue by Tade Ogidan earned the highest nominations with 12 nominations followed by Diamonds In The Sky by Femi Adebayo with 11 nominations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287731-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Best of Nollywood Awards\nVeteran actor, Sadiq Daba was awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award which was presented by the Kano State governor, Ganduje. Governor Ganduje also endowed Sadiq Daba with a \u20a61 million donation on behalf of the Kano the State Government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287731-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Best of Nollywood Awards\nGold Statue won in 6 categories including movie of the year, best actor of the year, director of the year, movie with the best production design, film with the best use of sound and best use of make-up in a Movie. Diamonds In The Sky won in 2 categories namely; movie with the best editing and movie with the best cinematography.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287731-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Best of Nollywood Awards\nOther winners include Tamara Etaimo, Ibrahim Yekini, Adebimpe Oyebade, Abba Elmustapha, Hadiza Gabon, Hassana Muhammad and Hauwa Kulu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287731-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Best of Nollywood Awards\nIt was noted that Igbo language films were not represented in the awards and the head of Jury of BON awards, Niran Adedokun reacted saying \"The process started in July and with over 100 movies entered for nomination consideration. BON is interested in the promotion of films in Nigerian languages as filmmaking is a tool for preservation. But we struggle to get entries in other languages other than Yoruba so I encourage producers to employ more of our languages and sunlit them for awards.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287732-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bethlehem Steel FC season\nThe 2019 season was Bethlehem Steel FC's fourth season of competitive soccer in the USL Championship and third season competing in the second division of American soccer. Steel FC competed in the league's Eastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287732-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bethlehem Steel FC season, 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 17, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287732-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bethlehem Steel FC season, Competitions, U.S. Open Cup\nDue to their affiliation with a higher division professional club (Philadelphia Union), Steel FC was one of 13 teams expressly forbidden from entering the Cup competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287733-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bethune\u2013Cookman Wildcats football team\nThe 2019 Bethune\u2013Cookman Wildcats football team represented Bethune\u2013Cookman University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by fifth-year head coach Terry Sims and played their home games at Daytona Stadium. They were a member of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC). They finished the season 7\u20134, 5\u20133 in MEAC play to finish in fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287733-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bethune\u2013Cookman Wildcats football team, Previous season\nThe Wildcats finished the 2018 season 7\u20135, 5\u20132 in MEAC play to finish in a tie for second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287733-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bethune\u2013Cookman Wildcats football team, Preseason, MEAC poll\nIn the MEAC preseason poll released on July 26, 2019, the Wildcats were predicted to finish in second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287733-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bethune\u2013Cookman Wildcats football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013MEAC teams\nThe Wildcats had eleven players selected to the preseason all-MEAC teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 80], "content_span": [81, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287734-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bhatpara by-election\nThe 2019 Bhatpara by-election was held to elect a member for the Bhatpara constituency of the West Bengal Legislative Assembly. It was held alongside the national general elections and was won by Pawan Kumar Singh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287735-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bhutan Premier League\nThe 2019 Bhutan Premier League was the eighth season of unified league, rebranded as the Bhutan Premier League (previously the Bhutan National League), the top national football competition in Bhutan, having replaced the A-Division in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287735-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bhutan Premier League\nThe Bhutan Football Federation implemented a new league structure for this season. The top division is named Bhutan Premier League (BPL) and has featured ten teams across the country. The second division is named Bhutan Super League (BSL) and has featured nine teams across the country, replacing Thimphu League as qualifying competition for the Premier League. The lowest division is named Dzongkhag League where teams play in their respective districts (Dzongkhags) to gain promotion to the Super League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287735-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bhutan Premier League, Super League\nThe Bhutan Super League was played from April to June, in single round-robin format, featuring nine teams: five teams from Thimphu, one team from Paro, one team from Phuentsholing and two teams from the Bhutan Football Federation Academy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287735-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bhutan Premier League, Premier League\nThe Bhutan Premier League began in June and ended in November, in double round-robin format, featuring top five teams of the 2018 Bhutan National League and top five teams of the 2019 Bhutan Super League. Since Thimphu were dissolved, they were replaced by Phuentsholing United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287736-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bianca Andreescu tennis season\nThe 2019 Bianca Andreescu tennis season officially began on December 31, 2018 with the start of the 2019 WTA Tour. She entered the season as No. 152 in the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287736-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bianca Andreescu tennis season, Year in detail, Early hard court season, Auckland Open\nAndreescu started her season at the Auckland Open, where she qualified for the main draw after beating Krist\u00edna Ku\u010dov\u00e1, Jaimee Fourlis and Laura Siegemund. In the main draw, she made it to the final after defeating four top-30 players, including two former World No. 1 players, Caroline Wozniacki and Venus Williams. However, she lost to defending champion Julia G\u00f6rges in three sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 91], "content_span": [92, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287736-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bianca Andreescu tennis season, Year in detail, Early hard court season, Australian Open\nIn Melbourne, Andreescu successfully progressed through qualifying to enter the main draw. She then beat Whitney Osuigwe before losing in the second round to Anastasija Sevastova in three sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 93], "content_span": [94, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287736-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bianca Andreescu tennis season, Year in detail, Early hard court season, Newport Beach\nAndreescu played at the Newport Beach, where she was the sixth seed. Having received a bye in the first round, she then won the next five matches and secured her first ever WTA 125K series title, which elevated herself to the World No. 68.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 91], "content_span": [92, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287736-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bianca Andreescu tennis season, Year in detail, Early hard court season, Mexican Open\nIn February, Andreescu played the Mexican Open, where she got to the semi-finals, losing to No. 5 seed Sofia Kenin in three sets. Nevertheless, her ranking climbed to a career-high 60.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 90], "content_span": [91, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287736-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bianca Andreescu tennis season, Year in detail, March sunshine events, Indian Wells Open\nThis year's Indian Wells Premier Mandatory event proved to be her breakout event. By reaching the semi-finals, Andreescu became the third wild card to reach the semi-finals of the tournament, joining Grand Slam champions Serena Williams and Kim Clijsters. She then defeated two then top-ten players, Elina Svitolina and Angelique Kerber, to win her first WTA title. The victory also promoted the 19-year-old rising star to a new-career high ranking of 24.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 93], "content_span": [94, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287736-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bianca Andreescu tennis season, Year in detail, March sunshine events, Miami Open\nSeveral days later, Andreescu drew Begu in the first round again in Miami. She managed to save a match point and eventually won the match to reach the second round. In the second round, she avenged her Acapulco loss to Kenin to set up another meeting with Kerber. She upset Kerber in three sets once again, but she had to retire against Anett Kontaveit due to a right shoulder injury, ending her 10-match winning streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 86], "content_span": [87, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287736-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bianca Andreescu tennis season, Year in detail, European clay court season, French Open\nAfter a three-month-long recovery, Andreescu returned to the tennis court at the French Open, as the 22nd seed. However, she retired before her second round match against Kenin. She missed the entire grass-court season to recover from her shoulder injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 92], "content_span": [93, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287736-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Bianca Andreescu tennis season, Year in detail, US Open series, Rogers Cup\nAndreescu came back two months later in her home tournament, the 2019 Rogers Cup in Toronto, where she made to her third WTA final after defeating two former top-ten players, Eugenie Bouchard and Daria Kasatkina, and two then top-ten players, Kiki Bertens and Karol\u00edna Pl\u00ed\u0161kov\u00e1, all in three sets. In the semi-finals, she met Kenin for the third time this season, and successfully upset the American girl in two straight sets. Her final rival was the 23-time Grand Slam winner Serena Williams, but a tearful Williams retired when she was 1\u20133 down in the first set due to her own injury. This gave Bianca her second WTA title, and a career-high ranking of 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 79], "content_span": [80, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287736-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Bianca Andreescu tennis season, Year in detail, US Open series, US Open\nTwo weeks later, she was seeded 15th in the US Open. She made it to the second week of a Grand Slam without losing a set. In the fourth round, she outlasted local player Taylor Townsend to make her first quarter-final appearance in a Grand Slam. After downing Elise Mertens in three tough sets, she upset Belinda Bencic in two sets to reach her first Grand Slam final, where she faced Serena Williams once again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287736-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Bianca Andreescu tennis season, Year in detail, US Open series, US Open\nAndreescu beat Serena in straight sets, becoming the first Canadian to win a Grand Slam singles title, the first woman to win the US Open in her main draw debut (she previously lost in a qualifying round), and the first player born after 2000 to win a Grand Slam tournament. With the 2,000 points she won from the Grand Slam, she made her top-five debut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287736-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Bianca Andreescu tennis season, Year in detail, East Asian fall swing, China Open\nHaving rested for near a month, Andreescu returned to court in the China Open, the tournament she never played before. She upset Aliaksandra Sasnovich, Elise Mertens and Jennifer Brady to reach quarterfinals, where her opponent was the former World No. 1 players Naomi Osaka. She eventually lost to the Japanese woman after three tough sets, ending her 17-match winning streak. Nevertheless, Andreescu was still qualified for the WTA Finals for the first time in her career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 86], "content_span": [87, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287736-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Bianca Andreescu tennis season, Year in detail, Year-end Championships, WTA Finals\nAt the Year-end Championships, Andreescu was divided into the purple group, alongside Karol\u00edna Pl\u00ed\u0161kov\u00e1, Simona Halep and defending champion Elina Svitolina. The first round robin match against Halep marked the first-ever meeting between the two Romanian descendants. Despite having a match point, she was still edged by the 2019 Wimbledon Champion in three tough sets. In the second match against World No. 2 Pl\u00ed\u0161kov\u00e1, Andreescu retired after losing the opening set when she injured her knee. The injury ended her season a little bit earlier than expected as she withdrew from the tournament. Sofia Kenin later replaced her to complete the match against Svitolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 87], "content_span": [88, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287737-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Championship Game\nThe 2019 Dr Pepper Big 12 Championship Game was a college football game played on Saturday, December 7, 2019, at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas between the Baylor Bears and Oklahoma Sooners. The 18th Big 12 Championship Game, Oklahoma defeated Baylor 30\u201323 in overtime to win its fifth consecutive and 13th overall Big 12 Conference football championship, and 49th overall conference championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287737-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Championship Game\nThis was the third year of the current division-less format of the game; instead of representatives from two divisions, the two teams with the best conference records from a full round robin conference schedule earn a spot in the game. The Big 12 Championship Game featured the winners of the former North and South divisions from 1996 to 2010, and the conference did not have a championship game from 2011 to 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287737-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Championship Game, Previous season\nThe 2018 Big 12 Championship Game featured top-seeded Oklahoma against second-seeded Texas. It was the first time the two rivals had played each other in the conference title game. Texas had won the regular season's Red River Showdown game 48\u201345. In the championship game, Oklahoma was victorious by a score of 39\u201327, winning their fourth consecutive and 12th overall Big 12 Conference championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287737-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Championship Game, Teams\nThe 2019 Championship Game was contested by Baylor and Oklahoma. The teams had met 29 times previously, with Oklahoma leading the series 26\u20133. The Sooners came into the game having won five straight meetings, including the 2019 regular-season meeting, which was played in Waco and saw Oklahoma complete the largest comeback in school history by overcoming a 25-point deficit to win 34\u201331.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287737-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Championship Game, Teams, Baylor\nThe Baylor Bears, led by head coach Matt Rhule, were making their first Big 12 Championship appearance. They were the first team to make their debut in the Big 12 Championship since TCU in 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287737-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Championship Game, Teams, Oklahoma\nThe Oklahoma Sooners, led by Lincoln Riley, were making their eleventh Big 12 Championship appearance; they were 9\u20131, having won each of their past eight appearances in the conference title game, including both editions played since the Championship game was reinstated for the 2017 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287737-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Championship Game, Game summary, Statistics\nOklahoma received the opening kick-off, but both teams punted on their first offensive possessions. Oklahoma opened the scoring with a six-yard touchdown run by Kennedy Brooks on a 78-yard drive that featured a 71-yard pass from Jalen Hurts to CeeDee Lamb. After a Baylor fumble, Oklahoma scored again with a 44-yard field goal by Gabe Brkic. In the second quarter, Baylor got on the board with a 44-yard field goal by John Mayers. Baylor starting quarterback Charlie Brewer left the game with an injury after being sacked by Kenneth Murray.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287737-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Championship Game, Game summary, Statistics\nLate in the second quarter, Oklahoma's Jalen Hurts was intercepted by Jordan Williams and returned to the OU 23 yard line, after which Baylor tied the game with a 33-yard touchdown pass from backup quarterback Gerry Bohanon to Tyquan Thornton. Baylor took the lead in the final seconds of the half with a 28-yard field goal by Mayers to make the score 13\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287737-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Championship Game, Game summary, Statistics\nOn Oklahoma's first offensive possession of the second half, the Sooners tied the game with a 24-yard field goal by Gabe Brkic. They then took the lead on the next drive with an 18-yard touchdown pass from Jalen Hurts to Nick Basquine. Early in the fourth quarter, Baylor backup quarterback Gerry Bohanon was also injured. The Sooners took a 10-point lead with another 24-yard field goal by Brkic. Baylor, led by third-string quarterback and true freshman Jacob Zeno, responded with an 81-yard touchdown pass from Zeno to Trestan Ebner. On the next drive, Zeno completed a 78-yard pass to Chris Platt, which set up a 27-yard field goal to tie the game with 3:25 remaining. Oklahoma was forced to punt, and Baylor was unable to score in the final minute, forcing overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 827]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287737-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Championship Game, Game summary, Statistics\nIn overtime, Oklahoma received the ball first and scored in three plays via a five-yard run by Rhamondre Stevenson. On Baylor's possession, Jacob Zeno was sacked by Nik Bonitto and Jalen Redmond on 3rd and 10, and they failed to convert on 4th and 20, ending the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287737-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Championship Game, Game summary, Statistics\nOklahoma wide receiver CeeDee Lamb had eight receptions for 173 yards and was named game MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287737-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Championship Game, Aftermath\nOklahoma, who had been ranked sixth heading into the game, moved up to fourth in the final College Football Playoff rankings, earning them a spot in the CFP semifinal to be played at the Peach Bowl. Facilitating the rise in the rankings was No. 4 Georgia's loss to LSU in the SEC Championship Game and No. 5 Utah's loss to Oregon in the Pac-12 Championship Game. Baylor remained ranked seventh and received a bid to the Sugar Bowl against Georgia. Oklahoma lost to LSU in the Peach Bowl, 63\u201328; and Baylor lost to Georgia, 26\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287738-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2019 Big 12 Conference Baseball Tournament was held from May 22 through May 26 at Chickasaw Bricktown Ballpark in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. The annual tournament determined the conference champion of the Division I Big 12 Conference for college baseball. The winner of the tournament, Oklahoma State, earned the league's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287738-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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 five. Among original members, Kansas State has never won the event. Baylor won their first championship in 2018. Iowa State discontinued their program after the 2001 season without having won a title. Having joined in 2013, TCU won their first title in 2014 while West Virginia has yet to win the Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287738-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Conference Baseball Tournament, Format and seeding\nThe top eight finishers from the regular season were seeded one through eight, and then played a two-bracket double-elimination tournament leading to a winner-take-all championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 62], "content_span": [63, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287739-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Conference Softball Tournament\nThe 2019 Big 12 Conference Softball tournament will be held at ASA Hall of Fame Stadium in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma from May 10 through May 11, 2019. The tournament winner will earn the Big 12 Conference's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Division I Softball Tournament. All games of the tournament aired on Fox College Sports, the championship game will air on FS2. Due to Weather conditions, the last 4 games of the Big 12 Tournament were canceled. Therefore the Automatic bid was given to the regular season champion which would be Oklahoma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287740-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Conference Women's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 Phillips 66 Big 12 Conference Women's Basketball Tournament was the postseason tournament for the Big 12 Conference held from March 8 to 11, 2019 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma at Chesapeake Energy Arena. Baylor won the championship game over Iowa State, 57\u201349. Kalani Brown was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287741-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Conference Women's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2019 Big 12 Conference Women's Soccer Tournament was the postseason women's soccer tournament for the Big 12 Conference held from November 3 to 10, 2019. The 7-match tournament was held at the Swope Soccer Village in Kansas City, MO with a combined attendance of 2,025. The 8-team single-elimination tournament consisted of three rounds based on seeding from regular season conference play. The Kansas Jayhawks defeated the TCU Horned Frogs in the championship match to win their 1st conference tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287742-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Conference football season\nThe 2019 Big 12 Conference football season represented the 24th season of Big 12 conference football, taking place during the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The season began with non-conference play on Thursday, August 29, 2019. Conference play began on Saturday, September 21, 2019. The entire schedule was released on October 18, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287742-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Conference football season\nThe 2019 season eas the eighth for the Big 12 since the early-2010s conference realignment brought the Big 12 membership to its current form.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287742-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Conference football season\nAs a ten\u2013team league, the Big 12 played a nine-game round-robin conference schedule and each member played three non-conference games \u2013 one of which must be against a Power Five conference foe. The regular season was followed by a conference championship game played between the regular-season champion and the regular-season runner-up. The 2019 Big 12 Championship Game was held at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas on Saturday, December 7, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287742-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Conference football season, Preseason, Big 12 Media Days\nThe Big 12 media days will be held on July 15\u201316 in Frisco, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287742-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Conference football season, Preseason, Big 12 Media Days, Preseason poll\nThe 2019 Big 12 Preseason media poll was released on July 10, 2019. Prior to the Big 12 media days. Oklahoma was chosen to finish at the top of the standings for the fourth consecutive year in the Big 12 football preseason poll, voted on by media representatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 84], "content_span": [85, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287742-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Conference football season, Head coaches\nThere will be 4 new head coaches in the Big 12 Conference for the 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 52], "content_span": [53, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287742-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Conference football season, Head coaches\nOn November 4, KU fired coach David Beatty after four years at the school. Two weeks later on November 19, Les Miles was hired as the new head coach of the Jayhawks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 52], "content_span": [53, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287742-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Conference football season, Head coaches\nOn November 25, Texas Tech fired coach Kliff Kingsbury after six years with the team. Four days later on November 29, Matt Wells from Utah State was hired as the new head coach of the Red Raiders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 52], "content_span": [53, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287742-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Conference football season, Head coaches\nOn December 2, Bill Snyder retired from the Kansas State Wildcats after 26 years with the school. Nine days later on December 11, Chris Klieman from North Dakota State was named the new head coach of the Wildcats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 52], "content_span": [53, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287742-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Conference football season, Head coaches\nOn January 1, Dana Holgorsen left West Virginia to become the new head coach of the Houston Cougars. Three days later on January 4, The team hired Neal Brown from the Troy Trojans as the new head coach of the Mountaineers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 52], "content_span": [53, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287742-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Conference football season, Schedule\nThe regular season began on August 30 and will end on November 30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287742-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Conference football season, Big 12 vs other conferences, Big 12 vs Group of Five matchups\nThe following games include Big 12 teams competing against teams from the American, C-USA, MAC, Mountain West or Sun Belt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 101], "content_span": [102, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287742-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Conference football season, Big 12 vs other conferences, Big 12 vs FBS independents matchups\nThe following games include Big 12 teams competing against FBS Independents, which includes Army, Liberty, New Mexico State, or UMass. The Big 12 counts games against the other two FBS independents, BYU and Notre Dame, as satisfying its requirement that Big 12 members play at least one Power Five non-conference opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 104], "content_span": [105, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287742-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Conference football season, Postseason, Bowl games\nRankings are from CFP rankings. All times Central Time Zone. Big 12 teams shown in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287742-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Conference football season, Awards and Honors, Big 12 Individual Awards\nThe following individuals received postseason honors as voted by the Big 12 Conference football coaches at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 83], "content_span": [84, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287742-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Conference football season, Awards and Honors, All-Americans\nThe 2019 College Football All-America Teams are 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), FOX Sports (FOX) College Football News (CFN), Bleacher Report (BR), Scout.com, Phil Steele (PS), SB Nation (SB), Athlon Sports, Pro Football Focus (PFF) and Yahoo! Sports (Yahoo! ).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287742-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Conference football season, Awards and Honors, All-Americans\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. Any player named to the First Team by all five of the NCAA-recognized selectors is deemed a Unanimous All-American.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 936]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287742-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Conference football season, NFL Draft\nThe following list includes all Big 12 players who were drafted in the 2020 NFL draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287743-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big 12 Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 Phillips 66 Big 12 Men's Basketball Tournament was the postseason men's basketball tournament for the Big 12 Conference. It was played from March 13 to 16, in Kansas City, Missouri at the Sprint Center. No. 5 seed Iowa State defeated Kansas 78\u201366 to win the championship and receive the Big 12\u2019s automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Tournament. It was Iowa State's fourth Big 12 title in the last six years. They also became the first team lower than a four seed to win the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287743-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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. Teams were seeded by record within the conference, with a tiebreaker system to seed teams with identical conference records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287744-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big East Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2019 Big East Conference Baseball Tournament was held at Prasco Park in Mason, Ohio from May 23 through May 26. The event, held at the end of the conference regular season, determined the champion of the Big East Conference for the 2019 season. The winner of the double-elimination tournament, Creighton, received the conference's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287744-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Big East Conference Baseball Tournament, Format and seeding\nThe tournament used a double-elimination format and featured the top four finishers of the Big East's seven teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287745-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big East Conference Men's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2019 Big East Men's Soccer Tournament, was the sixth men's soccer tournament of the current 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 25th edition of the Big East tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287745-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Big East Conference Men's Soccer Tournament\nGeorgetown, the two-time defending champions, successfully three-peated, and won their third consecutive Big East Tournament title, defeating Providence 3\u20131 in the final. Georgetown would also go on to win their first NCAA Tournament championship in program history. In addition, three teams (Butler, Providence, and St. John's) earned at-large bids into the NCAA Tournament, giving the Big East the most tournament bids since 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287745-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Big East Conference Men's Soccer Tournament\nFuture MLS player, Dylan Nealis won the Offensive MVP Award. Jack Beer won the Defensive MVP award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287746-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big East Conference Women's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2019 Big East Conference Women's Soccer Tournament was the postseason women's soccer tournament for the Big East Conference held from November 3 through November 10, 2019. The five-match tournament took place at campus sites, with the higher seed hosting each game. The six-team single-elimination tournament consisted of three rounds based on seeding from regular season conference play. The defending champions were the Georgetown Hoyas. However, they were unable to defend their crown, losing to Xavier 2\u20130 in the final. This is the first title in program history for Xavier, and the first for head coach Nate Lie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287747-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big East Conference men's soccer season\nThe 2019 Big East Conference men's soccer season was the seventh season for the realigned Big East Conference. Including the history of the original Big East Conference, this was the 24th season of men's soccer under the \"Big East Conference\" name. The regular season began on August 30 and concluded on November 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287747-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Big East Conference men's soccer season\nEntering the season, Georgetown were the defending conference tournament champions, while Creighton were the defending conference regular season champions. Georgetown successfully defended their Big East Tournament title, and also won the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287747-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Big East Conference men's soccer season\nFour Big East teams earned berths into the NCAA Tournament, where Georgetown won the NCAA Tournament Championship in penalty kicks against Virginia. This was Georgetown's first national championship in men's soccer, and their first College Cup appearance since 2012. Elsewhere, St. John's and Providence reached the Sweet Sixteen, losing to Virginia and Clemson, respectively, while Butler was eliminated in the first round by West Virginia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287747-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Big East Conference men's soccer season, Background, Coaching changes\nAhead of the 2019 season, Creighton head coach Elmar Bolowich was hired by professional soccer club, Jacksonville Armada FC. Johnny Torres was hired to replace Bolowich.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 74], "content_span": [75, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287747-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Big East Conference men's soccer season, Preseason, Preseason national polls\nThe preseason national polls were released in July and August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 81], "content_span": [82, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287747-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Big East Conference men's soccer season, Preseason, Preseason All-Conference Teams\nAll conference teams were announced in conjunction with the preseason poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 87], "content_span": [88, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287747-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Big East Conference men's soccer season, Regular season, Early season tournaments\nEarly season tournaments will be announced in late Spring and Summer 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 86], "content_span": [87, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287747-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Big East Conference men's soccer season, Postseason, Big East Tournament\nThe 2019 Big East Tournament was held from November 9\u201317, 2019. Georgetown won the championship against Providence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 77], "content_span": [78, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287747-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Big East Conference men's soccer season, Postseason, NCAA Tournament\nThe NCAA Tournament will begin in November 2019 and conclude on December 17, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 73], "content_span": [74, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287747-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Big East Conference men's soccer season, Awards and honors, Postseason honors\nDerek Dodson, GeorgetownTani Oluwaseyi, St. John'sSamson Sergi, XavierYudai Tashiro, CreightonJacob Montes, GeorgetownTiago Mendonca, ProvidenceMax de Bruijne, DePaulDylan Nealis, GeorgetownPatrick Seagrist, MarquetteJoao Serrano, ProvidenceGiannis Nikopolidis, Georgetown", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 82], "content_span": [83, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287747-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Big East Conference men's soccer season, Awards and honors, Postseason honors\nWilmer Cabrera Jr., ButlerLuke Haakenson, CreightonAchara, GeorgetownCarlton McKenzie, Seton HallSean Zawadzki, GeorgetownLuka Prpa, MarquettePaulo Lima, ProvidenceSkage Simonsen, St. John'sYounes Boudadi, CreightonBrandon Duarte, St. John'sShane Bradley, VillanovaJan Hoffelner, St. John's", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 82], "content_span": [83, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287747-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Big East Conference men's soccer season, Awards and honors, Postseason honors\nBrandon Guhl, ButlerJack Haywood, ButlerJared Timmer, ButlerKuba Polat, CreightonConnor Alba, MarquetteJosh Coan, MarquetteAustin Aviza, ProvidenceDanny Griffin, ProvidenceBrandon Knapp, St. John'sEinar Lye, St. John'sDerrick Otim, XavierMatthew Rosenberg, Xavier", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 82], "content_span": [83, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287747-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Big East Conference men's soccer season, Awards and honors, All-Americans\nTo earn \"consensus\" status, a player must win honors based on a point system computed from the four different all-America teams. The 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, 44], "section_span": [46, 78], "content_span": [79, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287747-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Big East Conference men's soccer season, 2020 MLS Draft\nThe 2020 MLS SuperDraft was held on January 9, 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287747-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Big East Conference men's soccer season, Homegrown players\nThe Homegrown Player Rule is a Major League Soccer program that allows MLS teams to sign local players from their own development academies directly to MLS first team rosters. Before the creation of the rule in 2008, every player entering Major League Soccer had to be assigned through one of the existing MLS player allocation processes, such as the MLS SuperDraft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287747-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Big East Conference men's soccer season, Homegrown players\nTo place a player on its homegrown player list, making him eligible to sign as a homegrown player, players must have resided in that club's home territory and participated in the club's youth development system for at least one year. Players can play college soccer and still be eligible to sign a homegrown contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287747-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Big East Conference men's soccer season, Homegrown players\nNo players in the Big East Conference signed homegrown contracts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287748-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament was the men's basketball postseason tournament for the Big East Conference. It was held from March 13 through March 16, 2019 at Madison Square Garden in New York City. Villanova defeated Seton Hall 74\u201372 to win the tournament, and the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. With the win, Villanova became the first team to win the Big East Tournament three consecutive times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287748-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nAll 10 Big East schools participated in the tournament. Teams were seeded by conference record with tie-breaking procedures to determine the seeds for teams with identical conference records. The top six teams received first-round byes. Seeding for the tournament was determined at the close of the regular conference season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287749-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big East Women's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 Big East Women's Basketball Tournament concluded the 2018\u201319 season of Big East Conference women's basketball. The event was held from March 9\u201312, 2019 at Wintrust Arena in Chicago. DePaul won the championship game over Marquette , 74\u201373.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287749-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Big East Women's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nMarquette, DePaul and Butler have clinched first round byes. Xavier will play in the first round", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287750-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Easy Tour\nThe 2019 Big Easy Tour was the 9th season of the Big Easy Tour. It was the second season in which events received Official World Golf Ranking points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287750-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Easy Tour, Schedule\nThe schedule included 18 regular events and an end-of-season tour championship. Regular events have prize money of R 75,000 with R 200,000 for the tour championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287750-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Easy Tour, Order of Merit\nThe top 10 players on the Order of Merit earned Sunshine Tour cards for the 2020/2021 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287751-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Sky Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 Big Sky Conference Men's Basketball Tournament was the postseason tournament for the Big Sky Conference, held March 13\u201316 at CenturyLink Arena in Boise, Idaho. It was the 44th edition of the tournament, which debuted in 1976.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287751-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Sky Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nRegular season and defending tournament champion Montana defeated Eastern Washington 68\u201362 in the championship game to gain the conference's automatic bid to the 68-team NCAA Tournament. It was Montana's eleventh Big Sky tournament title, which leads the conference; its first came in 1991.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287751-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Sky Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nThe eleven teams were seeded by conference record, with a tiebreaker to seed teams with identical conference records. The top five teams received a first round bye.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 58], "content_span": [59, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287752-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Sky Conference Women's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 Big Sky Conference Women's Basketball Tournament was a postseason tournament that was held from March 11\u201315, 2019 at CenturyLink Arena in Boise, Idaho. Portland State was the winner of the Big Sky Tournament earns an automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287753-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Sky Conference Women's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2019 Big Sky Conference Women's Soccer Tournament was the postseason women's soccer tournament for the Big Sky Conference held from November 6 to November 10, 2019. The five-match tournament took place at Jackson Stadium, home of the regular-season champions Montana Grizzlies. The six-team single-elimination tournament consisted of three rounds based on seeding from regular season conference play. The Montana Grizzlies were the defending champions and did not successfully defended their title, losing to the Northern Colorado Bears in the semifinals. Northern Colorado would go on to win the tournament, with a 1\u20130 win over Eastern Washington in the final. This was the second overall title for Northern Colorado, and the second title for coach Tim Barrera.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287754-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big South Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2019 Big South Conference Baseball Tournament was held from May 21\u201325. The top eight regular season finishers of the conference's ten teams met in the double-elimination tournament held at Fayetteville Ballpark in Fayetteville, North Carolina. The tournament champion, Campbell, earned the conference's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287754-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Big South Conference Baseball Tournament, Seeding and format\nThe top eight finishers of the league's ten teams qualified for the double-elimination tournament. Teams were seeded based on conference winning percentage, with the first tiebreaker being head-to-head record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 65], "content_span": [66, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287755-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big South Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 Big South Men's Basketball Tournament was the postseason men's basketball tournament that ended the 2018\u201319 season of the Big South Conference. It was held from March 5 through March 10, 2019 at various campus sites. Gardner\u2013Webb defeated Radford 76\u201365 in the championship game to win the tournament, and received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. It was the first title for Gardner\u2013Webb after 11 years in the Big South, and their first trip to the NCAA Tournament in school history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287755-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Big South Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Sites\nThe first round was played at campus sites at the home of the higher seed. The quarterfinals and semifinals were played at Gore Arena in Buies Creek, North Carolina, home of regular-season champion Campbell. The championship game was held at the Dedmon Center in Radford, Virginia, the home arena of the highest surviving seed, Radford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 60], "content_span": [61, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287755-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Big South Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nAll 11 conference teams were eligible for the tournament. The top five teams received a first-round bye. Teams were seeded by record within the conference, with a tiebreaker system to seed teams with identical conference records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 60], "content_span": [61, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287756-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big South Conference Men's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2019 Big South Conference Men's Soccer Tournament, was the 30th edition of the tournament. It determined the Big South Conference's automatic berth to the 2019 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287756-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Big South Conference Men's Soccer Tournament\nCampbell won the tournament, making it their second consecutive and sixth all-time Big South championship. They defeated High Point in the final. With the title, Campbell earned their second consecutive automatic berth to the NCAA Tournament. They defeated James Madison in the first round 3\u20131, but fell to #1 Virginia in the second round 0\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287756-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Big South Conference Men's Soccer Tournament, All Tournament Team\nIan Rees, CampbellGideon Betz, CampbellThibaut Jacquel, CampbellJalen James, CampbellAlessandro Sobacchi, High PointIlias Kosmidis, High PointJonathan Bolanos, High PointAlain Delgado, Gardner\u2013WebbAbel Gebrekiros, Gardner\u2013WebbLuca Ziegler, PresbyterianSergio Pinto, PresbyterianVictor Valls, RadfordMiles Rapp, Winthrop", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 70], "content_span": [71, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287757-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big South Conference Women's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 Big South Women's Basketball Tournament was the postseason women's basketball tournament that ended the 2018\u201319 season of the Big South Conference. It was held from March 12 through March 17, 2019 at various campus sites. Radford won the conference tournament championship game over the Campbell Lady Camels, 57\u201345, to receive the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287757-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Big South Conference Women's Basketball Tournament, Sites\nThe first round will be played at campus sites at the home of the higher seed. The quarterfinals and semifinals will be played at #1 and #2 seeds. The championship game will be held at the home arena of the higher surviving seed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 62], "content_span": [63, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287757-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Big South Conference Women's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nAll 11 conference teams are eligible for the tournament. The top five teams will receive a first-round bye. Teams are seeded by record within the conference, with a tiebreaker system to seed teams with identical conference records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 62], "content_span": [63, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287758-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big South Conference Women's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2019 Big South Conference Women's Soccer Tournament was the postseason women's soccer tournament for the Big South Conference held from November 1 through November 10, 2019. The quarterfinals of the tournament were held at campus sites, while the semifinals and final took place at Sportsplex at Matthews in Matthews, North Carolina. The eight-team single-elimination tournament consisted of three rounds based on seeding from regular season conference play. Radford were the defending champions, and successfully defended their championship with a 2\u20131 win over Gardner-Webb fin the final. The conference tournament title was the seventh for the Radford women's soccer program and the seventh for head coach Ben Sohrabi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 776]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287759-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Baseball Tournament\nThe 2019 Big Ten Conference Baseball Tournament was held at TD Ameritrade Park Omaha in Omaha, Nebraska from May 22 through 26. The event aired on the Big Ten Network.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287759-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Baseball Tournament, Format and seeding\nThe 2019 tournament was an 8 team double-elimination tournament. The top eight teams based on conference regular season winning percentage earned invites to the tournament. The teams then played a double-elimination tournament leading to a single championship game. A run rule (10 run lead after 7 innings) was in effect for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287760-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference football season\nThe 2019 Big Ten conference football season was the 124th season of college football play for the Big Ten Conference and was part of the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287760-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference football season\nThis was the Big Ten's sixth season with 14 teams. The defending league champion was Ohio State. The 2019 season consisted of a nine-game conference schedule for the fourth year in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287760-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference football season\nThe Big Ten had two new coaches for the 2019 season. Ohio State promoted offensive coordinator Ryan Day to head coach, replacing Urban Meyer who retired at the end of the 2018 season. Maryland also had a new coach for 2019, hiring Mike Locksley to replace D.J. Durkin, who was fired in 2018 ultimately due to the events that led to the death of player Jordan McNair.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287760-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference football season\nThe first coaching change during the 2019 season came on September 29, 2019 when Rutgers dismissed Chris Ash. Tight ends coach Nunzio Campanile served as interim coach for the remainder of the 2019 season. Then on December 1, Rutgers announced that former coach Greg Schiano would return to coach the team in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287760-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference football season\nOn the field of play, Ohio State won the East Division title and made their fifth appearance in the Big Ten Football Championship Game and third consecutive appearance. In the West Division, Wisconsin and Minnesota tied for the division title, but the Badgers represented the division in the conference title game due to their head-to-head win over the Golden Gophers. Wisconsin made their sixth appearance in the conference title game overall. In that championship game, Ohio State defeated Wisconsin 34-21 to win their third consecutive Big Ten championship. With that win, the Buckeyes landed a spot in the 2019-20 College Football Playoff as the #2 seed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287760-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference football season, Previous season\nOhio State defeated Northwestern, 45\u201324, in the Big Ten Football Championship Game. The win gave the Buckeyes their second consecutive Big Ten championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287760-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference football season, Previous season\nNine teams participated in bowl games in the 2018 season and the league 5\u20134 in those games, however the Big Ten failed to land a team in the College Football Playoff for the second straight year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287760-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference football season, Previous season\nMinnesota defeated Georgia Tech, 34\u201310 in the Quick Lane Bowl. Wisconsin defeated Miami (FL), 35\u20133, in the Pinstripe Bowl. Purdue lost to Auburn, 63\u201314, in the Music City Bowl. Michigan State lost to Oregon, 7\u20136, in the Redbox Bowl. Northwestern defeated No. 20 Utah, 31\u201320, in the Holiday Bowl. Iowa defeated No. 18 Mississippi State, 27\u201322, in the Outback Bowl. No . 13 Penn State lost to No. 16 Kentucky, 27\u201324, in the Citrus Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287760-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference football season, Previous season\nIn the New Year's Six Games, No. 8 Michigan lost to No. 10 Florida, 41\u201315, in the Peach Bowl. And No. 5 Ohio State defeated No. 9 Washington, 28\u201323, in the Rose Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287760-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference football season, Preseason\n2019 Big Ten Spring Football and number of signees on signing day:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 50], "content_span": [51, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287760-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference football season, Preseason, Big Ten Media Days\nThe Big Ten conducted its annual media days at the Chicago Marriott Downtown Chicago Magnificent Mile in Chicago, IL on July 23\u201324. The event commenced with a speech by Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany, and all 14 teams sent their head coaches and two selected players to speak with members of the media. The event along with all speakers and interviews were broadcast live on the Big Ten Network. The teams and representatives in respective order were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287760-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference football season, Preseason, Big Ten Media Days, Preseason media polls\nThe Big Ten Media Days concluded with its annual preseason media polls in early August. Since 1992, the credentialed media has gotten the preseason champion correct just five times. Only eight times has the preseason pick even made it to the Big Ten title game. Below are the results of the media poll with total points received next to each school and first-place votes in parentheses. For the 2019 poll, Michigan was voted as the favorite to win both the East Division and the Big Ten Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 93], "content_span": [94, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287760-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference football season, Regular season\nThe Regular season will begin on August 29 and will end on November 30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287760-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference football season, Postseason, Bowl games\nRankings are from CFP rankings. All times Eastern Time Zone. Big Ten teams shown in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287760-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference football season, Awards and honors, All-Conference Teams\nCoaches Honorable Mention: ILLINOIS: Kendrick Green, Jake Hansen, Doug Kramer; INDIANA: Peyton Hendershot, Caleb Jones, Micah McFadden, Tiawan Mullen, Simon Stepaniak, Haydon Whitehead; IOWA: Chauncey Golston, Cedric Lattimore, Tyler Linderbaum, Ihmir Smith-Marsette, Nate Stanley, Kristian Welch; MARYLAND: Nick Cross, Dontay Demus, Ayinde Eley, Keandre Jones, Javon Leake; MICHIGAN: Zach Charbonnet, Nico Collins, Nick Eubanks, Hassan Haskins, Aidan Hutchinson, Giles Jackson, Jalen Mayfield, Cameron McGrone, Sean McKeon, Josh Metellus, Donovan Peoples-Jones; MICHIGAN STATE: Joe Bachie, Elijah Collins, Jake Hartbarger, Mike Panasiuk, Josiah Scott, Antjuan Simmons, Cody White; MINNESOTA:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 80], "content_span": [81, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287760-0014-0001", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference football season, Awards and honors, All-Conference Teams\nCurtis Dunlap Jr., Coney Durr, Daniel Faalele, Kamal Martin, Conner Olson, Sam Renner, Sam Schlueter; NEBRASKA: Darrion Daniels, Brenden Jaimes, Dedrick Mills, JD Spielman; NORTHWESTERN: Blake Gallagher, Rashawn Slater, Travis Whillock; OHIO STATE: Tuf Borland, Baron Browning, Drue Chrisman, Jashon Cornell, K. J. Hill, Robert Landers, Pete Werner; PENN STATE: Tariq Castro-Fields, Sean Clifford, Will Fries, Blake Gillikin, KJ Hamler, Jan Johnson, Michal Menet, Jake Pinegar, John Reid, Garrett Taylor, Lamont Wade; PURDUE: Derrick Barnes, J.D. Dellinger, Ben Holt, George Karlaftis, Matt McCann; RUTGERS: Tyshon Fogg; WISCONSIN: Logan Bruss, Eric Burrell, Quintez Cephus, Jake Ferguson, Matt Hennigsen, Faion Hicks, Isaiahh Loudermilk, Cole Van Lanen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 80], "content_span": [81, 835]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287760-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference football season, Awards and honors, All-Conference Teams\nMedia Honorable Mention: ILLINOIS: Dre Brown, Sydney Brown, Kendrick Green, Stanley Green Jr., Jake Hansen, Nate Hobbs, Josh Imatorbhebhe, Doug Kramer, Jamal Milan, Alex Palczewski; INDIANA: Demarcus Elliott, Tiawan Mullen, Peyton Ramsey; IOWA: Chauncey Golston, Michael Sleep-Dalton, Tyler Linderbaum, Ihmir Smith-Marsette, Geno Stone, Kristian Welch; MARYLAND: Keandre Jones, Javon Leake, Ellis McKennie; MICHIGAN: Ronnie Bell, Nico Collins, Nick Eubanks, Jordan Glasgow, Hassan Haskins, Brad Hawkins, Giles Jackson, Cameron McGrone, Sean McKeon, Michael Onwenu, Donovan Peoples-Jones, Ambry Thomas; MICHIGAN STATE: Matt Coghlin, David Dowell, Jake Hartbarger, Mike Panasiuk, Antjuan Simmons, Cody White; MINNESOTA:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 80], "content_span": [81, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287760-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference football season, Awards and honors, All-Conference Teams\nThomas Barber, Curtis Dunlap Jr., Coney Durr, Daniel Faalele, Kamal Martin, Conner Olson, Sam Renner, Sam Schlueter, Benjamin St. Juste; NEBRASKA: Mohammed Barry, Dicaprio Bootle, Khalil Davis, Brenden Jaimes, Dedrick Mills, Wan'Dale Robinson, JD Spielman, Cam Taylor-Britt; NORTHWESTERN: Blake Gallagher, Rashawn Slater, Jared Thomas; OHIO STATE: Tuf Borland, Baron Browning, Drue Chrisman, Jashon Cornell, Luke Farrell, K.J. Hill, Robert Landers, Pete Werner; PENN STATE: Cam Brown, Journey Brown, Sean Clifford, Will Fries, Blake Gillikin, KJ Hamler, Jan Johnson, Michal Menet, Jake Pinegar, John Reid, Shaka Toney, Garrett Taylor, Lamont Wade, Robert Windsor; PURDUE: J.D. Dellinger, Ben Holt, Matt McCann, Cory Trice; RUTGERS: Tyshon Fogg, Willington Previlon; WISCONSIN: Logan Bruss, Eric Burrell, Quintez Cephus, Jack Coan, Jake Ferguson, Faion Hicks, Isaiahh Loudermilk, Rachad Wildgoose.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 80], "content_span": [81, 977]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287760-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference football season, Awards and honors, All-Americans\nThe 2019 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), FOX Sports (FOX) College Football News (CFN), Bleacher Report (BR), Scout.com, Phil Steele (PS), SB Nation (SB), Athlon Sports, Pro Football Focus (PFF), The Athletic, and Yahoo! Sports (Yahoo! ).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287760-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference football season, Awards and honors, All-Americans\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. Any player named to the First Team by all five of the NCAA-recognized selectors is deemed a Unanimous All-American.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 937]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287760-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference football season, 2020 NFL Draft\nThe Big Ten had 48 players selected in the 2020 NFL Draft, which was second among all FBS conferences, trailing only the SEC who had 63 picks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287760-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference football season, Head coaches\n* Tom Allen was hired to replace Kevin Wilson in December 2016 at Indiana and coached the Hoosiers in their 2016 bowl game, going 0\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 53], "content_span": [54, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287760-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference football season, Head coaches\n* Mike Locksley served as interim head coach at Maryland in 2015 and coached for six games, going 1\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 53], "content_span": [54, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287760-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference football season, Head coaches\n* Ryan Day served as interim head coach at Ohio State for the first three games of the 2018 season while Urban Meyer served a three-game suspension and went 3\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 53], "content_span": [54, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287760-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference football season, Head coaches\n* Chris Ash was terminated as head coach at Rutgers on Sept. 29, 2019. Tight ends coach Nunzio Campanile was named interim coach for the remainder of the 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 53], "content_span": [54, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287761-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference men's soccer season\nThe 2019 Big Ten Conference men's soccer season was the 29th season of men's varsity soccer in the conference. The regular season began on August 30, 2019, and concluded on November 3, 2019. The season culminated with the 2019 Big Ten Conference Men's Soccer Tournament to determine the conference's automatic berth into the 2019 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament. The tournament began on November 10, 2019 and concluded on November 17, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287761-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference men's soccer season\nIndiana enters the season as the defending regular season and tournament champions. Maryland enters the season as the defending NCAA Tournament champions. Indiana went on to win the Big Ten regular season and tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287761-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference men's soccer season, Background, Previous season\nThe previous season was the 28th season of men's varsity soccer in the conference. The 2018 Big Ten regular season began on August 24, 2018 concluded on October 28, 2018. The season culminated with the 2018 Big Ten Conference Men's Soccer Tournament to determine the conference's automatic berth into the 2018 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament. Indiana went on to win both the regular season and the tournament, winning all eight of their Big Ten Conference games. They defeated Michigan in the Big Ten Men's Soccer Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 72], "content_span": [73, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287761-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference men's soccer season, Background, Previous season\nWith the Big Ten title, Indiana earned the conference's automatic berth into the 2018 NCAA Tournament, where Maryland, Michigan, and Michigan State joined as at-large berths. The conference had the strongest showing in the NCAA Tournament, where three of their four berths reached the College Cup (Final Four) of the tournament. Big Ten side, Maryland, would defeat Akron in the National Championship Game to win their fourth NCAA title, and their first since 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 72], "content_span": [73, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287761-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference men's soccer season, Background, Previous season\nConcluding the tournament, Indiana senior and captain, Andrew Gutman, won the TopDrawerSoccer.com National Player of the Year Award as well as the Missouri Athletic Club's Hermann Trophy. Gutman would forgo an opportunity to sign a homegrown contract with the Chicago Fire and signed with Celtic in Scotland. Indiana sophomore forward, Griffin Dorsey was the highest Big Ten player selected in the 2019 MLS SuperDraft, being drafted by Toronto FC ninth overall. Eleven other Big Ten players were selected in the MLS SuperDraft, the most of any collegiate conference, and an additional four signed homegrown player contracts with their parent MLS clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 72], "content_span": [73, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287761-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference men's soccer season, Background, Coaching changes\nDan Donigan, the former head coach of Rutgers was fired following the 2018 season and was replaced by Fordham head coach, Jim McElderry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 73], "content_span": [74, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287761-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference men's soccer season, Preseason, Preseason national polls\nThe preseason national polls will be released in July and August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 80], "content_span": [81, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287761-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference men's soccer season, Regular season, Early season tournaments\nEarly season tournaments will be announced in late Spring and Summer 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287761-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference men's soccer season, Postseason, Big Ten Tournament\nThe Big Ten Tournament was played from November 9\u201317. Indiana won the tournament, defeating Michigan in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 75], "content_span": [76, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287761-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference men's soccer season, Postseason, NCAA Tournament\nThe NCAA Tournament will begin in November 2019 and conclude on December 17, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 72], "content_span": [73, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287761-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference men's soccer season, Rankings, Regional rankings - USC North Region\nThe USC North Region compares teams across the Big Ten Conference, Horizon League, and Mid-American Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 91], "content_span": [92, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287761-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference men's soccer season, Awards and honors, Postseason honors\nForwardNebojsa Popovic, Michigan*Liam Butts, Penn StateMidfieldAidan Morris, IndianaEli Crognale, MarylandJack Hallahan, Michigan*Aaron Molloy, Penn State*DefenseJack Maher, Indiana* Johannes Bergmann, Maryland* Jackson Ragen, MichiganBrandon Hackenberg, Penn StateGoalkeeperAndrew Verdi, Michigan", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 81], "content_span": [82, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287761-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference men's soccer season, Awards and honors, Postseason honors\nForward Eric Matzelevich, Maryland Matt Moderwell, NorthwesternMidfield Joshua Penn, Indiana Marc Ybarra, Michigan Jack Holland, Ohio State Pablo \u00c1vila, RutgersDefense Spencer Glass, Indiana Simon Waever, Indiana Patrick Nielsen, Michigan State Garrett Opperman, NorthwesternGoalkeeper Niklas Neumann, Maryland", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 81], "content_span": [82, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287761-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference men's soccer season, Awards and honors, Postseason honors\nHerbert Endeley, IndianaAidan Morris, Indiana*Joshua Penn, Indiana* Malcolm Johnston, Maryland Nick Richardson, Maryland Derick Broche, Michigan Liam Butts, Penn State* Kris Shakes, Penn State Jalen Watson, Penn State* Hugo Le Guennec, Rutgers Jackson Temple, Rutgers*", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 81], "content_span": [82, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287761-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference men's soccer season, Awards and honors, Postseason honors\nJack Maher, IndianaNick Richardson, MarylandKevin Buca, MichiganCody Sweatte, Michigan StateMac Mazolla, NorthwesternParker Siegfried, Ohio StateWill Campbell, Penn StateJake Longo, RutgersNoah Leibold, Wisconsin", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 81], "content_span": [82, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287761-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference men's soccer season, Awards and honors, All-Americans\nTo earn \"consensus\" status, a player must win honors based on a point system computed from the four different all-America teams. The 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, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287761-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference men's soccer season, 2020 MLS Draft\nThe 2020 MLS SuperDraft was held in January 2020. Nine Big Ten players were selected in the draft, all in the first three rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 59], "content_span": [60, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287761-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference men's soccer season, Homegrown players\nThe Homegrown Player Rule is a Major League Soccer program that allows MLS teams to sign local players from their own development academies directly to MLS first team rosters. Before the creation of the rule in 2008, every player entering Major League Soccer had to be assigned through one of the existing MLS player allocation processes, such as the MLS SuperDraft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287761-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Conference men's soccer season, Homegrown players\nTo place a player on its homegrown player list, making him eligible to sign as a homegrown player, players must have resided in that club's home territory and participated in the club's youth development system for at least one year. Players can play college soccer and still be eligible to sign a homegrown contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287762-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Football Championship Game\nThe 2019 Big Ten Football Championship Game presented by Discover was played on December 7, 2019 at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, Indiana. The ninth annual Big Ten Football Championship Game, it determined the 2019 champion of the Big Ten Conference. The game was between the No. 1 Ohio State Buckeyes out of the East division, and the No. 8 Wisconsin Badgers out of the West division. Ohio State won the game and the conference title by a score of 34\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287762-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Football Championship Game, History\nThe 2020 Championship Game will be the tenth in the Big Ten's 125-year history and the seventh to feature the conference's East and West alignment. East division champion Ohio State won the 2018 game over West division champion Northwestern by a score of 45\u201324. It was Ohio State's third consecutive and fourth overall victory in the Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287762-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Football Championship Game, Teams\nOhio State and Wisconsin faced each other in the Big Ten Championship Game for the third time. Ohio State won each of the last two championship games between the two schools, in 2014 and 2017. The Buckeyes and Badgers also met during the 2019 regular season, where Ohio State won by a score of 38\u20137 in Columbus, Ohio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287762-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Football Championship Game, Teams, Ohio State\nOhio State secured their place in the Championship Game by winning the East Division with an undefeated 12\u20130 (9\u20130 Big Ten) regular season record. This was Ohio State's fifth appearance in the Championship Game, and third consecutive. They were the two-time reigning conference champions. The Buckeyes were ranked first in the College Football Playoff rankings heading into the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287762-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Football Championship Game, Teams, Wisconsin\nWisconsin finished the regular season at 10\u20132 (7\u20132 Big Ten), tied atop the West Division with Minnesota. The Badgers defeated their rivals, the Golden Gophers, in the final game of the regular season to earn their way to the Championship Game on the head-to-head tiebreaker. This is Wisconsin's sixth appearance in the Big Ten Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287762-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Football Championship Game, Game summary, Statistics\nWisconsin received the opening kickoff and completed an 83-yard drive, ending with a 44-yard touchdown run by Jonathan Taylor to take the early lead. Ohio State's opening drive resulted in a turnover on downs at the Wisconsin 34 yard line. Early in the second quarter, Wisconsin scored again via a 14-yard run by quarterback Jack Coan. The Buckeyes got on the board with 42 seconds remaining in the half via a two-yard run by J. K. Dobbins. Wisconsin was able to rattle off another touchdown drive in the final seconds thanks to a 45-yard run by Jonathan Taylor and a 24-yard pass from Coan to Quintez Cephus, and scored with a one-yard run by Coan to take a 21\u20137 lead into half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287762-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Football Championship Game, Game summary, Statistics\nOhio State received the ball first in the second half and scored via a 16-yard pass from Justin Fields to Jeremy Ruckert. After a muffed punt snap by Wisconsin on their own 16 yard line, Ohio State converted a 27-yard field goal to cut Wisconsin's lead to 21\u201317. Wisconsin kicker Zach Hintze missed a 48-yard field goal attempt on the following drive. Ohio State then took the lead late in the third quarter with a 16-yard touchdown pass from Fields to K. J. Hill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287762-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Football Championship Game, Game summary, Statistics\nOhio State scored once again early in the fourth quarter with another connection between Fields and Hill, this time from 13 yards out. The Buckeye defense continued to hold the Badger offense from moving the ball, and on the next possession Ohio State kicked a 24-yard field goal that made the score 34\u201321 with 4:39 remaining, which held until the end of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287762-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Football Championship Game, Game summary, Statistics\nWith the win, Ohio State won their third consecutive Big Ten championship game, and 38th overall Big Ten title. The Buckeyes became the first team to ever win ten conference games in a single season, the Conference Championship Game being the tenth win. Quarterback Justin Fields passed for 299 yards and three touchdowns, and was named game MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287762-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Football Championship Game, Aftermath\nOhio State, who had been ranked first in the College Football Playoff rankings heading into the game, dropped to number two behind LSU in the final rankings. LSU beat then-No. 4 Georgia 37\u201310 in the SEC Championship Game on the same day. As a result, Ohio State received a bid to the national semifinal against third-seeded Clemson to be played at the Fiesta Bowl. Wisconsin stayed at number eight in the CFP rankings and received a bid to the Rose Bowl. The Buckeyes lost to Clemson, 29\u201323; and the Badgers lost to Oregon, 28\u201327.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 50], "content_span": [51, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287763-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 Big Ten Conference Men's Basketball Tournament was the postseason men's basketball tournament for the Big Ten Conference of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The tournament returned to its more traditional Midwest roots as it will be held at the United Center in Chicago, Illinois. The tournament was held from March 13 through March 17, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287763-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Men's Basketball Tournament\nMichigan State defeated Michigan 65\u201360 in the championship game to win the tournament, marking the school's sixth tournament championship. As a result, they received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287763-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nAll 14 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. The top 10 teams received a first round bye and the top four teams received a double bye. Tiebreaking procedures remain unchanged from the 2018 tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287764-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\nThe 2019 Big Ten Conference Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was the sixth tournament in conference history. It was played between March 8 and March 23, 2019, on-campus locations. By Winning the tournament Notre Dame earned the Big Ten's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287764-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format\nThe 2019 tournament features a format with all games taking place on the campus of the higher-seeded teams. The tournament opens March 8-10 with three best-of-three quarterfinal series, as the second, third and fourth-seeded teams each hosting a series. The top-seeded team has a bye to the single-elimination semifinals, which is played on March 16. The highest-seeded team remaining after the semifinals hosts the championship game on March 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287765-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Men's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2019 Big Ten Conference Men's Soccer Tournament was the 29th edition of the tournament. It determined the Big Ten Conference's automatic berth into the 2019 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament. Maryland hosted the semifinal and final rounds of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287765-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Men's Soccer Tournament\nDefending champions, Indiana, successfully defended their title, giving the program their 13th Big Ten Tournament championship. They defeated Michigan in the final in a penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287766-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Softball Tournament\nThe 2019 Big Ten Conference Softball tournament was held at Andy Mohr Field on the campus of Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana from May 9 through May 11, 2019. The tournament winner earned the Big Ten Conference's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Division I Softball Tournament. All games of the tournament aired on BTN. The Michigan Wolverines earned the conferences automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Division I Softball Tournament by winning the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287767-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Women's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 Big Ten Conference Women's Basketball Tournament was a postseason tournament that was held from March 6\u201310, 2019 at Bankers Life Fieldhouse in Indianapolis. Iowa won the tournament championship game over Maryland, 90\u201376.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287767-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Women's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nAll 14 Big Ten schools are participating in the tournament. Teams will be seeded by 2018\u201319 Big Ten Conference season record. The top 10 teams receive a first-round bye and the top 4 teams receive a double bye.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287767-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Women's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nSeeding for the tournament will be determined at the close of the regular conference season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287767-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Women's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\n## \u2013 Received a double bye in the conference tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287767-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Women's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\n# \u2013 Received a first-round bye in the conference tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287767-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Women's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nOverall record are as of the end of the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287768-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Women's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2019 Big Ten Conference Women's Soccer Tournament is the postseason women's soccer tournament for the Big Ten Conference for the 2019 season. It was held from November 3\u201310, 2019. The seven-match tournament began with first-round matches held at campus sites, before moving to Yurcak Field in Piscataway, New Jersey for the semifinals and final. The eight-team single-elimination tournament consisted of three rounds based on seeding from regular-season conference play. The defending tournament champion, Minnesota, did not qualify for this year's tournament. Penn State beat Michigan in the tournament championship game in overtime 2-1. Penn State is the Big Ten Tournament Champion. It was just the sixth Big Ten final to go to overtime (first since 2018).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 802]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287768-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Big Ten Women's Soccer Tournament, Seeds\nEight Big Ten schools participated in the tournament. Teams were seeded by conference record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287769-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament was the postseason men's basketball tournament for the Big West Conference of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. It was held from March 14 through March 16, 2019 at the Honda Center in Anaheim, California. UC Irvine defeated Cal State Fullerton 92\u201364 in the championship game to win the tournament, and received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. The championship was the second for UC Irvine in the Big West, last winning it in 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287769-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nThe top eight conference teams were eligible for the tournament. Teams were seeded by record within the conference, with a tiebreaker system to seed teams with identical conference records. Teams were reseeded after the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 59], "content_span": [60, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287770-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big West Conference Men's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2019 Big West Conference Men's Soccer Tournament, was the 12th edition of the tournament. It determined the Big West Conference's automatic berth to the 2019 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287770-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Big West Conference Men's Soccer Tournament\nUC Davis won the Big West Tournament, giving the program their first ever Big West title, and their first berth into the NCAA Tournament since 2008. UC Davis defeated UCSB in the final, 2\u20130. UC Davis senior forward, Adam Mickelson, was named the tournament's Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287770-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Big West Conference Men's Soccer Tournament\nIn addition to UC Davis, UCSB earned a berth in the NCAA Tournament. UC Davis earned their first ever national seeding and second round bye into the tournament, being seeded 14th overall. UC Davis were eliminated in the Second Round by Louisville, losing 1\u20130. UCSB won their first three NCAA Tournament games before losing to Wake Forest in the Quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287771-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big West Conference Men's Volleyball Tournament\nThe 2019 Big West Conference Men's Volleyball Tournament was a postseason men's volleyball tournament for the Big West Conference during the 2019 NCAA Division I & II men's volleyball season. It was held from April 18 through April 20, 2019 at University of Hawaii's Stan Sheriff Center. The winner received the conference's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Volleyball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287771-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Big West Conference Men's Volleyball Tournament, Seeds\nAll six teams were eligible for the postseason, with the top two seeds receiving byes to the semifinals. Teams were seeded by record within the conference, with a tiebreaker system to seed teams with identical conference records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 59], "content_span": [60, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287771-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Big West Conference Men's Volleyball Tournament, Bracket\nHawai'i won the 2019 Big West Conference men's volleyball tournament. The title is their first Big West men's volleyball title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 61], "content_span": [62, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287772-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big West Conference Women's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 Big West Conference Women's Basketball Tournament was the postseason women's basketball tournament that took place March 12\u201316, 2019 at two venues in the Los Angeles area. The first two rounds were scheduled for the Bren Events Center in Irvine, California, while the semifinals and championship were held at the Honda Center in Anaheim. The winner of the Big West Tournament receives the conference's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Women's Division I Basketball Tournament. UC Davis won the conference tournament championship game over Hawai'i, 58\u201350.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287773-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big West Conference Women's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2019 Big West Conference Women's Soccer Tournament was the postseason women's soccer tournament for the Big West Conference held on November 7 and 10, 2019. The three-match tournament took place at Titan Stadium in Fullerton, California. The four-team single-elimination tournament consisted of two rounds based on seeding from regular season conference play. The defending champions were the Long Beach State 49ers, but they failed to qualify for the 2019 tournament. The Cal State Fullerton Titans won the title by beating the Cal State Northridge Matadors 2\u20130 in the final. This was the eighth Big West tournament title for the Cal State Fullerton program and the sixth for head coach Demian Brown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287774-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Big3 season\nThe 2019 Big3 season was the third season of Big3. The regular season began on June 22, 2019 and ended on August 17, 2019. The playoffs began on August 25, 2019 and concluded with the championship game on September 1, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287774-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Big3 season\nOn January 11, 2019, the Big3 announced that they would expand to 12 teams for the upcoming season, and move to two nights (consisting of three games each) per week. The league will also play in 18 cities, and allow players as young as 27 to compete in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287774-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Big3 season\nOn April 4, 2019, Big3 announced a new broadcast deal with CBS Sports, under which coverage moved to CBS and CBS Sports Network.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287774-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Big3 season\nOn April 18, 2019, Big3 announced a new partnership deal with Toyota which introduces the RAV4 Point Shot. On April 29, 2019, Big3 announced another partnership deal with cannabidiol brand cbdMD as the official jersey partner of the Big3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287774-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Big3 season, Draft\nThe 2019 BIG3 draft was held in Las Vegas, Nevada on April 12, 2019. 31 players were selected across three rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287774-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Big3 season, Draft, Player selections\nNOTES* Last team does not only refer to NBA teams, it also refers to overseas play such as Euroleague, NBL or any other major international league* Last played refers to last year of being active in any basketball league", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287774-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Big3 season, Regular season, Week 1 (June 22 \u2014 Detroit, MI)\nThe first week of the first three games in the Big3 Basketball League took place at the Little Caesars Arena, in Detroit, Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 64], "content_span": [65, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287774-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Big3 season, Regular season, Week 1 (June 23 \u2014 Indianapolis, IN)\nThe first week of the second three games in the Big3 Basketball League took place at the Bankers Life Fieldhouse, in Indianapolis, Indiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 69], "content_span": [70, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287774-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Big3 season, Regular season, Week 2 (June 29 \u2014 Charlotte, NC)\nThe second week of the first three games in the Big3 Basketball League took place at the Spectrum Center (arena), in Charlotte, North Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 66], "content_span": [67, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287774-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Big3 season, Regular season, Week 2 (June 30 \u2014 Philadelphia, PA)\nThe second week of the second three games in the Big3 Basketball League took place at the Liacouras Center, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 69], "content_span": [70, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287774-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Big3 season, Regular season, Week 3 (July 6 \u2014 Birmingham, AL)\nThe third week of the first three games in the Big3 Basketball League took place at the Legacy Arena, in Birmingham, Alabama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 66], "content_span": [67, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287774-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Big3 season, Regular season, Week 3 (July 7 \u2014 Atlanta, GA)\nThe third week of the second three games in the Big3 Basketball League took place at the State Farm Arena, in Atlanta, Georgia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 63], "content_span": [64, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287774-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Big3 season, Regular season, Week 4 (July 13 \u2014 Providence, RI)\nThe fourth week of the first three games in the Big3 Basketball League took place at the Dunkin Donuts Center, in Providence, Rhode Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 67], "content_span": [68, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287774-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Big3 season, Regular season, Week 4 (July 14 \u2014 Brooklyn, NY)\nThe fourth week of the second three games in the Big3 Basketball League took place at the Barclays Center, in Brooklyn, New York.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 65], "content_span": [66, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287774-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Big3 season, Regular season, Week 5 (July 20 \u2014 Kansas City, MO)\nThe fifth week of the first three games in the Big3 Basketball League took place at the Sprint Center, in Kansas City, Missouri.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 68], "content_span": [69, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287774-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Big3 season, Regular season, Week 5 (July 21 \u2014 Oklahoma City, OK)\nThe fifth week of the second three games in the Big3 Basketball League took place at the Chesapeake Energy Arena, in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 70], "content_span": [71, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287774-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Big3 season, Regular season, Week 6 (July 27 \u2014 Salt Lake City, UT)\nThe sixth week of three games in the Big3 Basketball League took place at the Vivint Smart Home Arena, in Salt Lake City, Utah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 71], "content_span": [72, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287774-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Big3 season, Regular season, Week 7 (August 3 \u2014 Rosemont, IL)\nThe seventh week of the first three games in the Big3 Basketball League took place at the Allstate Arena, in the Chicago suburb of Rosemont, Illinois.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 66], "content_span": [67, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287774-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Big3 season, Regular season, Week 7 (August 4 \u2014 Milwaukee, WI)\nThe seventh week of the second three games in the Big3 Basketball League took place at the Fiserv Forum, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 67], "content_span": [68, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287774-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Big3 season, Regular season, Week 8 (August 10 \u2014 Miami, FL)\nThe eighth week of three games in the Big3 Basketball League took place at American Airlines Arena in Miami, Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 64], "content_span": [65, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287774-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Big3 season, Regular season, Week 9 (August 17 \u2014 Dallas, TX)\nThe ninth week of all six games in the Big3 Basketball League took place at American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 65], "content_span": [66, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287774-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Big3 season, Playoffs, Week 10 (New Orleans, LA)\nThe semifinals and the fifth place game in the Big3 Basketball League took place at the Smoothie King Center, in New Orleans, Louisiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 53], "content_span": [54, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287774-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Big3 season, Playoffs, Week 11 (Los Angeles, CA)\nThe third place game and the third Big3 Championship game will take place at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, California.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 53], "content_span": [54, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287774-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Big3 season, Awards\nThe awards for the 2019 season will be announce prior to the championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287775-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bihar encephalitis outbreak\nIn June 2019, an outbreak of acute encephalitis syndrome (AES) occurred in Muzaffarpur and the adjoining districts in Bihar state of India resulting in deaths of more than 150 children, mainly due to hypoglycemia. In subsequent months more cases and deaths were reported. The cause of outbreak is unclear. Malnutrition, climate, hygiene, inadequate health facilities, and lack of awareness are considered as contributing factors. The lychee fruit toxins are also cited as plausible cause of AES.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287775-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bihar encephalitis outbreak, History\nOutbreaks of acute encephalitis syndrome (AES) have occurred previously in the northern regions of Bihar state and eastern regions of Uttar Pradesh state of India. The first case of AES in Muzaffarpur district was recorded in 1995. There were 143 deaths in 2013, 355 in 2014, 11 in 2015, four in 2016, 11 in 2017 and 7 in 2018. In most recent years, the death toll had remained under 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287775-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bihar encephalitis outbreak, Outbreak\nIn June 2019, an outbreak of AES occurred in 222 blocks of Muzaffarpur and the adjoining districts in Bihar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287775-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bihar encephalitis outbreak, Outbreak\nAs a result of the outbreak, total 154 children died in first three weeks of June 2019. A total of 440 cases of AES were admitted to hospitals in these three weeks. At least 85 children of them died at the Sri Krishna Medical College and Hospital (SKMCH), the largest state-operated hospital in Bihar, while at least 18 children died at the Kejriwal Matrisadan, a trust-run hospital, in these weeks. Most of them were aged between 1 and 10 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287775-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bihar encephalitis outbreak, Outbreak\nIn subsequent months of July, August and September; at SKMCH; 30, 18 and at least 12 cases were reported. Total 647 cases of AES including 161 deaths were reported between 1 June and 20 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287775-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bihar encephalitis outbreak, Syndrome\nThe term acute encephalitis syndrome (AES) was coined by the World Health Organisation in 2008. The symptoms of AES include an acute onset of fever and associated clinical neurological manifestations such as mental confusion, disorientation, delirium, convulsions, or coma. Early symptoms include headaches and vomiting, along with sudden hypoglycemia (drops in blood sugar levels), but may lead to coma, brain dysfunctions, and inflammation of the heart and lungs. Those that survive AES may have long-term neurological weaknesses. The severe hypoglycemia can cause death. The syndrome is locally known as Chamki Bukhar in Bihar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287775-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bihar encephalitis outbreak, Cause\nAES can be caused by different microorganisms including virus, bacteria, fungi, parasites and spirochetes, as well as chemicals and toxins. AES mostly affects children below 15. In India, AES was chiefly associated with Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) before 1975. The JEV cases and outbreaks became more frequent and endemic regions developed between 1975 and 1999. After 1999, non-JEV cases and outbreaks of AES were increasingly reported caused by other viruses including Chandipura virus (CHPV), Nipah virus (NiV), and enteroviruses. After 2012, it is observed that the cause shifting to JEV. Initial examination shows little sign of the JEV or other viral routes in the affected children. A study by AIIMS Patna found the presence of enterovirus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287775-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bihar encephalitis outbreak, Cause\nHigh temperature, humidity, malnutrition, poor hygiene and lack of awareness are known aggravating factors of AES. Cases of AES tend to occur during the country's monsoon season. In June 2019, the temperature in Muzaffarpur had remained above 40\u00a0\u00b0C (104\u00a0\u00b0F) and the rains were delayed which might have aggravated the situation. It was the second-longest heatwave in the region. Poverty and malnutrition is widespread among children in the region. Malnourished children lack a buffer stock of sugar as glycogen in the liver which puts them at higher risk of hypoglycemia. Awareness campaigns were carried out in March\u2013April 2019 but were not conducted later due to the 2019 Indian general elections. The local administration was not watchful due to the few cases of AES in recent years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 825]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287775-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Bihar encephalitis outbreak, Cause\nThe region is the largest producer of lychee fruits in India. A 2014 study published in Lancet found that the methylene cyclopropyl acetic acid and hypoglycin A found in unripe lychee (Litchi chinensis) fruit can cause hypoglycemia and cited them as plausible cause of AES outbreaks. A diet heavy on unripe lychee fruits without having an otherwise full meal later in the day may put malnourished children at risk of hypoglycemia. Others disputed the findings citing the unlikeliness of very large consumption of unripe lychee fruits, lack of cases in healthy, well-nourished children and many other pediatric illnesses causing hypoglycemia. Health officials reported that most of the victims suffered severe hypoglycemia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 762]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287775-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Bihar encephalitis outbreak, Cause\nThe hospitals and primary health centres lacked the required facilities to treat children.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287775-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Bihar encephalitis outbreak, Government response\nThe Chief Minister of Bihar Nitish Kumar announced an ex gratia payment of \u20b94 lakh (US$5,600) to the next of the kin of the children who died from AES. He also visited the hospital and ordered the expansion of the hospital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287775-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Bihar encephalitis outbreak, Government response\nThe union minister of health Harsh Vardhan visited and announced the set-up of 100-bed pediatric ward at the SKMCH as well as five virology laboratories in Bihar. He also announced the upgrade of the India Meteorological Department\u2019s observatory in Muzaffarpur for better study of climate. Seven pediatric intensive care units are being established.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287775-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Bihar encephalitis outbreak, Government response\nThe interdisciplinary team consisting of experts from Indian Council of Medical Research, National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences, National Institute of Malaria Research; National Institute of Nutrition, National Institute of Virology; National Institute of Epidemiology and All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi was formed and sent to Bihar to study the syndrome and establish the cause.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287775-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Bihar encephalitis outbreak, Government response\nThe Supreme Court ordered the Bihar government to file an affidavit to show the competence of medical facilities and other hygiene conditions in the state in the wake of the deaths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287775-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Bihar encephalitis outbreak, Government response\nThe National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) sent notices to the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare and the Bihar government over the deaths and asked for a report in four weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287775-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Bihar encephalitis outbreak, Aftermath\nTotal 872 cases of encephalitis including 176 deaths were reported in Bihar in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287776-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bihar floods\nThe 2019 Bihar floods affected 13 districts of North Bihar, India, causing 130 deaths by the end of July. 1269 panchayats (settlement councils) under 92 blocks of 13 districts of Northern Bihar were severely affected in the flood. Around 88.46 lakhs (8.846 million) people were affected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287776-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bihar floods, Events, 13 Affected districts\nAraria, Kishanganj, Madhubani, East Champaran, Sitamarhi, Sheohar, Supaul, Darbhanga, Muzaffarpur, Saharsa, Katihar, West Champaran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287776-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bihar floods, Events, District wise human lives lost.\nAs per Bihar Disaster Management Department, no death was reported from West Champaran and Katihar from the flood-hit districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287777-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bilderberg Conference\nBilderberg conferences are an annual private gathering of 120 to 150 people of the European and North American political elite, experts from industry, finance, academia, and the media, established in 1954 by Prince Bernhard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287777-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bilderberg Conference\nThe 2019 Bilderberg Conference took place between 30 May - 2 June 2019 at the Fairmont Le Montreux Palace in Montreux, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287777-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bilderberg Conference, Agenda\nA list of key topics for discussion at the 2019 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-00287777-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bilderberg Conference, Delegates (alphabetical)\nA list of expected delegates was published by the Bilderberg Group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287778-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 1\nThe 2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 1 was the 119th version of the annual, English rugby union, County Championship organised by the Rugby Football Union (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 North or National League 2 South). The counties were divided into two regional sections with the winners of each meeting in the final held at Twickenham Stadium. Lancashire were the reigning champions having defeated Hertfordshire in the previous year's final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287778-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 1\nAt the end of the group stage, Cheshire overcame stiff challenges from Lancashire and Yorkshire to top Division 1 North. Although they beat Yorkshire in a razor tight game during round 2, they had to rely on the same side to beat favourites Lancashire on the final match day, before they were assured of a place in the competition final. The tournament structure was perhaps slightly unkind to Yorkshire as they had to play the top two sides, while Cheshire and Lancashire avoided playing one another.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287778-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 1\nCornwall made amends for a terrible tournament the previous year by topping Division 1 South with an resounding victory over Hertfordshire being probably the most impressive of their three wins. Again, due to the rather bizarre tournament structure the top two sides in the group did not meet, although Gloucestershire failed to get the 100% record needed to qualify for the final, thanks to a defeat against Kent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287778-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 1\nIn an incredibly tight Twickenham final Cornwall defeated Cheshire 14\u201312. Cornwall had a 7\u20130 lead at the end of the first half thanks to a solo Alex Ducker converted try (his 4th of the tournament), when a moment of madness just before half-time saw Cornish scrum-half, Jack Oulton, red carded for an off-the-ball incident. The second half was all Cheshire as they looked to get back into the game against the 14 men of Cornwall, scoring two tries to eventually take a 12\u20137 lead with 10 minutes remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287778-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 1\nWith a Cheshire win looking imminent, Cornwall were awarded a penalty inside the Cheshire 22. What followed was a series of Cornwall penalties and scrums, as Cheshire were reduced to 13 men for repeated infringements as the game went into injury time. Eight minutes into injury, the ball finally left the scrum and was found by Cornwall's Seti Raumakita, who dodged several tackles to go over for a try to make it 12-12. With the last kick of the game Matthew Shepherd held his nerve to kick the conversion and win Cornwall the 2019 County Championship, and their sixth overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287778-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 1, Competition format\nThe 2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 1 consists of twelve county sides, with six counties in the northern group, and six in the southern group. Each county plays three games per group, which means that certain counties get two home games, while others just the one home game. The RFU have taken fixtures from the previous year into account so that county sides that only played one home game in that competition now get two games and vice versa. At the end of the group stage the top teams with the best record from each group (north and south) advance to the final held on 2 June 2019 at Twickenham Stadium. It is the top tier of county championship rugby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 69], "content_span": [70, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287778-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 1, Competition format\nPromotion into the division and relegation from it occurs every two seasons, with accumulated points taken into consideration. At the end of the 2017\u201318 season, East Midlands (north) and Surrey (south) were relegated due to pool results accumulated over the 2017 and 2018 competitions, although in East Midlands' case they actually took voluntary relegation due to difficulties in getting the top eligible clubs in their union to provide players for future competitions. They are replaced by Durham (north) and Hampshire (south), who were the highest ranked counties during the 2017 and 2018 Division 2 competitions, with Durham being the 2018 champions. This also means that there will be no promotion or relegation until the end of the 2020 competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 69], "content_span": [70, 825]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287778-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 1, Competition records, Team\n59 \u2013 3 Yorkshire at home to Northumberland on 4 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 76], "content_span": [77, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287778-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 1, Competition records, Team\n73 \u2013 7 Lancashire away to Durham County on 4 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 76], "content_span": [77, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287778-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 1, Competition records, Team\n73 \u2013 7 Lancashire away to Durham County on 4 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 76], "content_span": [77, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287778-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 1, Competition records, Attendances\nCheshire at home to Eastern Counties on 4 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 83], "content_span": [84, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287778-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 1, Competition records, Player\nLeo Fielding for Gloucestershire at home to Devon on 4 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287778-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 1, Competition records, Player\nLeo Fielding for Gloucestershire at home to Devon on 4 May 2019 Tom Grimes for Lancashire away to Durham County on 4 May 2019 Henry Roberts for Yorkshire at home to Northumberland on 4 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287778-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 1, Competition records, Player\nChris Johnson for Lancashire away to Durham County on 4 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287778-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 1, Competition records, Player\nLewis Minikin for Yorkshire away to Lancashire on 18 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287778-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 1, Competition records, Player\nChris Johnson for Lancashire at home to Yorkshire on 18 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287779-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 2\nThe 2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 2 was the 18th version of the competition that is part of the annual English rugby union County Championship organised 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 North or National League 2 South). The counties were divided into two regional sections with the winners of each meeting in the final held at Twickenham Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287779-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 2\nAt the end of the group stage, Leicestershire were dominant in Pool 1, winning all three games (albeit one which was a walkover), including an impressive win against a strong East Midlands side, while Surrey were equally impressive in topping Pool 2, also winning three out of three. In the final, Leicestershire finished as convincing winners with an emphatic 38 \u2013 13 victory over Surrey, in what was their second division title in three years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287779-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 2, Competition format\nThe competition format is two regional group stages divided into north and south with four teams in each group. This means that two teams in the pool had two home games, while the other two had just one. The RFU have taken fixtures from the previous year into account so that county sides that only played one home game in that competition now get two games and vice versa. At the end of the group stage the top teams with the best record from each group (north and south) advance to the final held on 2 June 2019 at Twickenham Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 69], "content_span": [70, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287779-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 2, Competition format\nPromotion and relegation occurs every two seasons, with accumulated points taken into consideration. At the end of the 2017\u201318 season, Durham (north) and Hampshire (south) were promoted to Division 1, replacing East Midlands (north) and Surrey (south) who dropped down into Division 2. Cumbria and North Midlands were relegated into Division 3, being replaced by promoted sides, Essex and Sussex. There will now be no promotion or relegation until the end of the 2020 competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 69], "content_span": [70, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287779-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 2, Competition records, Team\n47 \u2013 3 Sussex at home to Essex on 11 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 76], "content_span": [77, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287779-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 2, Competition records, Team\n78 \u2013 0 Leicestershire away to Warwickshire on 11 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 76], "content_span": [77, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287779-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 2, Competition records, Team\n78 \u2013 0 Leicestershire away to Warwickshire on 11 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 76], "content_span": [77, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287779-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 2, Competition records, Team\nEast Midlands at home to Warwickshire on 4 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 76], "content_span": [77, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287779-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 2, Competition records, Player\nJoe Wilson for Leicestershire away to Warwickshire on 11 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287779-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 2, Competition records, Player\nCarlie Carter for Somerset at home to Sussex on 18 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287779-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 2, Competition records, Player\nCharlie Reed for East Midlands at home to Warwickshire on 4 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287779-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 2, Competition records, Player\nDan O'Brien for Warwickshire away to East Midlands on 4 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287780-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 3\nThe Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 3 was the 15th version of the competition that is part of the annual English rugby union County Championship, organised by the Rugby Football Union (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 two regional pools (north/south) with the winners of each pool meeting in the final at Twickenham Stadium, London.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287780-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 3\nAt the end of the group stage, Cumbria won three out of three to stop Pool 1 ahead of Oxfordshire, who they defeated in the final game, while Dorset & Wilts made their second successive final by also winning all three of their games. In the Twickenham final it was Cumbria who emerged victorious, defeating Dorset & Wilts convincingly, 23-13, with tournament top scorer, Mark Ireland, kicking 13 of their points. For Cumbria it was their first Division 3 title in three attempts and first county championship silverware since 1997, while Dorset & Wilts failed to retain their title and make it a fourth win in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287780-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 3, Competition format\nThe competition format is two regional group stages divided into north and south with four teams in each group. This means that two teams in the pool had two home games, while the other two had just one. The RFU have taken fixtures from the previous year into account so that county sides that only played one home game in that competition now get two games and vice versa. The shield competition has increased from six to eight teams as two counties, Middlesex and Notts, Lincs & Derbyshire, have returned to the county championships after an absence of several years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 69], "content_span": [70, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287780-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 3, Competition format\nAt the end of the pool stage the top teams with the best record from each pool advance to the final held on 26 May 2019 which will once more be held back at Twickenham Stadium in London, having been held at the Athletic Ground in nearby Richmond the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 69], "content_span": [70, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287780-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 3, Competition format\nPromotion occurs every two seasons, with accumulated points taken into consideration. At the end of the 2017\u201318 season, Essex and Sussex were promoted to tier 2 with Cumbria and North Midlands dropping down to replace them in tier 3. There will now be no promotion until the end of the 2020 competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 69], "content_span": [70, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287780-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 3, Competition records, Team\n68 \u2013 0 Dorset & Wilts at home to Buckinghamshire on 11 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 76], "content_span": [77, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287780-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 3, Competition records, Team\n64 \u2013 21 Berkshire away to Buckinghamshire on 18 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 76], "content_span": [77, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287780-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 3, Competition records, Team\n68 \u2013 0 Dorset & Wilts at home to Buckinghamshire on 11 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 76], "content_span": [77, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287780-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 3, Competition records, Team\nDorset & Wilts at home to Buckinghamshire on 11 May 2019Berkshire away to Buckinghamshire on 18 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 76], "content_span": [77, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287780-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 3, Competition records, Team\nDorset & Wilts at home to Buckinghamshire on 11 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 76], "content_span": [77, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287780-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 3, Competition records, Team\nCumbria away to North Midlands on 4 May 2019North Midlands at home to Cumbria on 4 May 2019Cumbria at home to Oxfordshire on 18 May 2019Cumbria versus Dorset & Wilts on 8 June 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 76], "content_span": [77, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287780-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 3, Competition records, Player\nDan Thorne for Berkshire away to Buckinghamshire on 18 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287780-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 3, Competition records, Player\nDoug Billam for Notts, Lincs & Derbyshire at home to Cumbria on 11 May 2019 Connor Hayhow for Berkshire away to Buckinghamshire on 18 May 2019 Gabe Hill for Berkshire away to Buckinghamshire on 18 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287780-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 3, Competition records, Player\nSam Baker for Dorset & Wilts at home to Buckinghamshire on 11 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287780-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 3, Competition records, Player\nRhys Harrhy for North Midlands at home to Cumbria on 4 May 2019 Mark Ireland for Cumbria away to North Midlands on 4 May 2019 Mark Ireland for Cumbria at home to Oxfordshire on 18 May 2019 Mark Ireland for Cumbria versus Dorset & Wilts on 8 June 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287780-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 3, Competition records, Player\nGlen Weightman for Cumbria at home to Oxfordshire on 18 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287781-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Billboard Latin Music Awards\nThe 26th Billboard Latin Music Awards ceremony, presented by Billboard magazine, honored the best performing Latin recordings of 2018 and took place on April 25, 2019 at the Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas. Billboard presented awards in 59 categories. The ceremony was televised in the United States by Telemundo for the 21st time, and was the culmination of the Billboard Latin Music Conference. The awards recognize the most popular Latin performers, songs, albums, labels, songwriters and producers in the United States. Recipients were based on sales, radio airplay, online streaming and social data during a one-year period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287781-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Billboard Latin Music Awards\nVenezuelan actress, model and presenter Gaby Espino hosted the ceremony. Throughout the show, Espino was joined by Bad Bunny, Carlos Vives, Mark Tacher and Luis Fonsi as co-hosts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287781-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Billboard Latin Music Awards\nOzuna led the list of nominations for the 2019 Billboard Latin Music Awards, with 23 nods in 15 categories \u2014 a record number in the history of the awards. Ozuna was the biggest winner of the night, with eleven awards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287781-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Billboard Latin Music Awards, Winners and nominees\nThe nominees for the 26th Billboard Latin Music Awards were announced on February 12, 2019 J Balvin and Shakira led the nominations with 12 each. Ozuna leads the list of nominations with 23 nods in 15 categories \u2014 a record number in the history of the awards. He is followed in number of finalist slots by J Balvin and Nicky Jam, with 13 each, Bad Bunny with 12, and Daddy Yankee with 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287782-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Billboard Music Awards\nThe 2019 Billboard Music Awards ceremony was held at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada on May 1, 2019. It aired live on NBC and was hosted by Kelly Clarkson for a second year in a row. The list of nominees were announced on April 4, 2019. Mariah Carey received the Icon Award during the show.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287783-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 BinckBank Tour\nThe 2019 BinckBank Tour was a road cycling stage race that took place between 12 and 18 August 2019 in Belgium and the Netherlands. It was the 15th edition of the BinckBank Tour and the thirty-first event of the 2019 UCI World Tour. It was won by Laurens De Plus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287783-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 BinckBank Tour, Teams\nAll UCI WorldTeams were invited as the race is part of the UCI World Tour. The race organisation also gave out wildcards to five UCI Professional Continental teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287783-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 BinckBank Tour, Schedule\nThe race organisation announced the full schedule in June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287783-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 BinckBank Tour, Classification leadership table\nThere are four principal classifications in the race. The first of these is the general classification, calculated by adding up the time each rider took to ride each stage. Time bonuses are applied for winning stages (10, 6 and 4 seconds to the first three riders) and for the three \"golden kilometre\" sprints on each stage. At each of these sprints, the first three riders are given 3-, 2- and 1-second bonuses respectively. The rider with the lowest cumulative time is the winner of the general classification. The rider leading the classification wins a green jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287783-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 BinckBank Tour, Classification leadership table\nThere is also a points classification. On each road stage the riders are awarded points for finishing in the top 10 places, with other points awarded for intermediate sprints. The rider with the most accumulated points is the leader of the classification and wins the red jersey. The combativity classification is based solely on points won at the intermediate sprints; the leading rider wins the white jersey. The final classification is a team classification: on each stage the times of the best three riders on each team are added up. The team with the lowest cumulative time over the seven stages wins the team classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287784-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Birmingham Classic\nThe 2019 Birmingham Classic (also known as the Nature Valley Classic for sponsorship reasons) was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor grass courts. It was the 38th edition of the event, and a Premier tournament on the 2019 WTA Tour. It took place at the Edgbaston Priory Club in Birmingham, United Kingdom, on 17\u201323 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287784-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Birmingham Classic, Points and prize money, Prize money\n1Qualifiers prize money is also the Round of 32 prize money. *per team", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 60], "content_span": [61, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287784-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Birmingham Classic, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pair received a wildcard into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287784-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Birmingham Classic, Champions, Doubles\nHsieh Su-wei / Barbora Str\u00fdcov\u00e1 def. Anna-Lena Gr\u00f6nefeld / Demi Schuurs, 6\u20134, 6\u20137(4\u20137), [10\u20138]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287785-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Birmingham Classic \u2013 Doubles\nT\u00edmea Babos and Kristina Mladenovic were the defending champions, but chose not to participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287785-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Birmingham Classic \u2013 Doubles\nHsieh Su-wei and Barbora Str\u00fdcov\u00e1 won the title, defeating Anna-Lena Gr\u00f6nefeld and Demi Schuurs in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20137(4\u20137), [10\u20138].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287786-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Birmingham Classic \u2013 Singles\nPetra Kvitov\u00e1 was the two-time defending champion, but withdrew with an arm injury before the tournament began.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287786-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Birmingham Classic \u2013 Singles\nAshleigh Barty won the title without dropping a set, defeating Julia G\u00f6rges in the final 6\u20133, 7\u20135. As a result of winning the title, Barty attained the WTA no. 1 singles ranking for the first time, displacing Naomi Osaka at the No. 1 position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287786-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Birmingham Classic \u2013 Singles\nThe second round match between Karol\u00edna and Krist\u00fdna Pl\u00ed\u0161kov\u00e1 was the first match between identical twins in WTA Tour history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287787-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Birmingham Legion FC season\nThe 2019 Birmingham Legion FC season is the club's inaugural season and their first in the USL Championship, the second tier of American soccer. The season covers the period from the founding of the club to the start of the 2020 USL Championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287787-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Birmingham Legion FC season, Non-competitive, Preseason\nAlthough Legion FC officially announced just one preseason game, the matchup against Nashville SC on February 16, the club wound up playing a four-game preseason schedule ahead of its inaugural season. Two of the four games were against fellow USL Championship clubs, with one fixture against a team from Major League Soccer and one against a USL League One opponent. The first two preseason matches saw Birmingham as the road team, with Legion FC hosting the final two games at BBVA Field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287787-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Birmingham Legion FC season, Competitive, USL Championship, Match results\nThe league announced home openers for every club on December 14, 2018. Legion FC were initially set to play the inaugural match in club history on March 9, facing Bethlehem Steel FC at BBVA Field; the game would later be postponed to March 10 due to inclement weather.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 78], "content_span": [79, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287787-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Birmingham Legion FC season, Competitive, USL Championship, Match results\nThe full Birmingham schedule was released on December 19. Legion FC's inaugural season will consist of 34 matches, with home and away games against every Eastern Conference opponent. The club will be one of six new teams in the Eastern Conference: Hartford Athletic, Loudoun United, and Memphis 901 are also joining as expansion clubs, while Saint Louis FC and Swope Park Rangers move over from the Western Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 78], "content_span": [79, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287787-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Birmingham Legion FC season, Competitive, U.S. Open Cup\nAs a member of the USL Championship, Birmingham Legion will enter the tournament in the Second Round, to be played May 15, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287788-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Birthday Honours\nThe 2019 Queen's Birthday Honours are 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 for the United Kingdom and the Commonwealth realms were announced on 8 June, except the honours for New Zealand that were announced on 3 June and for Australia on 10 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287788-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Birthday Honours, United Kingdom\nBelow are the individuals appointed by Elizabeth II in her right as Queen of the United Kingdom with honours within her own gift, and with the advice of the Government for other honours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287788-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Birthday Honours, Australia\nThe 2019 Queen's Birthday Honours for Australia were announced on 10 June 2019 by the Governor-General, Sir Peter Cosgrove.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287788-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Birthday Honours, Canada\nThe 2019 Canada Day Honours were announced on 29 June 2019 by the Governor General of Canada, the Right Honourable Julie Payette.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287788-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Birthday Honours, New Zealand\nThe 2019 Queen's Birthday Honours for New Zealand were announced on 3 June 2019 by the Governor-General, Dame Patsy Reddy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287788-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Birthday Honours, Cook Islands\nBelow are the individuals appointed by Elizabeth II in her right as Queen of the Cook Islands, on the recommendationof the Ministers of the Cook Islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287788-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Birthday Honours, Barbados\nBelow are the individuals appointed by Elizabeth II in her right as Queen of Barbados, on advice of Her Majesty's Barbados Ministers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287788-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Birthday Honours, Bahamas\nBelow are the individuals appointed by Elizabeth II in her right as Queen of the Commonwealth of The Bahamas, on the advice ofHer Majesty's Bahamas Ministers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287788-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Birthday Honours, Grenada\nBelow are the individuals appointed by Elizabeth II in her right as Queen of Grenada, on the advice of Her Majesty's Grenada Ministers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287788-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Birthday Honours, Papua New Guinea\nBelow are the individuals appointed by Elizabeth II in her right as Queen of Papua New Guinea, on the advice of Her Majesty's Papua New Guinea Ministers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287788-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Birthday Honours, Solomon Islands\nBelow are the individuals appointed by Elizabeth II in her right as Queen of Solomon Islands, on the advice of Her Majesty's Solomon Island Ministers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287788-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Birthday Honours, Saint Lucia\nBelow are the individuals appointed by Elizabeth II in her right as Queen of Saint Lucia, on the advice of Her Majesty's Saint Lucia Ministers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287788-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Birthday Honours, Belize\nBelow are the individuals appointed by Elizabeth II in her right as Queen of Belize, on the advice of Her Majesty's Belize Ministers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287788-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Birthday Honours, Antigua and Barbuda\nBelow are the individuals appointed by Elizabeth II in her right as Queen of Antigua and Barbuda, on the advice of Her Majesty's Antigua and Barbuda Ministers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287788-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Birthday Honours, St Christopher and Nevis\nBelow are the individuals appointed by Elizabeth II in her right as Queen of Saint Christopher and Nevis, on the advice of Her Majesty's St Christopher and Nevis Ministers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287789-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Birthday Honours (New Zealand)\nThe 2019 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 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287789-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287790-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bislett Games\nThe 2019 Bislett Games was the 54th edition of the annual outdoor track and field meeting in Oslo, Norway. Held on 13 June at Bislett Stadium, it was the fifth leg of the 2019 IAAF Diamond League \u2013 the highest level international track and field circuit. 29 events were contested with 13 of them being point-scoring Diamond League disciplines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287790-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bislett Games\nLocal favorite Karsten Warholm, running in the men's 400 metres hurdles, won in a new European record time of 47.33 seconds, improving on the previous European record of 47.37 seconds that was set by St\u00e9phane Diagana for France in 1995. Warholm had already been the Norwegian record holder with a time 47.64 seconds. He also improved on the meeting record of 47.60 seconds, previously set by Abderrahman Samba for Qatar in the 2018 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287790-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bislett Games\nIn other men's events, Christian Coleman improved on the 100 metres world lead that he shared with fellow American Noah Lyles and Nigeria's Divine Oduduru by 0.01 seconds to 9.85 seconds. A Polish record and world lead was set by Marcin Lewandowski in the mile race, passing Kenyan Vincent Kibet on the home straight to win in 3:52.34, four hundredths ahead of Kibet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287790-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Bislett Games\nSelemon Barega also set a world lead and personal best in the 3000 metres race with a time of 7:32.17 seconds to win ahead of Joshua Cheptegei and Nicholas Kimeli, who finished second and third also with personal bests of 7:33.26 and 7:34.85 respectively. Henrik Ingebrigtsen finished fourth with a Norwegian record with a time of 7:36.85.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287790-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bislett Games\nSam Kendricks took his third Diamond League win for the season in the men's pole vault with a mark of 5.91 metres, with world leader Mondo Duplantis settling for fourth behind second place Piotr Lisek and third place Cole Walsh, with all three below Kendricks sharing a final mark of 5.81 metres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287790-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bislett Games\nIn the women's 3000 metres steeplechase, Norah Jeruto defeated world record holder Beatrice Chepkoech and 2017 world champion Emma Coburn, winning in a world leading and meeting record time of 9:03.71. Chepkoech, who hadn't lost since May 2018, finished second in 9:04.30 with Coburn in fourth behind Hyvin Jepkemoi. Though they did not finish in the top eight, national records were set by Maru\u0161a Mi\u0161ma\u0161 for Slovenia and Anna Emilie M\u00f8ller for Denmark, with times of 9:20.97 and 9:24.21 respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287790-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bislett Games\nTwo other world leads were set by the women in the high jump and the triple jump. Mariya Lasitskene leaped the first over two meters mark for the 2019 season in the high jump, winning her 20th Diamond League meet in her career at 2.01 metres. Caterine Ibarg\u00fcen took the world lead in the triple jump with a mark of 14.79 metres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287790-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bislett Games\nIn her Diamond League debut in the women's 400 metres hurdles, Sydney McLaughlin passed 2016 Olympic champion and world leader Dalilah Muhammad after the final hurdle to win in 54.16 seconds to Muhammad's 54.35 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287790-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bislett Games, Diamond League results\nAthletes competing in the Diamond League disciplines earned extra compensation and points which went towards qualifying for one of two Diamond League finals (either Z\u00fcrich or Brussels depending on the discipline). First place earned eight points, with each step down in place earning one less point than the previous, until no points are awarded in ninth place or lower.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287791-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Blaby District Council election\nThe 2019 Blaby District Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of the Blaby District Council in England. They were held on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287792-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Black-Eyed Susan Stakes\nThe 2019 Black-Eyed Susan Stakes was the 95th running of the Black-Eyed Susan Stakes. The race took place on May 17, 2019, and was televised in the United States on the NBC Sports Network. Ridden by jockey Javier Castellano, Point of Honor won the race by a half length over runner-up Ulele. Approximate post time on the Friday evening before the Preakness Stakes was 4:40 p.m. Eastern Time. The Maryland Jockey Club supplied a purse of $250,000 for the 95th running. The race was run over a fast track in a final time of 1:51.87. The Maryland Jockey Club reported a Black-Eyed Susan Stakes Day record attendance of 51,573. The attendance at Pimlico Race Course that day was a record crowd for Black-Eyed Susan Stakes Day and the fifth largest for a thoroughbred race in North America in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 822]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287793-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Blackburn with Darwen Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Blackburn with Darwen Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Blackburn with Darwen Borough Council in England. This was the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287793-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Blackburn with Darwen Borough Council election, Council Composition\nPrior to the election, the composition of the council was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 72], "content_span": [73, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287794-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Blackpool Council election\nThe 2019 Blackpool Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Blackpool Council in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287794-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Blackpool Council election\nBlackpool Council has been controlled by the Labour Party since 2011, who currently hold a majority of ten with 26 councillors. The Conservatives were defending twelve seats, and independent councillors were defending four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287794-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Blackpool Council election, Background\nBlackpool Council will hold local elections on 2 May 2019 along with councils across England as part of the 2019 local elections. The council elects its members in all-out elections, with all its councillors up for election every four years. Councillors defending their seats in this election were previously elected in 2015. In that election, 29 Labour councillors and 13 Conservative councillors were elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287794-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Blackpool Council election, Background\nThe Conservative Party held its seat in Warbreck ward following a March 2017 by-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287794-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Blackpool Council election, Background\nFollowing suspension by the Conservative Party, Colin Maycock left his party to sit as an independent councillor in November 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287794-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Blackpool Council election, Background\nFollow complaints about comments he made at an event in March 2018, Ian Coleman resigned as mayor, left the Labour group on the council, and said he wouldn't stand for re-election. His son and daughter-in-law, Labour councillors Gary Coleman and Debbie Coleman, left their party in June 2018 to sit as independents. Debbie Coleman had been deselected, and Gary Coleman had announced he wouldn't seek re-election. The three councillors formed a new group called the Independent Blackpool Residents Group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287794-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Blackpool Council election, Background\nTwo Conservative councillors including former council leader Peter Callow were deselected by their party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287794-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Blackpool Council election, Overall results\nAfter the previous election, the composition of the council was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287794-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Blackpool Council election, Overall results\nImmediately ahead of this election, the composition of the council was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287794-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Blackpool Council election, Overall results\nFollowing the latest election, the current composition of the council is:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287794-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Blackpool Council election, Ward results\nIncumbent councillors seeking re-election are marked with an asterisk (*). Two sitting councillors\u2014Debbie Coleman and Andrew Stansfield\u2014are seeking election in different wards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287795-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Blackwater Elite season\nThe 2019 Blackwater Elite season is the 5th 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-00287796-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Blancpain GT Series\nThe 2019 Blancpain GT Series was the last season under the title of the Blancpain GT Series. The season began on 14 April at Monza and ended on 29 September in Barcelona. The season features ten rounds, five Endurance Cup rounds and five World Challenge Europe rounds. The overall championship was won by Chinese Lamborghini factory team FFF Racing and their drivers, Andrea Caldarelli and Marco Mapelli.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287796-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Blancpain GT Series, Calendar\nAt the annual press conference during the 2018 24 Hours of Spa on 27 July, the St\u00e9phane Ratel Organisation announced the first draft of the 2019 calendar. The Endurance Cup round in Barcelona would become a World Challenge Europe round, replacing the round at the N\u00fcrburgring. Zolder was initially dropped from the schedule in favor of the Red Bull Ring, before the Austrian Grand Prix venue was replaced by Zandvoort in the final draft of the calendar released on 22 October. Barcelona and the N\u00fcrburgring were once again swapped around, making the latter circuit the host of a World Challenge Europe round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287796-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Blancpain GT Series, Championship standings\nChampionship points are awarded for the first ten positions in each race. The pole-sitter also receives one point and entries are required to complete 75% of the winning car's race distance in order to be classified and earn points. Individual drivers are required to participate for a minimum of 25 minutes in order to earn championship points in any race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287796-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Blancpain GT Series, Championship standings\nPoints were awarded after six hours, after twelve hours and at the finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287797-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Blancpain GT Series Endurance Cup\nThe 2019 GT Series Endurance Cup (known for sponsorship reasons as the 2019 Blancpain GT Series Endurance Cup)was the ninth season of the GT Series Endurance Cup. The season began on 14 April at Monza and ended on 29 September in Barcelona. The season featured five rounds, with each race lasting for a duration of three hours besides the 24 Hours of Spa and the 1000 km Paul Ricard events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287797-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Blancpain GT Series Endurance Cup, Calendar\nAt the annual press conference during the 2018 24 Hours of Spa on 27 July, the St\u00e9phane Ratel Organisation announced the first draft of the 2019 calendar. The World Challenge Europe round at the N\u00fcrburgring would become an Endurance Cup round, replacing the round in Barcelona, before the two tracks were swapped around again in the final draft of the calendar released on 22 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287797-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Blancpain GT Series Endurance Cup, Championship standings\nChampionship points are awarded for the first ten positions in each race. The pole-sitter also receives one point and entries are required to complete 75% of the winning car's race distance in order to be classified and earn points. Individual drivers are required to participate for a minimum of 25 minutes in order to earn championship points in any race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287797-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Blancpain GT Series Endurance Cup, Championship standings\nPoints are awarded after six hours, after twelve hours and at the finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287798-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Blancpain GT Sports Club\nThe 2019 Blancpain GT Sports Club was the fifth season of the SRO Motorsports Group's Blancpain GT Sports Club, an auto racing series for grand tourer cars. The Blancpain GT Sports Club is a championship for Bronze level drivers only, with two additional sub-classes based on age, Titanium and Iron, in order to separate the potential of using higher-level drivers who are often in amateur classes based on their age. The Titanium categorisation for drivers between the age of 50 and 59.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287798-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 Blancpain GT Sports Club\nThe Iron categorisation for drivers over the age of 60 (meaning all drivers who would be FIA Platinum or Gold but are 60 or older). The races were contested with GT3-spec, GTE-spec, GT2-spec and Trophy cars. The season began on 13 April at Monza and ended on 29 September at Barcelona-Catalunya.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287798-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Blancpain GT Sports Club, Calendar\nAt the annual press conference during the 2018 24 Hours of Spa on 27 July, the St\u00e9phane Ratel Organisation announced the first draft of the 2019 calendar, in which the N\u00fcrburgring initially made an appearance. It was dropped from the schedule and replaced by Misano, when the finalised calendar was announced on 28 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287798-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Blancpain GT Sports Club, Championship standings\nChampionship points were awarded for the first ten positions in each race. Entries were required to complete 75% of the winning car's race distance in order to be classified and earn points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287799-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Blancpain GT World Challenge America\nThe 2019 Blancpain GT World Challenge America was the thirtieth season of the United States Auto Club's Blancpain GT World Challenge America. It was the first under Blancpain sponsorship, taking over from the longtime Pirelli sponsorship, as part of the standardisation of names of St\u00e9phane Ratel Organisation-run GT3 sprint racing series globally, following the series' acquisition by the SRO Motorsports Group. It was also the last under Blancpain sponsorship, after they and the SRO concluded their partnership at the end of 2019. The season began on 2 March in Austin and ended on 20 October at Las Vegas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287799-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Blancpain GT World Challenge America, Calendar\nAt the annual press conference during the 2018 24 Hours of Spa on 27 July, the St\u00e9phane Ratel Organisation announced the first draft of the 2019 calendar. The date for the season opening weekend in Austin was confirmed on 15 August. The Grand Finale at Las Vegas was announced on 26 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287799-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Blancpain GT World Challenge America, Calendar\nIn previous years under the Pirelli World Challenge name, a race weekend consisted of one Qualifying session, one race on Saturday (in some cases on Friday) - of which the fastest laps set up the grid for the second race - and one race on Sunday. On 7 December 2018, changes to the format of race weekends were announced. In 2019 a race weekend consisted of two races scoring equal points and featuring separate Qualifying sessions for each race. In addition to a revised schedule as the Sprint-format was dropped and the SprintX-format - 90-minute races with two drivers per car and mandatory Pit stops with driver changes - remained, the FIA international points system was adopted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287799-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Blancpain GT World Challenge America, Championship standings\nChampionship points were awarded for the first ten positions in each 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 40 minutes in order to earn championship points in any race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 65], "content_span": [66, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287800-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Blancpain GT World Challenge Asia\nThe 2019 GT World Challenge Asia (known for sponsorship reasons as the 2019 Blancpain GT World Challenge Asia) was the third season of SRO Motorsports Group and Team Asia One GT Management's GT World Challenge Asia, an auto racing series for grand tourer cars in Asia. The races were contested with GT3-spec and GT4-spec cars. The season began on 6 April at Sepang and ended on 28 September at Shanghai. It was the first season of the unification of GT3 sprint series across the globe under the World Challenge name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287800-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Blancpain GT World Challenge Asia, Calendar\nAt the annual press conference during the 2018 24 Hours of Spa on 27 July, the St\u00e9phane Ratel Organisation announced the first draft of the 2019 calendar. Ningbo was replaced by Korea. The dates for the races at Shanghai were confirmed on 11 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287800-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Blancpain GT World Challenge Asia, Championship standings\nChampionship points are awarded for the first ten positions in each race. Entries are required to complete 75% of the winning car's race distance in order to be classified and earn points. Individual drivers are required to participate for a minimum of 25 minutes in order to earn championship points in any race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287800-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Blancpain GT World Challenge Asia, Championship standings, Teams' championship\nOnly the two best results of a team per race counted towards the Teams' championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 83], "content_span": [84, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287801-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Blancpain GT World Challenge Europe\nThe 2019 GT World Challenge Europe (known for sponsorship reasons as the 2019 Blancpain GT World Challenge Europe) was the seventh season of the GT World Challenge Europe following on from the demise of the SRO Motorsports Group's FIA GT1 World Championship (an auto racing series for grand tourer cars), the first with the sponsorship of Blancpain. The season began on 4 May at Brands Hatch and ended on 8 September at the Hungaroring. It was the first season of the unification of GT3 sprint series across the globe under the World Challenge name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287801-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Blancpain GT World Challenge Europe, Calendar\nAt the annual press conference during the 2018 24 Hours of Spa on 27 July, the St\u00e9phane Ratel Organisation announced the first draft of the 2019 calendar. Zolder was initially replaced by the Red Bull Ring, before Zandvoort was chosen to host a race weekend. The Endurance Cup round in Barcelona would become an World Challenge Europe round, replacing the round at the N\u00fcrburgring, before the two tracks were swapped around again in the final draft of the calendar released on 22 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287801-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Blancpain GT World Challenge Europe, Entry list\nA cap of 26 cars was placed in an attempt to reduce accidents on narrower tracks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287801-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Blancpain GT World Challenge Europe, Championship standings\nChampionship points are awarded for the first ten positions in each race. The pole-sitter also receives one point and entries are required to complete 75% of the winning car's race distance in order to be classified and earn points. Individual drivers are required to participate for a minimum of 25 minutes in order to earn championship points in any race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287802-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Blaublitz Akita season\n2019 Blaublitz Akita season. The annual club slogan was \"\u6607\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287802-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Blaublitz Akita 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-00287802-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Blaublitz Akita season, Gallery\nAkita Prefectural Central Park Football Stadium West Side Field in 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287802-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Blaublitz Akita season, Gallery\nAkita Prefectural Central Park Football Stadium East Side Field in 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287803-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois leadership election\nThe 2019 Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois leadership election was initiated by the resignation of party leader Martine Ouellet in June 2018. While originally scheduled to be held on February 24, 2019 on a one member, one vote basis, Yves-Fran\u00e7ois Blanchet, as the only candidate in the race following the nomination deadline of January 15, 2019, was officially acclaimed Leader of the Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois on January 17, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287803-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois leadership election, Background\nOuellet got 32% support from a confidence vote of party members. She resigned on June 11, 2018. Seven out of ten Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois caucus members left on February 28, 2018 and formed Qu\u00e9bec debout, which was announced on May 9, 2018. On September 17, 2018, the party's five MPs rejoined the Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois caucus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287803-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois leadership election, Background\nOn June 13, 2018, Mario Beaulieu, MP for La Pointe-de-l'\u00cele and president of the BQ since 2014, was appointed interim leader of the Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287804-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Blue Stars/FIFA Youth Cup\nThe 2019 Blue Stars/FIFA Youth Cup was the 81st edition of the Blue Stars/FIFA Youth Cup, an association football tournament organized by FIFA for clubs featuring players under the age of 21. It was held on Ascension Thursday, 30 May 2019 and 31 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287804-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Blue Stars/FIFA Youth Cup\nThis year's women's tournament was the second edition after the 2018 edition which Young Boys women team won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287804-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Blue Stars/FIFA Youth Cup\nAll matches were played in two 20-minute halves (except for the final which was 25 minutes), only players between 18\u201320 years were eligible to participate. However, each team may have up to five players under the age of 18 feature. All matches were played at the Buchlern sports stadium in Zurich.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287805-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bluegreen Vacations 500\nThe 2019 Bluegreen Vacations 500 was a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race that was held on November 10, 2019, at ISM Raceway in Avondale, Arizona. Contested over 312 laps on the one mile (1.6\u00a0km) oval, it was the 35th race of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season, ninth race of the Playoffs, and final race of the Round of 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287805-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bluegreen Vacations 500, Report, Background\nISM Raceway \u2013 also known as PIR \u2013 is a one-mile, low-banked tri-oval race track located in Avondale, Arizona. It is named after the nearby metropolitan area of Phoenix. The motorsport track opened in 1964 and currently hosts two NASCAR race weekends annually. PIR has also hosted the IndyCar Series, CART, USAC and the Rolex Sports Car Series. The raceway is currently owned and operated by International Speedway Corporation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287805-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bluegreen Vacations 500, Report, Background\nThe raceway was originally constructed with a 2.5\u00a0mi (4.0\u00a0km) road course that ran both inside and outside of the main tri-oval. In 1991 the track was reconfigured with the current 1.51\u00a0mi (2.43\u00a0km) interior layout. PIR has an estimated grandstand seating capacity of around 67,000. Lights were installed around the track in 2004 following the addition of a second annual NASCAR race weekend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287805-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bluegreen Vacations 500, Report, Background\nISM Raceway is home to two annual NASCAR race weekends, one of 13 facilities on the NASCAR schedule to host more than one race weekend a year. The track is both the first and last stop in the western United States, as well as the fourth and penultimate track on the schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287805-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bluegreen Vacations 500, Practice, First practice\nKyle Busch was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 26.170 seconds and a speed of 137.562\u00a0mph (221.385\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287805-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bluegreen Vacations 500, Practice, Final practice\nChase Elliott was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 25.969 seconds and a speed of 138.627\u00a0mph (223.099\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287805-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bluegreen Vacations 500, Qualifying\nKyle Busch scored the pole for the race with a time of 25.693 and a speed of 140.116\u00a0mph (225.495\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287805-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bluegreen Vacations 500, Media, Television\nNBC Sports will cover the race on the television side. Rick Allen, two\u2013time Phoenix winner Jeff Burton, Steve Letarte and three-time Phoenix winner Dale Earnhardt Jr. had the call in the booth for the race. Dave Burns, Parker Kligerman, Marty Snider and Kelli Stavast reported from pit lane during the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287805-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Bluegreen Vacations 500, Media, Radio\nMRN covered the radio call for the race, which was simulcast on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio. Alex Hayden, Jeff Striegle, and Rusty Wallace called the action from the broadcast booth when the field raced down the front straightaway. Dan Hubbard called the action from turns 1 & 2 and Kyle Rickey called the action from turns 3 & 4. Winston Kelley, Steve Post, Kim Coon, and Dillon Welch called the action on MRN from pit lane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287806-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Boar's Head Resort Women's Open\nThe 2019 Boar's Head Resort Women's Open was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the eighteenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Charlottesville, Virginia, United States between 22 and 28 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287806-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Boar's Head Resort Women's Open, 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-00287807-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Boar's Head Resort Women's Open \u2013 Doubles\nSophie Chang and Alexandra Mueller were the defending champions, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287807-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Boar's Head Resort Women's Open \u2013 Doubles\nAsia Muhammad and Taylor Townsend won the title, defeating Lucie Hradeck\u00e1 and Katarzyna Kawa in the final, 4\u20136, 7\u20135, [10\u20133].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287808-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Boar's Head Resort Women's Open \u2013 Singles\nMariana Duque Mari\u00f1o was the defending champion, but she had retired from professional tennis earlier in the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287808-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Boar's Head Resort Women's Open \u2013 Singles\nWhitney Osuigwe won the title, defeating Madison Brengle in the final, 6\u20134, 1\u20136, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287809-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Boca Raton Bowl\nThe 2019 Boca Raton Bowl was a college football bowl game that was played on December 21, 2019, with kickoff at 3:30\u00a0p.m. EST on ABC. It was the 6th edition of the Boca Raton Bowl, and was one of the 2019\u201320 bowl games concluding the 2019 FBS football season. Sponsored by the Cheribundi beverage company, the game was officially known as the Cheribundi Boca Raton Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287809-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Boca Raton Bowl, Teams\nThis was the first time that Florida Atlantic and SMU had ever played each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287809-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Boca Raton Bowl, Teams, SMU Mustangs\nSMU finished their regular season with a 10\u20132 record (6\u20132 in conference). The Mustangs finished in third place in the West Division of the American Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287809-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Boca Raton Bowl, Teams, Florida Atlantic Owls\nFlorida Atlantic finished their regular season atop the East Division of Conference USA (C-USA), then defeated UAB in the C-USA Championship Game, 49\u20136. The Owls entered the bowl with a 10\u20133 record (7\u20131 in conference).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287810-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress crash\nOn October 2, 2019, a Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress owned by the Collings Foundation crashed at Bradley International Airport, Windsor Locks, Connecticut, United States. Seven of the thirteen people on board were killed, and the other six, as well as one person on the ground, were injured. The aircraft was destroyed by fire, with only the tail and a portion of one wing remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287810-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress crash, Aircraft\nThe aircraft was a 74-year-old Douglas-built Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress, military serial number 44-83575 (variant B-17G-85-DL) with civilian registration N93012. The aircraft was painted to represent a different B-17G, the 91st Bomb Group's Nine-O-Nine, with military serial number 42-31909 (variant B-17G-30-BO), which had been mothballed shortly after World War II at Kingman, Arizona and eventually scrapped. During its original military career, the aircraft operated as an Air-Sea Rescue aircraft until 1952, when it was reassigned to the Air Force Special Weapons Command for use as a specimen in weapons-effects testing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287810-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress crash, Aircraft\nIn this role, it was subjected to three nuclear explosions as part of Operation Tumbler\u2013Snapper. The aircraft was purchased as scrap in 1965 for a price of US$269 (equivalent to $2,209 in 2020); being in relatively good condition, it was restored to airworthy condition for use as a water bomber over the course of ten years, entering civilian service in 1977.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287810-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress crash, Aircraft\nFollowing its operator's liquidation in 1985, the aircraft was acquired by the Collings Foundation in January 1986, restored to its 1945 configuration, and N93012 was flying as Nine-O-Nine by August 1986. While operated by the Collings Foundation, it was involved in two prior accidents: on August 23, 1987, it overran the runway on landing at Beaver County Airport near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and on July 9, 1995, it was damaged on landing at Karl Stefan Memorial Airport in Norfolk, Nebraska, as the result of a landing gear malfunction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287810-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress crash, Aircraft\nThe October 2019 crash and resulting fire destroyed most of the aircraft. Only the left wing and part of the tail remained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287810-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress crash, Accident\nThe \"living history\" flight was delayed 40 minutes because of difficulty starting one of the four engines. The pilot shut down the other three engines and used a spray can of Nitrogen to \"blow out the moisture\" in the engine that balked. The aircraft took off from Bradley International Airport in Windsor Locks, Connecticut, at 09:48 local time (13:48 UTC). It carried three crew and ten passengers. A witness reported that an engine was sputtering and smoking. At 09:50, two minutes after takeoff, the pilot radioed that there was a problem with engine number 4. The control tower diverted other traffic to allow for an emergency landing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287810-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress crash, Accident\nThe aircraft came in low, touched down 1,000 feet (300\u00a0m) short of the runway, clipped the instrument landing system (ILS) antenna array, veered to the right off the runway across a grassy area and taxiway, then crashed into a de-icing facility at 09:54; the aircraft then burst into flames.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287810-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress crash, Accident\nSeven occupants were killed, and the remaining six were injured severely enough to be taken to the hospital, including one who was airlifted. Among the dead were the pilot and co-pilot, aged 75 and 71 respectively. One person on the ground was injured (see below). The airport was closed for 3+1\u20442 hours after the crash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287810-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress crash, Rescue\nOne of the passengers on the aircraft, a Connecticut Air National Guardsman, managed to open an escape hatch after the crash, despite having a broken arm and collarbone. An airport employee, who had been working in the building into which the aircraft had crashed, ran to the wreckage to help pull injured passengers from the burning aircraft. The employee suffered severe burns on his hands and arms and was taken by ambulance to the hospital. Construction worker Robert Bullock was working nearby at the airport when he heard the explosion and felt the heat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287810-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress crash, Rescue\nHearing cries for help, the former firefighter scaled a barbed wire fence and began helping victims. He applied a tourniquet to one patient and then moved on to others until emergency medical services arrived. Bullock appeared to be uninjured during his heroic rescue. Multiple planes on the ramp contacted the control tower immediately after the accident helping to accelerate rescue efforts. Air traffic controllers contacted airport fire and rescue personnel as well as Life Flight. The airport was closed to allow unrestricted access to the accident scene and began diverting incoming flights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287810-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress crash, Investigation\nThe National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) opened an investigation into the accident. A \"go team\" was dispatched to Bradley International Airport, headed by Jennifer Homendy. The NTSB removed some wreckage to their laboratory for further analysis, completing operations at the scene by October 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287810-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress crash, Investigation\nThe NTSB issued its preliminary report on October 15, 2019. Fuel recovered from the tanks for the No. 3 engine appeared free from water and debris contamination and was consistent with 100LL avgas in smell and appearance. The fuel truck that had refueled the aircraft with 160 US gallons (130\u00a0imp\u00a0gal; 610\u00a0l) of 100LL prior to the flight was quarantined, but the NTSB found no anomalies in its fuel supply or equipment, and no engine trouble was reported by pilots of other aircraft refueled from the same truck before or after the accident aircraft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287810-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress crash, Investigation\nDuring the flight, the accident pilot had reported that No. 4 engine had a \"rough mag\" referring to a magneto on that engine. The NTSB reported that the propeller blades of No. 3 engine were near the feathered position and the propeller blades of No. 4 engine were in the feathered position. The aircraft had landed with the flaps in the retracted position and the landing gear extended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287810-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress crash, Investigation\nIn March 2020, the Federal Aviation Administration revoked the Collings Foundation's permission to carry passengers, citing numerous safety concerns and noting that allowing passengers \"would adversely affect safety.\u201d Investigators found substantial shortcomings in the foundation's safety practices: key personnel were ignorant of the organization's maintenance program and \"basic information concerning operations.\" The left magneto for the No. 4 engine had been \"jury [rigged]\" with safety wire and was inoperative, while the right magneto produced a weak or no spark in four of the nine cylinders it was supposed to fire. All spark plugs on both the No. 3 and No. 4 engines had been gapped improperly and needed cleaning, and evidence of detonation was found. The inspection of engine No. 3 also revealed problems with the cylinders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 891]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287810-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress crash, Investigation\nAn updated NTSB docket summary containing investigation details, testimonies, media, and medical reports was released on December 9, 2020. The final NTSB report was released on April 13, 2021, and cited pilot error as the likely cause\u2014noting in particular, \"The B-17 could likely have overflown the approach lights and landed on the runway had the pilot kept the landing gear retracted and accelerated to 120 mph until it was evident the airplane would reach the runway. \"\u2014with inadequate maintenance as a contributing factor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287810-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress crash, Legal action\nIn June 2020, the families of three of the victims who were killed and five who were injured filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the Collings Foundation. The lawsuit claimed that the Collings Foundation failed to take necessary safety precautions for passenger flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 52], "content_span": [53, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287811-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bogot\u00e1 car bombing\nOn 17 January 2019, a vehicle was driven into the General Santander National Police Academy in Bogot\u00e1, Colombia. The truck forced its way into the facility, hit a wall and detonated, killing 22 people (including the perpetrator) and injuring 68 others. Suicide attacks are unusual in Colombia. The car contained about 80 kilograms (180\u00a0lb) of pentolite. It was the deadliest attack on the Colombian capital since the 2003 El Nogal Club bombing and the first terrorist attack on the capital since the 2017 Centro Andino bombing. The National Liberation Army (ELN) accepted responsibility for the attack and justified it as a response to the bombings made by the Colombian government during the unilateral ceasefire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287811-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bogot\u00e1 car bombing, Background, Colombian conflict\nThe Colombian conflict started in 1964, although systematic violence in the country can be dated since the end of the 19th century (Thousand Days' War). The National Liberation Army (ELN) is one of the most prominent participants of the ongoing conflict. For decades, residents of Bogot\u00e1 lived in fear of being a victim of a bombing by leftist rebels or Pablo Escobar's Medell\u00edn drug cartel. But as Colombia's conflict has wound down, and the nation's largest rebel group, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) disarmed under a 2016 peace deal, security has improved and attacks have become less frequent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 55], "content_span": [56, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287811-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bogot\u00e1 car bombing, Background, Colombian conflict\nSporadic attacks have affected the city since the peace deal was initiated. The most prominent was an explosion at the upmarket Andino shopping mall in June 2017 which killed three people, including a French woman, and injured another 11. Police later arrested several suspected members of a far-left urban guerrilla group called the People Revolutionary's Movement for the bombing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 55], "content_span": [56, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287811-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bogot\u00e1 car bombing, Background, Peace dialogue\nThe 2016 peace deal between the FARC and Colombian government resulted in the ELN gaining strength in the region. The Colombian government has attempted to establish peace dialogue with the ELN since 2017, though ELN groups have rejected conditions placed by the government, such as the end of criminal actions including violent attacks and kidnappings. The ELN, however, persisted that the Colombian government should continue dialogue without making any demands towards the group. Between 2017 and up until the attack, Colombian officials stated that the ELN had participated in at least 400 terrorist attacks in the nation since dialogue began, including the shoot down of a civilian helicopter and the kidnapping of its occupants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287811-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bogot\u00e1 car bombing, Background, ELN in Venezuela\nAccording to InSight Crime, the ELN and FARC dissidents allegedly met together in Venezuela to form a potential alliance in October 2018. Sources based in the Arauca department in Colombia provided the information, with reports that the groups would participate in illicit activity together. It was also alleged that former FARC commander Iv\u00e1n M\u00e1rquez participated in the talks with the ELN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287811-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bogot\u00e1 car bombing, Background, ELN in Venezuela\nIn November 2018, InSight Crime also reported that the ELN was present in over twelve Venezuelan states, spanning from the Colombia-Venezuela border in the west across Venezuela and into Brazil and Guyana to the east. Insight Crime states that Venezuelan president Nicol\u00e1s Maduro was tolerant of the ELN, explaining that \"ELN\u2019s expansion in Venezuela has been marked by the Maduro administration\u2019s inaction and even encouragement towards the group\", with reports from Venezuelan NGO Fundaci\u00f3n Redes that the Venezuelan military had possibly armed ELN members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287811-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bogot\u00e1 car bombing, Events, Planning\nAttorney General N\u00e9stor Humberto Mart\u00ednez identified the perpetrator as Jos\u00e9 Aldemar Rojas Rodr\u00edguez, known as \"Mocho Kiko\" because of his missing hand due to a previous explosion, a 57-year-old from the northern department of Boyac\u00e1. Rojas is alleged to have been involved with the ELN for three decades and served as an intelligence chief for a branch of the group. Since 2011, Rojas is alleged to have been teaching guerrilla militants in Venezuela how to construct explosives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287811-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bogot\u00e1 car bombing, Events, Planning\nRicardo Carvajal, who was previously investigated for drug trafficking in 2012 but was acquitted of the charges, allegedly contracted Rojas for the bombing due to his experience. The bombing, according to Colombian authorities, had been planned for more than ten months. In May 2018, Colombian records show that Rojas purchased a 1993 Nissan Patrol from Mauricio Mosquera, who was previously charged with terrorism and rebellion. On 27 July 2018, the vehicle was officially inspected in Arauca, Arauca, a city found on the border of Colombia and Venezuela where the ELN mainly controls territory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287811-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Bogot\u00e1 car bombing, Events, Attack\nThe authorities stated that on 17 January 2019 at 9:30\u00a0am, Rojas drove his grey 1993 Nissan Patrol loaded with 80 kilograms (180\u00a0lb) of pentolite to the campus of the General Santander National Police Academy and dropped off a passenger at a nearby bus stop. Rojas then reportedly drove his truck down a side street used for deliveries to make his way onto the campus. When a detection dog signaled explosives on the vehicle, the driver forced his vehicle through a security checkpoint and struck security guards. The explosives in the truck were then detonated near the women's dormitories at the police academy as students were leaving a promotion ceremony. It is unknown if the driver detonated the explosives or if it was possibly the individual he left near the bus stop who remotely triggered the device.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 850]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287811-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Bogot\u00e1 car bombing, Events, Attack\nIn the immediate aftermath, the authorities began investigating Rojas's possible connections to either the National Liberation Army (ELN) guerrilla movement, the Clan \u00dasuga organized crime gang, or FARC dissidents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287811-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Bogot\u00e1 car bombing, Events, Initial investigations\nOn 18 January, Defence Minister Guillermo Botero identified Rojas Rodr\u00edguez as a long-time member of the ELN, within which he served as an explosives expert. Investigators were able to identify Rojas with security camera footage and fingerprints from his remaining hand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 55], "content_span": [56, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287811-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Bogot\u00e1 car bombing, Events, Initial investigations\nA second individual, who Attorney General Mart\u00ednez said \"had participated in the attack\", was arrested in Bogot\u00e1 at 2:30\u00a0am on the day following the attack. The individual was identified as Ricardo Carvajal after he allegedly confessed to the bombings over a telephone call investigators intercepted. He was found with a \"combatant's manual\" and numerous coveralls. Carvajal Salgar denied that he was involved in the attack and his family stated that the coveralls were used for the jobs he worked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 55], "content_span": [56, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287811-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Bogot\u00e1 car bombing, Events, Initial investigations\nAccording to Colombian authorities, there are on-going operations throughout Bogot\u00e1 and the department of Arauca to capture other individuals suspected of having been involved in the attack, and that the ELN was responsible despite the organization not taking claim for the attack as it has done in the past.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 55], "content_span": [56, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287811-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Bogot\u00e1 car bombing, Events, Peace dialogue ends\nPresident Iv\u00e1n Duque M\u00e1rquez announced on 18 January that peace dialogue between the Government of Colombia and the ELN was officially suspended. Duque also demanded that Cuba extradite the ten ELN leaders that found refuge on the island nation during peace talks and the reactivation of their Interpol Red Notices, and he criticized Venezuela for providing refuge for the ELN on the Colombia-Venezuela border. In response to the request, Cuba's Foreign Minister announced that Cuba would abide by the protocols of ongoing negotiations between both parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 52], "content_span": [53, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287811-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Bogot\u00e1 car bombing, Events, Peace dialogue ends\nThe President of the National Constituent Assembly of Venezuela, Diosdado Cabello, denied any Venezuelan involvement in the attacks on 18 January. On 21 January, Colombian Foreign Minister Carlos Holmes Trujillo called for a \"concrete response\" from the government of Nicol\u00e1s Maduro in Venezuela on whether the ELN was present in Venezuela, explaining that prior to the attack, the Colombian government asked the Venezuelan government on the potential presence of ELN groups in Venezuela without a response. Holmes Trujillo also stated that the Maduro government had taken \"evasive positions\" when speaking about the ELN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 52], "content_span": [53, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287811-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Bogot\u00e1 car bombing, Events, Claim of responsibility\nELN accepted the responsibility for the attack, saying the bombing was carried out in retaliation for the Colombian government not honoring the ceasefire by carrying out attacks on its camps. It justified that government and the cadres of its security forces had therefore become legitimate targets and called for resuming peace dialogue. High Peace Commissioner Miguel Ceballos spoke out against its members being sheltered anymore now that it had claimed responsibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287811-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Bogot\u00e1 car bombing, International reactions\nA foreign national, identified as a female cadet from Ecuador, was killed in the attack, while three nationals from Panama, one from the United States and another also from Ecuador were wounded. Their respective governments have expressed their condemnation for the attack and assistance to their citizens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287811-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Bogot\u00e1 car bombing, International reactions\nArgentina, Brazil, Peru, Venezuela, and the Organization of American States also condemned the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287812-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohemian F.C. season\nThe 2019 League of Ireland season was Bohemian Football Club's 129th year in their history and their 35th consecutive season in the League of Ireland Premier Division since it became the top tier of Irish football. Bohemians participated in various domestic cups this season, including the FAI Cup, EA Sports Cup and the Leinster Senior Cup. Bohemians also competed in the Scottish Challenge Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287812-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohemian F.C. season\nOn 19 December 2018 the fixtures were announced with Bohs down to play newly promoted Finn Harps on the opening day of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287812-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohemian F.C. season\nBohemians successfully sold out their home ticket allocation for the first eight matches of the season with average crowds at Dalymount Park up exponentially on seasons prior. They would go on to sell out the Jodi stand five more times in Dalymount, including a capacity crowd for a mid-season friendly against Chelsea, bringing the total number of sell outs up to fourteen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287812-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohemian F.C. season\nBohemians secured European football for the first time in seven years on the penultimate day of the season and would finish in third place. The club advanced to the semi final stage of all three domestic cup competitions. Bohs long-serving captain Derek Pender retired on the last day of the season against Sligo Rovers and marked the occasion with a goal from the penalty spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287812-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohemian F.C. season, Club, Kits\nThe club\u2019s traditional red and black stripes were provided by O'Neills this season. The deal with previous kit manufacturer Hummel ended after the 2018 campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287812-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohemian F.C. season, Club, Kits\nBohemians away jersey for the 2019 campaign sparked international media attention, as it paid tribute to one of the most famous musicians to have played at Dalymount Park - Bob Marley. Due to image rights issues, Bohemians were forced to remove the singer\u2019s face from the jersey. The redesign showed a clenched fist as \u201ca symbol of solidarity and support used to express unity, strength and resistance\u201d.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287812-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohemian F.C. season, Statistics, Appearances and goals\nNumber in brackets represents appearances of which were substituted ON.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287812-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohemian F.C. season, Statistics, Captains\nLast updated: 26 October 2019Source: 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections\nBohol local elections was held last May 13, 2019 as part of the 2019 Philippine general election. Registered voters elected leaders for local positions: a city or town mayor, vice mayor and town councilors, as well as three to four members of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan, the vice-governor, governor and three representatives for the three districts of Bohol.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections\nThere is a 12.51% increase to the number of registered voters for the whole province by the end of COMELEC's nationwide registration deadline last September 28, 2018. This is equivalent to 99,914 new registered voters from 798,768 last 2016 election to a total of 898,682 for this election, becoming the 19th vote-rich province of the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections\nAt the end of the filing of certificates of candidacy last October 17, 2018, 46 hopefuls have filed their certificates of candidacy (COC) for 15 provincial elective positions. Based on the official list of provincial Commission on Elections, 5 aspirants ran for governor, 2 for vice-governors, 31 for provincial board members, and 8 for congressmen in three districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections\nOn May 16, 2019, Arthur C. Yap was proclaimed as the new governor of the province by the provincial board of canvassers edging a narrow margin from former cabinet secretary Leoncio Evasco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, Provincial Election, Governor\nEdgar Chatto is the incumbent but term-limited. He decided to regain his former post as representative of 1st District under Padayaon Bohol banner and was reinstated. Incumbent 3rd district congressman Arthur C. Yap is the official nominee of the ruling coalition. His major contender is the former Maribojoc mayor and Cabinet Secretary Leoncio Evasco Jr..", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, Provincial Election, Vice-Governor\nDionisio D. Balite is the incumbent but chose to run for representative of the 3rd district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 62], "content_span": [63, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, Congressional Election Candidates, 1st District, Congressman\nLast termer Rene Relampagos is the incumbent. Incumbent governor Edgar Chatto is the ruling party's official nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 88], "content_span": [89, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, Congressional Election Candidates, 3rd District, Congressman\nLast termer Arthur Yap is the incumbent and term-limited. Instead, he ran for governor and won. Judge Carlos Fernando was the ruling party's official nominee. Former neophyte board member Kristine Alexie Besas-Tutor became the first congresswoman ever elected in Bohol's 3rd District and the second congresswoman elected in the province after Venice Borja-Agana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 88], "content_span": [89, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election\nAll municipalities of Bohol and Tagbilaran City elected mayor, vice-mayor and councilors this election. The mayor and vice mayor with the highest number of votes win the seat; they are voted separately, therefore, they may be of different parties when elected. Below is the list of Mayoral and vice-Mayoral candidates of each city and municipalities in three districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, First District, Tagbilaran City\nJohn Geesnell Yap and Jose Antonio Veloso are the incumbent mayor and vice-mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 88], "content_span": [89, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, First District, Alburquerque\nElpren Charles Tungol and Cayetano Doria Jr. are the incumbents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 85], "content_span": [86, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, First District, Antequera\nIncumbents Jose Mario Pahang and Simon Leo Jadulco just exchanged on the positions they ran with.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 82], "content_span": [83, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, First District, Balilihan\nIncumbent Pureza Veloso-Chatto and Adonis Roy Olalo are the incumbents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 82], "content_span": [83, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, First District, Calape\nBrothers Nelson Yu and Sulpicio Yu Jr. are the incumbents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 79], "content_span": [80, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, First District, Catigbian\nIncumbent mayor Virgilio Lurot did not run for reelection, paving a way for former mayor Roberto Salinas to regain his post. Meanwhile, vice-mayor Necita Napi\u00f1as-Digaum vied for reelection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 82], "content_span": [83, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, First District, Corella\nIncumbent Jose Nicanor Tocmo is the incumbent mayor but term-limited. He ran for Provincial board member instead. Incumbent vice-mayor Ma. Asuncion Banal-Daquio vied for reelection unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, First District, Dauis\nMarietta Tocmo-Sumaylo and Luciano Bongalos are the incumbent mayor and vice-mayor, all ran for reelection and won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 78], "content_span": [79, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, First District, Loon\nElvi Peter Relampagos and Lloyd Peter Lopez are the incumbents and were reelected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 77], "content_span": [78, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, First District, Sikatuna\nIncumbents Jose Ellorimo Jr. and Julian Manigo are term-limited. The ruling party nominated new candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, First District, Tubigon\nWilliam Richard Jao is the incumbent mayor. However incumbent vice-mayor Virgilio Fortich is term limited, have already served for 3 consecutive terms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Second District, Bien Unido\nElected vice-mayor Rene Borenaga replaced mayor Gisela Bendong-Boniel after the latter's tragic death. Borenaga ran for full-term as mayor and won. Incumbent vice-mayor Ramon Arcenal also got his full-term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 84], "content_span": [85, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Second District, Buenavista\nMayor Ronald Lowell Tirol died while in office. His successor incumbent vice-mayor Dave Duallo ran for full term as mayor and won. Ma. Christine Cabarrubias-Torregosa ran for vice-mayor unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 84], "content_span": [85, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Second District, Clarin\nAllen Ray Piezas is the incumbent but term limited. He decided to run for vice-mayor instead and won. Meanwhile, incumbent vice-mayor Velden Aparicio is term-limited.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Second District, Dagohoy\nSofronio Apat and Ma. Shirley Abulag-Amodia are the incumbents and won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Second District, Danao\nNatividad Gonzaga is the incumbent. Former mayor and current incumbent vice-mayor Jose Cepedoza ran again for town's chief executive and won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 79], "content_span": [80, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Second District, Getafe\nCasey Shaun Camacho and Eduardo Torremocha are the incumbents and were reelected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Second District, Inabanga\nJosephine Socorro Ching-Jumamoy and Rodrigo Jumamoy are the incumbents and won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 82], "content_span": [83, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Second District, Pres. Carlos P. Garcia\nFernando Estavilla and Renato Sente are the incumbents. Estavilla was reelected but not Sente.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 96], "content_span": [97, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Second District, Sagbayan\nRicardo Suarez is the incumbent but term-limited. The ruling party nominated new candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 82], "content_span": [83, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Second District, San Isidro\nIncumbent mayor Jacinto Naraga is term-limited. Meanwhile, incumbent vice-mayor Filemon Mantabute ran for reelection and won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 84], "content_span": [85, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Second District, San Miguel\nIncumbent mayor Nunila Mendez-Pinat is not seeking for reelection. On the other hand, incumbent vice-mayor Faustino Bulaga ran for reelection and won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 84], "content_span": [85, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Second District, Talibon\nIncumbent Restituto Auxtero seek for election as Sangguniang Panlalawigan member. Incumbent vice-mayor Cleto Garcia ran for mayor of the town. Janette Aurestila-Garcia became the first female chief executive of the town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Second District, Trinidad\nIncumbents Judith del Rosario-Cajes and Manuel Garcia ran for reelection and won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 82], "content_span": [83, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Second District, Ubay\nIncumbents Constantino Reyes and Nelson Uy seek for reelection. Reyes was reelected but not Uy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 78], "content_span": [79, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Third District, Alicia\nIncumbents Marnilou Salas-Ayuban and Victoriano Torres III just exchanged positions they ran with and won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 79], "content_span": [80, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Third District, Anda\nIncumbent Angelina Blanco-Simacio and Nilo Bersabal vied for reelection. Bersabal was reelected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 77], "content_span": [78, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Third District, Batuan\nIncumbents Antonino Jumawid and Precious Joy Dumagan-Baguio ran for reelection and won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 79], "content_span": [80, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Third District, Bilar\nNorman Palacio is the incumbent but term limited. He decided to run as vice-mayor instead. Meanwhile, incumbent vice-mayor Arnold Calamba is term-limited.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 78], "content_span": [79, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Third District, Candijay\nChristopher Tutor is the incumbent and won. Unfortunately, former vice-mayor Jesse Sales died while in office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Third District, Carmen\nIncumbents Ricardo Francisco Toribio and Romeo Bigay Jr. are seek for reelection on their respective posts and won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 79], "content_span": [80, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Third District, Dimiao\nDanilo Guivencan is the incumbent but lost. Incumbent vice-mayor Aniceta Calihat-Ucang didn't run for reelection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 79], "content_span": [80, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Third District, Duero\nIncumbent mayor Conrada Castino-Amparo vied against vice-mayor Emma Fe Peligro-Bajade for mayorship of the town. Amparo won and reelected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 78], "content_span": [79, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Third District, Garcia Hernandez\nIncumbents mayor Tita Baja-Gallentes and vice-mayor Lito Dajalos were at one-on-one battle for town chief executive. Gallentes was reelected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 89], "content_span": [90, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Third District, Guindulman\nAlbino Balo is the incumbent mayor. Incumbent vice-mayor Ma.Fe A\u00f1ana-Piezas seek to regain her old position as mayor and was elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 83], "content_span": [84, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Third District, Jagna\nIncumbents mayor Fortunato Abrenilla and vice-mayor Bonifacio Virtudes Jr. just exchanged positions they are ran to. However, Abrenilla died while in office. His brother, Theodore Abrenilla was named as a replacement candidate and won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 78], "content_span": [79, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Third District, Lila\nIncumbent mayor Regina Cahiles-Salazar and vice-mayor Arturo Piollo II just exchanged positions and won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 77], "content_span": [78, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Third District, Loay\nIncumbent mayor Rochelle Brigitte Imboy-Abutazil moved down to run for vice-mayor while his mother and former mayor Rosemarie Lim-Imboy ran on her place. Both failed on their candidancies, ending 12-year dominance of Imboys since 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 77], "content_span": [78, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Third District, Loboc\nHelen Calipusan-Alaba is the incumbent but didn't seek third and final term. Former mayor Leon Calipusan is the ruling party's official nominee and was elected. Meanwhile, incumbent vice-mayor Pablito Sumampong vied for reelection and won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 78], "content_span": [79, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0048-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Third District, Mabini\nThis was a one-on-one battle between incumbent mayor Juanito Jayoma and vice-mayor Jesha Cuyacot-Toque for the top post of the town. Jayoma was reelected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 79], "content_span": [80, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0049-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Third District, Pilar\nIncumbents Necitas Tabaranza-Cubrado and Eugenio Datahan II seek for reelection and won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 78], "content_span": [79, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0050-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Third District, Sevilla\nIncumbents Juliet Bucag-Dano and Richard Bucag both ran for reelection and won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0051-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Third District, Sierra Bullones\nIncumbent mayor Simplicio Maestrado and vice-mayor Rainfredo Buslon vied against each other for town's top executive post. Maestrado was reelected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 88], "content_span": [89, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287813-0052-0000", "contents": "2019 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Election, Third District, Valencia\nIncumbent mayor Maria Katrina Lim seek for reelection unopposed. Her opponent, Jesus Balistoy Jr. withdrew his candidacy last November 29, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287814-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Boise State Broncos football team\nThe 2019 Boise State Broncos football team represented Boise State University during the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. This was the Broncos' 83rd season overall, sixth under head coach Bryan Harsin, ninth as a member of the Mountain West Conference and seventh within the Mountain Division. The Broncos played their home games at Albertsons Stadium in Boise, Idaho. They finished the season 12\u20132, 8\u20130 in Mountain West play to be champions of the Mountain Division. This was the first time since joining the Mountain West in 2011 that they went undefeated in conference play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287814-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 Boise State Broncos football team\nThey represented the Mountain Division in the Mountain West Championship Game where they defeated Hawaii to become Mountain West champions for the fourth time. This was Boise State's 20th overall conference championship since they first joined a conference in 1970. They were invited to the Las Vegas Bowl where they lost to Washington. Boise State finished ranked in the final polls for the 13th time since 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287814-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Boise State Broncos football team, Previous season\nThe Broncos finished the 2018 season 10\u20133, 7\u20131 in Mountain West play to finish in a tie for first place in the Mountain Division with Utah State. Due to their head-to-head win over Utah State, they were champions of the Mountain Division. They represented the Mountain Division in the Mountain West Championship Game where they lost to West Division champion Fresno State. They were invited to the First Responder Bowl against Boston College. With 5:08 left in the 1st quarter, the bowl game was delayed and ultimately canceled and ruled a no contest. They finished the year ranked in the top 25 in both polls for the 12th time since 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287814-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Boise State Broncos football team, Preseason, Mountain West media days\nThe Mountain West media days will be held in July 2019 at the Cosmopolitan on the Las Vegas Strip.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 75], "content_span": [76, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287814-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Boise State Broncos football team, Preseason, Media poll\nThe preseason poll was released at the Mountain West media days on July 23, 2019. The Broncos were predicted to finish in first place in the MW Mountain Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287814-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Boise State Broncos football team, Preseason, Media poll, Preseason All-Mountain West Team\nThe Preseason All-Mountain West Team will be chosen following the Mountain West media days in July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 95], "content_span": [96, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287814-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Boise State Broncos football team, Game summaries, at Florida State\nSenior kicker Eric Sachse was named the Mountain West Special Teams Co-Player of the Week (shared with Nevada kicker Brandon Talton) after going 5\u20135 on field goals (36, 36, 41, 26, 30) and 3\u20133 on PAT's to score half of Boise State's points. Sachse was also named a Lou Groza Award Star of the Week for week one. Freshman quarterback Hank Bachmeier was named the as one of the Manning Award's Stars of the Week after going 30\u201351 for 407, 1 TD and 1 INT in his first career start. Junior running back Robert Mahone was named to the Earl Campbell Tyler Rose Award Honorable Mention list after gaining 142 yards and 2 TDs on 24 carries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287815-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Boise mayoral election\nThe 2019 Boise mayoral election was held on November 5, 2019, to determine the mayor of Boise, Idaho. The election was officially nonpartisan. The election was won by Boise City Council the president Lauren McLean, who defeated the incumbent mayor Dave Bieter in a runoff election held on December 3, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287815-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Boise mayoral election, Background\nIn the 2019 Boise mayoral election, incumbent mayor Dave Bieter sought a fifth term. He had won re-election four years earlier with a 40-point lead over his closest challenger, Judy Peavey-Derr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287815-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Boise mayoral election, Background\nDuring his fourth term, Bieter faced controversy, in particular opposition to his plan to build a $100 million library. Former mayor and future candidate H. Brent Coles, at a city council meeting, argued the money should be spent instead on police and fire stations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287815-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Boise mayoral election, Background\nAda County Clerk, Phil McGrane, refused to place the issue on the 2019 ballot, and stated that he would change his mind only in the event of a challenge in court. Bieter declined to mount a legal challenge, in part due to the fact that initial cost estimates were far lower than subsequent estimates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287815-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Boise mayoral election, Background\nIn a statement, Bieter wrote that he \"believe(s) a new Main Library is vital to the future of our city and (he) will remain dedicated to making sure we have one [...] However, with little time before ballots must be printed, and to avoid further confusion among residents, a court action simply isn\u2019t viable at this time.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287815-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Boise mayoral election, General election\nAs Boise's mayoral elections are nonpartisan, neither party nominated a candidate. A total of seven candidates appeared on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287815-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Boise mayoral election, General election\nThe race featured two candidates who had been mayors of Boise: the incumbent mayor, and 1993-2003 mayor Brent Coles. Incumbent mayor Bieter emphasized that his goals for a fifth term included ensuring access to affordable housing, making Boise carbon-neutral by 2035, and building the new library, while \"making sure the project is completed within the budget set by the city\". Coles was appointed mayor in 1993 then twice won re-election, but was removed from office in 2003 when he, as well as his chief of staff and the city human resources director, pleaded guilty in 2003 to misusing public funds. Coles campaigned on his record as mayor, including the consolidation of the city's transport system and his expansion of the police department. He also vowed to \"re-prioritize public safety and neighborhoods and curb the growth in city spending\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 895]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287815-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Boise mayoral election, General election\nCity Council President Lauren McLean campaigned on affordable housing, improved transit conditions, and transparency in local government. She received the endorsement of Planned Parenthood. McLean argued that discouraging sprawl is the most effective way to address the influx of newcomers to the city. She also refused to accept funds from corporations for her campaign, although she did receive donations from business people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287815-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Boise mayoral election, General election\nCandidate Rebecca Arnold, the three-times-elected President of the Ada County Highway District, described herself as a \"fiscal conservative\" and was openly critical of Mayor Bieter, arguing that he had displayed an \"inability to work with other agencies, such as ACHD and the legislature\". She also argued property tax increases were excessive, and that the city was spending money on a number of \"vanity projects\". Wayne Richey, an auto mechanic, campaigned on a platform of discouraging Californians from migrating to Boise. He argued that they were changing the culture of the city, expected too many \"amenities\", and drove up housing prices. He mounted his campaign at the behest of former Idaho Senator Larry Craig, his neighbor. Cortney Nielsen argued that the city's wages were too low, and also promised to \"advocate for a statewide emissions test to clean our air\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 920]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287815-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Boise mayoral election, General election\nBieter and McLean each raised more than $200,000 for their campaigns. Boise State Public Radio described the race as much closer than usual, and quoted College of Idaho professor Jasper LiCalzi, who argued that the candidates defied the typical categorization of \"a typical Republican and a typical Democrat and a few fringe people\", positing that there were \"three significant campaigns\" vying for votes, which made a runoff election, in the event that no candidate yields more than 50 percent of the vote, more likely than usual.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287815-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Boise mayoral election, General election\nBieter and McLean advanced to a runoff mayoral election, the first in Boise since 1965, when Jay S. Amyx defeated Eugene W. Shellworth. In 2006, the city abolished runoff elections for City Council seats, but maintained runoff elections for mayoral races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287815-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Boise mayoral election, General election\nMcLean won the runoff by a landslide, defeating Bieter by over 31%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287816-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bojangles' Southern 500\nThe 2019 Bojangles' Southern 500 presented by John Deere, the 70th running of the event was a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race held on September 1-2, 2019, at Darlington Raceway in Darlington, South Carolina. Contested over 367 laps on the 1.366-mile (2.198\u00a0km) egg-shaped oval, it was the 25th race of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287816-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bojangles' Southern 500, Report, Background\nDarlington Raceway is a race track built for NASCAR racing located near Darlington, South Carolina. It is nicknamed \"The Lady in Black\" and \"The Track Too Tough to Tame\" by many NASCAR fans and drivers and advertised as \"A NASCAR Tradition.\" It is of a unique, somewhat egg-shaped design, an oval with the ends of very different configurations, a condition which supposedly arose from the proximity of one end of the track to a minnow pond the owner refused to relocate. This situation makes it very challenging for the crews to set up their cars' handling in a way that is effective at both ends.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287816-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bojangles' Southern 500, Practice, First practice\nKurt Busch was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 28.714 seconds and a speed of 171.261\u00a0mph (275.618\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287816-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bojangles' Southern 500, Practice, Final practice\nRicky Stenhouse Jr. was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 29.125 seconds and a speed of 168.845\u00a0mph (271.730\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287816-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bojangles' Southern 500, Qualifying\nWilliam Byron scored the pole for the race with a time of 28.510 and a speed of 172.487\u00a0mph (277.591\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287816-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bojangles' Southern 500, Media, Television\nNBC Sports covered the race on the television side. Rick Allen, two\u2013time Darlington winner Jeff Burton, Steve Letarte and Dale Earnhardt Jr. were in the booth to call the race. Dave Burns, Marty Snider and Kelli Stavast reported from pit lane during the race. Earnhardt Jr., Dale Jarrett and Kyle Petty also called a portion of the race as part of the Throwback Weekend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287816-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bojangles' Southern 500, Media, Radio\nThe Motor Racing Network (MRN) called the race for radio, which was simulcast on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio. Alex Hayden, Jeff Striegle, and Rusty Wallace called the action for MRN when the field raced down the front stretch. Dave Moody called the race from a Billboard outside of turn 1 when the field raced through turns 1 and 2, and Mike Bagley called the race atop of the Darlington Raceway Club outside of turn 3 when the field raced through turns 3 and 4. Winston Kelley, Steve Post, and Kim Coon called the action on pit road for MRN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287817-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bol Open\nThe 2019 Bol Open was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the fourteenth edition of the tournament and part of the 2019 WTA 125K series. It took place in Bol, Croatia, from 4 to 9 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287817-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bol Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received a wildcard into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 57], "content_span": [58, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287817-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bol Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players used protected ranking to enter the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 57], "content_span": [58, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287817-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bol Open, Doubles entrants, Seeds\nThe following team received a wildcard into the doubles draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 38], "content_span": [39, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287818-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bol Open \u2013 Doubles\nMariana Duque Mari\u00f1o and Wang Yafan were the defending champions, but Duque Mari\u00f1o has since retired from professional tennis and Wang chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287818-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bol Open \u2013 Doubles\nTimea Bacsinszky and Mandy Minella won the title, defeating Cornelia Lister and Renata Vor\u00e1\u010dov\u00e1 in the final, 0\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20133), [10\u20134].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287819-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bol Open \u2013 Singles\nTamara Zidan\u0161ek was the defending champion, and successfully defended her title, defeating Sara Sorribes Tormo in the final, 7\u20135, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287820-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolaang Mongondow mine collapse\nOn 26 February 2019, an illegal gold mine collapsed in Bolaang Mongondow Regency, North Sulawesi, Indonesia. At least 29 people were killed and dozens more were trapped due to the collapse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287820-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolaang Mongondow mine collapse, Location\nThe mine collapse occurred at an illegal communal gold mine in Bakan village, Lolayan subdistrict, Bolaang Mongondow, North Sulawesi. The land where the mine is located is part of a concession belonging to J Resources Asia Pacific, which operates a site in the area. According to the company's management, the illegal mine had only been relatively crowded in the past few months leading to the event. Previously, in June 2018, the same mine had experienced a smaller landslide due to heavy rainfall, which killed 5 miners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287820-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolaang Mongondow mine collapse, Collapse\nThe collapse occurred around 20:30 WITA (12:30 GMT) on February 26, while tens of locals were actively mining at the site. According to accounts from rescued miners, the collapse happened due to a fracturing of the support structures of the mineshafts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287820-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolaang Mongondow mine collapse, Collapse\nThe number of people trapped in the mineshafts according to eyewitnesses varied, reaching up to more than 100 miners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287820-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolaang Mongondow mine collapse, Rescue\nAround 140 personnel from multiple agencies were involved in the evacuation process. Early in the evacuation process, rescuers reported hearing voices of the miners who were still trapped in the shafts, with pictures of hands reaching out through small gaps in the rocks. Due to fears of triggering further landslides, in addition to the difficult and unstable terrain, rescuers initially opted to not utilize available heavy equipment and delivered drinking water to allow the miners to survive longer. Later, on 1 March, the manual rescue was halted in favor of preparing the use of heavier equipment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287820-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolaang Mongondow mine collapse, Rescue\nAs of 1 March, 8 miners had been confirmed dead and 20 had been evacuated alive from the collapsed mine. The injured survivors were brought to a hospital at Kotamobagu for treatment. On 2 March, there were believed to be over 30 miners still trapped inside the mines. By 3 March, the death toll was updated to 9 dead, with the still-to-be-found victims' families barred from the mine location to ease the evacuation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287820-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolaang Mongondow mine collapse, Rescue\nFurther searches found 20 bodies of miners buried within the site.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287820-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolaang Mongondow mine collapse, Reactions\nThe provincial government of North Sulawesi remarked that the local governments had made plans to certify the communal mines to ensure compliance with safety regulations, and that the collapsed mine would not be closed, but turned into a legal mine. The Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources responded by sending inspectors to the mine, who were also to aid in the evacuations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287821-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian Primera Divisi\u00f3n season\nThe 2019 Bolivian Primera Divisi\u00f3n season, known as the 2019 Copa Tigo season for sponsorship reasons, was the 42nd season of Bolivia's top-flight football league and the second season under Divisi\u00f3n de F\u00fatbol Profesional management. San Jos\u00e9 were the defending champions, having won the 2018 Clausura tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287821-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian Primera Divisi\u00f3n season\nIn the Torneo Apertura, Bol\u00edvar won their twenty-ninth league title and twenty-third in the professional era, with two matches to spare following a 2\u20131 victory over Oriente Petrolero on 16 May, while in the Torneo Clausura, Jorge Wilstermann won their fifteenth league title and eighth in the professional era following a 3\u20131 win against Oriente Petrolero on the last matchday of the tournament on 28 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287821-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian Primera Divisi\u00f3n season, Format\nThe season was split into a Torneo Apertura and a Torneo Clausura, played in the first and second half of the year, respectively. Both were played under a double round-robin system, with all teams playing each other twice for a total of 26 matches. The teams placed first at the end of each tournament were the champions and earned qualification for the Copa Libertadores group stage. The remaining two Copa Libertadores berths as well as the four Copa Sudamericana ones were awarded through the aggregate table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287821-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian Primera Divisi\u00f3n season, Teams\nThe number of teams for the 2019 season remained the same as the 2018 season. Universitario were relegated to the Copa Sim\u00f3n Bol\u00edvar after finishing in last place of the aggregate table in the previous season, and were replaced by Always Ready, the 2018 Copa Sim\u00f3n Bol\u00edvar champions, who made their return to the top tier after 28 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287821-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian Primera Divisi\u00f3n season, Relegation/promotion playoff\nThe relegation playoff would have been played by Sport Boys, as the team placed 13th in the 2019 Divisi\u00f3n Profesional aggregate table, and Real Santa Cruz, who were the 2019 Copa Sim\u00f3n Bol\u00edvar runners-up, with the winners playing in the top flight for the 2020 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 67], "content_span": [68, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287821-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian Primera Divisi\u00f3n season, Relegation/promotion playoff\nHowever, considering Sport Boys's disaffiliation from the league as well as Destroyers's relegation as the bottom-placed team in the aggregate table, and with the late conclusion of the 2019 season which made infeasible playing the playoff in early January 2020, the FBF decided on 5 January 2020 that Real Santa Cruz would be promoted for the next season as Copa Sim\u00f3n Bol\u00edvar runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 67], "content_span": [68, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election\nGeneral elections were held in Bolivia on 20 October 2019. Voters elected all 130 members of the Chamber of Deputies and 36 senators and cast ballots for a joint slate of president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election\nThe Bolivian constitution allows the President and Vice-President to put themselves forward for re-election only once, limiting the number of terms to two, and the elections took place after in 2016 a referendum to amend the constitution was rejected, but that the Supreme Court of Justice ruled that all public offices would have no term limits despite what was established in the constitution and allowing Morales to run for a fourth term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election\nDisputes over the transparency and legitimacy of the elections prompted weeks of widespread protests in Bolivia after incumbent President Evo Morales was declared the winner with 47.08% of the vote; because this was greater than ten-point margin over his nearest competitor, Carlos Mesa, this was enough for Morales to be announced as a winner without a run-off second-round vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election\nThe Organization of American States (OAS) conducted an audit claiming \"clear manipulation\" and significant irregularities, releasing a full report afterwards. Observers from the European Union released a report with similar findings and conclusions as the OAS. Several reports, from and commissioned by the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR), a think tank, alleged that OAS conclusions about irregularities in the late vote count were incorrect. A later report by CEPR alleged that OAS's findings of electoral irregularities were primarily due to an OAS programming error during analysis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election\nFollowing protests, as well as calls for a second-round election from several foreign countries, Morales, who had pledged to respect the OAS audit, agreed on 10 November to hold new elections, at a date to be determined. On the same day, Morales and his vice president, \u00c1lvaro Garc\u00eda Linera, was forced to resign from office after losing support from the police and military. Furthermore, the President of the Senate and the President of the Chamber of Deputies \u2013 both party allies of Morales, also resigned on the same day, thus exhausting the constitutional line of succession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election\nAs a result, the second vice president of the Senate, Jeanine \u00c1\u00f1ez of the opposition Democrat Social Movement, assumed the interim presidency of Bolivia on 12 November 2019. Due to the annulment of the 2019 elections, MAS retained their supermajority of more than two-thirds in both chambers in opposition to the government, although they would lose this in the 2020 elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election\nThe 2019 elections were to be rerun in May 2020, but were postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. On 22 June 2020, \u00c1\u00f1ez approved a law passed by both the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate to set a date for the election for 6 September 2020 and the elected authorities in place by mid to late November 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Background\nArticle 168 of the 2009 constitution allows the President and Vice-President to put themselves forward for re-election only once, limiting the number of terms to two. The governing party, the Movement Towards Socialism\u2013Political Instrument for the Sovereignty of the Peoples (MAS\u2013IPSP) sponsored an effort to amend this article. The referendum was authorized by a joint session of the Plurinational Legislative Assembly on 26 September 2015, by a vote of 112 to 41.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Background\nThe referendum was held on 21 February 2016 and the proposed amendment was narrowly rejected by 51.3% to 48.7%. A successful 'yes' vote would have allowed President Evo Morales and Vice President \u00c1lvaro Garc\u00eda Linera to run for another term in office in 2019. Morales had already been elected three times. The first time, in 2006, is not counted as it was before the two term limit was introduced by the 2009 constitution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Background\nDespite the referendum result, the Supreme Court of Justice \u2013 referring to Art. 23 of the American Convention on Human Rights \u2013 ruled a little over one year later in December 2017 that all public offices would have no term limits despite what was established in the constitution, thus allowing Morales to run for a fourth term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Electoral system\nThe President of Bolivia is elected using a modified two-round system; a candidate wins outright if they receive more than 50% of the vote, or between 40% and 50% of the vote and are at least 10 percentage points ahead of their closest rival. If neither condition is met, a run-off election is held between the two top candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Primary elections\nPrimary elections were held on 27 January 2019. Mar\u00eda Eugenia Choque, President of the Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE), stated that international observers had worked with the TSE to monitor the primary election results. She also stated that they had been given an \"information seminar\" about all the logistic, legal and communications issues related to the primary and had even visited polling stations to make assessments and recommendations. By the time [sic] the primary was held, however, only one candidate had been registered for each of the nine parties or alliances participating in the general elections. Morales received 36.54% of the total primary votes. Revolutionary Nationalist Movement candidate Virginio Lema was his closest challenger, receiving 7.10% of the total primary votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 848]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Presidential candidates\nOn 27 January 2019, the TSE announced that nine candidates would contest the presidential elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results\nTwo independent vote count processes were used for the elections. The first one, Transmisi\u00f3n de Resultados Electorales Preliminares (TREP), is a quick count process based on photographs that is meant to provide a preliminary result on election day. The second process is the traditional physical count that takes more time to complete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results\nWith a preliminary vote count of 45% for incumbent president Evo Morales and 38% for his leading challenger, former president Carlos Mesa, after 83% of votes were counted, neither of the conditions for a first-round win appeared likely to be met. A second-round runoff vote between those two candidates would therefore be held on 15 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results\nHowever, no further updates to the preliminary results were made after 19:40 hours local time on election day, which caused consternation among opposition politicians and election monitors deployed by the Organization of American States (OAS); Mesa described the suspension as \"extremely serious\" and spoke of manipulation; the OAS requested an explanation for the pause in the publication of the vote tally. But while the vote tally was not being publicized, election staff were still observed counting votes overnight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results\nAfter the publication of the count resumed, the OAS said it observed a \"drastic and hard-to-explain change in the trend\", and recommended a runoff election due to what the OAS viewed as manipulation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results\nBolivia\u2019s Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE), stated that updates to the preliminary count had been halted because the official results were starting to be released. The TSE also stated the vote had taken place normally and with relatively few incidents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results\nOn 24 October 2019, Morales officially declared outright victory following a counting process which gave him 46.83% of the vote against Mesa's 36.7%, with only few votes remaining to be counted. Though the process was deemed controversial, Morales stated that he was still open to a second round runoff if the process later determined that he did not receive the required 10 percentage point victory margin needed in order to avoid a runoff. C\u00f3mputo Electoral concluded its counting that very same day, with final results showing Morales with 47.07% of the vote and Mesa with 36.51%. This gave Morales a victory margin of more than 10 percentage points and thus prevented a second round runoff. This was the first election since his first win in which Morales obtained less than 50% of the vote. On the morning of 25 October, the election results were made official.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 906]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results\nSome ballots, accounting for 0.01% of the electorate, were voided in the department of Beni. A redo session was scheduled for those affected on 3 November 2019, but the electoral commission said that those votes would not change the outcome of the presidential vote. On 25 October 2019 the TSE cancelled the redo session after neither MAS nor 'Bolivia Dice No' protested the inclusion of the annulled ballots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Controversy\nThe pause in results transmission for 24 hours, which took Morales from a tight race with Mesa to an outright win, was challenged by people in Bolivia and other countries, who questioned the legitimacy of the results. Protesters and opposition politicians called for a second round to be held despite Morales' lead, as did the governments of Brazil, Argentina, Colombia, the United States, and the European Union. Support for the results of the election came from the governments of Mexico, Nicaragua, Venezuela, Cuba, Palestine, the Non-Aligned Movement and the new President-elect of Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Controversy\nThe day after the election the vice-president of the TSE Antonio Costas resigned, citing his disagreement with the decision to stop transmitting results. The president of the Santa Cruz Electoral Tribunal Sandra Kettels also resigned on 30 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Controversy\nAfter an updated vote tally was announced on Friday 25 October, including previously annulled ballots in Beni, the United Nations announced that it supported an audit of the process and results, to be carried out by the OAS. Responding to concerns about vote tampering and violent protests, Morales asked the Organization of American States (OAS) to conduct an audit of the vote count. Morales said he would call for a second-round runoff vote with Mesa if the OAS audit found evidence of fraud.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Controversy\nOn 27 October, Morales declared that a coup d'\u00e9tat was in the making against his government, saying that political rivals were planning to stage a coup the following week. On 6 November, the opposition published a report stating there had been electoral fraud, including cases where MAS allegedly obtained more votes than the number of registered voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Results of OAS audit and resignation\nOn 10 November, the Organization of American States Electoral Observation Mission in Bolivia published a preliminary report of the audit conducted during the elections. The report found significant irregularities overseen by the Electoral Commission, including widespread data manipulation and altered and forged records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0022-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Results of OAS audit and resignation\nadding that it was statistically unlikely that Morales had secured the 10-percentage-point margin of victory needed to win outright, saying that election should be annulled after it had found \"clear manipulations\" of the voting system that called into question Morales' win and that \"The manipulations to the computer systems are of such magnitude that they must be deeply investigated by the Bolivian State to get to the bottom of and assign responsibility in this serious case. The OAS recommended new elections and appointment of a new elections commission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Results of OAS audit and resignation\nWithin hours, Morales announced that fresh elections would take place. By late afternoon of that day, Morales and his vice president, \u00c1lvaro Garc\u00eda Linera, resigned from office after losing support from the police, the military, and former political allies. Adriana Salvatierra Arriaza, the president of the Bolivian Senate, was next in the line of succession, but she too resigned from office on 10 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Analyses of the election, Prior to Morales's resignation\nOn 5 November, Professor Walter R. Mebane at the University of Michigan used his own \"eforensics\" model to detect and predict the level of fraud that occurred during the election. He estimated that there were between 20,450 and 24,664 fraudulent votes which were subdivided into votes that were abstentions (no votes) that were then transferred to MAS and votes that were initially for other parties but later changed to MAS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 97], "content_span": [98, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0024-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Analyses of the election, Prior to Morales's resignation\nWith this level of fraud, he initially determined that it would not have been enough to change the results of the elections (Morales would have had a margin of 10.16-10.27%, depending on assumptions) although on 13 November Mebane said that feedback from colleagues led him to believe that \"best formula\" for the model led to a new reallocation which indicated that Morales would have had a lead of 9.9% over Mesa, requiring a runoff election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 97], "content_span": [98, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Analyses of the election, Prior to Morales's resignation\nOn 8 November 2019, Ethical Hacking, the tech security company hired by the TSE (under Morales) to audit the elections, stated that there were multiple irregularities and violations of procedure and that \"our function as an auditor security company is to declare everything that was found, and much of what was found supports the conclusion that the electoral process be declared null and void\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 97], "content_span": [98, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0025-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Analyses of the election, Prior to Morales's resignation\nIn their official report, one source for the OAS, they stated \"We cannot attest to the integrity of the electoral results because the entire process is null and void due to the number of alterations to the TREP source code, the number of accesses and manual modifications with the maximum privileges to the databases being created during the electoral process and the inconsistencies in the software that arose in the TREP and Computo.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 97], "content_span": [98, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Analyses of the election, Prior to Morales's resignation\nOn 12 November, the OAS's preliminary conclusions were contradicted by a separate analysis by the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR), a left-wing policy think-tank based in Washington. The CEPR report said the OAS \"provided no evidence to support these statements suggesting that the quick count could be wrong\" and postulated that the irregularities they perceived were instead merely the result of normal geographic voting patterns, noting that \"later-reporting areas are often politically and demographically different from earlier ones\". The CEPR report argued that due to Morales' voter base being in more rural regions, the later-arriving results from peripheral areas were more likely to be in his favor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 97], "content_span": [98, 821]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Analyses of the election, OAS and EU full reports and responses\nOn 5 December, the full 95-page OAS report was released along with 500 pages of corroborating details as appendices. The audit involved the work of 36 specialists and auditors of 18 nationalities including electoral lawyers, statisticians, computer experts, specialists in documents, calligraphy, chain of custody and electoral organization.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 104], "content_span": [105, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0027-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Analyses of the election, OAS and EU full reports and responses\nThe findings included that an outside user who controlled a Linux AMI appliance with \"root privileges\" \u2014 conferring the ability to alter results \u2014 accessed the official vote-counting server during the counting and that in a sample of 4,692 returns from polling stations around the country, 226 showed multiple signatures by the same person for different voting booths, a violation of electoral law. On those returns, 91 per cent of votes went to MAS, approximately double the rate recorded elsewhere. The identity of this user was later claimed to be Sergio Mart\u00ednez, who subsequently fled the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 104], "content_span": [105, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Analyses of the election, OAS and EU full reports and responses\nOn 21 December, the Technical Mission of Electoral Experts sent by the European Union published a 67-page report made similar observations and conclusions to that of the OAS. They noted that \"there were minutes with an unusually high number of null votes, blank votes and a hundred percent participation of voters in a series of polling stations\" and highlighted the general failure of the TSE to declare these irregularities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 104], "content_span": [105, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Analyses of the election, OAS and EU full reports and responses\nOn 27 February 2020, a further CEPR statistical analysis was published via the Washington Post. The work was carried out by Jack Williams and John Curiel, independent contractors for CEPR. The researchers stated that \"there is not any statistical evidence of fraud that we can find \u2014 the trends in the preliminary count, the lack of any big jump in support for Morales after the halt, and the size of Morales\u2019s margin all appear legitimate. All in all, the OAS's statistical analysis and conclusions would appear deeply flawed\" and that \"it is highly likely that Morales surpassed the 10-percentage-point margin in the first round\" as originally presented.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 104], "content_span": [105, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Analyses of the election, OAS and EU full reports and responses\nWilliams and Curiel's work was originally implied to be a study undertaken by MIT. After the Washington Post article, Bolivian government officials wrote to MIT about the report. The MIT Associate Provost for International Activities responded stating \"this study was conducted independently of MIT... it should be referred to as a CEPR study... we do not endorse or otherwise offer an opinion on the findings\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 104], "content_span": [105, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0030-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Analyses of the election, OAS and EU full reports and responses\nBolivian newspaper, P\u00e1gina Siete, notes that one of the authors of the report, Jack Williams, had previously signed a letter to the US Congress to oppose the \"military coup\" in Bolivia and which supported the previous CEPR study. The OAS reiterated their criticisms of the original CEPR report and issued a statement to say that \"the mentioned article contains multiple falsehoods, inaccuracies and omissions.\" Bolivian Minister for Foreign Affairs Karen Longaric called the study \"lacking in scientific and academic value\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 104], "content_span": [105, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0030-0002", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Analyses of the election, OAS and EU full reports and responses\nIt has also been noted, by political scientist and electoral analyst Rodrigo Salazar Elena, that, except for a few details, the two linked CEPR studies are replicas of the same analysis and that lack of statistical knowledge led commentators to be guided by the prestige of MIT and Washington Post and take the conclusions of the CEPR for granted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 104], "content_span": [105, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Analyses of the election, OAS and EU full reports and responses\nOn 10 March 2020, Irfan Nooruddin, Professor in the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University and author of Elections in Hard Times: Building Stronger Democracies in the 21st Century, wrote a Washington Post article to defend the analysis he performed as the head of the OAS statistical study included in their audit. In it, he criticises the 27 February CEPR report by questioning the plausibility of their extrapolation, as well as their assumption that there was no discontinuity in the data beyond the point where the preliminary count was halted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 104], "content_span": [105, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0031-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Analyses of the election, OAS and EU full reports and responses\nNooruddin states that at the point where 95% of votes were counted, Morales's vote share began to rise more quickly than it had previously, which is consistent across all six departments reporting at that point. These findings, he says, are consistent with the rest of the findings in the OAS report. He also notes that they are consistent with a separate analysis conducted by Diego Escobari, Associate Professor at University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, and Gary A. Hoover, Head of Economics at University of Oklahoma. CEPR also said that the results of this study were in error.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 104], "content_span": [105, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Analyses of the election, OAS and EU full reports and responses\nOn 12 March 2020, Professor Rodrigo Salazar Elena, researcher at the Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences in Mexico, wrote an article in Voz y Voto magazine in which he compares and discusses the claims and evidence shown in the OAS and two CEPR studies. He defends the OAS audit by stating that the \"duly justified\" statistical analysis rests on the \"continuity assumption\": even with different voting groups, change in vote trend should not exhibit large discontinuities around a single point in time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 104], "content_span": [105, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0032-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Analyses of the election, OAS and EU full reports and responses\nHe states that in order to rebut the OAS analysis and account for the increase in Morales's vote share, it would be necessary to identify a feature distinguishing voters on either side of the threshold. He does not dispute CEPR's method, but notes that it rests on the assumption that voting patterns are geographically contiguous \"despite the fact that they are different in terms of reporting the votes to TREP\". He offers two potential objections to this assumption. First, he says that geographic contiguity is less plausible than the \"continuity assumption\" made by the OAS. Secondly, he says that the patterns of stations voting before and after the TREP cutoff are not due to chance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 104], "content_span": [105, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Analyses of the election, OAS and EU full reports and responses\nIn June 2020, the New York Times reported on a study by independent researchers Francisco Rodr\u00edguez (Tulane University), Dorothy Kronick and Nicol\u00e1s Idrobo (University of Pennsylvania) which said that the OAS's statistical analysis was flawed, and that the OAS likely used a dataset that incorrectly excluded 1,500 late-reporting voting stations. With these stations included, there was no sudden change in the voting trend, contrary to the OAS's finding. The authors also stated that the OAS used a statistical method that improperly created the appearance of a break in the voting trend where none existed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 104], "content_span": [105, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0033-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Analyses of the election, OAS and EU full reports and responses\nReached for comment by the New York Times, Irfan Nooruddin, who conducted the OAS's statistical analysis, said that Rodr\u00edguez and colleagues' study was wrong and did not accurately represent his work. Nooruddin later responded in a comment that the OAS audit included the 1,511 polling stations in all the analyses conducted and that changing the statistical method to the one advocated by the researchers doesn't change the finding. Nooruddin published software to replicate the results found in the OAS audit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 104], "content_span": [105, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0033-0002", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Analyses of the election, OAS and EU full reports and responses\nThe authors note that they \"do not assess the integrity of the election overall.. the OAS presented many qualitative indicators of electoral malpractice\". The head of electoral observations for the OAS, Gerardo De Icaza, called the conclusions of the study \"a moot point\", saying that proving or disproving electoral fraud with statistics alone is impossible, a sentiment echoed by Nooruddin in his own article. Calla Hummel, a Bolivia expert at the University of Miami also commenting in the NYT article stated: \"There was fraud \u2014 we just don't know where and how much\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 104], "content_span": [105, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Analyses of the election, OAS and EU full reports and responses\nIn August 2020, after Nooruddin published the dataset he used for his audit to a Harvard University digital repository, CEPR reported that they had found a \"fatal flaw\" in the data which \"negat(ed) the OAS\u2019s claims that fraud affected the results\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 104], "content_span": [105, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0034-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Analyses of the election, OAS and EU full reports and responses\nThey noted that timestamps for the tally sheets recorded in the dataset were formatted as alphanumeric strings, rather than in a purely numeric format: therefore, when they were sorted using this variable, they would have been sorted alphabetically, rather than chronologically, so that tally sheets which had been timestamped with a time of 1:00 pm would be earlier in the order than those timestamped at 1:01 am on the same date, despite the latter having been timestamped nearly twelve hours earlier. The CEPR's David Rosnick argued that \"the OAS had no real-world chronology of Bolivia\u2019s vote count, even though it made accusations that there was a change in the trend of the votes over time that suggested fraud\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 104], "content_span": [105, 823]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Analyses of the election, OAS and EU full reports and responses\nOn 25 August 2020, Nooruddin acknowledged the timestamp sorting error identified by the CEPR resulted in \"figures where the x-axis is generated using using this variable were incorrect,\" but stated that the mistake \"does not affect any of the results or conclusions reported in the original OAS report.\" Nooruddin updated a comment explaining the statistical analysis correcting the timestamp sorting mistake and updating the statistical estimator to a local linear regression as argued for by Idrobo, Kronick and Rodr\u00edguez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 104], "content_span": [105, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Analyses of the election, OAS and EU full reports and responses\nIn October 2020, the Bolivian government presented the results of a police investigation into electoral fraud during the election, alleging that former minister of the presidency Juan Ram\u00f3n Quintana set up a \"war room\" to plan electoral fraud together with a number of members of the electoral bodies. The investigation also alleged that a number of foreign individuals, some linked to Mexico's Labor Party, an ally of the governing National Regeneration Movement, were involved in the meeting .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 104], "content_span": [105, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Analyses of the election, OAS and EU full reports and responses\nThe same month, the Bolivian prosecutors office also released a report corroborating 16 pieces of evidence indicating willful manipulation of the election results. This included redirection of server traffic to a network outside the control of the TSE, falsified tally sheets, burned voter index lists, poor chain of custody not guaranteeing that the material had not been tampered with and modification of data from a number of polling stations. These incidences and more led to the OAS concluding that they could not endorse the results of the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 104], "content_span": [105, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Results, Analyses of the election, OAS and EU full reports and responses\nIn December 2020, CEPR released another response to the concerns raised by the OAS, writing that \"when within-locality variation is taken into account, the election results stand up to scrutiny\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 104], "content_span": [105, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Aftermath\nThe right-wing caretaker government led by \u00c1\u00f1ez subsequently moved to persecute Morales' supporters, stifle dissent and consolidate power, detaining several hundred opponents and silencing journalists. Charges of sedition and terrorism were brought against people questioning the new government and a campaign of \"national pacification\" led to 31 deaths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Aftermath\nThe elections were set to be rerun in May 2020, but were postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In June 2020, \u00c1\u00f1ez stated that she would approve a law passed by both the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate to set a date for the election for 6 September 2020. However, she subsequently refused to sign it, insisting she needed to see an epidemiological study that justified having elections in September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287822-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian general election, Aftermath\nOn 23 July 2020, the TSE announced that the election would be postponed to 18 October 2020, due to medical reports that the pandemic would have its highest peaks in late August and early September. The 2020 Bolivian general election was indeed held on that date, resulting in a first-round win by MAS-IPSP candidate Luis Arce, former Minister of Economy and Public Finance and ally of Evo Morales. In the election, which took place under the surveillance of OAS and other international organizations, MAS received 55% of the votes with a margin of 26% over the second party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis\nThe 2019 Bolivian political crisis occurred on 10 November 2019, after 21 days of civil protests following the disputed 2019 Bolivian general election. The elections took place after a referendum to amend the Bolivian constitution, which limits the number of terms to two, was rejected in 2016, but the Supreme Court of Justice ruled that all public offices would have no term limits despite what was established in the constitution and allowing Morales to run for a fourth term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis\nAn audit by the Organization of American States (OAS), which released a full report afterwards, concluding that significant irregularities happened during the electoral process. Observers from the European Union released a report with similar findings and conclusions as the OAS. The military and the police of Bolivia compelled President Evo Morales to resign. He complied, accompanied by other resignations by high-level politicians throughout the day, some citing fears for the safety of their families. The government of Mexico offered political asylum to Morales the following day, which Morales accepted a day afterwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis\nThe second vice president of the Senate, opposition senator Jeanine \u00c1\u00f1ez, assumed the role of president on 12 November. This was not without controversy, as her initial appointment was made during a brief legislative session that lacked quorum, due to a boycott by Morales's party, Movement for Socialism (Movimiento al Socialismo; MAS). Bolivia's Plurinational Constitutional Tribunal then endorsed \u00c1\u00f1ez's assumption of the presidency, and the MAS ruling party returned most members to both chambers, with some assuming key positions such as Leader of the Senate. They also committed to working with the interim government towards new elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis\nMorales called for the Bolivian people to reject the leadership of \u00c1\u00f1ez. He and his supporters argued that the event was a coup d'\u00e9tat. International politicians, scholars and journalists were divided between describing the event as a coup or popular uprising. The Bolivian Congress, with the majority being members of Morales' MAS party, unanimously approved a bill on 23 November 2019 that annulled the results of 20 October election, allowed for new elections and prevented Evo Morales from participating in the new elections. The bill was signed into law the next day by president \u00c1\u00f1ez. The unrest would ultimately lead to the Senkata and Sacaba Massacres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis\nOn 4 December 2019, the OAS released its final report related to 20 October election, detailing what they called \"deliberate\" and \"malicious\" tactics to rig that election in favor of President Evo Morales. Analysis by the US thinktank Center for Economic and Policy Research rejected the OAS statistical analysis of election data, arguing that a basic coding error resulted in inexplicable changes in trend. In August 2021, a report commissioned by the OAS and carried out by independent human rights experts concluded that the A\u00f1ez government's path to power came with \"irregularities\" and serious human rights abuses by security forces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Background, 2016 constitutional referendum\nThe Bolivian constitution allows the President and Vice-President to put themselves forward for re-election only once, limiting the number of terms to two, and the elections took place after in 2016 a referendum to amend the constitution was rejected, but that the Supreme Court of Justice ruled that all public offices would have no term limits despite what was established in the constitution and allowing Morales to run for a fourth term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Background, 2019 general election and subsequent investigations\nOn 20 October 2019, the first round of voting for all government positions was held. After the polls closed, the Supreme Electoral Tribunal began to release the preliminary results of the presidential election; at 7:40\u00a0pm, when 83.8% of the votes had been counted, the preliminary count stopped because the official results had begun to be released. At the time that the preliminary count was stopped, Morales led with 45.3%, and his primary opponent, Carlos Mesa, had 38.2%. Less than a 10-point lead would have resulted in another round of runoff voting. At 9:25\u00a0pm, President Morales stated he was the likely winner, given that rural areas would guarantee his victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 95], "content_span": [96, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Background, 2019 general election and subsequent investigations\nAlthough uncounted votes in rural areas were expected to favor Morales, one body observing the election\u2014the Organization of American States (OAS)\u2014stated that even if Morales did win outright, his lead beyond the 10-point threshold would be so negligible as to warrant a runoff anyway. The OAS expressed concern about a purported day-long gap in results reporting: after 24 hours, the updates resumed, but with a surge for Morales at the first update.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 95], "content_span": [96, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Background, 2019 general election and subsequent investigations\nOn 21 October, the Plurinational Electoral Organ reported a count, suggesting that with 95.3% of verified votes, Morales had too large of a margin above 10 points to overcome, avoiding a second run-off round, and so Morales would remain in power for a fourth term. Based on this result, along with claimed irregularities, the Bolivian opposition and protestors as well as some Western governments and observers called for an audit of the process and results, to which Morales agreed. The OAS audit of the election began on 31 October and was observed by Spain, Mexico, and Paraguay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 95], "content_span": [96, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Background, Protests\nBy 24 October, Morales began describing the actions taken against him as a coup. On 25 October, when the results were officially announced with Morales as the winner, various countries in Latin America, as well as the United States and European Union, called for the second round to go ahead regardless of the official results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Background, Protests\nOn 31 October, two deaths were announced by the government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Background, Protests\nThe third death during the protests occurred on 7 November when a 20-year-old student called Limbert Guzman was killed during clashes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, Allegations of electoral fraud and OAS audit\nOn 6 November, the Bolivian opposition published a 190-page long report containing fraud accusations, including irregularities such as mistaken electoral acts additions, data swiping and electoral acts where the ruling party obtained more votes than registered voters, expecting to send it to international organizations such as the OAS and the United Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 84], "content_span": [85, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, Allegations of electoral fraud and OAS audit\nAlthough a complete report was not yet due, mounting tension in the country prompted the OAS to release a preliminary report on 10 November claiming that they had discovered sufficient evidence of election fraud to warrant new elections. This led to a string of events that culminated in Morales being forced to resign. The OAS alleged multiple irregularities, including failures in the chain of custody for ballots, alteration and forgery of electoral material, redirection of data to unauthorized servers and data manipulation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 84], "content_span": [85, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, Allegations of electoral fraud and OAS audit\nThey added that it was statistically unlikely that Morales had secured the 10-percentage-point margin of victory needed to win outright, saying that election should be annulled after it had found \"clear manipulations\" of the voting system, and that \"The manipulations to the computer systems are of such magnitude that they must be deeply investigated by the Bolivian State to get to the bottom of and assign responsibility in this serious case.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 84], "content_span": [85, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, Allegations of electoral fraud and OAS audit\nAn analysis by the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR) disputed the OAS's preliminary findings and criticized what it called a \"politicization of the electoral observation process.\" The co-director of the think-tank, Mark Weisbrot, stated the OAS showed \"no evidence \u2013 no statistics, numbers, or facts of any kind\" to support its claim of electoral manipulation. CEPR concluded that due to Morales' voter base being in more rural regions, the results from peripheral areas received towards the end of the count were more likely to be in his favour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 84], "content_span": [85, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0014-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, Allegations of electoral fraud and OAS audit\nThe New York Times noted, however, that this criticism has \"not addressed the accusations of hidden data servers, forged signatures and other irregularities found by the O.A.S. observers, nor have they tried to explain the electoral council's sudden decision to stop the count\". The OAS also dismissed the report as \"neither honest, nor fact-based nor comprehensive\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 84], "content_span": [85, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, Allegations of electoral fraud and OAS audit\nOn 5 December, the full 95-page OAS report was released along with 500 pages of corroborating details as appendices. These included that an outside user who controlled a Linux AMI appliance with \"root privileges\" \u2014 conferring the ability to alter results \u2013 accessed the official vote-counting server during the counting and that in a sample of 4,692 returns from polling stations around the country, 226 showed multiple signatures by the same person for different voting booths, a violation of electoral law. On those returns, 91 percent of votes went to MAS, approximately double the rate recorded elsewhere.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 84], "content_span": [85, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, Allegations of electoral fraud and OAS audit\nOn 21 December, the Technical Mission of Electoral Experts sent by the European Union published a 67-page report that concluded that the election day \"passed peacefully and with a high voter turnout\" but \"a large number of electoral records showed irregularities, which could be due to deficiencies in the training of jurors or deliberate manipulations\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 84], "content_span": [85, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, Allegations of electoral fraud and OAS audit\nOn 3 January 2020, at a meeting of the Committee for Latin America of Socialist International, it was declared that they accepted the findings of the OAS and that Morales was not a victim of a coup. A document containing discussions of the Bolivian political crisis states that \"After a broad mobilization of citizens in that country in protest of electoral fraud that was informed and verified by an audit conducted by the Organization of American States (OAS) of the elections that took place on 20 October, the president Evo Morales did not suffer a coup d'etat\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 84], "content_span": [85, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, Allegations of electoral fraud and OAS audit\nIndependent contract researchers for CEPR, John Curiel and Jack R. Williams disputed the claims of irregularities in the late vote count that were made by OAS with a statistical analysis released on 27 February 2020. They contended that the OAS allegations about irregularities in the vote count were made on two unproven premises: \"...the unofficial count accurately reflects the vote continuously measured, and that reported voter preferences do not vary by the time of day\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 84], "content_span": [85, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0018-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, Allegations of electoral fraud and OAS audit\nLater, in August 2020, after Nooruddin published the dataset he used for the OAS audit to a Harvard University digital repository, CEPR released a statement suggesting that the way the data was sorted was flawed due to a coding error which would indicate that the OAS claims about the irregularities in the vote count were also flawed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 84], "content_span": [85, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, Authorities remove Morales\nAfter weeks of repelling violent protests at the Casa Grande del Pueblo presidential palace, units of the Police Operations Tactical Unit (UTOP) tasked with defending Morales assembled a meeting on 8 November. UTOP officers ultimately decided at the gathering to abandon their posts and to call for the resignation of Morales. According to Reuters, UTOP turned away from Morales for multiple reasons: complaints of alleged orders to suppress opposition protestors while avoiding Morales loyalists; resentments over perceived preferential treatment given to the military; and the exhaustion of combating protestors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, Authorities remove Morales\nOn 9 November, Morales organized a meeting and ordered the military to maintain security, with officers present rejecting Morales' orders according to former general Fernando S\u00e1nchez. According to The Wall Street Journal, following this meeting, officers feared of \"violent military suppression\" similar to 2003 protests during the Bolivian gas conflict, which happened before Morales become president. At this time, all UTOP officers had left their positions, leaving Morales vulnerable to protesters. At a police station near the presidential palace, officers climbed onto the roofs and chanted \"The Police with the People\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0020-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, Authorities remove Morales\nPolice nationwide refused to take action against protesters, returning to their stations, while other departments began to mutiny against the Morales government, arguing that they did not want to be an \"instrument of any government\". Head of the Bolivian Armed Forces, General Williams Kaliman, refused to suppress violent demonstrations, saying that the military would \"never confront the people among whom we live\" and that the events unfolding were \"a political problem and it should be resolved within that realm\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, Authorities remove Morales\nAfter police left their posts at the presidential palace, Morales never returned and was forced into hiding in an improvised office protected by a small group of his guard. He ultimately held a press conference at the Bolivian Air Force's presidential hangar in El Alto International Airport later in the day, leading some to suspect that Morales had already lost control of the government. Franklin Pareja, a professor of the Higher University of San Andr\u00e9s, said that because of the abandonment by police, the Morales government \"lost its shield\" and that \"it was totally vulnerable and couldn't go on\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, Authorities remove Morales\nAccording to members of the Bolivian military quoted by the Wall Street Journal, authorities had opposed Morales' actions for some time. Morales had performed multiple actions that had offended officers within the armed forces, including glorifying Che Guevara after his guerrillas killed 59 Bolivian troops during their insurgency in the 1960s and forcing officers to attend the Anti- Imperialist Military Academy that was led by a convicted former rebel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0022-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, Authorities remove Morales\nGeneral Tom\u00e1s Pe\u00f1a y Lillo, who was chief of the Bolivian armed forces until 2010, stated that officers within the military were traditionally conservative and had refused plans proposed by Morales to be guided by Cuban military and intelligence agents, damaging Morales' hold of the military. Roberto Ponce, former chief of staff of the Bolivian military, also explained that Morales spent little on the country's armed forces as he feared that he would be overthrown, which frustrated military officers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, Rioters overrun La Paz\nBy the night of 9 November, violent riots escalated throughout Bolivia. Members of MAS called on supporters to gather in the capital city of La Paz to \"defend Morales\" and the results of the vote, with reports of clashes between pro-Morales groups and opposition protesters. However, violent anti-Morales rioters had already overrun the streets of La Paz, with some groups of police joining in protests against Morales. Rioters began to storm government offices, flooding the stations of Bolivia TV and Radio Patria Nueva, accusing them of serving Morales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0023-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, Rioters overrun La Paz\nRelatives of Morales had their homes attacked by rioters, with his older sister's home in Oruro being burned while other regional governors had their homes torched as well. The next day, two miners from Potos\u00ed were shot and injured, reportedly by snipers, when cooperative miners where marching to join protests in La Paz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, Calls for Morales to resign\nAfter the release of 10 November OAS audit, multiple Bolivian entities called on Morales to resign. Morales had initially relied on support from civil organizations to protect him from violent protests instead of the military since he enjoyed popular support. However, the two main civil groups of Bolivia had begun aligning themselves with the opposition to Morales; the Bolivian Workers' Center (COB), Bolivia's largest trade union and a traditionally pro-Morales entity, and the Single Trade Union Confederation of Workers (CSUTCB), an indigenous workers union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 67], "content_span": [68, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, Calls for Morales to resign\nCSUTCB had already met with opposition leader Luis Fernando Camacho, announcing an alliance and in the morning of 10 November, the leader of COB suggested Morales resign if it would help solve the violence, and called for new elections. Indigenous and Aymara leader Nelson Condori, the director of CSUTCB, intensified his condemnation of Morales later in the day while at an event beside Camacho, stating, \"Evo, we have cried, you have made our lives bitter, you have lied to us. ... When have you forgotten the slogan of our ancestors, do not steal, do not lie, do not be lazy?\" Condori also called for a \"purge\" of the Bolivian government, demanding that Morales and his governmental allies be jailed for electoral fraud.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 67], "content_span": [68, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, Calls for Morales to resign\nAfter the COB and other civil groups formerly supportive of Morales called on him to resign, Morales held a second press conference at the presidential hangar, changing his position on the October election results and announced that new elections would be held. Morales released a statement, saying \"As President, my main mission is to preserve peace, social justice and economic stability. Listening to the Bolivian Workers' Center (COB), the Pact of Unity and other social sectors, I have decided first to renew all the members of the Supreme Electoral Tribunal\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 67], "content_span": [68, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, Calls for Morales to resign\nSince civil groups had abandoned Morales, the military was the only group protecting him from violent protesters. The military then made the decision to force Morales to resign. First, officers who feared punishment if they deployed troops against civilians pressured General Williams Kaliman, the commander-in-chief of the Armed Forces of Bolivia and Morales loyalist, to turn away from Morales. Later, Kaliman announced that the military had suggested Morales resign to \"help restore peace and stability\" after weeks of protests over the vote, adding that the military was calling on the Bolivian people to refrain from violence and disorder. The military also said it would conduct operations to \"neutralise\" any armed groups that attacked the protesters. The military press release invoked Article 20, paragraph b, of Law No. 1405 which states:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 67], "content_span": [68, 916]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, Calls for Morales to resign\nArticle 20. The attribution and responsibilities of the military high command are: [...] b. To analyze inner and foreign troubled situations to suggest to whom it may concern the appropriate solutions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 67], "content_span": [68, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, Morales resigns\nAfter Kaliman's statement, Morales took the presidential plane from El Alto International Airport to an undisclosed location, announcing his immediate resignation on television, stating that he was resigning to \"protect the families\" of Movement for Socialism members. He concluded by stating that he believed Carlos Mesa had \"achieved his objective\", and asked rioters to \"stop burning down the houses of [his] brothers and sisters\". Vice President \u00c1lvaro Garc\u00eda Linera also resigned after consulting with Morales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, Morales resigns\nShortly thereafter, it was reported that Morales was on a plane to Argentina; however, the Argentine foreign minister, Jorge Faurie, said that Argentina would not grant him asylum. Commander Yuri Calder\u00f3n assured that there was no warrant for Morales' arrest, though armed individuals had entered his home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, Morales resigns\nLater in the day, Adriana Salvatierra, the President of the Senate, Victor Borda, the leader of the Chamber, and Rub\u00e9n Medinaceli, First Vice President of the Senate, also resigned. Mexico's foreign minister declared that twenty members of Bolivia's executive and legislative branches were at the official Mexican residence in the capital seeking asylum following the resignation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0031-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, Morales resigns\nFollowing the resignation of Morales and his allied successors, protesters called for a board to be convened to oversee the government and new elections, though Mesa disagreed with the proposal, stating protesters should not \"violate the Constitution so as not to give Evo Morales an excuse that he was the victim of a coup d'etat\" and that the Legislative Assembly should determine the constitutional successor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, Morales resigns\nLater on 10 November, BBC Mundo published an article suggesting that five main reasons combined to force Morales to resign: the disputed OAS audit results, the opposition from the military and police, the ongoing protests, the growing radicalization of the political opposition, and public opposition towards Morales' move to end term-limits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Events, OEP detentions and TSE arrests\nAt 8:20\u00a0pm, the Associated Press reported that Bolivian police had detained 38 members of the Plurinational Electoral Organ (or \u00d3rgano Electoral Plurinacional (OEP)) on suspicion of falsification and other electoral crimes, including the former president and vice president of the Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE), Maria Eugenia Choque and Antonio Costas. According to police commander Yuri Calder\u00f3n, Choque was apprehended whilst disguised as a man. The attorney general's office earlier announced that it was opening an investigation into allegations raised by the OAS report. An election official in Santa Cruz, Sandra Kettels, was arrested Monday morning, with arrest warrants issued for the remaining TSE officials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 70], "content_span": [71, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Succession of presidency, Assumption of presidency by Jeanine \u00c1\u00f1ez\nOn the evening of 10 November, Jeanine \u00c1\u00f1ez, the second vice president of the Senate and highest-ranking official remaining, proclaimed herself President of the Senate following the resignation of the previous Senate president Adriana Salvatierra and the first vice president of the Senate Rub\u00e9n Medinaceli. Moments later, \u00c1\u00f1ez declared herself President of Bolivia, claiming constitutional succession. She announced she would be assuming the presidency on an interim basis from 11 November onward, with the responsibility of calling new elections. She stated that she would assume the office once the Senate had formally recognized the previous day's resignations. Upon inauguration, \u00c1\u00f1ez would officially become the President of Bolivia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 98], "content_span": [99, 838]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Succession of presidency, Assumption of presidency by Jeanine \u00c1\u00f1ez\nThe Bolivian Constitution had no provisions that would have allowed \u00c1\u00f1ez, as second vice president of the Senate, to legitimately succeed to the Presidency. Article 169 says that \"In case of impediment or definitive absence of the president of the State, he will be replaced in office by the Vice President and, in his absence, by the President of the Senate, and in the absence of this by the President of the Chamber of Deputies. In the latter case, new elections will be called within a maximum period of ninety days.\" It also establishes the line of succession, which did not include \u00c1\u00f1ez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 98], "content_span": [99, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Succession of presidency, Assumption of presidency by Jeanine \u00c1\u00f1ez\nThe following day, \u00c1\u00f1ez arrived at La Paz-El Alto airport and was taken in a military helicopter to a nearby Air Force base; from here she traveled in convoy to the Senate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 98], "content_span": [99, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Succession of presidency, Assumption of presidency by Jeanine \u00c1\u00f1ez\nOn 12 November 2019, in a brief legislative session held improperly due to the lack of a quorum, \u00c1\u00f1ez declared herself as acting president of Bolivia while holding a large bible, stating that \"the bible has returned to the government palace\". \u00c1\u00f1ez obtained the favourable vote of the opposition parties, only one-third of the parliament, while the Movement for Socialism ruling party did not participate in the voting, rejecting the succession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 98], "content_span": [99, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Succession of presidency, Assumption of presidency by Jeanine \u00c1\u00f1ez\n\u00c1\u00f1ez's assumption of the presidential office was supported by Bolivia's Plurinational Constitutional Tribunal, which interpreted, citing articles referring to the presidential succession of the 2001 Constitutional Declaration, that the next person in the succession line assumes the presidency ipso facto despite not having the required quorum, stating that \"the functioning of the executive should not be suspended\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 98], "content_span": [99, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Succession of presidency, Reactions and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests\nReactions to the transfer of power and to Ms \u00c1\u00f1ez's assumption of the presidency have been mixed, being met with both celebrations and protests. Demonstrators celebrating the removal of the government chanted \"yes we can\" and set off fireworks. Hundreds of supporters of Morales made their way toward the center of La Paz from the mountains surrounding the city, some of them armed with sticks, chanting \"here we go, civil war\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Succession of presidency, Reactions and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests\nThe police claimed that Morales supporters had vandalized police offices, inciting panic in some neighborhoods where people blocked their doors with furniture to protect stores and houses. After receiving requests for help from the national police and politicians, the armed forces announced that night they would mobilize to defend gas, water and electricity services around the capital, and also begin joint patrols with the police around the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Succession of presidency, Reactions and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests\nOn 13 November, a dozen MAS senators were blocked by police from entering the National Assembly building during the session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Succession of presidency, Reactions and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests\nThe next few days were marked by protests and roadblocks on behalf of Morales' supporters. In Senkata and Sacaba, at least 19 pro-Morales protesters were killed in clashes with security forces in what was denounced as a massacre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Succession of presidency, Reactions and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests\nOn 20 November, Evo Morales offered not to run for reelection if he was allowed to return to Bolivia and finish his presidential term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Succession of presidency, Reactions and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests, Capital shut down\nThe drinking water supplies to parts of both La Paz and El Alto, the second and third largest cities in Bolivia, were cut off. According to Gen. Williams Kaliman, it was the plan of insurgents to leave these cities without water or fuel and counteractions to guard public services were covered under the so-called \"Sebasti\u00e1n Pagador\" plan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 109], "content_span": [110, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Succession of presidency, Reactions and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests, Capital shut down\nLa Paz's legislature forced the capital's infrastructure, schools, and workplaces to close, claiming this was for reasons of public safety. Supporters of Morales also built barricades on roads that lead to the airport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 109], "content_span": [110, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Succession of presidency, Reactions and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests, Capital shut down\nBarricades were placed around the Senkata refinery in El Alto by Morales supporters, cutting power and fuel to El Alto and La Paz. Pro -Morales demonstrators entered the refinery and set fire to vehicles within the compound. The Bolivian military launched a violent invasion of the site on 19 November using armored vehicles and helicopters, killing three protesters and injuring 22 in the process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 109], "content_span": [110, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Succession of presidency, Reactions and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests, Capital shut down\nAs a result of blockades from various protests surrounding the city, some goods were also not able to enter. Food supply was affected, leading to rationing and controlled prices in El Alto and La Paz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 109], "content_span": [110, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0048-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Succession of presidency, Interim government response to protests\nIn the face of protests against the interim government, \u00c1\u00f1ez called for police to suppress the protests and maintain order and, on 14 November, issued a decree that would exempt the military from any type of criminal responsibility for killing or injuring protestors, when acting in a \"legitimate defense or state of necessity.\" On 15 November, security forces fired upon coca farmers peacefully protesting against the government in Cochabamba. The massacre left nine dead and dozens injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 97], "content_span": [98, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0049-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Succession of presidency, Interim government response to protests, Human rights concerns\nJos\u00e9 Miguel Vivanco, head of Human Rights Watch in the Americas, said that the decree \"sends a very dangerous message to the military that they have carte blanche to commit abuses\". The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) condemned \u00c1\u00f1ez's government for issuing the decree.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 120], "content_span": [121, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0050-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Succession of presidency, Interim government response to protests, Human rights concerns\nUN Human Rights Chief Michelle Bachelet issued a statement, saying that \"while earlier deaths mostly resulted from clashes between rival protestors\", the latest incidents appear to be due to the \"disproportionate use of force by the army and police\", stating that \"in a situation like this, repressive actions by the authorities will simply stoke that anger even further and are likely to jeopardise any possible avenue for dialogue.\" Bachelet also expressed concern that \"widespread arrests and detentions\" were adding to the tensions; according to her office, more than 600 people had been detained since 21 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 120], "content_span": [121, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0050-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Succession of presidency, Interim government response to protests, Human rights concerns\nFurthermore, Bachelet also declared being concerned that the situation could \"spin out of control if the authorities do not handle it sensitively and in accordance with international norms and standards governing the use of force, and with full respect for human rights\", stating that it couldn't be solved through \"force and repression\". The decree was later repealed by \u00c1\u00f1ez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 120], "content_span": [121, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0051-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Succession of presidency, Interim government response to protests, Human rights concerns\nThe Inter-American Commission on Human Rights expressed concerns over human rights violations that occurred after the 2019 Bolivian general election. Paulo Abr\u00e3o, who heads the IACHR, declared that due to the \"massive\" number of human rights violations amid post-election violence, the country may need outside help to investigate the situation and recommended Bolivia coordinate with an international panel of experts to ensure findings are seen as credible. On 5 December 2019, \u00c1\u00f1ez approved an act to provide compensation to the families of those killed and injured during the conflict.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 120], "content_span": [121, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0051-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Succession of presidency, Interim government response to protests, Human rights concerns\nOn 10 December, the government and IACHR signed an agreement to investigate the acts of violence that occurred. On 30 Dec, Eva Copa, MAS head of the Senate, stated that a report had been filed with Arturo Murillo to give an account of the deaths in Sacaba and Senkata after the Assembly recess in the new year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 120], "content_span": [121, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0052-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Succession of presidency, Interim government response to protests, Human rights concerns\nOn 29 October 2020, the outgoing parliament approved a report on the \"massacres of Senkata, Sacaba and Yapacani, which recommends a judgment of responsibility against Jeanine Anez for genocide and other offenses\". Parliament also approved the criminal indictment of 11 of Anez' ministers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 120], "content_span": [121, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0053-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Succession of presidency, Interim government response to protests, Human rights concerns\nOn 17 August 2021, the human rights watchdog of the Organization of American States published their report on human rights during the \u00c1\u00f1ez administration. It observed that the interim government had come to power by sidestepping the constitutional rules for presidential succession, but stopped short of calling it a coup. The report documented the persecution of opponents with \u201csystematic torture\u201d and \u201csummary executions\u201d, such as the use of lethal ammunition to suppress peaceful street protests by unarmed supporters of Morales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 120], "content_span": [121, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0054-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Succession of presidency, Interim government response to protests, Foreign participation\nIn July 2021, the Bolivian government accused Mauricio Macri's government in Argentina of having supplied arms used in the Senkata and Sacaba massacres. Bolivian Foreign Minister Rogelio Mayta said air force chief General Jorge Gonzalo Terceros had written a letter on 13 November 2019 thanking Argentinian ambassador Normando Alvarez Garcia for the delivery of 40,000 bullets, tear gas canisters and grenades. The Ecuadorian government of Lenin Moreno offered military aid to Bolivia in the same period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 120], "content_span": [121, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0054-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Succession of presidency, Interim government response to protests, Foreign participation\nGonzalo Terceros accused the letter of being a forgery, made with a signature not his own and at a point when he had resigned, and the former chancellor Karen Longaric pointed that the date in the letter would mean that the alleged shipment was prepared and sent when Morales was still president. Longaric also pointed that, although the letter describes the shipment as war weapons, they are actually police weapons, whose trade is not illegal. Terceros' lawyer pointed as well that his client belonged to the air force, who had no business trading anti-riot materials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 120], "content_span": [121, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0055-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Succession of presidency, Interim government response to protests, Foreign participation\nAn investigation carried out by the Argentine Government shows records of the exit of firearms, ammunition, bulletproof vests, pepper spray, and hand grenades of harassment gas, among other materials. The Bolivian Police confirmed they found part of the material sent, which had no associated documentation. Minister of Justice and Human Rights of Argentina Mart\u00edn Soria said this would suggest the destination was not the Argentine Embassy as previously claimed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 120], "content_span": [121, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0056-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, New elections\n\u00c1\u00f1ez stated on 15 November that in order to restore faith in the electoral process, a vote would first be held to elect a new Electoral Commission, before having a new vote for president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 76], "content_span": [77, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0057-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, New elections\nOn 20 November the interim government presented a bill that aimed to forge a path to new elections. The two chambers congress were expected to debate the bill which would annul 20 October election and appoint a new electoral board within 15 days of its passage, paving the way for a new vote. The bill, drafted jointly by MAS and anti-Morales legislators, was approved on 23 November; it also prohibited Morales from participating in the fresh election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 76], "content_span": [77, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0057-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, New elections\nIn exchange, \u00c1\u00f1ez's government agreed to withdraw the armed forces from all protest areas (although some servicemen were still permitted to stay at some state companies to \"prevent vandalism\"), revoke her decree which granted the army immunity from criminal prosecution, release arrested protesters, protect lawmakers and social leaders from attacks and provide compensation for the families of those killed during the crisis. She approved the bill shortly thereafter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 76], "content_span": [77, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0058-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, New elections\nElections were initially scheduled to be held on 3 May 2020. However, they were postponed due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 76], "content_span": [77, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0059-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, New elections\nOn 22 June 2020, \u00c1\u00f1ez approved a law passed by both the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate to set a date for the election for 6 September 2020, with elected authorities in place by mid-to-late November 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 76], "content_span": [77, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0060-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, New elections\nOn 23 July 2020, the TSE postponed the election to 18 October 2020 due to medical reports that the pandemic will have its highest peaks in late August and early September. Many opposition leaders, including Evo Morales, have condemned the delays, seeing the continued delays as an unconstitutional attempt to remain in power, and some groups, including the Bolivian Workers' Center have planned protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 76], "content_span": [77, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0061-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, Domestic policy\nImmediately after his resignation, protests emerged in support of Morales and against the new government. In response, \u00c1\u00f1ez signed decree no. 4078, granting total impunity to the armed forces to quell protestors, resulting in the massacres of Senkata and Sacaba, where at least 18 people were killed by the military. This decree was subject to international criticism. Jos\u00e9 Miguel Vivanco, Americas Director of Human Rights Watch described the decree as, \"giv[ing] the armed forces a blank check to commit abuses instead of working to restore the rule of law in the country\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 78], "content_span": [79, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0062-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, Domestic policy\nThe \u00c1\u00f1ez administration appointed government ministers between 13 and 18 November. The first eleven members of the interim cabinet, appointed 13 November, did not contain any indigenous members. The Guardian described this partial cabinet as showing \"no signs that [\u00c1\u00f1ez] intended to reach across the country's deep political and ethnic divide\". \u00c1\u00f1ez did, however, designate two persons of indigenous origin as ministers of culture and mining as the remaining positions were filled. Morales's first cabinet was majority indigenous (14 out of 16 positions), though this number decreased over the course of his tenure as president. Among the senior ministers in \u00c1\u00f1ez' cabinet were prominent Bolivian businesspeople. Shortly after taking office, \u00c1\u00f1ez also appointed a new military high command. The new commander of the armed forces, General Carlos Orellana Centellas, pledged to take orders from \u00c1\u00f1ez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 78], "content_span": [79, 978]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0063-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, Domestic policy\nOn 20 November, \u00c1\u00f1ez granted safe-conduct to Evo Morales' daughter, Evaliz, to receive political asylum in Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 78], "content_span": [79, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0064-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, Domestic policy\nThe government renamed the state newspaper, known as Cambio under president Morales, as Bolivia on 17 November. On 25 November, the \u00c1\u00f1ez met with civil groups Bolivian Workers' Center, the country's largest union, and the Pact of Unity, a prominent indigenous grassroots group, to sign agreements on how to pacify Bolivia following previous violent events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 78], "content_span": [79, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0065-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, Domestic policy\nIn the week following the inauguration of \u00c1\u00f1ez, the new government came under heavy criticism from a variety of sources. The New York Times described \u00c1\u00f1ez as \"reaching beyond her caretaker mandate of organizing national elections by January\". Javier Corrales, a Latin American politics professor at Amherst College in Massachusetts, said \"without a popular mandate, [the government] are pushing forward some of the most objectionable aspects of their agenda\". Oliver Stuenkel, associate professor of international relations at the Get\u00falio Vargas Foundation in S\u00e3o Paulo, said that \"the only thing this government was supposed to do was calm things down and call elections, and that's just about the only thing it has not done\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 78], "content_span": [79, 806]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0066-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, Domestic policy\nBy late November and December, some progress was made in passing legislation for new elections, appointing a new electoral body, entering dialogue with representatives from protesting factions in El Alto and cooperating with Morales' MAS party in joint participation in the coming elections, albeit without Morales as a presidential candidate. A survey by Bolivian newspaper P\u00e1gina Siete showed that 43% of Bolivians approved of how \u00c1\u00f1ez has handled the presidency, while 23% disapproved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 78], "content_span": [79, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0066-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, Domestic policy\nOn 13 Dec, \u00c1\u00f1ez approved an agreement between the three main parties over a so-called \"Law of Guarantees\" formulated to restore faith among political actors in the process of moving forward, including reparations for those killed and injured by her government. This act was welcomed by the Secretary General of the UN. A previous incarnation of this legislation, passed in both chambers by the MAS majority, had not been given presidential approval due to articles that implied immunity from prosecution for representatives of the previous government. This version was described by opposition lawmakers as an attempted \"cover up\" on behalf of the MAS party and caused friction among members of MAS itself.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 78], "content_span": [79, 784]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0067-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, Domestic policy\nOn 1 January 2020, \u00c1\u00f1ez presented a change in the law that would it make it mandatory for presidential candidates to engage in public debate with their opponents to support \"the strengthening of informed democracy\". La Raz\u00f3n says such debates did not take place before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 78], "content_span": [79, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0068-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, Domestic policy\nIn September 2020, Human Rights Watch released a report saying that the interim caretaker government is \"abusing the justice system to wage a politically motivated witch-hunt against former president Evo Morales and his allies\", adding that prosecutors had charged some Morales backers with terrorism for simply speaking to him on the phone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 78], "content_span": [79, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0069-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, Foreign policy\nKaren Longaric, appointed as foreign minister by Jeanine \u00c1\u00f1ez, announced the formal departure from the country of the Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America (ALBA) and breaking all diplomatic relations with Venezuela's Maduro government, recognizing Juan Guaid\u00f3 as acting president of Venezuela in the Venezuelan presidential crisis. Longaric also announced that the interim government was considering leaving the Union of South American Nations (UNASUR).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0070-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, Foreign policy\nA month later, the country announced its entry into the Lima Group, a regional bloc established in 2017 with the purpose of finding a way out of the Venezuelan crisis. The Bolivian foreign ministry said in a statement that it hoped to \"contribute to a peaceful, democratic and constitutional solution to the crisis in Venezuela, which must be guided by the Venezuelan people\". On the same month, the interim government announced that they would give refuge to 200 Venezuelans \"who have fled their country for reasons of political order, of political persecution promoted by the Nicol\u00e1s Maduro government.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0071-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, Foreign policy\nIn January 2020, the interim government suspended relations with Cuba in response to remarks made by Foreign Minister Bruno Rodr\u00edguez Parrilla, who called \u00c1\u00f1ez a \"liar,\" \"coupist\" and \"self-proclaimed\" in reference to her latest statements about the role of Cuban medical doctors in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0072-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, Foreign policy, Diplomatic row over Mexican embassy\nSince the resignation of Morales, several members of the past administration have taken diplomatic refuge in the Mexican Embassy in La Paz. Several of them faced accusations and prosecution under the interim government, the most senior being the former Minister of the Presidency, Juan Ram\u00f3n Quintana. Anti -Morales protesters routinely gathered at the doorstep of the Embassy to voice their discontent and demand that they be turned over to the Bolivian authorities. An increased security presence by police and army in the vicinity of the Embassy led to accusations of harassment and a \"siege\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 114], "content_span": [115, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0072-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, Foreign policy, Diplomatic row over Mexican embassy\nOn 27 December, tensions were further increased when visiting Spanish diplomats were stopped by police during a visit to the Embassy. The Mexican ambassador accused the Bolivian government of Mar\u00eda Teresa Mercado violating the Vienna Convention. Longaric responded by saying the presence of masked and armed guards aroused suspicion that there would be an attempt to smuggle Quintana from the Embassy to another location. Longaric said: \"No country in the world could tolerate what happened last Friday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 114], "content_span": [115, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0072-0002", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, Foreign policy, Diplomatic row over Mexican embassy\nIn that case, the Vienna Convention empowers the host State to declare those diplomats who violate the rules of the conventions themselves personas non-gratas.\" On 30 December, \u00c1\u00f1ez made an announcement giving a number of Mexican and Spanish diplomats 72 hours to leave the country; Spain responding by declaring that three Bolivian diplomats likewise must leave the country. Eva Copa, MAS head of the Senate, criticised \u00c1\u00f1ez for the expulsion of diplomats of countries who helped bring stability to Bolivia and urged her to reconsider the action.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 114], "content_span": [115, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0073-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, Counteractions\nOn 15 November, Longaric expelled 725 Cuban citizens, mostly medical doctors, after accusing them of being involved in protests. The government announced it arrested nine Venezuelans in the border city of Guayaramer\u00edn (near Brazil) with boots and insignias of the Bolivarian National Police (PNB), identification cards of the United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV) and microchips containing photos of themselves with other people armed with guns. After the arrest and the discovery of the microchips, the interim government accused the men of participating in \"violent acts\" in the country, and transferred them to the Bolivian Special Crime Fighting Forces to conduct a preliminary investigation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0074-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, Counteractions\nArturo Murillo, \u00c1\u00f1ez's new interior minister, vowed to \"hunt down\" his predecessor Juan Ram\u00f3n Quintana, a prominent Morales ally, stoking fears of a vendetta against members of the previous administration. He later announced he would start arresting certain members of the previous government who he accused of \"subversion\". Roxana Liz\u00e1rraga, \u00c1\u00f1ez's communication minister, stated that she had a list of journalists who were \"involved in sedition\" and threatened them with prosecution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0075-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, Counteractions\nOn 22 November, after an audio recording, allegedly of Morales, leaked in which Morales supporters were directed to block main roads to La Paz, the interim government opened an investigation into Morales for \"terrorism and sedition\". Hours later, the vice-president of MAS-IPSP was arrested for allegedly using a car of the ministry of the President; in the car, according to T\u00e9lam, police discovered computers and biometric devices that belonged to the electoral commission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0076-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, Social media campaign\nIn December 2019, the interim government of \u00c1\u00f1ez contracted CLS Strategies, a Washington-based public relations firm, \"to carry out lobbying in support of Bolivian democracy\" and \"in support of holding new presidential elections\". In September 2020, Facebook closed 55 accounts, 42 pages and 36 Instagram accounts linked to CLS Strategies. Facebook said these were fake accounts used to secretly manipulate politics in Bolivia, Venezuela and Mexico in violation of Facebook's prohibition on foreign interference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 84], "content_span": [85, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0077-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, Social media campaign\nFollowing Morales' resignation, a large anti-Morales Twitter bot network was uncovered by the microblogging site in mid November. The network had published automated tweets which declared opposition to Morales, further adding that the events were \"not a coup\". Compared to the extremely low proportion of the population that speaks English, the abundance of English tweets from this network suggests that it was intended to sway opinions beyond Bolivia. The company behind the site had removed many of the tweets by 19 November, but media reports suggested that around 4200 were still up by that point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 84], "content_span": [85, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0077-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, Social media campaign\nThe Caracas-based TeleSur network alleged that nearly 70,000 fake accounts had been used by the network, many of which were created just days before. A Social Networks head working for the Spanish party Podemos further alleged that fake accounts were used to artificially boost the online following of anti-Morales political figures, including A\u00f1ez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 84], "content_span": [85, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0078-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, Social media campaign\nAn investigation by The Guardian in 2021 found that Facebook was slow to remove fake accounts and pages in Bolivia when notified of their existence. A network of fake accounts supporting a candidate during the October 2019 election were still operating in September 2020. In general, Facebook \"allowed major abuses of its platform in poor, small and non-western countries in order to prioritise addressing abuses that attract media attention or affect the US and other wealthy countries\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 84], "content_span": [85, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0079-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, Handling of COVID-19 pandemic\nIn May 2020, Health Minister Marcelo Navajas was arrested on suspicion of corruption related to a scheme to buy ventilators for the treatment of COVID-19. The ventilators were purchased from a Spanish company for around twice their value. Intensive care doctors said that the ventilators were not suitable for Bolivian intensive care units. In August 2020, a report in the New York Times said the death rate in Bolivia was \"nearly five times the official tally\" and that testing was very limited.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 92], "content_span": [93, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287823-0079-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian political crisis, Interim government activities, Handling of COVID-19 pandemic\nIt said that Bolivia was one of the worst affected countries and calculated that Bolivia had five times as many deaths in July as in previous years. Writing in the New York Times in September 2020, Diego von Vacano, who is an expert in Latin America, said A\u00f1ez' interim government had mismanaged the COVID-19 crisis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 92], "content_span": [93, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests\nThe 2019 Bolivian protests were protests and marches from 21 October 2019 until late November of that year in Bolivia, in response to claims of electoral fraud in the 2019 general election of 20 October. After 11 November 2019, there were protests by supporters of the outgoing government in response to Jeanine \u00c1\u00f1ez becoming the acting president of Bolivia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests\nThe claims of fraud were made after the suspension of the preliminary vote count, in which incumbent Evo Morales was not leading by a large enough margin (10%) to avoid a runoff, and the subsequent publication of the official count, in which Morales won by just over 10%. Some international observers expressed concern over the integrity of the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests\nWhile the majority of the demonstrations were peaceful, there were also numerous acts of violence. Initial violence allegedly targeted opposition protesters, Pro-MAS supporters were bused into opposition areas, given weapons, and were told to clear blockades, resulting in death and injury of opposition protesters. In the later weeks of the protests, senior members of the Movement for Socialism (MAS) and their families were victims of attacks, including vandalism and arson of their houses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests\nMorales denied the allegations and invited international observers to audit the electoral processes, promising to hold a runoff if any fraud was found, although initially refusing to be bound by the results of an audit. Opposition leaders rejected the OAS audit, saying they hadn't been party to the agreement. Subsequently, an audit team from the Organization of American States (OAS), with access provided by Bolivian authorities, worked to verify the integrity and reliability of the results. Their preliminary report, released on 10 November 2019 questioned the integrity of the election results and recommended another \"electoral process\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests\nFollowing the release of the OAS initial report, Morales announced the government would hold another full election (rather than a runoff). However, later that day, the influential National Union of Workers requested Morales' resignation, followed 5 hours later by the commanders of the Armed Forces who suggested Morales resign during a live televised press conference, and almost immediately after, the national Police Commander also requested his resignation. Morales, together with his vice-president Garc\u00eda Linera, resigned the same day, on live television, both also delivered written resignations. Following their resignations and the resignations of the next two politicians in the line of succession, Jeanine \u00c1\u00f1ez, second Vice-President of the Senate, was next in line for the presidency. On 12 November 2019, she formed an interim government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 874]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests\nProtests continued until the end of November, primarily by those that sought Morales' return. Under direction from Morales and his allies, and at times under coercion, protesters created blockades on inter-departmental highways, resulting in shortages of food and fuel. The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights expressed concerns over the use of force by the new government in response to armed protests at Senkata and Sacaba. By 25 November 2019, the interim government had made agreements with most protest leaders to end blockades, and began to withdraw troops and to release arrested protesters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Background, Term limits\nArticle 168 of the 2009 constitution allowed the President and Vice-President to be re-elected only once, limiting the number of terms to two. The governing party, the Movement for Socialism (MAS) sponsored an effort to amend this article. The referendum was authorized by a joint session of the Plurinational Legislative Assembly on 26 September 2015, by a vote of 112 to 41. Law 757, which convened the February referendum, passed by 113 votes to 43 and was promulgated on 5 November 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Background, Term limits\nThe referendum marked the rise of anti-Morales sentiment in Bolivia. The vote was held on 21 February 2016 and the proposed amendment was rejected by 51.3% to 48.7%. A successful \"yes\" vote would have allowed President Evo Morales and Vice President \u00c1lvaro Garc\u00eda Linera to run for another term in office in 2019. Morales had already been elected three times. The first time, in 2006, is not counted, as it was before the two-term limit was introduced by the 2009 constitution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Background, Term limits\nDespite the referendum result, the Plurinational Constitutional Tribunal overruled the constitution by deferring to Article 23 of the American Convention on Human Rights, which promotes the human right to participate in government. The court ruled a little over one year after the referendum in December 2017 that all public offices would have no term limits, thus allowing Morales to run for a fourth term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Background, Term limits\nThe removal of term limits proved controversial among Bolivians, including Morales' supporters, with some losing trust in Morales for overturning a referendum. John Walsh, Andes Director of the Washington Office on Latin America, stated that \"The court\u2019s decision, which was very much in favor of MAS, added to the tensions and distrust leading into this election\" and that for Morales, it was \"also just hard to be in power for that long and not lose popularity\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Background, Term limits\nMark L. Schneider of the Center for Strategic and International Studies summarized that there was \"no question that there was a successful impact on raising the standard of living of the poor\" under Morales, but that \"problems in Bolivia arose, unfortunately, from the same problems that you see in Nicaragua and Venezuela, in Honduras and elsewhere where individuals decide that it's more important to stay in power than to follow democratic norms and the rule of law\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Background, 2019 general election\nHeading into the elections, some voters distrusted Bolivia's voting system, suspecting fraud after Morales and his supporters disregarded the results of the 2016 referendum. Bolivia's Plurinational Electoral Body and the private company in charge of the preliminary vote count ad announced eleven days before the election, on 9 October, that only approximately 80% of the preliminary results would be released. On 20 October 2019, the first round of voting for all government positions was held. The Supreme Electoral Tribunal released two sets of counts shortly after the vote was closed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 57], "content_span": [58, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Background, 2019 general election\nFirst was an exit poll that verified 95.6% of votes that showed incumbent President of Bolivia Evo Morales as having 9.33 percentage points over his main opposition and former president, Carlos Mesa. Leading by less than 10 percentage points indicates the vote must continue to a second run-off round. The complete count then appeared as provisional results on a website with routine live updates. At the point of 83.8% of votes in the complete count having been verified, the website showed Morales at 45.3% and Mesa at 38.2%; this also reflected a less than ten-point lead. However, no further updates to the preliminary results were made after 7:40 pm local time (UTC\u20134). The electoral authorities explained that updates to the preliminary count had been halted because the official results were beginning to be released; nevertheless, no official results were published overnight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 57], "content_span": [58, 942]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Background, 2019 general election\nAt 9:25 pm, as the vote counting was still underway, President Morales declared himself the winner of the elections, stating that while he would wait for final scrutiny of the results, the outstanding vote from rural areas would guarantee his victory; he did not mention the possibility of a runoff. Most of the remaining votes, from remote rural areas, were expected to go in Morales's favour, although the Organization of American States (OAS) recommended a runoff be held even if Morales's lead exceeded 10 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 57], "content_span": [58, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Background, 2019 general election\nManuel Gonz\u00e1lez, head of the OAS election observation team in Bolivia, said that \"In the case that [...] the margin of difference exceeds 10%, it is statistically reasonable to conclude that it will be by negligible margin\" and that \"given the context and the problematic issues in this electoral process the best option continues to be the convening of a second round.\" International observers expressed concern over the unexplained daylong gap in the reporting of results, which was followed by a surge in Morales votes when the count resumed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 57], "content_span": [58, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Background, 2019 general election\nOn 21 October 2019, a press conference of the Plurinational Electoral Organ was held, which published data of the rapid count of the system of Transmisi\u00f3n de Resultados Electorales Preliminares (TREP, \"Transmission of Preliminary Electoral Results\"), published at 7:30 pm, almost a whole day after being initially suspended, stating that with 95.30 percent of the votes verified, Morales's MAS obtained 46.86% of the votes over the 36.72% of Mesa's Civic Community, surpassing the 10 percentage points needed to avoid a second run-off round and as such Morales would remain in power for a fourth term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 57], "content_span": [58, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Background, 2019 general election\nOn 6 November, the Bolivian opposition published a 190-page-long report containing fraud accusations, including irregularities such as mistaken electoral acts additions, data wiping and electoral acts where the ruling party obtained more votes than registered voters, expecting to send it to international organizations such as the OAS and the United Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 57], "content_span": [58, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 21 October\nCitizens held vigils at the gates of the computing centers of several departments. The Commander of the Bolivian Police, Vladimir Calder\u00f3n, said they were on alert for any event that could alter public order in the country after some social sectors called for civil resistance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 21 October\nAccording to Los Tiempos, on the morning of 21 October, in the Sopocachi and Miraflores residential neighborhoods of La Paz, ballots marked in favor of MAS and electoral material were found in the hands of people that were not Electoral Tribunal officials; videos of citizen reports circulating on social media show the police deploying tear gas against the residents of those residential neighborhoods and protecting the electoral material and the suspects. As a result, the District Board of Parents requested the suspension of classes at schools in downtown Sucre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 21 October\nProtests in Sucre became violent, and the violence was severe to the point that a fire broke out in the campaign house of MAS and the offices of the Single Federation of Workers of Peoples Originating in Chuquisaca (Futpoch) were attacked. Subsequently, female police officers members of the National Association of NCOs, Sergeants, Cabos and Police (Anssclapol) marched, calling for a peaceful night, on the 25 de Mayo Square. At the head was their leader, Sergeant Cecilia Calani, who was wearing a white handkerchief, demanding that the president respect the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 21 October\nProtesters set fire to electoral buildings and ballot boxes in the cities of Sucre and Tarija. In Potos\u00ed, the COMCIPO march ended with the electoral court of the region being set on fire, damaging nearby homes. Campfires and vigils by university students, supporters of Carlos Mesa and activists were set in other counting centers such as in Hotel Presidente, Hotel Real, Campo Ferial de Cochabamba. Police from Sucre were sent to Potos\u00ed to reinforce security and avoid possible disturbances before the vigil of citizens at the gates of the Departmental Electoral Court (TED), which denounced irregularities in the counting and computing of voting polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 21 October\nAt Hotel Real a clash between opponents and supporters of Morales and police took place; opposition groups were attacked with tear gas by the police. Dozens were wounded, including the rector of the Higher University of San Andr\u00e9s (UMSA), Waldo Albarrac\u00edn, who was taken to the UMSA hospital. Subsequently, the computing center at the Hotel Presidente suspended the vote count due to the protests that were in place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 21 October\nFour departmental electoral tribunals suspended the vote counting made by the TREP due to protests by citizens registered outside the computing centers. The Mayor of Cobija, Luis Gatty Ribeiro, and the Governor of Pando, Luis Adolfo Flores, were attacked by a group of protesters, with Flores being hospitalized. In Oruro, a MAS tent and a Public Ministry vehicle were destroyed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 22 October\nAt dawn on 22 October, the head of a statue of Hugo Ch\u00e1vez was found at the door of the home of the Mayor of Riberalta, Omar N\u00fa\u00f1ez Vela Rodr\u00edguez, after the statue was toppled and shattered by protesters. Ch\u00e1vez, former president of Venezuela, was a friend and ally of Morales. In Cochabamba, after violence at the Alalay Fairgrounds (FEICOBOL), which occurred between students and police on 21 October 37 students from the Universidad Mayor de San Sim\u00f3n (UMSS) protested at Sucre Square against the alleged electoral fraud at noon. The police intervened with tear gas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 22 October\nEpifanio Ram\u00f3n Morales, leader of the Ponchos Rojos organization, announced that they would hold marches in support of Morales, not ruling out including blocking roads and forming fences, in La Paz, and warned that they would respond to attacks with chicotes (whips) and weapons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 23 October\nAround noon, leaders of the Local University Federation (FUL) and university students seized the facilities of the Civic Committee of Tarija, ignoring the board because of their alleged political affinity with the ruling MAS party, and abiding by the indefinite strike called by the Conade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 23 October\nIn Chuquisaca, Santa Cruz, Tarija, Beni and Cochabamba, the first day of an indefinite public strike began. Kathia Antequera filed a formal complaint with the Special Force for the Fight Against Crime (FELCC) of Santa Cruz about the disappearance of Eduardo Guti\u00e9rrez, the spokesperson of the 21F party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 23 October\nThe presidential candidate for Third System Movement (MTS), and former Education Minister, F\u00e9lix Patzi, also spoke out against the fact that the votes for his party were passed to the MAS in the provinces of Larecaja, Caranavi and Palos Blancos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 24 October\nThe Chuquisaca Departmental Electoral Court announced that the vote counting was being carried out in the municipality of Zuda\u00f1ez, because its facilities in the city of Sucre had been burned in the protests. The count was carried out in the meeting room of the Public Production Company Glass Containers of Bolivia. Likewise, the Electoral Tribunal of Potos\u00ed ended the recount in the municipality of Llallagua, without notifying the delegates of the opposition political parties. The counts show that in the municipalities of Zuda\u00f1ez and Llallagua the government party managed to obtain more than two thirds of the votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 24 October\nA group of MAS supporters expelled a group of opponents from Plaza 14 de Septiembre in Cochabamba minutes before Morales gave a speech in the square. Opponents, who were on strike, reported receiving insults and threats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 24 October\nTowards the end of the day, clashes were recorded in the city of Santa Cruz between those supporting the victory of Evo Morales, and those demanding a second round. According to initial reports, several people were injured by stones and fighting in the municipality of El Torno. Also in Cochabamba, there were clashes between students and supporters of President Evo Morales, and the police dispersed them with tear gas. MAS militants announced that they will remain in Cochabamba keeping vigil \"until the final results.\" Luis Fernando Camacho, president of the Civic Committee in Santa Cruz, again addressed the people of Santa Cruz reaffirming the call for strikes, and noting that Bolivia will not go to a second round with the same electoral authorities that oversaw this electoral process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 872]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 24 October\nSome Bolivians living in Madrid, Milan and Berlin demonstrated, demanding a second round between the leading candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 24 October\nAt 7:00 pm local time, the Plurinational Electoral Body published the vote count in Bolivia and abroad (the result 'Mundo') at 99.99% counted, with Morales winning over 40% with a lead of 10.56 points over the other candidates, as a provisional result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 25 October\nBy Friday 25 October, when the results were officially announced with Morales as the winner, several countries in Latin America, as well as the United States and European Union, had called for the second round to go ahead regardless. From Thursday evening through the night, protestors filled the streets of the capital, chanting that Bolivia \"is not Cuba or Venezuela\" and should be respected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 26 October\nDemonstrations occurred again in various regions. In Cochabamba, Santa Cruz and La Paz, the streets were again confronted by mass in the morning, and residents returned to the shopping center to buy groceries. In Oruro, students suspended the folkloric university entrance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 26 October\nA group of free transportation drivers, armed with sticks and stones, went from the centre of Cochabamba to the south of the city, to unblock the highways in the urban centre. According to official reports, the police mobilized to avoid confrontation and vandalism. According to who recorded the video filmed by residents in the area, the police only escorted armed groups. They also reported that rioters damaged the windshield of the car while travelling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 27 October\nMembers of the Mamore-Bulo Bulo Coca Farmers Federation blocked the main road from Cochabamba to Santa Cruz, on the Ichilo Bridge in Bulo Bulo, to show their support for President Evo Morales. Coca farmers have announced that they will not let motorized vehicles pass this road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 28 October\nOn 28 October, a massive blockade took place between supporters and opponents of Morales in La Paz, Sucre and Cochabamba.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 31 October\nThe government announced that at least two people had died in protests since 21 October, both in the town of Montero. The same day, the OAS began their audit of the election; they said it would take up to 12 days to complete, with Spain, Paraguay and Mexico monitoring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 6 November\nOn 6 of November opposition protesters storm the municipality of Vinto's offices and kidnap the Mayor Patricia Guzman Arce and set the building on fire. Protesters beat her, cut her hair, and force her to walk barefoot 40 blocks where then they urinate and spit on her.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 7 November\nOn 7 November, the death toll from the protests rose to three as a 20-year-old student called Limbert Guzman was killed during a confrontational protest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 8 November\nBy 8 November, members of the police had joined the protests; in the evening, several could be seen protesting with flags on the roof of the Cochabamba police department, as well as in La Paz, Santa Cruz, and Sucre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 9 November\n9 November opposition protesters on Oruro burn down the governor, Victor Hugo Vasquez, house down. They also to burn down the house of the governor of Chuquisaca Esteban Urquizu. Also burned was the house of MAS senator Omar Aguilar. They all subsequently resign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 9 November\n9 November opposition protesters burn down Evo Morales' sister's house in Oruro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 9 November\nPresident Evo Morales invited parties to conduct \"open dialogue\". But Carlos Mesa refused and answered: \"I have nothing to negotiate with Evo Morales and his government\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 9 November\nThe Bolivian army for the first time since the presidential election, discussed they would not oppose the Bolivian people as long as they asked for a political solution to overcome this problem.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 10 November\nOn 10 November the Organization of American States published the report that their technical audit conducted after the elections. The report alleged multiple serious irregularities, including \"manipulations of the I.T. system [that] are of such magnitude that they should be investigated in depth by the Bolivian State in order to get to the bottom of them and determine who is responsible for such a serious situation.\" They stated that \"it is statistically unlikely that Morales obtained the 10% difference needed to avoid a second round.\" They maintained that \"the audit team cannot validate the results of this election and therefore recommends another electoral process. Any future process should be overseen by new electoral authorities to ensure the conduct of credible elections.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 78], "content_span": [79, 867]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 10 November\nThe same day, General Williams Kaliman asked Morales to resign to \"help restore peace and stability\" after weeks of protests over the vote, adding that the military was calling on the Bolivian people to refrain from violence and disorder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 78], "content_span": [79, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 10 November\nFollowing this announcement, Morales spoke on television announcing his immediate resignation from an undisclosed location.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 78], "content_span": [79, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 11 November\nProtesters took to the streets to celebrate, chanting \"yes we can\" and setting off fire crackers. The police withdrew from La Paz streets as crowds welcomed the transfer of power with fireworks, while others looted stores and set reportedly politically motivated fires.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 78], "content_span": [79, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 11 November\nProtests were also held in support of Morales throughout Bolivia. El Alto was the site of a particularly large protest, in which multiple people were injured, with crowds chanting, \"Now, civil war!\" and waving the Wiphala indigenous flag. The acting president, Jeanine \u00c1\u00f1ez, called for the military to support the police tasks. The head of Bolivia's military said that following reports police have been overtaxed by weeks of unrest, the armed forces would provide help in keeping order.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 78], "content_span": [79, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 11 November\nPresident of Mexico Andr\u00e9s Manuel L\u00f3pez Obrador offered Morales political asylum. The decision was criticized by the National Action Party and the Institutional Revolutionary Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 78], "content_span": [79, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0048-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 12 November\nOn 12 November Morales left Bolivia on a plane toward Mexico, accepting the political asylum offered by President Obrador. Former vice-president \u00c1lvaro Garc\u00eda Linera also left the country. Jeanine \u00c1\u00f1ez, acting president of the Senate of Bolivia, called an extraordinary session of the Plurinational Legislative Assembly in order to ratify Morales's and the other officials' resignation. \u00c1\u00f1ez called to all deputies and senators to participate, including the ones of the Movement for Socialism.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 78], "content_span": [79, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0049-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 12 November\nAt 18:48, citing article 169 of the Constitution of Bolivia, Jeanine \u00c1\u00f1ez declared herself as President of the Senate and acting President of Bolivia in front of the opposition senators in the Plurinational Legislative Assembly, the session was boycotted by members of the Movement for Socialism, which hold a majority in the assembly. The move was later upheld by the Plurinational Constitutional Tribunal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 78], "content_span": [79, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0050-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Anti-Morales protests, 12 November\nVideos also emerged of Bolivian police cutting the wiphala off of their uniforms. It was also removed from some government buildings and burned by protesters, who chanted \"Bolivia belongs to Christ!\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 78], "content_span": [79, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0051-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Pro-Morales and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests\nCounter-protests have been held in favour of Evo Morales both before and after his resignation. They increased in severity following Morales' departure, with pro-Morales indigenous protesters cutting off major Bolivian roads. At least 20 people have died during the clashes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 78], "content_span": [79, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0052-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Pro-Morales and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests, 12 November\nIn La Paz, tens of thousands of pro-Morales protesters clashed with police, military and opposition forces as they attempted to make their way to the city's centre to protest Morales' removal. Another march of several thousand, held peacefully in the periphery of the town was held on the same day, with protesters lamenting the fact that military fighter aircraft flew over the city as military and security forces blocked them from reaching the city's main square.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 91], "content_span": [92, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0053-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Pro-Morales and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests, 12 November\nIn response, pro-Morales protesters blocked roads leading to the city's airport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 91], "content_span": [92, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0054-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Pro-Morales and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests, 12 November\nDemonstrators originating from El Alto, considered a \"bastion of support\" for Morales, further attempted to march to La Paz, but were stopped by more than 400 Bolivian policemen equipped with tear gas launches and water cannons and backed by the nation's military. Police, military and opposition forces set up roadblocks in anticipation of a renewed counter-demonstrator march on the city's centre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 91], "content_span": [92, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0055-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Pro-Morales and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests, 13 November\nIn the early hours of 13 November, following the proclamation of the new acting president, thousands of Morales supporters took to the street in support of their former president, calling his resignation a \"Washington-backed coup d'\u00e9tat\". A crowd managed to clear the way to Bolivia's national assembly in La Paz and protested the inauguration by waving indigenous wiphala flags that by that point had become a symbol for Morales supporters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 91], "content_span": [92, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0056-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Pro-Morales and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests, 13 November\nAfter videos showing the burning of the Wiphala, the multi-coloured flag of native people of the Andes, started circulating on social media, thousands of protesters took the streets waving the banner. Another video showed police officers cutting the flag out of their uniforms, which made a police officer issue an apology.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 91], "content_span": [92, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0057-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Pro-Morales and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests, 14 November\nOn 14 November, Bolivian police used tear gas to break up a peaceful pro-Morales protest in La Paz. Following this, it blocked about a dozen pro-Morales senators from entering the nation's legislature, upon which pro-Morales demonstrators responded with cries of \"dictatorship\" and by throwing stones at the policemen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 91], "content_span": [92, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0058-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Pro-Morales and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests, 14 November\nIn the Bolivian town of Sacaba, demonstrators took the streets and expressed their support for Morales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 91], "content_span": [92, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0059-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Pro-Morales and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests, 15 November\nIn Sacaba, nine people were killed and over 100 injured during clashes between security forces and protesters. This resulted after police and armed forces attempted to prevent them marching either central Sacaba or the city of Cochabamba. Demonstrators set off sticks of dynamite, while the police and armed forces tried to disperse them with tear gas. This quickly escalated into violence. raising the total death toll since 20 Oct to 23. A tenth demonstrator injured by gunfire died on June 11, 2020 after seven months with a bullet lodged in his head.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 91], "content_span": [92, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0060-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Pro-Morales and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests, 15 November\nIn response, Morales described the events as a \"massacre\" and the A\u00f1ez-led government as a \"dictatorship\". UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet called the events an \"extremely dangerous development\". A UN envoy met with A\u00f1ez shortly thereafter to relay the organization's \"concern\". Minister for the Government, Arturo Murillo, claimed that the army were not ordered to fire and implicated that the shots came from the side of the protesters. He also called for a \"transparent\" investigation by the attorney general's office. As of June 2020, the official investigation of the day's events has not progressed significantly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 91], "content_span": [92, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0061-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Pro-Morales and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests, 16 November\nA\u00f1ez announced in response to the killing protesters by the Armed forces, that the military would be exempt from any type of criminal responsibility, when acting in a \"legitimate defense or state of necessity.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 91], "content_span": [92, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0062-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Pro-Morales and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests, 16 November\nThe Inter-American Commission on Human Rights commission condemned A\u00f1ez's government for issuing the decree.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 91], "content_span": [92, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0063-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Pro-Morales and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests, 16 November\nUN Human Rights Chief Michelle Bachelet issued a statement, saying that \"while earlier deaths mostly resulted from clashes between rival protestors\", the latest incidents appear to be due to the \"disproportionate use of force by the army and police\", stating that \"in a situation like this, repressive actions by the authorities will simply stoke that anger even further and are likely to jeopardise any possible avenue for dialogue.\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 91], "content_span": [92, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0063-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Pro-Morales and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests, 16 November\nBachelet also expressed concern that \"widespread arrests and detentions\" are adding to the tensions; according to her office, more than 600 people had been detained since 21 October, many in the past few days. Furthermore, Bachelet also declared being concerned that the situation could \"spin out of control if the authorities do not handle it sensitively and in accordance with international norms and standards governing the use of force, and with full respect for human rights\", stating that it couldn't be solved through \"force and repression\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 91], "content_span": [92, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0064-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Pro-Morales and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests, 18 November\nThe interim interior minister Arturo Murillo threatened to arrest MAS legislators, who refuse to recognize A\u00f1ez's legitimacy, for \"subversion.\" He also cautioned journalists reporting on the protests to \"not commit sedition.\" Murillo further threatened to unveil a list of MAS legislators which he deemed had been involved in alleged \"sedition\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 91], "content_span": [92, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0065-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Pro-Morales and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests, 18 November\nThousands of Bolivian coca farmers came out in protest in favour of Morales and called for the resignation of A\u00f1ez as Acting President. Bolivian police fired tear gas in the country's highlands to prevent the demonstrators from reaching the city of Cochabamba. Some of the protesters responded to the launching of tear gas by throwing stones at the police officers, which in turn responded by arresting at least ten demonstrators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 91], "content_span": [92, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0066-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Pro-Morales and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests, 19 November\nSenate president and MAS leader M\u00f3nica Eva Copa instructed MAS legislators in the Plurinational Legislative Assembly to cancel a planned vote to reject Morales' resignation. She later announced that legislation would be introduced to annul the 20 October election and move towards new elections as soon as possible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 91], "content_span": [92, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0067-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Pro-Morales and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests, 19 November\nEight people were killed in clashes outside the major Senkata gasoline plant that had been blockaded for days by Morales supporters as police and military attempted to escort a fuel convoy to relieve shortages in La Paz. Witnesses said that the men died when a military unit guarding the plant opened fire on the protesters that had surrounded it for over a week. Bolivia's new defense minister, Fernando L\u00f3pez, told reporters that \u201cnot one bullet\u201d had been fired by the military at Senkata, an account that was contradicted by dozen of witnesses who had gathered at the church that night.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 91], "content_span": [92, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0068-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Pro-Morales and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests, 21 November\nDozens of thousands of pro-Morales protesters marched some 15\u00a0km from El Alto to downtown La Paz in response to the killings at Senkata. They brought with them the coffins of five of the eight victims of the tragedy. Protesters were dispersed with tear gas, which also hit many passersby. Police on motorcycles continued to fire tear gas at hiding or retreating protesters, pushing them further from the San Francisco Square. The Anez-led interim government blamed Morales and \"radical groups\" of allegedly supporting the violence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 91], "content_span": [92, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0069-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Timeline of events, Pro-Morales and anti-\u00c1\u00f1ez protests, 22 November\nThe interim government opened an investigation into Morales for \"terrorism and sedition.\" Hours later, the vice-president of MAS-IPSP was arrested while travelling in a vehicle without licence plates carrying a number of computers and biometric equipment taken from the electoral commission offices.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 91], "content_span": [92, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0070-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Responses, Reactions to fraud allegations\nThe suspension of the vote count generated criticism in the opposition and the electoral observation mission of the Organization of American States (OAS). In a press conference, the head of the electoral observation mission of the OAS, former Costa Rican foreign minister Manuel Gonz\u00e1lez, made a statement in which his team expressed concern about the drastic and unexplained changes published by the Supreme Electoral Tribunal that interpreted the victory of Evo Morales in the first round, saying \"It is essential that the citizens will be fully respected by honoring the values contained in the OAS Inter-American Democratic Charter\". In addition, the mission published a statement calling for respect for the will of the citizens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 65], "content_span": [66, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0071-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Responses, Reactions to fraud allegations\nCarlos Mesa called for civil mobilizations in defense of the vote after denouncing fraud in the elections. In a later video, Mesa called for constant protesting until a second round of voting was held, adding that he would bring proof of fraud.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 65], "content_span": [66, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0072-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Responses, Reactions to fraud allegations\nOpposition candidate \u00d3scar Ortiz called to demonstrate in peace to \"maintain the legitimacy of the democratic claim.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 65], "content_span": [66, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0073-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Responses, Reactions to fraud allegations\nThe Bolivian Episcopal Conference (CEB) warned of fraud and demanded that the electoral authorities fulfill their duty as an \"impartial arbitrator of the electoral process\". The CEB also called on \"international observers to fulfill their mission of monitoring the transparency of the electoral process\" in order to respect the Bolivian people and the principles of democracy, noting that one of the observers for the election, the European Union, had financed the electronic vote count system and should, therefore, be mandated to ensure it is used properly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 65], "content_span": [66, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0074-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Responses, Reactions to fraud allegations\nThe Minister of Justice, H\u00e9ctor Arce, denied the alleged electoral fraud and said that the demonstrations are unjustified, since the electoral calculation process is free and public.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 65], "content_span": [66, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0075-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Responses, Reactions to fraud allegations\nOn 22 October, the Vice President of the Bolivian electoral board, Antonio Costas, described by news website Infobae as the only independent member of the TSE, resigned, criticizing the Electoral Tribunal for suspending the publication of the results of the TREP, saying that the issues with the count discredited the democratic process. Gunnar Vargas, also member of the electoral board, announced in the radio that he went into hiding for his personal safety.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 65], "content_span": [66, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0076-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Responses, Reactions to fraud allegations\nThe National Committee for the Defense of Democracy in Bolivia (Conade) held the Morales government responsible for any confrontation that may arise in the country, and called for an indefinite national strike from midnight on the morning of 23 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 65], "content_span": [66, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0077-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Responses, Reactions to fraud allegations\nIn a televised address on 23 October, Morales made a speech saying that there was a coup d'\u00e9tat underway in his country that had been orchestrated by right-wing groups in Bolivia with the aid of foreign powers; earlier that day, Manuel Gonz\u00e1lez opined that the second round should go ahead even if Morales is revealed to have achieved a lead of over 10 percentage points, as his vote margin (based on the earlier results) would still be \"negligible\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 65], "content_span": [66, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0078-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Responses, Reactions to fraud allegations\nOn Saturday 26 October, after international calls for an audit of the electoral processes, Morales invited foreign governments to hold one, and promised to move the election to a run-off should any fraud be found.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 65], "content_span": [66, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0079-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Responses, Reactions to fraud allegations\nIn the announcement on Friday 8 November, Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE) denies that irregularities had taken place in the vote count. TSE referred critics to a report by the company Ethical Hacking, which had checked the electronic vote and did not find any kind of \"alteration of the data.\" But the company's chief, Alvaro Andrade, said his firm did find \"vulnerabilities\" in the vote count.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 65], "content_span": [66, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0080-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Responses, Suspension of activities\nThe Bolivian Football Federation (FBF) suspended all matches on day 17 of the Clausura tournament of the Bolivian Primera Divisi\u00f3n, due to a predicted lack of presence of both players and spectators because of the protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 59], "content_span": [60, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0081-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Responses, Suspension of activities\nThe Bolivian Association of Supermarkets announced that the opening hours of supermarkets and hypermarkets for the day of 25 October would be from 7:00 am through noon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 59], "content_span": [60, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0082-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Responses, Media incidents and coverage\nA correspondent for the Cochabamba newspaper Los Tiempos, Wilson Aguilar, said he was assaulted on 21 October by MAS supporters during the Supreme Electoral Tribunal conference in La Paz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 63], "content_span": [64, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0083-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Responses, Media incidents and coverage\nThe newspaper El Deber reported that on the night of 21 October, Vice Minister of Communication Leyla Medinacelli called the newspaper to \"ask for a headline\" on the front page of the next day's edition, specifying that it should encourage protesters to \"demobilize\". The newspaper clarified that it does not allow people who are not their own journalists to \"impose a headline\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 63], "content_span": [64, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0084-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Responses, Media incidents and coverage\nOn 10 November the newspaper P\u00e1gina Siete announced it would not publish its morning edition of 11 November due to security reasons. The website and social media later resumed its updating. Two days later on 12 November, the newspaper El Diario announced it would not publish its print edition of that day due to security reasons, while the online edition would still be updated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 63], "content_span": [64, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0085-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Responses, Media incidents and coverage\nFollowing Morales' resignation, a large anti-Morales Twitter bot network was uncovered by the microblogging site in mid November. The network had published automated tweets which declared opposition to Morales, further adding that the events were \"not a coup\". Compared to the extremely low proportion of the population that speaks English, the abundance of English tweets from this network suggests that it was intended to sway opinions beyond Bolivia. The company behind the site had removed many of the tweets by 19 November, but media reports suggested that around 4200 were still up by that point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 63], "content_span": [64, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0085-0001", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Responses, Media incidents and coverage\nThe Caracas-based TeleSur network alleged that nearly 70,000 fake accounts had been used by the network, many of which were created days before. A Social Networks head working for the Spanish party Podemos further alleged that fake accounts were used to artificially boost the online following of anti-Morales political figures, including A\u00f1ez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 63], "content_span": [64, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287824-0086-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolivian protests, Responses, Later responses\nOn 21 January 2020, the interim government Department of Justice produced a 65-page document on cases where they believe human rights have been violated. This was created with the intention of presenting these cases to be investigated by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) and to different embassies and international organizations. The report is in two parts, with the second relating to events of violence, sedition and terrorism that allegedly occurred since the 20 October elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 50], "content_span": [51, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287825-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolsover District Council election\nThe 2019 Bolsover District Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect all 37 members of Bolsover District Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287825-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolsover District Council election\nThe election resulted in the Labour Party losing control of the council for the first time in 40 years after winning 18 seats, one short of a majority. Independents made gains largely at the expense of Labour, winning 16 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287826-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolton Metropolitan Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Bolton Metropolitan Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Bolton Council in Greater Manchester, England. This was on the same day as other local elections. The Labour Party, which had run the council since 2006 and had maintained a majority since 2011, lost overall control of the Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287826-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolton Metropolitan Borough Council election\n20 seats were contested and the Labour Party won 6 seats, the Conservative Party won 6 seats, the Liberal Democrats won 3 seats, Farnworth and Kearsley First won 2 seats, Horwich and Blackrod First won 2 seat, and UKIP won 1 seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287826-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolton Metropolitan Borough Council election\nAfter the election, the total composition of the council was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287826-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolton Metropolitan Borough Council election\nThe Conservatives formed an agreement with all the other opposition parties, the Liberal Democrats, Farnworth and Kearsley First, UKIP and Horwich and Blackrod First in order to form a minority administration. For the first time since the period between 2004 and 2006, the Labour Party went into opposition. This was also the first time in history at Bolton Council that the party with the largest number of seats was not in charge of running the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287826-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bolton Metropolitan Borough Council election, Council composition\nPrior to the election the composition of the council was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 70], "content_span": [71, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287827-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bommarito Automotive Group 500\nThe 2019 Bommarito Automotive Group 500 was the fifteenth round of the 2019 IndyCar Series season, contested over 248 laps at the 1.25-mile (2 km) World Wide Technology Raceway in Madison, Illinois. Pole position was won by Josef Newgarden, his third pole of the season. Takuma Sato would go on to win the race, his 2nd win of the season and 5th of his career. This race would also be the last podium for Tony Kanaan in his IndyCar career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287827-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bommarito Automotive Group 500, Results, Race\nNotes: Points 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287828-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Booker Prize\nThe 2019 Booker Prize for Fiction was announced on 14 October 2019. The Booker longlist of 13 books was announced on 23 July, and was narrowed down to a shortlist of six on 3 September. The Prize was awarded jointly to Margaret Atwood for The Testaments and Bernardine Evaristo for Girl, Woman, Other. This was the first time the prize was shared since 1992, despite a rule change banning joint winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287829-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bora\u2013Hansgrohe season\nThe 2019 season for the Bora\u2013Hansgrohe cycling team began in January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287830-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Borno State gubernatorial election\nThe 2019 Borno State gubernatorial election occurred on March 9, 2019, the APC nominee Babagana Umara Zulum won the election, defeating Mohammad Imam of the PDP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287830-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Borno State gubernatorial election\nBabagana Umara Zulum emerged APC gubernatorial candidate after scoring 4,432 votes and defeating his closest rival, Idris Durkwa, who received 115 votes. He picked Umar Usman Kadafur as his running mate. Mohammad Imam was the PDP candidate with Buba Haruna Biu as his running mate. 32 candidates contested in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287830-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Borno State gubernatorial election, Electoral system\nThe Governor of Borno is elected using the plurality voting system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287830-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Borno State gubernatorial election, Primary election, APC primary\nThe APC primary election was held on September 30, 2018. Babagana Umara Zulum won the primary election polling 4,432 votes against 9 other candidates. His closest rival was Idris Durkwa, who came a distant second with 115 votes, while Kashim Imam came third with 20 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287830-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Borno State gubernatorial election, Primary election, PDP primary\nThe PDP primary election was held on September 30, 2018. Mohammad Iman won the primary election polling 2,785 votes against 2 other candidates. His closest rival was Kyari Abba Bukar came second with 52 votes, while Mohammed Wakil came third with 20 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287830-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Borno State gubernatorial election, Results\nA total number of 32 candidates registered with the Independent National Electoral Commission to contest in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287830-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Borno State gubernatorial election, Results\nThe total number of registered voters in the state was 2,316,218, while 1,292,138 voters were accredited. Total number of votes cast was 1,289,027, while number of valid votes was 1,266,967. Rejected votes were 22,060.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287830-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Borno State gubernatorial election, Results, By local government area\nHere are the results of the election by local government area for the two major parties. The total valid votes of 1,266,967 represents the 32 political parties that participated in the election.Blue represents LGAs won by Babagana Umara Zulum. Green represents LGAs won by Mohammad Imam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 74], "content_span": [75, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287831-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Borough Council election\nElections for Boston Borough Council, which governs as a second-tier authority the Borough of Boston were held on Thursday 2 May 2019. The election was held on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287832-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Cannons season\nThe 2019 Boston Cannons season will be the nineteenth season for the Boston Cannons of Major League Lacrosse. Sean Quirk enters his fourth season as head coach, after leading the team to a 5-9 record in 2018, which was a two-win improvement from 2017. 2019 will be the team's first summer at Veterans Memorial Stadium in Quincy after most recently playing at Harvard Stadium. With this move, the team will invest $1.5 million in stadium expansion and improvements, bringing capacity up to 5,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287832-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Cannons season, Collegiate Draft\nThe 2019 Collegiate Draft was held on March 9 in Charlotte, North Carolina at the NASCAR Hall of Fame. Inside Lacrosse gave the Cannons a \"C-\" in their team-by-team draft grades, the lowest mark received by any team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287832-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Cannons season, Collegiate Draft\nTop draft selection and third overall pick Zach Goodrich officially signed with the Cannons on May 19. Goodrich chose the Cannons over Chrome Lacrosse Club of the Premier Lacrosse League, who also selected Goodrich third in their respective draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287832-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Cannons season, Broadcast\nOn March 28, the Cannons announced that all 16 regular season games will be broadcast on NBC Sports Boston, 11 of them being produced live.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287833-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston City Council election\nBoston City Council elections were held on November 5, 2019. Nomination forms could be submitted starting April 17, and candidates had a filing deadline of May 21. A preliminary election was held on September 24. By law, Boston municipal elections are nonpartisan\u2014candidates do not represent a specific political party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287833-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston City Council election\nFor the four at-large seats: all four incumbents sought re-election. Election night results showed that three incumbents were re-elected, and one new at-large councillor was elected, by a margin of only 10 votes over the next-highest vote-getter. A recount of that race confirmed the result, by only a single vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287833-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston City Council election\nFor the nine district seats: six incumbents sought re-election; two were contested and four ran uncontested\u2014election night results showed that all six were re-elected. Three new district councillors were elected, for seats where incumbents were not seeking re-election. All district winners won by comfortable margins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287833-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston City Council election\nCouncil members elected in November 2019 were inaugurated on January 6, 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287833-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston City Council election, Incumbents\nThe council members at the time of both the preliminary election and general election were as listed below. The table further indicates if each incumbent ran for re-election, and if so, whether they were re-elected or not.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287833-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston City Council election, Incumbents\nCouncil President Filled vacancy created by resignation of Ayanna Pressley upon her election to the United States House of Representatives", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287833-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston City Council election, Results\nA preliminary election was held on September 24 to select candidates for four districts, and at-large, for the general election. Voter turnout was 11.17%, as 44,972 of the city's 402,536 registered voters cast ballots. The general election was held on November 5, registering 16.5% voter turnout, as 67,011 ballots were cast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287833-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston City Council election, Results, At-large\nThe top eight vote-getters in the preliminary election qualified for the general election of four seats. Late on the night of the general election, with only a 10-vote margin between candidates for the final at-large seat, fifth-placed Alejandra Nicole St. Guillen called for a recount. The election department subsequently corrected the tallies of some hand-counted ballots, resulting in a margin of five votes as of November 13 (22,477 to 22,472), and tallied provisional ballots, resulting in a margin of eight votes on November 15 (22,500 to 22,492).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287833-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston City Council election, Results, At-large\nBoston election laws require that a candidate seeking a recount submit 50 signatures from registered voters within each ward where a recount is requested, within 10 days of the election. On November 15, St. Guillen submitted 2,000 signatures in support of a recount. Recount signatures, and the results in all other contests, were planned to be certified by Board of Election Commissioners on November 20. The date for the recount was subsequently announced as December 7. The result of the recount was announced on December 9, and confirmed Julia Mejia as winner of the final seat, by a margin of one vote\u201422,492 votes to 22,491 votes. On December 10, St. Guillen conceded the race, rather than appealing contested ballots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287833-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston City Council election, Results, District 4\nNo preliminary election was necessary, as the only two candidates were listed on the general election ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287833-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston City Council election, Results, District 5\nThe top two vote-getters in the preliminary election qualified for the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287833-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston City Council election, Results, District 7\nThe top two vote-getters in the preliminary election qualified for the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287833-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston City Council election, Results, District 8\nThe top two vote-getters in the preliminary election qualified for the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287833-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston City Council election, Results, District 8\nNassour sought to become the first self-identified (as Boston municipal elections are non-partisan) Republican elected to the City Council since John W. Sears in November 1979.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287833-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston City Council election, Results, District 9\nThe top two vote-getters in the preliminary election qualified for the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287833-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston City Council election, Nonbinding advisory question\nA non-binding advisory question was added to the November 5, 2019, ballot for all Boston residents asking, \"Do you support the renaming/changing of the name of Dudley Square to Nubian Square?\" Election night results show that the question was defeated:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287833-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston City Council election, Nonbinding advisory question\nMayor of Boston Marty Walsh subsequently announced that the question had \"passed in the surrounding areas\" near the square, 1,990 to 958, and could be considered further by the city's Public Improvement Commission. On December 19, 2019, the Public Improvement Commission unanimously approved changing the name of Dudley Square to Nubian Square.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287834-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston College Eagles football team\nThe 2019 Boston College Eagles football team represented Boston College during the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Eagles played their home games at Alumni Stadium in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts and competed in the Atlantic Division of the Atlantic Coast Conference. They were led by seventh-year head coach Steve Addazio until his dismissal on December 1, 2019. For their bowl game, the Eagles were led by interim head coach Rich Gunnell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287834-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston College Eagles football team, Preseason, Coaching changes\nIn January 2019, head coach Steve Addazio announced the hiring of Mike Bajakian as the new offensive coordinator, replacing Scot Loeffler, who left to take the head coaching job at Bowling Green. Bajakian had spent the previous four years as the quarterbacks coach for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287834-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston College Eagles football team, Preseason, Preseason media poll\nIn the preseason ACC media poll, Boston College was predicted to finish in fifth in the Atlantic Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 73], "content_span": [74, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287834-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston College Eagles football team, Schedule\nBoston College's 2019 schedule will begin with their conference home opener against Virginia Tech on August 31. In non-conference play, the Eagles will play home games against Richmond of the Colonial Athletic Association and Kansas of the Big 12 Conference, and road games against Rutgers of the Big Ten Conference and Notre Dame, a football independent. In ACC play, they will face the other members of the Atlantic Division as well as Virginia Tech and Pittsburgh from the Coastal Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287834-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston College Eagles football team, Game summaries, Kansas\nThe Kansas Jayhawks came into the game as a three touchdown underdog, but performances by quarterback Carter Stanley (238 yards passing) and running back Pooka Williams Jr. (121 yards rushing) combined with other efforts to give the Jayhawks their first road win against a \"power 5\" team in almost 11 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287834-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston College Eagles football team, Game summaries, Kansas\nBoston College scored first and had the lead 10-0 until the Jayhawks scored on six straight possessions. Kansas took the lead 28-24 at the half thanks to an 82 yard run with 40 seconds remaining before the break to set up a 3-yard score just two plays later. Kansas continued to score in the second half but Boston College could not match the effort. The final score was Kansas 48, Boston College 24.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287835-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston College Eagles men's soccer team\nThe 2019 Boston College Eagles men's soccer team represented Boston College during the 2019 NCAA Division I men's soccer season. The Eagles were led by head coach Ed Kelly, in his fourteenth season. They played home games at Newton Soccer Complex. This was the team's 53rd season playing organized men's college soccer and their 15th playing in the Atlantic Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287835-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston College Eagles men's soccer team, Background\nThe 2018 Boston College men's soccer team finished the season with a 4\u20138\u20134 overall record and a 2\u20135\u20131 ACC record. The Eagles were seeded ninth\u2013overall in the 2018 ACC Men's Soccer Tournament, where they lost in the first round to NC State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287835-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston College Eagles men's soccer team, Background\nThe Eagles were not invited to the 2018 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament, and did not have any players selected in the 2019 MLS SuperDraft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287835-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston College Eagles men's soccer team, Squad, 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, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287836-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston College Eagles women's soccer team\nThe 2019 Boston College Eagles women's soccer team represented Boston College during the 2019 NCAA Division I women's soccer season. The Eagles were led by head coach Jason Lowe, in his first season. They played home games at Newton Campus Soccer Field. This is the team's 39th season playing organized women's college soccer, and their 15th playing in the Atlantic Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287836-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston College Eagles women's soccer team\nThe Eagles finished the season 8\u20138\u20132 overall, and 1\u20138\u20131 in ACC play to finish in fourteenth place. They did not qualify for the ACC Tournament and were not invited to the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287836-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston College Eagles women's soccer team, Squad, 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, 46], "section_span": [48, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287837-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Marathon\nThe 2019 Boston Marathon was the 123rd running of the annual marathon race held in Boston, Massachusetts. It took place on April 15, 2019. The elite men's race came down to a sprint finish, which Lawrence Cherono won in 2:07:57. The elite women's race was won by Worknesh Degefa, who took an early lead and built up a large gap between herself and the other runners, in 2:23:31. The men's and women's wheelchair races were won by Daniel Romanchuk in 1:21:36 and Manuela Sch\u00e4r in 1:34:19, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287837-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Marathon, Course\nThe marathon distance is officially 42.195 kilometres (26.219\u00a0mi), as sanctioned by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF), now known as World Athletics. 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. This area is lined by 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, 863]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287837-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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 and 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-00287837-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Marathon, Field\nThe 2019 edition of the marathon included nine previous winners of the race. The elite women's race included the 2018 winner Des Linden, who had the ninth-fastest personal best in the field. Sally Kipyego, runner-up in the 2016 New York City Marathon and the 10,000 metres at the 2012 Summer Olympics also competed. The fastest woman in the field was Aselefech Mergia, who ran 2:19:31 to win the 2012 Dubai Marathon. Mergia raced alongside three other sub-2:20 runners; Edna Kiplagat, Mare Dibaba, and Worknesh Degefa. Jordan Hasay, who had been dealing with injury and had pulled out of the previous year's race the day before, returned to race. Also running were 2015 winner Caroline Rotich and 2012 winner Sharon Cherop. The field included 11 sub-2:23 runners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287837-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Marathon, Field\nThe elite men's race featured 2018 winner Yuki Kawauchi. The Boston Herald listed \"five men to watch\": Geoffrey Kirui, winner in 2017 and whose personal best was 2:06:27, Soloman Deksisa (personal best of 2:04:40), Lawrence Cherono (personal best of 2:04:06), Lelisa Desisa, winner in 2015 and whose personal best was 2:04:45, and Hiroto Inoue (personal best of 2:06:54) who was debuting in Boston. Others who had run sub-2:05 were Sisay Lemma (best of 2:04:08) and Lemi Berhanu (best of 2:04:33). The men's wheelchair race featured four-time winner Marcel Hug and ten-time winner Ernst van Dyk, whilst the women's featured Manuela Sch\u00e4r, the first woman to record a sub-1:30 in Boston. Also racing were Sandra Graf, and Americans Amanda McGrory, Susannah Scaroni, and Tatyana McFadden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 814]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287837-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Marathon, Field\nThe day before the race, the winners of the previous year's race spoke to a crowd in Copley Square about subjects such as their diet and the mental challenges in marathons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287837-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Marathon, Race summary\nIn the early morning, rain had made the conditions wet but by the start there was only some light rain which cleared away later in the day. The race began with a flyover of General Dynamics F-16 Fighting Falcons from the 104th Fighter Squadron. In the men's race, Inoue and Kawauchi went to the front of the lead pack early on and, following a series of sub-5 minute miles, the group of 25 passed 10 kilometres (6.2\u00a0mi) in 30:20. The lead pack didn't \"get really serious about hard racing\" until they had passed through Wellesley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287837-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Marathon, Race summary\nBy Heartbreak Hill the pack still contained eight runners but, at 21 miles (34\u00a0km), Kiriu increased the pace, decreasing the size of the group to just five runners. The group had further reduced to three by mile 24; Cherono, Desisa, and Kenneth Kipkemoi. With 1 mile (1.6\u00a0km) to go, Kipkemoi increased the pace. Then with 1 kilometre (0.62\u00a0mi) left, Desisa made a surge before Cherono was able to catch up and the two sprinted down Boyleston Street.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287837-0006-0002", "contents": "2019 Boston Marathon, Race summary\nDesisa was unable to hold Cherono's pace and he dropped behind, meaning Cherono won in 2:07:57, two seconds ahead of Desisa. Kipkemoi finished third in 2:08:07, later stating that he had wanted to get away from the other runners, but they had managed to stay with him. The gap between the top two runners was the closest since the 1988 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287837-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Marathon, Race summary\nIn the women's race, Sara Hall took control early on, passing 5 kilometres (3.1\u00a0mi) in a \"slow\" time of 17:34, but Degefa overtook her about not long after. She had built up a small gap on the pack by 4 miles (6.4\u00a0km) with Cherop and Dibaba attempting to stay close. However, by 10 kilometres (6.2\u00a0mi), Degefa was 14 seconds ahead of the two and 29 seconds ahead of the chasing group. Degefa passed through halfway in 1:10:40 and had managed to extend her lead to nearly three minutes by 30 kilometres (19\u00a0mi).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287837-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Marathon, Race summary\nThe chasing group comprised 12 runners through the halfway point, but the group began to break up in the following hills. With 10 miles (16\u00a0km) left, Kiplagat made a move from the chasing group and in the 22nd mile, moved into second place and began to catch Degefa. However, despite running the fastest 5 kilometres (3.1\u00a0mi) split in the race (16:08 between the 35th and 40th kilometres), Kiplagat was too far from Degefa and she won in 2:23:31. Kiplagat finished second, 42 seconds back in 2:24:13 and Hasay in third, a further 67 seconds back in 2:25:20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287837-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Marathon, Race summary\nIn the men's wheelchair race, Daniel Romanchuk passed Masazumi Soejima at mile 16 and won in 1:21:36, an American record. At 20 years old, he was the youngest winner in the history of the race and the first American since Jim Knaub won in 1993. Soejima finished second in 1:24:30 and Hug took third in 1:24:42. Romanchuk called the victory an \"amazing thing to happen\". In the women's race, Sch\u00e4r took the lead. McFadden was in sight of the leaders when she slipped on a railroad track around mile six, causing her wheelchair to flip. Sch\u00e4r \"cruised to victory\" in 1:34:19 while McFadden was able to recover lost ground, finishing in 1:41:35 to take second place, one second ahead of Madison de Rozario. The Boston Herald described Sch\u00e4r as \"dominant\" and \"increasing her lead at every checkpoint\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 833]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287837-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Marathon, Results\nResults reported by NBC Sports and the Boston Athletic Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287838-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Pizza Cup\nThe 2019 Alberta Boston Pizza Cup presented by Best Western, the provincial men's curling championship for Alberta, was held from February 6 to 10 at the Ellerslie Curling Club in Edmonton, Alberta. The winning Kevin Koe team represented Alberta at the 2019 Tim Hortons Brier in Brandon, Manitoba.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season\nThe 2019 Boston Red Sox season was the 119th season in the team's history, and their 108th season at Fenway Park. The Red Sox entered the season as reigning World Series champions, but did not repeat, as they were eliminated from playoff contention on September 20. With a record of 84 wins and 78 losses, they finished third in the American League East, 19 games behind the New York Yankees. It was the first time the Red Sox did not win their division since 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Offseason\nDuring the offseason, the team retained or re-signed most players from the 2018 team. Not retained were closer Craig Kimbrel, reliever Joe Kelly, starter Drew Pomeranz, and second baseman Ian Kinsler. Prior to Opening Day, the team sent catcher Sandy Le\u00f3n to the minor leagues, opting to carry two catchers on the roster, Christian V\u00e1zquez and Blake Swihart. Manager Alex Cora stated he would use Andrew Benintendi as the team's leadoff hitter, with Mookie Betts batting second, swapping their positions from the team's usual 2018 batting order. Cora did not name a specific relief pitcher as closer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, Opening Day, March 28 at Seattle Mariners\nThe 2019 regular season began on March 28 against the Seattle Mariners at T-Mobile Park (formerly known as Safeco Field). Manager Alex Cora named Chris Sale as Boston's Opening Day starting pitcher, and advised the starting lineup to the media on March 27. Seattle scored seven runs off of Sale, who only pitched three innings and took the loss. Mariners' shortstop Tim Beckham had two home runs en route to a 12\u20134 final score. Mookie Betts went 3-for-5 at the plate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 85], "content_span": [86, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, March\nMarch 28\u2013March 31, at Seattle MarinersAfter a 12\u20134 loss in the season opener, the Red Sox came from behind to win the second game of the season, 7\u20136. Brian Johnson got the win in relief, with Matt Barnes picking up the team's first save of the season. Mitch Moreland's three-run home run in the ninth inning provided the winning margin. A late Boston rally in the third game of the series came up a run short, as Seattle held on for a 6\u20135 win. Boston again rallied late in the fourth game, loading the bases with one out in the ninth, but fell two runs short, losing 10\u20138. During the series, only one Red Sox starting pitcher, Nathan Eovaldi in the second game, lasted five innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, April\nApril 1\u2013April 4, at Oakland AthleticsThe Red Sox were held scoreless in the first two games of the series, falling to the Athletics by scores of 7\u20130 and 1\u20130. It was Boston's first time being shutout back-to-back since their 2015 season. Each game featured an outfield assist by Oakland center fielder Ram\u00f3n Laureano to retire Xander Bogaerts; at home in the first game, and at third base in the second game. The Red Sox ended their four-game losing streak with a 6\u20133 win in the third game of the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, April\nBlake Swihart was 3-for-4 at the plate including a home run, while Ryan Brasier recorded his first major league save. In the final game of the series, J. D. Martinez hit his third home run of the season, but the Red Sox were unable to win consecutive games, losing 7\u20133. Boston's 2\u20136 start was the worst for a defending World Series champion since the 1998 Florida Marlins, who were 1\u20137 through eight games played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, April\nApril 5\u2013April 7, at Arizona DiamondbacksBoston fell to Arizona in the Diamondbacks' home opener, 15\u20138, after falling behind 14\u20131 through six innings. Starter Rick Porcello allowed 10 hits and seven runs in 4+2\u20443 innings, followed by Brian Johnson who allowed six hits and seven runs in 1+1\u20443 innings. Late in the game, both Mookie Betts and Mitch Moreland homered, while infielder Eduardo N\u00fa\u00f1ez pitched an inning in relief.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, April\nThe second game of the series was tied in the bottom of the ninth, when Betts threw out Eduardo Escobar at the plate as he attempted to score from second on a single to right. However, a two-out walk-off single by the next batter, catcher Carson Kelly, gave the Diamondbacks a 5\u20134 win. Starting pitcher David Price allowed four runs in six innings for a no decision, while going 1-for-2 at the plate with an RBI. The team's record through 10 games was their worst start since 2011, which also began 2\u20138. The Red Sox won the final game of the series, 1\u20130, with the only run coming on a Moreland home run. Five Boston pitchers combined to shutout the Diamondbacks. Two Boston relief pitchers (Marcus Walden and Matt Barnes) batted, the first time that had occurred since 1972.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 824]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, April\nPrior to the home opener, the Red Sox celebrated their 2018 World Series victory, including raising a World Series banner and awarding World Series rings. In the game, Boston jumped out to an early 2\u20130 lead after two innings, only to fall behind 5\u20132 at the end of four, en route to a 7\u20135 defeat. Chris Sale gave up five runs in four innings for the loss, including a steal of home by Lourdes Gurriel Jr. For the Red Sox, Mookie Betts and Mitch Moreland both homered, while Dustin Pedroia was 1-for-4 in his first MLB game since May 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, April\nIn the second game of this short series, Toronto led 5\u20133 after three innings and 6\u20135 after eight. In the ninth inning, a Betts walk followed by a Moreland double tied the game. Two subsequent walks (one intentional) loaded the bases, then Rafael Devers delivered a walk-off single, giving Boston a 7\u20136 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, April\nApril 12\u2013April 15, vs. Baltimore OriolesThe opening game of the series was a 6\u20134 win for Boston, giving the team their first back-to-back wins of the season. Xander Bogaerts was 3-for-4 at the plate, while Andrew Benintendi hit his first home run of the year. Eduardo Rodr\u00edguez was the first Red Sox starting pitcher to record a win this season, while Ryan Brasier notched his third save. In the second game of the series, Red Sox starter Rick Porcello took the loss to fall to 0\u20133 on the season, as the Orioles won, 9\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, April\nChristian V\u00e1zquez was the only Boston player with two hits, one of them a home run. Baltimore first baseman Chris Davis ended his streak of 54 consecutive at bats without a hit, going 3-for-5 with four RBIs. The third game of the series saw David Price hold the Orioles to three hits and no runs through seven innings, as the Red Sox won, 4\u20130. Benintendi had to leave the game shortly after fouling a pitch off of his right foot in the bottom of the third inning, while Bogaerts had three RBIs on an eighth inning home run. The closing game of the series was an 8\u20131 Orioles win on the day of the Boston Marathon, with the Red Sox using a total of six pitchers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, April\nApril 16\u2013April 17, at New York YankeesThe first game of the season between the longtime rivals was an 8\u20130 shutout by the Yankees, as Chris Sale took the loss to fall to 0\u20134 on the season. Boston's record fell to 6\u201312, the team's worst start since the 1996 Red Sox started 3\u201315. In the second game of this two-game series, Boston starter Nathan Eovaldi held New York to three hits and one run through six innings, with the Red Sox leading, 3\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, April\nHowever, after the Yankees loaded the bases in the bottom of the seventh inning off of Red Sox reliever Brandon Workman, Brett Gardner hit a grand slam off of Ryan Brasier, giving New York a 5\u20133 lead and ultimately the win by that score. J. D. Martinez and Christian V\u00e1zquez homered for Boston, while Dustin Pedroia left the game in the middle of the second inning due to left knee discomfort. Boston's record of 6\u201313 was the worst for a defending World Series champion through 19 games since the 1998 Florida Marlins started 5\u201314. Boston's run differential of -42 set a new MLB-worst for a defending champion through 19 games, surpassing the -37 of the 1988 Minnesota Twins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, April\nThe opening game against the AL East leading Rays was a 6\u20134 Red Sox win. Tied 4\u20134 in the eighth inning, Mookie Betts and Mitch Moreland hit back-to-back home runs, and Ryan Brasier pitched a scoreless ninth inning for his fourth save of the season. In the second game of the series, the Red Sox jumped out to an early 5\u20130 lead, with four runs coming on a grand slam by Andrew Benintendi in the second inning. The Rays came back to tie the game, 5\u20135, through eight innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, April\nBoston scored one run in the top of the ninth, helped in part by a pinch hit double by Michael Chavis in his first MLB at bat. Brasier closed out the game for his fifth save of the season, the final out coming when catcher Christian V\u00e1zquez threw to first base to pickoff Rays outfielder Tommy Pham. The final game of the series was Boston's first extra innings game of the season. The Red Sox had a 3\u20132 lead after seven innings, but the Rays tied it in the bottom of the eighth. After scoreless ninth and tenth innings, Boston scored in the top of the eleventh, on a sacrifice fly by V\u00e1zquez that scored Rafael Devers. Brasier then got his third save in three days, closing out the 4\u20133 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, April\nApril 22\u2013April 25, vs. Detroit TigersThe April 22 game was postponed due to rain, resulting in a day-night doubleheader being scheduled for April 23. In the first game of a Tuesday doubleheader, the teams played to a 3\u20133 tie through seven innings, before the Tigers scored three runs off of Colten Brewer en route to a 7\u20134 win, ending the Red Sox' winning streak at three games. Xander Bogaerts had two home runs, as Boston was held to five hits total. In the second game of the doubleheader, the Tigers went ahead 3\u20130 in the fourth inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, April\nBoston closed the lead to 3\u20132 entering the ninth, but Detroit got an insurance run before closer Shane Greene notched his 11th save of the season in the 4\u20132 Tigers' win. The Red Sox got a total of five innings of one-run relief from Darwinzon Hern\u00e1ndez and Travis Lakins, both of whom made their MLB debuts. In the third game of the series, Boston held a 4\u20131 lead after six innings, then scored seven runs in the bottom of the eighth, en route to an 11\u20134 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0010-0002", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, April\nJ. D. Martinez was 3-for-4 at the plate, while Eduardo Rodr\u00edguez held Detroit to one run in six innings and got the win. The series' final game was a 7\u20133 Boston win, with Rick Porcello getting his first win of the season, and Michael Chavis hitting his second MLB home run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, April\nThe April 26 game was postponed due to rain, resulting in a day-night doubleheader being scheduled for June 8. In Saturday's game, Tampa Bay starter Charlie Morton held Boston to two hits and no runs through six innings, as the Rays went on to a 2\u20131 win. An eighth inning homer by Mookie Betts was the Red Sox' only run. In Sunday's game, Red Sox starter Chris Sale allowed two runs in each of the first two innings (two of the four runs were unearned), taking the loss in a 5\u20132 Rays win. Michael Chavis hit his third MLB home run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, April\nIn the first game of a three-game series, Boston fell behind 4\u20130 after two innings, then rallied for six runs in the bottom of the third, en route to a 9\u20134 win. Mookie Betts was 3-for-4, while Michael Chavis had three RBIs. Ryan Brasier got the win in a seven-pitcher effort from the Boston staff. The second game of the series was a 5\u20131 Boston win, as starter Rick Porcello pitched eight scoreless innings for the win. Betts and Mitch Moreland each homered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, May\nMay 1, vs. Oakland Athletics (cont'd)In the third and final game of the series, Boston starting pitcher H\u00e9ctor Vel\u00e1zquez was removed after 43 pitches in two innings. The bullpen provided six runs of scoreless relief, as Boston built a 7\u20131 lead en route to a 7\u20133 win and series sweep. Mitch Moreland and Christian V\u00e1zquez each homered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, May\nIn the first game of a four-game series, the Red Sox took a 4\u20133 lead into the bottom of the ninth. A one-out error by third baseman Rafael Devers put a runner on first. A single then put runners at the corners, and Nicky Delmonico followed with a three-run walk-off home run off of Ryan Brasier, giving Chicago the win, 6\u20134. Chris Sale got his first win of the season in the second game of the series, a 6\u20131 Boston win, allowing no runs and three hits in six innings pitched. Devers and Michael Chavis each homered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0014-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, May\nThe third game of the series was notable for the Red Sox scoring nine runs with two outs in the third inning; after the first two batters were retired, Boston had 10 hits in a row (four singles, three doubles, and three home runs). Chavis and Christian V\u00e1zquez each had four hits during the game, a 15\u20132 Boston win. The series' closing game was tied, 2\u20132, going into the eighth inning, when Boston scored seven runs. Four runs came on a grand slam by Xander Bogaerts, as the Red Sox won, 9\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, May\nThe opening game of the series saw all of Baltimore's runs come on a grand slam by Jonathan Villar off of Josh Smith, who was making a spot start for Boston. The Red Sox plated only a single run, resulting in a 4\u20131 loss. The first five batters in Boston's order were a collective 0-for-19. With David Price on the injured list, H\u00e9ctor Vel\u00e1zquez started the second game of the series, leaving after three innings with the score tied, 2\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, May\nMarcus Walden then pitched three innings in relief, later getting credit for the win, as Boston led 6\u20133 after six innings. Matt Barnes closed out the 8\u20135 win with a four-out save. J. D. Martinez hit his 200th MLB career home run; Xander Bogaerts and Mitch Moreland also homered. The final game of the series featured Chris Sale holding the Orioles to three hits and one run through eight innings, including pitching an immaculate inning in the bottom of the seventh. Sale received a no decision, as the game went to extra innings, tied 1\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0015-0002", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, May\nThere were no runs scored in the first two extra frames, with Jackie Bradley Jr. reaching over the outfield wall to prevent a game-winning homer by Trey Mancini in the bottom of the 11th. Andrew Benintendi hit a solo home run to give Boston a 2\u20131 lead in the top of the 12th, and Heath Hembree closed out the win with his first MLB save. The win gave the Red Sox a 19\u201319 record, the first time the team was at .500 since the second game of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, May\nEduardo Rodr\u00edguez started the first game of the series, holding Seattle scoreless through seven innings. Boston's offense had 15 hits, winning by a 14\u20131 score. Andrew Benintendi, Rafael Devers, and Mitch Moreland each homered. With the win, the Red Sox reached 20\u201319, their first winning record of the season. In the second game of the series, Seattle jumped out to an early 4\u20130 lead in the top of the first inning; Boston responded with one run in bottom of the second and eight runs in the bottom of the third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, May\nBoston's 9\u20135 victory gave the team their first four-game winning streak of the season. Rick Porcello went 6+2\u20443 innings and got the win. Every Boston batter walked at least once, while Moreland and Sandy Le\u00f3n each homered. The final game of the series was an 11\u20132 Boston win, with Michael Chavis going 3-for-5 at the plate with five RBIs, while J. D. Martinez had two home runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, May\nIn the opener of a two-game series, Chris Sale struck out 17 batters, a new career high. He left the game after seven innings with a 3\u20132 lead, but received a no decision as the game went to extra innings, tied 4\u20134. Colorado scored a run in the 11th inning off of two walks and a single for a 5\u20134 win, ending Boston's winning streak at five games. Boston's relievers had seven more strikeouts; the total of 24 tied the single-game record for the Red Sox franchise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0017-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, May\nThe second game of the series also went to extra innings; after Boston built an early 5\u20130 lead, Colorado tied the game at five in the seventh inning. In the 10th inning, the Rockies had a leadoff double, but were unable to score. In Boston's half of the inning, Xander Bogaerts doubled, Rafael Devers was intentionally walked, and then Michael Chavis drove in Bogaerts to give the Red Sox the win, 6\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, May\nBoston lost the first game of a three-game series, 3\u20131. A two-run homer by George Springer in the eighth inning took the Astros from a 1\u20130 deficit to a 2\u20131 lead. Xander Bogaerts and Christian V\u00e1zquez each had three hits for the Red Sox. Houston scored five runs in the second game of the series before Boston had a chance to bat, chasing starter H\u00e9ctor Vel\u00e1zquez after 1\u20443 of an inning. Boston got no closer than trailing by three runs, 6\u20133, after the fourth inning, as the Astros went on to win, 7\u20133. V\u00e1zquez homered for the Red Sox.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0018-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, May\nIn the final game of the series, Houston had a 3\u20131 lead after three innings. In the fifth inning, Boston tied the game, 3\u20133, on a Michael Chavis solo home run, followed by a Mookie Betts double and Bogaerts RBI single. Bogaerts again drove in Betts in the seventh inning, giving the Red Sox what proved to be the winning run in a 4\u20133 victory. Brandon Workman got the save, the first of his MLB career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, May\nThe Red Sox won the first game of the series, 12\u20132, while out-hitting the Blue Jays, 16 to 3. Michael Chavis, Jackie Bradley Jr., Xander Bogaerts, and Rafael Devers all homered. Boston lost the second game of the series, 10\u20133, after Toronto jumped out to a 6\u20130 lead through five innings, powered by DH Rowdy Tellez with two home runs for five RBIs. Boston's runs came on three solo homers; by Bradley Jr., Devers, and Mitch Moreland. The third game of the series was a 6\u20135 Boston win in 13 innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0019-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, May\nToronto erased one-run deficits both in the bottom of the ninth and in the bottom of the 12th. Boston's winning run came on a Chavis homer; Devers and Mookie Betts also homered earlier in the game. In the final game of the series, Toronto scored first and last, however it was a Boston win, 8\u20132. Ryan Weber held the Blue Jays to one run on three hits in six innings, earning his first MLB win as a starting pitcher. Steve Pearce hit his first home run of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, May\nBoston out-hit Houston, 7\u20134, in the first game of the series, but lost, 4\u20133. Chris Sale allowed four runs (two earned) in six innings and took the loss, falling to 1\u20136 on the season. Houston had a 4\u20130 lead through four innings, with Boston scoring on solo home runs by Xander Bogaerts, Jackie Bradley Jr., and Christian V\u00e1zquez in the sixth, eighth, and ninth innings, respectively. In the second game of the series, Red Sox starter David Price left in the first inning, due to flu-like symptoms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0020-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, May\nThe game remained scoreless until Houston took a 2\u20130 lead in the sixth inning. Boston rallied to tied the game in the top of the ninth, 3\u20133, but was unable to take the lead, despite having runners on first and third with no outs. In the bottom of the ninth, the Astros had a double, two walks, and a game-winning single by Carlos Correa, giving the Red Sox another 4\u20133 loss. Houston took a 1\u20130 first-inning lead in the final game of the series, however Boston scored four unanswered runs to win, 4\u20131. Rafael Devers hit his seventh home run of the season and Marcus Walden got the save.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, May\nCleveland took an early 3\u20130 lead in the first game of the series, with Boston evening the score, 3\u20133, at the end of four innings. Boston then scored six runs in the fifth, and went on to win, 12\u20135. Sandy Le\u00f3n had a three-run homer and J. D. Martinez hit two home runs. The second game of the series had a 69-minute rain delay during the second inning. Scoreless until the sixth inning, Boston took a 3\u20130 lead, and held a 5\u20132 lead going into the ninth inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0021-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, May\nCleveland rallied for five runs in the ninth, with the tying runs being charged to Ryan Brasier, and Travis Lakins taking the loss as Boston fell, 7\u20135. The final game of the series featured 23 runs and 32 hits, with Cleveland winning, 14\u20139. Four different Red Sox homered, including Andrew Benintendi, who had three RBIs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, May\nMay 30\u2013May 31, at New York YankeesThe first game of the series was postponed due to rain and rescheduled for August 3 at 7 p.m. In Friday's game, Boston took an early lead on a second-inning Rafael Devers solo home run, but New York scored four unanswered runs to win, 4\u20131, giving the Red Sox their fifth defeat in seven games. Chris Sale took the loss and fell to 1\u20137 for the season, as Boston (29\u201328) ended the month 8+1\u20442 games behind the division-leading Yankees (37\u201319).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, June\nJune 1\u2013June 2, at New York Yankees (cont'd)Boston scored first in Saturday's game, with New York taking a 3\u20131 lead at the end of the second inning. The Red Sox tied the game in the fourth inning, on a solo home run by Xander Bogaerts and an RBI single by Sandy Le\u00f3n. A two-run homer by Yankees catcher Gary S\u00e1nchez in the fifth inning was the only other scoring of the game. New York's 5\u20133 victory put them 9+1\u20442 games ahead of Boston, as the Red Sox fell back to .500 (29\u201329) for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0023-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, June\nIn the final game of the series, Boston led the entire way, with New York drawing no closer than 3\u20132 at the end of the fourth inning, en route to an 8\u20135 Red Sox win. Bogaerts and J. D. Martinez both homered. Before the game, manager Alex Cora announced that Mookie Betts would be the team's leadoff hitter for the rest of the season, as he had been during 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, June\nJune 4\u2013June 6, at Kansas City RoyalsAfter Kansas City had an early 2\u20130 lead in the opening game of the series, Boston went ahead by a run in the sixth. Eduardo N\u00fa\u00f1ez then hit a pinch hit three-run homer in the eighth inning, as Boston pulled away for an 8\u20133 win. The middle game of the series was a complete game shutout by Chris Sale, who also pitched his second immaculate inning of the season. Rafael Devers hit his ninth home run of the season as Boston won, 8\u20130. Boston completed the sweep with a 7\u20135 win on Thursday afternoon, using seven pitchers with Colten Brewer getting the win. Mookie Betts hit his 10th home run of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, June\nJune 7\u2013June 9, vs. Tampa Bay RaysThe Rays defeated the Red Sox, 5\u20131, in the opening game of the series, as Tampa Bay starter Yonny Chirinos did not allow a baserunner until the sixth inning. Xander Bogaerts had two of Boston's four hits, and the team's only RBI. In the first game of a Saturday doubleheader, Tampa Bay had a 4\u20131 lead at the end of the second inning, and went on to win, 9\u20132. Marco Hern\u00e1ndez played in his first MLB game since the 2017 season, and Jackie Bradley Jr. hit his fifth home run of the season. The second game of the doubleheader was a 5\u20131 Red Sox win, as David Price held the Rays to one run in six innings, with 10 strikeouts. The final game of the series was a 6\u20131 Rays win on Sunday, with Hern\u00e1ndez driving in Boston's only run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 808]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, June\nJune 10\u2013June 13, vs. Texas RangersChris Sale started the series' opener, holding Texas to one run (unearned) on three hits in seven innings, while striking out 10. Boston held a 2\u20131 lead going into the ninth, however the Rangers rallied for two runs, going ahead 3\u20132. Brock Holt then had a two-out RBI in the bottom of the ninth to send the game to extra innings. Texas scored what proved to be the winning run in the top of the 11th, on a double and a single, for a 4\u20133 final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0026-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, June\nThe second game of the series was a 9\u20135 Rangers win, dropping the Red Sox back to .500 on the season (34\u201334). The game included an inside-the-park home run by Hunter Pence, ejections of both managers (Alex Cora for Boston, Chris Woodward for Texas), and the first career ejection of Andrew Benintendi. Texas took a 2\u20131 first-inning lead in the third game of the series, with Boston going ahead 3\u20132 in the fifth inning, and the Rangers tying the score at 3\u20133 in the top of the eighth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0026-0002", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, June\nIn the bottom of the ninth, the Red Sox loaded the bases on a double, and single, and a walk. Mookie Betts then also walked, forcing in Marco Hern\u00e1ndez with the winning run, 4\u20133. In the final game of the series, the Red Sox were down 6\u20131 in the middle of the second inning, with starter David Price leaving the game after allowing six runs on five hits in 1+1\u20443 innings. Boston then used seven relief pitchers, who did not allow any more runs. The offense tied the game in the fifth inning, and a home run by Xander Bogaerts (one of five the team hit) in the seventh inning put Boston ahead, 7\u20136. With a depleted bullpen and Heath Hembree not available, Josh Smith closed out the victory for his first MLB save.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, June\nIn the opener of a three-game series in Baltimore, Boston had 16 hits including six home runs, for a 13\u20132 win. Eduardo Rodr\u00edguez held the Orioles to one run in seven innings, improving his record on the season to 7\u20134. The second game was scoreless until the sixth inning, with the Red Sox taking a 3\u20132 lead, en route to a 7\u20132 final. Chris Sale got the win and improved his record to 3\u20137, while J. D. Martinez hit his 16th home run of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0027-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, June\nBoston trailed Baltimore, 3\u20132, going into the ninth inning of the final game of the series, when a home run by Marco Hern\u00e1ndez tied the game and sent it to extra innings. The Red Sox then outscored the Orioles, 5\u20133, in the extra frame, giving Boston an 8\u20136 victory and their fifth consecutive win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, June\nBoston extended their winning streak to six games, with a 2\u20130 win in the series' opener in Minnesota. The only runs of the game came on three singles to open the game, and a pair of ninth-inning doubles. Rick Porcello improved his record to 5\u20136, while Ryan Brasier recorded his seventh save of the year. The second game of the series was Boston's longest to this point in the season, as the teams were tied, 2\u20132, at the end of regulation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0028-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, June\nIn the 13th inning, Mookie Betts homered for the Red Sox and Max Kepler homered for the Twins, leaving the game still tied, 3\u20133. Although Andrew Benintendi reached third base with no outs in the top of the 17th, he was left stranded there. In the bottom of the inning, the Twins loaded the bases with one out on a single, a double, and an intentional walk; Kepler then drove in the winning run with a single to right field. J. D. Martinez and Twins third baseman Miguel Sano each struck out five times in the game. Minnesota led the final game of the series, 4\u20133, after four innings. Boston then scored the final six runs of the game for the win, 9\u20134. Eduardo Rodr\u00edguez improved his season record to 8\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, June\nJune 21\u2013June 23, vs. Toronto Blue JaysIn the series' opener, the Red Sox fell behind, 4\u20131, at the end of four innings. At the end of seven, Toronto still led, 5\u20134, but Boston tied the game in the eighth, and the game went to extra innings. Christian V\u00e1zquez then hit a two-run walk-off home run in the bottom of the tenth, giving the Red Sox a 7\u20135 win. Boston held a 6\u20130 lead after three innings in the second game of the series, only to have Toronto go ahead, 8\u20136, in the eighth inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0029-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, June\nA Red Sox rally in the ninth inning came up a run short, resulting in an 8\u20137 loss. Boston's bullpen allowed seven runs in the final four innings. The final game of the series was a 6\u20131 Blue Jays win, as the Red Sox did not score until the ninth inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, June\nJune 24\u2013June 26, vs. Chicago White SoxTrailing 2\u20131 after four innings of the first game of the series, Boston scored a single run in each remaining inning, for a 6\u20135 win. The winning run came on an infield single by Marco Hern\u00e1ndez with the bases loaded and two outs in the bottom of the ninth. Start time of the second game of the series was delayed for 24 minutes by rain. The teams then traded early runs, and were tied 3\u20133 after three innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0030-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, June\nThe Red Sox went on to score the final three runs of the game, for a 6\u20133 win. Xander Bogaerts hit his 15th home run of the season, while starter David Price improved his record to 5\u20132. Boston was unable to complete the sweep on Wednesday afternoon, as Chicago scored two runs in the top of the ninth inning via a Jos\u00e9 Abreu homer for an 8\u20137 win. Matt Barnes was charged with his sixth blown save of the season, and took the loss. The White Sox had early leads of 3\u20132 and 5\u20133, while the Red Sox had gone ahead, 7\u20136, via three runs in the bottom of the eighth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, June\nJune 29\u2013June 30, vs. New York Yankees in London, United Kingdom", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, June\nThe first MLB game played in Europe opened with the Yankees scoring six runs in the top of the first inning, chasing Boston starter Rick Porcello after one-third of an inning. The Red Sox responded with six runs of their own in the bottom of the first, as New York starter Masahiro Tanaka only lasted two-thirds of an inning. The Yankees built a 17\u20136 lead through five innings, which the Red Sox narrowed to 17\u201313 at the end of the seventh, but there was no further scoring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0032-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, June\nMichael Chavis had a pair of three-run home runs, while Jackie Bradley Jr. also homered. At 4 hours 42 minutes, the game was only three minutes shorter than the longest nine-inning game in MLB history (August 18, 2006, also between the Red Sox and Yankees). In the second and final game of the series, the Red Sox jumped out to a 4\u20130 first-inning lead. The Yankees scored two runs in the second, and it remained 4\u20132 until the seventh inning, when New York scored nine runs, giving them an 11\u20134 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0032-0002", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, June\nBoston closed to 12\u20138 in the bottom of the eighth, and had the bases loaded with two outs, but there was no further scoring. The loss, Boston's third in a row, left the team with a 44\u201340 record at the end of June, 11 games behind New York in the American League East standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, July\nIn the opening game of the series, Boston scored four runs in the top of the first inning, and built a 7\u20131 lead en route to a 10\u20136 victory. Starting pitcher David Price limited the Blue Jays to four hits and two runs in six innings. Rafael Devers had two home runs and six RBIs, while Christian V\u00e1zquez went 3-for-5 with a homer. The second game of the series was tied, 3\u20133, after four innings. The only further scoring was three runs by the Blue Jays, handing the Red Sox a 6\u20133 defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0033-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, July\nV\u00e1zquez hit his 13th home run of the season, Chris Sale saw his record fall to 3\u20138, and Xander Bogaerts had a golden sombrero (four strikeouts) for the first time in his career. In the final game of the series, a nine-run sixth inning and a pinch hit home run by Marco Hern\u00e1ndez in the ninth gave Boston an 8\u20137 win. Devers and Michael Chavis also homered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, July\nBoston won the opener of the series, 9\u20136, in a game that included a two-hour rain delay. Rafael Devers and Xander Bogaerts each homered, their 16th and 17th of the season, respectively. The start of the second game of the series was delayed by rain for four hours. Boston then jumped out to an early 5\u20130 lead, and went on to win, 10\u20136. Andrew Benintendi was 4-for-6 at the plate, only lacking a home run for the cycle. On Sunday, the Red Sox completed a series sweep with a 6\u20133 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0034-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, July\nDavid Price improved his record on the season to 7\u20132, and Christian V\u00e1zquez hit his 14th home run of the year. Boston reached the All-Star break with a record of 49\u201341 (0.544 winning percentage), nine games behind the division-leading Yankees, and two games behind Cleveland for the second wild card spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, July\nIn a 4\u20133 American League win, all three Boston all-stars played, but were hitless. J. D. Martinez started at DH and was 0-for-2, Xander Bogaerts grounded out as a pinch hitter, and Mookie Betts appeared as a defensive replacement without batting. Alex Cora managed the American League team, with assistance from his Red Sox coaches and Cleveland Indians manager Terry Francona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, July\nIn this three-game series between the teams that contested the 2018 World Series, Boston won the opener, 8\u20131, in a game that included a one-hour rain delay. Red Sox starter Eduardo Rodr\u00edguez improved his record to 10\u20134 for the season, allowing only five hits and one run in seven innings. Rafael Devers, Christian V\u00e1zquez, and Xander Bogaerts each homered. The second game of the series was a one-run game entering the fifth inning, but turned into an 11\u20132 Dodgers' win. Chris Sale saw his record for the season fall to 3\u20139; Bogaerts had Boston's only home run and both RBIs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0036-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, July\nIn the final game of the series, Boston fought back from a 4\u20132 deficit to tie the game in the eighth; the game then went to extra innings. The Red Sox were not able to capitalize on a leadoff double by Jackie Bradley Jr. in the 11th. The Dodgers went on to score three runs in the 12th, giving Boston a 7\u20134 loss. Duration of the game was five hours and 40 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, July\nThe first game in this four-game series was a 10\u20138 Boston win; a two-run victory after the Red Sox had held leads of 5\u20130 and 10\u20134. Eight different Red Sox players scored, and Michael Chavis hit his first MLB grand slam. Toronto won the second game, 10\u20134, as Andrew Cashner took the loss in his first start with Boston, having allowed six runs (five earned) on eight hits in five innings. Xander Bogaerts hit his 21st home run of the season. The Red Sox won the third game, 5\u20134, with Eduardo Rodr\u00edguez improving his record on the season to 11\u20134. Rafael Devers went 3-for-4 at the plate, including his 18th home run of the year, and had four RBIs. Boston won the final game of the series, 5\u20130, with Chris Sale getting his first win at Fenway Park since July 11, 2018. Devers and Mookie Betts both homered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 853]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, July\nBaltimore won the opener of this three-game series, 11\u20132, as Boston's only runs came on a second-inning two-run homer by Sam Travis. In the middle game of the series, Boston took an early 5\u20130 lead, with Baltimore tying the game, 5\u20135, in the third inning. Boston then scored eight runs in the fourth inning, en route to a 17\u20136 win. Jackie Bradley Jr. hit a pair of three-run home runs; Rafael Devers, Mookie Betts, and Sandy Le\u00f3n also homered. Baltimore took the closing game of the series, 5\u20130, as the Red Sox were held to one hit, a seventh-inning double by Devers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, July\nBoston won the series' first game, 9\u20134, mainly powered by a seven-run third inning, which saw J. D. Martinez, Andrew Benintendi, and Sam Travis each homer. Eduardo Rodr\u00edguez improved his record on the season to 12\u20134. The second game was also a Boston win, 5\u20134. Christian V\u00e1zquez had a pinch hit home run, and the Red Sox reached 10 games over .500 (56\u201346) for the first time this season. The final game of the series included a formal protest by the Red Sox, \"due to placement of substitutes in the lineup following the removal of the DH.\" On the field, Boston had a 2\u20130 lead through three innings, however the Rays then scored three unanswered runs to win, 3\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, July\nIn the opener of a four-game series, the Red Sox scored seven runs in the first inning and went on to a 19\u20133 win, setting a franchise record for the most runs scored in a game against the Yankees. Boston had 10 doubles, including two by Michael Chavis, who entered the game after Brock Holt was ejected. Xander Bogaerts had two home runs, while Rafael Devers and Sandy Le\u00f3n also homered. In the second game of the series, Boston scored three first-inning runs, led 7\u20130 after four innings, and went on to a 10\u20135 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0040-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, July\nAndrew Cashner held the Yankees to three runs on 10 hits in 6+2\u20443 innings. Mookie Betts had the fifth three-homer game of his career, and J. D. Martinez also homered. The Red Sox reached 11 games over .500 (58\u201347) for the first time this year. Boston also won the third game of the series, 9\u20135, with Martinez and Andrew Benintendi hitting home runs. The Red Sox were unable to complete the sweep, as the Yankees won Sunday's game, 9\u20136. The two teams combined for five errors, including a throwing error by Jackie Bradley Jr. that allowed two runs to score. Benintendi again homered, while Chris Sale saw his record fall to 5\u201310 on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, July\nBoston scored two first-inning runs in the opening game of the series and held a 5\u20134 lead after five innings, but fell to Tampa Bay, 6\u20135. The Red Sox left seven runners on base in the final three innings. Andrew Benintendi homered for the third consecutive game. In the series' second game, the Rays had a 5\u20130 lead after two innings, and went on to an 8\u20135 win. J. D. Martinez and Michael Chavis each homered. Boston finished July with three consecutive losses; at 59\u201350, the team was 10 games behind the division-leading Yankees, and 2+1\u20442 games out of the second wild card spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, August\nTampa Bay completed their sweep of the three-game series with a 9\u20134 win. Xander Bogaerts had two home runs, and Mookie Betts also homered. Andrew Benintendi was 3-for-4 at the plate with three doubles. With four losses in a row, Boston fell to 59\u201351 on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, August\nThe opening game of this series\u2014with four games to be played in three days, due to a rainout earlier in the season\u2014was won by New York, 4\u20132. All scoring occurred in the first inning, with Boston's runs coming on a J. D. Martinez home run with Xander Bogaerts on base. The Red Sox' losing streak reached five games, for the first time since their 2015 season. New York won the second game of the series, 9\u20132, in the first game of a Saturday doubleheader. Boston's two runs came on solo homers by Jackie Bradley Jr. and Andrew Benintendi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0043-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, August\nRed Sox manager Alex Cora and starting pitcher Chris Sale were both ejected in the fourth inning. A 6\u20134 loss to the Yankees in the second game of the doubleheader gave the Red Sox their seventh loss in a row. Rafael Devers hit his 22nd home run of the season. The Yankees completed the sweep on Sunday evening with a 7\u20134 win. Christian V\u00e1zquez and Michael Chavis both homered, as the Red Sox' losing streak reached eight games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, August\nThe Red Sox ended their losing streak with a 7\u20135 win in the first of three games against the Royals. Sam Travis and Rafael Devers each homered, with Brandon Workman recording his sixth save of the year. Kansas City won the second game of the series, 6\u20132, scoring all their runs off of Boston starter Andrew Cashner in 5+1\u20443 innings. The final game of the series saw Boston take a 4\u20132 lead through five innings, with Kansas City coming back to tie the game, 4\u20134, after seven innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0044-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, August\nWith no further scoring in regulation, the game went to extra innings, and entered a rain delay in the top of the 10th inning. At approximately 12:30\u00a0a.m., the game was officially suspended\u2014the Royals returned to Fenway on August 22 at 1:05\u00a0p.m. to complete the game. For completion of the game and series, see August 22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, August\nThe first game of the four-game series was won by Boston, 3\u20130. Chris Sale held Los Angeles to two hits in eight innings, improving his record on the year to 6\u201311. Red Sox scoring came on a two-run homer by Sam Travis and a solo homer by Sandy Le\u00f3n. Boston won the second game, 16\u20134, while also outhitting the Angels, 14\u20133. J. D. Martinez was 4-for-5 at the plate, with two home runs and two doubles. Mookie Betts, Rafael Devers, and Mitch Moreland also homered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0045-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, August\nThe Angels responded to their 12-run loss on Friday with an 8-run win on Saturday, 12\u20134. Sam Travis hit his fifth home run of the season. Los Angeles took an early 3\u20130 lead in the final game of the series, with Boston going ahead, 4\u20133, after five innings. An eighth-inning run by the Angels tied the game, which went to extra innings; a tenth-inning run gave Los Angeles the win, 5\u20134. Christian V\u00e1zquez hit his 18th home run of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, August\nIn the series' opening game, Boston trailed, 5\u20131, after three innings. Two runs by the Red Sox in the fourth, one in the seventh, and one in the ninth resulted in a 5\u20135 tie. In the bottom of the ninth, Cleveland's Carlos Santana hit a walk-off home run, giving Boston their third loss in a row. Boston built a 6\u20131 lead midway through the sixth inning of the second game of the series, only to have Cleveland tie the game and force extra innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0046-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, August\nA home run by Jackie Bradley Jr. in the top of the 10th inning proved to be the difference in a 7\u20136 Red Sox win. Andrew Cashner was used in relief and got the save, the first of his MLB career. Chris Sale recorded the 2,000th strikeout of his MLB career. Rafael Devers became the latest MLB player to record six hits in a game; he was 5-for-5 in the first nine innings, and had his sixth hit in the 10th inning. The Red Sox won the third and final game of the series, 5\u20131. Devers homered, and Xander Bogaerts hit two home runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, August\nThe opening game of the series was a 9\u20131 Boston win, as the Red Sox outhit the Orioles, 12\u20135. Mookie Betts hit his 21st home run of the season. Boston extended their winning streak to four games with a 4\u20130 win in the middle game of the series. Eduardo Rodr\u00edguez improved his record on the season to 14\u20135, while Brock Holt and Rafael Devers each homered. Boston completed the sweep on Sunday, coming back from a 6\u20130 deficit to record a 13\u20137 win. Devers and Sam Travis each homered, as Boston used seven pitchers, with Marcus Walden getting the win. Devers became the first MLB players to reach 100 RBIs on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0048-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, August\nBoston lost the opening inter-league game against Philadelphia, 3\u20132. All three Phillies runs came in the first inning, from a walk, two doubles, and a single. Both Red Sox runs came in the third inning, as Jackie Bradley Jr. hit a two-run homer. Boston's five-game winning streak ended as the team fell to 67\u201360 on the season. Philadelphia then swept the two-game series with a 5\u20132 win, despite the Red Sox outhitting the Phillies, 8\u20136. Bradley Jr. homered again, his 16th of the season. Rick Porcello took the loss and fell to 11\u201310 on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0049-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, August\nThis was the resumption of the suspended game from August 7, which was halted due to rain with no outs in the top of the 10th with no runners on base and the score tied, 4\u20134. The Red Sox allowed anyone under 18 years old to enter Fenway Park for free; all other tickets were only $5 each, with proceeds going to The Jimmy Fund. After retiring the Royals in order in the top of the 10th, Christian V\u00e1zquez hit a one-out double, which was followed by an intentional walk and then a game-winning single by Brock Holt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0050-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, August\nThis three-game series was held on Players Weekend, when MLB players are allowed and encouraged to put nicknames on the back of their uniforms. For the opening game, the nicknames used by Boston's starting lineup were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0051-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, August\nIn the opening game, Boston scored three runs in each of the first two innings, and went on to an 11\u20130 win. Eduardo Rodr\u00edguez got the win and improved his record on the season to 15\u20135. J. D. Martinez hit a pair of three-run homers, going 3-for-4 at the plate with seven RBIs. In the middle game of the series, the Red Sox had a 4\u20133 lead after four innings. San Diego tied the game with a run in the seventh, then Brock Holt's ninth-inning home run provided Boston's winning margin, 5\u20134. The Red Sox were unable to complete the sweep on Sunday, falling to the Padres, 3\u20131. Boston's run came on the 31st homer of the season by Martinez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0052-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, August\nIn this inter-league series, Boston took a 6\u20130 lead in the first game, and went on to a 10\u20136 win. Jackie Bradley Jr., Christian V\u00e1zquez, and Xander Bogaerts each homered. At an estimated distance of 478 feet (146\u00a0m), the homer by Bradley Jr. was the longest by a Red Sox player since Statcast was introduced in 2015. Boston completed the two-game sweep with a 7\u20134 win, as Eduardo Rodr\u00edguez got his 16th win of the season. Bogaerts hit two home runs, becoming the first Red Sox shortstop with 30 in a season since Nomar Garciaparra in 1998. J. D. Martinez and Rafael Devers also homered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0053-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, August\nIn the series' opener, Boston took an early 4\u20130 lead, and had a 6\u20134 lead going to the bottom of the ninth inning, only to see the Angels tie the game and force extra innings. The tie held until Mookie Betts hit his second home run of the game in the top of the 15th inning, which proved to be the difference as the Red Sox won, 7\u20136. Duration of the game was 5 hours 23 minutes, and included the 33rd homer of the season by J. D. Martinez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0053-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, August\nIn the middle game of the series, the Red Sox held a 4\u20133 lead after seven innings. In the bottom of the eighth, the Angels scored seven runs, and went on to win, 10\u20134. The loss left Boston with an overall record of 73\u201363, having accrued a record of 14\u201313 during August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0054-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, September\nWith expanded rosters allowed starting on September 1, the team added four pitchers (Jhoulys Chac\u00edn, Travis Lakins, Ryan Weber, and H\u00e9ctor Vel\u00e1zquez) and two position players (catcher Juan Centeno and outfielder Gorkys Hern\u00e1ndez). Following the end of the Triple-A season, on September 4 the team added four additional pitchers (Colten Brewer, Trevor Kelley, Bobby Poyner, and Mike Shawaryn).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0055-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, September\nBoston won the third game of the series, 4\u20133. Xander Bogaerts and J. D. Martinez each homered, with Bogaerts going 3-for-4 with three RBIs. Brandon Workman recorded his 10th save of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0056-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, September\nIn the first game of the series, Minnesota took a 6\u20130 lead through the middle of the fifth inning. Boston closed to 6\u20134 at the end of the fifth, and to 6\u20135 at the end of the eighth. Despite a leadoff single in the bottom of the ninth, the Red Sox were unable to score again. Rick Porcello fell to 12\u201311 on the season, while Rafael Devers and Andrew Benintendi both homered. Boston won the second game of the series, 6\u20132, as Mookie Betts had two home runs, including one to leadoff the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0056-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, September\nEduardo Rodr\u00edguez got his 17th win of the season, and Brandon Workman got his 11th save. The final game of the series was a 2\u20131 win by the Twins. The Red Sox had the tying run on base in the ninth inning, but Devers was thrown out at the plate trying to score on a two-out double that J. D. Martinez hit off of the Green Monster. Boston's run came on a Betts homer that hit Pesky's Pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0057-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, September\nJhoulys Chac\u00edn got the start in the first game of this four-game series, retiring all six batters he faced while striking out four. Powered mainly by a four-run fourth inning, Boston went on to win, 6\u20131, while using seven pitchers. Mitch Moreland hit his 15th home run of the season. The Yankees won the series' second game, 5\u20131, also mainly due to a four-run fourth inning. Boston's run came on a ninth-inning homer by J. D. Martinez. New York won the third game of the series, 10\u20135, scoring first and never trailing. Jackie Bradley Jr. and Mookie Betts each homered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0058-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, September\nFollowing the September 8 loss to the Yankees, which dropped the Red Sox to 76\u201367 on the season, the team dismissed president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski. The team announced that baseball operations would be run by assistant general managers Brian O'Halloran, Eddie Romero, and Zack Scott on an interim basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0059-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, September\nThe final game of the series was a 5\u20130 Yankees win, which eliminated the Red Sox from AL East title contention. Prior to the game, David Ortiz threw out the ceremonial first pitch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0060-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, September\nThe first game of the series was a 4\u20133 win by Toronto, after Boston had held leads of 1\u20130 and 3\u20132. Mookie Betts hit his 28th home run of the season. The second game of the series was an 8\u20130 win by the Blue Jays, extending Boston's losing streak to five games. The Red Sox only collected two hits, one each by Brock Holt and Rafael Devers. Boston won the final game of the series, 7\u20134, with Blue Jay starter and former Red Sox pitcher Clay Buchholz taking the loss. Boston used nine pitchers, with Brandon Workman notching his 12th save of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0061-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, September\nIn this weekend inter-league series, Boston won the first game, 2\u20131. The winning run scored on a sacrifice fly by Andrew Benintendi in the top of the ninth inning. Boston also won the second game, 6\u20133. Christian V\u00e1zquez had a third-inning grand slam and a sixth inning solo homer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0062-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, September\nThe opening game of this three-game inter-league series featured the Giants' Mike Yastrzemski, grandson of Hall of Fame inductee Carl Yastrzemski of the Red Sox; the younger Yastrzemski hit his 20th home run of the season in the fourth inning. San Francisco built a 5\u20131 lead through four innings, which became a 5\u20135 tie at the end of the sixth. With no further scoring in regulation, the game went into extra innings. The teams traded runs in the 13th inning, and the Giants pushed across a run in the 15th inning, for a 7\u20136 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0062-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, September\nWith a game duration of 5 hours and 54 minutes, the teams used a total of 24 pitchers, tying the major league record, and 50 players total. The second game of the series was an 11\u20133 win by the Giants, the 2,000th win of manager Bruce Bochy's career. Rafael Devers hit his 30th home run of the season, while Jackie Bradley Jr. hit his 20th. Before the game, a ceremonial first pitch was thrown by Carl Yastrzemski to his grandson Mike. The Red Sox won the final game of the series, 5\u20134, with Eduardo Rodr\u00edguez recording his 18th win of the season. All of Boston's run came in the first two innings. Xander Bogaerts was 2-for-4 with three RBIs, in his first MLB game as a designated hitter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0063-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, September\nThe opening game of this four-game series was won in 11 innings by the Rays, 5\u20134. With the Rays defending Mitch Moreland's at-bats with four outfielders, he hit two home runs and had all four RBIs for the Red Sox. A win by the Cleveland Indians while Boston's game was in progress eliminated the Red Sox from postseason contention. The second game of the series was again a 5\u20134 Rays win in 11 innings. Tied 3\u20133 after nine innings, Moreland homered for Boston to take a 4\u20133 lead in the top of the 11th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0063-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, September\nWith no outs and a runner on second in the bottom of the 11th, Nate Lowe hit a walk-off home run to give Tampa Bay the win. Xander Bogaerts and Rafael Devers both homered during regulation for Boston. The third game of the series was a 7\u20134 Boston win, with Nathan Eovaldi getting the win after holding the Rays to three runs in six innings. Christian V\u00e1zquez hit his 22nd home run of the season, going 3-for-5 with three RBIs. The final game of the series was won by the Rays, 7\u20134. The Red Sox led, 4\u20130, midway through the fourth inning; Tampa Bay then scored six in the bottom of the fourth, and held Boston scoreless for the rest of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0064-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, September\nThe opener of this three-game series was won by the Red Sox, 12\u201310, with Eduardo Rodr\u00edguez earning his 19th win of the season, despite allowing seven runs in five innings. Mookie Betts hit his 29th home run of the season, giving the team 238 homers for the season, tying the franchise record set by the 2003 Red Sox. Boston won the second game of the series, 10\u20133, with starter Rick Porcello improving his record on the season to 14\u201312. A third-inning home run by Christian V\u00e1zquez was the team's 239th of the season, setting a new franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0064-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, September\nMitch Moreland and Rafael Devers added homers in later innings. The final game of the series was won by the Rangers, 7\u20135. Jackie Bradley Jr. and Chris Owings each homered for the Red Sox. This was Boston's final road game of the season; the team had an overall 46\u201335 record in away games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0065-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, September\nThe final series of the season began with a 4\u20131 Baltimore win, as Boston's only run was driven in by Xander Bogaerts in the ninth inning. Baltimore also won the second game of the series, 9\u20134. Bogaerts and J. D. Martinez each homered for Boston. The final game of the season was a 5\u20134 Red Sox win, as Rafael Devers notched his 200th hit of the season. Eduardo Rodr\u00edguez, going for his 20th win of the season, had to settle for a no decision. Mookie Betts scored the winning run in the bottom of the ninth inning, scoring all the way from first on a ground ball that went into right field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0066-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Season standings, Red Sox team leaders\nMinimum 3.1 plate appearances per team games played\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0AVG qualified batters: Benintendi, Betts, Bogaerts, Bradley, Devers, Martinez, V\u00e1zquez Minimum 1 inning pitched per team games played\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0ERA & WHIP qualified pitchers: Porcello, Rodr\u00edguez", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 66], "content_span": [67, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0067-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Roster, MLB debuts\nRed Sox players who made their MLB debuts during the 2019 regular season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0068-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Roster, Transactions\nNotable transactions of/for players on the 40-man roster during the 2019 regular season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0069-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Roster, Amateur draft\nBoston's top ten selections in the 2019 MLB draft, which started on June 3, are listed below. The team did not have a first-round pick, due to being more than $40 million over the MLB luxury tax threshold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0070-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Awards and honors\nMartinez was subsequently named to start the All-Star Game due to an injury to Hunter Pence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0071-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Awards and honors\nJackie Bradley Jr., Andrew Benintendi, and Christian Vazquez were also finalists for Rawlings Gold Glove Awards. Eduardo Rodr\u00edguez finished sixth in Cy Young Award voting. In AL MVP voting, Xander Bogaerts finished fifth, Mookie Betts eighth, Rafael Devers 12th, and J. D. Martinez was tied for 21st.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287839-0072-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Red Sox season, Awards and honors\nJackie Bradley Jr.'s over-the-wall catch of a Trey Mancini drive on May 8 was selected as number one on the list of MLB Network's Top 100 Plays of 2019, while number two on the list was an over-the-wall catch by Stevie Wilkerson on a drive that Bradley hit on September 29 at Fenway Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287840-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Uprising season\nThe 2019 Boston Uprising season was the second season of Boston Uprising's existence in the Overwatch League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287840-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Uprising season\nThe team finished the season with an 8\u201320 record \u2013 a far cry from their 26\u201314 record from 2018. A 3\u20132 victory over the Dallas Fuel in the final match of Stage 1 gave the Uprising a 4\u20133 record and qualified them for the Stage 1 Playoffs. However, they were eliminated in the quarterfinals after a 0\u20133 loss to the Vancouver Titans. Boston struggled to repeat the success they found in Stage 1, only winning four of their next fourteen matches before the implementation of an enforced 2-2-2 role lock by the league. The Uprising did not perform well under the new format, as a 0\u20134 loss to the Atlanta Reign on August 25 gave Boston a winless 0\u20137 Stage 4 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287840-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Uprising season, Preceding offseason, Player re-signings\nFrom August 1 to September 9, 2018, all Overwatch League teams that competed in the 2018 season could choose to extend their team's players' contracts. Uprising released four of their ten players \u2013 tied with Los Angeles Gladiators for the most in the league by a playoff team \u2013 in Shin \"Kalios\" Woo-yeol, Connor \"Avast\" Prince, Mikias \"Snow\" Yohannes, and Stanislav \"Mistakes\" Danilov.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287840-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Uprising season, Preceding offseason, Free agency\nBoston's first offseason acquisition was on October 22, when Uprising signed DPS player Jeffrey \"blas\u00e9\" Tsang from Overwatch Contenders team Gladiators Legion. On October 27, it was announced that flex support player Park \"Neko\" Seh-yeon had been signed to new expansion team Toronto Defiant. The team promoted Kelsey \"ColourHex\" Birse and Minseob \"Axxiom\" Park from their academy team Toronto Esports three days later. On November 4, Uprising signed main tank Cameron \"Fusions\" Bosworth, who had just recently competed in the 2018 Overwatch World Cup for team UK, on a two-way contract with Toronto Esports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287840-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Uprising season, Preceding offseason, Free agency\nOn December 3, Uprising transferred Kwon \"Striker\" Nam-joo to San Francisco Shock. Two day later, the team signed Renan \"alemao\" Moretto, the first Brazilian player to sign to an Overwatch League roster. The team's final offseason transaction occurred on February 12, two days before the beginning of the regular season, when Uprising transferred main tank Noh \"Gamsu\" Young-jin to Shanghai Dragons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287840-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Uprising season, Regular season, Stage 1\nBoston opened their season on February 14 with a match against the New York Excelsior. Heading out of halftime 1\u20131, Boston tied map three and lost map four to begin their season with a 2\u20131 loss. The Uprising's next match was against the Houston Outlaws three days later. Main tank Cameron \"Fusions\" Bosworth performed solidly in the match, as the team took a 3\u20132 victory. The following week, Boston took on the Shanghai Dragons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287840-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Uprising season, Regular season, Stage 1\nWith Fusions ineligible to play due to a two-way contract rule with Overwatch Contenders, the Uprising fell to the Dragons, who were led by Boston's former main tank Gamsu, by a 1\u20133 score, giving the Dragon's their first ever franchise victory. The Uprising's next match was against the Seoul Dynasty on February 28. With Fusions eligible to play, Boston took down Seoul 3\u20131 in a match that the Uprising were favored to lose. Three days later, the team faced the Toronto Defiant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287840-0004-0002", "contents": "2019 Boston Uprising season, Regular season, Stage 1\nContrasted to their previous match, Boston was favored to win the matchup against Toronto; however, the Uprising fell by a score of 1\u20133. Boston's lone match of week four was against the Florida Mayhem on March 10. Needing a win to have a reasonable chance at qualifying for the Stage 1 playoffs, Boston swept Florida 4\u20130, led by a stellar D.Va performance by Lucas \"NotE\" Meissner. The Uprising faced the Dallas Fuel in their final match of Stage 1, needing a victory in order to stay in playoff contention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287840-0004-0003", "contents": "2019 Boston Uprising season, Regular season, Stage 1\nAfter going down two maps, Boston was able claim the following three maps in a row to complete the reverse sweep against Dallas and win the match 3\u20132. With the Vancouver Titans defeating the Guangzhou Charge in the final match of Stage 1, Boston clinched the sixth, and final, seed of the Stage 1 Playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287840-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Uprising season, Regular season, Stage 1\nBoston faced the top-seeded Vancouver Titans in the Stage 1 Quarterfinals on March 21. Despite some bright spots in the match, such as a well-timed Graviton Surge-Self-Destruct combo by Colourhex as Zarya and NotE as D.va, the Uprising did not claim a single map against the Titans, losing the match 0\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287840-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Uprising season, Regular season, Stage 2\nTwo days prior to Boston's first match of Stage 2, the Uprising signed support player Zion \"Persia\" Yang, who had most recently played for Talon Epsorts of Overwatch Contenders Pacific. On the same day, Boston traded flex tank Lucas \"NotE\" Meissner to the Dallas Fuel in exchange for flex tank Richard \"rCk\" Kanerva. Boston began Stage 2 with a match against the Atlanta Reign on April 4. Despite losing the first two maps of the match, the Uprising completed a reverse sweep against the Reign, winning the match 3\u20132. Two days later, the Uprising faced the Toronto Defiant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287840-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Uprising season, Regular season, Stage 2\nOnce again, Boston lost the first two maps but was able to pick up the following three, giving the team a streak of three reverse-sweep victories in a row in the regular season. The Uprising took on the Hangzhou Spark the following week. After splitting the first four maps, the match went to a fifth tiebreaker map, marking the fourth consecutive five-map match for Boston. Unlike their previous three matches, however, Boston fell in the fifth map, losing the match 2\u20133. Boston's next match was against the London Spitfire on April 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287840-0006-0002", "contents": "2019 Boston Uprising season, Regular season, Stage 2\nDespite having the same 6\u20134 record for the season, Boston was handed their first 0\u20134 loss of the season by London. The team's next match was against the undefeated Vancouver Titans a day later. The Uprising, again, were unable to claim a map, losing 0\u20134; with the Titans win, Vancouver tied Boston's Overwatch League record of most consecutive wins (excluding playoffs) they set in their 2018 season at 14 wins. After a week off of play, the Uprising faced the Los Angeles Gladiators on May 3 in a must-win game to keep their Stage 2 Playoff hopes alive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287840-0006-0003", "contents": "2019 Boston Uprising season, Regular season, Stage 2\nBoston took the first two maps en route to a 3\u20131 victory, snapping the Gladiators 8-game win streak. In their final match of the stage, Boston took on the one-win Washington Justice. Boston jumped out to a quick 2\u20130 lead heading into halftime, but dropped three maps in a row to the Justice, losing the match 2\u20133 and ending their chances for a Stage 2 playoff berth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287840-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Uprising season, Regular season, Stage 3\nBoston began Stage 3 with a match against London Spitfire on June 7. The match saw the debut of Zion \"Persia\" Yang and Renan \"alemao\" Moretto; despite the roster change, the result was similar to their previous match in Stage 2, as Boston was swept 0\u20134. Their second match of the week, against the Paris Eternal two days later, did not end with much better results, as Boston fell by a score of 1\u20133. For their third match of the stage, the Uprising took on the Houston Outlaws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287840-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Uprising season, Regular season, Stage 3\nOutplayed and unable to adapt as the match went on, Boston was swept 0\u20134. Two days later, the team faced the Philadelphia Fusion. Despite going into halftime with a 1\u20130 lead, Boston dropped the final two maps, losing the match by a 1\u20132 scoreline. For their first match of week three, Boston faced the San Francisco Shock on June 20. The Uprising's struggles continued through the match; between rCk's poor Sombra play and the uncoordinated play from the support line, Boston was swept 0\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287840-0007-0002", "contents": "2019 Boston Uprising season, Regular season, Stage 3\nNow on a season-high 6-game losing streak, Uprising faced the Paris Eternal in their sixth match of the stage on June 23. While Boston dropped the first two maps of the match, they were able to pull off a reverse sweep to win 3\u20132 and claim their first victory of Stage 3. Boston's final match of the stage was against the Philadelphia Fusion on June 29. The match went to a tiebreaker map, the eighth one of the season for Boston, but Fusion was able to take the final map, ending Boston's Stage 3 with a 1\u20136 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287840-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Uprising season, Regular season, Stage 4\nPrior to the start of Stage 4, which would debut the League's enforcement of a 2-2-2 role lock, the Uprising acquired DPS Lee \"Stellar\" Do-hyung, who had retired earlier in the season, from the Toronto Defiant. The Uprising's first match of Stage 4 was against the Guangzhou Charge on July 27; Boston was unable to secure a map, getting swept 0\u20134. The team took on the Chengdu Hunters a day later. The match went the distance, but a game MVP performance from the Hunter's support player Xianyao \"Yveltal\" Li on Mercy led Chengdu to a 3\u20132 win over Boston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287840-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Boston Uprising season, Regular season, Stage 4\nWith a week off to prepare for their sole matchup of week three, Boston took on the Washington Justice on August 9. However, fueled by the stellar play from Washington's DPS player Corey \"Corey\" Nigra, the red-hot Justice proved too much to handle, as Boston fell 1\u20133. The following week, the Uprising faced another team dramatically improved since the 2-2-2 role lock in the Florida Mayhem on August 15. Boston failed to win a map in the series and was full-held on two of them, falling to the Mayhem 0\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287840-0008-0002", "contents": "2019 Boston Uprising season, Regular season, Stage 4\nThe team's next match was two days later against the Los Angeles Valiant. After dropping the first two maps, the Uprising took map three. Map four, Havana, went to overtime rounds after both teams completed the map on their first attack, but Boston was unable to hold the Valiant on their second attack to fall 1\u20133 in the match. In the final week of the regular season, Boston head to The Novo in Los Angeles for the Kit Kat Rivalry Weekend, hosted by the Los Angeles Valiant. Their first match was against the New York Excelsior on August 24.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287840-0008-0003", "contents": "2019 Boston Uprising season, Regular season, Stage 4\nWhile the Uprising were able to take a map in the match, they ultimately fell 1\u20133. Looking to avoid a winless stage, the Uprisings's final regular season match was against the Atlanta Reign a day later. After losing both points on Lijiang Tower and only one of three on Volskaya Industries, the Uprising entered halftime down 0\u20132. The team failed to hold Atlanta from completing both King's Row and Junkertown after halftime and were unable to complete the maps themselves, as they were swept 0\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287840-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Uprising season, Final roster, Transactions\nTransactions of/for players on the roster during the 2019 regular season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287840-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Boston Uprising season, Awards\nOn May 1, Cameron \"Fusions\" Bosworth was named as a starter for the 2019 Overwatch League All-Star Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287841-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Botswana general election\nGeneral elections were held in Botswana on 23 October 2019 to elect MPs and local government councillors. Despite a high profile split in the ruling Botswana Democratic Party (BDP) in May 2019 when former President Ian Khama left the party and switched his support to the new Botswana Patriotic Front, the BDP's vote share increased to almost 53% as the party won 38 of the 57 elected seats in the National Assembly, a gain of one compared to the 2014 elections. The elections were the twelfth straight victory for the BDP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287841-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Botswana general election, Background\nFollowing the 2014 elections, there were two opposing factions in parliament: the Umbrella for Democratic Change (an alliance of the Botswana National Front, the Botswana Movement for Democracy and the Botswana People's Party), and the Botswana Congress Party (BCP). In February 2017, the Botswana Congress Party (BCP) also joined the Umbrella for Democratic Change, uniting all parliamentary opposition parties. However, in October 2017, the Alliance for Progressives, led by Ndaba Gaolathe, broke away from the Botswana Movement for Democracy (BMD). The BMD was expelled from the coalition in October 2018 after it refused to forgo contesting constituencies that had originally been allocated to it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287841-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Botswana general election, Background\nOn 1 April 2018, Mokgweetsi Masisi of the Botswana Democratic Party (BDP) was sworn in as Botswana's fifth president, replacing Ian Khama. The BDP held its primary elections on 20 January and 25 August 2018 to select its candidates, with over 1,300 candidates running to be selected to contest the general elections. Following a falling out with Masisi, Khama left the BDP in May 2019 and announced that he would campaign against his former party in support of the Botswana Patriotic Front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287841-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Botswana general election, Electoral system\nThe 63 members of the National Assembly consisted of 57 MPs elected in single-member constituencies by first-past-the-post, four members appointed by the governing party, and two ex-officio members (the President and the Attorney General).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287841-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Botswana general election, Electoral system\nVoters were required to be citizens of Botswana and at least 18 years old, and have been resident in the country for at least 12 months prior to voter registration. People who were declared insane, held dual citizenship, were under a death sentence, had been convicted of an electoral offence or imprisoned for at least six months were not allowed to vote. Candidates had to be citizens of Botswana, at least 21 years old, without an undischarged bankruptcy and be able to speak and read English sufficiently well to take part in parliamentary proceedings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287841-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Botswana general election, Electoral system\nSeveral proposed amendments to the Electoral Law, including the introduction of electronic voting and an increase in nomination fees, were dropped in September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287841-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Botswana general election, Electoral system\nElection day and the two following days were declared public holidays.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287841-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Botswana general election, Aftermath\nAfrican Union and SADC called the elections free and fair, but criticized the lack of indelible ink and translucent ballot boxes at the polling stations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287841-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Botswana general election, Aftermath\nIn November 2019 Duma Boko claimed that there had been \"massive electoral discrepancies\" and stated that he planned to challenge the results in court. The appeal was initially dismissed by the High Court in December, but Boko appealed successfully to the Court of Appeal in early January 2020. However, in the full hearing in late January, the Court of Appeal dismissed the petitions on the basis that it did not have sufficient jurisdiction to hear them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287842-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bougainvillean independence referendum\nA non-binding independence referendum was held in Bougainville, an autonomous region of Papua New Guinea, between 23 November and 7 December 2019. The referendum question was a choice between greater autonomy within Papua New Guinea and full independence; voters voted overwhelmingly (98.31%) for independence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287842-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bougainvillean independence referendum\nThe referendum was a result of a 2001 agreement between the government of Papua New Guinea and the Autonomous Bougainville Government that ended a civil war fought from 1988 to 1998. The vote is non-binding and the government of Papua New Guinea has the final say on what becomes of Bougainville. Observers have said that the clear result makes it difficult for Papua New Guinea to ignore or delay the result, but that independence could take years to achieve.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287842-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bougainvillean independence referendum\nIn July 2021, an agreement was reached between the governments of Papua New Guinea and Bougainville, in which Bougainville will gain independence in 2027.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287842-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bougainvillean independence referendum, Background\nDiscussions about an independent Bougainville had been held as early as 1968. Following a meeting in Port Moresby between the two Bougainville MHAs (Paul Lapun and Donatus Mola) and around 25 Bougainvilleans, a proposal was put forward in the House of Assembly to hold a referendum to decide whether the island should remain part of Papua New Guinea, join the Solomon Islands, or become independent. However, no vote was held. After Papua New Guinea became independent from Australia in 1975, Bougainville was given provincial status in 1976.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287842-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bougainvillean independence referendum, Background\nIn 1988, tension erupted into a civil war between the Bougainville Revolutionary Army and Papua New Guinea government forces. One key issue of conflict was the Panguna mine, which was closed in 1989. The civil war ended with a ceasefire in 1998, that was followed with the Bougainville Peace Agreement from 2001. The agreement established the Autonomous Bougainville Government, and mandated a referendum on the independence of Bougainville to be held 10-15 years later than the election of the first Autonomous Bougainville Government, which is June 2020 at the latest. The referendum would be non-binding, and the final say would rest with the Papua New Guinean government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287842-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bougainvillean independence referendum, Background\nIn November 2019, Raymond Masono, Vice-President of the Autonomous Region of Bougainville, campaigned that he would plan to reopen the Panguna mine if the referendum resulted in a vote for independence. Panguna closed in 1989 due to the civil war and is now estimated to hold copper worth up to $60 billion. With independence, all of Papua New Guinea's interests in the mine would transfer to Bougainville, giving it a 60% share in all projects and retaining all mining licences. The remaining 40% would be left for investors to bid on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287842-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bougainvillean independence referendum, Planning\nThe vote was originally scheduled for 15 June 2019, but was delayed to 17 October amid allegations that the national government was slow to provide most of the promised funding for the referendum. The referendum was delayed again to 23 November at the request of the Bougainville Referendum Commission to ensure the credibility of the referendum roll so more people can vote. Both governments said this delay would be the last. Voting was planned to take place over two weeks, from 23 November to 7 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287842-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bougainvillean independence referendum, Planning\nThe vote faced a high degree of difficulty to organise, with most of the population in small hamlets and villages, and about half the population being illiterate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287842-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Bougainvillean independence referendum, Planning\nIn October 2018, former Taoiseach of Ireland Bertie Ahern was appointed to chair the Bougainville Referendum Commission, which was responsible for preparing the referendum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287842-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Bougainvillean independence referendum, Planning, Voters\nIn November, the BRC completed the official \"certified voter list\" to be used in polling for the referendum. The final number of eligible voters was 206,731, out of a total population of nearly 300,000. Males undergoing the upe rite of passage were allowed to vote at special male-only polling stations. Bougainvilleans living in other parts of Papua New Guinea, or in Australia and Solomon Islands, were also allowed to vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 61], "content_span": [62, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287842-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Bougainvillean independence referendum, Planning, Question\nDo you agree for Bougainville to have: (1) Greater Autonomy (2) Independence?", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287842-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Bougainvillean independence referendum, Results\nThe results of the referendum were announced on 11 December. Over 98% of valid ballots were cast in favor of independence. Prior to the election, it was widely expected that the independence option would win, with The Guardian reporting an estimate of 90% in favor of independence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287842-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Bougainvillean independence referendum, Results\nAn official reported that the referendum went \"better than we expected,\" and that voters were enthusiastic, while observers from Divine Word University said that the voting took place in an atmosphere of celebration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287842-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Bougainvillean independence referendum, Results\nOn 24 January 2020, the result was declared \"Petition Free\", confirming that no appeals had been received within 40 days against the conduct or the result of the referendum and that none could be accepted in future. On the same day, the December result was commended by the Referendum Commission to the governments and the referendum process formally closed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287842-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Bougainvillean independence referendum, Aftermath\nFollowing the announcements of the result, John Momis, President of the Autonomous Region of Bougainville, said, \"at least psychologically, we feel liberated.\" Papua New Guinea's Minister for Bougainville Affairs Puka Temu said, \"the outcome is a credible one,\" but also stated that Papua New Guinea should have time to absorb the result. As the referendum was non-binding, independence will need to be negotiated between leaders from Bougainville and Papua New Guinea. The final decision on Bougainville's status depends on the National Parliament of Papua New Guinea. Rod McGuirk of Time noted that \"the process of becoming a separate nation could take years to achieve.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287842-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Bougainvillean independence referendum, Aftermath\nPapua New Guinean Prime Minister James Marape acknowledged the referendum results and stated that he would only commit his government to develop \"a road map that leads to a lasting peace settlement\" in consultation with Bougainville authorities. Papuan New Guinean officials were concerned that Bougainvillean independence would set a precedent for copycat secession movements in other provinces such as East New Britain, New Ireland, and Enga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287842-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Bougainvillean independence referendum, Aftermath\nJonathan Pryke, director of the Pacific Islands program at the Lowy Institute in Sydney, stated that the referendum's results were disadvantageous for Papua New Guinea, adding that, \"[i]f there were to be a smaller majority, say 55 or 65 percent, the PNG government could have found a way to justify really stretching this out and having a period of negotiation that could last years or decades. Now with such a phenomenal majority, it\u2019s much harder for them to do that.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287842-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Bougainvillean independence referendum, Aftermath\nDamien Cave of The New York Times reported that the referendum would serve as an inspiration for West Papua separatists in Indonesia and for voters in the 2020 New Caledonian referendum for independence from France. Cave noted that, as with other Pacific countries, Bougainville will likely make pleas to Australia and New Zealand for assistance in developing its institutions while China and potentially the United States may offer diplomatic and economic partnerships once independence is achieved. China is seeking to incorporate an independent Bougainville into its Belt and Road Initiative.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287842-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Bougainvillean independence referendum, Aftermath\nNegotiations on the outcome of the referendum began on 17 May 2021. Bougainville President Ishmael Toroama, who took over from Momis in 2020, stated his wish to see Bougainville become independent by June 2025. Papua New Guinea Prime Minister James Marape for his part cautioned against setting a specific timetable. While Marape and his government have recognized the results of the referendum, he has expressed reluctance at granting Bougainville independence for fear it will potentially result in the breakup of the country. Toroama warned that anything short of independence was not an option for Bougainville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287842-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Bougainvillean independence referendum, Aftermath\nIn the meantime, Toroama launched the Independence Ready Mission to prepare the region for independence. He expressed hope of obtaining self-government by 2022, a prelude to full sovereignty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287842-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Bougainvillean independence referendum, Aftermath\nOn 7 July 2021, Toroama and Marape announced that the region will become independent by 2027.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287843-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council election\nThe 2019 Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect the inaugural members of Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council in England, formed from the former unitary authorities of Bournemouth and Poole, and borough of Christchurch. At the same time an election for the new Christchurch Town Council was held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287843-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council election\nA shadow authority comprising elected members of the three preceding councils and relevant members of Dorset County Council sat prior to the election. Elections for the two parish councils in the area were also held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287843-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council election, Background\nBournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council held elections on 2 May 2019 along with councils across England as part of the 2019 local elections. The council elected all of its councillors for the first time under the auspices of the combined council. The merger of Bournemouth Borough Council, Christchurch Borough Council and Poole Borough Council's councils to form this new council was reported to save \u00a3500,000 per year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 69], "content_span": [70, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287843-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council election, Background\nA shadow authority of councillors for the three preceding councils and relevant members of Dorset County Council sat as a shadow authority prior to the election, with the Conservative group controlling the council and a majority of councillors being members of the Conservative Party. Parish councils in the area also held elections, such as the newly formed Christchurch town council, replacing the former Borough Council, and the Highcliffe and Walkford Neighbourhood Council. Whilst the shadow authority had 125 members, the redrawn ward boundaries meant that the newly elected body has 76 members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 69], "content_span": [70, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287843-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council election, Background\nRepresentatives from all of the main UK political parties, the Conservatives, the Liberal Democrats, Labour, Green Party of England and Wales and UKIP, stood for election to the new council. Alongside the national parties, several localist groups also stood for election, such as the Poole People, Alliance for Local Living and the Engage parties, as well as the informal Christchurch Independents group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 69], "content_span": [70, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287843-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council election, Background\nPoole People is a localist group which had previously stood in and won seats in the former Poole borough. For the 2019 election, they stood eight candidates in wards corresponding to Poole, winning seven seats in total. The Alliance for Local Living also stood parties, after being set up in 2018, and cooperating with Poole People; ALL intended to stand four candidates in total, but due to the timing of the official registration of the party, only two were able to be listed on the ballot paper; all four candidates also stood in Poole seats, but with only one win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 69], "content_span": [70, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287843-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council election, Background\nIn March 2019, seven Conservative candidates, including the leader of the council David Flagg, were suspended from the party following their opposition to the merger. Five of the suspended councillors (David Flagg, Margaret Phipps, Lesley Dedman, Nick Geary and Janet Abbott) alongside two existing independents (Colin Bungey and Fred Neale) stood as 'Christchurch Independents', in opposition to the Conservatives, with those holding seats forming a group in the council after the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 69], "content_span": [70, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287843-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council election, Overall results\nThe composition of the shadow authority immediately ahead of this election was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 74], "content_span": [75, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287843-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council election, Summary\nThe table below only tallies the votes of the highest polling candidate for each party within each ward. This is known as the top candidate method and is often used for multi-member plurality elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 66], "content_span": [67, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287843-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council election, Aftermath\nThe election resulted in no overall control, with no party winning the thirty-nine seats required for an overall majority; whilst the Conservatives were the largest party on the council, they lacked a majority. The Conservatives held seats in Bournemouth, with other parties and independents performing well in both Christchurch and Poole. The newly formed Christchurch Independents group, who were the third largest group with seven seats, said that they would be open to working with all parties except the Conservatives, who had led the creation of the new authority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 68], "content_span": [69, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287843-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council election, Aftermath\nConservative councillor John Beesley said that the Conservatives should run the council, and that he was prepared to run a minority administration if no other party would support him. The Liberal Democrats also announced their intention to form a coalition with other parties on the council. Subsequently, Liberal Democrat Vikki Slade was elected council leader of a \"Unity Alliance\" of all the parties except the Conservatives and UKIP, with 39 members in total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 68], "content_span": [69, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287843-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council election, Ward results\nThe statement of persons nominated was posted by the authority on 5 April 2019, 299 candidates are standing. Asterisks (*) denote sitting councillors seeking re-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 71], "content_span": [72, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287844-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bowling Green Falcons football team\nThe 2019 Bowling Green Falcons football team represented Bowling Green State University during the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Falcons were led by first-year head coach Scot Loeffler and played their home games at Doyt Perry Stadium in Bowling Green, Ohio. They competed as members of the East Division of the Mid-American Conference (MAC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287844-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bowling Green Falcons football team, Preseason, Coaching changes\nSeven games into the 2018 season, Bowling Green fired third-year head coach Mike Jinks; defensive coordinator Carl Pelini served as interim head coach for the remainder of the season. On November 28, 2018, the school announced that Scot Loeffler had been hired to become the new head coach. Loeffler had spent the previous three seasons as the offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Boston College. On December 4, Loeffler announced that he would retain Pelini as defensive coordinator and hired former Western Michigan tight ends coach Terry Malone to be the new offensive coordinator. On December 10, former Louisville defensive coordinator Brian VanGorder was announced as the new linebackers coach. He was promoted to defensive coordinator in February 2019 after Carl Pelini left to pursue other opportunities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 893]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287844-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bowling Green Falcons football team, Preseason, MAC media poll\nThe MAC released their preseason media poll on July 23, 2019, with the Falcons predicted to finish in sixth place in the East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287844-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bowling Green Falcons football team, Schedule\nBowling Green's non-conference schedule will consist of home games against Morgan State of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC) and Louisiana Tech of Conference USA; and road games against Kansas State of the Big 12 Conference and Notre Dame, a football independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287844-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bowling Green Falcons football team, Schedule\nIn Mid-American Conference play, the Falcons will play home games against Toledo, Central Michigan, Akron, and Ohio; and road games against Kent State, Western Michigan, Miami, and Buffalo. They will not play games against West Division members Ball State, Eastern Michigan, or Northern Illinois during the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287844-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bowling Green Falcons football team, Game summaries, at Kansas State\nBowling Green managed 140 total yards (79 passing and 61 rushing) and completed just 8 of 19 passes. Kansas State led 31-0 and put up over 300 yards of total offense before the game was halfway through the second quarter. Kansas State ended up with 521 total yards by the end of the game and the final score was Kansas State 52, Bowling Green 0. The shutout was Bowling Green\u2019s first since losing 37-0 at Virginia Tech in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 73], "content_span": [74, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287844-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bowling Green Falcons football team, Game summaries, Toledo\nBowling Green broke their 9-year drought with their first victory in the Battle of I-75 rivalry since 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287845-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Box Office Entertainment Awards\nThe 50th Guillermo Mendoza Memorial Scholarship Foundation Box Office Entertainment Awards (GMMSF-BOEA) was an awarding ceremony honoring the actors, actresses, showbiz personalities, movies and TV programs in the Philippines. It was held on March 24, 2019 at the Star Theater, CCP Complex, Pasay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287845-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Box Office Entertainment Awards, Winners selection\nThe GMMSF honors Filipino actors, actresses and other performers' commercial success, regardless of artistic merit, in the Philippine entertainment industry. The award giving body selects the high-ranking Philippine films for the calendar year 2018 based on total average rankings at box office published results as basis for awarding the three major categories in the awarding ceremonies, The Phenomenal Box Office Star, The Box Office King and The Box Office Queen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287846-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Boyd Gaming 300\nThe 2019 Boyd Gaming 300 was a NASCAR Xfinity Series race held on March 2, 2019, at Las Vegas Motor Speedway in Las Vegas. Contested over 213 laps due to an overtime finish on the 1.5\u00a0mi (2.4\u00a0km) asphalt intermediate speedway, it was the third race of the 2019 NASCAR Xfinity Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287846-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Boyd Gaming 300, Practice, First practice\nJustin Allgaier was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 30.212 seconds and a speed of 178.737\u00a0mph (287.649\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287846-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Boyd Gaming 300, Practice, Final practice\nJustin Haley was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 29.949 seconds and a speed of 180.307\u00a0mph (290.176\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287846-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Boyd Gaming 300, Qualifying\nQualifying was canceled due to rain. Cole Custer was awarded the pole for the second consecutive race due to 2018 owner's points. Again, Chad Finchum qualified 2nd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287847-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Boys' Youth Pan-American Volleyball Cup\nThe 2019 Boys' Youth Pan-American Volleyball Cup was the third edition of the bi-annual Continental Cup, played by seven countries from April 22\u201330, 2019 in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. Cuba won the tournament beating Mexico in the finals. As Cuba had already qualified for the U19 World Championship through the NORCECA Championship, Mexico and the Dominican Republic qualified instead. Jose Miguel Gutierrez won the MVP award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287847-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Boys' Youth Pan-American Volleyball Cup, Final standing\nMiguel Gutierrez,Christian Thondike,Adrian Chirino,Ricardo Gomez,Yoel Bola\u00f1os,Reynier Ibar,Alejandro Gonzalez,Francisco Valle,Vidal Allen,Alexei Ramirez,Ramon Andreu,Eduardo Hernandez", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287848-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Brabantse Pijl\nThe 2019 Brabantse Pijl was the 59th edition of the Brabantse Pijl cycle race and was held on 17 April 2019. The race started in Leuven and finished in Overijse. The race was won by Mathieu van der Poel of Corendon\u2013Circus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287848-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Brabantse Pijl, Teams\n21 teams participated in the race, including 8 UCI WorldTeams and 13 UCI Professional Continental teams. Each team had a maximum of seven riders:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287849-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bracknell Forest Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Bracknell Forest Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Bracknell Forest Borough Council in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287849-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bracknell Forest Borough Council election\nThe Conservative Party has controlled the council since its establishment as a unitary authority in 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287849-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bracknell Forest Borough Council election, Background\nBracknell Forest Borough Council will hold local elections on 2 May 2019 along with councils across England as part of the 2019 local elections. The council elects its members in all-out elections, with all its councillors up for election every four years. Councillors defending their seats in this election were previously elected in 2015. In that election, forty-one Conservative councillors and one Labour councillor were elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 58], "content_span": [59, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287849-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bracknell Forest Borough Council election, Background\nThe council has been controlled by the Conservative Party since the unitary authority was created in 1997. The predecessor district council had been controlled by both the Labour and Conservative parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 58], "content_span": [59, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287849-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bracknell Forest Borough Council election, Overall results\nAfter the previous election, and immediately before this election, the composition of the council was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287849-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bracknell Forest Borough Council election, Overall results\nThe Conservatives held the council losing just three seats with two going to Labour and one to the Liberal Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287849-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bracknell Forest Borough Council election, Overall results\nFollowing the 2019 election, the composition of the council was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287850-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bradford Bulls season\nThis article details the Bradford Bulls rugby league football club's 2019 season. This is the Bulls 1st season back in the Championship after gaining promotion from League 1 by beating Workington Town 27-8 in the play off final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287850-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review, August 2018\nIt was announced that first team prop forward James Davies left the club to sign for rugby union side Huddersfield RUFC. Recruitment for the new season started as on loan prop forward Callum Bustin signed a permanent contract with the Bulls until the end of 2019. Bradford brought some experience into the squad with the signing of veteran Super League centre Jake Webster from Castleford Tigers on a 2 Year Deal. Prop James Green who was on loan from Castleford Tigers signed a 1 Year Deal with the Bulls after a successful loan spell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287850-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review, September 2018\nCentre Ashley Gibson signed a 1 Year extension to his contract. Welsh international winger Dalton Grant also signed a 1 Year extension after scoring 18 tries in the previous season. It was also announced that former prop forward Jon Magrin would return to the club after a year with the Sheffield Eagles. Academy products Alix Stephenson (fullback), Elliot Culling (centre) and Thomas Doyle (hooker) all signed contracts for the first team following in the footsteps of Oliver Wilson, Matthew Storton, Rowan Milnes and Evan Hodgson. Young Hunslet R.L.F.C. winger David Foggin-Johnston agreed to sign a 1 Year Deal at the Bulls. Home grown fullback Brandon Pickersgill signed a 2 Year extension to stay at the Bulls until the end of 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287850-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review, October 2018\nYoung hooker and academy product Reiss Butterworth signed for Super League side Huddersfield Giants on a 3-year deal after not featuring for the Bradford side in 2018. 2018 loanee Mikey Wood also put pen to paper on a permanent deal as he signed a 1 Year contract to join the Bulls for 2019 from the Huddersfield Giants. Continuing to recruit for the new season the Bulls announced the capture of seasoned hooker/halfback Matty Wildie on a 1 Year Deal from RFL Championship side Featherstone Rovers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287850-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review, October 2018\nFollowing this, the Bulls announced that hooker Vila Halafihi had departed the club later to sign a 1-year deal at Hunslet R.L.F.C.. Further good news was released by the club as winger Jy Hitchcox signed a 2 Year Deal with the club from Castleford Tigers despite interest from Toronto Wolfpack and London Broncos. Bradford re-signed free scoring back rower Elliot Minchella for 3 years on a full-time deal keeping him at Odsal Stadium until the end of the 2021 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287850-0003-0002", "contents": "2019 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review, October 2018\nFurther recruitment in the pack came in the form of Featherstone Rovers second rower Connor Farrell who signed a 2 Year Deal to play for Bradford. Captain and workhorse prop Steve Crossley signed a new 2 Year Deal with the Bulls. In a double coup for the club Joe Keyes signed a full time 2 Year Deal with the club, whilst out of contract halfback Dane Chisholm also signed up for 1 Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287850-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review, November 2018\nThe month started off with the announcement that the Bulls would host RFL Championship rivals York City Knights on Boxing Day. It was also revealed that the Bulls would face Super League side Huddersfield Giants on 13 January 2019 for Michael Lawrence's testimonial. The fixtures for the 2019 campaign were also released and Bradford would kick off their return to the Championship with a home match against Featherstone Rovers, it was also revealed that the Bulls would take on local rivals Halifax R.L.F.C. in the 2019 Summer Bash at Bloomfield Road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287850-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review, November 2018\nYoung backrower Danny King left the club and subsequently signed a 1 Year Deal with Dewsbury Rams. Former player and current Wales assistant coach Garreth Carvell was brought to the Bulls to continue working under John Kear as his assistant. Prop forward Jordan Andrade also left the Bulls to link up with Dewsbury on a 1 Year Deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287850-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review, December 2018\nDecember saw the Bulls sign ex Super League centre Rhys Evans on a 1 Year Deal from Leigh Centurions. Following this capture it was also revealed that the Yorkshire Cup would be resurrected after a 26 year absence in the form of a pre-season cup with Bradford, Batley Bulldogs, Dewsbury Rams, Featherstone Rovers, Halifax R.L.F.C., Hunslet R.L.F.C., Hunslet Club Parkside and York City Knights all participating. The Bulls will face Halifax at Odsal Stadium on 6 January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287850-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review, December 2018\nBradford released their 2019 squad number with fullback Gregg McNally taking the number 1 shirt and new signings Jake Webster, Jy Hitchcox and Matty Wildie taking numbers 3, 5 and 9. During an interview owner Andrew Chalmers revealed that the Bulls would host Canadian side Toronto Wolfpack in a Friday night friendly on January 25. Young reserve player Harvey Burnett left the Bulls to join Dewsbury on a 1 Year Deal. The Bulls got their pre-season off to a winning start with a 20-12 victory over York.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287850-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review, January 2019\nThe new year started off with the news that fullback Gregg McNally would be released on compassionate grounds in order to move closer to his home in Leigh to care for his ill wife. The Bulls beat local rivals Halifax R.L.F.C. 26-16 in the resurrected RFL Yorkshire Cup meaning they progressed to a semi final against Dewsbury Rams. Following this win Bradford announced that they would face Toronto Wolfpack in a friendly on the 25 January in the Transatlantic Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287850-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review, January 2019\nThe Bulls revealed that trialist Trae O'Sullivan signed a permanent deal with the club after impressing coach John Kear against Halifax. The Yorkshire Cup run continued as Bradford defeated Dewsbury 20-18 in the semi final earning their place in the first Yorkshire Cup final in over 25 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287850-0006-0002", "contents": "2019 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review, January 2019\nThe following day saw Bradford lose 56-12 to Super League side Huddersfield Giants in Michael Lawrence's testimonial, halfback Dane Chisholm scored a length of the field intercept try whilst new signing David Foggin-Johnston also crossed however the Super League side ran rampant as the Bulls finished the match with most of their Under 19's on the field. The Bulls claimed their first piece of silverware for the 2019 season as they won the Yorkshire Cup with a hard fought 14-12 win against Batley Bulldogs. The month ended with the Bulls losing 48-12 to Toronto in the final pre-season friendly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287850-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review, February 2019\nBradford opened their 2019 Betfred Championship campaign with a hard fought 17-16 win over Featherstone Rovers. The Bulls also signed Toronto Wolfpack prop forward Olsi Krasniqi on a one month loan due to an injury crisis in the forward pack. Following their opening round victory the Bulls backed this up with a 31-12 win over Swinton Lions. The first loss of the season came in the form of a 24-10 defeat by Sheffield Eagles with prop forward James Green receiving a red card. The month finished on a sour note for the Bulls as they fell to a 24-14 home defeat by last seasons rivals York City Knights, winger Ethan Ryan scored a brace of tries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287851-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Braga Open\nThe 2019 Braga Open was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the second edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Braga, Portugal between 6 and 12 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287851-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Braga 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-00287851-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Braga Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as alternates:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287851-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Braga Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287852-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Braga Open \u2013 Doubles\nSander Arends and Adil Shamasdin were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287852-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Braga Open \u2013 Doubles\nGerard Granollers and Fabr\u00edcio Neis won the title after defeating Kimmer Coppejans and Zden\u011bk Kol\u00e1\u0159 6\u20134, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287853-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Braga Open \u2013 Singles\nPedro Sousa was the defending champion but withdrew before the tournament began due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287853-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Braga Open \u2013 Singles\nJo\u00e3o Domingues won the title after defeating Facundo Bagnis 6\u20137(5\u20137), 6\u20132, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287854-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Braidy Industries Women's Tennis Classic\nThe 2019 Braidy Industries Women's Tennis Classic was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the seventh edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Ashland, United States between 22 and 28 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287854-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Braidy Industries Women's Tennis Classic, 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-00287855-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Braidy Industries Women's Tennis Classic \u2013 Doubles\nJovana Jak\u0161i\u0107 and Renata Zaraz\u00faa were the defending champions, but both players chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287855-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Braidy Industries Women's Tennis Classic \u2013 Doubles\nSanaz Marand and Caitlin Whoriskey won the title, defeating wildcards Vladica Babi\u0107 and Julia Rosenqvist in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20134), 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287856-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Braidy Industries Women's Tennis Classic \u2013 Singles\nGail Brodsky was the defending champion, but lost in the second round to Katie Swan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287856-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Braidy Industries Women's Tennis Classic \u2013 Singles\nEllen Perez won the title after her compatriot Zoe Hives retired in the final at 6\u20132, 3\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287857-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Braintree District Council election\nThe 2019 Braintree District Council election took place on 2\u00a0May\u00a02019 to elect members of Braintree District Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287857-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Braintree District Council election\nSome minor ward boundary changes were made in February\u00a02019. 49\u00a0members were elected from 26\u00a0wards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287857-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Braintree District Council election\nBefore the election, an alliance was formed between the Liberal Democrats, Greens and the two Independent candidates standing in Coggeshall, such that the two parties did not stand against each other in most wards, and neither stood in Coggeshall. The elected Green and Independent councillors formed a political group on the new Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287857-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Braintree District Council election\nThe election returned a much reduced Conservative majority, down from 39 in 2015 to 19. The Green and Independent group became the largest opposition for the first time, with 8 seats, entirely in the southeast of the district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287858-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Brandenburg state election\nThe 2019 Brandenburg state election was held on 1 September 2019 to elect the members of the 7th Landtag of Brandenburg. It took place on the same day as the 2019 Saxony state election. The outgoing government was a coalition of the Social Democratic Party (SPD) and The Left, led by Minister-President Dietmar Woidke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287858-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Brandenburg state election\nThe SPD, Left, and opposition Christian Democratic Union (CDU) suffered substantial losses. The SPD remained the largest party with 26% of votes, followed by the Alternative for Germany (AfD), which doubled its result to 23.5% and moved into second place. The CDU fell to third with 16%. The Greens improved to 11%, though they underperformed compared to prior opinion polling. The Left also recorded a result below expectations, falling from third to fifth place with 11%. The Brandenburg Free Voters (BVB/FW) narrowly passed the 5% electoral threshold and won five seats, up from three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287858-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Brandenburg state election\nThe incumbent government lost its majority. All parties ruled out cooperation with the AfD, and two possible coalitions were considered: a \"Kenya coalition\" of the SPD, CDU, and Greens which would hold 50 seats, and a \"red-red-green\" coalition of the SPD, Greens, and Left, which would hold 45 (a one-seat majority). On 16 November, both the SPD and CDU voted in favour of a Kenya coalition, followed by the Greens on 18 November. Woidke was re-elected Minister-President by the Landtag on 20 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287858-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Brandenburg state election, Background\nSince German reunification, the SPD has been the strongest party in Brandenburg on a state level, and has held the office of Minister-President continuously.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287858-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Brandenburg state election, Background\nThe SPD and Left formed a coalition government after the 2009 state election, which was renewed after the 2014 state election. In the 2019 European Parliament election in Germany, AfD was the strongest party in Brandenburg on 19.9%, ahead of the CDU (18.0%) and SPD (17.2%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287858-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Brandenburg state election, Electoral system\nIn principle, the Landtag consists of 88 members. 44 are elected by plurality vote in single-member constituencies (direct mandates), and the remainder are filled by party-list proportional representation. The seats are distributed according to the largest remainder method (Hare-Niemeyer method). Only parties whose share of second votes exceeds the 5% electoral threshold or which have won a direct mandate (the \"basic mandate clause\") are allocated seats. Overhang and leveling seats can expand the Landtag to a maximum size of 110 seats. This is detailed in the Brandenburg State Electoral Act.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287858-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Brandenburg state election, Electoral system\nAccording to the state constitution and the state election law, the election date must be a Sunday or a public holiday, at the earliest 57 months and at the latest 60 months after the beginning of the election period. In 2019, the date was set for 1 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287858-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Brandenburg state election, Parties\nThe table below lists parties represented in the 6th Landtag of Brandenburg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287858-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Brandenburg state election, Results\nBy early afternoon, significantly more people had voted than at the same time in the 2014 election. According to the state election director, 31.3% of voters cast their ballots by 2:00 PM. At the time in 2014, the figure was only 22.4%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287858-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Brandenburg state election, Government formation\nThe governing SPD and Die Linke both suffered losses, bringing an end to their coalition. Incumbent Minister-President Woidke (SPD) invited all parties except AfD to coalition negotiations as his party remained the largest bloc. The CDU expressed interest in joining a so-called \"Kenya coalition\" with SPD and Greens, which would have 50 seats, and reiterated their refusal to govern with AfD. Woidke confirmed he called CDU leader Senftleben on election day to begin discussions, but expressed reservations about the party's poor performance under pressure from the right.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287858-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Brandenburg state election, Government formation\nHe also did not rule out the possibility of a red-red-green coalition with Die Linke and Greens, which would have a bare majority of 45 seats. Greens leader Nonnemacher expressed willingness to participate in either coalition, but made it clear her party would bring its own policy goals to the table and refuse to merely prop up the existing red-red coalition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287858-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Brandenburg state election, Government formation\nOn November 16th, both the CDU and SPD voted in favor of a \"Kenya coalition.\" The Greens approved the coalition on the 18th; Woidke was duly voted in for his second term as Minister-President two days later by a count of 47 to 37 with 3 abstentions. The coalition commands 50 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287859-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Brasil Open\nThe 2019 Brasil Open was a tennis tournament played on indoor clay courts. It was the 19th edition of the Brasil Open, and part of the ATP Tour 250 series of the 2019 ATP Tour. It tookn place from February 25 through March 3, 2019, in S\u00e3o Paulo, Brazil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287859-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Brasil 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-00287859-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Brasil 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-00287860-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Brasil Open \u2013 Doubles\nFederico Delbonis and M\u00e1ximo Gonz\u00e1lez were the defending champions and successfully defended the title, defeating Luke Bambridge and Jonny O'Mara in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287861-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Brasil Open \u2013 Singles\nFabio Fognini was the defending champion, but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287861-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Brasil Open \u2013 Singles\nGuido Pella won his first ATP title, defeating Christian Gar\u00edn 7\u20135, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287861-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Brasil Open \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287862-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bratislava Open\nThe 2019 Bratislava Open was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Bratislava, Slovakia between 17 and 23 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287862-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bratislava 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-00287862-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bratislava Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287863-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bratislava Open \u2013 Doubles\nSander Gill\u00e9 and Joran Vliegen won the title after defeating Luk\u00e1\u0161 Klein and Alex Mol\u010dan 6\u20132, 7\u20135 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287864-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bratislava Open \u2013 Singles\nNorbert Gombos won the title after defeating Attila Bal\u00e1zs 6\u20133, 3\u20136, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287865-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Brazil prison riots\nPrison riots in Brazil that began on May 26, 2019 resulted in the deaths of at least 112 people as of July 29, 2019. The riots occurred at several prisons in the northern Brazilian state of Amazonas. Rival factions of the illicit Brazilian drug trade were responsible for the fighting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287866-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Brazilian Grand Prix\nThe 2019 Brazilian Grand Prix (formally known as the Formula 1 Heineken Grande Pr\u00eamio do Brasil 2019) was a Formula One motor race that was held on 17 November 2019 at the Aut\u00f3dromo Jos\u00e9 Carlos Pace in S\u00e3o Paulo, Brazil. The race was the twentieth and penultimate round of the 2019 Formula One World Championship. The race marked the 47th time the race had been run as a World Championship event since the first championship event in 1973, and the 48th time the race had been run overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287866-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Brazilian Grand Prix\nThe race was won by Max Verstappen with Pierre Gasly and Carlos Sainz Jr. taking their first podiums in second and third respectively. Sainz also scored McLaren's first podium since 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287866-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Brazilian Grand Prix, Background, Entrants\nThe drivers and teams were the same as the season entry list with no additional stand-in drivers for the race. However, Nicholas Latifi drove in the first practice session for Williams, replacing Robert Kubica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287866-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Brazilian Grand Prix, Race\nMax Verstappen maintained his lead down into the first corner, while just behind, Lewis Hamilton overtook Sebastian Vettel for second. Apart from a few minor changes in the midfield, and Charles Leclerc steadily making upwards progress from fourteenth on the grid, the order remained generally stable for the first few laps. On lap 9 Daniel Ricciardo attempted an overtake on Kevin Magnussen, but Ricciardo locked his tyres, causing a collision which resulted in Magnussen going into a spin and Ricciardo suffering damage to his front wing. Ricciardo was later given a five-second time penalty for the incident. By lap 11 Leclerc had made his way up to sixth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287866-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Brazilian Grand Prix, Race\nBy lap 18 the soft tyres were generally running out of life with Sergio P\u00e9rez the first to stop the following lap. On lap 20 Mercedes pitted Hamilton, hoping to undercut Verstappen. The next lap, Red Bull pitted Verstappen to try to cover off Hamilton. The pit stop broke the record for fastest pit stop with a time of 1.82 seconds, beating the previous time of 1.88 seconds which was made during the 2019 German Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287866-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Brazilian Grand Prix, Race\nAs Verstappen exited the pits the Williams of Robert Kubica pulled out in front of him, forcing the Red Bull to take evasive action; this resulted in Verstappen losing time and falling behind Hamilton. Verstappen and Hamilton quickly passed Leclerc, before Verstappen overtook Hamilton into turn 1. The two then passed Alexander Albon, Valtteri Bottas, and Vettel, who all pitted. At this point in the race, the cars outside the top six ran: Pierre Gasly, Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, Antonio Giovinazzi, and Sergio P\u00e9rez rounding out the top ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287866-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Brazilian Grand Prix, Race\nOver the next dozen of laps the wind started to pick up in speed. On lap 42 Bottas pitted for hard tyres, with his teammate, Hamilton, pitting two laps later to go onto the mediums. On lap 45 Verstappen pitted to prevent the undercut attempt from Hamilton. Further back, Bottas was unable to find a way past the Ferrari of Leclerc. Bottas retired on lap 52 with a hydraulics problem. His stopped car was adjudged to need a safety car to retrieve, initiating a round of pit stops. Hamilton was told to do the opposite of Verstappen, and so Hamilton stayed out whereas Verstappen pitted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287866-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Brazilian Grand Prix, Race\nFurther back, Leclerc and George Russell also pitted and any lapped cars were allowed to unlap themselves forcing the safety car to stay out for another couple of laps. At the restart, the order of the top ten was as follows: Hamilton, Verstappen, Vettel, Albon, Leclerc, Gasly, Romain Grosjean, Carlos Sainz, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and Giovinazzi. Verstappen managed to overtake Hamilton into turn 1. Further back, the other Red Bull of Albon overtook Vettel for third, while Grosjean in the Haas started to have problems with his car, causing him to drop back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287866-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Brazilian Grand Prix, Race\nOn lap 66 Leclerc overtook Vettel in turn 1, but Vettel, on the back straight, tried to take the position back. The two collided, with Leclerc suffering a broken suspension and Vettel getting a puncture. Both Ferraris retired from the race with terminal damage, and the safety car was called out again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287866-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Brazilian Grand Prix, Race\nMercedes then pitted Hamilton, still on lap 66, onto fresh soft tyres. This put him in line behind the safety car in fourth position, ahead of the McLaren of Sainz, but behind the Red Bulls of Verstappen and Albon, and the Toro Rosso of Gasly. During the safety car, Lance Stroll retired with front suspension damage. At the race restart, on lap 70, Hamilton passed Gasly, but later made contact with Albon while trying to pass him at turn 10. Albon was sent into a spin and was forced to rejoin the field in fifteenth position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287866-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Brazilian Grand Prix, Race\nHamilton, too, was slowed by the contact, allowing Gasly to pass into second place. Verstappen came home to win his third race of the season. Six seconds behind him, Gasly beat Hamilton for second place by 0.062 seconds, meaning that this was the first time since 1991 that drivers using Honda-powered cars finished 1-2. Sainz, two seconds behind them both, finished fourth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287866-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Brazilian Grand Prix, Race, Post race\nAs the final lap of the race was being run, a stewards investigation was announced concerning the Hamilton\u2013Albon incident on lap 70. The podium ceremony was run with Verstappen, Gasly, and Hamilton, but with the investigation ongoing for Hamilton. The stewards summoned Hamilton and Albon and Hamilton was given a five-second time penalty which dropped him from third to seventh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287866-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Brazilian Grand Prix, Race, Post race\nHis penalty promoted Sainz to third, representing Sainz's first podium finish (although Sainz was not present at the podium ceremony), McLaren's first since the 2014 Australian Grand Prix and also setting a new record for the youngest combined podium age, beating the 2008 Italian Grand Prix. The race was the first since the 1994 German Grand Prix in which two drivers scored their first podiums in Formula One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287866-0008-0002", "contents": "2019 Brazilian Grand Prix, Race, Post race\nThe race also marked the first time in the turbo-hybrid era, introduced in 2014, and the first time since the 2013 United States Grand Prix, that the final podium trio did not feature a Mercedes or Ferrari driver. This race also meant that all 3 drivers on the podium are graduates of the Red Bull Junior Team programme.. Carlos Sainz Jr.'s podium finish meant that he was first Spanish driver to step on the podium since Fernando Alonso took his most recent podium finish at the 2014 Hungarian Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287867-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Breckland District Council election\nThe 2019 Breckland District Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Breckland District Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections. The boundaries for this election were the same as those used in 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287867-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Breckland District Council election\nThe Conservative Party held the council with a very large majority, losing one seat to the Green Party (who also won an independent seat and thereby gained their first ever seats in the district) and three to independent candidates, though they gained one seat from UKIP. UKIP lost all four of its seats, with the remaining three being taken by the Labour Party, which became the second largest party on the council with six seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287867-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Breckland District Council election, Results\nIn addition to the elections, a referendum was held on the Swaffham neighbourhood plan. This passed 1572 votes in favour (81.5%) to 334 votes against (18.5%). 1930 ballot papers were issued and the turnout was 30.5%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287867-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Breckland District Council election, Breckland Politics 2015-2019\nAfter the 2015 election, 42 councillors were Conservatives, 4 were UKIP, 2 Labour, and 1 independent. This had changed by 2015 in the following ways:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287867-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Breckland District Council election, Breckland Politics 2015-2019\nThe Conservatives retained control of the council with a sizeable majority throughout this period, despite losing four councillors. The changes were caused by three defections or resignations from the Conservative group, one seat change in a by-election, and one death shortly before the 2019 election. Two Conservative councillors left to sit as independents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287867-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Breckland District Council election, Breckland Politics 2015-2019\nOne was Pablo Dimoglou of Mattishall, who resigned after accusing Council leader William Nunn of an undisclosed connection to the ownership of a local golf club in which the council had invested, before apologising for the allegation and resigning from the group; the other was Thomas Monument of Dereham Withburga, who was found guilty of assault after head-butting and punching an ex girlfriend. One Conservative (John Rogers of Saham Toney) left to sit as a Unionist. There was also a Labour gain from the Conservatives in a by-election in the Thetford Priory ward in September 2017. A UKIP councillor, John Newton of Castle Ward in, died in January 2019; his seat was not filled by a by-election due to the close proximity of this election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 815]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287867-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Breckland District Council election, Breckland Politics 2015-2019\nThere were also a number of Conservative holds in by-elections: Attleborough Queens & Besthorpe in 2016, and Harling & Heathlands and Saham Toney in 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287867-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Breckland District Council election, Breckland Politics 2015-2019\nIn the run-up to the 2019 election, the parties nominated a variable number of candidates. The Conservatives again by a wide margin nominated the most candidates, this time nominating one fewer than in 2015 and thus failing to contest just two of the 49 council seats. The Labour Party nominated 31 candidates, up from a previous 25, being the only party to significantly increase their candidate total. This was a major factor in far fewer wards being uncontested than in 2015. There were also more independent candidates, a total of eight, up from a previous total of three. The Green party meanwhile nominated two fewer candidates; the largest drop in candidate numbers was seen by UKIP, who having stood eighteen candidates previously now only stood two. The Liberal Democrats further decreased their number of candidates from two to one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 913]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287867-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Breckland District Council election, Breckland Politics 2015-2019\nUnlike in 2015, none of the council's 27 wards were uncontested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287867-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Breckland District Council election, Full results by ward\nNote: Anthony Crouch also contested this seat for UKIP in 2015, getting 23.1% on that occasion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287868-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election\nA by-election was held in the UK Parliament constituency of Brecon and Radnorshire (Welsh: Brycheiniog a Sir Faesyfed) on 1 August 2019 after Chris Davies, who had held the seat for the Conservatives since the 2015 general election, was unseated by a recall petition. The by-election was won by Jane Dodds of the Liberal Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287868-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election, Background\nRichard Livsey, a Liberal standing for the SDP\u2013Liberal Alliance, won the seat in the 1985 Brecon and Radnor by-election and retained it in 1987. He lost it narrowly as a Liberal Democrat MP to the Conservative Jonathan Evans in the 1992 general election. The Liberal Democrats regained the seat in the 1997 election and held it until 2015, when Chris Davies won it for the Conservatives. Davies retained his seat at the 2017 general election with an increased majority of 8,038 over the Liberal Democrat candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287868-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election, Background\nA seat with the same name and boundaries exists in the Welsh Assembly. At the time of the by-election, the seat had been represented by Liberal Democrat Kirsty Williams continuously from its creation in 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287868-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election, Background\nIn February 2019, Davies was charged with claiming false expenses, pursuant to the Parliamentary Standards Act 2009. He pleaded guilty in March and, in April, was sentenced to a community order of 50 hours unpaid work and a \u00a31,500 fine. Under the Recall of MPs Act 2015, this conviction triggered a recall petition. After receiving notice from the sentencing court, the Speaker of the House of Commons indicated on 24 April 2019 that he would be instructing the constituency's petition officer to begin the recall process. The petition opened on 9 May and remained open for signatures until 20 June 2019. It required 5,303 signatures (10% of eligible voters) to be successful. The Conservative Party were officially registered as campaigners for the petition's failure, while the Liberal Democrats, Labour and Plaid Cymru campaigned for its success.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 901]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287868-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election, Background\nThis petition was successful, receiving 10,005 signatures (19%), significantly in excess of the 10% of constituents required. Davies was removed from the seat, creating a vacancy to be filled at a by-election, in which he was permitted to stand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287868-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election, Background\nThe by-election occurred shortly after Boris Johnson won the 2019 Conservative leadership election and became Prime Minister, as well as Jo Swinson taking office after winning the 2019 Liberal Democrats leadership election. The result reduced the working majority of the government (including confidence and supply from the DUP) in the House of Commons to one. This makes him the PM to serve the shortest period before losing a by-election, just 10 days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287868-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election, Background\nThe by-election came against the continuing backdrop of Brexit. The constituency lies within the county of Powys, where, at the 2019 European Parliament election, the Brexit Party gained the most votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287868-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election, Background\nIt was the first Westminster by-election to take place in the month of August since the second Fermanagh and South Tyrone by-election of 1981.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287868-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election, Candidates and campaign\nThe by-election was administered by Powys County Council. The deadline for candidate nominations was 5 July, by which time a total of six candidates had registered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 64], "content_span": [65, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287868-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election, Candidates and campaign\nDavies wished to stand for re-election as the Conservative Party candidate and was chosen by the local party. The Liberal Democrat candidate was Jane Dodds, the leader of the Welsh Liberal Democrats. The Labour Party candidate was Brecon town councillor Tom Davies. The Brexit Party candidate was retired police chief superintendent Des Parkinson, who previously stood in Montgomeryshire as a UK Independence Party (UKIP) candidate for election to the UK parliament in May 2015, to the Welsh Assembly in May 2016, and as Dyfed-Powys Police and Crime Commissioner, also in May 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 64], "content_span": [65, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287868-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election, Candidates and campaign\nDodds, the Liberal Democrat candidate, was also supported by Plaid Cymru, the Greens, Change UK and the Renew Party. Plaid Cymru first indicated that it might not stand a candidate in order to support another party supporting a second referendum on Brexit. Change UK called for an independent joint Remain candidate in a letter to the Liberal Democrats, Plaid and the Greens. Plaid and Change UK subsequently confirmed that they were in talks with other Remain-supporting parties. Plaid Cymru decided not to put up a candidate, and instead to support Dodds. The Green Party also chose not to stand a candidate, in order to \"maximise the chances of the candidate most likely to beat the Conservatives and the Brexit Party.\" The Renew Party likewise chose not to stand a candidate for the same reason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 64], "content_span": [65, 864]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287868-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election, Candidates and campaign\nShortly after the result of the recall petition was announced, bookmakers made the Liberal Democrats odds-on favourites to win. In the final week before the election, Heidi Allen MP, former leader of Change UK and now sitting with The Independents, came to the constituency to campaign for Dodds. The new Liberal Democrat leader, Jo Swinson, visited the constituency four times, but the New Statesman noted that The Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage had not, and described the party's campaign infrastructure as \"threadbare\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 64], "content_span": [65, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287868-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election, Candidates and campaign\nDays before the election, BBC Cymru Wales reported that, in May 2019, the Conservative Party's Brecon and Radnorshire chairman, Peter Weavers, had discussed a pro-Brexit pact with Nathan Gill, a Welsh Brexit Party MEP. Gill dismissed the idea due to Davies' support for the Withdrawal Agreement negotiated by Theresa May's government. Weavers denied the claim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 64], "content_span": [65, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287868-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election, Opinion polling\nOnly one poll was conducted, with fieldwork taking place from 10 to 18 July. The poll was completed before Johnson and Swinson were elected as leaders of the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats respectively. Commenting on the paucity of polling, Britain Elects noted: \"Constituency opinion polling isn\u2019t tried much in the UK these days; it\u2019s difficult to get a sample with such a small electorate, and when it was tried on a large scale in advance of the 2015 election it fell victim to the same polling failures that beset that election.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287868-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election, Opinion polling\nThe poll, by Number Cruncher Politics, was the first UK by-election poll to be conducted entirely online.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287868-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election, Result\nThe result was announced at around 2:20\u00a0a.m. on 2 August. In her victory speech, Jane Dodds said she would urge Prime Minister Boris Johnson to \"stop playing with the future of our communities and rule out a no-deal Brexit\". By failing to secure at least 5% of the votes cast, both the Official Monster Raving Loony Party (1.05%) and the UK Independence Party (0.76%) forfeited their deposits. The 59.6% turnout figure was the highest recorded in a Westminster by-election since Winchester in 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287868-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election, Result\nThe Liberal Democrat majority was smaller than the number of votes polled by the Brexit Party, leading many commentators to suggest that vote splitting between the Conservatives and the Brexit Party was a significant threat to the party. The Brexit Party did however underperform relative to polls (although they got nearly twice as many votes as the Labour Party and came a clear third), with the BBC suggesting that the appointment of Boris Johnson as Prime Minister had helped the Conservatives win back some Brexit Party supporters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287868-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election, Result\nMeanwhile, the narrow win for the Lib Dems bolstered support for a \"Remain Alliance\", but the largest increase in Lib Dem votes appeared to come from those who voted Labour in 2017. The Guardian noted that although Labour had prioritised beating the Conservatives over winning the seat themselves, Labour's result was still \"at the lower end of what was credible\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287868-0016-0002", "contents": "2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election, Result\nThe extremely small vote share for UKIP was reported as an embarrassment for the party, and their failure to beat even the Official Monster Raving Loony Party was compared to the May 1990 Bootle election in which David Owen's continuing Social Democratic Party received fewer votes than the Loonys and collapsed shortly after.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287869-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bredene Koksijde Classic\nThe 2019 Bredene Koksijde Classic was the 17th edition of the Bredene Koksijde Classic road cycling one day race and the first edition of the rebranded Handzame Classic. It was held on 22 March 2019, starting and finishing in the titular towns of Bredene and Koksijde, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287869-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bredene Koksijde Classic, Teams\nEight UCI WorldTeams, fourteen UCI Professional Continental teams, and one UCI Continental team made up the twenty-three teams that participated in the race. Each team could enter up to seven riders, but Team Katusha\u2013Alpecin, Team Sky, and Trek\u2013Segafredo each entered five, while Corendon\u2013Circus entered six. Of the 154 riders who entered the race, there were 137 finishers and two non-starters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287870-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup\nThe 2019 Breeders' Cup World Championships was the 36th edition of the premier event of the North American thoroughbred horse racing year. The 14 races, all but one of which were Grade I, took place on November 1 and 2 at Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, California. The races were telecast by NBCSN on Friday and early Saturday, and by NBC later on Saturday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287870-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup\nThe Breeders' Cup is generally regarded as the end of the North American racing season, although a few Grade I events take place in later November and December. The event typically determines champions in many of the Eclipse Award divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287870-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup, Qualifying\nA maximum of 14 horses (12 in the Turf Sprint and Juvenile Turf Sprint) are allowed to start in each race. Horses can automatically qualify by winning one of the designated races in the Breeders' Cup Challenge series, which provide \"Win and You're In\" berths in a specified division of the Breeders' Cup. Other pre-entries are ranked by a points system and the judgement of a panel of experts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287870-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup, Qualifying\nOn October 21, pre-entries to the event were submitted for 188 horses, including 47 from overseas. During this stage, the connections of the horses indicated their intention to enter a specific race, and could also list a possible alternate. After assessing the potential competition, the connections made their final decision and paid the necessary entry fees on October 28. At that time, the field for each race was set, barring injury or other unforeseen circumstances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287870-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup, Qualifying\nFifty of the pre-entries qualified automatically via the Breeders' Cup Challenge series. These included the two leading candidates for the Classic, McKinzie (Whitney Handicap) and Code of Honor (Jockey Club Gold Cup). Other highly ranked qualifiers included Bricks and Mortar (Arlington Million) in the Breeders' Cup Turf and Midnight Bisou (Ogden Phipps, Personal Ensign Stakes) in the Distaff, both undefeated in 2019 and considered leading candidates for Horse of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287870-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup, Event preparation\nOn August 17, 2018, the Breeders' Cup organization announced that Santa Anita Park would host the event for a record tenth time. The track committed to over $5 million in improvements, including new suites on the upper level of the grandstand. The selection became controversial however when 30 horses died during Santa Anita's 2018-9 winter-spring meeting, raising concerns over the safety of the equine athletes. The management of Santa Anita undertook several changes, including extensive testing of the track surface and changes regarding pre-race medication. \"It's been an area of concern,\" said Chad Brown, Eclipse Award-winning trainer. \"But ultimately I didn't avoid running any horses in the Breeders' Cup due to this issue. I did have some questions from clients, but I feel confident Santa Anita management will make the track safe, and I agree with all the safeguards their management has put in.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 947]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287870-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup, Event preparation\nOut-of-competition testing for the event was also extensive, including the use of hair samples for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287870-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup, Event preparation\nExtensive wildfires in California, including the Getty Fire in western Los Angeles, did not affect the Breeders' Cup as they were all downwind from the facility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287870-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup, Results\nSanta Anita took several actions to increase the safety of horses and jockeys, such as closing the downhill turf course after several horses had been injured while crossing over the main track. This meant that the turf sprint races were run at 5 furlongs instead of the normal 6+1\u20442 furlongs. They also increased the number of veterinarians in attendance, which resulted in several scratches before racing began. Despite the precautions, Mongolian Groom was seriously injured during the running of the Classic and had to be euthanized.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287870-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup, Results\nJockey Irad Ortiz Jr. won the Shoemaker Award as the leading jockey during the event. He rode four winners, including Bricks and Mortar in the $4 million Turf and Vino Rosso in the $6 million Classic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287870-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup, Results\nTrainer Chad Brown was the leading trainer of the event with three winners: Bricks and Mortar in the Turf, Uni in the Mile and Structor in the Juvenile Turf. This gave Brown 15 lifetime wins at the Breeders' Cup, tying him for second with Bob Baffert. D. Wayne Lukas has the all-time lead with 20 wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287870-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup, Results, Friday, November 1\nThe on-track attendance was 41,243, down slightly from the Friday attendance in 2018 at Churchill Downs. However, all-source wagering was up 5.4%, to a record of $56,517,228.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287870-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup, Results, Friday, November 1\nFor the second year in a row, all five Breeders' Cup races on \"Future Stars Friday\" were for two-year-olds. The day featured several upsets, most notably that of Storm the Court in the Juvenile at odds of 45-1. The favorite, Dennis' Moment, stumbled at the start and was never a factor, ultimately finishing last. Storm the Court took the early lead and turned back a late challenge from Anneau d'Or, another longshot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287870-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup, Results, Friday, November 1\nThe only favorite to win was Four Wheel Drive in the Juvenile Turf Sprint. Four Wheel Drive is from the first crop of horses sired by Grand Slam winner American Pharoah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287870-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup, Results, Friday, November 1\nAn asterisk after the odds means the horse was the betting favorite.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287870-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup, Results, Saturday, November 2\nSaturday attendance was 67,811. Betting handle for the 14 Breeders' Cup races on Friday and Saturday was a record $154 million, up 12% from 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 49], "content_span": [50, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287870-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup, Results, Saturday, November 2\nOnly two favorites won on the Saturday card, Covfefe in the Filly and Mare Sprint and Bricks and Mortar in the Turf. Both horses are expected to win their respective divisions at the Eclipse Awards, and Bricks and Mortar is the leading candidate for horse of the year. Mitole, second choice in the Sprint, won that race and is expected to win the champion sprinter title. Despite being upset in the Distaff, Midnight Bisou will likely be named the Champion Older Female Horse. The female turf division is likely a tossup between Uni, who won the Mile, and Sistercharlie, who finished third in the Filly and Mare Turf. The three-year-old divisions are still undecided as none of the leading colts and fillies won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 49], "content_span": [50, 762]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287870-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup, Results, Saturday, November 2\nIridessa was the only European-trained horse to win at the event. Her trainer Joseph O'Brien became the youngest trainer, at age 26, to ever win a Breeders' Cup race. The son of Aidan O'Brien also became just the second person to have Breeders' Cup wins as both a jockey and trainer: Freddy Head being the other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 49], "content_span": [50, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287871-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup Challenge series\nThe 2019 Breeders' Cup Challenge series consisted of 86 horse races that provided the respective winners with an automatic \"Win and You're In\" Berth in the 2019 Breeders' Cup, held on November 1 and 2. Races were chosen by the Breeders' Cup organization and included key races in the various Breeders' Cup divisions from around the world. The Breeders' Cup organization paid the Breeders' Cup entry fee for the challenge race winners, provided they had been nominated as foals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287871-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup Challenge series, Summary\nThe 2019 Breeders' Cup Challenge series consisted of 86 races, 64 of which were Grade/Group One, from across 11 countries. There were 7 new races from the 2018 Series: the Gran Premio International Carlos Pellegrini (Turf), Prix Morny (Juvenile Turf Sprint), Fourstardave (Mile), Jockey Club Derby (Turf), the Kentucky Downs Turf Sprint (Turf Sprint), Cotillion (Distaff), Prix de l'Abbaye de Longchamp (Turf Sprint) and Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe (Turf). The following races were removed from the series: Doncaster Mile, Legacy Stakes, Gran Premio 25 de Mayo, Highlander, Forego, Spinaway, and Joe Hirsch Turf Classic. The International Stakes, formerly a qualifier for the Turf, became the first ever European qualifier for the Classic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287871-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup Challenge series, Summary\nOn October 21, fifty of the Challenge race winners were pre-entered in one or more of the Breeders' Cup races. Shortly before entries were taken, Magical \u2013 a leading contender in the Turf \u2013 was retired after spiking a fever.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287871-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup Challenge series, Summary\nEntries were taken on October 28. Several challenge race winners opted to enter a different division of the Breeders' Cup. For example, Omaha Beach, who qualified for the Sprint by winning the Santa Anita Sprint Championship, was instead entered in the Dirt Mile. Conversely, Catalina Cruiser and Mitole qualified for the Dirt Mile but instead were entered in the Sprint. Uni ran in the Mile instead of the Breeders' Cup Filly and Mare Turf. Elate was entered in the Classic after qualifying in the Distaff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287871-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup Challenge series, Summary\nOn Friday, two automatic qualifiers won their respective division of the Breeders' Cup. On Saturday, there were another three:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287871-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup Challenge series, Summary\nMitole, who qualified for the Dirt Mile by winning the Metropolitan Handicap, won the Sprint. Uni won the Mile after qualifying in the First Lady Stakes for the Filly and Mare Turf.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287871-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup Challenge series, Challenge Series races\nThe following table shows the Breeders' Cup Challenge races for 2019 and the respective winners. The status column shows whether the horse was subsequently entered in the corresponding Breeders' Cup race, and whether they finished in the money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287871-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup Challenge series, Television coverage\nFor the 2019 Breeders' Cup Challenge, NBCSN will produce 11 live broadcasts, covering more than 20 of the races in North America. The races will also be live streamed. This is in addition to NBC's coverage of the American Triple Crown series and Royal Ascot, the latter of which has four Breeders' Cup Challenge races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287872-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup Classic\nThe 2019 Breeders' Cup Classic was the 36th running of the Breeders' Cup Classic, part of the 2019 Breeders' Cup World Thoroughbred Championships program. It was run on November 2, 2019 at Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, California with a purse of $6,000,000. The race was won by Vino Rosso.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287872-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287872-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup Classic\nThe race was broadcast on NBC with a post time of 5:44 PM Pacific Daylight Time (PDT) \u2013 prime time on the East Coast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287872-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup Classic, Contenders\nPre -entries for the 2019 Classic were announced on October 21 with the post position draw held on October 28.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287872-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup Classic, Contenders\nThe 2019 Classic was considered to be wide open, given that the major races in the division for both three-year-olds and older male horses were split between many contenders. The favorite was McKinzie, a 4-year-old colt who had finished either first or second in all of his starts in 2019, including a win in the Whitney Handicap. The top-ranked three-year-old in the race was Code of Honor, who had won the Travers Stakes and Jockey Club Gold Cup, the latter by disqualification. The mare Elate attempted to become just the second female horse to win the race, the other being Zenyatta in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287872-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup Classic, Race description\nWar of Will went to the early lead and set moderate fractions, pressed by Mongolian Groom and McKinzie, who had to check strides a few times along the rail. Vino Rosso was a few lengths further back in fourth, then began his move on the far turn while racing three wide. McKinzie had also started his drive, moving to the lead at the head of the stretch. Vino Rosso gradually closed the gap to McKinzie, then pulled away in the final sixteenth of a mile to win by \u200b4\u00a01\u20444 lengths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287872-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup Classic, Race description\nIt was the first Breeders' Cup Classic win for all of Vino Rosso's connections: co-owners Mike Repole (Repole Stable) and Vince Viola (St Elias Stable), trainer Todd Pletcher and jockey Irad Ortiz Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287872-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup Classic, Race description\nPletcher felt that the colt's earlier win in the Gold Cup at Santa Anita, run over the same course and distance, was pivotal to his success in the Classic. \"It gave us confidence that the horse handled the track\", he said. \"We had a blueprint in place that worked. So we tried to follow that pattern exactly, and we did.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287872-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup Classic, Race description\nJoel Rosario, who rode McKinzie, felt his horse simply got tired. \"I let him run a little bit on the backside just to get my spot\", he said. \"That might have cost him a little bit. He ran his heart out, so we can't be too disappointed. We were just beaten by the best horse on the day.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287872-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup Classic, Race description\nMongolian Groom suffered a severe injury to his left hind leg during the stretch run and was later euthanized. Santa Anita had instigated a number of changes to enhance equine safety after a troubling number of deaths during its winter/spring meeting. \"It's something we were all very concerned about coming in\", said Pletcher. \"I think everyone took every possible precautionary measure.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287872-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Breeders' Cup Classic, Results\nTimes: \u200b1\u20444 \u2013 23.09; \u200b1\u20442 \u2013 47.16; \u200b3\u20444 \u2013 1:10.71; mile \u2013 1:36.35; final \u2013 2:02.80. Splits for each quarter-mile: (23.09) (24.07) (23.55) (25.64) (26.45)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287873-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bremen state election\nThe 2019 Bremen state election was held on 26 May 2019 to elect the members of the B\u00fcrgerschaft of Bremen, as well as the city councils of Bremen and Bremerhaven. The election took place on the same day as the 2019 European Parliament election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287873-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bremen state election\nThe opposition Christian Democratic Union (CDU) became the largest party in the B\u00fcrgerschaft, while the Social Democratic Party (SPD) fell to second place. The Greens and The Left also recorded small upswings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287873-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bremen state election\nDespite winning a narrow plurality, the CDU was opposed by a left-wing majority in the B\u00fcrgerschaft. Incumbent Mayor Carsten Sieling resigned after the election, and was succeeded by fellow SPD member Andreas Bovenschulte, who formed a three-party coalition government between the SPD, Greens, and Left. This was the first time that The Left had been involved in a government in western Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287873-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bremen state election, Parties\nThe table below lists parties represented in the previous B\u00fcrgerschaft of Bremen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287874-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Brentwood Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Brentwood Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Brentwood Borough Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287875-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Brest Challenger\nThe 2019 Brest Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the fifth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Brest, France between 21 and 27 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287875-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Brest 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-00287875-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Brest Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as a special exempt:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 65], "content_span": [66, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287876-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Brest Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nSander Gill\u00e9 and Joran Vliegen were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287876-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Brest Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nDenys Molchanov and Andrei Vasilevski won the title after defeating Andrea Vavassori and David Vega Hern\u00e1ndez 6\u20133, 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287877-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Brest Challenger \u2013 Singles\nHubert Hurkacz was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287877-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Brest Challenger \u2013 Singles\nUgo Humbert won the title after defeating Evgeny Donskoy 6\u20132, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287878-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bretagne Classic Ouest\u2013France\nThe 2019 Bretagne Classic Ouest\u2013France was a road cycling one-day race that took place on 1 September 2019 in France. It was the 83rd edition of Bretagne Classic Ouest\u2013France and the 34th event of the 2019 UCI World Tour. It was won by Sep Vanmarcke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287878-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bretagne Classic Ouest\u2013France, Teams\nTwenty-five teams, including all 18 UCI WorldTour teams and seven UCI Professional Continental teams, participated in the race. Each team could enter a maximum of seven riders, but Astana, Bahrain\u2013Merida, and Team Katusha\u2013Alpecin each submitted six riders, meaning the race began with a peloton of 172 riders. Of those riders, only 90 finished the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287879-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Brickyard 400\nThe 2019 Brickyard 400, branded as Big Machine Vodka 400 at the Brickyard presented by Golden Corral, was a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race held on September 8, 2019 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Speedway, Indiana. It is the 26th running of the Brickyard 400. Contested over 160 laps on the 2.5-mile (4.0\u00a0km) speedway, it was the 26th race of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season, and the final race of the regular season before the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287879-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Brickyard 400, Report, Background\nThe Indianapolis Motor Speedway, located in Speedway, Indiana, (an enclave suburb of Indianapolis) in the United States, is the home of the Indianapolis 500 and the Brickyard 400. It is located on the corner of 16th Street and Georgetown Road, approximately six miles (10\u00a0km) west of Downtown Indianapolis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287879-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Brickyard 400, Report, Background\nConstructed in 1909, it is the original speedway, the first racing facility so named. It has a permanent seating capacity estimated at 235,000 with infield seating raising capacity to an approximate 400,000. It is the highest-capacity sports venue in the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287879-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Brickyard 400, Report, Background\nConsidered relatively flat by American standards, the track is a 2.5-mile (4.0\u00a0km), nearly rectangular oval with dimensions that have remained essentially unchanged since its inception: four 0.25-mile (0.40\u00a0km) turns, two 0.625-mile long (1.006\u00a0km) straightaways between the fourth and first turns and the second and third turns, and two .125-mile (0.201\u00a0km) short straightaways \u2013 termed \"short chutes\" \u2013 between the first and second, and third and fourth turns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287879-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Brickyard 400, Practice, First practice\nKyle Larson was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 48.642 seconds and a speed of 185.025\u00a0mph (297.769\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287879-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Brickyard 400, Practice, Final practice\nPaul Menard was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 48.628 seconds and a speed of 185.079\u00a0mph (297.856\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287879-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Brickyard 400, Qualifying\nKevin Harvick scored the pole for the race with a time of 48.448 and a speed of 185.766\u00a0mph (298.961\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287879-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Brickyard 400, Media, Television\nNBC Sports covered the race on the television side. The broadcast was produced similarly to NBC's Watkins Glen International race broadcasts. Rick Allen and Steve Letarte had the call in the booth for the race. Motor Racing Network broadcaster Mike Bagley called from Turn 2, Dale Earnhardt Jr. called from Turn 3, and Jeff Burton called from Turn 4. Dave Burns, Marty Snider and Kelli Stavast reported from pit lane during the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287879-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Brickyard 400, Media, Radio\nIndianapolis Motor Speedway Radio Network and the Performance Racing Network jointly co-produced the radio broadcast for the race, which was simulcast on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio, and aired on IMS or PRN stations, depending on contractual obligations. The lead announcers and two pit reporters were PRN staff, while the turns and two pit reporters were from IMS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287880-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bridgeport, Connecticut mayoral election\nThe 2019 Bridgeport, Connecticut mayoral election was held on November 5, 2019. It saw the reelection of incumbent mayor and former 2018 Guberbatorial candidate Joseph Ganim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287880-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bridgeport, Connecticut mayoral election, Nominations, Democratic primary\nDemocratic incumbent Joseph Ganim narrowly won renomination over state senator Marilyn Moore. Moore had won the votes cast on election day, but her lead was surmounted by Ganim once absentee ballots were counted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 78], "content_span": [79, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287880-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bridgeport, Connecticut mayoral election, Nominations, Democratic primary\nMoore had filed a lawsuit alleging that there was \u201cirregularities and illegal conduct\u201d surrounding absentee ballots and requesting a judge order a re-do of the primary election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 78], "content_span": [79, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287881-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Brighton and Hove City Council election\nElections to Brighton and Hove City Council election took place on 2 May 2019, electing all 54 members of the council, alongside other local elections in England and Northern Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287881-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Brighton and Hove City Council election\nThe Labour Party lost 3 seats compared to the last election in 2015 but recovered its place as the largest party on the council, having seen its numbers reduced from 23 to 19 over the four years following 2015, while the strength of the Conservative group had been increased by one member in 2019, as a Labour councillor had changed allegiance shortly before the election. In addition to Labour and the Conservatives, the Green Party, which was in minority control from 2011 to 2015, fielded candidates for every seat on the council at this election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287881-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Brighton and Hove City Council election\nOther parties contesting were the Liberal Democrats, the Women's Equality Party (for the first time in the city, with two candidates) and United Kingdom Independence Party, together with a number of independent candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287881-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Brighton and Hove City Council election\nFollowing the election, the Labour minority administration that had governed since 2015 continued in office, however a little over a year later, in July 2020, the Greens regained control of the Council, after the incumbent Labour administration collapsed when three Labour councillors, two of which were accused of antisemitism quit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287881-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Brighton and Hove City Council election, Background and campaigning\nThe Green Party lost their minority control of the council after the 2015 election, following internal disputes. Labour became the largest party on the council, winning 23 seats. This was reduced in 2017 to 22 after a Labour councillor, Michael Inkpin-Leissner, for Hollingdean and Stanmer became an independent. There have been two council by-elections since the last election: the first in 2016 in the East Brighton ward was won by Lloyd Russell-Moyle, and the second, 18 months later and for the same seat, when Russell-Moyle resigned as a councillor having been elected as MP for Brighton Kemptown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 72], "content_span": [73, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287881-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Brighton and Hove City Council election, Background and campaigning\nWarren Morgan, Labour leader of the council, resigned from the position in February 2018, some attributing it to internal party conflicts related to the rise of Momentum, a left-wing campaigning group within the Labour Party, who supported many of the candidates selected for seats in the city. In February 2019 Morgan resigned his Labour membership, to form a bloc supporting The Independent Group with Inkpin-Leissner. Anne Meadows, a Labour councillor, defected to the Conservatives, making the Conservatives the largest party on the council. Fifteen councilors were reported to be standing down at this election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 72], "content_span": [73, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287881-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Brighton and Hove City Council election, Background and campaigning\nLabour published its manifesto in late March, with key policies such as building 800 new council homes over the next four years, making the city carbon neutral by 2030 and auditing outsourced services and bringing them back into council services should they fail in value. Controversy came when a provisional version of the document was leaked to the local media titled the \"many-fest\", a 210-page document that brought together ideas from consultation of local labour members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 72], "content_span": [73, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287881-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Brighton and Hove City Council election, Background and campaigning\nThe Green Party also posted their manifesto and coordinated their campaigning with Young Greens of England and Wales, who organised their activists from around the country to go to Brighton in April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 72], "content_span": [73, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287881-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Brighton and Hove City Council election, Background and campaigning\nThe Liberal Democrats released a manifesto focusing on five major themes, including housing and homelessness, with a flagship proposal of developing 1,500 new homes on part of the council-owned Hollingbury golf course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 72], "content_span": [73, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287881-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Brighton and Hove City Council election, Background and campaigning\nThe Conservatives announced their proposal to use money in the city council's reserves to fund projects, as well as the establishment of a local lottery programme to invest in sports and cultural facilities. A Conservative candidate standing in the Westbourne ward was forced to resign during the local campaigning period due to him posting islamophobic and other offensive jokes online.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 72], "content_span": [73, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287881-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Brighton and Hove City Council election, Background and campaigning\nA hustings for the elections \u2013 which focused on community housing in the city \u2013 was hosted on 27 March with councillors from Labour, the Conservatives, the Green party and a Liberal Democrat candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 72], "content_span": [73, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287881-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Brighton and Hove City Council election, Wards and candidates\nDetails of the candidates for the 21 wards of the authority were published by the council after nominations closed on 3 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287881-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Brighton and Hove City Council election, By-elections, Hollingdean and Stanmer\nA by-election was called for 6 May 2021 due to the resignation of incumbent Labour councillor Tracey Hill. The by-election was subsequently won by the Green Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 83], "content_span": [84, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287881-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Brighton and Hove City Council election, By-elections, Patcham\nA by-election was called for 6 May 2021 due to the resignation of incumbent Conservative councillor Lee Wares. The Conservatives held the seat, but with a reduced majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 67], "content_span": [68, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287882-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Brisbane Darts Masters\nThe 2019 Brisbane Darts Masters, in association with Pirate Life was the second staging of the tournament by the Professional Darts Corporation, as the third entry in the 2019 World Series of Darts. The tournament featured 16 players (eight PDC players facing eight regional qualifiers) and was held at the BCEC in Brisbane, Australia from 9\u201310 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287882-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Brisbane Darts Masters\nRob Cross was the defending champion, after defeating Michael van Gerwen 11\u20136 in the 2018 final, but lost to Damon Heta 8\u20137 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287882-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Brisbane Darts Masters\nDamon Heta won his first televised title after defeating the defending champion Rob Cross 8\u20137 in the final on his birthday. Heta only become the second regional qualifier to win a World Series event after compatriot and best friend Kyle Anderson won the 2017 Auckland Darts Masters, this also meant that he was the first ever host nation player to win and the first ever non-Tour Card player to win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287882-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Brisbane Darts Masters, Qualifiers\nThe eight invited PDC representatives, (seeded according to the World Series Order of Merit) were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287883-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Brisbane International\nThe 2019 Brisbane International was a tournament on the 2019 ATP Tour and 2019 WTA Tour. It was played on outdoor hard courts in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. It was the eleventh edition of the tournament and took place at the Queensland Tennis Centre in Tennyson. It was held from 30 December 2018 to 6 January 2019 as 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, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287883-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Brisbane International, Points and prize money, Prize money\n1Qualifiers prize money is also the Round of 32 prize money. *per team", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 64], "content_span": [65, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287883-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287883-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Brisbane International, ATP singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using a protected ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287883-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287883-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287883-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Brisbane International, WTA 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-00287884-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Brisbane International \u2013 Men's Doubles\nHenri Kontinen and John Peers were the defending champions but lost in the first round to Kyle Edmund and Neal Skupski.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287884-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Brisbane International \u2013 Men's Doubles\nMarcus Daniell and Wesley Koolhof won the title, defeating Rajeev Ram and Joe Salisbury in the final, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(8\u20136).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287885-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Brisbane International \u2013 Men's Singles\nNick Kyrgios was the defending champion, but lost in the second round to J\u00e9r\u00e9my Chardy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287885-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Brisbane International \u2013 Men's Singles\nKei Nishikori won the title, defeating Daniil Medvedev in the final, 6\u20134, 3\u20136, 6\u20132. The win ended Nishikori's streak of nine consecutive finals lost on the ATP World Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287885-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Brisbane International \u2013 Men's 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-00287886-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Brisbane International \u2013 Women's Doubles\nKiki Bertens and Demi Schuurs were the defending champions but lost in the first round to Kristina Mladenovic and Galina Voskoboeva.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287886-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Brisbane International \u2013 Women's Doubles\nNicole Melichar and Kv\u011bta Peschke won the title, defeating Chan Hao-ching and Latisha Chan in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287887-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Brisbane International \u2013 Women's Singles\nElina Svitolina was the defending champion, but lost to Aliaksandra Sasnovich \u2013 in a repeat of the previous year's final \u2013 in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287887-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Brisbane International \u2013 Women's Singles\nKarol\u00edna Pl\u00ed\u0161kov\u00e1 won the title, defeating Lesia Tsurenko in the final, 4\u20136, 7\u20135, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287887-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Brisbane International \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nThe top two seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 52], "content_span": [53, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287888-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Brit Awards\nThe 2019 Brit Awards were held on 20 February 2019 at The O2 Arena in London. It was the 39th edition of the British Phonographic Industry's annual pop music awards. On 26 November 2018, Jack Whitehall was announced as the host for the second year running. Sir David Adjaye was announced as the official designer of the BRIT statuette. In December 2018, it was announced that BBC Radio 1, Live Lounge and Top of the Pops host Clara Amfo hosted the BRITs Are Coming Nominations Launch Show on 12 January 2019. Clara Amfo and Alice Levine was live from the Red Carpet before the Main Show on ITV2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287888-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Brit Awards\nOn 11 February 2019, it was announced that Hugh Jackman would open the ceremony with a song from The Greatest Showman soundtrack and on 13 February 2019 during her appearance on BBC One's The One Show with Alex Jones and Matt Baker, Clara Amfo confirmed that Pink would close the ceremony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287888-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Brit Awards, Performers, Main show\nSam SmithIn the Lonely Hour \u2013 53 (+1)The Thrill of It All \u2013 83 (+3)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 39], "content_span": [40, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287888-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Brit Awards, YouTube Music and Facebook hosts\nOn 14 February 2019, it was announced that Capital FM Breakfast Show host Vick Hope and Todrick Hall would host the YouTube Music Live Stream from 7:45pm GMT and it was also announced on the same day, that Jamie Laing and Yasmin Evans would host the Facebook Red Carpet Live Stream from 4:30pm GMT.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 50], "content_span": [51, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287889-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Britcar Endurance Championship\nThe 2019 Dunlop Endurance Championship is a motor racing championship for GT cars, touring cars, sportscars and Production cars held across England. Cars compete in five classes with a car's class decided on horsepower, momentum, equipment, etc. It was the 17th season of a Britcar championship, the 8th run as the Britcar Endurance Championship and the 4th run as the Dunlop Britcar Endurance Championship. The championship changed back to 60-minute races for 2019.: The season began on 30 March at Silverstone and ended on 10 November at Brands Hatch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287889-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Britcar Endurance Championship\nDunlop supplied tyres for every team at all events throughout the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287889-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Britcar Endurance Championship\nThe Class 1 championship title was won by Tim Gray, Alistair Boulton and Grant Williams, Paul Bailey and Andy Schulz were the Class 2 champions, the Class 3 champions were Mark and Peter Cunningham, Tim Docker won the Class 4 championship title and Class 5 was won by Chris Murphy. The overall championship was sealed by Paul Bailey and Andy Schulz, who were 34 points ahead of Tim Docker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287889-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Britcar Endurance Championship\nThe season also saw the entry and marked the racing debut of the Brabham BT62.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287889-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Britcar Endurance Championship, Calendar\nEach race, 1-hour or 2-hours, would consist of one mandatory pit stop and driver change", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287889-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Britcar Endurance Championship, Teams and drivers\nCars are assigned classed based on speed, horsepower, momentum, equipment fitted to the car and the car's model;Class 1: GT3, prototype carsClass 2: GT4, cup (one-make series) carsClass 3: Cup (one-make series) carsClass 4: GT4, cup and TCR carsClass 5: Production cars", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287890-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 British Academy Scotland Awards\nThe 29th British Academy Scotland Awards were held on 3 November 2019 at the DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel Glasgow Central, honouring the best Scottish film and television productions of 2018. The nominations were announced by Edith Bowman on 25 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287890-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 British Academy Scotland Awards, Nominees, Outstanding Contribution to Television\nThe Creative Team Behind Still Game: Greg Hemphill, Ford Kiernan, Michael Hines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 86], "content_span": [87, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287891-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 British Academy Television Awards\nThe 2019 British Academy Television Awards were held on 12 May 2019 at the Royal Festival Hall in London. The nominations were announced on 28 March 2019, whilst the nominees for the \"Virgin TV\u2019s Must-See Moments\" were announced on 27 March 2019. The 2019 British Academy Television Craft Awards were held on 28 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287891-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 British Academy Television Awards, Programmes with multiple nominations\nThe following is a list of programmes with multiple nominations at both the 2019 British Academy Television Awards and the 2019 British Academy Television Craft Awards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287891-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 British Academy Television Awards, Ceremony Information\nOn 2 April 2019, it was announced that following a 2 year break, Graham Norton would return to host the 2019 BAFTA Television Awards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287891-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 British Academy Television Awards, Controversy\nThe inclusion of Killing Eve attracted some controversy as BAFTA rules state that a programme must have its premiere in the UK before elsewhere in order to be eligible, and Killing Eve premiered on BBC America in the US in April 2018, but in the UK in September 2018. BAFTA subsequently amended its eligibility rules, removing the requirement for UK programmes to premiere in the UK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 51], "content_span": [52, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287892-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 British Academy Television Craft Awards\nThe 20th Annual British Academy Television Craft Awards are presented by the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) and was held on 28 April 2019.The awards were held at The Brewery, City of London, and given in recognition of technical achievements in British television of 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287893-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 British Athletics Championships\nThe 2019 British Athletics Championships was the national championship in outdoor track and field for athletes in the United Kingdom, held from 24\u201325 August 2019 at Alexander Stadium in Birmingham. It was organised by UK Athletics. A full range of outdoor events were held up to 5000 metres. The competition served as the main selection event for the 2019 World Athletics Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287893-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 British Athletics Championships\nThe British Championships for 10,000 metres were held during the European 10,000m Cup as part of the Night of 10,000 metres PBs event at Highgate Stadium on 6 July. This event also served as the main qualification event for the 2019 World Championships 10,000\u00a0m.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287893-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 British Athletics Championships\nSelections for the men's and women's marathons were based on results in the 2019 London Marathon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287894-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 British Champions Series\nThe 2019 British Champions Series, sponsored by QIPCO, was the ninth edition of the horse racing series comprising 35 of the UK's top flat races. The series began with the 2,000 Guineas at Newmarket on 4 May, and concluded with British Champions Day at Ascot on 19 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287894-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 British Champions Series, Results\nThe series was split into five categories: Sprint, Mile, Middle Distance, Long Distance and Fillies & Mares. Each category included seven races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287895-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 British Columbia Scotties Tournament of Hearts\nThe 2019 Scotties BC Women's Curling Championship presented by Best Western and Nufloors, the provincial women's curling championship for British Columbia, was held January 29 to February 3 at the West Fraser Centre in Quesnel. The winning Sarah Wark team represented British Columbia at the 2019 Scotties Tournament of Hearts in Sydney, Nova Scotia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287895-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 British Columbia Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Round robin results\nAll draw times are listed in Pacific Standard Time (UTC-08:00)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 72], "content_span": [73, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287896-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 British Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2019 British Figure Skating Championships were held in Sheffield from 26 November to 1 December 2018. BBC Sport covered events on Friday 30 November and Saturday 1 December. 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 used to determine international assignments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287896-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 British Figure Skating Championships, Senior results, Ice dance\nLilah Fear / Lewis Gibson were second after a fall in the rhythm dance but overtook Robynne Tweedale / Joseph Buckland in the next segment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287896-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 British Figure Skating Championships, International team selections, European Championships\nFollowing the conclusion of the British Championships, the team for the 2019 European Championships was published.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 96], "content_span": [97, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287897-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 British GT Championship\nThe 2019 British GT Championship was the 27th British GT Championship, a sports car championship promoted by the St\u00e9phane Ratel Organisation (SRO). The season began on 20 April at Oulton Park and finished on 15 September at Donington Park, after ten rounds held over seven meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287897-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 British GT Championship, Calendar\nThe calendar for the 2019 season was announced on 30 July 2018. Except for the Belgian round at Spa, all races were held in the United Kingdom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287897-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 British GT Championship, Race Results\nBold indicates overall winner for each car class (GT3 and GT4).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287897-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 British GT Championship, Championship Standings, Drivers' Championships, Blancpain Trophy\n1 \u2013 Driver scored 5 points for being fastest in the Am Driver Qualifying Session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 94], "content_span": [95, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287897-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 British GT Championship, Championship Standings, Teams' Championship\nOnly the two best results of a team per race count towards the Teams' Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 73], "content_span": [74, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287898-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 British Grand Prix\nThe 2019 British Grand Prix (formally known as the Formula 1 Rolex British Grand Prix 2019) was a Formula One motor race held on 14 July 2019 at the Silverstone Circuit in Silverstone, United Kingdom. The race was the 10th round of the 2019 Formula One World Championship. It marked the 74th running of the British Grand Prix, the 70th time that the race has been run as a World Championship event and the 53rd time that the World Championship event has been held at the Silverstone Circuit. Lewis Hamilton won the race for a record sixth time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287898-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 British Grand Prix, Background\nFormally called the \"Formula 1 Rolex British Grand Prix 2019\", this was a Formula One Grand Prix event and the tenth round of the 2019 Formula One World Championship. The event took place over the weekend of 12\u201314 July 2019 at the Silverstone motor racing circuit in Northamptonshire. The circuit had a lap length of 5.891\u00a0km (3.660 miles) and, prior to the race, a lap record time of 1'30.621, set by Lewis Hamilton during the 2017 British Grand Prix. The race length was set as 306.198\u00a0km (190.263 miles), which is 52 laps of the circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287898-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 British Grand Prix, Background\nWith the first British Grand Prix having been held in 1926 and the second in 1927 and then there having been one held each year since 1948, with each race since 1950 being a World Championship event, the 2019 event was the 74th time that the British Grand Prix had been held and the 70th time it had been a World Championship event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287898-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 British Grand Prix, Background\nThe race was officially started by Charlie Whiting's son, Justin Whiting, as a tribute to his father, who had died prior to the season opening 2019 Australian Grand Prix. Prior to the start of the race, Sebastian Vettel gave a brief speech in commemoration of Whiting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287898-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 British Grand Prix, Background, Championship standings before the race\nHeading into the race, Lewis Hamilton had a 31-point advantage over teammate Valtteri Bottas in the Drivers' Championship. In the Constructors' Championship, Mercedes held a 135-point advantage over Ferrari.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 75], "content_span": [76, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287898-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 British Grand Prix, Background, Entrants\nThe drivers and teams entered were the same as those on the season entry list with no additional stand-in drivers for either the race or practice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287898-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 British Grand Prix, Practice\nThe first practice session ended with Pierre Gasly fastest for Red Bull almost half a second ahead of second placed Valtteri Bottas who was a further 0.4 seconds ahead of Gasly's teammate Max Verstappen. The only major incidents were Romain Grosjean crashing his car on the pit exit and Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen's Alfa Romeo stopping on the Wellington straight, the latter of which brought out a red flag. The drivers all struggled with track grip levels throughout the session due to the track having been recently resurfaced and although there was some brief rain it had little impact on the running in the session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287898-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 British Grand Prix, Race, Race summary\nOn Lap 1, the two Haas drivers collided at the exit of turn five. Both cars pitted, but both would go on to retire as a result of the damage, Kevin Magnussen on Lap 6 and Romain Grosjean on Lap 9. Valtteri Bottas and Lewis Hamilton fought for the lead, with Bottas maintaining 1st place until Lap 4, when Hamilton overtook at turn seven. Bottas then regained the lead shortly after at turn nine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287898-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 British Grand Prix, Race, Race summary\nAfter battling for 3rd place in the preceding laps, Charles Leclerc and Max Verstappen entered the pits at the same time on Lap 14, with Leclerc ahead. The Red Bull pit stop was the faster of the two and Verstappen emerged in front after the two cars were side by side whilst driving through the pit-lane. However, this lead would not last, as Verstappen ran wide shortly after at turn 4, allowing Leclerc through.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287898-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 British Grand Prix, Race, Race summary\nBottas pitted from the lead at the end of Lap 16, emerging behind Hamilton and Sebastian Vettel. Three laps later, Antonio Giovinazzi, who was running in 9th place, suffered a mechanical failure and spun into the gravel at turn 16. This incident brought out the safety car, allowing Hamilton an advantageous pit stop, maintaining the lead from Bottas. Other drivers including Vettel, Leclerc, Verstappen and Pierre Gasly also came into the pits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287898-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 British Grand Prix, Race, Race summary\nRacing resumed on Lap 24. Sergio P\u00e9rez and Nico H\u00fclkenberg made contact shortly after the restart, damaging P\u00e9rez's front wing. This forced P\u00e9rez to pit and caused him to eventually finish the race last of the running cars in 17th place. Verstappen and Leclerc continued to battle for position, until Verstappen began to pull away and was allowed through by his teammate Gasly, taking 4th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287898-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 British Grand Prix, Race, Race summary\nLeclerc overtook Gasly around the outside of turn 3 on Lap 36, taking 5th position. Shortly after, Verstappen took 3rd place from Vettel on the Hangar Straight. However, in an attempt to retake the position, Vettel locked up his brakes and collided with the back of the Red Bull at the entry to turn 16. Both cars spun into the gravel, but were able to escape and continue the race, with them both emerging behind Leclerc and Gasly. Vettel fell down the order over the remainder of the lap due to damage to his front wing, before pitting to have it replaced. He would go on to cross the line in 15th place, but was handed a 10-second penalty for causing a collision, demoting him to 16th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287898-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 British Grand Prix, Race, Race summary\nLewis Hamilton won the race for a record sixth time, claiming the extra point for recording the fastest lap of the race on his final lap, and setting a new lap record of 1:27.369.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287898-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 British Grand Prix, Race, Race summary\nOn lap 12, for Pierre Gasly's pit stop, the Red Bull Racing team broke the record for the fastest pit stop time, with 1.91 seconds, beating the previous time of 1.92 seconds, which was jointly held by Red Bull and Williams and had stood since 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287899-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 British Indoor Athletics Championships\nThe 2019 British Indoor Athletics Championships was the national indoor track and field competition for British athletes, held on 9 and 10 February 2019 at the Arena Birmingham in Birmingham, England. The event served as the team trials for the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287899-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 British Indoor Athletics Championships\nHolly Bradshaw set a championship record in the women's pole vault, with a clearance of 4.80 metres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287900-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 British Motocross Championship\nThe 2019 British Motocross Championship is the 68th British Motocross Championship season. Evgeny Bobryshev will start the season as the defending champion in the MX1 class, with Conrad Mewse going into 2019 as the reigning champion in the MX2 class. The championship is due to start on 10 March at FatCat MotoParc, near Armthorpe and will conclude after eight rounds on 15 September at Landrake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287901-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 British National Track Championships\nThe 2019 British National Track Championships were a series of track cycling competitions held from 25\u201327 January 2019 at the Manchester Velodrome. They are organised and sanctioned by British Cycling, and were open to British cyclists. The championships were sponsored by HSBC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287902-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 British Rally Championship\nThe 2019 MSA British Rally Championship will be the 61st season of the series, the premier rally competition in the UK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287902-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 British Rally Championship, Calendar\nThe 2019 championship will be contested over six rounds in six different territories England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland, Ireland and Belgium. The Wales Rally GB has been added as a reserve event. The events will be held on both tarmac and gravel surfaces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287902-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 British Rally Championship, Drivers Points Classification, Scoring system\nPoints are awarded as follows: 25, 18, 15, 12, 10, 8, 6, 4, 2, 1. Drivers may nominate one event as their 'joker', on which they will score additional points: 5, 4, 3, 2, 1. Competitors five best scores will count towards their championship total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287903-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 British Rowing Junior Championships\nThe 2019 British Rowing Junior Championships were the 48th edition of the National Junior Championships, held from 19\u201321 July 2019 at the National Water Sports Centre in Holme Pierrepont, Nottingham. They are 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, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287904-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 British Speedway Championship\nThe 2019 British Speedway Championship was the 59th edition of the British Speedway Championship. Robert Lambert was the defending champion having won the title in 2018. The competition consisted of one semi-final and a final, with six riders qualifying from the semi-final, there were 10 riders seeded to the final. These riders were Robert Lambert, Rory Schlein, Chris Harris, Dan Bewley, Craig Cook, Richard Lawson, Edward Kennett, Scott Nicholls, Adam Ellis and Danny King. However, Lambert and Ellis missed out on the final due to injury, so Lambert was unable to defend his title. The championship was won by Charles Wright for the first time, King finished second, while Cook took third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287904-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287905-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 British Superbike Championship\nThe 2019 British Superbike Championship season was the 32nd British Superbike Championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287905-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 British Superbike Championship, Championship standings, Riders' championship\nPoints are awarded to the top fifteen finishers. A rider has to finish the race to earn points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 81], "content_span": [82, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287906-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 British Touring Car Championship\nThe 2019 Kwik Fit British Touring Car Championship (commonly abbreviated as BTCC) was a motor racing championship for production-based touring cars held across England and Scotland. The championship featured 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. The 2019 season was the 62nd British Touring Car Championship season and the ninth season for cars conforming to the Next Generation Touring Car (NGTC) technical specification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287906-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 British Touring Car Championship, Race calendar\nThe championship calendar was announced by the championship organisers on 13 June 2018. Rockingham Motor Speedway will be replaced in the calendar by a second Thruxton Circuit round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election\nGeneral elections were held in the British Virgin Islands on 25 February 2019. For the first time, four parties with at least one incumbent member were contesting an election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election\nThe result was a decisive victory for the Virgin Islands Party, which won eight of the 13 elected seats. The ruling National Democratic Party won only three seats, with party leader Myron Walwyn losing his seat. Seven of the thirteen seats were won by candidates contesting an election for the first time, all for the Virgin Islands Party, a territory record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election\nThe elections were the first in the British Virgin Islands to use electronically tabulated voting rather that manual counts. Voter turnout was 64.64%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election\nElection monitors reported that they saw \"no real evidence of corruption\", but highlighted a large influx of voter registrations in Districts 5 and 8 which had been regarded in some quarters as potential attempt to manipulate results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, Background\nThe House of Assembly normally sits in four-year terms. The Governor must dissolve the House within four years of the date when the House first meets after a general election unless it has been dissolved sooner. Once the House is dissolved a general election must be held after at least 21 days, but not more than two months after the dissolution of the House.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, Background\nThe third session of the House of Assembly first met on 23 June 2015, and therefore in the ordinary course of things the latest possible date of the next British Virgin Islands general election would have been one day short of four years and two months after that date, i.e. on 22 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, Background\nHowever, Delores Christopher, member of the House of Assembly representing the 5th District died on 16 October 2018. There was broad agreement that it was undesirable to hold two elections so close together (a by-election to appoint a new representative for the 5th District, followed by a general election). Accordingly, after taking legal advice and consulting with the Premier Orlando Smith the Governor, Augustus Jaspert, advised that it had been agreed that no separate by-election should be held, and the election would be held on or before 16 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, Background\nThe House of Assembly was dissolved on 23 January 2019 and an election date was immediately announced for 25 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, New leaders and new parties\nBoth of the main political parties which had contested the prior election had leadership contests, and in both cases the person who lost the leadership contest left to form their own party. Accordingly, in the 2019 election, there will be an unprecedented four different political parties with at least one sitting member contesting the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 73], "content_span": [74, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, New leaders and new parties, National Democratic Party\nIn June 2018 the Premier and leader of the National Democratic Party (NDP), Orlando Smith indicated he would be stepping down and not contesting the next general election. In the subsequent leadership contest the party chose Education Minister Myron Walwyn to lead the party into the next election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 100], "content_span": [101, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, New leaders and new parties, National Democratic Party\nIn the wake of Dr Smith's announced retirement, rumours of splits within the ruling National Democratic Party began to circulate almost immediately. Eventually Ronnie Skelton, runner up in the leadership contest, left to form his own political party, named the Progressive Virgin Islands Movement (PVIM).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 100], "content_span": [101, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, New leaders and new parties, National Democratic Party\nSecond District Representative Melvin \"Mitch\" Turnbull also left the NDP to join Skelton, as did at-large representative, Archie Christian. Certain media houses began to sarcastically refer to the PVIM as \"NDP 2\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 100], "content_span": [101, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, New leaders and new parties, Virgin Islands Party\nThe Virgin Islands Party (VIP) also had a leadership contest, and the sitting leader, Julian Fraser, was ousted by the challenger, Andrew Fahie. Fraser subsequently announced he would leave the VIP and set up his own party, which he called Progressives United (PU).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 95], "content_span": [96, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, New leaders and new parties, Controversies, Myron Walwyn Eligibility Issue\nIn the run up to the election there were repeated suggestions in the press that Myron Walwyn was not eligible for election to the House of Assembly because his parents are not from the BVI. His father is from Nevis and his mother is from Antigua. Leader of the opposition Virgin Islands Party, Andrew Fahie, distanced himself from questions about Walwyn's eligibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 120], "content_span": [121, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, New leaders and new parties, Controversies, Speaker of the House Issue\nSome controversy arose when leaked lists of candidates suggested that the speaker of the House, Ingrid Moses-Scatliffe, was to stand as an NDP candidate. A number of public figures, the most prominent being Deputy Premier Kedrick Pickering, expressed concern at her being held out as a candidate for a political party whilst occupying the position of Speaker of the House.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 116], "content_span": [117, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, New leaders and new parties, Controversies, Speaker of the House Issue\nMs Moses-Scatliffe refused to confirm or deny that she would be a candidate for the NDP, and the Attorney General rendered an opinion indicating that even if she were, this would not legally preclude her from acting as Speaker of the House in the interim. Ultimately she was not named as a candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 116], "content_span": [117, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, Results, Territorial seats\nWinning candidates are highlighted in blue. Previously incumbent candidates are marked in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 72], "content_span": [73, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, Results, Territorial seats\nIncumbent Andrew Fahie (VIP) easily won his sixth consecutive election over his two challengers each contesting their first. District 1 had the lowest turnout of any district with 60.38% of voters participating. Fahie's victory was the highest in terms of margin of votes (601) and the percentage of votes cast (81.45%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 72], "content_span": [73, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, Results, Territorial seats\nIncumbent Melvin Turnbull retained his seat after switching parties to join the PVIM, defeating political newcomer Carnel Clyne (VIP).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 72], "content_span": [73, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, Results, Territorial seats\nIncumbent Julian Fraser won his sixth election but his first as the leader of the PU after leaving the VIP. He has never lost an election in his 3rd district stronghold. His opponents, Aaron Parillon (NDP) and Arlene Smith-Thompson (VIP) were each contesting their first election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 72], "content_span": [73, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, Results, Territorial seats\nIncumbent Mark Vanterpool (NDP) won his fifth election in six contests, narrowly holding off newcomer Luce Hodge-Smith. District 4 had the highest proportion of spoiled ballots of any district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 72], "content_span": [73, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, Results, Territorial seats\nIncumbent Delores Christopher died prior to the election leaving the seat vacant. Newcomer Kye Rymer (VIP) overcame fellow newcomer Wade Smith (PVIM) and Elvis \"Juggy\" Harrigan (NDP), who was contesting his fifth election (including once as an at-large candidate).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 72], "content_span": [73, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, Results, Territorial seats\nIncumbent Alvera Maduro-Caines (NDP) won her third consecutive election narrowly defeating newcomer John Samuel (VIP).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 72], "content_span": [73, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, Results, Territorial seats\nIncumbent Kedrick Pickering running as an independent in his fifth election, having won his previous four contests, lost to Natalio Wheatley who was contesting his third-ever general election for a third different party. The same seat was formerly held by Wheatley's grandfather, former Chief Minister, Willard Wheatley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 72], "content_span": [73, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, Results, Territorial seats\nMarlon Penn (NDP) won his third consecutive contest, comfortably defeating Dean Fahie (VIP) who was standing for election for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 72], "content_span": [73, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, Results, Territorial seats\nPolitical newcomer Vincent Wheatley (VIP) easily defeated incumbent Hubert O'Neal (NDP) who was contesting his seventh general election (having won only once previously, in 2015). District 9 had the highest turnout of any district with 71.03% of voters participating. Wheatley's 891 votes were the highest total of any district candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 72], "content_span": [73, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, Results, At-large seats\nThe VIP candidates won all four of the at-large seats. Each of them other than Sharie DeCastro (contesting her second election, after being unsuccessful in 2015), were standing for election for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 69], "content_span": [70, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, Results, At-large seats\nIncumbents Myron Walwyn and Ronnie Skelton were not returned (the two other previous incumbents, Orlando Smith and Archie Christian, did not run).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 69], "content_span": [70, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, Pre-election polling\nAlthough no formal or scientific polls were conducted in the Territory, an unofficial online poll was conducted by VI Platinum News which suggested that a majority of voters prefer the Virgin Islands Party, and a plurality of voters prefer Andrew Fahie as leader. However the highly fragmented outcome of the polling (which does not include independents) pointed to the possibility of a coalition government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, Pre-election polling\nAlthough unscientific, previous polls have correctly predicted the outcome of past elections. In this election the final results were also relatively similar to the informal advance polls, each party polling within 2.5% (the normal margin of error on a scientific poll) of the predicted result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, Manifestos\nMyriad political promises were made and publicised by each party. Manifestos for each political party were launched before the election date of 25 February 2019 as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, Government\nAs the leader of the party with a majority, Andrew Fahie was appointed Premier and invited to form a government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, Government\nIn appointing his Cabinet, Fahie reshuffled various ministerial portfolios from the traditional division of responsibilities. Unusually, ever member of Cabinet except for Fahie himself is a political newcomer entering the House of Assembly for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, Government\nIn addition, Shereen Flax-Charles was appointed a junior minister for tourism.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, Subsequent events\nFollowing the shock defeat of Myron Walwyn, Marlon Penn was appointed Leader of the Opposition. After initially prevaricating, Walwyn confirmed that he would not be quitting politics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, Subsequent events\nAs is customary, the opposition pledged to work with the new government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287907-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 British Virgin Islands general election, Subsequent events\nEight days after the election, the successful District 4 candidate and former Cabinet Minister, Mark Vanterpool shocked the country by announcing he was resigning from politics and stepping down from his seat. He subsequently withdrew his resignation and alleged it was invalid as it was sent to the Cabinet Secretary and not the Speaker of the House as required by the Constitution. The Speaker has insisted that the seat is vacant, but in subsequent legal proceedings the court eventually ruled in favour of Mr Vanterpool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287908-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 British baseball season\n2019 was the 90th season of competitive baseball in the United Kingdom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287908-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 British baseball season\nThe year saw four teams competing in the top-division National Baseball League, with seven in Triple-A, twelve in Double-A, and 22 in Single-A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287908-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 British baseball season\nThe season began on 7 April 2019 and ended on 18 August, with the National Baseball Championships played on 24 and 25 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287908-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 British baseball season, British Baseball Federation leagues, National Baseball League\nThe NBL played 52 regular-season matches in total (26 per team).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 91], "content_span": [92, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287908-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 British baseball season, British Baseball Federation leagues, Single-A, Pool A\nBracknell and Richmond each penalised one win due to forfeit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 83], "content_span": [84, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287909-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 British motorcycle Grand Prix\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Engr. Smitty (talk | contribs) at 09:01, 6 September 2021 (Reverted edits by 27.73.144.195 (talk) to last version by 2A00:23C5:1F1A:7100:AD77:F48C:6375:676). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287909-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 British motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2019 British motorcycle Grand Prix was the twelfth round of the 2019 MotoGP season. It was held at the Silverstone Circuit in Silverstone on 25 August 2019. The race saw one of the closest finishes in the history of MotoGP, as \u00c1lex Rins won the race by just 0.013s ahead of Marc M\u00e1rquez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy\nOn 28 August 2019, the Parliament of the United Kingdom was ordered to be prorogued by Queen Elizabeth II upon the advice of the Conservative prime minister, Boris Johnson, advice later ruled to be unlawful. The prorogation, or suspension, of Parliament was to be effective from between 9 and 12 September 2019 and last until the State Opening of Parliament on 14 October 2019; in the event, Parliament was suspended between 10 September and 24 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy\nSince Parliament was to be prorogued for five weeks and reconvene just 17 days before the United Kingdom's scheduled departure from the European Union on 31 October 2019, the move was seen by many opposition politicians and political commentators as a controversial and unconstitutional attempt by the prime minister to avoid parliamentary scrutiny of the Government's Brexit plans in those final weeks leading up to Brexit (withdrawal of the UK from the European Union). Johnson and his Government defended the prorogation of Parliament as a routine political process that ordinarily follows the selection of a new prime minister and would allow the Government to refocus on a legislative agenda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy\nIn early September 2019, judges in the High Court of Justice, and the Outer House of the Court of Session\u2014the English and Scottish civil courts of first instance\u2014ruled that the matter was not subject to judicial review as it was a political decision; an appeal in the latter case to the Inner House of the Court of Session\u2014Scotland's supreme civil court\u2014overturned the Outer House verdict and ruled the prorogation was justiciable and unlawful.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy\nTo resolve the differences of opinion between the courts, both cases were appealed to the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom which, on 24 September, ruled unanimously in R (Miller) v The Prime Minister and Cherry v Advocate General for Scotland that the prorogation was both justiciable and unlawful; consequently, the Order in Council ordering prorogation was quashed, and the prorogation was deemed \"null and of no [legal] effect\". When Parliament resumed on the following day, the prorogation ceremony was expunged from the Journal of the House of Commons and business continued as if the ceremony had never happened. A second much shorter prorogation, this time for six days, began on 8 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Background\nProrogation is a political process which marks the end of a parliamentary session, and also refers to the time between the end of one parliamentary session and the start of another. During prorogation, neither Parliament nor its committees sit, and all motions, unanswered questions, and bills not yet assented to automatically lapse, unless a so-called \"carry-over motion\" allows for the business to be resumed in the next session. Prorogation is a power under the royal prerogative and is ordered by the Queen-in-Council; that is, the Queen under advice of the Privy Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Background\nProrogation takes effect when a royal proclamation which orders the prorogation is read to both Houses of Parliament; at that point, Parliament does not meet again until the State Opening of Parliament some days later. It is distinct from adjournment and recess, which are short breaks that do not halt all parliamentary business, and dissolution, which disperses Parliament in advance of a general election. Since 1854, prorogation has been undertaken by the Lords Commissioners in lieu of the Sovereign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Background\nHistorically, the prorogation of Parliament was the norm; the monarch would typically only summon Parliament to approve royal taxes and summarily prorogue the body again. Prorogation was also used as a royal tactic to avoid parliamentary scrutiny; Elizabeth I suspended Parliament in 1578 to prevent public debate of her courtship with Francis, Duke of Anjou. The turning point came in the prelude to the English Civil War, when Charles I prorogued his third Parliament. Parliament objected to royal imposition of taxes and issued the Petition of Right in response to the King's actions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Background\nWhen then-Speaker of the House of Commons, John Finch, announced the end of the session, incensed MPs sat on Finch, which momentarily prevented the closure of Parliament until the Commons passed several motions which condemned the King's abuse of power. After Parliament was prorogued, Charles I ruled on his own for eleven years\u2014and even attempted to close down the Parliament of Scotland in 1638\u2014and only recalled Parliament in 1640 to pass more taxes. The second sitting of Parliament that year\u2014the famous Long Parliament\u2014passed legislation which prevented its prorogation or dissolution without its consent. In the event, it sat undissolved for another twenty years throughout the English Civil War, Interregnum, and Restoration, despite Pride's Purge in 1648 which created the Rump Parliament and Oliver Cromwell's expulsion of the Long Parliament and convocation of an alternative assembly in 1653.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 953]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Background\nAlthough prorogation is typically uncontroversial, there have been several noteworthy prorogations during major political disputes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Background\nIn 1774, upon the advice of Lord North, George III prorogued Parliament after the passage of the Quebec Act, one of the triggers of the American Revolution; in 1831, peers took umbrage to William IV's prorogation of Parliament after the Commons defeated the First Reform Bill which sought to expand the franchise; in 1948, Clement Attlee called a short pro forma session of Parliament, which was prorogued after ten days, to hasten the passage of the Parliament Act 1949; and in 1997, John Major advised an early prorogation prior to the general election in May, at the height of the cash-for-questions affair.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Background\nThe most controversial prorogation of recent times took place in 2008 in Canada; Stephen Harper, the prime minister and leader of the minority Conservative government, advised the governor general, Micha\u00eblle Jean, to prorogue Parliament prior to the budget. At the time, the Liberal and New Democratic parties planned to form an alternative government with the support of the Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois; prorogation postponed the motion of no confidence in Harper's government and by the time Parliament sat again, the agreement between the opposition parties fell apart and Harper remained in office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Background\nHarper controversially advised Jean to prorogue Parliament again in late 2009, until after the 2010 Winter Olympics; at the time, Harper was under heavy scrutiny for his role in the Afghan detainee affair. A similar crisis that concerned the use of royal powers to break parliamentary deadlock took place in Australia in 1975; the prime minister, Gough Whitlam, was controversially dismissed by the governor-general, John Kerr, and replaced by the leader of the Opposition, Malcolm Fraser, who commanded a majority in the Senate. The House of Representatives, controlled by the Australian Labor Party, passed a motion of no confidence in Fraser, but was unable to reinstall Whitlam before Kerr dissolved Parliament in advance of a federal election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 797]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Prelude, Under Theresa May\nProposals of prorogation first surfaced in early 2019. At the time, the parliamentary session had been ongoing since 13 June 2017, several days after a general election which saw the governing Conservative Party, then led by Theresa May, lose its majority. Prior to 2010, parliamentary sessions typically started in October and ended in September; general elections would shorten the preceding session and lengthen the following. After the Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011\u2014which abrogated the similar royal power to dissolve Parliament\u2014passed into law, the regular start of the parliamentary calendar moved to coincide with elections in May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Prelude, Under Theresa May\nIn June 2017, the Government announced the imminent parliamentary session would last for two years, to allow for greater parliamentary scrutiny of Brexit and the repeal or amendment of the corpus of European law which would no longer have effect upon the United Kingdom's departure from the European Union. On 7 May 2019, the 2017\u201319 Parliament became the longest parliamentary session since the Long Parliament four centuries prior.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Prelude, Under Theresa May\nAfter the Brexit withdrawal agreement negotiated by the Government was rejected by Parliament in the so-called \"meaningful vote\", prorogation was seen as an option for the Government to bring the agreement back for another vote; Erskine May, which conventionally codifies parliamentary practice, states \"matters already decided\" cannot be brought back during a parliamentary session if they were already rejected on a substantive basis. The Speaker of the House of Commons, John Bercow, allowed a second vote on the agreement on 12 March 2019, which was rejected with a reduced majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Prelude, Under Theresa May\nOn 18 March, Bercow said any motion to approve the withdrawal agreement for a vote must not be \"substantially the same\", and on 27 March, re-iterated his warning to the Government. A third \"meaningful vote\" on the withdrawal agreement, which did not include the \"political declaration\" on future EU\u2013UK relations, was lost by the Government on 29 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Prelude, Under Theresa May\nContemporaneously, the United Kingdom's withdrawal from the European Union, previously scheduled for 29 March 2019, was delayed to 12 April 2019. Proponents of leaving the European Union without a deal suggested prorogation as a method to ensure such a departure; the United Kingdom's withdrawal remains the legal default with or without a negotiated withdrawal agreement, and the prorogation of Parliament would prevent legislation to either ratify the agreement, seek an extension to Brexit negotiations, or revoke the invocation of Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Prelude, Under Theresa May\nProrogation would also prevent a motion of no confidence or a motion to trigger an early general election. After persistent rumours of this course of action, despite Parliament's explicit rejection of a \"no-deal\" scenario, opposition MPs took control of the legislative calendar and passed the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2019, also known as the \"Cooper\u2013Letwin Bill\", which mandated the Government to seek a longer extension to Brexit negotiations. A subsequent agreement with the European Council delayed Brexit once again to 31 October 2019 and mandated elections to the European Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Prelude, Under Theresa May\nAfter the European elections, in which the Conservatives finished fifth behind the Brexit Party, Liberal Democrats, Labour Party and Green Party, Theresa May announced her intention to resign as prime minister after a new Conservative leader was elected in July. In the interim period, opposition MPs asked whether a new prime minister would use prorogation to reduce parliamentary scrutiny of the Government's Brexit policy, which the Government did not rule out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Prelude, Under Theresa May\nIn response, Bercow said from the chair that \"Parliament will not be evacuated from the centre stage of the decision-making process on this important matter\"; he further said such a statement was \"so blindly obvious so as not to need stating\" but was dismayed by the fact it needed to be said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Prelude, Under Boris Johnson\nBoris Johnson, an outspoken critic of the withdrawal agreement, was subsequently elected Conservative leader on 23 July 2019 and became prime minister on the following day. As part of his strategy to ensure, \"do or die\", the UK's withdrawal from the EU on 31 October 2019, Johnson's campaign team and political commentators saw prorogation as a viable method to effect the policy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Prelude, Under Boris Johnson\nOn 18 July, Johnson's imminent victory led opposition MPs to successfully amend the Northern Ireland (Executive Formation etc) Bill to make prorogation during late October functionally impossible; the Act requires the Government to lay reports before Parliament, which would then sit to debate them even during the body's suspension.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0010-0002", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Prelude, Under Boris Johnson\nOn 25 July, the newly appointed Leader of the House of Commons, Jacob Rees-Mogg, who also intimated the possibility of prorogation when he was a backbencher, said the Government viewed prorogation for political purposes as an \"archaic mechanism\" which was now his view due to collective ministerial responsibility would not be used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Prelude, Under Boris Johnson\nDuring the summer recess, prorogation was still seen as a likely prospect. At the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, Bercow said he would \"fight with every breath in [his] body\" to prevent the suspension of Parliament, as he believed Parliament's right to sit and debate was sacrosanct. On 27 August 2019, over 150 cross-party opposition MPs signed the Church House Declaration\u2014named after the Headquarters of the Church of England and former temporary parliamentary chamber near Parliament\u2014and pledged to \"do whatever is necessary\" to prevent Parliament being prorogued. Opposition MPs also mooted the traditional conference season recess; in 2019, the conference season started with the Liberal Democrat conference, which began on 14 September, and ends with the closure of Conservative conference on 2 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 872]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Prorogation\nIn the week ending 24 August 2019, it was reported that within the previous 10 days Johnson had asked the attorney general, Geoffrey Cox QC, for legal advice on the matter of prorogation, tentatively scheduled for between the return of Parliament on 3 September and the European Council meeting on 17 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Prorogation\nOn 28 August, Jacob Rees-Mogg, in the role of Lord President of the Council, convened a small Privy Council meeting with Mark Spencer as Chief Whip, Baroness Evans of Bowes Park as Leader of the House of Lords and the Queen whilst she was in residence at Balmoral Castle. The Queen gave her consent to prorogation, to start on the week beginning 9 September, and end with the State Opening of Parliament on 14 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Prorogation\nSuch a long prorogation was seen as unprecedented; since 1979, Parliament has not been prorogued for more than three weeks, and is typically prorogued for less than a week, as opposed to the five-week prorogation requested by the Government. Bercow described the prorogation as a \"constitutional outrage\" designed to \"stop MPs debating Brexit\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Prorogation\nOpposition politicians stated their opposition to prorogation: First Minister of Scotland Nicola Sturgeon (SNP) described Johnson as a \"tin-pot dictator\"; First Minister of Wales Mark Drakeford (Labour) said Johnson wanted to \"close the doors on democracy\"; and Liberal Democrat leader Jo Swinson called prorogation a \"dangerous and unacceptable course of action\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0013-0002", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Prorogation\nSupporters of the Government defended the prorogation; Conservative chairman James Cleverly described prorogation as \"something all new governments do\", President of the United States Donald Trump congratulated Johnson, via Twitter, for preventing a motion of no confidence, and former First Minister of Northern Ireland Arlene Foster (DUP) welcomed prorogation as an opportunity to review and renegotiate the confidence and supply agreement her party entered into with the Government. Within hours of the announcement, impromptu protests took place in major cities; a demonstration to \"stop the coup\" outside Parliament claimed an attendance of several thousand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Prorogation, Loss of working majority\nUpon Parliament's return on 3 September 2019, Conservative MP and \"no-deal\" opponent Oliver Letwin made an emergency motion to introduce a bill which sought to delay Brexit past 31 October. The motion would allow backbench control of the timetable for 4 September to pass, in one day, what would become the European Union (Withdrawal) (No. 2) Act 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0014-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Prorogation, Loss of working majority\nLetwin was successful due to the rebellion of 21 Conservative MPs who were subsequently suspended from the party; coupled with the defection of Phillip Lee to the Liberal Democrats, Johnson lost his working majority on his second day in Parliament as prime minister. The Government then attempted to filibuster the bill in the House of Lords to prevent the bill's passage before prorogation; the Government later discontinued the filibuster and allowed the bill to pass the Lords on 6 September, and subsequently receive Royal Assent on 9 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Prorogation, Loss of working majority\nAfter the bill's passage into law, Johnson reiterated his commitment to ensure the UK's withdrawal from the EU took place on 31 October; this sparked speculation he could be imprisoned for contempt of court or otherwise removed from office for failing to uphold the law. The Government also attempted twice to trigger an early general election, on 6 September and 9 September; both attempts failed, as opposition parties refused to support a motion on the basis it would dissolve Parliament and similarly make it unable to prevent a no-deal Brexit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Prorogation, Loss of working majority\nOn 9 September 2019, the House of Commons voted 311\u2013302 for a humble address for a return to force the Government to turn over, within 48 hours, all communications within the Prime Minister's Office related to prorogation as well as publish all documents related to no-deal preparations under Operation Yellowhammer. In Westminster Hall, MPs debated two e-petitions: one supported prorogation and garnered 100,000 signatures before being closed; and one opposed prorogation and garnered 1.7 million signatures in several weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0015-0002", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Prorogation, Loss of working majority\nOn the same day, Bercow announced his resignation as Speaker, effective 31 October 2019, amidst speculation the Conservatives would break the tradition of not standing against the Speaker at the next general election; his resignation beforehand triggered a speakership election in which the Government would find it difficult to install a friendlier Speaker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Prorogation, Prorogation\nParliament was ostensibly prorogued shortly before 2 am on 10 September 2019, when Sarah Clarke, Lady Usher of the Black Rod, entered the Commons chamber to signal the start of the formal ceremony amidst shouts of protest from the opposition benches. Bercow, who was then surrounded by opposition MPs who held makeshift signs that read \"silenced\", derided the intended prorogation as an \"act of executive fiat\" before he departed to the House of Lords for the ceremony. As many Conservative MPs followed him out of the chamber, many in opposition heckled the Government with chants of \"shame on you\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Prorogation, Prorogation\nThe ceremony in the Lords was boycotted by opposition peers; this included the Labour and Liberal Democrat leaders in the Lords, Baroness Smith of Basildon and Lord Newby, and caused the procedure to be performed with only three of the Lords Commissioners instead of the usual five. There were only sixteen peers in attendance: thirteen Conservatives, two crossbenchers and one Lord Spiritual. The session closed minutes later; upon his return to the Commons chamber alone, Bercow was cheered by opposition MPs before he read the notice of prorogation, later declared to be void.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Prorogation, Prorogation\nBaroness Evans of Bowes Park(Leader of the House of Lords, Conservative)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Prorogation, Prorogation\nThe ostensible prorogation was said at the time to have brought an end to a parliamentary session that had sat for 341 days. Fifty-two bills had passed into law; this included eight Brexit-related bills, six budgetary bills, and nine bills related to the collapse of the Northern Ireland Executive in 2017. At the time it was thought that three bills were carried over into the next session, whereas twelve government bills were not carried over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0018-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Prorogation, Prorogation\nNotable bills that were said to be dropped as a result of prorogation included a Trade Bill, which was due for \"ping-pong\" and ineligible to be carried over; a Fisheries Bill; and bills concerned with animal cruelty, divorce, and domestic violence. The supposed prorogation also cancelled a meeting between Johnson and members of the Liaison Committee that was scheduled for 11 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Lower court rulings\nDuring the parliamentary recess in August, a group of 78 parliamentarians, led by SNP justice spokeswoman Joanna Cherry QC MP and Brexit opponent Jolyon Maugham QC, made an application for judicial review to the Outer House of Scotland's highest court, the Court of Session in Edinburgh. The litigants sought a ruling that prorogation to avoid parliamentary scrutiny would be unconstitutional and unlawful; the hearing was expedited to 6 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Lower court rulings\nImmediately after the announcement of prorogation on 28 August, Cherry applied to the court for an interim interdict to prevent prorogation until the case could be heard; on the same day, Gina Miller, who previously defeated the Government on the use of the royal prerogative in R (Miller) v Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union, made an urgent application for judicial review of the use of prerogative powers at the High Court of Justice for England and Wales in London, and victims' rights activist Raymond McCord made an application at the High Court of Northern Ireland in Belfast which alleged breaches of the Good Friday Agreement. On 30 August, Lord Doherty refused the request in the Scottish case for an interdict as he was not satisfied there was a \"cogent need\" for one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 853]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Lower court rulings\nDuring the Court of Session hearings on 3 September, the court heard evidence Johnson had approved negotiations with the Palace on 15 August 2019, by way of signing a handwritten note to his special adviser Nikki da Costa and Dominic Cummings, and made comments about the short sitting of parliament in September being a \"rigmarole\" to show MPs were \"earning their crust\". Aiden O'Neill QC, who represented the petitioners at the Court of Session, argued this proved the Government misled the court when they described the issue of prorogation as an academic one. During the proceedings, the Government offered no sworn witness statements which testified to the reasons for prorogation; legal commentator David Allen Green likened the lack of such a statement to Sherlock Holmes's famous quote about \"the curious incident of the dog in the night-time\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 910]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Lower court rulings\nOn 4 September, Doherty ruled in the first instance that the matter was non-justiciable; the case was immediately appealed to the Inner House of the Court of Session. Doherty's opinion was shared by the High Court of Justice, who rejected Miller's case on 6 September as non-justiciable. The High Court of Northern Ireland did not rule on the aspect of prorogation in McCord's case\u2014as the English and Scottish courts had already ruled on the matter\u2014and found the other aspects on his cases non-justiciable on 12 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0022-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Lower court rulings\nOn 11 September, the three-judge appellate panel at the Court of Session, consisting of Lords Carloway (Lord President), Brodie, and Drummond Young, unanimously found the prorogation was unlawful. The court found Johnson was motivated by \"the improper purpose of stymieing Parliament\" and had effectively \"misled the Queen\", and as a result, declared the royal proclamation as \"null and of no effect\". To resolve the fundamental differences in the verdicts from England and Scotland's senior courts, both the Miller and Cherry cases were appealed to the Supreme Court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Political events during prorogation\nAfter the Scottish judgement was announced, opposition MPs demanded Parliament be immediately recalled that afternoon and some MPs returned to the empty chamber in protest. At the same time, 10 Downing Street reportedly said the petitioners had \"chosen the Scottish courts for a reason\". The statement evoked the \"Enemies of the People\" newspaper headline after the government lost the 2016 Miller case, and the subsequent controversy over then-Lord Chancellor Liz Truss's apparent failure to defend the independence of the judiciary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 73], "content_span": [74, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0023-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Political events during prorogation\nIn response, incumbent Lord Chancellor Robert Buckland QC\u2014who several days previously met Johnson to encourage him to not breach the Article 50 extension law\u2014responded in defence of the judiciary, and the Prime Minister's Office made a subsequent statement which defended the impartiality of the judges. That evening, Kwasi Kwarteng, a senior minister in the government, reopened the controversy on The Andrew Neil Show when he told Neil \"many people are saying that the judges are biased\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 73], "content_span": [74, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Political events during prorogation, Operation Yellowhammer\nThat same evening, just before the deadline set by Parliament for the Government to comply with the 9 September humble address, the Government published a summary of the Operation Yellowhammer documents, but refused to publish the full documents or release the prorogation correspondence, on the grounds that doing so would violate the legal right to privacy which civil servants enjoy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 97], "content_span": [98, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0024-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Political events during prorogation, Operation Yellowhammer\nRefusal to conform with a humble address, which is binding, risks the Government being found in contempt of Parliament for the second time within a year; in the first instance, Parliament voted in December 2018 that legal professional privilege was not a defence to a charge of contempt, in relation to the Government's initial refusal to disclose the full legal advice it received on the withdrawal agreement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 97], "content_span": [98, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Political events during prorogation, Operation Yellowhammer\nThe partial release of the Yellowhammer documents, which detailed possible disruption to the supply of food, fuel, and medicine as a result of a no-deal Brexit, led to renewed calls from the opposition for Parliament on 12 September to be immediately recalled. At the same time, Johnson was scrutinised with regard to the Court of Session finding he had misled the Queen; he denied lying to the Queen and said the High Court of Justice corroborated his belief.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 97], "content_span": [98, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0025-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Political events during prorogation, Operation Yellowhammer\nOn the same day, former Conservative attorney general Dominic Grieve QC MP said that if the Supreme Court found the Government had misled the Queen, it would represent a \"very serious\" breach of the relationship between the Queen and her prime minister, and Johnson would be forced to \"very swiftly\" resign as a matter of constitutional principle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 97], "content_span": [98, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0025-0002", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Political events during prorogation, Operation Yellowhammer\nOn 15 September, the Mail on Sunday reported that Cummings, in a meeting with other governmental special advisors, had suggested a second prorogation if the Supreme Court declared the first prorogation unlawful; the Prime Minister's Office confirmed the accuracy of the story and said the comment was \"clearly made as a joke\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 97], "content_span": [98, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Political events during prorogation, Impeachment\nOn the same day, Plaid Cymru leader Adam Price said Parliament should impeach Johnson if the Government lost before the Supreme Court and Johnson refused to resign; Liz Saville Roberts, the leader of the party in the House of Commons, had said earlier that week that Johnson should also be impeached if he refused to extend Brexit negotiations and entered discussions with other parties to gather support. Impeachment is an arcane parliamentary procedure which has never been successfully levelled towards a prime minister or a Cabinet minister: the last individual to be impeached was Henry Dundas, 1st", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 86], "content_span": [87, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0026-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Political events during prorogation, Impeachment\nViscount Melville in 1806; and the last serious attempt was an unsuccessful 2004 effort by Price and ten other MPs to impeach then-prime minister Tony Blair. Johnson, then a member of the opposition frontbench, was another high-profile supporter of the impeachment motion and wrote an opinion piece in The Daily Telegraph which accused Blair of \"treating Parliament and the public with contempt\". Historically, individuals who were impeached would be arrested and prosecuted by the Commons in a trial before the Lords in Westminster Hall; those who were later convicted were sentenced at the liberty of the Commons and had no right to receive the royal prerogative of mercy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 86], "content_span": [87, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Supreme Court\nThe Supreme Court of the United Kingdom began a three-day hearing to consider the appeals for both the London and Edinburgh cases on 17 September 2019; McCord, who did not appeal his ruling, was granted leave to make an oral intervention. On the first day of the hearing, which focused on the losers of each lower court case, the Advocate General for Scotland, Lord Keen, argued that the Government was entitled to prorogue Parliament for political purposes and the Court of Session ruled outside its jurisdiction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0027-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Supreme Court\nWhen asked by the court whether Johnson would prorogue Parliament for a second time, Keen did not answer. Lord Pannick QC, who responded on Miller's behalf, argued that there was \"strong evidence\" that the purpose of prorogation was to prevent MPs from \"frustrating\" the Government's Brexit plans, as opposed to a short prorogation for a Queen's Speech that the respondents \"had no quarrel with\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0027-0002", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Supreme Court\nThe second day focused on the victors in each lower court case; the Government, represented by James Eadie QC, argued that in the absence of legislation that regulated the power of prorogation, it was not appropriate for the judiciary to \"design a set of rules\" to judge prorogation by; O'Neill argued that although it would not be to appropriate to create such rules, it was nevertheless \"the province of the courts\" to decide whether prorogation was constitutional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Supreme Court\nThe final day of the hearing saw interventions from other interested parties: former solicitor general Lord Garnier, who responded for former prime minister John Major, argued prorogation was \"motivated by a desire to prevent Parliament interfering with the prime minister's policies during that period\"; the Scottish Government, who were represented by its Lord Advocate, James Wolffe, argued prorogation had a \"profoundly intrusive effect\" on Parliament; McCord's advocate Ronan Lavery QC argued prorogation was designed to \"run down the clock\" to force a no-deal Brexit, which would in turn result in controls on the border with Ireland; and in a written submission, the shadow attorney general, Shami Chakrabarti, said that if the power to prorogue was unchecked, Parliament would be \"deprived\" of the ability to \"perform its constitutional function\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 907]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0028-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Supreme Court\nThe hearing ended with the Government and the petitioners summing up their arguments: Keen re-iterated the argument that the courts were constitutionally \"not properly equipped\" to decide on matters of high policy; and Pannick requested the court make a declaration that prorogation was unlawful and for Parliament to be recalled as a result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Supreme Court\nOn 24 September, the Supreme Court ruled unanimously that the prorogation was both justiciable and unlawful, and therefore null and of no effect. The court cited the Case of Proclamations (1611), in which the High Court of Justice asserted its power to test the existence of limits of prerogative powers, in answering the question of justiciability; in the case of prorogation, use of the Royal Prerogative must have respect for the conventions of parliamentary sovereignty and democratic accountability.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0029-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Supreme Court\nThe court ruled that any prorogation would be unlawful \"if it has the effect of frustrating or preventing, without reasonable justification, the ability of Parliament to carry out its constitutional functions as a legislature\"; if this is the case, there would be no need to rule on whether the motives of the executive were lawful.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Supreme Court\nThe court further ruled that the prorogation of Parliament did have the effect of frustrating Parliament's constitutional functions; the court found that the suspension of Parliament in the prelude to the \"fundamental [constitutional] change\" of Brexit had an \"extreme\" effect on the \"fundamentals of democracy\". The court also found that the Government had not provided a justification for the intended prorogation nor for its length or its effect on the requirement for parliamentary scrutiny of any withdrawal agreement under the terms of the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018. As a result, the Court quashed the relevant Order in Council, which meant the effect of the royal proclamation of prorogation had the legal effect of \"a blank piece of paper\" and reverted the 2017\u201319 Parliament into being in session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 869]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Aftermath, Legal aftermath\nAs with the Scottish ruling, several opposition parliamentarians returned to the chamber immediately after the ruling was issued; those MPs who had surrounded Bercow with makeshift signs during the prorogation ceremony took selfies with their signs edited to reflect the ruling. In a statement on College Green\u2014near Parliament and the Supreme Court's seat in the Middlesex Guildhall\u2014John Bercow announced he had recalled Parliament to sit on the following day from 11:30 am. Prime Minister's Questions was not scheduled for its regular Wednesday midday slot, but Bercow said he would allow urgent questions and applications for emergency debates to be heard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Aftermath, Legal aftermath\nBercow opened the first sitting of Parliament, on 25 September 2019, with a statement from the chair: he welcomed MPs back to work and informed the House that consequent to the Supreme Court ruling, the record of the prorogation ceremony would be expunged from the Journal of the House of Commons and corrected to reflect the House as adjourned instead, and that the Royal Assent that had been signified to the Parliamentary Buildings (Restoration and Renewal) Act during the ceremony would need to be re-signified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0032-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Aftermath, Legal aftermath\nThe first item of debate was an urgent question by Cherry to the attorney general; she urged Cox to publish the legal advice he gave to Johnson on the subject of prorogation to avoid him being labelled as a scapegoat for the affair. Cox defended the advice he gave to Johnson as being \"in good faith\", and distanced himself from comments from Conservative MPs which attacked the independence of the judiciary: specifically, Rees-Mogg's description of the ruling as a \"constitutional coup\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Aftermath, Political consequences\nOn the day of the ruling, Johnson was in New York City to give a speech before the United Nations General Assembly, tentatively scheduled for the morning on 25 September. Johnson said that the Government disagreed with the ruling, but would nevertheless abide by it and not seek to prevent Parliament from meeting on the following day. Johnson refused to rule out a second prorogation, and also ruled out his resignation. The Prime Minister's Office confirmed that Johnson's speech would be brought forward to the evening of the 24th to allow Johnson to fly back to Britain in time for the start of the following day's parliamentary sitting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Aftermath, Political consequences\nAfter the ruling, Johnson was criticised by opposition leaders: Jeremy Corbyn, whose Labour Party was in conference in Brighton at the time, brought forward his keynote speech in which he invited Johnson to \"consider his position and become the shortest-serving prime minister there's ever been\"; SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon demanded Johnson's resignation and urged Parliament to table a motion of no confidence if he did not resign; Liberal Democrat leader Jo Swinson said that Johnson \"wasn't fit to be prime minister\"; and Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage called prorogation \"the worst political decision ever\" and called on Johnson to fire his adviser Dominic Cummings for suggesting the plan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Aftermath, Political consequences\nJohnson's first address to Parliament after returning from New York was on the evening of 25 September. In his address, after he stated his opinion that the Supreme Court was \"wrong to pronounce on a political question at a time of great national controversy\", he re-iterated his call for an early general election and offered time in the parliamentary agenda on 26 September for any party who wished to lay a motion of no confidence against him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0035-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Aftermath, Political consequences\nWhen asked by MPs whether he would rule out a second prorogation, he refused, and when asked whether he would abide by the law which mandates him to request an extension to Article 50, he said he would not do so; he had earlier described the law as a \"Surrender Bill\" or commonly referred to in the media as the Benn Act.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Aftermath, Political consequences\nJohnson's speech and conduct was criticised by opposition MPs, who alleged his choice of words were fuelling threats of violence against politicians. Labour MP Paula Sherriff said parliamentarians were routinely receiving death threats using language such as \"surrender\" and \"betrayal\", and asked Johnson to moderate his language, especially in the context of the June 2016 murder of Jo Cox. Johnson prompted heckles of \"shame\" when he responded to Sherriff's comments that he \"had never heard so much humbug in [his] life\". Sherriff's request for moderated language was repeated by Cox's constituency successor Tracy Brabin; Johnson declined and elicited further anger when he told Brabin that the best way to \"honour the memory\" of Cox would be to \"get Brexit done\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 840]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Aftermath, Political consequences\nOn 26 September, Bercow made another statement from the chair that he was considering an application by Kenneth Clarke and Harriet Harman\u2014the longest serving male and female MPs respectively\u2014for a Speaker's Conference to be held to discuss the lack of decorum in contemporary British political culture. Bercow also lambasted the tone of the previous night's debates as the worst he had seen in Parliament since his election as an MP in 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0037-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Aftermath, Political consequences\nSeveral hours after asking an urgent question on political decorum, Labour MP Jess Phillips told LBC that a man had been arrested on suspicion of a public order offence outside her Birmingham Yardley constituency office; Phillips alleged the man had been attempting to break into the office whilst accusing her of fascism. In an interview with the BBC, Johnson said he deplored any threats of violence, but defended his description of the Article 50 extension law as a \"Surrender Bill\" and declined requests to apologise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Aftermath, Political consequences\nLater that day, a Government motion for the House of Commons to go into recess for the duration of the Conservative Party conference in Manchester was rejected 289\u2013306; the defeat represented the seventh successive Government defeat in the House of Commons and continued Johnson's record of not winning a single division since taking office. As a result, the Government scheduled relatively uncontroversial matters for debate for the three days Parliament sat during the conference; this included the cross-party domestic violence bill, which was scheduled for the Wednesday 2 October session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0038-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Aftermath, Political consequences\nThe lack of a conference recess meant that Prime Minister's Questions clashed with the leader's keynote speech at the Conservative conference; Johnson delivered his conference keynote whilst Prime Minister's Questions was deputised by Dominic Raab who faced questions from then Shadow Home Secretary Diane Abbott making her the first black MP to stand at a dispatch box for PMQs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Aftermath, Political consequences\nOn 2 October, the Government announced fresh plans to prorogue Parliament for six days, from Tuesday 8 October to Monday 14 October. Proroguing on a Tuesday meant that Johnson would miss Prime Minister's Questions for the third successive Wednesday; at that point his only scheduled question time since becoming prime minister was on 4 September, although Johnson had faced over eight hours of questions in response to ad hoc ministerial statements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0039-0001", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Aftermath, Political consequences\nThe second prorogation ceremony took place on the evening of 8 October, and was attended by 30 MPs who followed Black Rod Sarah Clarke from the Commons to the Lords. The ceremony passed without the protests that had marked the previous attempt at prorogation with opposition leaders in the House of Lords also participating in the proceedings, though Lord Judge was substituted for Lord Hope of Craighead having in the interim succeeded him as crossbench convenor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287910-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 British prorogation controversy, Aftermath, 2019 general election and Brexit\nThe manifesto published by the Conservative Party prior to the 2019 general election, held in December of that year, stated that a newly elected Conservative government would review the broader constitutional relationship between Parliament and the courts, as well as the function of the Royal Prerogative itself, the basis on which prorogation is made. In the election, they won an 80-seat majority and therefore formed the next government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 81], "content_span": [82, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287911-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Broadland District Council election\nThe 2019 Broadland District Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of the Broadland District Council in England. They were held on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287912-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bromsgrove District Council election\nThe 2019 Bromsgrove District Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of the Bromsgrove Council in England. It was held on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287913-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bronx Open\nThe 2019 Bronx Open was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 1st edition of the Bronx Open as part of the WTA International tournaments of the 2019 WTA Tour. It took place at the Cary Leeds Center in Crotona Park in The Bronx, New York City, United States from 18 to 24 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287913-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bronx Open\nThis tournament replaced the Tournoi de Qu\u00e9bec on the WTA Tour. The Connecticut Open, which was a WTA Premier event formerly scheduled for the week before the US Open, was replaced by the Zhengzhou Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287913-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bronx 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-00287913-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bronx 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-00287914-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bronx Open \u2013 Doubles\nDarija Jurak and Mar\u00eda Jos\u00e9 Mart\u00ednez S\u00e1nchez won the title, defeating Margarita Gasparyan and Monica Niculescu in the final, 7\u20135, 2\u20136, [10\u20137].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287915-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bronx Open \u2013 Singles\nMagda Linette won her first WTA Tour title, defeating Camila Giorgi in the final, 5\u20137, 7\u20135, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287915-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bronx Open \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top two seeds to participate received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287916-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Brown Bears football team\nThe 2019 Brown Bears football team represented Brown University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by first-year head coach James Perry and played their home games at Brown Stadium. They were a member of the Ivy League. They finished the season 2\u20138, 1\u20136 in Ivy League play to finish in last place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287916-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Brown Bears football team, Previous season\nThe Bears finished the 2018 season 1\u20139, 0\u20137 in Ivy League play to finish in last place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287916-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Brown Bears football team, Preseason, Preseason media poll\nThe Ivy League released their preseason media poll on August 8, 2019. The Bears were picked to finish in eighth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287917-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Brownlow Medal\nThe 2019 Brownlow Medal was the 92nd year the award was presented to the player adjudged the best and fairest player during the Australian Football League (AFL) home-and-away season. Nat Fyfe was the winner for the second time, with 33 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287917-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287917-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287918-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Broxbourne Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Broxbourne Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of the Broxbourne Borough Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287919-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Broxtowe Borough Council election\nElections to Broxtowe Borough Council were held on 2 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287920-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Brussels Cycling Classic\nThe 2019 Brussels Cycling Classic was the 99th edition of the Brussels Cycling Classic road cycling one day race. It was held on 7 September 2019 as part of the 2019 UCI Europe Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287920-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Brussels Cycling Classic, Teams\nTwenty-five teams participated in the race, of which nine were UCI WorldTour teams, fifteen were UCI Professional Continental teams, and one was a UCI Continental Team. Each team entered seven riders, with the exception of AG2R La Mondiale, who entered six. Of the 174 riders who started the race, only 155 riders finished.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287921-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bryant Bulldogs football team\nThe 2019 Bryant Bulldogs football team represents Bryant University during the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They are led by first-year head coach Chris Merritt and play their home games at Beirne Stadium. They are a member of the Northeast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287921-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bryant Bulldogs football team, Previous season\nThe Bulldogs finished the 2018 season 6\u20135, 2\u20134 in NEC play to finish in a tie for fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287921-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bryant Bulldogs football team, Preseason, Preseason coaches' poll\nThe NEC released their preseason coaches' poll on July 24, 2019. The Bulldogs were picked to finish in fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287921-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bryant Bulldogs football team, Preseason, Preseason All-NEC team\nThe Bulldogs had two players at two positions selected to the preseason all-NEC team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287922-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bucharest Open\nThe 2019 BRD Bucharest Open was a tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the sixth edition of the tournament and part of the International category of the 2019 WTA Tour. It was held from 15 to 21 July 2019 at the Arenele BNR in Bucharest, Romania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287922-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bucharest 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-00287922-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bucharest Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry using a protected ranking into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287922-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bucharest Open, WTA doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 67], "content_span": [68, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287923-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bucharest Open \u2013 Doubles\nIrina-Camelia Begu and Andreea Mitu were the defending champions, but chose to participate with different partners. Begu played alongside Raluca Olaru, while Mitu teamed up with Lara Arruabarrena. Both teams lost to Jaqueline Cristian and Elena-Gabriela Ruse in the semifinals and quarterfinals, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287923-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bucharest Open \u2013 Doubles\nVikt\u00f3ria Ku\u017emov\u00e1 and Krist\u00fdna Pl\u00ed\u0161kov\u00e1 won the title, defeating Cristian and Ruse in the final, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20133).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287924-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bucharest Open \u2013 Singles\nAnastasija Sevastova was the defending champion, but lost in the second round to Patricia Maria \u021aig.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287924-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bucharest Open \u2013 Singles\nElena Rybakina won her first WTA Tour title, defeating \u021aig in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287925-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Buckle Up in Your Truck 225\nThe 2019 Buckle Up in Your Truck 225 was a NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series race held on July 11, 2019, at Kentucky Speedway in Sparta, Kentucky. Contested over 150 laps on the 1.5-mile (2.4\u00a0km) tri-oval speedway, it was the 13th race of the 2019 NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287925-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Buckle Up in Your Truck 225, Background, Track\nThe track is a 1.5-mile (2.4\u00a0km) tri-oval speedway in Sparta, Kentucky, which has hosted ARCA, NASCAR and Indy Racing League racing annually since it opened in 2000. The track is currently owned and operated by Speedway Motorsports. The speedway has a grandstand capacity of 69,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287925-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Buckle Up in Your Truck 225, Practice, First practice\nHarrison Burton was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 29.920 seconds and a speed of 180.481\u00a0mph (290.456\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287925-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Buckle Up in Your Truck 225, Practice, Final practice\nBrett Moffitt was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 29.693 seconds and a speed of 180.481\u00a0mph (290.456\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287925-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Buckle Up in Your Truck 225, Qualifying\nGrant Enfinger scored the pole for the race with a time of 29.678 seconds and a speed of 181.953\u00a0mph (292.825\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287925-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Buckle Up in Your Truck 225, Race, Summary\nGrant Enfinger started on pole, but Sheldon Creed took the lead within the first turn and pulled away. He eventually held a two-second lead over Enfinger and won Stage 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287925-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Buckle Up in Your Truck 225, Race, Summary\nWith 5 laps remaining in Stage 2, Enfinger and Brandon Jones tangled together while battling for the lead. Enfinger dove underneath Jones but lost control and ended up pulling them both into the outside wall. Matt Crafton won the stage under caution. Tyler Ankrum passed Crafton soon after the caution and dominated until he had to pit and was overtaken by Brett Moffitt. He then led for 10 laps until Dylan Lupton and Crafton both took the lead on separate occasions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287925-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Buckle Up in Your Truck 225, Race, Summary\nBrett Moffitt retook the lead on lap 125, but had to pit for fuel on the final lap. This gave the lead to Ankrum, who ultimately led a race-high 40 laps. Ankrum won the race with a 7-second lead over runner-up Stewart Friesen (who had to start in a backup truck).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287926-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bucknell Bison football team\nThe 2019 Bucknell Bison football team represents Bucknell University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They are led by first-year head coach Dave Cecchini and play their home games at Christy Mathewson\u2013Memorial Stadium. They play as a member of the Patriot League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287926-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bucknell Bison football team, Previous season\nThe Bison finished the 2018 season 1\u201310, 1\u20135 in Patriot League play to finish in last place. In January 2019 the Bucknell Athletics Department announced that Joe Susan would be stepping down as head football coach to serve in a new position within the department. Susan compiled a 38\u221261 record during his nine-year tenure with the Bison, winning the Patriot League Coach of the Year in 2014. On February 6 it was announced that Dave Cecchini, the former head coach of Valparaiso, would be the 27th Bob Odell Head Football Coach at Bucknell University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287926-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bucknell Bison football team, Preseason, Preseason coaches' poll\nThe Patriot League released their preseason coaches' poll on July 30, 2019 (voting was by conference head coaches and sports information directors). The Bison were picked to finish in seventh (last) place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287926-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bucknell Bison football team, Preseason, Preseason All-Patriot League team\nThe Bison had two players selected to the preseason All-Patriot League team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 79], "content_span": [80, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287927-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Budapest Assembly election\nThe 2019 Budapest Assembly election was held on 13 October 2019, concurring with other local elections in Hungary. Voters elected the Mayor of Budapest, and the mayors of the 23 districts directly, while 9 seats in the assembly were distributed proportionally, taking into account votes cast for losing district mayoral candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287927-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Budapest Assembly election, Mayor\nGergely Kar\u00e1csony was elected mayor with 50.86% of the vote, defeating incumbent Istv\u00e1n Tarl\u00f3s who held the office since 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287927-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Budapest Assembly election, District mayors\nIn case of joint candidates, bold denotes the party to which the candidate personally belongs. In the 23 districts, 14 opposition or opposition supported candidates won, with 9 government-aligned or government-supported mayors. This is a sharp improvement for the opposition as they previously only occupied 4 of these mayorships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287927-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Budapest Assembly election, District mayors\nIn most of the cities, the assembly majority is composed of members aligned with the mayor, except:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287927-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Budapest Assembly election, District mayors\nIn XXIII., the mayor's civil organization together with Fidesz-KDNP members have a majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287927-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Budapest Assembly election, Party list seats\nNumber in parentheses is the candidate's original position on the list, as some list candidates were elected to a mayorship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287927-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Budapest Assembly election, Party list seats\nTarl\u00f3s announced on 15 October 2019, that he won't take his seat. This caused Attila Ughy (list position 15) to take his seat instead. Zsolt Wintermantel did not take either his seat on 28 October; he was replaced by G\u00e1bor Pint\u00e9r, according to the request of the Fidesz\u2013KDNP alliance. Botond S\u00e1ra (9.) and Tam\u00e1s Hoffmann (11.) were elected into the local representative bodies in their districts, therefore they were excluded from the party compensation list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287927-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Budapest Assembly election, Breakdown of seats\nThe opposition won a majority in the Assembly, breaking over 15 years of a Fidesz majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287928-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Budapest Formula 2 round\nThe 2019 Budapest Formula 2 round was a pair of motor races held on 3 and 4 August 2019 at the Hungaroring in Mogyor\u00f3d, Hungary as part of the FIA Formula 2 Championship. It was the eighth round of the 2019 FIA Formula 2 Championship and was run in support of the 2019 Hungarian Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287929-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Budapest Formula 3 round\nThe 2019 Budapest FIA Formula 3 round is a motor racing event held on 3 and 4 August 2019 at the Hungaroring, Budapest, Hungary. It was the fifth round of the 2019 FIA Formula 3 Championship, and ran in support of the 2019 Hungarian Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287929-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Budapest Formula 3 round, Classification, Qualifying\nThe Qualifying session took place on 2 August 2019, with Christian Lundgaard scoring pole position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287930-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Budapest mayoral election\nThe 2019 Budapest mayoral election was held on 13 October 2019 to elect the Mayor of Budapest (f\u0151polg\u00e1rmester). On the same day, local elections were also held throughout Hungary, including the districts of Budapest which will determine the composition of the General Assembly. The election is run using a first-past-the-post voting system. The winner of the election will serve for a term of 5 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287930-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Budapest mayoral election, Candidates\nOn 10 October 2018, Istv\u00e1n Tarl\u00f3s announced that he will run for a third term as Mayor, after negotiating about his future role with Prime Minister Viktor Orb\u00e1n. Also in October, independent publicist R\u00f3bert Puzs\u00e9r declared his run for the mayorship, and published his manifesto Walking Budapest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287930-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Budapest mayoral election, Candidates, Opposition primary\nIn December 2018, the Hungarian Socialist Party reached an agreement with independent candidate R\u00f3bert Puzs\u00e9r about a two-round primary. According to that, there would be a first round (in February), where the socialists and their allies would participate, and a second round (in June) where the \"candidate of the centre\" would join them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287930-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Budapest mayoral election, Candidates, Opposition primary\nThe first round was conducted between 28 January and 3 February. Two candidates participated: Csaba Horv\u00e1th (MSZP group leader in the General Assembly) and Gergely Kar\u00e1csony (Dialogue, mayor of Zugl\u00f3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287930-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Budapest mayoral election, Candidates, Opposition primary\nAfter the first round, a second round between Kar\u00e1csony and Puzs\u00e9r was planned in July. Opposition parties Politics Can Be Different and Jobbik endorsed Puzs\u00e9r, with the condition that he takes part in the primary. Multiple forums and debates were held between the two, but on 8 April Puzs\u00e9r announced he would not take part, citing a recent agreement about district mayoral candidates which did not include the parties supporting him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287930-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Budapest mayoral election, Candidates, Opposition primary\nThe European Parliament election caused a major change in the balance of power, as the Socialists-Dialogue alliance gained only 6% of the votes, with the Democratic Coalition taking 16% and new party Momentum (M) taking almost 10%. This prompted Momentum to announce their candidate, entrepreneur G\u00e1bor Kerpel-Fronius (hu) on 3 June, followed by the Democratic Coalition on 6 June, their candidate being television host Olga K\u00e1lm\u00e1n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287930-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Budapest mayoral election, Candidates, Opposition primary\nThe second round was conducted between 20 and 26 June with online and in-person voting. On 23 June a televised debate was held between the three candidates on the channel ATV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287930-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Budapest mayoral election, Candidates, Opposition primary\nAccording to the organizers' self-imposed criteria, the primary was valid, as more than 50 000 valid votes were cast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287931-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Buenos Aires provincial election\nElections in the province of Buenos Aires were held on 27 October 2019, alongside national elections. On that day, elections were held to elect the governor, vice governor, provincial deputies, provincial senators and municipal offices.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287931-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Buenos Aires provincial election\nThe candidatures were defined in the open, simultaneous, and mandatory primaries (PASO), which took place on 11 August 2019. Lists that won at least 1.5% of the votes (including blanks) qualified to the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287931-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Buenos Aires provincial election\nThe election resulted in the defeat of incumbent governor Mar\u00eda Eugenia Vidal (PRO) to former finance minister and current national deputy Axel Kicillof. This accompanied the national trend, in which incumbent president Mauricio Macri lost to Alberto Fern\u00e1ndez. Vidal is the first governor to seek re-election and lose, while Kicillof becomes the eighth governor (sixth peronist) since the return of democracy in 1983. It was the most polarized election since 1999, with the two most voted candidates summing 90.68% of the votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287932-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bandits season\nThe Buffalo Bandits are a lacrosse team based in Buffalo, New York playing in the National Lacrosse League (NLL). The 2019 season is their 28th season in the NLL", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287932-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bandits 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-00287932-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bandits season, Roster, Entry Draft\nThe 2018 NLL Entry Draft took place on September 25, 2018. The Bandits made the following selections:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season\nThe 2019 season was the Buffalo Bills' 60th overall, 50th in the National Football League (NFL), fifth full under the ownership of Terry and Kim Pegula and third under the head coach/general manager tandem of Sean McDermott and Brandon Beane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season\nDuring the offseason, Buffalo acquired several players who would make major contributions on offense. The Bills improved on their 6\u201310 record from the previous season with a 37\u201320 win over Miami Dolphins in Week 11, then clinched their second winning season in three years with a 26\u201315 win over the Dallas Cowboys on Thanksgiving Day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season\nDespite losing 24\u201317 to the Baltimore Ravens in Week 14, the Bills' 9\u20134 record marked the first time since 1996 (during the Marv Levy/Jim Kelly era) that the team won at least nine of their first 13 games and matching their highest full-season win total (2004, 2014 and 2017) in the 21st century with four games remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0001-0002", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season\nWith a 17\u201310 win over the Pittsburgh Steelers in Week 15, not only did the Bills clinch their second playoff berth in three years, but they reached 10 wins for the first time since winning 11 in 1999, which was also the last time the team made the playoffs until 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season\nThe Bills defense finished an impressive season with just 259 points allowed, second in the league behind only the New England Patriots. The defense allowed more than 20 points just five times all season, and more than 30 points only once (in Week 8 against the Philadelphia Eagles). Overall, the Bills had the lowest-scoring games in the league with just 573 total points scored and allowed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season\nThe Bills attempted to win their first playoff game since 1995 in the Wild Card round, but were defeated by the Houston Texans 22\u201319 in overtime after giving up a 16\u20130 lead, just like they did against the Tennessee Titans. The loss extended their playoff win drought to 25 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Transactions, Free agency\nThe Bills freed up cap space after paying off the dead money for players from the Doug Whaley era they had either cut or traded over the past two offseasons, including WR Sammy Watkins, CB Ronald Darby and DT Marcell Dareus. To address the team's offensive woes from the previous season, numerous offensive players such as WRs John Brown, Cole Beasley and Andre Roberts, C Mitch Morse, RBs Frank Gore and T. J. Yeldon and others were added in free agency, with Beane angrily dismissing the notion that \"free agents don't want to play for Buffalo.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Preseason\nThe Bills went undefeated in their preseason games for the first time in franchise history. The team had only once before won their first three preseason games in 1966 before losing the preseason finale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: at New York Jets\nDespite four first-half turnovers, two of which were interceptions by QB Josh Allen and being down 16\u20130 in the third quarter, the Bills scored on three consecutive drives afterwards, with the defense stifling Jets QB Sam Darnold and RB Le'Veon Bell for the most part, but it was an injury to Jets LB C. J. Mosley, along with misses on an extra point and a field goal by Jets K Kaare Vedvik (ultimately leading to his subsequent release), that paved the way for Buffalo's largest comeback win since Week 3 of the 2011 season, when the Bills came back from a 21\u20130 first-half deficit to upset the New England Patriots 34\u201331.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: at New York Giants\nWith the win, not only did Buffalo earn its first 2\u20130 start since 2014, but also became the first team to win back-to-back road games in the same stadium since the 2006 Chicago Bears, who ultimately went on to lose Super Bowl XLI to the Indianapolis Colts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nBuffalo dominated the first half, holding the Bengals offense to just 76 yards and occupying 22:57 of ball possession, compared to just 7:03 for Cincinnati, but were only able to hold a 14\u20130 lead due to some miscues on offense, including a T. J. Yeldon fumble in the red zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nAfter Allen threw an interception to the Bengals defense in the third quarter, Cincinnati surged to 17 unanswered points, but Buffalo scored on its final drive, which featured a 49-yard pass from Allen to rookie TE Dawson Knox in which Knox broke two tackles and was capped by a touchdown run by RB Frank Gore. Bengals QB Andy Dalton was intercepted by CB Tre'Davious White for the second time on Cincinnati's ensuing drive, sealing a 21\u201317 victory for Buffalo. With the win, the Bills earned their first 3\u20130 start since 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. New England Patriots\nThe game was a defensive battle, as both Allen and Patriots QB Tom Brady struggled throughout the game. However, the Patriots took an early 13\u20130 lead following a Brandon Bolden rushing touchdown and a blocked punt returned for a touchdown. After leading the Bills to 10 points, Allen was knocked out of the game in the fourth quarter after sustaining a helmet-to-helmet hit with Patriots CB Jonathan Jones during a scramble. The Patriots defense stifled backup quarterback Matt Barkley, keeping the Bills offense out of the end zone for the rest of the game. With their first loss of the season, the Bills fell to 3-1, failing to earn their first 4\u20130 start since 2008. On a positive note, Gore became the fourth running back in NFL history to attain 15,000 career rushing yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 91], "content_span": [92, 870]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Tennessee Titans\nIn another defensive game, Buffalo scored first with an Allen pass to TE Lee Smith in the second quarter, while Titans QB Marcus Mariota was sacked four times in the first half. The Titans responded in the third quarter with a Derrick Henry rushing touchdown and were on the way to taking the lead in the fourth quarter. However, in a reversal of luck compared to the Music City Miracle from 20 years earlier, the Titans were denied a Mariota passing touchdown when it was determined that Mariota crossed the line of scrimmage prior to making a forward pass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Tennessee Titans\nThe resulting penalty forced the Titans to settle for a field goal by K Cairo Santos, which was blocked by the Bills defense. Santos wound up missing his other three field goal attempts, finishing 0-for-4 on the day (ultimately leading to his subsequent release). Following the miss, the Bills drove 80 yards down the field, capitalizing with a go-ahead touchdown from Allen to receiver Duke Williams as Tennessee was unable to respond. With the win, Buffalo improved to 4\u20131 heading into the bye week. WR Zay Jones was traded to the Oakland Raiders the day after this game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Miami Dolphins\nAgainst the winless Dolphins, the Bills trailed at halftime 14\u20139 following a strong second quarter from Miami QB Ryan Fitzpatrick, who was Buffalo's starter from 2009-2012. The Dolphins looked to extend their lead in the third quarter, but White intercepted Fitzpatrick at the Buffalo 2-yard line. The Bills then regained the lead with two Allen touchdown passes to WRs John Brown and Cole Beasley, respectively, with the latter occurring after White forced the Dolphins to fumble near their 30-yard line. Though the Dolphins scored again later in the fourth quarter, the Bills iced the game after safety Micah Hyde returned Miami's ensuing onside kick for a 45-yard touchdown. With the win, the Bills improved to 5\u20131 for the first time since 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 834]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: vs. Philadelphia Eagles\nDuring a rain-swept, windy game, the Bills took an early 7\u20133 lead, but after an Allen fumble shortly before halftime, the Eagles stormed back, outscoring the Bills 28\u20136 afterwards and finishing with 218 rushing yards under RBs Jordan Howard and Miles Sanders. With the loss, the Bills fall to 5\u20132. It was the only game all season, including the playoffs, in which the Bills defense allowed more than three touchdowns, or more than 25 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: vs. Washington Redskins\nThe Bills won against the Redskins with 140 total yards from rookie RB Devin Singletary, improving to 6\u20132, making this their best start since 1993, also the same year the Bills last made a Super Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: at Cleveland Browns\nIn a game featuring a showdown between Allen and fellow 2018 draftee Baker Mayfield, Cleveland scored first with a Mayfield touchdown pass to Jarvis Landry and dominated the time of possession in the first half, but the Bills defense provided two goal-line stands in the second quarter, causing a turnover on downs and limiting the Browns to a field goal, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0014-0001", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: at Cleveland Browns\nAllen passed for a career-high 266 yards and had two rushing scores, the second of which gave Buffalo a 16\u201312 lead late in the fourth quarter, but Mayfield then drove Cleveland down the field to retake the lead with a touchdown pass to Rashard Higgins. The Bills drove to the Cleveland 35-yard line on the ensuing drive, but K Stephen Hauschka missed the potential game-tying field goal attempt, sealing the loss for Buffalo and dropping them to 6\u20133 on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: at Miami Dolphins\nIn the rematch against Miami, the Bills defense sacked Fitzpatrick seven times and limited the Dolphins to 23 rushing yards, but the special teams unit allowed a 101-yard kickoff return touchdown from Dolphins KR Jakeem Grant and an onside kick. Offensively, Allen and Brown posted strong performances as the Bills cruised to over 400 total yards and Hauschka rebounded from his poor performance in Cleveland, making all three of his field goals with a long of 51 yards. With the dominating win, Buffalo improved to 7\u20133, improving on their 6\u201310 record from 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: vs. Denver Broncos\nAgainst a strong Broncos defense, Allen's streak of games without throwing an interception came to an end at five, as he threw one to Broncos S Justin Simmons in the second quarter. Nonetheless, Allen still passed for two touchdowns and Buffalo's rushing offense recorded 244 yards. RBs Singletary and Gore each hit notable milestones, as Singletary recorded his first career 100-yard rushing game and Gore surpassed Barry Sanders on the NFL's all-time rushing list, taking over third place for career rushing yards. Defensively, the Bills had another strong performance and shut down the Denver offense, limiting the Broncos to just 134 net yards and a 45-yard field goal midway through the third quarter in addition to sacking QB Brandon Allen four times. The Bills improved to 8\u20133 with the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 884]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: at Dallas Cowboys\nBuffalo traveled to Dallas for its first Thanksgiving game since 1994, when they lost 35\u201321 to the Detroit Lions. Despite an opening-drive touchdown pass from Cowboys QB Dak Prescott to TE Jason Witten, the Bills defense kept the Cowboys' top-ranked offense out of the end zone for the rest of the first half and most of the second half and forced two turnovers from Prescott. The Bills would respond in the second quarter when Beasley, making his first return to Dallas since signing with Buffalo in free agency, caught a 25-yard touchdown pass from Allen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0017-0001", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: at Dallas Cowboys\nThey took the lead for good when they scored on a trick play 28-yard pass from Brown to Singletary just before halftime. Buffalo wound up scoring 26 unanswered points before allowing a 15-yard touchdown pass from Prescott to Ventell Bryant in garbage time. With the 26\u201315 win, the Bills improved to 9\u20133, clinching just their fourth winning season since 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nAgainst the top-ranked Ravens and MVP candidate Lamar Jackson, the Bills defense limited the Ravens to less than 100 total yards in the first half with an interception of Jackson, but the Ravens defense likewise limited the Bills offense, scoring a touchdown after forcing Allen to fumble deep in Bills territory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0018-0001", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nBaltimore took a commanding 17\u20136 lead three plays into the third quarter after Jackson found TE Hayden Hurst for a 61-yard touchdown through blown coverage and extended their lead with a long touchdown drive following a Bills field goal and a missed pass interference call after Ravens CB Jimmy Smith pushed Bills WR Robert Foster in the back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0018-0002", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nBuffalo would respond with an Allen touchdown pass to Beasley and successful two-point conversion and had one final chance to tie the game after penalties by Baltimore, but the drive stalled at the Baltimore 18-yard line when CB Marcus Peters batted down the ball with just over a minute to go, sealing a 24\u201317 loss that dropped the Bills to 9\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nThis game was originally scheduled to air at 1:00pm ET on CBS, but during the New England Patriots\u2013Houston Texans primetime game in Week 13, it was announced that the game would be flexed to 8:20pm ET on NBC. This marked the first Sunday primetime game for the Bills since 2007, when they hosted the Patriots (who were attempting to complete a perfect 16-0 regular season) and lost 56\u201310. The Bills won the defense-heavy game 17\u201310 as Brown led the Bills offense with 99 receiving yards. Defensively, the Bills forced five turnovers, including four interceptions of Steelers quarterback Devlin Hodges. This win snapped a six-game losing streak against the Steelers dating back to 1999, and was the Bills\u2019 first win at Pittsburgh since 1993.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 831]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nWith the win, Buffalo improved to 10\u20134, clinching both a playoff berth and its first season with 10 or more wins since 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: at New England Patriots\nDespite New England holding the ball for much of the first half, Buffalo tied it up at halftime after stopping a fourth-down conversion, then subsequently marching down the field in 38 seconds and capitalizing with a Josh Allen touchdown pass to offensive tackle Dion Dawkins. The second half saw the Bills and Patriots alternate leads, with the Patriots scoring a go-ahead touchdown late in the fourth quarter with a Rex Burkhead touchdown run and subsequent two-point conversion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 91], "content_span": [92, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0021-0001", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: at New England Patriots\nSimilar to the game against the Ravens, Buffalo then drove down the field into the redzone on its final possession, but was unable to score the game-tying touchdown as the drive stalled at the New England 14-yard line. With the loss, the Bills fell to 10\u20135 and allowed New England to clinch the divisional title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 91], "content_span": [92, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: at New England Patriots\nLater in the weekend, the other AFC teams contending for Wild Card spots in the playoffs, namely the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Tennessee Titans, both lost to fall to 8-7. With only one game remaining, neither team could reach 10 wins and match the Bills' win total. Therefore, the Bills clinched the #5 seed and a road game against the #4 seed in the AFC playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 91], "content_span": [92, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. New York Jets\nThe Bills' final regular season game against the Jets had no implications for their playoff seeding, as they had already locked up the #5 seed in the AFC. After initially announcing that many starters would play, head coach Sean McDermott limited playing time for many players in order to rest up for the playoffs. The Bills played many of their reserves for much of the game, leading to a low-scoring contest which the Jets were able to win, 13-6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Wild Card Playoffs: at (4) Houston Texans\nIn their third consecutive playoff game against the AFC South, the Bills jumped out to an early lead including a trick play touchdown from receiver John Brown to Josh Allen on their first drive, and were able to contain Texans quarterback Deshaun Watson in the first half. The Bills expanded their lead to 16-0 in the third quarter before the Texans came back with three straight scores to take a 19-16 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 100], "content_span": [101, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0024-0001", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Wild Card Playoffs: at (4) Houston Texans\nAfter exchanging turnovers on downs, the Bills were able to get the ball back with just over a minute remaining and set up a field goal to force the game into overtime. Both teams punted on their first possession of overtime, although the Bills had made it into field goal range but were pushed back by a blindside block penalty on offensive lineman Cody Ford, forcing the punt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 100], "content_span": [101, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287933-0024-0002", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bills season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Wild Card Playoffs: at (4) Houston Texans\nOn the ensuing drive, the Texans advanced to the Bills' 44 yard line where, facing 2nd & 6, Watson escaped multiple Bills defenders to avoid a sack, and completed a pass to former Bill Taiwan Jones to the Bills' 10 yard line, setting up the game-winning field goal kicked by Ka'imi Fairbairn with 3:20 remaining in overtime. The Bills were eliminated with the loss, and the Texans advanced to play the Kansas City Chiefs in the divisional round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 100], "content_span": [101, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287934-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bulls football team\nThe 2019 Buffalo Bulls football team represented the University at Buffalo in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Bulls were led by fifth-year head coach Lance Leipold and played their home games at the University at Buffalo Stadium as members of the East Division of the Mid-American Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287934-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bulls football team, Previous season\nThe Bulls finished the 2018 season with a 10\u20134 overall record, including going 7\u20131, in MAC play to finish first in the East Division and clinch their first ever MAC East Division title before losing to Troy in the Dollar General Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287934-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo Bulls football team, Preseason, MAC media poll\nThe MAC released their preseason media poll on July 23, 2019, with the Bulls predicted to finish in third place in the East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287935-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo State Bengals football team\nThe 2019 Buffalo State Bengals football team represents Buffalo State College in the 2019 NCAA Division III football season. The team is led by first-year head coach Christian Ozolins and play their home games at Coyer Field in Buffalo, New York. This marks their first season as members of the Liberty League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287935-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Buffalo State Bengals football team, Game summaries, at Hobart\nat Boswell Field at David J. Urick Stadium, Geneva, NY", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287936-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Buhi local elections\nLocal elections were held in Buhi, Camarines Sur on May 13, 2019, within the Philippine general election, for posts of the mayor, vice mayor and eight councilors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287936-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Buhi local elections, Overview\nThe incumbent mayor, Margarita Aguinillo of Nationalist People's Coalition ran once again for mayoral post against vice mayor Rey Lacoste from PDP\u2013Laban party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287936-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Buhi local elections, 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287936-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Buhi local elections, Results, Municipal Council elections\nVoters elected eight councilors to comprise the Municipal Council or the Sangguniang Bayan. Candidates were voted separately so winning candidates may come from different political parties. The eight candidates with the highest number of votes won the seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 63], "content_span": [64, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections\nBulacan local elections were held on May 13, 2019 as part of the 2019 Philippine general election. Voters selected their candidates of choice 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 and the lone district of San Jose del Monte City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, Gubernatorial and Vice Gubernatorial election, Governor\nIncumbent Governor Wilhelmino Sy-Alvarado was term-limited; he switched places with incumbent Vice-Governor Daniel Fernando, who ran for governor. Fernando's opponents are incumbent Malolos mayor Christian \"Agila\" Natividad and former councilor Teddy \"Aguila\" Natividad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 85], "content_span": [86, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, Gubernatorial and Vice Gubernatorial election, Vice Governor\nIncumbent Vice-Governor Daniel Fernando was term-limited; he switched places with incumbent Governor Wilhelmino Sy-Alvarado, who will ran for Vice-Governor. Asiong Mendiola, the running mate of Teddy Natividad, withdrew his candidacy. Sy-Alvarado's opponents were Nelson dela Merced and incumbent Bocaue councilor Anjo Mendoza, son of former Bulacan governor Joselito Mendoza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, Congressional elections, 3rd District\nIncumbent Lorna C. Silverio ran for her second term. She faced former Governor and 3rd District Representative Joselito Andrew Mendoza and her late husband's son Ricardo S. Silverio, Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 67], "content_span": [68, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, Congressional elections, 4th District\nIncumbent Linabelle Ruth Villarica was term-limited; she ran as City Mayor of Meycauayan instead. Her husband, incumbent Meycauayan City Mayor Henry Villarica ran unopposed for her seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 67], "content_span": [68, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, Congressional elections, San Jose del Monte\nIncumbent Florida Robes ran for her second term, and won against incumbent councilor Irene del Rosario with a margin of 10,896 votes (6.52%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 73], "content_span": [74, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, Sangguniang Panlalawigan Elections\nAll 4 Districts of Bulacan elected members of the Bulacan Provincial Board. The first (including Malolos) and fourth (including San Jose del Monte) districts send three board members each, while the second and third districts send 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, 64], "content_span": [65, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, Sangguniang Panlalawigan Elections, 1st District\nIncumbent Board Members Ayee Ople and Toti Ople were term-limited; Incumbent Board Member Allan Andan ran for his second term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 78], "content_span": [79, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, Sangguniang Panlalawigan Elections, 2nd District\nIncumbent Board Member Buko dela Cruz was term-limited; his sister and incumbent Baliuag councilor Pechay dela Cruz ran in his stead. The husband of incumbent Board Member Baby Monet Posadas, former Senior Board Member Monet Posadas, ran in her stead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 78], "content_span": [79, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, Sangguniang Panlalawigan Elections, 3rd District\nIncumbent Board Member Nono Castro is term-limited; his brother Romeo Castro ran in his place. Incumbent Board Member Emily Viceo ran for her second term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 78], "content_span": [79, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, Sangguniang Panlalawigan Elections, 4th District\nIncumbent Lita delos Santos did not run for reelection; her nephew, former Board Member Jon-jon delos Santos, ran in her stead. Incumbent Board Members Alex Castro and Allan Ray Baluyut ran for their second and third terms, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 78], "content_span": [79, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections\nAll cities and municipalities of Bulacan also elected their new mayor and vice-mayor in this election. The candidates for mayor and vice mayor with the highest number of votes won the respective seats; they were voted separately, and may therefore have come from different parties. Below is the list of mayoralty candidates of each city and municipality, grouped per district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, First district, Malolos City\nIncumbent Mayor Christian Natividad was term-limited and he ran for Governor. Bebong Gatchalian won with a margin of 4,545 votes (4.85%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 88], "content_span": [89, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, First district, Malolos City\nIncumbent Vice Mayor Gilbert \"Bebong\" Gatchalian was term-limited and he ran for Mayor. His running mate, incumbent Councilor Noel \"Len\" Pineda, faced incumbent Board Member Ayee Ople for Vice Mayor. Pineda won with a percentage of 39.42% against Toots Bautista's 30.32% and Ople's 29.80%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 88], "content_span": [89, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, First district, Bulakan\nIncumbent Mayor Patrick Neil Meneses was term-limited, and ran for Vice Mayor. His brother, incumbent Councilor Piccolo, ran for Mayor against former PBA player and JRU Heavy Bombers head coach Vergel Meneses. Vergel won with a margin of 6,993 votes (17.51%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 83], "content_span": [84, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, First district, Bulakan\nIncumbent Vice Mayor Alberto \"Berting\" Bituin was term-limited, and ran for councilor. Patrick Neil Meneses won with a margin of only 39 votes (0.1%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 83], "content_span": [84, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, First district, Calumpit\nIncumbent Mayor Jessie de Jesus ran for his third term unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 84], "content_span": [85, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, First district, Calumpit\nIncumbent Vice Mayor Zar Candelaria was term-limited, and ran for Board Member under PDP-Laban. The candidates for Vice Mayor were incumbent Councilors Thelma Antonio-Dansalan and Victor \"Aboy\" de Belen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 84], "content_span": [85, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, First district, Hagonoy\nIncumbent Mayor Raulito \"Amboy\" Manlapaz ran for his third and final term. He faced the daughter of incumbent Governor Wilhelmino Sy-Alvarado, Ate Charo Sy-Alvarado, and ABC President Jhane dela Cruz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 83], "content_span": [84, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, First district, Hagonoy\nIncumbent Vice Mayor Pedro Santos ran for his third consecutive term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 83], "content_span": [84, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, First district, Paombong\nIncumbent Mayor Mary Ann Marcos ran for her second term. Her opponent was former Mayor Isagani Castro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 84], "content_span": [85, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, First district, Paombong\nIncumbent Vice Mayor Cristina Gonzales ran for her second term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 84], "content_span": [85, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, First district, Pulilan\nIncumbent Mayor Maritz Ochoa-Montejo ran for her second term unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 83], "content_span": [84, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, First district, Pulilan\nIncumbent Vice Mayor Ricardo \"Rec\" Candido ran for his second term against incumbent Councilor Enoc \"Jayjay\" Santos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 83], "content_span": [84, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Second district, Balagtas\nIncumbent Mayor Eladio \"JR\" Gonzales ran for his second term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 85], "content_span": [86, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Second district, Balagtas\nIncumbent Vice Mayor Alberto \"Bobby\" Carating ran for his second term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 85], "content_span": [86, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Second district, Baliuag\nIncumbent Mayor Ferdinand Estrella ran for his second term against former Mayor Carolina Dellosa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 84], "content_span": [85, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Second district, Baliuag\nIncumbent Vice Mayor Christopher Clemente ran for his third term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 84], "content_span": [85, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Second district, Bocaue\nIncumbent Mayor Eleanor \"Joni\" Villanueva-Tugna ran for her second term against former Provincial Administrator Jim Valerio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 83], "content_span": [84, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Second district, Bocaue\nIncumbent Vice Mayor Aldrin Sta. Ana ran for Councilor. Mayor Villanueva's running mate was incumbent Councilor Noriel German who was up against former Vice Mayor Jose Santiago, Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 83], "content_span": [84, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Second district, Bustos\nIncumbent Mayor Arnel Mendoza was term-limited and ran for Vice Mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 83], "content_span": [84, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Second district, Bustos\nIncumbent Vice Mayor Ading Leoncio ran for Mayor. Incumbent Mayor Arnel Mendoza ran against former Vice Mayor Loida Rivera and incumbent Councilor Romulo Lazaro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 83], "content_span": [84, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Second district, Guiguinto\nIncumbent Mayor Ambrosio \"Boy\" Cruz ran for his third term. His opponent was incumbent Vice Mayor Banjo Estrella.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 86], "content_span": [87, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Second district, Guiguinto\nIncumbent Vice Mayor Banjo Estrella ran for Mayor. The candidates for Vice Mayor were incumbent Councilors JJ Santos and Ricky Jose", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 86], "content_span": [87, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Second district, Pandi\nIncumbent Mayor Tinoy Marquez ran for his second term. Among his opponents was former Mayor Rico Roque.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 82], "content_span": [83, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Second district, Pandi\nIncumbent Vice Mayor Noel Roxas ran for his second term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 82], "content_span": [83, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Second district, Plaridel\nFormer Mayor Anastacia \"Tessie\" Vistan, mother of incumbent Mayor Jocell Vistan-Casaje, ran unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 85], "content_span": [86, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Second district, Plaridel\nIncumbent Vice Mayor Imelda \"Mhel\" Gatdula-de Leon ran for her second term unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 85], "content_span": [86, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Third district, Angat\nIncumbent Mayor Leonardo de Leon ran for his third and final term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 81], "content_span": [82, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Third district, Angat\nIncumbent Vice Mayor Gilberto \"Reggie\" Santos ran for his second term against former Vice Mayor Reynante \"Jowar\" Bautista.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 81], "content_span": [82, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Third district, Do\u00f1a Remedios Trinidad\nIncumbent Mayor Ronaldo Flores was term-limited, and ran for Vice Mayor; his wife Marita ran for Mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 98], "content_span": [99, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Third district, Do\u00f1a Remedios Trinidad\nIncumbent Vice Mayor Larry Cruz ran for his second term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 98], "content_span": [99, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Third district, Norzagaray\nIncumbent mayor Fred Germar ran for his third term. He had been removed from office for grave misconduct on August 10, 2016, a decision reversed by the Supreme Court on November 23, 2018. His opponents were the incumbent vice mayor and former acting mayor Ade Cristobal and former mayor Matilde Legaspi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 86], "content_span": [87, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Third district, Norzagaray\nIncumbent councilor Boyet Santos ran for a full term as vice mayor; he was elected as the top Municipal Councilor in 2016, and as such had been acting vice mayor while Germar was out of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 86], "content_span": [87, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Third district, San Ildefonso\nIncumbent Mayor Carla Galvez-Tan ran for her second term even as she was suspended for 9 months on 29 August 2018. She was up against her cousin, former Mayor Gerald Galvez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 89], "content_span": [90, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Third district, San Ildefonso\nIncumbent Vice Mayor and Acting Mayor Luis Sarrondo ran for his second term. He was up against incumbent Councilor and Acting Vice Mayor Zander Galvez and incumbent Councilor Rocky Sarmiento.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 89], "content_span": [90, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Third district, San Miguel\nIncumbent Mayor Marivee Mendez-Coronel ran for her second term against former Mayor Roderick Tiongson and Atty. Jose Francisco S. Cabochan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 86], "content_span": [87, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Third district, San Miguel\nIncumbent Vice Mayor John \"Bong\" Alvarez ran for his second term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 86], "content_span": [87, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0048-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Third district, San Rafael\nIncumbent Mayor Cipriano \"Goto\" Violago ran for his third and final term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 86], "content_span": [87, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0049-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Third district, San Rafael\nIncumbent Vice Mayor Edison Veneracion ran for his third and final term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 86], "content_span": [87, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0050-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Fourth district, Meycauayan City\nIncumbent Mayor Henry Villarica ran for Representative of the 4th district; his wife, Deputy Speaker and incumbent Representative Linabelle Villarica, ran for Mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 92], "content_span": [93, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0051-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Fourth district, Meycauayan City\nIncumbent Vice Mayor Rafael \"Jojo\" Manzano was term-limited; his party nominated incumbent Councilor Jojie Violago, who ran unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 92], "content_span": [93, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0052-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Fourth district, Marilao\nIncumbent Mayor Juanito \"Tito\" Santiago did not seek reelection; his party nominated former Municipal ABC President Ricky Silvestre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 84], "content_span": [85, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0053-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Fourth district, Marilao\nIncumbent Vice Mayor Henry Lutao ran for his second term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 84], "content_span": [85, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0054-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Fourth district, Obando\nIncumbent Mayor Edwin Santos ran for his third and final term against incumbent Councilor Artus Sayao.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 83], "content_span": [84, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0055-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Fourth district, Obando\nIncumbent Vice Mayor Arvin dela Cruz ran for his second term against former Vice Mayor Danilo de Ocampo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 83], "content_span": [84, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0056-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Fourth district, Santa Maria\nIncumbent Mayor Russell Pleyto ran for his second term against former Mayors Bartolome \"Omeng\" Ramos and Jesus \"Ato\" Mateo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 88], "content_span": [89, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0057-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, Fourth district, Santa Maria\nIncumbent Vice Mayor Ricky Buenaventura ran for his second term against incumbent Councilor Nelson Luciano.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 88], "content_span": [89, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0058-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, San Jose del Monte City\nIncumbent Mayor Arthur Robes ran for his second term against former City Mayor Reynaldo San Pedro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 83], "content_span": [84, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287937-0059-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, San Jose del Monte City\nIncumbent Vice Mayor Efren Bartolome Jr. ran for his second term unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 83], "content_span": [84, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287938-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian Cup Final\nThe 2019 Bulgarian Cup Final was the final match of the 2018\u201319 Bulgarian Cup and the 79th final of the Bulgarian Cup. The final took place on 15 May 2019 at Vasil Levski National Stadium, Sofia, Bulgaria. It was refereed by Nikolay Yordanov from Sofia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287938-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian Cup Final\nThe clubs contesting the final were Botev Plovdiv and Lokomotiv Plovdiv, who traditionally take part in the Plovdiv derby. Both teams have met on multiple occasions in the competition but never in the final itself.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287938-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian Cup Final\nLokomotiv won the final with the score of 1\u20130, claiming their first ever Bulgarian Cup title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287939-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian Supercup\nThe 2019 Bulgarian Supercup was the 16th Bulgarian Supercup, an annual Bulgarian football match played between the winners of the previous season's First Professional Football League and Bulgarian Cup. The game was played between the champions of the 2018\u201319 First League, Ludogorets Razgrad, and the 2019 Bulgarian Cup winners, Lokomotiv Plovdiv.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287939-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian Supercup\nThis was Ludogorets's seventh Bulgarian Supercup appearance and Lokomotiv Plovdiv's third. The two teams played each other in the 2012 Bulgarian Supercup, with Ludogorets winning 3\u22121.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287939-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian Supercup\nLudogorets won the Supercup for a 4th time after a 2\u20130 win over Lokomotiv Plovdiv. The goals were scored by Mavis Tchibota and Jody Lukoki.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections\nThe first round of the local elections for mayors and municipal councilors on both the local and provincial level in Bulgaria were held on 27 October 2019. The second round of the election took place on 3 November, as per the decree signed by the President of Bulgaria. 6,227,901 Bulgarians were included on the voter lists and were eligible to vote, a 136,000 voter reduction compared to the 2015 local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections\nFollowing the final results, the results on the provincial level showed that the ruling GERB party had lost 6 mayorships in comparison to the previous election. The Socialist Party gained four, the Bulgaria for Citizens movement gained one, the Union of Democratic Forces and the Movement for Rights and Freedoms kept their previous result by obtaining one each, and two independent candidates were elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Electoral system\nThe elections to Bulgaria's municipal councils are conducted via proportional representation with an open list preferential voting system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Electoral system\nThe mayoral elections take place within the context of a majoritarian two-round system. The first round of the elections was held on 27 October. If no candidate in a given constituency managed to gain 50% of the vote, a runoff election was held for that constituency in the second round on 3 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Electoral system\nVoting is officially mandatory, but in practice there is no punishment for failing to vote and the law itself isn't strictly enforced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Electoral system\nVoters further have the option to vote against all proposed candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Electoral system\nA recent change in Bulgaria's electoral code made it mandatory for all candidates in the local elections to have had a permanent address registration within their respective constituency for at least 6 months prior to the election in order to be permitted to stand for election in that constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Electoral system\nMachine voting did not take place, as this type of voting was removed from Bulgaria's electoral code in July, under the pretext that it would be \"too complicated\" for voters to vote in local elections using machines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Electoral system\nBulgarian law imposes strong restrictions on campaign agitation. Each piece of electoral propaganda must clearly show the candidate which it represents and must contain the phrase \"the buying and selling of votes is a crime\". The use of Bulgaria's flag or coat of arms on election materials is strictly forbidden. Religious symbols, as well as symbols representing foreign countries or regions are also banned. All campaign materials must be issued in the Bulgarian language only. No agitation is permitted on 26 October, the day before the election. Candidates may also only present their platforms before the media after concluding a written contract. Agitation within public transport, as well as all state or local institutions, as well as corporations with over 50% state ownership are banned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 847]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Electoral system\nVoting takes place between 7:00 and 20:00, which can be extended to 21:00, if by 20:00 there are still people waiting in line to vote. After the votes are collected, they are transported by the Bulgarian police to Arena Armeec, where they are subsequently verified and counted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Electoral campaign\nThe electoral season officially began on 27 September. A total of 59 political parties, 7 coalitions and numerous independents announced their intention to field a total of 12,000 mayoral candidates and 36,000 candidates for members of the municipal councils.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Electoral campaign\nAll of Bulgaria's political parties spent a total sum of 1,3 million Bulgarian lev in the electoral campaign in the run-up to the elections. IMRO spent the largest amount of money on the campaign, totaling nearly 300,000 lev. The Movement for Rights and Freedoms came second in terms of spending with over 145,000 lev spent, while the Bulgarian Socialist Party came in third with around 140,000 lev.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Electoral campaign\nThe Mayors of Montana and Gotse Delchev set the record for longest mayoral terms, with both of them standing for election for the seventh consecutive term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Electoral campaign, Funding changes\nA few months before the election, Bulgaria's National Assembly accepted a government bill, which cut public party subsidies from 11 down to just 1 lev per vote. The bill also permitted unlimited donations to political parties by private individuals or corporations for the first time in Bulgaria's history. The change was criticised by Bulgaria's opposition as a \"hit by a bat\" from the government in time for the local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 67], "content_span": [68, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Mayorship of Sofia\nThe election for the position of Mayor of Sofia, Bulgaria's capital and largest city, was expected to be hotly contested in particular. Twenty people announced their intention to run for that position, including incumbent mayor Yordanka Fandakova from the ruling GERB party, former Ombudsman and parliamentary deputy head Maya Manolova, IMRO President Angel Dzhambazki, and Volen Siderov, the leader of the ATAKA party, who resigned from his seat in the National Assembly in order to announce his candidacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Mayorship of Sofia\nFandakova based her campaign around continuing the work she had begun during her previous tenures. Manolova's campaign revolved around fixing the aftermath of various scandals surrounding municipal renovations that had happened during Fandakova's previous term, digitalization of municipal services and ensuring kindergarten access for all young children in the city. Dzhambazki focused his campaign on dismantling ghettos inhabited primarily by Bulgaria's romani minority, as well as banning the annual Sofia Pride gay parade as part of what he described as a 'law and order' campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Mayorship of Sofia\nThe election was expected to be a very tight race between Fandakova, who had run the city for three consecutive mandates and Manolova, who is one of the only two Bulgarian politicians with an approval rating of above 50%. Dzhambazki was expected to come in third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Mayorship of Sofia\nThe election was also noteworthy for the fact that it breaks the typical electoral mould. Sofia is traditionally known as a stronghold of centre-right and right-wing politics and is usually considered a very safe election for the ruling GERB party, yet Maya Manolova, who hails from the leftist Socialist Party, was predicted to be one of the top two candidates. If elected, she would have become the first left-wing Mayor of Sofia since the end of the socialist period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Mayorship of Sofia\nA pre-election study found it necessary for a candidate to receive around 6000-7000 votes in order to be elected into Sofia's municipal assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Conduct, First round\nThe first round of the election took place on October 27. The electoral commission ordered the seizure of all preference vote ballots in the town of Pleven due to what it deemed a \"technical error\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Conduct, First round\nThe ruling GERB party's campaign announced that it would ask Bulgaria's electoral authorities to punish television broadcaster BTV for airing footage which GERB deemed to have negatively affected their electoral result during the voting day. BTV stated that they would refuse to comment before they receive a copy of the complaint.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Conduct, First round\nThe IMRO party complained of what they deemed to be \"vote buying, voter intimidation and harassment\". IMRO's candidate in Plovdiv decried what he deemed to be \"monsterous\" electoral manipulation and stated that he would refer the matter to Bulgarian public prosecution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Conduct, First round\nMaya Manolova's campaign raised concerns over what they deemed to be \"organized vote buying\" in favour of Fandakova in three of Sofia's districts, pointing to large discrepancies between the candidates in several electoral sections, in which Fandakova has 10 times more votes than all other candidates combined, despite polling at around 30% in opinion polls and not being native to those districts. Manolova later alleged that the \"entire Bulgarian underground was mobilized\" to engage in widespread electoral fraud in favour of her opponent Yordanka Fandakova from the ruling GERB party. Fandakova denied the allegations and stated that it would be impossible for her to win the Sofia election via vote buying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Conduct, First round\nThree cases of major fraud were investigated in the town of Byala Slatina, in which undefined figures broke the secrecy of the ballot by observing which candidates voters were casting their ballot for. In addition, hundreds of voters voted in special mobile voting booths using allegedly fake medical documents. Some of these voters admitted that they were illiterate, that they had no real medical documents and that the voting booth officials \"helped them secretly\" to make a decision on whom to vote for. An illegally unsealed ballot box was also allegedly found to have been used during the voting process in the town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Conduct, First round\nDue to long waiting times during the counting of the ballots, the central electoral commission provided government-funded Sorry! board games, playing cards, Plasma TVs which play Bulgarian movies and various other tabletop games in an attempt to please the counters of the electoral vote. The commission also separated the entry points to the counting arena, in order to attempt to avoid a repeat of the 2015 elections, in which the counting authorities were locked in without food for over 3 days and wrote SOS messages on Arena Armeec's windows in what was described as analogous to a \"hostage crisis\". Despite these measures, two civilian counters and one policeman fell unconscious during the counting process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Conduct, First round\nNumerous errors were discovered during the ballot verification process. Bulgaria's electoral authorities refused to specify the amount of the errors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Conduct, First round\nATAKA's Volen Siderov arrived at the ballot counting premises and insisted to be allowed in. He was denied entry by the policemen guarding the area and left by midnight after a long argument with the authorities, which stated that Bulgarian electoral law makes no provision for election candidates to observe the counting process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Conduct, First round\nThe independent mayor of Nesebar, who was running for a new term, was arrested the day before the election and held in detention throughout the first round election. Several socialist party councillors were also arrested alongside him by police. Despite this, he managed to win the election while still under arrest by defeating GERB's candidate for the position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0027-0001", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Conduct, First round\nA local court later ordered that he continue to be held in detention, which rendered the newly re-elected mayor unable to attend the oath-taking ceremony at the local council, thus raising legal questions as to whether or not he would be eligible to take up the position for another mandate. The arrestees were accused by prosecutors of taking part in a vote buying ring, an allegation dubbed \"hilarious\" by the mayor's attorney, which stated that the prosecution had only summoned a single witness, which allegedly rambled on stories with an \"unexpected\" ending.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0027-0002", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Conduct, First round\nThe arrests came after a request by State Prosecutor Sotir Tsatsarov to the Central Electoral Commission for the removal of the legal immunity of the mayor, the socialist party councillors, as well as several candidates from the \"21 Movement\", was granted by the commission. The chairman of Nesebar's Municipal Assembly, himself hailing from the socialist party, stated that he believed the only explanation for these arrests were a \"political order\" as part of a \"war\" to seize power in the town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Conduct, First round\nDespite these events, Bulgaria's electoral authorities stated that the first round of the vote had taken place successfully \"without major incidents\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Conduct, First round, Aftermath\nFollowing civil protests in favour of Nesebar's re-elected Mayor, who was held in detention, Bulgarian authorities eventually agreed to allow him to give his oath of office. He was escorted in a police van to the local municipal assembly by a dozen officers and became the first elected Bulgarian official to give his oath of office while wearing handcuffs. He pledged to serve the town and denied all accusations levied against him. Following his oath, he was taken back to jail by the police. His inauguration was ceremonial, as he would not be permitted to run the town from his jail cell. In addition, Bulgarian prosecutors stated that they were considering the option of calling for the annulment of the Nesebar election and the termination of his term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 822]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Conduct, Second Round\nBulgaria's Central Electoral Commission stated that numerous reports were made about illegal vote buying and improper electoral agitation during the election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Conduct, Second Round\nMaya Manolova's electoral campaign in Sofia stated that it allegedly had evidence of organized electoral fraud organized by the ruling GERB party. It stated that it had dozens of reports of vote buying, exit poll rigging and violations of Bulgaria's electoral law, adding that the electoral commission had refused access to any of her campaign's authorized representatives to the vote counting premises at Arena Armeec, despite them having the legal right to do so. For these reasons, her campaign declared that it did not recognize the election results and would attempt to have the Sofia election annulled and re-run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0031-0001", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Conduct, Second Round\nThe Bulgarian Socialist Party stated that it did not have the legal right to ask for a re-run of the election, as Manolova had formally run as an independent, instead of a Socialist Party candidate. Despite this, the party declared that it would support her bid for a re-run, promising to \"remain on the same team\" as her and adding that it would \"remain eternally loyal to Miss Manolova\". Tomislav Donchev from the ruling GERB party denied that his party had been involved in electoral manipulation, stating that GERB's \"various opponents had always complained of electoral fraud\", adding that he was not concerned with them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Conduct, Second Round\nOn the nationwide scale, the Socialist Party's leader Korneliya Ninova stated that the elections w\u0435re skewed by \"vote buying\" and an \"atmosphere of fear\" among voters. She lamented both the conduct of the elections and the recent changes to Bulgaria's electoral code and raised concerns over the election over the mayorship of the Shumen Province, where the candidate supported by GERB defeated the Socialist Party's nominee by just 77 votes, while the electoral authorities declared over 400 ballots as 'invalid'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0032-0001", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Conduct, Second Round\nShe also stated that the socialist party's candidate in the Lovech Province had also lost the election to GERB's nominee by just 347 votes and alleged that in that case the number of invalidated ballots was also \"huge\". She finished by stating that her party was considering filing a petition before the Bulgarian courts for the annulment and rerunning of the elections in these provinces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Conduct, Second Round\nA newly elected mayor hailing from the Alternative for Bulgarian Revival stated that a fellow local councillor and party member in the city of Strelcha was ambushed and badly beaten during the dark hours of the day due to his local political activities in favour of the party. He further alleged that the party had been targeted with \"pressure\" during the elections, which he described as a \"swamp\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Conduct, Second Round\nLarge irregularities during the verification of ballots in several villages in Varna Province led to a case being filed with the Bulgarian Administrative Court, as a third of all ballots cast were declared to be \"blank\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Conduct, Second Round\nSeveral political analysts asserted that the elections in several provinces and localities were allegedly won by illegal vote buying. A sociologist further called the elections \"the most corrupt elections in the country\" and alleged that one of the political parties had even announced a campaign, where it would pay 50 lev to any citizen, which signs up as a party member.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Conduct, Second Round\nThe former mayor of Garmen was arrested by police for alleged illegal vote buying. A candidate for the Blagoevgrad municipal council was also interrogated by Bulgarian police over vote buying allegations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Conduct, Second Round\nBulgarian President Rumen Radev stated that he believed the electoral process had been \"compromised\" and called on all citizens to vote in order to dilute the effect of the alleged mass vote buying campaigns. He further stated, that he would invite the Bulgarian Police, Central Electoral Commission and Parliamentary parties to a discussion on what should be the response to what he deemed to be the \"retreat of fairness from the electoral process\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Conduct, Second Round, Aftermath\nA week following the second round of the election, Maya Manolova officially filed a petition for the annulment of Sofia's Mayoral election, stating that she had deposited 14 folders full of evidence of alleged fraud and errors in both the voting and counting process. She further alleged that nearly 6700 residents of EU-member states, which are enfranchised in local elections, had been denied their right to vote as the local administration only included 44 such residents on the electoral rolls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0038-0001", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Conduct, Second Round, Aftermath\nThe Socialist Party further filed petitions for the annulment of the elections in three of Sofia's districts - Iskar, Lyulin and Krasna polyana, in which the socialist candidates were all very narrowly defeated by GERB candidates, with the socialists alleging that they had evidence these electoral victories were due to illegal vote buying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Conduct, Second Round, Aftermath\nThe GERB candidates denied the allegations, while Bulgarian Prime minister and GERB leader Boyko Borisov reacted sharply by declaring that GERB's victory in Sofia had been \"undebatable\" and adding that in the same vein that Manolova wanted to annul the mayoral election, he himself would like to annul the 2016 Bulgarian presidential election which GERB lost, but that it would be pointless as the president's mandate was already coming to an end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Results, First round\nFollowing the first round on 27 October, the ruling GERB party remained Bulgaria's strongest political party. It won 90 localities in the first round, compared to 65 in the 2015 elections. Despite this increase, GERB's overall support had actually decreased, in what some political scientists described as an \"erosion\", a \"serious challenge\" for the party, and a \"heavy hit\". On the provincial level, the party obtained a plurality of Bulgaria's provinces, winning the mayoral elections on the first round in 8 regions, and qualifying for a runoff in all but three other regions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Results, First round\nThe Bulgarian Socialist Party won 35 localities in the first round and qualified for the runoff election in 50 more. The party is going to compete against GERB in a runoff election in 9 major cities, compared to the zero it had during the previous election. The party enjoyed a considerable overall increase in support, but still lagged behind GERB by a non-negligible margin. On the provincial level, while the party didn't win any mayoral positions in the first round, it qualified to the runoff election in 13 of Bulgaria's regions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Results, First round\nThe Movement for Rights and Freedoms won the Kardzhali mayoral election on the provincial level in the first round and qualified for the runoff in the Targovishte Province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Results, First round\nIMRO \u2013 Bulgarian National Movement, the Union of Democratic Forces, the Bulgaria for Citizens Movement, the \"Direct Democracy\" movement and two Independent candidates didn't win any mayoral positions on the provincial level in the first round of the election, but qualified for one runoff election each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Results, First round, Sofia\nGERB doubled its number of councillors among Sofia's districts. At the same time, GERB's mayoral candidate in Sofia, Yordanka Fandakova, saw only 36% voter support in comparison to 60% in 2015. Furthermore, while GERB had won between 18 and 20 of Sofia's districts in the first round during the previous election, the party failed to muster the same support this time around, thus forcing every single district of Sofia into a second round runoff election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Results, First round, Sofia\nThe Socialist Party's Maya Manolova managed to obtain 27% of the vote, thus securing a runoff election with the incumbent Fandakova from the GERB party and marking a huge increase from the previous election, in which the Socialist Party's Mihail Mirchev polled third with only 8% of the vote. The party also more than doubled its representation in Sofia's municipal assembly, becoming the second largest party in the chamber by surpassing the \"urban rightist\" coalitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Results, First round, Sofia\nThe Democratic Bulgaria coalition, a union of centre-right and right-wing parties which represent Sofia's traditional \"urban rightists\" came in third, with its candidate Borislav Ignatov securing 12% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Results, First round, Sofia\nBoris Bonev from the widely pro-European localist \"Save Sofia\" movement came in fourth with just under 11% of the vote. Despite the fact that he was not elected as Mayor of Sofia, he was nonetheless elected as a municipal councillor, as he had been a candidate for both Mayor and municipal councilor in the same election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0048-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Results, First round, Sofia\nThe IMRO's Angel Dzhambazki fared far worse than expected, polling in fifth at under 4% voter support, despite the fact that the IMRO had spent the largest amount of money for its election campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0049-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Results, First round, Sofia\nThe rest of Bulgaria's nationalist parties, including ATAKA and the National Front for the Salvation of Bulgaria, also fared relatively poorly, receiving less support than in the country's European Parliament election that same year, as well as when compared to the previous local elections in 2014. ATAKA's Volen Siderov polled in at just over 1% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0050-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Results, Second Round\nGERB managed to win the majority of Mayoral positions on the provincial level after the second round, thus securing its position in first place, despite obtaining a noticeably poorer result than in the previous election and losing several regions. GERB's largest success in the election, however, was managing to narrowly secure their control of Sofia City Province and Plovdiv Province, which were strongly contested by the Socialist Party and IMRO respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0051-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Results, Second Round\nThe Socialist Party marked a major increase in support, managing to secure 4 mayoral positions, including the very hotly contested Pernik Province. On the local level, the socialist party won the runoff in 26 localities, thus bringing the total number of local settlements under the party's control up to 61 - more than double the party's result from the previous local election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0052-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Results, Second Round\nTwo independent candidates won mayoral positions by defeating the two main parties' candidates in the second round - one in Pazardzhik Province and the other in Pleven Province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0053-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Results, Second Round\nThe UDF managed to avoid being taken off the Bulgarian provincial map by winning the Vidin Province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0054-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Results, Second Round\nThe Bulgaria for Citizens Movement defeated GERB's candidate and won the election in the Dobrich Province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0055-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Results, Second Round\nThe \"Direct Democracy\" movement entered the Bulgarian local scene by securing the Yambol Province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0056-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Results, Second Round\nBulgaria's central electoral commission reported that total voter turnout was at 42,1%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0057-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Results, Second Round, Sofia\nAlthough she failed to achieve a majority, GERB's Yordanka Fandakova won the election by managing to score at just over 4% more support than her primary opponent - Maya Manolova, and was thus re-elected for another term as Mayor of Sofia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0058-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Results, Second Round, Sofia\nIn an unexpected turn of events, a large percentage of the centre-right and right-wing voters, which had previously supported the \"Democratic Bulgaria\" coalition or the IMRO's Angel Dzhambazki, voted mostly in favour of Manolova, the candidate supported by the leftist Socialist Party, instead of Fandakova from the centre-right GERB party. Despite this, political analysts noted that the newly-added option for voters to cast a ballot for none of the above allowed Fandakova to secure another mandate as Mayor of Sofia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0059-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Results, Second Round, Sofia\nGERB, however, took a very heavy hit in Sofia's local districts. The GERB-UDF coalition managed to win only 11 of Sofia's 25 local mayoral positions, as opposed to the 2015 elections in which GERB alone won 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0060-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Results, Second Round, Sofia\nThe candidates of the \"Democratic Bulgaria\" coalition fared well, winning control over 11 local mayoral positions, the vast majority of which were held by GERB in the previous election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287940-0061-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian local elections, Results, Second Round, Sofia\nThe Bulgarian Socialist Party entered into the field of Sofia's local politics, as it won control of two of Sofia's districts - Izgrev and Mladost, whereas it lacked any local mayoral seats in Sofia in the previous election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287941-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian revenue agency hack\nOn 15 July 2019, a massive data breach of the National Revenue Agency (NRA) of Bulgaria was revealed. The hacker responsible for the breach sent an email to major Bulgarian media outlets, detailing the scope of the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287941-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian revenue agency hack\nThe leaked data amounted to 57 folders with .csv files detailing the names and national identification numbers of some 5 million Bulgarian citizens, as well as records on revenues, tax and social security payments, debts, online betting data and company activities dating back as early as 2007, and as recently as June 2019. According to some researchers, nearly every adult in the country had their personal data compromised.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287941-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian revenue agency hack, Background\nSuccessive Bulgarian governments have spent nearly two billion leva ($1.15 billion) on e-government projects since 2002, producing few results. The National Revenue Agency is one of only five entities that provide e-government services to citizens. A 2018 government report indicated a very low level of cybersecurity at government entities, citing a lack of qualified IT employees in public agencies and noncompetitive salaries compared to the private sector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287941-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian revenue agency hack, Background\nIn 2017, personal data including addresses and names of 1.2 million Bulgarian children was openly accessible on a Ministry of Education website and the leak was not addressed until it was revealed by a report on investigative journalism website Bivol.bg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287941-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian revenue agency hack, Background\nSerious doubts over government capacity to handle data continued in August 2018, when the Bulgarian Commercial Register, which contains the entire database of the Bulgarian economy, crashed. A total hard disk drive failure caused by sloppy maintenance left 25 terabytes of company data inaccessible for more than two weeks, essentially halting business transactions. Following the crash, the e-Government State Agency began an audit of software and hardware used by all government entities. Later that year, a Cybersecurity Law came into effect, establishing a National Cybersecurity System along with several government positions related to cybercrime and accident prevention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287941-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian revenue agency hack, Background\nA few days before the NRA hack was revealed, a white hat hacker reported serious vulnerabilities in the Bulgarian Commission for Personal Data Protection website; the hacker had \"begged\" the Commission to fix the issues for three years. The Commission did not take any action to protect the data, which included emails and phone numbers of more than 14,000 citizens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287941-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian revenue agency hack, Attack\nOn 15 July, an anonymous hacker emailed Bulgarian media outlets with details of an attack carried out against \"servers of the Ministry of Finance\". The leak revealed 11 gigabytes of data taken from National Revenue Agency databases. The 57 folders included .csv files, some with more than 1 million lines, containing full names, national identification numbers, revenue figures, personal debt information, health and pension payments, and a register of online gambling website users. The email also claimed that the entire volume of data amounted to 110 folders and 21 gigabytes. The message called the Bulgarian government \"retarded\", its computer security \"parodic\", and called for Julian Assange to be freed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 754]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287941-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian revenue agency hack, Attack\nOn the following day, the NRA confirmed the authenticity of the data. According to the agency, its servers were accessed through a rarely used VAT refund service for deals abroad, and the breach had affected about 3% of their total database.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287941-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian revenue agency hack, Attack\nThe hacker deployed a SQL injection and randomly collected data from the servers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287941-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian revenue agency hack, Aftermath, Arrest of Kristiyan Boykov\nKristiyan Boykov, a 20-year-old employee of a cybersecurity company, was arrested on 16 July by police in Sofia and charged with breach and theft of personal data.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287941-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian revenue agency hack, Aftermath, Arrest of Kristiyan Boykov\nAccording to police, the released data also contained a lock file with information about the attacker's computer and username, which matched the one Boykov used in social media. The lock file, however, was dated before the supposed time of the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287941-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian revenue agency hack, Aftermath, Arrest of Kristiyan Boykov\nBoykov was released on 18 July, on the grounds that his attack had not affected critical NRA databases. He denied carrying out the attack, stating that police had asked him \"uncomfortable questions\", used \"slight intimidation\", and attempted to extract a forced confession. His lawyer announced that the evidence against Boykov is \"non-existent\", and that the accusation neither points to a specific time period or even a perpetrator. According to Boykov and his employers, a market competitor may have used the occasion to frame him and cause damage to their company.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287941-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian revenue agency hack, Aftermath, Commission for Personal Data Protection hack attempt\nOn July 22, the Commission for Personal Data Protection announced that an unsuccessful cyber attack had been carried out against it. It remains unknown if the database was targeted, but the attacker had used the local Wi-Fi network and was apparently in the vicinity of the Commission's headquarters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 99], "content_span": [100, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287941-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulgarian revenue agency hack, Reactions, Industry\nBulgarian IT professionals launched an online petition demanding open source software infrastructure for government services. The petition also demanded clarity on the billions spent on e-government since 2002 without noticeable results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287942-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulls (rugby union) season\nIn 2019, the Bulls participated in the 2019 Super Rugby competition, the 24th edition of the competition since its inception in 1996. They were included in the South African Conference of the competition, along with the Jaguares, Lions, Sharks and Stormers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287942-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulls (rugby union) season\nThe Bulls won eight, drew two and lost six of their matches during the regular season of the competition to finish second in the South African Conference, and in 5th place overall to qualify for the finals as a wildcard team. They lost in their quarterfinal match to the Hurricanes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287942-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulls (rugby union) season, Personnel, Coaches and management\nThe Bulls coaching and management staff for the 2019 Super Rugby season were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287942-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulls (rugby union) season, Personnel, Squad\nThe following players were named in the Bulls squad for the 2019 Super Rugby season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287942-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulls (rugby union) season, Standings\nThe final standings for the 2019 Super Rugby season are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287942-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulls (rugby union) season, Standings, Round-by-round\nThe table below shows the Bulls' progression throughout the season. For each round, their cumulative points total is shown with the overall log position:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287942-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulls (rugby union) season, Matches\nThe Bulls played the following matches during the 2019 Super Rugby season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287942-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulls (rugby union) season, Player statistics\nThe Super Rugby appearance record for players that represented the Bulls in 2019 is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287942-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Bulls (rugby union) season, Player statistics\n(c) denotes the team captain. For each match, the player's squad number is shown. Starting players are numbered 1 to 15, while the replacements are numbered 16 to 23. If a replacement made an appearance in the match, it is indicated by . \"App\" refers to the number of appearances made by the player, \"Try\" to the number of tries scored by the player, \"Con\" to the number of conversions kicked, \"Pen\" to the number of penalties kicked, \"DG\" to the number of drop goals kicked and \"Pts\" refer to the total number of points scored by the player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287943-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Buriram United F.C. season\nThe 2019 season is Buriram United's 8th season in the Thai League. The club enters the season as the Thai League defending champions, and will participate in the top level league. They will also participate in two domestic cups (FA and League Cup), Champions Cup and AFC Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287943-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Buriram United F.C. season\nThis is the first season in the league that Buriram will face only other 15 instead of 17 teams since the football association reduced the top league teams from 18 to 16. And this is also the first season that Buriram doesn't win any titles of the season (excluding Thailand Champions Cup) since the club's first season, 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287943-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Buriram United F.C. season, Transfers, In\nNote 1: Go Seul-ki returned from loan before heading to Port FC for another loan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287944-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Burkina Faso government resignation\nOn 19 January 2019, the government of Burkina Faso dissolved due to the resignation of Prime Minister Paul Kaba Thieba and all members of his cabinet. President of Burkina Faso Roch Marc Christian Kabor\u00e9 announced that he intends to form a new government; on 21 January, he began the process of appointing a new government by naming Christophe Joseph Marie Dabir\u00e9 as the new Prime Minister, but his cabinet remains vacant. In the days leading up to the resignation of the government, the country faced a number of attacks from militant terrorist groups, and opposition members of government had previously called for the prime minister and defense ministries to step down, citing an inability to address terrorist attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 763]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287944-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Burkina Faso government resignation, Background\nThe resignations were announced on television by President Kabor\u00e9, but his announcement did not state any reasons for why his government resigned. Northern provinces of the country, particularly ones bordering Mali and Niger, have been in a state of emergency since 31 December, following a rise in jihadist attacks. In the week preceding these resignations, Burkina Faso's government extended the state of emergency for an additional six months in regions where terror attacks were reoccurring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287944-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Burkina Faso government resignation, Background\nAccording to the ACLED, at least 200 militant attacks were suspected throughout the country \u2013 including southern and western provinces \u2013 from 1 January 2018 to 12 January 2019. It is estimated that violence in the northern provinces has displaced at least 54,000 people since 2016. At least 60 attacks were confirmed by the ACLED to have happened in the country's eastern provinces since February 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287944-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Burkina Faso government resignation, Background, Attacks on the French Embassy and Burkinab\u00e9 Army headquarters\nIn the capital city Ouagadougou on Friday, 2 March 2018, jihadists initiated a coordinated attack against France's embassy to Burkina Faso as well as the Burkina Faso army headquarters. Eight were killed and more than 80 wounded. Burkina Faso security forces later killed all eight militants involved. French authorities were alerted once gunfire began, and French citizens in the area were told to stay inside. Windows were shattered at the Burkinab\u00e9 Army headquarters and heavy smoke could be seen from the army chief of staff's office in Ouagadougou, with explosions being reported around the area. The United Nations condemned the attacks and United Nations Secretary-General Ant\u00f3nio Guterres requested that the nations of the world work to \"promote national reconciliation and create the conditions for sustainable peace and development\" in Burkina Faso. French President Emmanuel Macron spoke with the Burkinab\u00e9 President to express his condolences.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 115], "content_span": [116, 1071]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287944-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Burkina Faso government resignation, Background, Kidnapping and murder of Canadian nationals\nDays before the government resigned, it was confirmed by officials that a Canadian geologist, Kirk Woodman, was abducted and killed at a mine exploration camp in the country's northern provinces near the border with Mali. He was the second Canadian national to be killed in the country within a span of weeks. The Foreign Ministry of Canada condemned the attacks and stated that it will work with the government of Burkina Faso to pursue those responsible, and the Foreign Ministry of Burkina Faso stated that it will open an investigation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 97], "content_span": [98, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287944-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Burkina Faso government resignation, Background, Kidnapping and murder of Canadian nationals\nThe Security Ministry of Burkina Faso believes that Islamist militants from outside of the country are responsible. Other Canadian nationals in Burkina Faso, including Edith Blais and her Italian partner Luca Tacchetto, have been known to be missing since December. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau stated that to the best of his knowledge, Blais is still alive, and that Canadian authorities are working to gain information about her disappearance in Burkina Faso. In response to these abductions, Canada has issued travel warnings for Burkina Faso, warning of banditry and kidnappings. The United States issued a similar warning the same day, advising against travel to Burkina Faso's northern and eastern provinces. In the interests of public safety, Burkina Faso's government imposed a curfew in Orodara from 19 to 23 January, citing severe threats of terrorism and kidnappings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 97], "content_span": [98, 986]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287944-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Burkina Faso government resignation, Announcement of resignation\nOn the afternoon of 19 January, Prime Minister Paul Kaba Thieba submitted to the President his resignation, as well as the resignation of his cabinet. President Kabor\u00e9 reportedly \"accepted the resignation\" and expressed \"all his gratitude to Prime Minister Paul Kaba Thieba and all its ministers for their commitment to the service of the nation\". In the months leading up to the resignation, opposition ministers have requested the resignation of the Prime Minister, as well as the resignation of those in charge of the security and defense of the country. The President announced that he intends to form a new government in the near future, but his televised announcement of the resignations did not include an explanation for why his government resigned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 827]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287944-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Burkina Faso government resignation, Announcement of resignation\nOn Monday, 21 January, President Kabor\u00e9 begun forming a new government by naming Christophe Joseph Marie Dabir\u00e9, once a health minister under former President Blaise Compaore, as the country's Prime Minister. The new government has not yet been named, and the cabinet remains vacant as of 21 January. Dabir\u00e9 had also represented Burkina Faso at the West African Economic and Monetary Union. He was appointed by presidential decree. Secretary-General St\u00e9phane Sanou announced the appointment via television.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287945-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Burnaby South federal by-election\nA by-election was held in the federal riding of Burnaby South on February 25, 2019 following the resignation of incumbent New Democratic MP Kennedy Stewart on September 14, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287945-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Burnaby South federal by-election\nJagmeet Singh, the federal leader of the NDP since October 1, 2017, won the by-election after having served as his party's leader without a seat in the House of Commons for over a year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287945-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Burnaby South federal by-election, Background, Riding profile\nThe riding of Burnaby South was created by the 2012 federal electoral boundaries redistribution and was first contested in the 2015 federal election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287945-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Burnaby South federal by-election, Background, Riding profile, Demographics\nAccording to the 2016 Canadian Census, Chinese Canadians make up a plurality of the riding's population, while a majority of the riding's population speaks a mother tongue that is neither English nor French.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 80], "content_span": [81, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287945-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Burnaby South federal by-election, Background, Resignation of Kennedy Stewart\nOn May 10, incumbent MP Kennedy Stewart publicly revealed that he was considering a run for mayor of Vancouver in the city's 2018 elections. Stewart formally confirmed his candidacy for Vancouver mayor on May 14, announcing that he would resign his seat in Parliament before the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287945-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Burnaby South federal by-election, Candidate nominations, People's\nThe People's Party of Canada announced Laura-Lynn Tyler Thompson as their party's candidate for the by-election on January 8, 2019. She had previously been a host on the Canadian edition of The 700 Club and had earlier run to be a trustee on the Burnaby Board of Education in November of the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287945-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Burnaby South federal by-election, Candidate nominations, Independent candidacies\nValentine Wu, who was the BC Greens candidate in the 2017 provincial election for the riding of Burnaby-Edmonds, announced on January 17, 2019 that he would contest the by-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 86], "content_span": [87, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287945-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Burnaby South federal by-election, Candidate nominations, Non-contesting parties\nThe Green Party had previously promised not to run a candidate against Jagmeet Singh if he were to run in a by-election. Green Party Leader Elizabeth May reiterated the party's plans to give Singh \"leader's courtesy\" on August 16 after he announced his candidacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 85], "content_span": [86, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287945-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Burnaby South federal by-election, Candidate nominations, Non-contesting parties\nAlthough the Libertarian Party had announced on its blog the selection of Rex Brocki as their candidate, he did not register and ultimately did not appear on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 85], "content_span": [86, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287946-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Burnie International\nThe 2019 Burnie International was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the sixteenth (men) and tenth (women) editions of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour and the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Burnie, Australia between 21 and 27 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287946-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Burnie International, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287946-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Burnie International, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw using a protected ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287946-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Burnie International, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as alternates:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287946-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Burnie International, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287946-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Burnie International, Women's singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 77], "content_span": [78, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287947-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Burnie International \u2013 Men's Doubles\nGerard and Marcel Granollers were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287947-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Burnie International \u2013 Men's Doubles\nLloyd Harris and Dudi Sela won the title after defeating Mirza Ba\u0161i\u0107 and Tomislav Brki\u0107 6\u20133, 6\u20137(3\u20137), [10\u20138] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287948-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Burnie International \u2013 Men's Singles\nSt\u00e9phane Robert was the defending champion but lost in the quarterfinals to Maverick Banes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287948-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Burnie International \u2013 Men's Singles\nSteven Diez won the title after defeating Banes 7\u20135, 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287949-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Burnie International \u2013 Women's Doubles\nVania King and Laura Robson were the defending champions, but neither player chose to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287949-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Burnie International \u2013 Women's Doubles\nEllen Perez and Arina Rodionova won the title, defeating Irina Khromacheva and Maryna Zanevska in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287950-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Burnie International \u2013 Women's Singles\nMarta Kostyuk was the defending champion, but lost to Wang Xiyu in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287950-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Burnie International \u2013 Women's Singles\nQualifier Belinda Woolcock won the title, defeating Paula Badosa Gibert in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20133), 7\u20136(7\u20134).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287951-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Burnley Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Burnley Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Burnley Borough Council in England. This election was held on the same day as other local elections. One third of the council was up for election, and each successful candidate will serve a four-year term of office, expiring in 2023. These seats were last contested in 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287951-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Burnley Borough Council election\nIn 2017, four members of the local Liberal Democrats (including Charlie Briggs and Mark Payne) left the party over its stance on Brexit, to form the Burnley and Padiham Independent Party. However in early 2019 Christine White (elected in 2016) stepped down following a complaint from a resident, prompting a by-election in the Rosehill with Burnley Wood ward which was won by Peter McCann of the Liberal Democrats. After the 2018 election, Bill and Margaret Brindle (both Coalclough with Deerplay ward) who had been sitting on the council as independents after also splitting with the local Lib Dems, joined the Labour group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287951-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Burnley Borough Council election\nFollowing the election Labour lost control of the council and a coalition of all the other parties formed a new executive with Charlie Briggs returning to the role of Council leader to replace Mark Townsend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287952-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Burundi landslides\nThe 2019 Burundi landslides were a series of rapidly occurring natural disasters in 2019. On December 4, 2019, less than two months after the October celebration of the International Day for Disaster Reduction (IDDR), heavy rains precipitated the deadly series of landslides that followed later that night into the next day, affecting a total of 9,935 people in Nyempundu, Gikomero and Rukombe of the northwestern provinces of Cibitoke, bordering Rwanda, and Bubanza as well as the northeastern province of Cankuzo. At least 27 people died and 10 remained missing as of the December 11 human toll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287952-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 Burundi landslides\n7 injured persons were admitted into Cibitoke referral hospital, 6 of whom were discharged, and the seventh was transferred to the Kigobe hospital, managed by M\u00e9decins Sans Fronti\u00e8res/Doctors Without Borders-Burundi (MSF-B). Significant property damage was incurred as well, leaving 1,081 people (551 females and 530 males) of 206 households (on average, roughly 5 persons per household) displaced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287952-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Burundi landslides\nAnother flood event happened on December 22 affecting 787 people in the northern neighbourhoods in Bujumbura. As per the Burundi Red Cross Society (BRCS) Rapid Assessment, the December 22 floods disaster affected 787 people (219 households), completely destroyed 47 households, partially destroyed 40 households and submerged 132 households. 33 people were reported injured and 14 people dead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287952-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Burundi landslides, Background\nSince January 2019, heavy rainfall triggered flash floods, mudslides and landslides in various provinces, especially Bujumbura (Mairie and Rural), Cibitoke, Bubanza, Muyinga, Cankuzo, and Muramvya provinces. Resultingly, almost 13,000 people were displaced, and 45 people died. Furthermore, these natural disasters caused extensive damage to local infrastructure systems, and hampered access to essential sources of food, water, education and healthcare. This is also brought a heightened risk of the transmission of infectious disease due to the resulting proliferation of mosquitoes as vectors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287952-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Burundi landslides, Background\nAs of September 2019, there were 103,412 Internally displaced persons (IDPs) in Burundi, of which roughly 79,600 or 77% were displaced due to natural disasters (including over 8,400 displaced since January 2019), mainly in the regions bordering Lake Tanganyika, and the north-western and central provinces, according to the International Organization for Migration's (IOM) Displacement Tracking Matrix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287952-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Burundi landslides, Background\nAccording to the European Union's Directorate-General for European Civil-protection and Humanitarian-aid Operations (DG ECHO) the risk of natural disaster continued to increase day-by-day with the early onset of the Burundian September 2019 rainy season and above-average rainfall forecasted by the United States' National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (US NOAA). The US Agency for International Development's (USAID's) Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWSNET) reported that the greater horn of Africa region received up to 300 per cent above average rainfall from October to mid-November 2019. UNOCHA now considers Burundi to be among the twenty most vulnerable countries to climate change and natural hazards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 762]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287952-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Burundi landslides, Background\nEast Africa currently experiences unseasonably heavy rains caused by the higher-than-average temperatures of the Indian Ocean, potentially due to cyclical dipole weather phenomenons and global warming. The heavy rains and previous floods which inflict Burundi appear to be the resulting manifestations of these factors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287952-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Burundi landslides, Background\nAccording to a Save the Children count based on United Nations and government figures, more than 1,200 deaths across East and Southern Africa have been caused by floods, landslides, and a cyclone in 2019. In addition, the UN has found that floods have displaced nearly half a million people in southern Sudan, 200,000 in Ethiopia and at least 370,000 in Somalia in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287952-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Burundi landslides, Background\nSoil erosion as a result of overgrazing and the expansion of agriculture into marginal lands, may have contributed to the Burundian susceptibility and vulnerability to devastating landslides.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287952-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Burundi landslides, Background\nThe recently launched Global Humanitarian Overview (GHO) indicates that Natural disasters pose substantial risks to the approximately 80 per cent of Burundians depend on subsistence farming, and that 1.74 million people will be in need in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287952-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Burundi landslides, Disaster\nFrom December 4 onwards, at least a dozen hills around Nyempundu, in Mugina commune in Cibitoke, were collapsed by severely damaging landslides, precipitated by torrential rains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287952-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Burundi landslides, Disaster\nAn anonymous local Cibitoke provincial government official, reported to Reuters that victims were living on a hillside which gave way after the heavy rains of the day before. \"They are still digging up dead bodies,\" the official said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287952-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Burundi landslides, Disaster\nIn an official Twitter post, the Ministry of Public Security confirmed that much property was damaged in the disaster, at least 26 people died and 10 were missing. According to another ministry spokesperson, Pierre Nkurikiye, other provisional police reports indicated the deaths of at least some 38 people (three in Gikomero, 13 in Rukombe and 22 died in Nyempundu), though these reports were still provisional, and as of then, excavation and search-and-rescue (SAR) operations were still ongoing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287952-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Burundi landslides, Disaster\nDestruction and damage of key infrastructure \u2013 including homes, roads, and bridges \u2013 was reported. Over 80 houses, 6 bridges and roads, and 9 water access points were destroyed, and crops continued to be destroyed in the immediate aftermath.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287952-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Burundi landslides, Response\nOn December 5, the provincial Cibitoke Governor Joseph Iteriteka addressed victims of the disaster, thanking everyone involved in the management of the disaster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287952-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Burundi landslides, Response\nUNOCHA led an intersectoral team to gain access to these hard-to-reach affected areas to evaluate the destruction. The international community's willingness to help the affected people was communicated in a December 6 meeting with the Government's Provincial Platform, led by the Governor's Counsellor in charge of social affairs. The Government of Burundi's Civil Protection and Disaster Management Unit, the public provincial and communal administration, the BRCS, the police, the army, the surrounding population, and the Cibitoke and Mugina Health Districts, all deployed local emergency relief services. BRCS teams, coordinated by 3 staff members deployed 15 volunteers many of which were trained in first aid, and Water Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) in emergencies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 806]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287952-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Burundi landslides, Response\nThe UNOCHA intersectoral team concluded that the most pressing necessities in order of priority were food and water, shelter and other non-food items (NFIs such as household kits, WASH kits, female dignity kits, school kits and monetary funds for such have been provided by IOM, World Vision, BRCS, UNICEF, UNFPA, the USAID OFDA, Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance, and NGOs Help a Child, War Child Holland, Concern Worldwide & ), psychosocial support, and access between hills and villages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287952-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 Burundi landslides, Response\nLandslides washed away fields that were exploited by these populations, as well as their crops and food reserves, notably those by the Mubarazi river in Muramvya, and similarly much livestock. Water access points and sanitary facilities were washed away and what remained of them was under considerable strain due to high demand. There was also an elevated risk of waterborne diseases. The mission noted that physical access to schools in the Nyempundu area was hampered by landslides that have cut off some roads, and that many schoolchildren in general lost their school materials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287952-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Burundi landslides, Response\nOn December 7, the National Platform for Disaster Management set up an ad hoc crisis management committee to manage the emergency headed by the Director of Humanitarian Action of the Ministry of Human Rights, Social Affairs and Gender. On the same day, 1,900 affected households received 28.5 tonnes of rice granted by the Ministry-led committee. This aid was deposited in the commune of Mugina, over 25 kilometres from the disaster site and to which the beneficiaries will have to travel to access. No provisions were made yet for people with special needs, and a relocation site identified in the village of Rusagara, not far from the shopping centre of the municipality of Mugina, was rejected for the second time by the BRCS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 763]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287952-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Burundi landslides, Response\nOn December 8, the ad hoc committee, noting that the response to needs would continue as sectors refine their data for a more consistent assistance, requested that the World Food Programme (WFP) carry out the food assistance, which began to distribute 15-day rations of beans, corn, oil and salt on December 16, that the visit to the relocation site be conducted quickly and that support be provided to all victims of the rainy season. UNOCHA concluded its December 8 \"Flash Update No. 2\" saying \"The humanitarian community will continue to work with the Government's National Platform to reinforce this emergency response, as well as with local municipalities that are willing to support these relief efforts.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287952-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Burundi landslides, Response\nA week after the landslide, the burial of the recovered bodies, arranged by the BRCS in cooperation with the various Partner National Societies (PNSs) of the ICRC (Finnish Red Cross, Belgian Red Cross and ), took place on December 12 in the Nyamakarabo area, but issues were still faced in the lack of assistance to the efforts of the authorities in conducting SAR operations, the extraction of corpses, and the evacuation of the wounded to nearby hospitals. In addition, access to the area remained hampered by landslides that damaged the roads and wooden bridges crossing the area that remained not allowing heavy machinery to pass through.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287952-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Burundi landslides, Response\nOn December 16, the IOM began requesting support from the BRCS to both arrange the procurement and distribution of half of the household kits each and other NFIs to accommodate for the displaced households who, in the meantime, were temporarily relocated to various communal spaces (i.e churches and schools) or hosted by community members. In addition Burundi and the UNOCHA intersectoral team announced their intention to begin the rehabilitation of a collapsed dam and reorienting the river to its initial direction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287952-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Burundi landslides, Response\nThe IFRC concluded their operation 4 months following its beginning (December 23, 2019 - April 23, 2020), having allocated 82,628 Swiss Francs (~90,000 USD) to the disaster relief emergency fund (DREF).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287952-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Burundi landslides, Aftermath\nAs of December 31, the UNHCR estimated there to be 209,179 Burundian people of concern in Tanzania. The rate of return of 2000 refugees per week planned by the Tanzanian and Burundian governments appear to have been strongly affected by the environmental situation. In November 2019 only one of the three transit centres was functioning, allowing only 409 Burundian refugees to return, the lowest rate since January that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287952-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Burundi landslides, Aftermath\nThe UN Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) and Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) have both stated that the phenomenally heavy rains have contributed to a \"serious and widespread desert locust outbreak\". The Desert Locust Control Organization for Eastern Africa (the DLCO-EA which Burundi is not member to) noted the necessity for urgent and decisive action from all partners, as well as the resources to support large-scale ground surveys, aerial spraying services, provision of chemicals, information dissemination, and further capacity building for control operations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287952-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Burundi landslides, Aftermath\nForecasted heavy rains accompanied by flash flooding continued into approximately January 9. Beyond that only moderately light rainfall was predicted and observed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287953-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Bury Metropolitan Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Bury Metropolitan Borough Council Election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Bury Metropolitan Borough Council. This was on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287953-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Bury Metropolitan Borough Council election, Ward results\nCandidates seeking re-election were last elected in 2015 and are denoted with an asterisk. Changes are compared to the 2018 results in that ward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 61], "content_span": [62, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287954-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Busan Open\nThe 2019 Busan Open was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the eighteenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Busan, South Korea between 6 and 12 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287954-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Busan 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-00287955-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Busan Open \u2013 Doubles\nHsieh Cheng-peng and Christopher Rungkat were the defending champions and successfully defended their title, defeating Toshihide Matsui and Vishnu Vardhan 7\u20136(9\u20137), 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287956-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Busan Open \u2013 Singles\nMatthew Ebden was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287956-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Busan Open \u2013 Singles\nRi\u010dardas Berankis won the title after defeating Andrew Harris 7\u20136(7\u20135), 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287957-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Busy Bee Congo crash\nOn 24 November 2019, a Dornier 228 twin turboprop aircraft operated by local carrier Busy Bee Congo crashed shortly after takeoff from Goma International Airport in a densely populated section of the city, killing 20 of the 21 on board and 6 on the ground. It is the deadliest accident involving the Dornier 228.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287957-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Busy Bee Congo crash, Background\nThe airline operating the plane, Busy Bee Congo, was founded in 2007 and uses Goma as the base for its fleet of Dornier 228s. Due to lack of funds, poverty, lack of oversight, and corruption in government, airline safety in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, especially among local low-price carriers, is infamously lax with all the local carriers banned from operating in the European Union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287957-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Busy Bee Congo crash, Background, Aircraft and crew\nThe aircraft was a Dornier 228 twin turboprop built in 1984. It had been owned by three previous operators. The aircraft did not carry a cockpit voice recorder or a flight data recorder. While in service with Olympic Aviation (during which its registration was SX-BHC) on 9 January 1994, the aircraft was involved in an accident at when it struck power lines on approach to runway 15L at Ellinikon International Airport and its left engine failed, but landed safely with no fatalities and was repaired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287957-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Busy Bee Congo crash, Background, Aircraft and crew\nThe unnamed 52-year-old captain had 14,124 flight hours, including 3,048 hours on the Dornier 228. The unnamed 29-year-old first officer had 2,273 flight hours, with 1,635 of them on the Dornier 228.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287957-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Busy Bee Congo crash, Accident\nAccording to reports the aircraft took off from the airport but suffered engine failure and crashed less than a minute after take off from runway 17. Witnesses describe the plane spinning three times as it crashed with thick black smoke coming from the engines. The aircraft violently burst in flames after impact in one of the densely populated areas of the city, the fire preventing locals from helping victims caught in the blaze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287957-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Busy Bee Congo crash, Accident\n19 people on board were killed on impact. One source reports that 2 passengers managed to be pulled from the blaze. The BBC reports that 9 casualties on the ground all came from one family.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287957-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Busy Bee Congo crash, Investigation\nThe accident is being investigated by the Permanent Office of Investigations of Aviation Accidents/Incidents (French: Bureau Permanent d'Enqu\u00eates d'Accidents et Incidents d'Aviation) (BPEA), part of the DRC's Ministry of Transport and Channels of Communication. A preliminary report on the accident was released on 10 January 2020. The report stated that the aircraft take-off roll was unusually long, with a lower climb-out. The flight crew then requested to land on runway 35 without specifying why, after which the aircraft entered a rapid descent and crashed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287958-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Butler Bulldogs football team\nThe 2019 Butler Bulldogs football team represents Butler University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They are led by 14th-year head coach Jeff Voris and play their home games at the Bud and Jackie Sellick Bowl. They are members of the Pioneer Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287958-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Butler Bulldogs football team, Previous season\nThe Bulldogs finished the 2018 season 4\u20137, 2\u20136 in PFL play to finish in a three-way tie for seventh place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287958-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Butler Bulldogs football team, Preseason, Preseason coaches' poll\nThe Pioneer League released their preseason coaches' poll on July 30, 2019. The Bulldogs were picked to finish in seventh place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287958-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Butler Bulldogs football team, Preseason, Preseason All-PFL teams\nThe Bulldogs had five different players selected to the preseason all\u2013PFL teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287959-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Butler Bulldogs men's soccer team\nThe 2019 Butler Bulldogs men's soccer team represented Butler University during the 2019 NCAA Division I men's soccer season and the 2019 Big East Conference men's soccer season. The regular season began on August 30 and concluded on November 6. It was the program's 31st season fielding a men's varsity soccer team, and their 7th season in the Big East Conference. The 2019 season was Paul Snape's ninth year as head coach for the program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287959-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Butler Bulldogs 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, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287960-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 C-League\n2019 Metfone C-League is the 35th season of the C-League. Contested by 14 clubs, it operates on a system of promotion and relegation with Cambodian Second League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287960-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 C-League, Foreign players\nThe number of foreign players is restricted to five per team. A team can use four foreign players on the field in each game, including at least one player from the AFC country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 30], "content_span": [31, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287960-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 C-League, Foreign players\nPlayers name in bold indicates the player is registered during the mid-season transfer window.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 30], "content_span": [31, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287961-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CAA Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 Colonial Athletic Association Men's Basketball Tournament was the postseason men's basketball tournament for the Colonial Athletic Association for the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The tournament was held March 9\u201312, 2019 at the North Charleston Coliseum in North Charleston, South Carolina. Northeastern defeated Hofstra 82\u201374 in the championship game and received the CAA's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. It was the second title for Northeastern in the CAA, the last coming in 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287961-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CAA Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nAll 10 CAA teams participated in the tournament. Teams were seeded by conference record, with a tiebreaker system used to seed teams with identical conference records. The top six teams received a bye to the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287962-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CAA Men's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2019 CAA Men's Soccer Tournament, was the 37th edition of the tournament. It determined the Colonial Athletic Association's automatic berth into the 2019 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament. The tournament began November 8 and concluded on November 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287962-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CAA Men's Soccer Tournament\nJames Madison, the defending champions, repeated as champions, defeating UNCW in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287962-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CAA Men's Soccer Tournament, Awards, All Tournament XI\nThe All Tournament XI was announced following the CAA Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287963-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CAA Women's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 Colonial Athletic Association Women's Basketball Tournament is the upcoming postseason women's basketball tournament for the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA) for the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The tournament will be held March 13\u201316, 2019 at the Bob Carpenter Center in Newark, Delaware. The champion will receive the CAA's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. Towson won the conference tournament championship game over Drexel, 53\u201349 to send Towson to their first ever NCAA tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287963-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CAA Women's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nAll 10 CAA teams participated in the tournament. Teams were seeded by conference record, with a tiebreaker system used to seed teams with identical conference records. The top six teams received a bye to the quarterfinals. JMU Drexel and Towson have secured first round byes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287964-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CAA Women's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2019 CAA Women's Soccer Tournament was the postseason women's soccer tournament for the Colonial Athletic Association held from November 1 through November 9, 2019. The tournament was held at campus sites, with the higher seed hosting each game. The defending champions were the Hofstra Pride, who successfully defended their title, beating the James Madison Dukes 5\u20131 in the final. The conference tournament title was the sixth overall for the Hofstra women's soccer program and the fifth overall for head coach Simon Riddiough. Both Hofstra and Riddiough have won three straight CAA Tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287965-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CAF Champions League Final\nThe 2019 CAF Champions League Final was the final of the 2018\u201319 CAF Champions League, the 55th edition of Africa's premier club football tournament organized by the Confederation of African Football (CAF), and the 23rd edition under the current CAF Champions League title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287965-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CAF Champions League Final\nThe final was originally contested in two-legged home-and-away format between Wydad Casablanca from Morocco and defending champions Esp\u00e9rance de Tunis from Tunisia. The first leg was hosted by Wydad Casablanca at the Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium in Rabat on 24 May 2019, while the second leg was hosted by Esp\u00e9rance de Tunis at the Stade Olympique de Rad\u00e8s in Rad\u00e8s on 31 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287965-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CAF Champions League Final\nEsp\u00e9rance de Tunis were initially declared winners following a refusal by Wydad Casablanca to resume play following an issue with VAR, though CAF later ruled the second leg must be replayed in a neutral venue to decide the champions. However, the decision to order a replay was thrown out by the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), who told the Confederation of African Football (CAF) to refer the case to its proper disciplinary structures for a decision, and on 7 August 2019, Esp\u00e9rance de Tunis were declared winners for a second time. As winners, they earned the right to play in the 2020 CAF Super Cup and the 2019 FIFA Club World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287965-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CAF Champions League Final, 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, 38], "content_span": [39, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287965-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CAF Champions League Final, Road to the final\nNote: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first (H: home; A: away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287965-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CAF Champions League Final, Format\nThe final was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis, with the order of legs determined by the knockout stage draw, which was held on 20 March 2019, 20:00 CAT (UTC+2), at the Marriot Hotel in Cairo, Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287965-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 CAF Champions League Final, Format\nIf the aggregate score was tied after the second leg, the away goals rule would have been applied, and if still tied, extra time would not have been played, and a penalty shoot-out would have been used to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287965-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 CAF Champions League Final, Matches, Second leg\nAssistant referees:Djibril Camara (Senegal)El Hadji Samba (Senegal)Fourth official:Joshua Bondo (Botswana)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287966-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CAF Confederation Cup Final\nThe 2019 CAF Confederation Cup Final was the final of the 2018\u201319 CAF Confederation Cup, the 28th edition of Africa's secondary club football tournament organized by the Confederation of African Football (CAF), and the 16th edition under the current CAF Confederation Cup title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287966-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CAF Confederation Cup Final\nThe final was contested in two-legged home-and-away format between RS Berkane from Morocco and Zamalek from Egypt. The first leg was hosted by RS Berkane at the Stade Municipal de Berkane in Berkane on 19 May 2019, while the second leg was hosted by Zamalek at the Borg El Arab Stadium in Alexandria on 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287966-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CAF Confederation Cup Final\nThe final finished 1\u20131 on aggregate, with Zamalek winning 5\u20133 on penalties for their first CAF Confederation Cup title. The winner will earn the right to play in the 2020 CAF Super Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287966-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CAF Confederation Cup Final, Road to the final\nNote: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first (H: home; A: away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287966-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CAF Confederation Cup Final, Format\nThe final will be played on a home-and-away two-legged basis, with the order of legs determined by the knockout stage draw, which was held on 20 March 2019, 19:00 CAT (UTC+2), at the Marriot Hotel in Cairo, Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287966-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CAF Confederation Cup Final, Format\nIf the aggregate score is tied after the second leg, the away goals rule will be applied, and if still tied, extra time won't be played, and the penalty shoot-out will be used to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287966-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 CAF Confederation Cup Final, Matches, First leg\nAssistant referees:Jerson Dos Santos (Angola)Anouar Hmila (Tunisia)Fourth official:Bernard Camille (Seychelles)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287966-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 CAF Confederation Cup Final, Matches, Second leg\nAssistant referees:Zakhele Siwela (South Africa)El Hadji Samba (Senegal)Fourth official:Sadok Selmi (Tunisia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287967-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CAF Super Cup\nThe 2019 CAF Super Cup (officially the 2019 Total CAF Super Cup for sponsorship reasons) was the 27th 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, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287967-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CAF Super Cup\nThe match was played between Esp\u00e9rance de Tunis from Tunisia, the 2018 CAF Champions League winners, and Raja Casablanca from Morocco, the 2018 CAF Confederation Cup winners, at the Thani bin Jassim Stadium in Al Rayyan, Qatar on 29 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287967-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CAF Super Cup\nRaja Casablanca won the match 2\u20131 for their second CAF Super Cup title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287967-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CAF Super Cup\nThe match was originally to be hosted by Esp\u00e9rance de Tunis at the Stade Olympique de Rad\u00e8s in Rad\u00e8s, Tunisia on 29 December 2018, but CAF announced on 12 December 2018 that the match would be played in Qatar on 20 February 2019. However, the date was later changed to 29 March 2019 after both clubs requested a new date for the match. This was the first CAF Super Cup to be played outside of Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287967-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CAF Super Cup\nThe Super Cup of this season followed a transitional calendar which allows the CAF club competitions to switch from a February-to-November schedule to an August\u2013to-May schedule, as per the decision of the CAF Executive Committee on 20 July 2017. The Super Cup of next season will then be played in August after the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations (which has been switched from January/February to June/July) following the new calendar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287967-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CAF Super Cup, Format\nThe CAF Super Cup was played as a single match at a neutral venue, with the CAF Champions League winners designated as the \"home\" team for administrative purposes. If the score was tied at the end of regulation, extra time would not be played, and the penalty shoot-out would be used to determine the winner (CAF Champions League Regulations XXVII and CAF Confederation Cup Regulations XXV).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287967-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 CAF Super Cup, Ticketing\nA total of 20,560 tickets are available in three categories: category 1 for 100 QR, category 2 for 50 QR, and category 3 for 20 QR.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287967-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 CAF Super Cup, Match, Details\nAssistant referees:Zakhele Siwela (South Africa)Waleed Ahmed Ali (Sudan)Fourth official:Janny Sikazwe (Zambia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287967-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 CAF Super Cup, Prize money\nPrize money shared between CAF Champions League winner and CAF Confederations Cup winner in CAF Super Cup are as following\u00a0:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287968-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CAFA U-16 Championship\nThe 2019 CAFA U16 Championship is the 2nd edition of the CAFA Youth Championship, for men's under-16 national teams; This international football competition is organized by Central Asian Football Association (CAFA). The tournament is hosted by Tajikistan from July 26 to August 1, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287968-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CAFA U-16 Championship\nIt is played on a Round-robin tournament format among the 6 participating teams", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287968-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CAFA U-16 Championship\nUzbekistan was the defending champions. On August 1, 2019, Tajikistan U16 team won its 1st title", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287969-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CAFL season\nThe 2019 CAFL season was the second season of the China Arena Football League (CAFL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287969-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CAFL season, Background\nAfter the 2016 season, the Dalian Dragon Kings and Shenzhen Naja relocated to become the Shenyang Black Rhinos and Wuhan Gators, respectively. In June 2017, it was announced that the 2017 season was being moved to the spring of 2018. In January 2018, the league postponed the start of their second season to continue to establish business partnerships in China. The league has targeted a return to play in the autumn of 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287969-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CAFL season, Background\nIn September 2019, the CAFL released an abbreviated schedule, with a two-game regular season and a playoff tournament featuring all four teams, with games played November 6, 9, 20 and 23. Uniquely among professional football leagues, the CAFL playoff seeds were set as part of the schedule, with the semifinal round (December 6) consisting of the two matchups that did not play in the regular season. The winners of the semifinal round will play for the championship two days after the semifinals, and the losers for a consolation game the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287969-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CAFL season, Background\nOn November 8, the CAFL announced that the first game had been postponed to November 13. Two days later, the league announced that the regular season was canceled and that two of the four games scheduled would be played as exhibition games. In lieu of a regular season or semi-final playoffs, the CAFL instead held a single round-robin tournament with each team playing the other for 12 minutes, with no overtime in the event of a tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287969-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 CAFL season, Background\nThe standings following those contests will then be used to seed the championship: the two lowest-ranked teams played a consolation round, and the two highest-ranked played for the CAFL championship. Both games were 24 minutes long, separated into two 12-minute halves, with overtime if necessary (which it was for the championship). The entirety of the CAFL tournament took place in Suzhou over the course of three days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287969-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CAFL season, Standings\n+ = Shenyang secured third place by way of defeating Shanghai in the consolation game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 27], "content_span": [28, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287969-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CAFL season, Draft\nThe 2017 CAFL Draft was held on July 10, 2017. 36 players were drafted with 18 of them being Americans and 18 players from China or who are of Chinese descent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287969-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 CAFL season, Draft, Round six\nNote: CN indicates Chinese national or of Chinese descent while IN indicates international players", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 34], "content_span": [35, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287970-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CARIFTA Games\nThe 2019 CARIFTA Games took place between 20 and 22 April 2019. The event was held at the Truman Bodden Sports Complex in George Town, Cayman Islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287971-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CBA Playoffs\nThe 2019 CBA Playoffs was the postseason tournament of the Chinese Basketball Association's 2018\u201319 season. It began on 16 March 2019. In this season, the playoffs was expanded from 10 teams to 12 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287972-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CBR Brave season\nThe 2019 CBR Brave season was the Brave's 6th season in the Australian Ice Hockey League since being founded and entering the league in 2014. The season ran from 20 April 2019 to 31 August 2019 for the Brave. CBR finished first in the regular season to clinch the H Newman Reid Trophy for the second time in franchise history. However, the Brave lost their semi-final match to the Sydney Bears during the Goodall Cup Finals series in Newcastle. The team set a number of new league records including: most wins (26), most points (79), largest winning streak (17 matches), most goals scored (161), fewest goals conceded in a 28 match season (67) and least losses in a 28 match season (2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287973-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CCC Team season\nThe 2019 season for the CCC Pro Team began in January with the Tour Down Under. As a UCI WorldTeam, they were automatically invited and obligated to send a squad to every event in the UCI World Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287974-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CEBL Entry Draft\nThe 2019 CEBL Entry Draft was the inaugural CEBL Entry Draft, held on March 23, 2019 at the Art Gallery of Hamilton in Hamilton, Ontario. Six Canadian Elite Basketball League (CEBL) teams selected 78 athletes in total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287974-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CEBL Entry Draft, Format\nA blind draw was used to determine the draft order for the first round. A \"snake draft\" was used, with the order reversing in even-numbered rounds, and the original order in odd-numbered rounds. The draft order for the first round was drawn as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287974-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CEBL Entry Draft, Format\nThe first four rounds were regional rounds, in which teams selected players from their region. The three eastern teams had to choose players from Eastern Canada and the western teams from Western Canada. The next seven rounds were open rounds, with teams able to select players from any region of the world. The final two rounds were U Sports rounds, in which teams selected players playing in U Sports, Canada's university basketball program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287975-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CEBL season\nThe 2019 CEBL season was the inaugural season of the Canadian Elite Basketball League. It included six teams: Saskatchewan, Fraser Valley, Edmonton, Hamilton, Niagara, and Guelph. The regular season ran from May 9, 2019 to August 15, 2019, and the Championship Weekend took place on August 24 and 25, 2019, hosted in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. On August 25, the Saskatchewan Rattlers won the CEBL's first ever Championship after beating the Hamilton Honey Badgers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287976-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CECAFA Cup\nThe 2019 CECAFA Cup was the 40th 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). It took place in Uganda in December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287976-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CECAFA Cup, Participants\nThe following teams were confirmed to be participating in the tournament. The national team of the Democratic Republic of Congo was announced to participate in place of Rwanda. Ethiopia, DR Congo and South Sudan all withdrew from the tournament in December 2019. The reason was the financial shortages of each respective federation which prevented them from meeting the $20,000 entry requirement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287977-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CECAFA U-15 Championship\nThe 2019 CECAFA U15 Championship was the first CECAFA U-15 Championship organized by CECAFA (Council of East and Central Africa Football Association). It was held in Eritrea (it is the first time in recent times that an official international football tournament is being staged in Eritrea.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287978-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CECAFA U-20 Championship\nThe 2019 CECEFA U-20 Challenge Cup will take place from 21 September - 5 October 2019 in Uganda. It was originally expected to take place in January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287979-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CECAFA Women's Championship\nThe 2019 CECAFA Women's Championship was the fourth edition of the association football tournament for women's national teams in the East African region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287979-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CECAFA Women's Championship\nIt was held in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania between 16 and 25 November 2019. Kenya won the tournament with a 2\u20130 win over Tanzania in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287979-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CECAFA Women's Championship, Awards\nJentrix Shikangwa from Kenya won the top scorer award with 10 goals. The Golden Glove Award went to Kenyan goalkeeper Annedy Kundu who did not concede a single goal in the whole tournament. Tanzania's Omary Mwanahamisi was voted Most Valuable Player and her team also bagged the Fair Play Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287980-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL Draft\nThe 2019 CFL Draft took place on May 2, 2019 at 8:00\u00a0pm ET and was broadcast on TSN and RDS. 73 players were chosen from among eligible players from Canadian universities, as well as Canadian players playing in the United States on NCAA or NAIA teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287980-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL Draft\nThe draft was broadcast live on TSN and RDS for two hours and then switched to digital platforms on TSN.ca and TSN GO. Randy Ambrosie, the CFL commissioner, was at the TSN studios in Toronto to announce the first twenty picks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287980-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00287980-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL Draft, Territorial exemptions\nBeginning in 2019, the CFL announced the two teams with the highest waiver priority will each get to make one Territorial Draft Pick (to be used to select a player born within their territorial limits at the end of the second round). The two teams that qualified for the 2019 Draft were Montreal and Toronto and these picks were made with the 17th and 18th overall picks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 38], "content_span": [39, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287980-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL Draft, Territorial exemptions\nThis was the first time since 1984 that the league\u2019s draft will feature territorial selections. From 1972 to 1982, each club had the right to pre-select two players from its region who would be exempted from the draft. That limit was reduced to one Draft exemption selection in 1983 and 1984, and then the practice was terminated altogether prior to the 1985 Canadian Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 38], "content_span": [39, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287981-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL European Draft\nThe 2019 CFL European Draft took place on April 11, 2019. Nine players were chosen from a pool of 18 European players who attended the 2019 CFL Combine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287981-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL European Draft, Background\nIn October 2018, Canadian Football League (CFL) commissioner Randy Ambrosie outlined a plan to grow the CFL's presence, which he dubbed CFL 2.0, including growth internationally. As part of this expansion the CFL held a special draft in January 2019 with the Liga de F\u00fatbol Americano Profesional (LFA), the top-level pro American football league in Mexico. Players selected there were not signed to teams but rather had their rights held by their selecting teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287981-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 CFL European Draft, Background\nIn March 2019, 18 players from teams in Italy, Germany, France, Finland, and Denmark attended the 2019 CFL Combine alongside Canadian players eligible for the normal CFL Draft; all players came from top club leagues in Europe, with the exception of two French players coming from Canadian university football and one Italian player from coming American junior college football. Only those that attended the combine were be eligible to be drafted in the CFL European Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287981-0001-0002", "contents": "2019 CFL European Draft, Background\nPlayers selected in these drafts filled a new classification of CFL players called \"global players\" (in contrast to \"National\" Canadian players and \"International\" players which mostly consist of Americans); Ambrosie was initially seeking for each CFL team to have two roster spots for these new global players but, after negotiations with the CFLPA, it formally decided on one roster spot and two practice roster spots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287981-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL European Draft, Selection order\nUnlike the normal CFL Draft, which sets selection order based on a team's record the previous season (similar to the NFL Draft), the preceding CFL\u2013LFA draft instead used a weighted lottery system where teams received an increased chance at a higher draft priority (similar to the NBA Draft) but not a guarantee. Unlike either the 3-round CFL\u2013LFA draft or the 8-round CFL draft, this draft will only consist of a single round. Similarly, the European draft also used a lottery system, with a draft order set on April 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287982-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL season\nThe 2019 Canadian Football League season was the 66th season of modern Canadian professional football. Officially, it was the 62nd season of the league. The regular season began on June 13 and concluded with the playing of the 107th Grey Cup in Calgary on November 24 \u2014where the Winnipeg Blue Bombers defeated the Hamilton Tiger-Cats 33\u201312 to win their first Grey Cup since 1990.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287982-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL season, League business, International partnerships\nIn October 2018, the CFL began work on an initiative known as \"CFL 2.0\" to grow its revenues and broaden its international reach outside of Canada and the United States. This included establishing partnerships with other gridiron football leagues (including using them as a potential farm system for Canadian player development post-university), international combines, scouting international prospects to join Canadian university football programs, expansion of the international media presence of the league, as well as increased investments in amateur football programs in Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 60], "content_span": [61, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287982-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL season, League business, International partnerships\nOn November 23, 2018 the CFL and the Professional American Football League of Mexico (LFA) signed a non-binding letter of intent on various partnerships, which included projects such as the possibility of hosting a regular season game in Mexico. On January 9, 2019, it was announced that the CFL and its franchises had committed to investing $4 million in supporting amateur football programs in Canada in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 60], "content_span": [61, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287982-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL season, League business, International partnerships\nOn January 31 the CFL and German Football League (GFL) signed an agreement to form a long-term strategic partnership. The partnership included the participation of German athletes at the 2019 CFL Combine. In February 2019, the CFL reached similar agreements with the Ligue \u00c9lite de Football Am\u00e9ricain (France), the Austrian American Football Federation, the Federazione Italiana di American Football (Italy), and with football officials in Finland, Norway, Sweden and Denmark. In July, the league also partnered with the British American Football Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 60], "content_span": [61, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287982-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL season, League business, New collective bargaining agreement\nThe five-year agreement that was ratified between the CFL and CFL Players' Association in 2013 was set to expire just prior to the start of this season, on the first day of scheduled training camp, May 19. On May 15 the CFL and CFL Players' Association announced they had reached a tentative agreement on a new three-year collective bargaining agreement, which was ratified by players and approved by the league's Board of Governors a week later on May 22; four days before the first preseason game. The length of the agreement aligns with Bell Media's media rights to the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 69], "content_span": [70, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287982-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL season, League business, Football operations cap\nOn June 5, 2018, it was reported that the CFL had approved a limit on football operations staff salaries and number of coaches and operations staff employed by each team. In this report, the number of coaches on each team would not exceed 11 and the number of other football operations staff may not exceed 17. The total compensation of those 28 staff members would be capped at $2,738,000. As of the 2018 CFL season, four teams had more than 11 coaches employed and would be directly impacted by these changes. Consequently, there was talk of a potential coaches union being formed to combat the unilateral decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 57], "content_span": [58, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287982-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL season, League business, Football operations cap\nOn December 6, 2018, the league formally announced the cap regulations, with the total compensation of the combined 11 coaches and 14 other football operations staff being set at $2,588,000 for 2019 and 2020. Similar to the player salary cap, violations in excess of $100,000 would result in monetary fines and loss of draft picks. However, as teams adjust to the new rules for 2019, they may self-report violations to avoid personal fines and loss of draft picks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 57], "content_span": [58, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287982-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL season, League business, Montreal Alouettes ownership\nOn May 31 Robert Wetenhall surrendered his ownership of the Montreal Alouettes back to the league, after having pursued a sale of the franchise for several months. The CFL intended to continue this process, but would operate the team on its behalf.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 62], "content_span": [63, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287982-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL season, League business, New outfitter\nOn September 12, 2018, it was announced that New Era would be the official outfitter of all CFL teams beginning in the 2019 season. This came as a result of the previous supplier, Adidas, not renewing their contract following the 2018 expiry of their previous deal. New Era Cap had been a licensee of the CFL for headwear and apparel since January 2011, and it was the first time that the company provided football uniforms and sideline apparel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 47], "content_span": [48, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287982-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL season, League business, New outfitter\nWhile most teams maintained relatively similar uniforms, the Montreal Alouettes unveiled a revamped identity with new logos and uniforms on February 1, while the B.C. Lions returned to using their normal logo on their helmets rather than a stylized version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 47], "content_span": [48, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287982-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL season, Player movement, International drafts\nThe CFL and LFA hosted a combine in Mexico City on January 13 attended by 51 top Mexican players. The following day, 27 players were selected in a CFL\u2013LFA Draft; the Edmonton Eskimos held the first overall pick, and selected Diego Viamontes of Mayas CDMX.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 54], "content_span": [55, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287982-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL season, Player movement, International drafts\nOn April 11, the CFL held its first European draft in which nine players were drafted, one to each CFL team: four of the players were from France, three from Germany, and one each from Italy and Finland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 54], "content_span": [55, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287982-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL season, Player movement, Free agency\nThe free agency period began on February 12 at noon EST. All players eligible for free agency are unrestricted free agents, as is customary in the league. Notable signings in the period included:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 45], "content_span": [46, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287982-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL season, Player movement, Trade deadline\nThe in-season trade deadline was on October 9 at 3:59\u00a0pm EDT.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 48], "content_span": [49, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287982-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL season, Player movement, Johnny Manziel\nOn February 27, Johnny Manziel, a quarterback for the Montreal Alouettes in 2018, was permanently banned from playing on any CFL team as a result of what the Alouettes called an unspecified \"(contravention of) the agreement which made him eligible to play.\" Manziel has denied any wrongdoing but accepted the banishment, stating he would consider playing options in the United States; he then signed on with the Alliance of American Football who were partly through their inaugural season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 48], "content_span": [49, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287982-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL season, Rule changes\nIn March the CFL's Rules Committee submitted a variety of rule changes to the Board of Governors, to be implemented for the 2019 season. As had been the case in previous years the proposed changes once again focused on improving game flow and increasing player safety. The proposals were reviewed and accepted by the CFL's Board of Governors on April 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287982-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL season, Regular season, Schedule\nThe regular season schedule was announced on December 20, 2018, and was played over 21 weeks from June 13 to November 12. 2019. There was an increase in Saturday primetime games with 7:00\u00a0p.m. ET kickoffs, appearing in all but one week of the season. Only three games were played on Sundays, and three were played on Mondays.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 41], "content_span": [42, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287982-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL season, Regular season, Schedule\nFor the first time in league history, no games were played on Thanksgiving.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 41], "content_span": [42, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287982-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL season, Regular season, Schedule\nIn the late evening of August 9 at 9:06\u00a0pm EDT, a weather delay was declared at Percival Molson Memorial Stadium in Montreal due to an approaching thunderstorm with intense lightning; the Saskatchewan Roughriders were leading the Alouettes 17\u201310 with 2:41 left in the 3rd quarter. Because the game had not restarted by 10:06\u00a0pm EDT and over 7:30 had been played in the 3rd at that point, the 17\u201310 score was declared final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 41], "content_span": [42, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287982-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL season, CFL Playoffs\nThe Grey Cup was played at McMahon Stadium in Calgary, Alberta, on November 24. The Winnipeg Blue Bombers won their first Grey Cup championship in 29 years, ending the longest current championship drought in the Canadian Football League. Winnipeg native, Andrew Harris was named both the Grey Cup Most Valuable Player and Grey Cup Most Valuable Canadian. This was the first time that a player won both awards in the Grey Cup championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287982-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL season, Broadcasting\nThe 2019 season marked the 11th of the CFL's exclusive Canadian media rights with Bell Media, covering TSN (English) and RDS (French).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287982-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL season, Broadcasting\nOn January 14, the league renewed its U.S. broadcast deal with TSN's minority partner ESPN, which expired after the 2018 season; it includes 20 games on ESPN's linear networks, and all remaining games carried on ESPN+. Prior to renewing with ESPN, it had been speculated that the league was courting NFL Network, which carried the league's games in 2010 and 2011; that network requested a significant change in the schedule that would have moved the season opener to an earlier date in order to secure carriage, which the league indicated could not happen without a new CBA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287983-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL\u2013LFA Draft\nThe 2019 CFL\u2013LFA Draft took place on January 14, 2019. 27 players were chosen from an invited pool of 51 Mexican players: 34 from the Liga de F\u00fatbol Americano Profesional (LFA) (a professional American football league) and 17 seniors from Mexican university teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287983-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL\u2013LFA Draft, Background\nIn October 2018, Canadian Football League commissioner Randy Ambrosie outlined a plan to grow the CFL's presence, which he dubbed CFL 2.0, including growth internationally. In November 2018, the LFA signed a non-binding Letter of Intent with the CFL to share resources and to allow for at least one CFL game to be played in Mexico, as wells as lay the ground work for special Mexican-specific editions of the CFL Combine and CFL Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287983-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL\u2013LFA Draft, Background\nOn January 11, 2019, 51 players from the LFA and Mexican college ranks were announced as participants in a combine to beheld on January 13 and a 27-player draft to be held on January 14, 2019. Each CFL team sent scouts and were reported to likely receive four picks. Consensus after the combine was that 6-18 players were of (or could be made into) CFL camp caliber, but that a majority of players had no professional potential.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287983-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 CFL\u2013LFA Draft, Background\nThis led to criticism of commissioner Ambrosie for spending time and resources on this additional draft, when a collective bargaining agreement with the CFLPA still had not been reached. Originally, there were plans for a 4-round 36-player draft but, after the combine and interviews, was scaled back to a 3-round, 27-player draft. BC Lions General Manager Ed Hervey was reported to have, \"settled for athletic and the ability to speak English\" in player evaluations. It was not reported if drafted players would count towards a team's National or International slots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287983-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL\u2013LFA Draft, Background\nOn January 12, 2019, the LFA held their own domestic 66-player draft in advance of the CFL's draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287983-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CFL\u2013LFA Draft, Selection order\nUnlike the normal CFL Draft, which sets selection order based on a team's record the previous season (similar to the NFL Draft), the CFL\u2013LFA draft instead used a weighted lottery system where teams receive more balls in a selection bin depending on their record, with more balls increasing the chance at a higher draft priority (similar to the NBA Draft). The draft order was set the night before the draft: The Edmonton Eskimos received the first pick, despite Edmonton's general manager and head coach both skipping the combine and draft process, sending a subordinate instead. Edmonton GM Brock Sunderland in particular was largely dismissive of the entire process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287984-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CHA Women's Ice Hockey Tournament\nThe 2019 College Hockey America Women's Ice Hockey Tournament was the 17th tournament in league history played between March 6 and March 8, 2019, at the LECOM Harborcenter in Buffalo, New York. Syracuse won their first tournament and earned College Hockey America's automatic bid into the 2019 NCAA National Collegiate Women's Ice Hockey Tournament", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287984-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CHA Women's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format\nAll six CHA Teams participated in the Tournament. On the first day of the Tournament, the top two seeds received a bye, while the #3 seed played the #6 seed, and the #4 seed played the #5 seed in the Quarterfinal round. On the second day, the Semifinal games featured the #1 seed against the lowest remaining seed, while the #2 seed played the highest remaining seed. On the third and final day, the CHA Championship was played between the two Semifinal winners. There was a total of five games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287984-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CHA Women's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format, Standings\nAll five members of the All-Tournament team were from Syracuse. Forward Aonda Hoppner was named the Tournament MVP, while Lauren Bellefontaine and Abby Moloughney rounded out the corps of forwards. Defenders included Lindsey Eastwood, who scored a hat trick in the Semifinal against Mercyhurst, and Jessica DiGirolamo. Ady Cohen was the All-Tournament Goalie with two wins and a .917 Save Percentage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287984-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CHA Women's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format, Standings\nDuring the Championship Game, Jaycee Gephard became the Single Season Points Leader (19-32-51) in the Robert Morris Colonials history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287984-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CHA Women's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format, Standings\nThe Tournament Champion earned a berth in the NCAA Tournament to determine the national champion. The Syracuse Orange was the number 8 seed out of 8 in the tournament, and lost to #1 seed Wisconsin 4\u20130 on March 16, in Madison, Wisconsin", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287985-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CIBACOPA season\nThe 2019 CIBACOPA was the 19th season of the Circuito de Baloncesto de la Costa del Pac\u00edfico (CIBACOPA), one of the professional basketball leagues of Mexico. It started on March 27, 2019, and ended on July 17, 2019. The league title was won by Rayos de Hermosillo, who defeated first-year expansion team Mantarrayas de La Paz in the championship series, 4\u20133. It was the Rayos' third CIBACOPA title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287985-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CIBACOPA season\nThere was a total attendance of more than 220,000 on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287985-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CIBACOPA season, Overview, Format\nNine teams participate, playing in one single group. The top eight teams qualify for the playoffs, which are three rounds in a best-of-7 format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287985-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CIBACOPA season, Draft\nThe 2019 CIBACOPA draft was held in February. Each team got three picks across three rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287985-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CIBACOPA season, All-Star Game\nThe 2019 CIBACOPA All-Star Game was played in Guadalajara, Jalisco, at the Domo del Code on May 11, 2019. The game was played between Zona Norte (teams from Baja California, Sonora, and northern Sinaloa) and Zona Sur (teams from Baja California Sur, Jalisco and southern Sinaloa). Zona Norte won the game after three quarters 106\u201388, but a new format was established this year to reset the score for a fourth-quarter period that included a cash bonus for the winning team. Zona Sur won this final period 29\u201321. Hameed Ali and Tyrone White led all scorers with 26 points each, but Jordan Williams was named All-Star Game MVP with 18 points, 5 rebounds and 3 assists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287985-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CIBACOPA season, All-Star Game\nCezar Guerrero won the three-point shootout while Jordan Williams won the dunk contest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287986-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CIK-FIA Karting European Championship\nThe 2019 CIK-FIA European Championship was the 48th edition of the CIK-FIA Karting European Championship, with championships in the KZ, KZ2, OK, OKJ and Superkart classes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287987-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CME Group Tour Championship\nThe 2019 CME Group Tour Championship was the ninth CME Group Tour Championship, a women's professional golf tournament and the season-ending event on the U.S.-based LPGA Tour. It was played at the Gold Course of Tibur\u00f3n Golf Club in Naples, Florida. The CME Group Tour Championship marked the end of the season-long \"Race to the CME Globe\" in 2019. The event was televised by Golf Channel Thursday through Saturday on a 3-hour delay, and NBC Sunday live.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287987-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CME Group Tour Championship, Format, Qualification\nSince 2014, the field has determined by a season-long points race, the \"Race to the CME Globe\". All players making the cut in a tournament earned points, with 500 points going to the winner. The five major championships had a higher points distribution, with 625 points to the winner. No-cut tournaments only awarded points to the top 40 finishers. Only LPGA members are eligible to earn points. From 2014 to 2018, the top 72 players on the points list and any tournament winners, whether or not a member, earned entry into the championship. The points were reset for the championship and the points leader after the championship won a $1 million bonus. Only the top-12 players entering the tournament has a mathematical chance of winning the bonus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 805]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287987-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CME Group Tour Championship, Format, Qualification\nFor 2019, the top 60 players on the \"Race to the CME Globe\" points list gained entry into the championship. Tournament winners were no longer given automatic entry into the championship. The bonus is now rolled into the purse so that the winner of the tournament wins $1.5 million. All 60 players compete for the top prize.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287987-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CME Group Tour Championship, Format, Field\nTop 60 LPGA members and those tied for 60th on the \"Race to the CME Globe\" Points Standings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287987-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CME Group Tour Championship, Format, Field\nMarina Alex, Brittany Altomare, C\u00e9line Boutier, Nicole Broch Larsen, Ashleigh Buhai, Chella Choi, Carlota Ciganda, Jodi Ewart Shadoff, Shanshan Feng, Kristen Gillman, Hannah Green, Jaye Marie Green, Georgia Hall, Nasa Hataoka, Brooke Henderson, Wei-Ling Hsu, Charley Hull, M. J. Hur, Ji Eun-hee, Ariya Jutanugarn, Moriya Jutanugarn, Danielle Kang, Megan Khang, Kim Hyo-joo, Kim Sei-young, Katherine Kirk, Cheyenne Knight, Ko Jin-young, Lydia Ko, Jessica Korda, Nelly Korda, Jennifer Kupcho, Bronte Law, Lee Jeong-eun, Lee Mi-hyang, Minjee Lee, Mirim Lee, Stacy Lewis, Yu Liu, Gaby L\u00f3pez, Nanna Koerstz Madsen, Caroline Masson, Ally McDonald, Azahara Mu\u00f1oz, Anna Nordqvist, Su-Hyun Oh, Amy Olson, Annie Park, Inbee Park, Park Sung-hyun, Morgan Pressel, Ryu So-yeon, Lizette Salas, Alena Sharp, Jenny Shin, Jasmine Suwannapura, Lexi Thompson, Jing Yan, Amy Yang, Angel Yin", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 918]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287988-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CMT Music Awards\nThe 2019 CMT Music Awards were held at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, Tennessee on June 5, 2019. Little Big Town was the host for the show. The CMT Music Awards are a fan-voted awards show for country music videos and television performances; Voting takes place on CMT's website.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287989-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Beach Soccer Championship\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Chanheigeorge (talk | contribs) at 19:01, 6 March 2020 (\u2192\u200eKnockout stage). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287989-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Beach Soccer Championship\nThe 2019 CONCACAF Beach Soccer Championship was the eighth edition of the CONCACAF Beach Soccer Championship, the premier beach soccer tournament contested by North American men's national teams and organised by CONCACAF (seventh official edition, tenth edition if qualifying tournaments held jointly with CONMEBOL are also counted). The tournament took place in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico between 13\u201319 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287989-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Beach Soccer Championship\nThe championship also acts as the qualification tournament for CONCACAF teams to the 2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup in Paraguay; the top two teams qualify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287989-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Beach Soccer Championship\nPanama were the defending champions, but lost in the third-place match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287989-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Beach Soccer Championship, Draw\nThe draw was held on 8 April 2019 at the Calle Independencia in Puerto Vallarta. The 16 teams were drawn into four groups of four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 45], "content_span": [46, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287989-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Beach Soccer Championship, Group stage\nEach team earns three points for a win in regulation time, two points for a win in extra time, one point for a win in a penalty shoot-out, and no points for a defeat. The top two teams from each group advance to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 52], "content_span": [53, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287989-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Beach Soccer Championship, Awards\nThe following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287989-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Beach Soccer Championship, Qualified teams for FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup\nThe following two teams from CONCACAF qualify for the 2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 88], "content_span": [89, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287990-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Boys' Under-15 Championship\nThe 2019 CONCACAF Boys' Under-15 Championship is an international football tournament, the third edition of the CONCACAF Boys' Under-15 Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287990-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Boys' Under-15 Championship\nThe competition was initially set to feature up to 39 teams from the CONCACAF region as well as three invited teams from UEFA; however, the withdrawal of Jamaica led to a total of 41 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287990-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Boys' Under-15 Championship, Teams\nThe 41 teams were divided in three divisions according to the Concacaf Men's Under-17 Ranking as of 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287990-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Boys' Under-15 Championship, Venues\nThe competition took place at the IMG Academy in Bradenton, Florida, United States, the same venue as the previous edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287990-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Boys' Under-15 Championship, Format\nEach match shall last 70 minutes, comprising two periods of 35 minutes with an interval of 10 minutes in between. In the championship game, if the score is tied at the end of regulation time, two 10 minute overtime periods will be played. If the score is still tied at the end of overtime, kicks from the penalty mark shall be taken to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287990-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Boys' Under-15 Championship, Format\nIn Division 1, the 16 teams are divided into four groups (A to D) of four. After the group stage, the top two teams of each group advance to the quarter-finals, where the winners advance to the semi-finals and final. The remaining teams play in a final round classification match depending on their position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287990-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Boys' Under-15 Championship, Format\nIn Division 2, the 16 teams are also divided into four groups (E to H) of four. After the group stage, each team play in a final round classification match depending on their position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287990-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Boys' Under-15 Championship, Format\nIn Division 3, the 9 teams are divided into two groups (I and J), one of four and one of five. After the group stage, each team play in a final round classification match depending on their position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League\nThe 2019 CONCACAF Champions League (officially the 2019 Scotiabank CONCACAF Champions League) was the 11th edition of the CONCACAF Champions League under its current name, and overall the 54th edition of the premier football club competition organized by CONCACAF, the regional governing body of North America, Central America, and the Caribbean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League\nMonterrey defeated UANL 2\u20131 on aggregate in the final to win their fourth title. As the winners of the 2019 CONCACAF Champions League, they qualified for the 2019 FIFA Club World Cup in Qatar. Guadalajara were the title holders, but did not qualify for this tournament and were unable to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Qualification\nA total of 16 teams participated in the CONCACAF Champions League:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Qualification\nTherefore, teams from either 9 or 10 out of the 41 CONCACAF member associations could participate in the CONCACAF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Qualification, North America\nThe nine berths for the North American Football Union (NAFU) were allocated to the three NAFU member associations as follows: four berths each for Mexico and the United States, and one berth for Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Qualification, North America\nFor Mexico, the champions and runners-up of the Liga MX Apertura and Clausura Liguilla (playoff) tournaments qualified for the CONCACAF Champions League. If there was any team which were finalists of both tournaments, the vacated berth was reallocated using a formula, based on regular season records, that ensured that two teams qualified via each tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Qualification, North America\nFor the United States, because of the restructuring of the CONCACAF Champions League starting from 2018, two teams each from the 2017 and 2018 seasons qualified for the 2019 CONCACAF Champions League:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Qualification, North America\nThis meant that the Supporters' Shield champions in 2017 and 2018, and the Eastern Conference or Western Conference regular season champions which were not Supporters' Shield champions in 2017 and 2018, which would have qualified for the CONCACAF Champions League in the usual setup, were not guaranteed a berth in the 2019 CONCACAF Champions League. If there was any team which qualified through multiple berths, or if there was any Canada-based MLS team which were champions of the 2017 or 2018 MLS Cup, the vacated berth was reallocated to the U.S.-based team with the best aggregate record over the 2017 and 2018 MLS regular seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Qualification, North America\nFor Canada, the champions of the Canadian Championship, its domestic cup competition which awards the Voyageurs Cup, qualified for the CONCACAF Champions League. While some Canada-based teams competed in MLS, they could not qualify through either the MLS regular season or playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Qualification, Central America\nThe five berths for the Central American Football Union (UNCAF) were allocated to five of the seven UNCAF member associations as follows: one berth for each of Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Panama. As all of the leagues of Central America employed a split season with two tournaments in one season, the champions with the better aggregate record (or any team which were champions of both tournaments) in the leagues of Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Panama qualified for the CONCACAF Champions League. Another 13 teams from Central America, which qualified through their domestic leagues, entered the CONCACAF League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Qualification, Central America\nIf teams from any Central American associations were excluded, they were replaced by teams from other Central American associations, with the associations chosen based on results from previous CONCACAF Champions League tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Qualification, Caribbean\nThe sole berth for the Caribbean Football Union (CFU), which consisted of 31 member associations, was allocated via the CONCACAF Caribbean Club Championship, the first-tier subcontinental Caribbean club tournament. Since 2018, the CONCACAF Caribbean Club Championship was open to teams from professional leagues. To qualify for the CONCACAF Caribbean Club Championship, teams had to finish as the champions or runners-up of their respective association's league in the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Qualification, Caribbean\nThe champions of the CONCACAF Caribbean Club Championship qualified for the CONCACAF Champions League. Another three teams from the Caribbean, which qualified through the CONCACAF Caribbean Club Championship or CONCACAF Caribbean Club Shield (via a playoff), entered the CONCACAF League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Qualification, CONCACAF League\nBesides the 15 direct entrants of the CONCACAF Champions League, another 16 teams (13 from Central America and 3 from the Caribbean) entered the CONCACAF League, a tournament held from August to October prior to the CONCACAF Champions League. The champions of the CONCACAF League qualified for the CONCACAF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Teams\nThe following 16 teams (from nine associations) qualified for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Teams\nIn the following table, the number of appearances, last appearance, and previous best result count only those in the CONCACAF Champions League era starting from 2008\u201309 (not counting those in the era of the Champions' Cup from 1962 to 2008).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Draw\nThe draw for the 2019 CONCACAF Champions League was held on 3 December 2018, 19:00 EST (UTC\u22125), at the Univision Studios in Miami.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 36], "content_span": [37, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Draw\nThe draw determined each tie in the round of 16 (numbered 1 through 8) between a team from Pot 1 and a team from Pot 2, each containing eight teams. The \"Bracket Position Pots\" (Pot A and Pot B) contained the bracket positions numbered 1 through 8 corresponding to each tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 36], "content_span": [37, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0017-0001", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Draw\nThe teams from Pot 1 were assigned a bracket position from Pot A and the teams from Pot 2 were assigned a bracket position from Pot B. Teams from the same association could not be drawn against each other in the round of 16 except for \"wildcard\" teams which replaced a team from another association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 36], "content_span": [37, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Draw\nThe seeding of teams were based on the CONCACAF Club Index. Each team qualified for the CONCACAF League based on criteria set by the respective associations (e.g., tournament champions, runners-up, cup champions), resulting in an assigned slot (e.g., MEX1, MEX2) for each team. The CONCACAF Club Index, instead of ranking each team, was based on the on-field performance of the teams that have occupied the respective qualifying slots in the previous five editions of the CONCACAF Champions League. To determine the total points awarded to a slot in any single edition of the CONCACAF Champions League, CONCACAF used the following formula:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 36], "content_span": [37, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Draw\nThe 16 teams were distributed in the pots as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 36], "content_span": [37, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Format\nIn the CONCACAF Champions League, the 16 teams played a single-elimination tournament. Each tie was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Schedule\nTimes are Eastern Time, as listed by CONCACAF (local times are in parentheses):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Round of 16\nIn the round of 16, the matchups were decided by draw: R16-1 through R16-8. The teams from Pot 1 in the draw hosted the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Round of 16, Summary\nThe first legs were played from 19\u201321 February, and the second legs were played from 26\u201328 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Quarter-finals\nThe winners of round of 16 matchups 1, 3, 5, 7 hosted the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Quarter-finals, Summary\nThe first legs were played from 5\u20136 March, and the second legs were played from 12\u201314 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Semi-finals\nThe semi-finalists in each tie which had the better performance in previous rounds hosted the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Semi-finals, Summary\nThe first legs were played from 3\u20134 April, and the second legs were played from 10\u201311 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Final\nIn the final (Winner SF1 vs. Winner SF2), the finalist which had the better performances in previous rounds hosted the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287991-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League, Final, Summary\nThe first leg was played on 23 April, and the second leg was played on 1 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287992-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League Final\nThe 2019 CONCACAF Champions League Final was the final round of the 2019 CONCACAF Champions League, the 11th edition of the CONCACAF Champions League under its current name, and overall the 54th edition of the premier football club competition organised 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, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287992-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League Final\nThe final was contested in two-legged home-and-away format between Mexican teams UANL and Monterrey in a Cl\u00e1sico Regiomontano. The first leg was hosted by UANL at the Estadio Universitario in San Nicol\u00e1s de los Garza on 23 April 2019, while the second leg was hosted by Monterrey at the Estadio BBVA Bancomer in Guadalupe on 1 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287992-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League Final\nMonterrey won the final 2\u20131 on aggregate for their fourth CONCACAF Champions League title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287992-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League Final, Teams\nIn the following table, final until 2008 were in the CONCACAF Champions' Cup era, since 2009 were in the CONCACAF Champions League era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287992-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League Final, Teams\nThis was the eighth all-Mexican final in the eleven editions of the CONCACAF Champions League, and guaranteed that for the fourteenth season in a row the CONCACAF club champions were from Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287992-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League Final, Road to the final\nNote: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first (H: home; A: away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287992-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League Final, Format\nThe final was played in a home-and-away two-legged series, with the team with the better performance in previous rounds (Monterrey) hosting the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287992-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League Final, Format\nIf the aggregate score was tied after the second leg, the away goals rule would not be applied, and extra time would be played. If the aggregate score was still tied after extra time, a penalty shoot-out would be used to determine the winner (Regulations II, Article G).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287992-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Champions League Final, Matches, Second leg\nAssistant referees:Corey Rockwell (United States)Frank Anderson (United States)Fourth official:Malcolm Villarreal (Saint Kitts and Nevis)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287993-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup\nThe 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup was the 15th edition of the CONCACAF Gold Cup, the biennial international men's football championship of the North, Central American, and Caribbean region organized by CONCACAF. The tournament was primarily hosted in the United States, with Costa Rica and Jamaica hosting double-headers in the first round of matches in groups B and C, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287993-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup\nThe United States were the defending champions, having won the 2017 tournament. With the abolition of the FIFA Confederations Cup, the CONCACAF Cup was annulled and the Gold Cup did not qualify the winner to a major tournament for the first time since 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287993-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup\nIn February 2018, CONCACAF announced that the tournament would expand to 16 teams from 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287993-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup\nMexico won their eighth Gold Cup title (their eleventh CONCACAF championship) with their 1\u20130 victory over the United States in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287993-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Qualified teams\nThe qualification system was changed and no longer divided into Central American and Caribbean zones. Among the 16 teams, six qualified directly after participating in the 2018 FIFA World Cup qualifying Hexagonal, while the other 10 teams qualified through the 2019\u201320 CONCACAF Nations League qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287993-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Venues\nIn May 2018, CONCACAF confirmed that matches would be held in Central America and the Caribbean in addition to the United States. This was the first time that the Gold Cup was held in the Caribbean, with all previous matches having taken place in the United States, Mexico, or Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287993-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Venues, United States\nIn May 2018, CONCACAF announced the fifteen venues in the United States which would host matches. Soldier Field in Chicago was announced on 27 September 2018 as the venue of the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287993-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Venues, Costa Rica\nOn 26 November 2018, CONCACAF announced that Costa Rica would host a double-header in the first round of matches of Group B on 16 June 2019, taking place at the Estadio Nacional de Costa Rica in San Jos\u00e9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287993-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Venues, Jamaica\nOn 2 April 2019, CONCACAF announced that Jamaica would host a double-header in the first round of matches of Group C on 17 June 2019, taking place at the Independence Park in Kingston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287993-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Seeding and schedule\nOn 31 August 2018, CONCACAF announced that the top four teams of the September 2018 CONCACAF Ranking Index were seeded for the group stage of the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287993-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Seeding and schedule\nThe groups and full match schedule were revealed on 10 April 2019, 18:00 EDT (15:00 local time, PDT), in Los Angeles, California, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287993-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Squads\nEach team had to submit a list of 23 players (three players had to be goalkeepers).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287993-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Group stage\nThe match dates and the assignments were announced by CONCACAF on 9 October 2018. The quarter-final pairings were later amended on 12 October 2018. The top two teams from each group qualified for the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287993-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Group stage\nAll match times listed are EDT (UTC\u22124), as listed by CONCACAF. If the venue is located in a different time zone, the local time is also given.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287993-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Group stage, Tiebreakers\nThe ranking of teams in the group stage was determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287993-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, if a match was tied after 90 minutes, extra time was played, where a fourth substitute was allowed for each team. If still tied after extra time, the match was decided by a penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287993-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Awards, Individual awards\nThe following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287993-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Goalscorers\nThere were 96 goals scored in 31 matches, for an average of 3.1 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287994-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final\nThe 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final was a football match which determined the winners of the 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup. The match was held at Soldier Field in Chicago, Illinois, United States, on July 7, 2019, and was contested by Mexico and the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287994-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final\nIt was the sixth Gold Cup final to be contested by Mexico and the United States, and the first since 2011. Mexico had won the modern Gold Cup seven times, while the United States had won it six times. Mexico won the final 1\u20130, the lone goal scored by Jonathan dos Santos in the second half, for their eighth Gold Cup title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287994-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Route to the final, Mexico\nMexico, nicknamed El Tri, were the most successful team in the history of the Gold Cup, having won the tournament seven times since 1993, most recently in 2015. The team qualified automatically for the 2019 Gold Cup because of their participation in the final round of regional qualification for the 2018 World Cup. The tournament would be the first for the team under Gerardo \"Tata\" Martino, who took over as head coach in January 2019 after leaving Atlanta United FC of Major League Soccer (MLS). Martino named his preliminary roster in May, leaving out regular starters like Carlos Vela, Javier Hern\u00e1ndez, Giovani dos Santos, Hirving Lozano, Jesus Manuel Corona, and H\u00e9ctor Herrera due to requests for personal or recovery time from the players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 805]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287994-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Route to the final, Mexico\nEl Tri were drawn into Group A alongside Canada, Cuba, and Martinique\u2014all of whom qualified through the Nations League preliminary rounds. In their opening match against Cuba at the Rose Bowl, Mexico won 7\u20130 with a hat-trick for Uriel Antuna of the local LA Galaxy, who was a late addition to the roster to replace the injured Jorge S\u00e1nchez, and two goals by Ra\u00fal Jim\u00e9nez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287994-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Route to the final, Mexico\nThe team then secured its quarter-final berth by defeating Canada 3\u20131 in Denver, with a first-half goal from midfielder Roberto Alvarado and a pair of second-half goals by substitute Andr\u00e9s Guardado; Lucas Cavallini scored a consolation goal for the Canadians in the 75th minute, cutting the lead to 2\u20131 before Guardado's second goal. Martino opted to rest several starting players in the final group stage match against Martinique, which saw El Tri take the lead in the first half through a goal by Antuna but concede an equalizer to Martiniquais forward K\u00e9vin Parsemain's free kick in the 56th minute. Jim\u00e9nez and defender Fernando Navarro added a pair of goals to win the match 3\u20132 for Mexico after Jordy Delem was able to score a consolation goal in the 84th minute for Martinique.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 842]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287994-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Route to the final, Mexico\nIn the quarter-finals, Mexico played Group B runners-up Costa Rica in Houston. They took the lead before halftime with a goal by Jim\u00e9nez, but conceded a penalty in the 52nd minute after a controversial foul on Joel Campbell; Costa Rican captain Bryan Ruiz scored from the penalty spot to level the match. Both teams had chances to score in regulation and extra time, including a shot by Jonathan McDonald that was saved by Mexican goalkeeper Guillermo Ochoa, but the score remained 1\u20131 and triggered a penalty shoot-out. Jim\u00e9nez, the first kick-taker, had his shot stopped by Leonel Moreira, but a miss by Randall Leal kept the shootout even through five rounds; in the sixth round, Keysher Fuller's penalty was saved by Ochoa to give Mexico a 5\u20134 shoot-out victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 823]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287994-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Route to the final, Mexico\nMexico advanced to the semi-finals to play Group B winners Haiti, who had upset Canada with a 3\u20132 comeback victory in the quarter-finals. Martino was suspended from the match due to yellow card accumulation. The match was scoreless at the end of regulation time despite several chances for Mexico, including two saves for goalkeeper Johny Placide. Jim\u00e9nez was fouled in the penalty area and was awarded a penalty kick for Mexico, which he took and scored in the 93rd minute; Haiti were unable to equalize, missing a chance in the 119th minute that hit the crossbar, and Mexico advanced to the final with a 1\u20130 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287994-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Route to the final, United States\nThe United States, the primary host of the tournament, were the defending champions of the Gold Cup and the second most successful, with six titles in ten appearances in the final. They have a major rivalry with Mexico, who they met in five previous Gold Cup finals, winning only once. The U.S. qualified as another participant in the final round of World Cup qualification, where they missed the World Cup for the first time since 1986.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287994-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Route to the final, United States\nFollowing a year with an interim manager, Gregg Berhalter of the Columbus Crew was hired as the team's head coach in December 2018; in his first four matches as head coach, the U.S. were unbeaten while playing against opponents from Central and South America with experimental lineups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287994-0006-0002", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Route to the final, United States\nBerhalter's preliminary Gold Cup roster excluded several holdover veterans, including defenders DeAndre Yedlin and John Brooks, and goalkeeper Bill Hamid; in the final roster, released after two exhibition losses, he opted to exclude young striker Josh Sargent in favor of Tyler Boyd, who had not played for the U.S. after switching allegiances from New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287994-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Route to the final, United States\nThe Americans were placed in Group D, playing against Gold Cup debutants Guyana, Panama, who qualified for the World Cup ahead of the U.S., and Trinidad and Tobago, who had defeated the U.S. in the final game of qualification and prevented them from participating in the World Cup. The United States opened against Guyana at Allianz Field in Minnesota, winning 4\u20130 with a first-half goal by Paul Arriola, two from Tyler Boyd in his second match for the team, and another by Gyasi Zardes that was scored with a deflection off his eye.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287994-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Route to the final, United States\nThe Americans won 6\u20130 in their match against Trinidad and Tobago in Cleveland, clinching them a place in the quarter-finals with two goals each from Zardes and Aaron Long, and one each from Christian Pulisic and Paul Arriola. A fully rotated U.S. squad closed out the group by defeating Panama 1\u20130 in Kansas City to finish at the top of the standings; Jozy Altidore scored the lone goal of the match in the 66th minute with a bicycle kick after Panama failed to clear a corner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287994-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Route to the final, United States\nThe U.S. faced Caribbean side Cura\u00e7ao in the quarter-finals after the team had unexpectedly finished second in Group C on goal differential. The Americans took the lead in the 25th minute, with a header by Weston McKennie from 4 yards (3.7\u00a0m), and were held to a 1\u20130 win in Philadelphia. The semi-final fixture against Jamaica in Nashville, a rematch of the previous final, began with a goal for McKennie in the ninth minute to finish a long passing sequence, but the match was suspended in the 16th minute because of a lightning delay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287994-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Route to the final, United States\nIt was resumed 90 minutes later and Jamaica were initially dominant, but conceded a goal to the U.S. in the 52nd minute, with Christian Pulisic finishing a rebound from goalkeeper Andre Blake, who had parried away a shot from Jordan Morris. Shamar Nicholson scored with a header in the 69th minute to cut the lead down to a one-goal margin, but Pulisic got his second goal in the 87th minute from another rebound off Blake. The U.S. won 3\u20131 and advanced to their second consecutive final, having conceded only one goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287994-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Venue\nThe final was played at Soldier Field, an American football venue in Chicago, Illinois. The venue seats 61,500 spectators and is primarily used by the Chicago Bears of the National Football League, but had hosted the Chicago Fire of Major League Soccer in the past. Soldier Field hosted two previous Gold Cup finals in 2007 and 2013, the former featuring the United States and Mexico, as well as several matches at the 1994 FIFA World Cup, 1999 FIFA Women's World Cup, and the Copa Am\u00e9rica Centenario in 2016. CONCACAF announced its selection of Soldier Field as the venue for the final on September 27, 2018. The tickets for the match were sold out prior to the semi-finals and CONCACAF held special fan events at Union Station in the run-up to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287994-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Pre-match, Scheduling\nThe Gold Cup Final was staged on the same day as the FIFA Women's World Cup Final, which was played earlier in the day and involved the United States women's national team, and the Copa Am\u00e9rica final. The scheduling of the three events was criticized as an example of women's soccer being deprioritized by FIFA, who called it a \"rare and exciting occurrence\". CONCACAF president Victor Montagliani said that the scheduling of the Gold Cup final had been the result of a \"clerical error\" and that the conflict was not realized until it was too late to change. The timing of finals for both U.S. teams resulted in comparisons of their accolades, framed by an ongoing debate over a pay gap for the women's team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287994-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Match, Summary\nThe match began at 21:15 Central Time in front of a sold-out, pro-Mexican crowd of 62,493 at Soldier Field. Mexican midfielder Jonathan dos Santos made an attempt on goal in the first minute that was saved by Zack Steffen, but the majority of early chances fell to the United States. A run four minutes later into the six-yard box by Christian Pulisic resulted in a shot that was saved by goalkeeper Guillermo Ochoa, while an attempt by Jozy Altidore in the eighth minute was sent wide of the goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287994-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Match, Summary\nMexico gained control of midfield possession and produced another chance of its own in the 16th minute, with Rodolfo Pizarro sending a pass towards Mexico captain Andr\u00e9s Guardado in the penalty area that was cleared away by Paul Arriola. Arriola had his own chance to score in the 31st minute, beating several defenders to an overhead ball in the penalty area and shooting across from a tight angle that rolled wide past the goal. Just before the conclusion of the first half, a foul caused on Rodolfo Pizarro caused him to fall on his elbow in an apparent injury but returned for the second half, with his elbow wrapped.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287994-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Match, Summary\nEarly in the second half, Altidore was pushed and kneed in the back by Hector Moreno, resulting in a confrontation with U.S. captain Weston McKennie, who was grabbed by the neck by Andres Guardado; no cards were shown by referee Mario Escobar, who was in front of McKennie during the incident. Five minutes later, a header by Jordan Morris on a U.S. corner kick was saved off the goal line by Guardado, which sparked a change in momentum in Mexico's favor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287994-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Match, Summary\nU.S. coach Gregg Berhalter brought on Cristian Roldan and Gyasi Zardes to regain control and stymie the Mexican attack, but to no avail. Dos Santos scored the lone goal of the match in the 73rd minute, receiving a short backheel pass from Ra\u00fal Jim\u00e9nez and shooting from 16 yards (15\u00a0m) to beat Steffen. The U.S. missed several chances to equalize, including a sequence in the 88th minute in which Roldan shot off a rebound from Ochoa that was saved off the line by Guardado with his face.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287994-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Match, Details\nAssistant referees:William Arrieta (Costa Rica)Humberto Panjoj (Guatemala)Fourth official:Juan Gabriel Calder\u00f3n (Costa Rica)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287994-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Post-match\nMexico won its eighth Gold Cup championship, including four of the past six editions. The match marked the end of a ten-match Gold Cup winning streak for the United States that began in 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287995-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group A\nGroup A of the 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup took place from 15 to 23 June 2019. The group consisted of Canada, Cuba, Martinique, and Mexico. The top two teams, Mexico and Canada, advanced to the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287995-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group A, Matches, Canada vs Martinique\nAssistant referees:Walter L\u00f3pez (Honduras)Helpys Feliz (Dominican Republic)Fourth official:Jose Kellys (Panama)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287995-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group A, Matches, Mexico vs Cuba\nAssistant referees:Christian Ramirez (Honduras)Henri Pupiro (Nicaragua)Fourth official:Keylor Herrera (Costa Rica)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287995-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group A, Matches, Cuba vs Martinique\nAssistant referees:Taleb Al Marri (Qatar)Saoud Al Maqaleh (Qatar)Fourth official:Ismail Elfath (United States)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287995-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group A, Matches, Mexico vs Canada\nAssistant referees:William Arrieta (Costa Rica)Helpys Feliz (Dominican Republic)Fourth official:Randy Encarnacion (Dominican Republic)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287995-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group A, Matches, Canada vs Cuba\nAssistant referees:Frank Anderson (United States)Ian Anderson (United States)Fourth official:Jair Marrufo (United States)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287995-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group A, Matches, Martinique vs Mexico\nAssistant referees:Juan Francisco Zumba (El Salvador)David Mor\u00e1n (El Salvador)Fourth official:Jose Kellys (Panama)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287995-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group A, Discipline\nFair play points would have been used as tiebreakers if the overall and head-to-head records of teams were tied. These were calculated based on yellow and red cards received in all group matches as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287995-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group A, Discipline\nOnly one of the above deductions were applied to a player in a single match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287996-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group B\nGroup B of the 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup took place from 16 to 24 June 2019. The group consisted of Bermuda, co-hosts Costa Rica, Haiti, and Nicaragua. The top two teams, Haiti and Costa Rica, advanced to the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287996-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group B, Matches, Haiti vs Bermuda\nAssistant referees:Kedlee Powell (Cayman Islands)Zachari Zeegelaar (Suriname)Fourth official:Ismael Cornejo (El Salvador)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287996-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group B, Matches, Costa Rica vs Nicaragua\nAssistant referees:Miguel Hern\u00e1ndez (Mexico)Caleb Wales (Trinidad and Tobago)Fourth official:Diego Montano (Mexico)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287996-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group B, Matches, Nicaragua vs Haiti\nAssistant referees:Humberto Panjoj (Guatemala)Zachari Zeegelaar (Suriname)Fourth official:Armando Villareal (United States)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287996-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group B, Matches, Costa Rica vs Bermuda\nAssistant referees:Christian Ram\u00edrez (Honduras)Kyle Atkins (United States)Fourth official:Oliver Vergara (Panama)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287996-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group B, Matches, Bermuda vs Nicaragua\nAssistant referees:Micheal Barwegen (Canada)Zachari Zeegelaar (Suriname)Fourth official:Jose Torres (Puerto Rico)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287996-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group B, Matches, Haiti vs Costa Rica\nAssistant referees:Corey Parker (United States)Kyle Atkins (United States)Fourth official:Oshane Nation (Jamaica)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287996-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group B, Discipline\nFair play points would have been used as tiebreakers if the overall and head-to-head records of teams were tied. These were calculated based on yellow and red cards received in all group matches as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287996-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group B, Discipline\nOnly one of the above deductions were applied to a player in a single match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287997-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group C\nGroup C of the 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup took place from 17 to 25 June 2019. The group consisted of Cura\u00e7ao, El Salvador, Honduras, and co-hosts Jamaica. The top two teams, Jamaica and Cura\u00e7ao, advanced to the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287997-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group C, Matches, Cura\u00e7ao vs El Salvador\nAssistant referees:Gerson L\u00f3pez (Guatemala)Juan Carlos Mora (Costa Rica)Fourth official:Reon Radix (Grenada)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287997-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group C, Matches, Jamaica vs Honduras\nAssistant referees:Frank Anderson (United States)Ian Anderson (United States)Fourth official:Jos\u00e9 Torres (Puerto Rico)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287997-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group C, Matches, Honduras vs Cura\u00e7ao\nAssistant referees:Juan Carlos Mora (Costa Rica)Corey Parker (United States)Fourth official:Keylor Herrera (Costa Rica)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287997-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group C, Matches, Jamaica vs Cura\u00e7ao\nAssistant referees:Juan Mora (Costa Rica)Corey Parker (United States)Fourth official:Keylor Herrera (Costa Rica)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287997-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group C, Discipline\nFair play points would have been used as tiebreakers if the overall and head-to-head records of teams were tied. These were calculated based on yellow and red cards received in all group matches as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287997-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group C, Discipline\nOnly one of the above deductions were applied to a player in a single match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287998-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group D\nGroup D of the 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup took place from 18 to 26 June 2019. The group consisted of Guyana, Panama, Trinidad and Tobago, and was co-hosted by the United States, the defending champions of the competition. The top two teams, the United States and Panama, advanced to the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287998-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group D, Matches, United States vs Guyana\nAssistant referees:Juan Francisco Zumba (El Salvador)David Mor\u00e1n (El Salvador)Fourth official:Oshane Nation (Jamaica)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287998-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group D, Matches, Guyana vs Panama\nAssistant referees:Nicholas Anderson (Jamaica)Kedlee Powell (Cayman Islands)Fourth official:Marco Ort\u00edz (Mexico)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287998-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group D, Matches, United States vs Trinidad and Tobago\nAssistant referees:Walter L\u00f3pez (Honduras)Helpys Feliz (Dominican Republic)Fourth official:Ismael Cornejo (El Salvador)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287998-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group D, Matches, Trinidad and Tobago vs Guyana\nAssistant referees:Juan Mora (Costa Rica)William Arrieta (Costa Rica)Fourth official:Walter Lopez (Guatemala)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 70], "content_span": [71, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287998-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group D, Matches, Panama vs United States\nAssistant referees:Taleb Al Marri (Qatar)Saoud Al Maqaleh (Qatar)Fourth official:Reon Radix (Grenada)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287998-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group D, Discipline\nFair play points would have been used as tiebreakers if the overall and head-to-head records of teams were tied. These were calculated based on yellow and red cards received in all group matches as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287998-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group D, Discipline\nOnly one of the above deductions were applied to a player in a single match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287999-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup knockout stage\nThe knockout stage of the 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup began on 29 June with the quarter-finals and ended on 7 July 2019 with the final at Soldier Field in Chicago.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287999-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup knockout stage\nAll match times listed are EDT (UTC\u22124), as listed by CONCACAF. If the venue is located in a different time zone, the local time is also given.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287999-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup knockout stage, Format\nIn the knockout stage, if a match was level at the end of 90 minutes of normal playing time, extra time was played (two periods of 15 minutes each), where each team was allowed to make a fourth substitution. If still tied after extra time, the match was decided by a penalty shoot-out to determine the winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287999-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup knockout stage, Qualified teams\nThe top two placed teams from each of the four groups qualified for the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287999-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup knockout stage, Quarter-finals, Haiti vs Canada\nAssistant referees:Frank Anderson (United States)Corey Parker (United States)Fourth official:Ismail Elfath (United States)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 70], "content_span": [71, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287999-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup knockout stage, Quarter-finals, Jamaica vs Panama\nAssistant referees:Gerson L\u00f3pez (Guatemala)Humberto Panjoj (Guatemala)Fourth official:Juan Gabriel Calder\u00f3n (Costa Rica)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 72], "content_span": [73, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287999-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup knockout stage, Semi-finals, Haiti vs Mexico\nAssistant referees:Taleb Al Marri (Qatar)Saoud Al Maqaleh (Qatar)Fourth official:Henry Bejarano (Costa Rica)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 67], "content_span": [68, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287999-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup knockout stage, Semi-finals, Jamaica vs United States\nAt 19:56 Central Time, in the 16th minute, the match was interrupted due to severe weather. The match resumed 88 minutes later at 22:24.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287999-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup knockout stage, Semi-finals, Jamaica vs United States\nAssistant referees:Juan Francisco Zumba (El Salvador)David Mor\u00e1n (El Salvador)Fourth official:Said Mart\u00ednez (Honduras)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00287999-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup knockout stage, Final\nAssistant referees:William Arrieta (Costa Rica)Humberto Panjoj (Guatemala)Fourth official:Juan Gabriel Calder\u00f3n (Costa Rica)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288000-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup squads\nThe sixteen national teams involved in the 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup were required to register a squad of 23 players; only players in these squads were eligible to take part in the tournament. CONCACAF published all provisional lists on 20 May. The final list of 23 players per national team was submitted to CONCACAF by June 2019. Three players per national team had to be goalkeepers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288000-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup squads\nThe statistics in the tables below represent player profiles as of the beginning of the tournament. See individual player articles for current statistics. The club listed is the club for which the player last played a competitive match prior to the tournament. The nationality for each club reflects the national association (not the league) to which the club is affiliated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288000-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup squads, Group A, Mexico\nThe 29-man provisional squad was announced on 14 May 2019. On 26 May and 27 May, defender Miguel Lay\u00fan and forward Hirving Lozano were ruled out for medical reasons, therefore, provisional squad was reduced to 27 players. The 23-man final squad was announced on 5 June 2019. On 14 June 2019, Uriel Antuna replaced the injured Jorge S\u00e1nchez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288000-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup squads, Group A, Canada\nThe 40-man provisional squad was announced on 20 May 2019. The 23-man final squad was announced on 30 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288000-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup squads, Group A, Martinique\nThe preliminary squad was announced on 28 May 2019, Gregory Eneleda replaced to Wesley Jobello. The final squad was announced on 7 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288000-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup squads, Group A, Cuba\nThe final squad was announced on 7 June 2019. Yordan Santa Cruz did not travel, but remained in the official list. Yasmany L\u00f3pez defected following Cuba's opening match. Daniel Luis, Reynaldo Perez, Luismel Morris defected after second game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288000-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup squads, Group B, Costa Rica\nThe 40-man provisional squad was announced on 20 May 2019. The 23-man final squad was announced on 5 June 2019. The squad was reduced to 22 players after Jimmy Mar\u00edn left the team without permission in order to sign with Hapoel Be'er Sheva, but remained in the official list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288000-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup squads, Group B, Haiti\nThe 40-man provisional squad was announced on 16 May 2019. The 23-man final squad was announced on 23 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288000-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup squads, Group B, Nicaragua\nThe 40-man provisional squad was announced on 20 May 2019. The 23-man final squad was announced on 3 June 2019. Marlon Lopez, Carlos Montenegro, Carlos Chavarria expelled from the team after first mach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288000-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup squads, Group C, Honduras\nThe 40-man provisional squad was announced on 20 May 2019. The 23-man final squad was announced on 6 June 2019. On 10 June, defender Andy Najar withdrew injured and was replaced by Jos\u00e9 Reyes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288000-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup squads, Group C, El Salvador\nThe 39-man provisional squad was announced on 20 May 2019. The 23-man final squad was announced on 28 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288000-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup squads, Group C, Cura\u00e7ao\nThe final squad was announced on 7 June 2019. Kenji Gorr\u00e9 replaced Gervane Kastaneer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288000-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup squads, Group D, United States\nThe 40-man provisional squad was announced on 20 May 2019. The final 23-man squad was announced on 5 June. On 11 June, the injured Tyler Adams was replaced by Reggie Cannon. On 15 June, the injured Duane Holmes was replaced by Djordje Mihailovic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288000-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup squads, Group D, Panama\nThe 40-man provisional squad was announced on 20 May 2019. The 23-man final squad was announced on 4 June 2019. Ernesto Walker later replaced An\u00edbal Godoy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288000-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup squads, Group D, Trinidad and Tobago\nThe 40-man provisional squad was announced on 20 May 2019. The 23-man final squad was announced on 5 June 2019. Aubrey David remplaced to Leland Archer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288000-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup squads, Group D, Guyana\nThe 40-man provisional squad was announced on 20 May 2019. The final squad was announced on 30 May 2019. On 13 June, the injured Warren Creavalle was replaced by Brandon Beresford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288000-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup squads, Statistics, Age\nAll ages are set to 15 June 2019, the opening day of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288000-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup squads, Statistics, Player representation, By club\nClubs are ordered alphabetically: first by country, then by club name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League\nThe 2019 CONCACAF League (officially the 2019 Scotiabank CONCACAF League for sponsorship purposes) was the third edition of the CONCACAF League, a football club competition organized by CONCACAF, the regional governing body of North America, Central America, and the Caribbean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League\nThe tournament was expanded from 16 to 22 teams for the 2019 edition, with the addition of a preliminary round. The six new entrants were five teams from Central America, which had previously directly qualified for the CONCACAF Champions League, and a team from Canada playing in the Canadian Premier League, bringing the total number of teams playing in the CONCACAF League/Champions League from 31 to 32. Moreover, a total of six teams now qualified from the CONCACAF League to the CONCACAF Champions League, meaning that the winners of the 2019 CONCACAF League and the next best five teams qualified for the 2020 CONCACAF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League\nSaprissa defeated Motagua in the final to win their first CONCACAF League. Herediano were the title holders, but were eliminated by Waterhouse in the Round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Qualification\nA total of 22 teams participated in the CONCACAF League:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Qualification\nTherefore, teams from either 10 or 11 out of the 41 CONCACAF member associations could participate in the CONCACAF League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Qualification, North America\nThe one berth for the North American Zone (NAFU) was allocated to the Canadian Soccer Association through the Canadian Premier League. As the inaugural 2019 Canadian Premier League season was not scheduled to finish by the start of the 2019 CONCACAF League, the Canadian CONCACAF League berth for this season was decided by the winners of the home and away matches in the Canadian Premier League spring season between FC Edmonton, Forge FC, and Valour FC, the three \"inaugural teams\" of the Canadian Premier League. They were the second Canadian representative included in CONCACAF competitions, besides the Canadian Championship champions which qualified for the CONCACAF Champions League. In future seasons, the previous year's Canadian Premier League champions would qualify for the CONCACAF League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 853]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Qualification, Central America\nThe 18 berths for the Central American Football Union (UNCAF), which consisted of seven member associations, were allocated as follows: three berths for each of Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Panama, two berths for Nicaragua, and one berth for Belize.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 52], "content_span": [53, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Qualification, Central America\nAll of the leagues of Central America employed a split season with two tournaments in one season, so the following teams qualified for the CONCACAF League:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 52], "content_span": [53, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Qualification, Central America\nIf teams from any Central American associations were excluded, they were replaced by teams from other Central American associations, with the associations chosen based on results from previous CONCACAF League and CONCACAF Champions League tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 52], "content_span": [53, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Qualification, Caribbean\nThe three berths for the Caribbean Football Union (CFU), which consisted of 31 member associations, were allocated via the CONCACAF Caribbean Club Championship and CONCACAF Caribbean Club Shield, the first-tier and second-tier subcontinental Caribbean club tournaments. Since 2018, the CONCACAF Caribbean Club Championship was open to teams from professional leagues, where they could qualify as champions or runners-up of their respective association's league in the previous season, while the CONCACAF Caribbean Club Shield was open to teams from non-professional leagues, where they could qualify as champions of their respective association's league in the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Qualification, Caribbean\nBesides the champions of the CONCACAF Caribbean Club Championship which qualified for the CONCACAF Champions League, the runners-up and third-placed team of the CONCACAF Caribbean Club Championship, and the winners of a playoff between the fourth-placed team of the CONCACAF Caribbean Club Championship and the champions of the CONCACAF Caribbean Club Shield, qualified for the CONCACAF League. For the champions of the CONCACAF Caribbean Club Shield to be eligible for the playoff, they had to comply with the minimum CONCACAF Club Licensing requirements for the CONCACAF League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Teams\nThe following 22 teams (from eleven associations) qualify for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Draw\nThe draw for the 2019 CONCACAF League was held on 30 May 2019, at 20:00 Eastern Time (18:00 local time), at the Grand Tikal Futura Hotel in Guatemala City, Guatemala.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 26], "content_span": [27, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Draw\nThe draw determined each tie in the preliminary round (numbered 1 through 6) between a team from Pot 1 and a team from Pot 2, each containing six teams. The \"Bracket Position Pots\" (Pot A and Pot B) contained the bracket positions numbered 1 through 6 corresponding to each tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 26], "content_span": [27, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Draw\nThe teams from Pot 1 were assigned a bracket position from Pot A and the teams from Pot 2 were assigned a bracket position from Pot B. Teams from the same association could not be drawn against each other in the preliminary round except for \"wildcard\" teams which replaced a team from another association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 26], "content_span": [27, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Draw\nThe draw also determined each tie in the round of 16 (numbered 1 through 8) between a team from Pot 3 and a team from Pot 4, each containing eight teams, with the six preliminary round winners, whose identity was not known at the time of the draw, in Pot 4. The \"Bracket Position Pots\" (Pot A and Pot B) contained the bracket positions numbered 1 through 8 corresponding to each tie. The teams from Pot 3 were assigned a bracket position from Pot A and the teams from Pot 4 were assigned a bracket position from Pot B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 26], "content_span": [27, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Draw\nThe seeding of teams was based on the CONCACAF Club Index. The CONCACAF Club Index, instead of ranking each team, was based on the on-field performance of the teams that had occupied the respective qualifying slots in the previous five editions of the CONCACAF League and CONCACAF Champions League. To determine the total points awarded to a slot in any single edition of the CONCACAF League or CONCACAF Champions League, CONCACAF used the following formula:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 26], "content_span": [27, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Draw\nTeams qualified for the CONCACAF League based on criteria set by their association (e.g., tournament champions, runners-up, cup champions), resulting in an assigned slot (e.g., CRC1, CRC2) for each team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 26], "content_span": [27, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Draw\nThe 22 teams were distributed in the pots as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 26], "content_span": [27, 80]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Format\nIn the CONCACAF League, the 22 teams played a single-elimination tournament. Each tie was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Schedule\nTimes are Eastern Time, as listed by CONCACAF (local times are in parentheses):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Preliminary round\nIn the preliminary round, the matchups were decided by draw: PR-1 through PR-6. The teams from Pot 1 in the draw hosted the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Preliminary round, Summary\nThe first legs were played on 30 July \u2013 1 August, and the second legs were played on 6\u20138 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 48], "content_span": [49, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Round of 16\nIn the round of 16, the matchups were decided by draw: R16-1 through R16-8. The teams from Pot 3 in the draw hosted the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Round of 16, Summary\nThe first legs were played on 20\u201322 August, and the second legs were played on 27\u201329 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Quarter-finals\nThe winners of round of 16 matchups 1, 3, 5, 7 hosted the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Quarter-finals, Summary\nThe first legs were played on 24\u201326 September, and the second legs were played on 1\u20133 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Semi-finals\nThe semi-finalists in each tie which had the better performance in previous rounds (excluding preliminary round) hosted the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Semi-finals, Summary\nThe first legs were played on 24 October, and the second legs were played on 31 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Final\nIn the final (Winner SF1 vs. Winner SF2), the finalists which had the better performance in previous rounds (excluding preliminary round) hosted the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Final, Summary\nThe first leg was played on 7 November, and the second leg was played on 26 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Qualification to CONCACAF Champions League\nStarting from the round of 16, teams were ranked based on their results (excluding preliminary round) using the following criteria (Regulations II, Article I):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Qualification to CONCACAF Champions League\nBased on the ranking, the top six teams, i.e., champions, runners-up, both losing semi-finalists, and best two losing quarter-finalists, qualified for the 2020 CONCACAF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288001-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League, Awards\nThe following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288002-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League Final\nThe 2019 CONCACAF League Final was the final round of the 2019 CONCACAF League, the third edition of the CONCACAF League, the secondary club football tournament organised by CONCACAF, the regional governing body of North America, Central America, and the Caribbean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288002-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League Final\nThe final was contested in two-legged home-and-away format between Saprissa from Costa Rica and Motagua from Honduras. The first leg was hosted by Saprissa at the Estadio Ricardo Saprissa Aym\u00e1 in Tib\u00e1s on 7 November 2019, while the second leg was hosted by Motagua at the Estadio Tiburcio Car\u00edas Andino in Tegucigalpa on 26 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288002-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League Final\nSaprissa won the final 1\u20130 on aggregate for their first CONCACAF League title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288002-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League Final, Teams\nFor the third consecutive season, the final of the CONCACAF League was competed between teams from Costa Rica and Honduras.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288002-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League Final, Road to the final\nNote: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first (H: home; A: away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288002-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League Final, Format\nThe final was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis, with the team with the better performance in previous rounds (excluding preliminary round) hosting the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288002-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League Final, Format\nThe away goals rule would not be applied, and extra time would be played if the aggregate score was tied after the second leg. If the aggregate score was still tied after extra time, the penalty shoot-out would be used to determine the winner (Regulations II, Article G).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288002-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF League Final, Matches, First leg\nAssistant referees:Ojay Duhaney (Jamaica)Caleb Wales (Trinidad\u00a0and\u00a0Tobago)Fourth official:Reon Radix (Grenada)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288003-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF U-17 Championship\nThe 2019 CONCACAF U-17 Championship was the 6th edition of the CONCACAF Under-17 Championship (19th edition if all eras included), the men's under-17 international football tournament organized by CONCACAF. It was hosted in the United States between 1 May and 16 May 2019. The top four teams qualified for the 2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup in Brazil as CONCACAF representatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288003-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF U-17 Championship\nMexico were the defending champions, and successfully won a fourth consecutive title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288003-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF U-17 Championship, Qualified teams\nThe format for qualification had changed since the 2017 edition. The qualifying competition no longer featured Caribbean and Central American zones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288003-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF U-17 Championship, Qualified teams\nThe 41 CONCACAF teams were ranked based on the CONCACAF Men\u2019s Under-17 Ranking as of May 2017. A total of 35 teams entered the tournament. The sixteen highest-ranked entrants were exempt from qualifying and advanced directly to the group stage of the final tournament, while the lowest-ranked nineteen entrants had to participate in qualifying, where the four group winners advanced to the round of 16 of the knockout stage of the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288003-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF U-17 Championship, Venues\nMatches were played at the IMG Academy in Bradenton, Florida:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288003-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF U-17 Championship, Draw\nThe draw for the group stage took place on 19 February 2019, 11:00 EST (UTC\u22125), at the CONCACAF Headquarters in Miami. The sixteen teams were drawn into four groups of four teams. Based on the CONCACAF Men's Under-17 Ranking, the top four ranked teams were seeded into position one of each group, while the remaining twelve teams were distributed in the other pots, as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288003-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF U-17 Championship, Squads\nPlayers born on or after 1 January 2002 were eligible to compete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288003-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF U-17 Championship, Group stage\nThe top three teams in each group advanced to the round of 16, where they were joined by the four teams advancing from the qualifying round. The teams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, tiebreakers were applied in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288003-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF U-17 Championship, Knockout stage, Quarter-finals\nThe four quarter-final winners qualified for the 2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288003-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF U-17 Championship, Awards\nThe following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288003-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF U-17 Championship, Goalscorers\nThere were 152 goals scored in 39 matches, for an average of 3.9 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288003-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF U-17 Championship, Qualified teams for FIFA U-17 World Cup\nThe following four teams from CONCACAF qualified for the 2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 72], "content_span": [73, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288004-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF U-17 Championship qualifying\nThe qualifiers of the 2019 CONCACAF U-17 Championship took place between 16\u201325 March and 1\u20137 April 2019. All matches were played at the IMG Academy campus in Bradenton, Florida, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288004-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF U-17 Championship qualifying, Teams\nThe 41 CONCACAF teams were ranked based on the CONCACAF Men\u2019s Under-17 Ranking as of May 2017. A total of 35 teams entered the tournament. The highest-ranked 16 entrants were exempt from qualifying and advanced directly to the group stage of the final tournament, while the lowest-ranked 19 entrants had to participate in qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288004-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF U-17 Championship qualifying, Draw\nThe draw for the qualifying round took place on 19 February 2019, 11:00 EST (UTC\u22125), at the CONCACAF Headquarters in Miami. The 19 teams were drawn into four groups: three groups of five teams and one group of four teams. Based on the CONCACAF Men's Under-17 Ranking, the top four ranked teams were seeded into position one of each group, while the remaining 15 teams were distributed in the other pots, as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 48], "content_span": [49, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288004-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF U-17 Championship qualifying, Qualifying round\nThe winners of each group qualify for the 2019 CONCACAF U-17 Championship, where they enter the round of 16 of the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 60], "content_span": [61, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288004-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF U-17 Championship qualifying, Goalscorers\nThere were 107 goals scored in 32 matches, for an average of 3.34 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 55], "content_span": [56, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288005-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CONCACAF U-17 Championship squads\nThis is a squad list for the 2019 CONCACAF U-17 Championship, the continental association football tournament for players under the age of 17. Each national team was allowed to choose twenty players to represent their country in the tournament. All players born on or after 1 January 2002 were eligible to play the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288006-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CONIFA European Football Cup\nThe 2019 Sportsbet.io CONIFA European Football Cup was the third edition of the CONIFA European Football Cup, an international football tournament for states, minorities, stateless peoples and regions unaffiliated with FIFA with an affiliation to Europe, organised by CONIFA. It was hosted by Artsakh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288006-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CONIFA European Football Cup\nThe goal of the tournament was scored by S\u00e1pmi player Kristoffer Edvardsen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288006-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CONIFA European Football Cup, Tournament\nOn August 19, 2018, CONIFA announced that Artsakh would host the 2019 edition of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288006-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CONIFA European Football Cup, Tournament\nThe Artsakh postal authorities issued in June 4, 2019 a commemorative stamp for this occasion, which depicts as well the flags of participant teams in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288006-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CONIFA European Football Cup, Tournament, Venues\nThe tournament was held in 4 cities: Stepanakert (the capital), Askeran, Martakert and Martuni.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288006-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CONIFA European Football Cup, Participants\nA total of twelve teams were scheduled to participate, with their seedings below. The seeded teams are Padania (winners of the 2017 CONIFA European Football Cup) and Artsakh, as the hosts of the 2019 European Football Cup. Abkhazia and Sz\u00e9kely Land were also drawn as top seeds in Pot 1, based on their CONIFA rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288006-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 CONIFA European Football Cup, Participants\nSardinia entered in 2018 in CONIFA and it was drawn in one of the groups. However, in May 2019, it withdrew from the competition. The reserve team, in case one of the below teams withdraws, was granted to Kernow, but after County of Nice, Donetsk PR and Luhansk PR all withdrew, CONIFA opted to proceed with just 8 teams in 2 groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288006-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 CONIFA European Football Cup, Final positions\nPlayer of the tournament: Batradz GurtsievYoung player of the tournament: Kristoffer Edvardsen", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288007-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CONIFA European Football Cup squads\nBelow are the squads for the 2019 CONIFA European Football Cup, held in Abkhazia from 2-9 June 2019. Although the tournament was originally scheduled to include 12 teams, withdrawals from Sardinia, County of Nice, Luhansk PR and Donetsk PR led to the tournament being reduced to 8 teams. Squads were published on the eve of the tournament in late May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288008-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 COSAFA Cup\nThe 2019 COSAFA Cup was the 19th 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).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288008-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 COSAFA Cup\nThe tournament was originally to be hosted in Zimbabwe but they withdrew in February 2019. In April 2019, Durban of South Africa was announced as the host city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288008-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 COSAFA Cup, Group stage, Tiebreakers\nThe ranking of each team in each group was determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 41], "content_span": [42, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288009-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 COSAFA U-17 Women's Championship\n2019 COSAFA Women's U17 Championship was the first edition of COSAFA U-17 Women's Championship and took place on September 20th\u201329th 2019, in Mauritius. Guest nation Uganda become champions after winning 2-1 in the final to South Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288009-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 COSAFA U-17 Women's Championship, Participants\nAll the 14 COSAFA nations U17 teams along with R\u00e9union were eligible for the tournament, and 7 took part. For this tournament CECAFA member Uganda was also invited.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 51], "content_span": [52, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288009-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 COSAFA U-17 Women's Championship, Group stage\nThe teams were drawn into two groups of four out of which two advanced to the semi-finals from each group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 50], "content_span": [51, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288010-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 COSAFA U-20 Cup\nThe 2019 COSAFA U-20 Cup was the 26th edition of the COSAFA U-20 Challenge Cup, an international youth competition open to national associations of the COSAFA region. It took place between 4 December and 14 December in Zambia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288010-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 COSAFA U-20 Cup\nThe competition was open to players born on or before 1 January 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288011-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 COSAFA U-20 Women's Championship\nThe 2019 COSAFA U-20 Women's Championship was the first edition of the COSAFA U-20 Women's Championship, an international football tournament, for national women's under-20 teams organized by COSAFA. The tournament was played between August 1-11 in Nelson Mandela Bay, South Africa. Invited from CECAFA, Tanzania became champions after winning 2-1 over Zambia in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288011-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 COSAFA U-20 Women's Championship, Participants\nSeven of the 14 nations in COSAFA was represented in this tournament, along with the invited CECAFA nation Tanzania. There was a late change in the line-up when Mozambique took Malawi's spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 51], "content_span": [52, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288011-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 COSAFA U-20 Women's Championship, Group stage\nThe 8 teams were on the 3rd of July, drawn into 2 groups and, played against each other once in a round-robin. The top two teams advanced to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 50], "content_span": [51, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288012-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 COSAFA Under-17 Championship\nThe 2019 COSAFA Under-17 Championship is the 8th edition of the COSAFA U-17 Championship, an association football tournament organised by the Council of Southern Africa Football Associations (COSAFA) involving teams from Southern Africa for players aged 17 and below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288012-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 COSAFA Under-17 Championship, Venues\nThe tournament was played in Blantyre\u00a0: Mpira Stadium and Kamuzu Stadium", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288013-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 COSAFA Women's Championship\nThe 2019 COSAFA Women's Championship is the seventh edition of the COSAFA Women's Championship, an women's international football tournament for national teams organised by COSAFA, teams from Southern Africa. It takes place from 31 July to 11 August in the Nelson Mandela Bay Metropolitan Municipality, South Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288013-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 COSAFA Women's Championship, Participants\nTwelve of the fourteen COSAFA member took take part in the competition with Comoros entering the competition for the first time. Also rejoining the competition would be Eswatini who didn't compete in last year's tournament. The draw was held on 3 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288013-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 COSAFA Women's Championship, Group stage\nThe group stage is composed of three groups of four teams each. Group winners and the best runner-up amongst all groups advance to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288013-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 COSAFA Women's Championship, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 117 goals scored in 22 matches, for an average of 5.32 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288014-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 COTIF Tournament\nThe 2019 L'Alc\u00fadia International Football Tournament is a football competition which took place in July and August 2019. The 2019 edition was the fourth to feature only international youth teams. Previous editions have contained a mix of national selections and club selections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288015-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CPL\u2013U Sports Draft\nThe 2019 CPL\u2013U Sports Draft was the second annual CPL\u2013U Sports Draft. It was held on November 11, 2019 in Montreal, Quebec. Seven Canadian Premier League (CPL) teams selected 14 eligible U Sports athletes in total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288015-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CPL\u2013U Sports Draft, Format\nEach CPL team will make two selection in the U Sports Draft. Players can be selected if they have years of U Sports eligibility remaining and have declared for the draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288015-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CPL\u2013U Sports Draft, Format\nFor the non-finalist teams, the CPL combined standings were used to determine the order for the first round, with last-placed HFX Wanderers FC selecting first. Finals runner-up Cavalry FC selected sixth, while champions Forge FC selected seventh. A \"snake draft\" was used, with the order reversing in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288016-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CRO Race\nThe 2019 CRO Race is a road cycling stage race that took place in Croatia between 1 and 6 October 2019. It is the fifth edition of the race through Croatia organized by Top Sport Event company, but first under new name and logo. The race is rated as a 2.1 event as part of the 2019 UCI Europe Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288016-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CRO Race, Teams\nEighteen teams were invited to start the race. These included four UCI WorldTeams, five UCI Professional Continental teams and nine UCI Continental teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 20], "content_span": [21, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288017-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CS Asian Open Figure Skating Trophy\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Shubhamghodke3904 (talk | contribs) at 17:35, 10 January 2020 (\u2192\u200eChanges to preliminary assignments). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288017-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CS Asian Open Figure Skating Trophy\nThe 2019 CS Asian Open Figure Skating Trophy was held in November 2019 in Dongguan, China. It was part of the 2019\u201320 ISU Challenger Series. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, and ice dance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288017-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CS Asian Open Figure Skating Trophy\nThe International Skating Union announced on July 22, 2019 that the Asian Open Figure Skating Trophy would replace the canceled Asian Open Figure Skating Classic on the same dates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288017-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CS Asian Open Figure Skating Trophy, Entries\nThe International Skating Union published the full list of entries on October 3, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288018-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CS Autumn Classic International\nThe 2019 CS Autumn Classic International was held in September 2019 in Oakville, Ontario. It was part of the 2019\u201320 ISU Challenger Series. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, and ice dance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288018-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CS Autumn Classic International, Entries\nThe International Skating Union published the list of entries on August 13, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288019-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CS Finlandia Trophy\nThe 2019 CS Finlandia Trophy was held in October 2019 in Espoo. It was part of the 2019\u201320 ISU Challenger Series. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288019-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CS Finlandia Trophy, Entries\nThe International Skating Union published the list on entries on September 19, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288020-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CS Golden Spin of Zagreb\nThe 2019 CS Golden Spin of Zagreb was held in December 2019 in Zagreb, Croatia. It was part of the 2019\u201320 ISU Challenger Series. Medals were awarded 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, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288020-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CS Golden Spin of Zagreb, Entries\nThe International Skating Union published the list of entries on November 12, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288021-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CS Ice Star\nThe 2019 CS Ice Star was held in October 2019 in Minsk, Belarus. It was part of the 2019\u201320 ISU Challenger Series. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, and ice dance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288021-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CS Ice Star, Entries\nThe International Skating Union published the list of entries on September 24, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288022-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CS Lombardia Trophy\nThe 2019 CS Lombardia Trophy was held in September 2019 in Bergamo, Italy. It was part of the 2019\u201320 ISU Challenger Series. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, and ice dance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288022-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CS Lombardia Trophy, Entries\nThe International Skating Union published the list of entries on August 19, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288023-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CS Nebelhorn Trophy\nThe 2019 CS Nebelhorn Trophy was held in September 2019 in Oberstdorf, Germany. It was part of the 2019\u201320 ISU Challenger Series. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288023-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CS Nebelhorn Trophy, Entries\nThe International Skating Union published the list of entries on August 27, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288024-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CS Ondrej Nepela Memorial\nThe 2019 CS Nepela Memorial, formerly known as the Ondrej Nepela Trophy, was held in September 2019 at the Ondrej Nepela Arena. It was part of the 2019\u201320 ISU Challenger Series. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, and ice dance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288024-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CS Ondrej Nepela Memorial, Entries\nThe International Skating Union published the list of entries on August 27, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288024-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CS Ondrej Nepela Memorial, Records\nThe following new ISU best scores were set during this competition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288025-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CS U.S. International Figure Skating Classic\nThe 2019 CS U.S. International Figure Skating Classic was held in September 2019 in Salt Lake City, Utah. It was part of the 2019\u201320 ISU Challenger Series. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288025-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CS U.S. International Figure Skating Classic, Entries\nThe International Skating Union published the list of entries on August 20, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 58], "content_span": [59, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288026-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CS Warsaw Cup\nThe 2019 CS Warsaw Cup was held in November 2019 in Warsaw, Poland. It was part of the 2019\u201320 ISU Challenger Series. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288026-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CS Warsaw Cup, Entries\nThe International Skating Union published the full list of entries on October 14, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288027-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CSIO Gij\u00f3n\nThe 2019 CSIO Gij\u00f3n was the 2019 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-00288027-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CSIO Gij\u00f3n\nThis edition of the CSIO Gij\u00f3n was held between 28 August and 1 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288027-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CSIO Gij\u00f3n, Nations Cup\nThe Cup was a show jumping competition with two rounds, held on 30 August. The height of the fences were up to 1.60 meters. The best eight teams of the twelve which participated were allowed to start in the second round. The competition was endowed with \u20ac73,500.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288027-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CSIO Gij\u00f3n, Nations Cup\nItaly won their first Nations Cup at Gij\u00f3n ever, after a perfect second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288027-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CSIO Gij\u00f3n, Gij\u00f3n Grand Prix\nThe Gij\u00f3n Grand Prix, the Show jumping Grand Prix of the 2019 CSIO Gij\u00f3n, was the major show jumping competition at this event. The sponsor of this competition was Funeraria Gijonesa. It was held on Sunday, 2 September 2019. 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-00288027-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CSIO Gij\u00f3n, Gij\u00f3n Grand Prix\nIt was endowed with 147,000 \u20ac. Greg Broderick won the trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288028-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CTECH Manufacturing 180\nThe 2019 CTECH Manufacturing 180 is a NASCAR Xfinity Series race held on August 24, 2019, at Road America in Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin. Contested over 45 laps on the 4.048-mile (6.515 km) road course, it was the 23rd race of the 2019 NASCAR Xfinity Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288028-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CTECH Manufacturing 180, Background, Track\nRoad America is a motorsport road course located near Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin on Wisconsin Highway 67. It has hosted races since the 1950s and currently hosts races in the NASCAR Xfinity Series, NTT Indycar Series, NTTWeatherTech SportsCar Championship, SCCA Pirelli World Challenge, ASRA, AMA Superbike series, IndyCar Series, and SCCA Pro Racing's Trans-Am Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288028-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CTECH Manufacturing 180, Practice, First practice\nChristopher Bell was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 134.239 seconds and a speed of 108.559\u00a0mph (174.709\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288028-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CTECH Manufacturing 180, Practice, Final practice\nChristopher Bell was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 134.235 seconds and a speed of 108.562\u00a0mph (174.714\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288028-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CTECH Manufacturing 180, Qualifying\nA. J. Allmendinger scored the pole for the race with a time of 132.731 seconds and a speed of 109.792\u00a0mph (176.693\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288028-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CTECH Manufacturing 180, Race, Summary\nA. J. Allmendinger started on pole and remained in the lead until Stage 1, where he won the stage. Justin Allgaier had locked up the brakes in turn 1 in the gravel, but kept his car away from the tire barrier. The team had to make lengthy repairs to the vehicle. Cole Custer's car took some damage after he mowed down some banners, and Chase Briscoe took the stage 2 win when the leaders pitted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288028-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 CTECH Manufacturing 180, Race, Summary\nBrandon Jones, who had to start the race at the rear in a backup car, blew a tire and damaged his right front. With 2 laps left, Gray Gaulding lost his brakes and spun out of control in the gravel. His rear-end got damaged, but track officials towed him out and his team made repairs to return to the race. Matt DiBenedetto (who led the most laps) lost control on the final turn while running second and ultimately finished one lap down. Christopher Bell (who struggled with handling issues during Stage 1) took the lead and managed to hold off Austin Cindric (who weaved his way through from 20th to second) to win the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288029-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CWL Pro League\nThe 2019 CWL Pro League was the Call of Duty: Black Ops 4 league on PlayStation 4 which took place from February through July, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288029-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CWL Pro League, Format\nThe 2019 CWL Global Pro League will consist of a single Stage, with 16 teams from North America, Europe and the APAC region participating. The 16 teams will be split into 2 different Divisions. Unlike previous years, teams will also play against teams from the other Division. Teams will be able to make changes to their roster throughout the season, with matches being broadcast on Monday through Thursday. The top teams will qualify for the CWL Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288029-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CWL Pro League, Format, Tiebreakers\nIn the event of two or more teams having the same win/loss record at the conclusion of the Regular Season, final placing will be determined via Tiebreaker Rules. Tiebreaker rules in order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288029-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CWL Pro League, Format, Tiebreakers\nIf these tiebreakers cannot break a tie, the tied teams will be scheduled to play a best-of-five round-robin tiebreaker. A coin-flip will determine which team will act as home and away for pick ban process. After each team has played all other tied Teams in the tiebreaker, their records of games won and games lost will be used to break the tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288029-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CWL Pro League, Format, Tiebreakers\nIf there is a tie involving more than two teams and a tiebreaker resolved the tie for a team(s), but leaves at least two teams tied, the tie(s) that remains will be broken by starting over with the Head to Head Match winning percentage tiebreaker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288029-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CWL Pro League, Pro League\n16 teams from around the world will participate in the CWL Pro League. The top four teams from CWL Las Vegas will automatically qualify for the CWL Pro League while teams placing 5th - 32nd will fight for the remaining 12 CWL Pro League spots, at a qualification event that will take place in January at the MLG Arena in Columbus, Ohio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288029-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 CWL Pro League, Regular season\nA total of 16 teams, spread across 2 Divisions, participate during the Regular Season of the Pro League. Each team will play 22 matches: two Best of Five series against the other teams in their Division and one Best of Five series against the eight teams in the other Division. The top 4 teams from each Division will directly qualify for the Playoff Bracket while the bottom 4 teams will have to play in the Play-In Bracket. Matches will be played from February 4 through July 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288029-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 CWL Pro League, Playoffs\nThe playoffs will take place from July 19\u201321, 2019 at the Miami Beach Convention Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288029-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 CWL Pro League, Playoffs, Play-In Bracket\nThe Play-In Bracket is a single elimination bracket consisting of the Teams who placed 5th\u20138th in their division during Regular Season play. Once two teams remain in the Play-In Bracket those teams will be moved to round one of the Playoff Bracket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288029-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 CWL Pro League, Playoffs, Playoff Bracket\nThe Playoff Bracket is a ten-team double elimination bracket which consists of the two teams who qualified via the Play-In Bracket and the top four teams from each Division of Regular Season play. The 4th placed team from each Division will be placed in the first round of the winners bracket, facing one of the two teams which qualified via the Play-In Bracket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288029-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 CWL Pro League, Playoffs, Playoff Bracket, Final 3\nThe Final 3 consists of the Winners Bracket Round 4 winners who enter in the Final, the Winners Bracket Round 4 losers and the winners of the Losers Bracket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 55], "content_span": [56, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288029-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 CWL Pro League, Playoffs, Prize Money\nA total of $2,400,000 prize money for the 2019 CWL Pro League will be distributed as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 42], "content_span": [43, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288030-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cabuyao local elections\nLocal elections was held in Cabuyao City on May 13, 2019 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, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288030-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cabuyao local elections, Overview\nIncumbent Mayor Rommel Gecolea is seeking his second term under PDP\u2013Laban with Councilor Leif Laiglon Opi\u00f1a as his running mate. Their opponent is the tandem of Dennis Felipe Hain and Vice Mayor Jose Benson Aguillo of Nacionalista Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288031-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race\nThe 2019 Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race was a road cycling one-day race that took place on 27 January 2019 in Geelong, Australia. It was the fifth edition of the Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race and the second event of the 2019 UCI World Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288031-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race\n2018 runner-up Elia Viviani, from Italy, improved upon that position, as the Deceuninck\u2013Quick-Step rider led home a 33-rider group at the finish to take the victory, ahead of the highest-placed Australian rider Caleb Ewan (Lotto\u2013Soudal). The podium was completed by the previous week's Tour Down Under winner Daryl Impey, who finished third for the second year in succession for Mitchelton\u2013Scott.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288031-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race, Teams\nAs the race was only added to the UCI World Tour calendar in 2017, all UCI WorldTeams were invited to the race, but not obligated to compete in the race. As such, fifteen of the eighteen WorldTeams competed in the race, up three on 2018. An Australian national squad completed the 16-team peloton, therefore no UCI Professional Continental teams competed for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288032-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cairo bombing\nOn 4 August 2019, a car drove into three other cars outside the National Cancer Institute Egypt in central Cairo, Egypt. The collisions caused an explosion, killing at least 20 people and injuring at least 47 others. The next day, Mahmoud Tawfik the Interior Minister of Egypt, said that the car contained explosives and was to be used in a terrorist operation. The explosives-filled car was on its way to commit an attack in another part of the capital. Tawfik accused the Hasm Movement of carrying out the bombing, but the group denied the allegations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288033-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cal Poly Mustangs football team\nThe 2019 Cal Poly Mustangs football team represented California Polytechnic State University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Mustangs were led by 11th-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 3\u20138, 2\u20136 in Big Sky play to finish in a five-way tie for ninth place. On November 25, 2019, Tim Walsh announced his retirement. He finished with a 176\u2013148 record in 29 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288033-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cal Poly Mustangs football team, Previous season\nThe Mustangs finished the 2018 season 5\u20136, 4\u20134 in Big Sky play to finish in a tie for sixth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288033-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cal Poly Mustangs football team, Preseason, Big Sky preseason poll\nThe Big Sky released their preseason media and coaches' polls on July 15, 2019. The Mustangs were picked to finish in ninth place in both polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288033-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cal Poly Mustangs football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013Big Sky team\nThe Mustangs did not have any players selected to the preseason all-Big Sky team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288033-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cal Poly Mustangs football team, Schedule\nDespite also being a member of the Big Sky, the game at Weber State was a non-conference game and had no effect on the Big Sky standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288034-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Calamba local elections\nLocal elections were held in Calamba City on May 13, 2019, within the Philippine general election, for posts of the mayor, vice mayor and twelve councilors. They will also elect their first representative of their newly-created lone congressional district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288034-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Calamba local elections, Overview\nThe incumbent mayor, Justin Marc SB. Chipeco once again ran for mayoral post for the third consecutive time together with his running mate, the incumbent vice mayor Roseller Rizal. For the second time in a row, Rizal will run for vice mayoral position unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288034-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Calamba local elections, Results\nThe candidates for mayor and vice mayor with the highest number of votes win. Candidates who are incumbent in the position they are running are in italic text.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288034-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Calamba local elections, Results, City Council elections\nVoters elected twelve councilors to comprise the City Council or the Sangguniang Panlungsod. Candidates voted separately so winning candidates came from different political parties. The twelve candidates with the highest number of votes won the seats. Incumbent city councilors Edgardo Catindig, Moises Morales, Peewee Perez, and Santiago Atienza did not run as their respective terms are limited. Perez ran as provincial board member of the 2nd District of Laguna instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288035-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Calder Cup playoffs\nThe 2019 Calder Cup playoffs of the American Hockey League began on April 17, 2019 with the playoff format that was introduced in 2016. The sixteen teams that qualified, four from each division, play a best-of-five series in the division semifinals, with the playoffs continuing with best-of-seven series for the division finals, conference finals, and Calder Cup finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288035-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Calder Cup playoffs\nThe playoffs ended with the Charlotte Checkers winning their first Calder Cup in franchise history, defeating the Chicago Wolves in five games in the Calder Cup Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288035-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Calder Cup playoffs, Playoff seeds\nAfter the 2018\u201319 AHL regular season, 16 teams qualify for the playoffs. The top four teams in each division ranked by points qualify for the 2019 Calder Cup playoffs. The Charlotte Checkers were the first team to clinch a playoff spot on March 22 and won the regular season title with three games remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288035-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288035-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288035-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 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 240 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-00288035-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288036-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections. One councillor was elected in each ward for a four-year term so the councillors elected in 2019 last stood for election in 2015. Each ward is represented by three councillors, the election of which is staggered, so only one third of the councillors were elected in this election. Before the election there was no overall control with a minority Labour administration. Following the election Labour, having gained four councillors, took control of the council with an overall majority of five seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288036-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council election\nIn May 2019 Councillor Colin Peel defected from the Conservative Party to Change UK. After the dissolution of the party he retained his seat as an independent councillor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288036-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council election\nIn November 2019 Councillor Roger Taylor was suspended from the Conservative Party over alleged Islamophobic comments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288036-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council election, Council Composition\nPrior to the election the composition of the council was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 74], "content_span": [75, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288036-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council election, Ward results, Brighouse ward\nThe incumbent was Scott Benton for the Conservative Party. Swing shown is Conservative against Labour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 83], "content_span": [84, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288036-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council election, Ward results, Calder ward\nThe incumbent was Dave Young for the Labour Party. The swing shown is Labour against Green. The swing for Labour against Conservative, who were second in the previous election, is +4.8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 80], "content_span": [81, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288036-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council election, Ward results, Elland ward\nThe incumbent was John Ford for the Conservative Party. The swing is for Labour against Conservative.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 80], "content_span": [81, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288036-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council election, Ward results, Greetland & Stainland ward\nThe incumbent was Chris Pearson for the Conservative Party who stood down at this election. The swing is for Liberal Democrats against Conservatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 95], "content_span": [96, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288036-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council election, Ward results, Hipperholme & Lightcliffe ward\nThe incumbent was David Kirton for the Conservative Party. The swing is Conservative against Labour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 99], "content_span": [100, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288036-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council election, Ward results, Illingworth & Mixenden ward\nThe incumbent was Barry Collins for the Labour Party who stood down at this election. Swing is Labour against Conservative.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 96], "content_span": [97, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288036-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council election, Ward results, Luddendenfoot ward\nThe incumbent was Nicola May for the Conservative Party. The swing shown is Labour against Conservative", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 87], "content_span": [88, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288036-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council election, Ward results, Northowram & Shelf ward\nThe incumbent was Roger Taylor for the Conservative party. The swing shown is Conservative against Labour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 92], "content_span": [93, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288036-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council election, Ward results, Ovenden ward\nThe incumbent was Bryan Smith for the Labour Party. The swing is for Labour against Conservatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 81], "content_span": [82, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288036-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council election, Ward results, Park ward\nThe incumbent was Faisal Shoukat for the Labour Party. Swing shown is Labour against Conservative.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 78], "content_span": [79, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288036-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council election, Ward results, Rastrick ward\nThe incumbent was Chris Pillai for the Conservative Party. Swing is for Conservatives against Labour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 82], "content_span": [83, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288036-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council election, Ward results, Ryburn ward\nThe incumbent was Robert Thornber for the Conservative Party. The swing shown is for the Independent, Robert Holden, against the Conservative Party. The swing for the Conservatives against Labour was -17.7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 80], "content_span": [81, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288036-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council election, Ward results, Skircoat ward\nThe incumbent was Marcus Thompson for the Conservative Party who stood down at this election. Swing is for Labour against Conservative.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 82], "content_span": [83, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288036-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council election, Ward results, Sowerby Bridge ward\nThe incumbent was Mike Payne for the Conservative Party. Swing is Labour against Conservatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 88], "content_span": [89, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288036-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council election, Ward results, Todmorden ward\nThe incumbent was Carol Machell for the Labour Party who stood down at this election. Swing is for Labour against the Conservatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 83], "content_span": [84, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288036-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council election, Ward results, Town ward\nThe incumbent was Tim Swift for the Labour Party. Swing show is for Labour against the Conservatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 78], "content_span": [79, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288036-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council election, Ward results, Warley ward\nThe incumbent was James Baker for the Liberal Democrats. Swing shown is Liberal Democrats against Labour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 80], "content_span": [81, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288037-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Calgary Roughnecks season\nThe Calgary Roughnecks are a lacrosse team based in Calgary playing in the National Lacrosse League (NLL). The 2019 season is the 18th in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288037-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Calgary Roughnecks 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288038-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Calgary Stampeders season\nThe 2019 Calgary Stampeders season was the 62nd season for the team in the Canadian Football League and their 85th overall. The Stampeders finished with a 12\u20136 record and hosted the West Semi-Final game in a year where they were also hosting the 107th Grey Cup. Having lost to the Blue Bombers team in the aforementioned playoff game, however, the Stampeders failed to repeat as Grey Cup champions in 2019, marking the first time since 2011 where the Stampeders failed to reach the West Division Final and only the second time since their 2008 Championship-Winning Season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288038-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 Calgary Stampeders season\nDespite the loss in the opening round of the postseason, the Stampeders qualified for the playoffs for the 15th consecutive year with a week 15 win over the Toronto Argonauts coupled with a loss by the Ottawa Redblacks, the playoff berth being clinched on September 21, 2019. It is the longest playoff streak in franchise history and tied for the fifth-longest streak in CFL history. The 2019 season marked Dave Dickenson's fourth season as head coach and John Hufnagel's 12th season as general manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288038-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Calgary Stampeders season, Offseason, Foreign drafts\nFor the first time in its history, the CFL held drafts for foreign players from Mexico and Europe. Like all other CFL teams, the Stampeders held three non-tradeable selections in the 2019 CFL\u2013LFA Draft, which took place on January 14, 2019. The 2019 European CFL Draft took place on April 11, 2019 where all teams held one non-tradeable pick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288038-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Calgary Stampeders season, Offseason, CFL Draft\nThe 2019 CFL Draft took place on May 2, 2019. By virtue of winning the 106th Grey Cup, the Stampeders had the last selection in each of the eight rounds. The team acquired another fourth-round pick after trading Charleston Hughes to the Hamilton Tiger-Cats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288038-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Calgary Stampeders season, Team, Roster\nItalics indicate American playerBold indicates Global player updated 2019-11-10 \u2022 46 Active, 9 One-game Injured,10 Six-game Injured, 10 Practice", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288039-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 California 8 Hours\nThe 2019 California 8 Hours was the third edition of the California 8 Hours race held on WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca on March 30, 2019. The race was contested with GT3-spec cars, \"GT Cup\" for one-make spec cars, GT4-spec cars. The race was organized by the St\u00e9phane Ratel Organisation (SRO).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288039-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 California 8 Hours\nThe third and final California 8 Hours was the second round of the 2019 Intercontinental GT Challenge. The event was to be replaced by a race held at Indianapolis Motor Speedway", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288039-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 California 8 Hours\nThe race was won by Taiwanese Ferrari team HubAuto Corsa. The Ferrari 488 GT3 completed 327 laps in the allotted eight hours, making a race distance of over 730 miles. Miguel Molina, Nick Foster and Tim Slade beat Hong Kong Mercedes-AMG Team GruppeM Racing by twelve seconds. American Porsche team Park Place Motorsports was third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288039-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 California 8 Hours\nLamborghini team ARC Bratislava won the GT Cup class, finishing 24 laps behind the HubAuto Corsa Ferrari and completed 678 miles. Winning the GT4 class was the PF Racing Ford Mustang, a further seven laps down, completing 662 miles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288040-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 California Golden Bears football team\nThe 2019 California Golden Bears football team represented the University of California, Berkeley in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. They competed as members of the North Division of the Pac-12 Conference. In their third year under head coach Justin Wilcox, the Bears improved to an 8\u20135 record for only the second time since 2009, finishing 2nd in the Pac-12 North.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288040-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 California Golden Bears football team\nThe Bears started off the season strong, achieving a No. 15 AP ranking (their highest since 2009) after a 4\u20130 start, including a 20\u201319 upset win against No. 14 ranked Washington. However, after injury to quarterback Chase Garbers during the Arizona State game, the Bears proceeded to lose the next four games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288040-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 California Golden Bears football team\nWith the return of Garbers, Cal notably defeated Stanford in the Big Game for the first time since 2009. This win clinched bowl eligibility for the Bears while making the Cardinal ineligible for the post-season for the first time in ten years. The Bears went to the Redbox Bowl, where they defeated the Illinois Fighting Illini 35\u201320, their first bowl win since 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288040-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 California Golden Bears football team\nSenior linebacker Evan Weaver was the standout player of the season after leading the nation with a school-record and Pac-12 record 182 tackles, earning him the Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Year and becoming the first consensus All-American from Cal since 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288040-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 California Golden Bears football team, Previous season\nIn 2018, the Bears went 7\u20136 under second-year head coach Justin Wilcox. After the Bears upset #15 Washington 12\u201310 and defeated USC 15\u201314 at the Coliseum in Los Angeles to snap a 14-year losing streak to the Trojans, the Bears lost 10\u20137 in overtime to TCU in the 2018 Cheez-It Bowl. The Bears\u2019 offensive efficiency ranked as the second worst among all Power Five teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288040-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 California Golden Bears football team, Preseason, Coaching changes\nOn February 26, 2019, defensive line coach Tony Tuioti left the Golden Bears to become the new defensive line coach for the Nebraska Cornhuskers under Scott Frost. Andrew Browning was named the Bears' new defensive line coach on February 27, 2019. Browning is the third defensive line coach in three years under Justin Wilcox after Jerry Azzinaro's departure in 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 71], "content_span": [72, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288040-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 California Golden Bears football team, Preseason, Pac-12 media days, Pac-12 media poll\nIn the 2019 Pac-12 preseason media poll, California was voted to finish in fifth place in the North Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 91], "content_span": [92, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288040-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 California Golden Bears football team, Schedule\nThree of California first four games were non-conference games, starting on August 31 against UC Davis of the Big Sky Conference. The Golden Bears then played their conference opener against Washington. Rounding out the non-conference slate was a home game against North Texas of Conference USA and a road game against Ole Miss of the Southeastern Conference (SEC). In Pac-12 Conference play, Cal played the other members of the North Division and faced Arizona State, UCLA, USC, and Utah from the South Division. They did not play Arizona and Colorado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288040-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 California Golden Bears football team, Game summaries, at Washington\nThe game started at 7:30 pm, but was paused at the end of first quarter due to a lightning storm; the pause lasted for approximately two and a half hours. By the time of the restart - 10 pm, there was only approximately 16,000 of the original approximately 60,000 fans left at the venue. Relying on rushing of running backs Christopher Brown Jr. (80 yards), and Marcel Dancy (72 yards, 2 touchdowns) and quarterback Chase Garbers (42 yards), Cal won on a last minute field goal by Greg Thomas. This was the Golden Bears second straight win against the Huskies. In the 2018 home game Cal upset No. 15 Washington 12 to 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 73], "content_span": [74, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288040-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 California Golden Bears football team, Game summaries, Arizona State\nIn the final drive of the first half, quarterback Chase Garbers was injured, breaking his right collarbone. Gabrers would not be cleared to play again until he started against USC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 73], "content_span": [74, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288040-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 California Golden Bears football team, Game summaries, at Utah\nThis defeat was the first shutout of a California team since a 1999 defeat to No. 5 Nebraska. Starting quarterback Chase Garbers and backup Devon Modster were injured for the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 67], "content_span": [68, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288040-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 California Golden Bears football team, Game summaries, at Stanford\nWith this victory, Cal ended Stanford's nine-year win streak in the Big Game. The win also ensured the Bears' qualification to a bowl game for the second consecutive year, the first time this has happened in ten years. Likewise, the loss put Stanford at 4\u20137 for the season, ending its hopes of making its tenth consecutive bowl game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 71], "content_span": [72, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288041-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 California Golden Bears men's soccer team\nThe 2019 California Golden Bears men's soccer team represented University of California, Berkeley during the 2019 NCAA Division I men's soccer season and the 2019 Pac-12 Conference men's soccer season. The regular season began on August 30 and concluded on November 14. It was the program's 114th season fielding a men's varsity soccer team, and their 20th season in the Pac-12 Conference. The 2019 season was Kevin Grimes's twentieth year as head coach for the program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288041-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 California Golden Bears 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, 46], "section_span": [48, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288042-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 California power shutoffs\nThe 2019 California power shutoffs, known as public safety power shutoff (PSPS) events, were massive preemptive power shutoffs that occurred in approximately 30 counties in Northern California and several areas in Southern California from October 9 to November 1, 2019, and on November 20, 2019, by Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E), Southern California Edison (SCE), and San Diego Gas & Electric (SDG&E). The power shutoffs were an attempt to prevent wildfires from being started by electrical equipment during strong and dry winds. The shutoffs initially affected around 800,000 customers, or about 2.5 million people but expanded to cause over 3 million people to lose utility-provided electrical power by late October as more utility companies from around the state also did preemptive power shutoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 844]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288042-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 California power shutoffs\nThe shutdowns have drawn widespread fierce backlash and criticism from residents as well as government officials as PG&E, SCE, SDG&E and the California Public Utilities Commission issued an apology. Many residents complained of either being misinformed or not informed when shutdowns would occur, while officials such as California governor Gavin Newsom blamed the shutdowns on PG&E's \"greed and mismanagement.\" Some people expressed their frustrations through vandalism and violence, including the egging of a PG&E office's front doors and someone shooting at a PG&E vehicle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288042-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 California power shutoffs\nFor the state's largest utility, PG&E, to bury all of its distribution lines (relatively low voltage lines which bring power to homes, not the higher voltage transmission lines) would cost US$15,000 per customer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288042-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 California power shutoffs, Background\nThe \"Public Safety Power Shutoff\" (PSPS) has been standard practice in California for many years, though in the past, the preemptive shutoffs occurred predominantly in rural areas. PG&E warned the state for months of its impending action, set to commence when the combination of high autumn winds and dry conditions made the fires more likely to happen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288042-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 California power shutoffs, Background\nPG&E began its series of power blackouts in the San Francisco Bay Area on Wednesday, October 9, at around 12 AM PDT in order to reduce the risks of devastating wildfires caused by PG&E's power lines or equipment, like the October 2017 Northern California wildfires and the 2018 Camp Fire, responsible for a combined total of 95 deaths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288042-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 California power shutoffs, Background\nAs California's population has continued to grow in suburban and exurban areas that were formerly wilderness, the risk and size of fires has escalated. More than a third of California's housing is now located in areas known as wildland\u2013urban interface. When wildfires happen upon these communities, they become more dangerous and leap from structure to structure in what is called \"fast-moving urban conflagrations\" that firefighters find difficult to stop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288042-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 California power shutoffs, Legal setting\nBesides safety, one of the reasons behind PG&E's (now moving into bankruptcy) imposition of the blackouts is a legal doctrine known as inverse condemnation, which makes California utilities responsible for wildfire destruction regardless of whether the utility acted negligently or not. California's interpretation of inverse condemnation is unique. The tenet is applied in other states, usually to government entities that damage private property when engaged in a public service. California's courts have ruled the principle can be applied to utilities. So the utilities are held liable for damage, even if they comply with all of California's strict energy-related rules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288042-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 California power shutoffs, Legal setting\nThis policy resulted in $30B of liability for PG&E from the 2017 & 2018 fires and drove it to bankruptcy proceedings. In July 2019, a new $21 billion wildfire trust fund was created to pay for damages from future wildfires, started with a 50-50 balance of utility and customer monies and also reduced the liability threshold for utilities to where customers must prove negligence before companies are held liable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288042-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 California power shutoffs, Legal setting\nCritics of inverse condemnation point out that it can lead to utility bankruptcies which can threaten the integrity of the California power grid as well as hurt financing the states' efforts for renewable energy and against climate change, one of the causes of the intensified fire threat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288042-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 California power shutoffs, Legal setting\nIn addition to court cases in recent years and the evolution of case law which have made new standards of legal liability, the California State legislature and the Governor also enacted new statutory laws to modify the legal regime under which electrical utilities operate in California. Over 20 new wildfire-related laws were enacted in the 2019 legislative session, several of them affecting the electrical service providing utility companies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288042-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 California power shutoffs, Undergrounding\nThe fire risk from the electricity supply is principally from the large amount of energy carried in above-ground power lines, which under fault conditions can become a factor in the ignition of wildfires. Public utilities in the state of California have a total of 26,000 miles (42,000\u00a0km) of high voltage transmission lines, and 240,000 miles (390,000\u00a0km) of distribution lines. Distribution lines bring electricity directly to homes; two thirds of them statewide are above ground. For transmission lines, the cost of constructing these underground is approximately US$80 million per milewhile for distribution lines, the construction cost of new underground lines is about US$3 million per mile, compared to overhead lines at about $800,000 per mile.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288042-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 California power shutoffs, Undergrounding\nThe state's largest utility, PG&E, has 107,000 miles (172,000\u00a0km) of distribution lines, 81,000 miles (130,000\u00a0km) of which are overhead. The cost to convert all of PG&E's overhead distribution lines to underground lines would be approximately US$240 billion, or roughly US$15,000 per PG&E customer. (This cost estimate is only for distribution lines, not the higher voltage transmission lines.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288042-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 California power shutoffs, Impacts\nA man dependent on an oxygen supply died 12 minutes after the outage started in his area on October 11. An investigation has been initiated. His family said he could not reach his battery-powered tank in time. Large numbers of other disabled people reported issues with poor communication by PG&E of when shutoffs would occur, and with the inability to power or charge electrical devices on which their wellbeing depended during shutoffs. Affected devices included ventilators, oxygen concentrators, nebulizers, dialysis machines, refrigerators for drugs such as insulin, and electrically powered beds, hoists and wheelchairs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288042-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 California power shutoffs, Impacts\nPG&E had a list of over 30,000 customers registered on their Medical Baseline program as being vulnerable to shutoffs, but used it only as a contact list, leaving the affected disabled customers unsupported. Dependence on the Medical Baseline list meant PG&E inevitably missing many more disabled people not registered with the program. Others who were registered reported they were not contacted. PG&E also refused to give many local counties access to the Medical Baseline list, leaving them unable to check on vulnerable residents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288042-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 California power shutoffs, Impacts\nUnder backup power on October 11, 2019 [UTC], the Mission Operations Center (MOC) at the Space Sciences Laboratory at University of California, Berkeley oversaw the deployment of a satellite launched from Cape Canaveral. Paula Milano, who helps run the Laboratory, did not want to postpone the launch saying \"If a scrub of the mission happens because of Berkeley, that's a huge black eye for us, and it's a huge public black eye for NASA.\" After notification on October 7, the lab began extensive preparation for the power outage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288042-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 California power shutoffs, Impacts\nBy late October, water had been restricted for some in areas which rely on pump stations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288042-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 California power shutoffs, Impacts\nSonoma\u2013Marin Area Rail Transit commuter rail services were cancelled on October 28 and 29 due to loss of power at crossings throughout the system. Partial service as far north as Downtown Santa Rosa was restored the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288042-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 California power shutoffs, Potential fires averted\nAfter the early October power shutoffs, the CEO of PG&E stated that they found more than 100 cases of \"wind-related damage\" to the 25,000 miles of power lines they had de-energized. He also stated \"More than half of PG&E's 70,000-square-mile service area in Northern and Central California is considered by state officials to be at high risk of wildfire. In 2012, that designation applied to just 15% of our service area.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288042-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 California power shutoffs, Potential fires averted\nBy the end of October, PG&E officials told a federal judge that the power shutoffs so far helped prevent up to 56 wildfires; 44 from contact with vegetation and 12 cases of wind-caused equipment damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288042-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 California power shutoffs, Future events\nOn October 18, 2019, PG&E announced that shutoffs could continue for 10 years before they can start to reduce significantly, which was met with scorn by many California officials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288042-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 California power shutoffs, Future events\nSince the 2019 shutoffs, PG&E has always been continuously trying to make improvements to its electrical utilities to minimize fire risk and reduce the number of shutoffs at the same time. However, on September 5, 2020, PG&E issued a PSPS Shutoff Watch for several regions in Northern California in anticipation of scorching temperatures and gusty winds at the end of the heat wave that could easily knock off power utilities. PG&E assured customers, though, that if shutoffs do happen, they will affect fewer customers and be shorter in duration than the 2019 shutoffs, i.e. they were aiming to restore power within 12 hours of shutting it off instead of several days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288043-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 California wildfires\nThe 2019 wildfire season was a fire season in California, United States. As of December\u00a022, 2019, over 7,860 fires have been recorded according to Cal Fire and the US Forest Service, totaling an estimated of 259,823 acres (105,147 hectares) of burned land. Although the 2019 fire season had been relatively quiet in California through mid-September as compared to past years, October through December was still expected to have the greatest fire potential as the Diablo and Santa Ana winds pick up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288043-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 California wildfires\nIn late October, the Kincade Fire became the largest fire of the year, burning 77,758 acres (31,468\u00a0ha) in Sonoma County by November 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288043-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 California wildfires\nMassive preemptive public safety power shutoff events have been controversial. Pacific Gas & Electric, Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas & Electric had preemptively shut off power to 800,000 electric customers to reduce the risk of wildfires by preventing electrical arcing in high winds from their above-ground power lines. While large areas were without power for days, people in fire danger areas had trouble getting information, and critical life support equipment would not work without backup power.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288043-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 California wildfires, Early projections\nFire behavioral experts and climatologists have warned that heavy rains from months early in the year have produced an excess of vegetation that would become an abundance of dry fuel later in the year as the fire season gets underway. According to the US Forest Service and US Department of the Interior officials, early projections indicated that the fire season would possibly be worse than the year prior, stating that \"if we're lucky, this year will simply be a challenging one.\" This assessment was written on the basis of noting that the state has recently been seeing consistently destructive fires more often than ever before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288043-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 California wildfires, Wildfires\nThe following is a list of fires that burned more than 1,000 acres (400\u00a0ha), or produced significant structural damage or casualties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288043-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 California wildfires, Wildfires, Other fires\nThree people were injured during the Moose Fire (August\u00a012\u201317). Two people were injured and four structures were destroyed during the Country Fire (September\u00a03\u20136). Four people were injured during the Lopez Fire (September\u00a021\u201327), and one during the Electra Fire (September\u00a025). A small brush fire ignited in Pacific Palisades in Los Angeles County on October\u00a021. The fire burned 42 acres (17 hectares) within a few hours, forcing the evacuation of 200\u00a0homes. Three firefighters suffered injuries while one civilian was treated for respiratory illness.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288044-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cambridge City Council election\nThe 2019 Cambridge City Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Cambridge City Council in England. This was on the same day as other nationwide local elections. Next election 2021", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288045-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Camellia Bowl\nThe 2019 Camellia Bowl was a college football bowl game played on December 21, 2019, with kickoff at 5:30\u00a0p.m. EST (4:30\u00a0p.m. local CST) on ESPN. It was the 6th edition of the Camellia Bowl, and one of the 2019\u201320 bowl games concluding the 2019 FBS football season. For 2019, the Camellia Bowl did not have a corporate naming sponsor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288045-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Camellia Bowl, Teams\nThe bowl matched the FIU Panthers and the Arkansas State Red Wolves. This was the ninth meeting between the programs; entering the game, Arkansas State led the all-time series, 6\u20132 (officially 4\u20132, as two wins were vacated per NCAA sanctions). From 2005 to 2012, FIU and Arkansas State were both members of the Sun Belt Conference; their previous meetings spanned that era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288045-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Camellia Bowl, Teams, FIU Panthers\nFIU finished their regular season with a 6\u20136 record (3\u20135 in conference). The Panthers tied with Middle Tennessee for fifth place in the East Division of Conference USA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288045-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Camellia Bowl, Teams, Arkansas State Red Wolves\nArkansas State finished their regular season with a 7\u20135 record (5\u20133 in conference). The Red Wolves finished in second place in the West Division of the Sun Belt. This was the program's second Camellia Bowl, making them the second team (after Appalachian State) to appear in multiple Camellia Bowls. The 2017 Red Wolves appeared in that season's Camellia Bowl, losing to Middle Tennessee, 35\u201330.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 52], "content_span": [53, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288046-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cameron Highlands by-election\nA by-election was held on 26 January 2019 for the Dewan Rakyat seat of Cameron Highlands. The seat became vacant after the Election Court on 30 November 2018 declared the incumbent Barisan Nasional (BN) Member of Parliament of Malaysian Indian Congress (MIC) Dato' Sivarraajh Chandran's victory in the seat null and void because it was found that corrupt practices were committed in the 14th general election. The court found Sivarraajh guilty of bribing of between RM30 and RM1,000 to the Orang Asli community voters prior to the election as established beyond reasonable doubt in the election petition filed by the Democratic Action Party (DAP) candidate M. Manogaran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288046-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cameron Highlands by-election\nThis was the fifth national and the second parliamentary by-election to be called since the historic 2018 general election, which saw the first-ever change of federal government in Malaysia's history. Polling for this by-election was held on 26 January 2019 (Saturday), with nomination day on 12 January and early voting on 22 January. Overseas voting was opened for registration from 19 December 2018 and closed on 11 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288046-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cameron Highlands by-election\nBarisan Nasional's direct member candidate Ramli Mohd Nor won the by-election. He was the first indigenous Orang Asli candidate elected into the Dewan Rakyat. (Ramli would later join one of the coalition's constituent parties, United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) as its member.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288046-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cameron Highlands by-election\nThe by-election had the highest turnout than any other by-election after the 14th General Elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288046-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cameron Highlands by-election, Demographics\nEthnic breakdown of Cameron Highlands's electorate as of 2018 Source: The Star", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288046-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cameron Highlands by-election, Demographics\nThe electoral roll used was as of the third quarter of 2018, updated on 14 December. There were a total of 32,009 registered voters, including 247 early voters and 12 absentee voters. There are also 385 disabled voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288046-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Cameron Highlands by-election, Demographics\nThe constituency electorate breakdown are Malay 33.5%; Chinese 29.48%; Indian 14.91%; Orang Asli (Peninsular Malaysia) 21.56%; Bumiputera Sabah 0.12%; Bumiputera Sarawak 0.06%; Others 0.37%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288046-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Cameron Highlands by-election, Demographics\nCameron Highlands district officer Datuk Ishak Md Napis was the returning officer for the by-election. A total of 811 election officers handled the by-election in 31 polling centres, with an allocation of RM3.5 million. The nomination centre and vote-tallying centre was the Gemilang Hall of Sekolah Menengah Kebangsaan Sultan Ahmad Shah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288046-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Cameron Highlands by-election, Demographics\nVote-tallying process and results announcement of the by-election were also broadcast live to the public for a historic first time on Election Commission (EC)\u2019s social media platforms such as Facebook and Instagram.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288046-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Cameron Highlands by-election, Nomination\nBN initially planned to continue to let MIC field a candidate for the by-election and the Malaysian Chinese Association (MCA) has pledges to assist MIC in Cameron Highlands by-election. But somehow BN on 10 January announced that a BN direct member who is not a member from any BN component party; Ramli Mohd Noor as the coalition's candidate in the Cameron Highlands by-election. Ramli is a retired senior police officer with the rank of Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP); who is a local indigenous Orang Asli of Semai tribe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288046-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Cameron Highlands by-election, Nomination\nPakatan Harapan (PH) had on 4 January picked and announced DAP's M. Manogaran as the candidate for the Cameron Highlands by-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288046-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Cameron Highlands by-election, Nomination\nThe Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party (PAS) had announced that they would stay out of the by-election to support opposition candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288046-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Cameron Highlands by-election, Nomination\nThe in-turmoil People's Progressive Party (MyPPP) disputed president M. Kayveas had announced on 6 January he will be contesting for the party in the by-election. But on Nomination Day, he decided not to contest and supported the PH candidate instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288046-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Cameron Highlands by-election, Nomination\nFormer BN component Parti Gerakan Rakyat Malaysia (Gerakan) on 11 January announced that it has decided to sit out the Cameron Highlands parliamentary by-election after earlier rumours that the party might field its Cameron Highlands deputy division chairperson Dr Eddie Edward Tharmaraj as the candidate in the by-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288046-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Cameron Highlands by-election, Nomination\nBN's Ramli Mohd Noor, PH's M. Manogaran and two independent candidates, Wong Seng Yee and Sallehudin Ab Talib, submitted their nomination papers on 12 January to set for a four-cornered fight on 26 January. Wong (hoe logo) is a farmer and a member of the Cameron Highlands Agricultural Cooperative Association, while Sallehudin (book logo) from Felda Sungai Koyan 1, is a former lecturer at Institut Aminuddin Baki.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288046-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Cameron Highlands by-election, Controversies and issues\nA voter Syazleen Anisa Misria who is a bride-to-be got panic realising that the school hall she had booked six months ago for her wedding was to be used as a voting centre on the same day when the by-election was announced. She took to express her despair and sadness of her dilemma situation as almost all her wedding preparations have been done in a post on the EC's Facebook page. Her post was quickly met with an immediate attention and reply by the admin of the EC Facebook page who request her contact details to discuss the matter further.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288046-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 Cameron Highlands by-election, Controversies and issues\nHours later Syazleen commented to her earlier post that she had been contacted by the EC and that her wedding has been brought forward by a week. She also mentioned EC will compensate her with some contribution and her hopes that the by-election and her wedding will be smoothly conducted beside her gratitude to the EC for their assistance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288046-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Cameron Highlands by-election, Controversies and issues\nThe EC ruled on 28 December that MIC C. Sivarraajh is ineligible to re-contest the by-election as he was barred from becoming a candidate or voter in any election for the next five years beginning 13 December 2018 under Section 36(2)(a) and Section 37 of the Election Offences Act 1954. The High Court on 10 January dismisses Sivarraajh's bid to challenge EC decision over the five-year election ban.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288046-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Cameron Highlands by-election, Controversies and issues\nPH candidate M. Manogaran had on 10 January apologised and expressed regrets for his insensitive remarks a day earlier citing the perception that \"Malays don't even buy kuih from Orang Asli vendors\" analogy regarding BN fielding an Orang Asli candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288046-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Cameron Highlands by-election, Controversies and issues\nOrang Asli Senator Bob Manolan Mohamad of People's Justice Party (PKR) clarified that his appeal to the Orang Asli village headmen (Tok Batin) in a dialogue between them earlier, to put aside political differences and work together with the Federal Government to better their villages in Cameron Highlands have been mistaken as \"threats\" allegedly made to them if they did not support PH they will not get paid and will be sacked. However the explanation was vague due to clear recording obtained containing his speech during the campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288046-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Cameron Highlands by-election, Controversies and issues\nBN candidate Ramli had refused to face the other three by-election candidates who already agreed to a live debate to be organised by Bersih 2.0. Ramli also had failed to sign a Bersih 2.0-organised pledges for a fair and clean by-election like the other candidates did.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288046-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Cameron Highlands by-election, Controversies and issues\nThere were photographs showing a woman clad in a PH T-shirt purportedly handing out money was widely shared on 13 January, which PH explains it was not bribes but just petrol reimbursements for their party volunteers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288046-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Cameron Highlands by-election, Controversies and issues\nCelebrity chef, Dato' Redzuawan Ismail or popularly known as Chef Wan, the son of a Federal Land Development Authority (Felda) settler, said he wants to slap former prime minister Najib Razak and ex-Felda chairman Mohd Isa Abdul Samad for mismanaging the agency into a financial mess while on a cooking programme and campaign trail for Felda settlers in Cameron Highlands on 20 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288046-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Cameron Highlands by-election, Controversies and issues\nA driver of the Raub Forest Department reported over the use of state government vehicles during the by-election campaign and defended his action of handing over the government vehicle to Deputy Water, Land and Natural Resources Minister Tengku Zulpuri Shah Raja Puji on 21 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288046-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Cameron Highlands by-election, Controversies and issues\nOn Polling Day, M. Manogaran, wore a shirt bearing the party logo to a polling station against the election rules and he was then escorted out by the EC officer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288047-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cameron's Brewing Oakville Fall Classic\nThe 2019 Cameron's Brewing Oakville Fall Classic was held August 30 to September 2 in Oakville, Ontario. It was the first event of the Ontario Curling Tour for the 2019\u201320 curling season and the sixth and fifth Men's and Women's events on the World Curling Tour respectively. The total purse for the event was $16,000 on both the Men's and Women's side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288047-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cameron's Brewing Oakville Fall Classic\nIn the Men's event, Yannick Schwaller defeated Kim Chang-min 7\u20133 in the final and in the Women's event, Eve Muirhead defeated Silvana Tirinzoni 5\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288048-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Camp Shorabak attack\nOn the morning of 1 March 2019, Taliban gunmen and suicide bombers attacked Camp Shorabak in Helmand Province, Afghanistan. They killed 23 Afghan soldiers and injured another 15. Twenty insurgents were killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288049-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Campbell Fighting Camels football team\nThe 2019 Campbell Fighting Camels football team represented Campbell University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by seventh-year head coach Mike Minter and played their home games at Barker\u2013Lane Stadium. They were second-year members of the Big South Conference. They finished the season 6\u20135, 3\u20133 in Big South play to finish in fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288049-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Campbell Fighting Camels football team, Previous season\nThe Fighting Camels finished the 2018 season 6\u20135, 1\u20134 in Big South play to finish in fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288049-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Campbell Fighting Camels football team, Preseason, Big South poll\nIn the Big South preseason poll released on July 21, 2019, the Camels were predicted to finish in fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 70], "content_span": [71, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288049-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Campbell Fighting Camels football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013Big South team\nThe Fighting Camels had seven players selected to the preseason all-Big South team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288050-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Campbell Fighting Camels soccer team\nThe 2019 Campbell Fighting Camels soccer team represented Campbell University during the 2019 NCAA Division I men's soccer season and the 2019 Big South Conference men's soccer season. The regular season began on August 30 and concluded on November 2. It was the program's 57th season fielding a men's varsity soccer team, and their 9th season since rejoining the Big South Conference. The 2019 season was Dustin Fonder's fifth year as head coach for the program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288050-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Campbell Fighting Camels 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-00288051-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Campbellfield factory fire\nThe 2019 Campbellfield factory fire was a major industrial fire that began in Campbellfield, a suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, on 5 April 2019. The size of the fire site was about 5,000 square metres (53,819.55\u00a0sq\u00a0ft), and it emitted toxic smoke across the city\u2019s northern suburbs. The fire was finally extinguished four days after it started.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288051-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Campbellfield factory fire\nThe company which operated the property where the fire took place, Bradbury Industrial Services, collapsed in July 2019, leaving taxpayers to potentially foot a multimillion-dollar clean-up bill. On 1 August 2019, the administrators for the company were given three months to clean up the site.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288051-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Campbellfield factory fire, Background\nThe fire occurred at a waste management factory owned by Bradbury Industrial Services on Thornycroft St at 6:40 am. Buildings and vehicles were turned into fireballs and chemical drums sent soaring high above the warehouse as the inferno raged for hours. A witness in a nearby suburb to the fire said he saw a \"massive explosion that looked like a mushroom cloud\". Two other fires had broken out in the facility previously.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288051-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Campbellfield factory fire, Background\nBradbury Industrial Services provides storage and disposal services for hazardous and industrial waste, and specialises in treating solvent and other waste from paint and related industries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288051-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Campbellfield factory fire, Fire\nMetropolitan Fire Brigade firefighters brought the blaze under control by midday on 5 April; however, the fire was not fully extinguished until four days later. About thirty people were believed to have escaped the building before the firefighters arrived. At least two factory workers were hospitalised as a result of severe burns from the fire, with one employee receiving an eye injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288051-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Campbellfield factory fire, Fire\nThe fire was initially contained within four hours by 175 firefighters. Fire crews remain at the scene, using heat-detection devices to continually identify and dampen-down hotspots. The fire forced the closure of nearby schools and businesses. Some residents fled their homes to escape toxic fumes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288051-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Campbellfield factory fire, Fire\nA number of schools and kindergartens in proximity to the fire were closed as of 7 April including:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288051-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Campbellfield factory fire, Investigations\nInvestigations into the cause of the fire were started on 9 April, involving police, fire investigators from the Melbourne Metropolitan Fire Brigade, WorkSafe Victoria, and the Victorian Coroner. Initial speculations focused on the illegal or improper storage of flammable chemical waste.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288051-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Campbellfield factory fire, Investigations\nThe fire began less than one day after Victorian Environment Protection Authority authorities inspected the factory, and fifteen days after the factory had its license revoked for storing three times as much waste as it was permitted. The EPA's inspection on 4 April discovered 300,000 litres of chemicals inside.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288051-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Campbellfield factory fire, Investigations\nEPA executive director Damian Wells said the factory contained \"highly flammable materials\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288051-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Campbellfield factory fire, Investigations\nThe EPA has begun an independent review into its systems and processes for dealing with toxic waste.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288052-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Baiano\nThe 2019 Campeonato Baiano de Futebol was the 115th edition of Bahia's top professional football league. The competition began on 19 January and ended on 21 April. Bahia won the championship for the 48th time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288053-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A\nThe 2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A (officially the Brasileir\u00e3o Assa\u00ed 2019 for sponsorship reasons) was the 63rd season of the Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, the top level of professional football in Brazil, and the 16th edition in a double round-robin since its establishment in 2003. The competition started on 27 April and ended on 8 December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288053-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A\nThe top six teams as well as the 2019 Copa do Brasil champions qualified for the Copa Libertadores. The next six best-placed teams not qualified for Copa Libertadores qualified for the Copa Sudamericana and the last four were relegated to S\u00e9rie B for 2020. Palmeiras were the defending champions. During the 2019 season, the official match ball was the Nike Merlin CBF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288053-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A\nFlamengo secured their sixth league title with four matches to spare on 24 November and just one day after winning the 2019 Copa Libertadores, following Palmeiras' 2\u20131 loss to Gr\u00eamio at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288053-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, Teams\nTwenty teams competed in the league \u2013 the top sixteen teams from the previous season, as well as four teams promoted from the S\u00e9rie B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288053-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, Teams\nFortaleza became the first club to be promoted after a 1\u20132 win against Atl\u00e9tico Goianiense on 3 November 2018. Goi\u00e1s was promoted on 17 November, and Ava\u00ed and CSA on 24 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288053-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, Personnel and kits, Foreign players\nThe clubs can have a maximum of five foreign players in their Campeonato Brasileiro squads per match, but there is no limit of foreigners in the clubs' squads.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 71], "content_span": [72, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288053-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, Standings, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches. In order to preserve chronological evolvements, any postponed matches are not included to the round at which they were originally scheduled, but added to the full round they were played immediately afterwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 65], "content_span": [66, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288054-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie B\nThe 2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie B was a football competition held in Brazil, equivalent to the second division. The competition started on 26 April and ended on 30 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288054-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie B\nTwenty teams competed in the tournament, twelve returning from the 2018 season, four promoted from the 2018 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C (Botafogo-SP, Bragantino, Cuiab\u00e1 and Oper\u00e1rio Ferrovi\u00e1rio), and four relegated from the 2018 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A (Am\u00e9rica Mineiro, Paran\u00e1, Sport and Vit\u00f3ria).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288054-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie B\nRed Bull GmbH signed a deal with the promoted team Bragantino. Team was merged with Red Bull Brasil and renamed as RB Bragantino, although in the 2019 S\u00e9rie B their name was simply Bragantino with Red Bull as main sponsor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288054-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie B\nIn the 17th round (20 August), Figueirense players refused to play their away match against Cuiab\u00e1 in protest over unpaid wages. Cuiab\u00e1 was awarded a 3\u20130 win by forfeit. On 4 October, Figueirense was sanctioned by the Superior Tribunal de Justi\u00e7a Desportiva (STJD) with loss of three points and a fine of R$3,000. Few days later the STJD corrected its decision and gave back the three points to Figueirense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288054-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie B\nThe top four teams were promoted to the 2020 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A. Bragantino became the first club to be promoted after a 3\u20131 win against Guarani on 5 November 2019. Sport was promoted on 20 November, and Coritiba and Atl\u00e9tico Goianiense on 30 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288055-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C\nThe 2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C was a football competition held in Brazil, equivalent to the third division. The competition started on 27 April and ended on 6 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288055-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C\nTwenty teams competed in the tournament, twelve returning from the 2018 season, four promoted from the 2018 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D (Ferrovi\u00e1rio, Treze, S\u00e3o Jos\u00e9 and Imperatriz), and four relegated from the 2018 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie B (Paysandu, Sampaio Corr\u00eaa, Juventude and Boa Esporte).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288055-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C\nConfian\u00e7a, Juventude, N\u00e1utico and Sampaio Corr\u00eaa qualified for the semi-finals and were promoted to the 2020 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288055-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C\nN\u00e1utico defeated Sampaio Corr\u00eaa 5\u20133 on aggregate in the finals to win their first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288055-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C, Group stage\nIn the group stage, each group was played on a home-and-away round-robin basis. The teams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, and 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, the following criteria would be used to determine the ranking: 1. Wins; 2. Goal difference; 3. Goals scored; 4. Head-to-head (if the tie is only between two teams). If tied on aggregate, the away goals rule would be used (except if both teams shared the same stadium); 5. Fewest red cards; 6. Fewest yellow cards; 7. Draw in the headquarters of the Brazilian Football Confederation (Regulations Article 15).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288055-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C, Group stage\nThe top four teams of each group advanced to the quarter-finals of the knockout stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288055-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C, Final Stages\nStarting from the quarter-finals, the teams played a single-elimination tournament with the following rules:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288055-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C, Final Stages\nStarting from the semi-finals, the teams were seeded according to their performance in the tournament. The teams were ranked according to overall points. If tied on overall points, the following criteria would be used to determine the ranking: 1. Overall wins; 2. Overall goal difference; 3. Draw in the headquarters of the Brazilian Football Confederation (Regulations Article 17).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288055-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C, Final Stages, Quarter-finals\nThe matches were played from 31 August to 9 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288055-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C, Final Stages, Quarter-finals, Group C\nTied 2\u20132 on aggregate, N\u00e1utico won on penalties and advanced to the semi-finals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288055-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C, Final Stages, Quarter-finals, Group D\nJuventude won 4\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the semi-finals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288055-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C, Final Stages, Quarter-finals, Group E\nSampaio Corr\u00eaa won 3\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the semi-finals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288055-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C, Final Stages, Quarter-finals, Group F\nConfian\u00e7a won 2\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the semi-finals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288055-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C, Final Stages, Semi-finals\nThe matches were played from 14 to 22 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288055-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C, Final Stages, Semi-finals, Group G\nTied 3\u20133 on aggregate, N\u00e1utico won on penalties and advanced to the finals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288055-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C, Final Stages, Semi-finals, Group H\nSampaio Corr\u00eaa won 3\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the finals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288055-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C, Final Stages, Finals\nThe matches were played on 29 September and 6 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288056-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D\nThe 2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D was a football competition held in Brazil, equivalent to the fourth division. The competition started on 4 May and ended on 18 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288056-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D\nSixty-eight teams competed in the tournament. Sixty-four teams qualified from their state leagues and cups, and four relegated from the 2018 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C (Joinville, Juazeirense, Salgueiro and Tupi).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288056-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D\nBrusque, Ituano, Jacuipense and Manaus qualified for the semi-finals and were promoted to the 2020 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288056-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D\nThe finals between Brusque and Manaus finished in a 4\u20134 draw on aggregate, but Brusque clinched their first title by winning 6\u20135 on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288056-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D, Teams, Federation ranking\nThe number of teams from each state was chosen based on the CBF State Ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288056-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D, Competition format\nIn the first stage, 68 teams were divided into seventeen groups of four, organized regionally. 32 teams (17 winners and 15 runners-up) qualified for the second stage. From the second stage on the competition was played as a knock-out tournament with each round contested over two legs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288056-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D, First stage\nIn the first stage, each group played on a home-and-away round-robin basis. The winners of each group and the best 15 runners-up qualified for the second stage. The teams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, and 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, the following criteria would be used to determine the ranking: 1. Wins; 2. Goal difference; 3. Goals scored; 4. Head-to-head (if the tie was only between two teams); 5. Fewest red cards; 6. Fewest yellow cards; 7. Draw in the headquarters of the Brazilian Football Confederation (Regulations Article 12).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288056-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D, Second stage\nThe Second stage was a two-legged knockout tie, with the draw regionalised.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288056-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D, Second stage, Qualification and draw\nThe 32 qualifiers (17 group winners and 15 best performing group runners-up) were divided into two pots. Pot 1 contained the 16 best performing group winners. Pot 2 contained the worst performing group winner and the 15 qualifying group runners-up. In pot 1 the teams were numbered 1 to 16 in numerical order of the group they qualified from. In pot 2 the teams were numbered 17 to 32 in numerical order of the group they qualified from. In the case that one of the qualifying runners-up was from the same group as the worst performing group winner, both teams would be in pot 2 and the group winners would be numbered lower in sequence than the group runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 72], "content_span": [73, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288056-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D, Second stage, Qualification and draw\nThe teams were ranked according to points. If tied on points, the following criteria would be used to determine the ranking: 1. Wins; 2. Goal difference; 3. Goals scored; 4. Draw in the headquarters of the Brazilian Football Confederation (Regulations Article 14).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 72], "content_span": [73, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288056-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D, Second stage, Qualification and draw\nTo keep the draw regionalised Team 1 played Team 18, Team 2 played Team 17 and this pattern was repeated throughout the draw. The higher numbered team played at home in the first leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 72], "content_span": [73, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288056-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D, Third stage\nThe third stage was a two-legged knockout tie, with the draw regionalised. The ties were predetermined from the second stage, with the winners of second stage tie 1 playing the winners of second stage tie 2, etc. The teams were seeded according to their performance in the tournament with the higher-seeded team hosting the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288056-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D, Third stage, Ties\nThe matches were played from 30 June to 8 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288056-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D, Final stages\nThe final stages were a two leg knockout competition with quarter-finals, semi-finals and finals rounds. The draw for the quarter-finals was seeded based on the table of results of all matches in the competition for the qualifying teams. First played eighth, second played seventh, etc. The top four seeded teams played the second leg at home. The four quarter-final winners were promoted to S\u00e9rie C for 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288056-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D, Final stages\nThe draw for the semi-finals was seeded based on the table of results of all matches in the competition for the qualifying teams. First played fourth, second played third. The top two seeded teams played the second leg at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288056-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D, Final stages\nIn the finals, the team with the best record in the competition played the second leg at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288056-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D, Final stages, Semi-finals ties\nThe matches were played from 28 July to 4 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288057-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Carioca\nThe 2019 Campeonato Carioca de Futebol was the 116th edition of the top division of football in the state of Rio de Janeiro. The competition is organized by FERJ. The top four teams in the final standings of the tournament not otherwise qualified will qualify to compete in the 2020 Copa do Brasil. Additionally, the top two teams not competing in any level of the national Campeonato Brasileiro qualify for the 2020 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288057-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Carioca\nBotafogo were the defending champions. Flamengo won their record 35th Campeonato Carioca after defeating Vasco da Gama in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288057-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Carioca\nBangu and Cabofriense qualified for the 2020 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288057-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Carioca, Format\nThe competition maintains the format of the 2017 and 2018 editions. The preliminary phase of the tournament is contested as a round-robin among the two worst-placed teams of the 2018 competition, the two best-placed teams in the 2018 relegation group, and the two teams promoted from the 2018 S\u00e9rie B1. The top two teams of the preliminary phase qualify for the main competition while the remaining four compete in the relegation group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288057-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Carioca, Format\nIn the main competition, the twelve clubs compete across two rounds in two groups of six. The first round is the Ta\u00e7a Guanabara. Each group contests a round-robin and the two top-placed teams in each group qualify for the semi-final of the Ta\u00e7a Guanabara. In the event of a draw, the higher placed team advances to the final. The Ta\u00e7a Guanabara final is contested as a single match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288057-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Carioca, Format\nThe second round is the Ta\u00e7a Rio. The two groups of six remain the same, and each team faces all six teams of the opposite group. Like the Ta\u00e7a Guanabara, the top two teams in each group standing qualify to a semi-final with the same format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288057-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Carioca, Format\nThe Final Stage is contested as a four-team semifinal and final. The winning teams of the Ta\u00e7a Guanabara and Ta\u00e7a Rio qualify directly to the Final Stage. The best-placed teams in the overall group stage standings that did not win either round also qualify. The final is contested as a two-leg tie. In the event that the same team wins both the Ta\u00e7a Guanabara and Ta\u00e7a Rio, that team qualifies directly to a single-match final. The four other best-placed teams in the overall group stage standings compete in a four-team single-match semifinal and final to face them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288057-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Carioca, First round\nGoytacaz and Resende qualified from the 2018 Campeonato Carioca relegation playoff. Nova Igua\u00e7u and Maca\u00e9 were the two lowest placed teams in the 2018 Campeonato Carioca main tournament. Am\u00e9rica and Americano were promoted from the 2018 Campeonato Carioca S\u00e9rie B1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288057-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Carioca, Championship round, Ta\u00e7a Guanabara\nOn the morning of 8 February, a fire erupted at the Ninho do Urubu youth training ground of Flamengo. The fire resulted in the deaths of ten people, mostly academy players between the ages of 14 and 16 training with the club. Three other people were injured, one of them seriously injured. The initial cause of the fire was suspected to be a malfunctioning air-conditioning unit that caught fire close to 5:00.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 59], "content_span": [60, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288057-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Carioca, Championship round, Ta\u00e7a Guanabara\nMost of the Rio clubs suspended all football activity the day of the tragedy. The governor of the state of Rio de Janeiro declared a three-day period of mourning following the tragedy. The two Ta\u00e7a Guanabara semifinal matches on the following days, including the match between Flamengo and Fluminense, were postponed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 59], "content_span": [60, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288057-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Carioca, Relegation playoffs\nThe Relegation Round is competed from 20 January to 23 February 2018 in double round-robin format. The top two teams qualify for the First Round of the 2020 Campeonato Carioca and the bottom two teams are relegated to the 2019 Campeonato Carioca S\u00e9rie B1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288057-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Carioca, Final stage, Overall table, Knockout stage\nFlamengo advance to the finals with a draw as the higher seeded team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288058-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Carioca S\u00e9rie B1\nThe 2019 Campeonato Carioca S\u00e9rie B1 was the 39th edition of the second division of football in Rio de Janeiro. The contest is organized by FERJ. Since 2017, the Campeonato Carioca S\u00e9rie B has been called the S\u00e9rie B1. Friburguense were champions, defeating America 2-1 in the second match of the final after the first match ended 1-1. Friburguense and America were promoted to the 2020 Campeonato Carioca. America returned to the top division in 2020 after being relegated from the 2019 Campeonato Carioca.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288059-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Catarinense\nThe Campeonato Catarinense de Futebol de 2019 da S\u00e9rie A, known as the 2019 Campeonato Catarinense, was the 94th season of Santa Catarina's top-flight football league. The season began on 16 January and ended on 21 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288059-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Catarinense\nAva\u00ed won on penalties their 17th title after beating Chapecoense in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288059-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Catarinense\nThe defending champions were Figueirense but they were eliminated by Chapecoense in the semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288059-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Catarinense, Format\nThe tournament was contested between 10 teams, who first played in a double round-robin in which the bottom two teams were relegated to next year's S\u00e9rie B. The final stage was a single-legged bracket contested by the top four teams. Only two places were available in the 2020 Copa do Brasil, while three places were available in the 2020 S\u00e9rie D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288060-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Ga\u00facho\nThe 2019 Campeonato da Primeira Divis\u00e3o de Futebol Profissional da FGF (2019 FGF First Division Professional Football Championship), better known as the 2019 Campeonato Ga\u00facho or Ga\u00facho, was the 99th edition of the top flight football league of the Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul. The season began on 20 January and ended on 21 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288060-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Ga\u00facho\nThe 12 clubs contested in the Campeonato Ga\u00facho (Championship A1 Series) in a first phase single round-robin and two-legged knockout bracket in the final. Gr\u00eamio successfully defended in the final its 36th championship title to add the 2019 championship to its cache over Ta\u00e7a Centen\u00e1rio champions Brasil de Pelotas. VAR use would debut in the tournament's history for both legs of the final and any Grenal matches that take place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288060-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Ga\u00facho, Format\nThe Gauch\u00e3o was contested between 12 teams in the first phase a single round-robin, who first played in a single round-robin. The 8 top ranked teams qualified for the final stage, a two-legged knockout bracket, and the 2 bottom ranked teams were relegated to the S\u00e9rie A2. Three places were available in the 2020 Copa do Brasil, while either one or two places would be available in the 2020 S\u00e9rie D, depending on thedecision of the CBF to reduce the number of participant clubs from 68 to 40. A new disitinction called the Campeonato do Interior Ga\u00facho, was awarded to the best-placing team outside the final. Gr\u00eamio and Internacional are automatically eliminated from being eligible for the award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288061-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Goiano\nThe 2019 Campeonato Goiano (officially the Campeonato Goiano de Profissionais da 1\u00aa Divis\u00e3o \u2013 Edi\u00e7\u00e3o 2019) is the 77th edition of Goi\u00e1s's top professional football league. The competition began on 19 January 2019 and will end on 21 de abril 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288061-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Goiano, Format\nIn the first stage, the 12 teams were drawn into two groups of six teams each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288062-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Internacional de T\u00eanis de Campinas\nThe 2019 Campeonato Internacional de T\u00eanis de Campinas was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the eighth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Campinas, Brazil between 30 September and 6 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288062-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Internacional de T\u00eanis de Campinas, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 94], "content_span": [95, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288063-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Internacional de T\u00eanis de Campinas \u2013 Doubles\nHugo Dellien and Guillermo Dur\u00e1n were the defending champions but only Dellien chose to defend his title, partnering Federico Zeballos. Dellien and Zeballos withdrew before their quarterfinal match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288063-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Internacional de T\u00eanis de Campinas \u2013 Doubles\nOrlando Luz and Rafael Matos won the title after defeating Miguel \u00c1ngel Reyes-Varela and Fernando Romboli 6\u20137(2\u20137), 6\u20134, [10\u20138] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288064-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Internacional de T\u00eanis de Campinas \u2013 Singles\nCristian Gar\u00edn was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288064-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Internacional de T\u00eanis de Campinas \u2013 Singles\nJuan Pablo Varillas won the title after defeating Juan Pablo Ficovich 2\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20134), 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288065-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Mineiro\nThe 2019 Campeonato Mineiro was the 105th season of Mineiro's top professional football league. The competition began on January 19 and ended on April 3. Cruzeiro are the defending champions, having won their 37th title by defeating Atl\u00e9tico Mineiro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288065-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Mineiro, Format, First stage\nThe 2019 M\u00f3dulo I first stage was played by 12 clubs in a single round-robin, with all teams playing each other once. The eight best-placed teams qualified for the final stage and the bottom two teams were relegated to the 2020 M\u00f3dulo II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288065-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Mineiro, Format, First stage\nThe league also selects Minas Gerais's representatives in the Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D and the Copa do Brasil. The three best-placed teams not already qualified for the 2019 seasons of the S\u00e9rie A, S\u00e9rie B or S\u00e9rie C, earn places in the 2020 S\u00e9rie D. The four best-placed teams qualify for the 2020 Copa do Brasil. Should a team qualify for the cup by other means, their entry is passed down to the next best-placed team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288065-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Mineiro, Format, Knockout stage\nThe knockout stage was played between the 8 best-placed teams from the previous stage, with the quarterfinals played in a one-legged tie and the semifinals and finals played in a two-legged tie. The quarterfinals were hosted by the better placing team in the first stage. In the semifinals, the best-placed team in the first stage of each contest has the right to choose whether to play its home game in the first or second leg. The away goals rule is not in effect, and should two teams be level on aggregate after both legs, the team who placed better in the first stage advances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288066-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Nacional de F\u00fatbol de Cuba\nThe 2019 Campeonato Nacional de F\u00fatbol de Cuba is the 108th season of the Campeonato Nacional de F\u00fatbol de Cuba, the top division football competition in Cuba. The season began on 19 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288067-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paraense\nThe 2019 Campeonato Paraense was the 107th edition of Par\u00e1's top professional football league. The competition started on 19 January and ended on 21 April. Remo won the championship for the 46th time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288067-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paraense, Format\nThe competition will consist of two groups of five teams each, who will face off in round games and back against the other key times in a single turn. The top two will contest the semi-finals in their respective groups, thereby defining the two championship finalists. The losers of the semifinals will make two matches to decide the third place. Semifinal and final matches will round trip.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288067-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paraense, Format\nThe worst placed of each group will be relegated to the Second Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288067-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paraense, Format\nThe champion qualify to the 2020 Copa Verde. The champion, the runner-up and the 3rd-placed team qualify to the 2020 Copa do Brasil. The best two teams who isn't on Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, S\u00e9rie B or S\u00e9rie C qualifies to 2020 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288067-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paraense, Final stage, Semi-finals, Semi-final 1\nRemo won 1\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 64], "content_span": [65, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288067-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paraense, Final stage, Semi-finals, Semi-final 2\nIndependente won 3\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 64], "content_span": [65, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288068-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paraense Finals\nThe 2019 Campeonato Paraense Finals was the final that decided the 2019 Campeonato Paraense, the 107th season of the Campeonato Paraense. The final were contested between Independente and Remo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288068-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paraense Finals\nRemo defeated Independente 2\u20131 on aggregate to win their 46th Campeonato Paraense title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288068-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paraense Finals, Road to the final\nNote: In all scores below, the score of the home team is given first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288068-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paraense Finals, Format\nThe finals were played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If tied on aggregate, the penalty shoot-out was used to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288068-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paraense Finals, Matches, First leg\nAssistant referees:H\u00e9lcio Ara\u00fajo Neves (Par\u00e1)Rafael Ferreira Vieira (Par\u00e1)Fourth official:Melck M\u00fcller Soares de Almeida (Par\u00e1)Fifth official:Ign\u00e1cio Jos\u00e9 de Almeida Pedro (Par\u00e1)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288068-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paraense Finals, Matches, Second leg\nAssistant referees:M\u00e1rcio Gleidson Correia Dias (Par\u00e1)Jos\u00e9 Ricardo Guimar\u00e3es Coimbra (Par\u00e1)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288069-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paraibano\nThe 2019 Campeonato Paraibano de Futebol was the 109th edition of Para\u00edba's top professional football league. The competition began on 12 January and ended on 20 April. Botafogo-PB were defending champions, after defeating Campinense in the 2018 final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288069-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paraibano\nBotafogo-PB were crowned champions, after a repeat of the 2018 final against Campinense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288069-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paraibano, Format\nIn the first (group) stage, the ten teams were divided into two groups of five. Each team played the five teams in the other group, home and away, for a total of ten games. The teams that finished first and second in each group qualified directly for the second (semi-final) stage. The teams that finished last in each group were relegated to the second division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288069-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paraibano, Format\nIn the second (semi-final) stage, the winner of each group played the runner up of their group over two games, home and away. The group winner had home advantage in the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288069-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paraibano, Format\nIn the third (final) stage, the two winning teams from the second (semi-final) stage played over two legs, with the team with the best record in the competition so far playing the second leg at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288069-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paraibano, Format, Qualification\nThe two finalists qualified to participate in the 2020 Copa do Brasil and 2020 Copa do Nordeste. The two best placed teams (other than those already participating in a national league) qualified to participate in the 2020 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288069-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paraibano, Semi-finals\nIn the semi-final stage, the winner of each group played the runner up of their group over two games, home and away. The group winner had home advantage in the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288069-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paraibano, Semi-finals\nSemi-finals were played between 31 March and 14 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288069-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paraibano, Final\nThe final took place over two games, home and away, and the team with the best record in the competition had home advantage in the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288069-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paraibano, Final\nThe final took place on 17 and 20 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 78]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288070-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paranaense\nThe 2019 Campeonato Paranaense de Futebol was the 105th edition of the top division of football in the state of Paran\u00e1. The competition started on 19 January and ended on 21 April, and was organized by FPF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288070-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paranaense\nThe defending champions, Athletico Paranaense, won on penalties their 25th title after beating Toledo in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288070-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paranaense, Format\nThe 12 participants were split into two groups of six, Group A and Group B, and competed in two separate tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288070-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paranaense, Format\nIn the first tournament, each team in Group A played the six teams in Group B once, and vice versa. The best two in each group advanced to a knockout bracket, where the best team in each group played the second-best team in each group in a single leg in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288070-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paranaense, Format\nIn the second tournament, each team played every other team in their group once, and the best two in each group advanced to a knockout bracket. The best team in each group played the second-best team in the opposite group in a single leg in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288070-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paranaense, Format\nThe winners of each tournament played in a two-legged final to determine the champion. If the same team won both tournaments, the final would not be contested. After both tournaments have been played, the points totals from each tournament were added up, and the bottom two teams were relegated to the second division. Four places were available in the 2020 Copa do Brasil, while two places (via Campeonato Paranaense) were available in the 2020 S\u00e9rie D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288071-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paulista\nThe 2019 Campeonato Paulista de Futebol Profissional da Primeira Divis\u00e3o - S\u00e9rie A1 was the 118th season of S\u00e3o Paulo's top professional football league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288071-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paulista, Format, Tiebreakers\nThe teams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss). If two or more teams were equal on points on completion of the group matches, the following criteria were applied to determine the rankings:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288071-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paulista, Awards, Team of the Year\nThe Player of the Year was awarded to Jean Mota of Santos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288071-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paulista, Awards, Team of the Year\nThe Young Player of the Year was awarded to Gabriel Martinelli of Ituano.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288071-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paulista, Awards, Team of the Year\nThe Countryside Best Player of the Year was awarded to Gabriel Martinelli of Ituano.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288071-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paulista, Awards, Team of the Year\nThe top scorer of the season was Jean Mota, who scored seven goals for Santos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288072-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paulista S\u00e9rie A3\nThe 2019 Campeonato Paulista S\u00e9rie A3 was the 27th season of the third level of the S\u00e3o Paulo state league under its current title and the 66th season overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288072-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paulista S\u00e9rie A3, Team changes\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2018 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288073-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paulista knockout stage\nThe knockout stage of the 2019 Campeonato Paulista began on 23 March with the quarter-finals concluded on 21 April 2019 with the final. A total of eight teams competed in the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288073-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paulista knockout stage, Round and draw dates\nAll draws were 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, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288073-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Paulista knockout stage, Format\nEach tie was played over two legs, with the team with the better ranking in the general table playing the second leg at home. The quarter-finals were played between the winners and runners-up of each group. In the semi-finals, the best ranked team faced the team with the worst remaining ranking, while the second-placed team face the team with the third- best ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288074-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Pernambucano\nThe 2019 Campeonato Pernambucano (officially the Pernambucano da S\u00e9rie A1 de 2019) was the 105th edition of the state championship of Pernambuco organized by FPF. The championship began on 19 January and ended on 21 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288074-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Pernambucano\nIn the Finals, Sport and the defending champions N\u00e1utico tied 2\u20132 on aggregate. Sport won on penalties to win their 42nd Campeonato Pernambucano title. As champions, Sport qualified for the 2020 Copa do Brasil and 2020 Copa do Nordeste.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288074-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Pernambucano\nN\u00e1utico and Afogados qualified for 2020 Copa do Brasil as runners-up and third placed team, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288074-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Pernambucano\nSanta Cruz (best second-team in the 2019 RNC) qualified for the 2020 Copa do Nordeste. N\u00e1utico qualified for the 2020 Pr\u00e9-Copa do Nordeste via RNC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288074-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Pernambucano, Teams\nTen teams were competing, nine returning from the 2018 and Petrolina, promoted as champions of 2018 Pernambucano A2 Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288074-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Pernambucano, First stage\nIn the first stage, each team played the other nine teams in a single round-robin tournament. The teams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, and 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, the following criteria would be used to determine the ranking: 1. Wins; 2. Goal difference; 3. Goals scored; 4. Head-to-head; 5. Fewest red cards; 6. Fewest yellow cards; 7. Draw in the headquarters of the FPF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288074-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Pernambucano, First stage\nTop eight teams advanced to the quarter-finals of the final stages. The two teams with the lowest number of points were relegated to the 2020 Campeonato Pernambucano A2. Top three teams not already qualified for 2020 S\u00e9rie A, S\u00e9rie B or S\u00e9rie C qualified for 2020 S\u00e9rie D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288074-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Pernambucano, Final stages\nStarting from the quarter-finals, the teams played a single-elimination tournament with the following rules:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288074-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeonato Pernambucano, 2019 Campeonato Pernambucano team\nThe 2019 Campeonato Pernambucano team was a squad consisting of the eleven most impressive players at the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288075-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeones Cup\nThe 2019 Campeones Cup was the second edition of the Campeones Cup, an annual North American football match contested between the champions of the previous Major League Soccer season and the winner of the Campe\u00f3n de Campeones from Liga MX.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288075-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeones Cup\nThe match featured Atlanta United FC, winners of the 2018 MLS Cup, and Am\u00e9rica, winners of the 2019 Campe\u00f3n de Campeones. Atlanta United hosted the match at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, Georgia, United States, on 14 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288075-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Campeones Cup, Venue\nAtlanta United FC hosted the match at their home stadium, Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta. The announced attendance was 40,128 (a Campeones Cup Record). Although the stadium can hold 71,000, the upper deck was curtained off, limiting the capacity to 42,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288076-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Campe\u00f3n de Campeones\nThe 2019 Campe\u00f3n de Campeones was a Mexican football match that took place on July 14, 2019. The match is the fifth edition of the modern Campe\u00f3n de Campeones, contested by the Liga MX season's Apertura and Clausura champions. The 2019 edition featured Club Am\u00e9rica, the Apertura champion, and Tigres UANL, the Clausura champion, at the Dignity Health Sports Park (formerly known as the StubHub Center) in Carson, California, hosting for the fourth consecutive year. Like previous editions, the Campe\u00f3n de Campeones was contested at a neutral venue in the United States and paired with the 2019 Supercopa MX.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288076-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Campe\u00f3n de Campeones\nThe winner of this match qualified for the 2019 Campeones Cup and take on the 2018 Major League Soccer champions Atlanta United on August 14, 2019 at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, Georgia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288076-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Campe\u00f3n de Campeones, Match details\nAssistant referees:Pablo Israel Hern\u00e1ndez (Mexico City)Michel Alejandro Morales (Mexico City)Fourth official:Diego Monta\u00f1o Robles (Jalisco)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288077-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World 225\nThe 2019 Camping World 300 is a NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series race held on June 28, 2019, at Chicagoland Speedway in Joliet, Illinois. Contested over 150 laps on the 1.5-mile (2.4\u00a0km) intermediate speedway, it was the 12th race of the 2019 NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288077-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World 225, Background, Track\nChicagoland Speedway is a 1.5 miles (2.4\u00a0km) tri-oval speedway in Joliet, Illinois, southwest of Chicago. The speedway opened in 2001 and currently hosts NASCAR races. Until 2011, the speedway also hosted the IndyCar Series, recording numerous close finishes, including the closest finish in IndyCar history. The speedway is owned and operated by International Speedway Corporation and is located adjacent to Route 66 Raceway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288077-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World 225, Practice, First practice\nBrandon Jones was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 30.738 seconds and a speed of 175.678\u00a0mph (282.726\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288077-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World 225, Practice, Second practice\nAnthony Alfredo was the fastest in the second practice session with a time of 30.635 seconds and a speed of 176.269\u00a0mph (283.677\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288077-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World 225, Practice, Final practice\nAnthony Alfredo was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 30.596 seconds and a speed of 176.494\u00a0mph (284.040\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288077-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World 225, Qualifying\nAustin Hill scored the pole for the race with a time of 30.572 seconds and a speed of 176.632\u00a0mph (284.262\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288077-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World 225, Race, Summary\nAustin Hill started on pole. Grant Enfinger took the lead from him on lap 13, holding it for the majority of the stage. On the final lap of Stage 1, Brandon Jones inched past Enfinger and took the stage win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288077-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World 225, Race, Summary\nEnfinger retook the lead afterwards, but managed to win Stage 2 himself after holding off a charging Jones. As the final stage began, Enfinger's run worsened as he got caught in a four-wide pack and fell to the back of the top 10. He was then pushed into the wall when Spencer Davis got loose underneath him, triggering a wreck that also collected Austin Wayne Self. Issues on pit road caused Enfinger to confront Hill after the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288077-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World 225, Race, Summary\nBrett Moffitt took the lead with 75 laps to go, and remained the fastest driver of the night. He briefly lost the lead during a series of green-flag pit stops. Moffitt's lead over runner-up Jones grew to around two seconds, with Moffitt eventually earning his second win of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288078-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World 300\nThe 2019 Camping World 300 is a NASCAR Xfinity Series race held on June 29, 2019, at Chicagoland Speedway in Joliet, Illinois. Contested over 200 laps on the 1.5-mile (2.4\u00a0km) intermediate speedway, it was the 15th race of the 2019 NASCAR Xfinity Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288078-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World 300, Background, Track\nChicagoland Speedway is a 1.5 miles (2.4\u00a0km) tri-oval speedway in Joliet, Illinois, southwest of Chicago. The speedway opened in 2001 and currently hosts NASCAR races. Until 2011, the speedway also hosted the IndyCar Series, recording numerous close finishes, including the closest finish in IndyCar history. The speedway is owned and operated by International Speedway Corporation and is located adjacent to Route 66 Raceway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288078-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World 300, Practice, First practice\nTyler Reddick was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 30.872 seconds and a speed of 174.916\u00a0mph (281.500\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288078-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World 300, Practice, Final practice\nJoey Logano was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 30.936 seconds and a speed of 174.554\u00a0mph (280.917\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288078-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World 300, Qualifying\nJoey Logano scored the pole for the race with a time of 30.413 seconds and a speed of 177.556\u00a0mph (285.749\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288078-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World 300, Race, Summary\nJoey Logano began on pole. Cole Custer passed him after 3 laps. The first caution was thrown for Justin Allgaier spinning out on lap 13. Allgaier would later crash into the wall in the second half of the race, ending his day early. Custer and Logano continued to battle for the lead, with Custer winning the first stage. He would maintain the lead until Logano regained it on lap 80. A caution was thrown after Ryan Sieg spun out due to a flat tire, and Custer opted to pit, while Logano did not get tires and won the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288078-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World 300, Race, Summary\nCuster retook the lead on lap 116, dominating for the next run. He gave up the lead on lap 154 after taking a green-flag pit stop. Michael Annett and Noah Gragson decided to stay out and stretch their fuel run. B. J. McLeod made contact with the wall later, bringing out the final caution. Ross Chastain was able to return to the lead lap. The final green flag run lasted 21 laps. Custer jumped out to the lead and won the race with a 3-second lead over Logano.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288078-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World 300, After the race\nChristopher Bell's car failed post-race inspection, disqualifying him from his third-place finish. He was credited as finishing last, also losing his 17-stage points. For the inspection, NASCAR had the team take the shocks off the car so it can be compared to pre-race inspection. The front of Bell's car was \"extremely low\" and the rear was slightly higher. Bell's disqualification is the second one to occur under 2019's inspection format, following Chastain's disqualification in the truck series at Iowa in mid-June and is the first Xfinity disqualification since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288079-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World 400\nThe 2019 Camping World 400, is a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race that was held on June 30, 2019 at Chicagoland Speedway in Joliet, Illinois. Contested over 267 laps on the 1.5-mile (2.4\u00a0km) intermediate speedway, it was the 17th race of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season. Alex Bowman won the race, recording his first career Cup Series victory, while Kyle Larson, Joey Logano, Jimmie Johnson and Brad Keselowski rounded out the top 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288079-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World 400\nThis was the last NASCAR race at Chicagoland, as the track lost all three of its 2020 race dates due to scheduling conflicts because of the COVID-19 pandemic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288079-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World 400, Report, Background\nChicagoland Speedway is a 1.5 miles (2.4\u00a0km) tri-oval speedway in Joliet, Illinois, southwest of Chicago. The speedway opened in 2001 and currently hosts NASCAR racing. Until 2011, the speedway also hosted the IndyCar Series, recording numerous close finishes including the closest finish in IndyCar history. The speedway is owned and operated by International Speedway Corporation and located adjacent to Route 66 Raceway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288079-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World 400, Practice, First practice\nAlex Bowman was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 30.692 seconds and a speed of 175.942\u00a0mph (283.151\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288079-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World 400, Practice, Final practice\nJoey Logano was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 30.954 seconds and a speed of 174.452\u00a0mph (280.753\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288079-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World 400, Qualifying\nAustin Dillon scored the pole for the race with a time of 30.636 and a speed of 176.263\u00a0mph (283.668\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288079-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World 400, Media, Television\nNBC Sports covered the race on the television side. Rick Allen, Jeff Burton, Steve Letarte and 2005 race winner Dale Earnhardt Jr. had the call in the booth for the race. Dave Burns, Parker Kligerman, Marty Snider and Kelli Stavast reported from pit lane during the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288079-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World 400, Media, Radio\nThe Motor Racing Network had the radio call for the race, which was simulcast on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288080-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World Bowl\nThe 2019 Camping World Bowl was a college football bowl game played on December 28, 2019, with kickoff at 12:00\u00a0p.m. EST on ABC. It was the 30th edition of the Camping World Bowl, and was one of the 2019\u201320 bowl games concluding the 2019 FBS football season. The game was sponsored by recreational vehicle company Camping World.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288080-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World Bowl, Teams\nThe game matched the Iowa State Cyclones from the Big 12 Conference and the Notre Dame Fighting Irish, an FBS independent. This was the first meeting between the two programs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288080-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World Bowl, Teams, Iowa State Cyclones\nIowa State entered the game with a 7\u20135 record (5\u20134 in conference). The Cyclones finished in a four-way tie for third place in the Big 12. They played three ranked FBS teams during the regular season, defeating Texas while losing to Iowa and Oklahoma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288080-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Camping World Bowl, Teams, Notre Dame Fighting Irish\nNotre Dame entered the game with a 10\u20132 record, ranked 14th in the AP Poll. The Fighting Irish split their four games against ranked teams, defeating Virginia and Navy while losing to Georgia and Michigan. This was Notre Dame's second Camping World Bowl; their 2011 team appeared in the then-Champs Sports Bowl, losing to Florida State, 18\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 57], "content_span": [58, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288081-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Can-Am League season\nThe 2019 Canadian American Association of Professional Baseball season began May 16 and ended September 2. It was the 15th season of operations for the league. Following the regular season, the playoffs were held. The New Jersey Jackals defeated the previous defending champions Sussex County Miners in the fourth game of the championship round on September 14, 2019. It was the Jackals\u2019 fifth championship overall as a team for the first time in fifteen years, but it was their first championship title as a member of the Can-Am League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288081-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Can-Am League season\nThis would be the last season in Can-Am League history, as the league announced on October 16, 2019 that they would merge with the Frontier League and operate as a 14-team league under the Frontier League banner. All teams except the Ottawa Champions were absorbed by the Frontier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288081-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Can-Am League season, Season summary\nOnce again, the Cuban National Baseball Team and Shikoku Island team both toured during the regular season, facing all six of the Can-Am League teams. This season also saw the Empire League playing four games. Shortly after this season, the Can-Am League merged with the Frontier League, absorbing five of its teams to make a total of 14 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288081-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Can-Am League season, Season summary, All-star game and home run derby\nIn the 2019 season, the league held a home run derby and all-star game. The events took place on July 9\u201310, 2019 at Palisades Credit Union Park, home of the Rockland Boulders. In both events, the Can-Am League All-Stars faced the Frontier League All-Stars. The home run derby was played on July 9, 2019, where Boulders star Grant Heyman won the home run derby for the Can-Am League. The all-star game was played the following day, July 10, where the Frontier League defeated the Can-Am League, 7\u20130. J.J. Hernandez was named the all-star game MVP for the Frontier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288082-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canad Inns Women's Classic\nThe 2019 Canad Inns Women's Classic was held from October 17 to 20 at the Portage Curling Club in Portage la Prairie, Manitoba as part of the World Curling Tour. The event was held in a triple-knockout format with a purse of $60,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288082-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canad Inns Women's Classic\nIn the final, Elena Stern of Switzerland defeated Rachel Homan of Ottawa, Ontario by stealing one in an extra end to claim the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288083-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canada Cup\nThe 2019 Home Hardware Canada Cup was held from November 27 \u2013 December 1 at Sobeys Arena in Leduc, Alberta. The tournament winners were the first qualifiers for the 2021 Canadian Olympic Curling Trials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288083-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canada Cup\nIn the men's final, John Epping beat Kevin Koe to win his first Canada Cup. Koe was looking for his third title, having won the event in 2008 and 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288083-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Canada Cup\nIn the women's final, Rachel Homan defeated Tracy Fleury to win her second Canada Cup event, her first in 2015. It was Fleury's first Canada Cup playoff appearance with her previous best finish a 2-4 round robin record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288083-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Canada Cup\nThe total purse for the event was $265,000 with the winning teams to receive $40,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288083-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Canada Cup, Men, Teams\nSix teams qualified for the event on September 17. The top-ranked team on the CTRS standings as of November 11 that hasn't previously qualified will also qualify for the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288083-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Canada Cup, Women, Teams\nSix teams qualified for the event on September 17. The top-ranked team on the CTRS standings as of November 11 that hasn't previously qualified will also qualify for the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288084-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canada Open (badminton)\nThe 2019 Canada Open (officially known as the Yonex Canada Open 2019 for sponsorship reasons) was a badminton tournament which took place at Markin-MacPhail Centre in Canada from 2 to 7 July 2019 and had a total purse of $75,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288084-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canada Open (badminton), Tournament\nThe 2019 Canada Open was the third Super 100 tournament of the 2019 BWF World Tour and also part of the Canada Open championships, which has been held since 1957. This tournament was organized by the Badminton Alberta and sanctioned by the BWF and Badminton Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288084-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Canada Open (badminton), Tournament, Venue\nThis international tournament was held at Markin-MacPhail Centre in Calgary, Alberta, Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288084-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Canada Open (badminton), Tournament, Point distribution\nBelow is the point distribution table for each phase of the tournament based on the BWF points system for the BWF Tour Super 100 event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288084-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Canada Open (badminton), Tournament, Prize money\nThe total prize money for this tournament was US$75,000. Distribution of prize money was in accordance with BWF regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288085-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canada Sevens\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Jonesey95 (talk | contribs) at 16:19, 20 February 2020 (Fix Linter errors using AutoEd). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288085-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canada Sevens\nThe 2019 Canada Sevens was the fourth edition of the Canada Sevens tournament, and the sixth tournament of the 2018\u201319 World Rugby Sevens Series. The tournament was played on 9\u201310 March at BC Place in Vancouver.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288085-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Canada Sevens, Format\nThe teams are drawn into four 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 bracket where teams compete for the Gold, Silver, and Bronze Medals. The bottom two teams from each group go to the Challenge Trophy bracket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288085-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Canada Sevens, Teams\nFifteen core teams played in the tournament along with one invitational team, the winner of the 2019 Sudam\u00e9rica Rugby Sevens, Chile:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288085-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Canada Sevens, Players, Dream Team\nThe following seven players were selected to the tournament Dream Team at the conclusion of the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288086-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canada Winter Games\nThe 2019 Canada Winter Games, officially known as the XXVII Canada Games, is a Canadian multi-sport event that was held in Red Deer, Alberta, from February 15, 2019, to March 3, 2019. These were the third Canada Winter Games held in the province of Alberta, after the 1975 Canada Winter Games in Lethbridge and the 1995 Canada Winter Games in Grande Prairie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288086-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canada Winter Games, Host selection\nOn September 4, 2014, it was announced that Red Deer had won its bid to host the games by beating Lethbridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288086-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Canada Winter Games, Venues\n13 competition venues located in Red Deer, Calgary and Kananaskis were used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288086-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Canada Winter Games, Sports\n164 medals events in 19 sports were contested. Note, ski cross is included in the alpine ski program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288086-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Canada Winter Games, Participating Provinces/Territories\nAll 13 of Canada's provinces and territories competed. The number of competitors each province or territory entered is in brackets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 61], "content_span": [62, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288086-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Canada Winter Games, Schedule\nThe competition was held over 16 days, with Saturday the 23rd being the transition day (no events held).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288087-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canada Women's Sevens\nThe 2019 Canada Women's Sevens was the fifth tournament within the 2018\u201319 World Rugby Women's Sevens Series and the fifth edition of the Canada Women's Sevens to be played in the series. It was held over the weekend of 11\u201312 May 2019 at Westhills Stadium in Langford, British Columbia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288087-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canada Women's Sevens, Format\nThe teams 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 brackets while the top 2 third place teams also compete in the Cup/Plate. The other teams from each group play-off for the Challenge Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288087-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Canada Women's Sevens, Teams\nEleven core teams are participating in the tournament along with one invited team, Brazil:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288088-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Championship\nThe 2019 Canadian Championship was the twelfth edition of the Canadian Championship, contested from May 15 to September 25, 2019. Montreal Impact won their fourth Canadian Championship title (their tenth Voyageurs Cup) and earned a berth in the 2020 CONCACAF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288088-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Championship\nThe competition expanded to thirteen teams with the introduction of the seven Canadian Premier League (CPL) clubs, the most in the competition's history. The 2019 tournament also marked the first time that clubs from Manitoba and Nova Scotia were represented in the Canadian Championship, and the return of clubs from Alberta after none participated in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288088-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Championship\nCavalry FC's 2\u20131 aggregate defeat of Vancouver Whitecaps FC in the tournament's third qualifying round marked the first time in the history of the Canadian Championship that an MLS team was defeated by a non-MLS team in a home-and-away series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288088-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Championship\nIgnacio Piatti was the tournament's top scorer with four goals and won the George Gross Memorial Trophy, while Zachary Brault-Guillard received the inaugural Best Young Canadian Player award for the best Canadian player of the tournament aged 21 or younger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288088-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Championship, Format\nThe format of the competition was changed to include the seven CPL clubs, and consisted of three qualifying rounds before semi-finals and a final. All rounds were played in a two-legged tie format. In the first qualifying round, the League1 Ontario champion Vaughan Azzurri, Premi\u00e8re Ligue de soccer du Qu\u00e9bec champion A.S. Blainville, and four CPL clubs entered the competition. They were joined by the remaining three CPL clubs (given byes due to previously competing or being sanctioned earlier than the other clubs) in the second qualifying round. In the third qualifying round, Ottawa Fury FC and two Major League Soccer teams entered. The previous year's champion, Toronto FC, received a bye to the semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288088-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Championship, First qualifying round, Summary\nThe first legs were held on May 15, and the second legs on May 22, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288088-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Championship, Second qualifying round, Summary\nThe first legs were held on June 4 and 5, and the second legs were held on June 11 and 12, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288088-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Championship, Third qualifying round, Summary\nThe first legs were held on July 10, and the second legs were held on July 24, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288088-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Championship, Semi-finals, Summary\nThe first legs were held on August 7, and the second legs were held on August 14, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288088-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Championship, Final, Summary\nThe first leg was held on September 18, and the second leg was held on September 25, 2019.The higher-seeded team in the final, Toronto FC, chose to play the first leg away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288089-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Championship Final\nThe 2019 Canadian Championship Final was a two-legged series to determine the winner of the 2019 Canadian Championship, Canada's primary domestic cup competition in men's soccer. The series was played between Canadian Classique rivals Montreal Impact and three-time defending champions Toronto FC, both members of Major League Soccer. It was the third time Montreal and Toronto have met in the finals since the cup format was adopted in 2011; with the Impact winning in 2014, and Toronto winning in 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288089-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Championship Final\nThe first leg was hosted by the Impact at Saputo Stadium in Montreal on September 18, while the second leg was played at BMO Field in Toronto on September 25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288089-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Championship Final\nMontreal Impact won their fourth title and first since 2014, following a 3\u20131 victory on penalties after both legs finished 1\u20130 to the home side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288089-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Championship Final\nAs winners, Montreal qualified for the 2020 CONCACAF Champions League as Canada's sole direct entrant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288089-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Championship Final, Background\nThis was the third time Montreal Impact and Toronto FC faced one another in the Canadian Championship final. The first time, in 2014, Montreal Impact won 2\u20131 over two legs to win the Voyageurs Cup and advance to the 2014\u201315 CONCACAF Champions League. Montreal subsequently made it to the Champions League final, where they were ultimately defeated by Mexican club Am\u00e9rica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288089-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Championship Final, Background\nThe more recent finals meeting took place in 2017, where Toronto FC won 3\u20132 on aggregate. Toronto also advanced to the CONCACAF Champions League final after having qualified through the Canadian Championship, losing to Guadalajara on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288089-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Championship Final, Background, Montreal Impact\nMontreal Impact were drawn into the third qualifying round where they played Canadian Premier League side York9 FC from Toronto. Over two legs, they defeated York9 3\u20132 on aggregate to advance to the semi-finals. In the semi-finals they went on to play another CPL side, Cavalry FC from Calgary, who had just defeated fellow MLS side Vancouver Whitecaps FC to advance to play the Impact. Montreal defeated Cavalry 2\u20131 in Montreal, and 1\u20130 in Calgary for a 3\u20131 aggregate victory to advance to the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288089-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Championship Final, Background, Toronto FC\nAs the defending champions, Toronto FC qualified directly to the semi-finals where they played the Ottawa Fury of the USL Championship. Toronto won the first leg 2\u20130 in Ottawa at TD Place Stadium, followed by a 3\u20130 victory at home one week later August 14 to win the series 5\u20130 on aggregate and advance to the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288090-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Curling Club Championships\nThe 2019 Canadian Curling Club Championships was held from November 25 to 30 at the Leduc Curling Club in Leduc, Alberta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288090-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Curling Club Championships\nIn the Men's final, Paul Moffatt's rink from the Kitchener-Waterloo Granite Club in Ontario defeated the Jasmin Gibeau rink from the Club de Curling Thurso in Quebec 10-5 to claim the title. It was the KW Granite Club's first victory at the Club Championships. In the bronze medal game, Northern Ontario's Ben Mikkelsen rink from the Port Arthur Curling Club shut out the Tyler Williams rink from the Whitehorse Curling Club in Yukon 12\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288090-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Curling Club Championships\nIn the Women's final, Alberta's Nanette Dupont rink from the Lethbridge Curling Club defeated Nova Scotia's Tanya Phillips rink from the CFB Halifax Curling Club 9-4 to win the gold medal. It was a second championship for Dupont as she won the title in 2010. In the bronze medal game, Quebec's Isabelle N\u00e9ron rink from the Club de Curling Chicoutimi beat the Peggy Dorosz rink from the Whitehorse Curling Club in Yukon 9\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288091-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2019 Canadian Tire National Skating Championships was held from January 13\u201320, 2019 in Saint John, New Brunswick. Organized by Skate Canada and sponsored by Canadian Tire, the event determined the national champions of Canada. Medals were be 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 were among the selection criteria for the 2019 World Championships, the 2019 Four Continents Championships, and the 2019 World Junior Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288091-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Figure Skating Championships\nSaint John was named as the host in January 2018. Competitors qualified at the Skate Canada Challenge held in Edmonton, Alberta in December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288091-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Figure Skating Championships\nThis was Saint John's first time hosting this event. The city had previously hosted Skate Canada International three times (2013, 1999, and 1995). They also hosted the 1998 World Junior Championships in December 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288091-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Figure Skating Championships, Entries\nThe Skate Canada published the entry list on December 21, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288091-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Figure Skating Championships, Schedule\nAll competition events for the 2019 Canadian Tire National Skating Championships will be held at Harbour Station in Saint John, New Brunswick. Practices will be held at Qplex in Quispamsis, New Brunswick. The Harbour Station is the home of the Saint John Sea Dogs, of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League, and the Saint John Riptide of the National Basketball League of Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288091-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Figure Skating Championships, International team selections, World Championships\nSkate Canada will announce the team for the 2019 World Championships after the championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 94], "content_span": [95, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288091-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Figure Skating Championships, International team selections, Four Continents Championships\nSkate Canada will announce the team for the 2019 Four Continents Championships after the championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 104], "content_span": [105, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288091-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Figure Skating Championships, International team selections, World Junior Championships\nSkate Canada will announce the team for the 2019 World Junior Championships after the championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 101], "content_span": [102, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288092-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Grand Prix\nThe 2019 Canadian Grand Prix (formally known as the Formula 1 Pirelli Grand Prix du Canada 2019) was a Formula One motor race held on 9 June 2019 at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It was the 7th round of the 2019 FIA Formula One World Championship. It was the 56th running of the Canadian Grand Prix, the 50th time the event had been included as a round of the Formula One World Championship since the inception of the series in 1950, and the 40th time that a World Championship had been held at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve. The race was won by Lewis Hamilton after a controversial penalty was given to race leader Sebastian Vettel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288092-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Grand Prix, Background, Championship standings before the race\nHeading into the race Lewis Hamilton had a 17-point advantage over team mate Valtteri Bottas in the Drivers' Championship. In the Constructors' Championship it was Mercedes who held a 118-point advantage over Ferrari.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 76], "content_span": [77, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288092-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Grand Prix, Background, Entrants\nThe drivers and teams were the same as the season entry list with no additional stand-in drivers for the race. However, Nicholas Latifi drove in the first practice session for Williams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288092-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Grand Prix, Background, Entrants\nMission Winnow, the title sponsor of Ferrari, was banned from this race as it did not comply with local laws governing tobacco sponsorship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288092-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Grand Prix, Qualifying\nSebastian Vettel won pole position ahead of Lewis Hamilton and Vettel's teammate Charles Leclerc. Max Verstappen could only finish 11th in Q2 following a crash at the final corner from Kevin Magnussen, who therefore failed to set a lap time in Q3, and started the race from the pit lane. Daniel Ricciardo qualified in 4th place for Renault, the team's highest qualifying position since Robert Kubica qualified 4th at the 2010 Japanese Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288092-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Grand Prix, Race\nSebastian Vettel started on pole and maintained the lead from Lewis Hamilton, who started in second place. The opening lap saw Valtteri Bottas lose sixth place to Nico H\u00fclkenberg, and saw Alexander Albon squeezed between Sergio P\u00e9rez and Antonio Giovinazzi at turn one, making contact with Giovinazzi and causing Albon to lose his front wing. Debris from Albon was blown back into the cockpit of Romain Grosjean's Haas, catching on the car's halo and causing Grosjean to go straight on at turn two whilst he removed the debris with his hand, losing positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288092-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian Grand Prix, Race\nAlbon pitted at the end of the lap for a replacement, having fallen to last place. His pace suffered for the rest of the race, and the team eventually opted to retire his damaged car on lap 60. Carlos Sainz Jr. was forced to pit at the end of the third lap after his brake calipers began to overheat due to a duct blockage. The problem was cleared and Sainz emerged from the pits in 19th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288092-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Grand Prix, Race\nOn lap nine, Lando Norris, who was running in eighth place, pulled over to the side of the pit exit after suffering a broken right-rear suspension. It later emerged that the McLaren's brakes had overheated and set on fire, burning through the suspension. This was unconnected to the problem encountered earlier by his teammate, which was caused by a helmet visor tear-off. No safety car was deployed, since Norris' car had stopped away from the track.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288092-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Grand Prix, Race\nH\u00fclkenberg made his first pit stop at the end of lap 16, allowing Bottas and Max Verstappen to take fourth and fifth place respectively. Vettel pitted at the end of lap 26, with Hamilton inheriting the race lead. Vettel emerged in third place ahead of Bottas and Verstappen. On the following lap, Giovinazzi spun at turn two, coming to a stop on the grass and avoiding the barriers. He was able to recover and continue racing. Hamilton pitted at the end of lap 28, coming out behind Vettel and handing the lead to Charles Leclerc. Bottas pitted on lap 30, emerging in sixth place behind the Renault of Daniel Ricciardo. Leclerc pitted on lap 33, resulting in Vettel re-taking the lead. Bottas made it past Ricciardo on lap 38 after struggling to overtake the Renault since his pit stop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 817]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288092-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Grand Prix, Race\nHamilton had been closely following Vettel until turn three of lap 48, when Vettel went straight on over the grass, missing turn four. As the Ferrari re-joined the track, Hamilton was squeezed towards the outside wall and was forced to slow down to avoid a collision. A lap later, Verstappen was the last of the front-runners to make a pit stop, emerging in seventh place behind both Renaults. By lap 52 the Red Bull had made it up to fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288092-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Grand Prix, Race\nOn lap 57, Vettel was handed a five-second time penalty for the lap 48 incident, for re-entering the track unsafely and forcing another driver off the track. Over the next thirteen laps, Vettel attempted to build a five-second gap to Hamilton in second. Vettel ultimately crossed the finish line in first place, but was only 1.3 seconds ahead, meaning the victory was awarded to Hamilton. At the conclusion of the race, rather than park his car in parc ferme, Vettel pulled over much earlier in the pit lane and had to be collected by an official to attend the podium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288092-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian Grand Prix, Race\nOn the way, Vettel removed the #1 sign from in front of Hamilton's car and moved it to the empty space where his car should have been parked. Ferrari announced it would appeal the penalty. On 21 June the FIA denied the appeal, stating that Ferrari had supplied \"...no significant and relevant new elements which were unavailable to the parties at the time [the penalty was given],...\" The Incident has been described as controversial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288093-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Junior Curling Championships\nThe 2019 New Holland Canadian Junior Curling Championships was held from January 19 to 27 at the Art Hauser Centre in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan. The winners represented Canada at the 2019 World Junior Curling Championships in Liverpool, Nova Scotia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288093-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Junior Curling Championships, Qualification, Manitoba\nThe Canola Junior Provincial Championship presented by Telus were held from January 3, 2019 - January 7, 2019 at the Heather Curling Club in Winnipeg, Manitoba.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 67], "content_span": [68, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288093-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Junior Curling Championships, Qualification, Manitoba\nThe championship was held in a round robin format, which qualified four teams for a page-playoff championship round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 67], "content_span": [68, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288093-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Junior Curling Championships, Qualification, New Brunswick\nThe New Brunswick Papa John's Pizza U21 Championships were held from December 27\u201330, 2018 at the Capital Winter Club in Fredericton, New Brunswick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 72], "content_span": [73, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288093-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Junior Curling Championships, Qualification, New Brunswick\nThe championship was held in a modified triple-knockout format, which qualified three teams for a championship round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 72], "content_span": [73, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288093-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Junior Curling Championships, Qualification, Nova Scotia\nThe AMJ Campbell U21 Championships were held from December 27\u201331, 2018 at the Lakeshore Curling Club in Lower Sackville, Nova Scotia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288093-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Junior Curling Championships, Qualification, Nova Scotia\nThe championship was held in a modified triple-knockout format, which qualified three teams for a championship round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288093-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Junior Curling Championships, Qualification, Ontario\nThe Ontario U21 Provincial Championships were held December 27\u201330, 2018 at the Annandale Golf & Curling Club in Ajax.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288093-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Junior Curling Championships, Qualification, Prince Edward Island\nThe Pepsi PEI Provincial Junior Curling Championships were held from December 27\u201330, 2018 at the Charlottetown Curling Club in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 79], "content_span": [80, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288093-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Junior Curling Championships, Qualification, Prince Edward Island\nThe championship was held in a modified triple-knockout format, which qualified three teams for a championship round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 79], "content_span": [80, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288094-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Junior Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament\nThe men's tournament of the 2019 New Holland Canadian Junior Curling Championships was held from January 19 to 27 at the Art Hauser Centre and the Prince Albert Golf & Curling Club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288094-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Junior Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Round robin results\nAll draw times are listed in Eastern Standard Time (UTC\u22125:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 82], "content_span": [83, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288095-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Junior Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament\nThe women's tournament of the 2019 New Holland Canadian Junior Curling Championships was held from January 19 to 27 at the Art Hauser Centre and the Prince Albert Golf & Curling Club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288095-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Junior Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Round robin results\nAll draw times are listed in Eastern Standard Time (UTC\u22125:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 84], "content_span": [85, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288096-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Junior Open Squash Championships\nThe 2019 Canadian Junior Open Squash Championships is the men's edition of the 2019 Canadian Junior Open Squash Championships, which is a World Junior Squash Circuit Tier 3 event. The event took place at The Club at White Oaks from December 6 to 10. Juan Sebastian Salazar Gomez from Mexico claimed his first Canadian Junior Open title after defeating the Canadian Maaz Mufti 3-0 in the Boys' Under 19 final. Gabriel Yun from Canada won his first Canadian Junior Open title defeating Shomari Wiltshire of Guyana in the Boys' Under 17 final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288097-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Mixed Curling Championship\nThe 2019 Canadian Mixed Curling Championship was held from November 4 to 10, 2018 at the Fort Rouge Curling Club in Winnipeg, Manitoba. Team Manitoba, as champions, represented Canada at the 2019 World Mixed Curling Championship where they won the gold medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288098-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Mixed Doubles Curling Championship\nThe 2019 Canadian Mixed Doubles Curling Championship was held from March 19 to 24 at the Willie O'Ree Place in Frederiction, New Brunswick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288098-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Mixed Doubles Curling Championship, Round robin results\nAll draw times are listed in Atlantic Standard Time (UTC\u221203:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288099-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Open (curling)\nThe 2019 Meridian Canadian Open was held from January 8 to 13 at the Civic Centre in North Battleford, Saskatchewan. This will be the fifth Grand Slam event and third \"major\" of the 2018\u201319 curling season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288099-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Open (curling)\nOn the men\u2019s side, Brendan Bottcher of Edmonton defeated John Epping of Toronto 6-3 in seven ends to win his first Grand Slam. On the women\u2019s side, Rachel Homan of Ottawa edged Silvana Tirinzoni of Aarau 4-3 to win her tenth slam. With the win, Homan passed Jennifer Jones for most career Grand Slam wins, excluding defunct slams. It was also Homan's third straight slam win of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288099-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Open (curling), Qualification\nSixteen teams compete in the Canadian Open, including the seven top-ranked teams on the World Curling Tour's Order of Merit rankings as of December 3, 2018, the seven top teams on the Year-to-Date rankings as of December 3, the Tier 2 winner of the 2018 Tour Challenge, and a sponsor's exemption.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288100-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Premier League Finals\nThe 2019 Canadian Premier League Finals determined the winner of the Canadian Premier League's inaugural 2019 season. It featured Cavalry FC of Calgary, Alberta, and Forge FC of Hamilton, Ontario, and was the culmination of a rivalry that had developed between those teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288100-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Premier League Finals\nIt was contested over two legs between the winners of the spring and fall seasons, with the fall season winners choosing which leg to host. Since Cavalry won both split seasons, the team with the second-best overall season record, Forge, also competed in the Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288100-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Premier League Finals\nForge won the inaugural Canadian Premier League title 2\u20130 on aggregate over two legs, earning the right to compete in the 2020 CONCACAF League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288100-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Premier League Finals, Path to the finals\nOn June 26, 2019, Cavalry won the spring season and qualified for the championship. On September 28, 2019, Forge secured the second best overall season record, and thus clinched the second spot in the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288100-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Premier League Finals, Path to the finals, Cavalry FC\nCavalry started the inaugural 2019 Canadian Premier League season as one of six newly-formed teams competing in the league. They started their spring campaign with a 2\u20131 win over York9 FC on May 4. They went on to win the first seven games of the ten game spring season before suffering a 1\u20130 to Forge FC. Their 2\u20130 victory in their next game against York9 on June 26 clinched the spring title and a berth in the Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288100-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Premier League Finals, Path to the finals, Cavalry FC\nCavalry finished the spring season with a 8\u20130\u20132 record. They also won the fall competition by one point with a 11\u20135\u20132 record, giving the Finals berth for that season to the second-placed overall record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288100-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Premier League Finals, Path to the finals, Forge FC\nForge was another one of the newly-formed teams for the inaugural season. They finished the spring season in second place with a 6\u20131\u20133 record. In the fall season, Cavalry and Forge cemented themselves as the top two teams in the standings. Forge was able to clinch the Finals berth after a 3\u20130 victory over Pacific FC on September 28, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288100-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Premier League Finals, Path to the finals, Forge FC\nDespite not clinching the fall title, Cavalry and Forge's dominance ensured that no other team could catch them in either the fall or overall standings. Forge would go on to finish second in the fall season by one point, winning the Finals berth not as the fall title winner but the second-placed overall finisher.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288100-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Premier League Finals, Path to the finals, Head-to-head\nGoing into the Finals, Cavalry and Forge had played each other seven times in 2019; winning three matches each, with one draw, and scoring seven goals apiece. In June, Cavalry defeated Forge 3\u20132 on aggregate in the second qualifying round of the Canadian Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288100-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Premier League Finals, Path to the finals, Head-to-head\nIn the final week of the regular season, Forge and Cavalry faced-off in Hamilton. With both teams having clinched their positions in the overall table, each side rested key players in advance of the Finals. Forge won the game 1\u20130 but defender Dominic Samuel picked up two yellow cards and was automatically suspended for the first leg of the Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288100-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Premier League Finals, Venues\nForge's home of Tim Hortons Field in Hamilton, with a reduced seating capacity of 10,016 hosted the first leg. Opened in 2014, the multi-purpose stadium is shared with the Canadian Football League's Hamilton Tiger-Cats. The second leg was held in Cavalry's home of ATCO Field in Foothills County. It is a 5,288 capacity stadium part of the Spruce Meadows equestrian facility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288100-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Premier League Finals, Match details, First leg, Summary\nThe first leg of the Finals was played on October 26 at Tim Hortons Field in Hamilton, Ontario. Forge FC entered the game without defenders Dominic Samuel and Bertrand Owundi who were serving suspensions. Forge had the first close chance when captain Kyle Bekker's long shot hit the crossbar in the 35th minute. Minutes later, Cavalry defender Joel Waterman handled the ball in his own penalty area while sliding to prevent a scoring chance. Waterman was sent off and Forge was awarded a penalty kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288100-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian Premier League Finals, Match details, First leg, Summary\nCPL-leading scorer Tristan Borges took the penalty kick but it was stopped by Marco Carducci to keep the game scoreless. Late into first half stoppage time, Borges would beat Carducci with a left-footed strike to give Forge the lead going into halftime. Early in the second half, Forge controlled possession with the man-advantage. In the 69th minute, a challenge between Borges and Jay Wheeldon of Cavalry sent both players to the ground. As a result of the play, Borges was shown a red card and both teams finished the match with 10 players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288100-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Premier League Finals, Match details, First leg, Summary\nAfter the match, Cavalry and Forge appealed their respective red cards to the Canadian Soccer Association. The governing body's disciplinary committee upheld the red card to Cavalry's Joel Waterman for denying an obvious goal scoring opportunity, and confirmed he would be suspended for the second leg of the Finals. The red card and suspension to Tristan Borges was overturned, with the committee citing that his actions \"did not meet the threshold of a violent conduct offence.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288101-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Premier League season\nThe 2019 Canadian Premier League season was the inaugural season of the Canadian Premier League, the top level of Canadian professional soccer. The regular season began on April 27 and ended on October 19, with seven teams competing. The inaugural match of the Canadian Premier League took place between Forge FC and York9 at Tim Hortons Field on April 27, 2019, which ended in a 1\u20131 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288101-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Premier League season\nThe CPL Finals were contested between the Spring and Fall season champions, Cavalry FC, and the Spring and Fall season runners-up, Forge FC, in October and November. Forge FC won 2\u20130 over two legs to win the inaugural Canadian Premier League title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288101-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Premier League season, Overview, Background\nOn May 6, 2017, the Canadian Premier League was unanimously approved and sanctioned by the Canadian Soccer Association. Seven teams competed in the first Canadian Premier League season, leaving four professional Canadian teams playing in United States-based leagues (Montreal Impact, Toronto FC and Vancouver Whitecaps FC in Major League Soccer and Ottawa Fury FC in the USL Championship). The CPL teams competed in the 2019 Canadian Championship with the Canadian MLS and USL teams, and the champions of the Ontario and Quebec tier three leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288101-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Premier League season, Overview, Teams\nSeven teams competed during this season \u2013 six newly-formed teams and one existing team which joined the CPL. The six new teams were Cavalry FC, Forge FC, HFX Wanderers FC, Pacific FC, Valour FC, and York9 FC. FC Edmonton announced their move to the CPL having previously ceased professional operations following their 2017 season in the North American Soccer League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288101-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Premier League season, Overview, Format\nThe Canadian Premier League season ran from late April to October. Each team played 28 games, split between a spring and fall season. The 10-game spring season began on April 27 and ended on Canada Day, July 1. The 18-game fall season began on July 6 and ended on October 19. The winner of each season gained a berth into the 2019 Canadian Premier League Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288101-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Premier League season, Spring season, 2019 CONCACAF League qualification\nOne Canadian Premier League team qualifies annually for the CONCACAF League tournament. For the 2019 edition only, this slot was granted to one of the league's 'inaugural teams' (FC Edmonton, Forge FC, or Valour FC) based on their home and away matches in the 2019 spring season. In subsequent years, CONCACAF League qualification is awarded to the previous year's CPL champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 86], "content_span": [87, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288101-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Premier League season, Finals\nThe winners of the spring and fall seasons gained berths to the two-legged CPL Finals. As a contingency implemented this year because a single team won both halves of the season, the second berth was given to the team with the second-best overall record. The two games were played on October 26, 2019 and November 2, 2019, with the winner of the Fall season choosing which leg to host.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288101-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Premier League season, Finals, Results\nThe first leg was held on October 26, and the second leg on November 2, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288101-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Premier League season, Awards, Premier Performer\nThe Premier Performer presented by Volkswagen Canada is presented to the CPL's top player based on an algorithm developed by the league and its data analysis provider. The winner receives a 2019 Volkswagen Jetta GLI, handed out at the Canadian Premier League Awards ceremony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288101-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Premier League season, Awards, Canadian Premier League Awards\nOn November 1, 2019, the Canadian Premier League revealed the five individual awards to be given based on performance over the whole season including Finals. The awards are Inuit soapstone sculptures designed by artists from Cape Dorset, Nunavut. The recipients of the awards were announced at a ceremony in Toronto on November 26.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 75], "content_span": [76, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288101-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Premier League season, Awards, Fan Awards\nThe Canadian Premier League allowed fans to vote for a series of Fan Awards for a chance to win various prizes. The winners were announced on December 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288101-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Premier League season, Player transfers, U Sports Draft\nThe 2018 CPL\u2013U Sports Draft was held on November 12 in Vancouver, British Columbia. Draftees were invited to team preseason camps, with an opportunity to earn a developmental contract and retain their U Sports men's soccer eligibility. Cavalry FC selected Gabriel Bitar with the first overall pick. Three players were selected by each team, with a total of twenty-one players being drafted including fifteen Canadians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288101-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Premier League season, Player transfers, Foreign players\nCanadian Premier League teams may sign a maximum of seven international players, out of which only five can be in the starting line-up for each match. The following players are considered foreign players for the 2019 season. This list does not include Canadian citizens who represent other countries at international level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288101-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Premier League season, Player transfers, Foreign players\nPlayers in bold have been capped internationally at the senior level by their respective nation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288102-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Senior Curling Championships\nThe 2019 Everest Canadian Senior Curling Championships, Canada's national 50+ curling championship was held March 22 to 28 at the Chilliwack Curling and Community Centre in Chilliwack, British Columbia. The winning teams will represent Canada at the 2020 World Senior Curling Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288102-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Senior Curling Championships\nThis was the first event to be held at the new Chilliwack Curling and Community Centre facility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288102-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Senior Curling Championships\nThe men's event was headlined by defending champions Bryan Cochrane of Ontario and two-time world champion Al Hackner of Northern Ontario. The women's event was headlined by defending champions Sherry Anderson (and 2018 World Senior champion) of Saskatchewan, 2006 Olympic bronze medalist Glenys Bakker of Alberta and four-time Tournament of Hearts bronze medalist Sherry Middaugh of Ontario, who made her seniors debut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288103-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Soccer League season\nThe 2019 Canadian Soccer League season was the 22nd season under the Canadian Soccer League name. The season started on May 19, 2019, and concluded on October 26, 2019 with the CSL Championship final. Fixtures for the 2019 season were announced on April 30, 2019. The final consisted of Scarborough SC defeating FC Ukraine United at Centennial Park Stadium in Toronto, Ontario to claim their first championship title. The First Division title went to FC Vorkuta along with the Second Division title, and championship. The single new addition to the First Division was Kingsman SC, and the departures occurred in the Second Division with Halton United, London City, and Milton SC becoming founding members in the Canadian Academy of Soccer League (CASL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 788]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288103-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Soccer League season, Summary\nScarborough SC was the highlight of the season as they claimed their first CSL Championship after two previous consecutive attempts at the title. Throughout the regular season the eastern Toronto team were the consistent challengers to Vorkuta, and finished as runners-up in the First Division. They retained the services of Zoran Rajovi\u0107 as head coach, and continued in the status quo of acquiring imports in maintaining competitiveness with the major clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288103-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Soccer League season, Summary\nFC Vorkuta continued in their standard of recruiting talent from the Ukraine, and as a result achieved a league milestone of three titles (First & Second division titles, and DII Championship). The club became the fourth club in CSL history after York Region Shooters in the 2014 season to achieve an undefeated regular season. After a surprising early defeat to Kingsman SC in the early round of the postseason eliminated their chance of acquiring a perfect season. Only the Toronto Olympians, and York Region Shooters accomplished this feat in the top division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288103-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Soccer League season, Summary\nThe third position in the First division was primarily contested between FC Ukraine United, SC Waterloo Region, and Serbian White Eagles. The White Eagles held the position for fourteen weeks straight before relinquishing in the final three weeks to SC Waterloo, and ultimately to Ukraine United. The Etobicoke based team experienced a tumultuous season as general manager Vladimir Koval, and newly appointed head coach Mykhailo Hurka struggled in coordinating the usage of import players as they were fulfilling their commitments in Europe. Injuries were also a factor in the team's performance, but late in the season the club acquired several new players with Molham Babouli being the most notable domestic acquisition. As a result Ukraine United secured third place in the division, and reached the championship final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 866]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288103-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Soccer League season, Summary\nSC Waterloo, and Serbian White Eagles both strengthened their core veteran squad with additional imports from the Western Balkans. Throughout the majority of the season the White Eagles held the third position, but after a series of defeats late in the season allowed Waterloo to briefly secure the position until finishing fourth with a higher differential in scoring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288103-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian Soccer League season, Summary\nWaterloo managed to hold the highly contested third position from Serbia three times throughout the season, and after winning six of its last seven games usurped the position permanently until the final match of the season with Ukraine United firmly securing the spot. Both Waterloo, and Serbia competed in the postseason with the former reaching the second round, and the latter facing an earlier departure in the first round respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288103-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Soccer League season, Summary\nThe final three playoff berths were contended among CSC Mississauga, Hamilton City SC, and Kingsman SC. Kingsman SC an expansion franchise held the sixth position for the majority of the season, and enjoyed the benefit of acquiring seasoned imports from FC Vorkuta. After battling Kingsman for the sixth position Hamilton managed to steal the spot in the final stages of the regular season campaign. The town north of Vaughan accomplished a major upset in the postseason after handing Vorkuta its first defeat of the season. Subsequently Kingman were eliminated in the second round to Scarborough. CSC Mississauga continued its focus on player development, but followed the standard of the league's dominant clubs by attracting some foreign talent in order to remain competitive. Its efforts were effective as the franchise secured its first playoff berth by finishing seventh with a higher goal differential from Kingsman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 967]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288103-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Soccer League season, Summary\nWhile the two remaining clubs were Brantford Galaxy, and SC Real Mississauga finishing in the tenth, and ninth positions. Brantford retained their veterans for the season, but struggled in making an impact and primarily were situated at the bottom of the standings the entire season. Real Mississauga produced a similar result as Brantford finishing just three points ahead in the standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288103-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Soccer League season, First Division, Changes from 2018\nDuring the off season former SC Toronto founder and league equity owner Isac Cambas died on March 1, 2019 from cancer. The season commenced with all nine teams from the 2018 season returning with the approval of a single expansion team from five applicants. The changes confirmed at the 2019 annual general meeting of team owners was the introduction of professional soccer to King, Ontario with Kingsman SC fielding teams in the First & Second divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288103-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian Soccer League season, First Division, Changes from 2018\nOriginally the league released a press release announcing the return of professional soccer to Niagara Falls, Ontario under the name Niagara FC with former league veteran Timotej Zakrajsek, and Tamara Samardzija as the driving forces behind the bid. Unfortunately the project failed to materialize as the club didn't make its debut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288103-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Soccer League season, First Division, Changes from 2018\nChanges occurred in the CSL executive committee and staff with Serbian White Eagles president Dragan Bakoc serving as the league's president. Meanwhile the Second Division fielded six teams for the 2019 season. Several departing clubs became founding members of the Canadian Academy of Soccer League (CASL) a new professional league centered in Milton, Ontario, with Milton SC owner Jasmin Halkic initiating the operation along with the additions of Halton United, and London City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288103-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Soccer League season, Second Division\nThe Second Division remained the same as the previous season with six teams. The new additions were the reserve teams of CSC Mississauga, Hamilton City SC, and Kingsman SC. The departing clubs were Halton United, London City, and Milton SC in order to become inaugural members of the Canadian Academy of Soccer League (CASL), thus making the Second Division primarily a reserve division for its senior clubs. FC Vorkuta B successfully defended its championship and division title for the second consecutive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288104-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian U18 Curling Championships\nThe 2019 Canadian U18 Curling Championships were held from April 2 to 7 at the Glen Allan Recreation Complex and the Sherwood Park Curling Club in Sherwood Park, Alberta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288105-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian U18 Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament\nThe men's tournament of the 2019 Canadian U18 Curling Championships was held from April 2 to 7 at the Glen Allan Recreation Complex and the Sherwood Park Curling Club in Sherwood Park, Alberta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288105-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian U18 Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Round Robin Results\nAll draw times are listed in Mountain Daylight Time (UTC\u221206:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 79], "content_span": [80, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288106-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian U18 Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament\nThe women's tournament of the 2019 Canadian U18 Curling Championships was held from April 2 to 7 at the Glen Allan Recreation Complex and the Sherwood Park Curling Club in Sherwood Park, Alberta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288106-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian U18 Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Round Robin Results\nAll draw times are listed in Mountain Daylight Time (UTC\u221206:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 81], "content_span": [82, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288107-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian Wheelchair Curling Championship\nThe 2019 Canadian Wheelchair Curling Championship was held April 26 - May 1 at the Club de curling de Boucherville in Boucherville, Quebec.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288108-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian electoral calendar\nThis is a list of elections in Canada scheduled to be held in 2019. Included are municipal, provincial and federal elections, by-elections on any level, referendums and party leadership races at any level. In bold are provincewide or federal elections (including provincewide municipal elections) and party leadership races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288109-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal budget\nThe Canadian federal budget for fiscal year 2019\u20132020 was presented to the House of Commons by Finance Minister Bill Morneau on March 19, 2019. This was the last budget before the 2019 federal election. The deficit is projected to rise to $19.8 billion, after including a $3 billion adjustment for risk. The budget introduced $22.8 billion of new spending over six years. The budget will not make any changes to the income tax brackets for individuals or corporations. This was later refined to $39.4 billion when the Annual Financial Report of the Government of Canada for Fiscal Year 2019\u20132020 was released.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288109-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal budget\nThe projected deficit of $19.8 billion would result in a deficit of ca. 0.9% of GDP. At the same time the GDP grew by 1.6% in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288109-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal budget, New Expenditures\nThis budget aims to reduce interest rates on postsecondary students' Canada Student Loans and will eliminate interest charges on student debt during the six-month grace period that begins upon graduation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288109-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal budget, New Expenditures\nThe budget will appropriate an additional $586.5-million a year to pay for job training through the Employment Insurance program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election\nThe 2019 Canadian federal election (formally the 43rd Canadian general election) was held on October 21, 2019, members of the House of Commons were elected to the 43rd Canadian Parliament. The writs of election for the 2019 election were issued by Governor General Julie Payette on September 11, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election\nWith 33.12% of the vote for the Liberal Party, led by incumbent Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, the 2019 election ranked second (with the 2021 federal election ranking first) for the lowest vote share for a party that would go on to form a single-party minority government. The Liberals lost the popular vote to the Conservative Party by one percent, marking only the second time in Canadian history that a governing party formed a government while receiving less than 35 percent of the national popular vote, the first time being the inaugural 1867 Canadian federal election after Confederation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election\nThe Conservatives, led by Andrew Scheer, won 121 seats and remained the Official Opposition. The Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois, led by Yves-Fran\u00e7ois Blanchet, won 32 seats to regain official party status and became the third party for the first time since 2008. The New Democratic Party, led by Jagmeet Singh, won 24 seats, its worst result since 2004. The Green Party, led by Elizabeth May, saw its best election results with three seats and for the first time received over one million votes. The Greens also elected their first MP outside of British Columbia, Jenica Atwin in Fredericton, New Brunswick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election\nIndependent MP Jody Wilson-Raybould won her seat and was the first independent to win a seat in over a decade. In their first election, the People's Party failed to win any seats, as leader Maxime Bernier lost his own seat in Beauce, a seat he won as a Conservative in the previous four elections before forming his own party following his unsuccessful bid for the Conservative Party's leadership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election\nThe Liberal Party saw its majority government won in the 2015 federal election cut down to a 157-seat minority, and the Liberals subsequently formed a minority government. Following the election, Trudeau ruled out a coalition and his new cabinet was sworn in on November 20, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Background\nThe 2015 federal election resulted in a Liberal majority government headed by Justin Trudeau. The Conservatives became the Official Opposition (with Stephen Harper announcing his resignation as party leader) and the New Democrats (NDP) became the third party. While members of the Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois and the Greens were elected to the House, both failed to achieve the required number of MPs\u2014twelve\u2014for official party status. Bloc leader Gilles Duceppe announced his resignation shortly after the election, and was succeeded by Parti Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois MNA Martine Ouellet. After losing a leadership review, Ouellet announced she would step down as Bloc leader on June 11, 2018, and was succeeded by Yves-Fran\u00e7ois Blanchet on January 17, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Background\nTom Mulcair was rejected as NDP party leader; he gained only 48% of the vote at the NDP's April 2016 leadership review. The party held a leadership election on October 1, 2017, electing Ontario MPP and the former Deputy Leader of the Ontario New Democratic Party Jagmeet Singh as Mulcair's successor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Background, Parties and standings\nThe table below lists parties represented in the House of Commons after the 2015 federal election, and the standings at dissolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Background, Bill C-44\nBill C-44 was passed in 2017 and assigned responsibility to the Parliamentary Budget Office to calculate the cost of party platforms for elections; the review was available in the 2019 election. The Parliamentary Budget Office had a $500,000 budget for costing party platforms for this election, but announced it would only review a party platform at the request of the authoring party. It also conducted confidential assessments of independent and party platform proposals preceding the election campaign. The service was also available to members of parliament representing a party without official party status in the House of Commons, like Elizabeth May's Green Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Background, Electoral reform\nIn June 2015, Trudeau pledged to reform the electoral system if elected, saying, \"We are committed to ensuring that 2015 is the last election held under first-past-the-post.\" As the Liberals, New Democrats, Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois, and Green Party were all in favour of reform, a different voting system could have been in place by the next federal election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Background, Electoral reform\nA Special Committee on Electoral Reform was formed with representatives from all five parties in the House. The committee's report, Strengthening Democracy in Canada: Principles, Process and Public Engagement for Electoral Reform, was presented in December 2016 and recommended a proportional electoral system be introduced following a national referendum. The majority of the all-party committee recommended \"that the government should, as it develops a new electoral system ... [seek to] minimize the level of distortion between the popular will of the electorate and the resultant seat allocations in Parliament.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Background, Electoral reform\nThe mandate of the committee was to \"identify and conduct a study of viable alternate voting systems\" rather than to recommend a specific alternative system. The Minister of Democratic Institutions Maryam Monsef was critical of the committee's recommendation saying \"I have to admit I'm a little disappointed, because what we had hoped the committee would provide us with would be a specific alternative system to first past the post.\" Interim Conservative Leader Rona Ambrose said Monsef's comments were \"a disgrace\" and Green Party Leader Elizabeth May said \"[t]he minister chose to insult the committee and chose to mislead Canadians.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Background, Electoral reform\nIn February 2017, Trudeau dropped support for electoral reform, issuing a mandate to newly appointed Minister of Democratic Institutions Karina Gould, saying that, \"A clear preference for a new electoral system, let alone a consensus, has not emerged. ... Changing the electoral system will not be in your mandate.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Background, Electoral reform\nIn response to questions from the public in Iqaluit, Trudeau said \"It is because I felt it was not in the best interests of our country and of our future,\" citing concerns that alternative electoral systems would give too much power to \"extremist and activist voices\" that could create \"instability and uncertainty\" dividing the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Background, Assessment of Trudeau's government\nIn July 2019, an independent academically-edited study, Assessing Justin Trudeau's Liberal Government: 353 Promises and a Mandate for Change, was published by Les Presses de l'Universit\u00e9 Laval, finding that Justin Trudeau's government kept 92 per cent of pledges, when complete and partial pledges were added together, while the Harper government kept 85 per cent of complete and partial pledges. When only completed, realized pledges were calculated, Harper's government, in their last year, kept 77 per cent of promises while the Liberal government kept 53.5 per cent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 78], "content_span": [79, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Background, Assessment of Trudeau's government\nThe book notes that Harper's pledges tended towards transactional pledges which target sub-populations while Trudeau's government's promises were transformative\u2014ambitious pledges the Liberals took while they were the third-place party. Trudeau's government, according to the researchers, and the \"last Harper government had the highest rates of follow-through on their campaign promises of any Canadian government over the last 35 years.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 78], "content_span": [79, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Background, Election spending\nAccording to Elections Canada rules, third parties are allowed to spend $1,023,400 in the pre-election period between June 30 and the start of the election campaign. They can spend an additional $511,700 during the election campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Background, Election spending, Reimbursements for political parties and candidates\nPolitical parties receive a reimbursement for 50 per cent of their election expenses during the writ period. Similarly, electoral district associations receive a reimbursement of 60 per cent of their election expenses during the writ period. Both reimbursements are publicly funded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 114], "content_span": [115, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Background, Election spending, Registered third parties\nA person or group must register as a third party immediately after incurring expenses totaling $500 or more on regulated activities that take place during the pre-election period or election period. The regulated activities are partisan activities (that promote parties or candidates), election surveys, partisan advertising and election advertising. Furthermore, to be a third party you must be\u00a0:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 87], "content_span": [88, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Background, Election spending, Registered third parties\nOne cannot spend money or use their resources to influence Canadian elections if they are a foreign third party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 87], "content_span": [88, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Background, Election spending, Registered third parties\nThere are also strict limits on expenses related to regulated activities, and specific limits that can be incurred to promote or oppose the election of one or more candidates in a particular electoral district. Registered third parties are subject to an election advertising expenses limit of $1,023,400 in the pre-election period, of which $10,234 can be spent in a given electoral district and $511,700 during the election period. Of that amount, no more than $4,386 can be spent to promote or oppose the election of one or more candidates in a particular electoral district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 87], "content_span": [88, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Background, Incumbents not running for reelection\nThe following MPs announced that they would not be running in the 2019 federal election:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 81], "content_span": [82, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Liberal\nThe Parliament of Canada's Ethics Commissioner, Mario Dion, found that Trudeau improperly influenced then Minister of Justice and Attorney General Jody Wilson-Raybould to intervene in an ongoing criminal case against Quebec-based construction company SNC-Lavalin. The Trudeau government has maintained that there was no undue pressure or law broken, that offering SNC-Lavalin a deferred prosecution agreement (DPA) could save jobs, and that the controversy resulted from a misunderstanding and an \"erosion of trust\". The affair became public in February 2019, shortly after Wilson-Raybould had been shuffled to another cabinet position. Wilson-Raybould resigned from cabinet later that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0019-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Liberal\nThis was followed by the resignation of cabinet minister Jane Philpott, over the government's handling of the affair. In April, Wilson-Raybould and Philpott were expelled by Trudeau from the Liberal caucus; Trudeau cited concerns for division in and subsequent weakening of the Liberal party. On April 2, 2019, Wilson-Raybould, as Liberal candidate for Vancouver Granville, and Philpott, as Liberal candidate for Markham\u2014Stouffville, were deselected as candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Liberal\nIn late August 2019, Party deputy leader Ralph Goodale, Liberal candidate for Regina\u2014Wascana, Lawrence MacAulay, candidate for Cardigan, and Francis Scarpaleggia, candidate for Lac-Saint-Louis, were singled out for their opposition to same-sex marriage. Pundits argued that Goodale was being hypocritical, due to his role with Scheer and the same-sex marriage incident. Goodale later stated that he had evolved on the position and wanted answers from Scheer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Liberal\nOn August 30, 2019, Hassan Guillet, Liberal candidate for Saint-L\u00e9onard\u2014Saint-Michel, was dropped as a candidate following allegations of anti-Semitic comments from B'nai B'rith. Guillet's nomination previously raised concern that his ethnicity would be out of place in the majority Italian riding. Guillet denied the allegation, alleged that the Liberals were aware of the post, and that they \"imposed\" his replacement Patricia Lattanzio, on the riding. On September 20, 2019, Guillet announced he would run as an independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Liberal\nSameer Zuberi, Liberal candidate for Pierrefonds\u2014Dollard, was nominated on September 15, 2019, despite questioning Osama bin Laden's involvement in 9/11 in a social media post. Zuberi called the accusations false saying it was an attempt by the Conservatives to deflect attention away from their own candidates with extremist or white supremacist leanings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Liberal\nOn September 18, 2019, L'Express of Drummondville reported that the Liberal candidate for Drummond, William Morales' nomination victory was attended by two convicted criminals. Morales said that while he maintains contact with Spanish-speaking members from the Drummondville community the two people were not involved in his campaign and he does not have close relations with them. He later told his local newspaper that he interacts with members regardless of their background.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Liberal\nOn September 18, 2019, Trudeau attracted controversy for a photograph published in Time magazine, in which he wore brownface makeup to a party at West Point Grey Academy, where he was a teacher, in 2001. Trudeau called it a mistake and apologized publicly for it. When apologizing, Trudeau also confessed to having worn similar makeup in high-school. Following his apology, an earlier instance from the early 1990s of Trudeau wearing blackface makeup was uncovered. The following day, Trudeau apologized again and said he was \"not that person anymore\". He also said that it should not be called \"makeup\" but blackface.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0024-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Liberal\nSome commentators labelled this hypocritical, since the Liberals had exposed the past misdeeds of some Conservative candidates. Trudeau drew a mixed reaction from the public. Some were upset and contemplated changing their vote, while others defended him, such as members of minorities, minority community groups, racialized commentators and some of his opponents. Later, Trudeau announced that he wanted to apologize personally to Jagmeet Singh, who replied that he would only meet Trudeau for an apology if it was \"politics-free\" and private. Following the announcement, Singh received a call from Trudeau on September 24, 2019, and they talked privately for 15 to 20 minutes. In the days following the scandal, pollsters pointed out that the majority of Canadians either were not bothered by the scandal or had accepted Trudeau's apology.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 900]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Liberal\nOn September 23, 2019, Del Arnold, Liberal candidate for Calgary Shepard, apologized to Conservative rival Tom Kmiec after spreading misleading information about his place of residence. Arnold has not apologized for a deleted tweet that accused Andrew Scheer of having links to \"white supremacy\" and the 2017 Unite the Right rally in Virginia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Liberal\nOn September 28, 2019, Judy Sgro, Liberal candidate for Humber River\u2014Black Creek, made remarks during an interview with a radio network called GBKM FM defending Trudeau's wearing of brownface/blackface makeup: \"Those in the black community have told me how much more love they have for the prime minister, that he wanted to have a black face. That he took great pride in that, too\". She later apologized for her remarks, saying that \u201cthe comments I made on GBKM FM were insensitive,\u201d and further adding \u201cI should have known better, and I apologize\u201d.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Liberal\nOn October 13, 2019, due to a security threat, Trudeau appeared 90 minutes late to a campaign rally. Trudeau took extraordinary security precautions at the event. He wore a bulletproof vest and was surrounded by heavily armed security personnel. His wife was also supposed to introduce him, but she did not appear on stage. The Liberal Party did not reveal the nature of the threat. Scheer and Singh both showed concern for Trudeau following the threat. The following day, the RCMP was still with the Liberal leader. Furthermore, Trudeau explained that he followed advice from the RCMP and that this event will not change the way he campaigns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Liberal\nOn October 14, 2019, Trudeau dodged multiple questions about a possible coalition with the NDP in a minority scenario. He responded that he remains focused on winning a majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Conservative\nAbout one year after he assumed office, polling showed that Ontario Premier Doug Ford of the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario was deeply unpopular\u2014in some cases even less popular than previous Ontario Liberal Party Premier Kathleen Wynne when she lost power, which could have deterred voters from voting for Scheer. This worried CPC insiders and prompted the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario to call an extended recess of the provincial legislature to reduce negative news coverage, in order to help the federal Tories. If the Conservatives lost the election, Scheer pledged to blame it on Ford during his leadership review. Therefore, leading up to the campaign, Andrew Scheer distanced himself from Ford and later campaigned without him. Meanwhile, the Liberals and Scheer's opponents tried to capitalize on Ford's unpopularity by linking Scheer to the Premier multiple times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 960]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Conservative\nSeveral CPC candidates were dropped leading to and during the course of the campaign. On April 25, 2019, Harzadan Khattra, the candidate for Dufferin\u2014Caledon, was disqualified after a fellow contestant sent the party verifiable information about \"membership buying, improper voting, and other concerns\". On June 28, 2019, Salim Mansur, the candidate for London North Centre, was disqualified over alleged fears that the Liberals would characterize Mansur's record as Islamophobic. On July 10, 2019, Mark King, the candidate for Nipissing\u2014Timiskaming, was stripped of his nomination for disputed reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0030-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Conservative\nOn September 12, 2019, Cameron Ogilvie, Conservative candidate for Winnipeg North, resigned as a candidate after the party became aware of withheld social media post which the Conservative Party described as \"discriminatory\". On October 4, 2019, the party announced that Heather Leung, the candidate for Burnaby North\u2014Seymour, was dropped as reports surfaced of her making anti-LGBTQ comments in a video from 2011. Due to the deadline for naming candidates having passed, her name remained on the ballot. If she were to win, she would not sit in the party's caucus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0030-0002", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Conservative\nQuestions were raised as to why it took the party so long to remove her, since she was \"a known commodity\" when she was nominated. She had made anti-LGBTQ and anti-abortion comments in the past and ignored the media for months. Her riding association had also been criticized for their controversial social media posts. On October 10, 2019, Leung claimed she was misunderstood and that her comments were lost in translation since English is her third language. However, she did not apologize for her comments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Conservative\nOn July 10, 2019, Cyma Musarat, Conservative candidate for Pickering\u2014Uxbridge, faced an allegation from fellow party members that she won her nomination by using improper voting procedures. The Conservative Party faced an accusation that its headquarters had been delaying the nomination contest to find a different candidate. From July 24 to September 15, 2019, Ghada Melek attracted attention. This conservative candidate for Mississauga\u2014Streetsville, was revealed by former organizers of the Ontario Progressive Conservative Party to have been rejected as a candidate in the provincial riding over Twitter posts about Muslim extremism.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0031-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Conservative\nNational Council of Canadian Muslims had issues over Melek's Twitter posts about Islam and LGBT+ community. Scheer accepted an apology she issued for her comments. Later, CTV News obtained her provincial vetting report and her promotion of conspiracy theories was seen as another factor behind her disqualification. When asked about the provincial party red-flagging Melek, Scheer defended her again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Conservative\nOn August 22, 2019, Scheer faced questions over a 2005 online video in which he spoke against same-sex marriage Scheer himself did not respond until a press conference a week later where he argued that Trudeau was raising a wedge issue; Several pundits had an issue with his response. Weeks later, Scheer was asked if he needed to apologize for his comments giving the standards he set for his candidates; however he gave no response. After Trudeau's apology regarding blackface, Scheer was asked again if he should apologize for his words; he gave no response. Scheer once again chose to not answer the question directly on popular Quebec talk show Tout le monde en parle. He said that he supports the law and the rights of Canadians, but that he will not walk in Pride parades.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 843]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Conservative\nBetween August 26 and 30, 2019, the Conservatives were questioned on abortion. Alain Rayes, Scheer's Quebec lieutenant, attracted attention after he told a Quebec radio station that he misspoke on the party stance on abortion. A few days later, Scheer held a press conference, where he addressed the issue. However, his answers were seen as confusing in the media, and anti-abortion activists found his answers to be mixed-messaging. A day later, Scheer said that he and his cabinet would vote against anti-abortion bills if the debate is re-opened. Scheer reiterated this statement on Tout le monde en parle. A day after his rivals pushed him to clarify his position during the TVA debate, Scheer mentioned that he was pro-life but reiterated what he said in the past concerning anti-abortion bills.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 864]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Conservative\nOn September 12, 2019, Rachel Wilson, Conservative candidate for York Centre, attracted attention after a video was posted online that called for pro-life legislation. Wilson did not comment when asked about abortion legislation. On September 13, 2019, Arpan Khanna, Conservative candidate for Brampton North, apologized after it was revealed that he offhandedly used the slur \"fag\" to tease a friend. On September 14, 2019, Justina McCaffrey, Conservative candidate for Kanata\u2014Carleton, attracted attention for making negative remarks in a video about Justin Trudeau and Francophones, and her relationship with Faith Goldy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0034-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Conservative\nShe departed a campaign event when confronted by reporters, but later released a statement apologizing for her comments and later stated that her relationship with Goldy ended a longtime ago. However, there were pictures of the two together in 2017\u2014one of them featured Goldy doing the \"OK sign\". Conservative campaign manager Hamish Marshall's past role as a director of Rebel Media was also questioned, since Goldy was an on-screen personality before being fired. On October 7, 2019, the Canadian Press discovered that McCaffrey was a member of the controversial religious group Opus Dei. The CPC's spokesperson responded by saying that they do not question their candidates about their personal religious beliefs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 780]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Conservative\nOn September 28, 2019, The Globe and Mail revealed that they found no record of Scheer receiving the licence required by law to work as an insurance agent or broker in Saskatchewan despite him claiming so in the past. Robert Fife, the Ottawa bureau chief for The Globe and Mail, explained that Scheer was an insurance clerk. Scheer responded by saying that he did receive his accreditation, but that he left the insurance office before the licensing process was finalized. Later, the Insurance Brokers Association of Saskatchewan said that Scheer completed just one of four required courses to become an insurance broker. The IBAS declined to comment further and said that a formal complaint had been launched by Liberal MP Marco Mendicino to the General Insurance Council of Saskatchewan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 853]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Conservative\nOn October 3, 2019, The Globe and Mail revealed that Scheer had dual Canadian and American citizenship. The latter was obtained through his American-born father. He began the process of renouncing his US citizenship in August. Scheer confirmed that he has filed US tax returns. A party spokesperson added that he let his US passport lapse and that he has not voted in any U.S. election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0036-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Conservative\nThe party verified that he is registered for the draft under the U.S. Selective Service System, which is a list of individuals who can be conscripted into the armed forces in the event of a national emergency. When asked why he had not previously disclosed his dual citizenship, Scheer stated that he had never been asked about it. It was seen as hypocritical since Scheer had attacked former Governor General Micha\u00eblle Jean on this same issue and because the Conservatives had attacked Thomas Mulcair and St\u00e9phane Dion on this issue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0036-0002", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Conservative\nScheer defended the former by stating that he was asking a question to his constituents and said that he was not leading the party at the time when it came to the latter situation. Over the next days, he refused to explain how he traveled to the United States without a valid U.S. passport. It is against the law for U.S. citizens to do so without a valid U.S. passport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Conservative\nOn October 11, 2019, the CBC filed an application in the Federal Court of Canada against the Conservative party over the use of television excerpts in partisan advertising. They claimed the party's use of excerpts violated the \"moral rights\" of news anchor Rosemary Barton and reporter John Paul Tasker. The action was brought despite the material having been taken down from websites and deleted from Twitter. The CBC said that it was given no reassurance that such use would not be repeated. The lawsuit says that the use of the material in a partisan way \"diminishes the reputation\" of the CBC and leaves it open to allegations that it is biased.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Conservative\nOn October 14, 2019, Scheer ruled out any coalition or negotiations with the Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois. He said that he \"does not need to work with the Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois to deliver results for Quebec\" and that he can work with Quebec Premier Fran\u00e7ois Legault to deliver them. On October 16, 2019, Scheer said that the party with most seats should have the right to form government. A day later, he stood by his claim and added that is what has happened in modern history. Journalists pointed out that it was not the case and gave examples such as the 2018 New Brunswick general election and the 2017 British Columbia general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Conservative\nOn October 18 and 19, 2019, The Globe and Mail and CBC News revealed that the Conservative Party hired Warren Kinsella to \"seek and destroy\" the People's Party. Bernier filed a complaint to Elections Canada over what he called \"a secret campaign to smear his party\". Scheer did not say or deny that the Conservatives hired a consultant to destroy the PPC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, New Democratic Party\nNDP candidates were dropped or stepped down during the course of the campaign. On June 20, 2019, Rana Zaman, candidate for Dartmouth\u2014Cole Harbour, was dropped over comments about the Israeli\u2013Palestinian conflict that the party deemed \"unacceptable\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, New Democratic Party\nOn August 16, 2019, Pierre Nantel, candidate for Longueuil\u2014Saint-Hubert, was de-selected after reports surfaced of ongoing discussions regarding Nantel joining the Green Party of Canada. On September 11, 2019, Dock Currie, candidate for Kamloops-Thompson-Cariboo, was forced to resign over \"flippant and aggressive\" comments he made toward pro-pipeline activists. The next day, Olivier Mathieu, candidate for Lasalle-Emard-Verdun, stepped down following allegations of physical abuse against his ex-spouse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, New Democratic Party\nDuring the election, Jagmeet Singh has faced questions about wearing of a turban and whether that would reduce the number of people who would vote for him. Jonathan Richardson, the former federal NDP's executive member for Atlantic Canada, who defected to the Green Party, stated in an interview with CBC Radio, that some potential NDP candidates were hesitant to run in New Brunswick, due to Singh's turban. CTV News covered a Singh event in Verner, Ontario and spoke to a number of voters there, including NDP supporters, who said that they would not vote for a leader wearing a turban.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0042-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, New Democratic Party\nCBC News found a similar reaction in Ruth Ellen Brosseau's riding. Singh responded to these concerns. He explained some things about his turban and recorded a French ad without it to alleviate people's worries. Furthermore, according to Alexandre Boulerice, the party's Deputy Leader and Quebec lieutenant, the NDP is targeting young voters and they do not care about the turban.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, New Democratic Party\nOn October 2, 2019, a man told Singh to cut off his turban to look more Canadian during a campaign stop. Singh politely responded that Canadians \"look like all sorts of people\" before walking off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, New Democratic Party\nDuring the campaign, Singh talked about what he would do in a minority. On August 22, 2019, due to the controversy over Scheer's previous comments about same-sex marriage, he announced that the NDP would not support a Conservative minority government under any circumstances. On September 22, 2019, Singh announced that despite Trudeau's past brownface and blackface incidents, he would not rule out working with the Liberals in a minority scenario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0044-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, New Democratic Party\nOn October 10, 2019, he laid out the conditions for NDP support in a minority Parliament: a national single-payer universal pharmacare plan, a national dental care plan, investments in housing, a plan to waive interest on student loans, a commitment to reduce emissions, to end subsidies for oil companies and to deliver aid to oilpatch workers to transition them out of fossil fuel industries, the introduction of a \"super wealth\" tax, a commitment to closing tax loopholes and reducing cellphone bills.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0044-0002", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, New Democratic Party\nHe later added that changing the way the country votes is also a condition (Singh's NDP backs a system of mixed-member proportional representation). He added that he does not rule out supporting a pipeline-owning Liberal minority government. On October 13, 2019, Singh said he would \"do whatever it takes\" to keep the Tories from power, including forming a coalition government with the Liberals. He added that he is \"ready to work with anyone\", when he was asked about the Bloc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0044-0003", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, New Democratic Party\nThe following day, Singh backed off those comments and urged Canadians to vote NDP in order to receive the best services like universal pharmacare and dental care. Later, Singh said that coalition is not a dirty word and doubled down on his view that under no circumstance would his party support the Conservatives in a minority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois\nOn August 9, 2019, Andr\u00e9 Parizeau, Bloc candidate for Ahuntsic-Cartierville, created attention over his past communist affiliations as Leader of the Parti communiste du Qu\u00e9bec (PCQ). Parizeau disavowed the PCQ in order to be accepted as candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois\nIn October 2019, the Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois called on Quebeckers to vote for candidates \"who resemble you\" (\" des gens qui nous ressemblent \") in the election, prompting NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh to denounce the message as unacceptable and divisive. In his closing statement during Wednesday's French-language debate, Bloc Leader Yves-Fran\u00e7ois Blanchet called on voters to \"opt for men and women who resemble you, who share your values, who share your concerns and who work for your interests, and only for the interests of Quebeckers.\" The Bloc has said the comment has nothing to do with someone's background or religion but with Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois values. During the English debate, Blanchet called the translation of his words dishonest and mentioned that the same words were used by Igniatieff in 2011 and Mulcair in 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 875]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois\nOn October 10, 2019, Le Journal de Montr\u00e9al discovered that four BQ candidates had made anti-Islam and racist social media posts. A Bloc spokeswoman said it was up to Quebeckers to judge its candidates\u2019 social-media posts. The comments were condemned by Elizabeth May, Jagmeet Singh, M\u00e9lanie Joly and Fran\u00e7oise David. Later, the candidates all posted the same apology on their respective social media accounts and Yves-Fran\u00e7ois Blanchet apologized for his candidates' Islamophobic and racist social media posts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0048-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois\nOn October 13, 2019, Blanchet announced that they will not support a coalition or a party in a minority scenario. The Bloc will go issue by issue and support what is best for Quebec.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0049-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Green Party\nSeveral GPC candidates were dropped or stepped down during the course of the campaign. On July 23, 2019, Brock Grills, Green candidate for Peterborough\u2014Kawartha, stepped down for \"personal reasons\". Grills was accused of fraud by a former employer but he and the EDA president stated that accusation was not the reason behind his stepping down. Grills, who repeated his reasoning, also mentioned the Green Party central office \"pushed\" for his resignation because he was reaching out to other parties to ask them to adopt policies to curb climate change.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0049-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Green Party\nOn August 16, 2019, Luc Saint-Hilaire, Green candidate for L\u00e9vis\u2014Lotbini\u00e8re, was forced to resign because of a Facebook post demanding Boufeldja Benabdallah, co-founder of the Centre Culturel Islamique de Qu\u00e9bec, to denounce a man who allegedly lit his ex-wife on fire. On September 12, 2019, Erik Schomann, Green candidate for Simcoe North, resigned over a 2007 Facebook post which appeared to suggest he wanted to mail pieces of a pig carcass to Muslims in support of the protesters during the Muhammed comic controversy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0050-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Green Party\nOn September 9, 2019, the Green Party issued a statement insisting that there is \"zero chance\" of reopening the abortion debate; few hours after May stated the Green Party will not ban members from trying to reopen abortion debate in an interview. May later added that MPs risk being ousted if they move to reopen the debate. From September 10 to 16, 2019, attention was focused on Pierre Nantel, the candidate for Longueuil\u2014Saint-Hubert. He created this attention over his comments about Qu\u00e9bec separatism on a Quebec radio station.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0050-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Green Party\nMay disputed that Nantel was a Quebec sovereigntist, but Nantel contradicted her afterwards. However, May stated he could be still be a candidate. Some journalists and columnists were confused by her reasoning for keeping him as a candidate. Furthermore, May was asked by the son of the late Jack Layton to not use the latter for political points when defending Nantel. On September 10, 2019, Mark Vercouteren, the candidate for Chatham-Kent-Leamington, and Macarena Diab, the candidate for Louis-H\u00e9bert were revealed to have made \"anti-abortion statements\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0050-0002", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Green Party\nA spokesperson defended both of them but a few days later, it was revealed by May that Vercoutern was being \"re-vetted\" over the party not noticing Vercouteren's questionnaires. A week after the original comments were revealed, Vercouteren stated his view aligned with the party. On September 12, 2019, Dale Dewar, Green candidate for Regina\u2014Qu'Appelle, apologized for making past negative comments on social media about Israel, Zionism and Israelis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0051-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Green Party\nOn October 15, 2019, the Green Party found anti-Islam social-media posts by four of its Quebec candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0052-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Green Party\nStarting on September 23, 2019, the GPC drew scrutiny around the world for manipulating a picture of Elizabeth May to make it seem as if she was using a reusable cup and metal straw instead of a disposable cup. When she was on Tout le monde en parle, May clarified that the original photo featured a compostable cup; the picture was modified to add the GPC's logo. She did admit that it was ridiculous that a staffer modified the picture.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0053-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Green Party\nLeading up to and during the campaign, May talked about what she would do in a minority. On September 3, 2019, she announced that she would not be prepared to prop up any minority government of the major parties given current climate plans. Later, on September 26, 2019, May announced that the GPC would not prop up a minority government that moves forward with the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion. In the final week of the campaign, the idea of a coalition took hold. May said that in countries with proportional representation, parties can plan to govern together before the election, but that in Canada such talk is \"meaningless\" due to the first-past-the-post system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0054-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, People's Party\nIn February 2019, LaPresse discovered that Martin Masse, the PPC's spokesperson, had written controversial blog posts in the past. The Star discovered that four members of the PPC had used racist and anti-immigrant rhetoric. They were removed from the party as a result. Bernier himself has been accused multiple times of using dog-whistle politics. Bernier responded to this by saying racists are not welcome in his party and acknowledging that Canada is a diverse country. Later, Maxime Bernier generated a reaction after a photograph of him with members of an anti-immigration group surfaced online.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0054-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, People's Party\nBernier told the media that everyone is welcome at his events, that he is unaware of their views, that he would condemn them if the media could show that they were racists and that racists were not welcome in his party, but experts were skeptical of Bernier and thought that he was well aware of who was attending. A few weeks later, he was also reprimanded for being photographed with Paul Fromm. A spokesperson stated that Bernier had no idea who Fromm was, but once again experts were skeptical of the explanation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0054-0002", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, People's Party\nOn September 23, 2019, news sites revealed that one of the PPC's founding members was a White nationalist and two others had ties to Anti-immigration groups. One of those founding members\u2014a former American neo-Nazi leader\u2014was volunteering for the party. He was also a member of the Ontario Progressive Conservative Party. He was removed from the party on August 29, 2019, after his past came to light. The PPC's spokesperson said that it did not come up during the vetting process since he came from the US.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0054-0003", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, People's Party\nThey later cited to Global News that his removal was an example of the Party taking a stand against racism. The party told Le Devoir that they did not have enough resources to vet them at the beginning of the PPC 's formation and the two other members denied having racist views.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0055-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, People's Party\nOn July 30, 2019, Cody Payant, People's candidate for Carlton Trail\u2014Eagle Creek, attracted attention for a social media post defending Lindsay Shepherd. Payant argue that it was taken out of context. Bernier defended Payant after he spoke to Payant and was satisfied with his explanation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0056-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, People's Party\nOn September 2, 2019, Maxime Bernier called Greta Thunberg \"mentally unstable\" on Twitter. A few days later, he backtracked his comments stating his intention was to criticize her role as \"a spokesperson for climate alarmism\" and did not mean to denigrate her. After the campaign, Bernier classified these comments as his only election regret and as a mistake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0057-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, People's Party\nOn September 18, 2019, Steven Fletcher, People's candidate for Charleswood\u2014St. James\u2014Assiniboia\u2014Headingley, denied allegations for illegally using campaign signs and voter data from the Conservative Party. Fletcher also suggested that the move was political motivated from the Conservative and took issues to the fact that the letter was leaked online. On September 19, 2019, Nancy Mercier, People's candidate for Beaus\u00e9jour, raised concern from local organizations over comments about Islamism and immigration Mercier indicated her concerns are with Islamic terrorism and not members of any race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0057-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, People's Party\nOn October 10, 2019, Sybil Hogg, the candidate for Sackville-Preston-Chezzetcook, came under fire for a series of anti-Islam tweets calling Islam \"pure evil\" and for the religion to be banned in Canada. The PPC's executive director reached out to her to understand the context and Hogg explained that she failed to draw the distinction between \"Islam\" and \"Islamism\" or \"radical Islam\". She added that her concern was radical Islam and not Islam. Due to the response, the PPC said they would not take action against her. Later, Bernier called the tweets \"absolutely racist and Islamophobic\" and confirmed that she will not face consequences.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0058-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, People's Party\nSeveral candidates were dropped or stepped down before the election. On September 6, 2019, Ken Pereira, People's candidate for Portneuf\u2014Jacques-Cartier, stepped down because of a \"terrible family tragedy\". When announced as the candidate, Pereira had attracted attention for his online \"anti-vaccine\" and \"pro-conspiracy theory\" posts and was defended by the party. On September 12, 2019, Brian Misera, People's candidate for Coquitlam\u2014Port Coquitlam, claimed that he was removed for asking Bernier to denounce racism more clearly in an online video posted on Misera's Twitter account.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0058-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, People's Party\nHowever, the PPC stated that Misera was removed after he allegedly admitted to the party that he was his own financial agent, a violation of Elections Canada rules. Yet a statement of Misera's disqualification obtained by City News made no reference to the PPC's claim or Misera's claim. On September 30, 2019, Chad Hudson, People's Party candidate for the Nova Scotia riding of West Nova, tweeted that he would no longer be running for the party, less than two hours before Elections Canada's deadline for candidates to officially register to be on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0058-0002", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, People's Party\nHe criticized the party and its leadership for being \"divisive\", as well as \"bad for democracy\" and contributors to the \"toxic state of politics\". Hudson, later admitted that he did not notify the party of his decision. On October 8, 2019, Victor Ong the People's Party of Canada candidate in Winnipeg North resigned after deciding the party is \"racist and intolerant\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0059-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Third-party organizations\nOn August 19, 2019, environmental groups were warned by Elections Canada that any third party that promotes information about climate change during the election period with paid advertising could be engaging in partisan activity. Registered charities with a charitable tax status would be required to register as a third party for the election if they engaged in any partisan activity incurring $500, which would include advertising and surveys, or risk their charitable tax status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 76], "content_span": [77, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0059-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Third-party organizations\nThese regulations were a result of People's Party of Canada leader Maxime Bernier expressing doubts about the legitimacy of climate change, because a third party that advertises the dangers of climate change during the election period may be considered to be indirectly advocating against the People's Party. After confusion about the warning, Elections Canada released a public statement to clarify that the prohibition applied only to advertising, not speech in general the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 76], "content_span": [77, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0060-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Third-party organizations\nOn August 25, 2019, billboards purchased by a True North Strong & Free Advertising Corp., a third party promoting the People's Party of Canada's immigration policy, with the text \"Say NO to Mass Immigration\" appeared in Vancouver, Calgary, Regina, and Halifax. True North Strong & Free Advertising Corp is run by Frank Smeenk, the chief executive of a Toronto-based mining exploration company. The Peoples Party of Canada told the media that it had no contact with the group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 76], "content_span": [77, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0060-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Third-party organizations\nInitially, Pattison Outdoor Advertising defended the billboards, arguing that they complied with the Advertising Standards Canada Code but later decided to pull them and said that they would review their protocols on advocacy advertising. The Pattison president later revealed that the billboards would have stayed up had True North Strong & Free identified themselves on the billboards and how the public could get in touch with them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 76], "content_span": [77, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0061-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Third-party organizations\nOn October 3, 2019, the CBC revealed that the Manning Centre is a driving financial force behind a network of anti-Liberal Facebook pages pumping out political messaging and memes during the federal election campaign. Facebook pulled one of their ads due to the excess violence. The Manning Centre's donations to those groups, worth more than $300,000, are hidden, since the think tank, which did not register as a third party, does not intend to disclose them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 76], "content_span": [77, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0061-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election campaign, Third-party organizations\nElections Canada says there is nothing in the law to prevent outside groups from raising money and then passing those donations along to third-party advertisers. As a result of this lack of disclosure, Democracy Watch filed a complaint to Canada's Chief Electoral Officer. It argued that the Manning Centre should have registered as a third party. Furthermore, due to this controversy, Jean-Pierre Kingsley, the former chief electoral officer, said that the next federal government must close the gap in the law that allowed the Manning Centre to raise money and then pass it along to third-party groups without disclosing the source of those donations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 76], "content_span": [77, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0062-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Fact-checking\nDuring the Maclean's debate, Scheer said that refugees were \"jumping the queue\". Journalists called this a false statement and one expert explained that \"there is no queue\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0063-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Fact-checking\nOn September 17, 2019, Brock Harrison, Scheer's director of communication, and the CPC tweeted that the RCMP had confirmed Trudeau was under investigation for SNC-Lavalin. Scheer himself also repeated the allegation. Both tweets were removed after journalists deemed it to be false.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0064-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Fact-checking\nA claim was circulating online that Bill Morneau was related to RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki through her husband, which is what was stopping the RCMP investigation regarding SNC-Lavalin. The claim is false; Lucki's husband is not related to Morneau. Furthermore, there has been no confirmation that there is an RCMP investigation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0065-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Fact-checking\nRumours were circulating online that there was a scandal that resulted in Justin Trudeau's departure from West Point Grey Academy. This was false. The rumour was propagated by fake news sites, gossip magazines, Warren Kinsella and Ezra Levant. Then, on October 7, 2019, the Conservatives issued a press release referencing the rumour and asking \"why did Justin Trudeau leave West Point Grey Academy?\". The Toronto Star and The Globe and Mail devoted multiple reporters to the story and found nothing to corroborate it. The former headmaster also released a statement that said \"there is no truth to any speculation that [Trudeau] was dismissed\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0066-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Fact-checking\nDuring the campaign, the NDP claimed Bill Morneau had used tax-havens when he was the executive chair of Morneau Shepell, which was proven false. A probe by Canadians for Tax Fairness found that Morneau Shepell's subsidiary in the Bahamas was a legitimate business and not a way to avoid taxes. The NDP retracted the statement a few weeks after the campaign had ended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0067-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Results\nWith 157, the Liberals won a plurality of seats in the House of Commons, allowing them to form a government albeit short of the majority government that they had won in 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0068-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Results\nThe Liberals, under incumbent Prime Minister Justin Trudeau won the highest number of seats, at 157, allowing them to form a minority government. The Conservatives under Andrew Scheer remained the Official Opposition and, with 121 seats, formed the largest opposition caucus in Canadian history. The Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois won 32 seats under Yves-Fran\u00e7ois Blanchet, the party's best result since 2008, and regained official party status after losing it in 2011, while the New Democratic Party under Jagmeet Singh was reduced to 24 seats, its worst results since 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0068-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Results\nThe Greens saw its best result in the party's history, winning 3 seats, while independent MP Jody Wilson-Raybould was re-elected in the riding of Vancouver Granville and became the first independent to win a seat since 2008. The newly created People's Party, meanwhile, lost its only seat, with party leader Maxime Bernier losing re-election in the riding of Beauce. Aside from Bernier, every major party leader was able to secure election to the House of Commons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0069-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Results\nMarking the first time in Canadian history that no single party received more than 35% of the popular vote, the Conservatives won 34.41% of the popular vote, a plurality of the vote despite finishing 36 seats behind the Liberals, who won 33.07% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0069-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Results\nThe NDP placed third in the popular vote at 15.98%, the party's worst performance since 2004, while the Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois came in fourth with 7.69% of the popular vote, its best performance since 2008; as the Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois vote is concentrated entirely in Quebec, however, the party placed ahead of the NDP in terms of seats despite winning less than half of the party's vote. The Greens placed fifth with 6.55% of the popular vote, while the People's Party received 1.64% in its inaugural election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0070-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Results\nLiberal strength was predominantly concentrated in Eastern Canada and British Columbia. In Ontario, the Liberals won 79 of the province's 121 seats, with a particularly strong showing in the Golden Horseshoe, where the party was not only able to fend off expected challenges from the Conservatives and the NDP but gain the Conservative-held ridings of Kitchener\u2014Conestoga and Milton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0070-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Results\nIn Quebec, the party won 35 of the province's 78 seats, with gains from the NDP (specifically the ridings of Hochelaga, Laurier\u2014Sainte-Marie, Outremont, and Sherbrooke) offsetting losses to the Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois, and with the party doing particularly well on the Island of Montreal where they got their best result since 1980. In Atlantic Canada, the Liberals won 26 out of the region's 32 seats, sweeping Prince Edward Island and winning all but a single seat in both Newfoundland and Labrador and Nova Scotia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0070-0002", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Results\nIn Western Canada, the party won only 15 of the region's 104 seats, winning 11 seats in British Columbia and 4 in Manitoba and being shut out of Alberta and Saskatchewan for the first time since 2011 and 1988, respectively. The best Liberal showing in Canada's west was in British Columbia, where they won 11 out of 42 seats. The Liberals also won two of the three territories, Yukon and the Northwest Territories.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0071-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Results\nConservative strength was predominantly concentrated in Western Canada, particularly in Alberta and Saskatchewan, where the party won all but one of the 48 seats between the two provinces. In British Columbia the Conservatives won 17 of the province's 42 seats, while in Manitoba the party won half the province's 14 seats, with the remainder split between the Liberals and NDP. The Conservatives increased their vote share in every district in three of those provinces (Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba). However, it only resulted in a net gain of 10 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0071-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Results\nIn Ontario the party won 36 out of the province's 121 seats, an increase of three seats compared to 2015, with losses to the Liberals in the Golden Horseshoe being offset by gains from the Liberals and NDP elsewhere in the province, though Ontario was nevertheless only one of two provinces where the Conservatives saw their share of the popular vote decrease compared to 2015. In Quebec, the second province where the Conservatives won a lower share of the popular vote than they did in 2015, the party won 10 of the province's 78 seats. In Atlantic Canada, the party was able to win 4 of the region's 32 seats after having been shut out entirely in 2015, winning 3 in New Brunswick and a single seat in Nova Scotia, though the party remained shut out of Newfoundland and Labrador and Prince Edward Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 847]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0072-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Results\nOnly running in Quebec, the Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois won 32 of the province's 78 seats, with the party doing particularly well in the Greater Montreal Area. Gaining seats from the Conservatives, Liberals, and in particular the NDP, compared to 2015 the party saw its share of the vote increase in all but one of the province's 78 seats, the one exception being the Montreal riding of Laurier\u2014Sainte-Marie, where the party ran a candidate other than former party leader Gilles Duceppe for the first time in its history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0073-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Results\nWith 11 seats in British Columbia and 6 seats in Ontario, the two provinces accounted for a majority of the NDP's 24 seats, though in both provinces the party lost ground compared to 2015: in British Columbia, the party lost the ridings of Kootenay\u2014Columbia and Port Moody\u2014Coquitlam to the Conservatives and Nanaimo\u2014Ladysmith to the Greens, while in Ontario the party lost Essex and Windsor\u2014Tecumseh to the Conservatives and Liberals, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0073-0001", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Results\nIn Manitoba, the party won 3 of the province's 14 seats, picking up a single seat from the Liberals, while in each of Alberta, Quebec, Newfoundland and Labrador, and Nunavut the party won a single seat, gaining the latter riding for the first time since 1980. In Alberta, Heather McPherson managed to hold the riding of Edmonton Strathcona following Linda Duncan's retirement, becoming the only non-Conservative MP in the province, while in Newfoundland and Labrador, Jack Harris returned to parliament after having been defeated in 2015, becoming the party's only MP in Atlantic Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0073-0002", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Results\nIn Quebec, only eight years after the Orange Wave saw the party win 59 of the province's then-75 seats, the NDP won just one of the province's 78 seats\u2014the seat of Deputy Leader Alexandre Boulerice\u2014as a result of losses to both the Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois and the Liberals, with prominent MPs Ruth Ellen Brosseau, Guy Caron, and Matthew Dub\u00e9 losing re-election and the party suffering its worst performance since 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0074-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Results\nIn addition to party leader Elizabeth May being re-elected, the Greens held the Vancouver Island riding of Nanaimo\u2014Ladysmith, previously won from the NDP in a by-election earlier in the year, and gained the New Brunswick riding of Fredericton from the Liberals, marking the first time the party has won a seat outside of British Columbia. With three seats total, the election marked the best performance in the party's history, with May declaring on election night that the party's results marked \"the best election result that any Green Party in any first past-the-post system has ever had.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0075-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Results, Analysis\nVote-splitting benefited the Conservatives in Ontario and Metro Vancouver, the Liberals in Quebec and the Maritimes, and the NDP in British Columbia and outside the GTA in Ontario. It also helped the Bloc in some Quebec ridings. Furthermore, analysis by different news outlets showed that the PPC cost the Tories six to seven seats. However, a Tory strategist said that it is not guaranteed that PPC voters would have voted for the Conservatives. The PPC's spokesperson echoed similar sentiments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0076-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Results, Analysis\nStrategic voting was prominent across the country. However, it was not the primary factor for most. According to a poll conducted after the election, of respondents who ultimately voted Liberal, 46 per cent said they had considered voting for the NDP at some point during the campaign. Another 29 per cent considered voting Green. Additionally, 15 per cent of Conservative voters considered voting for the People's Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0077-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Results, Analysis\nNinety-eight women were elected to federal seats in this election. This also set a new record, both by number and by percentage, but still fell short of equality advocates' goal of 30% women. The highest percentage of elected women was in the Green party, with two female MPs out of three elected Green Party members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0078-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election aftermath\nFollowing the election, Trudeau ruled out a coalition and announced that his new cabinet would be sworn in on November 20, 2019. On November 4, 2019, Elizabeth May announced that she would be stepping down as leader of the Green Party. On December 12, 2019, Andrew Scheer announced that he was resigning as leader of the Conservative Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0079-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election aftermath, Recounts\nDefeated parties sought recounts in three ridings where the races were won by a few hundred votes. The Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois made its request in the Quebec Superior Court for the ridings of Hochelaga and Qu\u00e9bec and the NDP sought a recount for the riding of Port Moody\u2014Coquitlam. Federal judges accepted the requests and ruled that recounts should happen for those ridings. All three recount requests were withdrawn during the recounting process, thus the victors stayed the same.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0080-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election aftermath, Electoral reform\nThe nature of the elections' results reignited calls for electoral reform. Some commentators argued against the current first-past-the-post system, while others defended it. Dominic O'Sullivan, Associate Professor of Political Science at Charles Sturt University, argued that Canada should follow in New Zealand's footsteps with their electoral reform. News outlets also published articles showing what the election results could have looked like if Trudeau had kept his promise on electoral reform.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 68], "content_span": [69, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0081-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election aftermath, Electoral reform\nAfter the election, Elizabeth May sent Prime Minister Justin Trudeau a letter recommending STV as a compromise for electoral reform since it meets some of the concerns Trudeau expressed in the past.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 68], "content_span": [69, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0082-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election aftermath, Electoral reform\nA poll published by the Angus Reid Institute showed that support for electoral reform and proportional representation in particular skyrocketed following the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 68], "content_span": [69, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0083-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election aftermath, Western Canadian separatism\nAfter Justin Trudeau's re-election on October 21, 2019, #Wexit trended on social media. However, experts stated part of the push was due to disinformation and bots. On November 4, 2019, the separatist group Wexit Alberta applied for federal political party status. On November 6, 2019, a poll conducted by Ipsos show a historic high level of interest in secession from Canada in both Alberta and Saskatchewan by 33% and 27%, respectively. On January 12, 2020, Wexit Canada was granted eligibility for the next federal election. They subsequently changed their name to the Maverick Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 79], "content_span": [80, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0084-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election aftermath, Deregistered parties\nThe Progressive Canadian Party was deregistered by Elections Canada on October 30, 2019, for failing to comply with the reporting provisions of the Canada Elections Act.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 72], "content_span": [73, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0085-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election aftermath, Deregistered parties\nThe United Party of Canada was deregistered on December 31, 2020, for failing to submit required financial documents or update party information.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 72], "content_span": [73, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288110-0086-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election, Election aftermath, Deregistered parties\nThe Stop Climate Change Party was deregistered on March 31, 2021, for failing to provide an auditor's report.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 72], "content_span": [73, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288111-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election in Ontario\nThe 2019 Canadian federal election in Ontario was held on Monday, October 21 across 121 electoral districts within Ontario, as part of the 2019 Canadian federal election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288111-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election in Ontario, Analysis\nThe Liberals retained a majority of seats in Ontario, with a net decrease of 1 seat. Of the Liberal Seats lost, only 1, Aurora\u2014Oak Ridges\u2014Richmond Hill was within the Greater Toronto Area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288111-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election in Ontario, Analysis\nThe Conservatives made small seat gains, but lost support in the GTA, with the Deputy Leader of the Opposition Lisa Raitt losing her seat of Milton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288111-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election in Ontario, Analysis\nThe New Democrats remained similar in vote share to 2015, with the party losing 2 Seats in Essex County, Ontario, Windsor\u2014Tecumseh and Essex.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288111-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election in Ontario, Analysis\nThe Green Party increased its share of the vote but failed to make any gains. They placed second in the ridings of Guelph and Kitchener Centre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288111-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian federal election in Ontario, Analysis\nThis elections in Canada-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288112-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canadian honours\nThe following are the appointments to various Canadian Honours of 2019. 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-00288112-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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 2019 calendar year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288112-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288113-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canarian Island Cabildo elections\nThe 2019 Canarian Island Cabildo elections were held on Sunday, 26 May 2019, to elect the 11th Island Cabildos of El Hierro, Fuerteventura, Gran Canaria, La Gomera, La Palma, Lanzarote and Tenerife. All 157 seats in the seven Island Cabildos were up for election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288113-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canarian Island Cabildo elections, Island Cabildo control\nThe following table lists party control in the Island Cabildos. Gains for a party are displayed with the cell's background shaded in that party's colour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288114-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canarian regional election\nThe 2019 Canarian regional election was held on Sunday, 26 May 2019, to elect the 10th Parliament of the Autonomous Community of the Canary Islands. All 70 seats in the Parliament were up for election. The election was held simultaneously with regional elections in eleven other autonomous communities and local elections all throughout Spain, as well as the 2019 European Parliament election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288114-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canarian regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nThe Parliament of the Canary Islands was the devolved, unicameral legislature of the autonomous community of the Canary Islands, having legislative power in regional matters as defined by the Spanish Constitution and the Canarian Statute of Autonomy, as well as the ability to vote confidence in or withdraw it from a regional president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288114-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Canarian regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nVoting for the Parliament was on the basis of universal suffrage, which comprised all nationals over eighteen, registered in the Canary Islands and in full enjoyment of their political rights. Additionally, Canarians abroad were required to apply for voting before being permitted to vote, a system known as \"begged\" or expat vote (Spanish: Voto rogado). The 70 members of the Parliament of the Canary Islands were elected using the D'Hondt method and a closed list proportional representation, with an electoral threshold of 15 percent of valid votes\u2014which included blank ballots\u2014being applied in each constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288114-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Canarian regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nAlternatively, parties could also enter the seat distribution as long as they reached four percent regionally. Seats were allocated to constituencies, corresponding to the islands of El Hierro, Fuerteventura, Gran Canaria, La Gomera, La Palma, Lanzarote and Tenerife, as well as an additional constituency comprising the whole archipelago, with each being allocated a fixed number of seats: 3 for El Hierro, 8 for Fuerteventura, 15 for Gran Canaria, 4 for La Gomera, 8 for La Palma, 8 for Lanzarote, 15 for Tenerife and 9 for the regional constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288114-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Canarian regional election, Overview, Election date\nThe term of the Parliament of the Canary Islands expired four years after the date of its previous election. Elections to the Parliament were fixed for the fourth Sunday of May every four years. The previous election was held on 24 May 2015, setting the election date for the Parliament on Sunday, 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288114-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Canarian regional election, Overview, Election date\nAfter legal amendments in 2018, the president was granted the prerogative to dissolve the Parliament of the Canary Islands and call a snap election, provided that no motion of no confidence was in process and that dissolution did not occur before one year had elapsed since the previous one. In the event of an investiture process failing to elect a regional president within a two-month period from the first ballot, the Parliament was to be automatically dissolved and a fresh election called. Any snap election held as a result of these circumstances would not alter the period to the next ordinary election, with elected deputies merely serving out what remained of their four-year terms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288114-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Canarian regional election, Opinion polls\nThe table below lists voting intention estimates in reverse chronological order, showing the most recent first and using the dates when the survey fieldwork was done, as opposed to the date of publication. Where the fieldwork dates are unknown, the date of publication is given instead. The highest percentage figure in each polling survey is displayed with its background shaded in the leading party's colour. If a tie ensues, this is applied to the figures with the highest percentages. The \"Lead\" column on the right shows the percentage-point difference between the parties with the highest percentages in a given poll. When available, seat projections are also displayed below the voting estimates in a smaller font. 36 seats were required for an absolute majority in the Parliament of the Canary Islands (31 until 6 November 2018).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 884]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288114-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Canarian regional election, Opinion polls\nPoll conducted after legal ban on opinion polls\u00a0\u00a0Exit poll", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288115-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canary Islands wildfires\nDuring August 2019, a number of forest fires broke out in the Canary Islands of Gran Canaria, Tenerife and Lanzarote. The fires on the island of Gran Canaria were the most severe, resulting in the loss of large areas of the island's forests and leading to the evacuation of thousands of residents from a number of towns and villages. The intense heat brought by a heat wave and the presence of strong winds, combined with the island's mountainous terrain, made extinguishing activities exceptionally difficult.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288115-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canary Islands wildfires, Gran Canaria, Artenara\nThe first forest fire was started by inadvertent human action on 10 August 2019 in Artenara. The 55-year-old who was working with a welding machine and accidentally caused the fire was arrested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288115-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Canary Islands wildfires, Gran Canaria, Artenara\nBy 12 August, the fire had been contained but not extinguished. 1,000 hectares (2,500 acres) of land had been burnt by then and over 1000 local residents had been evacuated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288115-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Canary Islands wildfires, Gran Canaria, Artenara\nThe wildfire was declared to have been stabilised on 13 August after 13 aircraft had been working on firefighting activities. A total of 1,500 hectares (3,700 acres) had been affected by then. By 16 August, residents had been allowed to move back into their homes. On 25 August, the fire was declared to have been completely extinguished.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288115-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Canary Islands wildfires, Gran Canaria, Cazadores\nA second fire broke out in Cazadores on 13 August, in the municipality of Telde, causing the evacuation of 25 residents. This smaller fire was started by a pyromaniac who was later arrested. By 14 August, the fire had been brought under control after having burnt through about 160 hectares (400 acres) of land. On 25 August, the fire was declared to have been completely extinguished.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288115-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Canary Islands wildfires, Gran Canaria, Valleseco\nOn 17 August, during an intense heat wave, another wildfire broke out around the town of Valleseco. As of 19 August, the fire had destroyed around 3400 hectares, resulting in the evacuation of about 8000 people from approximately 40 towns in the region, including those affected by the Artenara wildfire just a few days ago. The fire has also reached the Tamadaba natural park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288115-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Canary Islands wildfires, Gran Canaria, Valleseco\nThe firefighting operation involved 16 aircraft and about 700 firefighters; however, the high temperatures, strong winds and low humidity levels were hampering the efforts and the wildfire could not be contained, with authorities declaring it to be \"completely out of control\". Flames as high as 50 metres (160\u00a0ft) made some areas inaccessible for the water-dropping planes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288115-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Canary Islands wildfires, Gran Canaria, Valleseco\nOn 20 August, and thanks, in part, to the improved weather conditions, the wildfire began to die down. Some fronts had been contained while others were still unapproachable. The affected area had grown to 10,000 hectares (25,000 acres) (over 6% of the entire island), making it the worst fire in all of Spain in the last six years. Overall, around 9000 people from over 50 towns and villages were evacuated from their homes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288115-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Canary Islands wildfires, Gran Canaria, Valleseco\nBy 22 August, the fire had been stabilised but not yet extinguished. Around 7500 people of those evacuated were allowed to return to their homes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288115-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Canary Islands wildfires, Gran Canaria, Valleseco\nThe fire originated very close to an electricity pylon and the cause of the fire was found to be a fault with electrical wiring on the pylon that caused a spark. Two and a half months earlier a level-one fire occurred in exactly in the same place, but like most fires on the island was quickly extinguished. It is also clear that the hot, windy and dry weather conditions greatly contributed to the fire's rapid propagation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288115-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Canary Islands wildfires, Gran Canaria, Valleseco\nMany also blamed the neglect of local authorities for not having cleared the thick undergrowth and dry leaves accumulated on the forest floor, further fuelling the fire. In addition, firefighters pointed at the poor political management of emergencies on the island, inadequate work conditions, a shortage of firefighters and the fact that the nearest fire station to the forest fire had been closed for the past eight years. The president of the cabildo insular (island council), Antonio Morales, disagreed with these claims stating that a team of extraordinary professionals works throughout the year on preventive measures such as firewalls. Instead, Morales put the onus on the owners of private terrains who do not adequately maintain their properties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 812]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288115-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Canary Islands wildfires, Gran Canaria, Valleseco, Damage to protected areas\nThe wildfire affected the areas surrounding Risco Ca\u00eddo and the Sacred Mountains of Gran Canaria a month after the site was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site. According to reports, the fire did not damage the actual archeological site.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 81], "content_span": [82, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288115-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Canary Islands wildfires, Gran Canaria, Valleseco, Damage to protected areas\nAccording to early reports, 84% of the over 10,000 hectares (25,000 acres) of land affected by the wildfire, i.e. 8,709.5 hectares (21,522 acres), was part of protected natural spaces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 81], "content_span": [82, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288115-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Canary Islands wildfires, Tenerife\nIn the evening of 18 August, a wildfire broke out in Vilaflor. A helicopter and three ground vehicles were used in the firefighting operation and, as of 19 August, the wildfire was said to be under control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288115-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Canary Islands wildfires, Lanzarote\nDuring the night of 18 August 2019, a forest fire broke out by the Bosquecillo (Spanish for 'small forest') area, located in the north of the island in the municipality of Har\u00eda. The fire was declared to be under control shortly after. The fire, which burnt through about 20,000 square metres (2.0\u00a0ha) of land, was eventually extinguished after over six hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288116-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canberra Challenger\nThe 2019 Canberra Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the fourth edition of the tournament which was a part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Canberra, Australia between 6 and 12 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288116-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canberra 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-00288116-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Canberra Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288116-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Canberra Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as alternates:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288117-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canberra Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nJonathan Erlich and Divij Sharan were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288117-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canberra Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nMarcelo Demoliner and Hugo Nys won the title after defeating Andr\u00e9 G\u00f6ransson and Sem Verbeek 3\u20136, 6\u20134, [10\u20133] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288118-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canberra Challenger \u2013 Singles\nAndreas Seppi was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288118-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canberra Challenger \u2013 Singles\nHubert Hurkacz won the title after defeating Ilya Ivashka 6\u20134, 4\u20136, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288119-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canberra Rugby League, Canberra Raiders Cup (First Grade)\nThe 2019 Canberra Raiders Cup will be the 22nd season of the cup, the top division Rugby League club competition in Canberra. The 2019 Canberra Raiders Cup will consist of 18 regular season rounds that will begin on the 7th of April and ended on the 18th of August. There will be 3 playoff rounds, beginning on the 24th of August with the first semi-final, and ending on the 8th of September with the Grand Final. Woden Valley Rams are the defending premiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 62], "content_span": [63, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288119-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canberra Rugby League, Canberra Raiders Cup (First Grade), Teams\nThere will be 9 teams playing in 2019. 5 teams from Canberra, 2 from Queanbeyan, 1 from Yass, and 1 from Goulburn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 69], "content_span": [70, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288119-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Canberra Rugby League, Canberra Raiders Cup (First Grade), Teams\nAll 9 clubs will field a team in the reserve grade competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 69], "content_span": [70, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288119-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Canberra Rugby League, George Tooke Shield (Second Division), Teams\nThere will be 9 teams playing in 2019. 3 teams from Canberra. 6 teams from New South Wales towns surrounding Canberra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 72], "content_span": [73, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288120-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cannes Film Festival\nThe 72nd annual Cannes Film Festival took place from 14 to 25 May 2019. Mexican filmmaker Alejandro Gonz\u00e1lez I\u00f1\u00e1rritu served as jury president. The Palme d'Or went to the South Korean film Parasite, directed by Bong Joon-ho; Bong became the first Korean director to win the award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288120-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cannes Film Festival\nAmerican film director Jim Jarmusch's ensemble zombie comedy film The Dead Don't Die served as the opening film of the festival. The festival honoured French filmmaker Agn\u00e8s Varda, who died in March 2019, featuring her on the official poster of the festival. The photograph used was taken during the filming of her debut film La Pointe Courte (1955), which later screened at the Cannes Film Festival.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288120-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cannes Film Festival, Official selection, In competition\nThe following films were selected to compete for the Palme d'Or:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 61], "content_span": [62, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288120-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cannes Film Festival, Official selection, Un Certain Regard\nThe following films were selected to compete in the Un Certain Regard section:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288120-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cannes Film Festival, Official selection, Out of competition\nThe following films were selected to be screened out of competition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 65], "content_span": [66, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288120-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cannes Film Festival, Official selection, Special screenings\nThe following films were selected be shown in the special screenings section:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 65], "content_span": [66, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288120-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Cannes Film Festival, Official selection, Short films\nOut of 4,240 entries, the following films were selected to compete for the Short Film Palme d'Or.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288120-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Cannes Film Festival, Official selection, Cin\u00e9fondation\nThe Cin\u00e9fondation section focuses on films made by students at film schools. The following 17 entries (14 live-action and 3 animated films) were selected out of 2,000 submissions. Six of the films selected represent schools participating in Cin\u00e9fondation for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288120-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Cannes Film Festival, Official selection, Cannes Classics\nThe full line-up for the Cannes Classics section was announced on 26 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 62], "content_span": [63, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288120-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Cannes Film Festival, Official selection, Cin\u00e9ma de la Plage\nThe Cin\u00e9ma de la Plage is a part of the Official Selection of the festival. 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, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288120-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Cannes Film Festival, Parallel sections, International Critics' Week\nThe following films were selected to be screened in the International Critics' Week section:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288120-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Cannes Film Festival, Parallel sections, Directors' Fortnight\nThe following films were selected to be screened in the Directors' Fortnight section:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 66], "content_span": [67, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288120-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Cannes Film Festival, Parallel sections, ACID\nThe following films were selected to be screened in the ACID (Association for the Distribution of Independent Cinema) section:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288120-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Cannes Film Festival, Awards, Official awards, In Competition\nThe following awards were presented for films shown In Competition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 66], "content_span": [67, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288121-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cannock Chase District Council election\nElections to Cannock Chase District Council took place on 2 May 2019 on the same day as other local elections in England, including to several parish councils in the district. All of the council's wards were up for election, meaning a total of 15 councillors were elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288121-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cannock Chase District Council election\nBefore the election, the Labour Party held control of the council with 21 seats, a majority of one. They were aiming to defend the six seats they won at the 2015 election as well as another in Hednesford Green Heath which they gained at a by-election in September 2017. Labour lost four of the seven seats they were defending and only gained one, meaning they lost their overall majority on the council. Four Labour candidates stood as joint Labour and Co-operative candidates and one was elected adding to the three councillors who also represented the Co-operative Party on the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288121-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cannock Chase District Council election\nThe Conservatives had previously strengthened their position as the largest opposition group on the council at the previous elections and maintained their total of 15 seats. They lost one seat to the Green Party and another to Labour but also gained two seats from Labour, including one of the Hednesford seats they lost in the 2017 by-elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288121-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cannock Chase District Council election\nThe Green Party had not won any seats in 2015 but went on to gain one seat in 2016, one seat in the 2017 by-elections and another in 2018. They retained their by-election seat and gained two seats, one from Labour and another from the Conservatives, to take their total up to five seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288121-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cannock Chase District Council election\nThe Liberal Democrats only fielded two candidates this year: one in Brereton & Ravenhill and one in Rawnsley, both former strongholds of theirs. They succeeded in regaining Brereton & Ravenhill which they had lost to Labour in 2015. UKIP stood in six wards and increased their share of the vote compared to 2018 but did not gain any seats. Two independent candidates also stood but neither were elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288121-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cannock Chase District Council election, Results, Council Composition\nPrior to the election, the composition of the council was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 74], "content_span": [75, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288121-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Cannock Chase District Council election, Ward results\nVote share changes are based on the results achieved by parties in 2015 election when these seats were last contested, except from the Hednesford Green Heath and Hednesford South wards which were last contested at by-elections in 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288121-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Cannock Chase District Council election, Ward results, Hednesford Green Heath\n^ Linda Tait was the sitting councillor for the Hednesford Green Heath ward after gaining it from the Conservatives in a 2017 by-election. Changes to vote shares, turnout and swing is compared with the by-election, not the 2015 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 82], "content_span": [83, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288121-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Cannock Chase District Council election, Ward results, Hednesford South\n^ Stuart Crabtree was the sitting councillor for the Hednesford South ward after gaining it from the Conservatives in a 2017 by-election. Changes to vote shares, turnout and swing is compared with the by-election, not the 2015 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 76], "content_span": [77, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288122-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canoe Slalom World Cup\nThe 2019 Canoe Slalom World Cup was a series of five races in several canoeing and kayaking categories organized by the International Canoe Federation (ICF). It was the 32nd edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288122-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canoe Slalom World Cup, Calendar\nThe series opened with World Cup Race 1 in Lee Valley, England (13\u201316 June) and ended with the World Cup Final in Prague, Czech Republic (6\u20138 September).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288122-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Canoe Slalom World Cup, Standings\nThe winner of each race was awarded 60 points (double points were awarded for the World Cup Final). 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.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288122-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Canoe Slalom World Cup, Results, World Cup Final\n6-8 September in Prague, Czech Republic. These were the World Championships for the extreme kayak events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288123-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cantabrian regional election\nThe 2019 Cantabrian regional election was held on Sunday, 26 May 2019, to elect the 10th Parliament of the autonomous community of Cantabria. All 35 seats in the Parliament were up for election. The election was held simultaneously with regional elections in eleven other autonomous communities and local elections all throughout Spain, as well as the 2019 European Parliament election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288123-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cantabrian regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nThe Parliament of Cantabria was the devolved, unicameral legislature of the autonomous community of Cantabria, having legislative power in regional matters as defined by the Spanish Constitution and the Cantabrian Statute of Autonomy, as well as the ability to vote confidence in or withdraw it from a regional president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288123-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cantabrian regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nVoting for the Parliament was on the basis of universal suffrage, which comprised all nationals over eighteen, registered in Cantabria and in full enjoyment of their political rights. Additionally, Cantabrians abroad were required to apply for voting before being permitted to vote, a system known as \"begged\" or expat vote (Spanish: Voto rogado). The 35 members of the Parliament of Cantabria were elected using the D'Hondt method and a closed list proportional representation, with an electoral threshold of five percent of valid votes\u2014which included blank ballots\u2014being applied regionally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288123-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cantabrian regional election, Overview, Election date\nThe term of the Parliament of Cantabria expired four years after the date of its previous election. Elections to the Parliament were fixed for the fourth Sunday of May every four years. The previous election was held on 24 May 2015, setting the election date for the Parliament on Sunday, 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288123-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cantabrian regional election, Overview, Election date\nThe president had the prerogative to dissolve the Parliament of Cantabria and call a snap election, provided that no motion of no confidence was in process, no nationwide election was due and some time requirements were met: namely, that dissolution did not occur either during the first legislative session or within the legislature's last year ahead of its scheduled expiry, nor before one year had elapsed since a previous dissolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288123-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Cantabrian regional election, Overview, Election date\nIn the event of an investiture process failing to elect a regional president within a two-month period from the first ballot, the Parliament was to be automatically dissolved and a fresh election called. Any snap election held as a result of these circumstances would not alter the period to the next ordinary election, with elected deputies merely serving out what remained of their four-year terms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288123-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cantabrian regional election, Parliamentary composition\nThe Parliament of Cantabria was officially dissolved on 2 April 2019, after the publication of the dissolution decree in the Official Gazette of Cantabria. The table below shows the composition of the parliamentary groups in the Parliament at the time of dissolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288123-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Cantabrian regional election, Parties and candidates\nThe electoral law allowed for parties and federations registered in the interior ministry, coalitions and groupings of electors to present lists of candidates. Parties and federations intending to form a coalition ahead of an election were required to inform the relevant Electoral Commission within ten days of the election call, whereas groupings of electors needed to secure the signature of at least one percent of the electorate in Cantabria, disallowing electors from signing for more than one list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288123-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Cantabrian regional election, Parties and candidates\nBelow is a list of the main parties and electoral alliances which contested the election:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288123-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Cantabrian regional election, Opinion polls\nThe table below lists voting intention estimates in reverse chronological order, showing the most recent first and using the dates when the survey fieldwork was done, as opposed to the date of publication. Where the fieldwork dates are unknown, the date of publication is given instead. The highest percentage figure in each polling survey is displayed with its background shaded in the leading party's colour. If a tie ensues, this is applied to the figures with the highest percentages. The \"Lead\" column on the right shows the percentage-point difference between the parties with the highest percentages in a given poll. When available, seat projections are also displayed below the voting estimates in a smaller font. 18 seats were required for an absolute majority in the Parliament of Cantabria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 850]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288124-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canterbury City Council election\nThe 2019 Canterbury City Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of the Canterbury City Council in Kent, England. This was on the same day as other local elections. The Conservative Party retained overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288124-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canterbury City Council election, Results by Ward, Blean Forest\nGeorge Metcalfe was elected as a Conservative in 2015. The change in voteshare is shown from his result then, rather than the Liberal Democrat candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288125-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canterbury Cup NSW\nThe 2019 Canterbury Cup NSW season was the eleventh season of the New South Wales Cup, the top rugby league competition administered by the New South Wales Rugby League. The competition acts as a second-tier league to the ten New South Wales-based National Rugby League clubs, as well the Canberra Raiders and New Zealand Warriors. The Newtown Jets won the premiership and played against Burleigh Bears, who won the 2019 Intrust Super Cup, in the NRL State Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288125-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Canterbury Cup NSW, Teams\nIn 2019, 12 clubs fielded teams in the Canterbury Cup. The South Sydney Rabbitohs will enter their own team, and the North Sydney Bears will become the reigning premiers Sydney Roosters' new feeder club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288125-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Canterbury Cup NSW, Teams\nThe Jersey Flegg Cup competition will be run in parallel to the New South Wales Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288125-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Canterbury Cup NSW, Television Broadcast\nFox League and Channel 9 will continue their broadcast of the Canterbury Cup. Channel 9 will be moving their weekly game from Saturday to Sunday to move between their broadcast of the Sunday Footy Show and their Sunday Afternoon NRL Broadcast for the NSW market, whilst in QLD they will broadcast an Intrust Super Cup match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288125-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Canterbury Cup NSW, Radio Broadcast\nThe Canterbury Cup is presented every weekend on Steele Sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288126-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canterbury Cup NSW results\nThe 2019 Canterbury Cup NSW is the 1st season since the name change, and is the current season of professional rugby league in New South Wales, Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288127-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs season\nThe 2019 Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs season was the 85th in the club's history. Coached by Dean Pay, they finished the National Rugby League's 2019 Telstra Premiership in 12th place and did not qualify for the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288128-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cape Verdean Football Championships\nThe 2019 Cape Verdean Football Championships is the 40th season of the Cape Verdean Football Championships, the top-tier football league in Cape Verde.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288128-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cape Verdean Football Championships, Overview\nA total of 12 clubs participate in the national championship (Campeonato Nacional). Cape Verdean clubs in the nine inhabited islands will play between late 2017 and early 2018 in the eleven regional leagues, where each league winner qualify for the national championship. The defending champions also qualify, and if they win their regional league, the runner-up of their league also qualifies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288129-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Capital Football season\nThe 2019 Capital Football season saw a new competition format for the top two men\u2019s divisions in the Australian Capital Territory. The Capital League (former second division) became linked to the National Premier League (first division) with the introduction of a two-step plan to establish promotion and relegation between the two divisions, as well as a re-branding of both divisions to National Premier League 1 (NPL1) and National Premier League 2 (NPL2). The NPL1 Premier qualified for the 2019 National Premier Leagues final series and the Federation Cup winner qualified for the 2019 FFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288129-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Capital Football season, 2019 National Premier Leagues Capital Football\nRe -branded NPL1 in 2019, this was the ACT\u2019s highest senior men\u2019s division. Nine teams competed, with the team finishing last in NPL1 relegated to NPL2 for the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 76], "content_span": [77, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288129-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Capital Football season, 2019 National Premier Leagues Capital Football 2\nReplacing the Capital League, 2019 was the first season of NPL2 as the ACT\u2019s second senior men\u2019s division. The competition was a double round-robin played over 18 rounds, with no promotion to the NPL1, followed by an end of season finals competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 78], "content_span": [79, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288129-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Capital Football season, 2019 Capital Football State League 1\nThe 2019 ACT Capital Football Division 1 (also known as State League 1) is the fifth edition of the Capital League Division 1 as ACT's third senior men\u2019s division. The 2019 season consists of 18 rounds with four matches played per round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 66], "content_span": [67, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288129-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Capital Football season, 2019 Women's National Premier Leagues ACT\nThe highest tier domestic football competition in the ACT is known as the ACT Women's National Premier Leagues (WNPL). Each team played each other twice for a total of 16 rounds, plus a finals series for the top 4 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 71], "content_span": [72, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288129-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Capital Football season, 2019 Federation Cup\n2019 is the 57th edition of the Capital Football Federation Cup. The Federation cup acts as the preliminary rounds for the FFA Cup in the ACT with the Cup winner entering the subsequent FFA Cup round of 32. Although open to all senior men's teams registered with Capital Football, entry to the competition is staggered, with NPL1 clubs entering the tournament in the second round. The Cup run from 5 March until 15 June 2019. Tigers FC secured its first-ever Federation Cup title and qualification to the 2019 FFA Cup with a 0\u20130 (4\u20132) penalty shootout victory over Canberra FC at Deakin Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288129-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Capital Football season, 2019 Charity Shield\n2019 is the fourth edition of the annual ACT Charity Shield contested to kick off the 2019 Capital Football season. Money raised from the event goes towards a nominated charity, which in 2019 was Salvation Army Canberra. Canberra FC and Gungahlin United contested the Shield in 2019. The matchup was a replay of the 2018 Federation Cup final. Canberra FC claimed its second Charity Shield title with a 2\u20131 victory thanks to an unfortunate own goal winner in the fifty-second minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288130-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CarShield 200\nThe 2019 CarShield 200 is a NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series race held on June 22, 2019, at World Wide Technology Raceway at Gateway in Madison, Illinois. Contested over 160 laps on the 1.25-mile (2.01\u00a0km) oval, it was the 11th race of the 2019 NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288130-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CarShield 200, Background, Track\nKnown as Gateway Motorsports Park until its renaming in April 2019, World Wide Technology Raceway is a 1.25-mile (2.01\u00a0km) paved oval motor racing track in Madison, Illinois, United States. The track previously held Truck races from 1998 to 2010, and returned starting in 2014. In conjunction with the Truck Series, the ARCA Menards Series held a support race earlier in the night.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288130-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CarShield 200, Entry list\nAfter intentionally wrecking Austin Hill under caution at the previous week's M&M's 200 at Iowa Speedway, Johnny Sauter was suspended for the Gateway race. Myatt Snider replaced him in the No. 13 ThorSport Racing truck.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288130-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CarShield 200, Practice\nOnly one practice session was held as rain caused the other to be cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288130-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CarShield 200, Practice, Final practice\nStewart Friesen was the fastest in the practice session with a time of 32.911 seconds and a speed of 136.732\u00a0mph (220.049\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288130-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CarShield 200, Qualifying\nQualifying was cancelled due to rain. The starting lineup was determined by owner's points, awarding the pole to Christian Eckes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288130-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 CarShield 200, Race, Summary\nChristian Eckes began on pole. Greg Rayl crashed into the wall in lap 3, ending his day and causing the first caution. Grant Enfinger won the Stage 1. As the stage ended, Ross Chastain and Matt Crafton battled for position, resulting in Crafton making contact with Chastain after the flag flew to end the stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288130-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 CarShield 200, Race, Summary\nStage 2 was also won by Enfinger, who led the entire stage to score his third stage win of the season. He held off Myatt Snider, who was driving in place of the suspended Johnny Sauter. On lap 78, Natalie Decker crashed into the wall hard, ending her day and resulting in her fifth DNF of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288130-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 CarShield 200, Race, Summary\nHarrison Burton and Sheldon Creed made contact with 15 laps remaining. Burton slid the rear end of his truck into the wall, receiving significant damage. He continued racing, though barely managing to stay on the lead lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288130-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 CarShield 200, Race, Summary\nThe final restart took place with seven laps to go. On the restart, Chastain (who did not get tires during the lengthy caution) spun his tires, but received a helpful push from Todd Gilliland. Chastain cleared Eckes, and fended him off even though Eckes had fresher tires.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288130-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 CarShield 200, Race, Summary\nOn the final lap, Eckes was passed by Gilliland and spun by Stewart Friesen. The caution was not thrown, causing Eckes to lose many positions. Chastain managed to hold off Gilliland to win the race. His truck passed inspection, redeeming himself from his stripped win in the previous week's race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288131-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cargill Curling Training Centre Icebreaker\nThe 2019 Cargill Curling Training Centre Icebreaker was held from August 23 to 25 in Morris, Manitoba. It was the fourth event of the 2019\u201320 curling season. The total purse for the event was $7,480 on both the Men's and Women's side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288131-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cargill Curling Training Centre Icebreaker\nIn the Men's event, Jason Gunnlaugson defeated Ty Dilello 7\u20135 in the final and in the Women's event, Tracy Fleury defeated Tori Koana 5\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288132-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Caribbean Club Championship\nThe 2019 Caribbean Club Championship was the 21st edition of the Caribbean Club Championship (also known as the CFU Club Championship), the first-tier annual international club football competition in the Caribbean region, held amongst clubs whose football associations are affiliated with the Caribbean Football Union (CFU), a sub-confederation of CONCACAF. The tournament was played in Jamaica between 12\u201319 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288132-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Caribbean Club Championship\nAtl\u00e9tico Pantoja were the title holders, but did not compete in this season's CONCACAF Caribbean Club Championship. Portmore United were crowned Caribbean club champions for the second time and qualified for the 2020 CONCACAF Champions League. Runners-up Waterhouse and third place Capoise qualified for the 2019 CONCACAF League, but fourth-placed Real Hope lost to 2019 Caribbean Club Shield winners Robinhood in a playoff and failed to qualify for the CONCACAF League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288132-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Caribbean Club Championship, Teams\nAmong the 31 CFU member associations, four of them were classified as professional leagues and each may enter two teams in the CONCACAF Caribbean Club Championship. However, two associations were not allowed to enter this season, and as a result, only four teams from two associations entered the 2019 CONCACAF Caribbean Club Championship (officially the 2019 Flow CONCACAF Caribbean Club Championship for sponsorship reasons).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288132-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Caribbean Club Championship, Venue\nThe matches were played at the Stadium East in Kingston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288132-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Caribbean Club Championship, 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288132-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Caribbean Club Championship, 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288132-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Caribbean Club Championship, 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288132-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Caribbean Club Championship, 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288132-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Caribbean Club Championship, Matches, CONCACAF League playoff\nThe CONCACAF League playoff was played between the 2019 CONCACAF Caribbean Club Championship fourth-placed team, Real Hope, and the 2019 CONCACAF Caribbean Club Shield winners, Robinhood, with the winners qualifying for the 2019 CONCACAF League preliminary round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288133-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Caribbean Club Shield\nThe 2019 Caribbean Club Shield was the second edition of the Caribbean Club Shield (also known as the CFU Club Shield), the second-tier annual international club football competition in the Caribbean region, held amongst clubs whose football associations are affiliated with the Caribbean Football Union (CFU), a sub-confederation of CONCACAF. The tournament was played in Cura\u00e7ao between 5\u201315 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288133-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Caribbean Club Shield\nThe winners of the 2019 CONCACAF Caribbean Club Shield, as long as they fulfill the CONCACAF Regional Club Licensing criteria, would play against the fourth place team of the 2019 CONCACAF Caribbean Club Championship in a playoff match to determine the final Caribbean spot to the 2019 CONCACAF League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288133-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Caribbean Club Shield\nRobinhood defeated title holders Club Franciscain in the final to win their first CONCACAF Caribbean Club Shield, and later defeated Real Hope in a playoff to qualify for the CONCACAF League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288133-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Caribbean Club Shield, Teams\nAmong the 31 CFU member associations, 27 of them were classified as non-professional leagues and each may enter one team in the CONCACAF Caribbean Club Shield. A total of 13 teams (from 13 associations) entered the 2019 CONCACAF Caribbean Club Shield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288133-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Caribbean Club Shield, Venues\nThe matches were played at the Ergilio Hato Stadium and Stadion dr. Antoine Maduro in Willemstad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288133-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Caribbean Club Shield, Group stage\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 11 January 2019, 11:00 EST (UTC\u22125), at the CONCACAF Headquarters in Miami, United States. The 13 teams were drawn into four groups: one group of four teams and three groups of three teams. The team from the host association Cura\u00e7ao, Jong Holland, were allocated to position A1, while the remaining 12 teams were drawn into the other group positions without any seeding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288133-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Caribbean Club Shield, Group stage\nThe winners and runners-up of each group advance to the quarter-finals. The third-placed teams play in the consolation matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288133-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Caribbean Club Shield, Knockout stage, Final\nWinners advanced to CONCACAF League playoff against 2019 CONCACAF Caribbean Club Championship fourth-placed team for a place in 2019 CONCACAF League preliminary round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288134-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Caribbean Premier League\nThe 2019 Caribbean Premier League (CPLT20) was the seventh season of the Caribbean Premier League, the domestic Twenty20 cricket league in the West Indies. Matches were played in six countries \u2013 Trinidad and Tobago, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Guyana, Barbados, Jamaica and Saint Lucia. Originally, the tournament was scheduled to start on 21 August 2019. However, this was pushed back to 4 September 2019, to avoid clashing with India's tour to the West Indies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288134-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Caribbean Premier League\nIn August 2019, the St Lucia Stars franchise team was axed from the tournament, with the CPL looking to replace the team. They were later replaced by the returning St Lucia Zouks franchise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288134-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Caribbean Premier League\nThe Barbados Tridents won the tournament, claiming their second CPL title, after beating the Guyana Amazon Warriors by 27 runs in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288134-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Caribbean Premier League, League stage, Fixtures\nThe complete fixture was released on 28 May 2019. All times are in the respective local times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288135-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Caribbean Series\nThe 2019 Caribbean Series (Serie del Caribe) was the 61st edition of the international competition featuring the champions of the Cuban National Series, Dominican Professional Baseball League, Mexican Pacific League, Puerto Rican Professional Baseball League, Panamanian Professional Baseball League, and Venezuelan Professional Baseball League. It took place from February 4 to 10, 2019, at Estadio Nacional de Panam\u00e1 in Panama City, Panama. The series was originally set to be hosted in Barquisimeto, Venezuela, but for the second consecutive year had to be moved to an alternate location. This was due primarily to security concerns stemming from the 2019 Venezuelan presidential crisis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288135-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Caribbean Series\nThe Toros de Herrera won the tournament, becoming the first team from Panama to win since the Carta Vieja Yankees in 1950. It was Panama's first appearance in a Caribbean Series since 1960.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288135-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Caribbean Series, Format\nWith the addition of a sixth team for the 2019 competition, two groups were formed with each composed of three teams. The groups had their Round-robin, with each team facing the others in their group twice. The teams with the best record from each group advanced to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288136-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Carling Black Label Cup\nThe 2019 Carling Black Label Cup was the eighth edition of the Carling Black Label Cup to be held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288136-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Carling Black Label Cup, Venue\nThe FNB Stadium was chosen to host this annual event. The FNB Stadium, known as Soccer City during the 2010 FIFA World Cup, is a stadium located in Nasrec, the Soweto area of Johannesburg, South Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288137-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlisle City Council election\nThe 2019 Carlisle City Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Carlisle City Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288137-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlisle City Council election, By-elections between 2019 and 2021\nThe consultation on local reorganisation in Cumbria meant that Carlisle City Council elections did not go ahead as planned. However, elections for the vacant seats on local councils were still held due to the resignations of 3 Labour councillors. These were - Cathedral & Castle ward, Harraby South & Parklands and Newtown & Morton North city ward. The elections were held on Thursday 6 May 2021 which saw 2 Conservative Party gains in the City Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288137-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlisle City Council election, By-elections between 2019 and 2021\nFollowing the death of UKIP councillor John Denholm, a by-election is also planned for Currock & Upperby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288138-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlow County Council election\nA Carlow County Council election was held in County Carlow in Ireland on 24 May 2019 as part of that year's local elections. All 18 councillors were elected for a five-year term of office from three local electoral areas (LEAs) by single transferable vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288138-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlow County Council election\nThe 2018 boundary review committee recommended significant changes to the LEAs used in the 2014 elections due to terms of references requiring a maximum of seven councillors in each LEA and changes in population revealed in the 2016 census. These changes were made by the Minister of State with special responsibility for Local Government and Electoral Reform John Paul Phelan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288138-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlow County Council election\nFianna F\u00e1il gained an additional seat to emerge level with Fine Gael on 6 seats apiece and a higher share of the vote. Sinn F\u00e9in had a poor election losing two seats, and Cllr John Cassin was re-elected as an Independent. Labour retained two seats, while Adrienne Wallace, who contested Ireland South for Solidarity\u2013People Before Profit in the European Parliament election held on the same day, gained a seat for the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288139-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlow Senior Football Championship\nThe 2020 Carlow Senior Football Championship is the 120th edition of the Carlow GAA's premier club gaelic football tournament for senior graded clubs in County Carlow, Ireland. The tournament consists of 8 teams, with the winner going on to represent Carlow 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, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288139-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlow Senior Football Championship\n\u00c9ire \u00d3g were the defending champions after they defeated Rathvilly in the previous years final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288139-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlow Senior Football Championship\nThis was O'Hanrahans return to the senior grade after claiming the 2019 Carlow Intermediate Football Championship title, thus ending a 3-year exodus since being relegated in 2017. There was no Relegation Playoff in 2020 due to Covid-19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288139-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlow Senior Football Championship, Team changes\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2018 championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 54], "content_span": [55, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288139-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlow Senior Football Championship, Group stage\nThere are two groups of four teams. The top two teams in each group compete in the semi-finals. The bottom team in each group compete in the relegation Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288139-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlow Senior Football Championship, Knock-out stages, Finals\nThe winners and runners up of each group qualify for the quarter finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288139-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlow Senior Football Championship, Relegation play off\nThere was no relegation playoff in the 2020 Championship due to Covid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288139-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlow Senior Football Championship, Leinster Senior Club Football Championship\nThere was no Leinster Club Championship in 2020 due to Covid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 84], "content_span": [85, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season\nThe 2019 AFL season is the 123rd season in the Australian Football League contested by the Carlton Football Club. It was also the third AFL Women's season contested by its senior women's team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season\nIn the men's competition, after having finished in last place in 2018, the club's on-field performances improved slightly but without delivering wins, resulting in the dismissal of coach Brendon Bolton after eleven games. Caretaker coach David Teague led the team for the remainder of the season. The Blues were much improved under Teague, winning six games in the second half of the year to avoid a second consecutive wooden spoon, with the Blues ultimately finishing 16th with a win-loss record of 7\u201315. As a result of the club's onfield improvement, Teague was later appointed as Carlton's full-time senior coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season\nThe club's women's team had a successful season, finishing second out of ten teams after qualifying for the Grand Final, which it lost against Adelaide by 45 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Club summary\nThe 2019 AFL season is the 123rd season of the VFL/AFL competition since its inception in 1897; and, having competed in every season, it is also the 123rd season contested by the Carlton Football Club. 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, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Club summary\nCarlton's primary home ground continued to be the Melbourne Cricket Ground, with many games also played at Marvel Stadium (renamed from Etihad Stadium in 2018); traditional home ground Ikon Park continued to serve as the training and administrative base. The club fielded its women's team in the third season of the AFL Women's competition, running in February and March, and Ikon Park served as the home ground for AFL Women's matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Club summary\nCar manufacturer Hyundai, which had been a major sponsor of the club continuously since 2008, and airline Virgin Australia, which had upgraded from a secondary sponsor to a major sponsor during the 2017 season, continued as the club's two major sponsors, under deals in place until 2022.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Club summary\nThe club again achieved a record membership in 2019, signing a total of 64,269 members through the season. This was the club's second consecutive huge increase in membership numbers, having increased from 50,130 to a then-record 56,005 members in 2018. This translated also to a significant increase in home attendances for the club's matches on previous years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Senior Personnel\nMark LoGiudice continued as club president, a role he has held since June 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Senior Personnel\nBrendon Bolton commenced the year as the club's senior coach for his fourth season in the role. However, after the team's 1\u201310 start to the season, punctuated by a heavy round 11 loss to Essendon, Bolton was dismissed, bringing an end to his Carlton coaching career after 77 games and a win-loss record of 16\u201361. The club paid out the balance of the protected period in Bolton's open-ended contract to the end of the 2020 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Senior Personnel\nDavid Teague, who has been the forwards assistant coach since 2018 and who had previously coached the club's VFL-affiliate Northern Bullants from 2008 to 2010, was appointed caretaker coach for the rest of the season; then, with two games remaining in the season, Teague was appointed senior coach on a permanent basis on a three-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Senior Personnel\nOther than the change of senior coach at midseason, the club's coaching staff was relatively unchanged, with former North Melbourne and Geelong ruckman Hamish McIntosh joining the club as specialist coach for rucks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Senior Personnel\nMarc Murphy stepped down as club captain after six seasons in the role. In his place, joint vice-captains Patrick Cripps and Sam Docherty were named joint captains, the first time in club history that joint captains had been named \u2013 although Docherty ultimately missed the entire season for the second year in a row after suffering an anterior cruciate ligament injury in the preseason. With no formal vice captains appointed, Murphy, Kade Simpson and Ed Curnow formed the rest of a leadership group which was reduced in size from 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Squad for 2019\nStatistics are correct as of end of 2018 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-00288140-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Playing list changes\nThe following summarises all player changes which occurred after the 2018 season. Unless otherwise noted, draft picks refer to selections in the 2018 National Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Playing list changes\nThe most notable feature of the club's recruiting was the bold live draft pick trade it made with Adelaide in the National Draft. Carlton was keen to draft Liam Stocker, the 2018 Morrish Medallist whom it rated as the sixth-best draft prospect; and when he was yet to be selected in the later stages of the first round, Carlton set about arranging a trade, offering to swap 2019 first round selections with higher-ranking clubs in exchange for a low 2018 selection. After seeing Xavier Duursma selected by Port Adelaide with the No. 18 selection, Adelaide, who had wanted to recruit Duursma, agreed to the live trade. It was the first live trade in AFL Draft history after rule changes for this season allowed the practice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Playing list changes\nFor the early part of the season, the bold decision looked likely to backfire badly, and as late as Round 13, Adelaide was sitting in the top four while Carlton was on the bottom of the ladder, opening the possibility that it would lose the 2019 No. 1 selection in the deal. However, Carlton's stronger end-of-season form saw it rise to 16th, and Adelaide lost seven of its last nine games to fall to 11th; and when the teams entered the 2019 National Draft, Carlton had effectively traded pick No. 4 for pick No. 9 and Stocker. Carlton ultimately traded pick 9 as well, turning the 2019 No. 4 pick into three late first round selections: Stocker (No. 19, 2018), Brodie Kemp (No. 17, 2019) and Sam Philp (No. 20, 2019).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 775]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Season summary, Pre-season\nThe club played two full-length practice matches as part of the JLT Community Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Individual awards, John Nicholls Medal\nThe Carlton Football Club Best and Fairest awards night took place on 4 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, 73], "content_span": [74, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Individual awards, John Nicholls Medal\nThe winner of the John Nicholls Medal was Patrick Cripps, who polled 143 votes. It was Cripps' third John Nicholls Medal, having won the medal previously in 2015 and 2018, and at 24 he became the youngest player ever to win the award three times (surpassing John Nicholls, who won his third at 26). Cripps won a close count ahead of Ed Curnow, who finished second with 138 votes, and Lachie Plowman, who finished third with 134 votes; it was the highest medal placing for both players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 73], "content_span": [74, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Individual awards, John Nicholls Medal\nThe following other awards were presented on John Nicholls Medal night:-", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 73], "content_span": [74, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Individual awards, AFL Rising Star\nSam Walsh was the winner of the 2019 NAB AFL Rising Star award, making him the first Carlton player to win the award in the men's competition in its 27-year history. Walsh was nominated for the award in Round 4, and quickly became a strong favourite to win. He went on to poll 54 out of a possible 55 votes in the final count, meaning ten of the eleven judges placed him first and one placed him second. He won by 12 votes from second place getter Connor Rozee (Port Adelaide). The strength of his performances and his ability to have an impact in games in only his first season was widely noted, and in the process he broke the record for most disposals in a season by a first year player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Individual awards, Leading goalkickers\nHarry McKay was Carlton's leading goalkicker for the season with 26 goals. It was McKay's first time as Carlton's leading goalkicker. 2018 leading goalkicker Charlie Curnow finished third despite playing only eleven games due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 73], "content_span": [74, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Individual awards, Other\nFor each of the AFLPA awards, one or three Carlton players were nominated by an internal vote of Carlton players; Patrick Cripps and Sam Docherty were also nominated for the Best Captain award by default (despite Docherty not having played a game due to injury).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Individual awards, Other\nCarlton had its strongest showing in the AFLPA awards in history, winning two and placing in third. Patrick Cripps won the Leigh Matthews Trophy as AFLPA Most Valuable Player for the first time in his career, finishing 313 votes ahead of Geelong's Tim Kelly; he also placed second in the Best Captain award with 128 votes, behind only West Coast's Shannon Hurn who polled 171. Sam Walsh was a runaway winner of the Best First Year Player award, polling more than three times as many votes as runner up Connor Rozee (Port Adelaide).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Women's teams, AFL Women's\nAfter having finished last in the 2018 AFLW season, the club replaced inaugural coach Damien Keeping with former Carlton and Northern Bullants player Daniel Harford, who had been coached at Balwyn and St Kevins over the previous decade. Key recruitments to the Carlton AFLW squad were Amelia Mullane, traded from Collingwood, and Madison Prespakis and Abbie McKay in the draft \u2013 the latter being the daughter of club champion and administrator Andrew McKay. Brianna Davey remained captain of the club for the second consecutive season; Katie Loynes was vice-captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Women's teams, AFL Women's\nThe club's 2019 squad is given below. The number of games played and goals scored in the 2019 season is given in parentheses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Women's teams, AFL Women's\nThe AFL Women's competition expanded from eight clubs to ten in 2019; and to accommodate this within the seven week season, the clubs were split into two conferences of five teams each. Carlton, after losing its first two matches against Conference A opponents, finished the season with four wins from its last five, losing only in a close game to Conference B rival Geelong. This saw Carlton finish atop the ladder within Conference B, and saw the team qualify for the finals for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Women's teams, AFL Women's\nThis conclusion to the season was not without controversy, as Carlton qualified with a record of 4\u20133 and a percentage of 99.6%, which was a poorer numerical record than both North Melbourne and Melbourne who both missed the finals from Conference A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Women's teams, AFL Women's\nFinishing first in Conference B, Carlton qualified for the preliminary finals, hosting Fremantle, who had finished second in Conference A. Carlton dominated the preliminary final throughout, gaining a strong lead with a four-goals-to-none second quarter and maintaining that advantage to victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Women's teams, AFL Women's\nThis set up a Grand Final against Adelaide. After an even first quarter which saw Adelaide hold a nine-point quarter time lead, Adelaide proceeded to dominate the second quarter with six goals to Carlton's one, which opened a 40-point half time lead which effectively killed the contest. Only one goal was kicked after half time as Adelaide finished with a 45-point win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Women's teams, AFL Women's\nThe following individual awards and honours were won by Carlton players:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Women's teams, VFL Women's\nCarlton's VFL Women's team contested the VFL Women's competition for the second time, finishing twelfth out of thirteen teams with a win-loss record of 3\u201310\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288140-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Carlton Football Club season, Northern Blues\nThe Carlton Football Club had a full affiliation with the Northern Blues during the 2019 season. It was the seventeenth (and ultimately, the last) 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 the Northern Blues senior team in the Victorian Football League. The club's home matches were split between the VFL club's traditional home ground Preston City Oval, and Carlton's traditional home ground Ikon Park. The club finished tenth out of fifteen on the final ladder with a win-loss record of 7\u201311, missing the finals. Carlton-listed player Hugh Goddard won the Laurie Hill Trophy as Northern Blues' best and fairest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 809]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288141-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Carolina Challenge Cup\nThe 2019 Carolina Challenge Cup was the 15th edition of the Carolina Challenge Cup, an annual soccer tournament held in Charleston, South Carolina by the Charleston Battery. The tournament ran from February 16 to 23, with all matches played at MUSC Health Stadium in Charleston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288141-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Carolina Challenge Cup\nIn addition to the Charleston Battery of the USL Championship (USL), three Major League Soccer (MLS) clubs participated: Columbus Crew, Chicago Fire, and FC Cincinnati, all of Major League Soccer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288142-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Carolina Panthers season\nThe 2019 season was the Carolina Panthers' 25th in the National Football League (NFL), and their ninth and last under head coach Ron Rivera. The Panthers played in London as part of the NFL International Series for the first time in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288142-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Carolina Panthers season\nDespite suffering their first 0\u20132 start since 2013, they had a 5\u20133 record coming into week 10 of the season. However, their futility from the previous year repeated itself. They suffered an eight-game losing streak (their worst since 2001, where they finished 1\u201315) to end the season badly with a 5\u201311 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288142-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Carolina Panthers season\nNot only were they unable to improve upon their 7\u20139 record from the previous season, but they were also mathematically eliminated from postseason contention for the second consecutive season and for the third time in the past four seasons after losing to the Denver Broncos in Super Bowl 50 in 2015 (they finished the season with a 15\u20131 record) after a 20\u201340 loss to division rivals Atlanta Falcons coming into Week 14 of the season. On December 3, two days after a loss to the Washington Redskins, Rivera was fired after nearly nine seasons as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288142-0001-0002", "contents": "2019 Carolina Panthers season\nCam Newton suffered a season-ending foot injury after playing in the first 2 weeks of the season, and was replaced by rookie quarterbacks Will Grier and Kyle Allen. On October 7, Kyle Allen became the first undrafted quarterback to win their first 4 starts since Kurt Warner did so during the St. Louis Rams' 1999 Super Bowl-winning season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288142-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Carolina Panthers season\nThe 2019 season was also linebacker Luke Kuechly's final season in the NFL, as he retired following the conclusion of the season. It was also the final season that Cam Newton was on the roster as he was released during the off-season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288142-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Carolina Panthers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Los Angeles Rams\nIt was a scoreless first quarter in the Panthers' home opener against the Los Angeles Rams. In the second, the Rams scored 13 points, but with two seconds to go in the half, Joey Slye made a field goal for Carolina. Early in the third, the Rams made another field goal. The Panthers answered back with a Christian McCaffrey touchdown plus a Slye field goal, making it 16\u201310. Towards the end of the third, the Rams scored a touchdown. Carolina followed with another field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288142-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Carolina Panthers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Los Angeles Rams\nAt the beginning of the fourth, Carolina blocked a Rams punt and recovered it at the 5-yard line. They went on to score, making it a three-point game. Soon after, James Bradberry intercepted the ball, but they ended up having to punt it away. The Rams scored again to increase their lead to 10, before intercepting the ball from Carolina. With less than two minutes to go, Alexander Armah scored a touchdown for Carolina. Despite this, the Panthers still fell short and lost 30\u201327 to go 0\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288142-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Carolina Panthers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nFor the first time since 2013, the Panthers started the season 0\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 95], "content_span": [96, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288142-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Carolina Panthers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Arizona Cardinals\nIn Week 3, Carolina traveled to Arizona for their first road trip of the season and both teams looking for their first win. This was also Kyle Allen's first start of the season at QB. The Cardinals were first on the board with a Larry Fitzgerald touchdown, before Curtis Samuel tied the scores with a touchdown for Carolina early in the second quarter. In the last two minutes of the half, Arizona retook the lead via a field goal, before Kyle Allen threw a 52-yard touchdown pass to D. J. Moore to give the Panthers a 14\u201310 lead at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288142-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Carolina Panthers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Arizona Cardinals\nArizona started off with the ball in the second half, and capping a 75-yard drive, Kyler Murray completed a 3-yard pass to David Johnson for a touchdown. However, their lead was brief, as Allen threw a 3-yard touchdown pass to Greg Olsen. The Cardinals reduced their deficit to a single point on their next series, as Zane Gonzalez made a 47-yard field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288142-0005-0002", "contents": "2019 Carolina Panthers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Arizona Cardinals\nRay-Ray McCloud was only able to return the ensuing kickoff to the Panthers 16, but a pair of runs from Christian McCaffrey, first for eight yards and then for 76 yards, put the Panthers up by eight points going into the final period, following a Kyler Murray interception on Arizona's next possession. In the fourth quarter, Greg Olsen picked up another 3-yard touchdown catch and Joey Slye added a 36-yard field goal to give the Panthers a 38\u201320 win, improving them to 1\u20132. This game would give the Panthers franchise all-time win number 200, with both regular season and playoff record at 200-203-1 at that point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288142-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Carolina Panthers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: at Houston Texans\nThe Panthers defeat Houston 16\u201310 on the road and improve to 2\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288142-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Carolina Panthers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. Jacksonville Jaguars\nThe Panthers get their third straight win, improving to 3-2. This regular season win was Ron Rivera's 74th, surpassing John Fox for the most regular season wins in franchise history with a record of 74-60-1 at that point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 95], "content_span": [96, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288142-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Carolina Panthers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: at Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nThe Panthers played in London for the first time as part of the NFL International Series. The Panthers get their fourth straight win, improving to 4-2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 94], "content_span": [95, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288142-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Carolina Panthers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: at San Francisco 49ers\nThe 49ers blow out the Panthers 51-13, and they fall to 4\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 93], "content_span": [94, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288143-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cary Challenger\nThe 2019 Cary Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 5th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Cary, North Carolina, United States between 9 and 15 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288143-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cary 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-00288143-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cary Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as alternates:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288144-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cary Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nEvan King and Hunter Reese were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288144-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cary Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nSekou Bangoura and Michael Mmoh won the title after defeating Treat Huey and John-Patrick Smith 4\u20136, 6\u20134, [10\u20138] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288145-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cary Challenger \u2013 Singles\nJames Duckworth was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288145-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cary Challenger \u2013 Singles\nAndreas Seppi won the title after defeating Michael Mmoh 6\u20132, 6\u20137(4\u20137), 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288146-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cary, North Carolina mayoral election\nThe 2019 election for the Mayor of Cary, North Carolina was held on for Tuesday, October 8, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288146-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cary, North Carolina mayoral election\nOn July 10, 2019, Harold Weinbrecht, the incumbent mayor, announced that he was running for re-election. He was first elected in 2007 and re-elected in 2011 and 2015. Dero-Asha Davis-Weeks was Weinbrecht's sole challenger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288146-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cary, North Carolina mayoral election\nHarold Weinbrecht was elected to a fourth term, winning 84.1% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288147-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Case Western Reserve Spartans football team\nThe 2019 Case Western Reserve Spartans football team represented Case Western Reserve University of Cleveland, Ohio, during the 2019 NCAA Division III football season. The team was coached by 16th-year coach Greg Debeljak and played its home games at DiSanto Field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288148-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Casino Admiral Trophy\nThe 2019 Casino Admiral Trophy was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the second edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Marbella, Spain between 25 and 31 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288148-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Casino Admiral Trophy, 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-00288148-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Casino Admiral Trophy, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288148-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Casino Admiral Trophy, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288149-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Casino Admiral Trophy \u2013 Doubles\nGuido Andreozzi and Ariel Behar were the defending champions but only Behar chose to defend his title, partnering Thiago Monteiro. Behar lost in the first round to David P\u00e9rez Sanz and Oriol Roca Batalla.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288149-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Casino Admiral Trophy \u2013 Doubles\nKevin Krawietz and Andreas Mies won the title after defeating Sander Gill\u00e9 and Joran Vliegen 7\u20136(8\u20136), 2\u20136, [10\u20136] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288150-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Casino Admiral Trophy \u2013 Singles\nStefano Travaglia was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288150-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Casino Admiral Trophy \u2013 Singles\nPablo And\u00fajar won the title after defeating Beno\u00eet Paire 4\u20136, 7\u20136(8\u20136), 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288151-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cassis Open Provence\nThe 2019 Cassis Open Provence was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 2nd edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Cassis, France between 2 and 8 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288151-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cassis Open Provence, 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-00288151-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cassis Open Provence, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw using a protected ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 69], "content_span": [70, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288151-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cassis Open Provence, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as alternates:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 69], "content_span": [70, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288152-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cassis Open Provence \u2013 Doubles\nMatt Reid and Sergiy Stakhovsky were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288152-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cassis Open Provence \u2013 Doubles\nAndr\u00e9 G\u00f6ransson and Sem Verbeek won the title after defeating Sander Arends and David Pel 7\u20136(8\u20136), 4\u20136, [11\u20139] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288153-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cassis Open Provence \u2013 Singles\nEnzo Couacaud was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288153-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cassis Open Provence \u2013 Singles\nJo-Wilfried Tsonga won the title after defeating Dudi Sela 6\u20131, 6\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288154-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Castilian-Leonese regional election\nThe 2019 Castilian-Leonese regional election was held on Sunday, 26 May 2019, to elect the 10th Cortes of the autonomous community of Castile and Le\u00f3n. All 81 seats in the Cortes were up for election. The election was held simultaneously with regional elections in eleven other autonomous communities and local elections all throughout Spain, as well as the 2019 European Parliament election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288154-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Castilian-Leonese regional election\nThe Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) saw its first plurality in a regional election in Castile and Le\u00f3n since 1983, being only its second victory ever in the region, as support for the governing People's Party (PP) collapsed into the worst showing, either for it or for any of its previous incarnations, in history. However, as a result of a substantial increase for the liberal Citizens party (Cs), the two centre-right parties were able to retain a slim absolute majority of 41 seats, enabling PP candidate Alfonso Fern\u00e1ndez Ma\u00f1ueco to become the region's new president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288154-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Castilian-Leonese regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nThe Cortes of Castile and Le\u00f3n were the devolved, unicameral legislature of the autonomous community of Castile and Le\u00f3n, having legislative power in regional matters as defined by the Spanish Constitution and the Castilian-Leonese Statute of Autonomy, as well as the ability to vote confidence in or withdraw it from a regional president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288154-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Castilian-Leonese regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nVoting for the Cortes was on the basis of universal suffrage, which comprised all nationals over eighteen, registered in Castile and Le\u00f3n and in full enjoyment of their political rights. Additionally, Castilian-Leonese people abroad were required to apply for voting before being permitted to vote, a system known as \"begged\" or expat vote (Spanish: Voto rogado). All members of the Cortes of Castile and Le\u00f3n were elected using the D'Hondt method and a closed list proportional representation, with an electoral threshold of three percent of valid votes\u2014which included blank ballots\u2014being applied in each constituency. Seats were allocated to constituencies, corresponding to the provinces of \u00c1vila, Burgos, Le\u00f3n, Palencia, Salamanca, Segovia, Soria, Valladolid and Zamora, with each being allocated an initial minimum of three seats, as well as one additional member per each 45,000 inhabitants or fraction greater than 22,500.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 998]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288154-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Castilian-Leonese regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nThe use of the D'Hondt method might result in a higher effective threshold, depending on the district magnitude.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288154-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Castilian-Leonese regional election, Overview, Election date\nThe term of the Cortes of Castile and Le\u00f3n expired four years after the date of their previous election, unless they were dissolved earlier. The election decree was required to be issued no later than the twenty-fifth day prior to the date of expiry of parliament and published on the following day in the Official Gazette of Castile and Le\u00f3n (BOCYL), with election day taking place between the fifty-fourth and sixtieth days from publication. The previous election was held on 24 May 2015, which meant that the legislature's term would have expired on 24 May 2019. The election decree was required to be published in the BOCYL no later than 30 April 2019, with the election taking place up to the sixtieth day from publication, setting the latest possible election date for the Cortes on Saturday, 29 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 65], "content_span": [66, 878]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288154-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Castilian-Leonese regional election, Overview, Election date\nThe president had the prerogative to dissolve the Cortes of Castile and Le\u00f3n and call a snap election, provided that no motion of no confidence was in process and that dissolution did not occur either during the first legislative session or before one year had elapsed since a previous dissolution. In the event of an investiture process failing to elect a regional president within a two-month period from the first ballot, the Cortes were to be automatically dissolved and a fresh election called.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 65], "content_span": [66, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288154-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Castilian-Leonese regional election, Parliamentary composition\nThe Cortes of Castile and Le\u00f3n were officially dissolved on 2 April 2019, after the publication of the dissolution decree in the Official Journal of Castile and Le\u00f3n. The tables below show the composition of the parliamentary groups in the Cortes at the time of dissolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288154-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Castilian-Leonese regional election, Parties and candidates\nThe electoral law allowed for parties and federations registered in the interior ministry, coalitions and groupings of electors to present lists of candidates. Parties and federations intending to form a coalition ahead of an election were required to inform the relevant Electoral Commission within ten days of the election call, whereas groupings of electors needed to secure the signature of at least one percent of the electorate in the constituencies for which they sought election, disallowing electors from signing for more than one list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288154-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Castilian-Leonese regional election, Parties and candidates\nBelow is a list of the main parties and electoral alliances which contested the election:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288154-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Castilian-Leonese regional election, Opinion polls\nThe table below lists voting intention estimates in reverse chronological order, showing the most recent first and using the dates when the survey fieldwork was done, as opposed to the date of publication. Where the fieldwork dates are unknown, the date of publication is given instead. The highest percentage figure in each polling survey is displayed with its background shaded in the leading party's colour. If a tie ensues, this is applied to the figures with the highest percentages. The \"Lead\" column on the right shows the percentage-point difference between the parties with the highest percentages in a given poll. When available, seat projections are also displayed below the voting estimates in a smaller font. 41 seats were required for an absolute majority in the Cortes of Castile and Le\u00f3n (43 until 10 January 2018).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 887]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288155-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Castilian-Manchegan regional election\nThe 2019 Castilian-Manchegan regional election was held on Sunday, 26 May 2019, to elect the 10th Cortes of the autonomous community of Castilla\u2013La Mancha. All 33 seats in the Cortes were up for election. The election was held simultaneously with regional elections in eleven other autonomous communities and local elections all throughout Spain, as well as the 2019 European Parliament election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288155-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Castilian-Manchegan regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nThe Cortes of Castilla\u2013La Mancha were the devolved, unicameral legislature of the autonomous community of Castilla\u2013La Mancha, having legislative power in regional matters as defined by the Spanish Constitution and the Castilian-Manchegan Statute of Autonomy, as well as the ability to vote confidence in or withdraw it from a regional president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288155-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Castilian-Manchegan regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nVoting for the Cortes was on the basis of universal suffrage, which comprised all nationals over eighteen, registered in Castilla\u2013La Mancha and in full enjoyment of their political rights. Additionally, Castilian-Manchegan people abroad were required to apply for voting before being permitted to vote, a system known as \"begged\" or expat vote (Spanish: Voto rogado). The 33 members of the Cortes of Castilla\u2013La Mancha were elected using the D'Hondt method and a closed list proportional representation, with an electoral threshold of three percent of valid votes\u2014which included blank ballots\u2014being applied in each constituency. Seats were allocated to constituencies, corresponding to the provinces of Albacete, Ciudad Real, Cuenca, Guadalajara and Toledo, with each being allocated an initial minimum of three seats and the remaining 18 being distributed in proportion to their populations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 963]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288155-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Castilian-Manchegan regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nThe use of the D'Hondt method might result in a higher effective threshold, depending on the district magnitude.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288155-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Castilian-Manchegan regional election, Overview, Election date\nThe term of the Cortes of Castilla\u2013La Mancha expired four years after the date of their previous election. Elections to the Cortes were fixed for the fourth Sunday of May every four years. The previous election was held on 24 May 2015, setting the election date for the Cortes on Sunday, 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 67], "content_span": [68, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288155-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Castilian-Manchegan regional election, Overview, Election date\nThe president had the prerogative to dissolve the Cortes of Castilla\u2013La Mancha and call a snap election, provided that no motion of no confidence was in process, no nationwide election was due and some time requirements were met: namely, that dissolution did not occur either during the first legislative session or within the legislature's last year ahead of its scheduled expiry, nor before one year had elapsed since a previous dissolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 67], "content_span": [68, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288155-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Castilian-Manchegan regional election, Overview, Election date\nAny snap election held as a result of these circumstances would not alter the period to the next ordinary election, with elected deputies merely serving out what remained of their four-year terms. In the event of an investiture process failing to elect a regional president within a two-month period from the first ballot, the candidate from the party with the highest number of seats was to be deemed automatically elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 67], "content_span": [68, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288155-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Castilian-Manchegan regional election, Parliamentary composition\nThe Cortes of Castilla\u2013La Mancha were officially dissolved on 2 April 2019, after the publication of the dissolution decree in the Official Journal of Castilla\u2013La Mancha. The tables below show the composition of the parliamentary groups in the Cortes at the time of dissolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 69], "content_span": [70, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288155-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Castilian-Manchegan regional election, Parties and candidates\nThe electoral law allowed for parties and federations registered in the interior ministry, coalitions and groupings of electors to present lists of candidates. Parties and federations intending to form a coalition ahead of an election were required to inform the relevant Electoral Commission within ten days of the election call, whereas groupings of electors needed to secure the signature of at least one percent of the electorate in the constituencies for which they sought election, disallowing electors from signing for more than one list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288155-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Castilian-Manchegan regional election, Parties and candidates\nBelow is a list of the main parties and electoral alliances which contested the election:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288155-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Castilian-Manchegan regional election, Opinion polls\nThe table below lists voting intention estimates in reverse chronological order, showing the most recent first and using the dates when the survey fieldwork was done, as opposed to the date of publication. Where the fieldwork dates are unknown, the date of publication is given instead. The highest percentage figure in each polling survey is displayed with its background shaded in the leading party's colour. If a tie ensues, this is applied to the figures with the highest percentages. The \"Lead\" column on the right shows the percentage-point difference between the parties with the highest percentages in a given poll. When available, seat projections are also displayed below the voting estimates in a smaller font. 17 seats were required for an absolute majority in the Cortes of Castilla\u2013La Mancha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 864]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288155-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Castilian-Manchegan regional election, Opinion polls\nPoll conducted after legal ban on opinion polls\u00a0\u00a0Exit poll", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288156-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Castle Point Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Castle Point Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Castle Point Borough Council in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288157-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Catalan general strike\nThe 2019 Catalan general strike, also known as 18-O, was a general strike held by Catalan separatists on 18 October 2019, on the fifth night of the 2019 protests following the verdict against Catalonia independence leaders for their participation in a referendum on independence two years earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288157-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Catalan general strike\nStrikes for political reasons are not allowed by Spanish law. The main labor unions in the country, UGT and CCOO, did not participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288158-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Catalan motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2019 Catalan motorcycle Grand Prix was the seventh round of the 2019 MotoGP season. It was held at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya in Montmel\u00f3 on 16 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288159-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Categor\u00eda Primera A season\nThe 2019 Categor\u00eda Primera A season (officially known as the 2019 Liga \u00c1guila season for sponsorship reasons) was the 72nd season of Colombia's top-flight football league. The season began on 25 January and concluded on 7 December. Junior entered the season as defending champions having won the 2018 Finalizaci\u00f3n tournament and successfully defended the title in the Torneo Apertura, beating Deportivo Pasto 5\u20134 on penalties after a 1\u20131 draw on aggregate to claim their ninth domestic league title on 12 June. Junior's winning streak was stopped in the Torneo Finalizaci\u00f3n by Am\u00e9rica de Cali, who won their fourteenth Primera A title and first since 2008 on 7 December by defeating the defending champions 2\u20130 on aggregate in the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288159-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Categor\u00eda Primera A season, Teams\n20 teams competed, eighteen of them returning from last season plus C\u00facuta Deportivo and Uni\u00f3n Magdalena, who were promoted from the 2018 Primera B. Both promoted teams replaced Boyac\u00e1 Chic\u00f3 and Leones who were relegated at the end of the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288159-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Categor\u00eda Primera A season, Teams, Stadia and locations\na: Deportes Tolima played their Torneo Apertura home match against Rionegro \u00c1guilas at Estadio Metropolitano de Techo in Bogot\u00e1 due to maintenance works at their regular stadium Estadio Manuel Murillo Toro.b: Deportivo Pasto will temporarily play their home matches at Estadio Municipal de Ipiales in Ipiales due to remodeling works at Estadio Departamental Libertad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288159-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Categor\u00eda Primera A season, Torneo Apertura, First stage\nThe First stage began on 25 January and consisted of twenty rounds with teams playing each other once plus an extra match against their regional rival. It ended on 5 May with the top eight teams at the end of this stage advancing to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288159-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Categor\u00eda Primera A season, Torneo Apertura, Semifinals\nThe eight teams that advanced to the semifinals were drawn into two groups of four teams. The winners of each group advanced to the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288159-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Categor\u00eda Primera A season, Torneo Finalizaci\u00f3n, First stage\nThe First stage began on 13 July and will feature the same format used in the Torneo Apertura, with reversed fixtures. It ended on 29 October with the top eight teams at the end of this stage advancing to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288159-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Categor\u00eda Primera A season, Torneo Finalizaci\u00f3n, Semifinals\nThe eight teams that advanced to the semifinals were drawn into two groups of four teams. The winners of each group advanced to the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288159-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Categor\u00eda Primera A season, Torneo Finalizaci\u00f3n, Finals\nThis final series featured the use of VAR for the first time in Colombian domestic football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288159-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 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. This table is elaborated from a sum of all first stage games played for the current season and the previous two seasons. For purposes of elaborating the table, promoted teams are given the same point and goal tallies as the team in the 18th position at the start of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288159-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Categor\u00eda Primera A season, Relegation\nSource: Rules for classification: 1st points; 2nd goal difference; 3rd goals scored; 4th away goals scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288160-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Categor\u00eda Primera B season\nThe 2019 Categor\u00eda Primera B season (officially known as the 2019 Torneo \u00c1guila season for sponsorship reasons) was the 30th season since its founding as Colombia's second division football league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288160-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Categor\u00eda Primera B season, Format\nFor this season, the league returned to the format used in 2017. The season consisted of two tournaments (Torneo I and Torneo II) with three stages each. In the first stage of both tournaments, the 16 clubs played each other once, for a total of 15 games. The top eight teams after the first stage advanced to the semifinal round where they were sorted into two groups of four and played a double round-robin tournament group stage, with the top team of each group qualifying to the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288160-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Categor\u00eda Primera B season, Format\nThe winners of both tournaments would play a final series on a home-and-away basis, with the winner being crowned as the season champions and also earning promotion to the Categor\u00eda Primera A for the 2020 season. The season runners-up would then play the best team in the aggregate table (other than the champions) in another double-legged series for the second promotion berth. In case the season runner-up also ended up as the best team in the aggregate table, it would also be promoted and the promotion play-off would not be played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288160-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Categor\u00eda Primera B season, Teams\n16 teams took part, fourteen of them returning from last season plus Boyac\u00e1 Chic\u00f3 and Leones, who were relegated from the 2018 Primera A after one year in the top flight. Both teams replaced C\u00facuta Deportivo and Uni\u00f3n Magdalena who earned promotion at the end of the last season. Also, starting from this season, Real Santander moved its home games to San Andr\u00e9s Island, becoming Real San Andr\u00e9s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288160-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Categor\u00eda Primera B season, Teams\nOn 12 March 2019, the General Assembly of DIMAYOR approved a proposal to relocate Universitario from Popay\u00e1n to Cali starting from the second half of the season, with the aforementioned club being effectively rebranded as Boca Juniors de Cali. Universitario played its last match in the tournament under that name on 4 May 2019, losing to Deportivo Pereira in Palmira by a 4\u20131 score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288160-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Categor\u00eda Primera B season, Teams\na: Universitario played their home matches against Llaneros, Bogot\u00e1, Leones and Deportivo Pereira at Estadio Deportivo Cali in Palmira.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288160-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Categor\u00eda Primera B season, Torneo I, Semifinals\nThe eight teams that advanced to the semifinals were drawn into two groups of four teams. The winners of each group advanced to the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288160-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Categor\u00eda Primera B season, Torneo II, Semifinals\nThe eight teams that advanced to the semifinals were drawn into two groups of four teams. The winners of each group will advance to the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288160-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Categor\u00eda Primera B season, Grand Final\nSince Deportivo Pereira won both tournaments of the season, the Grand Final was not played and they were declared as champions of the season. Deportivo Pereira also earned direct promotion to Categor\u00eda Primera A for the 2020 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288160-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Categor\u00eda Primera B season, Promotion play-off\nThe promotion play-off was played by Boyac\u00e1 Chic\u00f3 and Cortulu\u00e1, who were the best two teams in the aggregate table excluding the champions, Deportivo Pereira. The winners of this double-legged series earned the second promotion berth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288161-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Causeway Coast and Glens Borough Council election\nThe second election to Causeway Coast and Glens Borough Council, part of the Northern Ireland local elections on 2 May 2019, returned 40 members to the council via Single Transferable Vote. The Democratic Unionist Party won a plurality of first-preference votes and seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288161-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Causeway Coast and Glens Borough Council election, Results by Electoral Area, Ballymoney\n2014: 3 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x Sinn Fein, 1 x TUV2019: 3 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 2 x Sinn Fein2014-2019 Change: Sinn Fein gain one seat from TUV", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 93], "content_span": [94, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288161-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Causeway Coast and Glens Borough Council election, Results by Electoral Area, Bann\n2014: 2 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x SDLP2019: 2 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Sinn Fein2014-2019 Change: Sinn Fein gain one seat from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 87], "content_span": [88, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288161-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Causeway Coast and Glens Borough Council election, Results by Electoral Area, Benbradagh\n2014: 3 x Sinn Fein, 1 x SDLP, 1 x TUV2019: 3 x Sinn Fein, 1 x SDLP, 1 x DUP2014-2019 Change: DUP gain one seat from TUV", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 93], "content_span": [94, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288161-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Causeway Coast and Glens Borough Council election, Results by Electoral Area, Causeway\n2014: 2 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x SDLP, 1 x TUV2019: 3 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x SDLP2014-2019 Change: DUP gain one seat from TUV", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 91], "content_span": [92, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288161-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Causeway Coast and Glens Borough Council election, Results by Electoral Area, Coleraine\n2014: 2 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x PUP, 1 x SDLP2019: 2 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x PUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Alliance2014-2019 Change: Alliance gain one seat from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 92], "content_span": [93, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288161-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Causeway Coast and Glens Borough Council election, Results by Electoral Area, Limavady\n2014: 2 x DUP, 1 x Sinn Fein, 1 x SDLP, 1 x UUP2019: 3 x DUP, 1 x Sinn Fein, 1 x SDLP2014-2019 Change: DUP gain one seat from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 91], "content_span": [92, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288161-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Causeway Coast and Glens Borough Council election, Results by Electoral Area, The Glens\n2014: 2 x Sinn Fein, 1 x SDLP, 1 x UUP, 1 x Independent2019: 2 x Sinn Fein, 1 x SDLP, 1 x UUP, 1 x Independent2014-2019 Change: No change", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 92], "content_span": [93, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288162-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavalry FC season\nThe 2019 Cavalry FC season was the first season in the club's history, as well as the first season in Canadian Premier League history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288162-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavalry FC season, Overview\nOn May 17, 2018 Cavalry FC was unveiled as Calgary's team in the new Canadian Premier League, with then Calgary Foothills FC head coach Tommy Wheeldon Jr. chosen to be the first head coach in Cavalry history. On November 29, 2018, Cavalry signed its first ever players: veteran Nik Ledgerwood and young talent Sergio Camargo, both from the Foothills. Overall, 12 of the players on the Cavalry squad came from the Foothills. Cavalry's first ever international signing was Brazilian striker Oliver Minatel. Cavalry signed two of its picks in the 2018 CPL\u2013U Sports Draft, first overall pick Gabriel Bitar and fourteenth overall pick Joel Waterman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288162-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavalry FC season, Overview\nOn May 3, 2019 Cavalry played their first ever game, at home against York9 FC. Jordan Brown scored the first goal in Cavalry FC history, with Dominick Zator adding a second and Cavalry hanging on for a 2\u20131 victory. Cavalry went on to win their first seven games, until succumbing to Forge FC in a 1\u20130 defeat. However, Cavalry rebounded and defeated York9 2\u20130 in their next game, clinching the spring season title and a berth in the 2019 Canadian Premier League Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288162-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavalry FC season, Overview\nIn the Canadian Championship, Cavalry faced Pacific FC in the first round and won both legs. Next, they were up against Forge. In the first leg in Hamilton, Forge struck first, but there was late drama when Forge FC goalkeeper Quillan Roberts received a red card in stoppage time, with no substitutions remaining. Cavalry was given a penalty shot, and Dominique Malonga beat midfielder turned goalkeeper Alexander Achinioti-J\u00f6nsson to tie the game. Tensions were high after the goal, and Cavalry players accused a member of Forge's coaching staff of making racist remarks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288162-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Cavalry FC season, Overview\nThe match ended with a melee between Cavalry and Forge players, establishing a rivalry that would continue to take shape for the rest of the season. In the second leg, Forge opened the scoring again, but goals from Malonga and Camargo meant that it was Cavalry who advanced to the quarterfinals. Cavalry faced MLS club Vancouver Whitecaps FC in the quarterfinals and in the first leg the Cavs held the Whitecaps to a 0\u20130 draw at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288162-0003-0002", "contents": "2019 Cavalry FC season, Overview\nIn the second leg at BC Place in Vancouver, Brown and Zator scored in a 2\u20131 victory and goalkeeper Marco Carducci, who used to play for the Whitecaps, was praised for his performance. Cavalry became the first CPL team to defeat an MLS team, and advanced to the semifinals, where they were awaited by the Montreal Impact. In the first leg of the semifinals, Ignacio Piatti scored twice for the Impact, but Cavalry was given hope when Camargo scored later in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288162-0003-0003", "contents": "2019 Cavalry FC season, Overview\nIt was not meant to be, however, as Cavalry couldn't get another one and Ledgerwood received a second yellow card, forcing Cavalry to play the last part of the game with 10 men. A 1\u20130 defeat back in Calgary ended the Cinderella story and the Impact ended up defeating Toronto FC in the finals to become the champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288162-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavalry FC season, Overview\nAlthough Cavalry was already secured a spot in the CPL finals, they won the fall season as well, causing Forge FC to qualify as the other finalist on the basis of having the next best overall record. In the first leg of the finals in Hamilton, Waterman was given a red card and Forge star and CPL top scorer Tristan Borges was given a penalty kick, but it was stopped by Carducci. However, Borges scored ten minutes later and the game ended at 1\u20130. Neither team could score in the second leg, until in stoppage time when all of Cavalry's outfield players were pressing in the attacking zone, and Forge managed to break out. David Choini\u00e8re managed to score on the resulting 2 on 0, securing Cavalry's fate as runners up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 754]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288162-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavalry FC season, Overview\nOver the course of the season, Carducci and Zator were called up to the Canada men's national soccer team once each, but neither saw action. Carducci was the first Canadian Premier League player to be called up to the national team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288162-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavalry FC season, Overview\nDespite losing in the finals, Cavalry finished first overall in the regular season, and Wheeldon Jr. stated that he would like to bring most of the players back for the next season. Wheeldon Jr. was named coach of the year, and Carducci was named best goalkeeper and Volkswagen Premier Performer, while Malonga was nominated for best player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288162-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavalry FC season, Transfers, In, Draft picks\nCavalry FC selected the following players in the 2018 CPL\u2013U Sports Draft on November 12, 2018. Draft picks are not automatically signed to the team roster. Only those who are signed to a contract will be listed as transfers in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 50], "content_span": [51, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288163-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavan County Council election\nAn election to Cavan County Council took place on 24 May 2019 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 18 councillors were elected for a five-year term of office from three local electoral areas (LEAs) by single transferable vote. The 2018 boundary review committee did not recommend any alteration in the LEAs used by Cavan in the 2014 elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288163-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavan County Council election\nThe election was disastrous for Sinn F\u00e9in, which lost all but one of their seats. Fianna F\u00e1il returned with one extra seat, to give a total of eight seats; while Independent candidate Brendan Fay was elected and became the first Independent councillor in the county since 1999. Fine Gael returned with the same number of seats as on the previous council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288164-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavan Intermediate Football Championship\nThe 2019 Cavan Intermediate Football Championship was the 55th edition of Cavan GAA's premier Gaelic football tournament for intermediate graded clubs in County Cavan, Ireland. The tournament consists of 15 teams, with the winner representing Cavan in the Ulster Intermediate Club Football Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288164-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavan Intermediate Football Championship\nThe championship starts with a league stage and then progresses to a knock out stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288164-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavan Intermediate Football Championship\nLaragh United won the championship, beating Belturbet in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288164-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavan Intermediate Football Championship, Team changes\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2018 championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 59], "content_span": [60, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288164-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavan Intermediate Football Championship, Team changes, To I.F.C.\nRamor United also entered a second string into the 2019 I.F.C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 70], "content_span": [71, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288164-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavan Intermediate Football Championship, League stage\nAll 15 teams enter the competition at this stage. A random draw determines which teams face each other in each of the four rounds. No team can meet each other twice in the group stage. The top eight teams go into a seeded draw for the Quarter-Finals while the bottom four teams will enter a Relegation Playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 59], "content_span": [60, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288164-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavan Intermediate Football Championship, Relegation play-offs\nThe bottom four teams in the league phase will play off against each other. The two winners will maintain their intermediate status for 2019, while the two losers will face off in a relegation final. The ultimate loser will be relegated to the 2020 J.F.C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288165-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavan Senior Football Championship\nThe 2019 Cavan Senior Football Championship was the 110th edition of Cavan GAA's premier gaelic football tournament for senior graded clubs in County Cavan, Ireland. The tournament consists of 12 teams, with the winner representing Cavan in the Ulster Senior Club Football Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288165-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavan Senior Football Championship\nThe championship starts with a league stage and then progresses to a knock out stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288165-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavan Senior Football Championship\nCastlerahan were the defending champions after they defeated Crosserlough in the previous years final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288165-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavan Senior Football Championship\nThis was Mullahoran's return the senior grade after a one year absence after claiming the 2018 Cavan Intermediate Football Championship title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288165-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavan Senior Football Championship\nCastlerahan won their second title in a row, defeating neighbours Ramor United in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288165-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavan Senior Football Championship, Team Changes\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2018 championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 53], "content_span": [54, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288165-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavan Senior Football Championship, League Stage\nAll 12 teams enter the competition at this stage. A random draw determines which teams face each other in each of the four rounds. No team can meet each other twice in the group stage. The top 8 teams go into a seeded draw for the Quarter-Finals while the bottom 3 teams will enter a Relegation Playoff. If teams are level on points and a place in the Quarter-Final is at stake, a Playoff will be conducted to determine who goes through.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 53], "content_span": [54, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288165-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavan Senior Football Championship, Relegation Play-Offs\nThe 3 bottom placed teams the league phase will enter the Relegation Play-Offs. The 10th and 11th placed teams from the league phase will face each other in the Relegation Semi-Final, with the winner maintaining their senior status for 2020. The loser will face the 12th placed team with the ultimate being relegated to the 2020 I.F.C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288166-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavite local elections\nLocal elections were held in the province of Cavite of the Philippines, on May 13, 2019 as part of the 2019 general election. Voters selected candidates for all local positions: a municipal and city mayor, vice mayor and councilors, as well as members of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan, the governor, vice governor and representatives for the eight districts of Cavite.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288166-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavite local elections, Provincial elections, Governor\nIncumbent Governor Boying Remulla opted not to run for re-election to run for congressman for the 7th District and support to his younger brother, former Governor Jonvic Remulla, is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288166-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavite local elections, Congressional elections, 1st District (Northern Cavite)\nFrancis \"Boyblue\" Abaya is the incumbent. His opponent is Jose Luis \"Jholo\" Granados, the son of his 2016 opponent Marina Granados who died in April 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 84], "content_span": [85, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288166-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavite local elections, Congressional elections, 4th District (Dasmari\u00f1as)\nIncumbent Representative Jennifer Barzaga opted to run for Mayor of Dasmari\u00f1as; she switched her position with her husband, Mayor Elpidio Barzaga, Jr. His opponents are Leonardo \"Jun\" Manicio, Jr. and retired Police Director, former ACT-CIS Partylist nominee (2016) Benhardi Mantele, and Aileen Padel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 79], "content_span": [80, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288166-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavite local elections, Congressional elections, 5th District (Carsigma)\nIncumbent Representative Roy Loyola is term-limited and opted to run for Mayor of Carmona instead. His wife, incumbent Carmona Mayor Dahlia Loyola, is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 77], "content_span": [78, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288166-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavite local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District (Northern Cavite), Cavite City\nIncumbent Mayor Bernardo \"Totie\" Paredes and Vice Mayor Denver Chua are running unopposed under the Nacionalista Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 102], "content_span": [103, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288166-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavite local elections, City and municipal elections, 7th District (Cavite Central), Trece Martires\nMayor Melandres de Sagun is term-limited. He withdrews his candidacy for Congressman of Seventh District after he was accused as mastermind of the assassination of Vice Mayor Alexander Lubigan few days after the Assassination of Antonio Halili. His father, former Mayor Melencio de Sagun, Jr. is his party's nominee. His opponents are Lubigan's widow Gemma and Vice Mayor Denver Colorado who was elevated to the Vice Mayorship after Lubigan's assassination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 104], "content_span": [105, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288166-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavite local elections, City and municipal elections, 7th District (Cavite Central), Amadeo\nMayor Conrado Viado who was elevated to the Mayorship after the death of Mayor Albert Ambagan has opted to run as Vice Mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 96], "content_span": [97, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288166-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavite local elections, City and municipal elections, 7th District (Cavite Central), Indang\nBoth incumbent Mayor Perfecto Fidel and Vice Mayor Ismael Rodil are running unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 96], "content_span": [97, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288166-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavite local elections, City and municipal elections, 8th District (Cavite Southwest), Tagaytay\nBoth incumbent mayor Agnes Delgado-Tolentino, wife of incumbent 7th District representative Abraham \"Bambol\" Tolentino and sister-in-law of 2019 senatorial candidate Francis Tolentino, and running mate city Vice Mayor Raymond Ambion will be running unopposed, all 10 candidates for city council are filled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 100], "content_span": [101, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288166-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavite local elections, City and municipal elections, 8th District (Cavite Southwest), Alfonso\nMayor Virgilio Varias is term limited, although he was elected in the disputed elections of 2007 with former Mayor Jose Pe\u00f1ano. He will run for Board Member of Eight District under PDP-Laban. His party nominated Vice Mayor Randy Salamat with Councilor Madonna Mojica-Pel as his running mate. Pel is opposed by outgoing Eight District Board Member Reinalyn Varias. Mr. Raul Rodis candidate of Mayor of Alfonso.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 99], "content_span": [100, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288166-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Cavite local elections, City and municipal elections, 8th District (Cavite Southwest), Maragondon\nCouncilor Lawrence Arca is running against, Incumbent Mayor Reynaldo Rillo", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 102], "content_span": [103, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections\nLocal elections were held in Cebu City on May 13, 2019 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-00288167-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections\nOn May 14, 2019, after more than 24 hours since the polls have closed, Edgardo Labella was proclaimed as Cebu City's new mayor. He led the mayoral race with 265,738 votes, followed by Osme\u00f1a with 246,813 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections, Background\nTomas Osme\u00f1a of Bando Osme\u00f1a \u2013 Pundok Kauswagan (BOPK), who allied his group with Liberal Party, won the 2016 elections with 53.40% of the votes defeating then incumbent mayor Michael Rama of BARUG Team Rama, which was allied with United Nationalist Alliance. Meanwhile, Rama's running mate, incumbent vice mayor Edgardo Labella of BARUG Team Rama (BARUG), defeated Osme\u00f1a's running mate, then councilor Nestor Archival of BOPK, in the vice mayoralty election. Rama initially challenged the victory of Osme\u00f1a by holding a prayer rally with his supporters and threatened to file an electoral protest claiming that Osme\u00f1a committed electoral fraud.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections, Background\nOn May 16, 2016, seven days after the 2016 elections, Rama conceded to Osme\u00f1a during the 3rd prayer rally in front of the Cebu City Hall. He reiterated however that he would pursue an electoral protest to question the results of the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections, Background\nOn June 28, 2016, vice president-elect Leni Robredo administered the oath to Osme\u00f1a and six BOPK councilors who won in the 2016 elections at Cebu City Sports Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections, Background\nDespite winning as Mayor, Osme\u00f1a had to deal with a Cebu City Council that was dominated by councilors from Rama's party with eleven councilors including Cebu City Liga ng mga Barangay President Phillip Zafra who sits as an ex-officio member. During the inaugural session of the 14th Sangguniang Panlungsod, BARUG councilors prevented BOPK councilors from being able to get committee chairmanships and memberships. Instead, BOPK councilors were given with executive functions by Osme\u00f1a by designating them as deputy mayors in different fields. Osme\u00f1a defined the term \"deputy mayor\" as someone higher compared to holding a committee chairmanship or membership in the Cebu City Council which in turn made them as his alter egos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections, Background\nThe Cebu City Council experienced several shifts during the 14th Sangguniang Panlungsod which started when councilor Dave Tumulak left BARUG, where he ran and won during the 2016 elections, on August 24, 2016 to become an independent politician after a closed-door meeting with councilor Margot Osme\u00f1a, wife of mayor Osme\u00f1a. Tumulak cited the reason that he was tired of political quarrels in Cebu City and indicated his support on Osme\u00f1a's plans for Cebu City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections, Background\nSeveral days after, on August 30, 2016, councilor Nendell Hanz Abella also left BARUG to become an independent politician producing a city council with nine councilors from BARUG, six from BOPK and two from the independent bloc. On March 25, 2017, councilor Jerry Guardo, who was meted with a 3-month suspension by the DILG, left BARUG after he alleged that fellow party member Lemar Alcover, son of Councilor Pastor Alcover Jr., was behind the push for the implementation of his suspension. On the same day, Tumulak also confirmed that he was joining BOPK while Mayor Osme\u00f1a confirmed that Abella has joined them. This in turn gave the majority in the Cebu City Council to BOPK with nine councilors against BARUG's eight councilors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 776]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections, Background\nBOPK's majority in the Cebu City Council was short-lived when Abella announced his resignation after he was appointed by president Rodrigo Duterte as commissioner in the 7th Division of the National Labor Relations Commission (NLRC) thus giving the two council blocs at an even 8\u20138 but still had vice mayor Edgardo Labella of BARUG to break the tie for party-line voting in the council. The names of Renato \"Junjun\" Osme\u00f1a Jr. and Inayawan barangay captain Lutherlee \"Lotlot\" Ignacio-Soon were recommended as replacements to Abella.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections, Background\nBoth Osme\u00f1a Jr. and Ignacio-Soon ran with BARUG but failed to make it to the Cebu City Council. Councilor Joel Garganera accused mayor Osme\u00f1a of maneuvering the appointment of their party ally as replacement of Abella in the Cebu City Council by claiming that BOPK reached out to Senator Manny Pacquiao to let former vice president Jejomar Binay, head of the United Nationalist Alliance (UNA), appoint instead Rengelle Pelayo to the council. Eventually, UNA endorsed Osme\u00f1a Jr. to fill the position vacated by Abella.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections, Background\nCouncilor James Anthony Cuenco of BARUG was dismissed from public service on October 3, 2017 by the Office of the Ombudsman for alleged irregularities when he served as chief of staff of his father, former Cebu City South District representative Antonio Cuenco reducing BARUG's councilors to seven. Upon the appointment of Osme\u00f1a Jr. by Duterte, the council standing returned to 8-8. Erik Miguel Espina, son of former Cebu governor and senator Rene Espina, was nominated by BARUG to replace Cuenco. Espina's appointment gave BARUG the majority once again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections, Background\nDuring the 2018 barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan elections, 49 out of the 80 elected barangay captains and 41 out of the 80 elected SK chairpersons in Cebu City were identified with BOPK. In the election for SK Federation president, BARUG fielded Sonia Cal of Barangay Tisa while BOPK fielded Jessica Resch of Barangay San Nicolas Proper. Resch won with 44 votes becoming the SK Federation president of Cebu City and ex-officio member of the Cebu City Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections, Background\nThree barangay captains were initially floated as candidates for Liga ng mga Barangay (LNB) President namely Franklyn Ong of Barangay Kasambagan, Prisca Ni\u00f1a Mabatid of Barangay Mabolo and incumbent LNB President & councilor Phillip Zafra of Barangay Tisa. BOPK chose Ong as its candidate while Mabatid was chosen by BARUG after its candidate Zafra bowed out from the race. Despite the walkout of Mabatid's allies during the LNB elections, Ong still won with 51 votes. The election of Resch and Ong returned the majority of the Cebu City Council to BOPK with ten councilors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections, Background\nIn December 2018, BARUG was accredited as a political party by the Commission on Elections (COMELEC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections, Background\nCouncilor Espina announced on December 14, 2018 that he will only remain in his post until January 1, 2019 after the Court of Appeals reversed the ruling of the Office of the Ombudsman finding suspended councilor Cuenco guilty of serious dishonesty and grave misconduct and ordered his reinstatement to the Cebu City Council. Cuenco reported back to work as councilor on January 3, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections, Background\nBARUG had no mayoralty candidate for the 2019 elections as two of its leaders namely former mayor Rama and vice mayor Labella both expressed their intentions to run as mayor. On August 30, 2018, Rama announced his decision to run for vice mayor instead and gave way to Labella.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections, Background\nOsme\u00f1a named two of his allies, councilors Tumulak and Mary Ann de los Santos, as his possible candidate for vice mayor. There were also reports of BOPK-allied barangay captains pushing for an Osme\u00f1a-Ong tandem but Ong declined since he wanted to focus as LNB President. Osme\u00f1a officially declared de los Santos as his candidate for vice mayor during BOPK's rally at Lahug Elementary School gym. Osme\u00f1a also announced that BOPK was no longer affiliated with the Liberal Party (LP) as they have pledged allegiance to the Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino (LDP) party of Senator Sonny Angara.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections, Debate\nThe Integrated Bar of the Philippines-Cebu City Chapter organized the only mayoral and vice mayoral debate for Cebu City originally scheduled on April 22, 2019 at Cebu City Sports Club. Osme\u00f1a, his running-mate de los Santos, and Labella confirmed their attendance. Rama was the only one who declined to participate and tried to convince Labella to join him in ditching the debate saying that it would only put Osme\u00f1a on the spotlight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections, Debate\nThe IBP-Cebu City Chapter then moved the debate schedule to May 6, 2019 to give candidates quality time to observe the Holy Week. Upon Labella's request, the debate was once again postponed since he had to attend a meeting with Duterte in Malaca\u00f1ang. The IBP-Cebu City Chapter granted his request to move the schedule to May 10, 2019 which the other participants also agreed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections, Mayoralty and vice mayoralty elections, Mayor\nTomas Osme\u00f1a ran for his second term as the mayor of Cebu City. Meanwhile, Edgardo Labella, who served as vice mayor of Cebu City under the administrations of Michael Rama and Osme\u00f1a, ran for his first time as mayor and defeated Osme\u00f1a.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections, Mayoralty and vice mayoralty elections, Vice Mayor\nMary Ann de los Santos, who was on her second term as Cebu City councilor for the North District and was eligible for a third and final term, opted to run for vice mayor. Michael Rama, who served 2 terms as mayor and 3 terms as vice mayor, ran again as vice mayor and defeated de los Santos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 82], "content_span": [83, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections, District representatives, 1st District\nRaul del Mar ran for his third and final term, and won against actor Richard Yap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 70], "content_span": [71, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections, District representatives, 2nd District\nRodrigo Abellanosa ran for his third and final term, and won against former Cebu City councilor for the South District Jocelyn Pesquera.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 70], "content_span": [71, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections, City Council\nIncumbents are expressed in italics. Number indicates the ballot number assigned for the candidates by COMELEC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections, City Council, By district, 1st District\nNote: Incumbent councilors Alvin Arcilla and Sisinio Andales were disqualified by COMELEC after it issued a writ of execution for the certificate of finality of the earlier decision canceling Arcilla's and Andales' certificate of candidacy (COC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections, Electoral dispute\nIn a five-page decision promulgated on June 28, 2019, the COMELEC First Division declared Sherwin Luie Abella a nuisance candidate after he failed to answer the petition for his disqualification filed by BOPK candidate for councilor Atty. Marie Velle \"Amay\" Abella, who received 110,131 votes in the 2019 elections. Both candidates share the same surname and ran for an elective post for councilor in Cebu City's 2nd (South) district. Amay was furnished a copy of the said order on July 2, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections, Electoral dispute\nAmay hoped to get the 20,262 votes cast for Sherwin giving her 130,393 votes, which would dislodge newly-elected councilor Phillip Zafra who clinched the 8th slot in the Cebu City Council for south district. She only needs 5,162 votes to unseat Zafra. Should she succeed in unseating Zafra, this will raise the number of BOPK-allied councilors from six to seven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections, Electoral dispute\nOn August 30, 2019, the COMELEC First Division ruled with finality that Sherwin has been disqualified for being a nuisance candidate. However, the election body ruled that not all of the votes garnered by Sherwin will go to the Amay. Upon the checking of ballots, if a voter voted for both candidates, this vote will not be credited to Amay. Only votes cast for Sherwin will automatically be credited to Amay according to the decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections, Electoral dispute\nOn May 26, 2020, Amay passed away due to illness according to Cebu City south district representative Rodrigo Abellanosa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288167-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu City local elections, Electoral dispute\nCOMELEC went on with the recount of votes for Amay in September 2021 but was halted due to an appeal from Councilors Zafra and Renato Osme\u00f1a Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288168-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu local elections\nLocal elections were held in the province of Cebu on May 13, 2019, as part of the 2019 Philippine general election. Voters selected from among 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 seven districts of Cebu (including two districts of Cebu City and the lone district of Lapu-Lapu City).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288168-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu local elections, Gubernatorial and Vice Gubernatorial race, Governor\nVice Governor Agnes Magpale ran for the first time as governor and was defeated by her opponent, former Governor Gwendolyn Garcia, who was also serving as representative of Cebu's third legislative district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 78], "content_span": [79, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288168-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu local elections, Gubernatorial and Vice Gubernatorial race, Vice Governor\nMagpale's running mate was Governor Hilario Davide III while Garcia's running mate was businesswoman Daphne Salimbangon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288168-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu local elections, Congressional race, Cebu City, 1st District\nRaul del Mar ran for his third and final term, and won. His opponent is actor and businessman Richard Yap. Yap is known for his character as Richard \"Sir Chief\" Lim in the drama series Be Careful with My Heart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 70], "content_span": [71, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288168-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cebu local elections, Congressional race, Cebu City, 2nd District\nRodrigo Abellanosa ran for his third and final term, and won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 70], "content_span": [71, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288169-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Celebration Bowl\nThe 2019 Celebration Bowl was a college football bowl game played on December 21, 2019, with kickoff at 12:00 p.m. EST on ABC. It was the 5th edition of the Celebration Bowl, and the only one of the 2019\u201320 bowl games to feature FCS teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288169-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Celebration Bowl, Teams\nFor the second consecutive year, the bowl was played between the Alcorn State Braves and the North Carolina A&T Aggies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288169-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Celebration Bowl, Teams, Alcorn State\nAlcorn State earned their berth in the Celebration Bowl via a win over the Southern Jaguars in the SWAC Championship Game on December 7. The Braves entered the Celebration Bowl with a 9\u20133 overall record (6\u20131 in conference). This was their third appearance in the Celebration Bowl, having lost their prior two appearances (2015 and 2018); both losses were to North Carolina A&T.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288169-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Celebration Bowl, Teams, North Carolina A&T\nNorth Carolina A&T, led by second-year head coach Sam Washington, clinched their spot in the Celebration bowl on November 23 with their win over North Carolina Central. The Aggies entered the game with an overall 8\u20133 record (6\u20132 in conference). They finished runner-up in the MEAC behind Florida A&M, who were ineligible for postseason play due to NCAA sanctions. This was the Aggies' fourth appearance in the Celebration Bowl, having won each of their previous three (2015, 2017, 2018).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288170-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Centenario Open\nThe 2019 Centenario Open was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Asunci\u00f3n, Paraguay between 28 October and 3 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288170-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Centenario 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-00288171-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Centenario Open \u2013 Doubles\nAndrea G\u00e1miz and Georgina Garc\u00eda P\u00e9rez won the title, defeating Anna Danilina and Conny Perrin in the final, 6\u20134, 3\u20136, [10\u20133].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288172-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Centenario Open \u2013 Singles\nElisabetta Cocciaretto won the title, defeating Sara Errani in an all-Italian final, 6\u20131, 4\u20136, 6\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288173-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Central African Republic League\nThe 2019 Central African Republic League season is the top level of football competition in Central African Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288173-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Central African Republic League, Teams\nA total of 8 teams participate in the Ligue de Bangui Division 1:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288174-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Central American Cricket Championship\nThe 2019 Central American Cricket Championship was a cricket tournament held in Mexico from 25 to 28 April 2019. It was the seventh edition of the Central American Championship and the first since the ICC granted Twenty20 International (T20I) status to matches between all of its Members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288174-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Central American Cricket Championship, Men's championship\nThe five participating teams were the national sides of Belize, Costa Rica, Mexico and Panama, as well as a side representing the MCC. The matches were played at the Reforma Athletic Club in the city of Naucalpan, just to the northwest of Mexico City. All participating nations made their T20I debuts during the tournament (matches involving the MCC did not have T20I status). MCC were the defending champions, but were defeated by five wickets in the final by Belize.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 62], "content_span": [63, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288174-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Central American Cricket Championship, Women's championship\nA women's championship, consisting of a three-match series between Mexico and Costa Rica, took place alongside the men's event. The final match of the series was played at the Reforma Athletic Club ahead of the men's final. The first two matches had Women's Twenty20 International (WT20I) status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288175-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Central Arkansas Bears football team\nThe 2019 Central Arkansas Bears football team represents the University of Central Arkansas in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season as a member of the Southland Conference. The Bears are led by second-year head coach Nathan Brown and play their home games at Estes Stadium. UCA finished the regular season 9-3 overall, 7-2 in Southland Conference play, earning a share of the 2019 Southland Conference championship, and a first round bye in the FCS playoffs with a #8 seeding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288175-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Central Arkansas Bears football team, Previous season\nThe Bears finished the 2018 season 6\u20135, 5\u20134 in Southland play to finish in a four-way tie for fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288175-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Central Arkansas Bears football team, Preseason, Preseason poll\nThe Southland Conference released their preseason poll on July 18, 2019. The Bears were picked to finish in second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288175-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Central Arkansas Bears football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013Southland Teams\nThe Bears placed seven players on the preseason all\u2013Southland teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 83], "content_span": [84, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288175-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Central Arkansas Bears football team, FCS Playoffs\nThe Bears enter the postseason tournament as the number eight seed, with a first-round bye. They will play Illinois State at Estes Stadium in Conway on December 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 55], "content_span": [56, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288176-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Central Bedfordshire Council election\nElections to Central Bedfordshire Council were held on 2 May 2019, along with other local elections. The whole council was up for election, with each successful candidate serving a four-year term of office, expiring in 2023.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288177-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Central Coast Pro Tennis Open\nThe 2019 Central Coast Pro Tennis Open was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the third edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Templeton, California, United States between 23 and 29 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288177-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Central Coast Pro Tennis Open, 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-00288177-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Central Coast Pro Tennis Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using protected rankings:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288178-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Central Coast Pro Tennis Open \u2013 Doubles\nAsia Muhammad and Maria Sanchez were the defending champions, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288178-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Central Coast Pro Tennis Open \u2013 Doubles\nVladica Babi\u0107 and Caitlin Whoriskey won the title, defeating Gabriela Talab\u0103 and Marcela Zacar\u00edas in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288179-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Central Coast Pro Tennis Open \u2013 Singles\nAsia Muhammad was the defending champion, but chose to participate at the 2019 Darwin Tennis International instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288179-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Central Coast Pro Tennis Open \u2013 Singles\nShelby Rogers won the title, defeating CoCo Vandeweghe in the final, 4\u20136, 6\u20132, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288180-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Central Connecticut Blue Devils football team\nThe 2019 Central Connecticut Blue Devils football team represents Central Connecticut State University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They are led by first-year head coach Ryan McCarthy. They play their home games at Arute Field as a member of the Northeast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288180-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Central Connecticut Blue Devils football team, Previous season\nThe Blue Devils finished the 2018 season 6\u20135, 4\u20132 in NEC play to finish in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288180-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Central Connecticut Blue Devils football team, Preseason, Preseason coaches' poll\nThe NEC released their preseason coaches' poll on July 24, 2019. The Blue Devils were picked to finish in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 86], "content_span": [87, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288180-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Central Connecticut Blue Devils football team, Preseason, Preseason All-NEC team\nThe Blue Devils had six players at three positions selected to the preseason all-NEC team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 85], "content_span": [86, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288180-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Central Connecticut Blue Devils football team, FCS Playoffs\nThe Blue Devils received an automatic bid (due to winning their conference) for the postseason tournament, with a first-round pairing against Albany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 64], "content_span": [65, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288181-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Central League Climax Series\nThe 2019 Central League Climax Series (CLCS) was a postseason playoff consisting of two consecutive series that determined which of the three teams who finished in the top three during the 2019 regular season would represent the Central League in the Japan Series. The First Stage was a best-of-three series played between the second-place hosts Yokohama DeNA BayStars and the third-place Hanshin Tigers. The series was played between October 5 to 7. The Tigers defeated the Baystars 2\u20131 and advanced to the Final Stage to face the pennant-winning Yomiuri Giants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288181-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Central League Climax Series\nThe Final Stage was a best-of-six series hosted by the Giants. Having won the regular season, Yomiuri was awarded a one-win advantage over the Tigers. The series was played between October 9 to 13. Yomiuri defeated Hanshin 4\u20131 in four games to advance to the 2019 Japan Series, where they competed against the 2019 Pacific League Climax Series winner, the Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288181-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Central League Climax Series, First Stage\nThe Yokohama DeNA Baystars clinched second place in the Central League on September 24 and thus secured a spot as the home team in the First Stage of the Climax Series. It was their highest finish in the standings since winning the CL pennant in 1998. While they had hosted Japan Series games in 1998 and 2017, this was the first time in team history that their home field, Yokohama Stadium, hosted a Climax Series. The BayStars finished the season 43-27-1 at Yokohama Stadium, the most wins by any CL team in its home park. The Hanshin Tigers, however, also had a winning record in Yokohama, going 8\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288181-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Central League Climax Series, First Stage\nThe Tigers clinched third place in the Central League on September 30, the last game of the regular season. They won the last six games of the season to help pass the Hiroshima Toyo Carp by half a game and secure the third and final postseason position. Hanshin was 16\u20138\u20131 against the Baystars during the regular season and had won six of their last seven meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288181-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Central League Climax Series, First Stage, Game 1\nAfter the Tigers didn't score against BayStars' starting pitcher Kenta Ishida in the first inning, DeNA quickly took the lead in the bottom half of the inning. After the first two batters reached base, Yoshitomo Tsutsugo hit a three-run home run off of Tiger's starter Yuki Nishi. Nishi was eventually taken out of the game that same inning after allowing five straight hits, not recording an out, and a ball hit by Toshiro Miyazaki struck him in the leg. The BayStars had another high scoring inning in the fifth when Tsutsugo hit an RBI single, followed by an RBI single by Jos\u00e9 L\u00f3pez and a two-run hit by Tatsuhiro Shibata.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288181-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Central League Climax Series, First Stage, Game 1\nThe Tigers had been held to four hits resulting in one fourth-inning RBI by Ryutaro Umeno through six innings by starters Ishida and Shota Imanaga, who made an appearance as a relief pitcher. However, they mounted a comeback starting in the seventh inning against Baystars reliever Edison Barrios when Shun Takayama hit a double and pinch hitter Seiya Kinami drove him in with a single. Barrios was then replaced with Edwin Escobar who subsequently allowed Koji Chikamoto to reach via a single. Fumiya Hojo then hit a three-run home run to bring the Tigers within two runs of the Baystars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288181-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Central League Climax Series, First Stage, Game 1\nThe scoring continued for the Tigers in the top of the eight inning. Kinami hit another RBI single followed by a single by Chikamoto. With two players on base, the Baystars put in reliever Yuki Kuniyoshi. Hojo then hit a triple to give the Tigers the lead. Suguru Iwazaki pitched a scoreless eighth and veteran Kyuji Fujikawa earned the save in the ninth to secure a Tiger's win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288181-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Central League Climax Series, First Stage, Game 2\nIn Game 2, the Baystars once again took the lead in the first, this time scoring two-run on a home run by L\u00f3pez off of Tiger's starter Koyo Aoyagi. They added a run to their lead in the third inning when Tsutsugo hit a home run, his second of the series. The Tigers were able to come back and tie the game starting in the fifth inning. Hojo hit an RBI double and moved to third base on a throwing error on the same play. That DeNA error proved costly when Kosuke Fukudome singled, allowing Hojo to score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288181-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Central League Climax Series, First Stage, Game 2\nIn the sixth, Kento Itohara singled, moved to second base on a sacrifice bunt, then advanced to third on a wild pitch. Hiroki Uemoto tied the game with a single to drive in Itohara. The Baystars responded in the bottom of the same inning by taking the lead on a Kazuki Kamizato RBI single. DeNA relief pitchers kept the Tigers scoreless until their closer Yasuaki Yamasaki, who also pitched in the eighth inning, blew the save in the ninth by allowing a Fukudome solo home run to tie the game. In the bottom of the ninth, Miyazaki singled off of Baystars reliever Iwazaki. Yokohama manager Alex Ram\u00edrez then put left-handed batter Tomo Otosaka in as a pinch hitter to face the left-handed Iwazaki. Otosaka hit a two-run sayonara home run to win the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 809]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288181-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Central League Climax Series, First Stage, Game 3\nA light rain fell throughout Game 3, the series finale. Both the Tigers and the Baystars were scoreless through the first five innings. Hanshin plated the game's first run in the sixth inning. After Shun Takayama hit a double off of pitcher Yuki Kuniyoshi, Ryutaro Umeno laid down a bunt to move him to third base. Takayama then scored on a wild pitch from Kuniyoshi. Yokohama tied the game similarly in the seventh inning when they loaded the bases and then scored on a throwing error by third baseman Fumiya Hojo. The Tigers broke the tie in the eight inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288181-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Central League Climax Series, First Stage, Game 3\nEdwin Escobar hit Takayama with a pitch, who was then replayed by Kai Ueda on first base. Ueda went on to steal second base then move to third on a wild pitch by Escobar. Umeno then hit a sacrifice fly to center field that allowed Ueda to score what would ultimately be the series winning run. Kyuji Fujikawa then came in to pitch two scoreless innings to close out the game and earn the save.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288181-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Central League Climax Series, Final Stage\nThe Yomiuri Giants clinched the Central League pennant on September 21 and thus secured a spot as the home team in the Final Stage of the Climax Series. It was the team's 37th league title and their first since the 2014 season. This was the first season of Tatsunori Hara's third stint as the Giant's manager. Prior to this season, Hara had led the team to win seven CL pennants and three Japan Series titles. This was the first CL title in the Reiwa Era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288181-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Central League Climax Series, Final Stage\nThe Giants were also the first team to win the CL title of the Heisei Era in 1989. A week before the postseason began, longtime Yomiuri catcher Shinnosuke Abe announced that he would be retiring at the end of the season after 19\u00a0years with the Giants. He is regarded to be one of the greatest catchers in NPB history. Yomiuri was 15\u201310 against the Hanshin Tigers during the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288181-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Central League Climax Series, Final Stage, Game 1\nIn Game 1, the Giants scored quickly against Tigers starter Atsushi Mochizuki, who only lasted two innings. With two outs in the first inning, Yoshihiro Maru and Kazuma Okamoto hit back-to-back solo home runs to give Yomiuri a two-run lead. The scoring continued for the Giants the next inning when Yoshiyuki Kamei hit an RBI double and Hayato Sakamoto hit a two-run single. The five runs would prove to be all that was needed to win the game. Giants starting pitcher Shun Yamaguchi pitched into the eighth inning. The only run allowed by Yamaguchi came in the fourth inning. With two outs, he allowed two singles and then walked a batter. A run then scored on a wild pitch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288181-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Central League Climax Series, Final Stage, Game 1\nHanshin attempted a comeback in the ninth inning. With one out, Giants closer Rubby De La Rosa gave up two singles to Kento Itohara and Shun Takayama. Ryutaro Umeno then drew a two-out walk to load the bases. De La Rosa walked the next batter, Fumiya Hojo, to give the Tigers another run. With the bases still loaded, reliever Kazuto Taguchi entered the game to retire the final batter, preserve the win, and record the save.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288181-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Central League Climax Series, Final Stage, Game 2\nIn Game 2, the starting pitchers for the Giants and the Tigers were C.C. Mercedes and Haruto Takahashi, respectively. Yomiuri started the game's scoring early, earning a run on a double play in the first inning. Takahashi only lasted two innings before being removed from the game. Alex Guerrero added to the Giants' lead in the fourth inning with a two-run home run off of Takahashi's replacement, Onelki Garc\u00eda. In the fifth inning, Maru drove in a run with a sacrifice fly and Okamoto hit an RBI-single, making it 5\u20130. Akihiro Wakabayashi closed out the scoring with a run-scoring hit in the eighth inning. For the Giants, Mercedes pitched seven innings allowing the Tigers no runs on only three hits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288182-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Central Michigan Chippewas football team\nThe 2019 Central Michigan Chippewas football team represented Central Michigan University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. They were led by first-year head coach Jim McElwain and played their home games at Kelly/Shorts Stadium as members of the West Division of the Mid-American Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288182-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Central Michigan Chippewas football team, Previous season\nThe Chippewas finished the 2018 season 1\u201311 overall and 0\u20138 in the Mid American Conference. On November 23, 2018 following a loss to Toledo, head coach John Bonamego was fired. He finished at Central Michigan with a four-year record of 22\u201329. On December 2, the school hired Michigan wide receivers coach Jim McElwain, who previously served as head coach at Colorado State and Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288182-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Central Michigan Chippewas football team, Preseason, MAC media poll\nThe MAC released their preseason media poll on July 23, 2019, with the Chippewas predicted to finish in sixth place in the West Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 72], "content_span": [73, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288183-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Central and Western District Council election\nThe 2019 Central and Western District Council election was held on 24 November 2019 to elect all 15 members of the Central and Western District Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288183-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Central and Western District Council election\nAmid the ongoing pro-democracy protests, the pro-democrats scored a historic landslide victory by taking 14 of the 15 seats, with DAB being completely wiped out from the council and its legislator Cheung Kwok-kwan being ousted in Sai Wan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288184-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ceres\u2013Negros F.C. season\nThe 2019 season was Ceres\u2013Negros Football Club's 8th season in existence and the club's 3rd consecutive season in the top flight of Philippine football. In addition to the Philippines Football League, the club competed in the Copa Paulino Alcantara, the AFC Cup, and the first preliminary round of the AFC Champions League. Competitive matches were played from February 5 to November 16, 2019. Ceres\u2013Negros won the Philippines Football League for the third successive season, this time without a single defeat \u2013 a record of 22 wins and 2 draws, which included a 17-game winning streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288184-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 Ceres\u2013Negros F.C. season\nThey also won the Copa Paulino Alcantara unbeaten, completing the domestic double without a single defeat in domestic competitions. The club was less successful in Asian competitions: after losing the first preliminary round of the AFC Champions League, they were transferred to the AFC Cup where they topped their group but were eliminated in the ASEAN Zonal semi-final. Ceres had only 3 losses overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288184-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ceres\u2013Negros F.C. season\nMartin Steuble, who was club captain since 2017, left the club in July and was succeeded by Carli de Murga. The main additions to the team were striker Robert Lopez Mendy, and midfielders James Younghusband and Takashi Odawara. Ceres also signed defender \u00c1lvaro Silva, who played for the club from February to June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288184-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Ceres\u2013Negros F.C. season\nCeres\u2013Negros players also won individual awards: Bienvenido Mara\u00f1\u00f3n was the 2019 AFC Cup top scorer while Stephan Schr\u00f6ck won the PFL Golden Ball. In the Copa Paulino Alcantara, Robert Lopez Mendy won the Golden Boot while Takashi Odawara won the Golden Ball. Goalkeeper Roland M\u00fcller won the Golden Glove in both the PFL and Copa Paulino Alcantara.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288184-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Ceres\u2013Negros F.C. season\nIn July, the club's future became uncertain when club owner and chairman, Leo Rey Yanson, was ousted as president and CEO of Vallacar Transit by his brother Roy. As the new president, Roy Yanson did not like to invest the company's money into the football club, though Leo Rey insisted that he spends his personal money for the club. On August 11, Leo Rey regained control of the company.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288184-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Ceres\u2013Negros F.C. season, Season overview\nAfter winning their second consecutive league title in the previous season, Ceres\u2013Negros participated in the qualifiers for the 2019 AFC Champions League. However, before the competitions began, veteran players Patrick Reichelt and Manuel Ott left the club. The notable pre-season signing was Philippines national team defender \u00c1lvaro Silva, who previously played under Risto Vidakovi\u0107 at C\u00e1diz. On February 5, Ceres began their campaign by hosting Myanmar National League champions Yangon United for the preliminary round 1, to whom they lost 2\u20131. As such, they were relegated to the group stage of the AFC Cup, the second-tier competition of Asian club football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288184-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Ceres\u2013Negros F.C. season, Season overview\nIn the AFC Cup, Ceres\u2013Negros were in Group G alongside Vietnamese Cup winners Becamex B\u00ecnh D\u01b0\u01a1ng, Myanmar National League runners-up Shan United, and Indonesian Liga 1 champions Persija Jakarta. Ceres topped their group by winning all but one of their group matches, losing their last match\u2014at home to Becamex B\u00ecnh D\u01b0\u01a1ng 1\u20130. Their notable group match was the comeback win away to Persija Jakarta on April 23. After a goalless first half, Ceres were down by two goals at the 57th minute until Miguel Tanton and Bienvenido Mara\u00f1\u00f3n managed to equalize. Mike Ott then scored the winning goal in injury time, ending the match 3\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288184-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Ceres\u2013Negros F.C. season, Season overview\nIn the ASEAN Zonal semi-finals, Ceres faced V.League 1 champions H\u00e0 N\u1ed9i who topped Group F. The first leg, played at Panaad on June 18, ended in a 1\u20131 draw. Ceres went on to lose the second leg in Hanoi on June 25, with a score of 2\u20131 (3\u20132 on aggregate), thus failing to make their third consecutive ASEAN Zonal final. Although they were eliminated, Bienvenido Mara\u00f1\u00f3n was awarded as AFC Cup top scorer at the end of the season, with 10 goals in eight matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288184-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Ceres\u2013Negros F.C. season, Season overview\nIn the domestic level, Ceres were supposed to participate in the Philippine Premier League (PPL)\u2014the new top-tier league as the Philippines Football League (PFL) was dissolved after the troubled 2018 season, which Ceres won. However, the PPL was also plagued with numerous issues, with Stallion Laguna and Global Makati withdrawing a day before the season commenced. Ceres later withdrew after the first matchday (in which they were not scheduled to play), and later the Philippine Football Federation (PFF) decided to withdraw its sanction of the PPL thus dissolving the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288184-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Ceres\u2013Negros F.C. season, Season overview\nThe PFF then decided to revive the PFL for a third season. Ceres' opening PFL fixture was at the Rizal Memorial Stadium against Stallion Laguna on May 25, which ended in a 2\u20132 draw. On May 29, they earned their first league win of the season at the expense of debutants Philippine Air Force, 5\u20130. The next day, Kevin Ingreso left the club; he played three and a half years with Ceres. On June 28, notable pre-season signing \u00c1lvaro Silva announced his surprise departure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288184-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Ceres\u2013Negros F.C. season, Season overview\nWhile on July 4, Martin Steuble, who captained Ceres since 2017, left the club to join Port of the Thai League 1. Despite the loss of several key players, Ceres continued to win their matches with Carli de Murga as the new captain. They notably thrashed Philippine Air Force 12\u20130 on July 13, the league's largest home win of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288184-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Ceres\u2013Negros F.C. season, Season overview\nIn the midseason transfer window, Ceres made three notable signings: Senegalese striker Robert Lopez Mendy, who was the PFL's top scorer in 2018 with Kaya\u2013Iloilo, Philippines national team midfielder James Younghusband, and Japanese midfielder Takashi Odawara. On August 28, Ceres thrashed Global Makati 13\u20130 away, the league's largest margin of victory in the season. On September 28, a 1\u20131 draw with Stallion Laguna ended Ceres' winning streak at 17 games. After winning the subsequent fixtures, Ceres secured their third consecutive league title by defeating Green Archers United 3\u20131 on October 12, with two matches to spare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288184-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Ceres\u2013Negros F.C. season, Season overview\nAfter winning the two remaining games, Ceres completed a historic unbeaten season with a total of 22 wins and 2 draws (68 points). Goalkeeper Roland M\u00fcller won the season's Golden Glove while midfielder Stephan Schr\u00f6ck won the Golden Ball. With 30 goals, striker Bienvenido Mara\u00f1\u00f3n was the Golden Boot runner-up behind Kaya's Jordan Mintah, who scored 31.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288184-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Ceres\u2013Negros F.C. season, Season overview\nAfter failing to progress from the group stage in 2018, Ceres were determined to win the 2019 edition of the Copa Paulino Alcantara. They were drawn in Group A alongside Mendiola, Green Archers United, and Philippines U22 (who are participating in preparation for the Southeast Asian Games). In their first group match, they were held to a 2\u20132 draw by Mendiola. This was followed by wins over the two other clubs as Ceres topped the group. In the semi-finals, they defeated Group B runners-up Stallion Laguna 4\u20133 to earn their first ever finals appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288184-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Ceres\u2013Negros F.C. season, Season overview\nOn November 16, Ceres faced defending champions Kaya\u2013Iloilo in the final. Ceres won the match 2\u20131, completing their domestic double. Ceres won the final despite having only 14 players available in their squad, as the others were either resting or on international duty. Head coach Risto Vidakovi\u0107 was also absent for the final, thus it was assistant coach Jooc Treyes who managed the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288184-0010-0002", "contents": "2019 Ceres\u2013Negros F.C. season, Season overview\nThe Copa's individual awards were all won by Ceres players: striker Robert Lopez Mendy, who scored five goals in the tournament, won the Golden Boot, goalkeeper Roland M\u00fcller won the Golden Glove, and midfielder Takashi Odawara won the Golden Ball for his defensive performances. With the Copa win, Ceres finished their 2019 season without a single defeat in domestic competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288184-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Ceres\u2013Negros F.C. season, Season overview, Ownership crisis\nOn July 7, Ceres\u2013Negros' owner and chairman, Leo Rey Yanson, was ousted as president and CEO of Vallacar Transit in a boardroom coup led by his older brother Roy and supported by three of his other siblings. In a statement, Leo Rey called the move \"illegal\" and refused to recognize it, saying: \"The removal was only done through a special meeting of which the election/removal of the president was not even included in the agenda.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288184-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Ceres\u2013Negros F.C. season, Season overview, Ownership crisis\nAs the new president, Roy Yanson accused Leo Rey of using the company's funds for the football team, adding that players who are \"just simply kicking the ball\" are earning more than the Vallacar Transit employees. Leo Rey defended the football club and denied the accusation, insisting that he funds the team using his own money, saying: \"I don't need to justify how much I'm spending for the club because it's my own personal money.\" Leo Rey also spent for the refurbishment of the Panaad Statium, the club's home ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288184-0011-0002", "contents": "2019 Ceres\u2013Negros F.C. season, Season overview, Ownership crisis\nNonetheless, the Yanson siblings' battle for control of the company made the team's future uncertain. The football players expressed their support for Leo Rey, with Stephan Schr\u00f6ck saying: \"He's been there for us not only as an owner or manager or benefactor. He was, for the longest time for us, a friend almost like a dad to everyone at the club. We owe him.\" On August 11, Leo Rey regained control of the company's headquarters in Bacolod with the help of his sister Ginnette, mother Olivia, and the Philippine National Police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288184-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Ceres\u2013Negros F.C. 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288184-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Ceres\u2013Negros F.C. season, Competitions, Copa Paulino Alcantara, Group Stage\nOn October 20, Ceres\u2013Negros were drawn in Group A of the Copa Paulino Alcantara alongside Mendiola, Green Archers United, and Philippines U22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 80], "content_span": [81, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288184-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Ceres\u2013Negros F.C. season, Competitions, AFC Cup, Group Stage\nThe group stage draw was held on November 22, 2018 at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Ceres\u2013Negros were drawn in Group G alongside Vietnamese Cup winners Becamex B\u00ecnh D\u01b0\u01a1ng, Myanmar National League runners-up Shan United, and Indonesian Liga 1 champions Persija Jakarta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288185-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ceuta Assembly election\nThe 2019 Ceuta Assembly election, was held on Sunday, 26 May 2019, to elect the 7th Assembly of the Autonomous City of Ceuta. All 25 seats in the Assembly were up for election. The election was held simultaneously with regional elections in at least seven autonomous communities and local elections all throughout Spain, as well as the 2019 European Parliament election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288185-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ceuta Assembly election, Electoral system\nThe Assembly of Ceuta is the top-tier administrative and governing body of the autonomous city of Ceuta. Voting for the Assembly is on the basis of universal suffrage, which comprises all nationals over eighteen, registered and residing in the municipality of Ceuta and in full enjoyment of their political rights, as well as resident non-national European citizens and those whose country of origin allows Spanish nationals to vote in their own elections by virtue of a treaty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288185-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Ceuta Assembly election, Electoral system\nThe 25 members of the Assembly of Ceuta are elected using the D'Hondt method and a closed list proportional representation, with a threshold of 5 percent of valid votes\u2014which includes blank ballots\u2014being applied. Parties not reaching the threshold are not taken into consideration for seat distribution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288185-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Ceuta Assembly election, Electoral system\nThe Mayor-President is indirectly elected by the plenary assembly. A legal clause requires that mayoral candidates earn the vote of an absolute majority of members, or else the candidate of the most-voted party in the assembly shall be automatically appointed to the post. In case of a tie, a toss-up would determine the appointee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288185-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Ceuta Assembly election, Electoral system\nThe electoral law provides that parties, federations, coalitions and groupings of electors are allowed to present lists of candidates. However, groupings of electors are required to secure the signature of a determined amount of the electors registered in Ceuta. Concurrently, parties and federations intending to enter in coalition to take part jointly at an election are required to inform the relevant Electoral Commission within ten days of the election being called.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288185-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Ceuta Assembly election, Opinion polls\nThe table below lists voting intention estimates in reverse chronological order, showing the most recent first and using the dates when the survey fieldwork was done, as opposed to the date of publication. Where the fieldwork dates are unknown, the date of publication is given instead. The highest percentage figure in each polling survey is displayed with its background shaded in the leading party's colour. If a tie ensues, this is applied to the figures with the highest percentages. The \"Lead\" column on the right shows the percentage-point difference between the parties with the highest percentages in a given poll. When available, seat projections are also displayed below the voting estimates in a smaller font. 13 seats are required for an absolute majority in the Assembly of Ceuta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 838]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288186-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Cup\nThe 2019 Challenge Cup known as the Coral Challenge Cup for sponsorship reasons, is the 118th staging of the Challenge Cup, the main rugby league knockout tournament for teams in the Super League, the British National Leagues and a number of invited amateur clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288186-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Cup\nThe defending champions were Catalans Dragons, who beat Warrington Wolves 20\u201314 at Wembley Stadium on 25 August 2018, to become the first non-British team to win the challenge cup in its 117-year history. However, they were eliminated in the quarter finals after a 51\u20138 defeat, away to Hull F.C..", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288186-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Cup\nThe format of the competition will be eight knock-out rounds followed by the final. The final will be held on the August bank holiday weekend, and from 2020 the final will move to July, but will still be played at Wembley Stadium. The day of the final will see three matches played back-to-back, with the Challenge Cup final being preceded by the Steven Mullaney Memorial Match (the RFL Champion Schools Final for Year 7s), and the final of the newly announced 1895 Cup for clubs in the Championship and League\u00a01.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288186-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Cup\nA new sponsorship deal was announced in January 2019, with Coral replacing Ladbrokes (although both are part of the Ladbrokes Coral group).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288186-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Cup, Round details\n*Toulouse Olympique and Toronto Wolfpack declined to participate in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288186-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Cup, Entry\nEntry into the Cup is mandatory for the English and Welsh professional teams, but is by invitation for all other clubs, either professional or amateur. French side Toulouse declined to enter for 2019, after also declining to play in the 2018 competition. Canadian side Toronto Wolfpack also declined to enter for 2019, after both clubs were presented with a demand by the Rugby Football League (RFL) for roughly \u00a3750,000 (\u20ac830,000; C$1,226,000 approximately) as a bond insurance against reduced ticket sales, if either team reached the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288186-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Cup, Entry\nIn January 2019 it was revealed that defending champions, Catalans Dragons, had also been asked to pay a \u00a3500,000 (\u20ac553,000) bond to enter the competition. Catalans informed the RFL, that the club had no intention of paying, leading to the possibility, that for the first time ever, the competition would take place without the defending champions being in the tournament. However, after settling their dispute with the RFL, it was confirmed that they would be defending their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288186-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Cup, Entry\nThe first and second rounds of the competition are competed for solely by amateur teams, and for 2019, 51 British based teams are joined by Serbian side Red Star in the draw for the first round of the cup. Red Star's entry is on condition that they play away from home in the first and second rounds (assuming victory in the first round). The 51 amateur clubs are 47 British teams together with four teams representing the armed forces and the British police. This season will be the first since the 1990s, that no student sides will be playing in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288186-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Cup, First round\nThe draw was made on 14 December 2018 at Headingley Rugby Stadium and was streamed live on the BBC Sport website. The home teams were drawn by Leeds Rhinos Women captain Lois Forsell and the away teams by Bradford Bulls coach John Kear. Ties are to be played over the weekend of 26/27 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288186-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Cup, Second round\nThe draw was made on 28 January 2019 at Wigan St Patricks and was streamed live on the BBC Sport website. The home teams were drawn by Leigh Centurions captain Mickey Higham and the away teams by Wigan Warriors halfback George Williams. Ties are to be played over the weekend of 9\u201310 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288186-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Cup, Third round\nThe draw for the third round was made at St Mary's Guildhall, Coventry on 11 February and shown live on the BBC Sport website. The draw was made by Coventry born athletes Kare Adenegan and David Moorcroft. During the draw ball number six (Haydock) was announced wrongly as number nine (Lock Lane) and vice versa. The RFL later confirmed that the draw would be as the balls drawn and not as they were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288186-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Cup, Fourth round\nThe draw for the fourth round was made at Odsal Stadium, home of the Bradford Bulls on 12 March and shown live on the BBC Sport website. The draw was made by former Bradford player Robbie Hunter-Paul and Simon Foster, son of former player Trevor Foster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288186-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Cup, Fifth round\nThe fifth round ties were drawn on 1 April and shown live on BBC Sport. The home teams were drawn by Linzi Prescott (widow of Steve Prescott) and the away teams by Martin Offiah. Ties will be played over the weekend of 11\u201314 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288186-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Cup, Sixth round\nThe draw for the sixth round was made on 15 April 2019. Originally planned to be shown live on the BBC News Channel, the coverage was displaced due to ongoing coverage of the Notre-Dame de Paris fire and instead was restricted to live streaming on the BBC Sport website. The home teams were drawn by Paul Sculthorpe and the away teams by Jon Wilkin. Ties will be played over the weekend of 10\u201312 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288186-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Cup, Sixth round\nBroadcasts of matches changed from on-line only to mainstream TV at this stage, with BBC and Sky Sports each televising two ties. BBC One will show the first competitive meeting of West Yorkshire rivals Bradford Bulls and Leeds Rhinos on Saturday 11 May. On Sunday 12 May, BBC One will show the repeat of the 2018 Super League Grand Final between Wigan Warriors and Warrington Wolves. Sky Sports will show two all-Super League ties; Hull F.C. v Castleford Tigers on Friday 10 May, and Huddersfield Giants v St. Helens on Sunday 12 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288186-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the Quarter finals was made on 12 May live on BBC1, directly after the televised sixth-round tie between Wigan Warriors and Warrington Wolves, with Ellery Hanley and Jonathan Davies conducting the draw. The ties will be played 30 May \u2013 2 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288186-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Cup, Broadcasts\nThe primary broadcast organisation for the competition was BBC Sport. As in 2018 the BBC streamed one tie from each of the first five rounds live on the BBC Sport website with two games from the 6th, 7th, 8th rounds and the final being broadcast live on BBC TV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288187-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Cup Final\nThe 2019 Challenge Cup Final was the deciding game of the Rugby Football League's 2019 Challenge Cup competition, the 118th staging of the competition. The match was held at Wembley Stadium in London on 24 August 2019 with kick off at 15:00. The final was contested by the Warrington Wolves and St Helens, the first time the two sides have met in a major final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288187-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Cup Final, Background\nThe two sides have never met in a Challenge Cup final before. It had been 11 years since St Helens last won in the Challenge Cup Final, and despite final appearances in 2016 and 2018, Warrington have not triumphed since 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288187-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Cup Final, Background\nWarrington came into the game on the back of five straight defeats in Super League, and with being defeated by the Catalans Dragons in last season's final. On the other hand, Saints were leading the way at the top of the table, losing just three games all season, 2two of which came at the London Broncos (one of those games going to golden point extra time), with the other, away to Catalans. They had not lost a home game so far in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288187-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Cup Final, Route to the final, Warrington Wolves\nWarrington escaped the sixth round with a narrow 26\u201324 victory over rivals Wigan. Warrington then faced Hull KR in the quarter finals winning 28 points to 22. Warrington's semi-final opposition was also a Kingston-upon-Hull side, this time Hull F.C., to which they secured their most comfortable win en route to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288187-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Cup Final, Route to the final, St Helens\nSt Helens faced Super League side Huddersfield Giants in the sixth round, beating them 22\u201316. A 48\u201310 thrashing of Wakefield Trinity in the quarter finals saw the Saints progress to the semis where they faced Championship side Halifax and getting a comfortable victory to progress to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288188-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Cup Final (UK ice hockey)\nThe 2019 Challenge Cup Final was the culmination of the 2018\u201319 Challenge Cup. The final was contested between Belfast Giants and Guildford Flames. The Giants were the cup holders and the Flames were in their first ever final at Elite League level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288188-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Cup Final (UK ice hockey)\nAfter a scoreless first period it was the Giants who took the lead when Patrick Dwyer scored a powerplay goal assisted by Josh Roach & Kyle Baun at 20:33. The Flames equalised through Jamie Crooks on the powerplay at 36:38. The third period was scoreless which sent the game into overtime with the score level at 1\u20131. Belfast won the game and retained the Challenge Cup when Jordan Smotherman scored with 69:30 on the clock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288189-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Tour\nThe 2019 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-00288189-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288189-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Tour, Tournament schedule\nThe 2019 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-00288189-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Tour, Tournament schedule, Unofficial event\nThe following tournament appeared on the official schedule, but did not offer official money or ranking points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 58], "content_span": [59, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288190-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Tour graduates\nThis is a list of players who graduated from the Challenge Tour in 2019. The top 15 players on the Challenge Tour rankings in 2019 earned European Tour cards for 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288190-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenge Tour graduates\n* European Tour rookie in 2020\u2020 First-time member ineligible for Rookie of the Year award", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288191-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger ATP Cachant\u00fan Cup\nThe 2019 Challenger ATP Cachant\u00fan Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on red clay courts. It was the 12th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Santiago, Chile between 4 and 10 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288191-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger ATP Cachant\u00fan Cup, 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-00288191-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger ATP Cachant\u00fan Cup, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw using a protected ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288191-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger ATP Cachant\u00fan Cup, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288192-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger ATP Cachant\u00fan Cup \u2013 Doubles\nRomain Arneodo and Jonathan Eysseric were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288192-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger ATP Cachant\u00fan Cup \u2013 Doubles\nFranco Agamenone and Fernando Romboli won the title after defeating Facundo Arg\u00fcello and Mart\u00edn Cuevas 7\u20136(7\u20135), 1\u20136, [10\u20136] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288193-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger ATP Cachant\u00fan Cup \u2013 Singles\nMarco Cecchinato was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288193-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger ATP Cachant\u00fan Cup \u2013 Singles\nHugo Dellien won the title after defeating Wu Tung-lin 5\u20137, 7\u20136(7\u20131), 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288194-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Drummondville\nThe 2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Drummondville was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 13th edition of the tournament and part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Drummondville, Canada between March 11 and March 17, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288194-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Drummondville, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 93], "content_span": [94, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288194-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Drummondville, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as alternates:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 93], "content_span": [94, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288194-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Drummondville, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 93], "content_span": [94, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288195-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Drummondville \u2013 Doubles\nJoris De Loore and Frederik Nielsen were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288195-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Drummondville \u2013 Doubles\nScott Clayton and Adil Shamasdin won the title after defeating Matt Reid and John-Patrick Smith 7\u20135, 3\u20136, [10\u20135] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288196-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Drummondville \u2013 Singles\nDenis Kudla was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288196-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Drummondville \u2013 Singles\nRi\u010dardas Berankis won the title after defeating Yannick Maden 6\u20133, 7\u20135 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288197-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Gatineau\nThe 2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Gatineau was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 4th edition of the tournament for men and the 6th for women, and it was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour and the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Gatineau, Canada between July 15 and 21, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288197-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Gatineau, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 94], "content_span": [95, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288197-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Gatineau, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw using a protected ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 94], "content_span": [95, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288197-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Gatineau, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 94], "content_span": [95, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288197-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Gatineau, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 94], "content_span": [95, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288197-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Gatineau, Women's singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 96], "content_span": [97, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288197-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Gatineau, Women's singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 96], "content_span": [97, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288198-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Gatineau \u2013 Men's Doubles\nRobert Galloway and Bradley Klahn were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288198-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Gatineau \u2013 Men's Doubles\nAlex Lawson and Marc Polmans won the title after defeating Hans Hach Verdugo and Dennis Novikov 6\u20134, 3\u20136, [10\u20137] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288199-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Gatineau \u2013 Men's Singles\nBradley Klahn was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288199-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Gatineau \u2013 Men's Singles\nJason Kubler won the title after defeating Enzo Couacaud 6\u20134, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288200-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Granby\nThe 2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Granby was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the twenty-sixth (men) and ninth (women) editions of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour and the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Granby, Canada between 22 and 28 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288200-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288200-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Granby, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as alternates:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 92], "content_span": [93, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288200-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Granby, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 92], "content_span": [93, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288200-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Granby, Women'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, 94], "content_span": [95, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288201-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Granby \u2013 Men's Doubles\nAlex Lawson and Li Zhe were the defending champions but only Li chose to defend his title, partnering Hugo Nys. Li lost in the final to Andr\u00e9 G\u00f6ransson and Sem Verbeek.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288201-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Granby \u2013 Men's Doubles\nG\u00f6ransson and Verbeek won the title after defeating Li and Nys 6\u20132, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288202-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Granby \u2013 Men's Singles\nPeter Polansky was the defending champion but lost in the semifinals to Yasutaka Uchiyama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288202-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Granby \u2013 Men's Singles\nErnesto Escobedo won the title after defeating Uchiyama 7\u20136(7\u20135), 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288203-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Granby \u2013 Women's Doubles\nEllen Perez and Arina Rodionova were the defending champions, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288203-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Granby \u2013 Women's Doubles\nHaruka Kaji and Junri Namigata won the title, defeating Quinn Gleason and Ingrid Neel in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20135), 5\u20137, [10\u20138].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288204-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Granby \u2013 Women's Singles\nJulia Glushko was the defending champion, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288204-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Granby \u2013 Women's Singles\nLizette Cabrera won the title, defeating Leylah Annie Fernandez in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288205-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Saguenay\nThe 2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Saguenay was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the fourteenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Saguenay, Canada between 21 and 27 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288205-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288206-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Saguenay \u2013 Doubles\nTara Moore and Conny Perrin were the defending champions, but Perrin chose not to participate. Moore partnered Emina Bektas, but lost to Samantha Murray and Bibiane Schoofs in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288206-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Saguenay \u2013 Doubles\nM\u00e9lodie Collard and Leylah Annie Fernandez won the title, defeating Murray and Schoofs in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20133), 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288207-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Saguenay \u2013 Singles\nKatherine Sebov was the defending champion, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288207-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Banque Nationale de Saguenay \u2013 Singles\nIndy de Vroome won the title, defeating Robin Anderson in the final, 3\u20136, 6\u20134, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288208-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Ciudad de Guayaquil\nThe 2019 Challenger Ciudad de Guayaquil was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the fifteenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Guayaquil, Ecuador between October 28 and November 3, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288208-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288208-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Ciudad de Guayaquil, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 79], "content_span": [80, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288209-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Ciudad de Guayaquil \u2013 Doubles\nGuillermo Dur\u00e1n and Roberto Quiroz were the defending champions but only Quiroz chose to defend his title, partnering Yannick Hanfmann. Quiroz lost in the first round to Luis David Mart\u00ednez and Felipe Meligeni Alves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288209-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Ciudad de Guayaquil \u2013 Doubles\nAriel Behar and Gonzalo Escobar won the title after defeating Pedro Sakamoto and Thiago Seyboth Wild 7\u20136(7\u20134), 7\u20136(7\u20135) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288210-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Ciudad de Guayaquil \u2013 Singles\nGuido Andreozzi was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288210-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Ciudad de Guayaquil \u2013 Singles\nThiago Seyboth Wild won the title after defeating Hugo Dellien 6\u20134, 6\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288211-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Eckental\nThe 2019 Challenger Eckental was a professional tennis tournament played on carpet courts. It was the 23rd edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Eckental, Germany between 28 October and 3 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288211-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Eckental, 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-00288211-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Eckental, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288212-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Eckental \u2013 Doubles\nKevin Krawietz and Andreas Mies were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288212-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Eckental \u2013 Doubles\nKen Skupski and John-Patrick Smith won the title after defeating Sander Arends and Roman Jebav\u00fd 7\u20136(7\u20132), 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288213-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Eckental \u2013 Singles\nAntoine Hoang was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288213-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger Eckental \u2013 Singles\nJi\u0159\u00ed Vesel\u00fd won the title after defeating Steve Darcis 6\u20134, 4\u20136, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288214-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger La Manche\nThe 2019 Challenger La Manche was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 26th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Cherbourg, France between 11 and 17 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288214-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger La Manche, 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-00288214-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger La Manche, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as alternates:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 69], "content_span": [70, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288214-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger La Manche, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 69], "content_span": [70, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288215-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger La Manche \u2013 Doubles\nRomain Arneodo and Tristan-Samuel Weissborn were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288215-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger La Manche \u2013 Doubles\nRobert Galloway and Nathaniel Lammons won the title after defeating Javier Barranco Cosano and Ra\u00fal Brancaccio 4\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20134), [10\u20138] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288216-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger La Manche \u2013 Singles\nMaximilian Marterer was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288216-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger La Manche \u2013 Singles\nUgo Humbert won the title after defeating Steve Darcis 6\u20137(6\u20138), 6\u20133, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288217-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger de Buenos Aires\nThe 2019 Challenger de Buenos Aires was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the ninth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Buenos Aires, Argentina between 23 and 29 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288217-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger de Buenos Aires, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288217-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger de Buenos Aires, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288218-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger de Buenos Aires \u2013 Doubles\nGuido Andreozzi and Guillermo Dur\u00e1n were the defending champions but only Andreozzi chose to defend his title, partnering Andr\u00e9s Molteni. Andreozzi successfully defended his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288218-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger de Buenos Aires \u2013 Doubles\nAndreozzi and Molteni won the title after defeating Hugo Dellien and Federico Zeballos 6\u20137(3\u20137), 6\u20132, [10\u20131] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288219-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger de Buenos Aires \u2013 Singles\nPablo And\u00fajar was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288219-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Challenger de Buenos Aires \u2013 Singles\nSumit Nagal won the title after defeating Facundo Bagnis 6\u20134, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288220-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Champion Hurdle\nThe 2019 Champion Hurdle was a horse race held at Cheltenham Racecourse on Tuesday 12 March 2019. It was the 89th running of the Champion Hurdle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288220-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Champion Hurdle\nThe race was won by 16/1 chance Espoir d'Allen, ridden by Mark Walsh and trained by Gavin Cromwell. Two-time winner Buveur d'Air fell at the third hurdle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288221-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Champion of Champions\nThe 2019 Champion of Champions (also known as the 2019 ManBetX Champion of Champions for the purposes of sponsorship) was a professional snooker tournament that took place between 4 and 10 November 2019 at the Ricoh Arena in Coventry, England. It was the ninth Champion of Champions event, the first of which was held in 1978. The tournament featured 16 participants who had won World Snooker events throughout the prior snooker season. In 2019, the Women's World Champion competed at the tournament for the first time. As an invitational event, the Champion of Champions tournament carried no world ranking points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288221-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Champion of Champions\nRonnie O'Sullivan was the defending champion having defeated Kyren Wilson 10\u20139 in the final of the 2018 event. O'Sullivan lost 5\u20136 to Neil Robertson in the semi-finals. Robertson defeated reigning world champion Judd Trump 10\u20139 in the final to win the championship, having required foul shots in the penultimate frame to avoid losing the match. There were 20 century breaks during the tournament, eight of which were made in the final. Mark Allen compiled the highest break of the tournament, a 140, in his semi-final loss to Trump. The tournament's total prize fund was \u00a3440,000, the winner receiving \u00a3150,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288221-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Champion of Champions, Format\nThe Champion of Champions is an invitational snooker tournament, first held in 1978, and annually since 2013. As an invitational event, it does not carry any world ranking points. The 2019 Champion of Champions took place from 4\u00a0to 10 November 2019 at the Ricoh Arena in Coventry, England. It featured 16\u00a0winners of events from the previous 12\u00a0months on the World Snooker Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288221-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Champion of Champions, Format\nThe World Women's Snooker Championship and the World Seniors Championship were added to the list of eligible events for 2019, the winners of these two championships being allowed to participate in the Champion of Champions for the first and second time, respectively, (Steve Davis as reigning World Seniors Champion qualified for the 2014 Champion of Champions). The tournament was organised by Matchroom Sport, broadcast on ITV4 and sponsored by sports betting company ManbetX.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288221-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Champion of Champions, Format\nThe 16 qualifiers were split into four groups of four players; each group competed on a different day, with the group finals (event quarter-finals) played on the same day as the corresponding first-round matches. The two semi-finals were played on separate days \u2013 8\u00a0and 9 November \u2013 with the final on 10 November. The length of the matches varied throughout the competition, those in the opening round being best-of-7 frames, group finals and semi-finals best-of-11 frames, and the two-session final played as a best-of-19-frames match. Ronnie O'Sullivan automatically qualified for the event as reigning champion, having defeated Kyren Wilson in the 2018 Champion of Champions final 10\u20139.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288221-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Champion of Champions, Format, Prize fund\nThe event featured a prize fund of |\u00a3440,000, an increase of \u00a370,000 over the 2018 Champion of Champions tournament. The winner's prize money was increased from the previous year by \u00a350,000, to \u00a3150,000. The breakdown of prize money for the 2019 event was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288221-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Champion of Champions, Format, Qualification\nQualification for the 2019 Champion of Champions event was determined by the winners of 26 tournaments over a one-year period, from the 2018 Champion of Champions to the 2019 World Open, thereby including tournaments from both the 2018\u201319 and 2019\u201320 snooker seasons. The tournaments were placed into six groups dependent on the size of the event, with the previous year's Champion of Champions and the Triple Crown events listed in the first group, and tournaments in the same group were listed chronologically. The winners of the first 16 tournaments on the list were guaranteed a place in the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288221-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Champion of Champions, Format, Qualification\nIn the event of any of these players meeting multiple qualification criteria, the winners of subsequent tournaments on the list (in the order shown below) would be offered a place in the Champion of Champions. Judd Trump qualified for the event by winning six of the first 16 tournaments, the most won by any player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288221-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Champion of Champions, Summary\nThe event featured 16 participants, split into four groups of four players. There were eight seeded players, based on the world snooker rankings, and each of the top four seeds was placed into a separate group. As defending champion, Ronnie O'Sullivan was seeded first, world champion Judd Trump second, Mark Selby third and Neil Robertson fourth. Each group was played over the course of a single day as single-elimination, rather than a round-robin competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288221-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Champion of Champions, Summary, Group stages\nThe championship began on 4 November 2019, with players from group four competing in the first round. The opening match was between Neil Robertson and 2019 Championship League winner Martin Gould. Robertson defeated Gould 4\u20130, the highest break of the match being just 67. In the other group four match, 2019 China Championship winner Shaun Murphy played Reanne Evans, the 2019 World Women's Snooker champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288221-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Champion of Champions, Summary, Group stages\nSpeaking to the press before the match, Evans reflected that whilst it was an honour to play in the competition despite not being on the World Snooker Tour, there was still a disparity between the men's and women's games. She also commented that the prize money for appearing at the event was double that of any she had received before, despite having won the women's world championship on 12 occasions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288221-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Champion of Champions, Summary, Group stages\nMurphy developed an early lead by winning the first three frames of the match, before Evans took the next three to force a deciding frame. She went in-off whilst playing a safety shot in the final frame, allowing Murphy to make a break of 130 and win the match 4\u20133. Murphy praised Evans afterwards, saying that he really hoped \"we see more of Reanne on the main event\". He also remarked later that the audience were supporting Evans and even his wife was \"reluctant to wish [him] good luck today\". Murphy and Robertson competed in the group four final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288221-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Champion of Champions, Summary, Group stages\nMurphy again took the first three frames of the match, before Robertson drew level at 3\u20133 after a break of 100 and two breaks of 90 plus. The two players shared the next four frames, both experiencing issues with the table running off, to tie the match at 5\u20135. Robertson took the deciding frame to win 6\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288221-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Champion of Champions, Summary, Group stages\nThe group three matches were played on 5 November, three-time world champion Mark Selby defeating first-time ranking event winner Yan Bingtao 4\u20130. The 2018 Scottish Open winner Mark Allen defeated the 2019 Indian Open winner Matthew Selt in the other group three first-round match. In the group three final, Allen recovered from 1\u20132 behind to defeat Selby 6\u20132. The group two matches, played on 6 November, featured a first-round encounter between the reigning world champion Judd Trump and the six-red and World Cup winner Stephen Maguire. Trump won the first two frames of the match, Maguire scoring just four points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288221-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Champion of Champions, Summary, Group stages\nTrump also took frames three and four, making three breaks of over 50, to win the match 4\u20130. The 2019 Snooker Shoot Out winner Thepchaiya Un-Nooh played Kyren Wilson in the other group two first-round match. Un-Nooh won three of the first four frames, with breaks of 63, 51 and 90, before Wilson made breaks of 102 and 98 to force a deciding frame. Un-Nooh won the match 4\u20133 to progress to the group two final, which was a rematch of the 2019 World Open final, held the previous week, between Trump and Un-Nooh. Trump won the first four frames of the match, scoring two centuries; Un-Nooh won frame five but Trump then pulled ahead to 5\u20131. After Un-Nooh replied with breaks of 61 and 66, Trump took the ninth frame to win the match 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288221-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Champion of Champions, Summary, Group stages\nThe group one matches took place on 7 November. World number three Ronnie O'Sullivan played 2019 World Seniors Championship winner Jimmy White in the first match. White took the first three frames, before O'Sullivan won the next two. During frame six, White suffered a kick at a crucial point where he could have won the match, allowing O'Sullivan to force a deciding frame, which he won. Two former world champions, John Higgins and Stuart Bingham, met in the other group one first-round match, which Higgins won 4\u20132. O'Sullivan defeated Higgins 6\u20133 in the group one final. O'Sullivan's average shot time during the match was just 13 seconds per shot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288221-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Champion of Champions, Summary, Knockout stages\nThe semi-finals were played as best-of-11-frames matches. The first semi-final was held on 8 November between Ronnie O'Sullivan and Neil Robertson. The pair had met in the finals of two events in the 2019 Coral Cup series\u2014the Tour Championship and the Players Championship\u2014with O'Sullivan winning on both occasions. The match was even throughout, with no more than one frame separating the two players. Robertson compiled a break of 108 in frame five to open up a 3\u20132 lead, O'Sullivan winning three of the next four frames to lead 5\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288221-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Champion of Champions, Summary, Knockout stages\nRobertson won frame 10 with a break of 135, the highest of the tournament at that point, to force a deciding frame. O'Sullivan gained the first chance of the final frame, but miscued whilst playing the black ball, allowing Robertson to make a break of 90 to win the match 6\u20135. Robertson later commented that the match was \"definitely one of the best matches [he had] been involved in\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288221-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Champion of Champions, Summary, Knockout stages\nMark Allen and Judd Trump met in the second semi-final on 9 November. Trump won the first three frames of the match, but Allen took the next four, including the tournament's highest break of 140, to lead 4\u20133. Trump made a break of 86 to tie the match, and then clinched frame nine after a fluke when potting a red ball. With a break of 98 in frame 10, Trump won the match 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288221-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Champion of Champions, Summary, Knockout stages\nThe final between Trump and Robertson was played as a best-of-19-frames match over two sessions on 10 November. The referee for the final was Desislava Bozhilova. Robertson won the first two frames of the match, including a break of 112 in the second frame, and took an early 3\u20131 lead. Trump then made three consecutive centuries in frames five to seven, totalling 367 points without reply, to go ahead 4\u20133. Breaks of 96 and 111 gave Robertson the next two frames to retake the lead at 5\u20134 between the two sessions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288221-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Champion of Champions, Summary, Knockout stages\nTrump took the first frame of the second session, but Robertson replied with a break of 104. Trump won the next two frames to go ahead 7\u20136, and retained the lead until Robertson made a break of 135 in the 16th frame to tie the match at 8\u20138. Trump required foul shots from his opponent to win frame 17, and went ahead once again. Robertson needed a snooker in frame 18 to avoid losing the match; he succeeded and forced a re-spotted black, which he potted to draw level at 9\u20139.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288221-0014-0001", "contents": "2019 Champion of Champions, Summary, Knockout stages\nHe then made a break of 137 in the deciding frame to win the match 10\u20139. This was Robertson's second Champion of Champions victory, having won the event in 2015. He later commented: \"I can't believe the pair of us playing a match like that. It's the best match I've ever been involved in\". With a total of eight century breaks (five of which were compiled by Robertson), the final included a record number of centuries for a best-of-19-frames match. There were 784,000 viewers on ITV4 across the two sessions of the final. This was the second-highest non-terrestrial viewing figure in the United Kingdom for the day, behind a Premier League football match between Liverpool F.C. and Manchester City F.C. on Sky Sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288221-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Champion of Champions, Main draw\nBelow is the main draw for the event. Numbers in brackets show the four seeded players. Players in bold denote match winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288221-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Champion of Champions, Century breaks\nA series of 20 century breaks were made during the competition. Mark Allen made the highest break of the tournament, a 140 in frame five in his semi-final match against Judd Trump.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288222-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Champions Cup (curling)\nThe 2019 Humpty's Champions Cup was held from April 23 to 28 at the Merlis Belsher Place in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. It was the eighth and final Grand Slam event of the 2018\u201319 curling season. In the men's final, Brendan Bottcher defeated Kevin Koe 6\u20135 to win his 3rd career Grand Slam. In the women's final, Silvana Tirinzoni defeated Kerri Einarson 6\u20133 to win her 2nd career Slam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288222-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Champions Cup (curling), No tick zone\nThe 2019 Champions Cup tested a new rule, where tick shots were disallowed in the 8th and extra ends. Any rock that touches the centre line in those ends was not allowed to be moved by an opposing rock until after the fifth rock of the end had been played. This rule had previously been used in the defunct Elite 10 Grand Slam event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288222-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Champions Cup (curling), Qualification\nThe champions of thirteen Grand Slam, national or regional championships, and world championship events are invited to the Champions Cup. The champions of two World Curling Tour events, based on the strength of field, are also invited. If a team qualifies from more than one event or declines the invitation, champions of World Curling Tour events with the highest strength of field are invited until the field of 15 teams is completed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288222-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Champions Cup (curling), Men, Round robin results\nAll draw times are listed in Central Standard Time (UTC\u22126).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288222-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Champions Cup (curling), Women, Round robin results\nAll draw times are listed in Central Standard Time (UTC\u22126).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288223-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Champions Indoor Football season\nThe 2019 Champions Indoor Football season was the fifth season of the CIF. The regular season began on March 23 when the Salina Liberty traveled to the Amarillo Venom. The regular season concluded on June 22. Two teams per conference advanced to the Champions Bowl playoffs, with the top seed in each conference hosting their conference's second seed in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288223-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Champions Indoor Football season, League changes\nDuring the 2018 season, it was announced that after a change in ownership, the West Michigan Ironmen would return to the CIF after playing a season in the semi-professional Midwest Professional Indoor Football. The league also added an expansion team called the Oklahoma Flying Aces in Enid, Oklahoma. During the offseason, the CIF lost the Bismarck Bucks and Quad City Steamwheelers to the IFL. When the 2019 schedule was released, both the West Michigan Ironmen and the Kansas City Phantoms had been removed as members. On May 9, the Texas Revolution folded during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288224-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Champions League of Darts\nThe 2019 Paddy Power Champions League of Darts was the 4th annual staging of the Champions League of Darts, organised by the Professional Darts Corporation. It took place from 19\u201320 October 2019 at the Morningside Arena, Leicester.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288224-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Champions League of Darts\nThe defending champion was Gary Anderson who beat Peter Wright 11\u20134 in the 2018 final, but he was eliminated in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288224-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Champions League of Darts\nMichael van Gerwen won the Champions League for the first time, beating Peter Wright 11\u201310 in the final, surviving three match darts at 7\u201310, and by winning that title, van Gerwen became the second player to win every PDC premier event title at least once, after Phil Taylor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288224-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Champions League of Darts, Format\nThe eight qualifiers are split into two groups, playing each other once in a best of 19 legs match. The top two of each group then proceed to the semi-finals. Both semi-finals and the final are a best of 21 legs match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288224-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Champions League of Darts, Qualifiers\nThe top 7 players on the PDC Order of Merit following the 2019 World Matchplay qualified. Reigning champion Gary Anderson was given a guaranteed place in the tournament, as he was the defending champion. As Anderson was in the top seven, the eighth ranked player also qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288224-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Champions League of Darts, Results, Group Stage\nNB: P = Played; W = Won; L = Lost; LF = Legs For; LA = Legs Against; +/\u2212 = Plus/Minus Record, in relation to legs; Avg = Three-Dart average in group matches; Pts\u00a0=\u00a0Group\u00a0Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288225-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Championship League\nThe 2019 Championship League was a professional non-ranking snooker tournament, taking place from 1 January to 14 March 2019 at the Ricoh Arena in Coventry (Group 1\u20136) and at the Barnsley Metrodome in Barnsley (Group 7 and the Winners' Group), both in England. It was the 12th staging of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288225-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Championship League\nDavid Gilbert made the historic 147th maximum break in his group 5 round robin match against Stephen Maguire. It was Gilbert's second professional maximum break (he achieved his first in the 2015 Championship League), and it was the sixth consecutive year that a maximum was made in the Championship League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288225-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Championship League\nDuring the round robin matches, Neil Robertson recorded his 600th career century in Group 1, and Ding Junhui his 500th in Group 7. And during the Winners' Group round robin matches, John Higgins made his 750th career century break, and Judd Trump also recorded his 600th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288225-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Championship League\nJohn Higgins was a two-time defending champion, having retained his 2017 title with a 3\u20132 victory against Zhou Yuelong in the 2018 final. However, Higgins lost 3\u20130 to Martin Gould in the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288225-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Championship League\nMartin Gould went on to win his second Championship League title, beating Jack Lisowski 3\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288225-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Championship League, Tournament Format\nThe Championship League event sees 25 professionals (including substitutes; 28 players in 2019) take part, with players earning prize money for every frame won. Matches are best of 5 frames, and the league is played from January to March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288225-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Championship League, Tournament Format\nThe competition runs over eight groups, each consisting of seven players. From each group the top four qualify for a play-off, and the winners of the first seven play-offs qualify for the winners group. The bottom two players of each group are eliminated and the remaining four move to the next group, where they are joined by three more players until the seventh group. The winners play in the final group, and the winner of the Winners' Group play-off takes the title and a place at the 2019 Champion of Champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288225-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Championship League, Tournament Format, Prize fund\nThe breakdown of prize money for the 2019 Championship League is shown below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288225-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Championship League, Group 1\nGroup 1 was played on 1 and 2 January 2019. Neil Robertson was the first player to qualify for the Winners' Group, recording his 600th career century in the round-robin match against Anthony Hamilton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288225-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Championship League, Group 2\nGroup 2 was played on 3 and 4 January 2019. Jack Lisowski was the second player to qualify for the Winners' Group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288225-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Championship League, Group 3\nGroup 3 was played on 7 and 8 January 2019. Judd Trump was the third player to qualify for the Winners' Group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288225-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Championship League, Group 4\nGroup 4 was played on 9 and 10 January 2019. Stuart Bingham was the fourth player to qualify for the Winners' Group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288225-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Championship League, Group 5\nGroup 5 was played on 21 and 22 January 2019. Mark Selby was the fifth player to qualify for the Winners' Group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288225-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Championship League, Group 5, Matches\nDue to illness, Luca Brecel withdrew from the tournament prior to group 5 play. He was replaced in the group by David Gilbert.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288225-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Championship League, Group 6\nGroup 6 was played on 23 and 24 January 2019. Martin Gould was the sixth player to qualify for the Winners' Group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288225-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Championship League, Group 7\nGroup 7 was played on 11 and 12 March 2019. John Higgins was the seventh and final player to qualify for the Winners' Group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288225-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Championship League, Group 7, Matches\nDavid Gilbert and Barry Hawkins withdrew from the tournament prior to group 7 play. They were replaced by Tom Ford and Noppon Saengkham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288225-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Championship League, Winners' Group\nThe Winners' Group was played on 13 and 14 March 2019. Martin Gould won his second Championship League title, beating Jack Lisowski 3\u20131 in the final. During the round robin matches, John Higgins made his 750th career century break. On the second day, Judd Trump made his 600th career century in his match against Martin Gould.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288225-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Championship League, Winnings\nGreen: won the group. Bold: highest break in the group. All prize money in GBP. Parenthesis: World rankings prior to tournament start, 1 January 2019. Notes(1) Due to illness, Luca Brecel withdrew from the tournament prior to Group 5 play. (2) Barry Hawkins and David Gilbert withdrew from the tournament prior to Group 7 play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288226-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Changan Ford International Curling Elite\nThe 2019 Changan Ford International Curling Elite was held from December 5 to 10 in Xining, Qinghai, China. The total purse for the event was CNY 225,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288226-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Changan Ford International Curling Elite\nIn the men's final, Team Ruohonen from the United States defeated Team van Dorp from the Netherlands 5-4. Team Kim from Korea won the bronze medal with a 7-3 win over Canada's Team Horgan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288226-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Changan Ford International Curling Elite\nIn the women's final, Team Kovaleva from Russia beat Team Kim from Korea 6-4. Switzerland's Team Feltscher won the bronze medal game 7-5 against the 2019 Pacific-Asia Curling Championships winner Team Han from China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288226-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Changan Ford International Curling Elite, Men, Round Robin Results\nAll draw times are listed in China Standard Time (UTC+08:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288226-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Changan Ford International Curling Elite, Women, Round Robin Results\nAll draw times are listed in China Standard Time (UTC+08:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 73], "content_span": [74, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288227-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Changsha Open\nThe 2019 Changsha Open was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Changsha, China between 2 and 8 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288227-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Changsha 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-00288228-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Changsha Open \u2013 Doubles\nJiang Xinyu and Tang Qianhui won the title, defeating Rutuja Bhosale and Erika Sema in the final, 6\u20133, 3\u20136, [11\u20139].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288229-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Changsha Open \u2013 Singles\nNina Stojanovi\u0107 won the title, defeating Aleksandrina Naydenova in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288230-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Charleston Battery season\nThe 2019 Charleston Battery season is the club's 27th year of existence, their 16th season in the second tier of the United States Soccer Pyramid. It is their ninth season in the United Soccer League Championship as part of the Eastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288230-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Charleston Battery season, 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288230-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Charleston Battery season, Competitions, Regular season\nOn December 19, 2018, the USL announced their 2019 season schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288230-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Charleston Battery season, Competitions, U.S. Open Cup\nAs a member of the USL Championship, the Battery will enter the tournament in the Second Round, to be played May 14\u201315, 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288231-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Charleston Southern Buccaneers football team\nThe 2019 Charleston Southern Buccaneers football team represented Charleston Southern University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by first-year head coach Autry Denson and played their home games at Buccaneer Field. They were members of the Big South Conference. They finished the season 6\u20136, 4\u20132 in Big South play to finish in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288231-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Charleston Southern Buccaneers football team, Previous season\nThe Buccaneers finished the 2018 season 5\u20136, 3\u20132 in Big South play to finish in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288231-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Charleston Southern Buccaneers football team, Preseason, Big South poll\nIn the Big South preseason poll released on July 21, 2019, the Buccaneers were predicted to finish in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 76], "content_span": [77, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288231-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Charleston Southern Buccaneers football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013Big South team\nThe Buccaneers had three players selected to the preseason all-Big South team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 90], "content_span": [91, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team\nThe 2019 Charlotte 49ers football team represented the University of North Carolina at Charlotte in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The 49ers played their home games at Jerry Richardson Stadium in Charlotte, NC, and competed in the East Division of Conference USA (C\u2013USA). They were led by first-year head coach Will Healy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Previous season\nThe 49ers finished the 2018 season 5\u20137, 4\u20134 in C-USA play to finish in fourth place in the East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Coaching staff\nFollowing the loss of the final home game of the 2018 season to FIU and elimination from bowl game contention, first-year athletic director Mike Hill released head coach Brad Lambert from his contract. Lambert finished the season and his Charlotte 49ers career with a road victory against FAU the following Saturday. On December 5, 2018 Austin Peay third-year head coach Will Healy was introduced as the Charlotte 49ers second head football coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Coaching staff\nOn December 21 Austin Peay's Defensive Coordinator Brandon Cooper was named Co-Defensive Coordinator and safeties coach. Also coming over on the same date from Austin Peay was Max Thurmond who would take over the same positions of special teams coordinator and linebackers coach. Virginia State offensive coordinator Mark Carrey was named quarterbacks coach. Southern Miss cornerbacks coach Eddie Hicks would take the same position on Healy's new staff. Carter Crutchfield would also follow Healy from Austin Peay to continue as his recruiting coordinator and director of operations. Rounding out the first round of staff hires would be Chris Laskowski, who maintained the same position he had under Healy at Austin Peay of strength and conditioning coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 807]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Coaching staff\nOn December 23 Tulane assistant head coach, offensive coordinator and offensive line coach Alex Atkins was named offensive coordinator and offensive line coach. On January 8, 2019 Minnesota Defensive line coach Marcus West was reported as taking the same position with the 49ers and also joining Cooper as Co-defensive coordinators. In addition Healy named West, who had previously been on Healy's staff at Austin Peay, to Assistant Head Coach. On the same date Troy Runningbacks coach Sean Dawkins was named Runningbacks coach and Run game coordinator.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Coaching staff\nOn January 28, Western Kentucky Runningbacks coach Montario Hardesty joined the staff to coach Wide Receivers. On February 21 Clemson graduate assistant Zachary Alley joined the staff to coach Nicklebacks. On March 1 Oregon graduate assistant Cody Woodiel was hired to coach Tight Ends, completing Healy's first coaching staff at Charlotte.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Coaching staff\nAlley would depart from the staff shortly after his hire to join the Boise State staff as Inside Linebackers coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Coaching staff\nOn June 24 Asheville\u2019s Christ School\u2019s head football coach Tommy Langford accepted the Nicklebacks assistant coaching position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Recruiting, Recruiting class\nThe following recruits have signed letters of intent or verbally committed to the Charlotte 49ers football program for the 2019 recruiting year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Awards and honors, Postseason\nOffense:QB \u2013 Chris Reynolds, R- So. \u2022 WR \u2013 Victor Tucker, R-So.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 65], "content_span": [66, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Awards and honors, Postseason\nDefense:DE \u2013 Markees Watts, So. \u2022 LB \u2013 Jeff Gemmell, R-Sr. \u2022 DB \u2013 Nafees Lyon, R-Sr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 65], "content_span": [66, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Awards and honors, Postseason\nParticipants:RB - Benny LeMay (Shrine Game MVP) \u2022OL - Cameron Clark \u2022DE - Alex Highsmith", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 65], "content_span": [66, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Television\nCharlotte 49ers home games and conference road games will be broadcast through Conference USA's television partners ESPN, CBS Sports, Stadium, NFL Network, and Facebook Watch. Additional games will be available locally in the Charlotte TV market on WCCB.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Radio\nRadio coverage for all games is broadcast by IMG College through the Charlotte 49ers Radio Network flagship station WZGV ESPN Radio 730 AM The Game, and the TuneIn Charlotte 49ers IMG Sports Network app. The radio announcers are \"Voice of the 49ers\" Matt Swierad with play-by-play alongside NFL veteran Al Wallace providing color commentary and Bobby Rosinski and Walker Mehl with sideline reports. Swierad also hosts the \"Niners Live\" Coaches Show each Monday during the season at 7:00 pm from Cabarrus Brewing Company.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Preseason media poll\nConference USA released their preseason media poll on July 16, 2019, with the 49ers predicted to finish in last place in the East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Gardner\u2013Webb Runnin' Bulldogs\nHealy made his debut as head coach of the 49ers on August 29 against another former Austin Peay head coach in Gardner\u2013Webb's Carroll McCray. The 49ers recorded a 49-28 victory in Will Healy's first game as their head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 81], "content_span": [82, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Gardner\u2013Webb Runnin' Bulldogs\nTop performers included Charlotte quarterback Chris Reynolds who passed for 136 yards, a touchdown, and an interception. Charlotte's Benny LeMay had 16 carries for 120 yards and 2 touchdowns. Charlotte's Cameron Dollar had 5 receptions for 58 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 81], "content_span": [82, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Appalachian State Mountaineers\nThis was the 49ers' first visit to Boone, NC. After not scoring a touchdown in the previous matchup between these squads the 49ers would manage to keep the game within a two-score margin for the entire high-scoring contest. Charlotte would manage to control the clock and have the overall yardage lead but could never crack Appalachian States' score lead throughout the game", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 82], "content_span": [83, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Appalachian State Mountaineers\nTop performers included Charlotte quarterback Chris Reynolds who passed for 296 yards, 4 touchdowns, and an interception. App. St.'s Darrynton Evans had 19 carries for 234 yards and 3 touchdowns. Appalachian's Jalen Virgil had 3 receptions for 86 yards and 2 touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 82], "content_span": [83, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Massachusetts Minutemen\nCharlotte gained some revenge for last year's first quarter four touchdown lapse when they scored three touchdowns unanswered in the first quarter and a fourth early in the second. Charlotte would dominate the rest of the game in similar fashion to gain the program's first home out of conference FBS victory, and only the second FBS out of conference win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Massachusetts Minutemen\nTop performances were dominated by Charlotte and included quarterback Chris Reynolds who passed for 155 yards and 2 touchdowns. Running back Benny LeMay had 16 carries for 113 yards. Receiver Tyler Ringwood had 2 receptions for 46 yards and 2 touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #1 Clemson Tigers\nCharlotte visited \"Death Valley\" for the first time to meet the defending National Champions. The Tigers went up early and never looked back, cruising to a 52 to 10 home victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #1 Clemson Tigers\nTop performances were dominated by Clemson and included quarterback Trevor Lawrence who passed for 94 yards and 2 touchdowns. Running back Travis Etienne had 11 carries for 61 yards and a touchdown. Receiver Joe Ngata had 3 receptions for 62 yards and a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Florida Atlantic Owls\nCharlotte and Florida Atlantic both opened conference play in a rematch of the previous season finale. Florida Atlantic would get revenge for losing a chance at a bowl game the previous season by holding off two Niners rally attempts and stretching the lead out in the second half to comfortably win the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Florida Atlantic Owls\nTop performers included FAU quarterback Chris Robison who passed for 312 yards, 2 touchdowns, and an interception. Florida Atlantic's Malcolm Davidson had 13 carries for 83 yards and 2 touchdowns. Charlotte's Victor Tucker had 6 receptions for 115 yards and a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, FIU Panthers\nCharlotte would lose control of the game early in the second quarter. Florida International broke the game open with 21 points to finish the half and followed up in the third quarter with two more touchdowns to put the game well out of the 49ers' reach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, FIU Panthers\nTop performers included FIU quarterback James Morgan who passed for 160 yards and 2 touchdowns. The Panthers' Anthony Jones had 16 carries for 117 yards and 3 touchdowns. Charlotte's Benny LeMay had 4 receptions for 90 yards and a touchdown to add to his rushing stats of 21 carries for 144 yards and an additional touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, WKU Hilltoppers\nThe Hilltoppers would be Charlotte's third homecoming game in a row and their fourth straight loss. Though the game was competitive in the first half Charlotte couldn't find the endzones or the uprights in the second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, WKU Hilltoppers\nTop performances were dominated by the Hilltoppers. Quarterback Ty Storey threw for 283 yards and two touchdowns. Rusher Geaj Walker had 21 carries for 70 yards. Receiver Lucky Jackson had five receptions for 141 yards and a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, North Texas Mean Green\nIn this first ever meeting of conference foes the Mean Green took an early lead and held it throughout the game; but an offensive flurry for the 49ers in the fourth quarter, combined with the defense shutting down North Texas's high power offense in the same time period, resulted in the Niners gaining their first conference victory of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, North Texas Mean Green\nTop performers of the game included North Texas's Mason Fine, who threw for 394 yards and 5 touchdowns. Charlotte's Benny LeMay rushed for 155 yards on 30 carries for 2 touchdowns. The Mean Green's Jyaire Shorter had 3 receptions for 111 yards and 3 touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders\nMiddle Tennessee would get the first points, but Charlotte's defense wouldn't let them score again until the fourth quarter. By then it was too late, as the 49ers had a steady stream of scores in the first quarter and stretched the lead out enough to make the late Blue Raiders' rally fall far short.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 81], "content_span": [82, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders\nCharlotte dominated the top performances with Chris Reynolds throwing for 192 yards and a touchdown while also adding a rushing touchdown behind 103 yards on the ground. Charlotte's Aaron McAllister would step in for the injured Benny LeMay with 24 carriers for 104 yards and 2 touchdowns. Charlotte's Cameron Dollar had 3 receptions for 80 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 81], "content_span": [82, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, UTEP Miners\nThe Miners, looking for their first FBS and conference win of the season, would strike quickly by going up two touchdowns in the first quarter and taking a two score lead into the half. The 49ers would reverse the action in the second half, holding the Miners scoreless while coming from behind to take their first road victory of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 63], "content_span": [64, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, UTEP Miners\nChris Reynolds would have another outstanding performance, setting a new FBS school single game record with 354 passing yards which resulted in 2 touchdowns and an interception. With Benny LeMay still injured Reynolds would also add 18 carries for 91 yards on the ground to be the 49ers' top rusher. The Miners' QB Kai Locksley would be their top rusher today as well, having 15 carries for 84 yards and a touchdown. Charlotte's Cameron Dollar would grab 9 receptions for 157 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 63], "content_span": [64, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Marshall Thundering Herd\nIn a heavy rain the Thundering Herd, looking to secure home field for the C-USA Championship, would take an early lead; but the 49ers' defense would keep Marshall's offense from reaching the end zone for the entire game. Behind Quarterback Chris Reynolds the 49ers would stage a second half comeback victory to secure the program's first winning season and first bowl game qualification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 76], "content_span": [77, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Marshall Thundering Herd\nThe 49ers' Chris Reynolds would dominate the passing and rushing stats in the game, getting a touchdown by both methods. He passed for 166 yards, a touchdown, and 2 interceptions. He rushed for 145 yards on 25 carries and another touchdown. Charlotte's Victor Tucker would make 5 receptions for 121 yards and a touchdown, plus rush for another touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 76], "content_span": [77, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Old Dominion Monarchs (Khedive Shriners Oyster Bowl)\nCharlotte would come into Norfolk looking to secure their first winning season in program history and a spot in a bowl game. Charlotte would cruise to a relatively easy win over the struggling Monarchs and prepare for their first ever game past the month of November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 104], "content_span": [105, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Old Dominion Monarchs (Khedive Shriners Oyster Bowl)\nCharlotte dominated the top performances of the game with Chris Reynolds passing for 166 yards, two touchdowns and an interception. Benny LeMay would rush on 18 carries for 105 yards and two touchdowns. Victor Tucker had 3 receptions for 118 yards and a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 104], "content_span": [105, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Buffalo Bulls (Makers Wanted Bahamas Bowl)\nHigh winds encouraged both teams to keep things on the ground early but it was the Bulls that were able to score first and most often behind their powerful dual threat running game. The 49ers would have two costly drive stalling first half penalties and two costly turnovers at key moments of the game. The 49ers would finally score in the second half, but the game was out of reach as the Bulls took home their first bowl trophy in their fourth bowl appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 94], "content_span": [95, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288232-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Buffalo Bulls (Makers Wanted Bahamas Bowl)\nTop performers of the game included Charlotte quarterback Chris Reynolds, who threw for 198 yards with a touchdown and an interception. Buffalo rusher Jaret Patterson would have 32 carries for 173 yards and 2 touchdowns. Bulls' receiver Antonio Nunn had 5 receptions for 53 yards and a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 94], "content_span": [95, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288233-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte Independence season\nThe 2019 Charlotte Independence season was the club's fifth season of existence, and their fifth in the USL Championship, the second tier of American soccer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288233-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte Independence season, Competitions, USL Championship, Matches\nThe 2019 USL Championship season schedule for the club was announced on December 19, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288233-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte Independence season, Competitions, U.S. Open Cup\nAs a member of the USL Championship, the Independence entered the tournament in the Second Round, played May 14\u201315, 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 63], "content_span": [64, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288234-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlotte mayoral election\nThe 2019 mayoral election in Charlotte, North Carolina, was held on Tuesday, November 5, 2019. A primary was held on September 10, 2019. A primary runoff, if needed, would have been October 8, 2019, but one was not needed because incumbent Mayor Vi Lyles handily won the Democratic primary. The filing deadline for this election was July 19, 2019.the Mayor Lyles, first elected for a two-year term in 2017, was eligible to seek re-election. She was re-elected in a landslide over Republican David Rice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288235-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlottesville Men's Pro Challenger\nThe 2019 Charlottesville Men's Pro Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the eleventh edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour, taking place in Charlottesville, United States from October 28 to November 3, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288235-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288235-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlottesville Men's Pro Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as alternates:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 85], "content_span": [86, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288236-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlottesville Men's Pro Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nHarri Heli\u00f6vaara and Henri Laaksonen were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288236-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlottesville Men's Pro Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nMitchell Krueger and Bla\u017e Rola won the title after defeating Sekou Bangoura and Bla\u017e Kav\u010di\u010d 6\u20134, 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288237-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlottesville Men's Pro Challenger \u2013 Singles\nTommy Paul was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288237-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Charlottesville Men's Pro Challenger \u2013 Singles\nVasek Pospisil won the title after defeating Brayden Schnur 7\u20136(7\u20132), 3\u20136, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288238-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Charnwood Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Charnwood Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of the Charnwood Borough Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288239-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chatham Cup\nThe 2019 Chatham Cup (known as the ISPS Handa Chatham Cup for sponsorship reasons) is New Zealand's 92nd annual knockout football competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288239-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chatham Cup\nThe 2019 competition will have a preliminary round and four rounds proper before quarter-finals, semi-finals, and a final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288239-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chatham Cup, Results, Preliminary round\nMatches were played on Saturday 20 April, Monday 22 April and Anzac Day, Thursday 25 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 44], "content_span": [45, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288239-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Chatham Cup, Results, Preliminary round\nAll teams listed below received byes to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 44], "content_span": [45, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288239-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Chatham Cup, Results, Round 1\nRound 1 matches took place between 10 and 12 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 34], "content_span": [35, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288239-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Chatham Cup, Results, Round 1\nAll teams listed below received byes to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 34], "content_span": [35, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288239-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Chatham Cup, Results, Round 2\nAll matches were be played on Queen's Birthday weekend 31 May-3 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 34], "content_span": [35, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288239-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Chatham Cup, Results, Round 2\n*The match between Mosgiel and West End was originally an on-field 5\u20130 win for Mosgiel but they were deemed to have fielded an ineligible player and the result was overturn to a 3\u20130 loss instead. West End progressed to round three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 34], "content_span": [35, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288239-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Chatham Cup, Results, Round 3\nAll matches were played on the weekend of 15\u201316 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 34], "content_span": [35, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288239-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Chatham Cup, Results, Round 4\nAll matches were played on the weekend of 6\u20137 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 34], "content_span": [35, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288239-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Chatham Cup, Results, Quarter-finals\nThe quarter-finals were played on the weekend of 3\u20134 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 41], "content_span": [42, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288239-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Chatham Cup, Results, Semi-finals\nThe semi-finals were played on the weekend of 24\u201325 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288240-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chattanooga Mocs football team\nThe 2019 Chattanooga Mocs football team represented the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season as a member of the Southern Conference (SoCon). The Mocs were led by first-year head coach Rusty Wright and played their home games at Finley Stadium in Chattanooga, Tennessee. They finished the season 6\u20136 overall and 5\u20133 in SoCon play to place third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288240-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chattanooga Mocs football team, Previous season\nThe Mocs finished the 2018 season 6\u20135, 4\u20134 in SoCon play to finish in a tie for fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288240-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chattanooga Mocs football team, Preseason, Preseason polls\nThe SoCon released their preseason media poll and coaches poll on July 22, 2019. The Mocs were picked to finish in fifth place by the media and in fourth by the coaches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288240-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Chattanooga Mocs football team, Preseason, Preseason All-SoCon Teams\nThe Mocs placed six players on the preseason all-SoCon teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288241-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chattanooga Red Wolves SC season\nThe 2019 season was Chattanooga Red Wolves SC's first of existence. They played in USL League One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288241-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chattanooga Red Wolves SC season, Background\nThe formation of USL League One was announced in April 2017, and league officials began touring the country looking for candidate cities for new soccer clubs, one of which was Chattanooga, Tennessee. In August 2018, Chattanooga was announced as an expansion team. On September 11, 2018, the club announced their first head coach, Tim Hankinson. The club then officially announced their name, Chattanooga Red Wolves SC, on September 25, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288242-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cheez-It Bowl\nThe 2019 Cheez-It Bowl was a college football bowl game played on December 27, 2019, with kickoff at 10:15\u00a0p.m. EST (8:15\u00a0p.m. local MST) on ESPN. It was the 31st edition of the game originally staged as the Copper Bowl, the second edition played under the sponsorship of Cheez-It, and one of the 2019\u201320 bowl games concluding the 2019 FBS football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288242-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cheez-It Bowl, Teams\nThe game matched the Air Force Falcons from the Mountain West Conference (MWC) and the Washington State Cougars from the Pac-12 Conference. This was the first meeting between the two programs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288242-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cheez-It Bowl, Teams, Air Force Falcons\nAir Force entered the game ranked 24th in the AP Poll, with a 10\u20132 record (7\u20131 in conference) and a seven-game winning streak. The Falcons finished in second place in the Mountain Division of Mountain West. This was Air Force's second Cheez-It Bowl; their 1995 team appeared in the then-Copper Bowl, losing to Texas Tech, 55\u201341.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288242-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cheez-It Bowl, Teams, Washington State Cougars\nWashington State entered the game at 6\u20136 (3\u20136 in conference). The Cougars tied for fifth place in the Pac-12's North Division. This was Washington State's second Cheez-It Bowl; their 1992 team won the then-Copper Bowl over Utah, 31\u201328.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288243-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chelmsford City Council election\nThe 2019 Chelmsford City Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Chelmsford City Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288243-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chelmsford City Council election, Results summary\nThe Liberal Democrats made their largest gains in the country in Chelmsford, gaining 26 seats. These 26 gains were all to the expense of the Conservatives who lost 31 seats during the elections here. The other 5 Conservative losses went to three independent and two South Woodham Ferrers Council Taxpayers Association candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288243-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chelmsford City Council election, By-elections, Marconi\nA by-election was held in Marconi ward on 7th November 2019 after the resignation of Cllr Catherine Finnecy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288243-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Chelmsford City Council election, By-elections, Moulsham Lodge\nA by-election was held following the resignation of Cllr. Mark Springett in March 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 67], "content_span": [68, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288243-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Chelmsford City Council election, By-elections, Writtle\nA by-election was held in Writtle ward on 1st July 2021 following the death of sitting Councillor Malcolm Watson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288244-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cheltenham Gold Cup\nThe 2019 Cheltenham Gold Cup (known as the Magners Gold Cup for sponsorship reasons) was the 91st annual running of the Cheltenham Gold Cup horse race and was held at Cheltenham Racecourse, Gloucestershire, England, on 15 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288244-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cheltenham Gold Cup\nThe race was won by Al Boum Photo, ridden by Paul Townend and trained by Willie Mullins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288244-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cheltenham Gold Cup\nInvitation Only ridden by Patrick Mullins suffered a fatal injury after a fall during the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288245-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cheltenham state by-election\nA by-election for the seat of Cheltenham in the South Australian House of Assembly was held on 9 February 2019. The by-election was triggered by the parliamentary resignation of Labor Party MP and former Premier Jay Weatherill on 17 December 2018. Labor candidate Joe Szakacs retained the seat with an increased margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288245-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cheltenham state by-election\nAn Enfield by-election was held on the same day, as Weatherill's former deputy leader and Deputy Premier, John Rau, had also resigned from parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288245-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cheltenham state by-election, Candidates\nThe Liberal Party declined to field a candidate for both the Cheltenham and Enfield by-elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288246-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chengdu Challenger\nThe 2019 Chengdu Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 4th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Chengdu, China between 29 July and 4 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288246-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chengdu 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-00288246-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chengdu Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288247-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chengdu Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nGong Maoxin and Zhang Ze were the defending champions but lost in the quarterfinals to Arjun Kadhe and Saketh Myneni.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288247-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chengdu Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nKadhe and Myneni won the title after defeating Nam Ji-sung and Song Min-kyu 6\u20133, 0\u20136, [10\u20136] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288248-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chengdu Challenger \u2013 Singles\nZhang Ze was the defending champion but lost in the third round to Bai Yan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288248-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chengdu Challenger \u2013 Singles\nChung Hyeon won the title after defeating Y\u016bichi Sugita 6\u20134, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288249-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chengdu Hunters season\nThe 2019 Chengdu Hunters season was the first season of Chengdu Hunters's existence in the Overwatch League as one of eight expansion franchises added for the 2019 season. After posting three consecutive 3\u20134 records for the first three stages, the Hunters failed to qualify for any of the Stage Playoffs. A 4\u20133 record in Stage 4 gave Chengdu 13\u201315 record for the season and qualified them for the Play-In Tournament, where they were eliminated in the first round by the Guangzhou Charge by a 1\u20134 scoreline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288249-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chengdu Hunters season, Preceding offseason\nChengdu announced the entirety of their initial starting roster in late November, consisting of the following players:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288249-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chengdu Hunters season, Preceding offseason\nThe team also had signed Ted \"silkthread\" Wang, but silkthread retired from professional Overwatch on November 30. On January 16, Chengdu signed Wei \"jiqiren\" Yan-song.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288249-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Chengdu Hunters season, Regular season, Stage 1\nChengdu opened their 2019 season on February 15 with a victory over fellow Chinese expansion franchise Guangzhou Charge. After their second week of play, which resulted in a loss to Seoul Dynasty and a win over Florida Mayhem, it became apparent that Chengdu was generally not playing to the triple tank, triple support meta that the majority of the league was; instead, the team primarily featured a DPS-heavy composition. Chengdu would go on to lose three matches straight before defeating Atlanta Reign in their final match of Stage 1 to finish the stage with a 3\u20134 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288249-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Chengdu Hunters season, Regular season, Stage 2\nHunters began Stage 2 with a match against Paris Eternal on April 6. Sticking with their off-meta team composition strategy, Chengdu swept Paris 4\u20130. Chengdu defeated Washington Justice 3\u20131 a day later in a match that featured an Overwatch League record 27 out of the 30 possible heroes in the game. Despite the strong start, Chengdu went on a three-game losing streak before finding their next win against London Spitfire on April 28. Chengdu's final match of the stage was against Los Angeles Valiant. Hunters lost the match 2\u20133 to put them out of playoff contention and for the second stage in a row, finish the stage with a 3\u20134 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288249-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Chengdu Hunters season, Regular season, Stage 3\nThe Hunters opened Stage 3 on June 6 with a 1\u20133 loss to the Guangzhou Charge. Two days later, the team was swept 0\u20134 by the Los Angeles Valiant. Chengdu took on the Dallas Fuel a week later, looking to rebound from the previous two losses. The team kept Dallas guessing throughout the match and took a decisive 3\u20131 victory. The team's next match was on June 21, when they faced the undefeated Vancouver Titans. While Chengdu was able to take the first map of the match, they dropped the following three, leading to a 1\u20133 loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288249-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Chengdu Hunters season, Regular season, Stage 3\nThe Hunters rebounded two days later, when they swept the Dallas Fuel 4\u20130 in a rematch of the previous week. For the final week of the stage, Chengdu first took on the Stage 2 Champions San Francisco Shock on June 27. The match went to a fifth tiebreaker map, and the Hunters managed to pull out a 3\u20132 victory. Chengdu was unable to close out the stage with a winning record, however, as they fell 0\u20133 to the Seoul Dynasty three days later and ended the stage with another 3\u20134 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288249-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Chengdu Hunters season, Regular season, Stage 4\nA day prior to their first match of Stage 4, which would include the implementation of an enforced 2-2-2 role lock by the League, the Hunters brought in DPS prospect Xin \"leave\" Huang. The 17-year-old would not be eligible to officially sign with the Hunters until 2020 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288249-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Chengdu Hunters season, Regular season, Stage 4\nThe team's first match of the stage was against the Philadelphia Fusion on July 26. The match went the distance, needing a fifth map to determine the winner; Chengdu was able to take map five to win 3\u20132. Two days later, the team faced the Boston Uprising. The match also went the distance, and with game MVP performance from support Xianyao \"Yveltal\" Li on Mercy, Chengdu took another 3\u20132 win. The following week, the Hunters faced the Los Angeles Gladiators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288249-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Chengdu Hunters season, Regular season, Stage 4\nFor the third match in a row, the game went to a fifth tiebreaker map; this time, Chengdu was unable to pull out the win and lost the match 2\u20133. The team came back in full force two days later with a match against the Atlantic Champions New York Excelsior. DPS Yi \"Jinmu\" Hu on Pharah gave New York troubles throughout the series; that, along with Chengdu's ability to dive NYXL's Jeong \"Nenne\" Yeon-kwan on Widowmaker, proved to be too much for the Excelsior to handle, as handed New York their first 4\u20130 sweep in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288249-0007-0002", "contents": "2019 Chengdu Hunters season, Regular season, Stage 4\nThe following week, Chengdu faced the Hangzhou Spark; the team fell 1\u20133 in the match. The Hunter's final week of play saw them first face the San Francisco Shock on August 16. Chengdu was dominated throughout the match and was swept 0\u20134. Needing a win to keep their slim playoff hopes alive, the Hunters faced the Houston Outlaws in their final match of the season. Chengdu pulled out a 3\u20132 victory after the match went to a fifth tiebreaker map. The team finished the season with a 13\u201315 record and qualified for the Play-In Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288249-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Chengdu Hunters season, Postseason\nAs the twelfth seed in the overall standings, the Hunters qualified for the Play-In Tournament, where they took on the ninth-seeded Guangzhou Charge on August 30. After dropping the first two maps, Ilios and Eichenwalde, the Hunters closed the gap by taking map three, Horizon Lunar Colony. However, the Charge would not yield another map, as the Hunters lost the match 1\u20134 and ended their 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288249-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Chengdu Hunters season, Final roster, Transactions\nTransactions of/for players on the roster during the 2019 regular season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288250-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chengdu Open\nThe 2019 Chengdu Open was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 4th edition of the Chengdu Open and part of the ATP Tour 250 series of the 2019 ATP Tour. It took place at the Sichuan International Tennis Center in Chengdu, China, from September 23 to 29.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288250-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chengdu 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-00288250-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chengdu Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry using a protected ranking into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 61], "content_span": [62, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288250-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Chengdu 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-00288251-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chengdu Open \u2013 Doubles\nIvan Dodig and Mate Pavi\u0107 were the defending champions, but Pavi\u0107 chose not to participate this year. Dodig played alongside Filip Pol\u00e1\u0161ek, but lost in the semifinals to Jonathan Erlich and Fabrice Martin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288251-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chengdu Open \u2013 Doubles\nNikola \u010ca\u010di\u0107 and Du\u0161an Lajovi\u0107 won the title, defeating Erlich and Martin in the final, 7\u20136(11\u20139), 3\u20136, [10\u20133].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288252-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chengdu Open \u2013 Singles\nBernard Tomic was the defending champion, but retired in the first round of the qualifying tournament against Denis Istomin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288252-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chengdu Open \u2013 Singles\nPablo Carre\u00f1o Busta won the title, defeating Alexander Bublik in the final, 6\u20137(5\u20137), 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20133).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288252-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chengdu Open \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288253-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chennai Open Challenger\nThe 2019 Chennai Open Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the second edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Chennai, India between 4 and 10 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288253-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chennai Open Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 72], "content_span": [73, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288253-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chennai Open Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using protected rankings:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 72], "content_span": [73, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288253-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Chennai Open Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 72], "content_span": [73, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288253-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Chennai Open Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 72], "content_span": [73, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288254-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chennai Open Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nSriram Balaji and Vishnu Vardhan were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288254-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chennai Open Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nGianluca Mager and Andrea Pellegrino won the title after defeating Matt Reid and Luke Saville 6\u20134, 7\u20136(9\u20137) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288255-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chennai Open Challenger \u2013 Singles\nJordan Thompson was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288255-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chennai Open Challenger \u2013 Singles\nCorentin Moutet won the title after defeating Andrew Harris 6\u20133, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288256-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chennai water crisis\nThe 2019 Chennai water crisis was a water crisis occurring in India, most notably in the city of Chennai in Tamil Nadu. On 19 June 2019, Chennai city officials declared that \"Day Zero\", or the day when almost no water is left, had been reached, as all the four main reservoirs supplying water to the city had run dry. Two years of deficient monsoon rainfall, particularly in late 2017 and throughout much of 2018 had led to this crisis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288256-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chennai water crisis\nBecause tap water has stopped running, some families have been relying on alternative water sources such as distant, unreliable public water pumps, and costly private water tankers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288256-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chennai water crisis, Background\nChennai is a city of over 11 million people, around the size of New York City, and is the fourth largest city in India. The city is an automotive engineering hub and contains many automotive factories that are built around the reservoirs of the city. Mismanagement of the city\u2019s water resources and weak monsoons for the last four years reduced the city\u2019s reservoirs to 0.1% of normal capacity in June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288256-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Chennai water crisis, Background\nWater became a valuable resource in Chennai and experienced exploitation as wealthier residents paid to dig deep bore wells on their land and sold water to other residents or businesses. This practice was allowed by the government and resulted in the groundwater aquifer to be drained dramatically at twice the level of annual recharge. Protests erupted over the Chennai government\u2019s lack of action on the issue as water was no longer a basic human right in Chennai. The government also faced pressure on their management of the city\u2019s four main reservoirs; Poondi, Cholavaram, Redhills and Chembarambakkam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288256-0002-0002", "contents": "2019 Chennai water crisis, Background\nFactories and infrastructure built in the catchments of these reservoirs were unregulated and therefore much of the rain that fell ended up in the ocean or used in excess by these factories. This further exacerbated the issue and limited the amount of water that entered the reservoirs for public consumption. Monsoon rains in 2019 have been more plentiful in years past and have raised the reservoir levels to around 30% capacity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288256-0002-0003", "contents": "2019 Chennai water crisis, Background\nChennai has declared itself water secure because of the recent rains but concern remains about the future of water security in Chennai and many other Indian cities such as Bangalore which have similar regulation issues. An Indian government think tank predicted that 21 Indian cities will be out of groundwater by 2020, and the impact of future droughts in India brought upon by climate change will put the entire country at risk unless stronger regulations are put in place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288256-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Chennai water crisis, Background\nChennai has historically relied on annual monsoon rains to replenish its water reservoirs since the rivers are polluted with sewage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288256-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Chennai water crisis, Background\nThere are four reservoirs in the city, namely, Red Hills, Cholavaram, Poondi and Chembarambakkam, with a combined capacity of 11,057 mcft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288256-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Chennai water crisis, Background, Extreme drought\nThree years of failed monsoon in 2016, 2017, and 2018. The 2018 northeast monsoon season was one of the driest ever recorded in Chennai, as only 343.7 mm of rain had fallen compared to an average of 757.6 mm, which was a 55% rainfall deficit. Additionally, the entire state of Tamil Nadu had recorded a 23% rainfall deficit in that season. A major heat wave in India from May to June 2019 further exacerbated the problem by evaporating any water still left in reservoirs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288256-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Chennai water crisis, Background, Government mismanagement\nGovernment mismanagement and unplanned construction has also been a factor to blame for this crisis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 63], "content_span": [64, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288256-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Chennai water crisis, Impact\nMillions of people are without consistent access to water. A lack of rainwater and groundwater has left four of the reservoirs that supply the city completely dry. The inability to meet demand for water has forced businesses like hotels and restaurants to close. Water tankers from areas of Tamil Nadu unaffected by drought have been bringing water into some areas of the city. However, government tankers can take up to a month to appear after requested, so some families, wealthy residents, and business owners have opted to pay for costly private water tankers. The poor who live in slums do not have this option; a family in Chennai's slums may receive as little as 30 litres (7.9 US gallons) of water every day compared to an average American household which uses 1,150 litres (300 US gallons) of water a day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 848]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288256-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Chennai water crisis, Impact\nMany fights over water have also broken out as a result of the conflict. In one such conflict that occurred on 15 June 2019, a woman was stabbed and the perpetrator was turned in to the police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288257-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cherokee Nation principal chief election\nThe 2019 Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma principal chief election was held on Saturday, June 1, 2019. Former Cherokee Nation Secretary of State Chuck Hoskin, Jr. defeated Tribal Councilman Dick Lay in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288257-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cherokee Nation principal chief election\nA third candidate, Tribal Councilman David Walkingstick, also appeared on the ballot, but was disqualified due to campaign finance violations days before the election. Rhonda Brown-Fleming, the first Cherokee Freedman descendant to run for principal chief, was disqualified in March after the Cherokee Nation Supreme Court ruled she did not meet tribal residency requirements. Federal courts affirmed the decision just before the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288257-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cherokee Nation principal chief election\nThe principal chief is the chief executive of the Cherokee Nation. Incumbent Principal Chief Bill John Baker was unable to seek re-election in 2019 due to term limits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288257-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cherokee Nation principal chief election, Election results\nHoskin won the election with 57.93% of the vote. Lay received 27.34% while Walkingstick, whose name was on ballot but was disqualified after absentee and early voting had begun, took 14.73%. Despite being disqualified, votes for Walkingstick were tallied to determine whether or not a runoff would be needed. Nearly 14,000 ballots were cast in the election. In the race for Deputy Chief, Brian Warner defeated former Tribal Council Speaker Meredith Frailey 58.88% to 41.12%. (Although candidates for principal chief and deputy chief run together, they are voted upon separately.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 63], "content_span": [64, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288257-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cherokee Nation principal chief election, Controversies\nCherokee Nation elections are officially non-partisan, but the 2019 elections had heavy partisan overtones, with Walkingstick criticizing Hoskin and incumbent Baker's ties to the Democratic Party and calling for the Cherokee Nation to distance itself from Democrats. Walkingstick had early in the campaign expressed concerns about oversight, and called for federal officials to monitor the 2019 elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288257-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cherokee Nation principal chief election, Controversies\nDespite Cherokee law allowing campaign contributions only from individuals, a political action committee, Cherokees for Change LLC, was established by one of Walkingstick's campaign associates. Cherokees for Change argued that its funding and actions were allowed following the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in Citizens United v. FEC. The Cherokee Nation Election Commission disagreed and on May 6 ordered Cherokees for Change to cease its efforts to influence the election, which it determined to be in violation of tribal law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288257-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Cherokee Nation principal chief election, Controversies\nAlthough Walkingstick claimed no coordination existed between the PAC and his campaign, election officials determined he had violated tribal law and accepted donations from corporate entities on May 17. Walkingstick was disqualified from the election, although his name remained on the ballot. The Cherokee Supreme Court upheld the disqualification on May 29. Walkingstick subsequently threw his support behind Lay. Because Walkingstick was disqualified at such a late date, his name remained on the ballot; however, votes cast for him were not counted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288257-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Cherokee Nation principal chief election, Controversies\nDuring the 2019 election, Cherokee Future LLC was an Oklahoma Domestic Limited Liability Company owned by Chuck Hoskin Sr, the father of then Principal Chief Candidate Chuck Hoskin Jr and registered to an empty lot in Hoskin's home town of Vinta. The Hoskin/Warner campaign and several tribal council candidates showed significant spending of their campaign budget to the Cherokee Future. The Hoskin/Warner campaign reported $574,016.42 as miscellaneous campaign expenditures going to Cherokee Future LLC. And of that amount, $375,000 is noted as consultant fees, while the advertisement expenditure for the first two financial reporting periods was $7,499. Despite numerous complaints filed with the Cherokee Nation Election Commission, no action was taken by the Election Commission. Ultimately, the Election Commission's lack of action led to a twin lawsuit before the Cherokee Nation Supreme Court, and . Ultimately the twin suits were unsuccessful in overturning the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 1043]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288257-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Cherokee Nation principal chief election, Challenge to results\nFollowing the June 1 election, Lay and Frailey petitioned the Cherokee Nation Supreme Court to set aside the results and to order a new election. The petitioners accused the winning candidates of accepting illegal in-kind contributions and other campaign finance violations; however, the Cherokee Supreme Court found the complaints to be without merit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288258-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cherwell District Council election\nThe 2019 Cherwell District Council election was held on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Cherwell District Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288259-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chesapeake Bayhawks season\nThe 2019 Chesapeake Bayhawks season is the nineteenth season for the Bayhawks franchise of Major League Lacrosse, and tenth season using the 'Chesapeake' Bayhawks moniker. It is Dave Cottle's second season of his second tenure as head coach of the team. In 2018, Cottle led the Bayhawks to their first playoff appearance in five years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288259-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chesapeake Bayhawks season\nThe Bayhawks will look to get back to the postseason again, after posting a 9-5 record in 2018, a season that ended in disappointment after a 13-12 home semifinal loss to the eventual champion Denver Outlaws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288259-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chesapeake Bayhawks season, Collegiate Draft\nThe 2019 Collegiate Draft was held on March 9 in Charlotte, North Carolina at the NASCAR Hall of Fame. Inside Lacrosse gave the Bayhawks an \"A+\" in their team-by-team draft grades, the only team receiving such high marks. One reason was for drafting likely Tewaaraton Award winner Pat Spencer from Loyola.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288260-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cheshire East Council election\nElections to Cheshire East Council took place on Thursday 2 May 2019 in all 52 wards, with each ward returning between one and three councillors to the council. The Conservative Party lost overall control of the council, losing 17 seats; the Labour Party gained 9 seats, independents gained 6 and the Liberal Democrats gained 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288260-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cheshire East Council election\nThe elections were held against a background of a number of controversies, with the council facing eight criminal investigations. Multiple Conservative Cabinet members lost their seats, with Ainsley Arnold (Planning) losing out to Independents in Macclesfield Tytherington and Paul Bates (Finance) falling to fifth place in Congleton East, whilst then-Leader of the Council Rachel Bailey came within 78 votes of losing her seat to the Liberal Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288260-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Cheshire East Council election\nThe biggest shocks came in Broken Cross and Upton, with Labour's Rob Vernon and James Barber becoming the first ever Labour councillors for the area and unseating the Mayor-elect, Liz Durham, and Sandbach Ettiley Heath and Wheelock, where Laura Crane achieved a huge swing to win the seat for Labour against Conservative councillor Gail Wait.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288260-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cheshire East Council election\nNo party or grouping held a majority of the council seats, and so after a few weeks of negotiation, Labour and the Independents agreed to form a joint-Cabinet that would run the council for the following year, with a focus on changing the system of governance to abolish the Cabinet and replace it with the old committee system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288261-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cheshire West and Chester Council election\nThe 2019 Cheshire West and Chester Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Cheshire West and Chester Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections. Five fewer seats were contested because of boundary changes. No party gained overall control. The Labour Party gained a seat but lost control of the council; the Conservatives lost 8 seats, while the Independents gained 4, the Liberal Democrats gained 2, and the Green Party gained one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288261-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cheshire West and Chester Council election, Background\nAt the 2015 election, Cheshire West and Chester (CWaC) was the only council to be won by Labour from the Conservatives. The Liberal Democrats had lost their last seat on the council, while both UKIP and the Green Party had increased their vote share but failed to win seats. With only a narrow Labour majority, the Conservatives were hopeful of regaining the council. However, the aftermath of the Brexit referendum had significantly reshaped British party politics and BBC journalist Phil McCann noted that CWaC was the most evenly divided borough in the North West in terms of Leave/Remain, making the effect of Brexit on the election difficult to predict.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288261-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cheshire West and Chester Council election, Background\nBetween the 2015 and 2019 elections, a boundary review was carried out. The number of councillors was reduced from 75 to 70, with some wards merged and others split. In total there were 219 candidates \u2013 70 Conservative, 66 Labour, 49 Liberal Democrat, 18 Green, 11 independents (including Eveleigh Moore-Dutton, elected in 2015 as a Conservative), 4 UKIP and 1 For Britain Movement. 24 existing councillors stood down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288261-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cheshire West and Chester Council election, Results\nThe election saw Labour narrowly lose its majority, winning 35 seats of the 70 available \u2013 a result local election analyst Andrew Teale attributed chiefly to the boundary changes \u2013 but remain the largest party. The Conservatives fell back considerably, with just 28 seats, but still won the largest share of the vote. The Liberal Democrats returned to the council, winning 2 seats in Winsford Swanlow (formerly Labour) and Fardon (formerly Conservative), and the Greens won their first ever seat on CWaC, taking Helsby from the Conservatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 56], "content_span": [57, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288261-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Cheshire West and Chester Council election, Results\nIndependents also surged \u2013 incumbents Martin Barker in Parkgate and Eveleigh Moore-Dutton in Tarporley held their seats, and two further independents won a seat from the Conservatives in the multi-member wards of Weaver and Cuddington, and Hartford and Greenbank. In April 2020, Hartford and Greenbank Independent Cllr Phil Herbert joined the Conservative Group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 56], "content_span": [57, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288262-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chesterfield Borough Council election\nElections to Chesterfield Borough Council in Derbyshire, England were held on 2 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288263-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix\nThe Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix presented by Lear Corporation was the lone doubleheader event of the 2019 IndyCar Series season, consisting of the 7th and 8th rounds of the championship. The event was held at the Raceway at Belle Isle in Detroit, Michigan. Josef Newgarden won a shortened Race 1, and Scott Dixon won the Sunday race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288263-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix, Race 1 \u2013 Saturday, June 1, Results, Race\nNotes: Points include 1 point for leading at least 1 lap during a race, an additional 2 points for leading the most race laps. For Detroit only, 1 bonus point was awarded to the fastest qualifier from both groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 75], "content_span": [76, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288263-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix, Race 2 \u2013 Sunday, June 2, Results, Race\nNotes: Points include 1 point for leading at least 1 lap during a race, an additional 2 points for leading the most race laps. For Detroit only, 1 bonus point was awarded to the fastest qualifier from both groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 73], "content_span": [74, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288264-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chevrolet Silverado 250\nThe 2019 Chevrolet Silverado 250 is a NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series race held on August 25, 2019, at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park in Bowmanville, Ontario, Canada. Contested over 64 laps on the 2.459-mile (3.957\u00a0km) road course, it was the 18th race of the 2019 NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series season, second race of the Playoffs, and the second race of the Round of 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288264-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chevrolet Silverado 250, Background, Track\nCanadian Tire Motorsport Park is a multi-track motorsport venue located north of Bowmanville, in Ontario, Canada. The facility features a 2.459-mile (3.957\u00a0km), (length reduced through wider track re-surfacing done in 2003) 10-turn road course; a 2.9\u00a0km advance driver and race driver training facility with a quarter-mile skid pad (Driver Development Centre) and a 1.5\u00a0km kart track (Mosport Kartways). The name \"Mosport\" is a portmanteau of Motor Sport, came from the enterprise formed to build the track.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288264-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chevrolet Silverado 250, Practice, First practice\nTodd Gilliland was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 79.617 seconds and a speed of 111.187\u00a0mph (178.938\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288264-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Chevrolet Silverado 250, Practice, Final practice\nBrett Moffitt was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 79.540 seconds and a speed of 111.295\u00a0mph (179.112\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288264-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Chevrolet Silverado 250, Qualifying\nBrett Moffitt scored the pole for the race with a time of 79.482 seconds and a speed of 111.376\u00a0mph (179.242\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288264-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Chevrolet Silverado 250, Race, Summary\nBrett Moffitt started on pole and dominated the first stage, winning it after leading all of the laps. Todd Gilliland spun during stage 1, but pitted and managed to stay on the lead lap. Johnny Sauter and Grant Enfinger made contact, sending Enfinger spinning, though he was able to prevent his truck from hitting the wall. On lap 31, Dan Corcoran spun and wrecked. Ross Chastain stayed out during the caution and won Stage 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288264-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Chevrolet Silverado 250, Race, Summary\nAfter Stage 2 pit stops, Moffitt regained the lead after jumping ahead of Alex Tagliani. Moffitt was able to win his second consecutive race with a 5-second lead over Tagliani.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288265-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chevrolet Sports Car Classic\nThe 2019 Chevrolet Sports Car Classic was a sports car race sanctioned by the International Motor Sports Association (IMSA). The race was held at The Raceway on Belle Isle in Detroit, Michigan on June 1st, 2019. This race was the fifth round of the 2019 WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, and the second round of the 2019 WeatherTech Sprint Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288265-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chevrolet Sports Car Classic, Background\nSimilar to the Grand Prix of Long Beach, this event ran in conjunction with the Detroit Grand Prix in the IndyCar Series, with one event held on the same day as the IMSA event, and another held a day after as a double-header.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288265-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chevrolet Sports Car Classic, Background\nThe Detroit Sports Car Classic is a unique event in the GT Daytona (GTD) class, due to not counting towards the overall championship. It instead only counts toward the GTD support championship, the WeatherTech Sprint Cup, in an attempt to cut costs for the class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288265-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Chevrolet Sports Car Classic, Background, Entries\nOn May 22nd, 2019, the entry list for the event was released, featuring 23 cars in total. There were 11 cars in the Daytona Prototype International class and 12 entries in the GTD class. The Le Mans Prototype (LMP2) and GT Le Mans (GTLM) classes would not be participating in the event. Due to only counting towards the WeatherTech Sprint Cup, full-season GTD entries Riley Motorsports, Pfaff Motorsports, and Moorespeed decided to forego the Detroit event in favor of pursuing the full-season championship. Meyer-Shank Racing were initially among the teams that decided to miss the Detroit event, until confirming at the eleventh hour a full-time program in both the full-time and sprint championships with both of their cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288265-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Chevrolet Sports Car Classic, Background, Entries\nPfaff Motorsports driver Zach Robichon, who was initially due to miss the event, filled a vacant spot at Park Place Motorsports, replacing Patrick Lindsey, who was preparing for the official test sessions for the 2019 24 Hours of Le Mans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288265-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Chevrolet Sports Car Classic, Practice and qualifying, Qualifying Results\nPole positions in each class are indicated in bold and by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 78], "content_span": [79, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season\nThe 2019 season was the Chicago Bears' 100th in the National Football League (NFL) and their second under head coach Matt Nagy. The season was branded as \"Bears100\" to celebrate the franchise's centennial, which included a commemorative patch on jerseys and a new throwback uniform.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season\nDespite a 3\u20131 start, the Bears embarked on a four-game losing streak. After losing to the Philadelphia Eagles to fall to 3\u20135, they rebounded by winning four of their next five but were unable to improve upon their 12\u20134 record from 2018. A Week 15 loss to the Green Bay Packers coupled with the Minnesota Vikings beating the Los Angeles Chargers later that day eliminated them from playoff contention. Chicago ended the season with an 8\u20138 record and third in the NFC North. The offense struggled throughout the year, while the defense continued to rank in the top ten in multiple categories; the Bears were the only team to not make the playoffs despite being in the top five in fewest points allowed per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Organizational changes\nOn January 9, defensive coordinator Vic Fangio, who guided the Bears to the top-ranked scoring defense in 2018, left the team to become head coach of the Denver Broncos. Two days later, Chicago hired former Indianapolis Colts' head coach Chuck Pagano to take over the position; before joining the Colts in 2012, he served as the Baltimore Ravens' defensive coordinator for one season in 2011, during which they ranked third in total defense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Organizational changes\nIn assembling his defensive staff, Pagano chose not to retain outside linebackers coach Brandon Staley and assistant defensive backs coach Roy Anderson, both of whom had been with the Bears since 2017, and inside linebackers coach Glenn Pires, who had been on the Bears staff since 2015. Staley and defensive backs coach Ed Donatell followed Fangio to the Broncos. Following the moves, line coach Jay Rodgers and quality control coaches Bill Shuey and Sean Desai were the remaining defensive assistants; on February 8, Shuey and Desai were promoted to defensive pass analyst/assistant linebackers coach and safeties coach, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Organizational changes\nPagano began replacing the departures by hiring Deshea Townsend as defensive backs coach and Ronell Williams as defensive quality control coach on January 18. Townsend was a two-time Super Bowl champion cornerback with the Pittsburgh Steelers before becoming a coach; he was most recently the assistant defensive backs coach of the New York Giants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Organizational changes\nWilliams, a defensive analyst for the Temple Owls football team, worked with the Bears during Training Camp in 2018 as a member of the Bill Walsh Diversity Coaching Fellowship; former Arena Football League wide receiver Chris Jackson, who also participated in the program, was hired as a defensive assistant on February 12. On January 21, former Kansas State defensive coordinator Ted Monachino was hired as senior defensive assistant and outside linebackers coach; Monachino worked with Pagano in Baltimore and Indianapolis, the latter as defensive coordinator. The Bears later added Kansas City Chiefs inside linebackers coach Mark DeLeone to serve the same position, reuniting him with Nagy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Organizational changes\nOn May 1, Brad Childress rejoined the team as a senior offensive assistant. During the 2018 offseason and training camp, Childress had worked with Nagy and the Bears as a consultant; the two had been acquainted as co-offensive coordinators in Kansas City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Roster changes\nEntering the 2019 offseason, the Bears had 21 players set to become free agents, including three restricted free agents and three exclusive-rights free agents. Two of the restricted free agents, safety DeAndre Houston-Carson and long snapper Patrick Scales, became unrestricted free agents when the Bears did not extend qualifying offers to them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Roster changes, Acquisitions\nTwo days after their 2018 season ended, on January 8, the Bears signed ten players to futures/reserve contracts, nine of whom were part of the practice squad in 2018: running back Ryan Nall; offensive lineman Dejon Allen; defensive tackle Abdullah Anderson; linebacker Josh Woods; defensive backs John Franklin III, Cyril Grayson, Michael Joseph and Jonathon Mincy; and Canadian Football League player James Vaughters, who last played for the Calgary Stampeders. Later in the month, Chicago signed receiver Jordan Williams-Lambert and linebacker Jameer Thurman\u2014also CFL players\u2014New Orleans Saints offensive tackle Cornelius Lucas and Tulsa kicker Redford Jones. A second kicker, Pittsburgh Panthers alumnus Chris Blewitt, was signed on March 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 66], "content_span": [67, 811]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Roster changes, Acquisitions\nThe NFL conducted a two-day negotiation period for incoming unrestricted free agents on March 11\u201312, with free agency beginning the next day. During the period, running back Mike Davis, wide receiver Cordarrelle Patterson and cornerback Buster Skrine committed to signing with the Bears, with Davis and Patterson finalizing two-year contracts and Skrine a three-year deal when free agency opened.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 66], "content_span": [67, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Roster changes, Acquisitions\nWith the Seattle Seahawks, Davis recorded 514 rushing yards and four touchdowns, along with 214 receiving yards and two touchdowns in 2018; on the New England Patriots in 2018, Patterson had 247 receiving yards and three touchdowns, along with 42 carries for 228 yards and a touchdown as a running back and averaging 28.8 kickoff return yards as a return specialist; in 14 games for the 2018 New York Jets, Skrine had a forced fumble, a fumble recovery and four tackles for loss, with Matt Nagy calling him \"one of the better nickels in this league, if not the best\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 66], "content_span": [67, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Roster changes, Acquisitions\nAt the start of free agency on March 13, the Bears signed Miami Dolphins offensive lineman Ted Larsen, who started eight games for Chicago in 2016, to a one-year agreement. The following day, safety Ha Ha Clinton-Dix, who played for the Green Bay Packers and Washington Redskins in 2018, joined Chicago on a one-year deal. Atlanta Falcons wide receiver Marvin Hall signed with the Bears on March 15; a fast player, he recorded ten receptions for 149 yards and a touchdown, along with 616 kickoff return yards in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 66], "content_span": [67, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Roster changes, Acquisitions\nOn April 12, kicker Elliott Fry, who was a member of the Alliance of American Football's Orlando Apollos until the league's shutdown ten days prior, was signed to a three-year deal. A month later, on May 8, the Bears picked up Jets linebacker Kevin Pierre-Louis, who played in Kansas City with Nagy in 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 66], "content_span": [67, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Roster changes, Departures\nOn February 21, tight end Dion Sims was released with one year left on his contract; he was on injured reserve for half of the 2018 season and caught only two passes. The following day, it was reported kicker Cody Parkey would be released at the start of the league year on March 13 after 11 missed kicks in 2018 and $3.5\u00a0million guaranteed still on his 2019 contract. Linebacker Sam Acho, who spent much of 2018 on injured reserve, was let go on March 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Roster changes, Departures\nOnce free agency began, various unrestricted free agents opted to sign with other teams, including strong safety Adrian Amos, who signed with the Packers, and cornerback Bryce Callahan joining the Denver Broncos. Departing non-starters included running back Benny Cunningham to the Jacksonville Jaguars, fullback Michael Burton to the New Orleans Saints, wide receivers Josh Bellamy and Kevin White respectively to the Jets and Arizona Cardinals, tight end Daniel Brown with the Jets, and offensive linemen Eric Kush and Bryan Witzmann with the Cleveland Browns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Roster changes, Departures\nOn March 28, running back Jordan Howard, who struggled to adapt to Nagy's offense as he recorded a career-worst 935 rushing yards and nine touchdowns in 2018, was traded to the Philadelphia Eagles for a conditional sixth-round pick in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Roster changes, Departures\nAfter suffering a serious injury in a 2017 game that forced him to miss the entire 2018 season, tight end Zach Miller announced his retirement on April 16. Nine days later, the Bears officially released Miller with a failed physical designation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Roster changes, Departures\nOn May 3, wide receiver Cyril Grayson and offensive linemen Dejon Allen and Willie Beavers were waived. Grayson and Beavers were on the Bears' practice squad in 2018, while Allen joined the team in May 2018 but did not play in the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, NFL Draft\nIn a press conference on April 23, two days before the 2019 NFL Draft, general manager Ryan Pace explained the team did not have \"pressing, huge needs\" and \"can honestly select the best players\". The Bears entered the draft without picks in the first two rounds after trading the first rounder (No. 24 overall, Josh Jacobs) to the Oakland Raiders for linebacker Khalil Mack and the second rounder (No. 56) to the New England Patriots for their 2018 fourth-round selection, respectively. It was the first draft since 2010 in which the Bears did not have first- nor second-round picks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, NFL Draft\nDuring the draft, the Bears traded with the Patriots once again with an exchange that sent the former's third- (No. 87) and fifth-round (No. 162) for the latter's third- (No. 73) and sixth-round (No. 205) selections, and a fourth-round pick in the 2020 draft. With New England's 73rd-overall selection, Chicago drafted Iowa State running back David Montgomery; in 2018, Montgomery led the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision in missed tackles forced with 99, along with recording 24 rushing touchdowns and averaging 4.7 yards per carry and 8.2 yards per reception in his three-year college career. In the fourth round, the Bears used the 126th-overall on receiver Riley Ridley, who had 70 receptions for 1,026 yards (14.7 yards per catch) and 13 touchdowns at Georgia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 822]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, NFL Draft\nTwo rounds later, the Bears' No. 205 was used on Kansas State cornerback Duke Shelley; although his 2018 season was marred by a toe injury, Shelley recorded 33 tackles and three interceptions that year. In four years at Kansas State, Shelley had 165 career tackles and eight interceptions. With their two seventh-round picks, Chicago drafted Florida Atlantic running back Kerrith Whyte Jr. (No. 222) and Valdosta State cornerback Stephen Denmark (No. 238).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0017-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, NFL Draft\nWhyte attracted Pace's attention with his speed, running a 4.38-second 40-yard dash, and was a running back and return specialist at FAU; in 2018, Whyte had 134 carries for 866 yards and eight touchdowns, along with 19 kickoff returns for an average of 28.7 yards and a touchdown. A receiver who was converted to cornerback for his final year at Valdosta State, Denmark recorded 55 tackles and three interceptions in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, NFL Draft\nFollowing the draft, the Bears signed 22 undrafted free agents: receivers Emanuel Hall (Missouri) and Thomas Ives (Colgate); tight ends Ian Bunting (California), Dax Raymond (Utah State) and Ellis Richardson (Georgia Southern); offensive linemen Alex Bars and Sam Mustipher (Notre Dame), Blake Blackmar (Baylor), Joe Lowery (Ohio) and Marquez Tucker (Southern Utah); defensive linemen Daryle Banfield (Brown), Jonathan Harris (Lindenwood) and Lawrence Marshall (Michigan); linebackers Mathieu Betts (Laval) and Chuck Harris (Buffalo); defensive backs Jomon Dotson (Nevada), Clifton Duck (Appalachian State), Doyin Jibowu (Fort Hays State), Adarius Pickett (UCLA) and Josh Simmons (Limestone); kicker John Baron II (San Diego State); and long snapper John Wirtel (Kansas).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 819]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, NFL Draft\nRidley, Whyte and Denmark signed their four-year rookie contracts on May 13, while Montgomery did so on June 14. Shelley completed the draft signings on June 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Offseason activities\nThe Bears began offseason workouts on April 15. NFL rules stipulate teams may hold a voluntary nine-week program that is divided into three phases: the first phase, running for the first two weeks, may only consist of physical conditioning; the three-week second phase involves position drills but no contact nor offense against defense; the third phase has ten offseason team activities (OTAs) in which teams conduct drills between offenses and defenses without contact. Chicago's voluntary mini-camp was held on April 23\u201325, with OTAs on May 21\u201323, May 29\u201331 and June 4\u20137, and a required mini-camp on June 11\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Offseason activities\nOn May 3\u20135, Chicago held a rookie mini-camp for draft picks, undrafted free agents and others on a tryout basis. The Bears, who had struggled with kicking success since 2016 (they had the second-worst field goal conversion percentage during the stretch), invited eight kickers to the camp: Blewitt, Fry, Jones and Baron were under contract, while Notre Dame's Justin Yoon, Minnesota's Emmit Carpenter, Minnesota State's Casey Bernardski and Purdue's Spencer Evans were tryouts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0021-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Offseason activities\nMcNeese State punter Alex Kjellsten also participated in the session; he described the camp as \"almost like a combine for kickers\", with the Bears conducting measurements and analysis of each kick. In conjunction with the kicker competition, the team hired Jamie Kohl, director of the Kohl's Professional Camps kicking organization, as a kicking consultant for the 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Offseason activities\nAt the rookie camp's conclusion, Jones and Baron were released and none of the tryouts were signed, leaving Blewitt and Fry as the remaining kickers. Marshall and Pickett were also waived, while offensive lineman Tommy Doles and defensive lineman Jalen Dalton\u2014all tryouts at the camp\u2014received contracts. On May 6, the Bears traded a conditional 2021 seventh-round draft pick for Raiders kicker Eddy Pi\u00f1eiro; in his rookie year in 2018, Pi\u00f1eiro made all three of his preseason field goals, but missed the regular season with a groin injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0022-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Offseason activities\nUnder the conditions of the trade, the Raiders would receive the pick if Pi\u00f1eiro was on the Bears' active roster for at least five games in 2019. Princeton receiver-turned-tight end Jesper Horsted was signed on May 13, with Doles being released to make room before he was brought back three days later after Dotson was waived/injured. Doles was waived once again on May 31 to make room for offensive lineman T. J. Clemmings, who started 32 games in his four-year career for the Minnesota Vikings and Raiders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Offseason activities\nThe mandatory mini-camp began in mid-June. After the first day, during which he, Fry and Pi\u00f1eiro all missed 42-yard field goals, Blewitt was released on June 12. Offensive lineman Jordan McCray was signed the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Offseason activities\nBears Training Camp commenced in late July, with rookies and quarterbacks reporting on July 22 and veterans three days later. The first practice was conducted on July 27. During camp, on August 3, Simmons was waived with an injury designation and replaced by Delaware receiver Joe Walker, who attended the Bears' rookie mini-camp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Centennial promotions\nThe 2019 season marks the Bears' 100th season as a franchise, dating to the NFL's inaugural season in 1920 as the American Professional Football Association (APFA) and the team's debut as the Decatur Staleys. Of the original 14 teams in the NFL (then the American Professional Football Association) that year, only the Bears and Arizona Cardinals (then in Chicago) are still in existence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Centennial promotions\nThe team unveiled a customized version of the NFL's centennial emblem, which is being used in place of the league-wide version on jerseys. On June 7\u20139, the team held the Bears100 Celebration Weekend at the Donald E. Stephens Convention Center in Rosemont, Illinois. At the celebration, the team revealed throwback uniforms inspired by the 1936 team to be worn against the Minnesota Vikings and Dallas Cowboys.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Centennial promotions\nIn July, the team revealed each home game would honor a particular decade with bobbleheads of certain players from that time frame being given away. For the New York Giants game, which represented the 1960s, the Bears wore throwback helmets with a white 'C' logo and gray facemask.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Preseason\nThe Bears' preseason opponents, along with that of the rest of the NFL teams, were announced on April 9, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Preseason, Game summaries\nThe preseason began at home against the Carolina Panthers, with much of the Bears' starters not seeing action. Chicago's defense forced two turnovers with Josh Woods forcing Elijah Holyfield to fumble and James Vaughters recovering, along with Deon Bush intercepting a Will Grier pass; although the first takeaway set up David Montgomery\u2019s -yard touchdown, Eddy Pi\u00f1eiro missed a 48-yard field goal after the second. Elliott Fry and Pi\u00f1eiro also made 43- and 23-yard kicks, but the Bears were defeated 23\u201313 with Holyfield catching and rushing for two touchdowns and Joey Slye making three field goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Preseason, Game summaries\nGames two and three were on the road against the New York Giants and Indianapolis Colts. No starters played in the former as backup defenders Vaughters and Clifton Duck recording a fumble recovery and interception, respectively. Kerrith Whyte Jr. scored the Bears' only touchdown (a one-yard run in the third quarter) in the 32\u201313 defeat, while he also had a 108-yard kickoff return touchdown called back for a holding penalty. Pi\u00f1eiro made 41- and 27-yard field goals in the Giants game, while Fry missed a 47-yard kick and made an extra point; the latter would be released days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0030-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Preseason, Game summaries\nChuck Pagano\u2019s return to Indianapolis was largely overshadowed by reports of Colts starting quarterback Andrew Luck's retirement, sparking boos in Lucas Oil Stadium after the game. Offensive coordinator Mark Helfrich called offensive plays for the Bears in the game. After trailing 17\u20137, Chicago scored 20 unanswered points starting with Pi\u00f1eiro's 58-yard field goal, followed by Vaughters forcing Phillip Walker to fumble on a sack, with Joel Iyiegbuniwe returning the loose ball 22 yards for a touchdown. Iyiegbuniwe and Doyin Jibowu then recorded a sack and interception on consecutive defensive stands, while Tyler Bray threw a 17-yard touchdown pass to Jesper Horsted as the Bears won 27\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Preseason, Game summaries\nTo end the preseason, the Bears hosted the Tennessee Titans. 2019 is the first year in which the Bears and Titans regularly play each other in the preseason as part of an agreement between the teams; it is Chicago's first preseason partnership since their affiliation with the Cleveland Browns in 2004\u20132017. Quarterbacks coach Dave Ragone served as play-caller as Bray played the full game, completing 28 of 40 passes for 334 yards, one touchdown and a 103.5 passer rating. Horsted caught five passes for 82 yards and a touchdown, while Pi\u00f1eiro went from missing the ensuing extra point to making field goals from 32, 39 and 35 yards. However, Tennessee's Logan Woodside threw two touchdown passes, including the game-winning four-yard score to Dalyn Dawkins as the Titans won 19\u201315.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 836]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Preseason, Transactions\nAfter missing the preseason opener and the start of camp due to a sports hernia, Emanuel Hall was released on August 13. Fry was released on August 18 after making three-of-four kicks in two preseason games. Recently-released Kansas City Chiefs running back Josh Caldwell was signed a day later; although he recorded 59 rushing yards and a touchdown in the Chiefs' preseason opener, the team waived him to allow him to pursue opportunities elsewhere as it was unlikely he would make their 53-man roster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Preseason, Transactions\nA day after the Bears' game against the Colts, during which offensive linemen T. J. Clemmings and Rashaad Coward suffered injuries, Tommy Doles was claimed off waivers from the Atlanta Falcons, marking Chicago's third transaction involving the lineman. Clemmings would be placed on injured reserve with a quad injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Preseason, Transactions\nOn August 31, the Bears reduced their roster to 53 players by releasing 34 players: Bray, Caldwell, Doles, Duck, Horsted, Jibowu, Vaughters, Daryl Banfield, Alex Bars, Mathieu Betts, Jonathan Bullard, Ian Bunting, Jalen Dalton, Stephen Denmark, Kylie Fitts, John Franklin III, Tanner Gentry, Marvin Hall, Chuck Harris, Jonathan Harris, Thomas Ives, Michael Joseph, Joe Lowery, Jordan McCray, Jonathon Mincy, Taquan Mizzell, Sam Mustipher, Ryan Nall, Ellis Richardson, Jameer Thurman, Marquez Tucker, Joe Walker, Jordan Williams-Lambert and John Wirtel. Dax Raymond and Blake Blackmar were moved to injured reserve.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Preseason, Transactions\nThe following day, Bars, Bray, Denmark, Harris, Horsted, Ives, Joseph, Mustipher, Nall and Vaughters were assigned to the practice squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Schedule\nThe Bears' regular season schedule, along with that of the rest of the NFL, was released on April 17, 2019. Chicago played in five prime time games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Green Bay Packers\nFor the first game of the 2019 season, the Bears hosted the longtime rival Packers, who led the all-time series 97\u201395\u20136. In line with commemorating various decades in team history, the Bears honored the 1980s by inviting members of the 1985 Super Bowl-winning team to exit the tunnel, while more recent former Bears players Brian Urlacher and Jay Cutler were also in attendance. Quarterback Mitchell Trubisky, running back Tarik Cohen, defensive lineman Akiem Hicks, safety Eddie Jackson, offensive lineman Charles Leno Jr. and linebacker Khalil Mack served as team captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Green Bay Packers\nThe first three drives ended with punts as the Packers offense recorded negative yardage (\u221212) before Eddy Pi\u00f1eiro scored the opening points with a 38-yard field goal. During the second quarter, Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers led a four-play, 74-yard drive that ended with an eight-yard touchdown pass to Jimmy Graham; the Bears defense had 12 players on the field at the time, granting the Packers a free play. Chicago's offense struggled through the third quarter, including an attempt to convert a fourth-and-10 situation rather than try a 51-yard field goal, which resulted in Trubisky being tackled for a three-yard gain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0038-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Green Bay Packers\nIn the following quarter, the Bears offense had one drive in which they entered Green Bay territory, but holding penalties on Leno pushed them back into their side of the field; on first-and-30, Trubisky threw a 50-yard pass to Taylor Gabriel that was nullified by offensive pass interference on Gabriel. Now requiring 40 yards to earn a first down, the Bears only advanced nine yards before punting. On Green Bay's ensuing drive, they traveled 73 yards to set up Mason Crosby's 39-yard field goal with 5:15 remaining in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0038-0002", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Green Bay Packers\nAlthough Trubisky and the Bears reached the Packers' 16-yard line, his pass for Allen Robinson was intercepted by former Bears safety Adrian Amos, making his return to Chicago after signing a four-year deal with Green Bay in the offseason, with 1:58 to go. Although the Bears were able to force a Packer punt, Trubisky was sacked on his five-yard line by linebacker Preston Smith to seal the defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Green Bay Packers\nAlthough the defense recorded five sacks, Chicago's offense only ran 15 times as Trubisky attempted 45 passes, the latter of which head coach Matt Nagy assumed responsibility during a Friday press conference. In regards to his play-calling in the loss, he said it \"wasn't good enough. And I told the players that. I told them that last night in the locker room, it starts with me. I need to be better. And I will be better. And I'm going to demand that from myself, from our coaches and from our players.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: at Denver Broncos\nIn Week 2, the Bears visited Empower Field at Mile High to play the 0\u20131 Denver Broncos, led by former Bears defensive coordinator Vic Fangio. The two teams had not played since 2015, a game the Broncos won 17\u201315. The Bears also dropped their last game in Denver in 2011 13\u201310. Entering the game, the Broncos held a one-game advantage in the all-time meetings 8\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0040-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: at Denver Broncos\nDuring the week leading up to the game, on September 11, Abdullah Anderson was released and tight end J. P. Holtz was claimed off waivers; in his NFL debut the previous week with the Washington Redskins, Holtz exclusively played on special teams. Anderson was later moved to the practice squad, taking James Vaughters' spot, while Dax Raymond was released from injured reserve with a settlement. Linebacker Danny Trevathan, offensive tackle Bobby Massie and Kevin Pierre-Louis were team captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: at Denver Broncos\nThe Broncos scored on the opening drive on a 43-yard field goal by Brandon McManus QB Joe Flacco completed all six of his passes on the drive. After two punts, the Bears mounted a 64-yard drive in which the offense converted in two third-downs before Pi\u00f1eiro kicked a 40-yard field goal to tie the game. After another Broncos punt, Pi\u00f1eiro added a 52-yard kick with five minutes remaining in the first half to give the Bears a 6\u20133 lead. The third quarter began with the teams trading punts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0041-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: at Denver Broncos\nOn Chicago's next series, the Bears rushing attack led an 80-yard drive, including a 46-yard run by Cordarrelle Patterson, which led to David Montgomery's TD run from 1 yard out to give the Bears' first touchdown of the young season. The score had been set up after four consecutive plays from within Denver's two-yard line. The Broncos, aided by a controversial Eddie Goldman roughing the passer penalty, added a field goal with McManus' 32-yard kick in the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0041-0002", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: at Denver Broncos\nAfter the Bears punted again, the Denver offense reached Chicago's two-yard line, where Flacco's pass for Emmanuel Sanders was intercepted by Kyle Fuller. The Bears offense could not capitalize on the takeaway and they ended up punting. With 31 seconds left in the game, Flacco threw a 7 yard touchdown pass to Sanders on fourth down. Denver was penalized for a delay of game on their two-point conversion attempt and elected to kick the extra point instead and McManus' missed but the Bears were penalized for being offsides. The Broncos accepted the penalty and decided to go for the two point conversion and were successful on Flacco's pass to Sanders to give the Broncos a 14\u201313 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: at Denver Broncos\nChicago's final drive began at their own 25. After a five-yard gain on a Trubisky pass to Trey Burton, Bradley Chubb was flagged for a controversial roughing the passer penalty to push the Bears to their 45. Trubisky's next three passes fell incomplete. The Bears were penalized for having too many men on the field, pushing back their field position. On fourth-and-15, Trubisky completed a 25-yard pass to Robinson and quickly used the Bears' final timeout with one second left in the game. Pi\u00f1eiro came out and kicked the game-winning, 53-yard field goal to seal the victory; for his performance, he was named NFC Special Teams Player of the Week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Washington Redskins\nIn their first ever meeting on Monday Night Football, Chicago visited the 0\u20132 Washington Redskins, who entered the game leading the all-time series 26\u201323\u20131. The Bears had lost seven consecutive games to the Redskins, including a 41\u201321 defeat in their last meeting in 2016 and 45\u201341 in their most recent game in Washington in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0043-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Washington Redskins\nBefore the game, tight end Bradley Sowell was released and Anderson was promoted to take his roster spot; the move came after defensive tackle Bilal Nichols broke his hand in Week 2. Starting right tackle Massie also missed the game with vertigo-like symptoms, so Cornelius Lucas filled in at the position. Goldman, Gabriel and punter Pat O'Donnell represented the Bears as their captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Washington Redskins\nThe Bears punted after their first drive stalled at midfield, but Ha Ha Clinton-Dix intercepted Redskins quarterback Case Keenum's pass on the resulting series and returned it 37 yards for his first career touchdown; it was the Redskins' first turnover of the season. The next two possessions of the game ended with punts before Dustin Hopkins missed a 43-yard field goal wide left. From their 33-yard line, the Bears offense completed a 67 yard TD drive on Trubisky\u2019s three-yard touchdown pass to Gabriel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0044-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Washington Redskins\nFollowing a strip-sack by Mack on Keenum, which was recovered by Hicks, Trubisky threw his second touchdown pass to Gabriel from one yard out. Keenum was intercepted by Fuller on his team's ensuing drive to set up Trubisky's third score to Gabriel, this time from 36 yards out. Hopkins kicked a 35-yard FG to put the Redskins on the board as time expired to cut the Bears lead to 28-3. On their opening series of the second half, Keenum was intercepted again by Clinton-Dix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0044-0002", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Washington Redskins\nHowever, Pi\u00f1eiro missed a 44-yard field goal; he had been struggling with a right knee injury that forced O'Donnell to perform kickoffs. Washington scored on the next drive with 15-yard touchdown pass from Keenum to Terry McLaurin, followed by a two-yard touchdown pass to Paul Richardson after Trubisky was intercepted by Josh Norman; the Redskins failed the two-point conversion after both scores. Another Redskins drive reached the Bears' 16-yard line, where Keenum was hit by Trevathan on a quarterback sneak and fumbled, which was recovered by Bears Safety Eddie Jackson. With 1:50 remaining in the game, Pi\u00f1eiro kicked a 38-yard field goal to increase the Bears lead to 31\u201315. Washington drove down into Chicago territory, but Keenum was sacked by Nick Williams on the final play of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 888]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Washington Redskins\nGabriel, who exited the game after suffering a concussion, became the 35th player in NFL history to score three receiving touchdowns in the first half of a game and the third to do so on Monday Night Football joining Jerry Rice and Dwayne Allen. He was also the first Bears player to accomplish the feat in the Super Bowl era, and the fourth in team history to do so in one quarter after Red Pollock (1935), Frank Minini (1948) and Gale Sayers (1965).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nWearing their throwback uniforms, the Bears hosted the 2\u20131 divisional opponent Minnesota Vikings in Week 4. With 116 total games between them, the Vikings led their rivalry 60\u201354\u20132, though the Bears won both meetings in 2018. In addition to players who were already sidelined like Nichols and Mike Davis (personal reasons), the Bears were plagued by various injuries to starters that forced them to miss the game, including Gabriel (concussion), Hicks (knee), lineman Kyle Long (hip) and linebacker Roquan Smith (personal). The day before the game, Sowell was cut yet again as Jonathan Harris was promoted from the practice squad. Working as team captains for the Bears were Patterson, Williams and DeAndre Houston-Carson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 811]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nOn the Bears' opening drive, Trubisky was sacked by Danielle Hunter and injured his left shoulder, forcing backup quarterback Chase Daniel into action. Daniel led the offense on a 14-play, 75-yard drive that saw him complete four of five passes including a 10-yard touchdown to Cohen. The next two series ended with punts before Vikings receiver Stefon Diggs was stripped by Prince Amukamara and Clinton-Dix recovered the fumble; the play was initially ruled an incomplete pass before Nagy challenged and successfully overturned the call.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0047-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nThe Bears capitalized on the turnover with Pi\u00f1eiro's 25-yard field goal as time expired in the first half. On the first play of the second half, Vikings quarterback Kirk Cousins was sacked by Mack and fumbled, with Williams recovering the ball on Minnesota's 18-yard line. After three plays that resulted in a net loss of four yards, Pi\u00f1eiro made a 38-yard kick. Pi\u00f1eiro converted his third field goal three drives later, this time of 30 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0047-0002", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nFollowing four further punts, Dalvin Cook scored on a two-yard touchdown run with 2:58 remaining in the game, but Amukamara tackled Diggs' attempted screen pass on the two-point conversion. The Bears punted once again, but the Vikings turned the ball over on downs, enabling the Bears to run down the clock before their own turnover on downs with 24 seconds left. Cousins completed a six-yard pass to Bisi Johnson on the final play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0048-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nIn relief duty, Daniel completed 22 of 30 passes for 195 yards with one touchdown and a 101.4 passer rating. Reserve linebacker Nick Kwiatkoski led the team in tackles with nine as the Bears defense held the Vikings' second-ranked rushing offense, which had averaged 193 yards in its first three games, to just 40 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0049-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Oakland Raiders\nWeek 5 saw the Bears travel to London to play the 2\u20132 Oakland Raiders in the first NFL game at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, which opened in April 2019. It was the Bears' first game in London since they defeated the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 2011 and their third regular season game outside the United States (the first being a win over the Buffalo Bills in 2010 as part of the Bills Toronto Series); Chicago also played a preseason game against the Dallas Cowboys in London in 1986.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0049-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Oakland Raiders\nThe Bears and Raiders last met in 2015 with the former winning 22\u201320; the two teams split the all-time series with seven wins each. With Trubisky unavailable due to his shoulder injury, Tyler Bray was promoted from the practice squad and took Sowell's roster spot. Daniel, Mack and McManis were named team captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0050-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Oakland Raiders\nAfter a scoreless first quarter, the Raiders scored 17 unanswered points in the second. Josh Jacobs recorded a 12-yard touchdown run, which was followed by Daniel being intercepted by Nicholas Morrow, leading to a three-yard score by DeAndr\u00e9 Washington. Daniel Carlson added a 41-yard field goal later in the first half. Early in the third quarter, Derek Carr's pitch to Jacobs went wide and was recovered by Mack at the Raiders' 14-yard line; the Bears capitalized with Montgomery's one-yard touchdown run. Following a Raiders punt, Daniel led an 89-yard drive that ended with a four-yard touchdown throw to Robinson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0050-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Oakland Raiders\nWhen Chicago forced another Oakland fourth down, Cohen returned the ensuing punt a career-best 71 yards to set up Daniel's 16-yard touchdown to Robinson that gave the Bears the 21\u201317 lead. However, Anthony Miller was penalized for taunting, resulting in the following kickoff being moved back 15 yards; Trevor Davis returned the kickoff 52 yards to Chicago's 42, which was further pushed to their 37 when Miller received an offside penalty. Although Oakland reached the three-yard line, McManis punched the ball from Davis' hands and Amukamara recovered at the one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0050-0002", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Oakland Raiders\nThe Bears entered Raider territory before being forced to punt, pinning the Raiders at their three. On fourth down-and-six, punter A. J. Cole III was hit by Pierre-Louis for a roughing the kicker penalty, which moved the ball to a fourth-and-one; the Raiders successfully converted a fake punt with Erik Harris; Harris had initially fumbled with Buster Skrine recovering, but was ruled down. Oakland would complete a 97-yard drive with Jacobs' go-ahead two-yard touchdown run. With 1:57 remaining in the game, the Bears offense reached the Raiders' 47 before Daniel was intercepted by Gareon Conley; although the Raiders punted again with 21 seconds left, Daniel was sacked by Maurice Hurst Jr. on the final play of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 811]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0051-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: Bye week\nAt the bye week, the Bears sat at 3\u20132 and facing the toughest schedule in the league as their remaining opponents had a combined winning percentage of .632. After the first five games, Chicago's offense was struggling mightily with just 17.4 points scored per game (ranked 28th in the league), 4.5 yards per play (30th), a passer rating of 86.3 (24th), 5.2 yards per attempt (30th), 80.6 rushing yards per game (26th) and 3.4 yards per rush (29th).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0051-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: Bye week\nThe team as a whole also experienced troubles with penalties as they had 43 (23 by the defense), the sixth most in the NFL, for a seventh-ranked 360 yards; in 2018, the Bears were penalized 100 times for 848 yards, the fifth-lowest in the league. On defense, the Bears had 17 sacks\u2014ranked the third-best pass rush by Football Outsiders\u2014and the third-most turnovers forced with ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0052-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: Bye week\nOn October 9, with Trubisky's shoulder injury healing, Bray returned to the practice squad and Sowell was re-signed. In the week leading up to the Saints game, Long and Hicks were placed on injured reserve; Long's hip injury persisted after his return, while Hicks hurt his elbow against Oakland. To take their spots on the active roster, Anderson and Alex Bars were promoted from the practice squad, while Raymond and linebacker Fadol Brown were signed to the practice team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0053-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. New Orleans Saints\nChicago returned from the bye week by hosting the 5\u20131 New Orleans Saints. In 30 all-time games, the two were tied at 15 wins each, though the Bears trailed 13\u201315 in regular season meetings and had not defeated the Saints since 2008. Trubisky returned as the starter and wore a harness on his left shoulder, as did Nichols after missing the last three games and Larsen who missed the Oakland game with a knee injury. On the other side, the Saints were without starting quarterback Drew Brees, running back Alvin Kamara, and tight end Jared Cook due to injuries. Floyd, Kwiatkoski, and Cohen represented the Bears as captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0054-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. New Orleans Saints\nThe game started poorly for the Bears when J. T. Gray blocked O'Donnell's punt. O\u2019Donnell made a heads-up play by pushing the ball out of the end zone for a safety to avoid a possible Saints touchdown. After three drives ended with a punt, Miller was stripped by Vonn Bell on a sweep, with Bell recovering at the Bears' 24-yard line. The Saints capitalized with Teddy Bridgewater's seven-yard touchdown to Josh Hill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0054-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. New Orleans Saints\nThe Bears responded with Patterson returning the ensuing kickoff 102 yards for a touchdown; Patterson also had a kick return touchdown the previous year in Chicago as a member of the New England Patriots, while he was the first Bears player to do so at Soldier Field since Devin Hester in 2011, and the first Bear in general since Chris Williams in 2014. In the second quarter, Pi\u00f1eiro and New Orleans' Wil Lutz had 46- and 39-yard field goals but Pi\u00f1eiro missed a 42-yard attempt wide right. The Saints led 12\u201310 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0054-0002", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. New Orleans Saints\nAfter receiving the 2nd half kickoff, New Orleans mounted a 75-yard drive that ended with Latavius Murray\u2019s three-yard touchdown run; after Marcus Williams forced Montgomery to fumble on the Bears' first play of the half and A. J. Klein recovered, Lutz's 52-yard kick fell short. A Chicago punt led to a 78-yard drive by New Orleans in which Bridgewater threw a four-yard touchdown to Taysom Hill. Lutz kicked a 30-yard field goal early in the fourth quarter, and Murray added a four-yard TD run to put the Saints up 36\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0054-0003", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. New Orleans Saints\nWith 2:31 remaining in the game, Trubisky threw a seven-yard touchdown to Robinson and completed the two-point conversion to Adam Shaheen. Patterson recovered the following onside kick, which led to Javon Wims catching a four-yard touchdown from Trubisky with 48 seconds to go. With his team down 36\u201325, Ben Braunecker recovered the second onside kick but his foot had been out of bounds, negating the play. After two rushing plays by Murray and two Bears timeouts, Williams received a neutral zone infraction penalty that gave the Saints a first down. Bridgewater kneeled once to end the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0055-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. New Orleans Saints\nThe Bears' rushing attack, which was ranked 26th entering the game, had just 17 total yards on seven carries with two lost fumbles. The seven attempts were the lowest in team history, and Nagy's pass-heavy doctrine drew criticism from media considering Trubisky's recent injury. The Monday after the game, Nagy acknowledged the strategy but admitted the offense was \"definitely searching right now\" for an identity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0056-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. New Orleans Saints\nOn Tuesday, Chicago released Harris and signed defensive lineman Brent Urban; Urban started every game in 2018 for the Baltimore Ravens and spent the early 2019 season with the Titans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0057-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: vs. Los Angeles Chargers\nWearing their orange jerseys, the Bears hosted the 2\u20135 Los Angeles Chargers. In twelve all-time games, the Bears led 7\u20135, including winning the last two games. Robinson, Trevathan, and Houston-Carson were team captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 91], "content_span": [92, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0058-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: vs. Los Angeles Chargers\nThree straight punts preceded Pi\u00f1eiro's 33-yard field goal hitting the right upright. On the Chargers' ensuing drive, Fuller intercepted Philip Rivers and returned it to the Chargers' four-yard line, but the offense struggled to gain a yard, leading to Pi\u00f1eiro making a 27-yard kick. Chicago reached Los Angeles' nine-yard line but only reached their seven; Pi\u00f1eiro kicked a 25-yard field goal. The Chargers answered with a four-play, 75-yard drive that ended with Melvin Gordon's four-yard touchdown run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 91], "content_span": [92, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0058-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: vs. Los Angeles Chargers\nDown by one, the Bears reached the Chargers' five-yard line with help from Montgomery's 55-yard run, but further red zone woes persisted, leading to Pi\u00f1eiro giving his team the 9\u20137 lead on a 19-yard kick. To start the second half, the Bears mounted an 11-play, 75-yard series that included eight rushes as Montgomery recorded a four-yard score. Chase McLaughlin made a 20-yard field goal to end the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 91], "content_span": [92, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0058-0002", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: vs. Los Angeles Chargers\nEarly in the final period, Trubisky was intercepted by Casey Hayward, but McLaughlin's 42-yard kick was wide right; the Chargers regained possession on the next series after Trubisky lost a fumble on his 26-yard line. The takeaway led to Rivers' go-ahead score to Austin Ekeler. After two drives ending with punts, the Bears got the ball back on their 35 with 1:33 remaining in the game. Although Trubisky led the Bears to the Chargers' 21, Nagy called to kneel to run down the clock and set up Pi\u00f1eiro's potential game-winning 41-yard kick. The kick went wide left as time expired, marking the Bears' first three-game losing streak under Nagy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 91], "content_span": [92, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0059-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: vs. Los Angeles Chargers\nAlthough the Bears offense improved statistically by outgaining the Chargers in total yards (388 to 221), first downs (26 to 11), and time of possession (38 minutes to 22), the offense recorded a combined three yards on ten plays inside the ten-yard line. Nagy's decision to let Trubisky kneel before the final kick was criticized; in his post-game conference, Nagy explained he had \"zero thought of running the ball and taking the chance of fumbling the football.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 91], "content_span": [92, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0060-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: vs. Los Angeles Chargers\nThe Tuesday after the game, Brown was placed on practice squad injured reserve and Vaughters took his spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 91], "content_span": [92, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0061-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: at Philadelphia Eagles\nThe Bears visited the Philadelphia Eagles, who defeated them in 2018's Wild Card Game, in Week 9. In 46 total games since their first meeting in 1933, the Bears led 30\u201315\u20131. With outside linebacker Isaiah Irving out after suffering a quad injury against the Chargers, Vaughters was promoted to the active roster the day before the game, where he took Sowell's place. Burton, a former Eagle, was named a team captain alongside Nichols and Braunecker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0062-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: at Philadelphia Eagles\nThe Eagles scored points on their first three drives via two Jake Elliott field goals and Carson Wentz's 25-yard touchdown to Zach Ertz (though Elliott missed the extra point). On the other hand, Chicago's offense struggled mightily through the first half with every series ending in a punt; the Bears ended the half with just nine total yards and failed to record a first down until there were 48 seconds remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0062-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: at Philadelphia Eagles\nAfter former Bear Jordan Howard scored on Philadelphia's opening second-half series with a 13-yard run, Chicago rebounded as Trubisky threw a 53-yard pass to Gabriel to set up Montgomery's one-yard touchdown run. Following an exchange of punts, Montgomery scored again on another one-yard touchdown. However, the Eagles mounted a 16-play, 69-yard drive that saw them convert on third down four times, leading to Elliott's 38-yard kick with 25 seconds remaining. Elliott attempted a squib kick on the ensuing kickoff, which Shaheen muffed to secure the Bears' fourth-consecutive loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0063-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Detroit Lions\nWeek 10 saw a battle of divisional rivals as the Bears hosted the 3\u20134\u20131 Detroit Lions. Although Chicago led the rivalry 99\u201374\u20135 and swept Detroit in 2018, the Lions had won all but one game between 2013 and 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0063-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Detroit Lions\nThe Saturday before the game, Vaughters took Sowell's roster spot again, while Mike Davis was released and Ryan Nall was promoted from the practice squad; the decision to waive Davis, who had 11 carries for 25 yards as a Bear and never played more than 15 snaps per game since the season opener, was primarily an effort by the Bears to gain a fourth-round compensatory pick for the 2020 NFL Draft. Amukamara, Robinson, and Joel Iyiegbuniwe were the Bears' captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0064-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Detroit Lions\nThe Bears kicked off to start the game. The Lions offense lost starting quarterback Matthew Stafford due to a back injury, leading them to start backup Jeff Driskel. In his first drive, Driskel led Detroit to Chicago's four-yard line before having to settle for Matt Prater's 22-yard field goal. After seven consecutive drives ending with punts, Prater kicked a 54-yard field goal to put Detroit up 6\u20130 with 4:40 remaining in the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0064-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Detroit Lions\nThe Bears responded with an 80-yard drive that concluded with Trubisky's 18-yard touchdown to Braunecker, Chicago's first first-half touchdown since the Vikings game; it was Braunecker's first career touchdown as Trubisky completed all but one pass for 66 yards. Trubisky opened the second half with a nine-yard touchdown to Cohen to complete a 76-yard series, though Pi\u00f1eiro missed the extra point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0064-0002", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Detroit Lions\nOn Detroit's ensuing series, Driskel was intercepted by Kwiatkoski\u2014who entered the game after Trevathan suffered a serious elbow injury while trying to tackle Driskel in the first quarter\u2014to set up Trubisky's third touchdown throw of the game, a 24-yard pass to Gabriel. Three punts by each team eventually led to Driskel throwing a 47-yard touchdown pass to Kenny Golladay with 5:33 left in the game. The Bears punted again with 1:10 remaining, and although Detroit reached Chicago's 25-yard line, Driskel's Hail Mary pass to Marvin Jones fell incomplete and he received a penalty for throwing after crossing the line of scrimmage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0065-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Detroit Lions\nAs the Bears improved to 4\u20135 and snapped their four-game losing streak, the victory helped them pass the Lions for third in the division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0066-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: at Los Angeles Rams\nOn Sunday Night Football, Chicago visited Los Angeles to play the 5\u20134 Los Angeles Rams, whom the Bears beat 15\u20136 in 2018. In 93 all-time games, the Bears held the advantage 54\u201336\u20133. Over the week, Vaughters rotated between the practice squad and active roster before being on the latter for the game when Burton was placed on injured reserve. Burton, who continued to struggle with the groin injury, ended his season with 14 receptions for 84 yards. The Bears also added offensive lineman Dino Boyd, who recently spent time with the Cincinnati Bengals practice squad, to their own unit. Lucas, Skrine, and Pierre-Louis represented Chicago as team captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0067-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: at Los Angeles Rams\nDespite early defensive success as the Bears forced two Rams turnovers via Clinton-Dix recovering Todd Gurley's fumble and Smith intercepting Jared Goff, Pi\u00f1eiro missed 48- and 47-yard field goals and the offense turned the ball over on downs. Greg Zuerlein made a 38-yard field goal early in the second quarter. After two punts, Trubisky's pass for Miller bounced off his hands and was intercepted by Troy Hill, which led to a 50-yard pass from Goff to Cooper Kupp that set up Gurley's one-yard touchdown run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0067-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: at Los Angeles Rams\nAlthough the Bears recorded 151 yards, they were shut out in the first half for the third time in 2019. After the Rams punted to start the second half, the Bears recorded a 12-play, 80-yard drive in which Trubisky completed seven of nine passes for 66 yards and a 14-yard touchdown to Cohen. Neither team was able to score on their next four drives apiece before the Rams had a 70-yard drive, which included a 51-yard touchdown pass to Josh Reynolds that was nullified by an illegal formation penalty, that ended with Malcolm Brown's four-yard touchdown run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0067-0002", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: at Los Angeles Rams\nWith less than four minutes remaining, Daniel replaced Trubisky due to a hip injury; he was sacked twice and completed just one of three passes before the drive concluded with a turnover on downs. Trubisky's injury was later diagnosed as a hip pointer he had suffered while being sacked by Michael Brockers late in the second quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0068-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: at Los Angeles Rams\nWith the offense and particularly the tight ends continuing to struggle, Vaughters was cut and Jesper Horsted was promoted to the active roster; Horsted's 121 receiving yards in the preseason were more than those of any Bears tight end during the regular season. Running back Jeremy McNichols, who bounced between various NFL teams since his career began in 2017, and outside linebacker Dewayne Hendrix, who spent the 2019 offseason as an undrafted rookie with the Miami Dolphins, were added to the practice squad. Vaughters was back on the practice squad on November 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0069-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: vs. New York Giants\nWearing their 1960s throwback helmets, the Bears hosted the 2\u20138 Giants. Although the Bears won the latest meeting between the two in Chicago in 2013, they had lost the last two games, including a 30\u201327 defeat in 2018. In 59 total games, the Bears held a 33\u201324\u20132 advantage. Clinton-Dix, Leno, and O'Donnell were team captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0070-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: vs. New York Giants\nThe game began poorly for the Bears when Pi\u00f1eiro's kickoff went out of bounds, though the Giants had to punt. Chicago's offensive troubles continued as their first drive ended with another punt. On their next series, the Bears traveled 77 yards and into the Giants' red zone, where Braunecker dropped a potential 29-yard touchdown pass before Trubisky was intercepted by Alec Ogletree in the end zone. Although the Giants punted again, the Bears did the same after a 60-yard completion to Robinson was nullified by center Cody Whitehair receiving a hands-to-the-face penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0070-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: vs. New York Giants\nMidway through the second quarter, Kaden Smith caught a three-yard touchdown pass from Daniel Jones to give the Giants the lead. Despite further poor offensive performances by the Bears, one of which led to O'Donnell's 13-yard punt, New York's Aldrick Rosas missed field goals of 42 and 43 yards. With 1:55 left in the first half, the Bears drove 59 yards to set up Pi\u00f1eiro's 26-yard field goal. Chicago opened the second half with their first touchdown since Week 10 as Trubisky threw a 23-yard touchdown to Robinson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0070-0002", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: vs. New York Giants\nAfter the Giants punted to pin the Bears on their six-yard line, Trubisky and the offense went on an 88-yard drive that ended with Pi\u00f1eiro converting a 24-yard kick. On New York's next play, Jones was strip-sacked by Mack and Williams recovered, leading to Trubisky's two-yard touchdown run. Up 19\u20137, Chicago successfully scored on the two-point conversion with Trubisky's throw to Gabriel, but Robinson was penalized for offensive pass interference after colliding with Deone Bucannon. Instead, the Bears opted to kick the extra point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0070-0003", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: vs. New York Giants\nMassie, who normally worked with the kicking unit, hurt his ankle and forced Urban to take his spot, but his teammates\u2014unaware of the injury and his replacement\u2014assumed they were missing a player. As a result, Chicago suffered a too-many-men penalty that forced Pi\u00f1eiro to make a 48-yard extra point; he missed the kick wide left. Following another Giant punt, Trubisky was intercepted by Julian Love to start the fourth quarter, though the Bears defense forced a turnover on downs. With 4:10 remaining in the game, Jones threw a 23-yard touchdown to Golden Tate on fourth down; although Chicago punted again, Jones' fourth-down pass to Darius Slayton was incomplete. Trubisky kneeled thrice to clinch the 19\u201314 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 808]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0071-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: at Detroit Lions\nThe Bears' second game against the 3\u20138\u20131 Lions came in Week 13 in Detroit on Thanksgiving Day; the Bears were 18\u201315\u20132 in games held on the holiday, including beating the Lions 23\u201316 in 2018. Robinson, Fuller, and Patterson served as Chicago's team captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0072-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: at Detroit Lions\nOn the opening kickoff, Justin Coleman was given an unnecessary roughness penalty while tackling Patterson, forcing a re-kick that Patterson returned 57 yards to midfield. From there, Trubisky completed all four passes for 31 yards and a 12-yard touchdown to Robinson for Chicago's first opening-drive touchdown since Week 4. With Stafford and Driskel both out, third-string quarterback David Blough\u2014who had no NFL regular season experience\u2014assumed starting duties for the Lions, and threw a 75-yard touchdown to Golladay on his team's third offensive play after Amukamara relinquished his coverage to a safety who was not present.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0072-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: at Detroit Lions\nThe score was the first opening-drive touchdown allowed by the Bears since Week 7 of 2018, ending an NFL-best 21-game streak. After the Bears punted, Blough threw a second touchdown pass, this time a nine-yard throw to Jones; the Lions got the ball back when Prater successfully executed a surprise onside kick, though they were eventually forced to punt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0072-0002", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: at Detroit Lions\nIn the second quarter, the Bears had a 59-yard drive that was marred by penalties to result in a first-and-32; it subsequently ended with a turnover on downs, which led to Prater's 25-yard field goal to put Detroit up by ten points. With 3:10 remaining in the first half, Trubisky led a 59-yard series to set up a 30-yard kick by Pi\u00f1eiro. The Lions punted to start the second half, and although the Bears reached the opposing 33-yard line, Trubisky's pass for Robinson was intercepted by Darius Slay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0072-0003", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: at Detroit Lions\nChicago rebounded from the turnover with an 80-yard possession that resulted in Trubisky's 18-yard touchdown to Horsted. Detroit drove as far as Chicago's five-yard line on the ensuing series, where Fuller stopped J. D. McKissic's near-touchdown and the Lions had to settle for Prater's 24-yard kick. Following an exchange of punts, Trubisky guided the Bears offense on a 90-yard drive, during which he completed 32- and 34-yard passes to Miller on third down, en route to a three-yard touchdown pass to Montgomery that gave the Bears the lead with 2:17 left. Blough's final drive ended with a fourth-down interception by Jackson to seal the 24\u201320 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0073-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: at Detroit Lions\nThe Saturday after the game, Shaheen (foot) and McManis (groin) were placed on injured reserve, with offensive lineman Corey Levin and tight end Eric Saubert being signed in their places. Levin, who played in 16 games as a rookie for the 2018 Tennessee Titans, was poached from the Broncos' practice squad, while Saubert, who started a game for the 2017 Atlanta Falcons, was signed off Oakland's practice squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0074-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Dallas Cowboys\nWeek 14 saw a battle of 6\u20136 teams as the Bears hosted the Dallas Cowboys on Thursday Night Football. Chicago had not beaten Dallas since 2013, losing their last two meetings, and the latter also led the all-time series 15\u201311. Amukamara was out with a hamstring injury, forcing Kevin Toliver\u2014who had played just three snaps on defense in 2019\u2014into action at starting cornerback. Miller, Smith, and Bush were Chicago's team captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0075-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Dallas Cowboys\nThe Bears defense allowed an opening-drive touchdown for the second straight week as the Cowboys marched 75 yards on 17 plays for Ezekiel Elliott's two-yard touchdown run; the drive lasted 8:57, the longest to start a game in the NFL in 2019. Chicago's offense attempted to respond before Trubisky was intercepted by Jourdan Lewis at Dallas' one-yard line. In the second quarter, the Bears scored 17 unanswered points with Trubisky's five-yard touchdown to Robinson, Pi\u00f1eiro's 36-yard field goal, and a second Trubisky touchdown pass to Robinson for eight yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0075-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Dallas Cowboys\nThe Cowboys' four drives in the quarter ended with two punts, Brett Maher missing a 42-yard kick wide right, and Dak Prescott kneeling to take the game to halftime. Trubisky recorded his third touchdown throw of the day to start the second half with a 14-yard pass to Miller. The next three drives of the game resulted in punts before Montgomery was stripped by Joe Thomas and Jaylon Smith recovered; the Cowboys capitalized on the takeaway with Elliott's two-yard score to start the fourth quarter. The Bears retaliated with a read option play by Trubisky, running for a 23-yard touchdown. Dallas scored ten more points in the game with Prescott's 19-yard touchdown to Amari Cooper and Maher's 31-yard kick. With eight seconds left, Miller recovered Maher's onside kick to secure Chicago's third consecutive victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 904]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0076-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Dallas Cowboys\nDuring the game's opening drive, Smith suffered a season-ending pectoral injury, leading to him being placed on injured reserve on December 9. To take his place, the Bears signed linebacker Devante Bond, a former Buccaneer who played four games for Tampa Bay in 2019 but was suspended early in the season for violating the NFL's performance-enhancing drugs policy. Chicago also released Hendrix from the practice and signed defensive back Xavier Crawford to the group. Another practice squad transaction took place two days later with wide receiver Reggie Davis being signed and McNichols being waived.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0077-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Green Bay Packers\nThe Bears' second game against the Packers took place at Lambeau Field; their last game in Green Bay was a 24\u201323 defeat in Week 1 of 2018. The day before the game, Hicks was activated from injured reserve, while Braunecker was placed on IR with a concussion. Clinton-Dix, James Daniels, and Patrick Scales served as the Bears' captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0078-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Green Bay Packers\nNeither team scored on their first drives as they punted. On his team's next punt that reached midfield, Patterson tackled returner Tyler Ervin, who did not signal for a fair catch, and forced a fumble that the Bears recovered, but he was controversially penalized for kick catch interference; Fox rules analyst Dean Blandino pointed out the NFL's rule on kick catch interference disagreed with the penalty as Ervin had caught the ball before being hit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0078-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Green Bay Packers\nRegardless, the penalty meant the Packers started their drive on the Bears' 35-yard line, and they eventually scored first on Rodgers' 29-yard touchdown to Davante Adams on fourth down. Chicago's offense continued to struggle, including a drive that ended with a turnover on downs in Green Bay territory. With 1:45 left in the first half, Pi\u00f1eiro made a 30-yard field goal. However, the Packers scored touchdowns on their first two series of the second half with Aaron Jones' 21- and two-yard rushing scores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0078-0002", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Green Bay Packers\nMeanwhile, the Bears' first second-half series ended with another turnover on downs, this time at the Packers' 34-yard line. Down 21\u20133, the Bears defense held their ground by forcing the Packers to punt on every drive for the rest of the game. Pi\u00f1eiro converted a 27-yard kick to start the fourth quarter, followed by Trubisky's two-yard touchdown pass to Miller. Despite scoring ten unanswered points, further offensive errors included Trubisky being intercepted by defensive lineman Dean Lowry and another turnover on downs with 1:41 left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0078-0003", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Green Bay Packers\nAfter the defense forced a punt with 44 seconds left, the Chicago offense attempted a final rally. With one second remaining and the Bears on the Packers' 34-yard line, the offense's last play consisted of multiple laterals, a play that Trubisky remarked was \"kind of ad-libbed\": after Trubisky threw a pass to Cohen, Cohen lateraled back to Trubisky at the 21; Trubisky ran for five yards and escaped potential tackler Kyler Fackrell before pitching to Horsted; although Robinson was available as a lateral option, Horsted was tackled by Chandon Sullivan and fumbled, with Williams recovering at the two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0079-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Green Bay Packers\nLater in the day, the Vikings defeated the Chargers 39\u201310 to improve to 10\u20134, enabling them to either win the NFC North or clinch one of the two wild card spots. As the Bears could only win nine games at most and either of the 11-win San Francisco 49ers and Seattle Seahawks would secure the second wild card, Chicago was mathematically eliminated from playoff contention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0080-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Green Bay Packers\nThe Wednesday after the game, Trevathan was placed on injured reserve, with Michael Joseph being promoted from the practice squad. To take Joseph's spot on the practice squad, the team signed wide receiver Alex Wesley, who spent the 2019 offseason with the Giants before being waived from injured reserve in September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0081-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: vs. Kansas City Chiefs\nChicago's final home game of 2019 came in Week 16 against the 10\u20134 Kansas City Chiefs, serving as a battle between Nagy and his former boss and Chiefs head coach Andy Reid. In 12 all-time games, the Bears led 7\u20135 and won their last meeting in 2015, though the two teams had alternated victories since their fourth game in 1987. Whitehair, Williams, and Pierre-Louis were the Bears' captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0082-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: vs. Kansas City Chiefs\nThe Bears struggled throughout the first half as they punted on all three of their drives (a fourth series ended with a penalty that ran out the clock to conclude the half), while the Chiefs scored 17 points on their three possessions. Kansas City's three scores came via Patrick Mahomes' 12-yard touchdown run and a six-yard touchdown pass to Travis Kelce, while Harrison Butker made a 56-yard field goal; the Kelce touchdown also came on a 95-yard drive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0082-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: vs. Kansas City Chiefs\nChicago attempted to improve in the second half as the offense reached the Chiefs' four-yard line, but Trubisky's fourth-down pass to Robinson was broken up by Charvarius Ward. After forcing a punt, the Bears finally scored with Pi\u00f1eiro's 46-yard field goal as the third quarter ended. The Chiefs responded with a 14-yard touchdown throw from Mahomes to Damien Williams, though Butker's extra point hit both uprights to result in a miss. The kick drew comparisons to Cody Parkey's Double Doink miss that eliminated the Bears from the 2018 playoffs; like Parkey, Butker's miss came at Soldier Field's north end zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0082-0002", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: vs. Kansas City Chiefs\nChicago's next drive ended with another turnover on downs when Trubisky was sacked for a 13-yard loss and a fourth-and-23 ended with an 11-yard gain by Saubert. After Butker made a 32-yard kick, the Bears turned it over again as Trubisky's pass to Robinson on fourth-and-six with six seconds left in the game fell incomplete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0083-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: at Minnesota Vikings\nChicago ended the 2019 season at U.S. Bank Stadium against 10\u20135 Minnesota. With the Vikings locked into the sixth playoff seed, they elected to deactivate various starters including linebacker Eric Kendricks and offensive tackles Riley Reiff and Brian O'Neill. Cousins also did not play the game, with backup Sean Mannion instead seeing action. Holtz, Patterson, and Robertson-Harris served as team captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0084-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: at Minnesota Vikings\nVikings third-string running back Mike Boone recorded a 59-yard carry on the first play from scrimmage before dropping a pitch from Mannion that was recovered by Nichols. The Bears capitalized on the takeaway by reaching the Vikings' eight-yard line, where Pi\u00f1eiro made a 26-yard field goal. The cycle of a Bears takeaway leading to a Pi\u00f1eiro field goal continued on the ensuing drive when Mannion's pass to Boone was tipped and intercepted by Pierre-Louis, leading to Pi\u00f1eiro's 33-yard kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0084-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: at Minnesota Vikings\nIn the second quarter, Bailey made a 37-yard field goal, though Kwiatkoski tackled Boone in the end zone on Minnesota's following series for a Bears safety. The two teams traded field goals of 34 (Pi\u00f1eiro) and 38 (Bailey) yards to end the first half with Chicago leading 11\u20136. On the Bears' opening second-half drive, the offense focused on rushing as all but one of their nine plays was a run by Montgomery or Nall (the exception being a ten-yard pass by Trubisky to Ridley).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0084-0002", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: at Minnesota Vikings\nReceiving support from Daniels, Holtz, Larsen, and Lucas, Montgomery pushed through a group of Vikings for a 14-yard touchdown. After the Vikings punted and the Bears turned over the ball on downs when Trubisky's sneak failed, Boone recorded a one-yard touchdown run to start the fourth quarter. The margin decreased to two points after Bailey converted a 39-yard field goal, followed by Ifeadi Odenigbo sacking Trubisky and forcing a fumble; although Odenigbo returned it for a touchdown, a review overturned the score as his knee was down at Chicago's 23-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0084-0003", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: at Minnesota Vikings\nBailey eventually made a 34-yard kick to put the Vikings up 19\u201318. Trubisky and the offense responded with a 15-play, 71-yard drive that reached the Vikings' four-yard line, where Pi\u00f1eiro made the game-winning 22-yard field goal; the series was supported by Trubisky's 32-yard completion to Ridley on fourth-and-nine. With four seconds remaining, Mannion's Hail Mary was intercepted by Jackson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0085-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: at Minnesota Vikings\nWith the win, the Bears finished their disappointing season 8\u20138, the first time they had back-to-back non-losing seasons since the 2012 and 2013 season. They also swept the Vikings for the second consecutive year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0086-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Postseason\nThe Bears ended 2019 with an 8\u20138 record and third in the NFC North, failing to make the playoffs after winning the division in 2018. Of the six teams defeated by the Bears, four finished their seasons with losing records with the Vikings being the lone team with a winning season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0087-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Postseason\nOffensively, Chicago struggled mightily as they ranked 29th in scoring with 17.5 points per game and in total yards at 296.8. The team averaged just 4.7 yards per play, the second fewest in the NFL, and was last in the league in net yards per attempt (5.3). In all but five games, the Bears also failed to score a touchdown in the first half. Trubisky, who made the Pro Bowl in 2018, suffered regressions in passing categories including yardage (3,138), completion percentage (63.2), touchdowns (17), and rating (83).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0087-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Postseason\nThe offensive line also struggled in numerous fields including injuries to Long and Massie, a failed position swap between center Whitehair and guard Daniels, and penalties; by season's end, the Bears suffered 43 sacks (12th most in the league) and averaged just 91.1 rushing yards per game (sixth worst). Despite his teammates' struggles, Robinson recorded 98 receptions\u2014the fifth most in team history\u2014for 1,147 yards and seven touchdowns. Offensive coaches Helfrich, Harry Hiestand (offensive line), and Kevin M. Gilbride (tight ends) were fired after the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0088-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Postseason\nOn defense, while their turnovers forced decreased from 36 to 19, the Bears were ranked eighth overall and ninth in individual run and pass defense categories. Chicago was also the only team ranked in the top five in points allowed (18.6 per game) that did not qualify for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0089-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Postseason\nOn December 30, the Bears signed practice squad players Boyd, Crawford, Davis, Denmark, Ives, Mustipher, Raymond, and Vaughters to reserve/future contracts. Vaughters was the lone player of the nine to see regular season action in 2019, playing against the Rams, Lions, and Eagles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0090-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Awards\nDuring the 2019 season, various players received weekly awards from the league or its sponsors for their accomplishments in certain games. In Week 2, Pi\u00f1eiro was named NFC Special Teams Player of the Week and Snickers' Hungriest Player of the Week for his game-winning kick. Trubisky won Week 13's FedEx Air Player of the Week after completing 29 of 38 passes for 338 yards, three touchdowns, an interception, and a passer rating of 118.1 against the Lions. At the end of November, Patterson was named NFC Special Teams Player of the Month, the first Bears player to win the award since Devin Hester in October 2011; during the month, Patterson recorded 294 kickoff return yards on ten attempts and four tackles as a punt gunner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 763]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0091-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Awards\nOn December 17, the 2020 Pro Bowl rosters were revealed, with Patterson, Mack, and Jackson being voted as starters. Goldman, Fuller, and Cohen were named alternates for the all-star game. Fuller was added to the Pro Bowl roster on January 9, taking the place of the injured Jalen Ramsey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288266-0092-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Bears season, Awards\nIn January, Patterson was named a first-team All-Pro kick returner and second-team All-Pro special teamer by the Associated Press. Sporting News also named Patterson to their All-Pro roster as a first-team returner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288267-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Cubs season\nThe 2019 Chicago Cubs season was the 148th season of the Chicago Cubs franchise, the 144th in the National League and the Cubs' 104th season at Wrigley Field. The Cubs were managed by Joe Maddon, in his fifth year as Cubs manager, and played their home games at Wrigley Field as members of Major League Baseball's National League Central Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288267-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Cubs season\nThe Cubs began the season on the road against the Texas Rangers on March 28 and ended it at the St. Louis Cardinals on September 29. They finished the season 84\u201378 to finish in third place in the Central Division. The Cubs failed to make the playoffs for the first time since 2014. Prior to the end of the season, the Cubs announced that Joe Maddon would not return as manager for the 2020 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288267-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Cubs season, Previous season\nThe Cubs finished the 2018 season 95\u201367 to earn a tie with the Milwaukee Brewers for the division. They lost to the Brewers in a 163rd game to determine the Central Division champions, failing in their quest to win the division for a third consecutive year. Instead, they hosted the Wild Card Game against the Colorado Rockies, but the Cubs lost 2\u20131 in 13 innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288267-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Cubs season, Television broadcasts\nThe 2019 season marked the last full year of Cubs' television broadcasts on WGN-TV, the FTA broadcaster for over 71 straight years beginning in 1948. It was announced that, effective from the spring training season of 2020, the Cubs were moving to a new regional cable TV channel, the Marquee Sports Network, making them the fourth team overall to have their own cable station. WLS-TV Channel 7 was the team's secondary over-the-air broadcaster for the season, but did not extend its contract. It was also the final season to be aired over NBC Sports Chicago.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288267-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Cubs season, Roster\n(Contains all players who played in a game for the Cubs during the 2019 season.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288267-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Cubs season, Statistics, Batting\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At bats; R = Runs; H = Hits; 2B = Doubles; 3B = Triples; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; SB = Stolen bases; BB = Walks; K = Strikeouts; Avg. = Batting average; OBP = On Base Percentage; SLG = Slugging Percentage;", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288267-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288267-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Cubs season, Major League Baseball draft\nThe 2019 Major League Baseball (MLB) First-Year Player Draft began on Monday, June 3, 2019, and ended June 5. The draft will assign amateur baseball players to MLB teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288268-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Fire season\nThe 2019 Chicago Fire season was the club's 24th year of existence, as well as their 22nd in Major League Soccer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288268-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Fire season, Player movement, Out\nThe following players were drafted and did not sign a contract:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288268-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Fire season, Player movement, Out\nThe following players were trialing or training with the club but did not sign a contract:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288268-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Fire season, Match results, Open Cup\nAs a member of MLS, the Fire will enter the competition at the fourth round, scheduled to be played on June 12, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288268-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Fire season, Match results, Leagues Cup\nThe Fire were invited to this inaugural edition of this competition between MLS and Liga MX.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288268-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Fire season, Squad statistics, Cards\nNote: Italics indicates a player who left during the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288268-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Fire season, Affiliate Loans\nNelson Rodriguez announced on January 8, 2019, that the Fire's affiliation with Tulsa had ended, and that they'd affiliate with Indy Eleven in the USL Championship and Lansing Ignite in USL League One for the year. The following players were loaned to either team above:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288268-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Fire season, National team call-ups\nNote: Italics indicates player left after his first call up", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288269-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Marathon\nThe 2019 Chicago Marathon was the 42nd annual running of the Chicago Marathon held in Chicago, Illinois, United States on October 13, 2019. The men's race was won by Kenyan Lawrence Cherono in 2:05:45 while the women's was won by Kenyan Brigid Kosgei in 2:14:04, a world record by 81 seconds. The men's and women's wheelchair races were won by Daniel Romanchuk and Manuela Sch\u00e4r in 1:30:26 and 1:41:08, respectively. More than 45,000 runners completed the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288269-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Marathon, Course\nThe marathon distance is officially 26.219 miles (42.195\u00a0km) long as sanctioned by World Athletics. The course starts and finishes in Grant Park. Before leaving the park, the course runs underneath the BP Pedestrian Bridge before entering Downtown Chicago where the runners go along Michigan Avenue, Grand Avenue, and State Street. The course turns north onto LaSalle Street and enters Lincoln Park around mile 5. The course continues to Sheridan Road before turning back south along Broadway, passing through Boystown, Old Town, and River North.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288269-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Marathon, Course\nThe runners cross the Chicago River via the Wells Street Bridge before re-crossing the river heading west via the Monroe Street Bridge. The course passes through Greektown on Adams Street before turning back east in the 16th mile. The course continues down Jackson Boulevard then turns south through Little Italy and Pilsen before crossing the river again via Cermak Road. The course continues south through Chinatown before turning north just after mile 23 back towards the downtown. There is a slight uphill section after mile 26 before the course re-enters Grant Park to finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288269-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Marathon, Course\nThere were 20 aid stations situated every one to two miles along the course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288269-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Marathon, Field\nThe favorite in the women's race was Brigid Kosgei who had run a personal best of 2:18:20 at the 2019 London Marathon in April. Kosgei won the previous year and had finished either first or second in nine out of ten of the marathons in her career. In the initial field, only three other women had run sub-2:25 before; 2018 Paris Marathon winner Betsy Saina, Mada\u00ed P\u00e9rez who had run 2:22:59 in 2006, and Jordan Hasay, who ran 2:20:57 in 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288269-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Marathon, Field\nHasay had finished third in the 2017 edition and third at the 2017 Boston Marathon, but had not competed at the 2018 Chicago Marathon or 2018 Boston Marathon due to two stress fractures in her foot. Saina ran a time of 2:22:56 to win in Paris, but had failed to finish the 2017 Tokyo Marathon or 2017 New York City Marathon. P\u00e9rez had finished fourth in 2:24:44 at the 2017 Chicago Marathon, but did not finish the 2018 Boston Marathon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288269-0003-0002", "contents": "2019 Chicago Marathon, Field\nOther competitors in the field included three-time Olympian Fionnuala McCormack and Amy Cragg, however, she later pulled out of the race in August due to a hamstring injury. Not long before the day of the race, Gelete Burka, who had won the 2019 Paris Marathon and had run a personal best of 2:20:45, joined the field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288269-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Marathon, Field\nIn the men's race, defending champion Mo Farah returned, having run 2:05:11 in 2018 and 2:05:29 at the 2019 London Marathon in April. Galen Rupp had finished in fifth place the previous year in a time of 2:06:21 and said he \"could not be more excited\" to be running. Rupp had been recovering from a surgery on his left foot to treat Haglund's deformity, a congenital bump on the heel which causes problems for the Achilles tendon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288269-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Marathon, Field\nThe field initially featured sub-2:04 runners Getaneh Molla (who had won the 2019 Dubai Marathon in 2:03:34) and Herpasa Negasa (who finished in second place at the 2019 Dubai Marathon in 2:03:40), but they withdrew before the race. This left Lawrence Cherono as the fastest in the field, having ran 2:04:06 in 2018 as well as winning four of the last five marathons he ran, including the 2019 Boston Marathon in 2:07:57.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288269-0004-0002", "contents": "2019 Chicago Marathon, Field\nOthers in the field included Asefa Mengstu, who had a personal best of 2:04:06 but had only competed in one World Marathon Major, where he finished seventh, Dickson Chumba, with a personal best of 2:04:32 and first place finishes at the 2015 Chicago Marathon and 2018 Tokyo Marathon, Seifu Tura (2:04:44 personal best), Bedan Karoki (58:42 personal best in the half-marathon), Bashir Abdi, and Dejene Debela.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288269-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Marathon, Field\nIn the men's wheelchair race, Daniel Romanchuk returned to defend his title, having won the 2018 New York City Marathon, and the Boston and London Marathons in 2019. Also racing were ten-time Boston winner Ernst van Dyk, who had finished fifth in Tokyo and Boston, and sixth in London in 2019, eight time London winner David Weir, and four-time Chicago winner Josh George. In the women's wheelchair race, Manuela Sch\u00e4r returned to defend her title, having won the last seven World Marathon Majors, most recently the 2019 Berlin Marathon in September. She faced competition from three-time Chicago winner Amanda McGrory, eight-time Chicago winner Tatyana McFadden, and 2018 London winner Madison de Rozario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288269-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Marathon, Field\nThe men's wheelchair race started at 7:20\u00a0a.m. CT (UTC\u22125), the women's wheelchair race started one minute later, and the three waves of runners at 7:30, 8:00, and 8:35. The winners of the men and women's elite races received $100,000 each with an additional $75,000 available for a course record, and the wheelchair winners received $20,000 each with $5,000 available for a course record. The temperature at the start was around 40\u00a0\u00b0F (4\u00a0\u00b0C).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288269-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Marathon, Field\nThe weather forecast for the race was expected to be 46\u00a0\u00b0F (8\u00a0\u00b0C), with no chance of rain and 15\u201325-mile-per-hour (24\u201340\u00a0km/h) winds, described as \"near ideal conditions\" by the medical director. The race was held a day after Eliud Kipchoge ran the first sub-2 hour marathon during the Ineos 1:59 Challenge in Vienna, Austria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288269-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Marathon, Race summary\nIn the men's wheelchair race, a large pack formed, which was together through the first half of the race. Soon after this, Romanchuk made a move and was able to break away from the pack, winning in a time of 1:30:26. The pack approached the finish three minutes later and, following a sprint finish, Weir finished second in 1:33:31, and van Dyk finished a second later in third. In the women's wheelchair race was between McGrory, McFadden, Sch\u00e4r, and Susannah Scaroni.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288269-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Marathon, Race summary\nSch\u00e4r opened up a slight gap on the rest just after the halfway mark and managed to hold her lead to win in 1:41:08. At the 40-kilometre (25\u00a0mi) mark, the other three competitors were neck-and-neck, before McGrory and McFadden left Scaroni, then McFadden left McGrory to take second place in 1:45:22. Meanwhile, Scaroni had managed to catch back up to McGrory and they both crossed the finish line in 1:45:29. A photo finish concluded that McGrory had taken third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288269-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Marathon, Race summary\nIn the elite women's race, Kosgei set out very fast, passing 2 miles (3.2\u00a0km) in 9:54 and 5 kilometres (3.1\u00a0mi) in 15:28 with Ababel Yeshaneh and Burka 8 and 35 seconds behind, respectively. Hasay recorded a 5-kilometre split time of 22:20, equating to a 3:08 marathon, and she pulled out before the 10-kilometre mark citing a hamstring injury. Kosgei went through 10 kilometres (6.2\u00a0mi) in 32:28 and halfway in 1:06:59, which was over a minute faster than Paula Radcliffe's halfway split during her world record run at the 2003 London Marathon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288269-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Marathon, Race summary\nSaina, who had been running in fourth place, dropped out halfway through the race, having struggled with food poisoning on the journey to the United States from Kenya. Running behind two male pacemakers, Kosgei passed 25 kilometres (16\u00a0mi) in 1:19:33, 30 kilometres (19\u00a0mi) in 1:35:18, 35 kilometres (22\u00a0mi) in 1:51:14, 40 kilometres (25\u00a0mi) in 2:07:11 and finished in a time of 2:14:04. Kosgei beat Radcliffe's world record by 81 seconds and the course record, also set by Radcliffe in 2002, by 3:14. When she crossed the line, she was congratulated by Mayor of Chicago Lori Lightfoot and Radcliffe, who posed for a photo with her. Nearly seven minutes later, Yeshaneh and Burka finished in second and third in 2:20:51 and 2:20:55, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288269-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Marathon, Race summary\nIn the men's category, Cherono made an early breakaway, running the first mile in 4:42 with two pacemakers before he was caught by the pack. Six men, Debela, Cherono, Karoki, Mengstu, Chumba, and Tura, led for most of the race with a chasing pack close behind, however after 5 miles (8.0\u00a0km), the leading group had grown to nine runners with the addition of Abdi, Farah, and Rupp. Rupp and Farah dropped out of the lead group after 7 miles (11\u00a0km) and 15 kilometres (9.3\u00a0mi), respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288269-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Marathon, Race summary\nBy 20 kilometres (12\u00a0mi), the lead group was back down to the original six leaders and the pace was described by Cherono as \"very competitive from the beginning\" with the group going through half-way in 1:02:14 and Farah in 1:02:54 with Rupp three seconds behind before the pacemakers dropped out about 30 kilometres (19\u00a0mi) into the race. Not long after the halfway point, Rupp began to lose contact with Abdi and Farah, who were working together, but Rupp regained contact 18 miles (29\u00a0km) into the race, whilst Karoki increased the pace in the lead group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288269-0009-0002", "contents": "2019 Chicago Marathon, Race summary\nAt just after 30 kilometres, Chumba dropped from the lead group and 5 kilometres later, was 34 seconds behind, with Abdi, Farah, and Rupp a further 48, 116, and 138 seconds behind, respectively. Just before 23 miles (37\u00a0km), Rupp, who was nearly 3 minutes behind the leaders and 22 seconds behind Farah, abandoned the race citing a calf strain which had been causing pain since mile 6. At 38 kilometres (24\u00a0mi), Cherono made an attempt to break from the lead group, but was caught by Debela, Mengstu, and Karoki.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288269-0009-0003", "contents": "2019 Chicago Marathon, Race summary\nThe other three runners left Karoki behind before the final turn of the race before Cherono made a surge with 400 metres (1,300\u00a0ft) to go to and, following a sprint finish, won in a time of 2:05:45. Debela and Mengstu finished second and third, one and three seconds behind, respectively. Karoki was fourth in 2:05:53 and Abdi ran a Belgian record by finishing fifth in 2:06:14. Farah ran his slowest marathon ever, finishing eighth in 2:09:58.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288270-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Public Schools Strike\nThe 2019 Chicago Public Schools strike was a labor dispute between Chicago Public Schools and the Chicago Teachers Union (which represents the school district's teachers and some of the paraprofessional and school related personnel) and the Service Employees International Union Local 73 (which represents the district's support staff and a majority of the paraprofessional and school related personnel) that lasted 14 days. The strike began on October 17, 2019 when both unions failed to reach a contract agreement with Chicago Public Schools over compensation, benefits, staffing, wrap-around services such as counselors, nurses, and librarians, and caps on class sizes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288270-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago Public Schools Strike\nOn October 31, the strike officially ended when the mayor and the Chicago Teachers Union reached a tentative agreement allowing students to go back to class on Nov 1, 2019. The agreement included millions of dollars dedicated to reducing class sizes, hundreds more social workers, nurses and librarians, and a 16 percent salary increase over the coming five years, but did not achieve all the main goals of the unions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288270-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Public Schools Strike, Background\nAfter the expiration of the Chicago Public Schools (CPS) contract with the Chicago Teachers Union (CTU) in June 2019, a contract dispute emerged. CPS initially offered the union a 14% raise over 5 years while the union was seeking 15% over 3 years. The district proposed a 1.5% increase in healthcare costs while the union sought to maintain their current contributions. An independent fact-finder report suggested that the district offer a 16% raise over 5 years, and a 1% increase in healthcare costs. The district accepted the report, but the union rejected it. On top of pay and healthcare, the two sides disagreed on the length of the contract; the district proposed a 5-year contract while the union proposed a 3-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 780]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288270-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Public Schools Strike, Background\nOn September 24, 2019, CTU hosted a rally alongside SEIU Local 73 representing school support staff and Chicago Park District workers featuring Vermont senator and presidential candidate Bernie Sanders. Sanders was joined on the stage by city alderman, other labor activists, and actor John Cusack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288270-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Public Schools Strike, Background\nOn September 27, 2019, CTU members voted to authorize a potential strike starting on October 17 if a contract deal was not reached with 94% of its members voting in favor of a strike. The union's top priorities in contract negotiations are reducing classroom size and increasing the number of support staff such as nurses, librarians and social worker).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288270-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Public Schools Strike, Background\nOn July 16, 2019, SEIU Local 73 which represents the district's support staff such as custodians, bus aids, and security guards authorized a strike with a 97% approval vote from its members after contract negations stalled between the district and the union after their contract expired in June 2018. The union cited work schedules, compensation, staffing and benefits as points of conflicts in their contract negotiations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288270-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Public Schools Strike, Background\nOn October 14, 2019, the CTU and SEIU Local 73 held a rally for a fair contract in downtown Chicago 3 days before the strike. Despite progress made over the weekend prior, both sides remained divided on class sizes and staffing shortages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288270-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Public Schools Strike, Background\nOn October 16, 2019, the CTU held its house of delegates meeting where the bargaining team presented the board's final offer. The union delegates voted to reject the district's latest contract proposal leading to the beginning of a joint strike with SEIU Local 73 at 12:01 am on October 17 leaving roughly over 300,000 students out of school.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288270-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Public Schools Strike, Background\nOn October 16, 2019, CPS cancelled classes for October 17, 2019 in anticipation of the CTU strike. CTU delegates officially voted to go on strike hours afterwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288270-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Public Schools Strike, Strike and Actions, October 17th\nOn October 17, 2019 at 12:01 am, members of the Chicago Teachers Union and the SEIU Local 73, walked off the job. Pickets in front of schools began at 6:30 am until 10:30 am followed by a rally downtown later in the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288270-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Public Schools Strike, Strike and Actions, October 17th\nThe CTU and SEIU Local 73 began a rally outside Chicago Public Schools headquarters in downtown Chicago at around 1:30 pm. At around 2:30 pm, the demonstrators began marching through the loop towards to Millennium Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288270-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Public Schools Strike, Strike and Actions, October 18th\nOn October 18, 2019, the strike entered its second days as neither the CTU and SEIU Local 73 were able to reach a contract agreement. CPS staff members of the CTU and SEIU began picketing outside schools at 6:30 am to 10:30 am. The two unions held another rally downtown later that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288270-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Public Schools Strike, Strike and Actions, October 21st\nOn October 21, the strike entered its 5th day and 3rd school day. Union members returned to the picket line from 6:30 am to 10:30 am.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288270-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Public Schools Strike, Strike and Actions, October 22nd\nOn October 22, 2019, the strike entered its 6th day and 4th school day. Union members picketed from 6:30 am to 10:30 am. Massachusetts Senator and 2020 Presidential candidate Elizabeth Warren joined teachers on the picket line outside Oscar DePriest Elementary School in the South Austin neighborhood. Warren expressed her support for the striking CPS workers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288270-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Public Schools Strike, Strike and Actions, October 23rd\nOn October 23, union members only picketed until 8:00 am in front of schools. At 8:00 am, CTU members, SEIU 73, and their supporters rallied at various locations near the loop [311 S Wacker Park (Jackson/Wacker), Swisshotel (near Wacker/Columbus, D\u2019Angelo Park (Harrison/Franklin,Millennium Park (Randolph/Michigan) ] and converged into one march around City Hall during the mayor's budget address to the city. City officials as well as the Chicago Police Department urged the public to avoid driving in the loop and to use public transportation due to the large number of street closures due to the march.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288270-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Public Schools Strike, Strike and Actions, October 24th\nOn October 24, union members returned to the picket lines in front of schools from 6:30 am to 10:30 am. At 3:00 pm., the CTU held a civil disobedience training at their union headquarters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288270-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Public Schools Strike, Strike and Actions, October 29th\nOn October 29, The CTU and SEIU marched to the Sterling Bay headquarters to demand that the development return TIF funds given to the company that should have gone to schools. At the development, 9 CTU members were arrested when they did a sit-in located in the lobby of the Sterling Bay Headquarters. Chicago police said they were called just before 2 p.m. to a building in the 1300 block of West Fulton \"where numerous individuals were inside and refusing to leave.\" \"Police gave the offenders warnings to leave the building, which were refused,\" a statement from Chicago Police News Affairs read.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288270-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Public Schools Strike, Strike and Actions, October 30th\nDuring a House of Delegates vote in October 30, the union agreed to accept a tentative agreement in a 362-242 vote. A press conference later that night reinforced the mayor's stance that the days missed during the strike would not be made up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288270-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Public Schools Strike, Reactions, Public reaction\nThe Chicago Sun-Times/ABC7 Poll found 49% of voters either strongly or somewhat support a walkout, while 38% are opposed. CPS parents were more likely to support a strike, and some blamed Lightfoot for the ordeal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288270-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Public Schools Strike, Reactions, Public reaction\nSeveral national politicians who are candidates in the 2020 Democratic Party presidential primaries have expressed support for the unions during the strike. Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders spoke at a rally hosted by CTU and SEIU Local 73 on September 24. New Jersey Senator Cory Booker met with a group of teachers to show his support. Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren joined strikers on the picket line on October 22. Former Vice President Joe Biden called the leadership of the CTU and expressed his support for the strike on October 24.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288271-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Red Stars season\nThe 2019 Chicago Red Stars season was the team's eleventh season and seventh season in the National Women's Soccer League, the top tier of women's soccer in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288271-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Red Stars season, First-team squad, 2019 squad\nUpdated August 12, 2019 Players under contract to play for the club during 2019 season. bold type indicates player played for her national team. 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, 59], "content_span": [60, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288272-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Sky season\nThe 2019 Chicago Sky season was the franchise's 14th season in the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA). The regular season tipped off on May 25 and concluded on September 8. On August 22, the team clinched a playoff berth for the first time in three seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288272-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Sky season\nDuring the offseason, Amber Stocks was dismissed by the team as general manager and head coach. In November, James Wade was announced as the team's new head coach. Wade was previously an assistant with UMMC Ekaterinburg and the Minnesota Lynx.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288272-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Sky season\nThree Sky players, all guards, were named as reserves to the 2019 WNBA All-Star Game: veterans Allie Quigley and Courtney Vandersloot, and second-year player Diamond DeShields. The Sky finished the season second in points per game, but second-to-last in points allowed. DeShields was team's leading scorer with 16.2 points per game, and Vandersloot broke her own all-time record with 9.1 assists per game. Vandersloot and DeShields were named to the first and second All-WNBA Teams respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288272-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Sky season\nIn the first round of the 2019 WNBA Playoffs, fifth-seeded Sky hosted the eighth-seeded Phoenix Mercury, whom they defeated 105\u201376 in a single-elimination game. They lost their second-round single-elimination game on the road to the Las Vegas Aces by a score of 93\u201392 in the final seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288272-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Sky season, Transactions, WNBA Draft\nThe Sky made the following selections in the 2019 WNBA draft:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288272-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Sky season, Season overview\nPrior to the start of the season, new head coach James Wade prioritized improving defense as a key goal for the Sky this season. In the previous season, the Sky had recorded the league's worst defensive rating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288272-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Sky season, Season overview\nThe Sky lost their opening game against the Lynx on May 25, 2019, but won their home opener a week later against the Storm. After a road loss to the Mystics, the Sky proceeded to win four straight games. After a home loss to the Fever, the Sky faced the league-leading Sun, and surprised their opponents with a blowout 93\u201375 win. With a loss at home to the Mystics on June 26, Chicago held a 6\u20134 record ten games into the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288272-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Sky season, Season overview\nOn a three-game road trip from June 28 to July 2, the Sky lost three games against the Storm, Sparks, and Aces, dropping to a 6\u20137 record. The Sky won 5 out of their next 6 games, however, and improved to an 11\u20138 record before the All-Star break. The only game they lost during this period was a July 10 home game against the Lynx, which they lost by one point. The stretch also included a one-point win against the Dream on July 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288272-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Sky season, Season overview\nThree Sky players\u2014Diamond DeShields, Allie Quigley, and Courtney Vandersloot\u2014were named as reserves in the 2019 WNBA All-Star Game on July 27. Most of the team (all but three players) made the trip to Las Vegas for All-Star Weekend to support their teammates. DeShields won the Skills Challenge during All-Star Weekend, but Quigley failed to repeat as Three-Point Contest champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288272-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Sky season, Season overview\nOn July 30, on a road trip to face the league-leading Sun, the Sky faced problems with canceled and delayed flights and did not arrive in their hotel until 4:45am on the day of the game. They rebounded with a win in their next road game against the Dream and improved to a 12\u20139 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288272-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Sky season, Season overview\nDuring a 101\u201392 comeback victory against the New York Liberty on August 7, the Chicago Sky scored 42 points in the fourth quarter, the highest of any WNBA team since the league moved to a four-quarter format in 2006. Allie Quigley scored 22 points in the game, and Jantel Lavender double-doubled with 20 points and 10 rebounds. With this win, the Sky matched their previous season's win total of 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288272-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Sky season, Season overview\nOver their next four games, the Sky faced the two teams directly above them in the standings\u2014the Las Vegas Aces and the Los Angeles Sparks\u2014twice each. They split the series evenly with both teams, achieving a 15\u201311 record. Their home game against the Aces was marked by officiating controversies and a conflict between Liz Cambage and Cheyenne Parker, which resulted in technical fouls for both players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288272-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago Sky season, Season overview\nIn their remaining five games in August, the Sky went 3\u20132, for an overall record of 18\u201313. This stretch included both a convincing home 85\u201378 win over the top-seeded Washington Mystics and a surprise home loss to the low-seeded Dallas Wings. In September, the Sky scored 100 points in two straight games with wins over the playoff-bound Phoenix Mercury and Connecticut Sun, before losing their last regular season game on the road to the Mystics. Finishing the season with a 20\u201314 record, they finished the season as the fifth-seeded team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288273-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago White Sox season\nThe 2019 Chicago White Sox season was the club's 120th season in Chicago and 119th in the American League. The Sox played their home games at Guaranteed Rate Field. It was the final season of gameday broadcasts on WGN-TV, bringing to a close an era of periodic White Sox free-to-air broadcasts to its fans all over the city, as beginning in 2020 the White Sox will broadcast almost all its home and away games on both NBC Sports Chicago and NBC Sports Chicago+. Although they improved on their 62-100 record from the previous season, they missed the playoffs for the 11th straight year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election\nThe 2019 Chicago aldermanic election took place in two rounds on February 26 and April 2, 2019, to elect 50 aldermen to the Chicago City Council. Each alderman represents one of Chicago's 50 wards. The elections are non-partisan and use a two-round system where the top two finishers compete in a second-round run-off if no candidate receives more than 50% of the vote in the first round. The elections were party of the 2019 Chicago elections, which included elections for Mayor, City Clerk, City Treasurer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election\nOf the 50 incumbent aldermen 45 ran for re-election. Incumbents did not run in the 20th, 22nd, 25th, 39th, and 47th wards. Five aldermen ran unopposed: Brian Hopkins (2nd ward), Scott Waguespack (32nd), Gilbert Villegas (36th), Brendan Reilly (42nd), and Nicholas Sposato (38th).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election\nThree aldermen were defeated in the first round, and four more were defeated in run-off elections. There were a total of 12 new aldermen elected: Daniel La Spata (1st ward), Stephanie Coleman (16th), Jeanette Taylor (20th), Michael Rodriguez (22nd), Byron Sigcho-Lopez (25th), Felix Cardona (31st), Rossana Rodr\u00edguez (33rd), Samantha Nugent (39th), Andre Vasquez (40th), Jim Gardiner (45th), Matt Martin (47th), and Maria Hadden (49th). After the election, the council's Progressive Caucus grew from 10 to 18 members and a new 6-member Socialist Caucus was formed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Overview, Campaign\nCandidates for city council are required to submit 473 valid signatures from registered voters in their ward to appear on the ballot. A total of 212 candidates submitted nominating petitions, an increase from 184 candidates in the 2015 election. However, the total number of candidates is lower than the 351 candidates in 2011, the last municipal election that, like 2019, had an open race for mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Overview, Campaign\nIn the first round, three aldermen who ran for re-election lost their seats. There were run-offs elections in 14 wards: 10 races where incumbents are running, and four races for open seats. At least three additional incumbent aldermen were defeated in run-off elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, North Side, 1st ward\nIncumbent alderman Proco Joe Moreno unsuccessfully sought reelection. Moreno had been appointed alderman in 2010 by Mayor Richard M. Daley, and had subsequently been reelected in 2011 and 2015. Moreno ultimately lost reelection to his sole challenger, Daniel La Spata.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, North Side, 1st ward, Candidates\nOne candidate was removed from the ballot due to insufficient nominating petition signatures:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, North Side, 1st ward, Candidates\nThe following candidate filed nominating petitions but withdrew before ballot certification:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, North Side, 1st ward, Campaign\nMoreno and La Spata appeared at a candidate forum hosted by Logan Square Preservation on January 8, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, North Side, 2nd ward\nIncumbent first-term alderman Brian Hopkins won reelection, running unopposed on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, North Side, 32nd ward\nIncumbent third-term alderman Scott Waguespack won reelection, running unopposed on the ballot. He appeared at a candidate forum covering the Logan Square neighborhood on January 8, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, North Side, 40th ward\nIncumbent ninth-term alderman Patrick J. O'Connor unsuccessfully sought reelection, being defeated by Andre Vasquez in a runoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, North Side, 40th ward, Campaigns\nA candidate forum organized by several community organizations was scheduled on January 29, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, North Side, 42nd ward\nIncumbent third-term alderman Brendan Reilly won reelection, running unopposed on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, North Side, 43rd ward\nIncumbent second-term alderman Michele Smith won reelection, defeating Derek Lindblom in a runoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, North Side, 43rd ward, Candidates\nOne candidate was removed from the ballot due to insufficient nominating petition signatures:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, North Side, 44th ward, Candidates\nThe following candidate filed nominating petitions but withdrew before ballot certification:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, North Side, 46th ward\nIncumbent second-term alderman James Cappleman won reelection, defeating Marianne Lalonde in a runoff by a margin of only 25 votes (0.09% of the votes cast in the runoff).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, North Side, 47th ward\nIncumbent second-term alderman Ameya Pawar did not seek reelection as alderman, opting to instead run (unsuccessfully) for City Treasurer of Chicago. Matt Martin was elected to succeed him, defeating Michael Negron in a runoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, North Side, 47th ward, Campaign\nAll candidates, except Kastafaros, appeared at a forum focused on education issues on January 17, 2019. All candidates, except Ladien and Schwartzers, appeared at a forum on business issues on January 24. A third forum hosted by several neighborhood Chambers of Commerce was scheduled on January 26.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, North Side, 48th ward\nIncumbent second-term alderman Harry Osterman won reelection, defeating David Williams III, his sole challenger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, North Side, 49th ward\nIncumbent seventh-term alderman Joe Moore unsuccessfully sought reelection. He was defeated by Maria Hadden, his sole challenger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, North Side, 49th ward\nThrough this election, the victor Maria Hadden made history as the first LGBTQ woman of color to be elected to Chicago's City Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, North Side, 49th ward, Candidates\nTwo candidates were removed from the ballot due to insufficient nominating petition signatures:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, North Side, 49th ward, Campaign\nHadden and Moore both identify as progressives, but their policy positions differ sharply on a number of issues, including policing, accepting donations from developers, use of tax-increment financing, and charter school expansion. Both candidates participated in a debate hosted at Sullivan High School on January 15, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0024-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, North Side, 49th ward, Campaign\nAt the debate, they disagreed on a number of issues, including a freeze on new charter schools (Hadden supported one; Moore did not), funding for a new police training facility (Moore supported the ongoing proposal; Hadden did not), and use of tax-increment financing for the proposed Lincoln Yards project (Moore was in favor; Hadden was opposed).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, North Side, 49th ward, Campaign\nIn February 2019, a controversy emerged when two photographers alleged that the Moore campaign used their photographs in campaign advertisements without permission or attribution. Another controversy emerged late in the campaign when a Moore staffer accused a 15 year old Hadden volunteer (and former Moore intern) of espionage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, North Side, 50th ward, Candidates\nThe following candidate filed nominating petitions but withdrew before ballot certification:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Northwest Side, 26th ward\nIncumbent alderman Roberto Maldonado won reelection. Maldonado had been first appointed by Mayor Richard M. Daley in 2009, and had subsequently been reelected in 2011 and 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Northwest Side, 26th ward, Candidates\nTwo candidates were removed from the ballot due to insufficient nominating petition signatures:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Northwest Side, 30th ward\nIncumbent fourth-term alderman Ariel Reboyras won reelection, defeating Jessica Gutierrez in a runoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Northwest Side, 31st ward\nIncumbent first-term alderman Milly Santiago unsuccessfully sought reelection, losing to Felix Cardona, Jr. in a runoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Northwest Side, 31st ward, Candidates\nOne candidate was removed from the ballot due to insufficient nominating petition signatures:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Northwest Side, 33rd ward\nIncumbent alderman Deb Mell unsuccessfully sought reelection. Mell had first been appointed by Mayor Rahm Emanuel in 2013, and had subsequently been reelected in 2015. She was defeated by Rossana Rodriguez Sanchez in a runoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Northwest Side, 33rd ward, Candidates\nThe following candidates submitted nominating petition signatures but withdrew before the certification process:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Northwest Side, 33rd ward, Campaign\nAll three candidates appeared at a candidate forum hosted at Bateman Elementary School on February 7, 2019. The forum was originally scheduled for January 30 but was postponed due to the polar vortex.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Northwest Side, 35th ward\nIncumbent first-term alderman Carlos Ramirez-Rosa was reelected, defeating Amanda Yu Dieterich, his sole challenger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Northwest Side, 35th ward, Candidates\nTwo candidates were removed from the ballot due to insufficient nominating petition signatures:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Northwest Side, 35th ward, Campaign\nDieterich and Ramirez-Rosa appeared at a candidate forum hosted by Logan Square Preservation on January 8, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Northwest Side, 36th ward\nIncumbent first-term alderman Gilbert Villegas was reelected, running unopposed on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Northwest Side, 38th ward\nIncumbent first-term alderman Nicholas Sposato was reelected, running unopposed on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Northwest Side, 38th ward, Candidates\nOne candidate was removed from the ballot due to insufficient nominating petition signatures:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Northwest Side, 39th ward\nIncumbent alderman Margaret Laurino did not run for reelection. Laurino had first been appointed by Mayor Richard M. Daley in 1994, and had been reelected six times. Samantha Nugent was elected to succeed her, defeating Robert Murphy in a runoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Northwest Side, 39th ward, Candidates\nThe following candidates submitted nominating petition signatures but withdrew before the certification process:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Northwest Side, 41st ward\nIncumbent first-term alderman Anthony Napolitano won reelection, defeating Tim Heneghan, his sole challenger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Northwest Side, 45th ward\nIncumbent second-term alderman John Arena unsuccessfully sought reelection. He was defeated by Jim Gardiner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, West Side, 22nd ward\nIncumbent alderman Ricardo Mu\u00f1oz did not run for reelection. Mu\u00f1oz had first been appointed by Mayor Richard M. Daley in 1993, and had been subsequently reelected six times. Michael D. Rodriguez was elected to succeed him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, West Side, 22nd ward, Campaign\nAll four candidates appeared at a candidate forum at Little Village Lawndale High School on January 31, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, West Side, 24th ward, Candidates\nSecretary of Midwest Community Council 76 year old non for profit Organization", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0048-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, West Side, 24th ward, Candidates\nTwo candidates were removed from the ballot due to insufficient nominating petition signatures:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0049-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, West Side, 24th ward, Candidates\nOne candidate filed nominating petitions but withdrew before ballot certification:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0050-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, West Side, 25th ward\nIncumbent alderman Danny Solis did not run for reelection. Solis had first been appointed by Mayor Richard M. Daley in 1996, and had subsequently been reelected five times. Byron Sigcho-Lopez won the race to succeed him, defeating Alex Acevedo in a runoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0051-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, West Side, 25th ward, Campaign\nAll five candidates appeared at a forum hosted by the Pilsen Law Center and the Hispanic Lawyers Association of Illinois on January 12, 2019. Two additional forums were scheduled: one hosted by the West Loop Democratic Club is scheduled on January 23, and one hosted by the Coalition for a Better Chinese American Community and other Chinatown community organizations on January 28.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0052-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, West Side, 27th ward\nIncumbent sixth-term alderman Walter Burnett Jr. won reelection, defeating Cynthia Bednarz, his sole challenger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0053-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, West Side, 28th ward, Candidates\nThe following candidate submitted nominating petition signatures but withdrew before ballot certification:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0054-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, West Side, 29th ward, Candidates\nOne candidate was removed from the ballot due to insufficient nominating petition signatures:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0055-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, West Side, 37th ward\nIncumbent alderman Emma Mitts won reelection. Mitts had first been appointed by Mayor Richard M. Daley in 2000, and had subsequently been reelected in 2003, 2007, 2011, and 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0056-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Southwest Side, 11th ward\nIncumbent first-term alderman Patrick Daley Thompson won reelection, defeating David Mihalyfy, his sole challenger on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0057-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Southwest Side, 12th ward, Candidates\nTwo candidates were removed from the ballot due to insufficient nominating petition signatures:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0058-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Southwest Side, 13th ward\nIncumbent second-term alderman Marty Quinn won reelection, defeating David Krupa, his sole challenger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0059-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Southwest Side, 13th ward, Campaign\nKrupa ran on a platform of lowering property taxes and increasing police presence in the ward. Krupa walked back comments from 2016, in which he had declared himself to be a, \"day one Trump supporter\" to a reporter from the Chicago Reader. Krupa received support from 2018 Republican candidate for Illinois governor, Jeanne Ives, who helped fundraise for his campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0060-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Southwest Side, 13th ward, Campaign\nQuinn had originally challenged Krupa's ballot petition. However, Quinn's campaign submitted 2,800 sworn affidavits to the Board of Elections, supposedly from residents that had claimed they never signed Krupa's petitions. This create a problem for Quinn, since Krupa had only filed around 1,700 signatures in his petition, and only 200 of those signatures overlapped with affidavits submitted by Quinn's campaign. This meant that the majority of affidavits submitted by Quinn were either falsified or fraudulent. Quinn later dropped his challenge to Krupa, meaning that Krupa would appear on the ballot. Reports arose that the FBI had opened an investigation into Quinn's affidavits. This incident also brought free publicity to Krupa's candidacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 818]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0061-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Southwest Side, 14th ward\nIncumbent alderman Edward M. Burke won reelection. The longest-serving member of the Chicago City Council, Burke had consecutively served twelve full terms, plus a partial term. Burke won reelection despite having had a criminal complaint filed against him by the FBI on January 2, 2019, for attempted extortion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0062-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Southwest Side, 15th ward\nIncumbent first-term alderman Raymond Lopez won reelection, defeating Rafa Yanez in a runoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0063-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Southwest Side, 15th ward, Candidates\nOne candidate was removed from the ballot due to insufficient nominating petition signatures:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0064-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Southwest Side, 15th ward, Candidates\nOne candidate submitted nominating petition signatures but withdrew before the certification process:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0065-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Southwest Side, 16th ward\nIncumbent third-term alderman Toni Foulkes unsuccessfully sought reelection. She was defeated in a runoff election by Stephanie Coleman, whom she had narrowly defeated four years earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0066-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Southwest Side, 17th ward\nFirst-term incumbent alderman David H. Moore won reelection, defeating Raynetta Greenleaf, his sole challenger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0067-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Southwest Side, 18th ward\nIncumbent first-term alderman Derrick Curtis won reelection, defeating Chuks Onyezia, his sole challenger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0068-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Southwest Side, 23rd ward\nIncumbent alderman Silvana Tabares, who had been appointed by Mayor Rahm Emanuel in 2018, won reelection to a first full term, defeating Paulino Villarreal, her sole challenger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0069-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, Southwest Side, 23rd ward, Candidates\nOne candidate was removed from the ballot due to insufficient nominating petition signatures:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0070-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, South Side, 3rd ward\nIncumbent third-term alderman Pat Dowell won reelection, defeating Alexandria Willis, her sole challenger on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0071-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, South Side, 3rd ward, Candidates\nTwo candidates were removed from the ballot due to insufficient nominating petition signatures:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0072-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, South Side, 4th ward\nIncumbent alderman Sophia King, who had been appointed by Mayor Rahm Emanuel in 2016, won election to a first full term, defeating Ebony Lucas, her sole challenger on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0073-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, South Side, 5th ward\nIncumbent fifth-term alderman Leslie Hairston won reelection, defeating William Calloway in a runoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0074-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, South Side, 5th ward, Candidates\nOne candidate was removed from the ballot due to insufficient nominating petition signatures:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0075-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, South Side, 6th ward\nIncumbent second-term alderman Roderick Sawyer won reelection, defeating Deborah A. Foster-Bonner in a runoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0076-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, South Side, 7th ward, Candidates\nTwo candidates were removed from the ballot due to insufficient nominating petition signatures:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0077-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, South Side, 8th ward\nIncumbent alderman Michelle A. Harris won reelection. Harris had first been appointed alderman in 2006 by Mayor Richard M. Daley, and had subsequently been reelected in 2007, 2011, and 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0078-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, South Side, 8th ward, Candidates\nTwo candidates were removed from the ballot due to insufficient nominating petition signatures:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0079-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, South Side, 9th ward, Candidates\nOne candidate was removed from the ballot due to insufficient nominating petition signatures:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0080-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, South Side, 9th ward, Candidates\nOne candidate submitted nominating petitions but withdrew before ballot certification:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0081-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, South Side, 9th ward, Campaign\nA candidate forum was scheduled on January 26, 2019, at the Altgeld Murray Community Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0082-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, South Side, 10th ward\nFirst-term incumbent Susie Sadlowski Garza won reelection, defeating Robert \"Bobby\" Loncar, her sole challenger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0083-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, South Side, 10th ward, Candidates\nOne candidate was removed from the ballot due to insufficient nominating petition signatures:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0084-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, South Side, 19th ward\nSecond-term incumbent Matthew O'Shea won reelection, defeating David Dewar, his sole challenger on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0085-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, South Side, 20th ward\nIncumbent third-term alderman Willie Cochran did not run for reelection. Jeanette Taylor was elected to succeed him, defeating Nicole J. Johnson in a runoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0086-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, South Side, 20th ward, Candidates\nSix candidates were removed from the ballot due to insufficient nominating petition signatures:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0087-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, South Side, 21st ward\nIncumbent fourth-term alderman Howard Brookins won reelection, defeating Marvin McNeil in a runoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0088-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, South Side, 21st ward, Candidates\nOne candidate was removed from the ballot due to insufficient nominating petition signatures:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288274-0089-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago aldermanic election, South Side, 34th ward\nIncumbent alderman Carrie Austin won reelection, defeating Preston Brown Jr., her sole challenger on the ballot. She had first been appointed alderman by Mayor Richard M. Daley in 1994, and had subsequently been reelected to six consecutive subsequent terms before this.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288275-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago elections\nThe 2019 Chicago elections took place in two rounds on February 26, 2019, and April 2, 2019. Elections were held for Mayor of Chicago, City Clerk of Chicago, City Treasurer of Chicago, and all 50 members of the Chicago City Council. The candidates who won in these elections were inaugurated on May 20, 2019. Four ballot referenda were also voted on in certain precincts. The elections were administered by the Chicago Board of Elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288275-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago elections, Mayor\nIncumbent mayor Rahm Emanuel announced on September 4, 2018, that he would not run for re-election, reversing his previous announcement that he would run. Fourteen candidates appeared on the ballot in the first round election on February 26, 2019. Since no candidates won 50% of the vote, the top two vote-getters advanced to a run-off election. These candidates were former President of the Chicago Police Board Lori Lightfoot and Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle. In the general election on April 2, 2019, Lightfoot defeated Preckwinkle, winning with 73.7% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288275-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago elections, Mayor, Candidates, Candidates who advanced to runoff\nThe following candidates advanced to the runoff election on April 2", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 76], "content_span": [77, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288275-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago elections, Mayor, Candidates, Candidates eliminated in the first round\nThe following candidates were eliminated in the first round and did not advance to the runoff election", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 83], "content_span": [84, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288275-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago elections, Mayor, Candidates, Candidates eliminated in the first round\nA full list of eligible write-ins was made available to precincts on election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 83], "content_span": [84, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288275-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago elections, Mayor, Candidates, Petitions rejected\nThe following candidates had been denied inclusion on the ballot following successful challenges to their petitions:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 61], "content_span": [62, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288275-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago elections, Mayor, Candidates, Withdrew\nThe following individuals are previously-declared candidates who had terminated their candidacies. Unless otherwise indicated, these individuals did not submit petitions:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288275-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago elections, Mayor, Candidates, Declined\nThe following are prospective and speculative candidates that declined to run:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288275-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago elections, City Clerk\nIncumbent City Clerk Anna M. Valencia ran unopposed on the ballot after two potential challengers were removed for the ballot due to a lack of sufficient nominating petition signatures. Valencia thus won in the first round election on February 26, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288275-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago elections, City Clerk\nValencia had been first appointed in 2017 following the resignation of Susana Mendoza (who had resigned in order to assume the office of Illinois Comptroller).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288275-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago elections, City Clerk, Candidates, Petitions rejected\nThe following candidates had been denied inclusion on the ballot following successful challenges to their petitions", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288275-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago elections, City Treasurer\nIncumbent City Treasurer Kurt Summers announced that he would not run for re-election on October 16, 2018. Three candidates appeared on the first round ballot on February 26, 2019: Illinois state representative Melissa Conyears-Ervin, Chicago alderman Ameya Pawar, and accountant Peter Gariepy. Conyears-Ervin and Pawar advanced to the run-off election on April 2, where Conyears-Ervin won with 59.4% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288275-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago elections, City Council\nOf the 50 wards represented in Chicago City Council, 45 incumbent aldermen ran for re-election, of whom 38 were re-elected. In the first round election on February 26, 2019, four new aldermen were elected, including three who defeated incumbents. Elections in fourteen wards advanced to run-off elections on April 2, when eight new aldermen were elected. A total of 12 new aldermen were elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288275-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago elections, Ballot measures\nFour referenda appeared on the ballot in certain precincts on February 26, 2019:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288275-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago elections, Voter turnout, First round\nTurnout in the first round of the election was 35.45%. The low turnout was attributed to poor youth turnout and a drop off in voter turnout from the 2018 midterms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 50], "content_span": [51, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288275-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago elections, Voter turnout, First round\nOn the day of the election, there were concerns that the turnout was on track to be low enough to supplant 2007 Chicago elections as the record setter for the lowest municipal election turnout in Chicago history during a mayoral election year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 50], "content_span": [51, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288275-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago elections, Voter turnout, First round\nThe 35.45% turnout was higher than that of the first round of the 2015 election, but was lower than that of the 2015 runoff. Turnout was lower than in the previous year with an open race for mayor, which was 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 50], "content_span": [51, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288275-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago elections, Voter turnout, First round\nTurnout was reported to be lowest among the millennial age demographic, with a lower turnout among those under 35 than the previous lowest under-35 turnout in 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 50], "content_span": [51, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288275-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago elections, Voter turnout, Runoff\nAt 33.08%, turnout in the runoff matched the all-time low for municipal election turnout in a mayoral election year, set by the 2007 Chicago elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election\nThe 2019 Chicago mayoral election was the 2019 edition of the quadrennial elections held to determine the Mayor of the City of Chicago, Illinois. The election was held on February 26, 2019. Since no candidate received a majority of votes, a runoff election was held on April 2, 2019 between the two candidates with the most votes, Lori Lightfoot and Toni Preckwinkle. Lightfoot defeated Preckwinkle in the runoff election, becoming mayor-elect of Chicago. Lightfoot was sworn in as mayor on May 20, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election\nThe election was officially nonpartisan, with its winner being elected to a four-year term. The elections were part of the 2019 Chicago elections, which included elections for City Council, City Clerk, and City Treasurer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election\nIncumbent Mayor Rahm Emanuel initially announced he would run for a third term but withdrew in September 2018. Emanuel was first elected in 2011 (winning in the first round with 55.19% of the vote) and reelected in 2015 (receiving 55.7% of the vote in the runoff election).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election\nThe runoff was historic, as it assured Chicago would elect its first African-American female mayor, its second elected African-American Mayor, after Harold Washington, and its second female mayor, after Jane Byrne. Not only is Lightfoot the first African-American woman mayor in Chicago's history, but she is also the first openly LGBT person to lead Chicago. Lightfoot's election made Chicago the largest city won by an African American woman, as well as the largest by an openly LGBT person, in United States history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Campaign, First round\nIncumbent mayor Rahm Emanuel declared his intent to seek reelection on October 17, 2017. One month later, Troy LaRaviere became the first opponent to declare their intent to run against Emanuel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Campaign, First round\nLater, in 2018, more opponents would declare their intent to run against Emanuel, with Garry McCarthy and Willie Wilson doing so in March, Dorothy A. Brown Cook and Ja'Mal Green and Neal S\u00e1les-Griffin doing so in April, Lori Lightfoot, John Kozlar, and Paul Vallas doing so in May, Matthew Rooney doing so in June, and Amara Enyia and Jerry Joyce doing so in August. By the end of the Summer of 2018, a dozen individuals had declared their candidacies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Campaign, First round\nOn September 4, 2018, Emanuel announced that he would no longer be seeking reelection. Emanuel's announcement shook up the race, with many new candidates declaring their candidacies for mayor in the weeks that followed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Campaign, First round\nIn late November, much of the media coverage on the race showed Toni Preckwinkle and Susana Mendoza (both of whom had entered the race after Emanuel bowed out) to be considered its two frontrunners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Campaign, First round\nThe race for mayor was upended by Alderman Ed Burke's corruption scandal. Mayoral candidates Toni Preckwinkle, Susana Mendoza, Gery Chico, and Bill Daley all had connections to the disgraced alderman, and the scandal encouraged an anti-corruption and anti-machine politics sentiment among voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Campaign, First round\nA number of issues were debated by the candidates throughout the campaign. One of the major issues was pensions, as the city's annual pensions contribution had been projected to double between 2018 and 2023. Another issue was education, where sub-issues included school closings that had taken place under the Emanuel administration and the possibility of reforming the school-board selection method. Another issue was crime. Particularly in light of cases such as the murder of Laquan McDonald, issues regarding practices by the city's law enforcement were also discussed by candidates. Another issue was the use of tax increment financing by the city. Affordable housing was another issue debated. Ethics reforms were also debated. Taxes were another issue debated, with some candidates advocating for a commuter tax and some candidates advocating for a property tax freeze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 929]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Campaign, First round\nAfter ballot challenges were settled, a total of fourteen candidates were included on the ballot for the first round of the election. This is the most candidates that have ever been on the ballot in the history of Chicago mayoral elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Campaign, First round\nThe first round of the election was considered highly competitive to the end, with a number of candidates shown by polls to be viable contenders to potentially advance to the runoff. For example, a poll conducted February 11\u201313 by Mason-Dixon Polling & Research Inc. for the media outlets Telemundo/NBC 5 Chicago illustrated what the outlets described as a tight five-way race between (in alphabetical order) Chico, Daley, Lightfoot, Mendoza, and Preckwinkle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Campaign, First round\nOn February 24, The Wall Street Journal described the race's polling as showing six candidates with the possibility of making the runoff, with the five strongest contenders being described as (in alphabetical order) Chico, Daley, Lightfoot, Mendoza, and Preckwinkle. Also on February 24, Chicago magazine wrote that it considered six individuals to have a chance of making the runoff, with those individuals being (in alphabetical order) Chico, Daley, Lightfoot, Mendoza, Preckwinkle, and Wilson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Campaign, First round\nIn the first round, Lori Lightfoot placed first and Toni Preckwinkle placed second, securing them both a spot in the runoff election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Campaign, First round\nLightfoot's first-place finish in the first round was regarded to be an upset. She was seen as a long-shot when she first entered the race. In late-January, Lightfoot's support in publicly released polls had only ranged between 2% and 5%. Despite her low poll numbers in January, Lightfoot had persisted in her campaign, performing well in debates and running some ads on television. She won the endorsement of the Chicago Sun-Times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Campaign, First round\nShe also garnered new personal endorsements, including those of the Scott Waguespack, David Orr, and Robin Kelly, of whom the Chicago Sun-Times' Mark Brown would later write in exploring the contributing factors to Lightfoot's first-round victory, \"none of them heavyweights but influential enough to point the way for progressive voters looking for some sign, any sign, of how to pick their way through the thicket of candidates.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0013-0002", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Campaign, First round\nWhile Lightfoot rose to the top of some polls near the end of the race, she had peaked in support so late in the race that none of the other candidates had been focused on running negative ads against her. Lightfoot also was seen as ultimately benefiting from the Burke corruption scandal, as she was running as an \"political outsider\" on an anti-corruption platform. Preckwinkle's allies had also, accidentally, provided Lightfoot with free media attention on two noteworthy occasions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0013-0003", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Campaign, First round\nThe first incident occurred February 18, when one of Lightfoot's press conferences was crashed by Preckwinkle ally Robert Martwick, with whom Lightfoot got into a heated exchange. The second incident where Preckwinkle's camp generated free headlines for Lightfoot was when, days before the first round of the election, her campaign manager, Scott Cisek, published a Facebook post likening Lightfoot to a Nazi, leading to his firing by the Preckwinkle campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Campaign, First round\nIn Chicago, ethnic/racial coalitions had often played a key role in elections. As such, many of the candidates were seen as targeting different groups with their campaigns. Hispanic candidates Gery Chico and Susana Mendoza were seen as vying for the hispanic vote. Toni Preckwinkle and Willie Wilson were seen as targeting the black vote. Bill Daley was seen as targeting the white vote. Lightfoot was seen as breaking the rules of traditional Chicago politics by not basing her candidacy on seeking the support of particular ethnic/racial groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Campaign, Runoff\nFor the runoff, Lightfoot received endorsements from seven of the twelve candidates that had been eliminated in the first round (Gery Chico, Jerry Joyce, John Kozlar, Susana Mendoza, Neal Sales-Griffin, Paul Vallas, and Willie Wilson). Preckwinkle, in contrast, received no endorsements from any candidates that had been eliminated in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Campaign, Runoff\nIn what was considered a \"sweep\" of the city's major publications, retaining her endorsement from the Chicago Sun-Times, for the runoff Lightfoot also received the endorsements of the Chicago Tribune and Crain's Chicago Business (both of which had endorsed Bill Daley in the first round).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Campaign, Runoff\nIn the runoff, Preckwinkle highlighted her depth of government experience and sought to emphasize a contrast with Lightfoot's lack of experience in elected office. Lightfoot criticized Preckwinkle's connections with controversial figures such as Ed Burke and Joseph Berrios.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Campaign, Runoff\nThe two candidates differed on rent control, with Preckwinkle seeking the repeal of a state law prohibiting local governments from imposing rent control, while Lightfoot did not advocate for rent control in Chicago. The candidates differed on prospective term limits, with Preckwinkle opposing them, and Lightfoot advocating limiting both mayoral tenures and City Council committee chairmanships to two terms. Preckwinkle sought to create a ban on aldermen holding outside jobs, while Lightfoot differed, instead preferring to only ban them from holding outside jobs that pose conflicts of interest with official their duties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0018-0001", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Campaign, Runoff\nPreckwinkle wanted the power to draw ward maps to remain in the hands of the City Council, while Lightfoot wanted a nonpartisan and independent process to be created for redistricting. Preckwinkle defended retaining the practice of \"aldermanic prerogative\", while Lightfoot sought to bring an end to the practice. The candidates also differed on whether they would retain incumbent Superintendent of the Chicago Police Department Eddie T. Johnson, with Preckwinkle having stating that she planned to immediately dismiss Johnson of his post, while Lightfoot stated that she planned to retain him at least through the summer of 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Candidates\nIn order to be listed on the ballot, candidates were required to submit petitions between November 19 and 26.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Candidates\nAny certified candidate (those whose petitions had been certified by the Board of Elections) may have had their nomination papers challenged up until December 1. Those candidates with properly-filed challenges against their petitions would have their candidature subjected to hearings and procedures which would assess the validity of their petitions. If any candidate failed to file a statement of economic interests within five days of having their petition certified, then their certification would be revoked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Candidates\nThe deadline to file a notarized declaration of intent to be a write\u2013in candidate was December 27, 2018. An exception to the December 27 deadline for write-in candidates to file their declaration of intent existed for circumstances in which a candidate lost their certification after the December 27 deadline due to the outcome of a challenge to their petitions (candidates in this circumstance were granted until February 19 to file a notarized declaration of intent to run as a write-in candidate).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Candidates\nCertified candidates (those whose petitions had been certified by the Board of Elections) were permitted to have their name removed from the ballot if they officially withdrew any time before December 20, 2018. Even if they informally withdrew by ceasing to campaign, all certified candidates that did not file to formally withdraw before the December 20 deadline would have their names listed on the ballot regardless of whether they were still active contenders. However, after December 20 candidates still may have filed to officially withdraw, an action which would have instructed the Board of Elections to deem all votes cast for the candidates as invalid when tallying votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Candidates\nDue to the time needed to complete process of reviewing nearly 200 challenges to candidate petitions in the mayoral race and other municipal elections, the start of the early voting period for the first round had been delayed to January 29 from its previously scheduled January 17 date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Candidates\nThe total of fourteen candidates on the February mayoral ballot is record-setting for Chicago mayoral elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Candidates, Candidates eliminated in the first round, Write-in candidates\nA full list of eligible write-ins was made available to precincts on election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 104], "content_span": [105, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Candidates, Petitions rejected\nThe following candidates had been denied inclusion on the ballot following successful challenges to their petitions:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Candidates, Withdrew\nThe following individuals are previously-declared candidates who had terminated their candidacies. Unless otherwise indicated, these individuals did not submit petitions:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Candidates, Declined\nThe following are prospective and speculative candidates that declined to run:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Fundraising, Runoff\nNote that following totals include the amount raised in both rounds of the election", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Polling, Runoff\nThe following are runoff polls limited to voters in a single ward:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Results, First round, Results by ward\nSeven candidates each had pluralities in at least one of the city's fifty wards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Results, First round, Results by ward\nOf the city's eighteen wards that are predominantly black, Wilson carried a plurality of the vote in thirteen (Wards 6, 7, 9, 16, 17, 18, 20, 21, 24, 28, 29, 34, and 37) with Preckwinkle carrying a plurality of the vote in the remaining five (Wards 3, 4, 5, 8, and 27). In the combined vote of the city's predominately black wards, Wilson placed first, Preckwinkle placed second, Lightfoot placed third, Daley placed fourth, and Enyia placed fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Results, Runoff, Results by ward\nLightfoot won all fifty of the city's wards. Additionally, Lightfoot won 2,049 of the city's 2,069 voting precincts (all but twenty), a victory for Lightfoot in more than 99.03% of precincts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Voter turnout, First round\nTurnout in the first round of the election was 35.20%. The low turnout was attributed to poor youth turnout and a drop off in voter turnout from the 2018 midterms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Voter turnout, First round\nThe 35.32% turnout was higher than that of the first round of the 2015 election, but was lower than that of the 2015 runoff. Turnout was lower than in the previous open race in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Voter turnout, First round\nTurnout was reported to be lowest among the millennial age demographic, with a lower turnout among those under 35 than the previous lowest under-35 turnout in 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288276-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Chicago mayoral election, Portrayal in media\nThe Steve James documentary series City So Real, which premiered at the 2020 Sundance Film Festival and was later televised on National Geographic on October 28, 2020, centers on the mayoral election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288277-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chichester District Council election\nElections to Chichester District Council in West Sussex, United Kingdom were held on 2 May 2019. The whole council was up for election and the Conservative Party had its majority wiped out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288277-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chichester District Council election, Boundary changes\nIn 2016, the Local Government Boundary Commission for England presented its proposed boundary changes for the Chichester District, following a three-month consultation with the public. This involved reducing the number of councillors from 48 to 36, and the number of wards from 29 to 21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 59], "content_span": [60, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288277-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chichester District Council election, Notes and references\nThis Elections in England related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288278-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chilean Air Force C-130 crash\nOn 9 December 2019, a Chilean Air Force Lockheed C-130 Hercules military transport aircraft crashed in the Drake Passage while en route to Base Presidente Eduardo Frei Montalva, a Chilean military base on King George Island in Antarctica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288278-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chilean Air Force C-130 crash\nThe crash site was located on 12 December 2019 after a three-day search, and no survivors were found.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288278-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chilean Air Force C-130 crash, Aircraft\nThe aircraft was built in 1978 for the United States Air Force with tail number 77-0324 and serial number 382-4776, but was delivered to the United States Marine Corps as a KC-130R tanker for aerial refueling operations and assigned BuNo 160628. It operated in Cherry Point, North Carolina (VMGR-252) and in Iwakuni, Japan (VMGR-152).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288278-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Chilean Air Force C-130 crash, Aircraft\nThe aircraft was placed in storage at AMARG from 2009 until 2014. After being purchased by the Chilean Air Force for US$7 million, it was refurbished at Hill AFB, Utah, to C-130H standards and delivered in 2015 under the new tail number 990.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288278-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Chilean Air Force C-130 crash, Accident\nThe aircraft departed Punta Arenas, Patagonia, Chile, at 19:55 UTC (16:55 local time) bound for King George Island, Antarctica. The flight was intended to provide supplies to a base in Chilean Antarctic Territory and to bring personnel to inspect a floating fuel supply line and other equipment at the base. The Chilean Air Force flies from Punta Arenas to King George Island monthly. Radio contact with the plane was lost at 21:13 UTC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288278-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Chilean Air Force C-130 crash, Search\nA search was conducted by aircraft from the Chilean Air Force, Argentina, Brazil, United Kingdom, United States and Uruguay. Also, two Chilean Navy frigates searched the area where the aircraft was last observed by radar. They were aided by a team of satellite imagery analysts from the Israeli Defense Forces' Unit 9900. The search effort was hampered by rough seas and poor visibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288278-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Chilean Air Force C-130 crash, Crash site\nOne day into the search, debris from an aircraft was found floating in the sea 31 kilometres (19\u00a0mi) from the last known position of the missing aircraft. Debris and personal items were recovered by Brazilian Navy polar research ship Almirante Maximiano.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288278-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Chilean Air Force C-130 crash, Crash site\nThe crash site was located off the coast of South America on 12 December, 27 kilometres (17\u00a0mi) from the C-130's last known position. The aircraft fuselage and main components were identified along with human remains. Chilean Air Force chief Arturo Merino confirmed that everyone on board was killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288278-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Chilean Air Force C-130 crash, Passengers and crew\nThe aircraft had 38 people on board, 21 passengers and 17 crew. Fifteen passengers were Chilean Air Force servicemen, three were Chilean soldiers, two were civilians employed by the Inproser engineering and construction firm, and one was a student at University of Magallanes. The crew was composed entirely of Chilean air force personnel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288278-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Chilean Air Force C-130 crash, Investigation\nAn accident investigation is being conducted by the Chilean Air Force. As of December\u00a02019, the cause of the crash is unknown, due in part to an insufficient quantity of recovered components. The aircraft experienced a complete break-up, either in-flight, or after crashing into the sea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288279-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chilean Primera Divisi\u00f3n\nThe 2019 Campeonato Nacional, known as Campeonato AFP PlanVital 2019 for sponsorship reasons, was the 89th season of top-flight football in Chile. The season started on 15 February 2019. Universidad Cat\u00f3lica were the defending champions, having won the previous tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288279-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chilean Primera Divisi\u00f3n\nDue to the 2019 Chilean protests, the competition was suspended since mid-October with six matchdays still left. After a failed attempt to resume normal activity that saw only one match fully played, on 29 November 2019, ANFP's Council of Presidents voted to conclude the season. Thus Universidad Cat\u00f3lica, who were leading the competition at the time of the suspension, won their fourteenth title. No teams were relegated to the Primera B this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288279-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chilean Primera Divisi\u00f3n, Teams\nSixteen teams took part in the league in this season: the top fourteen teams from the previous season, plus Coquimbo Unido and Cobresal, who were promoted from the Primera B. Both promoted teams replaced Deportes Temuco and San Luis, who were relegated at the end of the last season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288280-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 China Championship\nThe 2019 China Championship was a professional snooker tournament that took place from 23 to 29 September 2019. The event was held at the Guangzhou Tianhe Sports Centre in Guangzhou, China. Qualifying for the event took place from 15 to 18 August 2019 at the Barnsley Metrodome in Barnsley, England. The tournament was the fourth edition of the China Championship and the third ranking event of the 2019/2020 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288280-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 China Championship\nMark Selby was the defending champion, having defeated John Higgins in the previous year's final 10\u20139. Selby reached the semi-finals, before losing 6\u20133 to Shaun Murphy. Murphy reached his third consecutive final, having done so at the two prior events Shanghai Masters and the International Championship. Murphy played Mark Williams in the final, winning his 8th ranking title with a 10\u20139 in the final. The highest break of the event was a 145 made by Mark Allen in the first round win over Anthony Hamilton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288280-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 China Championship, Tournament format\nThe 2019 China Championship was the fourth edition of the China Championship, first held in 2016. The event featured 64 players with a wildcard and qualifying round. Matches were played as best-of-9-frames until the semi-finals. At the semi-final stage, both matches were played as best-of-11-frames, and the two session final as best-of-19-frames.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288280-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 China Championship, Tournament format, Prize fund\nThe event featured a total prize fund of \u00a3751,000, with the winner receiving \u00a3150,000. This was slightly higher than the 2018 prize fund of \u00a3725,000 with the same denomination for the winner. A breakdown of prize money at the event is shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288280-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 China Championship, Tournament summary\nQualifying for the event was played over one round, and a pre-qualifier wildcard round. Qualifying took place between 15 and 18 August 2019 at the Barnsley Metrodome in Barnsley, England featuring 64 matches. Participants included players on the World Snooker Tour and invited amateur players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288280-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 China Championship, Tournament summary, Early rounds (first\u2013fourth round)\nDefending champion Mark Selby won his opening first round match, defeating Chen Feilong. Selby trailed 1\u20132, before Selby won three of the next four to win the match 5\u20133. Selby defeated Martin Gould, and then Chris Wakelin both 5\u20132 to reach the quarter-finals. Three-time world champion Mark Williams defeated Kishan Hirani in an all Welsh opening round match 5\u20131. Williams defeated Luo Honghao and Luca Brecel to reach the quarter-finals. Former world champion Graeme Dott lost on a deciding frame to Norwegian Kurt Maflin during the first round 5\u20134. Maflin then defeated Jordan Brown to play four-time world champion John Higgins. Four-time world champion Higgins led their match 3\u20130, before Maflin won five frames in-a-row to win the match, and reach the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 78], "content_span": [79, 851]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288280-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 China Championship, Tournament summary, Early rounds (first\u2013fourth round)\nHaving amassed a 15-match winning streak, Judd Trump lost in the third round to Joe Perry 5\u20132. Trump had not lost a match since April, and won the prior two tournaments that he played in, the World Snooker Championship and the International Championship. The 2005 world champion Shaun Murphy also reached the quarter-finals. He defeated Yuan Sijun, Ryan Day, and Matthew Selt all 5\u20133. Barry Hawkins defeated Liam Highfield, Mitchell Mann and Zhao Xintong to reach the last-8. Iranian Hossein Vafaei defeated Tom Ford, Kyren Wilson and Anthony McGill to reach the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 78], "content_span": [79, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288280-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 China Championship, Tournament summary, Early rounds (first\u2013fourth round)\nFormer world number one Ding Junhui also lost his opening match where he lost 5\u20133 to Zhao Xintong. Mark Allen won his opening match against Anthony Hamilton 5\u20133, also making the highest break of the tournament, a 145. Allen subsequently lost in the second round to Noppon Saengkham 5\u20134. Saengkham lost the third round to David Gilbert.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 78], "content_span": [79, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288280-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 China Championship, Tournament summary, Later rounds (quarter-final\u2013final)\nThe quarter-finals were played on 27 September. Defending champion Selby played Hawkins in the first quarter-final. The pair were always within one frame between scores, and were tied at 4\u20134. Selby made match's highest break of 98 in the deciding frame to claim a 5\u20134 victory. Shaun Murphy drew Kurt Maflin, Murphy lead the match throughout and won 5\u20132. Having defeated the reigning world champion in the round prior, Joe Perry was defeated by Hossein Vafaei. In winning the match, Vafaei reached only his third ranking semi-final. In the last quarter-final match, Mark Williams defeated David Gilbert 5\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 79], "content_span": [80, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288280-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 China Championship, Tournament summary, Later rounds (quarter-final\u2013final)\nThe semi-finals were played on 28 September, as best-of-11-frames matches. The first match had Murphy defeat Selby. Murphy won the first three frames of the match, before Selby won three of the next four with breaks of 100, and 101. Murphy won the next two frames to win the match 6\u20133. The second semi-final was contested between Vafaei and Williams. Vafaei had never played in a ranking event final, but reached this stage at the 2017 China Open, and the 2019 Welsh Open. Williams had lost only six frames in the prior five matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 79], "content_span": [80, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288280-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 China Championship, Tournament summary, Later rounds (quarter-final\u2013final)\nWilliams won the first three frames, and four of the first five to lead 4\u20131, before Vafaei made a 134 break to trail 4\u20132. Williams won frame seven, to be one away from victory, but Vafaei won three frames in-a-row to take the match to a deciding frame. Williams made a thin cut, and made a 96 break to win the match. He later commented, \"[he] could play that another 20 times and [he] wouldn't get it\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 79], "content_span": [80, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288280-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 China Championship, Tournament summary, Later rounds (quarter-final\u2013final)\nThe final was played on 29 September, a best-of-19-frames match played over two sessions. The final was contested between Shaun Murphy (who had defeated Yuan Sijun, Ryan Day, Matthew Selt, Kurt Maflin and Mark Selby to reach the final), and Mark Williams (who defeated Kishan Hirani, Luo Honghao, Luca Brecel, David Gilbert, and Hossein Vafaei). This was Williams' 35th ranking event final, event final and Murphy's 20th. Murphy had reached the final of both of the prior two tournaments, the International Championship and the Shanghai Masters, but had not won any of his prior five tournament finals. Williams, in comparison, had won all of his last five finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 79], "content_span": [80, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288280-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 China Championship, Tournament summary, Later rounds (quarter-final\u2013final)\nThe first session ended 5\u20134 in favour of Murphy, with Williams tying the match in frame 10. Murphy made breaks of 75, 76, 103 and 79 in four consecutive frames to lead 9\u20135. With his opponent one frame from winning the event, Williams won the next four frames, including a break of 132 in frame 18 to force a deciding frame. Murphy was the first player to get a chance in the frame, scoring 69, enough to force Williams to require a snooker. Williams made a break of 30, and attempted to play a snooker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 79], "content_span": [80, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288280-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 China Championship, Tournament summary, Later rounds (quarter-final\u2013final)\nHowever, Murphy potted the last remaining red ball to win the frame and match. After his win, he would comment that the break in the deciding frame was \"one of the best breaks of [his] life\". Murphy's last victory was over 18 months prior, and had struggled during the 2018/19 season, which he called the \"worst run\" of his career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 79], "content_span": [80, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288280-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 China Championship, Main draw\nThe main draw of the event featured 64 players. Players in bold denote match winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288280-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 China Championship, Qualifying\nQualifying for the event took place between 15 and 18 August 2019 at the Barnsley Metrodome in Barnsley, England. Matches involving four wildcard players, Mark Selby and Chen Feilong, Yan Bingtao and Mei Xiwen, Ding Junhui and Brandon Sargeant, Ken Doherty, Tom Ford, Judd Trump and James Wattana, were held over and played in Guangzhou. Matches were played as best-of-9-frames. Players in bold denote match winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288280-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 China Championship, Century breaks, Main stage centuries\nThere were a total of 58 century breaks made during the tournament. Mark Allen made the highest break of the event, a 145. The break was made in frame five of the first round win over Anthony Hamilton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 61], "content_span": [62, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288280-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 China Championship, Century breaks, Qualifying stage centuries\nThere were a total of 28 century breaks made during the qualifying tournament preceding the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288281-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 China Cup\nThe 2019 Gree China Cup International Football Championship (Chinese: 2019\u5e74\u683c\u529b\u4e2d\u56fd\u676f\u56fd\u9645\u8db3\u7403\u9526\u6807\u8d5b) was the third edition of the China Cup, an international football tournament held in China annually. It took place from 21 to 25 March 2019 in Nanning, Guangxi, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288281-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 China Cup, Participating teams\nOn 11 February 2019, it was announced that Thailand, Uruguay and Uzbekistan would participate in the 2019 China Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 35], "content_span": [36, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288281-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 China Cup, Match officials\nThe following referees were chosen for the 2019 China Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 31], "content_span": [32, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288281-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 China Cup, Goalscorers\nThere were 9 goals scored in 4 matches, for an average of 2.25 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 27], "content_span": [28, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288282-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 China Formula 4 Championship\nThe 2019 China Formula 4 Championship (Shell Helix FIA F4 Chinese Championship) was the fifth season of the China Formula 4 Championship. It began on 12 April at the Shanghai International Circuit and finished on 28 September at the same place after one double header, five triple header rounds. First round being run as a support for the Chinese Grand Prix in Shanghai, for the Formula One World Championship, remaining five rounds of them co-hosted with the China Formula Grand Prix championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288282-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 China Formula 4 Championship, Race calendar and results\nAll rounds were held in China. For the first time the series supported the Formula 1 Chinese Grand Prix. The remaining events supported the China Formula Grand Prix championship and 2019 F3 Asian Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288283-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 China League One\nThe 58.com 2019 Chinese Football Association China League (Chinese: 58\u540c\u57ce 2019\u4e2d\u56fd\u8db3\u7403\u534f\u4f1a\u7532\u7ea7\u8054\u8d5b) was the 16th season of the China League One, the second tier of the Chinese football league pyramid, since its establishment in 2004. The league's title sponsor was the e-commerce website 58.com.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288283-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 China League One\nThe season began on 9 March and concluded on 2 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 78]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288283-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 China League One\nPolicy regarding foreign players and U-23 domestic players was modified in this season. The same as the previous two seasons, at least one domestic player who is under the age of 23 (born on or after 1 January 1996) must be in the starting eleven. However, the total number of foreign players appearing in matches is no longer related to the total number of U-23 domestic players. A club can register three foreign players at most in the same time and use two foreign players at most in a match. On the other hand, at least two U-23 domestic players must be used in a match. In addition, if there are U23 players who have been called up by the national teams at all levels, the number of U-23 domestic players fielded will be reduced accordingly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288283-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 China League One\nIn order to expand the number of teams from 16 to 18 in 2020 season, this season will only directly relegate 1 team instead of 2 teams while 2 teams will enter relegation playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288283-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 China League One, Foreign players\nA total of four foreign players can be registered in a season and the number of foreign players is limited to three per CL1 team in the same time. Maximum of two foreign players can be fielded in one match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288283-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 China League One, Foreign players\nPlayers name in bold indicates the player is registered during the mid-season transfer window.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288283-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 China League One, Positions by round\nTo 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, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288283-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 China League One, Relegation play-offs\nAssistant referees:Ma Kexin(China)Zhang Haijun (China)Fourth official:Sun Shengyu (China)Video assistant referee:Gao Peng (China)Assistant video assistant referees:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288283-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 China League One, Relegation play-offs\nAssistant referees:Sun Kai (China)Jiao Wei (China)Fourth official:Cui Yong (China)Video assistant referee:Fu Ming (China)Assistant video assistant referees:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288283-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 China League One, Relegation play-offs\nAssistant referees:Meng Xiangkun(China)Zhong Yong (China)Fourth official:Han Lei (China)Video assistant referee:Zhu Wenbin (China)Assistant video assistant referees:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288283-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 China League One, Relegation play-offs\nAssistant referees:Guo Jingtao(China)Tang Rongdi (China)Fourth official:Lin Chentao (China)Video assistant referee:Zhang Long (China)Assistant video assistant referees:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288283-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 China League One, Awards\nThe awards of 2019 China League One were announced on 20 November 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288283-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 China League One, League attendance\nUpdated to games played on November 2nd, 2019Source: Notes:\u2020 Teams played previous season in CSL. \u2020\u2020 Teams played previous season in CL2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288284-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 China League Two\nThe 2019 Chinese Football Association Division Two League season is the 30th season since its establishment in 1989. The league was expanded to 32 teams, with 16 teams in North Group and 16 teams in South Group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288284-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 China League Two, Play-offs, Promotion play-offs, 3rd-4th place\nThe winner will be directly promoted to 2020 China League One while the loser will participate in the Relegation play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288284-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 China League Two, Awards\nThe awards of 2019 China League Two were announced on 4 December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288285-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 China National Baseball League season\nThe 2019 China National Baseball League season is the 1st season in the history of the China National Baseball League. The season began on 15 August, with the last scheduled day of the regular season on 13 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288286-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 China Open (badminton)\nThe 2019 China Open (officially known as the Victor China Open 2019 for sponsorship reasons) was a badminton tournament which took place at Olympic Sports Center Xincheng Gymnasium in Changzhou, Jiangsu, China, from 17 to 22 September 2019 and had a total prize of $1,000,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288286-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 China Open (badminton), Tournament\nThe 2019 China Open was the eighteenth tournament of the 2019 BWF World Tour and also part of the China Open championships, which have been held since 1986. This tournament was organized by Chinese Badminton Association and sanctioned by the BWF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288286-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 China Open (badminton), Tournament, Venue\nThis international tournament was held at Olympic Sports Center Xincheng Gymnasium in Changzhou, Jiangsu, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288286-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 China Open (badminton), Tournament, Point distribution\nBelow is the point distribution table for each phase of the tournament based on the BWF points system for the BWF World Tour Super 1000 event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288286-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 China Open (badminton), Tournament, Prize money\nThe total prize money for this tournament was US$1,000,000. Distribution of prize money was in accordance with BWF regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288287-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 China Open (snooker)\nThe 2019 XingPai China Open was a professional ranking snooker tournament, that took place between 1\u20137 April 2019 in Beijing, China. It was the nineteenth and penultimate ranking event of the 2018/2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288287-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 China Open (snooker)\nNeil Robertson won his second China Open title, and the 16th ranking title of his career, defeating Jack Lisowski 11\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288287-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 China Open (snooker)\nMark Selby was the two-time reigning champion, having defended his 2017 title with an 11\u20133 win against Barry Hawkins in the 2018 final. However, he lost 3\u20136 to Craig Steadman in qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288287-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 China Open (snooker)\nStuart Bingham made the highest break of the event, with his fifth 147 break of his career in his second round match with Peter Ebdon. It was the 151st 147 in snooker history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288287-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 China Open (snooker), Qualifying\nQualifying \u2013 excluding held over matches \u2013 took place between 18 and 20 February 2019 at the Chase Leisure Centre in Cannock, England. All qualifying matches were best of 11 frames.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288288-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 China Open (tennis)\nThe 2019 China Open was a tennis tournament being played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 21st edition of the China Open for the men and the 23rd for the women. It was part of the ATP Tour 500 series on the 2019 ATP Tour, and the last WTA Premier Mandatory tournament of the 2019 WTA Tour. Both the men's and the women's events were held at the National Tennis Center in Beijing, China, from September 30 to October 6, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288288-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288288-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 China Open (tennis), ATP singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received an entry using a protected ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 72], "content_span": [73, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288288-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288288-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 China Open (tennis), WTA singles main draw entrants, Seeds\nThe following are the seeded players. Seedings are based on WTA rankings as of 23\u00a0September\u00a02019. Rankings and points before are as of 30\u00a0September\u00a02019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288288-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 China Open (tennis), WTA singles main draw entrants, Seeds\n\u2020 The player did not qualify for the tournament in 2018. Accordingly, points for her 16th best result are deducted instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288288-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 China Open (tennis), WTA singles main draw entrants, Seeds\nThe following players would have been seeded, but withdrew before the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288288-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288288-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288289-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 China Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nIvan Dodig and Filip Pol\u00e1\u0161ek won the tournament by defeating the defending champions \u0141ukasz Kubot and Marcelo Melo in the final, 6\u22123, 7\u22126(7\u22124).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288290-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 China Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nNikoloz Basilashvili was the defending champion, but lost in the second round to Stefanos Tsitsipas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288290-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 China Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nDominic Thiem won the title, defeating Tsitsipas in the final, 3\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288291-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 China Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nAndrea Sestini Hlav\u00e1\u010dkov\u00e1 and Barbora Str\u00fdcov\u00e1 were the defending champions, but Sestini Hlav\u00e1\u010dkov\u00e1 did not participate due to maternity leave. Str\u00fdcov\u00e1 played alongside Hsieh Su-wei, but lost in the second round to Je\u013cena Ostapenko and Dayana Yastremska.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288291-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 China Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nSofia Kenin and Bethanie Mattek-Sands won the title, defeating Ostapenko and Yastremska in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20137(5\u20137), [10\u20137].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288291-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 China Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nKristina Mladenovic regained the WTA no. 1 doubles ranking from Str\u00fdcova after the end of the tournament. Elise Mertens was also in contention for the top ranking at the start of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288291-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 China Open \u2013 Women's Doubles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288292-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 China Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nCaroline Wozniacki was the defending champion, but lost to Naomi Osaka in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288292-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 China Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nOsaka went on to win the title, defeating World No. 1 Ashleigh Barty in the final 3\u20136, 6\u20133, 6\u20132. This was Osaka's second Premier Mandatory title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288292-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 China Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nBarty and Karol\u00edna Pl\u00ed\u0161kov\u00e1 were in contention for the WTA no. 1 singles ranking at the start of the tournament. Barty retained the top ranking when Pl\u00ed\u0161kov\u00e1 lost in the first round to Je\u013cena Ostapenko.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288292-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288292-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 China Open \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nThe four Wuhan semifinalists received a bye into the second round. They are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288293-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 China Tour\nThe 2019 China Tour was the second season of the China Tour to carry Official World Golf Ranking points. The season consisted of 12 events, two of which were co-sanctioned by the Challenge Tour. The tour was organised by the China Golf Association and ran separately from the 2019 PGA Tour China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288293-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 China Tour, Tournament schedule\nThe table below shows the 2019 schedule. \"Date\" is the ending date of each event. OWGR is the number of Official World Golf Ranking points awarded for that tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288294-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Artistic Gymnastics Championships\nThe 2019 Chinese Artistic Gymnastics Championships were held from 8 May to 13 May 2019 in Zhaoqing, Guangdong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288295-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Champions League\nThe 2019 Chinese Football Association Member Association Champions League (Simplified Chinese: 2019\u4e2d\u56fd\u8db3\u7403\u534f\u4f1a\u4f1a\u5458\u534f\u4f1a\u51a0\u519b\u8054\u8d5b), also known as SWM Motors 2019 Chinese Football Association Member Association Champions League for sponsorship reasons (Simplified Chinese: SWM\u65af\u5a01\u6c7d\u8f662019\u4e2d\u56fd\u8db3\u7403\u534f\u4f1a\u4f1a\u5458\u534f\u4f1a\u51a0\u519b\u8054\u8d5b), formerly known as Chinese Football Association Bing League (\u4e2d\u56fd\u8db3\u7403\u534f\u4f1a\u4e19\u7ea7\u8054\u8d5b) (before 2006) and Chinese Football Association Amateur League (\u4e2d\u56fd\u8db3\u7403\u534f\u4f1a\u4e1a\u4f59\u8054\u8d5b) (2006\u20132017), is the fourth-tier football league of the People's Republic of China. The league is under the auspices of the Chinese Football Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288295-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Champions League, Qualifying Round\nChina Amateur Football League includes 44 regional leagues. 2018 or 2019 season champion will advance to the Regional Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288295-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Champions League, Regional Finals, Group A\nRules 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) Goals scored; 7) Disciplinary points (1 point for each yellow card, 3 points for each red card); 8) Draw", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288295-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Champions League, Regional Finals, Group B\nRules 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) Goals scored; 7) Disciplinary points (1 point for each yellow card, 3 points for each red card); 8) Draw", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288295-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Champions League, Regional Finals, Group C\nRules 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) Goals scored; 7) Disciplinary points (1 point for each yellow card, 3 points for each red card); 8) Draw", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288295-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Champions League, Regional Finals, Group D\nRules 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) Goals scored; 7) Disciplinary points (1 point for each yellow card, 3 points for each red card); 8) Draw", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288295-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Champions League, Regional Finals, Group E\nRules 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) Goals scored; 7) Disciplinary points (1 point for each yellow card, 3 points for each red card); 8) Draw", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288295-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Champions League, Regional Finals, Group F\nRules 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) Goals scored; 7) Disciplinary points (1 point for each yellow card, 3 points for each red card); 8) Draw", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288295-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Champions League, Regional Finals, Group G\nRules 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) Goals scored; 7) Disciplinary points (1 point for each yellow card, 3 points for each red card); 8) Draw", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288295-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Champions League, Regional Finals, Group H\nRules 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) Goals scored; 7) Disciplinary points (1 point for each yellow card, 3 points for each red card); 8) Draw", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288295-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Champions League, Regional Finals, Group I\nRules 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) Goals scored; 7) Disciplinary points (1 point for each yellow card, 3 points for each red card); 8) Draw", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288295-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Champions League, Regional Finals, Group J\nRules 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) Goals scored; 7) Disciplinary points (1 point for each yellow card, 3 points for each red card); 8) Draw", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288295-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Champions League, National Finals, Overall table\n(C) Champion; (P) Promoted; (Q) Qualified to the phase indicated;", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288295-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Champions League, National Finals, Play-offs, 3rd-6th Place\nThe two winners of this round will be directly promoted to 2020 China League Two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288296-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese FA Cup\nYanjing Beer 2019 Chinese FA Cup (Chinese: \u71d5\u4eac\u5564\u91522019\u4e2d\u56fd\u8db3\u7403\u534f\u4f1a\u676f) was the 21st edition of the Chinese FA Cup. The cup title sponsor was Yanjing Beer. For the first time, entrants were not seeded and there were separate draws for each round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288296-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese FA Cup, Qualifying round\nQualifying rounds included two phases: Chinese Football Association Member Association FA Cup and Regional Finals. Teams will compete in the qualifying rounds to secure one of 27 available places in the First Round, joining another five amateur clubs (Guangzhou Haoxin, Nanjing Shaye, Ningbo Yinbo, Shanghai Jiading Boji and Hubei Chufeng United) who advanced to the First Round directly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288296-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese FA Cup, First Round\nThe draw for the First Round was originally scheduled on 18 February 2019. However, it was postponed to 25 February 2019 after the finally list of 2019 China League Two participants was decided. Due to the withdrawal of Shenzhen Xinqiao and Yunnan Flying Tigers as well the promotion of Shaanxi Chang'an Athletic, which directly qualified to the Third round, their opponents, Kunshan F.C., Lhasa Urban Construction Investment and Qingdao Elite United received byes and advanced to the Second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288296-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese FA Cup, Second Round\nThe draw for the Second Round took place on 12 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288296-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese FA Cup, Third Round\nThe draw for the Third Round took place on 3 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288296-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese FA Cup, Fourth Round\nThe draw for the Fourth Round took place on 21 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288296-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese FA Cup, Fifth Round\nThe draw for the Fifth Round took place on 2 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288296-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese FA Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the quarter-finals took place on 31 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288296-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese FA Cup, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the semi-finals took place on 24 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288296-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese FA Cup, Finals, 1st Leg\nAssistant referees:Wang Dexin (Shenyang FA)Song Xiangyun (Dalian FA)Fourth official:Shi Zhenlu (Changchun FA) Video assistant referee:Gu Chunhan (Wuhan FA)Assistant video assistant referees:Xiang Yao (Sichuan FA)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288296-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese FA Cup, Finals, 2nd Leg\nAssistant referees:Huo Weiming (Beijing FA)Cao Yi (Henan FA)Fourth official:Ma Ning (Jiangsu FA) Video assistant referee:Milorad Ma\u017ei\u0107 (Serbia)Assistant video assistant referees:Zhang Lei (Dalian FA)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288297-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese FA Super Cup\n2019 Chinese FA Super Cup (Chinese: 2019\u4e2d\u56fd\u8db3\u7403\u534f\u4f1a\u8d85\u7ea7\u676f) was the 17th Chinese FA Super Cup, an annual football match contested by the winners of the previous season's Chinese Super League and FA Cup competitions. The match was played between Shanghai SIPG, champions of the 2018 Chinese Super League, and Beijing Sinobo Guoan, the winner of the 2018 Chinese FA Cup. Policy of foreign players and U-23 domestic players was executed in the tournament. At most three foreign players could play in the match while at least one domestic player who is under the age of 23 (born on or after 1 January 1996) must be in the starting eleven and at least three U-23 players must play in this match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288297-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese FA Super Cup\nShanghai SIPG won the title for the first time after a 2\u20130 win over Beijing Sinobo Guoan with goals from Wang Shenchao and L\u00fc Wenjun. Beijing Sinobo Guoan's Hou Yongyong was substituted on in the 71st minute of the match as a U-23 domestic player, which made him the first naturalized player to appear for a Chinese club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288297-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese FA Super Cup, Match, Details\nMan of the Match: Yan Junling (Shanghai SIPG) Assistant referees:Song Xiangyun (Dalian FA)Shi Xiang (Jiangsu FA)Fourth official:Li Haixin (Guangzhou FA) Video assistant referee:Gu Chunhan (Wuhan FA)Assistant video assistant referees:Liang Songshang (Guangdong FA)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288298-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese FA Women's Cup\nThe 2019 Chinese FA Women's Cup (Chinese: 2019\u5e74\u4e2d\u56fd\u8db3\u7403\u534f\u4f1a\u676f(\u5973\u5b50)) is the 13th edition of the Chinese FA Women's Cup. Jiangsu Suning are the defending champions. It is held from 16 March to 22 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288299-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2019 Chinese Figure Skating Championships (Chinese: 2018/2019\u5e74\u5ea6\u5168\u56fd\u82b1\u6837\u6ed1\u51b0\u9526\u6807\u8d5b) was held on December 29 and 30, 2018 in Harbin. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing. For the first time, competitors also participated in a team event, synchronized skating, and the national talent transfer (Chinese: \u8de8\u754c\u8de8\u9879\u9009\u6750), an initiative to strengthen the discipline of ice dancing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288300-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Grand Prix\nThe 2019 Chinese Grand Prix (formally known as the Formula 1 Heineken Chinese Grand Prix 2019) was a Formula One motor race that took place on 14 April 2019 at the Shanghai International Circuit in Shanghai, China. The race was the 3rd round of the 2019 Formula One World Championship, and marked the 16th time that the Chinese Grand Prix had been run as a round of the Formula One World Championship. The race also marked the 1000th World Championship race since the first World Championship race was held at the Silverstone Circuit in 1950. This is also the last Chinese Grand Prix held to date. The 2020 event was cancelled and the 2021 event has been officially postponed and seems unlikely to be held as it is not included on the current final calendar due to the COVID-19 pandemic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 811]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288300-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Grand Prix, Background, Championship standings before the race\nHeading into the race, Valtteri Bottas was leading the Drivers' Championship by one point from Lewis Hamilton. Bottas's team Mercedes was leading the Constructors' Championship by 39 points from Ferrari.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 75], "content_span": [76, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288300-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Grand Prix, Background, Entrants\nThe drivers and teams were the same as the season entry list with no additional stand in drivers for either the race or practice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288300-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Grand Prix, Free practice\nSebastian Vettel was fastest in the first practice session with Valtteri Bottas fastest in the second practice. Bottas was again fastest in FP3 on Saturday, however the session was brought to a premature end when Alexander Albon lost control and hit the wall on the exit of the final corner, smashing into the wall rear-first with an impact of 49g. He would not compete in qualifying due to the damage sustained from the accident an therefore started from the pitlane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288300-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Grand Prix, Qualifying\nThe first qualifying session finished with no incidents with Valtteri Bottas setting the fastest lap of the session ahead of Charles Leclerc and teammate Lewis Hamilton. Qualifying ended with the elimination of Lance Stroll, George Russell, Robert Kubica, Antonio Giovinazzi and Albon, the last two of whom failed to set a time in the session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288300-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Grand Prix, Qualifying\nThe second qualifying session ended without incident with Hamilton setting the fastest lap on the medium tyre compound. Bottas, Sebastian Vettel, Leclerc and Max Verstappen also set their laps on the medium compound tyre. Daniil Kvyat, Sergio P\u00e9rez, Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, Carlos Sainz Jr. and Lando Norris were eliminated from qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288300-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Grand Prix, Qualifying\nThe third qualifying session ended without incident with most drivers having two chances to set a fastest lap. After the first runs, Bottas was quickest with Hamilton and Vettel rounding off the top 3. When setting up their second runs, Verstappen was overtaken at turn 14 by Vettel and both Renault cars, this prevented him crossing the line before the end of the session. Pierre Gasly and both Haas cars were also unable to start a lap before the session ended as a result. At the end of the session, Bottas was on pole position 0.023 seconds ahead of Hamilton in second. Vettel qualified third. The rest of the top ten consisted of, in qualifying order, Leclerc, Verstappen, Gasly, Daniel Ricciardo, Nico H\u00fclkenberg, Kevin Magnussen and Romain Grosjean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288300-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Grand Prix, Race\nLewis Hamilton won the race ahead of his teammate Valtteri Bottas and Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288300-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Grand Prix, Race\nAt the start of the race Bottas got a bad start allowing Hamilton to lead into the first corner. At the fourth corner Daniil Kvyat, Carlos Sainz Jr. and Lando Norris collided which would cause Norris and Kvyat to retire later in the race. On lap 11 Charles Leclerc was ordered by Ferrari to let his teammate Vettel past. Nico H\u00fclkenberg retired on lap 17 with an MGU-K problem. Daniel Ricciardo managed to score his first points of the season and his first points for Renault. Pierre Gasly got the first fastest lap of his career. It was also Mercedes' third 1\u20132 finish of the season and the first time that a team has managed a 1-2 in the first three races of a season since Nigel Mansell and Riccardo Patrese did so for Williams in 1992.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288301-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Super League\nThe 2019 Ping An Chinese Football Association Super League (Chinese: 2019\u4e2d\u56fd\u5e73\u5b89\u4e2d\u56fd\u8db3\u7403\u534f\u4f1a\u8d85\u7ea7\u8054\u8d5b) was the 16th season since the establishment of the Chinese Super League. The league title sponsor was Ping An Insurance. The season began on 1 March and ended on 1 December. Shanghai SIPG were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288301-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Super League\nThe policy regarding foreign players and U-23 domestic players was modified for this season. The same as the previous two seasons, at least one domestic player who is under the age of 23 (born on or after 1 January 1996) must be in the starting eleven. However, the total number of foreign players appearing in a match is no longer related to the total number of U-23 domestic players. A club can register four foreign players at most in the same time and use three foreign players at most in a match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288301-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Chinese Super League\nOn the other hand, at least three U-23 domestic players must be used in a match. In addition, if there are U-23 players who have been called up by the national teams at all levels, the number of U-23 domestic players fielded will be reduced accordingly. The policy was modified again during the season. From Round 16 and beyond, maximum of three foreign players can be used at the same time in one match and there must be at least one U-23 domestic player playing in one match. In addition, if there are U-23 players who have been called up by the national teams at all levels, the team is not required to field any U-23 players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288301-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Super League, Foreign players\nThe policy of foreign players remained unchanged. Clubs can register a total of six foreign players over the course of the season, but the number of foreign players allowed on each CSL team at any given time is limited to four. A maximum of three foreign players can be fielded in each match. In addition, each club can register a Hong Kong, Macau, or Taiwan player of Chinese descent (excluding goalkeepers), provided that he registered as a professional footballer in one of those three association for the first time, as a native player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288301-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Super League, Positions by round\nTo 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288301-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Super League, Awards, Annual awards\nThe awards of 2019 Chinese Super League were announced on 7 December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288301-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Super League, League attendance\nUpdated to games played on 1 December 2019Source: Notes:\u2020 Teams played previous season in CL1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288302-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Taipei Open\nThe 2019 Chinese Taipei Open (officially known as the Yonex Chinese Taipei Open 2019 for sponsorship reasons) was a badminton tournament which took place at Taipei Arena in Taipei, Taiwan, from 3 to 8 September 2019 and had a total purse of $500,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288302-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Taipei Open, Tournament\nThe 2019 Chinese Taipei Open was the seventeenth tournament of the 2019 BWF World Tour and was also a part of the Chinese Taipei Open championships which had been held since 1980. This tournament was organized by the Chinese Taipei Badminton Association and sanctioned by the BWF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288302-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Taipei Open, Tournament, Venue\nThis international tournament was held at Taipei Arena in Taipei, Taiwan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288302-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Taipei Open, Tournament, Point distribution\nBelow is the point distribution table for each phase of the tournament based on the BWF points system for the BWF World Tour Super 300 event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288302-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Taipei Open, Tournament, Prize money\nThe total prize money for this tournament was US$150,000. Distribution of prize money was in accordance with BWF regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288303-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Women's Football Championship\nThe 2019 Chinese Women's Football Championship (Chinese: 2019\u5e74\u4e2d\u56fd\u5973\u5b50\u8db3\u7403\u9526\u6807\u8d5b) is the 29th edition of the Chinese Women's Football Championship. Jiangsu Suning are the defending champions. It will be held from 27 February to 13 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288304-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Women's Football League\nThe 2019 Chinese Women's Football League season was the league's 5th season in its current incarnation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288304-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Women's Football League\nThe season started on 29 June and concluded on 26 October. The number of the teams were expanded from 7 to 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288305-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Women's Super League\nThe 2019 Chinese Women's Super League season was the league's 5th season in its current incarnation, and the 23rd total season of the women's association football league in China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288305-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Women's Super League\nThe season started on 13 July and concluded on 22 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288305-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chinese Women's Super League\nDalian were the defending champions but ended the season bottom of the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288306-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chonburi F.C. season\nThe 2019 season is Chonburi's 14th season in the Thai League T1 since 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288306-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chonburi 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288306-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chonburi F.C. season, Players, Squad information\nNote 1: The official club website lists the supporters as player 12th man. Note 2: Players who are AFC Champions League quota foreign players are listed in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288306-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Chonburi 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288307-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chongqing Dangdai Lifan F.C. season\nThe 2019 Chongqing Dangdai Lifan F.C. season was Chongqing Dangdai Lifan's 5th consecutive season in the Chinese Super League since it started in the 2004 season, and its 5th consecutive season in the top flight of Chinese football. This season Chongqing Dangdai Lifan participated in the Chinese Super League and Chinese FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288308-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3x3 season\nThe 2019 Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3x3 season is the inaugural season of the Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3x3 basketball league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288308-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3x3 season, Teams\n12 teams, many of which are from the Maharlika Pilipinas Basketball League (MPBL), participated in the inaugural conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288308-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3x3 season, Teams\nFor the Patriot's Cup, the second conference two foreign teams were invited to participate, VetHealth-Delhi 3BL from India and Moscow Inanomo from Russia. However Moscow will start playing in the second leg of the conference. The Thunder Pateros Hunters played in lieu of the Marikina Shoemasters in the first leg as a guest team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288308-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3x3 season, Teams\nTeams can name up to six players in their rosters for each conference but can opt not to fill up all six slots right away. However they cannot replace any player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288308-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3x3 season, Pre-season events, Manok ng Bayan-SBP 3X3\nThe Manok ng Bayan-SBP 3X3, a basketball youth tournament for boys and girls was held in Cebu as the official kickoff event of the 2019 Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3x3 season. The event was an attempt to break the record for the biggest FIBA-sanctioned youth tournament by participants, as well as to accumulate FIBA Federation Ranking points for the Philippines in order for the country to gain enough points to qualify to send a team to the 3x3 event at the 2020 Summer Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 81], "content_span": [82, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288308-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3x3 season, 2019 President's Cup\nThe President's Cup is the first conference of the Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3x3 season. The conference is exclusive to Filipinos and imports or foreigners are ineligible. However players of foreign descent who can prove their Filipino heritage are eligible to play. The conference consisted of five legs each considered as a separate tournament. A sixth leg, the Grand Finals, was planned but later scrapped.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288308-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3x3 season, 2019 President's Cup\nThe top placing team in the grand final qualifies for the FIBA 3x3 World Tour while the next top two teams gain a berth each at the inaugural Asia-Pacific Super Quest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288308-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3x3 season, 2019 President's Cup, Legs, 1st Tour\nThe first leg of the President Cup took place at the events area of the SM Megamall in Mandaluyong on February 16, 2019 with the 1Bataan Risers securing a slim win against the Pasig Grindhouse King, 19\u201318 in the leg final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288308-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3x3 season, 2019 President's Cup, Legs, 1st Tour\nIn the Gameville Dunk Contest, Kobe Paras of the University of the Philippines won over Daniel Chatman of the National University after he performed a one-handed tomahawk. Four judges gave Paras 49 points for the final performance, a point short of a perfect score while Chatman was given a 39 points. Dylan Ababou of Pasig won the three-point shootout contest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288308-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3x3 season, 2019 President's Cup, Legs, 2nd Tour\nThe second leg will be held in the same venue on February 24, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288308-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3x3 season, 2019 Patriot's Cup\nThe Patriot's Cup (also known as 2019 Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3x3 Patriot's Cup presented by Coca-Cola for sponsorship reasons) is the second conference of the Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3x3 league. Unlike the President's Cup, the tournament as a reinforced conference allows each of the participating teams to field a single foreign import. The conference will feature at least five legs with a Super Quest tournament possibly to be held as the sixth leg. The conference is set to commence on June 16, 2019 with the first leg scheduled be held in Cebu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 58], "content_span": [59, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288308-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3x3 season, 2019 Patriot's Cup\nAll of the twelve teams which played in the first conference will play in the Patriot's Cup with four or eight teams being considered to be allowed to make their debut in this conference. This includes two foreign teams each from Indonesia and Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 58], "content_span": [59, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288308-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3x3 season, 2019 Patriot's Cup, Legs, 1st Tour\nThe first leg of the Patriots Cup took place at the events area of the SM Seaside City Cebu in Cebu on June 16, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 74], "content_span": [75, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288308-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3x3 season, 2019 Patriot's Cup, Legs, 2nd Tour\nThe second leg was held in SM Fairview on June 23, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 74], "content_span": [75, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288308-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3x3 season, 2019 Patriot's Cup, Legs, 3rd Tour\nThird leg was held in SM Muntinlupa on July 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 74], "content_span": [75, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288308-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3x3 season, 2019 Patriot's Cup, Legs, 4th Tour\nThe fourth leg was held in SM Megamall on July 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 74], "content_span": [75, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288308-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3x3 season, 2019 Patriot's Cup, Legs, 5th Tour\nThe fifth and final leg was held in SM Megamall on July 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 74], "content_span": [75, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288308-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3x3 season, 2019 Magiting Cup\nThe Magiting Cup (also known as 2019 Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3x3 Magiting Cup presented by Coca-Cola for sponsorship reasons) is the third conference of the Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3x3 league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288308-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3x3 season, 2019 Magiting Cup, Legs, 1st Tour\nThe first leg of the Magiting Cup took place at the events area of the SM City Clark in Clark, Pampanga on September 1, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 73], "content_span": [74, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288309-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chorley Borough Council election\nCouncil elections for the Borough of Chorley were held on 2 May 2019 as part of the 2019 United Kingdom local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288309-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Chorley Borough Council election\nAll locally registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who are aged 18 or over on polling day are entitled to vote in the local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288309-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Chorley Borough Council election\nThe result was a hold for the ruling Labour group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288310-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Christchurch mayoral election\nThe 2019 Christchurch mayoral election was part of the New Zealand local elections on 12 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288311-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 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 29 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 85], "section_span": [85, 85], "content_span": [86, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288311-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Christian and Democratic Union \u2013 Czechoslovak People's Party leadership election, Campaign\nChristian Democrats decided to hold a series of debates to help decide who will become the new leader. The first debate was held on 25 February 2019. Barto\u0161ek, Jure\u010dka and V\u00fdborn\u00fd participated. All candidates agreed that it was a good choice to not join government coalition led by ANO 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 85], "section_span": [87, 95], "content_span": [96, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288311-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Christian and Democratic Union \u2013 Czechoslovak People's Party leadership election, Campaign\nSouth Bohemian KDU-\u010cSL held conference on 9 March 2019 and gave its nomination to Barto\u0161ek. Jure\u010dka on the other hand received nomination from Olomouc regional organisation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 85], "section_span": [87, 95], "content_span": [96, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288312-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Christy Ring Cup\nThe 2019 Christy Ring Cup was the 15th staging of the Christy Ring Cup hurling championship since its establishment by the Gaelic Athletic Association in 2005. It is the third tier of senior inter-county hurling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288312-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Christy Ring Cup\nThe competition began on 11 May 2019 and ended on 22 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288312-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Christy Ring Cup\nKildare were the 2018 Christy Ring champions, defeating London by 3-19 to 1-11 in the final. Kildare lost the relegation/promotion game against Antrim and remained in the Christy Ring Cup in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288312-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Christy Ring Cup, Competition Format\nIn 2018 the Christy Ring Cup changed to an initial stage of two groups of four teams, having previously been held as a double elimination tournament. The 2019 competition retains this structure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288312-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Christy Ring Cup, Competition Format\nThe top two teams in the two groups advance to the semi-finals with the winners meeting in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288312-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Christy Ring Cup, Competition Format\nThe 2019 Christy Ring champions contest will be automatically promoted to the 2020 Joe McDonagh Cup. This is a change to the 2018 format, where the champions had to contest a promotion/relegation playoff against the second-from-bottom team in the Joe McDonagh Cup. (This was because the 2018 Joe McDonagh Cup was contested by six teams, instead of the intended five, and while one McDonagh team had to be relegated for 2019, allowances also had to be made for a Christy Ring Cup team to be promoted on merit.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288312-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Christy Ring Cup, Competition Format\nThe bottom teams meet in a relegation playoff with the losers relegated to the following year's Nicky Rackard Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288312-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Christy Ring Cup, Knockout stage, Semi-finals\nThe Group 1 winners play the Group 2 runners-up and the Group 2 winners play the Group 1 runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 50], "content_span": [51, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288312-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Christy Ring Cup, Knockout stage, Final\nThe winners become the 2019 Christy Ring champions, and are automatically promoted to the 2020 Joe McDonagh Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288312-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Christy Ring Cup, Christy Ring relegation playoff\nThe bottom teams in the two groups meet in a relegation playoff. The losers are relegated to the Nicky Rackard Cup and are replaced by the Nicky Rackard Champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 54], "content_span": [55, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288312-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Christy Ring Cup, Christy Ring relegation playoff\nLondon retain Christy Ring Cup status for 2020; Donegal are relegated to the Nicky Rackard Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 54], "content_span": [55, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288313-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chrono des Nations\nThe 2019 Chrono des Nations was the 38th edition of the Chrono des Nations cycle race, organised as a 1.1 race on the UCI Europe Tour, was held on 20 October 2019. The race started and finished in Les Herbiers. The race was won by Jos van Emden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288314-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Chuseok Idol Star Championships\nThe 2019 Idol Star Championships Chuseok Special (Korean:\u00a02019 \ucd94\uc11d\ud2b9\uc9d1 \uc544\uc774\ub3cc\uc2a4\ud0c0 \uc120\uc218\uad8c\ub300\ud68c) was held at Goyang Gymnasium in Goyang was broadcast on MBC on September 12 and 13, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team\nThe 2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team represented the University of Cincinnati in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Bearcats played their home games at Nippert Stadium, and competed as members of the East Division in the American Athletic Conference. They were led by third-year head coach Luke Fickell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Previous season\nIn 2018, the Bearcats finished with an 11\u20132 (6\u20132 AAC) record, and won the Military Bowl against Virginia Tech. The 11 win season was only the third such season in the history of the program. This was Cincinnati's first bowl game since the 2015 season and the first bowl win since the 2012 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Recruits\nThe Bearcats signed a total of 16 recruits, including three transfers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Preseason, AAC media poll\nThe AAC media poll was released on July 16, 2019, with the Bearcats predicted to finish second in the AAC East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Schedule\nThe Bearcats' 2019 schedule consisted of six home games and six away games. Cincinnati hosted two of its four non-conference games; against UCLA from the Pac-12 Conference, and Miami (OH) from the Mid-American Conference for their annual Victory Bell game. They travelled to instate rival Ohio State for their first meeting with the Buckeyes since 2014, and to Marshall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Schedule\nThe Bearcats played eight conference games; hosting Temple, Tulsa, UCF, and UConn. They travelled to South Florida, East Carolina, Houston, and Memphis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, UCLA\nThe Bearcats kicked off the 2019 season before a raucous near capacity crowd at Nippert Stadium and a national TV audience, and like their previous meeting against the visitors from the Pac-12 dominated the game after a slow start. Sophomore QB Desmond Ridder was an efficient 18\u201326 from 242 yards while Junior RB Michael Warren II had 92 yards on 26 carries as the Bearcats defeated the Bruins 24\u201314. Both teams showed opening day rust and jitters combining for 19 penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, UCLA\nThe Bruins nearly flipped the game momentum when Ridder threw an interception near the goal line late in the first half, CB Jay Shaw raced 60 yards with the pass before Josiah Deguara heroically shed several blockers to make the tackle. The Bruins were flagged for a pair of unsportsmanlike conduct penalties and did not score off the turnover as the half ended. Warren scored a pair of touchdowns one on a run the other on a pass to keep the Bearcats comfortably in the lead. The win was the 2nd in the series and completed a 2-year sweep of the Bruins in football and basketball. The Bearcats men's basketball team logged wins over the Bruins in Dec 2017 in Los Angeles and in 2018 in the newly renovated Fifth Third Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, at Ohio State\nUnlike their 2014 meeting, the Bearcats were never in their meeting with the 5th ranked Ohio State. Ohio State QB Justin Fields threw for 2 scores, ran for an additional 2 scores and Ohio State blew out the Bearcats 42\u20130, their first shutout loss since 2005. The Bearcats had pitched 6 shutouts in the span of being blanked themselves", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, Miami (OH)\nThe Bearcats shook off a slow start and after spotting Miami 10 1st quarter points, scored 35 points in the 2nd and 3rd quarter to roar back to a 35\u201313 win. The Bearcats scored on four of five possessions in a span of the 2nd and 3rd quarters to rally then break the game open. Michael Warren rushed for 113 yards and 3 scores including a breathtaking 73 yard run as he made a number of nifty cutbacks and jukes before sprinting untouched the last 40 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, Miami (OH)\nDesmond Ridder threw for 186 yards and a pair of touchdowns both of which came on beautiful lead throws to his receivers. The win ensured the Victory Bell stays in Cincinnati for the 14th straight year, the longest run in the series which dates back to 1888 and is the oldest collegiate football rivalry west of the Alleghenies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, at Marshall\nShaking off their reputation for slow starts the Bearcats scored the game's first 45 points en route to a 52\u201314 blasting of Marshall in front of a sullen crowd in Huntington, W Va. The Bearcats were rude guests, scoring on each of their first four drives. Desmond Ridder threw for four scores. Marshall was limited to 256 yards of offense, with half of that coming in the fourth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, UCF\nIn front of a frenzied, black-clad crowd of 40,121 (which included a record 7,825 UC students), the Bearcats upset the 18th ranked Knights and avenged a pair of lopsided defeats from the previous two seasons. The Bearcats forced 4 turnovers, limited UCF to 3.0 yards per carry, and held the high-powered Knights offense under 30 points for the first time in 31 games (which was an FBS record). The win also snapped the Knights' 19-game conference win streak. The Bearcats and Knights traded scores in the 1st half and the Knights held a 16\u201310 lead at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, UCF\nThe Bearcats closed the gap to 16\u201313 on a Sam Crosa field goal. Ahmad Gardner picked off a Dillon Gabriel pass and raced 16 yards with the stolen loaf to give the Bearcats a lead they would never relinquish. After extending their lead to 11 with Desmond Ridder's scoring strike to Alec Pierce, the Knights fought back to close the game to 3 with a 45-yard pass from Gabriel to Nixon. The Knights would not get the ball back as the Bearcats would recover the Knights' onside kick attempt and then converted a 4th and inches to ice the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0010-0002", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, UCF\nThe Bearcats earned their first home win over a ranked opponent since 2009 (West Virginia) and their first win over a ranked team since 2012 (Virginia Tech), having lost their last 6 attempts. The win moved the Bearcats into 1st place in the AAC East and earned the Bearcats a Top 25 ranking at 25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, at Houston\nOn the road now as a ranked team (#25), the Bearcats traveled to Houston to face the Cougars. Taking advantage of five turnovers that led to 21 points, The Bearcats led all the way to a 38\u201323 win and improved to 2\u20130 in conference play. Big plays were the watchword of the day played under a sunny sky in Houston. Desmond Ridder scrambled 13 yards for the opening score, then found Rashad Medaris streaking downfield for a 75-yard score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, at Houston\nAfter the Cougars cut the Bearcat lead to four with a long touchdown pass of their own, Ridder found Josiah Deguara with a short pass that the senior tight end took into the end zone to give the Bearcats a 21\u201310 halftime lead. The Cougars again cut the lead to 4 with a 3rd quarter scoring strike, a 69-yard pass from the second of four different quarterbacks the Cougars employed on the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0011-0002", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, at Houston\nMichael Warren II took a screen pass from Ridder and pinballed his way to the end zone on an 11-yard TD to open the 4th quarter scoring and give the Bearcats a 28\u201317 lead. The Cougars answered with their own score but failed on the two-point conversion to close back to 5. After a Sam Crosa field goal increased the Bearcat lead to 8, the Cougars got the ball back needing a touchdown and two-point conversion to tie the score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0011-0003", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, at Houston\nThe Cougars started their drive inside their own 20 and Clayton Tune's 3rd down pass was batted by Malik Vann with Perry Young corralling the ricochet and waltzing into the end zone from 2 yards out for the clinching touchdown. A final Cougar drive was also snuffed out with an end zone interception by Coby Bryant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, Tulsa\nReturning home with #21 ranking, the Bearcats hosted the Golden Hurricane. Gerrid Doaks scored three times as he filled in for Michael Warren II who was hampered by nagging injuries and held to 35 yards rushing. Despite being outgained 377\u2013317 in total yardage, the Bearcats led all the way in a 24\u201313 win. Doaks, who had not seen the end zone since 2017, scored his first touchdown in the 1st quarter on a 4-yard run after the Bearcats opened the scoring with a 50-yard field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, Tulsa\nTrailing 10\u20130 in the 2nd quarter, the Golden Hurricane got on the board after a bizarre series of events: the Bearcats had forced the Golden Hurricane to punt and partially blocked it, but the ball ricocheted off a Bearcat player 10 yards downfield which Tulsa recovered and went on to score 5 plays later. The Bearcats led 10\u20137 at the half. The Bearcats increased their lead back to 10 on Doaks' second score of the day, a short pass from Desmond Ridder in which Doaks broke several tackles on his way to diving for the pylon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0012-0002", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, Tulsa\nThe Golden Hurricane got as close as 4 on a pair of field goals, the latter early in the 4th quarter. After forcing a turnover deep in their own territory, the Bearcats drove 80 yards but turned the ball over on downs at the Tulsa 10. With a chance to take the lead, Darrick Forrest intercepted Zach Smith and returned the ball to the Tulsa 27. The interception was the 5th forced by the Bearcats defense on the afternoon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0012-0003", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, Tulsa\nDoaks then delivered the back breaker with a nearly untouched 27 yard sprint to the end zone for his third touchdown of the day to put the Bearcats back up by 11. Doaks finished with 91 yards on 17 carries and 2 TDs. The win was the Bearcats' 11th consecutive win at Nippert, with only a 17-game home win streak by the 2008\u20132012 teams being longer. The win also made the Bearcats bowl eligible for the 2nd straight year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, at East Carolina\nAfter a bye week, the #17 ranked Bearcats headed on the road to face East Carolina, a team that they beat 56\u20136 in their previous meeting to end the 2018 regular season. Entering the game as heavy favorites, the Bearcats found themselves in a serious fight to remain unbeaten in conference play. The Bearcats opening the scoring with a short TD run by Michael Warren II, only to have the Pirates answer with a 75-yard touchdown pass from Holton Ahlers to CJ Johnson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, at East Carolina\nThe Bearcats answered that score with a long pass from Desmond Ridder to Josiah Deguara that covered 73 yards and Gerrid Doaks scoring from 2 yards out. The back and forth scoring continued with the Bearcats and Pirates trading scores and UC leading 21\u201314 after one quarter. ECU then scored 17 unanswered points to take a 31\u201321 lead into the half. The Bearcats responded with a solid drive to open the 2nd half, with Warren scoring his third TD of the game. The Pirates added another touchdown late in the 3rd to build their biggest lead at 40\u201328.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0013-0002", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, at East Carolina\nThe Bearcats battled back, cutting the lead to 5 with a touchdown pass from Ridder to Deguara. The biggest play of the game came from the much-maligned defense\u2014with the Pirates pushing into Bearcats territory for a potential backbreaking score, Ahmad Gardner intercepted a short out route pass and raced 62 yards with the stolen loaf for a momentum turning touchdown. The pick-6 gave the Bearcats a 43\u201340 lead after a Ridder to Deguara 2-point conversion. The Pirates did not go quietly, grinding a 9-play 65-yard drive ending in a Jake Verity 27-yard field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0013-0003", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, at East Carolina\nWith good field position due to a poor kickoff by Verity, UC's Ridder raced 30 yards on the first play, and a trio of short passes to Malick Mbodj got the Bearcats to the ECU 16-yard line. Sam Crosa nailed a 32-yard field goal with no time left to win the game. The Bearcats got the win despite being outgained (638\u2013462), giving up 35 first downs, and having a nearly 10 min deficit in time of possession. The win kept the Bearcats unbeaten in conference play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, UConn\nUC \u2013 11:31 Deguara 18 Pass from Ridder (Crosa Kick) 4 Plays 62 Yards 1:32 UC 7\u20130", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, UConn\nUC \u2013 5:55 Warren 6 Run (Crosa Kick) 7 plays, 65 yards, 2:44 UC 14\u20130", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, UConn\nUC \u2013 14:49 Smith 45 FG 13 plays, 44 yards, 4:45 UC 17\u20130", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, UConn\nUC \u2013 5:59 Warren 1 Run (Crosa Kick) 7 plays, 71 yards, 2:48 UC 24\u20130", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, UConn\nUC \u2013 2:35 Doaks 1 Run (Crosa Kick) 5 plays, 70 yards, 1:29 UC 31\u20130", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, UConn\nUC \u2013 0:06 Deguara 15 pass from Ridder (Crosa Kick)5 plays, 55 yards, 0:36 UC 38\u20130", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, UConn\nUC \u2013 10:53 Crosa 32 Yd FG 11 plays, 56 yards, 4:02 UC 41\u20130", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, UConn\nUC \u2013 14:53 Montgomery 2 Run (Crosa Kick) 11 plays, 93 yards, 5:07 UC 48\u20130", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, UConn\nConn \u2013 5:37 Harris 32 FG 16 plays, 52 yards, 9:08 UC 48\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, UConn\nThe #17 Bearcats (#20 CFP rankings) hosted Connecticut on a chilly, but sunny, homecoming Saturday. The Bearcats dominated the game from the start, driving the length of the field after holding the Huskies to a three-and-out on their initial drive. Desmond Ridder found Josiah Deguara in the middle of the end zone for the score. Michael Warren II scored on a 6-yard run on the Bearcats' second drive to build a 14\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0023-0001", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, UConn\nThe Bearcats scored 24 points in the second quarter with a field goal from Cole Smith, a short TD run by Gerrid Doaks, and a second score from Warren. Ridder added a second touchdown pass to Deguara on a slick fade pattern to make it 38\u20130 at the half. After playing one series in the 3rd quarter, the starters were done for the day. The rout gave Bearcats head coach Luke Fickell a chance to use a majority of reserve players in the 2nd half, providing valuable game experience.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0023-0002", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, UConn\nRyan Montgomery crashed into the end zone early in the 4th to make it 48\u20130. UConn spoiled the shutout bid with a late field goal but the 48\u20133 win gave the Bearcats a 13\u20133 edge in the all-time series and kept them perfect at 10\u20130 all-time at home against UConn. Desmond Ridder passed for 136 yards and a pair of touchdowns. Gerrid Doaks rushed for 123 yard and a score. The Bearcats dominated statistically gaining over 500 yards for the second straight week and 307 yards rushing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0023-0003", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, UConn\nThe defense allowed 218 yards total offense and 70 yards passing, a stark contrast to the 535 given up in the week previous. The 7th win matched the longest winning streak since 2014 and kept the Bearcats unbeaten in conference play. The Bearcats also extended their home win streak to 12 dating back to November 2017. Combined with the loss by UCF to Tulsa earlier in the day, the win clinched no worse than a tie for the American Eastern Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, at South Florida\nThe 17th ranked Bearcats headed on the road to face South Florida in Tampa. Twice rallying back from 10 point deficits, the Bearcats again were walk-off winners with a tense 20\u201317 win. The Bearcats offense started sluggish and let the Bulls dominate the first half. The Bulls got on the board with a 4-yard run from Trevon Sands in the first quarter and extended their lead to 10 with a Spencer Shrader field goal. In the second half the Bearcats got on the board with a short TD run from Gerrid Doaks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0024-0001", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, at South Florida\nThe Bulls extended their lead back to 10 with a short TD pass from Bulls QB Jordan McCloud to Mitchell Wilcox. The Bearcats cut the deficit back to 7 with a 41-yard field goal from Sam Crosa. In the 4th quarter, the Bearcats tied the game with a 4-yard touchdown run from Michael Warren II. After a series of possessions with no scoring, the Bulls went on a 13-play, 82-yard drive and Shrader lined up for a 33-yard field but his attempt was no good, bouncing off the upright. Given a reprieve, the Bearcats raced back down the field and Crosa nailed a 37-yard field goal as the clock expired, giving the Bearcats their first lead of the game. The win kept the Bearcats unbeaten in conference and extended their winning streak to 8 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 811]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, Temple\nThe 17th ranked (19th in CFP poll) Bearcats took the field against Temple in the regular season home finale for Senior Night. On a raw, rainy night, the Bearcats battled the Owls in an attempt to clinch their first AAC divisional title. After a scoreless first quarter, the Bearcats took the lead on a short field goal by Sam Crosa. The Bearcats squandered a chance to go up 10 after Temple punter Adam Barry knelt to field a low punt snap and was ruled down at the Temple 6-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0025-0001", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, Temple\nThe Bearcats failed to move the ball (actually losing 14 yards) and settled for a second Crosa field goal to double their lead going into the half. Taking the 2nd half kickoff, the Bearcats put together their best drive of the game. Taking advantage of the kickoff going out of bounds, the Bearcats drove 65 yards in 9 plays, highlighted by an 18-yard run by Michael Warren II and a 14-yard scamper by Gerrid Doaks. Warren finished the drive with a 13-yard TD run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0025-0002", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, Temple\nTemple got onto the board with a 10-play 73-yard drive with Re'Mahn Davis scoring on 7-yard run. The Bearcats, however, blocked the extra point attempt, and Coby Bryant scooped up the ball and raced 98 yards for 2 points making the score 15\u20136. This would be the score that would prove critical later in the game. The Bearcats punted on the subsequent drive and The Owls again put together a lengthy drive and again scored a touchdown with Temple QB Anthony Russo connecting with TE Kenny Yeboah on a 16-yard scoring strike to cut the lead to 15\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0025-0003", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, Temple\nTrying to ride out the clock, the Bearcats went on a 10-play 42-yard drive highlighted by a 17-yard run by Warren. The drive stalled and Crosa missed a 40-yard field goal. Taking over with one time-out and needing at 45 yards to get into field goal range, the Owls tried a last desperate drive, but 4 plays later Darrick Forrest picked off a deep pass attempt by Russo to seal the game. The Bearcats won their 3rd game when being outgained in yardage (310\u2013210) . The Bearcats broke a 4-game losing streak to Temple, completed their 2nd consecutive perfect home schedule and extended their home winning streak to 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, at Memphis\nThe 17th ranked (19th in CFP) Bearcats took the field the day after Thanksgiving to battle the 18th ranked Tigers in Memphis. The game was nationally televised on ABC and got off to an inauspicious start for the Bearcats as the kickoff was run back 94 yards by Chris Claybrooks for a Memphis touchdown. The Bearcats would be without the services of Desmond Ridder whose chronic shoulder troubles continued to haunt him. Redshirt freshman Ben Bryant would get the start in Ridder's place and the Bearcat offense struggled to move consistently in the 1st quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0026-0001", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, at Memphis\nAfter getting an opening drive field goal, the Bearcat defense allowed a long Memphis drive which ended in another touchdown, with Kederian Jones on the receiving end of a Brady White pass. Trailing 17\u20133, the Bearcats drove the length of the field at the start of the 2nd quarter and Bryant found TE Leonard Taylor for a 4-yard touchdown pass. Michael Warren II scored from 4 yards out with 2:54 to play in the half and the Bearcats had erased the deficit. Memphis responded with a short field goal to lead 20\u201317 at the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0026-0002", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, at Memphis\nAfter a scoreless 3rd quarter, the Tigers were on the move and had the ball just inside Bearcat territory when they ran a reverse flea-flicker for a 46-yard touchdown pass from White to Demonte Coxie that boosted the Tiger lead back to 10. The Bearcats cut the deficit back to 3 on a 12-yard touchdown scramble by Bryant, but the Tigers ground out another long drive aided by a costly unsportsmanlike conduct penalty on Myjai Sanders on what should have been a 3rd down stop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0026-0003", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, at Memphis\nThe Tigers Antonio Gibson raced in from 29 yards out three plays later, re-extending the Tigers lead to 10. The Bearcats last gasp was snuffed out with an interception, ending the Bearcats' 9-game winning streak. The win clinched the AAC West for the Tigers and gave them home field advantage for the AAC Championship game. Michael Warren rushed for 122 yards and a touchdown, putting him over 1000 yards rushing for the 2nd consecutive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, at Memphis (AAC Championship Game)\n(3:54) MEM \u2013 Riley Patterson 52 yard field goal (Drive: 10 plays, 41 yards, 3:27; Cincinnati 21\u201320)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 90], "content_span": [91, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, at Memphis (AAC Championship Game)\nThe 20th ranked Bearcats were making their first appearance in the AAC title game, seeking their first American title since 2014 when they shared the crown with Memphis & Central Florida (The American Championship game was first played in 2015). The Tigers won the toss and deferred to the 2nd half, but attempted an onside kick on the opening kickoff. The Bearcats alertly called for a fair catch on the kick and were able to keep the ball even though the return man fumbled the kick and Memphis recovered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 90], "content_span": [91, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0028-0001", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, at Memphis (AAC Championship Game)\nWith the free kick catch penalty leveled on the Tigers the Bearcats started with the ball deep in Tiger territory. Michael Warren II opened the scoring with a 6-yard run. Memphis answered with a pair of scores, the second being a 65-yard run by RB Antonio Gibson. The Tigers had a 10\u20137 lead at the end of the first quarter. The Bearcats capped off a 7-play 80-yard drive with a 15-yard run by Desmond Ridder who return to the starting lineup after missing a game. The Bearcats took lead into halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 90], "content_span": [91, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0028-0002", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, at Memphis (AAC Championship Game)\nThe Tigers went 75 yards on the 2nd half kickoff and Memphis QB Brady White later scored from a yard out. Michael Warren crashed in from a yard out on the ensuing drive which covered 9 plays and 75 yards. Riley Patterson validated his 1st team all-AAC selection by booming a 52-yard field goal and heading into the final quarter, the Bearcats held a narrow 21\u201320 lead. Patterson nailed his 2nd 50-yard field goal 13 seconds into the 4th and the Tigers took back the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 90], "content_span": [91, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0028-0003", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, at Memphis (AAC Championship Game)\nAfter a Sam Crosa 33-yard field goal, the Tigers marched back down the field and with 1:14 left in the game, the Tigers put the 8th lead change on the board with a White to Gibson TD pass. The game had seen everything but an ending, as the Bearcats raced back downfield without the benefit of a timeout. The last gasp drive stalled at the Tiger 25 with Ridder misfiring on his last four passes. The Bearcats with the loss fell to 10\u20133, but accepted a bid to the Birmingham Bowl to be played on January 2 against Boston College.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 90], "content_span": [91, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, vs. Boston College (Birmingham Bowl)\nPlaying in only their fourth January Bowl Game, the 21st Ranked Bearcats traveled to Birmingham to face Boston College from the ACC in the Ticketsmarter Birmingham Bowl. This would be the second time that the Bearcats had played a bowl game in this venue, having beaten Southern Mississippi in the 2007 Papa John's Bowl. The Bearcats dominated the game from start to finish and finished their season on a victorious note as they routed the Eagles 38\u20136 to notch their biggest bowl game victory margin in their bowl history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 92], "content_span": [93, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0029-0001", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, vs. Boston College (Birmingham Bowl)\nPlayed under cloudy threatening skies, the Eagles came into the game doubly hampered as head coach Steve Addazio had been fired before accepting the bowl bid and wide receivers coach Rich Gunnell would be interim head coach with newly hired Jeff Hafley on hand only as an observer. Star RB AJ Dillon declared for the NFL draft and announced that he would skip the bowl game. The Bearcats seniors were led by LB Perry Young, a Birmingham native who would be playing his final game in front of his hometown crowd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 92], "content_span": [93, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0029-0002", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, vs. Boston College (Birmingham Bowl)\nThe Bearcats and Eagles played tentatively at the start, which was played under a steady downpour and then delayed as lightning was detected in the area. After a 92-minute delay the teams returned to the field and the Bearcats broke into the scoring column with a 13-yard run by Desmond Ridder. BC put together its best drive but Aaron Bouhmerhi's 40-yard field goal attempt was blocked. That would forebode many of the Eagles offensive struggles. The Bearcats took possession after the miss and drove downfield resulting in a Sam Crosa 32-yard field goal to increase the Bearcat lead to 10\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 92], "content_span": [93, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0029-0003", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, vs. Boston College (Birmingham Bowl)\nThe Eagles continued to struggle against the stout Bearcat defense. Two plays into the subsequent BC drive, Eagle QB Dennis Grosel was sacked by Ethan Tucky and fumbled the ball. Bryan Wright recovered the fumble and the Bearcats were in excellent scoring position at the BC 19. After a BC penalty, Ridder notched his second rushing touchdown of the day with a 14-yard scamper. The Bearcats took a 17\u20130 lead into the half. The Bearcats opened the 2nd half with a punishing 12-play 75-yard drive that ate nearly 6 minutes off the clock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 92], "content_span": [93, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0029-0004", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, vs. Boston College (Birmingham Bowl)\nRidder found Malick Mbodj, who made an excellent one-handed TD grab, to increase the lead to 24\u20130. The Eagles again went three-and-out and the Bearcats' next drive stalled at the BC 26 yard line. Long distance field goal specialist Cole Smith was called on to try a 43-yard field goal, but the kick was blocked by BC's Mike Palmer and Brandon Sebastian picked up the loose ball and raced 65 yards the other way for an Eagles' touchdown. BC attempted a two-point conversion, but the pass was incomplete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 92], "content_span": [93, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0029-0005", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, vs. Boston College (Birmingham Bowl)\nThe Bearcats produced another long drive that spanned the end of the 3rd quarter and the beginning of the 4th. Early in the 4th, Ridder romped into the end zone for his third TD of the game and gave the Bearcats a commanding 31\u20136 lead. Bearcats head coach Luke Fickell cleared the bench and got many players some bowl experience. Ryan Montgomery capped the Bearcats final drive with a touchdown from a yard out with under a minute to go to make the final score 38\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 92], "content_span": [93, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0029-0006", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, vs. Boston College (Birmingham Bowl)\nThe 32 point victory margin was the largest in a bowl game since the 1947 Bearcats defeated Virginia Tech 33\u201313 in the Glass Bowl Cincinnati notched a school bowl game record in first downs (33), total plays (91), held BC to 164 total yards (87 passing, 77 rushing) a miserly 0\u201311 on third down conversions, and held the ball offense for 41:29. The Eagles scored zero points on offense and the Bearcats ran more plays in BC territory 51, than the Eagles ran for the whole game (44)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 92], "content_span": [93, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288315-0029-0007", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats football team, Game summaries, vs. Boston College (Birmingham Bowl)\nWith a school bowl record 4 touchdowns (3 Rushing, 1 Passing) Desmond Ridder was named game MVP. Senior TE Josiah Deguara finished his Bearcat career with 92 receptions, a school record for tight ends. The Bearcats won their 2nd consecutive bowl game for the first time since 2012 and finished with 11 wins for only the 4th time in school history. The Bearcats finished the season with 10+ wins for the 7th time in the previous 13 seasons and in the national ranking in back to back seasons for the first time since 2008\u20132009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 92], "content_span": [93, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288316-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats men's soccer team\nThe 2019 Cincinnati Bearcats men's soccer team represented the University of Cincinnati during the 2019 NCAA Division I men's soccer season and the 2019 American Athletic Conference men's soccer season. The regular season began on August 30 and concluded on November 5. It was the program's 47th season fielding a men's varsity soccer team, and their 7th season in the AAC. The 2019 season was Hylton Dayes's nineteenth year as head coach for the program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288316-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bearcats 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, 42], "section_span": [44, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season\nThe 2019 season was the Cincinnati Bengals' 50th in the National Football League (NFL), their 52nd overall, their 20th playing home games at Paul Brown Stadium and the first under head coach Zac Taylor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season\nNot only did the Bengals not improve upon last season's record of 6\u201310, but they also suffered an 0\u201311 start to the season for the first time in franchise history. As a result, they became the first team to be eliminated from playoff contention when they lost to the Oakland Raiders in Week 11, extending their playoff drought to four seasons. This marked the Bengals' fourth consecutive losing season. They finished the season 2\u201314, tying their franchise-worst record from 2002. This was also the Bengals' first season since 2002 without long-time head coach Marvin Lewis, as he mutually agreed to part ways after the conclusion of the 2018 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season\nThe Bengals won their first game in Week 13, when they defeated the New York Jets, 22\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season\nWith a Week 16 loss to the Miami Dolphins, the Bengals secured the first overall pick in the 2020 NFL Draft. It was the first time they had the first overall pick since 2003, when they drafted Carson Palmer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: at Seattle Seahawks\nThe Bengals began their season on the road against the Seahawks. In the first quarter, the Bengals scored first when Randy Bullock made a 39-yard field goal for a 3\u20130 lead and the only score of the period. In the second quarter, the Seahawks took the lead when Chris Carson ran for a 1-yard touchdown to make it 7\u20133. The Bengals retook the lead when John Ross III caught a 33-yard TD pass from Andy Dalton to make it 10\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: at Seattle Seahawks\nThe Seahawks then went back into the lead when Carson caught a 10-yard TD pass from Russell Wilson to make it 14\u201310. Though, the Bengals moved back into the lead when Dalton found Ross III again on a 55-yard TD pass to make it 17\u201314 at halftime. After a scoreless third quarter, the Seahawks retook the lead when Tyler Lockett caught a 44-yard TD pass from Wilson to make it 21\u201317. Later on in the fourth quarter, Bullock got the Bengals within 1 when he kicked a 27-yard field goal to make it 21\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0004-0002", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: at Seattle Seahawks\nThe Bengals' defense forced the Seahawks to go 3 and out and got the ball back. Dalton had completed a 6-yard pass to Tyler Eifert. However, the Seahawks' defense stood up to Dalton on the next play and then sacked him for then he fumbled and the Seahawks recovered sealing the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: vs. San Francisco 49ers\nAfter a tough road loss, the Bengals went home to face the 49ers. The 49ers scored first when Marquise Goodwin caught a 38-yard TD pass from Jimmy Garoppolo to make it 7\u20130. The Bengals tied the game up at 7\u20137 when Andy Dalton found Tyler Eifert on a 1-yard TD pass. The 49ers however retook the lead when Garoppolo found Raheem Mostert on a 39-yard TD pass to make it 14\u20137. In the second quarter, the 49ers increased their lead when Jeff Wilson ran for a 2-yard TD to make it 21\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 95], "content_span": [96, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: vs. San Francisco 49ers\nThe Bengals drew closer when Randy Bullock kicked a 37-yard field goal to make it 21\u201310. Though, the 49ers would move back into a 2-touchdown lead when Robbie Gould kicked a 33-yard field goal for a 24\u201310 halftime lead. In the third quarter, it was all 49ers when Garoppolo found Deebo Sanders on a 2-yard TD pass to make it 31\u201310. This would be followed by Gould kicking a 38-yard field goal to make it 34\u201310. By the fourth quarter, the 49ers pretty much sealed the game as Wilson ran for a 4-yard TD to make it 41\u201310. The scoring ended when Dalton found John Ross III on a late 66-yard TD pass to make the final score 41\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 95], "content_span": [96, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Buffalo Bills\nThe Bengals traveled for a Week 3 duel against the Bills. In the first half, it was all Bills scoring starting in the first quarter when they jumped out to a 14\u20130 lead before halftime. Though, the Bengals would respond by taking the lead well into the fourth quarter to make it 17\u201314, the Bills scored a late TD when Frank Gore ran it from a yard out. Getting the ball back late in the game and able to drive to the Bills' 28-yard line, Andy Dalton threw the game losing interception on a 3rd and 5 sealing the 21\u201317 victory for the Bills.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 88], "content_span": [89, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nThe Bengals then traveled again to Pittsburgh to take on the 0\u20133 division rival Steelers. In the first quarter, the Bengals managed to make it 3\u20130 after Randy Bullock kicked a 28-yard field goal. However, from the second quarter on wards, it would be all Steelers scoring which would lead to the eventual final score of 27\u20133 and a win sealed for them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 94], "content_span": [95, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nWith the loss, the Bengals fell to 0\u20134. The team also suffered its ninth straight loss to the Steelers and first 0-4 start since 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 94], "content_span": [95, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. Arizona Cardinals\nAfter another tough road loss, the Bengals returned home to face the Cardinals. The Bengals scored first when Randy Bullock kicked a 23-yard field goal to make it 3\u20130. The Cardinals however took the lead later in the quarter when Kyler Murray ran for a 4-yard TD to make it 7\u20133. The Cardinals made it 10\u20133 in the second quarter when Zane Gonzalez kicked a 23-yard field goal. Though, the Bengals would come within 4 when Bullock kicked a 48-yard field goal to make it 10\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 93], "content_span": [94, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. Arizona Cardinals\nGonzalez then put the Cardinals back up by a touchdown with a 20-yard field goal to make it 13\u20136 at halftime. In the third quarter, the Bengals came within 4 again as Bullock kicked yet another 23-yard field goal to make it 13\u20139. In the fourth quarter, the Cardinals would take a 2-touchdown lead when Gonzalez kicked a 22-yard field goal followed by Chase Edmonds running for a 37-yard TD for 16\u20139 and 23\u20139 leads. Andy Dalton then found Auden Tate on a 2-yard TD pass to make it 23\u201316. He would then find Tyler Boyd on a 42-yard TD pass to tie the game up at 23\u201323. The Cardinals got the ball back and the Bengals' defense stalled, allowing them to drive down the field and Gonzalez kicked the game-winning 31-yard field goal to make the final score 26\u201323.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 93], "content_span": [94, 851]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. Arizona Cardinals\nWith the loss, the Bengals dropped to 0\u20135. This would be the team's first such start since 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 93], "content_span": [94, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: at Baltimore Ravens\nThe Bengals then traveled to take on the Ravens. In the first quarter, the Bengals scored first when Brandon Wilson returned a kickoff 92 yards for a TD. The Ravens however, took the lead when Lamar Jackson ran for a 21-yard TD to tie the game at 7\u20137 followed by Mark Ingram II's 1-yard TD run to make it 14\u20137. In the second quarter, the Ravens made it 17\u20137 when Justin Tucker kicked a 40-yard field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: at Baltimore Ravens\nThe Bengals were able to make it a 7-point deficit when Randy Bullock kicked a 22-yard field goal to make it 17\u201310 at halftime. In the third quarter, the Ravens moved up by double digits when Tucker kicked a 49-yard field goal to make it 20\u201310 for the quarter's only score. They would then make it 23\u201310 when Tucker kicked a 21-yard field goal. The Bengals then came within 6 when Andy Dalton ran for a 2-yard TD. Trying to get the ball back with seconds left, the Bengals tried for an onside kick. However, the Ravens recovered the ball and sealed their win and another Bengals loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Jacksonville Jaguars\nThe Bengals then went back home for a game against the Jaguars. After a scoreless first quarter, the Jaguars would score first in the second quarter when Josh Lambo kicked a 21-yard field goal to make it 3\u20130. However, the Bengals were able to take the lead when Andy Dalton found Joe Mixon on a 2-yard TD pass. The Jaguars then came within a point when Lambo kicked a 29-yard field goal to make it 7\u20136 at halftime. In third quarter, the Jaguars moved into the lead when Lambo kicked a 37-yard field goal to make it 9\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 96], "content_span": [97, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Jacksonville Jaguars\nThough, the Bengals would regain the lead when Randy Bullock kicked a 38-yard field goal to make it 10\u20139. In the fourth quarter, the Jaguars took the lead back when Keelan Cole caught a 2-yard TD pass from Gardner Minshew II (with a successful 2-point conversion) to make it 17\u201310. This would be followed by them sealing the game when Yannick Ngakoue returned an interception 23 yards for a TD followed by Lambo's 26-yard field goal to make it 24\u201310 and then 27\u201310. Dalton would run for a 1-yard TD with seconds left to make the final score 27\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 96], "content_span": [97, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: at Los Angeles Rams\nAfter another tough loss at home, the Bengals traveled to London to take on the Rams. The Bengals were considered the away team for this game. In the first quarter, the Rams scored its only points with Greg Zuerlein's 23-yard field goal to make it 3\u20130. The Bengals tied it up in the second quarter when Randy Bullock kicked a 28-yard field goal to make it 3\u20133. The Rams retook the lead when Jared Goff found Josh Reynolds on a 31-yard TD pass to make it 10\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: at Los Angeles Rams\nHowever, the Bengals would tie it up again when Andy Dalton found Joe Mixon on a 1-yard TD pass to make it 10\u201310. The Rams moved back into the lead at halftime when Goff found Cooper Kupp on a 65-yard TD pass to make it 17\u201310. In the third quarter, the Rams would score the only points of the whole entire half when Todd Gurley II ran for a 3-yard TD to make it 24\u201310 as both teams headed into a scoreless fourth quarter, the Rams sealed the win, handing the Bengals yet another loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: at Los Angeles Rams\nWith the loss, the Bengals head into their bye week at 0\u20138. It would be the team's first such start since 2008 as they were also guaranteed their fourth straight non-winning season. This would happen for the first time since the 2001\u20132004 seasons. Andy Dalton became the first quarterback in NFL history to have starts of 8\u20130 (in 2015) and 0\u20138.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: at Los Angeles Rams\nDuring the team's bye week, the Miami Dolphins defeated the New York Jets 26\u201318, making the Bengals the last winless team in 2019. Also during their bye week, the Bengals benched Dalton in favor of rookie fourth round draft pick Ryan Finley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nComing off their bye week, the Bengals went back home for their second game against the Ravens. The Ravens made it 7\u20130 in the first quarter when Lamar Jackson found Mark Andrews on a 2-yard TD pass. They would make it 14\u20130 when Mark Ingram Jr. ran for a 1-yard TD. In the second quarter, the Bengals got on the board when Randy Bullock kicked a 42-yard field goal to make it 14\u20133. The Ravens then pulled away as Jackson found Andrews again on a 17-yard TD pass to make it 21\u20133. This would be followed by Marcus Peters returning an interception 89 yards for a touchdown to make it 28\u20133. The Bengals then made it 28\u201310 at halftime when Ryan Finley found Tyler Boyd on a 6-yard TD pass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 93], "content_span": [94, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nIn the third quarter, it was all Ravens as they managed to score 3 touchdowns: First, Jackson ran for one from 47 yards out. This would be followed by him finding Marquise Brown on a 20-yard pass and then Tyus Bowser returned a fumble 33 yards to make the score 49\u201310. Bullock added a useless field goal late in the fourth quarter to make the final score 49\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 93], "content_span": [94, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nWith the loss, the Bengals fell to 0\u20139. It would be the team's first 0\u20139 start since 1993. They were also swept by the Ravens for the first time since 2011. The team is also assured their fourth consecutive losing season for the first time since 1999\u20132002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 93], "content_span": [94, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: at Oakland Raiders\nAfter a horrifying loss at home, the Bengals traveled to take on the Raiders. The Bengals would score first when Joe Mixon ran for a 3-yard TD to make it 7\u20130 for the quarter's only score. In the second quarter, the Raiders responded with 2 touchdowns of their own: Derek Carr found Foster Moreau on a 2-yard TD pass and then Carr ran for another from 3 yards out to make it 7\u20137 and then 14\u20137 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0019-0001", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: at Oakland Raiders\nIn the third quarter, the Bengals came within 4 when Randy Bullock kicked a 40-yard field goal to make it 14\u201310 for the quarter's only score. In the fourth quarter, the Raiders moved ahead by a touchdown when Daniel Carson kicked a 20-yard field goal to make it 17\u201310. Getting the ball back later on in the quarter, Ryan Finley would be sacked. On the next play, he would throw the game-losing interception, sealing another Bengals loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: at Oakland Raiders\nWith the loss, the Bengals fell to 0\u201310 for the first time since 1993 and were eliminated from postseason contention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers\nThe Bengals then returned home for the second game of the season series against the Steelers. After a scoreless first quarter, the Steelers scored first when Chris Boswell kicked a 26-yard field goal to make it 3\u20130. The Bengals, however, would take the lead later on when Ryan Finley found Tyler Boyd on a 15-yard TD pass to make it 7\u20133 at halftime. In the third quarter, the Steelers retook the lead when Devlin Hodges found James Washington on a 79-yard TD pass to make it 10\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 96], "content_span": [97, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0021-0001", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers\nThe Bengals then tied the game up when Randy Bullock kicked a 27-yard field goal to make it 10\u201310. In the fourth quarter, the Steelers retook the lead with 2 field goals kicked by Boswell: from 47 and 26 yards out to make it 13\u201310 and then 16\u201310. The Bengals got the ball back later on in the quarter. The offense was able to drive to their own 29-yard line. However, on the next play, Finley was sacked, then he fumbled the ball, allowing the Steelers to recover it. The Bengals used up all their time outs before the Steelers were able to kneel out for victory, sealing yet another loss for the Bengals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 96], "content_span": [97, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers\nWith their tenth straight loss to the Steelers, the Bengals fell to 0\u201311.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 96], "content_span": [97, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers\nThe next day, it was announced that Andy Dalton would start as quarterback again in week 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 96], "content_span": [97, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: vs. New York Jets\nAfter yet another loss (and going 0\u20133 under Ryan Finley) and looking like the third team in the NFL to go 0\u201316 after the 2008 Detroit Lions and 2017 Cleveland Browns, the Bengals stayed home for a game against the Jets. The Jets scored first in the first quarter when Sam Ficken kicked a 42-yard field goal to make it 3\u20130. The Bengals took the lead later on in the quarter when Andy Dalton found Tyler Boyd on a 17-yard TD pass to make it 7\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0024-0001", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: vs. New York Jets\nIn the second quarter, the Bengals would make it 17\u20133 when Randy Bullock kicked a 24-yard field goal to make it 10\u20133 followed up by Joe Mixon running for a 5-yard TD. Ficken got the Jets within 11 as he kicked a 39-yard field goal to make it 17\u20136 at halftime. In the second half, it was all Bengals scoring as they put up a safety and field goal in the third quarter making it 22\u20136. A scoreless fourth quarter sealed the game for them and their first win of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: vs. New York Jets\nWith the win, the Bengals won their first game of the season, improving to a record of 1\u201311. Andy Dalton also won his first game back as the starting QB.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: at Cleveland Browns\nAfter the win at home, the Bengals traveled to Cleveland for Battle Of Ohio Round 1 against the Browns. In the first quarter, the Bengals scored first when Randy Bullock kicked a 34-yard field goal to make it 3\u20130. The Browns got on the board and took the lead when Denzel Ward returned an interception 61 yards for a touchdown to make it 7\u20133. The Bengals came within a point later on in the quarter when Bullock kicked a 44-yard field goal to make it 7\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 92], "content_span": [93, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0026-0001", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: at Cleveland Browns\nIn the second quarter, the Bengals were able to retake the lead when Joe Mixon ran for a 1-yard TD to make it 13\u20137. Though, the Browns regained the lead before halftime when Baker Mayfield ran for a 7-yard TD to make it 14\u201313. In the third quarter, the Browns increased their lead when Kareem Hunt ran for a 7-yard TD to make it 21\u201313. Though, the Bengals were able to come within 5 when Bullock hit yet another field goal from 28 yards out to make it 21\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 92], "content_span": [93, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0026-0002", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: at Cleveland Browns\nThe Browns pulled away when Austin Seibert kicked a 53-yard field goal to make it 24\u201316. In the fourth quarter, the Browns pulled away by double digits when Seibert kicked another field goal from 31 yards out to make the score 27\u201316. The Bengals then came within 8 when Bullock kicked a 46-yard field goal to make it 27\u201319. Later on in the quarter, the Bengals tried for an onside kick. Though, the Browns would recover sealing the Bengals loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 92], "content_span": [93, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: at Cleveland Browns\nWith the loss and their third straight to the Browns, the Bengals fell to 1\u201312. The team is also assured last place in the AFC North for the second straight season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 92], "content_span": [93, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. New England Patriots\nAfter another tough road loss, the Bengals went home to take on the Patriots. The Pats scored first in the first quarter when Tom Brady found James White on a 23-yard TD pass to make it 7\u20130. The Bengals then managed to tie it up and then take the lead when Cethan Carter caught an 8-yard TD pass from Andy Dalton to make it 7\u20137, followed by Randy Bullock kicking a 34-yard field goal to make it 10\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 97], "content_span": [98, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0028-0001", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. New England Patriots\nIn the second quarter, it was all Pats when Nick Folk kicked 2 field goals: from 40 and 46 yards out to make the score 10\u201310 and then give his team a 13\u201310 halftime lead. In the third quarter, the Pats went back to work as Brady found N'Keal Henry on a 7-yard TD pass to make it 20\u201310, followed by Stephen Gilmore returning an interception 64 yards for a touchdown to make it 27\u201310. The Bengals came within 2 touchdowns in the fourth when Bullock kicked a 48-yard field goal to make it 27\u201313. However, the Pats wrapped up the scoring of the game when Rex Burkhead ran for a 33-yard touchdown to make the final score 34\u201313, sealing another loss for the Bengals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 97], "content_span": [98, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. New England Patriots\nWith the loss, the Bengals fell to 1\u201313. Andy Dalton also put up a new record of games started and lost in a single season, surpassing the 9 losses from the 2016 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 97], "content_span": [98, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: at Miami Dolphins\nThe Bengals headed down south to take on the Dolphins in head coach Zac Taylor's first return to Miami in 4 years. Taylor served as an assistant coach for the Dolphins under then-head coach Joe Philbin from 2012-2015. In the first quarter, it was all Dolphins when Ryan Fitzpatrick found Christian Wilkins on a 1-yard TD pass to make it 7\u20130. They would make it 14\u20130 when DeVante Parker caught a 7-yard TD pass from Fitzpatrick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0030-0001", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: at Miami Dolphins\nThe Bengals were able to get on the board in the second quarter when Randy Bullock kicked a 20-yard field goal to make it 14\u20133. However, the Dolphins made it 21\u20133 when Fitzpatrick found Mike Gesicki on a 31-yard TD pass. Bullock ended the scoring of the half when he kicked a 57-yard field goal for a halftime score of 21\u20136. In the third quarter, Fitzpatrick for Gesicki again on a 13-yard TD pass to make it 28\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0030-0002", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: at Miami Dolphins\nThe Bengals drew closer when Andy Dalton found Tyler Boyd on a 34-yard TD pass (with a failed two-point conversion) to make it 28\u201312. The Dolphins pulled away in the fourth quarter when Myles Gaskin ran for a 2-yard touchdown. However, the Bengals were able to tie the game up late in the quarter when first Dalton found C. J. Uzomah on an 8-yard TD pass to make it 35\u201319, followed by Dalton finding Tyler Boyd on a 2-yard TD pass (with a successful 2-point conversion) to make it 35\u201327.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0030-0003", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: at Miami Dolphins\nAfter recovering the onside kick, the Bengals drove down the field to tie the game up at 35\u201335 after Dalton found Tyler Eifert on a 25-yard TD pass (with another successful two-point conversion) at the end of regulation. In overtime however, after going back and forth with the ball, the Dolphins were able to drive down the field in the final seconds. This allowed Jason Sanders to kick the game-winning 37-yard field goal for the final score 38\u201335.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: at Miami Dolphins\nWith the loss, the Bengals fell to 1\u201314. The team would also clinch the first round pick in the 2020 Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288317-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Cleveland Browns\nWith the win, the Bengals ended their season with a 2\u201314 record and avoided setting a new franchise-worst regular season record. This was their only win against an AFC North opponent as they managed to snap their 3-game losing streak to the Browns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 93], "content_span": [94, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288318-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cincinnati Reds season\nThe 2019 Cincinnati Reds season was the 150th season for the franchise in Major League Baseball, and their 17th at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati. The Reds were eliminated from playoff contention on September 16 after a loss to the Chicago Cubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288319-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Circle K Firecracker 250\nThe 2019 Circle K Firecracker 250 was a NASCAR Xfinity Series race held on July 5, 2019, at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida. Contested over 100 laps on the 2.5-mile (4.0\u00a0km) superspeedway, it was the 16th race of the 2019 NASCAR Xfinity Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288319-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Circle K Firecracker 250, Background, Track\nThe race was held at Daytona International Speedway, a race track located in Daytona Beach, Florida, United States. Since opening in 1959, the track is the home of the Daytona 500, the most prestigious race in NASCAR. In addition to NASCAR, the track also hosts races of ARCA, AMA Superbike, USCC, SCCA, and Motocross. It 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288319-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Circle K Firecracker 250, Practice, Final practice\nA. J. Allmendinger was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 46.177 seconds and a speed of 194.902\u00a0mph (313.664\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288319-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Circle K Firecracker 250, Qualifying\nTyler Reddick scored the pole for the race with a time of 47.938 seconds and a speed of 187.743\u00a0mph (302.143\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288319-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Circle K Firecracker 250, Race, Summary\nTyler Reddick began on pole. The first caution occurred when Caesar Bacarella lost control of his car and spun, causing seven other drivers to be involved. Landon Cassill was the only driver taken out in this caution due to a bent track bar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288319-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Circle K Firecracker 250, Race, Summary\nAs the first stage neared its end, Ross Chastain blocked Reddick and narrowly missed the wall, but Reddick made contact with it. The stack-up from the two drivers resulted in Sheldon Creed and John Hunter Nemechek simultaneously spinning from contact, bringing out the second caution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288319-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Circle K Firecracker 250, Race, Summary\nChastain won Stage 1. On the final lap of the first stage, Justin Haley blocked several drivers from making a run, causing them to pass him from underneath, but NASCAR deemed he forced them below the double-yellow line, and sent him to the rear of the field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288319-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Circle K Firecracker 250, Race, Summary\nReddick got a flat tire in the middle of Stage 2 and collected Chase Briscoe, ending his day. A. J. Allmendinger blocked Chastain to win Stage 2. The first \u201cBig One\u201d occurred in the middle of the field later on and collected ten drivers. Riley Herbst spun with 21 laps remaining, but no caution was thrown. Another \u201cBig One\u201d 7 laps later took out fifteen drivers, including Michael Annett and Cole Custer, and also brought out a red flag.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288319-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Circle K Firecracker 250, Race, Summary\nOn the final restart, Shane Lee and Justin Allgaier both spun out on separate occasions, but no caution was thrown for either instance. The trio of Kaulig Racing drivers proved too fast for any other driver to contend them. Chastain would win the race and was followed by teammates Haley and Allmendinger, Allmendinger would soon be disqualified after failing post race inspection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288319-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Circle K Firecracker 250, After the race\nA. J. Allmendinger was disqualified from his third-place finish after his car failed post-race inspection. This was the third consecutive week where a driver was disqualified with respect to the 2019 rules. Allmendinger's car failed an engine vacuum test, dialling back the initial 1-2-3 finish for Kaulig Racing to simply a 1-2 finish. Allmendinger was also stripped of his stage points after being relegated to last place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288320-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CircuitCity.com 250\nThe 2019 CircuitCity.com 250 is a NASCAR Xfinity Series race held on June 16, 2019, at Iowa Speedway in Newton, Iowa. Contested over 250 laps on the 0.8-mile (1.3\u00a0km) D-shaped oval, it was the 14th race of the 2019 NASCAR Xfinity Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288320-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CircuitCity.com 250, Background, Track\nIowa Speedway is a 7/8-mile (1.4\u00a0km) paved oval motor racing track in Newton, Iowa, United States, approximately 30 miles (48\u00a0km) east of Des Moines. The track was designed with influence from Rusty Wallace and patterned after Richmond Raceway, a short track where Wallace was very successful. It has over 25,000 permanent seats as well as a unique multi-tiered Recreational Vehicle viewing area along the backstretch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288320-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CircuitCity.com 250, Practice\nHarrison Burton was the fastest in the practice session with a time of 24.195 seconds and a speed of 130.192\u00a0mph (209.524\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288320-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CircuitCity.com 250, Qualifying\nCole Custer scored the pole for the race with a time of 23.779 seconds and a speed of 132.470\u00a0mph (213.190\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288320-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CircuitCity.com 250, Race, Summary\nCole Custer began on pole. He remained on the outside lane and pulled away. On lap 30, David Starr lost a motor and brought out the caution. On the restart, Custer got ahead on the top, with Christopher Bell contesting him on the bottom. Custer held the lead as Justin Allgaier chased after them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288320-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CircuitCity.com 250, Race, Summary\nJoey Gase and Vinnie Miller tangled on lap 48, wrecking their cars and bringing out the caution. Custer wins the race off pit road. Justin Haley took the lead as Custer and Bell quickly caught up to him. Bell used a sidedraft and slid in front of Custer to win Stage 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288320-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 CircuitCity.com 250, Race, Summary\nCuster and Bell continue their fight for the lead, with Allgaier behind them. With three laps remaining in stage 2, Austin Cindric and Allgaier made contact. Cindric thought he was clear, Allgaier still had a fender on him on the outside. Bell won Stage 2. He also built up a strong lead afterwards, staying in the lead after a caution caused by Tyler Matthews.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288320-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 CircuitCity.com 250, Race, Summary\nOn the next restart, Bell gets ahead of Custer, who in turn blocked Allgaier from passing. With 35 laps remaining, Custer got into the wall with no damage, bringing out the caution. He manages to get off pit road first. With 27 laps remaining, Custer got loose, prompting Bell to go to the bottom. Bell makes contact while trying to side draft, but he leads into the next turn. With 16 laps remaining, Chad Finchum brought out the caution after slamming into the wall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288320-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 CircuitCity.com 250, Race, Summary\nOn the restart, Custer went to the bottom, but Bell got ahead on the top. Custer pulled next to him off the next turn, but Bell drove away and took the win for the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288321-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Citi Open\nThe 2019 Washington Open (called the Citi Open for sponsorship reasons) was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 51st edition (for the men) and the 9th edition (for the women) of the Washington Open. The event was part of the ATP Tour 500 series of the 2019 ATP Tour, and of the WTA International tournaments of the 2019 WTA Tour. It took place at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center in Washington, D.C., United States, from July 29 to August 4, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288321-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Citi Open, Points and prize money, Prize money\n1 Qualifiers prize money is also the Round of 64 prize money* per team", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 51], "content_span": [52, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288321-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288321-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288321-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288321-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Citi Open, ATP doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pair received entry from the doubles qualifying draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 62], "content_span": [63, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288321-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288321-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Citi Open, WTA singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry using a protected ranking into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 62], "content_span": [63, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288321-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Citi Open, WTA doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pair received a wildcard into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 62], "content_span": [63, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288322-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Citi Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nJamie Murray and Bruno Soares were the defending champions, but chose not to participate together. Murray played alongside his brother Andy but lost in the quarterfinals to Raven Klaasen and Michael Venus. Soares teamed up with Mate Pavi\u0107 but lost in the first round to Jean-Julien Rojer and Horia Tec\u0103u.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288322-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Citi Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nKlaasen and Venus went on to win the title, defeating Rojer and Tec\u0103u in the final, 3\u22126, 6\u22123, [10\u22122].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288323-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Citi Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nAlexander Zverev was the two-time defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288323-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Citi Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nNick Kyrgios won the title, defeating Daniil Medvedev in the final 7\u20136(8\u20136), 7\u20136(7\u20134).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288323-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Citi Open \u2013 Men's Singles, Seeds\nClick on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288324-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Citi Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nHan Xinyun and Darija Jurak were the defending champions but both players chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288324-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Citi Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nCori Gauff and Caty McNally won the title, defeating Maria Sanchez and Fanny Stoll\u00e1r in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288325-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Citi Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nSvetlana Kuznetsova was the defending champion, however she was unable to defend her title due to visa issues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288325-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Citi Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nJessica Pegula won her first WTA title, defeating Camila Giorgi in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288326-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Citrus Bowl\nThe 2019 Citrus Bowl was a college football bowl game that was played on January 1, 2019. It was the 73rd edition of what is now the Citrus Bowl, and was one of the 2018\u201319 bowl games concluding the 2018 FBS football season. Sponsored by VRBO, a vacation rental marketplace owned by HomeAway, the game was officially known as the VRBO Citrus Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288326-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Citrus Bowl, Teams\nThe game was played between the Penn State Nittany Lions of the Big Ten Conference and the Kentucky Wildcats of the Southeastern Conference. The teams had previously met five times, with Penn State holding a 3\u20132 edge; their most recent meeting was the 1999 Outback Bowl, won by Penn State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288326-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Citrus Bowl, Teams, Penn State Nittany Lions\nPenn State received and accepted a bid to the Citrus Bowl on December 2. The Nittany Lions entered the bowl with a 9\u20133 record (6\u20133 in conference).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 49], "content_span": [50, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288326-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Citrus Bowl, Teams, Kentucky Wildcats\nKentucky received and accepted a bid to the Citrus Bowl on December 2. The Wildcats entered the bowl with a 9\u20133 record (5\u20133 in conference).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288327-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Citt\u00e0 di Como Challenger\nThe 2019 Citt\u00e0 di Como Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the fourteenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Como, Italy between 26 August and 1 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288327-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288327-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Citt\u00e0 di Como Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw using a protected ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288327-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Citt\u00e0 di Como Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as alternates:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288328-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Citt\u00e0 di Como Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nAndre Begemann and Dustin Brown were the defending champions but only Begemann chose to defend his title, partnering Florin Mergea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288328-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Citt\u00e0 di Como Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nBegemann successfully defended his title, defeating Fabr\u00edcio Neis and Pedro Sousa 5\u20137, 7\u20135, [14\u201312] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288329-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Citt\u00e0 di Como Challenger \u2013 Singles\nSalvatore Caruso was the defending champion but lost in the second round to Jan Choinski.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288329-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Citt\u00e0 di Como Challenger \u2013 Singles\nFacundo Mena won the title after defeating Andrej Martin 2\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288330-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 City of Bradford Metropolitan District Council election\nThe 2019 City of Bradford Metropolitan District Council Election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Bradford Metropolitan District Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288331-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 City of Jesolo Trophy\nThe 2019 City of Jesolo Trophy was the 12th annual Trofeo di Jesolo gymnastics competition held in Jesolo, Italy. Both senior and junior gymnasts were invited to compete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288332-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 City of Lincoln Council election\nThe 2019 City of Lincoln Council election took place on 3 May 2019 to elect members of City of Lincoln Council in Lincolnshire, England. This was held on the same day as other local elections. One third 33 seats were up for election, with one councillors in each of the 11 wards being elected. As the election in 2016 had been an all-out election with new ward boundaries, the seats of the candidates that had finished second in each ward in the all-out 2016 election were now up for election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288333-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 City of Playford Tennis International\nThe 2019 City of Playford Tennis International was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the second edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour and the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Playford, Australia between 31 December 2018 and 6 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288333-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 City of Playford Tennis International, 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-00288333-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 City of Playford Tennis International, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 92], "content_span": [93, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288333-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 City of Playford Tennis International, Women'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, 94], "content_span": [95, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288333-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 City of Playford Tennis International, Women's singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Rankings:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 94], "content_span": [95, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288334-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 City of Playford Tennis International II\nThe 2019 City of Playford Tennis International II was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the third edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour and the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in the City of Playford, Australia between 28 October and 3 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288334-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 City of Playford Tennis International II, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 95], "content_span": [96, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288334-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 City of Playford Tennis International II, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw using a protected ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 95], "content_span": [96, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288334-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 City of Playford Tennis International II, Women's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 97], "content_span": [98, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288335-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 City of Playford Tennis International II \u2013 Men's Doubles\nMax Purcell and Luke Saville were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288335-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 City of Playford Tennis International II \u2013 Men's Doubles\nHarri Heli\u00f6vaara and Patrik Niklas-Salminen won the title after defeating Ruben Gonzales and Evan King 6\u20134, 6\u20137(4\u20137), [10\u20137] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288336-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 City of Playford Tennis International II \u2013 Men's Singles\nRog\u00e9rio Dutra Silva was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288336-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 City of Playford Tennis International II \u2013 Men's Singles\nJames Duckworth won the title after defeating Yasutaka Uchiyama 7\u20136(7\u20132), 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288337-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 City of Playford Tennis International II \u2013 Women's Doubles\nGiulia Gatto-Monticone and Anastasia Grymalska were the defending champions but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288337-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 City of Playford Tennis International II \u2013 Women's Doubles\nAsia Muhammad and Storm Sanders won the title, defeating Naiktha Bains and Tereza Mihal\u00edkov\u00e1 in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288338-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 City of Playford Tennis International II \u2013 Women's Singles\nAnna Kalinskaya was the defending champion, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288338-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 City of Playford Tennis International II \u2013 Women's Singles\nStorm Sanders won the title, defeating Lizette Cabrera in an all-Australian final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288339-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 City of Playford Tennis International \u2013 Men's Doubles\nMackenzie McDonald and Tommy Paul were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288339-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 City of Playford Tennis International \u2013 Men's Doubles\nMax Purcell and Luke Saville won the title after defeating Ariel Behar and Enrique L\u00f3pez P\u00e9rez 6\u20134, 7\u20135 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288340-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 City of Playford Tennis International \u2013 Men's Singles\nJason Kubler was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288340-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 City of Playford Tennis International \u2013 Men's Singles\nRog\u00e9rio Dutra Silva won the title after defeating Mats Moraing 6\u20133, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288341-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 City of York Council election\nElections to City of York Council were held on 2 May 2019, as part of the United Kingdom local elections. The election resulted in substantial gains for the Liberal Democrats, who became the largest party, although no party surpassed the 24-seat majority threshold. The Conservatives suffered badly in this election, and lost 12 of the 14 seats they had won at the previous election. The Green Party held all their four seats, and surpassed the Conservatives in the popular vote. Labour gained two seats, although they failed to gain support in rural areas, where voters favoured the Liberal Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288341-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 City of York Council election\nOn 14 May, The Liberal Democrats and the Green Party announced that they had agreed to run the council in a new 'progressive partnership' coalition, with Green Party leader Andy D'Agorne assuming the role of Deputy Leader of the Council while Liberal Democrat leader Keith Aspden succeeded Ian Gillies as Leader of the Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288341-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 City of York Council election, Background\nIn October 2015, Dafydd Williams stepped down as leader of the local Labour Party with Janet Looker appointed to the role. Council leader Chris Steward resigned as leader of the Conservative group for health reasons in May 2016 and was replaced by David Carr. Labour Councillors Julie Gunnell and David Levene resigned in 2017 for personal reasons. The seats were retained by Labour candidates Jonny Crawshaw and Michael Pavlovic in the by-elections held in June 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288341-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 City of York Council election, Background\nCouncil Leader David Carr was replaced by Ian Gillies as leader of the Conservative group in January 2018 after losing a vote of no confidence. Labour councillor Sonja Crisp stepped down due to ill health, her seat was retained by Labour candidate Kallum Taylor in February 2018. Former leader David Carr and councillor Susan Mercer resigned from the Conservative Party in February 2018 due to \u201cunbridgeable differences\u201d within the local Conservative group to sit as independents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288341-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 City of York Council election, Background\nThe makeup of the Council was now 15 Labour, 12 Liberal Democrats, 12 Conservative, four Green and four independent councillors; the Conservative/Liberal Democrat joint administration had a majority of one. Ian Gillies was elected leader of the Council in March. In August Labour councillors Fiona Derbyshire and Hilary Shepherd resigned from the Labour Party to sit as Independent Socialists York, leaving the makeup of the Council as 13 Labour, 12 Liberal Democrats, 12 Conservatives, four Greens and six Independents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288341-0002-0002", "contents": "2019 City of York Council election, Background\nIn March Liberal Democrat councillor Sheena Jackson resigned from the Liberal Democrats Party to sit as an Independent, leaving the makeup of the Council as 13 Labour, 11 Liberal Democrats, 12 Conservatives, four Greens and seven Independents, leaving the Conservative and Liberal Democrat coalition without a majority for the end of the term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288341-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 City of York Council election, Ward results, Fulford and Heslington ward\nThe parish of Fulford and part of the parish of Heslington", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 77], "content_span": [78, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288341-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 City of York Council election, Ward results, Rural West York ward\nThe parishes of Askham Bryan, Askham Richard, Hessay, Nether Poppleton, Rufforth with Knapton, Skelton, and Upper Poppleton", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288342-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Civic Platform presidential primary\nThe Civic Platform presidential primary, 2020 was the second presidential primary after the 2010 Civic Platform presidential primary. The primary was organized by the party following the decision by Donald Tusk not to run for president again (he lost in a runoff to incumbent Lech Kaczy\u0144ski in 2005) and then served as Prime Minister from 2007 to 2014 after which he resigned to become President of the European Council. Prior to his withdrawal, Tusk was thought to be the presumptive nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288342-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Civic Platform presidential primary\nThe voting took place during a special conference on December 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288342-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Civic Platform presidential primary, Results\n475 electors cast their votes at the convention. 5 electors cast an empty ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288342-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Civic Platform presidential primary, Aftermath\nAfter being nominated, Ma\u0142gorzata Kidawa-B\u0142o\u0144ska was seen as the main challenger to incumbent Andrzej Duda. However, her campaign failed to gain any traction and she ended up polling below all of the major candidates. Due to the COVID-19 outbreak, the original election was cancelled and the Civic Platform decided to replace her with Rafa\u0142 Trzaskowski. Trzaskowski ended up losing the election in the second round to Duda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288343-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Clare County Council election\nA Clare County Council election was held in County Clare in Ireland on 24 May 2019 as part of that year's local elections. All 28 councillors were elected for a five-year term of office from 5 local electoral areas (LEAs) by single transferable vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288343-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Clare County Council election\nFollowing a recommendation of the 2018 Boundary Committee, the boundaries of the LEAs were altered from those used in the 2014 elections. Its terms of reference required no change in the total number of councillors but set a maximum LEA size of seven councillors, whereas the 2014 West Clare LEA had eight. Other changes were necessitated by population shifts revealed by the 2016 census.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288344-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Clare Senior Football Championship\nThe 2019 Clare Senior Football Championship was the 122nd staging of the Clare Senior Football Championship since its establishment by the Clare County Board in 1887.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288344-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Clare Senior Football Championship\nThe 2018 champions, and holders of the Jack Daly Cup were St. Joseph's, Miltown Malbay who became the county champions for the second time in three years winning their fourteenth overall title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288344-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Clare Senior Football Championship\nIn 2016 a Football Review Agreement decided that from 2019 onwards the Clare Senior and Intermediate Football Championships would both involve twelve teams in a effort to make both more competitive. This meant that five clubs would lose their senior status and be relegated down to the Clare Intermediate Football Championship. The eleven remaining senior clubs would be joined by the intermediate champions to form the new senior championship, and thereby increasing the intermediate championship from eight to twelve teams. 2018 saw the relegation of Doora-Barefield, Kilfenora, O'Curry's, St. Breckan's and Wolfe Tones down to Intermediate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288344-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Clare Senior Football Championship\nAs part of the 2016 Football Review Agreement, a pathway was left open for any amalgamations that wished to enter the senior championship. Two intermediate clubs - Naomh Eoin & O'Curry's - both from the Loop Head Peninsula, took up this opportunity for 2019 and competed together as West Clare. According to the Clare GAA Master Fixtures Plan 2019, any amalgamations that enter a team are immune from relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288345-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Clare Senior Hurling Championship\nThe 2019 Clare Senior Hurling Championship was the 121st staging of the Clare Senior Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Clare County Board in 1887.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288345-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Clare Senior Hurling Championship\nThe defending champions and holders of the Canon Hamilton Cup were Ballyea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288346-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Clarkson Cup\nThe 2019 Clarkson Cup was held at Ricoh Coliseum in Toronto on 24 March 2019 with the Calgary Inferno defeating the Canadiennes de Montreal by a score of 5-2. Brianna Decker scored the game-winning goal during a power play opportunity in the second period, with Kacey Bellamy logging the assist. Inferno forward Zoe Hickel was recognized as the First Star of the Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288346-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Clarkson Cup, Calgary Inferno \u2013 2019 Clarkson Cup champions\nWith the victory, Alex Rigsby became the first American-born goaltender to win an Olympic Gold Medal (2018), IIHF World Championship (2017), and a Clarkson Cup championship. Venla Hovi becomes the first player from Finland to win the Clarkson Cup, while Aina Mizukami is the third player from Japan to have won. As a side note, the first two Japanese players to have won, Kanae Aoki and Aina Takeuchi were part of Calgary's first Clarkson Cup win, back in 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 64], "content_span": [65, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288347-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Clemson Tigers football team\nThe 2019 Clemson Tigers football team represented Clemson University during the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Tigers were led by head coach Dabo Swinney, in his 11th full year. The Tigers competed as members of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC), and played their home games at Memorial Stadium in Clemson, South Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288347-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Clemson Tigers football team\nEntering the season as defending national champions, Clemson began the year ranked first in the polls. Despite securing another undefeated regular season and its fifth consecutive conference title after defeating Virginia in the ACC Championship Game, Clemson fell to third in the final College Football Playoff rankings of the season, owing to its comparatively weak strength of schedule. They were selected to the Fiesta Bowl to play second-seeded Ohio State, where the Tigers won by a score of 29\u201323. Clemson advanced to the National Championship Game, where they lost to LSU, 42\u201325, ending their winning streak at 29 games and finishing the season at 14\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288347-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Clemson Tigers football team\nClemson was led by sophomore quarterback Trevor Lawrence, who led the ACC with 3,665 passing yards and 45 total touchdowns. Running back Travis Etienne was named ACC Player of the Year for the second consecutive year, leading the conference with 19 rushing touchdowns and 7.8 yards per carry, and finishing in second with 1,614 rushing yards. Offensive lineman John Simpson was named a consensus All-American, and he was joined on the first-team All-ACC by Lawrence, Etienne, wide receiver Tee Higgins, and offensive lineman Tremayne Anchrum. On defense, the team was led by All-American and ACC Defensive Player of the Year linebacker Isaiah Simmons. He was joined on the first-team All-ACC by cornerback A. J. Terrell and safety Tanner Muse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288347-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Clemson Tigers football team, Previous season\nThe Tigers entered the 2019 season as defending national champions, having finished the 2018 season 15\u20130, and 8\u20130 in ACC play. They won the ACC for the fourth consecutive season by beating Pittsburgh in the ACC Championship game, 42\u201310. The Tigers won the national championship 44\u201316 over Alabama in the CFP National Championship game. They were the first major college football program to finish with a record of 15\u20130 since Penn in 1897.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288347-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Clemson Tigers football team, Offseason, Recruiting\nClemson's 2019 recruiting class consisted of 29 signees, including 17 that enrolled early and one that grayshirted. The class was ranked as the best class in the ACC and the 10th best class overall according to the 247Sports Composite.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288347-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Clemson Tigers football team, Preseason, ACC Media Days\nThe ACC media poll was released on July 22, 2019. Clemson was the consensus pick to repeat once again as ACC Champion, receiving 171 votes to win the Atlantic Division and 170 votes to win the Conference Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288347-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Clemson Tigers football team, Schedule\nClemson announced its 2019 football schedule on January 16, 2019. The 2019 schedule consists of seven home games and five away games in the regular season. The Tigers will host ACC foes Georgia Tech, Florida State, Boston College, and Wake Forest and will travel to Syracuse, North Carolina, Louisville and NC State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288347-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Clemson Tigers football team, Schedule\nThe Tigers will host three of the four non-conference opponents, Texas A&M from the SEC, Charlotte from Conference USA and Wofford from the Southern Conference, and will travel to South Carolina from the SEC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288347-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Clemson Tigers football team, Postseason, 2020 NFL Draft\nThe 2020 NFL Draft will be held on April 23\u201325, 2020 in Paradise, Nevada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288348-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Clemson Tigers men's soccer team\nThe 2019 Clemson Tigers men's soccer team represented Clemson University during the 2019 NCAA Division I men's soccer season. The Tigers were led by head coach Mike Noonan, in his tenth season. They played home games at Riggs Field. This was the team's 59th season playing organized men's college soccer and their 32nd playing in the Atlantic Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288348-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Clemson Tigers men's soccer team, Background\nThe 2018 Clemson men's soccer team finished the season with a 7\u20139\u20131 overall record and a 2\u20136\u20130 ACC record. The Tigers were seeded twelfth\u2013overall in the 2018 ACC Men's Soccer Tournament, where they lost in the first round to Notre Dame. The Tigers were not invited to the 2018 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament. This was the first time in five years the Tigers did not qualify for the tournament. Their seven wins was the Tigers' lowest win total since 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288348-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Clemson Tigers men's soccer team, Background\nAt the end of the season, one Tigers men's soccer player was selected in the 2019 MLS SuperDraft: Patrick Bunk-Andersen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288348-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Clemson Tigers men's soccer team, Squad, 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, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288349-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Clemson Tigers women's soccer team\nThe 2019 Clemson Tigers women's soccer team represented Clemson University during the 2019 NCAA Division I women's soccer season. The Tigers were led by head coach Ed Radwanski, in his eighth season. Home games were played at Riggs Field. This was the team's 26th season playing organized soccer. All of those seasons were played in the Atlantic Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288349-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Clemson Tigers women's soccer team, Previous Season\nThe 2018 Clemson women's soccer team finished the season with a 12\u20139\u20130 overall record and a 6\u20134\u20130 ACC record. The Tigers qualified for the ACC Tournament as the fifth-seed. The Tigers overcame Boston College in the Quarterfinals, but fell 0\u20131 to North Carolina in the Semifinals. The Tigers earned an at-large bid into the 2018 NCAA Division I Women's Soccer Tournament for the sixth season in a row. As an unseeded team in the Stanford Bracket, Clemson lost to Ole Miss at home 1\u20132 to end their season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288349-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Clemson Tigers women's soccer team, Squad, 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, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season\nThe 2019 season was the Cleveland Browns' 67th in the National Football League (NFL), their 71st overall, their second full season under general manager John Dorsey and their only season under head coach Freddie Kitchens. They finished 6\u201310, failing to improve on their 7\u20138\u20131 record from 2018 or end their franchise-record and league-high 16-year playoff drought. They also suffered a 12th consecutive losing season, also a franchise record and the longest such streak in the league. Following the season, the Browns fired Kitchens after one season and Dorsey left his position as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Offseason, Coaching changes\nOn October 29, 2018, after Week 8 of the 2018 season, the Browns fired head coach Hue Jackson. Jackson posted a record of 3\u201336\u20131 (.088) record during his 21\u20442-season tenure with the Browns. Jackson failed to win any away games during his tenure and lost every game in 2017. Offensive coordinator Todd Haley was also fired the same day. Defensive coordinator Gregg Williams finished out the 2018 season with a 5\u20133 (.625) record as interim head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 57], "content_span": [58, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Offseason, Coaching changes\nOn January 12, 2019, the Browns promoted interim offensive coordinator Freddie Kitchens to head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 57], "content_span": [58, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Offseason, Coaching changes\nOn January 12, the Browns hired former Minnesota Vikings special teams coordinator Mike Priefer to the same role.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 57], "content_span": [58, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Offseason, Coaching changes\nOn January 14, the Browns hired former Tampa Bay Buccaneers offensive coordinator Todd Monken as offensive coordinator and former Arizona Cardinals head coach Steve Wilks as defensive coordinator.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 57], "content_span": [58, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Offseason, Roster changes, Players added and lost\nDuring the 2019 off-season, the Browns also signed DT Brandin Bryant, WR Jaelen Strong, and G Bryan Witzmann, but released them prior to the start of the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 79], "content_span": [80, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Offseason, Uniform changes\nOn September 4, the Browns announced that they would use their brown \"color rush\" uniforms, which they debuted in 2018, as their primary home uniforms for 2019, wearing them for six home games. These uniforms feature dark brown jerseys with orange numbers and orange stripes, and dark brown pants with the same orange stripes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Tennessee Titans\nThe Browns opened the season with a home game against the Tennessee Titans with high hopes after their 7\u20138\u20131 season in 2018. The Browns scored a touchdown on their first drive to take a 6\u20130 lead, but the Titans controlled the game after that, taking a 12\u20136 lead into halftime. After a Titans field goal, a Browns' touchdown late in the third quarter made the score 15\u201313, but that is the closest they would get as quarterback Baker Mayfield threw three interceptions and the Titans scored four unanswered touchdowns to secure a 43\u201313 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Tennessee Titans\nWith the loss, the Browns opened the season at 0\u20131. The Browns failed to win in Week 1 for the 15th consecutive season. They also committed 18 penalties for 182 yards, their most penalties in a game since 1951.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: at New York Jets\nThe Browns traveled to New York for a Monday Night Football matchup against the Jets, marking the Browns' first MNF appearance since 2015. The Browns opened the scoring with a pair of Austin Seibert field goals\u2014the first of his career\u2014in the first quarter to take a 6\u20130 lead. After the Browns added a Nick Chubb touchdown run, the teams traded field goals late in the second quarter to give the Browns a 16\u20133 halftime lead. The only score of the second half was an 89-yard touchdown pass from Baker Mayfield to Odell Beckham Jr. to give the Browns a 23\u20133 win. The Browns' defense had a solid performance with four sacks (including three by Myles Garrett), one takeaway and two fourth-down stops.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 86], "content_span": [87, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: at New York Jets\nWith the win, the Browns improved to 1\u20131. Punter Jamie Gillan was named the AFC Special Teams Player of the Week; he made six punts, five of which landed inside the Jets' 20-yard line, averaging 38.5 yards per kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 86], "content_span": [87, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Los Angeles Rams\nThe Browns hosted the Los Angeles Rams in their first Sunday Night Football appearance since 2008. The Browns held a 6\u20133 halftime lead after a highly defensive first half. The only scoring came via field goals from the Browns' Austin Seibert and the Rams' Greg Zuerlein. In the third quarter, the Rams drove down the field and scored a touchdown on a Jared Goff pass to Cooper Kupp to take a 10\u20136 lead. The Browns responded on their next drive with a Baker Mayfield pass to Demetrius Harris to retake the lead at 13\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Los Angeles Rams\nEarly in the fourth quarter, the Rams regained the lead, 17\u201313, on another Goff touchdown pass to Kupp and extended their lead to 20\u201313 with a Zuerlein field goal. Late in the game, the Browns had a chance to tie the score with a touchdown. In the final minute, the Browns had the ball first and goal from the Rams' 4-yard line, but Mayfield threw three incomplete passes, followed by an interception on fourth down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: at Baltimore Ravens\nThe Browns opened the scoring in the first quarter with a Baker Mayfield touchdown pass to Ricky Seals-Jones. However, the Ravens responded with a Lamar Jackson touchdown pass to Miles Boykin to tie the game at 7\u20137. An Austin Seibert field goal gave the Browns a 10\u20137 lead at halftime. In the second half, Nick Chubb led the Browns, scoring a career-high three touchdowns and rushing for 128 of his 165 yards on the day, including an 88-yard touchdown run to extend the Browns' lead just two plays after the Ravens had cut the score to 24\u201318. A Dontrell Hilliard touchdown run extended the Browns' lead to 40\u201318. The Ravens added a garbage-time touchdown to make the final score 40\u201325.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 89], "content_span": [90, 775]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: at Baltimore Ravens\nWith the win, the Browns improved to 2\u20132 and moved into first place in the AFC North for the first time since Week 10 of 2014. For his 165 yards and three touchdowns, Chubb was named the AFC Offensive Player of the Week and FedEx Ground Player of the Week", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 89], "content_span": [90, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: at Baltimore Ravens\nOn October 3, punter Jamie Gillan was named the AFC Special Teams Player of the Month for September. Gillan had 11 punts inside the 20-yard line and helped the Browns limit opponents to just 19 punt return yards for the month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 89], "content_span": [90, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at San Francisco 49ers\nThe 49ers opened the scoring with a pair of Matt Breida touchdowns in the first quarter \u2013 an 83-yard run and a 5-yard reception from Jimmy Garoppolo. After a Browns field goal, the 49ers continued their dominance, scoring an additional 17 points en route to a 31\u20133 blowout win. The 49ers defense held Baker Mayfield to just 100 passing yards and no touchdowns, marking Mayfield's first career start in which he did not throw a touchdown pass, having done so in each of his first 17 starts. The Browns also turned the ball over four times, including two Mayfield interceptions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 92], "content_span": [93, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. Seattle Seahawks\nThe Browns returned home to take on the Seattle Seahawks in Week 6 and opened the scoring with a Nick Chubb touchdown run. Seattle responded with a touchdown run by Russell Wilson, giving the Browns a 7\u20136 lead after a missed extra point by Seattle. The Browns then extended their lead to 20\u20136, with Baker Mayfield running in from 10 yards before throwing a 31-yard touchdown pass to Ricky Seals-Jones. Before halftime, Seattle scored on a pair of Jason Myers field goals and a touchdown pass from Wilson to Jaron Brown to cut the Browns' lead to 20\u201318.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. Seattle Seahawks\nIn the second half, Seattle took the lead on another Wilson touchdown pass to Brown, but the Browns responded with a Chubb touchdown run and a two-point pass from Mayfield to Demetrius Harris to retake the lead, 28\u201325. The Seahawks retook the lead with 3:30 left in the game, going up 32\u201328 thanks to a Chris Carson touchdown run, before picking off Mayfield on the Browns' ensuing drive to allow them to run down the clock and claim the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. Seattle Seahawks\nWith the loss, the Browns went into their bye week at 2\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: at New England Patriots\nAfter their bye week, the Browns traveled to New England for a Week 8 contest against the defending Super Bowl champion New England Patriots, who entered this game 7\u20130. The Patriots raced to a 17\u20130 first quarter lead, aided by two Nick Chubb fumbles and a Baker Mayfield interception on three consecutive offensive snaps for the Browns. Chubb's first fumble was returned by Dont'a Hightower for a 26\u2013yard touchdown, while the Patriots' second touchdown came on a Tom Brady pass to Julian Edelman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 93], "content_span": [94, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0018-0001", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: at New England Patriots\nBrowns got on the board in the second quarter with a Mayfield touchdown pass to Demetrius Harris, to make the score 17\u20137 at halftime. In the third quarter, the Browns closed New England's lead to 17\u201310 with an Austin Seibert 38-yard field goal, but the Patriots responded with another Brady touchdown pass to Edelman on their next drive to extend their lead to 24\u201310. The teams traded field goals in the fourth quarter for a 27\u201313 Patriots win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 93], "content_span": [94, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: at Denver Broncos\nThe Browns visited the Denver Broncos for a Week 9 match-up. The Browns hoped to end a three-game losing streak while Denver quarterback Brandon Allen was making his first career start in place of an injured Joe Flacco. Denver opened the scoring with an Allen 21\u2013yard touchdown pass to Courtland Sutton. He added a 75\u2013yard touchdown pass to Noah Fant in the second quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 87], "content_span": [88, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0019-0001", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: at Denver Broncos\nFor the Browns, Austin Seibert kicked four field goals in the second quarter (three of which occurred with the Browns inside Denver's 15-yard line) and Denver's Brandon McManus added a field goal to give the Broncos a 17\u201312 halftime lead. In the second half, the Broncos extended their lead to 24\u201312 on a Phillip Lindsay touchdown run, while the Browns closed the Broncos' lead back to five points on a Baker Mayfield touchdown pass to Jarvis Landry. However, the Browns could not score again, resulting in a 24\u201319 Broncos' win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 87], "content_span": [88, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: at Denver Broncos\nWith the loss, the Browns fell to 2\u20136. This marks the 12th straight season in which the Browns suffered a losing streak of at least four games. Following the game, safety Jermaine Whitehead, out of frustration, made inappropriate and threatening tweets in response to critics. He was subsequently released by the Browns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 87], "content_span": [88, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Buffalo Bills\nThe Browns returned home to take on the Buffalo Bills, hoping to end their 4-game losing streak. The Browns scored a touchdown on the game's first drive on a Baker Mayfield 17-yard touchdown pass to Jarvis Landry. However, an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty on Landry resulted in the PAT attempt being kicked from 15 yards further back, and it was subsequently missed. Early in the second quarter, the Bills scored a touchdown on a Josh Allen 10-yard run to take a 7\u20136 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 88], "content_span": [89, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0021-0001", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Buffalo Bills\nBrowns kicker Austin Seibert nailed a 23-yard field goal, while Bills' kicker Stephen Hauschka missed a 35-yard field goal attempt late in the quarter, giving the Browns a 9\u20137 halftime lead. The Bills tied the game with a safety in the third quarter as Tremaine Edmunds sacked Mayfield in the end zone. Seibert added a field goal to give the Browns a 12\u20139 lead after three-quarters. In the fourth quarter, Allen gave the Bills a 16\u201312 lead on a 1-yard touchdown run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 88], "content_span": [89, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0021-0002", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Buffalo Bills\nHowever, the Browns responded with an 82-yard drive culminating with a Mayfield touchdown pass to Rashard Higgins, giving the Browns a 19\u201316 lead with just under two minutes remaining. The Bills drove down the field, but Hauschka missed a 53-yard potential game-tying field goal with 22 seconds remaining, giving the Browns a 19\u201316 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 88], "content_span": [89, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers\nThe Browns stayed home to face the Pittsburgh Steelers on Thursday Night Football. Browns quarterback Baker Mayfield scored the first points on a 1-yard touchdown run in the first quarter, set up by a 43-yard pass from Mayfield to wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. The next score came in the second quarter, with a 1-yard touchdown catch by Jarvis Landry. The Steelers struck back in the third quarter with a touchdown completion by Steelers running back Jaylen Samuels, but Cleveland held off the Steelers for the win. Browns rookie tight end Stephen Carlson caught a touchdown pass in the fourth quarter for his first career touchdown. The Browns defense forced four interceptions of Steelers quarterback Mason Rudolph in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 94], "content_span": [95, 826]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers\nA skirmish broke out between the two teams in the closing seconds of the game. After passing to Trey Edmunds, Rudolph found himself dragged down by Browns defensive end Myles Garrett. Upset by the late tackle, Rudolph started to attack Garrett by kicking him in the groin and attempting to pull off Garrett's helmet. Garrett then pulled off Rudolph's helmet and used it to hit Rudolph in the head. Steelers center Maurkice Pouncey and Browns defensive tackle Larry Ogunjobi then joined in on the fight in defense of their respective teammates. Garrett, Ogunjobi, and Pouncey were ejected from the game. Following the game, Garrett was suspended for the remainder of 2019 and required to apply for reinstatement in 2020, while Pouncey and Ogunjobi received suspensions of two games and one game, respectively. Garrett's suspension is the longest in NFL history for a single on-field transgression.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 94], "content_span": [95, 991]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers\nLandry recorded his 529th reception, breaking DeAndre Hopkins' record of most catches in an NFL player's first six seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 94], "content_span": [95, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers\nWith the win, the Browns improved to 4\u20136. The win ended an 8-game winless streak to the Steelers that dated back to 2014. This also marked the first time in franchise history that the Browns defeated division rivals Baltimore and Pittsburgh in the same season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 94], "content_span": [95, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: vs. Miami Dolphins\nThe Browns hosted the Miami Dolphins in their third straight home game. The Browns dominated the first half, building a 28\u20130 lead in the process. The Browns scored four first half touchdowns on three Baker Mayfield touchdown passes (two short passes to Jarvis Landry and a 35-yard pass to Odell Beckham, Jr.) and a 6-yard run by Kareem Hunt. The Dolphins got on the board with a Jason Sanders field goal to make the score 28\u20133 at halftime. The Dolphins came back in the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 89], "content_span": [90, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0026-0001", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: vs. Miami Dolphins\nAided by a Mayfield interception and a missed field goal by Austin Seibert, the Dolphins scored two touchdowns on a Ryan Fitzpatrick 11-yard pass to Mike Gesicki and a Fitzpatrick 8-yard run, to close the Browns' lead to 28\u201317. However, the Browns responded in the fourth quarter with a pair of Seibert field goals and a Nick Chubb 5-yard touchdown run to go up 41\u201317. A late Miami touchdown made the final score 41\u201324.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 89], "content_span": [90, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: vs. Miami Dolphins\nWith the win, the Browns improved to 5\u20136. This marked the Browns' 100th win since returning to the NFL in 1999. Linebacker Joe Schobert was named the AFC Defensive Player of the week after recording five tackles, four blocked passes, and two interceptions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 89], "content_span": [90, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nThe Browns traveled to Pittsburgh for round two of their division rivalry with the Steelers. In the first quarter, the Browns scored first on an Austin Seibert 31-yard field goal. They extended their lead to 10\u20130 in the second quarter on a Baker Mayfield 15-yard touchdown pass to Kareem Hunt. The Steelers, however tied the game 10\u201310 before halftime with a Chris Boswell 39-yard field goal followed by a Devlin Hodges 30-yard touchdown pass to James Washington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 93], "content_span": [94, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0028-0001", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nIn the third quarter, the Steelers took a 17\u201310 lead when Benny Snell ran for a 1-yard touchdown and added a Boswell 29-yard field goal to make it 20\u201310. Seibert got the Browns within a touchdown at 20\u201313 on a 34-yard field goal to make it 20\u201313. Getting the ball back later on in the quarter, the Browns had an opportunity to score a game-tying touchdown, However, Steelers cornerback and former Brown Joe Haden came up with the game-sealing interception of Mayfield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 93], "content_span": [94, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nWith the loss, the Browns fell to 5\u20137. This marked the Browns' 16th consecutive loss in Pittsburgh. On the same day, the Baltimore Ravens won their game, thus mathematically eliminating the Browns from AFC North title contention. This is the Browns 27th consecutive season without a division title, the longest active streak in the NFL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 93], "content_span": [94, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nThe Browns returned home to battle their in-state rival Cincinnati Bengals. Cincinnati took an early 3\u20130 lead on a Randy Bullock 34-yard field goal. The Browns got on the board later in the first quarter as Denzel Ward intercepted an Andy Dalton pass and returned it 61 yards for a touchdown to take a 7\u20133 lead. Bullock added a 44-yard field goal to bring the Bengals to within 7\u20136 after the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 93], "content_span": [94, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0030-0001", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nBoth teams scored a touchdown in the second quarter: the Bengals' coming on a Joe Mixon 1-yard run and the Browns' on a Baker Mayfield 7-yard run to give the Browns a 14\u201313 halftime lead. On the Browns' opening drive of the third quarter, they scored a touchdown on a Kareem Hunt 3-yard run to extend their lead to 21\u201313. The teams traded field goals to finish off the third quarter and also did so in the fourth quarter, to give the Browns a 27\u201319 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 93], "content_span": [94, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Arizona Cardinals\nThe Browns traveled to Arizona for a Week 15 tilt with the Arizona Cardinals. The Cardinals scored the only first quarter points on a Kenyan Drake 5-yard touchdown run, to take a 7\u20130 lead. The Cardinals extended their lead to 14\u20130 in the second quarter with a Drake 1-yard touchdown run. The Browns responded with a Nick Chubb 33-yard touchdown run and an Austin Seibert 44-yard field goal to close the Cardinals' lead to 14\u201310. However, the Cardinals extended their lead to 21\u201310 late in the first half on a Kyler Murray 6-yard touchdown pass to Dan Arnold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 91], "content_span": [92, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0031-0001", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Arizona Cardinals\nIn the third quarter, the Browns scored a touchdown on a Baker Mayfield 2-yard touchdown pass to Ricky Seals-Jones, but the Cardinals responded with a Drake 1-yard run to take a 28\u201317 lead into the fourth quarter. Early in the fourth quarter, Seibert missed a 45\u2013yard field goal attempt wide left that would have moved the Browns to within one possession at 28\u201320. Instead, the Cardinals scored a touchdown on their ensuing drive on a Drake 17-yard run, his fourth touchdown on the day. After a Seals-Jones fumble, former Brown Zane Gonzalez kicked a 21-yard field goal to give the Cardinals a 38\u201317 lead. The Browns added a late touchdown on a Mayfield pass to Seals-Jones to make the final score 38\u201324.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 91], "content_span": [92, 796]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nWith the loss, the Browns fell to 6\u20139. The loss eliminated the Browns from postseason contention for the 17th consecutive season, having last made the playoffs in 2002. The Browns were one of only two NFL teams, the other being the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, to not make the playoffs during the 2010s. The loss also meant the Browns would not improve upon their 7\u20138\u20131 record from their previous season, and it ensured the team's 12th consecutive season with a losing record, having last posted a non-losing record in 2007. The Browns finished 4\u20134 at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 91], "content_span": [92, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: at Cincinnati Bengals\nWith the loss, the Browns finished the season 6\u201310. They finished 2\u20136 in away games. This marked the Browns' 500th loss since joining the NFL in 1950.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 92], "content_span": [93, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: at Cincinnati Bengals\nFollowing the game, the Browns fired head coach Freddie Kitchens after one season. On December 31, the Browns and general manager John Dorsey mutually agreed to part ways. Dorsey had served as the Browns' GM since December 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 92], "content_span": [93, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Individual honors\nOn December 17, RB Nick Chubb and WR Jarvis Landry were named to the AFC Roster for the 2020 Pro Bowl. This marks Chubb's first Pro Bowl selection and Landry's fifth consecutive and fifth overall selection. Chubb will be the AFC's starting running back. On January 9, 2020, G Joel Bitonio was also named to the Pro Bowl as an injury replacement, marking his second consecutive and second overall selection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Individual honors\nIn addition, LB Joe Schobert was named a second alternate, CB Denzel Ward a fourth alternate, and WR Odell Beckham, Jr. a fifth alternate at their respective positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288350-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Browns season, Individual honors\nOn January 3, Bitonio was named to the AP All-Pro second team, his second consecutive and second overall All-Pro selection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288351-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Challenger\nThe 2019 Cleveland Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Cleveland, United States between 28 January and 3 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288351-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland 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-00288351-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 69], "content_span": [70, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288352-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nRomain Arneodo and Andrei Vasilevski won the title after defeating Robert Galloway and Nathaniel Lammons 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20134) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288353-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Challenger \u2013 Singles\nMaxime Cressy won the title after defeating Mikael Torpegaard 6\u20137(4\u20137), 7\u20136(8\u20136), 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288354-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cleveland Indians season\nThe 2019 Cleveland Indians season was the 119th season for the franchise. It was the seventh season under the leadership of manager Terry Francona and fourth under general manager Mike Chernoff. The Indians played their home games at Progressive Field in Cleveland, Ohio. In April 2019, the Indians extended Francona's contract for two more years. Although they improved upon their 91\u201371 campaign from the previous season, they failed to win the American League Central (due to the Minnesota Twins going 101\u201361) and failed to qualify for the playoffs for the first time since 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288355-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Clifford Cup\nThe 84th Clifford Cup tournament was held between the 15 and 24 March 2019. The 2019 Clifford Cup took place after the conclusion of the regular season, with teams seeded based on their performance in the 2018-19 Dialog Rugby League season. The eventual winner was Havelock Sports Club, who last won the cup in 1981, thirty seven years ago.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288355-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Clifford Cup\nKandy SC, the defending cup holders, who finished in first place at the end of the domestic season two points ahead of Havelock Sports Club, dramatically withdrew from competition three days before the opening round. Kandy SC had requested the governing body, Sri Lanka Rugby to permit them to play all their matches at Nittawela Rugby Stadium. Sri Lanka Rugby however insisted that their games be held at the Pallekele International Cricket Stadium, stating that the other participating teams had all agreed that the matches be played on neutral grounds, resulting in Kandy SC resolving not to participate in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288355-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Clifford Cup\nThe opening quarter-final match at the Colombo Racecourse ground pitted fourth placed Ceylonese Rugby & Football Club against the seventh placed Police SC. The two teams having beaten each other during the regular season. Police SC dominated the first half, scoring two tries and two penalties going into halftime with a 20-5 lead. In the second half CR &FC rallied scoring consecutive tries before Police SC replied with a second half try and a subsequent penalty to secure a 28 - 15 victory and a semi-final berth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288355-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Clifford Cup\nThe next scheduled match was declared a walkover with eighth seeded Air Force SC (who had only managed one win in the domestic season) securing a spot in the semi-finals following the withdrawal of the top seeded team in the competition, Kandy SC (the previous cup winner and the undefeated Dialog league champion). The fourth placed Colombo Hockey and Football Club then faced Army SC at the Colombo Racecourse. CH & FC scored an early try in the third minute of play and scored a second before Army SC responded with a try of their own.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288355-0002-0002", "contents": "2019 Clifford Cup\nBoth teams scored a try each before half time, with CH & FC going into the half time break with a 17 - 12 lead. After the break Army SC dominated play scoring a try to level the scores, with CH & FC responding some after with a try to regain the lead. Army SC scoring a subsequent try to level the score before breaking away for another try and a penalty to win 32-22. In the remaining quarter final match the second seed, Havelock SC, played their quarter final match against Navy SC, at Havelock Park. Havelock SC dominated the game scoring seven tries to three and advanced to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288355-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Clifford Cup\nSri Lanka Rugby appointed Remi Julien, a French rugby referee, to officiate in the semi-finals and the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288355-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Clifford Cup\nIn the first semi-final encounter played at the Colombo racecourse Havelock SC defeated Army SC 60 points to 29 points, running in eight tries to four. Havelock SC produced a dominant display in the first half, scoring 31 points to Army SC's three. After the break Havelock SC went onto to score another 29 points whilst Army picked up 26 points. The other semi-final match between Police SC and Air Force SC, at the Colombo Racecourse on the following day, was a closer affair, with Police SC leading 16 - 14 at half time (two tries apiece). In the second half Air Force SC went on to score another two tries whilst Police could only manage the one. The victory took Air Force SC through to the finals for the first time since 1986.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288355-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Clifford Cup\nThe final was held at Colombo Racecourse on Sunday 24 March. Scrum half, Mithun Hapugoda, opened the scoring for Havelock SC with a try in the fourth minute of the game, which was converted by Rizah Mubarak. Air Force were awarded a penalty try in the tenth minute, whilst Zayan Sabar and Chamara Dabare crossed the line for Havelock SC in the thirteenth and eighteen minute mark, both of which were subsequently converted by Mubarak. The score line at half time was 21 - 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288355-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Clifford Cup\nAfter the break Air Force SC\u2019s Ishara Madhushan scored a try in the 39th minute, which was converted by Charitha Senevirathne. Havelock SC went onto to convert three penalties, with Lasindu Karunathilaka scoring a try in the dying minutes of the game, which was converted by Mubarak, securing the victory for Havelock SC, 40 -21. The cup win was the first for Havelock SC in 37 years, when they won the triple crown \u2013 Sevens, Clifford Cup and the President\u2019s trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season\nThe 2019 season is Clube de Regatas do Flamengo's 124th year of existence, their 108th football season, and their 49th in the Brazilian S\u00e9rie A, having never been relegated from the top division. In addition to the 2019 Brasileir\u00e3o, Flamengo also competed in the CONMEBOL Copa Libertadores, the Copa do Brasil, and the Campeonato Carioca, the top tier of Rio de Janeiro's state football league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season\nThe season is one of the most successful in Flamengo's history, as the team captured their second Copa Libertadores, seventh Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, and record 35th Campeonato Carioca. The team qualified for the 2019 FIFA Club World Cup by winning the Copa Libertadores, finishing as runners-up to UEFA Champions League winners Liverpool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season\nThe season is marked by the tragic fire on 8 February at the Ninho do Urubu training center that claimed the lives of ten youth players who were sleeping in their rooms at the camp. The incident is considered the worst tragedy ever experienced by the club in its history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season\nFlamengo won their 35th Campeonato Carioca, defeating rivals Vasco da Gama across two legs in April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season\nOn 1 June, Flamengo hired Portuguese manager Jorge Jesus after the resignation of Abel Braga. In June and July, Flamengo completed the signings of prominent free agent fullbacks Rafinha from Bayern Munich and Filipe Lu\u00eds from Atl\u00e9tico Madrid, to play alongside the new signings of Gabriel Barbosa, Bruno Henrique and Giorgian De Arrascaeta. Flamengo were eliminated from the Copa do Brasil in the quarter-finals after a penalty shootout loss to Athletico Paranaense in the Maracan\u00e3 on 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season\nIn August, Flamengo defeated Internacional to advance to the club's first Copa Libertadores semi-finals since 1984. On 23 October, the team defeated Gr\u00eamio 5\u20130 in the Maracan\u00e3 to advance to their first Libertadores final since 1981. For the first time, the Copa Libertadores final would be played as a single match at a venue selected in advance. The location of the final was originally chosen to be the Estadio Nacional in Santiago, Chile. However, due to the ongoing Chilean protests, the match was moved to the Estadio Monumental in Lima, Peru. On 23 November in the final against defending champions River Plate, Flamengo trailed 0\u20131 in the final minutes before Gabriel scored twice to secure the 2\u20131 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season\nThe day after the come-from-behind victory in the Libertadores, Flamengo became champions of the Campeonato Brasileiro with four matches in hand after a loss by Palmeiras to Gr\u00eamio in the 34th round. This was a Flamengo Brazilian title after a hiatus since 2009. This feat marked the first time a Brazilian club had won the Brazilian league and Copa Libertadores in the same season since Santos in 1962 and 1963. The title-winning campaign broke a number of records in the 20-team league format era (2006\u2013present), including most victories (28), most points (90), most goals (86), best goal differential (+49), and most goals by a single player (25 from Gabriel Barbosa).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season\nThe team qualified to their first Club World Cup in Doha, Qatar in December, defeating Jorge Jesus's former club Al Hilal 3\u20131 in the semi-final before confronting Liverpool, the same opponent as the club's only world championship appearance and victory in the 1981 Intercontinental Cup. Both teams were closely matched in the final, ending regulation time in a scoreless draw. In the first half of extra time, Roberto Firmino of Liverpool scored the lone goal in Liverpool's 1\u20130 victory and Flamengo finished the competition as runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Ninho do Urubu fire\nOn the morning of 8 February, a fire erupted at the Ninho do Urubu youth training ground of Flamengo. The fire resulted in the deaths of ten academy players between the ages of 14 and 17 training with the club. Three others were injured. The cause of the fire was a malfunctioning air-conditioning unit that caught fire in the room of one of the victims close to 5:00. Intense storms caused flooding and tornadoes in Rio de Janeiro on the days before, likely requiring the training center to run on peak power. The location of the fire was the temporary living quarters in a newly expanded section of the campus. The state Labor Ministry launched a task force to determine if any preventative actions could have been taken, and to ensure that the families of the victims would be accommodated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 855]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Ninho do Urubu fire\nThe victims of the fire were Athila Paix\u00e3o (14 years old), Arthur Vin\u00edcius de Barros Silva Freitas (14), Bernardo Pisetta (14), Christian Esm\u00e9rio (15), Jorge Eduardo Santos (15), Pablo Henrique da Silva Matos (14), Vitor Isa\u00edas (15), Samuel Thomas Rosa (15), Gerdson Santos (14), and Ryckelmo de Souza Viana (17). Kauan Emanuel Nunes (14 years old), Francisco Diogo Alves (15) and Jhonathan Cruz Ventura (15) were hospitalized with injuries; Jhonathan's condition was the most severe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Ninho do Urubu fire\nClub president Rodolfo Landim described it as \"the worst tragedy the club has ever experienced in its 123 years.\" The governor of the state of Rio de Janeiro declared a three-day period of mourning following the tragedy. The Ta\u00e7a Guanabara semifinal matches on the following days, including Flamengo's match against Fluminense, were postponed. Flamengo wore black ribbons on their shirts for all following matches in the season as a symbol of mourning in honor of the victims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Ninho do Urubu fire\nThe Attorney General filed a lawsuit against Flamengo on 20 February requesting allocation of reparations to the victims and their families, and for the suspension of activities at the training center. The club entered mediation and negotiated directly with the families of victims, and were scrutinized for offering a lower compensation than the proposal from the Public Labor Ministry and the Public Defender's Office. On 27 February, the city of Rio de Janeiro officially enforced an interdiction of the Ninho do Urubu training center for the senior team (youth players had already been banned from the facilities after the fire). The interdiction is an enforcement of a penalty already applied to the training center in 2017 for operating without a valid license. The team moved their training activities to G\u00e1vea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 880]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Ninho do Urubu fire\nthe center was released for use for the professional team in March and the youth levels in April, however players were not permitted to sleep at the center. On 24 May, the Childhood and Youth Court fully released the Ninho do Urubu training center for regular use.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Ninho do Urubu fire\nIn June, Rio police indicted former Flamengo president Eduardo Bandeira de Mello, along with seven engineers and technicians from Flamengo and the company that constructed the containers, on 10 counts of homicide and 14 counts of attempted homicide after concluding that the containers should not have been used as sleeping quarters. In July, the public prosecutor of Rio de Janeiro did not find sufficient cause to bring the eight defendants to trial, and granted 45 days for police to provide clarification on aspects of the investigation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 19 December 2018 Rodolfo Landim was sworn in as Flamengo's new president after being elected on the 8th and officially took over official administrative roles on 1 January. Eduardo Bandeira de Mello had been president for two 3-year terms. Before officially taking office, Landim announced that plans to hire Abel Braga as the new head coach in 2019 were already underway. Braga was officially announced as the replacement to Dorival J\u00fanior at the start of the new year. Braga had previously managed Flamengo in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 29 December a deal for S\u00e3o Paulo center-back Rodrigo Caio was reportedly closed on 29 December \u2014 \u20ac5m for five years and 45% of the player's rights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 8 January Flamengo reached an agreement with Cruzeiro to sign highly-sought attacking midfielder Arrascaeta for R$55.3m in three installments, the largest transfer fee in Flamengo's history. The Uruguayan player was officially announced on 12 January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 8 January it was reported that Flamengo had secured a loan deal for striker Gabriel Barbosa, the leading goalscorer in the 2018 Brasileir\u00e3o and the Copa do Brasil while on loan with Santos. The club negotiated the loan with Inter Milan, Gabriel's contract holders. Flamengo paid no loan fee but are responsible for the entirety of his R$15m / \u20ac3.5m annual salary, the most expensive on the roster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nIn January Flamengo traveled to Orlando, Florida for participation in the 2019 Florida Cup with friendly matches against Ajax and Eintracht Frankfurt. Rodrigo Caio was the only new signing to travel with the club for Flamengo's first trip to the United States in nearly 13 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 10 January Flamengo defeated Ajax on penalty kicks in the Florida Cup. Fernando Uribe scored both goals for Flamengo in regular time, and Veltman and Magall\u00e1n of Ajax missed their penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 12 January Flamengo defeated Eintracht Frankfurt in Orlando City Stadium 1\u20130, goal scored by Jean Lucas. The victory gave Flamengo the Florida Cup title on points (2 for the penalty win, 3 for the win).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 22 January, amidst rumors of a transfer to Orlando City of MLS, 33 year-old midfielder Diego extended his contract with Flamengo until the end of 2020. His contract was set to expire in July and the club only agreed to renew with a reduction in salary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 23 January, Flamengo and Santos completed negotiations for the 28 year-old forward Bruno Henrique to sign with Flamengo in exchange for R$23m paid in three installations, and a one-year loan of 22 year-old midfielder Ronaldo to Santos for \u20ac3m (R$12.9m). However disagreements over salary between Santos and Ronaldo caused the loan to fall through, and it was announced later in the month that Ronaldo would remain at Flamengo. A deal was later reached to loan 20 year-old Jean Lucas to the S\u00e3o Paulo club instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 20 January Flamengo began their 2019 campaign in the Campeonato Carioca against Bangu. In front of a crowd of 40 thousand in the Maracan\u00e3, Flamengo conceded to the visitors within 3 minutes. Diego equalized on a 1st half penalty in an irregular play after the ball had gone out of bounds, and Rhodolfo scored a header to seal the victory. Gabriel and Arrascaeta were presented to the fans but did not feature in the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 23 January Flamengo's reserve squad faced Resende. Flamengo again conceded first before equalizing with a bicycle kick from Henrique Dourado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 26 January, Bruno Henrique scored both goals in his Flamengo debut: a 2\u20131 victory over Botafogo, Flamengo's first classico of the season. Flamengo's opponents again scored the first goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 8 February, a fire at Ninho do Urubu training center claimed the lives of 10 youth academy players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 14 February Flamengo fell to rivals Fluminense in the semi-final of the Ta\u00e7a Guanabara, their first match after the fire at the training center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 25 February, Henrique Dourado traveled to China to join Henan Jianye. Flamengo had negotiated a transfer of the striker for close to \u20ac6m (of which Flamengo received 75%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 26 February the club released their 30-man roster for the Copa Libertadores group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 5 March, Flamengo's 1\u20130 victory against San Jos\u00e9 in Oruro, Bolivia in the Copa Libertadores marked the first time in history the club had won away from home in their first match of continental competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 13 March, Flamengo defeated LDU in the Copa Libertadores 3\u20131. \u00c9verton Ribeiro scored early in the 1st half. Diego committed a foul in the box against Vega but Diego Alves saved the penalty of Intriago. Gabriel and Uribe scored in the 2nd half but Borja scored once for LDU in the final moments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 19 March Flamengo guaranteed their berth in the Carioca championship phase after defeating Madureira 2\u20130 in the penultimate round of the Ta\u00e7a Rio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 22 March Flamengo announced the closing of a deal with new primary kit sponsor Bank BS2. The deal is in place for 2 years and is valued at approximately R$25m total. Adidas officially unveiled the 2019-20 Flamengo home kit on 22 March, and the team debuted it against Fluminense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 24 March, Flamengo faced rivals Fluminense and won 3\u20132. Miguel Trauco, Robert Piris Da Mota, Giorgian De Arrascaeta, and Gustavo Cu\u00e9llar were called up by their national teams to participate in friendlies before the Copa Am\u00e9rica and were not available for the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 27 March Flamengo again faced Fluminense in the semifinal of the second phase of the Campeonato Carioca, the Ta\u00e7a Rio. Flamengo required a win, as Fluminense would advance with a draw. \u00c9verton Ribeiro converted a penalty in stoppage time to win, 2\u20131. Prior to this, manager Abel Braga left the stadium citing throat pain and was treated at a hospital for heart arrhythmia, before being discharged later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 31 March Flamengo went on to defeat Vasco on penalties to claim the club's 8th Ta\u00e7a Rio title. Since Flamengo had already qualified for the Carioca final stage, starters Diego and Gabriel Barbosa rested for both Ta\u00e7a Rio matches in preparation for the Copa Libertadores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 3 April, in Flamengo's highest-attended home match of the season, the team lost 0\u20131 to Pe\u00f1arol in the Copa Libertadores on a late goal by Lucas Viatri. The match represented Pe\u00f1arol's first victory as a visiting side in their previous sixteen Libertadores matches, dating back to 2013. Gabriel was sent off via a straight red card after a reckless tackle against Rodrigo Rojo. The result dropped Flamengo to second in the group, behind Pe\u00f1arol on goal differential.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 6 April, Flamengo qualified for a final against Vasco after Gabriel equalized against Fluminense in the semi-final of the Campeonato Carioca (as the team with the greater overall point total across both phases of the Carioca, Flamengo advanced with a draw).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nThe day prior to this match, it was confirmed by the governor of Rio de Janeiro that Flamengo and Fluminense would be joint-managers of the Maracan\u00e3 for six months beginning on 19 April, a deal which allowed the clubs to pay a fixed monthly fee and receive a higher share of matchday revenue than was granted under the previous deal. Because Vasco da Gama was not included in the deal, the president of the club announced that the team would not play their home matches at the Maracan\u00e3. This included the first leg of the Carioca final against Flamengo, which was moved to S\u00e3o Janu\u00e1rio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 11 April, Flamengo hosted San Jos\u00e9 in the Copa Libertadores and won emphatically by a score of 6\u20131 with Gabriel serving his red card suspension. The result returned Flamengo to the top of the group, ahead of Pe\u00f1arol on goal differential.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 14 and 21 April, Flamengo won both legs of the Caroica final against Vasco by the scoreline 2\u20130, capturing their record 35th Carioca title. Bruno Henrique scored both goals in the first leg and was the top goalscorer of the Campeonato Carioca.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 24 April in Quito, Ecuador against LDU, Bruno Henrique scored early before Flamengo conceded a goal in the final seconds of the first half. A draw would have guaranteed Flamengo's qualification to the round of 16 and LDU's elimination. Andr\u00e9s Chicaiza of LDU scored an excellent goal in the second half to save his team from elimination. The result forced Flamengo to earn at least a draw against Pe\u00f1arol in Montevideo on the final matchday to guarantee passage. Abel Braga was not present for the match, as CONMEBOL had suspended him for bringing his team out of the dressing room late after halftime against Pe\u00f1arol.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 27 April the 2019 Campeonato Brasileiro season began. Flamengo played host to Cruzeiro. Bruno Henrique scored twice and Gabriel scored on a rebound to put the match at 3\u20131. Legendary Flamengo and Sele\u00e7\u00e3o centre-back Juan entered the field for the final time in the closing minutes to mark his retirement from football. In the final play of the match, centre-back Rodrigo Caio suffered a head injury after colliding with Ded\u00e9 and exited the field in an ambulance. His was discharged from the hospital the following morning but would miss the following league match against Internacional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 1 May, Flamengo fell to Internacional in Porto Alegre 2\u20131, conceding the opening goal to former player Paulo Guerrero.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 2 May, the team was drawn against Corinthians in the Copa do Brasil round of 16, a rematch of the previous edition's semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 5 May, in preparation for their crucial last Libertadores group stage match, Flamengo fielded a reserve team against S\u00e3o Paulo in the Brazilian championship and came away with a draw, goal scored by Orlando Berr\u00edo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 8 May, a victory or draw against Pe\u00f1arol in Montevideo would guarantee qualification to the knockout stage of the tournament. In the final minutes of the match, substitute Vitinho failed to score on a one-on-one opportunity, but the draw was sufficient to qualify. Par\u00e1 received two yellow cards in the match and was sent off. LDU's 4\u20130 victory over San Jos\u00e9 qualified them and eliminated Pe\u00f1arol. Flamengo finished top of Group D with 10 points, tied with LDU and Pe\u00f1arol but ahead on goal differential.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0048-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 12 May, Flamengo fielded their reserve team against Chapecoense in the Maracan\u00e3 in preparation for their mid-week Copa do Brasil match against Corinthians. Flamengo won 2\u20131 with goals from Vitinho and Lincoln.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0049-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 13 May, Flamengo was drawn against Ecuadorian club Emelec in the Libertadores round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0050-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 15 May against Corinthians in the Arena Corinthians, Flamengo maintained high possession and won 1\u20130, with the goal scored by Willian Ar\u00e3o on a cross from Bruno Henrique.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0051-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 18 May Flamengo debuted their 2019 white alternative kits against Atl\u00e9tico Mineiro at the Independencia. They lost 2\u20131 off a goal from Yimmi Char\u00e1 despite having a man advantage for the entire second half after the sending off of Elias. Shortly thereafter, Flamengo's Gavea headquarters was vandalized with graffiti calling for the firing of Abel Braga. President Landim remarked that the graffiti was politically motivated and did not represent the views of most supporters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0052-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 26 May in a dramatic match against the mixed reserve team of Athletico Paranaense in the Maracan\u00e3, Flamengo were trailing 1\u20132 in the 90th minute. Bruno Henrique and Rodrigo Caio each scored in stoppage time to win 3\u20132, preserving their home win streak in three league matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0053-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 29 May, Abel Braga officially resigned as manager of Flamengo citing external pressure from fans and lack of support from the board. Braga served as manager for five months with a record of 18 wins, 7 draws and 5 losses. Under his management, Flamengo scored 56 and conceded 27 goals in 30 official matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0054-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 29 May, it was confirmed that striker Fernando Uribe would transfer to Santos. Since July 2018, he scored 8 goals in 37 appearances for Flamengo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0055-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 1 June, Flamengo confirmed the signing of Portuguese manager Jorge Jesus. Jesus signed a one-year contract and would assume management of the team in mid-June after the first week of the Copa Am\u00e9rica break. Under interim manager Marcelo Salles, Flamengo won three matches and drew once, against Fluminense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0056-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 4 June, the club defeated Corinthians in the Maracan\u00e3 1\u20130 to advance to the quarter-finals of the Copa do Brasil. In the Brazilian championship, Flamengo defeated Fortaleza and CSA. Jorge Jesus was a spectator for the match against Fluminense and assumed his managerial role on 20 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0057-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nThree Flamengo players joined their national teams for the Copa Am\u00e9rica: Gustavo Cu\u00e9llar of Colombia, Giorgian De Arrascaeta of Uruguay, and Miguel Trauco of Peru. Cu\u00e9llar scored a goal against Paraguay. Trauco's Peru advanced to the final against Brazil, and Trauco was named to the Team of the Tournament by CONMEBOL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0058-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 9 June, Flamengo confirmed the signing of Brazilian right-back Rafinha as a free agent after his eight year career at Bayern Munich. He would be officially presented at the club on 24 June. Rafinha signed a two-year contract, and contacted Miguel Trauco to request the use of his shirt number 13, the same number Rafinha wore for Bayern.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0059-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 20 June, Flamengo came to an agreement with French club Lyon for the transfer of midfielder Jean Lucas, on loan with Santos. Flamengo received \u20ac6.35m of the \u20ac8m transfer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0060-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 29 June Flamengo played a training match against Madureira. It served as the first match managed by Jorge Jesus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0061-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 9 July, promising midfielder Ronaldo was loaned to Bahia for the remainder of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0062-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 10 July in the Brazilian managerial debut of Jorge Jesus, Flamengo tied 1\u20131 against Athletico Paranaense in the Arena da Baixada for the Copa do Brasil quarter-finals, with the equalizing goal scored by Gabriel. The match was marked by several uses of VAR.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0063-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 11 July Flamengo announced the signing of Spanish central defender Pablo Mar\u00ed, previously on loan with Deportivo La Coru\u00f1a from Manchester City. He signed with Flamengo through December 2022.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0064-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 12 July, Flamengo closed a deal with Roma for Brazilian midfielder Gerson. The former Fluminense player was transferred for \u20ac11.8m in exchange for 100% of the player's economic rights, making him the most expensive Brazilian player ever signed by a Brazilian club. Gerson signed a contract through 2023.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0065-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 14 July in Flamengo's return to the Brasileir\u00e3o they defeated Goi\u00e1s 6\u20131 in a sold-out Maracan\u00e3 with a hat-trick from Arrascaeta. Rafinha made his Flamengo debut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0066-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 17 July Flamengo faced Athletico Paranaense in the return leg of the Copa do Brasil quarter-final. Gabriel scored in the 2nd half but Rony of Athletico responded. Tied 1\u20131, the match was decided by penalties. Diego took the first penalty and his shot was saved. Athletico Paranaense went on to win the shootout 3\u20131 and eliminate Flamengo from the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0067-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 19 July Flamengo released their 30-man roster for the Copa Libertadores round of 16. New signings Rafinha, Pablo Mar\u00ed, Jo\u00e3o Lucas, and Gerson, along with Lincoln, were the additions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0068-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 21 July Flamengo played to a 1\u20131 draw against Corinthians. Clayson converted a penalty after Berr\u00edo fouled V\u00e1gner Love, and Gabriel scored a goal initially ruled offside but reversed by VAR.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0069-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 23 July, Flamengo announced the signing of Filipe Lu\u00eds after his farewell from eight seasons at Atl\u00e9tico Madrid. Because the signing was made after 9 July, he was not eligible to participate in the Copa do Brasil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0070-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 24 July the team faced Emelec in Guayaquil and suffered a 2\u20130 loss in the opening leg of the Libertadores round of 16. With \u00c9verton Ribeiro, De Arrascaeta and Vitinho injured, Jorge Jesus started Rafinha as a winger, with Diego in front of Gerson and Ar\u00e3o in the midfield. Rodinei occupied the right-back spot. Emelec scored an early goal and led at halftime. Early in the second half, Vega of Emelec received a straight red card for a high-kick to the face of Rafinha. Flamengo made three substitutions shortly after, bringing on Lincoln and Lucas Silva for the attack. Twenty minutes after the red card, Diego left the field with a serious ankle fracture that would require surgery. Both teams playing with 10 men, Emelec scored again late in the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0071-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 28 July, Flamengo faced rivals Botafogo in the 12th round of the league and won 3\u20132 after conceding the first goal. Gabriel scored in his fifth consecutive league match. Rodrigo Caio and Lincoln both exited the match with injuries. After the match, Jorge Jesus confirmed that the transfer of L\u00e9o Duarte to Milan had been completed. The centre-back left Flamengo for \u20ac10 million. The club had 75% of his economic rights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0072-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 30 July Flamengo released the contract of right-back Par\u00e1, leaving him free to sign with Santos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0073-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 31 July Flamengo hosted Emelec in the return leg of the Copa Libertadores round of 16. Trailing 0\u20132 on aggregate, Gabriel converted a penalty after Rafinha is fouled by Bag\u00fci, and later scores from close range after recovering a pass from Bruno Henrique. Reinier makes his senior team debut in the 2nd half. In the penalty shootout, all four Flamengo players score. Diego Alves saved Dixon Arroyo's shot and Nicol\u00e1s Queir\u00f3z hit the crossbar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0074-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 1 August, left-back Miguel Trauco's departure to French club Saint-\u00c9tienne for R$2.5m (approximately \u20ac600k) was confirmed. His contract was set to expire at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0075-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 4 August, Flamengo fell to Bahia 0\u20133 on a hat-trick from Gilberto. Filipe Lu\u00eds made his Flamengo debut. Flamengo debuted their 2019-2020 alternative kits in the match: dark grey with lime green details.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0076-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 10 August Flamengo defeated Gr\u00eamio 3\u20131 in the Maracan\u00e3. De Arrascaeta recorded a goal and an assist. Gr\u00eamio played a team of mostly reserves in preparation for their mid-week Copa do Brasil semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0077-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 15 August, Flamengo announced that they had ceased negotiations with Italian striker Mario Balotelli.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0078-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 16 August, Bruno Henrique was called up to the Brazil National Team for the first time for a pair of friendlies in September. Arrascaeta was called up to the Uruguay National Team for the same window. The club also unveiled their list of players registered for the Copa Libertadores quarter-finals. With three players transferred out (Par\u00e1, Trauco and L\u00e9o Duarte), Filipe Lu\u00eds and Matheus Dantas were added to the roster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0079-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 17 August, Flamengo defeated Vasco da Gama 4\u20131 in Brasilia in the highest attended match of the Brasileirao season so far. The victory moved Flamengo into 2nd place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0080-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 21 August, Flamengo faced Internacional in the home leg of the Copa Libertadores quarter-finals. Bruno Henrique scored twice in the seconds half, minutes apart, to secure a 2\u20130 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0081-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 23 August the club released an official statement that Gustavo Cu\u00e9llar would be suspended from club activities indefinitely for refusing to travel with the team for the following league match, citing family matters. It was reported that Cu\u00e9llar had been seeking to exit Flamengo on an offer from Al-Hilal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0082-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 25 August, Flamengo defeated Cear\u00e1 3\u20130 in Fortaleza to assume leadership of the Brazilian Championship. De Arrascaeta scored a bicycle kick goal in stoppage time, assisted by Rafinha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0083-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 26 August, an official announcement from the club declared that Cu\u00e9llar would be re-integrated into the team and would travel for the second leg of the Copa Libertadores quarter-final against Internacional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0084-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 27 August, Orlando Berr\u00edo was called to the Colombian national team for September friendlies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0085-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 28 August, Flamengo qualified for the Copa Libertadores semi-final after drawing against Internacional. Rodrigo Lindoso scored a header from a set-piece, and Gabriel equalized on a counter-attack assisted by Bruno Henrique. Flamengo advanced with a 3\u20131 aggregate score to their first Copa Libertadores semi-final since 1984.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0086-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 30 August, Gustavo Cu\u00e9llar was officially announced as a new signing by Al-Hilal. Flamengo reopened negotiations with the club and the player was signed for a reported fee of \u20ac7.5m. Cu\u00e9llar made 170 appearances for Flamengo since 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0087-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 1 September, Flamengo defeated Palmeiras 3\u20130. It was Flamengo's first victory against Palmeiras since May 2014. Manager Luiz Felipe Scolari was dismissed by Palmeiras following the loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0088-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 7 September, Flamengo defeated Ava\u00ed 3\u20130 in the Man\u00e9 Garrincha Stadium in Bras\u00edlia. Reinier scored his first goal for the senior team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0089-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 14 September Flamengo hosted Santos for their final match of the first half of the Brasileir\u00e3o. Gabriel scored the only goal of the match, a chip shot from outside the penalty area. Flamengo maintained their lead in the league and Santos fell to third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0090-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 20 September, Tite called up Gabriel and Rodrigo Caio for a pair of national team friendlies against Senegal and Nigeria in October. Giorgian De Arrascaeta and Orlando Berr\u00edo were also called to their national teams for the same window, all four becoming unavailable against Atl\u00e9tico Mineiro and Athletico Paranaense. As a result, Flamengo requested that Reinier not be called up for the 2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup to be played in Brazil during that same period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0091-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 21 September the club faced Cruzeiro in Belo Horizonte. Giorgian De Arrascaeta scored against his former club, and Gabriel scored to win 1\u20132. The win set a club record of seven straight victories in the national league (Flamengo had previously won six straight in 1978, 1982, and 2015).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0092-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 25 September Flamengo hosted Internacional at the Maracan\u00e3. Inter had two key players sent off with red cards early: Bruno Vieira in the 18th minute for a foul against Gabriel, and former Flamengo player Paolo Guerrero for complaining after a collision with Rodrigo Caio at the end of the first half. Gabriel converted his penalty, and De Arrascaeta and Bruno Henrique also scored to win 3\u20131. The result extended the club's record winning streak to eight matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0093-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 28 September Flamengo faced S\u00e3o Paulo at home in Fernando Diniz's managerial debut. Starters Gerson, Rafinha and Filipe Lu\u00eds entered in the 2nd half, but the match ended in a scoreless draw. This was Flamengo's first failure to win at the Maracan\u00e3 in 2019 league play. Flamengo moved to four points clear of Palmeiras in first place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0094-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 2 October, Flamengo faced Gr\u00eamio in Porto Alegre for the first leg of the Copa Libertadores semi-final. Flamengo had three goals annulled by VAR and finished tired 1\u20131 with a goal from Bruno Henrique.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0095-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 6 October, Flamengo faced last-place Chapecoense away. With Gabriel suspended and Arrascaeta and Filipe Lu\u00eds injured, the team managed to win 1\u20130 via a goal from Bruno Henrique.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0096-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 10 October, Flamengo defeated Atl\u00e9tico Mineiro 3\u20131 at the Maracan\u00e3 with a goal and two assists from Vitinho to open up an eight point lead in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0097-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 13 October, the team traveled to the Arena da Baixada to face Athletico Paranaense. An early penalty decision in favor of Athletico was withdrawn after VAR review, and Bruno Henrique scored another brace to secure a 2\u20130 victory, breaking a 45-year spell of Flamengo's failure to win against Athletico Paranaense as a visitor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0098-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 16 October, Flamengo came from behind to defeat Fortaleza 2\u20131 at the Castel\u00e3o with a goal by Reinier. Fortaleza challenged the result on account of a second ball entering the field during the match-winning goal, but the appeal was denied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0099-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 23 October in the second leg of the Copa Libertadores semi-final at the Maracan\u00e3, Flamengo advanced against Gr\u00eamio with an astonishing 5\u20130 victory. The result matched the largest ever margin of victory in the Libertadores between two Brazilian clubs. Flamengo advanced 6\u20131 on aggregate to their first Copa Libertadores final since their championship in 1981.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0100-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 25 October, the selection for the Brazil national team's November friendlies against Argentina and South Korea were made. Flamengo reportedly requested that none of their players be called up, and none were. Manager Tite expressed interest in Gerson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0101-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 27 October the team defeated CSA 1\u20130. The match attendance at the Maracan\u00e3 set the 2019 Brasileir\u00e3o record with paid attendance of 65,649.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0102-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 31 October, Flamengo drew 2\u20132 against Goi\u00e1s. Gabriel scored a goal and received a yellow card in the match, becoming disqualified from the following league match against Corinthians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0103-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 3 November, Bruno Henrique scored a hat-trick as part of a 4\u20131 home rout against Corinthians. Diego Alves returned from injury and was available for the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0104-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 5 November in reaction to the ongoing civil protests in Chile, CONMEBOL, Flamengo and River Plate agreed to relocate the Copa Libertadores final from Santiago to Lima, Peru.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0105-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 7 November, with De Arrascaeta injured Flamengo defeated Botafogo 0\u20131 in a challenging match with a late game-winner from Lincoln.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0106-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 9 November, Reinier extended his contract with Flamengo through 2024 with a reduction in his release clause from \u20ac70 to \u20ac35 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0107-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 10 November, Flamengo defeated Bahia 3\u20131 at the Maracan\u00e3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0108-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 13 November, Flamengo played to a difficult 4\u20134 draw against rivals Vasco da Gama. \u00c9verton Ribeiro scored in the first 40 seconds, and Marrony equalized in the 34th minute. Trailing 2\u20133, Bruno Henrique scored a brace to take the lead before Ribamar equalized in stoppage time. This was Bruno Henrique's fourth brace in the 2019 Brasileir\u00e3o in addition to three braces in the Campeonato Carioca.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0109-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 17 November Flamengo defeated Gr\u00eamio 0\u20131 in the Campeonato Brasileiro, breaking the club's 21st Century undefeated streak record of 25 matches (set in 2011). Gabriel scored the lone goal of the match and received a red card, becoming the most booked player of the 2019 S\u00e9rie A season. The victory also set the Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A record for most wins in 38-match round-robin season with 25, breaking the previous record of 24 wins held by 2014 Cruzeiro, 2015 Corinthians, and 2016 Palmeiras.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0110-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 20 November, the team embarked to Lima for the Copa Libertadores final and released their list of available players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0111-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 23 November, Flamengo entered the Estadio Monumental in Lima for their historic single-match Copa Libertadores final against defending champions River Plate. Managed by Marcelo Gallardo, River controlled play for much of the first half. In the 14th minute, Rafael Santos Borr\u00e9 of River Plate scored after Willian Ar\u00e3o and Gerson failed to clear a ball in the penalty area. Flamengo trailed 0\u20131 at halftime. In the second half, Flamengo's play improved as Gabriel continued to be well-marked by River's defense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0111-0001", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nIn the 57th minute Flamengo shockingly failed to equalize, as \u00c9verton Ribeiro shot from inside the penalty area but was denied by goalkeeper Franco Armani. In the 65th minute, captain Diego was substituted on for Gerson in the midfield. Vitinho entered for Ar\u00e3o in the 85th minute. Still trailing by one goal, Diego and De Arrascaeta pressured Lucas Pratto to force a turnover. De Arrascaeta found Bruno Henrique who advanced into the attacking half before returning a through-ball to De Arrascaeta in the penalty area where he provided the assist to Gabriel's equalizing goal in the 89th minute. Minutes later, Diego lifted a deep forward pass into the area towards Gabriel. River Plate centre-back Javier Pinola failed to clear the ball and Gabriel scored with his first touch to complete the historic comeback. After trailing for much of the match, Flamengo won their second Copa Libertadores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 954]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0112-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nGabriel Barbosa was named Man of the Match and finished as the top goalscorer of the Copa Libertadores with nine goals. Bruno Henrique was named best player of the tournament. The victory qualified Flamengo to their first FIFA Club World Cup in December in Qatar, as well as the 2020 Recopa Sudamericana against Copa Sudamericana champions Independiente del Valle. The result also likely qualified Flamengo to the expanded FIFA Club World Cup in China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0113-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 24 November, fewer than 24 hours after the finish in the Copa Libertadores, Flamengo clinched their sixth Campeonato Brasileiro championship as a result of Gr\u00eamio's 1\u20132 victory over Palmeiras. With four league matches still to play, Flamengo became the first Brazilian team since Pel\u00e9's 1962 and 1963 Santos teams to win the Copa Libertadores and Campeonato Brasileiro in the same season. With the championship, Flamengo qualified for the 2020 Supercopa do Brasil against Copa do Brasil champions Athletico Paranaense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0114-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 27 November with the league title already won, Flamengo took the field at the Maracan\u00e3 against Cear\u00e1. Bruno Henrique scored his second hat-trick of the season en route to a 4\u20131 victory. The team received the S\u00e9rie A trophy on the field after the match. The victory set a new points record in the era of the league's current format (2006\u2013present) with 84, surpassing Corinthians' 2015 total of 81.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0115-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 1 December, Flamengo traveled to the Allianz Parque to face Palmeiras for the 36th round of the Brazilian league. Amidst public safety concerns and fear of clashes between supporters groups, CBF upheld the request from S\u00e3o Paulo police that visiting supporters not be permitted in the stadium, a decision which Flamengo opposed. Flamengo opened the scoring early with a goal from Arrascaeta and two from Gabriel, defeating Palmeiras 1\u20133. This was Flamengo's first victory at the Allianz Parque since its completion in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0115-0001", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nThe victory set another league record in the post-2006 era: 80 goals scored in the campaign surpassed Cruzeiro's mark of 77 from 2013. Additionally, Gabriel Barbosa broke the league goal-scoring record in the 20-team era with his 24th goal of the season, passing Jonas from 2010 Gr\u00eamio and Borges from 2011 Santos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0116-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 4 December Flamengo released their list of players for the Club World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0117-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 5 December in their final home match of the season, Flamengo defeated already relegated Ava\u00ed by a score of 6\u20131 with a mostly reserve lineup. Gabriel scored his 25th goal of the season and 17 year-old Reinier scored a second-half brace. Flamengo finished league play undefeated at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0118-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 8 December on the final matchday of the season, Flamengo suffered their worst loss of the year falling 4\u20130 to league runners-up Santos at the Vila Belmiro. With the defeat, Flamengo equaled the record for fewest losses in a 38-match season with four, a mark set by S\u00e3o Paulo in 2006 and Palmeiras in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0119-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 9 December, several Flamengo players were honored at the 2019 Bola de Prata and Pr\u00eamio Craque do Brasileir\u00e3o awards. Gabriel received the Bola de Ouro for best player of the season, and Bruno Henrique received the \"Craque do Brasileir\u00e3o\" award for player of the year. Jorge Jesus was honored as the best manager of the year by both awarding bodies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0120-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 17 December Flamengo made their Club World Cup debut against AFC Champions League winners Al Hilal of Saudi Arabia in Doha, Qatar. After conceding the first goal to Salem Al-Dawsari, Flamengo shone in the second half with a goal and assist from Bruno Henrique, and a late own goal against Al-Hilal to win 3\u20131 and secure a place in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0121-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 18 December Liverpool defeated Monterrey in the opposite semi-final to confirm a rematch of the 1981 Intercontinental Cup against Flamengo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0122-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 21 December, Flamengo and Liverpool entered the Khalifa International Stadium for the FIFA Club World Cup final and Flamengo's final match of the 2019 season. Forward Roberto Firmino of Liverpool nearly scored in the first minute of play. After resisting early chances, Flamengo matched Liverpool's play with chances from Bruno Henrique and maintained nearly 60% possession in the 1st half. In the 2nd half Firmino again came close, with a shot off the post. \u00c9verton Ribeiro and De Arrascaeta came off for Diego and Vitinho.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0122-0001", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nIn 2nd half stoppage time, Liverpool was awarded a penalty after Rafinha fouled Sadio Man\u00e9 on the edge of the penalty area, but the decision was reversed by VAR and the match went into extra time tied 0\u20130. Liverpool continued to pressure and finally scored in the 9th minute: Man\u00e9 found Firmino in the box who scored the match's only goal. Flamengo was unable to respond, coming close with an opportunity from substitute Lincoln in the second period of extra time. Liverpool won 1\u20130, claiming their first Club World Cup with Firmino being named Man of the Match. Bruno Henrique received the Silver Ball of the tournament behind Mohamed Salah of Liverpool's Golden Ball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0123-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Season overview\nOn 31 December Gabriel was elected \"Rey del F\u00fatbol de Am\u00e9rica\" (\"South American Footballer of the Year\") by Uruguayan paper El Pa\u00eds. Teammates Bruno Henrique and De Arrascaeta finished second and third in voting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0124-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Pre-season and friendlies, Florida Cup\nFlamengo won the 2019 Florida Cup in their first time competing in the annual friendly competition. S\u00e3o Paulo also participated but the two Brazilian clubs were not scheduled to meet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 80], "content_span": [81, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0125-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Pre-season and friendlies, Friendlies\nFlamengo scheduled a training match during the Copa Am\u00e9rica interval against Madureira. It served as the first match managed by Jorge Jesus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 79], "content_span": [80, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0126-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Competitions, Campeonato Carioca\nThe draw for the 2019 Campeonato Carioca was conducted on 16 October 2018. Flamengo was drawn into group C with Botafogo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 74], "content_span": [75, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0127-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Competitions, Copa Libertadores\nThe group stage draw for the 2019 Copa Libertadores was conducted on 17 December 2018. Flamengo were drawn into Group D with Pe\u00f1arol, Liga de Quito, and a Bolivian team unknown at the time of the draw that would be San Jos\u00e9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 73], "content_span": [74, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0128-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Competitions, Copa Libertadores, Knockout stage\nThe draw for the knockout stages of the Copa Libertadores was held on 13 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 89], "content_span": [90, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0129-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Competitions, Copa Libertadores, Knockout stage\nIn August 2018 the location of the 2019 Copa Libertadores Final was chosen to be the Estadio Nacional in Santiago, Chile. However, due to the ongoing Chilean protests, the match was moved to Lima, Peru on 5 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 89], "content_span": [90, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0130-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Competitions, Campeonato Brasileiro\nThe Campeonato Brasileiro provisional schedule was released by CBF on 22 February. Match dates are subject to change. League play paused for one month between rounds 9 and 10 for the 2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica hosted in Brazil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 77], "content_span": [78, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0131-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Competitions, Copa do Brasil\nAs Flamengo participated in the 2019 Copa Libertadores, the club entered the Copa do Brasil in the round of 16. The draw for the Round of 16 was held on 2 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0132-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Competitions, Copa do Brasil, Quarter-final\nThe draw for the quarter-final was held on 10 June. All eight teams were placed in a single pot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 85], "content_span": [86, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0133-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Competitions, Club World Cup\nFlamengo qualified for the 2019 FIFA Club World Cup after defeating River Plate in the Copa Libertadores final on 23 November. As the representative for CONMEBOL, Flamengo qualified directly to the semi-final against the winner of the match between AFC Champions League winners Al-Hilal and CAF Champions League winners Esp\u00e9rance de Tunis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0134-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Competitions, Club World Cup, Final\nUEFA Champions League winners Liverpool defeated CONCACAF Champions League winners Monterrey to advance to the final and recreate the matchup from the 1981 Intercontinental Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 77], "content_span": [78, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0135-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Statistics\nPlayers in italics have left the club before the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0136-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Statistics, Hat-tricks\n(H) \u2013 Home\u00a0; (A) \u2013 Away; (N) \u2013 Neutral", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0137-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Individual awards\nFIFA Club World Cup Silver BallCopa Libertadores Top AssistsCampeonato Carioca Top Goal ScorerCampeonato Carioca Team of the Year", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288356-0138-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Attendance\nIncludes all competition home matches in the 2019 season. Attendances recorded represent actual gate attendance, not paid attendance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288357-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube do Remo season\nThe 2019 season was Remo's 105th existence. The club participated in the Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C, the Campeonato Paraense, the Copa Verde and the Copa do Brasil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288357-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Clube do Remo season\nRemo finished outside of the top four of the Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C (5th place in the group stage and 9th overall), but they won the Campeonato Paraense by the 46th time. In the Copa Verde, the club was eliminated in the semi-finals by Paysandu 3-1 in the aggregate. In the Copa do Brasil, Remo ended in the first round by Serra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288358-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cl\u00e1sica de Almer\u00eda\nThe 2019 Cl\u00e1sica de Almer\u00eda was the 34th edition of the Cl\u00e1sica de Almer\u00eda road cycling one day race. It was held on 17 February 2019 as part of the UCI Europe Tour in category 1.HC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288358-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cl\u00e1sica de Almer\u00eda, Teams\nSeventeen teams of up to seven riders started the race:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288359-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cl\u00e1sica de San Sebasti\u00e1n\nThe 2019 Cl\u00e1sica de San Sebasti\u00e1n was a road cycling one-day race that took place on 3 August in San Sebasti\u00e1n, Spain. It was the 39th edition of the Cl\u00e1sica de San Sebasti\u00e1n and the twenty-eighth event of the 2019 UCI World Tour. It was won by 19 year old Remco Evenepoel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288359-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cl\u00e1sica de San Sebasti\u00e1n, Teams\nTwenty-two teams of seven riders were invited to take part in the race: all eighteen UCI WorldTeams and four UCI Professional Continental teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288360-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Coastal Carolina Chanticleers football team\nThe 2019 Coastal Carolina Chanticleers football team represented Coastal Carolina University during the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Chanticleers were led by first-year head coach Jamey Chadwell and played their home games at Brooks Stadium. They competed as a member of the East Division of the Sun Belt Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288360-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Coastal Carolina Chanticleers football team, Previous season\nThey finished the 2018 season 5\u20137, 2\u20136 in Sun Belt play to finish in fourth place in the East Division. The 2018 season was the last for head coach Joe Moglia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288361-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Coastal Carolina Chanticleers men's soccer team\nThe 2019 Coastal Carolina Chanticleers men's soccer team represented Coastal Carolina University during the 2019 NCAA Division I men's soccer season and the 2019 Sun Belt Conference men's soccer season. The regular season began on August 30 and concluded on November 9. It was the program's 42nd season fielding a men's varsity soccer team, and their 4th season in the Sun Belt. The 2019 season was Shaun Docking's 22nd year as head coach for the program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288361-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Coastal Carolina Chanticleers 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, 52], "section_span": [54, 60], "content_span": [61, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288362-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Coca-Cola 600\nThe 2019 Coca-Cola 600, the 60th running of the event, was a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race held on May 26, 2019 at Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord, North Carolina. Contested over 400 laps on the 1.5 mile (2.42\u00a0km) asphalt speedway, it was the 13th race of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season. Martin Truex Jr. won his fourth race of the season, second Coca-Cola 600, and 22nd career victory overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288362-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Coca-Cola 600, Report, Background\nThe race was held at Charlotte Motor Speedway, which is located in Concord, North Carolina. The speedway complex includes a 1.5-mile (2.4\u00a0km) quad-oval track that will be utilized for the race, as well as a dragstrip and a dirt track. The speedway was built in 1959 by Bruton Smith and is considered the home track for NASCAR with many race teams based in the Charlotte metropolitan area. The track is owned and operated by Speedway Motorsports Inc. (SMI) with Marcus G. Smith serving as track president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288362-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Coca-Cola 600, Report, Background\nFor the race, every car on track would sport a fallen military member tribute on their cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288362-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Coca-Cola 600, First practice\nDaniel Hemric was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 29.542 seconds and a speed of 182.791\u00a0mph (294.174\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288362-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Coca-Cola 600, Qualifying\nWilliam Byron scored the pole for the race with a time of 29.440 and a speed of 183.424\u00a0mph (295.192\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288362-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Coca-Cola 600, Practice (post-qualifying), Second practice\nDaniel Su\u00e1rez was the fastest in the second practice session with a time of 29.647 seconds and a speed of 182.143\u00a0mph (293.131\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 63], "content_span": [64, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288362-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Coca-Cola 600, Practice (post-qualifying), Final practice\nDaniel Su\u00e1rez was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 29.883 seconds and a speed of 180.705\u00a0mph (290.817\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288362-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Coca-Cola 600, Media, Television\nFox Sports televised the race in the United States for the 19th consecutive year. Mike Joy was the lap-by-lap announcer, while three-time Coca-Cola 600 winner, Jeff Gordon and five-time race winner Darrell Waltrip were the color commentators. Jamie Little, Regan Smith, Vince Welch and Matt Yocum reported from pit lane during the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288362-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Coca-Cola 600, Media, Radio\nRadio coverage of the race was broadcast by the Performance Racing Network (PRN), and was simulcasted on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio. Doug Rice and Mark Garrow called the race in the booth when the field raced through the quad-oval. Rob Albright reported the race from a billboard in turn 2 when the field was racing through turns 1 and 2 and halfway down the backstretch. Pat Patterson called the race from a billboard outside of turn 3 when the field raced through the other half of the backstretch and through turns 3 and 4. Brad Gillie, Brett McMillan, Wendy Venturini and Steve Richards were the pit reporters during the broadcast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288363-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Codasur South American Rally Championship\nThe 2019 Codasur South American Rally Championship is an international rally championship sanctioned by the FIA and run by the Confederacion Deportiva Automovilismo Sudamericana (Codasur). The championship was contested over five events held in five South American countries from March to November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288363-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Codasur South American Rally Championship\nParaguayan Toyota driver Alejandro Galanti won the championship for the first time. Galanti won by a single point in a dramatic finish to the championship. Galanti won the season ending Rally del Atl\u00e1ntico ahead of second placed Hyundai driver Diego Dom\u00ednguez who had been leading the championship going into the final rally. Dom\u00ednguez won the first two events, the Rally de la Tierra Colorada and the Rally Trans Itap\u00faa, and was second at the Rally de Erechim. Defending champion, \u0160koda driver Gustavo Saba, who had also still been in contention to win the championship, was third in the final event and the championship. Saba had won the Rally de Erechim. The Rally Santa Cruz de la Sierra was won by Bolivian \u0160koda driver Marco Bulacia Wilkinson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 796]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288363-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Codasur South American Rally Championship\nGalanti was the first new Codasur champion since Dom\u00ednguez won his first championship in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288363-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Codasur South American Rally Championship, Event calendar and results\nThe 2019 Codasur South American Rally Championship was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 74], "content_span": [75, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288363-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Codasur South American Rally Championship, Championship standings\nThe 2019 Codasur South American Rally Championship points were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 70], "content_span": [71, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288363-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Codasur South American Rally Championship, Championship standings\nPoints were awarded to the top ten finishers of each rally and for the top eight positions of each leg of each rally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 70], "content_span": [71, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288364-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Coke Zero Sugar 400\nThe 2019 Coke Zero Sugar 400 was a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race that was held on July 7, 2019 at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida. Contested over 127 of the scheduled 160 laps on the 2.5-mile (4.0\u00a0km) superspeedway, it was the 18th race of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season. The race was postponed from Saturday, July 6 to Sunday, July 7, due to rain. 20-year-old Justin Haley won the race, recording his first career Cup Series win and the first for Spire Motorsports after the race was called due to rain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288364-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Coke Zero Sugar 400, Report, Background\nThe race was held at Daytona International Speedway, a race track located in Daytona Beach, Florida, United States. Since opening in 1959, the track is the home of the Daytona 500, the most prestigious race in NASCAR. In addition to NASCAR, the track also hosts races of ARCA, AMA Superbike, USCC, SCCA, and Motocross. It 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288364-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Coke Zero Sugar 400, Report, Background\nThe track was built in 1959 by NASCAR founder William \"Bill\" France, Sr. to host racing held at the former Daytona Beach Road Course. His banked design permitted higher speeds and gave fans a better view of the cars. Lights were installed around the track in 1998 and today, it is the third-largest single lit outdoor sports facility. The speedway has been renovated three times, with the infield renovated in 2004 and the track repaved twice \u2014 in 1978 and in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288364-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Coke Zero Sugar 400, Report, Background\nOn January 22, 2013, the track unveiled artist depictions of a renovated speedway. On July 5 of that year, ground was broken for a project that would remove the backstretch seating and completely redevelop the frontstretch seating. The renovation to the speedway is being worked on by Rossetti Architects. The project, named \"Daytona Rising\", was completed in January 2016, and it costed US $400 million, placing emphasis on improving fan experience with five expanded and redesigned fan entrances (called \"injectors\") as well as wider and more comfortable seating with more restrooms and concession stands. After the renovations, the track's grandstands include 101,000 permanent seats with the ability to increase permanent seating to 125,000. The project was completed before the start of Speedweeks 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 853]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288364-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Coke Zero Sugar 400, Practice, First practice\nKyle Busch was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 44.831 seconds and a speed of 200.754\u00a0mph (323.082\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288364-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Coke Zero Sugar 400, Practice, Final practice\nMartin Truex Jr. was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 43.703 seconds and a speed of 205.936\u00a0mph (331.422\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288364-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Coke Zero Sugar 400, Qualifying\nQualifying for Friday was cancelled due to inclement weather and Joey Logano, the point leader, was awarded the pole as a result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288364-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Coke Zero Sugar 400, Race, Final stage results\nThe Big One occurred on lap 119 when Clint Bowyer and Austin Dillon battled for the lead in intense drafting packs, leading to a 17-car crash. Kurt Busch was the leader when most leaders pitted, but when at the end of Lap 127, officials gave the signal the race would restart on the ensuing lap, Busch pitted, handing the lead to Justin Haley. When lightning was detected while the cars were on the backstretch working Lap 128, the safety truck turned on its lights and immediately sent the cars to the pit lane. After two further attempts to restart the race were aborted because of lightning, more rain led NASCAR to declare the race official. NASCAR then spent considerable time to score all penalties assessed for pitting before pit lane was opened before an official result was declared. Haley was declared the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 875]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288364-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Coke Zero Sugar 400, Media, Television\nNBC Sports covered the race on the television side. Rick Allen, 2000 Coke Zero 400 winner Jeff Burton and two-time Coke Zero 400 winner Dale Earnhardt Jr. called in the booth for the race. Steve Letarte called from the NBC Peacock Pit Box on pit road. Dave Burns, Marty Snider and Kelli Stavast reported from pit lane during the race. During the lengthy red flag for lightning, television coverage eventually switched over to NBCSN, where the official announcement of the end of the race was made.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288364-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Coke Zero Sugar 400, Media, Radio\nMRN had the radio call for the race which was also simulcast on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288365-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Colchester Borough Council election\nElections to Colchester Borough Council were held on 2 May 2019. Seventeen members of the council (one-third of the whole) were up for election, one from each of the 17 wards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288365-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Colchester Borough Council election, Result Summary, Composition\nPrior to the election, the composition of the council was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288365-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Colchester Borough Council election, Ward results\nThe Statement of Nominated Persons was released on 4 April 2019 detailing the persons standing as candidates at the Borough Council election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 54], "content_span": [55, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288366-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Colgate Raiders football team\nThe 2019 Colgate Raiders football team represents Colgate University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They are led by sixth-year head coach Dan Hunt and play their home games at Crown Field at Andy Kerr Stadium. They are a member of the Patriot League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288366-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Colgate Raiders football team, Previous season\nThe Raiders finished the 2018 season 10\u20132, 6\u20130 in Patriot League play to be Patriot League champions. They received the Patriot League's automatic bid to the FCS Playoffs where, after a first round bye, they defeated James Madison in the second round before losing in the quarterfinals to North Dakota State. Following the season, they were awarded the Lambert Division I FCS Cup by the Eastern College Athletic Conference and the Metropolitan New York Football Writers, signifying the Raiders as the best team in the East in Division I FCS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288366-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Colgate Raiders football team, Preseason, Preseason coaches' poll\nThe Patriot League released their preseason coaches' poll on July 30, 2019 (voting was by conference head coaches and sports information directors). The Raiders were picked to finish in first place, receiving 12 of 14 first-place votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288366-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Colgate Raiders football team, Preseason, Preseason All-Patriot League team\nThe Raiders led the conference in selections, having ten players picked to the preseason All-Patriot League team. Additionally, Quarterback Grant Breneman was selected as the 2019 Patriot League Preseason Offensive Player of the Year and Defensive Lineman Nick Wheeler was selected as the 2019 Patriot League Preseason Defensive Player of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 80], "content_span": [81, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288367-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 College Baseball All-America Team\nThis is a list of college baseball players named first team All-Americans for the 2019 NCAA Division I baseball season. 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, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288368-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 College Basketball Invitational\nThe 2019 College Basketball Invitational (CBI) was a single-elimination men's college basketball tournament consisting of 16 National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I teams that did not participate in the 2019 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament or the NIT. It was held from March 19 through April 5, 2019 in various arenas. This event marked the 12th year the tournament has been held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288368-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 College Basketball Invitational, Participating teams\nThe following teams were announced as participants Sunday, March 17 after the NCAA Selection Show.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288368-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 College Basketball Invitational, Participating teams, Declined invitations\nThe following programs declined an invitation to play in the CBI.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 79], "content_span": [80, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288368-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 College Basketball Invitational, Format\nThe 2019 CBI had 16 teams organized into four regional brackets of four teams. The four teams that advanced to the semifinals were reseeded. The finals were a best-of-three series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288369-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 College Football All-America Team\nThe 2019 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-00288369-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 College Football All-America Team\nThe National Collegiate Athletic Bureau, which is the National Collegiate Athletic Association's (NCAA) service bureau, compiled, in the 1950, 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, including all NCAA championship sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288369-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 College Football All-America Team\nThe 2019 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), Sporting News (TSN, from its historic name of The Sporting News), Sports Illustrated (SI), The Athletic (Athletic), USA Today (USAT) ESPN, CBS Sports (CBS), College Football News (CFN), Scout.com, Athlon Sports, and Fox Sports (FOX).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288369-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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. Players are chosen against other players playing at their position only. To be selected a consensus All-American, players must be chosen to the first team on at least two of the five official selectors as recognized by the NCAA. Second- and third-team honors are used to break ties. Players named first-team by all five selectors are deemed unanimous All-Americans. 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, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288369-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 College Football All-America Team\nTwenty-five players were recognized as consensus All-Americans for 2019, 16 of them unanimously. Unanimous selections are followed by an asterisk (*)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288370-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 College Football Playoff National Championship\nThe 2019 College Football Playoff National Championship was a college football bowl game that determined a national champion in the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision for the 2018 season. It was played at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, California, on January 7, 2019, and was the culminating game of the 2018\u201319 bowl season. Sponsored by telecommunications company AT&T, the game was officially known as the College Football Playoff National Championship presented by AT&T.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288370-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 College Football Playoff National Championship\nThe Clemson Tigers defeated the Alabama Crimson Tide by a score of 44\u201316 to win the championship with an undefeated 15\u20130 record. Clemson became the first such undefeated team in the CFP era to win the title, and the first to finish 15\u20130 in a single season since the 1897 Penn Quakers. The 28-point loss was the largest margin of defeat for Alabama during the Nick Saban era (since 2007) and since Alabama's 31-point loss in the 1998 Music City Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288370-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 College Football Playoff National Championship, Background\nLevi's Stadium in Santa Clara, California, was announced as the host site for the fifth College Football Playoff National Championship on November 4, 2015. Atlanta was awarded the 2018 championship game while New Orleans was awarded the 2020 game. The three game sites were chosen out of nine bids, with bids by Houston, South Florida, Charlotte, Detroit, Minnesota, and San Antonio not selected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288370-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 College Football Playoff National Championship, 2019 College Football Playoff\nThe College Football Playoff selection committee selected four teams to advance to the playoff. The bowl selection show took place on December 2. The top-ranked Alabama Crimson Tide faced the fourth-ranked Oklahoma Sooners in the Orange Bowl and the second-ranked Clemson Tigers faced the third-ranked Notre Dame Fighting Irish in the Cotton Bowl, both held on December 29. Alabama defeated Oklahoma, 45\u201334, and Clemson defeated Notre Dame, 30\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 82], "content_span": [83, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288370-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 College Football Playoff National Championship, Teams\nAlabama held a 14\u20134 series lead over Clemson in prior meetings between the two teams. They had met in the postseason in each of the prior three seasons: the 2016 College Football Playoff National Championship, won by Alabama (45\u201340); the 2017 College Football Playoff National Championship, won by Clemson (35\u201331); and the 2018 Sugar Bowl playoff semifinal game, won by Alabama (24\u20136).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 58], "content_span": [59, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288370-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 College Football Playoff National Championship, Teams\nThis was the first time under the College Football Playoff format (initiated in 2014) that an undefeated team won the championship, as both teams came into the game 14\u20130. The most recent prior matchup of undefeated teams in a championship game had been the 2011 BCS National Championship Game, which saw 13\u20130 Auburn defeat 12\u20130 Oregon. The most recent undefeated winner of a national championship game had been Florida State, who won the 2014 BCS National Championship Game and finished their season with a 14\u20130 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 58], "content_span": [59, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288370-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 College Football Playoff National Championship, Teams, Clemson Tigers\nClemson defeated the Pittsburgh Panthers in the 2018 ACC Championship Game on December 1, then received their bid to the Cotton Bowl with the release of final CFP rankings on December 2. Clemson defeated the Notre Dame Fighting Irish in the Cotton Bowl Classic on December 29 to advance to the championship game. The Tigers entered the championship game with a 14\u20130 record. On January 3, it was confirmed that three Clemson players, including starting defensive lineman Dexter Lawrence, would remain suspended from playing by the NCAA, due to drug testing in advance of the Cotton Bowl Classic that showed \"trace amounts of a banned substance\", which was identified as ostarine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 74], "content_span": [75, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288370-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 College Football Playoff National Championship, Teams, Alabama Crimson Tide\nAlabama defeated the Georgia Bulldogs in the 2018 SEC Championship Game on December 1, then received their bid to the Orange Bowl with the release of final CFP rankings on December 2. Alabama defeated the Oklahoma Sooners in the Orange Bowl on December 29 to advance to the championship game. The Crimson Tide also entered the championship game with a 14\u20130 record. On December 27, in advance of the Orange Bowl, three Alabama players, including starting offensive lineman Deonte Brown, were suspended for the remainder of the season, in what was initially described as an unspecified violation of team rules, then later characterized as NCAA violations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 80], "content_span": [81, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288370-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 College Football Playoff National Championship, Game summary\nAfter winning the coin toss, Alabama elected to defer, giving Clemson the ball to start the game. The Tigers' opening drive resulted in a three-and-out, and Alabama took over on their own 21-yard-line following a punt. However, three plays later the scoring was opened by Clemson cornerback A. J. Terrell, who intercepted a Tua Tagovailoa pass and returned it 44 yards for a touchdown. Alabama responded quickly, as Tagovailoa made up for the interception three plays later by finding Jerry Jeudy downfield for a 62-yard score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 65], "content_span": [66, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288370-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 College Football Playoff National Championship, Game summary\nOn their ensuing drive, Clemson continued the offensive trend of the first quarter with a 62-yard pass of their own, from Trevor Lawrence to Tee Higgins, which set up a 17-yard touchdown rush by Travis Etienne on the next play. Now trailing 14\u20137, Alabama marched downfield on their next drive, covering 75 yards in ten plays, to score a touchdown with opportunity to tie the game. However, Alabama freshman placekicker Joseph Bulovas missed the extra point, hitting the right upright; this was his sixth missed extra point of the season and left Clemson ahead by one, 14\u201313. Clemson's ensuing drive resulted in another three-and-out; they punted to Alabama, who made it to the Clemson 3-yard-line when the first quarter ended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 65], "content_span": [66, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288370-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 College Football Playoff National Championship, Game summary\nThe second quarter began with Clemson holding a one-point lead, although this would not last for long. Two plays into the quarter, Bulovas converted a 25-yard field goal to put Alabama in front by two points, 16\u201314. Clemson would soon recapture the lead, as Lawrence led the Tigers' offense down the field in six plays; the drive was capped by a one-yard touchdown rush by Travis Etienne. With the Clemson lead at 21\u201316, Alabama began their next drive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 65], "content_span": [66, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288370-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 College Football Playoff National Championship, Game summary\nThe Clemson defense would make another important play, as Tagovailoa threw his second interception of the game and only his sixth all season. Clemson then capitalized with a five-yard pass from Lawrence to Etienne to make push the lead to 12 points, 28\u201316. On what would be their last drive of the half, Alabama punted on 4th-and-17, giving Clemson the ball on their own 21-yard-line. With just over two minutes on the clock, Clemson drove down the field and converted a 36-yard field goal that put the lead at 31\u201316 and gave the Tide the ball back with 45 seconds. After an incomplete pass and a six-yard rush, Alabama head coach Nick Saban elected to let the clock expire and head to halftime trailing by fifteen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 65], "content_span": [66, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288370-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 College Football Playoff National Championship, Game summary\nOn Alabama's first drive of the second half, they gained 53 yards on 12 plays before losing two yards on a fake field goal, turning the ball over on downs and giving the Tigers the football on their own 24-yard-line. Clemson took advantage of the Tide's mistake, scoring on a 74-yard Trevor Lawrence pass to Justyn Ross. Greg Huegel's extra point attempt hit the left upright, leaving the score at 37\u201316; it was only his second missed extra point of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 65], "content_span": [66, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288370-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 College Football Playoff National Championship, Game summary\nAlabama's next drive spanned 59 yards before they failed to convert a 4th-and-4 on Clemson's 14-yard-line, giving the Tigers the ball with just under six minutes to play in the third quarter. Clemson took advantage, driving 89 yards for a touchdown with a five-yard touchdown catch by Tee Higgins; the successful extra point pushing their lead to 44\u201316. Alabama's 28-point deficit was the largest in any game under Saban, their coach since 2007. The Tide began their third drive of the second half on their 25-yard-line following a touchback.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 65], "content_span": [66, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288370-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 College Football Playoff National Championship, Game summary\nFollowing a 48-yard pass from Tagovailoa to Jeudy on the final play of the third quarter, Alabama started the fourth quarter with a first down on Clemson's 27-yard-line. However, Alabama's offense stalled again, losing seven yards on 4th-and-goal from Clemson's 2-yard-line; this was the Tide's third straight turnover on downs, with all three coming in Clemson territory. Clemson was then unable to take advantage of their possession, and punted for the first time since the first quarter; the punt was downed at Alabama's 48-yard-line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 65], "content_span": [66, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288370-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 College Football Playoff National Championship, Game summary\nAlabama began their fourth second-half drive with just over eleven minutes on the clock and Jalen Hurts at quarterback; it ended in a three-and-out, and Mike Bernier's punt was downed at the Clemson one-yard-line. After draining more than seven minutes on the clock and with the ball on Alabama's 17-yard-line, the majority of Clemson's offensive starters were removed from the game and Chase Brice was put in at quarterback. Clemson used up the remaining two minutes off the clock and took a knee on the final play ending the longest drive (10:02) in Clemson history and winning the National Championship, their second title in three years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 65], "content_span": [66, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288370-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 College Football Playoff National Championship, Game summary\nClemson players celebrate in the end zone near the majority of their fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 65], "content_span": [66, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288370-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 College Football Playoff National Championship, Game summary\nClemson is recognized historical 15\u20130 national champion as confetti falls after the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 65], "content_span": [66, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288370-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 College Football Playoff National Championship, Game summary\nClemson's coach and players are presented with the championship trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 65], "content_span": [66, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288370-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 College Football Playoff National Championship, Broadcasting\nThe game was televised nationally by ESPN, with Megacast coverage across all of its networks except ABC. As in 2018, the network also promoted an off-site concert that was televised at halftime during ESPN's broadcast, featuring rock band Imagine Dragons, including a \"special collaboration\" with rapper Lil Wayne, on Treasure Island. Fans in attendance at Levi's Stadium saw the Clemson University Tiger Band and Alabama's Million Dollar Band perform.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 65], "content_span": [66, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288371-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament\nThe 2019 CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament (CIT) was a postseason single-elimination tournament of NCAA Division I basketball teams. The tournament began on March 18, 2019, and concluded on April 4, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288371-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament, Participating teams\nThe following teams received an invitation to the 2019 CIT:Note: Team records are before playing in the tournament", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288371-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament, Participating teams, Seeds\nThe top three seeds remaining after the first round received byes to the quarterfinals. Marshall received the number 1 seed. Louisiana-Monroe and NJIT also received byes to the quarterfinals after winning their first round matchup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 73], "content_span": [74, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288371-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament, Participating teams, Declined invitations\nThe following programs declined an invitation to play in the CIT.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 88], "content_span": [89, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288371-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament, Schedule\nNote: Top 3 seeds will get a bye after first round", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288371-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament, Bracket\nBracket is for visual purposes only. The CIT does not use a set bracket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 54], "content_span": [55, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288372-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Collegiate Rugby Championship\nThe 2019 Collegiate Rugby Championship was a college rugby sevens tournament played May 31 to June 2 at Talen Energy Stadium in Chester, Pennsylvania, a suburb of Philadelphia. It was the tenth annual Collegiate Rugby Championship, and the ninth consecutive year that the tournament was at Talen Energy Stadium (formerly known as PPL Park). The event was broadcast on ESPN+, ESPN2 and ESPNews. The men's competition consisted of 24 teams split into six pools. Lindenwood claimed their second consecutive title in only their third appearance in the tournament, defeating Life University in the men's final, 21\u201312.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288372-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Collegiate Rugby Championship, Freedom Cup\nWith their 2019 Freedom Cup victory, Harvard qualified for the CRC Championship top division in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288373-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Collingwood Football Club season\nThe 2019 Collingwood Football Club season is the club's 123rd season of senior competition in the Australian Football League (AFL). The club also fielded its reserves team in the VFL and a women's team in the AFL Women's competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288373-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Collingwood Football Club season, Women's season, VFL Women's\nCollingwood participated in their second consecutive season in the VFL Women's league. Ruby Schleicher and Grace Buchan were named co-captains and Penny Cula-Reid coached the VFLW Magpies for the second year in a row. The Magpies claimed the minor premiership for the second year in a row, and won 12 of 14 matches. The club went on to win their inaugural premiership, defeating the Western Bulldogs by 37 points in the Grand Final at Ikon Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288374-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Colombian Women's Football League\nThe 2019 Colombian Women's Football League (officially known as the Liga \u00c1guila Femenina 2019 for sponsorship reasons) was the third season of Colombia's top-flight women's football league. The season started on 13 July and concluded on 30 September 2019 with the second leg of the finals. Am\u00e9rica de Cali won their first league title following a 3\u20132 win on aggregate against Independiente Medell\u00edn in the finals. Atl\u00e9tico Huila were the defending champions, but were eliminated by eventual runners-up Independiente Medell\u00edn in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288374-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Colombian Women's Football League, Format\nFor this season, the league featured 20 teams, which were split into five double round-robin groups of four teams. The top teams in each group as well as the three best runners-up advanced to the quarterfinals, with the winners advancing to the semifinals. The winners of each semifinal qualified for the final to decide the champions. All rounds in the knockout stage were played on a home-and-away basis. The champions qualified for the 2019 Copa Libertadores Femenina, joining Atl\u00e9tico Huila who are already qualified as titleholders. On 15 June 2019, DIMAYOR and the FCF announced an agreement with CONMEBOL for an additional berth for Colombia into the Copa Libertadores Femenina, which was awarded to the league runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 776]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288374-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Colombian Women's Football League, Teams\n20 teams took part in the competition. The teams are affiliated with DIMAYOR affiliate clubs. Alianza Petrolera, Bogot\u00e1, Deportes Quind\u00edo, Envigado, Patriotas, Real Cartagena, and Uni\u00f3n Magdalena did not field a team in this edition, whilst Deportivo Cali, Independiente Medell\u00edn, Millonarios, and Once Caldas competed for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288374-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Colombian Women's Football League, First stage\nThe First stage started on 13 July and consisted of five groups of four teams. It ended on 18 August with the top teams from each group as well as the three best runners-up advancing to the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 51], "content_span": [52, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288374-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Colombian Women's Football League, First stage, Ranking of second-placed teams\nThe three best teams among those ranked second qualified for the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 83], "content_span": [84, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288374-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Colombian Women's Football League, Knockout stage, Seeding\nThe five group winners were sorted according to their performance in the first stage in order to decide the four teams that were seeded into each of the four quarterfinal ties, which will host the second leg in that stage. The four best group winners were seeded, while the remaining group winner was drawn along with the three best group runners-up against one of the seeded teams to make up the quarterfinal matchups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288375-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Athletic Association Baseball Tournament\nThe 2019 Colonial Athletic Association Baseball Tournament was held at Eagle Field at Veterans Memorial Park in Harrisonburg, Virginia from May 22 through May 25. The winner of the tournament, UNC Wilmington, earned the Colonial Athletic Association's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288375-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Athletic Association Baseball Tournament\nEntering the event, defending champion UNC Wilmington had won the most championships among active teams, with five. James Madison and William & Mary had claimed two titles, while College of Charleston, Delaware, and Towson each had one. Former member East Carolina won 7 titles during their tenure in the conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288375-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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 modified double-elimination tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 74], "content_span": [75, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288375-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Athletic Association Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Valuable Player\nGreg Jones was named Tournament Most Valuable Player. Weiss was a shortstop for UNC Wilmington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 97], "content_span": [98, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288376-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Athletic Association football season\nThe 2019 Colonial Athletic Association football season will be the thirteenth season of football for the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA) and part of the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288376-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Athletic Association football season, Previous season\nDespite being picked eighth in the preseason poll, Maine won the CAA championship outright with a conference record of 7\u20131. They were joined in the FCS playoffs by James Madison, Stony Brook, Towson, Delaware, and Elon. It marked the first time in FCS history that any conference qualified six teams for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288376-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Athletic Association football season, Previous season\nIn the first round of the playoffs, James Madison defeated conference mate Delaware, while Stony Brook, Towson, and Elon lost their matchups. In the second round, James Madison fell to Colgate while 7-seed Maine, which had received a first-round bye, defeated Jacksonville State. Maine defeated 2-seed Weber State in the quarterfinals before falling to Eastern Washington in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288376-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Athletic Association football season, Regular season\nRankings reflect that of the STATS FCS poll for that week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 66], "content_span": [67, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288376-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Athletic Association football season, NFL Draft\nThe following list includes all CAA players who were drafted in the 2020 NFL Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 61], "content_span": [62, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288377-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Athletic Association men's soccer season\nThe 2019 Colonial Athletic Association men's soccer season was the 37th season of men's varsity soccer in the conference. The regular season began on August 30, 2019 and concluded on November 2, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288377-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Athletic Association men's soccer season\nThe regular season culminated with the 2019 CAA Men's Soccer Tournament, which will began on November 8 and concluded on November 16, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288377-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Athletic Association men's soccer season\nUNCW won the CAA regular season championship, while James Madison won the CAA Tournament championship. James Madison earned the CAA's lone berth into the NCAA Tournament, where they were eliminated in the opening round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288377-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Athletic Association men's soccer season, Background\nThe 2018 season began in August 2018 and concluded in November 2018. The regular season and tournament champions were James Madison, who finished the season with a conference record of 5\u20131\u20130 and a regular season and conference tournament record of 12\u20134\u20133. As 2018 CAA Men's Soccer Tournament champions, James Madison earned the conference's automatic bid into the 2018 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament. In addition to James Madison, UNCW earned an at-large berth into the NCAA Tournament. UNCW finished the regular season in second place and reached the semifinals of the CAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 66], "content_span": [67, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288377-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Athletic Association men's soccer season, Background\nIn the NCAA Tournament, both James Madison and UNCW entered in the first round. UNCW ultimately lost in the first round at home to Furman on penalty kicks, while James Madison reached the quarterfinals of the tournament, the best performance in program history. The Dukes defeated No. 16 High Point, No. 4 North Carolina, and No. 9 Virginia Tech \u2013 all on the road. In the quarterfinals, the Dukes played at No. 5 Michigan State. In the Elite Eight matchup, James Madison scored the opening goal in the 32nd minute from follow up shot by Niclas Mohr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 66], "content_span": [67, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288377-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Colonial Athletic Association men's soccer season, Background\nThe Dukes held the lead against the Spartans until the 72nd minute, where Ryan Sierakowski notched the match-tying goal through a lower-right corner shot. Sierakowski scored the go-ahead goal for Michigan State in the 81st minute, giving Michigan State their first College Cup berth since 1968, and preventing James Madison from reaching the College Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 66], "content_span": [67, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288377-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Athletic Association men's soccer season, Preseason, Preseason national polls\nThe preseason national polls were released in July and August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 91], "content_span": [92, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288377-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Athletic Association men's soccer season, Postseason, NCAA Tournament\nThe NCAA Tournament will begin in November 2019 and conclude on December 17, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 83], "content_span": [84, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288377-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Athletic Association men's soccer season, Rankings, Regional rankings - USC Atlantic Region\nThe United Soccer Coaches Atlantic Region compares teams across the Atlantic Sun Conference, Colonial Athletic Association, and Patriot League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 105], "content_span": [106, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288377-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Athletic Association men's soccer season, Awards and honors, Postseason honors\nChris Donovan, So., F, DrexelPhillip Goodrum, Sr., F, UNCWMatthew Vowinkel, Jr., F, HofstraGabriel Cabral, Sr., M, UNCWFernando Casero, Sr., M, James MadisonJacob Evans, Jr., M, UNCWManuel Ferriol, Sr., M, James MadisonThomas Judge, Jr., D, James MadisonMark Lindstrom, Sr., D, UNCWDanny Reynolds, R-Sr., D, UNCWTJ Bush, R-Jr., GK, James Madison", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 92], "content_span": [93, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288377-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Athletic Association men's soccer season, Awards and honors, Postseason honors\nBenjamin Klingen, So., F, NortheasternJulian Ngoh, Sr., F, William & MaryTucker Heffron, R-Sr., M, CharlestonClay Obara, Fr., M, James MadisonPetter Soelberg, Jr., M, HofstraLuca Tausch, So., M, HofstraMelker Anshelm, So., D, James MadisonBrandon Clegg, Sr., D, James MadisonTimo Hummrich, So., D, DelawareWilhelm Nilsson, Sr., D, UNCWGeorge O\u2019Malley, Jr., D, HofstraGabriel Perrotta, Fr., GK, UNCW", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 92], "content_span": [93, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288377-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Athletic Association men's soccer season, Awards and honors, Postseason honors\nTimothy Ennin, R-Fr., F, NortheasternTuki Tayali, R-Jr., F, ElonAlfredo Bozalongo, Fr., M, William & MaryTyler Clegg, So., M, James MadisonRyan Massoud, So., M, NortheasternJake Nicholson, Jr., M, CharlestonOscar Ramsey, Sr., M, HofstraSam Golan, Sr., D, William & MaryLuke Matthews, Sr., D, ElonFrederik Rieper, Fr., D, HofstraAlex Ashton, Gr., GK, Hofstra", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 92], "content_span": [93, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288377-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Athletic Association men's soccer season, Awards and honors, Postseason honors\nTimothy Ennin, F, NortheasternAlexander Levengood, F, William & MaryRex Twum, F, DelawareAlfredo Bozalongo, M, William & MaryMattias Cooper, M, ElonClay Obara, M, James MadisonColton Pleasants, M, UNCWKasper Lehm, D, ElonFrederik Rieper, D, HofstraGabriel Perrotta, GK, UNCW", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 92], "content_span": [93, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288377-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Athletic Association men's soccer season, Awards and honors, Regional honors\nThomas Judge, Jr., D, James MadisonDanny Reynolds, Sr, D, UNCWGabriel Cabral, Sr., M, UNCWManuel Ferriol, Sr., M, James MadisonPhillip Goodrum, Sr., F, UNCW", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 90], "content_span": [91, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288377-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Athletic Association men's soccer season, Awards and honors, Regional honors\nMark Lindstrom, Sr., D, UNCWFernando Casero, Sr., M, James MadisonChris Donovan, So., F, DrexelMatthew Vowinkel, Jr., F, Hofstra", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 90], "content_span": [91, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288377-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Athletic Association men's soccer season, Awards and honors, All-Americans\nTo earn \"consensus\" status, a player must win honors based on a point system computed from the four different all-America teams. The 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, 54], "section_span": [56, 88], "content_span": [89, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288377-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Athletic Association men's soccer season, 2020 MLS Draft\nThe 2020 MLS SuperDraft will be held in January 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 70], "content_span": [71, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288377-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Athletic Association men's soccer season, Homegrown players\nThe Homegrown Player Rule is a Major League Soccer program that allows MLS teams to sign local players from their own development academies directly to MLS first team rosters. Before the creation of the rule in 2008, every player entering Major League Soccer had to be assigned through one of the existing MLS player allocation processes, such as the MLS SuperDraft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 73], "content_span": [74, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288377-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Athletic Association men's soccer season, Homegrown players\nTo place a player on its homegrown player list, making him eligible to sign as a homegrown player, players must have resided in that club's home territory and participated in the club's youth development system for at least one year. Players can play college soccer and still be eligible to sign a homegrown contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 73], "content_span": [74, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288377-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Athletic Association men's soccer season, Homegrown players\nNo CAA players signed a homegrown contract ahead of the 2020 Major League Soccer season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 73], "content_span": [74, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288378-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Square Ladies Classic\nThe 2019 Colonial Square Ladies Classic was held from September 27 to 30 at the Nutana Curling Club in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan as part of the World Curling Tour. The event was held in a triple-knockout format with a purse of $30,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288378-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Colonial Square Ladies Classic\nIn the final, Rachel Homan of Ontario defeated Tracy Fleury of Manitoba to win her first tour event of the 2019\u201320 season. It was a third straight appearance in a final for Fleury, having won the 2019 Cargill Curling Training Centre Icebreaker and finishing runner-up at the 2019 AMJ Campbell Shorty Jenkins Classic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288379-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado Buffaloes football team\nThe 2019 Colorado Buffaloes football team represented the University of Colorado Boulder during the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Buffaloes were led by first-year head coach Mel Tucker and played their home games on campus at Folsom Field. They competed as a member of the South Division of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season 5\u20137, 3\u20136 in Pac-12 play to finish in fifth place in the South Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288379-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado Buffaloes football team, Preseason, Pac-12 media days, Pac-12 media poll\nIn the 2019 Pac-12 preseason media poll, Colorado was voted to finish in last place in the South Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 86], "content_span": [87, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288379-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado Buffaloes football team, Schedule\nColorado's 2019 schedule began on Friday, August 30 with a non-conference neutral site game against in-state rival Colorado State in Denver. The Buffaloes will then play two more non-conference games at home, first against traditional Big Eight Conference rival Nebraska, now a member of the Big Ten Conference, and then against in-state foe Air Force, a member of the Mountain West Conference along with Colorado State. In Pac-12 Conference play, Colorado will play the other members of the South Division and draws Oregon, Stanford, Washington, and Washington State from the North Division. They will not play California or Oregon State as part of the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288380-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado Mammoth season\nThe Colorado Mammoth are a lacrosse team based in Denver, Colorado playing in the National Lacrosse League (NLL). The 2019 season is the 33rd in franchise history and 17th as the Mammoth (previously the Washington Power, Pittsburgh Crossefire, and Baltimore Thunder).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288380-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado Mammoth 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 45], "content_span": [46, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288381-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado Rapids season\nThe 2019 Colorado Rapids season is the club's twenty-fourth season of existence and their twenty-fourth consecutive season in Major League Soccer (MLS), the top flight of American soccer. Colorado will also compete in the U.S. Open Cup. The season covers the period from October 29, 2018 to the start of the 2020 Major League Soccer season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288381-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado Rapids season, Background\nColorado finished the 2018 season second-bottom of the Western Conference table, with the third-worst overall record in MLS. The Rapids finished 11th in the Western Conference and 21st in the overall table. The team scored a league-low 36 goals in 34 matches, and conceded 63 goals. Dominique Badji, who was traded to FC Dallas on July 23, led Colorado with seven goals across all competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288381-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado Rapids season, Background\nOutside of MLS play, the Rapids played in the 2018 edition of the U.S. Open Cup, where they lost in the fourth round to Nashville SC. They also played in the 2018 CONCACAF Champions League, where they were eliminated in the Round of 16 by Toronto FC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288381-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado Rapids season, Competitive, Major League Soccer, Results summary\nSource: Pld = Matches played; Pts = Points; W = Matches won; T = Matches tied; L = Matches lost; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; GD = Goal difference", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 78], "content_span": [79, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288381-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado Rapids season, Transfers, In, SuperDraft\nThe following players were selected by Colorado in the MLS SuperDraft, but did not sign a contract with the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288382-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado Rockies season\nThe 2019 Colorado Rockies season was the franchise's 27th in Major League Baseball. It was their 25th season at Coors Field. Bud Black returned as Manager for his 3rd season in 2019. Before the season began Black was officially offered a 3-year contract extension deal that would see him remain Manager till the 2022 season. After making the playoffs the previous two seasons, the Rockies were eliminated from postseason contention on September 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288382-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288382-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288382-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288382-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288382-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288383-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado Springs Switchbacks FC season\nThe 2019 Colorado Springs Switchbacks FC season is the club's fifth year of existence, and their fifth season in the Western Conference of the United Soccer League Championship, the second tier of the United States Soccer Pyramid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288383-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado Springs Switchbacks FC season, Competitions, USL Championship\nOn December 19, 2018, the USL announced their 2019 season schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 75], "content_span": [76, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288383-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado Springs Switchbacks FC season, Competitions, U.S. Open Cup\nAs a member of the USL Championship, the Switchbacks will enter the tournament in the Second Round, to be played May 14-15, 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 72], "content_span": [73, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288384-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado Springs elections\nThe 2019 Colorado Springs Elections will be held in 2 segments in 2019. The Tuesday, April 2, 2019 election includes Mayor of Colorado Springs, 3 Colorado Springs City Council at-large positions and 1 Colorado Springs Ballot Issue. The election on Tuesday, November 5, 2019, will include 4 Colorado Springs School District 11 Board of Education seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288384-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado Springs elections, Mayor\nRepublican incumbent mayor John Suthers is running for re-election to Mayor of Colorado Springs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288384-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado Springs elections, Mayor\nAll Candidates are confirmed on the Colorado Springs City Clerk website.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288384-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado Springs elections, City Council\nUnaffiliated incumbent city council member Merv Bennett is term-limited and cannot run for another term on the city council. Unaffiliated incumbent city council members Bill Murray and Tom Strand will be running for re-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288384-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado Springs elections, City Council\nAll Candidates are confirmed on the Colorado Springs City Clerk website.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288384-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado Springs elections, City Council\nRESULT: Wayne Williams and Incumbents Bill Murray and Tom Strand were elected to the Colorado Springs City Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288384-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado Springs elections, Issues on Ballot\nThe following Issues will be on the April election ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288384-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado Springs elections, Colorado Springs School District 11 Board of Education\nUnaffiliated incumbent school board members Nora Brown and Elaine Naleski are term-limited and cannot run for another election. Unaffiliated incumbent school board members Theresa Null and Mary Coleman are eligible to run for re-election should they choose to do so. Mary Coleman is running for re-election, Theresa Null is not running for re-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288384-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado Springs elections, Colorado Springs School District 11 Board of Education, Ballot List\nSchool Board Candidates were pulled on 9/3/2019 and will appear on the El Paso County Ballot on November 5, 2019 in the following order.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 100], "content_span": [101, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288384-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado Springs elections, Colorado Springs School District 11 Board of Education, Results\nResults shown per the El Paso County Clerk and Recorder office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 96], "content_span": [97, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288384-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado Springs elections, Colorado Springs School District 11 Board of Education, Results\nRESULT:Mary Coleman, Darleen Daniels, Parth Melpakam and Jason Jorgeonson were elected to the School Board of District 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 96], "content_span": [97, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288385-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado Springs mayoral election\nThe 2019 Colorado Springs mayoral election was held on April 2, 2019, to elect the Mayor of Colorado Springs, Colorado. The election was officially nonpartisan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288385-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado Springs mayoral election\nA runoff had been scheduled for May 21, 2019, but John Suthers received enough votes in the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288385-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado Springs mayoral election\nIncumbent mayor John Suthers won reelection to a second term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288386-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado State Rams football team\nThe 2019 Colorado State Rams football team represented Colorado State University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Rams were led by fifth-year head coach Mike Bobo and played their home games at Sonny Lubick Field at Canvas Stadium in Fort Collins, Colorado as members of the Mountain Division of the Mountain West Conference. The Rams finished the season 4\u20138, 3\u20135 in Mountain West play to finish in fifth place in the Mountain Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288386-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado State Rams football team\nOn December 4, head coach Mike Bobo agreed to step down as head coach. He finished at Colorado State with a five-year record of 28\u201335.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288386-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado State Rams football team, Previous season\nThe Rams finished the 2018 season 3\u20139, 2\u20136 in Mountain West play to finish in fifth place in the Mountain Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288386-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado State Rams football team, Preseason, Mountain West media days\nThe Mountain West media days were held from July 23\u221224, 2019 at Green Valley Ranch in Henderson, NV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 75], "content_span": [76, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288386-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado State Rams football team, Preseason, Mountain West media days, Media poll\nThe preseason poll was released at the Mountain West media days on July 23, 2019. The Rams were predicted to finish in fifth place in the MW Mountain Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 87], "content_span": [88, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288386-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Colorado State Rams football team, Preseason, Mountain West media days, Preseason All-Mountain West Team\nThe Rams had one player selected to the preseason All\u2212Mountain West Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 109], "content_span": [110, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288387-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbia Lions football team\nThe 2019 Columbia Lions football team represented Columbia University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season as a member of the Ivy League. They were led by fifth-year head coach Al Bagnoli and played their home games at Robert K. Kraft Field at Lawrence A. Wien Stadium. They finished the season 3\u20137, 2\u20135 in Ivy League play to finish in a tie for sixth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288387-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbia Lions football team, Previous season\nThe Lions finished the 2018 season 6\u20134, 3\u20134 in Ivy League play to finish in a three-way tie for fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288387-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbia Lions football team, Preseason, Preseason media poll\nThe Ivy League released their preseason media poll on August 8, 2019. The Lions were picked to finish in sixth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288388-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbia, Missouri mayoral election\nThe 2019 Columbia, Missouri mayoral election was held on April 2, 2019. Incumbent mayor Brian Treece successfully won re-election against former Missouri House member Chris Kelly. Kelly's run for Columbia mayor was the only unsuccessful electoral campaign of his career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288388-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbia, Missouri mayoral election, Background\nChris Kelly, a former Democratic member of the Missouri House of Representatives, had previously expressed interest in running for the city's highest office. On October 29, 2018, Kelly officially announced his candidacy for Columbia mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288388-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbia, Missouri mayoral election, Background\nCandidate petition filings for the municipal elections were open beginning October 30, 2018 and closed on January 8, 2019. Candidates running for mayor required the valid signatures of at least 100 registered Columbia voters. Both incumbent mayor Brian Treece and challenger Chris Kelly filed their petitions on October 30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288388-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbia, Missouri mayoral election, Campaign\nChris Kelly attracted controversy early in the race following the revelation that he had deleted thousands of tweets from his Twitter account days before beginning his campaign. Screenshots of the messages were obtained by both Mayor Treece and the Columbia HeartBeat, with Treece describing the contents of the tweets as \u201cmisogynistic, racist, offensive and unacceptable.\" Kelly responded to the accusations by claiming that the tweets were either jokes or taken out of context, while also stating in an interview \u201cI sometimes have said things that I should not have said, and there\u2019s no excuse for them.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288388-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbia, Missouri mayoral election, Results\nBrian Treece was re-elected mayor by a wide margin over Chris Kelly, winning the popular vote in 33 of the city's 35 precincts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288388-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbia, Missouri mayoral election, Aftermath\nOn election night, Chris Kelly called Brian Treece to concede the race, with Treece delivering his victory speech shortly afterwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288389-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbian Dyip season\nThe 2019 Columbian Dyip season is the 5th season of the franchise in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288390-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Challenger\nThe 2019 Columbus Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the sixth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Columbus, United States between 7 and 13 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288390-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as wildcards:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288390-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288391-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Challenger II\nThe 2019 Columbus Challenger II was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the seventh edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Columbus, United States between 10 and 16 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288391-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Challenger II, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as wildcards:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288391-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Challenger II, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using protected rankings:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288391-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Challenger II, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288391-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Challenger II, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288392-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Challenger II \u2013 Doubles\nMaxime Cressy and Bernardo Saraiva were the defending champions but lost in the quarterfinals to Roberto Mayt\u00edn and Jackson Withrow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288392-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Challenger II \u2013 Doubles\nMayt\u00edn and Withrow won the title after defeating Hans Hach Verdugo and Donald Young 6\u20137(4\u20137), 7\u20136(7\u20132), [10\u20135] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288393-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Challenger II \u2013 Singles\nJeffrey John Wolf was the defending champion but lost in the second round to Nam Ji-sung.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288393-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Challenger II \u2013 Singles\nMikael Torpegaard won the title after defeating Nam 6\u20131, 7\u20135 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288394-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Challenger III\nThe 2019 Columbus Challenger III was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the eighth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Columbus, United States between 16 and 22 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288394-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Challenger III, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as wildcards:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 72], "content_span": [73, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288394-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Challenger III, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 72], "content_span": [73, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288395-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Challenger III \u2013 Doubles\nRoberto Mayt\u00edn and Jackson Withrow were the defending champions but chose to defend their title with different partners. Mayt\u00edn partnered Robert Galloway but lost in the first round to Filip Peliwo and Roy Smith. Withrow partnered Martin Redlicki and successfully defended his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288395-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Challenger III \u2013 Doubles\nRedlicki and Withrow won the title after defeating Nathan Pasha and Max Schnur 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20134) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288396-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Challenger III \u2013 Singles\nMikael Torpegaard was the defending champion but lost in the quarterfinals to Roberto Quiroz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288396-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Challenger III \u2013 Singles\nPeter Polansky won the title after defeating Jeffrey John Wolf 6\u20133, 7\u20136(7\u20134) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288397-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nTommy Paul and Peter Polansky were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288397-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nMaxime Cressy and Bernardo Saraiva won the title after defeating Robert Galloway and Nathaniel Lammons 7\u20135, 7\u20136(7\u20133) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288398-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Challenger \u2013 Singles\nMichael Mmoh was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288398-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Challenger \u2013 Singles\nJeffrey John Wolf won the title after defeating Mikael Torpegaard 6\u20137(4\u20137), 6\u20133, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288399-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Crew SC season\nThe 2019 Columbus Crew SC season was the club's twenty-fourth season of existence and their twenty-fourth consecutive season in Major League Soccer, the top flight of American soccer. Columbus also competed in the U.S. Open Cup and took part in the Carolina Challenge Cup during preseason. The season covered the period from November 12, 2018 to the start of the 2020 Major League Soccer season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288399-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Crew SC season, Non-competitive, Preseason\nOn December 21, 2018, Crew SC officially announced its preseason schedule, with three confirmed matches. The club began preseason by spending two days in Lewis Center, Ohio before traveling to Chula Vista, California for a week-long training camp. While in California, Crew SC played a friendly match against Japanese club Vissel Kobe. After another week in Ohio, Columbus will then play in the Carolina Challenge Cup, looking to defend their title in the tournament for the third consecutive season. Crew SC will play a pair of rivals in the CCC, facing Chicago Fire and FC Cincinnati, as well as the tournament hosts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288399-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Crew SC season, Non-competitive, Preseason\nColumbus announced the addition of two friendly matches on January 21, both taking place while the club trains in California and behind closed doors. Crew SC played Mexican club Tijuana on January 31 before facing fellow MLS side Los Angeles FC on February 4. Both matches were open to media but closed to the public.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288399-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Crew SC season, Competitive, MLS, Results summary\nSource: Pld = Matches played; Pts = Points; W = Matches won; T = Matches tied; L = Matches lost; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; GD = Goal difference", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288399-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Crew SC season, Competitive, MLS, Match results\nOn December 20, 2018, the league announced the home openers for every club. Columbus will make their season debut at Mapfre Stadium on the opening day of the season, playing host to New York Red Bulls \u2013 the team that eliminated Crew SC from the playoffs in 2017. Columbus will also take part in the home-opening matches for two other clubs, with a trip to Gillette Stadium to face New England Revolution on March 9 and a visit to Saputo Stadium to take on Montreal Impact on April 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288399-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Crew SC season, Competitive, MLS, Match results\nThe schedule for the remainder of the season was released by the league on January 7, 2019. Crew SC will play twice against every Eastern Conference opponent and once against every Western Conference team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288399-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Crew SC season, Statistics, Appearances and goals\nFederico Higua\u00edn entered the season with 196 career appearances for Crew SC, good for eighth place all-time, and 58 goals for the club, good for third place. In order to move up the charts in each category, he needed to appear in four matches and score 17 goals. He appeared for the fourth time on the season on March 23, moving up the charts in the Crew's defeat against Philadelphia Union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288399-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Crew SC season, Statistics, Appearances and goals\nJustin Meram also came into the 2019 season sitting in the top ten in club history in both appearances and goals: his 225 appearances were good for fifth place in club history, and his 43 goals were good for sixth. In order to move up, Meram needed to play in 17 games and score 10 goals. He was traded on May 7, however, after playing just nine matches without scoring, departing without moving up in either category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288399-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Crew SC season, Statistics, Appearances and goals\nClub captain Wil Trapp was tenth place in club history in appearances coming into the season, with 177 games played for the Crew. In order to move up, he needed to appear at least 11 times in all competitions. Trapp made his 11th appearance on May 8, starting in the club's victory against LA Galaxy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288399-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Crew SC season, Statistics, Clean sheets\nZack Steffen came into the season with the fifth-most shutouts in club history, keeping 22 through his first three seasons with the club. In order to move up on the all-time charts, he needed to keep two clean sheets in 2019. Steffen accomplished that mark in just three matches, moving up the chart following a clean sheet against FC Dallas on March 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288399-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Crew SC season, Transfers, In, SuperDraft\nThe following players were selected by Columbus in the MLS SuperDraft, but did not sign a contract with the club. Crew SC passed with the 91st overall pick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288400-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Destroyers season\nThe 2019 Columbus Destroyers season was the 11th and last season for the franchise in the Arena Football League, their sixth season in Columbus, and their first season following a 10-year hiatus. The Destroyers played their home games at Nationwide Arena and were coached by Matthew Sauk for the 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288400-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Destroyers season, Standings\ny - clinched regular season titlex - clinched playoff berth", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288400-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Destroyers season, Schedule, Regular season\nThe 2019 regular season schedule was released on February 13, 2019. All times Eastern.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288400-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus Destroyers season, Roster\nRookies in italics updated May 16, 201924 Active, 14 Inactive", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288401-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus, Ohio mayoral election\nThe 2019 Columbus mayoral election took place on November 5, 2019, to elect the Mayor of Columbus, Ohio. The election was officially nonpartisan. Since there were fewer than three candidates, no primary was necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288401-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Columbus, Ohio mayoral election\nIncumbent mayor Andrew Ginther ran unopposed for reelection to a second term. However, write-in votes were allowed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288402-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Combined Austrian Championships\nThe 2019 Combined Austrian Championships were the first Austrian national championships for competition climbing in combined format. It was held in Innsbruck, Austria from 13 to 16 June 2019, together with the Austrian Championships for speed, bouldering and lead disciplines. In this competition, the athletes competed in three disciplines (speed, bouldering, and lead) in combined format. The winner for men was Jakob Schubert and for women was Jessica Pilz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288402-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Combined Austrian Championships, Competition format\nIt was held based on and to simulate the latest Olympic combined format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288402-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Combined Austrian Championships, Competition format\nAthletes were ranked based on their scores in separate disciplines. Points were calculated by multiplying the ranks of each athlete in the three disciplines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288402-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Combined Austrian Championships, Men\nThe final round of combined nationals started with speed discipline, where Matthias Erber took the lead. Next in bouldering, Jakob Schubert climbed strongly to top all three boulder problems in five attempts, two attempts less than the second place Elias Weiler. Last in lead, Schubert topped the route, the only one to do so. Schubert won the competition with just 3 points (3x1x1), far ahead the second place Nicolai Uznik's 48 points (4x3x4).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 41], "content_span": [42, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288402-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Combined Austrian Championships, Women\nThe finals started with speed race, where Sandra Lettner claimed top place. Next in bouldering, Jessica Pilz took the first place by topping all three boulder problems in six attempts, three attempts less than Lettner. Last in lead, Pilz continued to show her climbing prowess and became the only one to top the route. After multiplying the ranks of the three disciplines, Pilz won with 3 points (3x1x1), while Lettner took the second place with 10 points (1x2x5).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288403-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Combined Japan Cup\nThe 2019 Combined Japan Cup was the second of the competition. It was organized by the JMSCA (Japan Mountaineering and Sport Climbing Association). It was held from 25 to 26 May 2019 in Saij\u014d city, Ehime Prefecture. The athletes competed in combined format of three disciplines: speed, bouldering, and lead. The winner for men was Tomoa Narasaki and for women was Miho Nonaka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288403-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Combined Japan Cup, Competition format\nIt was held to simulate the latest Olympic combined format. It was also held to decide the athletes to compete in the 2019 IFSC Climbing World Championships in August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288403-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Combined Japan Cup, Competition format\nAthletes were ranked based on their scores in separate disciplines. Points were calculated by multiplying the ranks of each athlete in the three disciplines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288403-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Combined Japan Cup, Men\nTomoa Narasaki set a new Japan national record for speed climbing of 6.291s in the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 28], "content_span": [29, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288403-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Combined Japan Cup, Women\nMiho Nonaka set a new Japan national record for speed climbing of 8.499s in the qualifications.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288404-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Combined Slovenian Championships\nThe 2019 Combined Slovenian Championships were the first Slovenian national championships for competition climbing in combined format. It was held in Celje, Slovenia from 14 to 16 June 2019. The athletes competed in speed, bouldering, and lead disciplines, and the combined results of those disciplines would determine the winners. The winner for men was Jernej Kruder and for women was Janja Garnbret.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288404-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Combined Slovenian Championships, Competition format\nIt was held based on and to simulate the latest Olympic combined format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288404-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Combined Slovenian Championships, Competition format\nAthletes were ranked based on their scores in separate disciplines. Points were calculated by multiplying the ranks of each athlete in the three disciplines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288404-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Combined Slovenian Championships, Men\nThe final round started with speed race, which in the final race Jernej Kruder false started, giving an easy win for \u017diga Zajc. Next in the bouldering, Kruder made amends by topping all three boulder problems in five attempts, just one attempt less than the second place, An\u017ee Peharc. Lastly in the lead, Domen \u0160kofic leading the way, though not topping the route, and Kruder placed second which ultimately made him the winner of the competition. \u0160kofic took second place, and Peharc third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 42], "content_span": [43, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288404-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Combined Slovenian Championships, Women\nThe finals started with speed discipline, where Ur\u0161ka Repu\u0161i\u010d won after Janja Garnbret false started in the final race. Next in the bouldering, Vita Lukan led the way by topping all three boulder problems in just four attempts, where the second place Lu\u010dka Rakovec needed one more and the third place Janja Garnbret needed two more attempts. Coming to the last climbs in lead, the competition was very tight as there were three people with combined points of 6 and one with 7 so far. Two people topped the route, and the faster one, Garnbret, became the winner, and Rakovec took second place. In the end, after multiplying the ranks of each event, Garnbret became the women's champion of combined nationals, Rakovec closely behind in second place, and Lukan completing the podium in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 840]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288405-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Comorian presidential election\nEarly presidential elections were held in the Comoros on 24 March 2019 alongside regional elections. A second round would have been held on 21 April if required, but incumbent President Azali Assoumani was re-elected in the first round of voting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288405-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Comorian presidential election, Electoral system\nUntil 2018, the presidency of the Comoros rotated between the country's three main islands; Anjouan, Grande Comore and Moh\u00e9li. The 2010 elections were limited to Moh\u00e9lian candidates and the 2016 elections saw candidates from Grand Comore contest the elections. The next presidential election would have seen a president elected from Anjouan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288405-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Comorian presidential election, Electoral system\nHowever, a constitutional referendum in July 2018 saw voters approve constitutional amendments that scrapped the rotation system and instituted a standard two-round system in which a candidate has to receive a majority of the vote in the first round to be elected, with a second round held if no candidate is able to win in the first round. The changes also moved the next presidential elections forward to 2019 and allowed incumbent President Azali Assoumani run for a second term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288405-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Comorian presidential election, Electoral system\nThe referendum led to violent protests and an armed uprising in Anjouan in October 2018, which was stopped by the army after several days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288405-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Comorian presidential election, Candidates\nA total of 20 candidates registered to contest the elections, with the Supreme Court determining the final list of eligible participants. Incumbent President Assoumani ran for reelection, whilst other candidates attempting to register included the two losing candidates from the nationwide vote in 2016 (Mohamed Ali Soilihi and Mouigni Baraka) and Salim Saadi, who contested the 2016 primary elections as an independent. Seven of the 20 applicants were rejected, including the main opposition candidate Ibrahim Mohamed Soul\u00e9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288405-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Comorian presidential election, Aftermath\nFollowing the election, the fourth-placed candidate Mohamed Soilihi called for the results to be invalidated and for a campaign of civil disobedience. He was subsequently arrested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288406-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Comoros Premier League\nThe 2019 Comoros Premier League is the top level football competition in the Comoros.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288406-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Comoros Premier League, National championship\nThe champions of the three regional leagues of each island will take part in the final tournament to determinate the overall champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288407-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Compostela Valley renaming plebiscite\nOn December 7, 2019, a plebiscite was held to determine if residents of the Philippine province of Compostela Valley approve the renaming of their province to Davao de Oro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288407-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Compostela Valley renaming plebiscite, Background\nThe province of Compostela Valley was carved out from Davao del Norte in 1998. In early 2019, Republic Act No. 11297 was passed into law renaming Compostela Valley to Davao de Oro, subject to the province's residents' approval in a plebiscite. The legislation was signed into law by President Rodrigo Duterte on April 17, 2019 and the signing was made known to the public on May 23, 2019. The Philippine national government's Commission on Elections (Comelec) was tasked to supervise and conduct the required plebiscite.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288407-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Compostela Valley renaming plebiscite, Background\nRepublic Act No. 11297 was proposed as House Bill 7363, which was filed before the House of Representatives on May 15, 2018, and Senate Bill 1746, which was filed before the Senate on December 10, 2018. Representatives Pedro Acharon Jr., Ruwel Peter Gonzaga, and Maria Carmen Zamora were the proponents of HB 7363 and Senators Juan Miguel Zubiri and Sonny Angara were the proponents of the Senate counterpart of the House bill. The two proposed bills were consolidated on January 29, 2019. Supporters of the renaming said that renaming Compostella Valley to Davao de Oro would strengthen the association of the province with the rest of the Davao Region; prior to the plebiscite, Davao de Oro as Compostella Valley was the only province in the region without \"Davao\" in its name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 834]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288407-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Compostela Valley renaming plebiscite, Background\nAs per Resolution No. 10614 of Comelec, all voters in the 11 municipalities of Compostela Valley who voted in the 2019 Philippine general election were eligible to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288407-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Compostela Valley renaming plebiscite, Preparations, Campaign\nSince March 2019, the provincial government of Compostela Valley led by governor Tyrone Uy started the campaign to convince voters to approve the renaming of their province. Tyrone Uy's campaign was helped by Arturo Uy, his father and a former governor of his province. The proposed name of \"Davao de Oro\" was formally launched on March 8, 2019 during the Bulawan Festival.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288407-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Compostela Valley renaming plebiscite, Preparations, Organization\nPolling for the plebiscite was scheduled to run from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. on December 7, 2019. \u20b154 million was allocated for the conduct of the plebiscite. President Rodrigo Duterte also directed the police and the military to ensure the security of the province during the plebiscite. A province-wide gun ban was imposed in Compostela Valley from November 7 to December 7, 2019 and at least one police checkpoint was set up in each of the province's 11 municipalities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288407-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Compostela Valley renaming plebiscite, Preparations, Question\nThe question used in the ballot was in Filipino and voters were asked to vote either \"yes\" or \"no\". The question was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288407-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Compostela Valley renaming plebiscite, Preparations, Question\n\"Pumapayag ka ba na palitan ang pangalan ng lalawigan ng Compostela Valley at gawing lalawigan ng Davao de Oro alinsunod sa Batas Republika bilang 11297?\"transl. Do you approve of the change of the name of the Province of Compostela Valley to Province of Davao de Oro by virtue of Republic Act No. 11297?", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288407-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Compostela Valley renaming plebiscite, Preparations, Question\nVoters wrote \"yes\" or \"no\" or its equivalent in Filipino.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288407-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Compostela Valley renaming plebiscite, Results\nThe results of the plebiscite was counted manually and was submitted to the Provincial Plebiscite Board of Canvassers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288407-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Compostela Valley renaming plebiscite, Results\nThe turnout of the plebiscite as per the Comelec was around 45 percent which translates to 178,953 participants out of the 410,262 eligible votes. Majority of the voters favored the renaming with 174,442 voting \"yes\" and 5,020 voted \"no\". Canvassing was slowed due to inconsistencies regarding the number of votes in four municipalities. The results of the plebiscite was approved by the Comelec at 10:24\u00a0p.m. on December 8, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288408-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference Carolinas Men's Volleyball Tournament\nThe 2019 Conference Carolinas Men's Volleyball Tournament was the men's volleyball tournament for Conference Carolinas during the 2019 NCAA Division I & II men's volleyball season. It was held April 13 through April 18, 2019 at campus sites. The winner received the conference's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Volleyball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288408-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference Carolinas Men's Volleyball Tournament, Seeds\nEight of the nine teams are eligible for the postseason, with the highest seed hosting each round. Teams are seeded by record within the conference, with a tiebreaker system to seed teams with identical conference records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 60], "content_span": [61, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288408-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference Carolinas Men's Volleyball Tournament, Bracket\nThe win clinched Barton's second trip to the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 62], "content_span": [63, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288409-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA Baseball Tournament\nThe 2019 Conference USA Baseball Tournament was held from May 22 through May 26 at MGM Park in Biloxi, Mississippi. The annual tournament determined the conference champion of the Division I Conference USA for college baseball. The tournament champion, Southern Miss, received the league's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288409-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA Baseball Tournament\nThe tournament was established in 1996, Conference USA's first season of play. Rice has won the most championships, with seven. Defending champion Southern Miss has four titles, and UAB and FIU each have one. No other current members have won the event, with the Conference seeing major changes in membership in recent years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288409-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA Baseball Tournament, Seeding and format\nThe top eight finishers from the regular season were seeded one through eight. The tournament used a double elimination format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288410-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA Football Championship Game\nThe 2019 Conference USA Football Championship Game was a college football game played on Saturday, December 7, 2019, at FAU Stadium in Boca Raton, Florida, to determine the 2019 champion of Conference USA (C\u2013USA). The game featured the East division champions Florida Atlantic and the West division champions UAB and was the conference's 15th championship game. With sponsorship from Ryan LLC, a global tax services and software provider, the game was officially the 2019 Ryan Conference USA Football Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288410-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA Football Championship Game, Previous season\nThe 2018 Conference USA Football Championship Game featured East Division champion Middle Tennessee against West Division champion UAB in a rematch of the regular season match up a week before. Unlike the week prior, UAB was able to get a final field goal to take the lead, towards the end of the 4th quarter in a win of 27\u201325.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288410-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA Football Championship Game, Teams\nThe 2019 CUSA Football Championship Game was contested by the Florida Atlantic Owls, East Division champions, and the UAB Blazers, West Division co\u2013champions. The teams have met eight times previously, with Florida Atlantic holding a 6\u20132 edge in the series. The teams' last meeting came in 2014; UAB won, 31\u201328. Florida Atlantic's last victory in the series came in 2013, when they defeated UAB 37\u20133. This will be the teams' first meeting in the CUSA Football Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 53], "content_span": [54, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288410-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA Football Championship Game, Teams, Florida Atlantic\nFlorida Atlantic clinched its spot in the Championship Game after its November 30 win over Southern Miss. This is Florida Atlantic's second overall appearance in the Championship Game in three seasons. The Owls were previously 1\u20130 overall in the game, with their sole win back in 2017 against North Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 71], "content_span": [72, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288410-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA Football Championship Game, Teams, UAB\nUAB earned its spot after clinching the West Division title on November 30 with a win over North Texas. This will be UAB's second appearance in the title game, when they defeated Middle Tennessee last season, 27\u201325. The Blazers are the first team to represent the West Division twice consecutively since former CUSA member, Tulsa, did back in 2008. Eight different teams had represented the division each year since then. UAB was previously 1\u20130 overall in the game, with their sole win last season against Middle Tennessee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 58], "content_span": [59, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288411-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 Conference USA Men's Basketball Tournament was the concluding event of the 2018\u201319 Conference USA (C-USA) men's basketball season. It was held from March 13\u201316, 2019 alongside the C-USA women's tournament in Frisco, Texas, at the Ford Center at The Star. In the first round and quarterfinals, two games were played simultaneously within the same arena, with the courts separated by a curtain. Old Dominion defeated Western Kentucky 62\u201356 in the championship game to win the tournament, and received the conference's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Tournament. It was their first Conference USA title since joining the conference six years ago.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288411-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nOnly 12 conference teams play in the tournament. The top four teams receive a bye to the quarterfinals of the tournament. Teams are seeded within one of three groups. After each team had played 14 conference games, the teams were divided into groups based on conference record at that point in the season. The top five teams were placed in one group, the next five in a second group, and the bottom four in a final group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 54], "content_span": [55, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288411-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Conference USA Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nAll teams were at that time locked into a seeding range that corresponded to their group\u2014for example, the top five teams were assured the top five seeds. The remaining four conference games were played strictly within each group. The final seeding within each group is determined by overall conference record, with a tiebreaker system to seed teams with identical conference records. Only the top two teams within the bottom group enter the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 54], "content_span": [55, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288412-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA Men's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2019 Conference USA Men's Soccer Tournament, was the 25th edition of the tournament. It determined Conference USA's automatic berth into the 2019 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament. The tournament began November 13 and concluded on November 17. The tournament was hosted by Old Dominion University, and all matches were played at the ODU Soccer Complex in Norfolk, Virginia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288412-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA Men's Soccer Tournament\nTop-seed, Marshall, won their first Conference USA championship, defeating Charlotte in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288412-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA Men's Soccer Tournament, Seeds\nThe top six teams in C-USA by conference records qualified for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288413-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA Women's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 Conference USA Women's Basketball Tournament was a postseason women's basketball tournament for Conference USA that was held at The Ford Center at The Star in Frisco, Texas, from March 13 through March 16, 2019. In the first round and quarterfinals, two games were played simultaneously within the same arena, with the courts separated by a curtain. Rice won the conference tournament championship game over Middle Tennessee, 69\u201354. Nancy Mulkey was named the tournament's Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288413-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA Women's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nThe top twelve teams will qualify for the tournament. Teams will be seeded by record within the conference, with a tiebreaker system to seed teams with identical conference records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 56], "content_span": [57, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288414-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA Women's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2019 Conference USA Women's Soccer Tournament was the postseason women's soccer tournament for Conference USA held from November 6 through November 10, 2019. The seven-match tournament took place at Mean Green Soccer Complex in Denton, Texas. The eight-team single-elimination tournament consisted of three rounds based on seeding from regular season conference play. The defending champions were the North Texas Mean Green, who defended their title after defeating the Florida Atlantic Owls in the final. The conference championship was the fourth for the North Texas women's soccer program, all four of which have come under the direction of head coach John Hedlund.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288414-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA Women's Soccer Tournament, All-Tournament Team\nNote: Offensive MVP shown in bold, defensive MVP shown in italics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288415-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA football season\nThe 2019 Conference USA football season was the 24th season of College Football play for Conference USA (C-USA). It was played from August 29, 2019 until January 2020. Conference USA consisted of 14 members in two divisions. It was part of the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288415-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA football season\nThe conference consists of 14 members. The Conference USA Football Championship game was played on December 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288415-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA football season, Preseason, Media predictions\nThe 2019 preseason media football poll was released on July 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288415-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA football season, Head coaches\nNote: All stats shown are before beginning of the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288415-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA football season, Postseason, Bowl games\nRankings are from CFP rankings. All times Central Time Zone. C-USA teams shown in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288415-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA football season, Awards and honors, C\u2013USA Individual Awards\nThe following individuals received postseason honors as voted by the Conference USA football coaches at the end of the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 79], "content_span": [80, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288415-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA football season, Awards and honors, All-conference teams\nOffense:QB \u2013 Chris Reynolds, R-So., Charlotte \u2022 QB \u2013 James Morgan, Gr., FIU \u2022 QB \u2013 Jack Abraham, R-Jr., Southern Miss \u2022 RB \u2013 Anthony Jones, R-Sr., FIU \u2022 RB \u2013 Tre Siggers, R-So., North Texas \u2022 RB \u2013 De\u2019Michael Harris, Sr., Southern Miss \u2022 RB \u2013 Sincere McCormick, Fr., UTSA \u2022 OL \u2013 D\u2019Ante Demery, Jr., FIU \u2022 OL \u2013 Devontay Taylor, R-Jr., FIU \u2022 OL \u2013 Desmond Noel, R-Jr., Florida Atlantic \u2022 OL \u2013 Willie Allen, R-Jr., Louisiana Tech \u2022 OL \u2013 Drew Kirkpatrick, R-Sr., Louisiana Tech \u2022 OL \u2013 Kody Russey, R-Jr., Louisiana Tech \u2022 OL \u2013 Gewhite Stallworth, R-Sr., Louisiana Tech \u2022 OL \u2013 Will Gilchrist, Jr., Middle Tennessee \u2022 OL \u2013 Robert Jones, Jr., Middle Tennessee \u2022 OL \u2013 Isaac Weaver, Jr., Old Dominion \u2022 OL \u2013 Shea Baker, R-So., Rice \u2022 OL \u2013 Brian Chaffin, Gr., Rice \u2022 OL \u2013 Justin Gooseberry, Gr., Rice \u2022 OL \u2013 Nick Leverett, Gr., Rice \u2022 OL \u2013 Arvin Fletcher, R-Jr., Southern Miss \u2022 OL \u2013 Colby Ragland, R-Jr., UAB \u2022 OL \u2013 Sidney Wells, Jr., UAB \u2022 OL \u2013 Bobby DeHaro, R-So., UTEP \u2022 OL \u2013 Spencer Burford, So., UTSA \u2022 OL \u2013 Josh Dunlop, Sr., UTSA \u2022 OL \u2013 Jordan Meredith, R-Jr., WKU \u2022 TE \u2013 John Raine, Sr., Florida Atlantic \u2022 TE \u2013 Jason Pirtle, R-Jr., North Texas \u2022 TE \u2013 Carlos Strickland II, Jr., UTSA \u2022 TE \u2013 Joshua Simon, Fr., WKU \u2022 WR \u2013 Victor Tucker, R-So., Charlotte \u2022 WR \u2013 Tony Gaiter IV, Sr., FIU \u2022 WR \u2013 Deangelo Antoine, Sr., Florida Atlantic \u2022 WR \u2013 Adrian Hardy, R-Jr., Louisiana Tech \u2022 WR \u2013 Malik Stanley, R-Sr., Louisiana Tech \u2022 WR \u2013 Jyaire Shorter, Fr., North Texas \u2022 WR \u2013 Brad Rozner, Jr., Rice \u2022 WR \u2013 Austin Trammell, Jr., Rice \u2022 WR \u2013 Myron Mitchell, R-Jr., UAB", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 1629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288415-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA football season, Awards and honors, All-conference teams\nDefense:DT \u2013 Ray Ellis, Gr., Florida Atlantic \u2022 DT \u2013 Milton Williams, R-So., Louisiana Tech \u2022 DT \u2013 Dion Novil, Jr., North Texas \u2022 DT \u2013 Myles Adams, Sr., Rice \u2022 DT \u2013 Delmond Landry, R-Sr., Southern Miss \u2022 DT \u2013 Tony Fair, R-Jr., UAB \u2022 DT \u2013 Jaylon Haynes, Jr., UTSA \u2022 DT \u2013 Jeremy Darvin, R-Jr., WKU \u2022 DT \u2013 Jaylon George, R-Sr., WKU \u2022 DE \u2013 Markees Watts, So., Charlotte \u2022 DE \u2013 Tim Bonner, R-Sr., Florida Atlantic \u2022 DE \u2013 Willie Baker, R-Jr., Louisiana Tech \u2022 DE \u2013 Darius Hodge, R-So., Marshall \u2022 DE \u2013 LaDarius Hamilton, Sr., North Texas \u2022 DE \u2013 Derek Wilder, Sr., Old Dominion \u2022 DE \u2013 Jacques Turner, R-Jr., Southern Miss \u2022 DE \u2013 Fitzgerald Mofor, R-Sr., UAB \u2022 DE \u2013 Eric Banks, Sr., UTSA \u2022 DE \u2013 Jarrod Carter-McLin, Sr., UTSA \u2022 LB \u2013 Jeff Gemmell, R-Sr., Charlotte \u2022 LB \u2013 Rashad Smith, Sr., Florida Atlantic \u2022 LB \u2013 Collin Scott, R-Sr., Louisiana Tech \u2022 LB \u2013 Connor Taylor, Sr., Louisiana Tech \u2022 LB \u2013 KD Davis, So., North Texas \u2022 LB \u2013 Tyreke Davis, Jr., North Texas \u2022 LB \u2013 Racheem Boothe, R-Jr., Southern Miss \u2022 LB \u2013 Swayze Bozeman, Jr., Southern Miss \u2022 LB \u2013 Kyle Bailey, Jr., WKU \u2022 DB \u2013 Nafees Lyon, R-Sr., Charlotte \u2022 DB \u2013 Zyon Gilbert, Jr., Florida Atlantic \u2022 DB \u2013 James Pierre, Jr., Florida Atlantic \u2022 DB \u2013 Chris Tooley, Sr., Florida Atlantic \u2022 DB \u2013 Michael Sam, R-Sr., Louisiana Tech \u2022 DB \u2013 Nazeeh Johnson, R- Jr., Marshall \u2022 DB \u2013 Jovante Moffatt, Sr., Middle Tennessee \u2022 DB \u2013 Treshawn Chamberlain, So., Rice \u2022 DB \u2013 Ky\u2019el Hemby, R-Jr., Southern Miss \u2022 DB \u2013 Rachuan Mitchell, R-Jr., Southern Miss \u2022 DB \u2013 Will Boler, R-So., UAB \u2022 DB \u2013 TD Marshall, R-Jr., UAB \u2022 DB \u2013 Dy\u2019Jonn Turner, Jr., UAB \u2022 DB \u2013 Michael Lewis, R-Sr., UTEP \u2022 DB \u2013 Ta\u2019Corian Darden, R-Sr., WKU \u2022 DB \u2013 Devon Key, R-Jr., WKU \u2022 DB \u2013 Antwon Kincade, Jr., WKU \u2022 DB \u2013 Trae Meadows, R-Jr., WKU", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 1823]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288415-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA football season, Awards and honors, All-conference teams\nSpecial Teams:K \u2013 Ethan Mooney, So., North Texas \u2022 K \u2013 Andrew Stein, Fr., Southern Miss \u2022 K \u2013 Nick Vogel, R-Sr., UAB \u2022 K \u2013 Gavin Baechle, So., UTEP \u2022 P \u2013 Tommy Heatherly, Jr., FIU \u2022 P \u2013 Alvin Kenworthy, R-Sr., North Texas \u2022 KR \u2013 Deangelo Antoine, Gr., Florida Atlantic \u2022 KR \u2013 Blake Watson, R-Fr., Old Dominion \u2022 KR \u2013 Myron Mitchell, R-Jr., UAB \u2022 KR \u2013 Duron Lowe, R-Jr., UTEP \u2022 PR \u2013 Darrell Brown, Sr., Old Dominion \u2022 PR \u2013 Justin Garrett, R-Jr., UTEP \u2022 LS \u2013 Jonathan Sullivan, Jr., Florida Atlantic \u2022 LS \u2013 Nate Durham, Jr., North Texas \u2022 LS \u2013 Campbell Riddle, So., Rice \u2022 LS \u2013 T.J. Harvey, R-Fr., Southern Miss \u2022 LS \u2013 Jacob Fuqua, R-Jr., UAB", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288415-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA football season, Awards and honors, All-Americans\nThe 2019 College Football All-America Teams are 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), FOX Sports (FOX) College Football News (CFN), Bleacher Report (BR), Scout.com, Phil Steele (PS), SB Nation (SB), Athlon Sports, Pro Football Focus (PFF) and Yahoo! Sports (Yahoo! ).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288415-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA football season, Awards and honors, All-Americans\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. Any player named to the First Team by all five of the NCAA-recognized selectors is deemed a Unanimous All-American.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 933]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288415-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA football season, C-USA records vs Other Conferences, C-USA vs Power Five matchups\nThis is a list of games the Sun Belt has scheduled versus power conference teams (ACC, Big 10, Big 12, Pac-12, BYU/Notre Dame and SEC). All rankings are from the current AP Poll at the time of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 101], "content_span": [102, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288415-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA football season, C-USA records vs Other Conferences, C-USA vs Group of Five matchups\nThe following games include C-USA teams competing against teams from the American, MAC, Mountain West or Sun Belt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 104], "content_span": [105, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288415-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA football season, C-USA records vs Other Conferences, C-USA vs FBS independents matchups\nThe following games include C-USA teams competing against FBS Independents, which includes Army, Liberty, New Mexico State, or UMass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 107], "content_span": [108, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288415-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA football season, NFL Draft\nThe following list includes all C-USA players who were drafted in the 2020 NFL Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288416-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA men's soccer season\nThe 2019 Conference USA men's soccer season was the 25th season of men's varsity soccer in the conference. The season began on August 25 and concluded on November 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288416-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA men's soccer season, Background, Previous season\nAhead of the 2018 NCAA Division I men's soccer season, FIU was ranked 20th in the United Soccer Coaches preseason poll. As the season progressed, Kentucky emerged as the one of the strongest teams in the nation, being ranked as high as third in the country. Kentucky finished the season with a program best record of 19\u20132\u20131. Kentucky would also go on to win the C-USA regular season, win the 2018 Conference USA Men's Soccer Tournament, and reach the Elite Eight of the 2018 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament. Additionally, C-USA runners-up, Charlotte earned an at-large bit into the NCAA Tournament. Old Dominion, who had one point been ranked as high as 18th in the nation, were one of the first teams out of the NCAA Tournament bubble.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 68], "content_span": [69, 813]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288416-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA men's soccer season, Background, Head coaching changes\nThe New Mexico Lobos men's soccer program was relegated from a varsity to a club sport. Head coach Jeremy Fishbein's contract expired with the termination of the New Mexico varsity program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 74], "content_span": [75, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288416-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA men's soccer season, Background, Head coaching changes\nLong-time UAB Blazers men's soccer head coach, Mike Getman, retired following the conclusion of the 2018 NCAA Division I men's soccer season. Getman was replaced by Virginia Tech assistant coach, Jeff Kinney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 74], "content_span": [75, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288416-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA men's soccer season, Preseason, Preseason national rankings\nThe preseason national rankings will be announced in August 2019. United Soccer Coaches, Soccer America, and TopDrawerSoccer.com do a Top-25 preseason poll. CollegeSoccerNews.com and Hero Sports do a Top-30 preseason poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 79], "content_span": [80, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288416-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA men's soccer season, Regular season, Rankings, Regional - United Soccer Southeast\nThe United Soccer Southeast regional rankings contain teams from Conference USA, the Atlantic 10 Conference, Sun Belt Conference, and Missouri Valley Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 101], "content_span": [102, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288416-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA men's soccer season, Postseason, Conference USA Tournament\nThe Conference USA Men's Soccer Tournament was held from November 13\u201316, 2019 on the campus of Old Dominion University. Marshall won their first ever Conference USA Championship, beating Charlotte in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 78], "content_span": [79, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288416-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA men's soccer season, Awards and honors, Postseason awards, Conference awards\nGK: Elliot Panicco, CharlotteD: Patrick Hogan, CharlotteD: Nick O'Callaghan, FIUD: Aim\u00e9 Mabika, KentuckyD: Illal Osmanu, MarshallMF: Teddy Chaouche, CharlotteMF: Andrew Booth, FIUMF: Alonso Coello Camarero, Florida AtlanticMF: Kalil El-Medkhar, KentuckyF: Alessandro Campoy, FIUF: Milo Yosef, Marshall", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 96], "content_span": [97, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288416-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA men's soccer season, Awards and honors, Postseason awards, Conference awards\nGK: Enrique Facusse, KentuckyGK: Paulo Pita, MarshallD: Jimmy Filerman, Old DominionD: Frano Buhovac, South CarolinaMF: Alban Rousselet, FIUMF: Alex Alexis, Florida AtlanticMF: Marcel Meinzer, KentuckyMF: Pedro Dolabella, MarshallMF: Deniz Dogan, Old DominionF: Ivan Mykhailenko, Florida AtlanticF: Daniel Evans, KentuckyF: Jamil Roberts, Marshall", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 96], "content_span": [97, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288416-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA men's soccer season, Awards and honors, Postseason awards, Conference awards\nGK: Daniel Gagliardi, FIUD: Luke Johnson, CharlotteD: David Garcia, FIUD: Tom Abrahamsson, Florida AtlanticD: Jan-Erik Leinhos, MarshallD: Chris Reichman, UABMF: Joe Brito, CharlotteMF: Xavi Olmos Ferris, FIUMF: Sebastien Hauret, Old DominionMF: Logan Hitzeman, South CarolinaMF: Chase Rushing, UABF: Kameron Lacey, CharlotteF: Brian Banahan, South Carolina", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 96], "content_span": [97, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288416-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA men's soccer season, Awards and honors, Postseason awards, Conference awards\nKameron Lacey, F, CharlotteAxel Sigurdarson, MF, CharlotteAJ Cousins, D, FIUDavid Garcia, D, FIUTom Abrahamsson, D, Florida AtlanticJohn Michael Bandy, D, KentuckyEythor Bjorgolfsson, MF, KentuckyMax Schneider, MF, MarshallMilo Yosef, F, MarshallJose Olmos, D, Old DominionBrian Banahan, F, South CarolinaLogan Hitzeman, MF, South Carolina", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 96], "content_span": [97, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288416-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA men's soccer season, Awards and honors, Postseason awards, All-Americans\nTo earn \"consensus\" status, a player must win honors based on a point system computed from the four different all-America teams. The 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 92], "content_span": [93, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288416-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA men's soccer season, 2020 MLS Draft\nThe 2020 MLS SuperDraft was held in January 2020. Five players from Conference USA were selected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288416-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA men's soccer season, Homegrown players\nThe Homegrown Player Rule is a Major League Soccer program that allows MLS teams to sign local players from their own development academies directly to MLS first team rosters. Before the creation of the rule in 2008, every player entering Major League Soccer had to be assigned through one of the existing MLS player allocation processes, such as the MLS SuperDraft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288416-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA men's soccer season, Homegrown players\nTo place a player on its homegrown player list, making him eligible to sign as a homegrown player, players must have resided in that club's home territory and participated in the club's youth development system for at least one year. Players can play college soccer and still be eligible to sign a homegrown contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288416-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Conference USA men's soccer season, Homegrown players\nNo players from Conference USA signed homegrown contracts following the 2019 season ahead of the 2020 MLS season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288417-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Connacht Senior Football Championship\nThe 2019 Connacht Senior Football Championship is the 120th installment of the annual Connacht Senior Football Championship organised by Connacht GAA. It is one of the four provincial competitions of the 2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship. As of 2018 the competition winners advanced to the \"All-Ireland Super 8s\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288417-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Connacht Senior Football Championship\nThe draw for the Connacht Championship was made on 12 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288417-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Connacht Senior Football Championship\nThe winners receive the J. J. Nestor Cup, named after J. J. Nestor of Quinaltagh, County Galway. For a fourth year in a row, the final was contested between Galway and Roscommon. Roscommon were the winners of the championship, defeating Galway at Pearse Stadium in Salthill by 1-13 to 0-12. In 2020 Sligo skipped the championship due to Covid-19 meaning it could be the last year of London and New York been part of the Connacht championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288417-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Connacht Senior Football Championship, Teams\nThe Connacht championship is contested by the five counties in the Irish province of Connacht plus London and New York.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288417-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Connacht Senior Football Championship, Bracket\nThe Connacht county teams play London and New York on a rotational basis. The match involving New York is now a quarter final \u2013 it was last a preliminary game in 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288418-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Connecticut Sun season\nThe 2019 WNBA season was the 21st season for the Connecticut Sun franchise of the WNBA. It was also the 17th season for the franchise in Connecticut. The team opened the season on May 25 versus the Washington Mystics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288418-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Connecticut Sun season\nThe Sun started the season well, posting a 9\u20134 record through the end of June. They were especially strong at home, going 6\u20130 over the first two months of the season. The end of June into the beginning of July proved to be a rough patch for the team. They lost five straight games from June 23 to July 10. This stretch included one of only two home losses on the season. After this losing streak, the Sun went on a seven game winning streak that lasted from July 12 to August 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288418-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Connecticut Sun season\nThe Sun's final record in July was 5\u20132. The Sun didn't lose in August and posted an 8\u20133 record. The Sun's other home loss came on September 6 as the team closed out the season 1\u20132 in September. The Sun clinched a playoff berth on August 18, and their final 23\u201311 record earned them the second seed in the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288418-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Connecticut Sun season\nAs the second seed, the Sun earned a bye through to the Semifinals. There, they met the #3 seed Los Angeles Sparks. The Sun proved to be too much for the Sparks, sweeping them three games to none. They advanced to the finals where they faced off against the #1 seed Washington Mystics. In a tightly contested finals, the Sun ultimately came up short, losing two games to three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288418-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Connecticut Sun season, Transactions, WNBA Draft\nThe Sun made the following selections in the 2019 WNBA Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election\nThe 2019 Conservative Party leadership election was triggered when Theresa May announced on 24 May 2019 that she would resign as Leader of the Conservative Party on 7 June and as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom once a successor had been elected. Nominations opened on 10 June; 10 candidates were nominated. The first ballot of Members of Parliament (MPs) took place on 13 June, with exhaustive ballots of MPs also taking place on 18, 19 and 20 June, reducing the candidates to two. The general membership of the party elected the leader by postal ballot with the result announced on 23 July, with Boris Johnson being elected with almost twice as many votes as his opponent Jeremy Hunt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election\nSpeculation about a leadership election first arose following the party's performance at the 2017 snap general election. May had called it in hope of increasing her parliamentary majority for Brexit negotiations. However, the Conservatives lost their overall majority in the House of Commons. Subsequent speculation arose from the difficulties May had in obtaining a Brexit deal acceptable to the Conservative Party. These increased in November 2018, with members of the Eurosceptic European Research Group pushing for a vote of no confidence in May, which was defeated in December 2018. In early 2019, Parliament repeatedly voted against May's proposed deal, leading to her resignation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election\nThe first members' vote leadership election of the Conservative Party was held in 2001, but since then the party had been in opposition except in 2016, which concluded with Andrea Leadsom withdrawing before members' vote. With Johnson, it is the first time that Conservative Party members have directly elected a Prime Minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Background\nAfter the 2016 United Kingdom European Union membership referendum saw a 52% to 48% vote in favour of leaving, David Cameron resigned as leader of the Conservative Party and as Prime Minister, triggering the 2016 Conservative Party leadership election. Theresa May, then serving as Home Secretary, won the contest after the withdrawal of Andrea Leadsom, and succeeded Cameron as Prime Minister on 13 July 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Background, Snap general election and aftermath\nMay began the process of Brexit, the UK's withdrawal from the European Union, by triggering Article 50 on 29 March 2017. In April 2017, May announced a snap general election in June in order to \"strengthen her hand\" when she negotiated with the European Union. May aimed to substantially increase the Conservative Party's slim majority, with opinion polls originally predicting a landslide victory for her party. However, the result was a hung parliament, with the number of Conservative seats falling from 330 to 317. This prompted her to broker a confidence and supply deal with Northern Ireland's Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) to support her minority government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 92], "content_span": [93, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Background, Snap general election and aftermath\nMay's handling of the campaign was widely criticised, particularly the role of her chiefs of staff Nick Timothy and Fiona Hill, who both resigned within days of the result. In June 2017, George Osborne, a former Chancellor of the Exchequer, described May as a \"dead woman walking\". A YouGov poll for The Sunday Times had 48% of respondents saying May should resign, with 38% against. A Survation poll for The Mail on Sunday showed a similar result. Former Cabinet minister Anna Soubry called for May to \"consider her position\" after the election result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 92], "content_span": [93, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Background, Snap general election and aftermath\nFormer Cabinet minister Nicky Morgan said that May could not lead the Conservative Party into the next general election, and called for a leadership election in the summer or in 2018 before the Brexit deal would be finalised. After the Grenfell Tower fire in June 2017, May's leadership faced further criticism following her initial refusal to meet victims, and what was described as her poor handling of the crisis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 92], "content_span": [93, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Background, Snap general election and aftermath\nWith May's position weakened, senior figures in the party were said to be preparing for a leadership contest and \"jostling for succession\". Politicians and journalists did not expect May to lead the party at the next general election, with the Sunday Times Political Editor Tim Shipman describing \"the first shots in a battle that could tear the government apart\" as the three then-leading contenders for the leadership, David Davis, Boris Johnson and Philip Hammond, briefed against each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 92], "content_span": [93, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Background, Snap general election and aftermath\nJunior ministers were also said to be frustrated at Cabinet ministers propping up a Prime Minister with no authority in order to further their careers, with some ministers preparing to resign in order to trigger a leadership election. Andrew Mitchell, an ally of Davis, was said to have told a dinner that May was finished and was said to be organising letters to force May to announce her date of departure. A July 2017 report in The Independent said a core of fifteen Conservative MPs were ready to sign letters of no confidence, with forty-eight needed to trigger a contest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 92], "content_span": [93, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Background, Snap general election and aftermath\nMay reportedly announced to Conservative MPs in August 2017 that she would resign as Prime Minister on 30 August 2019. May then announced on 31 August 2017 that she intended to stay on to fight the next general election, which under the Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011 was scheduled to be in 2022, though it could be held earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 92], "content_span": [93, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Background, Snap general election and aftermath\nOn 16 September 2017, Johnson published an article in The Daily Telegraph laying out his vision for Brexit. Many saw this as a way of positioning himself for a leadership challenge, though some commentators such as columnist Iain Dale and Newsnight's political editor Nick Watt argued this was the wrong interpretation and that Johnson's motivation was to assert his influence in Brexit negotiations. The timing of the article\u2014a few days before May was due to give a significant speech on her plans for the UK's relationship with Europe after Brexit, and shortly after a terrorist attack in London\u2014was criticised.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 92], "content_span": [93, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Background, Summer 2018 Cabinet resignations\nFollowing Cabinet agreement for May's proposals on Brexit, Davis resigned as Brexit Secretary on 8 July 2018. Steve Baker, a minister in the same department, resigned later the same day. On the same day it was reported that May was facing the threat of a leadership contest amid mounting anger from supporters of a hard Brexit over her government's Brexit policy. Backbencher Andrea Jenkyns called for her to be replaced, saying \"Theresa May's premiership is over\". Johnson later resigned as Foreign Secretary on 9 July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 89], "content_span": [90, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Background, Summer 2018 Cabinet resignations\nA Daily Telegraph article by Johnson opposing the burqa ban in Denmark in early August 2018 sparked controversy over the language he used, saying women wearing the burqa look like letterboxes or bank robbers. Kimiko de Freytas-Tamura, writing in the New York Times, saw it as an attempt to court an anti-Islamic segment of the Conservative Party membership, who would be the electorate in the final stage of a leadership campaign. Former Attorney General Dominic Grieve said that he would not remain in the party if Johnson became leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 89], "content_span": [90, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Background, Brexit deal presented\nIn November 2018, May presented her final proposal for an initial Brexit deal following negotiations with the EU. Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab and others resigned from the Cabinet in response, with Jacob Rees-Mogg calling for a leadership election for the first time. Members of the Eurosceptic European Research Group including Rees-Mogg and Baker were seen to be launching a coup in mid-November following the Cabinet resignations. There was considerable speculation about whether enough letters of no confidence would be reached to trigger a vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 78], "content_span": [79, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Background, Brexit deal presented\nFifteen percent of the Parliamentary party (forty-eight MPs) need to send a letter to the chairman of the 1922 Committee to trigger a no confidence vote in the Conservative Party leader. As of early afternoon on 16 November 2018, the BBC reported there were twenty-one MPs who had publicly stated they had sent a letter. Baker asserted that more letters had been sent and that he expected forty-eight to be reached in the week beginning 19 November. Some commentators expressed scepticism about this prediction. By 19 November 2018, twenty-six MPs publicly said they had submitted letters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 78], "content_span": [79, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Background, Brexit deal presented\nBaker also suggested that the ERG could draw lots for who would be their candidate in a leadership election. By 20 November, the forty-eight letters had not been reached, with Rees-Mogg predicting that it may be reached in December when the House of Commons was due to vote on May's deal. However, facing likely defeat with opposition from the ERG, DUP and Conservative MPs who had supported Remain during the referendum, the vote in Parliament was delayed to January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 78], "content_span": [79, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Background, Brexit deal presented\nConservative MPs including Dominic Grieve and Kwasi Kwarteng suggested that the party could see members leaving the party or a formal split if the party were led by Johnson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 78], "content_span": [79, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Background, Brexit deal presented, 12 December confidence vote\nBy 11 December, the public count was still at twenty-six letters from MPs. That day, however, Owen Paterson publicly sent his letter and it later became clear that forty-eight letters had been submitted. May was informed, and chose to contest the vote. The confidence vote, held on 12 December, was a secret ballot of Conservative MPs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 107], "content_span": [108, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Background, Brexit deal presented, 12 December confidence vote\nIn the week, May had been meeting EU leaders to discuss changes to her Brexit deal, but cancelled a planned 12 December meeting with the Irish Taoiseach in order to campaign to win the confidence vote. May and her supporters argued that a defeat for her would mean that Brexit would have to be delayed. In a speech to Conservative MPs immediately before voting, May said that she did not intend to lead the party into the 2022 general election and that she would seek a legally binding addition to the withdrawal agreement with the EU to address concerns over the Northern Ireland backstop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 107], "content_span": [108, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Background, Brexit deal presented, 12 December confidence vote\nTwo MPs who had been suspended from the party, Andrew Griffiths and Charlie Elphicke, had the whip restored on the day of the vote, meaning they could also vote. Griffiths indicated his support for May; Elphicke declined to indicate his preference. There were 317 Conservative MPs able to vote. Every member of the Cabinet declared their support for May, including Leave supporters in the Cabinet like Michael Gove and Liam Fox.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 107], "content_span": [108, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Background, Brexit deal presented, 12 December confidence vote\nNotable Remain supporters in the Conservative Party including Anna Soubry also declared support for May, as did May's predecessor, David Cameron, and the leader and acting leader of the Scottish Conservatives. The Tory Reform Group announced their support for May. Notable Leave supporters outside the Cabinet, including Jacob Rees-Mogg and Bill Cash, said they would vote against her.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 107], "content_span": [108, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Background, Brexit deal presented, 12 December confidence vote\nMay won the vote by 200 for to 117 against. Brexit-supporting MPs varied in their response to the result: some, including Rees-Mogg and Raab, called on her to resign nevertheless, while others such as Paterson called on her to change her Brexit policy. As May won this vote, another party leader confidence vote could not be held for one year under standing rules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 107], "content_span": [108, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Background, Further Brexit delays and May's final days\nOn 27 March 2019, May said she would resign before the next stage of EU negotiations if her Brexit deal was passed. With no resolution around Brexit plans, there was continuing pressure for May to resign through April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 99], "content_span": [100, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Background, Further Brexit delays and May's final days\nAfter poor Conservative results in the 2019 local elections\u2014the worst since 1995, when the party lost over 1,000 seats\u2014there were further calls from Conservatives for May to resign. Davis announced his support for Raab, who set out a leadership platform in an interview with The Sunday Times Magazine. With one report saying May intended to remain until autumn 2019, further senior Conservatives openly campaigned to replace her, including Andrea Leadsom, Jeremy Hunt, Michael Gove and Sajid Javid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 99], "content_span": [100, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Background, Further Brexit delays and May's final days\nMay had said that she wanted Parliament to approve her Brexit plan before the summer recess, after which she would resign, which would have been around late July. Further pressure mounted on May to be clear about her timetable for departure, with May meeting the 1922 Committee on the matter on 16 May 2019. There was talk about the Committee changing its rules to allow a new vote of no confidence in May to be held sooner. May was reported as having agreed to stand down by 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 99], "content_span": [100, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Background, Further Brexit delays and May's final days\nOn 21 May, May made a speech outlining her plan to introduce an EU withdrawal agreement bill in June that would allow the Commons to make amendments, such as amendments in favour of a Customs Union or a second referendum, but this was received badly by much of her own party as well as by other parties. There were growing calls for her to resign on 22 May, the day before the European Parliament elections. Andrea Leadsom, the Leader of the House of Commons, resigned that day. May had planned to publish the bill on 24 May, but on polling day (23 May) she abandoned that plan, with publication delayed until early June. On 24 May she announced her resignation as leader of the Conservative Party, effective 7 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 99], "content_span": [100, 821]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Election procedure\nThe principles of the procedure for selecting the leader of the Conservative Party are set in the party's constitution, while the detailed rules are agreed by the 1922 Committee executive in consultation with the Conservative Party Board. Nominations for the leadership are invited by the chair of the 1922 Committee, who acts as returning officer. When nominations close, a list of valid nominations is published. If there is only one valid nomination, that person is elected. If two valid nominations are received, both names go forward to the party membership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Election procedure\nIf more than two nominations are received, a ballot is held within the Parliamentary party. An exhaustive ballot system is used to select two candidates to go forward to the party membership. The 1922 Committee executive considered changing the rules so that four candidates go to the ballot of the party membership. They also recommended increasing the number of MP nominations required to eight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0023-0001", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Election procedure\nOn 4 June the rule change was accepted by the party board, with candidates requiring the support of eight MPs to be nominated, then the support of at least 5% of the Parliamentary Conservative Party in the first ballot, and 10% in the second ballot in order to proceed further. In 2019, this equated to requiring the support of 17 MPs in the first ballot and 33 in the second. If all candidates met the threshold then the candidate with fewest votes would be eliminated. If three or more candidates remained after the second ballot, further ballots would be held, eliminating the candidate with the fewest votes and repeating this process until two candidates remained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Election procedure\nNominations opened on 7 June and closed on 10 June. The first ballot was held on 13 June, with subsequent ballots being held on 18, 19 and 20 June. The first membership hustings was scheduled for 22 June and the ballot of the membership was to take place over the following month, with the winner announced on 23 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Campaign, Speculation\nA large number of candidates attracted attention or were the subject of speculation over an extended period before the election was called. In 2017, the main contenders were initially seen to be Philip Hammond, David Davis, Boris Johnson and Amber Rudd. By early August 2017, Jacob Rees-Mogg was receiving considerable attention and he had risen to second in the betting markets after Davis. There was considerable speculation that the party's leader in Scotland, Ruth Davidson, could attempt to become the next leader, despite being ineligible as she was not an MP at Westminster. In September 2018, she said that she did not want the job and would focus on politics in Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 66], "content_span": [67, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Campaign, Speculation\nFollowing renewed speculation about May's leadership after Johnson and Davis resigned from the Cabinet in summer 2018, press interest focused on Johnson, Rees-Mogg, Michael Gove, Sajid Javid and Jeremy Hunt. Dominic Raab became Brexit Secretary after Davis. In November 2018, following his resignation from the role over a proposed deal on the UK's departure from the European Union, Raab became the bookmakers' favourite to be new leader, followed by Javid or Johnson. Raab opposed holding a leadership election, but did not rule out his candidacy. Esther McVey, who resigned her position as Secretary of State for Work and Pensions on the same day, indicated that she would stand as a candidate if she had support.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 66], "content_span": [67, 783]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Campaign, Speculation\nBy December 2018, Johnson, Javid and Rudd were all reported to be contemplating running if May were voted out. In November and December, other potential candidates included Gove, Hunt, Raab, Davis and Penny Mordaunt. Bookmakers had Johnson as most likely to succeed May on the morning of 12 December confidence vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 66], "content_span": [67, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Campaign, Candidates declare\nOn 2 May 2019, Rory Stewart, the International Development Secretary, announced his candidacy for the leadership. He stated that he would \"bring the country together\" as Prime Minister. Following a poor result for the party in the 2019 local elections on 2 May 2019, Dominic Raab, Sajid Javid, Michael Gove and Matt Hancock gave speeches and interviews that the journalist Tim Shipman described as a \"beauty contest between those jostling to succeed Theresa May\". On 4 May 2019, David Davis announced he would not seek the party leadership, and would instead support Raab if he chose to run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 73], "content_span": [74, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0028-0001", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Campaign, Candidates declare\nOn 8 May 2019, Andrea Leadsom, the Leader of the House of Commons, stated she was \"seriously considering\" a second bid for the party leadership. On 9 May 2019, McVey announced she would be standing for the leadership. She stated that she had \"enough support\" from fellow MPs to \"go forward\" once May stepped down as Prime Minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 73], "content_span": [74, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Campaign, Candidates declare\nOn 24 May, the day May resigned, Johnson told an economic conference in Switzerland that, \"We will leave the EU on October 31, deal or no deal.\" Stewart ruled out serving in a cabinet under Johnson over Johnson's support for a no-deal Brexit, which he believed was \"undeliverable, unnecessary and is going to damage our country and economy.\" On the same day, Jeremy Hunt announced his candidacy for the leadership at a festival in his constituency. Matt Hancock, Dominic Raab, and Andrea Leadsom announced their candidacies the following day, 25 May; Michael Gove declared his own shortly afterwards, on 26 May, with Sajid Javid and Kit Malthouse following the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 73], "content_span": [74, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Campaign, Candidates declare\nOn 28 May, Gove promised to remove the charge for UK citizenship applications from EU nationals if elected. Hunt condemned a no-deal Brexit as \"suicide\", but McVey said it would be \"political suicide\" to not leave at the earliest opportunity. Both BBC News and Sky News invited candidates to debates. On 29 May, James Cleverly announced his candidacy. Hunt and Stewart both admitted during campaigning that they had taken illegal drugs in the past when abroad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 73], "content_span": [74, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0030-0001", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Campaign, Candidates declare\nFormer Conservative leader Iain Duncan Smith warned on 30 May that there were too many candidates running and urged the 1922 committee to \"accelerate the process.\" That same day, Mark Harper announced his candidacy. On 1 June, Liz Truss revealed an article of hers to be published the following day in The Mail on Sunday, providing Johnson with his first endorsement from a Cabinet minister. Donald Trump said: \"I think Boris would do a very good job. I think he would be excellent.\" When prompted on Gove and Hunt, Trump said he liked the latter, and criticised the former for his stance on Iran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 73], "content_span": [74, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Campaign, After recess\nOn 2 June, Sam Gyimah said no deal would be an \"abject failure\" and entered the race as the only candidate to back a referendum on the Brexit deal, with the options of remaining in the EU, leaving without a deal, or leaving with the current deal. He withdrew eight days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 67], "content_span": [68, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Campaign, After recess\nThe One Nation conservative caucus of MPs announced a series of hustings over the week prior to close of nominations on 10 June. With so many candidates in the race, candidates with less support from fellow MPs were under mounting pressure to leave the leadership race. James Cleverly and then Kit Malthouse dropped out of the race on 4 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 67], "content_span": [68, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Campaign, After recess\nOn the same day, the 1922 Committee decided on a rule change to the contest, determining that to make the ballot, MPs must have eight nominations by 10 June. The last-placed candidate in each round would be eliminated, but in addition, to survive the first and second ballots, MPs must obtain at least 5% and 10% of the total available votes (313) respectively (plus one representing their own vote; i.e., 17 and 33 respectively). The contest was to end in the week beginning 22 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 67], "content_span": [68, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Campaign, After recess\nBy 5 June, Johnson was the clear favourite with the bookmakers, with Gove second favourite. In the hustings, Javid said he did not want to \"become the Brexit Party\" but Johnson said the party needed to \"deliver Brexit on 31 October\", whilst Hancock called Jeremy Corbyn an anti-Semite. On 7 June, Gove admitted to taking cocaine twenty years previously. Before nominations formally opened on 10 June, Johnson promised to cut income tax for higher earners and Gove to reduce VAT. Johnson also pledged to refuse to pay \u00a339 billion to the EU. Candidates Hunt, Raab, Hancock, McVey and Gove all formally launched their campaigns on 10 June. Johnson launched his campaign on 12 June. He sidestepped a question about his previous admission that he had taken cocaine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 67], "content_span": [68, 828]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Campaign, After recess\nRaab said that he would be willing to prorogue Parliament in order to ensure the UK's departure from the European Union, particularly in order to leave without a deal. Johnson refused to rule out prorogation, leading to Stewart saying that he would set up an \"alternative Parliament\" to stop him if he prorogued Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 67], "content_span": [68, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Campaign, After recess\nOn 13 June, the Chancellor Philip Hammond wrote to candidates asking them to restrict themselves in any policy pledges they made to the current 2% of GDP deficit limit. This followed Raab saying he would reduce the income tax basic rate by 5p costing more than \u00a320 billion annually, and Johnson saying he would raise the higher tax rate starting threshold from \u00a350,000 to \u00a380,000 costing \u00a310 billion annually.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 67], "content_span": [68, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Campaign, MP ballots\nIn the first MP ballot on 13 June, Leadsom, Harper and McVey were eliminated as they failed to obtain 17 votes. Johnson came first, with over a third of MPs' support\u2014enough to ensure, were none of those who voted for him to change their minds in subsequent ballots, that he would be one of the final two on whom the membership voted. Hancock withdrew the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Campaign, MP ballots\nJohnson was criticised for avoiding media interviews and not participating in the first TV debate, held on 16 June on Channel 4. All the other candidates took part, with an Opinium survey of those watching the debate having Stewart as the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Campaign, MP ballots\nIn the second MP ballot on 18 June, Johnson retained his substantial lead, increased by twelve compared to the first ballot. Hunt retained second place, but Stewart was the biggest gainer, up 18. Raab was eliminated as both the bottom candidate and for getting less than the required 33 votes. All five remaining candidates, Johnson, Hunt, Gove, Stewart and Javid, took part in a BBC debate later that same day. One poll after the debate found Stewart again to be the winner, but a second found Johnson ahead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Campaign, MP ballots\nThe third MP ballot on 19 June saw the top three remain the same (Johnson, Hunt, Gove). Stewart was the only candidate to lose votes compared to the previous round, down ten to come last, and was thus eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Campaign, MP ballots\nThe fourth and fifth MP ballots were on 20 June. In the fourth ballot, Javid was eliminated, while Gove narrowly overtook Hunt for second place. The fifth ballot to produce a final candidate pairing eliminated Gove, who received two votes fewer than Hunt. There were questions raised as to whether the Johnson campaign encouraged some supporters to vote for Hunt instead in order to knock Gove out of the leadership, given the poor personal relationship between Johnson and Gove since the 2016 leadership election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Campaign, Final two\nJohnson and Hunt, the final two candidates, were to be put to a vote of about 160,000 Conservative members, with the result to be announced in the week of 22 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Campaign, Final two\nIn the early hours of 21 June, police were called to Johnson's home after neighbours heard an altercation between him and his girlfriend Carrie Symonds. The police attended and subsequently stated they found no need for police action.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Campaign, Final two\nA poll conducted on Saturday 22 June showed support for Johnson had fallen sharply following the incident. His eight-point lead earlier in the week had fallen to three points behind Hunt by Saturday morning. Among Tory voters, when asked who would make the best prime minister, Johnson's lead had fallen from 27% to 11% in the same period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Campaign, Final two\nThe first of a series of hustings took place in Birmingham on 22 June and was chaired by Iain Dale. During the hustings, Johnson repeatedly refused to answer questions about alleged altercation that took place between himself and Symonds. He claimed that the audience of Conservative members wanted to know \"what my plans are for my country and for the party. I don\u2019t think they want to hear about that kind of thing.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Campaign, Final two\nOn the evening of 22 June, The Observer published evidence suggesting close links between Johnson and Steve Bannon. The video evidence, in which Bannon discussed how he helped Johnson craft the first speech after his resignation as foreign secretary, contradicted Johnson's previous denials of an association with Bannon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Candidates, Nominated\nThe following ten MPs were nominated on 10 June. Each candidate needed the nomination of at least eight MPs, but only the proposer and seconder were made public.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 66], "content_span": [67, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0048-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Candidates, Withdrew\nThe following MPs announced that they would seek the leadership of the Conservative Party but subsequently did not stand, or withdrew from the race, due to insufficient support or other reasons:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0049-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Candidates, Publicly expressed interest\nThe following MPs publicly expressed interest in the leadership of the Conservative Party but subsequently declined to stand:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0050-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Candidates, Declined\nThe following MPs were touted by the media as potential candidates for the leadership of the Conservative Party but subsequently declined to stand:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0051-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Public hustings\nFollowing the fifth ballot of Conservative MPs on 20 June, the final two candidates, Jeremy Hunt and Boris Johnson, were invited to take place in a series of hustings organised by the party. Each of the sixteen events was held in a different region of the country. A digital hustings was held on 26 June, moderated by Hannah Vaughan Jones and live streamed on social media (through Periscope).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0052-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Candidate debates\nOn 28 May, the BBC announced plans to hold televised leadership debates for the candidates that would take place once nominations had closed. All candidates who had not yet been eliminated would be invited to take part in a hustings debate chaired by Emily Maitlis, followed by a Question Time special with Fiona Bruce. The final two candidates would then have a one-to-one interview with Andrew Neil, which aired on 12 July. On the same day, Sky News also announced plans for a head-to-head leadership debate between the final two candidates in front of an audience of Conservative Party members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0053-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Candidate debates\nThe BBC confirmed that the first debate would be broadcast under the title Our Next Prime Minister at 20:00 on 18 June 2019 on BBC One, two hours after the second ballot. Members of the public in BBC studios around the UK will ask the candidates questions live. Channel 4 broadcast a 90-minute debate between the candidates on 16 June, hosted by Krishnan Guru-Murthy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0054-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Candidate debates\nITV announced on 20 June that they would be holding a head-to-head debate between Hunt and Johnson on 9 July, hosted by Julie Etchingham. The debate also aired in the Republic of Ireland on Virgin Media One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0055-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Candidate debates\nOn 21 June, Sky News presenter Kay Burley announced that their debate was planned to take place on 25 June, but Johnson was not willing to attend. On 24 June, Sky stated the event would not go ahead without Johnson, and would have to be cancelled. The channel also announced that both candidates had been invited to a rescheduled debate on 1 July. Johnson once again declined to attend, with Sky News announcing they would hold an interview with Hunt on 1 July, with Johnson being invited to conduct a similar interview at another date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0056-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Candidate debates\nOn 10 July, the BBC announced that the Question Time special was \"unlikely to go ahead\" on 16 July, due to Mr Johnson's team expressing concerns about the format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288419-0057-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Party leadership election, Results\nAfter each ballot of Conservative MPs, the candidate with the fewest votes is eliminated. A new rule was introduced in 2019 due to the number of candidates: In the first ballot, held on 13 June 2019, candidates also needed to pass a threshold of 17 votes to avoid elimination. In the second ballot, held on 18 June, candidates needed to pass a threshold of 33 votes to avoid elimination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288420-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Political Action Conference\nThe 2019 Conservative Political Action Conference was the annual event of the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC), hosted by the American Conservative Union. It was held at the Gaylord National Resort & Convention Center in Oxon Hill, Maryland, from February 27 to March 2, 2019. The event was headlined by President Donald Trump, with many speakers and panels throughout the conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288420-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Political Action Conference\nThemes through the conference were fighting against socialism; criminal justice reform; China; and criticizing Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and the Green New Deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288420-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Political Action Conference, Speakers, President Donald Trump\nPresident Donald Trump headlined the event, appearing on Saturday, March 2. He spoke for over two hours, which was the longest speech of his presidency to date. Trump criticized many people and topics during the speech, including reporter David Weigel, former FBI Director James Comey, special counsel Robert Mueller, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, and attorney general Jeff Sessions, political consultant John Podesta, the Green New Deal, and the Russia investigation, which he called \"a phony witch-hunt.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 79], "content_span": [80, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288420-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Conservative Political Action Conference, Speakers, President Donald Trump\nDuring the speech, Trump promised to sign a bill protecting free speech on college campuses and \"urged conservative activists to remain vigilant\" going into the 2020 elections. Newsweek called the speech \"blustery\" with \"unverifiable statistics\", while The New York Times called the speech \"rambling.\" The Week stated the speech contained 104 \"false or misleading claims.\" The Washington Examiner praised the speech, stating the \"...speech was a road map for [his] 2020 campaign.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 79], "content_span": [80, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288420-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Political Action Conference, Speakers, President Donald Trump\nOn The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, Stephen Colbert made fun of the fact Trump hugged an American flag while onstage, stating, \"He is dry humping Old Glory! I believe that is the first time a flag has ever volunteered to be burned. Just full Kevorkian.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 79], "content_span": [80, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288420-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Political Action Conference, Speakers, Others\nMark Meadows spoke at the event during a panel on Thursday morning, February 28. He criticized the Green New Deal, stating, \"You know, with this Green New Deal, they\u2019re trying to get rid of all the cows. But I\u2019ve got good news: Chick-fil-A stock will go way up because we are gonna be eating more chicken!\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 63], "content_span": [64, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288420-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Political Action Conference, Speakers, Others\nDuring a panel on Thursday afternoon, African-American second amendment rights activists were interviewed, including Maj Toure, the founder of Black Guns Matter; Antonia Okafor, founder of EmPOWERed; and Niger Innis, spokesman for the Congress of Racial Equality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 63], "content_span": [64, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288420-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Political Action Conference, Speakers, Others\nOn Thursday night, Sebastian Gorka gave a \"fiery speech\" criticizing Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, whom he branded a \"socialist.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 63], "content_span": [64, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288420-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Political Action Conference, Speakers, Others\nOn Friday, Ted Cruz had a panel with National Review editor Rich Lowry. Cruz criticized Democrats, stating, \"I think there is a technical description for what\u2019s going on, which is that Democrats have gone batcrap crazy. They are getting more and more and more extreme on every issue.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 63], "content_span": [64, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288420-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Political Action Conference, Speakers, Others\nOther speakers or guest panelists included Vice President Mike Pence, Lindsey Graham, Laura Ingraham, Diamond and Silk, Mark Levin, Nigel Farage, Charlie Kirk, David Limbaugh, Candace Owens, Michelle Malkin, Kay Coles James, Tom Fitton, Deneen Borelli, Dennis Prager, Larry Kudlow, Glenn Beck, Jerry Falwell, Jr., Bill Hagerty, Wilbur Ross, Pete Hegseth, Matt Gaetz, Sarah Palin, Jenny Beth Martin, and Carly Fiorina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 63], "content_span": [64, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288420-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Political Action Conference, Activities\nThe Daily Beast stated Turning Point USA's Thursday night party was \"the most sought-after party\" of the conference, with many notable people attending, including Bill Shine, Benny Johnson, Jacob Wohl, Charlie Kirk, Candace Owens, Dan Crenshaw, and Kimberly Guilfoyle. Donald Trump Jr. was the featured speaker of the party, while Ted Cruz was the honored guest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288420-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Political Action Conference, Activities\nA panel led by David Perdue focused on reducing the national debt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288420-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Conservative Political Action Conference, Activities\nAuthor DeAnna Lorraine arranged a \"Tribute to Men\" event, during which she criticized the Boy Scouts of America for admitting girls, calling them the \"Soy Scouts.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288421-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Constellation Cup\nThe 2019 Constellation Cup was the 10th Constellation Cup series between New Zealand and Australia. The series was held in October 2019 and was the first meeting between the two teams since the 2019 Netball World Cup final. The series was played over four test matches, two hosted by Australia and two hosted by New Zealand. The series finished 2\u20132, however Australia retained the cup due to a superior goal difference over the four tests. This saw saw Australia win their seventh successive Constellation Cup series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288422-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Consumers Energy 400\nThe 2019 Consumers Energy 400 is a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race held on August 11, 2019 at Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn, Michigan. Contested over 200 laps on the two-mile (3.2\u00a0km) D-shaped oval, it is the 23rd race of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288422-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Consumers Energy 400, Report, Background\nMichigan International Speedway (MIS) is a two-mile (3.2\u00a0km) moderate-banked D-shaped speedway located off U.S. Highway 12 on more than 1,400 acres (5.7\u00a0km2) approximately four miles (6.4\u00a0km) south of the village of Brooklyn, in the scenic Irish Hills area of southeastern Michigan. The track is used primarily for NASCAR events. It is sometimes known as a \"sister track\" to Texas World Speedway, and was used as the basis of Auto Club Speedway. The track is owned by International Speedway Corporation (ISC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288422-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Consumers Energy 400, Report, Background\nMichigan International Speedway is recognized as one of motorsports' premier facilities because of its wide racing surface and high banking (by open-wheel standards; the 18-degree banking is modest by stock car standards). Michigan is the fastest track in NASCAR due to its wide, sweeping corners and long straightaways; typical qualifying speeds are in excess of 200\u00a0mph (320\u00a0km/h) and corner entry speeds are anywhere from 215 to 220\u00a0mph (346 to 354\u00a0km/h) after the 2012 repaving of the track.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288422-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Consumers Energy 400, First practice\nAustin Dillon was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 37.901 seconds and a speed of 189.969\u00a0mph (305.725\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288422-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Consumers Energy 400, Qualifying\nBrad Keselowski scored the pole for the race with a time of 37.801 and a speed of 190.471\u00a0mph (306.533\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288422-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Consumers Energy 400, Practice (post-qualifying), Second practice\nKevin Harvick was the fastest in the second practice session with a time of 37.795 seconds and a speed of 190.501\u00a0mph (306.582\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 70], "content_span": [71, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288422-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Consumers Energy 400, Practice (post-qualifying), Final practice\nErik Jones was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 37.926 seconds and a speed of 189.843\u00a0mph (305.523\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 69], "content_span": [70, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288422-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Consumers Energy 400, Media, Television\nNBC Sports covered the race on the television side. Rick Allen, Jeff Burton, Steve Letarte and two-time Michigan winner, Dale Earnhardt Jr. had the call in the booth for the race. Parker Kligerman, Marty Snider and Kelli Stavast reported from pit lane during the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288422-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Consumers Energy 400, Media, Radio\nMotor Racing Network had the radio call for the race, which was simulcast on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio. Alex Hayden, Jeff Striegle and 4 time Michigan winner Rusty Wallace had the call from the booth. Dave Moody called the action when the field raced thru turns 1 & 2. Kyle Rickey had the call for the race when the field raced thru turns 3 & 4. Covering the action in the pits was be Woody Cain, Kim Coon, and Pete Pistone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288423-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Continental Cup\nThe 2019 World Financial Group Continental Cup was held from January 17 to 20 at the Orleans Arena in Paradise, Nevada. This was the fourth time the event is being held in Paradise and the fourth time outside Canada. The event featured new team scramble competitions, with players from different traditional teams competing together, along with the mixed doubles, team, and skins competitions seen in previous years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288423-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Continental Cup\nTeam World was in the lead for the entirety of the event. However, a strong performance from Team North America in the final skins draw, holding Team World to 0.5 points in the first seven ends of all three matches, led to the winner being decided in the eighth and final end. The cup was decided in the women's game when Eve Muirhead made a hit and stick to win a skin worth 2.5 points against Team Rachel Homan to clinch the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288423-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Continental Cup\nThe final result was a 34\u201326 victory for Team World, their first win since 2012. Team World collected CAD$85,000; Team North America collected CAD$45,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288423-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Continental Cup, Competition format\nThis edition of the Continental Cup will use a new format. There will be sixty points available, distributed as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288423-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Continental Cup, Competition format\nThe number of traditional team games is reduced under this format, with each team now playing in only one traditional team game instead of three as in past years. There is one additional mixed doubles draw, eliminating the practice of having the third mixed doubles game consisting of two pairs of players who switch after four ends of play; this in turn ensures that all players are involved in one full mixed doubles game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288423-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Continental Cup, Competition format\nThe two new events are the team scramble and mixed team scramble. The team scramble will be a mix of the traditional teams into same-gender lineups. Front-end or back-end teammates cannot stay together, but a back-end player may play with a front-end teammate. The mixed teams scramble will use mixed teams, with at least one team per side skipped by a female. There is one men's team scramble draw and one women's team scramble draw, with each game worth one point; each game in the single mixed scramble draw is worth two points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288423-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Continental Cup, Events\nAll draw times are listed in Pacific Daylight Time (UTC\u22127:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288424-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Continental Cup (cricket)\nThe 2019 Continental Cup was a Twenty20 International (T20I) cricket tournament held in Romania between 29 August and 1 September 2019. The hosts were the defending champions, having won the previous edition in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288424-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Continental Cup (cricket)\nThe format was originally to be two groups of three teams played over the first two days, followed by a series of play-off matches. However, after Russia withdrew two days before the tournament, the format was changed to a single round-robin stage followed by a final. The participating teams were hosts Romania, along with Austria, Czech Republic, Luxembourg and Turkey. All five teams played their first matches with T20I status during this tournament, following the decision of the ICC to grant full Twenty20 International status to all its members from 1 January 2019. Austria topped the round-robin stage and went on to defeat the Czech Republic in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288424-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Continental Cup (cricket)\nA number of T20I records were set during the tournament, particularly in games against Turkey who had been affected by visa problems resulting in many of their best players not bein able to travel to Romania. These included Czech Republic's winning margin of 257 runs, in a game that also saw Sudesh Wickramasekara equal the fastest century in T20I cricket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288425-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cook Islands Round Cup\nThe 2019 Cook Islands Round Cup (also known as Vans Premiership due to sponsorship reasons) was the 46th recorded edition of the Cook Islands Round Cup, the top association football league of the Cook Islands organised by the Cook Islands Football Association. This season kicked off on 2 August 2019, and was competed by six teams from the island of Rarotonga in triple round-robin format. Tupapa Maraerenga won the league for the third straight year and qualified for the 2020 OFC Champions League, though they withdrew from that competition in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288425-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cook Islands Round Cup, Results\nTitikaveka 4\u20133 Tupapa Maraerenga Avatiu 1\u20134 Nikao Sokattak Puaikura 4\u20130 Matavera", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288425-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cook Islands Round Cup, Results\nTupapa Maraerenga 1\u20130 Matavera Nikao Sokattak 2\u20132 Titikaveka Avatiu 1-3 Puaikura (postponed due to rain)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288425-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cook Islands Round Cup, Results\nTupapa Maraerenga 2\u20132 Puaikura Nikao Sokattak 2\u20131 Matavera Titikaveka 4\u20130 Avatiu", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288425-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cook Islands Round Cup, Results\nPuaikura 1-3 Nikao Sokattak Tupapa Maraerenga 6-0 Avatiu Titikaveka 3-0 Matavera", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288425-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cook Islands Round Cup, Results\nNikao Sokkatak 0-4 Tupapa Maraerenga Matavera 1-0 Avatiu Puaikura 0-1 Titikaveka", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288425-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Cook Islands Round Cup, Results\nTupapa Marerenga 3-0 Titikaveka Nikao Sokattak 13-2 Avatiu Puaikura 1-1 Matavera", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288425-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Cook Islands Round Cup, Results\nAvatiu 1-5 Puaikura Matavera 0-3 Tupapa Maraerenga Titikaveka 0-4 Nikao Sokattak", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288425-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Cook Islands Round Cup, Results\nMatavera 2-10 Nikao Sokattak Puaikura 1-3 Tupapa Maraerenga Avatiu 3-0 Titikaveka", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288425-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Cook Islands Round Cup, Results\nNikao Sokattak 2-1 Puaikura Avatiu 1-4 Tupapa Maraerenga Titikaveka 2-2 Matavera", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288425-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Cook Islands Round Cup, Results\nNikao Sokattak 1-3 Tupapa Maraerenga Avatiu 2-2 Matavera Puaikura 4-2 Titikaveka", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288425-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Cook Islands Round Cup, Results\nNikao Sokattak 3-1 Avatiu Puaikura 0-3 Matavera Tupapa Maraerenga 8-0 Titikaveka", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288425-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Cook Islands Round Cup, Results\nNikao Sokattak 12-0 Titikaveka Puaikura 1-1 Avatiu Tupapa Maraerenga 9-0 Matavera", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288426-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cook Islands dengue fever outbreak\nThe Cook Islands Dengue Fever Outbreak refers to the Dengue fever outbreak in the Cook Islands beginning sometime in January 2019, declared an outbreak after seven cases were detected with varying stages. The Ministry of Health stated one case was allegedly from French Polynesia. This was relatively new, as the last dengue fever outbreak was in 2009; this specific serotype of DENV-1 in 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288426-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cook Islands dengue fever outbreak\nInitial cases were restricted to Rarotonga and Aitutaki, but in August 2020 a case was reported on Pukapuka. The Pukapuka outbreak was brought under control in October 2020 after a mosquito eradication campaign, and the entire outbreak was declared over in early November 2020. There were a total of 380 probable or confirmed cases (6 in Aitutaki, 5 in Pukapuka, and the rest on Rarotonga), 77 hospitalisations, and no deaths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288427-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica\nThe 2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica was the 46th edition of the Copa Am\u00e9rica, the international men's association football championship organized by South America's football ruling body CONMEBOL. It was held in Brazil and took place between 14 June and 7 July 2019 at 6 venues across the country. This is the first time since 1991 where no CONCACAF nation took part in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288427-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica\nHeading into the tournament, Chile were the two-time defending champions, having won the 2015 and 2016 editions of the tournament, but were eliminated by Peru in the semi-finals leading to the third place match against Argentina, which they also lost.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288427-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica\nHost nation Brazil won their ninth title by defeating Peru 3\u20131 in the final. Argentina took third place by beating Chile 2\u20131 in the third-place match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288427-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica, Host country\nOriginally, the 2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica was to be hosted by Chile, while Brazil was due to host the 2015 Copa Am\u00e9rica, because CONMEBOL normally rotates tournament host nations in alphabetical order. However, because Brazil hosted the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup, the 2014 FIFA World Cup, and the 2016 Summer Olympics, Brazil decided against also hosting the 2015 Copa Am\u00e9rica. Brazil's and Chile's football federations agreed to swap their host nation order for the 2015 and 2019 championships, and CONMEBOL approved this agreement in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288427-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica, Host country\nStarting in 2021 (originally scheduled for 2020), Copa Am\u00e9rica will be held in the same years as the UEFA European Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288427-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica, Venues\nOn 14 June 2018, CBF Vice President Fernando Sarney announced that five cities would host the tournament: Salvador, Rio de Janeiro, S\u00e3o Paulo, Belo Horizonte and Porto Alegre. The list of stadia was decided on 17 September 2018. The opening match was held at the Est\u00e1dio do Morumbi in S\u00e3o Paulo, the semi-finals were held at the Arena do Gr\u00eamio in Porto Alegre and Est\u00e1dio Mineir\u00e3o in Belo Horizonte, and the final was held at the Est\u00e1dio do Maracan\u00e3 in Rio de Janeiro. On 23 November 2018, CONMEBOL announced that the second S\u00e3o Paulo venue would be changed from the Allianz Parque to Arena Corinthians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288427-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica, Teams\nApart from all ten CONMEBOL national teams which were eligible to enter, CONMEBOL initially planned to hold a 16-team tournament by inviting six teams from outside CONMEBOL, similar to the Copa Am\u00e9rica Centenario three years earlier. On 16 March 2018, CONMEBOL announced three teams from CONCACAF and three teams from the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) would be invited to participate in the 2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica. On 12 April 2018, it was announced that Qatar, the host of the 2022 FIFA World Cup, had accepted the invitation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288427-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica, Teams\nOn 4 May 2018, CONMEBOL announced that the tournament would instead be played with 12 teams, the same number as previous editions since 1993 (apart from the Copa Am\u00e9rica Centenario held in 2016), with the two guest teams being Qatar and Japan from the AFC. Both teams managed to reach the final of the 2019 AFC Asian Cup held in the UAE, which was won by Qatar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288427-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica, Teams\nQatar made their debut appearance in the Copa Am\u00e9rica, becoming the first Arab nation to play in the tournament, while Japan made their second appearance, their first since 1999. This was also the first Copa Am\u00e9rica to not feature any team from CONCACAF since teams had been invited; in particular, Mexico, which competed in all ten editions since 1993 as an invited team, did not participate in this tournament. United States competed in four tournaments, including the 2016 event as host.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288427-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica, Draw\nThe draw of the tournament took place on 24 January 2019, 20:30 BRST (UTC\u22122), at the Cidade das Artes in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The 12 teams were drawn into three groups of four, by selecting one team from each of the 4 ranked pots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 23], "content_span": [24, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288427-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica, Draw\nAt the CONMEBOL Council meeting held on 23 November 2018, it was decided that FIFA Ranking would be the basis to determine the seeds and the distribution of the rest of teams in the pots of the draw. This decision will also be valid for future editions of the Copa America.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 23], "content_span": [24, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288427-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica, Draw\nFor the draw, the teams were allocated to four pots based on the FIFA World Ranking of December 2018 (shown in brackets). Pot 1 contained the hosts Brazil (who were automatically assigned to position A1) and the best two teams, pot 2 contained the next best three teams, and so on for pots 3 and 4. The teams from Pot 1 would be assigned to position 1 in their group, while the teams from Pots 2, 3 and 4 would be drawn to one of the positions 2, 3 or 4 in their group. The two guest teams, Japan and Qatar, which were seeded in different pots, could not be drawn in the same group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 23], "content_span": [24, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288427-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica, Match officials\nA total of 23 referees and 23 assistant referees were appointed for the tournament on 21 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 34], "content_span": [35, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288427-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica, Squads\nEach team had to submit a list of 23 players (three of whom had to be goalkeepers).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288427-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica, Group stage\nThe match schedule was announced on 18 December 2018. The winners and runners-up of each group and the two best third-placed teams among all groups advanced to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288427-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica, Group stage, Tiebreakers\nThe ranking of teams in the group stage was determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 43], "content_span": [44, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288427-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, if a match was tied after 90 minutes:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288427-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 60 goals scored in 26 matches, for an average of 2.31 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 42], "content_span": [43, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288427-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica, Statistics, Final ranking\nAs per statistical convention in football, matches decided in extra time were counted as wins and losses, while matches decided by penalty shoot-out were counted as draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 44], "content_span": [45, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288427-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica, Statistics, Awards\nThe following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288427-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica, Statistics, Team of the Tournament\nThe Technical Study Group announced the tournament's Best XI squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 53], "content_span": [54, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288427-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica, Marketing, Mascot\nThe mascot of the tournament was Zizito, a capybara whose name paid homage to Zizinho, the Brazilian footballer who shared the all-time goal-scoring record in the Copa Am\u00e9rica (17 goals) with Argentina's Norberto Doroteo M\u00e9ndez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 36], "content_span": [37, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288427-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica, Marketing, Slogan\nThe slogan of the 2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica was \"Vibra el Continente/Vibra o Continente\" (Rocking the Continent).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 36], "content_span": [37, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288427-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica, Marketing, Official song\n\"Vibra Continente\" by Brazilian recording artist L\u00e9o Santana and Colombian recording artist Karol G served as an official song for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 43], "content_span": [44, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288428-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Femenina de Futsal\nThe 2019 CONMEBOL Copa Am\u00e9rica Femenina de Futsal was the 7th edition of the Copa Am\u00e9rica Femenina de Futsal, the international futsal championship under FIFA rules organised by CONMEBOL for the women's national teams of South America. The tournament was held in Luque, Paraguay between 13\u201320 December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288428-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Femenina de Futsal, Venues\nThe matches were played at the Polideportivo del Comit\u00e9 Ol\u00edmpico Paraguayo in Luque.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288428-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Femenina de Futsal, Draw\nThe draw of the tournament was held on 19 November 2019, 18:00 PYST (UTC\u22123), at the Paraguayan Olympic Committee headquarters at Luque, Paraguay. The ten teams were drawn into two groups of five. The hosts, Paraguay, and the title holders, Brazil, were seeded in Groups A and B respectively, while the other eight teams were divided into four pots based on their results in the 2017 Copa Am\u00e9rica Femenina de Futsal, and were drawn to the remaining group positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 42], "content_span": [43, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288428-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Femenina de Futsal, Squads\nEach team has to submit a squad of 14 players, including a minimum of two goalkeepers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288428-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Femenina de Futsal, Group stage\nThe top two teams of each group advance to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288428-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Femenina de Futsal, Group stage\nThe ranking of teams in the first stage is determined as follows (Regulations Article 8):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288428-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Femenina de Futsal, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, extra time and penalty shoot-out would be used to decide the winner if necessary (no extra time would be used in the play-offs for third to tenth place).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288429-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Final\nThe 2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Final was a final match of the 46th edition of Copa Am\u00e9rica tournament that took place on 7 July 2019 at the Est\u00e1dio do Maracan\u00e3 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil to determine the winner of the 2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288429-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Final\nThe match featured Brazil, the tournament hosts and Peru, in which Brazil won the match 3\u20131 to clinch their ninth Copa Am\u00e9rica title and their first since 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288429-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Final, Background\nThis edition was the fifth Copa Am\u00e9rica tournament hosted by the Brazil. This final was the third of Peru in which they had been emerged as champions two times in their history. Their last championship (including worldwide tournaments) was won in 1975. Meanwhile, it was Brazil's nineteenth final in Copa Am\u00e9rica in which they had emerged as champions eight times. For the last time Brazil was crowned champions were in the 2007 Copa Am\u00e9rica which was hosted in Venezuela, after defeating Argentina by 3 goals to 0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288429-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Final, Background\nThese two sides had met each other before the final on their respective group stage match where Brazil defeated Per\u00fa on a big margin of 5-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288429-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Final, Match, Summary\nEverton opened the score sheet for Brazil after 15 minutes from the kick-off with a low right footed volley from eight yards out after a Gabriel Jesus cross from the right. Peru were awarded a penalty after 44 minutes when the ball struck the hand of Thiago Silva, with Paolo Guerrero scoring with a low shot to the right corner of the net. Brazil went back in front a minute later with a shot to the left corner of the net from inside the penalty area from Gabriel Jesus. Gabriel Jesus was shown a red card after 70 minutes after picking up a second yellow for jumping into the back of Carlos Zambrano. Substitute Richarlison made it 3\u20131 in the 90th minute with a penalty, shooting low to the left corner after Everton was fouled by Carlos Zambrano.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288429-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Final, Match, Details\nAssistant referees:Christian Schiemann (Chile)Claudio R\u00edos (Chile)Fourth official:Alexis Herrera (Venezuela)Video assistant referee:Julio Bascu\u00f1\u00e1n (Chile)Assistant video assistant referees:Nicol\u00e1s Gallo (Colombia)Alexander Guzm\u00e1n (Colombia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288430-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group A\nGroup A of the 2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica took place from 14 to 22 June 2019. The group consisted of Bolivia, hosts Brazil, Peru, and Venezuela.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288430-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group A\nBrazil and Venezuela as the top two teams, along with Peru as one of the two best third-placed teams, advanced to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288430-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group A, Matches, Brazil vs Bolivia\nAssistant referees:Hern\u00e1n Maidana (Argentina)Juan Pablo Belatti (Argentina)Fourth official:Roddy Zambrano (Ecuador)Video assistant referee:Patricio Loustau (Argentina)Assistant video assistant referees:Fernando Rapallini (Argentina)Ezequiel Brailovsky (Argentina)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288430-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group A, Matches, Venezuela vs Peru\nAssistant referees:Alexander Guzm\u00e1n (Colombia)Jhon Alexander Le\u00f3n (Colombia)Fourth official:Carlos Orbe (Ecuador)Video assistant referee:Leod\u00e1n Gonz\u00e1lez (Uruguay)Assistant video assistant referees:Andr\u00e9s Rojas (Colombia)Christian Lescano (Ecuador)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288430-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group A, Matches, Bolivia vs Peru\nAssistant referees:Christian Lescano (Ecuador)Byron Romero (Ecuador)Fourth official:Piero Maza (Chile)Video assistant referee:Esteban Ostojich (Uruguay)Assistant video assistant referees:Nicol\u00e1s Gallo (Colombia)Hern\u00e1n Maidana (Argentina)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288430-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group A, Matches, Brazil vs Venezuela\nAssistant referees:Christian Schiemann (Chile)Claudio R\u00edos (Chile)Fourth official:Andr\u00e9s Rojas (Colombia)Video assistant referee:Roberto Tobar (Chile)Assistant video assistant referees:Fernando Rapallini (Argentina)Alexander Guzm\u00e1n (Colombia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 55], "content_span": [56, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288430-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group A, Matches, Peru vs Brazil\nAssistant referees:Hern\u00e1n Maidana (Argentina)Eduardo Cardozo (Paraguay)Fourth official:Arnaldo Samaniego (Paraguay)Video assistant referee:Andr\u00e9s Rojas (Colombia)Assistant video assistant referees:Nicol\u00e1s Gallo (Colombia)Wilmar Navarro (Colombia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288430-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group A, Matches, Bolivia vs Venezuela\nAssistant referees:Nicol\u00e1s Taran (Uruguay)Richard Trinidad (Uruguay)Fourth official:Carlos Orbe (Ecuador)Video assistant referee:N\u00e9stor Pitana (Argentina)Assistant video assistant referees:Piero Maza (Chile)Alexander Guzm\u00e1n (Colombia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288430-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group A, Discipline\nFair play points would have been used as tiebreakers if the overall and head-to-head records of teams were tied. These were calculated based on yellow and red cards received in all group matches as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288430-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group A, Discipline\nOnly one of the above deductions were applied to a player in a single match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288431-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group B\nGroup B of the 2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica took place from 15 to 23 June 2019. The group consisted of Argentina, Colombia, Paraguay, and guests Qatar of the AFC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288431-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group B\nColombia and Argentina as the top two teams, along with Paraguay as one of the two best third-placed teams, advanced to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288431-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group B, Matches, Argentina vs Colombia\nAssistant referees:Christian Schiemann (Chile)Claudio R\u00edos (Chile)Fourth official:Alexis Herrera (Venezuela)Video assistant referee:Julio Bascu\u00f1\u00e1n (Chile)Assistant video assistant referees:Piero Maza (Chile)Nicol\u00e1s Tar\u00e1n (Uruguay)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288431-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group B, Matches, Paraguay vs Qatar\nAssistant referees:Jonny Bossio (Peru)V\u00edctor R\u00e1ez (Peru)Fourth official:Esteban Ostojich (Uruguay)Video assistant referee:Raphael Claus (Brazil)Assistant video assistant referees:V\u00edctor Carrillo (Peru)Byron Romero (Ecuador)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288431-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group B, Matches, Colombia vs Qatar\nAssistant referees:Luis Murillo (Venezuela)Nicol\u00e1s Taran (Uruguay)Fourth official:V\u00edctor Carrillo (Peru)Video assistant referee:Jes\u00fas Valenzuela (Venezuela)Assistant video assistant referees:Anderson Daronco (Brazil)Richard Trinidad (Uruguay)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288431-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group B, Matches, Argentina vs Paraguay\nAssistant referees:Marcelo van Gasse (Brazil)Rodrigo Correa (Brazil)Fourth official:Carlos Orbe (Ecuador)Video assistant referee:Leod\u00e1n Gonz\u00e1lez (Uruguay)Assistant video assistant referees:Raphael Claus (Brazil)Kl\u00e9ber L\u00facio Gil (Brazil)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288431-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group B, Matches, Qatar vs Argentina\nAssistant referees:Christian Schiemann (Chile)Claudio R\u00edos (Chile)Fourth official:Roddy Zambrano (Ecuador)Video assistant referee:Roberto Tobar (Chile)Assistant video assistant referees:Gery Vargas (Bolivia)Christian Lescano (Ecuador)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288431-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group B, Matches, Colombia vs Paraguay\nAssistant referees:Jonny Bossio (Peru)V\u00edctor R\u00e1ez (Peru)Fourth official:Alexis Herrera (Venezuela)Video assistant referee:Anderson Daronco (Brazil)Assistant video assistant referees:Diego Haro (Peru)Byron Romero (Ecuador)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288431-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group B, Discipline\nFair play points would have been used as tiebreakers if the overall and head-to-head records of teams were tied. These were calculated based on yellow and red cards received in all group matches as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288431-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group B, Discipline\nOnly one of the above deductions were applied to a player in a single match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288432-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group C\nGroup C of the 2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica took place from 16 to 24 June 2019. The group consisted of title holders Chile, Ecuador, guests Japan of the AFC, and Uruguay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288432-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group C, Matches, Uruguay vs Ecuador\nAssistant referees:Marcelo Van Gasse (Brazil)Kl\u00e9ber Gil (Brazil)Fourth official:Nicol\u00e1s Gallo (Colombia)Video assistant referee:Wilton Sampaio (Brazil)Assistant video assistant referees:Fernando Rapallini (Argentina)Rodrigo Correa (Brazil)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288432-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group C, Matches, Japan vs Chile\nAssistant referees:Eduardo Cardozo (Paraguay)Dar\u00edo Gaona (Paraguay)Fourth official:Arnaldo Samaniego (Paraguay)Video assistant referee:Jes\u00fas Valenzuela (Venezuela)Assistant video assistant referees:Gery Vargas (Bolivia)Wilmar Navarro (Colombia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288432-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group C, Matches, Uruguay vs Japan\nAssistant referees:Alexander Guzm\u00e1n (Colombia)Wilmar Navarro (Colombia)Fourth official:Nicol\u00e1s Gallo (Colombia)Video assistant referee:Diego Haro (Peru)Assistant video assistant referees:N\u00e9stor Pitana (Argentina)Hern\u00e1n Maidana (Argentina)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288432-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group C, Matches, Ecuador vs Chile\nAssistant referees:Juan Pablo Belatti (Argentina)Ezequiel Brailovsky (Argentina)Fourth official:Jes\u00fas Valenzuela (Venezuela)Video assistant referee:Wilmar Rold\u00e1n (Colombia)Assistant video assistant referees:Mario D\u00edaz de Vivar (Paraguay)Jhon Alexander Le\u00f3n (Colombia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288432-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group C, Matches, Chile vs Uruguay\nAssistant referees:Marcelo Van Gasse (Brazil)Kl\u00e9ber L\u00facio Gil (Brazil)Fourth official:Mario D\u00edaz de Vivar (Paraguay)Video assistant referee:Wilton Sampaio (Brazil)Assistant video assistant referees:Arnaldo Samaniego (Paraguay)Ezequiel Brailovsky (Argentina)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288432-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group C, Matches, Ecuador vs Japan\nAssistant referees:Luis Murillo (Venezuela)Rodrigo Correa (Brazil)Fourth official:Wilmar Rold\u00e1n (Colombia)Video assistant referee:Fernando Rapallini (Argentina)Assistant video assistant referees:Nicol\u00e1s Gallo (Colombia)Jhon Alexander Le\u00f3n (Colombia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288432-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group C, Discipline\nFair play points would have been used as tiebreakers if the overall and head-to-head records of teams were tied. These were calculated based on yellow and red cards received in all group matches as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288432-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica Group C, Discipline\nOnly one of the above deductions were applied to a player in a single match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288433-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica de Futsal\nThe 2019 CONMEBOL Copa Am\u00e9rica de Futsal was the 13th edition of the Copa Am\u00e9rica de Futsal, the international futsal championship under FIFA rules organised by CONMEBOL for the men's national teams of South America. The tournament was originally to be held in Los \u00c1ngeles, Chile between 23\u201330 October 2019. However, on 22 October 2019, one day before the start of the tournament, CONMEBOL announced that it was cancelled due to the Chilean protests. Due to cancellation the tournament, leaving the hosting rights for the 2021 Copa Am\u00e9rica de Futsal with Chile.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288433-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica de Futsal, Venues\nThe matches were originally to be played at the Polideportivo de Los \u00c1ngeles in Los \u00c1ngeles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288433-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica de Futsal, Draw\nThe draw of the tournament was held on 26 September 2019, 12:30 CLST (UTC\u22123), at the Hotel Four Points at Los \u00c1ngeles, Chile. The ten teams were drawn into two groups of five. The hosts, Chile, and the title holders, Brazil, were seeded in Groups A and B respectively, while the other eight teams were divided into four pots based on their results in the 2017 Copa Am\u00e9rica de Futsal, and were drawn to the remaining group positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 33], "content_span": [34, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288433-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica de Futsal, Squads\nEach team has to submit a squad of 14 players, including a minimum of two goalkeepers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288433-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica de Futsal, Group stage\nThe top two teams of each group advance to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288433-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica de Futsal, Group stage\nThe ranking of teams in the first stage is determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288433-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica de Futsal, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, extra time and penalty shoot-out would be used to decide the winner if necessary (no extra time would be used in the play-offs for third to tenth place).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288433-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica de Futsal, Knockout stage, Semi-finals\nNote: If the hosts Chile qualify for the semi-finals, they will play in the second semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288434-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica knockout stage\nThe knockout stage of the 2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica began on 27 June 2019 with the quarter-finals and ended on 7 July 2019 with the final at the Est\u00e1dio do Maracan\u00e3 in Rio de Janeiro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288434-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica knockout stage, Format\nIn the knockout stage, if a match was tied after 90 minutes:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288434-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica knockout stage, Format, Combinations of matches in the quarter-finals\nThe specific match-ups involving the third-placed teams depended on which two third-placed teams qualified for the quarter-finals:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 87], "content_span": [88, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288434-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica knockout stage, Qualified teams\nThe top two placed teams from each of the three groups, along with the two best-placed third teams, qualified for the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288434-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica knockout stage, Quarter-finals, Brazil vs Paraguay\nAssistant referees:Christian Schiemann (Chile)Claudio R\u00edos (Chile)Fourth official:Roddy Zambrano (Ecuador)Video assistant referee:Julio Bascu\u00f1\u00e1n (Chile)Assistant video assistant referees:Piero Maza (Chile)Nicol\u00e1s Taran (Uruguay)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 68], "content_span": [69, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288434-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica knockout stage, Quarter-finals, Venezuela vs Argentina\nAssistant referees:Alexander Guzm\u00e1n (Colombia)Jhon Alexander Le\u00f3n (Colombia)Fourth official:Diego Haro (Peru)Video assistant referee:Andr\u00e9s Rojas (Colombia)Assistant video assistant referees:Nicol\u00e1s Gallo (Colombia)Richard Trinidad (Uruguay)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288434-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica knockout stage, Quarter-finals, Colombia vs Chile\nAssistant referees:Hern\u00e1n Maidana (Argentina)Juan Pablo Belatti (Argentina)Fourth official:Anderson Daronco (Brazil)Video assistant referee:Fernando Rapallini (Argentina)Assistant video assistant referees:Gery Vargas (Colombia)Ezequiel Brailovsky (Argentina)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288434-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica knockout stage, Quarter-finals, Uruguay vs Peru\nAssistant referees:Kl\u00e9ber Gil (Brazil)Rodrigo Correa (Brazil)Fourth official:Arnaldo Samaniego (Paraguay)Video assistant referee:Patricio Loustau (Argentina)Assistant video assistant referees:Jes\u00fas Valenzuela (Venezuela)Eduardo Cardozo (Paraguay)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288434-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica knockout stage, Semi-finals, Brazil vs Argentina\nAssistant referees:Christian Lescano (Ecuador)Byron Romero (Ecuador)Fourth official:Esteban Ostojich (Uruguay)Video assistant referee:Leod\u00e1n Gonz\u00e1lez (Uruguay)Assistant video assistant referees:Jes\u00fas Valenzuela (Venezuela)Nicol\u00e1s Tar\u00e1n (Uruguay)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288434-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica knockout stage, Semi-finals, Chile vs Peru\nAssistant referees:Alexander Guzm\u00e1n (Colombia)Wilmar Navarro (Colombia)Fourth official:Mario D\u00edaz de Vivar (Paraguay)Video assistant referee:Andr\u00e9s Rojas (Colombia)Assistant video assistant referees:Nicol\u00e1s Gallo (Colombia)Jhon Alexander Le\u00f3n (Colombia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288434-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica knockout stage, Third place play-off\nAssistant referees:Eduardo Cardozo (Paraguay)Dar\u00edo Gaona (Paraguay)Fourth official:Gery Vargas (Bolivia)Video assistant referee:Diego Haro (Peru)Assistant video assistant referees:Andr\u00e9s Rojas (Colombia)Jonny Bossio (Peru)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288434-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica knockout stage, Final\nAssistant referees:Christian Schiemann (Chile)Claudio R\u00edos (Chile)Fourth official:Alexis Herrera (Venezuela)Video assistant referee:Julio Bascu\u00f1\u00e1n (Chile)Assistant video assistant referees:Nicol\u00e1s Gallo (Colombia)Alexander Guzm\u00e1n (Colombia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288435-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica squads\nThe following is a list of squads for all 12 national teams that competed at the 2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica. Each national team had to submit a final squad of 23 players, 3 of whom had to be goalkeepers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288435-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica squads\nOn 31 May 2019 CONMEBOL published the lists of the twelve teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288435-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica squads, Group A, Brazil\nThe 23-man squad was announced on 17 May 2019. On 6 June, Neymar withdrew due to an injury and was replaced by Willian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288435-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica squads, Group A, Bolivia\nThe 31-man provisional squad was released on 15 May 2019. The 23-man final squad was announced on 31 May 2019. On 11 June, forward Rodrigo Ramallo withdrew injured and was replaced by Ramiro Vaca.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288435-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica squads, Group A, Venezuela\nThe 40-man provisional squad was announced on 10 May 2019. The 23-man final squad was announced on 30 May 2019. On 8 June, midfielder Adalberto Pe\u00f1aranda was ruled out due to an injury and was replaced by Yeferson Soteldo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288435-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica squads, Group A, Peru\nThe 40-man provisional squad was announced on 15 May 2019. The 23-man final squad was announced on 30 May 2019. On 11 June, Paolo Hurtado was ruled out due to injury and replaced by Josepmir Ball\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288435-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica squads, Group B, Argentina\nThe 40-man provisional squad was released on 15 May 2019. The 23-man final squad was announced on 20 May 2019. On 3 June midfielder Exequiel Palacios was replaced by Guido Pizarro due to injury. On 14 June goalkeeper Esteban Andrada was replaced by Juan Musso due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288435-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica squads, Group B, Colombia\nThe 40-man provisional squad was announced on 15 May 2019. On 20 May, defender Luis Manuel Orejuela was replaced by Stefan Medina due to injury. The 23-man final squad was announced on 30 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288435-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica squads, Group B, Paraguay\nThe 40-man provisional squad was announced on 13 May 2019. Provisional squad was reduced to 39 players on 17 May after Roque Santa Cruz withdrew injured. The 23-man final squad was announced on 29 May 2019. On 10 June, midfielder Richard Ortiz was ruled out due to an injury and replaced by Richard S\u00e1nchez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288435-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica squads, Group B, Qatar\nThe 23-man final squad was announced on 30 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288435-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica squads, Group C, Uruguay\nThe 23-man final squad was announced on 30 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288435-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica squads, Group C, Ecuador\nThe 40-man provisional squad was released on 17 May 2019. The 23-man final squad was released on 20 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288435-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica squads, Statistics, Age\nAll ages are set to 14 June 2019, the opening day of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288435-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica squads, Statistics, Player representation, By club\nClubs are ordered alphabetically: first by country, then by club name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288435-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica squads, Statistics, Player representation, By club nationality\nNations in bold are represented by their national teams in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 80], "content_span": [81, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288435-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica squads, Statistics, Player representation, By club confederation\nNations in bold are represented by their national teams in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 82], "content_span": [83, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288436-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Argentina Final\nThe 2019 Copa Argentina Final was the 109th. and final match of the 2018\u201319 Copa Argentina. It was played on December 13, 2019 at the Estadio Malvinas Argentinas in Mendoza between Central C\u00f3rdoba (SdE) and River Plate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288436-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Argentina Final\nRiver Plate defeated Central C\u00f3rdoba (SdE) in the final to win their third title. As champions, they qualified for the 2020 Copa Libertadores group stage and the 2019 Supercopa Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288436-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Argentina Final, Match, Details\nMan of the Match: Ignacio Fern\u00e1ndez (River Plate)Assistant referees:Gabriel ChadeFacundo Rodr\u00edguezFourth official:Pablo Echavarr\u00eda", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288437-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Bicentenario\nThe 2019 Copa Bicentenario was played between June and July while the Peru national football team prepared for and competed in the 2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica. The tournament was played as a knockout competition, with the participation of the 18 teams of the Liga 1, and 12 teams of the Liga 2. The champions will qualify for the 2020 Copa Sudamericana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288438-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Chile\nThe 2019 Copa Chile (officially known as Copa Chile MTS 2019 due to its sponsorship), was the 40th edition of the Copa Chile, the country's national football cup tournament. Palestino were the defending champions, but were knocked out of the competition by Santiago Morning in the second round. Colo-Colo were the champions, defeating Universidad de Chile 2\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288438-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Chile, Format\nThe 2019 Copa Chile was based on a system of direct elimination with double-legged ties, similar to the Copa del Rey. Clubs that were members of the Segunda Divisi\u00f3n Profesional and ANFA were included in the competition, same as the previous edition, and played against the Primera B clubs for 16 berths to the second round, where the winners faced the 16 Primera Divisi\u00f3n clubs which joined the competition in that round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288438-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Chile, Prizes\nThe champions of this edition (or the runners-up, if the champions had already qualified) were entitled to earn the right to compete in the 2020 Copa Libertadores, taking the Chile 4 berth, and also earned the right to play the 2020 Supercopa de Chile against the 2019 Campeonato Nacional champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288438-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Chile, Teams\n48 clubs took part in this edition of the Copa Chile: 16 from the Primera Divisi\u00f3n, 16 from the Primera B, 11 from the Segunda Divisi\u00f3n Profesional and 5 invitees from the Tercera Divisi\u00f3n A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288438-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Chile, Preliminary phases, First round\nThe pairings for the first round were announced by the ANFP on 14 March 2019. The 16 teams from the Segunda Divisi\u00f3n and Tercera Divisi\u00f3n A were drawn against the 16 Primera B teams, according to geographical and safety criteria. Unlike the previous edition, ties in this round were single-legged, with the team from the lower tier hosting the match. Matches in this round were played on 23 and 24 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 48], "content_span": [49, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288438-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Chile, Preliminary phases, Second round\nThe 16 Primera Divisi\u00f3n teams entered the competition at this stage, and were drawn against the 16 first round winners. In each tie, the team from the lower tier hosted the first leg. The pairings for the second round were announced by the ANFP on 8 May 2019, the first legs were played from 30 May to 9 June 2019 and the second legs were played from 5 June to 10 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 49], "content_span": [50, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288438-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Chile, Final phases, Round of 16\nThe draw for the Round of 16 and subsequent phases was held on 14 June 2019. Starting from this round, the order of legs in each tie will depend on the number assigned to each second round winner, with the team with the highest number in each tie hosting the second leg. The first legs were played on 13\u201314 and 16 July 2019, and the second legs were played on 20\u201321 July, 7 August, and 4 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 42], "content_span": [43, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288438-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Chile, Final phases, Semifinals\nWith the ANFP's Council of Presidents voting to conclude the 2019 season on 29 November 2019, it was decided that both the semifinals and final would be single-legged series to be played in January 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 41], "content_span": [42, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288439-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Colombia\nThe 2019 Copa Colombia, officially the 2019 Copa \u00c1guila for sponsorship reasons, was the 17th edition of the Copa Colombia, the national cup competition for clubs of DIMAYOR. The tournament was contested by 36 teams, beginning on 13 February and ending on 6 November, with Independiente Medell\u00edn winning their second title by defeating Deportivo Cali in the finals by a 4\u20133 aggregate score and qualifying for the 2020 Copa Libertadores. Atl\u00e9tico Nacional were the defending champions, but were knocked out of the competition by Deportes Tolima in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288439-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Colombia, Format\nThis year the competition featured the return of the group stage, after being played under a single-elimination format in its entirety in the previous edition. The first stage was played by 28 teams, which were split into seven groups of four teams each based on a regional basis, where teams played each of the teams in their group twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288439-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Copa Colombia, Format\nThe seven group winners plus the best second-placed team qualified for the round of 16, where they were joined by the eight teams that qualified for CONMEBOL competitions for the 2019 season: Deportes Tolima, Junior, Independiente Medell\u00edn, Atl\u00e9tico Nacional, Once Caldas, La Equidad, Rionegro \u00c1guilas and Deportivo Cali. Starting from this point, the cup continued as a single-elimination tournament, with all subsequent rounds being played as double-legged series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288439-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Colombia, Group stage, Ranking of second-placed teams\nThe best team among those ranked second qualified for the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 63], "content_span": [64, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288439-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Colombia, Knockout stage\nEach tie in the knockout stage will be played in a home-and-away two-legged format. In each tie, the team which has the better overall record up to that stage will host the second leg, except in the round of 16 where the group winners automatically host the second leg. In case of a tie in aggregate score, neither the away goals rule nor extra time are applied, and the tie is decided by a penalty shoot-out. The teams that qualified for the 2019 Copa Libertadores and 2019 Copa Sudamericana entered the competition in the round of 16, being joined there by the seven group winners and the best second-placed team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288439-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Colombia, Knockout stage, Round of 16\nThe teams qualifying from the group stage played the second leg at home. The first legs were played from 24 July to 8 August 2019, and the second legs were played on 14 and 15 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288439-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Colombia, Knockout stage, Quarterfinals\nThe first legs were played on 28 and 29 August 2019, and the second legs were played on 11 and 12 September 2019. Team 2 hosted the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 49], "content_span": [50, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288439-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Colombia, Knockout stage, Semifinals\nThe first legs were played on 25 September, and the second legs were played on 16 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 46], "content_span": [47, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288440-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Colsanitas\nThe 2019 Copa Colsanitas (also known as the 2019 Claro Open Colsanitas for sponsorship reasons) was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 22nd edition of the tournament and part of the International category of the 2019 WTA Tour. It took place at the Centro de Alto Rendimiento in Bogot\u00e1, Colombia, from April 8 through April 14, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288440-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Colsanitas, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry using a protected ranking into the main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288440-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288441-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Colsanitas \u2013 Doubles\nDalila Jakupovi\u0107 and Irina Khromacheva were the defending champions, but withdrew due to a left eye injury sustained by Jakupovi\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288441-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Colsanitas \u2013 Doubles\nZoe Hives and Astra Sharma won the title, defeating Hayley Carter and Ena Shibahara in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288442-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Colsanitas \u2013 Singles\nAnna Karol\u00edna Schmiedlov\u00e1 was the defending champion, but lost in the second round to Beatriz Haddad Maia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288442-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Colsanitas \u2013 Singles\nAmanda Anisimova won her first WTA Tour title, defeating Astra Sharma in the final, 4\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288443-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Constituci\u00f3\nThe 2019 Copa Constituci\u00f3 was the 27th edition of the national football knockout tournament with clubs from Andorra. The cup began on 20 January 2019 and ended on 26 May 2019 with the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288443-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Constituci\u00f3\nFC Santa Coloma were the defending cup champions after defeating Sant Juli\u00e0 in the previous season's final by a score of 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288443-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Constituci\u00f3, First round\nEight clubs competed in the first round. The matches were played on 20 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288443-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Constituci\u00f3, Quarter-finals\nEight clubs competed in the quarter-finals. The matches were played on 14 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288443-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Constituci\u00f3, Semifinals\nFour clubs competed in the semifinals. The matches were played on 3\u20134 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288444-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Ecuador\nThe 2019 Copa Ecuador was the first edition of the Copa Ecuador, Ecuador's domestic football cup. It began with the first round on 10 November 2018 and concluded with its double-legged final on 10 and 16 November 2019. LDU Quito were the winners, beating Delf\u00edn on away goals after tying 3\u20133 on aggregate score. They would have qualified for the 2020 Copa Sudamericana, but since they had already qualified for international competition through their league performance as well as the runners-up and both semifinalists, the berth was reallocated to the ninth-placed team of the league, El Nacional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288444-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Ecuador, Format\nThe competition involved 48 teams and was divided into seven rounds. The first round was played by 22 teams from the provincial associations (20 provincial champions and 2 invitees) and 2 amateur teams, which were drawn into 12 two-legged ties. The 12 winners qualified for the second round, where they were drawn into six two-legged ties with the winners advancing to the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288444-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Ecuador, Format\nIn the third round, the six winners from the previous round were joined by the 16 Serie A and 10 Serie B teams, who played in 16 two-legged ties with the winners advancing to the round of 16, from where the competition advanced to the quarterfinals, semifinals, and final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288444-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Ecuador, Prizes\nThe champions of this edition earned the right to compete in the 2020 Copa Sudamericana, taking the Ecuador 4 berth. In case the champions were already qualified for the Copa Libertadores or Copa Sudamericana through their league performance, the berth would be transferred to the runners-up, the semifinalists, or the next best team of the league not yet qualified for either competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288444-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Ecuador, Teams\n48 clubs took part in this edition of the Copa Ecuador: 16 from the Serie A, 8 from the Serie B, 20 from the Segunda Categor\u00eda, 2 amateur teams and Deportivo Quito and Everest, both invited by the Ecuadorian Football Federation based on their historical records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288444-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Ecuador, Second round\nNote: Deportivo Quito qualified for the third round, however they were excluded from the competition due to their suspension for failing to pay its creditors. They were replaced by Mineros, as the next best team in the aggregate table of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288444-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Ecuador, Third round\nThe third round of the competition was held from 24 April to 19 June 2019, with teams in Serie A and Serie B entering at this stage. The draw for this stage of the competition was held on 2 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288444-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Ecuador, Finals\nTied 3\u20133 on aggregate, LDU Quito won on away goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 77]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288445-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a\nThe 2019 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a is the 27th edition of the Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, also known as Copa RFEF, a knockout competition for Spanish football clubs in Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B and Tercera Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288445-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a\nThe competition began in late July with the first games of the Regional stages and will end in November 2019 with the national final. As part of the new competition format, the four semifinalists will join the 2019\u201320 Copa del Rey first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288445-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, Regional tournaments, West Andalusia and Ceuta tournament\nUtrera was the only registered team and qualified directly for national phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 89], "content_span": [90, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288445-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, Regional tournaments, East Andalusia and Melilla tournament\nV\u00e9lez was the only registered team and qualified directly for national phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288445-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, Regional tournaments, Asturias tournament\nFor this edition, reserve teams were excluded. This decision affected to Sporting Gij\u00f3n B, Oviedo B and Praviano, that since this season acted as Oviedo's second reserve team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 73], "content_span": [74, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288445-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, Regional tournaments, Asturias tournament\nGroups were drawn on 23 July in a competition where format changed as all the knockout stage will be played at Estadio Santa Cruz, in Gij\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 73], "content_span": [74, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288445-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, Regional tournaments, Canary Islands tournament\nUni\u00f3n Viera was the only registered team and qualified directly for national phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 79], "content_span": [80, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288445-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, Regional tournaments, Cantabria tournament\nTeams qualified between second and ninth place in 2017\u201318 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n Group 3 registered for playing the competition, except Racing Santander B as reserve team. The bracket was drawn on 4 July. Quarter-finals and Semi-finals were played in Santa Cruz de Bezana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288445-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, Regional tournaments, Castile-La Mancha tournament\nThe Castile-La Mancha Football Federation announced the XVIII Torneo Junta de Comunidades de Castilla La Mancha as the regional Copa RFEF qualifying tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 82], "content_span": [83, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288445-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, Regional tournaments, Extremadura tournament\n17 teams joined the tournament, consisting in a single-game knockout tournament. The preliminary round and the round of 16 were firstly drawn, and later each round was drawn independently.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 76], "content_span": [77, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288445-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, Regional tournaments, Galicia tournament\nFor this edition, reserve teams were excluded and the winner will receive a price of \u20ac3,005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 72], "content_span": [73, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288445-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, Regional tournaments, Murcia tournament\n6 teams joined the tournament. Two groups of three teams were established at two different locations, in the G\u00f3mez Meseguer field in Cartagena and in the Los Garres field in Murcia. Each match will last 45 minutes. The champions of each group qualifies to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288445-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, Regional tournaments, Valencian Community tournament\n6 teams joined the tournament. Tournament will be played in three stages, the first with two groups of three teams, second with the semifinals being the group winners the local team and third the final in a neutral venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 84], "content_span": [85, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288445-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, National phase\nNational phase was played between October and December with 32 teams (18 winners of the Regional Tournaments and 14 teams of Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B). The four semifinalists qualified to 2019\u201320 Copa del Rey first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288445-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, National phase, Draw\nThe draw of all the tournament was held at the headquarters of the RFEF on 20 September. Teams were divided in four pots according to geographical criteria. Each pot will play independently until semifinals:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288445-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, National phase, Draw\nUni\u00f3n Viera Arandina Burgos Salamanca UDS Compostela Coruxo Internacional M\u00f3stoles URJC", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288445-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, National phase, Draw\nLinense San Fernando Utrera V\u00e9lez Conquense Talavera de la Reina Arroyo Murcia", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288445-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, National phase, Quarter-finals\nWinners will qualify to 2019\u201320 Copa del Rey first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288446-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa LP Chile Hacienda Chicureo\nThe 2019 Copa LP Chile Hacienda Chicureo was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the third edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Colina, Chile between 4 and 10 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288446-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa LP Chile Hacienda Chicureo, 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-00288447-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa LP Chile Hacienda Chicureo \u2013 Doubles\nQuinn Gleason and Luisa Stefani were the defending champions, but Gleason chose to participate at the 2019 Henderson Tennis Open instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288447-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa LP Chile Hacienda Chicureo \u2013 Doubles\nStefani partnered alongside Hayley Carter and successfully defended her title, defeating Anna Danilina and Conny Perrin in the final, 5\u20137, 6\u20133, [10\u20136].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288448-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa LP Chile Hacienda Chicureo \u2013 Singles\nXu Shilin was the defending champion but chose to participate at the 2019 Shenzhen Longhua Open instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288448-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa LP Chile Hacienda Chicureo \u2013 Singles\nElisabetta Cocciaretto won the title, defeating Victoria Bosio in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288449-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores\nThe 2019 Copa CONMEBOL Libertadores was the 60th edition of the CONMEBOL Libertadores (also referred to as the Copa Libertadores), South America's premier club football tournament organized by CONMEBOL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288449-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores\nFlamengo defeated defending champions River Plate in the final by a 2\u20131 score to win their second Copa Libertadores title. As champions, they qualified as the CONMEBOL representative at the 2019 FIFA Club World Cup in Qatar, and earned the right to play against the winners of the 2019 Copa Sudamericana in the 2020 Recopa Sudamericana. They also automatically qualified for the 2020 Copa Libertadores group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288449-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores\nIn 2016, CONMEBOL proposed that the Copa Libertadores final to be played as a single match instead of over two legs. It was only on 23 February 2018 that CONMEBOL was able to confirm that starting from this edition, the final will be played as a single match at a venue chosen in advance, and on 11 June 2018 after its Council meeting in Moscow, the confederation confirmed that the final would be played on 23 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288449-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores\nOn 14 August 2018, CONMEBOL announced that the 2019 final would be played in Santiago, Chile at the Estadio Nacional, however, due to safety concerns derived from the 2019 Chilean protests, and after consultations with the finalist clubs and their respective football associations, CONMEBOL announced on 5 November 2019 that the match was moved to the Estadio Monumental in Lima, Peru.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288449-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores, Teams\nThe following 47 teams from the 10 CONMEBOL member associations qualified for the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288449-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores, Schedule\nThe schedule of the competition was as follows. After changing the dates of the 2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica, the Brazilian Football Confederation released on 3 October 2018 its calendar for the following year, with new dates for the Copa Libertadores. The first stage matches were played on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday instead of Monday and Friday in the last two seasons. The group stage matches were played in six matchdays instead of being spread over a longer period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288449-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores, Draws\nThe draw for the qualifying stages and group stage was held on 17 December 2018, 20:30 PYST (UTC\u22123), at the CONMEBOL Convention Centre in Luque, Paraguay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288449-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores, Draws\nTeams were seeded by their CONMEBOL ranking of the Copa Libertadores as of 15 December 2018 (shown in parentheses), taking into account the following three factors:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288449-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores, Draws\nFor the first stage, the six teams were drawn into three ties (E1\u2013E3), with the teams from Pot 1 hosting the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288449-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores, Draws\nFor the second stage, the 16 teams were drawn into eight ties (C1\u2013C8), with the teams from Pot 1 hosting the second leg. Teams from the same association could not be drawn into the same tie, excluding the three winners of the first stage, which were allocated to Pot 2 and whose identity was not known at the time of the draw, and could be drawn into the same tie with another team from the same association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288449-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores, Draws\nFor the third stage, the eight winners of the second stage were allocated without any draw into the following four ties (G1\u2013G4), with the team in each tie with the higher CONMEBOL ranking hosting the second leg. As their identity was not known at the time of the draw, they could be drawn into the same tie with another team from the same association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288449-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores, Draws\nFor the group stage, the 32 teams were drawn into eight groups (Groups A\u2013H) of four containing a team from each of the four pots. Teams from the same association could not be drawn into the same group, excluding the four winners of the third stage, which were allocated to Pot 4 and whose identity was not known at the time of the draw, and could be drawn into the same group with another team from the same association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288449-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores, Draws\nThe draw for the round of 16 was held on 13 May 2019, 20:30 PYT (UTC\u22124), at the CONMEBOL Convention Centre in Luque, Paraguay. For the round of 16, the 16 teams were drawn into eight ties (A\u2013H) between a group winner (Pot 1) and a group runner-up (Pot 2), with the group winners hosting the second leg. Teams from the same association or the same group could be drawn into the same tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288449-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores, Qualifying stages\nIn the qualifying stages, 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, extra time was not played, and a penalty shoot-out was used to determine the winner (Regulations Article 29).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288449-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores, Qualifying stages, Copa Sudamericana qualification\nThe two best teams eliminated in the third stage entered the Copa Sudamericana second stage. Only matches in the third stage were considered for the ranking of teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288449-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores, Group stage\nIn the group stage, each group was played on a home-and-away round-robin basis. The teams were ranked according to the following criteria: 1. Points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, and 0 points for a loss); 2. Goal difference; 3. Goals scored; 4. Away goals scored; 5. CONMEBOL ranking (Regulations Article 28).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288449-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores, Group stage\nThe winners and runners-up of each group advanced to the round of 16 of the final stages. The third-placed teams of each group entered the Copa Sudamericana second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288449-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores, Final stages\nStarting from the round of 16, the teams played a single-elimination tournament with the following rules:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288449-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores, Final stages, Seeding\nStarting from the round of 16, the teams are seeded according to their results in the group stage, with the group winners (Pot 1) seeded 1\u20138, and the group runners-up (Pot 2) seeded 9\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288449-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores, Final stages, Bracket\nThe bracket was decided based on the round of 16 draw, which was held on 13 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288450-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Femenina\nThe 2019 Copa CONMEBOL Libertadores Femenina was the 11th edition of the CONMEBOL Libertadores Femenina (also referred to as the Copa Libertadores Femenina), South America's premier women's club football tournament organized by CONMEBOL. The tournament was held in Quito, Ecuador from 11 to 28 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288450-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Femenina\nThe final originally scheduled for 27 October 2019 was rescheduled to 28 October 2019 due to a series of protests and riots in Ecuador. The final was played between the Brazilian teams Corinthians and Ferrovi\u00e1ria, being the first final played between teams from the same country. Corinthians defeated Ferrovi\u00e1ria 2\u20130 to win their second tournament title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288450-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Femenina\nAtl\u00e9tico Huila were the defending champions, but were eliminated in the quarter-finals by Ferrovi\u00e1ria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288450-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Femenina\nDuring the tournament, Mariana Larroquette (UAI Urquiza) scored against Municipalidad de Majes (64th minute, Group D) the 1000th goal of Copa Libertadores Femenina history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288450-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Femenina, Format changes\nStarting from this season, the tournament was expanded from 12 to 16 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288450-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Femenina, Format changes\nFor the group stage, the 16 teams were drawn into four groups. Teams in each group played one another in a round-robin basis, with the top two teams of each group advancing to the quarter-finals. Starting from the quarter-finals, the teams played a single-elimination tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288450-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Femenina, Draw\nThe draw for the tournament was held on 30 September 2019, 16:00 ECT (UTC\u22125), at the Mercure Hotel Alameda Quito in Quito. The 16 teams were drawn into four groups of four containing a team from each of the four pots. The defending champions Atl\u00e9tico Huila and the Ecuadorian champions Deportivo Cuenca were automatically seeded into Pot 1 and allocated to positions A1 and B1, respectively, in the group stage. The Colombian champions Am\u00e9rica were automatically seeded into Pot 3, while the four additional teams from associations with the best historical performance were automatically seeded into Pot 4. The remaining teams were seeded based on the results of their association in the 2018 Copa Libertadores Femenina. Teams from the same association could not be drawn into the same group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 830]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288450-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Femenina, 2019 Ecuadorian protests\nOne week before the beginning of the tournament, various protests began in Ecuador after the government announced an end to fuel subsidies as part of public spending cuts agreed with the IMF in return for a loan. On 12 October 2019, two days into the tournament, none of the scheduled Group C and Group D matches were played due to security concerns caused by the protests. The Ecuadorian government and leaders representing the Andean nation's indigenous peoples reached an agreement on 13 October 2019 to repeal the decree that eliminated fuel subsidies. CONMEBOL later announced the competition would be resumed on 14 October 2019 with a modified schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288450-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Femenina, 2019 Ecuadorian protests\nFinally, the group stage was extended from 18 to 19 October, the quarter-finals were rescheduled from 20 and 21 to 21 and 22 October, semi-finals from 23 and 24 to 24 and 25 October and the final and third place match from 27 to 28 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288450-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Femenina, Group stage\nFour matches were played on opening day but CONMEBOL suspended the four games scheduled for 12 October 2019 due to security concerns caused by a civil unrest. CONMEBOL later announced the competition would be resumed on 14 October 2017 with a modified schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288450-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Femenina, Group stage\nIn the group stage, the teams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, tiebreakers would be applied in the following order (Regulations Article 21).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288450-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Femenina, Group stage\nThe winners and runners-up of each group advanced to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288450-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Femenina, Final stages\nStarting from the quarter-finals, the teams played a single-elimination tournament. If tied after full time, extra time would not be played, and the penalty shoot-out would be used to determine the winners (Regulations Article 23).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288450-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Femenina, Final stages, Final\nLuana Sart\u00f3rio (Ferrovi\u00e1ria) and Ingryd (Corinthians), sent off and booked in the semi-finals respectively, were suspended and could not play in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288450-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Femenina, Broadcasting\nElsewhere in South America and other countries, the matches were broadcast through the official CONMEBOL Libertadores pages on Facebook and YouTube.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288451-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Femenina de Futsal\nThe 2019 Copa CONMEBOL Libertadores Femenina de Futsal was the 6th edition of the Copa Libertadores Femenina de Futsal, South America's premier women's club futsal tournament organized by CONMEBOL. The tournament was held at Balne\u00e1rio Cambori\u00fa, Brazil between 1\u20138 December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288451-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Femenina de Futsal\nLe\u00f5es Da Serra were the defending champions, but did not qualify for this edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288451-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Femenina de Futsal, Teams\nThe competition was contested by 10 teams: one entry from each of the ten CONMEBOL associations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288451-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Femenina de Futsal, Venues\nThe tournament was played at the Gin\u00e1sio Hamilton Linhares Cruz in Balne\u00e1rio Cambori\u00fa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288451-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Femenina de Futsal, Draw\nThe draw of the tournament was held on 20 November 2019, 17:00 BRA (UTC\u22123), at the headquarters of the Federa\u00e7\u00e3o Catarinense de Futebol in Balne\u00e1rio Cambori\u00fa. The ten teams were drawn into two groups of five. The following two teams were seeded:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 47], "content_span": [48, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288451-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Femenina de Futsal, Draw\nThe other teams were seeded based on the results of their association in the 2018 Copa Libertadores Femenina de Futsal. Each group, apart from the seeded team, contained two teams from each of Pot 1 and Pot 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 47], "content_span": [48, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288451-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Femenina de Futsal, Squads\nEach team has to submit a squad of 14 players, including a minimum of two goalkeepers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288451-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Femenina de Futsal, Group stage\nThe top two teams of each group advance to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288451-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Femenina de Futsal, Group stage\nThe teams are ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, tiebreakers are applied in the following order (Regulations Article 21):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288451-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Femenina de Futsal, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, extra time and penalty shoot-out would be used to decide the winner if necessary (no extra time would be used in the play-offs for third to tenth place).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 57], "content_span": [58, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288452-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Final\nThe 2019 Copa Libertadores Final was the final match which decided the winner of the 2019 Copa Libertadores, the 60th edition of the Copa Libertadores, South American's top-tier continental club football tournament organized by CONMEBOL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288452-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Final\nThe match was played on 23 November 2019 at the Estadio Monumental in Lima, Peru, between Brazilian team Flamengo and the defending champions, River Plate from Argentina. This was the first Copa Libertadores final to be played as a single match at a neutral venue chosen in advance, replacing the previous home-and-away format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288452-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Final\nFlamengo won the match 2\u20131, securing their second tournament title. As champions, they qualified as the CONMEBOL representative at the 2019 FIFA Club World Cup and the 2020 Recopa Sudamericana. They also automatically qualified for the 2020 Copa Libertadores group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288452-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Final, Venue\nThe match was played at the Estadio Monumental in Lima, Peru. Originally scheduled at the Estadio Nacional in Santiago, Chile the match had to be relocated to the Estadio Monumental in Lima due to protests in Chile. It was the first final to be played as a single match at a neutral venue chosen in advance, replacing the home-and-away format used from 1960 to 2018. The second leg of the 2018 final was played at Santiago Bernab\u00e9u Stadium in Madrid, Spain, the first final held outside of South America, after security concerns cancelled the original second leg at the stadium of River Plate in Buenos Aires.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288452-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Final, Venue\nThis was the fourth Copa Libertadores Final held in Lima, after the play-off of the 1971 finals and the first legs of the 1972 and 1997 finals, all matches played at the Estadio Nacional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288452-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Final, Venue, Host selection\nIn 2016, CONMEBOL proposed that the Copa Libertadores final be played as a single match instead of over two legs. It was only on 23 February 2018 that CONMEBOL was able to confirm that the 2019 final onwards would be played as a single match at a venue chosen in advance, and on 11 June 2018 set the date of the match as 23 November 2019. With the Argentine and Brazilian cities banned by CONMEBOL for this bidding, three national associations had officialized interest in hosting the 2019 Copa Libertadores Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288452-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Final, Venue, Host selection\nOn 14 August 2018, the CONMEBOL Council selected the Estadio Nacional Julio Mart\u00ednez Pr\u00e1danos in Santiago, Chile as the venue of the 2019 Copa Libertadores Final while the Estadio Nacional in Lima had been chosen to host the 2019 Copa Sudamericana Final. The Uruguayan Football Association withdrew its bid because Estadio Centenario did not meet the CONMEBOL requirements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288452-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Final, Venue, Host selection\nLarge street protests in Chile began on 14 October 2019, involving millions of protestors and resulting in the deaths of at least 24 people. The protests led to safety concerns for the teams that would play the match and their travelling fans, despite this CONMEBOL still considered Santiago as the venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288452-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Final, Venue, Host selection\nEventually, after a meeting between CONMEBOL president with the presidents of both finalists and those of their football associations and the Football Federation of Chile president, on 5 November it was announced that the match was moving to the Estadio Monumental in Lima, Peru, due to the ongoing unrest in Chile.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288452-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Final, Show\nBefore the match, the Argentineans Fito P\u00e1ez and Tini Stoessel, the Colombian Sebasti\u00e1n Yatra and the Brazilian Anitta, who performed \"Y dale alegr\u00eda a mi coraz\u00f3n\" by P\u00e1ez. Then two bands identified with the finalist teams participated: Turf, for River Plate and Gabriel o Pensador, for Flamengo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 34], "content_span": [35, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288452-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Final, Road to the final\nNote: In all scores below, the score of the home team is given first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288452-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Final, Format\nThe final is played as a single match at a pre-selected venue, with the higher-seeded team designated as the \"home\" team for administrative purposes. If scores are level after full time, 30 minutes of extra time would be played. If still tied after extra time, a penalty shoot-out would be used to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288452-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Final, Match, Summary\nRiver Plate opened the match in a 2\u20133\u20133\u20132 formation, which allowed their midfield to dominate. This tactic gained them an early lead, when Rafael Santos Borr\u00e9 scored in the 14th minute from a cross by Ignacio Fern\u00e1ndez. River Plate had numerous chances for a second goal in the first half: Borr\u00e9 missed a opportunity by inches, Nicol\u00e1s De La Cruz missed a good chance in the 21st minute, and Exequiel Palacios had two long-distance shots that nearly went in. However River Plate were unable to capitalise on these opportunities, so at half time the score remained 1-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288452-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Final, Match, Summary\nRiver Plate continued to dominate in the early part of the second half. However, Flamengo began to assert themselves on the counter-attack, with Gabriel Barbosa and \u00c9verton Ribeiro nearly scoring while Borr\u00e9 was down with an injury. Flamengo substitute Diego was brought on for Gerson in the 66th minute, and he helped Flamengo turn the match around. Diego began several counter-attacks, including in the 75th minute when he linked up with Bruno Henrique Pinto and Gabriel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288452-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Final, Match, Summary\nThe score was still 1-0 in the 89th minute, with River Plate seeking to finish off the game, when Flamengo's Arrascaeta won the ball from Lucas Pratto in his own half, and started a counter-attack by passing to Bruno Henrique. Henrique dribbled the ball down the left wing and cut inside; near the opposing goal, he passed the ball to Arrascaeta, who avoided the goalkeeper's challenge to pass to an open Gabriel who scored a tap-in to tie the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288452-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Final, Match, Summary\nThree minutes later (in the second minute of injury time), Diego launched a deep pass from his own half that both River Plate centre backs missed. This allowed Gabriel to score again, giving Flamengo a 2-1 lead. The sudden reversal of fortune caused tempers to flare: Palacios kicked Bruno Henrique in the 95th minute, for which he received a red card. Gabriel Barbosa sarcastically applauded the referee in response; he also received a red card. The match ended shortly thereafter. After being behind for most of the match, Flamengo emerged as last minute champions, winning their second Copa Libertadores title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288452-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Final, Match, Details\nAssistant referees:Christian Schiemann (Chile)Claudio R\u00edos (Chile)Fourth official:Andr\u00e9s Rojas (Colombia)Video assistant referee:Esteban Ostojich (Uruguay)Assistant video assistant referees:Piero Maza (Chile)Alexander Guzm\u00e1n (Colombia)V\u00edctor Carrillo (Peru)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288452-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Final, Post-match\nFlamengo won their second Copa Libertadores and earned the right to represent CONMEBOL at the 2019 FIFA Club World Cup in Qatar. Jorge Jesus became the second non-South American manager to win the Copa Libertadores, following Mirko Jozi\u0107's 1991 championship for Colo-Colo. The club went on to clinch the Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A title a day later after the second-place team, Palmeiras, was mathematically eliminated from reaching the title. Flamengo became the first Brazilian club to earn a league and continental double since Santos did in 1963. The victory celebrations in Rio de Janeiro attracted tens of thousands of fans as the players rode in an open-top bus, but ended with clashes between riot police and spectators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 774]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288452-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Final, Post-match\nFlamengo's two late goals to overturn a 0\u20131 deficit invited comparisons to the 1999 UEFA Champions League Final, in which Manchester United defeated Bayern Munich in a similar fashion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288452-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores Final, Broadcasting\nIn Brazil, the match was broadcast by Rede Globo with commentary provided by Luiz Roberto, J\u00fanior and Walter Casagrande, in addition to Fox Sports on cable television with commentary provided by Nivaldo Prieto, Edmundo and Paulo Vinicius Coelho. The original broadcast received an Ibope Rating of 38 points in the 15 largest metropolitan regions in Brazil, reaching a total of 65.7 million viewers, with almost half of the television sets in Brazil watching the Globo broadcast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288453-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores de Beach Soccer\nThe 2019 CONMEBOL Libertadores de Beach Soccer was the fourth edition of the Copa Libertadores de Beach Soccer (known natively in Spanish as the Copa Libertadores de Futbol Playa), an annual continental beach soccer club tournament contested primarily between the champions of the domestic leagues of South American nations who are members of CONMEBOL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288453-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores de Beach Soccer\nThe tournament took place in Luque, Paraguay, between 14 and 21 September 2019, and was organised by CONMEBOL in cooperation with the host association, the Paraguayan Football Association (APF). It was originally scheduled to take place from 13\u201320 October 2019 but a change of dates was announced on 13 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288453-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores de Beach Soccer\nBrazilians Vit\u00f3ria were the defending champions but were eliminated at the group stage, ultimately finishing 10th. The title was won by fellow Brazilian club Vasco da Gama, who claimed their third title at the fourth attempt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288453-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores de Beach Soccer, Format\nAs per Regulations Article 15, the competition format consists of two phases: the Preliminary phase (Group phase) and the Final phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288453-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores de Beach Soccer, Teams\nTwelve teams qualified to take part; each of the domestic league champions (or champions of specific Copa Libertadores qualification tournaments) from the ten South American nations which are members of CONMEBOL, plus an additional club from the host country and the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288453-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores de Beach Soccer, Venue\nOne venue was used in the city of Luque, Gran Asunci\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288453-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores de Beach Soccer, Squads\nEach team had to submit a squad of 12 players, including a minimum of two goalkeepers (Regulations Article 31).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288453-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores de Beach Soccer, Draw\nThe draw to split the twelve teams into three groups of four took place on 20 August 2019 at 12:00 PYT (UTC\u20133) in Luque, Paraguay at the headquarters of the Paraguayan Football Association. The draw was conducted based on Regulations Article 16 as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 44], "content_span": [45, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288453-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores de Beach Soccer, Draw\nInitially, three teams were seeded and assigned to the head of the groups (Vit\u00f3ria automatically to Group A, the others via a draw from pot 1):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 44], "content_span": [45, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288453-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores de Beach Soccer, Draw\nThe remaining nine teams were split into three pots of three based on the final placement of their national association's club in the previous edition of the championship, with the highest three (Argentina, Uruguay and Bolivia) placed in Pot 2, the next three (Colombia, Peru and Chile) placed in Pot 3 and the lowest two (Venezuela and Ecuador) in pot 4, alongside the additional Paraguayan club. From each pot, the first team drawn was placed into Group A, the second team drawn placed into Group B and the final team drawn placed into Group C. Clubs from the same association could not be drawn into the same group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 44], "content_span": [45, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288453-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores de Beach Soccer, Group stage\nEach team earns three points for a win in regulation time, two points for a win in extra time, one point for a win in a penalty shoot-out, and no points for a defeat. The top two teams of each group, plus the two best ranked third-placed teams, advance to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 51], "content_span": [52, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288453-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores de Beach Soccer, Group stage\nIf two or more teams are equal on points, their rankings are determined as follows (Regulations Article 21):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 51], "content_span": [52, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288453-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores de Beach Soccer, Group stage, Ranking of third-placed teams\nAs per Regulations Article 17, it was decided the third place teams would take the following berths in the quarter-final draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288453-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores de Beach Soccer, 9th\u201312th place play-offs\nThe worst third placed team plays the best fourth placed team for 9th place; the second best fourth placed team plays the worst fourth placed team for 11th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288454-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores de Futsal\nThe 2019 Copa CONMEBOL Libertadores de Futsal was the 19th edition of the Copa Libertadores de Futsal, South America's premier club futsal tournament organized by CONMEBOL. The tournament was held at Buenos Aires, Argentina between 14\u201321 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288454-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores de Futsal, Teams\nThe competition was contested by 12 teams: the title holders, one entry from each of the ten CONMEBOL associations, plus an additional entry from the host association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288454-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores de Futsal, Venues\nThe tournament was played at the Polideportivo del Club San Lorenzo de Almagro in Buenos Aires.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288454-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores de Futsal, Draw\nThe draw of the tournament was held on 4 July 2019, 13:00 ART (UTC\u22123), at the Predio de Ezeiza of the Argentine Football Association in Buenos Aires. The twelve teams were drawn into three groups of four. The following three teams were seeded:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 38], "content_span": [39, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288454-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores de Futsal, Draw\nThe other teams were seeded based on the results of their association in the 2018 Copa Libertadores de Futsal, with the additional entry from the host association seeded last. Each group, apart from the seeded team, contained one team from each of Pot 1, Pot 2, and Pot 3. Teams from the same association could not be drawn into the same group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 38], "content_span": [39, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288454-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores de Futsal, Squads\nEach team has to submit a squad of 14 players, including a minimum of two goalkeepers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288454-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores de Futsal, Group stage\nThe top two teams of each group and the two best third-placed teams advance to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288454-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores de Futsal, Group stage\nThe teams are ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, tiebreakers are applied in the following order (Regulations Article 21):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288454-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores de Futsal, Knockout stage\nIn the quarter-finals, semi-finals and final, extra time and penalty shoot-out would be used to decide the winner if necessary (no extra time would be used in the play-offs for third to twelfth place).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288455-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores final stages\nThe 2019 Copa Libertadores final stages were played from 23 July to 23 November 2019. A total of 16 teams competed in the final stages deciding the champions of the 2019 Copa Libertadores, with the final played in Lima, Peru at the Estadio Monumental.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288455-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores final stages, Qualified teams\nThe winners and runners-up of each of the eight groups in the group stage advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288455-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores final stages, Qualified teams, Seeding\nStarting from the round of 16, the teams are seeded according to their results in the group stage, with the group winners (Pot 1) seeded 1\u20138, and the group runners-up (Pot 2) seeded 9\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288455-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores final stages, Format\nStarting from the round of 16, the teams played a single-elimination tournament with the following rules:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288455-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores final stages, Draw\nThe draw for the round of 16 was held on 13 May 2019, 20:30 PYT (UTC\u22124), at the CONMEBOL Convention Centre in Luque, Paraguay. For the round of 16, the 16 teams were drawn into eight ties (A\u2013H) between a group winner (Pot 1) and a group runner-up (Pot 2), with the group winners hosting the second leg. Teams from the same association or the same group could be drawn into the same tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 41], "content_span": [42, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288455-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores final stages, Bracket\nThe bracket starting from the round of 16 was determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288455-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores final stages, Bracket\nThe bracket was decided based on the round of 16 draw, which was held on 13 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288455-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores final stages, Round of 16\nThe first legs were played on 23\u201325 July, and the second legs were played on 30\u201331 July and 1 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288455-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores final stages, Round of 16, Match A\nTied 0\u20130 on aggregate, River Plate won on penalties and advanced to the quarter-finals (Match S1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288455-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores final stages, Round of 16, Match B\nPalmeiras won 6\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the quarter-finals (Match S2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288455-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores final stages, Round of 16, Match C\nTied 2\u20132 on aggregate, Flamengo won on penalties and advanced to the quarter-finals (Match S3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288455-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores final stages, Round of 16, Match D\nLDU Quito won 4\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the quarter-finals (Match S4).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288455-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores final stages, Round of 16, Match E\nBoca Juniors won 3\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the quarter-finals (Match S4).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288455-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores final stages, Round of 16, Match F\nInternacional won 3\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the quarter-finals (Match S3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288455-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores final stages, Round of 16, Match G\nGr\u00eamio won 5\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the quarter-finals (Match S2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288455-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores final stages, Round of 16, Match H\nCerro Porte\u00f1o won 2\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the quarter-finals (Match S1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288455-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores final stages, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs were played on 20\u201322 August, and the second legs were played on 27\u201329 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288455-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores final stages, Quarter-finals, Match S1\nRiver Plate won 3\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the semi-finals (Match F1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288455-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores final stages, Quarter-finals, Match S2\nTied 2\u20132 on aggregate, Gr\u00eamio won on away goals and advanced to the semi-finals (Match F2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288455-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores final stages, Quarter-finals, Match S3\nFlamengo won 3\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the semi-finals (Match F2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288455-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores final stages, Quarter-finals, Match S4\nBoca Juniors won 3\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the semi-finals (Match F1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288455-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores final stages, Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 1\u20132 October, and the second legs were played on 22\u201323 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288455-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores final stages, Semi-finals, Match F1\nRiver Plate won 2\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288455-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores final stages, Semi-finals, Match F2\nFlamengo won 6\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288455-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores final stages, Final\nThe final was played on 23 November 2019 at the Estadio Monumental in Lima.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288456-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores group stage\nThe 2019 Copa Libertadores group stage was played from 5 March to 9 May 2019. A total of 32 teams competed in the group stage to decide the 16 places in the final stages of the 2019 Copa Libertadores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288456-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores group stage, Draw\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 17 December 2018, 20:30 PYST (UTC\u22123), at the CONMEBOL Convention Centre in Luque, Paraguay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 40], "content_span": [41, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288456-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores group stage, Draw\nTeams were seeded by their CONMEBOL ranking of the Copa Libertadores as of 15 December 2018 (shown in parentheses), taking into account the following three factors:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 40], "content_span": [41, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288456-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores group stage, Draw\nFor the group stage, the 32 teams were drawn into eight groups (Groups A\u2013H) of four containing a team from each of the four pots. Teams from the same association could not be drawn into the same group, excluding the four winners of the third stage, which were allocated to Pot 4 and whose identity was not known at the time of the draw, and could be drawn into the same group with another team from the same association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 40], "content_span": [41, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288456-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores group stage, Draw\nThe following were the four winners of the third stage of qualifying which joined the 28 direct entrants in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 40], "content_span": [41, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288456-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores group stage, Format\nIn the group stage, each group was played on a home-and-away round-robin basis. The teams were ranked according to the following criteria: 1. Points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, and 0 points for a loss); 2. Goal difference; 3. Goals scored; 4. Away goals scored; 5. CONMEBOL ranking (Regulations Article 28).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288456-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores group stage, Format\nThe winners and runners-up of each group advanced to the round of 16 of the final stages. The third-placed teams of each group entered the Copa Sudamericana second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288457-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages\nThe 2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages were played from 22 January to 28 February 2019. A total of 19 teams competed in the qualifying stages to decide four of the 32 places in the group stage of the 2019 Copa Libertadores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288457-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages, Draw\nThe draw for the qualifying stages was held on 17 December 2018, 20:30 PYST (UTC\u22123), at the CONMEBOL Convention Centre in Luque, Paraguay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 46], "content_span": [47, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288457-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages, Draw\nTeams were seeded by their CONMEBOL ranking of the Copa Libertadores as of 15 December 2018 (shown in parentheses), taking into account the following three factors:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 46], "content_span": [47, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288457-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages, Draw\nFor the first stage, the six teams were drawn into three ties (E1\u2013E3), with the teams from Pot 1 hosting the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 46], "content_span": [47, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288457-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages, Draw\nFor the second stage, the 16 teams were drawn into eight ties (C1\u2013C8), with the teams from Pot 1 hosting the second leg. Teams from the same association could not be drawn into the same tie, excluding the three winners of the first stage, which were allocated to Pot 2 and whose identity was not known at the time of the draw, and could be drawn into the same tie with another team from the same association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 46], "content_span": [47, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288457-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages, Draw\nFor the third stage, the eight winners of the second stage were allocated without any draw into the following four ties (G1\u2013G4), with the team in each tie with the higher CONMEBOL ranking hosting the second leg. As their identity was not known at the time of the draw, they could be drawn into the same tie with another team from the same association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 46], "content_span": [47, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288457-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages, Format\nIn the qualifying stages, 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, extra time was not played, and a penalty shoot-out was used to determine the winner (Regulations Article 29).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288457-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages, Bracket\nThe bracket was decided based on the first stage draw and second stage draw, which was held on 17 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288457-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages, First stage\nThe first legs were played on 22\u201323 January, and the second legs were played on 29\u201330 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288457-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages, First stage, Match E1\nDelf\u00edn won 5\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the second stage (Match C7).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288457-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages, First stage, Match E2\nTied 2\u20132 on aggregate, Deportivo La Guaira won on away goals and advanced to the second stage (Match C6).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288457-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages, First stage, Match E3\nDefensor Sporting won 6\u20135 on aggregate and advanced to the second stage (Match C8).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288457-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages, Second stage\nThe first legs were played on 5\u20137 February, and the second legs were played on 12\u201314 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 54], "content_span": [55, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288457-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages, Second stage, Match C1\nAtl\u00e9tico Mineiro won 5\u20134 on aggregate and advanced to the third stage (Match G1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288457-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages, Second stage, Match C2\nMelgar won 1\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the third stage (Match G2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288457-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages, Second stage, Match C3\nLibertad won 6\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the third stage (Match G3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288457-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages, Second stage, Match C4\nTied 2\u20132 on aggregate, Palestino won on penalties and advanced to the third stage (Match G4).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288457-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages, Second stage, Match C5\nTalleres won 2\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the third stage (Match G4).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288457-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages, Second stage, Match C6\nAtl\u00e9tico Nacional won 1\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the third stage (Match G3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288457-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages, Second stage, Match C7\nTied 1\u20131 on aggregate, Caracas won on away goals and advanced to the third stage (Match G2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288457-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages, Second stage, Match C8\nDefensor Sporting won 3\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the third stage (Match G1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288457-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages, Third stage\nThe first legs were played on 19\u201321 February, and the second legs were played on 26\u201328 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288457-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages, Third stage, Match G1\nAtl\u00e9tico Mineiro won 2\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the group stage (Group E).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288457-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages, Third stage, Match G2\nMelgar won 3\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the group stage (Group F).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288457-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages, Third stage, Match G3\nTied 1\u20131 on aggregate, Libertad won on penalties and advanced to the group stage (Group H).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288457-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages, Third stage, Match G4\nPalestino won 4\u20133 on aggregate and advanced to the group stage (Group A).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288457-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Libertadores qualifying stages, Copa Sudamericana qualification\nThe two best teams eliminated in the third stage entered the Copa Sudamericana second stage. Only matches in the third stage were considered for the ranking of teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 73], "content_span": [74, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288458-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Paraguay\nThe 2019 Copa Paraguay was the second edition of the Copa Paraguay, Paraguay's domestic football cup competition. The competition started on 28 May 2019 and concluded on 5 December 2019. Libertad won their first title in the competition by beating defending champions Guaran\u00ed in the final by a 3\u20130 score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288458-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 Copa Paraguay\nWith both champions Libertad and runners-up Guaran\u00ed being already qualified for the 2020 Copa Libertadores, and third-placed team Deportivo Capiat\u00e1 being relegated at the end of the season, the berth to the 2020 Copa Sudamericana the winners were originally entitled to was transferred to the Primera Divisi\u00f3n aggregate table eighth-placed team, Sportivo Luque\u00f1o.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288458-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Paraguay, Format\nFor this edition, the competition was expanded from 48 to 64 teams, with the Primera B, Primera C, and UFI being entitled to more berths. Given the expansion, the competition did not feature any preliminary rounds for teams from the lower tiers and the 64 teams directly qualified for the first round. Ties in all rounds were played as a single game, with a penalty shootout deciding the winner in case of a draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288458-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Paraguay, Teams\n64 teams competed in this edition of the competition: the 12 Primera Divisi\u00f3n and 16 Divisi\u00f3n Intermedia teams, as well as 11 from the Primera B, 8 from the Primera C, and the 17 champions from each department of Paraguay representing the UFI.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288458-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Paraguay, Teams, Primera Divisi\u00f3n\nAll of the 12 Primera Divisi\u00f3n teams took part in the competition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288458-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Paraguay, Teams, Primera B\nThe 9 teams ranked from 2nd to 10th place in the 2018 Primera B season and the top two in the 2018 Primera C season qualified:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 36], "content_span": [37, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288458-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Paraguay, Teams, Primera C\nTeams ranked from 3rd to 10th place in the previous Primera C season qualified:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 36], "content_span": [37, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288458-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Paraguay, Teams, UFI\nThe champions from each of the 17 departments of Paraguay qualified for the competition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288458-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Paraguay, Round of 64\nThe draw for the round of 64 was held on 16 May 2019 and the matches were played from 28 May to 25 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288458-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Paraguay, Round of 32\nMatches in this round were played from 7 August to 3 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288458-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Paraguay, Round of 16\nMatches in this round were played from 10 to 19 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288458-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Paraguay, Quarterfinals\nMatches in this round were played from 9 to 16 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288458-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Paraguay, Semifinals\nThe semifinals were played on 5 and 6 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 83]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288459-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Paulino Alcantara\nThe 2019 Copa Paulino Alcantara was the second edition of the Copa Paulino Alcantara, the domestic football cup competition of the Philippines. It included 6 out of 7 Philippines Football League teams as well as a guest team, the Philippines U22. It started on October 26, 2019, and concluded on November 16, 2019, with Ceres-Negros beating Kaya-Iloilo in the final, 2\u20131. The win in the final propelled Ceres to an \"invincible\" status, having gone unbeaten the entire domestic season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288459-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Paulino Alcantara, Participating clubs\nAll seven clubs of the 2019 Philippines Football League are eligible to participate in the tournament. However, Global Makati which was undergoing a reorganization, pulled out of the tournament. A guest team, the Philippines U-22, competed in the tournament as preparation for the upcoming 2019 Southeast Asian Games", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288459-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Paulino Alcantara, Format, Competition\nThe Copa Paulino Alcantara will commence on October 26, 2019 with a group phase of two groups with four teams each. A round robin format will be used for this phase. The top two teams advance to the semifinals with the group winners facing the runner-up team from the other group. The higher seeded teams will host the one-off semifinals. The final will consist of a single match as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288459-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Paulino Alcantara, Format, Draw\nThe draw for the 2019 Copa Paulino Alcantara was held on October 20, 2019. Due to Global's sudden backing out, one group will have 3 teams while the other will have 4. The top 2 teams of the 2019 Philippines Football League season, namely Ceres-Negros and Kaya-Iloilo are the two seeded teams. The other five will be in pot 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288460-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Paulino Alcantara Final\nThe final of the second season of the Copa Paulino Alcantara will be contested by Ceres\u2013Negros and Kaya F.C.\u2013Iloilo on 16 November 2019 on neutral ground at the Bi\u00f1an Football Stadium in Bi\u00f1an.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288460-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Paulino Alcantara Final, Background\nKaya F.C.\u2013Iloilo are the defending champions of the Copa Paulino Alcantara having won the inaugural tournament in 2018 while Ceres\u2013Negros are the league champions for the 2019 season. Both teams topped their groups in the group stage and advances to the semifinals. This marks the first time Ceres-Negros advances to the knockout stages after failing to do so in the previous tournament. Ceres-Negros overcame Stallion Laguna 4\u20133 away from home at the Bi\u00f1an Football Stadium while Kaya\u2013Iloilo won 3\u20130 over Mendiola at the Aboitiz Pitch in Lipa, Batangas to secure a berth in the final. Kaya\u2013Iloilo also secured the second slot for Philippine clubs at the 2020 AFC Cup since their final opponents already clinched the first by winning the league title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 797]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288460-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Paulino Alcantara Final, Background\nThe final will be held 16 November 2019 on neutral ground at the Bi\u00f1an Football Stadium in Bi\u00f1an, Laguna. Ceres\u2013Negros enters the final with a 28-match undefeated streak when league matches also taken into account.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288460-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Paulino Alcantara Final, Match summary\nThe 2019 Copa Paulino Alcantara final was contested in the Bi\u00f1an Football Stadium in Bi\u00f1an, Laguna. At the time of the final, Ceres-Negros were considered the underdogs as majority of their first-team players (Carli de Murga, Mike Ott, Sean Kane, Jose Elmer Porteria and Stephan Schr\u00f6ck) were on international duty for the Philippine national team in the 2022 Fifa World Cup qualifiers, trimming the squad size down to 14. Kaya\u2013Iloilo, on the other hand, had a full-strength squad and were also the defending champions, having won the 2018 Copa Paulino Alcantara, and were looking for revenge after Ceres beat them 3\u20130 on the last matchday of the 2019 Philippines Football League season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288460-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Paulino Alcantara Final, Match summary\nThe match was an even affair with both sides having equal possession of the ball until Senegalese forward Robert Lopez Mendy struck off a deflection from Louie Casas. Kaya then had majority of possession, with Jovin Bedic, Jordan Mintah, and Kenshiro Daniels coming close to finding the back of the net. The half ended 1\u20130 in favor of Ceres. In the 2nd half, Kaya retained much of the possession but a slick pass from Mendy found Negros-born Tristan Robles, who finished in the 68th minute. Kaya's Copa top scorer Kenshiro Daniels found the back of the net in the 85th minute to reduce the scoreline to 2\u20131. Kaya pushed for an equalizer but could not find the back of the net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288460-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Paulino Alcantara Final, Match summary\nThe match ended in a 2\u20131 in favor of Ceres-Negros. By doing so, they completed the first-ever \"Invincibles\" domestic season in the Philippine Professional Football era. However, since they already qualified for the 2020 AFC Cup by winning the 2019 Philippines Football League, Kaya-Iloilo qualified as they were runners-up in both competitions. Stallion Laguna by being 3rd place in the 2019 Philippines Football League season qualify as a standby team should Ceres get through to the 2020 AFC Champions League group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288460-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Paulino Alcantara Final, Match summary\nCeres Negros also clinched all three individual awards of the tournament: Robert Mendy won the Golden Boot by scoring five goals in the whole tournament, Roland Muller was awarded the Golden Glove, and Takashi Odawara the Golden Ball award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288461-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Per\u00fa\nThe 2019 Peru Cup season (Spanish: Copa Per\u00fa 2019), the largest amateur tournament of Peruvian football, started in February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288461-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Per\u00fa\nThis edition has featured a change, with the elimination of the Regional Stage and the inclusion of participants from all the Regions of Peru in the National Stage. Under the new format, the tournament has four stages. The first three stages are played as mini-league round-robin tournaments, and the fourth stage is played under POT System intellectual property of the MatchVision company.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288461-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Per\u00fa\nThe 2019 Peru Cup started with the District Stage (Spanish: Etapa Distrital) in February. The next stage was the Provincial Stage (Spanish: Etapa Provincial) which started in June. The tournament continued with the Departmental Stage (Spanish: Etapa Departamental) in July. The National Stage (Spanish: Etapa Nacional) starts in September. The winner of the National Stage will be promoted to the Liga 1 and the runner-up will be promoted to the Liga 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288461-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Per\u00fa, Departmental stage\nDepartmental Stage: 2019 Ligas Departamentales del Peru and 2019 Ligas Superiores del Per\u00fa", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288461-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Per\u00fa, Departmental stage\nThe following list shows the teams that qualified for the National Stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288461-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Per\u00fa, National Stage, Final group stage\nThe final group stage, colloquially known as La Final\u00edsima, will be played by the four semifinalists at the Estadio Miguel Grau. The team with the most points will be declared the winner and be promoted to the 2020 Liga 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 49], "content_span": [50, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288462-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sevilla\nThe 2019 Copa Sevilla was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the 22nd edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Seville, Spain between 9 and 15 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288462-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288462-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sevilla, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using protected rankings:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 61], "content_span": [62, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288463-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sevilla \u2013 Doubles\nGerard Granollers and Pedro Mart\u00ednez were the defending champions and successfully defended their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288463-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sevilla \u2013 Doubles\nGranollers and Mart\u00ednez won the title after defeating Kimmer Coppejans and Sergio Martos Gorn\u00e9s 7\u20135, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288464-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sevilla \u2013 Singles\nKimmer Coppejans was the defending champion but lost in the quarterfinals to Alejandro Davidovich Fokina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288464-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sevilla \u2013 Singles\nDavidovich Fokina won the title after defeating Jaume Munar 2\u20136, 6\u20132, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288465-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana\nThe 2019 Copa CONMEBOL Sudamericana was the 18th edition of the CONMEBOL Sudamericana (also referred to as the Copa Sudamericana, or Portuguese: Copa Sul-Americana), South America's secondary club football tournament organized by CONMEBOL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288465-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana\nEcuadorian club Independiente del Valle defeated Argentine club Col\u00f3n by a 3\u20131 score in the final to win their first tournament title. As champions, Independiente del Valle earned the right to play against the winners of the 2019 Copa Libertadores in the 2020 Recopa Sudamericana. They also automatically qualified for the 2020 Copa Libertadores group stage. They would also have played the winners of the 2019 J.League Cup in the 2020 J.League Cup / Copa Sudamericana Championship, but it would not be held due to the 2020 Tokyo Olympics scheduled at the same time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288465-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana\nOn 14 August 2018, CONMEBOL decided that starting from the 2019 edition, the final will be played as a single match, and although it was originally stated that the final would be played in Lima, Peru at the Estadio Nacional, on 9 May 2019 the confederation's Council decided to switch the venue to Estadio Defensores del Chaco in Asunci\u00f3n, Paraguay. On 21 June 2019, APF announced that Estadio General Pablo Rojas in Asunci\u00f3n will host the 2019 final due to remodeling works at the Estadio Defensores del Chaco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288465-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana\nAthletico Paranaense were the defending champions, but did not play this edition as they qualified for the 2019 Copa Libertadores group stage as Copa Sudamericana champions and later advanced to the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288465-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana, Teams\nThe following 44 teams from the 10 CONMEBOL associations qualified for the tournament, entering the first stage:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288465-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana, Teams\nA further 10 teams eliminated from the 2019 Copa Libertadores were transferred to the Copa Sudamericana, entering the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288465-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana, Schedule\nThe schedule of the competition was as follows. After changing the dates of the 2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica, the Brazilian Football Confederation released on 3 October 2018 its calendar for the following year, with new dates for the Copa Sudamericana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288465-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana, Draws\nThe draw for the first stage was held on 17 December 2018, 20:30 PYST (UTC\u22123), at the CONMEBOL Convention Centre in Luque, Paraguay. For the first stage, the teams were divided into two pots according to their geographical zones:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288465-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana, Draws\nThe 44 teams were drawn into 22 ties (E1\u2013E22) between a team from Pot A and a team from Pot B, with the teams from Pot B hosting the second leg in odd-numbered ties, and the teams from Pot A hosting the second leg in even-numbered ties. This distribution ensured that teams from the same association could not be drawn into the same tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288465-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana, Draws\nThe draw for the second stage was held on 13 May 2019, 20:30 PYT (UTC\u22124), at the CONMEBOL Convention Centre in Luque, Paraguay. For the second stage, the teams were allocated to two pots according to their previous results in this season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288465-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana, Draws\nThe 32 teams were drawn into 16 ties (O1\u2013O16) between a team from Pot 1 and a team from Pot 2, with the teams from Pot 1 hosting the second leg. Teams from the same association could be drawn into the same tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288465-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana, 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, extra time was not played, and a penalty shoot-out was used to determine the winner (Regulations Article 27).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288465-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana, First stage\nThe 22 winners of the first stage advanced to the second stage to join the 10 teams transferred from the Copa Libertadores (two best teams eliminated in the third stage of qualifying and eight third-placed teams in the group stage).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288465-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana, Second stage\nIn the second 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, extra time was not played, and a penalty shoot-out was used to determine the winner (Regulations Article 27).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288465-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana, Second stage\nThe 16 winners of the second stage advanced to the round of 16 of the final stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288465-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana, Final stages\nStarting from the round of 16, the teams played a single-elimination tournament with the following rules:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288465-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana, Final stages, Seeding\nStarting from the round of 16, the teams were seeded according to the second stage draw, with each team assigned a \"seed\" 1\u201316 corresponding to the tie they won (O1\u2013O16) (Regulations Article 22.c).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288465-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana, Final stages, Bracket\nThe bracket was decided based on the second stage draw, which was held on 13 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288466-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana Final\nThe 2019 Copa Sudamericana Final was the final match to decide the winner of the 2019 Copa Sudamericana, the 18th edition of the Copa Sudamericana, South America's secondary international club football tournament organized by CONMEBOL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288466-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana Final\nThe final was contested in a single match format between Ecuadorian team Independiente del Valle and Argentinian team Col\u00f3n, at the Estadio General Pablo Rojas in Asunci\u00f3n, Paraguay on 9 November 2019. This was the first final to be played as a single match at a venue chosen in advance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288466-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana Final\nIndependiente del Valle defeated Col\u00f3n by a 3\u20131 score to win their first Copa Sudamericana title. As champions, Independiente del Valle earned the right to play against the winners of the 2019 Copa Libertadores in the 2020 Recopa Sudamericana. They also automatically qualified for the 2020 Copa Libertadores group stage. They would also have played the winners of the 2019 J.League Cup in the 2020 J.League Cup / Copa Sudamericana Championship, but it would not be held due to the 2020 Tokyo Olympics scheduled to be held at the same time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288466-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana Final, Venue\nOn 14 August 2018, CONMEBOL decided that starting from the 2019 edition, the final would be played as a single match, and although it was originally stated that the final would be played in Lima, Peru at the Estadio Nacional, on 9 May 2019 the confederation's Council decided to switch the venue to Estadio Defensores del Chaco in Asunci\u00f3n, Paraguay. On 21 June 2019, APF announced that Estadio General Pablo Rojas in Asunci\u00f3n would host the 2019 final due to remodeling works in Estadio Defensores del Chaco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288466-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana Final, Show\nBefore the game, two bands identified with the finalist teams played on the field: Los Palmeras, for Col\u00f3n, and La Vagancia, for Independiente. Then the Puerto Rican singer Luis Fonsi finished the show.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 34], "content_span": [35, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288466-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana Final, Road to the final\nNote: In all scores below, the score of the home team is given first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288466-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana Final, Format\nThe final was played as a single match at a venue pre-selected by CONMEBOL, with the higher-seeded team designated as the \"home\" team for administrative purposes (Regulations Article 25). If tied after regulation, 30 minutes of extra time would be played. If still tied after extra time, the penalty shoot-out would be used to determine the winner (Regulations Article 28).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288466-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana Final, Match\nAt 18:05 UTC\u22123, in the 32nd minute, the match was interrupted due to severe weather. The match resumed at 19:00 UTC\u22123.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288466-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana Final, Match\nAssistant referees:Emerson de Carvalho (Brazil)Bruno Pires (Brazil)Fourth official:Alexis Herrera (Venezuela)Video assistant referee:Daniel Fedorczuk (Uruguay)Assistant video assistant referees:V\u00edctor Carrillo (Peru)Danilo Manis (Brazil)Nicol\u00e1s Tar\u00e1n (Uruguay)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288467-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana final stages\nThe 2019 Copa Sudamericana final stages were played from 9 July to 9 November 2019. A total of 16 teams competed in the final stages to decide the champions of the 2019 Copa Sudamericana, with the final played in Asunci\u00f3n, Paraguay at the Estadio General Pablo Rojas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288467-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Qualified teams\nThe 16 winners of the second stage advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288467-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Qualified teams, Seeding\nStarting from the round of 16, the teams were seeded according to the second stage draw, with each team assigned a \"seed\" 1\u201316 corresponding to the tie they won (O1\u2013O16) (Regulations Article 22.c).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288467-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Format\nStarting from the round of 16, the teams played a single-elimination tournament with the following rules:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288467-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Bracket\nThe bracket starting from the round of 16 was determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288467-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Bracket\nThe bracket was decided based on the second stage draw, which was held on 13 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288467-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Round of 16\nThe first legs were played on 9\u201311 and 23\u201325 July, and the second legs were played on 16\u201318, 30\u201331 July and 1 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288467-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Round of 16, Match A\nLa Equidad won 4\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the quarter-finals (Match S1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288467-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Round of 16, Match B\nIndependiente del Valle won 2\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the quarter-finals (Match S2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288467-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Round of 16, Match C\nFluminense won 5\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the quarter-finals (Match S3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288467-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Round of 16, Match D\nTied 3\u20133 on aggregate, Zulia won on away goals and advanced to the quarter-finals (Match S4).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288467-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Round of 16, Match E\nTied 1\u20131 on aggregate, Col\u00f3n won on penalties and advanced to the quarter-finals (Match S4).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288467-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Round of 16, Match F\nCorinthians won 4\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the quarter-finals (Match S3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288467-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Round of 16, Match G\nTied 3\u20133 on aggregate, Independiente won on away goals and advanced to the quarter-finals (Match S2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288467-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Round of 16, Match H\nAtl\u00e9tico Mineiro won 3\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the quarter-finals (Match S1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288467-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs were played on 6, 8, 20 and 22 August, and the second legs were played on 13, 15, 27 and 29 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288467-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Quarter-finals, Match S1\nAtl\u00e9tico Mineiro won 5\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the semi-finals (Match F1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288467-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Quarter-finals, Match S2\nTied 2\u20132 on aggregate, Independiente del Valle won on away goals and advanced to the semi-finals (Match F2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288467-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Quarter-finals, Match S3\nTied 1\u20131 on aggregate, Corinthians won on away goals and advanced to the semi-finals (Match F2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288467-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Quarter-finals, Match S4\nCol\u00f3n won 4\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the semi-finals (Match F1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288467-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 18\u201319 September, and the second legs were played on 25\u201326 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288467-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Semi-finals, Match F1\nTied 3\u20133 on aggregate, Col\u00f3n won on away goals and advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288467-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Semi-finals, Match F2\nIndependiente del Valle won 4\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288467-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Final\nThe final was played on 9 November 2019 at the Estadio General Pablo Rojas in Asunci\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288468-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana first stage\nThe 2019 Copa Sudamericana first stage was played from 5 February to 8 May 2019. A total of 44 teams competed in the first stage to decide 22 of the 32 places in the second stage of the 2019 Copa Sudamericana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288468-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana first stage, Draw\nThe draw for the first stage was held on 17 December 2018, 20:30 PYST (UTC\u22123), at the CONMEBOL Convention Centre in Luque, Paraguay. For the first stage, the teams were divided into two pots according to their geographical zones:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 40], "content_span": [41, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288468-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana first stage, Draw\nThe 44 teams were drawn into 22 ties (E1\u2013E22) between a team from Pot A and a team from Pot B, with the teams from Pot B hosting the second leg in odd-numbered ties, and the teams from Pot A hosting the second leg in even-numbered ties. This distribution ensured that teams from the same association could not be drawn into the same tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 40], "content_span": [41, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288468-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana 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, extra time was not played, and a penalty shoot-out was used to determine the winner (Regulations Article 27).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288468-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana first stage, Format\nThe 22 winners of the first stage advanced to the second stage to join the 10 teams transferred from the Copa Libertadores (two best teams eliminated in the third stage of qualifying and eight third-placed teams in the group stage).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288468-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana first stage, Matches\nThe first legs were played on 5\u20137, 12\u201314, 26 February, 19\u201321 March and 2\u20134 April, and the second legs were played on 19\u201321, 26\u201328 February, 21 March, 16\u201318, 30 April, 1\u20132 and 8 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288468-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana first stage, Matches, Match E1\nMontevideo Wanderers won 3\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288468-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana first stage, Matches, Match E2\nLiverpool won 1\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288468-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana first stage, Matches, Match E3\nIndependiente won 6\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288468-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana first stage, Matches, Match E4\nTied 2\u20132 on aggregate, Rionegro \u00c1guilas won on penalties and advanced to the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288468-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana first stage, Matches, Match E5\nArgentinos Juniors won 2\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288468-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana first stage, Matches, Match E6\nCol\u00f3n won 5\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288468-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana first stage, Matches, Match E7\nTied 2\u20132 on aggregate, Uni\u00f3n Espa\u00f1ola won on penalties and advanced to the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288468-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana first stage, Matches, Match E8\nCerro won 4\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288468-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana first stage, Matches, Match E9\nDeportivo Santan\u00ed won 3\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288468-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana first stage, Matches, Match E10\nTied 1\u20131 on aggregate, Universidad Cat\u00f3lica won on penalties and advanced to the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288468-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana first stage, Matches, Match E11\nTied 1\u20131 on aggregate, River Plate won on away goals and advanced to the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288468-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana first stage, Matches, Match E12\nMacar\u00e1 won 5\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288468-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana first stage, Matches, Match E13\nTied 3\u20133 on aggregate, Royal Pari won on penalties and advanced to the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288468-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana first stage, Matches, Match E14\nTied 1\u20131 on aggregate, Sol de Am\u00e9rica won on penalties and advanced to the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288468-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana first stage, Matches, Match E15\nTied 1\u20131 on aggregate, Uni\u00f3n La Calera won on away goals and advanced to the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288468-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana first stage, Matches, Match E16\nTied 1\u20131 on aggregate, Deportivo Cali won on penalties and advanced to the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288468-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana first stage, Matches, Match E17\nTied 1\u20131 on aggregate, Zulia won on penalties and advanced to the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288468-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana first stage, Matches, Match E18\nTied 2\u20132 on aggregate, Corinthians won on penalties and advanced to the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288468-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana first stage, Matches, Match E19\nTied 0\u20130 on aggregate, La Equidad won on penalties and advanced to the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288468-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana first stage, Matches, Match E20\nFluminense won 2\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288468-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana first stage, Matches, Match E21\nTied 2\u20132 on aggregate, Independiente del Valle won on penalties and advanced to the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288468-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana first stage, Matches, Match E22\nBotafogo won 4\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288469-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana second stage\nThe 2019 Copa Sudamericana second stage was played from 21 to 30 May 2019. A total of 32 teams competed in the second stage to decide the 16 places in the final stages of the 2019 Copa Sudamericana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288469-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana second stage, Draw\nThe draw for the second stage was held on 13 May 2019, 20:30 PYT (UTC\u22124), at the CONMEBOL Convention Centre in Luque, Paraguay. For the second stage, the teams were allocated to two pots according to their previous results in this season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 41], "content_span": [42, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288469-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana second stage, Draw\nThe 32 teams were drawn into 16 ties (O1\u2013O16) between a team from Pot 1 and a team from Pot 2, with the teams from Pot 1 hosting the second leg. Teams from the same association could be drawn into the same tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 41], "content_span": [42, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288469-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana second stage, Draw\nThe following were the 10 teams transferred from the Copa Libertadores (two best teams eliminated in the third stage of qualifying and eight third-placed teams in the group stage).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 41], "content_span": [42, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288469-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana second stage, Draw\nThe following were the 22 winners of the first stage from the Copa Sudamericana. Matches in the first stage were considered for the ranking of teams for the second stage draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 41], "content_span": [42, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288469-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana second stage, Format\nIn the second 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, extra time was not played, and a penalty shoot-out was used to determine the winner (Regulations Article 27).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288469-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana second stage, Format\nThe 16 winners of the second stage advanced to the round of 16 of the final stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288469-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana second stage, Matches\nThe first legs were played on 21\u201323 May, and the second legs were played on 28\u201330 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288469-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana second stage, Matches, Match O1\nLa Equidad won 4\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the round of 16 (Match A).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288469-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana second stage, Matches, Match O2\nIndependiente del Valle won 7\u20133 on aggregate and advanced to the round of 16 (Match B).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288469-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana second stage, Matches, Match O3\nFluminense won 4\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the round of 16 (Match C).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288469-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana second stage, Matches, Match O4\nSporting Cristal won 6\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the round of 16 (Match D).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288469-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana second stage, Matches, Match O5\nArgentinos Juniors won 1\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the round of 16 (Match E).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288469-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana second stage, Matches, Match O6\nMontevideo Wanderers won 1\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the round of 16 (Match F).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288469-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana second stage, Matches, Match O7\nUniversidad Cat\u00f3lica won 6\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the round of 16 (Match G).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288469-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana second stage, Matches, Match O8\nTied 1\u20131 on aggregate, Atl\u00e9tico Mineiro won on penalties and advanced to the round of 16 (Match H).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288469-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana second stage, Matches, Match O9\nBotafogo won 5\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the round of 16 (Match H).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288469-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana second stage, Matches, Match O10\nIndependiente won 4\u20133 on aggregate and advanced to the round of 16 (Match G).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288469-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana second stage, Matches, Match O11\nCorinthians won 4\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the round of 16 (Match F).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288469-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana second stage, Matches, Match O12\nCol\u00f3n won 3\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the round of 16 (Match E).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288469-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana second stage, Matches, Match O13\nZulia won 3\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the round of 16 (Match D).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288469-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana second stage, Matches, Match O14\nPe\u00f1arol won 3\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the round of 16 (Match C).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288469-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana second stage, Matches, Match O15\nCaracas won 2\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the round of 16 (Match B).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288469-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Sudamericana second stage, Matches, Match O16\nTied 3\u20133 on aggregate, Royal Pari won on away goals and advanced to the round of 16 (Match A).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288470-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Venezuela\nThe 2019 Copa Venezuela was the 50th edition of the competition. It began on 27 July 2019 with the first stage and concluded on 27 November 2019 with the second leg of the finals. The champions will qualify for the 2020 Copa Sudamericana. Primera Divisi\u00f3n side Zulia were the defending champions, but they were eliminated by Academia Puerto Cabello in the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288470-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Venezuela\nZamora won their first title in the competition after defeating Monagas on away goals in the final, and qualified for the 2020 Copa Sudamericana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288470-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Venezuela, Final stages, Finals\nThe finals were played on 20 and 27 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 41], "content_span": [42, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288471-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Verde\nThe 2019 Copa Verde was the sixth edition of a football competition held in Brazil. Featuring 24 clubs, Acre, Amazonas, Distrito Federal, Esp\u00edrito Santo, Goi\u00e1s, Mato Grosso, Mato Grosso do Sul and Par\u00e1 have two vacancies; Amap\u00e1, Rond\u00f4nia and Roraima with one each. The others five berths will be set according to CBF ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288471-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Verde\nIn the finals, Cuiab\u00e1 defeated Paysandu 5\u20134 on penalties after tied 1\u20131 on aggregate to win their second title and a place in the Round of 16 of the 2020 Copa do Brasil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288471-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Verde, Qualified teams\nNote: The state of Tocantins, which at the beginning would be represented by Palmas, was without representatives after the same give up, not being replaced by another club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288471-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Verde, First round, Draw\nIn the first round, each tie was played on a two-legged basis. The higher-ranked team hosted the second leg. If the score was level, the match would go straight to the penalty shoot-out to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 34], "content_span": [35, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288472-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Verde Finals\nThe 2019 Copa Verde Finals was the final two-legged tie that decided the 2019 Copa Verde, the 6th season of the Copa Verde, Brazil's regional cup football tournament organised by the Brazilian Football Confederation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288472-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Verde Finals\nThe finals were contested in a two-legged home-and-away format between Cuiab\u00e1, from Mato Grosso, and Paysandu, from Par\u00e1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288472-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Verde Finals\nPaysandu won the first leg 1\u20130, and Cuiab\u00e1 won the second leg by the same score, which meant the title was decided by a penalty shoot-out, which Cuiab\u00e1 won 5\u20134 to claim their second Copa Verde title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288472-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Verde Finals, Teams, Road to the final\nNote: In all scores below, the score of the home team is given first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288472-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Verde Finals, Format\nThe finals were played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If tied on aggregate, the penalty shoot-out was used to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288472-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Verde Finals, Matches, First leg\nAssistant referees:Cristhian Passos Sorence (Goi\u00e1s)Leone Carvalho Rocha (Goi\u00e1s)Fourth official:Eduardo Tomaz de Aquino Valad\u00e3o (Goi\u00e1s)Video assistant referee:Elmo Alves Resende Cunha (Goi\u00e1s)Assistant video assistant referees:Jefferson Ferreira de Moraes (Goi\u00e1s)Edson Ant\u00f4nio de Sousa (Goi\u00e1s)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288472-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa Verde Finals, Matches, Second leg\nAssistant referees:Daniel Henrique da Silva Andrade (Distrito Federal)Jos\u00e9 Reinaldo Nascimento J\u00fanior (Distrito Federal)Fourth official:Christiano Gayo Nascimento (Distrito Federal)Video assistant referee:Wilton Pereira Sampaio (Goi\u00e1s)Assistant video assistant referees:Dyorgines Jos\u00e9 Padovani de Andrade (Esp\u00edrito Santo)Fabiano da Silva Ramires (Esp\u00edrito Santo)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288473-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa de la Reina de Baloncesto\nThe Copa de la Reina de Baloncesto 2019 was the 57th edition of the Spanish Queen's Basketball Cup. It is managed by the Spanish Basketball Federation \u2013 FEB and was 28 February to 3 March 2019 in the Polideportivo de Mendizorroza, Vitoria-Gasteiz. Perfumer\u00edas Avenida beat Spar CityLift Girona 79-71 in the final. \u00c9rika de Souza was the MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288473-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa de la Reina de Baloncesto, Qualification\nPrior to the start of the season, the rules of the Spanish Basketball Federation established that the top seven teams classified after the end of the first half of the 2018\u201319 League (13th matchday, 30 December 2018), would play the competition along with the host chosen by the Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288473-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa de la Reina de Baloncesto, Draw\nThe Cup was drawn on 15 February 2019 in Vitoria-Gasteiz. The seeded teams were paired in the quarterfinals with the non-seeded teams. There were not any restrictions for the draw of the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 41], "content_span": [42, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288474-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa de la Superliga\nThe 2019 Copa de la Superliga Argentina (named Copa de la Superliga YPF Infinia 2019 due to sponsorship by YPF) was the first edition of the Copa de la Superliga Argentina, Argentina's football league cup competition open to all 26 participants in the Superliga Argentina for the 2018\u201319 season. The competition was planned by the Executive Committee of the Superliga Argentina throughout 2018 with a final approval being given on 12 December 2018, and was played from 12 April to 2 June 2019, after the conclusion of the Superliga season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288474-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa de la Superliga\nTigre were the champions, beating Boca Juniors by a 2\u20130 score in the final match played at Estadio Mario Alberto Kempes in C\u00f3rdoba.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288474-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa de la Superliga, Format\nThe competition was played as a knockout tournament in its entirety, with the top six teams in the 2018\u201319 Superliga season receiving byes to the round of 16, and the remaining 20 teams starting the competition in the first round, where they were paired into 10 ties according to their league placement, with the winners advancing to the round of 16. Matchups in all rounds prior to the final were played as two-legged ties, with the team with the best placement in the league season hosting the second leg, whilst the final was played as a single match at a neutral ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288474-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa de la Superliga, Format\nIf teams were tied on aggregate in all rounds prior to the final, the away goals rule was used. If still tied, a penalty shoot-out was used to determine the winner. In the final, 30 minutes of extra time would be played if both teams were tied, and if still tied at the end of extra time, the champions would be determined in a penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288474-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa de la Superliga, Format\nAs champions, Tigre qualified for the group stage of the 2020 Copa Libertadores, with the runners-up being entitled to a berth to the 2020 Copa Sudamericana. However, that berth was passed to semifinalists Argentinos Juniors since runners-up Boca Juniors as well as the other semifinalist Atl\u00e9tico Tucum\u00e1n qualified for the Copa Libertadores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288474-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa de la Superliga, Schedule\nThe competition schedule was unveiled by the Superliga Argentina on 27 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288474-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa de la Superliga, Seeding\nTeams were seeded 1\u201326 according to their placements in the Superliga Argentina season. Seeds 1\u20136 received a bye to the round of 16, and seeds 7\u201326 played the competition from the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288474-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa de la Superliga, First round\nThe 20 teams placed from seventh to twenty-sixth in the 2018\u201319 Superliga Argentina played in the first round of the competition. The higher-seeded team in each tie played the second leg at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288474-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa de la Superliga, Round of 16\nThe top six teams in the 2018\u201319 Superliga Argentina season entered the competition in this round, joining the 10 first round winners. The higher-seeded team in each tie played the second leg at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288474-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa de la Superliga, Quarterfinals\nThe higher-seeded team in each tie played the second leg at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288474-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa de la Superliga, Semifinals\nThe higher-seeded team in each tie played the second leg at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288474-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa de la Superliga, Statistics, Awards\nThe following players were rewarded for their performances during the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288475-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa de la Superliga Final\nThe 2019 Copa de la Superliga Final was the 49th and final match of the 2019 Copa de la Superliga. It was played on 2 June 2019 at the Estadio Mario Alberto Kempes in C\u00f3rdoba between Tigre and Boca Juniors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288475-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa de la Superliga Final\nTigre defeated Boca Juniors 2\u20130 to win their first Primera Divisi\u00f3n title. As champions, Tigre qualified for the group stage of the 2020 Copa Libertadores. They also qualified for the 2019 Trofeo de Campeones de la Superliga Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288475-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa de la Superliga Final\nAs Boca Juniors and the semifinalist Atl\u00e9tico Tucum\u00e1n had already qualified for the 2020 Copa Libertadores, the other semifinalist Argentinos Juniors won the 2020 Copa Sudamericana berth. Atl\u00e9tico Tucum\u00e1n qualification allowed the qualification of Lan\u00fas for 2020 Copa Sudamericana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288475-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa de la Superliga Final, Qualified teams, Road to the final\nNote: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first (H: home; A: away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288475-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa de la Superliga Final, Match\nIv\u00e1n Marcone and Nahitan N\u00e1ndez (Boca Juniors) both missed out on the final due to suspension.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288475-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa de la Superliga Final, Match, Details\nMan of the Match: Gonzalo Marinelli (Tigre)Assistant referees:Hern\u00e1n MaidanaJuan Pablo BelattiFourth official:Ariel Penel", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288476-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa del Rey Final\nThe 2019 Copa del Rey Final was a football match played on 25 May 2019 that decided the winner of the 2018\u201319 Copa del Rey, the 117th edition of Spain's primary football cup (including two seasons where two rival editions were played). The match was played at the Estadio Benito Villamar\u00edn in Seville between Barcelona and Valencia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288476-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa del Rey Final\nValencia won the final 2\u20131, achieving their 8th title overall and ending their trophy drought winning their first major trophy since 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288476-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa del Rey Final, Background\nBarcelona were competing in their 41st Copa del Rey final, extending the competition record, and had won a record 30 titles prior. They were the reigning champions, having defeated Sevilla 5\u20130 in the 2018 final. The match was their sixth consecutive final, extending the record they set in the previous season, and were seeking a fifth consecutive title, a feat never accomplished before (only Real Madrid and Athletic Bilbao have also previously won four titles consecutively).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288476-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa del Rey Final, Background\nValencia were competing in their 17th Copa del Rey final, and would go on to win their 8th title. Their last title win had come in the 2008 final defeating Getafe 3-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288476-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa del Rey Final, Background\nIn reaching the final, both teams were assured qualification for the four-team 2019\u201320 Supercopa de Espa\u00f1a.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288477-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa del Rey Juvenil\nThe 2019 Copa del Rey Juvenil is the 69th staging of the Copa del Rey Juvenil de F\u00fatbol. The competition started on May 18, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288477-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa del Rey Juvenil, First round\nThe top two teams from each group of the 2018\u201319 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor Juvenil de F\u00fatbol and the two best third-placed teams were drawn into a two-game best aggregate score series. The first leg was played on May 18 and 19 and the second on May 25 and 26.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288477-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa del Rey Juvenil, Quarterfinals\nThe eight winners from the first round advanced to quarterfinals, that were played in a two-game series. The first leg were played on June 1 and 2 and the second on June 8 and 9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288477-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa del Rey Juvenil, Semifinals\nThe four winners from the quarterfinals advanced to semifinals, that are played in a two-game series. The first leg was played on June 16 and the second leg will be played on June 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288478-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa del Rey de Baloncesto\nThe 2019 Copa del Rey de Baloncesto was the 83rd edition of the Spanish King's Basketball Cup. It was managed by the ACB and was held in Madrid, in the WiZink Center in February 2019. Bar\u00e7a Lassa defended successfully the title and conquered its second consecutive cup, 25th overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288478-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa del Rey de Baloncesto, Qualified teams\nThe top seven ranking teams after the first half of the 2018\u201319 ACB regular season and one team from the Community of Madrid qualified for the tournament. As one team from the Community of Madrid, Real Madrid, was among the seven highest ranking teams, the second highest ranking team from the Community of Madrid, Movistar Estudiantes, entered the Copa del Rey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288478-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa del Rey de Baloncesto, Draw\nThe 2019 Copa del Rey de Baloncesto was drawn on 21 January 2019 at approximately 12:00 and was broadcast live on YouTube and on TV in many countries. The seeded teams were paired in the quarterfinals with the non-seeded teams. There were not any restrictions for the draw of the semifinals. As in recent seasons, the first qualified team plays its quarterfinal game on Thursday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288478-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa del Rey de Baloncesto, Final\nAfter wasting a 15-point difference in the last quarter, Real Madrid's Sergio Llull took the game to the overtime with a two-pointer with only three seconds left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288478-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa del Rey de Baloncesto, Final\nIn the extra time and with ten seconds left, a hard contact of Anthony Randolph to Chris Singleton was not sanctioned with a foul and in the next play, Jaycee Carroll scored a 2+1 for allowing Real to take the lead. In the last play, Randolph blocked the shot of Ante Tomi\u0107 but the referees sanctioned a goaltending despite watching it in the instant replay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288478-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa del Rey de Baloncesto, Final\nAfter the match, Real Madrid threatened to leave the ACB.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288479-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil\nThe 2019 Copa do Brasil (officially the Copa Continental Pneus do Brasil 2019 for sponsorship reasons) was the 31st edition of the Copa do Brasil football competition. It was held between 5 February and 18 September 2019. The competition was contested by 91 teams, either qualified through participating in their respective state championships (70), by the 2019 CBF ranking (10), by the 2018 Copa do Nordeste (1), by the 2018 Copa Verde (1), by the 2018 S\u00e9rie B (1) or those qualified for 2019 Copa Libertadores (8).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288479-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil\nAthletico Paranaense defeated Internacional 3\u20131 on aggregate in the finals to win their first title. As champions, Athletico Paranaense qualified for the 2020 Supercopa do Brasil, the 2020 Copa Libertadores group stage and the 2020 Copa do Brasil Round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288479-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil\nCruzeiro were the defending champions, but lost in the semifinals 0\u20134 on aggregate to Internacional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288479-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil\nPaolo Guerrero (Internacional) and F\u00e1bio (Cruzeiro) won best player and best goalkeeper awards, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288479-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil, Format\nThe competition was a single elimination knockout tournament, the first two stages featuring a single match and the other stages featuring two-legged ties. Eleven teams qualified for the Round of 16 (Teams qualified for 2019 Copa Libertadores (8), S\u00e9rie B champions, Copa Verde champions and Copa do Nordeste champions). The remaining 80 teams played the first stage. The 40 winners played the second stage, the 20 winners played the third stage, the 10 winners played the fourth stage. Finally, the five fourth-stage winners qualified for the Round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288479-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil, Qualified teams\nTeams in bold are qualified directly for the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288479-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil, Draw\nThe draw for the first and second stage was held on 13 December 2018, 20:00 at CBF headquarters in Rio de Janeiro. Teams were seeded by their CBF ranking (shown in parentheses). The 80 qualified teams were divided in eight groups (A-H) with 10 teams each. The matches were drawn from the respective confronts: A vs. E; B vs. F; C vs. G; D vs. H. The lower ranked teams hosted the first stage match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288479-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil, First stage\nIn the first stage, each tie was played on a single match basis. The lower CBF ranked team hosted the match. If tied, the higher CBF ranked team would advance to second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288479-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil, Second stage\nIn the second stage, each tie was played on a single match basis. If tied, extra time would not be played and the penalty shoot-out would be used to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288479-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil, Third stage\nIn the third stage, each tie was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If tied on aggregate, the away goals rule would not be used, extra time would not be played and the penalty shoot-out would be used to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288479-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil, Fourth stage\nThe draw for the fourth stage was held on 12 April 2019, 11:00 at CBF headquarters in Rio de Janeiro. The 10 qualified teams were in a single group (CBF ranking shown in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288479-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil, Fourth stage\nIn the fourth stage, each tie was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If tied on aggregate, the away goals rule would not be used, extra time would not be played and the penalty shoot-out would be used to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288479-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil, Final stages\nIn the final stages, each tie was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If tied on aggregate, the away goals rule would not be used, extra time would not be played and the penalty shoot-out would be used to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288479-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil, Final stages, Round of 16\nThe draw for the round of 16 was held on 2 May 2019, 15:00 at CBF headquarters in Rio de Janeiro. The 16 qualified teams were divided in two pots. Teams from Pot 1 were the ones which competed at the 2019 Copa Libertadores. Pot 2 was composed of the five teams which qualified through the Fourth Stage plus the champions of 2018 Copa Verde, 2018 Copa do Nordeste and 2018 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288479-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil, Final stages, Round of 16\nThe first legs were played from 15 to 23 May and the second legs were played from 29 May to 6 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288479-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil, Final stages, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the quarter-finals was held on 10 June 2019, 15:00 at CBF headquarters in Rio de Janeiro. All teams were placed into a single pot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288479-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil, Final stages, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs were played on 10 and 11 July and the second legs were played on 17 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288479-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil, Final stages, Semi-finals\nThe draw to determine the home-and-away teams for both legs was held on 22 July 2019, 15:00 at CBF headquarters in Rio de Janeiro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288479-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil, Final stages, Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 7 and 14 August and the second legs were played on 4 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288479-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil, Final stages, Finals\nThe draw to determine the home-and-away teams for both legs was held on 5 September 2019, 15:00 at CBF headquarters in Rio de Janeiro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 41], "content_span": [42, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288480-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Final Stages\nThe 2019 Copa do Brasil final stages were the final stages (Round of 16, Quarter-finals, Semi-finals and Finals) of the 2019 Copa do Brasil football competition. They were played from 15 May to 18 September 2019. A total of 16 teams competed in the final stages to decide the champions of the 2019 Copa do Brasil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288480-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Final Stages, Format\nIn the final stages, each tie was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If tied on aggregate, the away goals rule would not be used, extra time would not be played and the penalty shoot-out would be used to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288480-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Final Stages, Round of 16, Draw\nThe draw for the round of 16 was held on 2 May 2019, 15:00 at CBF headquarters in Rio de Janeiro. The 16 qualified teams were divided in two pots. Teams from Pot 1 were the ones which competed at the 2019 Copa Libertadores. Pot 2 was composed of the five teams which qualified through the Fourth Stage plus the champions of 2018 Copa Verde, 2018 Copa do Nordeste and 2018 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288480-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Final Stages, Round of 16, Matches\nThe first legs were played from 15 to 23 May and the second legs were played from 29 May to 6 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288480-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Final Stages, Round of 16, Match 76\nInternacional won 4\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288480-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Final Stages, Round of 16, Match 77\nFlamengo won 2\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288480-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Final Stages, Round of 16, Match 78\nAtl\u00e9tico Mineiro won 2\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288480-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Final Stages, Round of 16, Match 79\nGr\u00eamio won 3\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288480-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Final Stages, Round of 16, Match 80\nPalmeiras won 3\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288480-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Final Stages, Round of 16, Match 81\nAthletico Paranaense won 1\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288480-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Final Stages, Round of 16, Match 82\nTied 3\u20133 on aggregate, Cruzeiro won on penalties and advanced to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288480-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Final Stages, Round of 16, Match 83\nBahia won 2\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288480-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Final Stages, Quarter-finals, Draw\nThe draw for the quarter-finals was held on 10 June 2019, 15:00 at CBF headquarters in Rio de Janeiro. All teams were placed into a single pot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288480-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Final Stages, Quarter-finals, Matches\nThe first legs were played on 10 and 11 July and the second legs were played on 17 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288480-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Final Stages, Quarter-finals, Match 84\nGr\u00eamio won 2\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288480-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Final Stages, Quarter-finals, Match 85\nTied 2\u20132 on aggregate, Athletico Paranaense won on penalties and advanced to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288480-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Final Stages, Quarter-finals, Match 86\nCruzeiro won 3\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288480-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Final Stages, Quarter-finals, Match 87\nTied 1\u20131 on aggregate, Internacional won on penalties and advanced to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288480-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Final Stages, Semi-finals, Draw\nThe draw to determine the home-and-away teams for both legs was held on 22 July 2019, 15:00 at CBF headquarters in Rio de Janeiro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288480-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Final Stages, Semi-finals, Matches\nThe first legs were played on 7 and 14 August and the second legs were played on 4 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288480-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Final Stages, Semi-finals, Match 88\nTied 2\u20132 on aggregate, Athletico Paranaense won on penalties and advanced to the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288480-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Final Stages, Semi-finals, Match 89\nInternacional won 4\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288480-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Final Stages, Finals, Draw\nThe draw to determine the home-and-away teams for both legs was held on 5 September 2019, 15:00 at CBF headquarters in Rio de Janeiro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288480-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Final Stages, Finals, Matches\nThe first leg was played on 11 September and the second leg was played on 18 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288481-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Finals\nThe 2019 Copa do Brasil Finals were the final two-legged tie that decided the 2019 Copa do Brasil, the 31st season of the Copa do Brasil, Brazil's national cup football tournament organised by the Brazilian Football Confederation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288481-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Finals\nThe finals were contested in a two-legged home-and-away format between Athletico Paranaense, from Paran\u00e1, and Internacional, from Rio Grande do Sul. Athletico Paranaense and Internacional reached the Copa do Brasil finals for the second and third time, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288481-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Finals\nA draw by CBF was held on 5 September 2019 to determine the home-and-away teams for each leg. The first leg was hosted by Athletico Paranaense at Arena da Baixada in Curitiba on 11 September 2019, while the second leg was hosted by Internacional at Est\u00e1dio Beira-Rio in Porto Alegre on 18 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288481-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Finals\nAthletico Paranaense defeated Internacional 3\u20131 on aggregate in the finals to win their first title. As champions, Athletico Paranaense qualified for the 2020 Copa Libertadores group stage and the 2020 Copa do Brasil round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288481-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Finals\nAthletico Paranaense also earned the right to play in the 2020 Supercopa do Brasil against the 2019 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288481-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Finals, Teams, Road to the final\nNote: In all scores below, the score of the home team is given first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288481-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Finals, Format\nIn the finals, the teams played a single-elimination tournament with the following rules:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288481-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Finals, Matches\nJonathan and Bruno Naz\u00e1rio (Athletico Paranaense) and Natanael, Matheus Galdezani and Rodrigo Dourado (Internacional) were ruled out of the finals due to injuries. Thiago Heleno and Camacho (Athletico Paranaense) were suspended for a doping violation and could not play the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288481-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Finals, Matches\nAndr\u00e9s D'Alessandro and William Pottker (Internacional) suffered injuries before the second leg. William Pottker was ruled out of the second match but D'Alessandro was substitute although he did not play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288481-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Finals, Matches, First leg\nAthletico Paranaense defeated Internacional 1\u20130 in the first leg. In the 57th minute, after a combination of Nik\u00e3o, Marco Ruben and Bruno Guimar\u00e3es, Ruben passed the ball to Bruno Guimar\u00e3es. The pass was deflected by Rodrigo Moledo and Eden\u00edlson allowing Bruno Guimar\u00e3es scored the winning goal with a shot inside the box.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288481-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Finals, Matches, First leg\nMan of the Match: Bruno Guimar\u00e3es (Athletico Paranaense)Assistant referees:Rodrigo Figueiredo Henrique Corr\u00eaa (Rio de Janeiro)Neuza In\u00eas Back (S\u00e3o Paulo)Fourth official:Luiz Fl\u00e1vio de Oliveira (S\u00e3o Paulo)Fifth official:Fabr\u00edcio Vilarinho da Silva (Goi\u00e1s)Video assistant referee:Rodrigo Guarizo Ferreira do Amaral (S\u00e3o Paulo)Assistant video assistant referees:Caio Max Augusto Vieira (Rio Grande do Norte)Fabr\u00edcio Porf\u00edrio de Moura (S\u00e3o Paulo)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288481-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Finals, Matches, Second leg\nIn the second leg, Athletico Paranaense defeated Internacional 1-2. L\u00e9o Cittadini scored in the 24th minute after a play with Rony and Marco Ruben. Nicol\u00e1s L\u00f3pez equalized after Rodrigo Lindoso' shot off the post and V\u00edctor Cuesta gained the rebound. During the injury time, Marcelo Cirino dribbled Eden\u00edlson, Rafael S\u00f3bis and Rodrigo Lindoso before assist Rony, who scored the winning goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288481-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Finals, Matches, Second leg\nMan of the Match: Rony (Athletico Paranaense)Assistant referees:\u00c9merson Augusto de Carvalho (S\u00e3o Paulo)Bruno Raphael Pires (Goi\u00e1s)Fourth official:Fl\u00e1vio Rodrigues de Souza (S\u00e3o Paulo)Fifth official:Danilo Ricardo Simon Manis (S\u00e3o Paulo)Video assistant referee:Br\u00e1ulio da Silva Machado (Santa Catarina)Assistant video assistant referees:\u00c9merson de Almeida Ferreira (Minas Gerais)Leone Carvalho Rocha (Goi\u00e1s)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288482-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil First Stage\nThe 2019 Copa do Brasil first stage was the first stage of the 2019 Copa do Brasil football competition. It was played from 5 February to 3 April 2019. A total of 80 teams competed in the first stage to decide 40 places in the second stage of the 2019 Copa do Brasil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288482-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil First Stage, Draw\nThe draw for the first and second stage was held on 13 December 2018, 20:00 at CBF headquarters in Rio de Janeiro. Teams were seeded by their CBF ranking (shown in parentheses). The 80 qualified teams were divided in eight groups (A-H) with 10 teams each. The matches were drawn from the respective confronts: A vs. E; B vs. F; C vs. G; D vs. H. The lower ranked teams hosted the first stage match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288482-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil First Stage, Format\nIn the first stage, each tie was played on a single match basis. The lower CBF ranked team hosted the match. If tied, the higher CBF ranked team would advance to second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288482-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil First Stage, Matches\nAll times are Bras\u00edlia summer time, BRST (UTC\u22122), except the Aparecidense v Ponte Preta replay, BRT (UTC\u22123).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288483-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Fourth Stage\nThe 2019 Copa do Brasil fourth stage was the fourth stage of the 2019 Copa do Brasil football competition. It was played from 17 April to 7 May 2019. A total of 10 teams competed in the fourth stage to decide five places in the final stages of the 2019 Copa do Brasil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288483-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Fourth Stage, Draw\nThe draw for the fourth stage was held on 12 April 2019, 11:00 at CBF headquarters in Rio de Janeiro. The 10 qualified teams were in a single group (CBF ranking shown in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 38], "content_span": [39, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288483-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Fourth Stage, Format\nIn the fourth stage, each tie was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If tied on aggregate, the away goals rule would not be used, extra time would not be played and the penalty shoot-out would be used to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288483-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Fourth Stage, Matches, Match 71\nTied 0\u20130 on aggregate, Juventude won on penalties and advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288483-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Fourth Stage, Matches, Match 72\nTied 2\u20132 on aggregate, Fluminense won on penalties and advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288483-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Fourth Stage, Matches, Match 73\nCorinthians won 2\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288483-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Fourth Stage, Matches, Match 74\nSantos won 3\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288483-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Fourth Stage, Matches, Match 75\nBahia won 5\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288484-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Second Stage\nThe 2019 Copa do Brasil second stage was the second stage of the 2019 Copa do Brasil football competition. It was played from 19 February to 10 April 2019. A total of 40 teams competed in the second stage to decide 20 places in the third stage of the 2019 Copa do Brasil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288484-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Second Stage, Format\nIn the second stage, each tie was played on a single match basis. If tied, extra time would not be played and the penalty shoot-out would be used to determine the winner. Host teams were settled in the first-stage draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288485-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Third Stage\nThe 2019 Copa do Brasil third stage was the third stage of the 2019 Copa do Brasil football competition. It was played from 13 March to 20 April 2019. A total of 20 teams competed in the third stage to decide ten places in the fourth stage of the 2019 Copa do Brasil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288485-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Third Stage, Format\nIn the third stage, each tie was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If tied on aggregate, the away goals rule would not be used, extra time would not be played and the penalty shoot-out would be used to determine the winner. Host teams were settled in a draw held on 8 March 2019, 11:00 at CBF headquarters in Rio de Janeiro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288485-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Third Stage, Matches, Match 61\nCorinthians won 3\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the fourth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288485-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Third Stage, Matches, Match 62\nVila Nova won 3\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the fourth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288485-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Third Stage, Matches, Match 63\nJuventude won 3\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the fourth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288485-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Third Stage, Matches, Match 64\nSanta Cruz won 3\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the fourth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288485-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Third Stage, Matches, Match 65\nFluminense won 2\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the fourth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288485-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Third Stage, Matches, Match 66\nBahia won 2\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the fourth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288485-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Third Stage, Matches, Match 67\nSantos won 3\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the fourth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288485-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Third Stage, Matches, Match 68\nChapecoense won 5\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the fourth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288485-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Third Stage, Matches, Match 69\nLondrina won 5\u20133 on aggregate and advanced to the fourth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288485-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Brasil Third Stage, Matches, Match 70\nVasco da Gama won 4\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the fourth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288486-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Nordeste\nThe 2019 Copa do Nordeste was the 16th edition of the main football tournament featuring teams from the Brazilian Northeast Region. The competition featured 16 clubs, with Bahia, Cear\u00e1 and Pernambuco having two seeds each, and Rio Grande do Norte, Sergipe, Alagoas, Para\u00edba, Maranh\u00e3o and Piau\u00ed with one seed each. Four teams were decided by a qualifying tournament (Pr\u00e9-Copa do Nordeste).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288486-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Nordeste\nIn the finals, Fortaleza defeated Botafogo-PB 2\u20130 on aggregate to win their first Copa do Nordeste title. As champions, Fortaleza qualified for the Round of 16 of the 2020 Copa do Brasil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288486-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Nordeste\nSampaio Corr\u00eaa were the defending champions, but were eliminated in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288486-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Nordeste, Format changes\nIn this season, 12 teams (9 state league champions and best placed teams in the 2018 CBF ranking from Bahia, Cear\u00e1 and Pernambuco) gained direct entries into the group stage while the other four berths were decided by the Pr\u00e9-Copa do Nordeste.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288486-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Nordeste, Format changes\nFor the group stage, the 16 teams were drawn into two groups. Each team played once against the eight clubs from the other group. Top four teams qualified for the final stages. Quarter-finals and semi-finals were played on a single-leg basis and finals were played on a home-and-away two-legged basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288486-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Nordeste, Teams, 2019 Pr\u00e9-Copa do Nordeste\nThe 2019 Pr\u00e9-Copa do Nordeste was the qualifying tournament of 2019 Copa do Nordeste. It was played from 18 April to 1 May 2018. Best placed team in the 2018 CBF ranking not already qualified from Alagoas, Bahia, Maranh\u00e3o, Para\u00edba, Pernambuco, Piau\u00ed, Rio Grande do Norte and Sergipe competed to decide four places in the Copa do Nordeste.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288486-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Nordeste, Teams, 2019 Pr\u00e9-Copa do Nordeste, Draw\nThe draw was held on 9 April 2018, 15:00, at the CBF headquarters in Rio de Janeiro. Teams were seeded by their 2018 CBF ranking (shown in parentheses). The eight teams were drawn into four ties, with the Pot A teams hosting the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288486-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Nordeste, Teams, 2019 Pr\u00e9-Copa do Nordeste, Draw\nEach tie was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If tied on aggregate, the away goals rule would not be used, extra time would not be played, and the penalty shoot-out would be used to determine the winner (Regulations Pr\u00e9-Copa do Nordeste Article 9).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288486-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Nordeste, Teams, 2019 Pr\u00e9-Copa do Nordeste, Matches\nSampaio Corr\u00eaa, Confian\u00e7a, Salgueiro and CRB qualified for 2019 Copa do Nordeste.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 64], "content_span": [65, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288486-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Nordeste, Draw\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 4 October 2018, 20:00, at Teatro Gustavo Leite in Macei\u00f3. The 16 teams were drawn into two groups of eight containing two teams from each of the four pots with the restriction that teams from the same federation (except Salgueiro) could not be drawn against each other. Teams were seeded by their 2018 CBF ranking (shown in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 27], "content_span": [28, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288486-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Nordeste, Draw\nA second draw to determine the home-and-away teams for matches between same-state clubs was held on 15 October 2018 at CBF headquarters in Rio de Janeiro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 27], "content_span": [28, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288486-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Nordeste, Group stage\nFor the group stage, the 16 teams were drawn into two groups of eight teams each. Each team played on a single round-robin tournament against the eight clubs from the other group. The top four teams of each group advanced to the quarter-finals of the knockout stages. The teams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, and 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, the following criteria would be used to determine the ranking: 1. Wins; 2. Goal difference; 3. Goals scored; 4. Fewest red cards; 5. Fewest yellow cards; 6. Draw in the headquarters of the Brazilian Football Confederation (Regulations Article 10).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288486-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Nordeste, Group stage, Results\nSource: Legend: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288486-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Nordeste, Final stages\nStarting from the quarter-finals, the teams played a single-elimination tournament with the following rules:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288486-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Nordeste, Final stages\nStarting from the semi-finals, the teams were seeded according to their performance in the tournament. The teams were ranked according to overall points. If tied on overall points, the following criteria would be used to determine the ranking: 1. Overall wins; 2. Overall goal difference; 3. Draw in the headquarters of the Brazilian Football Confederation (Regulations Article 17).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288486-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Nordeste, 2019 Copa do Nordeste team\nThe 2019 Copa do Nordeste team was a squad consisting of the eleven most impressive players at the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 49], "content_span": [50, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288486-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Copa do Nordeste, 2019 Copa do Nordeste team, Awards\nBefore the 2020 Copa do Nordeste draw, the following players were rewarded for their performances during the 2019 competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 57], "content_span": [58, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288487-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Copeland Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Copeland Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of the Copeland Borough Council in England. They were held on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288488-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Coppa Italia Final\nThe 2019 Coppa Italia Final decided the winner of the 2018\u201319 Coppa Italia, the 72nd season of Italy's main football cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288488-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Coppa Italia Final\nIt was played on 15 May 2019 at the Stadio Olimpico in Rome between Atalanta and Lazio. This was the first-ever meeting between these two clubs in the final. Lazio won the match 2\u20130, winning their seventh title overall, from 10 finals appearances. Atalanta made its fourth finals appearance, and have now lost three consecutive finals after winning their only title in 1963.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288488-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Coppa Italia Final\nAs the cup winners, Lazio automatically qualified to the group stage of the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League and to the 2019 Supercoppa Italiana against Juventus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288488-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Coppa Italia Final, Road to the final\nNote: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first (H: home; A: away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288488-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Coppa Italia Final, Pre-match, Ticketing\nTickets were available for sale only to Italian fans (for security reasons) from 29 April 2019 in three price categories: \u20ac35, \u20ac50, and \u20ac130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288488-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Coppa Italia Final, Match, Details\nAssistant referees:Gianluca VuotoLorenzo ManganelliFourth official:Fabio MarescaReserve assistant referee:Alfonso MarrazzoVideo assistant referee:Gianpaolo CalvareseAssistant video assistant referees:Giorgio Peretti", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288489-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Coppa Ugo Agostoni\nThe 2019 Coppa Ugo Agostoni was the 73rd edition of the Coppa Ugo Agostoni road cycling one day race. It was held on 14 September 2019 as part of the UCI Europe Tour as a 1.1-ranked event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288489-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Coppa Ugo Agostoni, Teams\nTwenty-five teams, which consisted of three UCI WorldTour teams, thirteen UCI Professional Continental teams, eight UCI Continental teams, and one national team, participated in the race. Each team could enter up to seven riders; however, Bahrain\u2013Merida, Meridiana\u2013Kamen, UAE Team Emirates, Wanty\u2013Gobert entered only six riders, and Giotti Victoria\u2013Palomar entered only five. Of the 175 riders that started the race, only 57 riders finished.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288490-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Coquimbo earthquake\nThe 2019 Coquimbo earthquake is an earthquake occurred 10 km south southwest of Coquimbo in Chile, on January 19, 2019 at 22:32 (local time). The epicenter was located off the coast of the Coquimbo Region (63.0km depth) and had a moment magnitude of Mw6.7. On the Mercalli scale, the earthquake reached an intensity of VIII. There has been moderate damage in hospitals, buildings, houses and serious damage in the historic center of Coquimbo and La Serena, as well as rock slides on desert roads. Two people died of heart attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288491-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork City Council election\nA Cork City Council election was held in Cork city in Ireland on 24 May 2019 as part of that year's local elections. Thirty-one councillors were elected from five local electoral areas (LEAs) by single transferable vote. This election broadly coincided with an increase in the city council area, and several outgoing members of Cork County Council, based in areas transferred to the city, stood for election to the city council. Besides extending all LEAs into the former county area, the former LEA of North Central was abolished and its area divided between North West and North East.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288491-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork City Council election\nUnder the Local Government Act 2019, voters in the city were also asked to contribute to a plebiscite on whether to have a directly-elected executive mayor. Voters rejected the proposal in favour of retaining the existing ceremonial Lord Mayor of Cork, who is chosen annually by the councillors from among their number.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288491-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork City Council election, Changes since 2019 local elections\nCork City North-East Fianna F\u00e1il Cllr Kenneth O'Flynn quit the party and became an Independent after being refused a place on the party ticket for Cork North-Central in the 2020 general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288491-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork City Council election, Changes since 2019 local elections\nCork City South East Green Party Cllr Lorna Bogue quit the Green Party and became an Independent on 27 October 2020 in opposition to the passage of the Mother and Baby Homes Legislation through the D\u00e1il.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288492-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork County Council election\nA Cork County Council election wias held in County Cork in Ireland on 24 May 2019 as part of that year's local elections. All 55 councillors were elected for a five-year term of office from 10 local electoral areas (LEAs) by single transferable vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288492-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork County Council election\nThis election coincides with a transfer of land around Cork city from the administration of the County Council to that of Cork City Council. Several outgoing county councillors, based in areas transferred to the city, are standing in the city council election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288492-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Cork County Council election\nCompared to the previous election in 2014, the total number of councillors is unchanged, but following the recommendation of the 2018 Boundary Committee, there were significant changes to the LEAs, taking account of the transfer of land to the city, a maximum of 7 seats per LEA in its terms of reference, and population shifts revealed by the 2016 census.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288492-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork County Council election\nCompared with the previous election, in 2014, Fianna F\u00e1il increased its seat number by 1 to 18 and also polled more votes than Fine Gael. However, Fine Gael gained an additional 4 seats to emerge as the largest party with 20 seats. Both parties benefitted from the collapse of Sinn F\u00e9in who only returned with 2 seats, a loss of 8. However, there had been many defections within the party in the years since 2014 and several Councillors did not seek re-election. Independents won 10 seats, the same total as in 2014. The Green Party gained 2 seats in the Cobh and Midleton LEAs. After a recount, Holly McKeever Cairns won a seat in Bantry-West Cork for the Social Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288493-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork Intermediate Hurling Championship\nThe 2019 Cork Intermediate Hurling Championship was the 110th 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 15 January 2019. The championship began on 27 April 2019 and ended on 16 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288493-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork Intermediate Hurling Championship\nOn 16 November 2019, Blackrock won the championship after a 0-15 to 1-10 defeat of Cloughduv in the final at P\u00e1irc U\u00ed Rinn. This was their first ever championship title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288493-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork Intermediate Hurling Championship\nCloughduv's Brian Verling was the championship's top scorer with 1-43.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288494-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork Junior A Football Championship\nThe 2019 Cork Junior A Football Championship was the 121st staging of the Cork Junior A Football Championship since its establishment by the Cork County Board in 1895. The championship draw took place on 2 September 2019. The championship began on 15 September 2019 and ended on 10 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288494-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork Junior A Football Championship\nOn 10 November 2019, Kilshannig won the championship after a 0-22 to 0-11 defeat of St James' in the final at P\u00e1irc U\u00ed Rinn. This was their third championship title overall and their first title since 1996.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288494-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork Junior A Football Championship\nSt James' Alan O'Shea was the championship's top scorer with 0-17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288495-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork Junior A Hurling Championship\nThe 2019 Cork Junior Hurling Championship was the 122nd staging of the Cork Junior Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Cork County Board in 1895. The championship draw took place on 2 September 2019. The championship began on 14 September 2019 and ended on 3 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288495-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork Junior A Hurling Championship\nOn 3 November 2019, Russell Rovers won the championship after a 1-17 to 0-09 defeat of Carrignavar in the final at P\u00e1irc U\u00ed Rinn. This was their first ever championship title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288495-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork Junior A Hurling Championship, Qualification\nThe Cork Junior Hurling Championship features fourteen teams in the final tournament. Over 70 teams contested the seven divisional championships with the seven respective champions and runners-up automatically qualifying for the county series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288496-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork North-Central by-election\nA by-election was held in the Cork North-Central constituency of D\u00e1il \u00c9ireann on Friday, 29 November 2019, to fill the vacancy left by the election to the European Parliament of outgoing TD Billy Kelleher of Fianna F\u00e1il.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288496-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork North-Central by-election\nThe election was won by P\u00e1draig O'Sullivan, a Fianna F\u00e1il member of Cork County Council. Sheila O'Callaghan was co-opted to O'Sullivan's seat on Cork County Council following his election to the D\u00e1il.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288496-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork North-Central by-election\nThree other by-elections were held on the same day, in Dublin Fingal, Dublin Mid-West, and Wexford. The Electoral (Amendment) Act 204 stipulates that a by-election in Ireland must be held within six months of a vacancy occurring. The by-election writ was moved in the D\u00e1il on 7 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288496-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork North-Central by-election\nAt the 2016 general election, the electorate of Cork North-Central was 81,609, and the constituency elected one Fianna F\u00e1il TD, one AAA\u2013PBP TD, one Sinn F\u00e9in TD, and one Fine Gael TD. The 2019 electorate was 85,524 (a 4.8% increase).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288496-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork North-Central by-election\nAmong the by-election candidates were Senator and former MEP Colm Burke; four Cork City Councillors (Thomas Gould, John Maher, Oliver Moran and Fiona Ryan); Cork County Councillor P\u00e1draig O'Sullivan; and three unsuccessful candidates at the May 2019 city council election (Sin\u00e9ad Halpin. Thomas Kiely, and Finian Toomey). This was the first occasion Aont\u00fa (also contested Wexford) and the Social Democrats (also contested Dublin Fingal and Dublin Mid-West) contested by-elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288496-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork North-Central by-election\nIn mid-November it was reported that Fine Gael's Dara Murphy would be resigning his seat in the same constituency in December, to become deputy chef de cabinet of European Commissioner Mariya Gabriel. The Irish Times reported regret within Fine Gael that Murphy had not resigned sooner, which would have allowed one single transferable vote by-election to fill both vacancies, increasing the likelihood that Fine Gael would have retained a seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288496-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork North-Central by-election, Result\nThe number of votes to qualify for reimbursement of election expenses was 3,179 (one-quarter of the quota), which was reached by O'Sullivan, Burke, Gould, and Maher.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288497-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork Premier Intermediate Football Championship\nThe 2019 Cork Premier Intermediate Football Championship was the 14th 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 15 January 2019. The championship began on 6 April 2019 and ended on 27 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288497-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork Premier Intermediate Football Championship\nOn 27 October 2019, \u00c9ire \u00d3g won the championship following a 0-14 to 0-12 defeat of St Michael's in the final at P\u00e1irc U\u00ed Rinn. It was their first championship title in the grade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288498-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork Premier Intermediate Hurling Championship\nThe 2019 Cork Premier Intermediate Hurling Championship was the 16th staging of the Cork Premier Intermediate Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Cork County Board in 2004. The draw for the opening round fixtures took place on 15 January 2019. The championship began on 19 April 2019 and ended on 12 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288498-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork Premier Intermediate Hurling Championship\nOn 12 October 2019, Fr. O'Neill's won the championship after a 3-23 to 1-20 defeat of Kilworth in the final at P\u00e1irc U\u00ed Rinn. It was their first ever championship title in this grade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288498-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork Premier Intermediate Hurling Championship\nDeclan Dalton from the Fr. O'Neill's club was the championship's top scorer with 3-45.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288499-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork Senior Football Championship\nThe 2019 Cork Senior Football Championship was the 131st staging of the Cork Senior Football Championship since its establishment by the Cork County Board in 1887. The draw for the opening round fixtures took place on 15 January 2019. The championship began on 18 March 2019 and ended on 27 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288499-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork Senior Football Championship\nSt. Finbarr's entered the championship as the defending champions, however, they were beaten by Nemo Rangers at the quarter-final stage. Femoy secured promotion to the top tier championship after a 54-year absence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288499-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork Senior Football Championship\nOn 27 October 2019, Nemo Rangers won the championship after a 2\u201308 to 0\u201310 defeat of Duhallow in the final at P\u00e1irc U\u00ed Rinn. It was their 21st championship overall and their first title since 2017. It was a second successive final defeat for Duhallow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288499-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork Senior Football Championship\nJohn Hayes from the Carbery Rangers club was the championship's top scorer with 2-20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288500-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork Senior Hurling Championship\nThe 2019 Cork Senior Hurling Championship was the 131st staging of the Cork Senior Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Cork County Board in 1887. The draw for the 2019 opening round fixtures took place on 15 January 2019. The championship began on 26 March 2019 and ended on 20 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288500-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork Senior Hurling Championship\nThe final was played at P\u00e1irc U\u00ed Rinn in Cork, between defending champions Imokilly and Glen Rovers, in what was their first meeting in a final in 70 years. Original venue, P\u00e1irc U\u00ed Chaoimh, was deemed unplayable due to an unsatisfactory playing surface. Imokilly won the match by 2-17 to 1-16 to claim their sixth championship title overall and a first three-in-a-row of titles since St. Finbarr's in 1982.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288500-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork Senior Hurling Championship\nImokilly's Declan Dalton was the championship's top scorer with 3-55.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288501-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork boundary change\nThe boundary between Cork city and County Cork, under the local jurisdiction of Cork City Council and Cork County Council respectively, was changed in mid 2019 when the Local Government Act 2018 came into force after the 2019 local elections, with the city area quadrupling in size. Its implementation followed the Cork Local Government Review, a 2015 review by the Cork Local Government Committee which recommended merging the two councils into a single \"super-council\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288501-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 Cork boundary change\nThe recommendation was unpopular within the city and in 2017, after a review, it was dropped in favour of extending the city boundary into territory of the county. This alternative was not approved by county council, which meant the Fine Gael-led government was obliged to pass an Act of the Oireachtas to effect it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288501-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork boundary change\nAreas transferred from the county to the city are (clockwise from the south east): Rochestown, Douglas, Grange, Donnybrook, Frankfield, Cork Airport, Togher, Ballincollig, Kerry Pike, Tower, Blarney, Killeens, Ballyvolane, White's Cross, and Glanmire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288501-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork boundary change\nAdjacent areas remaining in the county are (clockwise from the south east): Passage West, Carrigaline, Ballygarvan, Waterfall, Ballinora, Killumney, Ovens, Inniscarra, Cloghroe, Matehy, Monard, Knockraha, Glounthaune, and Little Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288501-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork boundary change, Background\nPrior to the 2019 extension, the most recent previous extension of the boundary of the city council area was in 1965. At the 2011 census, there were 119,230 people in the city proper and 79,352 in adjacent suburbs within the county. Under the Local Government Act 1991, the Minister for the Environment, Community and Local Government can by statutory instrument change the boundaries of local government areas including cities and counties, subject to a formal proposal from the relevant local authority and a report from a local boundary committee appointed to review the boundaries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288501-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork boundary change, Committee\nThe committee's terms of reference were specified by minister Alan Kelly. It could recommend either merging the two councils into a single local government area for County Cork, or else adjusting the boundary between Cork city and the county. The five committee members were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288501-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork boundary change, Report\nAfter a public consultation, its report was submitted in September 2015. The majority report, by Smiddy, Curran, and Lucey, recommends a single council, with more powers than existing county councils have under the 2001 act and the Local Government Reform Act 2014. The super-council would have three subunits called \"divisions\", one being a \"metropolitan division\" around Cork city, the others respectively covering the north and east of the county and the south and west of it. The divisions would be further divided into municipal districts as defined under the 2014 act.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288501-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork boundary change, Report\nKeogh and Reidy submitted a minority report arguing for retention of separate city and county councils, with a boundary adjustment increasing the area of the city council. The minority report interpreted the \"metropolitan division\" proposed in the majority report as nothing more than a municipal district with no budgetary powers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288501-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork boundary change, Report, City/metropolitan boundary\nThe majority report recommended that the \"metropolitan division\" around the city should correspond to the existing Metropolitan Cork statistical area, with a population of 289,739, as far out as Ballinhassig, Minane Bridge, Cloyne, Midleton, Watergrasshill, and Dripsey. It did not specify a boundary for the \"metropolitan district\" within the metropolitan division, but said all municipal district boundaries should be redrawn by an implementation committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 61], "content_span": [62, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288501-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork boundary change, Report, City/metropolitan boundary\nThe minority report recommended that the city boundary be extended to the satellite towns of Ballincollig, Blarney, Carrigtwohill, and Carrigaline, but not Midleton or Cobh. It would have a population between 230,000 and 235,000, the precise boundary to be negotiated between the city and county councils.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 61], "content_span": [62, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288501-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork boundary change, Response\nIn general, politicians from the county agreed with the majority report, while politicians and civic groups from the city favoured retaining a separate city council. Cork South- Central TD Ciar\u00e1n Lynch commissioned a poll of the constituency showing 59 percent support for boundary extension and 23 percent for amalgamation, which county mayor John Paul O\u2019Shea criticised as a \"biased survey\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288501-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork boundary change, Response\nEighteen former Lord Mayors of the city signed a letter opposing any merger with the county. A specially convened meeting of the city council on 22 September 2015 resolved by 29 votes to none to seek a judicial review in the High Court of the proposal's constitutionality, and to write to the Taoiseach and minister demanding a halt to the process. The county council endorsed the majority report on 28 September 2015, with only Sinn F\u00e9in councillors opposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288501-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork boundary change, Response\nAlan Kelly, the responsible minister, backed the majority report. Simon Coveney, a government minister from near Carrigaline, advised voters to read the full report before passing judgment. In the D\u00e1il, Miche\u00e1l Martin and Jonathan O'Brien opposed it while Kelly supported it. In the Seanad, Paul Bradford opposed while junior minister Jimmy Deenihan replied that there were \"obviously pros and cons\". Michael McCarthy, Labour TD for Cork South-West, and chair of the D\u00e1il Committee on Environment, Culture and the Gaeltacht, invited the review committee members to address the D\u00e1il committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288501-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork boundary change, Response\nCork chamber of commerce, which straddles both council areas, favours amalgamation. The Cork branch of IBEC made a submission in favour of retaining separate councils but subsequently endorsed the majority report, denying this was a U-turn. Cork Institute of Technology president Brendan Murphy backed the merger; UCC did not initially take a position, while defending the right of the UCC faculty on the committee to express a minority view.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288501-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork boundary change, Response\nIn a February 2016 debate before the general election, eight of nine Cork candidates were opposed to the merger, with Fine Gael's Dara Murphy saying \"It has been too divisive. What we are left with now is the status quo, which is the worst of both worlds.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288501-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork boundary change, Response\nUCC commissioned Tony Bovaird of the University of Birmingham to review both majority and minority reports. Bovaird said the minority report was \"much better substantiated\", while Alf Smiddy dismissed Bovaird's review as \"a continuation of an ongoing orchestrated saga from certain narrow quarters to frustrate the Government\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288501-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork boundary change, Expert advisory group\nEarly in 2016, the Cork report was considered by the government's Committee on Social Policy and Public Service Reform, along with another recommending merging Galway City and County. After the 2016 election, Simon Coveney became Minister for Housing, Planning, Community and Local Government in the Fine Gael\u2013led government. In June, he announced that a new expert group would take \"a fresh look\" at the Cork question. In September, he appointed an \"expert advisory group\" with detailed terms of reference including \"having regard particularly to the review carried out by the Cork Local Government Review Committee and its report\". Unlike the original committee, the review group's terms referred to the city's \"strategic role\" as a \"regional and national growth centre\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 822]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288501-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork boundary change, Expert advisory group\nThe group was originally expected to report in early 2017. Its 130-page draft report was submitted in April, and in May 2017, Coveney returned it for revision of specified points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288501-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork boundary change, Expert advisory group\nIn June 2017, Coveney published the group's report (called the \"Mackinnon Report\" by media) and said he intended to implement it in time for the 2019 local elections. The report provided for the city boundary to be extended to include Little Island, Cork Airport, Ballincollig, Blarney, and Carrigtwohill, adding a population of over 100,000. Under the plan, places further from the city would remain part of the county, including Cobh, Carrigaline, and Midleton, as well as Ringaskiddy, the centre of the Port of Cork.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288501-0017-0001", "contents": "2019 Cork boundary change, Expert advisory group\nThe report gives parameters for compensation to be paid by the city to the county for the consequent reduction in its revenue. The revised proposal was welcomed by Miche\u00e1l Martin but criticised by some county councillors. The city council voted unanimously to accept it. Barry Roche of The Irish Times wrote that the Mackinnon Report \"has proven almost as divisive as its predecessor\", except with the city and county councils' positions reversed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288501-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork boundary change, Implementation Oversight Group\nOn 28 July 2017, Coveney appointed a three-person \"Cork Local Government Implementation Oversight Group\" (IOG). Its terms of reference included planning and overseeing the implementation of the expert advisory group's report, but also adjusting the boundary delineation. The IOG facilitated discussions between the chief executives of the two councils, who reached an agreement in December on a compromise whereby the city would be extended to include Ballincollig, Blarney, Glanmire, and Cork Airport, but not Little Island or Carrigtwohill. The cabinet accepted the IOG report on 13 December. A county council meeting on 15 December 2017 voted 28\u20135 to reject the proposal, with Sinn F\u00e9in the only party to support it. A city council meeting on 18 December endorsed the IOG proposal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 842]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288501-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork boundary change, Implementation Oversight Group\nOn 13 December 2017 two LEA Boundary Committees were established and tasked with drawing all LEA boundaries for the 2019 local election, except initially excluding Cork city and county. The IOG finalised its boundary by 27 February 2018. On 23 March 2018 Cork city and Cork county were added to the remit of the LEA Boundary Committees, using the IOG city\u2013county boundary and keeping the current numbers of councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288501-0019-0001", "contents": "2019 Cork boundary change, Implementation Oversight Group\nAlthough county and city boundaries can be adjusted by statutory instrument under the Local Government Act 1991, this requires the consent of both adjoining local authorities; absent the consent of Cork County Council, the IOG boundary change can only be implemented by primary legislation. This led to the Local Government Bill 2018, for which Phelan moved the second reading in the D\u00e1il on 18 October 2018. The bill was initially passed by the D\u00e1il on 13 December and the Seanad on 19 December; the D\u00e1il agreed to the Seanad's amendments on 23 January, and the bill was sign it into law on 25 January by the President, Michael D. Higgins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288501-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork boundary change, Implementation\nThe boundary change took place on 31 May 2019, at which time the land area of the city area increased from 39\u00a0km2 to 187\u00a0km2, and the population within the city bounds increased from 125,000 to 210,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288501-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Cork boundary change, Implementation\nThe change followed the 2019 Cork City Council election, which had taken place on 24 May, and among the 31 incoming city councillors were four outgoing county councillors, based in local electoral areas transferred to the city. At the first annual meeting of the new council on 7 June, John Sheehan was elected Lord Mayor. At the first business meeting on 10 June, Sheehan said the council would seek increased representation on the Southern Regional Assembly to reflect its increased population and area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288502-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cornell Big Red football team\nThe 2019 Cornell Big Red football team represented Cornell University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season as a member of the Ivy League. They were led by seventh-year head coach David Archer and played their home games at Schoellkopf Field. They finished the season 4\u20136 overall and 3\u20134 in Ivy League play to tie for fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288502-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cornell Big Red football team, Previous season\nThe Big Red finished the 2018 season 3\u20137, 2\u20135 in Ivy League play to finish in seventh place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288502-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cornell Big Red football team, Preseason, Preseason media poll\nThe Ivy League released their preseason media poll on August 8, 2019. The Big Red were picked to finish in seventh place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288503-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Corrigan Oil 200\nThe 2019 Corrigan Oil 200 is a NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series race held on August 10, 2019, at Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn, Michigan. Contested over 105 laps due to an overtime finish on the two-mile (3.2\u00a0km) D-shaped oval, it was the 16th race of the 2019 NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series season, and the final race of the regular season before the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288503-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Corrigan Oil 200, Background, Track\nMichigan International Speedway (MIS) is a two-mile (3.2\u00a0km) moderate-banked D-shaped speedway located off U.S. Highway 12 on more than 1,400 acres (5.7\u00a0km2) approximately four miles (6.4\u00a0km) south of the village of Brooklyn, in the scenic Irish Hills area of southeastern Michigan. The track is used primarily for NASCAR events. It is sometimes known as a \"sister track\" to Texas World Speedway, and was used as the basis of Auto Club Speedway. The track is owned by International Speedway Corporation (ISC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288503-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Corrigan Oil 200, Background, Track\nMichigan International Speedway is recognized as one of motorsports' premier facilities because of its wide racing surface and high banking (by open-wheel standards; the 18-degree banking is modest by stock car standards). Michigan is the fastest track in NASCAR due to its wide, sweeping corners and long straightaways; typical qualifying speeds are in excess of 200\u00a0mph (320\u00a0km/h) and corner entry speeds are anywhere from 215 to 220\u00a0mph (346 to 354\u00a0km/h) after the 2012 repaving of the track.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288503-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Corrigan Oil 200, Practice, First practice\nRoss Chastain was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 38.724 seconds and a speed of 185.931\u00a0mph (299.227\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288503-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Corrigan Oil 200, Practice, Final practice\nChristian Eckes was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 39.081 seconds and a speed of 184.233\u00a0mph (296.494\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288503-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Corrigan Oil 200, Qualifying\nRoss Chastain scored the pole for the race with a time of 39.179 seconds and a speed of 183.772\u00a0mph (295.752\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288503-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Corrigan Oil 200, Race, Summary\nRoss Chastain started on pole and led all 20 laps of Stage 1. His day ended early after contact between Johnny Sauter and Codie Rohrbaugh on pit road severely damaged Chastain's truck as it sent Rohrbaugh's truck into Chastain going onto pit road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288503-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Corrigan Oil 200, Race, Summary\nBen Rhodes assumed the race lead and held it until Christian Eckes spun and brought out the first caution on lap 33. Rhodes and many of the leaders pitted for tires and fuel, but Brett Moffitt stayed out, beating Austin Hill during the final laps of Stage 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288503-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Corrigan Oil 200, Race, Summary\nWhen the final stage began, Sheldon Creed and Rhodes (who were both playoff contenders) battled fiercely, exchanging the lead multiple times until Cory Roper slammed the wall on lap 57 and brought out the yellow. Moffitt stayed out again and assumed the race lead on the restart, but was passed by Todd Gilliland later on that lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288503-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Corrigan Oil 200, Race, Summary\nThe caution was brought out again on lap 66 when Rohrbaugh spun, prompting Moffitt to pit while Gilliland stayed out. Gilliland and Rhodes battled for the race lead from the lap 70 restart up until lap 76, when they made contact while blocking each other. This caused Gilliland to drop from the lead to sixth, while Rhodes was forced to pit after cutting a tire. Hill inherited the lead afterwards, battling with Tyler Ankrum through two cautions for Eckes spinning twice on lap 86 and lap 93.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288503-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Corrigan Oil 200, Race, Summary\nOn lap 97, Ankrum took the lead on the restart but spun his tires while Matt Crafton was pushing him, sending his truck spinning into oncoming traffic on the frontstretch, destroying the three DGR-Crosley cars while also taking Gilliland out of playoff contention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288503-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Corrigan Oil 200, Race, Summary\nAfterwards, Hill held off a charging Creed to win the final race of the 2019 regular season. Grant Enfinger captured the regular season championship by the end of Stage 1, securing 15 playoff points. Due to Hill's win, Crafton took the final playoff spot on points over Rhodes, Creed, Tyler Dippel, and Harrison Burton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288504-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cotabato earthquakes\nThe 2019 Cotabato earthquakes were an earthquake swarm which struck the province of Cotabato on the island of Mindanao in the Philippines in October 2019. Three of these earthquakes were above 6.0 on the moment magnitude scale with a Mercalli intensity of VIII. More than 40 people have been reported dead or missing and nearly 800 were injured as a result of these events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288504-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cotabato earthquakes, Tectonic setting\nMindanao lies across the complex convergent boundary between the Sunda Plate and the Philippine Sea Plate. Part of the oblique convergence between these plates is taken up by subduction along the Cotabato Trench. The strike-slip component of the convergence is accommodated partly by the Philippine Fault System and partly by the Cotabato Fault System, a network of mainly NW-SE trending sinistral (left-lateral) strike-slip faults that form the boundary between the Cotabato Arc and the Central Mindanao Volcanic Belt. In the area of the October 2019 earthquakes series, the individual faults include the NW-SE trending South Columbio Fault, North Columbio Fault, M'Lang Fault, Makilala\u2013Malungon Fault and Tangbulan Fault, and the SW-NE trending Makilala Fault and Balabag Fault.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 824]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288504-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cotabato earthquakes, Major earthquakes, October 16\nThe Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (PHIVOLCS) reported that an earthquake of 6.3 magnitude was recorded at 19:37 PST (UTC+8) with a depth of 10.0km kilometers (recorded as 6.4 Mw\u202f at a depth of 12.8\u00a0km by the USGS). The epicenter was 7 kilometers ENE of Columbio, 22 kilometers southeast of Tulunan, Cotabato where the earthquake was felt at Intensity VII. VII was also reached at M'lang and Kidapawan. Intensity VI was reached at Tacurong, Santo Ni\u00f1o in South Cotabato, and Digos in Davao del Sur. The earthquake was a result of sinistral movement on a NW-SE trending strike-slip fault.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288504-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cotabato earthquakes, Major earthquakes, October 16\nPhilippine government seismologist Renato Solidum described the quake as \"moderately powerful\". The National Tsunami Center issues a statement saying no present tsunami threat from the earthquake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288504-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cotabato earthquakes, Major earthquakes, October 16\nThree malls in Davao City reported damage following the earthquake. In General Santos, the Gaisano Mall was mostly gutted following a fire triggered by the earthquake. 143 buildings were damaged and one was destroyed. The damaged buildings included 40 houses, 70 schools, 7 health facilities, 10 commercial buildings, and 2 places of worship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288504-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cotabato earthquakes, Major earthquakes, October 29\nOn October 29, 2019, a 6.6-magnitude earthquake struck the island of Mindanao in the Philippines at a depth of 14.0\u00a0km, according to the USGS, and 7\u00a0km according to PHIVOLCS. The maximum perceived shaking was VII on both the PEIS and MMS scales. This intensity was reached in Tulunan, Makilala, Kidapawan City, Digos City, and Malungon. This earthquake was caused by movement on a different, but related, strike-slip fault to the October 16 event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288504-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Cotabato earthquakes, Major earthquakes, October 29\nA major fire broke out in General Santos City. There were power outages in many parts of Cotabato and locally in South Cotabato, Sultan Kudarat, and Sarangani. At least ten deaths were reported, with a minimum of another four hundred injured. The fatalities were reported in Arakan, Carmen, Tulunan, Makilala, Digos City, and Magsaysay. School classes were suspended in parts of North Cotabato, South Cotabato, and Sultan Kudarat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288504-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Cotabato earthquakes, Major earthquakes, October 31\nOn October 31, 2019, a 6.5 magnitude earthquake struck the island of Mindanao in the Philippines at a depth of 10\u00a0km according to the USGS, with the epicenter located 1\u00a0km south of Kisante. A maximum perceived shaking of VII (PEIS) was reported from Tulunan, Makilala, Kidapawan City, Santa Cruz, Matanao, Magsaysay, Bansalan and Digos City. Some buildings in Davao and Soccksargen were seriously damaged and some collapsed. The death toll of these two quakes (October 29 and 31) was raised to 24, with 563 people injured, and 11 still missing. More than 300 aftershocks were recorded after the earthquake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288504-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Cotabato earthquakes, Major earthquakes, October 31\nA hotel in Kidapawan City collapsed following the earthquake; fortunately, according National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC), no one was inside in the building when the earthquake struck. The Davao City government suspended the classes on all levels. Affected residents in Makilala, Cotabato have begged on the highway for basic needs such as rice and tents. According to the NDRRMC, about 30,000 families or 150,000 individuals affected by the earthquake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288504-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Cotabato earthquakes, Major earthquakes, December 15\nThe Cotabato sequence was followed by an earthquake, with a magnitude of Mw\u202f 6.8 (ANSS) or Ms\u202f 6.9 (PHIVOLCS), on December 15 at 14:11 PST with an epicenter in the neighboring province of Davao del Sur. It had a hypocentral depth of between 22.4 km (ANSS) and 3.0 km (PHIVOLCS) and a maximum felt intensity of VII MMI or VII PEIS. The greatest damage was reported from the towns of Matanao, Magsaysay, Hagonoy and Padada. The earthquake caused 13 deaths and a further 210 people were injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288504-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Cotabato earthquakes, Landslides\nThe earthquake sequence triggered a large number of landslides and rockslides. Municipalities affected by landslides include Kidapawan City, Antipas, Arakan, Makilala, M'Lang and Tulunan in Cotabato province; Magsaysay, Bansalan, Malalag, Matanao and Kiblawan in Davao Del Sur. Three fatalities were caused by landslides triggered by the October 29 shock with a further six people reported missing. Two fatalities were caused by landslides triggered by the October 31 shock, with a further five people reported missing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288504-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Cotabato earthquakes, Reactions, International\nThe US Ambassador to the Philippines, Sung Kim, and the EU delegation to the Philippines both offered their condolences to the Filipino people. Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi also sent his message of sympathy to Philippine Foreign Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr.. The Chinese government has donated \u00a53 million yuan (roughly equivalent to \u20b122 million pesos) to support the disaster relief efforts in Mindanao. Meanwhile, the Spanish Consulate in the Philippines pledged to donate up to 35,000 euros to the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies and 70,000 euros to assist people in water, hygiene and sanitation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288504-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Cotabato earthquakes, Reactions, Domestic\nThe Provincial Government of South Cotabato, Sarangani and the City of General Santos was one of the first to initiate to help the citizens with blankets, trapal, food and water near the epicenter of the earthquake swarm, most especially in the Municipalities of Makilala, Tulunan, M'lang and City of Kidapawan. Local citizens in Soccsksargen acted in both giving donations in the government processes and privately giving donations across the highway in Makilala, Tulunan and Kidapawan. The Davao City Government also helped the affected areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288504-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 Cotabato earthquakes, Reactions, Domestic\nThe Island Garden City of Samal Government also went to Cotabato Province to give relief goods and drinking water. The Bangsamoro Government also went to the affected areas to give relief goods. The municipality of Datu Saudi Ampatuan Government also went to the area to share donations to help the affected people. Among other institutions that immediately helped where banks, malls, universities and schools in Soccsksargen and Davao Region to assist their fellow Mindanaoans in crisis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288505-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cotif Women's Tournament\nThe 2019 L'Alc\u00fadia International Football Tournament is a football competition which is being held from 1 August to 8 August 2019 at Els Arcs de, Alc\u00fadia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288505-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cotif Women's Tournament, Participating nations\nAll the five teams will play each other in a round robin phase and the top two teams will play the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288506-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cotswold District Council election\nThe 2019 Cotswold District Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect all members of Cotswold District Council, as part of the United Kingdom local elections. The Conservatives had controlled the council since 2003 but lost ten seats. The Liberal Democrats won overall control of the council for the first time since local government reorganisation in 1973.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288507-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cotton Bowl Classic\nThe 2019 Cotton Bowl Classic was a college football bowl game played on December 28, 2019, with kickoff at 12:00\u00a0p.m. EST (11:00\u00a0a.m. local CST) on ESPN. It was the 84th edition of the Cotton Bowl Classic, and was one of the 2019\u201320 bowl games concluding the 2019 FBS football season. Sponsored by the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company, the game was officially known as the Goodyear Cotton Bowl Classic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288507-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cotton Bowl Classic, Teams\nThe participants were selected by the College Football Playoff selection committee on December 8, 2019. This was the first meeting between the Memphis and Penn State programs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288507-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cotton Bowl Classic, Teams, Memphis Tigers\nMemphis entered the game with a 12\u20131 record (7\u20131 in conference), ranked 15th in the AP Poll. The Tigers tied with Navy for first place of the West Division of the American Athletic Conference (AAC). Due to their win over Navy during the regular season, Memphis advanced to the AAC Championship Game, where they defeated Cincinnati, 29\u201324.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288507-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cotton Bowl Classic, Teams, Memphis Tigers\nMemphis was selected to the Cotton Bowl as the highest-ranked team from the Group of Five conferences, a spot they secured by winning the AAC championship. This was Memphis' first Cotton Bowl Classic, as well as their first New Year's Six game overall. At the time the Tigers received their bowl invitation, the status of head coach Mike Norvell was unclear, as he had accepted an offer to become the new head coach of the Florida State Seminoles. On December 9, Norvell announced that he would not coach Memphis in the bowl, allowing interim head coach Ryan Silverfield to do so. On December 13, it was announced that the interim tag would be removed and that Silverfield was being hired as the new head coach of Memphis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288507-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cotton Bowl Classic, Teams, Penn State Nittany Lions\nPenn State entered the game ranked 13th in the AP Poll, with a 10\u20132 record (7\u20132 in conference). The Nittany Lions finished second in the Big Ten's East Division. They split their four games against ranked opponents, defeating Iowa and Michigan while losing to Minnesota and Ohio State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 57], "content_span": [58, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288507-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cotton Bowl Classic, Teams, Penn State Nittany Lions\nPenn State was selected to the Cotton Bowl as the highest-ranked team not already selected to a New Year's Six bowl. This was Penn State's fourth Cotton Bowl Classic; the Nittany Lions have a 2\u20130\u20131 record in the game, most recently their 1974 team winning the 1975 Cotton Bowl Classic over Baylor, 41\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 57], "content_span": [58, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288508-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 County Championship\nThe 2019 County Championship, known for sponsorship reasons as the 2019 Specsavers County Championship, was the 120th cricket County Championship season. As in 2018, Division One had eight teams and Division Two had ten teams. The first round of matches began on 5 April and the final round of matches ended on 26 September. Surrey were the defending champions. At the end of the 2019 season only one team was relegated with three promoted. Therefore, from 2020 onwards, Division One would feature ten teams and Division Two would feature eight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288508-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 County Championship, Results\nFixtures for the 2019 County Championship were announced on 26 November 2018, with the previous season's champions Surrey beginning the defence of their title against Essex at The Oval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288508-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 County Championship, Standings\nTeams receive 16 points for a win, 8 for a tie and 5 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, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288509-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Coupe de Cal\u00e9donie\nThe 2019 Coupe de Cal\u00e9donie (also known as New Caledonia Cup) was the 64th edition of the national cup in New Caledonian football. AS Magenta were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288509-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Coupe de Cal\u00e9donie\nHiengh\u00e8ne Sport won the title, beating AS L\u00f6ssi in the final, and earned the right to represent New Caledonia in the 2019\u201320 Coupe de France, entering at the seventh round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288509-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Coupe de Cal\u00e9donie, Teams\nSixteen teams compete for the cup, being the ten teams of the 2019 New Caledonia Super Ligue and six teams which qualified from provincial competitions (two each from Loyalty Islands Province, North Province and South Province).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288509-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Coupe de Cal\u00e9donie, Round of 16\nGames in the round of 16 took place on 14 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288509-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Coupe de Cal\u00e9donie, Quarter-finals\nGames in the quarter-finals took place on 21 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288509-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Coupe de Cal\u00e9donie, Semi-finals\nGames in the semi-finals were played on 28 September 2019, back-to-back at Stade Numa-Daly Magenta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288509-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Coupe de Cal\u00e9donie, Final\nThe final was played on 19 October 2019 at Stade Numa-Daly Magenta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288510-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Coupe de France Final\nThe 2019 Coupe de France Final was a football match between Rennes and Paris Saint-Germain to decide the winner of the 2018\u201319 Coupe de France, the 102nd season of the Coupe de France. Rennes won the cup, their first since 1971, after a penalty shoot-out following a 2\u20132 draw in extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288510-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Coupe de France Final, Match, Details\nAssistant referees:Guillaume D\u00e9bartJulien PacelliFourth official:J\u00e9r\u00f4me MiguelgorryVideo assistant referee:Cl\u00e9ment TurpinAssistant video assistant referee:Thomas L\u00e9onard", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288511-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Coupe de la Ligue Final\nThe 2019 Coupe de la Ligue Final was the final of the 2018\u201319 Coupe de la Ligue, the 25th edition of France's football league cup competition, the Coupe de la Ligue, contested by the 44 teams that the Ligue de Football Professionnel (LFP) manages. The final took place on 30 March 2019 at the Stade Pierre-Mauroy in Villeneuve-d'Ascq and was contested by Strasbourg and Guingamp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288511-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Coupe de la Ligue Final\nStrasbourg won the final 4\u20131 on penalties, following a 0\u20130 draw after extra time, for their fourth Coupe de la Ligue title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288511-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Coupe de la Ligue 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288511-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Coupe de la Ligue Final, Match, Details\nAssistant referees:St\u00e9phan LuziAur\u00e9lien DrouetFourth official:Johan HamelVideo assistant referee:J\u00e9r\u00f4me BrisardAssistant video assistant referee:Hakim Ben El Hadj", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288512-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Coventry City Council election\nThe 2019 Coventry City Council election was held on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Coventry City Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288512-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Coventry City Council election\nResidents in Allesley, Finham and Keresley areas of the City had the opportunity to elect Parish Councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288512-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Coventry City Council election, Current Council seats\nThe table below shows a summary of the make-up of the City Council before the 2 May 2019 elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288512-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Coventry City Council election, Key dates\nAll electors who are currently registered and are eligible to vote on Thursday 2 May should receive their polling card by 7 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288513-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Craven District Council election\nThe 2019 Craven District Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Craven District Council in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288514-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Crawley Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Crawley Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Crawley Borough Council in West Sussex, England. This was on the same day as other local elections. The entire council was up for election after ward boundaries changed and the Labour Party retained control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup\nThe 2019 ICC Cricket World Cup was the 12th Cricket World Cup, a quadrennial One Day International (ODI) cricket tournament contested by men's national teams and organised by the International Cricket Council (ICC). It was hosted between 30 May to 14 July across 10 venues in England and a single venue in Wales with the tournament being the fifth time that England had hosted the World Cup while for Wales it was their third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup\nThe tournament was contested by 10 teams, a decrease from 14 teams in the previous edition, with the format of the tournament changing to a single round-robin group with the top four teams qualifying through to the knockout stage. After six weeks of round-robin matches, which saw four games not have a result, India, Australia, England and New Zealand finished as the top four, with Pakistan missing out on net run rate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup\nIn the knockout stage, England and New Zealand won their respective semi-finals to qualify for the final, which was played at Lord's in London. The final ended in a tie after the match ended with both teams scoring 241 runs, followed by the first Super Over in an ODI; England won the title, their first, on the boundary countback rule after the Super Over also finished level. The total attendance throughout the 2019 ICC Cricket World Cup was 752,000. Overall, videos of the group stages amassed over 2.6\u00a0billion views from around the world, making it the most-watched cricket competition as of 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Hosting\nThe hosting rights were awarded in April 2006, after England and Wales withdrew their bid to host the 2015 Cricket World Cup, which was played in Australia and New Zealand. It was the fifth Cricket World Cup played in England, following the 1975, 1979, 1983 and 1999 World Cups. Wales also hosted matches at the 1983 and 1999 tournaments, the latter also seeing matches played in Scotland, Ireland and the Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Qualification\nThe 2019 World Cup featured 10 teams, a decrease from previous World Cups in 2011 and 2015, which each featured 14 teams. The hosts (England) and the top seven other teams in the ICC One Day International rankings on 30 September 2017 earned an automatic qualification. Results from 19 September 2017 confirmed that these teams were Australia, Bangladesh, England, India, New Zealand, Pakistan, South Africa and Sri Lanka. The remaining two spots were decided by the 2018 Cricket World Cup Qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Qualification\nAt the time of the announcement of the qualification structure, ICC Associate and Affiliate Members, who were guaranteed four spots in the previous two World Cup tournaments, could now only be represented by at most two teams, and possibly none at all if they were beaten by the lowest-ranked Full Members in the Qualifier. It also meant that at least two of the ten Test-playing nations at the time of the announcement would have to play in the qualifying tournament, and could miss the World Cup finals entirely. Thus, this was the first World Cup to be contested without all of the Full Member nations being present.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Qualification\nThe final stage of the tournament was a \"Super Six\" group, from which the top two teams qualified for the 2019 World Cup. The West Indies were guaranteed a spot after defeating Scotland in the penultimate round. Afghanistan joined them after defeating Ireland in the final over of their match. This was the first time since 1983 that Zimbabwe had failed to qualify for a World Cup. Ireland also missed the competition for the first time since 2003, and, for the first time, no Associate nation participated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Venues\nThe fixture list for the tournament was released on 26 April 2018 after the completion of an ICC meeting in Kolkata, India. London Stadium had been named as a possible venue in the planning stages, and in January 2017, the ICC completed an inspection of the ground, confirming that the pitch dimensions would be compliant with the requirements to host ODI matches. However, when the fixtures were announced, London Stadium was not included as a venue. All of the venues used are in England except for Sophia Gardens, which is in Wales. The final was scheduled for 14 July 2019 at Lord's in London.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Squads\nAll the participating teams had to submit the names of their respective World Cup squads by 23 April 2019. The teams were allowed to change players in their 15-man squad anytime up to seven days before the start of the tournament. New Zealand was the first team to announce their World Cup squad. The oldest player of the tournament was South African player Imran Tahir, who was 40 years old, while the youngest was Afghan spinner Mujeeb Ur Rahman, who was 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Match officials\nIn April 2019, the ICC named the officials for the tournament. Ian Gould announced that he would retire as an umpire following the conclusion of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Match officials, Referees\nThe ICC also named six match referees for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Prize money\nThe International Cricket Council declared a total prize money pool of US$10\u00a0million for the tournament, the same as the 2015 edition. The prize money was allocated according to the performance of the team as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Warm-up matches\nBefore the World Cup, the participating nations competed in 10 warm-up matches, which were played from 24 to 28 May 2019. These matches did not have either One Day International (ODI) status or List A status as teams were allowed to field all 15 members of their squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Opening ceremony\nThe opening ceremony took place on The Mall in central London during the evening of 29 May 2019, a day before the start of the World Cup. Andrew Flintoff, Paddy McGuinness and Shibani Dandekar hosted the event. Prior to the opening ceremony, the 10 captains met at Buckingham Palace where they were greeted by Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Harry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Opening ceremony\nA 60-second challenge took place among the 10 participating 'teams', with each side represented by two guest figures, including Viv Richards, Anil Kumble, Mahela Jayawardene, Jacques Kallis, Brett Lee, Kevin Pietersen, Farhan Akhtar, Malala Yousafzai, Yohan Blake, Damayanthi Dharsha, Azhar Ali, Abdur Razzak, James Franklin and Steven Pienaar, while David Boon was the umpire for the game. England won the game by scoring 74 points, and Australia came second with 69 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Opening ceremony\nMichael Clarke, who captained Australia to the title in 2015, took the World Cup trophy to the stage, accompanied by former England spin bowler Graeme Swann. The ceremony concluded with the official World Cup song, \"Stand By\", performed by Loryn and Rudimental.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage\nThe initial stage of the tournament saw the 10 teams grouped together for a single round-robin, in which each team played the other nine once for a total of 45 matches. Teams earned two points for a win and one for a tie or no-result (a minimum of 20 overs per side was needed to constitute a result). Matches in this stage had no reserve day set aside in the event of bad weather. After four games in seven days were rained off and complaints were made about the lack of reserve days, the ICC chief executive, Dave Richardson, said that trying to include reserve days \"would significantly increase the length of the tournament and practically would be extremely complex to deliver\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage\nThe top four teams from the group stage progressed to the knockout stage. If teams were tied on points, then the number of wins and then the net run rate was used to separate them. A similar format was previously used in the 1992 Cricket World Cup, though that tournament featured nine teams instead of ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage\nFollowing the 2019 Pulwama attack, several former Indian players and the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) called for the boycott of the group match fixture between India and Pakistan. They also wanted to have the Pakistan team banned from playing in the tournament. However, after conducting a board meeting in Dubai, the ICC rejected the BCCI's proposal and confirmed that the scheduled match would go ahead as planned, at Old Trafford in Manchester, despite the ongoing standoff between the two nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 1\nThe tournament began on 30 May at The Oval in London, between the host nation, England, and South Africa. England batted first and, despite losing their first wicket to the second ball of the tournament, went on to score 311/8, with Ben Stokes top-scoring with 89 runs. South Africa were bowled out for 207, following a collapse of eight wickets for 63 runs, to give England a victory by 104 runs. The next three matches were one-sided: in the first, the West Indies bowled Pakistan out for just 105, which was the lowest score of the tournament. The target of 106 was chased down in only 13.4 overs, the quickest successful run chase in the tournament. The first double-header of the group stage saw comfortable wins for New Zealand and Australia, as they won by 10 and 7 wickets respectively over Sri Lanka and Afghanistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 878]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 1\nAt The Oval, in the fifth match of the group stage, Bangladesh made their highest score in an ODI, with 330/6. Mushfiqur Rahim top-scored for Bangladesh with 78, as he and Shakib Al Hasan had a 142-run partnership for the third wicket. In reply, the South Africans could not sustain a partnership with wickets falling regularly throughout their innings. Mustafizur Rahman took three wickets for Bangladesh as South Africa fell short by 22 runs. The following day saw Pakistan cause an upset over one of the tournament favourites, as they beat England by 14 runs at Trent Bridge. This was despite Joe Root (107) and Jos Buttler (103) both scoring centuries in the chase, as they became the first and second batsmen to score hundreds at the tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 804]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 1\nIn Cardiff, three wickets in five balls from Afghanistan's Mohammad Nabi provided the catalyst for a Sri Lankan collapse, as they fell from 144/1 to 201 all out. Kusal Perera top-scored for Sri Lanka with 78, while Nabi took another wicket to finish with four for the innings. After rain reduced Afghanistan's innings to 41 overs, they were unable to reach the revised target of 187 as they lost by 34 runs. Najibullah Zadran top-scored for Afghanistan with 43, while Sri Lanka's Nuwan Pradeep took four wickets. Wednesday saw a double-header being played at the Rose Bowl and The Oval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0020-0001", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 1\nAt the Rose Bowl, India started their campaign with a six-wicket win over South Africa. Yuzvendra Chahal took four wickets as he helped restrict the batsmen to a total of 227. In reply, Rohit Sharma scored 122 not out to help India chase the target with 15 balls to spare. The other match on the Wednesday saw Bangladesh give New Zealand a scare, as the Black Caps went from 160/2 to 191/5 chasing 245, before getting home with three overs to spare. Ross Taylor top-scored for New Zealand with 82, while Matt Henry was the pick of the bowlers with four wickets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 2\nThe second week began with Australia having an early batting collapse to fall to 38/4 in their innings against the West Indies at Nottingham. Half-centuries from Steve Smith and Nathan Coulter-Nile helped Australia recover before they were bowled out for 288. In response, Chris Gayle had two overturned decisions go his way before he was dismissed for 21. Despite a 68 from Shai Hope, Australia won by 15 runs off the back of a five-wicket haul by Mitchell Starc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0021-0001", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 2\nAfter the Friday match between Pakistan and Sri Lanka in Bristol was abandoned due to rain, the Saturday matches were played in nearby Cardiff and Taunton. At Cardiff, Jason Roy made the highest score of the tournament so far, with 153, as he was named man of the match in England's 106-run victory over Bangladesh. In Taunton, a five-wicket haul from Kiwi bowler James Neesham led New Zealand to their third consecutive win, with a seven-wicket victory over Afghanistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 2\nThe final completed match of the week saw India defeat Australia by 36 runs at The Oval. Batting first, India targeted Marcus Stoinis and Adam Zampa's bowling with a combined total of 113 runs coming from their 13 overs, as India scored 352/5. Shikhar Dhawan (pictured) top-scored for India with 117, while Stoinis was the only bowler to take more than one wicket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0022-0001", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 2\nIn the run chase, Australia were behind the required run rate for much of their innings, despite half-centuries from David Warner, Steve Smith and Alex Carey, and were bowled out for 316, Bhuvneshwar Kumar and Jasprit Bumrah taking three wickets each. The following two games of the week were washed out. Only 7.2 overs of play was possible in the fixture between South Africa and the West Indies, while the match between Bangladesh and Sri Lanka was abandoned without the toss taking place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0022-0002", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 2\nThe following day at Taunton saw Australia open with a 146-run stand between David Warner and Aaron Finch, with Warner going on to get a century. Pakistan fought back into the innings, with Mohammad Amir taking five wickets, which restricted Australia to 307. In response, Pakistan could not get a partnership established with regular wickets coming from Australia; Pat Cummins finished his 10 overs with figures of 3/33. Sarfaraz Ahmed and Wahab Riaz tried to get Pakistan the victory with a quick-fire 64-run partnership, but it was not enough, with Starc taking two of the final three wickets in the 41-run victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 3\nAfter a wash-out of the match between India and New Zealand in Nottingham to open up the third week, the fourth wash-out in the World Cup, Joe Root scored his second century of the tournament and took two wickets in England's eight-wicket victory over the West Indies at Southampton. However, the English victory was soured as Jason Roy had to leave the field in the eighth over with hamstring injury that ruled him out of the next two games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0023-0001", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 3\nSouth Africa recorded their first win of the tournament at Cardiff against Afghanistan, with Imran Tahir taking four wickets as Afghanistan were bowled out for 125. In reply, South Africa chased down their target for the loss of just one wicket. The other match on Saturday at The Oval saw Aaron Finch and Mitchell Starc guide Australia to an 87-run victory over Sri Lanka that sent them to the top of the table with eight points from five games. The following day saw rivals India and Pakistan face each other at Old Trafford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0023-0002", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 3\nIndia scored 336/5 from their 50 overs, which included a man-of-the-match performance of 140 runs from Rohit Sharma. In response, Pakistan got off to a good start and were 117/1 at one stage before Kuldeep Yadav took two wickets in three balls to turn the tide for India, helping them to an 89-run victory via the Duckworth\u2013Lewis\u2013Stern method.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 3\nMonday saw Bangladesh beat the West Indies by seven wickets at the County Ground in Taunton. In the West Indies' innings, Shai Hope top-scored with 96 runs from 121 balls as he and Evin Lewis (70) got the West Indies to 321/8 from their 50 overs. In the run chase, Bangladeshi all-rounder Shakib Al Hasan scored 124 from 99 balls as aided Bangladesh in chasing the target of 322 and recording Bangladesh highest successful run chase in their ODI history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0024-0001", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 3\nAt Manchester, Eoin Morgan hit 17 sixes, a new world record in ODIs, as he top-scored for England with 148, leading the hosts to a total of 397/6, the highest total of the tournament. Afghanistan's Rashid Khan conceded 110 runs without taking any wickets, the most expensive bowling spell in Cricket World Cup history, and the second-most expensive of all time. Hashmatullah Shahidi managed 76 in response for Afghanistan, but they were always behind the required rate and fell 151 runs short, managing 247 from their 50 overs. Wednesday saw South Africa taking on New Zealand at Edgbaston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0024-0002", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 3\nWith the match reduced to 49 overs each due to a wet outfield, South Africa posted a total of 241/6 with some late hitting from Rassie van der Dussen, who was unbeaten on 67, while Lockie Ferguson was the best of the bowlers with three wickets. In response, New Zealand were 137/5 at one stage, before a partnership from Kane Williamson (who went on to score a century) and Colin de Grandhomme guided New Zealand to their fourth victory of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 4\nWeek four saw David Warner score 166, the highest individual score of the tournament, as Australia's total of 381/5 proved out of reach for Bangladesh, despite Mahmudullah and Mushfiqur Rahim getting them within 48 runs of the target. Friday saw Lasith Malinga dismantle the English top order, as his four wickets helped Sri Lanka defend a total of 232 for their second win of the tournament. Despite the best efforts of Stokes, who was left stranded on 82 not out, England fell 21 short.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0025-0001", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 4\nAngelo Mathews top-scored for the Sri Lankans with an unbeaten 85, while Mark Wood was the best of the English bowlers with 3/40. The Saturday games saw the first elimination of the tournament, with Afghanistan's loss to India at Southampton meaning they could no longer qualify for the knockout stage. Despite limiting India to 224 from their 50 overs, a Mohammed Shami hat-trick saw Afghanistan fall 12 runs short. The other match on the Saturday saw a close game between New Zealand and the West Indies at Manchester.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0025-0002", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 4\nAfter New Zealand scored 291/8, including 148 from Kane Williamson, they had the West Indies reeling at 164/7 after 27 overs. The momentum, though, was swung to the West Indies, with Carlos Brathwaite making 101 (including five sixes and nine fours) as he led them to within six runs of the target; however, his attempt to finish off the game with a six saw him caught by Trent Boult at long on, as New Zealand won by five runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 4\nThe following day saw South Africa eliminated from the World Cup after an 89-run performance from Haris Sohail got Pakistan to 308/7 before Shadab Khan took three wickets in the South African run chase to give Pakistan a 49-run victory. Monday saw Bangladesh record their third win of the tournament; a 62-run victory over Afghanistan at the Rose Bowl. The match also saw Bangladesh's Shakib Al Hasan become the second player in World Cup history to take five wickets and score a half-century in the same match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0026-0001", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 4\nAustralia became the first team to qualify for the semi-finals as a century from Aaron Finch, a five-wicket haul from Jason Behrendorff and another four from Mitchell Starc guided them to a 64-run victory over England at Lord's, with only Stokes (89) showing any resistance to Australia's bowling. The result left England needing to win both of their remaining two games to guarantee qualification for the semi-finals. Pakistan caused New Zealand's first loss of the World Cup at Edgbaston with a Babar Azam century guiding them to a victory by six wickets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 5\nThe fifth week of the tournament started with India defeating the West Indies by 125 runs at Old Trafford, with Mohammed Shami taking four wickets as they bowled the West Indies out for 143. The result also knocked the West Indies out of the World Cup. The following day saw play suspended in the match between South Africa and Sri Lanka when bees swarmed the Riverside Ground pitch. Faf du Plessis and Hashim Amla led the run chase with a partnership of 175 runs, taking South Africa to a nine-wicket victory. Saturday saw two matches played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0027-0001", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 5\nAt Lord's, Starc became the first player to take three five-wicket hauls at a World Cup as he guided Australia to an 86-run victory over New Zealand. This was after Australia were 92/5 in the 22nd over before a century partnership between Usman Khawaja and Alex Carey got the total to 243/9. New Zealand managed 157 in response, with Kane Williamson top-scoring with 40. The other match, played at Headingley, saw Afghanistan set 227 against Pakistan, with Shaheen Afridi taking four wickets. The run chase got off to a shaky start with Fakhar Zaman being bowled for a duck.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0027-0002", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 5\nHowever, Babar Azam and Imam-ul-Haq made a partnership of 72, but Pakistan's progress was once again throttled by regular wickets, leaving them needing 46 runs from the last five overs. Imad Wasim immediately hit 18 runs in the 46th over, and despite losing Shadab Khan to a run out in the 47th, Wasim and Wahab Riaz saw Pakistan home to a three-wicket victory with two balls to spare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 5\nThe return of opener Jason Roy from injury helped England escape their slump as they emerged victorious by 31 runs against the hitherto unbeaten India in a crucial must-win game for the hosts. An opening partnership between Roy (66) and Jonny Bairstow (111) was the key factor in the victory, while Stokes scored 79 runs off 54 balls for his third consecutive half-century, to help England reach 337/7. The score proved too much for India, despite Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli scoring 102 and 66 respectively, while the returning England bowler Liam Plunkett took 3/55.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0028-0001", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 5\nSri Lanka won the dead rubber against the West Indies at Chester-le-Street, where both Avishka Fernando and Nicholas Pooran scored their maiden ODI centuries. Bangladesh's Shakib Al Hasan made history against India, as he became the first man to score 500 runs and take 10 wickets in a single World Cup. This performance was not enough, though, with a Rohit Sharma century leading India into the semi-finals at their opponents' expense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 6\nThe final round started with England taking on New Zealand, with the winner guaranteed a semi-final position. Another Jonny Bairstow hundred saw England win by 119 runs and qualify for the semi-finals for the first time since 1992. After the West Indies won the dead rubber against Afghanistan at Leeds, Pakistan needed to win their final match against Bangladesh by a record margin of over 300 runs at Lord's. They won, but only by 94 runs, allowing New Zealand to take the fourth and final semi-final berth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0029-0001", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 6\nThe match saw Pakistan's Shaheen Afridi, aged 19\u00a0years and 76\u00a0days, become the youngest player to take a five-wicket haul at a Cricket World Cup with the tournament's best bowling figures of 6/35. Despite Bangladesh losing the match, Shakib Al Hasan finished his tournament with 606 runs, surpassing Sachin Tendulkar's record for the most runs in the group stage of a World Cup. Shakib's record would very soon be surpassed by Rohit Sharma and David Warner by the end of the group stage, with former top-scoring in the group stage with 647 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 6\nThe final two matches of the group stage were played on the Saturday to determine who would finish top of the group. At Leeds, India cruised to a seven-wicket victory over Sri Lanka off the back of centuries from K. L. Rahul and Rohit Sharma as they chased down a target of 265 runs. This was Sharma's fifth century of the tournament, the most in a single World Cup. Angelo Mathews scored his third ODI century for Sri Lanka, all of which had come against India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0030-0001", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Summary, Week 6\nWith South Africa defeating Australia by 10 runs, India finished top of the table, sending Australia to a semi-final against England. A century from Faf du Plessis and a further 95 from Rassie van der Dussen saw South Africa set the Australians a target of 326. In response, Australia lost Usman Khawaja early on to a hamstring injury; he later returned but was dismissed for 18, before being ruled out for the rest of the tournament. David Warner scored 122, his third century of the tournament, and Alex Carey scored a career-best 85 but crucial wickets in the middle of the innings gave South Africa the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Group stage, Fixtures\nThe ICC released the fixture details on 26 April 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Knockout stage\nThe knockout stage started with semi-finals at Old Trafford and Edgbaston, the winners of each progressing to the final at Lord's. All three knockout games were allotted a reserve day. If a reserve day came into play, the match would not be restarted but instead resumed from the previous day's play, if there was any. In the event of no play on the scheduled day or the reserve day, in the semi-finals, the team that finished higher in the group stage progressed to the final, and if no play were possible in the final, the trophy would be shared. If any match ended in a tie, a Super Over would be used to determine the winner. If the scores in the Super Over were also tied, the winner would be determined by the two teams' overall boundary count, including both the match itself and the Super Over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 841]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Knockout stage\nOn 25 June 2019, Australia became the first team to qualify for the semi-finals after beating England at Lord's. India became the second team to qualify after they defeated Bangladesh at Edgbaston on 2 July 2019. The following day saw tournament hosts England become the third team to qualify after they beat New Zealand at the Riverside Ground. New Zealand were the fourth and final team to qualify for the semi-finals after Pakistan were unable to increase their net run rate sufficiently enough in their match against Bangladesh at Lord's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Knockout stage\nThe first semi-final was played between India and New Zealand at Old Trafford, while the second semi-final was played between Australia and England at Edgbaston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Knockout stage, Semi-finals\nThe first semi-final between India and New Zealand was played at Old Trafford in Manchester. Batting first, New Zealand lost opener Martin Guptill in the fourth over, having scored just one run. However, the Indians found wickets hard to come by after that, as Kane Williamson combined with Henry Nicholls and Ross Taylor for partnerships of 68 and 65 respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0035-0001", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Knockout stage, Semi-finals\nWilliamson managed 67 runs before he was the third man out in the 36th over, a score matched by Taylor when rain stopped play in the 47th over with New Zealand at 211/5 following the wickets of Neesham and De Grandhomme. No further play was possible on the day, so the match went into its reserve day. Taylor managed another seven runs to top-score for the Kiwis, who managed to get the score to 239/8 at the end of their 50 overs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0035-0002", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Knockout stage, Semi-finals\nThe Indian chase got off to a poor start with India falling to 5/3 in the fourth over, with the top three batsmen all going for one run each, then 24/4 after 10 overs. After a small partnership of 47 runs for the fifth wicket between Rishabh Pant and Hardik Pandya, Ravindra Jadeja was joined by MS Dhoni for a century partnership for the seventh wicket that left India needing 37 runs from the final three overs. This game turned out to be MS Dhoni's final game for India, he retired from all formats in August 2020. Once Dhoni had gone (run out), a late-order collapse saw New Zealand take the last four wickets for just 13 runs, sending them into their second consecutive World Cup final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Knockout stage, Semi-finals\nThe second semi-final saw England take on Australia at Edgbaston. Australia won the toss and chose to bat first, but lost three of their top four batsmen for single-figure scores, two of them to Chris Woakes, to reduce them to 14/3 into the seventh over. Wicket-keeper Alex Carey was promoted up the order due to his recent form, and, after getting his helmet knocked off by a Jofra Archer bouncer, he scored 46 before being caught by Adil Rashid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0036-0001", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Knockout stage, Semi-finals\nAs wickets continued to tumble at the other end, Steve Smith held his wicket to top-score with 85 as Australia were bowled out for 223 with Woakes and Rashid being the best of the bowlers with three wickets apiece. England took their time to get going in the run chase but were soon making progress, reaching 124 before Jonny Bairstow was trapped LBW by Starc for the first wicket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0036-0002", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Knockout stage, Semi-finals\nQuick-hitting Jason Roy went two overs later to a controversial decision, caught behind off a bouncer that appeared not to touch his bat, but England had already used their review on Bairstow's wicket, and Roy departed for 85 off 65 balls, including five sixes. Nevertheless, England were well over halfway to their target by this point, and an unbroken partnership of 79 between Joe Root and captain Eoin Morgan saw them home to an eight-wicket victory and their first World Cup final since 1992.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Knockout stage, Final\nAfter New Zealand won the toss and chose to bat first, Henry Nicholls' first half-century of the tournament and a further 47 from wicket-keeper Tom Latham helped the Kiwis to a total of 241/8 from their 50 overs, as Chris Woakes and Liam Plunkett each secured three wickets for the hosts. Defending a middling score, the New Zealand bowlers bowled effectively, hampering England's top order, with only Jonny Bairstow managing more than a start with 36.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0037-0001", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Knockout stage, Final\nWith the loss of their top order, England fell to 86/4 in the 24th over, however, a century partnership between Ben Stokes and Jos Buttler for the fifth wicket got them back into the game before Buttler was caught on 59. However, with five overs to play, England still required another 46 runs, and the bottom order were forced to bat more aggressively. Stokes managed to farm the strike and, more crucially, score runs, leaving England needing 15 to win from the final over, two wickets still in hand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0037-0002", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Knockout stage, Final\nAfter two dot balls, Stokes first planted a six into the stands at deep mid-wicket; on the next ball, the fielder's throw deflected off Stokes' bat as he was coming back for a second run and went to the boundary for an additional four; umpire Kumar Dharmasena awarded six runs for that delivery, although a correct application of Laws of Cricket would have resulted in only five runs being awarded as one of the runs should have not counted as the batsmen had not crossed during the attempted second run at the moment the fielder threw the ball in. The final two deliveries of the over saw England get a run each, but losing their last two wickets going for a second run each time, leaving the scores tied at 241 with Stokes left unbeaten with 84.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Knockout stage, Final\nWith the scores tied, the match went to a Super Over. England returned Stokes and Buttler to the crease, and they handled Trent Boult's bowling to accumulate 15 runs without loss. For New Zealand, Martin Guptill and James Neesham went in to face Jofra Archer needing at least 16 runs to claim the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0038-0001", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Knockout stage, Final\nAfter a steady accumulation of runs, including a wide and a six, left New Zealand needing two from the final delivery, Guptill hit the ball out to deep mid-wicket and tried to scamper back for the winning run, but Roy's throw in to Buttler was a good one with Guptill being well short of his crease.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0038-0002", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Knockout stage, Final\nNew Zealand finished with 15 runs to tie the Super Over, but England's superior boundary count in the match and Super Over combined (26 to New Zealand's 17) meant they claimed the World Cup title for the first time after three previous final defeats in 1979, 1987 and 1992. This game has gone down in history as one of the greatest ever finals, and games, in cricketing history. Ben Stokes was named man of the match; referring to the controversial overthrows that deflected off his bat, he said he would be \"apologising to [New Zealand captain Kane Williamson] for the rest of [his] life\", and later said England's first World Cup victory was \"written in the stars\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Statistics\nIndia's Rohit Sharma ended the tournament as the leading run scorer with 648 runs from nine matches which featured a 140 against Pakistan at Old Trafford. He finished ahead of Australia's David Warner (647 runs) and Bangladesh's Shakib Al Hasan (606 runs). Australian bowler Mitchell Starc ended up as the leading wicket-taker with 27 wickets, which surpassed the record set by Glenn McGrath in 2007. Second was Lockie Ferguson from New Zealand with 21 wickets, while Mustafizur Rahman (Bangladesh) and Jofra Archer (England) were tied for third place with 20 wickets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Statistics, Team of the tournament\nThe ICC announced its team of the tournament on 15 July 2019 with Kane Williamson being named as player of the tournament and captain of the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 58], "content_span": [59, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Broadcasting\nThe ICC agreed deals for broadcast and digital distribution on a range of platforms, including television, radio and online streaming. The in-house ICC TV served as host broadcasters of the world feed, in collaboration with Sunset+Vine (as part of a new long-term agreement covering all ICC events, excluding the 2021 ICC T20 World Cup and 2023 Cricket World Cup in India).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Broadcasting\nIn the United Kingdom, live coverage of the tournament was exclusive to pay television service Sky Sports, with free-to-air highlights packages sub-licensed to Channel 4. Sky later agreed to sub-license a simulcast of the final to Channel 4 if England reached the final. Sky Sport (New Zealand) also decided to air the final on its co-owned free-to-air channel Prime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288515-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup, Broadcasting\nHotstar held digital rights to the tournament in India and several other markets. Hotstar surpassed 100\u00a0million daily users during the group match between India and Pakistan, and reached a record 25.3\u00a0million concurrent viewers during the semi-final between India and New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final\nThe 2019 Cricket World Cup Final was a One Day International cricket match played at Lord's in London, England, on 14 July 2019 to determine the winner of the 2019 Cricket World Cup. It was contested by the runners-up from the previous tournament, New Zealand, and the host nation, England. It was the fifth time Lord's had hosted the Cricket World Cup Final, the most of any ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final\nThe two teams were tied on 241 runs at the end of the match, resulting in a Super Over being played to break the tie. On the final ball of New Zealand's Super Over, after equalling the 15 runs England managed in their over, Martin Guptill attempted to score the winning run but was run out by Jason Roy and Jos Buttler, meaning the Super Over was also tied. England won on the boundary count-back rule, having scored 26 boundaries to New Zealand's 17, thus becoming Cricket World Cup winners for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final\nIt was the first time a One Day International final match required a Super Over, and subsequently the first time it had been decided by a boundary count. The match has been described as one of the greatest and most dramatic in the history of the sport, with some analysts describing it as the greatest match in the history of one-day cricket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Background\nThe 2019 Cricket World Cup started on 30 May and was hosted by England and Wales. Ten teams played each other once in a round-robin format with the top four teams going through to the semi-finals. Fourth-placed New Zealand beat group winners India in the first semi-final, and England, who finished third in the group, defeated second-placed Australia in the second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Background\nEngland played in their first final in 27 years, their last appearance coming in 1992, when they were defeated by Pakistan at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. Their other appearances in the final were in 1979 against the West Indies at Lord's and 1987 against Australia at Eden Gardens. Despite playing in the second-highest number of finals in the World Cup after Australia, they were yet to win the trophy. New Zealand played in their second final, and also their second in a row. They previously played in the 2015 final but were beaten by Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Background\nWhen England reached the final, demand increased greatly for it to be shown on a free-to-air television channel in the United Kingdom. Rights holders Sky Sports agreed to allow Channel 4, who had the rights to broadcast evening highlights of the tournament, to carry the final in a simulcast (England cricket matches are not compulsory events requiring free-to-air broadcast). However, due to an existing commitment by Channel 4 to cover the 2019 British Grand Prix, the coverage switched to their sister channel More4 during the motor racing, returning to Channel 4 after the Grand Prix had finished. It was the first time an England international match had been broadcast on free-to-air television in the UK since the 2005 Ashes series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Background\nWhichever team won the match would become the first new winner of the World Cup since Sri Lanka's victory in 1996. It was also the first world final with a guaranteed new winner since 1992.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Road to the final, New Zealand\nNew Zealand retained the majority of the team that reached their maiden World Cup Final as co-hosts in 2015, although Kane Williamson took on the captaincy following Brendon McCullum's retirement. They finished level on 11 points with Pakistan in the round-robin stage (five wins, three losses and one no result after their match against India was interrupted by rain), but took fourth place by virtue of a better net run rate than Pakistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Road to the final, New Zealand\nIn the semi-finals, they were paired with India, who finished first in the round-robin stage. The match was played at Old Trafford in Manchester on 9 July. With New Zealand on 211/5 after 46.1 overs, Williamson having scored 67 and Ross Taylor on the same score at the time, the match was suspended by rain and ultimately play was pushed to the reserve day the next day. Eventually finishing on 239/8, Taylor eventually out for 74, they produced a spirited bowling and fielding performance to leave India 18 runs short.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Road to the final, New Zealand\nMan of the Match Matt Henry took 3/37, including openers Rohit Sharma and K. L. Rahul caught for just one each and Dinesh Karthik spectacularly caught by James Neesham for 6. Meanwhile, fellow pace bowler Trent Boult had captain Virat Kohli trapped lbw for one and top scorer Ravindra Jadeja caught by Williamson for 77 when a seventh-wicket partnership looked to be swinging the match back in India's favour. Finally, Martin Guptill ran out World Cup-winning captain MS Dhoni for 50 with a direct hit to leave India with just their tail.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Road to the final, England\nEngland, by contrast, entered as the top-ranked ODI team after director of cricket and former Ashes-winning captain Andrew Strauss helped orchestrate the national team's white-ball revamp following their bowing out in the group stage in 2015. Only a handful of the players who featured in 2019, including Irish-born captain Eoin Morgan, Test captain Joe Root, wicket-keeper Jos Buttler and bowling all-rounder Chris Woakes, were holdovers from that team, though a good number played in the narrow defeat against the West Indies in the 2016 World Twenty20 Final. Morgan was also the lone remaining member of England's 2010 World Twenty20 champion team \u2013 England's only ICC world championship going into this final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Road to the final, England\nTheir campaign was nearly derailed after a loss at Lord's to defending champions and arch-rivals Australia left them having to beat both India and New Zealand to guarantee their semi-final spot. They won both games and finished third in the round-robin stage with 12 points (six wins and three losses out of nine matches). They met group runners-up Australia in the second semi-final at Edgbaston on 11 July and soundly defeated them by 8 wickets to progress to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Road to the final, England\nKey moments included Woakes having David Warner caught for 9, Jofra Archer trapping captain Aaron Finch lbw for a golden duck, Buttler running out Australian top scorer and former captain Steve Smith through his legs on 85 and Jason Roy's 85 off 65 as England completed their chase with 107 balls to spare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Match, Match officials\nOn 12 July 2019, the International Cricket Council (ICC) named Sri Lankan Kumar Dharmasena and South African Marais Erasmus as the on-field umpires, with Australian Rod Tucker as the third umpire, Pakistani Aleem Dar as the reserve umpire and Sri Lankan Ranjan Madugalle named as match referee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Match, Teams and toss\nBoth teams remained unchanged from their semi-final matches; New Zealand decided that the line-up that beat India against the odds would work in their favour in the final, while England's Jason Roy avoided suspension after his show of dissent in their semi-final match against Australia to open the batting for the hosts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Match, Teams and toss\nSome early rain slightly delayed the toss, with the match starting at 10:45, 15 minutes later than scheduled. It was feared that the rain would interfere with the match, but it cleared up quickly, although the overcast conditions and wet grass changed the dynamic of the toss. New Zealand won the toss and decided to bat first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Match, New Zealand innings\nMartin Guptill and Henry Nicholls opened the innings for New Zealand, with Nicholls scoring his first half-century of the tournament. A further 30 runs from captain Kane Williamson, and 47 from wicket-keeper Tom Latham, helped New Zealand to a total of 241/8 from their 50 overs. Chris Woakes and Liam Plunkett took three wickets each for the hosts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Match, England innings\nDefending a middling score, the New Zealand bowlers bowled effectively, hampering England's top order, with only Jonny Bairstow managing more than a start with 36. With the loss of their top order, England fell to 86/4 in the 24th over; however, a century partnership between Ben Stokes and Jos Buttler for the fifth wicket got them back into the game before Buttler was caught. But with five overs to play, England still required another 46 runs and the bottom order were forced to bat more aggressively. Stokes managed to farm the strike and, more crucially, score runs, leaving England needing 15 to win from the final over, two wickets still in hand. After two dot balls, Stokes hit a six into the stands at deep mid-wicket, bringing their score to 233/8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 812]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Match, England innings\nFrom the third-last ball of the final over, Stokes drove the ball into mid-wicket. Guptill fielded the ball and threw it back to the striker's end as Stokes was returning to complete a second run; however, as Stokes dived for the crease, the ball deflected off his bat and to the boundary behind the wicket, resulting in four runs being added to the two that Stokes had run. The final two deliveries went for a run each, but England lost their last two wickets going for a second run each time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Match, Super Over\nWith the scores tied at 241, the match went to a Super Over. Stokes and Buttler returned to the crease for England to face the bowling of Trent Boult; the pair scored 15 runs without loss, with both batsmen contributing a boundary four. For New Zealand, Guptill and James Neesham went in to face Jofra Archer, needing 16 runs to claim the title. Archer's over started badly, beginning with a wide, and a steady accumulation of runs, along with a six from Neesham off the third ball, left New Zealand needing two from the final delivery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0017-0001", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Match, Super Over\nFacing his first ball of the Super Over and the last of the match, Guptill hit the ball to deep mid-wicket and tried to scamper back for the winning run, but Roy's throw in to Buttler was a good one, and Guptill was run out well short of his crease. New Zealand finished with 15 runs, the Super Over tied, but England's superior boundary count (26 to New Zealand's 17) meant they won the World Cup title for the first time in four final appearances. Stokes earned Man of the Match honours with his unbeaten 84, plus eight runs in the Super Over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Match, Super Over\nThis is the moment! It's Archer to Guptill: 2 to win. (Guptill hits the delivery) Guptill's gonna push for 2! They've got to go! It's [the ball] gonna...(Roy fields) Roy's gonna go to the keeper's end... (Buttler takes the throw and downs the wicket) He's got it! England have won the World Cup! By the barest of margins! By the barest of all margins! Absolute ecstasy for England! Agony, agony for New Zealand!", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Match, Super Over\nIan Smith on the TV broadcast of the final ball", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Match, Super Over\nIt's come to this. Here's the last ball of the World Cup Final. Archer bowls it \u2013 it's clipped away to the leg side. They're going to come back for the second. The throw is picked up, they throw to the wicketkeeper's end...he's run out, is he?! I think he's run out! England think he's run out!...Wait now, listen... (Replay shown, crowd cheers as Guptill shown out) That tells you that England have won the World Cup!", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Match, Super Over\nJonathan Agnew on Test Match Special's radio broadcast of the final ball on BBC Radio Five Live", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Match, Match details\nFall of wickets: 1/29 (Guptill, 6.2 ov), 2/103 (Williamson, 22.4 ov), 3/118 (Nicholls, 26.5 ov), 4/141 (Taylor, 33.1 ov), 5/173 (Neesham, 39 ov), 6/219 (De Grandhomme, 46.5 ov), 7/232 (Latham, 48.3 ov), 8/240 (Henry, 49.3 ov)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Match, Match details\nFall of wickets: 1/28 (Roy, 5.4 ov), 2/59 (Root, 16.3 ov), 3/71 (Bairstow, 19.3 ov), 4/86 (Morgan, 23.1 ov), 5/196 (Buttler, 44.5 ov), 6/203 (Woakes, 46.1 ov), 7/220 (Plunkett, 48.3 ov), 8/227 (Archer, 49 ov), 9/240 (Rashid, 49.5 ov), 10/241 (Wood, 50 ov)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Post-match, Reaction\nThe closeness of the match, with scores being level even after the end of the Super Over and England claiming the tie-breaker by having scored more boundaries throughout the match, combined with the dramatic turn of events in the final hour and the fact that it was played as a Cricket World Cup Final, led to many former and active players, analysts and media outlets describing it as the greatest cricket match ever played. Former England one-day bowler Stuart Broad called it \"the best white ball game of all time\". England players Joe Root and Jonny Bairstow declared the World Cup Final as \"the greatest game ever\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Post-match, Reaction\nThe Guardian's live commentator wrote: \"That is the most amazing game I have ever seen in my life.\" The Sydney Morning Herald called it \"one of the most dramatic clashes in cricket history\", while ABC News referred to it as \"the greatest ODI ever played\". The headline of The Week was \"Super human Ben Stokes drags England to victory in the greatest cricket match\". With Novak Djokovic and Roger Federer contesting the Wimbledon Championships' longest ever singles final (which finished during the World Cup Final), and Lewis Hamilton winning the British Grand Prix on the same day, it was referred to as a \"golden sporting Sunday\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Post-match, Reaction\nUmpire Kumar Dharmasena's decision to award England six runs following an overthrow boundary in the final over was criticised by former international umpire Simon Taufel, who said it was an \"error in judgment\" and a \"clear mistake\" by the on-field umpires.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0026-0001", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Post-match, Reaction\nLaw 19.8 of the Laws of Cricket says \"If the boundary results from an overthrow or from the wilful act of a fielder, the runs scored shall be: any runs for penalties awarded to either side; the allowance for the boundary; and the runs completed by the batsmen, together with the run in progress if they had already crossed at the instant of the throw or act.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0026-0002", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Post-match, Reaction\nAs Stokes and Adil Rashid had not crossed at the moment the New Zealand fielder threw the ball, it was suggested that England should only have been awarded one completed run in addition to the overthrow boundary. Dharmasena later admitted this was an error, though said he would \"never regret the decision\". As a result of the incident, the Marylebone Cricket Club said it would review the overthrow rule. Some active and former players criticised the ICC rule of boundary count and not using the wicket count for a tied match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Post-match, Reaction\nJacinda Ardern, Prime Minister of New Zealand, said that despite the loss she felt \"incredibly proud of the Black Caps, and I hope every New Zealander does because they played remarkable cricket\". The New Zealand cricket coach, Gary Stead, said that sharing the World Cup is something that \"should be considered\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Post-match, Reaction\nIn the wake of the result of the final, the ICC scrapped the boundary count rule; instead teams will play as many super overs as are necessary until the one team wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Post-match, Celebrations\nIn the wake of England's victory, the nation erupted into a state of national pride and celebrations that lasted into the night and most of the next day. The England team stayed at Lord's for most of the night celebrating. The next day, the team hosted an event at The Oval, inviting fans to meet and greet the team, and pose and take photos with the trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Post-match, Celebrations\nQueen Elizabeth II congratulated the England team on the victory, as well as many other high-profile celebrities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Post-match, Celebrations\nPrince Philip and I send our warmest congratulations to the England Men\u2019s Cricket team after such a thrilling victory in today\u2019s World Cup Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Post-match, Celebrations\nBritish Prime Minister Theresa May invited the England team to 10 Downing Street the day after the victory to celebrate and offer her congratulations. Former Conservative Prime Minister Sir John Major, himself a former Surrey CCC President and honorary life vice-president, was also in attendance. In December, Stokes was also named BBC Sports Personality of the Year, making him the first cricketer to win it since Andrew Flintoff in 2005. In the subsequent New Year's Honours List, six England players and staff received Order of the British Empire decorations: CBEs for Morgan and ECB chairman Colin Graves, OBEs for Stokes and coach Trevor Bayliss and MBEs for Buttler and Root.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Post-match, Broadcast\nThe match was the first international cricket match to be broadcast on free-to-air TV in the United Kingdom since the 2005 Ashes series. 8.3\u00a0million viewers tuned in to see the final, making it one of the most viewed broadcasts of the year, with the highest audience share since the 2018 FIFA World Cup semi-Final between Croatia and England and the 2012 Summer Olympics in London.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288516-0033-0001", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup Final, Post-match, Broadcast\nA unique audience of 15.4 million witnessed the most exciting final via Sky Sports, Sky, Channel 4 and More 4, peaking with 8.92m unique viewers at 19:29 at the start of the historic Super Over. This was also the highest ever peak having the highest viewing hours for a live cricket match on UK television record with 36.6 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288517-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup group stage\nThe 2019 Cricket World Cup group stage was played in a round-robin league format, with all 10 teams playing each other once in a single group, resulting in a total of 45 matches being played. The top four teams from the group progressed to the knockout stage. A similar format was previously used in the 1992 Cricket World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288517-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup group stage\nOn 25 June 2019, Australia became the first team to qualify for the semi-finals, after beating England at Lord's. India became the second team to qualify for the semi-finals, after they defeated Bangladesh at Edgbaston on 2 July 2019. The following day saw tournament hosts England become the third team to qualify for the semi-finals, after they beat New Zealand at the Riverside Ground. New Zealand were the fourth and final team to qualify for the semi-finals, after Pakistan were unable to increase their net run rate sufficiently enough in their match against Bangladesh at Lord's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288518-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup knockout stage\nThe knockout stage of the 2019 Cricket World Cup consisted of two semi-finals, played at Old Trafford in Manchester on 9 July and Edgbaston in Birmingham on 11 July, and a final, at Lord's on 14 July. It was the third time Edgbaston hosted a World Cup semi-final and the fourth at Old Trafford \u2013 a record for a World Cup venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288518-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup knockout stage, Rules\nAll of the knockout games had a reserve day. If a reserve day came into play, the match would not be restarted but resumed from the previous day's play (if any). In the event of no play on the scheduled day or the reserve day, in the semi-finals, the team that finished higher in the group stage progressed to the final, and if no play were possible in the final, the trophy would be shared.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288518-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup knockout stage, Rules\nIf any match ended in a tie, a Super Over would be used to determine the winner; each team would select three batsmen and a bowler, with the full team available to field. There would be no penalty for the loss of a wicket, but the loss of two wickets would end the Super Over. If the scores in the Super Over were also tied, the winner would be determined by the two teams' overall boundary count, including both the match itself and the Super Over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288518-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup knockout stage, Qualification\nOn 25 June 2019, Australia became the first team to qualify for the semi-finals, after beating England at Lord's. India were next to qualify, thanks to victory over Bangladesh at Edgbaston on 2 July. The following day saw tournament hosts England become the third team to qualify, after they beat New Zealand at the Riverside Ground. New Zealand were the fourth and final team to qualify, after Pakistan were unable to increase their net run rate sufficiently enough in their match against Bangladesh at Lord's. As group winners, India faced fourth-placed New Zealand in the first semi-final, while the second semi-final will feature Australia and England, who finished second and third, respectively. The International Cricket Council (ICC) appointed the umpires for the two matches on 7 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 847]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288518-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup knockout stage, Semi-finals\nDue to persistent rain, the first semi-final was suspended in the 47th over of New Zealand's innings, and continued on 10 July. New Zealand eventually posted a total of 239/8 from their 50 overs; in response, India were bowled out for 221, 18 runs short, sending New Zealand through to their second Cricket World Cup final, having also played in the final in 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 50], "content_span": [51, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288518-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup knockout stage, Semi-finals\nThe second semi-final saw England take on Australia at Edgbaston. Australia won the toss and chose to bat first, but lost three of their top four batsmen for single-figure scores, two of them to Chris Woakes, to reduce them to 14/3 a ball into the seventh over. Steve Smith held his wicket to top-score with 85 as Australia were bowled out for 223 with Woakes and Rashid being the best of the bowlers with three wickets apiece. Nevertheless, England were well over halfway to their target by this point, and an unbroken partnership of 79 between Joe Root and captain Eoin Morgan saw them home to an eight-wicket victory and their first World Cup final since 1992.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 50], "content_span": [51, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288519-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup officials\nMatch officials for the 2019 Cricket World Cup were selected by the Umpire selection panel and the information was released on 26 April, 2019. Umpire selection panel selected 16 umpires to officiate at the World Cup: Out of 16 umpires four were from Australia, five from England, four from Asia, one each from New Zealand, South Africa and West Indies. It also selected 6 match referees for the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288519-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup officials, Umpires\nOut of the selected umpires, twelve of them belong to the Elite Panel of ICC Umpires while the remaining four belong to the International Panel of Umpires and Referees. Ian Gould, an Elite panel umpire, announced that he would retire as an umpire following the conclusion of the tournament. On 6 July 2019, Gould retired from umpiring, after standing in the World Cup match between India and Sri Lanka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288519-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup officials, Referees\nSix referees were also selected by the selection panel. All the selected referees belong to the Elite Panel of ICC Referees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288520-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup opening ceremony\nThe Opening Ceremony of the Cricket World Cup 2019 took place on 29 May 2019, at The Mall in central London. The ICC promised that the opening ceremony would be the \u2018most celebrated start to a Cricket World Cup ever\u2019. The ceremony included live sport, music and entertainment for a planned 4,000 fans. Cricket journalist Andy Bull estimated that \"there cannot have been many more than 400\" fans actually present, which he ascribed in part to heavy rain. It ended with the official World Cup song, \"Stand By\", performed by Loryn and Rudimental.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288520-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup opening ceremony, Theme song\nOn 17 May 2019, ICC unveiled its official theme song for the World Cup, titled \"Stand By\". The song was performed by the Canadian singer Loryn and the British band Rudimental.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288520-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup opening ceremony, Ceremony\nThe ceremony was held on The Mall, with Buckingham Palace as the backdrop. It featured the team captains, former cricketers, dignitaries, celebrities and singers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288520-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup opening ceremony, Ceremony\nThe ceremony was hosted by ex-England cricketer Andrew Flintoff, Indian actress and presenter Shibani Dandekar and English TV presenter Paddy McGuinness.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288520-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup opening ceremony, Ceremony\nThe captains of the ten participating nations were introduced on the stage. Then the nations were represented in a ten-team celebrity street cricket game, with each team formed of a former cricketer and a celebrity from their country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288520-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup opening ceremony, Ceremony\nThe participants were: Afghanistan's Mirwais Ashraf and singer songwriter Aryana Sayeed, Sri Lanka's Mahela Jayawardene and athlete Damayanthi Dharsha, West Indies' Viv Richards and Jamaican sprinter Yohan Blake, Bangladesh's Abdur Razaak and actress Jaya Ahsan, Pakistan's Azhar Ali and 2014 Nobel Peace Prize laureate Malala Yousafzai, Australia's Brett Lee and former tennis player Pat Cash, New Zealand's James Franklin and former Rugby player Sean Fitzpatrick, South Africa's Jacques Kallis and former footballer Steven Pienaar, India's Anil Kumble and actor-director Farhan Akhtar, and England's Kevin Pietersen and TV personality Chris Hughes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288520-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup opening ceremony, Ceremony\nThe hour-long show closed with a live performance of the official tournament song, \"Stand By\", by Loryn and Rudimental.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288521-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup squads\nThis is a list of the squads picked for the 2019 Cricket World Cup. All 10 teams were required to submit a 15-member squad by 23 April, with changes to the squad allowed to be made up to 22 May. New Zealand were the first team to name their squad, naming their team on 3 April 2019. The West Indies were the last team to name their squad, announcing their team on 24 April 2019, one day after the initial deadline set by the International Cricket Council (ICC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288521-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup squads\nTwo cricketers, New Zealand's Tom Blundell and Bangladesh's Abu Jayed, had not played in a One Day International (ODI) prior to being named in their team's squad. On 13 May 2019, Jayed made his ODI debut for Bangladesh, against the West Indies, in the fifth match of the tri-series in Ireland. Three captains, England's Eoin Morgan, the West Indies' Jason Holder and Bangladesh's Mashrafe Mortaza, had led their respective teams in the previous tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288521-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup squads, Afghanistan\nAfghanistan announced their 15-man squad on 22 April. Following Afghanistan's second match, Mohammad Shahzad was ruled out of the tournament due to injury. He was replaced by Ikram Alikhil. On 27 June 2019, Aftab Alam was ruled out of the tournament due to \"exceptional circumstances\" and was replaced by Sayed Shirzad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288521-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup squads, Australia\nAustralia announced their 15-man squad on 15 April. Jhye Richardson was originally included in the squad but on 8 May 2019, he was ruled out of the tournament with a dislocated shoulder and replaced by Kane Richardson. Cricket Australia named Mitchell Marsh as cover for Marcus Stoinis, ahead of Australia's match against Pakistan on 12 June 2019. Stoinis was ruled out of the fixture due to an injury, with Cricket Australia waiting to see if he's ruled out of the rest of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288521-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup squads, Australia\nAhead of Australia's final group-stage match, Shaun Marsh was ruled out of the rest of the tournament with a fractured forearm. Peter Handscomb was named as his replacement. Usman Khawaja picked up a hamstring injury during Australia's final group-stage match, ruling him out of the rest of the tournament. Matthew Wade was named as cover for him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288521-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup squads, England\nEngland announced their 15-man squad on 17 April. It originally included Alex Hales, though he was later withdrawn following a ban for recreational drug use. England announced their final squad on 21 May, with Jofra Archer, Liam Dawson and James Vince replacing David Willey, Joe Denly and Hales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288521-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup squads, India\nIndia announced their 15-man squad on 15 April. They have also named Ambati Rayudu, Rishabh Pant, Axar Patel, Navdeep Saini and Ishant Sharma as stand-by players for the team, who can be drafted in the event of injuries to any player. Rishabh Pant was called up to India's squad as cover for Shikhar Dhawan, after Dhawan suffered a hairline fracture on his left thumb during India's game against Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288521-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup squads, India\nOn 19 June 2019, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) confirmed that Dhawan had been ruled out for the rest of the tournament, with Pant confirmed as his replacement. Vijay Shankar was ruled out of India's final two round-robin matches due to an injury, with Mayank Agarwal named as his replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288521-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup squads, New Zealand\nNew Zealand announced their 15-man squad on 3 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288521-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup squads, Pakistan\nPakistan announced their initial World Cup squad on 18 April. They announced their final squad on 20 May, with Junaid Khan, Faheem Ashraf and Abid Ali replaced by Wahab Riaz, Mohammad Amir and Asif Ali.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288521-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup squads, South Africa\nSouth Africa announced their World Cup squad on 18 April. Anrich Nortje was originally included in the squad but on 7 May 2019, he was ruled out of the tournament with a hand injury and replaced by Chris Morris. Dale Steyn was ruled out of the tournament due to an ongoing shoulder injury, and was replaced by Beuran Hendricks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288521-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup squads, Sri Lanka\nSri Lanka announced their World Cup squad on 18 April. Nuwan Pradeep was ruled out of Sri Lanka's last two matches of the tournament, after contracting chickenpox. He was replaced by Kasun Rajitha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288521-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup squads, West Indies\nWest Indies announced their World Cup squad on 24 April. On 19 May 2019, Sunil Ambris, Dwayne Bravo, John Campbell, Jonathan Carter, Roston Chase, Shane Dowrich, Keemo Paul, Khary Pierre, Raymon Reifer and Kieron Pollard were all named as reserve players by Cricket West Indies. On 24 June 2019, Andre Russell was ruled out of the rest of the tournament, due to a knee injury, and was replaced by Sunil Ambris.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288522-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup statistics\nThis is a list of statistics for the 2019 Cricket World Cup. Each list contains the top five records (including ties for fifth place), except for the partnership records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288522-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup statistics, Team statistics, Lowest team totals\nThis is a list of completed innings only, low totals in matches with reduced overs are omitted except when the team was all out. Successful run chases in the second innings are not counted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288522-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup statistics, Team statistics, Smallest winning margin, By runs\nNote: England won the final of the tournament based on the total number of boundaries scored, after the scores finished level in both the match and the resulting Super over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 84], "content_span": [85, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288522-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup statistics, Batting Statistics, Most boundaries\nNote: For Full list of Boundaries and Sixes hit see", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288522-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup statistics, Batting Statistics, Most ducks\n11 players all had two ducks, with Nuwan Pradeep of Sri Lanka and Shoaib Malik of Pakistan doing so in the fewest total innings (three).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288522-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup statistics, Fielding Statistics, Most dismissals\nThis is a list of wicket-keepers with the most dismissals in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288522-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup statistics, Fielding Statistics, Most catches\nThis is a list of the fielders who took the most catches in the tournament; catches made as wicket-keeper are not included.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288522-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup statistics, Other statistics, Highest partnerships\nThe following tables are lists of the highest partnerships for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 73], "content_span": [74, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288522-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Cricket World Cup statistics, Tied match\n2019 Cricket World cup saw the final match as the fifth tied match in the history of the tournament ensuring that this was the fifth world cup with a tied game (1999 Cricket World Cup \u2013 Semifinals between Australia and South Africa, 2003 Cricket World Cup \u2013 Group B match between South Africa and Sri Lanka, 2007 Cricket World Cup \u2013 Group D match between Ireland and Zimbabwe, and 2011 Cricket World Cup \u2013 Group B match between India and England). The tie-breaking super over was also tied, England won the match and title by superior boundary count.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288523-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9\nThe 2019 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9 was the 71st edition of the Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, a road cycling stage race. The race took place between 9 and 16 June 2019, in France and Switzerland. On 25 March 2019, the race organisers, the Amaury Sport Organisation (ASO), announced the route at a presentation in Lyon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288523-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Teams\nThe eighteen UCI WorldTeams were automatically invited to participate. In addition, four UCI Professional Continental teams received wildcard invitations: Cofidis, Ark\u00e9a\u2013Samsic, Vital Concept\u2013B&B Hotels and Wanty\u2013Gobert. In total, twenty-two teams started the race, with seven riders per team:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288523-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Pre-race favourites\nChris Froome (Team Ineos) was the favourite for the race, having won three previous editions. Defending champion Geraint Thomas (Team Ineos) was not in the field. Jakob Fuglsang (Astana), Richie Porte (Trek\u2013Segafredo), Nairo Quintana (Movistar Team) and Tom Dumoulin (Team DSM) were considered as the nearest rivals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288523-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 1\n9 June 2019 - Aurillac to Jussac, 142\u00a0km (88.2\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288523-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 2\n10 June 2019 - Mauriac to Craponne-sur-Arzon, 180\u00a0km (111.8\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288523-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 3\n11 June 2019 - Le Puy-en-Velay to Riom, 172\u00a0km (106.9\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288523-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 4\n12 June 2019 - Roanne to Roanne, 26.1\u00a0km (16.2\u00a0mi) (ITT)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288523-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 4\nPre -race favourite Chris Froome suffered a crash during the route reconnaissance before the stage, resulting in fractures of the pelvis, femur, elbow and ribs. Team principal Dave Brailsford later confirmed that Froome would miss the rest of the race, and the 2019 Tour de France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288523-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 5\n13 June 2019 - Bo\u00ebn-sur-Lignon to Voiron, 201\u00a0km (124.9\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288523-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 6\n14 June 2019 - Saint-Vulbas to Saint-Michel-de-Maurienne, 228\u00a0km (141.7\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288523-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 7\n15 June 2019 - Saint-Genix-les-Villages to Les Sept Laux-Pipay, 133\u00a0km (82.6\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288523-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 7\nTom Dumoulin, one of the pre-race favourites, withdrew from the race before the start of the stage. During the stage, the weather started sunny, but the day's last two climbs occurred in heavy rain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288523-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 8\n16 June 2019 - Cluses to Champ\u00e9ry (Switzerland), 113.5\u00a0km (70.5\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288523-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 8\nAdam Yates, second place on the general classification, abandoned the race in the final 50\u00a0km (31\u00a0mi).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288523-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Classification leadership table\nIn the Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, four different jerseys were awarded. The most important was the general classification, which was calculated by adding each cyclist's finishing times on each stage. Time bonuses were awarded to the first three finishers on all stages except for the individual time trial: the stage winner won a ten-second bonus, with six and four seconds for the second and third riders respectively. The rider with the least accumulated time is the race leader, identified by a yellow jersey with a blue bar; the winner of this classification was considered the winner of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288523-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Classification leadership table\nAdditionally, there was a points classification, which awarded a green jersey. In the classification, cyclists received points for finishing in the top 10 in a stage. More points were awarded on the flatter stages in the opening half of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288523-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Classification leadership table\nThere was also a mountains classification, the leadership of which was marked by a blue jersey with white polka dots. In the mountains classification, points towards the classification 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. Hors-category climbs awarded the most points; the first ten riders were able to accrue points, compared with the first six on first-category climbs, the first four on second-category, the first two on third-category and only the first for fourth-category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288523-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, 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 on or after 1 January 1993 were eligible to be ranked in the classification. There was also a team classification, 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, 59], "content_span": [60, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288524-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Croatia Open Umag\nThe 2019 Croatia Open (also known as the Plava Laguna Croatia Open Umag for sponsorship reasons) was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 30th edition of the Croatia Open, and part of the 250 Series of the 2019 ATP Tour. It took place at the International Tennis Center in Umag, Croatia, from 15 July through 21 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288524-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Croatia Open Umag, ATP singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 70], "content_span": [71, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288524-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Croatia Open Umag, ATP singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry using a protected ranking into the main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 70], "content_span": [71, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288524-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Croatia Open Umag, 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-00288525-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Croatia Open Umag \u2013 Doubles\nRobin Haase and Matw\u00e9 Middelkoop were the defending champions, but Middelkoop chose to compete in B\u00e5stad instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288525-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Croatia Open Umag \u2013 Doubles\nHaase played alongside Philipp Oswald and successfully defended the title, defeating Oliver Marach and J\u00fcrgen Melzer in the final, 7\u20135, 6\u20137(2\u20137), [14\u201312].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288526-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Croatia Open Umag \u2013 Singles\nMarco Cecchinato was the defending champion, but lost in the first round to Alja\u017e Bedene.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288526-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Croatia Open Umag \u2013 Singles\nDu\u0161an Lajovi\u0107 won his first ATP Tour singles title, defeating Attila Bal\u00e1zs in the final, 7\u20135, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288526-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Croatia Open Umag \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-00288527-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Croatian Football Cup Final\nThe 2019 Croatian Cup Final between Dinamo Zagreb and Rijeka was played on 22 May 2019 in Pula.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288527-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Croatian Football Cup Final, Match details\nAssistant referees:Tomislav Petrovi\u0107 (Valpovo)Miro Grgi\u0107 (Osijek) Fourth official:Goran Pataki (\u0110akovo)Additional assistant referees:Igor Paja\u010d (Sveti Ivan Zelina)Marko Matoc (Zapre\u0161i\u0107)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288528-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Croatian Football Super Cup\nThe 2019 Croatian Football Super Cup was the twelfth edition of Croatian Football Super Cup, a football match contested by the winners of the Croatian First League and Croatian Football Cup. The match was played on 13 July 2019 at Stadion Maksimir in Zagreb between 2018\u201319 Croatian First League winners Dinamo Zagreb and 2018\u201319 Croatian Football Cup winners Rijeka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288528-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Croatian Football Super Cup, Match details\nAssistant referees:Goran Pataki (\u0110akovo)Vedran \u0110urak (Sisak)Fourth official:Marko Matoc (Zapre\u0161i\u0107)Additional assistant referees:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288529-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Croatian national minorities councils and representatives elections\n2019 Croatian national minorities' councils and representatives elections took place on 5 May. The elections were the fifth minority elections since 2003 and near 254,000 citizens of Croatia were entitled to vote on them. In total, 352 councils and 109 representatives were up for election. 14 minority groups were electing their councils while 20 minority groups were electing representatives. 6,686 candidates in total participated in elections which were conducted at 846 polling places. Elections for councils took place in 19 counties of Croatia, City of Zagreb, 68 cities of Croatia and 108 municipalities of Croatia. Elections for representatives took place in 19 counties, City of Zagreb, 34 cities and one municipality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [72, 72], "content_span": [73, 801]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288529-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Croatian national minorities councils and representatives elections\nMajor challenge to this and all previous minority elections in Croatia is low voter turnout with 3,93% turnout from 07:00 till 11:30 A.M. Some media warned about possibility that minority elections risk being overshadowed by the campaign for the 2019 European Parliament election in Croatia which are taking place on May 26.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [72, 72], "content_span": [73, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288529-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Croatian national minorities councils and representatives elections, Background\nThe first minority elections in Croatia were held in 2003 after the introduction of the Constitutional Act on the Rights of National Minorities in the Republic of Croatia in late 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [74, 84], "content_span": [85, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288529-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Croatian national minorities councils and representatives elections, Electoral system\nElections for councils and representatives are regulated by the Constitutional Act on the Rights of National Minorities in the Republic of Croatia and the Law on Election of Councils and Representatives of National Minorities. National minorities are electing municipal and county councils or representatives depending on relative and absolute minority population. Councils are elected in municipalities and cities in which minority population constitute at least 1,5% of the total population and there is at least 200 members of certain minority group. County councils are elected if there is more than 500 members of certain minority in a given Croatian county. Units with smaller numbers of members of certain minority, but in which there is still 100 or more members of given minority are electing minority representatives. 10 members are elected into municipal minority councils, 15 into city councils and 25 into county councils.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [74, 90], "content_span": [91, 1026]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288529-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Croatian national minorities councils and representatives elections, Electoral system\nMinority elections are called by decision of the Government of the Republic of Croatia. The government called elections for 515 minority councils and 144 representatives. Candidates were not proposed for all councils and representatives which limited elections to 352 councils and 109 representatives. The State Election Commission is proposing to the government the fees for the work of the members of the electoral bodies. Bodies responsible for the implementation of the elections are the State Election Commission, county election commissions, the Election Commission of the City of Zagreb, town and municipal election commissions and polling boards. Contrary to other elections in Croatia in which an individual voter with prior registration can vote at any polling place in the country or abroad, voters at minority elections can vote exclusively in the place of permanent residence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [74, 90], "content_span": [91, 980]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288529-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Croatian national minorities councils and representatives elections, Results\nIn the first round held on 5 May 2019, the turnout at the county level election was 31,755 or 12.61% of the 251,867 registered voters. On the city level, the turnout was 13,086 or 10.9%, and on the municipality level, the turnout was 14,204 or 23.13%. The second round was held on 19 May. A total of 5,029 candidates were elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [74, 81], "content_span": [82, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288530-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Croatian protests\nThe 2019 Croatian protests was an influx of movements and peaceful demonstrations in Zagreb, as part of a popular uprising against a surge in Violence against women and participated in rallies as part of the Spasime movement. The protests have been nicknamed the #Justice for Girls, #Save Me! Movement and #Me too! Movement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288530-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Croatian protests, Background\nIn Croatia, protesters were on the streets after a wave of Violence against women and injustice against young girls. Girls and women has suffered a history of violence in Croatia, so they called on Marches and Rallies to be held in public in protest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288530-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Croatian protests, Protests\nMass rallies was held in Zagreb on 16 March, in protest at violence against women. Thousands rallied in town squares and city-centres in streets for a day. Justice rallies and different street protests grew in late-October, when justice for girls rallies were taking place across Zagreb at protest against violence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288531-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks season\nThe 2019 Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks season was the 53rd in the club's history. The team was coached by John Morris, who replaced Shane Flanagan after he resigned in January. The Cronulla Sharks were captained by Paul Gallen and Wade Graham and competed in the National Rugby League's 2019 Telstra Premiership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288531-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks season, Representative honours\nThe following players have played a first grade representative match in 2019. (C) = Captain", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288531-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks season, Representative honours\n1 \u2013 Andrew Fifita was originally selected to play, but was subsequently forced to withdraw following suspension.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288532-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cross River State gubernatorial election\nThe 2019 Cross River State gubernatorial election occurred on March 9, 2019. Incumbent PDP Governor Benedict Ayade won re-election for a second term, defeating APC's John Owan Enoh, and several minor party candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288532-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cross River State gubernatorial election\nAyade won in all 18 LGAs of the state with a total of 73.04% of popular vote, while Enoh with no win in any LGA was his closest contestant with a total of 25.11% of popular vote having 250,323 votes less than Ayade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288532-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cross River State gubernatorial election\nBen Ayade emerged unopposed in the PDP gubernatorial primary elections as the sole candidate, after the other candidate was disqualified. His running mate was Ivara Esu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288532-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cross River State gubernatorial election\nJohn Owan Enoh emerged the APC candidate in the gubernatorial primary election. His running mate was Ntufam Ekpo Okon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288532-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cross River State gubernatorial election\nOf the 26 candidates who aspired for the governorship seat, 24 were male, two were female.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288532-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cross River State gubernatorial election, Electoral system\nThe Governor of Cross River State is elected using the plurality voting system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 63], "content_span": [64, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288532-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Cross River State gubernatorial election, Primary election, PDP primary\nThe PDP primary election was held on 30 September 2018. Earlier on, Hon. Emmanuel Ibeshi, who was diequalified by the party from contesting in the primary election just about 24 hours before the exercise, sued the party and state governor for his disqualification, in court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 76], "content_span": [77, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288532-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Cross River State gubernatorial election, Primary election, APC primary\nThe Guardian and Today Nigeria reported five candidates seeking to unseat the incumbent governor. A crisis earlier developed in the state's APC party, causing it to be divided into two factions: The Etim John faction and the other faction. The Etim John faction's results were are follows: Usani Uguru Usani 47,313 votes, John Owan Enoh 1,486 votes, Eyo Etim Nyong 1,052 votes, Edem Duke 1,322 votes, and John Odey 1,099 votes. However, the official results were announced by the Chairman of Electoral Committee, Ali Magaji, pronouncing John Owan-Enoh winner with 82,272 votes out of the 101,212 votes cast. Edem Duke was said to have had 7,367 votes while Usani Usani polled 1,778 votes. There were a total of 106,212 accredited voters who cast 117 invalid votes. The elections were held on September 30, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 76], "content_span": [77, 888]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288532-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Cross River State gubernatorial election, Primary election, APC primary\nThe official results were strongly opposed by three other contestants, led by Usani, who was also rejected by the APC as a candidate. However, a court ruling affirmed Enoh as the candidate for the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 76], "content_span": [77, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288532-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Cross River State gubernatorial election, Results\nA total of 26 candidates registered with the Independent National Electoral Commission to contest in the election. PDP Governor Benedict Ayade won re-election for a second term, defeating APC's Owan Enoh John (who despite being delisted by a Calabar High Court order from the elections, still had his party logo on the ballot paper), and several minor party candidates. Ayade polled 381,484 votes representing 73.04% of total vote cast, and Enoh 131,161 votes representing 25.11%. SDP's Eyo Ekpo came third with 4,818 votes representing 0.92% of total valid votes cast. The APC, however, rejected this result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 54], "content_span": [55, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288532-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Cross River State gubernatorial election, Results\nThe total number of registered voters in the state was 1,486,026 while 542,115 voters were accredited. Total number of votes cast was 533,808, while total number of valid votes was 522,309. Total rejected votes were 11,499.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 54], "content_span": [55, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288532-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Cross River State gubernatorial election, Results, By local government area\nHere are the results of the election from the local government areas of the state for the two major parties. The total valid votes of 522,309 represents the 26 political parties that participated in the election. Green represents LGAs won by Ayade. Blue represents LGAs won by Enoh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 80], "content_span": [81, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288533-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 CrossFit Games\nThe 2019 CrossFit Games were the 13th CrossFit Games and were held from August 1\u20134, 2019, at the Alliant Energy Center in Madison, Wisconsin, United States. The men's competition was won by Mat Fraser, the women's by Tia-Clair Toomey, and CrossFit Mayhem Freedom won the Team competition, all of whom also won the 2018 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288533-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 CrossFit Games\nThe 2019 Games were the first to operate under a new set of qualification rules, allowing athletes to qualify for the Games via the Open, the Sanctionals and invitations, replacing the Regionals of previous seasons. It was also the first year to allow a team to be composed of members that did not share a gym affiliation, thereby removing the Affiliate Cup. This year the Games were not broadcast on ESPN or CBS, but rather streamed online by various partners using an open-source broadcast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288533-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 CrossFit Games\nThis year's Games were the largest yet in the Games' history with the introduction of national champions from 114 countries who can qualify for the Games. The field, however, was quickly reduced to 10 men and 10 women in a series of cuts. The men's competition was tightly fought between Fraser and Noah Ohlsen, with Ohlsen leading in many events and Fraser only pullng ahead to win in the final two events. Fraser's fourth consecutive win equaled Rich Froning Jr.'s record, while Toomey's win was the first time a woman has achieved three consecutive wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288533-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 CrossFit Games, Qualification\nFor this season, the Games qualification procedures were overhauled. For the first year since 2008, the CrossFit Games no longer hosted a regional qualifier and instead sanctioned independently run events around the world. The events were trademarked as \"Sanctionals\" by CrossFit, and were used to qualify participants in the Men, Women, and Team divisions for the 2019 Games. In previous years the CrossFit Open was used to determine which athletes and teams qualified for the Regionals. In 2019, each Sanctional was either by invitation or through its own open qualification process. The CrossFit Open still occurred, but was used to qualify directly to the Games. Team rules were also changed so that members no longer needed to be from the same CrossFit affiliate, there was therefore also no Affiliate Cup which was awarded to an affiliate in previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 897]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288533-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 CrossFit Games, Qualification\nIndividual athletes qualified for the 2019 CrossFit Games in one of four ways by order of precedence: becoming a national champion in the 2019 CrossFit Open, finishing in the top 20 men or women worldwide in the Open, winning a Sanctionals event, or by select invitation at the Games' discretion. The first set of qualified athletes came from the top-ranked man and woman from each country, with at least one CrossFit affiliate in good standing, that completed each Open workout as written in the Rx'd (prescribed) category after video review.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288533-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 CrossFit Games, Qualification\nThe Open took place over five weeks starting on February 21; after the Open was completed, a total of 123 men and 117 women qualified for the Games as national champions pending final review. After the national champions were determined, the next 20 overall male and female worldwide finishers in the Open qualified for the Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288533-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 CrossFit Games, Qualification\nThe 2019 Sanctionals consisted of 15 sanctioned events that took place between December 2018 and June 2019. The events were the Dubai CrossFit Championship (Dubai), Australian CrossFit Championship (Broadbeach), Wodapalooza (Miami), CrossFit Fittest in Cape Town, CrossFit Strength in Depth (London), Asia CrossFit Championship (Shanghai), Mid-Atlantic CrossFit Challenge (Baltimore), CrossFit Italian Showdown (Milan), Brazil CrossFit Championship (S\u00e3o Paulo), CrossFit Lowlands Throwdown (Apeldoorn), Down Under CrossFit Championship (Wollongong), Reykjavik CrossFit Championship (Reykjavik), Rogue Invitational (Columbus, Ohio), CrossFit French Throwdown (Paris), and the Granite Games (St. Cloud, Minnesota).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288533-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 CrossFit Games, Qualification\nUnlike the Regionals of previous years where the events were standardised, each Sanctional devised its own separate events. The male, female, and team winners of each of the events qualified for the Games and if a Sanctionals event winner has previously qualified for the 2019 CrossFit Games, the qualifying place for that competition would be awarded to the next highest finisher who has yet to qualify for the games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288533-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 CrossFit Games, Qualification\nThe final method of qualification allowed for the CrossFit Games to issue four at-large bids. No other details were provided by the CrossFit Games rulebook, but invitations were given to professional obstacle course racer Hunter McIntyre and ten-time CrossFit Games competitor Ben Smith following social media campaigns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288533-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 CrossFit Games, Individual\nFollowing the qualification procedure, there were 148 men and 134 women that had qualified for the CrossFit Games in the Individual competition (143 men and 117 women turned up at the Games). In the previous 4 Games, no athletes were cut during the competition; this year due to the significantly higher number of participants, the Games implemented cuts after each of the first 6 events. The field was cut to 75 competitors after the first event, and 50 competitors after the second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288533-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 CrossFit Games, Individual\n10 athletes were then cut for each subsequent event until only 10 remained after the Sprint Course on Saturday. The scoring for each event was adjusted after the cuts so that there would be greater point difference in later events than in the earlier events (wins were therefore more advantageous in later events). The drastic nature of the cuts and how early the athletes were cut proved controversial as many podium finishers of previous Games such as Sara Sigmundsdottir, Samantha Briggs, Annie Thorisdottir, Patrick Vellner, Brent Fikowski, and Ben Smith failed to reach the later stages of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288533-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 CrossFit Games, Individual, Thursday, August 1, 2019, Event 1: First Cut\nThe snatch weight for the event was 185 pounds (84 kilograms) for men and 130 pounds (59 kilograms) for women. The event was won by both defending champions, Mat Fraser and Tia-Clair Toomey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 77], "content_span": [78, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288533-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 CrossFit Games, Individual, Thursday, August 1, 2019, Event 2: Second Cut\nAs fast as possible, each competitor accumulated 800 meters on a rowing machine, then lifted two kettlebells from the shoulder to overhead for 66 repetitions, and then finished with 132 feet (40 meters) of handstand walking. The weight of each kettlebell was 16 kilograms (35 pounds) for the men and 12 kilograms (26 pounds) for the women. Fraser won the men's event again, while Danielle Brandon won the women's side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 78], "content_span": [79, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288533-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 CrossFit Games, Individual, Friday, August 2, 2019, Event 3: Ruck\nCompetitors ran four laps around a 1,500-meter (4,900-foot) course carrying a weighted rucksack. The weight increased by 10 pounds (4.5 kilograms) each lap, from 20 pounds on the first lap to 50 pounds on the last. Lukas H\u00f6gberg and Emily Rolfe won the event. A bag fell out of Mat Fraser's rucksack near the end of the 6 km run without his being aware of it, which led to a penalty of 60 seconds, dropping his position from 6th to 17th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 70], "content_span": [71, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288533-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 CrossFit Games, Individual, Friday, August 2, 2019, Event 4: Sprint Couplet\nThe competitors started the event by pushing a sled, then completing the required number of muscle-ups on a pull-up bar, and then finished with another sled push to the finish line. The event was won by Matt McLeod and Amanda Barnhart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 80], "content_span": [81, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288533-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 CrossFit Games, Individual, Friday, August 2, 2019, Event 5: Mary\nA traditional CrossFit workout, the competitors performed five handstand push-ups, then ten squats, followed by fifteen pull-ups. After the pull-ups, they started back at the handstand push-ups and repeated the order until the 20 minute mark. The event was won by Noah Ohlsen and Kari Pearce.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 70], "content_span": [71, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288533-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 CrossFit Games, Individual, Saturday, August 3, 2019, Event 6: Sprint Course\nThree-round bracket elimination sprint course. In heats of five, competitors ran through a course. The top ten in the first round advanced to the second round, and then the top five in the second round moved on to the final run. Saxon Panchick and Kristin Holte won the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 81], "content_span": [82, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288533-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 CrossFit Games, Individual, Saturday, August 3, 2019, Event 6: Sprint Course\nFollowing the event, only the final ten competitors participated in the remainder of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 81], "content_span": [82, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288533-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 CrossFit Games, Individual, Saturday, August 3, 2019, Event 7: Split Triplet\nThe dumbbell weight was 80 pounds (36 kilograms) for the men 55 pounds (25 kilograms) for the women. Mat Fraser and Tia-Clair Toomey won the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 81], "content_span": [82, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288533-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 CrossFit Games, Individual, Saturday, August 3, 2019, Event 8: Clean\nThe event consisted of progressively heavier weights that each competitor must clean. The men started at 315 pounds (143 kilograms) and the women started at 215 pounds (98 kilograms). If multiple athlete failed to complete a lift at the same weight, they went to a tie-breaker bar, where they then cleaned 295 pounds (134 kilograms) for men and 195 pounds (88 kilograms) for women five times. The time to complete the five lifts and run to a finish line was the tie-breaker score. The event was again won by defending champions Mat Fraser and Tia-Clair Toomey, with a 380-pound (170-kilogram) and 265-pound (120-kilogram) clean, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 73], "content_span": [74, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288533-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 CrossFit Games, Individual, Sunday, August 4, 2019, Event 9: Swim Paddle\nA 1,000-meter (3,300-foot) swim to a buoy in Lake Monona and back to shore, then immediately grabbing a paddleboard for a 1,000-meter paddle on the same course. The event was won by Matt McLeod and Tia-Clair Toomey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 77], "content_span": [78, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288533-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 CrossFit Games, Individual, Sunday, August 4, 2019, Events 10 and 11: Ringer 1 and 2\nRinger 1 and Ringer 2 were separately scored events, with Ringer 2 beginning seven minutes from the start of Ringer 1. In Ringer 1, the competitors alternated between riding an air-resistance stationary bicycle and repetitions of hanging from gymnastic rings and touching their toes to the rings. In Ringer 2, the athletes alternated between completing burpees and jumping up to touch the rings as a target and overhead squats with a barbell. The men's weight on the barbell was 135 pounds (61 kilograms) and the women's was 95 pounds (43 kilograms). Katr\u00edn Dav\u00ed\u00f0sd\u00f3ttir won both women's events, while James Newbury won Ringer 1 and Mat Fraser won Ringer 2 for the men.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 89], "content_span": [90, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288533-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 CrossFit Games, Individual, Sunday, August 4, 2019, Event 12: The Standard\nFor the final event, a combination of three standard CrossFit workouts were done back-to-back-to-back: \"Grace\" (30 clean and jerks), muscle-ups, and \"Isabel\" (30 snatches). The weight for both barbell movements was 135 pounds (61 kilograms) and 95 pounds (43 kilograms) for the men and women, respectively. The event was won both Mat Fraser and Tia-Clair Toomey, who also both repeated as CrossFit Games champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 79], "content_span": [80, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288533-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 CrossFit Games, Team events\nTeams were cut to 11 after Strongman's Fear, 9 after Sprint Relay, 7 after Big Chipper, 5 after Swim Paddle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288534-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Crossminton World Championships\nThe 2019 ICO Crossminton World Championships was a crossminton tournament, taking place in Budapest, Hungary, between 4th and 7th July 2019. With the 1st Crossminton World Championships being played in 2011 and the competition taking place every two years, the 2019 World Championships was the 5th Crossminton World Championships. 505 players from 23 countries participated at the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288534-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Crossminton World Championships, Venue\nThe tournament, organised by the Hungarian Crossminton Association, was played in Budapest\u2019s multi-purpose indoor arena T\u00fcskecsarnok.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288535-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cruzeiro Esporte Clube season\nThe 2019 season was the 98th in the Cruzeiro Esporte Clube's existence. Along with the Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, the club also competed in the Campeonato Mineiro, the Copa do Brasil and the Copa Libertadores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288535-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cruzeiro Esporte Clube season\nAfter a strong start to the season \u2013 which included a 21-game unbeaten streak, a solid performance in the Copa Libertadores group stage and a Campeonato Mineiro title over city rivals Atl\u00e9tico Mineiro \u2013, Cruzeiro were largely appointed as major contenders for the 2019 national and international competitions titles. However, the team had a sharp drop in yeld from May, causing them to fight against relegation since the early rounds of the Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288535-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cruzeiro Esporte Clube season\nOn 26 May, corruption and mismanagement scandals involving the Cruzeiro's board were revealed by the Rede Globo program Fant\u00e1stico, causing huge repercussions inside and outside the club. Police investigations, financial difficulties and political unstability would be a constant throughout the year at Cruzeiro, leading to a devastating crisis that ended up affecting the team's performance on the pitch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288535-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cruzeiro Esporte Clube season\nOn 30 July, Cruzeiro were knocked out of Copa Libertadores on penalties to River Plate in the round of 16 stage, after a 0\u20130 tie on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288535-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cruzeiro Esporte Clube season\nOn 7 August, following a run of bad results \u2013 having the team won just 1 of 18 matches \u2013, Cruzeiro announced the departure of manager Mano Menezes, ending a more than three years spell in the club. Four days later, Rog\u00e9rio Ceni was announced as the new team's manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288535-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cruzeiro Esporte Clube season\nOn 4 September, the club were eliminated by Internacional in the Copa do Brasil semi-finals, losing 4\u20130 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288535-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Cruzeiro Esporte Clube season\nRog\u00e9rio Ceni was sacked on 26 September, after just 8 games in charge. Disagreements with squad members and lack of support from the club board were cited as the main causes for dismissal. On 27 September, Abel Braga was appointed as the new team's manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288535-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Cruzeiro Esporte Clube season\nIncapable of improving the team's performance, Abel Braga left Cruzeiro on 29 November, having achieved only 3 wins in 14 games. On the same day, Adilson Batista was announced as the manager for the last three rounds of the championship, taking the team in 17th position in the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288535-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Cruzeiro Esporte Clube season\nIn financial, technical and political collapse, Cruzeiro were relegated to Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie B for the first time in their history on 8 December, after a 2\u20130 loss to Palmeiras at Mineir\u00e3o.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288535-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Cruzeiro Esporte Clube season, Competitions, Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A\nLeague play paused for one month between rounds 9 and 10 for the 2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica hosted in Brazil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 79], "content_span": [80, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288535-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Cruzeiro Esporte Clube season, Competitions, Copa do Brasil\nAs Cruzeiro participated in the 2019 Copa Libertadores, the club entered the Copa do Brasil in the round of 16, whose draw was held on 2 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288535-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Cruzeiro Esporte Clube season, Competitions, Copa Libertadores\nThe group stage draw for the 2019 Copa Libertadores was made on 17 December 2018. Cruzeiro were drawn into Group B with Emelec, Hurac\u00e1n and Deportivo Lara.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288535-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Cruzeiro Esporte Clube season, Competitions, Copa Libertadores, Knockout stage\nThe draw for the knockout stages of the Copa Libertadores was held on 13 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 83], "content_span": [84, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288536-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cuban constitutional referendum\nA constitutional referendum was held in Cuba on 24 February 2019. Voters were asked whether they approved of a new constitution passed by the National Assembly of People's Power in July 2018. The reforms were approved, with 90.61% of valid votes cast in favour. The new constitution came into force on 10 April 2019 after it was proclaimed in the Cuban National Assembly and published in the Official Gazette of the Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288536-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cuban constitutional referendum\nWhile the structure of Cuban society and its political system had not fundamentally changed, the 2010s saw the Cuban thaw and more openness with the constitutional referendum, which was described as a relatively open process. Some observers noted that even though the political system remained largely the same, civil liberties had recently increased, even if not enough.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288536-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Cuban constitutional referendum\nThe referendum recognized both private property and foreign direct investment, among other things, such as removing obstacles to same-sex marriage and banning discrimination based on gender, race, ethnic origin, sexual orientation, gender identity, or disability, the introduction of habeas corpus and restoration of a presumption of innocence in the justice system which was last provided for in the 1940 Constitution of Cuba, and other political reforms, such as presidential term and age limits, as checks on government power. The new constitution also omits the aim of building a communist society and instead works towards the construction of socialism.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288536-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cuban constitutional referendum, Constitutional changes\nThe new Constitution came into force after being proclaimed by the National Assembly on 10 April 2019. Laws which were passed to enforce the Constitution's reforms to the country's judicial system must be enacted within 18 months. An electoral law detailing the restructuring of government must also be passed within six months. A Cuban President must then be elected by the National Assembly in the following three months and then appoint Provincial Governors and a Prime Minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288536-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cuban constitutional referendum, Constitutional changes, Same-sex marriage\nThe new constitution also removes the requirement that marriage be \"between one man and one woman\". An earlier draft of the new constitution would have changed the language to \"a union between two people\" ... \"with absolutely equal responsibilities\". This language was removed due to backlash from the more conservative sectors of Cuban society, with the new constitution not specifically recognizing same-sex marriage, but still removing the constitutional obstacles to its recognition by specifically avoiding a definition of marriage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 79], "content_span": [80, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288536-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Cuban constitutional referendum, Constitutional changes, Same-sex marriage\nMariela Castro, a Cuban LGBT rights activist, daughter of Ra\u00fal Castro and director of the Cuban National Center for Sex Education, has stated that this change is \"not a setback\" and that the issue would be addressed in the upcoming family code amendment. It is expected that same-sex marriage will be part of a new Cuban Family Code, which is due to be put to a new referendum within the next two years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 79], "content_span": [80, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288537-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cup of China\nThe 2019 SHISEIDO Cup of China was the fourth event of the 2019\u201320 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, a senior-level international invitational competition series. It was held at Chongqing Huaxi Culture and Sports Center in Chongqing, China from November 8\u201310. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dance. Skaters earned points toward qualifying for the 2019\u201320 Grand Prix Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288537-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cup of China, Entries\nThe ISU announced the preliminary assignments on June 20, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288538-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cup of Nations\nThe 2019 Cup of Nations was the inaugural edition of the Cup of Nations, an international women's football tournament, consisting of a series of friendly games. It was held in Australia from 28 February to 6 March 2019, and featured four teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288538-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cup of Nations\nAustralia won the tournament after winning all of its matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 82]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288538-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cup of Nations, Format\nThe four invited teams played a round-robin tournament. Points awarded in the group stage followed the formula of three points for a win, one point for a draw, and zero points for a loss. A tie in points will be decided by goal differential.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288538-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cup of Nations, Venues\nJubilee Oval was formerly the Sydney venue, but on 25 February 2019 it was changed to Leichhardt Oval due to poor pitch conditions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288538-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cup of Nations, Standings\nAll times are local (AEDT in Sydney and Melbourne, AEST in Brisbane).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288538-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cup of Nations, Goalscorers\nThere have been 19 goals scored in 6 matches, for an average of 3.17 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288539-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cup of Nations squads\nThe 2019 Cup of Nations is the inaugural edition of the Cup of Nations, an international women's football tournament, consisting of a series of friendly games, that was held in Australia from 28 February to 6 March 2019. The four national teams involved in the tournament registered a squad of 23 players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288539-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cup of Nations squads\nThe age listed for each player is on 28 February 2019, the first day of the tournament. The numbers of caps and goals listed for each player do not include any matches played after the start of tournament. A flag is included for coaches that are of a different nationality than their own national team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288539-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cup of Nations squads, Squads, Australia\nThe final squad was announced on 21 February 2019. On 26 February 2019, Chloe Logarzo was replaced by Amy Harrison, after the former didn't recover from an ankle injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288540-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei\nThe 2019 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei was the 115th season of Romania`s national rugby union cup competition, reserved for club teams participating in the CEC Bank SuperLiga. Starting with this edition the number of participating teams has decreased to seven, due to CSM Bucure\u0219ti dissolving before the start of the new season meaning all of CSM`s matches are to be cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288541-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final\nThe 2019 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final is the final match of the 2018\u201319 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei and the 81st final of the Cupa Rom\u00e2niei, Romania's premier football cup competition. It was played on 25 May 2019 between Astra Giurgiu and Viitorul Constan\u021ba.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288541-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final\nAstra Giurgiu reached their third cup final in the club's existence. The club from Giurgiu won the cup in 2014 and lost the final in 2017, when the match was played on the same Ilie Oan\u0103 Stadium, the home ground of Astra's bitter rival, Petrolul Ploie\u0219ti. It should be mentioned that Astra was a football club originally from Ploie\u0219ti until it was relocated in 2012 to Giurgiu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288541-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final\nOn the other hand, this was the first Romanian Cup final for Viitorul. The champions of Romania in 2017, Hagi's Kids were in front of the second big achievement in the 10 years history of the club located on the seaside of the Black Sea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288541-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final\nThe winner qualified for the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League. They also earned the right to play against 2018\u201319 Liga I champions for the 2019 Supercupa Rom\u00e2niei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288541-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final\nViitorul Constan\u021ba won the game dramatically by scoring in the extra-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288541-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final\nThe game was hosted by the Ilie Oan\u0103 Stadium in Ploie\u0219ti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 82]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288542-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final (women's football)\nThe 2019 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final was the 16th Romanian football women's cup final, the final match of the 2018\u201319 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei. It was played at Stadionul Trans-Sil in T\u00e2rgu Mure\u0219, on 31 May 2019, contested by Fortuna Becicherecu Mic and Vasas Femina Odorheiu Secuiesc. Vasas Femina won the match 5\u20130, with a hat-trick from Carolina \u021aabur and one goal from each Rita Mitri and Krisztina Ben\u0151 in only the fourth time a team has scored five goals or won by at least a five-goal margin in a cup final. The win brought Vasas its first major trophy, making it only the 7th club to win the Romanian Women's Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288542-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final (women's football), Route to the final\nBoth teams had a similar road to the finals, a clear 8\u20130 win in the quarterfinals, and a surprising win in the semifinals against opponents they severely lost to in league matches, at just a few days distance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288542-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final (women's football), Route to the final, Fortuna Bechicherecu Mic\nThe first two matches for Fortuna Becicherecu Mic in the competition were plagued by the inability of the opponents to field enough players on matchday. Scheduled mid-week on 31 October and 21 November, the second and third rounds against Banat Girls Re\u0219i\u021ba and Juventus Timi\u0219oara respectively, were both stopped early in the game at 2\u20130 for Fortuna, and subsequently awarded 3\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 89], "content_span": [90, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288542-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final (women's football), Route to the final, Fortuna Bechicherecu Mic\nThe first full match played by Fortuna in the 2018\u201319 edition of the cup was the quarter final played at home on 24 March against Heniu Prundu B\u00e2rg\u0103ului and it finished at a clear and unprecedented 8\u20130 for Fortuna, although Fortuna were to lose against Heniu 0\u20131 in the Liga I match played at less than a month distance, on 20 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 89], "content_span": [90, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288542-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final (women's football), Route to the final, Fortuna Bechicherecu Mic\nFortuna met rivals U Olimpia Cluj in the semifinals. The match was played at home on 15 May and was won 2\u20130, due to the goals scored by Larisa Grigore. With this win, Fortuna became the only Romanian team to ever beat Olimpia twice in the same season, with the first time being on 10 March, in an away Liga I match. Still, Fortuna was to lose against Olimpia 0\u20137 just 4 days after the cup semifinal, in an away Liga I play-off match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 89], "content_span": [90, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288542-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final (women's football), Route to the final, Vasas Femina Odorheiu Secuiesc\nVasas Femina did not play any of its cup matches at home in this edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 95], "content_span": [96, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288542-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final (women's football), Route to the final, Vasas Femina Odorheiu Secuiesc\nIts first game was in the 2nd round on 28 October, where it met Csiksereda Miercurea Ciuc which it defeated with a clear 9\u20130. The third round match was played on 18 November against Navobi Ia\u0219i and won 4\u20130, with a hat-trick from Rita Mitri and another goal by Carolina \u021aabur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 95], "content_span": [96, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288542-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final (women's football), Route to the final, Vasas Femina Odorheiu Secuiesc\nIn the quarterfinals, it trashed Fair Play Bucure\u0219ti 8\u20130 on 27 March, while in the semifinals, Vasas traveled to Gala\u021bi to play against Universitatea on 15 May and won the game by 4\u20131, even though they just lost a Liga I match 0\u20134 against the same team and on the same pitch a week before, on 8 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 95], "content_span": [96, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288542-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final (women's football), Pre-game\nNeither team had won a major trophy before. Vasas previously reached only the semifinals of the Cup in the previous season, while Fortuna's best result was reaching the last 16 in the 2016\u201317 season. In the league, Vasas were the standing vice-champions, while Fortuna finished the previous Liga I on the eight place, just above the relegation line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288542-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final (women's football), Pre-game\nIn the Liga I regular season, Fortuna played Vasas earlier in May, at Odorheiu Secuiesc, with Vasas winning 4\u20131. However, after the end of the regular league season, Fortuna qualified for the Championship play-offs (places 1\u20133), while Vasas only qualified for the Lower table round (places 4\u20136).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288542-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final (women's football), Pre-game\nBoth teams organized buses for the fans to attend the final in T\u00e2rgu Mure\u0219. Just before the kickoff, a ceremony was held, and the local municipal team CSM T\u00e2rgu Mure\u0219 was awarded with the trophy for winning Liga III, Seria III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288542-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final (women's football), Match, Team selection\nFortuna had a selection of footballers who spent most of their careers in the western part of Romania, notably at CFR Timi\u0219oara, who folded in early autumn, meaning that Fortuna had received at the start of the season an influx of new young players who played well with the already existing squad. A notable additional presence was former Romania national team member and top youth national team goalscorer Alexandra Lunca, who joined the team this season. An important absence for Fortuna was goalkeeper Mihaela Durl\u0103, who defended Fortuna's goal for the first part of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 66], "content_span": [67, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288542-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final (women's football), Match, Team selection\nYouth national team player Bianca Ienovan was uncertain for the match due to a recent injury, but eventually she was benched for the final. Other available players on matchday, that could have been included were Rebeca Pavel (#17) who had been announced for the final, Andrada Rusu (#22) and Cristina Costa (#8), the latter having had injury problems this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 66], "content_span": [67, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288542-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final (women's football), Match, Team selection\nVasas had a core of 4 players from the Moldova women's national football team (Violeta Mi\u021bul, Nadejda Colesnicenco, Margarita Panova and Carolina \u021aabur), Romania national youth team star Ana Maria Vl\u0103dulescu, in addition to a large base of local homegrown players of Hungarian ethnicity, a lot of which have been previously selected for Romania's youth national squads. Coach Andra\u0219i did not field M\u0103d\u0103lina Marinescu, who was previously announced for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 66], "content_span": [67, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288542-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final (women's football), Post-match\nVasas won its first major trophy after 7 years of existence, becoming the 7th team to win the Cupa Rom\u00e2niei. However, the team finished the League in 6th place. On the other hand, after this severe defeat, Fortuna went on to also become league vice-champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288543-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cure Bowl\nThe 2019 Cure Bowl was a college football bowl game played on December 21, 2019, in Orlando, Florida, with kickoff at 2:30 p.m. EST on CBS Sports Network. It was the fifth edition of the Cure Bowl, and one of the 2019\u201320 bowl games concluding the 2019 FBS football season. This was first Cure Bowl played at Exploria Stadium, as all prior editions were held at nearby Camping World Stadium. With FBC Mortgage as the title sponsor, the game was officially known as the FBC Mortgage Cure Bowl. Liberty defeated Georgia Southern 23\u201316, to claim their first bowl win in program history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288543-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cure Bowl, Teams\nThe game was played between the Liberty Flames and the Georgia Southern Eagles. Georgia Southern held a 3\u20130 record against Liberty in prior meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 21], "content_span": [22, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288543-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cure Bowl, Teams, Liberty Flames\nLiberty finished their regular season with a 7\u20135 record while competing as an independent. This was the Flames' first bowl game since joining the Football Bowl Subdivision, accomplished in their first season of being eligible to qualify for a bowl game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 37], "content_span": [38, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288543-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cure Bowl, Teams, Georgia Southern Eagles\nGeorgia Southern finished their regular season with a 7\u20135 record (5\u20133 in conference), in second place of the East Division of the Sun Belt Conference. This was the Eagles' third bowl game since moving to the Football Bowl Subdivision in 2014; they had an undefeated record of 2\u20130 in prior bowls. Their 2018 team won that season's Camellia Bowl over Eastern Michigan, 23\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 46], "content_span": [47, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288544-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Curlers Corner Autumn Gold Curling Classic\nThe 2019 Curlers Corner Autumn Gold Curling Classic was held from October 11 to 14 at the Calgary Curling Club in Calgary, Alberta as part of the World Curling Tour. The event was held in a triple-knockout format with a purse of $44,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288544-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Curlers Corner Autumn Gold Curling Classic\nIn the final, Kerri Einarson of Gimli defeated Cheryl Bernard who was skipping Team Scheidegger 7\u20130 to claim the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288545-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Currie Cup First Division\nThe 2019 Currie Cup First Division \u2013 known as the Currie Cup sponsored by DirectAxis Financial Services for sponsorship reasons \u2013 was the second tier of the Currie Cup, the premier domestic rugby union competition in South Africa. It was the 81st edition of the competition organised by the South African Rugby Union and was played between 6 July and 31 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288545-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Currie Cup First Division\nThe competition was won by the Jaguares, who beat the Griffons 27\u201313 in the final played on 31 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288545-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Currie Cup First Division, Competition rules and information\nThere were eight participating teams in the 2019 Currie Cup First Division. They played each other once during the pool stage, either at home or away. Teams received four points for a win and two points for a draw. Bonus points were awarded to teams that scored four or more tries in a game, as well as to teams that lost a match by seven points or less. Teams were ranked by log points, then points difference (points scored less points conceded).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288545-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Currie Cup First Division, Competition rules and information\nThe top four teams in the pool stage qualified for the semifinals, which were followed by a final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288545-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Currie Cup First Division, Teams\nThe teams that competed in the 2019 Currie Cup First Division are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288545-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Currie Cup First Division, Regular season, Standings\nThe current standings in the 2019 Currie Cup First Division is:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288545-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Currie Cup First Division, Regular season, Round-by-round\nThe table below shows each team's progression throughout the season. For each round, each team's cumulative points total is shown with the overall log position in brackets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288545-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Currie Cup First Division, Regular season, Matches\nThe following matches were played in the 2019 Currie Cup First Division:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288545-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Currie Cup First Division, Honours\nThe honour roll for the 2019 Currie Cup First Division was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288545-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Currie Cup First Division, Players\nThe squads and player appearance and scoring statistics for the 2019 Currie Cup First Division are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288545-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Currie Cup First Division, Players\n(c) denotes the team captain. For each match, the player's squad number is shown. Starting players are numbered 1 to 15, while the replacements are numbered 16 to 23. If a replacement made an appearance in the match, it is indicated by . \"App\" refers to the number of appearances made by the player, \"Try\" to the number of tries scored by the player, \"Con\" to the number of conversions kicked, \"Pen\" to the number of penalties kicked, \"DG\" to the number of drop goals kicked and \"Pts\" refer to the total number of points scored by the player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288545-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Currie Cup First Division, Referees\nThe following referees officiated matches in the 2019 Currie Cup First Division:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288546-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Currie Cup Premier Division\nThe 2019 Currie Cup Premier Division was the 81st edition of the top tier of the Currie Cup, the premier domestic rugby union competition in South Africa. DirectAxis Financial Services was the tournament sponsor. It was organised by the South African Rugby Union and ran from 12 July to 7 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288546-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Currie Cup Premier Division\nThe competition was won by the Free State Cheetahs, who beat the Golden Lions 31\u201328 in the final played on 7 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288546-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Currie Cup Premier Division, Competition rules and information\nThere were seven participating teams in the 2019 Currie Cup Premier Division. They played each other once during the pool stage, either at home or away. Teams received four points for a win and two points for a draw. Bonus points were awarded to teams that scored four or more tries in a game, as well as to teams that lost a match by seven points or less. Teams were ranked by log points, then points difference (points scored less points conceded).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288546-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Currie Cup Premier Division, Competition rules and information\nThe top four teams in the pool stage qualified for the semi finals, which will be followed by a final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288546-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Currie Cup Premier Division, Teams\nThe teams that competed in the 2019 Currie Cup Premier Division are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288546-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Currie Cup Premier Division, Regular season, Standings\nThe current standings in the 2019 Currie Cup Premier Division is:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288546-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Currie Cup Premier Division, Regular season, Round-by-round\nThe table below shows each team's progression throughout the season. For each round, each team's cumulative points total is shown with the overall log position in brackets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288546-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Currie Cup Premier Division, Regular season, Matches\nThe following matches were played in the 2019 Currie Cup Premier Division:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288546-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Currie Cup Premier Division, Honours\nThe honour roll for the 2019 Currie Cup Premier Division was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288546-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Currie Cup Premier Division, Players\nThe squads and player appearance and scoring statistics for the 2019 Currie Cup Premier Division are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288546-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Currie Cup Premier Division, Players\n(c) denotes the team captain. For each match, the player's squad number is shown. Starting players are numbered 1 to 15, while the replacements are numbered 16 to 23. If a replacement made an appearance in the match, it is indicated by . \"App\" refers to the number of appearances made by the player, \"Try\" to the number of tries scored by the player, \"Con\" to the number of conversions kicked, \"Pen\" to the number of penalties kicked, \"DG\" to the number of drop goals kicked and \"Pts\" refer to the total number of points scored by the player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288546-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Currie Cup Premier Division, Referees\nThe following referees officiated matches in the 2019 Currie Cup Premier Division:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288547-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus Women's Cup\nThe 2019 Cyprus Cup was the twelfth edition of the Cyprus Cup, an invitational women's football tournament held annually in Cyprus. It took from 27 February to 6 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288547-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus Women's Cup\nNorth Korea won their first title after a final win over Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288547-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus Women's Cup, Format\nThe twelve invited teams were split into three groups to play a round-robin tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288547-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus Women's Cup, Format\nPoints awarded in the group stage follow 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 determine the higher place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288547-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus Women's Cup, Group stage, Ranking of teams for placement matches\nThe ranking of the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd placed teams in each group to determine the placement matches:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 76], "content_span": [77, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288547-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus Women's Cup, Goalscorers\nThere were 85 goals scored in 24 matches, for an average of 3.54 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288548-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus Women's Cup squads\nThis article lists the squads for the 2019 Cyprus Women's Cup, the 12th edition of the Cyprus Women's Cup. The cup consisted of a series of friendly games, and was held in Cyprus from 27 February to 6 March 2019. The twelve national teams involved in the tournament registered a squad of 23 players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288548-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus Women's Cup squads\nThe age listed for each player is on 27 February 2019, the first day of the tournament. The numbers of caps and goals listed for each player do not include any matches played after the start of tournament. The club listed is the club for which the player last played a competitive match prior to the tournament. The nationality for each club reflects the national association (not the league) to which the club is affiliated. A flag is included for coaches that are of a different nationality than their own national team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288548-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus Women's Cup squads, Group A, Czech Republic\nThe squad was announced on 13 February 2019. On 24 February 2019, it was announced that Ivana Pi\u017elov\u00e1, Andrea Jarchovsk\u00e1, and Krist\u00fdna Jank\u016f replaced Barbora Vot\u00edkov\u00e1, Petra Divi\u0161ov\u00e1, and Kate\u0159ina Svitkov\u00e1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288548-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus Women's Cup squads, Group A, Finland\nThe squad was announced on 14 February 2019. Heidi Kollanen replaced Tia H\u00e4linen on 20 February 2019. Iina Salmi replaced Emmi Alanen due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288548-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus Women's Cup squads, Group B, Mexico\nA preliminary squad was named on 11 January 2019. The final squad was announced on 14 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288548-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus Women's Cup squads, Group C, Slovakia\nThe squad was announced on 11 February 2019. Jana Maslov\u00e1 was replaced by Monika Havranov\u00e1 before the beginning of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288549-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus rape allegation case\nThe 2019 Cyprus rape allegation case was a high-profile case of alleged gang rape in Cyprus. In July 2019, a British woman on holiday in Ayia Napa alleged she had been gang raped by twelve Israeli tourists. The Israeli men were subsequently arrested and investigated over the allegation by the Cyprus Police, but they were subsequently released without charge and the woman was charged for making a false allegation. In January 2020, the woman was convicted of \"public mischief\" in a Cypriot court and received a suspended sentence. The woman has maintained that she was pressured to retract her statement, something contested by Cypriot authorities. The case triggered intense international scrutiny.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288549-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus rape allegation case, Alleged crime and police investigation\nDuring the 2019 summer break, the 19-year old British woman had traveled to Pambos Napa Rocks resort in the Cypriot resort town of Ayia Napa on a working holiday organised by the British tourism company Summer Takeover. On 17 July 2019, the British teenager filed a report with the Cyprus Police in Ayia Napa claiming that she had been raped by several Israeli youths in her hotel room. The following day, the Cypriot authorities arrested 12 Israeli youths, aged between 15 and 22 years, for eight days. The police investigation was led by Detective Sergeant Marios Christou. Police questioned the suspects and took DNA samples from all twelve. Police found five used condoms and thirteen condom wrappers in the room.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288549-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus rape allegation case, Alleged crime and police investigation\nThe woman was examined by Cypriot state pathologist Dr. Sophocles Sophocleus, who found no evidence of gang rape. He subsequently testified that he found a few light bruises on her thighs and scratches on her legs but in his opinion, they were not consistent with gang rape. He also examined the woman's vagina together with a gynecologist and reported finding no lesions or other injuries. However, private forensic pathologist Dr. Marios Matsakis, who was hired by her family to participate in the case, reported that there was clear evidence of gang rape.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288549-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Cyprus rape allegation case, Alleged crime and police investigation\nLater testifying for her defense at trial, he stated he found bruising across her legs, arms, and buttocks from photographs of her injuries shown in court, claiming that he identified 35 separate bruises, and that the injuries left \"no doubt\" of gang rape. He also criticised Sophocleus for allegedly improperly investigating her.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288549-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus rape allegation case, Alleged crime and police investigation\nOn 25 July, five of the youths were released due to a lack of DNA evidence connecting them to the alleged incident. Seven remained detained. In addition to the allegation of gang rape, they were suspected of conspiracy to commit a crime, including those whose DNA was not found on the complainant. Following DNA testing, police linked three of the detained to the case and also found three more DNA samples not matching any of the accused.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288549-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Cyprus rape allegation case, Alleged crime and police investigation\nPolice suspected that three Israelis had participated but had subsequently returned to Israel, and prepared to send a team to Israel to work in coordination with the Israel Police and Israeli travel agencies to identify them. On 27 July, it was reported that three of the suspects were set to be charged, with police likely to release at least two other suspects. There were conflicting reports over whether or not police would offer immunity from prosecution to one or two of the suspects in exchange for information on other suspects still being sought. Police said they had taken statements from 36 witnesses and that they were planning to interview 20 more.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288549-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus rape allegation case, Alleged crime and police investigation\nHowever, the investigation turned toward the British woman. According to an attorney for some of the Israelis, they were able to provide convincing evidence of their innocence. On 27 July, the British teenager visited a police station to give a statement but was instead accused of lying about allegations. The teenager\u2019s defense claimed she had been subjected to eight hours of questioning without a lawyer. The claim however was not in line with the evidence. Furthermore, at all times the teenager was accompanied by a welfare officer who testified that no pressure had been placed on the teenager to retract her statement. The woman signed a statement retracting her rape allegations:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 762]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288549-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus rape allegation case, Alleged crime and police investigation\nThe report I did on the 17th of July 2019 that I was raped at ayia napa was not the truth. The truth is that I wasnt raped and everything that happened in that appartment was with my consent. The reason I made the statement with the fake report is because I did not know they were recording & humiliating me that night I discovered them recording me doing sexual intercourse and I felt embarrassed as I want to appologise, and say I made a mistake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288549-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus rape allegation case, Alleged crime and police investigation\nThe defence has contended that the defendant made the statement while under duress. Cypriot authorities charged her with \"giving a false statement over an imaginary offence.\" On 28 July, the remaining Israeli suspects were released from custody. Cypriot Police claimed that the woman had got angry when her alleged attackers had filmed her having consensual sex with some of the alleged attackers and alleged she had been raped. Nir Yaslovitch, a lawyer representing several of the Israeli youths, said that his clients would seek legal damages against her for false rape allegations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288549-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus rape allegation case, Legal proceedings\nOn 30 July, the woman appeared at the Famagusta District Court in Paralimni, where she was charged with acts of \"public mischief\" and remanded into custody for eight days. On 6 August 2019, the defendant repudiated her retraction statement, claiming that she had been coerced into producing it by the Cypriot Police. Her lawyer Andreas Pittadjis resigned due to a \"serious disagreement\" with his client regarding her line of defence. The trial judge Tonia Antoniou adjourned the case until 19 August to give the woman time to find a new lawyer. He also remanded the defendant into custody. The defendant was supported by the legal aid group Justice Abroad, which supported her claims that she had been coerced into producing a retraction statement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288549-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus rape allegation case, Legal proceedings\nOn 27 August, the defendant pleaded not guilty to falsely claiming she was gang-raped and was bailed by a court on condition that she visited a police station in Nicosia three times a week before her trial. The woman was represented by British lawyer Lewis Power QC and two Cypriot lawyers, who were supported by Justice Abroad. The defendant had reportedly spent a month at the Central Jail of Nicosia, where she had reportedly shared a cramped cell with nine women. Michael Polak, the Director of Justice International and a member of the defence team, claimed that the defendant's interrogation violated the Constitution of Cyprus and European Union human rights legislation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288549-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus rape allegation case, Legal proceedings\nOn 2 October, the defendant's trial began. While the defence maintained that the woman had been raped and had been coerced into issuing a retraction, the prosecution insisted that the police had acted properly throughout the investigation. Judge Michalis Papathanasiou adjourned the defendant's trial by two weeks to allow the defence to produce new evidence including text messages and images circulated by the alleged attackers to support their contention that she had been raped. The defendant was also reportedly suffering from Post-traumatic stress disorder due to her legal ordeal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288549-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus rape allegation case, Legal proceedings\nThe teenager's trial resumed on 15 October 2019. On 28 November, the trial judge Michalis Papathansidi rejected the defence's claim of a forced confession and defended the police investigators who had conducted investigation. He ruled the defendant an \"unreliable witness\", claiming that she had provided the police with \"contradictory, inconsistent, exaggerated and inflated\" versions of the night of the alleged crime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288549-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Cyprus rape allegation case, Legal proceedings\nThe judge also dismissed the defence witnesses as unreliable and rejected the testimony of expert witnesses from the UK, including a forensic linguistic expert's testimony that the woman's confession was unlikely to have been written by a native English speaker. The trial proceeded with the testimony of police officers who had spoken to her on the night she had reported the alleged sexual assaults.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288549-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus rape allegation case, Legal proceedings\nOn 3 December 2019, the court heard the defendant's testimony, who maintained that she had been gang-raped by the Israeli youths and that she had been coerced by police into dropping the rape allegations. The case concluded on 6 December with testimony by defence witness, well-known pathologist Marios Matsakis. On 12 December, the defendant was told that she would have to remain in Cyprus over Christmas, with the final judgment expected on 30 December. On 30 December, the court found the defendant guilty of causing public mischief with her sentencing date set for 7 January 2020. In response, the defence said that they would appeal the verdict.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288549-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus rape allegation case, Legal proceedings\nOn 4 January 2020, the Famagusta District Court released their 70-page verdict defending their guilty verdict in response to criticism of the court's handling of the case from both Cyprus and abroad. On 7 January, Judge Papathanasiou sentenced the young woman to a four month suspended sentence, with the defendant being allowed to leave Cyprus. In response, the defence announced that they would be appealing the conviction at the Supreme Court of Cyprus, a process expected to take several years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288549-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus rape allegation case, Reactions\nThe Ayia Napa rape allegation case attracted considerable media coverage and commentary in the British and international news media.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288549-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus rape allegation case, Reactions, Israeli youths\nFollowing their release in late July, several of the Israeli teenagers were greeted by their cheering families at Ben Gurion International Airport in Tel Aviv. According to media reports, the boys were dressed in kippahs and they and their male relatives popped champagne, let off a confetti cannon and chanted \"Am Yisrael Chai\" (\"the people of Israel lives\") and \"the Brit is a whore.\" This heroes' welcome was criticized by several Israeli journalists, social media users, and parents for engaging in unethical behaviour including filming their sexual encounter with their alleged victim, which is illegal under Israeli law banning \"revenge porn.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288549-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus rape allegation case, Reactions, Defendant's parents and human rights activists\nOn 9 August 2019, the British teenager's parents established a GoFundMe campaign to raise \u00a315,000 (US$18,000) to cover their daughter's legal fees following the resignation of her first lawyer Andreas Pittadjis. Aryeh Fraser, an Israeli man living in Miami, had donated \u00a37,500 (US$9,000) to the GoFundMe campaign, describing it as a humanitarian donation. By 3 January 2020, the teenager's GoFundMe campaign had reach \u00a3120,000, exceeding its \u00a3105,000 target.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 91], "content_span": [92, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288549-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus rape allegation case, Reactions, Defendant's parents and human rights activists\nIn October 2019, Michael Polak, the director of the legal aid organisation Justice Abroad and a member of the defence team, criticised the Cypriot Police's handling of the investigation into the rape allegations including allegedly coercing a retraction from the defendant without a lawyer present and not making any audio or video recordings of the defendant's interrogation. He also criticised the Cypriot Police for failing to download data from the alleged Israeli attackers' 11 mobile phones; the Police had downloaded videos from five of the Israeli youths' phones but had neglected to collect text messages and social media data.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 91], "content_span": [92, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288549-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus rape allegation case, Reactions, Defendant's parents and human rights activists\nOn 14 October, several human rights and feminist groups urged the Cypriot attorney general Costas Clerides to dismiss the case against the British teenager. Susana Pavlou, the Director of the Mediterranean Institute for Gender Studies, criticized the brutal ordeal experienced by the British teenager and her family. Several Cypriot and Israeli feminists and women's rights activists also picketed the sentencing of the defendant on 7 January 2020, criticizing Judge Papathanasiou for victim blaming and siding with the alleged rapists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 91], "content_span": [92, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288549-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus rape allegation case, Reactions, Governmental responses\nThe United Kingdom Government has also raised concerns about the fairness of the teenager's trial in Cyprus. In response to the British teenager's guilty verdict, a British Foreign and Commonwealth Office spokesperson issued a statement on 30 December 2019 that \"the UK is seriously concerned about the fair trial guarantees in this deeply distressing case and we will be raising the issue with the Cypriot authorities.\" The British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab also stated that the UK Government was examining guidelines for British tourists to Cyprus in light of the rape allegation case. Raab later welcomed the British teenager's suspended jail term sentence but ruled out revising British tourism guidelines to Cyprus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288549-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus rape allegation case, Reactions, Governmental responses\nIn early January 2020, there were media reports that the President of Cyprus Nicos Anastasiades was considering pardoning the British teenager prior to her sentencing on 7 January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288549-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus rape allegation case, Reactions, Boycott Cyprus campaign\nIn January 2020, a campaign was launched on the social media platform Twitter with the hashtag #boycottcyprus. On 1 January, the British teenager's mother expressed support for a boycott campaign against Cyprus, stating that the country was unsafe for tourists and condemning her daughter's guilty verdict as a miscarriage of justice. On 6 January, protesters expressing support for the teenager picketed the Cypriot High Commission in London. In addition, solidarity protests with the teenager were also planned in Nicosia and Tel Aviv to time with the teenager's sentencing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 68], "content_span": [69, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288549-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus rape allegation case, Reactions, Boycott Cyprus campaign\nOn 3 January 2020, Summer Takeaways, the tour company behind the working holiday in which the British defendant had been allegedly gang raped, announced that the company would no longer provide services to Ayia Napa. The company removed all references to Ayia Napa on its website and offered refunds to customers who had booked for the upcoming 2020 summer tour to the destination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 68], "content_span": [69, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288549-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Cyprus rape allegation case, Reactions, Media commentary\nThe Independent's columnist Harriet Hall opined that the case reflected a long tradition of ignoring or punishing female rape victims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288550-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Athletics Championships\nThe 2019 Czech Athletics Championships (Czech: Mistrovstv\u00ed \u010cesk\u00e9 republiky v atletice 2019) was the 27th edition of the national outdoor track and field championships for the Czech Republic. It took place from 26 to 27 July 2019 at the stadium in the Pod Palack\u00e9ho Stadium in Brno, organized by the local club AC Moravsk\u00e1 Slavia Brno.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288551-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Darts Open\nThe 2019 Czech Darts Open was the ninth of thirteen PDC European Tour events on the 2019 PDC Pro Tour. The tournament took place at the PVA Expo Praha, Prague, Czech Republic, from 28\u201330 June 2019. It featured a field of 48 players and \u00a3140,000 in prize money, with \u00a325,000 going to the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288551-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Darts Open\nJamie Hughes won his first PDC title with an 8\u20133 win over Stephen Bunting in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288551-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Darts Open\nGerwyn Price hit the fourth nine-dart finish of the 2019 European Tour to beat Glen Durrant 6\u20134 in the second round. It was also the first of Price's career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288551-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Darts Open\nThe tournament saw a new European tour record for the most seeded players losing their first match as 11 of 16 players including Michael van Gerwen and Peter Wright lost in the second round. The previous record was set by the 2017 Dutch Darts Masters which involved 9 seeds being eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288551-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Darts Open\nIt was the first ever PDC tournament held in the Czech Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288551-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Darts Open, Qualification and format\nThe top 16 entrants from the PDC ProTour Order of Merit on 11 June will automatically qualify for the event and will be seeded in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288551-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Darts Open, Qualification and format\nThe remaining 32 places will go to players from six qualifying events \u2013 18 from the UK Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 21 June), six from the European Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 21 June), two from the West & South European Associate Member Qualifier (held on 19 May), four from the Host Nation Qualifier (held on 27 June), one from the Nordic & Baltic Qualifier (held on 8 March), and one from the East European Qualifier (held on 27 June).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288551-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Darts Open, Qualification and format\nFrom 2019, the Host Nation, Nordic & Baltic and East European Qualifiers will only be available to non-Tour Card holders. Any Tour Card holders from the applicable regions will have to play the main European Qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288552-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Indoor Athletics Championships\nThe 2019 Czech Indoor Athletics Championships (Czech: Halov\u00e9 mistrovstv\u00ed \u010cesk\u00e9 republiky v atletice 2019) was the 27th edition of the national indoor track and field championships for the Czech Republic. It was held on 16 and 17 February at the Ostravar Ar\u00e9na in Ostrava, the same venue as the annual Czech Indoor Gala.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288552-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Indoor Athletics Championships\nThe combined track and field events were held from 8\u201310 February in Prague.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288553-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Lion Awards\n2019 Czech Lion Awards ceremony was held on 7 March 2020. It will be moderated by V\u00e1clav Kopta. Nominations were announced on 15 January 2020. Owners received highest number of nominations. The Painted Bird then won in 9 categories including the Best film.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288553-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Lion Awards, Winners and nominees\nNominations were announced on 15 January 2020. Owners received 12 nominations. The Painted Bird was nominated for 11 categories and won non-statutory award for the Best Poster. Old-Timers was third most successful film with 10 nominations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288553-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Lion Awards, Winners and nominees\nOn 10 February 2020 nominations in television Categories were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288553-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Lion Awards, Winners and nominees\nCeremony was held on 8 March 2020. The Painted Bird has won 9 Awards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288554-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Mixed Doubles Curling Championship\nThe 2019 Czech Mixed Doubles Curling Championship (Czech: M\u010cR mixed doubles 2019) was held in Prague from February 1 to 3, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288554-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Mixed Doubles Curling Championship\nSix teams took part in the championship, with the top three teams promoted to the playoffs which involved a best of three semifinal and final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288554-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Mixed Doubles Curling Championship\nThe winners of the championship were team \"Zbraslav H\" (Zuzana Paulov\u00e1 / Tom\u00e1\u0161 Paul), who beat team \"Savona 1\" (Petra Vin\u0161ov\u00e1 / Luk\u00e1\u0161 Kl\u00edma) in the final. The bronze medal was won by team \"Savona M\" (Eva Mikl\u00edkov\u00e1 / Dalibor Mikl\u00edk).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288554-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Mixed Doubles Curling Championship\nThe championship team represented the Czech Republic at the 2019 World Mixed Doubles Curling Championship, where they finished fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288555-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Republic motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2019 Czech Republic motorcycle Grand Prix was the tenth round of the 2019 MotoGP season. It was held at the Masaryk Circuit in Brno on 4 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288555-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Republic motorcycle Grand Prix, Classification, Moto2\nKhairul Idham Pawi was replaced by Jonas Folger after the Friday practice sessions due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 64], "content_span": [65, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288556-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Social Democratic Party leadership election\nA leadership election for the Czech Social Democratic Party (\u010cSSD) was held on 1 March 2019. The incumbent leader Jan Ham\u00e1\u010dek was elected for second term when he received 433 votes while 57 delegates voted against him and 11 abstained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288556-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Social Democratic Party leadership election, Background\nJan Ham\u00e1\u010dek was elected party's leader in 2018 after its heavy defeat in 2017 election when Social Democrats fell to 7%. The party then suffered losses in 2018 Senate and municipal elections. Party's deputy Leader in Ham\u00e1\u010dek's rival in 2018 leadership election resigned on his deputy leader seat which led to speculation he could run against Ham\u00e1\u010dek.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 66], "content_span": [67, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288556-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Social Democratic Party leadership election, Background\nHam\u00e1\u010dek received nomination from Hradec Kr\u00e1lov\u00e9 regional organisation on 24 November 2018. Pardubice regional organisation gave him its nomination on the same day. Ji\u0159\u00ed Zimola received nomination from Ostrava organisation on 11 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 66], "content_span": [67, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288556-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Social Democratic Party leadership election, Background\nPrague organisation held its meeting on 11 January 2019. It decided not to nominate Jan Ham\u00e1\u010dek. Karlovy Vary organisation gave its nomination to Ham\u00e1\u010dek on 26 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 66], "content_span": [67, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288557-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Women's Curling Championship\nThe 2019 Czech Women's Curling Championship (Czech: Fin\u00e1lov\u00fd turnaj M\u010cR 2018/19 \u2013 \u017eeny) was held in Prague from April 4 to 8, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288557-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Women's Curling Championship\nFour teams took part in the championship, with the top three promoted to the playoffs, which involved a best of three semifinal and final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288557-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Women's Curling Championship\nThe winners of the championship were the \"Liboc 3\" team (skip Anna Kube\u0161kov\u00e1), who beat the \"Zbraslav W\" team in the final (skip Zuzana Paulov\u00e1). Team \"Savona H\" (skip Linda Kl\u00edmov\u00e1) won the bronze medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288557-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Czech Women's Curling Championship\nThe championship team represented the Czech Republic at the 2019 European Curling Championships, where they finished in 6th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288558-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 C\u00f3rdoba Open\nThe 2019 C\u00f3rdoba Open was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 1st edition of the C\u00f3rdoba Open (replacing the Ecuador Open Quito), and part of the ATP Tour 250 series of the 2019 ATP Tour. It took place at the Estadio Mario Alberto Kempes in C\u00f3rdoba, Argentina, from 4 February through 10 February 2019. Unseeded Juan Ignacio Londero, who entered on a wildcard, won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288558-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 C\u00f3rdoba 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-00288558-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 C\u00f3rdoba 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-00288559-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 C\u00f3rdoba Open \u2013 Doubles\nRoman Jebav\u00fd and Andr\u00e9s Molteni won the title, defeating M\u00e1ximo Gonz\u00e1lez and Horacio Zeballos in the final, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20134).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288560-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 C\u00f3rdoba Open \u2013 Singles\nJuan Ignacio Londero won the title, defeating Guido Pella in the final, 3\u20136, 7\u20135, 6\u20131. Notably, Londero had not won an ATP tour level match prior to the beginning of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288560-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 C\u00f3rdoba Open \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season\nThe 2019 D.C. United season was D.C. United's 24th season of existence, and their 24th in Major League Soccer, the top flight of American soccer. The campaign was the club's first full season playing in Audi Field. Previously, United spent 2018 split between the Maryland SoccerPlex, Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium, and Audi Field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season\nUnited finished the season in an upper-mid table position, finishing in 5th place out of 12 in the Eastern Conference, and 10th place out of 24 across the entire league. Outside of MLS, United competed in the 2019 U.S. Open Cup, where they were eliminated in the fifth round, and the 2019 MLS Cup Playoffs, where they were eliminated in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season\nThe 2019 season was also team captain, Wayne Rooney's, final year for United, where he finished the campaign with 11 goals in MLS play and 13 goals across all competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Off season\nThe off-season began with D.C. United announcing that they would not pick up options or renew a number of contracts for players on the 2018 roster, including striker Darren Mattocks, one of the team's leading scorers in 2018. Homegrown midfielder Ian Harkes was allowed to seek a spot with a club that would offer more playing time. Defender Taylor Kemp announced his retirement. The team let long-time defender Nick DeLeon go, and he found his way to Toronto FC. Despite interest in returning Yamil Asad, the club was unable to work out an extension of his loan, or a complete transfer. Veteran defender Kofi Opare moved on to a new club, Travis Worra retired, and David Ousted was released to free up cap space and in international roster spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Off season\nIn Asad's stead, the team made a loan deal for Lucas Rodriguez, a young attacker from Argentina. Rodriguez was joined by another Argentinean, Leonardo Jara, a right back, who also came on a loan from Boca Juniors. The 2019 MLS SuperDraft brought D.C. United a fullback from Creighton University, Akeem Ward. The team signed two homegrown players, defender Donovan Pines, and midfielder Antonio Bustamante. The club also added veteran depth in goal, with Chris Seitz and Earl Edwards, Jr.. As the pre-season neared an end, the team also was able to pick up some depth when Atlanta United F.C. released veteran Chris McCann to free up cap space. The final preseason move brought D.C. a back-up striker, MLS veteran Quincy Amarikwa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Off season\nThe biggest news of the off-season was a move that did not happen. On the last day of the European transfer window, G.M. Dave Kasper flew to Paris along with Luciano Acosta, to try and complete a transfer to the leading Ligue 1 team, Paris St-Germain F.C.. Reportedly the sides were just too far apart on the money involved to consummate the deal. This meant that Acosta entered the season on the final year of his deal with D.C. United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Early season\nD.C. United began the new season on a bright note in dismal weather. On a very cold and rainy night at Audi Field. United opened the season with a 2\u20130 victory over the defending MLS Cup champions, Atlanta United. Paul Arriola opened the scoring on the final kick of the half, assisted by Luciano Acosta on a corner kick by Wayne Rooney. In the second half, Lucho Acosta hit a knuckling shot that eluded Atlanta's goalkeeper, Brad Guzan. The team next traveled to New York City to play on NYCFC's famously small pitch. The goalkeeping for both teams was extraordinary with highlight-reel saves in a scoreless draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Early season\nIf it looked as if the team hadn't quite found its stride offensively in the first two matches, any concerns evaporated when the team returned to Audi Field. The visitors were Real Salt Lake and former D.C. United goalkeeper, Nick Rimando, making a farewell tour in his final M.L.S. season. United were merciless in a 5\u20130 thrashing of the visitors. Captain Wayne Rooney tallied his first-ever MLS hat-trick, putting United out in from 3\u20130. Rooney had a PK, and a chip over the goalie, in the first half with Leonardo Jara getting his first assist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Early season\nIn the second half, Rooney finished off a pretty combination, with Junior Moreno getting the assist. With RSL down to 9 men, United poured it on. A golazo by Lucas Rodriguez on a corner kick served by Rooney was the newcomer's first goal for the club, and Ulises Segura finished off the scoring. United topped the Eastern Conference, with 7 points from 3 games and not a single goal allowed. A bye week the following week was not totally uneventful, as United signed its 3rd Homegrown player of the year, 16-year old forward Griffin Yow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Early season\nOn the heels of a great performance by Toronto FC in the debut of their new Designated Player Alejandro Pozuelo, D.C. knew they had to get points in a road game in Orlando to maintain their top position in the Eastern Conference. Steven Birnbaum opened the scoring in the 6th minute heading in a Wayne Rooney corner kick. In the 30th minute, Rooney drew a foul in the opposite corner during the 30th minute. Facing a very sharp angle, Rooney nonetheless was able to bend the ball into the far corner to give the visitors a two-goal lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Early season\nD.C. would need that cushion to withstand a furious Orlando rally. Substitute Chris Mueller delivered a cross to the head of Dom Dwyer and Hamid was helpless to keep Dwyer's header out of the goal. It was the first goal D.C. had allowed in the 2019 season, coming 2/3 of the way through the 4th match. Mueller continued to shred the D.C. defense and nearly tied the match in the dying minutes when his header went off the post. The win left D.C. ahead of Columbus in the table, on goals, but with a game in hand on the Crew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0008-0002", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Early season\nHowever, Toronto trailed by only one point, with a game in hand themselves on D.C. Unfortunately, starting left back Joseph Mora suffered a first-half injury in a collision. Mora would undergo surgery later for a broken jaw, a loss which highlighted the team's lack of depth, including at the fullback position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Early season\nA sellout crowd turned out n a Saturday afternoon match at Audi Field, expecting a thrilling, competitive match from the teams topping the Eastern and Western Conference tables, but LAFC quickly ran D.C. off the pitch. Despite Hamid saving an early penalty shot, the visitors took advantage of sloppy midfield play by D.C. to turn turnovers into 3 first-half goals. In the second half, things went from bad to worse as Rooney was red-carded for a rash challenge after turning the ball over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Early season\nL.A. finished with the man advantage and a 4\u20130 victory on the strength of a hat-trick by Diego Rossi. It was a difficult start to a busy, taxing 3 games in 8 days stretch and losing Rooney to the red card promised to add additional stresses in the team's next match 3 days later, against Montreal Impact. United began the match against Montreal without More (injury) and Rooney (red card suspension), and finished the game in worse shape thanks to injuries suffered by the two fullbacks who had started the match, Chris McCann and Leonardo Jara.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0009-0002", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Early season\nWithout Mora, United seemed unable to attack down either wing, and without Rooney, every effort to try to pierce the center of the Montreal defense ended in futility. United was unable to put a single shot on goal, but still managed a scoreless draw thanks to more sterling goaltending by Hamid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Early season\nD.C. fielded a new formation and three young Homegrown players making their first starts of the season for a road match in the altitude of Colorado Rapids home field. Things got off to a rough start as the Rapids' Benny Feilhaber was left unmarked on a corner kick and beat Hamid to put the home team in the lead. D.C. finally broke through with Acosta scoring on a blast from about 12 yards, assisted by a slight header touch-on by Donovan Pines getting his first minutes in an MLS match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Early season\nThat goal ended a 245-minute goal-scoring drought for D.C.U., and opened the floodgates. Three minutes later, Lucas Rodriguez set-up Chris Durkin for a blast across goalie Tim Howard and inside the far post. It was Durkin's first MLS goal, coming in his first start of the year. Five minutes later, \"Titi\" Rodriguez did the business all by himself, picking up a loose ball, charging through the Rapids' defense and then touching it past Howard to put the visitors up 3\u20131 before halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0010-0002", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Early season\nColorado pulled one back in the 66th minute, as Feilhaber found the head of a poorly marked Kei Kamara. Frantically defending the last half-hour, United fended off a furious assault, requiring a headed stop on the line by Birnbaum. Despite recent struggles, the three points for the win moved D.C. United back to the top of the Eastern Conference table, though high-scoring Toronto F.C. was only 4 points back with 2 games in hand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Early season\nAn interesting phenomenon began to take shape, as United continued to struggle at home while getting results on the road. United never really threatened the NYCFC goal in a 2\u20130 home loss, but got the three points with their first win in over a decade in Columbus, a 1\u20130 victory, secured by a first-half free kick goal by Rooney. Thanks to inconsistent result by other Eastern Conference teams, D.C. remained atop the conference table, as they headed on the road, for the first-ever match in newly opened Allianz Field against Minnesota United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Early season\nEarly on, it appeared the run of good road play would continue. D.C. dominated the early play and appeared to take the lead on want would have been Donovan Pines' first MLS goal, heading in a Rooney service. However, video review resulted in the goal being disallowed, controversially, for a possible interference by Brillant. The home team turned the pitch their way in the second half, and Hamid was finally beaten in the 82nd minute when a cross into the box was directed past him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0011-0002", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Early season\nThe goal secured Minnesota's historic first win in their new stadium and it continued to expose D.C.'s offensive shortcomings. Over a stretch of 6 games in 21 days, D.C. was shut out in 4 of the last 6 games, and in one of the two others, they got one goal on a Rooney free kick. During those 6 games, their only goals in the run of play were 3 goals in an 8-minute stretch in Colorado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Early season\nAs injuries continued to pile up for defenders, D.C. worked out a complicated exchange with F.C. Dallas to bring in fullback Marquinhos Pedroso, but Jara returned from a groin injury in time to start at home against Columbus Crew. The run of bad fortune seemed to be continuing when Acosta ran into the referee, and the resulting turnover sent the Crew on a fast break and an early goal. However, the goal was eventually wiped out after a check of the Video Assistant Replay (VAR).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Early season\nShortly after the game resumed, D.C, won a free kick, which produced their own goal as Acosta pounced on a loose ball in the box to give D.C. its first goal and lead in 3 games. A check of VAR confirmed the goal. Then, in the last minute of first half stoppage time, another check of VAR led to a handball call and a penalty kick for D.C. Rooney scored the PK to put D.C. up 2\u20130. In the 61st minute, Jara took the ball away from an opponent at midfield and sped toward the goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0012-0002", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Early season\nHe attempted a back heel to Arriola and, though Jara didn't make good contact, Arriola was able to beat the defense to the ball and shot to the far corner of the goal to put the home side up 3\u20130, with no need to resort to the video replay. In the 76th minute, the Crew spoiled the shutout for DC, or really, Hamid spoiled it for himself. A corner kick was curling in just under the crossbar, but Hamid had the attempt well covered. Nonetheless, he let the ball slip between his hands and into the goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0012-0003", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Early season\nUnited held on for a 3\u20131 win that might have been a too flattering scoreline, but still a welcome result for a team that had been shutout in the two preceding games. With a third of the season behind them, the team was tied with the Philadelphia Union for 1st place in the conference table, with Toronto F.C. 4 points behind but holding 3 games in hand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Midseason\nD.C. United went into the middle third of the season, still struggling with an ever-growing list of injured. Rookie Donovan Pines had been ruled out for a month due to a knee ligament injury suffered in the win over Columbus. Recent signing Marquinhos Pedroso was forced into the starting lineup at left back, as D.C. kicked off a stretch of 3 games in 7 days, beginning with a Sunday evening match against Sporting KC at Audi Field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Midseason\nThe visitors were struggling through even more injuries than D.C., bringing only 13 field players, but fought D.C. to a standstill until Arriola broke through with a curler for the game's only goal in the 79th minute. The victory meant D.C. kept pace with the Philadelphia Union as the teams remained tied for first place in the Eastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Midseason\nFollowing the win over Sporting KC, United travelled for two road games to close the tough 3 games in seven days stretch, and the lineup was out under further pressure when Junior Moreno left to be with his Venezuelan family after the sudden passing of his father. Coach Olsen put together a midweek lineup that was a throwback to the good/bad old days of Bennyball, trying to rest as much of his best XI as possible. Akeem Ward made his first MLS appearance, starting at left back, while Jalen Robinson started on the other side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0014-0001", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Midseason\nDurkin made a rare start before heading to join the United States Under-20 World Cup team, and Zoltan Stieber and Quincy Amarikwa led the attack, such as it was. Toronto F.C. allowed a couple of chances early on, but then launched an almost ceaseless assault on the D.C. goal. Hamid turned away 12 shots, and but only 2 of the 35 shots Toronto produced really threatened the goal. Hamid and Brillant together denied their former teammate Nick DeLeon and Jordan Hamilton put the rebound onto the crossbar. In the end, D.C. had to be quite pleased with a point in a scoreless draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Midseason\nPlaying on short rest, with a very short roster, and on the road at Houston, D.C. United probably shouldn't have expected a result, but hopes rose when the second half began with a quick goal by Rooney to put the visitors in the lead. After the game passed the hour mark, the match went sour for D.C., surrendering two goals in two minutes. To make matters worse, Arriola took a straight red card in the 85th minute, and faced a two-game ban.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Midseason\nThe following week D.C. hoped to get back on the winning track with a road game against a New England Revolution side which was between managers, with Bruce Arena preparing to take over. First, a midweek exhibition against Spanish side Real Betis provided playing time for younger players. Despite losing the exhibition, fans celebrated homegrown Griffin Yow's first goal for the senior side. On the weekend, United and the Revolution played an uneventful first half. The Revolution went down a man in the second half when goalie Matt Turner took a straight red for a reckless challenge against Rooney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0015-0002", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Midseason\nHowever, United failed to take advantage, and 5 minutes later it was the Revolution that struck, with Juan Agudelo putting the short-handed home team in the lead. United's sputtering offense wasn't helped by the man advantage, but a VAR decision to award D.C. a penalty kick in stoppage time, enabled the team to salvage a point on Rooney's ensuing PK goal. D.C. continued to lead Philadelphia in the table, but the Union had a game-in-hand, trailing by just one point, with a suddenly charging New York Red Bulls just off the pace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Midseason\nReturning home for two games and missing a suspended Arriola, United made a couple of changes to the lineup, with Segura in Arriola's slot, and Chris Odoi-Atsem making his first start in a personal comeback from lymphoma. After Segura missed an early chance, the Chicago Fire responded with a free-kick goal by long-time D.C. nemesis C.J. Sapong on a terrific service from Nicol\u00e1s Gait\u00e1n. The Fire went up 2\u20130 when a long-range shot was deflected by Moreno, leaving Hamid unable to stop it. Despite being badly outplayed, United seemed to have stunned the Fire with two quick goals before half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Midseason\nThe first was a goal by a charging Segura set-up by Rooney. The second effort, coming in stoppage-time came when Acosta sent Rodriguez in on goal. Rodriguez' shot was stopped, but the ball seemed to pop back up to Rodriguez as he passed the goalie, and Rodriguez finished the play. However, the goal was disallowed for a handball after VAR review. Strong goalkeeping by Hamid kept DC in the game, and a long ball by Jara found Segura, who finished for his second goal of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0016-0002", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Midseason\nUnited seemed to have completed the comeback when Acosta put the team in the lead, heading a Jara cross. However, the Fire salvaged a draw in stoppage time, when Bastian Schweinsteiger played the ball into the box with an overhead bicycle kick that found the head of Francisco Calvo, who deflected it past the onrushing Hamid. A draw was probably a fair result, but the referees' organization, PRO, later advised that VAR should have overruled the goal call for offside. The dropped points definitely deflated the emotions of the crowd and team after the impressive comeback seemed to have secured a win for the home team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Midseason\nIn the final match before a two-week break for the 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup, D.C. were bossed around the pitch for much of the first half. An early injury to Canouse forced a formation switch which the visiting San Jose Earthquakes kept exploiting until M.L.S. all-time leading scorer Chris Wondolowski headed a ball off the post to take a 1-0 lead. United were outshot 17\u20133 in the half, but really turned the match around in the second half, before finally evening the score when Acosta finished the rebound off a shot by Jara. A second consecutive home draw significantly impacted United's standing as they trailed 3 other Eastern Conference teams, at least in points per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Midseason\nDuring the Gold Cup break, D.C. United opened its 2019 U.S. Open Cup campaign, playing its first-ever Open Cup match in Audi Field, against a familiar Cup foe, Philadelphia Union. Despite no upcoming MLS match, D.C. had to field a very makeshift lineup. Joseph Mora made his return from a broken jaw injury, but Jara was forced to play in defensive midfield for the first time, because the top 3 at the position were all unavailable, either for international duty, injury or card suspension.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0018-0001", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Midseason\nHe was joined in the midfield by Antonio Bustamante, a homegrown signing getting his first action for D.C. United in a competitive match. The teams were scoreless through 90 minutes and the first overtime period. However, as rain had begun to pour down over the field, the visiting Union side broke through with what seemed a sure game-winner in the 113th minute. However, substitute Chris McCann drew United back even with a header off of a Rooney corner kick in the 118th minute, and Lucho Acosta drew a penalty in the box in the final minute. Rooney finished the penalty kick to win the match and send D.C. through to the next round, where they would host NYCFC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Midseason\nIn their Round of 16 match in the 2019 U.S. Open Cup, D.C. missed a great chance when Rooney's shot hit the post in the first minute. The visitors dominated the next half-hour, but against the run of play, United struck when a long ball from Segura found Rooney, who took it off his chest and beat NYCFC's goalie to give D.C. a lead in the 32nd minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0019-0001", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Midseason\nThe lead vanished six minutes later when the central defense lost track of the visitor's striker, Alexandru Mitri\u021b\u0103, who collected a pass over the defense and beat United keeper, Chris Seitz to draw even. Two and half minutes later, Rodriguez was knocked over and dispossessed. With no foul called, the visitors went quickly on the attack and struck to take a lead they never gave back. D.C. went out of the Open Cup with a 2\u20131 home loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Midseason\nAfter the short break for international play, MLS play resumed, with D.C. United having two home games in 4 nights. Due to ongoing tournaments, D.C. was still without two starting midfielders, Arriola and Moreno. In a midweek match versus Orlando City SC, D.C. didn't create a lot of chances, but gained 3 points with a 1\u20130 win, secured when Wayne Rooney caught Orlando goalkeeper Brian Rowe far off his line, and chipped for a goal from beyond the midfield stripe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0020-0001", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Midseason\nAn apparent second-half goal by Segura was ruled offside by VAR, but D.C. was able to keep yet another clean sheet. The win proved somewhat costly, as Mora's return to MLS play from his broken jaw was cut short because he suffered an ankle sprain likely to keep him out for weeks. Mora's absence created additional issues for Head Coach Ben Olsen, who didn't have a lot of great options at fullback and midfield. He chose to give Zoltan Stieber a start on the wing, despite speculation that he would soon be sold on in the summer window.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0020-0002", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Midseason\nMcCann got the start at left back. Those moves proved fateful in the 19th minute, when Toronto FC midfielder Richie Laryea was able to get around Stieber along the end line and past McCann to set-up Nick DeLeon for an easy tap=in to give the visitors an early lead. It was an emphatic moment for DeLeon in his return to Audi Field, suiting up against his former D.C. United side for the first time. That goal nearly lasted to the final whistle, but VAR found a foul when Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Brillant was tackled inside the box in the 90th minute. Rooney coolly scored the penalty kick to give United a 1\u20131 draw, and second place in the Eastern Conference table, one point off of Philadelphia Union's pace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Midseason\nThe poor run of form continued in a July Fourth match on the road against FC Dallas. The home team opened the scoring in the 6th minute, and made it 2\u20130 in the 65th minute. That ended the scoring, but things went from bad to worse for D.C. United when Acosta picked up a red card as he clumsily attempted to step over a fallen opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0021-0001", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Midseason\nAcosta had only come on as a sub in the 58th minute, and his absence in a home match the following weekend was going to make it hard for the team to find chances even on the home pitch. The schedule didn't do D.C. any favor, as former head coach Bruce Arena returned to D.C. unbeaten in 7 games since taking over the helm of New England Revolution. Playing a new formation in Acosta's absence, United was out of sorts defensively and fell behind 2\u20130, before Jara restored some order, finishing on a cross from Arriola just before halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0021-0002", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Midseason\nIt was Jara's first goal for the club. In the second half, United began to figure things out, and Rodriguez drew a foul that left the Revolution playing a man down for the remainder. D.C. gained a point with an 86th-minute equalizer, as Quincy Amarikwa also got his first goal for D.C., with an acrobatic volley to score on a Wayne Rooney free kick service.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Midseason\nA compressed two-game road trip began against cellar-dwelling expansion side FC Cincinnati, and it proved to be a coming out party for Titi Rodriguez, who scored the team's first two goals and assisted Arriola on the fourth in a 4\u20131 drubbing of the home side, whose only goal came on penalty kick for a highly dubious handball call on the preceding free kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0022-0001", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Midseason\nThe third goal was a masterwork engineered by Jara, who intercepted a pass, sidestepped a defender, and sent a long ball to Rooney that split the defense, and set up Rooney for an elegant finish that gave the team a two-goal lead, only 10 minutes after the team had lost their early lead. It was a convincing win, coming without Acosta who was still on suspension and without Hamid, who sat after violating a team rule. It was only the team's second win in a ten-game stretch, but a much-needed confidence boost going into a match in Atlanta, against a red hot Atlanta United F.C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Midseason\nD.C. went to Atlanta as big underdogs, and the task didn't get any easier as Rooney was left out of the lineup. Still, for nearly 90 minutes, it seemed United's bunkering strategy might earn a point. Atlanta had better than 70 percent of the possession, but United arguably had the better arguments for goals, failing to convert on several counter-attacking runs. Atlanta's best chance had come when Josef Martinez drew penalty call in the second half, but Martinez missed the penalty kick. Atlanta finally broke through in the 89th minute, with a tap-in header by Pity Martinez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0023-0001", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Midseason\nJosef Martinez added a second goal on a breakaway in stoppage time. The loss meant D.C. slipped to 3rd place in the standings, behind Atlanta, but D.C also had fewer points per game than the two New York area teams, both of which had games in hand. New England and Toronto were rising quickly, and Montreal received good news as Ignacio Piatti played for the first time in 2 months. As D.C. United headed into the final third of its schedule, even a place in the top 7 and a playoff position hardly seemed a sure thing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Late season\nUnited made a couple of personnel moves, signing former University of Maryland star Gordon Wild, and releasing their own top pick, Akeem Ward to make room. In addition, D.C. and Zoltan Stieber agreed on terms for a mutual release of his contract. With only 11 games left in the season, United didn't look like favorites to win many of the remaining games. A visit to the lowly Chicago Fire might have been the best chance to win on the road, and Olsen finally had his best XI available.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0024-0001", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Late season\nStill, he chose to continue to use the 3 centerback set he had been employing before out of need. Surprisingly, he left Mora on the bench, to start Rodriguez and Jara as wingbacks. The set-up never really threatened the Chicago goal. D.C. was only able to secure a road draw thanks to Hamid's usual strong goalkeeping and some surprising defensive brilliance from Brillant, whose interventions denied three certain goal-scoring opportunities. Meanwhile, Montreal, led by a healthy Piatti, posted a convincing 4\u20130 over Philadelphia, 4\u20131 win by New England, and some brilliance by a healthy Jozy Altidore led Toronto to a victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Late season\nAlthough D.C. United still sat in third place, the week's results left the fan base wondering if the team would be able to qualify for the playoffs. The release of Steiber opened up an international player slot and perhaps some cap space to go abroad to find someone to boost the attack. The team was also giving a trial to former U.S.A. international, Jose Francisco Torres. Still, the team pondered its options, making no moves other than releasing McCann.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0025-0001", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Late season\nWith Canouse injured, the team was now down to central midfielders, neither of whom would finish the next match, at home against Philadelphia. United fell behind early thanks to Pines turnover that led to a Union goal by Alejandro Bedoya. Then Durkin went down with an injury. In the 40th minute, Moreno was issued a red card for a last man foul in the box. Though the Union failed to convert the spot kick, they did dd a goal just before halftime. The lead grew to 3\u20130 in the second half, before Brillant knocked in a loose ball to get United's only goal in a match that would end up a 5\u20131 drubbing by the conference-leading Philadelphia Union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Late season\nWith Durkin joining Canouse among the ranks of the injured, D.C. urgently needed mores midfield strength, along with a striker up top. In the end, D.C. made a flurry of moves at the transfer deadline, adding former Crew and Galaxy striker Ola Kamara and trading for long-time nemesis midfielder Felipe Martins and L.A. Galaxy winger Emmanuel Boateng. This all came on the heels of an announcement that Wayne Rooney would return to English football at the end of the MLS season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Late season\nDue to an illness, Rooney wasn't fit to make the pitch for the Sunday night home match against Zlatan Ibrahimovic and L.A. Galaxy. Olsen also kept Lucho Acosta out of the starting lineup, which left a sell-out crowd expecting another thrashing by a more potent visiting club. Ibrahimovic would set a league record for most shots by a player in one game, but he was unable to convert any of the shots into goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0027-0001", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Late season\nD.C. surprised everyone, thanks to the usual great goaltending by Hamid, a goal line clearance by Rodriguez, good central midfield play by Martins and Jara filling in for the team's usual starters, and goals by Arriola and Rodriguez, sandwiching the lone Galaxy score. The surprising win left United clinging to 3rd place in the standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Late season\nUnited needed an injection of coincidence, which seemed to come with Rooney's return to the lineup. On a trip to Vancouver, United enjoyed the better of possession and the number of chances, but the team failed to convert, whereas Vancouver Whitecaps did finish a chance in the 18th minute and held on for a 1\u20130 win. A midweek rivalry match at home against New York Red Bulls didn't go much better. The visitors took the lead in the 6th minute after a defensive miscue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0028-0001", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Late season\nThen, Rooney was shown a red card for an off-the-ball incident as players jockeyed for position as D.C. defended a corner kick. United caught a break when a NYRB was shown a second yellow for a foul just before halftime. Ola Kamara notched his first goal in a D.C. United uniform with a stunning curler in the 55th minute and momentum seemed to be heading in the home side's direction. However, a very dubious penalty was called against D.C. just 3 minutes later (and no video review was ordered).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0028-0002", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Late season\nThe resulting successful spot kick was the difference in a crucial home loss against a team battling with D.C. for playoff position. Without Rooney in the lineup, D.C. lost its third straight match in a road match against Philadelphia Union. Once again, the Union simply ran D.C off the pitch, on the strength of 3 first-half goals. Acosta pulled one back in the second half, but the 3-1 loss left D.C. on the precipice of falling out of playoff position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Late season\nWith Rooney again out of the lineup, United didn't figure to feature much offense in a trip to Montreal, but the team showed unusual clinical finishing in a 3\u20130 road win. Kamara scored first as free kick deflected through the defensive wall and provided the new D.C. striker with a straightforward chance, with only a helpless goalie to beat. Arriola scored a few minutes later on a breakaway, when a Hamid kick deflected into his path. Finally, Kamara finished off a well-worked corner kick with a header, assisted by Brillant and Martins. The win left the team with a decent chance of securing a home playoff match over their final four matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Late season\nA week later, D.C. notched a second consecutive road win, with one of the more unlikely results of the season, a 1\u20130 win in Portland, over Portland Timbers. D.C. took the lead on an own goal coming on what seemed an otherwise harmless cross by Segura into the box, with no D.C. player in position to finish. D.C. probably deserved a second goal in the 38th minute, as a Rooney corner kick ricocheted off a pair of Timbers players including the goalie, and appeared to have crossed the line, before being cleared by former D.C. United academy player Eryk Williamson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0030-0001", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Late season\nA television replay appeared to show a goal, but VAR did not have that angle, and upheld the on-field no goal decision, relying on a different angle which was at best unclear if the entire ball had cleared the line. Portland controlled 2/3 of the possession, with most of the second half being played in D.C.'s defensive third, but were unable to find the tying goal, having struck the frame of the goal on several shots. With only 3 games left in their schedule, the result appeared to solidify D.C.'s playoff prospects. The team remained even with Toronto in a race for 4th place and the final home-field advantage spot in the opening round, but Toronto held a tie-breaking edge with a better goal differential.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Late season\nThanks to results for other teams on Saturday, United came into a Sunday night home match against Seattle Sounders knowing they had already qualified for the playoffs, but in a three-way struggle to gain home field in the opening round. Toronto had squandered a rare chance to gain a road win against the league-leading LAFC, surrendering a penalty kick in stoppage time. D.C. capitalize on the opportunity, playing perhaps their most complete match since their 5\u20130 rout of Real Salt Lake in the third match of the season, over six months earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0031-0001", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Late season\nTiti Rodriguez gave D.C. an early lead when he collected a deflection in the 18-yard box and drilled a shot into the corner of the goal. In the second half, a Rooney free kick found Brillant, who tapped in for the clinching goal. The win left United in 4th place, just one point on top of New York Red Bulls, ahead of a crucial match in Red Bull Arena. Unsurprisingly, D.C. United was satisfied with a bunkering strategy against the Red Bulls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0031-0002", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Late season\nThanks to a goal-line clearance by Brillant and a spectacular save by Hamid, the team secured a scoreless draw and held on to the 4th spot in the Eastern Conference, heading into the final weekend. Unfortunately, Rooney would once again be sidelined in the final match, thanks to a suspension for yellow-card accumulation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Late season\nOn the final day of the regular season, United's position was boosted by Montreal Impact taking an early 2-0 lead over the Red Bulls, but when Toronto F.C. went ahead of Columbus Crew, D.C. still needed a win against the league's worst team FC Cincinnati to gain the home-field advantage in the opening playoff match. That result seemed all but inevitable when two Cincinnati players were ejected late in the first half. D.C. United apparently scored on the restart, but the goal was overturned by video review.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0032-0001", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, Late season\nOver the final 55 minutes of play, despite the two-man advantage, D.C. was unable to score. As a result, D.C. ended the season tied with Toronto in the table but moved into 5th place because Toronto had a +5 goal differential, one goal better than D.C's +4 goal differential, which served to highlight the significance of several officiating errors that had deprived D.C. of deserved goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288561-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 D.C. United season, Review, MLS Cup Playoffs\nDC United traveled to Toronto for their opening round match in the 2019 MLS Cup Playoffs, where they seemed to destined to end their season and end the Wayne Rooney and Luciano Acosta era. D.C. did trail for an hour after surrendering a goal on the 35th minute, but a stoppage time goal by Titi Rodriguez in the second half stunned the home side, giving the visitors new life. The Extra Time period showed just how cruel the game can be though. D.C. United's defense suffered an epic collapse, surrendering 4 goals in the overtime period, ending the season with a 5-1 loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288562-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 D1 Grand Prix series\nThe 2019 D1 Grand Prix series is the nineteenth season for the D1 Grand Prix series. The season began on June 29 at Tsukuba Circuit, and ended on November 3 at Autopolis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288563-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 D1NZ season\nThe 2019 D1NZ season was the sixteenth D1NZ series; the premier drifting series of New Zealand. The season began at Trustpower Baypark Stadium on January 12 and concluded at Manfeild: Circuit Chris Amon on April 27. Darren Kelly won the main championship, whilst Michael Thorley won the Pro-Sport class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288564-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 DFB-Pokal Final\nThe 2019 DFB-Pokal Final decided the winner of the 2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal, the 76th season of the annual German football cup competition. The match was played on 25 May 2019 at the Olympiastadion in Berlin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288564-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 DFB-Pokal Final\nThe match featured Bundesliga clubs RB Leipzig, playing in their first final, and Bayern Munich, the record winners of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288564-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 DFB-Pokal Final\nBayern Munich won the final 3\u20130 for their 19th DFB-Pokal title. With the win, Bayern completed their 12th domestic double, and therefore played away to 2018\u201319 Bundesliga runners-up Borussia Dortmund in the 2019 DFL-Supercup in August 2019. Because Bayern qualified for the Champions League through the Bundesliga, the sixth-place team in the Bundesliga, VfL Wolfsburg, earned qualification for the group stage of the 2019\u201320 edition of the UEFA Europa League, and the league's third second round spot went to the team in seventh, Eintracht Frankfurt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288564-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 DFB-Pokal Final, Teams\nIn the following table, finals until 1943 were in the Tschammerpokal era, since 1953 were in the DFB-Pokal era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288564-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 DFB-Pokal Final, Background\nThe match will be the first final for RB Leipzig, competing in their seventh season of the tournament. Their previous best performance in the competition was reaching the second round on three occasions (in 2011\u201312, 2015\u201316 and 2017\u201318). Leipzig became the 39th unique club to reach the final, and the first final debutant since Union Berlin in 2001, an achievement reached just short of ten years since the club's founding on 19 May 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288564-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 DFB-Pokal Final, Background\nThey are also the first club from Saxony to reach the final since Dresdner SC's win in 1941, as well as the second club from Leipzig to reach the final, after VfB Leipzig won in 1936. A victory would see RB Leipzig win their first major honour, with the club only previously winning regional league and cup titles. They would also become the first team since Bayer Leverkusen in 1993 to win in their debut final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288564-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 DFB-Pokal Final, Background\nThe final will be the last match for Ralf Rangnick as head coach of Leipzig, as he will return to his post as sporting director following the arrival of Julian Nagelsmann as coach for the 2019\u201320 season. Following the resignation of Ralph Hasenh\u00fcttl, Rangnick took over as head coach for the 2018\u201319 season, his second stint after leading the club to Bundesliga promotion in the 2015\u201316 season. While not serving as head coach, he has been the sporting director of the club since the 2012\u201313 season. The match will be the third DFB-Pokal final for Rangnick, having reached the final twice with Schalke 04 during his two stints at the club. He lost 1\u20132 to Bayern Munich in 2005, before winning the competition in 2011 with a 5\u20130 victory against MSV Duisburg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288564-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 DFB-Pokal Final, Background\nThe match will be the 23rd final for Bayern Munich, extending their competition record. Of the previous finals, Bayern have won on 18 occasions, also a competition record, and lost four times. This is the second consecutive final for Bayern, having lost in the 2018 final to Eintracht Frankfurt, who were led by now-Bayern coach Niko Kova\u010d. Bayern's last final victory was in 2016, where they won on penalties against Borussia Dortmund. Bayern are chasing a league and cup double, having won the 2018\u201319 Bundesliga on the final matchday, a week prior to the final. Bayern have previously completed the double on 11 occasions (in 2013 as part of a treble), a record in Germany, most recently in 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288564-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 DFB-Pokal Final, Background\nThe final is the third consecutive for Bayern manager Niko Kova\u010d, the fourth coach to do so after Hans Schmidt (with Schalke 04, losing in 1935 and 1936, winning in 1937), Udo Lattek (with Bayern Munich, winning in 1984 and 1986, losing in 1985) and Otto Rehhagel (with Werder Bremen, losing in 1989 and 1990, winning in 1991). However, Kova\u010d is the first to accomplish this with multiple clubs in the streak. Kova\u010d, who is in his first season with Bayern, reached the previous two finals with Eintracht Frankfurt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288564-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 DFB-Pokal Final, Background\nIn 2017, he lost 1\u20132 to Borussia Dortmund, before winning against future employers Bayern Munich in 2018. Kova\u010d is the second manager to reach three DFB-Pokal finals in their first three attempts, following Hans Schmidt for Schalke 04 (between 1935 and 1937). He could also become the seventh coach to win consecutive DFB-Pokal titles, following Georg K\u00f6hler (Dresdner SC, 1940 and 1941), Zlatko \u010cajkovski (Bayern Munich, 1966 and 1967), Dietrich Weise (Eintracht Frankfurt, 1974 and 1975), Hennes Weisweiler (1. FC K\u00f6ln, 1977 and 1978), Huub Stevens (Schalke 04, 2001 and 2002) and Felix Magath (Bayern Munich, 2005 and 2006).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288564-0007-0002", "contents": "2019 DFB-Pokal Final, Background\nHowever, Kova\u010d would be the first to accomplish this feat with a different club in each season. While in 2018 Kova\u010d became the fifth person to win the DFB-Pokal as player and manager, this final could see him become the second person to accomplish this for the same club, having won the 2003 final with Bayern during his playing career. This was previously accomplished by Thomas Schaaf for Werder Bremen (player in 1991 and 1994, manager in 1999, 2004 and 2009). He would also become the second person to win multiple DFB-Pokal titles as manager after having previously won the competition as a player, also along with Schaaf.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288564-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 DFB-Pokal Final, Background\nThe final will be the eighth match between Leipzig and Bayern, with a record of four Bayern wins, one Leipzig win, and one draw (which Bayern won on penalties) prior. The match is the 65th unique final pairing in DFB-Pokal history. Of the prior matches, one has been in the DFB-Pokal, with the teams meeting in the second round of the previous season. The match in Leipzig finished as a 1\u20131 draw after extra time, with Bayern winning 5\u20134 in a penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288564-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 DFB-Pokal Final, Background\nThe remaining meetings occurred in the Bundesliga, with Bayern winning 3\u20130 at home and 5\u20134 away in the 2016\u201317 season. In the 2017\u201318 Bundesliga, Bayern won the first match 2\u20130 at home, before Leipzig won 2\u20131 at home in the second meeting. The sides will have met twice during 2018\u201319 season prior to the final, with Bayern winning 1\u20130 at home in the first meeting on 19 December 2018, and the second meeting in Leipzig as a \"final preview\" on 11 May 2019 finishing as a 0\u20130 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288564-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288564-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288564-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 DFB-Pokal Final, Match, Details\nAssistant referees:Christian Gittelmann (Gauersheim)Matthias J\u00f6llenbeck (Freiburg)Fourth official:Bibiana Steinhaus (Langenhagen)Video assistant referee:Tobias Welz (Wiesbaden)Assistant video assistant referee:Martin Thomsen (Kleve)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288565-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 DFL-Supercup\nThe 2019 DFL-Supercup was the tenth edition of the German super cup under the name DFL-Supercup, an annual football match contested by the winners of the previous season's Bundesliga and DFB-Pokal competitions. The match was played on 3 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288565-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 DFL-Supercup\nThe DFL-Supercup featured the runners-up of the 2018\u201319 Bundesliga, Borussia Dortmund, and Bayern Munich, the champions of the Bundesliga and winners of the 2018\u201319 DFB-Pokal. Heading into the match, Bayern were the three-time defending champions of the DFL-Supercup. The match was hosted by Borussia Dortmund at the Signal Iduna Park in Dortmund.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288565-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 DFL-Supercup\nBorussia Dortmund won the match 2\u20130 to secure their sixth German super cup title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288565-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288565-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 DFL-Supercup, Match, Details\nAssistant referees:Rafael Foltyn (Wiesbaden)Jan Seidel (Oberkr\u00e4mer)Fourth official:Harm Osmers (Hanover)Video assistant referee:Robert Schr\u00f6der (Hanover)Assistant video assistant referee:Christof G\u00fcnsch (Berlin)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288566-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 DPMM FC season\nThe 2019 season will be DPMM FC's 8th consecutive season in the top flight of Singapore football and in the Singapore Premier League. Along with the SGPL, the club will also compete in the Singapore Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288566-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 DPMM FC season\nThe club has also entered a domestic team to compete in the 2018\u201319 Brunei Premier League. DPMM became Brunei Premier League champions on 26 February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288566-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 DPMM FC season\nOn 15 September 2019, Brunei DPMM FC became champions of the 2019 Singapore Premier League with two games to spare after a 4\u20134 draw between Geylang International and Hougang United meant that DPMM's lead at the top of the table cannot be surpassed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288567-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 DTM Assen round\nThe 2019 DTM Assen round was a motor racing event for the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters held between 20 and 21 July 2019. The event, part of the 33rd season of the DTM, was held at the TT Circuit Assen in the Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288568-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 DTM Brands Hatch round\nThe 2019 DTM Brands Hatch round was a motor racing event for the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters held between 9 and 11 August 2019. The event, part of the 33rd season of the DTM, was held at Brands Hatch in the United Kingdom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288569-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 DTM Hockenheim Final\nThe 2019 DTM Hockenheim Final is a motor racing event for the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters held between 5 and 6 October 2019. The event, part of the 33rd season of the DTM, was held at the Hockenheimring in Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288569-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 DTM Hockenheim Final, Background\nThe final round of the DTM for 2019 was a dead rubber as far as the drivers' and manufacturers' championships were concerned, having already been won by Ren\u00e9 Rast and Audi respectively. The teams' championship however was far from resolved, as 32 points separated Audi squads Team Rosberg and Abt Sportsline with a potential 96 on offer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288569-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 DTM Hockenheim Final, Background\nThree guest entries from the Super GT Series' GT500 class were accepted into the race ahead of the Japanese series' adoption of the Class One Touring Car regulations used by DTM for 2020. One entry from each of the series' three manufacturers \u2013 Honda, Lexus and Nissan \u2013 made the trip, and were accompanied by five drivers; former Formula One World Champion Jenson Button would contest both races for Honda, Nick Cassidy and Ry\u014d Hirakawa would contest a race each for Lexus and the same approach was taken by Nissan for their entry, fielding Tsugio Matsuda and Ronnie Quintarelli.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288570-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 DTM Hockenheim round\nThe 2019 DTM Hockenheim round is a motor racing event for the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters held between 4 and 5 May 2019. The event, part of the 33rd season of the DTM, was held at the Hockenheimring in Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288570-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 DTM Hockenheim round, Results, Race 1, Race\n\u2014 Driver retired, but was classified as they completed 75% of the winner's race distance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288571-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 DTM Lausitz round\nThe 2019 DTM Lausitz round was a motor racing event for the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters (DTM) held between 24 and 25 August 2019. The event, part of the 33rd season of the DTM, was held at the EuroSpeedway Lausitz in Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288571-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 DTM Lausitz round\nRace 2 of the weekend marked the 500th race in the history of the DTM. Audi secured the manufacturers' championship with two events remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288572-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 DTM Misano round\nThe 2019 DTM Misano round is a motor racing event for the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters held between 8 and 9 June 2019. The event, part of the 33rd season of the DTM, was held at the Misano World Circuit Marco Simoncelli in Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288572-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 DTM Misano round, Background\nJamie Green was forced to sit out the event with appendicitis, and would be replaced with Audi Sport Team WRT driver Pietro Fittipaldi. Fittipaldi's seat was taken by 2017 and 2018 MotoGP runner-up Andrea Dovizioso, marking the Italian's debut in car racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288573-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 DTM N\u00fcrburg round\nThe 2019 DTM N\u00fcrburg round was a motor racing event for the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters held between 14 and 15 September 2019. The event, part of the 33rd season of the DTM, was held at the N\u00fcrburgring in Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288573-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 DTM N\u00fcrburg round\nRen\u00e9 Rast secured his second drivers' championship following his third-place finish in the second race, with his closest rival Nico M\u00fcller exactly an event's worth of points behind. Given that Rast had an insurmountable number of wins, even if M\u00fcller had managed to close the gap he would still have lost the title on a count-back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288574-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 DTM Zolder round\nThe 2019 DTM Zolder round is a motor racing event for the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters held between 18 and 19 May 2019. The event, part of the 33rd season of the DTM, was held at the Circuit Zolder in Belgium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288574-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 DTM Zolder round, Results, Race 1, Qualifying\n\u2013 Car #99 sent to the rear of field having made illegal modifications under Parc Ferm\u00e9 conditions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 50], "content_span": [51, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288574-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 DTM Zolder round, Results, Race 1, Race\n\u2013 Drivers did not complete 75% of the race distance, and therefore are not classified as finishers in the official results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288575-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 DXC Technology 600\nThe 2019 DXC Technology 600 was the ninth round of the 2019 IndyCar Series season, contested over 248 laps at the 1.5-mile (2.4\u00a0km) Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas. Takuma Sato claimed his second pole of the year, while Josef Newgarden claimed the 13th win of his career and his 3rd of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288575-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 DXC Technology 600, Results, Race\nNotes: Points 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, 38], "content_span": [39, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288576-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Da Nang Tennis Open\nThe 2019 Da Nang Tennis Open was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Da Nang, Vietnam between 6 and 12 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288576-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Da Nang Tennis Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as wildcards:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288576-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Da Nang Tennis Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288577-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Da Nang Tennis Open \u2013 Doubles\nHsieh Cheng-peng and Christopher Rungkat won the title after defeating Leander Paes and Miguel \u00c1ngel Reyes-Varela 6\u20133, 2\u20136, [11\u20139] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288578-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Da Nang Tennis Open \u2013 Singles\nMarcel Granollers won the title after defeating Matteo Viola 6\u20132, 6\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288579-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dacorum Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Dacorum Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of the Dacorum Borough Council in England. It was held on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288580-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dakar Rally\nThe 2019 Dakar Rally was the 41st edition of the event and the eleventh successive year that the event was held in South America. The event started in Lima, Peru on 6 January and finished there on 17 January after 10 stages of competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288580-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dakar Rally\nQatari Nasser Al-Attiyah won his third Dakar in the Cars division for Toyota, in the process becoming the second person to win the Dakar Rally with three different vehicle manufacturers (other wins came with Volkswagen in 2011 and Mini in 2015). In the Bikes division, Toby Price of Australia won his second Dakar Rally despite suffering from a fractured wrist during the event. The Kamaz team of Eduard Nikolaev, Evgenii Iakovlev and Vladimir Rybakov won their third consecutive title in the Trucks division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288580-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dakar Rally\nThis would mark the final time the Dakar Rally was held in South America. From 2020 onwards, the rally was held in Saudi Arabia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season\nThe 2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season was the 10th season in club history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, Preseason\nYifang started the winter training on 24 December 2018 in Dalian until 1 January 2019. The team moved to Kunming on 2 January for a 10-day training, before flying to Marbella, Spain for another 3-week training.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, Preseason\nThe club decided to end the contract with Bernd Schuster on 3 January. The team was close to Leonardo Jardim and he eventually refused the contract due to multiple concerns. Yifang reached agreement with Korean manager Choi Kang-hee, and officially announced it on 11 February. He was previously signed by Tianjin Quanjian (now renamed Tianjin Tianhai) by the end of the 2018 season, and Quanjian claimed his salary was beyond their ability since the owner and major investor of Quanjian was arrested for illegal MLM, thus terminated the contract. The team moved to Shanghai on 7 February for final preparations before the new season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, Preseason\nYifang announced the joining of 5 players on 13 February. Wanda Group had had a long negotiation with S.S.C. Napoli on Marek Ham\u0161\u00edk, and finally reached agreement on 14 February for a reported \u20ac15M transfer fee. Gait\u00e1n decided to leave for MSL club Chicago Fire since the team preferred a winger/striker with more offensive playing style than another midfielder upon the signing of Marek Ham\u0161\u00edk. Zheng Long joined on a one-year loan, while Alex Akande was signed as soon as Yanbian FC claimed their bankruptcy by the end of the transfer window.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, Preseason\nWang Xianjun was absent from the list. As later reported, the talented defender did not sign contract and demanded transfer. Yifang eventually decided to put him back to the reserve squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, March\nThe first match in the 2019 season was a mere draw against Henan Jianye, as Yang Shanping was sent off in just 37 minutes, and Carrasco claimed the team's first goal this season, as he did last year, to save the team in additional times. Qin Sheng committed a foul and accidentally fell on Henan player Henrique Dourado, to broke Dourado's right tibia. All new players except Zheng Long had their debut match. Yifang had another draw with Guangzhou R&F. Carrasco extended his scoring sheet with a penalty and a reflection shot, while Zheng Long scored his first goal 1 minutes after he was substituted in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, March\nFirst home match was a one-goal defeat. Ham\u0161\u00edk met with former teammate Paolo Cannavaro, who currently sided with his brother Fabio as Guangzhou's coaching staff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, April\nYifang started April with another defeat. Mushekwi's equalizer could not bring a victory, as the goalkeeper bumped into Zhao Mingjian's back clumsily, giving Johnathan a wide open goal. Ham\u0161\u00edk's playing style was surrounded by controversy. He lacked dribbling and sprinting, which led to easy interceptions, and his long passes lost accuracy in this match. He was frequently compared to Nico Gait\u00e1n, whose impressive dribbling tricks made many contributions on both ends.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, April\nYifang claimed the first victory on 15 April by overcoming great difficulties in Shandong. Mushekwi won a header. To fulfill the U23 policy, Yang Fangzhi came on at 90 minute, and went back to the bench in just 1 minute for He Yupeng. Li Shuai was sent off as he pushed opponent player in the face during a conflict. Yifang addressed him with a \u00a5500k fine, and sent him to the reserve team. He received an additional 6-match suspension.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, April\nCarrasco scored another reflection shot against Chongqing, but the home win slipped away as Zhao Mingjian committed a handball for a penalty. For the April 28 match with Beijing Guoan, Ham\u0161\u00edk and Carrasco were both unfit for the game. Yifang's conservative 5-defender formation was unable to hold against the opponent, while Boateng had his first goal in a corner kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, April\nNoticeably, on 29 April, Wanda Group chairman Wang Jianlin officially announced the takeover of Dalian Yifang during the groundbreaking ceremony of Dalian Youth Football Training Base, a joint youth training program between Wanda Group and the government of Dalian, that the team would use neutral team name (without sponsors or owner names) in the future, as the CFA had requested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, May\nYifang saw the first home win in the FA cup against Shaanxi, with Zhu Ting scoring the only goal in his 100th appearance for the team, to advance into the 5th round. They would face Shanghai Jiading Chengfa, the only amateur team left in the cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, May\nYifang gladly took 1 points away from Jiangsu Suning. Yu Ziqian entered the starting lineup as Zhang Chong had waist injury. Since his last appearance for Dalian Aerbin against Liaoning Whowin in the 2012 season, he had been absence in the Super League for 7 seasons. He was excluded from the first team at the time because of his frequent confusing blunders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, May\nIn the 11 May match, the team lost to contestant Wuhan Zall, sliding deeper into the relegation area. Shan Pengfei had a large wound on his left eyebrow when going up for a header. He received on-pitch suture with staples, and finished the 1st half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, May\nOn 19 May, Yifang overpowered Shenzhen and former manager Juan Caro. Li Jianbin was sent off at the end of 1st half. Ham\u0161\u00edk was kicked in the face by Wang Dalong to earn a penalty, to give Carrasco his 7th goal. He Yupeng surprisingly scored Mushekwi's cross as soon as he came on the pitch at 90 minute, then immediately went off for Yang Fangzhi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, May\nNoticeably, the club changed its registration name to \"Dalian Professional Football Club\" (Chinese: \u5927\u8fde\u4eba\u804c\u4e1a\u8db3\u7403\u4ff1\u4e50\u90e8) on 23 May, and the team name would be changed in the 2020 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, May\nA 1\u20130 home victory finally came on 26 May. Carrasco's corner found Ham\u0161\u00edk for his first goal in China. He Yupeng missed a scoring chance similar to the previous game in the last few minutes. Zhao Xuebin scored twice to push Yifang further in the FA Cup. Yang Lei had his first appearance in the first team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, June\nJune started with another defeat, with Carrasco absence for 4 yellow cards. Li Jianbin's easy marking and a misjudged interception gave 2 goals away. Mushekwi scored Ham\u0161\u00edk's corner in the 2nd half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, June\nCarrasco did not return to the match against Hebei CFFC due to flight delay, and Yifang lost by 1 goal. Mushekwi received a red card for pushing Zhang Chengdong in the face, and he missed several matches for the 2019 AFCON cup as planned. Huang Jiahui had his debut match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, June\nOn 18 June, Rafael Ben\u00edtez was connected with Yifang with a \u00a312m salary offered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, June\nOn 23 June, Yifang drew with Tianjin Tianhai. Ham\u0161\u00edk was selected captain. Boateng scored two goals for Yifang including a penalty, and later conceded an own goal. Li Shuai returned from suspension.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, June\nAfter three rounds without victory, Yifang defeated Beijing Renhe on 29 June. Carrasco returned to the squad and scored a penalty. Ham\u0161\u00edk showed controlling performance since last match, and forced Chen Jie to score an own goal. Boateng scored a gift goal from Zhang Lie. He and Zheng Long both scored off-side goals later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, June\nAs the league reached halfway, Yifang ranked 10th (4 wins 5 draws 6 losses, GA:GF 19:22) at 17 points, much better than 2018 season (15th, 2W 4D 9L, 12:31, 10 points). Moreover, until the 15th round in the previous season, Yifang won only one point from away matches. In this season, on the contrary, they acquired 12 away points out of the total 15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, June, Carrasco issue\nIn the preseason training, Carrasco wanted a proof to transfer back to Europe in winter transfer after the 2019 season, while the team showed negotiable attitude. He publicly announced to stay with the team in the 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, June, Carrasco issue\nHe was put on the bench during the match against Beijing Guoan on 28 April due to a claimed influenza. As reported, he expressed reluctance to play as substitute, and contradicted the manager before the match. He made apologies consequently.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, June, Carrasco issue\nUntil the end of May, Carrasco was the top goal scorer in quad, claiming 7 goals out of the total 13. He missed the match against Shanghai SIPG due to 4 yellow cards, and flew back to Europe for the June FIFA calendar ahead of time. During the FIFA calendar, Carrasco changed his attitude, showing strong desire to go back to Europe in the summer transfer window, and had transfer rumors with Arsenal. He returned to the team after the following match against Hebei CFFC due to a claimed flight delay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, June, Carrasco issue\nOn 20 June, the whole issue outbroke, as goalkeeper Yu Ziqian publicly criticized on his social media that Carrasco went on a strike during the training session, that he \"stood still regardless of anyone\", and that he \"skipped the previous two matches on purpose\". The team decided to suspend Carrasco from matches and training, unless he publicly apologize for the behaviour. No further actions including apologies were taken until the 23 June match, but Carrasco showed dissatisfaction on his social media account. Yifang withdrew the suspension on 25 June, indicating a temporary pause of this issue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, June, Carrasco issue\nThe entire issue seemed to have come to an end since Ben\u00edtez's arrival, as Carrasco showed quite different competing desire, that \"It's the first time I've had a good coach since I was in China\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, July\nYifang made major changes in managerial staff. On 1 July, Yifang announced the resignation of Choi Kang-hee. This also extended an awkward record, that no Korean manager could finish a complete season with teams in Dalian (Park Sung-hwa with Dalian Shide, June 2010 to May 2011; Chang Woe-ryong with Dalian Aerbin, Jan\u2013Apr 2012). One day later, Rafael Ben\u00edtez was officially appointed as the manager. He said the career in China would be a challenge, and he was impressed by chairman Wang's passion and future plan on football, and made the decision after consulting Juan Caro and Gregorio Manzano. He also restarted his personal blog after a 5-year-hiatus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, July\nOn 3 July, Zhou Jun quit his job as the club director, and returned to Shanghai Shenhua. Gao Yan from Wanda Group was selected for the position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, July\nBen\u00edtez had his debut win against Henan Jianye. Boateng scored twice again. He and Carrasco continued to extend their scoring sheet to win 3 points from Guangzhou R&F. Zhou Ting had his 400th top-tier league appearance in the match against Guangzhou Evergrande.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, July\nYifang announced the departure of Mushekwi on 15 July. Local fans gathered at the airport to say goodbye. 4 days later, Salom\u00f3n Rond\u00f3n officially signed with the ream.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, July\nCarrasco scored a corner directly against Tianjin TEDA. Rond\u00f3n scored on his first possession, disallowed as offside by VAR. He claimed his debut goal later, to bring one point for the team. Boateng claimed his hat-trick in the FA Cup against Tianjin Tianhai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, July\nAs the CSL summer window reached its closing date, Shan Huanhuan and 3 other young players under the Wanda \"Star of Hope\" project were confirmed to join the squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, August\nBoateng pulled his muscle, and Rond\u00f3n's decisive substitution performance won a 3-pointer from Chongqing under hot climate. Sun Bo won a long shot and a red card upon his first starting appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, August\nThe quick reunion with former coach Choi Kang-hee was not pleasant, as he overpowered his former team by two easy counter-attack goals from El Shaarawy. Yifang still could not breakthrough their highest record in the FA cup, reaching semi-finals in 2013, 2018 and 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, September\nThe league would meet a few long pauses to prepare for the 2022 World Cup qualification, and the team's condition was influenced by the extra-long break. Yifang struggled in Wuhan's high humidity and temperature with insufficient fitness, and lost by 1 goal. Li Jianbin earned his second red card for kicking the ball deliberately onto the opponent after the whistle. He would be grounded for 6 matches in total, to miss the rest matches in this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, September\nDong Yanfeng claimed his first super league goal against Shenzhen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, October\nLi Shuai had his first national team appearance against Guam on 10 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, October\nOn 25 October, it was announced that Dalian Yifang Women's Football Club (Dalian Yifang W.F.C., official name currently vacant), based on Dalian Under-18 women's football team, was established to meet the CFA's entry standard in 2020, and would compete in the 2019 Chinese Women's League Two, the third-tier league. Fan Yiying stepped up as the manager. On 10 November 2019, Yifang W.F.C. won by 1\u20130 against Donghua University in the play-off, ranked by 5th, and gained promotion into the Chinese Women's Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, November\nZhou Ting broke the record of the oldest appearing player at 40 years and 291 days against Hebei CFFC, which had previous been held by Rolando Schiavi (40 years 285 days) since 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, December\nZhao Xuebin won the reserve league top goalscorer by 19 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, Summary\nThroughout the 2019 season, Yifang won three more points than last year, and ensured safety from relegation much earlier. The team had overall equalized performance in home and away matches, band ut with Choi, Yifang acquired three away wins out the total of four at the time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, Summary\nChoi Kang-hee made multiple adjustments at the beginning of the season, mainly the midfielders. He often used Carrasco as a roaming attacker, not restrained to his familiar left winger position, and spent quite some time to adjust Ham\u0161\u00edk's role.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. season, Overview, Summary\nBen\u00edtez was aggressive at first, and he soon brought in his 5-4-1 formation, aiming to improve the defense. He moved Sun Guowen backwards as the right full back, who mostly played as a winger, and put the right back Dong Yanfeng in the CB position. With each coach, the team received four red cards respectively, being the team with the most red cards this season, as major defenders were slower at sprinting speed, and sometimes used rude fouls to stop opponent players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang F.C. 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288581-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 Dalian Yifang 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288582-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Baptist Patriots baseball team\nThe 2019 Dallas Baptist Patriots baseball team represented Dallas Baptist University during the 2019 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Patriots played their home games at Horner Ballpark as a member of the Missouri Valley Conference. They were led by head coach Dan Heefner, in his 12th season at Dallas Baptist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288582-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Baptist Patriots baseball team, Previous Season\nThe 2018 Dallas Baptist Patriots baseball team notched a 36\u201317 (16\u20135) regular season record and finished second in the Missouri Valley Conference standings. The Patriots reached the finals of the 2018 Missouri Valley Conference Baseball Tournament, where they were defeated by Missouri State in 10 innings. Dallas Baptist received an at-large bid to the 2019 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. The Patriots were eliminated from the NCAA Tournament by Arkansas in the Fayetteville Regional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288582-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Baptist Patriots 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, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288583-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Cowboys season\nThe 2019 season was the Dallas Cowboys' 60th in the National Football League (NFL), their 11th playing home games at AT&T Stadium and their ninth and final season under head coach Jason Garrett. It also marked the return of tight end Jason Witten, who retired in 2018 and spent a year as the color analyst for Monday Night Football. Wide receiver Cole Beasley, who was the second-longest tenured player on the roster, left the team in the offseason and signed with the Bills.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288583-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Cowboys season\nDespite being 6\u20134 by Week 11 and leading the NFC East, they lost 4 of the last 6 games for a final record of 8-8. The Cowboys failed to improve on their 10\u20136 record from the previous season after a 26\u201315 loss to the Buffalo Bills on Thanksgiving and failed to tie that record with a 31\u201324 loss to the Chicago Bears a week later. This was also their first non-winning season since the 2015 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288583-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Dallas Cowboys season\nA Week 16 loss to their division rival the Philadelphia Eagles was the turning point as they squandered a chance to clinch consecutive NFC East titles since 1992\u201396, and the first team in the NFC East to clinch the division in consecutive years since the Eagles did so from 2001\u201304. The Eagles proceeded to win in Week 17 against the Giants, ensuring Philadelphia would be the 2019 NFC East champions, and eliminating the Cowboys from playoff contention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288583-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Cowboys season\nHead coach Jason Garrett's contract was not renewed by Jerry Jones after expiration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288583-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Cowboys season, Preseason\nOn March 21, the exhibition matchup between the Cowboys and the Los Angeles Rams was officially announced for Saturday, August 17, at Aloha Stadium just outside of Honolulu, Hawaii, with the Rams serving as the home team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288583-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. New York Giants\nIn the season opener, the Cowboys scored in 5 consecutive drives, the longest streak in Cowboys history, despite Evan Engram scoring a touchdown first in this game. After that, it was all Dallas the rest of the way. The win allowed the Cowboys to start 1-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 87], "content_span": [88, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288583-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. New York Giants\nRookie quarterback Daniel Jones would end up playing the remainder of the game for Eli Manning when Manning was removed from the game due to a coaching decision made by head coach Pat Shurmur. This would be Manning's last game he played against the Cowboys, as he did not play in their second game in MetLife Stadium due to Jones being the starter since week 3 of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 87], "content_span": [88, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288583-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: at Washington Redskins\nThe game started with Montae Nicholson obtaining an interception, which would allow the Redskins to score the next drive. The Cowboys responded with a touchdown pass to Devin Smith to tie the game at 7-7. They would claim the lead, via a touchdown pass to veteran tight end Jason Witten before halftime. The Redskins would respond back after another touchdown scored by the Cowboys. Ezekiel Elliott would run for a first down to clinch the game, allowing the Cowboys to run out the clock. The game ended with Dak Prescott and Elliott rushing for 180 combined yards. This win would improve the Cowboys to 2-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 90], "content_span": [91, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288583-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Miami Dolphins\nAs historic Vegas favorites (22 points), both Ezekiel Elliott and Tony Pollard obtained 100+ rushing yards in one game. The game started with a missed field goal from the Dolphins. The Cowboys also denied the Dolphins a touchdown when DeMarcus Lawrence recovered a fumble at the Dallas 7-yard line. After this, it was all Dallas the rest of the way. This win improved the Cowboys to 3-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 86], "content_span": [87, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288583-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: at New Orleans Saints\nThe game would be neck-to-neck all the way. Chidobe Awuzie and the Cowboys recorded their first interception of the season. Despite a strong defense and allowing no touchdowns, they would drop to 3-1 with the loss. This game practically mimicked the previous year's game between these two teams in Dallas where it was mainly a defensive battle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 89], "content_span": [90, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288583-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. Green Bay Packers\nIn a highly anticipated matchup against Aaron Rodgers and the Green Bay Packers in a testament of the Cowboys-Packers rivalry, the Cowboys struggled mightily. Looking to defeat the Packers whom they have not beaten at home since 2007, the first drive resulted in an interception, which the Packers returned the interception for 37 yards without scoring. The Cowboys recovered from a 28 point deficit, but the Packers would prove excessive to overcome, and for the first time since the Divisional Round from 2018, they would allow 30+ points. This loss dropped the Cowboys to 3-2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 89], "content_span": [90, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288583-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: at New York Jets\nThe Cowboys traveled to Metlife Stadium to take on Sam Darnold, who had just recovered from mono and the Jets in one of their two trips to East Rutherford, New Jersey. They looked to defeat the Jets, whom they have not beaten since 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 84], "content_span": [85, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288583-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: at New York Jets\nThe Jets would score a 92-yard touchdown in one of the worst defensive plays by the Cowboys. The Cowboys attempted to rally, but while attempting a two-point conversion that would tie the game and send it to overtime, the pass was incomplete. The loss dropped them to 3-3, and their streak of losing three games against the Jets continued.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 84], "content_span": [85, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288583-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Philadelphia Eagles\nThe Cowboys dominated the entire game and returned to their winning ways. One of the first plays was a forced fumble on Carson Wentz, which Dallas recovered. Tavon Austin would give the Cowboys the first scoring drive shortly afterwards. Brett Maher kicked a 63-yard field goal to break his old record of 62, which was also during a game at home against the Eagles. The Cowboys would put their 3-game losing streak to an end as the Cowboys would improve to 4-3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 91], "content_span": [92, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288583-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: at New York Giants\nDespite a first pass attempt being an interception and the Giants having a lead by 9 points, the Cowboys dominated the rest of the game. Ezekiel Elliott made his first appearance at MetLife Stadium since his rookie season and would run for 139 yards on 23 carries. The game is famous for a black cat appearing during the game. This would delay the game for several minutes. The Jourdan Lewis fumble recovery sealed the game as it was returned for a touchdown while the Cowboys led 30-18 to put them up 37-18 and improve to 5-3 with the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 86], "content_span": [87, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288583-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nThe contest was competitive the entire night. The Cowboys would start by falling behind after two touchdowns were scored by the Vikings. Later, the Cowboys fought back and grabbed the lead late. This wouldn't last long as the Vikings ran away with another touchdown scoring drive. The Cowboys responded with a field goal to make it 28\u201324. Luck ran out after Dak Prescott's Hail Mary pass was intercepted in the fading seconds, sealing the Cowboys' loss. This loss dropped the Cowboys to 5-4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 90], "content_span": [91, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288583-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: at Detroit Lions\nOn the first handoff to Ezekiel Elliott, the fumble was recovered by the Lions, that way the Lions could score and take a 7-0 lead. The Cowboys would respond with a field goal by Brett Maher. Later on, the Cowboys would claim the lead and would not allow the Lions to lead again after Cowboys scored another touchdown. The game's biggest highlight was a catch by Michael Gallup, who would scoop the ball up after nearly dropping a pass. This win would improve them to 6-4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 85], "content_span": [86, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288583-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: at Detroit Lions\nElliott's touchdown celebration of the \u201cDak Dance\u201d became a meme and a trend for the rest of the 2019 NFL season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 85], "content_span": [86, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288583-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: at New England Patriots\nThe Cowboys would only muster three field goals as they would fall to 6-5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 92], "content_span": [93, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288583-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: vs. Buffalo Bills\nComing off a close loss at New England, the Cowboys returned home to take on the Bills. The Cowboys would obtain the lead 7-0 when Dak Prescott threw a touchdown pass to Jason Witten. Afterwards, the Cowboys would struggle in nearly every other aspect as they would not respond again until the 4th quarter. Their second touchdown was not enough as the Bills would defeat the Cowboys, 26-15. This loss would not only drop the Cowboys to 6-6, but also raised concerns of whether or not if the team were still contenders. This loss also ensures they would no longer exceed the win mark from the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 86], "content_span": [87, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288583-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: at Chicago Bears\nThe game would begin with the Cowboys leading 7-0, but they would struggle the remainder of the game. Bears' Mitchell Trubisky lead the Bears to a heavy 31-14 lead. The Cowboys would later fight back, but only to score 10 points. This loss dropped them to 6-7 and below .500 for the first time this season. Also with the loss, they would no longer be able to tie their 10-6 record from the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 85], "content_span": [86, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288583-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. Los Angeles Rams\nBefore the game started, there was an error on a coin toss, which the officials misunderstood, which Dak Prescott actually said \"kick\" when he intended to say \"defer\". The Cowboys afterwards dominated and led the entire game. It was the first time since the Week 13 in 2018 that the Cowboys would defeat a team sitting with a minimum of .500 percentage of wins. The win by the Cowboys also improved them to 7-7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 89], "content_span": [90, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288583-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: at Philadelphia Eagles\nThe Cowboys were denied a chance to become the first NFC East team to repeat as division champions since the Eagles did so between 2001 and 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 91], "content_span": [92, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288583-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: at Philadelphia Eagles\nThe game began with the Eagles converting two third-downs and converting a 36-yard field goal. The Cowboys would allow the Eagles' offense to march down the field 63 yards over 7 plays. Dallas Goedert caught a 6-yard pass from Wentz to increase the Eagles' lead. The Cowboys drove to the Eagles' 23-yard line when they were trailing 17-9, in which the Cowboys attempted to tie the game. A pass to Michael Gallup was incomplete on a fourth down play, giving the ball back to the Eagles to run out the game clock. This loss dropped the Cowboys to 7-8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 91], "content_span": [92, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288583-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Washington Redskins\nKai Forbath remained perfect in field goals as he converted each attempt for the third consecutive game. Jaylon Smith obtained his first interception in his career off quarterback Case Keenum, who started as emergency for Dwayne Haskins Jr. who injured his ankle the previous week. This would be the final game with head coach Jason Garrett as his contract expired and was not renewed. This win would prevent the Cowboys from suffering their first losing season since 2015 to finish 8-8. However, the Cowboys would be eliminated from playoff contention thanks to the Eagles' 34-17 victory over the Giants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 92], "content_span": [93, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288584-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Fuel season\nThe 2019 Dallas Fuel season was the second season of the Dallas Fuel's existence in the Overwatch League and was their first full season under head coach Aaron \"Aero\" Atkins. The team looked to improve on their disappointing 12\u201328 record from 2018, where they did not qualify for the season playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288584-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Fuel season\nDallas began the season posting an impressive 4\u20132 record through six games, but a 2\u20133 loss to the Boston Uprising eliminated the team from Stage 1 Playoff contention. The team hit their stride in Stage 2, amassing a 5\u20132 record, and qualified for the Stage 2 Playoffs. However, they were knocked out in the quarterfinals round by the Vancouver Titans in a 0\u20133 loss. The Fuel fell apart in the final half of the season, finding only one win in their final fourteen matches. With a 10\u201318 record for the season, the Fuel again did not qualify for the season playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288584-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Fuel season, Preceding offseason, Player re-signings\nFrom August 1 to September 9, 2018, all Overwatch League teams that competed in the 2018 season could choose to extend their team's players' contracts. Along with the retirement of star tank player Brandon \"Seagull\" Larned, Fuel released support Sebastian \"Chipshajen\" Widlund and tank Christian \"cocco\" Jonsson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 64], "content_span": [65, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288584-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Fuel season, Preceding offseason, Free agency\nAll non-expansion teams could not enter the free agency period until October 8, 2018; they were able to sign members from their respective academy team and make trades until then. On October 15, Fuel acquired Jung \"Closer\" Won-sik from London Spitfire; Closer signed with Fuel on a two-way contract with Team Envy. On November 11, Fuel signed off-tank Richard \"rCk\" Kanerva from Overwatch Contenders team Team Gigantti to a two-year contract. Fuel's final offseason transaction was on December 3, when the team signed former Fusion University and United States Overwatch World Cup team player Zachary \"ZachaREEE\" Lombardo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 57], "content_span": [58, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288584-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Fuel season, Regular season, Stage 1\nDallas began their 2019 season splitting their two matches in week one \u2013 a 0\u20134 loss against San Francisco Shock and a 3\u20131 win over Seoul Dynasty. The team repeated their inconsistent performance the following week, as Fuel fell 0\u20134 to Guangzhou Charge and defeated Philadelphia Fusion 3\u20131. After a pair of wins against Shanghai Dragons, Fuel took on Boston Uprising in their final match of the stage. Dallas took the first two maps of the match, but Boston was able to engineer a reverse sweep, placing Fuel at a 4\u20133 Stage 1 record and one match out from the Stage 1 Playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288584-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Fuel season, Regular season, Stage 2\nDallas had a multitude of player and coaching changes at the start of Stage 2. On April 2, Dallas traded Richard \"rCk\" Kanerva to Boston Uprising in exchange for Lucas \"NotE\" Meissner. On the same day, assistant coach Christian \"cocco\" Jonsson retired from the Overwatch League; Dallas signed former Paris Eternal head coach Julien \"daemoN\" Ducros as an assistant coach a day later. Three days later, Fuel's Hyeon \"EFFECT\" Hwang retired from professional Overwatch due to mental health issues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288584-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Fuel season, Regular season, Stage 2\nFuel's first two matches of Stage 2 were not until week two, where Dallas swept Toronto Defiant 4\u20130 and edged over Paris Eternal 2\u20131. Week three was not as fortunate for Dallas, as the team was swept 0\u20134 by both Vancouver Titans and Seoul Dynasty. Fuel took both of their matches in their \"Dallas Fuel Homestand Week\", defeating Los Angeles Valiant and in-state rivals Houston Outlaws and clinching a Stage 2 Playoff berth. Dallas capped off the regular season of Stage 2 with a win over Florida Mayhem, ending the stage with a 5\u20132 record and the sixth seed in the Stage 2 Playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288584-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Fuel season, Regular season, Stage 2\nTwo days before their Quarterfinal match against the undefeated Vancouver Titans, Fuel promoted Ashley \"Trill\" Powell form their academy team Team Envy. Dallas was not able to put up much of a challenge for Titans, as Fuel was swept 0\u20133 in the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288584-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Fuel season, Regular season, Stage 2, Homestand Weekend\nWeek four saw the \"Dallas Fuel Homestand Weekend\" \u2013 the first of three Overwatch League \"Homestand Weekends\" of the 2019 season. The two-day event, which took place at the Allen Event Center in Allen, Texas, sold out 4,500 seats each day. Held in part to test whether or not the league's plan to hold matches locally, Dallas Fuel was responsible for every aspect of the weekend aside from the broadcast, which was aired on ESPN2. During the first match of the weekend, a regional power outage delayed the event for 45 minutes. Marking the highest viewership of Stage 2, the homestand showed that the local-match model has promise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288584-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Fuel season, Regular season, Stage 3\nDallas opened Stage 3 on June 7 with a match against the Los Angeles Gladiators. The Fuel could not find a footing throughout the match, and was swept 0\u20134. Dallas turned it around two days later with a 3\u20130 victory over the Washington Justice. Notably, Dylan \"aKm\" Bignet tied an Overwatch League record set by Kelsey \"Colourhex\" Birse for highest average energy on Zarya in at map at 82%. The following week, the Fuel first took on the Chengdu Hunters on June 13. Dallas was unable to adapt to the off-meta compositions ran by the Hunters and lost the match 1\u20133. Two days later, the team faced the undefeated Vancouver Titans; the Fuel were dominated throughout the match and were swept 0\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288584-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Fuel season, Regular season, Stage 3\nThe Fuel's struggles continued the following week, losing 0\u20133 to the Hangzhou Spark in a match where the Dallas roster looked to be falling apart. Three days later, the Fuel were swept 4\u20130 by the Hunters in a rematch of the previous week. Dallas' final match of the stage was against the New York Excelsior on June 29. After winning the first two maps, Dallas look primed to take a win from New York, but the Excelsior made the proper adjustments after halftime, and completing a reverse sweep by taking three consecutive maps to hand Dallas a 2\u20133 loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288584-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Fuel season, Regular season, Stage 4\nThe Fuel's first match of Stage 4, along with the first match with an enforced 2-2-2 role lock by the League, was against the London Spitfire on July 26. Dallas' tank line and DPS were outplayed that of London's, as the team fell in a 1\u20133 loss. The following week, the team lost to the Los Angeles Valiant by a 1\u20133 scoreline. Trying to find wins to realistically keep their playoff hopes alive, the Fuel took on the Los Angeles Gladiators on August 9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288584-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Dallas Fuel season, Regular season, Stage 4\nDallas found themselves up 2\u20130 going into halftime, but the team crumbled thereafter, losing three consecutive maps to fall 2\u20133. Two days later, the team was swept 0\u20134 by the San Francisco Shock in a match that was as close as the scoreline. The following week, the Fuel fell to the Hangzhou Spark by a score of 1\u20133. The team's next match was against the Guangzhou Charge on August 18. Dallas found another loss in the matchup, as they were swept 0\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288584-0011-0002", "contents": "2019 Dallas Fuel season, Regular season, Stage 4\nNotably, an in-game bug cause an hour-long delay in the final map of the series \u2013 the longest delay in Overwatch League history. Officially eliminated from season playoff contention, the Fuel headed to The Novo in Los Angeles to play in the Kit Kat Rivalry Weekend, hosted by the Los Angeles Valiant. Their only match of the weekend was against the Atlanta Reign August 24. After the Reign took the first map with little resistance, both teams completed Volskaya Industries twice, to push the map to a second overtime round, but Dallas came out victorious, tying the series 1\u20131. Coming out of halftime, close losses on King's Row and Havana gave Dallas a 1\u20133 match loss. The loss ended Dallas' season with a 12-match losing streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 780]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288584-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Fuel season, Final roster, Transactions\nTransactions of/for players on the roster during the 2019 regular season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288585-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Rattlers season\nThe 2019 Dallas Rattlers season was the seventeenth season for the Rattlers franchise of Major League Lacrosse, and second season playing in Frisco, Texas since relocating from Rochester, New York.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288585-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Rattlers season\nThe Rattlers finished a league-best 11-3 in 2018, but fell short to the Denver Outlaws in the 2018 Steinfeld Cup, 16-12 in Charleston, South Carolina. It was the Rattlers' second loss in five years to the Outlaws in the championship game, and third overall Steinfeld Cup defeat in five years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288585-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Rattlers season\nLong-time Rattlers assistant and 2018 Coach of the Year winner Bill Warder returned for his second season as head coach. After starting the season a league-worst 0-7, Warder and the Rattlers orchestrated a six-game win streak (four wins on the road) that had Dallas on the doorstep of the playoff picture. However, two one-goal home losses to New York and Atlanta on August 31 and September 7 officially eliminated the Rattlers. The team finished 2019 with a record of 7-9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288585-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Rattlers season, Collegiate Draft\nThe 2019 Collegiate Draft was held on March 9 in Charlotte, North Carolina at the NASCAR Hall of Fame. Inside Lacrosse gave the Rattlers an \"A\" in their team-by-team draft grades, better than every team except the Chesapeake Bayhawks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288585-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Rattlers season, Collegiate Draft\nThe Rattlers announced the signing of five players on May 21: Craig Chick, Jack Jasinski, Joe Saggese, Lucas Wittenberg, and Landon Kramer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288586-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Wings season\nThe 2019 WNBA season was the 22nd season for the Dallas Wings franchise of the WNBA. This was the franchise's 4th season in Dallas. The season tipped off on May 24, 2019 versus the Atlanta Dream.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288586-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Wings season\nDuring the off-season, interim coach Taj McWilliams-Franklin was not retained. Brian Agler was hired from the Los Angeles Sparks to become the team's new head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288586-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas Wings season\nThe Wings started the season slowly, losing their first five games in a row. However, they turned things around, winning 4 of their next 6 to finish June with a 4\u20137 record. July proved to be disastrous for the Wings. They posted a 1\u20138 record in July only beating the Los Angeles Sparks at home. The Wings managed to turn things around in August, going 5\u20136 overall. Three of those five wins game against eventual playoff teams. The team couldn't keep the momentum going, finishing the season on a 4 game losing streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288586-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Dallas Wings season\nTheir final record of 10\u201324, was the franchises worst record since moving to Dallas, and worst record since 2012. Rookie Arike Ogunbowale proved to be a bright spot for the team. She won Rookie of the Month in June and August and lead the team in points scored per game, and assists per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288587-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas courthouse shooting\nOn June 17, 2019, a shooting occurred at the Earle Cabell Federal Building and Courthouse in Dallas, Texas, United States. No law enforcement officers or civilians were injured in the shooting, though one person sustained a superficial injury when she was taking cover. The shooter, identified as Brian Isaack Clyde, was then shot and killed by one or more federal officers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288587-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas courthouse shooting, Shooting\nA man, identified as Brian Isaack Clyde, opened fire near Earle Cabell Federal Building and Courthouse, before making his way to the glass door of the building and opening fire inside. Three officers from the Federal Protective Service returned fire. Following an exchange of gunfire, in which Clyde was fatally shot by one or more federal officers, he ran towards the parking lot and fired five more rounds before he collapsed. Federal officers performed CPR and took Clyde to the Baylor University Medical Center, approximately 2 miles (3.2\u00a0km) from the courthouse, where he was pronounced deceased. Authorities later detonated his vehicle. At the time of the shooting, Clyde was carrying more than 150 rounds of ammunition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288587-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas courthouse shooting, Shooting\nPhotojournalist Tom Fox, who works for The Dallas Morning News, was at the courthouse on assignment to take pictures of a defendant in a charter school fraud case when the shooting started; he was able to capture two photos of the suspect through a telephoto zoom lens before taking cover behind a pillar adjacent to the entrance. He took a video and additional photos of the scene after the suspect had been shot by law enforcement officers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288587-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas courthouse shooting, Perpetrator\nBrian Isaack Clyde (September 30, 1996 - June 17, 2019), a 22-year-old male, was a private first class in the U.S. Army, and was honorably discharged after serving as an infantryman from August 2015 to February 2017. According to The Dallas Morning News, he was stationed at Fort Campbell in Kentucky. He was not deployed to a war zone during his time in the military.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288587-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas courthouse shooting, Perpetrator\nAt the time of the shooting, Clyde had recently graduated from Del Mar College in Corpus Christi, Texas, with an associate degree in applied science in nondestructive testing technology.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288587-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas courthouse shooting, Perpetrator\nAlthough Clyde had not been of \"investigative interest\" to the FBI, his half-brother had contacted the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) three years before the shooting, alleging that Clyde was suicidal and had a fascination with guns. The FBI did not follow up on the tip because there was no specific threat specified. Investigations into his social media history took place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288587-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas courthouse shooting, Perpetrator, Motive\nClyde appears to have self-radicalized online, posting memes related to the incel subculture that appeals to men who feel lonely and alienated, and, ultimately, getting \"sucked into a hateful vortex that tells them that their lives are only valuable if they go out bringing death\" to others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288587-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas courthouse shooting, Perpetrator, Motive\nClyde had uploaded extremist far-right memes including ideas about the Confederate States and Nazism. Some of his posts were transphobic and others were anti-feminist. In April 2019 he posted a meme suggesting that combining eco-friendly and libertarian ideas with far-right authoritarianism, symbolized by what the Daily Beast describes as \"a green flag with a Nazi swastika in the middle\", could be the \"solution to all of our nation\u2019s political problems.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288587-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas courthouse shooting, Perpetrator, Motive\nClyde's family believed that it was a case of suicide by cop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288587-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas courthouse shooting, Aftermath\nA Maryland Air Force base was inspired by the Dallas shooting to initiate a program teaching personnel to recognize the warning signs that \"introverted, sexless individuals\" may be drawn to the \"incel\" online subculture.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288587-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas courthouse shooting, Aftermath\nOn March 18, 2020, a man pleaded guilty to threatening to assassinate the governor of New Mexico, Michelle Lujan Grisham. He cited Clyde as an inspiration for his desired attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288587-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas courthouse shooting, Aftermath\nOn May 4, 2020, Tom Fox was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News Photography for his photographs of several people fleeing, Clyde himself, and Clyde being attended to, respectively. However, the prize went to Reuters for their photography of the 2019 Hong Kong protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288588-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas mayoral election\nOn May 4, 2019, the city of Dallas, Texas, held an election to choose the next Mayor of Dallas. The election began as a nonpartisan blanket primary, no candidate took a majority of over 50% of the total vote so the two top vote-earners Eric Johnson and Scott Griggs advanced to a runoff election on June 8. Incumbent mayor Mike Rawlings was unable to run for reelection due to term limits. Dallas also concurrently elected all 14 members of its city council, and 3 of the 9 total members of the Dallas Independent School District. Johnson won the runoff with 55.61%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288588-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas mayoral election, Candidates\nThirteen candidates declared campaigns for Dallas Mayor ahead of the filing deadline. One dropped out voluntary, while three failed to qualify, which left nine candidates for the May ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288589-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dallas municipal election\nThe 2019 Dallas municipal election was an election to determine the mayor and all 14 city council members in Dallas, Texas. The election day was May 4, 2019 If no candidate takes a majority of over 50% of the total vote, the two top vote-earners will advance to a runoff election on June 8. Incumbent mayor Mike Rawlings is unable to run for reelection due to term limits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288590-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dally M Awards\nThe 2019 Dally M Awards were presented on Wednesday 2 October 2019. They are the official annual awards of the National Rugby League and are named after Dally Messenger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288590-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dally M Awards, Dally M Awards\nThe Dally M Awards are, 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 in a change from previous seasons, the Provan-Summons Medal was awarded to Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs skipper Josh Jackson for the sportsmanship he showed in consoling Wests Tigers goalkicker Paul Momirovski after he missed a goal to force golden point against the Bulldogs in round 21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288591-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Damallsvenskan\nThe 2019 Damallsvenskan was the 32nd season of the Swedish women's association football top division, Damallsvenskan. It began on 13 April 2019, and ended on 26 October. Kopparbergs/G\u00f6teborg FC are the defending champions, having won the competition in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288591-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Damallsvenskan\nKungsbacka DFF and KIF \u00d6rebro DFF were promoted from 2018 Elitettan after finishing first and second respectively. Kungsbacka makes their first appearance in Damallsvenskan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288591-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Damallsvenskan\nAll matches can be viewed worldwide for a fee at .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 70]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288591-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Damallsvenskan\nOn 20 October, the winner of Damallsvenskan was settled, when FC Roseng\u00e5rd netted one point in the league table and gained an impregnable lead with one remaining round against then relatively new closest competitor Kopparbergs/G\u00f6teborg FC. This is their 10th win of Damallsvenskan, the first club to achieve that. They immediately put a star on top of their emblem to mark this. Vittsj\u00f6 GIK had held the second place for some time but failed to hold on to it at the end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288591-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Damallsvenskan, Teams\nNotes:1 According to each club information page previously available at the Swedish Football Association website for Damallsvenskan, . Since May 2018 this is no longer present. 2 Kungsbacka DFF's home arena is really Tingbergsvallen, but because it didn't meet the requirements for Damallsvenskan, and SvFF did not grant dispensation, where particularly the lack of lightning was deemed unacceptable considering all games are broadcast, they had to relocate their games to P\u00e5skbergsvallen about 50\u00a0km away, in Varberg, instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288591-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Damallsvenskan, League table\nC Last season's champion. R Last season's runner up. P1 Promoted to Damallsvenskan from last season's Elitettan, finishing first there. P2 Promoted to Damallsvenskan from last season's Elitettan, finishing second there.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288592-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Daman indigenous land clearing protests\nOn 3 November 2019, Daman Collector Rakesh Minhas issued a Section 144 order banning peaceful assembly of four or more persons, slogan-shouting and the use of loudspeakers across the entire district of Daman and ordered the conversion of Government High School, Bhimpore and the Government Sarvottam High School, Moti Daman into 'temporary jails'. This was in response to a land ownership dispute between the local indigenous fishing community and the local administration that had confiscated their land and bulldozed their homes. The ensuing protest resulted with the detention of 70 protesters in the 'temporary jails' and another 8 arrests. Few of the adivasi fisherfolk were rehoused whilst most languished traumatised and homeless on the streets near the rubble of their razed homes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 835]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288592-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Daman indigenous land clearing protests, Demolition of indigenous people's homes\nValuable seafront land along the 700-metre (2,300\u00a0ft) stretch from Moti Daman Lighthouse to Jampore beach is claimed to be owned by adivasi fishing communities who have lived there for generations as well as by NRI Damanese predominantly living in Leicester, UK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 86], "content_span": [87, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288592-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Daman indigenous land clearing protests, Demolition of indigenous people's homes\nIn December 2018, local residents received official looking documents purportedly instructed by Praful Khoda Patel ordering the confiscation of the land and ordering the demolition of the homes to make way for development.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 86], "content_span": [87, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288592-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Daman indigenous land clearing protests, Demolition of indigenous people's homes\nWith 11,000 Damanese living the Leicester East constituency, members of the community approached their MP Keith Vaz, who flew out to Daman to meet the Administrator Praful Khoda Patel. In January 2019 Vaz reported back that, \"I had a very constructive discussion with Mr Patel. I believe that Mr Patel has a vision for Daman and he wants to develop it as a tourist and education centre. I was particularly impressed by the commitments made by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in order to enhance the development of Daman. Mr Patel promised that there would be no further demolitions until after the court has made its ruling and that he would talk to me about any further matters concerning this issue. I welcomed his constructive and positive approach.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 86], "content_span": [87, 837]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288592-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Daman indigenous land clearing protests, Demolition of indigenous people's homes\nOn 1 November 2019 with Police assistance, Rakesh Minhas oversaw the bulldozing of around 90 homes that the local administration stated were illegally constructed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 86], "content_span": [87, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288592-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Daman indigenous land clearing protests, Protests\nThe newly evicted residents erupted in street protests prompting local MP Lalu Patel to write to the Collector requesting that they \"be restored their homes at the very sites they were razed, on humanitarian grounds\". Rakesh Minhas retorted that they may apply for a 20-year housing loan under PMAY-U. The following day people engaged in peaceful protest and sat on the road at Ram Setu area. Upon approach of the authorities the protesters demanded alternative houses or flats but the authorities spoke with them and convinced them to go away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288592-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Daman indigenous land clearing protests, Protests\nBy the 3rd November, local residents joined the homeless families for peaceful protest near the football ground and shouted slogans critical of Collector Rakesh Minhas. Minhas responded by issuing a Section 144 order banning peaceful assembly of four or more persons, slogan-shouting and the use of loudspeakers across the entire district and ordered the conversion of Government High School, Bhimpore and the Government Sarvottam High School, Moti Daman into 'temporary jails'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288592-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Daman indigenous land clearing protests, Protests\nOn Monday 4 November 2019 Rakesh Minhas called a press conference and announcing - \"We have removed 90 houses that were built illegally on the coastal area on the road from Jampore to the lighthouse. Those who lost their houses can apply for houses at the Collector\u2019s office under PMAY-U. We will also arrange for the cheapest loans to the beneficiaries\u2026 There are some houses under PMAY-U ready for which the affected families would be considered on priority.\" Authorities then used water cannons to disperse the protesters from the football ground. With the protesters unmoved police resorted to a violent lathicharge detaining protesters at the 'temporary jails'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288592-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Daman indigenous land clearing protests, Protests\nBy the afternoon a large group of women protesters had gathered on the road at Ram Setu area. Police warned the protesters to leave but they didn't budge so police detained them with 70 people kept at the 'temporary jails' until evening. Eight were arrested under IPC 188, 143 and 149 and released on bail later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288592-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Daman indigenous land clearing protests, Protests\nThe following day 25 Daman Municipal Council members with four Sarpanch from different villages travelled to meet Rakesh Minhas but were denied permission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288592-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Daman indigenous land clearing protests, Protests\nThese extraordinary events garnered significant attention from the Indian Press. The most widely read English-language newspaper on earth, The Times of India, uniquely chose to interview hoteliers owners about the impact of protest on their business and had no quotes from evicted residents nor their advocates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288592-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Daman indigenous land clearing protests, Aftermath\nThe eviction victims are mostly vulnerable, uneducated, disabled, very old or very young and are left on the streets to fend for themselves. They are poorly positioned to assert their rights with many currently living on the streets near their demolished homes traumatised by their experience. The few that were offered alternative homes currently being built further inland from their demolished homes are required to pay towards the costs of the houses and monthly rent but do not have the means to do so.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 55], "content_span": [56, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288592-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Daman indigenous land clearing protests, Aftermath\nThe families affected have received exposure from the UK government registered human rights charity, Justice Upheld, who estimated that 200,000 people may be affected over time. They state that the local administration have no legal right to confiscate their land and demolish their homes. They were not consulted and no attempt was made to contact them. Their possessions were destroyed, notice was not given and legal process was not followed. Public and personal records prove the families are registered and they have been paying property tax for their land and properties to the Daman Municipal Council for generations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 55], "content_span": [56, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288592-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 Daman indigenous land clearing protests, Aftermath\nTheir property ownership was again confirmed upon the granting of Aadhaar ID cards by the government requiring verification of identity and property ownership. Despite legitimate ownership the land is not formally registered on the Government's central land records and is \u2018unregistered\u2019 land and property and open to exploitation. Registration involves a formal investigation and a lengthy legal process which can be costly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 55], "content_span": [56, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288592-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Daman indigenous land clearing protests, Aftermath\nAs of March 2021 the site is now The Fern Seaside Luxurious Tent Resort offering tourist accommodation for US$80/\u00a357GBP/6000 rupees per night. Billionaire Binod Chaudhary, Nepal's wealthiest person, owns the Fern brand via his multi-national conglomerate CG Corp Global.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 55], "content_span": [56, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288592-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Daman indigenous land clearing protests, Land Records Improvement Programmes\nThe Indian government has been trying to resolve the poor quality of land records since 1988 with little success. Digital India Land Record Modernization Programme was to resolve this but has experienced significant shortcomings. A huge number of land disputes are pending in the courts. Of the nearly one million (10 lakh) civil court cases were pending, 60 per cent are more than one year old, 34 per cent are over three years old and 20 per cent cases are over five years old.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 81], "content_span": [82, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288593-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dania Espaeva presidential campaign\nDanial Espaeva, member of the Mazhilis from 2016, was announced as a presidential nominee for the Ak Zhol Democratic Party on 24 April 2019, making her the first female in Kazakhstan history to bid for presidency. With 190 party delegates participation in the nomination, she received votes from half of the delegates while the remaining were divided among 5 men that were bidding for the nomination. This sparked controversy at the party congress to which Espaeva called it \"offensive\" and noted that no female in the Kazakh government has been involved in high-level corruption cases.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288593-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dania Espaeva presidential campaign\nThe Central Election Commission registered Espaeva as the candidate for the election on 3 May 2019 and announced her campaign platform on 12 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288593-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dania Espaeva presidential campaign, Platforms, Economic policy\nEspaeva supported to reduce interest rates in banks, as well as to end the practice of devaluation and improve the public procurement program. She also called for reduced tax rates for priority industries, particularly or mechanical engineering and to make lending more accessible to entrepreneurs with lastly, a focus on the creation of new industries in the rural areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288593-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Dania Espaeva presidential campaign, Campaign\nDespite being the first-female candidate in Kazakhstan, in an interview Espaeva was asked whether she preferred man or woman leading the country, she responded that a man should.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288593-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Dania Espaeva presidential campaign, Campaign\nEspaeva began her campaign rally by visiting a bread-baking plant in Almaty where she met workers consisted mostly of women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288594-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish Cup Final\nThe 2019 Danish Cup final was played on 17 May 2019 between FC Midtjylland and Br\u00f8ndby IF at Parken Stadium, Copenhagen, a neutral ground. The final is the culmination of the 2018\u201319 Danish Cup, the 65th season of the Danish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288594-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish Cup Final\nBr\u00f8ndby IF appeared in their 10th Danish Cup final (third consecutive) and were the defending title-holders. FC Midtjylland had never won a Danish Cup title before the match, being four times the runners-up. The winner of the final earned themselves a place in at least the second qualifying round of the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288594-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish Cup Final\nFC Midtjylland won the final after a penalty shoot-out and earned their first ever Danish Cup title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288594-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish Cup Final, Venue\nAll Cup Finals except the 1991 final (Odense Stadium) and 1992 final (Aarhus Idr\u00e6tspark) have been played in the Copenhagen Sports Park (1955\u20131990), or Parken Stadium (1993\u2013present)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288594-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish Cup Final, Background\nBr\u00f8ndby is competing in its third consecutive final, losing to F.C. Copenhagen in 2017 and capturing the title over Silkeborg IF in 2018. FC Midtjylland is appearing in its fifth final, losing all four if its previous appearances. The two teams have previously met in the 2003 and 2005 finals, and the teams share an equal 1-1-1 record during the regular season of the 2018\u201319 Danish Superliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288594-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish Cup 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, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288595-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish Darts Open\nThe 2019 Danish Darts Open was the eighth of thirteen PDC European Tour events on the 2019 PDC Pro Tour. The tournament took place at Br\u00f8ndbyhallen, Copenhagen, Denmark, from 14\u201316 June 2019. It featured a field of 48 players and \u00a3140,000 in prize money, with \u00a325,000 going to the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288595-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish Darts Open\nMensur Suljovi\u0107 was the defending champion after defeating Simon Whitlock 8\u20133 in the final of the 2018 tournament, but he lost 6\u20135 to Dave Chisnall in the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288595-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish Darts Open\nChisnall would go on to win the event, his second European Tour title and his first for 6 years, by defeating Chris Dobey 8\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288595-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish Darts Open, Qualification and format\nThe top 16 entrants from the PDC ProTour Order of Merit on 7 May will automatically qualify for the event and will be seeded in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288595-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish Darts Open, Qualification and format\nThe remaining 32 places will go to players from six qualifying events \u2013 18 from the UK Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 17 May), six from the European Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 17 May), two from the West & South European Associate Member Qualifier (held on 18 May), two from the Host Nation Qualifier (held on 13 June), two from the Nordic & Baltic Qualifier (excluding Danish players, held on 10 March), one from the East European Qualifier (held on 10 March), and one to the highest ranked PDCNB player on the PDC Order of Merit without a Tour Card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288595-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish Darts Open, Qualification and format\nFrom 2019, the Host Nation, Nordic & Baltic and East European Qualifiers will only be available to non-Tour Card holders. Any Tour Card holders from the applicable regions will have to play the main European Qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election\nGeneral elections were held in the Kingdom of Denmark on 5 June 2019 to elect all 179 members of the Folketing; 175 in Denmark proper, two in the Faroe Islands and two in Greenland. The elections took place ten days after the European Parliament elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election\nThe elections resulted in a victory for the \"red bloc\", comprising parties that supported the Social Democrats' leader Mette Frederiksen as candidate for Prime Minister. The \"red bloc\", consisting of the Social Democrats, the Social Liberals, Socialist People's Party, the Red\u2013Green Alliance, the Faroese Social Democratic Party and the Greenlandic Siumut, won 93 of the 179 seats, securing a parliamentary majority. Meanwhile, the incumbent governing coalition, consisting of Venstre, the Liberal Alliance and the Conservative People's Party whilst receiving parliamentary support from the Danish People's Party and Nunatta Qitornai, was reduced to 76 seats (including the Venstre-affiliated Union Party in the Faroe Islands).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election\nOn 6 June, incumbent Prime Minister Lars L\u00f8kke Rasmussen of the centre-right liberal Venstre party tendered his resignation, and Frederiksen was tasked with forming a new government. On 25 June, Frederiksen reached an agreement with the red bloc, and on 27 June she was appointed Prime Minister and her government, a single-party Social Democratic government, took office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Background\nAt the 2015 general election, a narrow majority was won by the Danish People's Party, Venstre, Liberal Alliance and the Conservative People's Party, colloquially known as the \"blue bloc\". They won 90 seats in the Folketing versus 89 seats for the remaining parties, all belonging to the \"red bloc\". Ten days later, Lars L\u00f8kke Rasmussen, the leader of Venstre, became Prime Minister, when Venstre formed a single-party government supported by the remaining parties in the \"blue bloc\". In November 2016, Rasmussen formed a new government, now a coalition with Liberal Alliance, and the Conservative People's Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Electoral system\nOf the 179 members of the Folketing, 175 are elected in Denmark proper, two in Faroe Islands and two in Greenland. In Denmark there are ten multi-member constituencies containing a total of 135 seats directly elected by proportional representation, with seats allocated using a modified version of the Sainte-Lagu\u00eb method and Hare quota. An additional 40 leveling seats are used to address any imbalance in the distribution of the constituency seats, and are distributed among all parties that cross the 2% election threshold, according to their national vote share.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Electoral system\nVoters could choose between casting a personal vote for a candidate, or voting for a political party. Most parties primarily choose a \"side-by-side\" option for choosing candidates, where the candidates with the most personal votes are appointed; however the Red\u2013Green Alliance, as well as other parties in a small number of consticuencies (storkredser) use a \"party list\" option, where the prioritized candidates are predetermined, with a candidate only being able to skip to the front of the list if they receive a substantial fraction (Droop quota) of the party's personal votes in the constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Electoral system\nAccording to the Danish Constitution, the 2019 election was required to be held no later than 17 June 2019, as the previous elections were held on 18 June 2015. The Prime Minister is able to call the election at any date, provided that date is no later than four years from the previous election, and this is cited as a tactical advantage for the sitting government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Electoral system\nFor a new party to become eligible to participate in the election, they must be supported by a number of voters corresponding to 1/175 of all valid votes cast in the previous election. A new party registering to contest the 2019 elections required 20,109 voter declarations to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Participating parties, Denmark\nAll nine parties that held seats in the Folketing contested the elections. Four other parties also gained ballot access: three new parties on the right and the Christian Democrats, who lost representation in the 2005 election. In October 2016, The New Right, a new right-wing party, became eligible to run in the election, and a year later, in October 2017, the Christian Democrats did likewise. The latter had participated in every election from 1971 to 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Participating parties, Denmark\nIn February 2019, the party Klaus Risk\u00e6r Pedersen, named after its founder, collected the necessary voter declarations and became eligible too, despite, breaking the rules for collection of declarations. Risk\u00e6r Pedersen found a way to circumvent a 7-day \"thinking period\" between a voter noting their support for a party and then confirming their signature in the online collection system. Even though the rules did not allow this, they contained no possibility of sanctions. Following this, all political parties in the Folketing agreed to close the loophole and build a new portal for declarations, expected to be available in the end 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Participating parties, Denmark\nIn April 2019, following unrest at N\u00f8rrebro caused by demonstrations by anti-Islamist politician Rasmus Paludan, his party Hard Line managed to collect the required signatures. Paludan and his party have been surrounded with controversy, with demonstrations containing activities like throwing the Quran around, burning the Quran and harassing Muslims. In April 2019, Paludan was sentenced for violating a paragraph in the Danish Penal Code colloquially known as the \"racism paragraph\". He had also circumvented the \"thinking period\" in the same manner as Risk\u00e6r Pedersen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Participating parties, Faroe Islands\nAll parties represented in the L\u00f8gting were eligible to contest the elections, although the Centre Party decided not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 66], "content_span": [67, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Participating parties, Greenland\nAll parties represented in the Parliament of Greenland were eligible to participate in the elections. In the previous elections, Aleqa Hammond won a seat as a Siumut candidate, but was expelled from the party in August 2016 following a case about misuse of funds from the Folketing. In April 2018, she joined Nunatta Qitornai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 62], "content_span": [63, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Campaign, Early statements\nIn October 2017, The New Right, a new right-wing political party that became eligible to run in October 2016, listed three demands for a candidate for Prime Minister to receive their support. All three demands were tightenings of the immigration policy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Campaign, Early statements\nOn 4 June 2018, the Social Democrats, the largest opposition party, stated that if they were to win the election, they wished to form a single-party government led by their leader Mette Frederiksen, i.e. not as a coalition government with the Social Liberal Party. This was done in order to both pursue traditional centre-left issues, and to have a strict immigration policy. Morten \u00d8stergaard, the leader of the Social Liberal Party, responded by saying that if the Social Democrats wanted their support, they would also need to give them concessions. The message was welcomed by the anti-immigration Danish People's Party, which supported the centre-right party Venstre in the election. Their leader Kristian Thulesen Dahl, said that this would ensure that they could get through with their immigration policy, no matter which party won the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 909]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Campaign, Early statements\nOn 26 June 2018, The Alternative, which traditionally is regarded as belonging to the \"red bloc\", stated that they no longer would support Mette Frederiksen as candidate to become Prime Minister. Instead, they would support their own political leader, Uffe Elb\u00e6k, as a way to \"pull their seats from the equation\" after the election. This was done because they did not regard the other parties' ambitions concerning climate change to be sufficient. The move was met with criticism, as Elb\u00e6k's chances are very slim, and it could risk keeping Lars L\u00f8kke Rasmussen as Prime Minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Campaign, Campaign begins\nThe election campaign started on 7 May 2019, when Prime Minister Lars L\u00f8kke Rasmussen announced that the election would be held on 5 June, which is Constitution Day. At the time of announcement, Mette Frederiksen, leader of the Social Democrats and contender to the office of Prime Minister, was sick and unable to participate in the televised debates between all party leaders held on the same evening. Instead, former minister Nicolai Wammen represented the Social Democrats in the debates. Frederiksen started campaigning on 10 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Campaign, Campaign begins\nShortly before the election was called, Hard Line, a new far-right party which wants to ban Islam, became eligible to participate in the election. In the beginning of the campaign, much attention was given to the party, and especially their leader Rasmus Paludan. Both L\u00f8kke Rasmussen and Frederiksen said that they would not base a government on their potential seats, and other party leaders rejected to cooperate with the party, should they gain seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0017-0001", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Campaign, Campaign begins\nWhile Venstre, Liberal Alliance and the Conservatives said that Hard Line should not be considered as part of the \"blue bloc\" when committee seats are distributed, the Danish People's Party were open to that possibility. On 8 May, when Paludan was guest in a TV-show, he called Mimi Jakobsen, a former politician, a \"Nazi pig\", shortly after she had said that Paludan's thoughts were \"close to Nazi a mindset\". Jakobsen threatened to sue, but ultimately decided not to.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0017-0002", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Campaign, Campaign begins\nOn 9 May media revealed that Paludan had been given a restraining order due to stalking, with more details following a week later. From 2010 to 2013 he had been stalking a 24-year-old man he met while studying Latin, and in 2015 he was sentenced a fine for offending a police officer who handled the case. Paludan declined to comment, saying it regarded his private life.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Campaign, Campaign begins\nOn 13 May the Christian Democrats announced that their leader Stig Grenov would take a leave of absence due to stress, and that deputy chairman Isabella Arendt would become acting chairman. On the first evening of the campaign, Grenov had participated in a televised debate on DR1 and was supposed to participate in another debate at TV 2, but became ill and was replaced by Arendt. She was hailed by her performance in that debate, dubbed the \"substitute from heaven\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0018-0001", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Campaign, Campaign begins\nFollowing the change in chairman, media speculated if the change was a tactical move, as Arendt was perceived to have a broader appeal than Grenov, and as a young woman could improve the party's image, but both Grenov and Arendt denied that tactics played a role in the decision. On 28 May, Grenov announced that he would step down as chairman at the party's October conference, and supported Arendt as new chairman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Campaign, Talks about an Social Democrats\u2013Venstre coalition government\nOn 16 May, L\u00f8kke Rasmussen published a book, in which he was open to a possible coalition government between the Social Democratic Party and Venstre (Danish: SV-regering). He said that he offered to be the \"grown up\", as a coalition across the political middle would be better than a government depending on the outermost political wings, but stressed that he and Venstre still campaigned for a centre-right government. The announcement was remarkable and regarded as a gamble; L\u00f8kke Rasmussen himself called it a \"game changer\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 100], "content_span": [101, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0019-0001", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Campaign, Talks about an Social Democrats\u2013Venstre coalition government\nProminent figures in Venstre, among those deputy chairman and Minister of Finance Kristian Jensen and Minister for Immigration Inger St\u00f8jberg, were deeply critical of the idea, while others supported the idea. Denmark had an SV government between 1978 and 1979, Ministeriet Anker J\u00f8rgensen III. That government, which was led by Prime Minister Anker J\u00f8rgensen of the Social Democrats, was widely regarded as a fiasco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 100], "content_span": [101, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Campaign, Talks about an Social Democrats\u2013Venstre coalition government\nThe idea of an SV-government were immediately rejected by Frederiksen, who said that the political differences are too big, and reiterated that the Social Democrats wished to form a single-party government after the election. Among the parties in the sitting government, S\u00f8ren Pape Poulsen, leader of the Conservative, said that they could not support an SV-government, and Anders Samuelsen, leader of the Liberal Alliance, said that he was worried about the turn that the election campaign had taken, and offered free membership of Liberal Alliance for all members of Venstre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 100], "content_span": [101, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0020-0001", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Campaign, Talks about an Social Democrats\u2013Venstre coalition government\nOn the other hand, the Social Liberals and the Danish People's Party welcomed the announcement, while the Red\u2013Green Alliance refused to support such a government. Pia Kj\u00e6rsgaard, speaker of the Folketing and former leader of the Danish People's Party, called for a majority government between Venstre, the Social Democrats, and the Danish People's Party, as an SV-government would be unstable and could give the Social Liberals too much influence on the immigration policy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 100], "content_span": [101, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Campaign, Talks about an Social Democrats\u2013Venstre coalition government\nOn 4 June, the day before the election, L\u00f8kke Rasmussen gave up on his plans to form a centre-right government, saying it was no longer \"realistic\". He instead made it his first priority to create a government across the political middle, in order to keep the right- and left wing away from power. He did not state which parties should be in such a government. The announcement was met with stark opposition from his coalition partners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 100], "content_span": [101, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0021-0001", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Campaign, Talks about an Social Democrats\u2013Venstre coalition government\nPape Poulsen rejected taking part in such a government, questioning what the political foundation should be while Samuelsen said that L\u00f8kke Rasmussen had \"let down\" the civic-liberal Denmark. Kristian Thulesen Dahl, leader of the Danish People's Party, said that it was paramount to them to take part in such a cooperation, so the Social Liberals and The Alternative did not influence it. He demanded that L\u00f8kke Rasmussen choose between the Social Liberals and the Danish People's Party. Frederiksen once again rejected the idea and said that \"voters must be confused\" as L\u00f8kke proposed three different governments during the election campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 100], "content_span": [101, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0021-0002", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Campaign, Talks about an Social Democrats\u2013Venstre coalition government\nMorten \u00d8stergaard, leader of the Social Liberals, said that he would be supporting Frederiksen as Prime Minister, and that he could not support L\u00f8kke Rasmussen. The day prior, the Social Liberals' vice chairman, Martin Lidegaard, had said that a government with both Venstre, the Social Democrats and the Social Liberals would be the \"dream scenario\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 100], "content_span": [101, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Results\nOverall the election was a win for the \"red bloc\" \u2013 the parties that supported Mette Frederiksen, leader of the Social Democrats, as Prime Minister. In total, the Social Democrats, the Social Liberals, Socialist People's Party and the Red\u2013Green Alliance won 91 seats. Green party The Alternative chose to go into opposition as a \"green bloc\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Results\nThe Social Democrats defended their position as the largest party, and won an additional seat despite a slightly reduced voter share. They were closely followed by Venstre, who saw the largest gains in seats, picking up an extra nine. In the \"blue bloc\", only Venstre and the Conservative People's Party saw gains, the latter doubling their seats. The Danish People's Party's vote share fell by 12.4 percentage points (pp), well over half of their support.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0023-0001", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Results\nLeader Kristian Thulesen Dahl speculated that the bad result was due to an extraordinary good election in 2015, and that some voters felt they could \"gain [their] policy elsewhere\". The Liberal Alliance saw their vote share fall by over two-thirds and became the smallest party in the Folketing, only 0.3pp above the 2% election threshold. Their leader Anders Samuelsen was not reelected and he subsequently resigned as leader, succeeded by Alex Vanopslagh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Results\nOf the new parties, only the New Right won seats, with Hard Line, the Christian Democrats and Klaus Risk\u00e6r Pedersen failing to cross the national 2% threshold, although the Christian Democrats were within 200 votes of winning a direct seat in the western Jutland constituency. On election night, Klaus Risk\u00e6r Pedersen announced that he would dissolve his party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Results\nIn the Faroe Islands, Republic (which had finished first in the 2015 elections) dropped to fourth place and lost their seat. The Union Party replaced them as the first party while the Social Democratic Party finished in second place again, retaining their seat. In Greenland, the result was a repeat of the 2015 elections, with Inuit Ataqatigiit and Siumut winning the two seats. Siumut regained parliamentary representation after their previous MP, Aleqa Hammond, was expelled from the party in 2016. Hammond later joined Nunatta Qitornai, which finished fourth and failed to win a seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Results, Seat distribution\nThe following is the number of constituency seats for each party with parenteses indicating levelling seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Government formation\nOn election night, Prime Minister Lars L\u00f8kke Rasmussen announced that his government would resign the following day. Following consultations with the political parties known as a \"Queen's round\" (Danish: Dronningerunde), Queen Margrethe II tasked Mette Frederiksen with forming a new government. At the Queen's round, the Social Liberals, the Socialist People's Party and the Red\u2013Green Alliance supported the Social Democratic leader. Government negotiations started on 7 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Government formation\nOn 19 June, the Social Democrats, the Socialist People's Party and the Red\u2013Green Alliance announced an agreement on global warming, committing to reduce Denmark's emission of CO2 by 70% in 2030. The Social Liberals decided to stay away from the meeting, as they were dissatisfied that parts were agreed before the negotiations was complete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288596-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Danish general election, Government formation\nOn 25 June, the four parties announced that they had reached an agreement, allowing Frederiksen to become Prime Minister as leader of a single-party Social Democratic government. Completed 20 days after the general election, the negotiations were the longest since 1988. Frederiksen decided not to formulate a government basis white paper, as is otherwise tradition, saying that it was sufficient with the 18-page \"political understanding\" she had agreed with her parliamentary support. On 27 June, the new cabinet was announced and took office the same day. The average age of ministers were 41.8 years, and Frederiksen herself became the youngest person to hold the office of Prime Minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288597-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Danmark Rundt\nThe 2019 Danmark Rundt (officially PostNord Danmark Rundt 2019 for sponsorship reasons) is a men's road bicycle race which was held from 21 August to 25 August 2019. It was the 29th edition of Danmark Rundt, which was established in 1985. The race was rated as a 2.HC event and formed part of the 2019 UCI Europe Tour. The race was made up of five stages over five days and includes an individual time trial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288597-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Danmark Rundt, Teams\nA total of 20 teams with 6 riders each race in the 2019 Danmark Rundt: 3 UCI WorldTeams, 10 UCI Professional Continental teams, 6 UCI Continental Teams along with a Danish national team under the Team Postnord Danmark name. PostNord is the name sponsor of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288597-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Danmark Rundt, Schedule\nThere are five stages over five days with an individual time trial on day two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288598-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Darlington Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Darlington Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of the Darlington Borough Council in England. It was held on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288599-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dartford Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Dartford Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of the Dartford Borough Council in England. It was held on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288600-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dartmouth Big Green football team\nThe 2019 Dartmouth Big Green football team represented Dartmouth College in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season as a member of the Ivy League. The Big Green were led by head coach Buddy Teevens in his 15th straight year and 20th overall. They played their home games at Memorial Field. They finished the season 9\u20131 overall and 6\u20131 in Ivy League play share of the Ivy League title with Yale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288600-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dartmouth Big Green football team, Previous season\nThe Big Green finished the 2018 season 9\u20131, 6\u20131 in Ivy League play to finish in second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288600-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dartmouth Big Green football team, Preseason, Preseason media poll\nThe Ivy League released their preseason media poll on August 8, 2019. The Big Green were picked to finish in second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288601-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Darwin Tennis International\nThe 2019 Darwin Tennis International was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the sixth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour and the 2019 ITF Men's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Darwin, Australia between 23 and 29 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288601-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Darwin Tennis International, Women's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 84], "content_span": [85, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288601-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Darwin Tennis International, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 82], "content_span": [83, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288602-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Darwin Tennis International \u2013 Women's Doubles\nRutuja Bhosale and Hiroko Kuwata were the defending champions, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288602-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Darwin Tennis International \u2013 Women's Doubles\nDestanee Aiava and Lizette Cabrera won the title, defeating Alison Bai and Jaimee Fourlis in the final, 6\u20134, 2\u20136, [10\u20133].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288603-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Darwin Tennis International \u2013 Women's Singles\nKimberly Birrell was the defending champion, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288603-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Darwin Tennis International \u2013 Women's Singles\nLizette Cabrera won the title, defeating Abbie Myers in the final, 6\u20134, 4\u20136, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288604-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Darwin Triple Crown\nThe 2019 Darwin Triple Crown (formally known as 2019 BetEasy Darwin Triple Crown) was a motor racing event for the Supercars Championship, held on the weekend of 14-16 June 2019. The event was held at Hidden Valley Raceway near Darwin in the Northern Territory and consisted of two races, 120 and 200 kilometres in length. It was the seventh event of fifteen in the 2019 Supercars Championship and hosted Races 15 and 16 of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288604-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Darwin Triple Crown\nDJR Team Penske's Scott McLaughlin became the first driver in the history of the event to win the Triple Crown by winning both races and pole position in the Top Ten Shootout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288604-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Darwin Triple Crown, Report, Background, Entry alterations\nBrad Jones Racing entered an additional Holden Commodore ZB for Jack Smith, his third wildcard entry of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288605-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Darwin shooting\nOn 4 June 2019, a mass shooting occurred in Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia. The Northern Territory Police confirmed that four people were killed in the incident and another one was injured. A 45-year-old man, Benjamin Glenn Hoffmann, was arrested and subsequently charged with murder and attempted murder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288605-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Darwin shooting, Attack\nThe attacks occurred over multiple locations starting at 5:39pm. According to one news source:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288605-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Darwin shooting, Attack\n\"Shots had rung out near Finnis Street just outside the CBD before the man moved to other locations \u2013 including the Buffalo Club, Gardens Hill Crescent, the Palms Motel, a Coles Express and Jolly Street in Woolner.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288605-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Darwin shooting, Attack\nWitnesses say the gunman entered the Palms Motel on McMinn Street, Darwin and used a pump-action shotgun to shoot through a guestroom door. According to sources, around 20 shots were fired by the suspect. Witnesses also noted that while in the motel the gunman went from \"room-to-room\" while screaming out \"Alex\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288605-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Darwin shooting, Attack\nPolice responded to the incident and the city centre near the motel remained in lock-down for an hour after the attack. The media reports that about 100 police were involved including officers from the Territory Response Group. Northern Territory Police Commissioner, Reece Kershaw described the weapon as \"a prohibited 12-gauge pump-action shotgun\", and said it may have been stolen as far back as 1997. Police say that the suspect used 7 vehicles to visit other places located in the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288605-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Darwin shooting, Suspect\nAfter the motel shooting, the suspect fled in a Toyota utility and remained at large for about an hour before being detained after notifying police of his location at the intersection of McMinn and Daly Streets. At the time of his arrest, the man, a suspected member of a motorcycle gang who had been released from prison in January, was wearing an electronic monitoring bracelet. The suspect was also taken to Royal Darwin Hospital after being injured with a knife and tasered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288605-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Darwin shooting, Suspect\nThe suspect has been identified by the media as Benjamin Glenn Hoffmann, age 45. Kershaw said that Hoffmann had been released from prison on parole in January 2019. He had been serving a 6-year prison sentence, eligible for parole after 4 years. After this he committed a minor violation of his parole conditions, breaking curfew by less than an hour, and as a result he was imprisoned again for two weeks, being released in early May. During his parole he had been drug tested, with all results negative. Police also revealed that they stopped the suspect for speeding hours before the shooting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288605-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Darwin shooting, Suspect\nThe suspect's motivation remains unclear, but Kershaw said the suspect may have been looking for certain individuals. One of the individuals may have been called \"Alex\". Police believe \"Alex\" was outside the Northern Territory at the time of the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288605-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Darwin shooting, Victims\nThe victims of the crime were all male: one man was reportedly killed at the motel, one at Buff Club, one at Gardens Hill Crescent, and one at Jolly Street.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288605-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Darwin shooting, Victims\nIn addition, at the motel, a 23 year-old woman was shot multiple times in the legs. She was helped by a witness at the scene, and later taken to Royal Darwin Hospital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288605-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Darwin shooting, Prosecution and trial\nHoffman was to stand trial in February 2020, but due to a dispute with NT Legal Aid, he had no legal representation. He is expected to plead not guilty on all counts, arguing mental impairment due to psychiatric illness. On 23 April 2020, Hoffman's lawyer indicated that he would run a defence of mental impairment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 43], "content_span": [44, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288605-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Darwin shooting, Reactions\nThe Prime Minister of Australia, Scott Morrison, commented that the shooting was not terrorism-related. Michael Gunner, Chief Minister of the Northern Territory, stated that his thoughts were with the families and friends of the victims, stating \"This is not the Darwin we know\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 31], "content_span": [32, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288606-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Davao del Sur earthquake\nAt 14:11 PST (06:11 UTC) on December 15, 2019, the province of Davao del Sur on the island of Mindanao in the Philippines was struck by an earthquake measuring 6.8 Mw. It had a maximum perceived intensity of VII (Very strong) on the Modified Mercalli Intensity Scale. At least 13 people were killed and another 210 injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288606-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Davao del Sur earthquake, Tectonic setting\nMindanao lies across the complex convergent boundary between the Sunda Plate and the Philippine Sea Plate. Part of the oblique convergence between these plates is taken up by subduction along the Cotabato Trench. The strike-slip component of the convergence is accommodated partly by the Philippine Fault System and partly by the Cotabato Fault System, a network of mainly NW-SE trending sinistral (left-lateral) strike-slip faults that form the boundary between the Cotabato Arc and the Central Mindanao Volcanic Belt. In the area of the December 2019 earthquake, the individual faults include the NW-SE trending Makilala\u2013Malungon Fault, Tangbulan Fault and the Central Digos Fault.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288606-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Davao del Sur earthquake, Earthquake\nThe earthquake was recorded as 6.8 Mw\u202f by ANSS and 6.9 Ms by PHIVOLCS. The maximum felt intensity was given as VII MMI on the ANSS ShakeMap and VII PEIS in the PHIVOLCS summary for this event. The focal mechanism indicates strike-slip faulting with either sinistral movement on a NW-SE trending fault or dextral movement on a SW-NE trending fault, but the distribution of the aftershocks are consistent with the sinistral fault plane. The earthquake may be the result of movement on the Tangbulan Fault, according to PHIVOLCS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288606-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Davao del Sur earthquake, Earthquake\nThere were a series of large aftershocks, including nine of M \u2265 5.0 in the first 48 hours after the mainshock, with the largest being an mb 5.7 event about an hour afterwards, which had a maximum felt intensity of VII (MMI).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288606-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Davao del Sur earthquake, Earthquake\nThis event followed on from a series of earthquakes that struck Mindanao during October that year. The sequence of three M>6 events affected that area to the northwest of the December earthquake. The December 15 event is likely to be related to the earlier sequence, possibly by the effects of stress transfer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288606-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Davao del Sur earthquake, Damage and casualties\nThe greatest damage from the earthquake was in the area around the epicenter, in the towns of Matanao, Magsaysay, Hagonoy and Padada. Significant damage was reported in 207out of 232 barangays in Davao del Sur, 5 in Sarangani, 3 in Sultan Kudarat and 3 in North Cotabato. This earthquake added to the damage that much of the affected area suffered during the Cotabato earthquakes in October. At least one road was declared impassable in the Matanao area, a hospital was destroyed in Hagonoy and there was significant damage to a police station and fire station in Padada. A total of 5,973 houses were destroyed in Davao del Sur, with 31,832 suffering some damage and a further 32 in North Cotabato. 397 schools and 62 health facilities were damaged in Davao del Sur, Sarangani and North Cotabato.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 849]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288606-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Davao del Sur earthquake, Damage and casualties\nA six-year-old child was crushed by a wall in the barangay of Asinan in Matanao. Three others were killed and several others were trapped in Padada when a supermarket collapsed. As of December 23, at least 13 people had been killed, one remained missing and a total of 210 people were reported injured in the quake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288606-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Davao del Sur earthquake, Aftermath\nAs of December 29, 40,424 people from 10,505 families were reported to be sheltering in a total of 102 evacuation centers after the earthquake, with a further 100,427 people (23,321 families) being assisted by friends and family.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288607-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Davidson Wildcats football team\nThe 2019 Davidson Wildcats football team represents Davidson College in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They are led by second-year head coach Scott Abell and play their home games at Richardson Stadium. They are members of the Pioneer Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288607-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Davidson Wildcats football team, Preseason, Preseason coaches' poll\nThe Pioneer League released their preseason coaches' poll on July 30, 2019. The Wildcats were picked to finish in fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 72], "content_span": [73, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288607-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Davidson Wildcats football team, Preseason, Preseason All-PFL teams\nThe Wildcats had five players selected to the preseason all\u2013PFL teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 72], "content_span": [73, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288608-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup\nThe 2019 Davis Cup was the 108th edition of the Davis Cup, a tournament between national teams in men's tennis. It was sponsored by Rakuten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288608-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup\nFor this edition, the format of the cup was changed. The main modification is the World Group took place at one location and in one week, with eighteen teams divided in six round-robin groups of three teams each, with the winners of the groups and the two best second places advancing to quarterfinals. The series between the teams in this stage featured two singles matches and one doubles match, instead of the best-of-5 series, with the matches changing from best of 5 sets to best of 3. As the World Group was taking place as one single tournament, this event had been named the 2019 Davis Cup Finals. The lower zone groups I and II were composed of single ties deciding promotion or relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288608-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup\nSpain won their sixth title (their first since 2011), defeating Canada in the final 2\u20130. Rafael Nadal received the Most Valuable Player (MVP) award for his performance in the tournament, after he won 8 of the 8 matches he participated in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288608-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup, Davis Cup Finals\nDate : 18\u201324 November 2019Venue: Caja M\u00e1gica in Madrid, SpainSurface: Hard court", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 32], "content_span": [33, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288608-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup, Davis Cup Finals\n18 nations are taking in the finals, formerly known as World Group. The qualification is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 32], "content_span": [33, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288608-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup, Davis Cup Finals\nH = Host Nation, TH = Title-Holder, 2018SF = Semi-Finalists from the 2018 tournament, WC = Wild Card", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 32], "content_span": [33, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288608-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup, Davis Cup Finals, Seeds\nThe seedings are based on the Nations Ranking of 4 February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 39], "content_span": [40, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288608-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup, Davis Cup Finals, Qualifying round\nTwenty-four teams played for twelve spots in the Finals, in series decided on a home and away basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 50], "content_span": [51, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288608-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup, Davis Cup Finals, Qualifying round\nThe 12 losing teams from the qualifying round then played at the Group I of the corresponding continental zone in September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 50], "content_span": [51, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288608-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup, Americas Zone, Group I\nThe losers go on and participate to the 2020 Davis Cup World Group I Play-offs while the winners qualify to the 2020 Davis Cup World Group I", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 38], "content_span": [39, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288608-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup, Americas Zone, Group I\n1Because of the Venezuelan financial crisis, the Venezuelan national team plays its \"home\" matches in the Miami metropolitan area in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 38], "content_span": [39, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288608-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup, Americas Zone, Group II\nThe losers go on and participate to the 2020 Davis Cup World Group II Play-offs while the winners qualify to the 2020 Davis Cup World Group I Play-offs", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 39], "content_span": [40, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288608-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup, Americas Zone, Group III\nThe first three nations qualify for the 2020 Davis Cup World Group II Play-offs", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 40], "content_span": [41, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288608-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup, Asia/Oceania Zone, Group I\nDates: 13\u201314 September, 14\u201315 September 2019 and 29\u201330 November 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 42], "content_span": [43, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288608-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup, Asia/Oceania Zone, Group I\nThe losers go on and participate to the 2020 Davis Cup World Group I Play-offs while the winners qualify to the 2020 Davis Cup World Group I", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 42], "content_span": [43, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288608-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup, Asia/Oceania Zone, Group II\nThe losers go on and participate to the 2020 Davis Cup World Group II Play-offs while the winners qualify to the 2020 Davis Cup World Group I Play-offs", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 43], "content_span": [44, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288608-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup, Asia/Oceania Zone, Group III\nThe first three nations qualify for the 2020 Davis Cup World Group II Play-offs", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 44], "content_span": [45, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288608-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup, Asia/Oceania Zone, Group III\nThe last nation is relegated to 2021 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group IV", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 44], "content_span": [45, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288608-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup, Asia/Oceania Zone, Group IV\nThe first two nations qualify for the 2021 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group III", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 43], "content_span": [44, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288608-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup, Europe/Africa Zone, Group I\nThe losers go on and participate to the 2020 Davis Cup World Group I Play-offs while the winners qualify to the 2020 Davis Cup World Group I", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 43], "content_span": [44, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288608-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup, Europe/Africa Zone, Group II\nThe losers go on and participate to the 2020 Davis Cup World Group II Play-offs while the winners qualify to the 2020 Davis Cup World Group I Play-offs", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 44], "content_span": [45, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288608-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup, Europe/Africa Zone, Group III Europe\nThe first four nations qualify for the 2020 Davis Cup World Group II Play-offs", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 52], "content_span": [53, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288608-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup, Europe/Africa Zone, Group III Europe\nThe last two nations are relegated to 2021 Davis Cup Europe Zone Group IV", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 52], "content_span": [53, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288608-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup, Europe/Africa Zone, Group III Africa\nThe first two nations qualify for the 2020 Davis Cup World Group II Play-offs", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 52], "content_span": [53, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288608-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup, Europe/Africa Zone, Group III Africa\nThe last two nations are relegated to 2021 Davis Cup Africa Zone Group IV", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 52], "content_span": [53, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288608-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup, Europe/Africa Zone, Group IV Europe\nLocation: Centro Tennis Cassa di Risparmio, San Marino, San Marino (clay)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 51], "content_span": [52, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288608-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup, Europe/Africa Zone, Group IV Europe\nThe first five nations qualify for the 2021 Davis Cup Europe Zone Group III", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 51], "content_span": [52, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288608-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup, Europe/Africa Zone, Group IV Africa\nThe first two nations qualify for the 2021 Davis Cup Africa Zone Group III", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 51], "content_span": [52, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288609-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Africa Zone Group III\nThe Africa Zone was the unique zone within Group 3 of the regional Davis Cup competition in 2019. The zone's competition was held in round robin format in Nairobi, Kenya, from 11 to 14 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288609-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Africa Zone Group III, Draw, Round Robin, Pool B\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-team ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-team ties, (a) percentage of sets won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (b) percentage of games won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (c) Davis Cup rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288609-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Africa Zone Group III, Draw, Playoffs\nThe winners of the 1st vs 2nd playoffs are promoted to Group II, the losers of the 3rd vs 4th playoff are relegated in group IV", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288610-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Africa Zone Group IV\nThe Africa Zone was the unique zone within Group 4 of the regional Davis Cup competition in 2019. The zone's competition was held in round robin format in Brazzaville, Republic of Congo, from 26 to 29 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288610-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Africa Zone Group IV, Draw, Round Robin, Pool B\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-team ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-team ties, (a) percentage of sets won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (b) percentage of games won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (c) Davis Cup rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288611-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Americas Zone Group I\nThe Americas Zone will be one of the three regional zones of the 2019 Davis Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288611-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Americas Zone Group I\nIn the Americas Zone there were three different tiers, called groups. The winners of the Group I ties in September will earn a place in the 2020 Davis Cup Qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288612-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Americas Zone Group II\nThe Americas Zone will be one of the three regional zones of the 2019 Davis Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288613-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Americas Zone Group III\nThe Americas Zone was the unique zone within Group 3 of the regional Davis Cup competition in 2019. The zone's competition was held in round robin format in Escaz\u00fa, Costa Rica, from 17 to 22 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288613-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Americas Zone Group III, Draw, Round Robin, Pool B\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-team ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-team ties, (a) percentage of sets won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (b) percentage of games won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (c) Davis Cup rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288614-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I\nThe Asia/Oceania Zone will be one of the three regional zones of the 2019 Davis Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288614-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I\nIn the Asia/Oceania Zone there are four different tiers, called groups. The winners of the Group I ties in September will earn a place in the 2020 Davis Cup Qualifiers, while the remaining nations in Groups I and II will be allocated a place within their region depending on their position in the Nations Ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288615-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II\nThe Asia/Oceania Zone was one of the three regional zones of the 2019 Davis Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288616-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group III\nThe Asia/Oceania Zone was the unique zone within Group 3 of the regional Davis Cup competition in 2019. The zone's competition was held in round robin format in Singapore, from 26 to 29 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288616-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group III, Draw, Round Robin, Pool B\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-team ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-team ties, (a) percentage of sets won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (b) percentage of games won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (c) Davis Cup rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 69], "content_span": [70, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288617-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group IV\nThe Asia/Oceania Zone was the unique zone within Group 4 of the regional Davis Cup competition in 2019. The zone's competition was held in round robin format in Amman, Jordan from 11 to 14 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288617-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group IV, Draw, Round Robin, Pool D\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-team ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-team ties, (a) percentage of sets won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (b) percentage of games won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (c) Davis Cup rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288618-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Europe Zone Group III\nThe Europe Zone was the unique zone within Group 3 of the regional Davis Cup competition in 2019. The zone's competition was held in round robin format in Athens, Greece, from 11 to 14 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288618-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Europe Zone Group III, Draw, Round Robin, Pool B\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-team ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-team ties, (a) percentage of sets won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (b) percentage of games won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (c) Davis Cup rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288619-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Europe Zone Group IV\nThe Europe Zone was the unique zone within Group 4 of the regional Davis Cup competition in 2019. The zone's competition was held in round robin format in San Marino, San Marino, from 15 to 20 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288619-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Europe Zone Group IV, Draw\nLocation: Centro Tennis Cassa di Rispamio, San Marino, San Marino (clay)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 41], "content_span": [42, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288619-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Europe Zone Group IV, Draw, Round Robin, Pool B\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-team ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-team ties, (a) percentage of sets won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (b) percentage of games won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (c) Davis Cup rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288620-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I\nThe Europe/Africa Zone will be one of the three regional zones of the 2019 Davis Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288620-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I\nIn the Europe/Africa Zone there are three different tiers, called groups. The winners of the Group I ties in September will earn a place in the 2020 Davis Cup Qualifiers, while the remaining nations in Groups I and II will be allocated a place within their region depending on their position in the Nations Ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288621-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II\nThe Europe/Africa Zone will be one of the three regional zones of the 2019 Davis Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288621-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II\nIn the Europe/Africa Zone there are three different tiers, called groups. The winners of the Group I ties in September will earn a place in the 2020 Davis Cup Qualifiers, while the remaining nations in Groups I and II will be allocated a place within their region depending on their position in the Nations Ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288622-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Finals\nThe Finals, formerly known as World Group, was the highest level of Davis Cup competition in 2019. It was held on indoor hard courts at the Caja M\u00e1gica in Madrid, Spain from 18 until 24 November. The ties were contested in a best-of-three rubbers format and were played on one day. There were two singles followed by a doubles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288622-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Finals\nCroatia were the defending champions, but were eliminated during the round robin stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288622-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Finals\nSpain won the title, defeating Canada in the final, 2\u20130. It was the Spanish team's first Davis Cup title since 2011 and their sixth Davis Cup title overall. Rafael Nadal was named the Most Valuable Player of the tournament after winning all eight of his matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288622-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Finals, Participating teams, Overview\nH = Host Nation, TH = Title Holder, WC = Wild Card", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 52], "content_span": [53, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288622-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Finals, Participating teams, Seeds\nThe seedings were based on the Davis Cup Ranking of 4 February. The top six nations were seeded and drawn into position 1 across groups A-F, the nations ranked from 7 to 12 were drawn randomly into position 2, the remaining nations were drawn randomly into position 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 49], "content_span": [50, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288622-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Finals, Team nominations\nEach nation had to submit a team of up to five players at least 20 days before the Monday of the week of the event. If a player became injured or ill severely enough to prevent his participation in the tournament before his team's first match, he would be replaced by another player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288622-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Finals, Format\nThe 18 teams are divided in six round robin groups of three teams each. The six group winners plus the two second-placed teams with the best records based on percentage of matches won (followed by percentage of sets won and then percentage of games won), will qualify for the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288622-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Finals, Group stage, Group D, Belgium vs. Australia\nNote: Gill\u00e9/Vliegen's retirement victory over Peers/Thompson counted as a 6\u20131, 6\u20130 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 66], "content_span": [67, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288622-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Finals, Group stage, Group F, United States vs. Canada\nNote: Querrey/Sock's walkover victory over Pospisil/Shapovalov counted as a 6\u20130, 6\u20130 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 69], "content_span": [70, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288623-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Finals teams\nFor the 2019 Davis Cup Finals, the 18 participating nations had to submit its team nominations to the International Tennis Federation (ITF) by 29 October 2019, 20 days before the Monday of the week of the event. Teams could nominate up to 5 players, or up to 4 additional players if the captain is also listed as a player. A maximum of 3 nominated players may be changed by 11:00 CET (10:00 UTC) on 17 November 2019, the day before the first round robin match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288623-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Finals teams\nIn the event that a player on the submitted team list suffered an injury or illness prior to the start of the tournament, that player could be replaced, provided that the tournament's Independent Doctor and Referee both confirmed that the injury or illness is severe enough to prevent the player's participation in the tournament, with final discretion resting with the Davis Cup Committee. Team nominations were announced by the ITF on 21 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288623-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Finals teams\nThe ATP ranking listed for each player is from 18 November, the Monday of the week of the Finals. Players are sorted by singles ranking, followed by doubles ranking for players without a singles ranking. Player statistics history shown covers all matches played by the players in previous Davis Cup ties before 17 November 2019, the day before the first tie of the Finals is played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288623-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Finals teams, Group E, Netherlands\n\u2020 Statistics shown for Jean-Julien Rojer include ties in which he played for the Netherlands Antilles team between 1998 and 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288624-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Qualifying Round\nThe 2019 Davis Cup Qualifying Round was held on 1\u20132 February. The twelve winners of this round qualified for the 2019 Davis Cup Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288624-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Qualifying Round, Teams\nTwenty-four teams played for twelve spots in the Finals, in series decided on a home and away basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288624-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Davis Cup Qualifying Round, Teams\nThe 12 losing teams from the qualifying round will play at the Group I of the corresponding continental zone in September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288625-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton Flyers football team\nThe 2019 Dayton Flyers football team represented the University of Dayton in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by 12th-year head coach Rick Chamberlin and played their home games at Welcome Stadium. They competed as a member of the Pioneer Football League. The Flyers finished the season 8\u20133, 6\u20132 in PFL play to finish in a tie for second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288625-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton Flyers football team, Previous season\nThe Flyers finished the 2018 season 6\u20135, 5\u20133 in PFL play to finish in a tie for fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288625-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton Flyers football team, Preseason, Preseason coaches' poll\nThe Pioneer League released their preseason coaches' poll on July 30, 2019. The Flyers were picked to finish in second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 68], "content_span": [69, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288625-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton Flyers football team, Preseason, Preseason All-PFL teams\nThe Flyers had eight players selected to the preseason all\u2013PFL teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 68], "content_span": [69, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288626-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton shooting\nOn August 4, 2019, 24-year-old Connor Betts shot and killed nine people and injured 17 others near the entrance of the Ned Peppers Bar in the Oregon District of Dayton, Ohio. Betts was fatally shot by responding police officers 32 seconds after the first shots were fired. A total of 27 people were taken to area hospitals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288626-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton shooting\nA search of the shooter's home found evidence that showed an interest in violence and mass shootings and that he had expressed a desire to commit one. Despite describing himself as a leftist and voicing his support for antifa, a preliminary assessment did not indicate that Betts had a racial or political motive. The attack occurred just 13 hours after a mass shooting in El Paso, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288626-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton shooting, Shooting\nTwo hours before the shooting, the gunman was seen entering a bar with his sibling and a friend in the downtown Oregon Historic District of Dayton. At about 12:13\u00a0a.m., he split from the two and was recorded leaving the bar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288626-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton shooting, Shooting\nAt 1:05\u00a0a.m., eyewitnesses reported that a man opened fire at the entrance of Ned Peppers Bar in the Oregon Historic District. He was carrying a firearm that included part of a semi-automatic Anderson Manufacturing AM-15 (based on the AR-15) in a pistol configuration with a shortened barrel, chambered in .223 caliber ammunition and equipped with a 100-round drum magazine. He fired 41 rounds into the crowd in less than 30 seconds, fatally shooting nine people and injuring 17 others. An additional ten people were injured by other causes, bringing the total number of injured to 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288626-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton shooting, Shooting\nAccording to Dayton Police Chief Richard Biehl, 20 seconds after the shooting began, law enforcement officers were already on the scene and engaged with the gunman. Within 32 seconds of the first shots being fired, the gunman was shot dead. An autopsy report released on December 6 showed that Betts was hit with 30 rounds. Local police evacuated many nearby night venues, and warned Dayton residents to stay away from the Oregon Historic District.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288626-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton shooting, Victims\nMiami Valley Hospital received 16 victims from the shooting, of which five were admitted, with one in critical condition. Kettering Health Network, comprising nine hospitals in the area, received nine victims, with three in serious condition and three in fair condition. By 10:00\u00a0a.m. on the same day, 15 of 27 hospitalized people had been discharged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288626-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton shooting, Victims\nPolice reported that all the fatalities occurred outside the bar on East 5th Street, and that the shooter's 22-year-old sibling was among those killed. Investigators are trying to determine if the gunman intentionally or accidentally killed his sibling, who was among the first victims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288626-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton shooting, Victims\nThe nine dead include five males and four females, six black and three white. Four of the dead were in their 20s, four more were in their 30s, and one was 57. Two of the victims who died were also shot by police. An autopsy showed that a woman who was shot by Betts was already bleeding from a fatal gunshot wound when she was struck by two bullets which were fired by police. Had she not been suffering from fatal injuries, one of the bullets which were fired by police would not have been lethal. The second victim was shot by Betts multiple times and sustained a superficial gunshot wound from police. As a result of those findings, Montgomery County Coroner Dr. Kent Harshbarger ruled that the deaths were caused by Betts and were not the result of police gunfire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288626-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton shooting, Perpetrator\nSoon after the attack, police identified the gunman as Connor Stephen Betts, a 24-year-old who lived in Bellbrook, Ohio. According to police, he had minor traffic offenses on his record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288626-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton shooting, Perpetrator\nBetts made online references about Satan and described himself as a leftist and antifa sympathizer. In the hours before he opened fire in Dayton, he \"liked\" a post in favor of gun control, and several concerning the El Paso shooting, including a tweet that called the El Paso shooter a \"terrorist\" and a \"white supremacist\". Betts was also known to have been in support of presidential candidates Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288626-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton shooting, Perpetrator\nTwo former high school classmates said Betts was suspended from Bellbrook High School after he made lists of other students he wanted to kill and rape. The \"hit list\" was discovered in early 2012 and resulted in a police investigation. He was previously bullied and had planned to shoot up the school, a classmate said. His high school girlfriend said he complained of visual and auditory hallucinations and psychosis, and was afraid of developing schizophrenia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288626-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton shooting, Investigation\nOn August 4, police and the FBI searched the shooter's home and found evidence that showed an interest in violence and mass shootings and that he had expressed a desire to commit a mass shooting. A preliminary assessment did not indicate the shooter had a racial or political motive. As of August\u00a05, 2019, police investigators stated that the investigation is ongoing and that they are not prepared to speculate about motivation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288626-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Dayton shooting, Investigation\nOn August 5, Dayton Police Chief Richard Biehl stated that: \"We have a lot of evidence still to go through ... based on where we're at now, we are not seeing any indication of race being a motive.\" Investigators are divided and have not determined whether he shot his sibling deliberately. A federal law enforcement official said that they were looking at whether the suspect was associated with incel groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288626-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton shooting, Investigation\nThe suspect had additional ammunition magazines with him, and was wearing body armor, a mask and hearing protection during the attack. He ordered the firearm used in the shooting online from Texas, and the firearm was transferred to a local firearms dealer in Ohio, where he picked it up. The firearm used was \"modified in essence to function like a rifle\", according to the Dayton Police; photos released by the Dayton Police show an AR-15 style firearm with a pistol brace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288626-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton shooting, Investigation\nOn August 15, the Montgomery County Coroner announced that Betts had cocaine, alcohol, and Xanax in his system; and he also had a vape pen and a baggie containing cocaine in one of his pockets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288626-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton shooting, Aftermath\nMembers of the Southwest Ohio Critical Incident Stress Management Team met with police who had responded to the scene to help them process the situation. The team includes mental health professionals, police officers, firefighters, medics, and chaplains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 31], "content_span": [32, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288626-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton shooting, Aftermath\nThe local blood bank asked for more donations following the shooting, and various companies promoted donation drives. Local leaders and community members held a vigil on East 5th Street on August 4, where ten doves were released, one each for each dead victim and one for the injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 31], "content_span": [32, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288626-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton shooting, Reactions, Domestic\nFollowing the shooting, Ned Peppers Bar posted a message on Instagram reading: \"All of our staff is safe and our hearts go out to everyone involved as we gather information.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288626-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton shooting, Reactions, Domestic\nPresident Donald Trump tweeted, \"God bless the people of El Paso Texas. God bless the people of Dayton, Ohio.\" In a later statement, he ordered that, following both shootings, all public U.S. flags be flown at half-staff until sunset on August 8. Regarding mass shootings, he said that the Trump Administration \"have done much more than most administrations. We've actually done a lot. But perhaps more has to be done.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288626-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton shooting, Reactions, Domestic\nMayor Nan Whaley thanked the officers for a quick response, saying that it certainly prevented more deaths. She also spoke of how hard the day would be for the city and the families affected. Ohio Senator Rob Portman and Governor Mike DeWine offered their condolences.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288626-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton shooting, Reactions, Domestic\nSenator Sherrod Brown, a Democrat representing Ohio, said \"Thoughts and prayers are not enough. We must act.\" He urged Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Republican, to start a United States Senate session on August 5 to \"vote on gun-safety laws\". Senate Minority Leader, Chuck Schumer, a Democrat, made a similar call to action. He referenced H.R.8, the Bipartisan Background Checks Act of 2019 that had passed the United States House of Representatives earlier in February, saying the Senate should also pass this. Representative Ted Lieu, a Democrat, asserted that McConnell was \"blocking\" the bipartisan proposal on \"common sense gun safety legislation\" from being voted on in the Senate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288626-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton shooting, Reactions, Domestic\nOhio House of Representatives member Candice Keller posted an essay on her personal Facebook page, blaming the shooting on several factors including recreational marijuana and the breakdown of the traditional family (due to causes including transgender rights). Her statement was criticized by Cincinnati City Council member Chris Seelbach, Butler County Sheriff Richard K. Jones, and Ohio Republican Party chairwoman Jane Timken (who called on her to resign).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288626-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton shooting, Reactions, Domestic\nFollowing the El Paso shooting, which occurred 13 hours prior, multiple Democratic 2020 presidential election candidates called for political action to eliminate gun violence in the United States; they included Cory Booker, Pete Buttigieg, Tim Ryan, Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, and Andrew Yang.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288626-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton shooting, Reactions, Domestic\nTrump visited El Paso and Dayton on August 7. In Dayton, he spoke to hospitalized victims, medical staff, and first responders. The White House published photos and videos of his trip, some of which showed him posing, smiling, and giving thumbs up gestures with his hosts. He told reporters, \"We had an amazing day. The love, the respect for the office of the presidency \u2013 I wish you could have been in there to see it.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288626-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton shooting, Reactions, Domestic\nComedian Dave Chappelle hosted a free concert for Dayton three weeks after the shootings to honor the victims and their families. More than 20,000 were estimated at the event, which included performances from artists such as Stevie Wonder, Jon Stewart, and Chance the Rapper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288626-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton shooting, Reactions, International\nThe incident was mentioned by Pope Francis during a speech in St. Peter's Square on August 4, in which he condemned attacks on defenseless people and said he was spiritually close to the victims and the families affected by the attacks that had \"bloodied Texas, California, and Ohio\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288626-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Dayton shooting, Reactions, International\nIn response to the shooting, the Consulate General of Japan in Detroit issued a notice stating that no Asians had been injured and that \"Japanese residents should be aware of the potential for gunfire incidents everywhere in the United States, a gun society, and continue to pay close attention to safety measures.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288626-0025-0001", "contents": "2019 Dayton shooting, Reactions, International\nAt least two other nations \u2013 Uruguay and Venezuela \u2014 issued similar travel warnings, with Uruguay's foreign ministry issuing a statement warning its citizens traveling in the U.S. \"to take precautions against growing indiscriminate violence, mostly for hate crimes, including racism and discrimination\", and Venezuela cautioning its citizens to postpone travel to the U.S. or to take precautions \"given the proliferation of acts of violence and crimes of indiscriminate hatred\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288627-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Daytona 500\nThe 2019 Daytona 500, the 61st running of the event, was a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race held on February 17, 2019, Contested over 207 laps -- extended from 200 laps due to an overtime finish, on the 2.5-mile (4.0\u00a0km) asphalt superspeedway. After three multiple cars crash in the last 20 laps (including the Big One on lap 191 which involved 21 cars), only 19 of the 40 cars were running at the end of the race and only 14 completed every lap. It was the first race of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season, and also marked the debut of the Ford Mustang, which Ford brought in as a replacement for the Fusion. This race was the final career start for Casey Mears.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288627-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Daytona 500\nThis Daytona 500 was the first not to feature the Earnhardt name in the starting lineup since 1978.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288627-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Daytona 500, Report\nDaytona International Speedway is a race track in Daytona Beach, Florida, that is one of two superspeedways, the other being Talladega Superspeedway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288627-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Daytona 500, Report, Background\nDaytona International Speedway is one of two superspeedways to hold NASCAR races, the other being 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, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288627-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Daytona 500, Practice, First practice (February 9)\nMartin Truex Jr. was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 45.937 seconds and a speed of 195.920\u00a0mph (315.303\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 55], "content_span": [56, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288627-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Daytona 500, Practice, Second practice (February 9)\nDarrell Wallace Jr. was the fastest in the second practice session with a time of 46.149 seconds and a speed of 195.020\u00a0mph (313.854\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 56], "content_span": [57, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288627-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Daytona 500, Qualifying\nWilliam Byron scored the pole for the race with a time of 46.319 and a speed of 194.305\u00a0mph (312.704\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288627-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Daytona 500, Gander RV Duel\nThe Gander RV Duels are a pair of NASCAR Monster Energy Cup Series races held in conjunction with the Daytona 500 annually in February at Daytona International Speedway. They consist of two races 60 laps and 150 miles (240\u00a0km) in length, which serve as heat races that set the lineup for the Daytona 500. The first race sets the lineup for cars that qualified in odd-numbered positions on pole qualifying day, while the second race sets the lineup for cars that qualified in even-numbered positions. The Duels set the lineup for positions 3\u201338, while positions 39 and 40 are filled by the two \"Open\" (teams without a charter) cars that set the fastest times in qualifying, but did not lock in a spot in the Duels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288627-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Daytona 500, Gander RV Duel\nFor championship purposes, each Duel is a full Championship Stage, except there is no playoff point awarded. The top ten drivers receive championship points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288627-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Daytona 500, Practice (post\u2013Duels), Third practice (February 15)\nKyle Busch was the fastest in the third practice session with a time of 44.936 seconds and a speed of 200.285\u00a0mph (322.327\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 69], "content_span": [70, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288627-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Daytona 500, Practice (post\u2013Duels), Fourth practice (February 15)\nPaul Menard was the fastest in the fourth practice session with a time of 44.830 seconds and a speed of 200.758\u00a0mph (323.089\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 70], "content_span": [71, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288627-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Daytona 500, Practice (post\u2013Duels), Final practice (February 16)\nMichael McDowell was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 47.012 seconds and a speed of 191.440\u00a0mph (308.093\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 69], "content_span": [70, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288627-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Daytona 500, Race\nNew England Patriots wide receiver Julian Edelman and Houston Texans linebacker J. J. Watt each had duties before the race. Watt, the race\u2019s grand marshal, became the first NFL player to give \u201cdrivers, start your engines\u201d in race history. Edelman was the race\u2019s honorary starter \u2013 something several current and former NFL players have done in year\u2019s past \u2013 as Edelman waved the green flag to signal the start of the 500. \u201cI think these guys are absolutely insane,\u201d Edelman, the MVP at Super Bowl LIII earlier that month, said before the race. \u201cFirst and foremost, they\u2019re going 200 miles an hour around for three hours straight and (are) able to focus in extreme conditions.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 22], "content_span": [23, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288627-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Daytona 500, Media, Television\nSince 2001\u2014with the exception of 2002, 2004 and 2006\u2014the Daytona 500 has been carried by Fox in the United States. The booth crew consisted of longtime NASCAR lap-by-lap announcer Mike Joy, three\u2013time Daytona 500 champion Jeff Gordon, and for the final time 1989 race winner Darrell Waltrip. Pit road was manned by Jamie Little, Regan Smith, Vince Welch and Matt Yocum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288627-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Daytona 500, Media, Television\nSpanish-language network Fox Sports LA aired the race live, with lap-by-lap announcer Jessi Losada and color analyst Rodolfo Landeros.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288627-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Daytona 500, Media, Radio\nThe race was broadcast on radio by the Motor Racing Network\u2014who has covered the Daytona 500 since 1970\u2014and simulcast on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio. The booth crew was consisted of Alex Hayden, Jeff Striegle and 1989 Cup Series champion Rusty Wallace. Longtime turn announcer Dave Moody was the lead turn announcer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288627-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 Daytona 500, Media, Radio\nHe called the Daytona 500 from atop the Sunoco tower outside the exit of turn 2 when the field raced through turns 1 and 2. Mike Bagley worked the backstretch for the Daytona 500 from a spotter's stand on the inside of the track & Kyle Rickey called the Daytona 500 when the field raced through turns 3 and 4 from the Sunoco tower outside the exit of turn 4. On pit road, MRN was manned by lead pit reporter and NASCAR Hall of Fame Executive Director Winston Kelley. He will be joined on pit road by Steve Post, Kim Coon, and Dillon Welch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288628-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Deceuninck\u2013Quick-Step season\nThe 2019 season for Deceuninck\u2013Quick-Step began in January at the Tour Down Under. As a UCI WorldTeam, they were automatically invited and obliged to send a squad to every event in the UCI World Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288629-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens football team\nThe 2019 Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens football team represented the University of Delaware in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They played as members of the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA). They were led by third-year head coach Danny Rocco, and played their home games at Delaware Stadium in Newark, Delaware, with the stadium undergoing renovations prior to the 2019 season. They finished the season 5\u20137, 3\u20135 in CAA play to finish in a tie for ninth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288629-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens football team, Previous season\nThe Fightin' Blue Hens finished the 2018 season 7\u20135, 5\u20133 in CAA play to finish tied for third in the conference. Delaware also returned to the FCS Playoffs for the first time since 2010, falling in the first round to CAA rival James Madison.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288629-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens football team, Preseason, CAA poll\nIn the CAA preseason poll released on July 23, 2019, the Fightin' Blue Hens were predicted to finish in fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 67], "content_span": [68, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288629-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013CAA team\nThe Fightin' Blue Hens had two players selected to the preseason all-CAA team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288629-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens football team, Schedule\nDelaware has scheduled 12 games in the 2019 season instead of the 11 normally allowed for FCS programs. Under a standard provision of NCAA rules, all FCS teams are allowed to schedule 12 regular-season games in years in which the period starting with Labor Day weekend and ending with the last Saturday of November contains 14 Saturdays.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 56], "content_span": [57, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288630-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Delaware State Hornets football team\nThe 2019 Delaware State Hornets football team represented Delaware State University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by second-year head coach Rod Milstead and played their home games at Alumni Stadium. They were a member of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC). They finished the season 2\u201310, 1\u20137 in MEAC play to finish in last place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288630-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Delaware State Hornets football team, Previous season\nThe Hornets finished the 2018 season 3\u20138, 2\u20135 in MEAC play to finish in a tie for eighth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288630-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Delaware State Hornets football team, Preseason, MEAC poll\nIn the MEAC preseason poll released on July 26, 2019, the Hornets were predicted to finish in ninth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288630-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Delaware State Hornets football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013MEAC teams\nThe Hornets had eight players selected to the preseason all-MEAC teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 78], "content_span": [79, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288631-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Delhi factory fire\nOn 8 December 2019, a fire occurred at a factory building in Anaj Mandi area of Delhi, India. At least 43 people died and more than 56 were injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288631-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Delhi factory fire\nThe fire started in a workshop that produced school bags and shoes. The Delhi Fire Service (DFS) received a call for help around 5:22\u00a0a.m. IST and reached the location within five minutes, but their entry to the building was prevented by the intensity of the fire and blockages to the entry points. Gas cutters had to be employed to remove the iron grilles. Thirty-five fire engines reached the location and extinguished the fire with an estimated 150 firemen involved who were able to rescue 63 people. A team from the National Disaster Response Force was deployed to assist the fire department in the rescue work.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288631-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Delhi factory fire\nAccording to the police, most of the people who died were labourers who had been sleeping inside the factory. Doctors stated that deaths were due to asphyxiation caused by smoke inhalation and carbon monoxide poisoning. The cause of the fire is being investigated. A preliminary investigation and eye witness claims have suggested an electrical short circuit may have been the cause.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288631-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Delhi factory fire\nThe factory was operating in a residential area and according to the local fire chief, the building lacked a proper fire license, and its use as a factory was illegal. The Delhi Police Crime Branch is investigating the case, and the owner of the building and his manager were arrested on the day of the fire. Arvind Kejriwal, chief minister of Delhi, announced a compensation of \u20b910 lakh (US$14,000) to the next of kin of each person that died and \u20b91 lakh (US$1,400) for the injured. Whereas, Narendra Modi, prime minister of India, also declared a compensation of \u20b92 lakh (US$2,800) lakhs rupees for dead and \u20b950,000 (US$700) thousand rupees for the injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288631-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Delhi factory fire, Fire\nThe fire occurred at the 600\u00a0sq\u00a0ft (56\u00a0m2) plot of a luggage bag factory in the Anaj Mandi area of Central Delhi in the early morning of 8 December 2019. At least 100 people were sleeping inside the factory, of whom more than 60 were rescued. According to a report from The Hindu, the fire started in the second floor of the building and quickly spread to the third and fourth floor where the workers had been sleeping. The residents of the first two floors were able to escape, but those on the third and the fourth floors were trapped, since the fire blocked their exit and the windows had iron grilles over them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288631-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Delhi factory fire, Fire\nOne worker made a phone call to his family from the building and stated that they were trapped by the fire and there was no way to escape.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288631-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Delhi factory fire, Rescue\nThe Delhi Fire Service (DFS) received a call for help around 5:22 am IST (UTC+05:30). According to the first responders of the DFS, they had reached the location within five minutes, but their entry to the building was prevented by narrow passageways and the intensity of the fire. A total of thirty five fire engines reached the area and eventually doused the fire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288631-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Delhi factory fire, Rescue\nA firefighter stated that the entry from the terrace was blocked by the locked doors, and that the windows had iron grilles. Gas cutters were employed to remove the grilles. The lane leading to the main entrance was congested and could only allow the entry of one fire engine at a time. A second staircase in the building was blocked with stacks of raw materials for the factory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288631-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Delhi factory fire, Rescue\nAn estimated 150 firemen were involved in the rescue operation and rescued 63 people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288631-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Delhi factory fire, Rescue\nA National Disaster Response Force team was deployed to assist the fire department in the rescue work. The NDRF team had searched the factory for any remaining trapped victims and swept the area with gas detectors. According to the NDRF deputy commander, the third and fourth floors were filled with smoke and the levels of hazardous carbon monoxide (CO) were found to be very high.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288631-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Delhi factory fire, Victims\n43 people died and more than 56 were injured. Two fire fighters were also injured in the incident. According to fire and police officials, the injured were shifted to Lady Hardinge Hospital, RML Hospital, LNJP Hospital, and Hindu Rao Hospital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288631-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Delhi factory fire, Victims\nAn LNJP Hospital official stated that thirty-four people were brought dead to the hospital, with smoke inhalation being the primary cause of the death. Some of the bodies were charred. He added that among the fifteen injured, nine were under observation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288631-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Delhi factory fire, Victims\nAccording to the police, most of the dead were labourers who were sleeping inside the factory and died due to asphyxiation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288631-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Delhi factory fire, Investigation\nThe state government ordered an investigation and a report be delivered within seven days. The cause of the fire is still unknown and is being investigated. According to eye witnesses and the preliminary police investigation, an electrical short circuit was the probable cause. A police official added that a large amount of plastic stored in the premises led to smoke after the fire started. The smoke caused asphyxiation and death among the residents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288631-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Delhi factory fire, Investigation\nThe luggage bag factory was operating in a residential area. According to the local fire chief, the building lacked a proper fire licence and its use as a factory was illegal. The Delhi Police filed a case against the two owners of the factory and assigned it to the Crime Branch for investigation. The owner of the building and his manager were arrested on the same day under IPC sections 304 (culpable homicide not amounting to murder) and 285 (negligent conduct with respect to fire or combustible matter).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288631-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Delhi factory fire, Investigation\nThe government of Delhi stated that Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs (MoHUA) of the Central Government of India had \"minted false claims\" about the Delhi factory fire to hide the \"corruption and inefficiency of the municipal corporation\". It also alleged that the MoHUA was defending the illegal factory. The Delhi Fire service had stated that the factory had no fire clearance or permits to operate and was illegal, and that safety equipment was unavailable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288631-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Delhi factory fire, Aftermath\nPrime Minister Narendra Modi tweeted about the incident, calling it \"extremely horrific\", and announced a compensation of \u20b92 lakh (US$2,800) to next of kin of each person that died and \u20b950,000 (US$700) for the injured. Arvind Kejriwal, the chief minister of state, reached on site to make overall assessment, and announced a compensation of \u20b910 lakh (US$14,000) to next of kin of each person that died and \u20b91 lakh (US$1,400) for the injured. Manoj Tiwari, Bharatiya Janta Party state president, announced a compensation of \u20b95 lakh (US$7,000) to the next of kin of each person that died and \u20b925,000 (US$350) to those who were injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288631-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Delhi factory fire, Aftermath\nFireman Rajesh Shukla was praised by the state Home Minister Satyendra Jain for rescuing 11 people. Shukla was an early responder and entered the building to rescue people without waiting for backup to arrive. He suffered bone injuries and was admitted to LNJP Hospital for treatment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288632-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Deloitte Tankard\nThe 2019 Deloitte Tankard, the provincial men's curling championship of Nova Scotia, was held from January 21 to 27 at the Dartmouth Curling Club in Dartmouth. The winning Stuart Thompson team represented Nova Scotia at the 2019 Tim Hortons Brier in Brandon, Manitoba, Canada's national men's curling championship. It was held in conjunction with the 2019 Nova Scotia Scotties Tournament of Hearts, the provincial women's curling championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288633-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Delray Beach Open\nThe 2019 Delray Beach Open was a professional men's tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 27th edition of the tournament, and part of the 2019 ATP Tour. It took place in Delray Beach, United States between 18 February and 24 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288634-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Delray Beach Open \u2013 Doubles\nJack Sock and Jackson Withrow were the defending champions, but Sock withdrew from the tournament due to injury. Withrow played alongside Nick Kyrgios, but lost in the quarterfinals to Radu Albot and Yoshihito Nishioka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288634-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Delray Beach Open \u2013 Doubles\nBob and Mike Bryan won the title, defeating Ken and Neal Skupski in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20135), 6\u20134. It was the first all-brothers doubles final on the ATP Tour since June 1977, when Vijay Amritraj and Anand Amritraj beat John Lloyd and David Lloyd 6-1, 6-2 at The Queen's Club in London.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288635-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Delray Beach Open \u2013 Singles\nFrances Tiafoe was the defending champion, but lost in the first round to Dan Evans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288635-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Delray Beach Open \u2013 Singles\nEvans, a qualifier, eventually reached the final but lost to Radu Albot, 6\u20133, 3\u20136, 6\u20137(7\u20139), double-faulting on championship point after squandering three championship points of his own in the tiebreaker. Albot became the first player from Moldova to win on the ATP Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288636-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Delta State Statesmen football team\nThe 2019 Delta State Statesmen football team will represent Delta State University in the 2019 NCAA Division II football season. They will be led by seventh-year head coach Todd Cooley. The Statesmen will played their home games at McCool Stadium and are members of the Gulf South Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288636-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Delta State Statesmen football team, Preseason, Gulf South Conference coaches poll\nOn August 1, 2019, the Gulf South Conference released their preseason coaches poll with the Statesmen predicted to finish in 6th place in the conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 87], "content_span": [88, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288636-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Delta State Statesmen football team, Preseason, Preseason All-Gulf South Conference Team\nThe Statesmen had three players at three positions selected to the preseason all-Gulf South Conference team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 93], "content_span": [94, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288636-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Delta State Statesmen football team, Schedule\nDelta State 2019 football schedule consists of five home and away games in the regular season. The Statesmen will host GSC foes Florida Tech, Valdosta State, West Alabama and West Georgia, and will travel to Mississippi College, North Greenville, Shorter, and West Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288636-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Delta State Statesmen football team, Schedule\nThe Statesmen will host one of the two non-conference games against Tusculum from the South Atlantic Conference and will travel to Grand Valley State from the Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288636-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Delta State Statesmen football team, Schedule\nTwo of the ten games will be broadcast on ESPN3 and ESPN+, as part of the Gulf South Conference Game of the Week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288637-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Delta State gubernatorial election\nThe 2019 Delta State gubernatorial election occurred on March 9, 2019. Incumbent PDP Governor Ifeanyi Arthur Okowa won re-election for a second term, defeating APC's Great Ovedje Ogboru, and several minor party candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288637-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Delta State gubernatorial election\nOkowa won in 23 LGAs with a total of 80.17% of popular vote, while Ogboru won in the other two of the state's 25 LGAs with a total of 18.71% of popular vote having 709,336 votes less than Okowa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288637-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Delta State gubernatorial election\nIfeanyi Okowa emerged unopposed in the PDP gubernatorial primary as the sole candidate, retaining his deputy, Kingsley Otuaro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288637-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Delta State gubernatorial election\nOf the 50 candidates who aspired for the governorship seat, 42 were male, eight were female.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288637-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Delta State gubernatorial election, Electoral system\nThe Governor of Delta State is elected using the plurality voting system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288637-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Delta State gubernatorial election, Primary election, PDP primary\nThe PDP primary election was held on 30 September 2018. Senator (Dr.) Ifeanyi Okowa, the incumbent governor, who was the party sole aspirant, emerged winner with 3,252 delegate votes. The chairperson of the PDP gubernatorial primary elections in Delta State announced there were 3,278 accredited delegates from across the state's local government areas, who cast 26 invalid votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288637-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Delta State gubernatorial election, Primary election, APC primary\nThe emergence of Chief Great Ogboru and Prof. Pat Utomi as the All Progressives Congress (APC) 2019 Delta State governorship candidates got messy, as the APC primary elections could not be held in a single venue but ran concurrently in two locations in Asaba. This crisis began early in the month of the elections. The elections returning officer at one venue announced Pat Utomi as the winner with 2,481 votes out of the 3,755 total delegate votes, followed by Rt. Hon. Victor Ochei, Dr. Cairo Ojougbuoh and Chief Great Ogboru, respectively. Great Ovedje Ogboru was, however, declared winner by the returning officer at the second venue, and said to have polled 3,292 votes of 3,515 valid votes; 129 votes were declared invalid. Ochei polled 160 votes, Utomi 26 votes and Ojougbuoh 12 votes. The elections were held on 30 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 909]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288637-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Delta State gubernatorial election, Primary election, APC primary\nAfter the elections were concluded, BusinessDay reported one ir the candidates, Hon. Victor Ochei, taking the said winner to the Federal High Court in Abuja, asking the court to nulify the results, which were nulified in April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288637-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Delta State gubernatorial election, Results\nA total of 50 candidates registered with the Independent National Electoral Commission to contest in the election. PDP Governor Ifeanyi Okowa won re-election for a second term, defeating APC's Great Ovedje Ogboru, and several minor party candidates. Okowa polled 925,274 votes representing 80.17% of total vote cast, and Ogboru 215,938 votes representing 18.71%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288637-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Delta State gubernatorial election, Results\nThe total number of registered voters in the state was 2,831,205 while 1,188,784 voters were accredited. Total number of votes cast was 1,178,335, while total number of valid votes was 1,154,188. Total rejected votes were 24,147.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288637-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Delta State gubernatorial election, Results, By local government area\nHere are the results of the election from the local government areas of the state for the two major parties. The total valid votes of 1,154,188 represents the 50 political parties that participated in the election. Green represents LGAs won by Okowa. Blue represents LGAs won by Ogboru.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 74], "content_span": [75, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288638-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Alliance Federal Council chairpersonship election\nThe 2019 Democratic Alliance Federal Council chairpersonship election was held on 20 October 2019 to elect the new Chairperson of the Federal Council of the Democratic Alliance (DA), after incumbent James Selfe had announced his retirement in June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288638-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Alliance Federal Council chairpersonship election\nThe members of the party's Federal Council elected the new chairperson. Helen Zille was elected to the position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288638-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Alliance Federal Council chairpersonship election, Background\nIn June 2019, James Selfe announced his retirement from the post of Chairperson of the Federal Council of the DA. He served in the post for almost two decades under the leadership of Tony Leon, Helen Zille and Mmusi Maimane. The leadership position is similar to that of the role of Secretary-General of the ruling African National Congress (ANC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 77], "content_span": [78, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288638-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Alliance Federal Council chairpersonship election, Background\nIn recent months, the DA had been plagued by infighting and disorder. The party unsuccessfully tried to grow its vote share in the May 2019 national elections, only to be met with its first electoral decline in its history. This consequently caused leadership uncertainty within the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 77], "content_span": [78, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288638-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Alliance Federal Council chairpersonship election, Candidates\nThe candidate nomination process closed on 4 October 2019 at around 17:00. Four candidates declared their intention to contest the election and were as follow:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 77], "content_span": [78, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288638-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Alliance Federal Council chairpersonship election, Results\nOn 20 October 2019, DA Spokesperson Solly Malatsi tweeted that Helen Zille had been elected to the post. The party soon confirmed her election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 74], "content_span": [75, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election\nThe 2019 Democratic Party leadership election was an open primary election held on 3 March 2019. The election was triggered by the resignation of Matteo Renzi on 12 March 2018, following the party's defeat at the 2018 general election. Vice Secretary Maurizio Martina was appointed Secretary in July 2018 by the National Assembly, but he resigned after few months to officially start the party's congress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election\nSix candidates were successfully nominated to stand in the Club's Conventions, held in January: Nicola Zingaretti, Maurizio Martina, Roberto Giachetti, Francesco Boccia, Dario Corallo and Maria Saladino. The first three candidates advanced to the open primary election scheduled in March, where Zingaretti won by a landslide getting more than 66% of votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Electoral process\nThe process consists of two phases: the first one in which only the members of the Democratic Party have the right to vote, thus determining the candidates who will enter the second round, where the center-left sympathizers are able to vote too. The Democratic Party is currently the only party in Italy that allows the non-members to elect the Secretary by open primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Electoral process\nThe term of office of the Secretary is usually four years, along with the National Assembly, but when the former resign in advance, the National Assembly can choose between electing another Secretary (until the natural expiration of the mandate is reached) or the early dissolution of the National Assembly itself and the convocation of a new leadership election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Electoral process\nWith the official resignation presented by Secretary Maurizio Martina on 30 October, the President must gather the members of the National Assembly within a month, which was held on 17 November on Rome after the convocation of the President, Matteo Orfini, officially starting the primaries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Electoral process\nOn the same day, the National Assembly elects the members of the \u201cNational Committee for the Congress\u201d (which will act in place of the elected bodies until the end of the leadership election), that the National Assembly has to follow, through the approval of the \u201cRules of the Primaries\u201d where are stated the rules, the dates and the procedure that the party must perform for the process of the leadership election. The National Committee also handle the internal disputes and appeals during the primary election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Electoral process\nAfter the assignment of the National Committee, their members elect a President to coordinate the activities, and they write the rules and the dates and propose them to the National Board. The election must take place within four months following the presentation of the resignation of the Secretary. On 28 November, the National Board unanimously approved the proposals made by the National Committee, setting the date of the leadership election on 3 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Electoral process, Requirements for candidacy\nAs stated in the Rules of the Primaries, to officially take part in the competition, applying candidates are required to gather signatures, by 6:00 PM on 12 December 2018, from either:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 96], "content_span": [97, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Electoral process, Requirements for candidacy\nAlong with the signatures, candidates must provide their manifesto. In a few days, the National Committee will announce the official list of the candidates and will carry out a draw to generate the official order of presentation of the candidates in the ballots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 96], "content_span": [97, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Electoral process, Closed primary\nTo be able to vote in this stage is required to be a member of the Democratic Party. The registration on the local branch closed on 28 November but it is still possible, if the member enrolled in for the previous year, to renew their membership of the party until the day their Circle Convention takes place. Along with the enrollment in the local branches, the National Committee approved the online enrollment, available only between 3 and 21 December for those who weren't members of the Democratic Party in the previous year. To prevent any electoral fraud, it is admitted to enroll only two people per credit card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 84], "content_span": [85, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Electoral process, Closed primary\nOnce the candidates are validated by the National Committee, the local branches, in a day choose individually by every branch between 7 and 23 January 2019, gather their registered members in the Circle Conventions to talk about the candidates, their manifesto and to introduce the delegates who will take part at the Provincial Conventions. The number of the delegates elected per branch is fixed by the Provincial Committee, on the basis of the average membership of the branch between 2016 and 2017. Along with the national candidate, the members will vote for the delegates linked to every candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 84], "content_span": [85, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Electoral process, Closed primary\nThe elected provincial delegates will take part in the Provincial Conventions in a date set between 29 or 30 January, to elect the delegates for the National Convention, each linked to a national candidate. Just like the Circle Conventions, the number of the delegates elected for every province are fixed by the National Committee, half on the basis of the result of the party in the latest election and half on the average membership of the province between 2016 and 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 84], "content_span": [85, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Electoral process, Closed primary\nThe National Convention will take place on 2 February; it's composed of 1,000 delegates, and it will announce the results of the votes that will be held in the Circle Conventions and will list the candidates admitted to the open primary and the National Assembly, according to one of these conditions:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 84], "content_span": [85, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Electoral process, Open primary\nThose interested in voting on 3 March for the election of the Secretary may present themselves at the polling station set up in a branch of the Democratic Party, where they can vote for the candidates, voting for one of the regional lists of delegates (who are elected proportionally to the votes obtained) for the National Assembly linked to the candidates. To take part in the election, voters have to:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 82], "content_span": [83, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Electoral process, Open primary\nThe renewed National Assembly meet up on 17 March to declare the elected Secretary, if he obtained the absolute majority of the delegates, otherwise, the delegates of the National Assembly will hold a run-off with a vote by secret ballot between the two most-voted candidates and determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 82], "content_span": [83, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Background\nIn the 2018 general election the Democratic Party, led by former Prime Minister Matteo Renzi, obtained its worst result ever: 18.7% of the vote, well behind the Five Star Movement (32.7%) and narrowly ahead of the League (17.4%). Following his party's defeat, Renzi resigned from secretary and his deputy Maurizio Martina started functioning as acting secretary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Background\nAfter two months of negotiations and the refusal of the PD to join forces with the M5S, the latter and the League formed a yellow-green government, under Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte, a M5S-proposed independent. The PD thus returned to opposition after virtually seven years and experienced some internal turmoil as its internal factions started to re-position themselves in the new context. Both Paolo Gentiloni and Dario Franceschini distanced from Renzi, while Carlo Calenda, a former minister in Renzi's and Gentiloni's governments who had joined the party soon after the election, proposed to merge the PD into a larger \"republican front\". However, according to several observers, Renzi's grip over the party was still strong and he was still the PD's leader behind the scenes. In July 2018 Martina was elected secretary by the party's national assembly and a new leadership election was scheduled for the first semester of 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 997]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Campaign\nOn 7 July 2018, the President of Lazio region, Nicola Zingaretti, announced his intention to run as party's secretary. Zingaretti was a former member of the Italian Communist Party (PCI) and Democratic Party of the Left (PDS), who served as leader of the Left Youth, the youth-wing of the PDS. He is considered a social democrat and one of the most prominent members of the PD's left-wing; for his leftist ideas, some journalists and political analysts compared him to Bernie Sanders and Jeremy Corbyn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Campaign\nZingaretti's campaign was based on a social democratic platform, whose aim was to abandon the social liberal and centrist policies promoted by Matteo Renzi and to move the Democratic Party more on the left. The campaign's main themes were social justice and fight to economic inequality; Zingaretti was supported, among others, by former Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni, who described him as a \"brave candidate who will open a new season for the centre-left\" and Dario Franceschini, the former Minister of Culture and leader of AreaDem, one of the main faction of the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Campaign\nOn 4 October, Senator Matteo Richetti, who between 2017 and 2018 served as Spokesman of the PD, announced his bid for party's leadership. He was a former member of The Daisy (DL) and a close advisor of Matteo Renzi, however he later assumed a more critical view on his premiership. Richetti is considered a centrist and social liberal politician; he is also the leader of Harambee, a PD faction founded in April 2018 with roots in the Christian left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Campaign\nOn 6 October, Cesare Damiano, former Minister of Labour in the second government of Romano Prodi, announced his candidacy as party's secretary. Damiano is a democratic socialist and former trade unionist. He has often been strongly against the policies promoted by the previous party's leadership and he wants to bring back the party on the left-wing. However, on the same day of the announcement, he added that he could withdraw his candidacy, following an agreement with Zingaretti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Campaign\nOn 8 October, Francesco Boccia, an economist and member of the Chamber of Deputies since 2008, presented his candidacy as new party's secretary. Boccia has been a long-time opponent of Renzi and Gentiloni and a close advisor of Michele Emiliano, current governor of Apulia region and former candidate in the 2017 leadership election. Boccia has always supported an alliance between the PD and the Five Star Movement, which was opposed by all the other candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Campaign\nOn 18 November 2018, Marco Minniti, the former Italian Minister of the Interior from 2016 to 2018, announced his candidacy as PD's leader. Minniti was a former member of the Italian Communist Party, however while in office, he promoted restricted policies on immigration and social security, for which he has been often criticized by left-wing intellectuals and writers, like Roberto Saviano. Minniti was supported by Matteo Renzi, former Prime Minister and party's leader, who led a liberal and centrist faction within the PD. He was also supported by former Minister of Economic Development, Carlo Calenda, who was considered by many a strong potential candidate for the leadership election, and the former Minister of Economy and Finance, Pier Carlo Padoan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 820]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Campaign\nOn 22 November, incumbent Secretary Maurizio Martina presented his candidacy as party's leader. Martina is a social democrat, member of the PD's left-wing, who was elected Secretary after the resignation of Matteo Renzi in March 2018. He also served as Italian Minister of Agriculture in Renzi and Gentiloni's governments. He was supported, among others, by Graziano Delrio, one of party's main bigwigs and former Minister of Infrastructures and Transports, who was very close to Renzi until 2017, but from whom he later distanced himself. One of Martina's main proposals is the introduction of a wealth tax for the so-called \"super-rich\" people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Campaign\nOn the next day of the Democratic National Committee meeting on 23 November, member of the Chamber of Deputies Lia Quartapelle launched a petition to move up the date of the primary election to January instead of 3 March. The proposal met the support of the former Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni, Marianna Madia, Carlo Calenda Debora Serracchiani, Pierfrancesco Majorino and the Mayor of Bergamo, Giorgio Gori. Even the candidates Maurizio Martina and Matteo Richetti welcomed the proposal, while Francesco Boccia strongly rejected the idea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Campaign\nThe race was characterized by many withdrawals. On 27 November, Senator Matteo Richetti announced his withdrawal from the race, endorsing Maurizio Martina. The day before his withdrawal, Graziano Delrio, former Minister of Infrastructures and Transports, appealed Richetti on Facebook to endorse Martina's candidacy. Richetti was selected by Martina as his deputy secretary candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0022-0001", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Campaign\nWhile, on 5 December, 17 days after having announced his candidacy, Marco Minniti withdrew from the race, saying to do so in order to facilitate the path of the party primaries and with the sole intent to encourage the election of an authoritative secretary; in January 2019, Minniti endorsed Zingaretti. On 11 December, Cesare Damiano withdrew from the race, endorsing Zingaretti, stating that his choice was motivated by a sense of unity and responsibility towards the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Campaign\nOn the same day Roberto Giachetti and Anna Ascani, with a live footage, announced their joint candidacy asking to their viewers to send them 1,500 signatures by the next day. Giachetti is a former Radical, member of the Chamber of Deputies since 2001 and former centre-left candidate for mayor of Rome in 2016 election, while Ascani is a 31 years old member of the Chamber of Deputies for Umbria. They are both strong supporter of Matteo Renzi, that, after Minniti's retirement, refused to endorse another candidate and decided to run themselves, aiming to represent all the renziani area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Campaign\nAfter the National Convention on 3 February, which saw Zingaretti, Martina and Giachetti advanced to the open primary election, Boccia endorsed Zingaretti, while Saladino endorsed Martina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Candidates, Endorsements, Nicola Zingaretti\nLuciano Andreotti, Gianluca Angelelli, Alberto Bellelli, Maino Benatti, David Bussagli, Emanuele Crestini, Simone Cretaro, Giacomo Cucini, Enzo Cuomo, Francesco De Rebotti, Paolo Festa, Emiliano Fossi, Alessandro Franchi, Giuseppe Germani, Matteo Gozzoli, Ilenia Malavasi, Maurizio Mangialardi, Nicola Marini, Vito Marotta, Simone Millozzi, Esterino Montino, Giuseppe Morini, Giulia Mugnai, Federica Nannetti, Lorenzo Piazzai, Antonio Pompeo, Mario Pupillo, Stefano Reggianini, Pierluigi Sanna, Roberto Solomita, Pietro Tidei, Alfio Todini", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 94], "content_span": [95, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Candidates, Endorsements, Nicola Zingaretti\nSilvana Amati, Gianni Cuperlo, Paolo D'Erasmo, Francesco De Angelis, Stefania Gasparini, Elisabetta Gualmini, Carlo Guccione, Vincenzo Insard\u00e0, Antonio Mastrovincenzo, Michele Mirabello, Giuliano Pisapia, Francesca Puglisi, Marina Sereni, Liana Serrani", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 94], "content_span": [95, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Candidates, Endorsements, Maurizio Martina\nCarla Cantone,Stefano Ceccanti, Andrea De Maria, Emanuele Fiano, Lorenzo Guerini, Matteo Orfini, Luca Rizzo Nervo, Ettore Rosato, Debora Serracchiani, Diego Zardini", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 93], "content_span": [94, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Candidates, Endorsements, Former candidates\nAnna Ascani,Stefano Ceccanti, Piero De Luca, Emanuele Fiano, Lorenzo Guerini, Gennaro Migliore, Alessia Morani, Alberto Pagani", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 94], "content_span": [95, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Candidates, Endorsements, Former candidates\nGiancarlo Acerbi, Pietro Amitrano, Vincenzo Ascione, Angela Bagni, Sergio Batino, Giuseppe Bencivenga, Rodolfo Bertoli, Cristian Betti, Ciro Bonajuto, Saverio Bosco, Mario Bruno, Giuseppe Canfora, Giorgio Cangiano, Pino Capalbo, Santo Caruso, Claudio Castello, Andrea Cereser, Giuseppe Cirillo, Rosalba Piera Colombo, Isabella Conti, Adamo Coppola, Alberto Crisianini, Francesco Del Deo, Marco Antonio Del Prete, Antonino Di Fuardo, Sergio Di Raimo, Enzo Ferrandino, Francesco Fiordomo, Filippo Frittelli, Pasquale Fuccio, Vittorio Gabbanini, Enrico Ioculano, Samuele Lippi, Maurilio Longhin, Vincenzo Magra, Giacomo Mangoni, Dario Mantovani, Marco Mazzanti, Francesco Menna, Paolo Micheli, Francesco Miglio, Rocchino Muliere, Sebastian Nicoli, Fabrizio Pagani, Maria Rosa Pavanello, Massimiliano Pescini, Alberto Polo, Massimiliano Presciutti, Stefania Proietti, Simone Pugnaloni, Rosaria Punzo, Santi Rando, Aurelio Russo, Dimitri Russo, Antonio Sabino, Angelo Sbrocca, Clara Scapin, Alessio Spinelli, Palmiro Ucchielli, Francesca Valenti, Gianfranco Valiante, Franco Zaccaria, Ermanno Zacchetti, Giorgio Zinno.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 94], "content_span": [95, 1208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Candidates, Endorsements, Former candidates\nFabiano Amati, Nicola Irto, Marco Leonardi, Giacomo Mancini, Pietro Mannoni, Mino Mortaruolo, Marcella Zappaterra", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 94], "content_span": [95, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288639-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Aftermath\nAccording to Il Post, the results of the popular vote were suspected of being \"almost impossible on a statistical level\", given that all three resulting percentages for each candidate are perfectly rounded numbers. The editorial staff of Il Post tried to contact the Democratic Party National Committee for further explanations but no answer was ever given.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 60], "content_span": [61, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288640-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Progressive Party presidential primary\nIn the 2019 Democratic Progressive Party presidential primary, the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) of Taiwan determined its nominee for the President of the Republic of China in the 2020 presidential election. The DPP candidate for the President was selected through a series of nationwide opinion polls held from 10 June to 13 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288640-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Progressive Party presidential primary, Background\nThe chance of incumbent President Tsai Ing-wen seeking for re-election was heavily crippled after the Democratic Progressive Party's devastating defeat in the 2018 local elections, where the DPP lost seven of the 13 cities and counties it previously held. The DPP\u2019s share of the vote also fell from 56 to 39 per cent since the 2016 presidential election. Tsai resigned as the party chairwoman after the defeat. However, Tsai kept trailing behind in the polls as the surveys found most Taiwanese would not support Tsai in the 2020 election but would support Premier Lai Ching-te, who also resigned from the premiership for the electoral defeat in January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 66], "content_span": [67, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288640-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Progressive Party presidential primary, Background\nOn 19 February 2019, Tsai Ing-wen told CNN in an interview she will run for re-election, despite facing calls from senior members of her own party to not seek re-election. Before her announcement, Tsai had received a bump in the polls after she gave a robust speech saying that her people would never relinquish their democratic freedoms, as a response to the General Secretary of the Communist Party of China Xi Jinping's speech in January describing Taiwan's unification with the mainland as \"inevitable\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 66], "content_span": [67, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288640-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Progressive Party presidential primary, Background\nOn 18 March, Lai Ching-te registered to run in the party's presidential primary, saying that he could shoulder the responsibility of leading Taiwan in defending itself from being annexed by China. This is the first time in history where a serious primary challenge has been mounted against a sitting president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 66], "content_span": [67, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288640-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Progressive Party presidential primary, Schedule\nThe primary was originally planned to be completed on 17 April 2019, and was postponed on 27 March for one week in name of President Tsai's one-week visit to three Pacific island countries. On 10 April, the DPP Central Executive Committee decided again to postpone the primary until after 22 May 2019. Expressing deep regret, Lai Ching-te claimed that this delay denied the value of democracy, and vowed to continue his campaign until the end of the primary. Former Minister of National Defense Michael Tsai renounced his DPP membership on 12 April to protest the party's decision to delay this primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 64], "content_span": [65, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288640-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Progressive Party presidential primary, Schedule\nOn 19 April, Tsai in a radio interview called on Lai to withdraw from the primary, saying things would be different, if Lai would agree to cooperate and a find solution through coordination. Lai responded by saying that he would not withdraw from the race. Amid speculation of party chairman Cho Jung-tai might resign from his post due to pressure from Tsai to cancel the primary, Lai warned the party would be very close to \"evil\" if it happens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 64], "content_span": [65, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288640-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Progressive Party presidential primary, Schedule\nOn 29 May, the DPP Central Executive Committee announced that cell phone sampling would occur in the primary polling alongside landline sampling, each accounting for a 50-percent share of the polling results. The primary polling occurred between 10 June and 13 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 64], "content_span": [65, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288640-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Progressive Party presidential primary, Results\nResults of the primary were announced on 13 June. Tsai defeated Lai by approximately 8.6 percentage points, the result was 35.68% for Tsai and 27.48% for Lai. She was formally nominated as the Democratic Progressive Party's presidential candidate on 19 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 63], "content_span": [64, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288641-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Republic of the Congo Senate election\nSenate elections were held in the Democratic Republic of the Congo on 14 March 2019 to elect the 108 Senators. Former DRC President Joseph Kabila, who stepped down from office in January 2019 following the inauguration of the recently elected F\u00e9lix Tshisekedi, has also joined the upper house of the legislature as a senator for life, for a total of 109 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288641-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Republic of the Congo Senate election, Background\nThe Senate is elected indirectly by the 780 members of the provincial assemblies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 65], "content_span": [66, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288641-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Republic of the Congo Senate election, Background\nThis Senate election was postponed one year from an earlier date in June 2012 and another year from a later date in June 2013. The Independent National Electoral Commission (CENI) planned on holding them in early 2016, but they did not occur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 65], "content_span": [66, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288641-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Republic of the Congo Senate election, Background\nOn 30 December 2018, a general election was held that resulted in opposition leader F\u00e9lix Tshisekedi being elected president. Incumbent President Joseph Kabila, in office since 2001 and whose constitutional mandate ended in 2016, stepped down from office in January 2019, when Tshisekedi was inaugurated. This was the first democratic transition of power in the DRC since it gained independence from Belgium in 1960. As a former president, Kabila will be a senator for life, according to the DRC's constitution. Kabila-allied parties gained a majority in both the National Assembly and the provincial assemblies, which were also elected on that date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 65], "content_span": [66, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288641-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Republic of the Congo Senate election, Results\nThe election for the eight seats from the provinces of North Kivu and Mai-Ndombe have been delayed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 62], "content_span": [63, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288641-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Democratic Republic of the Congo Senate election, Aftermath\nA police officer was killed during protests in the city of Mbuji-Mayi over the massive victory of the Common Front for Congo (FCC) coalition, supported by former President Joseph Kabila. Protests were also held in Kinshasa. Recently inaugurated President F\u00e9lix Tshisekedi has pledged to reform the country, but his ability to do this will be limited by the fact that the pro-Kabila FCC has the majority of seats in both the National Assembly and also the Senate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 64], "content_span": [65, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288641-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Democratic Republic of the Congo Senate election, Aftermath\nSupporters of Tshisekedi's UPDS party protested in Kinshasa and Tshisekedi's strongholds in the central DRC because they alleged that the results were rigged, and party supporters also attacked offices of FCC legislators in Kasa\u00ef-Oriental province. In Kinshasa, protests occurred outside the parliament building. Allegations have been made that provincial assemblymen were bribed to vote for the FCC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 64], "content_span": [65, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288642-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Denmark Open\nThe 2019 Denmark Open (officially known as the Danisa Denmark Open presented by Victor 2019 for sponsorship reasons) was a badminton competition which took place at Odense Sports Park in Odense, Denmark, from 15 to 20 October 2019. It had a total purse of $775,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288642-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Denmark Open, Tournament\nThe 2019 Denmark Open was the twentieth tournament of the 2019 BWF World Tour and also part of the Denmark Open championships, which has been held since 1935. This tournament was organized by Badminton Denmark with the sanction of the BWF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288642-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Denmark Open, Tournament, Venue\nThis international tournament was held at Odense Sports Park in Odense, Denmark.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 36], "content_span": [37, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288642-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Denmark Open, Tournament, Point distribution\nBelow is the point distribution table for each phase of the tournament based on the BWF points system for the BWF World Tour Super 750 event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288642-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Denmark Open, Tournament, Prize money\nThe total prize money for this tournament was US$775,000. Distribution of prize money was in accordance with BWF regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 42], "content_span": [43, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season\nThe 2019 season was the Denver Broncos' 50th in the National Football League (NFL) and their 60th overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season\nThis marked the Broncos' first season under new ownership since 1984, as longtime owner Pat Bowlen died during the offseason. The team underwent numerous coaching changes following the end of the 2018 season, as Vic Fangio became the Broncos' third different head coach since 2014. After their first 0\u20134 start since 1999, the Broncos went 7\u20135 the rest of the way, finishing at 7\u20139 and improving on their 6\u201310 record from 2018; however, they missed the playoffs for a fourth consecutive season. The team struggled with poor offensive performances, ranking in the bottom five in several statistical categories. The team underwent a quarterback carousel, and for a fourth consecutive season, scored 30 or more points only once.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Front office changes\nOn January 14, Gary Kubiak, the team's senior personnel advisor during the previous two seasons, departed for an assistant head coach/offensive advisor position with the Minnesota Vikings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Death of owner Pat Bowlen\nOn June 13, owner Pat Bowlen died at the age of 75, following a long battle with Alzheimer's disease. Bowlen, who had served as the team's majority owner since 1984, relinquished control of the team prior to the 2014 season after privately battling the disease five years prior. This resulted in Bowlen transferring control to a three-person group known as \"The Pat Bowlen Trust,\" consisting of team president/CEO Joe Ellis, team counsel Rich Slivka and Denver attorney Mary Kelly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Death of owner Pat Bowlen\nBowlen was the fastest owner to reach 300 wins, and during Bowlen's 35 seasons as majority owner, the team posted the league's second-best winning percentage (354\u2013240\u20131, .596), behind only the New England Patriots. The team also reached seven Super Bowls, winning three (XXXII, XXXIII and 50) and suffered a league-low seven losing seasons. Bowlen's death occurred two months before he was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Death of owner Pat Bowlen\nOne year before Pat Bowlen's death, two of his children expressed interest in succeeding as the Broncos' controlling owner\u2014Beth Bowlen Wallace and Brittany Bowlen. On December 2, Brittany Bowlen, 29, made her return to the Broncos' organization with a senior management position of vice president of strategic initiatives, following the end of her employment with McKinsey & Company. Ellis stated that selling the team remained an option, even with Brittany Bowlen's return to the organization.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Roster changes, Draft\nThe Broncos did not have selections in the fourth or seventh rounds\u2014see draft trades below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Roster changes, Undrafted free agents\nAll undrafted free agents were signed after the 2019 NFL Draft concluded on April 27, unless noted otherwise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 65], "content_span": [66, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Roster changes, Suspensions\nOn December 17, safety Kareem Jackson was suspended for the final two games of the 2019 season for violating the league's Policy and Program on Substances of Abuse. Jackson's suspension stems from a September 19 arrest for driving while ability impaired, which he promptly reported to the team to be investigated by the NFL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Preseason\nThe Broncos played the Atlanta Falcons in the Pro Football Hall of Fame Game on Thursday, August 1, at Tom Benson Hall of Fame Stadium in Canton, Ohio. The Broncos were represented by late owner Pat Bowlen, who died on June 13, as well as cornerback Champ Bailey. It marked the Broncos' fourth appearance in the game and the first since 2004, when John Elway was inducted into the Hall of Fame.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Schedule\nThe Broncos' schedule was announced on April 17. This marked the first time since 2010 in which the Broncos opened the season on the road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: at Oakland Raiders\nIn the season opener, the Broncos made their final visit to Oakland, prior to the Raiders' relocation to Las Vegas for 2020. The Broncos fell behind 14\u20130 in the first half against the Raiders on Monday Night Football. On the game's opening drive, Raiders' quarterback Derek Carr threw an 8-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Tyrell Williams, and running back Josh Jacobs added a 2-yard touchdown run in the second quarter. Broncos placekicker Brandon McManus missed short on a 63-yard field goal attempt just before halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 86], "content_span": [87, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: at Oakland Raiders\nThe Broncos reached the red zone on their first three possessions of the second half, but were forced to settle for field goals by McManus on each drive\u2014two 26-yarders in the third quarter and a 39-yarder midway through the fourth quarter. Wide receiver DaeSean Hamilton dropped a potential touchdown pass on the second drive. Following the second field goal, the Raiders increased their lead to 21\u20136, with Jacobs' second touchdown run of the game (a 4-yarder), and then to 24\u20139, with a 29-yard field goal by placekicker Daniel Carlson at the 4:41 mark of the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 86], "content_span": [87, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0010-0002", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: at Oakland Raiders\nAfter three red zone attempts that all resulted in short field goals, the Broncos finally reached the end zone with 2:18 remaining in the fourth quarter. Joe Flacco, in his debut as the Broncos' starting quarterback, connected on a 1\u2013yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Emmanuel Sanders to narrow the Raiders' lead to 24\u201316. However, the Broncos were unable to prevent the Raiders from running out the clock. With the loss, the Broncos opened the season at 0\u20131 for the first time since 2011, which was also a loss to the Raiders on Monday Night Football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 86], "content_span": [87, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: vs. Chicago Bears\nIn the Broncos' home opener, the only points of the first half came by way of field goals\u2014a 43-yarder by Broncos' placekicker Brandon McManus on the game's opening drive, and 43- and 52-yarders by Bears' placekicker Eddy Pi\u00f1eiro in the second quarter. The Bears increased their lead to 13\u20133 late in the third quarter, with running back David Montgomery diving for a 1-yard touchdown. For a second consecutive week, the Broncos were held without a touchdown for the first three-quarters, and were once again plagued by red-zone woes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 85], "content_span": [86, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: vs. Chicago Bears\nThe Broncos reached the red zone early in the fourth quarter, but were forced to settle on a 32-yard field goal by McManus to pull to within a 13\u20136 deficit. After forcing a Bears' punt, the Broncos were attempting to tie the game and reached the Bears' 2-yard line with 4:51 remaining; however, quarterback Joe Flacco was intercepted by Bears' cornerback Kyle Fuller. The Broncos forced another Bears' punt, and got the football back at their own 38-yard line with 2:48 remaining in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 85], "content_span": [86, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0011-0002", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: vs. Chicago Bears\nAfter burning all of their timeouts, the Broncos finally reached the end zone with 37 seconds remaining, with Flacco connecting with wide receiver Emmanuel Sanders on a 7-yard touchdown pass. The Broncos were initially planning to go for the two-point conversion, but a delay-of-game penalty pushed them back five yards. The Broncos then attempted the game-tying extra point, which McManus missed wide right; however, Bears' cornerback Buster Skrine was whistled for an offsides penalty. The Broncos attempted another two-point conversion, which was successful, with a Flacco completion to Sanders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 85], "content_span": [86, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0011-0003", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: vs. Chicago Bears\nThe Bears had one final drive, which began at their own 25-yard line with 31 seconds remaining. On the first play, Broncos' linebacker Bradley Chubb was whistled for a questionable roughing the passer penalty on Bears' quarter Mitchell Trubisky, which added 15 yards to a 5-yard completion to tight end Trey Burton. After three consecutive incomplete passes and a 5-yard penalty for having too many men on the field, the Bears faced a 4th-and-15 from their own 40-yard line. Trubisky completed a 25-yard pass to wide receiver Allen Robinson in the middle of the field to the Broncos' 35-yard line, and the Bears' final timeout was called with one second remaining. This set up the game-winning 53-yard field goal by Pi\u00f1eiro as time expired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 85], "content_span": [86, 826]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Green Bay Packers\nOn the game's opening drive, Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers launched a 40-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Marquez Valdes-Scantling. Broncos return specialist Diontae Spencer returned the ensuing kickoff to the Packers' 43-yard line, but the Broncos' offense went three-and-out on their initial possession. After forcing a Green Bay punt, the Broncos pulled even early in the second quarter, with running back Phillip Lindsay rushing for a 1-yard touchdown. The next two scoring plays came from each placekicker\u2014a 42-yard field goal by the Packers' Mason Crosby, followed by one from 30 yards by the Broncos' Brandon McManus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 88], "content_span": [89, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Green Bay Packers\nThe Broncos suffered turnovers on two of their next three possessions, and the Packers capitalized as a result. First, Broncos quarterback Joe Flacco was strip-sacked by Packers linebacker Preston Smith at the Denver 5-yard line. The Packers reclaimed the lead just before halftime, with a 7-yard touchdown run by running back Aaron Jones. Then early in the third quarter, linebacker Jaire Alexander forced a fumble off Broncos tight end Noah Fant at the Denver 37-yard line, and Jones' second rushing touchdown\u2014from 1 yard out\u2014increased the Packers' lead to 24\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 88], "content_span": [89, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0012-0002", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Green Bay Packers\nThe Broncos responded with a 12-play, 75-yard drive, with Lindsay's second 1-yard touchdown run\u2014this one on a 4th-and-goal. However, McManus hit the left upright on his extra point attempt, leaving the score at 24\u201316. After forcing the Packers to punt, the Broncos advanced to the Green Bay 38-yard line late in the third quarter; however, Flacco was intercepted by safety Darnell Savage Jr. The Packers increased their lead to 27\u201316 with less than 6 minutes to play, thanks to a 41-yard field goal by Crosby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 88], "content_span": [89, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0012-0003", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Green Bay Packers\nThe Broncos had two more possessions, but could not reach midfield on either drive\u2014both ending with Flacco getting sacked and turning over the football on downs. Flacco was sacked six times, and for a third consecutive game, the Broncos' defense failed to record a sack or force a turnover. The Broncos suffered their first 0\u20133 start since 1999. With the loss, the Broncos dropped to 0\u20136\u20131 in road games against the Packers, going 0\u20135 at Lambeau Field and 0\u20131\u20131 in two meetings in Milwaukee. To date, the Packers remain as the only team that the Broncos have never defeated on the road in their franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 88], "content_span": [89, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. Jacksonville Jaguars\nThe Broncos grabbed a 17\u20133 lead over the Jaguars by the second quarter, with quarterback Joe Flacco throwing a pair of touchdown passes\u2014a 25-yarder to tight end Noah Fant in the first quarter followed by a 7-yarder to wide receiver Courtland Sutton in the second quarter, and placekicker Brandon McManus adding a 33-yard field goal. The Broncos reached the Jaguars' 33-yard line 1:05 remaining until halftime, and were attempting to add to their lead; however, Flacco was intercepted by Jaguars' safety Ronnie Harrison, who advance the football to the Broncos' 43-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 92], "content_span": [93, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. Jacksonville Jaguars\nThis set up a 40-yard field goal by placekicker Josh Lambo just before halftime. On the opening possession of the second half, the Jaguars pulled to within a 17\u201313 deficit, with a 16-play, 75-yard drive, culminating in a 7-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Gardner Minshew II to running back Ryquell Armstead. After the Broncos went three-and-out on their first possession of the second half, the Jaguars took a 20\u201317 lead, with Minshew, starting in place of the injured Nick Foles, connecting on an 18-yard touchdown pass to tight end James O'Shaughnessy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 92], "content_span": [93, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0013-0002", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. Jacksonville Jaguars\nThe key play of the drive was an 81-yard run by running back Leonard Fournette. With 9:54 remaining in the fourth quarter, the Jaguars assembled a 13-play, 78-yard drive, with a 34-yard field goal by Lambo to increase the Jaguars lead to 23\u201317 with three minutes remaining. Six plays later, and with only one timeout remaining, the Broncos took a 24\u201323 lead, with Flacco throwing his third touchdown pass of the game\u2014an 8-yarder to Sutton with 1:38 remaining. However, for the second time in three weeks, the Broncos were unable to prevent a game-winning drive by their opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 92], "content_span": [93, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0013-0003", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. Jacksonville Jaguars\nOn the second play of the Jaguars' game-winning drive, linebacker Von Miller was whistled for a roughing the passer penalty after the Broncos forced their first fumble of the season. Lambo kicked the game-winning 32-yard field goal as time expired. After failing to record a sack in their first three games, the Broncos sacked Minshew five times, including two by Von Miller, who reached 100 career sacks in his 124th game, the fourth-fastest player to reach that landmark. With the loss, the Broncos suffered their first 0\u20134 start since 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 92], "content_span": [93, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Los Angeles Chargers\nThe Broncos jumped out to a 14\u20130 lead over the Chargers on their first two offensive possessions, courtesy of a 4-yard touchdown run by running back Phillip Lindsay, followed by a 70-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Joe Flacco to wide receiver Courtland Sutton. The Broncos reached the Chargers' 29-yard line on their third possession, but Flacco was strip-sacked by linebacker Uchenna Nwosu on the first play of the second quarter, with linebacker Jatavis Brown recovering the fumble.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 91], "content_span": [92, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0014-0001", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Los Angeles Chargers\nThe Chargers managed to get to the Denver 16-yard line on their ensuing possession, but quarterback Philip Rivers was flagged for intentional grounding on a 3rd-and-5, with the penalty pushing them back to the 30-yard line. The ensuing 48-yard field goal attempt from Chase McLaughlin was blocked by Broncos' defensive end Dre'Mont Jones. The Broncos increased their lead to 17\u20130 on their next possession, with a 40-yard field goal by Brandon McManus. The Chargers reached the Broncos' 1-yard line with seven seconds remaining before halftime, with Rivers completing a short pass to running back Austin Ekeler near the left sideline. However, Broncos' safety Kareem Jackson forced a fumble before Ekeler could break the plane of the goal line near the pylon, and the football went out of the corner of the end zone for a touchback, keeping the Chargers scoreless.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 91], "content_span": [92, 955]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Los Angeles Chargers\nAfter a series of punts to start the second half, the two teams exchanged turnovers. First, with the Broncos backed up near their own goal line, Flacco was intercepted on a deflected pass by linebacker Kyzir White, giving the Chargers a very short field at the 7-yard line. Three plays later, the Broncos returned the favor, with linebacker A. J. Johnson intercepting Rivers in the end zone for a touchback.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 91], "content_span": [92, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Los Angeles Chargers\nAfter the Broncos went three-and-out, the Chargers finally got on the scoreboard with 49 seconds remaining in the third quarter, with Desmond King returning a punt 51 yards for a touchdown\u2014the Chargers' only touchdown of the game. After McManus missed wide left on a 54-yard field goal attempt, the Chargers narrowed the Broncos' lead to 17\u201310, with a 45-yard field goal by McLaughlin. Following an exchange of punts, a 46-yard field goal by McManus increased the Broncos' lead to 20\u201310 at the two-minute warning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 91], "content_span": [92, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0015-0002", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Los Angeles Chargers\nThe Chargers attempted a rally, with a 32-yard field goal by McLaughlin with only 15 seconds remaining. However, the onside kick attempt was unsuccessful, giving the Broncos their first win of the season and snapping an eight-game losing streak dating back to last season. In addition, the Broncos earned their 500th win in franchise history and avoided their first ever 0\u20135 start. This was also the third and final meeting between the two teams at Dignity Health Sports Park\u2014the Chargers' temporary home field, prior to the Chargers' move to SoFi Stadium in Inglewood for the 2020 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 91], "content_span": [92, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. Tennessee Titans\nThe Broncos' defense recorded seven sacks, three interceptions, and for the second consecutive week, did not allow an offensive touchdown, in a 16\u20130 shutout win over the Titans. The only points of the first half came courtesy of two field goals by placekicker Brandon McManus\u2014a 31-yarder in the first quarter and a 53-yarder in the second. A 2-yard touchdown run by running back Phillip Lindsay increased the Broncos' lead to 13\u20130 late in the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 88], "content_span": [89, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. Tennessee Titans\nTitans quarterback Marcus Mariota was benched midway through the third quarter following a poor performance that included two interceptions, and was replaced by backup quarterback Ryan Tannehill. The Titans' offense did not advance past midfield until the fourth quarter, and reached the Broncos' 13-yard line with 9:22 remaining; however, Tannehill was sacked by defensive end DeMarcus Walker on a 4th-and-4. A 48-yard field goal by McManus increased the Broncos' lead to 16\u20130 with 4:57 remaining in the game. The Titans had one last offensive possession, and reached the Broncos' 5-yard line at the two-minute warning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 88], "content_span": [89, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0016-0002", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. Tennessee Titans\nFollowing an offensive holding penalty, a 10-yard sack of Tannehill by defensive tackle Derek Wolfe and an 18-yard pass completion from Tannehill to tight end Delanie Walker to the 12-yard line, Tannehill was intercepted by cornerback Kareem Jackson near the goal line, ending the Titans' rally attempt and preserving the shutout. Both teams' offenses went a combined 4-for-28 (.143) on third down\u20142-for-14 by each team. With this win the Broncos became only the second team originating in the American Football League to reach 500 career wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 88], "content_span": [89, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Kansas City Chiefs\nThe Broncos assembled a 10-play, 75-yard drive on the game's opening possession, which culminated in a 1-yard touchdown run by running back Royce Freeman. The drive was aided by a pair of penalties against the Chiefs' defense on two third-down plays. The Broncos elected for a two-point conversion attempt at the 1-yard line following an offside penalty against the Chiefs on the extra-point attempt. However, running back Phillip Lindsay was denied by the Chiefs' defense, and it was all downhill for the Broncos after that, as the Chiefs scored the final 30 points of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 90], "content_span": [91, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0017-0001", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Kansas City Chiefs\nFirst, quarterback Patrick Mahomes connected on a 21-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Mecole Hardman, which was followed by a pair of field goals by placekicker Harrison Butker\u2014a 33-yarder near the end of the first quarter and a 20-yarder midway through the second. Between the two field goals, Mahomes left the game with a dislocated patella and Broncos' punter Colby Wadman was sacked on a fake punt attempt. The Chiefs' defense then strip-sacked Broncos' quarterback Joe Flacco, with linebacker Reggie Ragland returning it 5 yards for a touchdown and a 20\u20136 halftime lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 90], "content_span": [91, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0017-0002", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Kansas City Chiefs\nMahomes was replaced by backup quarterback Matt Moore, who launched a 57-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Tyreek Hill in the third quarter, and Butker later added a 39-yard field goal in the fourth. After Broncos' placekicker Brandon McManus missed wide right on a 45-yard field goal attempt late in the second quarter, the Broncos' offense did not advance past the midfield line for the remainder of the game. In addition, Flacco was sacked nine times by the Chiefs' defense, and for a second consecutive week, the Broncos' offense performed poorly on third down, going 1-for-13 (.077).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 90], "content_span": [91, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: at Indianapolis Colts\nAfter a scoreless first quarter, the Broncos failed to capitalize on two red zone opportunities, settling for a pair of short field goals by placekicker Brandon McManus in the second quarter\u2014from 21 and 29 yards out. Colts' placekicker Adam Vinatieri, who missed wide-right on a 45-yard field goal attempt on the game's opening drive, kicked a 55-yard field goal at the end of the first half. The Broncos took the opening possession of the second half, and increased their lead to 13\u20133, with running back Royce Freeman rushing for a 4-yard touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 89], "content_span": [90, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0018-0001", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: at Indianapolis Colts\nHowever, the Broncos were held scoreless for the remainder of the game. After a 45-yard field goal by Vinatieri, Colts' running back Marlon Mack rushed for a 10-yard touchdown. However, Vinatieri missed wide-left on the extra-point attempt, keeping the score at 13\u201312. After an exchange of punts, which included the Broncos nearly blocking a punt in the Colts' end zone, Broncos' defensive end Derek Wolfe forced a fumble off Colts' quarterback Jacoby Brissett near midfield and midway through the fourth quarter; however, the Broncos were unable to capitalize, going three-and-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 89], "content_span": [90, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0018-0002", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: at Indianapolis Colts\nThe Broncos failed to convert a 3rd-and-5 at the Colts' 43-yard line at the two-minute warning, giving the Colts the football on their own 11-yard line. On the first play, Brissett evaded a sack by linebacker Von Miller, and completed a 35-yard pass to wide receiver T. Y. Hilton on the right sideline that was reviewed, but upheld by instant replay. A personal foul horse-collar tackle penalty on linebacker A. J. Johnson added 15-yards to a 5-yard pass completion from Brissett to running back Nyheim Hines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 89], "content_span": [90, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0018-0003", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: at Indianapolis Colts\nFour plays later, Vinatieri atoned for the aforementioned missed field goal and extra-point attempts by kicking the go-ahead 51-yard field goal with 26 seconds remaining. Without any timeouts, the Broncos had two offensive plays at their own 24-yard line, but failed to gain any yardage on either play. With the loss, the Broncos started with a 2\u20136 record for only the third time in franchise history\u20141983 and 2010 are the other two seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 89], "content_span": [90, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: vs. Cleveland Browns\nTwo days after quarterback Joe Flacco was placed on injured reserve, backup quarterback Brandon Allen got the start for the Broncos. He threw two touchdown passes\u2014the first one to wide receiver Courtland Sutton for 21 yards in the first quarter, and the second one a 75-yarder to tight end Noah Fant early in the second quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 88], "content_span": [89, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0019-0001", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: vs. Cleveland Browns\nThe Broncos' defense yielded four red zone opportunities by the Browns' offense in the second quarter, but forced the Browns to settle for four field goals by placekicker Austin Seibert in the second quarter\u2014the third one occurred after the Browns' defense forced a fumble deep in Broncos' territory. Broncos' placekicker Brandon McManus added a 43-yard field goal just after the two-minute warning for a 17\u201312 halftime lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 88], "content_span": [89, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0019-0002", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: vs. Cleveland Browns\nThe Broncos' defense subdued the Browns on another red zone opportunity at the 5:23 mark of the third quarter, with linebackers Todd Davis and Von Miller denying Browns' quarterback Baker Mayfield on a 4th-and-1 at the 5-yard line. The Browns unsuccessfully challenged the ruling on the field, and seven plays later, the Broncos increased their lead to 24\u201312, with a 30-yard run by running back Phillip Lindsay late in the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 88], "content_span": [89, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0019-0003", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: vs. Cleveland Browns\nThe Browns responded on their next drive, and with 10:53 remaining in the fourth quarter, Mayfield connected with wide receiver Jarvis Landry on a 9-yard touchdown to narrow the Broncos' lead to 24\u201319. The drive was aided by a defensive pass interference penalty on cornerback Chris Harris, Jr. on a 3rd-and-7 at the Broncos' 19-yard line. After forcing a Broncos' punt, the Browns reached the Broncos' 28-yard line with 3:23 remaining in the game and no timeouts, facing a 4th-and-4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 88], "content_span": [89, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0019-0004", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: vs. Cleveland Browns\nHowever, Mayfield's pass intended for Landry was incomplete, and the Broncos' ran out the clock, thanks to a critical third-down conversion by Lindsay on a wildcat formation. With the win, the Broncos entered their bye week with a 3\u20136 record, and improved to a 24\u20136 all-time record vs. the Browns (including the playoffs).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 88], "content_span": [89, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: at Minnesota Vikings\nThe Broncos took a 10\u20130 lead in the first quarter, with a 47-yard field goal by placekicker Brandon McManus and a 3-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Brandon Allen to tight end Troy Fumagalli. The lead increased to 17\u20130 early in the second quarter, with a 1-yard touchdown run by fullback Andy Janovich, who later left the game before halftime with a serious elbow injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 89], "content_span": [90, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0020-0001", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: at Minnesota Vikings\nLinebacker Shelby Harris forced a strip sack and fumble off Vikings' quarterback Kirk Cousins at the Vikings' 17-yard line; however, the Broncos were forced to settle on a 29-yard field goal by McManus with one minute before halftime. The Broncos recovered a fumble off return specialist Ameer Abdullah on the ensuing kickoff, and were hoping to increase their lead prior to halftime; however, on the next play, Allen was intercepted by safety Andrew Sendejo near the goal line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 89], "content_span": [90, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: at Minnesota Vikings\nThe second half was dominated by the Vikings, as they scored a touchdown on all four of their second half possessions. On the opening possession, Cousins connected on a 10-yard touchdown pass to tight end Irv Smith Jr. After a 41-yard field goal by McManus increased the Broncos lead to 23\u20137, the Vikings pulled to within a 23\u201320 deficit within the first five minutes of the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 89], "content_span": [90, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0021-0001", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: at Minnesota Vikings\nFirst, running back Dalvin Cook rushed for a 3-yard touchdown (with an unsuccessful two-point conversion attempt), and after a forcing a three-and-out by the Broncos' offense, Cousins launched a 54-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Stefon Diggs. After McManus missed wide right on a 43-yard field goal attempt, the Vikings took their first lead of the game, with Cousins' third touchdown pass\u2014a 32-yarder to tight end Kyle Rudolph with 6:10 remaining in the game. The Broncos began the last possession at their own 40-yard line, and with three fourth-down conversions, methodically marched to the Vikings' 4-yard line with only 10 seconds remaining in the game. However, three consecutive pass attempts into the end zone by Allen fell incomplete, ending the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 89], "content_span": [90, 856]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: at Buffalo Bills\nThe Broncos' offense gained only 134 total yards and the defense surrendered 244 rushing yards, in a 20\u20133 loss. Following a pair of field goals by Bills' placekicker Steven Hauschka\u2014a 39-yarder in the first quarter and a 23-yarder in the second quarter, Broncos' safety Justin Simmons intercepted a pass off Bills' quarterback Josh Allen. However, the Broncos' failed to capitalize, as quarterback Brandon Allen was intercepted by cornerback Tre'Davious White at the Bills' 8-yard line late in the second quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 85], "content_span": [86, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0022-0001", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: at Buffalo Bills\nAfter an 18-yard touchdown pass from Josh Allen to wide receiver Cole Beasley gave the Bills a 13\u20130 lead on the first possession of the second half, the Broncos' only scoring play was a 45-yard field goal by placekicker Brandon McManus midway through the third quarter. The Broncos' offense did not advance past their own 35-yard line for the remainder of the game, and Josh Allen added another touchdown pass\u2014a 34-yarder to wide receiver John Brown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 85], "content_span": [86, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: vs. Los Angeles Chargers\nQuarterback Drew Lock, the Broncos' second-round draft selection, made his NFL debut, after missing the first eleven games due to a sprained thumb sustained during the preseason. Lock replaced Brandon Allen, who started the previous three games, and Lock connected on a pair of touchdowns to wide receiver Courtland Sutton in the first quarter\u2014a 26- and a 5-yarder. The latter touchdown occurred after an interception of Chargers' quarterback Philip Rivers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 93], "content_span": [94, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0023-0001", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: vs. Los Angeles Chargers\nFollowing an exchange of field goals\u2014a 30-yarder by the Chargers' Michael Badgley and a 31-yarder by the Broncos' Brandon McManus, Rivers threw a 30-yard touchdown pass to running back Austin Ekeler to narrow the Broncos' lead to 17\u201310 just before halftime. Following a scoreless third quarter, a 36-yard touchdown pass from Rivers to wide receiver Keenan Allen tied the game at 17\u201317 early in the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 93], "content_span": [94, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0023-0002", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: vs. Los Angeles Chargers\nOn the Broncos' next possession, Lock was intercepted by Chargers' linebacker Denzel Perryman; however, the Chargers gained only one yard and failed to capitalize, as Badgley hit the left upright on a 55-yard field goal attempt. The Broncos re-gained the lead with a 52-yard field goal by McManus at the 4:31 mark of the fourth quarter. However, the Chargers responded, as Badgley redeemed himself with a 46-yard field goal with only 19 seconds remaining in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 93], "content_span": [94, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0023-0003", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: vs. Los Angeles Chargers\nThe Broncos had one final possession, and instead of kneeling down for an overtime period, Lock attempted a deep pass to Sutton that was incomplete at the Chargers' 35-yard line with only three seconds remaining. However, Chargers' cornerback Casey Hayward was flagged for pass interference, and after the Chargers called their final timeout, McManus kicked the game-winning 53-yard field goal as time expired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 93], "content_span": [94, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: at Houston Texans\nQuarterback Drew Lock threw for 309 yards and three touchdown passes, and the defense forced three turnovers, including a 70-yard fumble return for a touchdown by cornerback Kareem Jackson, in a surprising and dominating win over the Texans. The Broncos built a 38\u20133 lead after a 1-yard touchdown run by running back Phillip Lindsay early in the third quarter, despite surrendering three-second-half touchdowns to Texans' quarterback Deshaun Watson\u2014one passing and two rushing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 86], "content_span": [87, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0024-0001", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: at Houston Texans\nThe Broncos snapped a 21-game streak of failing to reach 30 or more points that dated back to last season, and this was the only game during the 2019 season in which the Broncos scored 30 or more points. In addition, Lock became the first rookie quarterback in NFL history to achieve 300 passing yards and three touchdown passes in his first road start.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 86], "content_span": [87, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Kansas City Chiefs\nThe same offensive struggles that had plagued the Broncos all season, prior to their Week 14 win over the Texans, resurfaced in snowy conditions vs. the Chiefs at Arrowhead Stadium. The Broncos' only managed a 32-yard field goal by placekicker Brandon McManus late in the second quarter, after falling behind 12\u20130. Chiefs' quarterback Patrick Mahomes connected on a pair of touchdown passes to wide receiver Tyreek Hill\u2014a 41-yarder on their opening possession and a 5-yarder in the third quarter that put the game out of reach. With the loss, the Broncos were officially eliminated from postseason contention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 90], "content_span": [91, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: vs. Detroit Lions\nThe Broncos fell behind 10\u20130 to the Lions, after a 26-yard field goal by placekicker Matt Prater in the first quarter, followed in the second quarter by return specialist Jamal Agnew returning a punt 64 yards for a touchdown. The Broncos responded, with a 1-yard touchdown run by running back Royce Freeman and a 34-yard field goal by placekicker Brandon McManus\u2014the latter just before halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 86], "content_span": [87, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0026-0001", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: vs. Detroit Lions\nAfter a 26-yard field goal by McManus gave the Broncos a 13\u201310 lead, the Lions re-claimed the lead later in the third quarter, with quarterback David Blough, starting in place of the injured Matthew Stafford, connecting on a 3-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Kenny Golladay. However, the Broncos took the lead for good early in the fourth quarter, with quarterback Drew Lock completing a shovel pass to wide receiver DaeSean Hamilton for a 3-yard touchdown. The Broncos later added to their lead, with a 27-yard touchdown run by running back Phillip Lindsay with 6:39 remaining in the game. The Lions' offense did not advance past their own 30-yard line on either of their final two possessions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 86], "content_span": [87, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Oakland Raiders\nIn the Broncos' season finale, they faced the Oakland Raiders for the final time\u2014home or away\u2014prior to the Raiders' relocation to Las Vegas for 2020. The Raiders got on the scoreboard early in the second quarter, with a 23-yard field goal by placekicker Daniel Carlson, who missed wide left on a 39-yard attempt midway through the first quarter. The Broncos responded, with a 43-yard field goal by placekicker Brandon McManus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 88], "content_span": [89, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0027-0001", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Oakland Raiders\nThe Raiders faced a 3rd-and-goal at the Broncos' 5-yard line on their next possession, and a 5-yard pass from quarterback Derek Carr to wide receiver Hunter Renfrow was initially ruled a touchdown. However, after a booth review, Renfrow was ruled down at the 1-yard line. On the very next play, fullback Alec Ingold was stopped inches short of the goal line on fourth down by the Broncos' defense. The Raiders thought Ingold had broken the plane of the goal line, and unsuccessfully challenged the ruling of the play, resulting in a turnover on downs. After a fumble on the Raiders' next possession, the Broncos took advantage, with a 1-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Drew Lock to tight end Andrew Beck just before halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 88], "content_span": [89, 819]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Oakland Raiders\nThe Broncos increased their lead to 16\u20133, with a pair of field goals by McManus\u2014a 49-yarder in the third quarter, followed by a 51-yarder on the first play of the fourth quarter. The Raiders responded with a pair of field goals by Carlson\u2014from 33 and 28 yards out; the latter occurring after a fumble by Lock. After a Raiders' turnover on downs at their own 27-yard line, the Broncos attempted to either the run out the clock or add to their lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 88], "content_span": [89, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0028-0001", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Oakland Raiders\nHowever, after a false start and an unnecessary roughness penalty on offensive tackle Garett Bolles pushes the Broncos back 15 yards, McManus missed wide-right on a 57-yard field goal attempt, giving the Raiders one last possession at their own 47-yard line. On the eighth play of the drive, the Raiders finally reached the end zone, with a 3-yard pass from Carr to Renfrow to pull to within a 16\u201315 deficit with 11 seconds remaining in the game. Instead on sending the game to overtime, the Raiders decided to go for a potential game-winning two-point conversion attempt. However, Carr's pass attempt was batted down by nose tackle Shelby Harris, and the Raiders' ensuing onside kick attempt was unsuccessful, giving the Broncos the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 88], "content_span": [89, 827]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Quarterback carousel\nFor the second time in three seasons, the Broncos underwent multiple changes at the quarterback position. The team traded for former Baltimore Ravens' quarterback Joe Flacco during the offseason. However, he threw for 1,822 yards and only six touchdown passes, prior to discovery of a herniated disc in his neck that ended his season following the team's Week 8 loss to the Indianapolis Colts. Backup quarterback Brandon Allen took over, beginning with their Week 9 win over the Cleveland Browns, and in three starts, threw for 515 yards and three touchdown passes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0029-0001", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Quarterback carousel\nFollowing a poor performance during the Broncos' Week 12 loss to the Buffalo Bills, Allen was replaced by Drew Lock, the team's second-round draft selection. Lock missed the first eleven games due to a sprained thumb that he sustained during the preseason, and he made his NFL debut on December 1, leading the Broncos to a 4\u20131 record in their last five games. Lock became the Broncos' seventh different starting quarterback since Week 9 of the 2017 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Awards and honors, Pro Bowl and All-Pro selections\nLinebacker Von Miller was selected to the 2020 Pro Bowl, while wide receiver Courtland Sutton, safety Kareem Jackson and return specialist Diontae Spencer were named alternates. Sutton was later added to the Pro Bowl roster as an injury replacement for Houston Texans' wide receiver DeAndre Hopkins, becoming the fastest wide receiver in Broncos' franchise history to make his first Pro Bowl\u2014in his second season. Safety Justin Simmons was voted to the 2019 All-Pro Team and named to the Second Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 78], "content_span": [79, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288643-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Broncos season, Other news and notes\nOn September 4, Broncos Stadium at Mile High was rebranded as Empower Field at Mile High. The Broncos had been seeking a long-term naming rights partner for their home field since sporting goods retailer Sports Authority went bankrupt in 2016. Empower Retirement, a retirement plan provider that is based in Denver, had served as a team sponsor since 2015, with the Broncos agreeing to terms on a 21-year deal that will run through 2039, though financial terms were undisclosed. This marks the third naming rights change for the Broncos' home field, following \"Invesco Field at Mile High\" (2001\u20132010), \"Sports Authority Field at Mile High\" (2011\u20132017) and \"Broncos Stadium at Mile High\"\u2014the latter of which was used on a temporary basis for the 2018 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 806]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288644-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Outlaws season\nThe 2019 Denver Outlaws season was the fourteenth season for the Outlaws franchise of Major League Lacrosse. It was also the first season under head coach Tony Seaman, who previously served as general manager before B.J. O'Hara took the head coaching job for the New York Lizards. The Denver Outlaws had a very strong team, having 7 players go to the All Star game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288644-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Outlaws season\nComing off of a 2018 championship season where the Outlaws again got off to a slow start (1-4) before rattling off a six-game win streak in the regular season and two postseason upsets over the second and top-seeded Chesapeake Bayhawks and Dallas Rattlers, hoisting the Steinfeld Trophy for the third time in five years on August 18 after defeating the Rattlers, 16-12 at MUSC Health Stadium in Charleston, South Carolina, the Outlaws finished with a 9-7 record and returned to the championship game for the fourth consecutive year but would lose to the Chesapeake Bayhawks in a heartbreaker by the score of 10-9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288644-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Outlaws season\nWith the season starting six weeks later in the calendar year, the Outlaws played their last two home games at Peter Barton Lacrosse Stadium, on the campus of the University of Denver due to conflicting with the NFL season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288644-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Outlaws season, Collegiate Draft\nThe 2019 Collegiate Draft was held on March 9 in Charlotte, North Carolina at the NASCAR Hall of Fame. Inside Lacrosse gave the Outlaws an \"B\" in their team-by-team draft grades.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288644-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Outlaws season, Collegiate Draft\nOn May 16, the Outlaws announced they had signed Chris Aslanian, Brandon Jones, and Kyle Pless from their draft class. Additionally, they signed rookies they picked up in the dispersal draft in Sean Eccles and Timmy Kelly. The signing of one of their first round picks, Daniel Bucaro, was announced on May 21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288644-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Outlaws season, Broadcast\nThe Outlaws announced on June 13 that Altitude Sports would air all remaining Outlaws games (Denver had played three games so far in the season).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288645-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Pioneers men's soccer team\nThe 2019 Denver Pioneers men's soccer team represented University of Denver during the 2019 NCAA Division I men's soccer season and the 2019 Summit League men's soccer season. The regular season began on August 30 and concluded on November 9. It was the program's 59th season fielding a men's varsity soccer team, and their 7th season in the Summit League. The 2019 season was Jamie Franks's fifth year as head coach for the program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288645-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver Pioneers 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, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288646-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Denver mayoral election\nThe election for Mayor of Denver was held on May 7, 2019. A runoff was held on June 4, 2019, between the top two finishers because no candidate reached 50% in the first round of voting. Michael Hancock, the incumbent mayor, was reelected for a third term, making him the first Mayor to be reelected to a third term since Wellington Webb in 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288647-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Derby City Council election\nThe 2019 Derby City Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Derby City Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections. The council remained under no overall control, with the Conservative Party overtaking the Labour Party as the largest party after gains in Chaddesden and Derwent. The Labour Party lost many of its leading councillors, including deputy leader Martin Rawson, former cabinet member Asaf Afzal and former Group and Council leader Paul Bayliss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288647-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Derby City Council election, Election results\nAll comparisons in vote share are to the corresponding 2015 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288648-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Derbyshire Dales District Council election\nThe 2019 Derbyshire Dales District Council election was held on 2 May 2019 to elect all 39 councillors for Derbyshire Dales District Council. This was on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288649-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Derry City and Strabane District Council election\nThe 2019 election to the Derry City and Strabane District Council, part of the Northern Ireland local elections on 2 May 2019, returned 40 members to the council via Single Transferable Vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288649-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Derry City and Strabane District Council election, Results by electoral area, Ballyarnett\n2014: 3 x Sinn Fein, 2 x SDLP, 1 x Independent2019: 3 x SDLP, 2 x Sinn Fein, 1 x Aont\u00fa2014-2019 Change: SDLP and Aont\u00fa gain one seat each from Sinn Fein and Independent", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 94], "content_span": [95, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288649-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Derry City and Strabane District Council election, Results by electoral area, Derg\n2014: 3 x Sinn Fein, 1 x DUP, 1 x UUP2019: 2 x Sinn Fein, 1 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x SDLP2014-2019 Change: SDLP gain one seat from Sinn Fein", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 87], "content_span": [88, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288649-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Derry City and Strabane District Council election, Results by electoral area, Faughan\n2014: 2 x DUP, 2 x SDLP, 1 x Sinn Fein2019: 2 x DUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Sinn Fein, 1 x Alliance2014-2019 Change: Alliance gain one seat from SDLP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 90], "content_span": [91, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288649-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Derry City and Strabane District Council election, Results by electoral area, Foyleside\n2014: 2 x SDLP, 2 x Sinn Fein, 1 x Independent2019: 2 x SDLP, 1 x Sinn Fein, 1 x People Before Profit, 1 x Independent2014-2019 Change: People Before Profit gain one seat from Sinn Fein", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 92], "content_span": [93, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288649-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Derry City and Strabane District Council election, Results by electoral area, Sperrin\n2014: 3 x Sinn Fein, 2 x DUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Independent2019: 2 x Sinn Fein, 2 x DUP, 2 x Independent, 1 x SDLP2014-2019 Change: Independent gain one seat from Sinn Fein", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 90], "content_span": [91, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288649-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Derry City and Strabane District Council election, Results by electoral area, The Moor\n2014: 3 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Independent2019: 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP, 1 x People Before Profit, 1 x Independent2014-2019 Change: People Before Profit gain one seat from Sinn F\u00e9in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 91], "content_span": [92, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288649-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Derry City and Strabane District Council election, Results by electoral area, Waterside\n2014: 3 x DUP, 2 x SDLP, 1 x Sinn Fein, 1 x UUP2019: 2 x DUP, 2 x SDLP, 1 x Sinn Fein, 1 x UUP, 1 x Alliance2014-2019 Change: Alliance gain one seat from DUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 92], "content_span": [93, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288650-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Derry Senior Football Championship\nThe 2019 Derry Senior Football Championship was the 96th edition of Derry GAA's premier gaelic football tournament for the top sixteen clubs. 2019 was the first year of the restructured adult football leagues of Division 1A, Division 1B and Division 2. The sixteen teams who qualified for the 2019 senior championship are explained in the 'Competition Format' section below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288650-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Derry Senior Football Championship\nMagherafelt won their first title in 41 years, beating Glen by a solitary point, 0-12 to 0-11, in the final on 20 October 2019 at Celtic Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288650-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Derry Senior Football Championship\nEoghan Rua, Coleraine were the defending champions having won their second title. They defeated Lavey by 1-12 to 0-12 in the final in Celtic Park on 28 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288650-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Derry Senior Football Championship\nMagherafelt and Glen featured heavily on the County Derry Post team of the championship", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288650-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Derry Senior Football Championship, Competition Format\nRelegations, promotions and rankings within the three divisions of the football league in 2018 were used to determine which of the three 2019 championships the thirty seven clubs competed in \u2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288650-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Derry Senior Football Championship, Competition Format\nThe restructured adult football leagues in Derry of Division 1A (12 teams), Division 1B (12 teams) and Division 2 (13 teams) were introduced in 2019. Five teams were relegated from the 2018 Division 1 to the new 2019 Division 1B (see section 'Relegations and promotions in 2018' below for details). The 2019 senior championship was competed for by the top fifteen teams in the 2018 Division 1 and Banagher, the winners of the 2018 Division 2. Claudy, who finished 16th in 2018, were relegated to the 2019 intermediate football championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288650-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Derry Senior Football Championship, Competition Format\nThe senior championship reverted to straight knock-out in 2016 and the format continues with some minor alterations. If the score is level at the end of the normal sixty minutes, the match is replayed. If the replay is also level at the end of normal time, two ten minute periods of extra time are played each way.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288650-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Derry Senior Football Championship, Competition Format\nAt the end (or close to the end) of each round, a random draw is held to determine the fixtures in the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288650-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Derry Senior Football Championship, Competition Format\nA back-door format was used from 2009 to 2015. Four initial \u2018round-robin\u2019 groups of four teams with the top two teams in each group progressing to the four knockout quarter-finals were used in seasons 2007 and 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288650-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Derry Senior Football Championship, Competition Format\nIn the early years of Derry GAA, three separate senior championships were organised \u2013 The North Derry Championship, The South Derry Championship and The Derry City Championship. One semi-final and a final were held to determine the overall Derry senior champions. In 1958, a straight knockout format for all senior teams was introduced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288650-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Derry Senior Football Championship, Recent history of relegations and promotions, Relegations and promotions in 2019\nAll twelve teams in the 2019 Division 1A automatically qualified for the 2020 senior championship. Four 2019 Division 1B teams also qualified for the 2020 senior football championship \u2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 121], "content_span": [122, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288650-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Derry Senior Football Championship, Recent history of relegations and promotions, Relegations and promotions in 2019\nTwo teams were relegated from Division 1A and were replaced by two teams from Division 1B \u2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 121], "content_span": [122, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288650-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Derry Senior Football Championship, Recent history of relegations and promotions, Relegations and promotions in 2018\nFifteen of the sixteen 2018 Division 1 teams retained the right to play in the 2019 senior championship. Claudy (who finished bottom in 2018) played in the 2019 intermediate championship. Banagher, the winners of the 2018 Division 2, took Claudy's place in the 2019 senior championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 121], "content_span": [122, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288650-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Derry Senior Football Championship, Recent history of relegations and promotions, Relegations and promotions in 2018\nFive teams were relegated from the old Division 1 in 2018 to the new Division 1B in 2019 and one team, Banagher, were promoted \u2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 121], "content_span": [122, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288650-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Derry Senior Football Championship, Senior Championship Full Draw\nThe championship began on Friday 6 September 2019. The draw for the first round was held on Thursday 9 May 2019. Subsequent draws are held at the end (or very near the end) of every round. The bracket below can therefore only be completed when the last four teams have been paired in the semi-final draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288650-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Derry Senior Football Championship, First Round\nThe first round draw was made on Thursday 9 May 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 52], "content_span": [53, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288651-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Des Moines mayoral election\nThe 2019 Des Moines mayoral election had an initial round held on November 5, 2019, with a runoff scheduled for December 3 to elect the mayor of Des Moines, Iowa. It saw the reelection of incumbent mayor Frank Cownie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288651-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Des Moines mayoral election\nCownie's margin of victory in the runoff was narrower than the margin of victory in any of his previous mayoral elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288652-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Desert Diamond Casino West Valley 200\nThe 2019 Desert Diamond Casino West Valley 200 is a NASCAR Xfinity Series race held on November 9, 2019, at ISM Raceway in Avondale, Arizona. Contested over 200 laps on the one-mile (1.6\u00a0km) oval, it was the 32nd race of the 2019 NASCAR Xfinity Series season, sixth race of the Playoffs, and the final race of the Round of 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288652-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Desert Diamond Casino West Valley 200, Background, Track\nISM Raceway is a 1-mile, low-banked tri-oval race track located in Avondale, Arizona, near Phoenix. The motorsport track opened in 1964 and currently hosts two NASCAR race weekends annually. ISM Raceway has also hosted the CART, IndyCar Series, USAC and the WeatherTech SportsCar Championship. The raceway is currently owned and operated by International Speedway Corporation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 61], "content_span": [62, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288652-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Desert Diamond Casino West Valley 200, Practice, First practice\nChristopher Bell was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 27.736 seconds and a speed of 129.795\u00a0mph (208.885\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 68], "content_span": [69, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288652-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Desert Diamond Casino West Valley 200, Practice, Final practice\nChristopher Bell was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 27.661 seconds and a speed of 130.147\u00a0mph (209.451\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 68], "content_span": [69, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288652-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Desert Diamond Casino West Valley 200, Qualifying\nChristopher Bell scored the pole for the race with a time of 27.180 seconds and a speed of 132.450\u00a0mph (213.158\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288652-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Desert Diamond Casino West Valley 200, Race, Summary\nChristopher Bell started on pole and led for the first 48 laps. The first caution occurred when Michael Annett and Riley Herbst tangled. Bell lost the lead to Tyler Reddick for one lap, but quickly took it back and won Stage 1. Bell and Austin Cindric were tagged for speeding on pit road. Cole Custer and Justin Allgaier exchanged the lead afterwards. Bell also won Stage 2 after briefly taking the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288652-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Desert Diamond Casino West Valley 200, Race, Summary\nBell lost his chance of winning the race after a spin on lap 117 caused him to go one lap down. However, Bell was already locked into the finale from his win at the previous week's race. Chase Briscoe took the lead on the restart, but lost it to Allgaier as Briscoe only took fuel on the last caution (he had hoped for another caution to occur). Allgaier held onto the lead, holding off a charging Custer to take the victory and advance to the final 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288652-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Desert Diamond Casino West Valley 200, Race, Summary\nReddick and Custer also made the championship 4 on points, eliminating Cindric, Briscoe, Annett, and Noah Gragson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season\nThe 2019 season was the Detroit Lions' 90th in the National Football League (NFL) and their second year under head coach Matt Patricia. The Lions had a promising start to the season with a 2\u20130\u20131 record. However, they lost 12 of their last 13 games and were mathematically eliminated from postseason contention following a Thanksgiving Day loss to the Chicago Bears in week 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season\nAfter franchise QB Matthew Stafford broke his backbone in a Week 9 loss to the Oakland Raiders, the Lions were forced to turn to former Bengals backup QB Jeff Driskel and later undrafted free agent David Blough, neither of whom were able to lead the Lions to a single win. The Lions failed to improve on their 6\u201310 record from last season, finishing the season with a 3\u201312\u20131 record and nine consecutive losses. This resulted in the 3rd pick of the 2020 NFL Draft. They also posted consecutive losing seasons for the first time since 2012\u20132013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: at Arizona Cardinals\nThe Lions began the regular season on the road against the Arizona Cardinals. After a scoreless first quarter, the Lions took a big lead by scoring 17 points in the second quarter via a 55-yard field goal by Matt Prater, a 47-yard touchdown pass from Matthew Stafford to Danny Amendola and a nine-yard touchdown pass from Stafford to Kenny Golladay. Arizona responded with a 20-yard field goal by Zane Gonzalez to make the score 17\u20133 in favor of Detroit at half-time. Arizona scored the only points of the third quarter via a 42-yard field goal by Gonzalez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: at Arizona Cardinals\nDetroit extended their lead in the fourth quarter via a 23-yard touchdown pass from Stafford to T. J. Hockenson. The Cardinals responded with 18 points in the fourth quarter, via a 34-yard field goal by Gonzalez, a 27-yard touchdown pass from Kyler Murray to David Johnson, and a four-yard touchdown pass from Murray to Larry Fitzgerald, followed by a two-point conversion pass from Murray to Christian Kirk to tie the game and force overtime. In overtime, the Cardinals scored via a 28-yard field goal by Gonzalez, and the Lions scored via a 33-yard field goal by Prater to re-tie the score before time expired. This was the first tie by the Lions since 1984 against Philadelphia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: vs. Los Angeles Chargers\nIn week 2, the Lions began their home schedule against the Los Angeles Chargers. The Chargers took an early lead in the first quarter via a one-yard touchdown run from Austin Ekeler. The Lions responded with a 36-yard touchdown pass from Matthew Stafford to Kerryon Johnson, and after a failed extra point conversion, the Lions trailed by a point. The Chargers extended their lead in the second quarter via a 39-yard field goal by Ty Long, making the score 10\u20136 in favor of Los Angeles at half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 91], "content_span": [92, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: vs. Los Angeles Chargers\nAfter a scoreless third quarter, Detroit scored the only points of the second half via a 31-yard touchdown pass from Stafford to Kenny Golladay to take a 13\u201310 lead. The Chargers' attempted comeback failed when a Philip Rivers pass was intercepted by Darius Slay in the end zone with 1:03 to play in the game, giving the Lions their first win of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 91], "content_span": [92, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Philadelphia Eagles\nIn week 3, the Lions visited the Philadelphia Eagles. The Eagles opened the scoring in the first quarter via a 25-yard field goal by Jake Elliott. The Lions then took the lead when Jamal Agnew returned a kickoff 100 yards for a touchdown, but Philadelphia responded with a one-yard touchdown run from Jordan Howard to take it back. The Lions added 13 points in the second quarter via a one-yard touchdown run from Kerryon Johnson and a pair of field goals by Matt Prater, from 25 and 33 yards, respectively, making the score 20\u201310 in favor of Detroit at half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Philadelphia Eagles\nThe Eagles scored the only points of the third quarter via a 20-yard touchdown pass from Carson Wentz to Nelson Agholor. The Lions extended their lead in the fourth quarter via a 12-yard touchdown pass from Matthew Stafford to Marvin Jones. The Eagles responded with a two-yard touchdown pass from Wentz to Agholor, making the final score 27\u201324 in favor of Detroit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. Kansas City Chiefs\nIn week 4, the Lions hosted the Kansas City Chiefs. The Lions opened the scoring in the first quarter via a 25-yard field goal by Matt Prater, before extending their lead through a five-yard touchdown pass from Matthew Stafford to T. J. Hockenson. The Chiefs scored 13 points in the second quarter via a pair of field goals by Harrison Butker from 23 yards and 44 yards, respectively, and a one-yard touchdown run from LeSean McCoy. The Lions scored via a 48-yard field goal by Prater, tying the score at 13\u201313 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. Kansas City Chiefs\nThe Chiefs took their first lead of the game in the third quarter via a 100-yard fumble recovery by Bashaud Breeland. The Lions responded with 10 points via a 53-yard field goal by Prater and a nine-yard touchdown pass from Stafford to Kenny Golladay to regain the lead. The teams exchanged touchdowns in the fourth quarter via a one-yard touchdown run from Darrel Williams for the Chiefs and a six-yard touchdown pass from Stafford to Golladay for the Lions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0004-0002", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. Kansas City Chiefs\nThe Chiefs scored the game's final points via a one-yard touchdown run from Williams, making the final score 34\u201330 in favor of Kansas City, and giving the Lions their first loss of the season, going into their bye week with a 2\u20131\u20131 record. The Lions also failed to start the season with 3 wins for the first time since 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: at Green Bay Packers\nAfter their bye week, for week 6, the Lions visited their divisional rival, the Green Bay Packers, on Monday Night Football. The Lions scored 10 points in the first quarter via a 26-yard field goal by Matt Prater and a one-yard touchdown run from Kerryon Johnson, and extended their lead in the second quarter via a 22-yard field goal by Prater. The Packers responded with 10 points via a five-yard touchdown pass from Aaron Rodgers to Jamaal Williams and a 37-yard field goal by Mason Crosby, making the score 13\u201310 in favor of Detroit at half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: at Green Bay Packers\nThe Packers opened the scoring in the third quarter via a 48-yard field goal by Crosby to tie the game. The Lions responded with two field goals by Prater, from 41 and 51 yards to regain the lead. The Lions extended their lead in the fourth quarter via a 54-yard field goal by Prater. The Packers responded with 10 points via a 35-yard touchdown pass from Rodgers to Allen Lazard, and a 23-yard field goal by Crosby as time expired, making the final score 23\u201322 in favor of Green Bay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nIn week 7, the Lions hosted another divisional rival, the Minnesota Vikings. The Lions scored 14 points in the first quarter via two touchdown passes from Matthew Stafford to Marvin Jones from 16-yards, and three-yards, respectively. The Vikings responded with a 25-yard touchdown pass from Kirk Cousins to Adam Thielen. The Vikings scored 14 points in the second quarter via a one-yard touchdown pass from Cousins to Bisi Johnson and an eight-yard touchdown run from Dalvin Cook to take their first lead of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nThe Lions responded with a 10-yard touchdown pass from Stafford to Jones, tying the score at 21\u201321 at halftime. Minnesota regained the lead in the third quarter via a five-yard touchdown pass from Cousins to C. J. Ham. The Lions responded with a 46-yard field goal by Matt Prater. The Vikings scored 14 points in the fourth quarter via a 15-yard touchdown pass from Cousins to Kyle Rudolph and a four-yard touchdown run from Cook.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0006-0002", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nThe Lions responded with a two-yard touchdown pass from Stafford to Jones, making the final score 42\u201330 in favor of Minnesota, for Detroit's third consecutive loss. Jones became the first Lions player with four touchdown receptions in a game since Cloyce Box did so against the Baltimore Colts in 1950. Stafford became the fastest quarterback to throw for 40,000 yards, reaching the milestone in 147 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: vs. New York Giants\nIn week 8, the Lions hosted the New York Giants. The Lions scored 14 points in the first quarter via a 13-yard fumble return by Devon Kennard and a 49-yard touchdown pass from Matthew Stafford to Marvin Hall. The Giants added 13 points in the second quarter via two touchdown passes from Daniel Jones to Darius Slayton, from 22-yards, and 28-yards, respectively. The Lions responded with a 52-yard field goal by Matt Prater, making the score 17\u201313 in favor of Detroit at half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: vs. New York Giants\nThe teams exchanged touchdowns in the third quarter via a nine-yard touchdown pass from Stafford to Kenny Golladay for Detroit and a two-yard touchdown pass from Jones to Evan Engram for New York. The teams exchanged touchdowns in the fourth quarter via a 41-yard touchdown pass from Stafford to Golladay for Detroit and a four-yard touchdown pass from Jones to Saquon Barkley for New York, making the final score 31\u201326 in favor of Detroit, snapping their three-game losing streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: at Oakland Raiders\nIn week 9, the Lions visited the Oakland Raiders. The teams exchanged touchdowns in the first quarter via a two-yard touchdown run from Josh Jacobs for the Raiders and a two-yard touchdown pass from Matthew Stafford to Marvin Jones for the Lions. The Raiders regained the lead in the second quarter via a 32-yard field goal by Daniel Carlson. The Lions responded with a 59-yard touchdown pass from Stafford to Kenny Golladay to take their first lead of the game. The Raiders responded with a three-yard touchdown run from Jacobs, making the score 17\u201314 in favor of Oakland at half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: at Oakland Raiders\nThe Lions scored the only points of the third quarter via a 23-yard field goal by Matt Prater to tie the game. The teams exchanged touchdowns in the fourth quarter via a three-yard touchdown pass from Derek Carr to Foster Moreau for the Raiders and a 26-yard touchdown pass from Stafford to J. D. McKissic for the Lions. The Raiders scored the final points of the game via a nine-yard touchdown pass from Carr to Hunter Renfrow, making the final score 31\u201324 in favor of Oakland. The Lions' attempt to tie the game fell short when they moved the ball to the Oakland 1-yard line with eight seconds on the clock, but were unable to score on the final play of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: at Chicago Bears\nIn week 10, the Lions visited their divisional rival, the Chicago Bears. The Lions opened the scoring in the first quarter via a 23-yard field goal by Matt Prater and extended their lead in the second quarter via a 54-yard field goal by Prater. The Bears responded with an 18-yard touchdown pass from Mitchell Trubisky to Ben Braunecker, making the score 7\u20136 in favor of Chicago at half-time. The Bears added 13 points in the third quarter via a 9-yard touchdown pass from Trubisky to Tarik Cohen and a 24-yard touchdown pass from Trubisky to Taylor Gabriel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: at Chicago Bears\nThe Lions scored the only points of the fourth quarter via a 47-yard touchdown pass from Jeff Driskel to Kenny Golladay, making the final score 20\u201313 in favor of Chicago. Due to a back injury the previous week, this was the first regular season game Matthew Stafford missed since the 2010 season, ending his streak of 136 consecutive games played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Dallas Cowboys\nIn week 11, the Lions hosted the Dallas Cowboys. The Lions opened the scoring in the first quarter via a five-yard touchdown run from Bo Scarbrough. The Cowboys responded with a 30-yard field goal by Brett Maher. The teams exchanged touchdowns in the second quarter via a 21-yard touchdown pass from Dak Prescott to Tony Pollard for the Cowboys to take their first lead of the game. The Lions responded with a two-yard touchdown run from Jeff Driskel to regain the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Dallas Cowboys\nThe Cowboys added 10 points via a one-yard touchdown run from Ezekiel Elliott, and a 19-yard touchdown pass from Prescott to Randall Cobb, making the score 24\u201314 in favor of Dallas at half-time. In the third quarter the Lions scored via an 11-yard touchdown pass from Driskel to Marvin Jones. The Cowboys responded with a 34-yard field goal by Maher. The teams exchanged touchdowns in the fourth quarter via a 17-yard touchdown pass from Prescott to Elliott, followed by a two-point conversion run from Pollard. The Lions scored the final points of the game via a 25-yard touchdown pass from Driskel to Jones, followed by a failed two-point conversion pass, making the final score 35\u201327 in favor of Dallas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: at Washington Redskins\nIn week 12, the Lions visited the Washington Redskins. The Redskins opened the scoring in the first quarter via a 28-yard field goal by Dustin Hopkins. In the second quarter, the Lions responded with a 24-yard field goal by Matt Prater to tie the game. Washington responded with 10 points via a 91-yard kickoff return by Steven Sims and a 37-yard field goal by Hopkins to regain the lead. The Lions added a 49-yard field goal by Prater at the end of the first half, making the score 13\u20136 in favor of Washington at half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: at Washington Redskins\nThe Lions scored the only points of the third quarter via a 12-yard touchdown pass from Jeff Driskel to Logan Thomas to tie the game. In the fourth quarter the Lions scored via a 21-yard field goal by Prater, to take their first and only lead of the game. The Redskins responded with two field goals by Hopkins, from 42-yards, and 39-yards, respectively, making the final score 19\u201316 in favor of Washington, for Detroit's fourth consecutive loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: vs. Chicago Bears\nIn week 13, the Lions hosted a rematch with their divisional rival, the Chicago Bears, in their annual Thanksgiving Day game. The Bears opened the scoring in the first quarter via a 10-yard touchdown pass from Mitchell Trubisky to Allen Robinson. The Lions responded with 14 points when third-string quarterback David Blough, in his NFL debut, threw two touchdown passes, one from 75-yards out to Kenny Golladay and one from eight-yards out to Marvin Jones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: vs. Chicago Bears\nBoth teams kicked field goals in the second quarter, first Detroit's Matt Prater from 25-yards, then Chicago's Eddy Pineiro from 30-yards, making the score 17\u201310 in favor of Detroit at half-time. The Bears scored the only points of the third quarter via an 18-yard touchdown pass from Trubisky to Jesper Horsted to tie the game at 17 points each. In the fourth quarter, the Lions responded with a 24-yard field goal by Prater to regain the lead. The Bears took their first lead of the game via a three-yard touchdown pass from Trubisky to David Montgomery. Detroit's attempted comeback failed when Robinson intercepted a pass from Blough in the final seconds, making the final score 24\u201320 in favor of Chicago, for Detroit's fifth consecutive loss. Also with the loss, the Lions would be eliminated from playoff contention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 908]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: at Minnesota Vikings\nIn week 14, the Lions visited their divisional rival the Minnesota Vikings, for a rematch of week 7. The Vikings opened the scoring in the first quarter via a nine-yard touchdown pass from Kirk Cousins to Bisi Johnson. The Vikings added 10 points in the second quarter via a 27-yard field goal by Dan Bailey and a three-yard touchdown run from Dalvin Cook, making the score 17\u20130 in favor of Minnesota at half-time. After a scoreless third quarter, the Vikings extended their lead in the fourth quarter via a 50-yard field goal by Bailey. The Lions finally got on the board late in the fourth quarter via a 10-yard touchdown pass from David Blough to Kenny Golladay, making the final score 20\u20137 in favor of Minnesota, for Detroit's sixth consecutive loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 843]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nIn week 15, the Lions hosted the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The Buccaneers scored 14 points in the first quarter via a 34-yard touchdown pass from Jameis Winston to Breshad Perriman and a 33-yard touchdown pass from Winston to Scott Miller. The Buccaneers extended their lead in the second quarter via a 25-yard touchdown pass from Winston to Perriman. The Lions finally got on the board via a 44-yard field goal by Matt Prater, making the score 21\u20133 in favor of Tampa Bay at half-time. In the third quarter the Buccaneers added a 46-yard field goal by Matt Gay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 92], "content_span": [93, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0014-0001", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nThe Lions responded with a one-yard touchdown run from Wes Hills. In the fourth quarter the Lions added a one-yard touchdown run from Hills, reducing the Buccaneers lead to seven points. The Lions attempted comeback failed when David Blough's pass was intercepted by Sean Murphy-Bunting and returned 70-yards for a touchdown. The Buccaneers extended their lead via a 25-yard touchdown pass from Winston to Perriman, making the final score 38\u201317 in favor of Tampa Bay, for Detroit's seventh consecutive loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 92], "content_span": [93, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: at Denver Broncos\nIn week 16, the Lions visited the Denver Broncos. The Lions opened the scoring in the first quarter via a 26-yard field goal by Matt Prater. In the second quarter the Lions extended their lead via a 64-yard punt return by Jamal Agnew. The Broncos responded with 10 points via a one-yard touchdown run from Royce Freeman and a 34-yard field goal by Brandon McManus, tying the score at 10\u201310 at halftime. In the third quarter the Broncos took their first lead of the game via a 26-yard field goal by McManus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: at Denver Broncos\nThe Lions responded with a three-yard touchdown pass from David Blough to Kenny Golladay to regain the lead. The Broncos scored 14 points in the fourth quarter via a three-yard touchdown pass from Drew Lock to DaeSean Hamilton and a 27-yard touchdown run from Phillip Lindsay, making the final score 27\u201317 in favor of Denver, for Detroit's eighth consecutive loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Green Bay Packers\nTo end the season, the Lions hosted a rematch with their divisional rival, the Green Bay Packers. The Lions opened the scoring in the first quarter via a 19-yard pass from Danny Amendola to David Blough. The Lions extended their lead in the second quarter via a one-yard touchdown run from Kerryon Johnson. The Packers finally got on the board late in the first half via a 32-yard field goal by Mason Crosby. The Lions responded with a 42-yard field goal by Matt Prater as time expired, making the score 17\u20133 in favor of Detroit at half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288653-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Green Bay Packers\nThe Packers scored the only points of the third quarter via a 20-yard touchdown pass from Aaron Rodgers to Davante Adams. The teams exchanged field goals in the fourth quarter via a 40-yard field goal by Crosby for the Packers, and a 56-yard field goal by Prater for the Lions. The Packers responded with 10 points via a 28-yard touchdown pass from Rodgers to Allen Lazard to tie the game, and a 33-yard field goal by Crosby as time expired, making the final score 23\u201320 in favor of Green Bay, for Detroit's ninth consecutive loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288654-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Detroit Tigers season\nThe 2019 Detroit Tigers season was the team's 119th season. This was the team's second year under manager Ron Gardenhire. They finished the season 47-114, their worst since 2003 when they went 43-119. It was their first 100-loss season for the team since said season. It was also the second straight season where any team finished with fewer than 50 wins, after the 2018 Orioles who, coincidentally, also finished with 47 wins. The Tigers only played 161 games in 2019 due to a late-season rainout in Chicago which was not made up due to both teams missing the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288654-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Detroit Tigers season\nAfter the Tigers won 7 of their first 10 games, the team lost 111 of the next 151 games. The stretch included eight different losing streaks of 5+ games, including a season-long nine-game losing streak from May 13-23. They were officially eliminated from playoff contention on August 24.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288654-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Detroit Tigers season\nOn September 25, the Tigers secured the first overall pick in the 2020 Major League Baseball draft. With a loss in their final home game to the Minnesota Twins on September 26, the Tigers tied the 1939 St. Louis Browns for the most home losses (59) during a season in the modern era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288654-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Detroit Tigers season, Announcer changes\nBeginning this season, Fox Sports Detroit television announcers Mario Impemba and Rod Allen, who had been together since 2003, no longer were in the broadcast booth. Their contracts were not renewed due to an alleged physical altercation that occurred after the game on September 4, 2018. On January 14, 2019, veteran sportscaster Matt Shepard was named play-by-play man, former Tigers teammates Kirk Gibson and Jack Morris were named color commentators, and Dan Petry was hired as a second studio analyst. Gibson was also named special assistant to the general manager on January 28. Shepard sat out 17 games, with Morris, Gibson, Petry and field reporter/studio analyst and former Tiger Craig Monroe sharing his duties instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 775]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288654-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Detroit Tigers season, Roster, 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, 57], "content_span": [58, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288655-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters\nThe 2019 DTM was the thirty-third season of premier German touring car championship, first season under \"Class 1\" regulations era and also twentieth season under the moniker of DTM since the series' resumption in 2000. Mercedes-AMG withdrew from the championship after the 2018 season to focus on their Formula E entry. British sports car manufacturer Aston Martin replaced Mercedes-Benz, which marked the first non-German entry in 23 years when Italian car manufacturer Alfa Romeo last entered the series under the International Touring Car Series name in 1996. Defending champion Gary Paffett did not return to defend his title, as he moved to Formula E.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288655-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters\nThe 2019 season oversaw the championship introduce revolutionary regulations known as \"Class 1\", the biggest change to the sport in recent history. These regulations will be shared between the DTM and the Japanese Super GT series' GT500 class from 2020, allowing entries to compete in both championships. The 2019 championship saw the running of the 500th DTM race, which was held as the second race at EuroSpeedway Lausitz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288655-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters\nAudi clinched the manufacturers' championship title for the seventh time, with four races to spare. Ren\u00e9 Rast clinched his second DTM driver's title in the N\u00fcrburgring round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288655-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters, Teams and drivers\nThe following manufacturers, teams and drivers competed in the 2019 DTM. All teams competed with tyres supplied by Hankook.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288655-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters, Results and standings, Scoring system\nPoints were awarded to the top ten classified finishers as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288655-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters, Results and standings, Scoring system\nAdditionally, the top three placed drivers in qualifying also received points:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288655-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters, Results and standings, Drivers' championship\nBold\u00a0\u2013 PoleItalics\u00a0\u2013 Fastest Lap1 \u2013 3 Points for Pole2 \u2013 2 Points for P23 \u2013 1 Point for P3", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 79], "content_span": [80, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288656-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Deutschland Cup\nThe 2019 Deutschland Cup was the 30th edition of the tournament, held between 7 and 10 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288657-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Deutschland Tour\nThe 2019 Deutschland Tour was a road cycling stage race that took place between 29 August and 1 September 2019. This year's edition of the Deutschland Tour was the 34th edition and was rated as a 2.HC event as part of the 2019 UCI Europe Tour. The defending champion, Slovenian Matej Mohori\u010d of Bahrain\u2013Merida, did not return to defend his title, though his team was invited. After taking the lead in the overall classification after stage 3, Belgian Jasper Stuyven of Trek\u2013Segafredo held off Sonny Colbrelli and Yves Lampaert, who finished second and third overall respectively, on the final stage to take the overall victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288657-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Deutschland Tour, Teams\nA total of 22 teams with 6 riders each participated in the event: 15 UCI WorldTeams, 3 UCI Professional Continental teams and 4 UCI Continental Teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288657-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Deutschland Tour, Route\nThe route of the 2019 Deutschland Tour went through central Germany and crossed through 4 German states. It started in Hannover, Lower Saxony and crossed through Saxony-Anhalt and Hesse before finishing in Erfurt, Thuringia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288658-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dhaka North City Corporation by-election\nThe 2019 Dhaka North City Corporation by-election was held on 28 february 2019 due to the death of Mayor Annisul Huq. The election was boycotted by the main opposition, the BNP. A total of 5 mayoral candidates took part in election. Atiqul Islam won the election by 786,473 votes. This election had a low turnout, with a decrease of 6.24% from the last election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288659-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Diamond Head Classic\nThe 2019 Diamond Head Classic was a mid-season eight-team college basketball tournament that was played on December 22, 23, and 25 at the Stan Sheriff Center in Honolulu, Hawaii. It was the eleventh annual Diamond Head Classic tournament, and was part of the 2019\u201320 NCAA Division I men's basketball season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288659-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Diamond Head Classic, Bracket\nAll games played at the Stan Sheriff Center in Honolulu, Hawaii.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288660-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Diamond League\nThe 2019 Diamond League was the tenth season of the annual series of outdoor track and field meetings, organised by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF). It featured fourteen meetings, with the final two meetings serving as the series finals. It is the third edition to feature the new championship-style system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288660-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Diamond League, Schedule\nThe following fourteen meetings are scheduled to be included in the 2019 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288661-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Diamond League Shanghai\nThe 2019 Diamond League Shanghai was the 15th edition of the annual outdoor track and field meeting in Shanghai, China. Held on 18 May at the Shanghai Stadium, it was the second leg of the 2019 IAAF Diamond League \u2013 the highest level international track and field circuit. 24 events were contested with 15 of them being point-earning Diamond League disciplines. The other events were held for Chinese nationals, except for the men's 200\u00a0m which attracted an international field of Olympic and world medalists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288661-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Diamond League Shanghai\nHighlights included an Asian and Chinese record in the women's pole vault by Li Ling with a mark of 4.72\u00a0m on her second attempt (though she placed second to world champion Katerina Stefanidi who vaulted the same height but on her first attempt), and a meeting record by Lyu Huihui in the javelin throw of 66.89\u00a0m to defend her 2018 meeting title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288661-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Diamond League Shanghai\nAlso in the women's events were the world leading times of 4:01.15 in the 1500\u00a0m by Rababe Arafi, and 9:04.53 in the 3000\u00a0m steeplechase by world record holder Beatrice Chepkoech, the latter also a meeting record. 19-year old Sydney McLaughlin, the fastest junior in history in the 400\u00a0m hurdles, stepped into the hurdles-free 400\u00a0m and was able to stay with the reigning Diamond League champion Salwa Eid Naser for most of the race, but Naser pulled away in the home straight with a seasonal best of 50.65 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288661-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Diamond League Shanghai\nOn the men's side one of the most anticipated events was the 400\u00a0m hurdles in which Abderrahman Samba and Rai Benjamin, the second and third fastest in history respectively in the event, met for the first time in competition. Samba however ran away with a clear victory in a meeting record and world leading 47.27 seconds, ahead of second place Benjamin who finished in a seasonal best of 47.80 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288661-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Diamond League Shanghai\nThe 100\u00a0m was a much closer race, with reigning Diamond League champions Christian Coleman and Noah Lyles in the 100\u00a0m and 200\u00a0m respectively both finishing in a world leading 9.86 seconds. In an upset the victory was given to Lyles after an analysis of the race footage showed Lyles finishing in 9.852 to Coleman's 9.858. Olympic and world champion Omar McLeod came back to win for the fourth year in a row in the 110\u00a0m hurdles, dedicating his achievement to his aunt who died the day before the race. Additional world leads were set in the 5000\u00a0m by Yomif Kejelcha (13:04.16) and in the javelin throw by Andreas Hofmann (87.55\u00a0m).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288661-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Diamond League Shanghai, Diamond League results\nAthletes competing in the Diamond League disciplines earned extra compensation and points which went towards qualifying for one of two Diamond League finals (either Z\u00fcrich or Brussels depending on the discipline). First place earned 8 points, with each step down in place earning one less point than the previous, until no points are awarded in 9th place or lower.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288662-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Digital Ally 250\nThe 2019 Digital Ally 250 was a NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series race held on May 10, 2019, at Kansas Speedway in Kansas City, Kansas. Contested over 167 laps on the 1.5 mile (2.4\u00a0km) asphalt speedway, it was the seventh race of the 2019 NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288662-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Digital Ally 250, Background, Track\nKansas Speedway is a 1.5-mile (2.4\u00a0km) tri-oval race track in Kansas City, Kansas. It was built in 2001 and it currently hosts two annual NASCAR race weekends. The IndyCar Series also held races at the venue until 2011. The speedway is owned and operated by the International Speedway Corporation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288662-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Digital Ally 250, Practice, First practice\nStewart Friesen was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 30.408 seconds and a speed of 177.585\u00a0mph (285.795\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288662-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Digital Ally 250, Practice, Final practice\nStewart Friesen was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 30.482 seconds and a speed of 177.154\u00a0mph (285.102\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288662-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Digital Ally 250, Qualifying\nMatt Crafton scored the pole for the race with a time of 30.459 seconds and a speed of 177.288\u00a0mph (285.317\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288663-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Digital Ally 400\nThe 2019 Digital Ally 400 is a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race held on May 11, 2019, at Kansas Speedway in Kansas City, Kansas. Contested over 271 laps\u2014extended from 267 laps due to an overtime finish, on the 1.5 mile (2.4\u00a0km) asphalt speedway, it was the 12th race of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season. Brad Keselowski won the race, his third of the season and 30th career victory overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288663-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Digital Ally 400, Report, Background\nKansas Speedway is a 1.5-mile (2.4\u00a0km) tri-oval race track in Kansas City, Kansas. It was built in 2001 and hosts two annual NASCAR race weekends. The NTT IndyCar Series also raced there until 2011. The speedway is owned and operated by the International Speedway Corporation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288663-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Digital Ally 400, Practice, First practice\nAric Almirola was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 30.311 seconds and a speed of 178.153\u00a0mph (286.709\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288663-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Digital Ally 400, Practice, Final practice\nKurt Busch was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 30.383 seconds and a speed of 177.731\u00a0mph (286.030\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288663-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Digital Ally 400, Qualifying\nKevin Harvick scored the pole for the race with a time of 30.131 and a speed of 179.217\u00a0mph (288.422\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288663-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Digital Ally 400, Media, Television\nFox Sports covered their ninth race at the Kansas Speedway. Mike Joy, three-time Kansas winner Jeff Gordon and Darrell Waltrip called in the booth for the race. Jamie Little, Regan Smith and Matt Yocum handled the action on pit road for the television side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288663-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Digital Ally 400, Media, Radio\nMRN had the radio call for the race which was also simulcasted on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio. Alex Hayden, Jeff Striegle and Rusty Wallace called the race in the booth when the field raced through the tri-oval. Dave Moody covered the race from the Sunoco spotters stand outside turn 2 when the field is racing through turns 1 and 2. Mike Bagley called the race from a platform outside turn 4. Jason Toy, Kim Coon, and Steve Post worked pit road for the radio side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288664-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dimension Data season\nThe 2019 season for the Team Dimension Data cycling team will begin in January at the Tour Down Under. As a UCI WorldTeam, they will be automatically invited and obligated to send a squad to every event in the UCI World Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288665-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Diriyah ePrix\nThe 2019 Diriyah ePrix (officially the 2019 ABB FIA Formula E Saudia Diriyah ePrix) was a pair Formula E electric car race held at the Riyadh Street Circuit in the town of Diriyah, north-west of Riyadh, in Saudi Arabia on 22 and 23 November 2019. It formed the first and second rounds of the 2019\u201320 Formula E season and was the second edition of the Diriyah ePrix. The first race was won by Sam Bird with Andre Lotterer and Stoffel Vandoorne completing the podium. Alexander Sims won the second race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288666-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dissolution Honours\nThe 2019 Dissolution Honours List was issued on 31 July 2020 following the 2019 United Kingdom general election the previous December, in which the Conservative Party won a large majority. This list was released concurrently with the 2020 Political Honours list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288667-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Division 1 (Swedish football)\nThe 2019 Division 1, part of the 2019 Swedish football season is the 14th season of Sweden's third-tier football league in its current format. The 2019 fixtures were released in December 2018. The season started on 6 April 2019 and ended on 2 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288667-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Division 1 (Swedish football), Teams\n32 teams contest the league divided into two divisions, Norra and S\u00f6dra. 22 returning from the 2018 season, three relegated from Superettan and seven promoted from Division 2. The champion of each division will qualify directly for promotion to Superettan, while the two runners-up compete in a play-off against the thirteenth and fourteenth teams from Superettan to decide who will play in the 2020 Superettan. The bottom three teams in each division will qualify directly for relegation to Division 2, while the two thirteenth-placed teams compete in a play-off with the top two runners-up from Division 2 to decide who will play in 2020 Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288667-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Division 1 (Swedish football), League tables, Playoffs\nThe 13th-placed teams of each division meets the best two runners-up from 2019 Division 2 in two-legged ties on a home-and-away basis with the team from Division 1 finishing at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288668-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor de B\u00e9isbol\nThe 2019 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor de B\u00e9isbol was the 34th season of the top Spanish baseball league since its establishment and the 74th Spanish championship overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288668-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor de B\u00e9isbol\nTenerife Marlins successfully defended their title from the previous season for their 11th championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288669-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dixie State Trailblazers football team\nThe 2019 Dixie State Trailblazers football team represented Dixie State University in the 2019 NCAA Division II football season. They were led by first-year head coach Paul Peterson and played their home games at Greater Zion Stadium in St. George, Utah as a member of the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288669-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dixie State Trailblazers football team, Previous season\nThe Trailblazers finished the 2018 NCAA Division II football season 7\u20134 overall and 7\u20133 in RMAC play to finish in a tie for third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288670-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Djurg\u00e5rdens IF season\nThe 2019 season was Djurg\u00e5rdens IF's 119th in existence, their 64th season in Allsvenskan and their 19th consecutive season in the league. They competed in Allsvenskan and the 2018\u201319 and 2019\u201320 editions of the Svenska Cupen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288670-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Djurg\u00e5rdens IF season\nDjurg\u00e5rden secured their 12th league title, and the first in 14 years, with a 2\u20132 draw away at IFK Norrk\u00f6ping in the last league game of the season after being down 0\u20132 at half-time, in a league battle that also featured Malm\u00f6 FF and Hammarby IF all the way to the final day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288670-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Djurg\u00e5rdens IF 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-00288671-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dockerty Cup\nThe 2019 Dockerty Cup was a football (soccer) knockout-cup competition held between men's clubs in Victoria, Australia in 2019, the annual edition of the Dockerty Cup. Victorian soccer clubs from the National Premier Leagues Victoria divisions, State League divisions, regional, metros and masters leagues competed for the Dockerty Cup trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288671-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dockerty Cup\nThe competition also served as Qualifying Rounds for the 2019 FFA Cup. In addition to the two Victorian A-League clubs, the four Preliminary Round 7 winners qualified for the final rounds of the 2019 FFA Cup, entering at the Round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288671-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dockerty Cup\nThe cup was won by Hume City, their first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 66]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288671-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Dockerty Cup, Preliminary rounds\nVictorian clubs participated in the 2019 FFA Cup via the preliminary rounds. This was open to teams from the NPL, NPL2, 5 State League divisions, regional and metros leagues. Teams were seeded in terms of which round they would enter based on their division in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288671-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Dockerty Cup, Semi finals\nA total of four teams took part in this stage of the competition, with the matches played in July 2019. As a new rule for the semi-finals and final, a fourth substitution was allowed if the game went to extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288672-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Doha Diamond League\nThe 2019 Doha Diamond League was the 21st edition of the annual outdoor track and field meeting in Doha, Qatar. Held on 3 May 2019 at the Khalifa International Stadium, it was the first leg of the 2019 IAAF Diamond League \u2013 the highest level international track and field circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288672-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Doha Diamond League\nA total of eight world-leading performances were set at the competition, three of which were also meeting records. Daniel St\u00e5hl of Sweden gave the highlight of the meeting with six straight discus throws beyond 69.50\u00a0m (the first man ever to deliver such as series) including a Diamond League record of 70.56 m. Caster Semenya of South Africa won the women's 800 metres in a meet record of 1:54.98 minutes and American Dalilah Muhammad improved the previous women's 400 metres hurdles record with her time of 53.61 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288672-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Doha Diamond League\nThe other world leaders on the men's side came from Nijel Amos of Botswana (1:44.29 in the 800\u00a0m), Kenyan Elijah Manangoi (3:32.21 in the 1500 metres) and Soufiane El Bakkali of Morocco (8:07.22 in the 3000 metres steeplechase). Great Britain's Dina Asher-Smith ran a world leading time of 22.26 to win the women's 200 metres and Kenya's Hellen Obiri overcame Genzebe Dibaba to win the women's 3000 metres in 8:25.60 minutes. The latter was among the highlights of the meet in terms of strength in depth, as it saw eight athletes achieve lifetime bests. The men's shot put also produced high quality performances, with winner Ryan Crouser and runner-up Tom Walsh both going beyond twenty-two metres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288672-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Doha Diamond League, Diamond League Results\nAthletes competing in the Diamond League disciplines earned extra compensation and points which went towards qualifying for one of two Diamond League finals (either Z\u00fcrich or Brussels depending on the discipline). First place earned 8 points, with each step down in place earning one less point than the previous, until no points are awarded in 9th place or lower.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288673-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dominican general election\nGeneral elections were held in Dominica on 6 December 2019. The elections were constitutionally due by March 2020, but had been widely expected to take place before the end of 2019. The result was a landslide victory for the ruling Dominica Labour Party, which won 18 of the 21 elected seats, gaining three seats. With the DLP winning a fifth consecutive election, DLP leader Roosevelt Skerrit remained Prime Minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288673-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dominican general election, Electoral system\nThe 21 elected members of the House of Assembly are elected in single-member constituencies. A further nine members are either elected by the Assembly after it convenes or appointed by the President (five on the advice of the Prime Minister and four on the advice of the Leader of the Opposition) to be Senators; the method of their choosing is voted on by popular vote, the vote is to determine which party is in power, from there the President is chosen by the Assembly and the President appoints a Prime Minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288673-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dominican general election, Results\nThe result followed disruptive protests including blocking roads by the United Workers' Party, which demanded changes to the electoral system. Following the results, Skerrit said \"I call to the UWP and its supporters to hold their conduct and behavior of the last few weeks, concede the election and work for peace.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288674-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Donegal County Council election\nAn election to Donegal County Council took place on 24 May 2019 as part of the Irish local elections. 37 councillors were elected for a five-year term of office from 7 local electoral areas (LEAs) by single transferable vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288674-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Donegal County Council election\nFollowing a recommendation of the 2018 Boundary Committee, the boundaries of the LEAs were altered from those used in the 2014 elections. Its terms of reference required no change in the total number of councillors but set a lower maximum LEA size of seven councillors, whereas Donegal in 2015 had LEAs of 10 and 9 seats. Other changes were necessitated by population shifts revealed by the 2016 census.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288674-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Donegal County Council election\nFianna F\u00e1il gained an additional seat to reach 12 and also saw a slight increase in their vote share. Anthony Molloy - who captained the Donegal GAA team to the 1992 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship - won a seat for the party, as did rally driver Manus Kelly (both for the first time). However, Seamus O Domhnaill - Fianna F\u00e1il's outgoing Cathaoirleach - was a notable casualty, as was former Senator Enda Bonner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288674-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Donegal County Council election\nUnlike other performances around the State, Sinn F\u00e9in actually gained a seat in Donegal; increasing their numbers by 1 to 10 seats while seeing a slight reduction in vote share. Fine Gael retained 6 seats overall, while Independents saw a reduction of 2 seats. One Independent elected was John O'Donnell, who attracted controversy following an RT\u00c9 Investigates programme into Irish Councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288675-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Donegal Senior Football Championship\nThe 2019 Donegal Senior Football Championship was the 97th official edition of Donegal GAA's premier Gaelic football tournament for senior graded clubs in County Donegal. 16 teams compete with the winner representing Donegal in the Ulster Senior Club Football Championship. The championship begins with four groups of four and continues with a knock-out format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288675-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Donegal Senior Football Championship\nGaoth Dobhair were the defending Donegal and Ulster champions after they defeated Naomh Conaill of Glenties 0-17 to 1-7 in the 2018 final. However they failed to defend their crown, losing the final to Naomh Conaill by one point after a second replay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288675-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Donegal Senior Football Championship\nThis was Glenfin's return to the senior grade after a two-year exodus when claiming the 2018 I.F.C. title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288675-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Donegal Senior Football Championship\nMalin were relegated back to the 2020 I.F.C. after 16 seasons in the top-flight when losing their Relegation Final to Ardara. Back in 2003, Malin gained promotion to the S.F.C. for the first time in the club's history. Although Malin lost the I.F.C. Quarter-Final to eventual champions St. Michael's that year, they earned promotion to Division 1 from Division 2 of the Donegal Leagues. At that time, promotion to the S.F.C. could be acquired through the leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288675-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Donegal Senior Football Championship, Team changes\nThe following teams changed division since the 2018 championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 55], "content_span": [56, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288675-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Donegal Senior Football Championship, Format\nThe 2019 County Championship took the same format as previous championships in which there was four groups of four with the top two qualifying for the quarter-finals. Bottom of each group play in relegation play-offs to decide which team is relegated the 2020 Intermediate championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288675-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Donegal Senior Football Championship, Group stage\nAll 16 teams enter the competition at this stage. The top 2 teams in each group go into the Quarter-Finals while the bottom team of each group entered a Relegation Playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288675-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Donegal Senior Football Championship, Television rights\nThe following matches were broadcast live on national television, unless otherwise indicated:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 60], "content_span": [61, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288676-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Donegal county football team season\nThe following is a summary of Donegal county football team's 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288676-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Donegal county football team season\nNeil McGee equalled Colm McFadden's record of 173 appearances for Donegal when he came on as a second half substitute in the final round of the 2019 National Football League, a victory over Kildare. He then broke McFadden's record with his 174th appearance for his county against Meath as a substitute in the final at Croke Park, also won by Donegal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288676-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Donegal county football team season\nThe 2019 season started with a 0-21 to 0-11 defeat of Queen's in the 2019 Dr McKenna Cup at MacCumhail Park on 30 December 2018. Ciar\u00e1n Thompson was man of the match and scored four of Donegal's points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288676-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Donegal county football team season\nOis\u00edn Gallen became an \"impact sub\" during the championship; this was despite him not being part of the Donegal panel at the start of the 2019 season. He was called up over the course of the McKenna Cup as Donegal were short on numbers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288676-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Donegal county football team season\nTwo players started all 18 matches in 2019: these were Jamie Brennan and Hugh McFadden. Niall O'Donnell played each match too, though only as a substitute in the championship meeting with Fermanagh. Paul Brennan only missed one of the eighteen games, though he began just five of these. Jason McGee played in all matches except for the 2019 National Football League fixture with Cork, which he missed due to suspension.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288676-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Donegal county football team season, National Football League Division 2\nDonegal qualified for the Division 2 Final, which they won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 77], "content_span": [78, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288677-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Donostia San Sebastian Klasikoa\nThe 2019 Donostia San Sebastian Klasikoa was a road cycling one-day race that took place on 3 August in San Sebasti\u00e1n, Spain. It was the first women's edition of the Cl\u00e1sica de San Sebasti\u00e1n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288677-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Donostia San Sebastian Klasikoa\nThe 126.7km route covered four categorised climbs, including the Jaizkibel around the 40km mark, a tough steep climb which has often played a pivotal role in deciding the men's race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288677-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Donostia San Sebastian Klasikoa, Teams\nEighteen teams, each with a maximum of six riders, will start the race:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288678-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dorset Council election\nThe 2019 Dorset Council election was held on Thursday 2 May 2019 to elect councillors to the new Dorset Council in England. It took place on the same day as other district council elections in the United Kingdom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288678-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dorset Council election\nThese were the first elections to the new unitary council, which has come into effect on 1 April 2019. The new unitary authority was created to administer most of the area formerly administered by Dorset County Council, which was previously subdivided into the districts of Weymouth and Portland, West Dorset, North Dorset, Purbeck, and East Dorset. The previous elections in for Dorset County Council took place in 2017, and for the former district councils in 2015 and 2016. Future elections will take place 2024 and 2029 and then every 4 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288678-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dorset Council election\nThe 2019 election saw the Conservatives take a majority of seats on the Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288678-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Dorset Council election, Council composition\nPrior to the election the composition of the shadow authority was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288678-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Dorset Council election, Ward results, Blackmore Vale\nBastone was later elected the first chairman of the council", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288678-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Dorset Council election, Ward results, Crossways\nIreland was later elected leader for the Liberal Democrat group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288678-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Dorset Council election, Ward results, Dorchester West\nFry was later elected leader of the all for Dorset independent group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288678-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Dorset Council election, Ward results, Littlemoor and Preston\nO'Leary was the youngest elected councillor aged 20. Cllr Ferrari became the cabinet member for finance and assets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 66], "content_span": [67, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288678-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Dorset Council election, Ward results, Portland\nKimber was later elected leader of the labour and co-op group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288678-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Dorset Council election, Ward results, Rodwell and Wyke\nSutton was elected as leader of the green group on the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288678-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Dorset Council election, Ward results, Verwood\nFlower was later elected as the first leader of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288679-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dover District Council election\nThe 2019 Dover District Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of the Dover District Council in Kent, England. It was held on the same day as other local elections. It was the first election to be held after boundary changes reduced the number of seats from 45 to 32. The Conservative Party retained overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288680-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dow Tennis Classic\nThe 2019 Dow Tennis Classic was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the twenty-fifth edition of the tournament and was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Midland, United States, on 28 January\u20133 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288680-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dow Tennis Classic, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received a wildcard into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288681-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dow Tennis Classic \u2013 Doubles\nKaitlyn Christian and Sabrina Santamaria were the defending champions, but both players chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288681-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dow Tennis Classic \u2013 Doubles\nOlga Govortsova and Valeria Savinykh won the title, defeating Cori Gauff and Ann Li in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288682-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dow Tennis Classic \u2013 Singles\nMadison Brengle was the defending champion but lost to Caty McNally in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288682-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dow Tennis Classic \u2013 Singles\nMcNally won the title, defeating Jessica Pegula in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288683-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Down Senior Football Championship\nThe 2019 Down Senior Football Championship was the 111th official edition of Down GAA's premier Gaelic Football tournament for senior clubs in County Down. 16 teams competed with the winner representing Down in the Ulster Senior Club Football Championship. The tournament operated a double elimination format for the opening two rounds of the championship, with the winners and early round losers rejoining at the quarter final stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288683-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Down Senior Football Championship\nBredagh made their return to the senior grade after claiming the Down I.F.C. title in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288683-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Down Senior Football Championship\nSt. Mary's Burren were the holders after they ended Kilcoo's run of six titles in a row, defeating the then defending champions on a scoreline of 2-12 to 2-09 in the 2018 final. They were unable to defend their title however, as they were eliminated in the Quarter Final, losing to last year's finalists Kilcoo after a replay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288683-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Down Senior Football Championship\nAn R\u00edocht and Saval were relegated to the 2020 I.F.C. after finishing outside the top 15 ranked teams in the Down football leagues for 2018. They finished 5th and 8th (ranked 16th and 19th overall) in Division 2 respectively. Glenn John Martin's and Darragh Cross will replace them after they claimed the 2019 I.F.C. title and finished 4th (ranked 15th overall) in Division 2 respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288683-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Down Senior Football Championship, Team Changes\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2018 championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 52], "content_span": [53, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288683-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Down Senior Football Championship, Participating Teams\nThe following teams took part in the 2019 edition of the Down Senior Football Championship. \u2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288683-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Down Senior Football Championship, Round 1\nThe 16 participating teams were placed into an open draw. Winning sides moved to Round 2A while losing sides went into Round 2B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288683-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Down Senior Football Championship, Round 1\nGame was originally scheduled for 10 August, but was postponed due to adverse weather conditions. The game was moved to 12 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288683-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Down Senior Football Championship, Round 2, Round 2A\nRound 2A featured the eight winning sides from Round 1, with an open draw to determine the fixtures. The winning sides progress directly to the Quarter Final, with the losing sides moving into Round 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288683-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Down Senior Football Championship, Round 2, Round 2B\nRound 2B saw the eight losing sides from Round 1 compete for a place in Round 3. The losing sides from this round were eliminated from the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288683-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Down Senior Football Championship, Round 3\nRound 3 is a supplementary round for teams to have a second chance at reaching the Quarter Final. This round features teams that have lost once so far in this year's Championship, either winning in Round 1 and losing in Round 2A, or losing in Round 1 but winning their Round 2B fixture. Losing sides in this round are eliminated from this year's competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288683-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Down Senior Football Championship, Round 3\nThis round is seeded, meaning in each fixture a Round 2A losing side will face a Round 2B winning side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288683-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Down Senior Football Championship, Quarter Final\nThe Quarter Final sees the two brackets rejoin, with the earlier Round 2A winners facing a Round 3 winner for a Semi Final spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288683-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Down Senior Football Championship, Semi Final\nThe Semi Final will see the four winning sides face off for a place in this year's final. This round is an open draw from the four Quarter Final winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288683-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Down Senior Football Championship, Final\nThe final was played between the two Semi Final winners, and took place at P\u00e1irc Esler, Newry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288683-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Down Senior Football Championship, Final\nWarrenpoint booked their place in their first final in 41 years, while in stark contrast their opponents Kilcoo had qualified for their 8th consecutive final. The teams have met one time before in the final, that was back in 1948 where Warrenpoint won the second of their three previous titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288684-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Down county football team season\nThe following is a summary of Down county football team's 2019 season. On 24 August 2018, Paddy Tally was announced as the new Down manager following the resignation of Eamon Burns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288684-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Down county football team season, Dr McKenna Cup\nThe draw for the 2019 Dr McKenna Cup was made in December 2018. It is the first time in recent history that the competition will start in the previous calendar year as the regular season with games starting in December 2018. Down finished 3rd in the group following defeats to Cavan and Donegal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288684-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Down county football team season, National Football League Division 3\nDown played in Division Three of the National Football League in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288684-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Down county football team season, National Football League Division 3, Fixtures and results\nFixtures for the 2019 National League were announced on 7 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 96], "content_span": [97, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288684-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Down county football team season, Ulster Senior Football Championship\nThe draw for the 2019 Ulster Senior Football Championship took place on 12 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288684-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Down county football team season, 2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship\nDown will enter the 2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship in Round 1 of the qualifiers. Following a win over Tipperary in Round 1 Down progressed into the 2nd round of the All Ireland qualifiers where they were defeated by Mayo bringing an end to their 2019 campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 84], "content_span": [85, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288685-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dr McKenna Cup\nThe 2019 Dr McKenna Cup, known for sponsorship reasons as the Bank of Ireland Dr McKenna Cup, was a Gaelic football competition in the province of Ulster for county and university teams. It was held at the beginning of the GAA season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288685-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dr McKenna Cup\nTwelve teams took part \u2013 the nine Ulster county teams and three university teams, i.e. St Mary's University College, Belfast, Queen's University Belfast and Ulster University at Jordanstown (UUJ).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288685-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dr McKenna Cup\nThe draw was made on 5 December 2018 with the fixtures confirmed following a meeting of Comhairle Uladh CCC later in the month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288685-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Dr McKenna Cup\nDonegal were the defending champions having defeated Tyrone in the 2018 decider.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288685-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Dr McKenna Cup\nTyrone were the 2019 champions beating Armagh in the final. Tyrone also won all five of their games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288685-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Dr McKenna Cup, Competition format\nThe twelve teams are drawn into three sections of four teams, with each section containing three county teams and one university team. Each team plays the other teams in their section once, either home or away. Two points are awarded for a win and one for a draw. The points-ratio method (points for divided by points against) is used to determine the ranking of teams who are level on section points (as opposed to the more typical scoring differential).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288685-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Dr McKenna Cup, Competition format\nThe winners of the three sections and the best of the runners-up in the three sections compete in the semi-finals with the two winners meeting in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288685-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Dr McKenna Cup, Experimental rules\nOn 24 November 2018 the GAA Central Council approved five experimental changes to the football playing rules which were amended slightly and trialled in the 2018\u201319 early season competitions organised by the four provincial councils (FBD League - Connacht, O'Byrne Cup - Leinster, McGrath Cup - Munster and McKenna Cup - Ulster).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288685-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Dr McKenna Cup, Experimental rules\nThe effectiveness of the new rules was reviewed by Central Council on 19 January 2019. Although one of the key aims of the experiment was to reduce the number of handpasses in Gaelic football, they voted 25-23 to not continue with the rule that restricted the number of consecutive handpasses to three (which was previously trialled in the 1989 National Football League and quickly abandoned). This decision followed an almost universal campaign by GAA county team managers in the media against its permanent introduction The Gaelic Players Association (GPA) were also strongly against the three handpass rule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288685-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Dr McKenna Cup, Experimental rules\nThe remaining four experimental rules were trialled in the 2019 National Football League which began on 26 January 2019 and ended on 31 March 2019. There was little criticism of the four rules in the league games. Jim Gavin, the Dublin manager, said the decision to experiment in the league, the GAA's second tier inter-county competition, was \"disrespectful\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288685-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Dr McKenna Cup, Experimental rules\nGAA rules only allow changes to the playing rules in years divisible by five which means that, at the earliest, the experimental playing rules could only be approved by Congress 2020 for implementation in the 2020 Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288685-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Dr McKenna Cup, Experimental rules\nThe three handpass rule was not used in the Dr. McKenna Cup final. Both Tyrone and Armagh agreed to play without the rule as it had been abandoned by Central Council in the hours just before the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288686-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Drake Bulldogs football team\nThe 2019 Drake Bulldogs football team represents Drake University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Bulldogs compete as members of the Pioneer Football League and are led by first-year head coach Todd Stepsis. They play their home games at Drake Stadium in Des Moines, Iowa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288686-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Drake Bulldogs football team, Previous season\nThe Bulldogs finished the 2018 season 7\u20134, 6-2 in PFL play to finish in a tie for second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288686-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Drake Bulldogs football team, Preseason, Coaching changes\nIn January 2019, it was announced that with the resignation of 5-year head coach Rick Fox, that defensive coordinator, Todd Stepsis would be promoted to head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288686-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Drake Bulldogs football team, Preseason, Preseason coaches' poll\nThe Pioneer League released their preseason coaches' poll on July 30, 2019. The Bulldogs were picked to finish in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288686-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Drake Bulldogs football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013PFL teams\nThe Bulldogs had eleven players selected to the preseason all\u2013PFL teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288687-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Drexler-Automotive Formula 3 Cup\nThe 2019 Drexler-Automotive Formula 3 Cup was the 38th Austria Formula 3 Cup season and the first Drexler-Automotive Formula 3 Cup season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288687-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Drexler-Automotive Formula 3 Cup, Teams and drivers\nAll Cup cars were built between 2008 and 2012, while Trophy cars were built between 1992 and 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288688-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Drive for the Cure 250\nThe 2019 Drive for the Cure 250 presented by Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina is a NASCAR Xfinity Series race held on September 28, 2019, at Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord, North Carolina. Contested over 67 laps on the 2.28-mile (3.67 km) road course, it was the 28th race of the 2019 NASCAR Xfinity Series season, second race of the Playoffs, and the second race of the Round of 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288688-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Drive for the Cure 250, Background, Track\nSince 2018, deviating from past NASCAR events at Charlotte, the race will utilize a road course configuration of Charlotte Motor Speedway, promoted and trademarked as the \"Roval\". The course is 2.28 miles (3.67\u00a0km) in length and features 17 turns, utilizing the infield road course and portions of the oval track. The race will be contested over a scheduled distance of 67 laps, 245.803 kilometres (152.735\u00a0mi).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288688-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Drive for the Cure 250, Practice, First practice\nChristopher Bell was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 84.489 seconds and a speed of 98.853\u00a0mph (159.088\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288688-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Drive for the Cure 250, Practice, Final practice\nA. J. Allmendinger was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 83.938 seconds and a speed of 99.502\u00a0mph (160.133\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288688-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Drive for the Cure 250, Qualifying\nChase Briscoe scored the pole for the race with a time of 83.232 seconds and a speed of 100.346\u00a0mph (161.491\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288688-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Drive for the Cure 250, Race, Summary\nChase Briscoe started on pole and maintained his lead, winning Stage 1. Cole Custer overtook teammate Briscoe at the conclusion of Stage 1, and won Stage 2, which did not see any cautions. Alex Labb\u00e9 notably won points in both stages and also had a career-best finish of 6th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288688-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Drive for the Cure 250, Race, Summary\nOn lap 45, a caution occurred and four playoff drivers, including Brandon Jones and John Hunter Nemechek, were involved. Afterwards, Briscoe attempted to overtake Christopher Bell for second place. Briscoe drove hard into Bell, running him off the track. Bell was obligated to serve a penalty due to going off-track, but instead chased Briscoe down and deliberately spun him. Bell was ruled by NASCAR to have to restart at the rear of the field. Briscoe suffered as his team spent a long time repairing his car. Neither driver was able to fully recover from the incident, though Bell was already locked into the next round of the playoffs from his win at the previous week's race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288688-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Drive for the Cure 250, Race, Summary\nFor the other playoffs drivers, Ryan Sieg dealt with fuel pressure issues early in the race, finishing two laps down. Justin Haley experienced mechanical issues and went to the garage for repairs, finishing six laps down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288688-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Drive for the Cure 250, Race, Summary\nA. J. Allmendinger had a strong run on the final restart, winning the race with a 2-second lead over Tyler Reddick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288688-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Drive for the Cure 250, Race, Summary\nNemechek, Jones, Sieg, and Haley all exited the race below the cut line for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288689-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Drydene 400\nThe 2019 Drydene 400 was a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race that was held on October 6, 2019 at Dover International Speedway in Dover, Delaware. Contested over 400 laps on the one-mile (1.6\u00a0 km) concrete speedway, it was the 30th race of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season, the fourth race of the Playoffs, and the first race of the Round of 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288689-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Drydene 400, Report, Background\nDover International Speedway (formerly Dover Downs International Speedway) is a race track in Dover, Delaware, United States. Since opening in 1969, it has held at least two NASCAR races. In addition to NASCAR, the track also hosted USAC and the Verizon IndyCar Series. The track features one layout, a 1 mile (1.6\u00a0km) concrete oval, with 24\u00b0 banking in the turns and 9\u00b0 banking on the straights. The speedway was owned and operated by Dover Motorsports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288689-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Drydene 400, Report, Background\nThe track, nicknamed \"The Monster Mile\", was built in 1969 by Melvin Joseph of Melvin L. Joseph Construction Company, Inc., with an asphalt surface, but was replaced with concrete in 1995. Six years later in 2001, the track's capacity moved to 135,000 seats, making the track have the largest capacity of sports venue in the mid-Atlantic. In 2002, the name changed to Dover International Speedway from Dover Downs International Speedway after Dover Downs Gaming and Entertainment split, making Dover Motorsports. From 2007 to 2009, the speedway worked on an improvement project called \"The Monster Makeover\", which expanded facilities at the track and beautified the track. After the 2014 season, the track's capacity was reduced to 95,500 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 783]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288689-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Drydene 400, Practice, First practice\nJoey Logano was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 22.056 seconds and a speed of 163.221\u00a0mph (262.679\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288689-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Drydene 400, Practice, Final practice\nKyle Larson was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 22.126 seconds and a speed of 162.705\u00a0mph (261.848\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288689-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Drydene 400, Qualifying\nDenny Hamlin scored the pole for the race with a time of 21.559 and a speed of 166.984\u00a0mph (268.735\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288689-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Drydene 400, Media, Television\nNBC Sports covered the race on the television side. Rick Allen, 2006 race winner Jeff Burton, Steve Letarte and 2001 race winner Dale Earnhardt Jr. had the call in the booth for the race. Dave Burns, Marty Snider and Kelli Stavast reported from pit lane during the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288689-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Drydene 400, Media, Radio\nMRN had the radio call for the race, which was simulcast on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio. Alex Hayden, Jeff Striegle and 3 time Dover winner Rusty Wallace had the call for MRN when the field raced down the front straightaway. Mike Bagley called the race from a platform outside turn 3 when the field raced down the back straightaway. Winston Kelley, Steve Post, and Kim Coon called the race for MRN from pit lane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288690-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai 24 Hour\nThe 2019 Dubai 24 Hour was the 14th running of the Dubai 24 Hour. It was also the first round of both the 2019 24H GT Series and the 2019 24H TCE Series. The event was held on 11 to 13 January at the Dubai Autodrome, United Arab Emirates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288691-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai Sevens\nThe 2019 Dubai Sevens was the first tournament within the 2019\u201320 World Rugby Sevens Series and was the 20th international edition and the 50th overall of the Dubai Sevens since it began in 1970. It was held on 5\u20137 December 2019 at The Sevens Stadium in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288691-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai Sevens, Background\nThe 2019 Dubai Sevens was the first of ten tournaments in the 2019\u201320 World Rugby Sevens Series with the tournament holding its 50th edition of the tournament with it being the 20th time that an World Series event has been held. For Ireland, they would join the series as a core team for the first time after winning the qualifier held at the 2019 Hong Kong Sevens defeating the host nation in the final by 21 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288691-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai Sevens, Background\nThroughout the off-season, qualifying for the 2020 Summer Olympics took place in the continental tournaments. Over in the Americas, Argentina and Canada qualified through to the Olympics after defeating Brazil and Jamaica respectively. The following week saw Great Britain became the eighth team to qualify after defeating France in the final at Colomiers. In early November, Australia and Kenya became the ninth and tenth team to qualify as they both won their respective regional tournaments. The final continentinal spot went to South Korea after defeating Hong Kong in the final of the 2019 Asia Rugby Sevens Olympic Qualifying Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288691-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai Sevens, Format\nThe sixteen are drawn into four pools of four teams. Each team plays every other team in their pool once. The top two teams from each pool advance to the Cup playoffs and compete for gold, silver and bronze medals. The other teams from each pool go to the classification playoffs for ninth to sixteenth placings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288691-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai Sevens, Teams\nFifteen core teams are participating in the tournament along with one invited team, Japan:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288692-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai Tennis Championships\nThe 2019 Dubai Tennis Championships (also known as the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships for sponsorship reasons) was an ATP Tour 500 event on the 2019 ATP Tour and a WTA Premier 5 event on the 2019 WTA Tour. Both events were held at the Aviation Club Tennis Centre in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. The women's tournament took place from 17 to 23 February and the men's tournament from 25 February\u20132 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288692-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288692-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288692-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288692-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai Tennis Championships, WTA doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received a wildcard into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288693-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Doubles\nJean-Julien Rojer and Horia Tec\u0103u were the defending champions, but lost in the semifinals to Rajeev Ram and Joe Salisbury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288693-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Doubles\nRam and Salisbury went on to win the title, defeating Ben McLachlan and Jan-Lennard Struff in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20134), 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288694-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Singles\nRoberto Bautista Agut was the defending champion, but lost in the second round to Nikoloz Basilashvili.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288694-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Singles\nRoger Federer won his 8th Dubai title, and 100th ATP singles title overall, defeating Stefanos Tsitsipas, 6\u20134, 6\u20134, in the final. Federer became the second male tennis player in history after Jimmy Connors in 1983 to win 100 ATP singles titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288694-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Singles\nFollowing his run to the final, Tsitsipas entered the top 10 in the ATP Rankings for the first time in his career, becoming the first Greek player to achieve this feat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288695-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Doubles\nWomen's doubles were played at the 2019 Dubai Tennis Championships at the Aviation Club Tennis Centre in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. The women's tournament took place from 17 to 23 February. Chan Hao-ching and Yang Zhaoxuan were the defending champions, but chose to participate with different partners. Chan played alongside her sister Latisha, but they lost in the semifinals to Hsieh Su-wei and Barbora Str\u00fdcov\u00e1. Yang partnered Abigail Spears, but lost in the first round to Eugenie Bouchard and Sofia Kenin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288695-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Doubles\nHsieh and Str\u00fdcov\u00e1 went on to win the title, defeating Lucie Hradeck\u00e1 and Ekaterina Makarova in the final, 6\u20134, 6-4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288695-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Doubles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds and the seventh seeds received a bye into the second round (the latter as the result of a late withdrawal).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 56], "content_span": [57, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288696-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Singles\nElina Svitolina was the two-time defending champion, but lost in the semifinals to Belinda Bencic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288696-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Singles\nBencic won the title, despite being six match points down in the third round against Aryna Sabalenka, beating Petra Kvitov\u00e1 in the final, 6\u20133, 1\u20136, 6\u20132. For the second time in her career, Bencic defeated four consecutive top-ten players en route to a Premier 5 title. This was her first WTA singles title since winning the Premier 5 Rogers Cup title in 2015 and lifted her back inside the top 25 for the first time in over two and a half years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288696-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nThe top eight seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 56], "content_span": [57, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288697-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai Women's Sevens\nThe 2019 Dubai Women's Sevens will be an tournament held at The Sevens Stadium in Dubai, United Arab Emirates from 5\u20137 December 2019. It will be the ninth edition of the Dubai Women's Sevens and will also be the second tournament of the 2019\u201320 World Rugby Women's Sevens Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288697-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai Women's Sevens, Format\nThe teams 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 while the top 2 third place teams also compete in the Cup/Plate. The other teams from each group play-off for the Challenge Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288697-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai Women's Sevens, Teams\nTwelve teams will compete in the tournament with eleven being the core teams that compete throughout the entire season. The invited team for this tournament is Japan who was invited after last competing in the previous round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288698-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai World Cup\nThe 2019 Dubai World Cup was a horse race run at Meydan Racecourse in Dubai on 30 March 2019. It was the 24th running of the race. The total prize money for the race was US$12 million, with the winner receiving $7.2 million. This was an increase of $2 million on the previous year, making it the world's richest horse race in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288698-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai World Cup\nThe race was won for the second year running by Thunder Snow, who became the first horse to win the Dubai World Cup twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288698-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai World Cup, Entries\nA total of 13 horses were entered for the race, including Godolphin's defending champion Thunder Snow, who was bidding to become the first horse to win the race for a second time. Al Maktoum Challenge winners North America (Rounds 1 and 2) and Capezzano (Round 3) headed a strong local challenge from the United Arab Emirates, which also included Axelrod, Gronkowski and New Trails. The United States was also well represented with Pegasus World Cup runner-up Seeking The Soul, Breeders' Cup Classic runner-up Gunnevera, along with Audible, Pavel and Yoshida. The field was completed by Japanese challenger K T Brave and the Korean-trained Dolkong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288698-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai World Cup, Entries, Road to Meydan\nThe contenders' results in key races during the build-up to the Dubai World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288698-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai World Cup, Entries, Race card\nThe draw for the race was made on 27 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288698-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai World Cup, Entries, Race card\nK T Brave was later withdrawn, reducing the field to 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288698-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Dubai World Cup, Race, Summary\nNorth America was fastest out of the gates and took an early lead, with defending champion Thunder Snow breaking well from the second widest draw to move in behind the leader, alongside Capezzano, who was pulling hard on the inside. As the horses settled, Gronkowski moved through to challenge North America for the lead, with the leaders closely followed by Thunder Snow, Capezzano and New Trails. The positions at the front of the race remained unchanged until the final bend, where Capezzano and New Trails quickly faded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288698-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Dubai World Cup, Race, Summary\nInto the home straight, North America started to drop back as Thunder Snow challenged Gronkowski for the lead. The two horses, now clear of the rest of the field, battled all the way to the line, with Thunder Snow getting up to win by a nose in a photo finish, becoming the first horse to win two Dubai World Cups. Gunnevera ran on from the back to take third place, with Pavel staying on to finish fourth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288699-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dublin City Council election\nAn election to Dublin City Council took place on 24 May 2019 as part of the Irish local elections. 63 councillors were elected from 11 local electoral areas (LEAs) on the system of proportional representation by means of the single transferable vote (PR-STV) for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288699-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dublin City Council election\nIn 2014, there were nine LEAs each electing between six and nine councillors. Following the recommendations of the Local Area Boundary Committee Report in June 2018, there are now eleven LEAs each electing between five and seven councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288699-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dublin City Council election\nSinn F\u00e9in had a bad election, losing eight seats to return with eight councillors, going from being the largest party to the fourth largest. Fianna F\u00e1il won eleven seats an increase of two, to become the largest party on the Council for the first time since 1999. The Green Party became the second largest party on the Council for the first time going from three to ten councillors, making the largest gains of any party and winning a seat in every LEA they contested here. Labour returned with eight councillors the same as they did five years previous.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288699-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Dublin City Council election, Results by party\nOutgoing Councillor Ellis Ryan was elected in 2014 in the North Inner City as an Independent but subsequently joined the Workers' Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288699-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Dublin City Council election, Results by party\nOutgoing Councillor Pat Dunne was elected in 2014 in Crumlin-Kimmage as a United Left candidate but was elected as an Independents 4 Change candidate in this election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288699-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Dublin City Council election, Results by party\nOutgoing Councillor John Lyons was a candidate for Independent Left which is an unregistered political party so appeared on the ballot paper as a non party independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288699-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Dublin City Council election, Results by local electoral area, Artane\u2013Whitehall\nOutgoing Councillor John Lyons was a candidate for Independent Left which is an unregistered political party so appeared on the ballot paper as a non-party independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 84], "content_span": [85, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288699-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Dublin City Council election, Results by local electoral area, Donaghmede\nNiamh McDonald was a candidate for Independent Left which is an unregistered political party so appeared on the ballot paper as a non-party independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 78], "content_span": [79, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288700-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dublin Fingal by-election\nA by-election was held in the D\u00e1il \u00c9ireann Dublin Fingal constituency in Ireland on Friday, 29 November 2019, to fill the vacancy left by the election of Independents 4 Change TD Clare Daly to the European Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288700-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dublin Fingal by-election\nIt was held on the same day as three other by-elections in Cork North-Central, Dublin Mid-West and Wexford. The Electoral (Amendment) Act 2011 stipulates that a by-election in Ireland must be held within six months of a vacancy occurring. The by-election writ was moved in the D\u00e1il on 7 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288700-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dublin Fingal by-election\nAt the 2016 general election, the electorate of Dublin Fingal was 93,486, and the constituency elected one Fianna F\u00e1il TD, one Independents 4 Change TD, one Fine Gael TD, one Labour Party TD, and one Sinn F\u00e9in TD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288700-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Dublin Fingal by-election\nThe election was won by Fingal County Councillor Joe O'Brien of the Green Party. It was the first by-election won by a Green Party candidate. Karen Power was co-opted to O'Brien's seat on Fingal County Council following his election to the D\u00e1il", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288700-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Dublin Fingal by-election\nAmong the candidates were 2 Senators Lorraine Clifford-Lee and James Reilly and four Fingal County Councillors Ann Graves, Dean Mulligan, Joe O'Brien and Duncan Smith.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288700-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Dublin Fingal by-election\nThis was the first occasion when by-elections were contested by Independents 4 Change (who also contested Dublin Mid-West) and the Social Democrats (who also contested Cork North-Central and Dublin Mid-West).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288700-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Dublin Fingal by-election, Campaign\nDuring the campaign, the Fianna F\u00e1il candidate Lorraine Clifford-Lee was embroiled in controversy when she had to apologise for the language she had used in tweets she had made in 2011, which were derogatory towards the Traveller community.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288701-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dublin Mid-West by-election\nA by-election was held in the D\u00e1il \u00c9ireann Dublin Mid-West constituency in Ireland on Friday, 29 November 2019, to fill the vacancy left by the election of Fine Gael TD Frances Fitzgerald to the European Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288701-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dublin Mid-West by-election\nIt was held on the same day as three other by-elections in Cork North-Central, Dublin Fingal and Wexford. The Electoral (Amendment) Act 2011 stipulates that a by-election in Ireland must be held within six months of a vacancy occurring. The by-election writ was moved in the D\u00e1il on 7 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288701-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dublin Mid-West by-election\nAt the 2016 general election, the electorate of Dublin Mid-West was 69,388, and the constituency elected one Sinn F\u00e9in TD, one Fine Gael TD, one Fianna F\u00e1il TD, and one AAA\u2013PBP TD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288701-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Dublin Mid-West by-election\nThe election was won by South Dublin County Councillor Mark Ward of Sinn F\u00e9in. Lisa Colman was co-opted to Ward's seat on South Dublin County Council following his election to the D\u00e1il.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288701-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Dublin Mid-West by-election\nAmong the candidates were 7 South Dublin County Councillors; Paul Gogarty, Emer Higgins, Peter Kavanagh, Shane Moynihan, Francis Timmons, Joanna Tuffy and Mark Ward and former South Dublin County Councillor Ruth Nolan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288701-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Dublin Mid-West by-election\nThis was the first occasion when by-elections were contested by Independents 4 Change (who also contested Dublin Fingal) and the Social Democrats (who also contested Cork North-Central and Dublin Fingal).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288702-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dublin Senior Football Championship\nThe 2019 Dublin Senior Football Championship was the 133rd edition of Dublin GAA's premier gaelic football tournament for senior clubs in County Dublin, Ireland. 32 teams participate (16 in Senior 1 and 16 in Senior 2), with the winner of Senior 1 representing Dublin in the Leinster Senior Club Football Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288702-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dublin Senior Football Championship\nRound Towers, Lusk won the 2018 I.F.C. and were promoted to Senior 2. Thomas Davis won the Senior 2 Championship and were promoted to Senior 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288703-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dublin Senior Hurling Championship\nThe 2019 Dublin Senior Hurling Championship was the 132nd staging of the Dublin Senior Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Dublin County Board in 1887. The championship began in April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288703-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dublin Senior Hurling Championship\nBallyboden St. Enda's were the defending champions, defeating Kilmacud Crokes in the 2018 final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288704-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dudley Hewitt Cup\nThe 2019 Dudley Hewitt Cup was the 48th Central Canadian Jr A Ice Hockey Championship for the Canadian Junior Hockey League. The Winner of the 2018 Dudley Hewitt Cup will represent the central region in the 2019 National Junior A Hockey Championship in Brooks, AB.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288704-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dudley Hewitt Cup, Tournament, Round Robin\nx = Clinched championship round berth; y = Clinched first overall", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288705-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dudley Metropolitan Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Dudley Metropolitan Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Dudley Metropolitan Borough Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288706-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Duhallow Junior A Football Championship\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by 109.79.124.115 (talk) at 22:58, 9 October 2021. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288706-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Duhallow Junior A Football Championship\nThe 2019 Duhallow Junior A Football Championship is the 87th staging of the Duhallow Junior A Football Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288706-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Duhallow Junior A Football Championship, Results, Final\nDuhallow Winners and Runners-Up will Qualify to the First Round of the 2019 Cork Junior A Football Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288707-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Duke Blue Devils football team\nThe 2019 Duke Blue Devils football team represented Duke University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season s a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) in the Coastal Division. The team was led by head coach David Cutcliffe, in his 12th year, and played its home games at Wallace Wade Stadium in Durham, North Carolina. They finished the season 5\u20137 overall and 3\u20135 in ACC play to place sixth in the Coastal Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288707-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Duke Blue Devils football team, Preseason, Preseason media poll\nIn the preseason ACC media poll, Duke was predicted to finish in fifth in the Coastal Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 68], "content_span": [69, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288708-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Duke Blue Devils men's soccer team\nThe 2019 Duke Blue Devils men's soccer team represented Duke University during the 2019 NCAA Division I men's soccer season. The Blue Devils were led by head coach John Kerr, in his twelfth season. They played home games at Koskinen Stadium. The team was founded in 1935 and currently plays in the Atlantic Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288708-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Duke Blue Devils men's soccer team, Background\nThe 2018 Duke men's soccer team finished the season with a 11\u20137\u20132 overall record and a 5\u20133\u20130 ACC record. The Blue Devils were seeded third\u2013overall in the 2018 ACC Men's Soccer Tournament, where they lost to North Carolina in the Semifinals, after advancing over Pittsburgh on penalties in the Quarterfinals. The Blue Devils earned an at-large bid into the 2018 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament. As the eighth\u2013overall seed in the tournament, Duke hosted Pacific in the Second Round. Duke won 1\u20130 and progressed to face Maryland at home. Duke lost the match 0\u20132 to end their season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288708-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Duke Blue Devils men's soccer team, Player movement, Players arriving\nIn addition to the three person recruiting class, Duke also added Sergi Nus via graduate transfer from Virginia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 74], "content_span": [75, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288708-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Duke Blue Devils men's soccer team, Squad, 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, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288709-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Duke Blue Devils women's soccer team\nThe 2019 Duke Blue Devils women's soccer team represented Duke University during the 2019 NCAA Division I women's soccer season. The Blue Devils were led by head coach Robbie Church, in his nineteenth season. They played home games at Koskinen Stadium. This was the team's 32nd season playing organized women's college soccer and their 32nd playing in the Atlantic Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288709-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Duke Blue Devils women's soccer team\nThe Blue Devils finished the season 9\u20134\u20137, 3\u20131\u20136 in ACC play to finish in sixth place. As the sixth seed in the ACC Tournament, lost to Virginia in the Quarterfinals. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they defeated Utah before losing to Wisconsin in the Second Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288709-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Duke Blue Devils women's soccer team, Squad, 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, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288710-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dundalk F.C. season\nDundalk entered the 2019 season as the reigning League Champions and FAI Cup holders from 2018. They had a new management team of Vinny Perth and the returning John Gill, after Stephen Kenny (the manager since 2013) had resigned to accept the Republic of Ireland U-21 manager's role. The 2019 season was Dundalk's 11th consecutive season in the top tier of Irish football, their 84th in all, and their 93rd in the League of Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288710-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dundalk F.C. season, Season summary\nThe new season's curtain raiser - the President's Cup - was played on 9 February in Turners Cross (stadium) between Dundalk and Cork City, the runners-up in both league and cup the previous year. Dundalk won on a 2-1 scoreline. The 36 round League programme commenced on 15 February 2019, and was completed on 25 October 2019. Dundalk retained their title with four games to spare, sealing the title in Oriel Park with a 3-2 victory over Shamrock Rovers on 23 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288710-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Dundalk F.C. season, Season summary\nThey had already won the League Cup, defeating Derry City on penalties in the Brandywell nine days earlier. Chasing a domestic Treble, they were defeated in a penalty shoot-out in the FAI Cup final by Shamrock Rovers. But they ended the season with a comprehensive 7\u20131 aggregate victory over Northern Irish champions, Linfield, in the inaugural Champions Cup (All-Ireland) \u2013 bringing the trophy haul in Perth's rookie season to four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288710-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dundalk F.C. season, Season summary\nIn Europe Dundalk entered the 2019-20 UEFA Champions League first qualifying round. After being seeded in the draw, they faced Riga, drawing the home leg in Oriel Park 0-0. The away leg in Riga was the club's 70th match in European football, which also finished 0-0. After extra-time failed to separate the sides, they won 5-4 in a sudden-death penalty shootout \u2013 their first in Europe, becoming the first Irish side to win a tie in that manner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288710-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Dundalk F.C. season, Season summary\nThey were knocked out in the second qualifying round by Qaraba\u011f when a 1-1 home draw was followed by a 3-0 defeat away in Baku, which saw them receive a bye into the Europa League Third qualifying round. Their interest in Europe for the season ended there, with a 4-1 aggregate defeat to Slovan Bratislava. Both Qaraba\u011f and Slovan subsequently reached the group stage of the Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288711-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dunedin mayoral election\nThe 2019 Dunedin mayoral election was held on 12 October 2019. It was conducted with a single transferable vote (STV) system. Aaron Hawkins was elected for his first term as Dunedin's 58th Mayor after beating 13 other candidates. Nominations opened on 19 July 2019 and closed on 16 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288712-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Duquesne Dukes football team\nThe 2019 Duquesne Dukes football team represents Duquesne University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They are led by 15th-year head coach Jerry Schmitt and play their home games at Arthur J. Rooney Athletic Field. They play as a member of the Northeast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288712-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Duquesne Dukes football team, Previous season\nThe Dukes finished the 2018 season 9\u20134, 5\u20131 in NEC play to be NEC co-champions with Sacred Heart. Due to their head-to-head win over Sacred Heart, they received the NEC's automatic bid to the FCS Playoffs where they defeated Towson in the first round before losing in the second round to South Dakota State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288712-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Duquesne Dukes football team, Preseason, Preseason coaches' poll\nThe NEC released their preseason coaches' poll on July 24, 2019. The Dukes were picked to finish in first place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288712-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Duquesne Dukes football team, Preseason, Preseason All-NEC team\nThe Dukes had nine players at eight positions selected to the preseason all-NEC team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288713-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Durand Cup\nThe 2019 Durand Cup was the 129th edition of the Durand Cup, oldest football tournament in Asia, since the tournament's founding in 1888. 16 teams competed in the tournament. The matches were played across three locations in West Bengal, namely Kolkata, Howrah and Kalyani from 2 August 2019. This was for the first time that the tournament played outside Delhi, its traditional venue. The final took place at the Salt Lake Stadium on 24 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288713-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Durand Cup\nArmy Green were the defending champions, having defeated NEROCA in the 2016 final, however they did not qualify for the semi-finals having finished last in the group. Gokulam Kerala won their maiden title by defeating Mohun Bagan 2\u20131 in the 2019 Durand Cup Final which was held on 24 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288713-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Durand Cup, Teams\nA total of 16 teams participated in this year's competition. 5 teams from Indian Super League, 6 from I-League, 1 2nd division club and 4 armed forces teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288713-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Durand Cup, Broadcasting\nAll match were streamed LIVE on Addatimes. Semifinals & Final matches were streamed LIVE on Hotstar as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288713-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Durand Cup, Broadcasting\n91.9 Friends FM was the official radio partner of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288713-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Durand Cup, Knockout stage\nWinners of each group will progress into the semi-finals. The winner of Group A will face the winner of Group D, and the winner of Group B will face the winner of Group C in the semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288713-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Durand Cup, Knockout stage\nThe knockout matches will have thirty minutes of extra-time if the teams are tied at the end of usual time, and if they are drawing even after that, the winner of the fixture will be decided through penalty shootouts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288713-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Durand Cup, Goalscorers\nThere were 74 goals scored in 27 matches, for an average of 2.74 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288714-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Durban Easter floods\nDuring the 2019 Easter weekend, the coastal city of Durban, South Africa, experienced severe flooding, caused by torrential rain brought on by a steep upper air trough, which deepened into low pressure in the upper levels of the atmosphere, and impacted the city and its surrounding areas starting 18 April 2019. The floods has resulted in at least 70 deaths caused by collapsed buildings, mudslides and sinkholes. It is one of the deadliest disasters to hit the country in the 2010s decade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288714-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Durban Easter floods, Cause\nWeather forecasters stated that the flooding was caused due to a cutoff low pressure system, which is often known to cause severe storms. The South African weather service later revealed that 165mm of rain fell over the city on 22 April 2019, breaking the previous record of 108mm that fell on October 10, 2017. It was also the heaviest rainfall the city has experienced in a 24-hour period since October 30, 1985.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288714-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Durban Easter floods, Impacted areas\nFlooding, landslides, collapsed buildings and rivers bursting their banks were reported all along the south of Durban, with the hardest-hit areas being uMlazi, eManzimtoti, Chatsworth, Malvern and Queensburgh. Other areas affected include Mount Edgecomb and Virginia airport. King Shaka International Airport, which is further north, reported lighter rainfall during the period, however, this came days after another storm caused significant infrastructural damage in Ballito, which is roughly 20\u00a0km south of KwaDukuza (Stanger). On the south coast, Port Edward recorded, Margate, Pennington and Paddock reported massive rainfall. The Eastern Cape was also hard hit, with Port St Johns recording 190mm of rainfall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288714-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Durban Easter floods, Death toll\nBy April 25, 2019, acting KwaZulu-Natal Premier Sihle Zikalala stated in a press briefing that the death toll has been risen from an initial 51, to 70. It was also revealed that at least 1000 people have been left displaced following the floods. Later on April 25, MEC for Co-operative Governance and Traditional Affairs Nomusa Dube-Ncube said that the death toll had now increased to 85.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288714-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Durban Easter floods, Reactions\nSouth African president Cyril Ramaphosa said he had been given the green light by National Treasury that there are emergency funds available to assist affected families. \"Money will be mobilized to assist our people. These are emergencies that are budgeted for, so resources will be mobilized in the biggest way so that people currently in need are assisted\". Ramaphosa was forced to cut short his trip to the African Union Troika Summit in Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288714-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Durban Easter floods, Reactions\nThe South African National Defense Force was also immediately deployed in order to assist with flood relief.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288714-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Durban Easter floods, Reactions\nPolitical parties in South Africa later called for the ANC and KZN Department of Cooperative Governance to immediately release disaster relief funds and urgently get to work on rebuilding homes and providing adequate shelter to all the affected communities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288714-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Durban Easter floods, Aftermath, Damage cost\nAn interim report tabled at eThekwini Metro following flooding estimated the cost of repair to tip over R650 000 000. Following a meeting with the city's Disaster Management Center, the KZN Municipality stated that damages such as storm water pipes, washed away walls and culvert repairs at R248 400 000. Electricity related costs were at R19 530 000 with repairs to 11 substations to be undertaken. The city's health unit estimates costs to be R3 000 000 with the roofs of clinics in a number of areas damaged as well as consultation rooms, which were also flooded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288714-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Durban Easter floods, Aftermath, Flood relief\nThe United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs (UNOOSA), announced an initiative to aid in flood relief in the country by activating the International Charter \"Space and Major Disasters\" on behalf of the National Disaster Management Centre (NDC). Multiple non-profit organisations rallied together to aid with the handing out of food, clothing and shelter to those displaced as a result of destroyed homes, while a crowd-funded initiative raised R24 000 under 20 hours, with NPO's later setting out several drop-off points for the public to assist in sponsoring items to those affected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288714-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Durban Easter floods, Aftermath, Flood relief\nNaspers Chief People Officer Aileen O\u2019Toole, revealed that the company as donated R1 000 000 to aid in flood relief and urged other companies to follow through with donations. Coca-Cola South Africa's Regional Public Affairs and Communications Manager, Nolundi Mzimba, revealed that the company donated R600 000 towards relief efforts and that companies will also be partnering with local communities, employees and Plastics SA to help with clean up following the floods subsiding", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288714-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Durban Easter floods, Aftermath, Pollution\nFollowing the floods subsiding, Durban acting port manager Nokuzola Nkowane said in a release that operating divisions were carrying out assessments to establish the full extent of damage caused by the storm, and revealed that Durban port's pollution control teams had been on-site cleaning up the debris within port waters, aided by cleanup from other companies. Due to the significant amount of water that was brought on land from the ocean and rivers, several beaches and river boundaries left behind significant plastic pollution resulting in massive uproar from multiple communities of the state of pollution in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288714-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Durban Easter floods, Aftermath, Pollution\nGreenpeace Africa stated that the Durban Floods have really brought to light the huge plastic pollution crisis in South Africa, and urged communities to begin a cleanup process. The massive pollution in the Durban port also resulted in movement of ships in Durban harbour limited by mass debris pile-up Lindsay Hopkins, project director at Breathe Ocean Conservation, told News24 on April 25, that several organisations that are mobilizing people to assist in cleanups. Cleanup processes were expected to take over a month to complete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288715-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Durham gas explosion\nOn April 10, 2019, a gas explosion occurred near downtown Durham, North Carolina at the 115 block of North Duke Street in the Brightleaf District. The blast destroyed several buildings and damaged dozens of others, killing two people and injuring 25 others, including 9 firefighters. City officials have cited a gas leak to be the cause of the blast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288715-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Durham gas explosion\nOn June 22, 2020, four separate lawsuits were filed in relation to the explosion. Each lawsuit represented separate victims of the blast, including one of the two deceased.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288715-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Durham gas explosion, Background\nThe explosion occurred at a local coffee shop by the name of Kaffeinate. The store was run by shop owner Kong Lee and his family.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288715-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Durham gas explosion, Background\nAt 9:38\u00a0am, firefighters responded to a call of a potential gas leak near the Kaffeinate shop. Many witnesses reported the smell of gas prior to the explosion taking place. Durham officials stated that they evacuated eight to ten people from the coffee shop prior to the blast. The leak was reportedly caused by a gas line being breached by contractors with valid work permits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288715-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Durham gas explosion, Explosion\nAt 10:07\u00a0am, an explosion was reported near downtown Durham. The sound of the explosion was captured on one of the cameras facing the nearby 11-foot-8 bridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288715-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Durham gas explosion, Explosion\nThe damage was widespread, as businesses roughly two blocks away suffered damage although this was mostly limited to shattered windows. Fifteen buildings suffered damage in and around Brightleaf. The coffee shop, Kaffeinate, was reduced to rubble as a result of the blast. An adjacent building holding a Porsche collection was destroyed. An office building directly in front of the coffee shop suffered extensive damage to its interior and exterior. The explosion could be felt several miles away, and a large smoke cloud from the resulting fire could be seen from miles away \u2014 this smoke cloud also showed up on weather radar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288715-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Durham gas explosion, Explosion\nThe Durham School of the Arts suffered damage to its interior, although no injuries were reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288715-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Durham gas explosion, Explosion, Casualties\n25 people were treated for injuries and at least 10 people were sent to local hospitals. Duke Regional Hospital and Duke University Hospital each received 5 patients. Kong Lee, the owner of Kaffeinate, was killed in the blast while preparing to evacuate the store. Jay Rambeaut, a Dominion Energy first responder, was sent to UNC Medical Center, where he died from his injuries on April 25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288715-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Durham gas explosion, Explosion, Casualties\nFive of the injured were in critical condition. Nine of the 25 injured were responding firefighters. One firefighter suffered major injuries and underwent surgery. Vincent E. Price, the president of Duke University, confirmed that 10 Duke employees were injured in the explosion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288715-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Durham gas explosion, Aftermath\nPassersby rushed to the scene quickly after the explosion, seeking to help the injured, while others helped motorists who were trapped in their cars by inflated airbags. City firefighters soon began arriving to fight a fire triggered by the explosion. Once the blaze was extinguished, a search-and-rescue effort began; it continued until the evening of the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288715-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Durham gas explosion, Aftermath\nFollowing an investigation, officials in the Durham Fire Department released a report which determined that a three person crew from Optic Cable Technology digging horizontally to install underground cables breached a 3/4 inch gas line in front of Kaffeinate on the morning of the explosion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288715-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Durham gas explosion, Aftermath\nShop owner Kong Lee went outside to complain about the gas smell \u2013 the report includes images from a nearby security camera that shows Lee waving his hand in front of his nose as he talked with the crew \u2013 but there was no evidence that Lee or anyone from Optic Cable called 911 to report the gas leak. The report was unable to determine what ignited the estimated 46,000 cubic feet of natural gas that leaked out of the ruptured pipe in the roughly 60 minutes from the initial breach to the explosion at 10:06\u00a0am.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288716-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Durham mayoral election\nThe 2019 Durham mayoral election was held on November 5, 2019 to elect the mayor of Durham, North Carolina. Steve Schewel was elected to a second term as mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288716-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Durham mayoral election\nThe only other candidate to file to run before the deadline was Sylvester Williams, a pastor who also ran for mayor in 2011, 2013, and 2017. Because only two candidates filed to run, the October primary election was cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288717-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Athletics Championships\nThe 2019 Dutch Athletics Championships was the national championship in outdoor track and field for the Netherlands. It was held on 25 to 28 July at the Sportpark Laan van Poot in The Hague. It served as the selection meeting for the Netherlands at the 2019 World Championships in Athletics. It was organised by local club Haag Atletiek and Atletiekunie. The long jump competitions were held within the Hague city centre in 25 July while the 10,000 metres took place earlier at the annual Golden Spike Leiden meeting on 8 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288718-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Basketball Supercup\nThe 2019 Dutch Basketball Supercup was the 8th edition of the Dutch Basketball Supercup. The game was played in the Landstede Sportcentrum in Zwolle for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288718-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Basketball Supercup\nThe game featured Landstede Hammers, the first-time defending champions of the 2018\u201319 Dutch Basketball League, and ZZ Leiden, the winners of the 2018\u201319 NBB Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288718-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Basketball Supercup\nHammers won the game and secured its second Supercup title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288718-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Basketball Supercup, Background\nIt was the re-match of the 2018\u201319 NBB Cup final, which was also played in the Landstede Sportcentrum and was won by Leiden, 69\u201387. Landstede Hammers came off its first national title in club history and saw most of its players returning. The team strengthened itself with two new Americans, Jordan Johnson and Martez Walker. Mohamed Kherrazi was acquired from Leiden. Kherrazi played his first game against his former team. Leiden entered the Supercup as national cup winners and added five new foreign players in the offseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288718-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Basketball Supercup, Match details\nLandstede led comfortably for most of the game after a 23\u201315 start. After a halftime score of 48\u201331, Leiden managed to cut the deficit but never came close to a win. Johnson set an all-time record for most points in a Supercup game with 26.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288719-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Darts Masters\nThe 2019 Dutch Darts Masters was the seventh of thirteen PDC European Tour events on the 2019 PDC Pro Tour. The tournament took place at IJsselhallen, Zwolle, Netherlands, from 24\u201326 May 2019. It featured a field of 48 players and \u00a3140,000 in prize money, with \u00a325,000 going to the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288719-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Darts Masters\nMichael van Gerwen was the defending champion after defeating Steve Lennon 8\u20135 in the final of the 2018 tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288719-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Darts Masters\nHowever, Ian White ended Van Gerwen's five-year winning run in the tournament by beating him 8\u20137 in the final to win his third European Tour title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288719-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Darts Masters\nThe result also ended Van Gerwen's 28-game winning streak in European Tour last-leg deciders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288719-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Darts Masters, Qualification and format\nThe top 16 entrants from the PDC ProTour Order of Merit on 7 May will automatically qualify for the event and will be seeded in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288719-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Darts Masters, Qualification and format\nThe remaining 32 places will go to players from six qualifying events \u2013 18 from the UK Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 17 May), six from the European Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 17 May), two from the West & South European Associate Member Qualifier (held on 18 May), four from the Host Nation Qualifier (held on 23 May), one from the Nordic & Baltic Associate Member Qualifier (held on 8 March) and one from the East European Associate Member Qualifier (held on 10 March).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288719-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Darts Masters, Qualification and format\nFrom 2019, the Host Nation, Nordic & Baltic and East European Qualifiers will only be available to non-tour card holders. Any tour card holders from the applicable regions will have to play the main European Qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288719-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Darts Masters, Qualification and format\nRob Cross, who was set to be the 7th seed, withdrew prior to the tournament. All seeds below him moved up a place, with Michael Smith becoming sixteenth seed, and an extra place being made available in the Host Nation Qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288719-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Darts Masters, Qualification and format\nJames Wade, the 5th seed, withdrew from the tournament after the draw and was not replaced, with his second round opponent Glen Durrant receiving a bye.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288720-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Indoor Athletics Championships\nThe 2019 Dutch Indoor Athletics Championships (Dutch: Nederlandse kampioenschappen indooratletiek 2019) was the 48th edition of the national championship in indoor track and field for the Netherlands. It was held on 16\u201317 February at the Omnisport Apeldoorn in Apeldoorn. A total of 24 events (divided evenly between the sexes) were contested over the two-day competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288721-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Open (badminton)\nThe 2019 Dutch Open (officially known as the Yonex Dutch Open 2019 for sponsorship reasons) was a badminton tournament which took place at Topsportcentrum in Almere, Netherlands, from 8 to 13 October 2019 and had a total purse of $75,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288721-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Open (badminton), Tournament\nThe 2019 Dutch Open was the ninth Super 100 tournament of the 2019 BWF World Tour and also part of the Dutch Open championships, which has been held since 1932. This tournament was organized by the Badminton Nederland and was sanctioned by the BWF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288721-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Open (badminton), Tournament, Venue\nThis international tournament was held at Topsportcentrum in Almere, Flevoland, Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288721-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Open (badminton), Tournament, Point distribution\nBelow is the point distribution table for each phase of the tournament based on the BWF points system for the BWF Tour Super 100 event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288721-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Open (badminton), Tournament, Prize money\nThe total prize money for this tournament was US$75,000. Distribution of prize money was in accordance with BWF regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288722-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Open (tennis)\nThe 2019 Dutch Open, also known by its sponsored name Van Mossel Kia Dutch Open, was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the first edition of the Challenger tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Amersfoort, Netherlands between 15 and 21 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288722-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Open (tennis), 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-00288722-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Open (tennis), Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw using a protected ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288722-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Open (tennis), Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288723-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Open \u2013 Doubles\nThis was the first edition of the tournament as a Challenger event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288723-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Open \u2013 Doubles\nHarri Heli\u00f6vaara and Emil Ruusuvuori won the title after defeating Jesper de Jong and Ryan Nijboer 6\u20133, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288724-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Open \u2013 Singles\nThis was the first edition of the tournament as a Challenger event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288724-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Open \u2013 Singles\nMats Moraing won the title after defeating Kimmer Coppejans 6\u20132, 3\u20136, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288725-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Senate election\nThe 2019 election to the Senate of the Netherlands was held on 27 May 2019, two months after the provincial elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288725-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Senate election, Electoral system\nThe Senate consists of 75 members elected every four years by the members of the States-Provincial of the country's twelve provinces, who are in turn elected directly by the citizens two months earlier in the 2019 provincial elections, and, following a law change in 2017, members of the island councils of the special municipalities of Bonaire, Sint Eustatius and Saba. The seats are distributed in one nationwide constituency using party-list proportional representation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288725-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch Senate election, Electoral system\nThe value of a vote is determined by the population of the province or special municipality which the elector represents. The seats are distributed in one nationwide constituency using party-list proportional representation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288726-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch TT\nThe 2019 Dutch TT was the eighth round of the 2019 MotoGP season. It was held at the TT Circuit Assen in Assen on 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288727-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch electoral college elections\nElectoral college elections were held in the Caribbean Netherlands on 20 March 2019 to elect the members of the electoral colleges for the Senate. The elections were held on the same day as the island council elections in the Caribbean Netherlands, and the provincial and water board elections in the European Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288728-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch island council elections\nIsland council elections were held in the Caribbean Netherlands on 20 March 2019 to elect the members of the island councils of Bonaire and Saba. The elections were held on the same day as the electoral college elections in the Caribbean Netherlands, and the provincial and water board elections in the European Netherlands. The election was won by the Bonaire People's Movement (4 seats) in Bonaire and by the Windward Islands People's Movement (5 seats) in Saba.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288728-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch island council elections, Campaign, Saba\nThe Windward Islands People's Movement (WIPM) made \"stability and continuation\" their top campaign issues, citing financial leadership and good relationships with the Netherlands. They promised to continue fighting for economic development, a \"realistic social minimum\", and poverty alleviation by reducing of the cost of living and the cost of doing business on Saba, with commitments to push for more \"affordable transportation, energy, and telecommunications\", as well as increasing the island's autonomy to allow it to grant work permits. The party's first rally was held on 20 February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288728-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch island council elections, Campaign, Saba\nThe Saba Labour Party (SLP) submitted its party list on 4 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288728-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch island council elections, Campaign, Saba\nOn 2 February 2019, Dave Levenstone announced he would form a new political party to run for a seat on the island council after working for 40 years in government service. He frequently criticized what he saw as a lack of engagement with Sabans. His slogan was \"a strong voice for Saba\". He submitted a blank list with his name on it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288729-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch provincial elections\nProvincial elections were held in the Netherlands on 20 March 2019. Eligible voters elected the members of the Provincial States in the twelve provinces of the Netherlands. The elections were held on the same day as the 2019 Dutch water boards elections and, in the Caribbean Netherlands, island council elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288729-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch provincial elections\nThese elections also indirectly determine the composition of the Senate, since the members of the twelve provincial states will elect the Senate's 75 members in the Senate election on 27 May, two months after the provincial elections. Because of this, the provincial elections were a test for the third Rutte cabinet, which previously had a majority of one seat in the Senate, but has since lost that majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288729-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch provincial elections, Coalition talks\nCoalition talks in the Netherlands are customarily organized by informateurs appointed by the party that came first in the elections, and then, in the event of a failure, by other parties. Informateurs usually submit a public report on possible coalitions in the weeks following the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288730-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dutch water board elections\nWater board elections were held in the European Netherlands on 20 March 2019 to elect the resident members of the country's twenty-one water boards (442 seats in total). The elections were held on the same day as the 2019 Dutch provincial elections and island council elections. Water Natuurlijk remained the largest party, winning 85 seats in 20 water boards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288731-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dwars door Vlaanderen\nThe 2019 Dwars door Vlaanderen is a road cycling one-day race that took place on 3 April 2019 in Belgium. It was the 74th edition of Dwars door Vlaanderen and the 13th event of the 2019 UCI World Tour. The race was won by Mathieu van der Poel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288732-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Dwars door Vlaanderen for Women\nThe eighth running of Dwars door Vlaanderen's women's race was held on Wednesday 3 April 2019. The race started in Tielt and finished in Waregem, covering a distance of 118\u00a0km.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288732-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Dwars door Vlaanderen for Women, Teams\nThree additional non-UCI women's teams participated: Rogelli-Gyproc U-23, Jos Feron Lady Force, and Multum Accountants Ladies Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288733-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 D\u00e9castar\nThe 2019 D\u00e9castar was the 43rd edition of the annual two-day track and field meeting for combined track and field events. It took place on 22 and 23 June 2019 in Talence, France. The competition, featuring a decathlon (men) and a heptathlon (women) event, was part of the 2019 IAAF World Combined Events Challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288734-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 D\u00fan Laoghaire\u2013Rathdown County Council election\nA D\u00fan Laoghaire\u2013Rathdown County Council election was held in D\u00fan Laoghaire\u2013Rathdown in Ireland on 24 May 2019 as part of that year's local elections. Forty councillors were elected for a five-year term of office from six local electoral areas (LEAs) by single transferable vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288734-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 D\u00fan Laoghaire\u2013Rathdown County Council election\nFollowing a recommendation of the 2018 Boundary Committee, the boundaries of the LEAs were altered from those used in the 2014 elections. Its terms of reference required no change in the total number of councillors but set a lower maximum LEA size of seven councillors, requiring a change to the eight-seat D\u00fan Laoghaire LEA. Other changes were necessitated by population shifts revealed by the 2016 census.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288734-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 D\u00fan Laoghaire\u2013Rathdown County Council election\nUniquely after 2019 D\u00fan Laoghaire-Rathdown became Ireland's first 50:50 gender-neutral Council. Fine Gael remained the largest party gaining an additional 2 seats while seeing a slight reduction in vote-share. Fianna F\u00e1il lost a seat in Stillorgan to return 7 in total and saw a slight reduction in vote share. The main winners in D\u00fan Laoghaire were the Greens who won 6 seats and saw all 6 of their candidates elected in the process. They topped the poll in 4 of the 6 LEAs. Labour gained a seat in Dun Laoghaire but lost seats in Stillorgan and Glencullen-Sandyford to reduce their numbers to 6 seats overall. Solidarity-People Before Profit lost a seat in D\u00fan Laoghaire to only return with 2 seats while Sinn F\u00e9in had a terrible election losing all 3 of their seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 821]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288735-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 E3 Binckbank Classic\nThe 2019 E3 BinckBank Classic is a road cycling one-day race, scheduled to be held on 29 March 2019 in Belgium. It is the 62nd edition of E3 Harelbeke and the eleventh event of the 2019 UCI World Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288735-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 E3 Binckbank Classic\nThe event was rebranded \"E3 BinckBank Classic\" due to a sponsorship agreement with Dutch online discount broker BinckBank. However, the race perpetuates its ties with Harelbeke, which continues to host the start and finish. The total distance is 203.9 kilometres (126.7\u00a0mi), featuring 15 categorized climbs in the Flemish Ardennes and five flat sectors of cobbled roads. Dutch rider Niki Terpstra won the previous edition in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288736-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 EAFF E-1 Football Championship\nThe 2019 EAFF E-1 Football Championship was the 8th edition of the EAFF E-1 Football Championship, an international football tournament for East Asian countries and territories organized by the EAFF. The finals were held in South Korea in December 2019. It was the nation's third time hosting the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288736-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 EAFF E-1 Football Championship, Teams\nTen teams were allocated to their particular stage. Each winner of the preliminary round progressed to the next stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288736-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 EAFF E-1 Football Championship, First preliminary round\nThe first preliminary round was held in Mongolia in September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288736-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 EAFF E-1 Football Championship, Second preliminary round\nThe second preliminary round was held in Taiwan in November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288736-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 EAFF E-1 Football Championship, Final round\nThe final round was held in Busan, South Korea between 10 and 18 December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288736-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 EAFF E-1 Football Championship, Final ranking\nPer 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288737-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 EAFF E-1 Football Championship (women)\nThe 2019 EAFF E-1 Football Championship was the seventh edition of the women's tournament of the EAFF E-1 Football Championship, the women's football championship of East Asia. It was held in South Korea in December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288737-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 EAFF E-1 Football Championship (women)\nOn 30 October 2019, EAFF announced that North Korea, who automatically qualified for the final round, withdrew from the tournament; Chinese Taipei was chosen as the replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288737-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 EAFF E-1 Football Championship (women), Teams\nBased on FIFA Women's world ranking, ten teams were allocated to their particular stage. Each winner of the preliminary round progressed to the next stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288737-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 EAFF E-1 Football Championship (women), Second preliminary round\nThe second preliminary round was held in December 2018 in Guam from December 1 to 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288737-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 EAFF E-1 Football Championship (women), Final round\nThe final competition was held in South Korea from 10 to 17 December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288737-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 EAFF E-1 Football Championship (women), Goalscorers\nThere were 17 goals scored in 6 matches, for an average of 2.83 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288738-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 EAFF E-1 Football Championship Final squads\nThe following is a list of squads for each nation competing in 2019 EAFF E-1 Football Championship Final in Busan, South Korea. Each nation must submit a squad of 23 players, including 3 goalkeepers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288738-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 EAFF E-1 Football Championship Final squads\nAge, caps and goals as of the start of the tournament, 10 December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288739-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 EAFF E-1 Football Championship Final squads (women)\nThe following is a list of squads for each nation competing in 2019 EAFF E-1 Football Championship (women) in Busan, South Korea. Each nation must submit a squad of 23 players, including 3 goalkeepers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288739-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 EAFF E-1 Football Championship Final squads (women)\nAge, caps and goals as of the start of the tournament, 10 December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288740-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ECAC Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\nThe 2019 ECAC Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament is the 58th tournament in league history. It was played between March 8 and March 23, 2019. First Round and Quarterfinal games are played at home team campus sites, while the final four games are played at the Herb Brooks Arena in Lake Placid, New York. The tournament winner, Clarkson, received the ECAC's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288740-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ECAC Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format\nThe tournament features four rounds of play. The teams that finish above fifth place in the standings receive a bye to the quarterfinal round. In the first round, the fifth and twelfth seeds, the sixth and eleventh seeds, the seventh and tenth seeds and the eighth and ninth seeds play a best-of-three series with the winners advancing to the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288740-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 ECAC Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format\nIn the quarterfinals the one seed plays the lowest remaining seed, the second seed plays the second-lowest remaining seed, the third seed plays the third-lowest remaining seed and the fourth seed plays the fourth-lowest remaining seed in another best-of-three series with the winners of these the series advancing to the semifinals. In the semifinals the top remaining seed plays the lowest remaining seed while the two remaining teams play against each other. The winners of the semifinals play in the championship game, and no third-place game is played. All series after the quarterfinals are single-elimination games. The tournament champion receives an automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288741-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 EF Education First season\nThe 2019 season for the EF Education First cycling team began in January at the Tour Down Under. As a UCI WorldTeam, they are 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, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288742-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL Championship play-off Final\nThe 2019 EFL Championship play-off Final was an association football match which was played on 27 May 2019 at Wembley Stadium, London, between Aston Villa and Derby County to determine the third and final team to gain promotion from the EFL Championship to the Premier League. The top two teams of the 2018\u201319 EFL 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; the winners of these semi-finals competed for the final place for the 2019\u201320 season in the Premier League. Winning the game was estimated to be worth \u00a3170\u00a0million to the successful team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288742-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL Championship play-off Final\nAston Villa had lost in the play-off final the previous season while Derby had failed to progress through the play-offs three times in the last five seasons. The 2019 final was watched by a crowd of almost 86,000 people and refereed by Paul Tierney. Villa took the lead through Anwar El Ghazi late in the first half, and doubled their advantage with a goal from man of the match John McGinn. Despite a late consolation goal from Derby's Jack Marriott, Villa won the match 2\u20131 to return to the Premier League for the first time since the 2015\u201316 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288742-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL Championship play-off Final\nDerby's next season, in the 2019\u201320 EFL Championship, was their twelfth consecutive in the second tier of English football. The season was delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom, and concluded in July 2020 with Derby in tenth position in the table, six points outside the playoffs. Villa's next season, in the Premier League, was also interrupted by the pandemic. They finished the season in 17th position, avoiding relegation by one place and one point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288742-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL Championship play-off Final, Route to the final\nAston Villa finished the regular 2018\u201319 season in fifth place in the EFL Championship, the second tier of the English football league system, one place ahead of Derby. 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. Aston Villa were thirteenth in the table heading into March and went on a ten-game winning streak, starting with a 4\u20130 home win over Derby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288742-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 EFL Championship play-off Final, Route to the final\nThe run of wins was the longest in the club's history and secured them a play-off place with two games of the season remaining. They finished 13 points behind Sheffield United (who were promoted in second place) and 18 behind league winners Norwich City. Derby ended the league in sixth place, a further two points behind Villa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288742-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL Championship play-off Final, Route to the final\nDerby lost the first leg of the play-off semi-finals at home at Pride Park against Leeds United 1\u20130 thanks to a second-half Kemar Roofe goal. The second leg, at Leeds' Elland Road, was described by Ian Woodcock writing for BBC Sport as \"a wild night\". Stuart Dallas had doubled Leeds' aggregate lead midway through the first half. Marriott scored for Derby following a defensive error early in the second half, with goals from Mason Mount and Harry Wilson giving Derby a 3\u20132 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288742-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 EFL Championship play-off Final, Route to the final\nDallas scored his second goal midway through the second half before his teammate Gaetano Berardi was sent off for a foul. Marriott's late strike secured a 4\u20132 lead on the night and a 4\u20133 aggregate victory for Derby. It was the first time that a Championship club had qualified for the play-off final having lost the first semi-final leg at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288742-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL Championship play-off Final, Route to the final\nAston Villa faced West Bromwich Albion in their play-off semi-final, the first leg was held at Villa Park. West Brom took the lead through Dwight Gayle before two goals in three minutes for Villa, a Conor Hourihane strike from 25 yards (23\u00a0m) and a penalty from Tammy Abraham, ended the tie 2\u20131; Gayle was sent off towards the end of the game for a late tackle on the Villa goalkeeper meaning he would miss the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288742-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 EFL Championship play-off Final, Route to the final\nThe return fixture was played at West Brom's The Hawthorns where the home team took the lead after 29 minutes with a Craig Dawson goal to equalise the semi-final on aggregate. Chris Brunt was sent off in the second half as Villa dominated the match, but failed to score a winner. A goalless extra time was played before a penalty shoot-out decided the tie. Two saves from Villa goalkeeper Jed Steer allowed Abraham to score the winning spot kick and send Villa to Wembley for their second consecutive play-off final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288742-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL Championship play-off Final, Match, Background\nThis was Aston Villa's second consecutive appearance in the play-off final having lost 1\u20130 to Fulham in the 2018 final. Derby County had last been promoted the top flight of English football through the playoffs in 2007, beating West Bromwich Albion 1\u20130 in the final. Derby had also reached the play-offs three times in the previous five years: they were losing semi-finalists in 2016 and 2018, and losing finalists in 2014. During the regular season, Aston Villa had beaten Derby 7\u20130 on aggregate: they won 3\u20130 at Pride Park in November 2018 and 4\u20130 at Villa Park the following March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288742-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL Championship play-off Final, Match, Background\nDerby were without their regular left-back Scott Malone \u2013 he was sent off in injury time in the second semi-final against Leeds after receiving a second yellow and was suspended for the final. Martyn Waghorn was a doubt having been injured in the last game of the league, but was selected as a substitute. However, Craig Bryson and Andy King were ruled out, both with ankle injuries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288742-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 EFL Championship play-off Final, Match, Background\nVilla's loan defender Axel Tuanzebe passed a late fitness test after he picked up an injury against West Bromwich Albion in the semi-final, but \u00d8rjan Nyland, Tom Carroll and Jordan Lyden were all sidelined with long-term injuries. There was considerable speculation in the media over Lampard's future at Derby with him being strongly linked with a move to manage his former club Chelsea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288742-0007-0002", "contents": "2019 EFL Championship play-off Final, Match, Background\nLampard sought to reassure the Derby fans of his commitment: \"I'll say straight away to the Derby fans, my focus all year has been how well I can do in this job, because this club gave me an opportunity. And I want to finish this season as well as I can.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288742-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL Championship play-off Final, Match, Background\nThe final was refereed by Paul Tierney from the Lancashire County Football Association, with assistant referees Ian Hussin and Adrian Holmes, and Chris Kavanagh acted as the fourth official. It was widely reported that the game was worth around \u00a3170\u00a0million over three years to the winners through sponsorship and television deals. Before the match, both teams were introduced to the match officials and various dignitaries on the pitch, including Debbie Jevans, the interim head of the EFL. Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, an Aston Villa supporter, watched from the stands. Aston Villa were considered favourites to win the match by the media and bookmakers. The final was broadcast in the United Kingdom live on Sky Sports Main Event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288742-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL Championship play-off Final, Match, First half\nAston Villa kicked off at 3\u00a0p.m. in front of a crowd of 85,826 people, and for the first few minutes of the match, neither team dominated. After five minutes, Villa's captain Jack Grealish passed the ball into the Derby penalty area but despite a defensive mix-up, Axel Tuanzebe was unable to finish, missing the ball altogether. Two minutes later Grealish himself shot over the bar from the edge of the box. In the 13th minute, Jayden Bogle was dispossessed during a rare Derby attack, but a tackle from Richard Keogh denied El-Ghazi a chance to score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288742-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 EFL Championship play-off Final, Match, First half\nA corner in the 16th minute from Villa's Ahmed Elmohamady was struck wide by John McGinn. The first booking of the match came in the 27th minute: El-Ghazi pulled Bogle back on the edge of the area and Villa's Dutch winger was shown a yellow card. Harry Wilson's resulting free kick floated aimlessly out of play. On 31 minutes, Mason Bennett crossed into the Villa box, only for Tyrone Mings to clear the danger. Two minutes later, Villa's Tammy Abraham received the ball on the edge of the area, turned and advanced; his shot flew high and wide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288742-0009-0002", "contents": "2019 EFL Championship play-off Final, Match, First half\nIn the 37th minute, Mason Mount's shot for Derby was easily saved by Jed Steer in the Villa goal. In immediate response, Grealish sent through a pass for El-Ghazi but the winger was flagged for offside. On 41 minutes, Keogh failed to convert a Derby corner despite being unmarked, his header going over the bar. Just before half-time, El-Ghazi was picked out by a cross from Elmohamady, diving between two defenders to score with his shoulder from six yards, ensuring Villa held a 1\u20130 advantage at the break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288742-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL Championship play-off Final, Match, Second half\nNo changes to either team were made at half-time, and Derby kicked off the second half. Two minutes in, Bennett was booked for a foul on Abraham, with Hourihane also receiving a yellow card for a foul on Wilson a minute later. In the 50th minute, Tomori brought McGinn down and was shown the fourth yellow card of the match. Bogle's trip on El-Ghazi in the 53rd minute resulted in a free kick which was taken by Hourihane whose cross for Mings was punched clear by the Derby goalkeeper Kelle Roos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288742-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 EFL Championship play-off Final, Match, Second half\nVilla extended their lead in the 59th minute with a goal from McGinn. El-Ghazi's shot took a large deflection and looped into the air as Roos came to claim the ball. McGinn beat him to the ball and headed it into the Derby net. The Derby County manager Frank Lampard made his first substitution immediately afterwards, sending on striker Marriott to replace the defensive midfielder Tom Huddlestone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288742-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL Championship play-off Final, Match, Second half\nMidway through the second half, Villa's penalty appeals were denied after El-Ghazi was brought down by Keogh. Derby's second substitution came in the 68th minute with Bennett being replaced by Waghorn. El-Ghazi's 70th minute strike was easily held by Roos and a minute later, Derby's Bogle struck the side netting with a shot despite Waghorn being in a better position to score. In the 73rd minute, Derby made their final substitution, Florian Jozefzoon coming on for Tom Lawrence, while Villa's Andre Green replaced Albert Adomah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288742-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 EFL Championship play-off Final, Match, Second half\nMarriott's shot from a corner in the 76th minute passed just wide of the post and seconds later a counter attack from Grealish came to nothing as instead of shooting, his square pass was intercepted by Bradley Johnson. Derby reduced the deficit to a single goal as Marriott scored in the 82nd minute. A clearance from Mings was collected by Jozefzoon whose cross was headed on to Marriott; he controlled the ball and struck it into the bottom left of the Villa goal. Mings, injured in the previous phase of play, was taken off and replaced with Kortney Hause. Seven minutes of additional time was indicated by the fourth official, and Wilson was booked for a foul two minutes later. Despite multiple attacks from Derby, no second goal was forthcoming and the match ended 2\u20131 in Villa's favour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 850]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288742-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL Championship play-off Final, Post-match\nAfter the game, Aston Villa manager Dean Smith remarked: \"it feels very good\u00a0... We've got two owners who have got a lot of money, and are in it for the long haul. The potential now is massive\u00a0... we made history by winning ten games on the spin.\" Grealish, the Villa captain, said it \"was such a hard game going up against a great team. We knew it was hard and it would go down to the wire\u00a0... It\u2019s like a dream.\" Lampard was appointed Chelsea manager with a three-year deal on 4 July 2019, and was replaced at Derby by former Dutch international player Phillip Cocu. John McGinn was named as the man of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288742-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL Championship play-off Final, Post-match\nDerby's next season, in the 2019\u201320 EFL Championship, was their twelfth consecutive in the second tier of English football. The season was delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom, and concluded in July 2020 with Derby in tenth position in the table, six points outside the playoffs. Villa's next season, in the Premier League, was also interrupted by the pandemic. They finished the season in 17th position, avoiding relegation by one place and one point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288743-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL Cup Final\nThe 2019 EFL Cup Final was an association football match that took place on 24 February 2019 at Wembley Stadium in London, England, to determine the winners of the 2018\u201319 EFL Cup (known as the Carabao Cup for sponsorship reasons). It was contested by Chelsea and holders Manchester City, who retained their title with a 4\u20133 victory on penalties following a 0\u20130 draw after extra time; it was the first time Manchester City had successfully defended a title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288743-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 EFL Cup Final\nAs winners, they would have entered the second qualifying round of the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League, but instead qualified directly for the 2019\u201320 UEFA Champions League by finishing first in the 2018\u201319 Premier League. The final was also a rematch of that season's FA Community Shield which Manchester City won 2\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288743-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL Cup Final, Route to the final, Chelsea\nChelsea's qualification for the 2018\u201319 UEFA Europa League meant they entered the EFL Cup in the third round, where they were drawn away to fellow Premier League side Liverpool. After going behind, goals from Emerson and Eden Hazard gave Chelsea a 2\u20131 win. In the next round, they were drawn at home to EFL Championship side Derby County. This time, Chelsea took an early lead via a Fikayo Tomori own goal, but Jack Marriott equalised for Derby four minutes later. Another own goal, this time by Richard Keogh, put Chelsea ahead again in the 21st minute, only for Martyn Waghorn to level the scores six minutes later. Four minutes before half-time, Cesc F\u00e0bregas scored what turned out to be the winning goal, as the second half went goalless.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288743-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL Cup Final, Route to the final, Chelsea\nIn the fifth round, Chelsea were drawn at home to Premier League side Bournemouth, with Hazard again proving the difference between the two sides in a 1\u20130 win. The semi-finals saw Chelsea drawn against London rivals Tottenham Hotspur. A Harry Kane penalty gave Tottenham a slim lead at Wembley Stadium in the first leg, but N'Golo Kant\u00e9 levelled the aggregate scores after 27 minutes of the second leg. Hazard then put Chelsea in front with his third goal of the tournament in the 38th minute, only for Fernando Llorente to equalise again five minutes after half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288743-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 EFL Cup Final, Route to the final, Chelsea\nThe remainder of the match produced no further goals, and since the away goals rule was not in effect, the match went straight to a penalty shoot-out. Both sides converted their first two kicks each, before Eric Dier put his effort over the bar, allowing Jorginho to give Chelsea the lead. Kepa Arrizabalaga then saved from Lucas Moura, before David Luiz scored to send Chelsea to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288743-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL Cup Final, Route to the final, Manchester City\nManchester City was qualified for the 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League, and thus also entered the EFL Cup in the third round, drawn away to EFL League One side Oxford United. At the Kassam Stadium, Manchester City won 3\u20130 with goals from Gabriel Jesus, Riyad Mahrez and Phil Foden. In the fourth round, they were drawn with fellow Premier League club Fulham at home. At their City of Manchester Stadium, Manchester City won 2\u20130 via two goals from Brahim D\u00edaz. In the next round, they were drawn away at fellow Premier League side Leicester City. The match finished 1\u20131 at the King Power Stadium, with Marc Albrighton's 73rd-minute goal \u2013 the only one Manchester City conceded en route to the final \u2013 cancelling out Kevin De Bruyne's early strike, but Manchester City won the resulting penalty shoot-out 3\u20131 and progressed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 55], "content_span": [56, 875]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288743-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL Cup Final, Route to the final, Manchester City\nIn the two legged semi-final, Manchester City drew League One side Burton Albion. Manchester City won the first leg at the City of Manchester Stadium 9\u20130 in their biggest win for 31 years, with four goals from Jesus and one each from Kevin De Bruyne, Oleksandr Zinchenko, Foden, Kyle Walker and Mahrez. In the second leg at the Pirelli Stadium, Sergio Ag\u00fcero scored his first goal of the competition to give Manchester City a 1\u20130 win (10\u20130 on aggregate) and confirm their place in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 55], "content_span": [56, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288743-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL Cup Final, Pre-match\nManchester City boss Pep Guardiola was thinking of playing second choice goalkeeper Arijanet Muric instead of Ederson as Muric had played for the duration of City's route to the final and conceded just once. He left Muric sweating about his place by insisting that he would make a lot call on whether to play him or not.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288743-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL Cup Final, Match, Summary\nThe match was overshadowed by an incident near the end of extra time, with the score at 0\u20130 and a penalty shoot-out looming, that saw Chelsea goalkeeper Kepa Arrizabalaga defy manager Maurizio Sarri and refuse to be substituted for Willy Caballero (whose penalty saves won former club Manchester City the 2016 Football League Cup Final). Arrizabalaga ultimately stayed on the pitch, while an irate Sarri nearly stormed into the match tunnel, and was later held back by Chelsea player Antonio R\u00fcdiger from confronting Arrizabalaga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288743-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL Cup Final, Match, Summary\nThe shoot-out, taken at the Chelsea fans' end, saw Chelsea starting: Jorginho's low, weak shot was saved by City goalkeeper Ederson, while \u0130lkay G\u00fcndo\u011fan sent Arrizabalaga the wrong way to put City 1\u20130 up. Chelsea's C\u00e9sar Azpilicueta blasted into the top corner to level at 1\u20131, while Sergio Ag\u00fcero's weak effort was let in under Arrizabalaga to put City ahead 2\u20131. Emerson's shot was too powerful and deflected into goal off Ederson for 2\u20132, and the scoreline remained as City's Leroy San\u00e9 had his penalty saved by Arrizabalaga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288743-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 EFL Cup Final, Match, Summary\nDavid Luiz failed to score for Chelsea when he hit the post, then Bernardo Silva's effort down the middle made it 3\u20132 for City. Chelsea's Eden Hazard scored with the Panenka technique for 3\u20133, but City's Raheem Sterling scored a high shot to win the shoot-out 4\u20133 and crown City as champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288743-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL Cup Final, Match, Summary\nAfter the game, both Arrizabalaga and Sarri said that the situation was a misunderstanding with Sarri believing that Arrizabalaga was too injured with a cramp to continue, but Arrizabalaga felt well enough to continue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288743-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL Cup Final, Match, Details\nAssistant referees:Andy Halliday (Army)Marc Perry (West Midlands)Fourth official:Paul Tierney (Lancashire)Reserve assistant referee:Constantine Hatzidakis (Kent)Video assistant referee:Martin Atkinson (West Yorkshire)Assistant video assistant referee:Steve Child (London)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288744-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL League One play-off Final\nThe 2019 EFL League One play-off Final was an association football match which was played on 26 May 2019 at Wembley Stadium, London, between Charlton Athletic and Sunderland to determine the third and final team to gain promotion from EFL League One to the EFL Championship. The top two teams of the 2018\u201319 EFL League One season gained automatic promotion to the Championship, while the teams placed from third to sixth place in the table partook in play-off semi-finals; the winners of these semi-finals competed for the final place for the 2019\u201320 season in the Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288744-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL League One play-off Final\nSunderland had reached the play-off final in their first season back in the third tier of English football, having been relegated from the Championship in the 2017\u201318 season. The two clubs had faced one another in a play-off final before, in the 1998 Football League First Division play-off Final, making it the first time in the history of the play-off format that a fixture had been repeated. The 2019 final was watched by a crowd of more than 76,000 people and refereed by Andrew Madley. Sunderland took the lead early in the first half when Charlton's Mouhamadou-Naby Sarr scored an own goal. The equaliser for Charlton came from Ben Purrington before half time, and Patrick Bauer scored the winning goal late into additional time in the second half, ending the match 2\u20131 to Charlton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 823]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288744-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL League One play-off Final\nSunderland started their next season in League One which was temporarily suspended as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. After the league resumed, they finished in seventh position. Charlton's first season back in the EFL Championship was also interrupted by the pandemic, and after resumption, the club ended the season in 22nd position and were relegated back to League One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288744-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL League One play-off Final, Route to the final\nCharlton Athletic finished the regular 2018\u201319 season in third place in EFL League One, the third tier of the English football league system, two places ahead of Sunderland. Both therefore missed out on the two automatic places for promotion to the EFL Championship and instead took part in the play-offs to determine the third promoted team. Charlton finished three points behind Barnsley (who were promoted in second place) and six behind league winners Luton Town. Sunderland ended the season three points behind Charlton, but having lost only five games, one fewer than the champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288744-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL League One play-off Final, Route to the final\nSunderland faced Portsmouth their play-off semi-final. The first leg was played at Sunderland's home ground, the Stadium of Light. Chris Maguire, who had been on the pitch for four minutes after coming on as a second-half substitute, volleyed Matt Clarke's attempted clearance into the Portsmouth net from 15 yards (14\u00a0m) to give Sunderland the lead. Soon after, Alim \u00d6zt\u00fcrk was sent off for a foul on Gareth Evans, and the resulting free kick struck the Sunderland bar. Maguire hit the post but the game ended 1\u20130 to Sunderland. The second leg, held five days later at Fratton Park, saw seven yellow cards shown, five to Portsmouth players. The match ended goalless and Sunderland progressed to the final 1\u20130 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288744-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL League One play-off Final, Route to the final\nCharlton's opponents in their play-off semi-final were Doncaster Rovers. The first leg held at Doncaster's Keepmoat Stadium. Lyle Taylor's header put Charlton into the lead after 32 minutes. They doubled their lead soon after when Joe Aribo scored from a Taylor pass. Matty Blair scored for Doncaster with three minutes remaining and the game ended 2\u20131 to Charlton. The second leg, played at The Valley, saw Charlton extend their aggregate lead to 3\u20131 after two minutes with a Krystian Bielik goal, but nine minutes later, Tommy Rowe equalised the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288744-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 EFL League One play-off Final, Route to the final\nWith two minutes of regular time remaining, Doncaster's Andy Butler scored with a header to make it 3\u20133 on aggregate, sending the match into extra time. Doncaster's John Marquis scored ten minutes into the first period, but Darren Pratley's headed goal a minute later made it 4\u20134 and sent the game to a penalty shootout. Charlton's goalkeeper Dillon Phillips saved Marquis' penalty, before Mouhamadou-Naby Sarr failed to score. Rowe's subsequent miss meant the shootout ended 4\u20133 and Charlton qualified for the play-off final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288744-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL League One play-off Final, Match, Background\nCharlton had previously made two appearances in play-off finals. In the 1987 Football League Second Division play-off Final, they beat Leeds United in a replay after the two-legged final ended 1\u20131 on aggregate, retaining their top-tier status. In the 1998 Football League First Division play-off Final, Charlton faced Sunderland at the old Wembley Stadium in a match described by Rob Stevens of the BBC as \"arguably the best play-off final in English Football League history\". That final ended 3\u20133 in regular time, 4\u20134 after extra time, and Charlton won the resulting penalty shootout 7\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288744-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 EFL League One play-off Final, Match, Background\nAs well as the 1998 final, Sunderland had appeared in the 1990 Football League Second Division play-off Final against Swindon Town which they lost 1\u20130. They were promoted however, as Swindon were later found guilty of financial misconduct. During the 2018\u201319 regular league season, Sunderland had beaten Charlton 2\u20131 in the opening match at the Stadium of Light in August, while the return fixture at The Valley in January 2019 ended in a 1\u20131 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288744-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL League One play-off Final, Match, Background\nThe Montserrat international Lyle Taylor was Charlton's top scorer for the season with 21 goals and 9 assists, while Josh Maja was Sunderland's most prolific striker having scored 15 times prior to the semi-finals, despite having left the club in January. Sunderland were aiming to be promoted at their first attempt, having been relegated from the Premier League in the 2017\u201318 season, while Charlton had spent three seasons in the third tier of English football following their drop in the 2015\u201316 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288744-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 EFL League One play-off Final, Match, Background\nSunderland had already played at Wembley during the season, losing on penalties to Portsmouth in the 2019 EFL Trophy Final; the play-off final was the club's 61st competitive fixture of the season. Pratley was selected for the Charlton starting eleven, in place of Albie Morgan who was not included in match-day squad. Igor Vetokele also missed out for Charlton with a long-term injury. Sunderland's starting line-up was the same as for their second semi-final leg against Portsmouth, although Aiden McGeady, who had scored 11 goals during the regular season, had recovered from a foot injury sustained in April to be named amongst the substitutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288744-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL League One play-off Final, Match, Background\nThe final was refereed by Andrew Madley, with assistant referees Nick Hopton and Andrew Fox, and Peter Bankes acting as fourth official. It was the first time in the history of the play-offs that two teams would face each other in the final for a second time. Sunderland were considered as favourites to win the match by bookmakers. The match was broadcast live in the United Kingdom on Sky Sports Football and Sky Sports Main Event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288744-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL League One play-off Final, Match, First half\nCharlton kicked off the first half around 3\u00a0p.m. in front of a Wembley crowd of 76,155 in their regular red home kit, with Sunderland playing in their black away strip. In the third minute, Max Power was brought down by Charlton's Sarr and required treatment from the physiotherapist. Two minutes later, Phillips failed to control a backpass from Sarr, and the ball rolled into the Charlton net for an own goal, putting Sunderland 1\u20130 ahead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288744-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 EFL League One play-off Final, Match, First half\nOn nine minutes, Sunderland were forced to make their first substitution, bringing on Lewis Morgan for Power who had failed to recover from the earlier injury. Grant Leadbitter's 11th minute shot was tipped round the post by Phillips. Over the next fifteen minutes, the game evened out with Charlton beginning to exert some pressure: in the 24th minute a Taylor corner was headed wide by Patrick Bauer and three minutes later Taylor himself struck a shot over the Sunderland bar. With ten minutes of the first half remaining, Charlton scored the equaliser.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288744-0009-0002", "contents": "2019 EFL League One play-off Final, Match, First half\nAribo's pass to Anfernee Dijksteel was flicked to Taylor whose cross was side-footed into the Sunderland goal from 3 yards (2.7\u00a0m) by Ben Purrington. A foul late on in the half by Sarr on George Honeyman earned the Charlton defender the first yellow card of the game. The resulting free kick was struck over the bar by Morgan, and with no further incident, the half ended 1\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288744-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL League One play-off Final, Match, Second half\nNaby was substituted during half time and replaced by Jason Pearce as Charlton switched to a diamond formation in midfield. They kicked off the second half with the first chance coming ten minutes in for Sunderland, as Maguire's cross was volleyed wide of the Charlton goal by Morgan. In the 57th minute, Sunderland made their second change of the afternoon, with Will Grigg coming on to replace Maguire. Two minutes later, Pratley and Luke O'Nien clashed heads, the latter needing to leave the pitch to address a bleeding head wound.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288744-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 EFL League One play-off Final, Match, Second half\nIn the 65th minute Grigg was booked for a foul on Purrington, and on 70 minutes, Pratley was replaced by Jonny Williams. A minute later McGeady came on for Charlie Wyke for Sunderland's final substitution of the afternoon. Soon after O'Nien was booked for a foul on Williams, before Bielik's header was cleared by Leadbitter. Grigg's cross with eight minutes to go was cleared by Bielik and a minute later, Leadbitter was shown a yellow card for a foul on Williams. McGeady's shot flew over Charlton's bar before O'Nien's cross was cleared at Sunderland's near post.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288744-0010-0002", "contents": "2019 EFL League One play-off Final, Match, Second half\nTwo minutes into injury time, Taylor was fouled by Tom Flanagan who received the fifth booking of the game. Josh Cullen's subsequent free kick was headed into the box by Bauer but the Sunderland goalkeeper Jon McLaughlin claimed the ball in a crowded area. In the final moments of added time, Cullen's deep cross from a quickly taken free kick was met by Bauer whose initial header was blocked by Flanagan, but the German defender was able to slide the ball into the Sunderland net from 4 yards (3.7\u00a0m) for a Charlton lead. The match ended 2\u20131 to Charlton and the London club were promoted to the EFL Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288744-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL League One play-off Final, Post-match\nThe winning goalscorer Bauer was elated: \"I don't know what to say. It's amazing. We worked so hard all season \u2013 now we\u2019ve done it, and it's unbelievable.\" His manager, Lee Bowyer, said: \"The goal was one of those freak things that happens in the game, but it shows our character to come from behind. This is probably the proudest moment of my whole career.\" Jack Ross, the Sunderland manager, noted: \"I came here to take the club back to the Championship at the first time of asking and I haven't been able to do that\u00a0... We have not fallen short by very much \u2013 but we have done.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288744-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL League One play-off Final, Post-match\nSunderland started their next season in the third tier of English football in League One for the second consecutive year. The league was temporarily suspended as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic with Sunderland in seventh position, equal on points with Peterborough who occupied the final play-off place, with eight games remaining to be played. Sunderland ended the season in the same position. Charlton's first season back in the EFL Championship was also interrupted by the pandemic with the club were in the relegation zone, in 22nd position, with nine games left. They ended the season in the same position, one point from safety, and were relegated back to League One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288745-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL League Two play-off Final\nThe 2019 EFL League Two play-off Final was an association football match which was played on 25 May 2019 at Wembley Stadium, London, between Newport County and Tranmere Rovers to determine the third and final team to gain promotion from EFL League Two to EFL League One. The top three teams of the 2018\u201319 EFL League Two season gained automatic promotion to League One, while those placed from fourth to seventh place in the table took part in play-off semi-finals; the winners of these semi-finals competed for the final place for the 2019\u201320 season in League One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288745-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL League Two play-off Final\nThe game, which was refereed by Ross Joyce, was played on a warm sunny day in front of a crowd of 25,217. After a goalless first half, Newport's captain Mark O'Brien was sent off after receiving a second yellow card in the final minute of the second half. The match went into extra time and one minute before full time, Tranmere's Connor Jennings scored with a header following a cross from Jake Caprice. The match ended 1\u20130 to Tranmere which secured them back-to-back promotions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288745-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL League Two play-off Final\nIn their following season, foreshortened by the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom, Tranmere finished 21st in League One and were relegated back to League Two. Newport's next season saw them finish in 15th position in the League Two table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288745-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL League Two play-off Final, Route to the final\nTranmere Rovers finished the regular 2018\u201319 season in sixth place in EFL League Two, the fourth tier of the English football league system, one place ahead of Newport County. Both therefore missed out on the three automatic places for promotion to EFL League One and instead took part in the play-offs to determine the fourth promoted team. Tranmere finished six points behind Milton Keynes Dons and Bury (who were promoted in third and second place respectively) and twelve behind league winners Lincoln City. Newport County ended the season two points behind Tranmere Rovers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288745-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL League Two play-off Final, Route to the final\nNewport faced Mansfield Town in their play-off semi-final. The first leg took place at Newport's home ground, Rodney Parade, on 9 May 2019. Mansfield took the lead early in the first half following combined play from Jacob Mellis and Danny Rose which allowed CJ Hamilton to strike the ball into the roof of Newport's net at the near post. Despite Mansfield's first-half dominance, Newport applied pressure in the second half, with a 70th minute strike from Robbie Willmott being disallowed for offside.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288745-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 EFL League Two play-off Final, Route to the final\nMansfield goalkeeper Conrad Logan had made a number of second-half saves before bringing down Adebayo Azeez and conceding a penalty late in the game. Azeez's strike was saved by Logan before P\u00e1draig Amond converted the rebound, and the game ended 1\u20131. The second leg of the semi-final was played three days later at Field Mill in Mansfield. Newport dominated the first half, striking the Mansfield crossbar twice, but failed to convert any of their chances as it ended goalless.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288745-0004-0002", "contents": "2019 EFL League Two play-off Final, Route to the final\nThe second half was a more even competition but saves from both goalkeepers ensured the match ended 0\u20130 in regular time, forcing the tie into extra time. The Newport goalkeeper Joe Day saved a Tyler Walker shot while Regan Poole blocked Rose's shot on the line. With no goals in extra time, the tie went to a penalty shootout. Day then saved Walker's spot kick while Newport converted all of theirs to win 5\u20133 in the shootout and progress to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288745-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL League Two play-off Final, Route to the final\nThe second play-off semi-final saw Tranmere Rovers take on Forest Green Rovers with the first leg being held at Prenton Park in Tranmere on 10 May 2019. Forest Green's Gavin Gunning was sent off for kicking out at Jay Harris. In the 25th minute, Ollie Banks' strike from 25 yards (23\u00a0m) scored via the underside of the Forest Green bar. The home side dominated possession and James Norwood missed four chances to extend their lead but the match ended 1\u20130. The semi-final second leg took place at The New Lawn three days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288745-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 EFL League Two play-off Final, Route to the final\nA headed goal from Forest Green's Joseph Mills early in the first half levelled the tie on aggregate before Norwood put Tranmere back into the lead with a volley on 27 minutes. Carl Winchester was sent off for the home side after being shown a second yellow card and Tranmere held on to secure the draw, and the 2\u20131 aggregate victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288745-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL League Two play-off Final, Match, Background\nTranmere had last played in the third tier of English football in 2014 while Newport had never played at that level. Tranmere were making their first appearance in a fourth tier play-off final, but had featured in the Football League Third Division play-offs twice, losing the 1990 final 2\u20130 to Notts County and winning the following year's final 1\u20130 against Bolton Wanderers in extra time. Having been promoted into the EFL through the 2018 National League play-off Final, Tranmere were aiming to win back-to-back promotions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288745-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 EFL League Two play-off Final, Match, Background\nNewport had been promoted to the EFL for the first time in their history when they won the 2013 Conference Premier play-off Final 2\u20130 against Wrexham. Coming into the final, Newport had gone on an unbeaten 12-match run while Tranmere had failed to win any of their last four games. Tranmere's squad included Norwood, League Two's Golden Boot winner with 29 goals, and goalkeeper Scott Davies, the league's Golden Glove winner. Amond and Matt had scored 43 goals in all competitions during the season for Newport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288745-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL League Two play-off Final, Match, Background\nDuring the regular season, Newport had won 1\u20130 against Tranmere at Prenton Park in September 2018 and both clubs played out a goalless draw the following April. The referee for the match was Ross Joyce, assisted by Nik Barnard and Rob Smith, with Eddie Ilderton acting as the fourth official and Matthew Lee the reserve assistant referee. Neither team were changed from their play-off semi-final second legs, with Newport's Jamille Matt recovering from a leg injury. There was no clear favourite to win with different bookmakers supporting both Tranmere and Newport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288745-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 EFL League Two play-off Final, Match, Background\nNewport manager Michael Flynn noted prior to the game that there was \"a lot of experience between the two squads at Wembley, which is quite surreal for League Two players. They have got a few good players \u2013 it is not just about James Norwood. We have to concentrate on what we can do as well.\" His counterpart, Micky Mellon, said: \"First and foremost we just want to get the performance right and hopefully that will be enough to help us to the next level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288745-0007-0002", "contents": "2019 EFL League Two play-off Final, Match, Background\nI think the experience of being here before will definitely help us but we still have to give the performance. We have to go and express ourselves. It should be a good battle.\" Both English and Welsh national anthems were performed by soprano Emily Haig. Newport played in their traditional amber and black kit while Tranmere wore their white and blue home strip.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288745-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL League Two play-off Final, Match, First half\nNewport kicked the match off in front of a Wembley Stadium crowd of 25,217 at around 3\u00a0p.m. in sunny conditions and a temperature of 22\u00a0\u00b0C (72\u00a0\u00b0F). Inside a minute, Matt's header from a Mickey Demetriou long throw was off target for Newport. In the seventh minute, a 30-yard (27\u00a0m) shot from Tranmere's Connor Jennings was saved by Day in the Newport goal. Sid Nelson then handled the ball and the resulting free kick was flicked on by Amond with Matt narrowly missing the ball at the far post.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288745-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 EFL League Two play-off Final, Match, First half\nThree minutes later Jennings' curling shot went over the Newport goal. In the 16th minute, a long-range strike from Scot Bennett flew over Tranmere's crossbar. Midway through the half, David Perkins sent a ball through for the overlapping defender Jake Caprice who crossed to Norwood. The Tranmere striker struck a first time volley which was saved by Day, before the teams took their first-half drinks break. On 31 minutes, Nelson hesitated in defence and conceded which was almost converted by Mark O'Brien at the far post after Newport had made an initial clearance. With less than ten minutes of the half remaining, Day saved a low Perkins strike from around 20 yards (18\u00a0m). In the 43rd minute, Perkins broke from midfield for Tranmere and passed to Harris whose cross was headed over the Newport goal by Norwood, and the half ended goalless.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 901]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288745-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL League Two play-off Final, Match, Second half\nNo changes were made by either side during the half-time interval and Tranmere kicked off the second half. In the 50th minute, Willmott's pass found Josh Sheehan whose shot was blocked by Monthe and Nelson. Three minutes later, Tranmere made the first substitution of the match, with Ben Pringle coming on to replace Harris. In the 55th minute, Matt received the first yellow card of the game for impeding the Tranmere goalkeeper Davies as he tried to release the ball early after saving a Dan Butler free kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288745-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 EFL League Two play-off Final, Match, Second half\nA minute later Day tipped a high cross from Pringle over the bar. Joss Labadie then shot wide for Newport before Tranmere's Liam Ridehalgh saw his free kick strike the defensive wall and cleared. In the 67th minute, O'Brien received the second yellow card of the game after a foul on Jennings. Soon after, Kieron Morris was brought down by Butler in the Newport box but the referee waved away the penalty appeals. In the 72nd minute, Newport made their first substitution of the match with Matthew Dolan coming on to replace Labadie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288745-0009-0002", "contents": "2019 EFL League Two play-off Final, Match, Second half\nTwo minutes later a cross from Butler was allowed to bounce in the Tranmere penalty area but Matt's low header was tipped onto the post by Davies. Perkins was then booked for a push on Newport's Dolan before Steve McNulty replaced Morris in Tranmere's second substitution of the game. With four minutes remaining, Monthe was brought down by Matt in the Tranmere penalty area but no penalty was awarded. In the last minute of regular time, Newport were reduced to ten men: O'Brien clashed with Norwood, and the Newport captain was sent off for a second yellow card. Three minutes into injury time, Banks played in Norwood but his shot was wide. After five minutes of added time, the second half was brought to an end, still goalless, forcing the match into extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 822]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288745-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL League Two play-off Final, Match, Extra time\nTyreeq Bakinson became Newport's third substitute when he came on to replace Sheehan at the start of the first period of extra time. In a half of few chances, Tranmere's appeal for a penalty was denied with five minutes remaining when Norwood was brought down by Demetriou. Three minutes later, Newport made their third substitution with Matt being replaced by Azeez. A minute later, Davies made a comfortable save from a Willmott header and a subsequent chance from Amond. After a minute of injury time, the half was brought to an end with the score remaining 0\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288745-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 EFL League Two play-off Final, Match, Extra time\nBefore the start of the second half of extra time, Newport made their fourth and final substitution, Keanu Marsh-Brown coming on for Willmott. Within a minute of his introduction, Marsh-Brown's shot was saved by Davies. Norwood then went close, denied once again by Davies, before Banks' free kick was struck high over the Newport crossbar. Two minutes later, Poole's foul on Jennings earned him a yellow card. In the 115th minute, Tranmere made their third substitution, with Adam Buxton coming on to replace Nelson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288745-0010-0002", "contents": "2019 EFL League Two play-off Final, Match, Extra time\nWith three minutes of regular extra time remaining, Norwood's header from a Banks cross was saved by Day. In the 119th minute, the deadlock was broken as Tranmere took the lead through Jennings. Buxton beat Bakinson to create space and sent Caprice down the right wing. His cross to the back post went beyond Norwood but the unmarked Jennings headed the ball past Day to make it 1\u20130 to Tranmere. Two minutes of injury time were played during which Newport had a free kick which came to nothing, and the match ended with Tranmere victorious, winning back-to-back promotions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288745-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL League Two play-off Final, Post-match\nWinning goalscorer Jennings said: \"We gave everything and we knew it was coming. To get back to back promotions is some achievement.\" Mellon noted: \"Let\u2019s give every credit to both sets of players \u2013 Newport kept fighting. I\u2019m absolutely delighted \u2013 the players gave me everything they had since Christmas and we're absolutely made up.\" His opposite number Flynn bemoaned the refusal of Joyce to use VAR to review Monthe's challenge on Matt late in the second half: \"We are at the home of football. We have all the VAR equipment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288745-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 EFL League Two play-off Final, Post-match\nYou\u2019ve got referees who are full-time referees and a big decision killed us. It was a stonewall penalty and I can't believe it wasn't given\u00a0... It's a very poor decision\u00a0... If they are not going to use all the facilities at hand, what\u2019s the point of having it here?\". Mellon's response was laconic: \"I'm not going to bother with VAR, I just got promoted.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288745-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL League Two play-off Final, Post-match\nLeagues One and Two were prematurely curtailed as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom. In their following season, Tranmere finished 21st in League One, three points from safety and were relegated back to League Two. Newport's next season saw the club finish in 15th position in the League Two table, six places and eight points above the relegation zone but eight places and twelve points below the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288746-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL Trophy Final\nThe 2019 EFL Trophy Final was a football match played at Wembley Stadium on 31 March 2019. It decided the winners of the 2018\u201319 EFL Trophy, the 35th edition of the competition, a knock-out tournament for the 48 teams in League One and League Two and 16 category one academy sides.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288746-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL Trophy Final\nThe Final was contested by League One sides Portsmouth and Sunderland, of which the winner received \u00a3100,000 and the Runners-Up received \u00a350,000. This was the first Trophy final pitting two English football champions against each other in 31 years. It was also the first EFL Trophy Final to be contested by two former Premier League clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288746-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL Trophy Final\nThe Portsmouth team used Wembley's West changing room, while Sunderland used the East. A coin toss decided that Sunderland had first choice on kit selection. This meant Portsmouth played in blue away socks to avoid clashing with Sunderland's first choice red socks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288746-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 EFL Trophy Final\nPortsmouth won the final after coming from one goal behind with English forward Oliver Hawkins scoring the winning penalty kick in the shootout to hand Portsmouth their first cup trophy since the 2008 FA Cup. Portsmouth centre back, Matthew Clarke, was named man of the match. The game was attended by 85,021 people, making it the highest attended match in the UK and the second highest in Europe that weekend. It set a new attendance record for the Football League Trophy, surpassing the 1988 final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288747-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ESF Women's Championship\nThe 2019 ESF Women's Championship was an international European softball competition that was held in Ostrava and Fr\u00fddek-M\u00edstek, Czech Republic; and Rybnik and \u017bory, Poland from 30 June to 6 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288747-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ESF Women's Championship, Preliminary Round, Group A\nGame originally scheduled: July 1, 2019, 18:00 at Ostrava 2, postponed due to rain", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288747-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ESF Women's Championship, Preliminary Round, Group A\nGame originally scheduled: July 1, 2019, 20:45 at Ostrava 1, postponed due to rain", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288747-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ESF Women's Championship, Preliminary Round, Group B\nGame originally scheduled: July 1, 2019, 16:15 at Fr\u00fddek-M\u00edstek, postponed due to rain", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288747-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ESF Women's Championship, Preliminary Round, Group B\nGame originally scheduled: July 1, 2019, 20:15 at Ostrava 2, postponed due to rain", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288747-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 ESF Women's Championship, Preliminary Round, Group C\nGame originally scheduled: July 1, 2019, 18:30 at Fr\u00fddek-M\u00edstek, postponed due to rain", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288747-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 ESF Women's Championship, Preliminary Round, Group C\nGame originally scheduled: July 1, 2019, 18:30 at Ostrava 1, postponed due to rain", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288748-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ESPY Awards\nThe 2019 ESPY Awards were presented at the 27th annual ESPY Awards show, held on July 10, 2019 at 5 PM Pacific at the Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles and broadcast on television nationwide in the United States on ABC at 8 PM Eastern/7 PM Central. Tracy Morgan served as the host.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288748-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ESPY Awards, In Memoriam\nThe 2019 ESPY Awards was the first time that there was no \"In Memoriam\" segment aired live. The segment was replaced by a segment honoring players' assistance within their communities with a performance of \"In Times Like These\" by Grammy award-winning Gospel singer Tori Kelly, taking place during the award segment for the Arthur Ashe Courage Award, which was awarded to NBA legend and Civil Rights activist Bill Russell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288749-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 East Asia Super League season\nThe 2019 East Asia Super League season is the third season of the tournament organized by Asia League Limited. The sole tournament, The Terrific 12 was held from 17\u201322 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288749-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 East Asia Super League season, Results\nThe Terrific 12 tournament was held at the Tap Seac Multi-sports Pavilion in Macau from 17 to 22 September. The FIBA-recognized basketball tournament features three clubs from the Chinese Basketball Association of China, four from the B.League of Japan, two from the Korean Basketball League of South Korea and three from the Philippine Basketball Association of the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288749-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 East Asia Super League season, Asia League Fest\nAs part of The Terrific 12, an evening concert named the Asia League Fest was held on 21 September featuring musical artists from mainland China, Japan, the Philippines, South Korea and Taiwan. The event featured known artists such as MC Jin, James Reid, Jess Connelly, Minzy, Julia Wu, Motherbasss, Blacklist Music and Soler.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288750-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 East Asian Youth Games\nThe 2019 East Asian Youth Games were to be the first international multi-sport event for countries in East Asia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288750-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 East Asian Youth Games, Participating nations\nAll eight countries whose National Olympic Committee is recognized by the East Asian Games Association and one country whose National Olympic Committee is recognized by the Oceania National Olympic Committees, would have participated had the games not been cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288750-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 East Asian Youth Games, History\nTaichung, Taiwan was selected to be the host city for the first East Asian Youth Games on October 24, 2014 during the 32nd East Asian Games Association Council Meeting in Beijing, China. The Taichung City Government originally planned to establish a committee for the Games in December 2014, but this was postponed until June 26, 2015, when the 2019 East Asian Youth Games Organization Committee (2019\u5e74\u6771\u4e9e\u9752\u5e74\u904b\u52d5\u6703\u7c4c\u5099\u59d4\u54e1\u6703) was set up. This was to be the first time Taichung City had organised an international multi-sport event, as well as being the first East Asian Youth Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288750-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 East Asian Youth Games, History\nOn July 31, 2018, Taichung was stripped of hosting rights after a vote by the East Asian Olympic Committee. The cancellation was to due to Chinese anger over public calls in Taiwan for a referendum on whether Taiwan should be allowed to compete under the name \"Taiwan\" at the 2020 Summer Olympics and pro-independence campaign, or should continue to compete under the name \"Chinese Taipei\", as it has been forced to acquiesce to since the 1970s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288750-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 East Asian Youth Games, Sports\nThere would have been be ten core sports events and two non-core sports events during the East Asian Youth Games. The core events were to be athletics, aquatics (swimming and diving), judo, taekwondo, three to three basketball, futsal, table tennis, badminton, tennis (tennis and soft tennis), and beach volleyball. Cycling and canoeing were to be non-core events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288751-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 East Cambridgeshire District Council election\nThe 2019 East Cambridgeshire District Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of East Cambridgeshire District Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections. The whole council was up for election on new boundaries. The Conservative Party retained control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288752-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 East Carolina Pirates football team\nThe 2019 East Carolina Pirates football team represented East Carolina University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Pirates, led by first-year head coach Mike Houston, played their home games at Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium, and were members of the East Division in the American Athletic Conference. They finished the season 4\u20138, 1\u20137 in AAC play to finish in fifth place in the East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288752-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 East Carolina Pirates football team, Previous season\nThe Pirates finished the 2018 season 3\u20139, 1\u20137 in AAC play to finish in fifth place in the East Division. On November 29, head coach Scottie Montgomery was fired. He finished at East Carolina with a three year record of 9\u201326. Defensive coordinator David Blackwell was the interim head coach during their final game of the season. On December 3, ECU hired James Madison head coach Mike Houston as their new head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288752-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 East Carolina Pirates football team, Preseason, AAC media poll\nThe AAC media poll was released on July 16, 2019, with the Pirates predicted to finish fifth in the AAC East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288753-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 East Devon District Council election\nThe 2019 East Devon District Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of East Devon District Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288754-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 East Hampshire District Council election\nThe 2019 East Hampshire District Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of the East Hampshire District Council in England. It was held on the same day as other local elections. New ward boundaries were used, with some new wards created, with others having their boundaries amended. Wards with the same name but amended boundaries are noted. The number of councillors was reduced from 44 to 43.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288754-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 East Hampshire District Council election\nThe election saw the Conservatives lose 10 seats, with the Liberal Democrats (previously the only other party to hold seats in the council), Labour, and Independents gaining seats. The Liberal Democrats, forming the largest opposition, with seven seats in total, an increase of five, with four seats in Alton, two in Whitehill, and one in Murray. Labour won a further two seats, and two seats returned independent councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288755-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 East Hertfordshire District Council election\nThe 2019 East Hertfordshire District Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect all members of East Hertfordshire District Council in England. The Conservatives retained control of the council, but lost 10 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288756-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 East Lindsey District Council election\nThe 2019 East Lindsey District Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect all members of East Lindsey District Council in England. The Conservatives retained overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288756-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 East Lindsey District Council election, Council composition\nFollowing the last election in 2015, the composition of the council was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288756-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 East Lindsey District Council election, Council composition\nIND - Independent Lab - Labour LI - Lincolnshire Independents LD - Liberal DemocratsSUDS - Skegness Urban District SocietyNL - No Label", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288756-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 East Lindsey District Council election, Ward results\nIncumbent councillors are denoted by an asterisk (*). References -", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 57], "content_span": [58, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288756-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 East Lindsey District Council election, Ward results, Alford\nDevereux was previously elected as a Lincolnshire Independents councillor. A total of 66 ballots were rejected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288756-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 East Lindsey District Council election, Ward results, Friskney\nDickinson was previously elected as a UKIP councillor. A total of 8 ballots were rejected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 67], "content_span": [68, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288756-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 East Lindsey District Council election, Ward results, Mablethorpe\nBrown was previously elected as a UKIP councillor. A total of 47 ballots were rejected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 70], "content_span": [71, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288756-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 East Lindsey District Council election, Ward results, St Clements\nDannatt was previously elected as a UKIP Councillor. A total of 10 ballots were rejected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 70], "content_span": [71, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288756-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 East Lindsey District Council election, Ward results, Winthorpe\nBrookes was previously elected as a UKIP councillor. A total of 26 ballots were rejected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 68], "content_span": [69, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288757-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 East Riding of Yorkshire Council election\nThe 2019 East Riding of Yorkshire Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect all 67 members of East Riding of Yorkshire Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections. The whole of the council was up for election and the Conservative Party retained control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288758-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 East Staffordshire Borough Council election\nThe 2019 East Staffordshire Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of the East Staffordshire Borough Council in England. It was held on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288759-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 East Suffolk District Council election\nThe inaugural East Suffolk District Council elections were held on 2 May 2019 to elect all 55 members of the newly-formed East Suffolk District Council in England. This was held on the same day as other local council elections across England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288760-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 East Tennessee State Buccaneers football team\nThe 2019 East Tennessee State Buccaneers football team represents East Tennessee State University (ETSU) in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season and are in the fourth year of their second stint as football members of the Southern Conference (SoCon). They are led by second-year head coach Randy Sanders and play their home games at William B. Greene Jr. Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288760-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 East Tennessee State Buccaneers football team, Previous season\nThe Buccaneers finished the 2018 season 8\u20134, 6\u20132 in SoCon play to win a share of the SoCon championship. They received an at-large bid to the FCS Playoffs, where they lost to Jacksonville State in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288760-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 East Tennessee State Buccaneers football team, Preseason, Preseason media poll\nThe SoCon released their preseason media poll and coaches poll on July 22, 2019. The Buccaneers were picked to finish in third place in both polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 83], "content_span": [84, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288760-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 East Tennessee State Buccaneers football team, Preseason, Preseason All-SoCon Teams\nThe Buccaneers placed seven players on the preseason all-SoCon teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 88], "content_span": [89, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288761-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastbourne Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Eastbourne District Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Eastbourne Borough Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288762-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastbourne International\nThe 2019 Eastbourne International (also known as the Nature Valley International for sponsorship reasons) was a combined men's and women's tennis tournament played on outdoor grass courts. It was the 45th edition of the event for the women and the 9th edition for the men. The tournament was classified as a WTA Premier tournament on the 2019 WTA Tour and as an ATP Tour 250 series on the 2019 ATP Tour. The tournament took place at the Devonshire Park Lawn Tennis Club in Eastbourne, United Kingdom between 23 and 29 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288762-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastbourne International, ATP doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 77], "content_span": [78, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288762-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastbourne International, WTA singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry using a protected ranking into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 77], "content_span": [78, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288762-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastbourne International, WTA 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, 77], "content_span": [78, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288763-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastbourne International \u2013 Men's Doubles\nLuke Bambridge and Jonny O'Mara were the defending champions but they lost in the first round to Dan Evans and Lloyd Glasspool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288763-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastbourne International \u2013 Men's Doubles\nJuan Sebasti\u00e1n Cabal and Robert Farah won the title, defeating M\u00e1ximo Gonz\u00e1lez and Horacio Zeballos in the final, 3\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20134), [10\u20136].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288764-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastbourne International \u2013 Men's Singles\nMischa Zverev was the defending champion, but chose not to participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288764-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastbourne International \u2013 Men's Singles\nTaylor Fritz won his first ATP Tour title, defeating Sam Querrey in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288764-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastbourne International \u2013 Men's Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 52], "content_span": [53, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288765-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastbourne International \u2013 Women's Doubles\nGabriela Dabrowski and Xu Yifan were the defending champions, but lost in the first round to Simona Halep and Raluca Olaru.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288765-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastbourne International \u2013 Women's Doubles\nChan Hao-ching and Latisha Chan won the title, defeating Kirsten Flipkens and Bethanie Mattek-Sands in the final, 2\u20136, 6\u20133, [10\u20136].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288766-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastbourne International \u2013 Women's Singles\nCaroline Wozniacki was the defending champion, but lost in the third round to Aryna Sabalenka in a rematch of the previous year's final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288766-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastbourne International \u2013 Women's Singles\nKarol\u00edna Pl\u00ed\u0161kov\u00e1 reached her third Eastbourne final in four years, and claimed her second title, defeating Angelique Kerber in the final 6\u20131, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288766-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastbourne International \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nThe top eight seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 54], "content_span": [55, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288766-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastbourne International \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nClick on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 54], "content_span": [55, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288767-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Asian Men's Volleyball Championship\nThe 2019 Eastern Asian Men's Volleyball Championship was the 10th edition of the AVC Eastern Zonal Men's Volleyball Championship, the volleyball championship of East Asia. It was held in Zhangjiagang, China from 16 to 21 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288767-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Asian Men's Volleyball Championship\nOn 21 July, China were the defending champions and won their second title. Yu Yuantai was elected the most valuable player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288768-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Cape provincial election\nThe 2019 Eastern Cape provincial election was held on 8 May 2019, concurrently with the 2019 South African general election, to elect the 63 members of the Eastern Cape Provincial Legislature. The election was won by the African National Congress, the incumbent governing party in the province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288768-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Cape provincial election, Premier candidates\nThe African National Congress did not announce its premier candidate prior to the election. The incumbent premier Phumulo Masualle was 39th on the ANC's national list for the National Assembly election. Oscar Mabuyane, the party's incumbent provincial chairperson, was first on the provincial list for the provincial election. After the election, he announced as the party's premier candidate by the party's National Executive Committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288768-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Cape provincial election, Premier candidates\nIn September 2018, the official opposition, the Democratic Alliance, announced its provincial leader, Nqaba Bhanga as the party's premier candidate for the provincial election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288768-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Cape provincial election, Premier candidates\nThe Economic Freedom Fighters did not announce a premier candidate since the party wants to abolish provinces, however, its provincial chairperson Yazini Tetyana was first on the party's list for the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288768-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Cape provincial election, Premier candidates\nThe United Democratic Movement placed its national chairperson Mncedisi Filtane first on its candidate list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288768-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Cape provincial election, Premier candidates\nFormer DA provincial chairwoman Veliswa Mvenya was chosen as the African Transformation Movement's premier candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288768-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Cape provincial election, Premier candidates\nOn 5 March 2019, the Freedom Front Plus announced their provincial leader Piet Mey as their premier candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288768-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Cape provincial election, Premier candidates\nCongress of the People Member of the Provincial Legislature, Rev. Lievie Sharpley was chosen as COPE's premier candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288768-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Cape provincial election, Aftermath\nOn 22 May 2019, members of the Eastern Cape Provincial Legislature were sworn in during the first sitting of the provincial legislature after the election and Oscar Masbuyane was elected as the provincial premier, while Helen Sauls-August was elected speaker with Mlibo Qoboshiyane as deputy speaker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 48], "content_span": [49, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288769-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern District Council election\nThe 2019 Eastern District Council election was held on 24 November 2019 to elect all 35 members to the Eastern District Council of Hong Kong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288769-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern District Council election\nThe pro-democrats achieved the majority of the council for the first time in a historic landslide victory amid the pro-democracy protests, taking 32 of the 35 seats in the council, with many of the pro-Beijing strongholds in North Point falling into the hands of pro-democracy independents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288770-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Illinois Panthers football team\nThe 2019 Eastern Illinois Panthers football team represented Eastern Illinois University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by first-year head coach Adam Cushing and played their home games at O'Brien Field in Charleston, Illinois as members of the Ohio Valley Conference (OVC). They finished the season 1\u201311, 1\u20137 in OVC play to finish in last place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288770-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Illinois Panthers football team, Previous season\nThe Panthers finished the 2018 season 3\u20138, 3\u20135 in OVC play to finish in a tie for sixth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288770-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Illinois Panthers football team, Preseason, Preseason coaches' poll\nThe OVC released their preseason coaches' poll on July 22, 2019. The Panthers were picked to finish in eighth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 80], "content_span": [81, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288770-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Illinois Panthers football team, Preseason, Preseason All-OVC team\nThe Panthers had one player selected to the preseason all-OVC team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 79], "content_span": [80, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288771-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Intercollegiate Volleyball Association Tournament\nThe 2019 Eastern Intercollegiate Volleyball Association Tournament was the men's volleyball tournament for the Eastern Intercollegiate Volleyball Association during the 2019 NCAA Division I & II men's volleyball season. It was held April 18 through April 20, 2019 at Princeton University's Dillon Gymnasium. The winner received The Association's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Volleyball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288771-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Intercollegiate Volleyball Association Tournament, Seeds\nThe top four teams qualified for the tournament, with the highest seed hosting each round. Teams were seeded by record within the conference, with a tiebreaker system to seed teams with identical conference records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 69], "content_span": [70, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288771-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Intercollegiate Volleyball Association Tournament, Bracket\nThe title was Princeton's second ever men's volleyball title, the first having occurred back in 1998.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 71], "content_span": [72, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288772-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Kentucky Colonels football team\nThe 2019 Eastern Kentucky Colonels football team represented Eastern Kentucky University during the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by fourth-year head coach Mark Elder and played their home games at Roy Kidd Stadium as a member of the Ohio Valley Conference. They finished the season 7\u20135, 5\u20133 in OVC play to finish in fourth place. Elder was fired following the season, he finished with a record of 21\u201324.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288772-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Kentucky Colonels football team, Previous season\nThe Colonels finished the 2018 season 7\u20134, 5\u20132 in OVC play to finish in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288772-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Kentucky Colonels football team, Preseason, Preseason coaches' poll\nThe OVC released their preseason coaches' poll on July 22, 2019. The Colonels were picked to finish in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 80], "content_span": [81, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288772-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Kentucky Colonels football team, Preseason, Preseason All-OVC team\nThe Colonels had three players at three positions selected to the preseason all-OVC team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 79], "content_span": [80, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288773-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Michigan Eagles football team\nThe 2019 Eastern Michigan Eagles football team represented Eastern Michigan University during the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Eagles were led by sixth-year head coach Chris Creighton and played their home games at Rynearson Stadium in Ypsilanti, Michigan. They competed as members of the West Division of the Mid-American Conference (MAC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288773-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Michigan Eagles football team, Preseason, MAC media poll\nThe MAC released their preseason media poll on July 23, 2019, with the Eagles predicted to finish in fourth place in the West Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 69], "content_span": [70, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288773-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Michigan Eagles football team, Schedule\nEastern Michigan's 2019 schedule will begin with four non-conference games, with three away games against Coastal Carolina of the Sun Belt Conference, Kentucky of the Southeastern Conference (SEC), and Illinois of the Big Ten Conference, and then a home game against Central Connecticut of the Northeast Conference. In Mid-American Conference play, the Eagles will play home games against Ball State, Western Michigan, Buffalo, and Kent State, and road games against Central Michigan, Toledo, Akron, and Northern Illinois. They will not play East Division members Miami, Ohio, or Bowling Green as part of the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288774-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Samar earthquake\nA 6.4 magnitude earthquake struck the islands of Visayas in the Philippines on April 23, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288774-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Samar earthquake, Earthquake\nThe Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology reported that an earthquake was recorded at 13:37 PST. The epicenter was in San Julian, Eastern Samar where earthquake was felt at Intensity VI. Initial report from the institute reported the earthquake with 6.2 Local magnitude. Although the earthquake happened a day after an earlier earthquake struck Luzon, the state agency has stated that the Visayas earthquake is unrelated to the prior earthquake. The Visayas earthquake was determined to be caused by the movement of the Philippine Trench.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288774-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Samar earthquake, Earthquake\nForty people were injured, most of them slightly by falling objects, and slight damage was reported near the epicenter. The Leyte Provincial Capitol in Tacloban sustained damage which led to the provincial government abandoning the building in May 2019, with the intention of converting the building into a museum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288775-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Washington Eagles football team\nThe 2019 Eastern Washington Eagles football team represented Eastern Washington University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The team was coached by third year head coach Aaron Best. The Eagles played their home games at Roos Field in Cheney, Washington and were a member of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 7\u20135, 6\u20132 in Big Sky play to finish in a three-way tie for third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288775-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Washington Eagles football team, Previous season\nThe Eagles finished the 2018 season 12\u20133, 7\u20131 in Big Sky play to finish in a three-way tie for first place. They received the third seed in the FCS Playoffs and advanced to the National Championship Game, where they lost to North Dakota State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288775-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Washington Eagles football team, Preseason, Polls\nOn July 15, 2019 during the Big Sky Kickoff in Spokane, Washington, the Eagles were predicted to win the Big Sky by both the coaches and media.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 62], "content_span": [63, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288775-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Washington Eagles football team, Preseason, Preseason All-Conference Team\nThe Eagles had one player selected to the Preseason All-Conference Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 86], "content_span": [87, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288775-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Washington Eagles football team, Preseason, Coaching/Personnel Changes\nOn January 18, defensive coordinator Jeff Schmedding left to take a position as linebackers coach/co-special teams coordinator with Boise State. Defensive line coach Eti Ena was promoted to replace Schmedding on January 23, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 83], "content_span": [84, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288775-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Washington Eagles football team, Preseason, Coaching/Personnel Changes\nOn February 9, former starting quarterback Gage Gubrud was granted a medical redshirt year by the NCAA after suffering a season-ending foot injury in a game against Montana State on September 29, 2018. He transferred to Washington State for his final year of eligibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 83], "content_span": [84, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288775-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Washington Eagles football team, Preseason, Coaching/Personnel Changes\nOn February 12, offensive coordinator Bodie Reeder left to become the co-offensive coordinator at North Texas. On February 25, Central Washington head coach Ian Shoemaker was hired to replace him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 83], "content_span": [84, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288775-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Washington Eagles football team, Schedule\nEWU has scheduled 12 games in the 2019 season instead of the 11 normally allowed for FCS programs. Under a standard provision of NCAA rules, all FCS teams are allowed to schedule 12 regular-season games in years in which the period starting with Labor Day weekend and ending with the last Saturday of November contains 14 Saturdays.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288775-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Washington Eagles football team, Schedule\nDespite also being a member of the Big Sky, the game vs. Idaho will count as a non-conference game and will have no effect on the Big Sky standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288775-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastern Washington Eagles football team, Schedule\nAlthough North Dakota is classified as an FCS Independent, games against them still count as Big Sky conference games through the 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288776-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastleigh Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Eastleigh Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect one third of members of Eastleigh Borough Council. The outcome was a strengthened majority for the incumbent Liberal Democrats who gained two Conservative seats. No election was held in Botley, a two-member ward, this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288776-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastleigh Borough Council election, Results\nThe Liberal Democrats further strengthened their already large majority, with an increased vote share. They gained two Conservative seats, Fair Oak & Horton Heath and Hiltingbury. The Liberal Democrats successfully defended 10 seats up for reelection, whilst Independent Councillor Raymond Dean retained his Bishopstoke seat with an increased majority", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288776-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Eastleigh Borough Council election, Results\nThe overall vote share also rose for the Liberal Democrats, as well as for UKIP and the Greens, whilst the Conservative vote share fell, alongside that of Labour and Independents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288777-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 East\u2013West Shrine Game\nThe 2019 East\u2013West Shrine Game was the 94th staging of the all\u2013star college football exhibition to benefit Shriners Hospital for Children. The game was played at Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg, Florida, on January 19, 2019, with a 3:00 PM EST kickoff, televised on the NFL Network. It was one of the final 2018\u201319 bowl games concluding the 2018 FBS football season. The game featured NCAA players (predominantly from the Football Bowl Subdivision) and a few select invitees from Canadian university football, rostered into \"East\" and \"West\" teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288777-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 East\u2013West Shrine Game\nThe game featured more than 100 players from the 2018 NCAA Division I FBS football season and prospects for the 2019 draft of the professional National Football League (NFL). In the week prior to the game, scouts from all 32 NFL teams attended team practices. Coaches and game officials were supplied by the NFL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288777-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 East\u2013West Shrine Game\nThe day before the game, the East\u2013West Shrine Game Pat Tillman Award was given to Cody Barton (LB, Utah); the award \"is presented to a player who best exemplifies character, intelligence, sportsmanship and service. The award is about a student-athlete's achievements and conduct, both on and off the field.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288777-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 East\u2013West Shrine Game, Coaching staffs\nIn early January 2019, head coaches were announced; Sam Mills III, defensive line coach for the Carolina Panthers, and Adam Zimmer, linebackers coach for the Minnesota Vikings, for the East and West teams, respectively. Each head coach had a support staff of 13 coaches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288777-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 East\u2013West Shrine Game, Players\nPlayers who accepted invitations to the game are listed on the official website; selected players are listed below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288778-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ebonyi State gubernatorial election\nThe 2019 Ebonyi State gubernatorial election occurred on March 9, 2019. Incumbent PDP Governor Dave Umahi won re-election for a second term, defeating APC Sonni Ogbuoji and several minor party candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288778-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ebonyi State gubernatorial election\nDave Umahi emerged PDP gubernatorial candidate unopposed. He picked Eric Kelechi Igwe as his running mate. Sonni Ogbuoji was the APC candidate with Justin Mbam Ogodo as his running mate. 37 candidates contested in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288778-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Ebonyi State gubernatorial election, Electoral system\nThe Governor of Ebonyi State is elected using the plurality voting system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 58], "content_span": [59, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288778-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Ebonyi State gubernatorial election, Primary election, PDP primary\nThe PDP primary election was held on September 30, 2018. Dave Umahi won the primary election unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288778-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Ebonyi State gubernatorial election, Primary election, APC primary\nThe APC primary election was held on September 30, 2018. Sonni Ogbuoji won the primary election polling 785 votes against 8 other candidates. His closest rival was Bernard Odoh, the immediate past secretary to the state government of Ebonyi, who came second with 519 votes. Edward Nkwegu came third with 395 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288778-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Ebonyi State gubernatorial election, Results\nA total number of 37 candidates registered with the Independent National Electoral Commission to contest in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288778-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Ebonyi State gubernatorial election, Results\nThe total number of registered voters in the state was 1,432,528, while 497,291 voters were accredited. Total number of votes cast was 493,002, while number of valid votes was 482,018. Rejected votes were 10,984.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288778-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Ebonyi State gubernatorial election, Results, By local government area\nHere are the results of the election by local government area for the two major parties. The total valid votes of 482,018 represents the 37 political parties that participated in the election. Green represents LGAs won by Dave Umahi. Blue represents LGAs won by Sonni Ogbuoji.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 75], "content_span": [76, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288779-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian Serie A\nThe 2019 Campeonato Ecuatoriano de F\u00fatbol Serie A (officially known as the LigaPro Banco Pichincha 2019 for sponsorship reasons) was the 61st season of the Serie A, Ecuador's top tier football league, and the first under the management of the Liga Profesional de F\u00fatbol del Ecuador (or LigaPro). LDU Quito were the defending champions, but were defeated in the finals by Delf\u00edn following a scoreless draw on aggregate score after two legs and a penalty shootout, in which the latter team won their first league title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288779-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian Serie A, Format\nStarting from this season, the league was expanded from 12 to 16 teams and a new format was implemented. The first stage will be played as a double round-robin tournament with all teams playing each other twice, once at home and once away, for a total of 30 matches. The top eight teams at the end of the first stage will qualify for the playoffs, which will consist of three rounds: quarterfinals, semifinals, and final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288779-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian Serie A, Format\nIn the quarterfinals, the eight qualified teams were split into four ties to be played on a home-and-away basis: the best-placed team in the first round played against the eighth-best team, the second-best team against the seventh-best, and so on. The four winners advanced to the semifinals, with the winners of this stage playing the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288779-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian Serie A, Format\nIn case of a tie in points and goals scored in the quarterfinals and semifinals, the best-placed team in each tie (according to the first stage standings) advanced to the following stage, whilst in a case of a tie in points and goals for in the final, a penalty shootout would be played to decide the champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288779-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian Serie A, Teams\nSixteen teams competed in the 2019 Serie A season, twelve of whom took part in the previous season. El Nacional and Guayaquil City would have been relegated from Serie A after accumulating the fewest points during the 2018 season, however, the expansion of the league prevented their relegation to Serie B. The four remaining spots in the top tier were filled by the top four teams in Serie B in the previous season: Mushuc Runa, Am\u00e9rica de Quito, Fuerza Amarilla and Olmedo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288779-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian Serie A, First stage\nThe First stage began on February 8 and ended on November 3. The top eight teams at the end of this stage advanced to the playoffs, while the bottom two were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests\nThe 2019 Ecuadorian protests were a series of protests and riots against austerity measures including the cancellation of fuel subsidies, adopted by President of Ecuador Len\u00edn Moreno and his administration. Organized protests ceased after indigenous groups and the Ecuadorian government reached a deal to reverse the austerity measures, beginning a collaboration on how to combat overspending and public debt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Background\nBeginning in 2007, President Rafael Correa established The Citizens' Revolution, a movement following left-wing policies, which some analysts described as populist. Correa was able to utilize the 2000s commodities boom to fund his policies, utilizing China's need for raw materials. Through China, Correa accepted loans that had few requirements, as opposed to firm limits set by other lenders. With this funding, Ecuador was able to invest in social welfare programs, reduce poverty and increase the average standard of living in Ecuador, while at the same time growing Ecuador's economy. Such policies resulted in a popular base of support for Correa, who was re-elected to the presidency twice between 2007 and 2013. Correa also utilized his popular support to increase power for himself and his 'citizen's revolution', drawing criticism that such acts were an entrenchment of power.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 923]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Background\nAs the Ecuadorian economy began to decline in 2014, Correa decided not to run for a fourth term and by 2015, protests occurred against Correa following the introduction of austerity measures and an increase of inheritance taxes. Instead, Len\u00edn Moreno, who was at the time a staunch Correa loyalist and had served as his vice-president for over six years, was expected to continue with Correa's legacy and the implementation of 21st century socialism in the country, running on a broadly left-wing platform with significant similarities to Correa's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Background\nIn the weeks after his election, Moreno distanced himself from Correa's policies and shifted the left-wing PAIS Alliance's away from the left-wing politics and towards the center. Despite these policy shifts, Moreno continued to identify himself as social democrat. Moreno then led the 2018 Ecuadorian referendum, which reinstated presidential term limits that were removed by Correa, essentially barring Correa from having a fourth presidential term in the future. At the time, Moreno enjoyed an approval rating of 80 percent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Background\nMoreno's distancing from his predecessor's policies and his electoral campaign's platform, however, alienated both former President Correa and a large percentage of his own party's supporters. In July 2018, a warrant for Correa's arrest was issued after facing 29 charges for corruption, for acts allegedly performed while he was in office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Background\nDue to increased borrowing by Correa's administration, which he had used to fund his welfare projects, as well as the 2010s oil glut, public debt tripled in a five-year period and with Ecuador eventually coming to use of the Central Bank of Ecuador's reserves for funds. In total, Ecuador was left $64 billion in debt and was losing $10 billion annually. On August 21, 2018, Moreno announced economic austerity measures to reduce public spending and deficit. Moreno stated that the measures aimed to save $1 billion and included a reduction of fuel subsidies, eliminating subsidies for gasoline and diesel, and the removal or merging of several public entities, a move denounced by the groups representing the nation's indigenous groups, as well as trade unions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 799]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Background\nBy mid-2019, analysts stated that Moreno's overturning of Correa's policies, as well as the implementation of austerity measures and his turn towards centrism cost him political support, with his approval ratings dropping to about 30%. In the months leading up to the protests, other sporadic demonstrations began to occur against Moreno's government as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Events, Economic measures\nThe night of 1 October 2019, Len\u00edn Moreno announced 6 economic measures and 13 restructuring proposals in order to stimulate the country's economy. It started with a speech declaring that there would not be an increase in taxes, Moreno mentioned he would do the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Events, Economic measures\nMoreno's government stated that the fuel subsidies had cost the country $1.4 billion annually and had been in place for 40 years. The cut of fuel subsidies resulted in diesel fuel prices doubling and regular fuel prices increasing 30 percent, angering transportation unions and businesses who started the protest movement. Businesses also panicked, leading to speculation, with a range of everyday costs spiking rapidly shortly after the decision. Indigenous groups have further stated that the IMF deal increased austerity and would promote inequality in Ecuador. The end of fuel subsidies was approved as the Decree 883. New prices took effect on October 3 .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Events, Protests begin\nOn October 2, 2019, the union central Frente Unitario de los Trabajadores (FUT), the Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities of Ecuador (CONAIE), the Popular Front and the student union Federation of University Students of Ecuador (FEUE) announced national protests against the government measures. that same day, the national Federation of Carriers (FENACOTIP) announced the paralysis of labour for October 3, day in which the decree 883 took effect and eliminated gas subsidies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Events, Protests begin\nThe protests began on October 3, 2019, as taxi, bus and truck drivers came out in protest against the planned abolition of the fuel subsidies. President Moreno declared a state of emergency the following day on 4 October 2019 four hours before protests began. The protests had crippled the country's transport network with all major roads and bridges blocked in the capital Quito. After reaching a deal with the government, a planned strike was cancelled by the groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Events, Protests begin\nIndigenous peoples' groups began protests shortly thereafter, along with university students and labour unions. The protesters declared their intention to hold an indefinite general strike, which would last until the government overturned its decision. Moreno refused to discuss a potential reversal, saying that he would \"not negotiate with criminals\", sparking clashes between the National Police and protesters, who were attempting to break into the Carondelet Palace in Quito. The Armed Forces were deployed by the government on 7 October to force protesters to release over 50 servicemen, who were being held captive by protesting indigenous groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Events, Relocation of government\nOn 8 October, President Moreno relocated his government to the coastal city of Guayaquil after anti-government protesters had overrun Quito, including the Carondelet Palace. On the same day, Moreno accused his predecessor Rafael Correa of orchestrating a coup against the government with the aid of Venezuela's Nicol\u00e1s Maduro. Correa called for early presidential elections from his residence in Belgium and denied plotting a coup against Moreno with the help of Maduro. Correa admitted that he was employed as a consultant by President Maduro at the time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Events, Relocation of government\nLater that day, the authorities shut down oil production at the Sacha oil field, which produces 10% of the nation's oil, after it was occupied by protesters. Two more oil fields were captured by protesters shortly thereafter. Demonstrators also captured repeater antennas, forcing State TV and radio offline in parts of the country. Indigenous protesters blocked most of Ecuador's main roads, completely cutting the transport routes to the city of Cuenca. Former president Correa stated that President Moreno was \"finished\" and called for early elections from his home in Europe. The National Police raided the Pichincha Universal radio station as part of a public prosecutor investigation for allegedly \"inciting to discord among citizens\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Events, Relocation of government\nOn 9 October, protesters managed to briefly burst into and occupy the National Assembly, before being driven out by police using tear gas. Violent clashes erupted between demonstrators and police forces as the protests spread further. Moreno declared that he would refuse to resign under any circumstance and imposed a night-time curfew on the nation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Events, National paralysis\nOn 10 October, Ecuador remained paralyzed as thousands of demonstrators marched and chanted demands for the return of the fuel subsidy and the resignation of President Moreno. Indigenous groups established headquarters at a cultural center in Quito. Demonstrators captured 10 police officers, making them take off their riot gear and carry the coffin of a dead indigenous protester before releasing them shortly thereafter. At the Casa de la Cultura Ecuatoriana, where protesters made their headquarters, the captured authorities were paraded in public.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Events, National paralysis\nWhile initially peaceful, violence erupted after the demonstrators were met by police, who attempted to disperse them using tear gas. Demonstrators responded by throwing stones, molotov cocktails and tube-launched fireworks at the mounted riot police officers sent to disperse them. The Energy Ministry reported that the country's main oil pipeline had ceased operating after being seized by indigenous protesters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Events, National paralysis\nIndigenous protesters accused the nation's private media of ignoring reports of police brutality and demanded that they broadcast a statement made by the demonstrators on live television. At least three private broadcasters complied and aired the live declaration, in which protest leader Jamie Vargas called for more protests during the weekend and threatened to \"radicalise the protests with more force\" if the nation's president continued to \"play\" with the nation's indigenous population.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Events, National paralysis\nSeventeen Venezuelans were arrested at the Quito airport. According to military officials, they had maps of planned anti-government marches and information about Moreno's personal security arrangements. On 11 October, fifteen were released due to lack of evidence, while the remaining two were prohibited to exit the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Events, Call for negotiations\nCONAIE listed three demands in order to begin dialogue with Moreno: the dismissal of the ministers of government and defense, the repeal of the gas subsidies decree, and finally the request for the government to \"take responsibility\" for the deaths that occurred during the protests. On 11 October, Moreno announced, \"The country must recover its calm, ... Let\u2019s sit down and talk.\" In a response, CONAIE dropped the demand for the return of oil subsidies as a requirement for dialogue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Events, Call for negotiations\nBy 12 October, CONAIE had announced that they would participate in dialogue with the Ecuadorian government. However, violent protests intensified in Quito, with the national auditor office\u2013which contained evidence surrounding corruption cases\u2013being set ablaze, and two media facilities being attacked by demonstrators: the offices of Teleamazonas and El Comercio. While masked protesters broke into the facilities, press workers were left trapped.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0019-0001", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Events, Call for negotiations\nBy 3:00pm, Moreno had decreed a national curfew and deployed the Ecuadorian army, stating \"We are going to restore order in all of Ecuador\" and explaining that the violent protesters were not related to organized indigenous groups, such as CONAIE, instead blaming drug traffickers, organised crime, and Correa supporters. In the few streets of Quito that were not blocked, taxi cabs formed a caravan that rolled through the city, honking and displaying anti-Moreno signs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Events, Call for negotiations\nOn 13 October, Ecuador's government stated that it had arrested 30 people accused of being involved in the previous day's burning of the auditor's office. Across the nation's capital, demonstrators set fire to car tires in order to block streets from the entry of Ecuador's military and police forces. CONAIE, the umbrella organization representing indigenous groups nationwide, stated that it would agree to enter into negotiations with Moreno's government after the latter declared a readiness to issue concessions, but added that it would continue to protest, despite the curfew declaration. The nation's military retook control of the park and streets leading to the National Assembly building and the torched auditor's office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Events, Return of fuel subsidies\nDuring the late-night hours of 13 October, the Ecuadorian government and CONAIE reached an agreement during a televised negotiation. Both parties agreed to collaborate on new economic measures to combat overspending and debt. The government agreed to end the austerity measures at the center of the controversy and the protesters in turn agreed to end the two-week-long series of demonstrations. President Moreno agreed to withdraw Decree 883, an IMF-backed plan that caused a significant rise in fuel costs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Events, Return of fuel subsidies\nFollowing the announcement of the deal, demonstrators were seen celebrating in Quito. After occupying the city center for weeks during the demonstrations, the protesters conducted a community clean-up project, traditionally known as minga, as they left the area. While they returned makeshift barricades they had constructed from materials commandeered from construction sites, city employees removed trash in a concerted effort to restore the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Events, Return of fuel subsidies\nOn October 14, Moreno signed Decree 894 returning fuel subsidies to previous levels. He also promised to form a special commission, consisting of indigenous leaders and other social organisations, which will be tasked with proposing new measures to curb Ecuador's current budget deficit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Events, Return of fuel subsidies\nOn 16 October 2019, the ombudsman Freddy Carri\u00f3n announced the creation of a committee of the Defensor\u00eda del Pueblo to investigate human rights violations committed during the protests between 2 and 13 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Events, Return of fuel subsidies\nOn 17 October, the Frente Unitario de los Trabajadores (FUT) denounced the labor reforms announced by Len\u00edn Moreno and called for protests to continue on 30 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Events, Opposition prosecution\nThe government has blamed the chaos during the protests on former president Rafael Correa and the Citizen Revolution Movement (MRC). Len\u00edn Moreno said that Correa was organizing an indigenous rebellion with the support of Nicol\u00e1s Maduro, an allegation denied by Correa. Since the protests started on 2 October, various MRC leaders have been arrested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Events, Opposition prosecution\nOn 7 October, MRC assemblyman Yofre Poma and Sucumb\u00edos prefect Amado Ch\u00e1vez were arrested, accused of trying to paralyze public services, and a court ordered pre-trial imprisonment for Poma on 9 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Events, Opposition prosecution\nOn 12 October assemblywoman Gabriela Rivadeneira requested protection in the Mexican embassy in Quito, fearing detention for her criticism of the Moreno government. The Mexican Foreign Ministry also reported that opposition legislators Luis Fernando Molina, Soledad Buend\u00eda and Carlos Viteri as well as Le\u00f3nidas An\u00edbal Moreno Ord\u00f3\u00f1ez from the Pichincha Province, had also taken refuge at the Mexican embassy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Events, Opposition prosecution\nOn the morning of 13 October, the police arrested former Dur\u00e1n mayor Alexandra Arce and raided her home as part of an ongoing investigation. Her digital devices were searched for messages in connection to the protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Events, Opposition prosecution\nAfter the dialogue session of the government and CONAIE finished, on the morning of 14 October Paola Pab\u00f3n, Christian Gonz\u00e1lez Narv\u00e1ez, and Pablo del Hierro were also arrested in connection to the protests. Hours later the police searched the house of former assemblyman Virgilio Hern\u00e1ndez, whose whereabouts were then unknown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Events, Opposition prosecution\nOn 22 October Ecuador's state prosecutors' office opened an investigation into Jaime Vargas, head of CONAIE, after Vargas said that CONAIE would create its \"own army\". CONAIE said Vargas was referring to a \"communal guard\" to protect its territory in accordance with the Ecuador constitution. The Indigenous group said that its leaders were being persecuted by the government since the anti-austerity protests had stopped. As a result, CONAIE paused talks with the government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288780-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian protests, Reactions, International, Solidarity protests\nDuring the weekend of 12\u201313 October 2019, Ecuadorian citizens held demonstrations in support of the protesters in Madrid (Spain) and Paris (France).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 71], "content_span": [72, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288781-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian women's football championship\n2019 Superliga Femenina was the 13th edition of the highest Ecuadorian women's football championship division. The season started on 26 April 2019 and ended on 28 September 2019. Deportivo Cuenca won their first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288781-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ecuadorian women's football championship, Knockout phase, Matches, Finals\nThe first leg match of the final was played on 21 September 2019 at the Casa de la Selecci\u00f3n (Ecuador's national football team headquarters) in Quito; and the second leg on 28 September 2019 at the Alejandro Serrano Aguilar Stadium in Cuenca.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 78], "content_span": [79, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288782-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Eden District Council election\nThe 2019 Eden District Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Eden District Council in England.. This was on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288782-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Eden District Council election, By-Elections, Penrith South\nA by-election was held in Penrith South ward on 5 September 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288782-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Eden District Council election, By-Elections, Shap\nA by-election was held in Shap ward on 14 November 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288782-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Eden District Council election, By-Elections, Hartside\nA by-election was held in Hartside ward on 6 May 2021", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288782-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Eden District Council election, By-Elections, Skelton\nA by-election was held in Skelton ward on 6 May 2021", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288782-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Eden District Council election, By-Elections, Penrith West\nA by-election was held in Penrith West ward on 30 September 2021", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288783-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Edmonton Eskimos season\nThe 2019 Edmonton Eskimos season was the 62nd season for the team in the Canadian Football League and their 71st overall. This was the fourth season under head coach Jason Maas and the third season under general manager Brock Sunderland. The team finished with an 8\u201310 record and fourth in the West Division. Notably, the team had a 1\u201310 record against playoff-bound teams and their 3\u20137 divisional record included only wins against the BC Lions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288783-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Edmonton Eskimos season\nThe Eskimos qualified for the playoffs, following a one-year absence, after their week 18 win against the BC Lions on October 12, 2019. The team played in the East Semi-Final, earning a crossover spot in the 2019 playoffs, defeating the Montreal Alouettes in the East Semi-Final, but lost to the Hamilton Tiger-Cats in the East Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288783-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Edmonton Eskimos season\nFollowing the season, the Eskimos parted ways with head coach Jason Maas. In addition, the 2019 season was the last season where the Eskimos team name was used, with an announcement during the suspended 2020 season the Eskimos name would be discontinued.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288783-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Edmonton Eskimos season, Offseason, Foreign drafts\nFor the first time in its history, the CFL held drafts for foreign players from Mexico and Europe. Like all other CFL teams, the Eskimos held three non-tradeable selections in the 2019 CFL\u2013LFA Draft, which took place on January 14, 2019. The 2019 European CFL Draft took place on April 11, 2019 where all teams held one non-tradeable pick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288783-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Edmonton Eskimos season, Offseason, CFL Draft\nThe 2019 CFL Draft took place on May 2, 2019. The Eskimos traded their third-round pick to the Toronto Argonauts for Martese Jackson, but acquired an additional fifth-round pick after trading Shamawd Chambers to the Hamilton Tiger-Cats. Like other CFL teams, the Eskimos held 4 additional non-tradeable selections across the 2019 CFL\u2013LFA Draft and 2019 European CFL Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288783-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Edmonton Eskimos season, Team, Roster\nItalics indicate international playerBold indicates global player updated 2019-11-17 \u2022 46 Active, 8 One-game injured,9 Six-game, 8 Practice,3 Suspended", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288784-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Egypt Cup Final\nThe 2019 Egypt Cup Final was the 87th Egypt Cup Final, the final match of the 2018\u201319 Egypt Cup, Africa's oldest football cup competition. It was played at Borg El Arab Stadium in Alexandria, Egypt, on 8 September 2019, contested by Pyramids and Zamalek. Zamalek won the match 3\u20130, with two goals from Achraf Bencharki and one from Youssef Obama. Zamalek won the competition for the 2nd consecutive time and for the 6th time in the previous 7 editions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288784-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 Egypt Cup Final\nSince both finalists qualified to an African competition based on their league rankings, the spot awarded to the winners (2019\u201320 CAF Confederation Cup preliminary or first round) was passed to the fourth-placed team in the league, Al Masry. Zamalek also earned the right to play the 2018\u201319 Egyptian Premier League champions Al Ahly for the 2019\u201320 Egyptian Super Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288784-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Egypt Cup Final, Route to the final\nIn all results below, the score of the finalist is given first. From the round of 16, all matches were played on neutral grounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288784-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Egypt Cup Final, Route to the final, Pyramids\nAs an Egyptian Premier League club, Pyramids started in the round of 32 where they were drawn with Egyptian Second Division team Tanta. Pyramids won 3\u20132 with two goals from Keno and one from Mohamed Magdy. In the round of 16, they drew fellow Egyptian Premier League team Al Ahly and won 1\u20130 with Eric Traor\u00e9 scoring the only goal of the game. In the quarter-finals, they were drawn with Egyptian Premier League side Haras El Hodoud and won 2\u20130 with both goals coming from John Antwi. In the semi-finals, they were drawn with Egyptian Premier League side Petrojet and progressed to the final after a 2\u20130 win with Traor\u00e9 and Ibrahim Hassan on the scoresheet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288784-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Egypt Cup Final, Route to the final, Zamalek\nAs an Egyptian Premier League club, Zamalek also started in the round of 32. They were drawn at home against Egyptian Third Division side MS Minyat Samanoud. Zamalek won 1\u20130 with a late goal from Ibrahim Hassan. In the round of 16, they drew fellow Egyptian Premier League team El Entag El Harby and won 2\u20130 at extra time courtesy of Mahmoud Alaa and Mahmoud Abdel Aziz. In the quarter finals, they played against fellow Egyptian Premier League side Misr Lel Makkasa and won 1\u20130 thanks to an early strike by Abdallah Gomaa. In the semi-finals, they were drawn against Egyptian Premier League side Al Ittihad and progressed to the final after a 1\u20130 extra time win with Mostafa Mohamed scoring the only goal of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288784-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Egypt Cup Final, Pre-game\nAfter missing their chance in reaching the final last season by losing to Smouha on penalties, Pyramids qualified to the Egypt Cup final this season for the first time in their history. Zamalek reached the final for the 40th time in their history and for the 4th time in the previous 5 seasons; winning all 4 of them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288784-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Egypt Cup Final, Pre-game\nThe Egyptian Football Association confirmed that at least 20,000 tickets will be available to purchase, but didn't confirm the number each club received. Tickets were priced E\u00a375, E\u00a3300 and E\u00a3750, with concessions in place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288785-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian Basketball Super League Finals\nThe 2019 EBSL Finals was the EBSL Finals championship series of the Egyptian Basketball Super League's, 2018\u201319 EBSL season and conclusion of 2019 EBSL playoffs. In this best-of-Five playoff series 2019 Egyptian Basketball Super League Finals It is a final between the two Egyptian basketball giants Zamalek and Gezira. Before this final, Zamalek won 13 league titles and Gezira won 10 league titles. The final is played in a best of five, for the First time in a Row. Zamalek won 2018-19 And crowned the 14th title of Egyptian Basketball Super League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288785-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian Basketball Super League Finals, Zamalek\nZamalek finished with the league's in 3rd place, finished the season with a 9\u20135, in Quarter-finals matchup with Sporting Alexandria who they win the league in the previous season, Zamalek won 2 Game, And winning the series 2-0. in Semi-finals matchup with Al Ahly Zamalek won 3 Game, And winning the series 3-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288785-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian Basketball Super League Finals, Gezira\nGezira finished with the league's in 4th place, finished the season with a 7\u20137, in Quarter-finals matchup with Al Gaish Army, Gezira won 2 Game, And winning the series 2-0. in Semi-finals matchup with Al Ittihad, Gezira wins the last match of the series 3-2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288785-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian Basketball Super League Finals, Regular season series\nThe Two Team Tied in the regular season series 1\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 67], "content_span": [68, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288786-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian constitutional referendum\nA constitutional referendum was held in Egypt from 20\u201322 April 2019, with overseas voting taking place between 19 and 21 April. The proposed changes allow President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi to remain in power until 2030; under the previous version of the constitution, he would have been barred from contesting the next elections, which were due in 2022. The changes were approved by 88.83% of voters who voted, with a 44% turnout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288786-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Preparation\nPlans to amend the constitution were prepared by the General Intelligence Directorate (Mukhabarat) around December 2018, with nearly daily meetings headed by el-Sisi's son Mahmoud el-Sisi, Deputy Director of the Mukhabarat. Some meetings were also attended by Abbas Kamel, the Director of the Mukhabarat. The initial plans were to extend the presidential term to six years while retaining a maximum of two terms and to weaken the powers of Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 52], "content_span": [53, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288786-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Preparation\nSecurity services planned \"wide-reaching arrest campaigns of civilian public figures from across the political spectrum\" as a method of \"not [tolerating] dissent on any scale regarding the amendments\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 52], "content_span": [53, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288786-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Proposed amendments\nArticle 140 is amended to lengthen the presidential term from four to six years and article 241 changes to lengthen el-Sisi's current term and allow him to stand for an additional term in office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288786-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Proposed amendments\nOther changes restore the president's ability to appoint Vice-Presidents (which had been abolished in 2012) and strengthen the powers of the president over the judiciary, with modifications to articles 185, 189 and 193 making the president head of the Higher Council for Judicial Authorities, which would appoint the public prosecutor and judicial leaders, as well as giving the president the power to directly appoint the head of the Supreme Constitutional Court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288786-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Proposed amendments\nTwo amendments further embed the role of the military in government, with a proposed change to article 200 to state that the military should \"preserve the constitution and democracy, maintain the basic pillars of the state and its civilian nature, and uphold the gains of the people, and the rights and freedoms of individuals\". A revision of article 234 would make the army's role in selecting the Defence Minister a permanent requirement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288786-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Proposed amendments\nFurther amendments make the parliament a bicameral body, with the Shura Council abolished in 2014 restored as the Senate, which would consist of 120 elected members and 60 appointed by the president. Changes to article 102 reduce the number of members of the lower house from 596 to 450, with at least 112 seats reserved for women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288786-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Proposed amendments\nOn 16 April 2019, Parliament approved changes to the constitution; 22 MPs voted against the changes, with another MP abstaining. The changes were required to be put to a referendum within 30 days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288786-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Campaign\nThe proposals were supported by Free Egyptians Party MP Mohamed Abu Hamed, who claimed el-Sisi needed more time in office to continue reforms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288786-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Campaign\nMultiple political parties, including the Socialist Popular Alliance Party, the Egyptian Social Democratic Party, the Constitution Party, the Reform and Development Party, the Freedom Egypt Party, the Socialist Party of Egypt, the National Conciliation Party, the Conservative Party, and the Dignity Party (as well as MPs from the 25-30 Alliance), came together on 5 February 2019 to form the Union to Defend the Constitution, which launched a three-pronged campaign to defeat the amendments (gathering signatures, creating a \"media platform\" and opposing the amendments through the courts). Constitution Party member Khaled Dawoud claimed the proposals were a power-grab, while the Civil Democratic Movement has come out in opposition to the amendments. Other parties and organizations also opposing the amendments included the Arab Democratic Nasserist Party and the Revolutionary Socialists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 944]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288786-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Campaign\nThe International Commission of Jurists called for the changes to be rejected, noting that the change to article 140 on presidential term lengths violates the entrenched clause of article 226, forbidding changes to texts pertaining to presidential re-election, except with more guarantees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288786-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Campaign\nA campaign named \"B\u0101til\" (\"null and void\") was launched the week of 7 April to oppose the proposed amendments. However, the campaign website was blocked on 9 April 2019 after gathering over 60,000 signatures against the changes; according to NetBlocks, the government subsequently blocked over 34,000 other domains in order to restrict access to the campaign site.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288786-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Campaign\nOpponents to the amendments faced government oppression according to Al-Monitor, which reported on a secretive grassroots group that hung banners and used graffiti to oppose the proposals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288786-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Campaign\nIn his reading of the proposed amendments, political analyst and columnist Maged Mandour concludes that the changes to the constitution \"will re-draw the Egyptian political system and remove the last pretence of separation of powers or the subordination of the military to the elected government. Egypt is set to become a military dictatorship in name as well as deed.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288786-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Conduct\nA judge in charge of a polling station in Cairo laid out various issues regarding electoral conduct, including combining unregistered and registered voters ballots, members of the pro-government Nation's Future Party at polling stations (and as poll workers), bribery with food and no oversight during the counting of ballots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288786-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Reactions\nMinutes after the results were announced, Sisi commented in a tweet, thanking the Egyptian people for voting \"Yes\": \"Wonderful scene done by Egyptians who took part in the referendum, will be written down in our nation's historical record.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 50], "content_span": [51, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288786-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Reactions\nThe New Arab reported: \"Pro-government media, business people and lawmakers had pushed for a \"Yes\" vote and a high turnout, with many offering free rides and food handouts to voters, while authorities threatened to fine anyone boycotting the three-day referendum.\" Amnesty International and the International Commission of Jurists had previously urged the Egyptian government to withdraw the amendments, for they \"would undermine judicial independence and expand military trials for civilians. If adopted, the amendments would weaken the rule of law, further erode fair trial guarantees and enshrine impunity for members of the Egyptian Armed Forces.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 50], "content_span": [51, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288786-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Reactions\nWhile National Election Authority chairman Lashin Ibrahim talked about \"forces of darkness and evil\" which boycotted the referendum in order \"to destroy the democratic atmosphere in which it took place,\" prominent Egyptian writer Alaa Al-Aswany, in an opinion piece on Deutsche Welle Arabic, provided reasons for why the referendum was \"void, unconstitutional and undemocratic, describing el-Sisi as a \"military dictator (Arabic: \u062f\u064a\u0643\u062a\u0627\u062a\u0648\u0631 \u0639\u0633\u0643\u0631\u064a) exercising unprecedented repression upon people.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 50], "content_span": [51, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288786-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Reactions\nThe BBC stated that the Egyptian authorities did not give the corporation accreditation to report on the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 50], "content_span": [51, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests\nThe 2019 Egyptian protests were mass protests in Cairo, Alexandria, Damietta and other cities on 20, 21 and 27 September 2019 in which the protestors called for President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi to be removed from power. Security forces responded with tear gas, rubber bullets and, as of 23\u00a0October\u00a02019, 4300 arbitrary arrests had been made, based on data from the Egyptian Center for Economic and Social Rights, the Egyptian Commission for Rights and Freedoms, the Arabic Network for Human Rights Information, among which 111 were minors according to Amnesty International and the Belady Foundation. Prominent arrestees included human rights lawyer Mahienour el-Massry, journalist and former leader of the Constitution Party Khaled Dawoud and two professors of political science at Cairo University, Hazem Hosny and Hassan Nafaa. The wave of arrests was the biggest in Egypt since Sisi formally became president in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 942]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests\nHuman Rights Watch called for all those arrested for peacefully expressing their opinions to be released immediately. Amnesty International described the Sisi government being \"shaken to its core\" by the 20\u201321 September protests and that the authorities had \"launched a full-throttle clampdown to crush demonstrations and intimidate activists, journalists and others into silence\". Two thousand people, including Sudanese Professionals Association (SPA) representatives, protested in Khartoum on 26 September in support of Waleed Abdelrahman Hassan, a Sudanese anti-Islamist student detained by Egyptian authorities, who gave a forced confession on MBC Masr television. The SPA stated, \"the era when Sudanese citizens were humiliated inside or outside their country has gone and will never return\". The Sudanese Foreign Ministry summoned the Egyptian ambassador and Waleed Abdelrahman Hassan was freed on 2 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 943]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests\nA massive police clampdown took place around Tahrir Square and across Egypt on 27 September, together with pro-Sisi rallies of government employees organised by the National Security Agency, and anti-Sisi protests on Warraq Island on the Nile, in Giza, in Helwan, in Qus, and in the Luxor, Aswan Minya and Sohag Governorates. On 3 November 2019, parliamentarian Ahmed Tantawi made online and parliamentary proposals for Sisi to step down in 2022 rather than stand for re-election in 2024.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Background\nMass protests in the Egyptian revolution of 2011 led to the demission of President Hosni Mubarak, the 2012 Egyptian presidential election won by Mohamed Morsi, the 2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests against the Morsi presidency, the 2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat which overthrew Morsi, the August 2013 Rabaa massacre by the security forces and army led by general Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, and an authoritarian government under Sisi, who was elected president with no serious opponents in 2014 and 2018. Protests against the imprisonment of ordinary civilians led to mass demonstrations at the beginning of the year. The first wave of mass protests were from February\u2013June. Strikes against electricity, bread and corn and rice prices, fuel price hike, economy, shortage of food and water and oil. It led to nothing achieved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 844]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Online anti-Sisi videos\nStarting on 2 September 2019, Mohamed Ali (also: Aly), an Egyptian construction contractor living in exile in Spain, claimed on online social networks that he had worked in the construction industry for 15 years under army contracts, building five villas for colleagues of Sisi and a palace for Sisi in a military camp. Ali accused Sisi of wasting public funds and \"[taking] low-level corruption to a new level\". Ali's videos outline specific incidents and directly accuse well-known military individuals, including Major-Generals Kamel al-Wazir and Essam al-Kholy. Egyptian authorities ran a media campaign attacking Ali. According to Said and Mamdouh writing in Mada Masr, the governmental campaign \"did not refute the substance of [Ali's] claims.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Online anti-Sisi videos\nAfter the first week of wide circulation of Ali's videos, Sisi denied the allegations at a session of the \"National Youth Conference. Sisi stated that \"all the intelligence agencies told me please do not talk about it. ... I told them, what's between me and the people is trust.\" Within a few hours of Sisi's speech, Ali posted two hours of new videos, referring to Sisi's son Mahmoud and the Sinai insurgency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Online anti-Sisi videos\nMosaad Abu Fagr, a Sinai activist in exile, then released two videos in which he claimed that the Egyptian authorities refused an offer by North Sinai tribal leaders to remove the terrorist cells within a few weeks, and that he was asked by the tribal leaders to publish that information. Abu Fagr stated that Sisi cooperated with drug smugglers and dealers instead of working with the tribes and that Sisi and his son Mahmoud have business interests in smuggling between the Sinai and the Gaza Strip. Abu Fagr also accused the Egyptian security forces of the \"wiping out of entire villages\" along the border with Gaza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Online anti-Sisi videos\nLawyer Mohamed Hamdy Younes stated that he would request the Attorney-General to investigate Ali's accusations. He was then arrested and charged with belonging to a terrorist organisation. Former army officer and lawyer Ahmed Sarhan circulated a video supporting most of Ali's claims, calling for Younes to be released and making new accusations against people close to Sisi. Sarhan's video was viewed half a million times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Online anti-Sisi videos\nA masked man circulated a video claiming that he had sensitive information about Sisi, that Ali's videos contain \"factual information about the corruption in the upper ranks of the Armed Forces\" and that \"the events happening\" constitute \"retaliation\" by the Mukhabarat against Military Intelligence, which was headed by Sisi until 2012. In another video, a masked man claiming to be an intelligence officer stated that Sisi changed commanders frequently in order to avoid any becoming too powerful and that Sisi coordinated intelligence information closely with Israel. Former Air Force pilot Hany Sharaf and former state security officer Hesham Sabry then circulated videos highly critical of Sisi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Online anti-Sisi videos\nWael Ghonim, who played a key online role in sparking the 2011 Egyptian revolution and lives in the United States, posted videos similar to the others, adding claims that Sisi's son Mahmoud played a strong role in managing Egyptian \"daily politics\". A representative of the Egyptian Embassy in Washington, D.C. telephoned Ghonim, asking him to stop criticising the Egyptian authorities, in exchange for which he would receive a payment and a guarantee to be able to \"return to Egypt safely\". Ghonim refused, and a few days later Ghonim's brother Hazem was arrested in Cairo. Ghonim interpreted this as a kidnapping in revenge for Ghonim having refused to remain silent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Online anti-Sisi videos\nAli was described in mid-September by Mohamed Elmasry of the Doha Institute for Graduate Studies as being \"probably the most popular man in Egypt\" with millions of viewers of his online videos and millions of people using Ali's anti-Sisi hashtags. Elmasry described Ali as \"a legitimate threat to the el-Sisi government.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Online anti-Sisi videos\nOn 21 September, following the previous day's protests, Ali called for a \"million-man march\" to fill all the \"major squares\" in Egypt on the following Friday, 27 September. Ali stated, \"This is a people's revolution... We have to link up together as one... and organise going down to the major squares.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Late September 2019 protests, 20 and 21 September\nOn Friday 20 September 2019, in response to Ali's call for anti-Sisi protests, two thousand people, mostly young, in Cairo, Alexandria, Damietta, Suez, Kafr El Sheikh and four other Egyptian cities on 20 September 2019 carried out street protests calling for Sisi to be removed from power.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 73], "content_span": [74, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Late September 2019 protests, 20 and 21 September\nChants included \"rise up, fear not, Sisi must go\" and \"the people demand the regime's fall\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 73], "content_span": [74, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Late September 2019 protests, 20 and 21 September\nStreet protests continued in Cairo, Suez, Giza and El Mahalla El Kubra on 21 September. In Suez, with 200 demonstrators, teargas, rubber bullets and live bullets were shot at protestors. The teargas spread to \"a few\" kilometres from the zone of the protest where a resident felt the gas making her nose feel as if it were burning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 73], "content_span": [74, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Late September 2019 protests, 27 September\nOn 26 September, exiled former presidential candidate Ayman Nour stated that the massive scale of the arrests showed that the Sisi government was \"terrified\" and that he expected protests to grow, with the fear barrier having been broken down and the mass arrests provoking anger in the context of socioeconomic difficulties. On the same day, actor Amr Waked tweeted to seven million followers that \"Sisi is done ... it is over for him and anyone who supports him now will be making a huge mistake.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Late September 2019 protests, 27 September\nOn 27 September itself, 1000 to 2000 people on Warraq Island on the Nile next to Cairo protested against Sisi and were attacked by police using tear gas. One of the slogans chanted by protestors was, \"No matter how, we'll bring Sisi down\". Using their rifles, police \"beat the hell\" out of six of the Warraq protestors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Late September 2019 protests, 27 September\nA protest of 24 people took place in Helwan in the Cairo Governorate in front of the al-Istiqama mosque. Police fired shots in the air in response.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Late September 2019 protests, 27 September\nAnti - Sisi protests took place in Qus in Qena, where they were dispersed by police, in Luxor Governorate, in Aswan Governorate, in Minya Governorate, and in Sohag Governorate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Late September 2019 protests, 27 September\nA protest of 70 people took place in Giza and was dispersed by police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Late September 2019 protests, 27 September\nPolice organised \"a huge show of force\" in central Cairo and other Egyptian cities, with Tahrir Square heavily policed and four metro stations close to Tahrir Square were closed. All roads leading to Tahrir Square were blocked and checkpoints were established on 6th October Bridge, which had been a key route to Tahrir Square during the 2011 Egyptian revolution, and 15th May Bridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Late September 2019 protests, 27 September\nInstructions received by the Ministry of Interior had been to respond to demonstrations with limited force for \"no more than a few minutes\" and the to use all available violent measures against street protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Late September 2019 protests, 27 September\nPro -Sisi rallies were organised on 27 September with the National Security Agency instructing health, education, youth and sports ministries and agencies and oil companies to send their employees to the rallies. State companies bussed employees to a major road east of the centre of Cairo and to Alexandria. Free meals were given to a group of families from Beni Mazar in Minya Governorate who organised 30 buses to participate in the pro-Sisi Cairo rallies. The National Security Agency warned independent Members of Parliament from talking about the \"ongoing events or the discussions around Sisi\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Arrests and harassment\nIn response to the first reports of arrests, Human Rights Watch (HRW) called for Egypt to respect the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights to which it is legally bound, guaranteeing freedom of expression, association and peaceful assembly. HRW called for the Egyptian security services to follow the United Nations Basic Principles on the Use of Force and Firearms by Law Enforcement Officials by using \"non-violent means before resorting to the use of force and firearms\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Arrests and harassment\nArrests for the 20 and 21 September protests were estimated as 500 by the Egyptian Center for Economic and Social Rights (ECESR) that published a list of the names of arrestees. Arrests were earlier reported by the Egyptian Commission for Rights and Freedoms (ECRF) for 12 towns including Cairo, Giza, Alexandria, Suez and towns in Dakahlia Governorate, Qalyubia Governorate and Kafr el-Sheikh. ECRF stated that it had created an \"emergency room\" to provide support in relation to the sudden surge in arrests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Arrests and harassment\nHuman rights lawyer Mahienour el-Massry was arrested by three plainclothes officers in front of the Supreme State Security Prosecution headquarters in Cairo while telephoning to a friend Noha Kamal on 22 September. She screamed to Kamal, \"They're arresting me. I am being taken away\" and was taken away in a microbus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Arrests and harassment\nHRW called on the Egyptian security forces to \"immediately release all those arrested for solely exercising their rights\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Arrests and harassment\nOn 23 September, Mohamed Ali, whose videos sparked off the online discussion and street protests, stated that \"officers\" had been following him in Spain for two weeks, and that he had been \"hiding and running away from them\". Ali stated that the officers wished to kill him and that he was too tired to \"run any more\". Ali stated that Spanish authorities were responsible for his safety and that if he were \"killed in Spain,\" then that would \"[prove] that Europe is a liar just like the United States and is willing to give up anybody.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Arrests and harassment\nBy 25 September, the arrest count was estimated at 1100 by the Arabic Network for Human Rights Information (ANHRI), ECESR and ECRF and 1400 by Middle East Eye. In addition to el-Massry, prominent arrestees included former leader of the Constitution Party Khaled Dawoud and two professors of political science at Cairo University, Hazem Hosny and Hassan Nafaa. Dawoud, Hosny and Nafaa were charged with \"spreading fake news and joining terrorist organisations\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Arrests and harassment\nHazem Hosny was arrested without a warrant and held incommunicado. His legal defence team called for him to be released immediately. Hosny had earlier described Mohamed Ali as playing a \"positive role\" and described the new protest movement as having the potential to affect the \"international formula that largely determines Sisi's continued rule\". Hosny argued in favour of \"[stripping] Sisi of his dictatorial control of the Egyptian state\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Arrests and harassment\nPrior to his arrest, Hassan Nafaa had argued that \"the continuation of Sisi's absolute rule [would] lead to disaster\" and that \"public pressure from the street\" was needed to end Sisi's presidency. Nafaa stated that \"the image Sisi has created for himself has been totally shaken and it has been replaced by the opposite image.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Arrests and harassment\nKhaled Dawoud, arrested on 25 September 2019, as former media spokesperson of the National Salvation Front, had supported the 2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat but later criticised Sisi. Following Mohamed Ali's video releases, Dawoud called for investigations of the corruption claims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Arrests and harassment\nThe arrest count mounted to 1909 on 26 September, with the arrest of lawyers Mohamed Salah Agag, deputy head of the Lawyers' Syndicate; Ahmed Sarhan; Ahmed Abdel Azeem; Islam Khairy Nour Eddin and Mahmoud Moemen Naeem. Two Turks, two Jordanians, a Palestinian and a Dutchman were arrested and charged with \"spreading violence against the state and publishing false news.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Arrests and harassment\nThe arrests of five journalists, including Sayed Abdellah, who had been reporting on the protests in Suez, and Mohammed Ibrahim, author of the blog \"Oxygen Egypt\", were documented by Amnesty International. Labour leader Rashad Mohammed Kamal, who participated in the protests, was arrested at his home in Suez. Politicians, including Abed Aziz Husseini, vice-president of the Dignity Party (Karama) and Abdel Nasser Ismail, vice-president of the Socialist Popular Alliance Party were arrested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Arrests and harassment\nOn 29 September, the Egyptian blogger, software developer and activist Alaa Abd el-Fattah, who had previously been arrested for his political activism during the Mubarak, Morsi and Sisi presidencies, and had not participated in the 2019 Egyptian protests, was arrested by State Security Prosecution on unknown charges. El-Fattah's lawyer Mohamed al-Baqer, director of the human rights organisation Adalah Center for Rights and Freedoms, was himself arrested at the prosecutor's office on 29 September. Both were tortured in welcome parades in Tora Prison.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Arrests and harassment\nArrested politicians included 11 members of the Independence Party that had called for citizens to participate in the street protests as proposed by Mohamed Ali.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Arrests and harassment\nOn 2 October, ECESR listed 2285 detainees grouped into six separate legal cases, among which almost all (2268) are in Case 1338/2019. Alaa Abd el-Fattah and his lawyer Mohamed el-Baqer were detained under Case 1356/2019 or 1365/2019. On 6 October, ECRF listed about 3000 detainees, larger than any earlier arrest waves of the Sisi presidency. Three quarters had appeared in front of a prosecutor; 57 had been released without being charged; 100 people were listed as missing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Arrests and harassment\nOf those arrested for protesting, many prisoners appear to not have participated in this most recent wave of action. There are multiple cases of people claiming that their family members have never publicly protested, in 2011 or 2019, but were still arrested. Several human rights lawyers and advocates described the arrests as indiscriminate and arbitrary. Amnesty International stated that at least 111 children were arrested as well, often after having their phones searched at checkpoints.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Arrests and harassment\nAccording to the New York Times, the arrested protestors were held in poor conditions. Due to the overflow in local prisons, some detainees have gone without food, water, or access to toilets. Most have not been allowed to contact their families. For this reason, families of those imprisoned rarely knew where their family members were being held. Some of the detained were placed in the bases of the Central Security Forces, a paramilitary group whose buildings are not made to hold citizen prisoners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Arrests and harassment, Internet censorship\nIn the week following the 20/21 September protests, Egyptian authorities blocked, restricted or temporarily disrupted online communication services including BBC News, WhatsApp, Signal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 67], "content_span": [68, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Arrests and harassment, Egyptian political party freeze threat\nThe Civil Democratic Movement, including the Socialist Popular Alliance Party, stated that it did not participate in the protests but did have a vision for political reforms. It objected to the mass arrests of protestors, lawyers, journalists and politicians, and stated that it was considering a freeze on public political activities in response to the crackdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 86], "content_span": [87, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Further calls for political change, November parliamentary protest\nOn 3 November 2019, elected member of the House of Representatives Ahmed Tantawi made parliamentary and online social network protests calling for el-Sisi to step down in 2022, rather than in 2024 as defined in the 2019 constitutional amendment. Tantawi later discussed his video with Mada Masr, stating that his aim was to protect Egypt from the \"imminent danger\" of el-Sisi continuing in power too long, that it was consistent with el-Sisi's promises, and that this should satisfy el-Sisi's supporters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 90], "content_span": [91, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0041-0001", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Further calls for political change, November parliamentary protest\nTantawi submitted his formal request under parliamentary procedure to Ali Abdel Aal, Speaker of the House of Representatives, proposing that 12 parliamentary committees be created to \"generate a national dialogue about the political, economic and social problems facing the country,\" to solve \"the real crisis Egypt is living through, which authorities should pay attention to before it is too late\" and that the proposal would help to \"absorb public outrage\". Tantawi expressed his worry that a violent reaction by authorities to his initiative would discourage \"the people\" from choosing political methods of change.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 90], "content_span": [91, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Further calls for political change, November parliamentary protest\nMember of parliament Mahmoud Badr called Tantawi's proposal an \"outright violation of the constitution\" and 95 members of parliament submitted a request to the Speaker, Abdel Aal, to refer Tantawi to the parliament's Ethics Committee, on the grounds that Tantawi's initiative \"undermines the Egyptian state and its institutions\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 90], "content_span": [91, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Further calls for political change, December 2019 broad consensus\nOn 28 December 2019, Mohamed Ali, who had sparked off the September street protests, released the \"Egyptian Consensus Document\" with a list of four key principles and four key actions for replacing the existing system of government. Ali claimed that the document represented the consensus of a wide range of the Egyptian opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 89], "content_span": [90, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Further calls for political change, December 2019 broad consensus\nThe following day, the Egyptian National Action Group (ENAG), including Ayman Nour as spokesperson, was launched. ENAG made a similar claim of representing the consensus of a broad array of the Egyptian opposition (\"centrists, liberals, leftists [and] Islamists\") with a consensus program for replacing the governmental system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 89], "content_span": [90, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Further calls for political change, September 2020 anniversary\nProtests restarted on the 2020 anniversary of the 2019 protests. The protests were decentralised and started on 20 September 2020, again calling for el-Sisi to resign. Protest locations included Cairo, Giza, Suez, Kafr El Dawwar, Alexandria, Aswan, El Qanater El Khayreya, Faiyum, Minya and Luxor. The sixth day of protests, on 25 September, was called a \"Day of Rage\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 86], "content_span": [87, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Sociopolitical analysis\nDalia Fahmy of Long Island University said that the 20 September 2019 protests showed people \"[breaking] the fear barrier\", which she said was surprising but expected because of demographic change. She stated, \"When you have much of the population that doesn't live with the post-revolution trauma or memories, you have a group of young people coming in with a different set of demands and different kinds of understanding of a future possibility. So those on the streets today are very different from the ones that were there eight years ago.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Sociopolitical analysis, Muslim Brotherhood role\nAccording to American University in Cairo political science professor Mustafa Kamel al-Sayyed, the Muslim Brotherhood supported and amplified Mohamed Ali's criticisms against Sisi and Ali's calls for protests. Al-Sayyed stated, \"the Brotherhood certainly benefited from his videos and their channels exploited what he was saying to portray a negative image of Sisi's leadership.\" He expected that the Muslim Brotherhood as an \"idea based on Islam [would] continue to attract many.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 72], "content_span": [73, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0048-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Sociopolitical analysis, Muslim Brotherhood role\nFormer member of parliament and member of the al-Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies, Amr el-Shobaki, judged the Brotherhood's role to be weak, stating that the Brotherhood does not \"have the capacity to call for a rally [and its] capacity to recruit new members has been weakened.\" He said that the 20 September protests were by \"everyday youth, those economically marginalised\" and that \"the Brotherhood wasn't behind or even participated\" in the protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 72], "content_span": [73, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0049-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Reactions\nWriting in The Independent on 6 October 2019, Bel Trew criticised the lack of reactions of Western powers to the wave of arrests, stating \"no major western ally of Egypt has breathed a word.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0050-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Reactions, Egypt\nThe Revolutionary Socialists stated that the protests \"restored hope to the millions who were desperate\". The Social Democratic Party, a supporter of the 2013 coup by Sisi, objected to the 2019 crackdown, stating that citizens had the right to \"exercise their constitutional and legal right to peaceful demonstration\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0051-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Reactions, International civil society protests\nDemonstrations by expatriate Egyptians in support of the 21 September and 22 September protests took place in the United States, Germany, Italy, the United Kingdom and South Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 71], "content_span": [72, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0052-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Reactions, International civil society protests\nOn 26 September, two thousand people protested in support of Waleed Abdelrahman Hassan (or Walid, Abdulrahman), a Sudanese student arrested in Cairo for alleged participation in the 21 September protest. The protest took place in Khartoum in front of the Foreign Affairs Ministry and the Egyptian embassy. The Sudanese Professionals Association (SPA) called for Abdelrahman Hassan to be able to contact his family, choose a lawyer and not be tortured or coerced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 71], "content_span": [72, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0052-0001", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Reactions, International civil society protests\nAbdelrahman Hassan's friends and relatives stated that an apparent confession by him broadcast by MBC Masr on 26 September, in which he stated support for the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, was a forced confession, given Abdelrahman Hassan's long-term opposition to Islamists in Sudan under the Omar al-Bashir government, for which he was arrested in 2013 and 2018, and during the Sudanese Revolution. Abdelrahman Hassan's friend Mohammed Saleh described the idea of Hassan supporting the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood as \"unbelievable\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 71], "content_span": [72, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0052-0002", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Reactions, International civil society protests\nThe SPA stated that the video broadcast was \"shameful\" and that, \"We stress here that the era when Sudanese citizens were humiliated inside or outside their country has gone and will never return.\" Another protest in front of the Egyptian embassy in Khartoum was held on 27 September, with protest banners stating that Abdelrahman Hassan was not a member of the Muslim brotherhood and that he didn't participate in the 2019 Egyptian protests. The Sudanese embassy in Cairo stated that it was in contact with Egyptian authorities and that Abdelrahman Hassan was charged with terrorism and membership of a banned organisation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 71], "content_span": [72, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0053-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Reactions, International civil society protests\nOn 29 September, the Egyptian ambassador in Khartoum was summoned and informed of concerns about Abdelrahman Hassan. The Sudanese Foreign Ministry protested against the Egyptian refusal to allow the Sudanese embassy in Cairo to meet Abdelrahman Hassan and asked for Abdelrahman Hassan to be given his full legal rights by the Egyptian authorities. Abdelrahman Hassan was released on 2 October and the Sudanese embassy in Cairo said that he would depart Cairo the same evening to return to Khartoum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 71], "content_span": [72, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0054-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Reactions, International bodies\nAccording to the European Parliament (EP), as of 23 October 2019, there had been \"no official, strong and united public response [forthcoming] from the [European Union] and its Member States to the September\u2013October 2019 crackdown in Egypt\". In Resolution 2019/2880(RSP), the EP strongly condemned the crackdown and \"[reminded] Egypt that any response by the security forces should be in line with international norms and standards and its own Constitution.\" In the resolution, the EP itemised 18 comments, requests, instructions and demands to Egyptian and European Union authorities and to the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights in relation to the crackdown and other human rights issues in Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288787-0055-0000", "contents": "2019 Egyptian protests, Reactions, The United States\nOn 23 September, between the two major protests in the fall of 2019, Sisi met with U.S. President Donald Trump at the United Nations General Assembly. In reference to the protests, Trump stated that \"everybody has demonstrations\" and that \"Egypt has a great leader.\" He reiterated his support for a strong relationship between Egypt and the United States. Trump said that Sisi has brought order and stability to his country. At the meeting, Sisi claimed that the cause of the protests was \"political Islam.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288788-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 El Cl\u00e1sico protest\nThe anonymous Catalan protest group, Democratic Tsunami, organized a massive protest during the El Cl\u00e1sico match between FC Barcelona and Real Madrid outside the Camp Nou stadium. The protest was in response of the trial of Catalonia independence leaders, who faced a total of 100 years in prison for organising the 2017 Catalan independence referendum. Hundreds demostrators attended the march that started before the football match with the slogan \"Spain, sit and talk\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288788-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 El Cl\u00e1sico protest, Protest\nDuring the match between FC Barcelona and Real Madrid, protests threw Molotov cocktails and set barricades on fire at Travessrea de les Corts avenue and Gran V\u00eda Carles III street, at the exteriors of Camp Nou. At least 5.000 people attended the march demanding the freedom of the Catalan separatists prisoners. During the match, loud bangs could be heard and the match had to be interrupted during a few minutes because protesters inside the stadium threw hundrerds of yellow globes. At least 60 people were injured, two in a serious condition and 9 people were arrested. Dozens of Catalan police officers were also injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288788-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 El Cl\u00e1sico protest, Objectives\nThe initial idea of the Democratic Tsunami protest was to \"stop\" El Cl\u00e1sico match with two banners with \"Sit and talk\" slogan carried by drones. The plan failed because Catalan region police, Mossos d'Esquadra, intercepted the drones before arriving at Camp Nou.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288789-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso Locomotive FC season\nThe 2019 El Paso Locomotive FC season is the inaugural season for El Paso Locomotive FC in the USL Championship, the second-tier professional soccer league in the United States and Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288789-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso Locomotive FC season, Competitions, USL Championship, Match results\nThe 2019 USL Championship season schedule for the club was announced on December 19, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 80], "content_span": [81, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288789-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso Locomotive FC season, Competitions, U.S. Open Cup\nAs a member of the USL Championship, El Paso entered the tournament in the Second Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting\nOn August 3, 2019, a mass shooting occurred at a Walmart store in El Paso, Texas, United States. A gunman shot and killed 23 people and injured 23 others. The Federal Bureau of Investigation is investigating the shooting as an act of domestic terrorism and a hate crime. The shooting has been described as the deadliest attack on Latinos in modern American history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting\nPatrick Wood Crusius, a 21-year-old from Allen, Texas, was arrested and charged with capital murder in connection with the shooting. Police believe a manifesto with white nationalist and anti-immigrant themes, posted on the online message board 8chan shortly before the attack, was written by Crusius; it cites the year's earlier Christchurch mosque shootings in New Zealand and the far-right conspiracy theory known as the Great Replacement as inspiration for the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Incident\nThe shooting occurred at a Walmart Supercenter near the Cielo Vista Mall on the east side of El Paso. The gunman walked into the store carrying what is believed to be a WASR-10 rifle, a semi-automatic civilian version of the AK-47, and opened fire just before 10:40\u00a0a.m.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Incident\nThe store manager witnessed the gunman begin firing in the parking lot prior to entering the crowded store. He issued a \"Code Brown\", designating an active shooter, to his employees, who began helping customers evacuate or hide. Many customers and employees fled to other stores in the adjacent mall, hid under tables, or in shipping containers located behind the building.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Incident\nFirst responders began to arrive within six minutes of the initial 9-1-1 call. The El Paso Police Department, Texas Rangers and paramedics responded to the scene along with the FBI and the ATF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Incident\nAfter the shooting, the suspect, Patrick Wood Crusius, drove to the intersection of Sunmount and Viscount, where he identified himself as the shooter and surrendered to Texas Rangers and an El Paso motorcycle officer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Victims\nThe shooting has been described as the deadliest anti-Latino attack in recent U.S. history, resulting in 23 deaths and 23 injuries. One victim died the day after the event, another victim died two days after, and a third died eight months later on April 26, 2020. Among the dead were thirteen Americans, eight Mexicans and one German. The names, ages, and citizenships of 22 of the dead were released by the El Paso Police Department on August 5. Seventeen were 56 or older, two were in their 40s, two in their 20s, one was 36, and one was 15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Victims\nThirteen victims were taken to the University Medical Center of El Paso, and another eleven to the Del Sol Medical Center. Two children, ages 2 and 9, were transferred to El Paso Children's Hospital after their conditions were stabilized. The Del Sol Medical Center patients were between 35 and 82 years old.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Suspect\nPatrick Wood Crusius (born July 27, 1998) was arrested shortly after the shooting and charged with capital murder. A 21-year-old white male, he was last known to have lived in his family's home in Allen, Texas, in the Dallas\u2013Fort Worth metroplex, approximately 650 miles (1,050\u00a0km) from El Paso. He graduated in 2017 from Plano Senior High School, and was enrolled at Collin College from 2017 until spring 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Suspect\nPolice said he bought the gun used in the attack legally, but provided no details about the purchase. During his first interrogation, he told detectives he had targeted Mexicans, according to an arrest warrant affidavit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Suspect, Manifesto\nThe El Paso police chief, Greg Allen, said that they are \"reasonably confident\" that a manifesto, titled The Inconvenient Truth, was posted by the suspect on the online message board 8chan shortly before the shooting. It identifies the type of weapon used in the attack; the suspect's name was revealed in a separate document in the post. Site moderators quickly removed the original post, though users continued sharing copies. Claiming to have been inspired by the Christchurch mosque shootings in New Zealand that killed 51 people earlier the same year, the author expresses support for the perpetrator of the Christchurch shootings and bemoans grievances such as environmental degradation, \"cultural and ethnic replacement\", and a \"Hispanic invasion\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 797]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Suspect, Manifesto\nThe anti-Hispanic, anti-immigrant manifesto promotes the white nationalist and far-right conspiracy theory called the Great Replacement, often attributed to the French writer Renaud Camus. While the document uses language about immigrants similar to that used by U.S. president Donald Trump, such as referring to a migrant \"invasion\", it states that the author's beliefs predate Trump's presidency, and that Trump should not be blamed for the attack. The author's \"racially extremist views\", according to The New York Times, could be used to prosecute the shooting as a hate crime or domestic terrorism.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Suspect, Manifesto\nThe manifesto states that Democrats would soon control the United States partly due to an increasing Hispanic population, an idea that had gained acceptance for years on right-wing radio shows. Criticizing both the Democratic Party and Republican Party for allowing corporations to \"import foreign workers\", the author describes the shooting as an \"incentive\" for Hispanics to leave the country, which would \"remove the threat\" of a Hispanic voting bloc. While primarily focused on ethnic and racial grievances, the document also expresses fears of automation's effects on employment and blames corporations for overusing natural resources.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Legal proceedings\nThe arrest warrant affidavit says Crusius waived his Miranda rights, confessed to detectives that he was the shooter, and admitted that he targeted \"Mexicans\" during the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Legal proceedings\nThere are multiple investigations and jurisdictions involved with the case. FBI officials in El Paso served multiple warrants in the Dallas area and interviewed acquaintances of Crusius in Dallas and San Antonio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Legal proceedings, State charges\nCrusius was indicted on capital murder charges by a Texas grand jury on September 12, 2019. He pleaded not guilty to capital murder charges at his arraignment on October 10, 2019 at the El Paso County Courthouse. Mark Stevens, a San Antonio criminal defense attorney, was appointed by the state court to represent Crusius, along with defense attorney Joe Spencer. On April 28, 2020, prosecutors announced they would be seeking a new capital murder charge following the recent death of a twenty-third victim after he spent nine months in the hospital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Legal proceedings, Federal charges\nOn February 6, 2020, Crusius was charged with 90 federal charges: 22 counts of committing a hate crime resulting in death, 22 counts of use of a firearm to commit murder, 23 counts of a hate crime involving an attempt to kill, and 23 counts of use of a firearm during a crime. Federal prosecutors of the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Western District of Texas are seeking the death penalty, but the final decision on whether a federal capital sentence will be sought will be made by the Attorney General of the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 57], "content_span": [58, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Legal proceedings, Federal charges\nCrusius waived his federal bond hearing on February 12, 2020 during his first federal court appearance. A trial in federal court is expected before the trial in state court. On July 23, 2020, Crusius entered a plea of not-guilty to federal charges. He also waived his arraignment on those charges.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 57], "content_span": [58, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Legal proceedings, Defense motion\nOn July 14, 2020, the court accepted a motion by the defense team in which they cited mitigating factors, citing Crusius' alleged lifelong neurological and mental disabilities, which they described as \"severe\". The defense added that he was treated with anti-psychotic medication and that he was in a \"psychotic state\" when arrested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Legal proceedings, Defense motion\nIn August 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Texas, the trials were delayed for at least a year. In the case of state court trial, it might be two or three years away, according to a defense attorney, not only due to the COVID-19 pandemic but also for the massive amount of evidence in the case, and added that as long as the prosecutors seek the death penalty, the case will remain open for years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Aftermath, Funerals and vigils\nSeveral funeral homes in El Paso and Ciudad Ju\u00e1rez announced they would provide funeral services for free to the families of the victims as a sign of solidarity for their community. Ciudad Ju\u00e1rez's Rotary International chapter organized a vigil in Ciudad Ju\u00e1rez. They gathered at a park and lit candles and shone cellphone lights in El Paso's direction as a sign of solidarity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 53], "content_span": [54, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Aftermath, Funerals and vigils\nAntonio Basco declared his wife's funeral on August 16 to be open to anyone who wished to attend. Hundreds of people from El Paso and other parts of the country attended, and flowers were sent from around the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 53], "content_span": [54, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Aftermath, Funerals and vigils\nEl Paso musician Khalid held a benefit concert for his home city on September 1, featuring several high-profile artists and introduced by fellow El Paso native and former US Representative Beto O'Rourke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 53], "content_span": [54, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Aftermath, Tributes\nOne week after the shooting, a citizen from Ciudad Ju\u00e1rez, Jorge Luis Mart\u00ednez Ch\u00e1vez, ran a total of 22 miles, a mile for each of the people killed in the Walmart shooting (one additional victim died months later), starting at the Zaragoza bridge in Ju\u00e1rez, Mexico, and finishing at the Walmart memorial in El Paso where the attack was perpetrated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Aftermath, Walmart's reaction\nTwo days after the shooting, a Walmart corporate employee sent a memorandum to Walmart's entire e-commerce division, which includes thousands of employees, urging a \"sick-out\" strike to force the corporation to stop selling guns. Walmart later sent out a memo instructing workers to remove signs and displays that \"contain violent themes or aggressive behavior\" and pledged $400,000 for funds that were aimed at helping the victims of the mass shooting. On September 3, 2019, the company announced it would stop selling ammunition for handguns and assault rifles in the United States, as well as ask customers not to openly carry firearms into their stores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 52], "content_span": [53, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Reactions\nTerrorism experts, including Peter R. Neumann, cited the Great Replacement conspiracy theory as a common factor among several similar attacks. The Southern Poverty Law Center's Hatewatch blog linked the shooting with the earlier Christchurch mosque shootings and the Poway synagogue shooting, citing the similar white nationalist contents of the respective attackers' manifestos. Jonathan Greenblatt, chief executive of the Anti- Defamation league, said that the shooting, as part of a series of similar attacks, indicated a \"global threat\" of white supremacy. NATO secretary-general Jens Stoltenberg urged countries to work together to prevent \"lone wolf\" attackers who find inspiration in one another's actions. Others, including the writer Daniel Okrent, disputed the \"lone wolf\" idea, pointing to the ways in which technology allows those with similar violent ideologies to congregate online.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 929]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Reactions\nSeveral commentators attributed both the El Paso and Christchurch shootings to an ideology of eco-fascism. The Washington Post described the El Paso and Christchurch shootings as examples of an eco-fascist trend among white supremacists. Writing in GQ, Luke Darby referred to the \"distinctly environmental theme\" of Crusius' alleged manifesto. Jeet Heer in The Nation described the manifesto as being based in \"Malthusian fascism\", a worldview in which different races vie against one another in the face of environmental crises such as global warming. Mainstream environmentalists, including the executive director of the Sierra Club, denounced the attacker's alleged white-supremacist motivations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Reactions, United States\nPresident Donald Trump condemned the shooting as \"hateful\" and an \"act of cowardice\" later that day. He promised that his administration would provide \"total support\". In a later statement, Trump announced after the shootings in El Paso and in Dayton, Ohio, that all US flags, both domestic and abroad, would be flown at half-staff until sunset on August 8. In a speech from the White House on August 5, Trump said: \"In one voice, our nation must condemn racism, bigotry and white supremacy. These sinister ideologies must be defeated. Hate has no place in America.\" On August 7, Trump said he was \"concerned about the rise of any group of hate\", whether it was \"white supremacy, whether it\u2019s any other kind of supremacy, whether it's antifa\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Reactions, United States\nWithin two days of the shooting, #WhiteSupremacistInChief reached the number one trend on Twitter as critics pointed out that statements in the suspect's alleged manifesto mirrored comments Trump had made in the past, including references to illegal immigration as an \"invasion\" and telling an unspecified group of \"\u2018Progressive\u2019 Democrat Congresswomen, who originally came from countries whose governments are a complete and total catastrophe\" to \"go back and help fix the totally broken and crime infested places from which they came\". Media outlets also highlighted an incident in May 2019 where an audience member at a campaign rally suggested shooting illegal migrants crossing the border, to which Trump responded with a joke, saying, \"only in the Panhandle you can get away with that\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 840]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Reactions, United States\nFormer president Barack Obama broke his self-imposed vow of silence on the new president's leadership to release the statement, \"We should soundly reject language coming out of the mouths of any of our leaders that feeds a climate of fear and hatred or normalizes racist sentiments,\" which has widely been interpreted as a criticism of Trump's specific rhetoric.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0029-0001", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Reactions, United States\nTrump's remark that violent video games contributed to such mass shootings, a view echoed by other politicians such as House Minority Leader of the United States House of Representatives Kevin McCarthy and Texas Lt. Governor Dan Patrick, drew criticism from the video game industry, as past studies have found that no link exists between shootings and video games, and accused the government of using the medium as a scapegoat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Reactions, United States\nU.S. Representative Veronica Escobar, who represents El Paso in Congress, brought a town hall meeting in the city to an early close following the shooting. Escobar later said there was also a hate epidemic, with domestic terrorism resulting from the dehumanization of others. Texas Senator Ted Cruz issued a written statement deploring \"this unspeakable evil.\" Beto O\u2019Rourke, a native of El Paso who represented the city in Congress from 2013 to 2019, said he was \"incredibly saddened\" but that \"The [El Paso] community is going to stay together.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0030-0001", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Reactions, United States\nEveryone's resolved to make sure this doesn't continue to happen in this country.\" Texas Governor Greg Abbott called the shooting \"a heinous and senseless act of violence\". Texas Senator John Cornyn said that gun violence would not be solved by focusing on law-abiding citizens. Texas Lt. Governor Dan Patrick said violent video games were partly to blame.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Reactions, United States\nMembers of the Democratic Party criticized Trump's anti-immigrant rhetoric in the wake of the shooting, including congresswoman Escobar and 2020 presidential candidates O'Rourke, Cory Booker, and Joe Biden. Other 2020 candidates called for political action to eliminate gun violence, including Booker, Pete Buttigieg, Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, and Andrew Yang. The incident also caused many celebrities and media figures to debate gun rights within the United States, with some condemning the perceived inaction of many political figures in stopping the large number of mass shootings in the country. That same evening, Moms Demand Action, which had a convention that weekend in Washington, DC, led a march and vigil outside the White House in support of gun control in the United States and the ban of assault weapons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 875]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Reactions, United States\nThe day after the shooting, some prominent Republicans, including Texas Land Commissioner George P. Bush, also spoke of the need to combat white-supremacist terrorism. Texas senator Ted Cruz decried the shooting as a \"heinous act of terrorism and white supremacy\". On Twitter, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein classified the attack as \"white terrorism\". Many Latinos interviewed by The New York Times said they felt disturbed at becoming targets of white-nationalist violence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Reactions, United States\nDan Stein, the president of the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR), issued a statement on Twitter denouncing the shooting, with no mention of Crusius' alleged manifesto. The group regularly makes similar anti-immigration arguments to those contained in the document, prompting worries of political fallout from the shooting among FAIR and similar groups, according to David Nakamura in The Washington Post. Both Stein and Mark Krikorian of the Center for Immigration Studies, which also advocates restrictions on immigration, dismissed any connections between Crusius' ideology and their own.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Reactions, United States\nIn response to the shooting, some 8chan users claimed that the shooter was \"our guy\". The purported manifesto of the shooter, after being deleted, was re-uploaded by some users, while others commented that it showed \"zero effort\", or claimed that it was fake. Following the attack, Cloudflare terminated its website security service for 8chan, commenting that \"8chan has repeatedly proven itself to be a cesspool of hate\". The site later went dark after its server rental provider Voxility discontinued its service.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Reactions, United States\nTrump visited El Paso and Dayton on August 7. The president and first lady also met with the mayors of El Paso and Dayton. In El Paso, protesters showed up at the site of the shooting, some claiming that Trump's attitude and statements had led to the shooting; Two days before the visit, congresswoman Escobar said that Trump was \"not welcome\" in the city and declined an invitation to meet with him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0035-0001", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Reactions, United States\nThe White House published photos and a video of Trump's trip; in some photos, Trump was pictured smiling and giving thumbs up gestures, while the video was focused on Trump shaking hands and posing for photos. Trump said that he had an \"amazing day\" of visits, praising the \"love, the respect for\" him as president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Reactions, Mexico\nMexican president Andr\u00e9s Manuel L\u00f3pez Obrador extended his condolences to the families of the victims, both Americans and Mexicans. L\u00f3pez Obrador also criticized the \"indiscriminate use of weapons\" in the United States. The Mexican Secretariat of Foreign Affairs (SRE) identified the eight Mexican citizens killed, and the seven Mexican citizens wounded, in the attack. The Mexican victims killed in the attack came from Ciudad Ju\u00e1rez, Chihuahua City, and Torre\u00f3n, Coahuila. One of the victims, identified only as \u2033Rosa,\u2033 who had also offered to testify, was deported on January 30, 2021 because of a minor traffic violation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Reactions, Mexico\nJavier Corral Jurado, the governor of the Mexican state of Chihuahua, offered his assistance to Texas governor Greg Abbott and El Paso mayor Dee Margo, and said that Chihuahua authorities were ready to assist in any capacity if needed by the U.S. government. The Chihuahua government also directed Chihuahua residents and Mexican citizens affected by the attack to Mexico's Executive Committee for Victims (Spanish: Comisi\u00f3n Ejecutiva de Atenci\u00f3n a V\u00edctimas), and set up a phone line for Mexican citizens who needed assistance. The Mexican Consulate in El Paso provided consular assistance to Mexican nationals affected by the attack, and sent personnel to visit Mexican victims treated at the hospitals. The SRE confirmed that the consul Mauricio Ibarra Ponce de Le\u00f3n would coordinate with El Paso and Ciudad Ju\u00e1rez officials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 868]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Reactions, Mexico\nOn August 4, Mexican Secretary of Foreign Affairs Marcelo Ebrard announced that Mexico would issue a formal charge against the suspect for terrorism against Mexican nationals should Mexico's Attorney General's Office (FGR) support it, and possibly request his extradition from the U.S. to Mexico to face those charges. If the suspect is charged with terrorism, it would be the first time in history that Mexico issues a criminal charge of this nature for a crime committed in the U.S. In addition, it would guarantee Mexico access to information about the case.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0038-0001", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Reactions, Mexico\nEbrard also stated that the Mexican government would remain in contact with the victims' families throughout the investigation and trial, and that they would press charges against the individual(s) or firm who sold the weapons to the suspect. Former Mexican president Felipe Calder\u00f3n offered his condolences on Twitter, and also directed a message against Trump. He said that notwithstanding if the attack was confirmed to be a hate crime or not, that Trump should stop his \"hate speech\" and \"stigmatization\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Reactions, International\nUN Secretary-General Ant\u00f3nio Guterres condemned \"in the strongest terms the terrorist attack against Latinos on Saturday in the Texas city of El Paso\" and called for everyone to work together to combat violence born of hate, racism and xenophobia. Recently the UN launched an action plan to \"fight against discourses that incite hatred\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Reactions, International\nThe incident was mentioned by Pope Francis during a speech in St. Peter's Square on August 4, in which he condemned attacks on defenseless people and said he was spiritually close to the victims, the wounded, and the families affected by the attacks that had \"bloodied Texas, California, and Ohio\". The Gilroy Garlic Festival shooting happened in California around a week before the El Paso shooting, while the 2019 Dayton shooting occurred in Ohio less than 24 hours after.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288790-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 El Paso shooting, Reactions, International\nUruguay and Venezuela issued travel warnings to avoid certain cities in America, including Baltimore, Detroit, Albuquerque, Cleveland, Memphis, and Oakland, citing \"proliferation of acts of violence\" and \"growing indiscriminate violence, mostly for hate crimes, including racism and discrimination\". Both countries warned their citizens to avoid any place with large crowds, including shopping malls, festivals, and \"any kind of cultural or sporting events\". Japan issued a similar travel warning, advising its citizens to pay attention to the potential for gunfire \"everywhere\" in the U.S., which they described as a \"gun society\". President Trump threatened undefined retaliation against countries and organizations that issue travel warnings on the United States because of gun violence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 838]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288791-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Eldora Dirt Derby\nThe 2019 Eldora Dirt Derby was a NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series race held on August 1, 2019, at Eldora Speedway in Rossburg, Ohio. Contested over 150 laps on the 0.500-mile (0.805\u00a0km) dirt track, it was the 15th race of the 2019 NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288791-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Eldora Dirt Derby, Background, Track\nEldora Speedway is a 0.5\u00a0mi (804.672\u00a0m) high-banked clay dirt oval. Located north of Rossburg, Ohio in the village of New Weston, Ohio. Originally constructed as a 1/4-mile semi-banked clay dirt oval by track founder and legendary promoter Earl Baltes, Eldora was enlarged to a 3/8-mile length and later to the \"half-mile\" standard required by the United States Auto Club (USAC) for National Championship events featuring the stars of the Indianapolis 500.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288791-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Eldora Dirt Derby, Practice, First practice\nChase Briscoe was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 19.257 seconds and a speed of 93.472\u00a0mph (150.429\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288791-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Eldora Dirt Derby, Practice, Final practice\nStewart Friesen was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 19.886 seconds and a speed of 90.516\u00a0mph (145.671\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288791-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Eldora Dirt Derby, Qualifying heat races\nChase Briscoe scored the pole for the race after winning the first qualifying heat race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288791-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Eldora Dirt Derby, Race, Summary\nChase Briscoe started on pole and remained in the lead, winning Stage 1 despite cautions caused by Landon Huffman and Jake Griffin spinning on separate occasions. Harrison Burton later spun on the backstretch on lap 57. A huge crash occurred on lap 65 after Christian Eckes spun around and collected numerous others including Johnny Sauter, Mason Massey, and Jeffrey Abbey. Stage 2 was also won by Briscoe, who had continued his strong lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288791-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Eldora Dirt Derby, Race, Summary\nAfter Stage 2, Stewart Friesen took over the lead. Ross Chastain spun in front of the field, though did not cause any major damage. Kyle Strickler brought out the next caution after spinning out, while another crash collected Briscoe, Sauter, and Tyler Dippel. At the same time, Jennifer Jo Cobb got turned by Norm Benning and collected Devin Dodson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288791-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Eldora Dirt Derby, Race, Summary\nDippel failed an attempted slide job on Ben Rhodes late in the race, pushing Rhodes into the fence and dropping him six spots behind Dippel. After the race, Dippel rammed into Rhodes on the cool-down lap, leading Rhodes to attempt to drag Dippel out of his truck on pit road after the race before being pulled away by NASCAR officials. Dippel later called out Rhodes in an expletive-laced tirade, calling it \"cool\" that Rhodes would miss the playoffs and implying that Rhodes was scared of fighting him. Rhodes, in a calmer post-race interview, called Dippel a dirty driver.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288791-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Eldora Dirt Derby, Race, Summary\nOn the final restart, Friesen stayed out and was able to maintain his lead, holding off Sheldon Creed and Grant Enfinger to win the dirt derby. This was also Friesen's first win in the truck series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288792-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Elite One\nThe 2019 Elite One is the 59th season of Elite One, the top-tier football league in Cameroon. The season started on 2 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288793-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Eliteserien\nThe 2019 Eliteserien was the 75th season of top-tier football in Norway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288793-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Eliteserien\nThe season began on 30 March and was scheduled to end 30 November 2019, not including play-off matches, but due to Rosenborg competing in the Europa League the final matchday was moved to 1 December. Fixtures for the 2019 season were announced on 19 December 2018. Rosenborg were the defending champions. Viking and Mj\u00f8ndalen joined as the promoted clubs from the 2018 1. divisjon. They replaced Sandefjord and Start who were relegated to the 2019 1. divisjon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288793-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Eliteserien\nMolde won their fourth title, with two matches to spare following a 4\u20130 home win against Str\u00f8msgodset on 10 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288793-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Eliteserien, Overview, Summary\nOn 10 November, Molde were confirmed as Eliteserien champions following their 4\u20130 home win against Str\u00f8msgodset in the 28th round. They won their fourth title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288793-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Eliteserien, Teams\nSixteen teams compete in the league \u2013 the top fourteen teams from the previous season, and two teams promoted from 1. divisjon. The promoted teams were Viking and Mj\u00f8ndalen, returning to the top flight after an absence of one and three years respectively. They replaced Sandefjord (after a two-year spell in Eliteserien) and Start (relegated after a season's presence).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288793-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Eliteserien, Relegation play-offs\nThe 14th-placed team, Lillestr\u00f8m takes part in a two-legged play-off against Start, the winners of the 1. divisjon promotion play-offs, to decide who will play in the 2020 Eliteserien.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288793-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Eliteserien, Relegation play-offs\nLillestr\u00f8m lost on the away goals rule after 5\u20135 on aggregate and were relegated to 1. divisjon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288793-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Eliteserien, League attendances\nUpdated to games played on 1 December 2019Source: Notes:1: Team played last season in 1. divisjon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288794-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Eliteserien Promotion/Relegation play-offs\nThe 2019 Eliteserien Promotion/Relagetion play-offs is the 46th time a spot in the Eliteserien will be decided by play-off matches between top tier and second level clubs. In the play-offs, five teams compete for one spot in the 2020 Eliteserien.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288794-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Eliteserien Promotion/Relegation play-offs\nAt the end of the 2019 season, Troms\u00f8 and Ranheim were relegated directly to 2020 1. divisjon, and were replaced by Aalesund and Sandefjord who were directly promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288794-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Eliteserien Promotion/Relegation play-offs, Format change\nThis season, the format of the qualification rounds for the 1. divisjon teams were changed. In previous seasons, the first two knockout-rounds began with the four teams in the 1. divisjon playing single-legged rounds with home advantage for the best placed team: 3rd v 6th and 4th v 5th, and the winner then played each other to determine who would meet the Eliteserien club in the final. This season, the first round will be played 5th v 6th, and the winner will advance to play away to 4th in the second round. The winner of the second round will advance to play away to 3rd in the third round. The winner of the third round will meet the 14th placed team in Eliteserien in a two-legged final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288794-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 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 the 1. divisjon. The fixtures are determined by final league position \u2013 the first round will be played 5th v 6th, and the winner will advance to play away to 4th in the second round. The winner of the second round will advance to play away to 3rd in the third round. The winner of the third round will meet the 14th placed team in Eliteserien in a two-legged final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 763]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288794-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Eliteserien Promotion/Relegation play-offs, Qualified teams\nFive teams entered a play-off for the last Eliteserien spot for the 2020 season. These were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288794-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Eliteserien Promotion/Relegation play-offs, Qualified teams, Matches\nThe third to sixth-placed teams will take part in the promotion play-offs; these are single leg knockout matches, three rounds involving 1. divisjon teams and a final between the winner of these rounds and the fourteenth-placed team in Eliteserien.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 73], "content_span": [74, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288794-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Eliteserien Promotion/Relegation play-offs, Qualified teams, Matches, Final\nThe 14th-placed team in Eliteserien, Lillestr\u00f8m, will play a two-legged play-off against Start, the winners of the 1. divisjon promotion play-offs, to decide who will play in the 2020 Eliteserien.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 80], "content_span": [81, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288794-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Eliteserien Promotion/Relegation play-offs, Qualified teams, Matches, Final\nThe tie ended with a 5\u20135 draw on aggregate, Start won on the away goals rule and retained promoted to Eliteserien.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 80], "content_span": [81, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288795-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Elmbridge Borough Council election\nThe by-thirds 2019 Elmbridge Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Elmbridge Borough Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288796-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Elon Phoenix football team\nThe 2019 Elon Phoenix football team represented Elon University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by first-year head coach Tony Trisciani and played their home games at Rhodes Stadium. They were members of the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA). They finished the season 5\u20136, 4\u20134 in CAA play to finish in a four-way tie for fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288796-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Elon Phoenix football team, Previous season\nThe Phoenix finished the 2018 season 6\u20135, 4\u20133 in CAA play to finish in sixth place. They received an at-large bid to the FCS Playoffs where they were lost to Wofford in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288796-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Elon Phoenix football team, Previous season\nOn December 14, head coach Curt Cignetti resigned to become the head coach at James Madison. He finished at Elon with a two-year record of 14\u20139.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288796-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Elon Phoenix football team, Preseason, CAA poll\nIn the CAA preseason poll released on July 23, 2019, the Phoenix were predicted to finish in fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288796-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Elon Phoenix football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013CAA team\nThe Phoenix had two players selected to the preseason all-CAA team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288797-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Emakumeen Euskal Bira\nThe 32nd running of the Emakumeen Euskal Bira was held from 22 to 25 May 2019. Raced over four stages in the Basque Country, it was one of two women's cycling events at World Tour level in Spain, together with La Madrid Challenge. It was the 12th event of the 2019 UCI Women's World Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288797-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Emakumeen Euskal Bira, Teams\nTwenty teams, each with a maximum of six riders, will start the race:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288798-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Emir of Qatar Cup\nThe 2019 Emir of Qatar Cup is the 47th edition of the Qatari cup tournament in men's football. It will be played by the first and second level divisions of the Qatari football league structure. The cup winner is guaranteed a place in the 2020 AFC Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288798-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Emir of Qatar Cup\nThe draw of the tournament was held on 15 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 76]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288798-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Emir of Qatar Cup, Final\nAssistant referees:Taleb Salem (Qatar)Saud Ahmed (Qatar)Fourth official:Khamis Mohamed Al Kuwari (Qatar)Assistant video assistant referees:Salman Ahmad Flahi (Qatar)Abdullah Al Adba (Qatar)Khaled Ayed (Qatar)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288799-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Emirates Cup\nThe 2019 Emirates Cup was a pre-season football friendly tournament hosted by Arsenal at its home ground, the Emirates Stadium. It was the tenth Emirates Cup, an invitational competition inaugurated in 2007. Held on 28 July 2019, the participants were Arsenal (men's and women's), Bayern Munich (women's only) and Lyon (men's only). In this edition, a new one-day format was introduced, with Arsenal women competing for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288799-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Emirates Cup, Background\nThe Emirates Cup was inaugurated in July 2007 after Arsenal finalised plans to stage a pre-season competition at its home ground. The competition is named after Arsenal's main sponsor Emirates; the airline's association with the football club began in 2004. Arsenal won the first tournament, which was attended by over 110,000 people across the two days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288799-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Emirates Cup, Summary\nThe tournament began when the Arsenal women's side took on Bayern Munich, and concluded following the Arsenal men's side match against Lyon. Both games were played at the Emirates Stadium in London on 28 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288800-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Emirati parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in the United Arab Emirates on 5 October 2019 to elect half of the members (i.e., 20 members) of the Federal National Council. As there were no political parties at the time of the elections, all candidates ran as independents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288800-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Emirati parliamentary election\nThe elections took place through an electoral college, the membership of which was expanded from 224,279 in 2015 to 337,738 in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288800-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Emirati parliamentary election, Electoral system\nThe Federal National Council consists of 40 members, 20 of whom are appointed by the rulers of each emirate. and 20 are elected by single non-transferable vote in seven electoral colleges based on the emirates. The colleges of Abu Dhabi and Dubai elects four members each, the colleges of Sharjah and Ras al-Khaimah three each, and the colleges of Ajman, Fujairah and Umm al-Quwain two each. Voters can vote for only one candidate in their emirate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288800-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Emirati parliamentary election, Electoral system\nIn December 2018, President Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan issued a directive that half the members of the Council should be women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288800-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Emirati parliamentary election, Electoral system\nUnder the constitution of the United Arab Emirates, \"each emirate shall be free to determine the method of selecting the citizens representing it in the Federal National Council\". The rulers of each emirate decides who will be able to vote; the total number of voters has increased at each election, with an objective that all citizens will be able to vote in the future.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288800-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Emirati parliamentary election, Electoral system\nOn election day, 39 voting centers were opened in the UAE, nine of which had been open for early voting on 1\u20133 October. Overseas voters were able to vote in UAE embassies on 22\u201323 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288800-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Emirati parliamentary election, Results\nA total of 117,592 voters were cast, giving a voter turnout of 34.81%. The number of votes cast increased by 48.5% compared to the 2015 elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288800-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Emirati parliamentary election, Results\nThe UAE has a 50% quota system for women in parliament. Therefore 50% of all parliament seats are reserved for women. As a result of the quota system, seven of the 20 elected members were women, although the sole incumbent elected female MP Naama al-Sharhan failed to win re-election in Ras al-Khaimah. To achieve gender parity, 13 of the 20 appointed members were women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288801-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Emperor's Cup\nThe 2019 Emperor's Cup (Emperor's Cup JFA 99th Japan Football Championship (Japanese: \u5929\u7687\u676f JFA \u7b2c99\u56de\u5168\u65e5\u672c\u30b5\u30c3\u30ab\u30fc\u9078\u624b\u6a29\u5927\u4f1a)) was the 99th edition of the annual Japanese national football cup tournament. The tournament began on 25 May and ended with the final on 1 January 2020. The final was the first event held at the National Stadium after its rebuilding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288801-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Emperor's Cup\nThe defending champions were Urawa Red Diamonds, but they lost to Honda FC in the Round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288801-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Emperor's Cup\nVissel Kobe won their first trophy after winning the final. As the winners, they automatically qualified to the group stage of the 2020 AFC Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288801-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Emperor's Cup, First round\nThe draw for the first three rounds was held on 4 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288801-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Emperor's Cup, Fourth round\nThe draw for the Fourth Round to the final was held on 16 August 2019. There was no seeding in the draw, however, the draw took into consideration the teams whose home or away in the round of 16 were predetermined:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288801-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Emperor's Cup, Fourth round\nThe round of 16 matches were played on 18 September 2019, except for the matches involving Kashima Antlers and Urawa Red Diamonds, which were delayed as they were playing in the second leg of the 2019 AFC Champions League quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288801-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Emperor's Cup, Final\nThe final was played on 1 January 2020 at the newly rebuilt National Stadium in Tokyo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288802-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Empire Slovak Open\nThe 2019 Empire Slovak Open was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the eleventh edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Trnava, Slovakia between 13 and 19 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288802-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Empire Slovak Open, 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-00288803-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Empire Slovak Open \u2013 Doubles\nJessica Moore and Galina Voskoboeva were the defending champions, but both players chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288803-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Empire Slovak Open \u2013 Doubles\nAnna Blinkova and Xenia Knoll won the title, defeating Cornelia Lister and Renata Vor\u00e1\u010dov\u00e1 in the final, 7\u20135, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288804-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Empire Slovak Open \u2013 Singles\nVikt\u00f3ria Ku\u017emov\u00e1 was the defending champion, but chose to participate at the 2019 Italian Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288804-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Empire Slovak Open \u2013 Singles\nBernarda Pera won the title, defeating Anna Blinkova in the final, 7\u20135, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288805-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Emporia State Hornets football team\nThe 2019 Emporia State Hornets football team represents Emporia State University in the 2019 NCAA Division II football season. The Hornets play their home games on Jones Field at Francis G. Welch Stadium in Emporia, Kansas, as they have done since 1937. 2019 is the 122nd season in school history. The Hornets are led by head coach Garin Higgins, who is in his 18th season overall, and 13th season at Emporia State as head coach. Emporia State has been a member of the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association (MIAA) since 1991.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288805-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Emporia State Hornets football team, Preseason\nThe Hornets enter the 2018 season after finishing with an 8\u20134 overall, 7\u20134 in conference play last season under Higgins. The 2019 MIAA Media Day will be held on July 31, where conference preseason rankings will be released.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288805-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Emporia State Hornets football team, Preseason\nNew changes occurred this year in conference play. With Lindenwood and Southwest Baptist's departures in July 2019, Lincoln re-joined MIAA football play after four seasons in the Great Lakes Valley Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288805-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Emporia State Hornets football team, Preseason\nOn July 31, 2019, the Hornets were chosen to finish 6th in the conference preseason polls by the coaches and media.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288806-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Enfield state by-election\nA by-election for the seat of Enfield in the South Australian House of Assembly was held on 9 February 2019. The by-election was triggered by the parliamentary resignation of Labor Party MP and former Deputy Premier John Rau on 17 December 2018. Labor candidate Andrea Michaels retained the seat with an increased margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288806-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Enfield state by-election\nA Cheltenham by-election was held on the same day, as Rau's former leader and Premier, Jay Weatherill, had also resigned from parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288806-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Enfield state by-election, Candidates\nThe Liberal Party declined to field a candidate for both the Enfield and Cheltenham by-elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288807-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open Andr\u00e9zieux-Bouth\u00e9on 42\nThe 2019 Engie Open Andr\u00e9zieux-Bouth\u00e9on 42 was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the ninth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Andr\u00e9zieux-Bouth\u00e9on, France between 21 and 27 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288807-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open Andr\u00e9zieux-Bouth\u00e9on 42, Women's singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 90], "content_span": [91, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288808-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open Andr\u00e9zieux-Bouth\u00e9on 42 \u2013 Doubles\nYsaline Bonaventure and Bibiane Schoofs were the defending champions, but Bonaventure chose not to participate. Schoofs played alongside Olga Doroshina, but lost in the first round to Audrey Albi\u00e9 and Margot Yerolymos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288808-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open Andr\u00e9zieux-Bouth\u00e9on 42 \u2013 Doubles\nCornelia Lister and Renata Vor\u00e1\u010dov\u00e1 won the title, defeating Andreea Mitu and Elena-Gabriela Ruse in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288809-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open Andr\u00e9zieux-Bouth\u00e9on 42 \u2013 Singles\nGeorgina Garc\u00eda P\u00e9rez was the defending champion, but chose to participate at the 2019 Burnie International instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288809-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open Andr\u00e9zieux-Bouth\u00e9on 42 \u2013 Singles\nRebecca \u0160ramkov\u00e1 won the title, defeating Audrey Albi\u00e9 in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20137(4\u20137), 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288810-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open Nantes Atlantique\nThe 2019 Engie Open Nantes Atlantique was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the sixteenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Nantes, France between 28 October and 3 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288810-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open Nantes Atlantique, 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-00288811-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open Nantes Atlantique \u2013 Doubles\nEstelle Cascino and Elixane Lechemia were the defending champions, but lost in the semifinals to Akgul Amanmuradova and Ekaterine Gorgodze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288811-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open Nantes Atlantique \u2013 Doubles\nAmanmuradova and Gorgodze went on to win the title, defeating Vivian Heisen and Yana Sizikova in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20132), 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288812-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open Nantes Atlantique \u2013 Singles\nTimea Bacsinszky was the defending champion, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288812-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open Nantes Atlantique \u2013 Singles\nCristina Buc\u0219a won the title, defeating Tamara Korpatsch in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20137(11\u201313), 7\u20136(8\u20136).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288813-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open Saint-Gaudens Occitanie\nThe 2019 Engie Open Saint-Gaudens Occitanie was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the twenty-third edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Saint-Gaudens, France between 13 and 19 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288813-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open Saint-Gaudens Occitanie, 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-00288814-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open Saint-Gaudens Occitanie \u2013 Doubles\nNaiktha Bains and Francesca Di Lorenzo were the defending champions, but both players chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288814-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open Saint-Gaudens Occitanie \u2013 Doubles\nMartina Di Giuseppe and Giulia Gatto-Monticone won the title, defeating Anna Kalinskaya and Sofya Lansere in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288815-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open Saint-Gaudens Occitanie \u2013 Singles\nVera Lapko was the defending champion, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288815-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open Saint-Gaudens Occitanie \u2013 Singles\nAnna Kalinskaya won the title, defeating Ana Bogdan in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288816-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open de Biarritz\nThe 2019 Engie Open de Biarritz was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the seventeenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Biarritz, France between 15 and 21 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288816-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open de Biarritz, 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-00288817-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open de Biarritz \u2013 Doubles\nIrina Bara and Valentina Ivakhnenko were the defending champions, but both players chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288817-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open de Biarritz \u2013 Doubles\nManon Arcangioli and Kimberley Zimmermann won the title, defeating Victoria Rodr\u00edguez and Ioana Loredana Ro\u0219ca in the final, 2\u20136, 6\u20133, [10\u20136].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288818-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open de Biarritz \u2013 Singles\nTamara Korpatsch was the defending champion, but chose to participate at the 2019 Ladies Open Lausanne instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288818-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open de Biarritz \u2013 Singles\nViktoriya Tomova won the title, defeating Danka Kovini\u0107 in the final, 6\u20132, 5\u20137, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288819-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open de Seine-et-Marne\nThe 2019 Engie Open de Seine-et-Marne was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the seventh edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Croissy-Beaubourg, France between 25 and 31 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288819-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open de 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-00288820-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open de Seine-et-Marne \u2013 Doubles\nAnna Kalinskaya and Vikt\u00f3ria Ku\u017emov\u00e1 were the defending champions, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288820-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open de Seine-et-Marne \u2013 Doubles\nHarriet Dart and Lesley Kerkhove won the title, defeating Sarah Beth Grey and Eden Silva in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288821-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open de Seine-et-Marne \u2013 Singles\nAnna Blinkova was the defending champion, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288821-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Engie Open de Seine-et-Marne \u2013 Singles\nVitalia Diatchenko won the title, defeating Robin Anderson in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288822-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 England netball team tour of South Africa\nThe England national netball team toured South Africa in November and December 2019 for a three-match series against the South Africa national netball team. The tour was Jess Thirlby's first international tour as new coach of the England team and was also Dorette Badenhorst's first home series as the new South African coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288823-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 English Channel Piper PA-46 crash\nA Piper PA-46 Malibu light aircraft transporting Argentine football player Emiliano Sala crashed in the English Channel off Alderney in the Channel Islands on 21 January 2019. It had been travelling from Nantes, France, to Cardiff, Wales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288823-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 English Channel Piper PA-46 crash\nContact was lost when the aircraft was 13 nautical miles (24 km; 15 mi) north of Guernsey. After the search for survivors was abandoned on 24 January, a private search for wreckage was launched. Sala's body was recovered, but no trace of the pilot David Ibbotson was found.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288823-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 English Channel Piper PA-46 crash\nThe AAIB investigation found that Sala's body showed high levels of exposure to carbon monoxide which had leaked into the cabin of the aircraft and may have impaired the judgement of the pilot. Ibbotson was not licensed to fly at the time of the crash, or qualified to fly at night. David Henderson, who organised the flight and was originally scheduled to be the pilot, was charged with endangering the safety of an aircraft, with his trial scheduled for October 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288823-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 English Channel Piper PA-46 crash, Disappearance\nThe aircraft departed from Nantes Atlantique Airport at 19:15 GMT (20:15 CET) bound for Cardiff Airport. Sala had been signed two days previously by Cardiff City Football Club from FC Nantes. The pilot was identified by Guernsey Police as David Ibbotson. Shortly before contact with Jersey air traffic control was lost, a request was made by the pilot to descend from 5,000 feet (1,500\u00a0m) to 2,500 feet (760\u00a0m), in order to maintain visual meteorological conditions. Contact was lost when the aircraft was at an altitude of 2,300 feet (700\u00a0m).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288823-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 English Channel Piper PA-46 crash, Disappearance\nAt 20:23\u00a0GMT, Guernsey Coastguard received an alert from Jersey air traffic control saying that a plane had gone off the radar around 13 nautical miles (24\u00a0km; 15\u00a0mi) north of Guernsey. The plane was then around 7 nautical miles (13\u00a0km; 8\u00a0mi) northwest of Alderney, Channel Islands, near Casquets lighthouse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288823-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 English Channel Piper PA-46 crash, Disappearance\nSala sent an audio message via WhatsApp just before take off, saying \"I am now on board a plane that seems like it is falling to pieces... If you do not have any more news in an hour and a half, I don't know if they need to send someone to find me. I am getting scared!\" Cardiff City had offered Sala a commercial flight from Paris, but he said that he had made alternative arrangements and would be training with his new teammates on the morning after the flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288823-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 English Channel Piper PA-46 crash, Disappearance\nThe flight was arranged by football agent Willie McKay, who said that he was not involved in selecting the plane or the pilot. It was reported in French media that the flight was arranged through pilot David Henderson, who had originally intended to fly the plane, but the flight had been given to David Ibbotson. The flight plan showed that the plane was scheduled to take off at 09:00 GMT (10:00 CET) on 21 January, but was delayed until the evening.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288823-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 English Channel Piper PA-46 crash, Aircraft\nThe aircraft involved was a Piper PA-46 Malibu, a six-seat type equipped with a single piston engine, registered in the United States as N264DB, serial number 46-8408037. The aircraft was manufactured in 1984. The Certificate of Registration had been issued on 11\u00a0September 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288823-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 English Channel Piper PA-46 crash, Aircraft\nThe aircraft was registered to a trustee, the Southern Aircraft Consultancy in Bungay, Suffolk, United Kingdom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288823-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 English Channel Piper PA-46 crash, Search\nA search and rescue operation was launched, but was suspended at 02:00\u00a0GMT on 22\u00a0January due to worsening weather conditions. Although the area was outside the United Kingdom's area of responsibility, Her Majesty's Coastguard sent two helicopters to assist in the search for the aircraft. A French helicopter was also sent to participate in the search, as were the Alderney and Guernsey lifeboats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288823-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 English Channel Piper PA-46 crash, Search\nThe search resumed at 08:00\u00a0GMT on 22\u00a0January. By 11:45\u00a0GMT, a total of 755 square nautical miles (2,590\u00a0km2; 1,000\u00a0sq\u00a0mi) had been covered by five aircraft and two lifeboats, but no trace of the aircraft had been found. A French Navy vessel also participated in the search. As of 15:30\u00a0GMT on 22\u00a0January, one aircraft and one lifeboat were still searching, bringing the total area covered to 872 square nautical miles (2,991\u00a0km2; 1,155\u00a0sq\u00a0mi). The search was again suspended in the evening of 22\u00a0January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288823-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 English Channel Piper PA-46 crash, Search\nFloating objects had been found, but it was not confirmed that they came from the missing aircraft. The search resumed at 08:00\u00a0GMT on 23\u00a0January with two aircraft searching coastal areas around Alderney. As of 11:30\u00a0GMT, a helicopter and three aircraft were continuing the search and trying to review satellite imagery and mobile phone data; there was still no trace of the missing aircraft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288823-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 English Channel Piper PA-46 crash, Search\nOn 23 January, the Channel Islands Air Search said they had abandoned hope of finding any survivors in the water. The search now focused on the possibility that survivors were on a life raft in the English Channel. The official search was called off on 24\u00a0January because the chances of survival were said to be \"extremely remote\". The search had covered 1,284 square nautical miles (4,403\u00a0km2; 1,700\u00a0sq\u00a0mi) of land and sea, covering Burhou, Les Casquets, Alderney, the north coast of the Cherbourg Peninsula, and the north coast of Jersey and Sark.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288823-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 English Channel Piper PA-46 crash, Salvage activity\nSala's family launched a fundraising appeal to find his body and a private search was launched on 26\u00a0January, funded by \u00a3259,000 raised in donations, via a specialised organisation. On 28\u00a0January, marine scientist David Mearns, who led the search, announced that a search vessel with an unmanned remotely operated underwater vehicle (ROV) was expected to be in place \"by the end of the week\". They planned to focus on some 25 square nautical miles (86\u00a0km2; 33\u00a0sq\u00a0mi) of the seabed; the last known position of the aircraft was north of Hurd's Deep. In the meantime, two fishing boats were being used to carry out a surface search of the area. Mearns engaged the FPV Morven for the search.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 56], "content_span": [57, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288823-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 English Channel Piper PA-46 crash, Salvage activity\nOn 30 January 2019, at approximately 13:58 GMT, the Air Accidents Investigation Branch (AAIB) reported that two seat cushions, found near Surtainville in France, were likely to be from the missing aircraft. AAIB identified a priority search area of approximately four square nautical miles (14\u00a0km2; 5\u00a0sq\u00a0mi) and commissioned a survey vessel from the British Ministry of Defence with sonar equipment to search the seabed for the aircraft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 56], "content_span": [57, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288823-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 English Channel Piper PA-46 crash, Salvage activity\nThe AAIB search carried out by the vessel Geo Ocean III started on 3\u00a0February, together with the private search, and was expected to last up to three days; the private search was set to continue \"until the plane is located\". The planned search was to cover an area of four square nautical miles (14\u00a0km2; 5\u00a0sq\u00a0mi) about 24 nautical miles (44\u00a0km; 28\u00a0mi) north of Guernsey. The search area was divided between the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 56], "content_span": [57, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288823-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 English Channel Piper PA-46 crash, Salvage activity\nOn 3 February, wreckage of the aircraft was found on the seabed at about 0.5 nautical miles (1\u00a0km; 0.6\u00a0mi) from the last known location. The wreckage was at a depth of 220 feet (67\u00a0m) and there was a possibility that the bodies of Sala and Ibbotson were still on board. On 4 February, it was confirmed that the image from the AAIB search remote submersible had shown the registration mark and at least one body inside the wreckage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 56], "content_span": [57, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288823-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 English Channel Piper PA-46 crash, Salvage activity\nOn 7 February, a body was recovered from the wreckage and was taken to the Isle of Portland to be passed to the Dorset coroner, where it was identified as that of Sala, by means of fingerprint evidence. Attempts to recover the aircraft wreckage were unsuccessful and poor weather conditions forced the salvage team to return the ROV to the ship. On 11 February, the results of a post-mortem reported that Sala had died of \"head and trunk injuries\". An inquest was scheduled to take place in March 2021. In October 2020, it was postponed to an undetermined date due to the decision to charge Henderson with offences related to the crash and his trial taking place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 56], "content_span": [57, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288823-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 English Channel Piper PA-46 crash, Salvage activity\nThe daughter of the pilot David Ibbotson launched a crowdfunding appeal to locate his body and on 10 February the fund received a donation of \u00a327,000 from French footballer Kylian Mbapp\u00e9. Former England captain Gary Lineker also donated \u00a31,000. As of 23\u00a0February\u00a02019, \u00a3249,000 of the \u00a3300,000 target had been raised. The search was to include a dive to the wreck to rule out the body being there, and a helicopter search of coastal areas in the Channel Islands. On 27 February, it was reported that a 20-minute dive to the wreck had discovered no body.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 56], "content_span": [57, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288823-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 English Channel Piper PA-46 crash, Investigation\nThe crash site lies in international waters. Under Annex 13 to the Convention on Civil Aviation, the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) had responsibility for investigating the accident because the aircraft was registered in the United States. The NTSB, in agreement with the Air Accidents Investigation Branch (AAIB) delegated responsibility for the investigation to the AAIB because the aircraft was based in the UK. On 23 January 2019, the AAIB opened an investigation into the accident. Assistance was given by France's Bureau d\u2019Enqu\u00eates et d\u2019Analyses, the British Civil Aviation Authority, the European Union Aviation Safety Agency, Argentina's Junta de Investigaci\u00f3n de Accidentes de Aviaci\u00f3n Civil and the NTSB.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288823-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 English Channel Piper PA-46 crash, Investigation\nPart of the investigation covered the operational aspects related to the accident including licensing and flight plans. David Ibbotson had undergone training to become a commercial pilot between 2012 and 2014, but had dropped out before it was completed; his private pilot licence did not permit him to carry passengers for profit. Ibbotson's type rating for the Piper Malibu had expired months prior to the crash. While at Nantes Atlantique Airport, Ibbotson had posted on Facebook that he was \"a bit rusty\" with the instrument landing system on the Piper Malibu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288823-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 English Channel Piper PA-46 crash, Investigation\nAfter confirming on 4\u00a0February that the wreckage of the aircraft had been located, the AAIB stated that it would publish an interim report on their findings within two weeks. A Special Bulletin was issued on 25 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288823-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 English Channel Piper PA-46 crash, Investigation\nPost mortem tests on Sala's body showed exposure to carbon monoxide with a carboxyhemoglobin level of 58%, which could have led to symptoms including seizure, unconsciousness or a heart attack. The AAIB considers it likely that the pilot would also have been exposed to carbon monoxide. The AAIB said that it had no plans to raise the wreckage of the plane from the seabed, saying \"In this case, we consider that it will not add significantly to the investigation and we will identify the correct safety issues through other means.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288823-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 English Channel Piper PA-46 crash, Investigation, AAIB final report\nThe AAIB published its final report into the accident on 13 March 2020. It concluded that the pilot David Ibbotson was not licensed to fly the plane as his rating had expired in November 2018, and that he was not qualified to fly at night. The investigation stated that \"neither the plane nor the pilot had the required licences or permissions to operate commercially.\" The report concluded that Sala would have been \"deeply unconscious\" due to carbon monoxide poisoning at the time of the crash, but that Ibbotson was still conscious and in control of the plane up to the time of the crash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288823-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 English Channel Piper PA-46 crash, Legal proceedings\nOn 29 April 2019, two people were arrested after a photograph showing the dead body of Emiliano Sala during a post-mortem was posted on Twitter. On 23 September 2019, a woman and a man working for a security company were jailed for 14 and 5 months for accessing CCTV footage of Sala's post-mortem at the mortuary in Bournemouth, which had led to the leak of the material.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288823-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 English Channel Piper PA-46 crash, Legal proceedings\nIn June 2019, Dorset Police arrested David Henderson on suspicion of manslaughter by an unlawful act in respect of the death of Sala. Henderson had arranged the flight and had originally intended to fly the plane. Police decided not to proceed with the case for manslaughter, but on 26 October, Henderson appeared at Cardiff Crown Court via video link charged with endangering the safety of an aircraft and attempting to discharge a passenger without valid permission or authorisation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288823-0023-0001", "contents": "2019 English Channel Piper PA-46 crash, Legal proceedings\nHis defence counsel questioned the neutrality of the location of the hearing and was informed that an application for a change of venue needed to be submitted by 23 November. Henderson pleaded not guilty to both charges and was granted bail. The trial is scheduled to start on 18 October 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288824-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 English Football League play-offs\nThe English Football League play-offs for the 2018\u201319 season were held in April 2019 with all finals played at Wembley Stadium in London. The play-offs will begin in each league with two semi-finals played over two legs. The teams who finish in 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th place in the Championship and League One and the 4th, 5th, 6th and 7th-placed teams in League Two are set to compete. The winners of the semi-finals advance to the finals, with the winners gaining promotion for the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288824-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 English Football League play-offs, Background\nThe English 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. The fixtures are determined by final league position \u2013 in the Championship and League One this is 3rd v 6th and 4th v 5th, while in League Two it is 4th v 7th and 5th v 24th And 22nd Vs 23rd In Relegation Playoffs", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288824-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 English Football League play-offs, Championship, Championship semi-finals\nWest Bromwich Albion 2\u20132 Aston Villa on aggregate. Aston Villa won 4\u20133 on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 78], "content_span": [79, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288824-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 English Football League play-offs, League One, League One semi-finals\nCharlton Athletic 4\u20134 Doncaster Rovers on aggregate. Charlton Athletic won 4\u20133 on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 74], "content_span": [75, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288824-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 English Football League play-offs, League Two, League Two semi-finals\nMansfield Town 1\u20131 Newport County on aggregate. Newport County won 5\u20133 on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 74], "content_span": [75, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288825-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 English Greyhound Derby\nThe 2019 Star Sports, ARC & LPS Greyhound Derby took place during May and June with the final being held on 29 June 2019 at Nottingham Greyhound Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288825-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 English Greyhound Derby\nIt was the first time that the event was held at Nottingham following the unexpected closure of Towcester Greyhound Stadium in 2018. The event was sponsored by Star Sports, ARC and LPS (Local Parking Security Services).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288825-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 English Greyhound Derby\nThe winner Priceless Blake won \u00a3100,000 and was trained by Paul Hennessy, owned by Bryan and Kathleen Murphy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288825-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 English Greyhound Derby\nThe dates of the competition were: First Round (24/25 May), Second Round (31 May/1 June), Third Round (7 June), Quarter Finals (15 June), Semi Finals (22 June) and Final (29 June).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288825-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 English Greyhound Derby, Final Result, Final Distances\n\u00bd, head, 3\u00be, 1\u00be, 2\u00be (lengths) 0.08 sec = one length", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288825-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 English Greyhound Derby, Competition Review\nThere were 209 entries of which 44 were from Ireland and the high number resulted in 17 greyhounds standing as reserves because the entry was restricted for the first time in over 30 years. The ante-post favourite was the defending champion Dorotas Wildcat at 12-1, followed by All England Cup and Dundalk International winner Droopys Verve (14-1), Lenson Blinder, Shelbourne 600 champion Clonbrien Prince and Irish Derby finalist Jaytee Taylor (all 20-1). A notable absentee was Easter Cup winner Clona Blaze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288825-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 English Greyhound Derby, Competition Review\nThe first round got underway on 24 May with a 29.71 race win for Sporting Dave, a time bettered by Droopys Trapper in heat 3 (29.60). Three Irish winners then impressed; Clonbrien Prince eased to victory in heat 5 (29.70) before Lemon Shane recorded 29.59 in heat 6 and Droopys Davy recorded 29.46. It was not until heat 15 that Droopys Expert appeared and he survived a scare when qualifying in third place after suffering in an incident packed race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288825-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 English Greyhound Derby, Competition Review\nThe final heat of the night was arguably the best as Graham Holland's Wolfe defeated Dorotas Wildcat by 1\u00bd lengths, with the benefit of being drawn inside the defending champion in a time of 29.54. The second batch of first round heats started with the shock defeat of Droopys Verve behind Desperado Dan but the black dog still progressed. Verve's kennelmate Droopys Nadal then impressed by setting a best time of 29.32, a time that was beaten by Queen Beyonce (29.27) one heat later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288825-0006-0002", "contents": "2019 English Greyhound Derby, Competition Review\nIrish hope Jaytee Taylor won heat 22 before Patrick Guilfoyle's Skywalker Logan broke the track record in heat 23 setting a new Nottingham record of 29.05. The brilliant King Turbo won his heat as did major contenders Ballyanne Sim (the Irish Derby champion), Boylesports Xtra and Lenson Blinder. Despite many troubled heats (caused by the large amount of greyhounds seeded rails) all of the major contenders made it through to round two and the trophy looked destined for an Irish victory at this stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288825-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 English Greyhound Derby, Competition Review\nThe second round started on 31 May with 8 heats; Magical Bale bounced back to winning ways in a very fast 29.30 comprehensively beating Ballyanne Sim. Second wins were sealed for Liberty Hawk, Clonbrien Prince who recorded the second fastest time of 29.42 for the first night of the second round, Desperado Dan, Lemon Shane and Queen Beyonce but Lenson Blinder and Boylesports Xtra both crashed out. Scottish Derby Champ Braveheart Bobby and King Sheeran completed the night's winners. The following night the big guns Dorotas Wildcat, Skywalker Logan and Droopys Expert all sealed wins but Wolfe seemed to stop chasing which left Roxholme Jim free to win by over ten lengths. Remarkably Droopys Trapper and Jaytee Taylor became the ninth and tenth greyhounds to remain unbeaten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 828]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288825-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 English Greyhound Derby, Competition Review\nBraveheart Bobby was withdrawn from the event before the third round and it was the defending champion Dorotas Wildcat who got the third round underway with a very fast time of 29.28, Droopys Expert qualified in third. Droopys Verve continued his good form winning heat 2 in a sparkling 29.14 and Clonbrien Prince remained unbeaten when winning heat 3 in 29.19, Ballyanne Sim qualified in third place. Desperado Dan and Droopys Trapper were both eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288825-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 English Greyhound Derby, Competition Review\nThe fourth heat saw the appearance of Skywalker Logan and after finding significant trouble and looking as though he was out he just managed to recover and qualify in third place behind Dower Rory who won despite being interfered with by Swift Jim on the run-in. Next Priceless Blake defeated Jaytee Taylor before Queen Beyonce won again. The final two heats went to Nice Charmer and Magical Bale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288825-0008-0002", "contents": "2019 English Greyhound Derby, Competition Review\nBy a twist of fate a dead heat for third place between Front Edge and Trafalgar Cup champion King Sheeran would normally have required a run off but because Swift Jim had been disqualified both would enter the quarter final draw. Previously the run off loser would have stood as reserve.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288825-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 English Greyhound Derby, Competition Review\nGoing into the quarter finals there were just two undefeated greyhounds left Clonbrien Prince and Queen Beyonce. In the first heat Priceless Blake ran well to hold off King Sheeran and Roxholme Glory but Droopys Verve could not overcome another bad trap draw and found trouble. Magical Bale made a blistering start and recorded a very fast 29.14, Droopys Expert finished second but could not make ground on the winner and Ballymac Tas took third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288825-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 English Greyhound Derby, Competition Review\nA competitive third heat saw Queen Beyonce come from behind to win and remain unbeaten, Clonbrien Prince battled with Paganini Show on the run-in but took second after overtaking the early leader Ballyanne Sim who claimed third. The champion Dorotas Wildcat completed the night with a 29.38 win from Jaytee Taylor and the strong finishing Skywalker Logan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288825-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 English Greyhound Derby, Competition Review\nThe first semi-final was arguably the strongest semi final in Derby history and favourite Magical Bale broke well ahead of the champion Dorotas Wildcat and Droopys Expert, the three inside traps looked to have final places sealed especially as the Irish champion Ballyanne Sim and King Sheeran found trouble. However Priceless Blake nipped in behind the trio and slowly gained on the leaders and caught the fading Dorotas Wildcat for third. The defending champion ran under par but retired with a great reputation. The second heat resulted in a comfortable win for Clonbrien Prince from track record holder Skywalker Logan and Ballymac Tas (who held of Jaytee Taylor); the unbeaten Queen Beyonce failed to get any sort of run and got tangled up with Roxholme Glory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 814]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288825-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 English Greyhound Derby, Competition Review\nIn the final Priceless Blake made a great start and as predicted with an all rails line-up there was trouble behind. Magical Bale recovered from a poor start and moved into second position at the first bend but failed to take the bend clean moving off and ending his chances and that of Clonbrien Prince and Droopys Expert. Ballymac Tas and Skywalker Logan both ran on strongly but could not catch Priceless Blake who led a 1-2-3 for Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288826-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 English National Badminton Championships\nThe 2019 English National Badminton Championships were held in Westgate Badminton Centre, Winchester, Hampshire from February 2 to February 3, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288826-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 English National Badminton Championships\nRajiv Ouseph won his ninth singles title which put him just one behind the record of ten set by Darren Hall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288827-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 English Open (snooker)\nThe 2019 English Open (also known as the 19.com English Open due to sponsorship) was a professional snooker tournament that took place from 14 to 20 October 2019 at the K2 Leisure Centre in Crawley, England. It was the fourth ranking event of the 2019\u201320 snooker season and the first of the 2019 Home Nations Series. The event was the fourth edition of the English Open, first held in 2016. Betting company 19.com sponsored the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288827-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 English Open (snooker)\nThe defending champion was Stuart Bingham who defeated Mark Davis 9\u20137 in the 2018 final. Bingham lost 1\u20134 to Si Jiahui in the second round of the tournament. In the event's semi finals, Mark Selby defeated Mark Allen, and David Gilbert beat Tom Ford to reach the final. Selby defeated Gilbert 9\u20131 in the final to win his 16th\u00a0ranking title. A total of 71 century breaks were made during the tournament. Tom Ford made the highest of the event, his fifth career maximum break and second of the season in the deciding frame of his 4\u20133 win over Shaun Murphy in the last 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288827-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 English Open (snooker), Format\nThe English Open was first played in 2016 as a world ranking tournament and a part of the Home Nations Series. The 2019 event was held in the K2 Leisure Centre, Crawley, England. The event was the fourth ranking tournament of the 2019\u201320 snooker season, and the first of four Home Nations Series events. The event followed the China Championship and preceded the World Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288827-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 English Open (snooker), Format\nStuart Bingham, who defeated Mark Davis 9\u20137 in the 2018 final was the defending champion. All matches were played as the best of 7 frames until the quarter-finals, at which point the number increased: 9 in the quarter-finals; 11 in the semi-finals; and the best of 19 frames in the final. Chinese sports prediction website 19.com sponsored the event, which was broadcast by Quest in the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland; in Europe by Eurosport; NowTV in Hong Kong; Superstars Online, Youku and Zhibo.tv in China; DAZN in Canada; Truesport in Thailand and Sky Sport in New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288827-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 English Open (snooker), Format, Prize fund\nThe event's total prize fund was a total of \u00a3405,000, with the winner receiving \u00a370,000. The breakdown of prize money for the tournament is shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288827-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 English Open (snooker), Summary\nRounds one to four were played between 14 and 17 October as the best of seven frames. Tian Pengfei defeated Gerard Greene, Alan McManus and Dominic Dale to reach the last 16 round. He met Si Jiahui, who had defeated the defending champion Stuart Bingham in the second round 4\u20131. Tian completed a whitewash over Si Jiahui. Tom Ford, seeded 24, completed 4\u20130 wins over Peter Lines and Lu Ning before defeating Kyren Wilson 4\u20132. In the last 16, Ford played Shaun Murphy, and made a maximum break in the final frame to win the match 4\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288827-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 English Open (snooker), Summary\nTwelfth seed David Gilbert defeated Stuart Carrington, amateur Ryan Davies, Kurt Maflin to meet Zhao Xintong in the last 16, which he won 4\u20133. Ricky Walden received a bye in his second round match against Sam Craigie, after Craigie failed to arrive before defeating Michael Holt 4\u20133 to reach the last 16. There he met Thepchaiya Un-Nooh and won 4\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288827-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 English Open (snooker), Summary\nChinese player Mei Xiwen defeated Yan Bingtao, Li Hang and Elliot Slessor. He met five-time World Snooker Championship winner Ronnie O'Sullivan, defeating him 4\u20133. Mark Selby, ranked sixth defeated Barry Pinches, Martin O'Donnell and Matthew Selt before defeating Xiao Guodong 4\u20131 to reach the quarter-finals. Mark Allen completed two whitewashes over Andy Lee and tenth seed Barry Hawkins to progress to the quarter-finals. World number 80 Lee Walker defeated Chen Zifan and Robbie Williams to play world number one Judd Trump in the last 32. Trump did not pot a ball in the opening two frames as Walker won the match 4\u20132, and defeated Gary Wilson to reach the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288827-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 English Open (snooker), Summary\nThe quarter-finals were played on 18\u00a0October as the best of 9 frames. Ford completed a 5-0 whitewash over Tian. Allen defeated Walker, who won only frame 5. Selby defeated Mei, who had led by three frames. The match between Gilbert and Walden went to a deciding frame as Gilbert won 5\u20134. The semi-finals were played as the best of 11 frames on 19 October. The first was held as Gilbert defeated Ford 6\u20133. Allen and Selby faced off in the second semi-final, as Selby led 3\u20131 but later trailed 3\u20135. Selby took the last three frames to win the match 6\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288827-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 English Open (snooker), Summary\nThe final was played on 20\u00a0October between Selby and Gilbert, as the best of 17 frames held over two sessions. Selby won the first five frames with breaks of 88, 68, 79 and 85 before Gilbert won frame six with a century break. Selby made a break of 130 in frame seven, before a 97 in the last frame of the session put him 7\u20131 up. Selby won both of the two sessions in the second session, with a century break in frame 10 to win 9\u20131. After the win, Selby commented, \"It's been a long time since I won my last tournament\u00a0.. I've been second guessing myself wondering if I am doing things right.\" He also commented that Gilbert would win a ranking event soon. This was the 16th career ranking win for Selby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288827-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 English Open (snooker), Main draw\nThe results from the event are shown below. Seeded players have their seedings in brackets. Players highlighted in bold denote match winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288827-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 English Open (snooker), Century breaks\nA total of 71 century breaks were made during the event. The highest was a maximum break made by Ford in the final frame of his 4\u20133 win over Murphy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season\nThe 2019 English cricket season ran between 26 March and 26 September. It was the 120th in which the County Championship has been an official competition and featured first-class, one-day and Twenty20 cricket competitions throughout England and Wales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season\nThe season saw the 2019 Cricket World Cup played in the country between 30 May and 14 July, followed by an Ashes tour by Australia in August and September. Pakistan took part in a one-day tour before the World Cup and the England men's team will play a One Day International in Ireland and a Test match against Ireland at Lord's in the first Test between the two teams. The West Indies and Australian women's sides both had toured during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season\nThe 18 first-class counties was competed in the 2019 County Championship, One-Day Cup and T20 Blast competitions, whilst women's teams competed for the 2019 Women's Cricket Super League and for the Women's County Championship. The 2019 Minor Counties Championship and MCCA Knockout Trophy was competed for by the Minor Counties of England and Wales and club cricket had been played throughout both countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season\nThe season was the last before the scheduled introduction of a city based 100-ball competition by the ECB in 2020 and changed to the organisation of Minor County cricket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, International Tours\nThree men's international sides toured England and Wales during the season: Pakistan, Ireland and Australia. ODIs and t20s played against Pakistan, the first test match between England and Ireland, and the Ashes contested between England and Australia. The Ashes series played after the 2019 Cricket World Cup. The West Indies and Australian women's sides also toured the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, International Tours, Pakistan tour\nPakistan toured England during the end of April to play a complete limited overs leg, which consisted of an T20I and a five match ODI series ahead of the 2019 Cricket World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, International Tours, Pakistan tour\nPakistan played one-off T20I at Cardiff, in which England won by 7 wickets to kick off the limited overs tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, International Tours, Pakistan tour\nAfter played the one-off T20I, Pakistan played a 5 match ODI series, with England won all the matches except the first ODI which was ended in No result due to rain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, International Tours, Pakistan tour\nBefore both the limited over series, Pakistan played two List A macthes against Kent and Northamptonshire followed by an T20 match played against Leicestershire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, International Tours, Ireland tour\nIreland toured England to play a one-off four day test match, after played their inaugural test match against Pakistan in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, International Tours, Ireland tour\nEngland won the test by 143 runs, despite some unbelievable comebacks from both the teams throughout the test match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, International Tours, 2019 Ashes series\nAfter knocked out of 2019 Cricket World Cup, during August, Australia played the 2019 edition of the Ashes series. Earlier, in July, England played a one-off Test match against Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, International Tours, 2019 Ashes series\nAustralia retained the Ashes after winning the fourth Test to take an unassailable 2\u20131 lead in the series, but England's victory in the final Test meant the series was drawn 2\u20132, the first drawn Ashes series since 1972.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, International Tours, 2019 Ashes series\nBefore the series, Australia scheduled to play a first-class match against Australia A. Later, this match was replaced by a four-day intra squad match between Brad Haddin XII and Graeme Hick XII, which consisted of twelve Australian players each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, International Tours, 2019 Ashes series\nIn between, after completion of first test, Australia played a three-day match against Worcestershire. Likewise, before the fourth test also Australia played a three-day match against Derbyshire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, International Tours, West Indies women's tour\nThe West Indies women's cricket team toured England in June 2019 to play three Women ODIs and three Women T20Is. Before their visit to England, the West Indies women's team also toured Ireland to play three WT20I matches. England women won the WODI series 3\u20130. England also won the T20I series 1\u20130, after two matches were abandoned due to rain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 74], "content_span": [75, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, International Tours, Australia women's tour\nThe Australia women's cricket team toured England in June and July 2019 to play the England women's cricket team to contest the Women's Ashes. The tour consisted of three WODIs, one-off Test match and three WT20Is.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 72], "content_span": [73, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, International Tours, Australia women's tour\nAustralia women won the WODI series 3\u20130 taking 6\u20130 points, and the one-off Test match was drawn, giving Australia an unassailable 8\u20132 lead in the series, and retained the Women's Ashes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 72], "content_span": [73, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, International Tours, Australia women's tour\nLater, Australia went on to win the WT20I series 2\u20131, therefore retained the Ashes 12\u20134 in the points-based system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 72], "content_span": [73, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, World Cup\nThe 12th edition of the Cricket World Cup took place at 11 grounds across England and Wales between 30 May and 14 July, with the final scheduled to take place at Lord's. A total of 48 matches played in the tournament which was featured 10 international sides which qualified for the finals, with each team playing two round-robin matches with the top four sides qualifying for the two semi-final stage to determine the finalists. It was the fifth time that the Cricket World Cup had been held in the British Isles, following the 1975, 1979, 1983 and 1999 World Cups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, World Cup\nAfter six weeks of round-robin matches, which saw four games not have a result, India, Australia, England and New Zealand finished as the top four, with Pakistan missing out on net run rate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, World Cup\nIn the knockout stage, England and New Zealand won their respective semi-finals to qualify for the final, which was played at Lord's in London. The final ended in a tie after the match ended with both teams scoring 241 runs, followed by the first Super Over in an ODI, England won the title, their first, on the boundary countback rule after the Super Over also finished level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, MCCU matches\nThe period of matches began on 26 March and ended on 7 April with the first of three rounds of matches between first-class counties and the six Marylebone Cricket Club University teams. Each first-class county played one either a first-class match or a non first-class match against a university side before the start of the County Championship season in April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, MCCU matches\nIn the opening round of fixtures, Alastair Cook scored 150 not out for Essex against Cambridge MCCU, in his first match since retiring from Test cricket. The opening round also saw Somerset beat Cardiff MCCU by 568 runs, a record margin for a first-class match in England. In the third and final round of matches, England Test cricketer Haseeb Hameed scored a double century, albeit in a fixture without first-class status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, MCCU matches\nIn August 2019, the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) announced that the 2020 fixtures will be the last ones to have first-class status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, County Championship\nThe men's County Championship season was scheduled to begin on 5 April and to finish on 26 September with each team playing 14 matches. As in 2018, Division One had eight teams and Division Two had ten teams. Nottinghamshire will be relegated from Division One and three promoted from Division Two in order to create a larger Division One ahead of the 2020 Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, One-Day Cup\nThe One-Day Cup competition played in a block of matches starting on 17 April, had been brought forward to be played before the start of the World Cup. Teams was organised in two geographical divisions, with each team playing eight 50-over fixtures. Teams played every other team in their division with the final played at Lord's on 25 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, t20 Blast\nThe men's Twenty20 Cup competition played in a block of matches in the same geographical groups as the One-Day Cup. Group matches played in a block starting 18 July, each side playing 14 group-stage matches. Finals day scheduled for 21 September at Edgbaston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, Women's County Championship\nThe 2019 Women's County Championship played between 5 May and 2 June. Each of the eight sides in Division One of the Championship played seven one-day fixtures, once against each of the other teams. A separate Twenty20 competition followed the County Championship between 9 June and 30 June with teams organised into a different set of divisions. Each Division One team played eight matches, one against each of the other teams in the Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, Women's Super League\nThe group stages of the Women's Super League played between 6 August and 28 August with a finals day scheduled took place at Hove on 1 September. In 2019 each franchise played each other both home and away with 10 group matches per side. The competition was scheduled to be the last in the present format, with an eight team 100 ball competition planned for the 2020 season with a new set of teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, Minor Counties Competitions\nThe Minor Counties Championship ran from June to September with teams organised in two divisions based on their geographical location. Each team played six three-day matches against sides from within their division with the four-day final taking place at Banbury Cricket Club Ground in Oxfordshire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, Minor Counties Competitions\nThe Unicorns Knockout Trophy and the group stages of the Unicorns T20 Cup competition took place before the start of the Championship, beginning in May. The finals of both competitions wtook place at Wormsley Park in Buckinghamshire in August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288828-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 English cricket season, Minor Counties Competitions\nThis was the final year of the current format for Minor Counties competitions, with changes, including a change of name, scheduled to begin during 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288829-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Enugu State gubernatorial election\nThe 2019 Enugu State gubernatorial election was held on 9 March 2019. Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi who won his party (PDP) primaries unopposed, got re-elected for office, Choosing Hon Mrs Cecilia Ezeilo as his deputy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288829-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Enugu State gubernatorial election\nHis rival and major opposition party the All Progressives Congress had series of court orders and counter count orders disrupting its election performance after the emergence of Ayogu Eze as its candidate, Aggrieved members formed a faction of the party which led to the party having multiple candidates in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288829-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Enugu State gubernatorial election\nIfeanyi Ugwuanyi the candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) won in all the 17 local government areas and polled 449,935 votes to defeat his closest rival and candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Ayogu Eze, who scored 10,423 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288829-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Enugu State gubernatorial election, Electoral system\nThe Governor of Enugu State is elected using the plurality voting system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288829-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Enugu State gubernatorial election, Primary elections, PDP primaries\nIfeanyi Ugwuanyi emerged as his party flagbearer unopposed after all aspirants stepped down and he was voted for overwhelmingly by the 2,895 delegates who participated in the exercise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288829-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Enugu State gubernatorial election, Primary elections, APC primaries\nThe Apc primaries was marred by parallel elections one by the NWC faction of the Federal Government and the other one by loyalists of the state working committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288829-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Enugu State gubernatorial election, Results\n42 candidates took part in this contest with Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi the candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) winning the 17 local government areas and polling 449,935 votes to defeat his closest rival and candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Ayogu Eze, who scored 10,423 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288829-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Enugu State gubernatorial election, Results, By Local Government area\nThe exercise was carried out in 17 LGAs, with the Peoples Democratic Party having a clean sweep.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 74], "content_span": [75, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288830-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Epping Forest District Council election\nThe 2019 Epping Forest District Council election will take place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Epping Forest District Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288830-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Epping Forest District Council election, Ward Results\nFigures are compared to the last time these seats were contested in any election cycle for the Epping Forest District Council election, this is indicated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288831-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Epsom Derby\nThe 2019 Epsom Derby was the 240th annual running of the Derby horse race and took place at Epsom Downs Racecourse on 1 June 2019. The race was sponsored by Investec. The winner was the Coolmore Stud's bay colt Anthony Van Dyck, ridden by Seamie Heffernan and trained at Ballydoyle in Ireland by Aidan O'Brien.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288831-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Epsom Derby, Race synopsis, Entries and race build-up\nThe initial entry for the 2019 Epsom Derby, announced in December 2017, consisted of 338 yearlings whose owners paid \u00a3560 for each horse entered. The number of entries was an decrease of 110 on the initial entry for the 2018 race, and included 11 horses from the Godolphin organisation and 45 from the Coolmore Stud. Khalid Abdullah entered 18 horses and five-time winning owner Aga Khan IV had 22 entries. Queen Elizabeth II entered 5 horses for the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 58], "content_span": [59, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288831-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Epsom Derby, Race synopsis, Entries and race build-up\nA further 14 horses were added at the second entry stage in April 2019, at a cost to their owners of \u00a39,000 for each horse entered. The second entries included three from Ireland and three from Godolphin, including eventual runners Line of Duty and Madhmoon. The Blue Riband Trial Stakes at Epsom on 24 April offered a free Derby entry to the winner; however the successful horse in 2019, Cape of Good Hope was already amongst the Derby entries. A final entry stage took place in May 2019 when Dante Stakes winner Telecaster and Chester Vase winner Sir Dragonet were added to the field at a cost of \u00a385,000 each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 58], "content_span": [59, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288831-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Epsom Derby, Race synopsis, Entries and race build-up\nThe field for the 2019 Derby took on its final shape on Thursday 30 May when thirteen horses were declared to run with entries Cape of Good Hope and Surfman being withdrawn in favour of a run in the French equivalent race, the Prix du Jockey Club. The runners included seven trained by Aidan O'Brien. Sir Dragonet was favourite at the time of the declaration at odds of 11 to 4, with Broome and Telecaster just behind in the betting at 9 to 2 and 5 to 1 respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 58], "content_span": [59, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288831-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Epsom Derby, The race\nThe race started at 4:33 pm in bright sunshine on ground officially described as good to firm. Sovereign set the early pace from Norway with Telecaster and Circus Maximus close behind ahead of Line of Duty and Sir Dragonet. The order remained largely unchanged until the horses entered the straight, where Sovereign gave way to Norway and the chasing group fanned out to obtain racing room. Approaching the last quarter mile Sir Dragonet hit the front closely pressed by Madhmoon to his left, while Broome began to make rapid headway on the outside.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 26], "content_span": [27, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288831-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Epsom Derby, The race\nEntering the final furlong Sir Dragonet held a narrow lead over Madhmoon with Broome in third but new challengers emerged in the form of Anthony Van Dyck, who had been switched to the inside, and Japan who launched a run on the wide outside. In a \"blanket finish\" Anthony Van Dyck took the lead in the last 100 yards and prevailed by half a length with Madhmoon getting the better of Japan, Broome and Sir Dragonet in a four-way photo for second. Circus Maximus was four and a half lengths back in sixth, one place ahead of the first British-trained finisher Humanitarian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 26], "content_span": [27, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288831-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Epsom Derby, Full result\nWinner's time: 2 min 33.38 sec* The distances between the horses are shown in lengths or shorter; nse = nose; shd = short head.\u2020 Trainers are based in Great Britain unless indicated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288831-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Epsom Derby, Records\nAnthony Van Dyck gave Aidan O'Brien a seventh winner of the race after Galileo, High Chaparral, Camelot, Ruler of the World, Australia and Wings of Eagles, equaling the records of Robert Robson, John Porter and Fred Darling. The Coolmore partners Susan Magnier and Michael Tabor were winning the race for a record eighth time. The winning time of 2:33.38 was the seventh fastest time for the Derby at Epsom. The first six finishers were trained in Ireland, bettering the result of 2009 when the first five were Irish-trained. Seamie Heffernan won the race at his twelfth attempt, after finishing second in 2009 and 2010 and third in 2016 and 2017. Anthony Van Dyck's foaling date of 19 May was the latest of any Derby winner since Erhaab (24 May) in 1994.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288831-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Epsom Derby, Form analysis, Two-year-old races\nNotable runs by the future Derby participants as two-year-olds in 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 51], "content_span": [52, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288831-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Epsom Derby, Form analysis, Road to Epsom\nEarly-season appearances in 2018 and trial races prior to running in the Derby:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 46], "content_span": [47, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288831-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288832-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Erewash Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Erewash Borough Council election was held on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Erewash Borough Council in Derbyshire, England. The whole council was up for election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288833-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Eritrean Premier League\nThe 2019 Eritrean Premier League is the 2019 season of the Eritrean Premier League, the top-level football championship of Eritrea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288833-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Eritrean Premier League\nA total of 10 teams played in the Division A, also known as the Eritrea Superdivision Zoba Meakel (central region). The title was won by Red Sea FC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288834-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Erovnuli Liga\nThe 2019 Erovnuli Liga or Crystalbet Erovnuli Liga 2019 (formerly known as Umaglesi Liga) was the 31st season of top-tier football in Georgia. Saburtalo Tbilisi were the defending champions. The season began on 1 March 2019 and ended on 1 December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288834-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Erovnuli Liga, Results\nEach team will play the other nine teams home and away twice, for a total of 36 games each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288835-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Erovnuli Liga 2\nThe 2019 Erovnuli Liga 2 (formerly known as Pirveli Liga) was the 31st season of second tier football in Georgia. The season began on 2 March 2019 and ended on 30 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288835-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Erovnuli Liga 2, Teams and stadiums\n'* Tshkinvali are based in South Ossetia and not allowed to play their home games in the area due to safety reasons. Source:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288836-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Erste Bank Open\nThe 2019 Erste Bank Open was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 45th edition of the event, and part of the ATP Tour 500 Series of the 2019 ATP Tour. It was held at the Wiener Stadthalle in Vienna, Austria, from 21 October until 27 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288836-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288836-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288837-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Erste Bank Open \u2013 Doubles\nJoe Salisbury and Neal Skupski were the defending champions, but Skupski chose to compete in Basel instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288837-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Erste Bank Open \u2013 Doubles\nSalisbury played alongside Rajeev Ram and successfully defended the title, defeating \u0141ukasz Kubot and Marcelo Melo in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20137(5\u20137), [10\u20135].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288838-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Erste Bank Open \u2013 Singles\nKevin Anderson was the defending champion, but could not participate this year due to a knee injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288838-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Erste Bank Open \u2013 Singles\nDominic Thiem won the title, defeating Diego Schwartzman in the final, 3\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288839-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Eschborn\u2013Frankfurt\nThe 2019 Eschborn\u2013Frankfurt was a road cycling one-day race that took place on 1 May 2019 in Germany. It was the 58th edition of Eschborn\u2013Frankfurt and the 22nd event of the 2019 UCI World Tour. It was won in the sprint by Pascal Ackermann.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288839-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Eschborn\u2013Frankfurt, Teams\nIn total, twenty-two teams start the race. Each team delivered seven riders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288840-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Escuintla mayoral election\nThe 2019 Escuintla mayoral election will be held on 16 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288840-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Escuintla mayoral election\nThe elections will be held next to the presidential, legislative, municipal and Central American Parliament elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288840-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Escuintla mayoral election\nThe current mayor Abraham Rivera Est\u00e9vez, elected by the extinct Renewed Democratic Liberty, is running for re-election with Victoria party. Victoria has been criticized for being considered an \"electoral vehicle\" used by the Rivera family.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288841-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Esiliiga\nThe 2019 Esiliiga was the 29th season of the Esiliiga, second tier of Estonian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288841-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Esiliiga, Teams\nA total of 10 teams were contesting the league, including 6 sides from the 2018 season, one relegated from 2018 Meistriliiga and three promoted from the 2018 Esiliiga B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 20], "content_span": [21, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288841-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Esiliiga, Teams\nThe 2017 Esiliiga and 2018 Esiliiga champions Maardu Linnameeskond got promoted to the highest tier for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 20], "content_span": [21, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288841-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Esiliiga, Teams\nN\u00f5mme Kalju FC U21 was the first team to suffer relegation after just returning to Esiliiga. Keila JK also immediately returned to Esiliiga B after losing the relegation play-offs to Kohtla-J\u00e4rve JK J\u00e4rve. JK Tallinna Kalev U21 narrowly avoided getting relegated in their debut season thanks to Tartu FC Santos' decision to start the new season in the fourth tier. The other two teams getting promoted were Tallinna JK Legion, who went almost unbeaten in their previous season, and Tartu JK Tammeka U21, who will be making their debut in Esiliiga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 20], "content_span": [21, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288841-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Esiliiga, League table, Relegation play-offs\nAt season's end the 8th placed club of Esiliiga plays a two-legged play-off with the 3rd placed team of the Esiliiga B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 49], "content_span": [50, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288842-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Esiliiga B\nThe 2019 Esiliiga B were the 7th season of the Esiliiga B, third-highest Estonian league for association football clubs, since its establishment in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288842-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Esiliiga B, Teams\nOf the 10 participating teams 5 remained following the 2018 Esiliiga B. The 2018 champions Legion, runners-up Tammeka U21 and 3rd placed J\u00e4rve were promoted to Esiliiga, while 9th and 10th placed Ajax and Flora U19 were relegated to II liiga. They are replaced by Viimsi JK, who returned after a year in the lower leagues, P\u00f5hja-Tallinna JK Volta and Tabasalu JK, who are making their debut in the top leagues. Volta and Viimsi both finished the last season on top of their leagues and Tabasalu defeated Ajax in the play-offs. The teams which were relegated from higher tiers were N\u00f5mme Kalju FC U21 and Keila JK, who both got to play a season in Esiliiga. Keila lost in the play-offs against J\u00e4rve.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288843-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Estonian Small Cup\nThe 2019 Estonian Small Cup is the 10th season of the Estonian amateur football knockout tournament. The tournament began in March 2019, and the final will take place in September 2019 at the A. Le Coq Arena, Tallinn. Saue JK are the current cup holders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288843-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Estonian Small Cup, First Round (1/64)\nThe draw was made by Estonian Football Association on 13 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288843-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Estonian Small Cup, First Round (1/64), Byes\nThese teams were not drawn and secured a place in the second round without playing:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288843-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Estonian Small Cup, Second round (1/32)\nThe draw was made by Estonian Football Association on 15 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288843-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Estonian Small Cup, Third round (1/16)\nThe draw was made by Estonian Football Association on 29 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288843-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Estonian Small Cup, Fourth round (1/8)\nThe draw was made by Estonian Football Association on 17 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288844-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Estonian parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Estonia on 3 March 2019. The Reform Party remained the largest party, gaining four seats for a total of 34 and the Conservative People's Party had the largest gain overall, increasing their seat count by 12 to a total of 19 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288844-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Estonian parliamentary election, Electoral system\nThe 101 members of the Riigikogu are elected by proportional representation in twelve multi-member constituencies. Seats are allocated using a modified D'Hondt method. Parties have to pass a nationwide threshold of 5% to win seats. If the number of votes cast for an individual candidate exceeds or equals the simple quota in their constituency (obtained by dividing the number of valid votes cast in the electoral district by the number of seats in the district), they are deemed elected. The remaining seats are allocated based on each party's share of the vote and the number of votes received by individual candidates. Any seats not allocated at the constituency level are filled using a closed list presented by each party at the national level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 805]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288844-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Estonian parliamentary election, Government formation\nHaving won the most seats, the Reform Party took the lead in forming a new government. Kallas stated that she would be seeking a three-party coalition with Isamaa and the Social Democratic Party, or a two-party coalition with the Centre Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288844-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Estonian parliamentary election, Government formation\nOn 6 March, the Reform Party announced that they would begin talks with the Centre Party. Two days later the Centre Party declined the offer, citing differences of opinion on tax matters and claiming that the Reform Party's demands were too ultimatum-like.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288844-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Estonian parliamentary election, Government formation\nAfter the Centre Party's rejection, the Reform Party invited the Social Democrats and Isamaa to negotiations. The Reform party had previously said that the poor relationship between two in the previous government would be unhelpful for a future coalition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288844-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Estonian parliamentary election, Government formation\nOn 11 March, the Centre Party announced that it would begin parallel coalition talks with Isamaa and the Conservative People's Party, while criticizing the Reform Party of \"extreme uncertainty\" in formation of a coalition. Isamaa rejected the Reform Party's proposal and accepted the Centre Party's proposal. At the same time the Conservative People's Party also decided to begin coalition talks with Centre and Isamaa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288844-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Estonian parliamentary election, Government formation, Coalition attempt by the Centre Party\nAfter having turned down an offer by the Reform party for coalition talks, the head of the Centre Party, J\u00fcri Ratas, entered into talks with Isamaa and the Conservative People's Party (EKRE), the latter being widely considered a far-right party. Ratas had previously ruled out forming a coalition with EKRE during the election campaign because of its hostile views.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 97], "content_span": [98, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288844-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Estonian parliamentary election, Government formation, Coalition attempt by the Centre Party\nWhen I said before that it would be impossible for me to cooperate with a political party which cuts heads off, doesn't agree to certain nationalities or races, then EKRE has indeed said those things.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 97], "content_span": [98, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288844-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Estonian parliamentary election, Government formation, Coalition attempt by the Centre Party\nThe subsequent reversal of his stance and the inclusion of EKRE by Ratas in coalition talks after the elections was met with local and international criticism. In a poll conducted after the start of the coalition talks, the party of J\u00fcri Ratas further lost support.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 97], "content_span": [98, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288844-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Estonian parliamentary election, Government formation, Coalition attempt by the Centre Party\nCritics of the decision to include the Conservative People's Party in a coalition government claimed that Ratas is willing to sacrifice the Centre Party's values, the confidence of Centre Party voters and the stability of the country to keep his position as prime minister. Ratas has countered that his first duty is to look for ways to get his party included in the government in order to be able to work for the benefit of his voters, and that the coalition would continue to firmly support the EU and NATO, and would be sending out messages of tolerance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 97], "content_span": [98, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288844-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Estonian parliamentary election, Government formation, Coalition attempt by the Centre Party\nSome key members and popular candidates of Ratas' Centre Party have been critical of the decision, with Raimond Kaljulaid leaving the party's governing board in protest. Yana Toom, a member of the party and a party representative in the European Parliament, expressed criticism of the decision. Mihhail K\u00f5lvart, popular among Russian-speaking voters, said the Centre Party cannot govern with the Conservative People's policy on languages in Estonia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 97], "content_span": [98, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288844-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Estonian parliamentary election, Government formation, Coalition attempt by the Centre Party\nThe decision to include the Conservative People's Party (EKRE) was also criticised in a letter written by Guy Verhofstadt, leader of the ALDE group in the European Parliament (the group in which Ratas' Centre Party is a member), suggesting that Ratas should break off coalition talks with the national-conservative EKRE. Ratas criticised Verhofstadt's letter in the Estonian media.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 97], "content_span": [98, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288844-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Estonian parliamentary election, Government formation, Coalition attempt by the Centre Party\nBrussels should not dictate to Estonia what our new coalition should be like.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 97], "content_span": [98, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288844-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Estonian parliamentary election, Government formation, Coalition attempt by the Centre Party\nOn 6 April, coalition negotiations ended between the Centre Party, EKRE, and Isamaa, after the parties agreed on a coalition plan. The parties agreed that J\u00fcri Ratas would retain the role of prime minister and that there would be four name and role changes to ministerial portfolios. The parties also agreed that the new cabinet will contain fifteen ministries (including the Prime Minister), with each party receiving a total of five ministries. It is the first time that a far-right party is poised to enter Estonia's government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 97], "content_span": [98, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288844-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Estonian parliamentary election, Government formation, Coalition attempt by the Centre Party\nOn 16 April, President Kersti Kaljulaid officially gave J\u00fcri Ratas the mandate to form the next government, after Kallas failed to get parliament's approval to form a government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 97], "content_span": [98, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288844-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Estonian parliamentary election, Government formation, Coalition attempt by the Reform Party\nAfter the announcement, the leader of Reform, Kaja Kallas, who was tasked first by President Kersti Kaljulaid to form a coalition, said that she intended to hold a vote in the Riigikogu on 15 April on a coalition deal that she was trying to form. Kallas stated that she was considering two options, either inviting another party (except EKRE) to join the coalition or forming a minority government with the Social Democrats. There was also another possible option, with Reform forming a coalition with the Social Democrats and receiving backing from some Centre and Isamaa MPs who expressed their opposition about forming a government with EKRE, but \"Kallas has not said that such a set-up was on the cards.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 97], "content_span": [98, 806]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288844-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Estonian parliamentary election, Government formation, Coalition voting process\nOn 15 April, Estonia's parliament voted against the Reform Party's coalition attempt, with 45 MPs voting in favor, 53 voting against, 2 abstentions, and 1 absent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 84], "content_span": [85, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288844-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Estonian parliamentary election, Government formation, Coalition voting process\nOn 17 April, Estonia's parliament approved the proposed coalition between Centre, EKRE and Isamaa, with a vote of 55\u201344, giving J\u00fcri Ratas the chance to form a government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 84], "content_span": [85, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288844-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Estonian parliamentary election, Government formation, Coalition voting process\nJ\u00fcri Ratas' second cabinet, containing the Centre Party, EKRE and Isamaa, was sworn in on 29 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 84], "content_span": [85, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288845-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Estoril Open\nThe 2019 Estoril Open (also known as the Millennium Estoril Open for sponsorship purposes) was a professional men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the fifth edition of the Estoril Open, and part of the ATP Tour 250 series of the 2019 ATP Tour. The event took place at the Clube de T\u00e9nis do Estoril in Cascais, Portugal, from April 29 through May 5, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288845-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Estoril 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-00288845-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Estoril 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-00288846-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Estoril Open \u2013 Doubles\nKyle Edmund and Cameron Norrie were the defending champions, but chose not to participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288846-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Estoril Open \u2013 Doubles\nJ\u00e9r\u00e9my Chardy and Fabrice Martin won the title, defeating Luke Bambridge and Jonny O'Mara in the final, 7\u20135, 7\u20136(7\u20133).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288847-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Estoril Open \u2013 Singles\nJo\u00e3o Sousa was the defending champion, but lost in the second round to David Goffin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288847-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Estoril Open \u2013 Singles\nStefanos Tsitsipas won the title, defeating Pablo Cuevas in the final, 6\u20133, 7\u20136(7\u20134).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288847-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Estoril Open \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288848-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ethiopian Athletics Championships\nThe 2019 Ethiopian Athletics Championships (Amharic: 48\u129b\u12cd \u12e8\u12a2\u1275\u12ee\u1335\u12eb \u12a0\u1275\u120c\u1272\u12ad\u1235 \u123b\u121d\u1352\u12ee\u1293) was the 48th edition of the national outdoor track and field championships for Ethiopia. It took place from 7\u201312 May 2019 in Addis Ababa at the Addis Ababa Stadium. A total of 40 events were contested by 1376 athletes (including 563 women).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288848-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ethiopian Athletics Championships\nOromia Region won the men's team competition, while Mekelakeya won both the women's team and overall team titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League\nThe 2019 Euro Beach Soccer League (EBSL) was the 22nd edition of the Euro Beach Soccer League, the annual, premier competition in European beach soccer contested between men's national teams. It was organised by Beach Soccer Worldwide (BSWW), in a league and play-off format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League\nThis season, the competing teams continued to take part in two divisions: the top tier (Division A) and the bottom tier (Division B). 12 teams continued to contest Division A; all twelve teams returned from last season's top tier as none were relegated. Division B accommodated a record 16 nations: 14 nations who did not gain promotion from last season, Finland who made their debut, and the Netherlands who returned after an absence from competing in recent years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League\nDue to the saturated 2019 international beach soccer calendar for European teams, this season was shortened considerably compared to the usual program. A total of just two stages of fixtures were scheduled during the regular season. Each team from Division A played in just one stage (compared to the usual two) whilst each team in Division B also played in one. At each stage the participating nations earned points for the overall league tables.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League\nAt the end of the regular season, according to the league tables, the eight best teams in Division A advanced to the post-season event, the Superfinal, to compete to become the winners of this year's EBSL. Meanwhile, the top seven teams in Division B (the four group winners and three best runners-up) and the team ranked bottom of Division A played in a different post-season event, the Promotion Final, to try to earn a spot in Division A next year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League\nAzerbaijan, the defending Division A team in the Promotion Final, beat Kazakhstan in the final to win the event, therefore retaining their Division A status for next season; for the second year running, no Division B nation earned promotion. Italy were the defending champions but were knocked out of title-winning contention in the group stage of the Superfinal, ultimately finishing fourth in the post-season event. The concluding match of the Superfinal was contested between Russia and Portugal, who were both looking to claim a record sixth European title. Portugal, on home sand, came from 2\u20130 down to win the match and claim their sixth EBSL crown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, Calendar and locations\nSimilarly to the 2008 and 2015 editions, this season's regular season schedule was truncated, down to just two stages, in order to accommodate the additional events taking up space in the international calendar, including Division A teams competing in just one stage each, compared to the usual two stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, Teams\nThe following 28 teams entered this season, divided into divisions A and B as shown (12 in Division A, 16 in Division B).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, Teams\nThe numbers in parentheses show the European ranking of each team prior to the start of the season, out of 36 nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, Stage 1 (Nazar\u00e9, 5\u20137 July)\nMatches are listed as local time in Nazar\u00e9, WEST (UTC+1)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, Stage 1 (Nazar\u00e9, 5\u20137 July)\nAll matches took place at the Est\u00e1dio do Viveiro on Praia de Nazar\u00e9 (Nazar\u00e9 Beach), in tandem with the hosting of the 2019 Women's Euro Beach Soccer Cup. The area has a capacity of 2,200.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, Stage 1 (Nazar\u00e9, 5\u20137 July)\nDuring this round, Georgia won their first ever matches in the EBSL, ultimately leading to a first stage title (in either division), meanwhile Spain reached a milestone of winning their 25th stage title. Goalkeeper Valentin Jaeggy made his 300th appearance for Switzerland on day 3, marked with a commemorative jersey presented on-field by fellow players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, Stage 1 (Nazar\u00e9, 5\u20137 July), Division B\nGeorgia & Bulgaria; Norway & Denmark are ranked based on their head-to-head results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, Stage 1 (Nazar\u00e9, 5\u20137 July), Awards\nThe following were presented after the conclusion of the final day's matches. Individual awards apply to Division A only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, Stage 2 (Catania, 16\u201318 August)\nMatches are listed as local time in Catania, CEST (UTC+2)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, Stage 2 (Catania, 16\u201318 August)\nAll matches took place at the Arena Beach Stadium on the \"Spiaggia libera numero 1\" (Free beach number 1) section of Playa di Catania (Catania Beach), with a capacity of approximately 2,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, Stage 2 (Catania, 16\u201318 August), Division B, Group 1\nSerbia withdrew on 16 August due to administrative issues; their opponents received 3\u20130 walkover wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 83], "content_span": [84, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, Stage 2 (Catania, 16\u201318 August), Awards\nThe following were presented after the conclusion of the final day's matches. Individual awards apply to Division A only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 70], "content_span": [71, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, League tables\nRanking & tie-breaking criteria: Division A \u2013 1. Points earned 2. Highest group placement 3. Goal difference 4. Goals scored / Division B \u2013 1. Highest group placement 2. Points earned 3. Goal difference 4. Goals scored 5. Least yellow cards", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, Promotion Final (Figueira da Foz, 5\u20138 September)\nMatches are listed as local time in Figueira da Foz, WEST (UTC+1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 79], "content_span": [80, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, Promotion Final (Figueira da Foz, 5\u20138 September)\nAll matches took place at a purpose built stadium constructed between 12 August and 3 September at the Beach Sports Complex on Praia de Buarcos (Buarcos Beach), with a capacity of 2,500.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 79], "content_span": [80, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, Promotion Final (Figueira da Foz, 5\u20138 September)\nThe top seven teams from Division B and the team bottom of Division A, as per the end of regular season league tables, played in the Promotion Final; the winner earned a place in Division A in the 2020 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 79], "content_span": [80, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, Promotion Final (Figueira da Foz, 5\u20138 September), Qualified teams\nThe teams in bold qualified as Division B regular season group winners; those in italics qualified as the three best group runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 96], "content_span": [97, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, Promotion Final (Figueira da Foz, 5\u20138 September), Qualified teams\nThe team in green attempted to retain their position in Division A, having finished bottom of the regular season table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 96], "content_span": [97, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, Promotion Final (Figueira da Foz, 5\u20138 September), Group stage, Group 2\nKazakhstan, Greece & Hungary are ranked based on their head-to-head results. (GD: Kaz +3; Gre +1; Hun \u20134)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 101], "content_span": [102, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, Promotion Final (Figueira da Foz, 5\u20138 September), Final standings\nAzerbaijan won the event to successfully retain their Division A status for the 2020 EBSL season; this was the first time since the Promotion Final was introduced in 2009 that the defending Division A team successfully won the event in consecutive seasons (following Germany's successful defence of their top tier membership in 2018).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 96], "content_span": [97, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, Promotion Final (Figueira da Foz, 5\u20138 September), Final standings\nConsequently, no Division B team earned promotion to the top division and no Division A team was relegated this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 96], "content_span": [97, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, Superfinal (Figueira da Foz, 5\u20138 September)\nMatches are listed as local time in Figueira da Foz, WEST (UTC+1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 74], "content_span": [75, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, Superfinal (Figueira da Foz, 5\u20138 September)\nAll matches took place at a purpose built stadium constructed between 12 August and 3 September at the Beach Sports Complex on Praia de Buarcos (Buarcos Beach), with a capacity of 2,500.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 74], "content_span": [75, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, Superfinal (Figueira da Foz, 5\u20138 September)\nThe winners of the Superfinal are crowned 2019 EBSL champions. No teams made their debut in the Superfinal, however Turkey made their first appearance in 17 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 74], "content_span": [75, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, Superfinal (Figueira da Foz, 5\u20138 September), Qualified teams\nThe top eight teams from Division A, as per the end of regular season league table, qualified for the Superfinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, Superfinal (Figueira da Foz, 5\u20138 September), Final standings\nFinalists Russia and Portugal faced each other for a record fourth time in an EBSL title-decider (no fixture has been played more in the Sueprfinal match), with Russia having won all three previous meetings (2009, 2013, 2017); both teams were aiming to win a record sixth EBSL title, surpassing the current five title record shared with Spain who first reached the milestone in 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, Season statistics (Division A), Top scorers\nThe following tables list the top 12 scorers in Division A, including goals scored in both the regular and post season events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 74], "content_span": [75, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, Season statistics (Division A), Most assists\nThe following tables list the top 10 assistants in Division A including assists provided in both the regular and post season events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 75], "content_span": [76, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288849-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Beach Soccer League, Season statistics (Division A), Discipline\nThe following table lists the players and teams who received the most penalties for disciplinary infringements in both the regular and post season events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288850-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Tour season\nThe 2019 Euro Tour Season was a professional pool series of events on the Euro Tour held in 2019. The season featured six tournament for both men and five for women, with the first being the Leende Open and the last being the Antalya Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288850-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Tour season, Rankings\nRankings for the events featured points awarded for players final positions in events with the following scores:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288850-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Tour season, Rankings, Men's\nBelow is a list of the 50 players in terms of ranking points for the 2019 season. Rankings for the Euro Tour consist of the last seven tournaments, so the final event of 2018 \u2013 the 2018 Treviso Open is included. Joshua Filler finished the season as the number one rated player, finishing as a quarter-finalist or better in five of the six events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288851-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Winners Cup\nThe 2019 Euro Winners Cup was the seventh edition of the Euro Winners Cup (EWC), an annual continental beach soccer tournament for men's top-division European clubs. The championship is the sport's version of the better known UEFA Champions League in association football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288851-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Winners Cup\nOrganised by Beach Soccer Worldwide (BSWW), the tournament was held in Nazar\u00e9, Portugal from 30 May till 9 June 2019, consisting of a preliminary qualifying round and the competition proper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288851-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Winners Cup\nFollowing the qualifying round, the competition proper began with a round robin group stage. At its conclusion, the best teams progressed to the knockout stage, a series of single elimination games to determine the winners, starting with the Round of 16 and ending with the final. Consolation matches were also played to determine other final rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288851-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Winners Cup\nBraga of Portugal were the defending champions and successfully defended their title after beating KP \u0141\u00f3d\u017a of Poland 6-0 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288851-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Winners Cup, Teams\nA record 60 teams from 24 countries have entered the championship; 36 qualify straight into the Main Round whilst 24 compete in the Euro Winners Challenge to attempt to qualify for the competition proper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288851-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Winners Cup, Venues\nTwo venues were used in one host city: Nazar\u00e9, Leiria District, Portugal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288851-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Winners Cup, Euro Challenge Cup\nThe Euro Winners Challenge is open to all clubs who did not automatically qualify for the Main Round as domestic league champions. At least eight teams will qualify for the Euro Winners Cup. Those will be distributed in two groups of four teams. The two top teams will progress to the Round of 16, and the winner of that round will enter the quarterfinals. Beside that, the winner team will be champion of the Euro Winners Challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288851-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Winners Cup, Euro Challenge Cup, Subsequent rounds, Second group stage\nThe eight qualifiers progressed to the second group stage that took place as part of the Main Round of the EWC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 80], "content_span": [81, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288851-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Winners Cup, Euro Challenge Cup, Subsequent rounds, Final\nThe best two teams of the second group stage advanced to the final that took place as part of the Round of 16 of the EWC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 67], "content_span": [68, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288851-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Euro Winners Cup, Top goalscorers\nGoals scored in both the competition proper and the preliminary round are counted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288852-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 EuroCup Finals\nThe 2019 EuroCup Finals will be the concluding games of the 2018\u201319 EuroCup season, the 17th season of Europe's secondary club basketball tournament organised by Euroleague Basketball, the 11th season since it was renamed from the ULEB Cup to the EuroCup, and the third season under the title sponsorship name of 7DAYS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288852-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 EuroCup Finals\nThe first leg played at the Fuente de San Luis arena in Valencia, Spain, on 9 April 2019, the second leg played at the Mercedes-Benz Arena in Berlin, Germany, on 12 April 2019 and the third leg, if necessary, was be played again at the Fuente de San Luis arena in Valencia, Spain, on 15 April 2019, between Spanish side Valencia Basket and German side Alba Berlin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288852-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 EuroCup Finals\nIt will be the sixth Finals appearance in the competition for Valencia Basket and the second ever final appearance in EuroCup for Alba Berlin. Both teams met previously in the 2010 Finals played in Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain, and Valencia beat the Germans by 67\u201344.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288852-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 EuroCup Finals\nValencia Basket has won the series 2-1 and also achieved qualification to the 2019\u201320 EuroLeague.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288852-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 EuroCup Finals, Road to the Finals\nNote: In the table, the score of the finalist is given first (H = home; A = away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288853-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 EuroEyes Cyclassics\nThe 2019 EuroEyes Cyclassics was a road cycling one-day race that took place on 25 August 2019 in Germany. It was the 24th edition of EuroEyes Cyclassics and the 33rd event of the 2019 UCI World Tour. It was won for the third year in a row by Elia Viviani in the sprint.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288853-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 EuroEyes Cyclassics, Teams\nTwenty teams of up to seven riders will be participating in the race:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288854-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 EuroHockey Club Champions Cup\nThe 2019 EuroHockey Club Champions Cup was the 47th and last edition of the premier European competition for women's field hockey clubs. HC Den Bosch were the defending champions, having won their 16th title in the 2018 EuroHockey Club Champions Cup. The tournament took place from 19 to 22 April 2019 at the Wagener Stadium in Amstelveen, Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288855-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 EuroLeague Final Four\nThe 2019 EuroLeague Final Four was the concluding EuroLeague Final Four tournament of the 2018\u201319 EuroLeague season, the 62nd season of Europe's premier club basketball tournament, and the 19th season since it was first organised by Euroleague Basketball. It was the 32nd Final Four of the modern EuroLeague Final Four era (1988\u2013present), and the 34th time overall that the competition has concluded with a final four format. The Final Four was played at the Fernando Buesa Arena in Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain, on 17 and 19 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288855-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 EuroLeague Final Four, Venue\nOn May 15, 2018, Euroleague Basketball announced that the Final Four will be held in the Fernando Buesa Arena in Vitoria-Gasteiz. It was the first time ever the event would be hosted in Vitoria. The arena hosted the 1996 FIBA Saporta Cup Final, in which local Saski Baskonia won the title and also hosted the 2010 EuroCup Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288855-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 EuroLeague Final Four, Venue\nThe Final Eight of the Copa del Rey (Spanish Cup) was played four times at Buesa Arena (2000, 2002, 2008 and 2013).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288855-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 EuroLeague Final Four, Venue\nOn 9 April 2012, at the game of Caja Laboral against Real Madrid, Fernando Buesa Arena registered the record of attendance in a basketball game of the Spanish Liga ACB with 15,504 spectators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288855-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 EuroLeague Final Four, Background, Real Madrid\nReal Madrid failed to defend the title after finishing the regular season in the third position, with a 22\u20138 record, and being the first qualified team by beating Panathinaikos OPAP 3\u20130 in the playoffs. This was their seventh Final Four in the last nine editions and the third consecutive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288855-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 EuroLeague Final Four, Background, Real Madrid\nCoach Pablo Laso could have won his third title in his sixth Final Four appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288855-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 EuroLeague Final Four, Semifinals, Semifinal A\nTurkish champions Fenerbah\u00e7e Beko returned to the Final Four to make it their fifth straight appearance. Led by head coach \u017deljko Obradovi\u0107, the all-time record holder for most EuroLeague championships won by a head coach, it defeated \u017dalgiris Kaunas 3\u20131 in the play-offs, to clinch a semi-final spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288855-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 EuroLeague Final Four, Semifinals, Semifinal A\nAnadolu Efes qualified for its first Final Four since 2001, this being their third appearance in total, after finishing the regular season in the 16 th (last) place the previous year. The club beat Barcelona Lassa 3\u20132 in the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288855-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 EuroLeague Final Four, Semifinals, Semifinal A\nLarkin set a new EuroLeague Final Four record for Performance Index Rating with 43.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288855-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 EuroLeague Final Four, Semifinals, Semifinal B\nRussian champions CSKA Moscow returned to the Final Four to make it their eighth consecutive Final Four appearance. The club beat Kirolbet Baskonia 3\u20131 in the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288855-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 EuroLeague Final Four, Semifinals, Semifinal B\nDefending Euroleague and spanish champions Real Madrid would play its third consecutive Final Four appearance. The match would be a re-match of the 2018 Semifinal A, which Real Madrid won on their way to their 10th title. Real Madrid beat Panathinaikos OPAP 3\u20130 in the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288855-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 EuroLeague Final Four, Third place game\nFenerbah\u00e7e and Real Madrid faced off in a re-match of the 2018 championship game. Facundo Campazzo set an all-time record for assists in a Final Four game, with 15. He surpassed Terrell McIntyre's record from 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288855-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 EuroLeague Final Four, Championship game\nThe seven-time EuroLeague champions CSKA Moscow advanced to the championship game for the seventh time and first since 2016 EuroLeague Final Four. Anadolu Efes advance to the Final Four Championship Game for the first time in their history, having finished third in both previous Euroleague Final Four participations. Remarkable was that in the previous season, Efes finished sixteenth and last in the EuroLeague.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288855-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 EuroLeague Final Four, Championship game\nShane Larkin broke the record for most points scored in a Final Four, with 59 total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288856-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 EuroLeague Playoffs\nThe 2018\u201319 EuroLeague Playoffs were played from 16 April 2019 to 1 May. Eight teams competed in the Playoffs. The winners qualified for the 2019 EuroLeague Final Four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288856-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 EuroLeague Playoffs, Format\nIn the playoffs, series are best-of-five, so the first team to win three games wins the series. A 2\u20132\u20131 format will be used \u2013 the team with home-court advantage will play games 1, 2 and 5 at home while their opponents will host games 3 and 4. Games 4 and 5 will only be played when necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288857-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Euroformula Open Championship\nThe 2019 Euroformula Open Championship was a multi-event motor racing championship for single-seat open wheel formula racing cars that held across Europe. The championship features drivers competing in two-litre Formula Three racing cars built by Italian constructor Dallara which conform to the technical regulations, or formula, for the championship. It was the sixth Euroformula Open Championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288857-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Euroformula Open Championship\nFor the first time since its inception, the championship featured multiple power unit manufacturers, allowing the use of Mercedes and Volkswagen engines. It was intended to have equalised performance of the powerplants, in terms of both power and torque like in the GT3 racing. But the equalisation was not successful as the teams that used Toyota engine which was tuned by Piedrafita had a lack of power in comparison with Mercedes and Volkswagen engines. The situation led to the withdrawal of the teams after the first round and switching to the Mercedes and Volkswagen engine prior round at Spa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288857-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Euroformula Open Championship\nTeam Motopark driver Marino Sato won the title after the first race at Barcelona, having won eight races, including series of six wins in row in Spa, Hungaroring and Spielberg, while his team clinched the title after the second Spielberg race. Top rookie Liam Lawson was Sato's closest challenger, winning four races throughout the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288857-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Euroformula Open Championship\nHis fellow Red Bull-staplemate Yuki Tsunoda won a race at the Hockenheimring, Teppei Natori was victorious in the second race at Catalunya, Billy Monger became the first double-amputee to win a race in single-seaters when he won the Pau Grand Prix, and Toshiki Oyu won both races at a one-off appearance in Silverstone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288857-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Euroformula Open Championship, Race calendar and results\nAn eight-round provisional calendar was revealed on 31 August 2018. The calendar features six circuits from 2018 schedule. While Aut\u00f3dromo do Estoril and Circuito de Jerez are not present in the current version of the calendar, Hockenheim made debut as Euroformula Open Championship round. The date of the Spa round was altered on 29 November 2018. On 10 December 2018 was announced that Pau Grand Prix will make debut in the extended nine-round Euroformula Open Championship schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288857-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Euroformula Open Championship, Championship standings, Drivers' championship\nOnly the fifteen best race results counted towards the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 81], "content_span": [82, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288858-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Europe Top 16 Cup\nThe 2019 Europe Top 16 Cup (also referred to as the 2019 CCB Europe Top 16 Cup for sponsorship reasons) was a table tennis competition held from 2\u20133 February in Montreux, Switzerland, organised under the authority of the European Table Tennis Union (ETTU). It was the 48th edition of the event, and the fourth time that it had been held in Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288858-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Europe Top 16 Cup\nEvents were held in men's singles and women's singles, and the three medallists in each event qualified for the 2019 Men's and Women's World Cups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288858-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Europe Top 16 Cup, Qualification\nIn total, 16 players qualified for both the men's and women's singles:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288858-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Europe Top 16 Cup, Qualification\nA maximum of two players from each association could qualify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288858-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Europe Top 16 Cup, Men's singles, Seeding\nPlayers were seeded according to the European ranking for February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288858-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Europe Top 16 Cup, Women's singles, Seeding\nPlayers were seeded according to the European ranking for February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288859-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Europe's Strongest Man\nThe 2019 Europe's Strongest Man was a strongman competition that took place in Leeds, England on 6 April 2019 at the First Direct Arena. This event was part of the 2019 Giants live tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288859-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Europe's Strongest Man, Results of events, Event 1: Max Log Lift\n^ Cheick Sanou's lift of 220 kilograms (490\u00a0lb) is a Burkinab\u00e9 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288859-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Europe's Strongest Man, Results of events, Event 1: Max Log Lift\n^ Rob Kearney's lift of 214 kilograms (472\u00a0lb) is an American record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288859-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Europe's Strongest Man, Results of events, Event 4: Hercules Hold\n^ Laurence Shahlaei sustained an injury in this event and took no further part in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 70], "content_span": [71, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288860-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European 10 m Events Championships\nThe 2019 European 10 m Events Championships was held in Osijek, Croatia, from March 17 to 24, 2019. The competition was held in the Gradski vrt Hall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288861-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European 10,000m Cup\nThe 2019 European 10,000m Cup took place on 6 July 2019. The races took place on Parliament Hill Athletics Track in London, Great Britain. The event was held together with the annual Night of the 10,000m PB's meeting for the second successive year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288861-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European 10,000m Cup, Race results, Women's\n* Athletes who competed in the Night of the 10,000m PBs but were not entered for the European Cup. The results of these athletes were not counted towards the final team score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288862-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Amateur Team Championship\nThe 2019 European Amateur Team Championship took place 9 \u2013 13 July at Ljunghusen Golf Club in H\u00f6llviken, Sweden. It was the 36th men's golf European Amateur Team Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288862-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Amateur Team Championship\nThe club was founded in 1932 and by 1965 it was the first golf club in Scandinavia to feature 27 holes, one of three clubs with links courses at the south west tip of Sweden, in Vellinge Municipality, Scania County. The championship was played at holes 1\u201318.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288862-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Amateur Team Championship\nEach team consisted of six players, playing two rounds of an opening stroke-play qualifying competition 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, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288862-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Amateur Team Championship\nLeader of the opening 36-hole competition was team Ireland, with a 19-under-par score of 701, three strokes ahead of team England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288862-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Amateur Team Championship\nThere was no official award for the lowest individual score, but individual leader was Euan Walker, Scotland, with a 12-under-par score of 132, two strokes ahead of nearest competitor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288862-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288862-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288862-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European Amateur Team Championship\nHost nation Sweden won the gold medal, earning their third title and first since 1961, beating eleven-times-champion team England in the final 4\u00bd\u20132\u00bd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288862-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 European Amateur Team Championship\nTeam Scotland earned the bronze on third place, after beating Denmark 4\u20133 in the bronze match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288862-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 European Amateur Team Championship\nFinland, Czech Republic, and Slovenia placed 14th, 15th and 16th and was intended to be moved to Division 2 for 2020, to be replaced by Switzerland, Italy and Portugal, who finished first, second, and third respectively in the 2019 Division 2. The 2020 championship came to be reduced, due to the Covid-19 pandemic, with several teams not participating, why the qualification status was changed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288862-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 European Amateur Team Championship, Teams\n16 nation teams contested the event. Each team consisted of six players. Belgium, Slovenia, and Wales had qualified for the championship by finishing first, second, and third in the 2018 Division 2. The other teams qualified by finishing top 13 in the 2018 championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288862-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 European Amateur Team Championship, Results\n* Note: In the event of a tie the order was determined by thebest total of the two non-counting scores of the two rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288862-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288862-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288863-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Artistic Gymnastics Championships\nThe 8th European Men's and Women's Artistic Gymnastics Individual Championships took place from 10\u201314 April 2019 at the Netto Arena in Szczecin, Poland. No team competition was held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288863-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Artistic Gymnastics Championships, Men's results, Individual all-around\nAndrey Likhavitski of Belarus and Israel's Alexander Shatilov withdrew and were replaced by reserves Yevgen Yudenkov of Ukraine and Joel Plata of Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 85], "content_span": [86, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288863-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Artistic Gymnastics Championships, Men's results, Floor\nGreat Britain's Dominick Cunningham withdrew due to his injury in qualifications. He was replaced by first reserve Nicola Bartolini of Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 69], "content_span": [70, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288863-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Artistic Gymnastics Championships, Men's results, Horizontal bar\nGreat Britain\u2019s James Hall was unable to finish his routine due to a shoulder injury from a fall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 78], "content_span": [79, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288864-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships\nThe 35th European Athletics Indoor Championships was held between 1 and 3 March 2019 at the Emirates Arena in Glasgow, Scotland. This was the second time this event was held in the city after the 1990 edition and the third time it was held in the United Kingdom, following the 2007 Edition in Birmingham, England. The three-day competition featured 13 men's and 13 women's athletics events and took place over three morning and three afternoon sessions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288864-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships, Bids\nApeldoorn, Glasgow, Minsk and Toru\u0144 all submitted bids to host the 2019 European Indoor championships. Glasgow were chosen to host the 35th edition of the event with 9 votes ahead of Toru\u0144 with 6 votes and Apeldoorn with 1. It is 29 years since Glasgow had last hosted the championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 50], "content_span": [51, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288864-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships, Participating nations\nThere was a total of 582 participants from 47 nations down from the 637 originally entered. Although originally announced, no athlete from Albania or Kosovo showed up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 67], "content_span": [68, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288865-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 metres\nThe men's 1500 metres event at the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 1 March 2019 at 11:50 (heats), and on 3 March 2019 at 20:01 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288865-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 metres, Results, Heats\nQualification: First 2 in each heat (Q) and the next 4 fastest (q) advance to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 80], "content_span": [81, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288866-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 3000 metres\nThe men's 3000 metres event at the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 1 March 2019 at 13:20 (heats) and on 2 March 2019 at 19:47 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288866-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 3000 metres, Results, Heats\nQualification: First 4 in each heat (Q) and the next 4 fastest (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 80], "content_span": [81, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288867-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay event at the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 3 March 2019 at 20:25 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 73], "section_span": [73, 73], "content_span": [74, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288868-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres\nThe men's 400 metres event at the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 1 March 2019 at 10:20 (heats), at 21:00 (semifinals) and on 2 March 2019 at 20:22 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288868-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres, Results, Heats\nQualification: First 2 in each heat (Q) and the next 4 fastest (q) advance to the Semifinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 79], "content_span": [80, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288868-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres, Results, Semifinals\nQualification: First 2 in each heat (Q) and the next 2 fastest (q) advance to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 84], "content_span": [85, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288869-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 60 metres\nThe men's 60 metres event at the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 2 March 2019 at 10:25 (heats), at 19:20 (semifinals) and 20:50 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288869-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 60 metres, Results, Heats\nQualification: First 3 in each heat (Q) and the next 6 fastest (q) advance to the Semi-Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 78], "content_span": [79, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288869-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 60 metres, Results, Semifinals\nQualification: First 3 in each heat (Q) and the next 2 fastest (q) advance to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 83], "content_span": [84, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288870-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 60 metres hurdles\nThe men's 60 metres hurdles event at the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 2 March 2019 at 12:02 (heats), and on 3 March 2019 at 11:05 (semifinals) and 18:10 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288870-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 60 metres hurdles, Results, Heats\nQualification: First 3 in each heat (Q) and the next 6 fastest (q) advance to the Semi-Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 86], "content_span": [87, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288870-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 60 metres hurdles, Results, Semifinals\nQualification: Qualification: First 3 in each heat (Q) and the next 2 fastest (q) advance to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 91], "content_span": [92, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288871-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres\nThe men's 800 metres event at the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 1 March 2019 at 19:48 (heats), on 2 March at 18:25 (semifinals) and on 3 March 2019 at 18:57 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288871-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres, Results, Heats\nQualification: First 2 in each heat (Q) and the next 2 fastest (q) advance to the Semifinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 79], "content_span": [80, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288871-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres, Results, Semifinals\nQualification: First 3 in each heat (Q) advance to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 84], "content_span": [85, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288872-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's heptathlon\nThe men's heptathlon event at the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 2 and 3 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288873-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's high jump\nThe men's high jump event at the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 1 March at 12:30 (qualification) and 2 March at 18:00 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288873-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's high jump, Results, Qualification\nQualification: Qualifying performance 2.28 (Q) or at least 8 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 86], "content_span": [87, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288874-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's long jump\nThe men's long jump event at the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 1 March at 10:03 (qualification) and 3 March at 11:35 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288874-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's long jump, Results, Qualification\nQualification: Qualifying performance 7.95 (Q) or at least 8 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 86], "content_span": [87, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288875-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's pole vault\nThe men's pole vault event at the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 1 March at 19:06 (qualification) and 2 March at 18:10 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288875-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's pole vault, Results, Qualification\nQualification: Qualifying performance 5.80 (Q) or at least 8 best performers (q) advance to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 87], "content_span": [88, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288876-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's shot put\nThe men's shot put event at the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 1 March at 11:30 (qualification) and at 20:35 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288876-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's shot put, Results, Qualification\nQualification: Qualifying performance 20.90 (Q) or at least 8 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 85], "content_span": [86, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288877-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's triple jump\nThe men's triple jump event at the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 1 March at 20:25 (qualification) and 3 March at 19:35 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288877-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's triple jump, Results, Qualification\nQualification: Qualifying performance 16.70 (Q) or at least 8 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 88], "content_span": [89, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288878-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 1500 metres\nThe women's 1500 metres event at the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 1 March 2019 at 19:10 (heats), and on 3 March 2019 at 20:12 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288878-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 1500 metres, Results, Heats\nQualification: First 2 in each heat (Q) and the next 3 fastest (q) advance to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 82], "content_span": [83, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288879-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 3000 metres\nThe women's 3000 metres event at the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 1 March 2019 at 21:40 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288879-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 3000 metres\nKonstanze Klosterhalfen came into the race with the leading time of the year, but the eyes were on defending champion Laura Muir. Eilish McColgan held the point, trying to set an honest pace for the first 7 laps, with Muir running relaxed marking her position in second. Behind them, the German duo of Klosterhalfen and Alina Reh were jockeying to maintain position near the front. With 8 laps to go, Klosterhalfen tried to break it open, running the next 400 meters in 64 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288879-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 3000 metres\nMuir stuck to her back, not giving up even two metres, behind them the field strung out, a long gap back to Reh and Melissa Courtney trying to bridge the gap. Even Klosterhalfen couldn't keep up the 32 second laps, but she strained to keep closer to 33 second, noticeably tiring in the process. Muir bided her time, finally positioning herself on Klosterhalfen's shoulder before the bell, then accelerating. Klosterhalfen had no answer and Muir stretched her lead, lapping most of the field as she finished her final lap. Losing ground the last few laps, Courtney allowed Reh to catch her before the final lap, but then again separated to take the bronze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288880-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe women's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay event at the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 3 March 2019 at 20:40 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 75], "section_span": [75, 75], "content_span": [76, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288881-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres\nThe women's 400 metres event at the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 1 March 2019 at 10:20 (heats), at 21:00 (semifinals) and on 2 March 2019 at 20:22 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288881-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres, Results, Heats\nQualification: First 2 in each heat (Q) and the next 4 fastest (q) advance to the Semifinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 81], "content_span": [82, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288881-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres, Results, Semifinals\nQualification: First 2 in each heat (Q) advance to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 86], "content_span": [87, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288882-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 60 metres\nThe women's 60 metres event at the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 2 March 2019 at 11:13 (heats), at 18:50 (semifinals) and 20:35 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288882-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 60 metres, Results, Heats\nQualification: First 3 in each heat (Q) and the next 6 fastest (q) advance to the Semi-Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 80], "content_span": [81, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288882-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 60 metres, Results, Semifinals\nQualification: Qualification: First 2 in each heat (Q) and the next 2 fastest (q) advance to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 85], "content_span": [86, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288883-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 60 metres hurdles\nThe women's 60 metres hurdles event at the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 2 March 2019 at 12:35 (heats), and on 3 March 2019 at 11:25 (semifinals) and 18:25 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [72, 72], "content_span": [73, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288883-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 60 metres hurdles, Results, Heats\nQualification: First 3 in each heat (Q) and the next 4 fastest (q) advance to the Semi-Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [74, 88], "content_span": [89, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288883-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 60 metres hurdles, Results, Semifinals\nQualification: First 3 in each heat (Q) and the next 2 fastest (q) advance to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [74, 93], "content_span": [94, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288884-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres\nThe women's 800 metres event at the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 1 March 2019 at 11:10 (heats), on 2 March at 18:06 (semifinals) and on 3 March 2019 at 19:18 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288884-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres, Results, Heats\nQualification: First 2 in each heat (Q) and the next 4 fastest (q) advance to the Semifinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 81], "content_span": [82, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288884-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres, Results, Semifinals\nQualification: First 3 in each heat (Q) advance to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 86], "content_span": [87, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288885-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's high jump\nThe women's high jump event at the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 1 March at 19:00 (qualification) and 3 March at 19:15 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288885-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's high jump, Results, Qualification\nQualification: Qualifying performance 1.96 (Q) or at least 8 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 88], "content_span": [89, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288886-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's long jump\nThe women's long jump event at the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 2 March at 10:00 (qualification) and 3 March at 18:00 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288886-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's long jump, Results, Qualification\nQualification: Qualifying performance 6.65 (Q) or at least 8 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 88], "content_span": [89, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288887-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's pentathlon\nThe women's pentathlon event at the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 1 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288888-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's pole vault\nThe women's pole vault event at the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 2 March at 10:03 (qualification) and 3 March at 18:05 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288888-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's pole vault, Results, Qualification\nQualification: Qualifying performance 4.65 (Q) or at least 8 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 89], "content_span": [90, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288889-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's shot put\nThe women's shot put event at the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 1 March at 19:02 (qualification) and on 3 March at 12:20 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288889-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's shot put, Results, Qualification\nQualification: Qualifying performance 18.20 (Q) or at least 8 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 87], "content_span": [88, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288890-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's triple jump\nThe women's triple jump event at the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 1 March at 12:00 (qualification) and 3 March at 10:00 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288890-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's triple jump, Results, Qualification\nQualification: Qualifying performance 14.20 (Q) or at least 8 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 90], "content_span": [91, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288891-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Team Championships\nThe 2019 European Athletics Team Championships (ETC) in athletics were held in four cities from 9\u201311 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288891-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Team Championships, Grouping and host cities\nExceptionally, for this 2019 edition, the following relegation and promotion principles were used:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 68], "content_span": [69, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288891-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Team Championships, First League, Participating countries\nOne promotion in Super-League, 5 relegations to Second League (4 without not-entered Russia):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 81], "content_span": [82, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288892-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics Team Championships Super League\nThese are the complete results of the 2019 European Team Championships Super League held on 9-11 August 2019 in Bydgoszcz, Poland. As 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 (except when the winner has already been established).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288893-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U20 Championships\nThe 2019 European Athletics U20 Championships were the 25th edition of the biennial European U20 athletics championships. They were held in Bor\u00e5s, Sweden from 18 July to 21 July. Beginning with this edition the long-distance races for men were 3000 and 5000 metres instead of 5000 and 10,000 metres mirroring the women's programme.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288893-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U20 Championships, Participation\n1,114 athletes from 48 nations are expected to participate in these championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 56], "content_span": [57, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288894-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships\nThe 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was the 12th edition of the biennial athletics competition between European athletes under the age of twenty-three. It was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden from 11 to 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288895-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 10,000 metres\nThe men's 10,000 metres event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehof Stadium Park on 11 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288896-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metres\nThe men's 100 metres event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehov Stadium Park on 11 and 12 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288896-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metres, Results, Heats\nQualification rule: First 3 (Q) and the next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 76], "content_span": [77, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288896-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metres, Results, Heats\nWind:Heat 1: -2.1 m/s, Heat 2: -1.9 m/s, Heat 3: -1.0 m/s, Heat 4: -2.4 m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 76], "content_span": [77, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288896-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metres, Results, Semifinals\n12 JulyQualification rule: First 3 (Q) and the next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 81], "content_span": [82, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288897-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 110 metres hurdles\nThe men's 110 metres hurdles event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehof Stadium Park on 11 and 12 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288897-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 110 metres hurdles, Results, Heats\n11 JulyQualification: First 4 in each heat (Q) and next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 84], "content_span": [85, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288897-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 110 metres hurdles, Results, Heats\nWind:Heat 1: -1.9 m/s, Heat 2: -1.9 m/s, Heat 3: -2.5 m/s, Heat 4: -1.7 m/s, Heat 5: -2.8 m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 84], "content_span": [85, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288897-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 110 metres hurdles, Results, Semifinals\n12 JulyQualification: First 2 in each heat (Q) and next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 89], "content_span": [90, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288897-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 110 metres hurdles, Results, Semifinals\nWind:Heat 1: +1.1 m/s, Heat 2: 0.0 m/s, Heat 3: +0.7 m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 89], "content_span": [90, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288898-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 metres\nThe men's 1500 metres event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehof Stadium Park on 11 and 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288898-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 metres, Results, Qualifying Rounds\nQualification rule: First 4 (Q) and the next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 89], "content_span": [90, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288899-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 20 kilometres walk\nThe men's 20 kilometres walk event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden on 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288900-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres\nThe men's 200 metres event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehov Stadium Park on 12 and 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288900-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres, Results, Heats\n12 JulyQualification: First 4 in each heat (Q) and next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 76], "content_span": [77, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288900-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres, Results, Heats\nWind:Heat 1: +0.4 m/s, Heat 2: +1.1 m/s, Heat 3: +1.1 m/s, Heat 4: +1.2 m/s, Heat 5: +0.8 m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 76], "content_span": [77, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288900-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres, Results, Semifinals\n13 JulyQualification: First 2 in each heat (Q) and next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 81], "content_span": [82, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288900-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres, Results, Semifinals\nWind:Heat 1: -1.2 m/s, Heat 2: -1.2 m/s, Heat 3: +1.3 m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 81], "content_span": [82, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288901-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 3000 metres steeplechase\nThe men's 3000 metres steeplechase event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehov Stadium Park on 12 and 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 74], "section_span": [74, 74], "content_span": [75, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288901-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 3000 metres steeplechase, Results, Heats\nQualification: First 5 in each heat (Q) and next 5 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 74], "section_span": [76, 90], "content_span": [91, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288902-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay\nThe men's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehov Stadium Park on 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288902-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay, Results, Heats\nQualification rule: First 3 in each heat (Q) and the next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 86], "content_span": [87, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288903-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehov Stadium Park on 13 and 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288903-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay, Results, Heats\nQualification rule: First 3 in each heat (Q) and the next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 86], "content_span": [87, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288904-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres\nThe men's 400 metres event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehof Stadium Park on 11, 12, and 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288904-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres, Results, Heats\nQualification rule: First 3 (Q) and the next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 76], "content_span": [77, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288904-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres, Results, Semifinals\nQualification: First 3 in each heat (Q) and next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 81], "content_span": [82, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288905-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres hurdles\nThe men's 400 metres hurdles event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehov Stadium Park on 12, 13 and 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288905-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres hurdles, Result, Heats\nQualification: First 3 in each heat (Q) and next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 83], "content_span": [84, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288905-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres hurdles, Result, Semifinals\nQualification: First 3 in each heat (Q) and next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 88], "content_span": [89, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288906-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 5000 metres\nThe men's 5000 metres event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehof Stadium Park on 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288907-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres\nThe men's 800 metres event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehov Stadium Park on 12 and 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288907-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres, Results, Heats\nQualification: First 3 in each heat (Q) and next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 76], "content_span": [77, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288908-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's decathlon\nThe men's decathlon event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehof Stadium Park on 13 and 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288909-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's discus throw\nThe men's discus throw event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships will be held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehov Stadium Park on 13 and 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288909-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's discus throw, Results, Qualification\nQualification rule: 58.50 (Q) or the 12 best results (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 86], "content_span": [87, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288910-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's hammer throw\nThe men's hammer throw event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships will be held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehov Stadium Park on 12 and 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288910-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's hammer throw, Results, Qualification\nQualification rule: 70.50 (Q) or the 12 best results (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 86], "content_span": [87, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288911-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's high jump\nThe men's high jump event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehof Stadium Park on 13 and 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288911-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's high jump, Results, Qualification\nQualification rule: 2.19 (Q) or the 12 best results (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 83], "content_span": [84, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288912-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's javelin throw\nThe men's javelin throw event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehov Stadium Park on 11 and 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288912-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's javelin throw, Results, Qualification\nQualification rule: 76.00 (Q) or the 12 best results (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 87], "content_span": [88, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288913-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's long jump\nThe men's long jump event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehov Stadium Park on 11 and 12 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288913-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's long jump, Results, Qualification\nThe qualification will be held on July 11 at 10:10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 83], "content_span": [84, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288913-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's long jump, Results, Qualification\nQualification rule: 7.75 (Q) or the 12 best results (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 83], "content_span": [84, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288914-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's pole vault\nThe men's pole vault event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehof Stadium Park on 11 and 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288914-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's pole vault, Results, Qualification\nQualification rule: 5.45 (Q) or the 12 best results (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 84], "content_span": [85, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288915-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's shot put\nThe men's shot put event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships will be held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehov Stadium Park on 11\u201312 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288915-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's shot put, Results, Qualification\nQualification rule: 18.80 (Q) or the 12 best results (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 82], "content_span": [83, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288916-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's triple jump\nThe men's triple jump event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships will be held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehov Stadium Park on 13 and 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288916-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's triple jump, Results, Qualification\nQualification rule: 16.30 (Q) or the 12 best results (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 85], "content_span": [86, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288917-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 10,000 metres\nThe women's 10,000 metres event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehof Stadium Park on 12 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288918-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres\nThe women's 100 metres event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehof Stadium Park on 11 and 12 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288918-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres, Results, Heats\nQualification rule: First 3 (Q) and the next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 78], "content_span": [79, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288918-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres, Results, Heats\nWind:Heat 1: -1.8\u00a0m/s, Heat 2: -2.8\u00a0m/s, Heat 3: -4.2\u00a0m/s, Heat 4: -2.3\u00a0m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 78], "content_span": [79, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288918-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres, Results, Semifinals\nQualification rule: First 3 (Q) and the next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 83], "content_span": [84, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288919-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres hurdles\nThe women's 100 metres hurdles event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehof Stadium Park on 11 and 12 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288919-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres hurdles, Results, Heats\n11 JulyQualification: First 4 in each heat (Q) and next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 86], "content_span": [87, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288919-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres hurdles, Results, Heats\nWind:Heat 1: -1.2 m/s, Heat 2: -1.1 m/s, Heat 3: -2.5 m/s, Heat 4: -4.1 m/s, Heat 5: -0.1 m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 86], "content_span": [87, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288919-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres hurdles, Results, Semifinals\n12 JulyQualification: First 2 in each heat (Q) and next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 91], "content_span": [92, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288919-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres hurdles, Results, Semifinals\nWind:Heat 1: +1.8 m/s, Heat 2: +1.3 m/s, Heat 3: +0.5 m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 91], "content_span": [92, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288920-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 1500 metres\nThe women's 1500 metres event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehov Stadium Park on 12 and 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288920-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 1500 metres, Results, Heats\nQualification: First 4 in each heat (Q) and next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 79], "content_span": [80, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288921-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 20 kilometres walk\nThe women's 20 kilometres walk event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden on 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288922-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 200 metres\nThe women's 200 metres event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehov Stadium Park on 12 and 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288922-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 200 metres, Results, Heats\n12 JulyQualification: First 3 in each heat (Q) and next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 78], "content_span": [79, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288922-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 200 metres, Results, Heats\nWind:Heat 1: +1.1 m/s, Heat 2: +0.6 m/s, Heat 3: -0.1 m/s, Heat 4: +0.6 m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 78], "content_span": [79, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288922-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 200 metres, Results, Semifinals\n13 JulyQualification: First 3 in each heat (Q) and next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 83], "content_span": [84, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288923-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 3000 metres steeplechase\nThe women's 3000 metres steeplechase event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehof Stadium Park on 11 and 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 76], "section_span": [76, 76], "content_span": [77, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288923-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 3000 metres steeplechase, Results, Heats\nQualification: First 5 in each heat (Q) and next 5 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 76], "section_span": [78, 92], "content_span": [93, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288924-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay\nThe women's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehov Stadium Park on 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [72, 72], "content_span": [73, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288924-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay, Results, Heats\nQualification rule: First 3 in each heat (Q) and the next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [74, 88], "content_span": [89, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288925-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe women's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehov Stadium Park on 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [72, 72], "content_span": [73, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288926-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres\nThe women's 400 metres event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehov Stadium Park on 12 and 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288926-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres, Result, Heats\nQualification: First 2 in each heat (Q) and next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 77], "content_span": [78, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288927-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres hurdles\nThe women's 400 metres hurdles event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehov Stadium Park on 12, 13 and 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288927-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres hurdles, Result, Heats\nQualification: First 3 in each heat (Q) and next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 85], "content_span": [86, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288927-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres hurdles, Result, Semifinals\nQualification: First 3 in each heat (Q) and next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 90], "content_span": [91, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288928-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 5000 metres\nThe women's 5000 metres event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehof Stadium Park on 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288929-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres\nThe women's 800 metres event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehov Stadium Park on 11 and 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288929-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres, Results, Heats\nQualification: First 2 in each heat (Q) and next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 78], "content_span": [79, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288930-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's discus throw\nThe women's discus throw event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships will be held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehov Stadium Park on 11 and 12 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288930-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's discus throw, Results, Qualification\nQualification rule: 53.00 (Q) or the 12 best results (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 88], "content_span": [89, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288931-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's hammer throw\nThe women's hammer throw event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehov Stadium Park on 11 and 12 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288931-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's hammer throw, Results\nThe qualification will be held on July 11 at 10:30 and 11:35.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 73], "content_span": [74, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288931-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's hammer throw, Results\nQualification rule: 64.00 (Q) or the 12 best results (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 73], "content_span": [74, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288932-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's heptathlon\nThe women's heptathlon event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehof Stadium Park on 11 and 12 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288933-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's high jump\nThe women's high jump event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehof Stadium Park on 12 and 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288933-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's high jump, Results, Qualification\nQualification rule: 1.89 (Q) or the 12 best results (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 85], "content_span": [86, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288934-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's javelin throw\nThe women's javelin throw event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehov Stadium Park on 13 and 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288934-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's javelin throw, Results, Qualification\nQualification rule: 54.00 (Q) or the 12 best results (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 89], "content_span": [90, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288935-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's long jump\nThe women's long jump event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehof Stadium Park on 13 and 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288935-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's long jump, Results, Qualification\nQualification rule: 6.40 (Q) or the 12 best results (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 85], "content_span": [86, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288936-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's pole vault\nThe women's pole vault event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehof Stadium Park on 12 and 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288936-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's pole vault, Results, Qualification\nQualification rule: 4.30 (Q) or the 12 best results (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 86], "content_span": [87, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288937-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's shot put\nThe women's shot put event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships will be held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehov Stadium Park on 12 and 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288937-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's shot put, Results, Qualification\nQualification rule: 16.00 (Q) or the 12 best results (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 84], "content_span": [85, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288938-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's triple jump\nThe women's triple jump event at the 2019 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in G\u00e4vle, Sweden, at Gavlehov Stadium Park on 11 and 12 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288938-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's triple jump, Results, Qualification\nQualification rule: 13.40 (Q) or the 12 best results (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 87], "content_span": [88, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288939-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Baseball Championship\nThe 2019 European Baseball Championship was an international baseball tournament organized by the Confederation of European Baseball. The 2019 Championship was held September 7\u201315, 2019, in Bonn and Solingen, Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288939-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Baseball Championship\nThe tournament contributed towards qualification to the 2020 Summer Olympics, with the top five teams and Team South Africa competing at the European-African qualifier for the 2020 Summer Olympics, which was played in September 2019 in Bologna and Parma, Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288939-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Baseball Championship, Qualification\nThe top 10 teams of the 2016 European Championship qualified automatically for the tournament. Two additional teams, Austria and Israel, qualified from the 14-team B-Pool tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288939-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Baseball Championship, Round 1, Pool A, Standings\n1 game suspended on September 7, 2019 in the 9th due to darkness (Ned led 10 \u2013 2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288939-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Baseball Championship, Placement Round 9th - 12th Place / Relegation Round\nThere was a scheduling mistake in this placement/relegation round: the first two games, it should have been A5-B6 and B5-A6, instead it was A5-B5 and A6-B6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 88], "content_span": [89, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288939-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Baseball Championship, Placement Round 9th - 12th Place / Relegation Round, Relegation Round\nThe loser of the above game is in 12th place and is relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 106], "content_span": [107, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288939-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Baseball Championship, Placement Round 9th - 12th Place / Relegation Round, Relegation Round\nThe loser of the above game is in 11th place and is relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 106], "content_span": [107, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288940-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Baseball Championship - B-Pool\n2019 European Baseball Championship - B-Pool was the second tier of Confederation of European Baseball men competition. It featured 14 teams, competing in two groups of 6 and 8 teams in early July 2019. The two group winners, Team Israel and Team Lithuania, faced off in the 2019 European Baseball Playoff Series for the last qualifying spot for the 2019 European Baseball Championship, with Team Israel prevailing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288940-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Baseball Championship - B-Pool, Group 1 - Trnava, Semifinals\nSemifinals order will be switched, because home team advanced to this round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 74], "content_span": [75, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288941-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Baseball Championship - Women\nThe 2019 European Baseball Championship Women was an international baseball tournament for women organized by Confederation of European Baseball. The 2019 European Championship was held in July and August 2019 in Rouen, France. Winner qualified for 2020 Women's Baseball World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288942-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Baseball Championship \u2013 Qualification\nThe qualification for the 2019 European Baseball Championship started on July 25, 2016 in Ljubljana, Slovenia and Miejska G\u00f3rka, Poland. The tournament was originally planned for 2018, but was moved back a year to 2019 to serve as a qualification for the 2020 Olympiad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288942-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Baseball Championship \u2013 Qualification, 2017 Pool B\nTop team from each group qualified for the playoff, winner of which (Austria) qualified for the 2019 European Baseball Championship, bottom team from each group was relegated to C-Pool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 64], "content_span": [65, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288942-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Baseball Championship \u2013 Qualification, 2018 Playoff Series\nWinner of the best-of-three playoff series qualified for the 2019 European Baseball Championship. Playoffs were hosted by Wiener Neustadt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 72], "content_span": [73, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288942-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Baseball Championship \u2013 Qualification, 2018 Pool C\nTwo groups of 5 nations competed, with the winner of each group advancing to the B-Pool. The better of the two second-place teams (based on record, with first tie-breaker based on runs per inning differential) also advanced to the B Pool as a wild card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 64], "content_span": [65, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288942-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Baseball Championship \u2013 Qualification, 2018 Pool C, Ashbourne Group, Final\nThe final was a rematch of Ireland vs. Greece; Ireland won the group round game 10\u20130 in eight innings and the final 12\u20132. Ireland advanced to Pool B as the winner. Greece, as the runner-up, also advanced as the wild card after Ukraine beat Romania in the Kropyvnytskyi group. Greece's 3\u20131 record in group play was better than Romania's 2\u20132 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 88], "content_span": [89, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288942-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Baseball Championship \u2013 Qualification, 2018 Pool C, Kropyvnytskyi Group\nThe three-way tie between Romania, Georgia, and Estonia at 2\u20132 was won by Romania with a Team Quality Balance within games played between those three teams of 0.5125 against Georgia's -.0625 and Estonia's \u22120.4183.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 85], "content_span": [86, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288942-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Baseball Championship \u2013 Qualification, 2018 Pool C, Kropyvnytskyi Group, Final\nThe final was a rematch between Ukraine and Romania; Ukraine won the group round game 13\u20130 in seven innings and the final 3\u20132 (again in seven innings, due to weather). Ukraine, as the winner, advanced to Pool B. The better runner-up between the two groups also advanced, but Romania's 2\u20132 record in group play was worse than that of 3\u20131 Greece (the Ashbourne group runner-up).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 92], "content_span": [93, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288942-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European Baseball Championship \u2013 Qualification, 2019 Pool B\nPool B featured 14 teams competing in two groups of 6 and 8 teams. The two group winners faced off in the playoff for the last qualifying spot for the 2019 European Championship, which was won by Team Israel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 64], "content_span": [65, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288942-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 European Baseball Championship \u2013 Qualification, 2019 Pool B, Play-offs, Semifinals\nSemifinals order will be switched, because home team advanced to this round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 87], "content_span": [88, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288942-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 European Baseball Championship \u2013 Qualification, 2019 Playoff Series\nThe winner of the best-of-three playoff series qualified for the 2019 European Baseball Championship. Playoff host was Utena, Lithuania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 72], "content_span": [73, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288943-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Beach Volleyball Championships\nThe 2019 European Beach Volleyball Championship were held in Moscow, Russia from 5\u201311 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288944-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Canoe Slalom Championships\nThe 2019 European Canoe Slalom Championships took place in Pau, France under the auspices of the European Canoe Association (ECA). It was the 20th edition of the competition and Pau hosted the event for the first time. The events took place at the Pau-Pyr\u00e9n\u00e9es Whitewater Stadium from 29 May to 2 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288945-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Championship (darts)\nThe 2019 Unibet European Championship was the twelfth edition of the Professional Darts Corporation's European Championship tournament, which saw the top players from the thirteen European tour events compete against each other. The tournament took place from 24\u201327 October 2019 at the Lokhalle in G\u00f6ttingen, Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288945-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Championship (darts)\nJames Wade was the defending champion, after beating Simon Whitlock 11\u20138 in the 2018 final. However, he was beaten 6\u20130 by Jonny Clayton in the first round. Clayton posted the 6th highest average in the tournament's history in the process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288945-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Championship (darts)\nRob Cross won his third major title with an 11\u20136 win over Gerwyn Price in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288945-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Championship (darts), Prize money\nThe 2019 European Championship will have a total prize fund of \u00a3500,000, an increase of \u00a3100,000 from the last staging of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288945-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Championship (darts), Qualification\nThe 2019 tournament continues the new system in terms of qualification with the two previous editions: The top 32 players from the European Tour Order of Merit, which is solely based on prize money won in the thirteen European tour events during the season, qualifying for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288945-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Championship (darts), Qualification\nAs with 2018's tournament, the draw will be done in a fixed bracket by their seeded order with the top qualifier playing the 32nd, the second playing the 31st and so on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288946-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Combined Events Team Championships\nThe 2019 European Combined Events Team Championships was the 34th edition of the biennial international team track and field competition for European combined track and field events specialists, with contests in men's decathlon and women's heptathlon. Held over 6\u20137 July, it consisted of three divisions: Super League, 1st League, and 2nd League. The Super League events were held at Avanhard Stadium in Lutsk, Ukraine, while the lower divisions were held at the Centro Desportivo da Madeira in Ribeira Brava, Portugal. National teams were ranked on the combined points totals of their best three athletes in both men's and women's competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288946-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Combined Events Team Championships\nEstonia won the Super League competition, led by Maicel Uibo and Mari Klaup-McColl. The Czech Republic and Finland took first and second in the 1st League to gain promotion to the Super League. Belgium and Ireland were the top two nations in the 2nd League, earning promotion to the 1st League. The best individual performers across the championships were Belarusian Vital Zhuk in the decathlon, with 8237 points, and Ukraine's Daryna Sloboda, with a personal best of 6165 points in the heptathlon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288946-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Combined Events Team Championships, Super League, Team\nCzech Republic and Netherlands were relegated to the 1st League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 68], "content_span": [69, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288946-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Combined Events Team Championships, 1st League, Team\nCzech Republic and Finland were promoted to the Super League, while Sweden and Latvia were relegated to the 2nd League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 66], "content_span": [67, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288947-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Cricket League\nThe 2019 European Cricket League (abbreviated as ECL19) was the inaugural edition of the European Cricket League. It was held in July 2019 with eight European champion club teams. At ECL19, the domestic club champions of Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Romania, Russia and Spain all competed for the chance to become club cricket's European champions. Players from 18 European nations as well as from more traditional cricket-playing nations took part. The league has adopted the T10 format and was played over three days. The La Manga Club in Cartagena, Murcia, Spain hosted the tournament, which was staged between July 29 and July 31, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288947-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Cricket League, Participating teams\nEight clubs from across Europe participated in the inaugural edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288947-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Cricket League, Tournament Play / Broadcast at ECL19\nPacking 17 matches into a T10 format over three days, every match was televised live in Europe, Asia, North America and Australasia across a combination of broadcast, digital and social channels, including the newly-launched European Cricket Network. Over 100 countries worldwide broadcast coverage including the UK, Australia, India, Middle East, UAE, France, Germany, Turkey, Spain, United States, Canada and the Caribbean. Teams were split into two groups of four with matches being played on a round-robin basis in La Manga with the top two from each progressing to contest the semi-finals and final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 66], "content_span": [67, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288947-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Cricket League, Tournament Play / Broadcast at ECL19\nThe current ECL title holders are V.O.C Rotterdam of the Netherlands, who won the inaugural 2019 season, beating SG Findorff (Bremen) from Germany in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 66], "content_span": [67, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288947-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Cricket League, Group stage, Group B\nJCC Brescia initially won all their matches, but were later found breaching the player eligibility criteria and thus their opponents were declared winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288947-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Cricket League, Group stage, Group B\nJCC Brescia initially won all their matches, but were later found breaching the player eligibility criteria and thus their opponents were declared winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288947-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Cricket League, Group stage, Group B\nJCC Brescia initially won all their matches, but were later found breaching the player eligibility criteria and thus their opponents were declared winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288947-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European Cricket League, Player of the Tournament\nMax O'Dowd of V.O.C. Rotterdam was awarded \u201cPlayer of the Tournament\u201d at the 2019 European Cricket League. O\u2019Dowd scored 219 runs in five innings (2 not outs) at an average of 73 and strike rate of 263.86, including an undefeated 74 in the Final against SG Findorff. He also took four wickets in the tournament with his leg-break bowling with a best of 2-25 against Catalunya Cricket Club in the semi-final. O\u2019Dowd is a current Netherlands international.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288947-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 European Cricket League, Pavel Florin at ECL19\nThe inaugural tournament gained significant worldwide prominence after the remarkable performances of Cluj all-rounder Pavel Florin during the group stages. Florin, a 40-year-old professional bodyguard and president of Cluj Cricket Club in Romania, caused a stir after his bowling performance went viral on social media. Many of the sport's most famous figures, including Australian legend Shane Warne, expressed their support and admiration of Florin because of his pure unaffected love for the game. Florin has since gone on to play in Australia where he again hit the headlines over the winter. Florin will take part in the second-staging of the European Cricket League - ECL20 - with Cluj Cricket Club, Romania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288948-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Cross Country Championships\nThe 2019 European Cross Country Championships is the 26th edition of the European Cross Country Championships. It was held December 8, 2019, hosted by Lisbon, Portugal. It was the third occasion that Portugal has hosted the championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288949-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Curling Championships\nThe 2019 Le Gruy\u00e8re AOP European Curling Championships was held in 2019 to qualify European curling teams for the 2020 World Curling Championships and World Qualification Event. The A and B division competitions were held from November 16 to 23 at The Olympia Rink in Helsingborg, Sweden. The C division competition was held from April 13 to 17 at the Bra\u0219ov Olympic Ice Rink in Bra\u0219ov, Romania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288949-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Curling Championships\nSeven men's teams, not including the hosts, Scotland, who automatically qualify, qualified for the 2020 World Men's Curling Championship. The next two teams in the A division and top two teams in the B division, not including the hosts, Finland, who automatically qualify, qualified for the 2020 World Qualification Event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288949-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Curling Championships\nSeven women's teams qualified for the 2020 World Women's Curling Championship. The next two teams in the A division and top two teams in the B division, not including the hosts, Finland, who automatically qualify, qualified for the 2020 World Qualification Event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288949-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Curling Championships, Men, A division, Teams\nSkip : Mikkel KrauseThird: Mads N\u00f8rg\u00e5rdSecond: Tobias EngelhardtLead: Henrik HoltermannAlternate: Kasper Wiksten", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288949-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Curling Championships, Men, A division, Teams\nSkip : Andrew ReedThird: Michael OpelSecond: Jamie MaltonLead: Thomas JaeggiAlternate: Andrew Woolston", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288949-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Curling Championships, Men, A division, Teams\nSkip : Marc MuskatewitzThird: Sixten TotzekSecond: Joshua SutorLead: Dominik GreindlAlternate: Benjamin Kapp", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288949-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Curling Championships, Men, A division, Teams\nSkip : Jo\u00ebl RetornazThird: Amos MosanerSecond: Sebastiano ArmanLead: Simone GoninAlternate: Alberto Pimpini", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288949-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European Curling Championships, Men, A division, Teams\nFourth: Wouter G\u00f6sgensSkip: Jaap van DorpSecond: Laurens HoekmanLead: Carlo GlasbergenAlternate: Alexander Magan", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288949-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 European Curling Championships, Men, A division, Teams\nSkip : Thomas UlsrudThird: Steffen WalstadSecond: Markus H\u00f8ibergLead: Magnus V\u00e5gbergAlternate: Magnus Nedregotten", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288949-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 European Curling Championships, Men, A division, Teams\nSkip : Sergey GlukhovThird: Alexey TimofeevSecond: Artur RazhabovLead: Anton KalalbAlternate: Aleksey Tuzov", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288949-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 European Curling Championships, Men, A division, Teams\nSkip : Ross PatersonThird: Kyle WaddellSecond: Duncan MenziesLead: Michael GoodfellowAlternate: Craig Waddell", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288949-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 European Curling Championships, Men, A division, Teams\nSkip : Niklas EdinThird: Oskar ErikssonSecond: Rasmus Wran\u00e5Lead: Christoffer SundgrenAlternate: Daniel Magnusson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288949-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 European Curling Championships, Men, A division, Teams\nSkip : Yannick SchwallerThird: Michael BrunnerSecond: Romano MeierLead: Marcel K\u00e4ufelerAlternate: Lucien Lottenbach", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288949-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 European Curling Championships, Men, A division, Round robin results\nNorway had to forfeit their game against England for breaking rule 3G: C3(g): \"If an alternate player comes into a game, that player must use the brush head of the player being replaced.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288949-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 European Curling Championships, Women, A division, Teams\nSkip : Anna Kube\u0161kov\u00e1Third: Al\u017eb\u011bta Baudy\u0161ov\u00e1Second: Petra Vin\u0161ov\u00e1Lead: E\u017een Kol\u010devsk\u00e1Alternate: Michaela Baudy\u0161ov\u00e1", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288949-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 European Curling Championships, Women, A division, Teams\nSkip : Mathilde HalseThird Jasmin LanderSecond Karolina JensenLead: My LarsenAlternate: Gabriella Qvist", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288949-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 European Curling Championships, Women, A division, Teams\nSkip : Marie TurmannThird: Kerli LaidsaluSecond: Heili GrossmannLead: Erika TuvikeAlternate: Liisa Turmann", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288949-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 European Curling Championships, Women, A division, Teams\nSkip : Daniela JentschThird: Emira AbbesSecond: Klara-Hermine FommLead: Analena JentschAlternate: Mia H\u00f6hne", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288949-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 European Curling Championships, Women, A division, Teams\nSkip : Iveta Sta\u0161a-\u0160ar\u0161\u016bneThird: Santa BlumbergaSecond: Ieva KrustaLead: Evel\u012bna BaroneAlternate: T\u012bna Sili\u0146a", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288949-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 European Curling Championships, Women, A division, Teams\nFourth: Kristin SkaslienSkip: Marianne R\u00f8rvikSecond: Maia RamsfjellLead: Pia TrulsenAlternate: Martine R\u00f8nning", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288949-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 European Curling Championships, Women, A division, Teams\nSkip : Alina KovalevaThird: Maria KomarovaSecond: Galina ArsenkinaLead: Ekaterina KuzminaAlternate: Anastasia Danshina", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288949-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 European Curling Championships, Women, A division, Teams\nSkip : Eve MuirheadThird: Lauren GraySecond: Jennifer DoddsLead: Vicky WrightAlternate: Sophie Sinclair", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288949-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 European Curling Championships, Women, A division, Teams\nSkip : Anna HasselborgThird Sara McManusSecond: Agnes KnochenhauerLead: Sofia MabergsAlternate: Johanna Heldin", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288950-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Darts Grand Prix\nThe 2019 European Darts Grand Prix was the sixth of thirteen PDC European Tour events on the 2019 PDC Pro Tour. The tournament took place at Glaspalast, Sindelfingen, Germany, from 10\u201312 May 2019. It featured a field of 48 players and \u00a3140,000 in prize money, with \u00a325,000 going to the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288950-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Darts Grand Prix\nMichael van Gerwen was the defending champion after defeating James Wade 8\u20133 in the final of the 2018 tournament, but he lost 6\u20133 to Peter Wright in the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288950-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Darts Grand Prix\nIan White became the eighth player to win multiple European Tour titles after beating Wright 8\u20137 in the final. It was White's third consecutive final on the European Tour, a record matched only by Van Gerwen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288950-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Darts Grand Prix, Qualification and format\nThe top 16 entrants from the PDC ProTour Order of Merit on 4 April will automatically qualify for the event and will be seeded in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288950-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Darts Grand Prix, Qualification and format\nThe remaining 32 places will go to players from six qualifying events \u2013 18 from the UK Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 12 April), six from the European Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 12 April), two from the West & South European Associate Member Qualifier (held on 9 May), four from the Host Nation Qualifier (held on 9 May), one from the Nordic & Baltic Associate Member Qualifier (held on 2 February) and one from the East European Associate Member Qualifier (held on 9 March).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288950-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Darts Grand Prix, Qualification and format\nFrom 2019, the Host Nation, Nordic & Baltic and East European Qualifiers will only be available to non-tour card holders. Any tour card holders from the applicable regions will have to play the main European Qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288950-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Darts Grand Prix, Qualification and format\nDave Chisnall, who was set to be the 12th seed, withdrew prior to the tournament draw due to family reasons. All seeds below him moved up a place, with Mervyn King becoming sixteenth seed, and an extra place being made available in the Host Nation Qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288950-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European Darts Grand Prix, Qualification and format\nJames Wade, the 10th seed, withdrew from the tournament after the draw and was not replaced, with his second round opponent Ryan Searle receiving a bye.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288951-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Darts Matchplay\nThe 2019 European Darts Matchplay was the eleventh of thirteen PDC European Tour events on the 2019 PDC Pro Tour. The tournament took place at the Maimarkthalle, Mannheim, Germany, from 6\u20138 September 2019. It featured a field of 48 players and \u00a3140,000 in prize money, with \u00a325,000 going to the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288951-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Darts Matchplay\nMichael van Gerwen was the defending champion after defeating William O'Connor 8\u20132 in the previous year's final. Van Gerwen reached a third European Tour final in five events, but lost in his third successive final appearance as Joe Cullen won his first stage title with an 8\u20135 success.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288951-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Darts Matchplay, Qualification and format\nThe top 16 entrants from the PDC ProTour Order of Merit on 25 June will automatically qualify for the event and will be seeded in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288951-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Darts Matchplay, Qualification and format\nThe remaining 32 places will go to players from six qualifying events \u2013 18 from the UK Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 2 August), six from the European Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 2 August), two from the West & South European Associate Member Qualifier (held on 5 September), four from the Host Nation Qualifier (held on 5 September), one from the Nordic & Baltic Qualifier (held on 23 August), and one from the East European Qualifier (held on 24 August).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288951-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Darts Matchplay, Qualification and format\nFrom 2019, the Host Nation, Nordic & Baltic and East European Qualifiers will only be available to non-Tour Card holders. Any Tour Card holders from the applicable regions will have to play the main European Qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288952-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Darts Open\nThe 2019 European Darts Open was the first of thirteen PDC European Tour events on the 2019 PDC Pro Tour. The tournament took place at Ostermann-Arena, Leverkusen, Germany, from 22\u201324 March 2019. It featured a field of 48 players and \u00a3140,000 in prize money, with \u00a325,000 going to the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288952-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Darts Open\nMichael van Gerwen was the defending champion after defeating Peter Wright 8\u20137 in the final of the 2018 tournament, and he defended his title by defeating Rob Cross 8\u20136 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288952-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Darts Open\nIn his semi-final win over Mensur Suljovi\u0107, Van Gerwen became the first player to hit two nine-darters on the European Tour, taking out 147 via T19-Bull-D20, which was also the first time a filmed nine-dart finish included a bullseye, but not as the final dart (as all the previous three were double in/double out nine-darters in the World Grand Prix).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288952-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Darts Open, Qualification and format\nThe top 16 entrants from the PDC ProTour Order of Merit on 12 February will automatically qualify for the event and will be seeded in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288952-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Darts Open, Qualification and format\nThe remaining 32 places will go to players from six qualifying events \u2013 18 from the UK Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 22 February), six from the European Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 22 February), two from the West & South European Associate Member Qualifier (held on 21 March), four from the Host Nation Qualifier (held on 21 March), one from the Nordic & Baltic Qualifier (held on 5 October 2018) and one from the East European Associate Member Qualifier (held on 19 January).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288952-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Darts Open, Qualification and format\nFrom 2019, the Host Nation, Nordic & Baltic and East European Qualifiers will only be available to non-Tour Card holders. Any Tour Card holders from the applicable regions will have to play the main European Qualifier. The only exceptions being that the Nordic & Baltic qualifiers for the first 3 European Tour events took place in late 2018, before the new ruling was announced, hence why Madars Razma qualified by this method, as under the new rules, he would have had to enter the European Tour Card Holder Qualifier, after regaining his Tour Card at European Q-School in January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288953-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Diving Championships\nThe 2019 European Diving Championships were held in Kyiv, Ukraine from 5 to 11 August 2019. This was the sixth edition of the stand alone Championships, and the 40th European Championships in diving in total, including the diving portion of the European Aquatics Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288953-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Diving Championships\nThe event is a qualification event for the 2020 Summer Olympics with quota places awarded to the nation of the winners of both men's and women's 3 metre and 10 metre events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288953-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Diving Championships, Participating nations\nA total of 126 athletes (72 men and 54 women) from 23 LEN federations participated at the championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288953-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Diving Championships, Championships Trophy\nThe trophy is assigned to the nation with most points gained by the top 12 athletes or teams in each event. Russia won the title with 258 points, while the previous Trophy's winner and host Ukraine finished at fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288954-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Diving Championships \u2013 Men's 1 metre springboard\nMen's 1 metre springboard event at the 2019 European Diving Championships was contested on 7 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288954-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Diving Championships \u2013 Men's 1 metre springboard, Results\n30 athletes participated at the event; the best 12 from the Preliminary round qualified for the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 71], "content_span": [72, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288955-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Diving Championships \u2013 Men's 10 metre platform\nMen's 10 metre platform event at the 2019 European Diving Championships was contested on 11 August. Ukrainian Oleksii Sereda, aged 13 years and seven months at the time, won the gold medal becoming the youngest European Diving champion ever.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288955-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Diving Championships \u2013 Men's 10 metre platform, Results\n19 athletes participated at the event; the best 12 from the Preliminary round qualified for the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 69], "content_span": [70, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288956-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Diving Championships \u2013 Men's 3 metre springboard\nMen's 3 metre springboard event at the 2019 European Diving Championships was contested on 9 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288956-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Diving Championships \u2013 Men's 3 metre springboard, Results\n32 athletes participated at the event; the best 12 from the Preliminary round qualified for the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 71], "content_span": [72, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288957-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Diving Championships \u2013 Men's 3 metre synchro springboard\nMen's 3 metre synchro springboard event at the 2019 European Diving Championships was contested on 10 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288958-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Diving Championships \u2013 Men's synchronized 10 metre platform\nMen's synchronized 10 metre platform event at the 2019 European Diving Championships was contested on 8 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 73], "section_span": [73, 73], "content_span": [74, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288959-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Diving Championships \u2013 Mixed 10 m platform synchro\nMixed 10 m platform synchro event at the 2019 European Diving Championships was contested on 9 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288960-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Diving Championships \u2013 Mixed 3 m springboard synchro\nMixed 3 m springboard synchro event at the 2019 European Diving Championships was contested on 6 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288961-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Diving Championships \u2013 Team event\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Jonesey95 (talk | contribs) at 16:49, 23 March 2020 (Fix Linter errors using AutoEd). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288961-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Diving Championships \u2013 Team event\nThe Team Event of the 2019 European Diving Championships was contested on the first day of the competition, 5 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288961-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Diving Championships \u2013 Team event, Results\n31 athletes from 8 national teams participated at the single-round event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 56], "content_span": [57, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288962-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Diving Championships \u2013 Women's 1 metre springboard\nWomen's 1 metre springboard event at the 2019 European Diving Championships was contested on 10 August. The Russian Vitaliia Koroleva, ranked at the 13th place and eliminated after the preliminary round, entered the final due to the withdrawal of Italian Elena Bertocchi (8th in the preliminaries), and managed to win the gold medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288962-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Diving Championships \u2013 Women's 1 metre springboard, Results\n23 athletes participated at the event; the best 12 from the Preliminary round qualified for the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 73], "content_span": [74, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288963-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Diving Championships \u2013 Women's 10 metre platform\nWomen's 10 metre platform event at the 2019 European Diving Championships was contested on 6 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288963-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Diving Championships \u2013 Women's 10 metre platform, Results\n19 athletes participated at the event; the best 12 from the Preliminary round qualified for the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 71], "content_span": [72, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288964-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Diving Championships \u2013 Women's 3 metre springboard\nWomen's 3 metre springboard event at the 2019 European Diving Championships was contested on 8 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288964-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Diving Championships \u2013 Women's 3 metre springboard, Results\n22 athletes participated at the event; the best 12 from the Preliminary round qualified for the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 73], "content_span": [74, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288965-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Diving Championships \u2013 Women's 3 metre synchro springboard\nWomen's 3 metre synchro springboard event at the 2019 European Diving Championships was contested on 11 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [72, 72], "content_span": [73, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288966-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Diving Championships \u2013 Women's synchronized 10 metre platform\nWomen's synchronized 10 metre platform event at the 2019 European Diving Championships was contested on 7 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 75], "section_span": [75, 75], "content_span": [76, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288967-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Fencing Championships\nThe 2019 European Fencing Championships was held in D\u00fcsseldorf, Germany from 17 to 22 June 2019 at the Messe D\u00fcsseldorf hall 8b.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288968-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2019 European Figure Skating Championships took place in Minsk, Belarus. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pairs, and ice dancing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288968-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Figure Skating Championships, Records\nThe following new ISU best scores were set during this competition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288968-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Figure Skating Championships, Qualification\nSkaters were eligible for the event if they represent a European member nation of the International Skating Union and have reached the age of 15 before 1 July 2018, in their place of birth. The corresponding competition for non-European skaters was the 2019 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, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288968-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Figure Skating Championships, Qualification, Minimum TES\nThe ISU stipulates that the minimum scores must be achieved at an ISU-recognized senior international competition in the ongoing or preceding season, no later than 21 days before the first official practice day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288968-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Figure Skating Championships, Qualification, Number of entries per discipline\nBased on the results of the 2018 European Championships, the ISU allows each country one to three entries per discipline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 91], "content_span": [92, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288968-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Figure Skating Championships, Entries\nMember nations began announcing their selections in December 2018. The International Skating Union published a complete list of entries on 3 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288968-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Figure Skating Championships, Medals summary, Medalists\nMedals awarded to the skaters who achieve the highest overall placements in each discipline:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 69], "content_span": [70, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288968-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European Figure Skating Championships, Medals summary, Medalists\nSmall medals awarded to the skaters who achieve the highest short program or rhythm dance placements in each discipline:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 69], "content_span": [70, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288968-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 European 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, 42], "section_span": [44, 69], "content_span": [70, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288968-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288968-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00288968-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 European Figure Skating Championships, Prize money\nPrize money is awarded to skaters who achieve a Top 6 placement in each discipline as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 55], "content_span": [56, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games\nThe 2nd European Games 2019 (Belarusian: II \u0415\u045e\u0440\u0430\u043f\u0435\u0439\u0441\u043a\u0456\u044f \u0433\u0443\u043b\u044c\u043d\u0456, Je\u016drapiejskija hu\u013ani 2019; Russian: II \u0415\u0432\u0440\u043e\u043f\u0435\u0439\u0441\u043a\u0438\u0435 \u0438\u0433\u0440\u044b, Yevropeyskiye igry 2019) was held in Minsk, Belarus, from 21 June to 30 June 2019. The games featured 200 events in 15 sports (23 disciplines). Around 4,000 athletes from 50 countries participated. Ten of the sports offered qualification opportunities for the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, Japan. The opening ceremony at the Dinamo Stadium was held on 21 June and the closing ceremony at the Dinamo Stadium was held on 30 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games\nThe logo of the games was \"papara\u0107-kvietka\"\u2014a plant that plays an important role in the culture of the Slavs. The slogan of the event is \"Bright Year, Bright You\", which also makes reference to the national domain of the Republic of Belarus and the official international shortening\u2014BY.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Host selection\nA number of countries and cities expressed their interest to host the second European Games in 2019 but only the Netherlands submitted an official bid. At the meeting of an Extraordinary General Assembly on 16 May 2015, the Netherlands was unanimously approved as host of the second edition of the Games. The competition intended to be nationwide and based in seven cities, including Amsterdam, The Hague, Eindhoven, Rotterdam, Utrecht.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 European Games, Host selection\nOn 10 June 2015, the Netherlands announced their refusal to hold the second European Games after insufficient funding for the Games, projected to cost \u20ac57.5m. The European Olympic Committee president, Patrick Hickey said the news was \"disappointing\". Following this, a number of countries expressed interest in hosting the games: Belarus (Minsk), United Kingdom (Glasgow), Poland (Poznan), Russia (Kazan and Sochi), Turkey (Istanbul).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Host selection\nIn November 2015, Russia was announced as a future host country for the II European Games. At the same time, the WADA began its investigation of the doping scandal in Russia which led to the IOC's refusal to support the holding of major sports events in Russia, including the second European Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Host selection\nDuring the meeting of the EO\u0421 General Assembly, held in Minsk on 21 October 2016, Minsk was selected as a host city for the second European Games. A contract was signed on 1 September 2017 by the chairman of the Minsk City Executive Committee Andrei Shorets, the president of the EOC Janez Kocijan\u010di\u010d, the Minister of Sport and Tourism of Belarus Alexander Shamko, first Vice-President of the NOC of Belarus Andrey Astashevich, Director of the 2nd European Games 2019 Georgy Katulin, Secretary-General of the European Olympic Committees Rafael Pagnozzi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Organising Committee\nOn 12 May 2017, the President of Belarus Alexander Lukashenko signed a decree on the Foundation of the Directorate of the II European Games 2019. The founders of the foundation are the National Olympic Committee, the Minsk City Executive Committee and the Ministry of Sports and Tourism. Georgy Katulin, General Secretary of the National Olympic Committee of the Republic of Belarus, was appointed the CEO of the foundation in August 2017. In November 2017, the management launched the official website of the games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 41], "content_span": [42, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Organising Committee\nIn April 2019, Lukashenko announced that the Games were on budget and on time and that \"everything should meet the highest standards\". Sergei Rumas, Belarus's prime minister and the head of the Organising Committee also said that all the facilities would be finished by 15 May and that \"95 per cent of the equipment has already been installed\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 41], "content_span": [42, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Organising Committee\nOn 20 May 2019, Lukashenko signed Decree No.191, entitled \"On security measures during the 2nd European Games in Belarus\". It gave the Ministry of Defence the power to restrict access to certain areas and placed a ban on drones, unmanned aerial vehicles and model aeroplanes at competition venues. Drones and planes violating the decree will be seized until 2 July, when the Games end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 41], "content_span": [42, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Volunteers\nThe start of the volunteer selection began in September 2017 during the \"Dobrofest\" and registration ended on 1 April 2019. In April 2019, the head of the volunteer network for the Games, Nadezhda Anisovets, said that the appeal resulted in 24,000 applications, much larger than the 8,000 needed for the Games. Most of them are students of Belarusian universities. Applications were also received from 52 other countries including Russia, Australia, the USA, Mexico, and Egypt. The basic requirements for the candidate are communication skills and high English-language proficiency. The selected volunteers will be involved in over 34 functional areas. Each volunteer will be given a special uniform, badges and souvenirs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 754]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Opening Ceremony\nThe Opening ceremony was held at National Olympic Stadium Dinamo and ran from 22:10 to 00:45 FET. It was produced by Russian company Art City 5, and was directed by Alexander Vavilov (Belarus) and Alexei Sechenov (Russia). Augmented reality imagery was used during the ceremony. The main musical performers were Anna Netrebko, Ilya Silchukov with Elena Salo and Dimash Kudaibergen. During the parade of nations, Greece entered the stadium first. The host nation\u00a0Belarus\u00a0marched last, while other countries entered in English alphabetical order.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 European Games, Opening Ceremony\nEach delegation is escorted by girls in dresses representing the Kupala wheel, a symbol of the sun for Eastern Slavs decorated with traditional Belarusian ornaments. Attending the ceremony was President Alexander Lukashenko, who opened the games, Janez Kocijan\u010di\u010d of the European Olympic Committee, as well as other foreign delegations such as Igor Dodon representing Moldova, Aleksandar Vu\u010di\u0107 representing Serbia as well as Dmitry Medvedev and Ramzan Kadyrov representing Russia. Georgian President Salome Zourabichvili, who was due to attend the ceremony, left early due to the civil unrest in the Georgian capital of Tbilisi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Closing Ceremony\nThe Closing ceremony was held at National Olympic Stadium Dinamo and ran from 22:00 to 23:50 FET. In attendance were IOC President Thomas Bach, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Tajik President Emomali Rahmon, and Armenian President Armen Sarkissian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Transportation\nOn 27 December 2017, it was announced about the finalising of the development of a comprehensive transport service plan for the competition, based on the needs of all stakeholders and the experience of the previous Olympic and European Games host cities: Beijing, London, Baku. The main goal of the developed plan is to optimise the routes in such a way that any participant can get to any stadium in no more than half an hour. Rail services between Masyukovshchina (Minsk-Arena), Belarus (regatta course Zaslawye) and Loshitsa (\u010cy\u017eo\u016dka-Arena) will operate with higher frequency during the event. In addition, the existing bus network will be expanded by 10 to 12 new routes to the competition sites, which will run up to 300 buses and trolleybuses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 785]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Transportation\nIn August 2018, new digital information boards were unveiled in order to improve the public transport network for foreign visitors. Valery Shkuratov, the director of Metropolitan Transport and Communications (the firm which manage the transit systems in the city), said that more than 270 displays had already been installed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Transportation\nIn October 2018, it was announced that the Minsk metro would have full 4G coverage by the time the Games began. The next month, fourteen taxi companies in Minsk as well as several governmental and administrational departments signed a memorandum of understanding to guarantee fair prices during the Games. In March 2019, it was announced that the taxis adhering to the scheme would carry a logo to enable customers to identify them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Venues\nThe Organising committee plans to involve already existed sports facilities after their renovation. The Opening and closing ceremonies, as well as competitions in track and field, will be held at the Dinamo Stadium (Minsk, Kirov, 8).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Venues\nAthletes, team officials and other team personnel will stay on the grounds of Minsk University, which has the capacity to host up to 7,500 people. The students have been evicted for the duration of the Games and given alternative accommodation. Part of the village facilities has already been put into operation, part of it will be completed by April 2019. Each apartment has two bedrooms and can hold up to 4 people. The village also has a canteen, gym, merchandise store and cultural centre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Participating countries\nFifty European Olympic Committees member countries competed at the games. Numbers in brackets denote the number of athletes being sent to the Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 44], "content_span": [45, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Games\nA total of 15 sports were presented: archery, athletics, badminton, basketball 3-on-3, beach football, boxing, canoe sprint, cycling, gymnastics, judo, karate, sambo, shooting, table tennis and wrestling. A number of disciplines were dropped after the 2015 European Games: all aquatics (diving, swimming, synchronised swimming and water polo), BMX racing, mountain biking, fencing, taekwondo, triathlon and all volleyball (beach volleyball and indoor volleyball). Ten of the sports offered qualification opportunities for the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Games, Calendar\nThe competition schedule consists of 200 events. The agenda as the competition schedule may change.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Games, Archery\nAt the 2019 European Games in Minsk, eight events of archery will be contested. Archers will shoot at the Olympic Sports Complex over seven days of competition. The 2019 Games will be the first to include compound archery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Games, Athletics\nAthletics competitions will held be from 23 to 28 June at the Dinamo Stadium with a seating capacity of 22,000. Athletes will compete over six days in men's, women's and mixed track and fields events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Games, Badminton\nBadminton competition will take place at the Falcon Club with a seating capacity of 2,000 from 24 to 30 June. The competition will be held over a seven-day period and include five medal events in men's and women's singles, men's and women's doubles and mixed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Games, Basketball 3x3\nBasketball competitions will be held from 21 to 24 June at the Palova Arena with a seating capacity of 1,000. The competition will take place in the half-court 3x3 format, and both the men's and women's tournaments will feature 128 athletes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 42], "content_span": [43, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Games, Beach soccer\nThe beach soccer tournament will be held from 25 to 29 June at the Olympic Sports Complex with a seating capacity of 1,500. Ninety-six male athletes will compete over five days of competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Games, Boxing\nBoxing competitions will be held from 21 to 30 June at the URUCHIE Sports Palace. The competition consists ten weights events for men and five for women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Games, Canoe sprint\nCanoeing will be contested between 25 and 27 June at the ZASLAVL Regatta Course. A total of sixteen medal events in canoe and kayak across both genders will be held. The European Games will replace the 2019 Canoe Sprint European Championships. Therefore, the winners of each discipline will be considered as European Champion 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Games, Cycling\nTwo disciplines of cycling will be contested at the games: road cycling and track cycling. A total of 24 medal events will be held. Competitions on-road cycling will take place in Minsk city and region from 22 to 25 June. Competitions on track cycling will take place at Minsk Arena velodrome from 27 to 30 June. Road cycling will take place in Minsk City centre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Games, Gymnastics\nGymnastics at the games will be held in five categories: artistic gymnastics, rhythmic gymnastics, trampolining, acrobatics, and aerobics. All competitions will take place at the Minsk-Arena with a seating capacity of 8,000. The acrobatics competitions will take place from 22 to 23 June. The competition will be held over a two-day period and include six medal events in women's trios and mixed pairs. Competitions on aerobics will take place from 24 to 25 June. The competition will be held over a two-day period and include two medal events in mixed pairs and teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0027-0001", "contents": "2019 European Games, Games, Gymnastics\nThe gymnastic trampoline competitions will take place from 24 to 25 June. The competition will be held over a two-day period and include four medal events. The artistic gymnastics will take place from 27 to 30 June. The competition will be held over a four-day period and include twelve medal events. The rhythmic gymnastics will take place from 22 to 23 June. The competition will be held over a two-day period and include eight medal events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Games, Judo\nJudo competitions will be held from 22 to 25 June at the \u010cy\u017eo\u016dka-Arena with a seating capacity of 8,800. The competition will consist of seven weight events and one team event in each gender; a total of 15 medal events. The European Games will replace the Judo European Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Games, Karate\nKarate competitions will be held from 29 to 30 June at the \u010cy\u017eo\u016dka-Arena with a seating capacity of 8,800. The competition will consist of twelve events, six in each gender\u2014individual Kata and ten weighted Kumite.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Games, Sambo\nSambo competitions will take place at the Minsk Sports Palace from 22 to 23 June and will consist of 18 events, nine in each gender.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Games, Shooting\nShooting at the games will be held in two categories: shooting rifle and pistol and shooting shotgun. Competitions on shooting rifle and pistol will take place at the Shooting Center from 22 to 29 June. Competitions on shooting shotgun will take place at the Sporting Club from 22 to 28 June. In total, the competition will be held over an eight-day period and include nineteen medal events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Games, Table tennis\nTable tennis will take place from 22 to 29 June at Tennis Olympic Center with a seating capacity of 1,000. Athletes will compete in five events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Games, Wrestling\nThe wrestling events will be held at the Minsk Sports Palace with a seating capacity 3,300 from 25 to 30 June. 18 events will be held, six events in freestyle for men, six events for women, and six in the Greco-Roman style for men.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Marketing, Logo\nThe prototype for creating the 2nd European Games' logo in Minsk was the Kupala fire and \"paparat-kvetka\", which plays an important role in the Slavic culture. According to legend, \"paparat-kvetka\" blossoms once a year at midnight on Kupala Night. Anyone who sees this flowering will become the owner of unusual abilities and talents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Marketing, Mascot\nIn autumn of 2017, an open republican contest for the development of the mascot of the European Games was announced. Anyone could take part in the competition. Over 2,000 variants were collected from professionals and amateurs. The public presentation of the winning version took place in Minsk on 29 November 2018. The mascot chosen was a baby fox named \"Lesik\" who wears a shirt and shorts with the colours of the games' logo and wears shoes and a baseball hat with the games' slogan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Marketing, Mascot\nLesik's story is based after The Little Prince, when after the Little Prince leaves Earth, Lesik the Fox misses his new friend and wants to make more. He learns of a legendary flower called the Paparats Kvetka which can help his dream come true, but he needs to travel 1 million steps to Belarus to find it. He represents friendship, development, harmony, discipline, determination, cheerfulness, invincibility and vigour, according to the mascot's creators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Marketing, Slogan\nThe slogan of the event is \"Bright Year, Bright You! \", which also successfully points to the national domain of the Republic of Belarus and the official international abbreviation BY. The Belarusian equivalent of the slogan is the phrase \"\u0427\u0430\u0441 \u044f\u0441\u043a\u0440\u0430\u0432\u044b\u0445 \u043f\u0435\u0440\u0430\u043c\u043e\u0433! \", and the Russian is \"\u0412\u0440\u0435\u043c\u044f \u044f\u0440\u043a\u0438\u0445 \u043f\u043e\u0431\u0435\u0434! \", literally \"Time for bright victories!\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Marketing, Torch relay\nThe torch relay \"Flame of Peace\" was planned for before the games. In addition to traditional running with a torch, there were also creative performances organised along the route. The torch relay will last for 50 days and will cover 7,700\u00a0km. The relay will include 450 torchbearers, 100 volunteers and 10 flame keepers. The torch relay will begin on 3 May in Rome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 43], "content_span": [44, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Marketing, Torch relay\nThe torch itself was designed by Yulia Braychuk, weighs 1.7\u00a0kg and is 81\u00a0cm tall. It is made from stainless steel and can be attached to a bike or wheelchair.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 43], "content_span": [44, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Promotion, Selfie contest\nThe deadline for submitting the selfie photos was October 2018. The criteria for evaluating photos include compliance with the theme and conditions of the contest, as well as artistic taste and originality. The final results were to be announced in late December 2018; however, the competition was extended to the 31 December. It was then later announced that the deadline would be extended again to the 25 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Promotion, Selfie contest\nThe winners were awarded diplomas from Belteleradiocompany, as well as sets of tickets for the events of the European Games in Minsk and the official gear of the National Team of the Republic of Belarus. It happened on 21 June, nearly 30 minutes prior to Opening Ceremony of the Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Promotion, Sponsors\nSponsorship was approved as one of the sources to reduce the number of budgetary funds for the games according to the decree of the President of the Republic of Belarus of 12 May 2017 \u00abOn the Directorate of the second European Games 2019\u00bb. On 15 December 2017, the official sponsor of the games became the operator of electronic interactive games \u00abSport Pari\u00bb. On 22 December 2017, it was announced that the telecommunication operator velcom is the official telecommunication partner of the 2nd European Games of 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Promotion, Sponsors\nIn March 2019, the Games' Organising Committee signed a memorandum of understanding with UNAIDS to strengthen co-operation in promoting safe lifestyles, preventing the spread of HIV/AIDS and eliminating discrimination around the infection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Promotion, Stamps\nOn 1 February 2019, Belposhta, the Belarussian postal service, released the official stamps for the Games. The four designs depict a cyclist, a runner, a rower and a dancer and were designed by Marina Vitkovskaya, with 120,000 sets being printed. There was an official cancellation ceremony in Minsk City Hall on the day of release.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Promotion, Broadcasting rights\nIn February 2019, International Sports Broadcasting, a Spanish firm, was chosen as the host broadcaster for the Games, beating Match TV and Medialuso-Mediapro. The company had previously broadcast the 1st European Games in Baku. In March 2019, ISB was allowed to sell global broadcasting rights for the Games, with around 117 countries that have already been granted viewing rights. ISB and the Games' organisers have expressed that they hope to broadcast to more than 160 countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 51], "content_span": [52, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Promotion, Cultural Program\nThe European Games featured a cultural program that included historical European martial arts. The program consisted of a tournament with 28 unique nations from 3 continents competing in 4 different weapon categories. Also, there was an exhibition of rare, original swords, fencing treatises, and martial arts paraphernalia from the 15th through the early 20th centuries. The exhibition also featured a conference of lectures and presentations from scholars on historical martial arts on 21 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 48], "content_span": [49, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288969-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games, Promotion, Art exhibition\nOn 7 June 2019, an exhibition celebrating the Games and its cultural legacy called \"The High Art of Sport\", opened at the National Centre for Contemporary Arts in Minsk. The exhibition contained more than 500 items, including materials from the Belarusian State Archive and works from artists from 11 of the competing countries. It was to be run until 4 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288970-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games medal table\nThe 2019 European Games was a multi-sport event held in Minsk, Belarus from 21 to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288970-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games medal table\nAthletes from 43 NOCs won medals, leaving 7 NOCs without a medal, and 34 of them won at least one gold medal. Russia led the medal table of the 2nd European Games. They led all the medal categories, winning the most gold medals (44, nearly 25\u00a0% of total gold medals), the most silver medals (24), the most bronze medals (41) and the most medals overall (109). Bosnia and Herzegovina and Luxembourg won their first medals on European Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288970-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games medal table, Medal table\nThe medal table is based on information provided by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and is consistent with IOC convention in its published medal tables. By default, the table is ordered by the number of gold medals the athletes from a nation have won, where nation is an entity represented by a National Olympic Committee (NOC). The number of silver medals is taken into consideration next and then the number of bronze medals. If nations are still tied, equal ranking is given and they are listed alphabetically.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288970-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Games medal table, Medal table\nSeven nations which failed to win any medals: Albania, Andorra, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Malta, Monaco and North Macedonia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288971-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Judo Championships\nThe 2019 European Judo Championships were held in Minsk, Belarus from 22 to 25 June 2019 during the 2019 European Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288972-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Junior & U23 Weightlifting Championships\nThe 2019 European Junior & U23 Weightlifting Championships took place in Rin Grand Hotel, Bucharest, Romania from 18 to 27 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288972-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Junior & U23 Weightlifting Championships, Medal table\nRanking by all medals: Big (Total result) and Small (Snatch and Clean & Jerk)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 67], "content_span": [68, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288973-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Junior Karate Championships\nThe 46th 2019 European Junior Karate Championships were the edition of the European Karate Championships, and were held in Aalborg, Denmark from 8 to 10 February 2019 along with the Karate Junior & U21 Championships and it was organized by Dansk Karate Forbund.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288973-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Junior Karate Championships, Junior Kumite Male -55 KG\nLuciano Carmine from Italy ranked first and won the gold medal in the Continental Championship with 930 points and a total of 5 matches won. Mikita Rashetnik from Belarus won the silver medal. Burak Ozdemir from Turkey and Victor Cuerva from Spain won bronze medals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288973-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Junior Karate Championships, Junior Kumite Male -61 KG\nAminagha Guliyev from Azerbaijan ranked first and won the gold medal in the Continental Championship with 990 points and a total of 6 matches won. Amar Youness Oualad from Belgium won the silver medal. Aleksandre Tkvatsiria from Georgia and Brahim El Beqqal from France won bronze medals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288973-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Junior Karate Championships, Junior Kumite Male -68 KG\nVladislav Taldykin from Russian Federation ranked first and won the gold medal in the Continental Championship with 990 points and a total of 6 matches won. Nguyen Hoang Ngan from Hungary won the silver medal. Yanis Lamotte from France and Daniele De Vivo from Italy won bronze medals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288973-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Junior Karate Championships, Junior Kumite Male -76 KG\nRaybak Abdesselem from France ranked first and won the gold medal in the Continental Championship with 990 points and a total of 6 matches won. Ilias Hounifa from Belgium won the silver medal. Andrii Zaplitnyi from Ukraine and Hasan Arslan from Turkey won bronze medals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288973-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Junior Karate Championships, Junior Kumite Male +76 KG\nCrean Christopher McCarthy from Ireland ranked first and won the gold medal in the Continental Championship with 990 points and a total of 6 matches won. Gligor Petkov from Macedonia won the silver medal. Tomas Kosa from Slovakia and Albert Baranov from Estonia won bronze medals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288974-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Junior Swimming Championships\nThe 2019 European Junior Swimming Championships were held from 3 to 7 July 2019 in Kazan, Russia at the Palace of Water Sports. The Championships were organized by LEN, the European Swimming League, and were held in a 50-meter pool. The Championships were for girls aged 14\u201317 and boys age 15\u201318.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288975-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Junior and U23 Canoe Slalom Championships\nThe 2019 European Junior and U23 Canoe Slalom Championships took place in Liptovsk\u00fd Mikul\u00e1\u0161, Slovakia from 4 to 7 July 2019 under the auspices of the European Canoe Association (ECA) at the Ondrej Cibak Whitewater Slalom Course. It was the 21st edition of the competition for Juniors (U18) and the 17th edition for the Under 23 category. A total of 16 medal events took place, 8 in each of the two age categories.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288976-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Juniors Wrestling Championships\nThe 2019 European Juniors Wrestling Championships was held in Pontevedra, Spain between June 03 - 09, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288977-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Karate Championships\nThe 2019 European Karate Championships were the 54th edition of the European Karate Championships, and were held in Guadalajara, Spain from 28 to 31 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288977-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Karate Championships, Para Karate\n46 athletes from 16 nations in 6 events was competed in 2nd European Para Karate Championships. Results:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288978-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Le Mans Series\nThe 2019 European Le Mans Series was the sixteenth season of the Automobile Club de l'Ouest's (ACO) European Le Mans Series. The six-event season began at Circuit Paul Ricard on 14 April and finished at Algarve International Circuit on 27 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288978-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Le Mans Series\nThe series is open to Le Mans Prototypes, divided into the LMP2 and LMP3 classes, and grand tourer-style racing cars in the LMGTE class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288978-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Le Mans Series, Calendar\nThe provisional calendar for the 2019 season was announced on 21 September 2018. The calendar comprises six events, with the only change from the 2018 season being the addition of a race at Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya, which replaces the Red Bull Ring as the third round of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288978-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Le Mans Series, Calendar\nIn April 2019, it was announced that the round in Barcelona would be held as an evening race, taking place on the Saturday evening of the event instead of the originally scheduled Sunday afternoon, primarily due to the anticipated hot weather in Spain in July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288978-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Le Mans Series, Calendar\nThe round at Silverstone is once again held in conjunction with the FIA World Endurance Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288978-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Le Mans Series, Entries, LMP2\nIn accordance with the 2017 LMP2 regulations, all cars in the LMP2 class use the Gibson GK428 V8 engine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288978-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Le Mans Series, Entries, LMP3\nAll cars in the LMP3 class use the Nissan VK50VE 5.0\u00a0L V8 engine and Michelin tyres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288978-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European Le Mans Series, Results\nTo be classified a car will have to cross the finish line on the race track when the chequered flag is shown, except in a case of force majeure at the Stewards\u2019 discretion and have covered at least 70% (the official number of laps will be rounded down to the nearest whole number) of the distance covered by the car classified in first place in the overall classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288979-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Masters Games\nThe 2019 European Masters Games is the fourth edition of the multi-sport event for masters sport, scheduled to take place between 26 July \u2013 4 August 2019 in Turin in Italy. It featured 28 sports, mostly for people aged 35 and above, although some disciplines will allow younger athletes to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288979-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Masters Games, Sports, Paralympic Sports\nDuring the European Masters Games Torino 2019 for disabled athletes it will be possible to participate in the disciplines of the following sports:ArcheryAthleticsSwimming", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288979-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Masters Games, Sports, Paralympic Sports\nFor further details, please consult the disability codes listed in the specific sport guides.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288980-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Mixed Team Badminton Championships\nThe 2019 European Mixed Team Badminton Championships was held in Copenhagen, Denmark, between 13\u201317 February 2019 and organised by Badminton Europe and Denmark's Badminton Union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288980-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Mixed Team Badminton Championships, Qualification, Qualification stage\nThe qualification stage was held between 7\u20139 December 2018 in 7 cities across Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 84], "content_span": [85, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288981-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Mixed Team Badminton Championships group stage\nThe following results are the 2019 European Mixed Team Badminton Championships's main draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288982-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Mixed Team Badminton Championships qualification stage\nThe following results are the 2019 European Mixed Team Badminton Championships's qualification stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288982-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Mixed Team Badminton Championships qualification stage, Summary\nThe qualification stage was held between 7\u20139 December 2018 in 7 cities across Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 77], "content_span": [78, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288983-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Mixed Team Badminton Championships squads\nThis article lists the confirmed squads lists for badminton's 2019 European Mixed Team Badminton Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288984-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Modern Pentathlon Championships\nThe 2019 European Modern Pentathlon Championships was held in Bath, Great Britain from 6 to 11 August 2019. The event was to be the 27th edition of the competition, and the third held in Great Britain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288984-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Modern Pentathlon Championships\nThe event was a direct qualification event for the 2020 Summer Olympics, with the eight highest finishers in the men's and women's individual events gaining quota places for their National Olympic Committee at the 2020 Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288984-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Modern Pentathlon Championships, Olympic Qualifiers\nThe following pentathletes secured qualification for the 2020 Olympic Games:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 65], "content_span": [66, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288985-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Motocross Championship\nThe 2019 European Motocross Championship was the 31st European Motocross Championship season since it was revived in 1988. It included 15 events and 5 different classes. It started at Matterley Basin in Great Britain on 24 March, and ended at Imola in Italy on 22 September. All rounds acted as support classes at the European rounds of the 2019 MXGP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288985-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Motocross Championship, EMX250\nA 9-round calendar for the 2019 season was announced on 25 October 2018. EMX250 is for riders competing on 4-stroke motorcycles between 175cc-250cc. For 2019, an age restriction has been placed on the class, meaning only riders under the age of 23 are allowed to compete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288985-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Motocross Championship, EMX125\nAn 8-round calendar for the 2019 season was announced on 25 October 2018. EMX125 is for riders competing on 2-stroke motorcycles of 125cc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288985-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Motocross Championship, EMX2T\nA 7-round calendar for the 2019 season was announced on 25 October 2018. EMX2T is for riders competing on 2-stroke motorcycles of 250cc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288985-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Motocross Championship, EMX85\nA 1-round calendar for the 2019 season was announced on 25 October 2018. EMX85 is for riders competing on 2-stroke motorcycles of 85cc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288985-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Motocross Championship, EMX85, Participants\nRiders qualify for the championship by finishing in the top 10 in one of the 4 regional 85cc championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288985-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Motocross Championship, EMX65\nA 1-round calendar for the 2019 season was announced on 25 October 2018. EMX65 is for riders competing on 2-stroke motorcycles of 65cc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288985-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European Motocross Championship, EMX65, Participants\nRiders qualify for the championship by finishing in the top 10 in one of the 4 regional 65cc championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288986-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Mountain Bike Championships\nThe 2019 European Mountain Bike Championships was the 29th holding of the European Mountain Bike Championships, an annual mountain biking competition organized by the Union Europ\u00e9enne de Cyclisme (UEC). The championships comprised seven disciplines: downhill, cross-country cycling (XC), cross-country marathon (XCM), cross-country ultra-marathon, cross-country eliminator (XCE), trials, and beach race. The competitions for each discipline were held on different dates and at different venues, the only exceptions being cross-country and cross-country eliminator, which were contested on the same dates and in the same location.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288987-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Netball Championship\nThe 2019 European Netball Championship were held in Belfast from 27-29 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288988-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Open\nThe 2019 European Open was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the fourth edition of the European Open and part of the ATP Tour 250 series of the 2019 ATP Tour. It took place at the Lotto Arena in Antwerp, Belgium, from October 14 to October 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288988-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European 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-00288988-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry using a protected ranking into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288988-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European 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-00288989-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Open \u2013 Doubles\nNicolas Mahut and \u00c9douard Roger-Vasselin were the defending champions, but Mahut chose not to defend the title and Roger-Vasselin chose to compete in Stockholm instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288989-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Open \u2013 Doubles\nKevin Krawietz and Andreas Mies won the title, defeating Rajeev Ram and Joe Salisbury in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20131), 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288990-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Open \u2013 Singles\nKyle Edmund was the defending champion, but lost in the first round of qualifying to Norbert Gombos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288990-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Open \u2013 Singles\nAndy Murray won the title, defeating Stan Wawrinka in the final, 3\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20134. This was Murray's first singles title since winning the 2017 Dubai Tennis Championships. This was also Murray's first appearance in an ATP singles final since returning to the ATP Tour after his career-saving hip resurfacing operation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288990-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Open \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-00288991-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Pairs Speedway Championship\nThe 2019 European Pairs Speedway Championship was the 16th edition of the European Pairs Speedway Championship. The final was held in Balakovo, Russia on 29 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288991-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Pairs Speedway Championship\nThe title was won by Russia for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election\nAn election to the European Parliament was held between 23 and 26 May 2019, the ninth parliamentary election since the first direct elections in 1979. A total of 751 Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) represent more than 512 million people from 28 member states. In February 2018, the European Parliament had voted to decrease the number of MEPs from 751 to 705 if the United Kingdom were to withdraw from the European Union on 29 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election\nHowever, the United Kingdom participated alongside other EU member states after an extension of Article 50 to 31 October 2019; therefore, the allocation of seats between the member states and the total number of seats remained as it had been in 2014. The Ninth European Parliament had its first plenary session on 2 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election\nOn 26 May 2019, the European People's Party led by Manfred Weber won the most seats in the European Parliament, making Weber the leading candidate to become the next President of the European Commission. Despite this, the European Council decided after the election to nominate Ursula von der Leyen as new Commission President. The centre-left and centre-right parties suffered significant losses, while pro-EU centrist, liberal and environmentalist parties and anti-EU right-wing populist parties made substantial gains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, New law\nOn 7 June 2018, the Council agreed at ambassador level to change the EU electoral law and to reform old laws from the 1976 Electoral Act. The purpose of the reform is to increase participation in elections, raise understanding of their European character and prevent irregular voting while at the same time respecting the constitutional and electoral traditions of the member states. The reform forbids double voting and voting in third countries, thus improving the visibility of European political parties. To avoid double voting, contact authorities are established to exchange data on voters, a process that has to start at least six weeks before the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, New law\nThe European Parliament gave its consent on 4 July 2018 and the Act was adopted by the Council on 13 July 2018. However, not all member states ratified the Act prior to the 2019 elections and therefore this election took place in line with the previous rules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Political groups and candidates\nThe Spitzenkandidat process involves the nomination by European political parties of candidates for the role of Commission President, the party winning the most seats in the European Parliament receiving the first opportunity to attempt to form a majority to back their candidate (akin to how heads of government are elected in national parliamentary democracies). This process was first used in 2014 and was opposed by some in the European Council. The future of the process is uncertain, but the European Parliament has attempted to codify the process and the parties are almost certain to select the candidates again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Political groups and candidates\nOn 23 January 2018, the Constitutional Affairs Committee adopted a text stating that the Spitzenkandidat process could not be overturned, and that Parliament \"will be ready to reject any candidate in the investiture procedure of the Commission President who was not appointed as a Spitzenkandidat in the run-up to the European elections\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Political groups and candidates\nIn May 2018 a Eurobarometer poll suggested that 49% of the 27,601 individuals from all 28 EU countries surveyed think that the Spitzenkandidat process will help them vote in the next European elections while 70% also think that the process requires a real debate on European issues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Political groups and candidates, European People's Party\nIncumbent Jean-Claude Juncker stated he would not seek a second term as President of the European Commission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 91], "content_span": [92, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Political groups and candidates, European People's Party\nAt their 2018 Congress in Helsinki, the EPP elected Manfred Weber as their Spitzenkandidat for President of the European Commission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 91], "content_span": [92, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Political groups and candidates, Party of European Socialists\nPrevious candidate Martin Schulz left the European Parliament in 2017 to head the Social Democratic Party of Germany, but he stepped down from the latter position in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 96], "content_span": [97, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Political groups and candidates, Party of European Socialists\nTwo candidates were nominated by PES member parties and organisations:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 96], "content_span": [97, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Political groups and candidates, Party of European Socialists\n\u0160ef\u010dovi\u010d announced his withdrawal in November and supported Frans Timmermans as the Common Candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 96], "content_span": [97, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Political groups and candidates, Party of European Socialists\nThe party will convene an extraordinary Congress in Lisbon to ratify the election of the candidate and to vote upon the manifesto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 96], "content_span": [97, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Political groups and candidates, European Conservatives and Reformists\nJan Zahradil, an MEP for the Czech Civic Democratic Party, is the Spitzenkandidat of the European Conservatives and Reformists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 105], "content_span": [106, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Political groups and candidates, European Green Party\nAs in 2014, the Greens adopted the principle of having two leading candidates for the European Elections 2019. Unlike in 2014, where the candidates were chosen through an open online primary elections, the two leading candidates were elected by the Council of the Party in Berlin in November 2018. Four people, two of them being currently MEPs, have declared their candidacy:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 88], "content_span": [89, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Political groups and candidates, European Green Party\nAt their 2018 Congress in Berlin, the party elected Ska Keller and Bas Eickhout as their Spitzenkandidaten for the President of the European Commission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 88], "content_span": [89, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Political groups and candidates, European Free Alliance\nOriol Junqueras, a Catalan historian, academic and former Vice President of Catalonia who is currently imprisoned because of his involvement in the 2017 Catalan independence referendum, is the Spitzenkandidat of the European Free Alliance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 90], "content_span": [91, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Political groups and candidates, Alliance of Liberals and Democrats\nRather than present a single candidate, the ALDE group presented a Team Europe of seven people as the alliance's leading candidates:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 102], "content_span": [103, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Political groups and candidates, Party of the European Left\nThe designated candidates are Violeta Tomi\u010d from Slovenia and Belgian trade-unionist Nico Cu\u00e9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 94], "content_span": [95, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Political groups and candidates, Populist and Eurosceptic groups\nThe Europe of Freedom and Direct Democracy was widely expected to disband after the election. One reason was that its biggest share of MEPs came from the United Kingdom, which was long expected to leave the EU before the election. The second was that the second-biggest partner, Italy's Five Star Movement (M5S), felt uneasy about this alliance anyway, having unsuccessfully tried to join the Greens/EFA or ALDE group instead. In February 2019, M5S alongside partners from Croatia, Finland, Greece and Poland presented a new alliance of anti-establishment parties that claim to be neither left nor right.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 99], "content_span": [100, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Political groups and candidates, Populist and Eurosceptic groups\nThe Movement is an alliance of populist parties set up by Steve Bannon in 2018 with the purpose of contesting the European elections. Participating parties included, at least temporarily, Lega Nord, People's Party of Belgium and Brothers of Italy and possibly French National Rally. Originally envisioned as an attempt to unite the populist parties in Europe, The Movement has so far been snubbed by the Alternative for Germany, the Freedom Party of Austria and the UK Independence Party. In March 2019, reporters assessed Bannon's project as a failure. Shortly ahead of the election, Marine Le Pen of the French National Rally distanced herself from Bannon, clarifying that he played no role in her party's campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 99], "content_span": [100, 817]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Political groups and candidates, Populist and Eurosceptic groups\nIn April 2019, Matteo Salvini of Italy's Lega launched the European Alliance of Peoples and Nations as a new coalition of populist, hard Eurosceptic and anti-immigration parties. It has been joined by most of the members of the outgoing Europe of Nations and Freedom group (including Lega, the French National Rally, Freedom Party of Austria and the Dutch Party for Freedom) as well as some former EFDD (Alternative for Germany) and ECR parties (Danish People's Party and Finns Party). It has been predicted to become the fourth largest group in parliament with an estimate of more than 80 MEPs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 99], "content_span": [100, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Political groups and candidates, New parties\n2019 saw the debut of new parties such as Wiosna of Poland, Czech Pirate Party of Czech Republic, USR-PLUS of Romania, Human Shield and Most of Croatia, \u013dSNS and Progressive Slovakia of Slovakia. Some of the new parties have already joined European parties, e.g. LM\u0160 of Slovenia is a member of ALDE.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 79], "content_span": [80, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Political groups and candidates, New parties\nThe biggest new party is La R\u00e9publique En Marche! (LREM) of French President Emmanuel Macron that was formed in 2016 and won the French presidential and parliamentary elections of the following year. Initially, it balked at joining any of the existing party families, instead trying to form a new parliamentary group of pro-European centrists who support Macron's plans to reform the European institutions, drawing away members from ALDE, EPP and S&D. Possible partners for such a project were expected to include Spanish Ciudadanos, Progressive Slovakia and the Hungarian Momentum Movement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 79], "content_span": [80, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0022-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Political groups and candidates, New parties\nHowever, the hypothetical group was considered to have difficulties to find MEPs from at least seven member states as is required to form a new group. In November 2018, LREM decided to cooperate with the liberal ALDE group instead. Nevertheless, Macron stressed that this was merely a loose alliance and his party is not a member of the ALDE Europarty. He bluntly criticised ALDE for accepting donations from the Bayer-Monsanto chemical group while LREM's campaign chief threatened to recall the alliance. In April and May 2019, LREM continued its efforts to build a broader group, including ALDE, but also centrist and centre-left parties outside of ALDE.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 79], "content_span": [80, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Political groups and candidates, New parties\nThe new Brexit Party won 29 seats in the United Kingdom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 79], "content_span": [80, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Political groups and candidates, New parties\nThe European Spring initiated from the Democracy in Europe Movement 2025 ran as a pan-European party alliance with one unified vision for Europe, the European Green New Deal. The most prominent figure is the former Greek minister Yanis Varoufakis, who ran as a candidate in the constituency of Germany, but failed to secure a seat. Despite garnering approximately one and a half million votes, no representatives who ran DiEM25 were elected, due to the votes being dispersed throughout different EU countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 79], "content_span": [80, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Political groups and candidates, New parties\nAs a new pan-European party, Volt Europa was founded in different European countries two years before the elections and successfully campaigned in eight EU countries for the elections with one transnational programme. Despite missing its own goal to create a parliamentary group on its own, approximately half a million votes in total were sufficient to send one of the founders, Damian Boeselager, into the European Parliament via a German Volt list. Since June 2019, Volt is part of the group of the Greens/EFA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 79], "content_span": [80, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Post-Brexit seats\nIn June 2018, the European Council decided to reapportion 27 of the 73 seats which would become vacant in the event of the United Kingdom leaving the EU. As the United Kingdom was still a member of the EU at the time of the election, the elections were held with the same allocation of seats as in 2014. When the United Kingdom left the EU, 27 of the seats were reallocated to other EU member states as shown below, resulting in a total of 705 MEPs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Post-Brexit seats, Changes in group representation\nThe table below shows the changes in group composition after the United Kingdom left the EU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 85], "content_span": [86, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Seat projections\nThere were no pan-European polls for the European elections. However, several organisations calculated the theoretical seat distribution in the European Parliament based on national polls in all member states. The table below displays these different projections. Since the United Kingdom notified its intention to leave the European Union in March 2017, the United Kingdom was expected not to participate in the European elections and was therefore excluded from projections. On 10 April 2019, the European Council extended the Brexit deadline to 31 October 2019, and the UK did participate in the European elections. The UK was included in most projections after that date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Seat projections, Percent\nThe following table shows projections with vote share instead of seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Aftermath, President of the Commission Approval\nThe heads of governments, gathered in a European Council on 1\u20133 July 2019, could not agree on a consensus President of the Commission. The two Spitzenkandidaten were discussed, but neither Manfred Weber (EPP), nor Frans Timmermans (PES), who had the backing of many leaders but not of those from the Visegrad Group, had a majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 82], "content_span": [83, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Aftermath, President of the Commission Approval\nIn the final hours, the name of Ursula von der Leyen was suggested and agreed to by all governments, with Germany's abstention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 82], "content_span": [83, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Aftermath, President of the Commission Approval\nThe European Parliament voted to approve her nomination on 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 82], "content_span": [83, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Aftermath, President of the Commission Approval\nLe Grand Continent published a detailed analysis of the secret ballot. The authors numbered the public pledges of national delegations and individual MEPs as amounting to 410, which is 27 more than what von der Leyen ultimately received.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 82], "content_span": [83, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288992-0033-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election, Aftermath, President of the Commission Approval\nTo explain the difference, they suggest three scenarios: one in which the support of delegations from the S&D group (some for, some against, some equivocal) was lower than admitted, another in which MEPs from the populist parties in government (Poland's PiS, Hungary's Fidesz and Italy's M5S) were claiming support only to gain leverage, and a half-way scenario which they see as the likeliest. In two of these three scenarios, the S&D group, which for decades was the pillar of the Grand coalition in Europe, no longer has a majority of MEPs supporting the Commission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 82], "content_span": [83, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288993-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Aosta Valley\nThe European Parliament election of 2019 took place in Italy on 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288993-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Aosta Valley\nIn Aosta Valley Lega Nord came first with 37.2% of the vote (country-level result 34.3%) and more than 20pp than the Democratic Party, which came second with 16.2% of the vote. Autonomies for Europe, a five-party regional coalition including the Valdostan Union, came third with 13.9% of the vote, ahead of the Five Star Movement (9.7%), Forza Italia (5.4%), Green Europe (4.7%), More Europe (3.7%), Brothers of Italy (3.3%) and The Left (2.7%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288994-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Austria\nThe 2019 European Parliament election was held in Austria on 26 May 2019 to elect the country's 18 members of the European Parliament. The Austrian People's Party (\u00d6VP) gained two seats for a total of seven, while the Freedom Party of Austria (FP\u00d6) and The Greens each lost one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288994-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Austria\nThe election took place nine days after the start of the Ibiza affair, which led to the resignation of Vice-Chancellor and FP\u00d6 leader Heinz-Christian Strache and the collapse of the federal \u00d6VP\u2013FP\u00d6 government. The European election was seen as a victory for the \u00d6VP and a defeat for the FP\u00d6, who were forecasted to perform substantially better.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288994-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Austria, Contesting parties\nThe table below lists parties elected in the 2014 European Parliament election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288994-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Austria, Contesting parties\nSeven parties contested the election. In addition to the five already represented in the European Parliament, two more collected enough signatures to appear on the ballot:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288994-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Austria, Facts and statistics\nAccording to final numbers, a total of 6,416,202 people aged 16+ are eligible to vote in this election, an increase from 6,410,602 people in the 2014 election. 3,312,745 women (2014: 3,322,498) and 3,103,457 men (2014: 3,088,104) are eligible to vote. Included in these totals are 44,718 Austrians living abroad and 38,668 foreign EU-citizens living in Austria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288994-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Austria, Facts and statistics\nPoll opening and closing times on election day are set individually by each municipality. Poll closing times can be no later than 5\u00a0pm. Results will be released at 11\u00a0pm (after Italy closes their polls).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288994-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Austria, Facts and statistics\nVoters are allowed to cast their vote by postal ballot. Postal ballots have to arrive at the district voting commission no later than 5\u00a0pm on election day and will be counted on Monday, 27 May \u2013 starting at 9\u00a0am.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288994-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Austria, Facts and statistics\nA total of 686,249 postal ballots have been requested by voters, up from 444,057 \u2013 an increase of 55% \u2013 compared with the 2014 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288994-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Austria, Campaign\nIn the lead up to the 2019 European Parliament election in Austria, in what The Guardian described as \"doubling down\" on rhetoric ahead of the election, FPO Vice Chancellor of Austria Heinz-Christian Strache endorsed the far-right conspiracy of the great replacement. He claimed that \"population replacement\" was real, adding: \"We don\u2019t want to become a minority in our own country\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288994-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Austria, Ibiza affair\nThe Ibiza affair (German: Ibiza-Aff\u00e4re), also known as Ibiza-gate, was a political scandal in Austria involving Heinz-Christian Strache, the former Vice-Chancellor of Austria and leader of the Freedom Party (FP\u00d6), Johann Gudenus, a deputy leader of the Freedom Party, and both the Austrian Freedom Party and Austria's political landscape in general.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288994-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Austria, Ibiza affair\nThe scandal started on 17 May 2019 with the publication of a secretly recorded video of a meeting in Ibiza, Spain, in July 2017, which appears to show the then opposition politicians Strache and Gudenus discussing their party's underhanded practices and intentions. In the video, both politicians appeared receptive to proposals by a woman posing as the niece of a Russian oligarch, discussing how to provide the FP\u00d6 with positive news coverage in return for government contracts. Strache and Gudenus also hinted at corrupt political practices involving numerous other wealthy donors to the FP\u00d6 in Europe and elsewhere.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288994-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Austria, Ibiza affair\nThe scandal caused the resignation of Strache and Gudenus, the collapse of the Austrian governing \u00d6VP-FP\u00d6 coalition on 18 May 2019 and the announcement of an early legislative election in September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288994-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Austria, Results\nThe numbers in brackets denote changes in seat distribution caused by Brexit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288995-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Belgium\nThe European Parliament election of 2019 in Belgium was held on 26 May 2019 in the three Belgian constituencies: the Dutch-speaking electoral college, the French-speaking electoral college and the German-speaking electoral college.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288995-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Belgium\nA royal order of 15 June 2018 fixed the date of the European Parliament election in Belgium, following an agreement at European level. Per the Belgian Constitution, the Belgian regional elections, and additionally the Belgian federal election because no snap election occurred, were automatically held on the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288995-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Belgium\nMarianne Thyssen, who was re-elected Member of the European Parliament in 2014 as lijsttrekker for CD&V and who subsequently became European Commissioner, announced in July 2018 that she would quit politics in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288995-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Belgium, Electoral system\nAs the reapportionment after Brexit did not impact the number of seats allocated to Belgium, 21 MEPs were elected in Belgium, as in the 2014 election. One of them is by law allocated to the German-speaking electoral college and the remaining ones are allocated to the Dutch-speaking and to the French-speaking electoral college in accordance with a population formula, giving them respectively twelve and eight seats, as in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 62], "content_span": [63, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288995-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Belgium, Electoral system\nVoters could only vote on the lists depending on the language area they live in. This means that in the bilingual arrondissement of Brussels-Capital, voters could choose whether to vote for the Dutch-speaking or for the French-speaking electoral college. There was an exception to this rule for the six municipalities with language facilities in the Brussels Periphery, whose inhabitants could also opt to vote for French-speaking lists despite being in the Dutch language area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 62], "content_span": [63, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288995-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Belgium, Electoral system\nSeats were allocated according to the D'Hondt method in each of the three electoral colleges; however, the German-speaking electoral college de facto used a first-past-the-post system, since it elected only one MEP. The electoral threshold was 5%, which was based on the vote share per electoral college rather than nationally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 62], "content_span": [63, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288995-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Belgium, Electoral system\nAll Belgian citizens aged 18 or over and residing in Belgium were obligated to participate in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 62], "content_span": [63, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288995-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Belgium, Electoral system\nOther EU citizens residing in Belgium as well as Belgians living in another EU member state had the right to vote on Belgian lists in European Parliament elections. The law of 17 November 2016 extended this right to Belgians living in a non-EU member state, which was already possible for federal elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 62], "content_span": [63, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288996-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Bulgaria\nThe 2019 European Parliament election for the election of the 5th delegation from Bulgaria to the European Parliament were held on 26 May 2019. All seats were up for election. The country forms a single constituency, with members elected by proportional representation using open lists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288997-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Croatia\nThe 2019 European Parliament election in Croatia were held on 26 May 2019, electing members of the national Croatia constituency to the European Parliament. These were the third such elections in the country since its accession to the European Union in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288997-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Croatia\nIt was the first election to be held nationally since the 2016 parliamentary election, following which the center-right HDZ had formed a coalition government, first with the center-right MOST and later - in June 2017, with the centrist HNS. The European Parliament elections were therefore viewed as a major test for the center-left SDP, which had contested all previous nationwide elections since 2011 as part of a coalition, but chose to stand in this election alone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288997-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Croatia\nThe elections as such was deemed important to showcase whether the SDP could remain the largest opposition party, having been faced with months of falling opinion poll ratings. Its main contenders for such a position within the political system were the anti-establishment, eurosceptic \u017divi zid party, and the newly formed center-left Amsterdam Coalition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288997-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Croatia\nThe election resulted in the two largest parties in the country, the ruling centre-right HDZ, and the opposition centre-left SDP, winning an equal number of seats - each taking 4. SDP won in all four of the largest Croatian cities: Zagreb, Split, Rijeka and Osijek. The remaining four seats were evenly divided between the right-wing Croatian Sovereignists coalition, the centre-left Amsterdam Coalition, the anti-establishment \u017divi zid party and the independent list led by jurist Mislav Kolaku\u0161i\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288997-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Croatia\nThe strong performance of right-wing and far-right parties, such as the Croatian Sovereignists coalition and Independents for Croatia-HSP coalition, is thought to have greatly contributed to the surprisingly poor result of the HDZ, notably by significantly reducing its support among members of the Croatian diaspora, who had registered a record turnout in this election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288997-0002-0002", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Croatia\nAnother surprise in the elections was the large number of votes received by Zagreb jurist Mislav Kolaku\u0161i\u0107 and his independent list - which was something not predicted by opinion polls, as well as the failures of MOST to attain a seat and of independent incumbent MEP Marijana Petir to retain her seat (which she had held since 2014).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288997-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Croatia\nAt the previous election in 2014, Croatia was allocated 11 seats and is set to receive one additional seat following the withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the EU. All seats were up for election and the whole country forms a single constituency, with the 12 members elected by proportional representation using open lists and the D'Hondt method.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288997-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Croatia, Campaign\nA total of 33 valid candidate slates with 396 candidates were submitted for the upcoming European Parliament election. The lists were published by the State Election Commission on 10 April, when the official election campaign began that will last for 45 days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288997-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Croatia, Campaign, Croatian Democratic Union\nThe slate of the Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ), the ruling centre-right party of Croatia and member of the European People's Party (EPP), was led by 30-year-old Karlo Ressler, who was nominated by the youth branch of the party. The slate also includes two current MEPs, three members of the Croatian Parliament, and two county prefects. The party platform for the election was called \"Croatia for Generations\". Croatian Prime Minister and HDZ President Andrej Plenkovi\u0107 said that the election is a choice between a political course of Croatia's development and a backward course that would isolate Croatia. The main campaign rally of the HDZ, held in Zagreb, was attended by German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Manfred Weber, EPP's candidate for European Commission (EC) President. Both of them urged voters to reject nationalism in the upcoming election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 81], "content_span": [82, 939]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288997-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Croatia, Campaign, Social Democratic Party of Croatia\nThe slate of the main opposition party, the centre-left Social Democratic Party of Croatia (SDP) of the Party of European Socialists (PES), was led by current MEP Tonino Picula. While presenting the party list, Picula said that Croatia had not taken full advantage of its membership in the EU. The SDP was expecting to win three seats in the upcoming election. The campaign event in Rijeka, where the SDP is in power, was attended by Frans Timmermans, the candidate of the PES for president of the EC, alongside SDP President Davor Bernardi\u0107. Bernardi\u0107 accused the HDZ for \"failing to salvage\" the Croatian shipyards in Rijeka and Pula, in cooperation with the EC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 90], "content_span": [91, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288997-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Croatia, Campaign, Amsterdam Coalition\nThe list of the Amsterdam Coalition, a coalition of seven parties, including the Croatian Peasant Party (HSS), the Civic Liberal Alliance (GLAS), and the Istrian Democratic Assembly (IDS), was headed by Istria County prefect Valter Flego of the IDS. GLAS President Anka Mrak Tarita\u0161 presented the list as a rejection of a \"Europe of barbed wire fences and the Brexit chaos\", and said that the coalition advocates an open and free Europe. HSS President Kre\u0161o Beljak said that the vote for the coalition is a vote for a European Croatia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 75], "content_span": [76, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288997-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Croatia, Campaign, \u017divi zid\nThe populist \u017divi zid party announced a joint platform with Italy's Five Star Movement, Kukiz'15 from Poland, and Greece's AKKEL. The 1st candidate on the slate of the \u017divi zid was its secretary-general Tihomir Lukani\u0107. Ivan Vilibor Sin\u010di\u0107, the president of the party, presented the platform as a new generation of politicians that will fight against corruption and organised crime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288997-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Croatia, Campaign, Bridge of Independent Lists\nThe slate of the Bridge of Independent Lists (Most) was led by its president, Bo\u017eo Petrov. If elected, Petrov would have given up his seat in the European Parliament to the next candidate with most preferential votes. Prior to the start of the campaign, the Most party attempted to filibuster a bill that would increase the spending limits for the European election, but the bill was passed by the Croatian Parliament just before the deadline. The party has not joined any of the European political groups and announced the work within the non-affiliated Non-Inscrits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 83], "content_span": [84, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288997-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Croatia, Campaign, Independents for Croatia\u2013Croatian Party of Rights\nTwo right-wing parties, the Independents for Croatia (NHR) and the Croatian Party of Rights (HSP), formed a coalition and emphasized a Europe of \"free, sovereign and independent nations\" as the main agenda. Their slate included both parties' presidents, Bruna Esih of the NHR and Karlo Star\u010devi\u0107 of the HSP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 105], "content_span": [106, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288997-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Croatia, Campaign, Croatian Sovereignists\nThe Croatian Sovereignists coalition was formed by four right-wing parties: the Croatian Conservative Party (HKS), the Croatian Growth (Hrast), the Croatian Party of Rights Dr. Ante Star\u010devi\u0107 (HSP AS), and the United Croatian Patriots (UHD). Its list was led by current MEP Ru\u017ea Toma\u0161i\u0107 of the HKS, who won a mandate in 2013 and in 2014 on the HDZ-led Patriotic Coalition slate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 78], "content_span": [79, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288997-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Croatia, Campaign, Independent Democratic Serb Party\nThe Independent Democratic Serb Party (SDSS), the largest party of the Serbs of Croatia, ran independently for the first time in the European election. Although there were speculations that the SDSS might leave the ruling coalition, its leader Milorad Pupovac confirmed that the SDSS will remain a part it, following a meeting with Prime Minister Plenkovi\u0107. Campaign was marked by SDSS jumbo posters with inscription \"Do you know how it is to be a Serb in Croatia?\" in which a word Serb was written in Serbian Cyrillic. Jovi\u0107 was second on the list, just behind party leader Milorad Pupovac. As it was expected by campaign leaders jumbo posters were target of widespread nationalist vandalism and destruction which underlined the issue of ethnic intolerance and discrimination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 89], "content_span": [90, 867]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288997-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Croatia, Campaign, Other electoral lists\nThe Croatian People's Party \u2013 Liberal Democrats (HNS\u2013LD), the junior partner in the governing coalition, also ran independently, with Me\u0111imurje County Prefect Matija Posavec leading the list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 77], "content_span": [78, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288997-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Croatia, Campaign, Other electoral lists\nCurrent MEP Marijana Petir, who was elected in 2014 on the HDZ-led coalition slate, ran as an independent candidate, with a campaign focused on agrarian issues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 77], "content_span": [78, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288997-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Croatia, Polls\nThe following graph depicts the evolution of standings of the two main political parties and other parties in the poll since the parliamentary elections 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288997-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Croatia, Results\nThe ruling HDZ won 22.72% of the vote and 4 seats in the European Parliament. The SDP, the main opposition party, also won 4 seats in the parliament, with 18.71% of the popular vote. The SDP will gain the fourth seat after the United Kingdom leaves the EU. The Croatian Soverignists coalition, the independent list of Mislav Kolaku\u0161i\u0107, the \u017divi Zid party, and the Amsterdam Coalition won one seat each. The voter turnout was 29.9%, up from 25.2% in the 2014 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288997-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Croatia, Results\nPrime Minister Plenkovi\u0107 admitted that he expected more votes. The elected MEP's of the HDZ list are Karlo Ressler, Dubravka \u0160uica, Tomislav Sokol and \u017deljana Zovko. SDP President Davor Bernardi\u0107 was satisfied with the results, which exceeded his expectations. The elected MEP's of the SDP are Biljana Borzan, Tonino Picula, Predrag Fred Mati\u0107 and Romana Jerkovi\u0107. Jerkovi\u0107 will take her seat after Brexit. Ru\u017ea Toma\u0161i\u0107 of the Croatian Sovereignists won the highest number of preferential votes and retained her seat in the parliament. The biggest surprise of the election was Kolaku\u0161i\u0107's independent list, which won 7.89% of the vote. Kolaku\u0161i\u0107 announced a presidential campaign the day after the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288997-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Croatia, Results\nIvan Vilibor Sin\u010di\u0107, the president of the \u017divi zid party, won most preferential votes on his party list and a place in the parliament ahead of the slate leader, Tihomir Lukani\u0107. The Amsterdam Coalition's main candidate, Valter Flego, won a seat in the parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288998-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Cyprus\nThe 2019 European Parliament election in Cyprus was held on 26 May 2019 to elect the country's six representatives to the European Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288998-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Cyprus\nThe Democratic Rally (DISY) has won every election to the European Parliament since Cyprus joined the European Union in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288998-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Cyprus\nAccording to final results, DISY again won the election with 29% and 2 seats. There were no changes in seat allocation, with AKEL also at 2 seats after securing 27% of the vote. DIKO and EDEK had 1 seat each, with 14% and 11% of the vote, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288998-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Cyprus\nIn terms of percentage, this was EDEK's best European elections result since 2004 (although that year it did not win any seats). Some attributed this in part to tactical voting, with many fearing the far-right ELAM gaining a seat had it finished fourth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288999-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Denmark\nThe 2019 European Parliament election in Denmark was held on 26 May 2019, and elected the Danish members to the European Parliament. The elections are part of the EU-wide elections for the parliament. Denmark has 13 seats in parliament, and which will be increased by one additional seat, once Brexit comes into force.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288999-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Denmark\nVenstre won the election, becoming the biggest party and gaining two seats. The election was a disaster for the Danish People's Party, who lost three of their four seats. Both the Social People's Party and the Social Liberals won doubles their seats from one to two. The People's Movement against the EU lost the representation in the parliament they have had since 1979.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288999-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Denmark\nThe election were held 10 days before general elections in Denmark.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288999-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Denmark, Background\nIn the 2014 European Parliament election, the Danish People's Party (DPP) became the largest party, gaining 4 seats overall, and the lead candidate, Morten Messerschmidt, received 465.758 individual votes, a new record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288999-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Denmark, Background\nIn October 2015, Rikke Karlson, another member of the DPP-group in the parliament, left the party due to lack of internal transparency into documents related to MELD and the associated foundation FELD. The following media attention revealed that MELD and DPP had misused EU funding, and Messerschmidt were forced to resign as leader of the parliamentary group. He was replaced by Anders Visitisen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288999-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Denmark, Background\nIn December 2015, Jens Rohde, elected MEP as a member of Venstre, left the party due to discontent with the parties increasingly tougher policy on immigration, passed in cooperation with DPP. Rohde joined the Social Liberals instead. In February 2016, Ulla T\u00f8rn\u00e6s from Venstre left the parliament to become Minister for Science, Technology, Information and Higher Education. Morten L\u00f8kkegaard became the new Venstre MEP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288999-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Denmark, Parties contesting\nAll parties represented in the Folketing participate in the election, in addition to the People's Movement against the EU. In previous elections, the Red-Green Alliance have declined to contest, but instead supported the People's Movement against the EU. This is the first European Parliament election that The Alternative participate in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288999-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Denmark, Parties contesting\nThe Alternative is contesting the election as a member of Democracy in Europe Movement 2025, a pan-European political movement who have a common political manifest. In April 2019, DPP was among the founding members of the European Alliance of People and Nations, a new coalition who aim to create a broader nationalist group after the election. If elected, the Liberal Alliance wishes to join ALDE, and the Red-Green Alliance wishes to join GUE/NGL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288999-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Denmark, Results\nVenstre became the biggest party in the election, taking 23.5\u00a0% of the votes and four seats, of which one will be assigned to Denmark following Brexit. They were closely followed by the Social Democrats with 21.5\u00a0% and three seats. The election was a \"meltdown\" for the Danish People's Party, who saw their support drop from 26.6\u00a0% to 10.8\u00a0%, and who lost three of the four seats they won in the last election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288999-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Denmark, Results\nBoth the Socialist People's Party and the Social Liberals had a good election, and both parties saw their seats double from one to two. The latter due to their electoral alliance with The Alternative, who did not win a seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288999-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Denmark, Results\nThe Conservative People's Party managed to defend their single seat despite a smaller vote share compared to last election. The Conservative People's Party is the only Danish party that is a member of the EPP, the largest group in the European Parliament. Prior to the election, people warned that it might damage Danish interests if there were no longer any Danish parties represented in the EPP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288999-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Denmark, Results\nThe People's Movement Against the EU lost their single seat, and for the first time since 1979, they are not represented in the parliament. The loss was widely regarded as caused by the Red-Green Alliance, who traditionally have supported the People's Movement, but decided to contest the election for the first time. The Red-Green Alliance won a single seat. Incumbent MEP Rina Ronja Kari reacted by saying that the movement would live on, and that \"the EU-opposition is not dead\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288999-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Denmark, Results\nThe turnout were 66\u00a0%, the highest ever in a Danish European Parliament election. This was unexpected, as the campaign was largely overshadowed by the general election 10 days later. A study by election scientist Kasper M\u00f8ller Hansen showed that among first-time voters (18-23 years old), the turnout increased from 41,19\u00a0% in 2014 to 59,70\u00a0% in 2019. M\u00f8ller Hansen ascribed the increase to a general focus on climate change and Brexit, as well educational elections held at schools since 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00288999-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Denmark, Results, Elected members\nOn 27 June Jeppe Kofod was appointed Minister of Foreign Affairs in the Social Democratic government formed after the general elections held on 5 June, and thus did not took his seat. The appointment was a surprise as he had just been elected, but media speculated it was due to Henrik Sass Larsen not being available as a minister. Marianne Vind is to take his seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 70], "content_span": [71, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289000-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Estonia\nThe 2019 European Parliament election in Estonia for the election of the delegation from Estonia to the European Parliament will take place on May 26, 2019. Due to the United Kingdom's impending withdrawal from the European Union and the redistribution of its European Parliament seats, the number of elected MEPs from Estonia is increased by one to seven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289000-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Estonia, Opinion polls\nPoll results are listed in the table below in reverse chronological order, showing the most recent first. The highest percentage figure in each poll is displayed in bold, and the background shaded in the leading party's color. In the instance that there is a tie, then no figure is shaded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289001-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Finland\nThe 2019 European Parliament election in Finland for the election of the delegation from Finland to the European Parliament took place on 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289001-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Finland\nA working committee consisting of the party secretaries of all parliamentary parties suggested in May 2017 that the 2019 Finnish parliamentary election, scheduled for April, should be organized simultaneously with the European Parliament election. The suggestion was considered by the Minister of Justice Antti H\u00e4kk\u00e4nen, but did not have enough parliamentary support to pass. Ultimately, the Finnish parliamentary election took place on 14 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France\nThe 2019 European Parliament election in France were held on 26 May 2019 (and on 25 May in parts of overseas France and for some nationals abroad), electing members of the 9th French delegation to the European Parliament as part of the elections held across the European Union. The election featured two major changes since the 2014 election: the return to a single national constituency and the increase in the number of French seats from 74 to 79 upon the withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the European Union. Officially, 79 MEPs were considered to have been elected, including five \"virtual\" MEPs who did not take their seats until the UK formally left the EU. The election featured 34 separate electoral lists, a record number at the national level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 801]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France\nIt was the first national election in France since the election of Emmanuel Macron as president and therefore his first major electoral test, taking place amid dismal approval ratings. For his party, Nathalie Loiseau led the Renaissance list of La R\u00e9publique En Marche!, Democratic Movement (MoDem), Agir, and the Radical Movement which ultimately arrived in second with 22.42% of the vote, behind the National Rally (RN) list led by the 23-year-old Jordan Bardella which received 23.34% of the vote, with a lower vote percentage but more overall votes than its 2014 result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France\nTurnout, at just over 50%, was the highest since the 1994 elections. Led by Yannick Jadot, Europe Ecology \u2013 The Greens (EELV) managed a surprise third-place finish with 13.48% of the vote, short of its score in the 2009 elections in which it also achieved a surprise result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France\nAt the same time, the list of The Republicans (LR) led by the 33-year-old Catholic philosopher Fran\u00e7ois-Xavier Bellamy ended up with a historically poor result of just 8.48% of the vote and the loss of 12 MEPs despite expectations of a strong electoral dynamic created by Bellamy's selection as the party's lead candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0002-0002", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France\nSimilarly, the results were also a significant disappointment for Jean-Luc M\u00e9lenchon's La France Insoumise, which fell far short of both its presidential and legislative results in 2017 with only 6.31% of the vote, narrowly ahead of the joint list between the Socialist Party (PS), Place Publique, and New Deal led by Rapha\u00ebl Glucksmann (the first time in its history the PS did not lead an autonomous list), which managed to remain in the European Parliament with its score of 6.19% of the vote, slightly above the 5% threshold needed for seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France\nNumerous other lists fell short of the 5% threshold, including Nicolas Dupont-Aignan's Debout la France (DLF) and Beno\u00eet Hamon's G\u00e9n\u00e9ration.s, the scores of which (both slightly above 3%) nevertheless allow their campaign expenses to be compensated by the state. The two were closely followed by the centre-right Union of Democrats and Independents (UDI) led by Jean-Christophe Lagarde and the French Communist Party (PCF) led by Ian Brossat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France\nThe recently founded Animalist Party, an animal rights party, also created a small surprise with its score of 2.16%, comparable to some of the more prominent lists, despite its limited presence in the campaign. The only two notable pro-Frexit parties received 1.82% of the vote combined. Other lists included Urgence \u00c9cologie, consisting of several small green parties, led by Dominique Bourg (garnering 1.82% of the vote); Lutte Ouvri\u00e8re with 0.78% of the vote; and a list of gilets jaunes which collected 0.54% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Background, Electoral system\nStarting from the 2004 elections, France was divided into eight large regional electoral constituencies for the purposes of European Parliament elections with members elected by proportional representation. The electoral system changed ahead of the 2019 election, with broad support in the French political class for a return to a national vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 73], "content_span": [74, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Background, Electoral system\nOn 29 November, Prime Minister \u00c9douard Philippe announced that all parties consulted except for The Republicans supported returning to national lists, and confirmed the intention of the government to prepare a bill to change the voting system to that end, which was officially unveiled on 3 January 2018, preserving the 5% threshold for representation and 3% for reimbursement of campaign expenses. The possibility of transnational lists following the withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the European Union was also considered. The return to national lists in effect benefits smaller parties which were previously disadvantaged by the system of large regional constituencies, while larger parties would win fewer seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 73], "content_span": [74, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Background, Electoral system\nThe bill creating a single national constituency was approved by a vote the National Assembly vote on the first reading on 20 February 2018, and the Senate officially adopted the bill on 23 May 2018, which was promulgated on 25 June after its validation by the Constitutional Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 73], "content_span": [74, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Background, Dates\nAs the European elections are scheduled from 23 to 26 May 2019 and French votes are traditionally held on Sundays, the date of the 2019 European election in France was confirmed to be 26 May 2019. Declarations of lists and candidacies were to be submitted between 23 April and 3 May 2019, while voting in some of the overseas territories and for nationals in the Americas officially took place on 25 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Background, Number of seats\nOn 23 January 2018, the European Parliament Committee on Constitutional Affairs adopted a proposal to reduce the size of the hemicycle from 751 to 705, splitting 27 former British seats between 14 underrepresented member states of which France was set to gain 5, increasing its representation from 74 to 79. On 7 February, the European Parliament voted 368 to 274 against the principle of reallocating British seats to transnational lists, though the idea's fate was ultimately in the hands of the European Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 72], "content_span": [73, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Background, Number of seats\nAfter the agreement on 10 April to postpone the British departure from the EU to 31 October, the participation of the United Kingdom in the European Parliament elections will mean that the number of elected MEPs will remain fixed at 74 until the eventual withdrawal of the UK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 72], "content_span": [73, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Background, Number of seats\nAs a result, legislation to \"provide for two phrases\", one with 74 MEPs, and later with 79 in total, was tabled on 24 April; electoral lists will still require 79 candidates, of which 74 will take their seats immediately and the remaining 5 \"virtual\" MEPs upon the departure of the UK from the EU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 72], "content_span": [73, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Background, Broadcast campaign\nThe length of campaign clips for each list was determined by its declared support among national parliamentarians (senators, deputies, and MEPs), a change largely to the benefit of the governing majority at the expense of opposition parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 75], "content_span": [76, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Background, Broadcast campaign\nFrom 15 April 2019, the Conseil sup\u00e9rieur de l'audiovisuel (CSA) ensured that all candidates receive a fair distribution of time in broadcast media, with the exact timing monitored by stations themselves and speaking time relayed every Monday until the elections. The campaign officially commenced on 13 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 75], "content_span": [76, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Background, Broadcast campaign, Televised debates\nHamon appealed against his exclusion from the France 2 debate on 4 April on 27 March, questioning the choice not to invite him given the inclusion of other lead candidates; this came after the earlier non-invitation of Brossat and Lagarde. He was joined in his case by Philippot and Asselineau, with the Paris administrative court subsequently ordering France 2 to invite the three to its debate, judging France T\u00e9l\u00e9visions's excuse that Hamon's views were sufficiently represented by the invitation of Glucksmann to have been insufficient.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 94], "content_span": [95, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Background, Broadcast campaign, Televised debates\nFrance T\u00e9l\u00e9visions contested this decision, and although the Conseil d'\u00c9tat ultimately ruled that France 2 was not obligated to invite the three, France 2 maintained its invitation out of courtesy. This first debate was watched by only 1.62 million viewers, representing an audience share of 9.8%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 94], "content_span": [95, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Background, Broadcast campaign, Televised debates\nOn 9 April, just before the debate hosted by RFI and France 24, the RN announced Bardella would not participate in the debate, taking issue with its format and apparent lack of preparedness on the part of the hosts. As M\u00e9lenchon was unable to appear on the CNews debate on 10 April due to a planned campaign meeting, Adrien Quatennens was invited to take his place instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 94], "content_span": [95, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Background, Broadcast campaign, Televised debates\nThe decision of to split the debate on 22 May, hosted by France 2 and France Inter, into two separate segments provoked consternation among those invited to the second part, as did the choice not to invite the lead candidates of three of the principal lists (Bellamy, Loiseau, and Bardella) but their party leaders (Wauquiez, Guerini, and Le Pen) instead. On 14 May, Brossat said he would file an appeal with the CSA to intervene in the debate, while Hamon castigated France T\u00e9l\u00e9visions president Delphine Ernotte for the decision, with Lagarde, Dupont-Aignan, and Philippot also denouncing the arrangement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 94], "content_span": [95, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0014-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Background, Broadcast campaign, Televised debates\nOn 15 May, Hamon, Lagarde, and Dupont-Aignan held a joint press conference in front of the France T\u00e9l\u00e9visions headquarters to announce that they would boycott the debate unless its format was modified, and Yahoo! later announced that the three would participate in a debate on its site before the debate that evening, hosted by Cl\u00e9ment Viktorovitch. The LCI debate on 20 May was held in a similar fashion, with the first part dedicated to \"small\" lists and the later part of the evening reserved for the \"main\" ones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 94], "content_span": [95, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Background, Broadcast campaign, Televised debates\nMeanwhile, doubts about her performance meant Loiseau would not appear at the debate hosted by France 2, but rather Bayrou, while some considered inviting Canfin to the LCI debate. On 19 May, both Canfin and Loiseau demanded that the three final debates feature live fact-checking in spite of logistical difficulties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 94], "content_span": [95, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Background, Other events\nOn 23 September 2018, the national congress of the Association of Rural Mayors of France (Association des maires ruraux de France, or AMRF) announced that they would refuse to directly transmit the results of the elections to the state on the night of the election to voice their discontent with the lack of attention given by the government to rural policy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Background, Other events\nThe 3 February 2019 edition of Le Journal du Dimanche revealed that Macron was interested in holding a referendum concurrent with the European elections on 26 May to conclude the grand d\u00e9bat national (great national debate) and end the gilets jaunes protests. The opposition, suspicious about the referendum's timing, expressed skepticism, and the idea also lacked support from members of the government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Background, Other events\nFollowing the Notre-Dame de Paris fire on 15 April, several parties briefly suspended their campaigns for the European elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Outgoing delegation\nThe table below shows the composition of the delegation of France to the European Parliament as of 3 May 2019. MEPs marked with an asterisk (*) are not standing as candidates; those marked with two asterisks (**) are candidates, but only in a clearly non-electable position near the end of electoral lists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Summary\nThe table below is a summary of the main parties contesting the 2019 European elections in France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Lutte Ouvri\u00e8re\nThe leadership of the New Anticapitalist Party (NPA) initially voted in favor of a common list with Lutte Ouvri\u00e8re (LO), with its national political council on 6 and 7 October 2018 voting 37\u201322 (with 5 abstentions and 10 non-participants) in favor of an alliance in the 2019 European elections; however, in November 2018, the parties acknowledged the failure to arrive to an agreement for a common list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 76], "content_span": [77, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0021-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Lutte Ouvri\u00e8re\nThe annual party congress of Lutte Ouvri\u00e8re on 8 and 9 December voted to present an autonomous list, with spokeswoman and former presidential candidate Nathalie Arthaud announcing that she would be its lead candidate. Arthaud said the party refused an alliance with the NPA because the interests of workers were not a priority for the latter, and because she did not want to run a campaign on \"all the struggles that can be fought, from ecology to feminism\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 76], "content_span": [77, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, French Communist Party\nOn 1 December 2017, Pierre Laurent, national secretary of the French Communist Party (PCF), stated that he wanted to gather \"the strongest possible left group\" for the 2019 European elections, launching an appeal to Jean-Luc M\u00e9lenchon of La France Insoumise and Beno\u00eet Hamon of G\u00e9n\u00e9ration.s. The national council of the PCF on 30 and 31 March approved the principle of a \"common platform\" including various left-wing groups as well as members of civil society and intellectuals, postponing discussion of electoral strategy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0022-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, French Communist Party\nOn 3 June, Ian Brossat, deputy for housing to Socialist mayor of Paris Anne Hidalgo, was selected as the leader of the PCF list. On 14 June, the PCF again called for a common list of the left in an open letter addressed to parties on the left, excluding the Socialist Party (PS). In December, Fabien Roussel, recently elected leader of the party, indicated that he did not necessarily support a common list given disagreements between left-of-centre parties, and indicated that an alliance with Hamon would only occur if Brossat led the list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0022-0002", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, French Communist Party\nOn 26 January, the PCF officially unveiled its list, voted on by party members from 31 January to 2 February. It includes two incumbent MEPs (Patrick Le Hyaric and Marie-Pierre Vieu), trade unionist Marie-H\u00e9l\u00e8ne Bourlard in second position (featured in the documentary film Merci patron! by sitting France Insoumise deputy Fran\u00e7ois Ruffin), and is half composed of workers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, La France Insoumise\nAt the convention of his movement on 25 November 2017, Jean-Luc M\u00e9lenchon announced that La France Insoumise would present a list in 2019, considering the elections a \"referendum on the European question\" to \"break the chains, exit the European budgetary treaties\". The movement negotiating an alliance with the Spanish party Podemos and the Portuguese Left Bloc in Lisbon on 12 April 2018. At the national level, M\u00e9lenchon continued to refuse any alliance with either Hamon's movement or the French Communist Party (PCF). He announced on 11 March 2018 that he himself would not be a candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 81], "content_span": [82, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, La France Insoumise\nThe movement published an unordered list of candidates on 5 June, with Charlotte Girard and Manuel Bompard guaranteed spots as the presumptive list leaders, in first and second position, respectively, and Younous Omarjee as the sole incumbent MEP. The movement received 637 applications, of which 506 were submitted by men and 131 by women; the electoral committee then ensured the demographic parity of the applicants. The resulting list was then submitted feedback until July, when the list was ranked, with another nine spots on the list reserved for members of civil society and trade unions and associations. On 4 July, following a meeting of the electoral committee on 30 June, the movement published an updated list consisting of 66 candidates, with 13 spots reserved for members of civil society.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 81], "content_span": [82, 886]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, La France Insoumise\nThe list produced by the electoral committee was met with criticism by dissatisfied activists, including Li\u00eam Hoang-Ngoc of the \"insubordinate Socialists\", who \"suspended\" his movement's participation; former electoral committee member Lilian Guelfi, who denounced alleged favoritism by Manuel Bompard; and Sarah Soilihi and Fran\u00e7ois Cocq, who withdrew their candidacies following its publication. Djordje Kuzmanovic later quit the movement in November following his removal from the list after sexist remarks. Nevertheless, the consultation of activists from 4 to 20 July resulted in its approval by 86.97% of participants. After Emmanuel Maurel and Marie-No\u00eblle Lienemann quit the PS in mid-October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 81], "content_span": [82, 783]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0025-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, La France Insoumise\nthe pair formed a new political party close to the Citizen and Republican Movement (MRC), the Republican and Socialist Left (GRS), in early 2019. On 15 October, MRC president Jean-Luc Laurent announced an alliance with Maurel and Lienemann to create a common list with La France Insoumise, with Maurel leaving the social democratic group in the European Parliament. In April 2019, political scientist Thomas Gu\u00e9nol\u00e9, in 14th position, accused La France insoumise of being \"a dictatorship\"\u00a0: the party reacted by saying he was accused of sexual harassment and removed him from the list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 81], "content_span": [82, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, La France Insoumise\nOn 15 November, Girard confirmed that she would neither lead the list nor be a candidate in 2019, and appeared to imply that she was sidelined. On 9 December, the movement officially voted to approve its list of 79 candidates and designate Manon Aubry, a 29-year-old tax evasion specialist and spokeswoman at Oxfam France, as its lead candidate. Manuel Bompard, campaign director, was second on the list, followed by Le\u00efla Chaibi and outgoing MEP Younous Omarjee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 81], "content_span": [82, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0026-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, La France Insoumise\nEmmanuel Maurel, who quit the PS for an alliance with the movement, appeared in sixth, with M\u00e9lenchon in the symbolic penultimate position and Girard last. According to Aubry, their list included several active gilets jaunes. As in the 2017 presidential campaign, the movement used holograms to hold virtual meetings in 471 small towns throughout France (via \"holovans\"). Unable to secure financing, M\u00e9lenchon called for supporters to participate in a \"people's loan\" to fund their campaign, collective 1.5 million euros within five days, and reaching 2 million euros by 10 April, with an average loan of 700 euros.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 81], "content_span": [82, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, G\u00e9n\u00e9ration.s\nOn 21 January 2018, Beno\u00eet Hamon announced alongside former Greek finance minister Yanis Varoufakis of DiEM25 that G\u00e9n\u00e9ration.s would contest the 2019 European elections. On 10 March, Hamon called for the creation of the \"first pan-European transnational list\" alongside Razem in Poland, The Alternative in Denmark, and LIVRE in Portugal, publishing a common manifesto in June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 74], "content_span": [75, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, G\u00e9n\u00e9ration.s\nHamon sought to invite \u00c9lise Lucet, host of Cash Investigation on France 2, as a lead candidate, but was rebuffed. Audrey Pulvar was also contacted, but indicated that she was not interested, as was the case with Christiane Taubira. The movement communicated with the Greens and PCF, even if the possibility of an alliance between the three was unlikely, and No\u00ebl Mam\u00e8re remained a possible \"consensus candidate\" in an alliance with the Greens, given his membership of both formations, but ruled out running on 25 June 2018. On 29 October, the movement launched a call for applications for prospective candidates from civil society, receiving between 300 and 400 applications. In mid-November 2018, incumbent MEP \u00c9douard Martin confirmed that he would not seek a second term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 74], "content_span": [75, 850]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, G\u00e9n\u00e9ration.s\nIn an interview published in Le Monde on 6 December, Hamon confirmed that he would be the lead candidate of a \"citizen alliance\", and subsequently closed the door to an alliance with the PS on 7 January 2019, citing its membership of the Party of European Socialists (PES). Le Journal du Dimanche reported that top candidates would also include MEPs Guillaume Balas and Isabelle Thomas, ex-La France Insoumise member Sarah Soilihi, spokeswoman Aurore Lalucq, and community activist Salah Amokrane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 74], "content_span": [75, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0029-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, G\u00e9n\u00e9ration.s\nIn an interview published in Le Monde in early February, Hamon proposed that the left hold a \"citizen vote\" in April to select a common list and program, though only New Deal, Les Radicaux de gauche (LRDG), and the Movement of Progressives (MdP) were receptive to the idea. Hamon then announced on 23 February that he would lead an independent list, revealing the first thirty candidates on the list on 26 February. Lalucq later quit, announcing on 18 March that she would join Place Publique. The movement indicated it was 600,000 euros short of financing its campaign, and considered soliciting donations via a \"citizen bank\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 74], "content_span": [75, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Socialist Party, Place Publique, and Nouvelle Donne\nEarly on, a number of PS heavyweights declined to lead the list, including Najat Vallaud-Belkacem, Pierre Moscovici, St\u00e9phane Le Foll, Olivier Faure, Christiane Taubira, Paul Magnette, Fran\u00e7ois Hollande, Bernard Cazeneuve, S\u00e9gol\u00e8ne Royal, Jean-Christophe Cambad\u00e9lis, and Christian Eckert. Julien Dray declared his candidacy, and Emmanuel Maurel was also reportedly approached to lead the list, and did not rule out the possibility at the time. On 8 October, Le Figaro reported that outgoing MEP \u00c9ric Andrieu was a candidate to lead the PS list, as was Christine Revault d'Allonnes, who announced her candidacy on 11 October. Gabrielle Siry, S\u00e9gol\u00e8ne Neuville, and Sylvie Guillaume were also considered potential list leaders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 113], "content_span": [114, 839]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Socialist Party, Place Publique, and Nouvelle Donne\nIn preparation for the elections, the PS began drafting its platform in May 2018, launching a \"digital collaborative platform\", laruchesocialiste.fr, which only elicited 337 responses from 272 people in two months. Disagreements on the left wing of the party on the final form of the program persisted through September, despite commitments to create a left-wing and ecologist \"intergroup\" in the European Parliament, halt any new free trade treaties, and vote against the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) with Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 113], "content_span": [114, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0031-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Socialist Party, Place Publique, and Nouvelle Donne\nThe text marked a new approach for the PS, arguing in favor of more social and environmental controls in trade agreements and a revision of the European treaties led by the left. Faure also affirmed that the PS would not support the candidacy of Frans Timmermans as Spitzenkandidat. In an interview with Le Monde published on 12 October, Maurel quit the PS and castigated its failure to represent socialism, soon followed by Marie-No\u00eblle Lienemann the following day, with the creating a new left-wing party associated with Citizen and Republican Movement (MRC) in 2019, the Republican and Socialist Left (GRS).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 113], "content_span": [114, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Socialist Party, Place Publique, and Nouvelle Donne\nOn 15 December 2018, at the ending of a meeting of the national council of the PS, Faure for the first time proposed that the party participate in a \"rally\" of forces on the left. After Royal ruled out standing as a candidate of a common list on 11 January, Faure indicated he would be ready to lead a PS list if necessary. Rapha\u00ebl Glucksmann, who co-founded Place Publique in an effort to unite the left, was offered the position of lead candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 113], "content_span": [114, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0032-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Socialist Party, Place Publique, and Nouvelle Donne\nOn 13 February, the national office of the party approved of Faure's plans to seek an alliance with Place Publique, and Glucksmann officially announced his intention to lead a list in the European elections on 15 March, with the national council of the PS voting to designate Glucksmann as lead candidate the following day, with 128 votes in favor, 5 against, and 35 abstensions (including St\u00e9phane Le Foll and Luc Carvounas). The list is composed of half PS candidates and half those of other parties and figures from civil society, marking the first time since 1979 the PS did not lead its own list in the European elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 113], "content_span": [114, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Socialist Party, Place Publique, and Nouvelle Donne\nNew Deal officially announced its support for the list on 18 March 2019, as did ex-G\u00e9n\u00e9ration.s spokeswoman Aurore Lalucq. After receiving 215 applications from party officials by 26 October 2018, the PS approved a list of 20 women and 20 men as candidates in the European elections on 27 March 2019, with 23 votes in favor and 11 against; Le Foll, Carvounas, Martine Aubry, and their allies expressed displeasure at the list, as did a number of candidates and outgoing MEPs, who denounced the diluted list (given the number of PS candidates in non-electable positions).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 113], "content_span": [114, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0033-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Socialist Party, Place Publique, and Nouvelle Donne\nAfter initially coming to an agreement, Virginie Rozi\u00e8re's Les Radicaux de gauche (LRDG) quit the list on 29 April, following pressure from their former PRG colleagues towards PS not to welcome the LRDG splitters while PRG was itself cancelling its merger into Macron-leaning Radical Movement. On 5 May, Le Parisien reported that Christiane Taubira would back the list, appearing alongside Glucksmann on 15 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 113], "content_span": [114, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Europe Ecology \u2013 The Greens\nOn 27 February 2018, MEP Yannick Jadot stated that EELV would seek to present an independent list in 2019. Both Jadot and fellow MEP Mich\u00e8le Rivasi opposed a rapprochement with Hamon like that in the 2017 presidential election. Among outgoing MEPs, Jos\u00e9 Bov\u00e9, Eva Joly, and Pascal Durand did not intend to seek a third mandate. Durand, a supporter of Nicolas Hulot, was seen as open to working with La R\u00e9publique En Marche!, as was Karima Delli, despite her denial of any such intentions, and on 13 April, she expressed her desire to lead the EELV list. Durand, on the other hand, ultimately joined the La R\u00e9publique En Marche list. Other candidates reportedly included David Cormand, Julien Bayou, Marie Toussaint, and Mounir Satouri. On 19 December, S\u00e9gol\u00e8ne Royal offered to join the EELV list in second position, but was rejected the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 89], "content_span": [90, 942]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Europe Ecology \u2013 The Greens\nGiven the difficulty in finding a potential list leader, No\u00ebl Mam\u00e8re was named a possible \"consensus candidate\" in an alliance with Hamon, but later declined on 25 June. On 9 and 10 June, the federal council of the party agreed to put forth provisional lists to be submitted to a membership vote from 11 to 16 July, and the outlines of the party's plans for the 2019 elections were presented from 23 to 25 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 89], "content_span": [90, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0035-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Europe Ecology \u2013 The Greens\nTwo possible lists were created \u2013 one led by Jadot and the other by Rivasi \u2013 with the names of Damien Car\u00eame and Julien Bayou removed after later revisions. On 16 July, the party announced that Jadot won the vote with 58.69% of votes against 35.59% for Rivasi, and subsequently reaffirmed that he would not ally with Hamon again in the European elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 89], "content_span": [90, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0035-0002", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Europe Ecology \u2013 The Greens\nOn 23 September, the EELV federal council agreed to place Damien Car\u00eame, mayor of Grande-Synthe, 3rd on the EELV list, and Alexis Tiouka, a former representative to the UN for the rights of indigenous peoples, later joined the list, becoming the first-ever Native American on a European electoral list. In an interview on 25 February 2019, Jadot announced the addition of regional councilor Beno\u00eet Biteau to the list in 11th position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 89], "content_span": [90, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Europe Ecology \u2013 The Greens\nR\u00e9gions et Peuples Solidaires planned to contest the elections but left open the possibility of allying with the Greens, and on 16 February 2019 announced it was an alliance, with former MEP Fran\u00e7ois Alfonsi as well as Lydie Massard and Anne-Marie Hautant joining the list. On 23 February, the Independent Ecological Alliance (AEI) duly announced that it reached an agreement with the EELV, with Caroline Roose and Salima Yenbou within the top 10 electable places on the list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 89], "content_span": [90, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Europe Ecology \u2013 The Greens\nThe Greens intend to target both ex-Socialists and disappointed Macron voters who view his government's policies as too right-wing. Jadot has sought to portray the EELV as neither left nor right but \"central\", attempting to represent a \"pragmatic\" German-style ecology and create an \"ecologist pole\" as opposed to the \"productivist\" and \"populist\" poles, saying that \"ecology is not the left\". The Greens, led by Jadot, also unveiled their plans for a \"Green New Deal\", a name borrowed from the American left, proposing dedicating 100 billion euros to investments in renewable energy and home insulation to achieve 100% electricity generation from renewables within 20 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 89], "content_span": [90, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, La R\u00e9publique En Marche and allies\nIn March 2019, Les \u00c9chos reported that the choice of lead candidate was to be made internally between either health minister Agn\u00e8s Buzyn or European affairs minister Nathalie Loiseau. Loiseau officially announced she would seek the nomination for lead candidate following her debate with Marine Le Pen on the set of L'\u00c9mission politique on 14 March, while Les \u00c9chos and Le Parisien later reported that Buzyn withdrew her name from consideration. Loiseau was officially designated as lead candidate on 26 March as the list of the first 30 candidates was unveiled. Alain Jupp\u00e9 was the subject of early speculation regarding his potential candidacy to lead the list, though confirmed on 19 March 2018 that he would not stand, and his appointment to the Constitutional Council precluded his participation in the campaign, but he indicated he would have supported Macron's list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 96], "content_span": [97, 970]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, La R\u00e9publique En Marche and allies\nOther speculated list leaders included \u00c9douard Philippe, Fran\u00e7ois Bayrou, Nicolas Hulot, Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet, Sylvie Goulard, Daniel Cohn-Bendit, Arnaud Danjean, and Michel Barnier. Pierre Moscovici ruled out the possibility, as did Barnier, Jean-Yves Le Drian, Bayrou, Danjean, Daniel Cohn-Bendit, and Thomas Pesquet. Outgoing Green MEP Karima Delli, ministers Marl\u00e8ne Schiappa and Brune Poirson, deputy Am\u00e9lie de Montchalin, Pascal Canfin, head of the French section of the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), and former France Inter journalist Bernard Guetta were also considered potential candidates. Canfin declined to lead the list on 16 November, and in late January 2019, Laurence Tubiana, president of the European Climate Foundation and former COP21 negotiator, was mentioned as a possibility, as were Le Drian, sailor Maud Fontenoy, justice minister Nicole Belloubet, and Emmanuelle Wargon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 96], "content_span": [97, 1003]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, La R\u00e9publique En Marche and allies\nOn 17 December 2017, at the congress of the Democratic Movement (MoDem), Christophe Castaner said he supported an \"enlarged list\" for the European elections based on their alliance, and on 26 September 2018, the movement officially announced the opening of applications for prospective candidates from civil society, receiving 2,673 in total, winnowed by an investiture committee chaired by Jean-Marc Borello. Former \u00c9lys\u00e9e advisor St\u00e9phane S\u00e9journ\u00e9 was designated campaign director on 29 October, tasked with creating a list alongside Agir, and seeking a lead candidate with a \"green profile\". For the MoDem, Bayrou selected R\u00e9gis Lefebvre to serve as deputy campaign director.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 96], "content_span": [97, 775]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, La R\u00e9publique En Marche and allies\nOn 15 February, Challenges revealed that EELV MEP Pascal Durand would be on the list in an electable position and S\u00e9journ\u00e9 in the top 25 places. The centre-right party Agir proposed several candidates for the list, including two in electable position: Nicolas Barnier (the son of Michel Barnier and a parliamentary assistant), as well as Fabienne Keller, Gilles Boyer, \u00c9lisabeth Morin-Chartier, and Xavier Fournier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 96], "content_span": [97, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0041-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, La R\u00e9publique En Marche and allies\nIn an interview published in Challenges on 6 February, Radical Movement co-president Laurent H\u00e9nart indicated that the movement would likely vote to join a common list, sparking dissent among some ex-PRG members including co-president Sylvia Pinel, who announced her departure from the party to resurrect the PRG on two days later. The candidates it proposed included outgoing MEP Dominique Riquet, Olga Johnson, and M\u00e9lanie Fortier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 96], "content_span": [97, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0041-0002", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, La R\u00e9publique En Marche and allies\nOne outgoing MEP, Jean Arthuis, announced that he would not seek to run again in 2019, and Agir MEP Tokia Sa\u00effi also retired, as did the party's other MEP \u00c9lisabeth Morin-Chartier after learning she would not be in electable position on the list. Foreign nationals were also be on the list, including former Italian undersecretary for European affairs Sandro Gozi. After declining to run as a lead candidate, Canfin ultimately appeared in second on the list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 96], "content_span": [97, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, La R\u00e9publique En Marche and allies\nLa R\u00e9publique En Marche considered alliances with similar European political parties including Citizens in Spain and the Democratic Party in Italy, as well as parties outside of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (ALDE). Pieyre-Alexandre Anglade was delegated with the task of forming contacts with potential European partners. On 9 September 2018, Guy Verhofstadt, leader of the ALDE group, claimed that La R\u00e9publique En Marche would ally with ALDE, which Castaner denied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 96], "content_span": [97, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0042-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, La R\u00e9publique En Marche and allies\nReports in October indicated Macron and Dutch prime minister Mark Rutte reached an agreement in principle for an alliance, though Anglade emphasized that ALDE parties would merely serve as the foundation, with EPP parties on the right such as Civic Platform in Poland and New Democracy in Greece as well as PES parties on the left including the Democratic Party in Italy and the Social Democratic Party of Austria in consideration. The party considered recruiting MEPs to form a group after the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 96], "content_span": [97, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0042-0002", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, La R\u00e9publique En Marche and allies\nFollowing the airing of a report on France 2 on 11 March about ALDE's financial backing from Monsanto, manufacturer of glyphosate, the party announced that it would not join the ALDE, leading the latter to announce it would no longer accept corporate donations. Verhofstadt later announced on 2 May that the ALDE group would be dissolved after the elections to ally and create a new group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 96], "content_span": [97, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Union of Democrats and Independents\nOn 15 December 2018, Lagarde launched the party's campaign at its extraordinary congress, hoping to gain the support of pro-European voters who were not necessarily in favor of Macron's ideas on Europe. The party is also seeking to gain support from LR voters disillusioned by the hard-right political line of Wauquiez. Former LR vice president Virginie Calmels as well as general Pierre de Villiers were approached as potential candidates. However, Calmels later denied she was contacted and ruled out working with the UDI.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 97], "content_span": [98, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0043-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Union of Democrats and Independents\nXavier Bertrand planned to appear at the launch of the UDI congress remotely, but reiterated that he did not support a federal Europe did support the UDI list. The UDI list includes former MEP Nora Berra, an Auvergne-Rh\u00f4ne-Alpes regional councilor elected on the LR list who later quit the party to protest its hard-right positioning, in second position, as well as longtime centrist Louis Giscard d'Estaing, son of Val\u00e9ry Giscard d'Estaing, in third. While the party's sole remaining MEP Patricia Lalonde initially supported the principle of an independent list, she later urged the party to join the LR list, expressing support for Bellamy and Wauquiez; Lalonde did not seek another mandate in the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 97], "content_span": [98, 808]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, The Republicans\nOn 18 November, Le Journal du Dimanche reported that LR leader Laurent Wauquiez was considering 33-year-old Catholic philosopher Fran\u00e7ois-Xavier Bellamy as a candidate to lead the LR list in 2019, though his political inexperience and conservative profile initially raised concerns. Wauquiez decided to submit three names to the CNI on 29 January, naming not only Bellamy but Agn\u00e8s Evren and Arnaud Danjean as top candidates for the list, balancing the various strands of the party, with Evren close to Val\u00e9rie P\u00e9cresse and Danjean a committed pro-European close to Alain Jupp\u00e9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0044-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, The Republicans\nOn 29 January, the CNI validated the nominations of Bellamy, Evren, and Danjean with 38 out of 40 votes. Other potential list leaders included Laurent Wauquiez, who declined, Virginie Calmels, Damien Abad, Nadine Morano, Jean Leonetti, Arnaud Danjean, Luc Ferry, Brice Hortefeux, Pierre de Villiers, \u00c9ric Woerth, Christian Jacob, Geoffroy Didier, Philippe Juvin, Michel Dantin, and Arnaud Danjean, though Leonetti declined, Ferry was uninterested, and Dantin decided instead to seek another term as mayor of Chamb\u00e9ry in 2020. P\u00e9cresse, Rachida Dati, and Michel Barnier also declined to lead the LR list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, The Republicans\nIn an interview published on 10 March 2018 in Le Journal du Dimanche, Thierry Mariani militated for an alliance with Le Pen, and was subsequently threatened with expulsion from the party; he ultimately joined the RN list. On 9 October, Wauquiez ruled out the possibility of alliances with Debout la France, La R\u00e9publique En Marche!, or the National Rally in a letter addressed to Nicolas Dupont-Aignan. On 12 February 2019, Herv\u00e9 Morin of The Centrists met with Wauquiez about a possible alliance for two out of the top 20 places on the list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0045-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, The Republicans\nOn 6 March, the LR national investiture committee designated the first 26 candidates on the list. Alexandre Vergnes, general secretary of Hunting, Fishing, Nature and Traditions (CPNT), was initially slated to appear in 13th \u2013 and later 15th \u2013 position, but was later demoted to 30th; ultimately, the party announced on 11 April that its candidates would be Martine Aury in 48th and Pascal Marie in 31st. Geoffroy Didier was appointed campaign director in March. Despite pressure from La R\u00e9publique En Marche to support their list ahead of the 2020 municipal elections and implied threats not to support them in case of their refusal denounced by some as \"blackmail\", \"Macron-compatible\" mayors (including Arnaud Robinet and Christian Estrosi) largely backed Bellamy's list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 852]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, The Republicans\nAmong outgoing MEPs, Nadine Morano, Brice Hortefeux, Alain Cadec, Franck Proust, Geoffroy Didier, and Ang\u00e9lique Delahaye sought to stand as candidates, while Fran\u00e7oise Grosset\u00eate, \u00c9lisabeth Morin-Chartier, Mich\u00e8le Alliot-Marie, Alain Lamassoure, J\u00e9r\u00f4me Lavrilleux, Renaud Muselier, and Maurice Ponga did not seek the party's investiture, with Rachida Dati also opting out in view of the 2020 municipal elections in Paris. Marc Joulaud and Philippe Juvin are also not running for another term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Debout la France\nOn 19 January 2018, Europe 1 revealed that Nicolas Dupont-Aignan, leader of Debout la France, appeared to close the door to an alliance with the National Rally (RN) while still appealing for a \"union of patriots\" that could yet include members of the National Rally. On 20 March, the National Centre of Independents and Peasants (CNIP) voted unanimously to join Dupont-Aignan's \"The Lovers of France\" (Les Amoureux de la France), a political formation including the Christian Democratic Party of Jean-Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Poisson and mayor of B\u00e9ziers Robert M\u00e9nard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 78], "content_span": [79, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0047-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Debout la France\nOn 31 May, the three figures of \"The Lovers of France\" presented a \"common program\" with president of the European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) group Ryszard Legutko in attendance, coinciding with the defection of FN MEP Bernard Monot to join DLF and the publication of an open letter from Le Pen inviting Dupont-Aignan to form a common list, which the latter subsequently rejected publicly. On 23 September, Dupont-Aignan officially announced that he intended to lead a \"union list\" of the right in the 2019 European elections, and DLF officially concluded its alliance with the ECR on 21 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 78], "content_span": [79, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0048-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Debout la France\nRN MEP Sylvie Goddyn, who was expelled from the party on 19 October 2018 after indicating her support for Dupont-Aignan's initiative for a union list, initially planned to appear on the party's list, as did Poisson. According to a report in Le Figaro, Dupont-Aignan also sought to invite Jean Lassalle to lead his list but was rebuffed, as was the case with Thierry Mariani, who chose to join the RN list. Jeannette Bougrab also refused to join the list, while both Dupont-Aignan and Le Pen failed to recruit LR member Erik Tegn\u00e9r.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 78], "content_span": [79, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0048-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Debout la France\nDLF attempted to draft another LR figure, Malika Sorel, while UBS whistleblower St\u00e9phanie Gibaud became a candidate on the DLF list. On 11 February, L'Opinion reported that wealthy financier and writer Charles Gave would appear on the DLF list and provide the party with nearly 2 million euros in funding, while his daughter Emmanuelle Gave would also be on the list in an electable position. After Quotidien revealed the younger Gave's history of controversial tweets, DLF announced on 20 February that she would not be nominated, thus losing the elder Gave's guarantee of funding. Following the departure of the Gaves and denial of loans, the party relied on 1.2 million in funding via a \"people's loan\" from supporters, in addition to around 1 million euros provided by candidates on the list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 78], "content_span": [79, 875]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0049-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Debout la France\nOn 28 March 2019, Dupont-Aignan unveiled the first 23 candidates on the list, excluding Poisson because of his alleged refusal to embrace a collective approach, with outgoing MEPs Monot and Goddyn also absent \"by mutual agreement\". Poisson reportedly threatened to launch his own list with Gave after being told he would appear in fifth position, rather than third as originally planned. Despite their participation in Les Amoureux de la France, M\u00e9nard and Nicolas Dhuicq ultimately supported the list of the RN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 78], "content_span": [79, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0050-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, National Rally\nAccording to a report in L'Obs on 22 November 2018, Jordan Bardella, the 23-year-old head of the party's youth wing G\u00e9n\u00e9ration Nation, was favored by Le Pen to lead the list. and on 7 January 2019, Louis Aliot confirmed that Bardella would lead the party's list in the European elections after being confirmed unanimously by the members of the RN's leadership. Two LR members, former minister Thierry Mariani and Jean-Paul Garraud, as well as economist Herv\u00e9 Juvin, appeared on the party's list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 76], "content_span": [77, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0050-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, National Rally\nIn addition, Andr\u00e9 Roug\u00e9, who advised Le Pen during the presidential campaign and another ex-UMP member, employed in the mayoral office of Jacques Chirac until 1995, was also on the list. A number of other lead candidates were considered but did not ultimately run. On 1 December 2017, Nicolas Bay announced that Marine Le Pen would not lead the party's list in 2019. Juvin was also considered a possibility, and on 12 October 2018, Aliot confirmed said he would seek to become lead candidate, but announced on 20 November that he would instead seek the mayoralty of Perpignan in the 2020 municipal elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 76], "content_span": [77, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0051-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, National Rally\nOn 13 December 2017, Le Pen claimed that she wanted an alliance with Nicolas Dupont-Aignan, president of Debout la France, and met with Dupont-Aignan the same day to discuss \"a possible partnership\", but was rebuked a month later, and subsequently published an open letter seeking an alliance on 31 May 2018, only to receive his rejection again on 3 June. RN MEP Sylvie Goddyn was expelled from the party on 19 October 2018 after indicating her openness to Dupont-Aignan's initiative for a union list on the right.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 76], "content_span": [77, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0052-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, National Rally\nLe Pen campaigned with Bardella at public meetings on Saturday afternoons in 20 small communes over the course of a campaign, the cost of which is anticipated to be around 4 million euros, in addition to a single major campaign event in a regional capital on 1 May, with H\u00e9nin-Beaumont mayor Steeve Briois appointed campaign director.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 76], "content_span": [77, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0052-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, National Rally\nLike La France Insoumise, the party launched an appeal for a \"popular loan\", soliciting donations from supporters in order to finance its campaign after being denied loans by French banks, and on 23 April announced that it raised 4 million euros using this scheme, which promised to repay lenders with 5% interest. Le Pen and Matteo Salvini plan to hold a joint campaign meeting in Italy in mid-May, likely in Milan on 18 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 76], "content_span": [77, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0053-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, The Patriots\nOn 23 November 2017, Florian Philippot announced that his movement, The Patriots (Les Patriotes), would present candidates in the 2019 European elections, fighting for the French exit from the European Union. The party had three MEPs, including Sophie Montel and Mireille d'Ornano, though Montel quit the party on 5 July 2018. Philippot launched the party's campaign for the European elections with the publication of his book Frexit, setting out his vision of Europe, in September 2018. Despite his hopes to build a cross-party list, his appeals to Henri Guaino, Fran\u00e7ois Asselineau, and Jean Lassalle went unreciprocated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 74], "content_span": [75, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0053-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, The Patriots\nLacking public financing, Philippot called for donations to help fund the party's campaign. As with other parties, the movement sought to recruit gilets jaunes onto its list, with Philippot seeking to register the name with the National Institute of Industrial Property (INPI) as well. Philippot confirmed on 22 February that his party would have the financial means to contest the elections, saying that he would lead the list, followed by d'Ornano in second place. On 30 April, Philippot filed his list, which was joined by members of Jean-Fran\u00e7ois Barnaba's list Jaunes et citoyens; Barnaba himself is ninth on the list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 74], "content_span": [75, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0054-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, The Patriots\nOn April 24, close to the deadline for filing of lists, Philippot publicly called for a common list with Asselineau; according to L'Opinion, he delegated Thibaud Lonjon with the task of soliciting an alliance, offering 300,000 euros in additional financing for the list (which had then already raised around 1.2 million euros). In addition to Asselineau, Philippot sought a last-minute alliance with Dupont-Aignan, this time offering 400,000 euros for the third spot on the list, but was again rejected, with Bertrand Dutheil de La Roch\u00e8re confirming these approaches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 74], "content_span": [75, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0055-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Popular Republican Union\nOn 18 November 2017, Fran\u00e7ois Asselineau, founder of the Popular Republican Union (UPR), said at the party congress in Tours that he would \"probably\" be a candidate on the party's list in the 2019 European elections. Asselineau intends to leverage the party's online presence to help raise funds from its 32,000 members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0056-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Gilets jaunes, Present lists\nIn a press release on 29 April, Francis Lalanne announced that he would present a list under the banner of Alliance jaune on 30 April, having allied with the abortive RIC list now led by J\u00e9r\u00e9my Cl\u00e9ment, with a financial guarantee of 800,000 euros from Jean-Marc Governatori, co-secretary of the Independent Ecological Alliance (AEI) \u2013 allied with the Greens \u2013 in order to ensure the list would be able to contest the elections. The list was led by Lalanne, with Sophia Albert-Salmeron in second and Cl\u00e9ment in third position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 90], "content_span": [91, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0056-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Gilets jaunes, Present lists\nThis effort began following the publication of an open letter signed by Lalanne and Governatori, co-secretary of the Independent Ecological Alliance (AEI), on 7 December 2018 supporting the principle of a gilets jaunes list. On 17 December, Lalanne announced the launch of the Rassemblement gilet jaune citoyen list, though was opposed by many gilets jaunes who felt that he did not represent them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 90], "content_span": [91, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0056-0002", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Gilets jaunes, Present lists\nAccording to Le Figaro, Jean-Fran\u00e7ois Barnaba was expected to be chosen as the lead candidate for this list, despite having once considered launching his own list, but on 22 March instead announced that he wanted to lead his own list, Jaunes et citoyens, which later allied with Philippot's list, The Patriots, with ten candidates in non-electable positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 90], "content_span": [91, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0057-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Gilets jaunes, Present lists\nOn 3 March, Christophe Chalen\u00e7on announced the creation of the \u00c9volution Citoyenne (Citizen Evolution) list for the European elections. Though Chalen\u00e7on is a notable figure of the movement, he says the list is not a list of \"yellow vests\", even if most of its candidates are, but consists of members of civil society representing \"citizens of the left and right\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 90], "content_span": [91, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0058-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Gilets jaunes, Present lists\nAnother list, Mouvement pour l'Initiative Citoyenne, which supports implementing the RIC at the national and European level, was selected by drawing lots, though it existed long before the movement, with its foundation in 2006 and presence in the 2009 elections. Yvan Bachaud, spokesman for the list (led by Gilles Helgen), reiterated on 6 May that the list has no connection to the gilets jaunes movement, and is only focused on supporting the RIC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 90], "content_span": [91, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0059-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Gilets jaunes, Present lists\nOther parties ultimately included gilets jaunes on their lists, including the French Communist Party (PCF) with three, two present on the pro-Frexit Popular Republican Union (UPR) list led by Fran\u00e7ois Asselineau, and right-wing activist Benjamin Cauchy in 9th position for Debout la France (DLF), of which he was already a member and spokesperson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 90], "content_span": [91, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0060-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Gilets jaunes, Abortive lists\nOn 4 December 2018, amid the gilets jaunes protests, Jean-Fran\u00e7ois Barnaba announced that he intended to prepare a list of gilets jaunes to contest the European elections in 2019. On 10 December, Hayk Shahinyan announced that he would also attempt to constitute a list. Christophe Chalen\u00e7on, one of the leaders of the \"free\" gilets jaunes, also supported the ambition of presenting a list in the European elections. Shahinyan's association, Gilets Jaunes, le mouvement, was the best-organized group, with 85,000 euros and 14,000 members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 91], "content_span": [92, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0061-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Gilets jaunes, Abortive lists\nOn 23 January, the group announced in a press release that they would present a list called Ralliement d'initiative citoyenne (RIC, or Citizens' Initiative Rally, referencing the acronym of the proposed referendum desired by many gilets jaunes) led by Ingrid Levavasseur, a 31-year-old nurse assistant, and also revealed the first 10 names on the list, with the remaining spots open to applications. Shahinyan was chosen as campaign director. The announcement of a list provoked largely negative reactions among other gilets jaunes, many of whom were skeptical and considered them opportunists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 91], "content_span": [92, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0061-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Gilets jaunes, Abortive lists\nMarc Doyer, eighth on the list, was revealed to have previously supported Macron, and withdrew from the list on 28 January. Shahinyan also stepped down as campaign director, citing doubts. On 31 January, Brigitte Lapeyronie, ex-UDI member and trade unionist, also announced that she would not stand as a candidate due to personal reasons. Barnaba, who hoped to lead his own list, also quit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 91], "content_span": [92, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0061-0002", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Gilets jaunes, Abortive lists\nOn 13 February, Levavasseur announced that she would quit the RIC list, a week after a controversial meeting with Luigi Di Maio, and announced on RTL on 11 March that she would not attempt to present a list. Two others on the list, C\u00f4me Dunis and Ayouba Sow, confirmed their departure from the initiative on 26 February. J\u00e9r\u00e9my Cl\u00e9ment said that he would be ready to be lead candidate for the list unless a \"more legitimate\" candidate emerged. On 5 April, Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Mestdjian, spokesman for the RIC list, said that he expected to arrive at an alliance with \"two or three\" other lists of yellow vests within weeks, working with Lalanne's list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 91], "content_span": [92, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0062-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Gilets jaunes, Abortive lists\nOn 29 January, a gilet jaune leader from Nice, Patrick Cribouw, announced his intention to present a list in the European elections under the banner of Union jaune. Spokesman Fr\u00e9deric Ibanez claimed the list already had around 40 candidates and would attempt to remain apolitical in terms of its composition. Appearing on BFM TV on 2 March, Cribouw claimed the list was complete and called for alliances with Mouraud, Levavasseur, and Valette.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 91], "content_span": [92, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0062-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Gilets jaunes, Abortive lists\nOn 1 February, Thierry Paul Valette announced the creation of a European election list under the banner of the Rassemblement des Gilets jaunes citoyens, claiming to have already chosen 10 candidates, after having quit Lalanne's initiative, but subsequently announced on 26 April that he would not present a list. Shahinyan and Chalen\u00e7on announced their intention to create the mouvement alternatif citoyen (MAC) and hold a member vote in March to decide whether to present a list. For her part, Jacline Mouraud launched a party, Les \u00c9mergents, on 27 January, and reiterated her intention not to present a list in the European elections but the 2020 municipal elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 91], "content_span": [92, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0063-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Gilets jaunes, Abortive lists\nMany of Macron's supporters considered gilets jaunes lists desirable, given that an internal poll suggested that such a list would siphon votes from the opposition and increase turnout by engaging traditional abstentionists, paradoxically strengthening Macron as a result. Others, however, warned that an electoral transformation of the movement could result in a French Five Star Movement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 91], "content_span": [92, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0064-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Absent lists, New Anticapitalist Party\nWhile the New Anticapitalist Party (NPA) initially sought to ally with Lutte Ouvri\u00e8re (LO), with its national political council of 6 and 7 October 2018 approving of the principle of an alliance by a 37\u201322 vote (with 5 abstentions and 10 non-participants), talks broke down in November 2018. On 28 January, the NPA indicated that it would attempt to present a list despite its serious financial difficulties, soliciting donations from its members, with its leadership deciding on 24 March whether to contest the European elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 100], "content_span": [101, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0064-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Absent lists, New Anticapitalist Party\nOn 18 February, the party reiterated its desire to be present in the elections, requiring a million euros to ensure its ability to do so. The NPA ultimately announced on 25 March that it would not present a list in 2019, lacking the financial means to do so, and called on its supporters to vote for Lutte Ouvri\u00e8re.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 100], "content_span": [101, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0065-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Absent lists, R\u00e9sistons!\nIn an interview published in Valeurs actuelles on 3 May 2018, former presidential candidate Jean Lassalle announced his intention to present a list under the banner of his movement R\u00e9sistons! in the European elections, hoping to defend the \"territories and rurality\" from the \"European supranationalism, globalization and hypercapitalism\". He voted \"no\" in the 1992 Maastricht Treaty referendum as well as the 2005 referendum on the European Constitution and opposed the Treaty of Lisbon in 2008. He intended to create a list composed of local mayors, farmers, business executives, and professionals inadequately represented in politics. On 6 March 2019, Lassalle indicated he had about a \"quarter\" of the 800,000 to 1 million euros needed to finance the campaign, and ultimately announced on 11 April 2019 that he would not present a list in the European elections, lacking sufficient funding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 981]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0066-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Other electoral lists\nOn 23 November 2018, Delphine Batho of Ecology Generation confirmed that she intended to present a list, and on 18 March 2019, she confirmed alongside Antoine Waechter of the Independent Ecological Movement (MEI) that Dominique Bourg would lead their Urgence \u00c9cologie list, also supported by the Movement of Progressives (MdP), as well as a significant contingent of the Union of Democrats and Ecologists (UDE).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 83], "content_span": [84, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0067-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Other electoral lists\nThe Animalist Party presented a list in the elections led by H\u00e9l\u00e8ne Thouy, with several notable candidates including journalist Henry-Jean Servat and Sylvie Rocard, wife of the late former prime minister Michel Rocard, as well as backing from numerous film and television personalities, and former MEP Mich\u00e8le Striffler in 11th position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 83], "content_span": [84, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0068-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Electoral lists, Other electoral lists\nOther lists include the monarchist and anti-EU Alliance Royale list led by Robert de Pr\u00e9voisin; La ligne claire, a far-right identitarian list led by Renaud Camus, known for promoting the Great Replacement conspiracy theory, with Karim Ouchikh, president of Souverainet\u00e9, Identit\u00e9 et Libert\u00e9s (SIEL), in third position; the list of the Pirate Party, a pro-transparency pirate party led by Florie Marie; D\u00e9mocratie repr\u00e9sentative, a far-left list led by Hadama Traor\u00e9 emanating from the citizen collective La r\u00e9volution est en marche; Parti des citoyens europ\u00e9ens (PACE), led by Audric Alexandre, which calls for a federal Europe; the Liste de la reconqu\u00eate, the list of the extreme-right party Dissidence fran\u00e7aise (DF) led by the 30-year-old Vincent Vauclin, which includes a number of ex-RN candidates; the European Federalist Party (PFE), a federalist party led by its president Yves Gernigon; Allons Enfants, a pro-European \"party of youth\" consisting entirely of candidates under 30 and led by 22-year-old Sciences Po graduate Sophie Caillaud; D\u00e9croissance 2019, a pro-degrowth and radical ecologist list led by Th\u00e9r\u00e8se Delfel; \u00c0 voix \u00e9gales, a feminist list led by Nathalie Tomasini, former lawyer for Jacqueline Sauvage; Neutre et actif, a list led by Cathy Denise Ginette Corbet to \"fight against abstention\" in the elections; the far-left Parti R\u00e9volutionnaire Communistes, a split from the PCF, led by national secretary Antonio Sanchez; Esp\u00e9ranto - langue commune \u00e9quitable pour l'Europe, the list of Europe D\u00e9mocratie Esp\u00e9ranto (EDE), led by Pierre Dieumegard, which calls for the designation of Esperanto as an official language; Les Oubli\u00e9s de l'Europe, a list led by Olivier Bidou to defend the interests of \"artisans, tradespeople, liberal professions, and the self-employed\"; the Union D\u00e9mocratique Pour La Libert\u00e9, Egalit\u00e9, Fraternit\u00e9 (UDLEF), a centre-right federalist list consisting mostly of African immigrants led by business leader Christian Luc Person; and Une Europe au service des peuples, the list of the Union des d\u00e9mocrates musulmans fran\u00e7ais (Union of French Muslim Democrats, UDMF) led by Najib Azergui, which was validated after a delay due to incomplete paperwork.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 83], "content_span": [84, 2282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0069-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Election platforms\nThe table below is a summary of the platforms of the principal electoral lists in the European elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0070-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Results\nOn 4 May 2019, the names of 33 official electoral lists, validated by the Ministry of the Interior, were published in the Journal officiel de la R\u00e9publique fran\u00e7aise, with their order determined by drawing lots. A 34th list entitled Une Europe au service des peuples, representing the Union des d\u00e9mocrates musulmans fran\u00e7ais (Union of French Muslim Democrats, UDMF) led by Najib Azergui, was later validated by the Ministry of the Interior after an initial delay, due to a lack of written consent from several candidates on the list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0070-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Results\nIn all, a total of 2,686 candidates were represented on these 34 lists, the number of which surpasses the previous record of 20 at the national level in the 1999 elections and the average of 24 lists per constituency in the 2014 elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0070-0002", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Results\nLacking the financial means to do so, most minor electoral lists were unable to distribute ballot papers at every polling site, instead requiring voters to print their own ballots published online; others, like the Pirate Party, only printed a fraction of ballots for each polling station, with those in particularly favorable areas targeted for ballots, to cut costs. Due to the Article 50 extension granted to the United Kingdom, 79 MEPs will be considered to have been officially elected, but only 74 will initially take their seats, with 5 \"virtual\" MEPs to take their seats upon the departure of the UK from the EU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0071-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Results\nComparisons for 2019 results for Europe Ecology \u2013 The Greens (EELV) are made with the combined score it received in 2014 of 8.95%, the Independent Ecological Alliance (AEI) with 1.12%, and R\u00e9gions et Peuples Solidaires (R&PS) with 0.34% (representing 10.41% in total); for the Socialist Party (PS) common list including Place Publique and New Deal, with its score in 13.98% as well as that of New Deal with 2.90% (representing 16.88% in total); the score of the Union of Democrats and Independents (UDI) is compared to his number of seats in The Alternative in 2014; and for the French Communist Party (PCF), his number of seats within the Left Front electoral alliance (including the Union for the Overseas).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 763]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0072-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Results, Elected MEPs\nFive MEPs were formally considered to have been elected in the elections, but will not take their seats pending the departure of the UK from the EU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 66], "content_span": [67, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0073-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Aftermath and analysis\nTurnout, up by 7.7 points compared to the previous European elections, was the highest since the 1994 elections. The results of the election were a confirmation of the establishment of the National Rally and La Republique En Marche as the two strongest political forces, between them leading in every single department. Although it fell relative to 2014, elevated turnout also meant the RN also attained a new record vote total in the European elections. Pre -election polls failed to capture both the rise of the Greens and abysmal result of The Republicans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 67], "content_span": [68, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0073-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Aftermath and analysis\nEven if surveys in the closing weeks uniformly reflected an increase in estimated turnout, that alone did not explain the discrepancy between polls and the final result. Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Dabi, deputy director general of the polling institute Ifop, admitted that pollsters missed the result, while Brice Teinturier, deputy managing director at Ipsos, suggested that the LR vote was more fragile than immediately visible, with their electorate less firm and many placing Loiseau's list as their second choice; the same was true for La Republique En Marche, with 17% of its backers then considering a vote for the Greens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 67], "content_span": [68, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0073-0002", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Aftermath and analysis\nTeinturier suggested that there had been a \"double transfer\" in votes in the closing weekend during the polling ban, with LR supporters moving Loiseau's list to prevent the RN from a first-place finish, the Greens depriving votes from the En Marche list, and a porous Socialist electorate compatible with both. Surveys indicated that nearly a quarter of voters made their choice only in the weekend before, with over half of EELV voters deciding within the last week alone, while retirees, who traditionally make up the LR vote, instead voted for the Renaissance list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 67], "content_span": [68, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0074-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Aftermath and analysis\nThe results of the European elections in France were also viewed with interest for their potential implications in the upcoming municipal elections in 2020. In Paris, the Renaissance list came first with 33% of the vote, followed by the Greens with just under 20%, LR with a catastrophic score of just 10%, the Socialists on 8%, RN on 7%, and M\u00e9lenchon's France Insoumise on only 5%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 67], "content_span": [68, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0074-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Aftermath and analysis\nDespite the overall vote share of the LREM list remaining relatively stable compared to Macron's result in 2017, the massive increase in support in the wealthier western arrondissements and decrease in support everywhere else in the city reflected the changing nature of its electoral base with the loss of its left flank. Even in Marseille, a stronghold of the right, the LR list received only 8% of the vote, whereas the National Rally led with just over 26% and the list backed by M\u00e9lenchon with just over 8% in his electoral fief.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 67], "content_span": [68, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0075-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Aftermath and analysis\nIn reaction to the results, the \u00c9lys\u00e9e claimed that it perceived the outcome as a \"disappointment\", but \"not a defeat\", while pointing to EELV's strong showing as reflecting strong support for ecological issues which it had made central to the campaign, with no change in direction expected from the government. Interpretations of the RN's score were also qualified, described as a \"victory but not a triumph\", falling short of the 25% mark in late polls, matching its usual electoral results and marking a slight decrease from its share of the vote from 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 67], "content_span": [68, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0075-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Aftermath and analysis\nSpeaking after the RN's victory, Le Pen called for the immediate dissolution of the National Assembly after the \"democratic rejection\" of Macron with his list's second-place finish. For his part, Beno\u00eet Hamon decided to take time to reflect upon his next steps and to try to assist in uniting the left after his movement, G\u00e9n\u00e9ration.s, fell short and failed to secure any seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 67], "content_span": [68, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0075-0002", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Aftermath and analysis\nDespite implicit pressure on him to step down after overseeing the worst result for the right in its history, Laurent Wauquiez initially sought to remain at the helm of The Republicans, proposing an \"Estates General\" to update the party's strategy and propositions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 67], "content_span": [68, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289002-0075-0003", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in France, Aftermath and analysis\nThe results were also a major disappointment for M\u00e9lenchon's France Insoumise with a score just over 6%, only narrowly ahead of the PS/Place Publique list, cut in third compared to the 2017 presidential election; like LR, it was also potentially a victim of tactical voting, potentially due to a strategic failure in framing the election as an anti-Macron referendum. Wauquiez ultimately announced his resignation as president of The Republicans a week later, on 2 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 67], "content_span": [68, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289003-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Friuli-Venezia Giulia\nThe European Parliament election of 2019 took place in Italy on 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289003-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Friuli-Venezia Giulia\nIn Friuli-Venezia Giulia Lega Nord came first with 42.6% of the vote (country-level result 34.3%) and more than 20pp than the Democratic Party, which came second with 22.2%. The Five Star Movement came third with 9.6%, ahead of Brothers of Italy (7.6%), Forza Italia (6.7%), More Europe (3.0%), Green Europe (3.0%) and The Left (1.6%). The South Tyrolean People's Party, which included one candidate from the Slovene Union, reached 38.9% in San Floriano del Collio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289004-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Germany\nThe 2019 European Parliament election in Germany were held on 26 May 2019, electing the 96 members of the national Germany constituency to the European Parliament. Both the CDU/CSU and SPD suffered major losses, while the Greens became the second largest party in a national-level election for the first time in German history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289004-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Germany, Background\nThe 2019 European Parliament election was first national election to be held in Germany since the 2017 federal election, in which Chancellor Angela Merkel's ruling coalition between the Christian Democrats and Social Democrats suffered major losses, while the right-wing, Eurosceptic party Alternative for Germany (AfD) entered parliament in third place. In 2018, the Greens and the AfD made large gains in state elections in Bavaria and Hesse, with the Greens moving into second place in each, whilst the Christian Democrats and Social Democrats each suffered 10+ point swings. Federal polling saw the Greens take a consistent lead over the SPD since October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289004-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Germany, Electoral threshold\nSince the 2014 European Parliament election, Germany does not have a formal threshold of the vote share required in order for a party to win an EP seat. This has allowed a number of smaller parties to gain representation, since they only have to reach about 0.5% of the vote share needed to get their first seat with the Webster/Sainte-Lagu\u00eb method.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 65], "content_span": [66, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289004-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Germany, Electoral threshold\nAlthough the European Council had recommended that countries with greater than 35 MEPs should introduce a threshold between 2\u20135%, the German government abandoned its plans for a 2% threshold in November 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 65], "content_span": [66, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289005-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Gibraltar\nThe British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar was a part of the European Parliament constituency combined region of South West England. Elections were held in Gibraltar on 23 May 2019 as part of the EU-wide elections after the date of EU withdrawal was delayed by the UK Government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289005-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Gibraltar, Background\nGibraltar's European Union Withdrawal Act was passed in March 2019 with the support of the governing GSLP\u2013Liberal coalition and an independent MP. The opposition Gibraltar Social Democrats originally did not intend to support the bill but later voted for it, but against parts of the legislation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 58], "content_span": [59, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289005-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Gibraltar, Background\nThe withdrawal agreement is supported by the governing GSLP-Liberal coalition, but opposed by the opposition Gibraltar Social Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 58], "content_span": [59, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289005-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Gibraltar, Background\nAccording to the Gibraltar newspaper Panorama, there had been a rise in Euroscepticism in Gibraltar since Spain was given a veto by the EU over Gibraltar's participation in the withdrawal agreement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 58], "content_span": [59, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289005-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Gibraltar, Campaign\nCandidates from the Brexit Party, Liberal Democrats, English Democrats and UKIP visited Gibraltar to campaign in the elections. The Liberal Democrat lead candidate for the constituency accepted that there was \"anger and frustration\" with regards to the EU's actions towards Gibraltar after the referendum result, but stated that she felt the party's anti-Brexit message was being received well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 56], "content_span": [57, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289005-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Gibraltar, Campaign\nBrexit Party candidate, James Glancy expressed concerns over the ramifications for Gibraltar of European federalisation, the Common Security and Defence Policy and influence of Spanish politicians in the EU in the event that Brexit does not happen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 56], "content_span": [57, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289005-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Gibraltar, Result\nThe result was a win for the Liberal Democrats, reflecting \"clearly pro-EU and pro Remain\" sentiment and with the Brexit Party taking second place, which \"reflects not just frustration with the stagnated Brexit process, but also anger at the way the EU has backed Spain during the withdrawal negotiations\", according to the Gibraltar Chronicle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 54], "content_span": [55, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289006-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Greece\nThe 2019 European Parliament election in Greece was held on 26 May 2019, electing members of the Greek delegation to the European Parliament as part of the European elections held across the European Union. In Greece, it was held in tandem with the first round of the local and regional government elections, resulting in a major defeat for the governing Syriza party, and forcing Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras to bring forward the scheduled legislative election for 7 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289007-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Hungary\nThe European Parliament election, 2019 for the election of the delegation from Hungary to the European Parliament was held on 26 May 2019,electing the 21 members of the Hungary delegation to the European Parliament as part of the European elections held across the European Union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289007-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Hungary, Date of the vote\nEuropean Parliament Elections are held every five years in the European Union. The vote had to take place from 23 to 26 May 2019, but the member states could set the exact date. Since Hungarian law states elections can only take place on a Sunday, the only possible date was 26 May 2019. Accordingly, President J\u00e1nos \u00c1der announced on 4 March 2019 that the vote would be held on 26 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 62], "content_span": [63, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289007-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Hungary, Background, Fidesz\nDuring early 2019, the Hungarian government launched a poster campaign targeting European commission president Jean-Claude Juncker and Hungarian-American philanthropist George Soros. The government campaign accuses Juncker and Soros of wanting \u201cto weaken member states\u2019 rights to protect their own borders\u201d and claims \u201cthey want \u2026migrants\u2019 visas\u201d. Due to the poster campaign, some members of the European People's Party (EPP), which the Hungarian governing party Fidesz is a member of, started moves to remove it from the group.\u201d Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orb\u00e1n, called those who were calling for his removal from the EPP \"Useful idiots\".\u201d In response to the political ad campaign, Manfred Weber, Spitzenkandidat of the EPP demanded Orb\u00e1n apologize for and renounce the criticism levied against the EU by him and his party or face Fidesz's suspension from the EPP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 935]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289007-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Hungary, Background, Fidesz\nOn 20 March 2019, the European People's Party voted to suspend the membership of Fidesz citing its anti-immigration stance, and personal attacks on Jean-Claude Juncker and George Soros. Prime Minister and Fidesz leader Viktor Orb\u00e1n had threatened to pull out of the EPP if it was suspended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289007-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Hungary, Parties contesting\nAccording to election law, Hungary consists of a single election district and all parties that collect 20,000 valid signatures from eligible citizens are put on the ballot. By the deadline (23 April 2019, 16:00), eleven parties or party alliances had submitted signature lists. Of those, two parties were refused registration, lacking a sufficient number of valid signatures\u00a0: the United Hungarian National People's Party (EMNP) and the Tea Party Hungary (TPM). Nine qualified lists were approved by the National Election Committee (NVB) to be put on the ballot, of which two of them are shared lists. All parties represented in the Orsz\u00e1ggy\u0171l\u00e9s participated in the election, in addition to four extra-parliamentary parties. The parties appeared on the ballot papers in the following randomly drawn order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 870]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289007-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Hungary, Analysis\nThese elections marked the change of balance in Hungarian politics. Although Fidesz-KNDP remained largest and dominant party, but MSZP and Jobbik were replaced by Democratic Coalition and Momentum Movement as leading opposition parties. LMP was wiped off from political sphere. The results of the European elections in Hungary were also viewed with interest for their potential implications in the upcoming local elections in 2019. Andr\u00e1s B\u00f3dis of V\u00e1lasz Online noted possibility that in some municipalities joint opposition candidates can defeat Fidesz-KNDP candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289008-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Ireland\nThe 2019 European Parliament election in Ireland is the Irish component of the 2019 European Parliament election and was held on Friday, 24 May 2019, on the same day as the 2019 local elections and a referendum easing restrictions on divorce. The election was conducted in three constituencies under the single transferable vote (STV). Thirteen MEPs were elected, but the last candidate elected in both Dublin and South did not take their seats until after Brexit on 31 January 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289008-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Ireland, Constituency changes\nThe United Kingdom invoked Article 50 to withdraw from the European Union on 29 March 2017 following the 2016 referendum to leave the European Union. As Article 50 has a two-year period for withdrawal, the United Kingdom would not be part of the 2019 European Parliament election scheduled for May 2019. In July 2018, the European Council made a decision to redistribute a number of the seats from the United Kingdom to other member states.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289008-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Ireland, Constituency changes\nThe allocation of MEPs from Ireland increased from 11 to 13; however, this change would not take effect until the United Kingdom has left the EU, which took place on 31 January 2020. As the United Kingdom was still a member of the EU at the beginning of the 2019\u20132024 parliamentary term, the allocation of seats will remain as it was in the previous parliament, until its withdrawal becomes legally effective.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289008-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Ireland, Constituency changes\nA Constituency Commission chaired by High Court judge Robert Haughton was established by the Minister for Housing, Planning and Local Government in July 2018 to redraw constituencies in line with the change in seats. The Commission's report was published on 24 September 2018 and proposed the following changes:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289008-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Ireland, Constituency changes\nThe European Parliament Elections (Amendment) Act 2019 enacted the changes recommended by the Constituency Commission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289008-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Ireland, Constituency changes\nIt also provided for the situation that Ireland's representation remained at 11 with an amendment to the rules, \"For the purpose of the European elections held in the year 2019, the return made by the chief returning officer [\u2026] shall declare that the last candidate deemed to be elected [\u2026] in each of the constituencies of Dublin and South as specified in the Third Schedule, shall not take up their seats in the European Parliament until such time as a date has been specified by the Parliament for the taking up of such seats\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289008-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Ireland, Constituency changes\nTaoiseach Leo Varadkar had incorrectly suggested that the votes would be counted twice in the constituencies which had an increased number of seats, to account for either contingency. However, Minister for Housing, Planning and Local Government Eoghan Murphy later clarified that there would be only one count for each constituency, and that the final candidate to be deemed elected in Dublin and South would not take their seats until the withdrawal of the United Kingdom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289008-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Ireland, Candidates\nNominations closed at midday on 15 April 2019, with 59 candidates in total: 19 in Dublin (4 seats), 17 in Midlands\u2013North-West (4 seats) and 23 in South (5 seats).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289008-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Ireland, European alliances\nIndependents 4 Change was not affiliated to a parliamentary group at the time of the election, but joined European United Left\u2013Nordic Green Left group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289009-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Italy\nThe 2019 European Parliament election in Italy were held on 26 May 2019, electing members of the 9th Italian delegation to the European Parliament as part of the European elections held across the European Union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289009-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Italy, Electoral system\nThe party-list proportional representation was the traditional electoral system of the Italian Republic from its establishment in 1946 to 1994, therefore it was also adopted to elect the Italian members of the European Parliament (MEPs) since 1979.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 60], "content_span": [61, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289009-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Italy, Electoral system\nTwo levels were introduced: a national level to divide the seats among parties and a constituency level to distribute them among candidates in open lists. Five constituencies were established, each including 2\u20135 regions and each electing a fixed number of MEPs. At national level, seats are divided between party lists using the largest remainder method with Hare quota. Seats are allocated to parties and then to their most voted candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 60], "content_span": [61, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289009-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Italy, Electoral system\nIn the run-up to the 2009 European Parliament election, the Italian Parliament introduced a national threshold of 4%. An exception was granted for parties representing some linguistic minorities as such lists can be connected with one of the major parties, combining their votes, provided that those parties reach the 4% threshold and that candidates from minority parties obtain a sufficient number of votes, no less than 50,000 for the main candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 60], "content_span": [61, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289009-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Italy, Background\nIn 2014, the governing Democratic Party (PD) of Prime Minister Matteo Renzi won the election with 40.8% of the vote and 31 seats, followed by the Five Star Movement (M5S) with 21.2% and 17 seats and Forza Italia (FI) with 16.8% and 13 seats. As a result, the PD was the second largest national party in the European Parliament by number of seats after the German CDU/CSU and the largest among the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats (S&D). The PD's score was also the best result for an Italian party in a nationwide election since the 1958 general election, when the Christian Democracy (DC) won 42.4% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289009-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Italy, Background\nHowever, after less than three years from the 2014 electoral landslide, Renzi was forced to resign after the defeat in the constitutional referendum and his foreign affairs minister Paolo Gentiloni was appointed new head of government in December 2016. Moreover, the 2018 general election was characterized by a strong showing of populist parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289009-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Italy, Background\nThe centre-right coalition, led by Matteo Salvini's right-wing League, emerged with a plurality of seats in the Chamber of Deputies and in the Senate while the anti-establishment M5S led by Luigi Di Maio became the party with the largest number of votes; and Renzi's centre-left came only third, with the worst electoral result of its history. However, no political group or party won an outright majority, resulting in a hung parliament. After three months of negotiation, a government was finally formed on 1 June by the M5S and the League, with the M5S-linked independent Giuseppe Conte as Prime Minister and Di Maio and Salvini Deputy Prime Ministers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289009-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Italy, Background\nIn March 2019, Nicola Zingaretti was elected secretary of the PD. In April, Zingaretti presented a special logo for the election, including a large reference to \"We Are Europeans\", a manifesto launched by Carlo Calenda; and the symbol of the Party of European Socialists (PES). Additionally, the PD is trying to forge an alliance with the Article One (Art.1) and minor parties. March and April registered more developments on the centre-left side of the political spectrum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289009-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Italy, Background\nUnder the new leadership of Benedetto Della Vedova, More Europe (+Eu) formed a joint list with Italia in Comune (IiC), the Italian Socialist Party (PSI), the Italian Republican Party (PRI), the Italian section of the European Democratic Party (EDP), the Liberal Democratic Alliance for Italy (ALI) and minor parties; Italian Left (SI), the Communist Refoundation Party (PRC), minor parties and individual splinters from the disbanded Free and Equal (LeU) formed The Left (LS), a joint list inspired by the Party of the European Left (PEL); and the Federation of the Greens (FdV), Possible (Pos) and Green Italy (GI) formed Green Europe (EV) under the banner of the European Green Party (EGP). On the centre-right side, FI welcomed in its lists candidates of the Union of the Centre (UdC) and several alike minor parties while Brothers of Italy (FdI) formed a partnership with Direction Italy (DI) and minor groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 969]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289009-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Italy, Main parties and leaders, Outgoing MEPs\nThe table shows the detailed composition of the Italian seats at the European Parliament before 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 83], "content_span": [84, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289009-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Italy, Main parties and leaders, Summary of parties\nThis is a list of the main parties which participated in the election and were polled in most opinion surveys.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 88], "content_span": [89, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289009-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Italy, Main parties and leaders, Top candidates\nIn the following table, the top candidates of each party/list in the five constituencies are listed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 84], "content_span": [85, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289009-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Italy, Opinion polling\nPoll results are listed according to the date of publication of the survey. Detailed data are usually published in the official website of the Italian government. The publication of opinion polls during the last 15 days of the electoral campaign is forbidden by Italian law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289010-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Latvia\nThe 2019 European Parliament election in Latvia is the election of the delegation from Latvia to the European Parliament in 2019. The previous elections were held in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289010-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Latvia\nThe election uses the Sainte-Lagu\u00eb method, which is weighted against the larger parties. That explains why, according to the results of one opinion poll, parties with 6% of the vote would be allocated one seat each, while a party with 17% of the vote would also be allocated only one seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289011-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Lithuania\nThe European Parliament election of 2019 in Lithuania was held on 26 May 2019 to elect delegation from Lithuania to the European Parliament. It was part of the wider 2019 European election. The second round of the 2019 Lithuanian presidential election took place at the same time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289011-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Lithuania, Results\nThe Homeland Union received the most votes (19.74 per cent) and most seats (3), although it won only in 12 (or just over one-fifth of) municipalities. The Social Democratic Party of Lithuania received 15.88 per cent of the votes and 2 seats. This party won in 35 municipalities. The Lithuanian Farmers and Greens Union received 12.56 per cent of the votes and 2 seats. This party won in 6 municipalities. The Labour Party received 8.99 per cent of the votes and won 1 seat. This party won in 1 municipality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 55], "content_span": [56, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289011-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Lithuania, Results\nAlthough Order and Justice and the Social Democratic Labour Party of Lithuania failed to win seats, these parties managed to obtain two municipalities (one municipality for each party).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 55], "content_span": [56, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289012-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Lombardy\nThe European Parliament election of 2019 took place in Italy on 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289012-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Lombardy\nIn Lombardy Lega Nord came first with 43.4% of the vote (country-level result 34.3%) and more than 20pp than the Democratic Party, which came second with 23.1%. The Five Star Movement came third with 9.3%, ahead of Forza Italia (8.7%), Brothers of Italy (5.5%), More Europe (3.1%), Green Europe (2.5%) and The Left (1.3%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289013-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Luxembourg\nElections for the 2019 European Parliament election in Luxembourg were held on 26 May 2019. Ten parties contested the election for Luxembourg's six seats in the European Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289013-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Luxembourg\nThe Democratic Party won the highest percentage of the vote with 21.4\u00a0%. These elections were first, in which this party managed to lead in Luxembourg-wide elections. Also these elections were the first, in which the Christian Social People's Party lost to the Democratic Party in Luxembourg-wide elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289013-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Luxembourg, Electoral system\nThe six representatives to the European Parliament are elected in a single constituency, similar to in elections for the Chamber of Deputies. Each voter could either select a party list or distribute six votes (with up to two to a single candidate), with the final seat tally calculated by a Hagenbach-Bischoff quota.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 65], "content_span": [66, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289013-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Luxembourg, Electoral system\nIn addition to Luxembourgish citizens, voting was open to European Union citizens resident in Luxembourg. Voting is compulsory for all eligible enrolled voters who are under 75 years of age.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 65], "content_span": [66, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289014-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Malta\nThe 2019 European Parliament election was held in Malta on 25 May 2019. 8 different political parties took part in the election, of which, only 2 won seats in the European Parliament; the Labour Party and the Nationalist Party, with 4 and 2 seats respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289014-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Malta, Contesting Parties, Alleanza Bidla\nIvan Grech Mintoff and Rebecca Dalli Gonzi contested on behalf of Alleanza Bidla. a conservative Christian and Eurosceptic party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289014-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Malta, Contesting Parties, Brain, Not Ego\nAntoine P. Borg contested on behalf of fledgling political party Brain, Not Ego.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289014-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Malta, Contesting Parties, Democratic Alternative\nDemocratic Alternative announced the approval of its 3 European parliamentary election candidates. They were: Arnold Cassola, Mina Tolu and Carmel Cacopardo. In the wake of a dispute regarding the topic of abortion, Cassola resigned from Democratic Alternative and contested the EP election as an independent candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 86], "content_span": [87, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289014-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Malta, Contesting Parties, Democratic Party\nThe Democratic Party announced the approval of its 4 European parliamentary election candidates, They were: Martin Cauchi Inglott, Anthony Buttigieg, Godfrey Farrugia and Camilla Appelgren.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289014-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Malta, Contesting Parties, Imperium Europa\nNorman Lowell announced that he would once again contest the European parliamentary election after Imperium Europa was officially registered with the Electoral Commission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 79], "content_span": [80, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289014-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Malta, Contesting Parties, Independents\nArnold Cassola announced that he would contest the European parliamentary election as an independent candidate. Stephen Florian announced that he would contest as an Independent candidate after resigning from the executive of the Moviment Patrijotti Maltin. Other independent candidates included Nazzareno Bonnici (Partit Ta' L-Ajkla), Mario Borg and Joseph Aquilina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289014-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Malta, Contesting Parties, Labour Party\nThe Labour Party announced the approval of its 14 European parliamentary election candidates. They were: Alfred Sant, Mary Gauci, Lorna Vassallo, Robert Micallef, Cyrus Engerer, Alex Agius Saliba, Felix Busuttil, Miriam Dalli, James Grech, Joe Sammut, Josianne Cutajar, Fleur Vella, Noel Cassar and Josef Caruana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289014-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Malta, Contesting Parties, Moviment Patrijotti Maltin\nSimon Borg and Naged Magelly contested on behalf of Moviment Patrijotti Maltin, an offshoot of the anti-immigration group G\u0127aqda Patrijotti Maltin led by Henry Battistino which campaigns against irregular migration, Malta's participation in the Schengen Area, and Islam in Malta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 90], "content_span": [91, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289014-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Malta, Contesting Parties, Nationalist Party\nThe Nationalist Party announced the approval of its 10 European parliamentary election candidates. They were: Roberta Metsola, David Casa, Francis Zammit Dimech, Peter Agius, Dione Borg, Michael Briguglio, Frank Psaila, Roselyn Borg Knight, Michael Mercieca and David Stellini.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 81], "content_span": [82, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289014-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Malta, Opinion polls, Expressing a preference\nThe values in the table below are derived by removing non-party responses (i.e. non-voters and \"don't know\"); as the margin is also recalculated, there may be slight differences in exact lead margins due to rounding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 82], "content_span": [83, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289014-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Malta, Results\nShortly after the first exit polls were announced, it was thought that Labour Party had a majority of 51,600 votes over the Nationalist Party, but this was later decreased to 42,656 after the official results came out. Although a large majority for Labour was expected, as well as Labour winning 4 out of 6 seats, the majority was unexpected and historic. Adrian Delia, the leader of the opposition, conceded defeat. He did state, however, that he would not resign because of the result and that his aim was still the next Maltese general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289014-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Malta, Results\nAlthough the far-right political party Imperium Europa increased their vote share from 2.68% in the 2014 European Parliament election to 3.17% (at 8,238 votes) in the current election, this was far less than initially thought by the Maltese media, who had thought that they had received about 15,000 votes. The Democratic Party on the other hand, the only third party in the Maltese Parliament, only managed to get 5,276 votes, with Camilla Appelgren defying expectations by not only getting 3,052 votes, but also beating her own party leader Godfrey Farrugia, who only managed to get 1,668 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289015-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Piedmont\nThe European Parliament election of 2019 took place in Italy on 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289015-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Piedmont\nIn Piedmont Lega Nord came first with 37.1% of the vote (country-level result 34.3%), virtually 15pp more than the Democratic Party, which came second with 23.9%. The Five Star Movement came third with 13.3%, ahead of Forza Italia (9.1%), Brothers of Italy (6.0%), More Europe (3.3%), Green Europe (2.3%) and The Left (1.5%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289016-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Poland\nOn Sunday 26 May 2019, a vote was held to elect the Polish delegation to the European Parliament. Polish voters elected 52 MEPs, compared to 51 in the 2014 election. The increased number of MEPs is a result of the 2018 reapportionment of seats in the European Parliament. Following the United Kingdom's announcement, that it will participate in elections to the European Parliament on May 23, Poland will continue to be represented by 51 MEPs. The 52nd MEP will take up their mandate immediately after the UK leaves the European Union. Following the announcement of the election results, the National Electoral Commission indicated Dominik Tarczy\u0144ski from Lesser Poland and \u015awi\u0119tokrzyskie will take up the 52nd seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289016-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Poland, Lists\nLegally, Polish elections are contested by \"election committees\" (see Polish Wikipedia article) that are established by:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289016-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Poland, Lists\nThese committees should register to the State Electoral Commission by 8 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289016-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Poland, Lists\nThe committees have to send lists of five to ten candidates in each electoral district by 16 April. Each list has to be supported by signatures of at least 10,000 voters residing in the district. However, a committee that had collected enough signatures in at least 7 electoral districts were allowed to register lists in the remaining districts regardless of local support. Establishment of an independent committee required signatures of at least 1,000 registered voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289016-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Poland, Lists\nThere were 26 registered committees 6 of them registered candidates in all 13 constituencies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289016-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Poland, Electoral calendar\nThe Electoral Commission has published a timetable of the election proceedings:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289016-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Poland, Results\nThe Law and Justice party achieved its highest vote of any Polish elections at 45%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289017-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Portugal\nThe European Parliament election of 2019, in Portugal, elected the Portuguese delegation to the European Parliament from 2019 to 2024. This was the eighth European election held in Portugal. The election was held on Sunday, 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289017-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Portugal\nThe Socialist Party (PS) was the winner of the elections, scoring 33.4% of the vote. The party increased their share of the votes by 2% from the 2014 election, and won an additional seat. It was one of the only three times in Portuguese history where the government party won a European Election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289017-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Portugal\nThe Social Democratic Party (PSD) achieved its worst results ever as a standalone party, with 21.9% of the vote, distancing more than eleven points from the winner. The People's Party (CDS), which ran alongside the PSD in the previous election, as part of the Portugal Alliance, also fell below expectations at 6.2% of the vote, only being able to elect their top candidate Nuno Melo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289017-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Portugal\nThe Democratic Unity Coalition (CDU) scored their worst result as well, narrowly electing two MEPs compared to their former three. On the other hand, the Left Bloc (BE) rebounded to previous support levels, more than doubling its vote share to 9.8% and electing a new member.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289017-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Portugal\nThe big surprise of the elections was the result of People-Animals-Nature (PAN). Headed by civil engineer Andr\u00e9 Silva, PAN won 5.1% of the votes and was able to elect its first ever European Parliament member, over-performing the polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289017-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Portugal\nTurnout, again, fell to the lowest level ever, with only 30.7% of voters casting a ballot. Abstention reached an unprecedented level of 99.04% for Portuguese citizens living abroad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289017-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Portugal, Electoral system\nThe voting method used, for the election of European members of parliament, is by proportional representation using the D'Hondt method. For the 2019 EU elections, Portugal has 21 seats to be filled. Deputies are elected in a single constituency, corresponding to the entire national territory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 63], "content_span": [64, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289017-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Portugal, Electoral system\nThis election was also the first in which the changes in the electoral law, approved in 2018, were put into practice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 63], "content_span": [64, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289017-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Portugal, Electoral system\nThe main changes were the automatic registration of all Portuguese citizens, at home and abroad, above 17 year's old, prompting the number of registered voters to increase from 9.7 million to almost 10.8 million, the introduction of early voting to all voters without filling an excuse, in previous elections voters could only vote early if they were unable to attend a polling station on election day, and the end of the \"voting card\", as voters would only need their ID card in order to cast a ballot. To vote early, 19,584 voters, 0.2% of all registered voters, requested an early ballot. According to the government, 14,909 voters cast an early ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 63], "content_span": [64, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289017-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Portugal, Parties and candidates\nThe major parties that participated in the election and their EP list leaders, ranked by percentage of the vote received, were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289018-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Romania\nThe European Parliament election of 2019 was held in Romania on 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289018-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Romania, Background, Social Democratic Party\nIn April 2019, the Party of European Socialists (PES) announced on Wednesday that it would freeze relations with the Social Democrats (PSD) at least until June, citing concerns about the rule of law in the country. Since then the (PSD) moved further to Euroscepticism. Victor Ponta, who was expelled from the PSD in 2017, said \"The PSD unfortunately has turned to a very populist, very nationalistic, demagogic party,\" he said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 81], "content_span": [82, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289018-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Romania, Background, National Liberal Party\nThree days after the 2014 election, on 28 May 2014, National Liberal Party president Crin Antonescu announced that the party would change European affiliation from ALDE to EPP, and it has started negotiations for the merger with the Democratic Liberal Party. The newly created party would still be called National Liberal Party, and be a member of the EPP. Democratic Liberal Party president Vasile Blaga later that day confirmed the merger of the two parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 80], "content_span": [81, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289018-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Romania, Background, National Liberal Party\nMEP Norica Nicolai, first candidate on the National Liberal Party list refused to join the European People's Party group, and continued to stay a member of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe group. After the 2014 presidential election, MEP Renate Weber, second candidate on the National Liberal Party list, resigned the European People's Party group, and joined the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe group. After the completion of the merger of the two parties, the two MEPs were given an ultimatum to join the European People's Party group or face party exclusion. They failed to fulfill the request and thus were expelled from the National Liberal Party, and currently stand with the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe group. Later, MEP Norica Nicolai joined the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 80], "content_span": [81, 919]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289018-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Romania, Background, National Liberal Party\nIn late August 2017, MEP Ramona M\u0103nescu, third candidate on the National Liberal Party list, resigned the party, but continued to stand with the European People's Party group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 80], "content_span": [81, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289018-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Romania, Background, National Liberal Party\nIn May 2018, People's Movement Party MEP Siegfried Mure\u0219an, spokesman of the European People's Party, announced he is leaving the party to join the National Liberal Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 80], "content_span": [81, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289018-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Romania, Background, National Liberal Party\nJournalist Rare\u0219 Bogdan, formerly a staunch opponent to the liberals, was officially nominated as head of the PNL list for the European Parliament elections, which also contains, among others, former co-president of PNL Vasile Blaga, MEPs Siegfried Mure\u0219an, Adina V\u0103lean, Daniel Buda, Cristian Bu\u0219oi, Marian-Jean Marinescu and Mihai \u021aurcanu, and mayors Mircea Hava and Gheorghe Falc\u0103.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 80], "content_span": [81, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289018-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Romania, Background, Democratic Liberal Party\nThree days after the 2014 election, on 28 May 2014, Democratic Liberal Party president Vasile Blaga confirmed the announcement made by National Liberal Party president Crin Antonescu, that the two parties were to merge into a new party, that would retain the name of the latter and international affiliation of the former. To express discontent with this decision, and the lack of a PDL candidate to the presidential election, MEP Monica Macovei, second candidate on the Democratic Liberal Party list resigned the party in September 2014, and competed in the 2014 presidential election as an independent. Following the presidential election, she joined, as an independent politician, the European Conservatives and Reformists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 82], "content_span": [83, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289018-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Romania, Background, People's Movement Party\nIn September 2014, following some declarations, Cristian Preda, first candidate on the People's Movement Party list, was expelled from the party. He continued to stand in the European People's Party group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 81], "content_span": [82, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289018-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Romania, Background, People's Movement Party\nIn 2016, the People's Movement Party merged with (absorbed) the National Union for the Progress of Romania, but the later's MEPs did not join the People's Movement Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 81], "content_span": [82, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289018-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Romania, Background, People's Movement Party\nIn May 2018, MEP Siegfried Mure\u0219an, spokesman of the European People's Party, announced he is leaving the People's Movement Party, to join the National Liberal Party. As a result, the People's Movement Party lost both its MEPs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 81], "content_span": [82, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289018-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Romania, Background, Conservative Party\nThe Conservative Party ran with the National Union for the Progress of Romania on a common list headed by the Social Democratic Party at the previous election. This electoral alliance was supposed to be called \"Social Democratic Union\" (\"Uniunea Social Democrat\u0103\"), but, due to the Romanian legislation (this name was taken by a 1990s alliance between the Democratic Party and Romanian Social Democratic Party), they ran as \"PSD-UNPR-PC\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 76], "content_span": [77, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289018-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Romania, Background, Conservative Party\nIn 2015, the party merged with the Liberal Reformist Party, to form the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats Members displeased with this decision, headed by MEP Maria Grapini (first Conservative Party candidate, and fifth on the PSD-UNPR-PC list), founded a new party, Humanist Power Party (Social-Liberal) (Romanian: Partidul Puterii Umaniste (Social-Liberal)). She continues to stand with the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats, as a member of PPU-SL. Lauren\u021biu Rebega, second Conservative Party candidate and fourteenth on the PSD-UNPR-PC list, sat as an independent politician in the Non-Inscrits group, before joining PRO Romania and the ECR.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 76], "content_span": [77, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289018-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Romania, Background, National Union for the Progress of Romania\nThe National Union for the Progress of Romania ran with the Conservative Party on a common list headed by the Social Democratic Party at the previous election. This electoral alliance was supposed to be called \"Social Democratic Union\" (\"Uniunea Social Democrat\u0103\"), but, due to the Romanian legislation (this name was taken by a 1990s alliance between the Democratic Party and Romanian Social Democratic Party), they ran as \"PSD-UNPR-PC\". In 2016, the National Union for the Progress of Romania merged with (was absorbed by) the People's Movement Party, but the former's MEPs did not join the People's Movement Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 100], "content_span": [101, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289018-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Romania, Background, National Union for the Progress of Romania\nBoth its two candidates continue to stand with the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats: Damian Dr\u0103ghici (first National Union for the Progress of Romania candidate and sixth on the \"PSD-UNPR-PC\" list) as an independent member, and Doru Frunzulic\u0103 (second National Union for the Progress of Romania candidate and thirteenth on the \"PSD-UNPR-PC\" list) joined the Social Democratic Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 100], "content_span": [101, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289018-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Romania, Candidates and Elected MEPs\nThe Central Electoral Bureau publishes the lists the latest in 24 hours after they have been registered by the parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 73], "content_span": [74, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289018-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Romania, Notes\nThe Social Democratic Party (PSD) ran in 2014 as part of the a three-party alliance that also included the Conservative Party (Romania) (PC, a founding member of the ALDE party in 2015) and the National Union for the Progress of Romania (UNPR). Initially it intended to run as \"Social Democratic Union\", but, as the same name was used by an alliance in the 1990s by the now defunct Democratic Party (PD) and Social Democratic Party of Romania (PSDR), they ran as \"PSD-UNPR-PC Alliance\", Save Romania Union and Freedom, Unity and Solidarity Party are running together under the 2020 USR-PLUS Alliance. Includes the Civic Force (2,6% in 2014), which merged into the Democratic Liberal Party (PDL) in July 2014, which itself merged into the PNL in November 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 811]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289019-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Sardinia\nThe European Parliament election of 2019 took place in Italy on 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289019-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Sardinia\nIn Sardinia the League, which included the Sardinian Action Party, came first with 27.7% of the vote (country-level result 34.3%), slightly ahead of the Five Star Movement (25.7%) and the Democratic Party (24.3%). Forza Italia came a distant fourth (7.8%), ahead of Brothers of Italy (6.2%), The Left (2.2%), More Europe (2.1%) and Green Europe (1.6%). No Sardinian candidate was elected to the European Parliament, due to the strength of Sicilians in the Islands constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289020-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Sicily\nThe European Parliament election of 2019 took place in Italy on 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289020-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Sicily\nIn Sicily the Five Star Movement came first with 31.2% of the vote (+14.1pp than at country-level), ahead of the League (20.8%; \u201313.5pp), Forza Italia (17.0%; +8.2pp), the Democratic Party (16.6; \u20136.1pp), Brothers of Italy (7.6%; +1.1pp), More Europe (1.9%), Green Europe (1.5%) and The Left (1.2%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289021-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Slovakia\nElections in Slovakia for the 2019 European Parliament election took place on 25 May 2019. Thirty-one parties featured on the electoral list. The election was won by alliance of Progressive Slovakia and TOGETHER - Civic Democracy. It was the first election since 2006 that was won by some other party than Direction \u2013 Social Democracy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289021-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Slovakia, Results, Post-election changes of Europarties\nOn 5 June, Peter Poll\u00e1k announced that he is switching from AECR to EPP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 92], "content_span": [93, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289022-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Slovenia\nEuropean Parliament elections were held in Slovenia on 26 May 2019. This was the most recent in the series of four elections held over the period of two years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289022-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Slovenia, Opinion polls\nPoll results are listed in the table below in reverse chronological order, showing the most recent first. The highest percentage figure in each polling survey is displayed in bold, and the background shaded in the leading party's colour. The projected numbers of MP's per party, if available, are listed in brackets. In the instance that there is a tie, then no figure is shaded. The lead column on the right shows the percentage-point difference between the two parties with the highest figures. Poll results use the date the survey's fieldwork was done, as opposed to the date of publication. However, if such date is unknown, the date of publication will be given instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289022-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Slovenia, Inaccessible polling places dispute\nBefore the 2015 same-sex marriage referendum, two voters with disabilities requested that the authorities make their polling places accessible. Their requests were denied, and the courts rejected their lawsuits and appeals. Before the 2019 European Parliament elections, they extended their requests to these elections. When the authorities rejected their requests, they submitted, together with the Slovenian Disability Rights Association (Drupis), applications to the European Court of Human Rights. In January 2020, the Court communicated the cases with the government of Slovenia. As of January 2020, the cases, called Toplak v. Slovenia and Mrak v. Slovenia, are ongoing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 82], "content_span": [83, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289022-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Slovenia, The Right to Vote by Persons with Intellectual Disabilities\nBefore the 2019 European Parliament elections, disability groups Son\u010dek and Slovenian Disability Rights Association, and a law professor Jurij Toplak, called for legislative amendments for the recognition of the right to vote for persons with disabilities, in line with the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. They also initiated proceedings with the Constitutional Court of Slovenia, which rejected three of their appeals. They filed a complaint with the European Commission and asked for an infringement procedure. As of September 2020, the procedure is ongoing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 106], "content_span": [107, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289023-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Spain\nThe 2019 European Parliament election in Spain was held on Sunday, 26 May 2019, as part of the EU-wide election to elect the 9th European Parliament. All 54 seats allocated to Spain as per the Treaty of Lisbon were up for election. Once the United Kingdom is effectively out of the European Union in a legal basis as a result of Brexit, 5 additional seats would be allocated to Spain. The election was held simultaneously with regional elections in twelve autonomous communities and local elections all throughout Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289023-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Spain\nHeld one month after the 2019 Spanish general election, the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) of Prime Minister Pedro S\u00e1nchez scored a landslide victory\u2014as well as the first win for the party in a European Parliament election in 15 years, also with Josep Borrell as its main candidate\u2014by achieving 32.9% of the share and 20 seats, a result which allowed it to become the largest national delegation within the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289023-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Spain\nConcurrently, the opposition People's Party (PP) suffered a severe setback and scored its worst result ever in a European Parliament election, but slightly improved on its general election results by achieving 20.2% of the vote and 12 seats. Citizens (Cs), which had integrated UPyD within its lists ahead of the election, became the third most-voted party of the country, but at 12.2% and 7 seats it only slightly improved on the combined Cs\u2013UPyD results in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289023-0001-0002", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Spain\nUnidas Podemos Cambiar Europa (English: \"United We Can Change Europe\"), the alliance of Podemos and United Left (IU) suffered a considerable drop from both parties' past results, being reduced to 10.1% and 6 seats. Far-right Vox performed well below expectations after disappointing results for the party in the 2019 general election, scoring 6.2% of the share and 3 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289023-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Spain\nAfterwards, and as a result of the United Kingdom's withdrawal from the European Union coming into effect on 31 January 2020, five additional seats were allocated to Spain's MEP delegation, which were re-distributed by granting one each to PSOE, PP, Cs, Vox and Junts according to their May 2019 election results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289023-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Spain, Electoral system\nThe 54 members of the European Parliament allocated to Spain as per the Treaty of Lisbon were elected using the D'Hondt method and a closed list proportional representation, with no electoral threshold being applied in order to be entitled to enter seat distribution. Seats were allocated to a single multi-member constituency comprising the entire national territory. Voting was on the basis of universal suffrage, which comprised all nationals and resident non-national European citizens over eighteen and in full enjoyment of their political rights. Additionally, Spaniards abroad were required to apply for voting before being permitted to vote, a system known as \"begged\" or expat vote (Spanish: Voto rogado). The use of the D'Hondt method might result in an effective threshold depending on the district magnitude.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 60], "content_span": [61, 881]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289023-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Spain, Parties and candidates\nThe electoral law allowed for parties and federations registered in the interior ministry, coalitions and groupings of electors to present lists of candidates. Parties and federations intending to form a coalition ahead of an election were required to inform the relevant Electoral Commission within ten days of the election call.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289023-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Spain, Parties and candidates\nIn order to be entitled to run, parties, federations, coalitions and groupings of electors needed to secure the signature of at least 15,000 registered electors; this requirement could be lifted and replaced through the signature of at least 50 elected officials\u2014deputies, senators, MEPs or members from the legislative assemblies of autonomous communities or from local city councils. Electors and elected officials were disallowed from signing for more than one list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289023-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Spain, Parties and candidates\nBelow is a list of the main parties and electoral alliances which contested the election:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289023-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Spain, Opinion polls\nThe table below lists voting intention estimates in reverse chronological order, showing the most recent first and using the dates when the survey fieldwork was done, as opposed to the date of publication. Where the fieldwork dates are unknown, the date of publication is given instead. The highest percentage figure in each polling survey is displayed with its background shaded in the leading party's colour. If a tie ensues, this is applied to the figures with the highest percentages. The \"Lead\" column on the right shows the percentage-point difference between the parties with the highest percentages in a given poll. When available, seat projections are also displayed below the voting estimates in a smaller font.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289024-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Sweden\nEuropean Parliament elections were held in Sweden in May 2019 to elect the country's twenty members of the European Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289024-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Sweden, Voter demographics\nVoter demographics of the 2019 European Parliament election in Sweden, according to the Swedish Television's exit polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289024-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Sweden, Referendums\nIn connection with the 2019 European Parliament elections, two local referendums were held in Sweden. In Svedala municipality, citizens took a stand on whether a prison should be established there, with 67.5% voting no. In the municipalities of Borgholm and M\u00f6rbyl\u00e5nga, residents voted on a proposal for a merger to the municipality of \u00d6land, which gave no in both municipalities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289025-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Trentino-Alto Adige/S\u00fcdtirol\nThe European Parliament election of 2019 took place in Italy on 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289025-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Trentino-Alto Adige/S\u00fcdtirol\nLega Nord (PD), which came first also at the country-level, was by far the most voted list in Trentino (37.7%), while the South Tyrolean People's Party (SVP) was by far the largest party in South Tyrol (46.5%). SVP's Herbert Dorfmann, the outgoing two-term MEP, was largely the most voted candidate in the region (95,753 preference votes), followed by Matteo Salvini (Lega Nord, 43,321), Roberto Battiston (PD, 23,788), Remate Holzeisen (Team K\u2013More Europe, 22,930) and Norbert Lantschner (Greens\u2013Green Europe, 9,825). Dorfmann was the only candidate from the region to be elected (in his case, re-elected) to the European Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289026-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Veneto\nThe European Parliament election of 2019 took place in Italy on 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289026-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in Veneto\nIn Veneto Lega Nord came first with 49.9% of the vote (country-level result 34.3%) and more than 20pp than the Democratic Party, which came second with 18.9%. The Five Star Movement came third with 8.9%, ahead of Brothers of Italy (6.8%), Forza Italia (6.1%), Green Europe (2.7%), More Europe (2.7%) and The Left (1.1%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic\nThe 2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic was held on 24 and 25 May 2019, electing the 21 members of the Czech delegation to the European Parliament as part of the European elections held across the European Union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic\nThe result was a victory of the populist ruling party ANO (ALDE), with 21.18 per cent and 6 seats, 2 more seats than in 2014 election. Followed by conservative ODS (ECR), with 14.54 per cent and 4 seats, marking a notable growth in the election. The Pirate Party also made major gains. SPD (ENF) gained seats in its first European election, while KDU-\u010cSL (EPP), TOP 09/STAN (EPP) and KS\u010cM (GUE/NGL) lost seats. \u010cSSD (S&D) did not cross 5% threshold for the first time, as well as Svobodn\u00ed (EFDD).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Background\nPrevious election was held in 2014. ANO 2011 has won the previous election followed by TOP 09. Civic Democratic Party has suffered losses and Czech Social Democratic Party had disappointing result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 67], "content_span": [68, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Background\nChristian and Democratic Union \u2013 Czechoslovak People's Party announced on 19 May 2018 that it will be led by MEP Pavel Svoboda during 2019 election. Christian Democrats admitted to consider joint list with TOP 09 and Mayors and Independents. Christian Democrats announced on 28 November 2018 the will run independently.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 67], "content_span": [68, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Background\nJan Zahradil became Alliance of Conservatives and Reformists in Europe candidate for the President of the European Commission and thus the election leader of Civic Democratic Party. Zahradil launched pan-European campaign of Alliance of Conservatives and Reformists in Europe on 28 November 2018. Zahradil stated that his Zahradil was confirmed as party's election leader on 10 December 2018. In national election polls, which use similar system (the only difference being national candidate list compared to regional for national elections), ODS polls at second place with 14-16%, which would give them 4 MEP's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 67], "content_span": [68, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Background\nCzech Social Democratic Party announced Pavel Poc as the leading candidate of the party on 30 November 2018. Josef St\u0159edula was reportedly offered the position but refused it. Poc was confirmed as electoral leader on 27 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 67], "content_span": [68, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Background\nMayors and Independents announced on 7 December 2018 that Stanislav Pol\u010d\u00e1k will be party's election leader. The party stated they negotiate with TOP 09, SNK European Democrats and Liberal-Environmental Party about joint list for the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 67], "content_span": [68, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Background\nCzech Pirate Party launched its primaries for the election on 10 December 2018. Mikul\u00e1\u0161 Peksa expressed his intention to become electoral leader of the party and entered the primaries. He was eventually defeated by Marcel Kolaja who became party's electoral leader on 19 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 67], "content_span": [68, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Background\nCommunist Party of Bohemia and Moravia chose Kate\u0159ina Kone\u010dn\u00e1 as the electoral leader on 15 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 67], "content_span": [68, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Background\nTOP 09 announced its leader Ji\u0159\u00ed Posp\u00ed\u0161il as the electoral leader on 25 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 67], "content_span": [68, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Campaign, ANO 2011\nDita Charanzov\u00e1 was introduced as the electoral leader of ANO 2011 on 17 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 75], "content_span": [76, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Campaign, ANO 2011\nThe party launched its campaign on 2 May 2019. It uses the slogan \"We will protect Czech strongly and without compromises.\" The party introduced baseball caps with the slogan \"Strong Czechia\" which is inspired by Donald Trump's 2016 presidential campaign. Charanzov\u00e1 promised strong Czechia in a strong Europe, fighting against illegal migration and fighting against low quality grocery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 75], "content_span": [76, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Campaign, ANO 2011\nANO 2011 used Gamekeepers's exhibition Natura Viva. Prime Minister Andrej Babi\u0161 and Minister of Environment attended party's meeting there along with Dita Charanzov\u00e1", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 75], "content_span": [76, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Campaign, ANO 2011\nANO 2011 concluded itc campaign on 23 May when Dita CHaranzov\u00e1 was doing contact campaign and handing out Doughnut to potential voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 75], "content_span": [76, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Campaign, Christian and Democratic Union - Czechoslovak People's Party (KDU-\u010cSL)\nKDU-\u010cSL concluded campaign on 23 May when its candidates met with party's supporters at And\u011bl to sing Ode to Joy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 137], "content_span": [138, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Campaign, Civic Democratic Party (ODS)\nThe Civic Democratic Party is led by Jan Zahradil. The list of candidates was announced on 21 January 2018. It includes, besides Zahradil, MEP Ev\u017een To\u0161enovsk\u00fd, former Minister of Defense Alexandr Vondra, MP Veronika Vrecionov\u00e1 and others. The party is a member of the Alliance of Conservatives and Reformists in Europe. Zahradil is a leading candidate of the European Conservatives and Reformists group. The party focuses on reform of the European Union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 95], "content_span": [96, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Campaign, Civic Democratic Party (ODS)\nThe party introduced its election slogan \"We are the Heart of Europe and we want to be heard\" on 16 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 95], "content_span": [96, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Campaign, Civic Democratic Party (ODS)\nODS launched its campaign during a meeting on 2 May 2019. Zahradil stated that the party aims for a less bureaucratic and more flexible Europe. Petr Fiala, leader of ODS, stated that the party plans to support safe outer borders of the European Union, open borders within the European Union and free trade without \"useless regulations\". He also promised large-scale legal cleaning of European law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 95], "content_span": [96, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Campaign, Civic Democratic Party (ODS)\nZahradil reacted to the campaign of ANO 2011 that was launched on 2 May 2019. He noted that ODS previously used the slogan \"Strong Czechia\" during the campaign for the 2017 legislative election. He also stated that ANO 2011 copied the election program of ODS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 95], "content_span": [96, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Campaign, Civic Democratic Party (ODS)\nODS released a campaign advertisement on 12 May 2019. It reminds voters of previous and current scandals of Andrej Babi\u0161.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 95], "content_span": [96, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Campaign, Civic Democratic Party (ODS)\nCivic Democratic Party concluded campaign on 24 May when Jan Zahradil was doing contact campaign along with supporters of the party and was handing out leaflets to voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 95], "content_span": [96, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Campaign, Czech Social Democratic Party (\u010cSSD)\nSocial Democrats chose Pavel Poc as the electoral leader. The party launched its campaign on 23 April 2019. It focuses on the fight against poor-quality grocery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 103], "content_span": [104, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Campaign, Czech Pirate Party\nThe Pirates are led by Marcel Kolaja. The party is not currently represented in the European Parliament. Kolaja stated that it could join Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe group or Greens\u2013European Free Alliance group after the election. The party launched its campaign on 3 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 85], "content_span": [86, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Campaign, Czech Pirate Party\nPirates launched their campaign on 29 April 2019 with a petition against Andrej Babi\u0161. The party's campaign utilises the slogan \"Europe needs Pirates.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 85], "content_span": [86, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Campaign, Czech Pirate Party\nPirate Party used a virtual reality workshop during its campaign. Printed Pirate Newspapers included a hologram of Ivan Barto\u0161, visible when someone aims their mobile phone camera at title page of Pirate Newspapers. The Pirate Party also published so-called Peksaso (named after Mikul\u00e1\u0161 Peksa) which is a pexeso whose pictures are based on the election program of the Pirates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 85], "content_span": [86, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Campaign, Czech Pirate Party\nPirates held a meeting with voters at Havl\u00ed\u010dk\u016fv Brod square on 19 May 2019 where they build an Election Town. There were attractions for people such as Musical performance or bouncy castle for children. Marcel Kolaja called people to vote as the election is important. Pirates also decided to hold a meeting in Olomouc. One of main planned attractions were ponies as a ride for children. Electoral leader Marcel Kolaja disagreed with ponies as he viewed it as an animal abuse which resulted in a party's election whether party members want the pony even at the cost of not having Kolaja at the meeting. Pirates eventually voted they prefer Ponies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 85], "content_span": [86, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Campaign, Czech Pirate Party\nPirates concluded campaign on 24 May when party's leader Ivan Barto\u0161 was driving through the Prague by a bus with DJ Music.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 85], "content_span": [86, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Campaign, Freedom and Direct Democracy (SPD)\nThe Freedom and Direct Democracy is running for the first time in a European parliament election. They are with Movement for a Europe of Nations and Freedom. The party launched its campaign on 25 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 101], "content_span": [102, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Campaign, Svobodn\u00ed\nSvobodn\u00ed launched campaign on 20 April 2019. V\u00edt Jedli\u010dka was announced as its leader. The party is running with support of Joyful Czech Republic. The party's campaign is somewhat less Eurosceptic than in previous years. The party wants to focus on the reform of the European Union. Jedli\u010dka stated that Svobodn\u00ed wants the Czech Republic to remain in the European Union and would support exit from the European Union only if reform does not occur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 75], "content_span": [76, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Campaign, Svobodn\u00ed\nOn 11 May 2016 Svobodn\u00ed began its election campaign. Its party members and supporters started printing electoral newspapers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 75], "content_span": [76, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Campaign, Svobodn\u00ed\nSvobodn\u00ed decided to finance its campaign through crowdfunding on the website HitHit. Their target is 350,000 CZK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 75], "content_span": [76, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Campaign, STAN and TOP 09\nOn 25 January 2019 was Ji\u0159\u00ed Posp\u00ed\u0161il, leader of the TOP 09 party, announced as the electoral leader of the coalition. In addition to Ji\u0159\u00ed Posp\u00ed\u0161il (TOP 09), the candidate list includes Stanislav Pol\u010d\u00e1k (STAN), MEP Lud\u011bk Niedermayer (TOP 09), Marek \u017den\u00ed\u0161ek (TOP 09) and others. All elected members of the European Parliament would be in the European People's Party group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 82], "content_span": [83, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Campaign, STAN and TOP 09\nIn January 2019 TOP 09 had announced its desire to negotiate with the political movement Mayors and Independents (STAN) about a joint candidate list for the European Parliament election in 2019. Mayors and Independents party itself had previously announced an agreement of a cooperation with the Green party and numerous regional subjects in the European Parliament election. On 18 February 2019 both party leaders, Petr Gazd\u00edk (STAN) and Ji\u0159\u00ed Posp\u00ed\u0161il (TOP 09), signed an agreement on cooperation in the European Parliament election. The assembled coalition was targeting European Union supporters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 82], "content_span": [83, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Campaign, STAN and TOP 09\nThe party's MEP Lud\u011bk Niedermayer launched a website called to support European Union by retelling real experiences and stories of Bohemian, Moravian and Silesian citizens, who feel like European citizens at the same time. The campaign aims to inform civil society about the European Union without a political context.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 82], "content_span": [83, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289027-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic, Campaign, STAN and TOP 09\nTOP 09 and Mayors and Independents coalition made a campaign commercial inspired by the iconic film Cosy Dens. The commercial quickly went viral on social networks. The campaign was aimed at pro-European voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 82], "content_span": [83, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289028-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Netherlands\nThe 2019 European Parliament election for the election of the delegation from the Netherlands is an election that was held on 23 May 2019. It is the ninth time the elections have been held for the European elections in the Netherlands. The number of Dutch seats was to increase from 26 to 29 following Brexit, but due to the extension of the Article 50 process in the United Kingdom, the number of seats to be elected will remain at 26.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289028-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Background, Voting and election organisation, Right to vote\nAdditionally, nationals of other member states of the European Union must:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 113], "content_span": [114, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289028-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Background, Voting and election organisation, Right to vote\nDutch nationals abroad, as well as in Aruba, Cura\u00e7ao and Sint Maarten have to register to vote for the elections to the European Parliament. When they register, they must say whether they will vote by post, by proxy, or in person at a polling station in the Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 113], "content_span": [114, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289028-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Background, Voting and election organisation, Right to vote\nDutch nationals living in another EU member state must make a statement that they have not voted in the member state in which they reside, if they want to vote in the Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 113], "content_span": [114, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289028-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Background, Voting and election organisation, Right to vote\nDutch residents on Bonaire, St. Eustatius, and Saba have no need to register, because these islands are part of the Netherlands. They are able to vote in person at polling stations on the islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 113], "content_span": [114, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289028-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Background, Voting and election organisation, Right to stand as a candidate\nIn order to stand in the European Parliament election, a candidate must:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 129], "content_span": [130, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289028-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Background, Voting and election organisation, Right to stand as a candidate\nAdditionally, candidates from other member states of the European Union must:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 129], "content_span": [130, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289028-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Background, Voting and election organisation, Organisation of elections\nIn elections for the European Parliament, the national electoral districts play no role in the nomination. The Netherlands consists of a single electoral district. Political parties, therefore, take part in the elections with only a single candidate list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 125], "content_span": [126, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289028-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Background, Voting and election organisation, Organisation of elections\nHowever, the national electoral districts do play an important role in processing the election results. The principal polling station of each constituency determines the vote total of the constituency. The results of the vote are recorded in an official document and transferred to the Electoral Council. The Electoral Council, in its role as the central electoral committee, then determines the result of the Netherlands' distribution of seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 125], "content_span": [126, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289028-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Background, Voting and election organisation, Casting a vote\nA voter could cast their vote at a polling station of their choice within their own district. At the casting their vote, they could identify themselves with an identity document which is considered valid even if it has expired within the last five years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 114], "content_span": [115, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289028-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Background, Voting and election organisation, Numbering of the candidates list\nThe parties which had obtained one or more seats in 2014 at the last election to the European Parliament were given a number based on the number of votes they had received in the previous election. These totalled nine candidate lists. The party with the most votes got number 1 and the rest were listed accordingly. The list numbers for the remaining candidate lists were decided by a lottery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 132], "content_span": [133, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289028-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Background, Voting and election organisation, Common lists\nParties can form common lists, which means that two or more parties create a single list and stand in the elections as though they were one party. There are two for this election:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 112], "content_span": [113, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289028-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Background, Voting and election organisation, Election day\nTraditionally, all elections are held on Wednesday in the Netherlands. However, the European Parliament elections run from Thursday to Sunday across the entire European Union so Thursday was chosen. This is because it is the only day that the Dutch Government believes is appropriate for an election day due to it not being a rest day for any religion. Sunday is not an option because it is a rest day for Christians, while it is the Sabbath on Friday and Saturday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 112], "content_span": [113, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289028-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Polls, Exit Poll\nAn exit poll carried out by Ipsos, as well as a forecast of the result produced by GeenPeil and Maurice de Hond based on a part of results collected, indicated that the Labour Party (PvdA) emerged with the most seats, followed by the Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA) and People's Party for Freedom and Democracy (VVD) with four seats each, Forum for Democracy (FvD) and GroenLinks (GL) with three seats and the Democrats 66 (D66) and the Christian Union \u2013 Reformed Political Party (CU-SGP) lists with two seats each, with all others on zero or one seat. The result marked the first time the Labour Party had won the most seats of the EU Parliament in the Netherlands since 1984, and the first time it has won the popular vote in a Dutch election since 1998.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 70], "content_span": [71, 829]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289028-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Results, Turnout\nA total of 13,164,688 people were entitled to vote. Of these 5,519,776 participated in the election. This amounts to a turnout of 41.93%, which is higher than in 2014 (37.32%), and higher than any European Parliament election in the past twenty years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 70], "content_span": [71, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289028-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Results, Seat assignment, Electoral quota\nThe electoral quota is the number of votes needed for one seat. It is the total valid number of votes divided by the number of seats. For this election it was 5,497,813 valid votes, divided by 26 seats. The electoral quota was established as 211,454.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 95], "content_span": [96, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289028-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Results, Seat assignment, Assigning full seats\nFull seats are assigned by number of votes divided by the electoral quota. Electoral alliances are marked as a letter, instead of a number. Any seats left over are not yet assigned to a specific party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 100], "content_span": [101, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289028-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Results, Seat assignment, Remainder seats\nThe remaining, or left over, seats are awarded sequentially to the lists with the highest average number of votes per seat. Only lists that reached the electoral quota are eligible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 95], "content_span": [96, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289028-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Results, Elected members\nTo be elected by preference votes, 10% of the electoral quota is needed. The electoral quota was 211,454. 10% of 211,454 = 21,145 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 78], "content_span": [79, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289028-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Results, Elected members\n36 members were directly elected by preference votes. Not all candidates could be appointed because either the party did not get enough seats, or it got no seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 78], "content_span": [79, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289028-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Results, Elected members\nBelow are all the elected members of European parliament for the Netherlands. The following 26 MEPs were officially announced by the Central Electoral Commission. Members elected by preference votes are in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 78], "content_span": [79, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289028-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, MEPs in 2019\u20132024\nBelow is a list of members of the European Parliament for the period 2019\u20132024 as a result of this election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 71], "content_span": [72, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom\nThe United Kingdom's component of the 2019 European Parliament election was held on Thursday 23 May 2019 and the results were announced on Sunday 26 and Monday 27 May 2019, after all the other EU countries had voted. This was the United Kingdom's final participation in a European Parliament election before leaving the European Union on 31 January 2020, and was also the last election to be held under the provisions of the European Parliamentary Elections Act 2002 before its repeal under the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom\nInitially no election was planned in the United Kingdom, as Brexit (following the 2016 referendum) was set for 29 March 2019. However, at the European summit on 11 April 2019 the British government and the European Council agreed to delay British withdrawal until 31 October 2019. While it was then the default position in UK and EU law for the election to take place, the UK Government continued attempts to avoid participation by agreeing on withdrawal before 23 May. On 7 May 2019, the UK government conceded that the election would go ahead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom\nThe election was the ninth time the United Kingdom had elected MEPs to the European Parliament (and the fourth for Gibraltar). Candidate nominations were submitted by 16:00 on 25 April 2019, and voter registration was completed on 7 May 2019. The MEPs sat until 31 January 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom\nBrexit was the central issue of the election campaign; arguments were made that it was a proxy for a second Brexit referendum. The Brexit Party won the most votes and became the largest single national party in the European Parliament, being the dominant choice of those who had voted to leave the European Union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom\nThe votes of those who had voted to remain were more fragmented: the Liberal Democrats made substantial gains, finishing second nationally, while the Green Party of England and Wales and Scottish National Party also improved on their 2014 result; however, Change UK failed to win any seats. Compared to the 2014 result, the Labour Party suffered heavy losses, while the Conservative Party lost all but four of its MEPs. The previously dominant UK Independence Party failed to elect any MEPs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom\nIn Northern Ireland, the Republican pro-Remain Sinn F\u00e9in and the Unionist pro-Leave Democratic Unionist Party both held their seats, while the Ulster Unionist Party lost its seat to the pro-Remain non-sectarian Alliance Party. In Scotland, the Scottish National Party elected three MEPs, while Labour lost both its MEPs and failed to win a seat in Scotland at a European election for the first time in its history. In Wales, the Brexit Party became the largest party, while the nationalist Plaid Cymru came second. The Liberal Democrats became the largest party in London.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom\nThe election was the first national poll in the United Kingdom since December 1910 in which a successor party to the Liberal Party reached higher than third place in the number of votes or seats, and the first ever national election in which the Conservative Party received less than 10% of the votes cast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Voting eligibility\nIndividuals had to be registered to vote by midnight on 7 May 2019. A person with two homes, such as a university student with a term-time address but living at home during holidays, could be registered to vote at both addresses as long as they are not in the same electoral area, but could vote in only one constituency at the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 75], "content_span": [76, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Voting eligibility\nEuropean Union citizens (except for British, Irish, Cypriot and Maltese citizens) also had to submit a European Parliament voter registration form (also known as Form UC1 or Form EC6) by midnight on 7 May 2019 to confirm that they would vote in the European Parliament election only in the UK, and not in their home country. However, in the top 10 local authorities with EU citizens, only 21% of EU citizens who were on the Electoral Register returned this form by the deadline. EU citizens who did not submit this form were unable to vote in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 75], "content_span": [76, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Constituencies\nThe United Kingdom was divided into 12 multi-member constituencies: the nine regions of England, plus Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. Gibraltar was assigned to the South West England constituency. As had been the case since 1999, the English electoral constituencies were based on the government's nine English regions. The seat allocation was the same as in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 71], "content_span": [72, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Constituencies\nThe breakdown of seats just prior to the election was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 71], "content_span": [72, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Electoral method\nIn Great Britain, candidates stood on either a party list, known as a closed list, in a set order of priority decided by that party, or as an independent. Voters chose a party (not an individual party candidate) or an independent candidate. Seats would then be allocated proportionally to the share of votes cast for each party or individual candidate in the electoral region using the D'Hondt method of calculation. The first seat was allocated to the party or individual with the highest number of votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 73], "content_span": [74, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Electoral method\nAfter each seat was allocated to a party, for the purpose of allocating further seats that party's total votes would then be divided by one plus the number of seats already allocated to that party, to give the party's quotient. The second and subsequent seats were allocated in turn to the party or independent candidate with the greatest quotient.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 73], "content_span": [74, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Electoral method\nThe Northern Ireland constituency used the single transferable vote (STV) system to allocate its three MEPs. Voters ranked the candidates sequentially, in the order of their choice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 73], "content_span": [74, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Background, Expected cancellation and contingency planning\nThe United Kingdom invoked Article 50 of the Treaty on the European Union on 29 March 2017 following a referendum on 23 June 2016 to leave the European Union. As a result, the country was due to leave the EU on 29 March 2019, before the European Parliament elections took place. Nonetheless, on 27 May 2018, it was reported that the UK's Electoral Commission had set aside \u00a3829,000 for its \"activities relating to a European Parliamentary election in 2019\". The Commission described the money as a \"precautionary measure, so that we have the necessary funds to deliver our functions at a European Parliamentary election, in the unlikely event that they do go ahead\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 115], "content_span": [116, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Background, Expected cancellation and contingency planning\nThe European Parliament resolution of 7 February 2018 on the composition of the European Parliament (2017/2054(INL) \u2013 2017/0900(NLE)) included these clauses:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 115], "content_span": [116, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Background, Expected cancellation and contingency planning\nThe European Council also drew up contingency plans allowing the UK to retain its MEPs were Brexit to be postponed:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 115], "content_span": [116, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Background, Official preparations\nAfter Brexit was delayed beyond its initial planned date of 29 March 2019, the possibility of a sufficiently long delay so as to require the election to take place became more apparent. The period for withdrawal under Article 50 was first extended, with the unanimous approval of the European Council, until 12 April 2019 \u2013 the deadline for informing the EU of the intention to hold an election. By early April, the House of Commons had voted again to extend the withdrawal period, and a deadline of 31 October 2019 was agreed between the UK and the Council. The UK Government therefore ordered preparations for the election, with the deadline for candidate nominations on 24 April for the South West England region and 25 April for all other regions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 90], "content_span": [91, 842]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Background, Official preparations\nNevertheless, ratification of a withdrawal agreement by the UK and European parliaments would still have permitted the UK to leave before October. Had this occurred before 23 May, the United Kingdom and Gibraltar would not have taken part in the 2019 European Parliament elections scheduled for that day. On 7 May, the UK Government announced that it would not be able to obtain ratification in time to prevent the elections, although it still aimed to ratify the withdrawal agreement before October. Later in May, it also acknowledged that the MEPs elected would take up their seats, with Brexit not due to happen until after 2 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 90], "content_span": [91, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Background, Campaign background\nThe two major UK political parties, the Conservatives and Labour, saw the prospect of elections for the European Parliament (while the UK was due to leave the European Union) as problematic, with both having been keen to avoid this scenario. The backdrop of ongoing debate around Brexit was expected to be a very significant factor in how people voted, with the election seen by many as a \"proxy referendum\" on whether the country should leave the EU or not. Commentators suggested that the vote share for the Conservatives and Labour could fall, with voters moving towards a number of pro-Leave or pro-Remain parties, and this did indeed happen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 88], "content_span": [89, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Background, Campaign background\nThe Conservative government had made several attempts to get the Withdrawal Agreement that it had negotiated with the EU approved by the House of Commons, which would have allowed for Brexit before the election. All these having failed, the Conservatives entered into cross-party talks with the Labour Party to see whether they could agree a withdrawal plan. These talks were still ongoing as of 10 May 2019, but eventually failed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 88], "content_span": [89, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Background, Campaign background\nThe election was seen as being significant for two new single-issue parties: the Brexit Party (supporting Brexit), and Change UK (supporting the UK remaining in the EU).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 88], "content_span": [89, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Background, Campaign background\nBetween the 2014 and 2019 elections, there were many changes to the breakdown of UK members due to defections and changes in affiliation. This table shows the number of MEPs in each party at both ends of the term:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 88], "content_span": [89, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Candidates\nNomination papers had to be submitted by 16:00 on the 19th working day before election day (25 April 2019). To stand as a candidate, individuals had to be aged 18 or over on the date of nomination and a British or European Union citizen, or a Commonwealth citizen possessing indefinite leave to remain or not requiring leave to enter or remain in the UK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 67], "content_span": [68, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Candidates\nIn April 2019, Labour said it had started its process for choosing candidates. 16 out of the 20 MEPs elected last time applied to stand again. The party's candidates were announced on 18 April, and included former Cabinet minister Andrew Adonis, former MP Katy Clark and the national co-ordinator of campaigning group Momentum Laura Parker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 67], "content_span": [68, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Candidates\nFollowing the prospect of a delay to Brexit, Conservative Party MEPs were asked by their delegation leader if they would consider standing again if there were a delay that would mean the UK staying in the EU beyond the date of the next European Parliament election. Fifteen of the party's 18 MEPs stood again as lead candidates for their respective regions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 67], "content_span": [68, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Candidates\nThe Brexit Party ran candidates for all 70 seats in Great Britain, with leader Nigel Farage, himself a former UKIP leader, standing in the South East England region, and former Conservative candidate Annunziata Rees-Mogg standing in the East Midlands region. Writer Claire Fox, formerly of the Revolutionary Communist Party, and former Conservative MP Ann Widdecombe both also stood.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 67], "content_span": [68, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Candidates\nThe UK Independence Party selected its three remaining MEPs as candidates, along with social media activist Carl Benjamin and YouTuber Mark Meechan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 67], "content_span": [68, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Candidates\nThe Green Party of England and Wales and the corresponding party in Scotland, the Scottish Greens, began their candidate selection processes in March. The Green Party of England and Wales announced a full slate of candidates for England and Wales on 24 April 2019, including one of its three outgoing MEPs, Molly Scott Cato. Other candidates included Catherine Rowett, Rupert Read and former Lord Mayor of Sheffield, Magid Magid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 67], "content_span": [68, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Candidates\nThe Liberal Democrats announced their selected candidates for England and Wales on 17 April 2019 following a membership vote. The party's sole incumbent MEP, Catherine Bearder, was re-selected as its lead candidate for South East England, while former MEPs Chris Davies, Fiona Hall, Bill Newton Dunn and Phil Bennion were selected as lead candidates for their respective regions. Other candidates included in London the entrepreneur Dinesh Dhamija and the former leader of the People's Alliance of Tower Hamlets, Rabina Khan, and former MPs Martin Horwood and Stephen Williams in the South West. The party also stood a full slate in Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 67], "content_span": [68, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Candidates\nChange UK said it had had 3,700 applicants to be candidates, including former MPs from both the Labour Party and the Conservative Party. Their candidates included writer Rachel Johnson (sister of Conservative MP Boris Johnson and formerly of the Liberal Democrats), former BBC journalist Gavin Esler, former Conservative MPs Stephen Dorrell and Neil Carmichael, former Labour MEP Carole Tongue, former Labour MPs Roger Casale and Jon Owen Jones, former Liberal Democrat MEP Diana Wallis, and former deputy Prime Minister of Poland Jacek Rostowski. It stood 70 candidates (all of Great Britain, but not Northern Ireland). Two of its candidates subsequently withdrew from the ballot due to reports that they had made misogynistic and racist remarks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 67], "content_span": [68, 815]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Candidates\nJill Evans, Plaid Cymru's sole MEP, stood as the party's lead candidate as part of a full slate for the Wales constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 67], "content_span": [68, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Candidates\nThe Women's Equality Party stood in the London constituency, with the party's co-founder Catherine Mayer as the lead candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 67], "content_span": [68, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Candidates\nFar-right activist Tommy Robinson stood as an independent for the North West England constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 67], "content_span": [68, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Candidates\nFurther parties and independent candidates also stood, including the English Democrats and the Yorkshire Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 67], "content_span": [68, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Candidates\nNine candidates, seven in London and two in South West England, were part of the new Climate Emergency Independents group. They took part in and were inspired by the Extinction Rebellion protests. However, as they were not a registered political party, they were all listed as separate independents on the ballot paper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 67], "content_span": [68, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Candidates\nPatrick O'Flynn, the Social Democratic Party's sole MEP, who defected to the SDP after originally being elected for UKIP, stated in April 2019 that the party would not be standing candidates at the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 67], "content_span": [68, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Candidates, Northern Ireland\nNorthern Ireland has a different party system to Great Britain, dominated by regional parties, and using single transferable vote rather than the party list system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 85], "content_span": [86, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Candidates, Northern Ireland\nTwo of the three sitting MEPs contested the election: Martina Anderson for Sinn F\u00e9in and Diane Dodds for the Democratic Unionist Party. Jim Nicholson, who had represented the Ulster Unionist Party since 1989, retired, with Danny Kennedy instead running for the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 85], "content_span": [86, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Candidates, Northern Ireland\nThree parties selected their leaders as candidates: Colum Eastwood for the SDLP, Naomi Long for the Alliance Party, and Clare Bailey for the Green Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 85], "content_span": [86, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Candidates, Northern Ireland\nUKIP nominated Robert Hill as their candidate. The Conservative Party also nominated a candidate, making the Conservatives and UKIP the only two parties to stand candidates in all regions across the UK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 85], "content_span": [86, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Candidates, Northern Ireland\nIn April 2019, Jane Morrice, co-founder of the Northern Ireland Women's Coalition and a former deputy speaker of the Northern Ireland Assembly, announced she was standing as an independent on a pro-Remain platform.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 85], "content_span": [86, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Labour\nIn early 2019 there was an ongoing debate within Labour as to what its policy should be with respect to Brexit. On 20 April, the party's deputy leader Tom Watson argued the party needed to back a second referendum on Brexit in order to present a clear alternative to and beat the Brexit Party, but that was not Labour's preferred option. A draft of a Labour leaflet that made no reference to a second referendum provoked a public row, including more than 90 Labour MPs and MEPs writing to the party's National Executive Committee (NEC) in protest. On 27 April, Labour announced that the original leaflet draft was to be redrafted to include details of the party's preparations for a general election, with a referendum if necessary to avoid what it called a \"bad Tory deal\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 73], "content_span": [74, 848]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Labour\nLabour's manifesto for the elections was agreed at an NEC meeting on 30 April, re-affirming its 2018 policy that it will first seek a Brexit deal on its terms (including a Customs Union), but if that is not possible, it will seek a general election, and, if that is not possible, a second referendum. Only one vote was held at the meeting, on an amendment from the TSSA union that sought to commit Labour to a referendum on any Brexit deal, but this was rejected by a what NEC sources called a \"clear\" margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 73], "content_span": [74, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0041-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Labour\nRetiring Labour MEP Mary Honeyball criticised this as \"Not good enough\" and some Labour Party members destroyed their membership cards in protest. However, some Remain-supporting Labour MPs, and Labour MPs sceptical of a second referendum, welcomed the decision. Watson had walked out of the Shadow Cabinet meeting earlier on 30 April in protest at Shadow Cabinet members not being shown the draft manifesto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 73], "content_span": [74, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Labour\nLabour's 9 May campaign launch stressed bringing the country together. Jeremy Corbyn talked of a \"healing process\" between those who supported Leave and Remain. By mid-May, Watson and Labour's Shadow Brexit Secretary Keir Starmer were arguing for a second referendum, yet their shadow international trade secretary Barry Gardiner stated \"Labour is not a Remain party now\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 73], "content_span": [74, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0042-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Labour\nIn most voting areas, e.g. Scotland and South West England, all Labour candidates stated their support for a second referendum, with the UK's longest-serving MEP, David Martin (Labour) and the Labour Leader in the European Parliament Richard Corbett MEP among those calling for the country to stay in the EU. Polling in mid-May suggested both Labour supporters and the electorate in general were split as to whether Labour supported remaining or leaving the EU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 73], "content_span": [74, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Conservative\nThe Conservative government was hopeful of agreeing a withdrawal deal with the EU soon enough that UK MEPs would not take up their seats. The party did not spend any central money on candidate campaigning, did not publish a manifesto and did not hold a campaign launch. One Conservative MEP said that the deficit of campaigning would be used as an excuse if the party does poorly in the elections. Many party activists were demotivated given the failure of the government to deliver Brexit. Conservative councillors in Derbyshire boycotted the European elections and refused to campaign in protest. A survey of 781 Conservative councillors found that 40% plan to vote for the Brexit Party. Conservative MPs, including Lucy Allan, tweeted positive comments about the Brexit Party. In response, the Conservative Party issued a warning that individuals campaigning for or endorsing other parties will be expelled from the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 79], "content_span": [80, 1005]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Conservative\nThe Prime Minister and leader of the Conservative Party, Theresa May, had announced her intention to resign before the next general election, but further pressure mounted on her to be clear about her timetable for departure, with May meeting the party's 1922 Committee on the matter on 16 May 2019. This resulted in May agreeing to stand down by 30 June 2019. Campaigning by possible successors accelerated after the local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 79], "content_span": [80, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, UKIP\nUKIP argued it was \"the authentic party of Brexit, the true party of Leave\", to quote party leader Gerard Batten. Alongside the Conservatives, UKIP was one of two Brexit-supporting parties fielding a candidate in every region of the United Kingdom, including Northern Ireland. Batten criticised the rival Brexit Party as having no policies. UKIP launched its campaign on 18 April. There was renewed criticism surrounding its candidate Carl Benjamin for telling Labour MP Jess Phillips \"I wouldn't even rape you\" on Twitter in 2016, and producing a satirical video. Further controversy came as one of UKIP's sitting MEPs Stuart Agnew addressed a pro-apartheid club of expat South Africans in London that reportedly had links to the far-right.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 71], "content_span": [72, 813]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Brexit Party\nNigel Farage, the Brexit Party and former UKIP leader, said that there was \"no difference between the Brexit party and UKIP in terms of policy, [but] in terms of personnel, there's a vast difference\", criticising UKIP's connections to the far right. On 15 April 2019, three more sitting female UKIP MEPs defected to the Brexit Party, criticising UKIP's nomination of Benjamin as a candidate. In particular, Collins noted UKIP leader Gerard Batten's defence of Benjamin's \"use of a non-rape threat as 'satire'\" to be an especially compelling factor. Two further UKIP MEPs moved to the Brexit Party on 17 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 79], "content_span": [80, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0046-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Brexit Party\nOn 23 April, Farage said that the Brexit Party was not \"here just to get a process vote on 23 May \u2013 far from it, 23 May for us is just the beginning\". He also argued that the better the performance of the Brexit Party, the lower the chance of a second referendum on Brexit. Farage argued that should the Brexit Party get most votes in the elections, his party should get a seat at the UK/EU negotiations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 79], "content_span": [80, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Liberal Democrats, Green Party and Change UK\nThe three main nationwide pro-European Union parties standing in the election, Liberal Democrats, Greens and Change UK, wished to treat this election as a \"soft referendum\" on Europe. Commentators, such as Marina Hyde, raised the concern of a split vote among pro-Remain parties reducing the number of pro-Remain MEPs being elected. Vince Cable, the leader of the Liberal Democrats, proposed standing joint candidates with the Greens and Change UK on a common policy of seeking a second referendum on Brexit, but the other parties rejected the idea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 111], "content_span": [112, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0047-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Liberal Democrats, Green Party and Change UK\nChange UK's co-founder Chuka Umunna confirmed the Lib Dem approach, but he and Change UK interim leader Heidi Allen dismissed concerns of a split Remain vote. Independent MEP Julie Girling, then supporting Change UK, said she had decided not to stand for re-election as a Change UK candidate because of the concern about maximising the Remain vote. On 10 May, she endorsed the Liberal Democrats. Change UK and Girling clarified that she had not been and was not a Change UK MEP, with Girling saying she sat as an independent MEP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 111], "content_span": [112, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0047-0002", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Liberal Democrats, Green Party and Change UK\nOn 15 May, David Macdonald, the lead candidate for Change UK in Scotland, switched to endorsing the Liberal Democrats in order not to split the pro-Remain vote. On 22 May, Allen said that she and another Change UK MP, Sarah Wollaston, wanted to advise Remain supporters to vote Liberal Democrat outside of London and South East England, but they were overruled by other party members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 111], "content_span": [112, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0048-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Liberal Democrats, Green Party and Change UK\nThe Greens said that joint lists were not \"desirable\" and that there were \"fundamental ideological differences\" on other issues between the parties that wanted a second referendum. The Green Party campaigned on a platform calling for action on climate change as well as an anti-Brexit platform.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 111], "content_span": [112, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0049-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Liberal Democrats, Green Party and Change UK\nThe Liberal Democrats ran with a \"stop Brexit\" message, seeking the support of those who wish the UK to remain in the EU. At his party's campaign launch on 26 April, Cable lamented that it was not standing on a common platform with other parties opposed to Brexit. It launched its manifesto on 9 May, unveiling its campaign slogan \"Bollocks to Brexit\" which attracted considerable media debate. Polling in the final fortnight put the Liberal Democrats ahead of the other pro-Remain parties and overtaking Labour in some polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 111], "content_span": [112, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0050-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Liberal Democrats, Green Party and Change UK\nChange UK (which in early April was still known as the Independent Group) saw the election as an important launchpad for its new party, seeking to turn the ballot into a \"proxy referendum\" on Brexit. On 16 April 2019, two former Conservative MEPs, who had left the party to sit as independents within the European People's Party grouping, announced their support for Change UK. The Renew Party agreed to support Change UK at the elections, and the latter included candidates from Renew's approved list. Molly Scott Cato, a sitting MEP for the Green Party of England and Wales, criticised Change UK as \"a single-issue party with no coherent policy platform beyond opposing Brexit\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 111], "content_span": [112, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0051-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Other parties\nThe SNP campaign launch was marred by tens of thousands of personalised letters being sent to the wrong people. The mistake was reported to be in the data supplied by SNP HQ, run by Peter Murrell, husband of SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon. The party apologised for the error: the party referred itself to the Information Commissioner's Office and may be fined.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 80], "content_span": [81, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0052-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Other parties\nThe DUP campaigned on sending a message to \"get on with Brexit\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 80], "content_span": [81, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0053-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Later events\nLocal elections were held in most of England and all of Northern Ireland on 2 May. The results saw both Conservatives and Labour losing seats in what The Guardian called a \"Brexit backlash\" while the Liberal Democrats, Greens and independents made gains. The Liberal Democrats made the biggest gains which the Lib Dem leader Vince Cable put down to a rejection of the Conservatives and Labour over their Brexit approaches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 79], "content_span": [80, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0053-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Later events\nStephen Bush, writing in the New Statesman, argued that the Lib Dem success in the local elections make it the most likely party for Remain voters to rally around at the European elections while James Moore in The Independent described them as having the \"momentum\" leading into the European elections. Alliance (the Lib Dems' sister party in Northern Ireland), other smaller parties and independents also made significant gains in the local elections in Northern Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 79], "content_span": [80, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0054-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Later events\nOn 18 May, former Conservative Deputy Prime Minister and sitting Conservative peer Michael Heseltine said he would vote for the Liberal Democrats instead of the Conservatives because of his own party's support for Brexit. Heseltine subsequently had the Conservative whip suspended, owing to his comments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 79], "content_span": [80, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0055-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Later events\nPolling after the local elections saw the Brexit Party in front, followed by Labour, with the Liberal Democrats taking third from the Conservatives. Conservative sources predicted the party could come even lower than fourth. By the weekend before the vote, the Labour Party was concerned at the increased polling for the Liberal Democrats, which came above Labour in London and in some national polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 79], "content_span": [80, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0056-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Later events\nOn 17 May, Labour left talks that had been held to find a Brexit deal with the Conservative government. May then proposed to bring a new deal to the House of Commons for a vote in early June, which she described as an \"improved package of measures\", after which she was expected to step down as Prime Minister and leader of the Conservative Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 79], "content_span": [80, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0057-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Later events\nThe campaign saw multiple cases of milkshakes being thrown at controversial MEP candidates on the right. The protests began against Carl Benjamin, the anti-feminist social media activist who had attracted controversy for jokes about rape, and activist Tommy Robinson. They later extended to Nigel Farage, leader of the Brexit Party. Police asked a Scottish fast food outlet near where a Farage rally was taking place not to sell milkshakes on the night of the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 79], "content_span": [80, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0058-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Later events\nOn 21 May, the Prime Minister and Leader of the Conservative Party, Theresa May made a speech outlining her plan to introduce an EU withdrawal agreement bill in June that would allow the Commons to make amendments, e.g. in favour of a Customs Union or a second referendum, but this was received badly by much of her own party as well as by other parties. There were growing calls for her to resign on 22 May, the day before the election. Andrea Leadsom, the Leader of the House of Commons, resigned on the evening of 22 May. May had planned to publish the bill on Friday 24 May, but on polling day, she abandoned that plan, with publication delayed until early June. On the day after the vote, May announced that she would resign as party leader on 7 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 79], "content_span": [80, 836]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0059-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Later events\nThere were several reports on the day of problems encountered by non-UK UK-resident EU citizens not being able to vote because their paperwork had not been processed in time, with opposition politicians raising concerns as to whether there had been systemic failures. At least three councils admitted that the compressed timescale of the election meant that they had not been able to send postal ballots out in time for some voters overseas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 79], "content_span": [80, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0059-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Later events\nA report by The Guardian after the election found that there were low levels of completion of UC1 forms, required by UK-resident EU citizens in order for them to vote in the UK, in many parts of the country. After the election, the European Commission complained to the UK government about the \"obstacles\" faced by EU citizens in voting. A month later, the Dutch Interior Ministry stated that almost half the local UK registration officials had failed to send the UC1 data to the Dutch authorities, and that a portion of the data sent was unusable, despite complaints by the Dutch government about similar issues in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 79], "content_span": [80, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0060-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Between the vote and the count\nBecause results could not be announced until the last European Union member country's polls had closed, and most countries in the EU voted on Sunday, the counting of UK ballots started on Sunday 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 97], "content_span": [98, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0061-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Between the vote and the count\nWithin a day of the polls closing, two party leaders and one deputy party leader announced their plans to resign. On 24 May, Theresa May announced her plan to resign as leader of the Conservative Party on 7 June, which would trigger a leadership contest. On the same day, Mike Hookem resigned as deputy leader of UKIP in order to challenge for the leadership. Vince Cable, leader of the Liberal Democrats, had previously stated his intention to stand down after the local elections and European Parliament elections. The party's leadership contest officially started on 24 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 97], "content_span": [98, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0062-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Between the vote and the count\nTwo Labour politicians announced their departures from the party after the vote: departing MEP Mary Honeyball and former Welsh AM Leighton Andrews; Andrews said he had voted Green. Both criticised Labour over alleged antisemitism and their failure to oppose Brexit. Alastair Campbell, formerly Director of Communications for the Labour Party, said he had voted for a pro-Remain party, the first time in his life he had not voted Labour. He later revealed that he voted for the Liberal Democrats and was expelled from the Labour Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 97], "content_span": [98, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0063-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Campaign, Party Brexit positions\nAmong other parties, the SDLP opposed Brexit and supported a second referendum, but it supported the withdrawal agreement if Brexit is to take place. The Alliance Party opposed Brexit, while TUV supported it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 89], "content_span": [90, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0064-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Debates\nA livestreamed debate was held by The Daily Telegraph between Nigel Farage, leader of the Brexit Party, and Vince Cable, leader of the Liberal Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 64], "content_span": [65, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0065-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Debates\nA debate was held by the BBC in Northern Ireland, with candidates of the main regional parties represented. The BBC also held a debate between the lead candidates of all parties standing in Wales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 64], "content_span": [65, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0066-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Opinion polls\nThe chart below depicts opinion polls conducted in Great Britain for the 2019 European Parliament elections in the UK; trendlines are local regressions (LOESS). There was regular polling from mid-March. The share for the Brexit Party rose rapidly, and it led the polls from late April. The share for the Labour Party declined over the period, but they came second in most polls. Polling for the Liberal Democrats started rising towards the end of April, with most polls predicting they would come third. Polling for the Conservative Party fell over the period, with most polls predicting it would come fourth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 70], "content_span": [71, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0067-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Results\nResults were declared for Wales and most of England on Sunday evening, with results for the rest of England and for Scotland coming on Monday. Results for Northern Ireland were clear by the end of Monday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 64], "content_span": [65, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0068-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Results, Analysis\nThe Brexit Party was the largest party, gaining five more seats than UKIP achieved in 2014. Nigel Farage, as leader of UKIP in 2014 and the Brexit Party in 2019, became the first person to lead two different parties that topped a national election. The Brexit party came first in Wales and in eight of the nine English constituencies. It finished third in London. The Brexit Party polled highest in regions that voted Leave in the Brexit referendum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 74], "content_span": [75, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0069-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Results, Analysis\nThe Liberal Democrats came second. This was its best performance in a national election since the 2010 general election and its best ever in a European Parliament election. This was the first time it or its predecessor parties had come second in a national election since before the Second World War. It was the largest party in the London constituency, the largest party in the second-highest number of English reporting areas, and the only party other than the SNP to top any Scottish reporting area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 74], "content_span": [75, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0070-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Results, Analysis\nThe Labour Party was third overall. It did not come first in any constituency. This was its worst result in Wales for nearly a century; it did not come first in any reporting area in Wales or Scotland. Labour's vote fell in both Remain and Leave areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 74], "content_span": [75, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0071-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Results, Analysis\nThe Greens came fourth, with their best performance since the 1989 European elections. The Green Party of England and Wales was the largest party in three reporting areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 74], "content_span": [75, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0072-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Results, Analysis\nThe Conservative Party came fifth, and was not the largest party in any reporting area, polling below 10% for the first time in the party's history. It lost votes across the country, but did worst in Remain areas. The combined share for Labour and the Conservatives was 23%, well below their previous (post-Second World War) low of 43.5% in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 74], "content_span": [75, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0073-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Results, Analysis\nThe SNP came sixth overall but first in the single Scottish constituency, the only one in which it stood candidates. It was the largest party in 30 of the 32 Scottish council areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 74], "content_span": [75, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0074-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Results, Analysis\nPlaid Cymru came second in Wales behind the Brexit Party, marking the first time it had beaten Labour in any Wales-wide election. The closest result across the UK was in Wales, where the Liberal Democrats were 13,948 votes (1.7%) behind Labour for the last MEP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 74], "content_span": [75, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0075-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Results, Analysis\nIn Northern Ireland, the three MEPs elected were from the Democratic Unionist Party, which advocates the continuation of the union with Great Britain, Sinn F\u00e9in, which campaigns for a united Ireland, and the cross-community Alliance Party. The latter two were opposed to Brexit. It was the first time that unionists had won fewer than two of the three seats, and the first time that all three MEPs were women. The Alliance success was noted as an indicator for the rise of the \"Others\", who identify neither as Unionist nor Nationalist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 74], "content_span": [75, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0076-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Results, Analysis\nVarious analyses sought to combine vote shares for different parties together to index a pro-Remain or pro-Leave vote. A Press Association report aggregated support for explicitly anti-Brexit parties, defined as the LibDems, Greens, SNP, Plaid Cymru and Change UK, totalling 40.4%, versus that for those supporting a no-deal Brexit, the Brexit Party and UKIP, on 34.9% (figures are for Great Britain only, excluding Northern Ireland where there was a majority for anti-Brexit parties). That analysis excludes Labour on 14% and the Conservatives on 9%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 74], "content_span": [75, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0076-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Results, Analysis\nGuardian journalist Dan Sabbagh noted how there were several possible comparisons one could make, e.g. the Brexit Party (5.2 million votes) against the Liberal Democrats and Greens combined (5.4 million votes); or the Brexit Party, UKIP and the DUP (5.9 million votes) against the Liberal Democrats, Greens, Change UK, SNP, Plaid Cymru, Sinn F\u00e9in and Alliance (6.8 million votes). In terms of seats, 34 were won by Leave-supporting parties and 39 by Remain-supporting parties (if Conservatives are counted for 'Leave').", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 74], "content_span": [75, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0076-0002", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Results, Analysis\nSabbagh, later followed by fellow Guardian journalist Polly Toynbee, tackled how to account for Labour and Conservative votes by adding them in based on polling as to how their supporters split\u2014assigning 80% of Conservatives voters to Leave and 60% of Labour voters to remain\u2014in this way predicting a 50%-Remain-to-47%-Leave split in a second referendum. However, BBC political journalist Laura Kuenssberg critiqued the whole endeavour of adding up different vote shares. In terms of a comparison between Leave- and Remain-supporting parties, psephologist John Curtice simply described the result as a draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 74], "content_span": [75, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0077-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Results, Analysis\nA large post-vote poll commissioned by Michael Ashcroft estimated that 53% of those who voted Conservative in the 2017 general election voted for the Brexit Party, while 21% voted Conservative and 12% voted Liberal Democrat. 38% of those who voted Labour in 2017 supported the party at this election, while 22% voted Liberal Democrat, 17% Green and 13% Brexit Party. 69% of 2017 LibDem voters stayed with the party, while 13% voted Green and 7% Brexit Party. 24% of 2017 UKIP voters stayed with their party, but 68% switched to the Brexit Party. Among all voters, 50% said they had voted to remain in the referendum and 45% to leave; and 50% stated they now wanted to leave, and 46% stated they now wanted to remain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 74], "content_span": [75, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0078-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Results, Analysis\nYouGov released polling suggesting 41% of Labour Party members voted for other parties at the European election (including 19% Green and 15% Liberal Democrat). Likewise, 67% of Conservative Party members voted for other parties (59% Brexit Party).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 74], "content_span": [75, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0079-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Results, Electoral Commission report\nThe Electoral Commission released its report on the election on 8 October 2019. The report highlighted the difficulties for EU27 citizens and British citizens abroad to vote, despite concerns raised after the 2014 European elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 93], "content_span": [94, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0080-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Reaction to results\nThe results were expected to push the Conservative Party towards a more hardline position with respect to Brexit and to lean towards electing a Brexiteer in its leadership contest shortly afterward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 76], "content_span": [77, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0081-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Reaction to results\nReacting to the results, the Shadow Foreign Secretary Emily Thornberry and Deputy Leader Tom Watson called for the Labour Party to change its policy to supporting a second referendum and remaining in the EU. There was renewed debate within the Labour Party over their policy, but with a shift towards clearer support for a second referendum, including Jeremy Corbyn stating that although a general election would be Labour's preference, any Brexit deal \"had to be put to a public vote\", but there was continuing criticism over the party's clarity on and Corbyn's commitment to another referendum. A modified policy was announced in July. Meanwhile, Leave supporters in the party were critical of any support for a second referendum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 76], "content_span": [77, 809]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0082-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Reaction to results\nAlastair Campbell, having revealed he voted for the Liberal Democrats, was expelled from the Labour Party, but this decision was criticised by some in the party. In response, former Labour Home Secretary Charles Clarke and former Labour MP (until 2017) Fiona Mactaggart announced that they had also voted Liberal Democrat, while former Labour Cabinet member Bob Ainsworth announced he had voted Green. A hashtag on Twitter in support, #expelmetoo, proved popular on social media. Watson and Harriet Harman criticised the expulsion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 76], "content_span": [77, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0082-0001", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Reaction to results\nLabour MP Owen Smith, among others, noted the juxtaposition of Campbell's expulsion on the same day that the EHRC opened an enquiry into anti-Semitism in Labour and the slow response to complaints of anti-Semitism. It then emerged that Cherie Blair, wife of the former Labour Prime Minister Tony Blair, had also voted Liberal Democrat. YouGov polling suggested 41% of Labour Party members voted for other parties (including 19% Green and 15% Liberal Democrat) at the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 76], "content_span": [77, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0083-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Reaction to results\nGeneral election polling shortly after the European elections showed continued support for the Brexit Party and the Liberal Democrats. A YouGov poll conducted on 28\u201329 May put the Liberal Democrats first and the Brexit Party second, with Labour and the Conservatives third. This was the first time a national poll had ever found that neither of the most popular two parties were Labour or the Conservatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 76], "content_span": [77, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0084-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Reaction to results\nOn 4 June 2019, in response to their poor performance in the elections, six of the eleven MPs in Change UK left the group to return to sitting as independents. The party's former spokesperson, Chuka Umunna, announced on 13 June that he would be seeking to join the Liberal Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 76], "content_span": [77, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0085-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, MEPs not returning, MEPs not standing for re-election\nTwenty-eight MEPs sitting at the end of the European Parliament's term did not seek re-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 110], "content_span": [111, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289029-0086-0000", "contents": "2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, MEPs not returning, MEPs not standing for re-election, Labour\nTwo additional Labour MEPs had already resigned ahead of the election, with their seats remaining vacant for the rest of the Parliament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 118], "content_span": [119, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289030-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Pool Championship\nThe 2019 European Pool Championships (also known as the 2019 Dynamic Billiards European Pool Championships) was a series of professional pool championships that took place at the Best Western Premier in Treviso, Italy. The event was played between 26 April and 8 May 2019 and was the 39th edition of the European Pool Championships that were first held in 1980. The championships saw events for men, women, under 23s and wheelchairs across five disciplines; straight pool, eight-ball, nine-ball, ten-ball and a team event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289030-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Pool Championship\nRussian players won the most medals over the course of the series, with seven \u2013 winning three events. Russia's Kristina Tkach was the most successful female player, winning two events, losing only once in the final of the ten-ball event. Jasmin Ouschan won the nine-ball event, with a whitewash over Nataliya Seroshtan. Finland's Jouni T\u00e4hti was the most successful wheelchair player, winning two of the three handicapped events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289030-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Pool Championship, Overview\nThe European Pool Championships are an annual series of pool tournaments for players in Europe which were first held in 1980. The 2019 event featured matches played over 24 tables, and was held between 26 April and 8 May 2019 at the Best Western Premier in Treviso, Italy. The event also set as a prelude to the 2019 Treviso Open event for the Euro Tour held in the same location. The series features events for four disciplines of pool \u2013 straight, eight-ball, nine-ball, and ten-ball \u2013 as well as a team event. Every event has a separate tournament for both men and women, with a wheelchair event in eight, nine and ten-ball. An event for junior players who are under 23 was also played for eight and nine-ball events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289030-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Pool Championship, Overview\nThe tournaments were played as a double-elimination bracket, with players qualifying for a single elimination knockout. Each discipline was played to a different length, with matches in straight pool being played to 125 points in the men's event, and 75 in the women's competition. The eight and ten-ball events was played as a race\u2013to\u20138 rack, with the women's and wheelchair events as race\u2013to\u20136 racks. The nine-ball event was held as race\u2013to\u20139 racks for the men's and juniors events, with women's and wheelchairs as race\u2013to\u20137 racks. The series was sponsored by billiards and pool online store Dynamic Billiard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289030-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Pool Championship, Tournament summary\nThe championships began 26 April 2019, with the straight pool event. Three Polish players reached the semi-finals of the men's event alongside Austria's Mario He. Karol Skowerski defeated He 125\u201332 and Tomas Kaplan defeated Mariusz Skoneczny 125\u201369 to complete an all-Polish final. Skowerski won his first individual European championship by defeating Skoneczny 125\u201345, with a run of 106. In the women's event, Russian player Kristina Tkach defeated Marharyta Fefilava in the semi-final, whilst the Netherlands' Tamara Peeters-Rademakers defeated Swiss player Claudia von Rorh. Rorh had previously defeated defending champion Jasmin Ouschan earlier in the tournament. Tkach won the final, defeating Peeters-Rademakers 75\u201323 to win the gold medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289030-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Pool Championship, Tournament summary\nThe ten-ball event began on 31 April, and featured 101 participants in the men's, and 43 for the women's division. Mieszko Fortunski met Casper Matikainen in the final of the men's event. Matikainen won the first three racks, but lost eight of the next nine racks for Fortunski to win the event 8\u20134. Having already won the straight pool event, Tkach reached the final of the ten-ball event. She met Christine Feldmann in the final, but lost her only match at the championships, with Feldmann winning 6\u20133. Sweden's Henrik Larsson won the wheelchair event, defeating Latvian player Kaspars Turks 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289030-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Pool Championship, Tournament summary\nThe eight-ball competition commenced on 2 May. Eklent Ka\u00e7i and Ralf Souquet meet in the final. Albanian Ka\u00e7i had never won a European championship title, with Souquet having won 22 previously. Ka\u00e7i took a 6\u20131 lead, but Souquet won five of the next six to trail by one rack. Ka\u00e7i won rack 14 to capture his first championship 8\u20136. Tkach contested the third final of the event in the women's eight-ball event, where she met Jasmin Ouschan. Ouschan won the first four racks of the final, before Tkach won three to trail 3\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289030-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 European Pool Championship, Tournament summary\nOn the verge of equalling the score, Tkach miscued allowing Ouschan to take a two rack lead. With the break to win the match, Ouschan missed her first shot, allowing Tkach to run the next two racks to tie the match at 5\u20135, and win the match 6\u20135. Finland's Jouni T\u00e4hti won the wheelchair event, defeating Roy Kimberley 5\u20132 to win his 25th European medal. In the Under 23s, Pijus Labutis played Vitaliy Patsura in the final, winning 8\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289030-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European Pool Championship, Tournament summary\nThe team events began 5 May. The men's competition featured national teams consisting of three players, with a match of eight, nine and ten-ball in each tie. In the final, the Spanish team of Francisco D\u00edaz-Pizarro, Francisco Sanchez Ruiz and David Alcaide played the Austrian side of Albin Ouschan, Maximilian Lechner, and Mario He. D\u00edaz-Pizarro was the first player to win a match, winning his ten-ball match 8\u20133 against Ouschan. Sanchez-Ruiz defeated He 9\u20135 to win the tournament, that eventually finished as a 3\u20130 victory for the Spanish team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289030-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 European Pool Championship, Tournament summary\nThe women's event was played with national teams consisting of two players. Ties consisted of one match of eight-ball and one of nine-ball. If a tie ended 1\u20131, a match of doubles in ten-ball was used as a tie-breaker. The Portuguese team of Vania Franco and Sara Rocha reached the final without losing a match, where they met the German pair of Tina Vogelmann and Veronika Ivanovskaia. Franco defeated Vogelmann 6\u20133 in eight-ball, whilst Rocha defeated Ivanovskaia 7\u20132 in nine-ball to win the final 2\u20130. In winning, the Portuguese team went undefeated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289030-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 European Pool Championship, Tournament summary\nThe final event was the nine-ball championships, beginning on 6 May. Russian player Fedor Gorst played Joshua Filler in the final. Gorst took an early lead in the match, with Filler making a lot of dry breaks. Gorst took an 8\u20134 lead, before Filler won four straight racks to lead the match to hill/hill. Gorst had the break for the deciding rack, and run the rack to win 9\u20138. Jasmin Ouschan met Russian Nataliya Seroshtan in the final of the women's nine-ball event, where she won in a whitewash 7\u20130. Having already won the eight-ball under 23 event, Pijus Labutis met Oliver Szolnoki in the final of the junior nine-ball event. Labutis won the final 9\u20137. The final event of the championships was the wheelchair nine-ball event, where Jouni T\u00e4hti defeated Irishman Fred Dinsmore 7\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 835]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289030-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 European Pool Championship, Medals table\nOn the overall medals table, Russia were top, having won three events and seven medals. Poland were second, with seven titles, but only two event victories. Finland placed third, with two event wins by Jouni T\u00e4hti. The full table is shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289031-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Race Walking Cup\nThe 2019 European Race Walking Cup took place on 19 May, 2019. The races were held on a 1\u00a0km lap around the city centre in Alytus, Lithuania. It was the last edition to be held under the name European Race Walking Cup before being renamed to European Race Walking Team Championships from 2021 on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289031-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Race Walking Cup\nFor the first time European Race Walking Cup also included women's 50 km racewalking event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289031-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Race Walking Cup, Participation\n256 athletes from 29 countries registered for competition of which 241 eventually started.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289032-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Racquetball Championships\nThe XX Racquetball European Championships were held in Hamburg, (Germany) from September 05 to 07 2019, with four men's national teams and two women's national teams in competition. One senior and junior competition could be held as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289032-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Racquetball Championships\nThe venue was the Sport & Spa Jenfeld Club in Hamburg, with 2 regulation racquetball courts. The 4 men's teams were Germany, Ireland, Italy and The Netherlands and the 3 women's teams were Germany, Ireland and the Netherlands. Team France dropped out to an injured player only a few days before the beginning of the competition. In total, 6 nations competed in the Individual competition with players from Germany, Ireland, Italy, Lithuania, Poland and The Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289033-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Rally Championship\nThe 2019 European Rally Championship was the 67th season of the FIA European Rally Championship, the European continental championship series in rallying. The season is also the seventh following the merge between the European Rally Championship and the Intercontinental Rally Challenge. Alexey Lukyanuk was the reigning champion and he returned to defend the title switching from a Ford Fiesta R5 to the Citro\u00ebn C3 R5. On the final round at Rally Hungary, Chris Ingram became the first British driver in 52 years to win the title in a Skoda Fabia R5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289033-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Rally Championship\nIn 2019 the two European Junior Championship tiers were renamed: ERC Junior U28 became ERC1 Junior and ERC Junior U27 is retitled ERC3 Junior.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289033-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Rally Championship, Calendar\nThe calendar for the 2019 season features eight rallies (four rallies on tarmac and four on gravel) like the previous season, albeit in a shaked-up order. The Acropolis Rally was discontinued in its entirety after 2018, and was replaced by a new event in Hungary, Ny\u00edregyh\u00e1za Rally, which will also be the season finale. The previous season finale, Rally Liep\u0101ja, was moved to the third round of the season in May. The Cyprus Rally and Rally Poland were switched to the seventh and fourth rounds, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289034-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Road Championships\nThe 2019 European Road Cycling Championships was the 25th running of the European Road Cycling Championships, that took place from 7 to 11 August 2019 in Alkmaar, the Netherlands. The event consisted of a total of 6 road races and 7 time trials, including the introduction of the new mixed team relay, regulated by the Union Europ\u00e9enne de Cyclisme (UEC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289034-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Road Championships, Location\nThe organization was initially awarded to Annecy, France, but the organisers there wanted different dates due to the busy tourism season in August and eventually returned the assignment. The UEC then asked the Dutch province of Drenthe to organise the European Championships, after their bid to organize the World Championships was rejected. In January there were several Dutch cities in the running, of which one fell after the other. There was not enough support in Emmen, the national championships are being held in Ede this year and Den Bosch said it had never been an official candidate. In February Alkmaar was the only one left, after which the organization was definitively awarded on 25 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289035-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Rowing Championships\nThe 2019 European Rowing Championships was held in Lucerne, Switzerland from 31 May to 2 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289036-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Rowing Junior Championships\nThe 2019 European Rowing Junior Championships took place in Essen, Germany, between 18 and 19 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289037-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Rowing U23 Championships\nThe 3rd European Rowing U23 Championships was the 3rd edition and was held from 7 to 8 September 2019 at the Ioannina Rowing Course in Ioannina, Greece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289038-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Rugby Champions Cup Final\nThe 2019 European Rugby Champions Cup Final was the final match in the 2018\u201319 European Rugby Champions Cup, and the twenty-fourth European club rugby final in general. The final was between defending champions and four-time winners Leinster, and two-time winners Saracens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289038-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Rugby Champions Cup Final\nSaracens defeated Leinster to claim their third title, overcoming a ten-point deficit to tie the score at half-time, before taking the lead in the second half to secure victory with a final result of 20\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289038-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Rugby Champions Cup Final, Background\nBoth Leinster and Saracens entered into the 2019 final with significant championship pedigree, having won six of the past ten top-tier European cup tournaments between them. Defending champions Leinster, who shared the accolade of most wins in tournament history (four) with Toulouse, had previously won the title in 2009, 2011, 2012 and 2018, and were looking for a record fifth trophy. Meanwhile, Saracens, who had gone undefeated in Europe this season, were aiming to win the cup for the third time in four seasons, following successes in 2016 and 2017, as well as become the first English rugby team ever to be crowned as European champions three times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289038-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Rugby Champions Cup Final, Background\nLeinster and Saracens had met in European competition three times prior to this fixture. On all three of those occasions, Leinster were the victors, most recently in the quarter\u2013finals of the 2017\u201318 tournament, when Leinster won 30\u201319 en route to winning the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289038-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Rugby Champions Cup Final, Background\nFrench referee J\u00e9r\u00f4me Garc\u00e8s was officiating a Champions Cup final for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289038-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Rugby Champions Cup 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289038-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Rugby Champions Cup Final, Match, Summary\nLeinster kicked off the match, and opened the scoring soon after, with a penalty kick from their fly-half and captain, Jonathan Sexton, after three minutes. The game played out at a fierce intensity from then on, as both Leinster and Saracens enjoyed promising attacking spells in the first half-hour, which were repelled by solid defensive efforts from their opponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289038-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European Rugby Champions Cup Final, Match, Summary\nFollowing a sustained period of pressure from Leinster, loosehead prop Cian Healy went over the try line, but was ruled by the television match official (TMO) to have been held up. However, Saracens lock Maro Itoje was sent to the sin bin for multiple offside infringements in the build-up, while the side also lost both starting props, Mako Vunipola and Titi Lamositele, at the same time due to injury. Leinster took advantage from a scrum in the next phase of play to score the game's first try, with tight-head prop Tadhg Furlong driving over from a ruck. With the subsequent conversion from Sexton, the Irish side led 10\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289038-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 European Rugby Champions Cup Final, Match, Summary\nFrom the restart, Saracens began to mount their comeback, and late in the half, a key tackle by lock George Kruis on Sexton forced a penalty, which fly-half Owen Farrell slotted to put his team on the board. A minute later, with the clock in the red, Saracens won another penalty, and kicked deep into Leinster's 22 for a line-out. After several phases among the forwards brought Saracens within inches of the try line, the ball was quickly distributed to the left wing for Sean Maitland to touch down. The try was successfully converted by Farrell, drawing the score level at 10\u201310 going into half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289038-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 European Rugby Champions Cup Final, Match, Summary\nThe second half began in similar fashion to the opening 40 minutes, with both teams coming close to their second try, only for strong defence to hold them out. As the match approached the hour mark, Saracens played out a period of attacking play that mirrored Leinster in the first half. The English side's replacement prop Richard Barrington was ruled by the TMO to have been held up at the base of the left-hand post, but Leinster flanker Scott Fardy was given a yellow card because of repeat offences. Farrell kicked over the resulting penalty, giving Saracens the lead for the first time in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289038-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 European Rugby Champions Cup Final, Match, Summary\nSaracens continued to apply pressure with a one-man advantage, and on 66 minutes, with a scrum five metres from the Leinster try line, Number 8 Billy Vunipola picked up the ball and managed to charge his way through four defenders to score under the posts. A straightforward conversion followed from Farrell, which gave his team a ten-point lead. There were no further scores for the remainder of the match, as Leinster sought to break out from their own half, but the Saracens defence stood firm. Upon the final whistle, Saracens were crowned the champions, with the final score of 20\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289038-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 European Rugby Champions Cup Final, Match, Summary\nIn the aftermath of the game, Saracens skipper and inside centre Brad Barritt, who recorded a game-high 28 tackles without missing one, was chosen as the Man of the Match. He also became only the second player in the history of the tournament to lift the title three times as a team captain, after former Leinster lock \u2013 and current head coach \u2013 Leo Cullen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289038-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 European Rugby Champions Cup Final, Match, Summary\nIn addition, full-back Alex Goode was named the European Professional Club Rugby (EPCR) Player of the Year, making him the third Saracens player to receive the award, following on from Maro Itoje in 2016 and Owen Farrell in 2017. The victory also meant that Saracens had replicated their feat in the 2015\u201316 competition, achieving a 100 per cent win rate throughout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289038-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 European Rugby Champions Cup Final, Match, Details\nTouch judges:Pascal Ga\u00fcz\u00e8re (FFR)Romain Poite (FFR)Television Match Official:Philippe Bonhoure (FFR)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289039-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Running Target Championships\nThe 2019 European Running Target Championships was the 14th edition of the running target competition, European Running Target Championships, organised for the first time by the European Shooting Confederation (ESC) and not by the International Shooting Sport Federation (ISSF).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289040-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Senior Tour\nThe 2019 Staysure Tour was the 28th season of the European Senior Tour, the professional golf tour for men aged 50 and above operated by the PGA European Tour. The season was officially called the Staysure Tour after UK-based insurance company Staysure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289040-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Senior Tour, Schedule\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, 35], "content_span": [36, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289040-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Senior Tour, Schedule\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, 35], "content_span": [36, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289040-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Senior Tour, Qualifying school\nThe qualifying school was played in Portugal in late January 2019. There were two 36-hole \"stage 1\" events with the leading players in these events joining a number of exempt players in the 72-hole final stage. There were just five qualifying places available for the 2019 season. There was a cut after 54 holes with players more than eight shots away from the fifth qualifying place not playing the final round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289040-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Senior Tour, Qualifying school\nThe following five players gained their places on the 2019 tour:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289040-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Senior Tour, Qualifying school\nLittle beat Peter Wilson with a birdie at the second playoff hole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289040-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Senior Tour, Order of Merit leaders\nA points-based system was used instead of one based on prize money. Tournaments had different points values with the three majors carrying 10,000 points and the remaining 16 events carrying between 2,500 and 4,500 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289040-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European Senior Tour, Order of Merit leaders\nThere is a complete list on the official site .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289041-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Shooting Championships\nThe 2019 European Shooting Championships were held in Bologna and Tolmezzo, Italy from 12 to 23 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289041-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Shooting Championships\nPistol and rifle competitions were held in Bologna from 11 September to 23 September, and 300 m rifle competitions were held in Tolmezzo from 22 to 27 September. Previously in Lonato del Garda from 3 to 17 September the 2019 European Shotgun Championships had taken place with regard to shotgun competitions (trap, skeet and double trap).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289042-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Short Course Swimming Championships\nThe 2019 European Short Course Swimming Championships took place in Glasgow, Scotland from 4 to 8 December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289043-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Short Track Speed Skating Championships\nThe 2019 European Short Track Speed Skating Championships took place, for the fourth time, from 11 to 13 January 2019 in Dordrecht, Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289044-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Shotgun Championships\nThe 2019 European Shotgun Championships was the 51st edition of the global shotgun competition, European Shotgun Championships, organised by the European Shooting Confederation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289045-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Speed Skating Championships\nThe 2019 European Speed Skating Championships took place in Collalbo, Italy from 11 to 13 January 2019. Skaters from 14 countries participated. It was the second time that the allround and sprint tournaments had taken place at the same time and venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289045-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Speed Skating Championships\nSven Kramer and Ireen W\u00fcst, both from the Netherlands, were the defending champions in the allround event. Kai Verbij from the Netherlands and Karol\u00edna Erbanov\u00e1 from the Czech Republic were the defending champions in the sprint event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289045-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Speed Skating Championships, Allround\nDNF = did not finish; DNS = did not start, WDR = withdrew, DQ = disqualified, PR = personal record, TR = track record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289045-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Speed Skating Championships, Sprint\nDNF = did not finish; DNS = did not start, WDR = withdrew, DQ = disqualified, PR = personal record, TR = track record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289046-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Table Tennis Championships\nThe 2019 European Table Tennis Championships were held in Nantes, France from 3\u20138 September 2019. The venue for the competition was Salle Sportive M\u00e9tropolitaine. The competition featured team events for men and women, with the winning teams qualifying for the 2019 ITTF Team World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289047-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Table Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's team\nThe Men's team tournament of the 2019 European Table Tennis Championships will be held from 3 September to 8 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289047-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Table Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's team\nGermany defeated Portugal in the final to capture the gold medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289048-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Table Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's team\nThe Women's team tournament of the 2019 European Table Tennis Championships will be held from 3 September to 8 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289049-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Throwing Cup\nThe 2019 European Throwing Cup was hold on 9\u201310 March in \u0160amor\u00edn, Slovakia. It is the 19th edition of the athletics competition for throwing events and was jointly organised by the European Athletic Association. 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.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289050-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Tour\nThe 2019 European Tour was the 48th season of golf tournaments since the European Tour officially began in 1972 and the 11th edition of the Race to Dubai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289050-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Tour\nThe Race to Dubai was won by Spain's Jon Rahm, who was also named Golfer of the Year. Scotland's Robert MacIntyre was the Sir Henry Cotton Rookie of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289050-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Tour, Changes from the previous season, Rule changes\nFrom January 1, 2019 onwards, tournaments followed the new rules released by the USGA and The R&A which were designed to simplify the rule book and speed up the pace of play. The most noticeable changes included golfers being able to putt on the green with the flag remaining in, and drops being made from knee rather than shoulder height.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 66], "content_span": [67, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289050-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Tour, Changes from the previous season, Scheduling changes\nAs announced in 2017, the US PGA Championship was moved from August to May, starting in 2019. The PGA of America cited the addition of golf to the Summer Olympics, as well as cooler weather enabling a wider array of options for host courses, as reasoning for the change. It was also believed that the PGA Tour wished to re-align its season so that its FedEx Cup Playoffs would not have to compete with the start of the NFL season in early September, since both United States broadcast partners (CBS and NBC) are NFL broadcast partners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 72], "content_span": [73, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289050-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Tour, Changes from the previous season, Scheduling changes\nConsequently, the European Tour moved the flagship event, the BMW PGA Championship, from the congested May date to late September, four weeks after the end of the 2019 PGA Tour season. It was hoped the date would attract more top names.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 72], "content_span": [73, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289050-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Tour, Changes from the previous season, Changes to the Race to Dubai\nThe number of Race to Dubai points available in the Final Series (last three events of the season) was increased, and the field size reduced. The aim was to make more players still have a chance of winning the Race to Dubai entering the Final Series. In addition, although the prize money was not increased, the bonus pool of US$5m would now be split among the top five players rather than the top ten. The money saved from restricting field sizes was used solely to increase the first prizes, which means that the tournaments would not have the standard prize fund distribution, and the DP World Tour Championship, Dubai would have the largest tournament first prize in golf of US$3m.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 82], "content_span": [83, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289050-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Tour, Schedule\nThe following table lists all tournaments on the 2019 European Tour schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289050-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European Tour, Race to Dubai points leaders\nNote: Tiger Woods, Brooks Koepka, Dustin Johnson and Gary Woodland are not European Tour members. Kevin Kisner joined the European Tour after the WGC Match Play, but forfeited his membership in mid-September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 48], "content_span": [49, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289050-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 European Tour, Race to Dubai points leaders\nNote2: Rory McIlroy was not a European Tour member during the WGC-Mexico Championship, WGC-Match Play, and The Masters. Points earned in these events do not count towards the Race to Dubai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 48], "content_span": [49, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289051-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Tour Qualifying School graduates\nThis is a list of the 28 players who earned 2020 European Tour cards through Q School in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289051-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Tour Qualifying School graduates\n2020 European Tour rookie\u00a0 First-time member ineligible for Rookie of the Year award", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289052-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Triathlon Championships\nThe 2019 European Triathlon Championships was held in Weert, Netherlands from 30 May to 2 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289053-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Truck Racing Championship\nThe 2019 FIA European Truck Racing Championship is a motor-racing championship using highly tuned tractor units. It is the 35th year of the championship. The eight-round season began May 25 at the Misano World Circuit and ended October 6 at the Circuito del Jarama. Jochen Hahn dominated the season en route to his sixth career ETRC championship, securing the title one round early at the Bugatti Circuit in France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289053-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Truck Racing Championship, Teams and drivers\nDrivers who did not participate in any of the first five events of the championship are not eligible to score points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289053-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Truck Racing Championship, Calendar and winners\nAll rounds from the 2018 season returned for 2019. A switch in order between the rounds in Slovakia and Germany was the only change in the schedule from the preceding year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289053-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Truck Racing Championship, Championship standings, Drivers championship\nEach round or racing event consists of four races. At each race, points are awarded to the top ten classified finishers using the following structure:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 85], "content_span": [86, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289053-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Truck Racing Championship, Championship standings, Drivers championship\nRaces 3 and 4 at Autodrom Most cancelled due to heavy rain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 85], "content_span": [86, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289053-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Truck Racing Championship, Championship standings, Grammer Truck Cup\nRaces 3 and 4 at Autodrom Most were cancelled due to heavy rain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 82], "content_span": [83, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289054-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European U23 Judo Championships\nThe 2019 European U23 Judo Championships were the edition of the European U23 Judo Championships, organised by the European Judo Union. It was held in Izhevsk, Russia from 1\u20133 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289054-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European U23 Judo Championships, Participating nations\nThere was a total of 235 participants from 33 nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289055-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European U23 Wrestling Championship\nThe 2019 European U23 Wrestling Championships was the 5th edition of European U23 Wrestling Championships of combined events, and took place from March 4 to 10 in Novi Sad, Serbia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289056-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Weightlifting Championships\nThe 2019 European Weightlifting Championships was held in Batumi, Georgia from 6 to 13 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289056-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Weightlifting Championships, Medal table\nRanking by all medals: Big (Total result) and Small (Snatch and Clean & Jerk)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289057-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wheelchair Handball Nations' Tournament\nThe 2019 EHF European Wheelchair Handball Nations\u2019 Tournament was the 4th edition and was hosted for the first time in Croatia from 14 to 15 December 2019. This was the last European Wheelchair Handball Nations\u2019 Tournament because next year will be held an official European championship. Croatia defeated Portugal to the first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289057-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wheelchair Handball Nations' Tournament, Draw\nThe draw was held at the EHF headquarters in Vienna on 26 November 2019. Spain was first planned as the sixth team but they withdrew from the tournament and Slovenia replaced them", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 59], "content_span": [60, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289058-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wildwater Championships\nThe 2019 European Wildwater Championships was the 11th edition of the global wildwater canoeing competition, European Wildwater Championships, organised by the European Canoe Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289059-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Women's U-17 Handball Championship\nThe 2019 European Women's U-17 Handball Championship was the 14th edition, which took place in Celje, Slovenia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289059-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Women's U-17 Handball Championship, Draw\nThe draw was held on 28 February 2019 in Celje.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 54], "content_span": [55, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289059-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Women's U-17 Handball Championship, Tournament awards\nThe all-star team and awards were announced on 11 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 67], "content_span": [68, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289060-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships\nThe 70th UWW European Wrestling Championships was held in Bucharest, Romania, between 8 and 14 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289061-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Freestyle 125 kg\nThe Men's Freestyle 125\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 9 and April 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289062-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Freestyle 57 kg\nThe Men's Freestyle 57\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 8 and April 9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289063-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Freestyle 61 kg\nThe Men's Freestyle 61\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 9 and April 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289064-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Freestyle 65 kg\nThe Men's Freestyle 65\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 8 and April 9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289065-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Freestyle 70 kg\nThe Men's Freestyle 70\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 9 and April 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289066-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Freestyle 74 kg\nThe Men's Freestyle 74\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 9 and April 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289067-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Freestyle 79 kg\nThe Men's Freestyle 79\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 8 and April 9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289068-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Freestyle 86 kg\nThe Men's Freestyle 86\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 9 and April 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289069-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Freestyle 92 kg\nThe Men's Freestyle 92\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 9 and April 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289070-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Freestyle 97 kg\nThe Men's Freestyle 97\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 8\u20139, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289071-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Greco-Roman 130 kg\nThe Men's Greco-Roman 130\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 12 and April 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289072-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Greco-Roman 55 kg\nThe Men's Greco-Roman 55\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 12 and April 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289073-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Greco-Roman 60 kg\nThe Men's Greco-Roman 60\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 13 and April 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289074-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Greco-Roman 63 kg\nThe Men's Greco-Roman 63\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 12 and April 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289075-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Greco-Roman 67 kg\nThe Men's Greco-Roman 67\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 13 and April 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289076-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Greco-Roman 72 kg\nThe Men's Greco-Roman 72\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 13 and April 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289077-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Greco-Roman 77 kg\nThe Men's Greco-Roman 77\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 12 and April 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289078-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Greco-Roman 82 kg\nThe Men's Greco-Roman 82\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 13 and April 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289079-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Greco-Roman 87 kg\nThe Men's Greco-Roman 87\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 12 and April 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289080-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Greco-Roman 97 kg\nThe Men's Greco-Roman 97\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 13 and April 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289081-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Women's Freestyle 50 kg\nThe Women's Freestyle 50\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 10 and April 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289082-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Women's Freestyle 53 kg\nThe Women's Freestyle 53\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 11 and April 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289083-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Women's Freestyle 55 kg\nThe Women's Freestyle 55\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 10 and April 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289084-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Women's Freestyle 57 kg\nThe Women's Freestyle 57\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 11 and April 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289085-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Women's Freestyle 59 kg\nThe Women's Freestyle 59\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 10 and April 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289086-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Women's Freestyle 62 kg\nThe Women's Freestyle 62\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 11 and April 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289087-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Women's Freestyle 65 kg\nThe Women's Freestyle 65\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 11 and April 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289088-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Women's Freestyle 68 kg\nThe Women's Freestyle 68\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 10 and April 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289089-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Women's Freestyle 72 kg\nThe Women's Freestyle 72\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 11 and April 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289090-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Women's Freestyle 76 kg\nThe Women's Freestyle 76\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2019 European Wrestling Championships, and was held in Bucharest, Romania on April 10 and April 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289091-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival\nThe 2019 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival (Bosnian: Evropski zimski olimpijski festival mladih 2019) was held in Sarajevo & Isto\u010dno Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina from 10 to 15 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289091-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival\nThe event had initially been planned to be held in 2017, whereas the 2019 EYOF had been planned for Erzurum. In November 2015, the two cities agreed to swap their events, since Sarajevo and Isto\u010dno Sarajevo could not be ready in time, while Erzurum already had facilities in place from the 2011 Winter Universiade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289091-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival\nWithin the framework of the EYOF 2019 project, there were around 750 recruited volunteers, the majority of which were students.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289091-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival, Schedule\nThe competition schedule for the 2019 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289091-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival, Participating nations\n46 national Olympic Committees sent athletes. Azerbaijan, Malta, Monaco did not compete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 66], "content_span": [67, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289091-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival, Opening ceremony\nOpening ceremony was held on City Stadium Ko\u0161evo on 10 February 2019 at 19:00. The name of the ceremony is \"We create together\", which is selected as the title of main music-dance performance. Flame at opening ceremony was lit by Larisa Ceri\u0107, Bosnian judoka, and event will is officially opened by Milorad Dodik, at the time the chairman of the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina together with Janez Kocijan\u010di\u0107, president of EOC, Abdulah Skaka, mayor of Sarajevo and Nenad Vukovi\u0107, mayor of Isto\u010dno Sarajevo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 61], "content_span": [62, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289091-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival, Opening ceremony\nLarisa Ceri\u0107 at the stairs that led to the flame", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 61], "content_span": [62, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289091-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival, Mascot\nThe official mascot of the EYOF 2019 was Groodvy, created by the Visia Agency from Isto\u010dno Sarajevo, and selected after all the votes of fans from social networks. Other proposed mascots were Jezos and Jazzy. The name Groodvy comes from the word grudva which in Bosnian and Serbian language means snowball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289091-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival, Medals\nMedals have irregular shape and represents a snowball that has engraved EYOF marks on either side. Medal award ceremonies were organized daily from 7.30 pm on a specially played floor in the area between the Hills Hotel and the Termal Riviera in Ilid\u017ea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289091-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival, Official song\nOn January 16, 2019, the official song of competition \"Za pravu raju\" was presented in Zetra Olympic Hall. At this occasion, Vu\u010dko, mascot of 1984 Winter Olympics, handed \"the key of fame and success\" to Groodvy as stated by mayor of Sarajevo, Abdulah Skaka. The song is performed by Elvir Lakovi\u0107 Laka, Mirela Lakovi\u0107 and Tarik Tanovi\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289091-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival, Flame of peace\nFlame of Peace was lighted at Stadio Olimpico in Rome on 31 January 2019, after when started its travel to Bosnia and Herzegovina. First stop of flame was in Banja Luka on 1 February 2019. After Banja Luka, flame was delivered to Sarajevo International Airport on 2 February 2019, with aircraft of the FlyBosnia company, that had special livery for this EYOF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 59], "content_span": [60, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289091-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival, Flame of peace\nDuring opening ceremony, the flame of peace was carried by several famous Bosnian sports people, and on the final stage, the flame was carried by Mirsad Fazlagi\u0107, Svetlana Kiti\u0107, Ajdin Pa\u0161ovi\u0107, Ned\u017ead Fazlija, Mirza Teletovi\u0107, \u017dana Novakovi\u0107, Aleksandra Samard\u017ei\u0107 and Larisa Ceri\u0107 as the last person who lit up the flame on the stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 59], "content_span": [60, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289091-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival, Media\nThe opening ceremony in Bosnia and Herzegovina was broadcast on BHT 1 and Hayat TV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289091-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival, Media\nTwo postal service companies from Bosnia and Herzegovina, BH Po\u0161ta and Po\u0161te Srpske, for this occasion issued promotional postal stamps and FDC to commemorate this event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289091-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival, Closing ceremony\nClosing ceremony was held in front of town administration of Isto\u010dno Sarajevo on 15 February 2019. During the closing ceremony, Miligram and Van Gogh, the musical groups from Serbia were performing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 61], "content_span": [62, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289091-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival, Closing ceremony\nEvent was officially closed by Milorad Dodik, and the Olympic flag was officially handed to the mayor of Vuokatti, host town of the next European Youth Olympic Winter Festival that will be held in 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 61], "content_span": [62, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289092-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Youth Summer Olympic Festival\nThe 2019 European Youth Summer Olympic Festival was held in Baku, Azerbaijan on 21 to 27 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289092-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Youth Summer Olympic Festival, Schedule\nThe competition schedule for the 2019 European Youth Olympic Summer Festival is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289092-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European Youth Summer Olympic Festival, Participant nations\n48 EOCs participated in the EYOF 2019. Armenia decided to boycott the EYOF. Liechtenstein did not compete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289093-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European Youth Weightlifting Championships\nThe 2019 European Youth Weightlifting Championships took place at the Leonardo Club Hotel in Eilat, Israel from 7 to 14 December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289093-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European Youth Weightlifting Championships, Medal table\nRanking by all medals: Big (Total result) and Small (Snatch and Clean & Jerk)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 60], "content_span": [61, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves\nIn late June and late July 2019 there were two temporally distinct European heat waves, which set all-time high temperature records in Belgium, France, Germany, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves\nThe first heat wave, in late June, killed over 567 people, and according to meteorologists was caused by high pressure and winds from the Sahara Desert affecting large parts of the continent. It resulted in record-breaking temperatures for the month of June at many locations. France experienced temperatures in excess of 45\u00a0\u00b0C (113\u00a0\u00b0F) for the first time in recorded history. A national all-time record high temperature of 46.0\u00a0\u00b0C (114.8\u00a0\u00b0F) occurred on 28 June in V\u00e9rargues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves\nIn late July, a second heat wave occurred, during which all-time records were broken by 3\u00a0\u00b0C (5.4\u00a0\u00b0F) in Belgium, by 0.3\u00a0\u00b0C (0.54\u00a0\u00b0F) in Luxembourg, by 2.1\u00a0\u00b0C (3.8\u00a0\u00b0F) in Germany and the Netherlands and by 0.2\u00a0\u00b0C (0.36\u00a0\u00b0F) in the United Kingdom. The deaths of 868 people in France and one person in Belgium were reported, along with thousands of animals when ventilation systems in barns were overwhelmed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 European heat waves\nDue to high river water temperatures and sluggish flows, particularly in France and to some extent Germany, a number of thermal power stations that use once-through cooling and do not have cooling towers had to reduce output or shut down to avoid breaching environmental limits on river water temperature designed to protect aquatic life.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, Meteorological history\nThe above-normal hot condition in June is caused by an anomalous long-lasting anticyclone in the upper troposphere, which advects warm air from the Sahel and Mediterranean region and enhances incoming solar radiation and surface turbulent fluxes. The anomalous anticyclone results from an unusually-intensified British-Baikal Corridor pattern and a synoptic Rossby wave breaking event over Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, Meteorological history\nThe July heat wave was caused by a strong omega block, consisting of hot, dry air from North Africa, trapped between cold storm systems. The high-pressure area of hot air, called Yvonne, stretched from the central Mediterranean to Scandinavia and was pinned between two low-pressure areas, one over western Russia and the other over the eastern Atlantic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, Fatalities\nTotal excess deaths are estimated to be around 2,500 during the summer months in 2019. Most of these were indirectly caused and were observed in statistical modeling later that year. Based on individual country counts, that figure may be an under estimate. The Dutch government reported 400 excess deaths in the week of the June heat wave, a figure comparable to those recorded during the 2006 European heat wave. France estimated 1,435 additional deaths due to the heatwave, public health England reported 900 excess deaths from the heatwave, and the Robert Koch institute reported 500 excess deaths in Berlin alone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, Fatalities\nThe June heat wave was directly implicated in the deaths of at least 15 people. Five died in France, four in Germany, three in the United Kingdom, two in Spain, and one in Italy. Nine of these were drownings, attributed to people cooling down, and another involved an exhausted farm worker who went unconscious after diving into a pool. The three who died in hot air were aged 72, 80 and 93. Approximately 321 million people were otherwise affected by similar temperatures in the same countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Belgium\nBelgium recorded three consecutive days exceeding 30\u00a0\u00b0C (86\u00a0\u00b0F); 25 June was the hottest day during this period, with many places exceeding 32\u00a0\u00b0C (90\u00a0\u00b0F) and other places nearly reaching 35\u00a0\u00b0C (95\u00a0\u00b0F).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Belgium\nDuring the period of hot weather, environmental officials warned of poor air quality levels, which would especially affect the young, elderly and people with respiratory illnesses. It also affects small countries that rely on tourism as their main source of income.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Belgium\nOn 24 July, the highest ever recorded temperature in Belgium was measured, reaching 40.2\u00a0\u00b0C (104.4\u00a0\u00b0F) in the town of Angleur, exceeding the previous record of 38.8\u00a0\u00b0C (101.8\u00a0\u00b0F), reached in 1947. On the same day, passengers were evacuated from a Eurostar train that had broken down between Halle and Tubize, as many began to fall ill due to the extreme temperatures. On 25 July, the national record was broken again, reaching 41.8\u00a0\u00b0C (107.2\u00a0\u00b0F) in Begijnendijk (Flemish Brabant). One death was reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Belgium\nThe official KMI weather station in Uccle reported a maximum temperature of 39.7\u00a0\u00b0C (103.5\u00a0\u00b0F), while many other weather stations, some even close to the North Sea, reported temperatures in excess of 40.0\u00a0\u00b0C (104.0\u00a0\u00b0F).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Czech Republic\nThe temperature record for June was recorded in Doksany and was 38.9\u00a0\u00b0C (102.0\u00a0\u00b0F). High temperatures also complicated rail transport in the Czech Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Finland\nOn 28 July, Helsinki recorded a temperature of 33.2\u00a0\u00b0C (91.8\u00a0\u00b0F), breaking the city's previous record. On the same day, 33.7\u00a0\u00b0C (92.7\u00a0\u00b0F) was recorded in Porvoo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, France\nFrance was one of the most affected countries from the heatwave, with much of the country exceeding 32\u00a0\u00b0C (90\u00a0\u00b0F) on 26 June. M\u00e9t\u00e9o France issued an Orange Alert for much of the country due to exceptionally hot temperatures, excluding coastal regions, e.g. Brittany and the northern part of Hauts-de-France. Four departments of France were put on Red Alert: Bouches-du-Rh\u00f4ne, Gard, H\u00e9rault and Vaucluse. Owing to building codes with old structures common across the country, numerous buildings in France lack air conditioning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, France\nThe French Government acted more proactively for the heat wave in light of its failings during the 2003 European heat wave; 15,000\u00a0people died during that event in the country. Approximately 4,000\u00a0schools closed nationwide. Authorities in Paris opened public cooling rooms. Parks and pools extended operation hours in multiple cities. Museums with air conditioning allowed free entry for all people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, France\nFrance observed temperatures in excess of 45\u00a0\u00b0C (113\u00a0\u00b0F) for the first time in recorded history. A national all-time record of46.0\u00a0\u00b0C (114.8\u00a0\u00b0F) was recorded by a manned weather station in V\u00e9rargues on 28 June, verified by M\u00e9t\u00e9o France on 19 July. Earlier, the highest temperature considered to have been reliably recorded during the heat wave was 45.9\u00a0\u00b0C (114.6\u00a0\u00b0F) by an automatic weather station in Gallargues-le-Montueux, also on 28 June. These exceeded the previous record of 44.1\u00a0\u00b0C (111.4\u00a0\u00b0F), recorded in Conqueyrac and Saint-Christol-l\u00e8s-Al\u00e8s. Twelve other locations observed temperatures above the previous record high.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0014-0001", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, France\nVillevieille also experienced temperatures of 45.1\u00a0\u00b0C (113.2\u00a0\u00b0F) on this day. Numerous records were broken along the Mediterranean coastline. Montpellier observed a temperature of 43.5\u00a0\u00b0C (110.3\u00a0\u00b0F), shattering the previous all-time by 5.8\u00a0\u00b0C (10.4\u00a0\u00b0F). Nantes and Bourges saw their highest low-temperature ever during the overnight of 27\u201328 June at 24.7\u00a0\u00b0C (76.5\u00a0\u00b0F) and 23.8\u00a0\u00b0C (74.8\u00a0\u00b0F), respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, France\nFive people died nationwide: four from drowning and one from heat stroke. Police noted an increase in instances of illegal fire hydrant openings. A six-year-old child was hospitalised in critical condition after being hit by a stream of water from an illegally opened hydrant. Hospitals reported a significant increase in cases of cramps, dehydration, dizziness, and heart conditions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, France\nIn July 2019, France experienced its second heat wave in less than a month, beating several regional and national temperature records. In the previous month, a national record temperature of 46.1\u00a0\u00b0C (115.0\u00a0\u00b0F) was measured in the southern commune of Gallargues-le-Montueux. Nevertheless, more than 50 French cities exceeded their previous high temperature records in this heat wave.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, France\nOn 23 July 80 departments of France were included in an orange heat wave alert by M\u00e9t\u00e9o-France, and 20 departments were included in a red alert the next day. On 24 July, a temperature of 41.2\u00a0\u00b0C (106.2\u00a0\u00b0F) was registered by M\u00e9t\u00e9o-France in Bordeaux, breaking the city's previous record of 40.7\u00a0\u00b0C (105.3\u00a0\u00b0F) in 2003. Similarly, on 25 July, a temperature of 42.6\u00a0\u00b0C (108.7\u00a0\u00b0F) was recorded in Paris, also breaking the city's previous record of 40.4\u00a0\u00b0C (104.7\u00a0\u00b0F) in July 1947.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, France\nOn the night of 24\u201325 July, France saw its hottest night since records began, as the whole country averaged an overnight low of 21.4\u00a0\u00b0C (70.5\u00a0\u00b0F), exceeding the record from the 2003 heat wave. Bordeaux saw an overnight low of 26.8\u00a0\u00b0C (80.2\u00a0\u00b0F), beating the previous record of 25\u00a0\u00b0C (77\u00a0\u00b0F, 2006); Lille saw 23.2\u00a0\u00b0C (73.8\u00a0\u00b0F), exceeding the July 2007 record of 22.5\u00a0\u00b0C (72.5\u00a0\u00b0F). Lille also saw a high of 41.5\u00a0\u00b0C (106.7\u00a0\u00b0F) the following day, above the record of 37.6\u00a0\u00b0C (99.7\u00a0\u00b0F) that had been set the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, France\nAlso on 25 July, the chief architect of the Notre-Dame de Paris cathedral told media that he feared that the heat wave could cause the cathedral's vaulted ceilings, damaged in an April 2019 fire, to collapse. While he indicated the stone walls were still stable for the time being, he explained that the walls were still saturated with water sprayed by firefighters during the blaze, and rapid drying from the extreme temperatures could adversely affect the stability of the structure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, France\nTwo nuclear reactors in southwest France were shut down and the output of six reactors were curtailed to avoid breaching environmental limits on the temperature of the rivers they use for cooling water. This reduced French nuclear power generation by around 5.2 gigawatts at a time of increased electricity demand due to the use of cooling devices.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, France\nAccording to the French Ministry of Health, 567 were reported to have died during the June heat wave, and 868 people died as a result of the July heat wave.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Germany\nMost of Germany recorded temperatures exceeding 32\u00a0\u00b0C (90\u00a0\u00b0F) on 26 June as well as large parts of the country exceeding 35\u00a0\u00b0C (95\u00a0\u00b0F). Temperatures as high as 37.5\u00a0\u00b0C (99.5\u00a0\u00b0F) were recorded in Berlin-Tempelhof, and Brandenburg had temperatures reaching 38.6\u00a0\u00b0C (101.5\u00a0\u00b0F), exceeding the previous June record of 38.2\u00a0\u00b0C (100.8\u00a0\u00b0F) recorded in Frankfurt. Nationwide, the average temperature for all of June reached 19.8\u00a0\u00b0C (67.6\u00a0\u00b0F), marking the warmest June in 140\u00a0years of record-keeping.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Germany\nOn 25 July, a temperature of 42.6\u00a0\u00b0C (108.7\u00a0\u00b0F) was recorded in Lingen, Lower Saxony. This beat the record for the highest ever temperature recorded in Germany, following its previous record of 40.5\u00a0\u00b0C (104.9\u00a0\u00b0F) measured a day earlier. Twenty-five weather stations in the country reported temperatures of 40\u00a0\u00b0C (104\u00a0\u00b0F) or higher on 25 July. Prior to this heat wave, the highest recorded temperature in Germany was 40.3\u00a0\u00b0C (104.5\u00a0\u00b0F) in Kitzingen in 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Germany\nAt the end of the heat wave, on the evening of 26 July, a maximum purple alert for storms was issued for three districts (Landkreise) of the Land Baden-W\u00fcrttemberg, namely Freudenstadt, B\u00f6blingen and Calw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Greenland\nAfter the heat wave ended in mainland Europe, the mass of warm air traveled north to Greenland, causing a heat wave that led to a melting of some 197 gigatonnes (217\u00a0billion short tons) of ice in July. The melting was forecast to peak on 1 August. For comparison, the entire melt season in 2012 caused 290 gigatonnes (320\u00a0billion short tons) of ice loss. A record 56.5 percent of Greenland Ice Sheet was showing signs of melting on 31 July. US National Snow and Ice Data Center estimated ice loss during the first week of August at 11\u201322 gigatonnes (12\u201324\u00a0billion short tons) per day with a total loss of 230 gigatonnes (250\u00a0billion short tons) for the melt season to date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Greenland\nA wild fire which has been burning near Sisimiut since early July necessitated dispatching firefighters from Denmark, as the fire was endangering inhabited areas and had the potential to continue burning through the winter. Forest fires are exceedingly rare in Greenland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Italy\nBy 28 June, Italian authorities placed 16\u00a0cities under high alert for dangerous temperatures. Civil security services distributed water to tourists visiting Rome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Italy\nA 72-year-old man died of heat stroke in the Milano Centrale railway station.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Luxembourg\nOn 25 July, a red alert for extreme heat was put in place for the entire country by Meteolux. The same day, a temperature of 40.8\u00a0\u00b0C (105.4\u00a0\u00b0F) was measured in Steinsel, the highest ever recorded in the country, beating the record of 40.5\u00a0\u00b0C (104.9\u00a0\u00b0F) set in Remich in 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Luxembourg\nThe high heat and dry conditions caused several fires during the heat wave. On 24 July, a fire broke out near Schumannseck, and hay bales caught fire in a field. On 25 July, a bush fire occurred in Hamm, and a fire truck exploded when it became engulfed in flames whilst attending the scene.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Netherlands\nOn 25 June, much of the inland areas of the Netherlands exceeded 32\u00a0\u00b0C (90\u00a0\u00b0F). The KNMI issued a code yellow warning for large parts of the country due to the heat, and RIVM also put National Heat Plans into force in areas issued under code yellow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Netherlands\nDe Bilt, where the headquarters of the KNMI is located, recorded a temperature of 33.2\u00a0\u00b0C (91.8\u00a0\u00b0F), and parts of Uden and Gelderland recorded temperatures as high as 36\u00a0\u00b0C (97\u00a0\u00b0F).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Netherlands\nIn July in the Netherlands, an orange alert was put in place for the entire country due to the extreme heat. The previous high temperature heat record 38.6\u00a0\u00b0C (101.5\u00a0\u00b0F), set in Warnsveld in 1944, was broken on 24 July in Eindhoven (North Brabant) where the temperature reached 39.3\u00a0\u00b0C (102.7\u00a0\u00b0F). The following day, 40.7\u00a0\u00b0C (105.3\u00a0\u00b0F) was measured in Gilze-Rijen (also North Brabant). The West Frisian Islands was the only region for which no weather alert had been issued but there was a heatwave for the first time ever on Vlieland and Terschelling since measurements started in 1996.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Netherlands\nOn 27 July, the KNMI ended the orange alert for South Holland, Zeeland, North Brabant and Limburg. The same day at 22:32 CEST they ended the orange alert for the whole country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Netherlands\nOn 22 July, ProRail announced code red for traffic controllers, as extra alertness was necessary for disturbances on the tracks and other problems due to heat. On 25 July, NS cancelled services on the Schiphol\u2013Antwerp high-speed railway between Amsterdam\u2014Schiphol\u2014Rotterdam, and the connection between Amsterdam\u2014Eindhoven and Eindhoven\u2014Heerlen. As trains were exposed to high temperatures, more maintenance was required and some were taken out of service. Units without air conditioning or openable windows were also taken out of service. This continued into the following day, except with four other routes made unavailable; Amsterdam\u2014Alkmaar, Amsterdam\u2014The Hague, Duivendrecht\u2014Lelystad and Schiphol\u2014Nijmegen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Netherlands\nMany farm animals died as a result of the high temperatures, mainly due to ventilation systems failing. Due to a power failure in a chicken barn in Neer, 4,000 chickens died. Hundreds of chickens also died whilst being transported to Poland on 24 July because of rising temperatures. On the same day, hundreds of pigs died in Middelharnis because of power failure in ventilation systems, and 2,100 pigs died in Maarheeze as barns reached temperatures of 40\u00a0\u00b0C (104\u00a0\u00b0F).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Netherlands\nNearly 400 extra people were reported to have died during the heatwave compared to a regular summer week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Norway\nOn 26 July, a temperature of 33.4\u00a0\u00b0C (92.1\u00a0\u00b0F) was recorded in Bergen in Norway, setting a new temperature record for the city. A day later, at Laksfors railway station south of Mosj\u00f8en, a temperature of 35.6\u00a0\u00b0C (96.1\u00a0\u00b0F) was recorded, equalling the national all-time temperature record first set in June 1970. However, the Norwegian Meteorological Institute later did not approve the recording due to too much gravel and too high vegetation near the station.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0038-0001", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Norway\nThe highest recording approved was 35\u00a0\u00b0C (95\u00a0\u00b0F) at the Mosj\u00f8en Airport on 27 July, the warmest temperature ever recorded in Northern Norway and a tie with the all-time national high for July. The same day, a temperature of 34.6\u00a0\u00b0C (94.3\u00a0\u00b0F) was recorded further north in Saltdal; this is highest temperature ever recorded inside the Arctic Circle in Norway. Also on 27 July, Trondheim Airport recorded a new all-time high with 33.5\u00a0\u00b0C (92.3\u00a0\u00b0F) and saw five consecutive days with high above 32\u00a0\u00b0C (90\u00a0\u00b0F).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Norway\nAt S\u00f8mna-Kval\u00f8yfjellet, a weather station on a coastal hill 302\u00a0m (991\u00a0ft) ASL in Nordland in Northern Norway (), the overnight low on 28 July did not go below 26.1\u00a0\u00b0C (79.0\u00a0\u00b0F), beating the previous national record for the warmest night of 25.5\u00a0\u00b0C (77.9\u00a0\u00b0F) recorded 6 degrees of latitude further south in Halden, south of Oslo, in July 1933. The Norwegian Meteorological Institute said that it had recorded \"tropical nights\" in 20 locations in the south of the country, where temperatures stayed above 20\u00a0\u00b0C (68\u00a0\u00b0F) throughout the night.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Poland\nPoland recorded high temperatures early in June, with much of the country exceeding 30\u00a0\u00b0C (86\u00a0\u00b0F) on 12 June. Like much of Western and Central Europe, most of Poland recorded temperatures as high as 33\u00a0\u00b0C (91\u00a0\u00b0F) on 26 June. Poland has also exceeded its previous June record, recording 38.2\u00a0\u00b0C (100.8\u00a0\u00b0F) in Radzy\u0144.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Spain\nLarge parts of Spain recorded temperatures exceeding recorded 35\u00a0\u00b0C (95\u00a0\u00b0F) on 27 June, and recorded its hottest temperatures in the north east of the country, with temperatures reaching as high as 39.6\u00a0\u00b0C (103.3\u00a0\u00b0F) in Bilbao and exceeding 40\u00a0\u00b0C (104\u00a0\u00b0F) in Zaragoza on 27 June. Albuquerque, Badajoz recorded 44.4\u00a0\u00b0C (111.9\u00a0\u00b0F) on 29 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Spain\nZaragoza Airport registered 43.2\u00a0\u00b0C (109.8\u00a0\u00b0F) in June 2019, Zaragoza was forecasted to reach temperatures as high as 44\u00a0\u00b0C (111\u00a0\u00b0F), exceeding the June temperature record for the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Spain\nAt least two heat stroke deaths occurred in the country: a 93-year-old man in Valladolid and a 17-year-old boy in C\u00f3rdoba.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Spain\nA wildfire broke out in La Torre de l'Espanyol within the Province of Tarragona in Catalonia on 26 June. According to local authorities, the fire ignited from decomposing chicken feces exposed to prolonged sunlight. Strong winds caused the fire to expand, with the blaze covering 6,500 hectares (16,000 acres) by 28 June. It was said to be the worst wildfire in Catalonia in 20 years. By 28 June more than 600\u00a0firefighters and six aircraft were deployed to combat the blaze. Dozens of people were displaced, including at least 30 in Flix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0044-0001", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Spain\nNear the village, more than 200\u00a0sheep, 2\u00a0horses, and a donkey died in the fire. One of Asc\u00f3's Nuclear Power Plant evacuation power lines was near the site the fire started, so it was subsequently switched off in an attempt to aid with the fire extinguishing tasks. The plant continued to operate normally throughout the days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Sweden\nSweden was only affected in the southern portion of the country. On 30 June Oskarshamn measured 33.7\u00a0\u00b0C (92.7\u00a0\u00b0F) the highest June temperature since 1970.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Sweden\nOn 26 July, a temperature of 34.8\u00a0\u00b0C (94.6\u00a0\u00b0F) was recorded in Markusvinsa, the highest temperature recorded in the north of Sweden since 1945. The Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute issued a Class 1 heat warning for parts of the country, as well as a warning for potential water shortages in August in 15 counties. To prevent forest fires due to the heat and dry weather, fire bans were also put in place in several locations in Sweden. However, a meteorologist at the institute stated that although above average, temperatures in the south of the country were not as extreme. Mainly, the reason for this was that July started with a cool spell in Northern Europe in between the two heat waves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Switzerland\nIn Switzerland, heat records were broken for the month of June at nearly 30 locations across the country. Temperatures reached as high as 35.5\u00a0\u00b0C (95.9\u00a0\u00b0F) in Z\u00fcrich and 35.3\u00a0\u00b0C (95.5\u00a0\u00b0F) in Basel on 26 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0048-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Switzerland\nAreas with high altitudes also exceeded 30\u00a0\u00b0C (86\u00a0\u00b0F), with temperatures reaching as high as 30.3\u00a0\u00b0C (86.5\u00a0\u00b0F) in Col Des Mosses and Adelboden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0049-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, Switzerland\nMeteoSwiss issued a Level 3 hazard due to high temperatures for much of the country, with large parts of Valais and Ticino under a Level 4 hazard, meaning high danger due to the exceptional heat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0050-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, United Kingdom\nOn 29 June large parts of England, including the South and the Midlands, faced temperatures exceeding 30\u00a0\u00b0C (86\u00a0\u00b0F) with the highest temperature of 34.0\u00a0\u00b0C (93.2\u00a0\u00b0F) recorded at Heathrow Airport and RAF Northolt. However, the heatwave was rather short lived in the United Kingdom, with temperatures dropping to near normal the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0051-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, United Kingdom\nOne child drowned in the River Irwell in Greater Manchester after diving in to cool off during high temperatures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0052-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, United Kingdom\nOn 23 July, Public Health England renewed a heat warning for the whole of the United Kingdom, urging people to \"keep hydrated, find shade and take protection against the sun\". On the same night, widespread thunderstorms affected the country, with BBC Weather reporting around 48,000 lightning strikes overnight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0053-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, United Kingdom\nOn 25 July, the Met Office announced that the United Kingdom had its hottest July day on record, with a temperature of 38.1\u00a0\u00b0C (100.6\u00a0\u00b0F) recorded at the National Institute of Agricultural Botany (NIAB) in Cambridge. This beat the previous July record of 36.7\u00a0\u00b0C (98.1\u00a0\u00b0F) in 2015, and marked the second time in history that the country had recorded a temperature higher than 38\u00a0\u00b0C or 100\u00a0\u00b0F. On 29 July, the Met Office announced confirmation that sensors at the Cambridge University Botanic Garden recorded a temperature of 38.7\u00a0\u00b0C (101.7\u00a0\u00b0F) on 25 July, breaking the national all-time record of 38.5\u00a0\u00b0C (101.3\u00a0\u00b0F) set in Brogdale, Kent, on 10 August 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0054-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, United Kingdom\nNew local temperature records were set in towns and cities across the country on 25 July, including 31.6\u00a0\u00b0C (88.9\u00a0\u00b0F) in Edinburgh and 35.1\u00a0\u00b0C (95.2\u00a0\u00b0F) in Sheffield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0055-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, United Kingdom, Impact on British transport and flights\nOn 25 July, Network Rail began to impose speed restrictions across its network to reduce buckling rails, as track temperatures surpassed 50\u00a0\u00b0C (122\u00a0\u00b0F). Measures also included painting railway tracks white to reduce the temperature of the steel, and cancelling services. East Midlands Trains, Southeastern and Greater Anglia advised passengers against all but essential travel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 93], "content_span": [94, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0056-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, United Kingdom, Impact on British transport and flights\nMany heat-related incidents on the country's rail network caused widespread disruptions, especially affecting intercity services from London. Damage to overhead line equipment occurred in Peterborough, Handsworth and Camden, as well as a trackside grass fire caused by cables snapping near West Hampstead. Trains arriving and departing from Birmingham New Street and around the West Midlands were also disrupted. Passengers were advised not to start new journeys as the overheating of overhead cables rendered many services unable to run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 93], "content_span": [94, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0057-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, United Kingdom, Impact on British transport and flights\nOn 26 July, all but essential travel had been advised against, after the extreme heat and storms caused severe disruption to the rail network and airports. Thameslink ran reduced services, with half of its lines unavailable. East Midlands Trains services between Sheffield, Nottingham, Derby and London St Pancras were disrupted due to overhead wire damage from the heat of the previous day, and an emergency timetable was put in place. All Eurostar services to and from Paris were also suspended for an \"undetermined amount of time\" due to an exploded cable, as well as delays lasting up to an hour on Brussels services.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 93], "content_span": [94, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0058-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, By country, United Kingdom, Impact on British transport and flights\nSeveral flights were cancelled and delayed from Heathrow, Gatwick and London City airports due to \"extreme weather conditions across Europe\". A spokesperson from Heathrow said that flights had been affected by overnight storms as a result of the heat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 93], "content_span": [94, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0059-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, Research\nAs of 1 August, the World Meteorological Organisation considered July 2019 to be at least tied for the hottest month ever recorded, based on global average temperature. Previously, June 2019 was found to be the hottest June on record. This was confirmed on 5 August by EU Earth Observation Network, which found it 0.04\u00a0\u00b0C (0.072\u00a0\u00b0F) hotter than the previous record-holder, July 2016. 2019 on the whole was found to be on track for the new hottest year on record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289094-0060-0000", "contents": "2019 European heat waves, Research\nA study of the event, a collaboration between several European climatological organisations and institutes, was published on 2 August 2019. It found that the temperatures experienced during the heat wave would have been 1.5 to 3\u00a0\u00b0C (2.7 to 5.4\u00a0\u00b0F) lower had it not been for anthropogenic global warming, and that temperatures recorded in France and Netherlands would have occurred there on average less than once a millennium. According to the study's lead author, at the current pace of warming, such heatwaves will be another 3\u00a0\u00b0C (5.4\u00a0\u00b0F) stronger by 2050.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289095-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Evian Championship\nThe 2019 Evian Championship was played 25\u201328 July at the Evian Resort Golf Club in \u00c9vian-les-Bains, France. It was the 26th Evian Championship (the first 20 played as the Evian Masters), and the seventh as a major championship on the LPGA Tour. The 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, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289095-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Evian Championship\nKo Jin-young won her second major of the year by two trokes over Shanshan Feng and Kim Hyo-joo. Earlier in the year, she won the 2019 ANA Inspiration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289095-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289095-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Evian Championship, Field\nThere were 17 exemption categories for the 2019 Evian Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289095-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Evian Championship, Field\nMar\u00eda Fassi, Julie McCarthy (a), Yealimi Noh, Albane Valenzuela (a)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289095-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Evian Championship, Field\n3. Top two players from the Island Resort Championship on the Symetra Tour", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289095-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Evian Championship, Field\n4. Winner of the Hanwha Classic Evian Championship Asia Challenge", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289095-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Evian Championship, Field\n5. The top 40 in the Women's World Golf Rankings, as of 25 June 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289095-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Evian Championship, Field\nMarina Alex, Choi Hye-jin, Chun In-gee (6,8,9), Carlota Ciganda, Austin Ernst (12), Shanshan Feng (9), Hannah Green (8,9), Georgia Hall (8), Nasa Hataoka (9), Brooke Henderson (8,9,12), Mamiko Higa, Charley Hull (10), Ji Eun-hee (9), Ariya Jutanugarn (8), Moriya Jutanugarn, Danielle Kang (8,9), Kim Hyo-joo (6), In-Kyung Kim (8), Kim Sei-young (9,12), Ko Jin-young (8,9), Lydia Ko (6,8,12), Jessica Korda (12), Nelly Korda (9), Bronte Law (9), Lee Jeong-eun (8,9,12), Lee Mi-hyang (12), Minjee Lee (9), Yu Liu, Azahara Mu\u00f1oz, Inbee Park (7,8,12), Park Sung-hyun (8,9), Ryu So-yeon (8,12), Lizette Salas, Ai Suzuki, Lexi Thompson (9), Amy Yang (9), Angel Yin", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289095-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Evian Championship, Field\n7. Active Evian Masters Champions (must have played in 10 LPGA Tour or LET events from 25 July 2018 to 25 July 2019)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289095-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Evian Championship, Field\n8. Winners of the other women's majors for the last five years", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289095-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Evian Championship, Field\nDiksha Dagar, C\u00e9line Herbin, Nuria Iturrioz (11), Meghan MacLaren (11), Becky Morgan, Marianne Skarpnord (11), Anne Van Dam", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289095-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Evian Championship, Field\n11. The top five on the LET Order of Merit, as of 16 July", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289095-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Evian Championship, Field\n12. Top 10 and ties from the 2018 Evian Championship", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 83]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289095-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Evian Championship, Field\nKristen Gillman forfeited her exemption by turning professional in November 2018. She qualified under category 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289095-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Evian Championship, Field\n16. Any player who qualified for the 2018 Evian but did not compete due to maternity", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289095-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Evian Championship, Field\n17. LPGA Tour money list, as of 16 July (if needed to fill the field to 120)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289095-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Evian Championship, Field\nBrittany Altomare, Pajaree Anannarukarn, Aditi Ashok, Nicole Broch Larsen, Ashleigh Buhai, Tiffany Chan, Chella Choi, Daniela Darquea, Lindy Duncan, Dana Finkelstein, Sandra Gal, Kristen Gillman, Jaye Marie Green, Mina Harigae, Wei-Ling Hsu, M. J. Hur, Tiffany Joh, Haeji Kang, Sarah Kemp, Cristie Kerr, Megan Khang, Jennifer Kupcho, Lee Jeong-eun, Mirim Lee, Lin Xiyu, Nanna Koerstz Madsen, Caroline Masson, Ally McDonald, Su-Hyun Oh, Annie Park, Pornanong Phatlum, Gerina Piller, Morgan Pressel, Melissa Reid, Madelene Sagstr\u00f6m, Sarah Schmelzel, Alena Sharp, Jenny Shin, Jennifer Song, Mariah Stackhouse, Lauren Stephenson, Linnea Strom, Emma Talley, Charlotte Thomas, Maria Torres, Ayako Uehara, Mariajo Uribe, Jing Yan, Sakura Yokomine, Pavarisa Yoktuan", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 789]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289095-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Evian Championship, Round summaries, First round\nPaula Creamer shot a 7-under-par 64 to lead by one stroke over four golfers. Defending champion Angela Stanford shot a 5-over 76.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289095-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Evian Championship, Round summaries, Second round\nLee Mi-hyang shot a second round 67 to take a one-stroke lead over three fellow South Koreans. The round was interrupted by a weather delay in the late afternoon. First round leader Paula Creamer fell seven strokes in her first five holes after the delay and ended with a 76 to fall to \u22122 and T-24 for the tournament. Defending champion Angela Stanford missed the cut by six strokes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289096-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Exeter City Council election\nThe 2019 Exeter City Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to of the members of Exeter City Council in Devon, England. This was on the same day as other local elections. 14 of the 39 seats were up for re-election: those of the candidates who had finished second in the all-out election of 2016, with a double vacancy in Priory ward. The Labour Party remained in control with 29 seats, with the Conservatives as the main opposition party, with 6 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289096-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Exeter City Council election, Results by ward, Alphington\nNote: The outgoing councillor Chris Musgrave was elected as Labour in 2016, but defected to the Green Party in February 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289097-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Extremaduran regional election\nThe 2019 Extremaduran regional election was held on Sunday, 26 May 2019, to elect the 10th Assembly of the autonomous community of Extremadura. All 65 seats in the Assembly were up for election. The election was held simultaneously with regional elections in eleven other autonomous communities and local elections all throughout Spain, as well as the 2019 European Parliament election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289097-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Extremaduran regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nThe Assembly of Extremadura was the devolved, unicameral legislature of the autonomous community of Extremadura, having legislative power in regional matters as defined by the Spanish Constitution and the Extremaduran Statute of Autonomy, as well as the ability to vote confidence in or withdraw it from a regional president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289097-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Extremaduran regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nVoting for the Assembly was on the basis of universal suffrage, which comprised all nationals over eighteen, registered in Extremadura and in full enjoyment of their political rights. Additionally, Extremadurans abroad were required to apply for voting before being permitted to vote, a system known as \"begged\" or expat vote (Spanish: Voto rogado). The 65 members of the Assembly of Extremadura were elected using the D'Hondt method and a closed list proportional representation, with a electoral threshold of five percent of valid votes\u2014which included blank ballots\u2014being applied in each constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289097-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Extremaduran regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nAlternatively, parties failing to reach the threshold in one of the constituencies were also entitled to enter the seat distribution as long as they ran candidates in both districts and reached five percent regionally. Seats were allocated to constituencies, corresponding to the provinces of Badajoz and C\u00e1ceres, with each being allocated an initial minimum of 20 seats and the remaining 25 being distributed in proportion to their populations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289097-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Extremaduran regional election, Overview, Election date\nThe term of the Assembly of Extremadura expired four years after the date of its previous election, unless it was dissolved earlier. The election decree was required to be issued no later than the twenty-fifth day prior to the date of expiry of parliament and published on the following day in the Official Journal of Extremadura (DOE), with election day taking place on the fifty-fourth day from publication. The previous election was held on 24 May 2015, which meant that the legislature's term would have expired on 24 May 2019. The election decree was required to be published in the DOE no later than 30 April 2019, with the election taking place on the fifty-fourth day from publication, setting the latest possible election date for the Assembly on Sunday, 23 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 838]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289097-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Extremaduran regional election, Overview, Election date\nThe president had the prerogative to dissolve the Assembly of Extremadura and call a snap election, provided that no motion of no confidence was in process and that dissolution did not occur before one year had elapsed since the previous one. In the event of an investiture process failing to elect a regional president within a two-month period from the first ballot, the Assembly was to be automatically dissolved and a fresh election called.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289097-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Extremaduran regional election, Parliamentary composition\nThe Assembly of Extremadura was officially dissolved on 2 April 2019, after the publication of the dissolution decree in the Official Journal of Extremadura. The table below shows the composition of the parliamentary groups in the Assembly at the time of dissolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289097-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Extremaduran regional election, Parties and candidates\nThe electoral law allowed for parties and federations registered in the interior ministry, coalitions and groupings of electors to present lists of candidates. Parties and federations intending to form a coalition ahead of an election were required to inform the relevant Electoral Commission within ten days of the election call, whereas groupings of electors needed to secure the signature of at least two percent of the electorate in the constituencies for which they sought election, disallowing electors from signing for more than one list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289097-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Extremaduran regional election, Parties and candidates\nBelow is a list of the main parties and electoral alliances which contested the election:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289097-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Extremaduran regional election, Opinion polls\nThe table below lists voting intention estimates in reverse chronological order, showing the most recent first and using the dates when the survey fieldwork was done, as opposed to the date of publication. Where the fieldwork dates are unknown, the date of publication is given instead. The highest percentage figure in each polling survey is displayed with its background shaded in the leading party's colour. If a tie ensues, this is applied to the figures with the highest percentages. The \"Lead\" column on the right shows the percentage-point difference between the parties with the highest percentages in a given poll. When available, seat projections are also displayed below the voting estimates in a smaller font. 33 seats were required for an absolute majority in the Assembly of Extremadura.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 852]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289098-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 F3 Americas Championship\nThe 2019 F3 Americas Championship powered by Honda was the second season for the FIA Formula 3 regional series across North America. The series is sanctioned by SCCA Pro Racing, the professional racing division of the Sports Car Club of America.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289098-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 F3 Americas Championship\nThe season began on 5 April at Barber Motorsports Park as part of the Honda Indy Grand Prix of Alabama and concluded on 15 September at Sebring International Raceway after six rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289098-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 F3 Americas Championship, Race calendar\nAll races were held on permanent road courses in the United States. The series schedule was announced on 7 December 2018. On 21 February 2019 the series announced the addition of Road America to the schedule. Four rounds were joint F3 Americas and United States F4 championship rounds, with events at one NTT IndyCar Series and one NASCAR Xfinity Series round each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289098-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 F3 Americas Championship, Championship standings, Drivers' standings\nBold\u00a0\u2013 PoleItalics\u00a0\u2013 Fastest Lap\u2020\u00a0\u2014 Did not finish, but classified", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289099-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 F3 Asian Championship\nThe 2019 F3 Asian Championship is a multi-event, Formula 3 open-wheel single seater motor racing championship held across Asia. The championship features a mix of professional and amateur drivers, competing in Formula 3 cars that conform to the FIA Formula 3 regulations for the championship. This is the second season of the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289099-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 F3 Asian Championship\nThe season will commence on 6 April at Sepang International Circuit and will conclude on 29 September at Shanghai International Circuit, after fifteen races to be held at five meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289099-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 F3 Asian Championship\nIn 2019 the F3 Asian Championship is hosting a Winter Series to give existing and new drivers from around the world an opportunity to prepare for the new season. The inaugural season of the Winter Series consists of three rounds with nine total races, beginning on 11 January at Chang International Circuit and ending on 24 February after two more rounds at Sepang International Circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289099-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 F3 Asian Championship, Summer Series, Race calendar\nThe second season of the series will be contested in four countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289100-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 F4 British Championship\nThe 2019 F4 British Championship was a multi-event, Formula 4 open-wheel single seater motor racing championship held across United Kingdom. The championship featured a mix of professional motor racing teams and privately funded drivers, competing in Formula 4 cars that conform to the technical regulations for the championship. This, the fifth season, following on from the British Formula Ford Championship, was the fifth year that the cars conformed to the FIA's Formula 4 regulations. Part of the TOCA tour, it formed part of the extensive program of support categories built up around the BTCC centrepiece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289100-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 F4 British Championship\nThe season commenced on 6 April 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 held at ten meetings, all in support of the 2019 British Touring Car Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289100-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 F4 British Championship\nThe rookie cup continued with the top prize being free entry into the 2020 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289100-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 F4 British Championship\nZane Maloney won both the overall and rookie championship, coming out victorious ten times out of 30 races. His closest title challenger Sebasti\u00e1n \u00c1lvarez won five races, one win fewer than third-placed Louis Foster. Carter Williams triumphed thrice, Josh Skelton and Luke Browning won twice respectively, and Bart Horsten and Tommy Foster got one victory each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289100-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 F4 British Championship, Race calendar\nThe calendar was announced on 5 June 2018. All races were held in the United Kingdom. Round at Rockingham was removed from the schedule in favour of the second Thruxton round. All rounds supported 2019 British Touring Car Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289100-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 F4 British Championship, Championship standings, Drivers' standings\n\u2020 Race 2 at Croft Circuit was stopped after two laps due to worsening weather conditions. The results were initially declared void, with the intention of running a fourth race at a later event. However, it was confirmed on 22 July that the original results would stand, with half points being awarded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 72], "content_span": [73, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289100-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 F4 British Championship, Championship standings, Teams Cup\nEach team nominated two drivers to score points before every round. All non-nominated drivers were ignored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289101-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 F4 Danish Championship\nThe 2019 F4 Danish Championship season was the third season of the F4 Danish Championship. The season began at Padborg Park in April and concluded at Jyllandsringen in October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289101-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 F4 Danish Championship, Championship standings\nPoints were awarded to the top 10 classified finishers in each race. No points were awarded for pole position or fastest lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289102-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 F4 Japanese Championship\nThe 2019 F4 Japanese Championship season was the fifth season of the F4 Japanese Championship. It began on 13 April in Okayama and finished on 3 November in Twin Ring Motegi after seven double header rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289102-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 F4 Japanese Championship, Race calendar and results\nAll rounds will be held in Japan. The \"2019 FIA Formula 1 World Championship Round 17 Japan Grand Prix Race\" will be held at Suzuka Circuit on October 11-13, 2019 first time as a support race event. This \"FIA-F4 Dream Cup Race\" (tentative name) will be a special non-points race. Other rounds supporting of the Super GT events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289102-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 F4 Japanese Championship, Championship standings, Drivers' standings\nBold\u00a0\u2013 PoleItalics\u00a0\u2013 Fastest Lap\u2020\u00a0\u2014 Did not finish, but classified", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289103-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 F4 Spanish Championship\nThe 2019 F4 Spanish Championship was the fourth season of the Spanish F4 Championship. It was a multi-event motor racing championship for open wheel, formula racing cars regulated according to FIA Formula 4 regulations, taking place in Spain. The championship featured drivers competing in 1.4 litre Tatuus-Abarth single seat race cars that conformed to the technical regulations for the championship. The series was organised by RFEDA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289103-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 F4 Spanish Championship, Race calendar\nThe series competed at Circuit Paul Ricard for the first time. The schedule consisted of seven rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289103-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 F4 Spanish Championship, Championship\nPoints were awarded to the top ten classified finishers in races 1 and 3 and for the top eight classified finishers in race 2. No points were awarded for pole position or fastest lap. Race 1 at Paul Ricard only awarded points to the top eight finishers. For Round 6 at Algarve Race 3 was the shorter race, awarding points to the top eight finishers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289104-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Community Shield\nThe 2019 FA Community Shield (also known as The FA Community Shield supported by McDonald's for sponsorship reasons) was the 97th FA Community Shield, an annual football match played between the winners of the previous season's Premier League and FA Cup. As Manchester City won both competitions in 2019, their opponents were the 2018\u201319 Premier League runners-up, Liverpool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289104-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Community Shield\nThe match was played at Wembley Stadium on 4 August 2019. Manchester City defended the trophy they won in 2018, winning 5\u20134 on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289104-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Community Shield, Background\nIn the 2018\u201319 season, Liverpool and Manchester City were in a heated title race, each going unbeaten in their first 15 league matches, and never more than three points apart in the table after the end of February. Despite being nine points behind Liverpool at Christmas, Manchester City won the league with 98 points, a point ahead of Liverpool. Manchester City also won the 2018\u201319 FA Cup and the 2018\u201319 EFL Cup, beating Watford 6\u20130 in the former, and defeating Chelsea 4\u20133 in a penalty shoot-out after a 0\u20130 draw in the latter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289104-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Community Shield, Background\nDuring 2018\u201319 the two teams only met in the league, playing out a goalless draw at Anfield on 7 October, as City's Riyad Mahrez missed a crucial penalty kick in the 84th minute, before Manchester City won 2\u20131 at the City of Manchester Stadium on 3 January, with goals from Sergio Ag\u00fcero and Leroy San\u00e9 for City either side of Roberto Firmino's effort for Liverpool. That game was Liverpool's only loss during the 2018\u201319 Premier League season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289104-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Community Shield, Background\nThis is the third super cup in which Liverpool's J\u00fcrgen Klopp and Manchester City's Pep Guardiola have faced each other. While they were each managing Der Klassiker rivals Borussia Dortmund and Bayern Munich respectively, they played against each other in the 2013 and 2014 DFL-Supercups, the German equivalent of the Community Shield. Klopp's side won on both occasions, with scores of 4\u20132 and 2\u20130 respectively. Both matches were played at Westfalenstadion, Dortmund's home stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289104-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Community Shield, Background\nManchester City wore a commemorative kit with no sponsor for the match, marking their 125th anniversary season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289104-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Community Shield, Match, Summary\nManchester City took the lead after 12 minutes when Kevin De Bruyne knocked the ball into the penalty area from the left to David Silva who flicked it to Raheem Sterling who scored from six yards out, hitting the ball with his left foot under Liverpool goalkeeper Alisson who almost managed to keep it out of the net. In the second half Virgil van Dijk had a shot from close range on the turn which came back off the underside of the bar and bounced out to safety.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289104-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 FA Community Shield, Match, Summary\nLiverpool equalized in the 77th minute when Jo\u00ebl Matip scored with a header from three yards out after a cross from the left by Virgil van Dijk. Mohamed Salah had a late chance to win the game but his initial shot was saved by Claudio Bravo with Salah following up with a header which was hooked off the line by Kyle Walker. The match went to a penalty shoot-out with Georginio Wijnaldum the only player to miss, Claudio Bravo saving to his right. Gabriel Jesus scored the winning penalty shooting to the left past Alisson to decide the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289104-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Community Shield, Match, Details\nAssistant referees:Sian Massey-Ellis (Birmingham)Dan Cook (Hampshire)Fourth official:Stuart Attwell (Birmingham)Reserve assistant referee:Neil Davies (London)Video assistant referee:Anthony Taylor (Cheshire)Assistant video assistant referee:Steve Child (London)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final\nThe 2019 FA Cup Final was an association football match between Manchester City and Watford on 18\u00a0May 2019 at Wembley Stadium in London, England. It was the 138th FA Cup final overall and was the showpiece match of English football's primary cup competition, the Football Association Challenge Cup (FA Cup), organised by the Football Association (FA). It was Manchester City's first FA Cup final appearance since 2013, when they lost 1\u20130 to Wigan Athletic. Watford were playing their second FA Cup final, the previous occasion being in 1984, when they were defeated 2\u20130 by Everton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final\nKevin Friend was the referee for the match, which was played in front of 85,854 spectators. Manchester City dominated the early stages of the final. In the 21st minute, Abdoulaye Doucour\u00e9's shot struck Vincent Kompany's arm in the Manchester City penalty area but after consultation with the video assistant referee (VAR), Friend declined to award a penalty and showed Doucour\u00e9 the first yellow card of the game for his subsequent protests. In the 26th minute the deadlock was broken, as David Silva scored from a Raheem Sterling header.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final\nTwelve minutes later Manchester City doubled their lead after Gabriel Jesus side-footed the ball past Kiko Femen\u00eda and Heurelho Gomes in the Watford goal. On 61 minutes City further extended their lead to 3\u20130 with a goal from substitute Kevin De Bruyne from close range. Seven minutes later, Jesus made it 4\u20130 after taking the ball on the counter-attack and shooting past Gomes. In the 81st minute, Sterling scored from a Bernardo Silva cross to make it 5\u20130, before scoring again in the 87th minute after his initial shot was pushed onto the post by Gomes. The match ended 6\u20130 to Manchester City: it was only the third time that a team has scored six goals in an FA Cup Final and the margin of victory is the joint-largest in an FA Cup Final, equalling Bury's 6\u20130 win over Derby County in 1903.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 812]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final\nManchester City's De Bruyne was named man of the match. The win completed a domestic treble for Manchester City, who had already won the League Cup and the Premier League that season, unprecedented by any English men's team. As they had already qualified for the 2019\u201320 UEFA Champions League, City's European qualification place for winning the FA Cup went to Wolverhampton Wanderers, who entered the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League in the second qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final, Route to the final, Manchester City\nAs a Premier League club, Manchester City started in the third round where they were drawn against Championship team Rotherham United at the City of Manchester Stadium. In what Neil Johnston of the BBC described as a \"powerful attacking performance\", City dominated their opponents and won 7\u20130, with goals from Raheem Sterling, Phil Foden, an own goal from Semi Ajayi, Gabriel Jesus, Riyad Mahrez, Nicol\u00e1s Otamendi, and Leroy San\u00e9. It was Rotherham's heaviest ever FA Cup defeat, but their manager Paul Warne was philosophical: \"It was a difficult day but we were playing against a world-class team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 54], "content_span": [55, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final, Route to the final, Manchester City\nI don't think we embarrassed ourselves\". In the fourth round, City were drawn at home once again, this time against fellow Premier League team Burnley. In a display which Burnley manager Sean Dyche called \"clinical\", City won 5\u20130 with goals from Jesus, Bernardo Silva, Kevin De Bruyne, Sergio Ag\u00fcero and an own goal from Kevin Long.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 54], "content_span": [55, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final, Route to the final, Manchester City\nIn the fifth round, City played League Two side Newport County away at Rodney Parade in Newport, Wales. Once again, City dominated their opponents, and although the first half ended goalless, they won 4\u20131 courtesy of two goals from Foden, and one each from San\u00e9 and Mahrez, with P\u00e1draig Amond scoring the consolation for Newport. In the quarter-finals, City drew Championship team Swansea City. Played at the Liberty Stadium, Swansea were 2\u20130 ahead at half time, but a goal from Silva and an own goal from Kristoffer Nordfeldt were followed by a controversial late winner from Ag\u00fcero.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 54], "content_span": [55, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final, Route to the final, Manchester City\nVideo replays demonstrated that the striker was offside but as the video assistant referee (VAR) system was not in use at the Liberty Stadium, the goal was allowed to stand, and the Manchester club progressed with a 3\u20132 victory. In the semi-final, played at Wembley Stadium as a neutral venue, Manchester City faced Premier League side Brighton & Hove Albion. City progressed to the final after a 1\u20130 win with a Jesus goal from a De Bruyne cross in the fourth minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 54], "content_span": [55, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final, Route to the final, Watford\nAs a Premier League club, Watford also started in the third round where they faced National League South side Woking away at the Kingfield Stadium. There were 110 places in the English football league system between the clubs, and Watford dominated the match. They won 2\u20130 with goals from Will Hughes and Troy Deeney. In the next round Watford played fellow Premier League side Newcastle United away at St James' Park. A total of eighteen changes were made to the starting line-ups of the two teams. After a goalless first half, Andre Gray opened the scoring for Watford and Isaac Success' strike in injury time ensured Watford's progress with a 2\u20130 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final, Route to the final, Watford\nIn the fifth round Watford played Championship side Queens Park Rangers away at Loftus Road. Watford won 1\u20130 when \u00c9tienne Capoue scored with his side's only shot on target of the game, just before half time. In the quarter final, they played Premier League Crystal Palace at home at Vicarage Road. Watford took the lead mid-way through the first half with a Capoue strike, but Michy Batshuayi levelled the score in the 62nd minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final, Route to the final, Watford\nGray, a second-half substitute, then scored the winning goal within two minutes of his introduction, ensuring a 2\u20131 Watford victory and progression to the semi-final at Wembley. There they faced Premier League Wolverhampton Wanderers (Wolves). A header from Matt Doherty and a volley from Ra\u00fal Jim\u00e9nez put Wolves into a 2\u20130 lead before Gerard Deulofeu reduced the deficit with what BBC reporter Phil McNulty described as \"an audacious angled flick\" with eleven minutes of the game remaining. Four minutes into injury time, Deeney levelled the score from the penalty spot, forcing the game into extra time. Deulofeu then scored his second in the 104th minute to ensure Watford's progression to the final with a 3\u20132 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final, Match, Background\nThis was Manchester City's eleventh FA Cup Final and their first since losing 1\u20130 to Wigan Athletic in the 2013 final. City had won the FA Cup on four previous occasions, the most recent being the 2011 final when they beat Stoke City 1\u20130. Watford qualified for their first FA Cup Final since 1984 when they lost 2\u20130 to Everton. In the two meetings between the clubs during the 2018\u201319 Premier League, City won 2\u20131 at Vicarage Road in December 2018 and 3\u20131 at the City of Manchester Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 36], "content_span": [37, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final, Match, Background\nWatford had beaten Manchester City once in the previous seventeen meetings, including a losing streak of ten games going back to 2013. The league season ended with City as champions and Watford eleventh, forty-eight points behind. It was City's second cup final of the season: in February they had won the 2018\u201319 League Cup against Chelsea in a penalty shootout. This meant that City were aiming to become the first club in English football history to win the domestic treble which came into existence with the creation of the League Cup in the 1960\u201361 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 36], "content_span": [37, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final, Match, Background\nThe referee for the match was Kevin Friend representing the Leicestershire and Rutland County Football Association. He was promoted to the Select Group in 2009 and had previously officiated over Wembley matches including the 2012 FA Community Shield and the 2013 Football League Cup Final. Friend's assistants were Constantine Hatzidakis (Kent County Football Association) and Matthew Wilkes (Birmingham County Football Association). The fourth official was Graham Scott (Berks & Bucks Football Association), and the reserve assistant referee was Edward Smart (Kent County Football Association).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 36], "content_span": [37, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final, Match, Background\nAndre Marriner (Birmingham County Football Association) was the video assistant referee who was assisted by Harry Lennard (Sussex County Football Association). Both clubs received an allocation of approximately 28,000 tickets. For adults, these were priced \u00a345, \u00a370, \u00a3115 and \u00a3145, with concessions in place. 14,000 tickets were distributed through the \"football family\", which included volunteers representing County FAs, FA-affiliated leagues, clubs and charities. Manchester City supporters were seated on the east side of the ground, and Watford's on the west. The match was broadcast live in the UK on BBC One and BT Sport. The traditional performance of the hymn, \"Abide with Me\" was performed by the Band of the Scots Guards and a mixed choir. Former players Luther Blissett (Watford) and Tony Book (Manchester City) brought out the trophy before the teams were introduced to Prince William, Duke of Cambridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 36], "content_span": [37, 954]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final, Match, Background\nWatford left-back Jos\u00e9 Holebas was sent off on the last day of the Premier League season in a 4\u20131 home defeat by West Ham United. The resulting one-match suspension would have ruled him out of the final but, on 13\u00a0May, the red card was rescinded, clearing him for selection. Deulofeu had recovered from a dead leg sustained against West Ham. The final was also slated to have been the Watford goalkeeper Heurelho Gomes' last professional football match as he announced his intention to retire at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 36], "content_span": [37, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final, Match, Background\nHe was selected in preference to Ben Foster, and Adrian Mariappa replaced Christian Kabasele in Watford's defence. Manchester City were still without long-term injured Benjamin Mendy but both Fernandinho and De Bruyne were available for selection, the former having recovered from a knee injury while the latter was back from damaging his hamstring. Jesus was preferred up front with Ag\u00fcero starting on the bench, along with De Bruyne. Watford played in their standard home kit of black and yellow stripes, black shorts and black socks while City's players wore light blue shirts, white shorts and white socks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 36], "content_span": [37, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final, Match, First half\nThe match was kicked off by Watford just after 5\u00a0p.m. on 18\u00a0May 2019 in front of a Wembley crowd of 85,854. The first chance of the game fell to Aymeric Laporte on 4 minutes whose long-range shot flew over Watford's crossbar. Three minutes later, Bernardo Silva made a run but his pass into the Watford penalty area was intercepted by Craig Cathcart. In the 10th minute, Mahrez won a corner for City which was cleared by Watford who went on the counter-attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 36], "content_span": [37, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final, Match, First half\nA cross from Deulofeu found Roberto Pereyra whose shot was saved by the Manchester City goalkeeper Ederson. Bernardo Silva then saw his strike saved by Gomes two minutes later and on 16 minutes, City won another corner off Holebas. Gomes failed to gather the set piece but Watford cleared the ball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 36], "content_span": [37, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final, Match, First half\nIn the 21st minute, Pereyra passed to Abdoulaye Doucour\u00e9 in the Manchester City box, whose shot struck Vincent Kompany's arm. After consultation with the VAR, Friend declined to award a penalty and showed Doucour\u00e9 the first yellow card of the game for his subsequent protests. Two minutes later, Sterling was unable to capitalise on a Gomes handling error before Jesus' shot was deflected for a corner by Mariappa. Capoue cleared the ball out to Deulofeu on the break, but Ederson was quick to react and clear the danger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 36], "content_span": [37, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final, Match, First half\nIn the 26th minute the deadlock was broken, as David Silva scored his first goal in 28 games, shooting across Gomes from a Sterling header. On 33 minutes, Mahrez passed to Jesus who was prevented from shooting by a Mariappa tackle. Five minutes later Manchester City doubled their lead. Bernardo Silva played a ball into a space on the left side of the six-yard box for Jesus who side-footed past Kiko Femen\u00eda and Gomes in the Watford goal. A minute later, Gomes pushed a Mahrez shot away and in the 44th minute, Watford's Hughes struck from distance and the ball was deflected for a corner. The set piece came to nothing and the half ended with Manchester City holding a 2\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 36], "content_span": [37, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final, Match, Second half\nNo changes were made to either side during half time and Watford kicked the second half off. They had the first chance, after 47 minutes, when Deeney found Pereyra who chose to try to find Hughes instead of shooting. Sterling then found Jesus whose shot from a tight angle was saved by Gomes. Oleksandr Zinchenko then crossed for Jesus who headed the ball into the Watford net but the goal was disallowed for offside. Watford then had a brief spell of pressure but failed to capitalise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final, Match, Second half\nIn the 55th minute, Manchester City made their first substitution of the afternoon with De Bruyne coming on to replace Mahrez. \u0130lkay G\u00fcndo\u011fan's corner on 57 minutes found Laporte whose header was wide. Watford responded with Deulofeu picking up a long ball but whose shot was mishit wide of the far post. David Silva was then shown a yellow card in the 60th minute for a foul on Hughes. On 61 minutes City further extended their lead to 3\u20130 with a goal from De Bruyne. Jesus beat Pereyra in the air and passed to De Bruyne, who took the ball past Gomes and scored from close range.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final, Match, Second half\nIn the 65th minute, Watford made a double substitution with Deulofeu and Pereyra coming off, to be replaced by Gray and Success. Three minutes later, Jesus made it 4\u20130 after taking the ball on the counter-attack and shooting past Gomes. De Bruyne then shot high and wide in the 70th minute before San\u00e9 was brought on for G\u00fcndogan and Watford's Hughes was replaced by Tom Cleverley. After a period of City possession, John Stones then came on for David Silva, and in the 80th minute, Kiko was booked for a foul on San\u00e9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final, Match, Second half\nIn the 81st minute, Sterling scored from a Bernardo Silva cross to make it 5\u20130, before scoring again in the 87th minute after his initial shot was pushed onto the post by Gomes. Two minutes into injury time, Stones' strike from around 10 yards (9.1\u00a0m) was saved by Gomes and Friend blew the final whistle, ending the match with Manchester City winning 6\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final, Match, Details\nAssistant referees:Constantine Hatzidakis (Kent)Matthew Wilkes (Birmingham)Fourth official:Graham Scott (Berks & Bucks)Reserve assistant referee:Edward Smart (Birmingham)Video assistant referee:Andre Marriner (Birmingham)Assistant video assistant referee:Harry Lennard (Sussex)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final, Post-match\nPep Guardiola, the winning manager, was elated: \"It was an incredible final for us and we have finished an incredible year\u00a0... To all the people at the club a big congratulations, especially the players because they are the reason why we have won these titles\". His opposite number, Javi Gracia said: \"we knew before the game we had to play the perfect game\u00a0... We started well and we created the best chance after 10 minutes with Roberto Pereyra but after that they dominated. They were better, congratulations to them and we will try again\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final, Post-match\nDe Bruyne was named as the man of the match. Kompany, the City captain, said: \"As soon as we scored the two goals and they had to come at us and press\u00a0... It made it easier for us. It wasn't as easy as the score suggests\". The day after the game, Kompany said that the match was his final game for the club as he would be leaving after eleven years to become the player-manager of Anderlecht. Watford's Gomes decided against retirement and instead signed a one-year extension to his contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final, Post-match\nDaniel Taylor writing in The Guardian described the game as a \"cakewalk\" for City. City scored 26 goals during the season's cup campaign, the most by any FA Cup-winning team since the 1925\u201326 FA Cup. It was also the largest margin of victory in an FA Cup Final since the 1903 final which ended with the same scoreline, Bury beating Derby County. Manchester City became the first English men's team to win a domestic treble, having already won the EFL Cup and Premier League that season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289105-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Cup Final, Post-match\nWinning the FA Cup meant that Manchester City qualified to play Liverpool, the Premier League runners-up, in the Community Shield in August which they won on penalties after a 1\u20131 draw. City's victory meant that Wolves went into the second qualifying round of the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League having finished seventh in the Premier League while Manchester United went directly into the group stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289106-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Trophy Final\nThe 2019 FA Trophy Final was a football match between AFC Fylde and Leyton Orient on 19 May 2019. It was the final match of the 2018\u201319 FA Trophy, the 50th season of the FA Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289107-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Vase Final\nThe 2019 FA Vase Final was the 45th final of the Football Association's cup competition for teams at levels 9\u201311 of the English football league system. The match was contested between Chertsey Town, of the Combined Counties Premier Division, and Cray Valley Paper Mills, of the Southern Counties East Premier Division. This was the first time both teams had reached the final and the first visit to Wembley Stadium for both sides. The final of the FA Trophy was played on the same day at the same venue for the fourth year running, as part of the FA's Non-League Finals Day. Both matches were televised in the UK on BT Sport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289107-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Vase Final\nChertsey Town began their campaign in the first qualifying round, with a victory over Woodley United. They proceeded to defeat Tadley Calleva, Flackwell Heath, Horndean, Redbridge, St. Austell, Irlam and West Auckland Town en route to the semi-final where they faced Northwich Victoria. After a 1\u20131 draw in the first leg, Chertsey Town drew 0\u20130 after extra time in the second leg before winning 5\u20133 on penalties, securing a place in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289107-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Vase Final\nCray Valley Paper Mills also began their campaign in the first qualifying round, where they defeated Sutton Athletic. Victories over Hailsham Town, St. Panteleimon, Badshot Lea, Sheppey United, Baffins Milton Rovers, Abbey Rangers and Willand Rovers saw them reach the semi-final where they faced Canterbury City. Cray Valley Paper Mills won the round 2\u20131 on aggregate after winning the first leg 1\u20130, and a 1\u20131 draw in the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289108-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FA WSL Cup Final\nThe 2019 FA WSL Cup Final was the eighth final of the FA WSL Cup, England's secondary cup competition for women's football teams and its primary league cup tournament. It took place on the 23 February 2019, at Bramall Lane, contested by Arsenal and Manchester City, the only two teams to have ever won the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289108-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FA WSL Cup Final\nArsenal had competed in all but one of the previous finals, winning five. Manchester City had appeared in three of the last four, securing the trophy twice. The final was a rerun of the 2018 final, which was won by Arsenal by a goal to nil, while both teams also met in the final in 2014 when Manchester City won by the only goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289108-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FA WSL Cup Final, Route to the final, Arsenal\nDrawn again - as with the previous season - against mostly second-tier opposition, plus WSL mid-table side West Ham United, Arsenal improved on their second-place finish in the 2017\u201318 group stage with a dominating series of results to top their group having secured all twelve points, the high note being an away 9\u20130 win over Lewes in which both Kim Little and Vivianne Miedema scored hattricks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 50], "content_span": [51, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289108-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FA WSL Cup Final, Route to the final, Arsenal\nThe quarter-finals saw Arsenal paired with Birmingham City, a team only a few paces behind in the WSL title race with three previous WSL Cup final appearances to their names, including two against Arsenal. A tight match saw Birmingham take the lead, but an injury time goal from Miedema would ultimately settle the tie in Arsenal's favour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 50], "content_span": [51, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289108-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FA WSL Cup Final, Route to the final, Arsenal\nThe semi-final matched Arsenal against the resurrected Manchester United, who had been performing beyond their second division status all season. An all-Manchester final was prevented, however, as Arsenal took control of the match to seal their place with two more goals from Miedema.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 50], "content_span": [51, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289108-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FA WSL Cup Final, Route to the final, Manchester City\nIn the group stages, Manchester City again found themselves matched with title challengers Birmingham City, along with Bristol City and three Championship sides, playing one more game than Arsenal by virtue of the increased number of teams competing in the tournament compared with the previous season. Their campaign began slowly as they were only able to prevail against Birmingham City on penalties, meaning they would only take two points out of a possible three. With the toughest match already out of the way, they would go on to win all of their remaining games, scoring 17 goals and conceding none in the process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 58], "content_span": [59, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289108-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FA WSL Cup Final, Route to the final, Manchester City\nTheir quarter-final against Brighton & Hove Albion would prove to be their highest-scoring in the cup competition, with an initially slow match bursting into life in the closing stages as four goals were scored after the 85th minute. The match drew extra journalistic attention as it came barely 24 hours after Manchester City's men's team had themselves scored nine goals in their own League Cup tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 58], "content_span": [59, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289108-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FA WSL Cup Final, Route to the final, Manchester City\nManchester City's place in the final would ultimately be assured by the work of Nikita Parris, who scored both goals as they defeated the reigning WSL champions Chelsea, giving them their fourth finals appearance in the previous five competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 58], "content_span": [59, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289109-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Women's Cup Final\nThe 2019 Women's FA Cup Final (known as the SSE Women's FA Cup Final for sponsorship reasons) was the 49th final of the Women's FA Cup, England's primary cup competition for women's football teams. The showpiece event was the 26th to be played directly under the auspices of the Football Association (FA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289109-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Women's Cup Final\nThe final was contested between Manchester City and West Ham United on 4 May 2019 at Wembley in London. It was Manchester City's second appearance in the final of the Women's FA Cup having won the 2017 final. It was the first FA Cup final for West Ham United and also their first appearance at the national stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289109-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Women's Cup Final\nManchester City won the game with three second-half goals from Keira Walsh, Georgia Stanway and Lauren Hemp to record their second Women's FA Cup victory in three seasons. The result meant that City went through the entire FA Cup campaign without conceding a goal, and completed their first domestic cup double.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289109-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Women's Cup Final, Route to the final, Manchester City\nManchester City were one of 22 WSL and Championship teams to enter the competition in the fourth round proper and were drawn against National League team Watford. Substitute Nikita Parris finally broke the deadlock in the 62nd minute, the first of her two goals on the day as City won 3\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 62], "content_span": [63, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289109-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 FA Women's Cup Final, Route to the final, Manchester City\nCity traveled to Championship side Tottenham Hotspur for the fifth round, securing a second consecutive 3\u20130 victory in the competition before repeating the result once again in the quarter-finals, this time against WSL opposition as Georgia Stanway scored a second half brace following Janine Beckie's opener against Liverpool to secure Manchester City a semi-final place for the fourth season in a row. Manchester City were drawn against familiar opposition for the semi-final in Chelsea: it was the fifth time in six seasons the teams had met in the FA Cup, with the previous three also occurring at the semi-final stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 62], "content_span": [63, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289109-0003-0002", "contents": "2019 FA Women's Cup Final, Route to the final, Manchester City\nChelsea had emerged victorious on all four of the previous occasions including the previous season on the way to winning the trophy. Despite controlling the game and creating more chances, a freak own goal by Magdalena Eriksson in the 90+2nd minute knocked the defending champions out by a scoreline of 1\u20130 meaning City had also successfully negotiated all four rounds without conceding a goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 62], "content_span": [63, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289109-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Women's Cup Final, Route to the final, West Ham United\nWest Ham United were one of 22 WSL and Championship teams to enter the competition in the fourth round proper and were drawn against National League team Blackburn Rovers. The third division team took the lead through Natasha Flint before the Hammers equalised on the stroke of half-time through Adriana Leon. Brianna Visalli put West Ham ahead after the break before Canadian international Leon scored her second goal of the game to secure a 3\u20131 victory. For the fifth round, West Ham were drawn at home to third division opposition for the second consecutive time in Huddersfield Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 62], "content_span": [63, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289109-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 FA Women's Cup Final, Route to the final, West Ham United\nThe visitors once again took the lead as captain Kate Mallin buried a 14th minute penalty into the top corner but Alisha Lehmann leveled eight minutes later. By half-time, West Ham were leading 4\u20131 and scored another four in the second half including a hat-trick by Leanne Kiernan to eventually win out emphatic 8\u20131 victors. Jane Ross scored the only goal of a 1\u20130 quarter-final win over Championship side Aston Villa to send West Ham through to the team's semi\u2013final appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 62], "content_span": [63, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289109-0004-0002", "contents": "2019 FA Women's Cup Final, Route to the final, West Ham United\nWith only WSL teams left in the final four, West Ham finally met first division opposition for the first time in the competition as they traveled to Reading in the semi-finals. After a goalless first half, Rachel Furness put the home side ahead in the 49th minute. Just like in the fifth round, West Ham found an equaliser through Alisha Lehmann eight minutes later. With the teams locked at 1\u20131 after extra-time, the tie was eventually settled in a penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 62], "content_span": [63, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289109-0004-0003", "contents": "2019 FA Women's Cup Final, Route to the final, West Ham United\n3\u20133 after five penalties each, the shoout-out entered sudden death: Anna Moorhouse saved Reading captain Jade Moore's weak attempt before South Korean international Cho So-hyun stepped up and stroked the ball into the top corner to book the Hammers' place at Wembley. The latter portion of West Ham's FA Cup run featured heavily in the BBC behind-the-scenes documentary Britain's Youngest Football Boss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 62], "content_span": [63, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289109-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FA Women's Cup Final, Pre-match\nWest Ham asked the Premier League that their men's fixture against Southampton at the London Stadium be moved from a 15:00 kick-off to 12:30 so fans attending that match could also make it to Wembley to watch the final. The request was denied by the Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289110-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FAI Cup\nThe 2019 FAI Cup (known as the Extra.ie FAI Cup for sponsorship purposes) was the 99th edition of the annual Republic of Ireland's cup competition. Forty teams participated in the competition, including all teams from the Premier Division and First Division. The competition began on 19 April 2019 with the first of five rounds and ended on 3 November 2019 with the final at the Aviva Stadium in Dublin, a nominally neutral venue, which has hosted the final since 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289110-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FAI Cup\nThe defending champions were Premier Division side Dundalk, after they defeated Cork City 2\u20131 in the previous final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289110-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FAI Cup\nShamrock Rovers won the final 4\u20132 against Dundalk for their 25th title. Because Rovers qualified for the Europa League through the Premier Division, the fourth-place team in the Premier Division, Derry City, earned qualification for 2020\u201321 edition of the UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289110-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FAI Cup, Qualifying round\nThe draw for the qualifying round was made on 20 March 2019 at the National Sports Campus in Abbotstown. Former Republic of Ireland international Keith Fahey and FAI Vice President Noel Fitzroy performed the draw, with representatives from the clubs in attendance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 30], "content_span": [31, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289110-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FAI Cup, Qualifying round\nA total of 20 teams were in the qualifying round draw: 16 intermediate teams and four junior teams. Four teams received byes into the first round of the competition: Cobh Wanderers, Crumlin United, Letterkenny Rovers and Killester Donnycarney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 30], "content_span": [31, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289110-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FAI Cup, Qualifying round\nAll ties were set to be played the week ending Sunday 21 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 30], "content_span": [31, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289110-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FAI Cup, First round\nThe draw for the first round took place on 8 July 2019 at the Aviva Stadium in Dublin, and was hosted by Con Murphy. National under-21 team manager Stephen Kenny and former Derry City manager Gavin Dykes performed the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 25], "content_span": [26, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289110-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FAI Cup, First round\nA total of 32 teams were in the first round draw: 20 teams from the Premier Division and First Division, four teams who received byes from the qualifying round and eight winners of the qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 25], "content_span": [26, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289110-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FAI Cup, First round\nAll ties were set to be played the week ending Sunday 11 August, except the tie between Athlone Town and Longford Town, which was postponed to 13 August due to an unplayable pitch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 25], "content_span": [26, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289110-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FAI Cup, Second round\nThe draw for the second round took place on 12 August 2019 and was broadcast live on the .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 26], "content_span": [27, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289110-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FAI Cup, Second round\nAll ties were played on the week ending Sunday 25 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 26], "content_span": [27, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289110-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 FAI Cup, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the semi-finals took place on 12 September 2019 and was broadcast live on Morning Ireland on RT\u00c9 Radio 1. Both ties were played on the weekend ending 29 September and were shown live on RT\u00c92.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 25], "content_span": [26, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289111-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FAI Cup Final\nThe 2019 FAI Cup Final, known as the 2019 Extra.ie FAI Cup Final for sponsorship reasons, was the final match of the 2019 FAI Cup, the national association football cup of the Republic of Ireland. The match took place on Sunday 3 November 2019 at the Aviva Stadium in Dublin, and was contested by defending champions Dundalk and Shamrock Rovers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289111-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FAI Cup Final\nThe match was broadcast live on RT\u00c9 Two and RT\u00c9 Two HD in the Republic of Ireland, and via the RT\u00c9 Player worldwide with commentary from George Hamilton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289111-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FAI Cup Final, Route to the final, Dundalk\nDundalk entered the FAI Cup at the first round as a League of Ireland Premier Division club and holders of the FAI Cup following their victory the previous year. They played their first match away at the Munster Senior League's Cobh Wanderers. At St Colman's Park, Dundalk won 1\u20130 due to a goal from Georgie Kelly. The next round they were drawn with fellow Premier Division Derry City away. At the Ryan McBride Brandywell Stadium in Northern Ireland, Dundalk won 3\u20132 after extra time with goals from Daniel Kelly, Daniel Cleary and Georgie Kelly. In the quarter final they played Premier Division Waterford away at the Waterford Regional Sports Centre. Dundalk won 3\u20131 with a hat-trick from Daniel Kelly. In the semi-final they played Premier Division Sligo Rovers and won away at The Showgrounds after a 1\u20130 with a goal from Michael Duffy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 889]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289111-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FAI Cup Final, Route to the final, Shamrock Rovers\nShamrock Rovers was also a Premier Division club and also started in the first round. They were drawn at home against Premier Division Finn Harps. They won 1\u20130 at their Tallaght Stadium due to a goal from Daniel Carr. In the next round they played First Division Drogheda United at home. Shamrock Rovers won 4\u20130 with goals from Gary O'Neill, Aaron Greene, Aaron McEneff, Sean Kavanagh. In the next round they played away at First Division Galway United. At Eamonn Deacy Park, Shamrock Rovers won due to goals from Greene and Lee Grace. In the semi-finals they played Bohemians away at Dalymount Park. Rovers won 2\u20130 due to goals from Graham Burke and Greene to reach the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 55], "content_span": [56, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289111-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FAI Cup Final, Prematch\nDundalk went into the final looking to retain the FAI Cup and win a treble of Irish domestic trophies after having won the 2019 League of Ireland Premier Division and 2019 League of Ireland Cup and be the first club since Derry City to win a treble in the Republic of Ireland. Shamrock Rovers, despite being the most historically successful club in the FAI Cup, were looking to win the FAI Cup for the first time since 1987 when they left their old Glenmalure Park stadium. This became known as the \"Milltown Curse\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289111-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FAI Cup Final, Prematch\nDundalk's Chris Shields was ruled out of the match due to suspension for picking up eight yellow cards during the season, which was described as a \"clerical error\" due to Dundalk losing track of the number of bookings during the season. Dundalk appealed the one match ban to the Football Association of Ireland but the appeal was rejected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289111-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 FAI Cup Final, Prematch\nShamrock Rovers fans marched to the final behind a white horse as part of a tradition that dated back to the 1940s where fans decided to march to Dalymount Park, Dublin where the FAI Cup final used to be held behind a white horse. They marched behind a white horse due to a lack of other available or affordable forms of transportation at the time. The white horse was also suggested as a reference to the 1923 FA Cup Final in England which was known as the \"White Horse Final\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289111-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FAI Cup Final, Prematch\nThe match was attended by the President of Ireland, Michael D. Higgins. Prior to the match, the Republic of Ireland's national anthem \"Amhr\u00e1n na bhFiann\" was played. Controversy arose after Shamrock Rovers' Northern Irish goalkeeper Alan Mannus refused to turn to face the flag of the Republic of Ireland during the anthem. Mannus stated he did not intend to offend and only did not turn towards it because he is not Irish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289111-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 FAI Cup Final, Prematch\nSome Irish football fans argued that he was disrespecting the flag, but his actions were defended by others and compared with County Londonderry-born Republic of Ireland international James McClean who had done a similar action several times during the playing of the English and Northern Irish anthem \"God Save the Queen\" in the past. Players from the Northern Irish club Cliftonville had done a similar action by bowing their head during \"God Save the Queen\" at the Irish Cup final in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289111-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FAI Cup Final, Match summary\nThe match remained scoreless until the 89th minute. In the 89th minute, Aaron Greene was taken down by Dundalk goalkeeper Gary Rogers with Aaron McEneff scoring the penalty to put Shamrock Rovers into the lead. In injury time, Michael Duffy scored on the half volley to send the game into extra time. The match went to a penalty shoot-out which took place in front of the Shamrock Rovers fans after Rovers won the coin toss to decide sides. Duffy hit the crossbar and Shamrock Rovers' Joey O'Brien had scored his.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289111-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 FAI Cup Final, Match summary\nDundalk's Cleary then took their third penalty but it was saved by Mannus. Greg Bolger then scored for Shamrock Rovers before both teams scored with their fourth penalties with Gary O\u2019Neill scoring the winning penalty, which resulted in Shamrock Rovers winning the match 4\u20132 on penalties. It was Shamrock Rovers's first FAI Cup win since 1987. The Irish Independent singled Mannus out for praise post-match for his goalkeeping performance during the match and also stated he should be remembered for the match, not for his choices pre-match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289112-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FAM Youth Championship\nThe 2019 FAM Youth Championship was the 8th season of the FAM Youth Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289112-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FAM Youth Championship, Teams\n9 teams participated in this year's Youth Championship. New Radiant prepared for the championship but they were unable to take part since they were suspended from all football activities due to financial reasons. On 30 January 2019, United Victory participated in the championship with New Radiant U21 players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289112-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FAM Youth Championship, Teams, Personnel\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, 45], "content_span": [46, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289112-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FAM Youth Championship, Group stage\nFrom each group, the top two teams will be advanced for the Semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289112-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FAM Youth Championship, Knockout phase\nThe semi-finals were scheduled to play on 15 February and the final on 18 February 2020. Due to a cricket series \u2013 India-Maldives Friendship Cricket Series, organized by Ministry of Youth, Sports, and Community Empowerment, Cricket Board of Maldives and India Embassy in Maldives, scheduled to start on 15 February, in which Cabinet of the Maldives participates, Football Association of Maldives announced that the semi-finals will be played on 16 February and the final match will be played on 19 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289113-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FAMAS Awards\nThe 67th Filipino Academy of Movie Arts and Sciences (FAMAS) Awards was an awarding ceremony given by the Filipino Academy of Movie Arts and Sciences (FAMAS), an organization composed of prize-winning writers and movie columnists, giving recognition to the Philippine mainstream and independent films, actors, actresses, directors and production staffs for their achievements in the year 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289113-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FAMAS Awards\nThe awards night was held at the Meralco Theater, Pasig, Metro Manila on Sunday, April 28, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289113-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FAMAS Awards\nThe film Gusto Kita With All My Hypothalamus garnered the most wins with three including Best Picture and Best Director. Nadine Lustre took home the Best Actress award for the film Never Not Love You, while Eddie Garcia and Victor Neri shared the Best Actor trophy for their respective films: ML and A Short History Of A Few Bad Things.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289114-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FAO League\nThe 2019 FAO League was the tenth season of the FAO League, the top Odia professional football league, since its establishment in 2010. Sunrise Club were the defending champions whereas Bidanasi Club were relegated from the Diamond League last season and played in the Gold League in the 2019 edition. The FAO League is annually organised by the Football Association of Odisha (FAO), the official football governing body of Odisha, India. The regular season started on 24 July. Sunrise Club were the defending champions, ending up at the top with sixteen points having a positive goal difference of fifteen. Odisha Police ended their 2018 FAO League stage at the runners-up spot with sixteen points, having a positive goal difference of nine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289114-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FAO League\nOdisha Sports Hostel won their maiden title ending up at the top with sixteen points having a positive goal difference of seven. Rising Student's Club ended up as the runners up with fifteen points. In the Gold Division, Rovers Club topped the table with eleven points having a positive goal difference of nine. Rising Star Club ended their group stage campaign with eight points having a positive goal difference of one. In the Silver Division, SAI-STC and Club N Club qualified for the Silver Play-Off. However, Club N Club failed to put up a team for the play-off, hence SAI-STC were crowned as the champions of the Silver Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289114-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FAO League, League Stage, Diamond League, League Table\nNote: Top four teams of Diamond League would qualify for the FAO Super Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289114-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FAO League, League Stage, Gold League\nNote: Top three teams of the Gold League would qualify for the FAO Super Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 42], "content_span": [43, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289115-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FAO Super Cup\nThe 2018 FAO Super Cup will be the second edition of the FAO Super Cup, the main club knockout football competition of Odisha, India. The competition will beging in October 2019 and will conclude in the same month. The entire tournament took place at one venue i.e. the Barabati Stadium in Cuttack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289115-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FAO Super Cup\nThe competition features teams from the Silver, Gold and Diamond competitions of the FAO League, the premier state level football league in Odisha, India. The top four teams from the Diamond League, top three from Silver League, and the winners of the Silver League qualify for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289115-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FAO Super Cup, Teams\nA total of 8 teams participated in the competition. Sunrise Club emerged as the champions whereas beating Rising Student's Club 2\u20131 in the final. Top four teams from the Diamond Division, three from the Gold Division, and the winners of Silver Division will qualify for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289115-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FAO Super Cup, Teams, Dates\nOn 9 May 2018, the Football Association of Odisha announced the schedule and full format of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289116-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FBD Insurance League\nThe 2019 FBD Insurance League (sometimes referred to as the Connacht SFL) was an inter-county Gaelic football competition in the province of Connacht. All five Connacht county teams participated, but there are no college or university teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289116-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FBD Insurance League\nAfter the 2018 tournament featured a crowded schedule and several postponements due to bad weather, the 2019 tournament was a straight knockout with teams playing just one or two games (as opposed to 4 games in the previous year).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289116-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FBD Insurance League\nThe competition featured an historic penalty shootout in which Mayo defeated Leitrim by 4-1 to advance to the semi-final after the teams could not be separated following seventy minutes of play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289116-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FBD Insurance League, Competition format\nThe competition was a straight knockout. Drawn games went a penalty shoot-out without the playing of extra-time. This occurred in Mayo v Leitrim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289117-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Aktobe season\nThe 2018 FC Aktobe season was the 25th successive season that the club playing in the Kazakhstan Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Kazakhstan. Aktobe finished the season in 12th and were relegated from the Premier League for the first time. In the Kazakhstan Cup, they were knocked out by Irtysh Pavlodar at the Last 16 stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289117-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Aktobe season, Season events\nOn 9 January, Aleksandr Sednyov was appointed as the club's manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289117-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Aktobe season, Season events\nOn 18 February, Aktobe were deducted 6-points by the Football Federation of Kazakhstan due to debts owed to former player Dele Adeleye. On 14 March, Aktobe were handed a further six point deduction for unpaid debts to former player Nemanja Nikoli\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289117-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Aktobe season, Season events, New Contracts\nOn 3 January, Marcos Pizzelli extended his contract with Aktobe until the end of 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289117-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Aktobe season, Season events, New Contracts\nOn 4 January, Sa\u0161a Marjanovi\u0107 extended his contract with Aktobe until the end of 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289117-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Aktobe season, Season events, New Contracts\nOn 9 January, Aslanbek Kakimov extended his contract with Aktobe until the end of 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289117-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Aktobe season, Season events, New Contracts\nOn 11 January, Vitali Volkov extended his contract with Aktobe until the end of 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289117-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Aktobe season, Season events, New Contracts\nOn 25 January, Milan Radin extended his contract with Aktobe until the end of 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289117-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Aktobe season, Season events, New Contracts\nOn 30 January, Hrvoje Mili\u010devi\u0107 extended his contract with Aktobe until the end of 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289118-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Astana season\nThe 2019 FC Astana season was the eleventh successive season that Astana played in the Kazakhstan Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Kazakhstan. Astana defended their Kazakhstan Premier League title, having won their fifth title the previous season. Domestically, Astana defeated FC Kairat in the season-opening Super Cup and reached the Last 16 of the Kazakhstan Cup. In Europe, Astana entered the Champions League at the First qualifying round and were defeated by CFR Cluj, dropping into the Europa League where they reached the Group Stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289118-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Astana season, Season events\nWhen announcing their pre-season training camp dates, Astana also announced that Roman Hryhorchuk would return to lead the team after missing the second half of the 2018 season due to family reasons. On 28 January, Pedro Henrique's loan ended early and he returned to PAOK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289118-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Astana season, Season events\nOn 22 February, Astana announced the signing of Luka \u0160imunovi\u0107 on a three-year contract from Shakhtyor Soligorsk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289118-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Astana season, Season events\nOn 26 February, Astana announced the signing of Dorin Rotariu on a four-year contract from Club Brugge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289118-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Astana season, Season events\nOn 17 June, Astana announced the signing of R\u00fanar M\u00e1r Sigurj\u00f3nsson on a free transfer after his contract with Grasshoppers had expired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289118-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Astana season, Season events\nOn 2 July, Astana announced the signing of Ndombe Mubele on a one-year loan deal from Toulouse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289118-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Astana season, Season events\nOn 1 August, after their 4-1 victory over Santa Coloma in the UEFA Europa League Second Round Qualifier, Astana announced that Marin Ani\u010di\u0107 had moved to Konyaspor for an undisclosed fee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289118-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Astana season, Season events\nOn 3 August, Astana announced the signing of \u017darko Toma\u0161evi\u0107 on a free transfer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289118-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Astana season, Season events\nOn 26 August, Astana announced that Antonio Rukavina had extended his contract with the club until 2021, and that Marin Tomasov had extended his contract until 2022.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289118-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Astana season, Season events\nOn 20 December, Ivan Mayewski signed a new 1+1-year contract with Astana, whilst the club confirmed that Yevgeny Postnikov had also extended his contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289118-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Astana season, Squad, On loan\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289119-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Atyrau season\nThe 2019 FC Atyrau season was the 19th successive season that the club played in the Kazakhstan Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Kazakhstan. They reached the Kazakhstan Cup Final for the third year in succession, losing to FC Kaisar, whilst finishing 11th in the Kazakhstan Premier League, being relegated for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289119-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Atyrau season, Season events\nOn 27 April, Viktor Kumykov left his role as manager of Atyrau by mutual consent, with Kuanysh Kuandulov being appointed as caretaker manager. Oleg Dulub was appointed as the club's permanent manager on 3 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289120-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Bunyodkor season\nThe 2019 season was FC Bunyodkor's 13th season in the Uzbek League in Uzbekistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289120-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Bunyodkor 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-00289120-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Bunyodkor 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-00289120-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Bunyodkor 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-00289120-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Bunyodkor 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-00289121-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Cincinnati season\nThe 2019 FC Cincinnati season was the club's debut season in Major League Soccer (MLS), and the fourth season of a team playing under the FC Cincinnati brand after three years in the lower-division United Soccer League (since renamed the USL Championship). The club finished with a league worst 6\u201322\u20136 record in their inaugural MLS season, setting a league record for the most goals given up with 75. FC Cincinnati missed the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289121-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Cincinnati season, Club, Coaching staff\nHead coach Alan Koch was fired on May 7, 2019, after a 2\u20137\u20132 start to the 2019 season. Yoann Damet served as interim coach until Ron Jans was named head coach on August 3, 2019, becoming the third head coach since the club moved to the MLS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289122-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Dallas season\nThe 2019 FC Dallas season was the club's 24th season in Major League Soccer, the top tier of American soccer. FC Dallas also participated in the U.S. Open Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289122-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Dallas season, Club, Roster\nAs of August 9, 2019. 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, 35], "content_span": [36, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289122-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Dallas 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, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289123-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Edmonton season\nThe 2019 FC Edmonton season was the eighth season in the club's history, as well as the first season in Canadian Premier League history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289123-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Edmonton season, Overview\nAfter finishing in seventh place in the 2017 NASL season, FC Edmonton discontinued professional operations, but kept their academy. Co -owner Tom Fath stated that the franchise had proved to be unsustainable in the Edmonton market, and the decision was reinforced by the uncertainty surrounding the status of the NASL. Despite these events, there was speculation that the still under construction Canadian Premier League was looking at Edmonton as a potential market. That speculation proved to be correct on June 8, 2018, when it was announced that Edmonton had came out of hiatus and officially joined the new league. A new logo was revealed, and it was announced that the team would continue to play at Clarke Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289123-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Edmonton season, Overview\nOn July 3, 2018, Jeff Paulus was named head coach. He had formerly been an assistant coach for the first team and technical director of the academy. On November 28, FC Edmonton announced their first two signings as members of the CPL, academy graduate Allan Zebie, who played for the team in 2017, and former Vancouver Whitecap Randy Edwini-Bonsu, who played minor soccer in Edmonton as a child. The Eddies signed more academy graduates, including Bruno Zebie, Ajeej Sarkaria and Ajay Khabra. On December 13, South Korean midfielder Son Yong-chan was signed, Edmonton's first international signing as a Canadian Premier League club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289123-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Edmonton season, Transfers, In, Draft picks\nFC Edmonton selected the following players in the 2018 CPL\u2013U Sports Draft on November 12, 2018. Draft picks are not automatically signed to the team roster. Only those who are signed to a contract will be listed as transfers in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289124-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Honka season\nThe 2019 season was FC Honka's 11th season in the Veikkausliiga. On 3 November 2019, Honka secured a spot in the Europa League 2020\u201321 first round of qualification by winning IFK Mariehamn 3 - 1 on aggregate in the European competition play-off finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289124-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Honka 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, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289124-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Honka season, Competitions, Veikkausliiga\nThe 2019 Veikkausliiga season begins on 3 April 2019 and ends on 3 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289125-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Irtysh Pavlodar season\nThe 2019 FC Irtysh Pavlodar season was the 28th successive season that the club will play in the Kazakhstan Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Kazakhstan. After narrowly avoiding relegation the previous season, Irtysh also participate in the Kazakhstan Cup, reaching the Quarterfinal's before defeat to Kaisar, and finishing 8th in the Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289125-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Irtysh Pavlodar season, Season events\nAt the end of April, rumors that manager Dimitar Dimitrov had left his role where downplayed by the club, however Dimitrov and his coaching staff subsequently went AWOL for Irtysh Pavlodar's match against Zhetysu on 1 May. The following day, 2 May, Dimitrov and his staff where summoned by clubs leadership to explain their absence, an explanation that wasn't demean valid by the club but he was suspended over the matter, with Sergey Klimov being appointed as caretaker manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289125-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Irtysh Pavlodar season, Season events\nOn 7 June, Milan Milanovi\u0107 was announced as the club's new manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289125-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Irtysh Pavlodar season, Season events\nOn 21 November, Irtysh signed Milo\u0161 Stamenkovi\u0107, Carlos Fonseca, Arman Kenesov, Serikbol Kapanov, Alexander Zarutsky and Dmitry Schmidt to new contracts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289125-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Irtysh Pavlodar season, Season events\nOn 29 November, Irtysh announced that Arman Nusip and Rafkat Aslan had signed new contracts with the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289126-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Istiklol season\nThe FC Istiklol 2019 season was Istiklol's eleventh Tajik League season. They were defending Tajik League and Cup Champions, whilst also participating in the Tajik Supercup, AFC Champions League and AFC Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289126-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Istiklol season\nIstiklol defended their Tajik League and Tajik Cup titles, whilst also winning the Tajik Supercup. In continental competitions they were knocked out of the AFC Champions League at the Preliminary round 2 stage by AGMK, and then at the group stage of the AFC Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289126-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Istiklol season, Season Events\nOn 3 December 2018, Khakim Fuzailov was announced as Istiklol's new manager. On 27 June, Fuzailov resigned as manager after Istiklol to progress from the group stages of the AFC Cup, with Alisher Tukhtaev being appointed as Caretaker Manager in his place. On 2 July, Istiklol parted company with Jalil Kimsanov, Mihajlo Caki\u0107 and Ruslan Koryan by mutual consent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289126-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Istiklol season, Season Events\nOn 19 July, Fatkhullo Fatkhuloev moved to Uzbekistan Super League club FK Buxoro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289126-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Istiklol season, Season Events\nOn 24 July, Tabrezi Davlatmir and Ehson Panjshanbe signed new contracts with Istiklol, keeping them at the club until the end of 2020. The following day, 25 July, Bakhtior Kalandarov was released by mutual consent. On 26 July, Amirbek Juraboev left Istiklol to join Navbahor Namangan of the Uzbekistan Super League on a free transfer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289126-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Istiklol season, Season Events\nOn 31 July, Istiklol announced the signings of Dzhamshed Rakhmonov, Khurshed-Timur Dzhuraev and Salam Ashurmamdov to two-year contracts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289127-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Kairat season\nThe 2019 FC Kairat season was the 9th 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 2nd place, 1 point behind champions Astana, reached the Second Qualifying Round of the Europa League, where runners-up in the Kazakhstan Super Cup were knocked out of the Kazakhstan Cup at the Quarterfinal stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289127-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Kairat season, Season events\nOn 25 November 2018, Kairat presented Aleksey Shpilevsky as their new manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289127-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Kairat season, Season events\nFollowing the conclusion of the season, on 14 November, Aderinsola Eseola signed a new two-year contract with Kairat, whilst Sergey Keyler extended his contract for another two season with the option of an additional third season. On 25 November, Kairat announced that both Aybol Abiken and Stas Pokatilov had both signed new three-year contracts with the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289127-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Kairat 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, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289128-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Kaisar season\nThe 2019 FC Kaisar season is the club's third season back in the Kazakhstan Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Kazakhstan, and 22nd in total. Kaisar will also participate in the Kazakhstan Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289129-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Okzhetpes season\nThe 2019 FC Okzhetpes season is the club's first season back in the Kazakhstan Premier League following their relegation at the end of the 2017 season, and 28th season in total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289130-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Ordabasy season\nThe 2019 FC Ordabasy season was the 17th successive season that the club played in the Kazakhstan Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Kazakhstan. Ordabasy finished the season in 3rd place, reached the Semifinal of the Kazakhstan Cup and were knocked out of the Europa League at the Second qualifying round stage by Mlad\u00e1 Boleslav.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289130-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Ordabasy season, Season Events, New Contracts\nOn 13 January, Timur Dosmagambetov signed a new contract with Ordabasy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289131-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Ryukyu season\nThe 2019 FC Ryukyu season is the club's first season in the J2 League after winning promotion in the 2018 J3 League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289132-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Seoul season\nThe 2019 season was FC Seoul's 36th season in the K League 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 82]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289132-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Seoul season, Players, Out on loan and military service\nNote: Where a player has not declared an international allegiance, nation is determined by place of birth. \u203b In: Transferred from other teams in the middle of the season. \u203b Out: Transferred to other teams in the middle of the season. \u203b Discharged: Transferred from Sanjgu Sangmu or Ansan Mugunghwa for military service in the middle of the season (registered in 2019 season). \u203b Conscripted: Transferred to Sangju Sangmu or Ansan Mugunghwa for military service after the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 63], "content_span": [64, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289133-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Shakhter Karagandy season\nThe 2019 FC Shakhter Karagandy season was the 29th successive season that the club will play in the Kazakhstan Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Kazakhstan. Shakhter finished the season in 9th position whilst they were knocked out of the Kazakhstan Cup at the last 16 stage by FC Taraz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289133-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Shakhter Karagandy season, Season events\nOn 20 June, Shakhter Karagandy extended their contract with Donjet Shkodra until the end of the 2020 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289133-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Shakhter Karagandy season, Season events\nOn 9 July, Shakhter announced the signing of Reginaldo from Kuk\u00ebsi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289134-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Sheriff Tiraspol season\nThe 2019 season was FC Sheriff Tiraspol's 23rd season, and their 22nd in the Divizia Na\u0163ional\u0103, the top-flight of Moldovan football. Sheriff defended their Divizia Na\u0163ional\u0103 title, winning it for the 18th time whilst also winning the 2018\u201319 Moldovan Cup and progressing to the Quarterfinal stage of the 2019\u201320 Moldovan Cup that will take place in the 2020 season. In Europe, Sheriff were knocked out of the Champions League by Saburtalo Tbilisi in the First Qualifying Round and then by AIK at the Third Qualifying Round of the Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289134-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Sheriff Tiraspol season, Season events\nOn 27 April, Goran Sabli\u0107 resigned as manager, with Zoran Zeki\u0107 returning as manager on 30 April. On 14 November, Cristiano extended his contract with Sheriff Tiraspol, which was due to end at the end of the 2020 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289134-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289135-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Taraz season\nThe 2019 FC Taraz season was the club's first season back in the Kazakhstan Premier League following their relegation at the end of the 2017 season, and 28th season in total. Taraz finished the season in 10th position, qualifying for a two-legged Relegation play-off against FC Akzhayik. After a 0-0 draw in the first leg away in Oral, Taraz won the second leg 3-1 to retain their place in the Kazakhstan Premier League for the 2020 season. Taraz also participated in the Kazakhstan Cup, where they were defeated by FC Ordabasy in the Quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289136-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Tobol season\nThe 2019 FC Tobol season was the 21st successive season that the club played in the Kazakhstan Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Kazakhstan. Tobol finished the season in 4th position, reached the Semifinals of the Kazakhstan Cup and were knocked out of the Europa League at the First Qualifying Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289136-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Tobol season, Season Events\nOn 31 December 2018, Vladimir Gazzayev was appointed as the club's new manager. Gazzayev resigned as manager on 21 July, after Tobol were eliminated from the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League by Jeunesse Esch. On 22 July, Nurbol Zhumaskaliyev was appointed as Caretaker manager of Tobol.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289136-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Tobol season, Season Events, New Contracts\nOn 22 November 2018, Tobol signed new two-year contracts with Sultan Busurmanov, Sultan Abilgazy, Nika Kvekveskiri and Jaba Kankava.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289136-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Tobol season, Season Events, New Contracts\nOn 14 December 2018, Azat Nurgaliev signed a new one-year contract with Tobol, with Samat Zharynbetov signing a new two-year contract on 27 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289136-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Tobol season, Season Events, New Contracts\nOn 13 January 2019, Grigori Sartakov signed a new two-year contract with Tobol, whilst Viktor Dmitrenko and Art\u016bras \u017dulpa both signed new one-year contracts on 18 January 2019. Aleksandr Zhukov signed a new one-year contract with Tobol on 26 January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289136-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Tobol 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, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289137-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Tokyo season\nThe 2019 FC Tokyo season is their 8th consecutive season in J1 League after finishing the 2018 season in 6th place. They will also compete in the J.League Cup and Emperor's Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289137-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Tokyo season, Squad\nAs of 16 February 2019. 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, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289138-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Tucson season\nThe 2019 FC Tucson season was the club's eighth season of existence and their first full professional season in USL League One. They previously played in the Premier Development League (USL League Two as of 2019) and won four divisional titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289138-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Tucson season, Competitions, U.S. Open Cup\nDue to their ownership by a more advanced level professional club, FC Tucson was one of 13 teams expressly forbidden from entering the Cup competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 50], "content_span": [51, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289139-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FC Zhetysu season\nThe 2019 FC Zhetysu season was the club's second season back in the Kazakhstan Premier League following their relegation at the end of the 2016 season, and 22nd season in total. Zhetysu finished the season in 5th position, whilst being knockout out of the Kazakhstan Cup at the Last 16 stage by Atyrau.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289140-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FEI European Championships\nThe 2019 FEI European Championships was held in Rotterdam, Netherlands, from 19 to 25 August 2019. Competitions was held in three disciplines; jumping, dressage and para-dressage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289141-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FF Cup\nThe 2019 Fiji Football Cup (FF Cup) was the 29th edition of FF Cup. The tournament started with the eight participants from the 2019 Fiji Premier League. The tournamnet was won by Nadi who defeated Suva in the final by 2-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [11, 11], "content_span": [12, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289141-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FF Cup, Teams\nThe eight teams from 2019 Fiji Premier League participated in the 2019 FF Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [13, 18], "content_span": [19, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289141-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FF Cup, Group Stage\nThe 8 teams were split in two groups with four teams each. The top two advanced to semifinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [13, 24], "content_span": [25, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289142-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup\nThe 2019 FFA Cup was the sixth season of the FFA Cup, the main national soccer knockout cup competition in Australia. 32 teams contested the competition proper (from the Round of 32), including 10 of the 11 A-League teams (with Western United not competing in their inaugural season) and 21 Football Federation Australia (FFA) member federation teams determined through individual state qualifying rounds, as well as the reigning National Premier Leagues Champion (Campbelltown City from South Australia).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289142-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup, Teams\nA total of 32 teams participated in the 2019 FFA Cup competition proper, ten of which are from the A-League, one the 2018 National Premier Leagues Champion (Campbelltown City), and the remaining 21 teams from FFA member federations, as determined by the qualifying rounds. The two new expansion A-League clubs \u2013 Western United and Macarthur FC \u2013 were deemed ineligible for the competition this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 19], "content_span": [20, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289142-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup, Teams\nA-League clubs represent the highest level in the Australian league system, whereas member federation clubs come from Level 2 and below. The current season tier of member federation clubs is shown in parentheses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 19], "content_span": [20, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289142-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup, Prize fund\nThe prize fund was unchanged from the previous three years' events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 24], "content_span": [25, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289142-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup, Preliminary rounds\nFFA member federations teams compete in various state-based preliminary rounds to win one of 21 places in the competition proper (Round of 32). All Australian clubs were eligible to enter the qualifying process through their respective FFA member federation, however only one team per club is permitted entry in the competition. The preliminary rounds operate within a consistent national structure whereby club entry into the competition is staggered in each state/territory, ultimately leading to round 7 with the winning clubs from that round gaining direct entry into the round of 32. The format for Queensland was restructured in 2019, whereby the Central & Northern Queensland region competes for one place, and South East Queensland competes for three places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 32], "content_span": [33, 799]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289142-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup, Preliminary rounds\nThe first matches of the preliminary rounds began in February 2019, and the final matches of the preliminary rounds scheduled was completed in June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 32], "content_span": [33, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289142-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup, Round of 32\nThe Round of 32 draw took place on 26 June 2019, with match information confirmed on 28 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 25], "content_span": [26, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289142-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup, Round of 32\nThe lowest ranked side that qualified for this round were Coomera Colts. They were the only level 4 team left in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 25], "content_span": [26, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289142-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup, Round of 16\nThe Round of 16 draw took place on 7 August and match information was confirmed on 9 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 25], "content_span": [26, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289142-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup, Round of 16\nThe lowest ranked side that qualified for this round were Moreland Zebras. They were the only level 3 team left in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 25], "content_span": [26, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289142-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe Quarter-finals draw took place on 28 August, with match details announced the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 28], "content_span": [29, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289142-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe lowest ranked club that qualified for this round were Moreland Zebras. They were the only level 3 team left in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 28], "content_span": [29, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289142-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup, Semi-finals\nThe semi-finals draw took place on 18 September, with match details confirmed the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 25], "content_span": [26, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289142-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup, Semi-finals\nThe lowest ranked side that qualified for this round were the Brisbane Strikers. They were the only level 2 team remaining in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 25], "content_span": [26, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289142-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup, Broadcasting rights\nThe live television rights for the competition were held by the subscription network Fox Sports. From the Round of 32 onwards all matches were broadcast online on the My Football Live app. Fox Sports also broadcast the following 10 games live:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 33], "content_span": [34, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289143-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup Final\nThe 2019 FFA Cup Final was the sixth final of the FFA Cup, Australia's main football cup competition and the final match of the 2019 FFA Cup. The match was contested between Adelaide United and Melbourne City, and was held at Coopers Stadium, home of Adelaide United. The home side, Adelaide, defeated City by four goals to nil and recorded their third FFA Cup title, and second in succession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289143-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup Final, Road to the final\nAdelaide United entered the tournament as the reigning champions, having defeated Sydney FC 2\u20131 in the 2018 Cup Final at home. The Reds were drawn away to high-profile NPL VIC club Melbourne Knights and won 5\u20132, with Ben Halloran's two goals in that match helping to keep the Knights at bay. In the Round of 16, Adelaide travelled to Brisbane to take on Olympic FC and were in danger of becoming the second A-League club to lose to an NPL club in this year's tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289143-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup Final, Road to the final\nOlympic FC drew level with Adelaide twice in the match, before George Blackwood's 84th minute penalty conversion got the Reds over the line. United then met A-League clubs for the remainder of the cup, winning 1\u20130 against Newcastle Jets at home in the Quarter-final. A come-from-behind Semi-final victory over the Central Coast Mariners was sealed by to a controversial 90th minute goal scored by ex-City footballer Riley McGree. Adelaide United became the first A-League club to qualify for their fourth FFA Cup Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289143-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup Final, Road to the final\nMelbourne City's opponent in the round of 32, was NPL SA club Campbelltown City in Adelaide. Goals from Jamie Maclaren and Craig Noone saw Melbourne City victorious by a margin of 3\u20131. In the round of 16, Melbourne City headed over to Sydney to take NPL NSW club Marconi Stallions. After Jamie Maclaren scored the opening goal in the second minute, Craig Noone would score Melbourne City's second off a flick from Connor Metcalfe to give Melbourne City a 2\u20130 lead. A late consolation goal wasn't enough for the Stallions, with the final scoreline reading 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289143-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup Final, Road to the final\nThe club met Western Sydney Wanderers in the Quarter-finals for the second time in three years and were dominant in a 3\u20130 win. In their Semi-final tie, City traveled to take on the Brisbane Strikers at Perry Park. Despite conceding the first goal inside the opening five minutes, City won the match 5\u20131. Striker Jamie Maclaren scored in each match, and entered the final with six goals to his name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289143-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup Final, Pre-match, Venue\nFor the second consecutive year, the host venue was randomly drawn following the conclusion of the semi-finals. Adelaide's home ground of Coopers Stadium was drawn, making it the third time the venue had hosted the showpiece event and for the second consecutive year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 36], "content_span": [37, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289143-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup Final, Pre-match, Analysis\nAdelaide entered the match as the reigning cup champions and made their fourth appearance in the event. Success would provide the club with their third title, having won the cup in 2014 and 2018. City meanwhile have reached the final once before, in 2016 when they defeated Sydney FC at home to claim the senior men's team first piece of silverware.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289143-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup Final, Pre-match, Analysis\nThe two teams met three days prior in Round 2 of the A-League where City came out on top 2\u20131 with Jamie Maclaren scoring a brace and Riley McGree scoring Adelaide's only goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289143-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup Final, Match, Details\nAssistant referees:Matthew CreamWilson BrownFourth official:Josh MannellaAdditional assistant referees:Shaun EvansAdam Kersey", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289144-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup preliminary rounds\nThe 2019 FFA Cup preliminary rounds were the qualifying competition to decide 21 of the 32 teams to take part in the 2019 FFA Cup Round of 32, along with the 10 A-League clubs and reigning National Premier Leagues champion, Campbelltown City. The preliminary rounds operated within a consistent national structure whereby club entry into the competition was staggered in each federation, with the winning clubs from Round 7 of the preliminary rounds in each member federation gaining entry into the Round of 32. All Australian clubs were eligible to enter the qualifying process through their respective FFA member federation, however only one team per club was permitted entry in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289144-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup preliminary rounds, Schedule\nThe number of fixtures for each round, and the match dates for each Federation, were as follows.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289144-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup preliminary rounds, Format\nThe preliminary rounds structures were as follows, and refer to the different levels in the unofficial Australian association football league system:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289144-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup preliminary rounds, Format\nNote: Campbelltown City did not participate in the South Australian qualifying rounds, as they had already qualified into the FFA Cup as 2018 National Premier Leagues champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289144-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FFA Cup preliminary rounds, Format\nNote: A-League Youth teams playing in their respective federation leagues were specifically excluded from the preliminary rounds as their respective Senior A-League clubs were already part of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289145-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FFAS Senior League\nThe 2019 FFAS Senior League is the 39th edition of the FFAS Senior League, the top football league of American Samoa organized by the Football Federation American Samoa. This season started on 23 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289145-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FFAS Senior League, League table\nRest of season cancelled due to measles outbreak and irrelevance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289146-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FFSA season\nThe 2019 FFSA season was the seventh season under the competition format in Football South Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289146-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FFSA season, 2019 National Premier Leagues South Australia\nThe 2019 National Premier Leagues South Australia season was played over 22 rounds, beginning on 22 February with the regular season concluding on 17 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 63], "content_span": [64, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289146-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FFSA season, 2019 South Australian State League 1\nPromotion to the 2020 NPL was awarded to the Premiers (highest placed team during the regular season), as well as the Champions (winner of the Grand Final).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 54], "content_span": [55, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289146-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FFSA season, 2019 South Australian State League 2\nPromotion to the 2020 State League 1 was awarded to the Premiers (highest placed team during the regular season), as well as the Champions (winner of the Grand Final).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 54], "content_span": [55, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289146-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FFSA season, 2019 Women's NPL\nThe highest tier domestic football competition in South Australia for women was known for sponsorship reasons as the PS4 Women's National Premier League. This was the fourth season of the NPL format. The 8 teams played a triple round-robin for a total of 21 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 34], "content_span": [35, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289146-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FFSA season, Cup competitions, 2019 Federation Cup\nSouth Australian soccer clubs competed in 2019 for the Federation Cup. Clubs entered from the NPL SA, the State League 1, State League 2, South Australian Amateur Soccer League and South Australian Collegiate Soccer League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 55], "content_span": [56, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289146-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FFSA season, Cup competitions, 2019 Federation Cup\nThe competition also served as the South Australian Preliminary Rounds for the 2019 FFA Cup. In addition to Adelaide Olympic, A-League club Adelaide United qualified for the final rounds, entering at the Round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 55], "content_span": [56, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289147-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA European Rallycross Championship\nThe 2019 FIA European Rallycross Championship was the 44th season of the FIA European Rallycross Championship. The season consists of eight rounds across two categories; Supercar and Super1600. The season commenced on 26 April with the Spanish round at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya, and culminated on 14 September in Latvia at the Bi\u0137ernieku Kompleks\u0101 Sporta B\u0101ze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289147-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA European Rallycross Championship, Results and standings, Super1600\na Loss of 15 championship points \u2013 stewards' decision. b Loss of 5 championship points \u2013 stewards' decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 75], "content_span": [76, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289148-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Formula 3 Championship\nThe 2019 FIA Formula 3 Championship was the inaugural season of the FIA Formula 3 Championship, a multi-event motor racing championship for single-seat open-wheel formula racing cars. The championship featured drivers competing in 3.4-litre Formula 3 racing cars which conform to the technical regulations, or formula, of the championship. It ran in support of the Formula 1 World Championship and its sister series, the FIA Formula 2 Championship. It serves as the third tier of\u00a0formula racing\u00a0in the\u00a0FIA Global Pathway. The championship was formed by the merger of the GP3 Series and the FIA Formula 3 European Championship in 2018, which brought the two championships under the umbrella of the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289148-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Formula 3 Championship\nPrema Racing driver Robert Shwartzman won the championship title with one race to spare after collecting three race wins with six other podium finishes. Shwartzman dominated from the first race of the season, losing the drivers' championship lead only for one race to his teammate Jehan Daruvala. Daruvala, who finished third overall, was victorious at Barcelona and Le Castellet. Marcus Armstrong, another Prema driver, finished second and won races at Hungaroring, Spa and Sochi. He passed Daruvala by one point in the drivers' championship just in the final race of the season. Prema Racing became the inaugural teams' champions after the second Spa-Francorchamps race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289148-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Formula 3 Championship, Teams and drivers\nThe following teams and drivers competed in the 2019 championship. As the championship is a spec series, all teams competed with an identical Dallara F3 2019 chassis and a bespoke tyre compound developed by Pirelli. Each car was powered by a 3.4\u00a0L (207\u00a0cu\u00a0in) naturally-aspirated V6 engine developed by Mecachrome that was previously used in the Dallara GP3/16. Teams were required to enter three cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289148-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Formula 3 Championship, Teams and drivers, Team entries\nThe merging of the\u00a0GP3 Series and the\u00a0FIA Formula 3 European Championship saw the FIA open up a tender process to prospective entrants. ART Grand Prix, Campos Racing, Jenzer Motorsport, MP Motorsport and Trident were selected from the GP3 Series entrants, while Carlin, Hitech Grand Prix and Prema Racing were chosen from the Formula 3 European Championship. Both Carlin and Prema Racing held entries in the championship's sister series Formula 2, as did Charouz Racing System. Charouz later formed a partnership with Sauber Motorsport, which currently runs Alfa Romeo's team in Formula 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289148-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 FIA Formula 3 Championship, Teams and drivers, Team entries\nThe final entry was awarded to HWA Racelab, who joined the series after Mercedes-Benz withdrew from the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters touring car championship. Formula 2 and GP3 regulars Arden International decided against entering Formula 3, while Motopark\u2014who competed in the Formula 3 European Championship\u2014were unsuccessful in their application and instead entered the Japanese Super Formula Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289148-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Formula 3 Championship, Teams and drivers, Driver entries\nTeppei Natori, who placed second in the 2018 F4 Japanese Championship, joined the series with Carlin Buzz Racing along with Euroformula Open champion Felipe Drugovich and Eurocup Formula Renault race winner Logan Sargeant. FIA Formula 3 European Championship race winners and Ferrari juniors Marcus Armstrong and Robert Shwartzman continued their collaboration with Prema Racing into the championship. Jehan Daruvala, who raced in Formula 3 European Championship with Carlin, also joined Prema Racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289148-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Formula 3 Championship, Teams and drivers, Driver entries\nHonda promoted F4 Japanese champion and Red Bull Junior, Yuki Tsunoda to the category with Jenzer Motorsport. Artem Petrov joined the team from the Formula 3 European Championship and Andreas Estner from ADAC Formula 4. Red Bull Junior J\u00fcri Vips, who also raced in the Formula 3 European Championship, moved to the new championship with Hitech Grand Prix. Leonardo Pulcini and Ye Yifei, who raced in GP3 with Campos Racing and Formula Renault with Josef Kaufmann Racing respectively, also joined Hitech Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289148-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Formula 3 Championship, Teams and drivers, Driver entries\nAfter racing in the GP3 Series with Jenzer Motorsport and Trident, David Beckmann signed with ART Grand Prix, who also took on Renault Sport Academy members Max Fewtrell and Christian Lundgaard. Sebasti\u00e1n Fern\u00e1ndez, Alex Peroni and Alessio Deledda joined Campos Racing after competing in the FIA European Formula 3 Championship with Motopark, Formula Renault Eurocup with MP Motorsport and Italian F4 with Technorace respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289148-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Formula 3 Championship, Teams and drivers, Driver entries\nKeyvan Andres Soori, who raced in European Formula 3 with Van Amersfoort Racing, joined the championship with HWA Racelab. He was partnered with Bent Viscaal, who was the runner-up in the 2018 Euroformula Open Championship driving for Teo Mart\u00edn Motorsport, and Jake Hughes, who raced in GP3 with ART. After racing with them in GP3, Richard Verschoor joined MP Motorsport alongside Simo Laaksonen and reigning TRS champion and Red Bull Junior, Liam Lawson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289148-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Formula 3 Championship, Teams and drivers, Driver entries\nThe Sauber Junior Team by Charouz entered the championship fielding reigning ADAC Formula 4 champion Lirim Zendeli, European Formula 3 racer Fabio Scherer and reigning F3 Asian champion Raoul Hyman. After scoring two race wins with them in the 2018 GP3 Series, Pedro Piquet reunited with Trident and was joined by Niko Kari and Devlin DeFrancesco, both of whom switched from MP Motorsport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289148-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Formula 3 Championship, Teams and drivers, Driver entries\nArtem Petrov ended his campaign after the first round due to lack of funding. His replacement at Jenzer Motorsport was Giorgio Carrara, however the Argentine can only start participating from the Spielberg round due to visa issues. Carrara was replaced with Federico Malvestiti for the Silverstone round. Carrara returned to the seat in Hungary. Hon Chio Leong replaced Carrara for the season finale at Sochi Autodrom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289148-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Formula 3 Championship, Teams and drivers, Driver entries\nFollowing an accident at the Monza round that left him with fractured vertebrae, Alex Peroni missed the final round at Sochi. He was replaced with David Schumacher, son of Ralf.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289148-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Formula 3 Championship, Teams and drivers, Driver entries\nDavid Beckmann withdrew from the final round of the championship for personal reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289148-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Formula 3 Championship, Calendar\nA schedule of eight rounds was made to take place as part of the 2019 championship. The eight rounds were drawn from the 2018 GP3 Series calendar as the series was run on the Formula 1 support bill whereas the Formula 3 European Championship did not.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289148-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 FIA Formula 3 Championship, Calendar\nThe ninth round held at the Yas Marina Circuit in 2018 was omitted from the Formula 3 calendar to allow drivers the opportunity to compete in the 2019 Macau Grand Prix, which was announced during the season to be a non-championship round of the FIA Formula 3 Championship, as all teams and cars were at the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289148-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Formula 3 Championship, Regulation changes, The car\nFor the championship's inaugural season, all teams were supplied with a new chassis package, named the Dallara F3 2019. It was still powered by a fuel-efficient 3.4 litre (207 cu in) naturally-aspirated direct-injected V6 engine developed by Mecachrome that also powered the GP3/16 chassis which was used in the championship's predecessor, the GP3 Series from 2016 to 2018. The chassis used tyres supplied by Pirelli and also featured the \"halo\" cockpit protection device used in the championship's sister series Formula One and Formula 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289148-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Formula 3 Championship, Regulation changes, Technical regulations\nThe championship introduced a rule restricting the amount of downforce available during a race. Teams were free to run as much downforce as they choose during free practice and qualifying in order to find the ideal car setup, but the minimum and maximum allowable angle of the rear wing was specified by stewards ahead of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 74], "content_span": [75, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289148-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Formula 3 Championship, Regulation changes, Technical regulations\nUse of the Drag Reduction System (DRS) was unrestricted, whereas the championship's predecessor, GP3, restricted its use to six in the feature race and four in the sprint race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 74], "content_span": [75, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289148-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Formula 3 Championship, Season report, Round 1: Spain\nFor the first race of the season it was Robert Shwartzman who took pole with Christian Lundgaard second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289148-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Formula 3 Championship, Championship standings, Scoring system\nPoints were awarded to the top 10 classified finishers in Race 1, and to the top 8 classified finishers in Race 2. The pole-sitter in Race 1 received four points, and two points were given to the driver who set the fastest lap inside the top ten in both races. No extra points are awarded to the pole-sitter in Race 2 as the grid for Race 2 is based on the results of Race 1 with the top eight drivers having their positions reversed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289148-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Formula 3 Championship, Championship standings, Scoring system\nPoints were awarded to the top eight classified finishers, excluding the fastest lap points which are given to the top ten classified finishers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289149-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA GT World Cup\nThe 2019 FIA GT World Cup (formally the SJM Macau GT Cup \u2013 FIA GT World Cup) was a Grand Touring (GT) sports car race held on the Guia Circuit in the Chinese Special Administrative Region of Macau on 17 November. It was the fifth edition of the FIA GT World Cup and the twelfth time overall that GT3 cars had competed in Macau. The event promoter, the Automobile General Association Macau-China, appointed the motorsports organiser St\u00e9phane Ratel Organisation (SRO) to form a grid. The edition itself was made up of two races: a 12-lap qualifying race and an 18-lap main event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289149-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA GT World Cup\nBoth the qualifying and main races were won by Raffaele Marciello of Mercedes-AMG Team GruppeM Racing from pole position. Marciello led every lap of each of the qualifying and main events to take Mercedes-Benz's third victory in the FIA GT World Cup since Maro Engel's 2015 win and Edoardo Mortara's 2017 triumph. Second place went to Porsche driver Laurens Vanthoor competing for Rowe Racing, while the podium was completed by his teammate Earl Bamber in third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289149-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA GT World Cup, Background and entry list\nThe 2019 FIA GT World Cup was confirmed during a 6 December 2018 meeting of the FIA World Motor Sport Council in Saint Petersburg, Russia. It was an undercard race for the 2019 Macau Grand Prix. The event occurred on the 6.120\u00a0km (3.803\u00a0mi) Guia Circuit in the streets of Macau on 17 November 2019 with three preceding days of practice and qualifying. It was the fifth FIA GT World Cup and the twelfth overall GT3 event in Macau since 2008. It was run by the St\u00e9phane Ratel Organisation working with the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA), the motor racing governing body. In accordance with the event regulations, the manufacturers' championship was presented to the manufacturer of the car of the winning entrant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289149-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA GT World Cup, Background and entry list\nIn order to enter the race, drivers had to have competed in a FIA-regulated championship race based on GT3 regulations over the prior two seasons or have earned significant experience in Grand Touring (GT) cars. Platinum or gold-licensed drivers were allowed to partake in the event. For the 2019 event, the FIA allowed amateur drivers (called gentlemen drivers) to race by reintroducing the silver rated category class for the first time since the 2016 edition following lobbying by GT3 manufacturers and privateers. Only Bronze rated competitors were not permitted to compete. Entries were open from 2 July to 31 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289149-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 FIA GT World Cup, Background and entry list\nThe FIA released the entry list on 17 October. There were 17 drivers (of which 11 were factory drivers) representing 13 nationalities and four manufacturers in Audi, BMW, Mercedes-AMG and Porsche. This was an increase of two drivers from 2018 and included each of the four previous FIA GT World Cup winners: Maro Engel, Augusto Farfus, Edoardo Mortara and Laurens Vanthoor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289149-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA GT World Cup, Background and entry list\nAfter Sophia Fl\u00f6rsch's accident at the 2018 Macau Grand Prix, an FIA investigation resulted in various track safety improvements. The barriers between Reservoir and San Francisco Bend corners were realigned and SAFER barriers were retrofitted at Lisboa and San Francisco Bend turns. Hospital Bend turn's wall was moved back by 2\u00a0m (6.6\u00a0ft) and the photographers' bunker at Lisboa corner was dismantled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289149-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA GT World Cup, Practice and qualifying\nTwo half-an-hour practice sessions were held before the race on 18 November: the first on the afternoon of 14 November and the second on the afternoon of 15 November. Earl Bamber in the No. 98 Rowe Racing Porsche 911 GT3 R lapped fastest early in the first practice session before improving to a 2 minutes, 17.058 seconds time on his final lap. His teammate Laurens Vanthoor was second-quickest, followed by Mercedes-AMG Team GruppeM Racing's Engel and Raffaele Marciello and Mortara of Craft-Bamboo Racing in positions third through fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289149-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 FIA GT World Cup, Practice and qualifying\nMortara had gone faster late in practice but he overshot the entry to Lisboa corner and made slight contact with the outside barrier. Engel also went off the circuit but continued. Bamber was again quickest in the second practice session with a 2 minutes, 17.360 seconds lap. He was again followed by his teammate Laurens Vanthoor in second with Kelvin van der Linde of Audi Sport Team Rutronik, Phoenix Racing's Christopher Haase and Marciello placed third to fifth. Weian Chen caused the first of two stoppages when he ran onto some oil and struck the Reservoir Bend turn barrier. Not long after, Engel stopped his car with apparent mechanical trouble. Once both cars were removed, the session resumed. A high-speed impact for K\u00e9vin Estre of Absolute Racing at the Mandarin Oriental Bend corner barrier prompted a second stoppage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 879]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289149-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA GT World Cup, Practice and qualifying\nFriday afternoon's half-hour qualifying session determined the qualification race's starting order through each driver's fastest lap times. Track temperatures were lower due to the setting sun. Marciello, the 2018 Blancpain GT Series champion, in the No. 999 GruppeM Racing Mercedes-AMG GT3 set a lap of 2 minutes, 15.699 seconds by going fastest in the final half of the lap at the session's conclusion to claim his second consecutive pole position for the race. He demoted the highest-placed Audi driver Dries Vanthoor for Audi Sport Team WRT to second after lacking pace in practice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289149-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 FIA GT World Cup, Practice and qualifying\nThe Rowe duo of Bamber and Laurens Vanthoor were not as fast as they were in practice and they were separated by two-tenths of a second in third and fourth. Engel was third before falling to fifth late on and was joined by his teammate Mortara in sixth. Audi drivers occupied seventh and eighth with Haase (who was fastest early on but sustained a puncture later on) ahead of Van Der Linde. Alexandre Imperatori and Charles Weerts of Team WRT occupied ninth and tenth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289149-0006-0002", "contents": "2019 FIA GT World Cup, Practice and qualifying\nJoel Eriksson of the FIST-AAI Team was the highest-placed BMW driver in 11th ahead of his brandmate Farfus in 12th. Alessio Picariello qualified 13th for Craft-Bamboo Racing with Estre 14th, Roelof Bruins of Solite Indigo Racing 15th, Adderly Fong for Zun Motorsport Crew 16th and Chen completing the starting order in 17th. Separate accidents involving Fong and Chen led to stoppages during qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289149-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA GT World Cup, Qualifying race\nThe 12-lap qualifying race to set the starting order for the main race was scheduled to commence under air temperatures of 25\u00a0\u00b0C (77\u00a0\u00b0F) at 13:05 Macau Standard Time (UTC+08:00) on 16 November, but was delayed for half an hour as a result of race management noticing a technical issue with the starting lights gantry. Once the formation lap began, Picariello was unable to start his car and was moved off the grid into the pit lane where he started following quick troubleshooting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289149-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 FIA GT World Cup, Qualifying race\nAt the start, Dries Vanthoor pulled into the slipstream of the pole position starter Marciello and attempted to get a run on the latter, but he ended up hitting the Mandarin Bend corner wall at the exit of the turn on the outside with the rear of his car. Dries Vanthoor sustained car bodywork damage and a left-rear puncture, which caused him to stop at the entry to Lisboa turn. Further round the lap, Chen lost control of his car and stopped briefly before continuing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289149-0007-0002", "contents": "2019 FIA GT World Cup, Qualifying race\nThe safety car was deployed for the first time in the event at the end of the first lap so that Dries Vanthoor's car could be moved to a safe area. Racing resumed on lap four with Maricello pulling away from Rowe teammates Bamber and Laurens Vanthoor who were close behind one another in second and third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289149-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA GT World Cup, Qualifying race\nOn lap five, Engel attempted to overtake van der Linde for fifth on the outside at the braking zone for Lisboa turn but made minor contact with the rear of the latter's car. Engel lost control of his car, hit the guardrail on the inside as he drove onto the rumble strips, and struck the side of his brandmate Mortara. Both Engel and Mortara retired due to the damage to their cars and the safety car was deployed for a second time so that the cars could be extricated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289149-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 FIA GT World Cup, Qualifying race\nVan Der Linde was able to enter the pit lane, where he retired as a result of car damage. Haase and Farfus were promoted to fourth and fifth because of the incident. Racing resumed with five laps to go with Marciello maintaining the lead over Bamber in second. On the eighth lap, Farfus overtook Haase for fourth into Lisboa turn as the first three pulled away from the rest of the field. Over the final laps, Bamber and Luarens Vanthoor appeared to be quicker in the track's tighter sections but could not match Marciello's overall pace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289149-0008-0002", "contents": "2019 FIA GT World Cup, Qualifying race\nMaricello thus held the lead for the rest of the event to claim victory and pole position for the main race. Bamber was 0.866 seconds behind in second with teammate Laurens Vanthoor third. Farfus was fourth, having started in 12th, and Haase fifth. Imperatori, Weerts and Estre made up positions sixth through eighth. Eriksson, ninth, had anti-lock braking system problems causing him to lock his tyres frequently and brake early for corners. Fong, Bruins and Picariello were the final finishers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289149-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA GT World Cup, Main race\nThe 18-lap main race commenced in dry weather conditions of 26\u00a0\u00b0C (79\u00a0\u00b0F) at 12:25 local time on 17 November. Engel was penalised with a pit lane start as a consequence for the collision with Mortara in the qualification event. Maricello made a fast start to maintain the lead as Laurens Vanthoor made a better start than Bamber and overtook his teammate for second. The leading trio pulled away from the field, as Bamber held off Farfus during the first lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289149-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 FIA GT World Cup, Main race\nOn the second lap, Estre attempted to pass Imperatori on the inside into Lisboa corner but made contact with the side of his teammate's car. Imperatori was sent into the Lisboa tyre barrier and retired from the event not long after. On lap three, Dries Vanthoor passed Weerts for tenth. Two laps later, Estre lost control of his car on the inside of the kerb through the quick Mandarin Oriental Bend corner. He made high-speed contact with the guardrail wall at the exit of the turn in a incident identical to the one suffered by Dries Vanthoor the day before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289149-0009-0002", "contents": "2019 FIA GT World Cup, Main race\nOne of Estre's wheels detached from his vehicle and rolled across the circuit, though no other driver hit it, and debris from his car littered the track. Estre stopped at the side of the track and the safety car was dispatched so that the Porsche could be moved off the track.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289149-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA GT World Cup, Main race\nRacing resumed at lap eight's conclusion following the removal of Estre's car from the track. Farfus made a fast restart and used his higher straightline speed to briefly overtake the slower starting Bamber for third into the Mandarin Oriental Bend turn. But heading into Lisboa corner, Bamber was able to reclaim third on the inside when Farfus had to slow for Laurens Vanthoor, who made slight contact with the rear of Marciello's car. On lap 10, van der Linde passed Bruins for tenth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289149-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 FIA GT World Cup, Main race\nWith the gap more than a second on lap 13 as a result of Maricello recording personal best sector times, Vanthoor allowed his teammate Bamber into second allowing Bamber to close up to Marciello. Bamber was six-tenths of a second faster than Maricello and was close behind him. But Bamber ran wide at the Police Bend corner and lost his left-hand side exterior wing mirror following minor contact with the barrier on the 15th lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289149-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA GT World Cup, Main race\n\"I would like to thank GruppeM Racing for the amazing car and also Mercedes-AMG. Porsche have been really close the whole weekend so I am really happy that we finally won. I have always been really close to winning this race from Formula 3 when I was on pole and last year in GT, but Macau is always Macau and it's really special to make it all perfect and finally I did. It is just an amazing feeling \u2013 to win this it also means I can be regarded as one of the best!\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289149-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA GT World Cup, Main race\nRaffaele Marciello on winning the 2019 FIA GT World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289149-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA GT World Cup, Main race\nWhen Marciello was cautious through the entry to the Melco hairpin, Bamber again closed up to him, making slight contact to the rear of his vehicle on the last lap. In just his third FIA GT World Cup start, Marciello led all of the racing laps over the weekend, achieving Mercedes' third victory in the event, following Engel's 2015 triumph and Mortara's 2017 win. Bamber honoured a pre-race agreement with Laurens Vanthoor by purposefully slowing through the R Bend corner and the start/finish straight to hand his teammate second as Bamber took third. Farfus finished fourth, leading a close group of cars driven by Haase, Mortara, Eriksson, Dries Vanthoor, Engel and Van Der Linde in positions five through ten. The final classified finishers were Bruins, Weerts and Weian with Fong and Picariello the two other retirements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 860]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289149-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA GT World Cup, Main race\nThe 2020 edition of the FIA GT World Cup was due to be the sixth running of the race but it was cancelled by the FIA as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic and was replaced by the Macau GT Cup, which was restricted to drivers from local racing series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289150-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA GTC season\nThe 2019 FIA GTC season was the second season of the FIA-Certified Gran Turismo Championships (FIA GTC), a professional esports league for the racing video game Gran Turismo Sport, managed by Japanese developer Polyphony Digital and French governing body F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de l'Automobile. The series concurrently runs two championships in the duration of the season, in the form of the Nations Cup (entrants from their respective countries will represent them) and the Manufacturers Series (entrants will race for and represent their chosen manufacturer).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289150-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA GTC season\nThe series season opener began in 16 March in Paris, France, and would conclude at Monaco with the season world final for the second year in a row. Mikail Hizal would earn his first Nations Cup championship, and Rayan Derrouiche, Igor Fraga, and Tomoaki Yamanaka would earn their first Manufacturers Series championship with Toyota at the World Final event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289150-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA GTC season, Series calendar\nSimilar to the previous season, the 2019 season was set in six locations worldwide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289151-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Motorsport Games\nThe 2019 FIA Motorsport Games was the first edition of the FIA Motorsport Games held at ACI Vallelunga Circuit, Campagnano di Roma from 1 November to 3 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289151-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Motorsport Games, Summary\nIt featured GT3-spec cars, TCR Touring Car, Formula 4, drifting, a karting slalom and eSports disciplines. Only Silver and Bronze drivers were allowed to compete. The event promoters were the Federation Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) and the St\u00e9phane Ratel Organisation (SRO). Rome was the city that hosted the opening ceremony on 30 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289151-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Motorsport Games, Summary\nThe event was contested in the Olympics-style, but because machine-based or motorized sports are not recognised by the Olympic Games organisation they will not be recognised as an Olympic event. \"Motorized\" events were held at the 1900 Summer Olympics and 1908 Summer Olympics (see Motor racing at the 1900 Summer Olympics and Water motorsports at the 1908 Summer Olympics) but they are not now regarded as official Olympic events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289151-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Motorsport Games, Summary\n166 athletes from 49 National FIA member organisations took part. 18 sets of medals were featured in the 6 disciplines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289151-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Motorsport Games, Summary\nTeam Russia topped the medal table, with one gold medal for Touring Car Cup and three medals (bronze medals in Karting Slalom and Drifting) overall. Team Australia and Team Italy tied on the second place with equal amount of gold (for Digital and Formula 4 Cups respectively) and bronze medals (for GT and Digital Cups respectively). Team Belgium (Touring Car and Karting Slalom Cups) was the only other team to win more than one medal. 13 different national teams received at least one medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289151-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Motorsport Games, Participants, Teams\nTeam France, Team Italy, Team Kuwait and Team Russia are the only teams with confirmed line-up in all six cups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289152-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Motorsport Games Digital Cup\nThe FIA Motorsport Games Digital Cup was the first FIA Motorsport Games Digital Cup, to be held at ACI Vallelunga Circuit, Italy on 1 November to 2 November 2019. The event was the part of the 2019 FIA Motorsport Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289152-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Motorsport Games Digital Cup, Entry list, Semi-Finals and Repechage\nDrivers qualified for the Finale highlighted in green. Drivers qualified for the Repechage highlighted in blue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289153-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Motorsport Games Drifting Cup\nThe FIA Motorsport Games Drifting Cup was be the first FIA Motorsport Games Drifting Cup, to be held at ACI Vallelunga Circuit, Italy on 1 November to 2 November 2019. The event was the part of the 2019 FIA Motorsport Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289153-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Motorsport Games Drifting Cup\nEach competitor had two solo runs, with the higher-scoring run counting towards a final qualifying classification. Top-16 drivers were eligible to contest the Final Battle stage. Drivers were seeded according to their qualifying results, with the best-scoring qualifier going up against the 16th-placed competitor, second facing 15th, etc. In qualifying, judges scored competitors using four criteria \u2013 line, angle, style and speed \u2013 up to a maximum total of 100 points. In the Final Battle phase, each judge scored the round individually with a majority decision between a three-person panel determining the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289154-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Motorsport Games Formula 4 Cup\nThe FIA Motorsport Games Formula 4 Cup was the first FIA Motorsport Games Formula 4 Cup, held at ACI Vallelunga Circuit, Italy on 1 November to 3 November 2019. The race was contested with identical Formula 4 cars. The event was the part of the 2019 FIA Motorsport Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289154-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Motorsport Games Formula 4 Cup\nThe event will feature two 45-minute practice sessions on 1 November, with 20-minute Qualifying session on 2 November for the Qualifying race, while the Main race will be held on 3 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289154-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Motorsport Games Formula 4 Cup, Entry list\nAll drivers utilized KCMG KC MG-01 cars, which were operated by Hitech GP. It was the first Formula 4 car to feature Halo safety device.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289155-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Motorsport Games GT Cup\nThe 2019 FIA Motorsport Games GT Cup was the first FIA Motorsport Games GT Cup, continuation of the FIA GT Nations Cup held at ACI Vallelunga Circuit, Italy on 1 November to 3 November 2019. The race was contested with GT3-spec cars. Only Silver and Bronze drivers were allowed to compete. The event was part of the 2019 FIA Motorsport Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289156-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Motorsport Games Karting Slalom Cup\nThe FIA Motorsport Games Karting Slalom Cup was the first FIA Motorsport Games Karting Slalom Cup, to be held at ACI Vallelunga Circuit, Italy on 1 November to 3 November 2019. The race will be contested with identical electric-powered karts The event was the part of the 2019 FIA Motorsport Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289156-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Motorsport Games Karting Slalom Cup\nDrivers raced around the cones, receiving penalty seconds for every cone knocked off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289156-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Motorsport Games Karting Slalom Cup, Entry List\nAll entered drivers aged between 14 and 16 and competed with identical electric-powered karts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289157-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA Motorsport Games Touring Car Cup\nThe FIA Motorsport Games Touring Car Cup was the first FIA Motorsport Games Touring Car Cup, held at ACI Vallelunga Circuit, Italy on 1 November to 3 November 2019. The race was contested with TCR Touring Car spec cars. The event was part of the 2019 FIA Motorsport Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289158-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA R-GT Cup\nThe 2019 FIA R-GT Cup is the fifth edition of the FIA rally cup for GT cars in Group R-GT. The cup is being contested over 8 tarmac rounds from the WRC, the ERC and the Rallye International du Valais.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289158-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA R-GT Cup, Calendar\nThe calendar for the 2019 season features eight tarmac rallies: three rounds from the WRC, one round from the ERC, one rally from the TER series and three European national rallies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 27], "content_span": [28, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289159-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA World Cup for Cross-Country Bajas\nThe 2019 FIA World Cup for Cross-Country Bajas was the first season of the reformed FIA World Cup for Cross-Country Bajas; an annual competition for baja-style rally raid events for cars, buggies, side-by-sides, and trucks held in multiple countries. The championship was last held in 2010, after which the baja events were combined with the longer cross-country rallies to form the FIA World Cup for Cross-Country Rallies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289159-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA World Cup for Cross-Country Bajas, Calendar\nThe 2019 edition of the world cup featured eight cross-country baja events. The longer cross-country rally events remained part of the regular Cross-Country Rally World Cup. Some events on the schedule were shared with the 2019 FIM Bajas World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289159-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA World Cup for Cross-Country Bajas, Calendar\nThe FIA awarded the world cup to drivers, co-drivers, and teams competing in the T1 category; whilst drivers and teams in the T2 and T3 categories were awarded FIA cups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289159-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA World Cup for Cross-Country Bajas, Championship standings\nIn order to score points in the Cup classifications, competitors must register with the FIA before the entry closing date of the first baja entered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289160-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA World Cup for Cross-Country Rallies\nThe 2019 FIA World Cup for Cross-Country Rallies was the 27th season of the FIA World Cup for Cross-Country Rallies; an annual competition for rally raid events for cars, buggies, side-by-sides, and trucks held in multiple countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289160-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA World Cup for Cross-Country Rallies, Calendar\nThe 2019 edition of the world cup featured five cross country rallies. The shorter 'baja' style events are now included in their own international competition, the FIA World Cup for Cross-Country Bajas. Some events on the schedule were shared with the 2019 FIM Cross-Country Rallies World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289160-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA World Cup for Cross-Country Rallies, Calendar\nThe FIA awards the world cup to drivers, co-drivers, and teams competing in the T1 category; whilst drivers and teams in the T2 and T3 categories are awarded FIA cups. The T4 'truck' category is recognized, but not awarded any end-of-season cup or trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289160-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA World Cup for Cross-Country Rallies, Calendar\nDue to irreconcilable differences between the FIA and Turkmenistan, the Turkmen Desert Race was cancelled for 2019; thereby leaving the calendar with just four events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289160-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA World Cup for Cross-Country Rallies, Championship standings\nIn order to score points in the Cup classifications, competitors must register with the FIA before the entry closing date of the first rally entered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 68], "content_span": [69, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289161-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA World Rallycross Championship\nThe 2019 FIA World Rallycross Championship presented by Monster Energy was the sixth season of the FIA World Rallycross Championship, an auto racing championship recognised by the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) as the highest class of international rallycross.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289161-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA World Rallycross Championship\nTimmy Hansen won the Drivers' Championship on countback after finishing with the same number of points as Andreas Bakkerud, winning based on his four event wins to Bakkerud's one. Team Hansen MJP won the Teams' Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289161-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA World Rallycross Championship, Calendar\nThe 2019 championship was contested over ten rounds in Europe, Africa, the Middle East and North America.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289161-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA World Rallycross Championship, Calendar\nThe following events are scheduled to take place as part of the 2019 championship:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289161-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIA World Rallycross Championship, Results and standings, FIA World Rallycross Championship for Teams\n1 \u2013 Team STARD ran two different specifications of car at rounds 1\u20133 and therefore were ineligible to score teams points at these events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 106], "content_span": [107, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289162-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA 3x3 Asia Cup\nThe 2019 FIBA 3x3 Asia Cup is the fourth edition of the FIBA Asia 3X3 Cup. The games of the final tournament will be held in Changsha, China between 24 May and 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289162-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA 3x3 Asia Cup, Participating teams\nThe FIBA 3x3 Asia Cup will both have a men's and women's tournament, each to be contested by twelve national teams. The teams are drawn into their groups as per their FIBA 3x3 Federation Ranking as of March 1, 2019. Nine teams for the men's team and ten teams for the women's team outright qualified for the final tournament while the remaining berths are to be contested in a qualification phase to be held from 22 to 23 May, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289163-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA 3x3 Asia Cup qualification\nThe 2019 FIBA 3x3 Asia Cup qualification refers to the qualification process for the 2019 FIBA 3x3 Asia Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289163-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA 3x3 Asia Cup qualification\nNine teams for the men's competition and ten teams for the women's competition outright qualifies for the FIBA 3x3 Asia Cup with three men's national teams and two women's national teams set to secure a berth in the final tournament through a qualification tournament to be held from 23 to 24 May 2019. The top teams from each group qualifies for the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289164-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA 3x3 Asia Cup \u2013 Men's tournament\nThe 2019 FIBA 3x3 Asia Cup is the fourth edition of the FIBA Asia 3X3 Cup. The games of the final tournament will be held in Changsha, China between 24 May and 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289165-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA 3x3 Asia Cup \u2013 Women's tournament\nThe 2019 FIBA 3x3 Asia Cup is the fourth edition of the FIBA Asia 3X3 Cup. The games of the final tournament will be held in Changsha, China between 24 May and 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289166-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA 3x3 Europe Cup\nThe 2019 FIBA 3x3 Europe Cup will be the fifth edition of the 3x3 Europe Championships that is organized by FIBA Europe and will be held in August 2019, at the Kossuth Square in Debrecen, Hungary. This 3x3 basketball event featured separate competitions for men's and women's national teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289166-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA 3x3 Europe Cup\nThe event is set to be held on Kossuth Square in front of the iconic Reformed Great Church.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289167-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA 3x3 World Cup\nThe 2019 FIBA 3x3 World Cup, hosted by the Netherlands, was an international 3x3 basketball event that featured separate competitions for men's and women's national teams. The tournament ran between 18 and 23 June 2019 in Amsterdam, North Holland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289167-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA 3x3 World Cup, Background\nIt was announced in February 2017 that the Netherlands would host the event and that the tournament would be held at Museumplein, one of Amsterdam's public squares. Tickets for the event went on sale in March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289167-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA 3x3 World Cup, Participating teams\nThe FIBA 3x3 Federation Ranking on 13 December 2018 was used as basis to determine the participating FIBA member associations. The hosts, the Netherlands, qualified automatically for both the men's and women's events, while the defending champions, Serbia for men's and Italy for women's, also qualified automatically. Thereafter, the next 15 teams in both the men's and women's tournaments qualified on the basis of the Federation Rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289168-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA 3x3 World Cup \u2013 Individual contests\nAs part of the 2019 FIBA 3x3 World Cup held from June 18 to 23, 2019 in Amsterdam, Netherlands, three tournaments in addition to the main 3x3 men's and women's tournaments were contested. The Dunk contest was for men, the Skills contest for women, and the Shoot-out contest for both men and women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289168-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA 3x3 World Cup \u2013 Individual contests, Dunk contest, Qualification phase\nEach player competed in two rounds and four players with the highest score advances to the knockout stage. In a case of a tie, the tied players would have to perform again and in case they were still tied, the jury would have to decide the player who will advance through a majority decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 80], "content_span": [81, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289168-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA 3x3 World Cup \u2013 Individual contests, Dunk contest, Knockout stage\nTwo players will compete for three rounds instead of two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 75], "content_span": [76, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289168-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA 3x3 World Cup \u2013 Individual contests, Skills contest\nThe skills contest was contested by women players from the qualified 3x3 national teams of the main tournament. Each team can enter at most a single player for the competition. The contest which had a time limit of 45 seconds involves a qualification phase and a knockout round. The players begins on the starting line on the side of their choice. Upon a signal, the player must execute the following in order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 61], "content_span": [62, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289168-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA 3x3 World Cup \u2013 Individual contests, Skills contest\nThe four women with the best time record qualify for the knock-out round", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 61], "content_span": [62, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289168-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA 3x3 World Cup \u2013 Individual contests, Shoot-out contest\nThe shoot-out contest is a mixed-gender competition with at most one male and one female player from 3x3 national teams participating in the main tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289168-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA 3x3 World Cup \u2013 Individual contests, Shoot-out contest, Qualification phase\nEach player were to attempt 10 shots with every successful shot worth one point", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 85], "content_span": [86, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289168-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA 3x3 World Cup \u2013 Individual contests, Shoot-out contest, Qualification phase\nTwo male and two female players with the most points in the shortest amount of time advance to the final. In case of a tie or players scoring the same points within the same amount of time, the tied players were tasked to shoot again. The round concluded on June 11, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 85], "content_span": [86, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289168-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA 3x3 World Cup \u2013 Individual contests, Shoot-out contest, Final\nPlayers were to attempt 18 shots from four different locations:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289168-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA 3x3 World Cup \u2013 Individual contests, Shoot-out contest, Final\nShots made from the 3x3 are worth 2 points while the rest of the shots of are worth 1 point. The tiebreaker which was used in the qualification phase is used again for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289169-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA 3x3 World Cup \u2013 Men's tournament\nThe 2019 FIBA 3x3 World Cup was held in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, the tournament consisted of 20 teams. Serbia were the three-time defending champions but were defeated in the Semifinals by Latvia. The United States won the title, their first title overall after defeating Latvia, 18\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289169-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA 3x3 World Cup \u2013 Men's tournament, Participating teams\nAll FIBA continental zones except for FIBA Africa are represented by at least one team. FIBA announced the final composition of the pools in May, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 63], "content_span": [64, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289170-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA 3x3 World Cup \u2013 Women's tournament\nThe 2019 FIBA 3x3 World Cup was held in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. The tournament consisted of 20 teams. Italy were the defending champions but were defeated in the Quarterfinals by France. China won the title, their first overall, after defeating Hungary, 19\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289170-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA 3x3 World Cup \u2013 Women's tournament, Participating teams\nAll FIBA continental zones except for FIBA Africa & FIBA Americas are represented by at least one team. FIBA announced the final composition of the pools in May, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 65], "content_span": [66, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289171-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Africa Women's Champions Cup\nThe 2019 FIBA Africa Women's Champions Cup is the 25th edition of the FIBA Africa Basketball Club Championship for Women, the international basketball club tournament of FIBA Africa. The tournament will be held in Cairo, Egypt, from 6 to 17 December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289171-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Africa Women's Champions Cup, Teams\nThe teams are Al Ahly (Egypt), Sporting Club (Egypt), Ferroviario de Maputo (Mozambique), Air Warrior (Nigeria), ASB Makomeno (DR Congo), City Hornets (Zimbabwe), Energie (Benin), FAP (Cameroon), Inter Clube (Angola), JKL (Uganda), Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) and Mountain of Fire Ministry (Nigeria)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289172-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Americas League\nThe 2019 FIBA Americas League was the 12th edition of the top-tier level intercontinental professional club basketball competition in the Americas and last for the FIBA Americas League. Sixteen teams from across the Americas competed over three rounds, to determine the champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289172-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Americas League\nSan Lorenzo won its second continental title, giving them the right to play in the 2020 FIBA Intercontinental Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289172-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Americas League, Group phase\nSixteen teams participated in the group phase, in which each team faced the other teams in the group once. Each group tournament was held at the arena of a host team. The two highest-placed teams in each group advance to the semifinal phase. Games were played from 18 January until 10 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289172-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Americas League, Semifinal phase\nThe eight teams which advance from the group phase, played in this stage in which each team faced the other teams in the group once. Each group tournament was held at the arena of a host team. The two highest-placed teams in each group advance to the final four. Games were played from 8 March until 17 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289172-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Americas League, Final Four\nThe final four tournament decided the champion of the 2019 season. The tournament was held from 30 March and 31 March 2019 in the Polideportivo Roberto Pando in Buenos Aires, Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289173-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Asia Champions Cup\nThe 2019 FIBA Asia Champions Cup was the 28th staging of the FIBA Asia Champions Cup, the international basketball club tournament of FIBA Asia. The tournament took place in Thailand from 24 to 29 September 2019. Games were played at Stadium29 in Nonthaburi. Alvark Tokyo won their first title after losing in the final last year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup\nThe 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup was the 18th tournament of the FIBA Basketball World Cup for men's national basketball teams. The tournament was hosted in China and was rescheduled from 2018 to 2019, becoming the first since 1967 that did not occur in the same year as the FIFA World Cup (which was held the previous year). The tournament expanded from 24 to 32 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup\nThe tournament also served as qualification for the 2020 Summer Olympics, which took the top two teams from each of the Americas and Europe, and the top team from each of Africa, Asia and Oceania, alongside the tournament's host Japan. Montenegro and the Czech Republic each made their first appearance as independent nations after previously being part of Serbia and Montenegro and Czechoslovakia respectively, while Poland marked its return to the FIBA Basketball World Cup for the first time since 1967.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup\nThe defending champions, the United States, experienced their worst result at a World Cup, losing to France in the quarter-finals and Serbia in the subsequent classification game. The United States' previous worst result was sixth place in 2002. This was the first World Cup at which all three of the historically most successful teams (United States, Serbia/Yugoslavia and Russia/Soviet Union) failed to reach the semi-finals. Asian powerhouse and hosts China, failed to get out of the first round, losing in shocking upsets to Poland and Venezuela. China ultimately missed the Asian qualifying spot for Tokyo, the first time in the country's history they did not qualify directly for the Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup\nSpain captured their second title after beating Argentina in the final by 95\u201375. It was the second time Spain had reached a World Cup final, and its second win, while for Argentina it would prove to be its second defeat in three attempts. France went on to win the bronze medal for the second consecutive time after defeating Australia 67\u201359.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Hosts selection\nThe whole bidding process started in April 2014. Bids from numerous nations were submitted. On 16 March 2015, it was confirmed that the World Cup would be staged in Asia, with China and Philippines as the final countries to be the basis for the selection of the host. On 7 August 2015, it was announced that China won the bid against the Philippines and will host the upcoming World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Qualification\nChina as the hosts automatically qualified for the tournament. The continental championships were no longer the qualification system for the World Cup. Instead, two rounds of continental qualifying tournaments were held over two years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Qualification\nThe first round of the Americas, Asia/Oceania and Africa qualifiers featured 16 teams each, whereas Europe had 32 teams. Division A teams were split in groups of four, to be held in a home-and-away round-robin. The top three teams in each groups advanced to round two, and the last placed teams played the best Division B teams to qualify for the next season's Division A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Qualification\nIn round two of the World Cup qualifiers, teams were split in groups of six, totaling four groups in Europe and two in the other qualifiers. Teams carried over the points from round one, and faced other three teams again in a home-and-away round-robin. The best teams in each group qualified for the World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Qualification\nStarting 2019, no wild card selection was held, and the Olympic champions were not guaranteed a spot in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Qualification\nThe draw for the qualifiers was held on 7 May 2017 in Guangzhou.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Qualification\nMontenegro and the Czech Republic debuted in the World Cup; Montenegro was formerly a part of Yugoslavia, and later, Serbia and Montenegro teams, while the Czech Republic was a part of the old Czechoslovakia. Poland was returning to the World Cup, after participating in 1967. Canada, China, Germany, Ivory Coast, Russia, and Tunisia were returning to the World Cup after missing out in 2014. Croatia, Egypt, Finland, Mexico, Slovenia, and Ukraine were the teams that participated in 2014 that did not qualify in 2019. Brazil and the United States qualified in 2019, continuing their streaks in participating in all World Cups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Squads\nEach team had a final roster of 12 players; a team can opt to have one naturalized player as per FIBA eligibility rules from its roster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Preparation games\nSeveral teams participated in official tournaments or in exhibition ones, either ad hoc or already existing ones, to prepare for the World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Preparation games, Pan American Games\nAn official and traditional tournament in the Americas. Out of the eight teams from the tournament, five already qualified to the World Cup. Of these five, all except the United States had players expected to be in the World Cup rosters, with the USA playing with collegiate players. Argentina defeated Puerto Rico to win the gold medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 69], "content_span": [70, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Preparation games, Acropolis International Basketball Tournament\nAn exhibition tournament. All four participating teams used the Acropolis Tournament as a warm-up. Serbia topped the table to win the championship, ahead of Greece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 96], "content_span": [97, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Preparation games, Austiger Cup\nAn exhibition tournament. The four teams played in this tournament hosted by China as a warm-up to the World Cup. Serbia topped the table to win the championship, ahead of France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Preparation games, M\u00e1laga Tournament\nAn exhibition tournament. Four teams participated in a preparation tournament hosted in M\u00e1laga, Spain. It was contested by Spain, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ivory Coast, and the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 68], "content_span": [69, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Preparation games, Other games\nExhibition games were held as warm-ups for the World Cup. The United States defeated Spain in the Honda Center in Anaheim, which was between the top two teams in the FIBA World Rankings. Australia's defeat of the United States in Marvel Stadium, Melbourne in the 2019 Australian International Basketball series was the first USA team's loss with NBA players since its 2006 FIBA World Championship semifinals loss to Greece. The USA is the second-youngest team in the tournament and features only two players with international experience. Notably the US is missing over 30 of their best players, who opted out either due to injury, or to prepare for the NBA season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Format\nThe tournament was played in three stages. During the first stage, the 32 qualified teams were sorted into eight groups of four (A-H) and each team in a group played the other three teams once. The top two teams from each group then advanced to the second group stage. In the second group stage, there were four groups of four (I-L) made up of the teams that advanced from the first round, with the teams that have not yet played each other facing off against one another once. The top two teams from groups I to L will qualify for the final knockout phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Format\nClassification rounds were revived after they were not held in 2014. They were traditionally held in every World Championship/World Cup and were last seen in action in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Format\nIn total, 92 games were played over a total of 16 days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Draw\nThe draw took place on 16 March 2019 at Shenzhen Cultural Center in Shenzhen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 36], "content_span": [37, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Draw\nHosts China and the seven best qualified teams as per the February 2019 FIBA World Rankings were seeded in Pot 1, and China and USA were assigned to groups A and E, respectively. Teams in pots 1, 4, 5 and 8 were drawn into Groups A, C, E and G, and Teams in pots 2, 3, 6 and 7 were drawn into Groups B, D, F and H. Canada was moved from Pot 5 to Pot 6, switching places with Iran (the best ranked team from that pot) to avoid having two teams from the Americas in the same group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 36], "content_span": [37, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Draw\nFIBA Basketball World Cup 2019 Global Ambassadors Kobe Bryant and Yao Ming, American singer and songwriter Jason Derulo, and Chinese idol singer Yang Chaoyue led the draw ceremony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 36], "content_span": [37, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Draw\nAfter the draw, Group H, which includes Australia, Canada, Lithuania, and Senegal, was described as the \"group of death\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 36], "content_span": [37, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, 17th\u201332nd Classification\nBottom 2 teams from each group in Round 1 will play in the Classification Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Awards\nThe all-star team and MVP were announced on 15 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Marketing, Logo\nThe official logo of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup was officially unveiled on 21 March 2017 in a ceremony held in Shanghai. The logo's concept was inspired from the Beijing Opera where the actors symbolize concepts such as wisdom, persistence, power and perfection, which are prerequisite characteristics that the participating players of national team will need to exhibit \"in order to succeed\". The logo design was also inspired from the Chinese Dragon Dance, a cultural tradition depicting a story of two flying dragons battling over a shining pearl which is meant to parallel the competition of national teams for the Naismith Trophy. The logo was created by Shanghai-based agency Flagship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Marketing, Sponsors\nInfront China became the exclusive marketing partner for the domestic commercial rights of FIBA Basketball World Cup China 2019, according to a strategic cooperation agreement officially announced between Infront China, a Wanda Sports company, the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) and the Organizing Committee for the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Marketing, Mascot\nAn international mascot design competition was organized with the winning mascot chosen by fans. Yan Xu's design, a Chinese Dragon-inspired mascot named Son of Dreams, was announced to be the winning mascot on 18 April 2018. Son of Dreams was born in China on 8 August 2015 one day after China was announced as the host according to the mascot's fictional biography. The magical horns of the mascot is described as having the ability to give the dragon \"the power to see in the future, envisioning plays and moves before they actually happen\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0029-0001", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Marketing, Mascot\nHe wears a red and blue uniform with the tournament's logo and high tops by China's top player Yao Ming. The mascot was chosen over other finalists Speed Tiger who was inspired by a Siberian tiger and QiuQiu (a.k.a. Little Lightning) who was inspired by a Chinese lion. The official mascot made his first public appearance on 28 June 2018 in Shenzhen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Marketing, Ball\nOn 16 March 2019, FIBA revealed the official ball that would be used in the World Cup, Molten BG5000, designed by Molten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Marketing, Official song\nThe song \"Champion\" was released on 24 July 2019, and performed by American singer-songwriter Jason Derulo featuring Chinese singer Tia Ray. It was performed both in English and the host language Chinese.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Issues and concerns\nThere were concerns from national federations that they would not be able to play the qualifiers with players from top professional leagues globally (the National Basketball Association and EuroLeague), which was possible with professional leagues operating in mid-year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Controversy\nAustralian center and NBA champion Andrew Bogut voiced concerns on the officiating in the semi-final match against Spain. During the match after a call he disagreed with Bogut was seeing gesturing with his hands that the officials had been bribed. Post match Claiming it was a \"disgrace\" and encouraging people to look into where the headquarters are based. 3-time NBA champion and Australian assistant coach was less accusative but also cited their run of luck with officiating when the two sides meet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289174-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, Controversy\nPatrick Mills was also controversially snubbed from the All-Star five. Even being told he had been in the five before being omitted. Many fans and journalists could not believe he was omitted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289175-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Final\nThe 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Final was the concluding basketball game which determined the winner of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup. The game was played on 15 September 2019, at the Wukesong Arena, in Beijing, China, between Argentina and Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289175-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Final\nAt halftime, a turnover ceremony was held to officially hand over the hosting rights of the FIBA Basketball World Cup from China to the Philippines, Japan, and Indonesia, hosts of the 2023 FIBA Basketball World Cup, which will take place from 25 August to 10 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289175-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Final\nSpain won their second World Cup title after a 95\u201375 win. Marc Gasol became the first player since Lamar Odom in 2010 to win an NBA championship and a World Cup in the same year, and the first non-American to win an NBA or WNBA title and either a World Cup or Olympic gold medal in the same year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289175-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Final, Route to the final, Argentina\nArgentina topped Group B in Wuhan, after beating Russia in the final group game. They also defeated South Korea and Nigeria to end with a 3\u20130 record in the first round. Group I in Foshan also saw the South Americans topping the group, thereby qualifying to the quarter-finals. Their win against Poland won them the group. In the quarter-finals at Dongguan, Argentina defeated 2014 World Cup runners-up and 2016 Olympic silver medalists Serbia by 10 points to qualify to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289175-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Final, Route to the final, Argentina\nFrance, which had defeated the United States in their own quarter-final match-up, faced the South Americans in the semi-final at Beijing. Luis Scola scored his tournament-high 28 points in the game, and Rudy Gobert was limited to just three points, which led to Argentina advancing to its first World Cup final since 2002, which was Scola's first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289175-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Final, Route to the final, Spain\nThe Spaniards finished on top of Group C in Guangzhou. The Europeans defeated Tunisia, Puerto Rico and Iran to end up undefeated going into the second round. At the second round Group J at Wuhan, Spain ran away winners of the group after defeating Italy and erstwhile undefeated team Serbia to finish the group stages with a 5\u20130 record. In the quarter-finals at Shanghai, Spain eliminated surprise qualifiers Poland, off the back of Ricky Rubio's near double-double of 19 points and nine assists, plus five rebounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289175-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Final, Route to the final, Spain\nA pair of three-point shots was the difference late in the fourth quarter that prevented the Poles from cutting the lead. In the semi-final against Australia at Beijing, the Australians led by as many as 11 points in the third quarter, but the Spaniards came back to tie the game at the end of regulation, 71-all. In overtime, Marc Gasol and Patty Mills scored three-pointers, but with the game tied at 78-all, Mills was fouled, and converted both free-throws. Gasol was fouled himself on the next possession, and also made both of his foul shots. Matthew Dellavedova tried to win it at the buzzer, but missed, sending the game to double overtime. Spain opened the second overtime with two three-pointers, and that was the difference, qualifying them to their second World Cup final, after winning it in 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 873]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289175-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Final, Game details\nThis is the eighth meeting between Argentina and Spain at the World Cup, with the Spaniards winning five; Argentina won two, including their last meeting at the 2010 World Championship. Spain won the last competitive meeting, at the 2016 Summer Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289175-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Final, Game details\nSpain led by 14\u20132 at the start of the game. Argentina recovered to finish the first quarter with 14 points against Spain's 22. The lead then fluctuated, but once the Argentinians cut the deficit to twelve at the start of the third quarter, the Spaniards went on a 14\u20130 run, leading by 55\u201333. The Spaniards never looked back. Ricky Rubio scored 20 points in the game, and limited Facundo Campazzo to just 11 points in 20% field-goal percentage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289175-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Final, Game details\nLuis Scola was also limited to 1/10 shooting in the game, and didn't score until making his free-throws late in the third quarter, as Gabriel Deck had a game high 24 points. Marc Gasol scored 14 points, had a team high 7 assists, had 2 steals, and blocked 3 shots in the game. Argentina tried to mount a comeback in the fourth period, but by then the lead was too great, and there was little time remaining by then. Spain won its second World Cup, with Gasol and Fern\u00e1ndez being also a part of the first title in 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289176-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group A\nGroup A of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup was the group stage of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup for the Ivory Coast, Poland, Venezuela and China. Each team played each other once, for a total of three games per team, with all games played at Wukesong Arena, Beijing. After all of the games were played, the top two teams with the best records qualified for the Second round and the bottom two teams played in the Classification Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289176-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group A, Games, Poland vs. Venezuela\nThis was the first competitive game between Poland and Venezuela.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289176-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group A, Games, Ivory Coast vs. China\nThis was the fourth meeting between the Ivory Coast and China in the World Cup. The Chinese have won all three prior meetings, including their 2010 match-up, which was the most recent game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289176-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group A, Games, Venezuela vs. Ivory Coast\nThis was the first competitive game between Venezuela and the Ivory Coast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289176-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group A, Games, China vs. Poland\nThis was the first competitive game between China and Poland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289176-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group A, Games, Ivory Coast vs. Poland\nThis was the first competitive game between the Ivory Coast and Poland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289176-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group A, Games, Venezuela vs. China\nThis was the second meeting between Venezuela and China in the World Cup. The Venezuelans won their first meeting in 1990. The Venezuelans also won their last competitive game against the Chinese, in the 2016 Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289177-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group B\nGroup B of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup was the group stage of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup for the Russia, Argentina, South Korea and Nigeria. Each team played each other once, for a total of three games per team, with all games played at Wuhan Gymnasium, Wuhan. After all of the games were played, the top two teams with the best records qualified for the Second round and the bottom two teams played in the Classification Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289177-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group B, Games, Russia vs. Nigeria\nThis was the first game between Russia and Nigeria in the World Cup. The Russians won against Nigeria in the 2012 FIBA World Olympic Qualifying Tournament for Men, the last competitive game between the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289177-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group B, Games, Argentina vs. South Korea\nThis was the second game between Argentina and South Korea in the World Cup, with the Argentinians winning the first game in 1994. Argentina also won their last competitive game against South Korea in the 1996 Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289177-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group B, Games, Nigeria vs. Argentina\nThis was the third game between Nigeria and Argentina in the World Cup. Argentina have won both games, and also won its last competitive game against the Nigerians at the 2016 Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289177-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group B, Games, South Korea vs. Russia\nThis was the first game between South Korea and Russia in the World Cup. The Russians won against South Korea in the 2012 FIBA World Olympic Qualifying Tournament for Men, the last competitive game between the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289177-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group B, Games, South Korea vs. Nigeria\nThis was the first competitive game between South Korea and Nigeria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289177-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group B, Games, Russia vs. Argentina\nThis was the fourth game between Russia and Argentina in the World Cup. The Russians won their last competitive game against Argentina, in the 2012 Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289178-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group C\nGroup C of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup was the group stage of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup for the Spain, Iran, Puerto Rico and Tunisia. Each team played each other once, for a total of three games per team, with all games played at Guangzhou Gymnasium, Guangzhou. After all of the games were played, the top two teams with the best records qualified for the Second round and the bottom two teams played in the Classification Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289178-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group C, Games, Iran vs. Puerto Rico\nThis was the first competitive game between Iran and Puerto Rico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289178-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group C, Games, Spain vs. Tunisia\nThis was the first competitive game between Spain and Tunisia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289178-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group C, Games, Tunisia vs. Iran\nThis was the second game in the World Cup between Tunisia and Iran. The Iranians won in 2010, which was also the last competitive game between the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289178-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group C, Games, Puerto Rico vs. Spain\nThis was the second game in the World Cup between Puerto Rico and Spain. The Puerto Ricans won in 2002, which was also the last competitive game between the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289178-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group C, Games, Puerto Rico vs. Tunisia\nThis was the first competitive game between Puerto Rico and Tunisia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289178-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group C, Games, Spain vs. Iran\nThis was the second game in the World Cup between Spain and Iran. The Spaniards won in 2014, which was also the last competitive game between the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289179-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group D\nGroup D of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup was the group stage of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup for the Angola, Philippines, Italy and Serbia. Each team played each other once, for a total of three games per team, with all games played at Foshan International Sports and Cultural Center, Foshan. After all of the games were played, the top two teams with the best records qualified for the Second round and the bottom two teams played in the Classification Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289179-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group D, Games, Angola vs. Serbia\nThis was the second game between Angola and Serbia in the World Cup. The Serbians won the first meeting in 2010. The Serbians won in the 2016 FIBA World Olympic Qualifying Tournament, the last competitive game between the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289179-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group D, Games, Philippines vs. Italy\nThis was the second game between the Philippines and Italy in the World Cup. The Italians won the first meeting in 1978, which was also the last competitive game between the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289179-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group D, Games, Italy vs. Angola\nThis was the second game between Angola and Italy in the World Cup. The Italians won the first meeting in 1990, which was also the last competitive game between the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289179-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group D, Games, Serbia vs. Philippines\nThis was the first competitive game between Serbia and the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289179-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group D, Games, Angola vs. Philippines\nThis was the first competitive game between Angola and the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289179-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group D, Games, Italy vs. Serbia\nThis was the first game between Italy and Serbia in the World Cup. Serbia won in its last competitive game against Italy, in EuroBasket 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289180-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group E\nGroup E of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup was the group stage of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup for the Czech Republic, Turkey, United States and Japan. Each team played each other once, for a total of three games per team, with all games played at Shanghai Oriental Sports Center, Shanghai. After all of the games were played, the top two teams with the best records qualified for the Second round and the bottom two teams played in the Classification Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289180-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group E, Games, Turkey vs. Japan\nThis was the first competitive game between Turkey and Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289180-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group E, Games, Czech Republic vs. United States\nThis was the first competitive game between the Czech Republic and the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 79], "content_span": [80, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289180-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group E, Games, Japan vs. Czech Republic\nThis was the first competitive game between Japan and the Czech Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289180-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group E, Games, United States vs. Turkey\nThis was the third game between the United States and Turkey, with the Americans winning the prior two games, including in 2014, which was the last competitive game between the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289180-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group E, Games, Turkey vs. Czech Republic\nThis was the first game between Turkey and the Czech Republic in the World Cup. The Turks won in EuroBasket 2007, which was the last competitive game between the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289180-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group E, Games, United States vs. Japan\nThis was the first game between the United States and Japan in the World Cup. The Americans won in the 1972 Olympics, which was the last competitive game between the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289181-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group F\nGroup F of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup was the group stage of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup for the Greece, New Zealand, Brazil and Montenegro. Each team played each other once, for a total of three games per team, with all games played at Nanjing Youth Olympic Sports Park Gymnasium, Nanjing. After all of the games were played, the top two teams with the best records qualified for the Second round and the bottom two teams played in the Classification Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289181-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group F, Games, New Zealand vs. Brazil\nThis was the first competitive game between New Zealand and Brazil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289181-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group F, Games, Greece vs. Montenegro\nThis was the first game between Greece and Montenegro in the World Cup. The Greeks won in EuroBasket 2011, which was the last competitive game between the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289181-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group F, Games, Montenegro vs. New Zealand\nThis was the first competitive game between Montenegro and New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 73], "content_span": [74, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289181-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group F, Games, Brazil vs. Greece\nThis was the fifth game between Brazil and Greece in the World Cup. The Greeks won in 2006, which was the last competitive game between the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289181-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group F, Games, Brazil vs. Montenegro\nThis was the first competitive game between Brazil and Montenegro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289181-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group F, Games, Greece vs. New Zealand\nThis was the first game between Greece and New Zealand in the World Cup. The Greeks won in the 2008 FIBA World Olympic Qualifying Tournament for Men, which was the last competitive game between the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289182-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group G\nGroup G of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup was the group stage of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup for the Dominican Republic, France, Germany and Jordan. Each team played each other once, for a total of three games per team, with all games played at Shenzhen Bay Sports Centre, Shenzhen. After all of the games were played, the top two teams with the best records qualified for the Second round and the bottom two teams played in the Classification Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289182-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group G, Games, Dominican Republic vs. Jordan\nThis was the first competitive game between the Dominican Republic and Jordan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289182-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group G, Games, France vs. Germany\nThis was the second game between Germany and France in the World Cup. The French won in 2006. The Germans won in EuroBasket 2017, the last competitive game between the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289182-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group G, Games, Germany vs. Dominican Republic\nThis was the first competitive game between Germany and the Dominican Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 77], "content_span": [78, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289182-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group G, Games, Jordan vs. France\nThis was the first competitive game between Jordan and France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289182-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group G, Games, Germany vs. Jordan\nThis was the second competitive game between the Germany and Jordan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289182-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group G, Games, Dominican Republic vs. France\nThis was the first competitive game between the Dominican Republic and France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289183-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group H\nGroup H of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup was the group stage of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup for Canada, Senegal, Lithuania and Australia. Each team played each other once, for a total of three games per team, with all games played at Dongfeng Nissan Cultural and Sports Centre, Dongguan. After all of the games were played, the top two teams with the best records qualified for the Second round and the bottom two teams played in the Classification Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289183-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group H, Games, Canada vs. Australia\nThis was sixth game between Canada and Australia in the World Cup. The Australians won the last match-up in 1998. The Canadians won in the 2000 Olympics, the last competitive game between the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289183-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group H, Games, Senegal vs. Lithuania\nThis was the first competitive game between Senegal and Lithuania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289183-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group H, Games, Australia vs. Senegal\nThis was the first game between Australia and Senegal in the World Cup. The Australians won in the 1980 Olympics, the last competitive game between the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289183-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group H, Games, Lithuania vs. Canada\nThis was the second game between Lithuania and Canada in the World Cup. The Lithuanians won the first match-up in 2010, the last competitive game between the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289183-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group H, Games, Canada vs. Senegal\nThis was the third game between Canada and Senegal in the World Cup. The Canadians won the last match-up in 1998. The Canadians also won in the 2016 FIBA World Olympic Qualifying Tournament, the last competitive game between the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289183-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group H, Games, Lithuania vs. Australia\nThis was the fourth game between Lithuania and Australia in the World Cup. The Australians won the last match-up in 2014. The Australians also won in the 2016 Olympics, the last competitive game between the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289184-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group I\nGroup I of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup was the second stage of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup for four teams, top two teams from Group A and two from Group B. The results from the first round were carried over. The teams played against the teams from the group they have not faced before, for a total of two games per team, with all games played at Foshan International Sports and Cultural Center, Foshan. After all of the games were played, the top two teams advanced to Quarter-finals, the third placed team was classified 9 to 12 and the fourth placed team 13 to 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289185-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group J\nGroup J of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup was the second stage of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup for four teams, top two teams from Group C and two from Group D. The results of round one were carried over. The teams played against the teams from the group they have not faced before, for a total of two games per team, with all games played at Wuhan Gymnasium, Wuhan. After all of the games were played, the top two teams advanced to Quarter-finals, the third placed team was classified 9 to 12 and the fourth placed team 13 to 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289185-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group J, Games, Serbia vs. Puerto Rico\nThis was the first game between Puerto Rico and Serbia in the World Cup. Serbia won in its last competitive game against Puerto Rico, in the 2016 FIBA World Olympic Qualifying Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289185-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group J, Games, Spain vs. Serbia\nThis was the third match between Spain and Serbia in the World Cup, with both teams winning once in previous matches. Serbia won in its last competitive game against Spain, in EuroBasket 2015 group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289186-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group K\nGroup K of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup was the second stage of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup for four teams, top two teams from Group E and two from Group F. The results of round one were carried over. The teams played against the teams from the group they have not faced before, for a total of two games per team, with all games played at Shenzhen Bay Sports Centre, Shenzhen. After all of the games were played, the top two teams advance\u00b4d to Quarter-finals, the third placed team was classified 9 to 12 and the fourth placed team 13 to 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289187-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group L\nGroup L of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup was the second stage of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup for four teams, top two teams from Group G and two from Group H. The results of round one were carried over. The teams played against the teams from the group they have not faced before, for a total of two games per team, with all games played at Nanjing Youth Olympic Sports Park Gymnasium, Nanjing. After all of the games were played, the top two teams advanced to Quarter-finals, the third placed team was classified 9 to 12 and the fourth placed team 13 to 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289188-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group M\nGroup M of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup was the classification stage of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup for four teams, bottom two teams from Group A and two from Group B. The results against the teams that also qualified were carried over. The teams played against the teams from the group they have not faced before, for a total of two games per team, with all games played at Guangzhou Gymnasium, Guangzhou. After all of the games were played, the first placed team was classified 17 to 20, the second placed team 21 to 24, the third placed team 25 to 28 and the fourth placed team 29 to 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289189-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group N\nGroup N of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup was the classification stage of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup for four teams, bottom two teams from Group C and two from Group D. The results against the teams that also qualified were carried over. The teams played against the teams from the group they have not faced before, for a total of two games per team, with all games played at Wukesong Arena, Beijing. After all of the games were played, the first placed team was classified 17 to 20, the second placed team 21 to 24, the third placed team 25 to 28 and the fourth placed team 29 to 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289190-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group O\nGroup O of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup was the classification stage of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup for four teams, bottom two teams from Group E and two from Group F. The results against the teams that also qualified were carried over. The teams played against the teams from the group they have not faced before, for a total of two games per team, with all games played at Dongfeng Nissan Cultural and Sports Centre, Dongguan. After all of the games were played, the first placed team was classified 17 to 20, the second placed team 21 to 24, the third placed team 25 to 28 and the fourth placed team 29 to 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289191-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup Group P\nGroup P of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup was the classification stage of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup for four teams, bottom two teams from Group G and two from Group H. The results against the teams that also qualified were carried over. The teams played against the teams from the group they have not faced before, for a total of two games per team, with all games played at Shanghai Oriental Sports Center, Shanghai. After all of the games were played, the first placed team was classified 17 to 20, the second placed team 21 to 24, the third placed team 25 to 28 and the fourth placed team 29 to 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289192-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup bids\nThe bidding process for the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup was the procedure for the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) in choosing the hosts for the 2019 FIBA World Cup. The process was concluded on 7 August 2015 with China announced by the basketball world body as hosts of the 2019 FIBA World Cup. The other candidate country was the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289192-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup bids\nAll FIBA national federations are allowed to bid for the 2019 Basketball World Cup, but FIBA also added that a federation can bid on both the 2019 and 2023 World Cups or bid only for 2023 and award hosts for events at the same time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289192-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup bids, Bidding calendar\nOn 16 April 2014, in a press release, FIBA announced the bidding calendar for the 2019 and/or 2023 Basketball World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289192-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup bids, Candidate countries\nOn 16 March 2015, FIBA announced that its executive committee has decided that the 2019 World Cup would be held in Asia, putting the bids of China and the Philippines as the final candidates in the running as hosts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289192-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup bids, Candidate countries\nThe Philippines had successfully hosted the 1978 FIBA World Championship and three FIBA Asia Championships (1960, 1973 and 2013).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289192-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup bids, Candidate countries\nChina hosted the 2015 FIBA Asia Championship, and also hosted four previous Asian championships this century.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289192-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup bids, Candidate countries\nBids from Germany, Turkey and Qatar were moved for the 2023 FIBA Basketball World Cup. Those from France, Lithuania, Russia, Venezuela, and Mexico were disregarded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289192-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup bids, Selection\nAfter the final bid presentation conducted by the two candidate countries in Tokyo, Japan on 7 August 2015. The FIBA Central Board decided on the hosts of the 2019 tournament and announced China as hosts of the tournament on the same day. 14 voted for China while 7 voted for the Philippines for the right to host the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289193-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup final round\nThe final round of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup was the knockout stage of the competition. The top two teams from Groups I, J, K, and L in the second round qualified for the single-elimination tournament. Quarterfinal losers were relegated to the classification stage for 5th\u20138th places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289193-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup final round, Quarter-finals, United States vs. France\nFrance snapped Team USA's 58-game winning streak in international competition that dated back to the bronze-medal game at the 2006 FIBA World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 84], "content_span": [85, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289194-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification\nThe 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification was the first World Cup for which teams had to qualify for under the new qualification system. The process determined 31 out of the 32 teams that participated at the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289194-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification, Format\nThe continental championships no longer belong to the qualification system for the World Cup. Instead, two rounds of continental qualifying tournaments were held over two years in a home-and-away format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289194-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification, Format\nThe first round of the qualifiers were held in late 2017 and early 2018. The Americas, Asia / Oceania and Africa qualifiers featured 16 teams each, whereas Europe had 32 teams. Division A teams was split in groups of four, to be held in a home-and-away round-robin. The top three teams in each groups advanced to round two, and last placed teams played the best Division B teams to qualify for the next season's Division A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289194-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification, Format\nRound two of the World Cup qualifiers were held in late 2018 and early 2019. Teams were split in groups of six, totaling four groups in Europe and two in the other qualifiers. Teams carried over the points from round one, and face another three teams again in a home-and-away round-robin. The best teams in each group qualified for the World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289194-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification, Format\nStarting in 2019, no wild card qualification were held, and the Olympic champions no longer directly qualified to the World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289194-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification, Format\nThe draw for the qualifiers was held on 7 May 2017 in Guangzhou, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289194-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification, Confederation qualifications, FIBA Asia and FIBA Oceania\nAll 16 teams which qualified for the 2017 FIBA Asia Cup played in the Asian qualification round of the 2019 FIBA World Cup, which included teams from FIBA Oceania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 102], "content_span": [103, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289194-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification, Confederation qualifications, FIBA Asia and FIBA Oceania, First round\nAustralia defeated Philippines by default following a brawl left Philippines with only 1 player on court", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 115], "content_span": [116, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289194-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification, Confederation qualifications, FIBA Europe, European Pre-Qualifiers\nThe 24 national teams that qualified for EuroBasket 2017 had also qualified for Division A of FIBA Basketball World Cup Qualifying. The last eight teams qualified through the FIBA Basketball World Cup 2019 European Pre-Qualifiers which were held in August 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 112], "content_span": [113, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289194-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification, Confederation qualifications, FIBA Europe, European Pre-Qualifiers\nIn order to determine the last eight spots in Division A, 13 teams participated in four home-and-away round robin groups on 2 to 19 August 2017. The draw to determine the 4 groups was held in Prague, Czech Republic on 10 December 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 112], "content_span": [113, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289194-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification, Issues and concerns\nThere were concerns from national federations that they would not be able to play the qualifiers with players from top professional leagues globally (the National Basketball Association and EuroLeague), which is possible with professional leagues operating in mid-year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 65], "content_span": [66, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289195-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification (Africa)\nThe 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification for the FIBA Africa region, began in November 2017 and concluded in February 2019. The process determined the five African teams that would participate at the 2019 FIBA World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289195-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification (Africa), Entrants\nThe 16 teams that have qualified for AfroBasket 2017 earned a right to participate in the first round of the FIBA Basketball World Cup African qualifiers. Few days before the start of the campaign, South Africa withdrew from the qualification. They were replaced by Chad, runner-up from AfroBasket 2017 additional qualifiying tournament. As of 10 November 2017, the qualified teams were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289195-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification (Africa), Schedule\nThe schedule of the competition is expected to be as follows.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289195-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification (Africa), Second round\nIn the second round, the top three teams from each group were placed in a group with three other top teams. All results from the first qualification round, were carried over to the second round. Games were played in September 2018, November 2018 and February 2019. The top two teams in each group along with the better placed third team qualified for the FIBA Basketball World Cup proper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 67], "content_span": [68, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289196-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification (Americas)\nThe 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification for the FIBA Americas region, began in November 2017 and concluded in February 2019. The process determined the seven teams that would participate at the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289196-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification (Americas), Seeding\nThe top five teams at the 2016 Centrobasket and 2016 South American Basketball Championship, plus the three teams from North America (Canada, The USA, and Mexico) qualified directly to the 2019 FIBA World Cup qualification. Four additional teams were scheduled to be selected at a pre-qualifier tournament in July 2017, but it was canceled. Instead, the sixth and seventh placed teams at the Centrobasket and South American Championship were invited to the World Cup qualification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 64], "content_span": [65, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289196-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification (Americas), Second round\nIn the second round, the top three teams from each group were placed in a group with three other top teams. All results from the first qualification round were carried over to the second round. Games were played in September 2018, November 2018 and February 2019. The top three teams in each group along with the better placed fourth team will qualified for the FIBA Basketball World Cup proper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 69], "content_span": [70, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289196-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification (Americas), Second round, Group F\n1 Virgin Islands did not arrive timely to play against Brazil and game was forfeited.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 78], "content_span": [79, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289197-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification (Asia)\nThe 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification for the FIBA Asia-Oceania region, began in November 2017 and concluded in February 2019. The process determined the seven teams that would join the automatically qualified hosts China at the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289197-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification (Asia), Seeding\nThe 16 participating teams at the 2017 FIBA Asia Cup did participate in the first round of the FIBA Basketball World Cup Asian qualifiers. China, the host of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup, also participated in the qualifiers despite being automatically qualified for the FIBA Basketball World Cup as hosts. The seeding of eight pots used in the draw were determined on the basis of the team's FIBA World Rankings and \"geographic principles\". Teams in pots with an odd number were either drawn on Group A or B while teams in pots with an even number were drawn on Group C or D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 60], "content_span": [61, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289197-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification (Asia), First round, Group B\n1 Australia won by default after the Filipino team was left with one player following a bench-clearing brawl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 73], "content_span": [74, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289197-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification (Asia), Second round\nIn the second round, the top three teams from each group were placed in a group with three teams from another group. All results from the first qualification round were carried over to the second round. Games were played in September 2018, November 2018 and February 2019. The top three teams in each group along with the better placed fourth team qualified for the FIBA Basketball World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 65], "content_span": [66, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289197-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification (Asia), Second round\nThe 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup host, China, shall not be taken into consideration for qualifying spots. However all results related to the previous games of China in the relevant group shall be taken into account for the final standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 65], "content_span": [66, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289197-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification (Asia), Controversy, Australia \u2013 Philippines brawl\nDuring the Group B match between the Philippines and Australia on 2 July 2018 in the Philippine Arena, a bench-clearing brawl broke out when an Australian player intentionally elbowed a Filipino player with 4:02 remaining in the third quarter, resulting in 13 players (nine from the Philippines and four from Australia) being ejected. The game was halted with 1:57 remaining in the third quarter when two of the remaining Filipino players fouled out, and awarded the win to Australia by default.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 95], "content_span": [96, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289198-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification (Europe)\nThe 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification for the FIBA Europe region, began in August 2017 and concluded in February 2019. Contrary to previous years, no teams were automatically placed into the World Cup, so all FIBA Europe nations had to participate in qualification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289198-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification (Europe), Format\nFIBA Europe was allocated 12 berths at the World Cup. In total, 37 FIBA Europe teams took part in the qualification tournament. The qualification consisted of the following stages:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 61], "content_span": [62, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289198-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification (Europe), Pre-Qualifiers\nTeams that did not manage or did not apply to make EuroBasket 2017 played in the pre-qualifiers round. 13 teams participated in four home-and-away round robin groups, from 2 to 19 August 2017. Armenia made its debut in FIBA international competitions, while teams such as Denmark, Switzerland, Luxembourg and Cyprus did not participate in 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup campaign. The draw to determine the groups was held in Prague, Czech Republic, on 10 December 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289198-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification (Europe), Pre-Qualifiers\nThe top two teams from each group qualified for the First round, determining the last eight spots in Division A. The other five teams (the bottom two teams from Group A + the bottom team from Groups B, C, and D) have been eliminated from the FIBA Basketball World Cup, and played in Division B of EuroBasket 2021 qualifying, starting with the pre-qualifiers first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289198-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification (Europe), Pre-Qualifiers, Seeding\nPre -qualifiers were drawn on 10 December 2016. Seeding was based on the EuroBasket 2017 qualification record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 78], "content_span": [79, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289198-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification (Europe), Qualifiers, First round\nThe 24 national teams that qualified for EuroBasket 2017 automatically qualified for this stage. They were joined by eight teams qualified through the Pre-Qualifiers. In total, 32 teams were divided into eight home-and-away round robin groups of four teams. The allocation of teams from the first round was determined on 24 August 2017, with the only restriction of not drawing Serbia and Kosovo in the same group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 78], "content_span": [79, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289198-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification (Europe), Qualifiers, First round\nGames were played during November 2017, February 2018, June 2018, and July 2018. The top three teams from each group advanced to the Second round. The bottom team from each group was eliminated from the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup and transferred to the Second Round of EuroBasket 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 78], "content_span": [79, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289198-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification (Europe), Qualifiers, Draw\nThere were two draws for the first round (group stage). The first one took place in Guangzhou on 6 May 2017 and involved only 24 teams directly qualified to this round as EuroBasket 2017 participants. The second draw was held in Munich on 24 August 2017, after Pre-Qualifiers was concluded and involved only 8 teams qualified from Pre-Qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 71], "content_span": [72, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289198-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification (Europe), Qualifiers, Seeding\nTeams were seeded according to their performance at the latest FIBA Europe tournaments. They were divided into eight pots of four teams. Pots 1 to 6 involved all EuroBasket 2017 participants and were determined using the same seedings as Eurobasket 2017. Pot 7 was reserved for the Pre-Qualifiers group winners and pot 8 for the runners-up. Teams from pots 1, 4, 5, and 8 were drawn to Groups A, C, E, and G, while teams from pots 2, 3, 6, and 7 were drawn to Groups B, D, F, and H.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 74], "content_span": [75, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289198-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification (Europe), Qualifiers, Second round\nThe top three teams from each group, from the previous round, were grouped with three top teams from another group. It was composed of four new, home-and-away, round robin groups of six teams. All results from the first round were carried over to the second round. Games were played in September 2018, November 2018, and February 2019. The top three teams from each group qualified for the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 79], "content_span": [80, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289199-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup squads\nThe 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup includes teams whose rosters consists of 12 players; a team may opt to have one naturalized player as per FIBA eligibility rules in their roster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289199-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup squads\nPlayer ages are as of 31 August 2019, the first day of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289199-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup squads, Group B, Argentina\nThe Argentinian team announced the 12-player final roster on 7th of August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289199-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup squads, Group E, Japan\nThe Japanese team announced the 12-player final roster on 27th of August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289199-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup squads, Group E, United States\nThe American team announced the 12-player final roster on 24th of August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289199-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup squads, Statistics, Player representation by league system\nLeague systems with 15 or more players represented are listed. In all, World Cup squad members play for clubs in 37 countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 89], "content_span": [90, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289199-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup squads, Statistics, Player representation by league system\na As the Euroleague is a multinational league and all competing teams (excluding Olympiacos) compete in their domestic leagues, the total percentage will be over 100 because of duplications. b The VTB United League is Russia's main system but teams from neighbouring nations are invited to enter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 89], "content_span": [90, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289200-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Europe Cup Finals\nThe 2019 FIBA Europe Cup Finals were the concluding games of the 2018\u201319 FIBA Europe Cup season. The Finals will be played in a two-legged format, with the first leg being played on April 24 and the second one on 1 May 2019. The finals were played between Dinamo Sassari and s.Oliver W\u00fcrzburg. Both teams appeared in their first FIBA Europe Cup final, as well as their first European final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289200-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Europe Cup Finals\nDinamo won its first European championship after defeating W\u00fcrzburg in both legs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289200-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Europe Cup Finals, Road to the Finals\nNote: In the table, the score of the finalist is given first (H = home; A = away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289201-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Europe SuperCup Women\nThe 2019 FIBA Europe SuperCup Women was the 9th edition of the FIBA Europe SuperCup Women. It was held on 10 October 2019 at the DIVS Sport Hall in Yekaterinburg, Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289202-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Intercontinental Cup\nThe 2019 FIBA Intercontinental Cup was the 28th edition of the FIBA Intercontinental Cup. The tournament took place from 15 to 17 February 2019. The tournament was held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, at the Carioca Arena 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289202-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Intercontinental Cup, Format\nThe tournament was held under a Final Four format, played by four teams, and included a third-place game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289202-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Intercontinental Cup, Teams\nThe tournament was contested by four teams. The NBA opted to send the G League champions, rather than send the NBA champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289202-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Intercontinental Cup, Venue\nWhen the event was announced, it was also announced that the game would be played at the Carioca Arena 1, the home arena of the tournament's host club, Flamengo. Carioca Arena 1 is located in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The arena was opened in 2016, and it has a seating capacity of 6,000 people for basketball games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289203-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA U16 European Championship\nThe 2019 FIBA U16 European Championship was the 33rd edition of the Under-16 European Basketball Championship. The competition took place from 9 to 17 August 2019 in Udine, Italy. The top five teams qualified for the 2020 FIBA Under-17 Basketball World Cup besides Bulgaria who automatically qualified as host.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289203-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA U16 European Championship, Preliminary round\nThe draw ceremony was held on 13 December 2018 in Belgrade, Serbia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289204-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA U16 European Championship Division B\nThe 2019 FIBA U16 European Championship Division B was the 16th edition of the Division B of the FIBA U16 European Championship. It was played in Podgorica, Montenegro, from 8 to 17 August 2019. 24 teams participated in the competition. Poland men's national under-16 basketball team won the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289205-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA U16 European Championship Division C\nThe 2019 FIBA U16 European Championship Division C was held in Tirana, Albania, from 14 to 21 July 2019. Nine teams participated in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289206-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA U16 Women's European Championship\nThe 2019 FIBA U16 Women's European Championship was the 31st edition of the Women's European basketball championship for national under-16 teams. It was held from 22 to 30 August in Skopje, North Macedonia. The top five teams qualified for the 2020 FIBA Under-17 Women's Basketball World Cup in Romania besides Romania who automatically qualified as host.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289207-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA U16 Women's European Championship Division B\nThe 2019 FIBA U16 Women's European Championship Division B was the 16th edition of the Division B of the European basketball championship for women's national under-16 teams. It was played in Sofia, Bulgaria, from 15 to 24 August 2019. Slovenia women's national under-16 basketball team won the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289207-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA U16 Women's European Championship 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 quarterfinals, the third and fourth teams will advance to the 9th\u201316th place playoffs, the other teams will play in the 17th\u201323rd place classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 67], "content_span": [68, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289208-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA U16 Women's European Championship Division C\nThe 2019 FIBA U16 Women's European Championship Division C was the 15th 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 Chi\u0219in\u0103u, Moldova, from 16 to 21 July 2019. Cyprus women's national under-16 basketball team won the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289209-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA U18 European Championship\nThe 2019 FIBA U18 European Championship was the 36th edition of the FIBA U18 European Championship. The competition took place in Volos, Greece, from 27 July to 4 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289209-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA U18 European Championship, Preliminary round\nThe draw ceremony was held on 13 December 2018 in Belgrade, Serbia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289210-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA U18 European Championship Division B\nThe 2019 FIBA U18 European Championship Division B is the 15th edition of the Division B of FIBA U18 European Championship. The competition takes place in Oradea, from 26 July to 4 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289210-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA U18 European Championship Division B, Group phase\nIn this round, the 24 teams are allocated in four groups of six teams each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 59], "content_span": [60, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289211-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA U18 European Championship Division C\nThe 2019 FIBA U18 European Championship Division C was the 15th edition of the Division C of the FIBA U18 European Championship. It was played in Andorra la Vella, Andorra, from 28 July to 4 August 2019. 9 teams participated in the competition. Cyprus national under-18 basketball team won the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289212-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA U18 Women's European Championship\nThe 2019 FIBA U18 Women's European Championship was an international basketball competition held from 6 to 14 July 2019 in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. It was the 36th edition of the championship. 16 national teams from across Europe, composed of women aged 18 and under, competed in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289212-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA U18 Women's European Championship, First round\nThe first-round groups draw took place on 13 December 2018 in Belgrade, Serbia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289213-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA U18 Women's European Championship Division B\nThe 2019 FIBA U18 Women's European Championship Division B was the 15th edition of the Division B of the FIBA U18 Women's European Championship, the second tier of the European women's under-18 basketball championship. It was played in Skopje, North Macedonia, from 5 to 14 July 2019. Finland women's national under-18 basketball team won the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289214-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA U18 Women's European Championship Division C\nThe 2019 FIBA U18 Women's European Championship Division C was the 14th 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 30 July to 4 August 2019. Armenia women's national under-18 basketball team won the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289215-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA U20 European Championship\nThe 2019 FIBA U20 European Championship was the 22nd edition of the FIBA U20 European Championship. The competition took place in Tel Aviv, Israel from 13 to 21 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289215-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA U20 European Championship, First round\nIn this round, the 16 teams are allocated in four groups of four teams each. All teams will advance to the Second Round of 16. All times are local (UTC+3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289216-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA U20 European Championship Division B\nThe 2019 FIBA U20 European Championship Division B was the 15th edition of the Division B of the FIBA U20 European Championship, the second-tier level of the European Under-20 basketball championship. The tournament was played in Matosinhos, Portugal, from 12 to 21 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289216-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA U20 European Championship Division B, Group Phase\nIn the Group Phase the 21 participating teams are divided into three groups of five and one group of six. Teams play four or five games within their group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 59], "content_span": [60, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289217-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA U20 Women's European Championship\nThe 2019 FIBA U20 Women's European Championship will be the 18th edition of the Women's European basketball championship for national under-20 teams. Held from 3 to 11 11 August in Klatovy, Czech Republic, 16 teams participate in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289217-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA U20 Women's European Championship, First round\nThe draw took place on 13 December 2018 in Belgrade, Serbia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289218-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA U20 Women's European Championship Division B\nThe 2019 FIBA U20 Women's European Championship was the 15th edition of the Women's European basketball championship Division B for national under-20 teams. Held from 3 to 11 August in Prishtina, Kosovo, 12 teams participated in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289218-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA U20 Women's European Championship Division B, First round\nThe draw took place on 13 December 2018 in Belgrade, Serbia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 67], "content_span": [68, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289219-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Under-16 African Championship\nThe 2019 FIBA Africa Under-16 Championship, alternatively the 6th Afrobasket U16, was an international basketball competition held in Praia, Cape Verde from 5\u201314 July 2019. It served as a qualifier for the 2020 FIBA Under-17 Basketball World Cup in Bulgaria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289219-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Under-16 African Championship, Participating teams\nOn the eve of the tournament, rosters were finalized for the following participating teams:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289220-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Under-16 Americas Championship\nThe 2019 FIBA Americas Under-16 Championship for Men was the international basketball competition that was held in Bel\u00e9m, Brazil from 3 to 9 June 2019. The top four teams qualified for the 2020 FIBA Under-17 Basketball World Cup in Bulgaria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289220-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Under-16 Americas Championship, Draw\nThe draw was held on 30 April 2019 in San Juan, Puerto Rico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 46], "content_span": [47, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289221-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Under-16 Asian Championship\nThe 2019 FIBA Under-16 Asian Championship was originally to be the qualifying tournament for FIBA Asia at the 2020 FIBA Under-17 Basketball World Cup. The tournament would have been held in Beirut, Lebanon from 5 to 12 April 2020. The top four teams would have represented FIBA Asia at the Under-17 Basketball World Cup in Bulgaria. However it was cancelled by FIBA due to the coronavirus pandemic in China. Instead it was determined by FIBA rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289221-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Under-16 Asian Championship, Qualification\nAside from the host nation and the defending champions, each of FIBA Asia's six subzones also gets one berth each, except for the Persian Gulf, East Asia and West Asian subzones, which were allocated two berths each. Rounding out the 16-team tournament are the four berths that would be added to each subzone, depending on its teams' performance in the previous championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289221-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Under-16 Asian Championship, Qualification, Qualified teams\nIncluded are the teams' FIBA World Rankings prior to the tournament (as of 7 December 2018).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 69], "content_span": [70, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289222-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Under-16 Women's African Championship\nThe 2019 FIBA Africa Under-16 Championship for Women was the 6th 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 Rwanda from 26 July to 4 August, with the games played in Kigali. The top two teams qualified for the 2020 FIBA Under-17 Women's Basketball World Cup in Romania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289223-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Under-16 Women's Americas Championship\nThe 2019 FIBA Under-16 Women's Americas Championship was an international basketball competition held in Puerto Ays\u00e9n, Chile from 16\u201322 June 2019. It was the sixth edition of the FIBA Americas Under-16 Championship for Women, and the first to be hosted in Chile.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289223-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Under-16 Women's Americas Championship\nThe United States defeated Canada, 87\u201337, in the final game to reclaim the championship. Meanwhile, the hosts Chile edged Puerto Rico in the bronze medal game, 59\u201349. The top four teams qualified for the 2020 FIBA Under-17 Women's Basketball World Cup in Romania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289223-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Under-16 Women's Americas Championship, Draw\nThe draw was held on 30 April 2019 in San Juan, Puerto Rico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 54], "content_span": [55, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289224-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Under-16 Women's Asian Championship\nThe 2019 FIBA Under-16 Women's Asian Championship was originally to be the qualifying tournament for FIBA Asia at the 2020 FIBA Under-17 Women's Basketball World Cup. The tournament would have been held in Canberra, Australia from 5 to 10 April 2020. The top four teams would have represented FIBA Asia to the Under-17 Women's Basketball World Cup in Romania. However it was cancelled by FIBA due to the coronavirus pandemic in China. Instead it was determined by the FIBA World Ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289225-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Under-17 Women's Oceania Championship\nThe 2019 FIBA Under-17 Women's Oceania Championship is an international under-17 basketball tournament held from 19\u201324 August 2019 by FIBA Oceania in Noum\u00e9a, New Caledonia. Australia were the defending champions and they successfully defended their title after defeating New Zealand in the final, 88\u201341.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289225-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Under-17 Women's Oceania Championship, Hosts Selection\nOn 23 September 2016, FIBA Oceania announced during their Board Meeting that New Caledonia was to host the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289226-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Under-19 Basketball World Cup\nThe 2019 FIBA Under-19 Basketball World Cup(Greek:\u03a0\u03b1\u03b3\u03ba\u03cc\u03c3\u03bc\u03b9\u03bf \u039a\u03cd\u03c0\u03b5\u03bb\u03bb\u03bf \u039c\u03c0\u03ac\u03c3\u03ba\u03b5\u03c4 FIBA Under-19 2019) was the tournament organized by FIBA for youth national teams aged 19 years old and below. It was hosted by Heraklion, Greece, from 29 June to 7 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289226-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Under-19 Basketball World Cup\nThe United States won their seventh title after defeating Mali 93\u201379 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289226-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Under-19 Basketball World Cup, Preliminary round\nThe draw for the tournament was held on 20 February 2019 in Heraklion, Greece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289227-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Under-19 Women's Basketball World Cup\nThe 2019 FIBA Under-19 Women's Basketball World Cup(Thai: \u0e1a\u0e32\u0e2a\u0e40\u0e01\u0e15\u0e1a\u0e2d\u0e25\u0e2b\u0e0d\u0e34\u0e07\u0e0a\u0e34\u0e07\u0e41\u0e0a\u0e21\u0e1b\u0e4c\u0e42\u0e25\u0e01\u0e23\u0e38\u0e48\u0e19\u0e2d\u0e32\u0e22\u0e38\u0e44\u0e21\u0e48\u0e40\u0e01\u0e34\u0e19 19 \u0e1b\u0e35 2019) (formerly FIBA U19 Women's World Championship) was a tournament organized by FIBA for women's youth national teams aged 19 years old and below and took place in Bangkok, Thailand from 20 to 28 July 2019. Colombia, Germany and Mozambique made their U-19 Women's Basketball World Cup debut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289227-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Under-19 Women's Basketball World Cup\nThe United States won their eighth title after defeating Australia in the final in the overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289227-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Under-19 Women's Basketball World Cup, Draw\nThe draw for the tournament was held on 20 March 2019 in Bangkok, Thailand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 53], "content_span": [54, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289228-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Under-19 Women's Basketball World Cup squads\nThis article shows the rosters of all participating teams at the 2019 FIBA Under-19 Women's Basketball World Cup in Thailand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289229-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Women's AmeriCup\nThe 2019 FIBA Women's AmeriCup was held in San Juan, Puerto Rico from 22 to 29 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289229-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Women's AmeriCup\nThe United States won their third title by defeating Canada in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289229-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Women's AmeriCup, Draw\nThe draw was held on 23 July 2019 in San Juan, Puerto Rico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289230-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Women's AmeriCup squads\nThis article displays the rosters for the teams competing at the 2019 FIBA Women's AmeriCup. Each team had to submit 12 players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289231-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Women's Asia Cup\nThe 2019 FIBA Women's Asia Cup was the first step for the qualification for FIBA Asia and FIBA Oceania for the women's basketball tournament at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, Japan. The tournament was held from 24 to 29 September 2019 in Bangalore, India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289231-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Women's Asia Cup\nJapan won their fifth overall and fourth consecutive title after defeating China in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289231-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Women's Asia Cup, Competition format\nFor Division A, during the Group phase, eight participating teams were divided into two groups of four teams each. Each team played all the other teams in its own group (a total of three games for each team).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289231-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Women's Asia Cup, Competition format\nThe top teams in each group automatically qualified to the semi-finals, while the next two teams qualified to the quarter-finals, where the second placed team of one group played the third placed team of the other group for a spot in the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289231-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Women's Asia Cup, Competition format\nMeanwhile, the bottom teams in each group played the seventh place classification game. The eighth placed team of Division A was supposed to be relegated down to Division B of 2021 FIBA Women's Asia Cup, while the remaining teams in Division A advanced to play in the FIBA Pre-Qualifying Olympic Tournament alongside the Division B winner. However, the Division B was not held due to no country willing to host the tournament and India was given a berth in the Olympic pre-qualifiers. India also remained in Division A of the 2021 FIBA Women's Asia Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289231-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Women's Asia Cup, Squads\nEach team consisted of 12 players which had to be confirmed by FIBA before September 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289231-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Women's Asia Cup, Statistics and awards, Awards\nThe all star-teams and MVP was announced on 29 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289232-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Women's Asia Cup squads\nThis article displays the rosters for the teams competing at the 2019 FIBA Women's Asia Cup. Each team had to submit 12 players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289232-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIBA Women's Asia Cup squads, Group B, Australia\nA 16-player squad was announced on 16 August 2019. The final squad was revealed on 21 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup\nThe 2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup was the 10th FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, the premier international beach soccer championship contested by men's national teams of the member associations of FIFA. Overall, this was the 20th edition of a world cup in beach soccer since the establishment of the Beach Soccer World Championships which ran from 1995 to 2004 but was not governed by FIFA. This was the fifth tournament to take place under the biennial basis; the World Cup now takes place once every two years, having taken place annually until 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup\nThe tournament was confirmed publicly on 3 November 2017, during the annual FIFA Beach Soccer Workshop in Dubai as part of the recently renewed partnership between FIFA and Beach Soccer Worldwide (BSWW). In October 2018, it was announced that the tournament would take place in Paraguay in the city of Luque, near the capital, Asunci\u00f3n, between 21 November and 1 December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup\nFifteen teams advanced through preliminary continental qualification competitions, which started in September 2018 and ended in July 2019, to join the hosts in the final tournament which included Belarus as the sole team making their debut at the finals and notably saw the third placed team of the previous edition, Iran, fail to qualify. This was the first FIFA tournament to be hosted by Paraguay, the first edition of the World Cup held in South America since 2007, and the first time a landlocked country hosted beach soccer's principal event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup\nFollowing two narrow loses, hosts Paraguay were eliminated at the group stage. Brazil were the defending champions, but were defeated at the quarter-finals stage by Russia in what was a repeat of the scenario of 2015, thereby condemning Brazil to their joint-worst ever result. Portugal won the tournament, besting Italy in the final to claim their second FIFA World Cup crown (following 2015) and third world title overall (including the 2001 World Championships); Italy collected a second runners-up medal, following 2008. For the first time, the podium teams were all European nations. Japan finished fourth, matching their best ever placing previously achieved in 2005. A joint-record tally of 286 goals were scored (with 2006).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup\nMadjer of Portugal made his last international beach soccer tournament appearance at this competition. The all-time top scorer of the competition, often heralded as the best player of all-time, announced his retirement following the final, aged 42.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Host selection\nThe bidding schedule to determine the hosts was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Host selection\nCountries known to have declared interest in bidding to host the competition are inclusive of but not exclusive to:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Host selection\nOn 1 October 2018, the FIFA Organising Committee recommended hosting be awarded to Paraguay as they were the only association to make an official bid after the initial declaration of interest stage. Confirmation of the awarding of hosting rights to Paraguay was announced at the FIFA Council meeting in Kigali, Rwanda on 26 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Qualification\nA total of 16 teams qualified for the final tournament. In addition to Paraguay who qualified automatically as hosts, 15 other teams qualified from six separate continental competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Qualification\nThe slot allocation for each confederation was decided at the FIFA Council meeting on 26 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Qualification, Qualifying rounds\nThe process of qualification to the World Cup finals began on 9 September 2018 and ended on 27 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Qualification, Qualified teams\nNote: All appearance statistics below include only the FIFA era (since 2005); see: National team appearances in the FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup for inclusion of the pre-FIFA era (1995\u20132004) stats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Venue\nOne venue was used in the city of Luque, part of the Greater Asunci\u00f3n area, on the grounds of the Paraguayan Olympic Committee headquarters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Venue\nThe stadium was purpose-built for the tournament, having been constructed between January and August 2019. It was officially opened by FIFA president Gianni Infantino on 9 November 2019, under the nickname of the Paraguayan national team, Los Pynandi, meaning \"barefoot\" in Guarani. The Paraguayan Football Association (APF) and FIFA funded the US$1.5 million cost of the concrete structure. The main arena was complemented by three external, floodlit training pitches located adjacent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Organisation\nThe following were key milestones in the organisation of the tournament (not belonging of other sections):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Match officials\nFIFA chose 24 officials from 24 different countries to referee matches at the World Cup, who were revealed on 29 October 2019. At least one referee was representing each of the six confederations: four from the AFC, three from CAF, five from CONMEBOL, three from CONCACAF, one from the OFC and eight from UEFA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Match officials\nThe most matches any one referee officiated in was seven (Dom\u00ednguez, Ostrowski, Benchabane, Gonz\u00e1lez, Angeles, Namazov, Mammadov); however it was Ivo Moraes who officiated the most matches as lead referee (three), including the final. Only Hugo Pado and Sergio Soares were not appointed as first referee of any match, the latter also officiating in the fewest total matches (one).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Draw\nThe draw to split the 16 teams into four groups of four took place on 13 September 2019 at 19:30 PYT (UTC\u22124), at the CONMEBOL Convention Centre in Asunci\u00f3n, Paraguay. The draw was assisted by Roberto Acuna of Paraguay and J\u00fanior of Brazil who both formerly represented their respective national teams at World Cups in both association football and beach soccer. CONMEBOL president, Alejandro Dom\u00ednguez and Paraguayan Football Association (APF) president, Robert Harrison, also took part in the presentation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 38], "content_span": [39, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Draw\nFor the purpose of the draw, the teams were divided into four pots each containing four teams. The teams were allocated into the respective pots based on their previous performances at recent World Cups, and their respective qualification tournaments. Initially, two teams from Pot 1 were automatically allocated to the groups \u2013 Paraguay, as the hosts, were assigned to position A1 and Brazil, as the defending champions, were assigned to position D1. Teams from the same confederation could not be drawn into the same group, except for UEFA for which one group was permitted to contain two, since UEFA are represented by five teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 38], "content_span": [39, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Squads\nEach team had to name a preliminary squad of between 12 and 18 players. From the preliminary squad, the team had to name a final squad of 12 players (two of whom must be goalkeepers) by the FIFA deadline. Players in the final squad could be replaced by a player from the preliminary squad due to serious injury or illness up to 24 hours prior to kickoff of the team's first match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Squads\nThe squads included a number of high-profile players who, at this tournament, made their final international beach soccer appearances, announcing their retirements following the conclusion of the competition. This included Portuguese captain and three-time world champion Madjer (1998 debut, 583 caps), 2009 runners-up, Swiss captain Moritz \"Mo\" Jaeggy (2003 debut, 355 caps) and his brother, Valentin Jaeggy (2005 debut, 321 caps).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Group stage\nEach team earned three points for a win in regulation time, two points for a win in extra time, one point for a win in a penalty shoot-out, and no points for a defeat. The top two teams of each group advanced to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Group stage, Tiebreakers\nThe ranking of teams in the group stage was determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Knockout stage, Semi-finals\nHeavy rain and strong winds threatened the postponement of the semi-finals and deterred fans from attending the matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Awards\nAfter the final, FIFA presented individual awards to the three best players of the tournament, three top goalscorers, and to the best goalkeeper. In addition, a collective award was given to the team with the most points in the Fair Play ranking. Following this, the winners' trophy was awarded to Portugal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Awards, Individual awards\nAlong with the eventual winners of the gold, silver and bronze ball awards, Takuya Akaguma (Japan), Rui Coimbra (Portugal), Gabriele Gori (Italy), Boris Nikonorov (Russia), Artur Paporotnyi (Russia), Fedor Zemskov (Russia) and Emmanuele Zurlo (Italy) were also announced as the candidates for the award in the initial ten-man shortlist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Awards, Individual awards\nThe individual awards were all sponsored by Adidas, except for the FIFA Fair Play Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Awards, Individual awards\nThe goal of the tournament was decided via an online public vote from which there were ten options to choose from. The vote closed at 14:00 GMT on 9 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Statistics, Goalscorers\nWith 16 goals, Italian forward Gabriele Gori finished as top scorer for the second consecutive tournament, a feat achieved only once previously during the FIFA era of World Cups, by Madjer in 2005 and 2006. Having failed to score at the last edition, Madjer scored one goal at this edition (what would be his last ever at a World Cup following his subsequent retirement) to extend his record tally of goals at FIFA World Cups to 88 (and 140 at all global championships).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 286 goals scored in 32 matches, for an average of 8.94 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Statistics, Goalscorers\n104 different players scored goals at this year's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Media, Broadcasting rights\nThe following tables are a summary of some notable and participating territories' broadcasting licensee holders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Media, Broadcasting rights\nIndividual territories listed that are also part of regional deals show the additional broadcasting licenses in those territories.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Media, Closing report, Social media\nAt the closing press conference on 30 November, head of FIFA Tournaments, Jaime Yarza reported that social media posts had generated over 46 million impressions, 1.7 million user interactions and 14 million video views, setting a new record for social media engagement of the FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, which Yarza claimed showed the continued growth of the sport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Media, Closing report, Economic impact\nPrior to the tournament, the Paraguayan Football Association (APF) estimated the competition would generate US$5 million for the local economy. The actual economic impact was reported at three times this amount of US$15 million at the closing press conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289233-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Media, Closing report, Attendance figures\nDespite struggling attendance figures, APF General Secretary Luis Kanonnikoff declared \"we are happy with the attendance numbers of both locals and foreigners.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 75], "content_span": [76, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final\nThe 2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final was a beach soccer match which took place on 1 December 2019 at Los Pynandi World Cup Stadium in Luque, Paraguay, to determine the winners of the 2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup. It was the final and hence the last match of the 10th FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, a biennial competition contested by the men's national teams of the member associations of FIFA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final\nAs the fourth all-European final (following 2001, 2005 and 2013), the match pitted the European champions of 2018 and 2019 respectively against each other: Italy, who had previously competed in one World Cup final, in 2008, and Portugal, who appeared in their third FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup final and their sixth overall when taking into account the pre-FIFA era Beach Soccer World Championships; their last appearance was four years prior in 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final\nIn what was seen as an evenly contested affair, Portugal emerged as victors thanks to a series of successful free kicks, clinching the match by six goals to four to win their second FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup crown (following 2015) and third world title overall (including success in the 2001 World Championship), condemning Italy to a second runners-up medal. The match was also notable as the 583rd and final international beach soccer appearance of Madjer; the Portuguese captain, often hailed as the best player of all-time, announced his retirement immediately following the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Background, World Cup history comparison\nBoth nations are veterans at World Cups, with Portugal missing only one and Italy, two, since their debuts (1997 and 1995 respectively). The former had had considerably more success than the latter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 80], "content_span": [81, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Background, World Cup history comparison\nDuring the World Championships era, Portugal became champions in 2001 and finished on the podium a further four times (1999, 2002, 2003, 2004). Since the FIFA era began, Portugal have fared relatively similarly, winning the 2015 title, finishing as runners-up in 2005 and earning bronze medals three times (2008, 2009, 2011). This was Portugal's third FIFA final and sixth overall. Italy's best finish of the World Championships was a single bronze medal, in 1996.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 80], "content_span": [81, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Background, World Cup history comparison\nItaly reached their first final during the FIFA era in 2008, when they lost to Brazil 5\u20133, and this remained their only podium finish of this era until now. This was Italy's second World Cup final. However, more recently, after neither team qualified for 2013, Italy had reached the semi-finals of the last two editions, one better than their Iberian opponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 80], "content_span": [81, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Background, 2019 season comparison\nBoth teams had enjoyed generally successful seasons but not without some negatives. As European nations, they had competed in many of the same events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 74], "content_span": [75, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Background, 2019 season comparison\nPortugal failed in qualification for the World Beach Games, but compensated for this disappointment by claiming the gold medal at the European Games and becoming six-time European champions at the Euro Beach Soccer League (EBSL). Despite reaching this final, they narrowly qualified for the World Cup in July, finishing in the final qualification spot, but also won the silver medal at the Mediterranean Beach Games. Portugal were world ranked 4th going into the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 74], "content_span": [75, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Background, 2019 season comparison\nItaly went into the season as reigning European champions having won the 2018 EBSL and began the year by qualifying for the World Beach Games were they went on to lose to Iran in the bronze medal match. They only managed a fifth place finish at the European Games, but claimed fourth in the EBSL and second place in qualification for the World Cup. The Mediterranean Beach Games was their most successful event, where they claimed the gold medal. Italy were world ranked 3rd going into the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 74], "content_span": [75, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Background, Previous matches, At World Cups\nThe teams had gone head-to-head three times previously at World Cups, twice during the World Championships era and once in the FIFA era. The three meetings are documented below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 83], "content_span": [84, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Background, Previous matches, Recent results (all competitions)\nThe teams had already met on three previous occasions in 2019, with Italy winning two, however Portugal had won the most recent contest. Before then, the teams had not clashed for over two years. However, overall, the two teams had met 48 times previously. The last five meetings are documented in the below table:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 103], "content_span": [104, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Match, Summary\nPeriod one began with Portugal on the offensive and Italy on the defensive, the latter's style compared to the Catenaccio tactics classically used by their national football team. Hence the Portuguese were the team creating the goal-scoring opportunities and dominating play, but on six minutes, Italy scored against the run of play \u2013 after a shot from Madjer (Portugal's twelfth of the match), Corosiniti played a ball through the middle to Zurlo who slotted home Italy's first shot of the match. 90 seconds later, Chiavaro fouled Leo Martins up against the touchline, just outside the Italian penalty area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Match, Summary\nThe Portuguese smashed his free kick into the bottom left hand corner to equalise the score. Portugal continued to dominate, having over 70% possession of the ball, but Italy began creating opportunities of their own as the period neared its end. After an injury timeout following Corosiniti and Belchior's clash, the period concluded with the score still level at 1\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Match, Summary\nThe second period started with a more even spread of chances for both teams. Del Mestre was forced into good saves from Jordan and then Be Martins, whilst, Gori and Zurlo saw their free kicks go narrowly wide for Italy. In the sixth minute, the deadlock was broken. Leo Martins won possession just inside his own half and lead Portugal on a quick counterattack, ultimately squaring the ball to an unmarked Jordan in the middle who fired home at the edge of the box.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Match, Summary\n30 seconds after the restart, Jordan won a long-range free kick, with his effort saved by a diving Del Mestre. However, the Italian mistakenly parried the ball back into the centre of the box; with the goal left undefended, Louren\u00e7o pounced onto the loose ball for a tap in, putting Portugal up 3\u20131. Despite the two goal gap, the game remained balanced as the second half of period two progressed; Leo Martins wasted a great chance, a one-on-one opportunity against the goalkeeper, shooting wide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Match, Summary\nJordan converted a powerful free kick from the centre of the pitch during the opening stages of period three to open up a 4\u20131 lead for Portugal. This deficit saw Italy become more offensive to try and bridge the gap. One minute later, Jordan was guilty of a foul on Gori, conceding a penalty, but the Italian's spot kick attempt was saved by Andrade. The attacking play of Italy began opening up more spaces for Portugal to exploit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Match, Summary\nSoon after, Leo Martins completed a brace from a free kick given away by Marinai just outside the Italian box, extending the Portuguese lead to 5\u20131 with just eight minutes left on the clock. Protests surrounding the foul lead to a flurry of yellow cards, for Jordan, Del Mestre and Chiavaro. After a Corosiniti effort hit the post, Italy scored two goals inside the 31st minute. First a one-two between Zurlo and Ramacciotti saw the latter slotting past Andrade at close range.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0012-0002", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Match, Summary\nAnd then from Ramacciotti's corner, Josep Junior ran from deep to head in at the back post for 5\u20133, reigniting the match as a contest, seeing Portugal take a more cautious approach into the final minutes. Gori almost made it 5\u20134 with two minutes left, hitting a bicycle kick against the post, but a controversial foul by Ramacciotti mere seconds later (for which he was booked) allowed Jordan to complete his hat-trick via the free kick. Italy's remaining efforts proved futile, save for a final attempt by Ramacciotti through Andrade's legs mere seconds from full time. But the goal bothered Portugal not as they knew they had the game won, and as the last seconds ticked by, the TV cameras were already focused on Madjer on the Portuguese bench who had begun crying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 823]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Match, Details\nSecond referee:Said Hachim (Madagascar)Third referee:Ingilab Mammadov (Azerbaijan)Timekeeper:Sofien Benchabane (France)Reserve assistant referee:Suhaimi Mat Hassan (Malaysia)Match commissioner:Paria Shahriyari (Iran)General coordinator:Josep Ponset (Spain)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Post-match, Tournament awards\nWhen the individual awards were presented at the conclusion of the final, players of the final's competing teams, Italy and Portugal, mopped up those on offer, claiming five of the seven available. Italy's Gabriele Gori and Emmanuele Zurlo won the Golden and Silver Scorer awards respectively, whilst Portugal's Jordan Santos, B\u00ea Martins and Elinton Andrade won the Silver, Bronze Balls and Golden Glove awards respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Post-match, Quotes from participants\nPlayers and staff made analytic comments to the media after the match, including:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Post-match, Quotes from participants\nI am really proud of my team-mates. In the end, we have the bitterness of not having won the final, it will always be there, the truth is that we had a great tournament and we need to be happy to have gone all the way to the final. We\u2019ve shown the world what kind of team Italy is, that we are capable of beating anyone, but in the end Portugal were deserved champions and were better.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Post-match, Quotes from participants\nThe games between Portugal and Italy are always very divided. The teams are very equal, but of course I was hoping we could win. At this moment what is in my soul is a great joy, not only for me but also for those who are in the dressing room... the feeling that I made my contribution to this achievement is amazing. It was a dream year, we had a lot of victories! It won't be easy to match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Post-match, Quotes from participants\nThe key to our success was playing well in the crucial matches. This is an experienced squad, full of players who knew what it was like to be crowned champions, and that made the difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Post-match, Quotes from participants\nThis is the perfect way to end a fantastic year, bearing in mind we also won the Euro Beach Soccer League and the European Games. It\u2019s a great source of pride to represent your country in such a way. I don\u2019t think I\u2019ll sleep with the trophy, as it\u2019s a bit hard, but maybe I\u2019ll do it with the medal!", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Post-match, Madjer's retirement\nAfter the trophy ceremony, Portuguese captain, Madjer, clarified his tears at the final whistle as \"farewell tears\"; he announced his retirement from international beach soccer, aged 42, bringing to an end a 22 year playing career, having claimed eleven individual awards at FIFA editions of the World Cup, as well as being by far the tournament's all-time top scorer with 88 goals and a total of 140 since the 1995 establishment of a world championship for beach soccer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0020-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Post-match, Madjer's retirement\nHe debuted for Portugal against Chile in the 1998 World Championship, and was the only player to be part of all three of Portugal's title winning teams to date. The announcement came in spite of plans he had recently revealed stating he would retire sometime in 2020. Being widely regarded as the greatest player of all-time, his announcement was met with an outpouring of tributes from fellow players and media outlets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Post-match, Madjer's retirement\nMadjer revealed the news in an emotional speech to the media:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Post-match, Madjer's retirement\nA big hug to all Portuguese, I thank from the bottom of my heart all the support you have given me throughout my career. I owe a lot to you, I owe a lot to this team, I owe a lot to everyone. Today was my last game... [ *begins crying*] ...I want to thank all Portuguese, all my colleagues, coaches, all the staff, people who worked with me until today. To say that I leave happy, fulfilled, proud to be Portuguese, and above all proud of this family that has been building more beautiful beach soccer, with fair play around the world. Thank you, Portuguese pride!", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Aftermath, Reception in Portugal and Italy\nThe Portuguese team subsequently flew home from Asuncion the next day, arriving back in Portugal at 07:00 WET on 3 December. Having accepted an invitation, the team then travelled to Bel\u00e9m Palace in Lisbon to meet with the President of Portugal, Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa at 13:45 in the Sala das Bicas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0023-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Aftermath, Reception in Portugal and Italy\nDuring the meeting, the delegation were commended with civil and national orders \u2013 the team's technical staff were awarded the title of Grand Officers of the Order of Merit, the players were bestowed with the title of Commanders of the Order of Merit, and Madjer was knighted, being made a Commander of the Order of Prince Henry. On 4 December, the whole team appeared for an interview on a domestic daytime TV talk show.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0023-0002", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Aftermath, Reception in Portugal and Italy\nCoach M\u00e1rio Narciso, players Madjer and Jo\u00e3o Gon\u00e7alves, team doctor Eduardo Farinha as well as Portuguese Football Federation (FPF) vice-president, Humberto Coelho and directior, Pedro Dias, were received at the 12 December plenary session of the Assembly of the Republic to be honoured by the chamber in recognition of the team's achievements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Aftermath, Reception in Portugal and Italy\nItalian Football Federation (FIGC) president Gabriele Gravina and Lega Nazionale Dilettanti (LND) president Cosimo Sibilia, both issued statements congratulating the Italian team on their silver medal and viewed the team's tournament very positively, despite the final loss, noting the increased engagement of new fans and reaffirming their commitments to develop the sport domestically.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289234-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Aftermath, Reception in Portugal and Italy, Broadcasting and viewership\nViewership was reported in the days following the final. In Portugal, the match started at 21:00 local time and was broadcast live on free-to-air television channel RTP2, earning an average audience share of 3.2% (~0.16m viewers), peaking with an audience share of 4.9% (~0.24m viewers) at 22:12; this coincided with the final minute of the match. In Italy, the match started at 22:00 local time and was broadcast live on pay television channel Sky Sport, earning an audience share of 0.4% (~0.1m viewers).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 111], "content_span": [112, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289235-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL)\nThe 2019 CONMEBOL qualifiers for the FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, (natively in Spanish: CONMEBOL Eliminatorias al Mundial de la FIFA de F\u00fatbol Playa Brasil 2019) was the eighth edition of the Beach Soccer World Cup qualification championship contested by the men's national teams of South America to determine the best beach soccer nation on the continent, organised by CONMEBOL. The tournament acted as a qualifying event to the 2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup in Asunci\u00f3n, Paraguay, with the top two finishing nations progressing to the finals in addition to Paraguay who qualify automatically as hosts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289235-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL)\nThe competition took place from 28 April to 5 May 2019 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Brazil were the defending champions and winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289235-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL), Participating teams, Draw\nThe draw of the tournament was held on 10 April 2019 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil during the 70th CONMEBOL Ordinary Congress. The ten teams were drawn into two groups of five. The hosts and defending champions Brazil and the 2017 vice-champions Paraguay were seeded into Group A and Group B respectively and assigned to position 1 in their group, while the remaining eight teams were placed into four \"pairing pots\" according to their final positions in the 2017 CONMEBOL qualifiers for the FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup (shown in brackets).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 84], "content_span": [85, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289235-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL), Group stage\nEach team earns three points for a win in regulation time, two points for a win in extra time, one point for a win in a penalty shoot-out, and no points for a defeat. The top two teams from each group advance to the semi-finals, while the teams in third, fourth and fifth advance to the fifth place, seventh place, and ninth place matches respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 70], "content_span": [71, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289235-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL), Qualified teams for FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup\nThe following three teams from CONMEBOL qualify for the 2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, including Paraguay who qualified automatically as host.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 106], "content_span": [107, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA)\nThe 2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualifiers for UEFA was a beach soccer tournament contested by European men's national teams who are members of UEFA that determined the five nations from Europe that qualified to the 2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup in Paraguay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA)\nThe event, organised by Beach Soccer Worldwide (BSWW) in cooperation with local entities, the Russian Football Union (RFU), Russian Ministry of Sport (RMoS) and the Government of Moscow, took place in Moscow, Russia from 19\u201327 July 2019. This also marked the first edition of the event to officially be under the patronage of UEFA, including the confederation's financial support.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA)\nThe tournament was a multi-stage competition, consisting of a first group stage, knockout round, second group stage and finishing with placement matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA)\nPoland were the defending champions but were eliminated from title-winning contention in the second group stage, ultimately finishing seventh. The competition was won by hosts Russia who, along with Italy, Belarus, Switzerland and Portugal, earned qualification to the World Cup by finishing in the top five (with the Belorussian team notably qualifying for the first time).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Format\nThe tournament started with a round-robin group stage; the top nations from each group advanced to the round of 16. The eight winners of the round of 16 then advanced to the second round-robin group stage. The top two teams of each group (total of four nations) secured qualification to the World Cup; the winners of each group also advanced to the tournament final to contest the title; the nations finishing in second through fourth played in consolation matches to decide third through eighth place, with the team claiming fifth place also qualifying for the World Cup finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 61], "content_span": [62, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Format\nThe format received criticism, being called the \"softest\" configuration in the history of UEFA qualifiers, \"forgiving the mistakes of teams again and again\", that in theory, a team could qualify for the World Cup despite winning just two and yet losing six matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 61], "content_span": [62, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Teams\n20 teams entered, a figure markedly lower than in recent editions. They are listed below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 60], "content_span": [61, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Teams\nSome notable absentees included England, Romania and Greece (all ranked in the European top 20, present at all previous qualifiers) and the Netherlands who qualified to the World Cup via this event in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 60], "content_span": [61, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Venue\nOne venue was used in the city of Moscow, Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 60], "content_span": [61, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Draw\nThe draw to split the 20 teams into five groups of four was conducted by BSWW at the Marriott Hotel in Minsk, Belarus at 10:30 FET on 29 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 59], "content_span": [60, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Draw\nInitially, all the teams were ordered according to their BSWW World Ranking. The top five teams (incl. the hosts) were seeded and each respectively assigned to position one of one of the groups. The remaining fifteen teams were then split into three pots of five according to their world ranking, with the highest placed in Pot 1 down to the lowest placed in Pot 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 59], "content_span": [60, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Draw\nFrom each pot, the first team drawn was placed into Group A, the second team drawn placed into Group B and so on. Pot 1 teams were placed in position two, Pot 2 teams in position three and so on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 59], "content_span": [60, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Draw\nThe composition of the seeds and pots is shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 59], "content_span": [60, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Draw\nRussia (3) (hosts; assigned to A1)\u00a0Portugal (2) (assigned to B1)\u00a0Italy (6) (assigned to C1)\u00a0Spain (7) (assigned to D1)\u00a0\u00a0Switzerland (9) (assigned to E1)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 59], "content_span": [60, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Draw\nUkraine (19)\u00a0Poland (24)\u00a0Belarus (29)\u00a0France (32)\u00a0Germany (33)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 59], "content_span": [60, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Draw\nCzech Republic (34)\u00a0Hungary (35)\u00a0Azerbaijan (36)\u00a0Turkey (40)\u00a0Norway (47)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 59], "content_span": [60, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Draw\nEstonia (49)\u00a0Kazakhstan (51)\u00a0Moldova (54)\u00a0Lithuania (59)\u00a0Latvia (91)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 59], "content_span": [60, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), First group stage\nEach team earns three points for a win in regulation time, two points for a win in extra time, one point for a win in a penalty shoot-out, and no points for a defeat. The top three nations and best fourth placed nation from each group advances to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 72], "content_span": [73, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), First group stage\nThe competition format was announced on 16 April when up to 32 teams were expected to participate. Despite only 20 teams ultimately entering, BSWW decided not to change the format. With Ukraine's withdrawal, this means just three teams were eliminated at this stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 72], "content_span": [73, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Round of 16\nThe round of 16 ties are contested as single elimination matches. The eight winners progress to the second group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 66], "content_span": [67, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Round of 16, Draw, Procedure\nThe draw took place at press centre of the host stadium immediately following the conclusion of the final match of the first group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 83], "content_span": [84, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Round of 16, Draw, Procedure\nFor the purpose of the draw, the 16 teams were split into four pots of four. The five group winners and three best second placed teams were divided between Pots 1 and 2, based on their BSWW World Ranking, with the highest ranked four placed in Pot 1 and the lowest ranked four in Pot 2. The two worst second placed teams, five third placed and best fourth placed nation were placed in Pots 3 and 4, also divided between pots in the same fashion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 83], "content_span": [84, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Round of 16, Draw, Procedure\nTeams from Pot 1 were drawn against teams from Pot 4, and Pot 2 nations face those from Pot 3. The drawing of ties alternated as such.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 83], "content_span": [84, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Round of 16, Draw, Procedure\nThe calculation of best and worst second placed teams was reformulated upon Ukraine's withdrawal, considering the occupants of Group D played just two matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 83], "content_span": [84, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Second group stage\nThe eight teams are split into two groups of four: the four winners of ties 3\u20136 of the round of 16 draw enter Group 1, whilst the four winners of ties 1, 2, 7 and 8 enter Group 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 73], "content_span": [74, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Second group stage\nThe teams that finish in the top two of each group earn qualification to the World Cup; those that finish in the corresponding positions of the two groups play against one another to determine the final standings of the tournament. The teams that play in the fifth place play-off will contest the last remaining spot at the World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 73], "content_span": [74, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Play-offs, Fifth place play-off\nWinner qualifies for the 2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 86], "content_span": [87, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Awards, Individual awards\nThe following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 80], "content_span": [81, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Top goalscorers\nThere were 416 goals scored in 51 matches, for an average of 8.16 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289236-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Final standings, Qualified teams to the FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup\nThe following five teams from UEFA qualify for the 2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 122], "content_span": [123, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289237-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup squads\nThe 2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup was an international beach soccer tournament held in Paraguay from 21 November to 1 December 2019. The 16 national teams involved in the tournament were required by FIFA to register a squad of 12 players, including two goalkeepers. Only players in these squads were eligible to take part in the tournament which was revealed on 15 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289237-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup squads\nThis article lists the national beach soccer squads that took part in the tournament. The age listed for each player is as on 21 November 2019, the first day of the tournament and the names of the players shown are that of the FIFA Display Names listed on the official squad document issued by FIFA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289237-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup squads, Statistics\nOverall, 192 players have travelled to Paraguay to compete in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289237-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup squads, Statistics\nFourteen of the sixteen managers are managing their own nation's national team whilst two manage foreign teams in respect to their own nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289238-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup\nThe 2019 FIFA Club World Cup (officially known as the FIFA Club World Cup Qatar 2019 presented by Alibaba Cloud for sponsorship reasons) was the 16th 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. The tournament was hosted by Qatar between 11 and 21 December 2019, taking place at two venues in Doha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289238-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup\nReal Madrid were the three-time defending champions, but could not defend their title after being eliminated in the 2018\u201319 UEFA Champions League round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289238-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup\nLiverpool won the final 1\u20130 after extra time against Flamengo for their first FIFA Club World Cup title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289238-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup, Host appointment\nWith proposals for an expanded Club World Cup, FIFA delayed the announcement of a host. A host was to be announced by FIFA on 15 March 2019, though this was later delayed. On 28 May 2019, FIFA announced that the 2019 and 2020 tournament host would be appointed at the FIFA Council meeting in Paris, France on 3 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289238-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup, Host appointment\nQatar was appointed as the host for the 2019 and 2020 tournaments on 3 June 2019, serving as test events ahead of their hosting of the 2022 FIFA World Cup. The Club World Cup retained its original format ahead of the revamp in 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289238-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup, Venues\nFIFA announced the three venues for the tournament, along with the match schedule, on 30 September 2019. All three stadiums were located in Doha, with the Jassim bin Hamad Stadium and the Khalifa International Stadium having hosted matches at the 2011 AFC Asian Cup, including the final for the latter. The newly built Education City Stadium, which was selected to host the final match, is also a host venue for the 2022 FIFA World Cup, as is the Khalifa International Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289238-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup, Venues\nOn 7 December 2019, FIFA moved all three matches (the second semi-final on 18 December and the third place match and final on 21 December) that were due to be played at the Education City Stadium to Khalifa International Stadium after the opening of the Education City Stadium was postponed to early 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289238-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup, Match officials\nFive referees, ten assistant referees, and six video assistant referees were appointed for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289238-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup, Squads\nEach team had to name a 23-man squad (three of whom must be goalkeepers). 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, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289238-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup, Matches\nThe draw of the tournament was held on 16 September 2019, 14:00 CEST (UTC+2), at the FIFA headquarters in Z\u00fcrich, to decide the matchups of the second round (between the first round winner and teams from AFC, CAF, and CONCACAF), and the opponents of the two second round winners in the semi-finals (against teams from CONMEBOL and UEFA). At the time of the draw, the identity of the teams from AFC and CONMEBOL were not known.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289238-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup, Final ranking\nPer statistical convention in football, matches decided in extra time were counted as wins and losses, while matches decided by penalty shoot-out were counted as draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289238-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup, Awards\nThe following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament. Mohamed Salah of Liverpool won the Golden Ball award, sponsored by Adidas, which is jointly awarded with the Alibaba Cloud Award to recognise the player of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289238-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289238-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup, Criticism\nIn 2017, three member countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council along with Egypt cut diplomatic ties with Qatar and criminalised trips for their citizens to the country. In October, FIFA sold 200 Club World Cup tickets to fans from Saudi Arabia and Bahrain, and 500 to those from the United Arab Emirates and Egypt. In November 2019, Human Rights Watch (HRW) criticised FIFA for neglecting fan welfare and selling tickets for the Club World Cup to those banned by their governments. HRW stated that FIFA should be aware of the risks that the football supporters can face in their countries and ensure that they are not exposed to the risk of harassment or prosecution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289238-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup, Criticism\nOn 5 November 2019, Liverpool Chief Executive Peter Moore assured that the Qatari authorities had permitted LGBT football fans to attend the FIFA Club World Cup matches in December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289239-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup Final\nThe 2019 FIFA Club World Cup Final was the final match of the 2019 FIFA Club World Cup, an international club association football tournament hosted by Qatar. It was the 16th final of the FIFA Club World Cup, a FIFA-organised tournament between the club champions from each 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, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289239-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup Final\nThe final was contested between English club Liverpool, representing UEFA as the reigning champions of the UEFA Champions League, and Brazilian club Flamengo, representing CONMEBOL as the reigning champions of the Copa Libertadores. The match was played at the Khalifa International Stadium in Doha on 21 December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289239-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup Final\nLiverpool won the match 1\u20130 after extra time for their first FIFA Club World Cup title. As winners, Liverpool were rewarded \u00a34\u00a0million in prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289239-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup Final, Teams\nIn the following table, finals until 2005 were in the FIFA Club World Championship era, since 2006 were in the FIFA Club World Cup era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289239-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup Final, Teams\nNote: On 27 October 2017, FIFA officially recognised all the champions of the Intercontinental Cup as club world champions, in equal status to the FIFA Club World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289239-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup Final, Venue\nThe final took place at the Khalifa International Stadium in Doha, Qatar. The venue previously hosted matches at the 2011 AFC Asian Cup, including the final, and was chosen as a venue for the 2022 FIFA World Cup. Originally, the final (along with the second semi-final and third place match) was to be played at the Education City Stadium, also located in Doha. However, the matches were moved after the opening of the Education City Stadium was postponed to early 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289239-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup Final, Background\nThe final was a rematch of the 1981 Intercontinental Cup, recognised by FIFA as a club world championship. Flamengo won the match 3\u20130 for their only club world title. Flamengo hadn't reached the final since while Liverpool had participated in two world championship matches in 1984 and 2005, also losing both to Independiente and S\u00e3o Paulo respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289239-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup Final, Route to the final, Liverpool\nLiverpool qualified for the Club World Cup as champions of the UEFA Champions League, having defeated Tottenham Hotspur in the final. The club had previously played in the 2005 Club World Championship, finishing as runners-up to S\u00e3o Paulo. Due to their participation in the tournament, Liverpool were forced to field a squad of youth players for a EFL Cup tie against Aston Villa due to the proximity of the two games, with the senior squad heading to Qatar to prepare while the reserves played in the cup game managed by U-23's manager Neil Critchley. As a result, they were beaten 5\u20130. The clubs heaviest ever defeat in the competition", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289239-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup Final, Route to the final, Liverpool\nLiverpool entered with a bye to the semi-finals, where they faced North American champions Monterrey of Mexico. The Reds went ahead in the 12th minute with a strike by Naby Ke\u00efta, who collected a pass from Mohamed Salah at the right side of the box. Monterrey equalised two minutes later as Rogelio Funes Mori, who collected a rebound off Alisson's save of a volley taken by Jes\u00fas Gallardo. Liverpool had several chances to retake the lead and switched to a new formation after half-time, but were unable to score and left themselves open to counter-attacks. Substitute Roberto Firmino scored the winning goal for Liverpool in the first minute of stoppage time, tapping in a pass from Trent Alexander-Arnold within the six-yard box.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 794]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289239-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup Final, Route to the final, Flamengo\nFlamengo qualified for the Club World Cup as winners of the Copa Libertadores, defeating River Plate with two last-minute goals by Gabriel Barbosa in the final, which was played a month before the Club World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289239-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup Final, Route to the final, Flamengo\nFlamengo entered with a bye to their semi-final match against AFC Champions League winners Al Hilal of Saudi Arabia. Flamengo started poorly and nearly conceded to Baf\u00e9timbi Gomis in the 16th minute after a big rebound from goalkeeper Diego Alves. Two minutes later, Mohammed Al-Breik crossed low to Salem Al-Dawsari in the box who scored the opening goal. Flamengo did little to create good chances in the first half but returned with a different posture and higher defensive line in the second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289239-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup Final, Route to the final, Flamengo\nWithin three minutes, Flamengo's attacking trio leveled the score: Gabriel Barbosa found Bruno Henrique open inside the box, who rolled the ball across to Giorgian De Arrascaeta for the equalizer. Diego came on in substitute for Gerson and initiated the play in the 78th minute that resulted in Rafinha's cross to Bruno Henrique for the go-ahead header. Three minutes later, Diego found Bruno Henrique in the box whose cross was deflected in by Ali Al-Bulaihi for an own-goal. Moments later, Andr\u00e9 Carrillo of Al-Hilal was sent off after hitting De Arrascaeta. Flamengo advance with the 3\u20131 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289239-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup Final, Match, Summary\nFirmino nearly scored for Liverpool in the first minute of the match, as the ball was lifted to him past the defense but his shot sailed high. Shortly after, Jordan Henderson and Trent Alexander-Arnold of Liverpool find shots of their own. Both teams continued equally matched, with Flamengo having a spell of possession after a rocky start and maintaining nearly sixty percent possession in the half. At the other end, Bruno Henrique had several sights of goal, though none quite as dangerous as Liverpool's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289239-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup Final, Match, Summary\nTwo minutes into the second half Firmino nearly scored again, this time hitting the inside of the left post. In the 53rd minute, Flamengo's Barbosa shot high, and later forced a diving save from goalkeeper Alisson with a shot from inside the 18-yard box. In the 73rd minute, Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain was injured and came off for Adam Lallana. Flamengo brought on Vitinho and Diego in place of Giorgian De Arrascaeta and \u00c9verton Ribeiro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289239-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup Final, Match, Summary\nIn the 83rd minute Liverpool had their first dangerous shot on goal: a shot from Henderson fed by Mohamed Salah that was tipped over the frame by Diego Alves. Moments into stoppage time, Liverpool was awarded a penalty after Rafinha clipped the trailing foot of Sadio Man\u00e9 free on goal on the edge of the penalty area. The decision was taken to video review where it appeared that the foul occurred outside the box and would result in a free kick, however the foul was waved off completely and play resumed with Flamengo. Regulation time ended with the match still scoreless.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289239-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup Final, Match, Summary\nIn the 99th minute Liverpool scored the breakthrough goal. Henderson played a long ball forward to Man\u00e9 which Rodrigo Caio could not deflect. One-on-one with Rafinha, Man\u00e9 played to an approaching Firmino on his left who hesitated and scored around Diego Alves. For Liverpool, James Milner came on for Naby Ke\u00efta, and for Flamengo Lincoln came on for midfielder Gerson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289239-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup Final, Match, Summary\nIn the second period of extra time, Flamengo found one dangerous opportunity to equalize in the 119th minute when a Vitinho cross rebounded back to him off a defender and he picked out Lincoln whose shot sailed high from ten yards out. Minutes later the match ended and Liverpool were victors by a score of 1\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289239-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup Final, Match, Details\nAssistant referees:Taleb Al-Marri (Qatar)Saoud Al-Maqaleh (Qatar)Fourth official:Mustapha Ghorbal (Algeria)Reserve assistant referee:Mokrane Gourari (Algeria)Video assistant referees:Juan Mart\u00ednez Munuera (Spain)Assistant video assistant referees:Esteban Ostojich (Uruguay)Kyle Atkins (United States)Bakary Gassama (Gambia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289239-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup Final, Post-match\nWith the win, Liverpool secured their first Club World Cup title, becoming the second English club to win the competition after Manchester United in 2008. Liverpool's Roberto Firmino was given the man of the match award, while teammate Mohamed Salah was awarded the Golden Ball by FIFA's Technical Study Group, which was jointly awarded with the Alibaba Cloud Player of the Tournament award. Flamengo's Bruno Henrique won the tournament's Silver Ball award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289240-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup squads\nEach team in the 2019 FIFA Club World Cup had to name a 23-man squad (three of whom must be goalkeepers). FIFA announced the squads on 5 December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289240-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup squads, Al-Hilal\nOn 11 December 2019, Nawaf Al Abed replaced the injured Salman Al-Faraj.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289240-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup squads, Al-Hilal\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, 41], "content_span": [42, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289240-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup squads, Al-Sadd\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-00289240-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup squads, Esp\u00e9rance de Tunis\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-00289240-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup squads, Flamengo\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, 41], "content_span": [42, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289240-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup squads, Hiengh\u00e8ne Sport\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-00289240-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup squads, Liverpool\nLiverpool initially named Dejan Lovren and Rhian Brewster in their squad, but they were subsequently not named in the contingent that travelled to Qatar. They subsequently added Ki-Jana Hoever and Sepp van den Berg to their squad, who flew out alongside Harvey Elliott following Liverpool's EFL League Cup quarter-final on 17 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289240-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup squads, Liverpool\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-00289240-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Club World Cup squads, Monterrey\nOn 13 December 2019, William Mej\u00eda replaced the injured Vincent Janssen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289240-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289241-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup\nThe 2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup was the 18th edition of the FIFA U-17 World Cup, the biennial international men's youth football championship contested by the under-17 national teams of the member associations of FIFA. It was hosted by Brazil between 26 October and 17 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289241-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup\nOriginally, it was determined that Peru would have hosted the tournament between 5 and 27 October 2019, however, it was announced in February 2019 that they would no longer host the tournament, following inspection of the facilities and concern over organizational challenges. A formal announcement on 15 March 2019 ratified the recommendation to move the tournament to Brazil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289241-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup\nWith the ratification to name Brazil as host, this marked the country's first time to host a FIFA youth competition, having previously hosted the senior World Cup twice as well as the 2000 FIFA Club World Championship, the 2008 FIFA Futsal World Cup, the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup, and numerous editions of the FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289241-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup\nEngland were the defending champions, but unable to defend their title after being eliminated in the group stages at the 2019 UEFA European Under-17 Championship in the Republic of Ireland. England became the second consecutive title holders that failed to qualify. Brazil won their fourth U-17 World Cup title, winning 2\u20131 against Mexico in the final, which was also the first time in the history that Brazil won a FIFA World Cup tournament at home soil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289241-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Host selection\nThe bidding process to host the 2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup and the 2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup was launched by FIFA in June 2017. A member association may bid for both tournaments, but they would be awarded to different hosts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289241-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Host selection, Original round of bidding\nTwo countries publicly declared their formal bids to host the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 67], "content_span": [68, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289241-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Host selection, Original round of bidding\nOn 8 March 2018, Rwanda withdrew its bid to host the tournament due to time and logistic aspects. FIFA then unanimously announced Peru as the host country after the FIFA Council meeting on 16 March 2018 in Bogot\u00e1, Colombia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 67], "content_span": [68, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289241-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Host selection, Second round of bidding\nOn 22 February 2019, FIFA announced that the tournament would be moved to a yet-to-be-determined host after inspection visits found issues with the prepared infrastructure and organization in Peru. On the same day, FIFA Secretary-General Fatma Samoura sent a letter to the Brazilian Football Confederation to determine if the tournament could be held in that country, and the answer was positive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 65], "content_span": [66, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289241-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Host selection, Second round of bidding\nCONMEBOL reinforced the idea by claiming that, because of the preparation for the 2019 Copa Am\u00e9rica, which was scheduled to start in less than four months, Brazil would be the only one able to make the commitment in such a short time. With the change of venue, the tournament was delayed by three weeks. Brazil was confirmed as the new host by the FIFA Council on 15 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 65], "content_span": [66, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289241-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Qualified teams\nA total of 24 teams qualified for the final tournament. Brazil as host team along with 23 other teams qualified from six separate continental competitions. The slot allocation was approved by the FIFA Council on 10 June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289241-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Organization, Emblem\nThe official emblem was unveiled on 10 July 2019 ahead of the draw. The emblem takes its inspiration from the country's rich history and diverse landscapes, with a variety of distinctive elements coming together to form the shape of the tournament trophy. The base evokes the lush green of Brazil's natural scenery. Sweeping vegetation leads the viewer's eye past the intense reds of the Brazilian soil and yellowy orange of the country's world-famous gemstones towards a celebratory figure. That figure, in turn, reaches towards a ball, the design of which is inspired by the iconic curved columns of Cathedral of Bras\u00edlia, a masterpiece by renowned Brazilian architect Oscar Niemeyer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289241-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Draw and schedule\nThe match schedule was unveiled on 10 July 2019, the day before the final draw. The kick-off times were confirmed on 25 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289241-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Draw and schedule\nThe final draw was held on 11 July 2019, 15:00 CEST (UTC+2), at the FIFA headquarters in Zurich, Switzerland. The 24 teams were drawn into six groups of four teams. Hosts Brazil were automatically seeded into Pot 1 and assigned to position A1, while the remaining teams were seeded into their respective pots based on their results in the last five FIFA U-17 World Cups (more recent tournaments weighted more heavily), with bonus points awarded to confederation champions. Teams from Pot 1 were drawn first, followed by Pot 2, Pot 3, and finally Pot 4, with each team (apart from Brazil) also drawn to one of the positions within their group. No group could contain more than one team from each confederation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289241-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Match officials\nA total of 20 refereeing trios (a referee and two assistant referees), 5 support referees, and 17 video assistant referees were appointed for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289241-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Squads\nPlayers born on or after 1 January 2002 and on or before 31 December 2004 were eligible to compete in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289241-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Squads\nEach team had to name a preliminary squad of between 22 and 50 players. From the preliminary squad, the team had to name a final squad of 21 players (three of whom must be goalkeepers) by the FIFA deadline. Players in the final squad could be replaced by a player from the preliminary squad due to serious injury or illness up to 24 hours prior to kickoff of the team's first match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289241-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Group stage\nThe top two teams of each group and the four best third-placed teams advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289241-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Group stage, Tiebreakers\nThe ranking of teams in the group stage was determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289241-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Group stage, Ranking of third-placed teams\nThe four best third-placed teams from the six groups advance to the knockout stage along with the six group winners and six runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289241-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Group stage, Ranking of third-placed teams\nIn the next stage the four third-placed teams will be matched with the winners of groups A, B, C, and D according to the tournament regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289241-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, if a match is level at the end of 90 minutes of normal playing time, the match would be directly decided by a penalty shoot-out to determine the winner; no extra time would be played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289241-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Knockout stage\nIn the round of 16, the four third-placed teams would be matched with the winners of groups A, B, C, and D. The specific match-ups involving the third-placed teams depend on which four third-placed teams qualified for the round of 16:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289241-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Awards\nThe following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament. They were all sponsored by Adidas, except for the FIFA Fair Play Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289241-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Goalscorers\nThere were 177 goals scored in 52 matches, for an average of 3.4 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289242-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup squads\nThe following is a list of all the squads of the national teams that participated in the 2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289242-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup squads\nEach team had to name a squad of 21 players (three of whom had to be goalkeepers) by the FIFA deadline. All players of its representative team had to have been born on or after 1 January 2002. The age listed for each player is on 26 October 2019, the first day of the tournament. Those marked in bold have been capped with the senior national team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289242-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup squads, Group B, Nigeria\nNigeria announced a squad of 25 players on 10 October 2019, which was reduced to 21 on 16 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289242-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup squads, Group B, Hungary\nHungary announced a squad of 23 players the 10 October 2019, which was reduced to 21 on 16 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289242-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup squads, Group D, United States\nThe United States announced their squad on 11 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289242-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup squads, Group D, Netherlands\nNetherlands announced a squad of 21 players on the 16 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289242-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup squads, Group F, Italy\nItaly announced its official squad of 21 players on 16 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289243-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup\nThe 2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup was the 22nd edition of the FIFA U-20 World Cup, the biennial international men's youth football championship contested by the under-20 national teams of the member associations of FIFA, since its inception in 1977 as the FIFA World Youth Championship. The tournament was hosted by Poland between 23 May and 15 June 2019. This was the first FIFA tournament hosted by Poland; the country had hosted UEFA international football events in the past including the UEFA Euro 2012 with Ukraine and the 2017 UEFA European Under-21 Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289243-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup\nEngland won the previous tournament in South Korea, but did not qualify for the tournament after finishing sixth at the 2018 UEFA European Under-19 Championship in Finland. In doing so, they became the sixth consecutive incumbent title holders to fail to qualify for the subsequent tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289243-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup\nUkraine won their first FIFA U-20 World Cup title after beating South Korea 3\u20131 in the final. They did it in their first appearance further than the round of 16, becoming the first team from a former Soviet republic to win a FIFA competition title since its dissolution in 1991. Soviet Union, whose record is now inherited by Russia, previously won the inaugural U-20 World Cup in 1977.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289243-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Host selection\nThe bidding process to host the 2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup and the 2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup was launched by FIFA in June 2017. A member association may bid for both tournaments, but they would be awarded to different hosts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289243-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Host selection, Candidate countries\nFIFA announced Poland as the hosts after the FIFA Council meeting on 16 March 2018 in Bogot\u00e1, Colombia. Poland won the bid over India in a 9\u20135 vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 61], "content_span": [62, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289243-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Qualified teams\nA total of 24 teams qualified for the final tournament. In addition to Poland, who qualified automatically as hosts, 23 other teams qualified from six separate continental competitions. The slot allocation was approved by the FIFA Council on 10 June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289243-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Venues\nBielsko-Bia\u0142a, Bydgoszcz, Gdynia, \u0141\u00f3d\u017a, Lublin and Tychy were the six cities hosting the competition. Lubin (not to confuse with Lublin) ended up withdrawn from the list due to hotel capacity troubles and was replaced by Bielsko-Bia\u0142a.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289243-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Organization\nThe emblem was unveiled on 14 December 2018. The emblem features a crocus, a flower that blooms every spring in Poland combined with the colors of the Polish flag, symbolising the new faces that will emerge to shape the tournament's trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289243-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Organization\nGrzywek, the official mascot was unveiled on 23 February 2019 one day before the final draw. Grzywek is inspired by a Polish bison distinctive name comes from the Polish word for \"mane\" \u2013 the long and coarse hair that adorns the neck of this striking animal \u2013 and also symbolises the country's pride at hosting its first ever FIFA competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289243-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Draw and schedule\nThe match schedule was unveiled on 14 December 2018, the same day as the official emblem.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289243-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Draw and schedule\nThe final draw was held on 24 February 2019, 17:30 CET (UTC+1), at the Gdynia Sports Arena in Gdynia. The 24 teams were drawn into six groups of four teams. The hosts Poland were automatically seeded into Pot 1 and assigned to position A1, while the remaining teams were seeded into their respective pots based on their results in the last five FIFA U-20 World Cups (more recent tournaments weighted more heavily), with bonus points awarded to confederation champions. Teams from Pot 1 were drawn first, followed by Pot 2, Pot 3, and finally Pot 4, with each team (apart from Poland) also drawn to one of the positions within their group. No group could contain more than one team from each confederation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289243-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Match officials\nA total of 21 refereeing trios (a referee and two assistant referees), 6 support referees, and 20 video assistant referees were appointed for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289243-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Squads\nPlayers born on or after 1 January 1999 and on or before 31 December 2003 were eligible to compete in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289243-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Squads\nEach team had to name a preliminary squad of between 22 and 50 players. From the preliminary squad, the team had to name a final squad of 21 players (three of whom must be goalkeepers) by the FIFA deadline. Players in the final squad could be replaced by a player from the preliminary squad due to serious injury or illness up to 24 hours prior to kickoff of the team's first match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289243-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Group stage\nThe top two teams of each group and the four best third-placed teams advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289243-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Group stage, Tiebreakers\nThe ranking of teams in the group stage is determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289243-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Group stage, Ranking of third-placed teams\nThe four best third-placed teams from the six groups advanced to the knockout stage along with the six group winners and six runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289243-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, if a match is level at the end of 90 minutes of normal playing time, extra time will be played (two periods of 15 minutes each), where each team is allowed to make a fourth substitution. If still tied after extra time, the match will be decided by a penalty shoot-out to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289243-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Knockout stage\nIn the round of 16, the four third-placed teams will be matched with the winners of groups A, B, C, and D. The specific match-ups involving the third-placed teams depend on which four third-placed teams qualified for the round of 16:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289243-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Awards\nThe following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament. They were all sponsored by Adidas, except for the FIFA Fair Play Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289243-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Goalscorers\nThere were 153 goals scored in 52 matches, for an average of 2.94 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289243-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup, International broadcasters\n- Coverage was not available in Andorra, France, and Spain", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289243-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup, International broadcasters\n- Coverage was not available in Dominican Republic, Nicaragua, and Panama", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289244-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup squads\nThe following is a list of all the squads of the national teams that participated in the 2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup. Each team had to name a preliminary squad of between 22 and 50 players. From the preliminary squad, the team had to name a final squad of 21 players (three of whom must be goalkeepers) by the FIFA deadline. Players in the final squad could be replaced by a player from the preliminary squad due to serious injury or illness up to 24 hours prior to kickoff of the team's first match. Players born on or after 1 January 1999 and on or before 31 December 2003 were eligible to compete in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289244-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup squads\nThe nationality for each club reflects the national association (not the league) to which the club is affiliated. A flag is included for coaches that are of a different nationality than their own national team. Those marked in bold have been capped at full International level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289244-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup squads, Group A, Colombia\nThe final squad was announced on 29 April. Y\u00e9iler G\u00f3ez was replaced by Andr\u00e9s Perea on 15 May due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289244-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup squads, Group D, Ukraine\nThe 25-man provisional squad was announced on 7 May 2019. Vitaliy Mykolenko was replaced by Oleh Veremiyenko on 23 May due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289244-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup squads, Group D, United States\nThe 21-man final squad was announced on 10 May. Ayo Akinola was replaced by Julian Araujo on 22 May due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289244-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup squads, Group E, Panama\nThe 23-man provisional squad was announced on 29 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289244-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup squads, Group F, Portugal\nThe 22-man provisional squad was announced on 10 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289244-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup squads, Group F, South Korea\nThe final squad was announced on 2 May 2019. On 12 May, Lee Kyu-hyuk was announced as a replacement for Jeong Woo-yeong after Bayern Munich declined to release him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup\nThe 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup was the eighth edition of the FIFA Women's World Cup, the quadrennial international football championship contested by 24 women's national teams representing member associations of FIFA. It took place between 7 June and 7 July 2019, with 52 matches staged in nine cities in France, which was awarded the right to host the event in March 2015, the first time the country hosted the tournament. The tournament was the first Women's World Cup to use the video assistant referee (VAR) system. This was the second and last edition with 24 teams before expanding to 32 teams for the 2023 tournament in Australia and New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup\nThe United States entered the competition as defending champions after winning the 2015 edition in Canada and successfully defended their title with a 2\u20130 victory over the Netherlands in the final. In doing so, they secured their record fourth title and became the second nation, after Germany, to have successfully retained the title. The matches were broadcast globally and attracted a combined audience of 1.12 billion people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Host selection\nOn 6 March 2014, FIFA announced that bidding had begun for the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup. Member associations interested in hosting the tournament had to submit a declaration of interest by 15 April 2014, and provide the complete set of bidding documents by 31 October 2014. As a principle, FIFA preferred the 2019 Women's World Cup and the 2018 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup to be hosted by the same member association, but reserved the right to award the hosting of the events separately.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Host selection\nInitially, five countries indicated interest in hosting the events: England, France, South Korea, New Zealand and South Africa. Both England and New Zealand registered expressions of interest by the April 2014 deadline, but in June 2014 it was announced that each would no longer proceed. South Africa registered an expression of interest by the April 2014 deadline; but later decided to withdraw prior to the final October deadline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Host selection\nBoth Japan and Sweden had also expressed interest in bidding for the 2019 tournament, but Japan chose to focus on the 2019 Rugby World Cup and the 2020 Summer Olympics, whilst Sweden decided to focus on European U-17 competitions instead. France and South Korea made official bids for hosting the tournament by submitting their documents by 31 October 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Host selection\nOn 19 March 2015, France officially won the bid to host the Women's World Cup and the U-20 Women's World Cup. The decision came after a vote by the FIFA Executive Committee. Upon the selection, France became the third European nation to host the Women's World Cup (following Sweden and Germany), and the fourth country to host both men's and women's World Cup, having hosted the men's tournament in 1938 and 1998.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Qualification\nThe slot allocation was approved by the FIFA Council on 13\u201314 October 2016. The slots for each confederation are unchanged from those of the previous tournament except the slot for the hosts has been moved from CONCACAF (Canada) to UEFA (France).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Qualification\nQualifying matches started on 3 April 2017, and ended on 1 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Qualification, Qualified teams\nA total of 24 teams qualified for the final tournament. Each team's FIFA Rankings in March 2019 are shown in parenthesis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Qualification, Qualified teams\nChile, Jamaica, Scotland, and South Africa made their Women's World Cup debuts, while Italy took part in the event for the first time since 1999 and Argentina took part for the first time since 2007. Brazil, Germany, Japan, Nigeria, Norway, Sweden, and the United States qualified for their eighth World Cup, continuing their streak of qualifying for every World Cup held so far.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Venues\nTwelve cities were candidates. The final 9 stadiums were chosen on 14 June 2017; Stade de la Beaujoire in Nantes, Stade Marcel-Picot in Nancy, and Stade de l'Abb\u00e9-Deschamps in Auxerre were cut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Venues\nThe semi-finals and final were played at Parc Olympique Lyonnais in the Lyon suburb of D\u00e9cines-Charpieu, with 58,000 capacity, while the opening match was played at Parc des Princes in Paris. The 2019 tournament is the first under the 24-team format to be played without double-header fixtures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Match officials\nOn 3 December 2018, FIFA announced the list of 27 referees and 48 assistant referees for the tournament. On 4 June 2019, FIFA announced that Canadian referee Carol Anne Chenard and Chinese assistant referee Cui Yongmei had pulled out for \"health reasons.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Match officials\nOn 15 March 2019, the FIFA Council approved the use of the video assistant referee (VAR) system for the first time in a FIFA Women's World Cup tournament. The technology was previously deployed at the 2018 FIFA World Cup in Russia. The fifteen male VAR officials were announced by FIFA on 2 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Match officials\nOn 26 June 2019, FIFA retained 11 officiating teams for the quarter-finals onwards. The referees included Edina Alves Batista, Marie-Soleil Beaudoin, Melissa Borjas, St\u00e9phanie Frappart, Kate Jacewicz, Katalin Kulcs\u00e1r, Kateryna Monzul, Anastasia Pustovoitova, Qin Liang, Claudia Umpi\u00e9rrez and Lucila Venegas. On 5 July 2019, FIFA announced that French referee St\u00e9phanie Frappart would officiate the final between the United States and the Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Draw\nThe draw for the final tournament was held on 8 December 2018, 18:00 CET (UTC+1), at the La Seine Musicale on the island of \u00cele Seguin, Boulogne-Billancourt. The 24 teams were drawn into six groups of four teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 33], "content_span": [34, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Draw\nThe 24 teams were allocated to four pots based on the FIFA Women's World Rankings released on 7 December 2018, with hosts France automatically placed in Pot 1 and position A1 in the draw. Teams from Pot 1 were drawn first and assigned to Position 1. This was followed by Pot 2, Pot 3, and finally Pot 4, with each of these teams also drawn to one of the positions 2\u20134 within their group. No group could contain more than one team from each confederation apart from UEFA, which have nine teams, where three groups had to contain two UEFA teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 33], "content_span": [34, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Draw\nFrance (3) (hosts)\u00a0United States (1)\u00a0Germany (2)\u00a0England (4)\u00a0Canada (5)\u00a0Australia (6)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 33], "content_span": [34, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Draw\nNetherlands (7)\u00a0Japan (8)\u00a0Sweden (9)\u00a0Brazil (10)\u00a0Spain (12)\u00a0Norway (13)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 33], "content_span": [34, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Draw\nSouth Korea (14)\u00a0China PR (15)\u00a0Italy (16)\u00a0New Zealand (19)\u00a0Scotland (20)\u00a0Thailand (29)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 33], "content_span": [34, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Draw\nArgentina (36)\u00a0Chile (38)\u00a0Nigeria (39)\u00a0Cameroon (46)\u00a0South Africa (48)\u00a0Jamaica (53)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 33], "content_span": [34, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Squads\nEach team had to provide to FIFA a preliminary squad of between 23 and 50 players by 26 April 2019, which was not to be published. From the preliminary squad, each team had to name a final squad of 23 players (three of whom must be goalkeepers) by 24 May 2019. Players in the final squad could be replaced by a player from the preliminary squad due to serious injury or illness up to 24 hours prior to kickoff of the team's first match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Group stage\nThe match schedule for the tournament was released on 8 February 2018. Following the final draw, seven group stage kick-off times were adjusted by FIFA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Group stage\nThe top two teams of each group and the four best third-placed teams advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Group stage, Tiebreakers\nThe ranking of teams in the group stage was determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Group stage, Ranking of third-placed teams\nThe four best third-placed teams from the six groups advanced to the knockout stage along with the six group winners and six runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, if a match was level at the end of 90 minutes of normal playing time, extra time was played (two periods of 15 minutes each), where each team was allowed to make a fourth substitution. If the score was still level after extra time, the winners were determined by a penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Awards\nThe following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament. The Golden Ball (best overall player), Golden Boot (top scorer) and Golden Glove (best goalkeeper) awards were sponsored by Adidas, while the Goal of the Tournament was sponsored by Hyundai Motor Company. FIFA.com shortlisted ten goals for users to vote on as the tournaments' best, with the poll closing on 17 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Awards, Players Who Dared to Shine\nThe FIFA Technical Study Group announced a list of ten key players of the tournament who \"dared to shine\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 146 goals scored in 52 matches, for an average of 2.81 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Statistics, Discipline\nA player was automatically suspended for the next match for the following offences:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Branding\nThe emblem and slogan were launched on 19 September 2017 at the Mus\u00e9e de l'Homme in Paris. The emblem mimics the shape of the World Cup trophy and features a stylised football surrounded by eight decorative shards of light, symbolising the eighth edition of the Women's World Cup. It alludes to several French cultural icons:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Branding\nThe World Cup's official English-language slogan is \"Dare to Shine\"; its French slogan is \"Le moment de briller\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Ticketing\nFIFA and the local organising committee sold tickets for the Women's World Cup beginning with a pre-sale of individual tickets in December 2018, single-city ticket packages in late 2018, and single-ticket sales for the general public beginning on 7 March 2019. The online platform, hosted by AP2S, permitted fans to print their tickets beginning on 20 May 2019, which included seating assignments that had separated ticketholders who had purchased their tickets as a group or family. FIFA responded to online complaints by referring to a warning in the online system that had reminded purchasers that its tickets would not be guaranteed in the same areas, inciting further outrage, but allowed families with underage children to have adjacent seating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Mascot\nThe official mascot, \"ettie\", was unveiled on 12 May 2018 at the TF1 Group headquarters, and was broadcast on LCI. She made her first public appearance in Paris in front of the iconic Eiffel Tower. FIFA describe her as \"a young chicken with a passion for life and football\" and state that \"she comes from a long line of feathered mascots, and is the daughter of Footix, the Official Mascot of the 1998 FIFA World Cup in France\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Broadcasting\nFIFA sold the broadcasting rights for the World Cup to broadcasters through several companies. A total of 1.12 billion people globally watched the matches, and the final match attracted 82.18 million viewers, setting a new FIFA Women\u2019s World Cup record, surpassing the 2015 final. The 2019 tournament set several new viewership records for various countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Qualified UEFA teams for Summer Olympics\nThe World Cup was used by UEFA to qualify three teams for the 2020 Summer Olympic women's football tournament in Japan, with the three European teams with the best results (considering only the round they reach) qualifying. If teams in contention for Olympic spots were eliminated in the same round, a maximum of four teams (determined by group stage results if necessary) would advance to play-offs in early 2020 to decide the remaining spot(s). However, this scenario did not happen for this tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Qualified UEFA teams for Summer Olympics\nFor the first time, as per the agreement between the four British football associations (England, Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales) for the women's team, Great Britain would attempt to qualify for the Olympics through England's performance in the World Cup (a procedure already successfully employed by Team GB in field hockey and rugby sevens), which they succeeded as England were among the three best European teams. Scotland also qualified for the World Cup but, under the agreement whereby the highest ranked home nation was nominated to compete for the purposes of Olympic qualification, their performance would not be taken into account. In effect, therefore, eight European teams competed for three qualification places during the World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 824]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Qualified UEFA teams for Summer Olympics\nThe United States' win over France in the quarter-finals guaranteed that the three remaining semi-finalists, all from UEFA, qualified for the Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Controversies\nThe final's scheduling on 7 July led to a degree of criticism among supporters of women's football, as two continental men's tournament finals were held on the same day\u2014the Copa Am\u00e9rica in Rio de Janeiro and the CONCACAF Gold Cup in Chicago. CONCACAF president Victor Montagliani described the scheduling as \"a mistake\", but claimed the error could not be reversed for logistical reasons. The lack of outdoor advertising across Paris, except for the Parc des Princes stadium and the temporary World Cup museum at Ch\u00e2telet, was also criticised.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Controversies\nThe Women's World Cup was the first major competition to use the updated Laws of the Game approved by the International Football Association Board (IFAB), which came into effect on 1 June 2019. Among the changes, the more severe punishment of goalkeeper encroachment during penalty kicks\u2014including retakes after a video assistant referee review\u2014gained the most attention and caused several successful saves to be disallowed in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0039-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Controversies\nThe use of the Women's World Cup as a \"guinea pig\" for the new changes to the rules was also criticised by some footballers and coaches for being potentially sexist, as several concurrent men's continental competitions had not implemented them. Pierluigi Collina, head of referees for FIFA, denied the claim, stating that it had long been customary for rule changes to be introduced in June, before major tournaments. Following widespread criticism and a request from FIFA, the IFAB issued a temporary dispensation to waive the requirement to show goalkeepers a yellow card for stepping off the line during a penalty shootout during the knockout stage of the Women's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289245-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Controversies\nThe round of 16 fixture between England and Cameroon was marred by misbehaviour of some Cameroonian players, who refused to kick off for several minutes after the second English goal, deliberately fouled several players, and argued with the referee while huddling around her. Cameroonian defender Augustine Ejangue was also seen on camera spitting at English winger Toni Duggan after conceding an indirect free kick in the penalty area, from which England later scored. After the match, England manager Phil Neville said it \"didn't feel like football\" and that he was \"completely and utterly ashamed of the opposition\". The Confederation of African Football (CAF) condemned some of the players' actions, while also criticising the refereeing. Cameroon felt three crucial decisions were unjust, two of which involved the video assistant referee (VAR). FIFA announced that it would investigate the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 945]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final\nThe 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final was a football match which determined the winner of the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup. It was the eighth final of the FIFA Women's World Cup, a quadrennial tournament contested by the women's national teams of the member associations of FIFA. The match was played on 7 July 2019 at the Parc Olympique Lyonnais in D\u00e9cines-Charpieu, a suburb of Lyon, France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final\nThe final was contested by the United States, the defending champion, and the Netherlands, in their first final. The United States won 2\u20130, earning their second consecutive and fourth overall Women's World Cup title, with second-half goals scored by co-captain Megan Rapinoe from the penalty spot and Rose Lavelle. With their victory, the U.S. joined Germany as the second team to win consecutive titles. The team's coach, Jill Ellis, became the first manager to win two Women's World Cup titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final\nEach finalist was the reigning champion of their own respective confederation, with the U.S. having won the 2018 CONCACAF Women's Championship and the Netherlands having won UEFA Women's Euro 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Venue\nThe final was held at the Parc Olympique Lyonnais in D\u00e9cines-Charpieu, a suburb of Lyon. During the tournament, the stadium was referred to as the Stade de Lyon by FIFA. The venue has a seating capacity of 57,900, and hosted both semi-final matches. The stadium was announced as the final venue when France was confirmed as host on 19 March 2015, with the stadium officially confirmed to host the semi-finals and final in September 2017. The stadium is home venue of Ligue 1 club Lyon, opening in January 2016 to replace their previous stadium, the Stade de Gerland. It has also hosted several UEFA Women's Champions League matches for the club's women's side, which is the most successful in European history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Venue\nIn 2008, the project for the new stadium was agreed upon by the government and commune of D\u00e9cines. Stadium construction started in mid 2013, and finished in late 2015 at a cost of \u20ac450 million. The stadium was chosen as a venue for UEFA Euro 2016, where it hosted six matches. The stadium also hosted the 2017 Coupe de la Ligue Final and 2018 UEFA Europa League Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Venue\nOutside of football, the Parc Olympique Lyonnais has hosted several musical performances, as well as ice hockey and rugby union matches, including the Rugby Champions Cup and Rugby Challenge Cup finals of 2016. The stadium is planned to host matches for the 2023 Rugby World Cup and the men and women's football tournaments at the 2024 Summer Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Background\nFor the first time since 2007, and fifth time overall (along with 1991, 1995 and 2003), the final featured a European team, as the continent took seven of the eight places in the quarter-finals. The previous two finals were contested by Japan and the United States. The match was the first final since 1991 to feature a North American side against a European side. The match was also the first final of a women's or men's World Cup to feature the defending champions against the reigning European champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Background\nThe match was a record-extending fifth Women's World Cup final for the United States, who were the defending champions and record winners of the competition with three titles. They won the inaugural final in 1991 against Norway, before winning their second title in 1999 as hosts via a penalty shoot-out victory against China PR. They made their next appearance in the 2011 final, losing on penalties to Japan, before securing their third title in the 2015 rematch against Japan. In the previous seven editions of the tournament, the U.S. never finished outside of the top three. The fixture was the third consecutive appearance in the final for the United States, setting a competition record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Background\nJill Ellis became the third manager to reach two Women's World Cup finals, after Even Pellerud for Norway (in 1991 and 1995) and Norio Sasaki for Japan (in 2011 and 2015), both with one win and one loss in the final. With her counterpart Sarina Wiegman, the match was the second final in which both teams have a female coach, after the 2003 matchup between Tina Theune of Germany and Marika Domanski-Lyfors of Sweden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Background\nThe match was the first Women's World Cup final for the Netherlands in their second tournament appearance. They were the fourth European country (after Germany, Norway and Sweden) and eighth overall to reach a Women's World Cup final, and the first new finalist since Japan in 2011. In the Netherlands only prior tournament appearance, in 2015, they were eliminated in the round of 16 by defending champions and eventual runners-up Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Background\nThe match was the eighth meeting between the United States and the Netherlands, and the first competitive fixture as all prior matches were friendlies. The sides first met in 1991, which the Netherlands won 4\u20133, but the U.S. won all six subsequent meetings, most recently a 3\u20131 win in September 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Route to the final, United States\nThe United States is the most successful team in women's football, having won three Women's World Cups in four previous final appearances and four Olympic gold medals. The team had never finished below third place in all eight editions of the World Cup. Jill Ellis was appointed as interim head coach of the team in 2014, following the firing of Tom Sermanni between major tournaments, and oversaw qualification for the 2015 World Cup using a core inherited from earlier cycles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Route to the final, United States\nThe United States had reached their second consecutive final in 2015, playing in a rematch of the 2011 final in which they had lost to Japan. The Americans won 5\u20132, including a first-half hat-trick by Carli Lloyd, to secure their third Women's World Cup title\u2014their first since 1999. Following an early quarter-final exit at the 2016 Olympics, Ellis adjusted the team's usual formation and adopted a 4\u20133\u20133 with an emphasis on faster play under the direction of new call-ups. The United States qualified for the 2019 Women's World Cup by winning the 2018 CONCACAF Women's Championship, outscoring their opponents 26\u20130 and defeating Canada in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Route to the final, United States\nThe U.S. team, entering the tournament ranked first in the FIFA World Rankings, were drawn into Group F and opened their title defence with a 13\u20130 victory against Thailand, setting a new tournament record for largest margin of victory and goals in a match. Alex Morgan scored five goals, equalling a one-match record set by compatriot Michelle Akers in 1991, while four of her teammates scored their first World Cup goals in their debut at the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Route to the final, United States\nThe U.S. team were later criticised for celebrating their later goals during the match, with some media commentators and former players calling it disrespectful, but the celebrations were defended by other media commentators, the team's players and members of the opposing Thai bench. Ellis then fielded a squad of reserve players in a 3\u20130 win over debutants Chile, which included Carli Lloyd's pair of goals and a missed penalty kick. The U.S. closed out its group by winning 2\u20130 against Sweden, advancing with three shutout victories and outscoring opponents 18\u20130, a group stage record in the Women's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Route to the final, United States\nIn the round of 16, the U.S. played Group B runners-up Spain, who conceded an early penalty in the seventh minute that was converted by captain Megan Rapinoe. Spanish forward Jennifer Hermoso found an equaliser within three minutes after capitalising on a defensive error near the top of the box, shooting from distance to beat goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher and end her shutout streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Route to the final, United States\nThe U.S. were awarded a second penalty kick after a foul in the box on Rose Lavelle and won the match 2\u20131 on another conversion by Rapinoe in the 75th minute per instruction from Ellis, after Morgan initially looked set to take the kick. The Americans were then matched against hosts France, winners of Group A and a tournament favourite, in the quarter-finals. This was the first time the U.S. had faced the tournament hosts of the Women's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0012-0002", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Route to the final, United States\nRapinoe opened the scoring in the fifth minute, with a free kick that was driven low and through several players, and added a second in the 65th minute by finishing a cut-back cross from Tobin Heath in the box. French defender Wendie Renard scored a consolation goal in the 81st minute on a headed corner kick, but the U.S. held on to win 2\u20131 and eliminate the hosts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Route to the final, United States\nThe U.S. played England in the semi-finals, but were without Rapinoe due to a hamstring injury that kept her out of the starting line-up. Her replacement, Christen Press, scored the opening goal in the tenth minute on a header in the box; English forward Ellen White then volleyed a shot from inside the box in the 19th minute to earn her team an equaliser.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Route to the final, United States\nAlex Morgan restored the U.S. lead in the 31st minute, the first player in Women's World Cup history to score on her birthday, finishing a cross by Lindsey Horan with a header that she celebrated with a controversial tea-sipping gesture. White scored an apparent second equaliser in the 67th minute, but was ruled offside by a video assistant referee (VAR) decision. A VAR decision in the 82nd minute determined that White was fouled in the penalty area by defender Becky Sauerbrunn and awarded a penalty to England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0013-0002", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Route to the final, United States\nThe resulting penalty was struck by captain Steph Houghton and saved by Alyssa Naeher, the first penalty save by a U.S. goalkeeper in the Women's World Cup outside of a shoot-out, ensuring a 2\u20131 victory for the United States. The U.S. reached their third consecutive Women's World Cup final by winning all six matches without trailing. Their semi-final win set a new tournament record for longest winning streak with eleven wins since 2015, as well as a record sixteen World Cup matches undefeated. They scored 24 goals en route to the final, including one in the opening twelve minutes of each match, coming close to the single-tournament record of 25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Route to the final, Netherlands\nThe Netherlands, nicknamed the Oranje, first qualified for a major women's tournament in 2009, reaching the semi-finals of their first UEFA European Championship, and qualified for their first FIFA Women's World Cup in 2015. The team's rapid improvement in international competition was credited to the establishment of a professional club league in 2007 with investment from the Royal Dutch Football Association; the league later merged to form a combined Belgian\u2013Dutch competition in 2012 and split again in 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0014-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Route to the final, Netherlands\nIn the 2015 Women's World Cup, the Dutch side finished third in their group with a 1\u20131\u20131 record and advanced to the round of 16, where they lost 2\u20131 to eventual runners-up Japan. The Netherlands hosted and won the 2017 European Championship, earning their first major international title with a dominating style implemented by interim manager Sarina Wiegman. The Dutch earned the last remaining European berth in the 2019 Women's World Cup by finishing second to Norway in its qualification group and winning the play-offs, defeating Denmark over two legs in the semi-finals and Switzerland in the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Route to the final, Netherlands\nThe Dutch, ranked eighth in the FIFA World Rankings, were drawn into Group E with two of their 2015 group stage opponents, Canada and New Zealand, alongside Cameroon. Their opening match against New Zealand was scoreless until a last-minute header by substitute Jill Roord in stoppage time won it 1\u20130 for the Dutch. The Netherlands secured a knockout stage berth by defeating Cameroon 3\u20131 on the second matchday, with two goals by Vivianne Miedema to make her the nation's all-time top goalscorer. The Dutch finished with a three-win record and topped the group after winning 2\u20131 against Canada. An early penalty was rescinded by the VAR and the opening goal was scored by Dutch defender Anouk Dekker in the 54th minute. Christine Sinclair scored an equaliser six minutes later, but the Netherlands restored their lead in the 75th minute through a short-range finish by substitute Lineth Beerensteyn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 967]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Route to the final, Netherlands\nThe round of 16 fixture for the Oranje was also a rematch against Japan, which manager Wiegman expected to end with a different result. Lieke Martens scored in the 17th minute with a backheel flick off a corner kick, but Japanese midfielder Yui Hasegawa equalised before half-time. The second half saw Japan creating more chances, with Dutch goalkeeper Sari van Veenendaal crucially saving a shot from Yuka Momiki in the 80th minute to keep the scores level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Route to the final, Netherlands\nIn second-half stoppage time, the Dutch were awarded a controversial penalty kick by the VAR for a handball in the box by captain Saki Kumagai, which was then scored by Martens to win the match 2\u20131. The Netherlands defeated Italy 2\u20130 in the quarter-finals, also qualifying for the 2020 Olympics, through second-half headers scored by Miedema in the 70th minute and Stefanie van der Gragt ten minutes later. The match was played in 34\u00a0\u00b0C (93\u00a0\u00b0F) heat and required several cooling breaks, which slowed the tempo of play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Route to the final, Netherlands\nThe Netherlands reached their first Women's World Cup final by winning 1\u20130 in extra time against Sweden in the semi-finals. The match was scoreless in regulation time, due to the performances of both defences and goalkeepers, who made saves to keep several chances from breaking the deadlock. Jackie Groenen scored the lone goal of the match in the 99th minute, striking from 20 yards (18\u00a0m) to beat goalkeeper Hedvig Lindahl, with her first shot on target during the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0017-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Route to the final, Netherlands\nThe Dutch were the third reigning European champions to reach the final, following Germany in 2003 and 2007, and the first to play a non-European country in the final. The Netherlands also managed to reach the final without trailing in their six victories, conceding only once in the knockout stage but not leading at half-time in any of their matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Route to the final, Netherlands\nThe success of the Dutch side has brought national attention to the women's football program, including thousands of fans who travelled to France to attend matches and record television ratings reaching 5 million viewers for the semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Pre-match, Scheduling\nThe final's scheduling on 7 July led to a degree of criticism among supporters of women's football, as two continental men's tournament finals were held on the same day\u2014the Copa Am\u00e9rica in Rio de Janeiro and the CONCACAF Gold Cup in Chicago. The latter final also featured the men's team of the United States. However, FIFA confirmed the Women's World Cup dates in September 2017, prior to the dates announced by CONMEBOL and CONCACAF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Pre-match, Scheduling\nWhile FIFA called the scheduling a \"rare and exciting occurrence\", U.S. co-captain Megan Rapinoe criticised it as \"ridiculous and disappointing\". CONCACAF president Victor Montagliani said that the scheduling of the Gold Cup final had been the result of a \"clerical error\" and that the conflict was not realised until it was too late.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Pre-match, Match ball\nThe official match ball for the final was the Adidas Tricolore 19, introduced for the knockout stage as a red-coloured variant of the Conext 19. The ball featured a blue-and-red glitch graphic, and pays homage to the original Adidas Tricolore, which was introduced for the men's 1998 FIFA World Cup, in which France were victorious for the first time while on home soil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Pre-match, Officials\nOn 5 July 2019, FIFA named French official St\u00e9phanie Frappart as the referee for the final. Frappart had been a FIFA referee since 2009, and previously officiated at the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup, 2016 Summer Olympics and UEFA Women's Euro 2017. In April 2019, she became the first woman to referee in Ligue 1, the top men's professional league in France. The final was Frappart's fourth match as referee during the tournament, having officiated two group stage matches and a quarter-final fixture.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0022-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Pre-match, Officials\nHer compatriot Manuela Nicolosi was chosen as one of the assistant referees, along with Irish official Michelle O'Neill. Claudia Umpi\u00e9rrez of Uruguay was chosen as the fourth official, with her compatriot Luciana Mascara\u00f1a serving as the reserve assistant referee. Spaniard Carlos del Cerro Grande was named the video assistant referee, presiding over the first use of the technology in the final of the Women's World Cup. His fellow countryman Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda S\u00e1nchez Mart\u00ednez was named as one of the assistant video assistant referees for the match, along with Mariana de Almeida of Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Pre-match, Team selection\nAmerican co-captain Megan Rapinoe, who scored five goals and had three assists during the tournament, was left out of the semi-final line-up against England due to a pulled hamstring. However, she said that she expected to return ahead of the final. U.S. midfielder Rose Lavelle also had to be substituted out in the semi-final due to a hamstring injury, though she also said that she was fit to play in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Pre-match, Team selection\nDutch winger Lieke Martens, winner of The Best FIFA Women's Player in 2017, was also listed as questionable due to a toe injury. She started in the semi-final against Sweden, previously a doubt for the match, though she was unable to make an impact and was substituted out at half-time. The team's goalkeeper, Sari van Veenendaal, finished the semi-final with a swollen hand, but returned to the starting line-up for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Match, Summary\nThe United States fielded their unusual 4\u20133\u20133 that was used by Jill Ellis during the tournament, including Megan Rapinoe, the U.S. captain for the match, after her injury that kept her from starting in the semi-final. Lieke Martens returned for the Netherlands side, while Shanice van de Sanden was placed on the bench. The match kicked off at 17:00 in 31\u00a0\u00b0C (88\u00a0\u00b0F) heat, which was lower than the earlier forecasts for the ongoing continental heat wave. The match was attended by 57,900 spectators, including a large number of American fans and a stand of Dutch fans organised behind one of the goals. French president Emmanuel Macron, Dutch monarch Willem-Alexander, and several professional male and female footballers were also among those in attendance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 808]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Match, Summary\nThe United States started several attacks early in the match, but failed to score within the opening twelve minutes as they had in their previous six matches. The two sides traded fouls, including one that earned Sherida Spitse a yellow card in the tenth minute, but the U.S. remained in control of possession and had several chances towards goal. Dutch goalkeeper and captain Sari van Veenendaal made several saves to keep her shutout, including two shots before half-time from Sam Mewis and Alex Morgan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0026-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Match, Summary\nA foul on Rose Lavelle at the top of the penalty area was left uncalled, allowing the Dutch to spring a counterattack that ended with a foul on forward Lineth Beerensteyn by U.S. defender Abby Dahlkemper, who earned a yellow card. In first half stoppage time, U.S. defender Kelley O'Hara and Dutch winger Lieke Martens collided heads during an aerial challenge, resulting in O'Hara being substituted at half-time for Ali Krieger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Match, Summary\nAnother physical challenge, resulting in a bloody facial cut for U.S. defender Becky Sauerbrunn, began the second half as the U.S. continued to have the majority of attacking chances. Dutch defender Stefanie van der Gragt kicked U.S. attacker Alex Morgan in the shoulder while attempting to control the ball in the penalty area, which was left uncalled until a VAR review by referee St\u00e9phanie Frappart awarded a penalty to the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0027-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Match, Summary\nVan der Gragt earned a yellow card and the penalty was scored in the 61st minute by U.S. captain Megan Rapinoe, who left Van Veenendaal standing on her line; the penalty was Rapinoe's sixth goal of the tournament, winning her the Golden Boot and making her the oldest player to score in a Women's World Cup final. Eight minutes later, Rose Lavelle scored the second goal of the final for the U.S. on a solo run through the Dutch defence that ended with a left-footed strike from 17 yards (16\u00a0m).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Match, Summary\nDown 2\u20130 and still conceding attacking chances to the U.S., the Netherlands substituted defender Anouk Dekker for forward Shanice van de Sanden and forced a save out of U.S. goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher. Van Veenendaal made several saves to deny a third goal for the United States after shots on target by Morgan, Tobin Heath, and Crystal Dunn. Rapinoe was substituted by Christen Press in the 79th minute, while Carli Lloyd was brought on in the last minutes of regulation time. After the end of the match, the U.S. bench spilled onto the field to celebrate the team's fourth Women's World Cup title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Match, Details\nAssistant referees:Manuela Nicolosi (France)Michelle O'Neill (Republic of Ireland)Fourth official:Claudia Umpi\u00e9rrez (Uruguay)Reserve assistant referee:Luciana Mascara\u00f1a (Uruguay)Video assistant referee:Carlos del Cerro Grande (Spain)Assistant video assistant referees:Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda S\u00e1nchez Mart\u00ednez (Spain)Mariana de Almeida (Argentina)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Post-match\nThe United States won a record-extending fourth title, and became the second team to win consecutive editions of the Women's World Cup, following Germany in 2003 and 2007. The victory was also the first World Cup title on European soil for the U.S. During the 2019 tournament, the U.S. scored 26 goals to set a new record for most goals in a single Women's World Cup, surpassing the record of 25 shared by the U.S. in 1991 and Germany in 2003. The team's goal difference of +23 also set a new tournament record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0030-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Post-match\nTheir World Cup unbeaten streak was also extended to 17 matches, including 12 consecutive wins. Jill Ellis became the first manager to win two Women's World Cup titles, amid criticism from fans over her style of management. On 10 July, the team were honoured with a ticker tape parade down the Canyon of Heroes in New York City and received their third Outstanding Team ESPY Award in Los Angeles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Post-match\nMegan Rapinoe was named the player of the match, and was awarded the Golden Ball as the best player of the tournament. She also won the Golden Boot as the top scorer of the tournament with six goals and three assists, while Alex Morgan won the Silver Boot with the same tallies; Rapinoe won the award on the second tie-breaker, having played fewer minutes. At the age of 34, Rapinoe became the oldest player to win the Golden Ball and Golden Boot awards. Rose Lavelle won the Bronze Ball award, while Dutch goalkeeper Sari van Veenendaal won the Golden Glove award as the best goalkeeper of the tournament; her eight saves in the final were the most during any knockout stage match in the 2019 tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Post-match\nRapinoe became the second player to start in three Women's World Cup finals, after Birgit Prinz of Germany (1995, 2003 and 2007). Additionally, Tobin Heath, Ali Krieger, Carli Lloyd and Alex Morgan joined them as the only players to make an appearance in three finals. Rapinoe's goal made her the first player to convert a penalty outside of a shoot-out in a Women's World Cup final, as German goalkeeper Nadine Angerer saved the only previous final penalty taken by Marta of Brazil in 2007. The goal also meant that Rapinoe became the oldest player to score in a final, surpassing teammate Carli Lloyd who scored a hat-trick in the 2015 final at the age of 32 years and 354 days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Post-match\nThe United States will receive $4 million (3.5 million euros) in prize money as the winners of the tournament, while the Netherlands will receive $2.6 million (2.3 million euros) as runners-up. The U.S. team will also play a four-match victory tour that will entitle them to a share of profits, totalling approximately $250,000 per player. The monetary prizes, along with small bonuses from the United States Soccer Federation, were criticised as being unfair and discriminatory compared to those offered to men's teams; fans in the stadium chanted \"Equal pay!\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0033-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Post-match\nduring FIFA president Gianni Infantino's appearance at the trophy ceremony alongside French president Emmanuel Macron. Several media personalities and sportspeople from the U.S. also mentioned the issue while congratulating the team on their victory. In response, Senator Joe Manchin introduced a bill in the U.S. Senate that would make equal pay for the women's team a requirement for federal funding for the 2026 men's World Cup, which is planned to be partially hosted by the United States. U.S. President Donald Trump, who had criticised Rapinoe's anthem protest and comments about rejecting a White House visit, also congratulated the team alongside former presidents Barack Obama and Bill Clinton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Post-match\nOn 30 July 2019, the United States Soccer Federation announced that head coach Jill Ellis would step down upon completion of the team's U.S. victory tour in October 2019. Following her departure, she will continue to work as an ambassador for U.S. Soccer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Post-match\nThe U.S. team was named the Athlete of the Year by Time magazine, while Rapinoe was awarded the Ballon d'Or F\u00e9minin and named the Sports Illustrated Sportsperson of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Broadcasting\nThe international broadcast of the match garnered an average of 82.18\u00a0million live viewers and 260\u00a0million total viewers, setting a new tournament record. The U.S. broadcast of the match on terrestrial television station Fox drew an average of 14.3\u00a0million, outranking the 2018 men's final (which did not feature the U.S.) but falling short of the 2015 Women's World Cup broadcast that was broadcast during U.S. prime time rather than late morning. An additional 1.6\u00a0million Americans watched the match on Telemundo in Spanish, and streaming audiences for Fox averaged 289,000 viewers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289246-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, Broadcasting\nIn the Netherlands, the final was watched by 5.5\u00a0million people, an estimated 88\u00a0percent of people with television access. The Brazilian broadcast on TV Globo and its partners was watched by 19.9\u00a0million people (a 41.7 percent share), setting a new women's football record. Large audiences were also reported in France (5.9\u00a0million), Germany (5.1\u00a0million), Sweden (1.5\u00a0million) and the United Kingdom (3.2\u00a0million).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289247-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group A\nGroup A of the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup took place from 7 to 17 June 2019. The group consisted of hosts France, Nigeria, Norway and South Korea. The top two teams, France and Norway, along with the third-placed team, Nigeria (as one of the four best third-placed teams), advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289247-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group A, Matches, France vs South Korea\nAssistant referees:Luciana Mascara\u00f1a (Uruguay)M\u00f3nica Amboya (Ecuador)Fourth official:Melissa Borjas (Honduras)Reserve assistant referee:Mariana de Almeida (Argentina)Video assistant referee:Mauro Vigliano (Argentina)Assistant video assistant referees:Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda S\u00e1nchez Mart\u00ednez (Spain)Felisha Mariscal (United States)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289247-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group A, Matches, Norway vs Nigeria\nAssistant referees:Kathryn Nesbitt (United States)Chantal Boudreau (Canada)Fourth official:Casey Reibelt (Australia)Reserve assistant referee:Maiko Hagio (Japan)Video assistant referee:Danny Makkelie (Netherlands)Assistant video assistant referees:Mohammed Abdulla Hassan Mohamed (United Arab Emirates)Sian Massey-Ellis (England)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289247-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group A, Matches, Nigeria vs South Korea\nAssistant referees:Ekaterina Kurochkina (Russia)Petru\u021ba Iugulescu (Romania)Fourth official:Katja Koroleva (United States)Reserve assistant referee:Julia Magnusson (Sweden)Video assistant referee:Carlos del Cerro Grande (Spain)Assistant video assistant referees:Paolo Valeri (Italy)Leslie V\u00e1squez (Chile)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 68], "content_span": [69, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289247-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group A, Matches, France vs Norway\nAssistant referees:Katrin Rafalski (Germany)Chrysoula Kourompylia (Greece)Fourth official:Riem Hussein (Germany)Reserve assistant referee:Lisa Rashid (England)Video assistant referee:Felix Zwayer (Germany)Assistant video assistant referees:Sascha Stegemann (Germany)Chantal Boudreau (Canada)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289247-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group A, Matches, Nigeria vs France\nAssistant referees:Shirley Perello (Honduras)Felisha Mariscal (United States)Fourth official:Mar\u00eda Carvajal (Chile)Reserve assistant referee:Leslie V\u00e1squez (Chile)Video assistant referee:Danny Makkelie (Netherlands)Assistant video assistant referees:Pawe\u0142 Gil (Poland)Loreto Toloza (Chile)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289247-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group A, Matches, South Korea vs Norway\nAssistant referees:Princess Brown (Jamaica)Stephanie-Dale Yee Sing (Jamaica)Fourth official:Gladys Lengwe (Zambia)Reserve assistant referee:Maria Salamasina (Samoa)Video assistant referee:Chris Beath (Australia)Assistant video assistant referees:Mohammed Abdulla Hassan Mohamed (United Arab Emirates)Lucie Ratajov\u00e1 (Czech Republic)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289247-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group A, Discipline\nFair play points would have been used as tiebreakers in the group if the overall and head-to-head records of teams were tied, or if teams had the same record in the ranking of third-placed teams. These were calculated based on yellow and red cards received in all group matches as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289247-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group A, Discipline\nOnly one of the above deductions were applied to a player in a single match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289248-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group B\nGroup B of the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup took place from 8 to 17 June 2019. The group consisted of China PR, Germany, South Africa and Spain. The top two teams, Germany and Spain, along with the third-placed team, China PR (as one of the four best third-placed teams), advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289248-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group B, Matches, Germany vs China PR\nAssistant referees:Princess Brown (Jamaica)Stephanie-Dale Yee Sing (Jamaica)Fourth official:Lucila Venegas (Mexico)Reserve assistant referee:Mayte Ch\u00e1vez (Mexico)Video assistant referee:Massimiliano Irrati (Italy)Assistant video assistant referees:Paolo Valeri (Italy)Sarah Jones (New Zealand)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289248-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group B, Matches, Spain vs South Africa\nAssistant referees:Leslie V\u00e1squez (Chile)Loreto Toloza (Chile)Fourth official:Laura Fortunato (Argentina)Reserve assistant referee:Mary Blanco (Colombia)Video assistant referee:Mauro Vigliano (Argentina)Assistant video assistant referees:Tiago Martins (Portugal)Mariana de Almeida (Argentina)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289248-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group B, Matches, Germany vs Spain\nAssistant referees:Maryna Striletska (Ukraine)Oleksandra Ardasheva (Ukraine)Fourth official:Sandra Braz (Portugal)Reserve assistant referee:Mihaela \u021aepu\u0219\u0103 (Romania)Video assistant referee:Danny Makkelie (Netherlands)Assistant video assistant referees:Pawe\u0142 Gil (Poland)Michelle O'Neill (Republic of Ireland)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289248-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group B, Matches, South Africa vs China PR\nAssistant referees:Katalin T\u00f6r\u00f6k (Hungary)Sanja Ro\u0111ak-Kar\u0161i\u0107 (Croatia)Fourth official:Jana Ad\u00e1mkov\u00e1 (Czech Republic)Reserve assistant referee:Stephanie-Dale Yee Sing (Jamaica)Video assistant referee:Chris Beath (Australia)Assistant video assistant referees:Mohammed Abdulla Hassan Mohamed (United Arab Emirates)Manuela Nicolosi (France)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289248-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group B, Matches, South Africa vs Germany\nAssistant referees:Julia Magnusson (Sweden)Lisa Rashid (England)Fourth official:St\u00e9phanie Frappart (France)Reserve assistant referee:Michelle O'Neill (Republic of Ireland)Video assistant referee:Cl\u00e9ment Turpin (France)Assistant video assistant referees:Drew Fischer (Canada)Manuela Nicolosi (France)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289248-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group B, Matches, China PR vs Spain\nAssistant referees:Neuza Back (Brazil)Tatiane Sacilotti (Brazil)Fourth official:Laura Fortunato (Argentina)Reserve assistant referee:Mary Blanco (Colombia)Video assistant referee:Mauro Vigliano (Argentina)Assistant video assistant referees:Tiago Martins (Portugal)Mariana de Almeida (Argentina)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289248-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group B, Discipline\nFair play points would have been used as tiebreakers in the group if the overall and head-to-head records of teams were tied, or if teams had the same record in the ranking of third-placed teams. These were calculated based on yellow and red cards received in all group matches as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289248-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group B, Discipline\nOnly one of the above deductions were applied to a player in a single match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289249-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group C\nGroup C of the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup took place from 9 to 18 June 2019. The group consisted of Australia, Brazil, Italy and Jamaica. The top two teams, Italy and Australia, along with the third-placed team, Brazil (as one of the four best third-placed teams), advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289249-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group C, Matches, Australia vs Italy\nAssistant referees:Shirley Perello (Honduras)Felisha Mariscal (United States)Fourth official:Katja Koroleva (United States)Reserve assistant referee:Enedina Caudillo (Mexico)Video assistant referee:Carlos del Cerro Grande (Spain)Assistant video assistant referees:Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda S\u00e1nchez Mart\u00ednez (Spain)Luciana Mascara\u00f1a (Uruguay)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289249-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group C, Matches, Brazil vs Jamaica\nAssistant referees:Kylie Cockburn (Scotland)Mihaela \u021aepu\u0219\u0103 (Romania)Fourth official:Kateryna Monzul (Ukraine)Reserve assistant referee:Petru\u021ba Iugulescu (Romania)Video assistant referee:Bastian Dankert (Germany)Assistant video assistant referees:Sascha Stegemann (Germany)Maryna Striletska (Ukraine)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289249-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group C, Matches, Australia vs Brazil\nAssistant referees:Sian Massey-Ellis (England)Susanne K\u00fcng (Switzerland)Fourth official:St\u00e9phanie Frappart (France)Reserve assistant referee:Lidwine Rakotozafinoro (Madagascar)Video assistant referee:Bastian Dankert (Germany)Assistant video assistant referees:Sascha Stegemann (Germany)Lucie Ratajov\u00e1 (Czech Republic)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289249-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group C, Matches, Jamaica vs Italy\nAssistant referees:Sarah Jones (New Zealand)Maria Salamasina (Samoa)Fourth official:Claudia Umpi\u00e9rrez (Uruguay)Reserve assistant referee:M\u00f3nica Amboya (Ecuador)Video assistant referee:Danny Makkelie (Netherlands)Assistant video assistant referees:Pawe\u0142 Gil (Poland)Chrysoula Kourompylia (Greece)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289249-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group C, Matches, Jamaica vs Australia\nAssistant referees:Katalin T\u00f6r\u00f6k (Hungary)Sanja Ro\u0111ak-Kar\u0161i\u0107 (Croatia)Fourth official:Jana Ad\u00e1mkov\u00e1 (Czech Republic)Reserve assistant referee:M\u00e1ria S\u00faken\u00edkov\u00e1 (Slovakia)Video assistant referee:Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda S\u00e1nchez Mart\u00ednez (Spain)Assistant video assistant referees:Mohammed Abdulla Hassan Mohamed (United Arab Emirates)Sian Massey-Ellis (England)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289249-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group C, Matches, Italy vs Brazil\nAssistant referees:Mayte Ch\u00e1vez (Mexico)Enedina Caudillo (Mexico)Fourth official:Katja Koroleva (United States)Reserve assistant referee:Mary Njoroge (Kenya)Video assistant referee:Carlos del Cerro Grande (Spain)Assistant video assistant referees:Tiago Martins (Portugal)Loreto Toloza (Chile)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289249-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group C, Discipline\nFair play points would have been used as tiebreakers in the group if the overall and head-to-head records of teams were tied, or if teams had the same record in the ranking of third-placed teams. These were calculated based on yellow and red cards received in all group matches as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289249-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group C, Discipline\nOnly one of the above deductions were applied to a player in a single match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289250-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group D\nGroup D of the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup took place from 9 to 19 June 2019. The group consisted of Argentina, England, Japan and Scotland. The top two teams, England and Japan, advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289250-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group D, Matches, England vs Scotland\nAssistant referees:Lucie Ratajov\u00e1 (Czech Republic)M\u00e1ria S\u00faken\u00edkov\u00e1 (Slovakia)Fourth official:Anastasia Pustovoitova (Russia)Reserve assistant referee:Sanja Ro\u0111ak-Kar\u0161i\u0107 (Croatia)Video assistant referee:Felix Zwayer (Germany)Assistant video assistant referees:Pawe\u0142 Gil (Poland)Ekaterina Kurochkina (Russia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289250-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group D, Matches, Argentina vs Japan\nAssistant referees:Manuela Nicolosi (France)Michelle O'Neill (Republic of Ireland)Fourth official:Anna-Marie Keighley (New Zealand)Reserve assistant referee:Sarah Jones (New Zealand)Video assistant referee:Cl\u00e9ment Turpin (France)Assistant video assistant referees:Carlos del Cerro Grande (Spain)Kathryn Nesbitt (United States)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289250-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group D, Matches, Japan vs Scotland\nAssistant referees:Mary Njoroge (Kenya)Queency Victoire (Mauritius)Fourth official:Gladys Lengwe (Zambia)Reserve assistant referee:Princess Brown (Jamaica)Video assistant referee:Massimiliano Irrati (Italy)Assistant video assistant referees:Drew Fischer (Canada)Oleksandra Ardasheva (Ukraine)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289250-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group D, Matches, England vs Argentina\nAssistant referees:Fang Yan (China PR)Kim Kyoung-min (South Korea)Fourth official:Ri Hyang-ok (North Korea)Reserve assistant referee:Hong Kum-nyo (North Korea)Video assistant referee:Felix Zwayer (Germany)Assistant video assistant referees:Sascha Stegemann (Germany)Katrin Rafalski (Germany)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289250-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group D, Matches, Japan vs England\nAssistant referees:Luciana Mascara\u00f1a (Uruguay)M\u00f3nica Amboya (Ecuador)Fourth official:Mar\u00eda Carvajal (Chile)Reserve assistant referee:Queency Victoire (Mauritius)Video assistant referee:Carlos del Cerro Grande (Spain)Assistant video assistant referees:Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda S\u00e1nchez Mart\u00ednez (Spain)Leslie Vasquez (Chile)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289250-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group D, Matches, Scotland vs Argentina\nAssistant referees:Hong Kum-nyo (North Korea)Kim Kyoung-min (South Korea)Fourth official:Lidya Tafesse (Ethiopia)Reserve assistant referee:Makoto Bozono (Japan)Video assistant referee:Bastian Dankert (Germany)Assistant video assistant referees:Drew Fischer (Canada)Katrin Rafalski (Germany)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289250-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group D, Discipline\nFair play points would have been used as tiebreakers in the group if the overall and head-to-head records of teams were tied, or if teams had the same record in the ranking of third-placed teams. These were calculated based on yellow and red cards received in all group matches as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289250-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group D, Discipline\nOnly one of the above deductions were applied to a player in a single match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289251-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group E\nGroup E of the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup took place from 10 to 20 June 2019. The group consisted of Cameroon, Canada, the Netherlands and New Zealand. The top two teams, the Netherlands and Canada, along with the third-placed team, Cameroon (as one of the four best third-placed teams), advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289251-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group E, Matches, Canada vs Cameroon\nAssistant referees:Hong Kum-nyo (North Korea)Kim Kyoung-min (South Korea)Fourth official:Qin Liang (China PR)Reserve assistant referee:Lee Seul-gi (South Korea)Video assistant referee:Massimiliano Irrati (Italy)Assistant video assistant referees:Mohammed Abdulla Hassan Mohamed (United Arab Emirates)Sian Massey-Ellis (England)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289251-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group E, Matches, New Zealand vs Netherlands\nAssistant referees:Neuza Back (Brazil)Tatiane Sacilotti (Brazil)Fourth official:Mar\u00eda Carvajal (Chile)Reserve assistant referee:M\u00f3nica Amboya (Ecuador)Video assistant referee:Carlos del Cerro Grande (Spain)Assistant video assistant referees:Tiago Martins (Portugal)Felisha Mariscal (United States)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289251-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group E, Matches, Netherlands vs Cameroon\nAssistant referees:Lee Seul-gi (South Korea)Maiko Hagio (Japan)Fourth official:Katja Koroleva (United States)Reserve assistant referee:M\u00e1ria S\u00faken\u00edkov\u00e1 (Slovakia)Video assistant referee:Paolo Valeri (Italy)Assistant video assistant referees:Mauro Vigliano (Argentina)Mayte Ch\u00e1vez (Mexico)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289251-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group E, Matches, Canada vs New Zealand\nAssistant referees:Naomi Teshirogi (Japan)Makoto Bozono (Japan)Fourth official:Kate Jacewicz (Australia)Reserve assistant referee:Sanja Ro\u0111ak-Kar\u0161i\u0107 (Croatia)Video assistant referee:Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda S\u00e1nchez Mart\u00ednez (Spain)Assistant video assistant referees:Pawe\u0142 Gil (Poland)Kathryn Nesbitt (United States)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289251-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group E, Matches, Netherlands vs Canada\nAssistant referees:Manuela Nicolosi (France)Michelle O'Neill (Republic of Ireland)Fourth official:Salima Mukansanga (Rwanda)Reserve assistant referee:Stephanie-Dale Yee Sing (Jamaica)Video assistant referee:Felix Zwayer (Germany)Assistant video assistant referees:Sascha Stegemann (Germany)Neuza Back (Brazil)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289251-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group E, Matches, Cameroon vs New Zealand\nAssistant referees:Maryna Striletska (Ukraine)Oleksandra Ardasheva (Ukraine)Fourth official:Sandra Braz (Portugal)Reserve assistant referee:Julia Magnusson (Sweden)Video assistant referee:Massimiliano Irrati (Italy)Assistant video assistant referees:Bastian Dankert (Germany)Lisa Rashid (England)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289251-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group E, Discipline\nFair play points would have been used as tiebreakers in the group if the overall and head-to-head records of teams were tied, or if teams had the same record in the ranking of third-placed teams. These were calculated based on yellow and red cards received in all group matches as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289251-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group E, Discipline\nOnly one of the above deductions were applied to a player in a single match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289252-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group F\nGroup F of the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup took place from 11 to 20 June 2019. The group consisted of Chile, Sweden, Thailand and the United States. The top two teams, the United States and Sweden, advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289252-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group F, Matches, Chile vs Sweden\nAt 19:30 CEST, in the 72nd minute, the match was interrupted due to severe weather. The match resumed at 20:12 CEST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289252-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group F, Matches, Chile vs Sweden\nAssistant referees:Mayte Ch\u00e1vez (Mexico)Enedina Caudillo (Mexico)Fourth official:Marie-Soleil Beaudoin (Canada)Reserve assistant referee:Princess Brown (Jamaica)Video assistant referee:Chris Beath (Australia)Assistant video assistant referees:Mohammed Abdulla Hassan Mohamed (United Arab Emirates)Kylie Cockburn (Scotland)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289252-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group F, Matches, United States vs Thailand\nThe United States opened their defence of their Women's World Cup title with a 13\u20130 victory against Thailand, setting a new record for the largest margin of victory in the tournament's history, as well as the most goals in a match. Alex Morgan scored five times, tying a tournament and team record set by Michelle Akers for most goals scored by a player in a single World Cup match, while four of her teammates scored their first World Cup goals in their debut at the tournament. The U.S. team were later criticised for celebrating their later goals during the match, with some media commentators and former players calling it disrespectful, but the celebrations were defended by other media commentators, the team's players and members of the opposing Thai bench.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 836]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289252-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group F, Matches, United States vs Thailand\nAssistant referees:Mariana de Almeida (Argentina)Mary Blanco (Colombia)Fourth official:Claudia Umpi\u00e9rrez (Uruguay)Reserve assistant referee:Luciana Mascara\u00f1a (Uruguay)Video assistant referee:Mauro Vigliano (Argentina)Assistant video assistant referees:Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda S\u00e1nchez Mart\u00ednez (Spain)Sarah Jones (New Zealand)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289252-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group F, Matches, Sweden vs Thailand\nAssistant referees:Bernadettar Kwimbira (Malawi)Lidwine Rakotozafinoro (Madagascar)Fourth official:Katalin Kulcs\u00e1r (Hungary)Reserve assistant referee:Katalin T\u00f6r\u00f6k (Hungary)Video assistant referee:Felix Zwayer (Germany)Assistant video assistant referees:Paolo Valeri (Italy)Sarah Jones (New Zealand)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289252-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group F, Matches, United States vs Chile\nThe United States fielded a reserve squad with seven changes to the starting lineup to rest its players ahead of the final group stage match against Sweden. Carli Lloyd scored in the 11th minute from the edge of the penalty area and Julie Ertz added a second with a header on a corner kick in the 26th minute. Lloyd scored her second goal of the match in the 35th minute, heading in another corner kick, and missed a penalty kick in the 81st minute that would have given her a hat-trick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 68], "content_span": [69, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289252-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group F, Matches, United States vs Chile\nChilean goalkeeper Christiane Endler made several major saves as her team was outshot 26\u20131, and was named the player of the match for her efforts. With her brace, Carli Lloyd set a new record for most consecutive World Cup appearances with a goal, having scored six matches in a row (starting in the 2015 knockout stage), surpassing the record of German forward Birgit Prinz from 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 68], "content_span": [69, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289252-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group F, Matches, United States vs Chile\nAssistant referees:Kylie Cockburn (Scotland)Mihaela \u021aepu\u0219\u0103 (Romania)Fourth official:Esther Staubli (Switzerland)Reserve assistant referee:Susanne K\u00fcng (Switzerland)Video assistant referee:Cl\u00e9ment Turpin (France)Assistant video assistant referees:Drew Fischer (Canada)Maryna Striletska (Ukraine)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 68], "content_span": [69, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289252-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group F, Matches, Sweden vs United States\nAssistant referees:Ekaterina Kurochkina (Russia)Petru\u021ba Iugulescu (Romania)Fourth official:Esther Staubli (Switzerland)Reserve assistant referee:Susanne K\u00fcng (Switzerland)Video assistant referee:Danny Makkelie (Netherlands)Assistant video assistant referees:Chris Beath (Australia)Chrysoula Kourompylia (Greece)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289252-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group F, Matches, Thailand vs Chile\nAssistant referees:Sarah Jones (New Zealand)Maria Salamasina (Samoa)Fourth official:Gladys Lengwe (Zambia)Reserve assistant referee:Bernadettar Kwimbira (Malawi)Video assistant referee:Paolo Valeri (Italy)Assistant video assistant referees:Drew Fischer (Canada)Mihaela \u021aepu\u0219\u0103 (Romania)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289252-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group F, Discipline\nFair play points would have been used as tiebreakers in the group if the overall and head-to-head records of teams were tied, or if teams had the same record in the ranking of third-placed teams. These were calculated based on yellow and red cards received in all group matches as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289252-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Group F, Discipline\nOnly one of the above deductions were applied to a player in a single match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289253-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup broadcasting rights\nFIFA, through several companies, sold the broadcasting rights for the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup to the following broadcasters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289253-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup broadcasting rights, Notes\n- EBU has made an agreement for 38 territories. They made the event also available in these territories on their own website eurovisionsports.tv, where you can watch the games live when they are not broadcast or streamed by the local broadcaster and on-demand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 54], "content_span": [55, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289253-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup broadcasting rights, Notes\n- CTA Coverage is not available in Dominican Republic, Nicaragua, and Panama", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 54], "content_span": [55, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage\nThe knockout stage of the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup was the second and final stage of the competition, following the group stage. It began on 22 June with the round of 16 and ended on 7 July with the final match, held at the Parc Olympique Lyonnais in D\u00e9cines-Charpieu. A total of 16 teams (the top two teams from each group, along with the four best third-placed teams) advanced to the knockout stage to compete in a single-elimination style tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, Format\nIn the knockout stage, if a match was level at the end of 90 minutes of normal playing time, extra time was played (two periods of 15 minutes each), where each team was allowed to make a fourth substitution. If still tied after extra time, the match was decided by a penalty shoot-out to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 50], "content_span": [51, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, Format\nFIFA set out the following schedule for the round of 16:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 50], "content_span": [51, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, Format, Combinations of matches in the round of 16\nIn the round of 16, the four third-placed teams were matched with the winners of groups A, B, C, and D. The specific match-ups involving the third-placed teams depend on which four third-placed teams qualified for the round of 16:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 94], "content_span": [95, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, Qualified teams\nThe top two placed teams from each of the six groups, plus the four best-placed third teams, qualified for the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Germany vs Nigeria\nGerman captain Alexandra Popp opened the scoring for her side in the 20th minute after heading in Lina Magull's corner from close range. In the 26th minute, Germany were awarded a penalty after Evelyn Nwabuoku was judged to have fouled Magull in the box after missing a clearance. Sara D\u00e4britz converted the resulting penalty by scoring low to Chiamaka Nnadozie's left. Nigeria missed a great scoring chance early in the second half, when substitute Rasheedat Ajibade's low cross was missed by Nigerian captain Desire Oparanozie. In the 82nd minute, Germany scored their third goal when Halimatu Ayinde's misjudged back pass played in Lea Sch\u00fcller, who shot low to the far post to seal the game for Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 75], "content_span": [76, 783]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Germany vs Nigeria\nAssistant referees:Naomi Teshirogi (Japan)Makoto Bozono (Japan)Fourth official:Casey Reibelt (Australia)Reserve assistant referee:Maiko Hagio (Japan)Video assistant referee:Carlos del Cerro Grande (Spain)Assistant video assistant referees:Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda S\u00e1nchez Mart\u00ednez (Spain)Mayte Ch\u00e1vez (Mexico)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 75], "content_span": [76, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Norway vs Australia\nAustralia started the game fast, with Caitlin Foord's through ball finding Sam Kerr at the edge of the penalty area within 30 seconds. Kerr dribbled past Maren Mjelde, but shot just wide of Ingrid Hjelmseth's goal. At the half-hour mark, Karina S\u00e6vik's curling pass played in Isabell Herlovsen, who shot past Lydia Williams to give Norway the lead. Minutes before halftime, Australia were awarded a penalty after Maria Thorisdottir was judged to have handled Kerr's cross from the right. A subsequent VAR check revealed that Thorisdottir touched the ball with her shoulder and the penalty call was reversed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Norway vs Australia\nKerr would have a goal ruled out in the 60th minute after she was judged to be offside. Elise Kellond-Knight equalized for Australia in the 83rd minute after her corner kick evaded all contact and bounced into the net at the far post. Caroline Graham Hansen almost won the game for Norway in stoppage time, when her curling strike from the edge of the penalty area struck the inside of the post and rolled along the goal line. The first period of extra time saw Williams make two strong saves to deny Norway, as well as Alanna Kennedy receive a red card after fouling Lisa-Marie Karlseng Utland. After a relatively tame second period of extra time, the match went to a penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 764]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Norway vs Australia\nHansen scored the first penalty for Norway, shooting low to Williams left after she dove the wrong way. Kerr went first for Australia but sent her shot high and wide of the goal. After Guro Reiten copied Hansen's method, Emily Gielnik saw her low effort saved by Hjelmseth, who dove to her right to make the stop. After both Maren Mjelde and Steph Catley scored their penalties, Ingrid Syrstad Engen slotted into the bottom right corner to send Norway into the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Norway vs Australia\nAssistant referees:Kylie Cockburn (Scotland)Mihaela \u021aepu\u0219\u0103 (Romania)Fourth official:Jana Ad\u00e1mkov\u00e1 (Czech Republic)Reserve assistant referee:M\u00e1ria S\u00faken\u00edkov\u00e1 (Slovakia)Video assistant referee:Felix Zwayer (Germany)Assistant video assistant referees:Sascha Stegemann (Germany)Katrin Rafalski (Germany)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, England vs Cameroon\nIn the 12th minute, England were awarded an indirect free kick in Cameroon's penalty area after goalkeeper Annette Ngo Ndom was judged to have picked up a back-pass from Augustine Ejangue. English captain Steph Houghton scored from the free kick by shooting low into the bottom right corner. England doubled their lead in first half stoppage time, when Ellen White received a pass from Lucy Bronze just inside the penalty area, and sent a low left-footed shot past Ngo Ndom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, England vs Cameroon\nEarly in the second half, Ajara Nchout appeared to get a goal back for Cameroon after shooting a Gabrielle Ongu\u00e9n\u00e9 cutback into the top corner, but the goal was disallowed when a VAR check showed Ongu\u00e9n\u00e9 was offside in the build up to the goal. Alexandra Takounda missed a great chance just after being substituted into the game, when she collected Alex Greenwood's weak back pass in front of goal, but her effort was saved by Karen Bardsley. England added another goal in the 58th minute when Greenwood hit Toni Duggan's low driven corner into the net at the far post.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, England vs Cameroon\nThe fixture attracted considerable controversy. The actions of the Cameroonian players, including delaying the restart after England's second and third goals, as well as what was perceived to be deliberately rough play, prompted a FIFA investigation into their actions. Match referee Qin Liang also received significant criticism for failing to punish several Cameroonian infractions, and was seen to have lost control of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, England vs Cameroon\nAssistant referees:Fang Yan (China PR)Hong Kum-nyo (North Korea)Fourth official:Ri Hyang-ok (North Korea)Reserve assistant referee:Kim Kyoung-min (South Korea)Video assistant referee:Bastian Dankert (Germany)Assistant video assistant referees:Mohammed Abdulla Hassan Mohamed (United Arab Emirates)Michelle O'Neill (Republic of Ireland)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, France vs Brazil\nAssistant referees:Princess Brown (Jamaica)Stephanie-Dale Yee Sing (Jamaica)Fourth official:Esther Staubli (Switzerland)Reserve assistant referee:Susanne K\u00fcng (Switzerland)Video assistant referee:Massimiliano Irrati (Italy)Assistant video assistant referees:Chris Beath (Australia)Oleksandra Ardasheva (Ukraine)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 73], "content_span": [74, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Spain vs United States\nAssistant referees:Katalin T\u00f6r\u00f6k (Hungary)Sanja Ro\u0111ak-Kar\u0161i\u0107 (Croatia)Fourth official:Anna-Marie Keighley (New Zealand)Reserve assistant referee:Sarah Jones (New Zealand)Video assistant referee:Danny Makkelie (Netherlands)Assistant video assistant referees:Pawe\u0142 Gil (Poland)Lucie Ratajov\u00e1 (Czech Republic)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 79], "content_span": [80, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Sweden vs Canada\nAssistant referees:Kathryn Nesbitt (United States)Felisha Mariscal (United States)Fourth official:Sandra Braz (Portugal)Reserve assistant referee:Lisa Rashid (England)Video assistant referee:Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda S\u00e1nchez Mart\u00ednez (Spain)Assistant video assistant referees:Paolo Valeri (Italy)Manuela Nicolosi (France)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 73], "content_span": [74, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Italy vs China PR\nAssistant referees:Neuza Back (Brazil)Tatiane Sacilotti (Brazil)Fourth official:Laura Fortunato (Argentina)Reserve assistant referee:Mary Blanco (Colombia)Video assistant referee:Mauro Vigliano (Argentina)Assistant video assistant referees:Tiago Martins (Portugal)Mariana de Almeida (Argentina)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 74], "content_span": [75, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, Round of 16, Netherlands vs Japan\nAssistant referees:Shirley Perello (Honduras)Chantal Boudreau (Canada)Fourth official:Katja Koroleva (United States)Reserve assistant referee:Sian Massey-Ellis (England)Video assistant referee:Chris Beath (Australia)Assistant video assistant referees:Cl\u00e9ment Turpin (France)Kylie Cockburn (Scotland)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 77], "content_span": [78, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, Quarter-finals, Norway vs England\nAssistant referees:Mayte Ch\u00e1vez (Mexico)Enedina Caudillo (Mexico)Fourth official:Katalin Kulcs\u00e1r (Hungary)Reserve assistant referee:Sanja Ro\u0111ak-Kar\u0161i\u0107 (Croatia)Video assistant referee:Massimiliano Irrati (Italy)Assistant video assistant referees:Paolo Valeri (Italy)Manuela Nicolosi (France)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 77], "content_span": [78, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, Quarter-finals, France vs United States\nAssistant referees:Maryna Striletska (Ukraine)Oleksandra Ardasheva (Ukraine)Fourth official:Kate Jacewicz (Australia)Reserve assistant referee:Kim Kyoung-min (South Korea)Video assistant referee:Danny Makkelie (Netherlands)Assistant video assistant referees:Pawe\u0142 Gil (Poland)Chantal Boudreau (Canada)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 83], "content_span": [84, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, Quarter-finals, Italy vs Netherlands\nAssistant referees:Luciana Mascara\u00f1a (Uruguay)M\u00f3nica Amboya (Ecuador)Fourth official:Qin Liang (China PR)Reserve assistant referee:Fang Yan (China PR)Video assistant referee:Carlos del Cerro Grande (Spain)Assistant video assistant referees:Cl\u00e9ment Turpin (France)Mariana de Almeida (Argentina)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, Quarter-finals, Germany vs Sweden\nAssistant referees:Manuela Nicolosi (France)Michelle O'Neill (Republic of Ireland)Fourth official:Melissa Borjas (Honduras)Reserve assistant referee:Felisha Mariscal (United States)Video assistant referee:Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda S\u00e1nchez Mart\u00ednez (Spain)Assistant video assistant referees:Chris Beath (Australia)Lucie Ratajov\u00e1 (Czech Republic)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 77], "content_span": [78, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, Semi-finals, England vs United States\nWith the win, the United States extended their winning streak in the Women's World Cup to eleven matches, breaking the ten match record of Norway set between 1995 and 1999, having last drawn against Sweden in the 2015 group stage. The U.S. also extended their undefeated streak to sixteen World Cup matches, breaking the record of fifteen set by Germany between 2003 and 2011, last losing against Sweden in the 2011 group stage (matches decided by penalty shoot-outs are counted as draws).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 81], "content_span": [82, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, Semi-finals, England vs United States\nAssistant referees:Neuza Back (Brazil)Tatiane Sacilotti (Brazil)Fourth official:Melissa Borjas (Honduras)Reserve assistant referee:Shirley Perello (Honduras)Video assistant referee:Carlos del Cerro Grande (Spain)Assistant video assistant referees:Tiago Martins (Portugal)Manuela Nicolosi (France)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 81], "content_span": [82, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, Semi-finals, Netherlands vs Sweden\nAssistant referees:Princess Brown (Jamaica)Stephanie-Dale Yee Sing (Jamaica)Fourth official:Kateryna Monzul (Ukraine)Reserve assistant referee:Maryna Striletska (Ukraine)Video assistant referee:Massimiliano Irrati (Italy)Assistant video assistant referees:Mohammed Abdulla Hassan Mohamed (United Arab Emirates)Chantal Boudreau (Canada)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, Third place play-off\nAssistant referees:Ekaterina Kurochkina (Russia)Petru\u021ba Iugulescu (Romania)Fourth official:Kate Jacewicz (Australia)Reserve assistant referee:Chantal Boudreau (Canada)Video assistant referee:Felix Zwayer (Germany)Assistant video assistant referees:Bastian Dankert (Germany)Kathryn Nesbitt (United States)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289254-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, Final\nAssistant referees:Manuela Nicolosi (France)Michelle O'Neill (Republic of Ireland)Fourth official:Claudia Umpi\u00e9rrez (Uruguay)Reserve assistant referee:Luciana Mascara\u00f1a (Uruguay)Video assistant referee:Carlos del Cerro Grande (Spain)Assistant video assistant referees:Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda S\u00e1nchez Mart\u00ednez (Spain)Mariana de Almeida (Argentina)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289255-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification\nThe 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification process decided all 24 teams which played in the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, with the hosts France qualifying automatically. It is the eighth FIFA Women's World Cup, the quadrennial international women's football world championship tournament. The tournament is the third to be hosted in Europe, after the 1995 FIFA Women's World Cup in Sweden and the 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup in Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289255-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification, Qualification process\nThe slot allocation was approved by the FIFA Council on 13\u201314 October 2016. The slots for each confederation are unchanged from that of the previous tournament except the slot for the hosts is moved from CONCACAF (Canada) to UEFA (France).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 64], "content_span": [65, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289255-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification, Qualification process, Summary of qualification\nQualifying matches started on 3 April 2017, and ended on 1 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 90], "content_span": [91, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289255-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification, Qualification process, Summary of qualification\nApart from the host France, 207 of the 210 remaining FIFA member associations could qualify through their own confederation's qualifying process if they choose to enter. The exceptions were Guatemala and Kuwait, whose football associations were suspended by FIFA, and Equatorial Guinea, which were banned from the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup. Guam, Lebanon, Sierra Leone, and Turks and Caicos Islands were initially drawn into qualifying stages but they withdrew from their qualifying tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 90], "content_span": [91, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289255-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification, Qualification process, Summary of qualification\nMore than 30 countries, mostly in Asia and Africa, did not enter qualification, including Saudi Arabia, Tunisia and Egypt, which qualified teams for the 2018 FIFA World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 90], "content_span": [91, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289255-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification, Confederation qualification, AFC\nAs in the previous World Cup cycle, the AFC Women's Asian Cup served as the World Cup qualifying tournament for AFC members. The World Cup qualifying process was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 75], "content_span": [76, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289255-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification, Confederation qualification, CAF\nAs in the previous World Cup cycle, the Africa Women Cup of Nations served as the World Cup qualifying tournament for CAF members. The World Cup qualifying process was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 75], "content_span": [76, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289255-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification, Confederation qualification, CAF\nFIFA banned Equatorial Guinea from qualifying for the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, meaning they could not qualify for the World Cup regardless of their performance in the Africa Women Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 75], "content_span": [76, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289255-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification, Confederation qualification, CONCACAF\nAs in the previous World Cup cycle, the CONCACAF Women's Championship served as the World Cup qualifying tournament for CONCACAF members. The World Cup qualifying process was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 80], "content_span": [81, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289255-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification, Confederation qualification, CONCACAF\nGuadeloupe and Martinique entered Caribbean qualifying for the 2018 CONCACAF Women's Championship. However, as they are not FIFA members, they were ineligible to qualify for the World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 80], "content_span": [81, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289255-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification, Confederation qualification, CONMEBOL\nAs in the previous World Cup cycle, the Copa Am\u00e9rica Femenina served as the World Cup qualifying tournament for CONMEBOL members. The World Cup qualifying process was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 80], "content_span": [81, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289255-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification, Confederation qualification, OFC\nAs in the previous World Cup cycle, the OFC Women's Nations Cup served as the World Cup qualifying tournament for OFC members. The World Cup qualifying process was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 75], "content_span": [76, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289255-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification, Confederation qualification, UEFA\nAs in the previous World Cup cycle, UEFA organised a tournament for its members designed only for World Cup qualifying. The World Cup qualifying process was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 76], "content_span": [77, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289255-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification, Confederation qualification, UEFA, Qualifying group stage\nRanking of second-placed teams (only results against first, third and fourth-placed teams taken into account)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 100], "content_span": [101, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289255-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification, Confederation qualification, UEFA, Play-offs\nThe play-off final winner qualifies for the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 87], "content_span": [88, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289255-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification, CONMEBOL\u2013CONCACAF play-off\nThe inter-confederation play-off was contested between CONCACAF's fourth-placed team Panama and CONMEBOL's third-placed team Argentina. The winners qualified for the World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 69], "content_span": [70, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289255-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification, CONMEBOL\u2013CONCACAF play-off\nThe draw for the order of legs was held on 9 June 2018 in Z\u00fcrich during a meeting between the secretary generals of CONCACAF and CONMEBOL. Argentina were drawn to host the first leg, while Panama (the identity of the team from CONCACAF was not known at time of draw) were drawn to host the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 69], "content_span": [70, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289255-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification, CONMEBOL\u2013CONCACAF play-off\nThe matches took place on 8 and 13 November 2018, during the women's international match calendar period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 69], "content_span": [70, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289255-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification, Top goalscorers\nThere were 1562 goals scored in 392 matches, for an average of 3.98 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289256-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL\u2013CONCACAF play-off)\nIn the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification process, one spot in the final tournament was allocated to the winner of a two-legged home-and-away play-off between the fourth-placed team from CONCACAF (Panama) and the third-placed team from CONMEBOL (Argentina).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289256-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL\u2013CONCACAF play-off), Summary\nThe draw for the order of legs was held on 9 June 2018 in Z\u00fcrich during a meeting between the secretary generals of CONCACAF and CONMEBOL. Argentina were drawn to host the first leg, while Panama (the identity of the team from CONCACAF was not known at time of draw) were drawn to host the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 79], "content_span": [80, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289256-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL\u2013CONCACAF play-off), Summary\nThe matches took place on 8 and 13 November 2018, during the women's international match calendar period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 79], "content_span": [80, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289256-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL\u2013CONCACAF play-off), Matches\nArgentina won 5\u20131 on aggregate and qualified for the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 79], "content_span": [80, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289256-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL\u2013CONCACAF play-off), Goalscorers\nThere were 6 goals scored in 2 matches, for an average of 3 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 83], "content_span": [84, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289257-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification (UEFA)\nThe European qualifying competition for the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup was a women's football competition that determined the eight UEFA teams joining the automatically qualified hosts France in the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289257-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification (UEFA)\nApart from France, 46 of the remaining 54 UEFA member national teams entered the qualifying competition, with Andorra making their World Cup debut and Kosovo making their competitive debut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289257-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification (UEFA), Format, Tiebreakers\nIn the preliminary round and qualifying group stage, teams are ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria are applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings (Regulations Articles 13.01, 13.02, and 15.01):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289257-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification (UEFA), Format, Tiebreakers\nTo determine the best runner-up from the preliminary round and the four best runners-up from the qualifying group stage, the results against the teams in last place (fourth place in preliminary round and fifth place in qualifying group stage) are discarded. The following criteria are applied (Regulations Articles 13.03 and 15.02):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289257-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification (UEFA), Format, Tiebreakers\nIn the play-offs, the team that scores more goals on aggregate over the two legs qualifies for the final tournament. If the aggregate score is level, the away goals rule is applied, i.e., the team that scores more goals away from home over the two legs advances. If away goals are also equal, extra time is played. The 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 advances by virtue of more away goals scored. If no goals are scored during extra time, the tie is decided by penalty shoot-out (Regulations Article 17.01).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289257-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification (UEFA), Schedule\nThe qualifying matches are played on dates that fall within the FIFA Women's International Match Calendar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289257-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification (UEFA), Entrants\nThe teams were ranked according to their coefficient ranking, calculated based on the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289257-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification (UEFA), Entrants\nThe 30 highest-ranked teams entered the qualifying group stage, while the 16 lowest-ranked teams entered the preliminary round. The coefficient ranking was also used for seeding in the preliminary round and qualifying group stage draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289257-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification (UEFA), Preliminary round, Draw\nThe draw for the preliminary round was held on 19 January 2017, 13:30 CET (UTC+1), at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 73], "content_span": [74, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289257-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification (UEFA), Preliminary round, Draw\nThe 16 teams were allocated into four seeding positions according to their coefficient ranking. They were drawn into four groups of four containing one team from each of the four seeding positions. First, the four teams which were pre-selected as hosts were drawn from their own designated pot and allocated to their respective group as per their seeding positions. Next, the remaining 12 teams were drawn from their respective pot which were allocated according to their seeding positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 73], "content_span": [74, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289257-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification (UEFA), Preliminary round, Ranking of second-placed teams\nTo determine the best second-placed teams from the preliminary round which advance to the qualifying group stage, only the results of the second-placed teams against the first and third-placed teams in their group are taken into account, while results against the fourth-placed team are not included. As a result, two matches played by each second-placed team are counted for the purposes of determining the ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 99], "content_span": [100, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289257-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification (UEFA), Qualifying group stage, Draw\nThe draw for the qualifying group stage was held on 25 April 2017, 13:30 CEST (UTC+2), at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 78], "content_span": [79, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289257-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification (UEFA), Qualifying group stage, Draw\nThe 35 teams were allocated into five seeding pots according to their coefficient ranking, with the five preliminary round qualifiers placed in Pot E. They were drawn into seven groups of five containing one team from each of the five seeding pots. For political reasons, Russia and Ukraine would not be drawn in the same group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 78], "content_span": [79, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289257-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification (UEFA), Qualifying group stage, Ranking of second-placed teams\nTo determine the four best second-placed teams from the qualifying group stage which advance to the play-offs, only the results of the second-placed teams against the first, third and fourth-placed teams in their group are taken into account, while results against the fifth-placed team are not included. As a result, six matches played by each second-placed team are counted for the purposes of determining the ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 104], "content_span": [105, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289257-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification (UEFA), Play-offs, Draw\nThe draw for the play-offs was held on 7 September 2018, 14:00 CEST (UTC+2), at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland. The four teams were drawn into two knockout rounds (semi-finals and final) of home-and-away two-legged format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289257-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification (UEFA), Play-offs, Draw\nFor the semi-finals, two teams were seeded and two teams were unseeded, based on their latest coefficient ranking after the completion of the qualifying group stage, calculated based on the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289257-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification (UEFA), Play-offs, Draw\nFor each semi-final, a seeded team was drawn against an unseeded team, with the order of legs decided by draw. A draw was also held for the final between the two winners of the semi-finals to decide the order of legs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289257-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification (UEFA), Play-offs, Matches, Play-off final\nThe winner Netherlands qualifies for the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 84], "content_span": [85, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289257-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification (UEFA), Qualified teams\nThe following nine teams from UEFA qualified for the final tournament, including France which qualified as hosts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289257-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification (UEFA), Top goalscorers\nThere were 575 goals scored in 169 matches, for an average of 3.4 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289257-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification (UEFA), Top goalscorers\nFor full lists of goalscorers, see sections in each group:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289258-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA Group 1\nUEFA Group 1 of the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification competition consisted of five teams: England, Russia, Wales, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Kazakhstan (which advanced from the preliminary round). The composition of the seven groups in the qualifying group stage was decided by the draw held on 25 April 2017, with the teams seeded according to their coefficient ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289258-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA Group 1\nThe group was played in home-and-away round-robin format between 17 September 2017 and 4 September 2018. The group winners qualified for the final tournament, while the runners-up advanced to the play-offs if they were one of the four best runners-up among all seven groups (not counting results against the fifth-placed team).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289258-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA Group 1, Matches\nTimes are CET/CEST, as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 65], "content_span": [66, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289258-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA Group 1, Goalscorers\nThere were 57 goals scored in 20 matches, for an average of 2.85 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 69], "content_span": [70, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289259-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA Group 2\nUEFA Group 2 of the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification competition consisted of five teams: Switzerland, Scotland, Poland, Belarus, and Albania (which advanced from the preliminary round). The composition of the seven groups in the qualifying group stage was decided by the draw held on 25 April 2017, with the teams seeded according to their coefficient ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289259-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA Group 2\nThe group was played in home-and-away round-robin format between 15 September 2017 and 4 September 2018. The group winners qualified for the final tournament, while the runners-up advanced to the play-offs if they were one of the four best runners-up among all seven groups (not counting results against the fifth-placed team).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289259-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA Group 2, Matches\nTimes are CET/CEST, as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 65], "content_span": [66, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289259-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA Group 2, Goalscorers\nThere were 67 goals scored in 20 matches, for an average of 3.35 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 69], "content_span": [70, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289260-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA Group 3\nUEFA Group 3 of the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification competition consisted of five teams: Norway, the Netherlands, the Republic of Ireland, Slovakia, and Northern Ireland. The composition of the seven groups in the qualifying group stage was decided by the draw held on 25 April 2017, with the teams seeded according to their coefficient ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289260-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA Group 3\nThe group was played in home-and-away round-robin format between 15 September 2017 and 4 September 2018. The group winners qualified for the final tournament, while the runners-up advanced to the play-offs if they were one of the four best runners-up among all seven groups (not counting results against the fifth-placed team).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289260-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA Group 3, Matches\nTimes are CET/CEST, as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 65], "content_span": [66, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289260-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA Group 3, Goalscorers\nThere were 62 goals scored in 20 matches, for an average of 3.1 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 69], "content_span": [70, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289261-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA Group 4\nUEFA Group 4 of the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification competition consisted of five teams: Sweden, Denmark, Ukraine, Hungary, and Croatia. The composition of the seven groups in the qualifying group stage was decided by the draw held on 25 April 2017, with the teams seeded according to their coefficient ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289261-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA Group 4\nThe group was played in home-and-away round-robin format between 15 September 2017 and 4 September 2018. The group winners qualified for the final tournament, while the runners-up advanced to the play-offs if they were one of the four best runners-up among all seven groups (not counting results against the fifth-placed team).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289261-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA Group 4, Matches\nTimes are CET/CEST, as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 65], "content_span": [66, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289261-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA Group 4, Goalscorers\nThere were 63 goals scored in 19 matches, for an average of 3.32 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 69], "content_span": [70, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289262-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA Group 5\nUEFA Group 5 of the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification competition consisted of five teams: Germany, Iceland, the Czech Republic, Slovenia, and the Faroe Islands (which advanced from the preliminary round). The composition of the seven groups in the qualifying group stage was decided by the draw held on 25 April 2017, with the teams seeded according to their coefficient ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289262-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA Group 5\nThe group was played in home-and-away round-robin format between 14 September 2017 and 4 September 2018. The group winners qualified for the final tournament, while the runners-up advanced to the play-offs if they were one of the four best runners-up among all seven groups (not counting results against the fifth-placed team).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289262-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA Group 5, Matches\nTimes are CET/CEST, as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 65], "content_span": [66, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289262-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA Group 5, Goalscorers\nThere were 90 goals scored in 20 matches, for an average of 4.5 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 69], "content_span": [70, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289263-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA Group 6\nUEFA Group 6 of the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification competition consisted of five teams: Italy, Belgium, Romania, Portugal, and Moldova (which advanced from the preliminary round). The composition of the seven groups in the qualifying group stage was decided by the draw held on 25 April 2017, with the teams seeded according to their coefficient ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289263-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA Group 6\nThe group was played in home-and-away round-robin format between 15 September 2017 and 4 September 2018. The group winners qualified for the final tournament, while the runners-up advanced to the play-offs if they were one of the four best runners-up among all seven groups (not counting results against the fifth-placed team).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289263-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA Group 6, Matches\nTimes are CET/CEST, as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 65], "content_span": [66, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289263-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA Group 6, Goalscorers\nThere were 78 goals scored in 20 matches, for an average of 3.9 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 69], "content_span": [70, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289264-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA Group 7\nUEFA Group 7 of the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification competition consisted of five teams: Spain, Austria, Finland, Serbia, and Israel (which advanced from the preliminary round). The composition of the seven groups in the qualifying group stage was decided by the draw held on 25 April 2017, with the teams seeded according to their coefficient ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289264-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA Group 7\nThe group was played in home-and-away round-robin format between 19 September 2017 and 4 September 2018. The group winners qualified for the final tournament, while the runners-up advanced to the play-offs if they were one of the four best runners-up among all seven groups (not counting results against the fifth-placed team).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289264-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA Group 7, Matches\nTimes are CET/CEST, as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 65], "content_span": [66, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289264-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA Group 7, Goalscorers\nThere were 58 goals scored in 20 matches, for an average of 2.9 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 69], "content_span": [70, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289265-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA play-offs\nThe UEFA play-offs of the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification competition involve the four runners-up with the best records among all seven groups in the qualifying group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289265-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA play-offs, Ranking of second-placed teams\nTo determine the four best second-placed teams from the qualifying group stage which advance to the play-offs, only the results of the second-placed teams against the first, third and fourth-placed teams in their group are taken into account, while results against the fifth-placed team are not included. As a result, six matches played by each second-placed team will count for the purposes of determining the ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 90], "content_span": [91, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289265-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA play-offs, Draw\nThe draw for the play-offs was held on 7 September 2018, 14:00 CEST (UTC+2), at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland. The four teams were drawn into two knockout rounds (semi-finals and final) of home-and-away two-legged format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 64], "content_span": [65, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289265-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA play-offs, Draw\nFor the semi-finals, two teams were seeded and two teams were unseeded, based on their latest coefficient ranking after the completion of the qualifying group stage, calculated based on the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 64], "content_span": [65, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289265-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA play-offs, Draw\nFor each semi-final, a seeded team was drawn against an unseeded team, with the order of legs decided by draw. A draw was also held for the final between the two winners of the semi-finals to decide the order of legs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 64], "content_span": [65, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289265-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA play-offs, Bracket\nThe play-off final winner qualifies for the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 67], "content_span": [68, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289265-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA play-offs, Play-off final, Overview\nThe winner Netherlands qualifies for the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 84], "content_span": [85, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289265-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA play-offs, Goalscorers\nThere were 16 goals scored in 6 matches, for an average of 2.67 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 71], "content_span": [72, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289266-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA preliminary round\nThe preliminary round of the European qualifying for the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup consisted of the 16 lowest-ranked teams among the 46 entrants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289266-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA preliminary round\nThe 16 teams were drawn into four groups of four teams. Each group was played in single round-robin format, where one of the teams was pre-selected as hosts, between 6 and 11 April 2017. The four group winners and the best runner-up (not counting results against the fourth-placed team) advanced to the qualifying group stage to join the 30 direct entrants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289266-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA preliminary round\nKazakhstan, Albania, Israel and the Faroe Islands advanced as group winners, and Moldova advanced as the best runner-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289266-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA preliminary round, Draw\nThe draw for the preliminary round was held on 19 January 2017, 13:30 CET (UTC+1), at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 72], "content_span": [73, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289266-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA preliminary round, Draw\nThe 16 teams were allocated into four seeding positions according to their coefficient ranking. They were drawn into four groups of four containing one team from each of the four seeding positions. First, the four teams which were pre-selected as hosts were drawn from their own designated pot and allocated to their respective group as per their seeding positions. Next, the remaining 12 teams were drawn from their respective pot which were allocated according to their seeding positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 72], "content_span": [73, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289266-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA preliminary round, Groups\nThe matches were played on 6, 8 and 11 April 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 74], "content_span": [75, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289266-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA preliminary round, Groups\nAll times were CEST (UTC+2), as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 74], "content_span": [75, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289266-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA preliminary round, Ranking of second-placed teams\nTo determine the best second-placed teams from the preliminary round which advance to the qualifying group stage, only the results of the second-placed teams against the first and third-placed teams in their group are taken into account, while results against the fourth-placed team are not included. As a result, two matches played by each second-placed team count for the purposes of determining the ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 98], "content_span": [99, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289266-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification \u2013 UEFA preliminary round, Goalscorers\nThere were 84 goals scored in 24 matches, for an average of 3.5 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 79], "content_span": [80, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289267-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup squads\nThe 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup was an international women's association football tournament held in France from 7 June until 7 July 2019. The 24 national teams involved in the tournament were required to register a squad of 23 players, including three goalkeepers. Only players in these squads were eligible to take part in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289267-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup squads\nA provisional list of between 23 and 50 players per national team was submitted to FIFA by 26 April 2019, which was not published. From the preliminary squad, the final list of 23 players per national team was submitted to FIFA by 24 May 2019, two weeks prior to the opening match of the tournament. FIFA published the final lists with squad numbers on their website on 27 May 2019. Teams were permitted to make late replacements in the event of serious injury, at any time up to 24 hours before their first match, where the replacement players did not need to be in the preliminary squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289267-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup squads\nThe age listed for each player is on 7 June 2019, the first day of the tournament. The numbers of caps and goals listed for each player do not include any matches played after the start of the tournament. The club listed is the club for which the player last played a competitive match prior to the tournament. A flag is included for coaches who are of a different nationality than their own national team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289267-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup squads, Group A, France\nThe final 23-player squad was announced on 2 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289267-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup squads, Group A, Nigeria\nA 27-player provisional squad was revealed on 13 May 2019. The final 23-player squad was announced on 24 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289267-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup squads, Group A, Norway\nThe final 23-player squad was announced on 2 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289267-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup squads, Group A, South Korea\nA 28-player provisional squad was revealed on 30 April 2019. The final 23-player squad was announced on 17 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289267-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup squads, Group B, China PR\nA 26-player provisional squad was revealed on 24 May 2019. The final squad was announced on 27 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289267-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup squads, Group B, Germany\nThe final 23-player squad was announced on 14 May 2019, as well as 5 players being named as a standby list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289267-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup squads, Group B, South Africa\nThe final 23-player squad was announced on 17 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289267-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup squads, Group B, Spain\nThe final 23-player squad was announced on 20 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289267-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup squads, Group C, Australia\nThe final 23-player squad was announced on 14 May 2019, as well as Kyra Cooney-Cross and Kyah Simon being named as standby players. Laura Alleway was ruled out due to injury and was replaced by Karly Roestbakken on 6 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289267-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup squads, Group C, Brazil\nThe final 23-player squad was announced on 16 May 2019. On 17 May 2019, Adriana was replaced by Luana due to injury. On 3 June 2019, Fabiana was replaced by Poliana due to injury. On 7 June 2019, \u00c9rika was replaced by Daiane due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289267-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup squads, Group C, Italy\nA 26-player provisional squad was revealed on 30 April 2019. The final 23-player squad was announced on 24 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289267-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup squads, Group C, Jamaica\n22 players of the final 23-player squad were announced on 22 May 2019. Havana Solaun was named as the 23rd player on 23 May 2019 after receiving clearance from FIFA. Mireya Grey replaced injured Kayla McCoy on 6 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289267-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup squads, Group D, Argentina\nA 26-player provisional squad was revealed on 30 April 2019. The final 23-player squad was announced on 22 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289267-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup squads, Group D, England\nThe final 23-player squad was announced on 8 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289267-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup squads, Group D, Japan\nThe final 23-player squad was announced on 10 May 2019. Riko Ueki injured her knee and was replaced by Saori Takarada on 31 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289267-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup squads, Group D, Scotland\nThe final 23-player squad was announced on 15 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289267-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup squads, Group E, Cameroon\nA 26-player provisional squad was revealed on 4 May 2019. The final 23-player squad was announced on 24 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289267-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup squads, Group E, Canada\nThe final 23-player squad was announced on 25 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289267-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup squads, Group E, Netherlands\nThe final 23-player squad was announced on 10 April 2019, as well as 7 players being named as a standby list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289267-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup squads, Group E, New Zealand\nThe final 23-player squad was announced on 29 April 2019. Meikayla Moore was ruled out due to a ruptured Achilles and replaced with Nicole Stratford on 9 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289267-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup squads, Group F, Chile\nThe 23-player squad was announced on 19 May 2019. Fernanda Pinilla replaced injured Ana Guti\u00e9rrez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289267-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup squads, Group F, Sweden\nThe final 23-player squad was announced on 16 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289267-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup squads, Group F, Thailand\nA 25-player provisional squad was revealed on 16 May 2019. This was later reduced to the final 23-player list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289267-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup squads, Group F, United States\nThe final 23-player squad was announced on 1 May 2019. Instead of naming one player as captain, the United States named Carli Lloyd, Alex Morgan, and Megan Rapinoe as co-captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289267-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup squads, Statistics, Player representation by league system\nLeague systems with 25 or more players represented are listed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 86], "content_span": [87, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289268-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup statistics\nThese are statistics for the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, which took place in France from 7 June to 7 July 2019. The World Cup started with 6 groups, there were 4 national teams in each group, it is a round-robin tournament in group stage and the top two to three teams qualify. It then goes to an elimination tournament among the 16 qualified teams. Goals, assist, performance analyses, and squad performance are shown here. Goals scored from penalty shoot-outs are not counted, and matches decided by penalty shoot-outs are counted as draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289268-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 146 goals scored in 52 matches, for an average of 2.81 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 51], "content_span": [52, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289268-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup statistics, Discipline\nA player was automatically suspended for the next match for the following offences:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289268-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup statistics, Overall results, By team\nTeam(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, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289268-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIFA Women's World Cup statistics, Overall results, By confederation\nHost nation(s) are situated in the region(s) rendered in italics. (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, 38], "section_span": [40, 73], "content_span": [74, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289269-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIG Artistic Gymnastics World Cup series\nThe 2019 FIG World Cup circuit in Artistic Gymnastics is a series of competitions officially organized and promoted by the International Gymnastics Federation (FIG) in 2019. All four of the Apparatus World Cup series competitions (Melbourne, Baku, Doha, and Cottbus) will serve as opportunities for gymnasts to earn points towards Olympic qualification through the FIG Artistic Gymnastics World Cup series route.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289270-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIG Rhythmic Gymnastics World Cup series\nThe 2019 FIG World Cup circuit in Rhythmic Gymnastics is a series of competitions officially organized and promoted by the International Gymnastics Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289270-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIG Rhythmic Gymnastics World Cup series\nWith stopovers in Europe and Asia, the World Cup competitions are scheduled for April 5\u20137 in Pesaro (ITA), April 12\u201314 in Sofia (BUL), April 19\u201321 in Tashkent (UZB), April 26\u201328 in Baku (AZE). World Challenge Cup competitions are scheduled for May 3\u20135 in Guadalajara (ESP), August 16\u201318 in Minsk (BLR), August 26\u201328 in Cluj Napoca (ROU), August 30\u2013September 1 in Kazan (RUS), September 6\u20138 in Portim\u00e3o (POR).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289271-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIL European Luge Championships\nThe 2019 FIL European Luge Championships took place under the auspices of the International Luge Federation at the Oberhof bobsleigh, luge, and skeleton track in Oberhof, Germany from 9 to 10 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289272-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIL European Luge Championships \u2013 Doubles\nThe Doubles competition at the 2019 FIL European Luge Championships was held on 9 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289272-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIL European Luge Championships \u2013 Doubles, Results\nThe first run was held at 12:35 and the second run at 14:15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 55], "content_span": [56, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289273-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIL European Luge Championships \u2013 Men's singles\nThe Men's singles competition at the 2019 FIL European Luge Championships was held on 9 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289273-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIL European Luge Championships \u2013 Men's singles, Results\nThe first run was held at 12:35 and the second run at 14:15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 61], "content_span": [62, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289274-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIL European Luge Championships \u2013 Women's singles\nThe Women's singles competition at the 2019 FIL European Luge Championships was held on 10 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289274-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIL European Luge Championships \u2013 Women's singles, Results\nThe first run was held at 09:00 and the second run at 10:25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 63], "content_span": [64, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289275-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIL Junior European Luge Championships\nThe 2019 FIL Junior European Luge Championships took place under the auspices of the International Luge Federation at St. Moritz-Celerina Olympic Bobrun, St. Moritz, Switzerland from 18 to 19 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289276-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIL World Luge Championships\nThe 2019 FIL World Luge Championships took place under the auspices of the International Luge Federation at the Winterberg bobsleigh, luge, and skeleton track in Winterberg, Germany from 25 to 27 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289277-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIL World Luge Championships \u2013 Doubles\nThe Doubles competition at the 2019 FIL World Luge Championships was held on 26 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289277-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIL World Luge Championships \u2013 Doubles, Results\nThe first run was held at 11:14 and the second run at 12:42.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289278-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIL World Luge Championships \u2013 Doubles' sprint\nThe Doubles' sprint competition at the 2019 FIL World Luge Championships was held on 25 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289278-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIL World Luge Championships \u2013 Doubles' sprint, Results\nThe qualification was held at 09:00 and the final at 13:44.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 60], "content_span": [61, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289279-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIL World Luge Championships \u2013 Men's singles\nThe Men's singles competition at the 2019 FIL World Luge Championships was held on 27 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289279-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIL World Luge Championships \u2013 Men's singles, Results\nThe first run was held at 11:10 and the second run at 13:18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 58], "content_span": [59, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289280-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIL World Luge Championships \u2013 Men's sprint\nThe Men's sprint competition at the 2019 FIL World Luge Championships was held on 25 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289280-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIL World Luge Championships \u2013 Men's sprint, Results\nThe qualification was held at 11:44 and the final at 15:33.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 57], "content_span": [58, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289281-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIL World Luge Championships \u2013 Team relay\nThe Team relay competition at the 2019 FIL World Luge Championships was held on 27 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289282-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIL World Luge Championships \u2013 Women's singles\nThe Women's singles competition at the 2019 FIL World Luge Championships was held on 26 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289282-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIL World Luge Championships \u2013 Women's singles, Results\nThe first run was held at 14:23 and the second run at 16:20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 60], "content_span": [61, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289283-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIL World Luge Championships \u2013 Women's sprint\nThe Women's sprint competition at the 2019 FIL World Luge Championships was held on 25 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289283-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIL World Luge Championships \u2013 Women's sprint, Results\nThe qualification was held at 10:10 and the final at 14:36.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 59], "content_span": [60, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289284-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIM Bajas World Cup\nThe 2019 FIM Bajas World Cup season is the 8th season of the FIM Bajas World Cup; an international rally raid competition for motorbikes and quads.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289284-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIM Bajas World Cup, Calendar\nThe calendar for the 2019 season will feature four baja-style events. Some of the bajas are also part of 2019 FIA World Cup for Cross-Country Bajas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289285-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIM CEV Moto2 European Championship\nThe 2019 FIM CEV Moto2 European Championship is the tenth CEV Moto2 season and the fourth under the FIM banner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289285-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIM CEV Moto2 European Championship, Calendar\nThe following races are scheduled to take place in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289285-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIM CEV Moto2 European Championship, Championship standings\nPoints were awarded to the top fifteen finishers. A rider had to finish the race to earn points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289286-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIM CEV Moto3 Junior World Championship\nThe 2019 FIM CEV Moto3 Junior World Championship is the eighth CEV Moto3 season and the sixth under the FIM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289286-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIM CEV Moto3 Junior World Championship, Calendar\nThe following races are scheduled to take place in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289286-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIM CEV Moto3 Junior World Championship, Championship standings\nPoints are awarded to the top fifteen finishers. A rider has to finish the race to earn points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 68], "content_span": [69, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289287-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIM Cross-Country Rallies World Championship\nThe 2019 FIM Cross-Country Rallies World Championship was the 17th season of the FIM Cross-Country Rallies World Championship; an international rally raid competition for motorbikes and quads.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289287-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIM Cross-Country Rallies World Championship, Calendar\nThe calendar for the 2019 season featured four long-distance rally raid events; including one marathon event in the Silk Way Rally. Some of the events were also part of 2019 FIA World Cup for Cross-Country Rallies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289287-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIM Cross-Country Rallies World Championship, Championship standings, Riders' championship\nIn Marathon Rallies (i.e. rallies with between eight and fifteen timed stages, including a rest day), the score was multiplied by 1.5 and rounded up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 95], "content_span": [96, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289287-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIM Cross-Country Rallies World Championship, Championship standings, Riders' championship\nFurthermore, all riders were awarded 3 bonus points for taking part in the first stage of an event; 1 bonus point for all riders taking the start of a stage (other than the first one) of a Marathon Rally; as well as 1 bonus point for each stage win. No rider was required to be classified in order to score these bonus points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 95], "content_span": [96, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289287-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIM Cross-Country Rallies World Championship, Championship standings, Riders' championship\nPoints for manufacturers were awarded by added the top two finishers of the respective manufacturer together from each event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 95], "content_span": [96, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289288-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIM Enduro World Championship\nThe 2019 World Enduro Championship is the 30th season of the FIM World Enduro Championship. The season consists of seven events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289288-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIM Enduro World Championship\nSteve Holcombe goes into the championship after winning the both the EnduroGP and Enduro 3 classes in 2018. Brad Freeman is the reigning Enduro 1 champion, with Eero Remes going into the season after taking the Enduro 2 title last year. A new class, the Enduro Open World Cup, will be contested for the first time in 2019. The aim of the class is to increase the number of privateer competitors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289289-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIM Motocross World Championship\nThe 2019 FIM Motocross World Championship was the 63rd FIM Motocross World Championship season. It included 18 events, started at Neuqu\u00e9n in Argentina on 3 March, and ended in Shanghai, China on 15 September. In the main MXGP class, Jeffrey Herlings was the defending champion after taking his first MXGP class title and his fourth title overall in 2018. In the MX2 class, Jorge Prado was the reigning champion, after taking his first world title in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289289-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIM Motocross World Championship, Race calendar and results\nThe championship will be contested over nineteen rounds in Europe, Asia and South America.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289290-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIM Women's Motocross World Championship\nThe 2019 FIM Women's Motocross World Championship is the 15th Women's Motocross World Championship season. Kiara Fontanesi goes into the season as defending champion, after taking her sixth title in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289290-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIM Women's Motocross World Championship, 2019 Calendar\nA 5-round calendar for the 2019 season was announced on 25 October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289291-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIM World Motorcycle Trials season\nThe 2019 World trials season consisted of eight trials events with four main classes: Trial GP, Trial 2, Women's and Women's 2. It began on 26 May, with round one in Pietramurata, Italy and ended with round 8 in La Nucia, Spain on 22 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289291-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIM World Motorcycle Trials season, Season summary\nToni Bou would claim his thirteenth outdoor World trials championship in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289291-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIM World Motorcycle Trials season, Season summary\nGabriel Marcelli would claim his first World outdoor title, winning the Trial 2 championship in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289291-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIM World Motorcycle Trials season, Season summary\nEmma Bristow would claim her sixth outdoor World trials championship in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289291-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIM World Motorcycle Trials season, 2019 World trials season calendar, Scoring system\nPoints were awarded to the top fifteen finishers in each class. All ten rounds counted for the World GP and Trial 2 classes, all five rounds in Women's and all three in Women's 2 classes were counted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 90], "content_span": [91, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289292-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FINA Diving World Series\nThe 2019 FINA Diving World Series, also known as the FINA/CNSG Diving World Series for sponsorship reasons, took place from 1 March to 19 May 2019. It was the tenth edition of the FINA-sanctioned invitational series, and included five events across three continents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289292-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FINA Diving World Series, Calendar\nThe calendar for the 2019 series was announced by FINA in July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289292-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FINA Diving World Series, Event 1: Sagamihara\nThe first event took place at the Sagamihara Green Pool in Sagamihara, Japan from 1\u20133 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289292-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FINA Diving World Series, Event 2: Beijing\nThe second event took place at the Beijing National Aquatics Center in Beijing, China from 7\u20139 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289292-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FINA Diving World Series, Event 3: Montreal\nThe third event took place in at Montreal Olympic Pool in Montreal, Canada from 26\u201328 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289292-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FINA Diving World Series, Event 4: Kazan\nThe fourth event took place at Kazan Aquatics Palace in Kazan, Russia from 10\u201312 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289292-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FINA Diving World Series, Event 5: London\nThe fifth event took place at London Aquatics Centre in London, Great Britain from 17\u201319 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289293-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FINA Marathon Swim World Series\nThe 2019 FINA Marathon Swim World Series took place from 16 February to 29 September 2019. It was the 13th edition of the FINA-sanctioned series, and included nine events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289294-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FINA Men's Water Polo World League\nThe 2019 FINA Men's Water Polo World League was the 18th edition of the annual men's international water polo tournament. It was played between October 2018 and June 2019 and opened to all men's water polo national teams. After participating in a preliminary round, eight teams qualified to play in a final tournament, called the Super Final from 18\u201323 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289294-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FINA Men's Water Polo World League\nIn the world league, there are specific rules that do not allow matches to end in a draw. If teams are level at the end of the 4th quarter of any world league match, the match will be decided by a penalty shootout. Teams earn points in the standings in group matches as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289294-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FINA Men's Water Polo World League, Final ranking\nGojko Pijetlovi\u0107, Du\u0161an Mandi\u0107, Ognjen Stojanovi\u0107, Sava Ran\u0111elovi\u0107, Milo\u0161 \u0106uk, Du\u0161ko Pijetlovi\u0107, Nemanja Vico, Milan Aleksi\u0107, Nikola Jak\u0161i\u0107, Filip Filipovi\u0107 , Andrija Prlainovi\u0107, Stefan Mitrovi\u0107, Branislav Mitrovi\u0107, Radomir Dra\u0161ovi\u0107, Strahinja Ra\u0161ovi\u0107. Head coach: Dejan Savi\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289295-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FINA Swimming World Cup\nThe 2019 FINA Swimming World Cup was a series of seven three-day meets in seven different cities between August and November 2019. This edition was held in the long course (50 meter pool) format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289295-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FINA Swimming World Cup, Meets\nThe 2019 World Cup consisted of the following seven meets, which were divided into three clusters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289295-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FINA Swimming World Cup, Event winners, 4 \u00d7 100 m mixed relays\nLegend: WR \u2013 World record; WJR \u2013 World Junior record; WC \u2013 World Cup record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 67], "content_span": [68, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289296-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FINA Water Polo Challengers' Cup\nThe 2019 FINA Water Polo Challengers' Cup is an international water polo tournament held at the OCBC Aquatic Centre in Singapore from 8 to 13 October 2019. It is the seventh edition of the tournament which was known as the FINA World Water Polo Development Trophy until the 2017 edition. The tournament was hosted by the Singapore Swimming Association. Ten nations participated in the Challengers' Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289296-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FINA Water Polo Challengers' Cup\nSingapore won over Austria in the final, with the host surpassing their second-place finish in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289297-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FINA Women's Water Polo World League\nThe 2019 FINA Women's Water Polo World League was the 16th edition of the annual women's international water polo tournament. It was played between November 2018 and June 2019 and open to all women's water polo national teams. After participating in a preliminary round, eight teams qualified to play in a final tournament, called the Super Final from 4\u20139 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289297-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FINA Women's Water Polo World League\nIn the world league, there are specific rules that do not allow matches to end in a draw. If teams are level at the end of the 4th quarter of any world league match, the match will be decided by a penalty shootout. Teams earn points in the standings in group matches as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289297-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FINA Women's Water Polo World League, Super Final, Final ranking\nAmanda Longan, Maddie Musselman, Melissa Seidemann, Rachel Fattal, Paige Hauschild, Maggie Steffens (C), Jamie Neushul, Kiley Neushul, Aria Fischer, Kaleigh Gilchrist , Makenzie Fischer, Alys Williams, Ashleigh Johnson, Jordan Raney, Stephania Haralabidis. Head coach: Adam Krikorian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 69], "content_span": [70, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289298-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FINA World Junior Swimming Championships\nThe 7th FINA World Junior Swimming Championships, are held in Budapest, Hungary at the Danube Arena from 20 to 25 August 2019. The championships are for girls aged 14\u201317 and boys age 15\u201318.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289298-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FINA World Junior Swimming Championships, Medal summary, Men\nSwimmers who participated in the heats only and received medals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 65], "content_span": [66, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289298-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FINA World Junior Swimming Championships, Medal summary, Women\nSwimmers who participated in the heats only and received medals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289298-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FINA World Junior Swimming Championships, Medal summary, Mixed\nSwimmers who participated in the heats only and received medals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289299-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIS Cross-Country Australia/New Zealand Cup\nThe 2019 FIS Cross-Country Australia/New Zealand Cup was a season of the Australia/New Zealand Cup, a Continental Cup season in cross-country skiing for men and women. The season began on 27 July 2019 in Falls Creek, Victoria, Australia and concluded on 5 September 2019 in Snow Farm, New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289300-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIS Cross-Country Balkan Cup\nThe 2019 FIS Cross-Country Balkan Cup was a season of the FIS Cross-Country Balkan Cup, a Continental Cup season in cross-country skiing for men and women. The season began on 12 January 2019 in Ravna Gora, Croatia and concluded on 1\u20133 March 2019 in Gerede, Turkey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289301-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix\nThe 2019 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix was the 26th Summer Grand Prix season in ski jumping for men and the 8th for ladies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289301-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix\nOther competitive circuits this season included the World Cup, Continental Cup, FIS Cup, FIS Race and Alpen Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289302-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIU Panthers football team\nThe 2019 FIU Panthers football team represented Florida International University (FIU) in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Panthers played their home games at Riccardo Silva Stadium in Miami, Florida, and competed in the East Division of Conference USA (C-USA). They were led by third-year head coach Butch Davis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289302-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIU Panthers football team, Preseason, CUSA media poll\nConference USA released their preseason media poll on July 16, 2019, with the Panthers predicted to finish in second place in the East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289302-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIU Panthers football team, Schedule\nFIU announced its 2019 football schedule on January 10, 2019. The 2019 schedule consists of 7 home and 5 away games in the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289303-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour\nThe 2019 FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour is the global elite professional beach volleyball circuit organized by the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de Volleyball (FIVB) for the 2018 beach volleyball season. Starts in late August 2018 after the end of the year season, the 2019 FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour Calendar comprised by three FIVB World Tour 5-star tournaments (including the World Tour Finals), twelve FIVB World Tour 4-star, five 3-star, eight 2-star and twenty-seven 1-star event, all organised by the FIVB. The World Championships will be held in Hamburg, Germany from June 28 to July 7, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289303-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour\nThe full calendar of events was announced on September 18, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289304-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship\nThe 2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship was the sixteenth edition of the FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship, contested by the men's national teams under the age of 19 of the members of the FIVB, the sport's global governing body. The tournament was held in Tunis and Rad\u00e8s, Tunisia from 21 to 30 August 2019. Tunisia played hosts for this event for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289304-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship\nThe finals involved 20 teams, of which 19 came through qualifying competitions, while the host nation qualified automatically. Of the 20 teams, 13 had also appeared in the previous tournament in 2017, while Colombia and Nigeria made their first appearances at a FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289304-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship\nIran was the defending champions, having won their second title in Bahrain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289304-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship\nPlayers must be born on or after 1 January 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289304-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship, Qualification\nA total of 20 teams qualified for the final tournament. In addition to Tunisia who qualified automatically as hosts, the other 19 teams qualified from five separate continental competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 64], "content_span": [65, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289304-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship, Pools composition\nTeams were seeded in the first two positions of each pool following the serpentine system according to their FIVB U19 World Ranking as of 1 January 2019. FIVB reserved the right to seed the hosts as heads of pool A regardless of the U19 World Ranking. All teams not seeded were drawn to take other available positions in the remaining lines, following the U19 World Ranking. Each pool had no more than three teams from the same confederation. The draw was held in Tunis, Tunisia on 27 June 2019. Rankings are shown in brackets except the hosts who ranked 17th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289304-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship, Pools composition\nSouth Korea (4)\u00a0Egypt (5)\u00a0Czech Republic (6)\u00a0Brazil (7)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289304-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289305-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship squads\nThis article shows the rosters of all participating teams at the Boys' U19 World Championship 2019 in Tunisia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289305-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship squads, Pool A, Belarus\nThe following is the Belarusian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 73], "content_span": [74, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289305-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship squads, Pool A, Brazil\nThe following is the Brazilian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 72], "content_span": [73, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289305-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship squads, Pool A, Chinese Taipei\nThe following is the Chinese Taipei roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 80], "content_span": [81, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289305-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship squads, Pool A, Cuba\nThe following is the Cuban roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 70], "content_span": [71, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289305-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship squads, Pool A, Tunisia\nThe following is the Tunisian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 73], "content_span": [74, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289305-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship squads, Pool B, Bulgaria\nThe following is the Bulgarian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 74], "content_span": [75, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289305-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship squads, Pool B, Colombia\nThe following is the Colombian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 74], "content_span": [75, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289305-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship squads, Pool B, Czech Republic\nThe following is the Czech roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 80], "content_span": [81, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289305-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship squads, Pool B, Iran\nThe following is the Iranian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 70], "content_span": [71, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289305-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship squads, Pool B, Italy\nThe following is the Italian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 71], "content_span": [72, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289305-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship squads, Pool C, Argentina\nThe following is the Argentinian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 75], "content_span": [76, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289305-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship squads, Pool C, Egypt\nThe following is the Egyptian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 71], "content_span": [72, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289305-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship squads, Pool C, Germany\nThe following is the German roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 73], "content_span": [74, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289305-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship squads, Pool C, Japan\nThe following is the Japanese roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 71], "content_span": [72, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289305-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship squads, Pool C, Mexico\nThe following is the Mexican roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 72], "content_span": [73, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289305-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship squads, Pool D, Dominican Republic\nThe following is the Dominican roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 84], "content_span": [85, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289305-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship squads, Pool D, South Korea\nThe following is the Korean roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 77], "content_span": [78, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289305-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship squads, Pool D, Nigeria\nThe following is the NGRerian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 73], "content_span": [74, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289305-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship squads, Pool D, Russia\nThe following is the Russian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 72], "content_span": [73, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289305-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship squads, Pool D, United States\nThe following is the American roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 79], "content_span": [80, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289306-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship\nThe 2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship is the sixteenth edition of the FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship, contested by the women's national teams under the age of 18 of the members of the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de Volleyball (FIVB), the sport's global governing body. The final tournament is currently being held in Egypt from 5 to 14 September 2019. Egypt were chosen as the hosts for this event for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289306-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship\nThe finals involve 20 teams, of which 19 came through qualifying competitions, while the host nation qualified automatically. Of the 20 teams, 13 had also appeared in the previous tournament in 2017, while Cameroon and DR Congo made their first appearances at a FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289306-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship\nItaly are the defending champions, having won their second title in Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289306-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship, Qualification\nA total of 20 teams qualify for the final tournament. In addition to Egypt who qualified automatically as hosts, the other 19 teams qualify from five separate continental competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 65], "content_span": [66, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289306-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship, Draw\nTeams were seeded in the first two positions of each pool following the Serpentine system according to their FIVB World Ranking as of 1 January 2019. FIVB reserved the right to seed the hosts as heads of pool A regardless of the World Ranking. All teams not seeded were drawn to take other available positions in the remaining lines following the World Ranking. Each pool had no more than three teams from the same confederation. The draw was held in Cairo, Egypt on 1 July 2019. Rankings as of 1 January 2019 are shown in brackets, except the hosts Egypt who ranked 14th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 56], "content_span": [57, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289306-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 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-00289306-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship, Final standing\nSetters: Kami Miner, Kennedi OrrOutside Hitters: Elena Oglivie, Lindsay Krause, Jess Mruzik, Emily Londot, Allison JacobsMiddle Blockers: Caroline Crawford, Devyn Robinson, Carter BoothLibero: Lexi Rodriguez, Sydney Taylor", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 66], "content_span": [67, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289307-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship squads\nThis article shows the rosters of all participating teams at the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship in Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289307-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship squads, Pool A, Brazil\nThe following is the Brazilian roster in the 2019 FIVB Girls' U18 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 73], "content_span": [74, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289307-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship squads, Pool A, Cameroon\nThe following is the Camerooni roster in the 2019 FIVB Girls' U18 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 75], "content_span": [76, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289307-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship squads, Pool A, China\nThe following is the Chinese roster in the 2019 FIVB Girls' U18 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 72], "content_span": [73, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289307-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship squads, Pool A, Egypt\nThe following is the Egyptian roster in the 2019 FIVB Girls' U18 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 72], "content_span": [73, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289307-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship squads, Pool A, Puerto Rico\nThe following is the Puerto Rican roster in the 2019 FIVB Girls' U18 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 78], "content_span": [79, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289307-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship squads, Pool B, Canada\nThe following is the Canadian roster in the 2019 FIVB Girls' U18 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 73], "content_span": [74, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289307-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship squads, Pool B, Italy\nThe following is the Italian roster in the 2019 FIVB Girls' U18 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 72], "content_span": [73, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289307-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship squads, Pool B, South Korea\nThe following is the Korean roster in the 2019 FIVB Girls' U18 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 78], "content_span": [79, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289307-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship squads, Pool B, Mexico\nThe following is the Mexican roster in the 2019 FIVB Girls' U18 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 73], "content_span": [74, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289307-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship squads, Pool B, United States\nThe following is the American roster in the 2019 FIVB Girls' U18 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 80], "content_span": [81, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289307-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship squads, Pool C, Argentina\nThe following is the Argentinian roster in the 2019 FIVB Girls' U18 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 76], "content_span": [77, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289307-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship squads, Pool C, Belarus\nThe following is the Belarusian roster in the 2019 FIVB Girls' U18 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 74], "content_span": [75, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289307-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship squads, Pool C, Romania\nThe following is the Romanian roster in the 2019 FIVB Girls' U18 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 74], "content_span": [75, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289307-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship squads, Pool C, Russia\nThe following is the Russian roster in the 2019 FIVB Girls' U18 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 73], "content_span": [74, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289307-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship squads, Pool C, Thailand\nThe following is the Thai roster in the 2019 FIVB Girls' U18 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 75], "content_span": [76, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289307-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship squads, Pool D, Bulgaria\nThe following is the Bulgarian roster in the 2019 FIVB Girls' U18 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 75], "content_span": [76, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289307-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship squads, Pool D, DR Congo\nThe following is the Congo roster in the 2019 FIVB Girls' U18 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 75], "content_span": [76, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289307-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship squads, Pool D, Japan\nThe following is the Japanese roster in the 2019 FIVB Girls' U18 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 72], "content_span": [73, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289307-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship squads, Pool D, Peru\nThe following is the Peruvian roster in the 2019 FIVB Girls' U18 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 71], "content_span": [72, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289307-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship squads, Pool D, Turkey\nThe following is the Turkish roster in the 2019 FIVB Girls' U18 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 73], "content_span": [74, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289308-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup\nThe 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup was the second edition of the FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup, an annual men's international volleyball tournament contested by 6 national teams that acts as a qualifier for the FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League. The tournament was held in Ljubljana, Slovenia from 3 to 7 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289308-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup\nSlovenia won the title, defeating Cuba in the final, and earned the right to participate in the 2020 Nations League replacing Portugal, the last placed challenger team after the 2019 edition. Belarus defeated Turkey in the 3rd place match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289308-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup\nOn 8 May 2020, FIVB announced that the 2020 Nations League and 2020 Challenger Cup was canceled due to COVID-19 pandemic. So the tournament eventually became the 2021 Nations League qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289308-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup, Pools composition\nTeams were seeded following the serpentine system according to their FIVB World Ranking as of 1 October 2018. FIVB reserved the right to seed the hosts as head of pool A regardless of the World Ranking. Not more than two teams from the same Continental Confederation can go into a same pool. In case the third team from the same Continental Confederation is placed in the same pool as per the World Ranking, the third team will move to the other pool. Rankings are shown in brackets except the hosts who ranked 17th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 60], "content_span": [61, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289308-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger 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, 41], "section_span": [43, 66], "content_span": [67, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289309-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup qualification\nThe 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup qualification was a series of tournaments to decide teams which played in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup. The 2019 Challenger Cup featured 6 teams. Only one place was allocated to the hosts. The remaining 5 places were determined by a qualification process, in which entrants from among the other teams from the five FIVB confederations competed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289309-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup qualification, Continental qualification tournaments, AVC (Asia and Oceania)\nFIVB selected South Korea to represent the AVC for the 2019 Challenger Cup via the FIVB World Ranking as of 1 October 2018 because less than 4 teams have registered to participate in the qualifier. But, South Korea refused to participate. So the AVC\u2013CSV playoff was canceled and the representatives from CSV directly qualified for the 2019 Challenger Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 118], "content_span": [119, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289309-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup qualification, Continental qualification tournaments, CAVB (Africa)\nFIVB selected a team to represent the CAVB for the 2019 Challenger Cup via the FIVB World Ranking as of 1 October 2018 because CAVB did not host the qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 109], "content_span": [110, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289310-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup qualification (NORCECA)\nThe North American section of the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup qualification acted as a qualifier for the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup, for national teams which are members of the North, Central America and Caribbean Volleyball Confederation (NORCECA). The tournament was held in Havana, Cuba from 30 May to 1 June 2019. The winners Cuba qualified for the 2019 Challenger Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289310-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup qualification (NORCECA), Qualification\nThe hosts Cuba and the top three ranked teams from the NORCECA Ranking as of 1 January 2019 not yet participating in the 2019 Nations League qualified for the tournament. But, Dominican Republic later withdrew. Rankings are shown in brackets except the hosts who ranked 3rd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 80], "content_span": [81, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289310-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup qualification (NORCECA), 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, 65], "section_span": [67, 90], "content_span": [91, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289311-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup squads\nThis article shows the rosters of all participating teams at the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup in Slovenia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289311-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup squads, Pool A, Chile\nThe following is the Chilean roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 63], "content_span": [64, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289311-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup squads, Pool A, Slovenia\nThe following is the Slovenian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 66], "content_span": [67, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289311-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup squads, Pool A, Turkey\nThe following is the Turkish roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 64], "content_span": [65, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289311-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup squads, Pool B, Belarus\nThe following is the Belarusian roster in the 2019 Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289311-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup squads, Pool B, Cuba\nThe following is the Cuban roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 62], "content_span": [63, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289311-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup squads, Pool B, Egypt\nThe following is the Egyptian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 63], "content_span": [64, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289312-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Club World Championship\nThe 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Club World Championship was the 15th edition of the event. It was held in Betim, Brazil from 3 to 8 December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289312-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Club World Championship, Qualification\n* Al-Rayyan replaced Shahrdari Varamin (2019 Asian Champions), who were banned by the FIVB. Panasonic Panthers (2019 Asian Runners-up), who were invited by the FIVB before Al-Rayyan, declined the invitation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 65], "content_span": [66, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289312-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289313-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Club World Championship squads\nThis article shows the rosters of all participating teams at the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Club World Championship in Betim, Brazil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289313-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Club World Championship squads, Al-Rayyan SC\nThe following is the roster of the Qatari club Al-Rayyan SC in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Club World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 71], "content_span": [72, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289313-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Club World Championship squads, Cucine Lube Civitanova\nThe following is the roster of the Italian club Cucine Lube Civitanova in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Club World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 81], "content_span": [82, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289313-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Club World Championship squads, Sada Cruzeiro V\u00f4lei\nThe following is the roster of the Brazilian club Sada Cruzeiro V\u00f4lei in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Club World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 78], "content_span": [79, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289313-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Club World Championship squads, Zenit Kazan\nThe following is the roster of the Russian club Zenit Kazan in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Club World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 70], "content_span": [71, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289314-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League\nThe 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League was the second edition of the FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League, an annual international men's volleyball tournament contested by 16 national teams. The competition was held between May and July 2019 and the final round took place in the Credit Union 1 Arena, Chicago, United States. This was the first edition of the World League or the Nations League to have the final round hosted in North America.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289314-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League\nFollowing the results of the 2018 Nations League and 2018 Challenger Cup, South Korea were replaced by debutants Portugal in this edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289314-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League\nPortugal were the last placed challenger team after the preliminary round and will be replaced by 2019 Challenger Cup winners Slovenia in the 2020 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289314-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League\nRussia successfully defended its title, defeating hosts, the United States, in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289314-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League, Qualification\nSixteen teams qualified for the competition. Twelve of them qualified as core teams which cannot face relegation. Other four teams were selected as challenger teams which could be relegated from the tournament. Portugal replaced South Korea after winning the 2018 Challenger Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 56], "content_span": [57, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289314-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League, Format, Preliminary round\nThe 16 teams compete in a round-robin format with every core team hosting a pool at least once. The teams are divided into 4 pools of 4 teams at each week and compete five weeks long, for 120 matches. The top five teams after the preliminary round join the hosts of the final round to compete in the final round. The relegation takes into consideration only the 4 challenger teams. The last ranked challenger team will be excluded from the 2020 Nations League. The winners of the 2019 Challenger Cup will qualify for the next edition as a challenger team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289314-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League, Format, Final round\nThe six qualified teams play in 2 pools of 3 teams in round-robin. The top 2 teams of each pool qualify for the semifinals. The pool winners play against the runners-up in this round. The semifinals winners advance to compete for the Nations League title. The losers face each other in the third place match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 62], "content_span": [63, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289314-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League, Pools composition\nThe overview of pools was released on October 23, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 60], "content_span": [61, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289314-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League, Venues\nThe list of host cities and venues was announced on 26 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289314-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League, Squads\nThe 16 national teams involved in the tournament were required to register a squad of 25 players, which every week's 14-player roster must be selected from. Each country must declare its 14-player roster two days before the start of each week's round-robin competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289314-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League, Final standing\nTeam roster for the final round: Dmitry Volkov, Egor Kliuka, Ivan Iakovlev, Viktor Poletaev, Ilyas Kurkaev, Dmitry Kovalev, Fedor Voronkov, Igor Kobzar (c), Denis Zemchenok, Anton Semyshev, Igor Philippov, Yaroslav Podlesnykh, Roman Martynyuk, Valentin Golubev. Head Coach: Tuomas Sammelvuo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 57], "content_span": [58, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289315-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League squads\nThis article shows the roster of all participating teams at the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League. The 16 national teams involved in the tournament were required to register a squad of 21 players, which every week's 14-player roster must be selected from. Each country must declare its 14-player roster two days before the start of each week's round-robin competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289315-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League squads, Argentina\nThe following is the Argentine roster in the 2019 Men's Nations League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 59], "content_span": [60, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289315-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League squads, Brazil\nThe following is the Brazilian roster in the 2019 Men's Nations League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 56], "content_span": [57, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289315-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League squads, France\nThe following is the French roster in the 2019 Men's Nations League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 56], "content_span": [57, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289315-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League squads, Iran\nThe following is the Iranian roster in the 2019 Men's Nations League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 54], "content_span": [55, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289315-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League squads, Japan\nThe following is the Japanese roster in the 2019 Men's Nations League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 55], "content_span": [56, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289315-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League squads, Poland\nThe following is the Polish roster in the 2019 Men's Nations League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 56], "content_span": [57, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289315-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League squads, Russia\nThe following is the Russian roster in the 2019 Men's Nations League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 56], "content_span": [57, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289316-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship\nThe 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship was the twentieth edition of the FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship, contested by the men's national teams under the age of 21 of the members of the FIVB, the sport's global governing body. The tournament was held in Riffa, Bahrain from 18 to 27 July 2019. 16 teams from the 5 confederations competed in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289316-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship\nPlayers must be born on or after 1 January 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289316-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship\nIran won its first title in the competition, defeating Italy in the final. Brazil defeated Russia for the bronze medal. Amir Hossein Esfandiar from Iran was elected the MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289316-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship, Qualification\nA total of 16 teams qualified for the final tournament. In addition to Bahrain, who qualified automatically as hosts, another 10 teams qualified via six separate continental tournaments while the remaining 5 teams qualified via the FIVB U21 World Ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 64], "content_span": [65, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289316-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship, Pools composition, First round\nTeams were seeded in the first two positions of each pool following the serpentine system according to their FIVB U21 World Ranking as of January 2019. FIVB reserved the right to seed the hosts as head of pool A regardless of the U21 World Ranking. All teams not seeded were drawn to take other available positions in the remaining lines, following the U21 World Ranking. The draw was held in Manama, Bahrain on 3 June 2019. Rankings are shown in brackets except the hosts who ranked 42nd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 81], "content_span": [82, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289316-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship, Pools composition, First round\nItaly (12)\u00a0Tunisia (12)\u00a0South Korea (15)\u00a0Puerto Rico (77)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 81], "content_span": [82, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289316-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship, Referees\nThere were sixteen referees from 5 continental confederations in this tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289316-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289317-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship squads\nThis article shows the rosters of all participating teams at the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship in Bahrain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289317-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship squads, Argentina\nThe following is the Argentine roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 67], "content_span": [68, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289317-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship squads, Brazil\nThe following is the Brazilian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 64], "content_span": [65, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289317-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship squads, Bahrain\nThe following is the Bahraini roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 65], "content_span": [66, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289317-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship squads, Canada\nThe following is the Canadian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 64], "content_span": [65, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289317-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship squads, China\nThe following is the Chinese roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 63], "content_span": [64, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289317-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship squads, Cuba\nThe following is the Cuban roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 62], "content_span": [63, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289317-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship squads, Czech Republic\nThe following is the Czech roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 72], "content_span": [73, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289317-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship squads, Egypt\nThe following is the Egyptian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 63], "content_span": [64, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289317-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship squads, Iran\nThe following is the Iranian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 62], "content_span": [63, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289317-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship squads, Italy\nThe following is the Italian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 63], "content_span": [64, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289317-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship squads, South Korea\nThe following is the South Korean roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 69], "content_span": [70, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289317-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship squads, Morocco\nThe following is the Moroccan roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 65], "content_span": [66, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289317-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship squads, Poland\nThe following is the Polish roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 64], "content_span": [65, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289317-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship squads, Puerto Rico\nThe following is the Puerto Rican roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 69], "content_span": [70, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289317-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship squads, Russia\nThe following is the Russian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 64], "content_span": [65, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289317-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship squads, Tunisia\nThe following is the Tunisian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 65], "content_span": [66, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289318-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup\nThe 2019 FIVB Men's World Cup was the 14th editon of the event, contested by the senior men's national teams of the members of the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de Volleyball (FIVB), the sport's global governing body. The tournament was held from 1 to 15 October 2019 in Japan. That was the first time since 1989 that FIVB decided not to allocate any spots in the Olympics, due to Japan hosting the 2020 Summer Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289318-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup, Qualification\nTwelve teams qualified for the competition by being one of the top two teams of each continental federation based on FIVB World Ranking on 1 January 2019 (except Japan who qualified as hosts, and Poland who qualified as 2018 World Champions).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289318-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup, Format\nThe competition system of the 2019 World Cup was the single Round-Robin system. Each team played once against each of the other 11 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289318-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup, Format\nThe teams were divided into 2 pools of 6 teams each. In round 1, total 30 matches in 5 days, each teams played against the other teams from the same pool. For rounds 2 and 3, total 36 matches in 6 days, each team played against the teams from another pool. Numbers in brackets denoted the FIVB World Ranking as of 1 January 2019 except the hosts who ranked 11th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289318-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup, Format\nMatch won 3\u20130 or 3\u20131: 3 match points for the winner, 0 match points for the loser Match won 3\u20132: 2 match points for the winner, 1 match point for the loser", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289319-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup squads\nThis article shows the rosters of all participating teams at the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup in Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289319-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup squads, Argentina\nThe following is the Argentine roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289319-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup squads, Australia\nThe following is the Australian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289319-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup squads, Brazil\nThe following is the Brazilian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289319-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup squads, Canada\nThe following is the Canadian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289319-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup squads, Egypt\nThe following is the Egyptian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289319-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup squads, Iran\nThe following is the Iranian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 49], "content_span": [50, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289319-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup squads, Italy\nThe following is the Italian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289319-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup squads, Japan\nThe following is the Japanese roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289319-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup squads, Poland\nThe following is the Polish roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289319-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup squads, Russia\nThe following is the Russian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289319-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup squads, Tunisia\nThe following is the Tunisian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289319-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup squads, United States\nThe following is the American roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289320-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup\nThe 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup is the second edition of the FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup, an annual women's international volleyball tournament contested by 6 national teams that acts as a qualifier for the FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League. This tournament was held in Lima, Peru.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289320-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup\nThe winner will earn the right to participate in the 2020 Nations League replacing Bulgaria, the last placed challenger team after the 2019 edition and the title holder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289320-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup, Pools composition\nTeams will be seeded following the serpentine system according to their FIVB World Ranking as of 21 October 2018. 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 27th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289320-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger 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, 43], "section_span": [45, 68], "content_span": [69, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289321-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup qualification\nThe 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup qualification is a series of tournaments to decide teams which will play in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup. The 2019 Challenger Cup will feature 6 teams. Only one place will be allocated to the hosts. The remaining 5 places will be determined by a qualification process, in which entrants from among the other teams from the five FIVB confederations will compete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289321-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup qualification, Confederation qualification, AVC (Asia and Oceania)\nFIVB selected Kazakhstan to represent the Asian team for 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup via FIVB World Rankings, because less than four teams participated in the qualification tournament. But Kazakhstan and Australia teams refused to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 110], "content_span": [111, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289321-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup qualification, Confederation qualification, CSV (South America)\nFIVB selected Argentina to represent the South American team for 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup via FIVB World Rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 107], "content_span": [108, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289322-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup qualification (NORCECA)\nThe North American section of the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup qualification acts as qualifiers for the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup, for national teams which are members of the North, Central America and Caribbean Volleyball Confederation (NORCECA). This tournament was held in Sportplex Beau-Chateau, Quebec, Canada. The eventual winner will earn the right to compete in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289322-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup qualification (NORCECA), Qualification\nThe participating teams are the host plus the top three ranked teams of Norceca not qualified to the FIVB Nations League as of January 1, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 82], "content_span": [83, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289322-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup qualification (NORCECA), 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, 67], "section_span": [69, 92], "content_span": [93, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289323-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup squads\nThis article shows the rosters of all participating teams at the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup in Peru.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289323-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup squads, Pool A, Peru\nThe following is the Peruvian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 64], "content_span": [65, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289323-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup squads, Pool A, Czech Republic\nThe following is the Czhech roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 74], "content_span": [75, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289323-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup squads, Pool A, Croatia\nThe following is the Croatian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289323-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup squads, Pool B, Argentina\nThe following is the Argentinian roster in the 2019 Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 69], "content_span": [70, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289323-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup squads, Pool B, Canada\nThe following is the Canadian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 66], "content_span": [67, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289323-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup squads, Pool B, Chinese Taipei\nThe following is the Taipei roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Challenger Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 74], "content_span": [75, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289324-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Club World Championship\nThe 2019 FIVB Women's Club World Championship was the 13th edition of the tournament. For the second straight time it was held in Shaoxing, China from 3 to 8 December. Eight teams competed in the tournament, including four wild cards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289324-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women'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, 52], "section_span": [54, 77], "content_span": [78, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289325-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Club World Championship squads\nThis article shows the rosters of all participating teams at the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Club World Championship in Shaoxing, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289325-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Club World Championship squads, Pool A, Eczac\u0131ba\u015f\u0131 VitrA \u0130stanbul\nThe following is the roster of the Turkish club Eczac\u0131ba\u015f\u0131 VitrA \u0130stanbul in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Club World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 94], "content_span": [95, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289325-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Club World Championship squads, Pool A, Guangdong Evergrande VC\nThe following is the roster of the Chinese club Guangdong Evergrande VC in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Club World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 92], "content_span": [93, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289325-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Club World Championship squads, Pool A, Imoco Volley Conegliano\nThe following is the roster of the Italian club Imoco Volley Conegliano in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Club World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 92], "content_span": [93, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289325-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Club World Championship squads, Pool A, Itamb\u00e9 Minas\nThe following is the roster of the Brazilian club Itamb\u00e9 Minas in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Club World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 81], "content_span": [82, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289325-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Club World Championship squads, Pool B, Dentil Praia Clube\nThe following is the roster of the Brazilian club Dentil Praia Clube in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Club World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 87], "content_span": [88, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289325-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Club World Championship squads, Pool B, Igor Gorgonzola Novara\nThe following is the roster of the Italian club Igor Gorgonzola Novara in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Club World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 91], "content_span": [92, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289325-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Club World Championship squads, Pool B, Tianjin Bohai Bank VC\nThe following is the roster of the Chinese club Tianjin Bohai Bank VC in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Club World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 90], "content_span": [91, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289325-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Club World Championship squads, Pool B, Vak\u0131fbank \u0130stanbul\nThe following is the roster of the Turkish club Vak\u0131fbank \u0130stanbul in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Club World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 87], "content_span": [88, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289326-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League\nThe 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League was the second edition of the FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League, an annual international women's volleyball tournament contested by 16 national teams. The competition was held between May and July 2019 and, for the second time, the final round took place in the Nanjing Olympic Sports Centre, Nanjing, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289326-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League\nUnited States won their second title in the competition, defeating Brazil in five sets on the final, after being 0\u20132 down. China defeated Turkey in four sets for the bronze medal. Andrea Drews from USA was elected the MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289326-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League\nFollowing the results of the 2018 Nations League and 2018 Challenger Cup, Argentina was replaced by debutants Bulgaria in this edition. Accordingly, following the results of this edition of the Nations League and the 2019 Challenger Cup, Bulgaria was replaced by newcomers Canada in the 2021 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289326-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League, Qualification\nSixteen teams qualified for the competition. Twelve of them qualified as core teams which cannot face relegation. The other four teams were selected as challenger teams which could be relegated from the tournament. Bulgaria replaced Argentina after winning the 2018 Challenger Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289326-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League, Format, Preliminary round\nThe 16 teams compete in a round-robin format with every core team hosting a pool at least once. The teams are divided into 4 pools of 4 teams at each week and compete five weeks long, for 120 matches. The top five teams after the preliminary round join the hosts of the final round to compete in the final round. The relegation takes into consideration only the 4 challenger teams. The last ranked challenger team will be excluded from the 2020 Nations League. The winners of the Challenger Cup will qualify for the next edition as a challenger team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 70], "content_span": [71, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289326-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League, Format, Final round\nThe six qualified teams play in 2 pools of 3 teams in round-robin. The top 2 teams of each pool qualify for the semifinals. The pool winners play against the runners-up in this round. The semifinals winners advance to compete for the Nations' League title. The losers face each other in the third place match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289326-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League, Pool composition\nThe overview of pools was released on October 23, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 61], "content_span": [62, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289326-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League, Venues\nThe list of host cities and venues was announced on March 26, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289326-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League, Squads\nThe 16 national teams involved in the tournament were required to register a squad of 25 players, which every week's 14-player roster must be selected from. Each country must declare its 14-player roster two days before the start of each week's round-robin competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289326-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League, Final standing\nTeam roster for the final round: Jordyn Poulter, TeTori Dixon, Lauren Carlini, Jordan Larson (c), Andrea Drews, Jordan Thompson, Michelle Bartsch-Hackley, Megan Courtney, Mikaela Foecke, Dana Rettke, Haleigh Washington, Kelsey Robinson, Chiaka Ogbogu, Mary Lake. Head Coach: Karch Kiraly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 59], "content_span": [60, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289327-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League squads\nThis article shows the roster of all participating teams at the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League. The 16 national teams involved in the tournament were required to register a squad of 21 players, which every week's 14-player roster must be selected from. Each country must declare its 14-player roster two days before the start of each week's round-robin competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289327-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League squads, Belgium\nThe following is the Belgian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 59], "content_span": [60, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289327-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League squads, Brazil\nThe following is the Brazilian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 58], "content_span": [59, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289327-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League squads, Bulgaria\nThe following is the Bulgarian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289327-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League squads, China\nThe following is the Chinese roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 57], "content_span": [58, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289327-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League squads, Dominican Republic\nThe following is the Dominican roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 70], "content_span": [71, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289327-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League squads, Germany\nThe following is the German roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 59], "content_span": [60, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289327-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League squads, Italy\nThe following is the Italian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 57], "content_span": [58, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289327-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League squads, Japan\nThe following is the Japanese roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 57], "content_span": [58, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289327-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League squads, Netherlands\nThe following is the Dutch roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 63], "content_span": [64, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289327-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League squads, Poland\nThe following is the German roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 58], "content_span": [59, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289327-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League squads, Russia\nThe following is the Russian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 58], "content_span": [59, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289327-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League squads, Serbia\nThe following is the Serbian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 58], "content_span": [59, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289327-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League squads, South Korea\nThe following is the Korean roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 63], "content_span": [64, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289327-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League squads, Thailand\nThe following is the Thai roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League. Head coach: Danai Sriwatcharamethakul", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289327-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League squads, Turkey\nThe following is the Turkish roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 58], "content_span": [59, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289327-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League squads, United States\nThe following is the American roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 65], "content_span": [66, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289328-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship\nThe 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship will be the twentieth edition of the FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship, contested by the women's national teams under the age of 20 of the members of the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de Volleyball (FIVB), the sport's global governing body. The final tournament was held in Mexico from 12 to 21 July 2019. Mexico played hosts for this event for the fourth time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289328-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship\nThe finals involved 16 teams, of which 15 came through qualifying competitions, while the host nation qualified automatically. Of the 16 teams, 15 had also appeared in the previous tournament in 2017, while Rwanda made its first appearances at an FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289328-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship\nChina is the defending champions, having won their third title in Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289328-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship, Qualification\nA total of 16 teams qualified for the final tournament. In addition to Mexico, who qualified automatically as the hosts, another 10 teams qualified via six separate continental tournaments while the remaining 5 teams qualified via the FIVB Junior World Ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 66], "content_span": [67, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289328-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship, Pools composition, First round\nThe draw was held in Le\u00f3n, Mexico on 18 June 2019. Mexico as a host country team were seeded in the top position of pool A. The top seven teams from World ranking as per January 2019 were seed in serpentine system in first two rows. The eight remaining teams were drawn in next two rows. Numbers in brackets denote the World ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 83], "content_span": [84, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289328-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship, Referees\nThere were sixteen referees from 5 continental confederations in this tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289328-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 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, 51], "section_span": [53, 76], "content_span": [77, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289329-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship squads\nThis article shows the rosters of all participating teams at the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship in M\u00e9xico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289329-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship squads, Argentina\nThe following is the Argentinian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 69], "content_span": [70, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289329-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship squads, Brazil\nThe following is the Brazilian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 66], "content_span": [67, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289329-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship squads, China\nThe following is the Chinese roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 65], "content_span": [66, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289329-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship squads, Cuba\nThe following is the Cuban roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 64], "content_span": [65, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289329-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship squads, Dominican Republic\nThe following is the Dominican roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 78], "content_span": [79, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289329-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship squads, Egypt\nThe following is the Egyptian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 65], "content_span": [66, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289329-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship squads, Italy\nThe following is the Italian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 65], "content_span": [66, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289329-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship squads, Japan\nThe following is the Japanese roster for the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 65], "content_span": [66, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289329-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship squads, Mexico\nThe following is the Mexican roster for the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 66], "content_span": [67, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289329-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship squads, Peru\nThe following is the Peruvian roster for the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 64], "content_span": [65, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289329-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship squads, Poland\nThe following is the Polish roster for the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 66], "content_span": [67, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289329-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship squads, Russia\nThe following is the Russian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 66], "content_span": [67, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289329-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship squads, Rwanda\nThe following is the Rwandan roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 66], "content_span": [67, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289329-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship squads, Serbia\nThe following is the Serbian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 66], "content_span": [67, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289329-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship squads, Turkey\nThe following is the Turkish roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 66], "content_span": [67, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289329-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship squads, United States\nThe following is the American roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 73], "content_span": [74, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289330-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup\nThe 2019 FIVB Women's World Cup was the 13th edition of the event, contested by the senior women's national teams of the members of the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de Volleyball (FIVB), the sport's global governing body. The tournament was held from 14 to 29 September 2019 in Japan. This was the first time that the FIVB did not distribute Olympics places since 1991 due to Japan hosting the 2020 Summer Olympics, but points for the FIVB World Rankings were given.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289330-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup\nChina won their historic fifth title, following titles from 1981, 1985, 2003, and 2015. China surpassed Cuba's earlier record of four titles in the history of the competition. Defending their title as the reigning champions in 2015, China reigned to sweep all eleven matches in Yokohama, Sapporo and Osaka. USA and Russia complete the 2019 podium as silver medallists and bronze medallists respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289330-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup\nZhu Ting, outside hitter and captain of the Chinese women's volleyball national team, was selected as the World Cup's MVP, retaining her title from 2015. Zhu was joined in the Dream Team by three members of the gold medal-winning Chinese side \u2013 Yan Ni as Best Middle Blocker, Wang Mengjie as Best Libero, and Ding Xia as Best Setter. Two members of the USA squad that finished second to the Chinese Team also made the Dream Team, as Kelsey Robinson and Andrea Drews won the Best Outside Spiker and Best Opposite awards, respectively. Russia's Irina Koroleva also won as Best Blocker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289330-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup, Qualification\nTwelve teams qualified for the competition as the top two teams of FIVB World Rankings of each continental federation on 1 January 2019. (except Japan who qualified as host, and Serbia who qualified as 2018 World Champion)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289330-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup, Format\nThe competition system of the 2019 World Cup was the single Round-Robin system. Each team played once against each of the 11 remaining teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289330-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup, Format\nThe teams were divided into 2 pools of 6 teams each. In round 1, total 30 matches in 5 days, each teams played against the other teams from the same pool. For rounds 2 and 3, total 36 matches in 6 days, each team played against the teams from another pool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289330-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup, Format\nNumbers in brackets denoted the FIVB World Ranking as of 1 January 2019 except the hosts who ranked 6th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289330-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup, Statistics leaders\nThe statistics of each group follows the vis reports P2 and P3. The statistics include 6 volleyball skills; serve, reception, set, spike, block, and dig. The table below shows the top 5 ranked players in each skill plus top scorers as of 29 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 58], "content_span": [59, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289330-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup, Statistics leaders, Best Scorers\nBest scorers determined by scored points from attack, block and serve.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289330-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup, Statistics leaders, Best Blockers\nBest blockers determined by the average of stuff blocks per set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 73], "content_span": [74, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289330-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup, Statistics leaders, Best Servers\nBest servers determined by the average of aces per set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289330-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup, Statistics leaders, Best Setters\nBest setters determined by the average of running sets per set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289330-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup, Statistics leaders, Best Diggers\nBest diggers determined by the average of successful digs per set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289331-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup squads\nThis article shows the rosters of all participating teams at the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup in Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289331-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup squads, Argentina\nThe following is the Argentine roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 56], "content_span": [57, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289331-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup squads, Brazil\nThe following is the Brazilian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289331-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup squads, Cameroon\nThe following is the Cameroonian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289331-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup squads, China\nThe following is the Chinese roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 52], "content_span": [53, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289331-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup squads, Dominican Republic\nThe following is the Dominican roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 65], "content_span": [66, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289331-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup squads, Japan\nThe following is the Japanese roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 52], "content_span": [53, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289331-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup squads, Kenya\nThe following is the Kenyan roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 52], "content_span": [53, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289331-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup squads, Netherlands\nThe following is the Dutch roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 58], "content_span": [59, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289331-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup squads, Russia\nThe following is the Russian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289331-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup squads, Serbia\nThe following is the Serbian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289331-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup squads, South Korea\nThe following is the Korean roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 58], "content_span": [59, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289331-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup squads, United States\nThe following is the American roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289332-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Women's Beach Volleyball Intercontinental Olympic Qualification Tournament\nThe 2019 FIVB Women's Beach Volleyball Intercontinental Olympic Qualification Tournament was a volleyball tournament for women's beach volleyball players organised by F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de Volleyball (FIVB), held in September 2019. 16 teams played in the tournament, where the top 2 teams qualified to the 2020 Olympic volleyball tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 84], "section_span": [84, 84], "content_span": [85, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289332-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Women's Beach Volleyball Intercontinental Olympic Qualification Tournament, Pools composition, First round\nTeams were seeded following the Serpentine system according to their FIVB Beach Volleyball World Rankings as of 16 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 84], "section_span": [86, 116], "content_span": [117, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289333-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Women's Volleyball Intercontinental Olympic Qualification Tournament\nThe 2019 FIVB Women's Volleyball Intercontinental Olympic Qualification Tournament was a volleyball tournament for women's national teams organised by F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de Volleyball (FIVB), held in August 2019. 24 teams played in the tournament, where the top 6 teams qualified to the 2020 Olympic volleyball tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 78], "section_span": [78, 78], "content_span": [79, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289333-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Women's Volleyball Intercontinental Olympic Qualification Tournament, Qualification\nTwenty-four teams qualified for the competition as the top twenty-four teams of FIVB World Rankings on 1 January 2019 (except Japan who qualified as the hosts. ).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 78], "section_span": [80, 93], "content_span": [94, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289333-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FIVB Women's Volleyball Intercontinental Olympic Qualification Tournament, Pools composition\nTeams were seeded following the serpentine system according to their FIVB World Ranking as of 1 January 2019. Rankings are shown in brackets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 78], "section_span": [80, 97], "content_span": [98, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289334-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FK Bod\u00f8/Glimt season\nThe 2019 season was Bod\u00f8/Glimt's second season back in the Eliteserien since their relegation at the end of the 2016 season. Bod\u00f8/Glimt finished the season in second position, qualifying for the first qualifying round of the UEFA Europa League. In the Norwegian Cup, they were knocked out by Str\u00f8mmen in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289334-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FK Bod\u00f8/Glimt 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-00289334-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FK Bod\u00f8/Glimt 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-00289334-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FK Bod\u00f8/Glimt 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-00289334-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FK Bod\u00f8/Glimt 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-00289335-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FK Haugesund season\nThe 2019 season is Haugesund's 10th season in the Tippeligaen following their promotion in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289335-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FK Haugesund season, Season events\nOn 7 January, Eirik Horneland became manager of Rosenborg, with Jostein Grindhaug being announced as Haugesund's new manager the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289335-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289335-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289335-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289335-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289335-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289335-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289336-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FNL Cup\nThe 2019 FNL Cup was the 8th edition of FNL Cup, a friendly association football tournament played in Cyprus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289336-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FNL Cup, Awards\nThe following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 20], "content_span": [21, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289337-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fada N'gourma attack\nOn 6 November 2019, gunmen ambushed a convoy transporting workers of the Canadian mining firm Semafo near the city of Fada N'gourma, on a road to the firm's Boungou mine. At least 37 people were killed, and dozens more are missing or injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289337-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fada N'gourma attack, Background\nBurkina Faso faced an uprising in 2014 leading to the downfall of President Blaise Compaor\u00e9 later that year. Burkina Faso is a member of the Trans-Saharan Counterterrorism Partnership and its commitment of peacekeeping troops in Mali and Sudan has made it a target for extremists in the region. Until 2015, Burkina Faso had remained violence free despite violent events occurring in the northern neighbouring countries of Mali and Niger. Since then, jihadist groups linked to Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State began their infiltration into the country from the northern borders followed by its eastern borders. The infiltration have also brought danger to the southern and western borders. Since 2015, Burkina Faso has faced cross-border attacks and sporadic raids in its territory, the result of instability and unrest in neighboring countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 880]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289337-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Fada N'gourma attack, Background\nIn the year 2019, ethnic and religious tensions increased as a result of the Islamist insurgency in Burkina Faso. The effect is more prominent in the northern areas of Burkina Faso bordering Mali, with attackers often crossing the border between the countries. According to the UN Refugee agency, in the last three months preceding October, more than a quarter of a million people have been forced to flee their homes in Burkina Faso.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289337-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Fada N'gourma attack, Background\nThe gold mine in Boungou has come under attack before. Eleven people were killed in two separate ambushes in 2018. The first ambush, in August 2018, killed six people, including five gendarmes. After the attack, Semafo increased security at the Boungou mine. In December 2018, five people including four gendarmes were killed when the lead vehicle of a convoy returning from an escort mission hit a landmine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289337-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Fada N'gourma attack, Attack\nThe attack happened in the morning. The target of the attack was a convoy of five buses carrying gold mine workers heading to the Semafo gold mine in Boungou. The convoy was being escorted by military vehicles. The attack started when a military vehicle escorting the convoy hit a landmine. Shortly afterwards, gunmen approached the convoy and opened fire, targeting two buses carrying workers as well as the military escort vehicles. At least 37 people were killed in the attack, not including any security forces who may have been killed while battling the attackers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289337-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Fada N'gourma attack, Attack\nA large number of people remained unaccounted for after the attack, with some survivors suggesting a death toll of over 100. One survivor said that he was one of only 3 survivors from a bus that initially carried over 80 people. Of the dead, 19 were workers for the Australian mining company Perenti Global, with of its workers hospitalized.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289337-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Fada N'gourma attack, Aftermath\nSemafo initially stated that the Boungou mine remained secured, and operations continued as usual. The company also confirmed that it was working with authorities to ensure the security of its employees and contractors. After the attack, the company's stock on the Toronto Stock Exchange fell 11 percent, to $3.49. Shortly afterwards, Semafo suspended its operations in the Boungou mine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289338-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fairfield Challenger\nThe 2019 Fairfield Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the fifth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Fairfield, United States between 7 and 13 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289338-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fairfield 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-00289338-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Fairfield Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 69], "content_span": [70, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289339-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fairfield Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nSanchai Ratiwatana and Christopher Rungkat were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289339-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fairfield Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nDarian King and Peter Polansky won the title after defeating Andr\u00e9 G\u00f6ransson and Sem Verbeek 6\u20134, 3\u20136, [12\u201310] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289340-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fairfield Challenger \u2013 Singles\nBjorn Fratangelo was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289340-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fairfield Challenger \u2013 Singles\nChristopher O'Connell won the title after defeating Steve Johnson 6\u20134, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289341-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fangoria Chainsaw Awards\nThe 21st Fangoria Chainsaw Awards is an award ceremony presented for horror films that were released in 2018. The nominees were announced in January 2019. The film Hereditary won five of its seven nominations, including Best Wide Release, as well as the write-in poll of Best Kill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289342-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Far North local elections\nThe 2019 Far North local elections will take place between September and October 2019 by postal vote in Far North District in New Zealand to elect a mayor of Far North District council, 9 councillors, and 19 community board members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289342-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Far North local elections, Mayoral election\nThere are 11 candidates running for Mayor of Far North District. They are listed below in alphabetical order. The incumbent mayor- John Carter- is seeking re-election. Carter served since the 2013 New Zealand local elections. Candidates with no listed party affiliation are listed as unaffiliated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289342-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Far North local elections, District council\nThere are 9 councillors in Far North District Council, elected from 3 multi-member wards. The 3 wards are Bay of Islands-Whangaroa, Kaikohe-Hokianga Ward and Te Hiku Ward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289342-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Far North local elections, District council, Bay of Islands-Whangaroa\nBay of Islands-Whangaroa ward elects 4 members to the Far North District Council. It contains, among others, Kerikeri, the eponymous Whangaroa, Paihia and Kawakawa. There are 15 candidates running for Bay of Islands-Whangaroa ward. They are listed below in alphabetical order.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289342-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Far North local elections, District council, Kaikohe-Hokianga\nKaikohe-Hoikianga ward elects 2 members to the Far North District Council. It contains, among others, the eponymous Kaikohe, Rawene and Oponi. There are 12 candidates running for Kaikohe-Hokianga ward. They are listed below in alphabetical order.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289342-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Far North local elections, District council, Te Hiku\nTe Hiku ward elects 3 members to the Far North District Council. It contains, among others, Kaitaia, Awanui, Whatuwhiwhi and Te Kao. There are 15 candidates running for Te Hiku ward. They are listed below in alphabetical order.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289342-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Far North local elections, Community boards\nElections will be required for 3 community boards located in the Far North District. These are the 7-member Bay of Islands-Whangaroa Community Board, the 6-member Kaikohe-Hokianga Community Board, and the 6-member Te Hiku Community Board.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289342-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Far North local elections, Community boards, Bay of Islands-Whangaroa Community Board\nThe Bay of Islands-Whangaroa Community Board consists of 7 members and contains 4 single-member subdivisions and 1 multi-member subdivision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289342-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Far North local elections, Community boards, Bay of Islands-Whangaroa Community Board, Kawakawa-Moerewa\nKawakawa-Moerewa subdivision elects 1 member to the Bay of Islands-Whangaroa Community Board.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 108], "content_span": [109, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289342-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Far North local elections, Community boards, Bay of Islands-Whangaroa Community Board, Kerikeri\nKerikeri subdivision elects 3 members to the Bay of Islands-Whangaroa Community Board. As the number of nominated candidates was equal to the amount of vacancies, all candidates were elected unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 100], "content_span": [101, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289342-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Far North local elections, Community boards, Bay of Islands-Whangaroa Community Board, Paihia\nPaihia subdivision elects 1 member to the Bay of Islands-Whangaroa Community Board.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 98], "content_span": [99, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289342-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Far North local elections, Community boards, Bay of Islands-Whangaroa Community Board, Russell-Opua\nRussell-Opua subdivision elects 1 member to the Bay of Islands-Whangaroa Community Board.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 104], "content_span": [105, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289342-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Far North local elections, Community boards, Bay of Islands-Whangaroa Community Board, Whangaroa\nWhangaroa subdivision elects 1 member to the Bay of Islands-Whangaroa Community Board.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 101], "content_span": [102, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289342-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Far North local elections, Community boards, Kaikohe-Hokianga Community Board\nThe Kaikohe-Hokianga Community Board consists of 6 members and contains 1 single-member subdivision and 2 multi-member subdivisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 82], "content_span": [83, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289342-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Far North local elections, Community boards, Kaikohe-Hokianga Community Board, Kaikohe\nKaikohe subdivision elects 3 members to the Kaikohe-Hokianga Community Board.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289342-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Far North local elections, Community boards, Kaikohe-Hokianga Community Board, North Hokianga\nNorth Hokianga subdivision elects 1 member to the Kaikohe-Hokianga Community Board.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 98], "content_span": [99, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289342-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Far North local elections, Community boards, Kaikohe-Hokianga Community Board, South Hokianga\nSouth Hokianga subdivision elects 2 members to the Kaikohe-Hokianga Community Board. As the number of nominated candidates was equal to the amount of vacancies, all candidates were elected unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 98], "content_span": [99, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289342-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Far North local elections, Community boards, Te Hiku Community Board\nThe Te Hiku Community Board consists of 6 members and contains 3 single-member subdivisions and 1 multi-member subdivision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 73], "content_span": [74, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289342-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Far North local elections, Community boards, Te Hiku Community Board, Doubtless Bay\nDoubtless Bay subdivision elects 1 member to the Te Hiku Community Board.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 88], "content_span": [89, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289342-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Far North local elections, Community boards, Te Hiku Community Board, Kaitaia\nKaitaia subdivision elects 3 members to the Te Hiku Community Board.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 82], "content_span": [83, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289342-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Far North local elections, Community boards, Te Hiku Community Board, North Cape\nNorth Cape subdivision elects 1 member to the Te Hiku Community Board. As the number of nominated candidates was equal to the amount of vacancies, all candidates were elected unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 85], "content_span": [86, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289342-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Far North local elections, Community boards, Te Hiku Community Board, Whatuwhiwhi\nWhatuwhiwhi subdivision elects 1 member to the Te Hiku Community Board.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 86], "content_span": [87, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289343-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Faroe Islands Cup\nThe 2019 Faroe Islands Cup was the 65th edition of Faroe Islands domestic football cup. It started on 30 March and ended with the final on 21 September. B36 T\u00f3rshavn were the defending champions, having won their sixth cup title the previous year, but lost to K\u00cd in the quarterfinals. As the winner of the competition, HB qualified to the preliminary round of the 2020\u201321 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289343-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Faroe Islands Cup\nOnly the first teams of the participating clubs were allowed to enter the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289344-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Faroe Islands Premier League\nThe 2019 Faroe Islands Premier League (referred to as Betri deildin menn for sponsorship reasons) was the 77th season of top-tier football in the Faroe Islands and the 15th under the current format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289344-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Faroe Islands Premier League\nHB T\u00f3rshavn were the defending champions, having won their 23rd title in the previous season. The season started on 10 March and ended on 26 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289344-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Faroe Islands Premier League, Teams\nThe champions of the 2018 1. deild, \u00cdtr\u00f3ttarfelag Fuglafjar\u00f0ar, replaced 07 Vestur, the last-placed team in the 2018 Faroe Islands Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289344-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Faroe Islands Premier League, Teams\nIt is the second consecutive season in which only one team went promoted from 1. deild, as they were the only non-reserve team in the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289344-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Faroe Islands Premier League, Teams\nTv\u00f8royrar B\u00f3ltfelag, FC Su\u00f0uroy and Royn ended their cooperation and TB replaced TB/FC Su\u00f0uroy/Royn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289344-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Faroe Islands Premier League, Results\nEach team plays three times (either twice at home and once away or once at home and twice away) against every other team for a total of 27 matches each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289345-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Faroese general election\nGeneral elections were held in the Faroe Islands on 31 August 2019. The elections resulted in the defeat of Aksel V. Johannesen's coalition government consisting of the Social Democratic, Republic, and Progress. Following the elections, a new coalition government was formed by Union Party leader B\u00e1r\u00f0ur \u00e1 Steig Nielsen, consisting of the Union Party, the People's Party and the Centre Party, which won 17 of the 34 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289345-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Faroese general election\nAccording to political scientist Lise Lyck, the main election issues were public finances (welfare, taxes and public coffers), recent reforms of the fishing sector and same-sex marriage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289345-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Faroese general election, Electoral system\nThe 33 members of the L\u00f8gting were elected by open list proportional representation in a single nationwide constituency with an electoral threshold of one thirty-third (~3.03%). Seats were allocated using the d'Hondt method.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289345-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Faroese general election, Results\nOf the 150 void votes, 85 were blank and 65 invalid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289346-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fayetteville, North Carolina mayoral election\nThe 2019 election for the Mayor of Fayetteville, North Carolina is scheduled to be held on November 5, 2019. Mayor Mitch Colvin, who was first elected in 2017, ran for re-election to a second term. No other candidate filed to run. Colvin was re-elected with 94.8% of the vote, with 5.2% of the vote going to various write-in candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289347-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Featherstone Rovers season\nThis article details the Featherstone Rovers rugby league football club's 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289348-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup\nThe 2019 Fed Cup is the 57th 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, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289348-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup\nIn one of the biggest shocks in this year's tournament, Romania upset title holders and 11-time winners Czech Republic at Ostrava in the quarterfinals of the competition. Czech Republic was unbeaten at home in the Fed Cup since 2009, when they lost to the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289348-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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 competed in the World Group Play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 35], "content_span": [36, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289348-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup, World Group Play-offs\nAt the time of the ties taking place, it was expected that the winners would secure a place in the World Group for 2020, while the losers would be relegated to World Group II, in accordance with the existing competition structure. However, the restructuring of the Fed Cup for 2020 announced on 27 June 2019 stipulated that all eight nations which participated in the World Group Play-offs would enter into the 2020 Fed Cup Qualifiers. Consequently, the results of the 2019 World Group Play-off ties had no bearing on promotion or relegation for the following year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 35], "content_span": [36, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289348-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup, World Group II\nThe four winners of World Group II advanced to the World Group Play-offs, whereas the four losers played the World Group II Play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 28], "content_span": [29, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289348-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup, World Group II Play-offs\nThe four losing teams in the World Group II ties and four winners of the zonal Groups I competed in the World Group II Play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 38], "content_span": [39, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289348-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup, World Group II Play-offs\nAt the time of the ties taking place, it was expected that the winners would secure a place in the World Group II for 2020, while the losers would be relegated to their respective zonal Group I, in accordance with the existing competition structure. However, the restructuring of the Fed Cup for 2020 announced on 27 June 2019 stipulated that the four winning nations will instead enter the 2020 Fed Cup Qualifiers. Of the four losing nations, the two with the highest ITF Fed Cup Nations Ranking (as of 22 April 2019) will also enter the 2020 Fed Cup Qualifiers, while only the remaining two losing nations will be relegated to their respective zonal Group I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 38], "content_span": [39, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289348-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup, World Group II Play-offs, Status of losing teams\nRussia, \u00a0Japan, \u00a0Great Britain and \u00a0Slovakia entered the 2020 Fed Cup Qualifiers, having won their respective World Group II Play-off ties. The fate of the four losing nations depended on their ITF Fed Cup Nations Ranking as of 22 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 62], "content_span": [63, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289348-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup, Americas Zone, Group II\nVenue 1: Tennis Club Las Terrazas Miraflores, Lima, Peru (clay) Venue 2: Centro Nacional de Tenis, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic (hard)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 37], "content_span": [38, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289348-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup, Europe/Africa Zone, Group I\nVenue 1: Hala Widowiskowo-Sportowa, Zielona G\u00f3ra, Poland (indoor hard) Venue 2: University of Bath, Bath, United Kingdom (indoor hard)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 41], "content_span": [42, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289348-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup, Europe/Africa Zone, Group III\nVenue 1: Tali Tennis Center, Helsinki, Finland (indoor hard) Venue 2: Ulcinj Bellevue, Ulcinj, Montenegro (clay)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 43], "content_span": [44, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289349-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Americas Zone\nThe Americas Zone is one of three zones of regional competition in the 2019 Fed Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289349-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Americas Zone, Group I\nThe eight teams were divided into two pools of four teams. The two pool winners took part in a play-off to determine the nation advancing to the World Group II Play-offs. The two nations finishing last and second last in their pools took part in relegation play-offs, with the two losing nations being relegated to Group II for 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289349-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Americas Zone, Group II\nThe twelve teams will compete across two different venues, with 6 nations taking part in Lima, and 5 nations taking part in Santo Domingo. In Lima, the six teams will be divided into two pools of 3 teams. The winners of each pool will play-off to determine the nation advancing to Group I in 2020. In Santo Domingo, five nations will compete in one pool, with the winning nation promoted to Group I in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289350-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs\nThe play-offs of the 2019 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 eight teams faced off to determine their placing in the 2019 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I. The winner of the promotion play-off advanced to World Group II Play-offs, and the losers of the relegation play-off were relegated down to the Americas Zone Group II in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289350-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs, Promotional play-off\nThe first placed teams of the two pools were drawn in head-to-head rounds. The winner advanced to the World Group II Play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289350-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs, Third place play-off\nThe runner-up teams of the two pools were drawn in head-to-head to determine the third and fourth placings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289350-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs, Relegation play-offs\nThe bottom two team of the pools were drawn in head-to-head. The losers were relegated down to Americas Zone Group II in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289351-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I \u2013 Pool A\nPool A of the 2019 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I was one of two pools in the Americas zone of the 2019 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, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289351-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I \u2013 Pool A, Standings\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-team ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-team ties, (a) percentage of sets won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (b) percentage of games won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (c) Fed Cup rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289352-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I \u2013 Pool B\nPool B of the 2019 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I was one of two pools in the Americas zone of the 2019 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, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289352-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I \u2013 Pool B, Standings\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-team ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-team ties, (a) percentage of sets won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (b) percentage of games won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (c) Fed Cup rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289353-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group II \u2013 Play-offs\nThe Play-offs of the 2019 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group II were the final stages of the Group II Zonal Competition involving teams from the Americas. Using the positions determined in their pools, the six teams in Lima faced off to determine their placing in the 2019 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group II. The winning team advanced to Group I in 2020, alongside the winning team from Pool A in Santo Domingo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289353-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group II \u2013 Play-offs, Promotional play-offs\nThe first placed teams of the two pools in Lima were drawn in head-to-head rounds. The winners advanced to Group I, alongside the winning team from Pool A in Santo Domingo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 70], "content_span": [71, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289353-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group II \u2013 Play-offs, Third to fourth place play-offs\nThe second placed teams of the two pools in Lima were drawn in head-to-head rounds to determine the 3rd to 4th placings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 80], "content_span": [81, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289353-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group II \u2013 Play-offs, Fifth to sixth place play-offs\nThe third placed teams of the two pools in Lima were drawn in head-to-head rounds to determine the 5th to 6th placings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 79], "content_span": [80, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289354-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group II \u2013 Pool A (Lima)\nPool A (Lima) of the 2019 Fed Cup Americas Group II was one of three pools in the Americas Group II of the 2018 Fed Cup. Three teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top team and bottom teams proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top team played for advancement to Group I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289354-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group II \u2013 Pool A (Lima), Standings\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-team ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-team ties, (a) percentage of sets won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (b) percentage of games won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (c) Fed Cup rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 62], "content_span": [63, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289355-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group II \u2013 Pool A (Santo Domingo)\nPool A (Santo Domingo) of the 2019 Fed Cup Americas Group II was one of three pools in the Americas Group II of the 2019 Fed Cup. Five teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top team winning advancement to Group I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289355-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group II \u2013 Pool A (Santo Domingo), Standings\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-team ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-team ties, (a) percentage of sets won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (b) percentage of games won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (c) Fed Cup rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 71], "content_span": [72, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289356-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group II \u2013 Pool B (Lima)\nPool B (Lima) of the 2019 Fed Cup Americas Group II was one of three pools in the Americas Group II of the 2018 Fed Cup. Three teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top team and bottom teams proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top team played for advancement to Group I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289356-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group II \u2013 Pool B (Lima), Standings\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-team ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-team ties, (a) percentage of sets won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (b) percentage of games won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (c) Fed Cup rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 62], "content_span": [63, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289357-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone\nThe Asia/Oceania Zone is one of three zones of regional competition in the 2019 Fed Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289357-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone, Group I\nThe seven teams were divided into one pool of 3 teams (Pool A) and one pool of 4 teams (Pool B). The two pool winners took part in a play-off to determine the nation advancing to the World Group II Play-offs. The teams that finished third in each pool took part in a play-off to determine which nation will be relegated to Asia/Oceania Zone Group II in 2020. The nation finishing fourth in Pool B was automatically relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289357-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone, Group II\n13 nations will compete across two different venues. In Dushanbe, six teams will compete across two pools of 3 teams (Pools A & B). The winners of each pool will play-off to determine which nation will advance to Asia/Oceania Zone Group I. In Kuala Lumpur, seven teams will compete across two pools of 3 and 4 teams (Pools A & B). The winners of each pool will play-off to determine which nation will advance to Asia/Oceania Zone Group I. One team will be promoted from each venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289358-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs\nThe play-offs of the 2019 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 six teams faced off to determine their placing in the 2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I. The winner of the promotional play-off advanced to the World Group II Play-offs, while the losers of the relegation play-off was relegated to the Asia/Oceania Zone Group II along with the bottom team of Pool B in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289358-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs, Promotional play-off\nThe first placed teams of the two pools will be drawn in head-to-head rounds. The winner will advance to the World Group II Play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 72], "content_span": [73, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289358-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs, 3rd place play-off\nThe second placed teams of the two pools will be drawn in head-to-head rounds to determine the third placed team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 70], "content_span": [71, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289358-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs, Relegation play-off\nThe third placed teams of the two pools will be drawn in head-to-head rounds. The loser will be relegated to Asia/Oceania Zone Group II in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 71], "content_span": [72, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289359-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I \u2013 Pool A\nPool A of the 2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I was one of two pools in the Asia/Oceania zone of the 2019 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, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289359-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I \u2013 Pool A, Standings\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-team ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-team ties, (a) percentage of sets won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (b) percentage of games won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (c) Fed Cup rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 58], "content_span": [59, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289360-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I \u2013 Pool B\nPool B of the 2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I was one of two pools in the Asia/Oceania zone of the 2019 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, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289360-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I \u2013 Pool B, Standings\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-team ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-team ties, (a) percentage of sets won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (b) percentage of games won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (c) Fed Cup rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 58], "content_span": [59, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289361-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II \u2013 Play-offs\nThe play-offs of the 2019 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 thirteen teams faced off to determine their placing in the 2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II. The top team advanced to Asia/Oceania Group I in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289361-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II \u2013 Play-offs, Promotional play-offs\nThe first placed teams of the pools were drawn in head-to-head rounds. The winners advanced to the Asia/Oceania Group I in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 74], "content_span": [75, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289361-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II \u2013 Play-offs, 3rd to 4th play-offs\nThe second placed teams of the pools were drawn in head-to-head rounds to find the equal third to equal fourth placed teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 73], "content_span": [74, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289361-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II \u2013 Play-offs, 5th to 6th play-offs\nThe third placed teams of the pools were drawn in head-to-head rounds to find the equal fifth to equal sixth placed teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 73], "content_span": [74, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289362-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II \u2013 Pool A (Dushanbe)\nPool A (Dushanbe) of the 2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II was one of four pools in the Asia/Oceania zone of the 2019 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 Group I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289362-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II \u2013 Pool A (Dushanbe), Standings\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-team ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-team ties, (a) percentage of sets won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (b) percentage of games won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (c) Fed Cup rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 70], "content_span": [71, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289363-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II \u2013 Pool A (Kuala Lumpur)\nPool A (Kuala Lumpur) of the 2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II was one of four pools in the Asia/Oceania zone of the 2019 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 Group I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289363-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II \u2013 Pool A (Kuala Lumpur), Standings\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-team ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-team ties, (a) percentage of sets won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (b) percentage of games won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (c) Fed Cup rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 74], "content_span": [75, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289364-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II \u2013 Pool B (Dushanbe)\nPool B (Dushanbe) of the 2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II was one of four pools in the Asia/Oceania zone of the 2019 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 Group I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289364-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II \u2013 Pool B (Dushanbe), Standings\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-team ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-team ties, (a) percentage of sets won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (b) percentage of games won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (c) Fed Cup rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 70], "content_span": [71, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289365-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II \u2013 Pool B (Kuala Lumpur)\nPool B (Kuala Lumpur) of the 2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II was one of four pools in the Asia/Oceania zone of the 2019 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.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289365-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II \u2013 Pool B (Kuala Lumpur), Standings\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-team ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-team ties, (a) percentage of sets won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (b) percentage of games won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (c) Fed Cup rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 74], "content_span": [75, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289366-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone\nThe Europe/Africa Zone is one of three zones of regional competition in the 2019 Fed Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289366-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone, Group I\nVenue 1: Hala Widowiskowo-Sportowa, Zielona G\u00f3ra, Poland (indoor hard) Venue 2: University of Bath, Bath, United Kingdom (indoor hard)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289366-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone, Group I\nThe fifteen teams were divided into three pools of four teams and one pool of three teams. The four pool winners took part in promotional play-offs to determine the two nations advancing to the World Group II Play-offs. The nations finishing last in their pools took part in relegation play-offs, with the two losing nations being relegated to Group II for 2020. One nation was promoted and one nation was relegated from each venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289366-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone, Group II\nThe seven teams were divided into two pools of three and four teams. The two pool winners and runners-up took part in promotional play-offs to determine the two nations advancing to the Group I for 2020. The nations finishing third in their pools took part in a relegation play-off, with the losing nation being relegated to Group III for 2020. The nation finishing last in Group B was automatically relegated to Group III for 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289366-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone, Group III\nVenue 1: Tali Tennis Center, Helsinki, Finland (indoor hard) Venue 2: Ulcinj Bellevue, Ulcinj, Montenegro (clay)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289366-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone, Group III\nFormat: 17 nations will compete across two different venues, with 9 nations taking part in Helsinki and 8 nations taking part in Ulcinj. In each location teams will compete across two pools; one pool of 5 teams and one pool of 4 teams in Helsinki, and one pool of 4 teams and one pool of 3 teams in Ulcinj. The winners of each pool will play-off to determine the nations advancing to Group II in 2020. One nation will be promoted from each venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289367-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs\nThe play-offs of the 2019 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 fourteen teams faced off to determine their placing in the 2019 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 to the Europe/Africa Zone Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289367-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289367-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs, 5th place play-off\nThe runner-up teams from pools A and B (in both venues) competed in order to establish which two teams would place joint fifth in the final standings and which two would place joint seventh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 71], "content_span": [72, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289367-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs, 9th place play-off\nThe third placed teams from pools A and B in Bath competed in order to establish which team would place ninth in the final standings (alongside Bulgaria) and which team would place eleventh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 71], "content_span": [72, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289367-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs, Relegation play-offs\nThe teams placing last in each pool competed to keep their place in the Europe/Africa Zone Group I. The losers were relegated to the 2020 Europe/Africa Zone Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 73], "content_span": [74, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289368-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I \u2013 Pool A (Bath)\nPool A (Bath) of the 2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I is one of four pools in the Europe/Africa zone of the 2019 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, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289368-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I \u2013 Pool A (Bath), Standings\nMethod to determine standings: i) If two Nations score an equal number of points, the head-to-head result between these Nations shall decide the winner. ii) If three or more Nations score an equal number of points the following procedure must be used:- The number of matches won shall decide the winner. - If matches won are equal, the percentage of sets won of sets played against all teams in the pool shall decide the winner. - If the percentage of sets won is equal, the percentage of games won of games played against all teams in the pool shall decide the winner. When three or more Nations are tied head-to-head results are never used to determine the positions in the pool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 66], "content_span": [67, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289369-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I \u2013 Pool A (Zielona G\u00f3ra)\nPool A (Zielona G\u00f3ra) of the 2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I is one of four pools in the Europe/Africa zone of the 2019 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, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289369-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I \u2013 Pool A (Zielona G\u00f3ra), Standings\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-team ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-team ties, (a) percentage of sets won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (b) percentage of games won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (c) Fed Cup rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 74], "content_span": [75, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289370-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I \u2013 Pool B (Bath)\nPool B (Bath) of the 2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I is one of four pools in the Europe/Africa zone of the 2019 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, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289370-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I \u2013 Pool B (Bath), Standings\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-team ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-team ties, (a) percentage of sets won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (b) percentage of games won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (c) Fed Cup rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 66], "content_span": [67, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289371-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I \u2013 Pool B (Zielona G\u00f3ra)\nPool A (Zielona G\u00f3ra) of the 2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I is one of four pools in the Europe/Africa zone of the 2019 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, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289371-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I \u2013 Pool B (Zielona G\u00f3ra), Standings\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-team ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-team ties, (a) percentage of sets won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (b) percentage of games won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (c) Fed Cup rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 74], "content_span": [75, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289372-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II \u2013 Play-offs\nThe play-offs of the 2019 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 eight teams faced off to determine their placing in the 2019 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-00289372-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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 2020 Europe/Africa Zone Group I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 75], "content_span": [76, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289372-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II \u2013 Play-offs, Relegation play-offs\nThe third-placed teams of the pools played against each other in a head-to-head round. The loser was relegated to the 2020 Europe/Africa Zone Group III alongside South Africa who finished last in Pool B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 74], "content_span": [75, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289373-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II \u2013 Pool A\nPool A of the 2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II was one of two pools in the Europe/Africa zone of the 2019 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 Group I, while the bottom team faced potential relegation to Group III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289373-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II \u2013 Pool A, Standings\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-team ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-team ties, (a) percentage of sets won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (b) percentage of games won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (c) Fed Cup rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 60], "content_span": [61, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289374-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II \u2013 Pool B\nPool B of the 2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II was one of two pools in the Europe/Africa zone of the 2019 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 Group I, while the bottom team faced potential relegation to Group III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289374-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II \u2013 Pool B, Standings\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-team ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-team ties, (a) percentage of sets won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (b) percentage of games won (head-to-head records if two teams remain tied), then (c) Fed Cup rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 60], "content_span": [61, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289375-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III \u2013 Play-offs\nThe play-offs of the 2019 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 sixteen teams faced off to determine their placing in the 2019 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, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289375-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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 winners advanced to Group II in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 76], "content_span": [77, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289375-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III \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 equal third and fourth placed teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 75], "content_span": [76, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289375-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III \u2013 Play-offs, 5th to 6th play-offs\nThe third placed teams of each pool were drawn in head-to-head rounds to find the equal fifth and sixth placed teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 75], "content_span": [76, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289375-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III \u2013 Play-offs, 7th to 8th play-offs\nThe fourth placed teams of each pool were drawn in head-to-head rounds to find the seventh and equal eighth placed teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 75], "content_span": [76, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289376-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III \u2013 Pool A (Helsinki)\nPool A (Helsinki) of the 2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Group III was one of four pools in the Europe/Africa Group III of the 2019 Fed Cup. Four teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top team and bottom teams proceeding to their respective section of the play-offs: the top team played for advancement to Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289376-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III \u2013 Pool A (Helsinki), Standings\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) If two teams have the same number of wins, head-to-head record; 3) If three teams have the same number of wins, (a) number of matches won in the group, then (b) percentage of sets won in the group, then (c) percentage of games won in the group, then (d) Fed Cup rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 72], "content_span": [73, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289377-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III \u2013 Pool A (Ulcinj)\nPool A (Ulcinj) of the 2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Group III was one of four pools in the Europe/Africa Group III of the 2019 Fed Cup. Four teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top team and bottom teams proceeding to their respective section of the play-offs: the top team played for advancement to Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289377-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III \u2013 Pool A (Ulcinj), Standings\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) If two teams have the same number of wins, head-to-head record; 3) If three teams have the same number of wins, (a) number of matches won in the group, then (b) percentage of sets won in the group, then (c) percentage of games won in the group, then (d) Fed Cup rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 70], "content_span": [71, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289378-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III \u2013 Pool B (Helsinki)\nPool B (Helsinki) of the 2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Group III was one of four pools in the Europe/Africa Group III of the 2019 Fed Cup. Five teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top team and bottom teams proceeding to their respective section of the play-offs: the top team played for advancement to Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289378-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III \u2013 Pool B (Helsinki), Standings\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) If two teams have the same number of wins, head-to-head record; 3) If three teams have the same number of wins, (a) number of matches won in the group, then (b) percentage of sets won in the group, then (c) percentage of games won in the group, then (d) Fed Cup rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 72], "content_span": [73, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289379-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III \u2013 Pool B (Ulcinj)\nPool B (Ulcinj) of the 2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Group III was one of four pools in the Europe/Africa Group III of the 2019 Fed Cup. Four teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top team and bottom teams proceeding to their respective section of the play-offs: the top team played for advancement to Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289379-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III \u2013 Pool B (Ulcinj), Standings\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) If two teams have the same number of wins, head-to-head record; 3) If three teams have the same number of wins, (a) number of matches won in the group, then (b) percentage of sets won in the group, then (c) percentage of games won in the group, then (d) Fed Cup rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 70], "content_span": [71, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289380-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup World Group\nThe World Group is the highest level of Fed Cup competition in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289381-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup World Group II\nThe World Group II was the second highest level of Fed Cup competition in 2019. The winning nations advanced to the World Group Play-offs, and the losing nations were relegated to the World Group II Play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289382-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup World Group II Play-offs\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by 2a02:c7f:ae9e:1400:c867:e1c0:18ef:2682 (talk) at 14:56, 6 April 2020 (maybe mention what sport this is somewhere in the article). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289382-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup World Group II Play-offs\nThe 2019 World Group II Play-offs was a tennis tournament consisting of four ties involving the losing nations of the World Group II and four nations from the three Zonal Group I competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289382-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup World Group II Play-offs\nAt the time of the ties taking place, it was expected that the winners would secure a place in the World Group II for 2020, while the losers would be relegated to their respective zonal Group I, in accordance with the existing competition structure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289382-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup World Group II Play-offs\nHowever, the restructuring of the Fed Cup for 2020 announced on 27 June 2019 stipulated that the four winning nations will instead enter the 2020 Fed Cup Qualifiers. Of the four losing nations, the two with the highest ITF Fed Cup Nations Ranking (as of 22 April 2019) will also enter the 2020 Fed Cup Qualifiers, while only the remaining two losing nations will be relegated to their respective zonal Group I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289382-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup World Group II Play-offs, Status of losing teams\nRussia, \u00a0Japan, \u00a0Great Britain and \u00a0Slovakia entered the 2020 Fed Cup Qualifiers, having won their respective World Group II Play-off ties. The fate of the four losing nations depended on their ITF Fed Cup Nations Ranking as of 22 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289383-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup World Group Play-offs\nThe Fed Cup is an annual tournament between national teams in women's tennis. The four losing teams in the World Group first round ties and four winners of the World Group II ties competed in the World Group Play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289383-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup World Group Play-offs\nAt the time of the ties taking place, it was expected that the winners would secure a place in the World Group for 2020, while the losers would be relegated to World Group II, in accordance with the existing competition structure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289383-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Fed Cup World Group Play-offs\nHowever, the restructuring of the Fed Cup for 2020 announced on 27 June 2019 stipulated that all eight nations which participated in the World Group Play-offs would enter into the 2020 Fed Cup Qualifiers. Consequently, the results of the 2019 World Group Play-off ties had no bearing on promotion or relegation for the following year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289384-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FedEx Cup Playoffs\nThe 2019 FedEx Cup Playoffs, the series of three golf tournaments that will determine the season champion on the U.S.-based PGA Tour, was played from August 8\u201325. It included the following three events:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289384-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FedEx Cup Playoffs\nThey were the 13th FedEx Cup playoffs since their inception in 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289384-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FedEx Cup Playoffs, Changes for 2019\nThere were a number of changes in the format compared to previous years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289384-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FedEx Cup Playoffs, The Northern Trust\nThe Northern Trust was played August 8\u201311. Of the 125 players eligible to play in the event, four did not play: Paul Casey (ranked 8th), Rafa Cabrera-Bello (59), Henrik Stenson (85) and Sam Burns (89), reducing the field to 121. 85 players made the second-round cut at 141 (\u22121).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289384-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FedEx Cup Playoffs, The Northern Trust\nPatrick Reed won by a stroke over Abraham Ancer. The top 70 players in the points standings advanced to the BMW Championship. This included four players who were outside the top 70 prior to The Northern Trust: Troy Merritt (ranked 72nd to 59th), Joaqu\u00edn Niemann (74 to 70), Wyndham Clark (90 to 68), and Harold Varner III (102 to 29). Four players started the tournament within the top 70 but ended the tournament outside the top 70, ending their playoff chances: Sergio Garc\u00eda (ranked 65th to 72nd), Danny Lee (66 to 73), Kevin Streelman (68 to 75), and Matthew Wolff (70 to 74).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289384-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FedEx Cup Playoffs, BMW Championship\nThe BMW Championship was played August 15\u201318. Of the 70 players eligible to play in the event, only Kevin Na (ranked 55th) did not play, reducing the field to 69. There was no second-round cut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289384-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FedEx Cup Playoffs, BMW Championship\nJustin Thomas won by 3 strokes from Patrick Cantlay. The top 30 players in the points standings advanced to the Tour Championship. This included three players who were outside the top 30 prior to the BMW Championship: Jason Kokrak (ranked 32nd to 30th), Hideki Matsuyama (33 to 15), and Lucas Glover (41 to 29). Three players started the tournament within the top 30 but ended the tournament outside the top 30, ending their playoff chances: Shane Lowry (25 to 33), Harold Varner III (29 to 38) and Andrew Putnam (30 to 34).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289384-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 FedEx Cup Playoffs, Tour Championship\nThe Tour Championship was played August 22\u201325. 30 golfers qualified for the tournament. There was no second-round cut. Rory McIlroy won the event, finishing four strokes ahead of Xander Schauffele. McIlroy had started the tournament at \u22125, a one stroke advantage over Schauffele who started at \u22124.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289385-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Federated Auto Parts 400\nThe 2019 Federated Auto Parts 400 is a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race that was held on September 21, 2019, at Richmond Raceway in Richmond, Virginia. Contested over 400 laps on the .75-mile (1.21\u00a0km) D-shaped short track, it was the 28th race of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season, second race of the Playoffs and second race of the Round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289385-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Federated Auto Parts 400, Report, Background\nRichmond Raceway (RR), formerly known as Richmond International Raceway (RIR), is a 3/4-mile (1.2\u00a0km), D-shaped, asphalt race track located just outside Richmond, Virginia in Henrico County. It hosts the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, the NASCAR Xfinity Series, and the IndyCar series. Known as \"America's premier short track\", it formerly hosted a NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series race, and two USAC sprint car races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289385-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Federated Auto Parts 400, Practice, First practice\nChris Buescher was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 22.287 seconds and a speed of 121.147\u00a0mph (194.967\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289385-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Federated Auto Parts 400, Practice, Final practice\nMartin Truex Jr. was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 22.152 seconds and a speed of 121.885\u00a0mph (196.155\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289385-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Federated Auto Parts 400, Qualifying\nBrad Keselowski scored the pole for the race with a time of 21.229 and a speed of 127.185\u00a0mph (204.684\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289385-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Federated Auto Parts 400, Media, Television\nNBC Sports covered the race on the television side. Rick Allen, Jeff Burton, Steve Letarte and three-time Richmond winner Dale Earnhardt Jr. had the call in the booth for the race. Dave Burns, Parker Kligerman, Kelli Stavast and Dillon Welch will report from pit lane during the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289385-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Federated Auto Parts 400, Media, Radio\nThe Motor Racing Network had the radio call for the race, which was simulcast on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio. Alex Hayden, Jeff Striegle, and 6 time winner at Richmond Rusty Wallace had the call in the broadcast booth for MRN when the field raced thru the front straightaway. Dave Moody called the race from a platform when the field raced down the backstraightaway. Steve Post, Jason Toy, and Woody Cain called the action for MRN from pit lane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289386-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Felda United F.C. season\nThe 2019 season was Felda United's 13th competitive season and 1st season in the Malaysia Super League since the club's promotion to the Malaysia Super League after only a one-year absence, winning the Malaysia Premier League. The club's license from the Football Association of Malaysia (FAM) has been obtained to continue their tracks in the Malaysian Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289386-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Felda United F.C. season, Background\nIn 2018, Felda United won the Premier League on their first season in the league. They played in the second-tier division due to complications in obtaining the club's license to play in the Super League in 2019. The team huddled through the season until they became champion in the guidance of then head coach, B. Sathianathan and then captain, Shukor Adan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289386-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Felda United F.C. season, Background\nIn the Malaysia FA Cup, Felda United was up against PKNP in the quarter finals. The team managed to score 1\u20130 in their first leg during the away match. Sadly, PKNP bust the team with a score of 1\u20132 in the second leg, leaving PKNP with the upper hand to continue in the semi finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289386-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Felda United F.C. season, Background\nMeanwhile, in the Malaysia Cup, Felda United was grouped with 3 other competitive clubs which were the PDRM, Melaka United and PKNP in Group B. Felda United managed to place second in the group with 10 points, after PKNS being placed first with 13 points. The team however failed to qualify into semifinals as they got dunked by Terengganu, with defeats in both first leg and second leg with a score of 1\u20132 and 3\u20134. The aggregate sides Terengganu with a 4\u20136 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289386-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Felda United F.C. season, Background\nHowever, throughout the end of 2018, Felda United was bummed with financial issues, the players and the coaches weren't paid for 3 months since the 2018 Malaysian Election. The situation was a blur and Felda United had to drop their key players and change all four of their previous import players including Thiago Fernandes due to budget cut in order to face the Super League in 2019. This season, the club will be represented by young, fresh and talented players but lacking of experience to play in the top flight, as mentioned by Christie Jayaseelan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289386-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Felda United F.C. season, Background\nDespite the disappointing ending for the 2018 season, the club signed three new import players and retained one of Felda United's Brazilian import player, Thiago Junio. Thiago Junio played very well in the previous season and he is back to be Felda United's shield. Besides Thiago, the club introduced three import players which are Jaycee John from Bahrain, Kei Ikeda from Japan and another Brazil-born player, Jocinei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289387-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fenland District Council election\nThe 2019 Fenland District Council election took place on 2 May 2019 for all 39 seats of the Fenland District Council in England. It was held on the same day as other local elections. In these elections, twelve councillors were returned without a vote to Fenland District Council, which topped the Electoral Reform Society's list of 'rotten boroughs'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289387-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fenland District Council election, Summary\nIn recent months a number of prominent Tories had failed to win selection for wards they had held in many instances for several years. Some of these stood as independent candidates. Nick Meekins standing as an independent took David Oliver's seat. Cllr Michelle Tanfield retained her Elm and Christchurch seat along with Will Sutton as independents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289387-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Fenland District Council election, Summary\nUKIP did not put up any candidates this election - former UKIP county councillor for Wisbech North ward (2013-2017), Paul Clapp said he felt he could \"achieve more outside of the political system than in it\". The local Green Party said it had \"pushed hard\" to field more candidates, but found \"limited interest\". The Labour candidate Martin Field (March East ward), felt uncontested seats were \"bad for democracy\". Labour had not a candidate standing in every seat in Fenland since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289387-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Fenland District Council election, Summary\nLiberal Democrat candidate (Parson Drove & Wisbech St Mary), Gavin Booth said: \"The state of national politics now puts people off and this has caused a lot of apathy for local politics, which is a shame.\" Two Independent councillors Virginia and Michael Bucknor stepped down, after 12 years in local politics, due to Mrs Bucknor's ill health. A former conservative councillor Andy Maul took one of the two seats they were vacating. A number of former Tory councillors standing as independents gained seats across the district, collectively they are forming the largest opposition for many years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289388-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fergana Challenger\nThe 2019 Fergana Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 20th edition of the tournament for men which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour, and the ninth edition of the event for women on the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Fergana, Uzbekistan, between 3\u20139 June (women) and 17\u201323 June (men).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289388-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289388-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Fergana Challenger, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 73], "content_span": [74, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289388-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Fergana Challenger, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as alternates:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 73], "content_span": [74, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289388-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289388-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Fergana Challenger, Women's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 75], "content_span": [76, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289389-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fergana Challenger \u2013 Men's Doubles\nIvan Gakhov and Alexander Pavlioutchenkov were the defending champions but chose to participate with different partners. Gakhov partnered John Paul Fruttero but lost in the quarterfinals to Andr\u00e9s Artu\u00f1edo and Emil Ruusuvuori. Pavlioutchenkov partnered Pavel Kotov but lost in the first round to Arjun Kadhe and Vijay Sundar Prashanth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289389-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fergana Challenger \u2013 Men's Doubles\nEvan King and Hunter Reese won the title after defeating Nikola \u010ca\u010di\u0107 and Yang Tsung-hua 6\u20133, 5\u20137, [10\u20134] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289390-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fergana Challenger \u2013 Men's Singles\nNikola Milojevi\u0107 was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289390-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fergana Challenger \u2013 Men's Singles\nEmil Ruusuvuori won the title after defeating Roberto Cid Subervi 6\u20133, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289391-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fermanagh Senior Football Championship\nThe 2019 Fermanagh Senior Football Championship was the 113th edition of the Fermanagh GAA's premier club Gaelic football tournament for senior clubs in County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland. The tournament consists of eight teams, with the winner representing Fermanagh in the Ulster Senior Club Football Championship. The championship had a straight knock-out format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289391-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fermanagh Senior Football Championship\nDerrygonnelly Harps were the defending champions for the fourth year running after they defeated Ederney St. Josephs's in the previous years final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289391-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Fermanagh Senior Football Championship\nThis season marked Belnaleck's return to the senior grade after claiming the 2018 I.F.C. (they also became the first side in Fermanagh football history to earn promotion from the J.F.C. and I.F.C. in two consecutive seasons). They last played top-flight football in the 1970s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289391-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Fermanagh Senior Football Championship\nDerrygonnelly Harps successfully defended their title to claim a five-in-a-row of S.F.C. triumphs and the eighth in their history. They defeated Roslea Shamrocks in the final at Brewster Park by 0-10 to 1-3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289391-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Fermanagh Senior Football Championship\nDevenish St. Mary's were relegated back to the I.F.C. for 2020 after losing the Relegation Final to Teemore Shamrocks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289391-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Fermanagh Senior Football Championship, Team changes\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2018 championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 57], "content_span": [58, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289391-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Fermanagh Senior Football Championship, Relegation playoffs\nThe four losers of the quarter-finals playoff in this round. The two losers will be relegated to the 2020 Intermediate Football Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289392-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fermanagh and Omagh District Council election\nElections took place for Fermanagh and Omagh District Council on 2 May 2019, part of that year's local elections. 40 Councillors were elected via STV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289392-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fermanagh and Omagh District Council election\nSinn F\u00e9in emerged as the largest party with Fifteen seats, six ahead of the Ulster Unionist Party and six seats away from overall control. The Alliance Party and Cross-Community Labour Alternative both gained representation onto the council for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289392-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Fermanagh and Omagh District Council election, Results by Electoral Area, Enniskillen\n2014: 2 x UUP, 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x DUP, 1 x SDLP2019: 2 x UUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x DUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Cross-Community Labour Alternative2014-2019 Change: Cross-Community Labour Alternative gain one seat from Sinn F\u00e9in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 90], "content_span": [91, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289392-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Fermanagh and Omagh District Council election, Results by Electoral Area, Erne East\n2014: 3 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x SDLP2019: 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Independent2014-2019 Change: Independent gain one seat from Sinn F\u00e9in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 88], "content_span": [89, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289392-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Fermanagh and Omagh District Council election, Results by Electoral Area, Erne North\n2014: 2 x UUP, 1 x DUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP2019: 2 x UUP, 1 x DUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP2014-2019 Change: No change", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 89], "content_span": [90, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289392-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Fermanagh and Omagh District Council election, Results by Electoral Area, Erne West\n2014: 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP, 1 x UUP, 1 x Independent2019: 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP, 1 x UUP, 1 x Independent2014-2019 Change: No change", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 88], "content_span": [89, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289392-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Fermanagh and Omagh District Council election, Results by Electoral Area, Mid Tyrone\n2014: 4 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x UUP, 1 x SDLP2019: 4 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x UUP, 1 x Independent2014-2019 Change: Independent gain one seat from SDLP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 89], "content_span": [90, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289392-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Fermanagh and Omagh District Council election, Results by Electoral Area, Omagh\n2014: 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 2 x SDLP, 1 x DUP, 1 x UUP2019: 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x Independent2014-2019 Change: Alliance and Independent gain one seat each from SDLP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 84], "content_span": [85, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289392-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Fermanagh and Omagh District Council election, Results by Electoral Area, West Tyrone\n2014: 3 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x SDLP2019: 3 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x SDLP2014-2019 Change: No change", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 90], "content_span": [91, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289393-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ferrari Challenge Asia-Pacific\nThe 2019 Ferrari Challenge Asia-Pacific is the 9th season of Ferrari Challenge Asia-Pacific. The season consisted of 7 rounds, starting at the Melbourne Grand Prix Circuit on March 15 and ending at the Mugello Circuit on October 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289393-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ferrari Challenge Asia-Pacific, Entry list\nAll teams and drivers used the Ferrari 488 Challenge fitted with Pirelli tyres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289393-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Ferrari Challenge Asia-Pacific, Results and standings, Championship standings\nPoints were awarded to the top ten classified finishers as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 82], "content_span": [83, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289394-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ferrari Challenge Europe\nThe 2019 Ferrari Challenge Europe is the 27th season of Ferrari Challenge Europe and its predecessor Ferrari Challenge Italy. The season consisted of 7 rounds, starting at the Bahrain International Circuit on February 16 and ending at the Mugello Circuit on October 26.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289394-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ferrari Challenge Europe, Entry list\nAll teams and drivers used the Ferrari 488 Challenge fitted with Pirelli tyres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289394-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Ferrari Challenge Europe, Results and standings, Championship standings\nPoints were awarded to the top ten classified finishers as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 76], "content_span": [77, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289395-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ferrari Challenge North America\nThe 2019 Ferrari Challenge North America is the 25th season of Ferrari Challenge North America. The season consisted of 7 rounds, starting at the Circuit of the Americas on March 9 and ending at the Mugello Circuit on October 26.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289395-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ferrari Challenge North America, Entry list\nAll teams and drivers used the Ferrari 488 Challenge fitted with Pirelli tyres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289395-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Ferrari Challenge North America, Results and standings, Championship standings\nPoints were awarded to the top ten classified finishers as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 83], "content_span": [84, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289396-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fiesta Bowl (December)\nThe 2019 Fiesta Bowl was a college football bowl game played on December 28, 2019 and broadcast by ESPN. It was the 49th edition of the Fiesta Bowl, and was one of the 2019\u201320 bowl games concluding the 2019 FBS football season. The Fiesta Bowl was one of two College Football Playoff semifinal games, with the winner advancing to the 2020 College Football Playoff National Championship. Sponsored by Sony Interactive Entertainment via its PlayStation brand, the game was officially known as the College Football Playoff Semifinal at the PlayStation Fiesta Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289396-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fiesta Bowl (December)\nOhio State raced to a 16\u20130 lead with 7 minutes in the first half, having three long drives to the red zone that were stopped by the Clemson defense. Clemson added two quick scores, within 1:35 of each other, to pull within 2 before halftime. The teams exchanged the lead three times throughout the second half. After Clemson scored to make it 29\u201323, Ohio State had one last chance to take the lead. Quarterback Justin Fields led his team to the Clemson 23-yard line, but a pass meant for Chris Olave was intercepted in the endzone after a miscommunication.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289396-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Fiesta Bowl (December)\nWith the loss, Ohio State fell to 0\u20134 against Clemson, which it had last played in 2016, losing 31\u20130 in a shutout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289396-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Fiesta Bowl (December), Teams\nThis was the fourth meeting between Clemson and Ohio State. The Tigers had won each of the prior three matchups, most recently the 2016 Fiesta Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289396-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Fiesta Bowl (December), Teams, Ohio State Buckeyes\nOhio State entered the game with a 13\u20130 record, after defeating Wisconsin in the Big Ten Championship Game. This was Ohio State's third College Football Playoff (CFP) semifinal game. The Buckeyes were 1\u20131 in prior CFP semifinals, their most recent appearance being a loss to Clemson in the 2016 Fiesta Bowl. Overall, Ohio State was 2\u20131 in prior CFP games, including their win over Oregon in the 2015 CFP National Championship. This was Ohio State's ninth appearance in the Fiesta Bowl; the Buckeyes are 5\u20133 in prior Fiesta Bowl games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289396-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Fiesta Bowl (December), Teams, Clemson Tigers\nClemson also entered the game with a 13\u20130 record, coming off a win over Virginia in the ACC Championship Game. This was Clemson's fifth CFP semifinal appearance. The Tigers were 3\u20131 in prior CFP semifinal games, most recently defeating Notre Dame in the 2018 Cotton Bowl. Including national championship contests, this was Clemson's eighth overall CFP game; they had a 5\u20132 record in prior CFP games, mostly recently defeating Alabama in the 2019 CFP National Championship. This was Clemson's second appearance in the Fiesta Bowl; they defeated Ohio State in the December 2016 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289397-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fiesta Bowl (January)\nThe 2019 Fiesta Bowl (January) was a college football bowl game that was played on January 1, 2019. It was the 48th edition of the Fiesta Bowl, and was one of the 2018\u201319 bowl games concluding the 2018 FBS football season. Sponsored by Sony Interactive Entertainment via its PlayStation brand, the game was officially known as the PlayStation Fiesta Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289397-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fiesta Bowl (January)\nThe LSU Tigers defeated the UCF Knights by the score of 40\u201332, snapping UCF's 25-game winning streak, the longest in the nation at the time. The Tigers dominated time of possession (44:31) and racked up 555 yards of offense. The Knights offense was held to a season-low 250 total yards, but scored a Fiesta Bowl record 93-yard interception return for a touchdown. Despite the loss, the Knights extended their NCAA Division I FBS record with their 26th consecutive game scoring 30 or more points, and the FBS-leading 32nd consecutive game forcing a turnover. It was LSU's 26th bowl victory, and first Fiesta Bowl victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289397-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Fiesta Bowl (January)\nIn a game that was described as \"chippy\", three players were ejected in the first half alone, two for LSU and one for UCF. Tigers defensive back Terrence Alexander was ejected for throwing a punch, while safety Grant Delpit was ejected for targeting. Knights defender Kyle Gibson was ejected for targeting, while linebacker Nate Evans and defensive lineman Randy Charlton each committed costly unsportsmanlike conduct penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289397-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Fiesta Bowl (January)\nWith the two participating schools both from the southeast, the announced attendance for the game was 57,246, the lowest since 1979.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289397-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Fiesta Bowl (January), Teams\nThe game featured LSU of the Southeastern Conference (SEC) and UCF of the American Athletic Conference (The American). This was the first meeting between the two programs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289397-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Fiesta Bowl (January), Teams, LSU Tigers\nLSU accepted a bid to the Fiesta Bowl on December 2. The Tigers entered the bowl with a 9\u20133 record (5\u20133 in conference). It would be their first appearance in the Fiesta Bowl, and mark their nineteenth consecutive season playing in a postseason bowl game. LSU entered the game depleted, however, as a number of players would sit out due to various reasons. They were also coming off an exhausting 7-OT loss against Texas A&M. Cornerback Greedy Williams and nose tackle Ed Alexander elected to skip the game to prepare for the NFL Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289397-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Fiesta Bowl (January), Teams, LSU Tigers\nKristian Fulton and Breiden Fehoko both were out due to injuries, while Jacob Phillips was required to sit out the first half due a targeting penalty in their previous game. Three additional players did not make the trip, Kelvin Joseph and Dare Rosenthal, suspended for violating team rules, and Travez Moore for \"personal issues.\" Despite being involved in a fatal shooting days earlier, Clyde Edwards-Helaire and Jared Small were available to play, as was Kary Vincent, mourning the recent loss of a family member.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289397-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Fiesta Bowl (January), Teams, UCF Knights\nUCF defeated Memphis in the AAC Championship Game on December 1, then accepted a bid to the Fiesta Bowl on December 2. The Knights entered the bowl with a 12\u20130 record (8\u20130 in conference), riding an overall 25-game winning streak dating back to the start of the 2017 season. It would be the second appearance by the Knights in the Fiesta Bowl, as they defeated Baylor 52\u201342 in the 2014 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289397-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Fiesta Bowl (January), Teams, UCF Knights\nThe biggest story entering the game was the loss of starting quarterback McKenzie Milton. During the second quarter against rival South Florida, Milton suffered a devastating leg injury, sidelining him for rest of the season. He would neve play another down for the Knights. Freshman Darriel Mack Jr. took over at quarterback, and led the team to victory in that game, and to a comeback victory against Memphis in the conference championship game. The Fiesta Bowl would be only Mack's third career start.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289397-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Fiesta Bowl (January), Game summary, First quarter\nLSU won the coin toss and elected to receive. Clyde Edwards-Helaire took the opening kickoff back 77 yards all the way to the UCF 16 yard line. The Knights defense, however, stiffened, and kept the Tigers out of the endzone. Cole Tracy kicked a 24-yard field goal for the first points of the game. On their first drive, Darriel Mack Jr. led the Knights on a 6-play, 69-yard drive. A 25-yard touchdown run by Greg McCrae put the Knights up 7\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289397-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Fiesta Bowl (January), Game summary, First quarter\nLSU drove to the Knights 15 yard line, but quarterback Joe Burrow was intercepted by Brandon Moore at the 7 yard line. Moore ran the ball back 93 yards for the touchdown (a Fiesta Bowl record), and a 14\u20133 Knights lead. During the return, defensive lineman Joey Connors made a legal blindside block on Burrow, sending him to the ground, but he was able to recover. Nate Evans drew a penalty, however, for taunting Burrow after the play, and it was assessed on the kickoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289397-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Fiesta Bowl (January), Game summary, First quarter\nOn the next drive, LSU faced a 3rd down & 12 at the UCF 41 yard line. Kyle Gibson sacked Burrow for a 6-yard loss. Randy Charlton was able to wrestle the ball away from Burrow, but not before Burrow was whistled down. Charlton was subsequently flagged for an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty after spiking the ball. The penalty proved costly as it gave LSU new life, and was a turning point in the game. The Tigers were awarded 15 yards and a first down. Six plays later they were in the endzone for their first touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289397-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Fiesta Bowl (January), Game summary, First quarter\nDriving across midfield in the closing seconds of the first quarter, quarterback Darriel Mack Jr. was tackled on a run, and fumbled the ball, and LSU recovered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289397-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Fiesta Bowl (January), Game summary, Second quarter\nLSU scored touchdowns on their first two possessions of the second quarter, erasing the deficit, and pulling out to a 24\u201314 lead. Meanwhile, the Knights went three-and-out twice, and also turned the ball over on downs in Tigers territory. With under two minutes left before halftime, LSU pinned UCF back at their own 5 yard line. Mack led the Knights on a 10-play, 95-yard drive, capped off by a much-needed score. Facing a 3rd down & 14 at the LSU 32 yard line, Mack threw a touchdown pass to Gabriel Davis at the back of the endzone with 4 seconds left. At halftime, LSU led 24\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289397-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Fiesta Bowl (January), Game summary, Third quarter\nUCF got the ball to start the second half, but went three-and-out on their first three drives. LSU scored a 32-yard touchdown from Joe Burrow to Ja'Marr Chase, and also kicked a field goal to go up 34\u201321. With 3:56 left in the third quarter, Mack Loudermilk's punt was muffed by Tigers return man Justin Jefferson, and UCF recovered at the 20 yard line. The Knights had to settle for a field goal, however, and kicker Matthew Wright trimmed the score to 34\u201324.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289397-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Fiesta Bowl (January), Game summary, Fourth quarter\nLSU tacked on two more field goals in the fourth quarter, and stretched their lead to 40\u201324. With just over four minutes remaining in regulation, the Knights went on a swift 75-yard scoring drive. A 2-yard touchdown run by Taj McGowan, followed by a two-point conversion, made the score 40\u201332 with 2:24 remaining. The Knights attempted an onside kick, but failed to recover. The Knights defense forced a three-and-out, and got one last possession with 35 seconds to go. With 20 seconds left, Mack's pass attempt deflected off of players, and was intercepted by JaCoby Stevens to seal the win for LSU, ending UCF's bid to go undefeated in consecutive seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289398-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fiji Battle of the Giants\nThe 2019 Battle of the Giants is the 41st season of Battle of the Giants a football competition held every year, under the auspices of the Fiji Football Association in which the top district teams take part.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289398-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fiji Battle of the Giants\nThe competition, which started in 1978, was due to the foresight of J.D. Maharaj, who saw it as a way of earning money for cash starved football associations in Fiji. This was the first time that a football competition in Fiji was sponsored by businesses. The competition has been held every year except 1987, when restrictions placed by the military government on organised competitions on Sunday led to all soccer competitions in Fiji being abandoned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289398-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Fiji Battle of the Giants, Teams\nThe 8 teams from 2019 Fiji Premier League play the Battle of The Giants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289398-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Fiji Battle of the Giants, Group Stage\nThe 8 teams were split in two groups with four teams each. The top two advanced to semifinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289399-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fiji Premier League\nThe 2019 Fiji Premier League was the 43rd season of the Fiji Premier League (Vodafone Premier League for sponsorship reasons), the top-tier football league in Fiji organized by the Fiji Football Association since its establishment in 1977. It started on 19 January 2019. Lautoka are the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289400-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Finali Mondiali\nThe 2019 Finali Mondiali was the 2019 edition of the season-ending event for all Ferrari Challenge championships. Held at the Mugello Circuit in Italy for the first time since 2017, the event saw drivers from the Asia-Pacific, European and North American championships take part.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289400-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Finali Mondiali\nTwo of the four reigning champions returned \u2013 with Trofeo Pirelli Pro and Coppa Shell Pro-Am champions Nicklas Nielsen and Christophe Hurni moved onto other championships. 2018 Trofeo Pirelli Pro-Am champion Fabienne Wohlwend moved into the Pro class, leaving just Coppa Shell Am champion Ingvar Mattsson to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289401-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FineMark Women's Pro Tennis Championship\nThe 2019 FineMark Women's Pro Tennis Championship was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Bonita Springs, Florida, United States between 6 and 12 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289401-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FineMark Women's Pro Tennis Championship, 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-00289402-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FineMark Women's Pro Tennis Championship \u2013 Doubles\nAlexa Guarachi and Erin Routliffe won the title after defeating Usue Maitane Arconada and Caroline Dolehide 6\u20133, 7\u20136(7\u20135) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289403-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FineMark Women's Pro Tennis Championship \u2013 Singles\nLauren Davis won the title after defeating Ann Li 7\u20135, 7\u20135 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289404-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fingal County Council election\nA Fingal County Council election was held in Fingal in Ireland on 24 May 2019 as part of that year's local elections. All 40 councillors were elected for a five-year term of office from 7 local electoral areas (LEAs) by single transferable vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289404-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fingal County Council election\nFollowing a recommendation of the 2018 Boundary Committee, the boundaries of the LEAs were altered from those used in the 2014 elections. Its terms of reference required no change in the total number of councillors but set a lower maximum LEA size of seven councillors, breached by four of Fingal's five 2014 LEAs. Other changes were necessitated by population shifts revealed by the 2016 census.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289404-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Fingal County Council election\nFianna F\u00e1il emerged as the largest party with 8 seats a net gain on 1 seat. The party won 2 seats in each of Swords and Rush-Lusk. Following boundary changes with Brian Dennehy having transferred to Rush-Lusk the party emerged seatless in Balbriggan, however. Fine Gael also increased their seat numbers by 1 to 7 but failed to win a seat in Swords for another election as well as Rush-Lusk. Labour gained 2 seats to return with 6 seats in total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289404-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Fingal County Council election\nThe Green Party gained 3 seats in Balbriggan, Ongar and Swords to increase their numbers to 5. Cian O'Callaghan and Paul Mulville had joined the Social Democrats in the years pre-election and both retained their seats. Sinn F\u00e9in lost 2 seats overall in Balbriggan and in Howth-Malahide. The party fared much better in the LEAs that make up the Dublin West constituency than Dubin Fingal and just took the last seat in Swords. Solidarity had a very poor election in a former heartland returning with just 1 seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289404-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Fingal County Council election\nThe election was also notable for the victory of Ireland'first Indian-born councillor, Punam Rane, who was elected as a Fine Gael candidate in the in Blanchardstown Mulhuddart LEA. The Green gains included a 20-year-old student: Daniel Whooley. elected in the Ongar LEA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289405-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Finnish Athletics Championships\nThe 2019 Finnish Athletics Championships (Finnish: Kalevan kisat 2019) was the year's national outdoor track and field championships for Finland. It was held on 1\u20134 August at the Kimpinen Sports Centre stadium in Lappeenranta. The walking events took place outside the stadium near Lappeenranta's harbour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289406-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Finnish Cup\nThe 2019 Finnish Cup was the 64th season of the Finnish Cup football competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289406-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Finnish Cup\nUntil the 2017\u20132018 season, the tournament was held in the autumn-spring schedule from July to September of the following year. The introduction of this new format of the contest meant that the League Cup was suspended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289406-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Finnish Cup\nThe winner of the Finnish Cup qualifies for the 2020\u201321 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289406-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Finnish Cup, Group Stage\nThe teams participating in the Group Stage were the teams of Veikkausliiga (12), Ykk\u00f6nen (10) and Kakkonen (25). The group stage was played between January and March 2019 with teams divided into 12 divisional groups, two groups with Veikkausliiga and Ykk\u00f6nen teams, and 8 groups with Kakkonen teams. The four best teams of the Veikkausliiga A and B groups, the first two teams of the Ykk\u00f6nen A and B teams, and the winners of Kakkonen groups continued in the eighth finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289407-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Finnish parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Finland on 14 April 2019. For the first time, no party received more than 20% of the vote. The Centre Party, which had been the largest party following the 2015 elections lost 18 seats as it recorded its lowest vote share since 1917 and dropped to fourth place, with the Social Democratic Party seeing the biggest gains, winning an additional six seats and narrowly becoming the largest party for the first time since 1999. The Green League and the Left Alliance also gained five and four seats respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289407-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Finnish parliamentary election\nThe Finns Party and the National Coalition Party also gained one seat each, with the Finns Party recovering the seats it had lost in the previous parliament when 21 of its MPs left to form Blue Reform, which failed to win a seat. The Swedish People's Party and the Christian Democrats retained all of their seats that they had won in the previous elections. The \u00c5land Coalition retained their seat in the \u00c5land Islands, whilst Harry Harkimo, a former National Coalition MP who founded Movement Now twelve months earlier, was reelected in his constituency, thus giving his own movement its first elected MP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289407-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Finnish parliamentary election\nSocial Democratic Party leader Antti Rinne subsequently formed a coalition government with the Centre Party, Green League, Left Alliance and Swedish People's Party. Due to the Centre Party's devastating defeat, Prime Minister Juha Sipil\u00e4 consequently announced that he would continue as the chairman only until the party's next convention in September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289407-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Finnish parliamentary election, Background\nThe incumbent government was formed by a three party center-right coalition, composed of the Centre Party, Finns Party and National Coalition Party. On 28 May 2015, the parliament elected Juha Sipil\u00e4 as prime minister by a vote of 128\u201362.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289407-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Finnish parliamentary election, Background, 2017 government crisis\nOn 10 June 2017, the Finns Party elected Jussi Halla-aho as the new leader of the party, after the long-time leader Timo Soini had decided to step down. Following the talks among the three coalition leaders, Sipil\u00e4 and Minister of Finance Petteri Orpo announced that they would no longer cooperate in a coalition government with the Finns Party. The collapse of government was averted on 13 June when twenty MPs defected from the Finns Party's parliamentary group, forming what would eventually become the Blue Reform party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289407-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Finnish parliamentary election, Background, 2017 government crisis\nOne MP (Kike Elomaa) later returned to the Finns Party and another (Kaj Turunen) defected to National Coalition Party, leaving the Blue Reform with 18 and Finns Party with 17 MPs. Veera Ruoho furthermore defected to the National Coalition. Sipil\u00e4's government retained a majority in the Parliament as the Blue Reform continued as a member of the coalition and the Finns Party was moved to the opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289407-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Finnish parliamentary election, Background, 2017 government crisis\nOn 8 March 2019, prime minister Sipil\u00e4 resigned. However, that same day president Sauli Niinist\u00f6 reappointed him as head of a caretaker government. According to Sipil\u00e4, his government collapsed because of the failure to reach agreement on the controversial health care reform. But several Finnish political analysts (Thomas Karv, Teivo Teivainen) interpreted his resignation as a strategic move that could give the coalition parties, Sipil\u00e4's Centre Party in particular, more freedom during the election campaign. Thus, the Centre Party might be able to revive itself in the polls, in which the party was lagging behind the Social Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289407-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Finnish parliamentary election, Campaign\nAfter the Oulu child sexual exploitation scandal, support for the anti-immigration Finns Party surged from around 8.5% to 9% in late 2018 to 17.5% by the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289407-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Finnish parliamentary election, Campaign\nThe Social Democrats proposed raising taxes to fund the country's generous welfare system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289407-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Finnish parliamentary election, Campaign\nThe election saw \"an unusual level of aggression on the campaign trail\" considering \"attacks on politicians are rare in Finland\". In late March, a man struck Left Alliance candidate Suldaan Said Ahmed in the chest while calling him an infidel and pedophile a day after a man wearing logos of far-right anti-immigrant group Soldiers of Odin attempted to attack Foreign Minister Timo Soini of the Blue Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289407-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Finnish parliamentary election, Electoral system\nThe 200 members of the Eduskunta were elected using proportional representation in 13 multi-member constituencies, with seats allocated according to the D'Hondt method. The number of elected representatives is proportional to the population in the district six months prior to the elections. \u00c5land has single member electoral district and its own party system. Compared to the previous election in 2015, one seat was reallocated from Savonia-Karelia to Uusimaa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289407-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Finnish parliamentary election, Government formation\nDuring election debates, the Social Democrats, the National Coalition Party, Green League, Left Alliance, and the Swedish People's Party stated that they were interested in joining a coalition that does not include the Finns Party. Despite being ruled-out by five parties, Finns Party chairman Jussi Halla-aho said that all parties should show responsibility when forming a coalition. He said the most responsible way to form a coalition is to include the Finns Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289407-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Finnish parliamentary election, Government formation\nTwo weeks later, SDP chairman Antti Rinne, who was expected to lead the government, sent a questionnaire to each of the other parties, to assess their positions on various topics such as basic income, collective bargaining, climate change or health care reform. Based on the answers and initial talks with all parties, Rinne announced that he would negotiate forming a government with Centre Party, Green League, Left Alliance and Swedish People's Party. The negotiations were ultimately successful, and the Rinne Cabinet was formally inaugurated on 6 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289408-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 FireKeepers Casino 400\nThe 2019 FireKeepers Casino 400 was a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race scheduled for June 9, 2019 at Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn, Michigan. Contested over 203 laps\u2014extended from 200 laps due to an overtime finish, on the two-mile (3.2\u00a0km) D-shaped oval, it was the 15th race of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season. The race was postponed to Monday, June 10, due to rain. Joey Logano won his second race of the season in his championship defense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289408-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 FireKeepers Casino 400, Report, Background\nThe race was held at Michigan International Speedway, a two-mile (3.2\u00a0km) moderate-banked D-shaped speedway located in Brooklyn, Michigan. The track is used primarily for NASCAR events. It is sometimes known as a \"sister track\" to Texas World Speedway, and was used as the basis of Auto Club Speedway. The track is owned by International Speedway Corporation. Michigan International Speedway is recognized as one of Motorsports premier facilities because of its wide racing surface and high banking (by open-wheel standards; the 18-degree banking is modest by stock car standards).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289408-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 FireKeepers Casino 400, Practice, First practice\nDaniel Su\u00e1rez was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 38.119 seconds and a speed of 188.882\u00a0mph (303.976\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289408-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 FireKeepers Casino 400, Practice, Final practice\nKevin Harvick was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 38.143 seconds and a speed of 188.763\u00a0mph (303.785\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289408-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 FireKeepers Casino 400, Qualifying\nJoey Logano scored the pole for the race with a time of 38.474 and a speed of 187.139\u00a0mph (301.171\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289408-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 FireKeepers Casino 400, Media, Television\nFox NASCAR televised the race in the United States on FS1 for the fourth time at Michigan. Mike Joy was the lap-by-lap announcer, while three-time Michigan winner, Jeff Gordon and two-time winner Darrell Waltrip were the color commentators. Jamie Little, Regan Smith and Matt Yocum reported from pit lane during the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289408-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 FireKeepers Casino 400, Media, Radio\nRadio coverage of the race was broadcast by Motor Racing Network (MRN) and simulcasted on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio. Alex Hayden, Jeff Striegle and five-time Michigan winner Rusty Wallace announced the race in the booth while the field is racing on the front stretch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289408-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 FireKeepers Casino 400, Media, Radio\nDave Moody called the race from a billboard outside of turn 2 when the field was racing through turns 1 and 2. Mike Bagley called the race from a platform outside of turn 3 when the field was racing through turns 3 and 4. Kim Coon, Steve Post, Pete Pistone and Dillon Welch reported from pit lane during the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289409-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Firenze Tennis Cup\nThe 2019 Firenze Tennis Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the second edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Florence, Italy between 23 and 29 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289409-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Firenze 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-00289409-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Firenze Tennis Cup, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw using a protected ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289410-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Firenze Tennis Cup \u2013 Doubles\nRameez Junaid and David Pel were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289410-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Firenze Tennis Cup \u2013 Doubles\nLuca Margaroli and Adil Shamasdin won the title after defeating Gerard Granollers and Pedro Mart\u00ednez 7\u20135, 6\u20137(6\u20138), [14\u201312] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289411-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Firenze Tennis Cup \u2013 Singles\nPablo And\u00fajar was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289411-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Firenze Tennis Cup \u2013 Singles\nMarco Trungelliti won the title after defeating Pedro Sousa 6\u20132, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289412-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg\nThe 2019 Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg was the 1st round of the 2019 IndyCar season. The race was held on March 10, 2019, in St. Petersburg, Florida. Will Power qualified on pole position, while Josef Newgarden took victory in the 110-lap race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289412-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, Results, Race\nNotes: Points 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, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289413-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 First Data 500\nThe 2019 First Data 500 was a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race held on October 27, 2019, at Martinsville Speedway in Ridgeway, Virginia. Contested over 500 laps on the .526 mile (.847\u00a0km) short track (extended from 500 laps), it was the 33rd race of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season, seventh race of the Playoffs, and first race of the Round of 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289413-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 First Data 500, Report, Background\nMartinsville Speedway is an International Speedway Corporation-owned NASCAR stock car racing track located in Henry County, in Ridgeway, Virginia, just to the south of Martinsville. At 0.526 miles (0.847\u00a0km) in length, it is the shortest track in the NASCAR Monster Energy Cup Series. The track is also one of the first paved oval tracks in NASCAR, being built in 1947 by H. Clay Earles. It is also the only race track that has been on the NASCAR circuit from its beginning in 1948. Along with this, Martinsville is the only NASCAR oval track on the entire NASCAR track circuit to have asphalt surfaces on the straightaways, then concrete to cover the turns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289413-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 First Data 500, Practice, First practice\nJoey Logano was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 19.591 seconds and a speed of 96.657\u00a0mph (155.554\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 45], "content_span": [46, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289413-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 First Data 500, Practice, Final practice\nBrad Keselowski was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 19.667 seconds and a speed of 96.283\u00a0mph (154.952\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 45], "content_span": [46, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289413-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 First Data 500, Qualifying\nDenny Hamlin scored the pole for the race with a time of 19.354 and a speed of 97.840\u00a0mph (157.458\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289413-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 First Data 500, Media, Television\nNBC Sports covered the race on the television side. Rick Allen, 1997 race winner Jeff Burton, Steve Letarte and 2014 race winner Dale Earnhardt Jr. had the call in the booth for the race. Parker Kligerman, Marty Snider and Kelli Stavast reported from pit lane during the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289413-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 First Data 500, Media, Radio\nMRN covered the radio call for the race, which was simulcast on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio. Alex Hayden, Jeff Striegle, and 7 time Martinsville winner Rusty Wallace had the call for MRN when the field raced down the front straightaway. Dave Moody covered the action for MRN when the field raced down the backstraightway into turn 3. Winston Kelley, Steve Post, Kim Coon, and Dillon Welch had the call for MRN from pit lane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289414-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 First Responder Bowl\nThe 2019 First Responder Bowl was a college football bowl game played December 30, 2019, with kickoff at 12:30\u00a0p.m. EST (11:30\u00a0a.m. local CDT) on ESPN. It was the 10th edition of the First Responder Bowl (although only the ninth to be played, as the 2018 edition of the game was declared a no contest while the game was in the first quarter), and was one of the 2019\u201320 bowl games concluding the 2019 FBS football season. Sponsored by fire and water cleanup and restoration company Servpro, the game was officially known as the Servpro First Responder Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289414-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 First Responder Bowl\nThe 2019 First Responder Bowl was played in Gerald J. Ford Stadium on the campus of Southern Methodist University in University Park, Texas. The move was necessitated by the National Hockey League's announcement that the league's annual New Year's Day outdoor game would be played in the bowl's normal host stadium, Dallas' Cotton Bowl, which created a scheduling conflict. Ford Stadium previously hosted two editions of the Armed Forces Bowl due to construction at its host stadium, Amon G. Carter Stadium in Fort Worth, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289414-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 First Responder Bowl, Teams\nThe game featured the Western Kentucky Hilltoppers of Conference USA (C-USA) and the Western Michigan Broncos of the Mid-American Conference (MAC). This was the 16th meeting between the two programs, and the first since 1947; Western Michigan led the all-time series, 11\u20133\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289414-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 First Responder Bowl, Teams, Western Kentucky Hilltoppers\nWestern Kentucky entered the game with an 8\u20134 record (6\u20132 in conference). The Hilltoppers finished tied for second place with Marshall in the East Division of C-USA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 62], "content_span": [63, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289414-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 First Responder Bowl, Teams, Western Michigan Broncos\nWestern Michigan entered the game with a 7\u20135 record (5\u20133 in conference). The Broncos finished in second place of the West Division of the MAC. Each of their five losses during the regular season were away games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289415-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fitzgibbon Cup\nThe 2019 Fitzgibbon Cup was the 103rd staging of the Fitzgibbon Cup since its establishment by the Gaelic Athletic Association in 1912. It was sponsored by Electric Ireland, and known as the Electric Ireland HE GAA Fitzgibbon Cup for sponsorship purposes. The draw for the group stage fixtures took place on 5 December 2018. It started with the group stage on 20 January 2019 and is scheduled to end on 23 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289415-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fitzgibbon Cup\nThe University of Limerick were the defending champions, however, they failed to make it out of the \"group of death\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289415-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Fitzgibbon Cup\nOn 23 February 2019, University College Cork won the Fitzgibbon Cup after a 2-21 to 0-13 defeat of Mary Immaculate College in the final. This was their 39th cup title overall and their first title since 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289415-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Fitzgibbon Cup\nNUI Galway's Evan Niland was the Fitzgibbon Cup top scorer with 0-54.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289416-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida A&M Rattlers football team\nThe 2019 Florida A&M Rattlers football team represented Florida A&M University as member of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC) during the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Rattlers were led by second-year head coach Willie Simmons and played their home games at Bragg Memorial Stadium. Florida A&M finished the year 9\u20132 overall and 7\u20131 in MEAC play to post with the best record in the MEAC and across all HBCU schools. However, in May 2019, Florida A&M had been banned from 2019 postseason play, so could not compete in the Celebration Bowl or for a MEAC championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289416-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida A&M Rattlers football team, Previous season\nThe Rattlers finished the 2018 season 6\u20135, 5\u20132 in MEAC play to finish in a tie for second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289416-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida A&M Rattlers football team, Preseason, MEAC poll\nIn the MEAC preseason poll released on July 26, 2019, the Rattlers were predicted to finish in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289416-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida A&M Rattlers football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013MEAC teams\nThe Rattlers had eleven players selected to the preseason all-MEAC teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 76], "content_span": [77, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289417-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Atlantic Owls football team\nThe 2019 Florida Atlantic Owls football team represented Florida Atlantic University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Owls played their home games at FAU Stadium in Boca Raton, Florida, and competed in the East Division of Conference USA (CUSA). They were led by head coach Lane Kiffin, and interim head coach Glenn Spencer for their bowl game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289417-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Atlantic Owls football team, Preseason, CUSA media poll\nConference USA released their preseason media poll on July 16, 2019, with the Owls predicted to finish in third place in the East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289417-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Atlantic Owls football team, Schedule\nFlorida Atlantic announced its 2019 football schedule on January 10, 2019. The 2019 schedule consists of 6 home and away games in the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289418-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Cup\nThe 2019 Florida Cup was the fifth edition of Florida Cup, a friendly association football tournament played in the United States. The competition is partnered with Universal Orlando Resort.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289419-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Gators baseball team\nThe 2019 Florida Gators baseball team represented the University of Florida in the sport of baseball during the 2019 college baseball season. Florida competed in the Eastern Division of the Southeastern Conference (SEC). Home games were played at Alfred A. McKethan Stadium on the university's Gainesville, Florida campus. The team was coached by Kevin O'Sullivan in his twelfth season as Florida's head coach. The Gators entered the season as the defending conference champions, reaching the national semifinals in the 2018 College World Series before being eliminated by Arkansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289419-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Gators baseball team, Preseason, SEC media poll\nThe SEC media poll was released on February 7, 2019 with the Gators predicted to finish in second place in the Eastern Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289419-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Gators baseball team, Schedule\nRankings from D1Baseball. All times Eastern. Parentheses indicate tournament seedings. Retrieved from", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289419-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289420-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Gators football team\nThe 2019 Florida Gators football team represented the University of Florida in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Gators played their home games at Ben Hill Griffin Stadium in Gainesville, Florida, and competed in the Eastern Division of the Southeastern Conference (SEC). They were led by second-year head coach Dan Mullen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289420-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Gators football team\nComing off a 10-win season that ended in a victory in the Peach Bowl in Mullen's first year, Florida began the 2019 season ranked eighth in the preseason AP Poll. They opened the schedule by rekindling their rivalry with Miami in a game played in Orlando, winning 24\u201320. The Gators won their first six games, including a win over then-No. 7 Auburn, before falling on the road to then-No. 5 LSU. Three weeks later, they fell again to Georgia in Jacksonville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289420-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Florida Gators football team\nFlorida ended the regular season in second in the East Division behind Georgia at 10\u20132 (6\u20132 SEC), and were invited to the Orange Bowl to play ACC runner-up Virginia. The Gators won the bowl game, 36\u201328, to end the season with 11 wins, and were ranked sixth in the final AP Poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289420-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Gators football team\nFeleipe Franks began the year as the Gators' starting quarterback, but he suffered a season-ending ankle injury in the third game of the season against Kentucky. He was replaced by Kyle Trask, who finished the year with 2,941 yards and 25 touchdowns, and had the conference's second best passer rating (156.1). Tight end Kyle Pitts was named first-team all-conference. Florida's defense ranked second in the SEC in points and yards allowed, and was led by first-team all-conference defensive end Jonathan Greenard, who led the conference in sacks (10) and tackles for loss (16). Cornerback C. J. Henderson was also named first-team all-conference by the coaches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289420-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Gators football team, Preseason, Recruits\nThe Gators signed a total of 25 recruits in the 2019 recruiting class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289420-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Gators football team, Preseason, SEC Media Days\nThe 2019 SEC Media Days were held July 15\u201318 in Birmingham, Alabama. In the preseason media poll, Florida was projected to finish in second behind Georgia in the East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289420-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Gators football team, Preseason, Preseason All-SEC teams\nThe Gators had seven players selected to the preseason all-SEC teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289420-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Gators football team, Schedule\nFlorida announced its 2019 football schedule on September 18, 2018. The 2019 schedule consists of 6 home, 4 away, and 2 neutral games in the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289420-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Gators football team, Game summaries, vs. Georgia\nAfter its road victory against South Carolina, Florida faced Georgia in the 97th iteration of their rivalry game, played at the neutral site TIAA Bank Field in Jacksonville. Georgia won 24\u201317 to extend its series winning streak to three games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289420-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Gators football team, Game summaries, vs. Georgia\nGeorgia won the opening coin toss and elected to defer to the second half. On the opening drive, Florida converted a third down, but Georgia took over at their own 40-yard line after an incomplete pass by Kyle Trask on fourth and inches. On their sixteen-play drive, Georgia made four third down conversions and scored first with a field goal by Rodrigo Blankenship. The next Florida drive was a three-and-out, with Trask being sacked once, but Georgia's next drive was stopped by the Florida defense and they were forced to punt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289420-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Florida Gators football team, Game summaries, vs. Georgia\nAfter another three-and-out by Florida, Georgia marched down the field with three third down conversions, ending their drive with a touchdown pass from Jake Fromm to Dominick Blaylock to bring the score to 10\u20130 with under five minutes left in the first half. Florida answered with an Evan McPherson field goal, but this was negated by another Blankenship field goal near the end of the half, bringing the score to 13\u20133 in favor of Georgia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289420-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Gators football team, Game summaries, vs. Georgia\nTo open the second half, Georgia made a nine-play drive that included a one-handed catch by Brian Herrien of a pass from Fromm, capping it with Blankenship's third field goal of the game to extend their lead to 13 points. Both teams punted on their next drives, but Florida rallied with a nine-play drive that resulted in their first touchdown, made by Van Jefferson off a 23-yard pass by Trask.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289420-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Florida Gators football team, Game summaries, vs. Georgia\nThis narrowed the score differential to a touchdown with just under fourteen minutes left in the game, but on the next drive Georgia pulled away when Lawrence Cager completed a 52-yard pass from Jake Fromm for a touchdown. Together with a successful 2-point attempt, also from Fromm to Cager, this extended the Georgia lead to fourteen points. A 75-yard Florida drive ended with a Trask 2-yard touchdown pass to Freddie Swain with just over three minutes remaining in the game. Returning Florida's punt to their own 32-yard line, Georgia ran out the clock to seal their victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289420-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Gators football team, Game summaries, vs. Georgia\nAfter the game, Florida dropped from sixth to tenth in the AP Top 25, while Georgia rose by two spots. Their victory gave Georgia uncontested first place in the SEC East, with now two-loss Florida in second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289421-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Mayhem season\nThe 2019 Florida Mayhem season was the second season of the Florida Mayhem's existence in the Overwatch League and the team's second season under head coach Vytis \"Mineral\" Lasaitis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289421-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Mayhem season\nThe Mayhem looked to improve from their 2018 campaign, when they only amassed seven wins. After finishing Stage 1 with only one win, the Mayhem announced their intention to implement an all-Korean team and fired two coaches, including head coach Mineral. The team's struggles continued in Stage 2, as they did not win a single match. Prior to Stage 3, the Mayhem's all-Korean overhaul continued, as they made several roster changes. Florida hired Oh \"Unread\" Nam-hun amidst a one-win Stage 3 as the team's new head coach. The Mayhem found success in Stage 4, when the league implemented a 2-2-2 role lock, as they were able to win four of their final five matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289421-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Mayhem season, Preceding offseason, Player re-signings\nFrom August 1 to September 9, 2018, all Overwatch League teams that competed in the 2018 season could choose to extend their team's players' contracts. After a disappointing season, Mayhem retained three of their nine players, releasing Andreas \"Logix\" Berghmans, Tim \"Manneten\" Bylund, Johan \"CWoosH\" Klingestedt, Sebastian \"Zebbosai\" Olsson, Aleksi \"Zuppeh\" Kuntsi, and Joonas \"zappis\" Alakurtti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 67], "content_span": [68, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289421-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Mayhem season, Preceding offseason, Free agency\nAll non-expansion teams could not enter the free agency period until October 8; they were able to sign members from their respective academy team and make trades until then. On September 11, when Mayhem acquired Koo \"xepheR\" Jae-mo from Seoul Dynasty. Mayhem promoted HyeonWoo \"HaGoPeun\" Jo and Damon \"Apply\" Conti from Mayhem Academy on September 21 and 24, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289421-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Mayhem season, Preceding offseason, Free agency\nFlorida made three free agency signings on October 15, signing Junsu \"Kris\" Choe, Sangbum \"bqb\" Lee, and Sangwon \"SWoN\" Yoon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289421-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Mayhem season, Regular season, Stage 1\nThe Mayhem opened their season on February 15 with a match against the Atlanta Reign. Despite some strong performances by DPS Kevyn \"TviQ\" Lindstr\u00f6m and flex tank Jae-mo \"xepheR\" Koo, Florida was swept 0\u20134 in the match. A week later, Florida took on the Philadelphia Fusion in their first match of week two. With a standout performance by Lee \"BQB\" Sang-bum on Sombra and Zarya, the Mayhem were able to edge a win over the Fusion by a score of 2\u20131. A day after the victory, Mayhem announced the signing of flex tank Caleb \"McGravy\" McGarvey. Florida's next match was against the Chengdu Hunters on February 23. After splitting the first four maps 2\u20132, the match went to a tiebreaker map; Florida was unable to win the final map of Busan, losing the match 2\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 811]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289421-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Mayhem season, Regular season, Stage 1\nThe Mayhem faced the Guangzhou Charge on February 28 in their first match of week three. The match saw the debut of McGravy, but similarly to their previous match, the team lost 2\u20133 after falling in a tiebreaker map. The team took on the Houston Outlaws two days later; the team dropped the first three maps en route to a 1\u20133 loss. Florida's lone match of week four was against the Boston Uprising on March 10. Unable to pick up a map, Florida was swept for the second time in Stage 1, losing 0\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289421-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Florida Mayhem season, Regular season, Stage 1\nThe team's final match of Stage 1 was against the winless Washington Justice on March 17. For the third time in the Mayhem's 2019 season, the match went to a fifth tiebreaker map, and for the third time, Florida was unable to win map five, falling to the Justice 2\u20133 and ending their first stage with a 1\u20136 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289421-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Mayhem season, Regular season, Stage 2\nOne day prior to their first match of Stage 2, Florida announced its plan to implement an all-Korean roster, citing that there were \"multiple issues with communication and overall team synergy, in part due to the lack of a common language among players and coaching staff.\" As such, Mayhem released head coach Vytis \"Mineral\" Lasaitis and assistant coach Jung \"Yeah\" Young-su; additionally, all non-Korean players (Kevyn \"TviQ\" Lindstr\u00f6m, Damon \"Apply\" Conti, and Caleb \"McGravy\" McGarvey) were inactive for the entirety of Stage 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289421-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Mayhem season, Regular season, Stage 2\nFlorida began Stage 2 with a match against the 2018 champions London Spitfire on April 5. After splitting the two maps and tying the third map, Florida was full-held on the fourth map Watchpoint: Gibraltar, leading to a 1\u20132 loss. A day later, the Mayhem took on the Philadelphia Fusion, who Florida defeated in their only victory of Stage 1. Despite taking the first map Oasis in convincing fashion, the Mayhem dropped the following three maps, falling to the Fusion 1\u20133. In their first match of week two, the Mayhem took on the Paris Eternal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289421-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Florida Mayhem season, Regular season, Stage 2\nFlorida struggled in the first half of the match, going 0\u20132 into halftime, but put up a stronger showing in the second half; however, they were only able to split the final two maps, losing 1\u20133. Three days later, on April 14, Florida faced the undefeated New York Excelsior. The Mayhem were unable to contain the Excelsior throughout the entirety of the match, getting swept 0\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289421-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Mayhem season, Regular season, Stage 2\nFlorida's first match of week three was against the Los Angeles Gladiators on April 18. The team was able to win the first map Busan but subsequently lost the final three to lose the match 1\u20133. Two days later, the Mayhem took on the Shanghai Dragons, the only team they placed ahead of in the 2018 season. Despite strong showings from DPS Lee \"BQB\" Sang-bum and tank Yoon \"Swon\" Seong-won, Florida was unable to secure a win, losing the match by a 1\u20133 scoreline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289421-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Florida Mayhem season, Regular season, Stage 2\nAfter a week off, the Mayhem, for their final match of Stage 2, faced the Dallas Fuel on May 2. Looking to find their first win of the stage, Florida was able to split the first two maps to head into halftime 1\u20131. However, after losing a close map three, Florida was rolled in the final map Rialto to lose 1\u20133 and end the stage without a win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289421-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Mayhem season, Regular season, Stage 3\nAfter the end of Stage 2, Mayhem made several roster moves. Mayhem traded Caleb \"Mcgravy\" McGarvy and Mayhem Academy players Russell \"FCTFCTN\" Campbell and Johannes \"Shax\" Nielsen to Los Angeles Valiant in exchange for Koo \"Fate\" Pan-seung on May 10, signed Lee \"Byrem\" Seong-ju on May 13, released Damon \"Apply\" Conti on May 29, and released Kevyn \"TviQ\" Lindstr\u00f6m and Kim \"SNT\" Sung-hoon on June 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289421-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Mayhem season, Regular season, Stage 3\nThe Mayhem opened Stage 3 with a match against the Seoul Dynasty on June 7. The match saw the debut of two of Florida's new players Fate and Byrem; however, the team was rolled by the Dynasty, getting swept 0\u20134. In their only match of week two, Florida took on the Paris Eternal on June 16. After falling 0\u20132 going into halftime, the Mayhem managed to take the third map Numbani but dropped the forth map Havana to lose the match 1\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289421-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Mayhem season, Regular season, Stage 3\nIn the following days after the Paris loss, Florida's all-Korean roster overhaul continued. The team signed support Park \"RaiN\" Jae-ho from Overwatch Contenders team O2 Blast on June 17, and two days later, they signed three players from Korean Contenders team Armament Esports: off-tank Lee \"Gargoyle\" Beom-jun, flex DPS Choi \"DPI\" Yong-joon, and main tank Choi \"Karayan\" San-ha. Additionally, the team signed three staff members: head coach Oh \"Unread\" Nam-hun, assistant coach Kim \"KH1\" Hyung-il, and analyst Daumantas \"RyuuTsubasa\" Krugliakovas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289421-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Mayhem season, Regular season, Stage 3\nIn their first match of week three, the Mayhem faced the Stage 2 champions San Francisco Shock. The match went as expected, as Florida was swept 0\u20134 for the fifth time of the season. Two days later, Florida took on the Houston Outlaws, who had just defeated the Shock two weeks prior. After dropping the first map to the Outlaws, the Mayhem were able to edge out three consecutive map victories, defeating Houston 3\u20131 to claim their second win of the season and snap their 15-game losing streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289421-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 Florida Mayhem season, Regular season, Stage 3\nLooking to carry that momentum into week four, Florida took on the Hangzhou Spark on June 29. The match saw the debut of Florida's Gargoyle and DPI, but the team was ultimately swept 0\u20134 by the Spark, who set the record for the fastest completion of Eichenwalde at 4 minutes and 12 seconds in the process. In the last week of the stage, the Mayhem headed to the Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre in Atlanta to play at the \"Atlanta Reign Homestand Weekend\". Their first match at the homestand was against the New York Excelsior on July 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289421-0013-0002", "contents": "2019 Florida Mayhem season, Regular season, Stage 3\nAfter dropping the first map, Florida was able to force a tie on map two Volskaya Industries to enter halftime down 0\u20131. The final two maps did not go the way of the Mayhem, as they dropped both and lost the match by a 0\u20133 scoreline. The next day, Florida faced the Atlanta Reign. The Mayhem were unable to close Stage 3 on a high note, as they were swept by the Reign 0\u20134 to end Stage 3 with a 1\u20136 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289421-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Mayhem season, Regular season, Stage 4\nAlthough not announced at the time, the team mutually parted ways with head coach Unread at some point in Stage 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289421-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Mayhem season, Regular season, Stage 4\nThe Mayhem's first match of Stage 4, along with the first match with an enforced 2-2-2 role lock by the League, was against the Vancouver Titans on July 28. Florida was dominated by Vancouver's DPS Kim \"Haksal\" Hyo-jong on Genji, as he amassed 27 Dragonblade kills during the match to set an Overwatch League record for most Dragonblade kills per 10 minutes, as the Titans went on to sweep the Mayhem 4\u20130. The loss marked the fourth match in a row in which Mayhem had failed to secure a map win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289421-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 Florida Mayhem season, Regular season, Stage 4\nThe following week, Florida took on the Washington Justice, who only had three wins on the season. The Mayhem jumped out to a quick 2\u20130 lead after taking the first two maps but subsequently was reverse swept and lost the match 2\u20133. Two days later, August 3, the Mayhem faced the London Spitfire. Despite being heavy underdogs, strong performances by Lee \"BQB\" Sang-bum on Mei and Ha \"Sayaplayer\" Jeong-woo on Widowmaker pushed the Mayhem to a 3\u20130 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289421-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Mayhem season, Regular season, Stage 4\nThe Mayhem's next match was against the Toronto Defiant on August 8. After dropping the first map, the Mayhem strung together three straight map wins to win 3\u20131 and claim their first back-to-back victories of season. Two days later, Florida took on the Los Angeles Valiant. Florida's DPS Ha \"Sayaplayer\" Jeong-woo broke the record for most final blows in a map at 42, but the effort was not enough, as the team lost the match 1\u20132. For their final week of the regular season, the Mayhem first took on the Boston Uprising.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289421-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 Florida Mayhem season, Regular season, Stage 4\nFlorida did not allow Boston to win a map in the series and full-held them on two of them, as they swept them, 4\u20130. The team's final match of the season was on August 18, against the Toronto Defiant. The Mayhem closed out the season on a high note, sweeping the Defiant, 4\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289421-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Mayhem season, Final roster, Transactions\nTransactions of/for players on the roster during the 2019 regular season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289421-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Mayhem season, Awards\nOn May 8, Ha \"Sayaplayer\" Jeong-Woo was named as a reserve for the 2019 Overwatch League All-Star Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289422-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida State Seminoles baseball team\nThe 2019 Florida State Seminoles baseball team represented Florida State University during the 2019 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Seminoles played their home games at Mike Martin Field at Dick Howser Stadium as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference. They were led by head coach Mike Martin, in his 40th and final season at Florida State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289423-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida State Seminoles football team\nThe 2019 Florida State Seminoles football team represented Florida State University during the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Seminoles played their home games at Doak Campbell Stadium in Tallahassee, Florida, and competed as members of the Atlantic Division in the Atlantic Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289423-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida State Seminoles football team\nFlorida State was initially led by second-year head coach Willie Taggart. On November 3, 2019, Taggart was fired after losing to Miami (FL) and falling to 4\u20135 on the season and 9\u201312 overall. Defensive line coach Odell Haggins was named interim head coach for the remainder of the season, for the second time during his tenure with the program. The Seminoles ultimately finished the season with a 6\u20137 record, completing consecutive losing seasons for the first time since the 1975 and 1976 seasons. This was the first season since 1976 that Florida State was not ranked in either of the major polls. Running back Cam Akers went on to be selected in the second round of the NFL Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289423-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida State Seminoles football team, Previous season\nFlorida State finished the 2018 season 5\u20137, 3\u20135 in ACC play, to finish in fifth place in the Atlantic Division. The Seminoles had a losing record for the first time since 1976 and missed a bowl game for the first time since 1981.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289423-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida State Seminoles football team, Preseason, Coaching changes\nIn December 2018, the school hired Kendal Briles to be the new offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach, replacing Walt Bell, who left to take the head coaching job at UMass. Briles spent the 2018 season as offensive coordinator at Houston. In January 2019, the school hired alum Ron Dugans to coach wide receivers. In February 2019, the school fired offensive line coach Greg Frey and hired Randy Clements to the same position; Briles and Clements previously worked together on the Houston staff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 71], "content_span": [72, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289423-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida State Seminoles football team, Preseason, Player news\nQuarterback Deondre Francois was dismissed from the team in February 2019 after Francois' girlfriend posted a video to Instagram which alleged domestic abuse. Francois had been the starting quarterback for the Seminoles during the 2016 and 2018 seasons (an injury sustained in the first game of 2017 sidelined him for most of that season), and was set to be the starter again as a senior.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289423-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida State Seminoles football team, Preseason, Player news\nIn March 2019, former Wisconsin quarterback Alex Hornibrook announced that he was transferring to Florida State for his final season of eligibility as an NCAA graduate transfer. In August 2019, Jordan Travis, a transfer quarterback from Louisville, was granted a waiver by the NCAA to be immediately eligible to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289423-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida State Seminoles football team, Preseason, Recruiting\nFlorida State's 2019 recruiting class consisted of 21 recruits. The class was ranked 21st in the nation and second in the ACC according to the 247Sports.com Composite. This represented the lowest-ranked class for the school since 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289423-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida State Seminoles football team, Preseason, Spring game\nThe 'Garnet and Gold Game' was held on April 6 with the Gold team, led by James Blackman, victorious over the Garnet team by a score of 27\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289423-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida State Seminoles football team, Preseason, Preseason media poll\nIn the preseason ACC media poll, Florida State was selected to finish third in the Atlantic Division. Wide receiver Tamorrion Terry and defensive tackle Marvin Wilson were named to the preseason All-ACC team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 75], "content_span": [76, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289423-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule\nFlorida State's 2019 season was set to begin with a non-conference neutral site game at TIAA Bank Field in Jacksonville, Florida, against Boise State of the Mountain West Conference, though the game was relocated to Tallahassee due to Hurricane Dorian. In ACC play, the Seminoles played the other members of the Atlantic Division as well as Virginia and Miami from the Coastal Division. To end the year, Florida State played on the road against rival Florida of the Southeastern Conference (SEC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289423-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida State Seminoles football team, Honors, All-ACC\nThe Seminoles had six players selected to the All-ACC team, with four defensive selections and two offensive selections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289424-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida State Seminoles women's soccer team\nThe 2019 Florida State Seminoles women's soccer team represented Florida State University during the 2019 NCAA Division I women's soccer season. It was the 25th season of the university fielding a program. The Seminoles were led by 15th year head coach Mark Krikorian and entered the season as the defending national champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289424-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida State Seminoles women's soccer team\nThe Seminoles finished the season 18\u20136\u20130, 8\u20132\u20130 in ACC play, to finish in second place. As the second seed in the ACC Tournament, they defeated Clemson in the first round before losing in overtime to Virginia in the semifinals. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they defeated South Alabama, Brown, and USF, before losing to UCLA in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289424-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida State Seminoles women's soccer team, Squad, 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, 63], "content_span": [64, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289425-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Tech Panthers football team\nThe 2019 Florida Tech Panthers football team will represent Florida Institute of Technology (FIT) during the 2019 NCAA Division II football season. They will led by seventh-year head coach Steve Englehart. The Panthers will play their home games at Florida Tech Panther Stadium, approximately one mile from the Florida Tech campus, and are members of the Gulf South Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289425-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Tech Panthers football team, Preseason, Gulf South Conference coaches poll\nOn August 1, 2019, the Gulf South Conference released their preseason coaches poll with the Panthers predicted to finish in 5th place in the conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 87], "content_span": [88, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289425-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Tech Panthers football team, Preseason, Preseason All-Gulf South Conference Team\nThe Panthers had four players at four positions selected to the preseason all-Gulf South Conference team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 93], "content_span": [94, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289425-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Tech Panthers football team, Schedule\nFlorida Tech 2019 football schedule consists of five home and six away games in the regular season. The Panthers will host GSC foes Shorter, West Alabama, West Florida, and West Georgia, and will travel to Delta State, Mississippi College, North Greenville, and Valdosta State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289425-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Tech Panthers football team, Schedule\nThe Panthers will host one of the three non-conference games against Fort Valley State from the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (SIAC) and will travel to Newberry from the South Atlantic Conference (SAC) and Savannah State also from the SIAC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289425-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Tech Panthers football team, Schedule\nTwo of the eleven games will be broadcast on ESPN3 and ESPN+, as part of the Gulf South Conference Game of the Week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289425-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Tech Panthers football team, Schedule\nThe Week One game at Savannah State, originally scheduled for September 7, was moved back a day due to Hurricane Dorian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289425-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Tech Panthers football team, Schedule\nThe Week Seven game at Valdosta State, originally scheduled for a 3 P.M. kickoff on October 19, was moved back to a 7 P.M. start due to the forecast approach of Tropical Storm Nestor earlier in the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289425-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Florida Tech Panthers football team, Awards and milestones, Gulf South Conference honors\nFive players from Florida Tech were honored as All-GSC selections by the league's coaches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 93], "content_span": [94, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289426-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500\nThe 2019 Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500 was a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race that was held on February 24, 2019, at Atlanta Motor Speedway in Hampton, Georgia. Contested over 325 laps on the 1.54-mile-long (2.48\u00a0km) asphalt quad-oval intermediate speedway, it was the second race of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289426-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500, Report, Background\nAtlanta Motor Speedway (formerly Atlanta International Raceway) is a track in Hampton, Georgia, 20 miles (32\u00a0km) south of Atlanta. It is a 1.54-mile (2.48\u00a0km) quad-oval track with a seating capacity of 111,000. It opened in 1960 as a 1.5-mile (2.4\u00a0km) standard oval. In 1994, 46 condominiums were built over the northeastern side of the track. In 1997, to standardize the track with Speedway Motorsports' other two 1.5-mile (2.4\u00a0km) ovals, the entire track was almost completely rebuilt. The frontstretch and backstretch were swapped, and the configuration of the track was changed from oval to quad-oval. The project made the track one of the fastest on the NASCAR circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289426-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500, First practice\nClint Bowyer was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 30.774 seconds and a speed of 180.152\u00a0mph (289.927\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289426-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500, Qualifying\nAric Almirola scored the pole for the race with a time of 30.550 and a speed of 181.473\u00a0mph (292.052\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289426-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500, Final practice\nClint Bowyer was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 30.954 seconds and a speed of 179.104\u00a0mph (288.240\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289426-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500, Media, Television\nThe Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500 was carried by Fox in the United States. Mike Joy, five-time Atlanta winner Jeff Gordon and three-time Atlanta winner Darrell Waltrip covered the race from the booth. Pit road was manned by Jamie Little, Vince Welch and Matt Yocum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289426-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500, Media, Radio\nThe race was broadcast on radio by the Performance Racing Network and simulcast on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio. Doug Rice and Mark Garrow called the race from the booth when the field down the front stretch. Rob Albright called the race from atop a billboard outside of turn 2 when the field raced through turns 1 and 2 & Pat Patterson called the race from a billboard outside of turn 3 when the field raced through turns 3 and 4. On pit road, PRN was manned by Brad Gillie, Brett McMillan, Wendy Venturini and Doug Turnbull.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289427-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Folkestone and Hythe District Council election\nElections to Folkestone & Hythe District Council were held on 2 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289427-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Folkestone and Hythe District Council election, Ward results, East Folkestone\nDylan Jeffrey stood as a Labour candidate in 2015, and Carol Sacre stood as a UKIP candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 82], "content_span": [83, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289427-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Folkestone and Hythe District Council election, Ward results, Folkestone Harbour\nRay Field stood as a TUSC candidate in 2015, and Mary Lawes stood as a UKIP candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 85], "content_span": [86, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289428-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Food City 300\nThe 2019 Food City 300 is a NASCAR Xfinity Series race held on August 16, 2019, at Bristol Motor Speedway in Bristol, Tennessee. Contested over 300 laps on the 0.533 miles (0.858\u00a0km) concrete short track, it was the 22nd race of the 2019 NASCAR Xfinity Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289428-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Food City 300, Background, Track\nBristol Motor Speedway, formerly known as Bristol International Raceway and Bristol Raceway, is a NASCAR short track venue located in Bristol, Tennessee. Constructed in 1960, it held its first NASCAR race on July 30, 1961. Despite its short length, Bristol is among the most popular tracks on the NASCAR schedule because of its distinct features, which include steep banking, an all concrete surface, two pit roads, and stadium-like seating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289428-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Food City 300, Practice, First practice\nErik Jones was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 15.385 seconds and a speed of 124.719\u00a0mph (200.716\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289428-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Food City 300, Practice, Final practice\nErik Jones was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 15.522 seconds and a speed of 123.618\u00a0mph (198.944\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289428-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Food City 300, Qualifying\nAustin Cindric scored the pole for the race with a time of 15.655 seconds and a speed of 122.568\u00a0mph (197.254\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289428-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Food City 300, Race, Summary\nAustin Cindric started on pole. Early on in the race, Matt Mills (who was a lap down) squeezed Cole Custer into the wall as he and Christopher Bell battled within the top 5, sending Custer sliding into Bell. The two leaned into the following turn, where Erik Jones and Joey Logano were also collected and eliminated. On the restart, John Hunter Nemechek got a flat tire but saved the car. He spun again in front of Kyle Busch, who was nearly smashed into the outside wall. Justin Allgaier took the lead from Busch on lap 61.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289428-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Food City 300, Race, Summary\nTyler Reddick later caught up to Allgaier, but made contact with him after driving too deep into the corner. Brandon Jones overtook Allgaier and Reddick after they both spun out (though Allgaier prevented his car from colliding into the wall) and won Stage 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289428-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Food City 300, Race, Summary\nIn the beginning of Stage 2, Ronnie Bassett Jr. lost a wheel going into a turn in front of Busch and spun out, causing a red flag. Busch won the stage despite his engine struggling. His car's motor blew immediately after winning the stage, subsequently ending his day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289428-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Food City 300, Race, Summary\nMichael Annett spun halfway into the final stage and brought out a caution. Allgaier strategically stayed out, while Reddick pitted. Ryan Sieg ran in second place but got into the wall and had a tire rub that forced him to pit and ultimately retire from the race. With 11 laps to go, Brandon Jones who was 2nd at the moment went to the outside wall. In the following lap, with 10 laps to go, Allgaier had a significant lead on Reddick, but he had a tire beginning to go down. Reddick benefited from this and overtook him, taking the victory over Chase Briscoe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289429-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Food City 500\nThe 2019 Food City 500 is a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race held on April 7, 2019, at Bristol Motor Speedway in Bristol, Tennessee. Contested over 500 laps on the 0.533 miles (0.858\u00a0km) concrete short track, it was the eighth race of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289429-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Food City 500, Report, Background\nBristol Motor Speedway, formerly known as Bristol International Raceway and Bristol Raceway, is a NASCAR short track venue located in Bristol, Tennessee. Constructed in 1960, it held its first NASCAR race on July 30, 1961. Despite its short length, Bristol is among the most popular tracks on the NASCAR schedule because of its distinct features, which include extraordinarily steep banking, an all concrete surface, two pit roads, and stadium-like seating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289429-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Food City 500, First practice\nRyan Blaney was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 14.804 seconds and a speed of 129.614\u00a0mph (208.594\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289429-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Food City 500, Qualifying\nChase Elliott scored the pole for the race with a time of 14.568 and a speed of 131.713\u00a0mph (211.972\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289429-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Food City 500, Practice (post-qualifying), Second practice\nErik Jones was the fastest in the second practice session with a time of 14.771 seconds and a speed of 129.903\u00a0mph (209.059\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 63], "content_span": [64, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289429-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Food City 500, Practice (post-qualifying), Final practice\nJoey Logano was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 14.894 seconds and a speed of 128.830\u00a0mph (207.332\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289429-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Food City 500, Media, Television\nFox Sports covered their 19th race at the Bristol Motor Speedway. Mike Joy, five-time Bristol winner Jeff Gordon and 12-time Bristol winner \u2013 and all-time Bristol race winner \u2013 Darrell Waltrip had the call in the booth for the race. Jamie Little, Regan Smith, Vince Welch and Matt Yocum handled the pit road duties for the television side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289429-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Food City 500, Media, Radio\nPRN had the radio call for the race which was also be simulcasted on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio. Doug Rice, Mark Garrow and Wendy Venturini called the race in the booth when the field was racing down the frontstretch. Rob Albright called the race from atop the turn 3 suites when the field raced down the backstretch. Brad Gillie, Brett Mcmillan, Jim Noble, and Steve Richards covered the action on pit lane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289430-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Championship of Cherkasy Oblast\nThe 2019 Football Championship of Cherkasy Oblast was won by Altayir Drabiv.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289431-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Championship of Chernihiv Oblast\nThe 2019 Football Championship of Chernihiv Oblast was won by FC Chernihiv.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289432-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Championship of Chernivtsi Oblast\nThe 2019 Football Championship of Chernivtsi Oblast was won by FC Voloka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289433-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Championship of Dnipropetrovsk Oblast\nThe 2019 Football Championship of Dnipropetrovsk Oblast was won by Skoruk Tomakivka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289434-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Championship of Donetsk Oblast\nThe 2019 Football Championship of Donetsk Oblast was won by Sapfir Kramatorsk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289435-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Championship of Kharkiv Oblast\nThe 2019 Football Championship of Kharkiv Oblast was won by FC Vovchansk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289436-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Championship of Kherson Oblast\nThe 2019 Football Championship of Kherson Oblast was won by FC Tavriya Novotroitske.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289437-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Championship of Khmelnytskyi Oblast\nThe 2019 Football Championship of Khmelnytskyi Oblast was won by Epitsentr Dunayivtsi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289438-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Championship of Kirovohrad Oblast\nThe 2019 Football Championship of Kirovohrad Oblast was won by FC Zirka Kropyvnytskyi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289439-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Championship of Kyiv Oblast\nThe 2019 Football Championship of Kyiv Oblast was won by Avanhard Bziv.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289440-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Championship of Luhansk Oblast\nThe 2019 Football Championship of Luhansk Oblast was won by Skif Shulhynka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289440-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Championship of Luhansk Oblast\nThe competition consisted of two stages. After the first stage consisting of a single round-robin, all teams were split depending on the points earned with the best 8 qualifying for the First League and the rest 5 for the Second League. During the second stage the 8 First League teams played off for championship title another single round robin, while the 5 Second League teams played off for final ranking also their round-robin tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289441-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Championship of Lviv Oblast\nThe 2019 Football Championship of Lviv Oblast was won by Yunist Verkhnia Bilka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289441-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Championship of Lviv Oblast, Premier League table\nSource:; Notes:* Results of FC Mostyska and Dumna Remeniv were annulled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289442-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Championship of Mykolaiv Oblast\nThe 2019 Football Championship of Mykolaiv Oblast was won by Varvarivka Mykolaiv.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289442-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Championship of Mykolaiv Oblast\nMFC Pervomaisk competed parallelly in the 2018\u201319 Ukrainian Football Amateur League and the 2019\u201320 Ukrainian Football Amateur League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289443-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Championship of Odessa Oblast\nThe 2019 Football Championship of Odesa Oblast was won by imeni V.Z.Tura Dmytrivka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289444-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Championship of Poltava Oblast\nThe 2019 Football Championship of Poltava Oblast was won by Olimpiya Savyntsi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289445-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Championship of Rivne Oblast\nThe 2019 Football Championship of Rivne Oblast was won by FC Malynsk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289446-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Championship of Sumy Oblast\nThe 2019 Football Championship of Sumy Oblast was won by LS Group Verkhnia Syrovatka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289446-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Championship of Sumy Oblast\nJust after the winter break on 4 March 2020 LS Group Verkhnia Syrovatka switched their name to FC Sumy and expressed their intention to play at national amateur competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289447-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Championship of Ternopil Oblast\nThe 2019 Football Championship of Ternopil Oblast was won by Ahron-OTH Velyki Ha\u00ef.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289448-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Championship of Zakarpattia Oblast\nThe 2019 Football Championship of Zakarpattia Oblast was won by Sevliush Vynohradiv.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289449-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Championship of Zaporizhzhia Oblast\nThe 2019 Football Championship of Zaporizhzhia Oblast was won by Motor Zaporizhzhia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289450-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Championship of Zhytomyr Oblast\nThe 2019 Football Championship of Zhytomyr Oblast was won by Zviahel Novohrad-Volynskyi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289451-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Football NSW season\nThe Football NSW 2019 season was the seventh season of football in New South Wales under the banner of the National Premier Leagues. The competition consists of four divisions across the state of New South Wales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289451-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Football NSW season\nWollongong Wolves, as the Premiers of the NPL NSW Men's 1, qualified for the national finals, where they became the champion of the 2019 National Premier Leagues, and in doing so received an automatic spot in the 2020 FFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289451-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Football NSW season\nDue to a restructure of Men's and Boys' competitions for the 2020 season, this was the last season that the Club Championship determined the teams for promotion and relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289451-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Football NSW season, Competitions, 2019 National Premier League NSW Men's 2\nFor the 2019 NPL NSW season 3 teams were relegated due to a change in the competition format for 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 80], "content_span": [81, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289451-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Football NSW season, Competitions, 2019 National Premier League NSW Men's 3\nFor the 2019 NPL NSW season 5 teams were relegated due to a change in the competition format for 2020, and the introduction of the new NPL4 division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 80], "content_span": [81, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289451-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Football NSW season, Competitions, 2019 NSW State League\nThe competition was set to be restructured at the end of the season, with the introduction of the new NPL4 division for 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 61], "content_span": [62, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289451-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Football NSW season, Competitions, 2019 National Premier Leagues NSW Women's 1\nThe 2019 National Premier Leagues NSW Women's 1 was the sixth edition of the NPL NSW Women's competition to be incorporated under the National Premier Leagues banner. 12 teams competed, playing each other twice for a total of 22 rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 83], "content_span": [84, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289451-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Football NSW season, 2019 Waratah Cup\nFootball NSW soccer clubs competed in 2019 for the Waratah Cup. The tournament doubled as the NSW qualifier for the 2019 FFA Cup, with the top five clubs progressing to the Round of 32. A total of 144 clubs entered the qualifying phase, with the clubs entering in a staggered format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289451-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Football NSW season, 2019 Waratah Cup\nThe Cup was won by Marconi Stallions, their 2nd title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289451-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Football NSW season, 2019 Waratah Cup\nIn addition to the three A-League clubs (Central Coast Mariners, Sydney FC and Western Sydney Wanderers), the five qualifiers (Manly United, Marconi Stallions, Mt Druitt Town Rangers, Sydney United 58 and St George FC) competed in the final rounds of the 2019 FFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289452-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Tasmania season\nThe 2019 Football Tasmania season was the sixth season of soccer under the restructured format in Tasmania. The men's competitions consisted of three major divisions across the State. The overall premier qualified for the National Premier Leagues finals series, competing with the other state federation champions in a final knock-out tournament to decide the National Premier Leagues Champion for 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289452-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Tasmania season, Men's Competitions, 2019 NPL Tasmania\nThe 2018 NPL Tasmania season was played as a triple round-robin over 21 rounds. The NPL Premier qualifies for the national NPL finals series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289452-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Tasmania season, Men's Competitions, 2019 Tasmanian Championships, 2019 Northern Championship\nThe 2018 Northern Championship was the sixth edition of the Northern Championship as the second level domestic association football competition in Tasmania. The league consisted of 8 teams, playing 21 matches, facing each opponent thrice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 107], "content_span": [108, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289452-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Tasmania season, Men's Competitions, 2019 Tasmanian Championships, 2019 Southern Championship\nThe 2019 Southern Championship was the sixth edition of the Southern Championship as the second level domestic association football competition in Tasmania. The league consisted of 8 teams, playing 21 matches, playing each opponent thrice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 107], "content_span": [108, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289452-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Tasmania season, Women's Competitions, 2019 Women's Super League\nThe 2019 Women's Super League season is the fourth edition of the statewide Tasmanian women's association football league. The league consisted of six clubs playing each opponent four times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 78], "content_span": [79, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289452-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Tasmania season, Cup competitions\nThe Milan Lakoseljac Cup competition also served as the Tasmanian Preliminary Rounds for the 2019 FFA Cup. South Hobart entered at the Round of 32, where they were eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289453-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Victoria season\nThe 2019 Football Victoria season refers to the soccer competitions contested under the organisation of Football Victoria in 2019. Across seven senior men's and six senior women's divisions, this was the 111th season of organised soccer in Victoria and the sixth following the latest competition restructure in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289453-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Victoria season\nOverall, the season was characterised by greater media attention and broadcasting efforts within the NPL, but was somewhat-marred by disciplinary issues at both the NPL and State League levels. The first year under FV's newly-rebranded name, it also saw further restructures to the men's competition structure, changes to the National Club Identity Policy, as well as expansion of the NPL junior boys leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289453-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Victoria season, League tables, 2019 NPL Victoria\nThe 2019 National Premier Leagues Victoria season was played over 26 rounds. As premiers, Heidelberg United qualified for the 2019 National Premier Leagues finals series, competing with the other state federation champions in a final knockout tournament to decide the National Premier Leagues 2019 champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289453-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Victoria season, League tables, 2019 NPL Victoria 2\nThe 2019 National Premier Leagues Victoria 2 season was played over 28 rounds with each team playing the teams in their conference twice and the other conference once. The top teams in each conference at the end of the season were promoted to National Premier Leagues Victoria, while the second-placed teams played-off to qualify for the promotion/relegation play-off with the 12th-placed team from the NPL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289453-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Victoria season, League tables, 2019 NPL Victoria Women\nThe highest tier domestic football competition in Victoria for women is the National Premier Leagues Victoria Women. This was the fourth season of the NPL format. The 10 teams played each other 3 times for a total of 27 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289453-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Victoria season, Cup Competitions, 2019 Dockerty Cup\nFootball Victoria soccer clubs competed in 2019 for the Dockerty Cup. The tournament doubled as the Victorian qualifiers for the 2019 FFA Cup, with the top four clubs progressing to the Round of 32. A total of 214 clubs entered the qualifying phase, with the clubs entering in a staggered format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289453-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Victoria season, Cup Competitions, 2019 Dockerty Cup\nThe Cup was won by Hume City, their first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289453-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Football Victoria season, Cup Competitions, 2019 Dockerty Cup\nIn addition to the two A-League clubs (Melbourne Victory and Melbourne City), the four semi-finalists (Bulleen Lions, Hume City, Melbourne Knights and Moreland Zebras) competed in the final rounds of the 2019 FFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289454-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Football West State Cup\nWestern Australian soccer clubs competed in 2019 for the Football West State Cup, known for sponsorship reasons as the Belt Up State Cup. Clubs entered from the National Premier Leagues WA, the two divisions of the State League, a limited number of teams from various divisions of the 2019 Amateur League, Metropolitan League and Masters League competitions, and from regional teams from the South West and Great Southern regions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289454-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Football West State Cup\nThis knockout competition was won by Floreat Athena, their seventh title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289454-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Football West State Cup\nThe competition also served as the Western Australian Preliminary Rounds for the 2019 FFA Cup. The two finalists \u2013 Bayswater City and Floreat Athena \u2013 qualified for the final rounds, entering at the Round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289454-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Football West State Cup, Preliminary rounds\nA total of 56 teams took part in the competition, from Perth-based and regional-based competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289454-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Football West State Cup, Final\nThe 2019 State Cup Final was played on 20 July 2019, at the neutral venue of Dorrien Gardens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289455-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Football West season\nThe 2019 Football West Season was the sixth season since the National Premier Leagues was established in Western Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289455-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Football West season, League Tables, 2019 National Premier Leagues WA\nThe competition reverted to a twelve-team format, and was played over 22 rounds, followed by an end of season Top 4 Cup competition. Promotion and Relegation was dependent on whether Gwelup Croatia (as the team finishing first in the State League 1) met a series of eligibility criteria, which they did; this meant that Stirling Lions would be relegated for the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 74], "content_span": [75, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289455-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Football West season, League Tables, 2019 WA State League 1\nThe 2019 WA State League 1 season was played over 22 rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289455-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Football West season, League Tables, 2019 WA State League 2\nThe 2019 WA State League 2 season was played over 22 rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289455-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Football West season, League Tables, 2019 Women's Premier League\nThe 2019 Women's Premier League was played over 20 rounds as a quadruple round-robin. This was the last season in the Premier League format, before the introduction of the National Premier Leagues WA Women competition in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 69], "content_span": [70, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289455-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Football West season, 2019 State Cup\nWestern Australian soccer clubs competed in 2019 for the State Cup, known as the Belt Up State Cup for sponsorship reasons. Clubs entered from the National Premier Leagues WA, the two divisions of the State League, a limited number of teams from various divisions of the 2019 Amateur League, Metropolitan League and Masters League competitions, and from regional teams from the South West and Great Southern regions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289455-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Football West season, 2019 State Cup\nThis knockout competition was won by Floreat Athena, their seventh title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289455-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Football West season, 2019 State Cup\nThe competition also served as the Western Australian Preliminary Rounds for the 2019 FFA Cup. In addition to the A-League club Perth Glory, the two finalists \u2013 Bayswater City and Floreat Athena \u2013 qualified for the final rounds, and entered at the Round of 32. All three clubs were eliminated in this round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289456-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 200\nThe 2019 Ford EcoBoost 200 is a NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series race held on November 15, 2019, at Homestead-Miami Speedway in Homestead, Florida. Contested over 134 laps on the 1.5 mile (2.4\u00a0km) oval, it was the 23rd and final race of the 2019 NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289456-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 200, Background, Track\nHomestead-Miami Speedway is a motor racing track located in Homestead, Florida. The track, which has several configurations, has promoted several series of racing, including NASCAR, the Verizon IndyCar Series, the Grand-Am Rolex Sports Car Series and the Championship Cup Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289456-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 200, Background, Track\nSince 2002, Homestead-Miami Speedway has hosted the final race of the season in all three of NASCAR's series: the Sprint Cup Series, Xfinity Series and Gander Outdoors Truck Series. Ford Motor Company sponsors all three of the season-ending races; the races have the names Ford EcoBoost 400, Ford EcoBoost 300 and Ford EcoBoost 200, respectively, and the weekend is marketed as Ford Championship Weekend. The Xfinity Series (then known as the Busch Series) has held its season-ending races at Homestead since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289456-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 200, Practice, First practice\nGrant Enfinger was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 32.141 seconds and a speed of 168.010\u00a0mph (270.386\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289456-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 200, Practice, Final practice\nStewart Friesen was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 32.664 seconds and a speed of 165.320\u00a0mph (266.057\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289456-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 200, Qualifying\nQualifying was cancelled due to rain. Stewart Friesen was awarded the pole for the race due to his win in the previous week's race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289456-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 200, Race, Summary\nStewart Friesen started on pole, but Ross Chastain quickly pressured him and overtook him by the first lap. However, he was unable to pull away from Friesen and the two built up a large lead over the remainder of the field. Austin Hill caught up to them and overtook Chastain to take the stage win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289456-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 200, Race, Summary\nBrett Moffitt won the race off pit road after Hill was blocked. Chastain caught up to Moffitt in a similar manner he did to Friesen at the beginning of the race. Hill again caught up to the leaders and passed them, remaining in the lead to take the second stage win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289456-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 200, Race, Summary\nOn lap 51, a caution was thrown for Ray Ciccarelli leaking fluid onto the track. Christian Eckes moved to the front on slightly worn tires. In the final round of green flag pit stops, Eckes pitted 10 laps before the others, while Hill stayed out for an extra 9 laps before pitting. Friesen was hit by Angela Ruch while entering his pit stall, costing him significant time. He later lacked long run speed, eliminating his chances of winning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289456-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 200, Race, Summary\nHill won the race by around 1.5 seconds over Matt Crafton, who became the 2019 champion despite not winning a single race during the season. Eckes finished third, giving Kyle Busch Motorsports the owner's championship. Chastain finished fourth and Moffitt finished fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289456-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 200, Race, Summary\nJoe Nemechek, who started 23rd and finished 14th, broke Richard Petty's all-time start record across NASCAR's top 3 series, starting his 1,186th NASCAR race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289457-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 300\nThe 2019 Ford EcoBoost 300 is a NASCAR Xfinity Series race held on November 16, 2019, at Homestead-Miami Speedway in Homestead, Florida. Contested over 200 laps on the 1.5 mile (2.4\u00a0km) oval, it was the 33rd and final race of the 2019 NASCAR Xfinity Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289457-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 300, Background, Track\nHomestead-Miami Speedway is a motor racing track located in Homestead, Florida. The track, which has several configurations, has promoted several series of racing, including NASCAR, the Verizon IndyCar Series, the Grand-Am Rolex Sports Car Series and the Championship Cup Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289457-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 300, Background, Track\nSince 2002, Homestead-Miami Speedway has hosted the final race of the season in all three of NASCAR's series: the Sprint Cup Series, Xfinity Series and Gander Outdoors Truck Series. Ford Motor Company sponsors all three of the season-ending races; the races have the names Ford EcoBoost 400, Ford EcoBoost 300 and Ford EcoBoost 200, respectively, and the weekend is marketed as Ford Championship Weekend. The Xfinity Series (then known as the Busch Series) has held its season-ending races at Homestead since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289457-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 300, Practice\nTyler Reddick was the fastest in the practice session with a time of 32.594 seconds and a speed of 165.675\u00a0mph (266.628\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289457-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 300, Qualifying\nTyler Reddick scored the pole for the race with a time of 32.322 seconds and a speed of 167.069\u00a0mph (268.871\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289457-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 300, Race, Summary\nTyler Reddick started on pole, and was challenging by Cole Custer in the opening laps. On lap 32, a caution was thrown for debris being stuck in the wall, causing Reddick and Custer to pit while Christopher Bell and Justin Allgaier stayed out. Custer managed to charge back to the front, only finishing behind teammate Chase Briscoe in Stage 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289457-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 300, Race, Summary\nOn lap 59, Custer made a pit stop for a loose wheel, causing him to go down one lap. He managed to weave past Austin Cindric and restarted in the final stage on the lead lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289457-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 300, Race, Summary\nIn the closing laps, Custer caught up to Reddick and took the lead. Reddick slid past Custer with under 20 laps remaining and pulled away, winning the race and the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289458-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 400\nThe 2019 Ford EcoBoost 400 was a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race that was held on November 17, 2019, at Homestead-Miami Speedway in Homestead, Florida. Contested over 267 laps on the 1.5 mile (2.4\u00a0km) oval, it was the 36th and final race of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289458-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 400, Report, Background\nHomestead-Miami Speedway is a motor racing track located in Homestead, Florida. The track, which has several configurations, has promoted several series of racing, including NASCAR, the Verizon IndyCar Series, the Grand-Am Rolex Sports Car Series and the Championship Cup Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289458-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 400, Report, Background\nSince 2002, Homestead-Miami Speedway has hosted the final race of the season in all three of NASCAR's series: the Sprint Cup Series, Xfinity Series and Gander Outdoors Truck Series. Ford Motor Company sponsors all three of the season-ending races; the races have the names Ford EcoBoost 400, Ford EcoBoost 300 and Ford EcoBoost 200, respectively, and the weekend is marketed as Ford Championship Weekend. The Xfinity Series (then known as the Busch Series) has held its season-ending races at Homestead since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289458-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 400, Report, Background, Championship drivers\nMartin Truex Jr. was the first of the four drivers to clinch a spot in the Championship 4, winning the first race of the Round of 8 at Martinsville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 64], "content_span": [65, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289458-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 400, Report, Background, Championship drivers\nKevin Harvick clinched the second spot in the Championship 4, winning the second race of the Round of 8 at Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 64], "content_span": [65, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289458-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 400, Report, Background, Championship drivers\nDenny Hamlin clinched the third spot after winning the final race of the Round of 8 at Phoenix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 64], "content_span": [65, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289458-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 400, Report, Background, Championship drivers\nKyle Busch clinched the last spot in the Championship 4 based on points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 64], "content_span": [65, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289458-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 400, Practice, First practice\nFirst practice session scheduled for Friday was cancelled due to rain. Final practice session was postponed to Saturday in place of qualifying also due to rain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289458-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 400, Practice, Final practice\nKyle Busch was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 31.959 seconds and a speed of 168.966\u00a0mph (271.924\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289458-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 400, Qualifying\nQualifying for Saturday was cancelled due to rain on Friday and Denny Hamlin, the point leader, was awarded the pole as a result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289458-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 400, Race, Final stage results\nNOTE: On November 27, 2019, NASCAR revised the official race results and penalised four teams -- 15, 27, 52, and 77 -- with 50 point penalties for teams. As all but one of the drivers was ineligible for points, NASCAR assessed the 50 point penalties for teams (as listed), and no drivers were penalised. The four teams were charged with race manipulation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289458-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 400, Race, Final stage results\nAccording to NASCAR officials, the match fixing was deliberately aimed to allow the Premium Motorsports No. 27 team to claim the most owner points of all teams not holding a charter, surpassing the Gaunt Brothers Racing No. 96 team in points, which is worth $175,000 more to the team in question. In the scheme, the 15, 77, and 52 teams all pulled their cars off the track early so the 27 can pass the 96 team in points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289458-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 400, Race, Race manipulation\nA race manipulation scheme late in the race was uncovered by NASCAR officials involving four teams (three chartered, one open) with end-of-season points and financial bonus payments. This was announced on November 27, 2019 by NASCAR's Scott Miller, who explained after reviewing data during the race, including radio communications among drivers and teams, including interviewing various competitors, that they had uncovered a deliberate race manipulation scheme to help teams with financial bonuses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289458-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 400, Race, Race manipulation\nThe Premium Motorsports No. 27 team was competing with the Gaunt Brothers Racing No. 96 team to be the highest placed non-charter team, enabling them a higher end of season cash bonus for the teams. According to the official NASCAR statement, they had found the Spire Motorsports No. 77, Rick Ware Racing No. 52, and Premium Motorsports No. 15 and No. 27 teams deliberately manipulated the finish of the race to allow the No. 27 team (an open team) to score more points than the No. 96 team to claim the Open teams championship, and the financial bonus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289458-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 400, Race, Race manipulation\nThe No. 15, 77, and 52 teams each deliberately parked their cars within a 15-lap span near the end of the race in order to ensure the No. 27 team would score more points than the No. 96 team by one point in the end of season results. Spire Motorsports driver Reed Sorenson was heard ignoring multiple calls to pit on the radio before finally obliging and the team subsequently retired the car for \"mechanical issues\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289458-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 400, Race, Race manipulation\nNASCAR fined Scott Egglestone (Premium Motorsports) and Kenneth Evans (Rick Ware Racing) $25,000 each and suspended both indefinitely. All three team owners were fined $50,000, and all four cars were assessed a fifty-point penalty. The same day, Spire Motorsports released a statement saying they would not appeal their penalties, while Premium and RWR did not comment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289458-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 400, Media, Television\nNBC covered the race on the television side. Rick Allen, Jeff Burton, Steve Letarte and Dale Earnhardt Jr. had the call in the booth for the race. Dave Burns, Parker Kligerman, Marty Snider and Kelli Stavast reported from pit lane during the race. While the race itself aired on NBC, NBCSN aired NBCSN NASCAR Hot Pass, a simultaneous live feed dedicated to each of the Championship drivers, with commentary by Leigh Diffey and Dale Jarrett. Also, three different angles from in-car cameras and a track map tracked the driver's position and changes throughout the field. This will be the last time that NBC broadcast the race as this race moves to March and will be broadcast by Fox in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289458-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Ford EcoBoost 400, Media, Radio\nMRN had the radio call for the race, which was simulcast on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio. Alex Hayden, Jeff Striegle, and NASCAR Hall of Famer Rusty Wallace called the action of the race for MRN when the field raced down the front straightaway. Dave Moody covered the action for MRN in turns 1 & 2, and Mike Bagley had the call of the action from turns 3 & 4. Winston Kelley, Steve Post, Kim Coon, and Dillon Welch covered the action of the race for MRN on pit road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289459-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fordham Rams football team\nThe 2019 Fordham Rams football team represents Fordham University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They are led by second-year head coach Joe Conlin and play their home games at Coffey Field as a member of the Patriot League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289459-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fordham Rams football team, Previous season\nThe Rams finished the 2018 season 2\u20139, 2\u20134 in Patriot League play to finish in a three-way tie for fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289459-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Fordham Rams football team, Preseason, Preseason coaches' poll\nThe Patriot League released their preseason coaches' poll on July 30, 2019 (voting was by conference head coaches and sports information directors). The Rams were picked to finish in fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289459-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Fordham Rams football team, Preseason, Preseason All-Patriot League team\nThe Rams had two players selected to the preseason All-Patriot League team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 77], "content_span": [78, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289460-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Forest of Dean District Council election\nElections for all seats on Forest of Dean District Council were held on 2 May 2019 as part of the 2019 United Kingdom local elections. This was the first election in the Forest of Dean following a boundary review, which reduced the total number of Councillors from 48 to 38. Due to the boundary review, party seat changes in the summary box (right) are based on notional results, not the actual 2015 results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289460-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Forest of Dean District Council election\nOnly the Conservatives fielded candidates for all 38 seats. The Green Party fielded 27 candidates, Labour 24, the Liberal Democrats 5 and UKIP 2. There were 24 independent candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289460-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Forest of Dean District Council election\nA Green Party candidate, David Richard Humphreys for Newent & Taynton died whilst canvassing for the election and has been postponed until 20 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289460-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Forest of Dean District Council election\nFollowing the elections, an administration was formed between the Independents, Labour and Green councillors. Cllr. Gwilliam, an independent councillor who has served as leader since July 2017 was re-elected as leader. Sitting on his cabinet are two independents, two Greens and two Labour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289461-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Forge FC season\nThe 2019 Forge FC season was the first season in the club's history, as well as first season in Canadian Premier League history. On April 27, 2019, Forge FC hosted York9 FC in the inaugural CPL match at Tim Hortons Field. During the season, Forge also participated in the Canadian Championship, CONCACAF League, and the Canadian Premier League Finals. On November 2, 2019, Forge FC defeated Cavalry FC 2\u20130 on aggregate in the CPL Finals and became the first ever champions of the Canadian Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289461-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Forge FC season, Transfers, In, Draft picks\nForge FC selected the following players in the 2018 CPL\u2013U Sports Draft on November 12, 2018. Draft picks are not automatically signed to the team roster. Only those who are signed to a contract will be listed as transfers in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 48], "content_span": [49, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289462-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 2 Championship\nThe 2019 FIA Formula 2 Championship was the fifty-third season of the second-tier of Formula One feeder championship and also third season under the moniker of FIA Formula 2 Championship, a motor racing championship for Formula 2 cars that is sanctioned by the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA). It is an open-wheel racing category that serves as the second tier of formula racing in the FIA Global Pathway. The category was run in support of the 2019 FIA Formula 1 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289462-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 2 Championship\nGeorge Russell was the reigning drivers' champion, having won the title at the final round of the 2018 championship in Abu Dhabi. Russell did not return to defend his title as he graduated to Formula 1. Carlin were the reigning teams' champions, having secured their first Formula 2 title in Abu Dhabi. ART Grand Prix driver Nyck de Vries won the drivers' championship after the win in the Feature race at Sochi. In the teams' championship DAMS secured their first team title over UNI-Virtuosi Racing after the win in the Feature race at Abu Dhabi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289462-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 2 Championship\nThe season was marred by the death of French driver Anthoine Hubert during the feature race of the Spa-Francorchamps round on 31 August 2019. Hubert's death was the first fatality for a driver competing in FIA-sanctioned feeder series racing since Henry Surtees's fatal crash at Brands Hatch in 2009 in the FIA Formula Two Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289462-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 2 Championship, Entries\nThe following teams and drivers competed in the 2019 championship. As the championship is a spec series, all competitors raced with an identical Dallara F2 2018 chassis with a V6 turbo engine developed by Mecachrome. Teams competed with tyres supplied by Pirelli.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289462-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 2 Championship, Entries, Team changes\nRussian Time left the championship after six years competing in Formula 2 and its predecessor, the GP2 Series. Their entry and assets were sold to Virtuosi Racing, who had operated the team. The new entry competes under the name \"UNI-Virtuosi Racing\". Fortec Motorsports had been granted an entry to the Formula 2 grid in 2018, but were later given permission to defer their entry until 2019. However, they were subsequently omitted from the draft entry list for the 2019 championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289462-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 2 Championship, Entries, Team changes\nArden International entered into a partnership with Mercedes-affiliated team HWA Racelab. Charouz Racing System formed a partnership with Sauber Motorsport, which currently runs Alfa Romeo's team in Formula 1. The Sauber-Charouz partnership is not affiliated with Alfa Romeo's Formula 1 entry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289462-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 2 Championship, Entries, Driver changes\nLando Norris left Carlin and the series as he was promoted to Formula 1 with McLaren. His seat was taken by Louis Del\u00e9traz, who left Charouz Racing System to join the team. He was joined by Nobuharu Matsushita, who returned to Formula 2 after a year spent racing in the Super Formula Championship, to replace S\u00e9rgio Sette C\u00e2mara.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289462-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 2 Championship, Entries, Driver changes\nC\u00e2mara left Carlin to replace Alexander Albon at DAMS. Albon left the championship to join Formula 1 team Toro Rosso.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289462-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 2 Championship, Entries, Driver changes\nArden drivers Nirei Fukuzumi and Maximilian G\u00fcnther left the series. Fukuzumi moved to the Super Formula Championship with Dandelion Racing, while G\u00fcnther joined the Formula E championship with Dragon Racing. Reigning GP3 Series champion Anthoine Hubert and GP3 Series regular Tatiana Calder\u00f3n joined Arden in their place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289462-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 2 Championship, Entries, Driver changes\nArtem Markelov and Tadasuke Makino left Russian Time and the championship. Both drivers moved to Japan to compete in the Super Formula Championship; Markelov joined Team LeMans while Makino joined Nakajima Racing. Guanyu Zhou graduated from the 2018 FIA Formula 3 European Championship, joining Russian Time's successors UNI-Virtuosi. Zhou was partnered by Luca Ghiotto, who raced with Russian Time in 2017 and Campos Racing in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289462-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 2 Championship, Entries, Driver changes\nNikita Mazepin joined the championship with ART Grand Prix, the team he drove for when he finished runner-up in the 2018 GP3 Series. Mazepin was partnered with Nyck de Vries, who left Prema Racing to join the team. Mazepin and de Vries replaced 2018 series champion George Russell\u2014who left the team and the championship to join Formula 1 team Williams\u2014and Jack Aitken, who will switch to Campos Racing. Prema Theodore Racing named Mick Schumacher as de Vries' replacement. Schumacher continued his association with the team after he won the 2018 FIA Formula 3 European Championship with them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289462-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 2 Championship, Entries, Driver changes\nArjun Maini left Trident and the series to join RLR MSport in the European Le Mans Series. Giuliano Alesi joined the championship with Trident, the team he raced for in the GP3 Series. He was joined by Ralph Boschung, who left MP Motorsport before the Sochi round in 2018. Dorian Boccolacci also left MP Motorsport, joining Jack Aitken at Campos Racing. Jordan King returned to the series with MP Motorsport, contesting the championship alongside his part-time NTT IndyCar Series campaign. Mahaveer Raghunathan returned to full-time competition for the first time since 2016, partnering King at MP Motorsport. Callum Ilott and Juan Manuel Correa joined the series, both signing with Sauber Junior Team by Charouz. Antonio Fuoco left Charouz and the series to join Formula One team Ferrari as a test driver.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 859]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289462-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 2 Championship, Entries, Driver changes\nArtem Markelov made a one-off return in Monaco as a replacement for Jordan King at MP Motorsport, who was competing in the 2019 Indianapolis 500 with Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing. After collecting twelve penalty points on his racing license for incurring three Virtual Safety Car infringements during the Paul Ricard feature race, Mahaveer Raghunathan was banned from the series for the Red Bull Ring round. Raghunathan's MP seat was filled in Austria by 2018 Indy Lights champion and 2019 IndyCar Series driver Patricio O'Ward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289462-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 2 Championship, Entries, Driver changes\nShortly after the Paul Ricard round, Arjun Maini was announced to be replacing Dorian Boccolacci at Campos Racing for the Red Bull Ring and Silverstone rounds. Marino Sato replaced Maini prior to the Spa round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289462-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 2 Championship, Entries, Driver changes\nAfter encountering funding problems, Ralph Boschung left Trident prior to the Red Bull Ring round. Former GP3 driver Ryan Tveter joined the team in Boschung's place. Tveter was later replaced by Boccolacci. Boschung returned to the team ahead of the Hungarian round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289462-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 2 Championship, Entries, Driver changes\nBWT Arden was represented only by Tatiana Calder\u00f3n at Monza after Anthoine Hubert's fatal accident. Juan Manuel Correa, who was also involved in the incident, was forced to miss the rest of the season due to injuries. Sauber Junior Team by Charouz did not replace him at Monza, running only Callum Ilott. Giuliano Alesi's car was impounded by Belgian authorities as part of their investigation into the accident at Spa, limiting Trident to a single entry for the next round. Ralph Boschung was stood down to allow Alesi to compete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289462-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 2 Championship, Entries, Driver changes\nFor the Sochi and Yas Marina rounds, Matevos Isaakyan, who raced in the 2018 European Le Mans Series, took Juan Manuel Correa's seat at Sauber Junior Team by Charouz. Artem Markelov replaced Anthoine Hubert at BWT Arden for the same rounds, although the Russian raced with #22 as the #19 had been retired for the remainder of the season in honour of the late French driver.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289462-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 2 Championship, Calendar\nThe following twelve rounds were scheduled to take place as part of the 2019 championship. Round 9 was abandoned. Each round consisted of two races: a Feature race, which was run over 170\u00a0km (105.6\u00a0mi) and included a mandatory pit stop; and a Sprint race, which was run over 120\u00a0km (75\u00a0mi) and did not require drivers to make a pit stop. The 2019 calendar retained the same twelve rounds from the 2018 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289462-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 2 Championship, Championship standings, Scoring system\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 as the grid for the sprint race were based on the results of the feature race with the top eight drivers having their positions reversed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289462-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 2 Championship, Championship standings, Scoring system\nPoints were awarded to the top eight classified finishers, excluding the fastest lap points which are given to the top ten classified finishers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289463-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 4 South East Asia Championship\nThe 2019 Formula 4 South East Asia Championship \u2013 Fueled by Petron was the fourth season of the Formula 4 South East Asia Championship. It began at the Sepang International Circuit on 5 April and ended at the same venue on 15 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289463-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 4 South East Asia Championship, Drivers\nThe following drivers competed in the series. All cars were run by Malaysian team Meritus GP. All drivers used the Mygale\u2013Renault M14-F4 chassis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289463-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 4 South East Asia Championship, Calendar\nThe ten-event, forty-race calendar was released on 2 April 2019. On 9 October 2019 the series announced it was replacing the final 2 rounds at Clark International Speedway with 2 rounds at Sepang International Circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289463-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 4 South East Asia Championship, Championship standings\nThe best 32 results out of 40 races counted towards the championship. Points were awarded as follows.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 67], "content_span": [68, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289464-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 4 UAE Championship\nThe 2019 Formula 4 UAE Championship was the third season of the Formula 4 UAE Championship, a motor racing series for the United Arab Emirates regulated according to FIA Formula 4 regulations, and organised and promoted by the Automobile & Touring Club of the UAE (ATCUAE) and AUH Motorsports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289464-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 4 UAE Championship\nIt began on 9 January 2019 at the Dubai Autodrome and finished on 2 March 2019 at the same location.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289464-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 4 UAE Championship, Championship standings\nPoints are awarded to the top 10 classified finishers in each race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289465-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 4 United States Championship\nThe 2019 Formula 4 United States Championship season was the fourth season of the United States Formula 4 Championship, a motor racing series regulated according to FIA Formula 4 regulations and sanctioned by SCCA Pro Racing, the professional racing division of the Sports Car Club of America.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289465-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 4 United States Championship, Race calendar\nAll races will be held on permanent road courses in the United States. The series schedule was announced on 7 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 56], "content_span": [57, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289465-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula 4 United States Championship, Championship standings, Drivers' standings\nBold\u00a0\u2013 PoleItalics\u00a0\u2013 Fastest Lap\u2020\u00a0\u2014 Did not finish, but classified", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 85], "content_span": [86, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289466-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula Academy Sudamericana season\nThe 2019 F\u00f3rmula Academy Sudamericana Championship season is the fourth season of this series, and the second under the F\u00f3rmula Academy Sudamericana name. It began on the 8 September at Interlagos Circuit, in Brazil and finished on 8 December at the Aut\u00f3dromo Victor Borrat Fabini \"El Pinar\" in Uruguay after 4 rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289466-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula Academy Sudamericana season, Race calendar and results\nThe grid for race 2 is determined by the finishing order of race 1, but with the top 6 reversed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289466-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula Academy Sudamericana season, Championship standings, F\u00f3rmula Academy Sudamericana Championship\nJuan Vieira became a two time winner of the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 107], "content_span": [108, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289467-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula Nordic\nThe 2019 Formula Nordic season was the seventh season of the single-seater championship, and the first without the STCC branding following the series' promoter's bankruptcy. Instead, the series formed its own association, relaunching under the Formula Nordic brand but continuing to use the previous Formula Renault 1.6 chassis and engines, as it used to go under the name of Formula Renault 1.6 Nordic before Renault Sport dropped its support for the 3.5 and 1.6 classes in late 2015. The season began on 3 May at Ring Knutstorp and concluded on 5 October at Mantorp Park after eight rounds, Edward Sander Woldseth took the main (NEZ) title, with Viktor Andersson winning the junior (JSM) crown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289467-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula Nordic, Race calendar and results\nThe season started on 3 May at Ring Knutstorp and finished on 5 October at Mantorp Park after eight rounds, often supported by the Porsche Carrera Cup Scandinavia and the TCR Scandinavia, the successor to the STCC, as well as various GT series. This season was the first to use reversed grid races for the final race of the weekend, where the top 6 were inverted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289467-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula Nordic, Championship standings\nPoints are awarded to the top 5 fastest qualifying times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 43], "content_span": [44, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289467-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula Nordic, Championship standings\nTwo championships are held, the Junior Svenskt M\u00e4sterskap (JSM) for drivers under 26 years old holding a Swedish driver license, and the Northern European Zone (NEZ) championship, the latter served as the overall championship, with the JSM points tally excluding round 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 43], "content_span": [44, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship\nThe 2019 FIA Formula One World Championship was the motor racing championship for Formula One cars which marked the 70th running of the Formula One World Championship. It is recognised by the governing body of international motorsport, the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA), as the highest class of competition for open-wheel racing cars. Starting in March and ending in December, the championship was contested over twenty-one Grands Prix. Drivers competed for the title of World Drivers' Champion, and teams for the title of World Constructors' Champion. The 2019 championship also saw the running of the 1000th World Championship race, the 2019 Chinese Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship\nLewis Hamilton successfully defended the World Drivers' Championship for the second year running, winning his sixth championship title at the United States Grand Prix. Mercedes successfully defended the World Constructors' Championship, securing the title for the sixth consecutive year at the Japanese Grand Prix to tie Ferrari's record from 1999 to 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Entries\nTen teams, with two drivers each, competed in the championship in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Entries, Free practice drivers\nAcross the season, two drivers drove as a test or third driver in free practice sessions. Nicholas Latifi drove for Williams at six Grands Prix, while Naoki Yamamoto drove for Toro Rosso at the Japanese Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Entries, Team changes\nRed Bull Racing ended its twelve-year partnership with Renault and switched to Honda engines. In doing so, Red Bull Racing joined sister team Scuderia Toro Rosso in using Honda power after the latter joined the Japanese manufacturer in 2018. Neither team is recognised as Honda's official factory team under the terms of the agreement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Entries, Team changes\nRacing Point F1 Team completed their transition from the Racing Point Force India identity that they used after a consortium led by Lawrence Stroll purchased the assets of Sahara Force India in August 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Entries, Team changes\nSauber was renamed Alfa Romeo Racing in an extension of the sponsorship deal that began in 2018. The Sauber name disappeared entirely from the Formula One grid, but is still used in the Formula 2 and Formula 3 support categories for Charouz Racing System.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Entries, Team changes\nHaas F1 Team signed a title sponsorship agreement with energy drinks manufacturer Rich Energy for 2019 before the end of the 2018 season. However, this agreement was later terminated on 9 September 2019, due to a series of off-track disputes between Haas and Rich Energy, and legal issues for Rich Energy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Entries, Driver changes\nThe lead up to the 2019 championship saw several driver changes. Daniel Ricciardo moved to Renault after five years with Red Bull Racing, replacing Carlos Sainz Jr. Ricciardo's drive at Red Bull Racing was taken by Pierre Gasly, who was promoted from Scuderia Toro Rosso, the team with whom he made his first Formula One start in 2017. Daniil Kvyat rejoined Toro Rosso after last racing for the team in 2017. He was partnered with Formula 2 driver Alexander Albon, who replaced Brendon Hartley. Albon subsequently became only the second Thai driver to race in Formula One after Prince Bira.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Entries, Driver changes\nSainz, who was on loan to Renault in 2018, did not have his deal with Red Bull renewed and subsequently moved to McLaren to replace two-time World Drivers' Champion Fernando Alonso, who had earlier announced that he would not compete in Formula One in 2019. Sainz was partnered with 2017 European Formula 3 champion Lando Norris, replacing Stoffel Vandoorne who left McLaren to race in Formula E with the Mercedes-affiliated HWA Racelab.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Entries, Driver changes\nCharles Leclerc left Sauber after one year with the team, replacing Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen at Ferrari. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen returned to Sauber, now renamed Alfa Romeo, with whom he had started his career in 2001. He was partnered with Antonio Giovinazzi, who made two starts for Sauber when he replaced the injured Pascal Wehrlein in 2017. Marcus Ericsson moved to race in the IndyCar Series in 2019 with Schmidt Peterson Motorsports but remained with Alfa Romeo as a third driver and brand ambassador.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Entries, Driver changes\nReigning Formula 2 champion George Russell joined Williams replacing Lance Stroll. Robert Kubica made his return to Formula 1, replacing Sergey Sirotkin at Williams. Sirotkin returned to Renault as a reserve driver. Kubica's return comes after an eight-year absence brought on by a near-fatal rally car crash in 2011 that left him with serious arm injuries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Entries, Driver changes\nEsteban Ocon left Racing Point Force India and joined Mercedes as a reserve driver. Ocon shared the role of simulator driver with Stoffel Vandoorne. Ocon was replaced at Racing Point by Lance Stroll, who left Williams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Entries, Driver changes, Mid-season changes\nIn the build-up to the Belgian Grand Prix, Red Bull Racing announced that Pierre Gasly would be demoted to Toro Rosso and Alexander Albon would be promoted in his place so that his performance would be evaluated in view of the team's 2020 line-up. The decision to release Gasly was criticised as he had completed just twelve races with the team, while Albon and Toro Rosso team-mate Daniil Kvyat had both previously been released from contracts with the Red Bull Junior Team and Red Bull Racing respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Calendar\nThe following twenty-one Grands Prix were run as part of the 2019 World Championship. Each race was run over a minimum number of laps that exceeds a total distance of 305\u00a0km (189.5\u00a0mi); the only exception to this is the Monaco Grand Prix, for which the distance is 260\u00a0km (161.6\u00a0mi).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Calendar, Calendar changes\nThe Mexican and United States Grands Prix swapped places on the calendar so that the United States round follows the Mexican Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Regulation changes\nRace Director and Technical Delegate Charlie Whiting died unexpectedly days before the opening race of the season in Australia. Deputy Race Director Michael Masi was named as his successor for Race Director.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Regulation changes, Technical regulations\nIn a bid to improve overtaking, teams agreed to a series of aerodynamic changes that affect the profile of the front and rear wings. The front wing endplates were reshaped to alter the airflow across the car and reduce the effects of aerodynamic turbulence and winglets above the main plane of the front wing have been banned. The slot in the rear wing was widened, making the drag reduction system (DRS) more powerful.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0017-0001", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Regulation changes, Technical regulations\nThe agreed-upon changes were drawn from the findings of a working group set up to investigate potential changes to the technical regulations in preparation for the 2021 championship. The front wing was made 200\u00a0mm (7.9\u00a0in) wider, 20\u00a0mm (0.79\u00a0in) higher, and moved 25\u00a0mm (0.98\u00a0in) further forward. The rear wing was made 100\u00a0mm (3.9\u00a0in) wider and 70\u00a0mm (2.8\u00a0in) higher, with a 20\u00a0mm (0.79\u00a0in) larger DRS opening.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Regulation changes, Technical regulations\nParts of the technical regulations governing bodywork were rewritten in a bid to promote sponsorship opportunities for teams. The agreed changes are to mandate smaller bargeboards and limit aerodynamic development of the rear wing endplates to create more space for sponsor logos. The changes were introduced as a response to falling revenues amid teams and the struggles of smaller teams to secure new sponsors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Regulation changes, Technical regulations\nThe mandated maximum fuel levels were raised from 105\u00a0kg (231\u00a0lb) to 110\u00a0kg (240\u00a0lb) to minimise the need for drivers to conserve fuel during a race. Driver weights are no longer considered when measuring the minimum weight of the car. This change was agreed to following concerns that drivers were being forced to lose dangerous amounts of weight in order to offset the additional weight of the post-2014 turbo-hybrid engines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0019-0001", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Regulation changes, Technical regulations\nDrivers who weigh less than 80\u00a0kg (180\u00a0lb) are required to make up this weight with a ballast, located around the seat to minimise possible performance gains. The changes were introduced to eliminate the advantage drivers with a naturally smaller body shape had over taller and heavier drivers and to discourage unhealthy diet and exercise regimes to improve performance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Regulation changes, Sporting regulations\nThe regulations introduced a bonus point to the driver (and the constructor) that sets the fastest lap in a race. The point is only awarded if the driver is classified in the top ten at the end of the race. This makes 2019 the first time since 1959 that a bonus point gets awarded for setting the fastest lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 77], "content_span": [78, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Regulation changes, Driver safety\nThe FIA introduced a new standard for driver helmets with the intention of improving safety. Under the new standard, helmets will be subjected to a more thorough range of crash tests aimed at improving energy absorption and deflection as well as reducing the likelihood of objects penetrating the helmet's structure. All certified helmet manufacturers were required to pass the tests in advance of the 2019 championship to have their certification renewed. Once introduced to Formula One, the new standard will gradually be applied to all helmets used by competitors in every FIA-sanctioned event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Regulation changes, Tyres\nTyre supplier Pirelli renamed its range of tyres following a request from the FIA and the sport's management. The governing body argued that the naming conventions used in 2018 were obtuse and difficult for casual spectators to understand. Under the new plan, names given to particular compounds, such as \"hypersoft\" and \"ultrasoft\", were replaced by referring during each race to the three compounds teams have available for that race as soft, medium and hard. This was intended to aid fans in understanding the tyre compounds used at each round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0022-0001", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Regulation changes, Tyres\nThe actual compounds for the season were referred to by number, from the firmest (\"1\") to the softest (\"5\"). Seven compounds were available in 2018, although only six of the seven were used, the \"superhard\" not being used at all. Pirelli continued to decide which three compounds are made available for each race. The practice of using colours to identify the specific compound (such as pink for the hypersoft) was discontinued, with white, yellow and red being used for the three compounds available for each race where white denoted the hardest available compound and red the softest. As all five compounds were available in testing there were slight variations in the details on the tyre sidewalls to distinguish between the different compounds during testing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 826]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Opening rounds\nThe season started with the Australian Grand Prix, won by Valtteri Bottas from second on the grid in dominant fashion, finishing 20 seconds ahead of Mercedes teammate Lewis Hamilton who himself only narrowly beat Red Bull's Max Verstappen to second. Verstappen's third place marked the first podium for a Honda powered car in over 10 years, last achieved at the 2008 British Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Opening rounds\nThe second race of the season was the Bahrain Grand Prix. Ferrari topped every practice session and then went on to lock out the front row in qualifying. Charles Leclerc earned the first pole position of his career by setting a lap time 3 tenths of a second quicker than his teammate Sebastian Vettel. In the race, Leclerc fell down to 3rd in the 1st corner behind Vettel and the championship leader Valtteri Bottas. However, he then climbed back up the order to take the lead despite being told by his team, Ferrari, not to overtake his teammate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0024-0001", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Opening rounds\nLate in the race, Leclerc was leading by around 10 seconds before his engine developed an issue, allowing Lewis Hamilton to take the race lead. A few laps later, Valtteri Bottas also overtook Leclerc pushing him down to 3rd and making it a Mercedes 1\u20132. Just as it was looking like Max Verstappen was going to overtake Leclerc as well, a safety car was called out due to both of the Renault cars of Nico H\u00fclkenberg and Daniel Ricciardo having engine and power issues at turns 1 and 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0024-0002", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Opening rounds\nThe race finished behind the safety car for the eighth time in F1 history. As a result, Lewis Hamilton won, Valtteri Bottas came second, and Charles Leclerc came home third for his first podium and Ferrari's first podium of the season. After the race Valtteri Bottas led the Drivers' Championship by 1 point over teammate Lewis Hamilton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Opening rounds\nAt round three, the Chinese Grand Prix which was noted as F1's 1000th race, Hamilton led away at the start and won the Grand Prix, resulting in him taking the championship lead by 6 points over his teammate Bottas, whilst Mercedes extended their lead over Ferrari, becoming the first team since Williams in 1992 to start a season with 3 consecutive 1\u20132finishes. Pierre Gasly set the fastest lap and finished in sixth, after pitting with 3 laps remaining as Ferrari got their second podium of the season with Vettel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Opening rounds\nAt the next round, the Azerbaijan Grand Prix, it was a different story. In the first practice session, George Russell's Williams made contact with a drain cover down the straight on the floor after Charles Leclerc, who was fastest in the session because it was suspended, also made contact with the drain cover but with his left front tyre. The next two practice sessions were all about Leclerc, being fastest in all three practice sessions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0026-0001", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Opening rounds\nIn qualifying, Pierre Gasly was fastest in the first session but did not set a time in the second because it was irrelevant since he would start in the pitlane for not stopping for the weighbridge in one practice session. Charles Leclerc, the favourite for pole, timed 2nd in the first session and was 5th in the second session, but crashed at turn 8 in the same session, locking up his tyres and missing the apex, going into the barrier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0026-0002", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Opening rounds\nThis meant that Leclerc's qualifying was over, at least physically; he did make it into the final session but did not set a time as a result of the crash. Valtteri Bottas took pole ahead of championship leader Hamilton. Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen originally qualified ninth, but started from the pitlane after his car failed a front wing deflection test and joined Red Bull driver Gasly in starting in the pitlane as his teammate, Antonio Giovinazzi, received a ten-place grid penalty for using a third control electronic in his power unit and started 17th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0026-0003", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Opening rounds\nIn the race, Lewis Hamilton did get the better start, but Bottas had better pace and stayed in the lead. Charles Leclerc, who started 8th, was 4th after losing two spots in the opening lap and was getting steady pace with leader Bottas on the fresh set of medium tyres he got as a result of his crash during qualifying. After Bottas, Hamilton, and Sebastian Vettel pitted for tyres, Charles Leclerc took the lead and led the race for a long time. Eventually, Bottas retook the lead from Leclerc who had not pitted yet at that time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0026-0004", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Opening rounds\nA virtual safety car was deployed after an incident with Daniel Ricciardo and Daniil Kvyat at a runoff area. Bottas won the race by 1.5 seconds over teammate Hamilton and took a 1-point lead in the Drivers' Championship. Charles Leclerc took his 2nd fastest lap after pitting with less than 5 laps remaining as his teammate, Sebastian Vettel, took 3rd place for the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, European and Canadian rounds\nAt the Spanish Grand Prix, Valtteri Bottas dominated the entire qualifying session, finishing in first place each time, thus giving him his third consecutive pole of the 2019 season. Hamilton, however, got past him quickly at the first corner in the race. The safety car was deployed on lap 44 after a collision between Racing Point's Lance Stroll and McLaren's Lando Norris, which ultimately did not change the positions of the top 6 runners. Mercedes finished again for their fifth 1\u20132 finish as Hamilton took the chequered flag (along with the fastest lap point) and Bottas four seconds behind. Red Bull's Max Verstappen completed the podium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, European and Canadian rounds\nAt the Monaco Grand Prix, teams and drivers honoured the memory of F1 legend and Mercedes non-executive chairman Niki Lauda, who had died the week before the race. Mercedes painted their halos red and other teams and some drivers memorialised Lauda on their cars and helmets. Mercedes locked out the front row of the grid again, with Hamilton on pole and Bottas in second. During the race, Red Bull's Max Verstappen was released unsafely from his pit box and impeded Valtteri Bottas, resulting in a five-second time penalty for Verstappen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0028-0001", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, European and Canadian rounds\nIn the second half of the race, Hamilton was on the radio complaining about his graining tyres, but his team kept him out. Second-placed Verstappen kept the pressure on Hamilton, with Verstappen coming close to Hamilton in the final laps of the race at the Nouvelle Chicane. Hamilton went on to win the race and although Verstappen was second, his penalty was applied and it demoted him to fourth place. This promoted Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel to second and Mercedes's Bottas to third, ending Mercedes's 1\u20132 winning streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, European and Canadian rounds\nAt the Canadian Grand Prix, free practice was eventful. Championship leader Lewis Hamilton made contact with the wall at turn 8, damaging his car, and some other drivers made contact not just there, but also at the Wall of Champions. Qualifying 2 was red-flagged after Kevin Magnussen slammed into the Wall of Champions, which also affected some racers trying to improve their times. At the end of qualifying, Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel won pole position ahead of Hamilton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0029-0001", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, European and Canadian rounds\nVettel led from the start until lap 48, when he lost control of his Ferrari and slid across the grass at turn 3, regaining control as he came back onto the circuit and nearly colliding with Hamilton. The stewards controversially gave Vettel a five-second time penalty for this incident as they deemed it an unsafe re-entry to the track and impeding Hamilton. Although Vettel crossed the finish line first, Hamilton was less than five seconds behind, so was promoted to first place after the penalty was applied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0029-0002", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, European and Canadian rounds\nVettel's teammate, Charles Leclerc finished in third place, and Mercedes's Valtteri Bottas received the fastest lap bonus point. Although Ferrari had intended to appeal the ruling, they withdrew but reviewed the evidence further. During free practice at the next race, the stewards announced that they would not review Ferrari's new evidence, thus the final standings stood with Hamilton in first and Vettel in second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, European and Canadian rounds\nAt the French Grand Prix, Mercedes dominated the free practice sessions. Hamilton was summoned to the stewards' office for rejoining the track unsafely, forcing Red Bull's Max Verstappen off the track, but no penalty was issued. Mercedes locked out the front row again in qualifying with Hamilton on pole and Bottas in second. Mercedes secured their sixth 1\u20132 of the season with Hamilton finishing 18 seconds ahead of Bottas, and Leclerc completing the podium less than a second behind Bottas. At the end of the final lap, fifth-placed finisher Vettel set the fastest lap for a bonus point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, European and Canadian rounds\nAt the Austrian Grand Prix, some drivers spun off the track in free practice due to wind. In qualifying, Leclerc secured his second pole position. Verstappen was promoted to second and Bottas third after second-placed Hamilton was given a grid penalty for impeding Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen in Q1. In the race, Leclerc led away as Verstappen lost a few positions at the start. However, Verstappen found power for his car and managed to come back, passing Leclerc with just a few laps left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0031-0001", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, European and Canadian rounds\nAn investigation followed after contact was made between the two at turn 3 on lap 69, but the stewards deemed it a racing incident. All drivers finished the race, with Verstappen winning the race for a second consecutive year as well as setting the fastest lap. Leclerc finished second and Bottas finished third. It was the first win for a Honda-powered F1 car since Jenson Button in the 2006 Hungarian Grand Prix, and the first non-Mercedes win in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, European and Canadian rounds\nAt the British Grand Prix, the newly resurfaced track surface caused plenty of eventful moments throughout the weekend, with Romain Grosjean crashing his car on the pit exit and Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen's Alfa Romeo stopping on the Wellington straight, the latter of which brought out a red flag. The drivers all struggled with track grip levels throughout the session, and although there was some brief rain, it had little impact on the running in the session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0032-0001", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, European and Canadian rounds\nChampionship leader Lewis Hamilton was chasing for a 6th consecutive pole position at Silverstone but Bottas pipped him to pole by 0.006 seconds, almost as close as the 0.002-second time gap by which Vettel beat Fernando Alonso in the 2010 German Grand Prix. The opening laps did provide for some battling between the two Mercedes drivers, but the safety car played a crucial role in the Mercedes battle when Giovinazzi became stuck in the gravel trap at the penultimate corner and Hamilton pitted under the safety car, whereas Bottas had already pitted a few laps earlier during open racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0032-0002", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, European and Canadian rounds\nThereafter, Vettel and Verstappen were battling for 3rd when Vettel misjudged his braking point at Vale corner and rammed into the back of Verstappen, resulting in a 10-second penalty, which led Vettel to finish behind the two Williamses. It also promoted Pierre Gasly to a joint career-best finish of 4th. Leclerc took 3rd, Bottas took 2nd, and Lewis Hamilton won his 6th British Grand Prix, equalling the record for the most home grand prix wins with Alain Prost. Hamilton also set the fastest lap on the final lap with the hardest tyre, which he ran for most of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, European and Canadian rounds\nAt the German Grand Prix, Mercedes ran a special one-off livery to commemorate their 125th anniversary in motorsport. Ferrari looked set to be the favourites for pole, having been fastest in every practice session, but both hit technical difficulties during qualifying, leaving Hamilton to take pole. Vettel started the race from last place. Everything changed in the race as it rained heavily before the start, leading the race to have a standing start for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0033-0001", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, European and Canadian rounds\nAs the race progressed, many drivers spun off or crashed, particularly at the final two turns of the track, where Nico H\u00fclkenberg and Charles Leclerc ended their races. H\u00fclkenberg was on course to take his first ever podium before he crashed out. Hamilton also fell victim at the same place, but managed to keep going with a broken front wing. He was later penalized for entering the pit lane outside the bollard, later having a spin, and ended up 11th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0033-0002", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, European and Canadian rounds\nMax Verstappen went on to claim victory in the race, with Vettel recovering from last to second, and the third podium place went to Toro Rosso's Daniil Kvyat, who made a stop for slick tyres late in the race to claim his third career podium and Toro Rosso's first since the 2008 Italian Grand Prix, after a close battle with Racing Point's Lance Stroll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0033-0003", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, European and Canadian rounds\nPost-race, both Alfa Romeos, which finished 7th and 8th, were penalized for technical infringements, promoting Hamilton and Williams's Robert Kubica into the points, the latter scoring Williams's first \u2013 and what turned out to be only \u2013 points of the season, as well as his first since the 2010 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, European and Canadian rounds\nVerstappen took his maiden pole at the Hungarian Grand Prix, equalling the record with Sir Jackie Stewart for taking the most victories before a maiden pole. An unexpected extra stop for Hamilton soon led him to winning the race and beating Verstappen in the closing laps, who was suffering from graining tyres late in the race, having been battling with Hamilton previously.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, European and Canadian rounds\nThe two tracks immediately after the summer break were more suited to Ferrari's top speed advantage, with Leclerc winning both the Belgian and Italian Grands Prix from pole position. In both races, Leclerc was under strong pressure from Hamilton throughout, winning the Belgian race by less than a second, before Hamilton ultimately dropped back after missing the first chicane in Italy. This enabled Bottas to finish second and slightly close up in the title race. Leclerc won his first two career wins consecutively and within the timespan of one week, as Vettel and Verstappen endured two terrible weekends.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0035-0001", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, European and Canadian rounds\nHis victory at Belgium was an emotional one, as the race was overshadowed by the death of Formula 2 driver Anthoine Hubert the previous day. The Renault junior driver was involved in an accident on lap 2 of the Feature Race, succumbing to his injuries later that evening. This saw Leclerc close up in the battle for third in the Drivers' Championship. Leclerc also became the first Ferrari Monza winner since Fernando Alonso's victory in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0035-0002", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, European and Canadian rounds\nQualifying sessions for both races were unusual in that Leclerc won pole by a sizeable margin of more than 0.7 seconds on a dry track in Belgium, whereas almost the entire Q3 field missed crossing the line in time for their second timed lap at Monza, as no driver wanted to be at the front of the group as they would not have the advantage of a tow from the car in front \u2013 a significant benefit at Monza, the season's fastest track.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Closing rounds\nVettel ended a winless streak stretching over a year to win at the Singapore Grand Prix for Ferrari, the team's third consecutive victory. Leclerc had qualified on pole ahead of Hamilton and Vettel and led the first stint. However, a timely pitstop by Vettel saw him unintentionally undercutting Leclerc with an outlap three seconds faster than Leclerc's inlap. Hamilton then tried an overcut that did not work, limiting him to a fourth-place finish, as Mercedes were off the podium with both cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0036-0001", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Closing rounds\nHamilton initially kept a reasonable pace, before his tyres fell off and the midfield cars behind him started to run faster laptimes than him. After his pitstop, he was unable to pass Verstappen, who finished third. There were three safety car spells in the second half of the race, although the complexion of the Singapore circuit made the restarts uneventful up front as the top cars ran in formation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0036-0002", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Closing rounds\nThis marked the first time in eleven years that Ferrari had won three races in a row and was Vettel's record fifth win at Singapore, and also the first time a team has finished 1\u20132 in Singapore. The race results saw Leclerc move ahead of Verstappen and climb to third in the standings for the first time of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Closing rounds\nLeclerc took his fourth consecutive pole at the Russian Grand Prix, but at the start of the race, it was Vettel who led, contradicting a pre-race agreement that had been discussed. Vettel led until he made his first stop on lap 26, but an engine component failed just after his stop, prompting his retirement (the four-time world champion even demanding the return of V12 engines as in the 1990s on the team radio as he ground to a halt). This prompted a Virtual Safety Car, during which both Mercedes as well as Leclerc pitted, therefore resulting in a 1\u20132 finish for Mercedes with Hamilton winning. Leclerc could only finish third behind the Mercedeses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Closing rounds\nAt the Japanese Grand Prix, free practice sessions 1 and 2 went as scheduled on Friday, with Mercedes topping each of the sessions. Because of Typhoon Hagibis, all events for Saturday, with the exception of qualifying, were cancelled with qualifying instead being rescheduled to Sunday morning. Vettel and Leclerc both locked out the front row for a Ferrari 1\u20132, with Bottas and Mercedes not far behind. The Red Bull drivers of Verstappen and Albon finished with the exact same Q3 time, but Verstappen received the position ahead of his teammate as he was released first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0038-0001", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Closing rounds\nAt the race, Vettel had an issue when the lights went out to start the race, letting Bottas pass by easily. Leclerc and Verstappen had a tangle at turn 2 on the opening lap, which saw Leclerc being given a five-second penalty; he was later given a ten-second penalty for driving in an unsafe condition after the collision. Verstappen eventually retired from the race, his second DNF of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0038-0002", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Closing rounds\nThe chequered flag was waved a lap early, and though Sergio P\u00e9rez of Racing Point crashed out, his 9th place standing was left intact as the results of the race were taken from lap 52. Bottas of Mercedes finished first, Vettel of Ferrari finished second, and Hamilton finished third with Hamilton receiving the fastest lap point. With the 1\u20133 finish for Mercedes, the team had secured their sixth consecutive Constructors' Championship. Renault had both drivers disqualified for a technical infringement following a protest from Racing Point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Closing rounds\nAt the Mexican Grand Prix, Hamilton won his tenth Grand Prix of the season, after a first-corner touch with Verstappen that saw them both crossing the grass at turn 2. Verstappen lost several positions, and in fighting his way back past Bottas sustained a puncture that effectively ended his challenge. Sebastian Vettel finished second and Valtteri Bottas third. Although Hamilton could have taken the World Championship, he was unable to outscore Bottas by a sufficient number of points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Closing rounds\nAt the United States Grand Prix, Bottas won from pole followed by Hamilton and Verstappen. Second place in the race was enough for Hamilton to claim his sixth World Drivers' Championship making him the second most successful Formula One driver in terms of Championship wins behind Michael Schumacher.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Closing rounds\nAt the Brazilian Grand Prix, Verstappen won from pole. Pierre Gasly and Carlos Sainz Jr. took their first podiums, finishing 2nd and 3rd respectively. The race changed dramatically on lap 53 when Valtteri Bottas retired with an engine problem, bringing out the safety car to bunch up the field. Immediately after the end of the safety-car period, Ferrari teammates Charles Leclerc and Sebastian Vettel collided on the back straight, causing both to retire. Debris from the incident brought out the safety car again, returning to the pits with two laps remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0041-0001", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Closing rounds\nFollowing the restart, Lewis Hamilton misjudged an overtaking manoeuvre on Alexander Albon, putting the latter into a spin and dropping him from a podium position to being out of the points. Hamilton's car was damaged but he was able to continue, although he lost second place to Pierre Gasly. Gasly and Hamilton were involved in a dramatic flat-out race to the finish line, with DRS being unavailable as this was only the second lap following the safety car ending.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0041-0002", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Closing rounds\nGasly held onto second place, with his ability to keep Hamilton's Mercedes at bay in a straight fight being a major show of strength for the Honda engine. Hamilton occupied the final step of the podium, but was later given a 5-second time penalty for causing the incident with Albon. This dropped him to 7th and promoted Carlos Sainz Jr. to his first podium in Formula One in his 101st race \u2013 the longest any podium winner has had to wait for his first podium in F1 history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Closing rounds\nHamilton took pole position at the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, ending his pole-less streak since Germany, and went on to dominate and win the race, taking the sixth Grand Slam of his career. Verstappen was initially overtaken by Leclerc at the start but despite having minor engine issues, managed to repass him later on. Leclerc had been summoned to the stewards regarding a fuel issue, and Ferrari were fined \u20ac50,000 while Leclerc got to keep his position. Bottas, who started from 20th and last due to multiple engine penalties, was able to recover to 4th place, despite a DRS issue affecting the entire grid for the first 17 laps of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Results and standings, Scoring system\nPoints were awarded to the top ten classified drivers and the driver who set the fastest lap. The points were awarded for every race, using the following system:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 74], "content_span": [75, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289468-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula One World Championship, Results and standings, Scoring system\nThe point for fastest lap was only awarded if the driver was classified in the top ten for the race. Two fastest lap points were not awarded this season as Kevin Magnussen and Valtteri Bottas set the fastest lap but did not classify within the top ten in Singapore and Brazil, respectively. As Daniil Kvyat and Nico H\u00fclkenberg ended the season with an identical number of points, a count-back system was used as a tie-breaker, with the driver's best result used to decide the standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 74], "content_span": [75, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289469-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula Regional European Championship\nThe 2019 Formula Regional European Championship was a multi-event, Formula 3 open-wheel single seater motor racing championship held across Europe. The championship features a mix of professional and amateur drivers, competing in Formula 3 cars that conform to the FIA Formula 3 regulations for the championship. It the inaugural season of the championship. Frederik Vesti is the drivers' champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289469-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula Regional European Championship\nThe season commenced on 14 April at Circuit Paul Ricard and concluded on 20 October at Autodromo Nazionale Monza, after eight meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289469-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula Regional European Championship, Teams and drivers\nAll teams and drivers competed with the Tatuus\u2013Alfa Romeo F3 T-318.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289469-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula Regional European Championship, Race calendar\nThe provisional calendar was announced on 31 October 2018. The schedule was altered on 9 November 2018 with Hockenheimring replaced by Circuit Paul Ricard, and on 1 December 2018, with the round at Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari moved from its original 9 June date. The last two race weekends of the season at Monza and Mugello were swapped. The cancelled race from Vallelunga Circuit was rescheduled and run at Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari in Round 5 as a fourth race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289469-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula Regional European Championship, Championship standings\nPoints are awarded to the top 10 classified finishers in each race. No points are awarded for pole position or fastest lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 67], "content_span": [68, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289469-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula Regional European Championship, Championship standings, Drivers' standings\nBold\u00a0\u2013 PoleItalics\u00a0\u2013 Fastest Lap\u2020\u00a0\u2014 Did not finish, but classified", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 87], "content_span": [88, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289470-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula Renault Eurocup\nThe 2019 Formula Renault Eurocup is a multi-event motor racing championship for open wheel, formula racing cars held across Europe. The championship features drivers competing in 1.8 litre Formula Renault single seat race cars that conform to the technical regulations for the championship. The 2019 season is the 29th Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 season organized by the Renault Sport. The series will visit nine circuits around the Europe, with one overseas round at Abu Dhabi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289470-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula Renault Eurocup\nThe series utilizes Formula 3 chassis for the first time and new 1.8-litre turbocharged engine. Furthermore, the series also introduced Hankook Tires for the first time in its history after a previous long-term partnership with Michelin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289470-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula Renault Eurocup, Teams and drivers\nOn 14 November 2018, a provisional entry list of ten teams was released. Fortec Motorsports left the series, while BhaiTech Racing, FA Racing by Drivex and M2 Competition have joined the series for the first time. In December 2018, Josef Kaufmann Racing announced it would be withdrawing from the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289470-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula Renault Eurocup, Calendar\nThe provisional calendar for the 2019 season was announced on 18 October 2018. The calendar was finalised on 11 December 2018 with introduction of the Yas Marina Circuit as first non-European venue in the Eurocup history. Red Bull Ring round was dropped from the calendar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289470-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula Renault Eurocup, Championship standings, Teams' championship\nOnly two-best cars are eligible to score points in the teams' championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 73], "content_span": [74, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289471-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula Renault seasons\nThis article describes all the 2019 seasons of Formula Renault series across the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289471-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula Renault seasons, Unofficial Formula Renault championships, 2019 Ultimate Cup Series Monoplace season\nThe season was held between 23 March and 3 November, predominantly based in France but also racing across Europe in Tatuus FR 2.0 chassis. Gentleman Drivers are indicated in blue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 113], "content_span": [114, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289471-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula Renault seasons, Unofficial Formula Renault championships, 2019 Drexler-Automotive Formula Renault 2.0 Pokal season\nThe season was held between 5th April and 13 October, and raced across Austria, Italy, Czech Republic and Germany. The races occur with other categories cars as part of the 2019 Austria Formula 3 Cup, this section presents only the Austrian Formula Renault 2.0L classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 128], "content_span": [129, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289471-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula Renault seasons, Unofficial Formula Renault championships, 2019 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, 113], "content_span": [114, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289471-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Formula Renault seasons, Unofficial Formula Renault championships, 2019 Formula Renault 2.0 Argentina season\n1 extra point in each race for regularly qualified drivers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 113], "content_span": [114, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289472-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fort Worth mayoral election\nThe 2019 Fort Worth mayoral election took place on May 4, 2019, to elect the mayor of Fort Worth, Texas. The election was officially non-partisan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289472-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fort Worth mayoral election\nBetsy Price, who was serving her fourth term, ran for reelection. Deborah Peoples, the chair of the Tarrant County Democratic Party, ran as a challenger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289472-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Fort Worth mayoral election\nBetsy Price handily won re-election with just under 56% of the vote. Price won a record fifth term as mayor of Fort Worth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289473-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Forward Madison FC season\nThe 2019 Forward Madison FC season was the inaugural season in the soccer team's history, where they competed in the third division of American soccer, USL League One, the first season of the competition. Forward Madison FC also participated in the 2019 U.S. Open Cup. Forward Madison FC played their home games at Breese Stevens Field, located in Madison, Wisconsin, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289473-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Forward Madison FC season, Overview\nThe USL League One schedule was announced on December 10, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289474-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2019 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships were held on February 7\u201310, 2019 in Anaheim, California, United States. Held annually since 1999, the competition featured skaters from the Americas, Asia, Africa, and Oceania. Medals were awarded in men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289474-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Qualification\nThis competition is open to skaters from all non-European member nations of the International Skating Union. The corresponding competition for European skaters is the 2019 European Figure Skating Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 64], "content_span": [65, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289474-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Qualification\nSkaters are eligible for the event if they reached the age of 15 before July 1, 2018. Each national federation is permitted three entries for each discipline and may choose skaters based on their own criteria, as long as the selected skaters have attained the minimum technical elements scores (TES) in accordance with ISU regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 64], "content_span": [65, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289474-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Qualification, Minimum technical element scores (TES)\nThe ISU stipulates that the minimum scores must be achieved at an ISU-recognized senior international competition in the ongoing or preceding season, no later than 21 days before the first official practice day. Due to the difference in the rules for the 2017\u201318 and 2018\u201319 seasons, the required minimum scores to enter the 2019 Four Continents Championships have been adjusted separately for scores reached in the 2017\u201318 and the 2018\u201319 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 104], "content_span": [105, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289474-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Entries\nThe International Skating Union announced the preliminary entries on January 17, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 58], "content_span": [59, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289474-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Records\nThe following new ISU best scores were set during this competition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 58], "content_span": [59, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289474-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289474-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Medals summary, Medalists\nSmall medals awarded to the skaters who achieve the highest short program or rhythm dance placements in each discipline:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 76], "content_span": [77, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289474-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Medals summary, Medalists\nSmall medals 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, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289474-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289474-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289474-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Prize money\nPrize money is awarded to skaters who achieve a Top 6 placement in each discipline as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 62], "content_span": [63, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289475-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Four Days of Dunkirk\nThe 2019 Four Days of Dunkirk (French: Quatre Jours de Dunkerque 2019) was the 65th edition of the Four Days of Dunkirk cycling stage race. It started on 14 May in Dunkirk and ended on 19 May again in Dunkirk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289475-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Four Days of Dunkirk, Teams\nThe start list includes 18 teams (4 UCI WorldTeams, 12 Professional Continental Teams, and 2 Continental Teams).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289475-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Four Days of Dunkirk, Stages, Stage 2\nClement Venturini from AG2R La Mondiale crossed the line first, but was relegated by the jury due to an \"irregular sprint\" in the finale, therefore Dylan Groenewegen, who crossed the line second, is the winner of the stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289475-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Four Days of Dunkirk, Stages, Stage 3\nClement Venturini from AG2R La Mondiale crossed the line fourth, but was again relegated by the jury due to an \"irregular sprint\" in the finale, therefore taking 16th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289476-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Four National Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2019 Four Nationals Figure Skating Championships included the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Poland, and Hungary. It took place on December 14\u201315, 2018 in Budapest, Hungary. The results were split by country; the three highest-placing skaters from each country formed their national podiums in men's singles, ladies' singles, and ice dancing. The results were among the criteria used to determine international assignments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289476-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Four National Figure Skating Championships, Medals summary, Slovakia\nNicole Raji\u010dov\u00e1 defeated Silvia Hugec for the Slovak ladies' title while Marco Klepoch overtook Michael Neuman for the men's title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 73], "content_span": [74, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289476-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Four National Figure Skating Championships, Senior results, Men\nMaty\u00e1\u0161 B\u011blohradsk\u00fd was first and won the Czech senior men's title for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 68], "content_span": [69, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289476-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Four National Figure Skating Championships, Senior results, Ladies\nMaking her debut for Poland, 16-year-old Ekaterina Kurakova finished first, ahead of the Czech Republic's Eli\u0161ka B\u0159ezinov\u00e1 and Hungary's Ivett T\u00f3th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 71], "content_span": [72, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289476-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Four National Figure Skating Championships, Senior results, Ice dance\nNatalia Kaliszek / Maksym Spodyriev and Anna Yanovskaya / \u00c1d\u00e1m Luk\u00e1cs were the Polish and Hungarian champions respectively, with Kaliszek / Spodyriev receiving the top scores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 74], "content_span": [75, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289477-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Four Nations Tournament (women's football)\nThe 2019 Four Nations Tournament was the 18th edition of the Four Nations Tournament, an invitational women's football tournament held annually in China. The tournament used single-elimination instead of single round-robin system for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289477-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Four Nations Tournament (women's football), Goalscorers\nThere have been 12 goals scored in 4 matches, for an average of 3 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 60], "content_span": [61, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289478-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Foxwoods Resort Casino 301\nThe 2019 Foxwoods Resort Casino 301 is a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race held on July 21, 2019 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon, New Hampshire. Contested over 301 laps on the 1.058-mile (1.703\u00a0km) speedway, it was the 20th race of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289478-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Foxwoods Resort Casino 301, Report, Background\nNew Hampshire Motor Speedway is a 1.058-mile (1.703\u00a0km) oval speedway located in Loudon, New Hampshire, which has hosted NASCAR racing annually since the early 1990s, as well as the longest-running motorcycle race in North America, the Loudon Classic. Nicknamed \"The Magic Mile\", the speedway is often converted into a 1.6-mile (2.6\u00a0km) road course, which includes much of the oval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289478-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Foxwoods Resort Casino 301, Report, Background\nThe track was originally the site of Bryar Motorsports Park before being purchased and redeveloped by Bob Bahre. The track is currently one of eight major NASCAR tracks owned and operated by Speedway Motorsports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289478-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Foxwoods Resort Casino 301, First practice\nChase Elliott was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 27.784 seconds and a speed of 137.086\u00a0mph (220.619\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289478-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Foxwoods Resort Casino 301, Qualifying\nBrad Keselowski scored the pole for the race with a time of 27.927 and a speed of 136.384\u00a0mph (219.489\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289478-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Foxwoods Resort Casino 301, Practice (post-qualifying), Second practice\nErik Jones was the fastest in the second practice session with a time of 28.546 seconds and a speed of 133.427\u00a0mph (214.730\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289478-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Foxwoods Resort Casino 301, Practice (post-qualifying), Final practice\nRyan Blaney was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 28.515 seconds and a speed of 133.572\u00a0mph (214.963\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289478-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Foxwoods Resort Casino 301, Media, Television\nNBC Sports covered the race on the television side. Rick Allen, four-time and all-time Loudon winner Jeff Burton, Steve Letarte and Dale Earnhardt Jr. called the action in the booth for the race. Dave Burns, Marty Snider and Kelli Stavast reported from pit lane during the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289478-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Foxwoods Resort Casino 301, Media, Radio\nPRN had the radio call for the race, which was simulcast on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio. Doug Rice, Mark Garrow, and Wendy Venturini called the race from the booth when the field raced down the frontstretch. Rob Albright called the race from turns 1 & 2 and Pat Patterson called the race from turns 3 & 4. Brad Gillie, Steve Richards, Jim Noble, and Brett McMillan handled the duties on pit lane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289479-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 France Women's Sevens\nThe 2019 France Women's Sevens is the final tournament within the 2018\u201319 World Rugby Women's Sevens Series and the fourth edition of the France Women's Sevens. For the first time in the tournament's history, it is held over the weekend of 15\u201316 June 2019 at Parc des Sports Aguil\u00e9ra in Biarritz. With New Zealand already qualified for the 2020 Summer Olympics, and the United States only needing to field a team to become eligible, the remaining two slots shall be determined over the weekend based upon overall series ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289479-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 France Women's Sevens, Format\nThe teams 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 brackets while the top 2 third place teams also compete in the Cup/Plate. The other teams from each group play-off for the Challenge Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289479-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 France Women's Sevens, Teams\nEleven core teams are participating in the tournament along with one invited team, Scotland:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289480-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 France Women's T20I Quadrangular Series\nThe 2019 France Women's T20I Quadrangular Series was a women's Twenty20 International (WT20I) cricket tournament held in Nantes, France from 31 July to 3 August. The participants were the women's national sides of France, Austria, Jersey and Norway. Matches in the series were recognised as official WT20I games as per ICC's announcement that full WT20I status would apply to all the matches played between women's teams of associate members after 1 July 2018. Jersey Women were the only side of the four to have previously played a WT20I (against Guernsey Women on 31 May 2019). The matches were played at the Cricket Ground, Parc du Grand Blottereau in Nantes. France won the tournament after winning 5 of their 6 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289481-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fred Page Cup\nThe 2019 Fred Page Cup was the 25th Canadian eastern junior A ice hockey championship for the Canadian Junior Hockey League. The Amherst Ramblers hosted for the first time in team history. The tournament was held May 1 to May 5 at Amherst Stadium in Amherst, Nova Scotia. The tournament champions qualified for the 2019 National Junior A Hockey Championship, held in Brooks, Alberta, and hosted by the Alberta Junior Hockey League's Brooks Bandits at the Centennial Regional Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289482-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Free State provincial election\nThe 2019 Free State provincial election was held on 8 May 2019, concurrently with the 2019 South African general election, to elect the 30 members of the Free State Provincial Legislature.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289482-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Free State provincial election\nThe election was won by the African National Congress, the incumbent governing party in the province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289482-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Free State provincial election, Premier candidates\nThe African National Congress (ANC) did not announce a premier candidate before the election. Provincial chairperson Sam Mashinini was first on the ANC's list with incumbent premier Sisi Ntombela third on the list. After the election, Ntombela was announced as the party's premier candidate and she was elected for another term at the first sitting of the legislature after the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289482-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Free State provincial election, Premier candidates\nThe Democratic Alliance (DA) chose Patricia Kopane, a two-term Member of Parliament and its leader in the Free State. She defeated Coreen Malherbe for the position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289482-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Free State provincial election, Premier candidates\nThe Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) did not field a premier candidate, since the party seeks to abolish provincial governments. Mandisa Makesini appeared first on the party's list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289482-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Free State provincial election, Premier candidates\nThe Freedom Front Plus (FF Plus) selected their incumbent provincial leader and former member of the provincial legislature, Jan van Niekerk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289482-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Free State provincial election, Aftermath\nDuring the first sitting of the provincial legislature on 22 May 2019, Sisi Ntombela was re-elected as premier, while Zanele Sifuba was elected speaker, and Vusi Tshabalala was appointed chief whip.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289483-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French Athletics Championships\nThe 2019 French Athletics Championships was the 131st edition of the national championship in outdoor track and field for France. It was held on 26\u201328 July at Stade Henri-Lux in Saint-\u00c9tienne. 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, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289484-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French F4 Championship\nThe 2019 French F4 Championship was the ninth season to run under the guise of the French F4 Championship and the second season under the FIA Formula 4 regulations. The championship used Mygale M14 chassis with an upgraded 2.0 litre engine. The series began on 20 April at Nogaro and ended on 13 October at Le Castellet. Hadrien David, who won seven races throughout the season, won the title, 57.5 points ahead of closest challenger Reshad de Gerus, who came out victorious on four occasions. Sixth-placed Enzo Valente won two races, and Nicky Hays, Victor Bernier, Gillian Henrion, Isack Hadjar, Ugo Gazil, Mikkel Grundtvig and Paul-Adrien Pallot all won one race respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289484-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 French F4 Championship, Race calendar\nA seven round calendar taking place in 3 countries is published on the FFSA Academy website.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289484-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 French F4 Championship, Championship standings\nEach driver dropped their worst round result. Points were awarded as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289484-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 French F4 Championship, Championship standings, Drivers' standings \u2013 FFSA Academy\nBold\u00a0\u2013 PoleItalics\u00a0\u2013 Fastest Lap\u2020\u00a0\u2014 Did not finish, but classified", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 86], "content_span": [87, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289485-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French Grand Prix\nThe 2019 French Grand Prix (formally known as the Formula 1 Pirelli Grand Prix de France 2019) was a Formula One motor race on 23 June 2019 at the Circuit Paul Ricard in Le Castellet, France. The race was the 8th round of the 2019 FIA Formula One World Championship. It was the 88th running of the French Grand Prix, and the 60th time the event had been included as a round of the Formula One World Championship since the inception of the series in 1950.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289485-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 French Grand Prix\nThe race was won by Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton ahead of teammate Valtteri Bottas and Ferrari's Charles Leclerc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289485-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 French Grand Prix, Background, Entrants\nThe drivers and teams were the same as the season entry list with no additional stand-in drivers for the race. However, Nicholas Latifi drove in the first practice session for Williams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289485-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 French Grand Prix, Background, Championship standings before the race\nBefore the race Lewis Hamilton had 162 points and held a 29-point lead over teammate Valtteri Bottas, with Sebastian Vettel third with 100 points, followed by Max Verstappen with 88 points, and then by Vettel's teammate Charles Leclerc in fifth place with 72 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289485-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 French Grand Prix, Background, Championship standings before the race\nIn the Constructors' Championship standings, Mercedes led Ferrari with 295 points and had a 123-point lead having won all the previous races in the season so far. Red Bull was third with 124 points and McLaren was fourth with 30 points, just 2 points ahead of Renault with 28 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289485-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 French Grand Prix, Background, Penalties\nDaniil Kvyat was required to start from the back of the grid as he exceeded his quota of power unit components, using a 4th Internal Combustion Unit (ICE), 3rd Motor Generator Unit-Kinetic (MGU-K), 3rd Energy Store (ES), 3rd Control Electronics (CE), 4th Turbocharger (TC) and 4th Motor Generator Unit-Heat (MGU-H). George Russell was required to start from the back of the grid as he exceeded his quota of power unit components, using a 3rd Energy Store (ES) and 3rd Control Electronics (CE).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289485-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 French Grand Prix, Background, Circuit changes\nFollowing the 2018 race, teams and drivers expressed concerns about the pit lane entry which saw cars enter the lane aimed directly at the Mercedes garage. In response the FIA announced that the pit lane entry would be moved to somewhere between turns 14 and 15 and also announced that the track would be resurfaced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289485-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 French Grand Prix, Background, Circuit changes\nThe FIA also announced that they had moved to clamp down any potential corner cutting ahead of the French Grand Prix weekend at the Circuit Paul Ricard. The nature of the track, which had prominently been used as a test venue in preceding years, meant that there was a lot of runoff for the drivers if they made a mistake. However, there had been bollards and signs placed around the circuit in order to stop the drivers taking advantage of the runoff area, ensuring they would lose time and rejoin the circuit safely.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289485-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 French Grand Prix, Background, Circuit changes\nAt turn 2, two yellow bollards had appeared along with some red and white signage to indicate where a driver should rejoin the circuit. The event notes state: \"Any driver who fails to negotiate Turn 2 by using the track, and who passes completely to the right of the first fluorescent yellow bollard on the apex of the corner, must keep completely to the right of the fluorescent yellow bollard and re-join the track by driving through the two arrays of blocks in the run-off by passing to the right of the first and to the left of the second.\" A similar system had been enforced further on in the first sector, at turns 3, 4, and 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289485-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 French Grand Prix, Background, Circuit changes\nThe rules would not strictly apply to free practice sessions, and each case was supposed to be handled and analysed differently depending on the circumstance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289485-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 French Grand Prix, Free practice\nLewis Hamilton set the fastest time in FP1 followed by Valtteri Bottas. The Ferrari drivers were third and fourth, with Charles Leclerc ahead of Sebastian Vettel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289485-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 French Grand Prix, Free practice\nIn FP2 it was another Mercedes 1\u20132 with Bottas leading Hamilton, and then Leclerc leading Vettel in 3\u20134. Early in the session Hamilton went off the track and joined unsafely, forcing Max Verstappen off the track when he rejoined. Hamilton was later summoned by the stewards but he received no penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289485-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 French Grand Prix, Race, Race summary\nThe race began cleanly, with Carlos Sainz Jr. unsuccessfully attempting to overtake Max Verstappen and the two Mercedes cars maintaining their lead. On lap 6, George Russell attempted an overtake on teammate Robert Kubica around the outside of turn 10, but was pushed off-track, destroying a polystyrene distance marker. By the following lap, Sebastian Vettel had overtaken both McLarens to take fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289485-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 French Grand Prix, Race, Race summary\nAntonio Giovinazzi was the first driver to pit, on lap 8, after struggling with degrading soft-compound tyres. On lap 10, Sergio P\u00e9rez was handed a 5-second time penalty for leaving the track and gaining an advantage on lap 1. The decision was controversial, since P\u00e9rez had correctly passed around the penalty bollard after cutting turn 4 as specified by the race director, but had still overtaken Alexander Albon and Kevin Magnussen to claim 13th place as a result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289485-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 French Grand Prix, Race, Race summary\nVerstappen was the first of the leading pack to pit, on lap 21. Charles Leclerc pitted on the following lap, as did Valtteri Bottas on lap 24, and Lewis Hamilton from the lead on lap 25. Vettel, who was yet to pit, had been far enough behind Hamilton that the Mercedes driver maintained the lead of the race. Vettel pitted on the following lap, emerging behind Verstappen and restoring the order of the top five. Lance Stroll was the final driver to make their first pit-stop; he did so on lap 40.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289485-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 French Grand Prix, Race, Race summary\nRomain Grosjean became the first and only retirement of the Grand Prix on lap 45 with an unspecified problem. A virtual safety car was briefly implemented on lap 50 after a bollard had rolled onto the track. Vettel pitted for soft-compound tyres on the penultimate lap in an attempt to claim the fastest lap point, which he did on the final lap of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289485-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 French Grand Prix, Race, Race summary\nOn the final lap, Lando Norris, who had been suffering from hydraulic problems, was passed by Daniel Ricciardo before turn 8. Ricciardo ran deep into the corner, and forced Norris off the track whilst rejoining it in turn 9. This allowed Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and Nico H\u00fclkenberg through, with R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen also getting past Ricciardo. Ricciardo then went off-track on the following straight to overtake the Alfa Romeo for seventh place. Ricciardo was later handed two 5-second penalties after the race, one for rejoining the track unsafely, and one for leaving the track and gaining an advantage. This demoted him to 11th place, outside of the points. The stewards also handed him two penalty points on his Super Licence for \"Unsafe rejoining of track\" and one point for \"Gaining advantage off track\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 835]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289485-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 French Grand Prix, Race, Race summary\nLewis Hamilton won the race from pole position ahead of teammate Valtteri Bottas and Charles Leclerc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289486-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French Indoor Athletics Championships\nThe 2019 French Indoor Athletics Championships was the 48th edition of the national championship in indoor track and field for France. It was held on 16\u201317 February at the Stadium Miramas M\u00e9tropole in Miramas, Bouches-du-Rh\u00f4ne. A total of 28 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, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289487-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open\nThe 2019 French Open was a Grand Slam tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was held at the Stade Roland Garros in Paris, France, from 26 May to 9 June, comprising singles, doubles and mixed doubles play. Junior and wheelchair tournaments are also scheduled. Rafael Nadal was the defending champion in men's singles and won a record 12th French Open singles title. Simona Halep was the defending champion in the women's singles, but lost in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289487-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open\nIt was the 123rd edition of the French Open and the second Grand Slam event of 2019. The main singles draws included 16 qualifiers for men and 12 for women out of 128 players in each draw. This was in contrast to two other Grand Slam tournaments \u2013 the Australian Open and Wimbledon, which from 2019 increased the number of women qualifiers to 16, to match with the US Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289487-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open\n2019 was the final year in which there was no roof on any of the French tennis courts. On 5 June 2019, the entire day's tennis was washed out due to heavy rain. It is also the only Grand Slam to retain the advantage set in the final sets, whereas Australian Open and Wimbledon have now switched to tiebreaks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289487-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open, Tournament\nThe 2019 French Open is the 123rd edition of the French Open and is held at Stade Roland Garros in Paris. A new shot clock that gives 25 seconds for the player serving, between points are introduced. In the juniors tournament, service lets won't be featured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289487-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open, Tournament\nThe tournament is an event run by the International Tennis Federation (ITF) and is part of the 2019 ATP Tour and the 2019 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, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289487-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open, Tournament\nThere is a singles and doubles events for both boys and girls (players under 18), which is part of the Grade A category of tournaments, and singles and doubles events for men's and women's wheelchair tennis players under the Grand Slam category, also hosting singles and doubles events for wheelchair quad tennis for the first time. The tournament is played on clay courts and took place over a series of 23 courts, including the three main showcourts, Court Philippe Chatrier, Court Suzanne Lenglen and the newly-opened Court Simonne Mathieu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289487-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open, Points and prize money, Points distribution\nBelow is a serie of tables for each of the competitions showing the ranking points on offer for each event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 61], "content_span": [62, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289487-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open, Points and prize money, Prize money\nThe total prize money for the 2019 edition is \u20ac42,661,000, an increase of 8% over 2018. The winners of the men's and women's singles title receive \u20ac2,300,000, an increase of \u20ac100,000 compared to 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 53], "content_span": [54, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289487-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open, Singles seeds\nThe following are the seeded players and notable players who have withdrawn from the event. Seedings are based on ATP and WTA rankings as of 20 May 2019. Rank and points before are as of 27 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 31], "content_span": [32, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289487-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open, Singles seeds, Men's Singles\n\u2020 The player did not qualify for the tournament in 2018. Accordingly, points for his 18th best result are deducted instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 46], "content_span": [47, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289487-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open, Singles seeds, Men's Singles\nThe following players would have been seeded, but they withdrew from the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 46], "content_span": [47, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289487-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open, Main draw wildcard entries\nThe following players were given wildcards to the main draw based on internal selection and recent performances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 44], "content_span": [45, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289487-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289487-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open, Withdrawals\nThe following players were accepted directly into the main draw, but withdrew with injuries or other reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289488-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open (badminton)\nThe 2019 French Open (officially known as the Yonex French Open 2019 for sponsorship reasons) was a badminton competition which took place at Stade Pierre de Coubertin in Paris, France, from 22 to 27 October 2019. It had a total purse of $750,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289488-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open (badminton), Tournament\nThe 2019 French Open was the twenty-first tournament of the 2019 BWF World Tour and also part of the French Open championships, which has been held since 1935. This tournament was organized by French Badminton Federation with the sanction of the BWF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289488-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open (badminton), Tournament, Venue\nThis international tournament was held at Stade Pierre de Coubertin in Paris, France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289488-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open (badminton), Tournament, Point distribution\nBelow is the point distribution table for each phase of the tournament based on the BWF points system for the BWF World Tour Super 750 event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289488-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open (badminton), Tournament, Prize money\nThe total prize money for this tournament was US$750,000. Distribution of prize money was in accordance with BWF regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289489-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Boys' Doubles\nMatheus Pucinelli de Almeida and Thiago Agust\u00edn Tirante won the Boys' Doubles tennis title at the 2019 French Open, defeating Flavio Cobolli and Dominic Stricker in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20133), 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289489-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Boys' Doubles\nOnd\u0159ej \u0160tyler and Naoki Tajima were the defending champions, but both players were no longer eligible to participate in junior tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289490-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Boys' Singles\nHolger Rune won the Boys' Singles tennis title at the 2019 French Open, defeating Toby Kodat in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20137(5\u20137), 6\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289490-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Boys' Singles\nTseng Chun-hsin was the defending champion, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289491-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries\nThe 2019 French Open described below in detail, in form of day-by-day summaries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289491-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 11 (5 June)\nFor the first time since 2016, all of the scheduled matches were disrupted by weather conditions and play was cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289491-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 12 (6 June)\nPlay would normally start at 1500 CEST, but due to inclement weather on the previous day, matches started at 1200 CEST. The women's semifinal match that was scheduled to be played was moved to Friday, 7 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289491-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 15 (9 June)\nRafael Nadal won his 12th French Open, an extended record breaking 12th title in a single Grand Slam tournament, surpassed Margaret Court's overall titles in a single Major. By capturing his 18th Grand Slam title, Nadal closed the gap on Roger Federer's record of 20 Grand Slam titles, and it is the first time that the gap of slams between the two has been down to just 2 since Federer overhauled Pete Sampras' then record of 14 Grand Slam titles in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289492-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Girls' Doubles\nChloe Beck and Emma Navarro won the Girls' Doubles tennis title at the 2019 French Open, defeating Alina Charaeva and Anastasia Tikhonova in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289492-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Girls' Doubles\nCaty McNally and Iga \u015awi\u0105tek were the defending champions, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289493-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Girls' Singles\nLeylah Fernandez won the Girls' Singles tennis title at the 2019 French Open, defeating Emma Navarro in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289493-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Girls' Singles\nCori Gauff was the defending champion, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289494-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Legends Over 45 Doubles\nMansour Bahrami and Fabrice Santoro were the defending champions, but were eliminated in the round robin competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289494-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Legends Over 45 Doubles\nSergi Bruguera and Goran Ivani\u0161evi\u0107 won the title, defeating Mikael Pernfors and Mats Wilander in the final, 6\u20132, 4\u20136, [10\u20134].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289494-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289494-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289495-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Legends Under 45 Doubles\n\u00c0lex Corretja and Juan Carlos Ferrero were the defending champions, but Corretja chose not to participate this year. Ferrero played alongside Andriy Medvedev, but lost to S\u00e9bastien Grosjean and Micha\u00ebl Llodra in the final, 6\u22127(4\u22127), 5\u22127.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289495-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289495-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289496-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nKevin Krawietz and Andreas Mies won the Men's Doubles tennis title at the 2019 French Open defeating Jeremy Chardy and Fabrice Martin in the final 6\u20132, 7\u20136(7\u20133). Chardy and Martin were the fourth all-French team to reach the French Open men's doubles final in seven years, and for the second time in three years none of the four players had previously played in a Grand Slam men's doubles final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289496-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nPierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Mahut were the defending champions, but Herbert chose not to participate this year. Mahut played alongside J\u00fcrgen Melzer, but lost in the second round to Krawietz and Mies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289496-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nAll four of the French Open men's doubles semifinal teams consisted of pairings of players representing the same country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289496-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Men's Doubles, Seeds\nClick on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289497-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nTwo-time defending champion Rafael Nadal defeated Dominic Thiem in a rematch of the previous year's final, 6\u20133, 5\u20137, 6\u20131, 6\u20131 to win the Men's Singles tennis title at the 2019 French Open. It was Nadal's record-extending twelfth French Open title and 18th major title overall. By winning the title, Nadal broke the all-time record for the most singles titles won by a player at the same major (which he previously co-held with Margaret Court, who won the Australian Open eleven times).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289497-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nNovak Djokovic and Roger Federer were both attempting to achieve the first double career Grand Slam in men's singles in the Open Era, with Djokovic also in contention to achieve a second non-calendar year Grand Slam, but both lost in the semifinals (Djokovic to Thiem and Federer to Nadal). This was Federer's first time playing the French Open in four years. Federer's third round match marked his 400th major match, an all-time record. Federer also became the oldest male singles player to reach the fourth round at Roland Garros since Nicola Pietrangeli in 1972, as well as the oldest semifinalist since the 40 year-old Pancho Gonzales in 1968.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289497-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nThe first round match between Ivo Karlovi\u0107 (40 years and three months) and Feliciano L\u00f3pez (37 years and 8 months) was the oldest French Open men's singles match in terms of combined ages in the Open Era. Karlovi\u0107 became the oldest male singles player to compete in the tournament since Istv\u00e1n Guly\u00e1s in 1973. Stefanos Tsitsipas became the first Greek player to reach the round of 16 at Roland Garros since Lazaros Stalios in 1936.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289497-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nFor only the third time in the Open Era and the first time since the 1970 Australian Open, all of the top 10 seeds reached the round of 16 at a major men's singles tournament. It is also the first time since the 2013 Australian Open that all top four seeds reached the semifinals (Djokovic, Nadal, Federer, and Thiem). It was the first time since the 2012 French Open that the Big Three all reached the semifinals of a major tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289497-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Men's Singles, Seeds\nClick on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289498-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Men's Singles Qualifying\nThe 2019 French Open \u2013 Men's Singles Qualifying was a series of tennis matches which took place from 20\u201324 May 2019 to determine the sixteen qualifiers into the main draw of the 2019 French Open \u2013 Men's Singles. Five players also qualified as lucky losers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289499-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Mixed Doubles\nLatisha Chan and Ivan Dodig were the defending champions and successfully defended their title, defeating Gabriela Dabrowski and Mate Pavi\u0107 in a rematch of the 2018 final, 6\u20131, 7\u20136(7\u20135). becoming the first team in the Open era to win back-to-back French Open mixed doubles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289500-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Wheelchair Men's Doubles\nSt\u00e9phane Houdet and Nicolas Peifer were the defending champions, but lost in the final to Gustavo Fern\u00e1ndez and Shingo Kunieda, 6\u20132, 2\u20136, [8\u201310].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289501-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Wheelchair Men's Singles\nShingo Kunieda was the defending champion, but lost to Gordon Reid in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289501-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Wheelchair Men's Singles\nGustavo Fern\u00e1ndez won the title, defeating Reid in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289502-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Wheelchair Quad Doubles\nThis was the first edition of the Quad Wheelchair event at the French Open. Dylan Alcott and David Wagner won the title, defeating Ymanitu Silva and Koji Sugeno in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289503-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Wheelchair Quad Singles\nThis was the first edition of the Quad Wheelchair event at the French Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289503-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Wheelchair Quad Singles\nDylan Alcott won the title, defeating David Wagner in the final, 6\u20132, 4\u20136, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289504-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Wheelchair Women's Doubles\nDiede de Groot and Aniek van Koot were the defending champions and successfully defended their title, defeating Marjolein Buis and Sabine Ellerbrock in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289505-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Wheelchair Women's Singles\nDiede de Groot defeated defending champion Yui Kamiji in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20130 to win the Wheelchair Women's Singles tennis title at the 2019 French Open. de Groot completed the career Grand Slam with the win, becoming the first wheelchair tennis player to do so.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289506-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nBarbora Krej\u010d\u00edkov\u00e1 and Kate\u0159ina Siniakov\u00e1 were the defending champions, but lost in the first round to Nadiia Kichenok and Abigail Spears.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289506-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nT\u00edmea Babos and Kristina Mladenovic won the Women's Doubles tennis title at the 2019 French Open, defeating Duan Yingying and Zheng Saisai 6\u20132, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289506-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nMladenovic replaced Siniakov\u00e1 in the WTA no. 1 doubles ranking at the end of the tournament. Barbora Str\u00fdcov\u00e1, Elise Mertens, Demi Schuurs, Ashleigh Barty and Zhang Shuai were also in contention for the top ranking at the start of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289506-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Women's Doubles, Seeds\nClick on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289507-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Women's Legends Doubles\nNathalie Dechy and Am\u00e9lie Mauresmo were the defending champions and successfully defended their title, defeating Martina Navratilova and Dinara Safina in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289507-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289507-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289508-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nAshleigh Barty defeated Mark\u00e9ta Vondrou\u0161ov\u00e1 in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20133 to win the Women's Singles tennis title at the 2019 French Open. It was Barty's first Grand Slam singles title, making her the first Australian player to win a French Open singles title since Margaret Court in 1973 and the first Australian player to win a major singles title since Samantha Stosur at the 2011 US Open. Vondrou\u0161ov\u00e1 was the first teenager to reach a French Open women's singles final since Ana Ivanovic in 2007, as well as the first teenager to reach a major women's singles final since Caroline Wozniacki at the 2009 US Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289508-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nSimona Halep was the defending champion, but lost to Amanda Anisimova in the quarterfinals. Anisimova was the first player, male or female, born in the 21st century to reach the quarterfinals and semifinals of a major tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289508-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nNaomi Osaka retained the WTA no. 1 singles ranking after Karol\u00edna Pl\u00ed\u0161kov\u00e1 lost in the third round. Angelique Kerber, Kiki Bertens and Petra Kvitov\u00e1 were also in contention for the top ranking. Osaka's streak of 16 consecutive wins at the Grand Slam level was broken when she lost to Kate\u0159ina Siniakov\u00e1 in the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289508-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nFor the first time since the 1978 Australian Open, none of the four semifinalists had previously reached a Grand Slam singles final. Of the four, Johanna Konta was the only one who had previously reached a Grand Slam singles semifinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289508-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nThis was the final major main draw appearance of former World No. 4, 2014 Australian Open runner-up, and 2016 WTA Finals champion Dominika Cibulkov\u00e1, as she retired from professional tennis after the 2019 season. She lost to Aryna Sabalenka in the first round. It was also the first French Open main draw appearance of future French Open champion Iga \u015awi\u0105tek. She reached the fourth round, losing to Halep in straight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289508-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nClick on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289509-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French Open \u2013 Women's Singles Qualifying\nThe 2019 French Open \u2013 Women's Singles Qualifying is a series of tennis matches that takes place from 21 May 2018 to 24 May 2019 to determine the twelve qualifiers into the main draw of the 2019 French Open \u2013 Women's Singles, and, if necessary, the lucky losers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289510-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French Road Cycling Cup\nThe 2019 French Road Cycling Cup is the 28th edition of the French Road Cycling Cup. Compared to the previous season, the same 15 events were held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289510-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 French Road Cycling Cup\nThe defending champion from the previous season is Hugo Hofstetter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289510-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 French Road Cycling Cup, Final Cup standings, Young rider classification\nAll riders younger than 25 are eligible for this classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 77], "content_span": [78, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289510-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 French Road Cycling Cup, Final Cup standings, Teams\nOnly French teams are eligible to be classified in the teams classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289511-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 French motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2019 French motorcycle Grand Prix was the fifth round of the 2019 MotoGP season. It was held at the Bugatti Circuit in Le Mans on 19 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289512-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fresno FC season\nThe 2019 Fresno FC season is the club's second season in the United Soccer League Championship, the second tier of the American soccer pyramid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289512-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fresno FC season, Competitions, U.S. Open Cup\nAs a member of the USL Championship, the Fresno FC will enter the tournament in the Second Round, to be played May 14\u201315, 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 50], "content_span": [51, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289513-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fresno State Bulldogs football team\nThe 2019 Fresno State Bulldogs football team represented California State University, Fresno in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Bulldogs were led by third year head coach Jeff Tedford and played their games at Bulldog Stadium as a member of the Mountain West Conference in the West Division. They finished the season 4\u20138, 2\u20136 in Mountain West play to finish in a three-way tie for fourth place in the West Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289513-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fresno State Bulldogs football team\nOn December 6, head coach Jeff Tedford resigned citing health reasons. He finished at Fresno State with a three-year record of 26\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289513-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Fresno State Bulldogs football team, Previous season\nThe Bulldogs finished the season 12\u20132 overall 7\u20131 in Mountain West Play to win the West division for a 2nd straight year. They defeated the Boise State in the Mountain West Conference Championship Game. They were invited to the Las Vegas Bowl where they defeated Arizona State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289513-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Fresno State Bulldogs football team, Preseason, Mountain West media days\nThe Mountain West media days will be held on July 23\u201324 at the Cosmopolitan on the Las Vegas Strip.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 77], "content_span": [78, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289513-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Fresno State Bulldogs football team, Preseason, Mountain West media days, Media poll\nThe preseason poll was released at the Mountain West media days on July 23, 2019. The Bulldogs were predicted to finish in first place in the MW West Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 89], "content_span": [90, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289514-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fresno shooting\nOn November 17, 2019, a mass shooting occurred at a Fresno, California football watch party with 35 to 40 people present, including several children. Four people were killed and six were injured. It was the third mass shooting in California in less than a week, the others being the Saugus High School shooting that killed three and injured another three in Santa Clarita, and a family murder\u2013suicide in San Diego that killed five and injured one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289514-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fresno shooting, Incident\nThe shooting happened in a backyard of a home when a group of friends and families were holding a football watch party, to watch the game between the Los Angeles Rams and the Chicago Bears. The party was composed of about 35 to 40 friends and family members of the home owner in attendance. At some point during the party the women and children attending the party had moved inside to watch TV, while 16 men stayed outside to continue watching the football game. At least two suspects snuck through an unlocked gate of the home around 6:00 pm PST and opened fire indiscriminately before they fled on foot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289514-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Fresno shooting, Victims\nThe deceased victims were all men between the ages of 23 and 40 years old. Three men were pronounced dead at the scene while another was transported to Community Regional Medical Center where he died of his injuries. Two of the deceased were well-known Southeast Asian singers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289514-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Fresno shooting, Victims\nFive others were treated with non-life threatening wounds at the same hospital while another was treated at a different hospital. The surviving victims are men between the ages of 28 and 36. All of the victims are members of the Hmong community in Fresno.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289514-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Fresno shooting, Investigation\nThe Fresno Police Department is investigating the incident, with assistance from the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and Clovis Police Department. Fresno Police Deputy Chief Michael Reed said the victims were \"likely targeted\". The department mobilized an \"Asian Gang Task Force\" to look into concerns about the attack being connected to a recent spike in violent crime by Asian gangs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289514-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Fresno shooting, Investigation\nOn December 31, six suspects were arrested in connection with the shooting, all of whom were believed to have been members of the Mongolian Boys Society gang. One of the victims was a former member of the rival gang Asian Crips. The shooting was allegedly retaliation for the murder of a Mongolian Boys Society member by a member of the Asian Crips. The suspects were detained at the Fresno County Jail and faced four counts of homicide, 12 counts of attempted homicide, and conspiracy to commit murder with gang and firearms enhancements. In February 2020, a seventh suspect was arrested and charged with the same offenses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289514-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Fresno shooting, Response\nThe Fresno area is home to the largest Hmong population in California and the second-largest in the United States. Their community expressed sadness and bewilderment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289514-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Fresno shooting, Response\nPoliticians such as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Fresno City Councilman Luis Chavez responded to the incident with statements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289515-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Frisco Bowl\nThe 2019 Frisco Bowl was a college football bowl game played on December 20, 2019, with kickoff at 7:30\u00a0p.m. EST (6:30\u00a0p.m. local CST) on ESPN2. It was the 3rd edition of the Frisco Bowl, and one of the 2019\u201320 bowl games concluding the 2019 FBS football season. Sponsored by restaurant franchise Tropical Smoothie Cafe, the game was officially known as the Tropical Smoothie Cafe Frisco Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289515-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Frisco Bowl, Teams\nThe bowl matched the Utah State Aggies of the Mountain West Conference and Kent State Golden Flashes of the Mid-American Conference (MAC). This was the teams' third meeting; the all-time series had been tied at 1\u20131. Their most recent meeting had seen Utah State defeat Kent State by a score of 27\u201324 on October 19, 1974, at Kent State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289515-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Frisco Bowl, Teams, Utah State Aggies\nUtah State completed their regular season with a 7\u20135 record (6\u20132 in conference), finishing in third place in the Mountain Division of Mountain West. This was the Aggies' 13th bowl game in program history, and eighth bowl appearance in nine seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289515-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Frisco Bowl, Teams, Kent State Golden Flashes\nKent State finished their regular season at 6\u20136 (5\u20133 in conference), in a three-way tie for second place in the East Division of the MAC. This was the fourth bowl game in school history, as the Golden Flashes were seeking their first-ever bowl win after losing the previous three. It was also Kent State's first bowl game since the 2013 GoDaddy.com Bowl, where their 2012 team lost to Arkansas State, 17\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 50], "content_span": [51, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289516-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fukui gubernatorial election\nA gubernatorial election was held on 7 April 2019 to elect the next Governor of Fukui.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289517-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fukuoka International Women's Cup\nThe 2019 Fukuoka International Women's Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor carpet courts. It was the nineteenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Fukuoka, Japan between 6 and 12 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289517-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fukuoka International Women's Cup, 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-00289518-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fukuoka International Women's Cup \u2013 Doubles\nNaomi Broady and Asia Muhammad were the defending champions, but Muhammad chose to participate at the 2019 FineMark Women's Pro Tennis Championship instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289518-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fukuoka International Women's Cup \u2013 Doubles\nBroady partnered alongside compatriot Heather Watson, and successfully defended their title, after Kristie Ahn and Alison Bai gave a walkover in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289519-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fukuoka International Women's Cup \u2013 Singles\nKatie Boulter was the defending champion, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289519-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fukuoka International Women's Cup \u2013 Singles\nHeather Watson won the title, defeating Zarina Diyas in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20131), 7\u20136(7\u20134).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289520-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fukuoka gubernatorial election\nA gubernatorial election was held on 7 April 2019 to elect the next Governor of Fukuoka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289521-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Furman Paladins football team\nThe 2019 Furman Paladins football team represents Furman University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They are led by third-year head coach Clay Hendrix and play their home games at Paladin Stadium. They are a member of the Southern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289521-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Furman Paladins football team, Previous season\nThe Paladins finished the 2018 season 6\u20134, 6\u20132 in SoCon play finish in a three way tie for the SoCon championship with Wofford and East Tennessee State. After tiebreakers, they did not receive the SoCon's automatic bid to the FCS playoffs and they did not receive an at-large bid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289521-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Furman Paladins football team, Preseason, Preseason polls\nThe SoCon released their preseason media poll and coaches poll on July 22, 2019. The Paladins were picked to finish in second place in both polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289521-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Furman Paladins football team, Preseason, Preseason All-SoCon Teams\nThe Paladins placed seven players on the preseason all-SoCon teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 72], "content_span": [73, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289521-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Furman Paladins football team, FCS Playoffs\nThe Paladins were selected for the postseason tournament, with a first-round pairing against Austin Peay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289522-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Furman Paladins men's soccer team\nThe 2019 Furman Paladins men's soccer team represented Furman University during the 2019 NCAA Division I men's soccer season and the 2019 Southern Conference men's soccer season. The regular season began on August 30 and concluded on November 2. It was the program's 53rd season fielding a men's varsity soccer team, and their 49th season in the SoCon. The 2019 season was Doug Allison's twenty-fifth year as head coach for the program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289522-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Furman Paladins 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, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289523-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fusagasug\u00e1 City Council election\nThe 2019 Fusagasug\u00e1 City Council election was held on Sunday, 27 October 2019, to elect the fifth City Council since the 2002 reform (Legislative Act 2002). At stake were all 17 seats in the City Council. There are twenty polling stations authorized by the Registradury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289524-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fuzhou China Open\nThe 2019 Fuzhou China Open was a badminton tournament which took place at Haixia Olympics Sports Center in Fuzhou, Fujian, China, from 5 to 10 November 2019 and had a total prize of $700,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289524-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Fuzhou China Open, Tournament\nThe 2019 Fuzhou China Open was the twenty-third tournament of the 2019 BWF World Tour and also part of the Fuzhou China Open championships, which has been held since 2005. This tournament was organized by Chinese Badminton Association and sanctioned by the BWF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289524-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Fuzhou China Open, Tournament, Venue\nThis international tournament was held at Haixia Olympic Sports Center in Fuzhou, Fujian, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289524-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Fuzhou China Open, Tournament, Point distribution\nBelow is the point distribution table for each phase of the tournament based on the BWF points system for the BWF World Tour Super 750 event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289524-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Fuzhou China Open, Tournament, Prize money\nThe total prize money for this tournament was US$700,000. Distribution of prize money was in accordance with BWF regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289525-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Fylde Borough Council election\nElections to Borough of Fylde were held on 2 May 2019 as part of the wider 2019 United Kingdom local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289526-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 G20 Osaka summit\nThe 2019 G20 Osaka summit was the fourteenth meeting of the G20, a forum of 19 countries and the EU that together represent most of the world economy. It was held on 28\u201329 June 2019 at the International Exhibition Center in Osaka. It was the first G20 summit to be hosted by Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289526-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 G20 Osaka summit, Issues\nThe 2019 G20 Summit discussed eight themes to Ensure Global Sustainable Development. The eight themes were \"Global Economy\", \"Trade and Investment\", \"Innovation\", \"Environment and Energy\", \"Employment\", \"Women's Empowerment\", \"Development\" and \"Health\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289526-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 G20 Osaka summit, Issues\nRegards to \"Trade and Investment\", support for the necessary reform of the World Trade Organization (WTO) was agreed. WHO Director-General Roberto Azev\u00eado had been participating in the summit, welcomed the communique.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289526-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 G20 Osaka summit, Issues\nRegards to \"Innovation\", necessity of respected and interoperable frameworks on Data Free Flow with Trust, both domestic and international, was discussed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289526-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 G20 Osaka summit, Issues\nRegards to \"Environment and Energy\", a common global vision, the \"Osaka Blue Ocean Vision\" which is aiming to reduce additional pollution by marine plastic litter to zero by 2050 through a comprehensive life-cycle approach was shared.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289526-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 G20 Osaka summit, Issues\nLeaders' Special Event was also held, and \"Digital Economy\" and \"Women\u2019s Empowerment\" were discussed. During the former event, \"Osaka Declaration on Digital Economy\" was issued, in which those leaders declared the launch of the \"Osaka Track\", a process which demonstrates their commitment to promote efforts on international rule-making on digital economy, especially on data flow and electronic commerce. Regards to the latter event, a press release compiling the messages from the leaders on their national measures and commitment regarding women's empowerment was issued after the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289526-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 G20 Osaka summit, Related topics\nMinistry of Foreign Affairs of the People's Republic of China has issued a statement considering the Hong Kong Protests as China's internal affairs on June 24. The Chinese government wanted to delist the Hong Kong issue from the summit's agenda for the year, to avoid possible political and security confrontations between all G20 leaders (from outside China) and China. China has threatened to attack G20 nations suspected for \u201cwrongfully\u201d accusing China. However, Japanese Prime Minister Abe had raised the issue to President Xi just before the official summit, while some Hong Kong citizens protested in places around the summit venue. Pro -independence leader Chan Ho-tin demonstrated with people from Chinese ethnic minorities like Rebiya Kadeer for Hong Kong, as well as Xinjiang issues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 831]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289526-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 G20 Osaka summit, Related topics\nOn June 29, President of the United States Donald Trump offered North Korea's Kim Jong-un a weekend meeting in the demilitarized zone, and the 2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit was realized.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289527-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 GB Pro-Series Shrewsbury\nThe 2019 GB Pro-Series Shrewsbury was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the twelfth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Shrewsbury, United Kingdom between 11 and 17 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289527-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 GB Pro-Series Shrewsbury, 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-00289528-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 GB Pro-Series Shrewsbury \u2013 Doubles\nSarah Beth Grey and Olivia Nicholls were the defending champions, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289528-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 GB Pro-Series Shrewsbury \u2013 Doubles\nArina Rodionova and Yanina Wickmayer won the title, defeating Freya Christie and Valeria Savinykh in the final, 6\u20132, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289529-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 GB Pro-Series Shrewsbury \u2013 Singles\nMaia Lumsden was the defending champion, but lost to Yanina Wickmayer in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289529-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 GB Pro-Series Shrewsbury \u2013 Singles\nVitalia Diatchenko won the title, defeating Wickmayer in the final, 5\u20137, 6\u20131, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289530-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 GC32 Racing Tour\n2019 was the sixth series of the GC32 Racing Tour. It was the first to include well-known GC32 teams Alinghi, Oman Air and Red Bull Sailing Team, following the collapse of the Extreme Sailing Series. The 2019 season consisted of five acts, returning to Villasimius, Riva del Garda, Lagos, and Palma de Mallorca, as well as its debut in Muscat, Oman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289530-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 GC32 Racing Tour, Events\n31 July- 4 August: 38 Copa del Rey MAPFRE / Palma de Mallorca, Spain", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289530-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 GC32 Racing Tour, Events\n11-15 September: GC32 Riva Cup / Riva del Garda, Italy", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289531-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 GC6\n2019 GC6 is a very small near-Earth asteroid and potentially hazardous object of the Apollo group, approximately 20 meters (70\u00a0ft) in diameter. It was detected by the Catalina Sky Survey at Catalina Station on 9 April 2019, a few days before it made its first-observed pass through the cislunar region at a distance of 136,000 miles (219,000\u00a0km), comparable to roughly half the average distance from the Earth to the Moon (0.58\u00a0LD).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [8, 8], "content_span": [9, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289531-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 GC6, Orbit and classification\n2019 GC6 is a member of the Apollo group of asteroids, which are Earth-crossing asteroids. They are the largest group of near-Earth objects with approximately 10,000 known members. It orbits the Sun at a distance of 0.91\u20131.29\u00a0AU once every 14 months (424 days; semi-major axis of 1.1\u00a0AU). Its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.18 and an inclination of 1\u00b0 with respect to the ecliptic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 34], "content_span": [35, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289531-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 GC6, Orbit and classification\nThe body's observation arc begins with its first observation by the Mount Lemmon Survey on 31 March 2019, just a few days prior to its potential discovery observation by the Catalina Sky Survey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 34], "content_span": [35, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289531-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 GC6, Physical characteristics, Diameter and albedo\nThe dimensions of the asteroid are estimated to range between 7.5\u201330 metres (25\u201398\u00a0ft) and has been compared to size of a house. Based on an magnitude-to-diameter conversion and a measured absolute magnitude of 26.5, 2019 GC6 measures between 15 and 28 meters in diameter for an assumed geometric albedo of 0.20 (siliceous) and 0.057 (carbonaceous), respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 55], "content_span": [56, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289532-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 GCPL season\nThe 2019 Gulf Coast Premier League season was the 4th season of the GCPL. FC New Orleans won the playoffs after beating Northshore United in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289532-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 GCPL season, Playoffs\nNote: FC New Orleans and Northshore United entered at the semi-finals stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 26], "content_span": [27, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289533-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 GEICO 500\nThe 2019 GEICO 500 was a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race held on April 28, 2019, at Talladega Superspeedway in Lincoln, Alabama. Contested over 188 laps on the 2.66 mile (4.28\u00a0km) superspeedway, it was the 10th race of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289533-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 GEICO 500, Report, Background\nTalladega Superspeedway, formerly known as Alabama International Motor Speedway, is a motorsports complex located north of Talladega, Alabama. It is located on the former Anniston Air Force Base in the small city of Lincoln. A tri-oval, the track was constructed in 1969 by the International Speedway Corporation, a business controlled by the France family. Talladega is most known for its steep banking. The track currently hosts NASCAR's Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, Xfinity Series and Gander Outdoors Truck Series. Talladega is the longest NASCAR oval with a length of 2.66-mile-long (4.28\u00a0km) tri-oval like the Daytona International Speedway, which is a 2.5-mile-long (4.0\u00a0km).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289533-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 GEICO 500, Practice, First practice\nKurt Busch was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 47.249 seconds and a speed of 202.671\u00a0mph (326.167\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 40], "content_span": [41, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289533-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 GEICO 500, Practice, Final practice\nRyan Newman was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 46.905 seconds and a speed of 204.157\u00a0mph (328.559\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 40], "content_span": [41, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289533-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 GEICO 500, Qualifying\nAustin Dillon scored the pole for the race with a time of 49.734 and a speed of 192.544\u00a0mph (309.870\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 26], "content_span": [27, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289533-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 GEICO 500, Media, Television\nFox Sports covered their 19th race at the Talladega Superspeedway. Mike Joy, six-time Talladega winner \u2013 and all-time restrictor plate race wins record holder \u2013 Jeff Gordon and four-time Talladega winner Darrell Waltrip called the race in the booth for the race. Jamie Little, Vince Welch and Matt Yocum handled the action on pit road for the television side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 33], "content_span": [34, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289533-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 GEICO 500, Media, Radio\nMRN had the radio call for the race which was also simulcast on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio. Alex Hayden, Jeff Striegle and two-time Talladega winner Dale Jarrett called the race in the booth when the field raced through the tri-oval. Dave Moody called the race from the Sunoco spotters stand outside turn 2 when the field raced through turns 1 and 2. Mike Bagley called the race from a platform inside the backstretch when the field raced down the backstretch. Kurt Becker called the race from the Sunoco spotters stand outside turn 4 when the field raced through turns 3 and 4. Winston Kelley, Kim Coon, Steve Post, and Dillon Welch worked pit road for the radio side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 28], "content_span": [29, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289534-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 GFF Elite League\nThe 2019 GFF Elite League is the 18th season of the GFF Elite League, the top-tier football in Guyana. The season started on 15 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289535-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 GP Industria & Artigianato di Larciano\nThe 2019 GP Industria & Artigianato di Larciano (transl. GP Industry & Handicraft of Larciano) was the 51st edition of the GP Industria & Artigianato di Larciano road cycling one day race, which was held on 10 March 2019. The 1.HC-category race was a part of the 2019 UCI Europe Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289535-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 GP Industria & Artigianato di Larciano, Teams\nSeven UCI WorldTeams, eleven UCI Professional Continental teams, six UCI Continental teams, and one national team make up the twenty-five teams that participated in the race. Only two of the twenty-five teams did not enter the maximum squad of seven riders; these two teams (Delko\u2013Marseille Provence and Riwal Readynez) each entered six riders. Of the 173 riders, there was one non-starter, while 90 riders finished.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289536-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 GP Miguel Indur\u00e1in\nThe 2019 GP Miguel Indur\u00e1in was the 66th edition of the GP Miguel Indur\u00e1in cycle race and was held on 6 April 2019 as part of the 2019 UCI Europe Tour. The race started and finished in Estella. The race was won by Jonathan Hivert.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289536-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 GP Miguel Indur\u00e1in, Teams\nEighteen teams were invited to take part in the race. These included four UCI WorldTeams, nine UCI Professional Continental teams, and five UCI Continental teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289537-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 GP de Plouay \u2013 Bretagne\nThe 2019 GP de Plouay featured as the twentieth round of the 2019 UCI Women's World Tour and was held on 31 August 2019, in Plouay, France. The race was held one day before the men's Bretagne Classic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289537-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 GP de Plouay \u2013 Bretagne, Teams\n128 riders from 22 teams started the race. Each team has a maximum of six riders:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289538-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 GT & Prototype Challenge\nThe 2019 GT & Prototype Challenge was the third series of the GT & Prototype Challenge. The GT and Superlights classes of the Supercar Challenge were split from the original series to form the new championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289538-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 GT & Prototype Challenge, Regulations\nThe series entrants are divided over four classes. The GT class, from the Supercar Challenge Super GT class, forms the highest and fastest division. Cars with a 2,8kg per HP or more ratio are allowed to compete. This includes all Group GT3 class cars and specially built GT's such as the Solution F built Volvo S60 and Renault Sport R.S. 01. LMP3 spec cars first raced in the Supercar Challenge Super GT class in 2016. The class forms a separate class within the series open to all 2016 specification LMP3 machinery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289538-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 GT & Prototype Challenge, Regulations\nTwo classes from the Supercar Challenge Superlights class are included in the new series. The fastest of the two is the Group CN class. Group CN specification cars built after 2014 are allowed to compete. The fourth, and slowest, class is the Radical SR3 class. Mainly a Radical SR3 spec class, the class is open to cars with comparable lap times. Also allowed are the Praga R1 and pre-2014 Group CN class cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289539-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 GT Cup Open Europe\nThe 2019 GT Cup Open Europe was the inaugural season of the GT Cup Open Europe, the grand tourer-style sports car racing series founded by the Spanish GT Sport Organizaci\u00f3n. It began on 27 April at Le Castellet and finished on 12 October, at Monza after six double-header meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289539-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 GT Cup Open Europe, Championship standings, Points systems\nPoints are awarded to the top 10 (Overall) or top 6 (Am, Pro- Am, Teams) classified finishers. If less than 6 participants start the race or if less than 75% of the original race distance is completed, half points are awarded. At the end of the season, the lowest race score is dropped; however, the dropped race cannot be the result of a disqualification or race ban.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 63], "content_span": [64, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289539-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 GT Cup Open Europe, Championship standings, Teams' Championship\nOnly the highest two finishing cars from a team count towards the Teams' Championship", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 68], "content_span": [69, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289540-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 GT4 America Series\nThe 2019 Pirelli GT4 America Series was the inaugural season of the GT4 America Series. It took over the GTS class of the Pirelli World Challenge, which adopted global GT4 technical regulations in 2018, and it is a Blancpain GT World Challenge America support series. GT4 America Series is split into a Sprint series, which features 50-minute races with one driver per car, and a SprintX series, which features one-hour races with two drivers per car and a mandatory driver change during Pit stops. Also East and West regional championships are awarded. The season began on 2 March in Austin and ended on 20 October in Las Vegas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289540-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 GT4 America Series, Calendar\nAt the annual press conference during the 2018 24 Hours of Spa on 27 July, the St\u00e9phane Ratel Organisation announced the first draft of the 2019 calendar. The date for the season opening weekend in Austin was confirmed on 15 August. Finalized schedules were announced on 29 September. An official announcement, concerning the races at Las Vegas Motor Speedway that carry the 'Grand Finale' name, is forthcoming.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289540-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 GT4 America Series, Championship standings\nChampionship points are awarded for the first ten positions in each race. Entries are required to complete 75% of the winning car's race distance in order to be classified and earn points. Individual drivers are required to participate for a minimum of 25 minutes in order to earn championship points in any SprintX race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289541-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 GT4 European Series\nThe 2019 GT4 European Series was the twelfth season of the GT4 European Series, a sports car championship created and organised by the St\u00e9phane Ratel Organisation (SRO). The season began on 13 April at Monza and ended on 1 September at the N\u00fcrburgring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289541-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 GT4 European Series, Calendar\nAt the annual press conference during the 2018 24 Hours of Spa on 27 July, the St\u00e9phane Ratel Organisation announced the first draft of the 2019 calendar, in which Barcelona-Catalunya initially made an appearance. It was dropped from the schedule and replaced by Zandvoort, when the finalised calendar was announced on 22 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289541-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 GT4 European Series, Partners\nThe GT4 European Series is supported by 5 sponsors. These are the tire manufacturer Pirelli, the lubricant specialist , the watch manufacturer CERTINA, Elf and .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289541-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 GT4 European Series, Championship standings\nChampionship points were awarded for the first ten positions in each 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.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289541-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 GT4 European Series, Championship standings, Teams' championship\nOnly the highest finishing car per team scored points and all other cars entered by that team were invisible as far as scoring points concerned. Only the highest ranked car in its respective category counted towards the championship. Parentheses indicate results that did not count towards the championship. Only two cars can be considered as forming the same team for the Teams' championship. If more than two cars are entered under the same competitor license, the competitor has to nominate the car numbers eligible to score points. Failure to do so will default the eligibility to score points to the two cars with the lowest car numbers. In several occasions full points were not awarded, because it is dependent on the number of teams participating per class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 69], "content_span": [70, 835]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289542-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 GT4 South European Series\nThe 2019 GT4 South European Series was the first season of the GT4 South European Series, a sports car championship created and organised by Iberian-based promoter Race Ready and supported by the St\u00e9phane Ratel Organisation (SRO). The season began on 20 April in Nogaro and ended on 24 November at Circuito do Estoril.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289542-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 GT4 South European Series, Calendar\nThe competition will consist in 5 weekends with 2 races each, and a non championship race, the Vila Real International Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289542-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 GT4 South European Series, Championship standings\nChampionship points were awarded for the first ten positions in each 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.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289543-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gabonese coup d'\u00e9tat attempt\nOn 7 January 2019, members of the Armed Forces of Gabon announced a coup d'\u00e9tat in Gabon. Military officers claimed that they had ousted President Ali Bongo, who was re-elected in 2016 after a controversial election and protests. During the absence of Ali Bongo, who was receiving medical treatment in Morocco, armed rebels in the capital city Libreville took hostages and declared that they had established a \"National Restoration Council\" to \"restore democracy in Gabon\". Widespread Internet outages occurred throughout the country, though it is unknown whether the Internet was shut down by the rebels themselves or by civilians. Gabon's government later declared that it had reasserted control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289543-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Gabonese coup d'\u00e9tat attempt\nAdditionally on 6 January 2019, a day before the coup attempt, American President Donald Trump sent 80 US troops to Gabon amid fears of violent protests in the nearby Democratic Republic of the Congo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289543-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Gabonese coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Developments\nThe military spokesman and leader of Patriotic Movement of the Defence and Security Forces of Gabon, Lieutenant Kelly Ondo Obiang, stated on national radio and state television on early Monday morning that he and his supporters were disappointed by President Ali Bongo\u2019s message to the nation on New Year's Eve, calling it a \"relentless attempt to cling onto power\" and saying it \"reinforced doubts about the president's ability to continue to carry out of the responsibilities of his office\". Obiang also claimed they were setting up a \"National Restoration Council...[for] restoring democracy\" in Gabon. A nationwide internet disruption was detected by global internet observatory NetBlocks starting at approximately 7:00\u00a0am UTC. Among other things, Obiang delivered the following message (in French) on national radio:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 869]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289543-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Gabonese coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Developments\n\"The eagerly awaited day has arrived when the army has decided to put itself on the side of the people in order to save Gabon from chaos... If you are eating, stop; if you are having a drink, stop; if you are sleeping, wake up. Wake up your neighbours ... rise up as one and take control of the street.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289543-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Gabonese coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Developments\nAt the time of the coup, on 7 January, President Bongo was receiving unrelated medical treatment in Morocco; he had been out of the country for about two months. President Bongo had suffered a stroke while in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, in October; his recorded New Year's wishes were the first time he had spoken in public since then.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289543-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Gabonese coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Developments\nThe pro-coup forces seized control of the national broadcaster Radio T\u00e9l\u00e9vision Gabonaise. Gabon's Republican Guard deployed various armoured vehicles throughout the capital, including Nexter Aravis MRAPs, a type not previously known to have been in the Gabonese Military's inventory. The coup attempt was put down by 10:30\u00a0am after the Gabonese Gendarmerie Intervention Group assaulted the Radio T\u00e9l\u00e9vision Gabonaise in which the pro-coup forces were holed up. Two pro-coup soldiers were killed in the assault. Officers involved in the coup took hostages which have since been released by Gabonese officials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289543-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Gabonese coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Developments\nHours after the coup announcement, government officials stated that the situation was \"under control\" with rebels arrested or on the run; two of the rebels were shot dead and Lieutenant Obiang was reported under arrest. NetBlocks observed that internet connectivity was briefly (though partially) restored across Gabon by 10:00\u00a0am UTC before falling back offline, and only returning fully 11:00\u00a0am the next day. Security Minister Guy-Bertrand Mapangou stated that the eight surviving rebels were handed over to the public prosecutor. The government of Gabon announced that President Bongo would be returning to the country \"very soon\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289544-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gabonese protests\nThe 2019 Gabonese protests were mass demonstrations and strike movements by teachers, university students and workers at schools in Gabon against new laws, mainly a new scholarship reform and university grants. Weeks of student protests hit the country, mainly bloodless and largely nonviolent. Massive street protests against further reforms spread to major cities surrounding the capital, Libreville. Protesters marched in April 2019, leading to protest rallies and inspiration of student protests in other cities. In response to the mass protest movement and wave of strike unrest, the government of Ali Bongo Ondimba withdrew from the law, shuttered schools and universities amid strikes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289545-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs\nThe 2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs of the Kontinental Hockey League (KHL) began on 25 February 2019, with the top eight teams from each of the conferences, following the conclusion of the 2018\u201319 KHL regular season. The playoffs ended on 19 April 2019, when Continental Cup winners CSKA Moscow became the first team to win the Gagarin Cup finals in a series sweep, defeating Avangard Omsk in four games to win their first Gagarin Cup, after two previous Finals defeats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289545-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs, Playoff seeds\nAfter the regular season, the standard 16 teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289545-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs, Playoff seeds, Western Conference\nThe regular season winners and Continental Cup winners were CSKA Moscow with 106 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289545-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs, Playoff seeds, Eastern Conference\nAvtomobilist Yekaterinburg were the Eastern Conference regular season winners with 95 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289545-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs, Playoff bracket\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 Finals, 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 (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, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289545-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs, Playoff bracket\nThe 2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs started on 25 February 2019, with the top eight teams from each of the conferences, and finished on 19 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289545-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs, First Round, Eastern Conference First Round, (1) Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg vs. (8) Traktor Chelyabinsk\nAvtomobilist Yekaterinburg finished first in the Eastern Conference earning 95 points. Traktor Chelyabinsk finished as the Eastern Conference's eighth seed, earning 58 points, and averaging 1.64 goals per game, the lowest recorded tally for any playoff-qualifying team. This was the first playoff meeting between the two teams; Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg won all four games in this year's regular season series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 130], "content_span": [131, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289545-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs, First Round, Eastern Conference First Round, (2) Barys Astana vs. (7) Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod\nBarys Astana finished second in the Eastern Conference earning 86 points. Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod finished as the Eastern Conference's seventh seed, earning 64 points. This was the first playoff meeting between the two teams, and they split their two-game regular season series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 120], "content_span": [121, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289545-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs, First Round, Eastern Conference First Round, (3) Metallurg Magnitogorsk vs. (6) Salavat Yulaev Ufa\nMetallurg Magnitogorsk finished third in the Eastern Conference earning 84 points. Salavat Yulaev Ufa finished as the Eastern Conference's sixth seed, earning 72 points. This was the fifth playoff meeting between the two teams, with the previous four series having been shared; Metallurg Magnitogorsk won the most recent series during the 2016 Gagarin Cup playoffs. This year's two-game regular season series was also shared.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 125], "content_span": [126, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289545-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs, First Round, Eastern Conference First Round, (4) Avangard Omsk vs. (5) Ak Bars Kazan\nAvangard Omsk finished fourth in the Eastern Conference earning 83 points. Ak Bars Kazan, the reigning Gagarin Cup champions, finished as the Eastern Conference's fifth seed, one point behind Avangard Omsk. This was the fourth playoff meeting between the two teams with Ak Bars Kazan winning all three previous series, the most recent of which was during the 2017 Gagarin Cup playoffs. This year's two-game regular season series was shared, with both games going to overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 111], "content_span": [112, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289545-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs, First Round, Eastern Conference First Round, (4) Avangard Omsk vs. (5) Ak Bars Kazan\nIn the opening game, a two-goal performance by Sergei Shumakov and a 21-save shutout at home by goaltender Igor Bobkov led Avangard Omsk to a 6\u20130 win. In the second game, another strong offensive performance coupled with the play of Bobkov gained them a two-game lead, with a 6\u20133 victory. Despite an early showing by Ak Bars Kazan, Avangard Omsk took a stranglehold in game three on the road on Denis Zernov's second period game-winner, ultimately winning 4\u20131. Finally, in game four, Shumakov scored all three goals \u2013 his first playoffs hat-trick \u2013 on the night, as Avangard Omsk swept Ak Bars Kazan in four successive games, marking the first time that the defending champions were beaten in such a manner in the first round of the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 111], "content_span": [112, 854]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289545-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs, First Round, Western Conference First Round, (1) CSKA Moscow vs. (8) Vityaz Podolsk\nCSKA Moscow finished first in the Western Conference earning 106 points. Vityaz Podolsk finished as the Western Conference's eighth seed, earning 63 points. This was the first playoff meeting between the two teams; CSKA Moscow won three of the four games in this year's regular season series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 110], "content_span": [111, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289545-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs, First Round, Western Conference First Round, (2) SKA Saint Petersburg vs. (7) Spartak Moscow\nSKA Saint Petersburg finished second in the Western Conference earning 103 points. Spartak Moscow finished as the Western Conference's seventh seed, earning 64 points. This was the third playoff meeting between the two teams, with the previous two series having been shared; SKA Saint Petersburg swept the most recent series during the 2011 Gagarin Cup playoffs. SKA Saint Petersburg won all four games in this year's regular season series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 119], "content_span": [120, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289545-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs, First Round, Western Conference First Round, (3) Lokomotiv Yaroslavl vs. (6) HC Sochi\nLokomotiv Yaroslavl finished second in the Western Conference earning 86 points. HC Sochi finished as the Western Conference's sixth seed, earning 66 points. This was the first playoff meeting between the two teams, and they split their four-game regular season series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 112], "content_span": [113, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289545-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs, First Round, Western Conference First Round, (4) Jokerit vs. (5) Dynamo Moscow\nJokerit finished fourth in the Western Conference earning 80 points. Ak Bars Kazan finished as the Western Conference's fifth seed, earning 72 points. This was the first playoff meeting between the two teams; Dynamo Moscow won all four games in this year's regular season series, extending a winning streak, stretching back to 17 September 2015, to eleven games over Jokerit. Dynamo Moscow extended the streak to thirteen, before Jokerit won Game 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 105], "content_span": [106, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289545-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs, Conference Semi-Finals, Eastern Conference Semi-Finals, (1) Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg vs. (6) Salavat Yulaev Ufa\nThis was the second playoff meeting between these teams, with Salavat Yulaev winning the series played in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 140], "content_span": [141, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289545-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs, Conference Semi-Finals, Eastern Conference Semi-Finals, (2) Barys Astana vs. (4) Avangard Omsk\nThis was the second playoff meeting between these teams, with Avangard winning the series played in 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 121], "content_span": [122, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289545-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs, Conference Semi-Finals, Western Conference Semi-Finals, (1) CSKA Moscow vs. (5) Dynamo Moscow\nThis was the third playoff meeting between these teams, with Dynamo having won both previous series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 120], "content_span": [121, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289545-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs, Conference Semi-Finals, Western Conference Semi-Finals, (2) SKA Saint Petersburg vs. (3) Lokomotiv Yaroslavl\nThis was the fifth playoff meeting between these teams, with SKA winning the three past seasons and Lokomotiv winning in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 135], "content_span": [136, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289545-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs, Conference Finals, Eastern Conference Finals, (4) Avangard Omsk vs. (6) Salavat Yulaev Ufa\nThis was the fourth playoff meeting between these teams, with Avangard Omsk winning the series played in 2009 and Salavat Yulaev Ufa winning in 2016 and 2018. This represents the lowest-seeded Conference Final match-up in KHL history, with the winners becoming the lowest seed to play in a Gagarin Cup final series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 117], "content_span": [118, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289545-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs, Conference Finals, Eastern Conference Finals, (4) Avangard Omsk vs. (6) Salavat Yulaev Ufa\nIn Game 3, Joonas Kemppainen's eventual game-winning goal \u2013 his ninth goal of the playoffs \u2013 set the record for most playoff goals by a Salavat Yulaev Ufa player in one season, breaking the record set by Alexander Radulov in 2010. In Game 6, the longest game in Conference Finals history, Salavat Yulaev Ufa goaltender Juha Metsola made 69 saves, a record in the KHL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 117], "content_span": [118, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289545-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs, Conference Finals, Western Conference Finals, (1) CSKA Moscow vs. (2) SKA Saint Petersburg\nThis was the sixth playoff meeting between these teams, with SKA winning the first three playoff series and CSKA winning the two most recent series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 117], "content_span": [118, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289545-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs, Gagarin Cup Finals\nThis is the first playoff meeting between these teams, and CSKA's third and Avangard's second appearance in the Gagarin Cup Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289545-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs, Gagarin Cup Finals, (W1) CSKA Moscow vs. (E4) Avangard Omsk\nIn the opening game of the series, CSKA Moscow's Mikhail Grigorenko scored the first hat-trick in the Gagarin Cup Finals, including the game-winning goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289545-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs, Player statistics, Scoring leaders\nThe following players led the league in points, at the conclusion of the playoffs. If two or more skaters are tied (i.e. same number of points, goals and played games), all of the tied skaters are shown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 61], "content_span": [62, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289545-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Gagarin Cup playoffs, Player statistics, Leading goaltenders\nThe following goaltenders led the league in goals against average, at the conclusion of the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 65], "content_span": [66, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289546-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gainesville mayoral election\nThe 2019 Gainesville mayoral election took place on March 19, 2019 to elect the Mayor of Gainesville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289546-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Gainesville mayoral election\nIncumbent Mayor Lauren Poe was reelected with 61.82% of the popular vote for 2nd term in a 4-way race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289547-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway City Council election\nA Galway City Council election was held in Galway in Ireland on 24 May 2019 as part of that year's local elections. All 18 councillors were elected for a five-year term of office from 3 local electoral areas (LEAs) by single transferable vote. Following a recommendation of the 2018 LEA boundary review committee, the only change to the LEAs and seat distribution used in the 2014 elections was to move the electoral division of Claddagh from the West LEA to the Central LEA in line with population changes revealed by the 2016 census.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289547-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway City Council election\nThis is expected to be the last election to Galway City Council as plans were announced in 2018 to merge the City and County Councils by 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289547-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway City Council election\nFianna F\u00e1il became the largest party on the City Council gaining 2 seats in the process. Fine Gael lost 1 seat despite slightly increasing their vote. The Green Party emerged as the big winners winning 2 seats; 1 in each of Galway City Central and Galway City West and a nearly 5 fivefold increase in voteshare. Following two recounts the Social Democrats held onto a seat in Galway City East at the expense of Sinn F\u00e9in, and lost a seat in City Central to the Greens. Sinn F\u00e9in lost all their seats as their vote collapsed almost in half. To a significant extent the rise in support for both the Social Democrats and the Greens contributed to the loss for Sinn F\u00e9in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289548-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway County Council election\nA Galway County Council election was held in County Galway in Ireland on 24 May 2019 as part of that year's local elections. All 39 councillors were elected for a five-year term of office from 7 local electoral areas (LEAs) by single transferable vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289548-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway County Council election\nFollowing a recommendation of the 2018 Boundary Committee, the boundaries of the LEAs were altered from those used in the 2014 elections. Its terms of reference required no change in the total number of councillors but set a maximum LEA size of seven councillors, which three of the 2014 LEAs exceeded. Other changes were necessitated by population shifts revealed by the 2016 census.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289548-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway County Council election\nThis is expected to be the last election to Galway County Council as plans were announced in 2018 to merge the County Council and the City Council by 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289548-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway County Council election\nFianna F\u00e1il had a very good election, winning 3 additional seats and increasing their vote by over 5%. Fine Gael lost a seat to fall to 11 but also increased their vote. The Greens gained 1 seat in Conamara and Republican Sinn F\u00e9in retained their single seat. Sinn F\u00e9in lost 2 seats to be reduced to just 1 member. However, Gabe Cronelly who had quit the party since 2014 was re-elected as an independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289548-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway County Council election, Results by party\nTom\u00e1s \u00d3 Curraoin appeared on the ballot as an independent (non-party) but is a member of Republican Sinn F\u00e9in and is the sole public representative of that party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289548-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway County Council election, Results by local electoral area, Conamara South\nTom\u00e1s \u00d3 Curraoin appeared on the ballot as an independent (non-party) but is a member of Republican Sinn F\u00e9in and is the sole public representative of that party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 84], "content_span": [85, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289549-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway Intermediate Hurling Championship\nThe 2019 Galway Intermediate Hurling Championship was the 61st staging of the Galway Intermediate Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Galway County Board in 1949. The championship began on 5 April 2019 and ended on 3 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289549-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway Intermediate Hurling Championship\nOn 3 November 2019, Kinvara won the championship after a 1-10 to 0-12 defeat of Kilconieron in the final at Kenny Park. It was their second championship overall and their first title since 1966.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289550-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway Senior Football Championship\nThe 2019 Galway Senior Football Championship is the 124th edition of Galway GAA's premier gaelic football tournament for senior graded clubs in County Galway, Ireland. The winners receive the Frank Fox Cup and represent Galway in the Connacht Senior Club Football Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289550-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway Senior Football Championship\nEighteen teams compete. This year there will be a new format once again. With the previous years 4 semi finalists being seeded and separated into 3 groups of 6(With one group having 2 seeded teams)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289550-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway Senior Football Championship\nCorofin were the defending champions after they defeated Mountbellew/Moylough in the 2018 final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289550-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway Senior Football Championship\nThis was An Spid\u00e9al's return the senior grade for the first time in 13 seasons (since their relegation from the S.F.C. in 2006) after they claimed to 2018 I.F.C. title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289550-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway Senior Football Championship, Team Changes\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2018 championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 54], "content_span": [55, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289550-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway Senior Football Championship, Format, Group Stage\n2019 brings about a new format for the competition where there is 3 groups of 6 teams. The 2018 Semi-finalists, Corofin, Mountbellew/Moylough, Annaghdown and Salthill/Knocknacarra will be Seeded and placed in each Group, with one group having two seeded teams. The remaining group places made up from the remaining 14 teams in an open draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289550-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway Senior Football Championship, Format, Group Stage\nIf teams are level on points, the first deciding factor will be the head-to-head result between the sides; the second will be the points difference; and the third will be the scoring average.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289550-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway Senior Football Championship, Relegation Playoffs, Format\nThis year, two teams will be relegated. The bottom two teams in each group will playoff, with the winner retaining Senior status, and the loser moving into a round robin group. The bottom two team in the round robin group will be relegated", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289550-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway Senior Football Championship, Relegation Playoffs, Relegation Group Stage\nThe bottom two teams in the table will be relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 85], "content_span": [86, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289551-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway Senior Hurling Championship\nThe 2019 Galway Senior Hurling Championship was the 122nd staging of the Galway Senior Hurling Championship since its establishment in 1887.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289551-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway Senior Hurling Championship\nSt. Thomas' were the reigning champions and went on to retain the title. Oranmore-Maree participated in the senior championship having been promoted from the intermediate competition in 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289551-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway Senior Hurling Championship, Competition Format\nTwenty four reams compete in the initial group stages of the championship \u2013 the top ranked twelve teams compete in the Senior A Group and the second ranked twelve teams compete in the Senior B Group. Eight teams from the Senior A Group and four teams from the Senior B Group progress to the knockout stage. The competition format is explained further in each of the championship rounds in the sections below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289551-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway Senior Hurling Championship, Group Stage, Senior A\nSenior A consists of 12 teams divided into two groups of 6. The top two teams from each group automatically qualify for the quarter finals. The third and fourth teams from each group play in the preliminary quarter finals. The bottom two teams from each group play-off with the losing team relegated to playing in the following year's Senior B Section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 62], "content_span": [63, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289551-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway Senior Hurling Championship, Group Stage, Senior B\nSenior B consists of 12 teams divided into two groups of 6. The winners of each group qualify for the 2019 preliminary quarter finals and compete in the following year's Senior A competition. The four second and third placed teams play-off with the two winners also qualifying for the 2019 preliminary quarter finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 62], "content_span": [63, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289551-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway Senior Hurling Championship, Group Stage, Senior B, Senior B - Playoffs\nThe second team in Senior B Group 1 plays the third team in Senior B Group 2 and the third team in Senior B Group 1 plays the second team in Senior B Group 2. The two winning teams qualify for the 2018 senior preliminary quarter finals. The two losing teams are eliminated from this year's senior championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 83], "content_span": [84, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289551-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway Senior Hurling Championship, Group Stage, Senior B, Senior B - Relegation\nThe losing team is relegated to the following year's intermediate championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 85], "content_span": [86, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289551-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway Senior Hurling Championship, Senior Knockout Stage, Senior Preliminary Quarter Finals\nThe four teams who finished third and fourth in the two Senior A Groups play the four Senior B teams who qualified (the two winners of the two Senior B Groups plus the two winners of the Senior B play-offs).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 97], "content_span": [98, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289551-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Galway Senior Hurling Championship, Senior Knockout Stage, Senior Quarter Finals\nThe four teams who finished first and second in the two Senior A groups play the four winners of the senior preliminary quarter finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 85], "content_span": [86, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289552-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gamba Osaka season\nThe 2019 Gamba Osaka season was Gamba Osaka's 26th season in the J1 League and 32nd overall in the Japanese top flight. It saw them compete in the 18 team J1 League as well as the J.League Cup and Emperor's Cup competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289552-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Gamba Osaka season, Transfers\nPrior to the end of 2018, Gamba completed the signing of Kwansei Gakuin University fullback, Ryu Takao, who impressed in his side's shock win over Gamba in the Emperor's Cup in June. He was joined by young midfielder Kohei Okuno, who signed a full-time deal after spending 2 years with Gamba's Under-23 side in J3 League. It was also announced that Kansai University left-back Keisuke Kurokawa would join the club as a designated special player before signing permanently once he concluded his university studies in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289552-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Gamba Osaka season, Transfers\nRoasso Kumamoto wide midfielder / wing-back, Tatsuya Tanaka was next to join, having performed well in a team that was relegated from J2 the previous season. Central midfielder Shinya Yajima returned from a loan spell with Vegalta Sendai where he spent the second half of the 2018 campaign while forward Hiroto Goya came back from J2 side Tokushima Vortis having only played 7 games due to injury. Goalkeeper Ken Tajiri also returned to the club following an 18 month loan spell with Zweigen Kanazawa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289552-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Gamba Osaka season, Transfers\nIn a surprise move, defender Naoyaki Aoyama joined the club following 4 seasons in Thailand with Muangthong United. Aoyama previously played with Shimizu S-Pulse, Yokohama F. Marinos and Ventforet Kofu in Japan. After his country's elimination from the 2019 AFC Asian Cup it was announced that South Korean defender Kim Young-gwon would sign from Chinese club Guangzhou Evergrande. He previously had spells in Japan with FC Tokyo and Omiya Ardija between 2010 and 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289552-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Gamba Osaka season, Transfers\nAt half time of the week 3 J.League fixture at home to Nagoya Grampus, it was announced that Spanish winger David Concha would join the club on loan from Real Sociedad. He was handed the number 11 jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289552-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Gamba Osaka season, Transfers\nIn mid-December, it was announced that defenders Fabio and Takaharu Nishino as well as midfielders Naoya Senoo and Yuto Mori had been released. Fabio played 31 times in J1 League during 2018, however Nishino, Senoo and Mori spent the majority of the season with Gamba U-23 in J3. Later on in December versatile full-back Ryo Hatsuse left for Vissel Kobe, he had filled in at left back during Hiroki Fujiharu's injury during the previous season but saw out the campaign playing J3 football with Gamba U-23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289552-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Gamba Osaka season, Transfers\nAttacking midfielder Haruya Ide left for J2 outfit, Montedio Yamagata, after 2 indifferent seasons in Osaka while young Korean defender Bae Soo-yong was again loaned out, this time to J3 side Kamatamare Sanuki. Giant forward Shun Nagasawa, who spent the second half of 2018 on loan at Vissel Kobe, left permanently for Vegalta Sendai at the end of December. On the same day, it was also announced that the versatile So Hirao, who had been with Avispa Fukuoka on loan in 2018 had signed a permanent deal with J2 side Machida Zelvia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289552-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Gamba Osaka season, Transfers\nThe beginning of 2019 brought with it the surprising news that attacking midfielder Jin Izumisawa, who'd spent the second half of 2018 on loan at J2 side Tokyo Verdy, would take the next step in his career in Poland with Pogo\u0144 Szczecin. A couple of days later it was announced that 4th choice goalkeeper, Ryota Suzuki, would join J2 side JEF United Chiba on a season-long loan. On the same day, promising forward Kazunari Ichimi, who was top scorer for Gamba U-23 in 2017 and 2018 joined Kyoto Sanga on loan for 2019. Club legend Takahiro Futagawa finally departed the club permanently in mid January. The 38 year-old had spent the previous 2 seasons out on loan in J2 with Tokyo Verdy and Tochigi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289552-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Gamba Osaka season, Transfers\nEarly on in the season young forward Hiroto Goya, who found himself well down the pecking order for a starting berth, was loaned out to J2 side V-Varen Nagasaki while Gamba U-23 captain Mizuki Ichimaru headed to FC Gifu on loan at the beginning of May. At the end of May another Gamba U-23 stalwart, centre-back Hiroki Noda also left on loan, this time to J2 outfit Montedio Yamagata.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289552-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Gamba Osaka season, Transfers\nGamba kicked off the summer transfer window with the announcement that attacking midfielder Takashi Usami would return for a third spell at the club. The 27-times capped Japanese international had spent the 2018-2019 European season on loan at Bundesliga side Fortuna D\u00fcsseldorf on loan from Augsburg. Right-sided midfielder Yuto Suzuki also came in on loan from Kawasaki Frontale in mid-July and his arrival was followed by the loan signing of Patric from Sanfrecce Hiroshima. The striker previously enjoyed 4 seasons with Gamba and scored 9 times in their title-winning season in 2014. Continuing the theme of returns, midfielder Yosuke Ideguchi also rejoined the club after an injury plagued 18 months in Europe. The following week, Renofa Yamaguchi attacker, Daisuke Takagi, became the fifth arrival of the summer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 853]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289552-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Gamba Osaka season, Transfers\nIn terms of summer departures, veteran full-back Oh Jae-suk left on loan to once again link up with former Gamba head-coach Kenta Hasegawa at FC Tokyo. Wing back Tatsuya Tanaka also left for fellow J1 side Oita Trinita, a mere 7 months after joining Gamba from Roasso Kumamoto. A few days later Korean forward Hwang Ui-jo departed for Bordeaux in France and he was followed out the exit door the following day by veteran attacking midfielder Jungo Fujimoto who joined J2 promotion chasers Kyoto Sanga on loan until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289552-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Gamba Osaka season, Transfers\nYoungster Keito Nakamura who'd recently broken into the team playing on the left side of midfield earned a 2-year loan move to Dutch side FC Twente in mid July following in the footsteps of Ritsu Doan who joined Groningen in the Netherlands two years previously. The exodus continued when veteran midfielder Yasuyuki Konno, who had fallen out of favour in 2019, moved to J1 rivals Jubilo Iwata on a permanent deal. Young striker Akito Takagi, who bagged 11 goals in just 17 J3 games for Gamba U23 joined former team-mate Hiroki Noda on loan at J2 side Montedio Yamagata.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289552-0009-0002", "contents": "2019 Gamba Osaka season, Transfers\nA few days later, right full-back Koki Yonekura returned to his former club, JEF United Chiba, on loan until the end of the season. Young attacker Ryotaro Meshino later made the surprise move to English side Manchester City on a permanent deal and the following week central-midfielder, Takahiro Ko, joined J2 outfit Renofa Yamaguchi on loan until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289552-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Gamba Osaka season, First team squad\nAppearances and goals as of the beginning of the 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289552-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Gamba Osaka season, J1 League\nOn 11 January, Gamba's first 2 fixtures for the season were announced, at home to Yokohama F. Marinos and away to Shimizu S-Pulse. The dates for the remaining games were revealed on 23 January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289552-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Gamba Osaka season, J1 League, Match Day Line-Ups\nThe following players appeared for Gamba Osaka during the 2019 J1 League:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289552-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Gamba Osaka season, Emperor's Cup\nGamba entered the 2019 Emperor's Cup at the 2nd round stage where they were drawn at home to J3 League side Kamatamare Sanuki on 3 July. A 7-1 thrashing of the Kagawa-based outfit set up a 3rd round tie with Hosei University who saw off J2 side Tokyo Verdy in the previous round. For the second year in a row Gamba were defeated by university opposition as the students recorded a 2-0 win in Tokyo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289552-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Gamba Osaka season, Emperor's Cup, 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, 58], "content_span": [59, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289552-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Gamba Osaka season, J.League Cup\nOn 23 January, Gamba's fixtures for the group stage of the 2019 J.League Cup were announced. Gamba were drawn alongside fellow J1 clubs; Jubilo Iwata, Matsumoto Yamaga and Shimuzu S-Pulse and after accumulating 11 points from 6 games they topped their group and reached the playoff round where they were paired with J2 League side V-Varen Nagasaki. A 4-1 victory in the first leg away from home ended the tie as a contest and although Nagasaki snatched a 2-0 win at the Panasonic Stadium it wasn't enough and Gamba progressed to the quarter-finals where they were paired with FC Tokyo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289552-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 Gamba Osaka season, J.League Cup\nA 1-0 home win preceded a 2-1 reverse in the second leg and meant Gamba headed to the semi-finals on the away goals rule. In the last 4 they were drawn against Hokkaido Consadole Sapporo. Gamba followed up a 5-0 win in the league 5 days previously with a 2-1 home leg victory, however this time they were the ones eliminated by the away goals rule as Musashi Suzuki's thunderbolt in the second leg in Sapporo sent Consadole through to their first ever final against Kawasaki Frontale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289552-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Gamba Osaka season, J.League Cup, 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, 57], "content_span": [58, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289552-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Gamba Osaka season, Gamba Osaka Under-23\nGamba Osaka's Under-23 side compete in the J3 League where they are allowed to name 3 overage players of which one must be a goalkeeper. On January 11, their opening home and away fixtures for the 2019 J3 League season were announced against Vanraure Hachinohe and Azul Claro Numazu. The schedule for the remaining games was announced on January 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289553-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Games of the Small States of Europe\nThe 2019 Games of the Small States of Europe, also known as the XVIII Games of the Small States of Europe, took place in Budva, Montenegro, from 27 May to 1 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289553-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Games of the Small States of Europe, Games\nThe 2019 Games were the first time Montenegro has hosted the event since its inception into the GSSE in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289553-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Games of the Small States of Europe, Games\nThe Games opened on the 27 May 2019 with around 2000 people attending the ceremony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289553-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Games of the Small States of Europe, Games, Participating teams\nBoth the Faroe Islands and the Vatican City expressed an interest in participating in the Games but neither have an official Olympic Committee, one of the requirements of participation in the GSSE.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289553-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Games of the Small States of Europe, Medal table\nLuxembourg topped the medal table, winning 77 medals including 26 golds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289554-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gander RV 150\nThe 2019 Gander RV 150 is a NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series race held on July 27, 2019, at Pocono Raceway in Long Pond, Pennsylvania. Contested over 60 laps on the 2.5-mile (4.0\u00a0km) superspeedway, it was the 14th race of the 2019 NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289554-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Gander RV 150, Background, Track\nThe race was held at Pocono Raceway, also known as The Tricky Triangle, which is a superspeedway located in the Pocono Mountains in Long Pond, Pennsylvania. It is the site of two annual Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series races held several weeks apart in early June and late July, one NASCAR Xfinity Series event in early June, one NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series event in late July, and two ARCA Racing Series events, one in early June and the other in late July. From 1971 to 1989, and since 2013, the track has also hosted an Indy Car race, currently sanctioned by the IndyCar Series and run in August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289554-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Gander RV 150, Practice, First practice\nHarrison Burton was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 53.586 seconds and a speed of 167.954\u00a0mph (270.296\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289554-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Gander RV 150, Practice, Final practice\nTodd Gilliland was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 53.383 seconds and a speed of 168.593\u00a0mph (271.324\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289554-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Gander RV 150, Qualifying\nAustin Hill scored the pole for the race with a time of 52.525 seconds and a speed of 171.347\u00a0mph (275.756\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289554-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Gander RV 150, Race, Summary\nAustin Hill started on pole, but Ross Chastain quickly shot past him. In the first turn of the race, Stewart Friesen brought out the caution after he got loose under Sheldon Creed and turned into the outside wall, also getting smacked by Anthony Alfredo. Friesen's truck was damaged to the point where he could not continue, ultimately ending his day before completing a single lap. Alfredo was only able to complete two more laps before his day also ended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289554-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Gander RV 150, Race, Summary\nOn the restart, Bryan Dauzat spun and immediately brought out the caution again. Chastain dominated and won stage 1. Hill had engine problems on lap 22 and was forced to park his truck in the garage. Chastain pitted with 3 laps remaining in stage 2, giving the stage win to Harrison Burton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289554-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Gander RV 150, Race, Summary\nChastain regained the lead after Burton pitted, and was never challenged again during the race. He won the race ahead of Tyler Ankrum, dedicating the race win to late crew chief Nick Harrison, who had died a week before the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289555-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gander RV 400\nThe 2019 Gander RV 400 was a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race held on May 6, 2019, at Dover International Speedway in Dover, Delaware. Contested over 400 laps on the 1-mile (1.6\u00a0km) concrete speedway, it was the 11th race of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season. The race was postponed from Sunday, May 5 to Monday, May 6 due to rain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289555-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Gander RV 400, Report, Background\nDover International Speedway is an oval race track in Dover, Delaware, United States that has held at least two NASCAR races since it opened in 1969. In addition to NASCAR, the track also hosted USAC and the NTT IndyCar Series. The track features one layout, a 1 mile (1.6\u00a0km) concrete oval, with 24\u00b0 banking in the turns and 9\u00b0 banking on the straights. The speedway is owned and operated by Dover Motorsports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289555-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Gander RV 400, Report, Background\nThe track, nicknamed \"The Monster Mile\", was built in 1969 by Melvin Joseph of Melvin L. Joseph Construction Company, Inc., with an asphalt surface, but was replaced with concrete in 1995. Six years later in 2001, the track's capacity moved to 135,000 seats, making the track have the largest capacity of sports venue in the mid-Atlantic. In 2002, the name changed to Dover International Speedway from Dover Downs International Speedway after Dover Downs Gaming and Entertainment split, making Dover Motorsports. From 2007 to 2009, the speedway worked on an improvement project called \"The Monster Makeover\", which expanded facilities at the track and beautified the track. After the 2014 season, the track's capacity was reduced to 95,500 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 785]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289555-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Gander RV 400, First practice\nKurt Busch was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 21.372 seconds and a speed of 168.445\u00a0mph (271.086\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289555-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Gander RV 400, Qualifying\nChase Elliott scored the pole for the race with a time of 21.692 and a speed of 165.960\u00a0mph (267.087\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289555-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Gander RV 400, Practice (post-qualifying), Second practice\nSecond practice session scheduled for Saturday was cancelled due to fog.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 63], "content_span": [64, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289555-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Gander RV 400, Practice (post-qualifying), Final practice\nJimmie Johnson was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 22.241 seconds and a speed of 161.863\u00a0mph (260.493\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289555-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Gander RV 400, Media, Television\nFox Sports covered their 19th race at the Dover International Speedway. Mike Joy, five-time Dover winner Jeff Gordon and two-time Dover winner Darrell Waltrip had the call in the booth for the race. Jamie Little, Vince Welch and Matt Yocum handled the action on pit road for the television side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289555-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Gander RV 400, Media, Radio\nMRN had the radio call for the race which was also simulcasted on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289556-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gander RV 400 (Pocono)\nThe 2019 Gander RV 400 was a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race held on July 28, 2019 at Pocono Raceway in Long Pond, Pennsylvania. Contested over 163 laps\u2014extended from 160 laps due to an overtime finish, on the 2.5-mile (4.0\u00a0km) superspeedway, it was the 21st race of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289556-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Gander RV 400 (Pocono), Practice, First practice\nDaniel Su\u00e1rez was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 52.169 seconds and a speed of 172.516\u00a0mph (277.638\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289556-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Gander RV 400 (Pocono), Practice, Final practice\nErik Jones was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 52.290 seconds and a speed of 172.117\u00a0mph (276.995\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289556-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Gander RV 400 (Pocono), Qualifying\nKevin Harvick scored the pole for the race with a time of 51.707 and a speed of 174.058\u00a0mph (280.119\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289556-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Gander RV 400 (Pocono), Media, Television\nNBC Sports covered the race on the television side. NBC had a radio-style broadcast for the race similar to the Watkins Glen and Indianapolis races which had Rick Allen and Steve Letarte calling in the regular booth for the race; Motor Racing Network broadcaster Mike Bagley calling from Turn 1, Dale Earnhardt Jr. calling from Turn 2, and Jeff Burton calling from Turn 3. Dave Burns, Marty Snider and Kelli Stavast reported from pit lane during the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289556-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Gander RV 400 (Pocono), Media, Radio\nMotor Racing Network covered the radio call for the race, which was simulcast on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio. Jeff Striegle and A. J. Allmendinger called the race from the booth when the field raced down the front straightaway. Dave Moody called the action from turn 1, Kyle Rickey called the action when the field raced thru the tunnel turn, and Jason Toy called the action from turn 3. Winston Kelley, Steve Post, Kim Coon, & Glenn Jarrett will handle the pit road duties for MRN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289557-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gander RV Duels\nThe 2019 Gander RV Duels were a pair of Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series stock car races held on February 14, 2019, at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida. Both contested over 60 laps, they were the qualifying races for the 2019 Daytona 500.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289557-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Gander RV 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\u2013turn superspeedway that is 2.5-mile (4.0\u00a0km) long. The track's turns are banked at 31 degrees, while the front stretch, the location of the finish line, is banked at 18 degrees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289557-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Gander RV Duels, Qualifying\nWilliam Byron scored the pole for the race with a time of 46.319 and a speed of 194.305\u00a0mph (312.704\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289558-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gandhi March\nThe 2019 Mahatma Gandhi Birth Anniversary Padyatra or 2019 Gandhi March was a cultural march held during the celebration of 150th birth anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi in Bhavnagar district of Gujarat, India. The 150km long march lasted for seven days from 16 January 2019 to 22 January 2019. The event was organized by Mansukh L. Mandaviya, the Union Minister of State for Ports, Shipping and Waterways and Union Minister of State for Chemical and Fertilizer, and a Rajya Sabha member from Gujarat. The march passed through 150 villages of Gujarat with 150 prominent followers of Gandhi. The aim of the march was to spread basic education among public and to introduce the Gandhian philosophy to young generation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289558-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Gandhi March, Timeline\nThe theme of the Padyatra was \"Towards Gandhian Principles and Values\". The route of the march, along with each evening's stopping place, was planned from the villages which have Nai Talim institutes, conceptualized by Gandhi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 27], "content_span": [28, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289558-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Gandhi March, Timeline\nThe march began on 16 January 2019 from Gram Dakshinamurti and was concluded at Sanosara, a village in the Bhavnagar district. It covered total 150 villages and total 150km distance. On the first day, Mandaviya started the march involving 150 people with tree plantation and explained the connection between Gandhian philosophy and nature. On the next day, the marchers passed through Samdhiyara, Dihor, Bhadravar and reached Mayadhar. As they entered each village, crowds greeted the marchers. Morari Bapu, a spiritual leader, gave speech about the unity of all religions and said \"universalism never binds anyone\". On the morning of the third day, the march began from Mayadhar and the marchers travelled through Pingari, lakhawada, Anida, Mandavda and Bhutiya, and arrived at Shetrunji Dam. Total 150 programs on Gandhian philosophy were held en route.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 27], "content_span": [28, 883]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289558-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Gandhi March, Timeline\nThe march was concluded at Lokbharti Gramvidyapith, Sanosara. It was ended with a speech by Vijay Rupani, chief minister of Gujarat, at concluding ceremony. Rupani stated that the dream of establishing 'Ram Rajya' (rule of Rama, Gandhi's concept of Utopia) in India according to the contemplation of Gandhi should acquire a holistic approach rather than an isolated one to promote the welfare of the society. The prime minister Narendra Modi delivered a speech through live telecast from Delhi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 27], "content_span": [28, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289558-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Gandhi March, Reception\nAbout 20,000 youngsters registered and about 12,000 youngsters participated in the march. During the seven days of march, 14 public gatherings were arranged which were addressed by various politicians, social activists and journalists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289559-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Garden Open\nThe 2019 Garden Open was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the eleventh edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Rome, Italy between 6 and 12 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289559-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Garden 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-00289559-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Garden Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 60], "content_span": [61, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289559-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Garden Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 60], "content_span": [61, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289560-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Garden Open \u2013 Doubles\nKevin Krawietz and Andreas Mies were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289560-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Garden Open \u2013 Doubles\nPhilipp Oswald and Filip Pol\u00e1\u0161ek won the title by walkover after Nikola \u010ca\u010di\u0107 and Adam Pavl\u00e1sek withdrew before the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289561-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Garden Open \u2013 Singles\nAdam Pavl\u00e1sek was the defending champion but lost in the semifinals to Gian Marco Moroni.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289561-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Garden Open \u2013 Singles\nHenri Laaksonen won the title after defeating Moroni 6\u20137(2\u20137), 7\u20136(7\u20132), 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289562-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gardner\u2013Webb Runnin' Bulldogs football team\nThe 2019 Gardner\u2013Webb Runnin' Bulldogs football team represented Gardner\u2013Webb University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by seventh-year head coach Carroll McCray and played their home games at Ernest W. Spangler Stadium. They were members of the Big South Conference. They finished the season 3\u20139, 1\u20135 in Big South play to finish in a three-way tie for fifth place. On November 24, 2019, Carroll McCray was fired, he finished with a record of 27\u201353.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289562-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Gardner\u2013Webb Runnin' Bulldogs football team, Previous season\nThe Runnin' Bulldogs finished the 2018 season 3\u20138, 2\u20133 in Big South play to finish in fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289562-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Gardner\u2013Webb Runnin' Bulldogs football team, Preseason, Big South poll\nIn the Big South preseason poll released on July 21, 2019, the Runnin' Bulldogs were predicted to finish in fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 75], "content_span": [76, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289562-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Gardner\u2013Webb Runnin' Bulldogs football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013Big South team\nThe Runnin' Bulldogs had three players selected to the preseason all-Big South team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 89], "content_span": [90, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289563-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Garena Young Lions FC season\nThe 2019 season is Young Lion's 16th consecutive season in the top flight of Singapore football and in the S.League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289563-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Garena Young Lions FC season, Team statistics, Appearances and goals\nNote 1: Lionel Tan scored an own goal in the SPL match against Tampines Rovers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 73], "content_span": [74, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289564-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gasparilla Bowl\nThe 2019 Gasparilla Bowl was a college football bowl game played on December 23, 2019, with kickoff at 2:30\u00a0p.m. EST on ESPN. It was the 12th edition of the Gasparilla Bowl, although only the third under that name, and one of the 2019\u201320 bowl games concluding the 2019 FBS football season. Sponsored by lawn mower manufacturing company Bad Boy Mowers, the game was officially known as the Bad Boy Mowers Gasparilla Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289564-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Gasparilla Bowl, Teams\nThe game matched the UCF Knights of the American Athletic Conference (The American) and the Marshall Thundering Herd of Conference USA (C\u2013USA). It was the fourth appearance in the Gasparilla Bowl for both teams (although their first Gasparilla Bowl against each other), leading all teams in Gasparilla Bowl appearances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289564-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Gasparilla Bowl, Teams\nIt was the twelfth overall meeting between UCF and Marshall; entering the game, UCF led the all-time series, 8\u20133. From 2002 to 2012, UCF and Marshall were in the same conference; they both played in the Mid-American Conference from 2002 to 2004, then both joined C\u2013USA in 2005 and played in that conference until UCF left to join The American in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289564-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Gasparilla Bowl, Teams, UCF Knights\nUCF entered the bowl with a 9\u20133 record (6\u20132 in conference), having finished in second place in the East Division of The American.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289564-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Gasparilla Bowl, Teams, Marshall Thundering Herd\nMarshall entered the game with an 8\u20134 record (6\u20132 in conference); they finished tied for second in the East Division of C\u2013USA. The Thundering Herd were the defending Gasparilla Bowl champions, their 2018 team having won that season's Gasparilla Bowl over South Florida, 38\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 53], "content_span": [54, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289565-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gateshead Metropolitan Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Gateshead Metropolitan Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of the Gateshead Metropolitan Borough Council in England. It was held on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289566-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gauteng provincial election\nThe 2019 Gauteng provincial election was held on 8 May 2019, concurrently with the 2019 South African general election, to elect the 73 members of the Gauteng Provincial Legislature.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289566-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Gauteng provincial election\nIncumbent Premier David Makhura led the ruling African National Congress (ANC), with the party attempting to retain its majority status and secure Makhura a second full term in office as premier. The media and political analysts widely expected that the ANC would lose its majority in the Gauteng Provincial Legislature, therefore it was considered to be the most hotly-contested province in this election cycle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289566-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Gauteng provincial election\nThe Official Opposition Democratic Alliance (DA) nominated Mayor of Tshwane Solly Msimanga to be its premier candidate. Msimanga was elected Tshwane Mayor in the aftermath of the 2016 South African municipal elections as the ANC had lost its majority in the Tshwane City Council. The DA did also manage to gain control of the City of Johannesburg and Mogale City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289566-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Gauteng provincial election\nThe Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF), which won 8 seats and clinched the title of the third largest party in 2014, was expected to grow in this election, possibly holding the balance of power, if the ANC had lost its majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289566-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Gauteng provincial election\nThe fourth largest party in the provincial legislature, the Freedom Front Plus (FF+), saw Gauteng as a province of significant importance for its election campaign. The party nominated Member of Parliament and advocate Anton Alberts as its premier candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289566-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Gauteng provincial election\nThe provincial election was won by the ruling ANC, but with a reduced seat total of only 37 seats, the threshold for a majority. The DA underperformed and lost support in this election, losing a total of three seats, which only gave the party 20 seats in the provincial legislature. The EFF grew its support and won three additional seats. The FF+ gained two seats, while the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) retained its sole seat. The African Christian Democratic Party (ACDP) returned to the provincial legislature by winning one seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289567-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gaza economic protests\nThe 2019 Gaza economic protests, dubbed as We Want to Live protests, began on February, initiating with the popular call \"We want to live\" by a group of politically unaffiliated media activists. The group has been nicknamed the 14th March movement. The protests aim at high costs of living and tax hikes in the Gaza Strip.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289567-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Gaza economic protests\nThe protests were met with violence by the ruling Hamas, which dispatched security forces to disperse protesters. Several human rights organisations and political factions have denounced attacks on protesters by Hamas security forces. The protests were described as the most severe anti-regime protests in Gaza since the Hamas takeover in 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289568-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gedling Borough Council election\nElections to Gedling Borough Council in Nottinghamshire were held on 2 May 2019, the same day as the other local government elections in England and Northern Ireland. The election used the nineteen wards created as a result of boundary commission recommendations formulated for the 2015 contest, with each division electing between one and three Councillors using the first-past-the-post electoral system. A total of 41 representatives were elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289568-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Gedling Borough Council election\nAfter the 2015 election, a Labour majority administration of 25 was formed. In 2019, Labour gained four seats, increasing their numbers to 29, eight clear of the Council's majority threshold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289569-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club season\nThe 2019 season was the Geelong Football Club's 120th in the Australian Football League (AFL). It was the ninth season under senior coach Chris Scott, with Joel Selwood appointed as club captain for an eight successive year. Geelong (known as the Cats) participated in the 2019 JLT Community Series as part of their pre-season schedule, and the club's regular season began on 22 March against Collingwood at the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG). The Cats finished the home-and-away season with a 16\u20136 win\u2013loss record and placed first on the league's ladder, earning Geelong their first minor premiership since the 2008 season. Progressing to the third week of the 2019 finals series, Geelong was subsequently defeated in a preliminary final against Richmond by 19 points, eliminating them before the 2019 AFL Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 853]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289569-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club season\nPatrick Dangerfield was named Geelong's best and fairest player, polling 268 votes for the Carji Greeves Medal ahead of second-placed Tim Kelly on 259.5 votes. It was Dangerfield's third Carji Greeves Medal, having previously won the award the 2016 and 2017 seasons. Tom Hawkins was the club's leading goalkicker for the eighth successive season, scoring 56 goals. Dangerfield, Kelly and Hawkins were all selected in the 2019 All-Australian team, alongside Geelong teammate Tom Stewart. Kelly also received the AFL Coaches Association's Best Young Player award. The Cats also fielded a reserves team in the Victorian Football League (VFL), where they were defeated in an elimination final by Port Melbourne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289569-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club season, Background\nChris Scott continued as the club's senior coach for a ninth season, after signing a contract in August 2018 extending his tenure until the end of the 2022 season. The Cats had four assistant coaches this season, each responsible for specific positions within games: James Rahilly (forward line), Matthew Knights and Nigel Lappin (midfield), Matthew Scarlett (back line). Corey Enright was also a member of the coaching panel, fulfilling the role of development coach for Geelong's young players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289569-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club season, Background\nJoel Selwood was appointed the club's captain for an eighth successive season, with Patrick Dangerfield and Harry Taylor sharing the role of vice-captain. They were supported by a leadership group made up by teammates Mark Blicavs, Mitch Duncan and Zach Tuohy, who all remained in the group from the prior season, along with new addition Tom Stewart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289569-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club season, Background\nFord Australia was the major sponsor of the club for the 2019 season, continuing a long-running deal that started in 1925. GMHBA was the naming rights sponsor for Geelong's home ground Kardinia Park, continuing a ten-year deal signed in October 2017 for the venue to be known as GMHBA Stadium. The Cats were scheduled to play nine of their eleven home games at GMHBA Stadium for the season's home-and-away fixture; the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG) hosted the club's remaining two home games against Essendon and Hawthorn. Geelong signed up 65,063 members and had an average home ground attendance of 33,405 spectators across the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289569-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club season, Playing list, Changes\nAt the end of the 2018 season, Geelong delisted Aaron Black, Ryan Gardner, Cory Gregson, Daniel Menzel and Jordan Murdoch and Timm House from their primary list; the club also removed Stewart Crameri and Matthew Hayball from their rookie list. Menzel and Murdoch were later recruited by Sydney and Gold Coast respectively as delisted free agents. Conversely, rookies Jack Henry and Mark O'Connor were both upgraded to the Cats' senior list for 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289569-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club season, Playing list, Changes\nGeelong were involved in six trades during the annual trade period, the first of which involved the Cats exchanging Lincoln McCarthy (along with picks 55 and 59 in the upcoming national draft) to Brisbane for picks 43 and 62. Geelong used these picks to secure Nathan Kreuger from Carlton and Gary Rohan from Sydney respectively. The club then traded George Horlin-Smith to Gold Coast for pick 59, and Jackson Thurlow to Sydney for pick 70; pick 59 was later on-traded (along with pick 60) to Collingwood in return for pick 51. Additionally, Luke Dahlhaus joined the club as an unrestricted free agent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289569-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club season, Playing list, Changes\nSix players were drafted by the Cats in the 2018 national draft: Jordan Clark (pick 15), Ben Jarvis (48), Jacob Kennerley (50), Darcy Fort (65), Jake Tarca (68) and Oscar Brownless (74)\u2014a father\u2013son selection. Geelong also selected Tom Atkins (pick 11) in the rookie draft; Atkins had been playing with the club's Victorian Football League (VFL) team since 2014. Gaelic footballer Stefan Okunbor was recruited to the club from Ireland as a Category B rookie, and was joined by Blake Schlensog, a graduate from Geelong's \"Next Generation Academy\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289569-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club season, Playing list, Statistics\nGeelong utilised 34 players from their playing list this season; of these players, five played in their first AFL game: Tom Atkins, Jordan Clark, Charlie Constable, Darcy Fort and Gryan Miers. Additionally, Luke Dahlhaus and Gary Rohan played their first games for the Cats, having previously played for Western Bulldogs and Sydney respectively. There was four players who played in all 25 of the club's games. Tom Hawkins was the club's leading goalkicker for the eighth successive season, scoring 56 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289569-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club season, Season summary\nThe fixture for the 2019 season was confirmed by the AFL in November 2018, with clubs playing 22 matches during the regular season and receiving a mid-season bye. Geelong participated in the 2019 JLT Community Series as part of their pre-season schedule, playing in two games against West Coast and Essendon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289569-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club season, Season summary\nGeelong began the regular season on 22 March against Collingwood at the MCG; despite featuring six new players in their team lineup, the Cats narrowly won the game by seven points. This successful start to the season continued the following week, with Geelong winning against Melbourne by 80 points; both Collingwood and Melbourne reached the preliminary finals in the previous season. After an away win against Adelaide in round 3, the Cats recorded their first loss for the season against Greater Western Sydney the next week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289569-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club season, Season summary\nPlaying against arch-rival Hawthorn on Easter Monday, Geelong overcame match-day injuries to midfielder Brandan Parfitt and ruckman Esava Ratugolea to post a 23-point win. This was the first of eight consecutive wins for the Cats, including a 58-point victory over reining premier West Coast in round 6. Geelong's score of 21.7 (133) against Western Bulldogs in round 9 was their highest of the season, with the Cats recording eleven individual goalkickers in their win. Travelling to the MCG again in round 12, the Cats defeated Richmond by 67 points; the Tigers had won 26 of their 28 previous games at the venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289569-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club season, Season summary\nThe Cats' early season success was somewhat marred by a string of on-field incidents by Cats' player Gary Ablett, beginning when Ablett was offered a one-match suspension for striking Essendon midfielder Dylan Shiel with a forearm to the head in the Cats' round 7 win. After successfully appealing the suspension at the AFL Tribunal, Ablett was involved in an almost identical incident the following week with North Melbourne's Sam Wright, but was not penalised.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289569-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club season, Season summary\nA fortnight later, Ablett was suspended for the first time in his 331-game career when he accepted a one-match suspension for punching the jaw of Gold Coast midfielder Anthony Miles. Heading into their bye in round 13, Geelong were placed first on the league's ladder with an 11\u20131 win\u2013loss record; notably the Cats had played each team that had qualified for the previous season's final series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289569-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club season, Season summary\nGeelong were defeated by Port Adelaide in their first match following their week off; it was the eighth consecutive year the Cats had lost after a mid-season bye. This loss began a pattern where Geelong failed to record successive wins for the remainder of the home-and-away season, winning just five of ten matches. All but one of the Cats' wins was at GMHBA Stadium; their sole away victory was against Sydney at the Sydney Cricket Ground in round 19, with Tom Hawkins scoring five goals in his 250th game. Despite this inconsistent form, the Cats's still finished the regular season with a 16\u20136 win\u2013loss record and placed first on the league's ladder, qualifying for the 2019 finals series and earning Geelong their first minor premiership since the 2008 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 815]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289569-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club season, Season summary\nLeading up to the finals series, Geelong had won just three of their 12 finals since their premiership win in 2011. Geelong continued this poor finals form in their qualifying final against Collingwood, losing by 10 points. Geelong defeated West Coast by 20 points in the following week's semi-final, progressing to the third week of the finals series as a result. Geelong were subsequently defeated in a preliminary final against Richmond by 19 points, eliminating them before the 2019 AFL Grand Final. It was the first time since the introduction of the final eight system that both of the regular season's top-two teams failed to reached the Grand Final, after second-placed Brisbane lost their semi-final against Greater Western Sydney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289569-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club season, Reserves team\nThe club's reserves team, participating in the VFL, was coached by Shane O'Bree for a fourth season. Aaron Black and James Tsitas were appointed co-captains, replacing Tom Atkins after he was rookie-listed in the senior team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289569-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club season, Reserves team\nThe reserves team finished the regular season with a 11\u20137 win\u2013loss record and placed sixth on the league's ladder, qualifying for the finals series as a result. Geelong was subsequently defeated in an elimination final by Port Melbourne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289569-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club season, Awards\nGeelong held their player awards night at Crown Palladium on 3 October, with former player Doug Wade presenting the club's best and fairest award, the Carji Greeves Medal. The award was won by Patrick Dangerfield, who received 268 votes; runner-up Tim Kelly polled 259.5 votes, with Tom Stewart in third place on 151 votes. It was Dangerfield's third Carji Greeves Medal, having previously won the award in 2016 and 2017. Additionally, Scott Selwood received the Tom Harley Award, for best representing the club's values, and Tom Hawkins was presented with the Community Champion award. Gryan Miers was named the club's Best Young Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289569-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club season, Awards\nDangerfield, Kelly, Hawkins and Stewart were all selected in the honorary 2019 All-Australian team. Teammates Gary Ablett and Mark Blicavs were initially shortlisted but ultimately not selected in the final team. Kelly also received the AFL Coaches Association's Best Young Player award. Geelong had three players, Charlie Constable (round two), Miers (round eight) and Jordan Clark (round fifteen), who were nominated for the season's Rising Star award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289570-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club women's season\nThe 2019 season was Geelong Football Club's first in the AFL Women's (AFLW) competition. Geelong (known as the Cats) joined the league as an expansion club alongside North Melbourne, having initially been denied entry into the competition's first season in 2017. Paul Hood was the club's inaugural senior coach, and Melissa Hickey was appointed club captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289570-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club women's season\nIn preparation for the club's entry into the league, Geelong were provided with a range of recruitment concessions, including early access to existing clubs' players prior to the league's signing period, and additional selections in the 2018 AFL Women's draft. Nina Morrison was selected by the Cats with the first overall selection in the draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289570-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club women's season\nGeelong began the regular season against Collingwood at GMHBA Stadium on 2 February, finished the regular season with a 3\u20134 win-loss record, and qualified for the 2019 finals series. Geelong was subsequently defeated in a preliminary final against Adelaide by 66 points, eliminating them before the 2019 AFL Women's Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289570-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club women's season\nMeg McDonald won Geelong's best and fairest award with 182 votes, finishing ahead of Olivia Purcell, who came in second place with 168 votes. McDonald was also the Cats' sole selection in the 2019 AFL Women's All-Australian team. Mia-Rae Clifford was the club's leading goalkicker, scoring six goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289570-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club women's season, Background\nThe first season of the AFL Women's (AFLW) league was held in 2017, and consisted of eight teams operated by associated clubs from the Australian Football League (AFL). Although Geelong Football Club's application to join the AFLW's inaugural season was unsuccessful, it was later confirmed in September 2017 that it would join the league as an expansion club from the 2019 season, alongside North Melbourne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 53], "content_span": [54, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289570-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club women's season, Background\nPaul Hood was appointed the club's inaugural AFLW coach in February 2018, having previously coached Geelong's VFL Women's (VFLW) team since its inception in 2016. Natalie Wood replaced Hood as the VFLW coach, and also secured a role as an assistant coach for the AFLW team. The coaching team was finalised in November 2018, with Geelong AFL players Tom Stewart and Aaron Black joining Wood as assistant coaches, and Oscar Owens and David Morgan named as development coaches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 53], "content_span": [54, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289570-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club women's season, Background\nMelissa Hickey was announced as the Cats' inaugural AFLW captain in December 2018. Rebecca Goring, who had captained the VFLW side since 2017, was awarded the role of vice-captain. The player leadership group for the 2019 season also consisted of Richelle Cranston, Renee Garing, Aasta O'Connor and Anna Teague.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 53], "content_span": [54, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289570-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club women's season, Background\nFord Australia and Deakin University were the major sponsors of the AFLW team for the 2019 season. Ford's partnership extended a long-running sponsorship deal that had existed since 1925 with the Geelong Football Club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 53], "content_span": [54, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289570-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club women's season, Playing list, Recruitment\nThe playing list size of each AFLW team was set at 30 players for the 2019 season, with two of these players signed as \"cross-code\" rookies that had not participated in any Australian rules football competition during the previous three years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289570-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club women's season, Playing list, Recruitment\nIn preparation for the clubs' entry into the league, both Geelong and North Melbourne were provided with a range of recruitment concessions. This included an exclusive ten-day signing period held in May 2018 where the two expansion clubs could recruit players from existing AFLW clubs. During this period Geelong signed: Richelle Cranston, Melissa Hickey, Erin Hoare and Anna Teague (from Melbourne); Aasta O'Connor (Western Bulldogs); Madeleine Boyd and Phoebe McWilliams (Greater Western Sydney). There was also the potential to sign players over the age of 18 who did not play in the AFLW in 2018, with the Cats recruiting six players from their VFLW team: Cassie Blakeway, Kate Darby, Renee Garing, Rebecca Goring, Jordan Ivey and Danielle Orr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 817]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289570-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club women's season, Playing list, Recruitment\nDue to the club only signing thirteen players during the expansion club signing period (compared to North Melbourne's seventeen players), Geelong was awarded four compensation selections in the upcoming draft\u2014including the first two picks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289570-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club women's season, Playing list, Recruitment\nFollowing the expansion club signing period, all clubs could participate in a signing and trading period that ran from 23 May to 4 June 2018. Geelong were not heavily involved in trading with clubs, preferring to focus on building their list through their VFLW player signings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289570-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club women's season, Playing list, Recruitment\nThe AFLW draft was held in October 2018, with the Cats selecting the final ten players of their inaugural list: Nina Morrison (pick 1), Sophie Van De Heuvel (2), Rebecca Webster (7), Olivia Purcell (14), Denby Taylor (20), Georgia Clarke (24), Rene Caris (35), Maighan Fogas (47), Elise Coventry (57) and Madeline Keryk (62).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289570-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club women's season, Playing list, Statistics\nGeelong utilised the majority of their playing list for this season, with only Elise Coventry and Hayley Trevean not appearing in an AFLW game. There were ten players who played in all eight of the club's games. Mia-Rae Clifford was the club's leading goalkicker, scoring six goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 67], "content_span": [68, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289570-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club women's season, Season summary\nDue to the expansion in the number of teams participating in the AFLW competition, a conference system was introduced for the 2019 season. This involved two conferences (\"Conference A\" and \"Conference B\") consisting of five teams, with each team playing the other teams in their conference once\u2014as well as three games against teams from the alternate conference. This equated to each team playing a total of seven matches in the regular season, with the two top teams in each conference qualifying for the finals series. Geelong were placed in Conference B with Brisbane, Carlton, Collingwood and Greater Western Sydney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 57], "content_span": [58, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289570-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club women's season, Season summary\nGeelong began the regular season against Collingwood at GMHBA Stadium, narrowly winning their first AFLW match by one point. Nina Morrison was nominated for the league's Rising Star award after accumulating 22 disposals and eight tackles and kicking the winning behind in a best-on-ground performance. This was to be Morrison's only game for the season, as she ruptured the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) in her right knee at training the following week, which required a reconstruction. Geelong were defeated by reigning premiers Western Bulldogs in round two, recording an 18-point margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 57], "content_span": [58, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289570-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club women's season, Season summary\nCaptain Melissa Hickey missed the first two matches of the season due to injury, with vice-captain Rebecca Goring assuming the captain's role in Hickey's absence. Hickey played her first game for the Cats in round three, captaining a loss against Adelaide. Geelong won their next two matches, defeating Carlton and Brisbane to move to first position on the Conference B ladder after round five. Brisbane's score of 1.2 (8) was the lowest overall score in AFLW history at the time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 57], "content_span": [58, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289570-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club women's season, Season summary\nGeelong played Fremantle in round six and despite leading after the first quarter, were defeated by 36 points after not scoring in the second half of the match. In the final round of the season, the Cats suffered a 31-point defeat by Greater Western Sydney, with a score of just 1.4 (10).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 57], "content_span": [58, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289570-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club women's season, Season summary\nThe club finished the regular season with a 3\u20134 win-loss record and placed second on the Conference B ladder, qualifying for the 2019 finals series. Geelong were subsequently defeated in a preliminary final against Adelaide by 66 points, and therefore did not progress to the 2019 AFL Women's Grand Final. Geelong's score of 1.1 (7) was the lowest overall score in AFLW history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 57], "content_span": [58, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289570-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club women's season, Awards\nGeelong's inaugural AFL Women's best and fairest was announced in a ceremony held at GMHBA Stadium on 5 April. The award was won by Meg McDonald, who received 182 votes; runner-up Olivia Purcell received 168 votes, with Renee Garing and Maddy McMahon in joint third place on 157 votes. Additionally, captain Melissa Hickey received the \u2018Hoops\u2019 award, for best representing the club's values, and Kate Darby was presented with the 'Community Champion' award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289570-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club women's season, Awards\nMcDonald and McMahon were both shortlisted for the honorary 2019 AFL Women's All-Australian team, however only McDonald was selected in the final team. Geelong also had two players, Nina Morrison (round one) and Purcell (round five), who were nominated for the season's Rising Star award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289570-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club women's season, VFLW Season\nIn their third season in the second-tier VFL Women\u2019s competition, AFLW coach Paul Hood stepped aside as Natalie Wood became the first female head coach in club history. Geelong appointed five players to a leadership group: Maddy Keryk, Amy McDonald, Danielle Higgins, Kate Darby, and Jordan Ivey sharing and rotating the captaincy responsibilities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289570-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Geelong Football Club women's season, VFLW Season\nMaking the finals from sixth position, the team was eliminated by Melbourne University in the first elimination final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289571-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 General Aung San Shield\nThe 2019 General Aung San Shield (Burmese: Bogyoke Aung San Shield) is the fifth season of Myanmar knockout football competition. The tournament is organized by the Myanmar Football Federation. It is the league cup competition started in 2019 Myanmar football season. This cup succeeded the Myanmar Football Federation Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289571-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 General Aung San Shield, Results, Preliminary Round\nPreliminary round consists of two rounds for teams currently playing in the Regional League Division 1 level. The First round was held 13 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289572-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 General Aung San Shield final\nThe 2019 General Aung San Shield Final is the 9th final of the MFF Cup. The General Aung San Shield winner will qualify to AFC Cup competition. The match was contested by Shan United and Yangon United at Thuwunna Stadium in Yangon. The match will play on 21 September 2019 and was the final match of the Bogyoke Aung San Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289572-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 General Aung San Shield final, Background\nIt is Shan United's second times General Aung San Shield final. Last time, they won against Yangon United in 2017 General Aung San Shield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289572-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 General Aung San Shield final, Background\nYangon United were playing a record 5th MFF Cup final. They had previously won against Hanthawaddy United in 2018 General Aung San Shield final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289572-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 General Aung San Shield final, Ticket allocation\nBoth Shan United and Yangon United received a ticket allocation of 10,000 for the game. Ticket price are 1,000 MMK (Normal Ticket) and 2,000MMK (Special Ticket).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289573-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 General Motors strike\nThe 2019 General Motors strike began September 15, 2019, with the walkout of 48,000 United Automobile Workers from some 50 plants in the United States. Demands by workers included increased job security, gateway for temporary workers to become permanent, better pay and retaining healthcare benefits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289573-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 General Motors strike, Background\nThis strike constituted the first major labor action in the American automotive industry in a decade. The last strike coordinated by the UAW targeting General Motors occurred in 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289573-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 General Motors strike, Background, Motivations\nDuring the Great Recession and economic uncertainty that followed, unionized automotive workers accepted concessions to allow GM and other companies to recover. Though GM has since received large tax breaks and returned to profitability, worker compensation remained stagnant, and the UAW took umbrage with the company's decisions to shutter American facilities and move some jobs abroad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289573-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 General Motors strike, Strike\nThe contract between the UAW and General Motors expired September 14, and the strike began at 11:59pm on Sunday, September 15, 2019. A two day difference between contract expiration and the beginning of a strike is unusually short, but likely motivated by the prolonged negotiations between management and the union. The strike involved 48,000 GM employees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289573-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 General Motors strike, Strike\nOn September 17, GM stopped providing health insurance to 55,000 union members, forcing the UAW to pay for COBRA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289573-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 General Motors strike, Strike\nOn September 26, it was announced that GM would start to pay health insurance again to people on strike.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289573-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 General Motors strike, Strike\nOn October 16, It was announced that GM and The UAW agreed on a new labor contract that could end a month-long strike by 48,000 workers. Although the agreement between GM and UAW has not been officially approved, and workers who are still on strike said that they will wait until the deal has been approved completely before they return to their jobs. The new contract was ratified by UAW members on October 25, ending the strike", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289573-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 General Motors strike, Impact\nAn analyst for Credit Suisse estimated GM could lose as much as $50 million each day the strike continues, while other analysts estimated daily losses could be as high as $100 million per day. GM's share of the automobile market has decreased from 30% in the late 1990s to 17% today, meaning the strike will likely have fewer implications for the economy at large when compared to labor actions in the past. The strike was also predicted to possibly lead to impacts on GM factories abroad, which rely on parts produced in American factories closed due to the strike, and on suppliers such as Canada-based Magna International.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289573-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 General Motors strike, Impact\nAt the beginning of the strike, GM had roughly 83 days' worth of inventory available for sale, temporarily insulating its supply chain from the impact of the strike.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289573-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 General Motors strike, Impact, Reactions\nThe Teamsters refused to deliver GM cars during the strike, in solidarity with GM workers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289573-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 General Motors strike, Impact, Reactions\nMembers of the Trump administration, including Larry Kudlow and Peter Navarro allegedly intervened in negotiations. GM and the White House have both denied Kudlow and Navarro's involvement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289573-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 General Motors strike, Impact, Reactions\nOn Saturday September 21, Senator Elizabeth Warren, running at the time for the Democratic nomination for President of the United States, joined a UAW picket line in Detroit. Other Democratic contenders for the nomination including Senator Bernie Sanders, former vice-president Joe Biden, Senator Amy Klobuchar, and Representative Tim Ryan, also visited picket lines during the strike.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289574-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Generali Open Kitzb\u00fchel\nThe 2019 Generali Open Kitzb\u00fchel was a tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 75th edition of the Austrian Open Kitzb\u00fchel, and part of the ATP Tour 250 series of the 2019 ATP Tour. It took place at the Tennis stadium Kitzb\u00fchel in Kitzb\u00fchel, Austria, from July 29 through August 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289574-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Generali Open Kitzb\u00fchel, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 72], "content_span": [73, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289574-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Generali Open Kitzb\u00fchel, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry using a protected ranking into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 72], "content_span": [73, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289574-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Generali Open Kitzb\u00fchel, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 72], "content_span": [73, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289574-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Generali Open Kitzb\u00fchel, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pair received entry using a protected ranking into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 72], "content_span": [73, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289575-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Generali Open Kitzb\u00fchel \u2013 Doubles\nRoman Jebav\u00fd and Andr\u00e9s Molteni were the defending champions, but chose not to participate together. Jebav\u00fd played alongside Matw\u00e9 Middelkoop but lost in the semifinals to Philipp Oswald and Filip Pol\u00e1\u0161ek. Molteni partnered Leonardo Mayer but lost in the first round to Oliver Marach and J\u00fcrgen Melzer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289575-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Generali Open Kitzb\u00fchel \u2013 Doubles\nOswald and Pol\u00e1\u0161ek went on to win the title, defeating Sander Gill\u00e9 and Joran Vliegen in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289576-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Generali Open Kitzb\u00fchel \u2013 Singles\nMartin Kli\u017ean was the defending champion but lost in the first round to Matthias Bachinger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289576-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Generali Open Kitzb\u00fchel \u2013 Singles\nDominic Thiem won the title, defeating Albert Ramos Vi\u00f1olas in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20130), 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289576-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Generali Open Kitzb\u00fchel \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289577-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Geneva Open\nThe 2019 Geneva Open (sponsored by Banque Eric Sturdza) was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 17th edition of the Geneva Open and part of the ATP Tour 250 series of the 2019 ATP Tour. It took place at the Tennis Club de Gen\u00e8ve in Geneva, Switzerland, from May 19 through May 25, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289577-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Geneva 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-00289577-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Geneva 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-00289578-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Geneva Open \u2013 Doubles\nOliver Marach and Mate Pavi\u0107 were the defending champions, and successfully defended their title, defeating Matthew Ebden and Robert Lindstedt in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289579-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Geneva Open \u2013 Singles\nM\u00e1rton Fucsovics was the defending champion, but lost in the second round to Federico Delbonis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289579-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Geneva Open \u2013 Singles\nAlexander Zverev won the title, defeating Nicol\u00e1s Jarry in the final, 6\u20133, 3\u20136, 7\u20136(10\u20138).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289579-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Geneva Open \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-00289580-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gent\u2013Wevelgem\nThe 2019 Gent\u2013Wevelgem is a road cycling one-day race that took place on 31 March 2019 in Belgium. It was the 81st edition of Gent\u2013Wevelgem and the 12th event of the 2019 UCI World Tour. It was won by Alexander Kristoff in the sprint.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289581-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gent\u2013Wevelgem (women's race)\nThe eighth running of Gent\u2013Wevelgem's women's race was held on Sunday 31 March 2019. It was the fifth event of the 2019 UCI Women's World Tour. The race started in Ypres and finished in Wevelgem, covering a distance of 136.9\u00a0km. Italian Marta Bastianelli won the previous edition in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289582-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgetown Hoyas football team\nThe 2019 Georgetown Hoyas football team represents Georgetown University as a member of the Patriot League during the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They are led by sixth-year head coach Rob Sgarlata and play their home games at Cooper Field. Georgetown finished the season 5\u20136 overall and 1\u20135 in Patriot League play to place last out of seven teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289582-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgetown Hoyas football team, Previous season\nThe Hoyas finished the 2018 season 5\u20136, 4\u20132 in Patriot League play to finish in a tie for second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289582-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgetown Hoyas football team, Preseason, Preseason coaches' poll\nThe Patriot League released their preseason coaches' poll on July 30, 2019 (voting was by conference head coaches and sports information directors). The Hoyas were picked to finish in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289582-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgetown Hoyas football team, Preseason, Preseason All-Patriot League team\nThe Hoyas had seven players selected to the preseason All-Patriot League team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 81], "content_span": [82, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289583-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgetown Hoyas men's soccer team\nThe 2019 Georgetown Hoyas men's soccer team represented the Georgetown University during the 2019 NCAA Division I men's soccer season and the 2019 Big East Conference men's soccer season. The regular season began on August 30 and concluded on November 6. It was the program's 68th season fielding a men's varsity soccer team, and their 24th season in the Big East Conference. The 2019 season was Brian Wiese's 14th year as head coach for the program. The Hoyas concluded their season with their first national championship in program history, defeating top-seeded Virginia in the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289583-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgetown Hoyas men's soccer team, Squad, 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, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289584-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia Bulldogs baseball team\nThe 2019 Georgia Bulldogs baseball team represented the University of Georgia in the 2019 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Bulldogs played their home games at Foley Field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289584-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia Bulldogs baseball team, Preseason, SEC media poll\nThe SEC media poll was released on February 7, 2019 with the Bulldogs predicted to finish in third place in the Eastern Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289584-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia Bulldogs baseball team, Schedule and results\n*Rankings are based on the team's current ranking in the D1Baseball poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289584-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia Bulldogs 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289585-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia Bulldogs football team\nThe 2019 Georgia Bulldogs football team represented the University of Georgia in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Bulldogs played their home games at Sanford Stadium in Athens, Georgia, and competed in the Eastern Division of the Southeastern Conference (SEC). They were led by fourth-year head coach Kirby Smart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289585-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia Bulldogs football team\nGeorgia began the year ranked third in the AP Poll, and were considered the favorite to represent the East Division in the SEC Championship Game for a third consecutive year. On September 21, the team secured a win over then-No. 7 Notre Dame, 23\u201317. They suffered their first loss of the year when they were upset by unranked South Carolina at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289585-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Georgia Bulldogs football team\nGeorgia rebounded with wins over highly ranked rivals No. 6 Florida and No. 12 Auburn, and ended the regular season atop the East Division with an 11\u20131 record, 7\u20131 in SEC play, and ranked fourth in the College Football Playoff rankings. In the SEC Championship Game, Georgia fell to West Division champion and eventual national champion LSU, 37\u201310. Georgia fell out of contention for the Playoff and received a bid to the Sugar Bowl to play Big 12 Conference runner-up Baylor, which Georgia won 26\u201314. The Bulldogs were ranked fourth in the season's final polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289585-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia Bulldogs football team\nGeorgia led FBS in scoring defense, but was 49th in scoring offense. Safety J. R. Reed and offensive tackle Andrew Thomas were named consensus All-Americans. Kicker Rodrigo Blankenship was the recipient of the Lou Groza Award as the nation's best placekicker. Quarterback Jake Fromm led the team in passing with 2,860 yards and 24 touchdowns. Running back D'Andre Swift led the team in rushing with 1,218 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289585-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia Bulldogs football team, Preseason, SEC Media Days\nThe 2019 SEC Media Days were held July 15\u201318 in Birmingham, Alabama. In the preseason media poll, Georgia was projected to repeat as East Division Champion and SEC runner-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289585-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia Bulldogs football team, Preseason, Preseason All-SEC teams\nThe Bulldogs had eleven players selected to the preseason all-SEC teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289585-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia Bulldogs football team, Schedule\nGeorgia announced its 2019 football schedule on September 18, 2018. The 2019 schedule consists of 7 home and 4 away games in the regular season along with a neutral site game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289586-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia Southern Eagles football team\nThe 2019 Georgia Southern Eagles football team represented Georgia Southern University during the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Eagles played their home games at Paulson Stadium in Statesboro, Georgia and competed in the East Division of the Sun Belt Conference. They were led by second year head coach Chad Lunsford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289586-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia Southern Eagles football team, Previous season\nThe Eagles finished the 2018 season 10\u20133, 6\u20132 in Sun Belt play to finish in third place in the East division. The Eagles received an invitation to the Camellia Bowl where they defeated Eastern Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289586-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia Southern Eagles football team, Preseason\nOn August 2, 2019, it was announced that QB Shai Werts and DE Quan Griffin had been indefinitely suspended following their arrests, which were not related. The charges against Werts were subsequently dropped, after what was believed to be cocaine on his car was tested to be bird feces, and he has since been cleared to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 53], "content_span": [54, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289587-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia State Panthers baseball team\nThe 2019 Georgia State Panthers baseball team represents Georgia State University in the 2019 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Panthers play their home games at the GSU Baseball Complex.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289588-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia State Panthers football team\nThe 2019 Georgia State Panthers football team represented Georgia State University (GSU) in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Panthers were led by third-year head coach Shawn Elliott. This was the Panthers' seventh season in the Sun Belt Conference, second within the East Division, and 10th since starting football. They played their home games at Georgia State Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289588-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia State Panthers football team, Previous season\nThe Panthers finished the 2018 season 2\u201310, 1\u20137 in Sun Belt play to finish in last place in the East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289588-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia State Panthers football team, Preseason, Sun Belt coaches poll\nThe preseason poll was released prior to the Sun Belt media day on July 21, 2019. The Panthers were predicted to finish in fifth place in the Sun Belt East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 75], "content_span": [76, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289588-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia State Panthers football team, Preseason, Preseason All-Sun Belt Teams\nThe Panthers had two players selected to the preseason all-Sun Belt teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 82], "content_span": [83, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289588-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia State Panthers football team, Schedule\nGeorgia State announced its 2019 football schedule on March 1, 2019. The 2019 schedule consists of six home and six away games for the regular season. The Panthers host Sun Belt foes Arkansas State, Troy, Appalachian State, and South Alabama, and travel to Texas State, Coastal Carolina, ULM, and in-state rivals Georgia Southern. Georgia State will not play Sun Belt foe Louisiana this year. The team will play four non-conference games, including home games against Furman, an FCS team from the Southern Conference, and Army, an FBS Independent, as well as away games at Tennessee of the Southeastern Conference (SEC) and Western Michigan of the Mid-American Conference (MAC)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289589-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia Swarm season\nThe 2019 Georgia Swarm season is the 4th season of the Georgia Swarm, a lacrosse team based in Duluth, Georgia playing in the National Lacrosse League. The team was formerly based in Saint Paul, Minnesota and was known as the Minnesota Swarm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289589-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289589-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia Swarm season, Roster, Entry Draft\nThe 2018 NLL Entry Draft took place on September 25, 2018. The Swarm made the following selections:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289590-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team\nThe 2019 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team represented the Georgia Institute of Technology during the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Yellow Jackets were led by head coach Geoff Collins, in his first season. They played their home games at Bobby Dodd Stadium and competed as a member of the Coastal Division of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). They finished the season 3\u20139, 2\u20136 in ACC play to finish in last place in the Coastal Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289590-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, Preseason, Preseason media poll\nIn the preseason ACC media poll, Georgia Tech was predicted to finish last in the Coastal Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 79], "content_span": [80, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289590-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, Previous season\nThe Yellow Jackets finished the 2018 season 7\u20136, 5\u20133 in ACC play to finish in second place in the Coastal Division. They were invited to the Quick Lane Bowl, where they lost to Minnesota.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289590-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, Game summaries, at Clemson\nA surprisingly positive start for Tech almost immediately turned into a wreck very early in the game. Tech defended Clemson's high-powered offense very well, earning a 3 and out on Clemson's first drive. However, all of Tech's momentum evaporated when the ensuing Clemson punt was fumbled deep in Tech territory. Clemson recovered the fumble and scored, the first 7 of 28 points in the half. Tech was able to find its defensive footing in fits and starts, but big plays broke through for Clemson, including a 90-yard run on a delayed draw by Travis Etienne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 74], "content_span": [75, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289590-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, Game summaries, at Clemson\nTech's best defensive play of the night would be a 41-yard interception return by Tre Swilling to the 2 yard line, which ultimately led to Tech throwing an interception on 4th & goal. Tech would later score 2 touchdowns in the second half, along with Clemson scoring 24 points to make the final score 52-14 Clemson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 74], "content_span": [75, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289590-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, Game summaries, South Florida\nGeorgia Tech secured the win over South Florida by way of USF mistakes, a strong defensive performance, and excellent special teams play. As the GT offense continues to solidify their long term offensive gameplan, they were able to do just enough to outscore the USF offense. Aided by numerous penalties on the USF defense, the Jackets moved the ball mostly via rushing plays while playing with a patchwork offensive line after a rash of injuries at those positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 77], "content_span": [78, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289590-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, Game summaries, South Florida\nThe defensive penalties and costly fumbles made up the list of USF mistakes, with the biggest miscue being a fumble on the goal line while trying to score the go-ahead touchdown. The Tech defense was able to secure that fumble, all the while limiting USF's production throughout the day. From the many pass breakups to the 9 TFLs, the Jackets defense stifled USF for most of the day. Finally, the performance of Tech's special teams provided a big lift and was a major contributor to the first win of the Geoff Collins Era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 77], "content_span": [78, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289590-0004-0002", "contents": "2019 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, Game summaries, South Florida\nMarred only by a widely missed 51-yard field goal attempt and one shanked punt, Tech's special teams was a definite positive on the day. Tech's Pressley Harvin III was able to pin USF consistently within the 15-yard line with 2 of the punt returns resulting in fumbles (one recovered by each team). Kick coverage and returns were executed with little drama and were consistently well-executed. With the win, Tech avoided its first 0\u20132 start in 30 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 77], "content_span": [78, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289590-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, Game summaries, The Citadel\nThe Citadel, with their triple option style of play, dominated time of possession, clocking in at 41:50 to Tech's 18:10. The Jackets struggled offensively, managing only 301 total yards compared to the Bulldogs' 320 rushing yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 75], "content_span": [76, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289590-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, Game summaries, The Citadel\nThe loss is a historic one for Georgia Tech. It marks Tech's first loss to an FCS opponent since a 1983 loss to Furman 36 years prior. This is also The Citadel's first win over an ACC opponent, previously going 0\u201322 against members of the Atlantic Coast Conference, and The Citadel's first win against the Jackets, failing to beat them in the previous 10 matchups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 75], "content_span": [76, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289590-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, Game summaries, at Temple\nThe meeting is the first between the universities. Coach Geoff Collins was Temple's coach the previous season and left them after building up their program towards a top tier AAC team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289590-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, Game summaries, North Carolina\nFacing off against UNC for the Yellow Jackets home ACC opening, they initially went scoreless in the first half. The Yellow Jackets managed to score 22 points in the second half, but ultimately was not enough to overcome the point deficit. The game marked the first career start for redshirt freshman James Graham, though he shared some early snaps with running QB Tobias Oliver.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 78], "content_span": [79, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289590-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, Game summaries, at Miami (FL)\nThree missed field goals by Miami kickers sent the game into overtime which led Georgia Tech to break a 4 game losing streak. As like the last game in Miami played 2 years prior, the game came down to the final play where Miami turned the ball over on downs just a few inches short of the line to gain during the overtime period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 78], "content_span": [79, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289591-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgian Cup\nThe 2019 Georgian Cup was a single elimination association football tournament which began in early 2019 and ended on 8 December 2019. The winner of the cup earned a place in the 2020\u201321 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289591-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgian Cup\nTorpedo Kutaisi were the defending champions of the Cup after winning the final in the previous season in a penalty shoot-out over Gagra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289591-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgian Cup, Format\nIn 2019, the Georgian Cup was contested between 58 clubs. All rounds of the competition were decided over one leg. Any match which was level after regulation proceeded to extra time and then to penalties, when needed, to determine the winning club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289591-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgian Cup, First round\nFourteen second round matches were played on 24 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289591-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgian Cup, Second round\nTwelve second round matches were played on 27\u201329 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289591-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgian Cup, Third round\nSixteen third round matches were played on 16\u201317 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289591-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgian Cup, Fourth round\nEight fourth round matches were played on 18\u201319 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289591-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgian Cup, Quarter finals\nFour quarter final matches were played on 24 & 25 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289591-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgian Cup, Semi finals\nTwo semi final matches were played on the 23 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289592-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Georgian Super Cup\n2019 Georgian Super Cup was a Georgian football match that was played on 24 February 2019 between the champions of the 2018 Erovnuli Liga, FC Saburtalo Tbilisi, and the winner of the 2018 Georgian Cup, FC Torpedo Kutaisi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289593-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 German Athletics Championships\nThe 2019 German Athletics Championships was the 119th edition of the national championship in outdoor track and field for Germany. It was held on 3 and 4 August at the Olympiastadion in Berlin. It served as the selection meeting for Germany at the 2019 World Championships in Athletics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289593-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 German Athletics Championships, Championships\nAs usual, due to time or organizational reasons, various competitions were not held as part of the main event in Berlin. These include championships for the 50\u00a0km road race, ultra trail and 24-hour race, which were previously organised by the German Ultramarathon Association (DUV) and now organised by the German Athletics Federation (DLV). For the first time, the 4 \u00d7 400 m relays were contested separately. The annual national championships in Germany comprised the following competitions:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289594-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 German Darts Championship\nThe 2019 German Darts Championship was the second of thirteen PDC European Tour events on the 2019 PDC Pro Tour. The tournament took place at Halle 39, Hildesheim, Germany, from 29\u201331 March 2019. It featured a field of 48 players and \u00a3140,000 in prize money, with \u00a325,000 going to the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289594-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 German Darts Championship\nMichael van Gerwen was the defending champion after defeating James Wilson 8\u20136 in the final of the 2018 tournament, but he was defeated 6\u20134 in the second round by Keegan Brown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289594-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 German Darts Championship\nDaryl Gurney won his first European Tour title, by defeating Ricky Evans 8\u20136 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289594-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 German Darts Championship\nJames Wade hit the second nine-dart finish of the 2019 European Tour season in his third round defeat to Darren Webster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289594-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 German Darts Championship, Qualification and format\nThe top 16 entrants from the PDC ProTour Order of Merit on 12 February will automatically qualify for the event and will be seeded in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289594-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 German Darts Championship, Qualification and format\nThe remaining 32 places will go to players from six qualifying events \u2013 18 from the UK Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 22 February), six from the European Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 22 February), two from the West & South European Associate Member Qualifier (held on 28 March), four from the Host Nation Qualifier (held on 28 March), one from the Nordic & Baltic Qualifier (held on 5 October 2018) and one from the East European Associate Member Qualifier (held on 19 January).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289594-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 German Darts Championship, Qualification and format\nFrom 2019, the Host Nation, Nordic & Baltic and East European Qualifiers will only be available to non-tour card holders. Any tour card holders from the applicable regions will have to play the main European Qualifier. The only exceptions being that the Nordic & Baltic qualifiers for the first 3 European Tour events took place in late 2018, before the new ruling was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289594-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 German Darts Championship, Qualification and format\nMichael Smith, who was set to be the 8th seed, withdrew prior to the tournament draw. All seeds below him moved up a place, with James Wilson becoming sixteenth seed, and an extra place being made available in the host nation qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289595-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 German Darts Grand Prix\nThe 2019 German Darts Grand Prix was the third of thirteen PDC European Tour events on the 2019 PDC Pro Tour. The tournament took place at Zenith, Munich, Germany, from 20\u201322 April 2019. It featured a field of 48 players and \u00a3140,000 in prize money, with \u00a325,000 going to the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289595-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 German Darts Grand Prix\nMichael van Gerwen was the defending champion after defeating Peter Wright 8\u20135 in the final of the 2018 tournament, and he defended his title by beating Simon Whitlock 8\u20133 in the final, which was his 30th European Tour title since its inception in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289595-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 German Darts Grand Prix, Qualification and format\nThe top 16 entrants from the PDC ProTour Order of Merit on 5 March will automatically qualify for the event and will be seeded in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289595-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 German Darts Grand Prix, Qualification and format\nThe remaining 32 places will go to players from six qualifying events \u2013 18 from the UK Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 15 March), six from the European Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 15 March), two from the West & South European Associate Member Qualifier (held on 19 April), four from the Host Nation Qualifier (held on 19 April), one from the Nordic & Baltic Qualifier (held on 6 October 2018) and one from the East European Associate Member Qualifier (held on 20 January).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289595-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 German Darts Grand Prix, Qualification and format\nFrom 2019, the Host Nation, Nordic & Baltic and East European Qualifiers will only be available to non-tour card holders. Any tour card holders from the applicable regions will have to play the main European Qualifier. The only exceptions being that the Nordic & Baltic qualifiers for the first 3 European Tour events took place in late 2018, before the new ruling was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289595-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 German Darts Grand Prix, Qualification and format\nGerwyn Price, who was set to be the 3rd seed, withdrew prior to the tournament draw. All seeds below him moved up a place, with Danny Noppert becoming sixteenth seed, and an extra place being made available in the Host Nation Qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289596-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 German Darts Masters\nThe 2019 German Darts Masters was the third staging of the tournament by the Professional Darts Corporation, and was the second entry in the 2019 World Series of Darts. The tournament featured 16 players (eight PDC players facing eight regional qualifiers) and was held at the LANXESS arena in Cologne, Germany on 12\u201313 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289596-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 German Darts Masters\nMensur Suljovi\u0107 was the defending champion after defeating Dimitri Van den Bergh 8\u20132 in the 2018 final, but lost 8\u20133 to Gabriel Clemens in the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289596-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 German Darts Masters\nPeter Wright won his third World Series title and his second in Germany with an 8\u20136 win over Gabriel Clemens in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289596-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 German Darts Masters\nThree of the top-ranked PDC players were beaten in the first round, a new record for the World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289596-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 German Darts Masters, Qualifiers\nThe eight invited PDC representatives are (with the top 4 seeded following the 2019 US Darts Masters):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289597-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 German Darts Open\nThe 2019 German Darts Open was the fourth of thirteen PDC European Tour events on the 2019 PDC Pro Tour. The tournament took place at Saarlandhalle, Saarbr\u00fccken, Germany, from 26\u201328 April 2019. It featured a field of 48 players and \u00a3140,000 in prize money, with \u00a325,000 going to the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289597-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 German Darts Open\nMax Hopp was the defending champion after defeating Michael Smith 8\u20137 in the final of the 2018 tournament, but he was defeated 6\u20133 by John Henderson in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289597-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 German Darts Open\nSteve Beaton hit the third nine-dart finish of the 2019 European Tour during his first round match with Kirk Shepherd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289597-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 German Darts Open\nBrendan Dolan averaged 105.54 in his first round defeat to Jamie Hughes, a European Tour record for a first round losing average.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289597-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 German Darts Open\nMichael van Gerwen won his 31st European Tour title, defeating Ian White 8\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289597-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 German Darts Open, Qualification and format\nThe top 16 entrants from the PDC ProTour Order of Merit on 5 March will automatically qualify for the event and will be seeded in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289597-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 German Darts Open, Qualification and format\nThe remaining 32 places will go to players from six qualifying events \u2013 18 from the UK Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 15 March), six from the European Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 15 March), two from the West & South European Associate Member Qualifier (held on 19 April), four from the Host Nation Qualifier (held on 25 April), one from the Nordic & Baltic Associate Member Qualifier (held on 1 February) and one from the East European Associate Member Qualifier (held on 20 January).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289597-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 German Darts Open, Qualification and format\nFrom 2019, the Host Nation, Nordic & Baltic and East European Qualifiers will only be available to non-tour card holders. Any tour card holders from the applicable regions will have to play the main European Qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289598-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 German Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2019 German Figure Skating Championships (German: Deutsche Meisterschaften im Eiskunstlaufen 2019) was held on December 21\u201323, 2018 at the Eissporthalle Stuttgart in Stuttgart. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dance on the senior, junior, and novice levels. The results of the national championships were among the criteria used to choose the German teams to the 2019 World Championships and 2019 European Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289599-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 German Football League\nThe 2019 German Football League season is the 41st edition of the top-level American football competition in Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289599-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 German Football League\nThe regular season starts on 27 April and will be finished on 8 September 2019, followed by the play-offs. The season culminated in the German Bowl XLI, which will be held on 12 October 2019 in Frankfurt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289599-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 German Football League, Modus\nDuring the regular season each club plays all other clubs in its division twice, home and away, resulting in each team playing 14 regular season games. There are no games between clubs from opposite divisions, interconference games having been abolished after the 2011 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289599-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 German Football League, Modus\nThe best four teams in each division qualify for the play-offs where, in the quarter finals, teams from opposite divisions play each other, whereby the better placed teams have home field advantage. The first placed team plays 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 can meet again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289599-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 German Football League, Modus\nThe eighth placed team in each division enter a two-leg play-off with the winner of the respective division of the German Football League 2, the second tier of the league system in Germany. The winners of this contest qualify for the GFL for the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289600-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 German Grand Prix\nThe 2019 German Grand Prix (formally known as the Formula 1 Mercedes-Benz Gro\u00dfer Preis von Deutschland 2019) was a Formula One motor race which was held on 28 July 2019 at the Hockenheimring in Germany. The race was the 11th round of the 2019 Formula One World Championship and marked the 78th running of the German Grand Prix, and the 64th time the race had been run as a World Championship event since the inaugural season in 1950.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289600-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 German Grand Prix\nThe race was won by Max Verstappen after starting second in a dramatic wet race. Pole-sitter Lewis Hamilton led the race until lap 27 when he crashed behind the safety car, losing the lead and his front wing as well as receiving a penalty for entering the pit lane on the wrong side of a safety bollard. Whilst behind the final safety car Daniil Kvyat and Lance Stroll switched to dry tyres before anyone else, allowing them to finish an unexpected third and fourth respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289600-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 German Grand Prix\nAs of 2021, this is the last German Grand Prix to be held in Formula One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289600-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 German Grand Prix, Background\nFormally known as the \"Formula 1 Mercedes-Benz Gro\u00dfer Preis von Deutschland 2019\" this was a Formula One race held on 28 July 2019. The event took place at the Hockenheimring near Hockenheim in Baden-W\u00fcrttemberg, Germany. It was the 11th round of 21 in the 2019 Formula One World Championship, the 78th running of the German Grand Prix and the 64th time it was run as part of the World Championship since the inaugural 1950 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289600-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 German Grand Prix, Background\nMercedes announced that they would be running a different livery in tribute to their heritage with the team as celebrating their 125th year of competing in motorsport, and their 200th F1 start. Racing Point announced that they would bring a \u201ctwo step\u201d upgrade package to the weekend and the struggling Williams team announced that they too would be bringing an upgrade package. Haas announced that they would have to split their car setups for the second race running as a result of the inter-team crash at the previous race in Britain with Kevin Magnussen's car also carrying extra upgrades.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289600-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 German Grand Prix, Background, Championship standings before the race\nHeading into the weekend it was Lewis Hamilton and Mercedes who held a lead of 39 and 164 points in the drivers and constructors championships respectively. The size of their leads meant that both were confirmed to still be leading their respective championships after the weekend regardless of the race result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289600-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 German Grand Prix, Background, Entrants\nThe drivers and teams entered were the same as those on the season entry list with no additional stand-in drivers for either the race or practice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289600-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 German Grand Prix, Practice\nSebastian Vettel was fastest in the first practice session followed by Ferrari teammate Charles Leclerc in second with Lewis Hamilton third fastest. The session passed mostly without incident with the exception being Kevin Magnussen after his car failed causing a brief red flag. Ferrari managed to get first and second in the second practice session but this time with Leclerc leading Vettel by just over 1 tenth of a second, Hamilton once again finished the session in third. The session's only notable incident was Pierre Gasly crashing on the exit of turn 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289600-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 German Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nThe race was scheduled for 67 laps with the formation lap due to start at 15:10 local time (13:10 UTC). A rule relevant to a race which has been declared as \"wet\" at its start was employed for the first time at this Grand Prix. The rule states that after the formation lap and zero or more additional laps behind the safety car, the race director has three options by which to proceed: a standing start without the safety car, a rolling start without the safety car, or suspending the race. The number of additional formation laps is subtracted from the overall race distance in all 3 instances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289600-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 German Grand Prix, Race, Race report, Race start\nSince at race time the track conditions were considered unsuitable due to heavy rain, all 20 cars were obligated to start on the wet tyres. After the formation lap and three additional laps behind the safety car, the race director elected to begin the grand prix with a standing start. Accordingly, the race distance was set to 64 laps, with all four laps behind the safety car at the beginning of the race officially scored as formation laps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 53], "content_span": [54, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289600-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 German Grand Prix, Race, Race report, Race start\nAt the standing start the Red Bulls driven by Max Verstappen and Pierre Gasly were both very slow off the starting grid and lost several places each. Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen took advantage, and ended up in third by the end of the first lap. Both Ferrari drivers had a first lap which saw them move up the order. Charles Leclerc who started in 10th was up to 6th, and Sebastian Vettel had improved from 20th to 14th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 53], "content_span": [54, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289600-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 German Grand Prix, Race, Race report, Race start\nVerstappen, who had dropped down due to his start, passed R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen for third immediately before Sergio P\u00e9rez spun off coming out of turn 10, he hit the wall on the inside taking him out of the race. This caused the race's first safety car to appear on lap two. As the track began to dry Vettel and Alexander Albon pitted for intermediate tyres, with the majority of the other cars doing the same on the following lap. The safety car period ended on lap 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 53], "content_span": [54, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289600-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 German Grand Prix, Race, Race report, Race start\nKevin Magnussen, Lance Stroll, Lando Norris, George Russell and Robert Kubica, all of whom stayed out on their wet tyres, quickly found themselves being overtaken by those on the intermediate tyres. All ultimately pitted for intermediates, but lost out for not having done so earlier dropping them to the back of the race. Daniel Ricciardo suffered an exhaust failure on lap 14, causing a virtual safety car. On lap 18, Carlos Sainz lost control of his McLaren at turn 16, causing it to run wide and aquaplane on the slippery, dragstrip area of the track, before narrowly avoiding the barriers. This caused a local yellow flag before he was able to drive off under his own power.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 53], "content_span": [54, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289600-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 German Grand Prix, Race, Race report, Lap 22\nBy lap 22, the track had dried sufficiently that teams further down the order decided to risk slick tyres. The first driver to attempt them was Magnussen in his Haas on soft tyres, followed shortly after by Vettel. Verstappen pitted from third position and fitted the medium tyres. Valtteri Bottas then pitted on lap 27 from second and was also fitted with mediums. Almost immediately after Bottas pitted, Verstappen lost control of his car and performed a 360 degree spin at turn 14, but managed to recover.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289600-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 German Grand Prix, Race, Race report, Lap 22\nNorris's car lost power on track on lap 26, prompting a second deployment of the virtual safety car. Many teams took the opportunity to pit their drivers for dry weather tires, including Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton. A notable exception was Sainz; with McLaren putting on a fresh set of intermediate tyres on his car. As Hamilton was leaving the pits on soft tyres, Leclerc spun into the tyre barrier at turn 17. He tried to drive out from the gravel, but his Ferrari SF90 was beached. This ended his race, and prompted the second full safety car of the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289600-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 German Grand Prix, Race, Race report, Lap 22\nAt the end of the lap, Hamilton, now in the lead behind the safety car, also lost control at turn 17, damaging his front wing on the wall and returning into the pit lane cutting across the track as he did so. His Mercedes team was not ready for him, and Hamilton endured a 50.3 second pit stop in which his front wing was replaced and he had switched back onto intermediate tyres. It became clear to all teams at this point that dry weather tyres were not viable, and all teams were back on intermediate tyres by the time the second safety car period ended at lap 34.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289600-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 German Grand Prix, Race, Race report, Lap 34\nAt the beginning of lap 34, the top five drivers in order were Verstappen, Nico H\u00fclkenberg, Bottas, Albon and Hamilton. Vettel, who had started last, was now in 8th. Shortly after the safety car restart, Hamilton was found to have entered the pit lane on the wrong side of a safety bollard on lap 27, and was given a five-second penalty. Meanwhile, on track, Bottas and Hamilton overtook the cars ahead of them to race second and third respectively behind Verstappen. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen avoided beaching his car in a turn 17 gravel trap on lap 39, losing numerous places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289600-0014-0001", "contents": "2019 German Grand Prix, Race, Race report, Lap 34\nOne lap later, H\u00fclkenberg slid into another gravel trap on the same corner, and was unable to free his car. This brought out the third safety car of the day. A few drivers including race leader Verstappen pitted during this safety car period; Verstappen's stop was notable as the fastest F1 pit stop time ever at 1.88 seconds, beating the previous time of 1.91 seconds, set during the 2019 British Grand Prix. All drivers who pitted during this safety car kept intermediate tyres, with one notable exception: Lance Stroll, who was the only driver to fit slick tyres. The third safety car period ended on lap 46.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289600-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 German Grand Prix, Race, Race report, Lap 46\nBy this point in the race, the rain had stopped falling, and a clear dry line had formed on the track. Half the field pitted on lap 46 for dry weather tyres, including Verstappen and Bottas. Hamilton took the lead ahead of both. All the drivers remaining on intermediates, Hamilton included, pitted on lap 47 for slick tyres. Hamilton, because he had to serve his five-second penalty, was relegated to 12th position after his stop. Meanwhile, Stroll, the only driver to take slicks during the previous safety car, briefly inherited the lead of the race. Verstappen and then Daniil Kvyat soon passed him within a lap leaving Stroll in 3rd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289600-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 German Grand Prix, Race, Race report, Lap 46\nThe next several laps of the race saw Verstappen extend his race lead to more than ten seconds. Sebastian Vettel, who had started lap 46 in 8th, began showing pace on dry tyres and moving through the midfield. Lewis Hamilton spun out at turn 1, narrowly avoiding the barriers, dropping down to 13th on lap 53. The field was frozen once again on lap 56, when Valtteri Bottas, running in 4th, slid off track and into a tyre barrier in a near identical spin to Hamilton a few laps earlier, suffering front suspension damage that would end his race. Verstappen's 10 second lead disappeared as Bottas's shunt brought out the fourth and final safety car of the race. Sebastian Vettel, who had by this point moved up to 5th position, found himself in a favorable position to attack the frontrunners heading into the final few laps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 874]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289600-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 German Grand Prix, Race, Race report, Finish\nThe safety car caused by Bottas's crash ended on lap 60. Pierre Gasly's car suffered terminal damage when he collided with Albon two laps later. Verstappen extended his race lead once again, pulling over 7 seconds ahead of 2nd position by the final lap. Vettel was able to pass Sainz, Stroll, and Kvyat to finish in 2nd after starting the race in last. Kvyat, finishing 3rd, achieved Toro Rosso's first podium since Vettel's victory at the 2008 Italian Grand Prix. Verstappen won his second race of the last three, also picking up the point for fastest lap and the spectator voted \"Driver of the Day\" award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289600-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 German Grand Prix, Race, After the race\nAfter the race, both Alfa Romeo drivers R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and Antonio Giovinazzi were penalised 30 seconds for use of driver aids at the start. This relegated them to 12th and 13th, respectively. The penalties moved Hamilton up to 9th and prevented Mercedes from leaving the race without points for the first time since the 2018 Austrian Grand Prix. It further allowed Kubica, moved up to 10th, to earn his and Williams's first and what would prove to be the only point in Williams's 2019 campaign. An appeal against the penalties was lodged by Alfa Romeo after the race and was subsequently dismissed by the FIA World Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289601-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 German Indoor Athletics Championships\nThe 2019 German Indoor Athletics Championships (German: Deutsche Leichtathletik-Hallenmeisterschaften 2019) was the 66th edition of the national championship in indoor track and field for Germany. It was held on 16\u201317 February at the Arena Leipzig in Leipzig. A total of 24 events, 12 for men and 12 for women, were contested. It served as preparation for the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289601-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 German Indoor Athletics Championships\nSeveral national championship events were staged elsewhere: combined events were held on 26\u201327 January in the Sporthalle Brandberge in Halle, the relays were held on 24 February at the Glaspalast Sindelfingen in Sindelfingen, while racewalking events were hosted in Halle on 1 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289602-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 German Masters\nThe 2019 D88.com German Masters was a professional ranking snooker tournament, taking place from 30 January to 3 February 2019 in Berlin, Germany. The tournament was the eleventh ranking event of the 2018/2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289602-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 German Masters\nThe event was won by Kyren Wilson, who won his third career ranking event, defeating David Gilbert in the final 9\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289602-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 German Masters\nMark Williams was the defending champion, but he lost 5\u20130 to Kyren Wilson in the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289602-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 German Masters\nJudd Trump made his fourth career maximum break, in the second qualifying round of the event, in his 5\u20130 win over Lukas Kleckers. David Gilbert made the main event's highest break; with a break of 139.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289602-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 German Masters\nDespite never previously reaching the last 16 of a ranking event, Duane Jones reached the semi-finals, defeating top 16 players Ding Junhui and Jack Lisowski.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289602-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 German Masters, Tournament Summary\nTwo rounds of qualifying took place between 18 and 21 December 2018 at the Barnsley Metrodome in Barnsley, England. The main event featured 32 players, held between 30 January and 3 February 2019 on four tables.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289602-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289602-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 German Masters, Qualifying\nTwo rounds of qualifying matches took place between 18 and 21 December 2018 at the Barnsley Metrodome in Barnsley, England. All matches were best of 9 frames.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289603-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 German Open (badminton)\nThe 2019 German Open (officially known as the Yonex German Open 2020 for sponsorship reasons) was a badminton tournament that took place at the Innogy Sporthalle in M\u00fclheim, Germany, from 26 February to 3 March 2019 and had a total prize of $150,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289603-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 German Open (badminton), Tournament\nThe 2019 German Open was the fifth tournament of the 2019 BWF World Tour and also part of the German Open championships, which had been held since 1955. This tournament was organized by the German Badminton Association and sanctioned by the BWF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289603-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 German Open (badminton), Tournament, Venue\nThis international tournament was held at the Innogy Sporthalle in M\u00fclheim, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289603-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 German Open (badminton), Tournament, Point distribution\nBelow is the point distribution table for each phase of the tournament based on the BWF points system for the BWF World Tour Super 300 event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289603-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 German Open (badminton), Tournament, Prize money\nThe total prize money for this tournament was US$150,000. Distribution of prize money was in accordance with BWF regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289604-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 German motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2019 German motorcycle Grand Prix was the ninth round of the 2019 MotoGP season. It was held at the Sachsenring in Hohenstein-Ernstthal on 7 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289604-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 German motorcycle Grand Prix\nThis round featured the first MotoE race. The class was originally meant to make its d\u00e9but at Jerez, but a fire in the paddock during pre-season testing destroyed all 18 bikes that were prepared and the Jerez round was cancelled along with the Le Mans round. All teams in the MotoE class use the Energica Ego Corsa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289605-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Geylang International FC season\nThe 2019 season is Geylang International's 24th consecutive season in the top flight of Singapore football and in the Singapore Premier League. Along with the Singapore Premier League, the club will also compete in the Singapore Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289605-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Geylang International FC season, Team statistics, Appearances and goals\nNote 1: Darren Teh scored an own goal against Balestier Khalsa on 31/3/2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289606-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ghana Football Association Normalization Committee Special Competition\nThe 2019 Ghana Football Association Normalization Committee Special Competition was a special competition organized by the Ghana Football Association (GFA) Normalization Committee in 2019 in place of the Ghana Premier League, the top association football league in Ghana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 75], "section_span": [75, 75], "content_span": [76, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289606-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ghana Football Association Normalization Committee Special Competition\nDue to the dissolution of the GFA in June 2018, the 2018 league season was abandoned, and a special competition was organized by the GFA Normalization Committee in 2019 to revive domestic football until the re-organization of the GFA. The competition started on 30 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 75], "section_span": [75, 75], "content_span": [76, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289606-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Ghana Football Association Normalization Committee Special Competition, Tier 1, Group stage\nThe teams are divided into two groups: Group A for teams in the North and Group B for teams in the South.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 75], "section_span": [77, 96], "content_span": [97, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289607-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ghana Movie Awards\nThe 2019 Ghana Movie Awards was an event held at National Theatre on December 20th, 2019. At the event, Actress Salma Mumin made history as she won her first best actress in the lead role award category. Actor Alphonse Menyo also took home his first trophy for best actor in role category. The annual award recognises excellence in the Ghana's movie industry and this was its ninth edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289607-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ghana Movie Awards\nThe most nominations going to 'Gold coast lounge', 'Away bus', 'A.B.A.D' and most wins awarded to 'Gold coast lounge' movie and its cast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289607-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Ghana Movie Awards, Awards, Categories\nSCREEN PLAY BY KOFI ASAMOAH, YAW TWUMASI AND PETER SEDUFIA", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289608-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ghanaian constitutional referendum attempt\nA constitutional referendum was scheduled to be held in Ghana on 17 December 2019, alongside district level elections. The proposed amendments to the constitution would have allowed for the direct election of Metropolitan, Municipal and District Chief Executives (MMDCEs) and allow political parties to be involved in local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289608-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ghanaian constitutional referendum attempt, Background\nThe direct election of MMDCEs was a campaign promise of successful presidential candidate Nana Akufo-Addo in the 2016 general elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289608-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Ghanaian constitutional referendum attempt, Background\nThe proposed changes would involve amending article 243(1), which provides for the appointment of MMDCEs by the president, and article 55(3), which bans political party activity in district-level elections. As article 55 is an entrenched clause, the referendum requires a turnout of at least 40% and over 75% of those voting to vote in favour for the proposal to be passed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289609-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ghazi Amanullah Khan Regional One Day Tournament\nThe 2019 Ghazi Amanullah Khan Regional One Day Tournament was a List A cricket competition that took place in Afghanistan between 10 and 24 September 2019. It was the third edition of the competition to be played with List A status, following the announcements by the International Cricket Council (ICC) in February and May 2017. Five teams competed; Amo Region, Band-e-Amir Region, Boost Region, Mis Ainak Region and Speen Ghar Region. Boost Region were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289609-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ghazi Amanullah Khan Regional One Day Tournament\nAmo Region, Boost Region and Mis Ainak Region all progressed to the knockout phase of the tournament. Mis Ainak Region beat Amo Region in the eliminator match to progress to the final against Boost Region. Mis Ainak Region won the tournament, beating Boost Region by 88 runs in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289610-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ghazni bombing\nA suicide car bombing occurred in Ghazni, Afghanistan on 7 July 2019. It killed 14 people and injured another 180. The Taliban has claimed responsibility for the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289611-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ghotki riots\nOn September 15, 2019, a large number of extremist Muslims desecrated three Hindu temples, a private school and attacked shops and houses belonging to the Hindu community in the Ghotki over the allegation of blasphemy against the Hindu principal of the Sindh Public School made by a school student. A delegation investigating the attack found that the attacks were pre-planned and had political support.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289611-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ghotki riots, Background\nOn 14 September, a student in the Sindh Public School in Ghotki complained to his father that the principal had allegedly made derogatory remarks against Prophet Muhammad. The student also made a video about this, which went viral. Following this, protesters filed an FIR against the principal on the night of 14 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289611-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Ghotki riots, Background\nOn 15 September, thousands of supporters of\u00a0Mian Mithoo\u00a0held sit-ins on the main roads and marched towards the school. Mian Aslam was leading the mob. The Mian Mitho is the brother of Mian Aslam has been allegedly involved in the forced conversion of Hindu girls in the past. The Mian Mitho denied his involvement in the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289611-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Ghotki riots, Background\nThe mob desecrated Hindu temple's including the famous Sacho Satram Das temple, vandalised the school and attacked houses and shops belonging to the members of the Hindu community. The mobs also damaged sacred items inside the temple.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289611-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Ghotki riots, Response\nCases against 218 people involved in the attack were registered in three separate cases.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 27], "content_span": [28, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289611-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Ghotki riots, Response\nFollowing the attack, many local Muslims in Ghotki held a rally to show solidarity with the Hindu community. Many Muslims spent night in temple to protect the Hindus, who were taking refugee inside it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 27], "content_span": [28, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289611-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Ghotki riots, Response\nThe Bilawal Bhutto, Chairman of Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) visited the Sacho Satram Dham temple which was desecrated and condemned the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 27], "content_span": [28, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289611-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Ghotki riots, Response\nA delegation was formed by Ministry of Human Rights to investigate the attacks which found that the attacks on temples and riots were pre-planned and had political support. The delegation found that the principal accused of blasphemy actively supported a political party in the recent Ghotki by-elections and attacking him was politically motivated. The delegation also found that local police were reluctant to even register FIR against the rioters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 27], "content_span": [28, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289612-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Giants Live Wembley\nThe 2019 Giants Live Wembley was a strongman competition that took place in London, England on the 6th July 2019 at the Wembley Arena. This event was part of the 2019 Giants live tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289613-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Giants Live World Tour Finals\nThe 2019 Giants Live World Tour Finals was a strongman competition that took place in Manchester, England on 7 September 2019 at the Manchester Arena. This event was the finale of the 2019 Giants live tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289614-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gibraltar Darts Trophy\nThe 2019 Gibraltar Darts Trophy is the thirteenth of thirteen PDC European Tour events on the 2019 PDC Pro Tour. The tournament is taking place at the Victoria Stadium, Gibraltar, from 27\u201329 September 2019. It features a field of 48 players and \u00a3140,000 in prize money, with \u00a325,000 going to the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289614-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Gibraltar Darts Trophy\nMichael van Gerwen was the defending champion after defeating Adrian Lewis 8\u20133 in the previous year's final, but he lost in the third round 6\u20133 to Nathan Aspinall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289614-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Gibraltar Darts Trophy\nDave Chisnall hit his first European Tour nine-dart finish in his quarter-final against James Wade, which was the fifth European Tour nine-darter of 2019, equalling the record set in the inaugural year in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289614-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Gibraltar Darts Trophy\nKrzysztof Ratajski won his sixth PDC title, and his first on the European Tour, with an 8\u20132 win against Chisnall in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289614-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Gibraltar Darts Trophy, Qualification and format\nThe top 16 entrants from the PDC ProTour Order of Merit on 10 September will automatically qualify for the event and will be seeded in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289614-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Gibraltar Darts Trophy, Qualification and format\nThe remaining 32 places will go to players from six qualifying events \u2013 18 from the UK Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 20 September), six from the European Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 20 September), two from the West & South European Associate Member Qualifier (held on 12 September), four from the Host Nation Qualifier (held on 26 September), one from the Nordic & Baltic Qualifier (held on 24 August), and one from the East European Qualifier (held on 25 August).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289614-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Gibraltar Darts Trophy, Qualification and format\nFrom 2019, the Host Nation, Nordic & Baltic and East European Qualifiers will only be available to non-Tour Card holders. Any Tour Card holders from the applicable regions will have to play the main European Qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289615-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gibraltar Open\nThe 2019 Betway Gibraltar Open was a professional ranking snooker tournament, taking place from 15 to 17 March 2019 in Gibraltar with qualifying rounds taking place 13\u201314 March 2019. It was the seventeenth ranking event of the 2018/2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289615-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Gibraltar Open\nStuart Bingham won his 6th career ranking title by defeating defending champion Ryan Day 4\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289615-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Gibraltar Open, 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-00289615-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Gibraltar Open, Amateur pre-qualifying\nQualifying rounds were played in Gibraltar on 13\u201314 March 2019. All matches were played best of 7 frames.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 43], "content_span": [44, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289616-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gibraltar general election\nThe Gibraltar general election of 2019 to elect all 17 members to the 4th Gibraltar Parliament took place on Thursday 17 October 2019. Chief Minister Fabian Picardo announced the date of the election on Monday 16 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289616-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Gibraltar general election\nThe GSLP\u2013Liberal Alliance won their third consecutive election, retaining their majority in the Parliament. Fabian Picardo was returned as Chief Minister of Gibraltar. However both the governing GSLP\u2013Liberal Alliance and the opposition Gibraltar Social Democrats lost votes to new party Together Gibraltar, which won one seat from the GSD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289616-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Gibraltar general election, Timing and procedure\nUnder section 38(2) of the Gibraltar Constitution Order 2006, the parliament must be dissolved four years after its first meeting following the last election (unless the Chief Minister advises the Governor of Gibraltar to dissolve parliament sooner). Under section 37 of the Constitution, writs for a general election must be issued within thirty days of the dissolution and the general election must then be held no later than three months after the issuing of a writ. In September 2019, Chief Minister Fabian Picardo formally asked Governor Ed Davis to dissolve parliament and call an election for 17 October 2019. Following the British tradition, elections in Gibraltar conventionally take place on a Thursday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289616-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Gibraltar general election, Campaign\nThe issue of Brexit (formerly due to take place exactly two weeks after election day) was a major theme in the election campaign, with incumbent Chief Minister Fabian Picardo stating that the territory is ready for a 'no deal' Brexit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289617-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ginetta GT4 Supercup\nThe 2019 Millers Oils Ginetta GT4 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 Ginetta G55s 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. It is the ninth Ginetta GT4 Supercup, having rebranded from the Ginetta G50 Cup, which ran between 2008 and 2010. The season commenced on 1 April at Brands Hatch\u00a0\u2013 on the circuit's Indy configuration\u00a0\u2013 and concludes on 30 September at the same venue, utilising the Grand Prix circuit, after twenty-two races held at eight meetings, all in support of the 2019 British Touring Car Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 837]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289618-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ginetta Junior Championship\nThe 2019 Michelin 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, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289618-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 Ginetta Junior Championship\nIt was the thirteenth Ginetta Junior Championship, and the first with new title sponsor Michelin, commencing on 6 April 2019 at Brands Hatch\u00a0\u2013 on the circuit's Indy configuration\u00a0\u2013 and concluding on 13 October 2019 at the same venue, utilising the Grand Prix circuit, after ten meetings, all in support of the 2019 British Touring Car Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289619-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Girls' U16 European Volleyball Championship\nThe 2019 Girls' U16 European Volleyball Championship was the 2nd edition of the Girls' U16 European Volleyball Championship, a biennial international volleyball tournament organised by the European Volleyball Confederation (CEV) the girls' under-16 national teams of Europe. The tournament was held in Italy and Croatia from 13 to 21 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289619-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Girls' U16 European Volleyball Championship, Awards\nAt the conclusion of the tournament, the following players were selected as the tournament dream team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 56], "content_span": [57, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289620-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Girls' Youth Pan-American Volleyball Cup\nThe 2019 Girls' Youth Pan-American Volleyball Cup was played from May 19 to May 27, 2019 in Durango, Mexico. Eight teams competed in this tournament. Peru won the tournament for the first time defeating Puerto Rico. Since Peru had already qualified for the 2019 World Championship through the South American Championship, Puerto Rico and Mexico qualified instead. Janelly Ceopa of Peru was named the tournament MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289620-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Girls' Youth Pan-American Volleyball Cup, Final standing\nYadhira Anchant,Carolina Takahash,Sarita Ceopa ,Nicolle Perez,Maria Lopez ,Francesca Calderon ,Yohmara Rivera ,Brunella Milla ,Lizanyela Lopez ,Antuanett Garcia,Alondra Alarcon,Thaisa Leod", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 61], "content_span": [62, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289621-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro Rosa\nThe 30th women's Giro d'Italia, or Giro Rosa, was held from 5 to 14 July 2019. Raced over ten stages, it was considered the most prestigious stage race of the women's calendar. The defending champion, Annemiek van Vleuten, won the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289621-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro Rosa, Teams\nTwenty-four teams of up to six riders each took part in the race:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 21], "content_span": [22, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289621-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro Rosa, Route\nThe race consisted of 10 stages totalling 905.8\u00a0km (562.8\u00a0mi), beginning in Cassano Spinola on 5 July with a team time trial and finishing in Udine on 14 July. Though originally 918.3\u00a0km (570.6\u00a0mi) in length, landslides forced the route of stage 5 to be rerouted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 21], "content_span": [22, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289621-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro Rosa, Stages, Stage 3\nAfter unsuccessful solo breakaway attempts by Eugenia Bujak and Tayler Wiles, Lucy Kennedy launched an attack at 2.5\u00a0km (1.6\u00a0mi) to go. She quickly opened up a gap and managed to keep it up the steep drag to the finish line. At 200 meter to go, the bunch was closing in and Marianne Vos launched her attack. Unaware of this, and with only a few meters left to the finish line, Kennedy thought she had won and started raising her arm in celebration. In extremis, Vos sped passed her to the stage victory, leaving Kennedy with second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 31], "content_span": [32, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289621-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro Rosa, Stages, Stage 4\nA three rider strong breakaway, consisting of Letizia Borghesi, Chiara Perini and Anouska Koster rode away from the peloton after 38\u00a0km (23.6\u00a0mi). Koster was dropped, while Nadia Quagliotto attacked from the peloton to join the two other Italians at the front. Quagliotto unsuccessfully tried to drop her fellow breakaway companions on the only categorised climb of the day. With the race coming down to a sprint for the three riders in the breakaway, Quagliotto was the first to launch her sprint. Thinking she'd won, she started celebrating, only to be pipped on the line by Borghesi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 31], "content_span": [32, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289621-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro Rosa, Stages, Stage 5\nOriginally, stage 5 was planned to finish on the Passo di Gavia. However, due to landslides, the stage had to be rerouted. The organisers replaced the Gavia with the finish to Lago Cancano in Valdidentro, a finish previously used in the 2011 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 31], "content_span": [32, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289621-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro Rosa, Classification leadership table\nIn the 2019 Giro d'Italia Femminile, five different jerseys will be awarded. The most important is the general classification, which is calculated by adding each cyclist's finishing times on each stage. Time bonuses will be awarded to the first three finishers on all stages with the exception of the time trials: the stage winner will win a ten-second bonus, with six and four seconds for the second and third riders respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 47], "content_span": [48, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289621-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Giro Rosa, Classification leadership table\nBonus seconds will also be awarded to the first three riders at intermediate sprints; three seconds for the winner of the sprint, two seconds for the rider in second and one second for the rider in third. The rider with the least accumulated time is the race leader, identified by a pink jersey. This classification is considered the most important of the 2019 Giro d'Italia Femminile, and the winner of the classification was considered the winner of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 47], "content_span": [48, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289621-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro Rosa, Classification leadership table\nAdditionally, there will a points classification, which awards a cyclamen jersey. In the points classification, cyclists receive points for finishing in the top 10 in a stage, and unlike in the points classification in the Tour de France, the winners of all stages \u2013 with the exception of the team time trial, which awards no points towards the classification \u2013 are awarded the same number of points. For winning a stage, a rider earned 15\u00a0points, with 12 for second, 10 for third, 8 for fourth, 6 for fifth with a point fewer per place down to a single point for 10th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 47], "content_span": [48, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289621-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro Rosa, Classification leadership table\nThere is also a mountains classification, the leadership of which is marked by a green jersey. In the mountains classification, points towards the classification are won by reaching the top of a climb before other cyclists. Each climb is categorised as either second, or third-category, with more points available for the higher-categorised climbs; however on both categories, the top five riders were awarded points. The fourth jersey represents the young rider classification, marked by a white jersey. This is decided the same way as the general classification, but only riders born on or after 1 January 1996 are eligible to be ranked in the classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 47], "content_span": [48, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289621-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro Rosa, Classification leadership table\nThe fifth and final jersey represents the classification for Italian riders, marked by a blue jersey. This is decided the same way as the general classification, but only riders born in Italy are eligible to be ranked in the classification. There is also a team classification, in which the times of the best three cyclists per team on each stage are added together; the leading team at the end of the race is the team with the lowest total time. The daily team leaders wore red dossards in the following stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 47], "content_span": [48, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia\nThe 2019 Giro d'Italia was a three-week Grand Tour cycling stage race organised by RCS Sport that took place mainly in Italy, between 11 May and 2 June 2019. The race was the 102nd edition of the Giro d'Italia and was the first Grand Tour of the 2019 cycling season. The race started with an individual time trial in Bologna, and finished with another time-trial in Verona. The race was won by Richard Carapaz (Movistar Team), who became the first Ecuadorian rider to win the Giro d'Italia. Italian Vincenzo Nibali (Team Bahrain Victorious) finished 2nd, with Slovenian rider Primo\u017e Rogli\u010d (Team Jumbo\u2013Visma) in 3rd place. Carapaz also became the second South American rider to win the Giro, after Nairo Quintana in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia\nPascal Ackermann (Bora\u2013Hansgrohe) narrowly won the points classification before Arnaud D\u00e9mare (Groupama\u2013FDJ), with Damiano Cima (Nippo\u2013Vini Fantini\u2013Faizan\u00e8) in third place. Giulio Ciccone (Trek\u2013Segafredo) won mountains classification after leading it through 20 of the race's 21 stages, and Miguel \u00c1ngel L\u00f3pez (Astana\u2013Premier Tech) won the young rider classification. The team classification was won by Movistar Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Teams\nAll 18 UCI WorldTeams were automatically invited and were obliged to attend the race. Four wildcard UCI Professional Continental teams were also selected. Because of an agreement between RCS Sport and the organisers of the Coppa Italia di ciclismo (the Italian Road Cycling Cup) one of the four wildcards is traditionally reserved for the overall cup winner. One of the wildcards was therefore awarded to Androni Giocattoli\u2013Sidermec. On 25 January 2019, the race organisers announced that the other three wildcards were awarded to Bardiani\u2013CSF, Israel Cycling Academy and Nippo\u2013Vini Fantini\u2013Faizan\u00e8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Teams\nAll of the wildcard teams had previously participated in the Giro, and three out of the four teams participated in the previous year. The one exception was Nippo-Vini Fantini, whose last participation in the Giro was in 2016. Each team started with eight riders. The on-stage presentation of the teams took place in Bologna on 9 May, two days before the opening stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Pre-race favourites\nTwo previous Giro d'Italia champions, Vincenzo Nibali (Bahrain\u2013Merida) and Tom Dumoulin (Team Sunweb), are considered to be among the favorites for the Maglia Rosa, together with Miguel \u00c1ngel L\u00f3pez (Astana), Mikel Landa (Movistar Team), Primo\u017e Rogli\u010d (Team Jumbo\u2013Visma) and Simon Yates (Mitchelton\u2013Scott).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Pre-race favourites\nOther riders believed to be competitive in the general classification were Richard Carapaz (Movistar Team), Esteban Chaves (Team BikeExchange), Davide Formolo (Bora\u2013Hansgrohe), Ion Izagirre (Astana\u2013Premier Tech), Bob Jungels (Deceuninck\u2013Quick-Step), Rafal Majka (Bora\u2013Hansgrohe), Bauke Mollema (Trek\u2013Segafredo), Ben O'Connor (Team Qhubeka Assos) and Ilnur Zakarin (Team Katusha\u2013Alpecin).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Pre-race favourites\nRiders believed to be the main contenders for victories on the sprint stages are the current German national champion Pascal Ackermann (Bora\u2013Hansgrohe), Frenchman Arnaud D\u00e9mare (Groupama\u2013FDJ), Australian rider Caleb Ewan (Lotto\u2013Soudal), Colombia's Fernando Gaviria (UAE Team Emirates), and the defending winner of the points classification, Italian Elia Viviani (Deceuninck\u2013Quick-Step).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Route and stages\nThe race started on 11 May with an 8\u00a0km cronoscalata, a mountain time trial, in Bologna, which concluded with a 2.1\u00a0km (1\u00a0mi) climb to the Sanctuary of the Madonna di San Luca. The steep (average gradient 9.7%) climb, which is regularly used as a finish in the Italian autumn classic Giro dell'Emilia, made its debut in the Giro in 1956 in a time trial stage won by Charly Gaul, and had now made its fourth appearance in the Giro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 36], "content_span": [37, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Route and stages\nThe race then headed south, with the second stage crossing the Apennines into Tuscany, honouring Tuscan cyclist Gino Bartali with a stage finish in Fucecchio. The following stage started in Vinci, celebrating the 500th anniversary of the death of Leonardo da Vinci, and finished in Orbetello, which also acted as the start location for the following stage, in which the race left Tuscany for the Lazio region with a stage finish in Frascati.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 36], "content_span": [37, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0006-0002", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Route and stages\nContinuing south, the peloton then left Frascati for a stage finish in Terracina, and, following a short transfer to Cassino, crossed the country on a hilly stage to the Apulian region on eastern coast, finishing in the town of San Giovanni Rotondo. The race then headed north, with stage finishes in L'Aquila and Pesaro. Stage nine's individual time trial in San Marino was the last stage before the rest day, and the only occasion where the Giro left Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 36], "content_span": [37, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Route and stages\nFollowing the first rest day, the riders tackled two flat stages with finishes in Modena and Novi Ligure. The twelfth stage, relatively short at 158\u00a0km (98\u00a0mi), started from Cuneo and included the climb of Montoso, 1248 meters above sea level. It finished with a very short, but steep climb in the town of Pinerolo, with the gradient reaching 20%. The thirteenth stage has been considered to become the first big test for the riders aiming for the general classification and included the race's first summit finish, at Lago Serr\u00f9, close to Ceresole Reale. Two other categorized climbs were included in the stage, namely the Colle del Lys and the Pian del Lupo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 36], "content_span": [37, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Route and stages\nFollowing the second, and last, rest day on 27 May, the riders faced what has been dubbed as the queen stage of the race, which started in Lovere, included several categorized climbs, including the Passo del Mortirolo, before finishing in Ponte di Legno. Initially, the stage was meant to also feature the Passo di Gavia, previously featured in 2014, in a stage won by Nairo Quintana (Movistar Team), who later won the overall classification, however the climb was ultimately removed from the route two days before the stage was run due to snow and poor weather conditions. The Mortirolo was first included in the race in 1990, and has since then made many appearances in the race, most recently on the 16th stage at the 2017 won by Vincenzo Nibali. The race finished with a 17\u00a0km (11\u00a0mi) time trial in Verona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 36], "content_span": [37, 847]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Race overview\nThe first stage, an 8\u00a0km mountain time trial in Bologna, was won by Primo\u017e Rogli\u010d (Team Jumbo\u2013Visma) who therefore became the first wearer of the maglia rosa, the pink jersey identifying the leader of the general classification. Rogli\u010d also took the lead in the points classification. Giulio Ciccone (Trek\u2013Segafredo) took the lead in the mountains classification and became the first wearer of the blue jersey, while Miguel \u00c1ngel L\u00f3pez (Astana) finished as the fastest young rider and became the leader of the young rider classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Race overview\nStage 2, the first bunch sprint stage, was taken by Pascal Ackermann (Bora\u2013Hansgrohe), who benefited from a mistake by Elia Viviani (Deceuninck\u2013Quick-Step) in the setup for the sprint. Rogli\u010d held the maglia rosa for another day, while Ackermann took the points classification. Ciccone also went into the breakaway and maintained his lead in the mountains classification. The third stage was once again a group sprint, but this one had much more controversy. In the leadup to the sprint, Viviani pulled out of line and bumped Matteo Moschetti (Trek\u2013Segafredo) out of the way.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0009-0002", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Race overview\nViviani won the stage on the road, but judges later relegated him for an illegal sprint, which handed the win and points classification to Fernando Gaviria (UAE Team Emirates). No other changes in the jerseys occurred. Richard Carapaz (Movistar Team) won the fourth stage after a late attack. Multiple crashes with only a few kilometers left of the stage saw several riders go down. One of those affected was favorite Tom Dumoulin (Team Sunweb), who eventually finished the stage four minutes after many other favorites had crossed the line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0009-0003", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Race overview\nRogli\u010d extended his general classification lead out to 35 seconds, and Ackermann took back the points classification. Stage five was a drenched one, with a neutralized bunch sprint at the end. Ackermann took the win after nearly colliding with a Groupama\u2013FDJ rider. Gaviria took a close second. Dumoulin officially withdrew after only a few kilometers of the stage, stating that the pain was too much to continue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Race overview\nThe first shakeup of the race occurred on stage six, where the breakaway took the stage. Fausto Masnada (Androni Giocattoli\u2013Sidermec) beat Valerio Conti (UAE Team Emirates) to the line, beating the peloton by a full seven minutes. Conti was handed over the maglia rosa with the rest of the breakaway riders between him and Rogli\u010d because of this. Giovanni Carboni (Bardiani\u2013CSF) gained the young rider classification also. Stage seven was another day for the breakaway, this time Pello Bilbao (Astana) fending off Tony Gallopin (AG2R La Mondiale) for the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Race overview\nStage eight saw Caleb Ewan (Lotto\u2013Soudal) take the sprint over Elia Viviani and Pascal Ackermann, the holder of the maglia ciclamino at the time. Stage nine, the San Marino time trial that would round out the first week, saw Primo\u017e Rogli\u010d victorious again, this time only 11 seconds over Victor Campenaerts (Lotto\u2013Soudal) and a full minute over Bauke Mollema (Trek\u2013Segafredo) and the rest of the GC favorites. Conti still held the maglia rosa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Race overview\nA slight controversy opened up the second week, with stage ten ending in a reduced sprint caused by the fall of the maglia ciclamino holder Ackermann. Arnaud D\u00e9mare (Groupama\u2013FDJ) found victory over Viviani and R\u00fcdiger Selig (Bora\u2013Hansgrohe), who sprinted after Ackermann's crash. Ackermann would finish, although losing the ciclamino to Demare, and Matteo Moschetti would withdraw from injuries sustained in the incident. Ewan found victory once again in stage eleven, where he once again beat Demare and Ackermann. Ewan and Viviani both announced their withdrawals afterwards, in preparation for the Tour de France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Race overview\nStage twelve followed the common roads of the Giro di Lombardia, where Cesare Benedetti (Bora\u2013Hansgrohe) of the breakaway took his first pro win over Damiano Caruso (Bahrain\u2013Merida) and Eddie Dunbar (Team Ineos). It also saw Jan Polanc (UAE Team Emirates) taking over the general classification from his teammate Conti. The thirteenth stage was the first true mountain stage of the Giro, and was potentially the turning point. Ilnur Zakarin (Team Katusha\u2013Alpecin) took victory after an attack, in which he caught up and surpassed second placed Mikel Nieve (Mitchelton\u2013Scott), with Mikel Landa (Movistar Team) coming in third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0011-0002", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Race overview\nThe surprise of the day was Richard Carapaz, who essentially was let go by Vincenzo Nibali (Bahrain\u2013Merida) and Rogli\u010d. This placed him right with the other favorites, two down on Rogli\u010d and a further two on Polanc. However, on the other end of the spectrum, big names like Miguel \u00c1ngel L\u00f3pez (Astana) and Simon Yates (Mitchelton\u2013Scott) lose multiple minutes on the day. Stage fourteen was arguably the maglia rosa-deciding stage, as Carapaz was once again on the attack for minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0011-0003", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Race overview\nThe rest of the favorites once again let him go, and let his gap grow to nearly two minutes for a decisive victory. Yates placed in second, gaining about 20 seconds on the rest of the favorites. The fifteenth day of racing was one for the break again, as Dario Cataldo (Astana) edged out Mattia Cattaneo (Androni Giocattoli\u2013Sidermec) for the win, with Yates once again placing on the podium. This stage saw Roglic lose a bit of time on his rivals after a nightmare day filled with crashes and such, obtaining a needed break from the final rest day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Race overview\nThe third week began with the now-shortened \"queen stage\" of the race. Missing out on the Gavia Pass, the challenging day saw the maglia azzurra (mountain classification) leader Giulio Ciccone (Trek\u2013Segafredo) not only secure the classification, but win the stage from a tough breakaway with Jan Hirt (Astana) in a close second. Fausto Masnada (Androni Giocattoli\u2013Sidermec) grabbed his second podium of the race in third, and saw Lopez lose some 20 seconds on Nibali, as well as Rogli\u010d over a minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Race overview\nThe seventeenth day was another one for the break, this time Nans Peters (AG2R La Mondiale) breaking through for the win, with Esteban Chaves (Mitchelton\u2013Scott) around a minute and a half back, and Davide Formolo (Bora\u2013Hansgrohe) rounded out in third. Nibali, Rogli\u010d, and others once again lost seconds on Carapaz. Stage eighteen, however, was more or less a break in the action for many. Damiano Cima (Nippo\u2013Vini Fantini\u2013Faizan\u00e8) outlasted the sprint trains to take a surprise win over Ackermann and Simone Consonni (UAE Team Emirates).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0012-0002", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Race overview\nDemare held the points classification up to this point, but bad positioning meant he brought it home in eighth, putting Ackermann in the maglia ciclamino to the end of the race. Stage nineteen was yet another for the break, this time Chaves finally nabbing a stage win for himself and Mitchelton-Scott. Andrea Vendrame (Androni Giocattoli\u2013Sidermec) and Amaro Antunes (CCC Team) made up the top three, with Lopez gaining around 45 seconds on his rivals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0012-0003", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Race overview\nThe penultimate stage of the Giro was maybe one of the more exciting ones, with Pello Bilbao (Astana) taking another one for himself over Landa, with Ciccone not far behind in third. Rogli\u010d and Yates both lost 50 seconds to the favorites, and Lopez once again lost 2 minutes on them. That left everything on the table for the final time trial to round out this year's edition. The American Chad Haga (Team Sunweb) surprisingly gave Sunweb their one and only win in the Giro, with Campernaerts once again only four seconds down, and with Thomas De Gendt (Lotto\u2013Soudal) taking the final place on the podium, rounding out an excellent Giro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Race overview\nCarapaz became the first Ecuadorian rider to win a Grand Tour and the second South American rider to win the Giro, after Colombian Nairo Quintana in 2014. Vincenzo Nibali placed second, one minute down, and Rogli\u010d managed to take third back from Landa on the final day by eight seconds. Pascal Ackermann took the points classification by 13 points over Arnaud Demare, and Giulio Ciccone outright dominated the mountain classification. Miguel Angel Lopez unsurprisingly took the youth classification over Pavel Sivakov, and Movistar unsurprisingly took the team classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Race overview, Incidents\nAbout 60\u00a0km (37\u00a0mi) from the finish of stage 18, a spectator walked onto the road shortly before the escape group reached the spot and dropped a bicycle in the path of the riders. The man then walked away from the scene. Another spectator stepped in and removed the obstacle. On 4 June 2019, it was reported that the identified perpetrator, a man from Tunisia, faced expulsion back to his home country due to his actions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Race overview, Incidents\nDuring the final ascent to Croce d'Aune on stage 20, Miguel \u00c1ngel L\u00f3pez was knocked off his bike in an incident with a spectator. Before he got back on his bike, L\u00f3pez hit the fan several times in anger. He would go on to lose almost two minutes on the group of other favourites at the end of the stage. Even though UCI regulations stipulate that a rider who engages in physical violence is to be disqualified from the event, L\u00f3pez was given no punishment for his action. The UCI announced on 2 June 2019 that they had launched an investigation into the jury's decision not to apply a penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Race overview, Doping\nOn 15 May 2019, the UCI announced that they had provisionally suspended Kristijan Koren (Bahrain\u2013Merida), part of his squad for the 2019 Giro, for his alleged involvement in the Operation Aderlass doping case. The team subsequently pulled Koren out of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Classification leadership\nIn the Giro d'Italia, four different jerseys are awarded. The first and most important is the general classification, calculated by adding each rider's finishing times on each stage. Riders receive time bonuses (10, 6 and 4 seconds respectively) for finishing in the first three places on each stage. Smaller time bonuses are also given to the top three riders at the last intermediate sprint on each stage (3, 2 and 1 seconds respectively). The rider with the lowest cumulative time is awarded the pink jersey (Italian: maglia rosa), and is considered the winner of the Giro d'Italia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Classification leadership\nAdditionally, there is a points classification. Riders win points for finishing in the top placings on each stage or by being within the first cyclists to reach intermediate sprint locations along each mass-start stage. Flat stages award more points than mountainous stages, meaning that this classification tends to favour sprinters. The leader of the points classification wore the cyclamen jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Classification leadership\nThere is also a mountains classification, for which points were awarded for reaching the top of a climb before other riders. Each climb was categorised as either first, second, third or fourth-category, with more points available for the more difficult, higher-categorised climbs. For first-category climbs, the top eight riders earned points; on second-category climbs, six riders won points; on third-category climbs, only the top four riders earned points with three on fourth-category climbs. The leadership of the mountains classification was marked by a blue jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0019-0001", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Classification leadership\nThe Cima Coppi, the race's highest point of elevation, awards more points than the other first-category climbs, with nine riders scoring points. Initially, the Cima Coppi was scheduled to be the Passo di Gavia on the sixteenth stage, but due to weather the climb was removed from the itinerary. The next highest climb was that to Serr\u00f9 Lake, however the climb had already been ascended prior to the cancellation. As a result, organisers chose to assign the Cima Coppi to the highest climb out of those which had not been ascended - the Passo Manghen on stage 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Classification leadership\nThe fourth jersey represents the young rider classification. This is decided the same way as the general classification, but only riders born after 1 January 1994 are eligible. The winner of the classification is awarded a white jersey. There are also two classifications for teams. In the Trofeo Fast Team classification, the times of the best three cyclists per team on each stage are added up; the leading team is one with the lowest total time. The Trofeo Super Team is a team points classification, with the top 20 riders of each stage earning points for their team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Classification leadership\nThe first additional award is the intermediate sprint classification. Each road stage has two sprints \u2013 the Traguardi Volanti. The first 5 riders across the intermediate sprint lines are awarded points (10, 6, 3, 2 and 1 points respectively); the rider with the most points at the end of the race wins the classification. Another classification\u00a0\u2013 the combativity prize (Italian: Premio Combattivit\u00e0)\u00a0\u2013 involves points awarded to the first riders at the stage finishes, at intermediate sprints, and at the summits of categorised climbs. There is also a breakaway award (Italian: Premio della Fuga).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289622-0021-0001", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Classification leadership\nFor this, points are awarded to each rider in any breakaway smaller than 10 riders that escapes for at least 5 kilometres (3.1\u00a0mi). Each rider is awarded a point for each kilometre that the rider was away from the peloton. The rider with the most points at the end of the Giro wins the award. The final classification is a \"fair play\" ranking for each team. Teams are given penalty points for infringing various rules. These range from half-point penalties, for offences that merit warnings from race officials, to a 2000-point penalty, for a positive doping test. The team that has the lowest points total at the end of the Giro wins the classification. When several teams are tied on points, the team with the highest classified rider in the general classification will be the higher ranked team in the fair play classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 876]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289623-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11\nThe 2019 Giro d'Italia is the 102nd edition of the Giro d'Italia, one of cycling's Grand Tours. The Giro began in Bologna with an individual time trial on 11 May, and Stage 11 occurred on 22 May with a stage to Novi Ligure. The race will finish in Verona on 2 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289623-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 1\n11 May 2019 - Bologna to Bologna (San Luca), 8\u00a0km (5.0\u00a0mi) (ITT)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289623-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 1\nThe first rider departed at 16:50 CEST (UTC+02:00). The route started on the Via F. Rizzoli, heading west for the first half of the course. The riders then turned back east for 2\u00a0km (1.2\u00a0mi), to the timecheck at the Via di San Luca. The course then headed southwest on a 2.1-kilometre-long (1.3\u00a0mi) category 3 climb, with a 9.7% average gradient, to the finish line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289623-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 1\nThe stage was won by Primo\u017e Rogli\u010d (Team Jumbo\u2013Visma) who therefore became the first wearer of the maglia rosa, the pink jersey identifying the leader of the general classification. Rogli\u010d also took the lead in the points classification. Giulio Ciccone (Trek\u2013Segafredo) took the lead in the mountains classification and became the first wearer of the blue jersey, while Miguel Angel Lopez (Astana) finished as the fastest young rider and became the leader of the young rider classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289623-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 2\n12 May 2019 - Bologna to Fucecchio, 200\u00a0km (120\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289623-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 3\n13 May 2019 - Vinci to Orbetello, 219\u00a0km (136\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289623-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 3\nElia Viviani from Deceuninck\u2013Quick-Step crossed the line first, but was relegated by the jury due to moving from his racing line during the final sprint, therefore Fernando Gaviria, who crossed the line second, is the winner of the stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289623-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 4\n14 May 2019 - Orbetello to Frascati, 228\u00a0km (142\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289623-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 5\n15 May 2019 - Frascati to Terracina, 140\u00a0km (87\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289623-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 5\nTom Dumoulin, the 2017 winner and one of the race favourites, withdrew in the stage's neutral zone. He had suffered a knee injury in a crash on the previous stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289623-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 6\n16 May 2019 - Cassino to San Giovanni Rotondo, 233\u00a0km (145\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289623-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 7\n17 May 2019 - Vasto to L'Aquila, 180\u00a0km (110\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289623-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 8\n18 May 2019 - Tortoreto Lido to Pesaro, 235\u00a0km (146\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289623-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 9\n19 May 2019 - Riccione to San Marino (San Marino), 34.7\u00a0km (21.6\u00a0mi) (ITT)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289623-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 10\n21 May 2019 - Ravenna to Modena, 147\u00a0km (91\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289623-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 11\n22 May 2019 - Carpi to Novi Ligure, 206\u00a0km (128\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289624-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21\nThe 2019 Giro d'Italia is the 102nd edition of the Giro d'Italia, one of cycling's Grand Tours. The Giro began in Bologna with an individual time trial on 11 May, and Stage 12 occurred on 23 May with a stage from Cuneo. The race will finish in Verona on 2 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289624-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 12\n23 May 2019 - Cuneo to Pinerolo, 146\u00a0km (91\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289624-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 12\nThe first high mountain stage includes the category 1 climb to Montoso, at an altitude of 1,248\u00a0m (4,094\u00a0ft), over a distance of 8.85\u00a0km (5.5\u00a0mi). The climb has an average gradient of 9.5%. The riders will also pass over the short but steep climb of the Via Principi d'Acaja, on two occasions, along the route. The first climb will occur before the climb to Montoso, and the second climb will occur in the last 3\u00a0km (1.9\u00a0mi) of the stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289624-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 13\n24 May 2019 - Pinerolo to Ceresole Reale (Serr\u00f9 Lake), 188\u00a0km (117\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289624-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 14\n25 May 2019 - Saint-Vincent to Courmayeur (Skyway Monte Bianco), 131\u00a0km (81\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289624-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 15\n26 May 2019 - Ivrea to Como, 237\u00a0km (147\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289624-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 16\n28 May 2019 - Lovere to Ponte di Legno, 194\u00a0km (121\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289624-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 17\n29 May 2019 - Commezzadura (Val di Sole) to Anterselva/Antholz, 180\u00a0km (110\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289624-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 18\n30 May 2019 - Valdaora/Olang to Santa Maria di Sala, 220\u00a0km (140\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289624-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 19\n31 May 2019 - Treviso to San Martino di Castrozza, 151\u00a0km (94\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289624-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 20\n1 June 2019 - Feltre to Croce d\u2019Aune-Monte Avena, 193\u00a0km (120\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289624-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 20\nA spectator caused Miguel \u00c1ngel L\u00f3pez to be knocked off his bike with 5\u00a0km (3.1\u00a0mi) remaining, losing time on the group of favourites. L\u00f3pez responded by hitting the spectator, but escaped sanction from the race officials. After receiving a long push uphill from a spectator on the 11\u00a0km (6.8\u00a0mi) climb of the Croce d'Aune, Primo\u017e Rogli\u010d was given a ten-second penalty for not refusing help.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289624-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 21\n2 June 2019 - Verona to Verona, 15.6\u00a0km (9.7\u00a0mi) (ITT)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289624-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 21\nThe riders departed in reverse order to the general classification, at one-minute intervals, starting at 13:45 CEST. The top twenty riders, on the general classification, departed at three-minute intervals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289625-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro dell'Emilia\nThe 2019 Giro dell'Emilia was the 102nd edition of the Giro dell'Emilia road cycling one day race. It was held on 5 October 2019 as part of the 2019 UCI Europe Tour as a 1.HC-ranked event. It was won by Slovenian rider Primo\u017e Rogli\u010d of Team Jumbo\u2013Visma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289625-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro dell'Emilia, Teams\nTwenty-five teams were invited in the race, of which eleven are UCI WorldTour teams, eight are UCI Professional Continental teams, and six are UCI Continental teams. Each team entered seven riders, though eight teams (Amore & Vita\u2013Prodir, Astana, Bardiani\u2013CSF, Biesse Carrera, Mitchelton\u2013Scott, Sangemini\u2013MG.K Vis, Team Colpack, and Team Ineos) only entered six riders, and Giotti Victoria\u2013Palomar only entered five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289626-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro di Sicilia\nThe 2019 Giro di Sicilia was the twenty-fourth edition of the Giro di Sicilia, a men's multi-stage bicycle race. It was held between 3 and 6 June 2019 and was organised as a 2.1 event in the UCI Europe Tour. The race was won by Brandon McNulty (Rally UHC Cycling).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289626-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Giro di Sicilia, Teams\nOne UCI WorldTeam, ten UCI Professional Continental teams, and seven UCI Continental teams made up the eighteen teams that participated in the race. Of these teams, three teams (Nippo\u2013Vini Fantini\u2013Faizan\u00e8, Riwal Readynez, and Sangemini\u2013Trevigiani\u2013MG.K Vis) entered only six riders each, while the rest entered seven each. 77 of the 123 riders in the race finished.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289627-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gjensidige Cup\nThe 2019 Gjensidige Cup held in Oslo at the Oslo Spektrum and the Nordstrand Arena between 3\u20136 January was a friendly handball tournament organised by the Norwegian Handball Federation as a preparation of the host nation to the 2019 World Men's Handball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289628-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Global Awards\nThe 2019 Global Awards ceremony was held on Thursday 7 March 2019 at London's Eventim Apollo and was sponsored by very.co.uk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289628-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Global Awards\nRoman Kemp, Rochelle Humes and Myleene Klass returned to host for the second year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289628-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Global Awards\nPerformances and special appearances included Little Mix, Lang Lang, Blossoms, Anne-Marie, Mark Ronson and Mabel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289628-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Global Awards, Nominees and winners\nThe list of nominees was announced in December 2018. Winners are listed first, in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289629-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Global Rapid Rugby season\nThe 2019 Global Rapid Rugby season was a showcase series for seven rugby union teams played in locations across the Asia-Pacific region. Global Rapid Rugby originally planned a full home and away tournament followed by finals, with eight teams competing in 2019. The competition launch was postponed by a year, however, due to the short time frame following World Rugby approval in November 2018. A scaled-down showcase series of fourteen matches was arranged instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289629-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Global Rapid Rugby season, Teams\nSeven teams played in the Rapid Rugby Showcase in 2019:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289629-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Global Rapid Rugby season, Standings\nA modified version of the standard Rugby union bonus points system was used, with bonus points awarded for:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289629-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Global Rapid Rugby season, Standings\nFour points were awarded for a win and none for a loss; two points were awarded to each team for a match ending in a draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289629-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Global Rapid Rugby season, Media coverage\nRapid Rugby had live broadcast television coverage in 18 countries across Asia and Oceania in 2019. Live streaming and video on demand services reached additional viewers within some Asia-Pacific countries, while Rapid Rugby's own website provided live streams and highlight packages to other regions worldwide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289629-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Global Rapid Rugby season, Media coverage\nNine of the fourteen matches of 2019 showcase series were televised. Fox Sports in Australia and related companies Star Sports and Fox Sports Asia provided the live coverage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289629-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Global Rapid Rugby season, Media coverage\nNational broadcaster SBS showed all nine of these matches live on free-to-air television across Australia via its SBS Viceland channel and also streamed through SBS on Demand. Other Rapid Rugby media partners included Kayo Sports in Australia, Sky Sport in New Zealand and Fiji TV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289630-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Global T20 Canada\nThe 2019 Global T20 Canada was the second edition of the Global T20 Canada, a 20-over professional cricket tournament, played at the CAA Centre, Brampton, Ontario. It started on 25 July 2019, and concluded with the final on 11 August 2019. It was slightly later in the calendar than the previous tournament, to avoid clashing with the 2019 Cricket World Cup. Vancouver Knights are the defending champions. A new team named New York Legends were announced to replace Cricket West Indies B Team. However, the idea was later cancelled, and the Brampton Wolves were named as the sixth franchise team in June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289630-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Global T20 Canada\nOn 26 July 2019, the start of the match between Montreal Tigers and Winnipeg Hawks was delayed by 90 minutes due to a bomb threat, when a suspicious package was found in the venue. The package was removed, with the match being reduced to twelve overs per side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289630-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Global T20 Canada\nThe final, between the Winnipeg Hawks and the Vancouver Knights, finished in a tie. Winnipeg Hawks won the match in the Super Over, to win their first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289630-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Global T20 Canada, Teams and squads\nThe following teams, squads and coaches were announced for the tournament. More than 1,000 cricketers from 42 nations were on the list for the players' draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289630-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Global T20 Canada, Teams and squads\nIn July 2019, Steven Taylor, Jasdeep Singh and Timil Patel withdrew from the tournament, after signing central contracts with USA Cricket. In early August, the majority of the Emirati cricketers were recalled to play in the Twenty20 International (T20I) series against the Netherlands. On 5 August 2019, Brendon McCullum announced his retirement from cricket, with the tournament being his final matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289631-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Glynhill Ladies International\nThe 2019 Glynhill Ladies International was held January 17 to 20, 2019 at the Braehead Curling Rink in Renfrew, Glasgow, Scotland as a part of the 2018\u201319 curling season. The event was held in a round robin format with the top eight teams advancing to the playoffs. The purse for the event was \u00a3 11,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289631-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Glynhill Ladies International\nIn an all Swiss final, Team Ursi Hegner of Uzwil defeated Team Elena Stern of Brig-Glis 5\u20133 to claim the event title. To reach the final, Hegner defeated Team Isabella Wran\u00e5 of Sweden 5\u20134 in one semifinal and Stern beat Team Tova Sundberg, also of Sweden, 8\u20130 in the other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289631-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Glynhill Ladies International, Round robin results\nAll draw times are listed in Greenwich Mean Time (UTC+00:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289632-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Go Bowling 250\nThe 2019 Go Bowling 250 is a NASCAR Xfinity Series race held on September 20, 2019, at Richmond Raceway in Richmond, Virginia. Contested over 250 laps on the 0.75 mile (1.2\u00a0km) asphalt short track, it was the 27th race of the 2019 NASCAR Xfinity Series season, first race of the Playoffs, and the first race of the Round of 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289632-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Go Bowling 250, Background, Track\nRichmond Raceway is a 3/4-mile (1.2\u00a0km), D-shaped, asphalt race track located just outside Richmond, Virginia in Henrico County. It hosts the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series and Xfinity Series. Known as \"America's premier short track\", it formerly hosted a NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series race, an IndyCar Series race, and two USAC sprint car races. Richmond Raceway is also one of only a few tracks to host all of its events at night.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289632-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Go Bowling 250, Practice\nGray Gaulding was the fastest in the practice session with a time of 22.241 seconds and a speed of 121.397\u00a0mph (195.370\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289632-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Go Bowling 250, Qualifying\nAustin Cindric scored the pole for the race with a time of 22.708 seconds and a speed of 118.901\u00a0mph (191.353\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289632-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Go Bowling 250, Race, Summary\nAustin Cindric started on pole. On lap 6, Christopher Bell took the lead from him and dominated the race, winning both stages. Aside from a few minor cautions, the race was relatively caution free. Bell was able to prevent Cindric and Cole Custer from passing him and won the stages with more than a 1-second gap. Bell won the race over Cindric by nearly a 2-second margin, locking himself into the next round. Custer also clinched a spot in the next round in points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289633-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Go Bowling at The Glen\nThe 2019 Go Bowling at The Glen was a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race held on August 4, 2019 at Watkins Glen International in Watkins Glen, New York. Contested over 90 laps on the 2.45-mile (3.94\u00a0km) road course, it was the 22nd race of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289633-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Go Bowling at The Glen, Report, Background\nWatkins Glen International (nicknamed \"The Glen\") is an automobile race track located in Watkins Glen, New York at the southern tip of Seneca Lake. It was long known around the world as the home of the Formula One United States Grand Prix, which it hosted for twenty consecutive years (1961\u20131980), but the site has been home to road racing of nearly every class, including the World Sportscar Championship, Trans-Am, Can-Am, NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, the International Motor Sports Association and the IndyCar Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289633-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Go Bowling at The Glen, Report, Background\nInitially, public roads in the village were used for the race course. In 1956 a permanent circuit for the race was built. In 1968 the race was extended to six hours, becoming the 6 Hours of Watkins Glen. The circuit's current layout has more or less been the same since 1971, although a chicane was installed at the uphill Esses in 1975 to slow cars through these corners, where there was a fatality during practice at the 1973 United States Grand Prix. The chicane was removed in 1985, but another chicane called the \"Inner Loop\" was installed in 1992 after J.D. McDuffie's fatal accident during the previous year's NASCAR Winston Cup event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289633-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Go Bowling at The Glen, Report, Background\nThe circuit is known as the Mecca of North American road racing and is a very popular venue among fans and drivers. The facility is currently owned by International Speedway Corporation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289633-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Go Bowling at The Glen, Practice, First practice\nAlex Bowman was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 70.062 seconds and a speed of 125.888\u00a0mph (202.597\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289633-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Go Bowling at The Glen, Practice, Final practice\nChase Elliott was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 69.503 seconds and a speed of 126.901\u00a0mph (204.227\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289633-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Go Bowling at The Glen, Qualifying\nChase Elliott scored the pole for the race with a time of 69.287 and a speed of 127.297\u00a0mph (204.865\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289633-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Go Bowling at The Glen, Media, Television\nNBC Sports covered the race on the television side. Rick Allen and Steve Letarte called from the regular booth for the race; Motor Racing Network broadcaster Mike Bagley called the race from the Esses, Dale Earnhardt Jr. had the call from Turn 5, and Jeff Burton called from Turns 6 & 7. Dave Burns, Marty Snider and Kelli Stavast covered from pit lane during the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289633-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Go Bowling at The Glen, Media, Radio\nMotor Racing Network had the radio call for the race, which was simulcast on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio. Alex Hayden, Jeff Striegle & 2 time Watkins Glen winner Rusty Wallace covered the action when the field raced down the front straightaway. Dave Moody called the race when the field raced thru the esses. Kurt Becker covered the action when the field raced thru the inner loop and turn 5 and Kyle Rickey covered the action in turn 10 & 11. Winston Kelley, Steve Post & Kim Coon called the action from the pits for MRN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289634-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gold Coast Titans season\nThe 2019 Gold Coast Titans Season was the 13th season for the Gold Coast Titans, they finished last on the ladder, missed out on the finals and clinched their second wooden spoon in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289635-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gold Cup (rugby union)\nThe 2019 Gold Cup \u2014 officially known as the SSG Gold Cup, presented by Blu Approved and M4Jam for sponsorship reasons \u2014 was the 2019 edition of the Gold Cup, an annual rugby union competition held in South Africa between the top non-university club teams of the South African Rugby Union's constituent provincial unions. The competition was the third edition of the competition since its name change in 2016 and the sixth edition since it was launched as the Community Cup in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289635-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Gold Cup (rugby union)\nSARU restored the competition to the early-year time-slot it occupied from 2013 to 2015 \u2014 which resulted the competition taking a hiatus in 2018 \u2013 and was scheduled for 9 March to 14 April 2019. In an additional change from the 2017 edition, the amount of participating teams were reduced from 20 to 16, with one spot going to each of the fourteen provincial unions, one spot to the Limpopo Blue Bulls sub-union and the final spot went to a wildcard entry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289635-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Gold Cup (rugby union), Competition rules and information\nThere were sixteen participating teams in the 2019 Gold Cup, divided into four pools of four teams. Each team played all the other teams in their pool during the pool stage, either at home or away. Teams received four log points for a win and two log points for a draw. Bonus log points were awarded to teams that scored four or more tries in a game, as well as to teams that lost a match by seven points or less. Teams were ranked by log points, then points difference (points scored less points conceded).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289635-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Gold Cup (rugby union), Competition rules and information\nThe top two teams in each pool after the pool stage qualified for the quarterfinals. The quarterfinal winners qualified to the semifinals, and the semifinal winners to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289635-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Gold Cup (rugby union), Teams\nThe teams that qualified for the 2019 Gold Cup were confirmed by SARU on 14 November 2018. In addition to the fifteen teams that qualified from each provincial union, East Rand United were included as a wildcard team. The participating teams are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289635-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Gold Cup (rugby union), Squads\nThe following squads were named for the 2019 Gold Cup:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289635-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Gold Cup (rugby union), Squads\nJeandr\u00e9 Atkinson\u00a0\u2022 Donavan Ball\u00a0\u2022 Francois Bezuidenhout\u00a0\u2022 Pieter Faber\u00a0\u2022 Kay-Kay Hlongwane\u00a0\u2022 Stefan Jacobs\u00a0\u2022 Sisonke Makapela\u00a0\u2022 Fiffy Rampeta\u00a0\u2022 Ollie Saayman\u00a0\u2022 Gerrit Smith\u00a0\u2022 Tjoep Steyn\u00a0\u2022 Branden Terblanche\u00a0\u2022 Lebohang Tsoeu\u00a0\u2022 Wakie van Wyngard", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289635-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Gold Cup (rugby union), Squads\nBrandon Bailing\u00a0\u2022 Molotsi Bouwer\u00a0\u2022 Cullen Collopy\u00a0\u2022 Alrin Eksteen\u00a0\u2022 Brian Habbick\u00a0\u2022 Alcino Izaacs\u00a0\u2022 Curtis Jonas\u00a0\u2022 Denham Leo Fosteras\u00a0\u2022 MB Lusaseni\u00a0\u2022 Khaya Majola\u00a0\u2022 Charles Mayeza\u00a0\u2022 Stairs Mhlongo\u00a0\u2022 Zee Mkhabela\u00a0\u2022 Njabulo Mkize\u00a0\u2022 Sandile Kubeka\u00a0\u2022 Mesuli Mncwango\u00a0\u2022 Minenhle Mthethwa\u00a0\u2022 Wandr\u00e9 Nortje\u00a0\u2022 Lusko Nyabaza\u00a0\u2022 Sino Nyoka\u00a0\u2022 Liam O'Connell\u00a0\u2022 Hendrik Prinsloo\u00a0\u2022 Inny Radebe\u00a0\u2022 Mark Richards\u00a0\u2022 Monwabisi Sanele Pina\u00a0\u2022 Luciando Santos\u00a0\u2022 Gavin Scott\u00a0\u2022 Brian Shabangu\u00a0\u2022 Damian Stevens\u00a0\u2022 Kyle Theron\u00a0\u2022 Sergio Torrens\u00a0\u2022 Byron van der Nest\u00a0\u2022 Marthinus Volker\u00a0\u2022 Adam Wessels", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289635-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Gold Cup (rugby union), Squads\nDaneel Hermann Botes\u00a0\u2022 Arend Daniel Jacobus Brink\u00a0\u2022 Angus Cleophas\u00a0\u2022 Johannes Christoffel Conradie\u00a0\u2022 Brendon Esterhuizen\u00a0\u2022 Dalen Kristan Sylvain Goliath\u00a0\u2022 Wiaan Griebenow\u00a0\u2022 Juan Janco Gunter\u00a0\u2022 Charl Jansen\u00a0\u2022 Lance Jurgens\u00a0\u2022 Ashley Kohler\u00a0\u2022 Ruan Geustyn Laubscher\u00a0\u2022 Gerdwill le Fleur\u00a0\u2022 Basil Liebenberg\u00a0\u2022 Karl Liebenberg\u00a0\u2022 Robbie Louw\u00a0\u2022 Edward Derrick Marais\u00a0\u2022 Roderick Moses\u00a0\u2022 Niel Oelofse\u00a0\u2022 Raymond Herbert Olivier\u00a0\u2022 Andrew Picoto\u00a0\u2022 Stephen Potgieter\u00a0\u2022 Tiaan Radyn\u00a0\u2022 Pieter Johannes Jacobus Smith\u00a0\u2022 Hanekom Gerrit Stofberg\u00a0\u2022 Etienne Swarts\u00a0\u2022 Gideon Francois Thiart\u00a0\u2022 Carl Francois Truter\u00a0\u2022 Erasmus Albertus van der Linde\u00a0\u2022 Christoffel Johannes van Niekerk\u00a0\u2022 Andries Conrad van Staden\u00a0\u2022 Jean Phillip Viviers\u00a0\u2022 Craig Walker", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289635-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Gold Cup (rugby union), Squads\nKholekile Bakumeni\u00a0\u2022 Jonathan Botha\u00a0\u2022 Hannri\u00ebl Coetzee\u00a0\u2022 Michael Daniel de Lange\u00a0\u2022 Clayton Gindan\u00a0\u2022 Jaco Herselman\u00a0\u2022 Morn\u00e9 Jansen\u00a0\u2022 Calvin Jantjies\u00a0\u2022 Jackie Jonkers\u00a0\u2022 Saki Klaas\u00a0\u2022 Johan Kruger\u00a0\u2022 Jedson la Grange\u00a0\u2022 Brandon Lee Haywood\u00a0\u2022 Cameron Lentoor\u00a0\u2022 Peter Mnguni\u00a0\u2022 Andr\u00e9 Myburgh\u00a0\u2022 Sibongile Njomba\u00a0\u2022 Vuyisile Nqweniso\u00a0\u2022 Tinus Oosthuysen\u00a0\u2022 Donique Perries\u00a0\u2022 Kevin Plaatjies\u00a0\u2022 Leon Potgieter\u00a0\u2022 Tiaan Ramat\u00a0\u2022 Cameron Rooi\u00a0\u2022 Tyrone Schaper\u00a0\u2022 Stanley Stewart\u00a0\u2022 Khahliso Thabana\u00a0\u2022 Waylon Thompson\u00a0\u2022 Jacques van Tonder\u00a0\u2022 Dirk van Wyk", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289635-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Gold Cup (rugby union), Squads\nOuza Arends\u00a0\u2022 Chevandrey Barney\u00a0\u2022 Riaan Bayman\u00a0\u2022 Denvor Bonaparte\u00a0\u2022 Kirwan Ceaser\u00a0\u2022 Ruben de Vos\u00a0\u2022 Bakkies Dlwengu\u00a0\u2022 Yster Dlwengu\u00a0\u2022 Margo Felix\u00a0\u2022 Craig Ferreira\u00a0\u2022 Nathal Forbes\u00a0\u2022 Lukhona Gans\u00a0\u2022 Elgin Grady\u00a0\u2022 Joggie Jansen\u00a0\u2022 Davian Josias\u00a0\u2022 Marvin Kampher\u00a0\u2022 Denino Ketchum\u00a0\u2022 Marlon Lewis\u00a0\u2022 Renaldo Lewis\u00a0\u2022 Ruvern Louw\u00a0\u2022 Cherwin Lovemore\u00a0\u2022 Andile Maart\u00a0\u2022 Ayanda Nogampula\u00a0\u2022 Ashhy Oelse\u00a0\u2022 Dwayne Prince\u00a0\u2022 Dylan Steenkamp\u00a0\u2022 Donavan Stevens\u00a0\u2022 Clyde Theron\u00a0\u2022 Colin Webb\u00a0\u2022 Oom Blerr Williams\u00a0\u2022 Zakes Zana\u00a0\u2022 Vinny Zinto", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289635-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Gold Cup (rugby union), Squads\nAshwill Adams\u00a0\u2022 Jimmy Baloyi\u00a0\u2022 Gerdus Botha\u00a0\u2022 Alvin Brandt\u00a0\u2022 Zander de Kock\u00a0\u2022 Cecil Dumond\u00a0\u2022 Josh Finlay\u00a0\u2022 Hashiem Gasant\u00a0\u2022 Robin Goliath\u00a0\u2022 Patrick Hattingh\u00a0\u2022 Wiehan Koen\u00a0\u2022 Polly Lindenberg\u00a0\u2022 Wortel Loots\u00a0\u2022 Attie Louw\u00a0\u2022 Tiny Masemola\u00a0\u2022 Sam Mcetywa\u00a0\u2022 Tyson Mulamba\u00a0\u2022 Bruce Muller\u00a0\u2022 Ruben Opperman\u00a0\u2022 Jaap Pienaar\u00a0\u2022 Donovan Pieters\u00a0\u2022 Ben Sekgobela\u00a0\u2022 Dean Stokes\u00a0\u2022 Odwa Tinise\u00a0\u2022 Sidney Tobias\u00a0\u2022 Ethin van Niekerk\u00a0\u2022 Ruan Venter\u00a0\u2022 Estehan Visagie\u00a0\u2022 Percy Williams\u00a0\u2022 Jacobus Wouter de Villiers", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289635-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Gold Cup (rugby union), Squads\nBarend Alexander\u00a0\u2022 Andr\u00e9 Barnardo\u00a0\u2022 Bredni Bestenbier\u00a0\u2022 Brianton Booysen\u00a0\u2022 Carlton Coeries\u00a0\u2022 Declan Coetzee\u00a0\u2022 Taswin da Silva\u00a0\u2022 Austin de Bruyn\u00a0\u2022 Mzo Dyantyi\u00a0\u2022 Ronaldo Fortuin\u00a0\u2022 Fizell Fredericks\u00a0\u2022 Jaydon Fredericks\u00a0\u2022 Alvin George\u00a0\u2022 Xavier Grant Scholtz\u00a0\u2022 Stefaan Grundlingh\u00a0\u2022 Kirsten Heyns\u00a0\u2022 Werner Jacobs\u00a0\u2022 Gerrin Jansen\u00a0\u2022 Andr\u00e9 Jantjies\u00a0\u2022 Chumani Kema\u00a0\u2022 Chazlin Lamini\u00a0\u2022 Justin Levendal\u00a0\u2022 Mac Muller\u00a0\u2022 Ossie Nortj\u00e9\u00a0\u2022 Leono Oosthuizen\u00a0\u2022 Wendell Pondo\u00a0\u2022 Shaun Raubenheimer\u00a0\u2022 Jade Roelfse\u00a0\u2022 Enrico Saaiers\u00a0\u2022 Jonathan Simons\u00a0\u2022 Deon Stoffels\u00a0\u2022 Nigel Theron\u00a0\u2022 Clinton Wagman\u00a0\u2022 Ethan Williams\u00a0\u2022 Eric Zana", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289635-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Gold Cup (rugby union), Squads\nOri Abutbul\u00a0\u2022 Marnus Coetzee\u00a0\u2022 Migael du Plessis\u00a0\u2022 Fran\u00e7ois du Toit\u00a0\u2022 Fransisco du Toit\u00a0\u2022 Ruan du Toit\u00a0\u2022 Bernard Erasmus\u00a0\u2022 Andr\u00e9 Esterhuizen\u00a0\u2022 Selom Gavor\u00a0\u2022 Duan Geldenhuys\u00a0\u2022 Stokkies Hanekom\u00a0\u2022 Terrance Longworth\u00a0\u2022 Derrick Lottering\u00a0\u2022 Gabriel Luyt\u00a0\u2022 Johannes Maree\u00a0\u2022 Rudi Marx\u00a0\u2022 Pieter Matthews\u00a0\u2022 Carl Mellet\u00a0\u2022 Mabutho Mongwe\u00a0\u2022 Tristan Moses\u00a0\u2022 Lux Ntsepe\u00a0\u2022 Ian Pottas\u00a0\u2022 Quinton Pretorius\u00a0\u2022 Wesley Pretorius\u00a0\u2022 Yahka Quinela\u00a0\u2022 Brandon Rick\u00a0\u2022 Wesley Roberts\u00a0\u2022 Rodney Robinson\u00a0\u2022 Gideon Roux\u00a0\u2022 Zander Slemmer\u00a0\u2022 Johan Swart\u00a0\u2022 Louis Trichardt\u00a0\u2022 Thifhidzi Tshivhase\u00a0\u2022 Kalla van Heerden\u00a0\u2022 Astley van Wyk\u00a0\u2022 Griffith van Wyk\u00a0\u2022 Clifford Vermaak", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289635-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Gold Cup (rugby union), Squads\nDirk Johannes Jacobus Botha\u00a0\u2022 Marius Breytenbach\u00a0\u2022 Gerhard Cloete\u00a0\u2022 JP Coetzee\u00a0\u2022 Brandon de Beer\u00a0\u2022 Isak Deetlefs\u00a0\u2022 Leon du Plessis\u00a0\u2022 Mcdonald Duma\u00a0\u2022 Andr\u00e9 Engelbrecht\u00a0\u2022 Ivann Espag\u00a0\u2022 Andr\u00e9 Grobler\u00a0\u2022 Dewaldt Havenga\u00a0\u2022 Hendrik Huyser\u00a0\u2022 Nico Kruger\u00a0\u2022 Stefan Kruger\u00a0\u2022 Jean-Pierre le Grange\u00a0\u2022 Siyabonga Masuku\u00a0\u2022 Dumisani Matyeshana\u00a0\u2022 Congo Mndoda\u00a0\u2022 Itumeleng Mpete\u00a0\u2022 Tiaan Nel\u00a0\u2022 Xolani Nkosi\u00a0\u2022 Andries Olivier\u00a0\u2022 Nico Peyper\u00a0\u2022 Tiaan Prinsloo\u00a0\u2022 Robert Rawlins\u00a0\u2022 Ethan Sias\u00a0\u2022 Mliqi Simanga\u00a0\u2022 Justin St Jerry\u00a0\u2022 Francois van Biljon\u00a0\u2022 Dean van der Merwe\u00a0\u2022 Maverick van der Merwe\u00a0\u2022 Boris van Jaarsveld\u00a0\u2022 Gysbert van Wyk\u00a0\u2022 Marius von Moltke\u00a0\u2022 Johnny Welthagen\u00a0\u2022 Justin Wheeler\u00a0\u2022 Chaney Willemse", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 754]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289635-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Gold Cup (rugby union), Squads\nJacobus Beylefeldt\u00a0\u2022 Fanie Booysen\u00a0\u2022 Dandr\u00e9 Brand\u00a0\u2022 Calvin Clack\u00a0\u2022 Neels Els\u00a0\u2022 Tyrone Ferreira\u00a0\u2022 Anwar Fillis\u00a0\u2022 Izan Green\u00a0\u2022 Tiaan Habig\u00a0\u2022 Steven Jacobs\u00a0\u2022 Sweis Jacobs\u00a0\u2022 Dirk Lowies\u00a0\u2022 Willa Martin\u00a0\u2022 Tiaan Moore\u00a0\u2022 Eddi Mphuthi\u00a0\u2022 HJ Neethling\u00a0\u2022 Hanco Nel\u00a0\u2022 Pottie Potgieter\u00a0\u2022 Wian Prinsloo\u00a0\u2022 Andre Shwab\u00a0\u2022 Dalton Smit\u00a0\u2022 Jurgen Steinbach\u00a0\u2022 Ruan van der Colff\u00a0\u2022 Steyn van der Heever\u00a0\u2022 Markus van der Linde\u00a0\u2022 Llewellyn van der Linde-Botha\u00a0\u2022 Johan van der Merwe\u00a0\u2022 Jannie van der Merwe\u00a0\u2022 Marinus van der Merwe\u00a0\u2022 Mike van Vuren\u00a0\u2022 Lennie Vergottini\u00a0\u2022 Berty Visser\u00a0\u2022 Evan Wessels\u00a0\u2022 Christiaan Wessels", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289635-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Gold Cup (rugby union), Squads\nShaun Botes\u00a0\u2022 Dowayn Botha\u00a0\u2022 Riaan Botha\u00a0\u2022 Xena Botha\u00a0\u2022 Martinus du Plessis\u00a0\u2022 Janu du Toit\u00a0\u2022 Fourie Francois\u00a0\u2022 Nico Furbey\u00a0\u2022 Andre Grobelaar\u00a0\u2022 Robin Howell\u00a0\u2022 Chris Janse van Rensburg\u00a0\u2022 Gerhard Jordaan\u00a0\u2022 Ruan Kotze\u00a0\u2022 Yanga Gift Lokwe\u00a0\u2022 Shaun McGeer\u00a0\u2022 Marco Niemandt\u00a0\u2022 DJ Oosthuizen\u00a0\u2022 Garnette Parkin\u00a0\u2022 Stanley Peacock\u00a0\u2022 Francios Prinsloo\u00a0\u2022 Andre Smit\u00a0\u2022 Choefie Swart\u00a0\u2022 Felix Toma\u00a0\u2022 Wikus van den Berg\u00a0\u2022 Zach van Loggerenberg\u00a0\u2022 Nicolaas van Wyk\u00a0\u2022 Divan van Zyl\u00a0\u2022 Inus Vermaak\u00a0\u2022 Cliffie Viljoen\u00a0\u2022 Marchell Viljoen\u00a0\u2022 Johan Zondagh", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289635-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Gold Cup (rugby union), Squads\nOnke Dubase\u00a0\u2022 Billy Dutton\u00a0\u2022 Samora Fihlani\u00a0\u2022 Leza Gcilitshane\u00a0\u2022 Lwando Mabenge\u00a0\u2022 Samkelo Mabombo\u00a0\u2022 Buhle Magazi\u00a0\u2022 Soso Mantyoyi\u00a0\u2022 Vuyisani Mavuso\u00a0\u2022 Siphamandla Mbusi\u00a0\u2022 Sokhana Mkhona\u00a0\u2022 Mihlali Mpafi\u00a0\u2022 Mbaba Mtsulwana\u00a0\u2022 Simnikelo Nandipha\u00a0\u2022 Mkhenia Ndzenene\u00a0\u2022 Sipho Nofemele\u00a0\u2022 Foxy Ntleki\u00a0\u2022 Siya Pati\u00a0\u2022 Anele Sibeko\u00a0\u2022 Bayanda Siko\u00a0\u2022 Bhulu Sineko\u00a0\u2022 Lukhanyo Siyobi\u00a0\u2022 Aphiwe Stemele\u00a0\u2022 Sethu Tom\u00a0\u2022 Lindokuhle Welemu\u00a0\u2022 Soso Xakalashe\u00a0\u2022 Aphiwe Xakalashe\u00a0\u2022 Yanga Xakalashe\u00a0\u2022 Siphelele Zono\u00a0\u2022 Anele Zweni", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289635-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Gold Cup (rugby union), Squads\nGivan Adams\u00a0\u2022 Gurshwin Africa\u00a0\u2022 Jennewil April\u00a0\u2022 Yrin Belelie\u00a0\u2022 Timothy Beukes\u00a0\u2022 Morn\u00e9 Boshoff\u00a0\u2022 Courtney Cupido\u00a0\u2022 Andries de Kock\u00a0\u2022 Ashley Dreyden\u00a0\u2022 Andr\u00e9 du Toit\u00a0\u2022 Lincolin Eksteen\u00a0\u2022 Damion Fuller\u00a0\u2022 Austin Hendricks\u00a0\u2022 Shandro Issel\u00a0\u2022 Zeeke Jansen\u00a0\u2022 Yazeed Johnson\u00a0\u2022 Jasherie Karriem\u00a0\u2022 Jodi Koul\u00a0\u2022 Edwill Lundi Msenge\u00a0\u2022 Cleve Malgas\u00a0\u2022 Gurshwin Nikhole Wehr\u00a0\u2022 Matthew Nortj\u00e9\u00a0\u2022 Ian Thompson\u00a0\u2022 Egan Uren\u00a0\u2022 Sergeyodei Uys\u00a0\u2022 Regarth Valla\u00a0\u2022 Elton Valla\u00a0\u2022 Neil van der Merwe\u00a0\u2022 Sergeo van Rhyn\u00a0\u2022 Calum Will Lawrence", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289635-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Gold Cup (rugby union), Squads\nGavin Annandale\u00a0\u2022 Slappies Arnolds\u00a0\u2022 Robert Baadjies\u00a0\u2022 Adoration Teboho Baji\u00a0\u2022 Charles Barnard\u00a0\u2022 Bradley Benade\u00a0\u2022 JB Bezuidenhout\u00a0\u2022 Christo Boshoff\u00a0\u2022 Christo Buytendach\u00a0\u2022 Anthony Carstens\u00a0\u2022 Kudakwashe Chipunza\u00a0\u2022 Quintin Davis\u00a0\u2022 Hannes Fouch\u00e9\u00a0\u2022 Johannes Fourie\u00a0\u2022 Rodger Hans\u00a0\u2022 Johannes Hellyer\u00a0\u2022 Llewelyn Hendricks\u00a0\u2022 Boytjie Herbert\u00a0\u2022 Christoffel Johannes Human\u00a0\u2022 Michiel Human\u00a0\u2022 Lucas Janse van Vuuren\u00a0\u2022 Dillan Laurent\u00a0\u2022 Carel Lewis\u00a0\u2022 Luche Louw\u00a0\u2022 Nathan Louw\u00a0\u2022 Tertius Maarman\u00a0\u2022 Vuyani Magadlela\u00a0\u2022 Sakhile Mangali\u00a0\u2022 Francois Maree\u00a0\u2022 Revaldo Marima\u00a0\u2022 Vincent Maruping\u00a0\u2022 Franco Mateus\u00a0\u2022 Lehlohonolo Matjele\u00a0\u2022 Thato Mavundla\u00a0\u2022 Richard Meiring\u00a0\u2022 Stuga Moahloli\u00a0\u2022 Leegan Moos\u00a0\u2022 Sephetho Ndobela\u00a0\u2022 Japie Nel\u00a0\u2022 Le Andre Nell\u00a0\u2022 Norman Nelson\u00a0\u2022 Gedeon Nobali\u00a0\u2022 Nkosi Nofuma\u00a0\u2022 Albertus Stephanus Pretorius\u00a0\u2022 Pieter Pretorius\u00a0\u2022 Jason Rainbird-Webb\u00a0\u2022 Mokhethi Ramatsa\u00a0\u2022 Tristan Reynders\u00a0\u2022 Jason Roux\u00a0\u2022 Attie Scholtz\u00a0\u2022 Mokhachane Sejanamane\u00a0\u2022 Ramoelo Sesing\u00a0\u2022 Khotso Setai\u00a0\u2022 Paul Spies\u00a0\u2022 Pieter Theunissen\u00a0\u2022 Kerr Till\u00a0\u2022 Tshidiso Tlale\u00a0\u2022 Andy Towa\u00a0\u2022 Maruis van der Walt\u00a0\u2022 Dean van Loggerenberg\u00a0\u2022 Rudi van Niekerk\u00a0\u2022 Johannes van Rooyen\u00a0\u2022 Ruan van Wyk\u00a0\u2022 Ryno Venter\u00a0\u2022 Riaan Conraad Vermeulen\u00a0\u2022 Stanley Collin Vermeulen\u00a0\u2022 Shaun Victor\u00a0\u2022 Jaques Wheeler\u00a0\u2022 Lwando Zita", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 1353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289636-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Golden Gala\nThe 2019 Golden Gala was the 39th edition of the annual outdoor track and field meeting in Rome, Italy. Held on 6 June at the Stadio Olimpico, it was the fourth leg of the 2019 IAAF Diamond League \u2013 the highest level international track and field circuit. 27 events total were contested with 14 of them being point-scoring Diamond League disciplines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289636-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Golden Gala\nA total of seven world leads and two meeting records were set at the competition. In the men's sprints, 400 metres world leader Michael Norman won in a meeting record and world leading time of 19.72 seconds in the 200 metres race, narrowly holding onto a shrinking lead ahead of reigning Diamond League champion Noah Lyles who placed second in a seasonal debut of 19.72 seconds. Norman's time was a personal best and broke Lyles' winning streak that went back to the 2016 US Olympic Trials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289636-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Golden Gala\nIn the men's distance events, Donavan Brazier passed Nijel Amos less than a meter before the finish line in the 800 metres race, winning in a world leading 1:43.63 ahead of Amos' 1:43.65. Benjamin Kigen won a close race with Getnet Wale in the 3000 metres steeplechase, setting a personal best and world leading time of 8:06.13 ahead of Wale's 8:06.83, also a personal best.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289636-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Golden Gala\nIn a fast 5000 metres race in which six competitors finished in less than 12:59 and 18 personal or seasonal bests were achieved, Telahun Haile Bekele narrowly defeated reigning Diamond League champion Selemon Barega in a personal best and world leading 12:52.98. Barega finished second in a seasonal best of 12:53.04.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289636-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Golden Gala\nThe shot put meeting record was broken by Konrad Bukowiecki with a personal best mark of 21.97 metres, and the world leading mark in the high jump of 2.31 metres was matched by Bohdan Bondarenko.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289636-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Golden Gala\nOn the women's side, a Swedish record was set in the pole vault by Angelica Bengtsson with a mark of 4.76 metres, defeating indoor world champion Sandi Morris who placed second jointly with Robeilys Peinado (4.66 metres). The 2016 Olympic champion over 100 metres and 200 metres, Elaine Thompson, came back from a slower start in the 100 metres race to defeat Dina Asher-Smith in the fastest time in the world since 2017, 10.89 seconds. Asher-Smith, who had defeated Thompson in the Stockholm Diamond League over 200 metres earlier that year, took second with a seasonal debut of 10.94 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289636-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Golden Gala\nIn the 1500 metres, Genzebe Dibaba ran her fastest time since setting the world record in 2015, narrowly holding off Laura Muir with a world leading 3:56.28. Muir herself ran the second fastest time in her career, 3:56.73, only behind her British record to place second. Malaika Mihambo defeated Olympic champion jumpers Brittney Reese and Caterine Ibarg\u00fcen in the long jump with a personal best and world leading 7.07 metres, her first mark seven metres or more.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289636-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Golden Gala, Diamond League results\nAthletes competing in the Diamond League disciplines earned extra compensation and points which went towards qualifying for one of two Diamond League finals (either Z\u00fcrich or Brussels depending on the discipline). First place earned 8 points, with each step down in place earning one less point than the previous, until no points are awarded in 9th place or lower.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289637-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Golden Movie Awards\nThe 2019 Golden Movie Awards is an African film award ceremony that was hosted at the Movenpick Ambassador Hotel in Accra, Ghana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289638-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gombe State gubernatorial election\nThe 2019 Gombe State gubernatorial election occurred in Nigeria on March 9, 2019, the APC nominee Muhammad Inuwa Yahaya won the election, defeating Usman Bayero Nafada of the PDP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289638-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Gombe State gubernatorial election\nMuhammad Inuwa Yahaya emerged APC gubernatorial candidate after scoring 859 votes and defeating his closest rival, Mohammed Jibrin Barde who received 463 votes. He picked Manasseh Daniel Jatau as his running mate. Usman Bayero Nafada was the PDP candidate with Charles Yau Iliyas as his running mate. 32 candidates contested in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289638-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Gombe State gubernatorial election, Electoral system\nThe Governor of Gombe State is elected using the plurality voting system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289638-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Gombe State gubernatorial election, Primary election, APC primary\nThe APC primary election was held on September 28, 2018. Muhammad Inuwa Yahaya won the primary election polling 859 votes against 8 other candidates. His closest rival was Mohammed Jibrin Barde, who came second with 463 votes, while Farouk Bamusa came third with 139 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289638-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Gombe State gubernatorial election, Primary election, PDP primary\nThe PDP primary election was held on September 30, 2018. Usman Bayero Nafada won the primary election polling 1,104 votes against 12 other candidates. His closest rival was Jamilu Gwamna, a governorship aspirant on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) who came second with 147 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289638-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Gombe State gubernatorial election, Results\nA total number of 32 candidates registered with the Independent National Electoral Commission to contest in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289638-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Gombe State gubernatorial election, Results\nThe total number of registered voters in the state was 1,394,386, while 627,457 voters were accredited. Total number of votes cast was 623,230, while number of valid votes was 608,846. Rejected votes were 14,384.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289638-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Gombe State gubernatorial election, Results, By local government area\nHere are the results of the election by local government area for the two major parties. The total valid votes of 608,846 represents the 32 political parties that participated in the election. Blue represents LGAs won by Muhammad Inuwa Yahaya. Green represents LGAs won by Usman Bayero Nafada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 74], "content_span": [75, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289639-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Goodfield arson\nOn April 6, 2019, nine-year-old Kyle Alwood killed five family members after starting a fire in a mobile home in Goodfield, Illinois. The nine-year-old boy was charged with the deaths on October 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289639-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Goodfield arson, Incident\nAt around 11:00 pm, a fire was reported in the central area of Peoria near the village of Goodfield, Illinois. Firefighters came a few minutes after the call. Five bodies, three children, all under three years old, Kathryn Murray, aged 69, and Jason Wall, aged 34, were all found dead from smoke inhalation. Katrina Alwood, aged 27, and her son Kyle both survived the fire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289639-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Goodfield arson, Charges\nNine-year-old Kyle Alwood was taken into custody and charged with murder six months after the incident. The child was charged with 5 counts of murder, two counts of arson, and one count of aggravated arson. If convicted, Alwood could face five years of probation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289640-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Governor General's Awards\nThe shortlisted nominees for the 2019 Governor General's Awards for Literary Merit were announced on October 2, 2019, and the winners were announced on October 29.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289641-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Grambling State Tigers baseball team\nThe 2019 Grambling State Tigers baseball team represented Grambling State University in the 2019 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Tigers played their home games at Ralph Waldo Emerson Jones Park and Wilbert Ellis Field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289642-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Grambling State Tigers football team\nThe 2019 Grambling State Tigers football team represents Grambling State University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Tigers are led by sixth-year head coach Broderick Fobbs and play their home games at Eddie Robinson Stadium in Grambling, Louisiana as members of the West Division of the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289642-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Grambling State Tigers football team, Previous season\nThe Tigers finished the 2018 season 6\u20135, 4\u20133 in SWAC play to finish tied for second place in the West Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289642-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Grambling State Tigers football team, Preseason, Preseason polls\nThe SWAC released their preseason poll on July 16, 2019. The Tigers were picked to finish in third place in the West Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 69], "content_span": [70, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289642-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Grambling State Tigers football team, Preseason, Preseason all\u2013SWAC teams\nThe Tigers placed four players on the preseason all\u2013SWAC teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 78], "content_span": [79, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289643-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gran Piemonte\nThe 2019 Gran Piemonte was the 103rd edition of the Gran Piemonte (known as Giro del Piemonte until 2009) single-day cycling race. It was held on 10 October, over a distance of 183\u00a0km, starting in Agli\u00e8 and ending in the Sanctuary of Oropa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289643-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Gran Piemonte\nThe race was won by Egan Bernal of Team Ineos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 65]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289643-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Gran Piemonte, Teams\nNineteen teams were invited to take part in the race. These included ten UCI WorldTeams and nine UCI Professional Continental.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289644-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gran Premio Bruno Beghelli\nThe 2019 Gran Premio Bruno Beghelli was the 24th edition of the Gran Premio Bruno Beghelli road cycling one day race. It was held on 6 October 2019 as part of the 2019 UCI Europe Tour in category 1.HC, over a distance of 199.3\u00a0km, starting and ending in Monteveglio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289644-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Gran Premio Bruno Beghelli, Teams\nTwenty-five teams were invited to take part in the race. These included eleven UCI WorldTeams, eight UCI Professional Continental teams and six UCI Continental teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289645-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Granatkin Memorial\nThe 2019 Valentin Granatkin Memorial Cup is its 19th edition after dissolution of the USSR. The tournament was held at Saint Petersburg, Russia from 4 to 14 June 2019, being organised by Russian Football Union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289645-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Granatkin Memorial, Participating Nations\nTotal of 12 National U-18 teams from three different confederations namely AFC, CONMEBOL and UEFA, participated in this edition of the tournament. The teams are further divided in three different groups, where Group A have Bulgaria, India, Moldova and host Russia, Group B have Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Turkey and Greece and Group C have Argentina, Iran, Armenia and second team of host Russia as Russia 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 46], "content_span": [47, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289645-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Granatkin Memorial, Group stage\nThe participants will play each other in each group and the winners of each group and the best of the teams finished second in each group will play for the semifinals. The remaining teams will play for 5\u20138 places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289645-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Granatkin Memorial, Goalscorers\nThere were 69 goals scored in 26 matches, for an average of 2.65 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289646-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Est Open 88\nThe 2019 Grand Est Open 88 was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the thirteenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Contrex\u00e9ville, France between 8 and 14 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289646-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Est Open 88, 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-00289647-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Est Open 88 \u2013 Doubles\nAn-Sophie Mestach and Zheng Saisai were the defending champions, however Mestach had retired from professional tennis earlier in the year and Zheng chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289647-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Est Open 88 \u2013 Doubles\nGeorgina Garc\u00eda P\u00e9rez and Oksana Kalashnikova won the title, defeating Anna Danilina and Eva Wacanno in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289648-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Est Open 88 \u2013 Singles\nStefanie V\u00f6gele was the defending champion, but lost in the semifinals to Katarina Zavatska.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289648-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Est Open 88 \u2013 Singles\nZavatska went on to win the title, defeating Ulrikke Eikeri in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289649-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand National\nThe 2019 Grand National (officially known as the Randox Health 2019 Grand National for sponsorship reasons) was the 172nd annual running of the Grand National horse race at Aintree Racecourse near Liverpool, England. The showpiece steeplechase is the pinnacle of a three-day festival which began on 4 April, followed by Ladies' Day on 5 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289649-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand National\nThe event was sponsored by Randox Health as part of an agreement signed in 2016 for the company to sponsor the race for five years starting in 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289649-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand National\nThe race was won by 4/1 favourite Tiger Roll, ridden by Davy Russell and trained by Gordon Elliott. Tiger Roll became the first horse since Red Rum in 1974 to win back-to-back Nationals, as well as the first favorite to win the race since Comply or Die in 2008. 19 of the 40 horses that started managed to complete the course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289649-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand National\nThe race was marred by the death of Up For Review, who suffered a neck fracture after being brought down at the first fence. He was the first equine fatality in the race since Synchronised and According To Pete in 2012, after which the fences were drastically altered and softened.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289649-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand National, Race card\n112 entries were received, including 47 from Ireland. The final line-up of 40 horses was announced on 4 April 2019. Mall Dini was withdrawn the following day due to injury and replaced by Just A Par. No further withdrawals meant that a full field of 40 horses were sent to the start line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289649-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand National, Race card\nGordon Elliott broke the record for the most horses trained in a single running of the race, entering 11 horses. Elliott had also been the initial trainer for both Outlander and Don Poli, though these horses were sold prior to the race and passed on to new trainers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289649-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand National, Broadcasting and media\nMagic Of Light blunders and leaves Tiger Roll two lengths clear, and Davy Russell is leaned to breathe on him as Tiger Roll breezes towards the Elbow. Off at the run-in, Tiger Roll is first to the elbow, Magic Of Light and Rathvinden trying to rally. Tiger Roll's been out in front for a while, he's got a five length lead. 150 yards between himself and a place in history! Tiger Roll from Magic Of Light, Tiger Roll keeping up the gallop! Up towards the line, back to back nationals, the first since Red Rum! An Aintree great!", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 43], "content_span": [44, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289649-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand National, Broadcasting and media\nITV lead commentator Richard Hoiles describes the climax of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 43], "content_span": [44, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289649-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand National, Broadcasting and media\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. The race was broadcast live on TV by ITV, in the third year of its four-year deal as the exclusive terrestrial broadcaster of horse racing in the UK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 43], "content_span": [44, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289649-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand National, Broadcasting and media\nThe coverage was co-anchored by Ed Chamberlin and Francesca Cumani. Analysis was provided by former Grand National winning jockeys Sir Anthony McCoy and Mick Fitzgerald, along with leading female jockey Bryony Frost, who had been ruled out of competing through injury, and veteran racing broadcaster Brough Scott. Reports were provided by Oli Bell, Alice Plunkett, Rishi Persad and Luke Harvey with updates from the betting ring by Brian Gleeson and Matt Chapman and Chris Hughes covering viewers comments on social media. The commentary team was Mark Johnson, Ian Bartlett and Richard Hoiles. Following the race, Bell, Fitzgerald and Chapman guided viewers on a fence-by-fence re-run of the race - due to the fatal injury sustained to Up For Review, the first fence was omitted from the re-run broadcast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 43], "content_span": [44, 849]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289650-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Prix Cycliste de Montr\u00e9al\nThe 2019 Grand Prix Cycliste de Montr\u00e9al was a road cycling one-day race that took place on 15 September 2019 in Canada. It was the 10th edition of Grand Prix Cycliste de Montr\u00e9al and the 36th event of the 2019 UCI World Tour. 2016 winner Greg van Avermaet won the race for the second time in a reduced bunch sprint.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289650-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Prix Cycliste de Montr\u00e9al, Teams\nTwenty-one teams, which consisted of all eighteen UCI WorldTour teams, two UCI Professional Continental teams, and one national team, participated in the race. Each team entered seven riders except for Lotto\u2013Soudal, who entered six, meaning that 146 riders started the race. Of these riders, only 97 finished.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289651-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Prix Cycliste de Qu\u00e9bec\nThe 2019 Grand Prix Cycliste de Qu\u00e9bec was a road cycling one-day race that took place on 13 September 2019 in Canada. It was the 10th edition of Grand Prix Cycliste de Qu\u00e9bec and the 35th event of the 2019 UCI World Tour. Australian rider Michael Matthews of Team Sunweb won the race for the second year in a row and successfully defended his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289651-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Prix Cycliste de Qu\u00e9bec, Teams\nTwenty-one teams, which consisted of all eighteen UCI WorldTour teams, two UCI Professional Continental teams, and one national team, participated in the race. Each team entered seven riders except for Lotto\u2013Soudal, who entered six riders. Of the starting peloton of 146 riders, only 128 riders finished the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289652-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Prix Hassan II\nThe 2019 Grand Prix Hassan II was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the 35th edition of the tournament and part of the 2019 ATP Tour. It took place in Marrakesh, Morocco between 8 and 14 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289652-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289652-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Prix Hassan II, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry using a protected ranking into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 69], "content_span": [70, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289652-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289653-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Prix Hassan II \u2013 Doubles\nNikola Mekti\u0107 and Alexander Peya were the defending champions, but chose not to participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289653-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Prix Hassan II \u2013 Doubles\nJ\u00fcrgen Melzer and Franko \u0160kugor won the title, defeating Matw\u00e9 Middelkoop and Frederik Nielsen in the final, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(8\u20136).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289654-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Prix Hassan II \u2013 Singles\nPablo And\u00fajar was the defending champion, but lost in the final to Beno\u00eet Paire, 2\u20136, 3\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289655-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Prix La Marseillaise\nThe 2019 Grand Prix La Marseillaise was the 40th edition of the Grand Prix La Marseillaise cycle race. It was held on 3 February 2019 as a category 1.1 race on the 2019 UCI Europe Tour. The race started and finished in Marseille. The race was won by Anthony Turgis of Direct \u00c9nergie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289655-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Prix La Marseillaise, Teams\nSixteen teams of up to seven riders started the race:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289656-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Prix SAR La Princesse Lalla Meryem\nThe 2019 Grand Prix SAR La Princesse Lalla Meryem was a women's professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the 19th edition of the tournament and part of the WTA International tournaments category of the 2019 WTA Tour. It took place in Rabat, Morocco, between 29 April and 4 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289656-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289656-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289657-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Prix SAR La Princesse Lalla Meryem \u2013 Doubles\nAnna Blinkova and Raluca Olaru were the defending champions, but chose not to participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289657-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Prix SAR La Princesse Lalla Meryem \u2013 Doubles\nMar\u00eda Jos\u00e9 Mart\u00ednez S\u00e1nchez and Sara Sorribes Tormo won the title, defeating Georgina Garc\u00eda P\u00e9rez and Oksana Kalashnikova in the final, 7\u20135, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289658-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Prix SAR La Princesse Lalla Meryem \u2013 Singles\nElise Mertens was the defending champion, but lost in the quarterfinals to Maria Sakkari.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289658-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Prix SAR La Princesse Lalla Meryem \u2013 Singles\nSakkari went on to win her first WTA Tour title, defeating Johanna Konta in the final, 2\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289659-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Prix de Fourmies\nThe 2019 Grand Prix de Fourmies was the 87th edition of the Grand Prix de Fourmies road cycling one day race. It was held on 8 September 2019 as part of the UCI Europe Tour as a 1.HC-ranked event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289659-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Prix de Fourmies, Teams\nTwenty-four teams participated in the race, of which six are UCI WorldTour teams, fourteen are UCI Professional Continental teams, and four are UCI Continental teams. Each team entered seven riders, and of the 168 riders that started the race, only 143 riders finished.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289660-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Prix of Portland\nThe 2019 Grand Prix of Portland was the 16th round of the 2019 IndyCar Series season. The race was held on September 1 at Portland International Raceway, in Portland, Oregon. Colton Herta started on pole but, the race was won by Will Power with Felix Rosenqvist finishing second and Alexander Rossi third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289660-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Prix of Portland, Results, Race\nAll cars utilized Dallara chassis with the Universal Aero Kit 18, and Firestone Firehawk tires", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289660-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Prix of Portland, Results, Race\nGraham Rahal was given a time penalty to where instead of finishing behind car numbers 7, 5, and 26 whom were terminally disabled behind him, he finished behind those cars instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289661-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Rapids mayoral election\nThe 2019 Grand Rapids mayoral election took place on November 5, 2019 to elect the mayor of Grand Rapids, Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289661-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Rapids mayoral election\nIncumbent Rosalynn Bliss faced a challenge from Daniel Allen Schutte, a local pastor and candidate for the 75th District of Michigan House of Representatives. Bliss defeated Schutte in a landslide, thus securing 2nd term as the mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289662-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Slam of Darts\nThe 2019 BoyleSports Grand Slam of Darts was the thirteenth staging of the tournament, organised by the Professional Darts Corporation. The event took place from 9\u201317 November 2019 in Wolverhampton, England, and like in 2018, it took place at Aldersley Leisure Village.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289662-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Slam of Darts\nThe tournament's defending champion was Gerwyn Price, who won his first PDC major title by defeating Gary Anderson 16\u201313, in a highly controversial final in 2018. Price successfully defended the title to win his second PDC major, beating Peter Wright 16\u20136 with the second highest average in a Grand Slam final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289662-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Slam of Darts, Prize money\nThe prize fund for the Grand Slam increased from \u00a3450,000 in 2018 to \u00a3550,000 this year, with the winner getting \u00a3125,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289662-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Slam of Darts, Qualifying, PDC Qualifying Tournaments\nAt most sixteen players could qualify through this method, where the position in the list depicts the priority of the qualification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 64], "content_span": [65, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289662-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Slam of Darts, Qualifying, PDC Qualifying Tournaments\nAs the list of qualifiers from the main tournaments produced fewer than sixteen players, the field of sixteen players is filled from the reserve lists. The first list consists of the winners from 2019 European Tour events, in which the winners are ordered by number of event wins then in Order of Merit position order at the cut-off date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 64], "content_span": [65, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289662-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Slam of Darts, Qualifying, PDC Qualifying Tournaments\nIf there were still less than sixteen qualified players after the winners of European Tour events are added, then the winners of 2019 Players Championships events would have been added, firstly by winners of multiple events followed by Order of Merit order, but that was not needed for this year's competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 64], "content_span": [65, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289662-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Slam of Darts, Qualifying, PDC Qualifying Event\nA further eight places in the Grand Slam of Darts were filled by qualifiers from a PDC qualifier in Wigan on 4 November. These are the qualifiers:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289662-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Slam of Darts, Qualifying, BDO Qualifying Tournaments\nThe men's and women's champions from the 2019 BDO World Darts Championship were invited, as was the winner of the 2019 BDO World Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 64], "content_span": [65, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289662-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Slam of Darts, Qualifying, BDO Ranking Qualifiers\nThree more invitations were given to the next highest ranked men's players:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 60], "content_span": [61, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289662-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Slam of Darts, Pools\nMichael van Gerwen (1) Rob Cross (2) Michael Smith (3) Gary Anderson (4) Gerwyn Price (5) Daryl Gurney (6) Peter Wright (7) James Wade (8)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289662-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Slam of Darts, Pools\nDave Chisnall Ian White Nathan Aspinall Adrian Lewis Darren Webster Dimitri Van den Bergh Danny Noppert Brendan Dolan", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289662-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Slam of Darts, Pools\nSteve Lennon William O'Connor Gabriel Clemens Ross Smith Martin Schindler Jamie Hughes Robert Thornton Ryan Harrington", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289662-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Slam of Darts, Pools\nGlen Durrant Mikuru Suzuki Jim Williams Wesley Harms Lisa Ashton Richard Veenstra Dave Parletti Wayne Warren", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289662-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Slam of Darts, Draw, Group stage\nAll group matches are best of nine legs After three games, the top two in each group qualify for the knock-out stage", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289662-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Grand Slam of Darts, Draw, Group stage\nNB: P = Played; W = Won; L = Lost; LF = Legs For; LA = Legs Against; +/\u2212 = Plus/Minus Record, in relation to legs; Pts = Points; Status = Qualified to Knockout Stage", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289663-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gravesham Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Gravesham Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of the Gravesham Borough Council in Kent, England. It was held on the same day as other local elections. The Labour Party gained control of the council from the Conservative Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289664-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Great Britain Lions tour\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Nthep (talk | contribs) at 21:56, 7 April 2020 (\u2192\u200eReferences). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289664-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Great Britain Lions tour\nThe 2019 Great Britain Lions tour was a tour by the Great Britain national rugby league team to the Southern Hemisphere in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289664-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Great Britain Lions tour, Background\nThis tour was the first matches played by the Lions since 2007 when they defeated New Zealand 3\u20130 during the New Zealand tour that year. The last time the Lions travelled to Australasia was for the 2006 Tri-Nations tournament and the last full Lions tour was in 1996.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289664-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Great Britain Lions tour, Background\nAfter the 2007 New Zealand tour to Great Britain the Great Britain Lions were disbanded and more emphasis was placed on the four home nations; England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales. In 2017 the Rugby League International Federation (RLIF) announced a four-year cycle of tours and tournaments to include the resurrection of the Great Britain Lions and a tour by the team to the Southern Hemisphere. At the RLIF's 2018 meeting a proposal by the Australian Rugby League Commission for the Lions tour to be postponed in favour of a tour to Europe by the Australian Kangaroos was rejected and the 2017 announced cycle was confirmed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289664-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Great Britain Lions tour, Squad\nThe 24-man Great Britain squad was named on 14 October 2019. Ages are as of 26 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289664-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Great Britain Lions tour, Squad\nFollowing injuries to Gildart and Hall, Ash Handley was called into the squad on 7 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289664-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Great Britain Lions tour, Itinerary\nAt the RLIF congress in November 2018 a provisional tour was arranged with Great Britain to play tests against New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Tonga, Fiji and Samoa with the exact locations and dates being subject to ratification by the various national league and player organisations. In March 2019 it was confirmed that test matches would only be played against New Zealand, Papua New Guinea and Tonga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289664-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Great Britain Lions tour, Itinerary\nIn September 2019 the Tongan National Rugby League's membership of the RLIF was suspended and in order to fulfil the fixture against the Lions a Tongan Invitational XIII was selected to play against Great Britain. The members of the suspended Tonga board labelled the invitational side as a 'rebel' squad and insisted that the game against Great Britain could not be classed as a test match. The International Rugby League (the RLIF was rebranded earlier in October 2019) disagreed and gave the match test status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289664-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Great Britain Lions tour, Itinerary, New Zealand leg\nTouch judges:Chris Butler (Australia)Chris McMillan (New Zealand)Video referee:Jared Maxwell (Australia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289664-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Great Britain Lions tour, Itinerary, New Zealand leg\nTouch judges:Chris Butler (Australia)Chris McMillan (New Zealand)Video referee:Henry Perenara (New Zealand)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289664-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Great Britain Lions tour, Itinerary, New Zealand leg\nTouch judges:Chris McMillan (New Zealand)Dave Munro (Australia)Video referee:Henry Perenara (New Zealand)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289664-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Great Britain Lions tour, Itinerary, Papua New Guinea leg\nTouch judges:Hanua Rupa (Papua New Guinea)Mexi Topani (Papua New Guinea)Video referee:Shayne Hayne (Australia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289665-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Great Yarmouth Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Great Yarmouth Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Great Yarmouth Borough Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289666-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Greek legislative election\nThe 2019 Greek legislative election was held on 7 July 2019. All 300 seats in the Hellenic Parliament were contested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289666-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Greek legislative election\nPreliminary results showed that the centre-right liberal conservative New Democracy party, led by Kyriakos Mitsotakis, won 158 seats, an outright majority that is more than double the party's previous representation. The party took nearly 40% of the popular vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289666-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Greek legislative election\nThis was the first national election in Greece and third election overall since the voting age was lowered to 17, and the number of parliamentary constituencies was increased from 56 to 59. Athens B, the largest constituency before the 2018 reform, with 44 seats, was broken up into smaller constituencies, the largest of which has 18 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289666-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Greek legislative election\nOn 26 May 2019, following his defeat in the 2019 European Parliament election in Greece and the concurrent local elections, Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras announced that a snap election would be held as soon as possible following the second round of the 2019 municipal elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289666-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Greek legislative election, Electoral system\nCompulsory voting was in force for the elections, with voter registration being automatic. However, none of the legally existing penalties or sanctions have ever been enforced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289666-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Greek legislative election, Electoral system\nA number of changes to the electoral system were introduced following the September 2015 elections. The voting age was reduced from 18 to 17 in July 2016, with the same law also abolishing the majority bonus system, which gave a 50-seat bonus to the largest party. Instead, all 300 seats would be awarded proportionally. However, this law did not come into effect for the 2019 elections, as it was not approved with the required supermajority despite the Syriza-led government expressing support for its introduction for the 2019 elections. As a result, the previous system remained in force, with 250 seats elected in multi-member constituencies using a 3% electoral threshold, plus 50 bonus seats for the largest party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289666-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Greek legislative election, Electoral system\nThe number of parliamentary constituencies was also modified in December 2018, with Athens B split into Athens B1 (North), Athens B2 (West), and Athens B3 (South), while Attica was split into East Attica and West Attica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289666-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Greek legislative election, Conduct\nA few minutes before the polls closed, a group of young protesters stormed the 33-d polling station in the distinct of Exarcheia in Athens and stole the ballot box. Subsequently, a previously unknown anarchist group called 'Ballot-seeking Arsonists' claimed responsibility. The group claimed that they burned the stolen ballot box. As a result, a repeat election at the same polling station was held a week later, on Sunday, 14 July. The results did not change the final allocation of seats due to the small volume of votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289667-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Greek local elections\nLocal elections were held in Greece on 26 May 2019 (first round) and 2 June 2019 (second round). Voters elected representatives to the country's local authorities, comprising 13 regions and 325 municipalities. New Democracy dominated the elections, winning 12 out of 13 Regions and 2 out of 3 biggest municipalities per population in the country. SYRIZA lost all the Regions that he had won in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289668-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Green Bay Packers season\nThe 2019 season was the Green Bay Packers' 99th in the National Football League (NFL), their 101st overall and their first under new head coach Matt LaFleur. After suffering back-to-back losing seasons for the first time since 1990\u201391 and missing the playoffs in back-to-back seasons for the first time since 2005\u201306, the Packers improved on their 6\u20139\u20131 record from 2018, finishing 13\u20133 and returning to the playoffs for the first time since 2016. This guaranteed the Packers' first non-losing season since that same year. Green Bay swept the NFC North for the first time since their franchise-best 2011 season, and achieved their best record since that season as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289668-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Green Bay Packers season\nThe Packers defeated the Seattle Seahawks 28\u201323 in the Divisional round of the playoffs, and visited the top-seeded San Francisco 49ers in the NFC Championship Game, where they lost 37\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289668-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Green Bay Packers season, Player movements, Roster cuts\nThe roster was cut to 53 on August 31, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289668-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Green Bay Packers season, Preseason\nThe Packers' preseason opponents and schedule were announced in the spring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289668-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Green Bay Packers season, Preseason\nThe preseason week 3 game against the Raiders was in the process of being negotiated; plans were for the game to be held at Investors Group Field in Winnipeg, Manitoba, on August 22 after a scheduling conflict prevented the game from being played at Mosaic Stadium in Regina, Saskatchewan. In the event that the Winnipeg negotiations would have fallen through, the game would be moved to Lambeau Field, effectively giving the Packers an extra home game. On June 5, the IG Field in Winnipeg was confirmed as the host.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289668-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Green Bay Packers season, Preseason\nDue to holes left in the endzones where the field goals are traditionally anchored in Canadian football, the Packers' third preseason game was played on a modified 80-yard field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289668-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Green Bay Packers season, Regular season\nOn March 25, the NFL announced that the Packers will open their season by playing the Chicago Bears in the 2019 Kickoff Game on Thursday, September 5, with the Bears serving as the home team. The game kicked off at 7:20\u00a0p.m. CDT, and was televised by NBC. The full schedule was released on April 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289668-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Green Bay Packers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Dallas Cowboys\nThe Packers controlled the game early on, establishing a 31\u20133 lead midway through the third quarter with running back Aaron Jones rushing for four touchdowns and the Packers defense forcing three interceptions off of Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott. Although the Cowboys attempted to come back late in the game, with the team totaling over 500 yards of total offense and 3 touchdowns, the Packers' lead would prove too much to overcome. With the win, the Packers improved to 4-1 and won their third straight meeting against the Cowboys.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289668-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Green Bay Packers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. Detroit Lions\nThis Monday Night Football game proved to be highly controversial, due to two highly questionable and controversial hands to the face penalties against Lions defensive end Trey Flowers helped the Packers score in the 4th quarter. Nevertheless, the Packers improved to 5-1 and snapped a 4-game losing streak to the Lions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289668-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Green Bay Packers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Oakland Raiders\nQuarterback Aaron Rodgers became the first player in Packers history to throw for a perfect passer rating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 90], "content_span": [91, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289668-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Green Bay Packers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: at New York Giants\nThe Packers beat the Giants in the snow to continue their winning streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 90], "content_span": [91, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289668-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Green Bay Packers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. Chicago Bears\nWith the win, the Packers improved to 11\u20133. With the victory of the Minnesota Vikings over the Los Angeles Chargers, the Bears were eliminated from post season contention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 89], "content_span": [90, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289668-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Green Bay Packers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: at Minnesota Vikings\nWith the win, the Packers advanced to 12\u20133 and won the NFC North. The Packers also won 12 games for the first time since 2014, and advanced to a record of 12\u20133 for the first time since 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 92], "content_span": [93, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289668-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Green Bay Packers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: at Minnesota Vikings\nThis was the first regular-season game of Aaron Rodgers' career, and second game overall, where he threw at least one interception and no touchdown passes and won the game. The only other time this occurred was the 2010 NFC Championship Game against the Bears.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 92], "content_span": [93, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289668-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Green Bay Packers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: at Detroit Lions\nWith the win, the Packers finished the season 13\u20133, achieving their best record since 2011, and gave the Packers their first division sweep since 2011 as well. They also clinched the #2 seed in the NFC playoffs and earned a first-round bye, although the San Francisco 49ers victory over the Seattle Seahawks prevented them from clinching home-field advantage throughout the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289669-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Greenlandic Football Championship\nThe 2019 Gr\u00f8nlandsBANKEN GM was the 49th edition of the Greenlandic Football Championship. The final round was held in Sisimiut from August 5 to 11. It was won by Nagdlunguaq-48 for the eleventh time in its history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289669-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Greenlandic Football Championship, Qualifying Stage, South Greenland\nEqaluk-54 qualified for the Final Round. Kissaviarsuk-33, Nagtoralik Paamiut and Narsaq-85 failed to qualify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 73], "content_span": [74, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289670-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Greenville Triumph SC season\nThe 2019 season was Greenville Triumph SC's first of existence. They played in USL League One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289670-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Greenville Triumph SC season, Background\nThe formation of a third tier USL League was announced in April 2017, and league officials began touring the country looking for candidate cities for new soccer clubs. USL vice president Steven Short visited Greenville in July 2017, and told local reporters at the time that Greenville was one of the league's top candidates. In early 2018, USL began announcing teams that would play in their inaugural season. The formation of the Greenville Triumph SC was officially announced on March 13, 2018, with local entrepreneur Joe Erwin named as the principal owner. The Greenville team was the third team to join the league after Tormenta FC and FC Tucson, two clubs which already existed and played in USL League Two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289671-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Grote Prijs Jef Scherens\nThe 2019 Grote Prijs Jef Scherens was the 53rd edition of the Grote Prijs Jef Scherens road cycling one day race in and around Leuven. It was held on 16 August 2018 as a 1.1 categorised race and was part of the 2018 UCI Europe Tour and the 2018 Belgian Road Cycling Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289671-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Grote Prijs Jef Scherens\nThe race ended in a bunch sprint of roughly 50 riders, with Niccol\u00f2 Bonifazio taking the victory ahead of Hugo Hofstetter. Timothy Dupont took third place, thereby managing to end on the podium for the third year running, after also becoming third in the 2018 Grote Prijs Jef Scherens and winning the 2017 edition. Defending champion Jasper Stuyven did not take part this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289671-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Grote Prijs Jef Scherens, Teams\nTwenty-three teams were invited to take part in the race. These included eleven UCI Professional Continental teams and twelve UCI Continental teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289672-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Group 10 Rugby League season\nThe 2019 Group 10 Rugby League season was the 73rd season of the premier rugby league competition in the Central West area of New South Wales. It was run under the auspices of the Country Rugby League. It was the seventh consecutive season to feature nine teams, after the re-admittance of the Blayney Bears in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289672-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Group 10 Rugby League season\nBathurst Panthers entered the season as defending champions, after defeating Cowra Magpies 12\u201310 in the 2018 Premier League decider. Panthers five-eighth and goal kicker Willie Wright kicked a match-winning conversion with four minutes remaining in the decider played at Cowra's Sid Kallas Oval, sealing Panthers first Premier League title since 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289672-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Group 10 Rugby League season\nPanthers would defend its title with a 9\u20138 win over Mudgee Dragons in the grand final at Carrington Park that went to extra-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289672-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Group 10 Rugby League season, Premier League season summary\nEighteen rounds was played between March to August, which concluded with a finals played under the top five McIntyre System. Bathurst Panthers played its round one match against Blayney Bears on March 30 at Carrington Park. The match acted as a curtain raiser to NRL match between the Penrith Panthers and Melbourne Storm later that evening. The remainder of the first round of Group 10 Premier League was played on weekend beginning on April 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289672-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Group 10 Rugby League season, Premier League season summary\nOrange Hawks claimed the minor premiership, but were bundled out in straight sets to be the first minor premier to miss the grand final since 1998, which ironically was the Orange Hawks. The grand final was played between the Bathurst Panthers and Mudgee Dragons. The match went to extra-time after the match finished 8\u2013all after 80 minutes. Panthers captain-coach Doug Hewitt would kick a field goal in extra-time to give his side a 9\u20138 lead, which would prove enough for Panthers to claim a second consecutive premiership and its fourth overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289672-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Group 10 Rugby League season, Group 10 Premier League ladder\nUpdated to match(es) played on unknown. Source:Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) point difference; 3) number of points scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289672-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Group 10 Rugby League season, Group 10 Premier League finals series, Grand final, Grand final report\nBathurst Panthers hosted the Group 10 Rugby League grand final day for the first time since 2007. Mudgee Dragons had won all their grand finals against Panthers (in 2000 and 2004) at Carrington Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 105], "content_span": [106, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289672-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Group 10 Rugby League season, Group 10 Premier League finals series, Grand final, Grand final report\nThe match was a low-scoring affair and it wasn't until the Dragons gave away two straight penalties that Panthers broke the deadlock with a penalty goal from the boot of Willie Wright in the 18th minute to give the Bathurst side a 2\u2013nil lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 105], "content_span": [106, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289672-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Group 10 Rugby League season, Group 10 Premier League finals series, Grand final, Grand final report\nNeither team could build momentum as both sides continued to shoot themselves in the foot through handling errors or discipline issues, but the Dragons crowd came to life with two minutes remaining in the half, voicing their approval of a huge break down the middle from Ben Thompson. Nathan Orr made the most of the chance close to the line, fending off an opponent before planting down the ball for the only try of the opening half. Mudgee lead 4\u20132 at half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 105], "content_span": [106, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289672-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Group 10 Rugby League season, Group 10 Premier League finals series, Grand final, Grand final report\nAfter play resumed for the second-half, Panthers looked to their left wing for a response eight minutes into the new half, however, Louis Murphy was denied on the try line by desperate Dragons defence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 105], "content_span": [106, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289672-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Group 10 Rugby League season, Group 10 Premier League finals series, Grand final, Grand final report\nAnother Orr fend gave the Dragons centre a chance to score in the 57th minute but a strong tackle from Josh Rivett put him into touch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 105], "content_span": [106, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289672-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Group 10 Rugby League season, Group 10 Premier League finals series, Grand final, Grand final report\nHowever, Jack Beasley wasn't going to be denied five minutes later and the Mudgee substitute crashed over to give the Dragons a 8\u20132 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 105], "content_span": [106, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289672-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Group 10 Rugby League season, Group 10 Premier League finals series, Grand final, Grand final report\nIt was on the 67th minute mark that the Panthers found their opening try of the match as second rower Jack Siejka scored between the uprights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 105], "content_span": [106, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289672-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Group 10 Rugby League season, Group 10 Premier League finals series, Grand final, Grand final report\nWright's conversion brought the score level at 8\u2013all and with no team finding the winning points in the remaining minutes, the match went to extra-time, the first grand final to require extra-time since 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 105], "content_span": [106, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289672-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Group 10 Rugby League season, Group 10 Premier League finals series, Grand final, Grand final report\nExtra-time would be five minutes each way and in their first chance to break the deadlock, captain-coach Doug Hewitt slotted home a field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 105], "content_span": [106, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289672-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Group 10 Rugby League season, Group 10 Premier League finals series, Grand final, Grand final report\nThe Panthers held on to win their second consecutive Group 10 Rugby League Premier League title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 105], "content_span": [106, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289672-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Group 10 Rugby League season, Group 10 Premier League finals series, Grand final, Grand final report\nBathurst Panthers 9 (Jack Siejka try; Willie Wright 2 goals, Doug Hewitt field goal)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 105], "content_span": [106, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289673-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Groupama\u2013FDJ season\nThe 2019 season for Groupama\u2013FDJ began in January at the Tour Down Under. As a UCI WorldTeam, 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-00289673-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Groupama\u2013FDJ season, Team roster\nIn March Georg Preidler is suspended and is replaced by K\u00e9vin Geniets from the continental team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289674-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Guam FA Cup\nThe 2019 Guam FA Cup is the 12th season of the Guam FA Cup knockout tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289674-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Guam FA Cup\nThe draw of the tournament was held on 13 April 2019. It was played between 2 and 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289674-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Guam FA Cup, First round\n2 May: Bank of Guam Strykers II 12-0 Omega Warriors", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 81]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289674-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Guam FA Cup, First round\n3 May: Pago Bay Disasters lose by forfeit to Big Blue", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 83]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289674-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Guam FA Cup, First round\n5 May: Bank of Guam Strykers Masters 1-2 Crushers FC", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 82]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289674-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Guam FA Cup, First round\n5 May: Islanders FC (Amateur) beat (probably by forfeit) Mijoo Family", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289674-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Guam FA Cup, Round of 16\n9 May: Guam Shipyard (Premier) 1-1 (1-3 p) GWM Bombers SC", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289674-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Guam FA Cup, Round of 16\n11 May: NAPA Rovers 6-2 Bank of Guam Strykers II", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 78]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289674-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Guam FA Cup, Round of 16\n11 May: Islanders FC (Premier) beat by forfeit Big Blue", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289674-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Guam FA Cup, Round of 16\n11 May: Bank of Guam Strykers (Premier) 17-0 Eurocar Masters", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289674-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Guam FA Cup, Quarterfinals\n16 May: Bank of Guam Strykers (Premier) 3-1 University of Guam Tritons", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 31], "content_span": [32, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289674-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Guam FA Cup, Semifinals\n23 May: Bank of Guam Strykers (Premier) 5-1 Quality FC", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 83]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289674-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Guam FA Cup, Final\n26 May: NAPA Rovers 1-5 Bank of Guam Strykers (Premier)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 79]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289675-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Guangdong\u2013Hong Kong Cup\nThe 41st Guangdong\u2013Hong Kong Cup was held on 6 and 9 January 2019. Hong Kong retained the trophy, beating Guangdong 5\u20132 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289675-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Guangdong\u2013Hong Kong Cup, Squads, Hong Kong\nThe final 23-man squad of Hong Kong was announced on 3 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289676-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Guangzhou Charge season\nThe 2019 Guangzhou Charge season was the first season of Guangzhou Charge's existence in the Overwatch League as one of eight expansion franchises added for the 2019 season. The team had a subpar performance throughout the first three stages of the season, posting a 9\u201312 record through 21 matches with no stage playoff appearances. After the implementation of an enforced 2-2-2 role lock by the league, the Charge flourished, losing only one match in their final seven matches to give them a 15\u201313 record for the season. Finishing in 9th place in the overall standings, Guangzhou qualified for the Play-In Tournament, where they defeated the Chengdu Hunters in the first round, 4\u20131. However, they were unable to make it season playoffs, as they fell to the Seoul Dynasty by a score of 1\u20134 the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 837]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289676-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Guangzhou Charge season, Preceding offseason\nCharge acquired Choi \"Hotba\" Hong-Jun from Philadelphia Fusion on 17 October. In mid-November, Charge announced nine more players signed for their inaugural roster:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289676-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Guangzhou Charge season, Preceding offseason\nCharge signed Cho \"J1N\" Hyo-jin as the team's head coach on 3 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289676-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Guangzhou Charge season, Regular season, Stage 1\nCharge opened their 2019 season on 15 February with a loss to fellow Chinese expansion franchise Chengdu Hunters. The team's first Overwatch League win came a week later in a 4\u20130 sweep over Dallas Fuel. Two days later, Charge lost in an overtime match to Vancouver Titans. Guangzhou took both of their matches week three over Florida Mayhem and Los Angeles Valiant to bring their record to 3\u20132. After dropping their week four match to Los Angeles Gladiators, Charge's final match of the stage was a rematch against Titans. Needing a win to secure a spot in the Stage 1 Playoffs, Charge was swept by Titans, ending the stage with a 3\u20134 record and out of playoff contention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289676-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Guangzhou Charge season, Regular season, Stage 2\nCharge could not find much success in Stage 2. Charge did not find a single map victory through their first four matches of the stage, getting swept 0\u20134 in each match. Guangzhou found their first map win in week three against Hangzhou Spark, but Spark took the match 3\u20132. The team faced Atlanta Reign the following week. Charge found their first win of the stage, taking the match 3\u20131; with a combined total score of 33 points, the match became the highest scoring game in Overwatch League history. Charge took a win in their final match of the stage, defeating Houston Outlaws, and ending the stage with a disappointing 2\u20135 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289676-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Guangzhou Charge season, Regular season, Stage 3\nThe Charge opened Stage 3 on 6 June strong with a 3\u20131 victory over the Chengdu Hunters. Two days later, they faced the Seoul Dynasty; Guangzhou was dominated throughout the match and was swept 0\u20134. The following week, the Charge took on the Los Angeles Valiant. The match was riddled with little mistakes by the Charge; that, and their inability to change strategies throughout, led to a 1\u20133 loss. Looking to rebound from the two straight losses, the Charge next took on the Toronto Defiant on 22 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289676-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Guangzhou Charge season, Regular season, Stage 3\nThe Charge took the first map, Ilios in convincing fashion and carried that momentum throughout the match to sweep Toronto 4\u20130. The team's next match was against the Shanghai Dragons a week later; Charge lost the match 1\u20133. For the final week of Stage 3, Guangzhou headed to the Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre in Atlanta to play at the \"Atlanta Reign Homestand Weekend\". Their first match at the homestand was, again, against the Dragons on 6 July. This time, the Charge took down the Dragons, winning 3\u20131. The following day, the team took on the Washington Justice. Guangzhou closed out the stage on a high note, as they dominated throughout the match and won 4\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289676-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Guangzhou Charge season, Regular season, Stage 4\nPrior to the start of Stage 4, which would include the implementation of an enforced 2-2-2 role lock by the League, the Charge made multiple roster moves. Guangzhou traded DPS Finley \"Kyb\" Adisi to the Philadelphia Fusion in exchange for tank Joona \"Fragi\" Laine on 17 July. The same day, the Charge acquired off-tank Kim \"Bischu\" Hyung-seok from the Los Angeles Gladiators in exchange for an undisclosed amount of cash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289676-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Guangzhou Charge season, Regular season, Stage 4\nThe Charge's first match of Stage 4 was also against the Fusion on 25 July. After splitting the first four maps, the match went to a fifth tiebreaker map; Charge won the final map to claim a 3\u20132 match victory. Two days later, the team swept the Boston Uprising 4\u20130. In their first match of week two, Guangzhou faced the London Spitfire on 1 August. The Charge lost the first three maps, Lijiang Tower, Hanamura, Blizzard World but were able to win on the final map, Havana, resulting in a 1\u20133 loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289676-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Guangzhou Charge season, Regular season, Stage 4\nThe team bounced back a day later, when they handily defeated the Hangzhou Spark 3\u20130. The team's next match was against the Seoul Dynasty on 8 August. After falling 0\u20132 going into halftime, the Charge responded by winning three straight maps to take a 3\u20132 win over the Dynasty. Three days later, the team faced the new York Excelsior.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289676-0007-0002", "contents": "2019 Guangzhou Charge season, Regular season, Stage 4\nIn the first map, Lijiang Tower, New York managed to take a point, but ultimately lost the map; that point was the only point the Charge would yield in the entire match, as Guangzhou won 4\u20130 in one of the most lopsided matches in the history of the Overwatch League. For their final regular season match, the Charge took on the Dallas Fuel on 18 August. Guangzhou closed out the regular season on a high note, sweeping the Fuel 4\u20130 in a match where an in-game bug cause an hour-long delay in the final map of the series \u2013 the longest delay in Overwatch League history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289676-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Guangzhou Charge season, Postseason\nWith a 15\u201313 regular season record, the Charge finished in 9th place in the regular season standings, qualifying them for the Play-In Tournament. The team took on the twelfth-seeded Chengdu Hunters in the first round on 30 August. After winning the first two maps, Ilios and Eichenwalde, the Hunters closed the gap by taking map three, Horizon Lunar Colony. However, the Charge would not yield another map, taking the next two and winning the match 4\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289676-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Guangzhou Charge season, Postseason\nAdvancing to the next round, the Charge faced the eighth-seeded Seoul Dynasty the following day; the winner of the match would advance to the season playoffs. Guangzhou found themselves down 0\u20132 going into the match break, but started to find their footing as they were able to draw the third map, Horizon Lunar Colony. The found a win next map, Rialto, due in part to a strong performance from DPS Charlie \"Nero\" Zwarg. However, Seoul DPS duo Kim \"Fleta\" Byung-sun and Kim \"Fits\" Dong-eon took over the match in the following two maps, and the Charge lost the series 1\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289676-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Guangzhou Charge season, Final roster, Transactions\nTransactions of/for players on the roster during the 2019 regular season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289677-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Guangzhou Evergrande Taobao F.C. season\nThe 2019 Guangzhou Evergrande Taobao season is the 66th year in Guangzhou Evergrande's existence and its 52nd season in the Chinese football league, also its 30th season in the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289678-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Guangzhou International Women's Open\nThe 2019 Guangzhou International Women's Open was a professional women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 16th edition of the Guangzhou International Women's Open, and part of the WTA International tournaments of the 2019 WTA Tour. It took place at the Guangdong Olympic Tennis Center in Guangzhou, China, from September 16 through September 21, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289678-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Guangzhou International Women's Open, Points and prize money, Prize money\n1 Qualifiers prize money is also the Round of 32 prize money* per team", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 78], "content_span": [79, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289678-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289678-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Guangzhou International Women's Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as a special exempt:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 85], "content_span": [86, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289678-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Guangzhou International Women's Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the main draw as lucky losers:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 85], "content_span": [86, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289678-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289679-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Guangzhou International Women's Open \u2013 Doubles\nMonique Adamczak and Jessica Moore were the defending champions, but Adamczak chose to compete in Osaka instead. Moore played alongside Dalila Jakupovi\u0107, but lost in the first round to Alexa Guarachi and Giuliana Olmos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289679-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Guangzhou International Women's Open \u2013 Doubles\nPeng Shuai and Laura Siegemund won the title, defeating Guarachi and Olmos in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289680-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Guangzhou International Women's Open \u2013 Singles\nWang Qiang was the defending champion, but lost in the first round to Peng Shuai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289680-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Guangzhou International Women's Open \u2013 Singles\nSofia Kenin won the title, defeating Samantha Stosur in the final, 6\u20137(4\u20137), 6\u20134, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289681-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Guangzhou R&F F.C. season\nThe 2019 Guangzhou R&F season is the 9th year in Guangzhou R&F's existence and its 8th season in the Chinese football league, also its 8th season in the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289681-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Guangzhou R&F F.C. season, Squad, Winter, 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, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289681-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Guangzhou R&F F.C. season, Squad, Winter, 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289681-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Guangzhou R&F F.C. season, Squad, Summer, 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, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289681-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Guangzhou R&F F.C. season, Squad, Summer, 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289682-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Guatemala City mayoral election\nThe 2019 Guatemala City mayoral election will be held on 16 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289682-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Guatemala City mayoral election\nThe elections will be held next to the presidential, legislative, municipal and Central American Parliament elections. Twenty-three candidates were presented.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289682-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Guatemala City mayoral election\nThe current mayor Ricardo Qui\u00f1\u00f3nez took office after the death of \u00c1lvaro Arz\u00fa, and is presented for the first time as a candidate for mayor and maintain the hegemony of the Unionist Party in Guatemala City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289682-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Guatemala City mayoral election\nThe polls show a close contest between the opposition candidate Roberto Gonz\u00e1lez D\u00edaz-Dur\u00e1n from the Commitment, Renewal and Order (CREO), which competes for the third time to win the mayor's office and the current mayor Ricardo Qui\u00f1\u00f3nez Lemus of Unionist Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289682-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Guatemala City mayoral election\nThey are followed by \u00c1lvaro V\u00e9liz of Semilla, Luis Garc\u00eda of Fuerza and Fernando S\u00e1nchez of the National Unity of Hope.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289682-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Guatemala City mayoral election\nIn this election, they are also elected to titular and alternate councilors who will make up the Municipal Council of Guatemala City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289682-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Guatemala City mayoral election, Opinion polls\nThe table below lists voting intention estimates in reverse chronological order, showing the most recent first and using the dates when the survey fieldwork was done, as opposed to the date of publication. Where the fieldwork dates are unknown, the date of publication is given instead. The highest percentage figure in each polling survey is displayed with its background shaded in the leading party's colour. If a tie ensues, this is applied to the figures with the highest percentages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289682-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Guatemala City mayoral election, Opinion polls\nThe \"Lead\" column on the right shows the percentage-point difference between the parties with the highest percentages in a given poll. When available, seat projections are also displayed below the voting estimates in a smaller font.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289683-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Guatemalan general election\nGeneral elections were held in Guatemala on June 16, 2019, to elect the President, Congress and local councils. A second round of the presidential elections was held on August 11, 2019, since no candidate won a majority in the first round. Alejandro Giammattei won the election in the second round of voting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289683-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Guatemalan general election\nIncumbent President Jimmy Morales was constitutionally barred from running for a second four-year term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289683-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Guatemalan general election, Electoral system\nThe President of Guatemala is elected using the two-round system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289683-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Guatemalan general election, Electoral system\nThe 160 members of Congress are elected by two methods; 130 are elected from 22 multi-member constituencies based on the departments, with the remaining 31 elected from a single nationwide constituency. Seats are elected using closed list Proportional representation, with seats allocated using the D'Hondt method.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289683-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Guatemalan general election, Candidates\nThelma Aldana's candidature was rejected by authorities in April 2019 on the grounds of alleged corruption cases concerning her. She denies the accusations and attributes them to what she calls the \"pact of the corrupt\", composed of politicians and business leaders of the country. As former Attorney General, she had uncovered several major corruption cases. Aldana appealed the ruling, but the appeal was rejected in May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289683-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Guatemalan general election, Candidates\nThe candidature of Zury R\u00edos, daughter of Guatemalan dictator from 1982 to 1983 Efra\u00edn R\u00edos Montt, was rejected by authorities in May 2019 on the grounds that the country's constitution bars close relatives of coup leaders from serving as president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289683-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Guatemalan general election, Candidates\nIn April 2019, centre-right candidate Mario Estrada was arrested. He is accused by the American authorities of having made a deal with the Sinaloa cartel - from which he allegedly obtained between 10 and 12 million dollars for his election campaign - and of having ordered the murder of rival candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289684-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Guildford Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Guildford Borough Council election were held on 2 May 2019, to elect all 48 seats to the Guildford Borough Council in Surrey, England as part of the 2019 local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289684-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Guildford Borough Council election\nThe Liberal Democrats won the most seats (17), the Residents for Guildford and Villages, a new political party formed in early 2019, came second with 15 seats, while the ruling Conservatives lost their majority coming third with 9 seats. Other parties such as the Guildford Greenbelt Group (4), the Labour Party (2) and the Green Party (1) won seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289684-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Guildford Borough Council election, Summary\nNumber of councillors per ward is shown in brackets after the ward name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289684-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Guildford Borough Council election, Summary\nWards won solely by the Liberal Democrats \u2013 Burpham (2); Friary & St Nicolas (3); Effingham (1); Onslow (3); Stoughton (3); Westborough (3)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289684-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Guildford Borough Council election, Summary\nWards won solely by Residents for Guildford and Villages (R4GV) \u2013 Christchurch (3); Lovelace (1); Pilgrims (1); Worplesdon (3)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289684-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Guildford Borough Council election, Summary\nWards won solely by the Conservatives \u2013 Ash Vale (2); Ash Wharf (2); Pirbright (1); Normandy (1)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289684-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Guildford Borough Council election, Summary\nWards won solely by Guildford Greenbelt Group \u2013 Send (2)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289684-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Guildford Borough Council election, Summary\nWards electing councillors of more than one party \u2013 Ash South & Tongham (3 \u2013 2 Con, 1 R4GV); Clandon & Horsley (3 \u2013 2 R4GV, 1 Guildford Greenbelt); Merrow (3 - 1 R4GV, 2 Lib Dem); Shalford (2 - 1 R4GV, 1 Guildford Greenbelt), Tillingbourne (2 - 1 Con, 1 Green)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289684-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Guildford Borough Council election, Summary\nThe results saw the Conservatives lose control of Guildford Borough Council, falling from 31 seats to 9, making the Liberal Democrats the largest party on 17 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289684-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Guildford Borough Council election, Summary\nPrior to the election, 3 councillors had defected from the Conservatives and 1 had defected from the Liberal Democrats to form the Independent Alliance on the council. The Independent Alliance registered Residents for Guildford and Villages as a political party to contest the 2019 elections and proceeded to win 15 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289684-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Guildford Borough Council election, Summary\nThe Guildford Greenbelt Group increased their representation to 4 seats whilst Labour maintained a by-election gain from the Conservatives to emerge with 2 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289684-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Guildford Borough Council election, Summary\nThe Green party also won their first seat on Guildford Borough Council in Tillingbourne ward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289684-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Guildford Borough Council election, Ward by Ward\nIn each of the wards indicated with an *, one of the R4GV gains is a notional one due to one councillor elected in the ward in 2015 having already defected to R4GV prior to the 2019 election being called. In all wards a 'gain' is defined as a seat gained from the party who won it at the most recent election even if the party who won it in 2015 no longer held it going in to the 2019 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 53], "content_span": [54, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289685-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Guinea-Bissau legislative election\nLegislative elections were held in Guinea-Bissau on 10 March 2019. They were originally scheduled for 18 November 2018 following an ECOWAS brokered agreement between President Jos\u00e9 M\u00e1rio Vaz and the opposition in April 2018, but the electoral census was not completed until 20 November, and Prime Minister Aristides Gomes subsequently proposed 16 December, 30 December, or 27 January 2019 as possible alternative dates. The election date was settled following a presidential decree issued in December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289685-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Guinea-Bissau legislative election\nThe African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde (PAIGC) won 47 of the 102 seats and remained the largest party. Although its loss of ten seats resulted in a hung parliament, pre-election agreements with the Assembly of the People United (five seats), the New Democracy Party (one seat) and the Union for Change (one seat) gave the PAIGC-led coalition a six-seat majority in the National People's Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289685-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Guinea-Bissau legislative election, Electoral system\nThe 102 members of the National People's Assembly were elected by two methods; 100 by closed list proportional representation from 27 multi-member constituencies and two from single-member constituencies representing expatriate citizens in Africa and Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289685-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Guinea-Bissau legislative election, Conduct\nElection day was peaceful, with President Vaz stating \"no-one has been killed, no fights, no coup, without random arrests and without political prisoners. Instead, there is freedom of expression and the right to assemble.\" Voter turnout was reportedly high.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289685-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Guinea-Bissau legislative election, Aftermath\nFollowing the elections, deputy President Domingos Sim\u00f5es Pereira of the PAIGC was initially proposed as the new Prime Minister. However, President Vaz refused to appoint him following a breakdown in relations between the two. The deadlock was finally lifted in late June 2019, when the incumbent Aristides Gomes was reappointed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 50], "content_span": [51, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289686-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Guinea-Bissau presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in Guinea-Bissau on 24 November 2019. As no candidate received a majority of the vote, a second round was held on 29 December. Incumbent president Jos\u00e9 M\u00e1rio Vaz finished fourth in the first round of voting, failing to progress to the runoff. Umaro Sissoco Embal\u00f3 won the second round with 54% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289686-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Guinea-Bissau presidential election, Aftermath\nEmbal\u00f3 was inaugurated as president in a ceremony in Bissau on 27 February 2020. However, the PAIGC rejected the results, claiming there had been electoral fraud, and submitted a petition to the Supreme Court. Holding a majority in National People's Assembly, the party swore in Speaker Cipriano Cassam\u00e1 as a rival president. Cassam\u00e1 resigned after a day, saying he had received death threats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289686-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Guinea-Bissau presidential election, Aftermath\nEmbal\u00f3 appointed Nuno Gomes Nabiam as Prime Minister. However, former Prime Minister Aristides Gomes refused to resign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289687-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gunma gubernatorial election\nA gubernatorial election was held on 21 July 2019 to elect the next Governor of Gunma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289688-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gush Etzion ramming attack\nIn the afternoon of 16 August 2019, a Palestinian driver hit two Israelis, outside the Gush Etzion settlement of Elazar. An off duty policeman saw the attack and shot the assailant who later died in the hospital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289688-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Gush Etzion ramming attack, Attack\nThe perpetrator was speeding on Route 60 which connects the West Bank and Gush Etzion. He swerved off the road near a bus station outside the settlement of Elazar and rammed his car into two people, crashing over the guard railing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289688-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Gush Etzion ramming attack, Attack\nA Hebron police officer who was on his way home after completing a shift noticed the attack and shot the driver as he was getting out of the vehicle. He also recorded the terror attack on his dashcam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289688-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Gush Etzion ramming attack, Victims\nThe victims, identified as Nahum and Noam Nevis, were both from Elazar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289688-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Gush Etzion ramming attack, Perpetrator\nThe Palestinian driver, Ala' Khader al-Hreimi, 26, from Bethlehem, had spent time in prison between 2014 and 2015 for unspecified violent activities. He later died of gunshot wounds in hospital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289689-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Guzzini Challenger\nThe 2019 Guzzini Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the seventeenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Recanati, Italy between 1 and 7 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289689-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289689-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Guzzini Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289689-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Guzzini Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289690-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Guzzini Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nGong Maoxin and Zhang Ze were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289690-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Guzzini Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nGon\u00e7alo Oliveira and Ramkumar Ramanathan won the title after defeating Andrea Vavassori and David Vega Hern\u00e1ndez 6\u20132, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289691-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Guzzini Challenger \u2013 Singles\nDaniel Brands was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289691-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Guzzini Challenger \u2013 Singles\nEgor Gerasimov won the title after defeating Roberto Marcora 6\u20132, 7\u20135 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289692-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gwangju Open\nThe 2019 Gwangju Open was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 4th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Gwangju, South Korea between 13 and 19 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289692-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Gwangju 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-00289692-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Gwangju Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 61], "content_span": [62, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289693-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gwangju Open \u2013 Doubles\nNam Ji-sung and Song Min-kyu were the defending champions but lost in the final to Hsieh Cheng-peng and Christopher Rungkat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289693-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Gwangju Open \u2013 Doubles\nHsieh and Rungkat won the title after defeating Nam and Song 6\u20133, 3\u20136, [10\u20136] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289694-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Gwangju Open \u2013 Singles\nMaverick Banes was the defending champion but lost in the first round to Shintaro Imai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289694-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Gwangju Open \u2013 Singles\nJason Jung won the title after defeating Dudi Sela 6\u20134, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289695-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 H1 Unlimited season\nThe 2019 H1 Unlimited season is the sixty-fourth 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-00289695-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 H1 Unlimited season, Teams and drivers\nNote: \u1e6a\u2014The U-3 is the only piston powered boat in the fleet, powered by a dual turbocharged Allison V-12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289696-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 HEC O'Connor Cup\nThe 2019 HEC O'Connor Cup was won by University of Limerick who defeated UCD by 2\u201316 to 1\u201310 in the final. Six teams were invited to take part in the competition. Queen's University and UCC reached the semi-finals while DCU defeated NUI Galway by 3\u201318 to 0\u20136 to win the Michael O'Connor Shield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289696-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 HEC O'Connor Cup, Group stage\nSix teams were invited to take part in the 2019 O'Connor Cup. They were drawn into two groups of three. UCD, Queen's University and NUI Galway were placed in Group A while University of Limerick, UCC and DCU, were placed in Group B. Each group played three rounds of games during February. The top two teams from each group qualified for the O'Connor Cup semi-finals. The two third placed teams played off for the O'Connor Shield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289696-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 HEC O'Connor Cup, O'Connor Cup Weekend\nThe O'Connor Shield play off, the two O'Connor Cup semi-finals and the final all formed part of the O'Connor Cup Weekend which was hosted by DIT GAA and the GAA Centre of Excellence in Abbotstown. The final was streamed live by TG4 on their YouTube channel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289697-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 HFX Wanderers FC season\nThe 2019 HFX Wanderers FC season was the first season in the club's history having been founded on 5 May 2018, as well as the first season in Canadian Premier League (CPL) history. Stephen Hart was the club\u2019s first manager, with the team playing at Wanderers Grounds. The season covers the period from 1 November 2018 through to 31 October 2019. Hart, like his peers in the CPL, built a squad from the ground up, and made use of all available mechanisms for player recruitment: the CPL Open Trials, the U-Sports Draft, and benefiting from his domestic and international connections, particularly from his native Trinidad & Tobago.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289697-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 HFX Wanderers FC season, Overview\nThe first ever player signed by the team was Canadian defender Zachary Sukunda on 29 November 2018, followed by a quartet of Trinidad & Tobago players in the new year. A contingent of Canadians followed before Hart turned his attention to signing three players from the CPL Open Trials: Kouam\u00e9 Ouattara, Kodai Iida, and Mohamed Kourouma. Hart also signed all three U-Sports draft picks, and added some veteran attacking options in Luis Alberto Perea and Juan Diego Gutierrez. As the season approached and during the season, Hart raided League 1 Ontario club Vaughan Azzurri three times to round out his squad, signing Tomasz Skublak, Matthew Arnone and eventually, Duran Lee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289697-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 HFX Wanderers FC season, Overview\nA short pre-season in April in the Dominican Republic saw HFX play only two matches, before playing its first ever competitive fixture on 28 April 2019, away at Pacific FC and losing 1-0. Following the defeat, HFX returned home to a raucous Wanderers Grounds on 4 May 2019, picking up its first win in history, defeating eventual champions Forge FC 2-1 with forward Akeem Garcia, scoring the team\u2019s first ever goal in the 30th minute. HFX would finish the Spring Season a respectable fourth place. In the Canadian Championship, HFX dispatched Vaughan Azzurri and Valour FC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289697-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 HFX Wanderers FC season, Overview\nThe Fall Season began optimistically on 6 July 2019 with the team recording a 1-0 win over York 9 FC and preparing to face Ottawa Fury FC of the United Soccer League Championship in the third preliminary round of the Canadian Championship. However, a congested fixture schedule would take its toll on the team, playing seven matches in eighteen days in July. HFX would lose all of them, bar one draw away to the afore-mentioned Ottawa Fury FC, which was insufficient to progress in the Canadian Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289697-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 HFX Wanderers FC season, Overview\nThroughout the year, HFX had had difficulty mustering much offense, which contributed to the slump. Improved defensive performances in September resulted in an uptick of form, but without much goalscoring, HFX could only muster six consecutive draws (a league record), surrendering the lead late on a number of occasions along the way. Combined with suggestions of locker room discord and Hart commenting on his players learning what it meant to be a professional, the Fall Season was difficult for HFX, finishing last which also \u201cearned\u201d the team the proverbial wooden spoon for 2019 as a whole. However, the year would end on a positive note, with Hart and company earning their first and only away win, 2-0 against York 9 FC. The Privateers 1882\u2019s supporter\u2019s group player of the year award went to centre-back, Matthew Arnone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 869]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289697-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 HFX Wanderers FC season, Overview\nOff the pitch, the club was a tremendous success, the supporters regularly packing Wanderers Grounds to its limits and making it a difficult place to play for visiting teams. Indeed, in league play Cavalry FC was the only team to ever win at Wanderers Grounds all year. The boisterous atmosphere was the envy of the league and even attracted the notice of Toronto FC captain Michael Bradley who hoped his team would play there in the Canadian Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289697-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 HFX Wanderers FC season, Overview\nA last place finish, however, was always going to mean high player turnover. Instead of announcing a list of players released at the end of the season, the club instead would announce returning players only over the course of the off-season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289697-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 HFX Wanderers FC season, Transfers, In, Draft picks\nHFX Wanderers selected the following players in the 2018 CPL\u2013U Sports Draft on November 12, 2018. Draft picks are not automatically signed to the team roster. Only those who are signed to a contract will be listed as transfers in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289698-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 HJK season, Season Events, New contracts\nOn 30 November 2018, Faith Obilor signed a new contract until the end of the 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 45], "content_span": [46, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289698-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 HJK season, Season Events, New contracts\nOn 8 February, Kevin Kouassivi-Benissan signed a new contract until the end of the 2020 season, with an option for an additional year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 45], "content_span": [46, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289698-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 HJK season, Season Events, New contracts\nOn 22 February, Nikolai Alho signed a new contract until the end of the 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 45], "content_span": [46, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289698-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 HJK season, Season Events, New contracts\nOn 15 March, Riku Riski signed a new contract until the end of the 2021 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 45], "content_span": [46, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289698-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 HJK season, Season Events, New contracts\nOn 17 June, Santeri V\u00e4\u00e4n\u00e4nen signed a new contract until the end of the 2021 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 45], "content_span": [46, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289698-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 HJK 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, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289698-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 HJK season, Competitions, Veikkausliiga\nThe 2019 Veikkausliiga season begins on 3 April 2019 and ends on 3 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289699-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 HKFC International Soccer Sevens\n2019 HKFC International Soccer Sevens, officially known as The HKFC Citi Soccer Sevens due to sponsorship reasons, is the 20th staging of the HKFC International Soccer Sevens tournament. It was held on 17\u201319 May 2019. In this edition, there were a number of celebrations to commemorate 20 years of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289699-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 HKFC International Soccer Sevens, Main Tournament - Knockout Stage\nMatches in the knockout stage were now 14 minutes each half, with golden goal extra time and a sudden death penalty shootout in the event of a draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 71], "content_span": [72, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289700-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hall of Fame Open\nThe 2019 Hall of Fame Open was a men's tennis tournament to be played on outdoor grass courts. It was the 44th edition of the event, and part of the 250 series of the 2019 ATP Tour. It took place at the International Tennis Hall of Fame in Newport, Rhode Island, United States, from July 15 through July 21, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289700-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hall of Fame 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-00289700-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hall of Fame 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-00289701-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hall of Fame Open \u2013 Doubles\nJonathan Erlich and Artem Sitak were the defending champions, but lost in the first round to Marcel Granollers and Sergiy Stakhovsky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289701-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hall of Fame Open \u2013 Doubles\nGranollers and Stakhovsky went on to win the title, defeating Marcelo Ar\u00e9valo and Miguel \u00c1ngel Reyes-Varela in the final, 6\u20137(10\u201312), 6\u20134, [13\u201311].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289702-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hall of Fame Open \u2013 Singles\nSteve Johnson was the defending champion, but lost in the first round to Christopher Eubanks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289702-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hall of Fame Open \u2013 Singles\nJohn Isner won a record fourth Newport title, defeating Alexander Bublik in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20132), 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289702-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hall of Fame 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-00289703-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Halle Open\nThe 2019 Halle Open (known for sponsorship reasons as the 2019 Noventi Open) was a tennis tournament played on outdoor grass courts. It was the 27th edition of the Halle Open and part of the ATP Tour 500 series of the 2019 ATP Tour. It took place at the Gerry Weber Stadion in Halle, Germany, between 17 June and 23 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289703-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Halle Open, 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-00289704-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Halle Open \u2013 Doubles\n\u0141ukasz Kubot and Marcelo Melo were the two-time defending champions, but lost in the final to Raven Klaasen and Michael Venus, 6\u20134, 3\u20136, [4\u201310].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289705-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Halle Open \u2013 Singles\nBorna \u0106ori\u0107 was the defending champion, but retired from his quarterfinal match against Pierre-Hugues Herbert.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289705-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Halle Open \u2013 Singles\nRoger Federer won a record-extending tenth singles title in Halle, defeating David Goffin in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20132), 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289706-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Halton Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Halton Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of the Halton Borough Council in England. It was held on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289707-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hambleton District Council election\nThe 2019 Hambleton District Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of the Hambleton District Council in England. It was held on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289708-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hamburg European Open\nThe 2019 Hamburg European Open was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor red clay courts. It was be the 113th edition of the German Open Tennis Championships and part of the ATP Tour 500 series of the 2019 ATP Tour. It took place at the Am Rothenbaum in Hamburg, Germany, from 22 July until 28 July 2019. Fourth-seeded Nikoloz Basilashvili won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289708-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hamburg European Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry as a special exempt into the main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289708-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hamburg European 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-00289709-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hamburg European Open \u2013 Doubles\nJulio Peralta and Horacio Zeballos were the defending champions, but Peralta chose not to participate this year. Zeballos played alongside Leonardo Mayer, but lost in the first round to Pablo Cuevas and Nicol\u00e1s Jarry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289709-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hamburg European Open \u2013 Doubles\nOliver Marach and J\u00fcrgen Melzer won the title, defeating Robin Haase and Wesley Koolhof in the final, 6\u20132, 7\u20136(7\u20133).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289710-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hamburg European Open \u2013 Singles\nNikoloz Basilashvili was the defending champion and successfully defended his title, defeating Andrey Rublev in the final, 7\u20135, 4\u20136, 6\u20133. En route to doing so, Basilashvili saved two match points against Alexander Zverev in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289711-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hamilton Tiger-Cats season\nThe 2019 Hamilton Tiger-Cats season was the 62nd season for the team in the Canadian Football League and their 70th overall. It was the 150th year overall in the combined history of the Tiger-Cats and its predecessors the Wildcats and Tigers; the team held sesquicentennial celebrations throughout the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289711-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hamilton Tiger-Cats season\nThe Tiger-Cats improved upon their 8\u201310 record from 2018 and finished the regular season with a franchise best 15\u20133 record. They finished in first place for the first time since 2014 and attempted unsuccessfully to win their 9th Grey Cup championship. This is the first season under co-general managers Drew Allemang and Shawn Burke, and the first full season under head coach Orlondo Steinauer. It was announced on December 3, 2018 that Steinauer would take the reins as the Tiger-Cats' head coach, replacing June Jones in that capacity. The plan was for Jones to remain with the team as an associate head coach and offensive coordinator, but he resigned with the club and joined the Houston Roughnecks of the XFL as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289711-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hamilton Tiger-Cats season\nOn October 19, 2019, the Tiger-Cats defeated the Ottawa Redblacks and recorded a franchise-record 13th win in a season. The team finished the season with 15 wins and with a perfect home record for the first time since the CFL went to an 18-game schedule, winning all nine home games. Despite their success during the regular season, they lost to the Winnipeg Blue Bombers, a team that had a dominant performance during the 107th Grey Cup game. With the Blue Bombers ending a 29-year Grey Cup drought, the Hamilton Tiger-Cats now hold the longest active Grey Cup drought dating back to the 1999 season, having won the 87th Grey Cup that season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289711-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hamilton Tiger-Cats season, Offseason, Foreign drafts\nFor the first time in its history, the CFL held drafts for foreign players from Mexico and Europe. Like all other CFL teams, the Tiger-Cats held three non-tradeable selections in the 2019 CFL\u2013LFA Draft, which took place on January 14, 2019. The 2019 European CFL Draft took place on April 11, 2019 where all teams held one non-tradeable pick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289711-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Hamilton Tiger-Cats season, Offseason, CFL Draft\nThe 2019 CFL Draft took place on May 2, 2019. The Tiger-Cats held eight selections in the eight-round draft, including three picks within the first 11 overall selections after trading Ryan Bomben and Jamal Robinson to the Montreal Alouettes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289711-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Hamilton Tiger-Cats season, Regular season, Season schedule\nTo accommodate for the viewership of the Toronto Raptors' 9pm EDT NBA Finals Game 6 start time on June 13, the CFL moved up the start time of the league opener that same day from 7:30pm to 7:00pm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289711-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Hamilton Tiger-Cats season, Team, Roster\nItalics indicate American playerBold indicates global player updated 2019-11-23 \u2022 46 Roster, 13 Injured,10 Practice, 1 Suspended", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289712-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hamilton mayoral election\nThe 2019 Hamilton City mayoral election was part of the New Zealand local elections and was held on 12 October 2019 to determine the Mayor of Hamilton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289712-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hamilton mayoral election, Candidates, Endorsements\nLouise Hutt was endorsed by Organise Aotearoa after surveying all the candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289712-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hamilton mayoral election, Campaign\nThe Employers and Manufacturers Association hosted a debate at Wintec on 4 September 2019. Hutt, King, O'Leary, Southgate and West attended. Another debate was held on 11 September 2019 at the event centre in Claudelands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289712-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hamilton mayoral election, Campaign\nPaula Southgate was motivated to re-apply for mayoralty, after missing out in the previous election by only seven votes. Southgate claimed that it is easy for mayoral candidates to make lavish promises but that at the council table, they're only one voice. Gielen's broom symbolized a claimed need for a clean sweep of council, while the colourful head attire was to represent an inclusive community.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289712-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Hamilton mayoral election, Campaign\nA Waikato Chamber of Commerce and Waikato Times poll conducted on 2 October found Southgate with 20.4% support, King with 14.1%, O'Leary with 13.7%, Casson with 3.1%, West on 3.0%, Hutt with 1.8%, Lewis with 1.5% and Gielen with 0.8%. Undecided voters made up 41.5% of respondents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289713-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hammarby Fotboll season\nThe 2019 season was Hammarby Fotboll's 104st in existence, their 50th season in Allsvenskan and their 5th consecutive season in the league. They competed in Allsvenskan and Svenska Cupen during the year. League play started in early April and lasted until November. Stefan Billborn made his second season as manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289713-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hammarby Fotboll season, Summary\nHammarby started the league play in a mediocre fashion, but made a strong finish to the season (with eight straight wins during between match day 22 and 30) and ultimately finished 3rd in Allsvenskan. This meant that the club qualified for the 2020\u201321 UEFA Europa League, their first continental competition in over ten years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289713-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hammarby Fotboll season, Player statistics, Disciplinary record\nLast updated: 2 November 2019Source: 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 68], "content_span": [69, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289714-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hampton Pirates football team\nThe 2019 Hampton Pirates football team represented Hampton University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by second-year head coach Robert Prunty and played their home games at Armstrong Stadium. They were first-year members of the Big South Conference. They finished the season 5\u20137, 1\u20135 in Big South play to finish in a three-way tie for fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289714-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hampton Pirates football team, Preseason, Big South poll\nIn the Big South preseason poll released on July 21, 2019, the Pirates were predicted to finish in sixth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289714-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hampton Pirates football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013Big South team\nThe Pirates had one player selected to the preseason all-Big South team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289714-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hampton Pirates football team, Preseason, Headlines\nOn August 2, 2019, it was announced that former Florida State quarterback Deondre Francois had completed a graduate transfer to Hampton and would be immediately eligible for the upcoming season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289715-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hangzhou Spark season\nThe 2019 Hangzhou Spark season was the first season of Hangzhou Spark's existence in the Overwatch League as one of eight expansion franchises added for the 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289715-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hangzhou Spark season\nThe Spark struggled in Stage 1, posting a 3\u20134 record and missing the Stage 1 Playoffs. A 3\u20131 win over the Seoul Dynasty on 5 May gave the team a 5\u20132 record for Stage 2 and the seventh seed in the Stage 2 Playoffs. Hangzhou defeated the London Spitfire, 3\u20131, in the Stage 2 quarterfinals, but their playoff run ended after getting swept 0\u20134 by the San Francisco Shock in the semifinals. The Spark improved upon their Stage 2 performance in Stage 3, amassing a 6\u20131 record and the third seed in the Stage 3 Playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289715-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Hangzhou Spark season\nHowever, they were eliminated in the quarterfinals by the Los Angeles Valiant after losing a in five-map series. Hangzhou struggled at the beginning of Stage 4 after suspending their starting DPS Cai \"Krystal\" Shilong and the implementation of an enforced 2-2-2 role lock by the league. The team lost their first three matches of the stage but recovered by winning their final four matches. The Spark ended the regular season with an 18\u201310 record and the fourth seed in the season playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289715-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hangzhou Spark season\nThe Spark began their playoff run with a 3\u20134 loss to the Los Angeles Gladiators, sending them to the lower bracket. The team defeated the Seoul Dynasty, 4\u20131, in the first round of the lower bracket. In the second round, the Spark swept the Atlanta Reign, 4\u20130 to advance to the third round, where they faced the Shock. The Spark's season came to an end in a 0\u20134 loss to the Shock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289715-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hangzhou Spark season, Preceding offseason\nOn 16 November, the Spark revealed their new head coach, Lee \"Mask\" Mu-ho. In the following week, the Spark revealed their 10-man inaugural roster through a series of Twitter posts, consisting of the following players from different Chinese and Korean Contenders teams:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289715-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Hangzhou Spark season, Regular season, Stage 1\nSpark began their 2019 season with wins over Shanghai Dragons and Los Angeles Valiant in week one. One day prior to week two, Spark signed flex tank Song \"SASIN\" Sang-hyun. Despite the strong start, Spark dropped four of their last five matches to end the stage with a 3\u20134 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289715-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Hangzhou Spark season, Regular season, Stage 2\nHangzhou opened Stage 2 with a 0\u20134 loss to the Stage 1 champions Vancouver Titans. Spark would find their first victory of Stage 2 a week later, as the team won in map 5 against Boston Uprising. Hangzhou would again win in a five-map series \u2013 this time against Guangzhou Charge \u2013 the following week. Two days later, Spark was swept 0\u20134 against the Stage 1 runners-up San Francisco Shock. Spark headed to Allen, Texas in week four for the Dallas Fuel \"Homestand Weekend\". The team took both of their matches against Chengdu Hunters and Paris Eternal, giving them a 4\u20132 record heading into their final match of the stage against Seoul Dynasty. Hangzhou defeated Seoul 3\u20131 to clinch a Stage 2 Playoff berth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289715-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Hangzhou Spark season, Regular season, Stage 2\nSpark faced London Spitfire in the Stage 2 Quarterfinals. After dropping the first map, Spark did not allow Spitfire to cap a single point in the final three maps as the team went on to a 3\u20131 victory to move on to the Semifinals against San Francisco Shock. In the Semifinals match, Spark did not cap a single point in the first three maps. Hangzhou was able to push the fourth map against San Francisco to overtime, but Shock took the map to sweep Spark and end their playoff run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289715-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Hangzhou Spark season, Regular season, Stage 3\nThe Spark's first match of Stage 3 was against the Philadelphia Fusion on 8 June. Hangzhou took advantage of Philadelphia's inability to adapt their lineup won the match in a 4\u20130 sweep. The following week, the Spark faced the undefeated Vancouver Titans. Amidst several close maps, the Spark could only take one map from the Titans, as they fell 1\u20133 in the match. Two days later, the team took on the Washington Justice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289715-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Hangzhou Spark season, Regular season, Stage 3\nAfter win and a tie in the first two maps, Hangzhou handed Washington one of the most dominant map losses in the history of the Overwatch League on Hollywood, as the Justice only secured two eliminations in the entire map. Hangzhou went on to win the match 3\u20130. The Spark's next match was against the Dallas Fuel on 20 June; the team took a convincing 3\u20130 win. Hangzhou faced the Seoul Dynasty two days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289715-0007-0002", "contents": "2019 Hangzhou Spark season, Regular season, Stage 3\nAfter four maps, the series was tied up, forcing the match to a fifth tiebreaker map; the Spark came out of the map with a win to take the match 3\u20132. For their final week of the stage, the Spark first took on the Los Angeles Valiant on 27 June. The match went down to the wire, as the teams went to a fifth tiebreaker map. Like their previous match, the Spark came out with a 3\u20132 victory. Their final match of the stage was against the Florida Mayhem two days later. took on the Hangzhou Spark on 29 June. Amidst a dominant performance, the Spark set an Overwatch League record for the fastest completion on Eichenwalde at 4 minutes and 12 seconds; Hangzhou swept the Mayhem 4\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289715-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Hangzhou Spark season, Regular season, Stage 3\nFinishing Stage 3 with an impressive 6\u20131 record, the Spark claimed the third seed in the Stage 3 Playoffs. For their quarterfinals match, the team took on the sixth-seeded Los Angeles Valiant on 12 July. The match opened on Ilios, while Hangzhou kept it close in both rounds, the Valiant came out with a map win. The Spark quickly turned it around, however, claiming wins on Hollywood and Paris, largely due to a strong performance from main tank Xu \"guxue\" Qiulin on Winston on both maps. However, the Valiant evened the match score with a win on Havana, bringing the match to a fifth tiebreaker map. The match went to Oasis; the Spark were handed their first ever map five loss and lost the series 2\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289715-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Hangzhou Spark season, Regular season, Stage 4\nPrior to the beginning of Stage 4, which would include the implementation of an enforced 2-2-2 role lock by the league, the Spark fined DPS Cai \"Krystal\" Shilong after he failed to return to the team following a ten-day leave to China. Krystal would later be indefinitely suspended by the Spark after a week-long public feud ensued.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289715-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Hangzhou Spark season, Regular season, Stage 4\nThe Spark's first match of Stage 4 was against the Atlanta Reign on 27 July; Hangzhou lost the match 1\u20133. The following week, the team was handily defeated by the Guangzhou Charge, 0\u20133. Looking to bounce back from their recent struggles, Hangzhou faced the New York Excelsior on 9 August. A back-and-forth battle sent the match to a fifth tiebreaker map, but the Spark were unable to pick up a win and lost the match 2\u20133. The team finally picked up their first win of the stage a day later, when they defeated the Chengdu Hunters, 3\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289715-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Hangzhou Spark season, Regular season, Stage 4\nThat momentum carried on to the following week, as the Spark downed the Dallas Fuel by a score of 3\u20131. The following day, the Spark took on the Los Angeles Gladiators. Hangzhou looked to have finally adapted to the new meta and team chemistry, as they took down the Gladiators, 3\u20132, in a five-map series. The win secured the Spark a spot in the season playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289715-0010-0002", "contents": "2019 Hangzhou Spark season, Regular season, Stage 4\nFor their final match of the regular season, the Spark headed to The Novo in Los Angeles to play in the Kit Kat Rivalry Weekend, hosted by the Los Angeles Valiant, where faced the Stage 3 Champions Shanghai Dragons on 25 August. The Spark closed out the regular season on a high note, sweeping the Dragons 4\u20130 to finish with a four-game winning streak and the fourth seed in the season playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289715-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Hangzhou Spark season, Playoffs\nThe Spark took on the fifth-seeded Los Angeles Gladiators in the first round of the season playoffs on 5 September. The Spark jumped out to a 1\u20130 lead after taking the first map win on Busan, but the Gladiators surged back, winning on King's Row, Temple of Anubis, and Rialto. Down 1\u20133, the Spark mounted their own comeback, winning the following two maps, Lijiang Tower and Eichenwalde. With the series tied 3\u20133, the match went to Watchpoint: Gibraltar. On defense, the Spark could not prevent the Gladiators from completing the map, and on their own attack, they were held from reaching the second checkpoint, losing the match 3\u20134. The loss sent the Spark to the lower bracket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289715-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Hangzhou Spark season, Playoffs\nTwo days later, Hangzhou faced the eighth-seeded Seoul Dynasty in the first round of the lower bracket. The Spark took the first map of the match, Busan, but the Dynasty evened the series after winning on Eichenwalde. The Spark found their groove coming out of the match break, winning on Temple of Anubis, Dorado, and Lijiang Tower. The 4\u20131 win eliminated Seoul from the playoffs and sent Hangzhou to the second round of the lower bracket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289715-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Hangzhou Spark season, Playoffs\nHangzhou's next match was against the sixth-seeded Atlanta Reign on 12 September. Like their two previous matches, the Spark jumped out to an early 1\u20130 lead after winning on Busan. For map two, the Reign selected Numbani \u2013 a map that the Reign had performed historically well on. After both teams completed the map on their respective attacks, the map went to overtime rounds. With only one minute in the time bank, the Spark rolled on their second attack, completing the map second time; Hangzhou prevented Atlanta from completing the same feat and took the map win. The Spark carried their momentum into the following to maps, winning them both, and swept the Reign, 4\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289715-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Hangzhou Spark season, Playoffs\nAdvancing to the third round of the lower bracket, the Spark next faced the third-seeded San Francisco Shock two days later. The match started on Busan, where the Spark started strong by winning the first round; however, the Shock surged backed on rounds two and three to put Hangzhou down 0\u20131 in the series. Looking to rebound, the Spark selected King's Row for map two. Both teams were able to complete the map on their respective attacks, but the Spark were unable to claim a point in overtime rounds and lost the map.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289715-0014-0001", "contents": "2019 Hangzhou Spark season, Playoffs\nComing out of match break down 0\u20132, the Spark sent the match to Temple of Anubis. Again, both teams completed the map on their first attempts; in overtime rounds, each team, again, completed the map, sending the map to a second overtime round. The Spark could not take a point on their third attempt, while the Shock capped the first point to take their third map win. In the fourth map, Dorado, each team, for the third consecutive map, completed the map on their first attacks. Once again in overtime rounds, the Spark managed to reach the first checkpoint, but they were held from reaching the second. The distance captured would prove not to be enough, as the Shock pushed the payload further on their attack. The 0\u20134 loss eliminated the Spark from the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 803]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289715-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Hangzhou Spark season, Final roster, Transactions\nTransactions of/for players on the roster during the 2019 regular season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289716-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hank Steinbrecher Cup\nThe 2019 Hank Steinbrecher Cup was the seventh edition of the United States Adult Soccer Association's (USASA) tournament whose winner is recognized with the title of U.S. National Amateur Champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289716-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hank Steinbrecher Cup\nUSL League Two (USL L2) side Flint City Bucks are the defending champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289716-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hank Steinbrecher Cup, Teams\nThe tournament featured the 2018 USASA National Amateur Cup winner Milwaukee Bavarian SC and the defending Steinbrecher Cup winner Flint City Bucks, rebranded from Michigan Bucks. Ordinarily the tournament would have featured the 2018 PDL champion Calgary Foothills FC and the 2018 National Professional Soccer League (NPSL) champion Miami FC 2, but Calgary was ineligible due to being based in Canada and Miami was ineligible due to being a professional club. In their place, PDL runner-up Reading United AC and NPSL runner-up FC Motown were invited. Chicago FC United 2018 PDL National Semi-Finalist took the USL League 2 spot after Reading elected not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289717-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Harborough District Council election\nThe 2019 Harborough District Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of the Harborough District Council in England. It was held on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289718-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hardee's Pro Classic\nThe 2019 Hardee's Pro Classic was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the nineteenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Dothan, Alabama, United States between 15 and 21 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289718-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hardee's Pro Classic, 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-00289719-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hardee's Pro Classic \u2013 Doubles\nAlexa Guarachi and Erin Routliffe were the defending champions, but lost in the first round to Beatrice Gumulya and Abbie Myers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289719-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hardee's Pro Classic \u2013 Doubles\nUsue Maitane Arconada and Caroline Dolehide won the title, defeating Destanee Aiava and Astra Sharma in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20135), 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289720-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hardee's Pro Classic \u2013 Singles\nTaylor Townsend was the defending champion, but lost in the first round to Sesil Karatantcheva.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289720-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hardee's Pro Classic \u2013 Singles\nKrist\u00edna Ku\u010dov\u00e1 won the title, defeating Lauren Davis in the final, 3\u20136, 7\u20136(11\u20139), 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289721-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Harlan County coal miners protest\nThe 2019 Harlan County coal miners protest was a labor protest held by dozens of coal miners in Harlan County, Kentucky. The causes of the protest stemmed from the 2019 bankruptcy of Blackjewel Coal, a coal mining company that operated a mine in the county. Following the company's bankruptcy, former coal miners did not receive payment for several weeks of work, leading to many miners protesting by blocking a coal train on tracks in the county. The protest lasted from July 30 to September 28, with litigation continuing in bankruptcy courts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289721-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Harlan County coal miners protest, Background\nOn July 1, 2019, Blackjewel Coal filed for bankruptcy, leading to the abrupt firing of about 1,700 miners in Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, and Wyoming. Following this, many of the affected workers reported bounced paychecks and being unable to access their 401(k) accounts. Shortly thereafter, a miner in Wyoming filed a class-action lawsuit against Blackjewel, arguing that they violated workers rights under the WARN Act.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289721-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Harlan County coal miners protest, Railroad occupation\nOn July 29, Blackjewel was scheduled to move $1 million worth of coal out of a mine in Harlan County, Kentucky via a CSX Railroad track. Before the train left the county, five former miners occupied a section of the track, not allowing the train to proceed. Following this, security guards for the company called police, and afterwards the protestors moved to another location on the tracks, still blocking the train's movements. Additional people joined the protest, with over 100 people occupying the tracks during the protest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289721-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Harlan County coal miners protest, Railroad occupation\nSeveral days after the occupation began, protestors agreed to allow several unloaded cars pass, but continued to hold the loaded coal train stationary. On August 1, former Kentucky Attorney General Greg Stumbo visited the protestors, criticizing Blackjewel and the Kentucky Labor Department for failing to hold the company accountable for workers rights violations. The next day, 2020 Democratic Party Presidential candidate Bernie Sanders voiced his support for the protestors and sent pizzas to the protestors. Kentucky Governor Matt Bevin and Senate candidate Amy McGrath also voiced their support for the protestors, along with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289721-0002-0002", "contents": "2019 Harlan County coal miners protest, Railroad occupation\nIn August, the Richard and Leslie Gilliam Foundation donated over $1 million to fired miners in Harlan County and other areas that were affected. On September 28, following almost 2 months of occupying the railroad, the mayor of Cumberland, Kentucky, where many of the protestors lived, announced an end to the protest. Many of the fired miners had found employment elsewhere, and settlement talks were underway with the company and fired workers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289721-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Harlan County coal miners protest, Aftermath\nIn October, as part of the company's bankruptcy settlement, $5.47 million was awarded to fired miners, including those in Harlan County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289721-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Harlan County coal miners protest, Aftermath\nA similar train blockade occurred in January 2020 in Pike County, Kentucky. On January 13, miners for Quest Energy occupied a railroad track near Kemper, Kentucky and blocked a 120-car coal train from leaving, claiming that the company failed to pay them wages for three weeks. The protest ended on January 15, with the protesting miners receiving pay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289722-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Harlow District Council election\nThe 2019 Harlow District Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Harlow District Council in Essex. This was on the same day as other local elections. The council remained under Labour Party control, with no seats changing hands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289722-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Harlow District Council election\nAfter the election, the composition of the council remained at:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289723-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Harpers Ferry train derailment\nA CSX freight train crossing the Winchester and Potomac Railroad bridge near Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, derailed on Saturday December 21, 2019 morning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289724-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hart District Council election\nThe 2019 Hart District Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Hart District Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289724-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hart District Council election, Results\nThe election saw the Conservatives lose five seats, two each to Community Campaign Hart and the Liberal Democrats, and one an Independent Candidate. The council remained under no overall control, with the Conservative party and Community Campaign the joint largest parties with eleven seats each overall. Subsequently, an administration was formed by Community Campaign Hart and the Liberal Democrats, with Liberal Democrat Councillor David Neighbour becoming leader of the council, and Community Campaign Hart Councillor James Radley becoming deputy leader of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289725-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hartford Athletic season\nThe 2019 Hartford Athletic season is the club's inaugural season and their first in the USL Championship, the second tier of American soccer. The season covers the period from the founding of the club to the start of the 2020 USL Championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289725-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hartford Athletic season, Non-competitive, Preseason\nAlthough a preseason schedule was not officially announced ahead of time, Hartford played four preseason matches ahead of the club's inaugural season. After opening preseason in Farmington, Connecticut and playing a behind closed doors friendly against New York Red Bulls II, Hartford announced three matches to be played while the club trained in Melbourne, Florida. Hartford played matches against USL League One club Orlando City B, National Premier Soccer League club Miami FC, and collegiate program Eastern Florida State College.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289725-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hartford Athletic season, Competitive, USL Championship, Match results\nThe league announced home openers for every club on December 14, 2018. The inaugural home match in Hartford Athletic history was scheduled for May 4, with the club facing Charlotte Independence; although it was initially anticipated that the game would be played at Dillon Stadium, it and six other home matches were later moved to Rentschler Field due to construction delays. Hartford were to take part in the home openers for four other clubs, facing Atlanta United 2 on March 9, Louisville City on March 23, Indy Eleven on March 30, and Pittsburgh Riverhounds SC on April 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 75], "content_span": [76, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289725-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hartford Athletic season, Competitive, USL Championship, Match results\nHartford Athletic's full schedule was released on December 19. The club's inaugural season will consist of 34 league matches, including home and away games against every Eastern Conference opponent. Hartford will be one of six new teams in the Eastern Conference: Birmingham Legion, Loudoun United, and Memphis 901 are also joining as expansion clubs, while Saint Louis FC and Swope Park Rangers move over from the Western Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 75], "content_span": [76, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289725-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Hartford Athletic season, Competitive, U.S. Open Cup\nAs a member of the USL Championship, Hartford Athletic will enter the tournament in the Second Round, to be played May 14\u201315, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289726-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hartlepool Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Hartlepool Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Hartlepool Borough Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289727-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Harvard Crimson football team\nThe 2019 Harvard Crimson football team represented Harvard University during the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season as a member of the Ivy League. They were led by 26th-year head coach Tim Murphy and played their home games at Harvard Stadium. They finished the season 4\u20136 overall and 2\u20135 in Ivy League play to tie for sixth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289727-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Harvard Crimson football team, Previous season\nThe Crimson finished the 2018 season 6\u20134, 4\u20133 in Ivy League play to finish in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289727-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Harvard Crimson football team, Preseason, Preseason media poll\nThe Ivy League released their preseason media poll on August 8, 2019. The Crimson were picked to finish in fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289728-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Harvey Norman NSW Women's Premiership\nThe 2019 Harvey Norman NSW Women's Premiership will be the fifteenth season NSW Women's Premiership, the top tier women's rugby league competition administered by the New South Wales Rugby League. The competition acts as a second-tier league to the NRL Women's Premiership teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289728-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Harvey Norman NSW Women's Premiership, Teams\nIn 2019, 11 clubs will field teams in the NSW Women's Premiership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289729-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Haryana Legislative Assembly election\nLegislative Assembly election was held in Haryana on 21 October 2019 to elect 90 members of the Haryana Legislative Assembly. The final voter turnout was recorded at 68.20%. The results were announced on 24 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289729-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Haryana Legislative Assembly election\nThe Bharatiya Janata Party emerged as the single largest party and formed the government in a post-poll alliance with the Jannayak Janta Party and seven Independent MLAs. BJP's Manohar Lal Khattar and JJP President Dushyant Chautala were sworn in as Chief Minister and Deputy Chief Minister respectively of BJP-JJP alliance government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289729-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Haryana Legislative Assembly election\nIn the previous election in 2014 , the Bharatiya Janata Party won a majority and ended the 10-year rule of the Congress government in the state and Manohar Lal Khattar became the Chief Minister .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289729-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Haryana Legislative Assembly election, Elections, Voter turnout\nAfter the final count the turnout was updated to 68.20%. Fatehabad 73.7%, Kaithal 73.3%, Jagadhari 73%, and Hathin 72.5% had highest turnout. Gurugram 51.2%, Badkhal 51.3%, and Tigaon 53.2% had lowest turnout of just above 50%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 68], "content_span": [69, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289729-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Haryana Legislative Assembly election, Detailed Results, Democratic Standards, Performance of the political parties\nDuring the election campaign, BJP had given the slogan of \"75+\" i.e. BJP will win more than 75 seats out of 90 seats in Haryana. But, BJP couldn't fulfill its target and it even lost the majority in the Legislative Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 120], "content_span": [121, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289729-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Haryana Legislative Assembly election, Detailed Results, Democratic Standards, Performance of the political parties\nThe INC emerged as the big gainer in the election. INC fought the election under the leadership of Selja Kumari and former chief minister Bhupinder Singh Hooda. Though INC couldn't reach the majority mark of 46 seats, it gained 15 seats in comparison to the previous election and won 30 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 120], "content_span": [121, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289729-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Haryana Legislative Assembly election, Detailed Results, Democratic Standards, Barrier to entry and politics of rich\n83.3% (75 out of 90) are crorepati, that is, they own assets worth at least INR10,000,000. Average worth of 2019 assembly members is INR18.29 crore compare to INR12.97 crore in 2014. 93.5% of INC (29 of 31), 92.5% of BJP (37 of 40), and 70% of JJP (7 of 10) are crorepati. With INR25.26 crore per MLA, the average wealth of JJP is highest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 121], "content_span": [122, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289729-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Haryana Legislative Assembly election, Detailed Results, Democratic Standards, Criminality\nAssociation for Democratic Reforms (ADR), a think tank which does poll analysis for accountability and transparency in democracy, found that the 13.3% (12 of 90) elected MLAs face criminal cases, highest being 4 from INC, followed by 2 from BJP, 1 from JJP, and rest being independent or single MLA parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 95], "content_span": [96, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289729-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Haryana Legislative Assembly election, Detailed Results, Democratic Standards, Dynastism and nepotism\nDynasts had field day in the election results, several dynasts across various parties won elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 106], "content_span": [107, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289729-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Haryana Legislative Assembly election, Detailed Results, Democratic Standards, Dynastism and nepotism\nHighest number of dynasts won from INC, namely Bhupinder Singh Hooda from Ranbir Singh Hooda, Kiran Choudhry from Bansi Lal clan, Kuldeep Bishnoi from Bhajan Lal clan, Chiranjeev Rao from Ajay Singh Yadav clan, Varun Chaudhary from Phool Chand Mullana; as well as Rao Dan Singh related to Rao Narbir Singh Aftab Ahmed of Khursheed Ahmed clan, Amit Sihag Chautala is another dynast who became INC MLA from Dabwali, he is grandson of Devi Lal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 106], "content_span": [107, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289729-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Haryana Legislative Assembly election, Detailed Results, Democratic Standards, Dynastism and nepotism\nDynasts who won from BJP are Dura Ram of Bhajan Lal clan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 106], "content_span": [107, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289729-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Haryana Legislative Assembly election, Detailed Results, Democratic Standards, Dynastism and nepotism\nHighest number of winning dynasts were from the Devi Lal's Chautala clan which had fielded 6 family members from different parties and 5 of them won including Dushyant Chautala and his mother Naina Singh Chautala from JJP, Abhay Singh Chautala from INLD, and INC rebel Ranjit Singh Chautala as independent candidate; as well as Amit Sihag Chautala from Dabwali as INC MLA. This was followed by 2 from Bhajan Lal clan, namely Kuldeep Bishnoi and Dura Ram. Lone HLP party MLA Gopal Kanda is also from political family as his father too had contested General Elections in the past on Jan Sangh ticket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 106], "content_span": [107, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289729-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Haryana Legislative Assembly election, Detailed Results, Democratic Standards, Lack of female empowerment\nOnly 9 (10% of total legislature membership) female candidate were elected, 4 from Congress, 3 from BJP, 1 from JJP and 1 independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 110], "content_span": [111, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289729-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Haryana Legislative Assembly election, Detailed Results, Democratic Standards, Lack of educational and innovation standards of candidates\nAccording to ADR report, only 69% (62 of 90) have at least a bachelor's degree, i.e. 31% lack even the basic degree,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 142], "content_span": [143, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289730-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hastings Deering Colts\nThe 2019 Hastings Deering Colts season was the 2nd season of the under-20 competition, sponsored by Hastings Deering and run by the Queensland Rugby League. The draw and structure of the competition mirrored that of its senior counterpart, the Queensland Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289730-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hastings Deering Colts\nThe Sunshine Coast Falcons won their first premiership, defeating the Wynnum Manly Seagulls in the Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289730-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hastings Deering Colts, Teams\nThe Victoria Thunderbolts moved to the New South Wales-run Jersey Flegg Cup in 2019, leaving the competition with fourteen sides, thirteen based in Queensland and one in northern New South Wales. 13 Queensland Cup teams field a side in the competition, with each team affiliated with an NRL club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289730-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hastings Deering Colts, Player statistics\nThe following statistics are correct as of the conclusion of Round 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289731-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Havant Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Havant Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Havant Borough Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289731-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Havant Borough Council election, Results\nThe Conservatives successfully defended all 11 seats up for election this year, with the Council composition remaining the same. However, the vote share for both the Conservatives and Labour fell, whilst the UKIP, Liberal Democrats, and Green vote share rose.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289731-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Havant Borough Council election, Results\nThe table below only tallies the votes of the highest polling candidate for each party within each ward. This is known as the top candidate method and is often used for multi-member plurality elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289732-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hawaii Bowl\nThe 2019 Hawaii Bowl was a college football bowl game played on December 24, 2019, with kickoff at 8:00\u00a0p.m. EST (3:00\u00a0p.m. local HST) on ESPN. It was the 18th edition of the Hawaii Bowl, and was one of the 2019\u201320 bowl games concluding the 2019 FBS football season. Sponsored by the SoFi personal finance company, the game was officially known as the SoFi Hawaii Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289732-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hawaii Bowl, Teams\nThe game was played between Hawaii of the Mountain West Conference, and BYU, an FBS independent. This was the 32nd meeting in this rivalry that dates back to 1930, and first in the postseason. Both teams were previously members of the Western Athletic Conference; BYU from 1962 to 1998, and Hawaii from 1979 to 2011. BYU led the rivalry series, 23\u20138.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289732-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hawaii Bowl, Teams, Hawaii Rainbow Warriors\nHawaii entered the bowl with a 9\u20135 record (5\u20133 in conference). The Rainbow Warriors finished atop the West Division of the Mountain West Conference, with the same conference win-loss record as San Diego State, whom they defeated during the regular season. Hawaii accepted their bowl invitation following their loss to Boise State in the Mountain West Conference Football Championship Game. This was their third Hawaii Bowl appearance under head coach Nick Rolovich, having won in 2016 and lost in 2018. Overall, this was the 13th bowl game for Hawaii (ninth Hawaii Bowl), with a prior record of 6\u20136 (4\u20134 in prior Hawaii Bowls).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 48], "content_span": [49, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289732-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hawaii Bowl, Teams, BYU Cougars\nBYU entered the bowl with a 7\u20135 record, having started the season 2\u20134, then winning five consecutive games, and losing to San Diego State in their regular season finale. Led by head coach Kalani Sitake, the Cougars accepted an invitation to the Hawaii Bowl on November 16. This was BYU's first Hawaii Bowl appearance, and their second postseason game in Honolulu; they played in the 1992 Aloha Bowl, where they fell to Kansas by three points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289733-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hawaii Rainbow Warriors football team\nThe 2019 Hawaii Rainbow Warriors football team represented the University of Hawaii at Manoa in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Rainbow Warriors played their home games at Aloha Stadium in Honolulu. They competed in the West Division of the Mountain West Conference and were led by fourth-year head coach Nick Rolovich, in what was his final season before his abrupt resignation in January 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289733-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hawaii Rainbow Warriors football team\nThe Rainbow Warriors had their most successful season since 2010. They finished 10\u20135, 5\u20133 to finish tied for first in the West Division, claiming the division championship with a 14\u201311 win over San Diego State. They advanced to the Mountain West Championship, where they lost to Boise State, but won the Hawaii Bowl over archrival BYU, 38\u201334.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289733-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hawaii Rainbow Warriors football team\nThis was Hawaii\u2019s first ten-win season since 2010, and just the seventh in program history. Nick Rolovich was also named Mountain West Coach of the Year, the fourth UH coach to receive that honor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289733-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hawaii Rainbow Warriors football team, Previous season\nThe Rainbow Warriors finished the 2018 season 8\u20136, 5\u20133 in Mountain West play to finish in a tie for second place in the West Division. They were invited to the Hawaii Bowl where they lost to Louisiana Tech. This was the first winning season for the Rainbow Warriors since 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289733-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Hawaii Rainbow Warriors football team, Preseason, Mountain West media days\nThe Mountain West media days were held from July 23\u201324, 2019 at Green Valley Ranch in Henderson, NV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 79], "content_span": [80, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289733-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Hawaii Rainbow Warriors football team, Preseason, Mountain West media days, Media poll\nThe preseason poll was released at the Mountain West media days on July 23, 2019. The Warriors were predicted to finish in fourth place in the MW West Division with one first place vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 91], "content_span": [92, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289733-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Hawaii Rainbow Warriors football team, Preseason, Mountain West media days, Preseason All-Mountain West Team\nThe Warriors had one player selected to the preseason All\u2212Mountain West Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 113], "content_span": [114, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289734-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hawthorn Football Club season\nThe 2019 Hawthorn Football Club season was the club's 95th season in the Australian Football League and 118th overall, the 20th season playing home games at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, the 19th season playing home games at the University of Tasmania Stadium, the 15th season under head coach Alastair Clarkson, and the 1st season with Ben Stratton as club captain. A 19-point loss to Sydney in round 14 meant that Hawthorn could not match their 15\u20137 record from 2018. A 70-point win over Gold Coast meant that for a tenth-consecutive season Hawthorn won at least 10 games. Hawthorn finished the season in ninth-place with a 11\u201311 record, thus missing the finals for the second time in the last three seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289734-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hawthorn Football Club season, Club summary\nThe 2019 AFL season was the 123rd season of the VFL/AFL competition since its inception in 1897; having entered the competition in 1925, it was be the 95th season contested by the Hawthorn Football Club. Tasmania and iiNet continued as the club's two major sponsors, as they have done since 2006 and 2013 respectively, while Adidas continued to manufacture the club's on-and-off field apparel, as they have done since 2013. Hawthorn continued its alignment with the Box Hill Hawks Football Club in the Victorian Football League, allowing Hawthorn-listed players to play with the Box Hill Hawks when not selected in AFL matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289734-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hawthorn Football Club season, Senior personnel\nOn 30 August 2018, it was announced that assistant coach Brett Ratten would be joining St Kilda as an assistant coach following the conclusion of the 2018 season. On 4 October 2018, it was announced that Chris Newman would be elevated from coach of Victorian Football League affiliate Box Hill Hawks to an assistant coach. Max Bailey was appointed as coach of Box Hill. On 6 October 2018, It was announced that coach Alastair Clarkson had signed a 3-year contract extension, keeping Clarkson at the club until the end of the 2022 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289734-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Hawthorn Football Club season, Senior personnel\nOn 8 October 2018, it was confirmed that Director of High Performance Andrew Russell would be departing the club after fourteen seasons, having accepted a position at Carlton. On 19 October 2018, it was announced that former player and 2008 AFL premiership captain Sam Mitchell would return to the club as an assistant coach, having been an assistant coach at West Coast and helping the club win the 2018 AFL Grand Final. On 3 November 2018, Torin Baker was announced as the new development coach, filling the role previously held by Max Bailey. On 27 November 2018, It was announced that Jarryd Roughead would not continue on as captain in 2019. Ben Stratton would be named as Roughead's successor on 28 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 772]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289735-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hazfi Cup Final\nThe 2019 Hazfi Cup Final was the 32nd final since 1975. The match was held between Persepolis and Damash in Foolad Arena, Ahvaz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289735-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hazfi Cup Final\nIn this match Persepolis won 1\u20130 against Damash and won the championship of this competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289736-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Heartland Championship\nThe 2019 Heartland Championship, known as the 2019 Mitre 10 Heartland Championship for sponsorship reasons, was the 14th edition of the Heartland Championship, a rugby union competition involving the twelve amateur rugby unions in New Zealand. The tournament began with a round-robin stage in which the twelve teams played eight games each, from which 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, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289736-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 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 featured the higher seed playing at home against the lower seed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289736-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Heartland Championship, Teams\nThe 2019 Heartland Championship was contested by the following teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289736-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289736-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Heartland Championship, Standings\nIn the caseof 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, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289736-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Heartland Championship, Regular season\nThe schedule of fixtures was confirmed on 25 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289736-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Heartland Championship, Ranfurly Shield, Pre-season challenges\nFor the 2019 preseason Ranfurly Shield holders Otago saw challenges from the reigning 2018 Heartland Championship champions Thames Valley as well as neighbours North Otago.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289737-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Heat Latin Music Awards\nThe 2019 Heat Latin Music Awards was held on May 13, 2019 at Hard Rock Hotel and Casino, Punta Cana, and broadcast live through HTV. The ceremony was hosted by Ana\u00eds Castro and Mariela Encarnaci\u00f3n. The awards celebrated the year's biggest Latin music acts. J Balvin led the nominations with five, followed by Ozuna and Sebasti\u00e1n Yatra, with four each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289738-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hebei China Fortune F.C. season\nThe 2019 Hebei China Fortune F.C. season will be Hebei China Fortune's 4th consecutive season in the Chinese Super League ever since it started back in the 2004 season and 4th consecutive season in the top flight of Chinese football. This season Hebei China Fortune participates in the Chinese Super League and Chinese FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289739-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Heilbronner Neckarcup\nThe 2019 Heilbronner Neckarcup was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the sixth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Heilbronn, Germany between 13 and 19 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289739-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Heilbronner Neckarcup, 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-00289739-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Heilbronner Neckarcup, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289740-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Heilbronner Neckarcup \u2013 Doubles\nRameez Junaid and David Pel were the defending champions but only Junaid chose to defend his title, partnering Jozef Koval\u00edk. Junaid lost in the quarterfinals to Andre Begemann and Fabrice Martin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289740-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Heilbronner Neckarcup \u2013 Doubles\nKevin Krawietz and Andreas Mies won the title after defeating Begemann and Martin 6\u20132, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289740-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Heilbronner Neckarcup \u2013 Doubles\nJust three weeks later, Krawietz and Mies would defeat Martin and J\u00e9r\u00e9my Chardy in the final of the French Open to win their first Grand Slam title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289741-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Heilbronner Neckarcup \u2013 Singles\nRudolf Molleker was the defending champion but lost in the quarterfinals to Dennis Novak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289741-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Heilbronner Neckarcup \u2013 Singles\nFilip Krajinovi\u0107 won the title after defeating Arthur De Greef 6\u20133, 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289742-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hellenic Premier League\nThe 2019 Hellenic Premier League (HPL) was a Twenty20 International (T20I) cricket tournament held in Gouvia, Corfu, Greece between 14 and 19 October 2019. The participating teams were the hosts Greece, along with Bulgaria, Serbia and three Greek club sides (Athens Pak, Corfu Pak and Forge Athens). All of the national teams played their first matches with T20I status during the tournament, following the decision of the International Cricket Council (ICC) to grant full Twenty20 International status to all its members from 1 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289742-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hellenic Premier League\nThe international teams competed in one group and the three club sides competed in a second group. The top two sides in the international group played a stand-alone final, that was not part of the HPL, to determine the winner of the international event; Bulgaria defeated Greece in the final by 18 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289742-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hellenic Premier League\nThe group stage was followed by semi-finals and a final for the overall HPL event. Greece defeated Corfu Pak in the first of the semi-finals. In the second semi-final, Forge Athens defeated Bulgaria to join Greece in the final. Greece won the final by 81 runs. Bulgaria won the third-place play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289743-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Henan Jianye F.C. season\nThe 2019 Henan Jianye F.C. season will be Henan Jianye's sixth consecutive season in the Chinese Super League since it started in the 2004 season, and its sixth consecutive season in the top flight of Chinese football. This season Henan Jianye participates in the Chinese Super League and Chinese FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289744-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Henderson Tennis Open\nThe 2019 Henderson Tennis Open was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the eleventh edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Las Vegas, United States between 4 and 10 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289744-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Henderson Tennis 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-00289744-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Henderson Tennis Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received a special exempt into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289745-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Henderson Tennis Open \u2013 Doubles\nAsia Muhammad and Maria Sanchez were the defending champions, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289745-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Henderson Tennis Open \u2013 Doubles\nOlga Govortsova and Mandy Minella won the title, defeating Sophie Chang and Alexandra Mueller in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289746-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Henderson Tennis Open \u2013 Singles\nBelinda Bencic was the defending champion, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289746-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Henderson Tennis Open \u2013 Singles\nMayo Hibi won the title, defeating Anhelina Kalinina in the final, 6\u20132, 5\u20137, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289747-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Henrico County Commonwealth's Attorney election\nThe 2019 Henrico County Commonwealth's Attorney election was held on November 5, 2019, to elect the Commonwealth's Attorney of Henrico County, Virginia, concurrently with elections to the Senate of Virginia and Virginia House of Delegates. Incumbent Democratic Commonwealth's Attorney Shannon Taylor won reelection to a second term against Republican nominee Owen Conway, a former worker for the office, by a wide margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289747-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Henrico County Commonwealth's Attorney election, Background and election\nAttorney Shannon Taylor had been serving as the Commonwealth's Attorney since 2012. After her win in the 2011 election, she fired several lawyers in a push for a diverse and different office. One of those was Owen Conway, whom Taylor face opposition with.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 77], "content_span": [78, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289747-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Henrico County Commonwealth's Attorney election, Background and election\nDuring the election, Taylor was accused of bribery from John J. Trak, a convicted felon, during the 2015 election, with Taylor confirming the donation and Conway saying that the donation was \"unethical and improper.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 77], "content_span": [78, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289747-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Henrico County Commonwealth's Attorney election, Results\nTaylor defeated Conway with a landslide victory, earning 61% of the total vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 61], "content_span": [62, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289748-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Herculis\nThe 2019 Herculis was the 33rd edition of the annual outdoor track and field meeting in Monaco. Held from 11\u201312 July at Stade Louis II, it was the ninth leg of the 2019 IAAF Diamond League \u2013 the highest level international track and field circuit. 15 events were contested with 13 of them being point-scoring Diamond League disciplines. Most events were held on 12 July, except for the women's triple jump, which was held on 11 July at Port Hercules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289748-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Herculis\nIn recognition of the recently deceased professional athlete Gabe Grunewald, who died a month earlier (11 June) after multiple battles with cancer and attempts to race through the disease, the meet organisers named the women's mile race the \"Brave Like Gabe Mile\". An elite field including world record holder in the 5\u00a0km, Sifan Hassan, and Diamond League leader in the 1500\u00a0m, Gudaf Tsegay, were invited.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289748-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Herculis\nHassan described the first 800\u00a0m as \"a bit slow\", but was able to run the last 800\u00a0m four seconds faster than the first to break a 23-year-old world record in the women's mile with a time 4:12.33. Hassan was recorded completing the first 1500\u00a0m in 3:55.30, a world leading time and faster than her Dutch record of 3:55.93. Every competitor in the race set either a personal best or a seasonal best, and national records were set by Gabriela DeBues-Stafford (4:17.87), Rababe Arafi (4:18.42), and Winnie Nanyondo (4:18.65) for Canada, Morocco, and Uganda respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289748-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Herculis\nAlso in the women's events, Sydney McLaughlin won the 400\u00a0m hurdles in a world leading time of 53.32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289748-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Herculis\nOn the men's side, Nijel Amos ran the first sub-1:42:00 time since he became the third-fastest competitor in the 800\u00a0m ever at the 2012 Olympic final, with a Herculis meeting record and 2019 world-leading time of 1:41.89. Only five people, including Amos himself, had ever run faster than 1:41.89. Piotr Lisek set a second personal best and Polish record in the span of a week with a meeting record and world-leading mark of 6.02\u00a0m in the pole vault, forcing European champion and world under-20 record holder Mondo Duplantis into second. Other highlights include Soufiane El Bakkali setting a world lead of 8:04.82 in the 3000\u00a0m steeplechase, and a meeting record in the triple jump by Christian Taylor with a leap of 17.82\u00a0m.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289748-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Herculis, Diamond League results\nAthletes competing in the Diamond League disciplines earned extra compensation and points which went towards qualifying for one of two Diamond League finals (either Z\u00fcrich or Brussels depending on the discipline). First place earned 8 points, with each step down in place earning one less point than the previous, until no points are awarded in 9th place or lower.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 37], "content_span": [38, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289749-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Herefordshire Council election\nThe 2019 Herefordshire Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect 52 of 53 members of Herefordshire Council in England. The election in Ross North ward was deferred until 6 June 2019 following the death of the UKIP candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289749-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Herefordshire Council election, Result\nThe election resulted in the Conservative Party losing its majority on the council for the first time since 2007, winning 13 seats. Independents made gains and became the largest group on the council after winning 18 seats, 9 seats short of a majority. The Liberal Democrats and Greens also made gains at the expense of the Conservatives, winning 7 seats each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289749-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Herefordshire Council election, Ward results, Ross North\nThe election in Ross North ward was deferred until 6 June 2019 following the death of the UKIP candidate, Gareth Williams. The Liberal Democrats won the postponed election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289750-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Heritage Classic\nThe 2019 NHL Heritage Classic (branded as the 2019 Tim Hortons NHL Heritage Classic for sponsorship reasons) was an outdoor regular season National Hockey League (NHL) game. The game, the fifth Heritage Classic, was held on October 26, 2019. The Winnipeg Jets defeated the Calgary Flames, 2\u20131, at Mosaic Stadium in Regina, Saskatchewan\u2014the home field of the Canadian Football League's Saskatchewan Roughriders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289750-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Heritage Classic, Background\nThis was the first NHL regular season outdoor game that was held in a neutral site territory that is not formally part of an NHL market, the first regular season game held in Regina, and the first regular season game held in Saskatchewan since 1994. Regina is located roughly half-way between Calgary and Winnipeg. The Jets were designated as the home team. This was also the second outdoor game for each team; the Flames and Jets respectively hosted the 2011 and 2016 Heritage Classic games at their cities' respective CFL stadiums.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289750-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Heritage Classic, Background\nTo accommodate the game, the CFL scheduled a three week road trip for the Riders near the end of the 2019 CFL season. Saskatchewan played its penultimate home game on October 5, followed by three road games while its stadium was converted to an outdoor hockey rink and back again. The Riders returned to Mosaic Stadium on November 2 for their final 2019 regular season game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289750-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Heritage Classic, Game summary\nBryan Little scored at 3:04 of overtime to give the Jets the 2\u20131 win. The Flames' Elias Lindholm opened the scoring on a power play at 14:47 of the second period. Winnipeg's Josh Morrissey then tied the game on a power play at 15:49 of the third period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289750-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Heritage Classic, Game summary\nAt 19:58 of the second period, the Jets' Adam Lowry was given a minor penalty for boarding the Flames' Oliver Kylington. The league would later give Lowry a two-game suspension as a repeat offender.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289750-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Heritage Classic, Entertainment\nThe Hunter Brothers sang the national anthem, The Sheepdogs performed during the first intermission, and Jess Moskaluke sang during the second intermission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289750-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Heritage Classic, Television\nThis aired as the late 10:00\u00a0p.m. EDT (8:00\u00a0p.m. local time) game on Hockey Night in Canada. In the U.S., NBCSN simulcast the HNIC feed; it was the second game of a rare Saturday night doubleheader on NBCSN that followed a 2019 Stanley Cup Finals rematch between the St. Louis Blues and the Boston Bruins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289750-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Heritage Classic, Festivities\nThe Western Hockey League's Regina Pats (who play at nearby Brandt Centre) hosted a \"Prairie Classic\" outdoor game against the Calgary Hitmen on October 27. Calgary won the game 5-4 in overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289751-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hertsmere Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Hertsmere Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of the Hertsmere Borough Council in England. It was held on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289752-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hi-Tec Oils Bathurst 6 Hour\nThe 2019 Hi-Tec Oils Bathurst 6 Hour was an endurance race for Group 3E Series Production Cars. The event, which was staged at the Mount Panorama Circuit, near Bathurst, in New South Wales, Australia, on 21 April 2019, was the fourth running of the Bathurst 6 Hour. The race was won by Beric Lynton and Tim Leahey, driving a BMW M3 F80 Competition. The race saw a new distance record established for the event, with 131 laps (813.903\u00a0km) completed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289753-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 High Peak Borough Council election\nThe 2019 High Peak Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect all 43 members of High Peak Borough Council in Derbyshire, England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289753-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 High Peak Borough Council election\nThe election resulted in the Labour Party taking control of the council from the Conservative Party after winning 22 of the 43 seats up for election. The Conservatives lost 7 of the seats they were defending and lost their majority on the council. The Liberal Democrats and Greens won 3 and 2 seats respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289754-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hinckley and Bosworth Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Hinckley and Bosworth Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Hinckley and Bosworth Borough Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections. The election resulted in the Liberal Democrats gaining control of the council from the Conservatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289755-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hlinka Gretzky Cup\nThe 2019 Hlinka Gretzky Cup was an under-18 international ice hockey tournament that was held in Pie\u0161\u0165any, Slovakia and B\u0159eclav, Czech Republic from 5 to 10 August 2019 at Alcaplast Arena in B\u0159eclav and Easton Arena in Pie\u0161\u0165any. Team Russia won the gold medal for the first time since 1995 with a 3\u20132 defeat against Canada in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289755-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hlinka Gretzky Cup, Final round, Semifinal playoff bracket\nThe semi-finals were decided on 7 August, 2019 after Group A and B completed three round-robin games each. The winner of Group A (Canada) played the runner-up of Group B (Sweden), while the winner of Group B (Russia) played the runner-up of Group A (Finland). The semifinals were held on 9 August 2019 and the gold medal and bronze medal games were held the following day on 10 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 63], "content_span": [64, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289755-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hlinka Gretzky Cup, Statistics, Top scorers\nList shows the top ten skaters sorted by points, then goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289755-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hlinka Gretzky Cup, Statistics, Top scorers\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2212 = Plus-minus; PIM = Penalties In MinutesSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289756-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hobart International\nThe 2019 Hobart International was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 26th edition of the Hobart International and was part of the WTA International tournaments of the 2019 WTA Tour. It took place at the Hobart International Tennis Centre in Hobart, Australia from 7 to the 12 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289756-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hobart International\nThe singles was won by unseeded American Sofia Kenin who took home her first WTA title after defeating Anna Karol\u00edna Schmiedlov\u00e1 from Slovakia in straight sets. In the doubles it was Taiwanese pair in Chan Hao-ching and Latisha Chan who won in three sets over their opponents in Kirsten Flipkens and Johanna Larsson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289756-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hobart International, Points and prize money, Prize money\n1 Points per the WTA. 2 Qualifiers prize money is also the Round of 32 prize money* per team", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 62], "content_span": [63, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289756-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hobart International, 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-00289756-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Hobart International, WTA doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289757-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hobart International \u2013 Doubles\nElise Mertens and Demi Schuurs were the defending champions, but Mertens chose not to participate and Schuurs chose to compete in Sydney instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289757-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hobart International \u2013 Doubles\nChan Hao-ching and Latisha Chan won the title, defeating Kirsten Flipkens and Johanna Larsson in the final, 6\u20133, 3\u20136, [10\u20136].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289758-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hobart International \u2013 Singles\nElise Mertens was the two-time defending champion but chose to compete in Sydney instead. Sofia Kenin won her first WTA Tour singles title without dropping a set. She defeated Anna Karol\u00edna Schmiedlov\u00e1 in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289759-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\nThe 2019 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was played between March 15 and March 23, 2019, at campus locations and at the TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts. Northeastern won their 3rd tournament and earned Hockey East's automatic bid into the 2019 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289759-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format\nIn a departure from the format of the last few years, just eight of the 11 teams will qualify for the 2019 Hockey East tournament. The top four teams in the league standings will host seeds five through eight on campus in the quarterfinals in the first round of the playoffs, while the remaining teams will be eliminated from championship contention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289759-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format\nThe four quarterfinal winners will be reseeded again as they advance to the TD Garden in Boston for the semifinals and Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289760-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hokkaido Bank Curling Classic\nThe 2019 Hokkaido Bank Curling Classic was held August 1\u20134, 2019 in Sapporo, Japan. It was the second event of the 2019\u201320 curling season. The total purse for the event was \u00a5 1,700,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289760-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hokkaido Bank Curling Classic\nIn the Men's event, Yuta Matsumura defeated Scott McDonald 7\u20132 in the final and Kirk Muyres beat Kim Soo-hyuk 7\u20133 in the Bronze Medal Game. In the Women's event, Jiang Yilun defeated Satsuki Fujisawa 7\u20132 in the final and Mei Jie beat Tracy Fleury 7\u20135 in the Bronze Medal Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289760-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hokkaido Bank Curling Classic, Men, Round Robin Results\nAll draw times are listed in Japan Standard Time (UTC+09:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289760-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hokkaido Bank Curling Classic, Women, Round Robin Results\nAll draw times are listed in Japan Standard Time (UTC+09:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289761-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hokkaido gubernatorial election\nA gubernatorial election was held on 7 April 2019 to elect the Governor of Hokkaido Prefecture.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289762-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Holiday Bowl\nThe 2019 Holiday Bowl was a college football bowl game played on December 27, 2019. Kickoff was at 8:07\u00a0p.m. EST (5:07\u00a0p.m. local PST). The game was aired on FS1. It was the 42nd edition of the Holiday Bowl, and was one of the 2019\u201320 bowl games concluding the 2019 FBS football season. This was the third season in which the Holiday Bowl was held at the SDCCU Stadium. The game was sponsored by San Diego County Credit Union and officially known as the San Diego County Credit Union Holiday Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289762-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Holiday Bowl\nThis game also marked the last Holiday Bowl with a conference tie-in with the Big Ten, as starting in 2020, the bowl will have a conference tie-in with the ACC. This is also the last game played at SDCCU Stadium as the 2020 edition was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic and due to the current site of the bowl is currently being demolished to make way for a new stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289762-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Holiday Bowl, Teams\nThe game featured the USC Trojans of the Pac-12 Conference and Iowa Hawkeyes of the Big Ten Conference. This was the 10th meeting between the two programs, with USC holding a 7\u20132 edge in previous meetings. This was Iowa's fourth Holiday Bowl, going 2\u20130\u20131 in previous appearances in 1986 (won against SDSU Aztecs 39\u201338), 1987 (won against Wyoming Cowboys 20\u201319) and 1991 (tied against BYU Cougars 13\u201313 \u2013 this was the last time a postseason game was tied in the NCAA). This was USC's third Holiday Bowl, going 1\u20131 in previous appearances in 2014 (won against Nebraska Cornhuskers 45\u201342) and 2015 (lost against Wisconsin Badgers 21\u201323). The teams had previously met in the 2003 Orange Bowl, where USC won by a score of 38\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289762-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Holiday Bowl, Teams, USC Trojans\nThe Trojans entered the game with an 8\u20134 record (7\u20132 in conference) and ranked 22nd in the AP Poll. The Trojans finished in second place in the Pac-12's South Division. USC was 2\u20133 against ranked teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289762-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Holiday Bowl, Teams, Iowa Hawkeyes\nThe Hawkeyes entered the game ranked 19th in the AP Poll (16th in the CFP poll), with a 9\u20133 record (6\u20133 in conference). The Hawkeyes finished in third place in the Big Ten's West Division. Iowa was 1\u20133 against ranked teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289763-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Holland Ladies Tour\nThe 2019 Boels Rental Ladies Tour also known as the 2019 Holland Ladies Tour is the 22nd edition of the Holland Ladies Tour, a women's cycle stage race held in the Netherlands. The tour was part of the 2019 women's road cycling calendar and was part of the UCI Women's World Tour. It ran from 3 to 8 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289763-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Holland Ladies Tour, Teams\nSixteen professional women's teams and one national team entered the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289764-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hollywood Casino 400\nThe 2019 Hollywood Casino 400 was a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race held on October 20, 2019, at Kansas Speedway in Kansas City, Kansas. Contested over 277 laps\u2014extended from 267 laps due to an overtime finish, on the 1.5\u00a0mi (2.4\u00a0km) intermediate speedway, it was the 32nd race of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season, sixth race of the Playoffs, and final race of the Round of 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289764-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hollywood Casino 400, Report, Background\nKansas Speedway is a 1.5-mile (2.4\u00a0km) tri-oval race track in Kansas City, Kansas. It was built in 2001 and it currently hosts two annual NASCAR race weekends. The Verizon IndyCar Series also raced at here until 2011. The speedway is owned and operated by the International Speedway Corporation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289764-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hollywood Casino 400, Practice, First practice\nBrad Keselowski was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 30.595 seconds and a speed of 176.499\u00a0mph (284.048\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289764-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hollywood Casino 400, Practice, Final practice\nDaniel Hemric was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 30.366 seconds and a speed of 177.830\u00a0mph (286.190\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289764-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Hollywood Casino 400, Qualifying\nDaniel Hemric scored the pole for the race with a time of 30.329 and a speed of 178.047\u00a0mph (286.539\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289764-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Hollywood Casino 400, Media, Television\nNBC Sports covered the race on the television side. Rick Allen, Jeff Burton, Steve Letarte and Dale Earnhardt Jr. had the call in the booth for the race. Dave Burns, Marty Snider and Kelli Stavast reported from pit lane during the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289764-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Hollywood Casino 400, Media, Radio\nMRN had the radio call for the race, which was simulcast on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio. Alex Hayden, Jeff Striegle and Rusty Wallace had the call of the race for MRN when the field raced thru the front straightaway. Dave Moody called the race for MRN from Turns 1 &2, and Mike Bagley called the race for MRN from turns 3 &4. Winston Kelley, Steve Post, Kim Coon, and Dillon Welch covered the action for MRN from pit lane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289765-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Holy Cross Crusaders football team\nThe 2019 Holy Cross Crusaders football team represents the College of the Holy Cross in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Crusaders, led by second-year head coach Bob Chesney, play their home games at Fitton Field as a member of the Patriot League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289765-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Holy Cross Crusaders football team, Previous season\nThe Crusaders finished the 2018 season 5\u20136, 4\u20132 in Patriot League play to finish in a tie for second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289765-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Holy Cross Crusaders football team, Preseason, Preseason coaches' poll\nThe Patriot League released their preseason coaches' poll on July 30, 2019 (voting was by conference head coaches and sports information directors). The Crusaders were picked to finish in second place, receiving 2 of 14 first-place votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289765-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Holy Cross Crusaders football team, Preseason, Preseason All-Patriot League team\nThe Crusaders had three players selected to the preseason All-Patriot League team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 85], "content_span": [86, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289765-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Holy Cross Crusaders football team, FCS Playoffs\nThe Crusaders received an automatic bid (due to winning their conference) for the postseason tournament, with a first-round pairing against Monmouth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 53], "content_span": [54, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289766-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Home United FC season\nThe 2019 season is Home United's 24th consecutive season in the top flight of Singapore football and in the Singapore Premier League. Along with the Singapore Premier League, the club will also compete in the Singapore Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289766-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Home United FC season, Team statistics, Appearances and goals\nNote 1: Ho Wai Loon scored an own goal in AFC Champions League qualifier against Persijia Jakarta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 66], "content_span": [67, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289767-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Honda Indy Grand Prix of Alabama\nThe 2019 Honda Indy Grand Prix of Alabama Presented by AmFirst was the 3rd round of the 2019 IndyCar season. The race was held on April 7, 2019, in Birmingham, Alabama. Takuma Sato won the race from the pole position scoring his fourth career IndyCar victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289767-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Honda Indy Grand Prix of Alabama, Results, Race\nNotes: Points 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, 52], "content_span": [53, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289768-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Honda Indy Toronto\nThe 2019 Honda Indy Toronto was an IndyCar Series motor race held on 14 July 2019 at the Exhibition Place in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It was the 11th race of the 2019 IndyCar Series season, and the 38th race at the event. It was won by Team Penske driver Simon Pagenaud who started from pole and led eighty of the eighty-five laps. Scott Dixon finished in second for Chip Ganassi Racing while Alexander Rossi came third for Andretti Autosport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289768-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Honda Indy Toronto, Background\nThe Honda Indy Toronto was confirmed as part of the IndyCar's 2019 series schedule on September 2018. It was the third of a four year deal that Honda Canada had contracted with the contract ending in 2020. Heading into the Toronto round, Team Penske driver Josef Newgarden lead the driver's championship with 402 points. His nearest rival and the last's round winner, Alexander Rossi from Andretti Autosport was seven points behind. Third was Simon Pagenaud from Team Penske a further 54 points behind with Scott Dixon and Will Power rounding out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289768-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Honda Indy Toronto, Results, Race\nNotes: Points 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, 38], "content_span": [39, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289769-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Honduran Cup\nThe 2019 Honduran Cup will be the 14th edition of the Honduran Cup and the fifth as Copa Presidente. The tournament was announced on 11 December 2018 and was scheduled to be played in the second semester of 2019, however, due to the tight schedule between league and international competitions, the tournament will be played on a later undisclosed time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289770-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Honduran Supercup\nThe 2019 Honduran Supercup was a match arranged by the Honduran Liga Nacional and the Honduran Cup which took place on 24 April 2019 between Platense F.C., winners of the 2018 Honduran Cup and C.D. Marath\u00f3n the winners (with best record) of the 2017\u201318 Liga Nacional. This was the second official edition of the Honduran Supercup and the 6th overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289770-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Honduran Supercup, Background\nThe game was announced on 13 April 2018. C.D. Marath\u00f3n qualified as winners (with best record) of the 2017\u201318 Honduran Liga Nacional. Meanwhile, Platense F.C. entered as winners of the 2018 Honduran Cup. Marath\u00f3n was seeking for revenge as they had lost the previous edition. Meanwhile, Platense qualified to their first Supercup since 1999. They were both looking for their first title. The match was rescheduled from January to April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289771-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Honduran protests\nThe 2019 protests in Honduras corresponded to a series of protests and riots that occurred in October, that called for the resignation of President Juan Orlando Hern\u00e1ndez; this as a direct consequence of the trial on drug trafficking charges against his brother Tony Hern\u00e1ndez, carried out in the United States. These protests first were against the privatisation of health and education then soon turned into an anti-government revolt that has killed dozens of people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289771-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Honduran protests, Background\nAfter the 2017 Honduran general election, widespread protests and dramatic demonstrations erupted nationwide leading to the 2017-2018 Honduran protests and the violence that ensued. 38 protesters were killed and thousands of demonstrators were detained. Many were injured during clashes at demonstrations in January 2019. Honduras has a stagnant economy and since president Juan Orlando Hernandez took power in the 2013 Honduran general election, the Growth Domestic Product or GDP growth has been slow and steadily. Protests took place in 2015 and 2013 and after the reforms was brought, many had enough.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289771-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Honduran protests, Protests\nIn the last week of April, Riot police and protesters have clashed in Tegucigalpa, the capital of Honduras, during a demonstration against education and health reforms. These demonstrations were met with tear gas as protesters threw stones and chanted slogans and cheered on songs against the president and his narco-style dictatorship. Many protesters threw firebombs as a result of the tear gas but the response was still tear gas. Buildings were then set on fire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289771-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Honduran protests, Protests\nOn May 30\u201331, healthcare workers and students threatened a nationwide strike and it went ahead, disrupting airline flights and health services from their routes and work. Mass demonstrations and violent protests rocked the capital Tegucigalpa and other cities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289771-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Honduran protests, Protests\nIn June\u2013July, the military forces were sent in to detain and quell the mass unrest from going ahead but it made it even worse. Water cannons was deployed on rock-throwing doctors and students in June while working people went on strike in July. At least 5 protesters were killed in clashes with the security forces in June\u2013July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289771-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Honduran protests, Protests\nOn August 7, mass demonstrations were held against the government led by mostly students. Tear gas and live bullets was used to disperse protesters while throwing stones and chanting slogans against president Juan Orlando Hernandez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289771-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Honduran protests, Protests\nOn August 18, A series of rioting took place between football teams leaving three dead in clashes. Groups of supporters came out in groups protesting and clapping during the intense clashes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289771-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Honduran protests, Protests\nOn Independence Day, anti-government and anti-presidential protests took place throughout the country against president Juan Orlando Hernandez. Brutal violence ignited and turned into rioting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289771-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Honduran protests, Protests\nIn October, long-lasting protests and fighting took place in protests. Bullets was fired to disperse protesters on 9 October but they came out on the 10th, chanting songs and cheering on the opposition leader yet police did not intervene. On 21\u201324 October, a series of riots took place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289772-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong Open (badminton)\nThe 2019 Hong Kong Open (officially known as the Yonex-Sunrise Hong Kong Open 2019 for sponsorship reasons) was a badminton tournament which took place at the Hong Kong Coliseum in Hong Kong from 12 to 17 November 2019 and had a total prize of $400,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289772-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong Open (badminton), Tournament\nThe 2019 Hong Kong Open was the twenty-fourth tournament of the 2019 BWF World Tour and also part of the Hong Kong Open championships, which has been held since 1982. This tournament was organized by Hong Kong Badminton Association and sanctioned by the BWF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289772-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong Open (badminton), Tournament, Venue\nThis international tournament was held at the Hong Kong Coliseum in Hong Kong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289772-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong Open (badminton), Tournament, Point distribution\nBelow is the point distribution table for each phase of the tournament based on the BWF points system for the BWF World Tour Super 500 event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289772-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong Open (badminton), Tournament, Prize money\nThe total prize money for this tournament was US$400,000. Distribution of prize money was in accordance with BWF regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289773-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong Sevens\nThe 2019 Hong Kong Sevens was a rugby sevens tournament that took place at the Hong Kong Stadium between the 5\u20137 April 2019. It was the 44th edition of the Hong Kong Sevens, and the seventh tournament of the 2018\u201319 World Rugby Sevens Series. Sixteen teams competed in the main tournament, while a further twelve competed in a qualifier tournament with the winner getting core team status for the 2019\u201320 World Rugby Sevens Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289773-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong Sevens\nAfter securing three wins from three in their \"pool of death\", Fiji became the first team to win five consecutive Hong Kong titles after they defeated France 21\u20137. The United States came in third after losing to Fiji in the semi final before dispatching Samoa (who lost to France) in the third place playoff by 12 points. In the Challenge Trophy, Scotland defeated Japan by two points with Gavin Lowe scoring the match winning try for Scotland. This meant that after seven rounds of the series, the United States margin was dropped to only seven points from second place Fiji with New Zealand a fellow five points behind after they finished sixth in Hong Kong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289773-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong Sevens\nThe World Series Qualifier tournament saw Ireland and Hong Kong make the final after they defeated Germany and Chile in the respective semi finals. In the final it was Ireland who got core status for the first time in the nation's history after they defeated Hong Kong 28\u20137 to be able to compete in all events as a core nation for the 2019\u201320 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289773-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong Sevens, Background\nThe 2019 Hong Kong Sevens is the seventh round of ten in the 2018\u201319 season and the 44th edition of the tournament since its inception in 1976. Heading into the round the United States was leading the series with 113 points from six rounds. This meant that they had a seven-point gap over second place New Zealand after finishing in fourth place in the previous round while New Zealand came in fifth. Behind them was Fiji and South Africa with both teams making the cup semis with South Africa taking out the title in Vancouver.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289773-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong Sevens, Background\nOutside of the top four spots, England was on 80 points with Australia sixth with 65. On 13 March, news about the future of the series was announced with the Hong Kong Sevens being one of six combined rounds in the men's and women's series starting from the 2019\u201320 season with the other tournaments being Dubai, Cape Town, New Zealand, Sydney and Paris.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289773-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong Sevens, Teams\nSixteen teams competed in the main tournament with the fifteen teams being core teams to the series. The sixteenth team in Portugal was invited by World Rugby to fill the remaining spot in the draw. A further twelve teams will compete in the World Series Qualifier tournament with the winner to replace the bottom ranked team after the end of the season. Ten teams will be returning from last year with only Russia and the Philippines not competing in the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289773-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 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. The main draw consists of sixteen teams with fifteen of them being core teams that compete in each series event, plus an invitational team (Portugal).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289773-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong Sevens, Format\nThese 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 Challenge Trophy bracket. The qualifying tournament features twelve teams from the six regional championships. These teams play in Pool E, F and G. The top two teams from each pool, plus the top two third-place teams, advanced to the knockout stage. The winner of the qualifying event books a spot as a core team for the following World Series season (2019\u201320).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289773-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong Sevens, Summary, Day 1\nThe opening day of the tournament saw the first eight games of the pool stage. The United States who were predicted to be the favourites for the tournament got off to a good start by defeating Spain 36\u20137 in the opening match of Pool D with Stephen Tomasin scoring a double. England survived a scare in their match with Wales after being behind by 14 points at the half before coming back with Dan Norton breaking the all-time leading try scorer record. England would go on to win the match 36\u201319.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289773-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong Sevens, Summary, Day 1\nThe New Zealand team paid tribute to the victims from the Christchurch massacre as they wore white instead of their traditional black as they knock off Australia 40\u201319. Fiji began their defence of the title as they defeated Kenya 22\u20135 in the other match of Pool C in what was a repeat of last year's final. The cup finalists from the previous round won their first games with France smashing Portugal 40\u20137 while South Africa was given an early scare in their 22\u20137 win over Japan. The other two games saw Samoa and Argentina record wins over their opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289773-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong Sevens, Summary, Day 2\nThe second day of the tournament saw the remaining sixteen matches being played in the groups. The main action from the second day was in Pool D with the United States losing to Wales in the second match of the day despite a hat-trick from Carlin Isles. The United States would qualify through to the knockout stage after Spain defeated Wales by sixteen points to make it through by point differential. England was the second team that qualified as they defeated Spain 54\u20135 before knocking off the leaders in the final match of the pool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289773-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong Sevens, Summary, Day 2\nFiji kept their defence alive after topping Pool C following a win over New Zealand in what was described as the \"group of death\". Earlier they defeated Australia 31\u201312 to eliminate the Australians from title contention. New Zealand finished in second place after they dispatch Kenya 36\u20130 to qualify through to the cup quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289773-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong Sevens, Summary, Day 2\nFrance finished top of Pool B after they came from seven points down in the match against Argentina to record a 26\u201314 which featured four different try scorers. Argentina would join them in the quarters after getting past Portugal in what was a tough match for Argentina. This was due to them being down by 14 points early in the second half before recovering to a 26\u201321 win with a Luciano Gonzalez try with only two minutes left on the clock. South Africa also remained perfect in the quest for their first Hong Kong title after they finished top of Pool A with a 21\u20137 over fellow qualifiers Samoa. For Scotland and Japan they were relegated to the challenge trophy after losing their second matches earlier in the pool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289773-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong Sevens, Summary, Day 3\nThe third day of competition saw the tournament head to the knockout phase of the competition. The quarter finals saw an upset in the final quarter final match with France defeating New Zealand for the first time at the event. Manoel Dall'igna from the French team responded, \"we played like a team, played very well together,\" in the 14\u201312 victory. Fiji received a massive shock in their quarter final match with the team going down 12\u20130 early in the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289773-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong Sevens, Summary, Day 3\nTwo tries from Paula Dranisinukula brought Fiji back into the match as they levelled with their opponents at the half. The second half saw the Fijians taking the lead and ending up winners by five points. South Africa attempt to win their first Hong Kong Sevens ended with a loss against the United States while Samoa defeated England 14\u201312 after Dan Bibby had to be carried off the field in the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289773-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong Sevens, Summary, Day 3\nIn the semi finals, Fiji defeated the Americans by nine points in the first semi final to book a spot in their fifth consecutive Hong Kong final. Sevuloni Mocenacagi opened the scoring for Fiji in the second minute of play before Carlin Isles scored his first of two tries for the game to level the match. The Fijians scored tries either side of the half to give them the victory and a spot in the cup final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289773-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong Sevens, Summary, Day 3\nTheir opponent in the final was France who made it to their second consecutive cup final for the season after dispatching Samoa in the other semi. The game which saw Samoa having to catch up after the French got the lead in the first minute from a Gabin Villi\u00e8re try. With the match see-sawing towards a result, a controversial try from Aurelien Callandret sealed the win for France despite replays showing the foot touching the line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289773-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong Sevens, Summary, Day 3\nVilimoni Botitu opened the scoring for Fiji with a try in the fourth minute to give Fiji the early lead in the final against France. Fiji extended their lead at the end of the first half with Aminiasi Tuimaba scoring the first of two tries in the match to give Fiji a fourteen-point lead at the break. A penalty try at the start of the second half gave France some hope. But Tuimaba got his second try of the match to give Fiji the win. This win saw Fiji became the first team to win five consecutive Hong Kong titles. In the third place play-off, the United States defeated Samoa 22\u201310 as they had four different try scorers in the twelve point victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289773-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong Sevens, Summary, Day 3\nIn the World Series Qualifier, Ireland and Hong Kong met in the qualifier final to see who would qualify through to the World Series. This was after they had defeated Germany and Chile earlier in the day. Harry McNulty scored the first try in the third minute of play to give Ireland the lead. This was followed by tries from Greg O'Shea and Jordan Conroy at either end of the half time to give Ireland a 21-point advantage. From there they wouldn't lose the lead despite Hong Kong getting a try back to give some sniff of a victory and for Ireland they received core status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289773-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong Sevens, Main draw, Players, Dream team\nThe following seven players were selected to the tournament dream team at the conclusion of the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 53], "content_span": [54, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289774-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong Women's Sevens\nThe 2019 Hong Kong Women's Sevens acts as a qualifier for the 2019\u201320 World Rugby Women's Sevens Series. The tournament was played on 4 April 2019 with pool stage matches played at So Kon Po Recreation Ground with knock-out stage matches played at the Hong Kong Stadium in Hong Kong alongside the 2019 Hong Kong Sevens for men.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289774-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong Women's Sevens, Continental qualifying\nTeams will qualify for the World Series Qualifier tournament based on continental championships. The top teams from each continent that are not already core teams will qualify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289774-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong Women's Sevens, Format\n12 teams, split into three groups of four. The group winners, runners up and the two best third ranked teams will enter the knockout stage. The overall winner will gain a spot on the 2019\u201320 World Rugby Women's Sevens Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289775-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong ePrix\nThe 2019 Hong Kong ePrix (formally the 2019 HKT Hong Kong E-Prix) was a Formula E electric motor race held at the Hong Kong Central Harbourfront Circuit in Hong Kong on 10 March 2019. It was the fifth race of the 2018\u201319 Formula E season, and the 50th Formula E ePrix running overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289775-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong ePrix, Report, Background\nThe Hong Kong ePrix was confirmed as part of Formula E's 2018\u201319 series schedule on June 7th 2018 by the FIA World Motor Sport Council. They were the fifth of thirteen scheduled single-seater electric car races of the 2018\u201319 season, and the third running of the event. It was held again at Hong Kong Central Harbourfront Circuit, located in the southern part of Hong Kong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289775-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong ePrix, Report, Background\nComing into Hong Kong, J\u00e9r\u00f4me d'Ambrosio is leading the Drivers' Championship with 53 points, seven points ahead from BMW Andretti driver Ant\u00f3nio F\u00e9lix da Costa in second, after finishing 4th on the last race in Mexico City, and in third is Sam Bird with 45 points, only one point behind Ant\u00f3nio F\u00e9lix da Costa. In the Teams' Championship, Mahindra Racing is leading with 83 points; Virgin Racing just 10 points behind in second, and BMW Andretti in third with 64 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289775-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong ePrix, Report, Background\nThe 2019 Hong Kong ePrix would celebrate the 50th ePrix in Formula E history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289775-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong ePrix, Report, Practice\nTwo practice sessions\u2014both on Saturday morning\u2014were held before the late afternoon race. The first session ran for 45 minutes and the second for half an hour. Early morning showers saw the drivers head out on to a damp track for the first practice session, with the drivers fighting hard to keep the cars off the wall. During the session, Oliver Rowland led the way during the first Practice session after setting a time of 1:09.283, ahead of both DS Techeetah driver Andre Lotterer and his teammate Jean-\u00c9ric Vergne. During the session, several competitors ran deep into the run-off area. The notable incidents happened when Virgin Racing driver Sam Bird slide himself into the wall at turn 2, and Frijns clipped the inside wall at the penultimate corner. Gary Paffett had a driveshaft problem at the end of Practice 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 859]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289775-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong ePrix, Report, Practice\nThe second practice session was underway an hour and a half later, with the track still in the damp condition after another rain came down between the first and second practice session. Virgin Racing driver Robin Frijns was the fastest in the second Practice session setting a lap time of 1:09.221, ahead from Rowland in second and Lotterer in third. Venturi driver Edoardo Mortara stopped on track due to a technical issue, just a few minutes into the session, and the Jaguar driver Mitch Evans had to stop as well with an issue at turn 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289775-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong ePrix, Report, Qualifying\nSunday's 75-minute afternoon qualifying session was divided into two groups of five cars and two groups of six entries. Each group was determined by championship standing and was permitted six minutes of on-track activity. All drivers were limited to two timed laps with one at maximum power. The fastest six overall competitors in the four groups participated in a \"Super Pole\" session with one driver on the track at any time going out in reverse order from six to first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289775-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong ePrix, Report, Qualifying\nEach of the six drivers was limited to one timed lap and the starting order was determined by the competitor's fastest times (Super Pole from first to six, and group qualifying from seventh to twenty-second). The driver and team who recorded the fastest time were awarded three points towards their respective championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289775-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong ePrix, Report, Qualifying\nIn group one, Audi driver Lucas Di Grassi was fastest, ahead of Bird, and Da Costa. Both Mahindra driver, Pascal Wehrlein and Jerome d'Ambrosio, will start the Hong Kong ePrix from the back of the grid. Mortara is fastest in group two, with Lotterer joining him in the top 6 of overall qualifying session. The reigning champion Jean-\u00c9ric Vergne crossed the finish line backwards and hitting the wall, causing a red flag during the group two qualifying session. His best qualifying session was deleted by the stewards decision, and he would start in 18th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289775-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong ePrix, Report, Qualifying\nIn the third group, Rowland set the fastest lap, ahead of his teammate S\u00e9bastien Buemi, which he missed out of the top six. Felipe Massa and Daniel Abt were third and forth in the group three, ahead of BMW Andretti driver Alexander Sims and the NIO driver of Oliver Turvey. In group four, Stoffel Vandoorne in the HWA Racelab set the overall fastest lap of the group qualifying, with his teammate Gary Paffett came in second, pushing Bird and Buemi out of the top six.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289775-0007-0002", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong ePrix, Report, Qualifying\nInto the Super Pole session, Vandoorne took his first Pole Position of his career with a 1-minute and 11.58 seconds, and collected first points for HWA Racelab. He would start on the front row with Oliver Rowland, who is 0.323 seconds slower. Mortara set the third fastest lap, with Lotterer in forth, and Paffett in fifth. Sixth-placed man Di Grassi runs too deep at turn two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289775-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong ePrix, Report, Post-qualifying\nAfter qualifying, Mortara received three place grid penalty and was demoted to sixth place on the grid for speeding under the red flag during group qualifying. This promoted Lotterer, Paffett and Di Grassi to third, forth and fifth place respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289775-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong ePrix, Report, Race\nThe race began at 16:03 Hong Kong Time (UTC+08:00). Weather conditions at the start of the race were wet. The air temperature throughout ranged from 18.44 to 18.72 \u00b0C (65.19 to 65.69 \u00b0F) and the track temperature stayed at 19 \u00b0C. Each driver was mandated to activate the attack mode system twice and were permitted to arm the system no more than five times. A special feature of Formula E is the \"Fan Boost\" feature, an additional 25 kW (34 hp) of power to use during the race's second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289775-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong ePrix, Report, Race\nThe five drivers who were allowed to use the boost were determined by a fan vote. For the Hong Kong race, Vandoorne, F\u00e9lix da Costa, Abt, Buemi, and Wehrlein were handed the extra power. Rowland took the lead from Vandoorne at the start, as Bird climbed up the order and came fourth at the first corner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289775-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong ePrix, Report, Race\nJust minutes in, Dragon driver Felipe Nasr went into the wall at Turn 2, with both Mahindra drivers d'Ambrosio and Wehrlein colliding into Nasr, ending all three drivers' races within the first five minutes and causing the full course yellow to be deployed followed by the Safety Car. The race was temporarily stopped under the red flag with Rowland leading ahead of Bird in second place. With the clock reset to just under 36 minutes remaining, most of the field took their first \"attack mode\" activation immediately prior to the restart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289775-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong ePrix, Report, Race\nRowland led for a lap before losing the lead to Bird when he accidentally pressed the Full Course Yellow speed limiter button at Turn 1, dropping him to 10th. Bird led a lap, before he went too deep at Turn 2 and lost a position to Lotterer. The two drivers battled hard for the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289775-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong ePrix, Report, Race\nWith less than 18 minutes left, Vandoorne stopped at Turn 6, suffering a driveshaft problem, while Buemi picked up damage to his left front wheel through the chicane, ending his race early. To recover Vandoorne's car from the track, the race director ordered the safety car to be deployed. The race restarted with 11 minutes left to go with Lotterer still leading, Bird close behind in second, and Mortara in third. Further down the pack, Rowland stopped on track after snapping his rear axle following contact with the wall. The Safety Car was deployed again to recover Rowland's car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289775-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong ePrix, Report, Race\nThe race restarted again with less than two minutes to go. At Turn 2 on the penultimate lap, Bird made contact with the back of Lotterer's car, puncturing his tyre. Lotterer dropped to last position in 14th, with Bird leading to what could have been his second win of the season. Behind Bird came Mortara in second and Di Grassi in third. Abt and Massa finished in fourth and fifth respectively, with Evans, Paffett, Turvey, and Da Costa completing the top 10. The final finishers were Lopez, Dillmann, Vergne, and Lotterer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289775-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong ePrix, Report, Post-race\nThree hours after the race, the FIA stewards gave Bird a five-second time penalty for causing a collision with Lotterer, dropping Bird to 6th. With the result, Mortara took the win of the 50th ePrix, followed by Audi driver Di Grassi in second and Frijns in third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289775-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong ePrix, Report, Post-race\nThe result put Bird into the Drivers' Championship lead with 54 points but only one point ahead of d'Ambrosio. Mortara's victory enabled him to move into fourth position with 52 points, tied with Di Grassi. Virgin Racing led the Teams' Championship with 97 points. Venturi's result moved them into fourth in the Teams' Championship with 66 points, one point ahead of BMW Andretti in fifth place. Techeetah fell to sixth while Audi took second place after both drivers finished in the points. The race also set the record for the most number of retirees (8).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill\nThe Fugitive Offenders and Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters Legislation (Amendment) Bill 2019 (Chinese: 2019\u5e74\u9003\u72af\u53ca\u5211\u4e8b\u4e8b\u5b9c\u76f8\u4e92\u6cd5\u5f8b\u5354\u52a9\u6cd5\u4f8b\uff08\u4fee\u8a02\uff09\u689d\u4f8b\u8349\u6848) was a proposed bill regarding extradition to amend the Fugitive Offenders Ordinance () in relation to special surrender arrangements and the Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters Ordinance () so that arrangements for mutual legal assistance can be made between Hong Kong and any place outside Hong Kong. The bill was proposed by the Hong Kong government in February 2019 to establish a mechanism for transfers of fugitives not only for Taiwan, but also for Mainland China and Macau, which are currently excluded in the existing laws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill\nThe introduction of the bill caused widespread criticism domestically and abroad from the legal profession, journalist organisations, business groups, and foreign governments fearing the erosion of Hong Kong's legal system and its built-in safeguards, as well as damage to Hong Kong's business climate. Largely, this fear is attributed to China's newfound ability through this bill to arrest voices of political dissent in Hong Kong. There have been multiple protests against the bill in Hong Kong and other cities abroad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill\nOn 9 June, protesters estimated to number from hundreds of thousands to more than a million marched in the streets and called for Chief Executive Carrie Lam to step down. On 15 June, Lam announced she would 'suspend' the proposed bill. Ongoing protests called for a complete withdrawal of the bill and subsequently the implementation of universal suffrage, which is promised in the Basic Law. On 4 September, after 13 weeks of protests, Lam officially promised to withdraw the bill upon the resumption of the legislative session from its summer recess. On 23 October, Secretary for Security John Lee announced the government's formal withdrawal of the bill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Background\nIn the final months of British rule, Hong Kong passed laws barring the extradition to mainland China due to concerns of freedoms promised under the one-country, two-systems formula. Beijing began plans to reverse this law almost immediately after the handover in 1997. In 2015, five people involved in selling books critical of the Chinese government disappeared and later reappeared in Chinese custody, becoming known as the Causeway Bay Books disappearances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Background\nThe push came to a head in 2017 when a Chinese billionaire living in Hong Kong named Xiao Jianhua was abducted from his serviced apartment in Hong Kong by Chinese security forces, as a spillover of China's paramount leader and general secretary Xi Jinping's mass anti-graft campaign. The Central Commission for Discipline Inspection had been frustrated by the fact that it had to resort to extraordinary rendition and thereafter pushed for an extradition treaty. The extradition law would eliminate the need for PRC agents to resort to kidnappings in Hong Kong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Background\nIn early 2018, 19-year-old Hong Kong resident Chan Tong-kai murdered his pregnant girlfriend Poon Hiu-wing in Taiwan, then returned to Hong Kong. Chan admitted to Hong Kong police that he killed Poon, but the police were unable to charge him for murder or extradite him to Taiwan because no agreement is in place. The two ordinances in Hong Kong, the Fugitive Offenders Ordinance and Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters Ordinance, were not applicable to the requests for surrender of fugitive offenders and mutual legal assistance between Hong Kong and Taiwan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Background\nThe pro-Beijing flagship party Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong (DAB) chairwoman Starry Lee and legislator Holden Chow pushed for a change to the extradition law in 2019 using the murder case as rationale. In February 2019, the government proposed changes to fugitive laws, establishing a mechanism for case-by-case transfers of fugitives by the Hong Kong Chief Executive to any jurisdiction with which the city lacks a formal extradition treaty, which it claimed would close the \"legal loophole\". Chen Zhimin, Zhang Xiaoming, and Han Zheng of the PRC publicly supported the change and stated that 300 fugitives were living in Hong Kong. Beijing's involvement in the proposed bill caused great concerns in Hong Kong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Provisions\nThe key provisions of the bill, as originally tabled, are as follows:In the Fugitive Offenders Ordinance (FOO) ():", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Provisions\nAnd in the Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters Ordinance (MLAO) ():", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Concerns\nOpposition expressed fears that the city would open itself up to the long arm of mainland Chinese law, putting people from Hong Kong at risk of falling victim to a different legal system. It therefore urged the government to establish an extradition arrangement with Taiwan only, and to sunset the arrangement immediately after the surrender of Chan Tong-kai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Concerns, Business community\nThe business community also raised concerns over the mainland's court system. The Liberal Party and the Business and Professionals Alliance for Hong Kong (BPA), the two pro-business parties, suggested 15 economic crimes being exempted from the 46 offences covered by the extradition proposal. The American Chamber of Commerce in Hong Kong (AmCham) pointed out that the mainland's \"criminal process is plagued by deep flaws, including lack of an independent judiciary, arbitrary detention, lack of fair public trial, lack of access to legal representation and poor prison conditions\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Concerns, Business community\nThe government responded to business chambers' concerns by exempting nine of the economic crimes originally targeted. Only offences punishable by at least three years in prison would trigger the transfer of a fugitive, up from the previously stated one year. Nonetheless, these amendments failed to assuage the business community's concerns. According to the CBC, \"[What the] rich business people fear is that the extradition law would destroy the freedoms people and businesses in the territory have grown to expect\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0007-0002", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Concerns, Business community\nDue to the vast power that politicians and officials exert over the mainland legal system, \"businesses that want contracts in China to be respected typically include a provision that allows for any disputes to be resolved under Hong Kong law\", thereby making Hong Kong a safe and stable haven for multinational corporations. The proposed extradition law would jeopardise Hong Kong's status, with some companies already considering relocation to Singapore. However, the pro-business parties in the Legislative Council later agreed to support the government bill. The situation was similar to the 2017 Chief Executive Election, in which the business sectors were requested to support Carrie Lam under the pressure from the Beijing's Authority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 803]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Concerns, Business community\nOn 1 April, Hong Kong billionaire tycoon Joseph Lau, former chair of the Chinese Estates Holdings who was convicted of bribery and money laundering in a land deal in Macau in 2014, applied for a judicial review over the bill in court. Lau's lawyers asked the court to make a declaration that the surrender of Lau to Macau would contravene the Hong Kong Bill of Rights. Lau made an abrupt U-turn and dropped his legal challenge on 29 May, saying that he \"loves his country and Hong Kong\" and that he now supported the legislation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Concerns, Legal sector\nThe Hong Kong Bar Association released a statement expressing its reservations over the bill, saying that the restriction against any surrender arrangements with mainland China was not a \"loophole\", but existed in light of the fundamentally different criminal justice system operating in the Mainland, and concerns over the Mainland's track record on the protection of fundamental rights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Concerns, Legal sector\nThe association also questioned the accountability of the Chief Executive as the only arbiter of whether a special arrangement was to be concluded with a requesting jurisdiction without the scrutiny of the Legislative Council or without expanding the role of the courts in vetting extradition requests. Twelve current and former chairs of the Bar Association warned that the government's \"oft-repeated assertion that the judges will be gatekeepers is misleading\", as \"the proposed new legislation does not give the Court power to review such matters and the Court would be in no such position to do so.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Concerns, Legal sector\nThree senior judges and twelve leading commercial and criminal lawyers called the bill \"one of the starkest challenges to Hong Kong's legal system\" in a Reuters report. They feared it would \"put [the courts] on a collision course with Beijing\", as the limited scope of extradition hearings would leave them little room to manoeuvre. They were concerned that if they tried to stop high-profile suspects from being sent across the border, they would be exposed to criticism and political pressure from Beijing. The judges and lawyers said that under Hong Kong's British-based common law system, extraditions are based on the presumption of a fair trial and humane punishment in the receiving country\u2014a presumption they say China's Communist Party-controlled legal system has not earned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 840]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Concerns, Legal sector\nOn 5 June 2019, the Law Society of Hong Kong released an 11-page review of the proposed Cap. 503 (FOO) amendments. It questioned the lack of additional requirements on proof-of-evidence in favour of extradition and the non-admissibility of additional evidence against extradition. It argued that the HK government should not rush to propose the current legislation, and that a comprehensive review of the current extradition system and research on the cross-jurisdiction transfer of fugitives should be done prior to the proposal of such laws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Concerns, Legal sector\nThe Law Society recommended a proposal to specifically cover the current Taiwan murder case to be made if the government wanted to transfer the suspect soon. In addition, some members of the Law Society question the necessity of such an amendment in the absence of any major problems with extradition to mainland China or Taiwan since Hong Kong's return to China in 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Concerns, Legal sector\nOn another perspective, Grenville Cross, Vice-Chairman (Senate) of the International Association of Prosecutors, and previous Director of Public Prosecutions in Hong Kong, has opined that although it is important to respect the rights of suspects, the debate has downplayed the issue of responsibilities of Hong Kong to other jurisdictions in the global combat of crime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Concerns, Human rights groups\nOn 4 March 2019 Justice Centre Hong Kong provided public comments outlining their concerns with the extradition proposals to the Security Bureau, preempting the Hong Kong business chambers taking an interest. Subsequently, Amnesty International, Hong Kong Human Rights Monitor, and Human Rights Watch declared their opposition to the bill, warning the extradition proposal could be used as a tool to intimidate critics of the Hong Kong or Chinese governments, peaceful activists, and human rights defenders, as well as further exposing those who are extradited to risks of torture or ill-treatment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Concerns, Human rights groups\nAlong with other journalists unions and independent media outlets, the Hong Kong Journalists Association reported that the amendment would \"not only threaten the safety of journalists but also have a chilling effect on the freedom of expression in Hong Kong.\" Speaking on behalf of the International Rehabilitation Council for Torture Victims, on 3 July 2019 the Executive Director of Justice Centre Hong Kong delivered a statement at the 21st meeting of the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva raising the bill and the disproportionate use of force being used against the resulting protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Concerns, Taiwan authorities\nAlthough Taiwan authorities had attempted to negotiate directly with the Hong Kong government to work out a special arrangement, the Hong Kong government did not respond. Taipei also stated it would not enter into any extradition agreement with Hong Kong that defined Taiwan as part of the People's Republic of China. It opposed the proposed bill on grounds that Taiwanese citizens would be at greater risk of being extradited to Mainland China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0014-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Concerns, Taiwan authorities\n\"Without the removal of threats to the personal safety of [Taiwan] nationals going to or living in Hong Kong caused by being extradited to mainland China, we will not agree to the case-by-case transfer proposed by the Hong Kong authorities,\" said Chiu Chui-cheng, deputy minister of Taiwan's Mainland Affairs Council. He also described the Taipei homicide case as an \"excuse\" and questioned whether the Hong Kong government's legislation was \"politically motivated\". He added that Taiwanese people feared to end up like Lee Ming-che, a democracy activist who disappeared on a trip to the Chinese mainland and was later jailed for \"subverting state power\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Concerns, Colonial-era officials\nHong Kong had been a British colony until it was officially handed over to China in 1997. Since then, the city is operating under \"one country, two systems\". Lam denied that the mainland was intentionally excluded from the extradition laws ahead of the 1997 handover over fears about the mainland's opaque and politically controlled legal system, or that China had agreed to the exclusion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Concerns, Colonial-era officials\nHowever, the last colonial governor of Hong Kong Chris Patten and then Chief Secretary Anson Chan asserted that Hong Kong and China knew very well that there had to be a firewall between the different legal systems. Patten also warned that the extradition law would be the \"worst thing\" to happen in Hong Kong since the 1997 handover. Malcolm Rifkind, former British Foreign Secretary who oversaw the final stages of the handover, also denied that the lack of extradition arrangements between Hong Kong and the Mainland was \"a loophole\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0015-0002", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Concerns, Colonial-era officials\nHe stated that \"negotiators from both China and the UK made a conscious decision to create a clear divide between the two systems so that the rule of law remains robust\", and that \"lawyers and politicians from across the political spectrum in Hong Kong have proposed multiple other viable solutions which will ensure that Chan faces justice\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Concerns, Online petitions\nMore than 167,000 students, alumni and teachers from all public universities and hundreds of secondary schools in Hong Kong, including St. Francis' Canossian College which Carrie Lam attended, also launched online petitions against the extradition bill in a snowballing campaign. St. Mary's Canossian College and Wah Yan College, Kowloon, which Secretary for Justice Teresa Cheng and Secretary for Security John Lee attended, respectively, also joined the campaign. Even the alumni, students, and teachers at St. Stephen's College, which the victim in the Taiwan homicide case Poon Hiu-wing attended, petitioned against the extradition bill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Concerns, Online petitions\nHigh Court judge Patrick Li Hon-leung's signature was spotted on a petition signed by nearly 3,000 fellow University of Hong Kong alumni. Li was reprimanded by Chief Justice Geoffrey Ma for expressing a personal opinion on a political issue, and particularly on a legal issue that might come before the courts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Legislative Council row\nThe pro-democracy camp, which stringently opposed the law, deployed filibustering tactics by stalling the first two meetings of the Bills Committee and preventing the election of a committee chairman. The House Committee, with a pro-Beijing majority, removed Democratic Party's James To, the most senior member, from his position of presiding member, and replaced him with the third most senior member, pro-Beijing Abraham Shek of the Business and Professionals Alliance for Hong Kong (BPA), thereby bypassing the second most senior member Leung Yiu-chung, a pro-democrat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0017-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Legislative Council row\nTo claimed that the move was illegitimate, adding that the secretariat had abused its power in issuing the circular without having any formal discussion. The pro-democrats insisted on going ahead with a 6 May meeting as planned which was rescheduled by Shek with only 20 members present. To and Civic Party's Dennis Kwok were elected chair and vice chair of the committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Legislative Council row\nAttempts to hold meetings on 11 May descended into chaos as the rival factions pushed and shoved each other along the packed hallway for control of the meeting room. A number of legislators fell to the ground, including Gary Fan who fell from a table before he was sent to hospital. On 14 May, the meeting with two rival presiding chairmen descended into chaos again. Subsequently, pro-Beijing presiding chairman Abraham Shek announced that he could not hold a meeting and asked the House Committee for guidance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0018-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Legislative Council row\nOn 20 May, Secretary for Security John Lee announced that the government would resume the second reading of the bill in a full Legislative Council meeting on 12 June, bypassing the usual practice of scrutinising the bill in the Bills Committee. After a five-hour meeting on 24 May, the House Committee of the Legislative Council dominated by the pro-Beijing camp passed a motion in support of the government's move to resume the second reading of the bill at a full council meeting on 12 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Legislative Council row\nOn 9 November, police arrested and charged six pro-democracy lawmakers (while summoning one more lawmaker) for their roles in a 11 May scuffle over the earlier proposed extradition bill. The lawmakers posted bail and were released.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Legislative Council row, No-confidence vote\nDemocratic Party legislator Andrew Wan moved a motion of no-confidence against Carrie Lam on 29 May on the grounds that Lam \"blatantly lied\" about the extradition bill and misled the public and the international community, as Lam claimed that colonial officials did not deliberately exclude China from extradition laws ahead of the 1997 Handover. It was the first no-confidence vote against her since she took the office in July 2017. Lam survived the vote with the backing of the pro-Beijing majority in the legislature. Chief Secretary Matthew Cheung defended Lam's record and dismissed the motion as \"an unnecessary political gesture\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, International escalation, Beijing weighs in\nChinese central government officials weighed in when Director of the Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office Zhang Xiaoming met a delegation led by Executive Councillor Ronny Tong in Beijing on 15 May in which Zhang showed support of the extradition law. At the same time, a delegation led by former pro-democrat legislator Martin Lee met with U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo who later released statement that he \"expressed concern\" that the bill could threaten the city's rule of law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0021-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, International escalation, Beijing weighs in\nOn 17 May, Director of the Liaison Office Wang Zhimin met with more than 250 Beijing loyalists in Hong Kong in a two-hour closed-door meeting. He instructed them to fully support the Chief Executive and her administration's push to pass the bill. Vice Premier Han Zheng and chairman of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference Wang Yang also spoke in favour of the extradition bill\u2014becoming the highest-ranking Chinese state officials to give their public endorsement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0021-0002", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, International escalation, Beijing weighs in\nChief Executive Carrie Lam defended Beijing's involvement, saying that mainland officials offered their views only after the bill controversy was \"escalated\" by foreign powers, which seized an opportunity to attack the mainland's legal system and human rights record. It was escalated to the level of \"one country, two systems\" and the constitutionality concerning the Basic Law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, International escalation, Foreign pressure\nOn 24 May, Chief Secretary Matthew Cheung held a special meeting involving 100 officials including principal officials, permanent secretaries and their deputies ostensibly to \"bring them up to speed on the justification for the extradition law\". Meanwhile, 11 European Union representatives met with Carrie Lam and then issued a d\u00e9marche to formally protest against the bill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0022-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, International escalation, Foreign pressure\nAlso on 24 May, eight commissioners from the U.S. Congressional-Executive Commission on China (CECC), Marco Rubio, Tom Cotton, Steve Daines from the U.S. Senate, as well as James McGovern, Ben McAdams, Christopher Smith, Thomas Suozzi and Brian Mast from the U.S. House of Representatives wrote to Chief Executive Carrie Lam asking that the bill be \"withdrawn from consideration\", stating that \"the proposed legislation would irreparably damage Hong Kong's cherished autonomy and protections for human rights by allowing the Chinese government to request extradition of business persons, journalists, rights advocates, and political activists residing in Hong Kong.\" The commissioners added that the bill could \"negatively impact the unique relationship between the U.S. and Hong Kong\"\u2014referring to the longstanding U.S. policy of giving the city preferential treatment over mainland China based on the United States\u2013Hong Kong Policy Act.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 1014]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, International escalation, Foreign pressure\nThe UK-based Hong Kong Watch also issued a petition on 29 May signed by 15 parliamentarians from various countries against the extradition bill. Signatories included Member of the House of Lords David Alton, Liberal Democrat Chief Whip of the House of Commons Alistair Carmichael, Leader of the Alliance 90/The Greens in the Bundestag Katrin G\u00f6ring-Eckardt, Deputy Shadow Minister for Foreign Affairs in the Canadian Parliament Garnett Genuis, Member of the Parliament of Malaysia and Chairman of the ASEAN Parliamentarians for Human Rights Charles Santiago, Member of the European Parliament from Austria Josef Weidenholzer, seven U.S. Senators and one U.S. Representative.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, International escalation, Foreign pressure\nThe American Chamber of Commerce in Hong Kong (AmCham) issued a statement on 30 May, questioning the government's decision to push the bill through. AmCham also sent Matthew Cheung eight questions related to the bill following Cheung meeting with the foreign chambers of commerce on the previous day, pressing the government on how it planned to address concerns from foreign diplomats in Hong Kong, and how it would ensure that the requesting jurisdictions could guarantee a fair trial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, International escalation, Foreign pressure\nOn 30 May, a joint statement was issued by British Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt and Canadian Minister of Foreign Affairs Chrystia Freeland to urge Hong Kong to ensure the new law was in-keeping with the city's autonomy. \"We are concerned about the potential effect of these proposals on the large number of UK and Canadian citizens in Hong Kong, on business confidence and on Hong Kong's international reputation. Furthermore, we believe that there is a risk that the proposals could impact negatively on the rights and freedoms set down in the Sino-British Joint Declaration\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, International escalation, Foreign pressure\nOn 13 August, Andrew James Scheer PC MP, Leader of the Conservative Party of Canada and Leader of the Official Opposition since 2017, shared the statement \"As Beijing amasses troops at the Hong Kong border, now is the time for everyone committed to democracy, freedom, human rights, and the rule of law to stand with the people of Hong Kong, including the 300,000 ex-pat Canadians. Now, and in the coming days, we are all Hong Kongers:\" on social media outlets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Government amendments to the bill\nOn 30 May, Secretary for Security John Lee rolled out six new measures to limit the scope of extraditable crimes and raise the bar to those punishable by the sentence of three years to seven years or above\u2014a key demand from the Hong Kong General Chamber of Commerce (HKGCC). Only requests from top judicial bodies of a requesting jurisdiction, namely the Supreme People's Procuratorate and Supreme People's Court in Mainland China, may be considered. Lee's announcement came hours after a group of 39 pro-Beijing legislators called for the bill to be amended. Their two demands\u2014raising the threshold on extraditable crimes and allowing only extradition requests from the mainland's top authority\u2014were both accepted by the government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Government amendments to the bill\nThe government promulgated on 30 May the provision of \"additional safeguards\" in the following three aspects:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Government amendments to the bill\nHong Kong's five major business chambers\u2014the Hong Kong General Chamber of Commerce (HKGCC), the Chinese General Chamber of Commerce, the Chinese Manufacturers' Association of Hong Kong, the Federation of Hong Kong Industries, and the Hong Kong Chinese Importers' and Exporters' Association quickly welcomed the concessions, but legal scholars and pro-democrats opposing the bill argued there was still no guarantee of human rights and fair treatment for fugitives sent across the border. John Lee dismissed calls to embed those safeguards in the proposed bill, claiming the current proposal would offer greater flexibility, adding he was confident mainland authorities would stay true to their promises, even without protection clauses in the bill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 815]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Government amendments to the bill\nThe Law Society of Hong Kong urged the government not to rush the legislation but should stop to conduct extensive consultation before it goes any further. The Bar Association said in response to the concessions that the additional safeguards provided by the government was \"riddled with uncertainties ...[and that it] offers scarcely any reliable assurances.\" On 6 June, some 3,000 Hong Kong lawyers, representing around one quarter of the city's lawyers, marched against the bill. Wearing black, they marched from the Court of Final Appeal to the Central Government Offices. While lawyers expressed grave reservations about the openness and fairness of the justice system in China, limited access to a lawyer, and the prevalence of torture, Secretary for Security John Lee said the legal sector did not really understand the bill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 899]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Government amendments to the bill\nAmnesty International, Human Rights Watch, Human Rights Monitor and more than 70 other non-governmental organisations wrote an open letter to Chief Executive Carrie Lam on 7 June stating the \"serious shortcomings in the proposed amendment\", claiming that the additional safeguards would still be unlikely to provide genuine and effective protection as it did not resolve the real risk of torture or other ill-treatment, including detention in poor conditions for indefinite periods, or other serious human rights violations which are prohibited under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Pre-suspension protests, 31 March\nThe first protest happened on 31 March with an attendance of 12,000 pro-democracy protesters according to organisers, the Civil Human Rights Front (CHRF); police put the peak figure at 5,200.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Pre-suspension protests, 28 April\nOn 28 April, the movement gained stronger momentum as an estimated 130,000 protesters joined the march against the bill; Police estimated 22,800 joined at its height. The claimed turnout was the largest since an estimated 510,000 joined the annual 1 July protest in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0033-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Pre-suspension protests, 28 April\nA day after the protest, Chief Executive Carrie Lam was adamant that the bill would be enacted and said the Legislative Councillors had to pass new extradition laws before their summer break, even though the man at the heart of a case used to justify the urgency of new legislation Chan Tong-kai had been jailed for 29 months shortly before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Pre-suspension protests, 9 June\nWhile reports suggested it had been the largest ever, certainly the largest protest Hong Kong has seen since the 1997 handover, surpassing the turnout seen at mass rallies in support of the Tiananmen protests of 1989 and 1 July demonstration of 2003, CHRF convenor Jimmy Sham said that 1.03\u00a0million people attended the march, while the police put the crowd at 270,000 at its peak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Pre-suspension protests, 9 June\nHundreds of protesters camped in front of the government headquarters well into the night, with more joining them in response to calls from Demosist\u014d and pro-independence activists. Police formed a human chain to prevent protesters from entering Harcourt Road, the main road next to government headquarters, while Special Tactical Squad (STS) stood by for potential conflicts. Although the CHRF officially had called an end to the march at 10\u00a0pm, around 100 protesters remained at the Civic Square.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Pre-suspension protests, 9 June\nAt 11\u00a0pm, the government issued a press statement, saying it \"acknowledge[s] and respect[s] that people have different views on a wide range of issues\", but insisted the second reading debate on the bill would resume on 12 June. Around midnight, tensions escalated and clashes broke out between protesters and officers at the Legislative Council Complex. Protesters threw bottles and metal barricades at police and pushed barricades while officers responded with pepper spray. Riot police pushed back against the crowd and secured the area, while police on Harcourt Road also pushed protesters back onto the pavements. Clashes shifted to Lung Wo Road as many protesters gathered and barricaded themselves from the officers. Several hundred protesters were herded by officers towards Lung King Street in Wan Chai around 2\u00a0am and then moved onto Gloucester Road. By the end of the clearance, 19 protesters had been arrested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 987]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Pre-suspension protests, 12 June\nA general strike had been called for 12 June, the day of the planned resumption of the second reading of the extradition bill. The Police started stopping and searching on commuters at the exits of Admiralty Station the night before. Sits-in began at and around Tamar Park in the morning, and around 8\u00a0am, a crowd rushed onto Harcourt Road and the nearby streets, blocking traffic. Around 11\u00a0am, the Legislative Council Secretariat announced that the second reading debate on the extradition bill had been postponed indefinitely.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Pre-suspension protests, 12 June\nIn the afternoon, riot police and the Special Tactical Squad, who hid their identifying numbers, were deployed. They fired tear gas and shot rubber bullets and bean bag rounds at protesters on Harcourt Road. The crowd fled to Citic Tower, where the gathering had been approved by the police and was peaceful. As people trickled through the jammed central revolving door and a small side door, the police fired another two tear gas canisters into the trapped crowd fuelling panic. Commissioner of Police Stephen Lo declared the clashes a \"riot\" and condemned the protesters' behaviour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Pre-suspension protests, 12 June\nMany videos of aggressive police action appeared online, showing tear gas canisters being fired at peaceful and unarmed protesters, first-aid volunteers, and even reporters. Amnesty International published a report which concluded that the use of force by police against the largely peaceful protest was unnecessary and excessive and that police had \"violated international human rights law and standards.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Pre-suspension protests, 12 June\nLo's declaration and police behaviour gave rise to new demands in later protests: to retract the characterisation of the clashes as a \"riot\" and to establish an independent commission of inquiry into police brutality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Pre-suspension protests, 16 June\nOn 15 June, Carrie Lam announced that it would suspend the second reading of the bill without a set a time frame on the seeking of public views. However, no apology nor resignation was forthcoming at this point. The pro-democracy camp demanded a full withdrawal of the bill and said they would go ahead with the 16 June rally as planned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Pre-suspension protests, 16 June\nOn the day, the route from Victoria Park in Causeway Bay to the government headquarters in Admiralty was totally taken over by the large crowd from 3\u00a0pm all the way to 11\u00a0pm. Although crowd control measures were in force, yet the large number of participants forced police to open all the six lanes of Hennessy Road, the main route; nevertheless, the masses then spilled over onto three parallel streets in Wan Chai. While the police said that there were 338,000 demonstrators at its peak on the original route, the Civil Human Rights Front claimed the participation of \"almost 2 million plus 1 citizens\", denoting the protester who committed suicide the day before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, Pre-suspension protests, 16 June\nThe government issued a statement at 8:30\u00a0pm where Carrie Lam apologised to Hong Kong residents and promised to \"sincerely and humbly accept all criticism and to improve and serve the public.\" A government source told to the South China Morning Post that the administration was making it clear that there was no timetable to relaunch the suspended bill, the legislation would die a \"natural death\" when the current term of the Legislative Council ended in July next year. On 18 June, Carrie Lam offered an apology for mishandling the extradition bill in person, but did not meet the protesters' demands of withdrawing the bill completely or resigning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, From suspension to withdrawal\nAfter the intense clashes on 12 June, the Legislative Council called off the general meetings on 13 and 14 June, and also postponed the general meetings on 17 and 18 June. Pro -Beijing newspaper Sing Tao Daily reported that Lam went to meet with Chinese Vice Premier Han Zheng in Shenzhen on 14 June evening. Lam then had a cabinet meeting with her top officials at 10:30\u00a0pm, lasting until midnight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, From suspension to withdrawal\nStudents unions, representing some protesters, issued four demands: total withdrawal of the extradition bill; retraction of all references to the 12 June protest being a riot; release all arrested protesters; and accountability of police officers who used excessive force. They warned of escalated protest action if the demands were not met. Hong Kong Catholic Apostolic Administrator Cardinal John Tong and Hong Kong Christian Council chairman Reverend Eric So Shing-yit also issued a joint statement calling for a complete withdrawal of the extradition bill and an independent inquiry into allegations of police brutality against protesters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, From suspension to withdrawal\nAs the city marked the 22nd anniversary of its 1997 handover, the annual pro-democracy protest march organised by civil rights groups claimed a record turnout of 550,000 while police placed the estimate around 190,000. Separately, hundreds of young protesters stormed the Legislative Council and defaced symbols associated with the People's Republic of China (PRC) and pro-Beijing elements inside the building.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, From suspension to withdrawal\nOn 9 July, Carrie Lam said the controversial bill \"is dead\", but still refused to meet the protesters' demand to withdraw it. The protesters continued to demand full withdrawal of the bill, among other demands regarding alleged police misconducts and universal suffrage. The confrontations between the protesters and the police had since escalated. On 21 July, the police is accused of colluding with a gang who indiscriminately attacked passengers at Yuen Long station. A poll conducted in August showed that more than 90% of supporters of the protests expressed dissatisfaction with police misconduct, and, among their five core demands, the primary demand had shifted from the withdrawal of the bill to the establishment of independent commission of inquiry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 824]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0048-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, From suspension to withdrawal\nOn 4 September, Carrie Lam announced that the government would officially withdraw the bill in October. However, she dismissed the other four core demands from the protesters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289776-0049-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong extradition bill, From suspension to withdrawal\nThe bill was officially withdrawn on 23 October. Chan Tong-kai was released from prison on the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections\nThe 2019 Hong Kong District Council elections were held on 24 November 2019 for all 18 District Councils of Hong Kong. 452 seats from all directly elected constituencies, out of the 479 seats in total, were contested. Nearly three million people voted, equivalent to 71 per cent of registered voters, an unprecedented turnout in the electoral history of Hong Kong. The election was widely viewed as a de facto referendum on the 2019\u201320 Hong Kong protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections\nThe pro-democracy camp in conjunction with the localist groups achieved its biggest landslide victory in the history of Hong Kong, gaining absolute majority in votes and electoral seats in all of the 18 District Councils and tripling their seats from around 124 to about 388. The pro-Beijing parties can only retain their control in one District Council due to their advantage in ex officio seats in such district council. The pro-democrats would also be able to capture 117 District Council subsector seats in the 1,200-member Election Committee, which is responsible for electing the Chief Executive of Hong Kong. Pro -Beijing parties and independent candidates won only 62 seats, a loss of more than 242 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections\nAll pro-Beijing parties suffered major setbacks and losses, including the flagship pro-Beijing party Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong (DAB), which received its largest defeat in history, losing 96 seats. Executive Councillor Regina Ip's New People's Party failed to obtain a single seat, and was ousted from all District Councils as a result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections\nDozens of prominent pro-Beijing heavyweights lost their campaigns for re-election, including Junius Ho, a controversial anti-protest figure who had expressed support for the triads behind the mob attack in Yuen Long on 21 July. In contrast, many pro-democracy candidates who actively participated in the protests were elected, including convenor of the Civil Human Rights Front (CHRF) Jimmy Sham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Boundary changes\nIn July 2017, following a review of the numbers of elected seats for each District Council having regard to local population forecasts, the Electoral Affairs Commission (EAC) proposed to create 21 new elected seats across 10 District Councils:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Boundary changes\nAccordingly, the total number of elected seats for the 2019 elections increased by 21 from 431 to 452.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Boundary changes, Gerrymandering concerns\nSome pro-democracy District Councillors accused the EAC of gerrymandering, stating that the borders of their constituencies were altered \"unreasonably\" to adversely affect their parties' election prospects. EAC chairman Barnabas Fung responded that the changes were based purely on an objective calculation. \"Factors with political implications would definitely not be taken into consideration,\" Fung said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 73], "content_span": [74, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Background, Project Storm\nIn April 2017, Occupy Central co-founder Benny Tai proposed the \"Project Storm\" strategy to win the majority of the District Council seats for the pro-democrats in the coming election. He stated that by winning a majority of the some 400 District Council seats, the pro-democracy camp could gain an additional 117 seats of the District Council subsectors on the 1,200-member Election Committee which elects the Chief Executive. Tai believed that by making it harder for Beijing to manipulate the Chief Executive election, it would compel Beijing to restart the stalled political reform after its restrictive proposal was voted down in 2015 in the aftermath of the Occupy protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Background, Project Storm\nPower for Democracy, a group that coordinated different parties and groups in the pro-democracy camp, worked with pro-democrats to identify suitable candidates for all 452 constituencies. The group also held rounds of non-binding primaries to select a candidate if more than one pro-democrat was interested in running in the same constituency. However, the camp still risked doubling up in about 30 constituencies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Background, Anti-extradition bill protests\nIn mid 2019, the Carrie Lam administration pushed forward the Fugitive Offenders and Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters Legislation (Amendment) Bill 2019 to establish a mechanism that would allow the extradition of fugitives to any territory not covered by existing extradition treaties, including Taiwan, Mainland China and Macau. The proposal's purported purpose was to fill a legal loophole that allowed a Hong Kong suspect involved in a homicide case not to be extradited to Taiwan in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Background, Anti-extradition bill protests\nThe proposed bill raised grave concerns from various sectors of society, including lawyers, journalists, businesses, as well as foreign governments, who feared the heightened risk that Hong Kong citizens, dissidents, and foreign nationals passing through the city could be sent for trial without safeguards of the local courts to Mainland Chinese courts under direct political control of the Communist Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Background, Anti-extradition bill protests\nStarting from June, rounds of demonstrations were attended by hundreds of thousands of people. The government first suspended the bill, and later proposed the withdrawal of the bill in September, which officially took place in October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Background, Anti-extradition bill protests\nThe pro-Beijing parties, who were among the strongest advocates of the bill, worried that their support of the controversial bill as well as the abrupt U-turn would cost them votes in the upcoming District Council elections and the next year's Legislative Council election, risking a repeat of their devastating defeat in the 2003 District Council elections following the highly controversial national security legislation, which sparked massive protests across the city in 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0010-0002", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Background, Anti-extradition bill protests\nThere were also reports that the government was looking into the possibility of cancelling polls in areas where serious protests took place, or even postponing the elections altogether by invoking the Emergency Regulations Ordinance. The election was widely seen as a referendum on Lam's government and in particular an indication of the measure of support for the protesters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Background, Registration drive\nRegistration drives are uncommon in Hong Kong, but promotion from campaigners led tens of thousands of new voters to register during mass protests against the controversial extradition bill, pouncing on an opportunity to bolster the democratic opposition's prospects in the upcoming elections. Over 386,000 newly registered electors were counted, an election cycle record turnout since the handover of Hong Kong. The number of registered voters between the ages of 18 and 35 jumped by more than 12 per cent compared to 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Background, Registration drive\nWhile the number of registered voters had been increasing steadily, large social movements and demonstrations have a tendency to galvanise registration. In 2004, 303,885 people had registered after half a million people took to the streets to protest against a government-proposed national security law criminalising \"sedition\", which was based on Article 23 of the Basic Law. In 2015, 262,633 people registered as voters after the 2014 Occupy protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Background, Registration drive\nAccording to the Registration and Electoral Office (REO) under the EAC, the number of registered voters in the final registers for 2019 was 4,132,977, a record high since the handover of Hong Kong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Nominations and disqualifications\nAn unprecedented 1,104 nomination forms were received by returning officers durinh the two-week nomination period from 4 to 17 October, although six nominees withdrew their candidatures before the end of the nomination period. It is the first time in Hong Kong's history that all 452 District Council seats were contested, compared to the previous elections in 2015 where 68 seats were left uncontested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Nominations and disqualifications\nAt least four candidates, including Tommy Cheung Sau-yin, Mo Kai-hong, Liu Qing of the Democratic Party, and Billy Chan Shiu-yeung of the Community Sha Tin movement received letters from returning officers asking them to explain what they meant when they said \"Liberate Hong Kong, the revolution of our times\", a popular slogan that was frequently used in the anti-extradition protests. Two other hopefuls also received letters asking for their stance on Hong Kong independence, including Demosist\u014d secretary-general Joshua Wong, who planned to run for the South Horizons West constituency. Wong was asked if he was running on behalf of his party Demosist\u014d and if he supported the notion of \"self-determination\" for Hong Kong. Agnes Chow, a member of Demosist\u014d, was barred from running in the March 2018 Legislative Council by-election on the grounds that Demosist\u014d advocated \"self-determination\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 963]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Nominations and disqualifications\nHenry Wong Pak-yu, who aimed for a seat in the Tin Heng constituency, was also questioned for his previous public pro-independence statements. Both Wongs denied they supported the Hong Kong independence movement. Political scientist Ma Ngok warned that any disqualification would only fuel the flames of the ongoing political crisis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Nominations and disqualifications\nIn light of the risk of being disqualified, Joshua Wong and at least 12 other pro-democracy candidates, including former student leader Lester Shum and pro-democracy legislator Eddie Chu, arranged for a backup candidate to stand in the same constituency before the nomination period ended, as their candidacy had not yet been confirmed by the Returning Officers. Chu was previously disqualified from running in the January rural representative election by Returning Officer Enoch Yuen Ka-lok, citing his stance of supporting \"self-determination\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Nominations and disqualifications\nMore than ten days after the nomination period, acting Returning Officer Laura Liang Aron, who replaced Dorothy Ma Chau Pui-fun who took indefinite sick leave, barred Joshua Wong from running due to political reasons, making Wong the only pro-democrat to be disqualified due to his political stance in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0017-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Nominations and disqualifications\nAron issued a six-page ruling noting that Wong dropped his advocacy of the option of independence as \"a compromise, instead of a genuine intention\" as Wong referred to Chinese Communist Party general secretary Xi Jinping's remarks on separatism as a \"stern threat\" and reason for him and Demosist\u014d to give up the advocacy of independence. Wong said the Returning Officer's decision showed that the central government was rigging the election, which was expected to be a key test of public sentiment about the protest movement. Kelvin Lam Ho-por, who stood in the same constituency, was widely believed to be Joshua Wong's substitute in case Wong was barred from running.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Pre-election events, 2 November election rally\nOver a hundred pro-democracy candidates launched an election rally at Victoria Park on 2 November, citing the Elections (Corrupt and Illegal Conduct) Ordinance which allowed for election meetings to be held in public, following the police rejection of the organisers' initial demonstration application.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 78], "content_span": [79, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Pre-election events, 2 November election rally\nSoon after the assembly started, the police quickly declared the rally an unauthorised assembly and dispersed attendees using means such as tear gas, pepper spray, and water cannons. Three pro-democrat candidates, Osman Cheng Chung-hang, Richard Chan Chun-chit and Man Nim-chi, were seen being taken away by the police. During the operation, officers pepper-sprayed Chan to subdue him, prompting calls from rally-goers for his release.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 78], "content_span": [79, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Pre-election events, 2 November election rally\nThe protests continued with clashes emerging between the police and protesters, where protesters responded to the police crackdown by throwing petrol bombs, vandalising MTR stations and shops seen as sympathetic to the Beijing government, spraying graffiti on walls and building barricades on streets, and capping the 21st week of anti-government demonstrations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 78], "content_span": [79, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Pre-election events, Physical attacks on candidates\nBoth pro-democrat and pro-Beijing candidates were physically attacked in the run-up to the election. In late September, Stanley Ho Wai-hong of the Labour Party, who was running in the Pak Sha Wan constituency, was attacked by four men dressed in white that were carrying metal rods. He suffered severe head injuries and several fractures to both of his hands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 83], "content_span": [84, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0021-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Pre-election events, Physical attacks on candidates\nOn 16 October, Jimmy Sham, the convenor of the Civil Human Rights Front (CHRF) and the candidate for the Lek Yuen constituency, was hospitalised after being attacked on Arran Street in Mong Kok by at least four men wielding hammers and spanners. Pro -democracy candidates Jocelyn Chau Hui-yan and Jannelle Rosalynne Leung, who were running for the City Garden and Yuet Wah constituencies respectively, were also attacked by pro-Beijing men.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 83], "content_span": [84, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Pre-election events, Physical attacks on candidates\nOn 3 November, during a protest at Cityplaza, the Democratic Party's Andrew Chiu, defending his Tai Koo Shing West seat, was stabbed by a pro-Beijing Mandarin-speaking male with a knife when he tried to stop a fight after the attacker had already assaulted several people. His left ear was partially bitten off by the attacker, and he was forced to undergo ear re-attachment surgery in hospital, which was ultimately unsuccessful.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 83], "content_span": [84, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Pre-election events, Physical attacks on candidates\nOn the morning of 6 November, pro-Beijing Legislative Councillor Junius Ho was also stabbed by a man with a knife while campaigning for re-election to the Tuen Mun District Council in his Lok Tsui constituency. The attacker shouted abusive expletives at Ho, accusing him of being involved in the mob attacks in Yuen Long on 21 July. Ho received a stab injury to his chest and was later hospitalised. Ho's assistant and the attacker were also injured by the knife before the attacker was finally arrested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 83], "content_span": [84, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Fraud allegations, Alleged false claims of allegiance\nThere were several self-proclaimed pro-democrat candidates who were later found to be members of pro-Beijing groups and organisations, who contested the elections in the hope of snatching votes from legitimate pro-democracy candidates that were endorsed by the pro-democracy camp. For example, in the Tai Pat Tin East constituency, there was a minor candidate named Lau Hin-ming, who was ahead of the Democratic Party and Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong (DAB) candidates. Lau used the \"Liberate Hong Kong, the revolution of our times\" slogan in his electoral messages, but was eventually found to be an member of an executive committee belonging to the Federation of The Youth Power of Kwai Tsing, a sub-group of the pro-Beijing Federation of New Territories Youth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 85], "content_span": [86, 884]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Fraud allegations, Alleged false claims of allegiance\nSome voters were found to have no knowledge about the candidates that they have nominated. For example, in the Lei Cheng Uk constituency, candidate Lam Ho-nam was ahead of Kong Kwai-sang from the pro-democratic Association for Democracy and People's Livelihood (ADPL) and Chan Keng-chau from the pro-Beijing Business and Professionals Alliance for Hong Kong (BPA). However, a voter who nominated Lam claimed that he had never actually intended to nominate him. Instead, he signed an endorsement for Chan Keng-chau because he was a member of the Lei Cheng Uk Resident Association, while Chan has been the chairman of the association. Pro -democracy media sources allege that Chan had transferred the nomination to Lam, in the hope of decreasing the votes of Kong Kwai-sang, though no substantial proof was supplemented to this claim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 85], "content_span": [86, 918]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Fraud allegations, Jinan University's alleged misuse of personal information\nApple Daily reported that they had received complaints from the students of Jinan University, who were requested by academic staff and counsellors to vote for pro-Beijing candidates, with them being promised free transportation if they do so. University staff members were able to locate the constituencies in which the students resided.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 108], "content_span": [109, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Fraud allegations, Alleged illegal transportation for voters\nApple Daily also reported that Wong Yiu-chung, a pro-Beijing candidate from the BPA who was contesting the election for the Wah Lai constituency, had offered free coach rides to voters as an incentive to vote for him. The coaches were adorned with posters of Wong, and potentially constitutes an illegal election-related expense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 92], "content_span": [93, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Fraud allegations, Alleged illegal transportation for voters\nStand News reported that in the Fu Tai constituency, there were alleged voluntary coach services offered to elderly voters by pro-Beijing parties. Some voters reported the services were offered by Manwell Chan, a pro-Beijing Hong Kong Federation of Trade Unions (FTU) candidate, and also stated that they were asked to vote for Chan in exchange for said ride, though no tangible proof could be found to support this claim .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 92], "content_span": [93, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Results\nThe elections to the District Councils of Hong Kong were held during the weekend, in which for the first time since the protests begun, no outbreaks of violence were reported. As the District Councils are the only governmental body chosen by full universal suffrage, the election was widely described as a proxy referendum over the protest movement's demands. 2.94\u00a0million out of 4.13\u00a0million registered voters have turned out to vote, including many first-time voters, representing a record turnout of over 71 per cent. The turnout was significant and some voters waited in line for more than an hour to cast their votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Results\nMore than 250 seats were flipped as the pro-democrats achieved their biggest landslide victory in Hong Kong's history, gaining absolute majority in votes and electoral seats in all of the 18 District Councils of Hong Kong, tripling their number of seats from about 124 to around 388, and have also gained the majority to capture 117 seats in the District Council subsectors of the next Election Committee, which is vested with the power to elect the Chief Executive of Hong Kong. The pro-democracy camp's upset victory led to speculation of the validity regarding support of a silent majority of voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Results\nParties belonging to the pro-Beijing camp and independents won 62 seats in the District Councils, with a loss of 242 seats. The main pro-Beijing party Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong (DAB) received its largest defeat in history, losing nearly a hundred seats, while Regina Ip's New People's Party was completely removed from power, losing all of their representation in the District Councils. While DAB chairwoman Starry Lee narrowly managed to fend off her main pro-democracy challenger Leung Kwok-hung, her nine fellow pro-Beijing legislators, Junius Ho, Horace Cheung, Michael Tien, Holden Chow, Lau Kwok-fan, Luk Chung-hung and Alice Mak were ousted by relatively unknown new faces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Results\nMany pro-democrats who actively participated in the protests also scored victories. Jimmy Sham, the convenor of the Civil Human Rights Front, which organised June's million-strong peaceful marches, won a seat in Lek Yuen. Andrew Chiu of the Democratic Party, was re-elected in Tai Koo Shing West, while Jocelyn Chau, aged 23, who was also arrested on the campaign trail, defeated long-time pro-Beijing incumbent Hui Ching-on in City Garden. Richard Chan, dubbed as \"airport uncle\" by the press, who was pepper-sprayed in the face by riot police during the election rally held on 2 November and later arrested while campaigning, won his seat in the Lam Tsuen Valley constituency in Tai Po.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Results\nOther prominent pro-democratic activists, including Tommy Cheung Sau-yin, a former student leader who was among the nine Occupy activists convicted for public nuisance earlier this year for his part in the 2014 Umbrella Revolution, defeated incumbent Wilson Wong Wai-shun, who was seen with the attackers in Yuen Lung during the mob attack on 21 July. Another former student leader Lester Shum, known for his involvements in the Umbrella Revolution, won in the Hoi Bun constituency in Tsuen Wan. Kelvin Lam, Joshua Wong's last-minute substitute after he was barred from running, won a seat in South Horizons West.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Aftermath\nFollowing the publication of the election results, DAB chairwoman Starry Lee submitted her resignation in light of the election results, but her resignation offer was rejected by the DAB's Central Committee, which stated they wanted Lee to stay and lead the party forward to face the coming challenges ahead of them. HKFTU legislator Alice Mak, who was unseated in her Wai Ying constituency, insisted that their electoral hammering was not their fault, instead blaming the \"overall political environment\". FTU president Ng Chau-pei addressed the results by insisting the election was not a referendum on the government's strategy of \"stopping violence\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Aftermath\nChinese state media outlets tried to downplay the outcome of district elections in Hong Kong, which saw a landslide victory of the pro-democracy camp. According to BBC, the state media's reaction ranged from making no reference whatsoever to the election results to overt claims that \"electoral tampering\" had occurred. The daily news program of state broadcaster CCTV, Xinwen Lianbo, remained silent on the results, accusing the US of electoral interference. The English-language version of the China Daily newspaper announced that the elections were over, but did not reference the victory of the pro-democracy camp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Aftermath\nChief Executive Carrie Lam said that her government would \"listen humbly\" and \"seriously reflect\" on views expressed at the election and would set up an independent review committee to look at cause of social unrest, modelling on Britain's response to the 2011 Tottenham riots. To some, this fell short of the protesters' demand on an independent commission of inquiry. Shortly after the election, U.S. President Donald Trump signed the Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act which was previously passed overwhelmingly in the United States Congress into law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0036-0001", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Aftermath\nIn a joint statement by U.S. Senator Marco Rubio, the co-sponsor of the bill, Jim Risch, Ben Cardin and Bob Menendez, it states that \"following last weekend's historic elections in Hong Kong that included record turnout, this new law could not be more timely in showing strong US support for Hong Kongers' long-cherished freedoms.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289777-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Hong Kong local elections, Aftermath\nThe State Council's removal, on 4 January 2020, of Wang Zhimin from his post as Director of the Liaison Office of the Central People's Government in Hong Kong was widely seen as a response to his failure to advise the central government accurately about the vulnerability of pro-Beijing candidates at the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289779-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hopman Cup\nThe Hopman Cup XXXI was the 31st and final edition of the Hopman Cup tournament between nations in men's and women's tennis that took place at the Perth Arena in Perth, Western Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289779-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hopman Cup\nOn 26 June 2018, the defending Swiss team of Roger Federer and Belinda Bencic and 2018 finalist German team of Alexander Zverev and Angelique Kerber were announced as the first teams for the 2019 tournament. On 15 August 2018, the teams of Greece and Spain were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289779-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hopman Cup\nFor the first time in history, Roger Federer and Serena Williams faced each other in a competitive event. Federer came out victorious alongside Bencic in the mixed doubles rubber. This match also attracted a Perth Arena record tennis crowd of 14,064, which was the highest attendance for a tennis match in Western Australian history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289779-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hopman Cup\nSwitzerland successfully defended their title, beating Germany in a repeat of the previous year's final. This was Federer's 3rd Hopman Cup title, the most by any player, male or female.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289779-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Hopman Cup, Entrants, Seeds\nThe draw took place on 3 October 2018 and it placed the 8 teams into two groups, according to the following ranking-based seedings:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289779-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Hopman Cup, Group stage, Group A, Spain vs. France\nAmerican Whitney Osuigwe played instead of Garbi\u00f1e Muguruza due to her withdrawal due to injury. Scores counted as a 4\u20130, 4\u20130 win for the French mixed pair.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 55], "content_span": [56, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289780-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Horizon League Baseball Tournament\nThe 2019 Horizon League Baseball Tournament was held from May 22\u201325. All six of the league's teams met in the double-elimination tournament held at the home field of the regular season champion. The winner of the tournament, UIC, earned the conference's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289780-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Horizon League Baseball Tournament, Seeding and format\nThe league's teams were seeded one through six based on winning percentage, using conference games only. The bottom four seeds participated in a play-in round, with winners advancing to a double-elimination tournament also including the top two seeds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289781-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Horizon League Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 Horizon League Men's Basketball Tournament (also known as Motor City Madness) was the final event of the 2018\u201319 men's basketball season of the Horizon League. It began on March 5, 2019 and ended on March 12; first-round games were played at the home courts of the top four teams in regular-season league play, with all remaining games at Little Caesars Arena in Detroit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289781-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Horizon League Men's Basketball Tournament\nNorthern Kentucky, which shared the regular-season conference title with Wright State, won the tournament and thus received the conference's automatic berth into the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289781-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Horizon League Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nThe top 8 teams participated in the tournament. Teams were seeded by record within the conference, with the following tiebreaker system used to seed teams with identical conference records:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 54], "content_span": [55, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289782-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Horizon League Men's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2019 Horizon League Men's Soccer Tournament was the 32nd edition of the tournament. The tournament decided the Horizon League champion and guaranteed representative into the 2019 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament. The tournament began on November 11 and concluded on November 16, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289782-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Horizon League Men's Soccer Tournament\nWright State won their first Horizon League championship, defeating Milwaukee 4\u20133 in penalty kicks after a 1\u20131 draw in regulation time and extra time. It was Wright State's first ever Horizon League tournament championship. Three-time defending champions, UIC, were eliminated in the semifinals by Milwaukee. Wright State second year head coach, Jake Slemker, won his first title with the Raiders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289782-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Horizon League Men's Soccer Tournament\nJoel Sundell of Wright State won the Horizon League Tournament Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289782-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Horizon League Men's Soccer Tournament\nWith the victory, Wright State earned the conference's automatic bid into the NCAA Tournament, which marked Wright State's first ever trip to the NCAA Tournament. In the opening round, Wright State upset Notre Dame 3\u20132 in the first round, before losing on penalty kicks to Michigan in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289782-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Horizon League Men's Soccer Tournament, All-Tournament Team\nFollowing the championship game, the Horizon League All-Tournament Team was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289783-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Horizon League Women's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 Horizon League Women's Basketball Tournament (also known as Motor City Madness) was the postseason women's basketball tournament for the Horizon League. It was held March 5 through March 12, 2019. Wright State defeated Green Bay in the finals to earn the conference's automatic berth into the 2019 NCAA Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289783-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Horizon League Women's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nThe top 8 teams participated in 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, 49], "section_span": [51, 56], "content_span": [57, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289784-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Horizon League Women's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2019 Horizon League Women's Soccer Tournament was the postseason women's soccer tournament for the Horizon League. It was held from November 4 through November 9, 2018. The quarterfinals of the tournament were held at campus sites, while semifinals and final took place at Engelmann Field in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The six team single-elimination tournament consisted of three rounds based on seeding from regular season conference play. The Milwaukee Panthers were the defending champions, and they successfully defended their title by beating the UIC Flames 2\u20130 in the final. This was the twelfth overall title for Milwaukee and second for head coach Troy Fabiano.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289784-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Horizon League Women's Soccer Tournament, Bracket\nSemifinal matchups were determined by the results of the quarterfinals. The #1 seed would play the lowest-remaining seed, while the #2 seed would play the other quarterfinal winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 54], "content_span": [55, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289785-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Horsham District Council election\nThe 2019 Horsham District Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Horsham District Council in England. It was held on the same day as other local elections. Every seat was contested and the Conservatives retained control of the council with a majority of 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289785-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Horsham District Council election, Council Composition\nPrior to the election, the composition of the council was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289785-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Horsham District Council election, By-election results 2019 - 2023\nA by-election was called in Trafalgar ward due to the retirement of Leonard Crosbie on September 3, 2020. The Horsham & Crawley Liberal Democrats confirmed his death on 11 September 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289785-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Horsham District Council election, By-election results 2019 - 2023\nA by-election was called in Forest ward due to the retirement of Godfrey Newman on August 11, 2021. The by-election is due to be held on Thursday 21 October", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289786-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hougang United FC season\nThe 2019 season is Hougang United's 22nd consecutive season in the top flight of Singapore football and in the S.League. Along with the S.League, the club will also compete in the Singapore Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289786-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hougang United FC season, Transfers, Pre-season transfers, ln\nNote 1: Fazrul Nawaz returned to the team after the loan and subsequently complete the transfer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289786-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hougang United FC season, Transfers, Pre-season transfers, ln\nNote 2: Ariyan Shamsuddin returned to the team after being loaned to Garena Young Lions in 2018. However, he was released for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289786-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hougang United FC season, Transfers, Pre-season transfers, ln\nNote 3: Rafael Ramazotti was initially signed but left the club without paying off compensation to sign for Mexican club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289786-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Hougang United FC season, Transfers, Pre-season transfers, Promoted\nNote 1: Idraki Adnan was signed to the 2019 season but subsequently released.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289786-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Hougang United FC season, Team statistics, Appearances and goals\nNote 1: Zulfahmi Arifin scored an own goal against Tampines Rovers on 3/3/2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289787-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Astros season\nThe 2019 Houston Astros season was the 58th season for the Major League Baseball (MLB) franchise in Houston, Texas, their 55th as the Astros, seventh in both the American League (AL) and AL West division, and 20th at Minute Maid Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289787-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Astros season\nThe Houston Astros announced after last season that their weekly night games will air on KTRH 740.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289787-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Astros season\nOn September 18, the Astros clinched a postseason berth against the Texas Rangers and became the first team since the 2002\u20132004 New York Yankees to have three consecutive 100-win seasons, having done so in 2017 and 2018 as well. On September 22, the Astros clinched their third straight AL West title. For the first time in franchise history, the Astros finished the season with the best record in baseball and defeated the Tampa Bay Rays in the Division Series by a margin of three games to two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289787-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Houston Astros season\nThey then defeated the New York Yankees in the American League Championship Series (ALCS) by a margin of four games to two, winning the pennant and a trip to the World Series for the second time in three years. However, they were defeated by the Washington Nationals in seven games in the World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289787-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Astros season\nDespite the World Series upset, this Astros team is still considered to have put together one of the best regular seasons, and most talented rosters, in the history of baseball, owing largely to its historic 107-win campaign, lion's share of season-end accolades, and record-breaking individual stats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289787-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Astros season\nFollowing the season, the Astros led the league with a record six players selected to 2019's inaugural All-MLB Team. Earlier in the year, they also once again sent six players (a franchise record four of whom were starters) to the 2019 All-Star Game, the most from any team in baseball. When including All-Star ace Zack Greinke, who was traded from Arizona to Houston at the July trade deadline, this iteration of the Astros had an eye-popping total of seven 2019 All-Stars on its postseason squad, among the most in baseball history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289787-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Astros season\nJustin Verlander, having lead the MLB in wins, went on to clinch his second American League Cy Young Award after an all-time historically dominant season alongside strikeout and ERA leader Gerrit Cole. Yordan Alvarez also won Rookie of the Year after a history-making season, while Alex Bregman finished as a runner-up for the AL MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289787-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Astros season\nThis was the Astros' final season with A. J. Hinch as manager and Jeff Luhnow as general manager; both were fired in January 2020 after MLB investigators confirmed that the team had used electronics to steal opponents\u2019 signs back in the 2017 regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289788-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Baptist Huskies football team\nThe 2019 Houston Baptist Huskies football team represents Houston Baptist University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Huskies are led by seventh-year head coach Vic Shealy. They play their home games at Husky Stadium and are members of the Southland Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289788-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Baptist Huskies football team, Previous season\nThe Huskies finished the 2018 season 1\u201310, 0\u20139 in Southland play to finish in last place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289788-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Baptist Huskies football team, Preseason, Preseason poll\nThe Southland Conference released their preseason poll on July 18, 2019. The Huskies were picked to finish in eleventh place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 69], "content_span": [70, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289788-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Baptist Huskies football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013Southland Teams\nThe Huskies placed three players on the preseason all\u2013Southland teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 84], "content_span": [85, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289789-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Cougars football team\nThe 2019 Houston Cougars football team represented the University of Houston in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Cougars played their home games at TDECU Stadium in Houston, Texas, and competed in the West Division of the American Athletic Conference. They were led by first-year head coach Dana Holgorsen. They finished the season 4\u20138, 2\u20136 in AAC play to finish in a tie for fifth-place in the West Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289789-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Cougars football team, Previous season\nThe Cougars finished the 2018 season 8\u20135, 5\u20133 in AAC play to finish in a three-way tie for the West Division championship. After tiebreakers, they did not represent the West Division in the AAC Championship Game. They were invited to the Armed Forces Bowl where they lost to Army by a score of 14\u201370, in the process tying records for the most points given up (70) and the largest margin-of-loss (56) in NCAA bowl game history. On December 30, Houston fired Major Applewhite after two seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289789-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Cougars football team, Preseason, AAC media poll\nThe AAC media poll was released on July 16, 2019, with the Cougars predicted to finish second in the AAC West Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289789-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Cougars football team, Preseason, Preseason All-AAC teams\nHouston placed six players to the All-AAC team, sanctioned by Athlon Sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289789-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Cougars football team, Game summaries, at Tulsa\nat Skelly Field at H. A. Chapman Stadium, Tulsa, OK", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289790-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Dash season\nThe 2019 Houston Dash season is the team's sixth season as an American professional women's soccer team in the National Women's Soccer League. James Clarkson was appointed head coach on December 11, 2018 after Vera Pauw departed the team after only one season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289790-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Dash season, 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289791-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Dynamo season\nThe 2019 Houston Dynamo season is the club's 14th season of existence since joining Major League Soccer in the 2006 season. The Dynamo missed the playoffs in 2018, but they did win the 2018 US Open Cup, the first in club history. The Open Cup victory also qualified the Dynamo for the 2019 CONCACAF Champions League. It is the Dynamo's third year with Wilmer Cabrera as Head coach and fifth season under General Manager Matt Jordan. On the front office end, it is Gabriel Brener's fourth season as majority owner. On November 1, 2018, John Walker was announced as the new President of Business Operations, replacing Chris Canetti who stepped down on October 26. On July 18, NBA and Houston Rockets All-Star James Harden became a minority owner in the Dynamo", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 784]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289791-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Dynamo season\nThe Dynamo got off to their best start in club history, winning 6 and drawing 1 in their first 8 league matches. However, Houston would lose form as the season progressed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289791-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Houston Dynamo season\nThe Dynamo were knocked out of the Champions League in the quarter finals to Tigres and fell to Minnesota United at home in the Round of 16 for the US Open Cup, After a 14 game stretch that saw the Dynamo only get 2 wins and 1 draw that included 4-0 and 5-0 defeats to the Portland Timbers and Atlanta United respectively, the Dynamo had fallen down to 9th place in the Western Conference. On August 13th, Cabrera was fired as head coach. Assistant coach Davy Arnaud was promoted to interim head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289791-0001-0002", "contents": "2019 Houston Dynamo season\nArnaud and the newly acquired Christian Ramirez were able to improve the Dynamo's performances at the end of the season, but not enough to lead them into the playoffs. Houston missed the playoffs for the 5th time in 6 years and team captain DaMarcus Beasley retired at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289791-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Dynamo season, Current squad\nAppearances and goals are totals for MLS regular season only. Age and stats are up to the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289791-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Dynamo season, Player movement, In\nPer Major League Soccer and club policies terms of the deals do not get disclosed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289791-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Dynamo season, Competitive, U.S. Open Cup\nAs a member of MLS, the Dynamo will enter the competition at the fourth round, scheduled to be played on June 11, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289792-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Outlaws season\nThe 2019 Houston Outlaws season was the second season of the Houston Outlaws's existence in the Overwatch League (OWL) and their second under head coach Tae-yeong Kim. After finishing 22\u201318 the previous season, the Outlaws were looking to improve on their record and qualify for the season playoffs for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289792-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Outlaws season\nThe Outlaws began the season winning three of their matches in Stage 1. The stage was capped off by a 1\u20133 loss to the Atlanta Reign that prevented Houston from qualifying for the Stage 1 Playoffs. Houston performed poorly in Stage 2, as the team did not claim a single victory in their seven matches of the stage. After the All-Star break, the Outlaws hit their stride, posting a 5\u20132 record in Stage 3 and qualifying for the Stage 3 Playoffs. However, lost to the Vancouver Titans 0\u20133 in the quarterfinals. A 1\u20133 loss to the London Spitfire in Week 3 of Stage 4 officially eliminated the Outlaws from season playoff contention. Houston ended the season on a 5-game losing streak to finish the season with a disappointing 9\u201319 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289792-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Outlaws season, Preceding offseason, Player re-signings\nFrom August 1 to September 9, 2018, all Overwatch League teams that competed in the 2018 season could choose to extend their team's players' contracts. Outlaws elected to release three of its players, Russell \"FCTFCTN\" Campbell, Lucas \"Mendokusaii\" H\u00e5kansson, and Matthew \"Clockwork\" Dias; Mendokusaii and Clockwork were moved to non-player roles with the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289792-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Outlaws season, Preceding offseason, Free agency\nAll non-expansion teams could not enter the free agency period until October 8; they were able to sign members from their respective academy team and make trades until then. On September 18, Outlaws traded GG Esports Academy player Yoo \"Smurf\" Myeong-hwan to San Francisco Shock in exchange for Dante \"Danteh\" Cruz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289792-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Outlaws season, Regular season, Stage 1\nThe Outlaws opened their 2019 season with a match against the new expansion franchise Toronto Defiant on February 15. Despite taking the first two maps, Toronto was able to grab the second two to force a fifth tiebreaker map on Busan; the Defiant won that map as well \u2013 completing a reverse sweep \u2013 as the Outlaws lost 2\u20133. Two days later, Houston faced the Boston Uprising. Similarly to their previous match, the series was tied up after four maps and went to a fifth tiebreaker map on Ilios.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289792-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Houston Outlaws season, Regular season, Stage 1\nHouston was, again, unable to pull out a win, as they went on to lose by a 2\u20133 scoreline for the second game in a row. For their second week of play, Houston first faced the Hangzhou Spark on February 23. Although the Outlaws were favored to lose the match, they took the first three maps of the match en route to a 3\u20131 victory, marking their first win of the 2019 season. The following day, the Outlaws took on the 2018 regular season juggernauts New York Excelsior. Through the first three maps, Houston failed to claim a single point on any of the maps and only grabbed a single tick on the fourth, as the team was swept 0\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289792-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Outlaws season, Regular season, Stage 1\nIn their only match of week three, Houston faced the Florida Mayhem. Supported by strong performances by Jake \"Jake\" Lyon and Dante \"Danteh\" Cruz, the Outlaws took the first three maps and dropped the fourth to claim a 3\u20131 victory. The team only had one match in week four, as well, in a match against the winless Los Angeles Valiant. With the match tied up 1\u20131 after three maps, Houston was able to full-hold the Valiant on map four Route 66 to win the match 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289792-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Houston Outlaws season, Regular season, Stage 1\nHouston's last match of the stage was a must-win game against the Atlanta Reign to keep their Stage 1 Playoff hopes alive. After dropping map one Ilios and taking map two King's Row, the Outlaws were full-held on the third map Horizon Lunar Colony. Needing to win the fourth map Rialto to bring the match into a tiebreaker map, Houston failed to stop Atlanta's push from completing the map and were unable to complete it themselves, as Houston lost 1\u20133, eliminating them from playoff contention and ending the stage with a 3\u20134 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289792-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Outlaws season, Regular season, Stage 2\nHouston's first match of Stage 2 was in week two against the Stage 1 champions Vancouver Titans on April 13. The Outlaws took the first map without letting the Titans take a single round, highlighted by a strong performance from Jiri \"LiNkzr\" Masalin on Soldier: 76. However, they were only able to take a single point in the next three maps combined, causing Houston to lose the match by a 1\u20133 scoreline. The team next faced the Philadelphia Fusion on April 19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289792-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Houston Outlaws season, Regular season, Stage 2\nDespite solid individual performances from the Outlaws' players, the team play was not as coordinated as that of the Fusion. Unable to claim a single map, Houston was swept 0\u20134 in the match. Two days later, Houston took on the Shanghai Dragons. LiNkzr, again, performed well in the match, along with his teammate Austin \"Muma\" Wilmot, but the Outlaws were unable to win a single point in any map until the fourth map, which they still lost. With a 0\u20133 loss against the Dragons, Houston did not win a single map in week three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289792-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Outlaws season, Regular season, Stage 2\nFor week four, Houston traveled to the Allen Event Center in Allen, Texas for the Dallas Fuel Homestand Weekend. Their first match of the weekend was against the Seoul Dynasty on April 27. Houston showed an overall better ultimate economy than in their previous few weeks of play but was unable to convert that into a map win, as they were swept 0\u20134. Their next match, a day later, was against their in-state rivals Dallas Fuel. Houston, who had never lost to Dallas, split the first two maps 1\u20131 going into halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289792-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Houston Outlaws season, Regular season, Stage 2\nThe Outlaws were unable to win the following two maps, however, and lost the match 1\u20133. Looking for a win going into their final week of Stage 2, Houston first took on the Guangzhou Charge on May 2. The Outlaws dropped the first two maps to quickly go down 0\u20132 in the match, but after halftime, they were able to pick up wins on King's Row and Rialto to tie the match 2\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289792-0007-0002", "contents": "2019 Houston Outlaws season, Regular season, Stage 2\nHouston had not won a 5-map match in the 2019 season, and that trend would continue against the Charge, as they were not able to secure a win on Busan to lose the match 2\u20133. The Outlaws' final match of Stage 2 was against the London Spitfire two days later. Houston was swept 0\u20134 by London, and ended the stage with a winless 0\u20137 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289792-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Outlaws season, Regular season, Stage 3\nThe Outlaws faced the New York Excelsior in their first match of Stage 3. Houston was able to take the first map off New York, but the Excelsior managed to grab the second, tying the match up 1\u20131 going into halftime. Coming out of halftime, the third map was won by the Outlaws, while the Excelsior won the fourth, bringing the match went to a fifth tiebreaker map. Houston ultimately lost the fifth map, losing the match 2\u20133. A week later, the team faced the Stage 2 champions San Francisco Shock in a match Houston was heavily favored to lose.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289792-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Houston Outlaws season, Regular season, Stage 3\nLike their match against New York a week prior, the game went to a fifth tiebreaker map; however, unlike their last game, Houston took down San Francisco and won the match 3\u20132. The win snapped both Houston's eight-game losing streak San Francisco's eleven-game winning streak. The team carried that success over into their next match, as they were able to sweep the Boston Uprising 4\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289792-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Outlaws season, Regular season, Stage 3\nFor their first match of week three, Houston took on the Paris Eternal. After going up 2\u20130 in the first half of the match, Houston was run over by Paris in map three. However, the Outlaws took map four to win the match by a 3\u20131 score, giving the team their first three-game winning streak of the season. Houston's next match was three days later against the struggling Florida Mayhem, who were on a 15-game losing streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289792-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Houston Outlaws season, Regular season, Stage 3\nAfter taking the first map, the Outlaws were edged out by the Mayhem in the next three consecutive maps, going on to lose the match 1\u20133. The team looked to bounce back from their loss in their final two matches of the stage. The Outlaws first took on the Washington Justice on June 28. After winning the first map and tying on the second, the Outlaws won the final two to take the match by a 3\u20130 scoreline. Two days later, they faced the Toronto Defiant in their final match of the stage; the Outlaws took the match by a score of 3\u20131. The Outlaws, who had a winless Stage 2, finished Stage 3 with a 5\u20132 record and secured a spot in the Stage 3 Playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289792-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Outlaws season, Regular season, Stage 3\nThe Outlaws faced the second-seeded Vancouver Titans in the Stage 3 Quarterfinals on July 11. The series opened on Ilios; the Outlaws consistently lost team fights, even when they had a player advantage, as they lost the map to go down 0\u20131. The second and third maps, Eichenwalde and Volskaya Industries, saw similar results. The Titans created solid defenses, and despite solid Widowmaker play from LiNkzr, Houston was unable to win either two, losing the match 0\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289792-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Outlaws season, Regular season, Stage 4\nThe Outlaws' first match of Stage 4, along with the first match with an enforced 2-2-2 role lock by the League, was against the Paris Eternal on July 25. Although Houston took the first map Busan convincingly, they were unable to take the following three and lost the match 1\u20133. Two days later, the team took on the Los Angeles Gladiators. Behind stellar performances from Dante \"Danteh\" Cruz and Alexandre \"SPREE\" Vanhomwegen, the Outlaws took down the Gladiators by a 3\u20131 score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289792-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Houston Outlaws season, Regular season, Stage 4\nHouston took on the Philadelphia Fusion in their first match of week two on August 2. Going into map four Havana, Houston was down 1\u20132. Both teams finished the map in overtime but Philadelphia was able to complete the map in their overtime round, leading to a 1\u20133 loss for the Outlaws. Two days later, Houston faced the Atlanta Reign. The Outlaws were unable to contain Atlanda DPS Jun \"Erster\" Jeong throughout the match, as the Outlaws did not win a point on Lijiang Tower and were full-held on Blizzard World. Despite losing most of the match, Houston did not play Matt \"coolmatt\" Iorio or Jacob \"JAKE\" Lyon, as the team went on to a 1\u20133 loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289792-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Outlaws season, Regular season, Stage 4\nThe team next faced the London Spitfire on August 10. Houston was dominated on the first map Lijiang Tower and narrowly lost the second map Volskaya Industries. Down 0\u20132, Houston needed a win on King's Row, the third map, but ultimately lost; after taking map four, Houston lost the match 1\u20133. The loss eliminated the Outlaws from season playoff contention. Now playing for pride, the Outlaws took on the red-hot Washington Justice the following day. Houston was still playing without JAKE, but managed to take the match to a fifth tiebreaker map. Unfortunately for the Outlaws, they were unable to take map five and lost the match 2\u20133. The team's final match of the season was against the Chengdu Hunters on August 17. The Outlaws could not pull out a win after the match went to a fifth tiebreaker map, falling 2\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 870]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289792-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Outlaws season, Sale of the franchise\nOn June 12, Immortals Gaming Club (IGC), the parent company of Immortals and Los Angeles Valiant, acquired Infinite Esports, the parent company of Houston Outlaws and OpTic Gaming, marking the first major sale of any Overwatch League franchise. By OWL rules, one company may not own more than one OWL franchise. Both Riot Games and Activision Blizzard approved the sale, but IGC must operate Valiant and Outlaws as entirely separate entities, with oversight by OWL representatives, until IGC sell the Outlaws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289792-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Outlaws season, Awards\nOn May 8, Dante \"Danteh\" Cruz was named as a reserve for the 2019 Overwatch League All-Star Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season\nThe 2019 season was the Houston Texans' 18th in the National Football League (NFL) and their sixth under head coach Bill O'Brien. It also marked the first full season without the ownership of Bob McNair, who died during the 2018 season. It was, however, the first season of full ownership of both Janice McNair and D. Cal McNair. For the first time in franchise history, the team played in London, against the Jacksonville Jaguars. On June 7, 2019, the Texans fired general manager Brian Gaine after only one season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season\nThe Texans attempted to match their 11\u20135 record from 2018 despite trading defensive end Jadeveon Clowney to the Seattle Seahawks for a 3rd round pick and two players. However, they lost their third straight season opener to the New Orleans Saints. Their first win came in Week 2 against the Jaguars. With a Week 16 win over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, the Texans clinched the AFC South for the fourth time in five seasons and their sixth overall division title. With the victory, the Texans also clinched their second 10-win season under O'Brien even though they failed to match their 11\u20135 record from last year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season\nThey defeated the Buffalo Bills in the Wild Card round 22\u201319 in overtime despite falling behind 16\u20130. However, they lost to the eventual Super Bowl champion Kansas City Chiefs in the Divisional round 51\u201331 after giving up an early 24\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Preseason\nThe Texans' preseason schedule was announced on April 9. Exact dates and times were finalized on April 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Preseason, Game summaries, Week 1: at Green Bay Packers\nIn the first preseason game of the 2019 season, the Texans had trouble holding on to the ball and committed four turnovers. Keke Coutee fumbled the ball on a muffed punt that was recovered in the end zone by Equanimeous St. Brown for a Packers' touchdown. Taiwan Jones also fumbled and lost the ball while Joe Webb threw two interceptions. Despite the turnovers, Houston out-gained Green Bay in total yards 412 vs. 237. After being down 18 points, the Texans rallied in the 4th quarter but the comeback fell short, losing to the Packers by 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 83], "content_span": [84, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Preseason, Game summaries, Week 2: vs. Detroit Lions\nThe Texans received the opening kickoff, with their first team offense marching down the field with the drive ending with a 4-yard touchdown pass from Deshaun Watson to DeAndre Hopkins. Watson finished the game 5/7 for 60 yards and a touchdown. Jordan Ta'amu also saw some play at quarterback, finishing 1/1 for 3 yards. Joe Webb was in as Houston's quarterback for most of the game, looking improved from the previous pre-season game. The Texans' offense committed less turnovers, with the only turnovers being a Webb interception and a fumble by wide receiver Steven Mitchell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Preseason, Game summaries, Week 3: at Dallas Cowboys\nRunning back Lamar Miller was injured on the second play of the game, tearing both his ACL and MCL. The Texans' offensive line struggled all game, giving up 8 sacks for a loss of 38 yards. Deshaun Watson only saw brief playing time, fumbling the ball after being sacked by Taco Charlton; Watson would not re-enter the game after the fumble and did not attempt any passes. Joe Webb saw most of the quarterback play for Houston, throwing two interceptions and being sacked 4 times for a loss of 18 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Preseason, Game summaries, Week 3: at Dallas Cowboys\nRookie free agent quarterback Jordan Ta'amu also saw play, completing 2 passes out of 5 attempts for 26 yards with no turnovers. Ta'amu was also sacked 3 times for a loss of 14 yards. The Texans only had 135 total yards with 4 turnovers while the Cowboys had 362 yards with no turnovers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Preseason, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. Los Angeles Rams\nTwo days after the game it was announced that the Texans had traded star defensive player Jadeveon Clowney to the Seattle Seahawks. The Texans received defensive ends Barkevious Mingo and Jacob Martin along with a 2020 third-round draft pick. Clowney was franchise tagged in March as a linebacker, but refused to sign the tag as he thought he should tagged a defensive end. Houston tried trading Clowney to the Miami Dolphins earlier in the week, but since Clowney had not signed his tag he had final say on where he would be traded to.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 83], "content_span": [84, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: at New Orleans Saints\nThe Texans' offense started off slow, only gaining 15 total yards on their first two drives. On the Saints' second drive, Drew Brees was intercepted in the red zone by Whitney Mercilus at the Houston 4-yard line, returning it for 2 yards. On the first play following the turnover, Deshaun Watson threw a 54-yard pass to Will Fuller; the drive ended with a 21-yard touchdown run from Watson. The Texans took a one-point lead with 37 seconds left in the game, only for the Saints to drive downfield and kick a 58-yard field goal to win the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 89], "content_span": [90, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: at New Orleans Saints\nThe Texans started 0\u20131, losing their third straight season opener. It was also the second straight road game that they had lost on a last-second field goal, after their Week 16 game against the Philadelphia Eagles in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 89], "content_span": [90, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: vs. Jacksonville Jaguars\nThe Texans were leading 13\u20136 in the second half before the Jags scored a touchdown. However, the Jags failed on their two-point conversion attempt, which led the Texans to their first win of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 92], "content_span": [93, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Los Angeles Chargers\nDuring the third quarter, quarterback Deshaun Watson made the 50th touchdown pass of his career on a 15-yarder to tight end Jordan Akins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 91], "content_span": [92, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. Atlanta Falcons\nAtlanta's defense struggled to contain Houston's offense, giving up 592 yards. Deshaun Watson passed for 426 yards with five touchdowns, only five incompletions, and no interceptions for a perfect passer rating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 87], "content_span": [88, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: at Kansas City Chiefs\nThis was assistant head coach Romeo Crennel's first visit to Kansas City in 7 years, where he served as their interim head coach for the final 3 Weeks of the 2011 season, most notably ending the Green Bay Packers' hopes of a perfect season that year, and was the Chiefs' head coach during the 2012 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 89], "content_span": [90, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: vs. New England Patriots\nThis was the Texans' first win over New England in a decade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 93], "content_span": [94, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Tennessee Titans\nWith the Kansas City Chiefs defeating the Los Angeles Chargers earlier in the afternoon, the Texans were locked in at the 4th seed for the playoffs. Houston rested several offensive and defensive starters with A. J. McCarron starting at quarterback, his first start since 2015 when he played for the Cincinnati Bengals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 89], "content_span": [90, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Wild Card Playoffs: vs. (5) Buffalo Bills\nHouston rallied back from a 16\u20130 3rd quarter deficit \u2013 having been held to 62 total yards in the first half \u2013 to win with 3:20 remaining in overtime on Ka'imi Fairbairn's 28-yard field goal, for Buffalo's 6th consecutive playoff loss since their last win in December 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 101], "content_span": [102, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Wild Card Playoffs: vs. (5) Buffalo Bills\nOn the opening drive of the game, Bills quarterback Josh Allen rushed for 42 yards \u2013 the Bills' longest rush of the season \u2013 and then caught a 16-yard touchdown pass from receiver John Brown on a trick play to put Buffalo up 7\u20130. In the second quarter, Devin Singletary rushed for an 18-yard gain and Allen completed a 28-yard pass to Brown as the team drove 69 yards in 11 plays to go up 10\u20130 on Stephen Hauschka's 40-yard field goal. Then after a punt, Buffalo drove 74 yards in 15 plays to score on a second 40-yard field goal from Hauschka, giving them a 13\u20130 lead at half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 101], "content_span": [102, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Wild Card Playoffs: vs. (5) Buffalo Bills\nFive minutes into the third quarter, Texans receiver DeAndre Hopkins fumbled the ball while being tackled by Tre'Davious White, and Tremaine Edmunds recovered it on the Texans' 38-yard line. Buffalo then drove to the 12-yard line, but ended up settling for Hauschka's third field goal after Allen was sacked on third down by J. J. Watt, giving them a 16\u20130 lead. This time, Houston managed to respond, moving the ball 75 yards in 9 plays and scoring on a 20-yard touchdown run from quarterback Deshaun Watson; Watson also scored the ensuing 2-point conversion to make the score 16\u20138. On the Bills' ensuing drive, linebacker Whitney Mercilus forced a fumble while sacking Allen, which Jacob Martin recovered for the Texans at midfield with 14:18 remaining. Watson then completed a 20-yard pass to Kenny Stills that set up Fairbairn's 41-yard field goal, cutting the score to 16\u201311.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 101], "content_span": [102, 981]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Wild Card Playoffs: vs. (5) Buffalo Bills\nAfter Buffalo punted on their next drive, Watson completed a 41-yard pass \u2013 on the drive's second play \u2013 to Hopkins on the Buffalo 28-yard line, and later connected with tight end Darren Fells for 14 yards to bring up first and goal from the 1-yard line. Running back Carlos Hyde fumbled a pitch from Watson and was forced out of bounds for a 4-yard loss, before catching a 5-yard touchdown pass from Watson on the next play. Hopkins caught Watson's pass for a 2-point conversion, giving Houston their first lead at 19\u201316 with 4:42 remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 101], "content_span": [102, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0019-0001", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Wild Card Playoffs: vs. (5) Buffalo Bills\nBuffalo started out their next drive with a 38-yard completion from Allen to Singletary, and soon found themselves with a first down on the Texans' 25-yard line. After an incompletion, Frank Gore was dropped by Mike Adams for a 3-yard loss and then Allen was flagged for intentional grounding, pushing the team all the way back to the 42-yard line. Allen was sacked for a 19-yard loss by Martin on 4th-and-27, with a turnover on downs putting the Texans at Buffalo's 39-yard line with less than two minutes remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 101], "content_span": [102, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0019-0002", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Wild Card Playoffs: vs. (5) Buffalo Bills\nThe Bills' defense managed to pin the Texans down, with Watson being stopped short by Star Lotulelei on 4th-and-1. Gaining the ball with 1:16 left, Allen led Buffalo 41 yards in 11 plays, including a 20-yard run by Allen, to score on Hauschka's 47-yard field goal, sending the game to overtime at 19\u201319.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 101], "content_span": [102, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Wild Card Playoffs: vs. (5) Buffalo Bills\nAfter both teams punted on their first drive of overtime \u2013 Buffalo having punted after a penalty pushed the team out of field goal range \u2013 Houston drove 73 yards in 9 plays for the game-winning score; the key play of the drive was an 18-yard completion from Watson to running back Duke Johnson on 3rd-and-18 from the Texans' 19-yard line. Then Watson rushed for 5 yards, Stills caught a pass for 10 yards, and Hyde rushed 4 yards to the Bills' 44-yard line. On the next play, Watson evaded a sack attempt by two Buffalo defenders and fired a short pass to reserve running back Taiwan Jones, who took off for a 34-yard gain to Buffalo's 10-yard line. Fairbairn then kicked a 28-yard field goal to give Houston the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 101], "content_span": [102, 823]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Wild Card Playoffs: vs. (5) Buffalo Bills\nThe Texans were the only home team to win during the Wild Card round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 101], "content_span": [102, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Divisional Playoffs: at (2) Kansas City Chiefs\nAfter falling behind 24\u20130, Kansas City suddenly buried the Texans with an NFL playoff record 7 consecutive touchdowns and a field goal over their next eight drives, starting with a shocking 28-point second quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 106], "content_span": [107, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Divisional Playoffs: at (2) Kansas City Chiefs\nOn the opening possession, Houston mounted a six-play, 75-yard drive that culminated in Deshaun Watson\u2019s 54-yard touchdown pass to Kenny Stills on 3rd-and-1, giving the Texans an early 7\u20130 lead. The Chiefs then went three-and-out on their first drive, with tight end Travis Kelce dropping a potential first down pass on third down. Dustin Colquitt\u2019s ensuing punt was blocked by Barkevious Mingo and recovered by Lonnie Johnson Jr., who returned it 10 yards for a touchdown that put the Texans up 14\u20130 less than five minutes into the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 106], "content_span": [107, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Divisional Playoffs: at (2) Kansas City Chiefs\nAfter both teams punted on their next drives, Chiefs returner Tyreek Hill muffed the ball inside his own 10-yard line which was recovered by Keion Crossen for Houston. Two plays later, Watson found tight end Darren Fells in the end zone for a 4-yard touchdown and a 21\u20130 lead late in the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 106], "content_span": [107, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Divisional Playoffs: at (2) Kansas City Chiefs\nThe next time Houston got the ball, they drove 48 yards in 9 plays to a 4th and inches on the Chiefs 13-yard line. Rather than risk a conversion, the Texans settled for Ka'imi Fairbairn's 31-yard field goal to go up by 24 four minutes into the second quarter. However, this would be the extent of their success, as they went on to be outscored 51-7 for the rest of the game. First, Mecole Hardman returned the ensuing kickoff 58 yards to Houston's 42-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 106], "content_span": [107, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0025-0001", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Divisional Playoffs: at (2) Kansas City Chiefs\nPatrick Mahomes then threw a 25-yard pass to Kelce to get in the red zone before hitting running back Damien Williams for a 17-yard touchdown. After Houston went three-and-out on their next drive, they attempted a fake punt on 4th and 4 with a direct snap to Justin Reid who was tackled by Daniel Sorensen two yards short, giving Kansas City the ball at the Texans 33. Johnson was then called for pass interference to put the ball at the five before Mahomes hit Kelce in the end zone to cut the deficit to 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 106], "content_span": [107, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0025-0002", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Divisional Playoffs: at (2) Kansas City Chiefs\nOn the ensuing kickoff, DeAndre Carter fumbled the ball due to a hit by Sorenson, and it went right into the arms of Kansas City's Darwin Thompson, who returned it to the Houston 6. Mahomes then threw his third touchdown pass in less than four minutes, and his second to Kelce, to make the score 24\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 106], "content_span": [107, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Divisional Playoffs: at (2) Kansas City Chiefs\nTaking possession at their own 10 with 2:47 left in the quarter, the Chiefs went on a 90-yard drive that included another pass interference on Johnson, while Mahomes rushed twice for 35 yards and completed a pair of 20-yard passes to Hill and Kelce. Finally, with 44 seconds left in the half, Mahomes threw another five-yard touchdown to Kelce to give the Chiefs their first lead of the game, 28\u201324. Mahomes\u2019 four touchdown passes in the second quarter tied an NFL postseason record set by Doug Williams in Super Bowl XXII. Fairbairn missed a 51-yard field goal as time expired in the half as the Chiefs became the first team in NFL history to fall behind by as many as 20 points in the first half but still lead at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 106], "content_span": [107, 832]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Divisional Playoffs: at (2) Kansas City Chiefs\nThe Chiefs would extend their lead on the opening possession of the third quarter, going 85 yards in 7 plays, the longest a 48-yard catch by Sammy Watkins. Williams ran the ball in from the goal-line, increasing their lead to 34-24 after Harrison Butker missed the extra point. After forcing another Texans punt, the Chiefs took advantage of another pass interference penalty against Houston and a 28-yard completion from Mahomes to Kelce, scoring on their sixth straight possession with another Williams touchdown run to give them a 41\u201324 lead with 4:39 left in the quarter. Houston finally snapped Kansas City's 41-point run when Watson completed 4 passes for 80 yards and finished the drive with a 5-yard touchdown run, making the score 41\u201331 with 24 seconds left in the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 106], "content_span": [107, 895]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Divisional Playoffs: at (2) Kansas City Chiefs\nKansas City would make it seven touchdowns in a row, setting a new postseason record, on a drive that included a 23-yard pass to Kelce and a 28-yard completion to Watkins, putting the ball at the Houston 8. Mahomes then found Blake Bell in the end zone, making the score 48\u201331. On Houston's next drive, they turned the ball over on downs at the Chiefs 42. A pair runs by Williams for gains of 11 and 26 yard to set up Butker's 24-yard field goal with 8:06 left to put Kansas City up by 20. Houston then turned the ball over on downs on their final two possessions, the last coming when Frank Clark sacked Watson for a 17-yard loss on 4th-and-8 from the Kansas City 8-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 106], "content_span": [107, 784]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289793-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston Texans season, Postseason, Game summaries, AFC Divisional Playoffs: at (2) Kansas City Chiefs\nMahomes finished the game 23/35 for 321 yards and five touchdowns with no interceptions. He was also the leading rusher with 53 yards on seven carries. Kelce had 10 catches for 134 yards and three touchdowns, tying a Super Bowl-era postseason record. Hardman had 6 kickoff returns for 142 yards. Williams rushed for 47 yards, caught 2 passes for 21 yards, and scored 3 touchdowns. Watson threw for 388 yards and two touchdowns, while DeAndre Hopkins had 118 yards on nine catches. Kansas City's 24-point comeback was the fourth largest in postseason history, and they would go on to win Super Bowl LIV. The Texans became the first team in NFL postseason history to lose by 20 or more points after leading by 20 or more points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 106], "content_span": [107, 833]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289794-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston mayoral election\nThe 2019 Houston mayoral election was decided by a runoff that took place on December 14, 2019 to elect the Mayor of Houston. Incumbent mayor Sylvester Turner defeated attorney Tony Buzbee in the runoff by 56.04% to 43.96%. No candidate won a majority of the vote during the general election on November 5, 2019 where Turner received 46% of the vote and Buzbee received 29%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289794-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston mayoral election, Declared candidates\nThe following candidates have announced their candidacies for the 2019 Houston mayoral election:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289794-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston mayoral election, Declared candidates, Candidates, Challengers\nIn September 2019, it was announced that 11 other names will appear on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 75], "content_span": [76, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289794-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Houston mayoral election, Election results\nHeld November 5, 2019 -- 50% needed to avoid runoff", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289795-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Howard Bison football team\nThe 2019 Howard Bison football team represented Howard University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Bison played their home games at William H. Greene Stadium. They were a member of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC). The Bison were led by first-year head coach Ron Prince until he was placed on administrative leave prior to the team's November 9 game, with director of football operations Aaron Kelton named as interim head coach. They finished the season 2\u201310, 2\u20136 in MEAC play to finish in a tie for seventh place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289795-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Howard Bison football team, Preseason, MEAC poll\nIn the MEAC preseason poll released on July 26, 2019, the Bison were predicted to finish in fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289795-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Howard Bison football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013MEAC teams\nThe Bison had nine different players selected to the preseason all-MEAC teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289796-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hpakant jade mine collapse\nOn 22 April 2019, a landslide triggered the collapse of a jade mine near Maw Wun Kalay, Hpakant, Kachin State, Myanmar, trapping at least 54 miners. The deaths of four miners were confirmed, along with the later deaths of two rescue workers. The remaining miners are presumed to be dead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289796-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hpakant jade mine collapse, Collapse\nAt 23:30 MMT, a mud-filled pond at a jade mine in Hpakant collapsed. The mud and tailings in the pond buried miners below it in up to 30.5 metres of mud. At the time, the miners were asleep in their residences, which were located below the mine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289796-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Hpakant jade mine collapse, Collapse\nThe miners belonged to two different companies: Myanmar Thura and Shwe Nagar Koe Kaung, while the mine was operated by Unity Co. A photo taken some time before the mine collapse and posted to Facebook showed a large pool of water being formed above the miners, while the Myanmar Thura company mined against the earth under the water.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289796-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hpakant jade mine collapse, Rescue efforts\nRescue efforts were started on 23 April, the morning after the collapse. The efforts were coordinated by the local government and welfare organizations. According to Tin Soe, a politician representing the area, removing the mud \"could cost millions of dollars.\" He also said that \"they won\u2019t survive. It is not possible because they are buried under mud.\" Four bodies were recovered. The search for more miners was cancelled on 26 April, after another landslide killed two of the rescue workers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289796-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hpakant jade mine collapse, Reactions\nIn response to the collapse, the acting UN Resident Coordinator to Myanmar called on the country to implement new safety legislation to protect mine workers. The natural resource minister of Kachin said that he would take action against mining companies involved in the incident, and said that he wanted mining companies to work to improve the safety of their mines. Following the collapse, the Lonekhin Jade Office carried out a survey on the safety of other jade mines in the region, reporting to the Myanmar government that other mining blocks in the area were also dangerous.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289796-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Hpakant jade mine collapse, Reactions\nIn response, the Myanmar central government suspended operations in seventeen mine blocks in Hapakant, affecting eleven companies. None of the companies the miners worked for or who operated the mine were shut down or found at fault by the Myanmar government. The Myanmar Gems Enterprise instead blamed the collapse on \"the instability of the earth.\" Some of the families of the miners were compensated, with one family receiving approximately $30,000USD, more than the average compensation for the victims of other industrial accidents in Hpakant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289796-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Hpakant jade mine collapse, Reactions\nReporters from Frontier Myanmar said that their investigation found that the collapse was preventable, and blamed it on policy failures under the current National League for Democracy and previous governments. All three of Myanmar Thura's mining licenses had expired in 2017, and the company had never been licensed to work in this mine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289796-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Hpakant jade mine collapse, Reactions\nIn May, 2019, the government issued a three month ban on mining in Hpakant, to prevent a collapse during the monsoon season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289797-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hpakant jade mine collapse (July)\nIn the early morning of July 28, 2019, a landslide in a Hpakant jade mine killed at least 17 people, leaving others missing and two injured. The people killed were workers from Yarzahtarni Jade Mining Company, local police, and others unaffiliated with the mine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289797-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hpakant jade mine collapse (July), Landslide\nBecause of Myanmar's monsoon season, the government had previously ordered all mines in Hpakant to cease operation. However, several of the workers from Yarzahtarni Jade company were still sleeping in tents below the mine. According to local residents, there were also still people looking through the tailings of the mine, trying to find jade discarded by the miners. To prevent illegal mine activity, the government had stationed police officers at the mine. The policemen were also sleeping in tents below the mine, near the workers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289797-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hpakant jade mine collapse (July), Landslide\nAccording to the local police, the area had experienced a lot of heavy rain in the week leading up to the collapse. Shortly after midnight on July 28th, a landslide occurred, and at approximately 2:20 am MMT, the mine collapsed onto the workers and police sleeping below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289797-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hpakant jade mine collapse (July), Rescue and recovery\nTwo policemen were injured and required hospital attention. Initially, the bodies of 14 miners were recovered after the collapse, including the body of one police officer. Later in the day, the total dead was updated to 17, with the death and missing tolls still expected to rise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289797-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Hpakant jade mine collapse (July), Rescue and recovery\nRescue efforts were organized by Myanmar police, who were assisted by the Thinkhar Philanthropic Society, a charity organization.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289797-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Hpakant jade mine collapse (July), Response\nState Minister for Natural Resources and Environmental Conservation U La Sai ordered signs to be placed by the mining companies, warning that landslides could occur, and for local government to inspect the mines and make sure that they followed all safety precautions. According to Hpakant Director Kyaw Swa Aung, the workers had been in the mine to protect it at the instruction of the mine owners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289798-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hualien earthquake\nThe 2019 Hualien earthquake (Chinese: 418\u82b1\u84ee\u5730\u9707) struck Hualien County, Taiwan with a moment magnitude of 6.1 on 18 April at 13:01 local time (05:01 UTC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289798-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hualien earthquake, Geography\nA 6.1 earthquake hit Taiwan which caused damage to weak buildings and roads in Taipei and other districts. Two people were injured while hiking and 15 other people were injured in Taipei. This was a moment magnitude earthquake 9 kilometres off of Hualien County, Taiwan. One of the two injured hikers which is identified as from Malaysia later died in local hospital on 28 April as the only fatality in the earthquake, which is the worst since 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289798-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hualien earthquake, Aftermath\nSeveral buildings were damaged after the earthquake with many buildings having to be evacuated. Outside walls of buildings damaged and furniture knocked off the wall was not unprecedented. Train services on Taipei's subway were suspended as were the airport subway to Taoyuan International Airport and most other metro and train systems in various parts of Taiwan, especially those around eastern and northern Taiwan, for safety inspections. A building was also leaning on its side in Hualien City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289799-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hub accident\n2019 Hub accident refers to a road accident on 21 January 2019 in which a passenger bus collided with a tank truck in Hub, Balochistan, Pakistan. At least 26 people were killed and 16 others suffered burn injuries as a result of the accident. The bus was travelling from Karachi to Panjgur with more than 40 people on board. The dead bodies were moved to Edhi Foundation's morgue in Sohrab Goth, Karachi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289799-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hub accident\nA joint investigation team was established to investigate the crash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289800-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hull City Council election\nThe 2019 Hull City Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Hull City Council in England. This was on the same day as other nationwide local elections. Following a review of Ward boundaries by the Local Government Boundary Commission for England (LGBCE) the whole council was elected in 2018, the 3rd placed winning candidate at that election is up for re-election in 2019. The Labour Party are defending overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289800-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hull City Council election\nThere were no elections in Bricknell or University wards, being two member wards and not being on this round of the three-year cycle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289800-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hull City Council election\nThis result had the following consequences for the total number of seats on the Council after the elections:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289800-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hull City Council election, Ward results\nAn asterisk * indicates an incumbent who stood for re-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289800-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Hull City Council election, Ward results\nTurnout figures where stated are the number of ballot papers handed out in a ward including any rejected ballot papers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289801-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hun Sen Cup\nThe 2019 Hun Sen Cup is the 13th season of the Hun Sen Cup, the premier football knockout tournament in Cambodia, for association football clubs in Cambodia involving Cambodian League and provincial teams organized by the Football Federation of Cambodia. Beoung Ket won the cup after beating Svay Rieng 5\u20134 on Penalty in the final. It was Beoung Ket's first time winning the cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289801-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hun Sen Cup, Round of 16\n26 June (1st leg): Siem Reap 0 - 6 Boeung Ket", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 75]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289801-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hun Sen Cup, Round of 16\n26 June (1st leg): Electricite du Cambodge 0 - 0 Angkor Tiger", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289801-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hun Sen Cup, Round of 16\n27 June (1st leg): Phnom Penh Crown 10 - 0 Kompong Cham", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289801-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Hun Sen Cup, Round of 16\n27 June (1st leg): Svay Rieng 4 - 0 Tboung Khmum", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 78]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289801-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Hun Sen Cup, Round of 16\n3 July (1st leg): Kirivong Sok Sen Chey 2 - 0 NagaWorld", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289801-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Hun Sen Cup, Round of 16\n3 July (1st leg): Asia Euro United 1 - 3 National Defense", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289801-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Hun Sen Cup, Round of 16\n4 July (1st leg): National Police 0 - 6 Visakha", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 77]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289801-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Hun Sen Cup, Round of 16\n4 July (1st leg): Soltilo Angkor 10 - 1 Ratanakiri", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 80]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289801-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Hun Sen Cup, Round of 16\n10 July (2nd leg): Boeung Ket 3 - 0 Siem Reap (9 - 0 agg)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289801-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Hun Sen Cup, Round of 16\n10 July (2nd leg): Angkor Tiger 3 - 2 Electricite du Cambodge (3 - 2 agg)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289801-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Hun Sen Cup, Round of 16\n11 July (2nd leg): Kompong Cham 0 - 14 Phnom Penh Crown (0 - 24 agg)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289801-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Hun Sen Cup, Round of 16\n11 July (2nd leg): Tboung Khmum 1 - 4 Svay Rieng (1 - 8 agg)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289801-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Hun Sen Cup, Round of 16\n17 July (2nd leg): Ratanakiri 5 - 5 Soltilo Angkor (6 - 15 agg)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289801-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Hun Sen Cup, Round of 16\n17 July (2nd leg): National Defense 3 - 2 Asia Euro United (6 - 3 agg)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289801-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Hun Sen Cup, Round of 16\n18 July (2nd leg): NagaWorld 1 - 0 Kirivong Kirivong Sok Sen Chey (1 - 2 agg)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289801-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Hun Sen Cup, Round of 16\n18 July (2nd leg): Visakha 4 - 0 National Police (10 - 0 agg)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289801-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Hun Sen Cup, Quarter-finals\n14 August (1st leg): Boeung Ket 2 - 0 Soltilo Angkor", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289801-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Hun Sen Cup, Quarter-finals\n14 August (1st leg): National Defense 1 - 0 Phnom Penh Crown", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289801-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Hun Sen Cup, Quarter-finals\n14 August (1st leg): Visakha 4 - 2 Kirivong Kirivong Sok Sen Chey", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289801-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Hun Sen Cup, Quarter-finals\n15 August (1st leg): Angkor Tiger 0 - 2 Svay Rieng", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 83]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289801-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Hun Sen Cup, Quarter-finals\n28 August (2nd leg): Soltilo Angkor 1 - 0 Boeung Ket (1 - 2 agg)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289801-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Hun Sen Cup, Quarter-finals\n28 August (2nd leg): Kirivong Kirivong Sok Sen Chey 0 - 1 Visakha (2 - 5 agg)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289801-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Hun Sen Cup, Quarter-finals\n28 August (2nd leg): Phnom Penh Crown 2 - 1 National Defense (2 - 2 agg, 5 - 4 pen)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289801-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Hun Sen Cup, Quarter-finals\n28 August (2nd leg): Svay Rieng 4 - 0 Angkor Tiger (6 - 0 agg)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289801-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Hun Sen Cup, Semi-finals\n19 September: Svay Rieng 0 - 0 (5 - 4 pen) Phnom Penh Crown", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289801-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Hun Sen Cup, Final\n6 November: Boeung Ket 1 - 1 Svay Rieng (aet, 5 - 4 pen)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 80]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289802-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Challenger Open\nThe 2019 Hungarian Challenger Open was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the fourth edition of the tournament and was a part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Budapest, Hungary between 4 and 10 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289802-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Challenger 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-00289802-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Challenger Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as a special exempt:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289802-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Challenger Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw using a protected ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289802-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Challenger Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as alternates:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289802-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Challenger Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289803-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Challenger Open \u2013 Doubles\nF\u00e9lix Auger-Aliassime and Nicola Kuhn were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289803-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Challenger Open \u2013 Doubles\nKevin Krawietz and Filip Pol\u00e1\u0161ek won the title after defeating Filippo Baldi and Luca Margaroli 7\u20135, 7\u20136(7\u20135) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289804-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Challenger Open \u2013 Singles\nVasek Pospisil was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289804-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Challenger Open \u2013 Singles\nAlexander Bublik won the title after defeating Roberto Marcora 6\u20130, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289805-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Grand Prix\nThe 2019 Hungarian Grand Prix (formally known as the Formula 1 Rolex Magyar Nagyd\u00edj 2019) was a Formula One motor race which was held on 4 August 2019 at the Hungaroring in Mogyor\u00f3d, Hungary. The race was the 12th round of 21 of the 2019 Formula One World Championship and the 35th running of the Hungarian Grand Prix and the 34th time the race had been run as a World Championship event since the inaugural season in 1950.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289805-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Grand Prix, Background, Entrants\nThe drivers and teams entered were the same as those on the season entry list with no additional stand-in drivers for either the race or practice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289805-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Grand Prix, Background, Championship standings before the race\nHeading into the weekend it was Lewis Hamilton and Mercedes who held a lead of 41 and 148 points in the drivers and constructors championships respectively. The size of their leads meant that both would still be leading their respective championships after the race regardless of the race result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 77], "content_span": [78, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289805-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Grand Prix, Qualifying\nMax Verstappen was fastest, becoming the first Dutch Formula 1 driver to be on pole and also the 100th different driver to be on pole in Formula 1 history. He was followed by Mercedes' drivers Valtteri Bottas and Lewis Hamilton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289805-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nMax Verstappen got a reasonable start from pole position but the Mercedes cars of Valtteri Bottas and Lewis Hamilton were both able to attack into turn one, forcing Verstappen to defend on the inside. However, Bottas locked his front right tyre forcing Hamilton to take a wider line through the corner and allowing Verstappen to pull away between turns one and two. Behind the front three cars, Charles Leclerc got a good start and maintained his lead over teammate Sebastian Vettel into turn one but Carlos Sainz managed to get ahead of both Pierre Gasly and Lando Norris to briefly threaten Vettel on the entry to the second corner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289805-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nThrough turn two, Bottas once again locked his tyres allowing Hamilton to attack around the outside and eventually pass through turn three, albeit with a tap on Bottas's front wing on the exit. The overtaking move forced Bottas slightly wide and onto the kerbs which slowed him enough for Leclerc to challenge on the run up to turn four. As Leclerc passed Bottas, he drifted to the left hitting the same part of the wing that Hamilton had touched moments before, damaging it. The incident was investigated by the stewards but no action was taken.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289805-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nThe damage to his wing hindered Bottas's pace and Vettel was able to overtake on the start finish straight at the start of lap 2. Bottas stayed out for a few more laps but was eventually brought into the pits at the end of lap 6 for a change to the hard tyres and a new front wing, dropping him to last place. At the front, Verstappen and Hamilton began to pull away from the rest of the field. By lap 13 the gap between Hamilton, in second place, and Leclerc, in third, was more than 10 seconds. Whilst the two Ferraris of Leclerc and Vettel were running within a few seconds of each other in third and fourth with the rest of the field lagging a further 17 seconds behind.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289805-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nBy lap 15 Bottas had managed to start making progress through the field and was up to seventeenth place. Just ahead of him Daniel Ricciardo had captured fourteenth place and Sergio P\u00e9rez was running in eleventh from his starting position of sixteenth. At the start of lap 19, the two Toro Rosso cars of Daniil Kvyat and Alexander Albon battled side by side all the way through the first sector, running millimetres apart at the exit of turn two, before Kvyat forced Albon onto the run off area after turn four and took twelfth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289805-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nAt the front, Verstappen pitted at the end of lap 25 for hard tyres, giving Hamilton a temporary lead. Hamilton then tried to push to overcut Verstappen on pit stop strategy but failed to make ground and was pitted on lap 32 for hard tyres, emerging about 5 seconds behind Verstappen. Immediately Hamilton went on the attack, however the two leading cars had to pick their way through traffic as they lapped slower cars. Whilst this slowed both drivers' progress, the presence of the lapped cars also gave Verstappen DRS allowing him to stay ahead of Hamilton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289805-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nAt the end of lap 38, Verstappen was held up by Ricciardo and then made a small mistake on the exit of turn twelve allowing Hamilton to close to 0.3 seconds. Both had DRS as they started lap 39 but Hamilton managed to pull almost alongside into turn one as they lapped Ricciardo. Unable to make the move, Hamilton continued to fight through turns two and three before launching a brave sortie into turn four that saw him run wide and fall back behind Verstappen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289805-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nThroughout the race, Hamilton had been struggling with brake issues, and the prolonged assault on Verstappen had overheated his brakes, forcing the Mercedes to back off through the next few laps. Knowing that they had used the best of the current set of tyres, Mercedes opted to try a two-stop strategy and pitted Hamilton for medium tyres on at the end of lap 48. By now, the gap between second and third place was almost 40 seconds so, with an expected 20 seconds lost due to a pit stop, Hamilton could pit without dropping any positions. Red Bull chose not to respond, fearing that Verstappen would lose position to Hamilton via the undercut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289805-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nBoth Verstappen and Hamilton had to fight through traffic but, despite some initial gains, Hamilton was 15 seconds behind with 14 laps remaining. On lap 60, Hamilton was 12 seconds behind but then began to reel in Verstappen. On lap 63, Verstappen reported over the team radio that his tyres were \"dead\" with the gap to Hamilton less than 6 seconds. By the end of lap 66, Hamilton had caught up to Verstappen, easily passed him round the outside through turn one, and pulled away; he maintained the lead to the end of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289805-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nBehind the leaders, the Ferraris of Leclerc and Vettel battled over third place. Ferrari had put their drivers on a split strategy and pitted Vettel a second time for soft tyres which allowed him to pass Leclerc, who was on old hard tyres, at the start of lap 68. Having lost the race lead, Verstappen pitted for soft tyres and proceeded to set the fastest lap of the race, a 1:17.103 which was a new lap record at the time, and thus earned him an extra championship point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289805-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nFurther down the field, Carlos Sainz came in fifth and Lando Norris managed ninth earning twelve points for McLaren. Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen came in seventh for Alfa Romeo and Albon secured the last point scoring position of tenth for Toro Rosso. Romain Grosjean was the only retirement, on lap 51 due to a water pressure issue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289805-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nBottas managed to recover to eighth place and Gasly finished sixth but both were scrutinised in the media due to their poor races in comparison to their teammates. Regarding Gasly, Red Bull team principal Christian Horner commented that Red Bull \"desperately need him realising more of the potential of the car\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289805-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Grand Prix, Race, After the race\nFollowing the Hungarian Grand Prix Red Bull Racing announced that Pierre Gasly would be replaced by Alexander Albon for the remainder of the season, with Gasly taking Albon's seat at Toro Rosso.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289806-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Ladies Open\nThe 2019 Hungarian Ladies Open was a tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 23rd edition of the Hungarian Ladies Open and an International-level tournament on the 2019 WTA Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289806-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Ladies 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-00289807-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Ladies Open \u2013 Doubles\nGeorgina Garc\u00eda P\u00e9rez and Fanny Stoll\u00e1r were the defending champions, but chose not to participate together. Garc\u00eda P\u00e9rez played alongside Renata Vor\u00e1\u010dov\u00e1, but lost in the quarterfinals to Anna Blinkova and Anastasia Potapova.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289807-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Ladies Open \u2013 Doubles\nStoll\u00e1r played alongside Heather Watson, but lost in the final to Ekaterina Alexandrova and Vera Zvonareva, 4\u20136, 6\u20134, [7\u201310].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289808-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Ladies Open \u2013 Singles\nAlison Van Uytvanck was the defending champion and successfully defended her title, defeating Mark\u00e9ta Vondrou\u0161ov\u00e1 in the final, 1\u20136, 7\u20135, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289809-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Open (table tennis)\nThe 2019 Hungarian Open was the first event of the 2019 ITTF World Tour. It took place from 17\u201320 January in Budapest, Hungary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289810-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Open (tennis)\nThe 2019 Hungarian Open was a men's tennis tournament to be played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 3rd edition of the event, and part of the ATP Tour 250 series of the 2019 ATP Tour. It took place at Sport 11 in Budapest, Hungary, from April 22\u201328.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289810-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Open (tennis), Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 72], "content_span": [73, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289810-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Open (tennis), Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 72], "content_span": [73, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289811-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Open \u2013 Doubles\nDominic Inglot and Franko \u0160kugor were the defending champions, but \u0160kugor chose to compete in Barcelona instead. Inglot played alongside Rohan Bopanna, but lost in the quarterfinals to Andre Begemann and Ernests Gulbis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289811-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Open \u2013 Doubles\nKen and Neal Skupski won the title, defeating Marcus Daniell and Wesley Koolhof in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289812-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Open \u2013 Singles\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by WOSlinker (talk | contribs) at 19:16, 23 November 2019 (fix sup tags). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289812-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Open \u2013 Singles\nMarco Cecchinato was the defending champion, but withdrew due to illness.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289812-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Open \u2013 Singles\nMatteo Berrettini won the title, defeating Filip Krajinovi\u0107 in the final, 4\u20136, 6\u20133, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289812-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian Open \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289813-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian local elections\nHungarian local elections were held in Hungary on 13 October 2019. Mayors and assembly members were elected for a term of 5 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289813-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian local elections, Budapest, Mayor\nGergely Kar\u00e1csony was elected mayor, defeating incumbent Istv\u00e1n Tarl\u00f3s who had been in office since 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289813-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian local elections, Budapest, Assembly\nThe General Assembly of Budapest consists of the directly elected mayor, the mayors of the districts, and 9 members from party electoral lists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289813-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian local elections, Budapest, Assembly\nThe opposition bloc (Momentum\u2013DK\u2013MSZP\u2013Dialogue\u2013LMP) won a majority of 18 seats, with Fidesz\u2013KDNP winning 13, and 2 seats going to independent politicians. This will be the first time Fidesz will not hold a majority in the assembly in over 15 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289813-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian local elections, County assemblies\nParties running in the county assembly elections are subject to a 5% threshold. An asterisk indicates a party with an absolute majority. The Fidesz\u2013KDNP coalition won a majority in all assemblies holding elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289813-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian local elections, Major cities, Cities with county rights\nIn the 23 cities, 13 government-aligned or government-supported candidates won, with 10 going to opposition or opposition supported mayors. This is a sharp improvement for the opposition as they previously only occupied 3 of these mayorships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289813-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian local elections, Major cities, Cities with county rights\nIn most of the cities, the assembly majority is composed of members aligned with the mayor, except:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289813-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian local elections, Major cities, Cities with county rights\nIn B\u00e9k\u00e9scsaba, the mayor's civil organization together with Fidesz-KDNP members have a majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289813-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian local elections, Results\nIn several major cities and districts of Budapest, the opposition took part in the election with joint candidates as some surveys said there were possibilities to gain a majority in local municipalities with a joint list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289813-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Hungarian local elections, Results\nOpposition parties achieved better results as compared than the 2014 Hungarian local elections. This was the first set of local elections with a joint list of opposition parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289814-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hwaebul Cup\nThe 2019 Hwaebul Cup was the seventh edition of the Hwaebul Cup (\ud670\ubd88, Torch) celebrating North Korea's Youth Day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289814-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hwaebul Cup, Group stage\nThe 12 teams were divided into two groups. The group winners and runners-up advanced to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289814-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hwaebul Cup, Group stage\nIn Group A, Ry\u014fmy\u014fng finished first with five wins and one draw, and Amrokkang finished second with three wins, one draw and two defeats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289814-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hwaebul Cup, Group stage\nIn Group B, P'y\u014fngyang City finished first with four wins and one draw, and Hwaebul finished second with three wins, one draw and one defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289815-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad Open (badminton)\nThe 2019 Hyderabad Open (officially known as the IDBI Federal Life Insurance Hyderabad Open 2019 for sponsorship reasons) was a badminton tournament which took place at G. M. C. Balayogi SATS Indoor Stadium in Hyderabad, India, from 6 to 11 August 2019 and had a total purse of $75,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289815-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad Open (badminton), Tournament\nThe 2019 Hyderabad Open was the fifth Super 100 tournament of the 2019 BWF World Tour and also part of the Hyderabad Open championships, which had been held since 2018. This tournament was organized by the Badminton Association of India and sanctioned by the BWF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289815-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad Open (badminton), Tournament, Venue\nThis international tournament was held at G. M. C. Balayogi SATS Indoor Stadium in Hyderabad, Telangana, India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289815-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad Open (badminton), Tournament, Point distribution\nBelow is the point distribution table for each phase of the tournament based on the BWF points system for the BWF Tour Super 100 event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289815-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad Open (badminton), Tournament, Prize money\nThe total prize money for this tournament was US$75,000. Distribution of prize money was in accordance with BWF regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder\nIn November 2019, the gang rape and murder of a 26-year-old veterinary doctor in Shamshabad, near Hyderabad, sparked outrage across India. Her body was found in Shadnagar on 28 November 2019, the day after she was murdered. Four suspects were arrested and, according to the Cyberabad Metropolitan Police, confessed to having raped and killed the doctor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder\nThe Telangana Police Department stated the victim parked her scooter near a toll plaza, catching the attention of two lorry drivers and their assistants. According to police, they deflated her tire, pretended to help her, and pushed her into nearby bushes, where they raped and smothered her. Allegedly, they loaded her corpse onto a lorry and dropped it onto the roadside.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder\nThe police arrested four men based on the evidence gathered from CCTV cameras and from the victim's mobile phone. The accused were taken into judicial custody at Cherlapally Central Jail for fourteen days. The Chief Minister of Telangana ordered the formation of a fast-track court to try the accused for their alleged crimes. The rape and murder elicited outrage in several parts of the country. Protests and public demonstration against rape were organised nationwide after the incident, with the public demanding stricter laws against rape and rapists. The Minister of Home Affairs criticised the Telangana Police and stated that the government intended to amend the Indian Penal Code and Code of Criminal Procedure to introduce laws for quicker punishment by fast-track courts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 817]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder\nAll four accused were killed on 6 December 2019, under a bridge on Bangalore Hyderabad national highway, while they were in police custody. According to the police, the suspects were taken to the location for a reconstruction of the crime scene, where two of them allegedly snatched guns and attacked the police. In the ensuing shootout, all four suspects were shot dead. Some accused the police of extrajudicial execution, while thousands of people celebrated the men's deaths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder\nThe first post-mortem of the four accused who were killed in the encounter was conducted on the same day itself at a government hospital in Mahabubnagar from where the bodies were subsequently moved to the Gandhi Hospital. The Telangana High Court on 21 December ordered the re-postmortem of the four accused. The second autopsy was done by a team of forensic experts of AIIMS, Delhi at a hospital in Hyderabad. After re-postmortem, the bodies have been handed over to the next of kin after due identification process was done.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Background\nRape is the fourth most common crime against women in India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Background\nIndia has been characterised as one of the \"countries with the lowest per capita rates of rape\". Many rapes go unreported in various countries including India. The willingness to report rape has increased in recent years, after several incidents of rape received widespread media attention and triggered public protest. Most notably, the 2012 Delhi gang rape led the Government of India to reform its penal code for crimes of rape and sexual assault.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Victim\nThe victim Disha (changed name to protect the identity) had pursued a degree in a veterinary college in Rajendranagar mandal. She was a resident of Shamshabad and was working as a veterinary assistant surgeon at the state-run hospital at Kollur village.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Rape and murder\nAccording to the Telangana Police Department remand report, the victim had parked her scooter near Tondupally toll plaza, where the accused ones saw her, two lorry drivers and their assistants, who had been drinking whiskey before allegedly planning the crime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Rape and murder\nAccording to the remand report, on 27 November 2019 at around 6:15\u00a0p.m., after parking the scooter, the victim took a taxi to a dermatologist's office in Hyderabad. The suspects allegedly deflated her scooter's tire in her absence. After returning at around 9:15\u00a0p.m., she noticed the flat tyre and made a call to her sister. The accused told police they offered to help her, then ambushed her. Three of the suspects pushed her into bushes near the toll gate and turned off her phone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Rape and murder\nShe continued screaming for help, so the men poured whiskey into her mouth in an attempt to silence her. The four men removed her clothes and took turns sexually assaulting her until she started bleeding and lost consciousness. When she regained consciousness, they smothered her, wrapped the corpse in a blanket, transported it in their truck 27\u00a0km to a location near the Shadnagar interchange on the Hyderabad Outer Ring road, and at approximately 2:30\u00a0a.m. burnt it under a bridge using diesel and petrol purchased for the purpose.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Investigation\nThe police arrested the four accused based on the evidence gathered from CCTV cameras, an eyewitness, and the victim's mobile phone. It was reported that they were drunk during the rape and murder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Investigation\nThe woman's charred corpse was found under Chatanpally Bridge in Shadnagar located 30\u00a0km (19\u00a0mi) from the toll booth where she was abducted. Her scooter was found at a distance of 10\u00a0km (6.2\u00a0mi) from the place where her body was found. The police found her clothes, handbag, footwear and a liquor bottle near the toll booth. 70% of the body was covered with burns. A locket of Ganesha found on the charred corpse helped her family to identify the victim. The body was handed over to the family after a post mortem.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Investigation\nThe executive magistrate sent the four accused into custody for 14 days to Cherlapally Central Jail. On 1 December 2019, Telangana Chief Minister ordered that a fast-track court be formed to try the accused of this crime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Aftermath\nAlthough the case was solved by the police in twenty-four hours, the family was dissatisfied. According to the victim's family, the response by the Cyberabad Police was improper, claiming that a quicker response by the police could have saved the victim's life. The victim's father had approached the police at 11\u00a0p.m. on 27 November, after which the police allegedly wasted time over the applicability of the jurisdiction of the police station and inappropriate questioning of the family. Constables were only sent for a search along with the family at 3\u00a0a.m. to Thondupally toll plaza and could not find the victim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Aftermath\nThe day after the incident the local police suspended three policemen, including a sub-inspector, belonging to the Shamshabad airport police station for negligence and the delay in registering a missing person case.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Aftermath\nThe local police convinced the victim's family to allow the use of a fictional name, Disha, in place of the victim's true name in media reporting. They also suggested using the hashtag #JusticeForDisha for social media posts instead of using the real name. Indian laws prohibit naming rape victims, and violations are subject to legal penalties. On 3 December, a man from Nizamabad district was arrested by the Cyberabad police, after a cyber crime case was filed against him, for posting pictures and spreading derogatory posts about the victim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Aftermath, Second corpse\nThe half-burnt corpse of another woman was found nearby, and the case is under investigation as of 1 December 2019. The police stated that it was not clear if it was a case of self immolation or if she was set on fire. Police have not confirmed a link between the second corpse and the veterinarian's murder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Aftermath, Protests\nThe rape and murder caused outrage in several parts of the country. Protests against rape were organised across the country including the major cities, New Delhi, Mumbai, Ahmedabad. Hyderabad was the centre of the protests. Politicians including Rahul Gandhi, expressed shock over the incident that happened near Rajiv Gandhi International Airport. Protesters across India demanded stricter laws against rapists. After the arrest of the four suspects, a crowd of local residents gathered at the Shadnagar police station to protest against the crime and demanding that the police either hang or shoot the culprits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Aftermath, Protests\nDue to the crowd of protestors around the police station, the accused could not be brought to court. Instead the executive magistrate arrived to the police station and passed the order to send the accused on judicial custody for 14 days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Aftermath, Protests\nWhile the police were transporting the accused from the Shadnagar police station to the prison in Hyderabad, several protestors threw stones over police vehicles. Police used force and wielded batons to control the crowd, who were demanding the police hand over the accused to them. The public sentiment was against the police. The protestors questioned the priorities of the police and demanded that police act in a sensitive, responsive and proactive manner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Aftermath, Discussion in Parliament\nOn 2 December 2019, the incident was discussed in both houses of the Indian parliament, the Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha. The members of the two houses expressed outrage on the incident and demanded concrete action. In the Lok Sabha, the Union Minister Rajnath Singh stated that the government was \"open to every suggestion to curb such heinous crimes\" and ready to explore strongest legal provisions. Minister of State for Home Affairs G Kishan Reddy said, \"There is zero tolerance towards crimes against women and children. Our government will soon bring requisite amendments to CrPC and IPC.\" He further added that the government will possibly try to bring the changes in the ongoing winter session of Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Aftermath, Discussion in Parliament\nIn Rajya Sabha, an adjournment motions over the incident was rejected by Chairman Venkaiah Naidu, but he allowed the members to discuss such incidents in the country. Member of Parliament Jaya Bachchan said during a heated debate that the rapists should be lynched. P. Wilson suggested courts be empowered \"to surgically and chemically castrate convicted rapists before they are released from jails\" to prevent repeat offenders. He stated that the list of sexual offenders should be released publicly. Vijila Sathyananth asked for faster delivery of justice and the hanging of the accused before 31 December. A speedy trial and death penalty for the accused was common demand of the members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 764]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Aftermath, Discussion in Parliament\nMohd. Ali Khan asked for defined timelines for the trial in fast-track courts. He also asked to avoid giving a religious colour to the accused since they belonged to different religions. The Communist Party of India which generally opposes capital punishment demanded it for the accused and its member Binoy Viswam stated \"I do not believe in death penalty but these accused should be hanged for such a heinous crime\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Aftermath, Proposed legal changes\nIn an interview to NDTV while visiting the family of the victim, Union Minister of State for Home, Kishan Reddy criticised the casual attitude of Telangana Police and their lack of a sense of urgency, saying it might have saved the victim. He stated \"No one can be turned away from the police station like that. We will make it compulsory for every police station to accept a complaint. The FIR can be filed later; first they should have helped to search [for] the girl\". He added \"We take a very serious view of the developments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0023-0001", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Aftermath, Proposed legal changes\nWe intend to amend the IPC (Indian Penal Code) and CrPC (Code of Criminal Procedure) to make the law such that punishment is quick through fast-track courts. We will discuss this in great detail in a meeting of DGPs (senior police officers) between December 6 and 8. We want to publicise 112 as an emergency response system. Every woman must download the app to use in emergency. At the same time, the police and law enforcement authorities, her family, even some volunteers will be alerted, so response can be quick. We have recently introduced it in Delhi and want to publicise it everywhere.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Aftermath, Proposed legal changes\nThe Bureau of Police Research and Development (BPR&D) has made additional suggestions for changes to IPC and CrPC rules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Aftermath, Proposed legal changes\nThe Government of Andhra Pradesh passed a bill named Disha Act (also known as, Andhra Pradesh Criminal Law (Amendment) Bill, 2019) to award death penalty for rapists within 21 days after the crime is committed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Killing of the suspects\nAll four accused were killed in an encounter (a term used in India for killings by police), at around 3:30 am IST on 6 December 2019, under a bridge on Bangalore Hyderabad national highway, prompting accusations of extrajudicial execution. The New York Times reported that police \"had been under enormous pressure to bring the rapists to justice\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Killing of the suspects\nAccording to Prakash Reddy, Deputy Commissioner of Shamshabad Police in Hyderabad, the four suspects were taken to the location for a reconstruction of the crime scene, where two of them snatched guns and attacked the police. In the ensuing shootout all four suspects were shot dead. According to reports in the Indian Express, police alleged that one of four accused had gestured to the other three to flee after attacking the police. The four tried to run towards a deserted pathway when police opened fire in what they described as self-defence. The suspects were not wearing handcuffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0027-0001", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Killing of the suspects\nAccording to Cyberabad police chief V. C. Sajjanar, the suspects had managed to snatch and use the weapons because the guns were unlocked. He stated \"All four accused got together and started attacking the police party. Officers maintained restraint and asked them to surrender but without listening to us they kept firing. Our officers retaliated\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Killing of the suspects, Response\nThe family of the victim welcomed the encounter. Thousands of people celebrated at the scene of the men's deaths the following day, some setting off firecrackers, distributing candies, showering police with flower petals, hoisting police to their shoulders, and shouting \"hail the police!\" The New York Times reported that crowds celebrating in the streets had brought traffic to a standstill. Celebrations were also reported in other areas. Politicians and celebrities thanked police for the encounter on social media.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0028-0001", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Killing of the suspects, Response\nThe BBC attributed the celebrations to frustration with the \"meandering pace\" of the judicial system in India, which often requires years and occasionally decades to adjudicate clear cases. The BBC noted the popularity of films featuring \"trigger-happy, vigilante cops brazenly carrying out extrajudicial executions\" and the number of tweets comparing the Cyberabad police officers with the protagonist of Singam, a 2010 film about an avenging police officer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Killing of the suspects, Response\nThe families of the accused were shocked with the news and questioned the killings. Human rights organizations and activists condemned the encounter. Maneka Gandhi stated that the case should have been tried in court. Karuna Nundy expressed concerns that \"now nobody will ever know if the four men killed by the police were innocent men, arrested fast to show action. And whether four of the most brutal rapists roam free, to rape and kill more women.\" Amnesty International India stated that the \"alleged extrajudicial execution\" had raised disturbing questions and asked for an independent investigation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0029-0001", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Killing of the suspects, Response\nThe Pioneer reported that multiple rights activists had termed the encounter as a distraction from the government's failures to safeguard women's rights. Meenakshi Ganguly of Human Rights Watch tweeted, \"To appease public rage over state failures against sexual assault, Indian authorities commit another violation.\" Activist Rukmini Rao criticized some members of parliament for adding to the pressure on police, telling News Today \"The police are acting on what they see as public support.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0029-0002", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Killing of the suspects, Response\nAnd today we find not just public support, ordinary citizens, but we are finding members of parliament demanding lynchings, demanding killings, and if that is the case, how do you expect the police to act? The parliament has to uphold constitutional law.\" The Telangana High Court ordered to preserve the bodies of the accused until 13 December, and permitted their transfer (due to lack of morgue space) to Gandhi Hospital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Killing of the suspects, Response\nThe National Human Rights Commission of India initiated an investigation of the killings and will send a team led by a senior officer to Telangana. News Today has questioned whether the encounter was staged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Legacy\nIn response to the incident, the Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly passed Andhra Pradesh Disha-Criminal Law (Andhra Pradesh Amendment) Bill, 2019 and Special Courts for Specified Offences against Women and Children) Bill, 2020. The bills seek to expediate the investigation and trail of heinous cases related to sexual offences against women and children when substantial conclusive evidence is present. As of July 2021, the bills were reserved for the President's assent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289816-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyderabad gang rape and murder, Legacy\nIn September 2020, filmmaker Ram Gopal Varma announced the film Disha Encounter which is based on the incident. The Central Board of Film Certification initially refused the certify the film but later passed it with Adult-only rating. The film's release has been delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic and the victim's parents approached the Telangana High Court petitioning that the film would bring disrepute to their family.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289817-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyndburn Borough Council election\nA by-thirds Hyndburn Borough Council local election, was held on Thursday 2 May 2019. Approximately one third of the local council's 35 seats fell up for election on that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289817-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyndburn Borough Council election, Background\nBefore the election Labour had a majority of 26 councillors, Conservatives had 9 councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289817-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyndburn Borough Council election, Council composition\nPrior to the election the composition of the council was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289817-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyndburn Borough Council election, Council composition\nNo candidates stood as potential Green or Independents councillors, in any Hyndburn ward, but UKIP candidates stood across only 2 wards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289817-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyndburn Borough Council election, Local Election result\nThe majority grouping of councillors as the headline result of the election, was unchanged; with Labour retaining an overall 26-seat majority, but with two seats switching hands, one from Labour to Conservative, one from Conservative to Labour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289817-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyndburn Borough Council election, Local Election result\nAfter the election, the composition of the council's 35 seats was -", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289817-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyndburn Borough Council election, Local Election result\nNB: Four (of the 16) Council wards, where seats will NOT be up for re-election in 2019, include the following wards - Netherton, Peel, Spring Hill and St. Andrews' in Oswaldtwistle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289817-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Hyndburn Borough Council election, Local Election result\nPrevious Councillors who were Standing-Down in this election included - Clare Cleary (Lab) (Rishton).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289818-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Hypo-Meeting\nThe 45th edition of the annual Hypo-Meeting took place on May 25 and May 26, 2019 in G\u00f6tzis, Vorarlberg (Austria). The track and field competition, featuring a men's decathlon and a women's heptathlon event is part of the 2019 IAAF Combined Events Challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289818-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Hypo-Meeting\nOn the first day, Damian Warner succeeded in finishing the 100 metres in 10.12 seconds, setting a new world record for this discipline in the decathlon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289819-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF Combined Events Challenge\nThe 2019 IAAF Combined Events Challenge was the 22nd edition of the global series of combined track and field event meetings organised by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF). It featured decathlon for men and heptathlon for women. A total of eleven meetings were in the 2019 series, starting at the Multistars meet on 27 April and finishing at the 2019 World Athletics Championships on 4 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289819-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF Combined Events Challenge\nAthletes scored points based on their performances at meetings in the series, with the overall winners being the athletes with the highest aggregate score over three meetings. The total prize money was US$202,000, split evenly between male and female athletes. The male and female winners each received $30,000, while second and third placed athletes were entitled to $20,000 and $15,000 respectively. Smaller prizes were given to the rest of the top eight finishers. The overall winners were Damian Warner of Canada with 25,753 points in the decathlon and Austrian Verena Preiner with 19,623 points in the heptathlon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289819-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF Combined Events Challenge, Calendar\nThe 2019 challenge included eleven meetings, covering invitational meetings, as well as national, regional and international championships and games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289819-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF Combined Events Challenge, Points rankings\nThe following are the rankings of all athletes who competed at three series meets or more.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289820-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF Road Race Label Events\nThe 2019 IAAF Road Race Label Events are the twelfth edition of the global series of road running competitions given Label status by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF). The series included a total of 138 road races: 64 Gold Label, 25 Silver Label and 49 Bronze Label. In terms of distance, 88 races were marathons, 28 were half marathons, 15 were 10K runs, and 7 were held over other distances. The series included all six World Marathon Majors in the Gold category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289821-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Challenge\nThe 2019 IAAF World Challenge was the tenth edition of the annual IAAF World Challenge, a nine-leg series of track and field meetings. The Jamaica International Invitational was cancelled at the last minute due to financial issues and thus the series this year comprises only eight meetings. The Meeting de Atletismo Madrid was not part of the series for the first time, but was replaced by a new meeting, the Nanjing World Challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289821-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Challenge, Schedule\nThe following nine meetings were scheduled to be included in the 2019 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289822-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Cross Country Championships\nThe 2019 IAAF World Cross Country Championships were hosted in the city of Aarhus in Denmark. It was the 43rd edition of the championships and was held on 30 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289822-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Cross Country Championships\nA part of the course was run on the grounds and grass roof of the Moesgaard Museum. The race was held in challenging conditions, due to the very muddy course and steep hills. The senior men's race was won by Ugandan Joshua Cheptegei, while the senior women's race was won by Kenyan Hellen Obiri.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289822-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Cross Country Championships, Schedule\nIn keeping with past events, all five races, including the mixed relay, were held in the middle of the day. The junior races preceded the senior races, and the senior men's event concluded the program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289823-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Junior men's race\nThe Junior men's race at the 2019 IAAF World Cross Country Championships was held at the Aarhus in Denmark, on March 30, 2019. Milkesa Mengesha from Ethiopia won the gold medal by two seconds from fellow countryman Tadese Worku while Ugandan runner, Oscar Chelimo finished a second later in third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289824-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Junior women's race\nThe Junior women's race at the 2019 IAAF World Cross Country Championships was held at the Aarhus in Denmark, on March 30, 2019. Beatrice Chebet from Kenya won the gold medal edging Ethiopian runners Alemitu Tariku and Tsigie Gebreselama. All three medalists finished so tightly, they all were given the same finish time of 20:50. Even 4th place Ugandan Sarah Chelangat was within a second of the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289825-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Mixed relay\nThe Mixed relay race of the 2019 IAAF World Cross Country Championships was run in Aarhus in Denmark on 30 March 2019, with 10 teams of four athletes each, two men and two women, taking part.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289825-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Mixed relay, Results\nAfter the race, Morocco and China were disqualified for handing over the timing wristband (used as a relay baton) outside the designated takeover zone. Morocco were reinstated after an appeal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 66], "content_span": [67, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289826-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Senior men's race\nThe Senior men's race at the 2019 IAAF World Cross Country Championships was held at the Aarhus in Denmark, on March 30, 2019. Joshua Cheptegei from Uganda won the gold medal by four seconds from fellow countryman Jacob Kiplimo while Kenyan runner, Geoffrey Kamworor finished third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289827-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Senior women's race\nThe Senior women's race at the 2019 IAAF World Cross Country Championships was held at the Aarhus in Denmark, on March 30, 2019. Hellen Obiri from Kenya won the gold medal by two seconds over Ethiopians Dera Dida and Letesenbet Gidey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289828-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Indoor Tour\nThe 2019 IAAF World Indoor Tour was the fourth edition of the IAAF World Indoor Tour, the highest series of international track and field indoor meetings. It was designed to create an IAAF Diamond League-style circuit for indoor track and field events, to raise the profile of indoor track and field athletics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289828-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Indoor Tour\nThe Tour retains six events for 2019, five in Europe and one in the United States. All six 2018 meetings returned, although the order of the meetings has been rearranged from 2018, and the Birmingham Indoor Grand Prix has returned from Glasgow to Birmingham as part of a long term deal, having hosted the 2018 IAAF World Indoor Championships. Glasgow, in turn, will host the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships at the end of the indoor season, from 1\u20133 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289828-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Indoor Tour, Scoring system\nAt each meeting a minimum of 12 events were staged. Included in the 12 events will be a core group of five or six events split across the two-season cycle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289828-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Indoor Tour, Scoring system\nTour counting events for 2019 were the men\u2019s 60m, hurdles 400m, 1500m, high jump and long jump, plus the women\u2019s 60m, 800m, 3,000/5,000m, pole vault, triple jump and shot put.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289828-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Indoor Tour, Scoring system\nPoints were allocated to the best four athletes in each event, with the winner getting 10 points, the runner up receiving seven points, the third-placed finisher getting five points and the athlete in fourth receiving three points. There is a bonus 3 points awarded to any athlete who set a world record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289828-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Indoor Tour, Scoring system\nThe individual overall winner of each event received US $20,000 in prize money. In each event the finishing positions offered the following money: 1st: $3000. 2nd : $1500. 3rd : $1000. 4th: $750. 5th: $500. 6th: $300. For middle distance races, $200 and $150 will be awarded to 7th and 8th place. All tour winners qualify for the 2020 IAAF World Indoor Championships, taking a wildcard spot subject to ratification by their country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289828-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Indoor Tour, Scoring system, Indoor Tour Events\nThe following events are core Tour events for the 2019 indoor season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289829-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Rankings\nThe 2019 IAAF World Rankings document the best performing athletes in the sport of athletics, per the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) individual athlete ranking system. It was the first year that the IAAF used the system. Individual athletes are assigned a points score best on an average of their best recent competition performances. The performance scoring is primarily based on the time or mark of the athlete, plus additional points for their placing within the competition, and some minor modifications based on the conditions. The world rankings are updated each Wednesday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289829-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Rankings\nAs of 31 March 2020, the number one ranked male athlete is Armand Duplantis with 1515 points, and the number one ranked female athlete is Sifan Hassan with 1528 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289830-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Relays\nThe 2019 IAAF World Relays was held in Yokohama, Japan from May 11 to May 12, 2019. Two new events were established for 2019, both mixed events: the 2 \u00d7 2 \u00d7 400 m relay and the shuttle hurdles relay. The first event replaced the 4 \u00d7 800 m relay that featured at previous events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289830-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Relays, Team standings\nTeams scored for every place in the top 8 with 8 points awarded for first place, 7 for second, etc. The overall points winner was given the Golden Baton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289831-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Relays \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay\nThe men's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay at the 2019 IAAF World Relays was held at the Nissan Stadium on 11 and 12 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289831-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Relays \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay, Results, Heats\nQualification: First 2 of each heat (Q) plus the 2 fastest times (q) advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 67], "content_span": [68, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289832-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Relays \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 200 metres relay\nThe men's 4 \u00d7 200 metres relay at the 2019 IAAF World Relays was held at the Nissan Stadium on 12 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289832-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Relays \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 200 metres relay, Results, Heats\nQualification: First 3 of each heat (Q) plus the 2 fastest times (q) advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 67], "content_span": [68, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289833-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Relays \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay at the 2019 IAAF World Relays was held at the Nissan Stadium on 11 and 12 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289833-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Relays \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay, Results, Heats\nQualification: First 2 of each heat (Q) plus the 2 fastest times (q) advanced to the final A. The next 8 fastest times qualified for the final B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 67], "content_span": [68, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289834-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Relays \u2013 Mixed 2 \u00d7 2 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe Mixed 2 x 2 x 400 metres relay at the 2019 IAAF World Relays was held at the Yokohama International Stadium on 11 May. It was the first time that this event was held at the IAAF World Relays or indeed any senior level major international competition. Each team had to comprise one man and one woman, who would each run twice, but could be lined up in any order.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289834-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Relays \u2013 Mixed 2 \u00d7 2 \u00d7 400 metres relay, Summary\nThis event mimics high-intensity interval training. The athletes each have to run a high intensity 400 metres, followed by another high intensity 400 metres, only allowing enough rest time for their partner to run around the track once.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 64], "content_span": [65, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289834-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Relays \u2013 Mixed 2 \u00d7 2 \u00d7 400 metres relay, Summary\nGiven the option to put men or women first in the order, Kenya and Papaua New Guinea put their men up first, both charging out to an early lead, with Papaua New Guinea's Daniel Paul trying to mark Kenya's Collins Kipruto. Down the final straight, Kipruto opened up a 15-metre lead before the handoff. 30 metres further back, the USA's Ce'Aira Brown had a narrow lead over Belarussian Marina Arzamasova and Australia's Catriona Bisset. With the huge lead and no interference, Kenya's Eglay Nafuna Nalyanya tripped as she took the baton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 64], "content_span": [65, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289834-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Relays \u2013 Mixed 2 \u00d7 2 \u00d7 400 metres relay, Summary\nBy the time Donavan Brazier took the USA's baton, Nalyanya was already halfway around the first turn. Over the course of his lap, he led the group of men back to within 2 metres of the Kenyan lead by the handoff, all of them swallowing Papaua's Donna Koniel in the process. Kipruto was bouncing up and down waiting to run again, Brown more sedate in her preparation. Once they had the batons in hand again, Brown stayed with Kipruto through the first turn, separating from the other women by 10 metres through the first turn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 64], "content_span": [65, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289834-0002-0002", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Relays \u2013 Mixed 2 \u00d7 2 \u00d7 400 metres relay, Summary\nKipruto began to separate down the backstretch, coming off the final turn, Brown had a debt to pay for her early speed. Ayano Shiomi from the home team of Japan and Bisset came back to pass her, half a straightaway behind Kipruto. Australia's Josh Ralph took the baton with a 5-metre lead over Brazier. Brazier took care of that in the first turn and was off into no man's land chasing a tired Nalyanya still 30 metres ahead. By the final turn, it was obvious the lead was not enough; led by Brazier, three men were coming fast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 64], "content_span": [65, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289834-0002-0003", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Relays \u2013 Mixed 2 \u00d7 2 \u00d7 400 metres relay, Summary\nBrazier passed Nalyanya before the straightaway, but Ralph was 2 metres behind him and Japan's Allon Tatsunami Clay was just another two metres back. This was still a race. Brazier persevered; Ralph couldn't gain ground and lost a little to Clay toward the end as the USA, Australia and Japan took the medals. After the race was over, Kenya was disqualified because when Nalyanya tripped she stepped momentarily outside the curb to catch her balance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 64], "content_span": [65, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289835-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Relays \u2013 Mixed 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe mixed 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay at the 2019 IAAF World Relays was held at the Nissan Stadium on 11 and 12 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289835-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Relays \u2013 Mixed 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay, Results, Heats\nQualification: First 2 of each heat (Q) plus the 2 fastest times (q) advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 67], "content_span": [68, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289836-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Relays \u2013 Mixed shuttle hurdles relay\nThe mixed Shuttle Hurdle Relay at the 2019 IAAF World Relays was held at the Nissan Stadium on 11 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289836-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Relays \u2013 Mixed shuttle hurdles relay, Results, Heats\nQualification: The winner of each heat (Q) plus the 2 fastest times (q) advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 68], "content_span": [69, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289837-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Relays \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay\nThe women's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay at the 2019 IAAF World Relays was held at the Nissan Stadium on 11 and 12 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289837-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Relays \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay, Results, Heats\nQualification: First 2 of each heat (Q) plus the 2 fastest times (q) advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289838-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Relays \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 200 metres relay\nThe women's 4 \u00d7 200 metres relay at the 2019 IAAF World Relays was held at the Nissan Stadium on 12 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289839-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Relays \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe women's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay at the 2019 IAAF World Relays was held at the Nissan Stadium on 11 and 12 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289839-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IAAF World Relays \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay, Results, Heats\nQualification: First 2 of each heat (Q) plus the 2 fastest times (q) advanced to the final A. The next 8 fastest times qualified for the final B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289840-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IBSF World Snooker Championship \u2013 Women's\nThe 2019 IBSF World Snooker Championship was an amateur snooker tournament that took place in 2019 in Antalya.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289840-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IBSF World Snooker Championship \u2013 Women's\nThe women's tournament was won by Ng On-yee, who defeated Nutcharut Wongharuthai 5\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289840-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IBSF World Snooker Championship \u2013 Women's, Tournament Details\nThe 2019 IBSF World Snooker Championship was an amateur snooker tournament that was held from 29 October to 9 November 2019 at the Starlight Resort Hotel in Antalya. Qualifying group matches happened from 29 October to 5 November. The top three players from each group qualified for the knockout stage, which started with two first round matches on 6 November. The last 16 matches were held on 7 November, the quarter-finals and semi-finals on 8 November, and the final on 9 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 66], "content_span": [67, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289840-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IBSF World Snooker Championship \u2013 Women's, Tournament Details\nNg On-yee won her third IBSF world snooker title, nine years after her second. In the final, she beat Nutcharut Wongharuthai 5\u20132, after trailing 0\u20132. Ng dedicated her title win to Poon Ching-chiu, a snooker player who had died at the age of 18 in the fortnight before the final. Ng finished top of the qualifying round, winning all four of her matches 2\u20130. She then beat Joy Lyn Willenberg 3\u20130 in the last 16 and Amee Kamani 4\u20131 in the quarter-final. In the semi-final she was taken to the deciding frame by defending champion Waratthanun Sukritthanes, but with breaks of 34 and 40, won the last frame 85\u20130 and the match 4\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 66], "content_span": [67, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289840-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 IBSF World Snooker Championship \u2013 Women's, Tournament Details\nThe three highest breaks of the tournament were 91, 81 and 78, all by reigning IBSF Under-21 snooker champion Bai Yulu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 66], "content_span": [67, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289840-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 IBSF World Snooker Championship \u2013 Women's, Results, Group Round\nThe top three players from each group qualified for the knockout stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289840-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 IBSF World Snooker Championship \u2013 Women's, Results, Knockout Rounds\nSeedings are shown in the box to the left of the player's name. Match winners are in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 72], "content_span": [73, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289841-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IBU Junior Open European Championships\nThe 4th IBU Junior Open European Championships was held from 6 to 10 March 2019 in Sjusj\u00f8en, Norway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289841-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IBU Junior Open European Championships\nThere was a total of 8 competitions: Single Mixed Relay, Mixed Relay, Sprint Women, Sprint Men, Pursuit Women, Pursuit Men, Individual Women and Individual Men.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289842-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IBU Open European Championships\nThe 26th IBU Open European Championships were held in Raubichi, Belarus from 20 to 24 February 2019. It was also a stage of the 2018\u201319 Biathlon IBU Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289842-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IBU Open European Championships\nThere were a total of eight competitions held: Single Mixed Relay, Relay Mixed, Sprint Women, Sprint Men, Pursuit Women, Pursuit Men, Individual Women and Individual Men.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289843-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Awards\nThe 2019 ICC Awards were the sixteenth edition of ICC Awards. The voting panel took into account players' performance between 1 January 2019 and 31 December 2019. The announcement of the ICC World XI Teams, along with the winners of the men's individual ICC awards, was made on 15 January 2020. The women's awards were announced on 17 December 2019, with Ellyse Perry winning the Rachael Heyhoe Flint Award as the Women's Cricketer of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289843-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Awards, ICC World XI Teams, ICC Test Team of the Year\nVirat Kohli was selected as the captain of the Test Team of the Year for the third time in a row, with BJ Watling selected as the wicket-keeper. Other players are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 62], "content_span": [63, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289843-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Awards, ICC World XI Teams, ICC ODI Team of the Year\nVirat Kohli was also selected as the captain of the ODI Team of the Year, with Jos Buttler selected as the wicket-keeper. Other players are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 61], "content_span": [62, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289843-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Awards, ICC World XI Teams, ICC Women\u2019s ODI Team of the Year\nMeg Lanning was selected as the captain of the Women's ODI Team of the Year, with Alyssa Healy selected as the wicket-keeper. Other players are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 69], "content_span": [70, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289843-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Awards, ICC World XI Teams, ICC Women\u2019s T20I Team of the Year\nMeg Lanning was also selected as the captain of the Women's T20I Team of the Year, with Alyssa Healy also selected as the wicket-keeper. Other players are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 70], "content_span": [71, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289844-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Men's T20 World Cup Qualifier\nThe 2019 ICC Men's T20 World Cup Qualifier was a cricket tournament held during October and November 2019 in the United Arab Emirates to determine which teams would qualify for the 2021 ICC Men's T20 World Cup tournament. The six teams finishing highest in the qualifier tournament joined Sri Lanka and Bangladesh in the first group stage of the 2020 ICC Men's T20 World Cup. The tournament formed part of the ICC T20 World Cup Qualifier series, with the Netherlands winning the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289844-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Men's T20 World Cup Qualifier\nIn April 2018, the International Cricket Council (ICC) granted full international status to Twenty20 men's matches played between member sides from 1 January 2019 onwards. Therefore, all the matches in the Regional Finals and the Qualifier itself, were played as full Twenty20 Internationals (T20Is). In July 2019, the ICC suspended Zimbabwe Cricket, with the team barred from taking part in ICC events, which put their participation in the tournament in doubt. The following month, with Zimbabwe banned from taking part in international cricket tournaments, the ICC named Nigeria as their replacement in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289844-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Men's T20 World Cup Qualifier\nPapua New Guinea were the first team to qualify for the 2020 ICC Men's T20 World Cup from the tournament, after they won Group A, finishing above the Netherlands on net run rate. It was the first time that Papua New Guinea had qualified for a World Cup in any format. Ireland became the second team to qualify when they won Group B, also on net run rate. Both teams also advanced to the playoff section of the qualifier. They were joined by the Netherlands, Namibia and Scotland from Group A, and Oman, the United Arab Emirates and Hong Kong from Group B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289844-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Men's T20 World Cup Qualifier\nIn the first qualifier match in the playoffs, the Netherlands qualified for the T20 World Cup when they beat the United Arab Emirates by eight wickets, after the UAE only scored 80 runs in their innings. The second qualifier match saw Namibia advance to their first T20 World Cup after beating Oman by 54 runs. Scotland beat tournament hosts the United Arab Emirates in the third qualifier by 90 runs to secure their place in the Men's T20 World Cup. The final qualifier match saw Oman become the last team to qualify for the Men's T20 World Cup, after they narrowly beat Hong Kong by 12 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289844-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Men's T20 World Cup Qualifier\nScotland beat Oman by five wickets to win the fifth-place playoff match. In the first semi-final, the Netherlands beat Ireland by 21 runs to advance to the final. They were joined in the final with Papua New Guinea, after they beat Namibia by 18 runs in the second semi-final. Ireland beat Namibia by 27 runs to win the third-place playoff. The final saw the Netherlands beat Papua New Guinea by seven wickets to win the tournament. Namibia's captain, Gerhard Erasmus, was named the player of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289844-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Men's T20 World Cup Qualifier, Teams and qualifications\nSub-regional qualification groups began on 26 February 2018 in Argentina. In the Americas group, both the Cayman Islands and Bermuda registered wins against Argentina. A total of 61 Associate Member teams out of originally scheduled 62 teams competed. Of these teams, 25 of them progressed to the regional finals in 2019, with the top seven teams progressing to the qualifier tournament. They were joined by the top six teams from the 2015 qualifier that were outside the top ten places in the ICC T20I Championship by the cut-off date of 31 December 2018, and the tournament host.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289844-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Men's T20 World Cup Qualifier, Teams and qualifications, ICC T20I Championship\nHost nation, Australia, and the nine best teams (according to the ICC T20I Championship ranking of 31 December 2018) who played in the last edition of ICC Men's T20 World Cup qualified for the final tournament directly. The remaining six entrants from the last tournament competed in the Regional Qualifiers of the World Cup qualifying tournaments. Of the teams in the ICC T20I Championship ranking, initially the United Arab Emirates and Nepal could only qualify through regional competitions. However, in March 2019, the ICC announced that the UAE would host the qualifier tournament, resulting in their automatic qualification. Later the same month, the ICC released the match schedule for all the Regional Finals, with the UAE omitted from the fixture list for the Asia Regional Final. The number of teams that could qualify from the Asia Regional Final was also reduced from two to one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 87], "content_span": [88, 979]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289844-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Men's T20 World Cup Qualifier, Teams and qualifications, ICC T20I Championship\nThe final rankings for automatic qualification as of 31 December 2018 were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 87], "content_span": [88, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289844-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Men's T20 World Cup Qualifier, Teams and qualifications, Regional qualifications\n62 teams were originally scheduled to compete in 12 regional qualification groups during 2018 across five regions, with 61 taking part. The top 25 teams progressed to five regional finals in 2019, with eight teams progressing to the 2019 qualifier tournament. The host nation of each sub-regional group and regional final groups are shown in bold. All the sub-regional stage matches in the European section were held in the Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 89], "content_span": [90, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289844-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Men's T20 World Cup Qualifier, Squads, UAE squad\nAhead of the tournament, Mohammad Naveed was withdrawn from the UAE's squad, with Ahmed Raza named as captain in his place. Qadeer Ahmed and Shaiman Anwar were also dropped from the UAE's squad, with Waheed Ahmed, Darius D'Silva and Junaid Sidique added to their squad. Two days before the start of the tournament, the ICC confirmed that the three players dropped from the UAE's squad had all been suspended after they had breached cricket's anti-corruption rules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289844-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 ICC Men's T20 World Cup Qualifier, Squads, UAE squad\nMohammad Naveed and Shaiman Anwar were believed to be planning to fix matches in the tournament, while Qadeer Ahmed was approached to fix a match during the UAE's tour of Zimbabwe in April 2019. On 21 October 2019, Ashfaq Ahmed became the fourth UAE cricketer to be suspended by the ICC. Ahmed had played in the first two matches for the team in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289844-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Men's T20 World Cup Qualifier, Squads, UAE squad\nOn 21 October 2019, Ghulam Shabber, the UAE's wicket-keeper, did not show up for the pre-match meeting ahead of the fixture against Hong Kong. It later transpired that Shabber had left the country without an explanation, before being traced to Pakistan. On 26 October 2019, in an interview for The National, Shabber denied any involvement with corruption and announced his retirement from cricket, citing the poor remuneration for playing. He said that \"if there is something with regards to anti-corruption, I am ready to cooperate in Pakistan. But I have decided cricket is not in my future\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289844-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Men's T20 World Cup Qualifier, Squads, UAE squad\nFollowing the conclusion of the group stage, the ICC's Event Technical Committee approved two replacements in the UAE's squad. Faizan Asif replaced Ashfaq Ahmed and Vriitya Aravind was named as Ghulam Shabber's replacement. On 30 October 2019, the Emirates Cricket Board (ECB) confirmed that they had suspended Shabber for absconding, and that he was part of the ICC's anti-corruption investigation. In March 2021, Mohammad Naveed and Shaiman Anwar were both found guilty of corruption, with each player given an eight-year ban from all cricket, backdated to 16 October 2019. In July 2021, the ICC also handed eight-year bans to Amir Hayat and Ashfaq Ahmed for violating the anti-corruption code. Their bans were both backdated to 13 September 2020. In September 2021, the ICC also issued a four-year ban to Ghulam Shabber, following the conclusion of their anti-corruption investigation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 946]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289844-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Men's T20 World Cup Qualifier, Squads, Other changes\nIn September 2019, ahead of the 2019\u201320 Oman Pentangular Series, Hong Kong's Babar Hayat declared that he was no longer available to play for Hong Kong. Brothers Tanveer Ahmed and Ehsan Nawaz also withdrew themselves for selection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289844-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Men's T20 World Cup Qualifier, Squads, Other changes\nAnantha Krishna was ruled out of Singapore's squad after suffering an injury in a training session. He was replaced by Aahan Gopinath Achar. On 24 October 2019, the ICC announced that the bowling actions of Abiodun Abioye (Nigeria), Tom Sole (Scotland) and Selladore Vijayakumar (Singapore) were all found to be illegal. They were all suspended from bowling in international cricket matches until an assessment shows that their bowling action is legal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289844-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Men's T20 World Cup Qualifier, Squads, Other changes\nAhead of the playoff matches, Dylan Budge replaced Ollie Hairs in Scotland's squad, after Hairs suffered a fracture in his foot. Ireland also made a replacement, with Barry McCarthy coming into their squad, replacing David Delany, who was ruled out with a knee injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289844-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Men's T20 World Cup Qualifier, Match officials\nIn October 2019, the ICC named the officials for the tournament, with G. S. Lakshmi becoming the first woman to be named as a referee at an ICC event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289844-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Men's T20 World Cup Qualifier, Match officials, Referees\nThe ICC also named three match referees for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289844-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Men's T20 World Cup Qualifier, Warm-up matches\nAhead of the main tournament, each team played two warm-up matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289844-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Men's T20 World Cup Qualifier, Group stage, Group A\nAdvanced to Semifinal and 2020 ICC Men's T20 World Cup. Advanced to Semi-final Play-offs. Advanced to 5th place Play-off Semi-Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289844-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Men's T20 World Cup Qualifier, Group stage, Group B\nAdvanced to Semifinal and 2020 ICC Men's T20 World Cup. Advanced to Semi-final Play-offs. Advanced to 5th place Play-off Semi-Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289844-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Men's T20 World Cup Qualifier, Final standings\nThese were the final standings following the conclusion of the tournament. The top six places were used for seeding purposes for the 2020 Men's T20 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289844-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Men's T20 World Cup Qualifier, Final standings\n1st to 6th\u00a0 Qualified for the 2021 ICC Men's T20 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289845-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's Qualifier Africa\nThe 2019 ICC Women's Qualifier Africa was a cricket tournament that was held in Zimbabwe in May 2019. The matches in the tournament were played as Women's Twenty20 Internationals (WT20Is), with the top team progressing to both the 2019 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier and the 2021 Women's Cricket World Cup Qualifier tournaments. Uganda won the previous Africa qualifier tournament, when it was held in Windhoek in 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289845-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's Qualifier Africa\nThe fixtures took place at Harare Sports Club, Old Hararians and Takashinga Cricket Club in Harare. The teams in the Qualifier are split into two groups, with the winner of each group progressing to the final on 12 May 2019. All the squads were confirmed on 1 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289845-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's Qualifier Africa\nNamibia were undefeated in Group B to progress to the final of the qualifier tournament. Zimbabwe were also undefeated in winning Group A, to join Namibia in the qualifier's final. Zimbabwe beat Namibia by 50 runs in the final to win the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289845-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's Qualifier Africa\nHowever, in July 2019, the International Cricket Council (ICC) suspended Zimbabwe Cricket, with the team barred from taking part in ICC events. The following month, with Zimbabwe banned from taking part in international cricket tournaments, the ICC confirmed that Namibia would replace them in the 2019 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289846-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's Qualifier Americas\nThe 2019 ICC Women's Qualifier Americas was a cricket tournament that was held in the United States in May 2019. The matches in the tournament were played as Women's Twenty20 Internationals (WT20Is), with the top team progressing to both the 2019 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier and the 2021 Women's Cricket World Cup Qualifier tournaments. The United States qualified for both tournaments, after taking an unassailable 2\u20130 lead, with wins in their first two matches. The United States also won the final match by 36 runs, therefore completing a 3\u20130 whitewash over Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289846-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's Qualifier Americas\nThe qualifier was played as a best of three matches, with the fixtures played in Lauderhill, Florida. The United States named their squad on 1 April 2019, with Canada naming their squad on 9 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289847-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's Qualifier Asia\nThe 2019 ICC Women's Qualifier Asia was a cricket tournament that was held in Thailand in February 2019. The matches were played as Women's Twenty20 Internationals (WT20Is), with the top team progressing to both the 2019 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier and the 2021 Women's Cricket World Cup Qualifier tournaments. The fixtures took place at the Terdthai Cricket Ground and the Asian Institute of Technology Ground in Bangkok.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289847-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's Qualifier Asia\nAhead of the final round of fixtures, Thailand, United Arab Emirates and Nepal all had a chance to top the group and progress to the next phase of qualification. Thailand won the tournament, after beating the United Arab Emirates by 50 runs in their final match. They won all of their matches in the tournament, and it was Thailand's 14th consecutive win in WT20Is. Nepal finished the tournament in second place, with the United Arab Emirates in third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289848-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's Qualifier EAP\nThe 2019 ICC Women's Qualifier EAP was a cricket tournament that was held in Vanuatu in May 2019. The matches in the tournament were played as Women's Twenty20 Internationals (WT20Is), with the top team progressing to both the 2019 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier and the 2021 Women's Cricket World Cup Qualifier tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289848-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's Qualifier EAP\nThe opening days of fixtures saw Papua New Guinea win both their matches, with Ravina Oa taking a five-wicket haul against Vanuatu in the first match, and Natasha Ambo taking five wickets in the second match, against Indonesia. In the final match of the tournament, Papua New Guinea beat Samoa by seven wickets to win the EAP Qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289849-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's Qualifier Europe\nThe 2019 ICC Women's Qualifier Europe was a cricket tournament that was held in Spain in June 2019. The matches in the tournament were played as Women's Twenty20 Internationals (WT20Is), with the top team progressing to both the 2019 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier and the 2021 Women's Cricket World Cup Qualifier tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289849-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's Qualifier Europe\nIn March 2019, Scotland was confirmed as the host nation for the Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier tournament. Therefore, if Scotland won the Europe Qualifier group, the next highest positioned team would also progress to the 2019 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier tournament. On 31 May 2019, the International Cricket Council (ICC) confirmed all of the squads for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289849-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's Qualifier Europe\nOn 26 June 2019, in the opening fixture of the tournament, Germany played their first ever WT20I match. The following day, the match between Scotland and the Netherlands ended in a tie, with Scotland winning the Super Over. Ahead of the final day of fixtures, all three teams were still in contention to win the qualifier. On the final day of the qualifier, both Scotland and the Netherlands won their match against Germany. Therefore, the Netherlands won the tournament, after finishing ahead of Scotland on net run rate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289850-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier\nThe 2019 ICC Women's T20 World Cup Qualifier was an international women's cricket tournament that was held in August and September 2019 in Scotland. It was the fourth edition of the Women's T20 World Cup Qualifier and was the qualification tournament for the 2020 ICC Women's T20 World Cup tournament. The top two teams from the qualifier tournament progressed to the 2020 ICC Women's T20 World Cup in Australia. In June 2019, Cricket Scotland confirmed the tournament dates, format and venues. The full schedule was confirmed on 8 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289850-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier\nIn July 2019, the International Cricket Council (ICC) suspended Zimbabwe Cricket, with the team barred from taking part in ICC events, which put their participation in the tournament in doubt. The following month, with Zimbabwe banned from taking part in international cricket tournaments, the ICC confirmed that Namibia would replace them in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289850-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier\nBangladesh were the first team to qualify for the Women's T20 World Cup, after they beat Ireland by four wickets in their semi-final match. Thailand qualified for their first Women's T20 Would Cup in the other semi-final, defeating Papua New Guinea by eight wickets. The final was played at Forthill, and saw Bangladesh claim their second title, beating Thailand by 70 runs in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289850-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier, Qualification\nEight teams took part in the qualifier for the 2020 ICC Women's T20 World Cup. The first teams to qualify were Bangladesh and Ireland, who finished bottom of the group at the 2018 ICC Women's World Twenty20 tournament. Twenty-six teams entered qualifying for the remaining five places, with Scotland gaining the hosting rights in March 2019. In Asia, Thailand defeated the United Arab Emirates on the final match day to finish with a perfect record to book their place into the qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 56], "content_span": [57, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289850-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier, Qualification\nIn May 2019, qualification tournaments were held in Africa, East-Asia and Pacific and the Americas. Zimbabwe, Papua New Guinea, and the United States all won their respective groups to advance to the qualifier. The final qualifying tournament was in Europe, which saw the Netherlands become the final team to reach the qualifier, as they finished ahead of Scotland on net run rate. On 7 August 2019, Zimbabwe was removed from the competition and replaced by Namibia due to their suspension from the ICC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 56], "content_span": [57, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289850-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier, Squads\nOn 21 August 2019, the ICC confirmed all the squads and match officials for the tournament. The ICC appointed an all-female umpire panel, the first time this had happened at an ICC event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289850-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier, Warm-up matches\nBefore the tournament, the eight teams took part in four warm-up matches which took place on 29 August 2019. These matches did not have WT20I status, as teams were allowed to field all fourteen members of their squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289850-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier, Group Stage\nThe first round of matches saw rain affect all four of the matches that were scheduled to be played, with the game between Bangladesh and Papua New Guinea abandoned and moved to the reserve day. The other match in Group A was reduced to seven overs per side, with Kathryn Bryce taking two wickets and scoring 29 not out, as she led Scotland to a 30-run victory over the United States at Forthill. In Group B, Thailand opened their campaign with a 30-run victory over the Netherlands at Lochlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289850-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier, Group Stage\nNatthakan Chantam top-scored with 44, with Thailand scoring 76 runs from their nine overs, with the Netherlands only making 46 runs in reply. The final match of the opening day saw Ireland recording a seven wicket victory over Namibia, after Namibia made 83/9 from their twenty overs, with Eimear Richardson taking two wickets for ten runs. Ireland chased down the target in 15 overs with Mary Waldron top scoring with 33.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289850-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier, Group Stage\nThe second day of matches saw the first shock of the tournament, with Papua New Guinea beating hosts Scotland by six wickets in Group A. Scotland's captain, Kathryn Bryce, admitted that her side was below par at the halfway point, and that the team gave away too many runs. In the other match in Group A, Bangladesh easily beat the United States, after the United States were bowled out for 46 runs, with Bangladesh winning by eight wickets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289850-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier, Group Stage\nIn Group B, Namibia started strongly against Thailand, with Sylvia Shihepo taking three wickets for eight runs, as Thailand were restricted to 99/6 in their 20 overs. However, Namibia were bowled out for 61 runs, with Chanida Sutthiruang taking three wickets for ten runs, with Thailand winning by 38 runs. In the day's final game, Ireland beat the Netherlands by 19 runs, despite a fightback from the Dutch side, after Ireland posted 120 runs in their innings. The wins for Thailand and Ireland guaranteed both sides a semi-final place. In the rescheduled match between Bangladesh and Papua New Guinea, Bangladesh won a close game by six runs, via the DLS method.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289850-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier, Group Stage\nThe final day of matches started in Group B with Thailand finishing top of the group with a two-run victory over Ireland. After Leah Paul took three wickets in the Thailand innings, Ireland made a poor start in their run chase. Ireland's captain, Laura Delany, said that they struggled with partnerships and was left with too much to get, as they lost four wickets in four overs, with Thailand winning the match. The other match in Group B saw the Netherlands record their first victory of the tournament, with a six wicket win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289850-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier, Group Stage\nIris Zwilling and Heather Siegers each took three wickets to restrict Namibia to 91 for 8 from their twenty overs. In response, Sterre Kalis top scored for the Netherlands, as they chased down the target with 17 balls to spare. In Group A, Bangladesh beat Scotland by 13 runs in a rain-affected match. Scotland suffered a collapse in their run chase, losing four quick wickets, including three run outs, to end their chances of progressing to the Women's T20 World Cup. Papua New Guinea beat the United States by 22 runs in another match impacted by the weather. Sibona Jimmy scored an unbeaten half-century and took three wickets, in a player of the match performance, to help Papua New Guinea secure their second win of the tournament. Therefore, Bangladesh and Papua New Guinea advanced to the semi-finals with wins in their final group matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 903]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289850-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier, Semi-finals\nThe semi-finals saw Bangladesh and Thailand win their respective matches, to see them both progress to the tournament's final and the 2020 ICC Women's T20 World Cup tournament in Australia. Ireland made 85 runs from their 20 overs, with Bangladesh chasing down their target to win by four wickets. Papua New Guinea only scored 67 runs in their 20 overs, with Thailand going on to win the fixture by eight wickets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289850-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier, Semi-finals\nIn the play-off semi-finals, both teams batting second recorded big wins against their opponents. The United States made 90 for 4, with Nadia Gruny scoring an unbeaten fifty. However, the Netherlands chased down their target to win by nine wickets. In the final match of the day, Namibia were bowled out for 67 runs inside 18 overs. With only 68 runs needed for victory, Scotland reached their target in 8.4 overs, winning the match by ten wickets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289850-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier, Play-off matches\nIn the third-place playoff, Ireland had a convincing win against Papua New Guinea. Konio Oala was the only cricketer for Papua New Guinea to reach double figures, making 35 runs, as the team finished on 85/8 from their twenty overs. Ireland chased down the target inside twelve overs, to win by eight wickets. The playoff for seventh place saw the United States beat Namibia by six wickets, with the US team chasing down a target of 85 to win in the penultimate over of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 59], "content_span": [60, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289850-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier, Play-off matches\nThe last pair of matches in the tournament started with the fifth-place playoff between Scotland and the Netherlands. Sisters Kathryn and Sarah Bryce both made half centuries, with Scotland scoring 167/4 in their twenty overs. In reply, the Netherlands were bowled out for 97 runs, with Miranda Veringmeier top-scoring with 45, and Scotland winning by 70 runs. In the tournament's final, Bangladesh beat Thailand, also by the margin of 70 runs, with Sanjida Islam scoring 71 not out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 59], "content_span": [60, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289851-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC World Cricket League Division Two\nThe 2019 ICC World Cricket League Division Two was an international cricket tournament that took place in April 2019 in Namibia. It was contested between six teams; Canada, Hong Kong, Oman, Papua New Guinea, the United States and tournament hosts Namibia. It formed part of the 2017\u201319 cycle of the World Cricket League (WCL) which determined the qualification for the 2023 Cricket World Cup. The final and third-place playoff match were granted One Day International (ODI) status by the International Cricket Council. Namibia won the tournament, after they beat Oman by 145 runs in the final. It was Namibia's first win in an ODI match, and it was the first ever ODI match played by Oman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289851-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC World Cricket League Division Two, Summary\nHong Kong and Papua New Guinea finished in the bottom two places in the 2018 Cricket World Cup Qualifier, therefore relegating them to the Division Two tournament and losing their ODI status in the process. They were joined by Canada and Namibia, who finished third and fourth respectively in the 2018 ICC World Cricket League Division Two tournament, and Oman and the United States, who won promotion from the 2018 ICC World Cricket League Division Three tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289851-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC World Cricket League Division Two, Summary\nAhead of the tournament in October 2018, it was announced that, following the conclusion of the tournament, the World Cricket League would be replaced by the ICC Cricket World Cup League 2 and the ICC Cricket World Cup Challenge League. The top four teams would join Scotland, Nepal and the United Arab Emirates in League 2 and gain ODI status. The bottom two teams would be assigned to the Challenge League along with other teams from the World Cricket League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289851-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC World Cricket League Division Two, Summary\nThe United States were the first team to qualify for League 2, after they beat Hong Kong by 84 runs in the fourth round of matches. Oman also qualified in the same round of fixtures, after they beat tournament hosts Namibia by four wickets. In the final round of matches, Namibia and Papua New Guinea secured League 2 qualification with big wins. Canada won their final match, against the United States, but finished narrowly behind Papua New Guinea on net run rate and qualified for the Challenge League, along with Hong Kong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289851-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC World Cricket League Division Two, Summary\nFollowing the round-robin matches, Canada played Hong Kong in the fifth-place playoff, the United States played Papua New Guinea in the third-place playoff, and hosts Namibia faced Oman in the tournament's final. Claire Polosak was appointed as one of the on-field umpires for the final, becoming the first woman to stand in a men's ODI match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289851-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC World Cricket League Division Two, Preparation\nThe United States took part in a one-week tour to Antigua, playing five matches, starting on 10 February 2019. USA Cricket also looked at arranging warm-up fixtures against Australia and Pakistan, followed by two Twenty20 International (T20I) matches against the United Arab Emirates, and some 50 over matches in the UAE during March 2019. Oman hosted a Twenty20 International (T20I) quadrangular series followed by three List A games against Scotland in February 2019, before taking part in an eight-team T20 tournament in Kenya during March 2019. Canada played practice matches in Sri Lanka and South Africa before naming their final squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 55], "content_span": [56, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289851-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC World Cricket League Division Two, Preparation\nPapua New Guinea and Hong Kong were both aiming to regain ODI status after losing it at the conclusion of the 2018 Cricket World Cup Qualifier. Canada were attempting to regain ODI status that they had lost in 2014, and had recruited the experienced Monty Desai to help guide them back to the top tier of Associate cricket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 55], "content_span": [56, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289851-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 ICC World Cricket League Division Two, Preparation\nHosts Namibia had been regulars in the top divisions of the World Cricket League, but their only previous ODIs were back in 2003, and they had faced a lack of international cricket in the months prior to the tournament in relation to their opponents. The United States were competing in Division Two for the first time, and were a team on the rise following a change in administration. Oman's form had fluctuated since qualifying for the 2016 World T20, the low point coming when they were bowled out for just 24 runs in a List A game against Scotland in February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 55], "content_span": [56, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289851-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 ICC World Cricket League Division Two, Playoffs\nThe final and third-place playoff matches were given ODI status by the ICC, with the fifth-place playoff being a List A match. Oman played in their first ever ODI match. The United States played their first ODI match in fifteen years, after playing two matches in the 2004 ICC Champions Trophy in September 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289852-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships\nThe 2019 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships were the 40th edition of the ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships. The event took place from 24 to 29 September 2019 in La Seu d'Urgell, Spain under the auspices of International Canoe Federation (ICF). The events took place at the Segre Olympic Park which also hosted the canoe slalom events at the 1992 Summer Olympics. La Seu d'Urgell hosted the championships for the third time after previously hosting the event in 1999 and 2009", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289852-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships\nAs is traditional in a pre-Olympic year, the Championships also doubled as the primary qualification event for the 2020 Summer Olympics. The top placed boats (subject to a limit of one per nation) earned their NOCs a qualification quota. 18 qualification spots were available in the K1 events, and eleven in the C1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289852-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships\nSeu also hosted the Wildwater Canoeing World Championships as part of the same event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289852-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships, Olympic qualification\nThe 2019 World Championships also served as a main qualification event in each of the individual boat classes. The following nations each qualified a boat in the stated event:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 64], "content_span": [65, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289852-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships, Olympic qualification\nGreat Britain, the Czech Republic and Spain achieved qualification in all four classes, and thus joined host Japan in completing their qualification pathway for Canoe slalom at the 2020 Games. Further events providing opportunities to qualify for other nations will take place throughout 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 64], "content_span": [65, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289853-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships\nThe 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships, the 45th edition of the World Championships, were held in Szeged, Hungary from 21 to 25 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289853-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships\nThe championships served as the primary qualification regatta for the 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games in Tokyo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289853-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships, Explanation of events\nCanoe sprint competitions were contested in either a Canadian canoe (C), an open canoe with a single-blade paddle, or in a kayak (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, 500, 1000 or 5000 metres. When a competition is listed as a K-2 500m event, for example, it means two people were in a kayak competing over a distance of 500 metres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 64], "content_span": [65, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289853-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships, Explanation of events\nParacanoe competitions were contested in either a va'a (V), an outrigger canoe (which includes a second pontoon) with a single-blade paddle, or in a kayak (as above). All international competitions were held over 200 metres in single-man boats, with three event classes in both types of vessel for men and women depending on the level of an athlete's impairment. The lower the classification number, the more severe the impairment is - for example, VL1 is a va'a competition for those with particularly severe impairments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 64], "content_span": [65, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289853-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships, Doping violation\nOn 19 August, the ICF announced that 11-time world champion Laurence Vincent-Lapointe was provisionally suspended from competition after testing positive for a banned substance. The substance in question was subsequently found to be Ligandrol, with Canoe Kayak Canada stating Ligandrol had been associated with recent tainted supplements and that preliminary information suggested Vincent-Lapointe's positive may have been the result of such.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 59], "content_span": [60, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289854-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-1 1000 metres\nThe men's C-1 1000 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289854-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-1 1000 metres, Results, Heats\nThe four fastest boats in each heat, plus the three fastest fifth-place boats advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 81], "content_span": [82, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289854-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-1 1000 metres, Results, Semifinals\nThe fastest three boats advanced to the A final. The next three fastest boats advanced to the B final. The seventh, eighth and ninth-place boats advanced to the C final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 86], "content_span": [87, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289854-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-1 1000 metres, Results, Finals, Final C\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 19 to 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 91], "content_span": [92, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289854-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-1 1000 metres, Results, Finals, Final B\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 10 to 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 91], "content_span": [92, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289854-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-1 1000 metres, Results, Finals, Final A\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 91], "content_span": [92, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289855-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-1 200 metres\nThe men's C-1 200 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289855-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-1 200 metres, Results, Heats\nThe six fastest boats in each heat, plus the three fastest seventh-place boats advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 80], "content_span": [81, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289855-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-1 200 metres, Results, Semifinals\nThe fastest three boats advanced to the A final. The next three fastest boats advanced to the B final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 85], "content_span": [86, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289855-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-1 200 metres, Results, Finals, Final B\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 10 to 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 90], "content_span": [91, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289855-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-1 200 metres, Results, Finals, Final A\nCompetitors raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 90], "content_span": [91, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289856-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-1 500 metres\nThe men's C-1 500 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289856-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-1 500 metres, Results, Heats\nThe six fastest boats in each heat, plus the three fastest seventh-place boats advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 80], "content_span": [81, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289856-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-1 500 metres, Results, Semifinals\nThe fastest three boats advanced to the A final. The next three fastest boats advanced to the B final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 85], "content_span": [86, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289856-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-1 500 metres, Results, Finals, Final B\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 10 to 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 90], "content_span": [91, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289856-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-1 500 metres, Results, Finals, Final A\nCompetitors raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 90], "content_span": [91, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289857-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-1 5000 metres\nThe men's C-1 5000 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289857-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-1 5000 metres, Results\nAs a long-distance event, it was held as a direct final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 74], "content_span": [75, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289858-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-2 1000 metres\nThe men's C-2 1000 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289858-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-2 1000 metres, Results, Heats\nThe six fastest boats in each heat, plus the three fastest seventh-place boats advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 81], "content_span": [82, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289858-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-2 1000 metres, Results, Semifinals\nThe fastest three boats advanced to the A final. The next three fastest boats advanced to the B final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 86], "content_span": [87, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289858-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-2 1000 metres, Results, Finals, Final B\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 10 to 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 91], "content_span": [92, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289858-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-2 1000 metres, Results, Finals, Final A\nCompetitors raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 91], "content_span": [92, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289859-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-2 200 metres\nThe men's C-2 200 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289859-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-2 200 metres, Results, Heats\nHeat winners advanced directly to the A final. The next six fastest boats in each heat advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 80], "content_span": [81, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289859-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-2 200 metres, Results, Semifinals\nThe fastest three boats in each semi advanced to the A final. The next four fastest boats in each semi, plus the fastest remaining boat advanced to the B final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 85], "content_span": [86, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289859-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-2 200 metres, Results, Finals, Final B\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 10 to 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 90], "content_span": [91, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289859-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-2 200 metres, Results, Finals, Final A\nCompetitors raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 90], "content_span": [91, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289860-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-2 500 metres\nThe men's C-2 500 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289860-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-2 500 metres, Results, Heats\nThe fastest three boats in each heat advanced directly to the final. The next four fastest boats in each heat, plus the fastest remaining boat advanced to the semifinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 80], "content_span": [81, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289860-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-2 500 metres, Results, Final\nCompetitors raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 80], "content_span": [81, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289861-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-4 500 metres\nThe men's C-4 500 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289861-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-4 500 metres, Results, Heats\nThe fastest three boats in each heat advanced directly to the final. The next four fastest boats in each heat, plus the fastest remaining boat advanced to the semifinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 80], "content_span": [81, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289861-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's C-4 500 metres, Results, Final\nCompetitors raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 80], "content_span": [81, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289862-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-1 1000 metres\nThe men's K-1 1000 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289862-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-1 1000 metres, Results, Heats\nThe four fastest boats in each heat, plus the three fastest fifth-place boats advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 81], "content_span": [82, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289862-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-1 1000 metres, Results, Semifinals\nThe fastest three boats advanced to the A final. The next three fastest boats advanced to the B final. The seventh, eighth and ninth-place boats advanced to the C final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 86], "content_span": [87, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289862-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-1 1000 metres, Results, Finals, Final C\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 19 to 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 91], "content_span": [92, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289862-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-1 1000 metres, Results, Finals, Final B\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 10 to 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 91], "content_span": [92, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289862-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-1 1000 metres, Results, Finals, Final A\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 91], "content_span": [92, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289863-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-1 200 metres\nThe men's K-1 200 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289863-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-1 200 metres, Results, Heats\nThe five fastest boats in each heat, plus the fastest remaining boat advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 80], "content_span": [81, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289863-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-1 200 metres, Results, Semifinals\nAll first and second-place boats, plus the fastest third-place boat advanced to the A final. All other third-place boats, all fourth-place boats and the two fastest fifth-place boats advanced to the B final. All other fifth-place boats, all sixth-place boats and the three fastest seventh-place boats advanced to the C final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 85], "content_span": [86, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289863-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-1 200 metres, Results, Finals, Final C\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 19 to 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 90], "content_span": [91, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289863-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-1 200 metres, Results, Finals, Final B\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 10 to 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 90], "content_span": [91, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289863-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-1 200 metres, Results, Finals, Final A\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 90], "content_span": [91, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289864-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-1 500 metres\nThe men's K-1 500 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289864-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-1 500 metres, Results, Heats\nThe four fastest boats in each heat, plus the three fastest fifth-place boats advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 80], "content_span": [81, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289864-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-1 500 metres, Results, Semifinals\nThe fastest three boats advanced to the A final. The next three fastest boats advanced to the B final. The seventh, eighth and ninth-place boats advanced to the C final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 85], "content_span": [86, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289864-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-1 500 metres, Results, Finals, Final C\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 19 to 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 90], "content_span": [91, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289864-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-1 500 metres, Results, Finals, Final B\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 10 to 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 90], "content_span": [91, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289864-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-1 500 metres, Results, Finals, Final A\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 90], "content_span": [91, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289865-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-1 5000 metres\nThe men's K-1 5000 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289865-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-1 5000 metres, Results\nAs a long-distance event, it was held as a direct final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 74], "content_span": [75, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289866-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-2 1000 metres\nThe men's K-2 1000 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289866-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-2 1000 metres, Results, Heats\nThe five fastest boats in each heat, plus the two fastest sixth-place boats advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 81], "content_span": [82, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289866-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-2 1000 metres, Results, Semifinals\nThe fastest three boats advanced to the A final. The next three fastest boats advanced to the B final. The seventh, eighth and ninth-place boats advanced to the C final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 86], "content_span": [87, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289866-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-2 1000 metres, Results, Finals, Final C\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 19 to 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 91], "content_span": [92, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289866-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-2 1000 metres, Results, Finals, Final B\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 10 to 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 91], "content_span": [92, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289866-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-2 1000 metres, Results, Finals, Final A\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 91], "content_span": [92, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289867-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-2 200 metres\nThe men's K-2 200 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289867-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-2 200 metres, Results, Heats\nHeat winners advanced directly to the A final. The next six fastest boats in each heat advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 80], "content_span": [81, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289867-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-2 200 metres, Results, Semifinals\nThe fastest three boats in each semi advanced to the A final. The next four fastest boats in each semi, plus the fastest remaining boat advanced to the B final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 85], "content_span": [86, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289867-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-2 200 metres, Results, Finals, Final B\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 10 to 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 90], "content_span": [91, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289867-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-2 200 metres, Results, Finals, Final A\nCompetitors raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 90], "content_span": [91, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289868-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-2 500 metres\nThe men's K-2 500 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289868-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-2 500 metres, Results, Heats\nHeat winners advanced directly to the A final. The next six fastest boats in each heat advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 80], "content_span": [81, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289868-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-2 500 metres, Results, Semifinals\nThe fastest three boats in each semi advanced to the A final. The next four fastest boats in each semi, plus the fastest remaining boat advanced to the B final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 85], "content_span": [86, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289868-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-2 500 metres, Results, Finals, Final B\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 10 to 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 90], "content_span": [91, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289868-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-2 500 metres, Results, Finals, Final A\nCompetitors raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 90], "content_span": [91, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289869-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-4 1000 metres\nThe men's K-4 1000 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289869-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-4 1000 metres, Results, Heats\nThe fastest three boats in each heat advanced directly to the final. The next four fastest boats in each heat, plus the fastest remaining boat advanced to the semifinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 81], "content_span": [82, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289869-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-4 1000 metres, Results, Final\nCompetitors raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 81], "content_span": [82, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289870-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-4 500 metres\nThe men's K-4 500 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289870-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-4 500 metres, Results, Heats\nThe six fastest boats in each heat, plus the three fastest seventh-place boats advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 80], "content_span": [81, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289870-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-4 500 metres, Results, Semifinals\nThe fastest three boats advanced to the A final. The next three fastest boats advanced to the B final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 85], "content_span": [86, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289870-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-4 500 metres, Results, Finals, Final B\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 10 to 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 90], "content_span": [91, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289870-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's K-4 500 metres, Results, Finals, Final A\nCompetitors raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 90], "content_span": [91, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289871-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's KL1\nThe men's KL1 competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289871-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's KL1, Results, Heats\nThe fastest three boats in each heat advanced directly to the final. The next four fastest boats in each heat, plus the fastest remaining boat advanced to the semifinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289871-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's KL1, Results, Final\nCompetitors raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289872-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's KL2\nThe men's KL2 competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289872-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's KL2, Results, Heats\nThe six fastest boats in each heat, plus the three fastest seventh-place boats advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289872-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's KL2, Results, Semifinals\nThe fastest three boats advanced to the A final. The next three fastest boats advanced to the B final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 74], "content_span": [75, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289872-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's KL2, Results, Finals, Final B\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 10 to 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 79], "content_span": [80, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289872-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's KL2, Results, Finals, Final A\nCompetitors raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 79], "content_span": [80, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289873-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's KL3\nThe men's KL3 competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289873-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's KL3, Results, Heats\nThe six fastest boats in each heat, plus the three fastest seventh-place boats advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289873-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's KL3, Results, Semifinals\nThe fastest three boats advanced to the A final. The next three fastest boats advanced to the B final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 74], "content_span": [75, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289873-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's KL3, Results, Finals, Final B\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 10 to 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 79], "content_span": [80, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289873-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's KL3, Results, Finals, Final A\nCompetitors raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 79], "content_span": [80, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289874-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's VL1\nThe men's VL1 competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289874-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's VL1, Results\nWith fewer than ten competitors entered, this event was held as a direct final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 62], "content_span": [63, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289875-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's VL2\nThe men's VL2 competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289875-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's VL2, Results, Heats\nHeat winners advanced directly to the A final. The next six fastest boats in each heat advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289875-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's VL2, Results, Semifinals\nThe fastest three boats in each semi advanced to the A final. The next four fastest boats in each semi, plus the fastest remaining boat advanced to the B final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 74], "content_span": [75, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289875-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's VL2, Results, Finals, Final B\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 10 to 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 79], "content_span": [80, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289875-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's VL2, Results, Finals, Final A\nCompetitors raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 79], "content_span": [80, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289876-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's VL3\nThe men's VL3 competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289876-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's VL3, Results, Heats\nHeat winners advanced directly to the A final. The next six fastest boats in each heat advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289876-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's VL3, Results, Semifinals\nThe fastest three boats in each semi advanced to the A final. The next four fastest boats in each semi, plus the fastest remaining boat advanced to the B final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 74], "content_span": [75, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289876-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's VL3, Results, Finals, Final B\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 10 to 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 79], "content_span": [80, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289876-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Men's VL3, Results, Finals, Final A\nCompetitors raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 79], "content_span": [80, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289877-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's C-1 200 metres\nThe women's C-1 200 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289877-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's C-1 200 metres, Results, Heats\nThe six fastest boats in each heat, plus the three fastest seventh-place boats advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 82], "content_span": [83, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289877-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's C-1 200 metres, Results, Semifinals\nThe fastest three boats advanced to the A final. The next three fastest boats advanced to the B final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 87], "content_span": [88, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289877-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's C-1 200 metres, Results, Finals, Final B\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 10 to 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 92], "content_span": [93, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289877-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's C-1 200 metres, Results, Finals, Final A\nCompetitors raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 92], "content_span": [93, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289878-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's C-1 500 metres\nThe women's C-1 500 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289878-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's C-1 500 metres, Results, Heats\nHeat winners advanced directly to the A final. The next six fastest boats in each heat advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 82], "content_span": [83, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289878-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's C-1 500 metres, Results, Semifinals\nThe fastest three boats in each semi advanced to the A final. The next four fastest boats in each semi, plus the fastest remaining boat advanced to the B final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 87], "content_span": [88, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289878-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's C-1 500 metres, Results, Finals, Final B\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 10 to 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 92], "content_span": [93, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289878-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's C-1 500 metres, Results, Finals, Final A\nCompetitors raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 92], "content_span": [93, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289879-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's C-1 5000 metres\nThe women's C-1 5000 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289879-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's C-1 5000 metres, Results\nAs a long-distance event, it was held as a direct final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 76], "content_span": [77, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289880-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's C-2 200 metres\nThe women's C-2 200 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289880-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's C-2 200 metres, Results, Heats\nThe fastest three boats in each heat advanced directly to the final. The next four fastest boats in each heat, plus the fastest remaining boat advanced to the semifinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 82], "content_span": [83, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289880-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's C-2 200 metres, Results, Final\nCompetitors raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 82], "content_span": [83, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289881-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's C-2 500 metres\nThe women's C-2 500 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289881-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's C-2 500 metres, Results, Heats\nHeat winners advanced directly to the A final. The next six fastest boats in each heat advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 82], "content_span": [83, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289881-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's C-2 500 metres, Results, Semifinals\nThe fastest three boats in each semi advanced to the A final. The next four fastest boats in each semi, plus the fastest remaining boat advanced to the B final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 87], "content_span": [88, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289881-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's C-2 500 metres, Results, Finals, Final B\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 10 to 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 92], "content_span": [93, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289881-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's C-2 500 metres, Results, Finals, Final A\nCompetitors raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 92], "content_span": [93, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289882-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-1 1000 metres\nThe women's K-1 1000 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289882-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-1 1000 metres, Results, Heats\nThe fastest three boats in each heat advanced directly to the final. The next four fastest boats in each heat, plus the fastest remaining boat advanced to the semifinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 83], "content_span": [84, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289882-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-1 1000 metres, Results, Final\nCompetitors raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 83], "content_span": [84, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289883-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-1 200 metres\nThe women's K-1 200 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289883-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-1 200 metres, Results, Heats\nThe five fastest boats in each heat, plus the two fastest sixth-place boats advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 82], "content_span": [83, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289883-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-1 200 metres, Results, Semifinals\nThe fastest three boats advanced to the A final. The next three fastest boats advanced to the B final. The seventh, eighth and ninth-place boats advanced to the C final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 87], "content_span": [88, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289883-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-1 200 metres, Results, Finals, Final C\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 19 to 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 92], "content_span": [93, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289883-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-1 200 metres, Results, Finals, Final B\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 10 to 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 92], "content_span": [93, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289883-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-1 200 metres, Results, Finals, Final A\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top four as two boats were tied for third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 92], "content_span": [93, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289884-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-1 500 metres\nThe women's K-1 500 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289884-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-1 500 metres, Results, Heats\nThe five fastest boats in each heat, plus the two fastest sixth-place boats advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 82], "content_span": [83, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289884-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-1 500 metres, Results, Semifinals\nThe fastest three boats advanced to the A final. The next three fastest boats advanced to the B final. The seventh, eighth and ninth-place boats advanced to the C final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 87], "content_span": [88, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289884-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-1 500 metres, Results, Finals, Final C\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 19 to 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 92], "content_span": [93, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289884-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-1 500 metres, Results, Finals, Final B\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 10 to 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 92], "content_span": [93, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289884-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-1 500 metres, Results, Finals, Final A\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 92], "content_span": [93, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289885-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-1 5000 metres\nThe women's K-1 5000 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289885-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-1 5000 metres, Results\nAs a long-distance event, it was held as a direct final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 76], "content_span": [77, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289886-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-2 1000 metres\nThe women's K-2 1000 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289886-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-2 1000 metres, Results\nWith fewer than ten competitors entered, this event was held as a direct final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 76], "content_span": [77, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289887-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-2 200 metres\nThe women's K-2 200 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289887-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-2 200 metres, Results, Heats\nThe fastest three boats in each heat advanced directly to the final. The next four fastest boats in each heat, plus the fastest remaining boat advanced to the semifinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 82], "content_span": [83, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289887-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-2 200 metres, Results, Final\nCompetitors raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 82], "content_span": [83, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289888-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-2 500 metres\nThe women's K-2 500 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289888-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-2 500 metres, Results, Heats\nThe six fastest boats in each heat, plus the three fastest seventh-place boats advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 82], "content_span": [83, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289888-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-2 500 metres, Results, Semifinals\nThe fastest three boats advanced to the A final. The next three fastest boats advanced to the B final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 87], "content_span": [88, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289888-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-2 500 metres, Results, Finals, Final B\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 10 to 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 92], "content_span": [93, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289888-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-2 500 metres, Results, Finals, Final A\nCompetitors raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 92], "content_span": [93, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289889-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-4 500 metres\nThe women's K-4 500 metres competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289889-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-4 500 metres, Results, Heats\nHeat winners advanced directly to the A final. The next six fastest boats in each heat advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 82], "content_span": [83, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289889-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-4 500 metres, Results, Semifinals\nThe fastest three boats in each semi advanced to the A final. The next four fastest boats in each semi, plus the fastest remaining boat advanced to the B final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 87], "content_span": [88, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289889-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-4 500 metres, Results, Finals, Final B\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 10 to 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 92], "content_span": [93, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289889-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's K-4 500 metres, Results, Finals, Final A\nCompetitors raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 92], "content_span": [93, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289890-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's KL1\nThe women's KL1 competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289890-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's KL1, Results, Heats\nThe fastest three boats in each heat advanced directly to the final. The next four fastest boats in each heat, plus the fastest remaining boat advanced to the semifinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 71], "content_span": [72, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289890-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's KL1, Results, Final\nCompetitors raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 71], "content_span": [72, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289891-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's KL2\nThe women's KL2 competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289891-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's KL2, Results, Heats\nThe fastest three boats in each heat advanced directly to the final. The next four fastest boats in each heat, plus the fastest remaining boat advanced to the semifinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 71], "content_span": [72, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289891-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's KL2, Results, Final\nCompetitors raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 71], "content_span": [72, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289892-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's KL3\nThe women's KL3 competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289892-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's KL3, Results, Heats\nHeat winners advanced directly to the A final. The next six fastest boats in each heat advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 71], "content_span": [72, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289892-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's KL3, Results, Semifinals\nThe fastest three boats in each semi advanced to the A final. The next four fastest boats in each semi, plus the fastest remaining boat advanced to the B final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 76], "content_span": [77, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289892-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's KL3, Results, Finals, Final B\nCompetitors in this final raced for positions 10 to 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 81], "content_span": [82, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289892-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's KL3, Results, Finals, Final A\nCompetitors raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 81], "content_span": [82, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289893-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's VL1\nThe women's VL1 competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289893-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's VL1, Results\nWith fewer than ten competitors entered, this event was held as a direct final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 64], "content_span": [65, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289894-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's VL2\nThe women's VL2 competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289894-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's VL2, Results, Heats\nThe fastest three boats in each heat advanced directly to the final. The next four fastest boats in each heat, plus the fastest remaining boat advanced to the semifinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 71], "content_span": [72, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289894-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's VL2, Results, Final\nCompetitors raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 71], "content_span": [72, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289895-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's VL3\nThe women's VL3 competition at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged took place at the Olympic Centre of Szeged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289895-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships \u2013 Women's VL3, Results\nWith fewer than ten competitors entered, this event was held as a direct final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 64], "content_span": [65, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289896-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IFK G\u00f6teborg season\nThe 2019 season was IFK G\u00f6teborg's 114th in existence, their 87th season in Allsvenskan and their 43rd consecutive season in the league. They competed in Allsvenskan and Svenska Cupen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289896-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289897-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IFMA World Muaythai Championships\nThe 2019 IFMA World Muaythai Championships is the 18th edition of the IFMA World Muaythai Championships. The competition are held from July 18 to July 28, 2019, in Bangkok, Thailand. The event served as a qualifier for the 2021 World Games in Birmingham, United States, with each men's and women's team that made the quarter-finals earning points for the qualification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289897-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IFMA World Muaythai Championships\nRussia was initially awarded rights to host this edition, but Thailand negotiated to host this edition instead due to celebrating Coronation of King Vajiralongkorn of Thailand. It was the first world championships after International Olympic Committee (IOC) fully recognized International Federation of Muaythai Amateur (IFMA) in the Association of IOC Recognised International Sports Federations (ARISF) in February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289897-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IFMA World Muaythai Championships, Royal team trophies\nThe first place of team ranking will hold a trophy donated by King Vajiralongkorn of Thailand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289897-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IFMA World Muaythai Championships, Participating nations\nA total of 600 athletes from 87 nations and two IFMA team competed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289898-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IFMAR 1:10 Electric Off-Road World Championships\nThe 2019 IFMAR 1:10 Electric Off-Road World Championships was the eighteenth edition of the IFMAR 1:10 Electric Off-Road World Championship was held in Slovakia at the Hudy Arena which is effectively the test track for Xray. However the two wheel drive class was won by Spencer Rivkin racing an Team Associated RC10B6.1D bringing the manufacturers tally of IFMAR World Championships to thirty. In the 4WD class Bruno Coelho from Protugal took the victory with the XRAY.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289899-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Climbing World Championships\nThe 2019 IFSC Climbing World Championships, the 16th edition, were held in Hachioji, Japan from 11 to 21 August 2019. The championships consisted of lead, speed, bouldering, and combined events. The paraclimbing event was held separately from 16 to 17 July in Brian\u00e7on, France. The combined event also served as an Olympic qualifying event for the 2020 Summer Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289899-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Climbing World Championships, Qualification for the 2020 Summer Olympics\nThe seven best climbers of the combined event automatically qualify for the 2020 Summer Olympics, where sport climbing will make its debut. There are seven spots available per gender, with a maximum of two spots per country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289899-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Climbing World Championships, Qualification for the 2020 Summer Olympics\nThe qualifiers for the 2020 Summer Olympics from the 2019 World Championships Combined events are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289899-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Climbing World Championships, Qualification for the 2020 Summer Olympics\nTomoa Narasaki\u00a0(JPN)\u00a0Jakob Schubert\u00a0(AUT)\u00a0Rishat Khaibullin\u00a0(KAZ)\u00a0Mickael Mawem\u00a0(FRA)\u00a0Alexander Megos\u00a0(GER)\u00a0Ludovico Fossali\u00a0(ITA)\u00a0Sean McColl\u00a0(CAN)\u00a0TBD\u00a0(JPN)*", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289899-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Climbing World Championships, Qualification for the 2020 Summer Olympics\nJanja Garnbret\u00a0(SLO)\u00a0Akiyo Noguchi\u00a0(JPN)\u00a0Shauna Coxsey\u00a0(GBR)\u00a0Aleksandra Miros\u0142aw\u00a0(POL)\u00a0Petra Klingler\u00a0(SUI)\u00a0Brooke Raboutou\u00a0(USA)\u00a0Jessica Pilz\u00a0(AUT)\u00a0TBD\u00a0(JPN)*", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289899-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Climbing World Championships, Qualification for the 2020 Summer Olympics\n* \u00a0Japan had qualified two quota places in each event, with the climbers still to be named.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289899-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Climbing World Championships, Speed, Women\nAleksandra Miroslaw won the women's speed final against Di Niu. In the small final Anouck Jaubert (7.534) won against YiLing Song (9.768) and secured the third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 52], "content_span": [53, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289899-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Climbing World Championships, Speed, Men\nLudovico Fossali won the men's speed final against Jan Kriz. In the small final Stanislav Kokorin (5.835) won against Danyil Boldyrev (5.934) and secured the third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289899-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Climbing World Championships, Combined\nClimbers who participated in all three events of bouldering, lead, and speed would receive a combined ranking, and the top 20 of each gender would automatically qualify for the combined event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289899-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Climbing World Championships, Combined\nIn combined competition, scoring is based on a multiplication formula, with points awarded by calculating the product of the three finishing ranks achieved in each discipline within the combined event. A competitor finishing with a first, a second and a sixth would thus be awarded 1 x 2 x 6 = 12 points, with the lowest scoring competitor winning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289900-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Climbing World Cup\nThe 2019 IFSC Climbing World Cup was held in 12 locations. Bouldering, lead and speed competitions were each held in 6 locations. The season began on 5 April in Meiringen, Switzerland with the first bouldering competition in the season, and concluded on 27 October in Inzai, Japan, with the last lead climbing competition in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289900-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289900-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Climbing World Cup, Olympic qualification\nFor the Tokyo 2020 Olympics athletes can qualify through either the IFSC Combined World Championships, the Olympic Qualifying Event or the Continental Championships. The Olympic Qualifying Event is an invitation only event open to the 22 highest ranked climbers on the World Cup circuit who haven't already qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289900-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Climbing World Cup, Highlights of the season\nIn bouldering, at the World Cup in Moscow, Janja Garnbret of Slovenia flashed all boulders in the final round to take the win. At the World Cup in Vail, Garnbret won her sixth consecutive gold medal and became the first climber ever to make a clean sweep of Bouldering World Cup season by winning six out of six events held this year. Moreover, she also became the first female climber to win overall World Cup season titles in lead (2016, 2017, 2018) and bouldering (2019). Ai Mori of Japan, in her first year of open eligibility, made her the World Cup debut in Meiringen, then won her first medal (bronze) at the World Cup in Wujiang, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289900-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Climbing World Cup, Highlights of the season\nIn speed, at the World Cup in Chongqing, YiLing Song of China set a new world record of 7.101s, breaking the previous world record of 7.32s set by Iuliia Kaplina of Russia at the 2017 World Games in Wroclaw and Anouck Jaubert of France at the 2018 Speed World Cup in Moscow. At the World Cup in Xiamen, Aries Susanti Rahayu of Indonesia set a new world record of 6.995s in the final race, breaking Song's 7.101s, and becoming the first woman in the history of the sport to record a time under 7 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289900-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Climbing World Cup, Highlights of the season\nIn lead, Chaehyun Seo of South Korea, in her first year of open eligibility, made her World Cup debut in Villars and claimed her first medal (silver) there. Then, she won the next 4 Lead World Cups and placed third in the last one, finishing her debut season with a 2019 Lead World Cup Season Champion title. Also in her debut season, Natsuki Tanii of Japan earned her first medal (bronze) in Brian\u00e7on and continued her consistent performance throughout the season and thus claiming third place of the overall lead season ranking. Other notable athletes in their World Cup debut season: Ai Mori (JPN), YueTong Zhang (CHN).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289900-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Climbing World Cup, Bouldering\nThe overall ranking is determined based upon points, which athletes are awarded for finishing in the top 30 of each individual event. There are six competitions in the season, but only the best five attempts are counted. The national ranking is the sum of the points of that country's three best male and female athletes. Results displayed in parentheses are not counted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289900-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Climbing World Cup, Bouldering, Men\nThe results of the ten most successful athletes of the Bouldering World Cup 2019:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 45], "content_span": [46, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289900-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Climbing World Cup, Bouldering, Women\nThe results of the ten most successful athletes of the Bouldering World Cup 2019:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289900-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Climbing World Cup, Bouldering, National Teams\nThe results of the ten most successful countries of the Bouldering World Cup 2019:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289900-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Climbing World Cup, Lead\nThe overall ranking is determined based upon points, which athletes are awarded for finishing in the top 30 of each individual event. There are six competitions in the season, but only the best five attempts are counted. The national ranking is the sum of the points of that country's three best male and female athletes. Results displayed in parentheses are not counted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 34], "content_span": [35, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289900-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Climbing World Cup, Lead, Men\nThe results of the ten most successful athletes of the Lead World Cup 2019:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289900-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Climbing World Cup, Lead, Women\nThe results of the ten most successful athletes of the Lead World Cup 2019:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289900-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Climbing World Cup, Lead, National Teams\nThe results of the ten most successful countries of the Lead World Cup 2019:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289900-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Climbing World Cup, Speed\nThe overall ranking is determined based upon points, which athletes are awarded for finishing in the top 30 of each individual event. There are six competitions in the season, but only the best five attempts are counted. The national ranking is the sum of the points of that country's three best male and female athletes. Results displayed in parentheses are not counted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289900-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Climbing World Cup, Speed, Men\nThe results of the ten most successful athletes of the Speed World Cup 2019:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289900-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Climbing World Cup, Speed, Women\nThe results of the ten most successful athletes of the Speed World Cup 2019:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289900-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Climbing World Cup, Speed, National Teams\nThe results of the ten most successful countries of the Lead World Cup 2019:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289900-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Climbing World Cup, Combined\nThe 22 highest ranked climbers on the World Cup circuit (combined) who haven't already qualified for the Olympics will be invited to the Toulouse Olympic Qualifying Event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289901-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Combined Qualifier\nThe 2019 IFSC Combined Qualifier was an Olympic Qualifying Event. It was held from 28 November to 1 December 2019 in Toulouse, France. It was organized by the French Federation of Sport Climbing and Mountaineering or FFME (Federation Francaise Montagne Escalade). The athletes competed in combined format of three disciplines: speed, bouldering, and lead, simulating the 2020 Olympics format. Six athletes per gender would qualify for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics through this event. The winner for men was Kokoro Fujii and for women was Futaba Ito.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289901-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Combined Qualifier, Qualification for the 2020 Summer Olympics\nThe six best climbers of the combined event automatically qualify for the 2020 Summer Olympics, where sport climbing will make its debut. There are six spots available per gender, with a maximum of two spots per country. Japan had already filled their maximum quota of two athletes per gender, so no more athletes were going to qualify for the Olympics through this event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 72], "content_span": [73, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289901-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Combined Qualifier, Qualification for the 2020 Summer Olympics\nThe qualifiers for the 2020 Summer Olympics from the 2019 IFSC Combined Qualifier event were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 72], "content_span": [73, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289901-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Combined Qualifier, Qualification for the 2020 Summer Olympics\nAdam Ondra\u00a0(CZE)\u00a0Bassa Mawem\u00a0(FRA)\u00a0Jan Hojer\u00a0(GER)\u00a0Yufei Pan\u00a0(CHN)\u00a0Alberto Gin\u00e9s L\u00f3pez\u00a0(ESP)\u00a0Nathaniel Coleman\u00a0(USA)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 72], "content_span": [73, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289901-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Combined Qualifier, Qualification for the 2020 Summer Olympics\nJulia Chanourdie\u00a0(FRA)\u00a0Mia Krampl\u00a0(SLO)\u00a0Iuliia Kaplina\u00a0(RUS)\u00a0Kyra Condie\u00a0(USA)\u00a0Laura Rogora\u00a0(ITA)\u00a0Yiling Song\u00a0(CHN)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 72], "content_span": [73, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289901-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Combined Qualifier, Competition format\nIn the qualification round each of the twenty competitors competed in speed climbing, bouldering and lead climbing. The scores were multiplied and the 8 competitors with the lowest total scores proceeded to the final round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289901-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Combined Qualifier, Competition format\nIn speed climbing, climbers raced against each other's in pairs on a standardized wall of 15m in height. In the qualification round, climbers had two runs on two different lanes; their best times were recorded and used for seeding placement in the final round. In the final round, climbers raced head-to-head with the fastest winning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289901-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Combined Qualifier, Competition format\nIn bouldering, climbers needed to top boulder problems set on 4.5m-high wall within a certain amount of time. In the qualification round, climbers were faced with 4 boulder problems and given 5 minutes on each problem to top them. The final round had 3 boulder problems to top within a 4 minutes time limit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289901-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Combined Qualifier, Competition format\nIn lead climbing, climbers were given a route set on 15m-high wall to top within 6 minutes. If there was a tie, the climber with the fastest elapsed time won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289901-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Combined Qualifier, Competition format, Route-setting\nSpeed climbing wall is standardized: 15 meters tall, 5 degrees overhanging. Bouldering and lead climbing have route-setting teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289901-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Combined Qualifier, Competition format, Route-setting\nThe IFSC route-setters were Manuel Hassler (chief) from Switzerland and Adam Pustelnik (chief) from Poland, Romain Cabessut from France, Matthias Woitzuck from Austria, Martin Hammerer from Austria, and Remi Samyn from France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289901-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Combined Qualifier, Competition format, Route-setting\nThe IFSC Technical Delegate was Fabrizio Minnino from Italy. The IFSC Jury President was Johannes Altner from Germany. The IFSC Judge was Paul Ledet from Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289901-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 IFSC Combined Qualifier, Participating nations\n44 climbers from 19 nations participated in the event. Athletes were invited based on the 2019 IFSC World Cup Combined Ranking and 2019 IFSC Climbing World Championships Combined Ranking. Athletes who were already qualified for the Olympics would not be invited.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289902-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IHF Emerging Nations Championship\nThe 2019 IHF Emerging Nations Handball Championship was the third edition of the IHF Emerging Nations Championship held in Georgia under the aegis of International Handball Federation from 7 to 16 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289902-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IHF Emerging Nations Championship\nGeorgia defeated Cuba in the final to win their first title and earned the right to compete at the Relegation Round of 2022 European Championship qualification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289902-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IHF Emerging Nations Championship, Participating teams\nUnlike previous edition, Europe was represented only by the teams who competed at the first phase of 2022 European Championship qualification and failed to advance to the Relegation Round. That implied Faroe Islands not to defend their title at this tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289902-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IHF Emerging Nations Championship, Draw\nThe draw was held on 26 April 2019. Georgia had the right to choose their group after the draw was completed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 44], "content_span": [45, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289903-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IHF Inter-Continental Trophy\nThe 2019 IHF Inter-Continental Trophy was the fourth edition of the competition held in Pristina, Kosovo from 10 to 14 April 2019. It featured a men's youth (U-19) tournament and a men's junior (U-21) tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289904-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IHF North American and Caribbean Emerging Nations Championship\nThe 2019 IHF North American and Caribbean Emerging Nations Championship was the first edition of the IHF North American and Caribbean Emerging Nations Championship held in the Dominican Republic under the aegis of International Handball Federation. The tournament was held in Santo Domingo from 8 to 14 April 2019. The winner qualified for the 2019 IHF Emerging Nations Championship held in Georgia from June 8 to 16 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289904-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IHF North American and Caribbean Emerging Nations Championship, Venues\nAll games are played at the Pabellon de Balomano in Santo Domingo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 75], "content_span": [76, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289904-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IHF North American and Caribbean Emerging Nations Championship, Draw, Draw Procedure\n1. Teams in pot 3 are drawn to groups A to D in row 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 89], "content_span": [90, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289904-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IHF North American and Caribbean Emerging Nations Championship, Draw, Draw Procedure\n2. Teams in pot 2 are drawn to groups A to D in row 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 89], "content_span": [90, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289904-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 IHF North American and Caribbean Emerging Nations Championship, Draw, Draw Procedure\n3. Organizer (\u00a0Dominican Republic) has the prerogative to assign itself to a group of its choice in row 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 89], "content_span": [90, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289904-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 IHF North American and Caribbean Emerging Nations Championship, Draw, Draw Procedure\n4. The remaining teams in pot 1 are drawn to groups A to D in row 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 89], "content_span": [90, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289905-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IHF Super Globe\nThe 2019 IHF Super Globe was the thirteenth edition of the IHF Men's Super Globe, a yearly club world championship in handball organised by the International Handball Federation (IHF). The tournament was held in Dammam, Saudi Arabia from 27 to 31 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289905-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IHF Super Globe\nFC Barcelona won their fifth title after defeating THW Kiel 34\u201332 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289905-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IHF Super Globe, Venue\nThe championship was played in Dammam, at the Dammam Sports Hall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289905-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IHF Super Globe, Teams\nTen teams were competing in the 2019 tournament, two more than in previous tournament. This is due to the split of the Pan-American Team Handball Federation at an IHF Council meeting in Zagreb which was split into the North America and the Caribbean Handball Confederation (NACHC) and the South and Central America Handball Confederation (SCAHC). New York City THC became the first team from North America to compete in the IHF Super Globe after finishing top of the continental championship. The winners of continental tournaments, the defending champion, a host team and wild card teams participated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289906-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IHF Women's Super Globe\nThe 2019 IHF Women's Super Globe was the first edition of the tournament. It was held in Wuxi, China from 1 to 4 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289906-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IHF Women's Super Globe\n1\u00ba de Agosto defeated China National Club in the final to win the inaugural event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289906-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IHF Women's Super Globe, Teams\nThe winners of continental tournaments, two host teams and a wild card team participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289907-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 II Lyga\nThe 2019 II Lyga season is the third season since return to two divisions system, the twenty-first after switch to spring-to-fall format and the thirty-first overall after the restoration of Independence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289907-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 II Lyga\nThe II Lyga is the third-tier of football in Lithuania. It is divided into the South Zone and the West Zone, this season containing respectively thirteen and ten clubs. The winning teams from each division are promoted to the I Lyga, while the last placed teams from both divisions are relegated to the appropriate regional division of the III Lyga, except in separately regulated cases for the B teams of higher tier clubs. The final list of participants often does not correlate to the final results of the previous season, as the participation is finalized through the Lithuanian Football Federation league licensing process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289907-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 II Lyga, II Lyga South Zone, Attendance\nUpdated to games played on completeSource: Notes:1: Team played in the I Lyga last season.2: Official attendance statistic from 1 of the Vidzgiris home matches was not publicly released.3: Official attendance statistic from 2 of the Marijampol\u0117 City home matches was not publicly released.4: Official attendance statistic from 1 of the TERA home matches was not publicly released.5: Official attendance statistic from 4 leagues matches was not publicly released.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 44], "content_span": [45, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289907-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 II Lyga, II Lyga West Zone, Attendance\nUpdated to games played on completeSource: Notes:1: Team played in the III Lyga last season.2: Official attendance statistic from 1 of the Babrungas home matches was not publicly released.3: Official attendance statistic from 1 of the Palanga B home matches was not publicly released.4: Official attendance statistic from 1 of the Saned home matches was not publicly released.5: Official attendance statistic from 1 of the Kra\u017eant\u0117 home matches was not publicly released.8: Official attendance statistic from 4 leagues matches was not publicly released.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 43], "content_span": [44, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289908-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 II liiga\nThe 2019 II liiga is the 25th season of the II liiga, fourth-highest league for association football clubs in Estonia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289908-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 II liiga, II liiga North/East, 2019 season\n2019 II N/E liiga consists of 14 different teams. Nine of them remain the same, two were promoted from III liiga, two were relegated from higher divisions and one club (Tallinna JK Legion II) transferred from the last year's II liiga S/W. Promoted teams were P\u00f5hja-Tallinna JK Volta II and FC J\u00f5geva Wolves while relegated clubs were Lasnam\u00e4e FC Ajax and Tartu FC Santos. These teams replaced Tartu Santos II (dissolved), P\u00f5hja-Tallinna JK Volta (promoted), Maardu United (relegated), Raasiku FC Joker and Tallinna JK Piraaja (transferred to II S/W Liiga).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 47], "content_span": [48, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289908-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 II liiga, II liiga North/East, 2019 season, Clubs\nThe following clubs are competing in II liiga North/East during the 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 54], "content_span": [55, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289908-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 II liiga, II liiga South/West, 2019 season\n2019 II S/W Liiga consists of 14 different teams. Eight of them remain the same. Three league winners were promoted from III liiga. They were P\u00f5hja-Sakala, Viimsi JK II, FC Kose. Two teams were transferred from II liiga N/E. They were Raasiku FC Joker and Tallinna JK Piraaja with the sixth new teaming joining from the higher division (FC Flora U19). These teams replaced Viimsi JK and Tabasalu JK (both promoted), Tallinna JK Legion II (transferred to II liiga N/E) T\u00f5rva JK, JK Ganvix T\u00fcri and FC Otep\u00e4\u00e4 (all relegated).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 47], "content_span": [48, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289909-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Challenge Cup of Asia\nThe 2019 IIHF Challenge Cup of Asia was the 12th edition of the IIHF Challenge Cup of Asia, an annual international ice hockey tournament held by the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF). The tournament took place from 1 to 9 March 2019 at Malaysia National Ice Skating Stadium in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289909-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Challenge Cup of Asia\nLast year's runner-up Thailand will not participate for the first time since the competition kicked off in 2008 and made their debut in Division III qualification tournament of the 2019 World Championships. Kuwait also participates in Division III qualification tournament and India unable to participate in the tournament due to lack of money. Only Oman returned after one year absence, bringing the number of participants reduced from nine to seven teams. Mongolia won the Challenge Cup of Asia for the second straight year, by defeating the Philippines in the final, while Singapore defeating hosts Malaysia, to win their first ever bronze medal in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289909-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Challenge Cup of Asia, Participants, Match officials\n4 referees and 6 linesmen were selected for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289909-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Challenge Cup of Asia, Awards and statistics, Goaltending leaders\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, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289910-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's Challenge Cup of Asia\nThe 2019 IIHF Women's Challenge Cup of Asia was an international women's ice hockey tournament run by the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF). The tournament took place between 14 April and 19 April 2019 in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates and was the seventh edition held since its formation in 2010 under the IIHF Challenge Cup of Asia series of tournaments. Thailand won the tournament after finishing first in the standings. Chinese Taipei finished in second place and Singapore finished third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289910-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's Challenge Cup of Asia, Overview\nThe 2019 IIHF Women's Challenge Cup of Asia began on 14 April 2019 in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates with games played at the Zayed Sports City Ice Rink. New Zealand's under-18 team (New Zealand U18), Singapore and Thailand returned after competing in last years tournament. The defending champions, Chinese Taipei's under-18 team, were replaced by the Chinese Taipei women's team and Malaysia joined after winning promotion at the 2018 Division I tournament. The tournament ran alongside the 2019 IIHF Women's Challenge Cup of Asia Division I competition with all games being held in Abu Dhabi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289910-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's Challenge Cup of Asia, Overview\nThe tournament consisted of a single round-robin with each team competing in four games. Thailand won the tournament after winning three games and recording an overtime loss to finish at the top of the standings. The win was Thailand's first gold medal of the competition having previously won silver in 2017 and bronze in 2018. Chinese Taipei finished second after losing only to Thailand and Singapore finished in third. Thailand's Nuchanat Ponglerkdee led the tournament in scoring with eleven points and was named the most valuable player. Su-Ting Tan of Chinese Taipei was named best forward and Thailand's Sirikarn Jittresin was named best defenceman. Wasunun Angkulpattanasuk of Thailand finished as the tournaments leading goaltender with a save percentage of 93.62 however the IIHF Directorate named Singapore's Qina Foo as the best goaltender.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 903]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289910-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's Challenge Cup of Asia, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top ten skaters sorted by points, then goals, assists, a greater plus-minus, and then lower penalties in minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289910-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's Challenge Cup of Asia, 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289911-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's Challenge Cup of Asia Division I\nThe 2019 IIHF Women's Challenge Cup of Asia Division I was an international women's ice hockey tournament run by the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF). The tournament took place between 14 April and 19 April 2019 in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates and was the fifth edition held since its formation in 2014 under the IIHF Challenge Cup of Asia series of tournaments. The tournament made up the second level of competition sitting below the 2019 IIHF Women's Challenge Cup of Asia. The Philippines won the tournament after finishing first in the standings. The United Arab Emirates finished in second place and India finished third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289911-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's Challenge Cup of Asia Division I, Overview\nThe 2019 IIHF Women's Challenge Cup of Asia Division I began on 14 April 2019 in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates with games played at the Zayed Sports City Ice Rink. India, the Philippines and the United Arab Emirates returned after missing promotion in last years 2018 Division I tournament. Malaysia did not return to Division I for 2019 after gaining promotion to the top division in 2018. Kuwait made their debut appearance in Division I and in women's international competition. Mongolia were also set to debut however withdrew at the end of March due to a lack of players. The tournament ran alongside the 2019 IIHF Women's Challenge Cup of Asia competition with all games being held in Abu Dhabi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 764]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289911-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's Challenge Cup of Asia Division I, Overview\nThe tournament consisted of a single round-robin with each team competing in three games. The Philippines won the tournament after winning all three of their games to finish at the top of the standings. The win was the Philippines first gold medal of the competition having previously won bronze in 2018. The United Arab Emirates finished second after losing only to the Philippines and India finished in third. Bianca Yasmine Cuevas of the Philippines led the tournament in scoring with eleven points and was named the best forward by the IIHF Directorate. India's Dechen Dolker and Tsetan Dolma were named most valuable player and top defenceman respectively and Ayah Alsarraf of Kuwait was named best goaltender. The Philippines' Rosalyn Elizabeth Angelina Lim finished as the tournaments leading goaltender with a save percentage of 96.15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 904]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289911-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's Challenge Cup of Asia Division I, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top ten skaters sorted by points, then goals, assists, a greater plus-minus, and then lower penalties in minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289911-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's Challenge Cup of Asia Division I, 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, 50], "section_span": [52, 71], "content_span": [72, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289912-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship\nThe 2019 IIHF Women's World Championship was an international Ice hockey tournament run by the International Ice Hockey Federation. It was contested in Espoo, Finland from 4 to 14 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289912-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship\nThe United States won their fifth consecutive and ninth overall title after a shootout win over Finland. Canada claimed the bronze medal by defeating Russia 7\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289912-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship\nAfter the 2017 tournament, it was announced that tournament would expand to ten teams for 2019, having been played with eight teams since the first tournament in 1990, except in 2004, 2007, 2008, and 2009, where nine teams played. The 2004 edition featured nine teams when Japan was promoted from Division II but no team was relegated from the top division in 2003, due to the cancellation of the top division tournament in China because of the outbreak of the SARS disease.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289912-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship\nTwo teams were relegated from the top division in 2004, going back to eight teams for 2005, but due to the success of the 9-team pool in 2004, IIHF decided to expand again to nine teams for 2007. Reverting to eight teams after the 2009 tournament. To bring the tournament to ten teams, Czech Republic which had lost the 2017 Relegation Round, stayed in the top division. Joined by Division I Group A Champions, Japan (2017) and France (2018)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289912-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship, Venue\n23 games were played in the main arena, while six games were played at a secondary rink.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289912-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship, Format\nThe ten teams were split into two groups according to their rankings. In Group A, all teams advanced to the quarterfinals and three teams from Group B advanced. The bottom two Group B teams were relegated. From the quarterfinals on, a knockout system was used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289912-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship, Match officials\n12 referees and 10 linesmen are selected for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289912-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship, Rosters\nEach team's roster consists of at least 15 skaters (forwards, and defencemen) and 2 goaltenders, and at most 20 skaters and 3 goaltenders. All ten participating nations, through the confirmation of their respective national associations, had to submit a \"Long List\" roster no later than two weeks before the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289912-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship, Knockout stage, Final, Controversy\nDuring the final between the United States and Finland, it appeared Finland had won 2\u20131 in overtime after a game-winning goal to win its first World Championship. However, Finland celebrated on the ice before the Video Goal Judge initiated a video review. The goal was reviewed for over ten minutes and eventually overturned. The IIHF released a press statement the next day citing rules 186 and 183ii as the reasons for overturning the goal. The United States went on to defeat Finland 2\u20131 in shootout. It was later announced that Finnish Ice Hockey Association would pay the Finnish team the bonus allotted for winning a gold medal, instead of the silver medal bonus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 72], "content_span": [73, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289912-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top skaters sorted by points, then goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289912-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship, Awards 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289912-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship, Awards 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 80], "content_span": [81, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289912-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship, Awards 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, 80], "content_span": [81, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289913-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division I\nThe 2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division I was an international ice hockey tournament ran by the International Ice Hockey Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289913-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division I\nThe Group A tournament was held in Budapest, Hungary from 7 to 13 April and the Group B tournament in Beijing, China from 6 to 12 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289913-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division I\nHungary and Denmark earned promotion to the top division in Group A, while the Netherlands gained promotion after their Group B win. Italy and Latvia got relegated by finishing last in their respective group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289913-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division I, Group A tournament, Match officials\n4 referees and 7 linesmen were selected for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 84], "content_span": [85, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289913-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division I, Group A tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top skaters sorted by points, then goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 107], "content_span": [108, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289913-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division I, Group A tournament, Awards 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, 47], "section_span": [49, 107], "content_span": [108, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289913-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division I, Group A tournament, Awards 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, 47], "section_span": [49, 111], "content_span": [112, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289913-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division I, Group A tournament, Awards 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, 47], "section_span": [49, 111], "content_span": [112, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289913-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division I, Group B tournament, Match officials\n4 referees and 7 linesmen were selected for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 84], "content_span": [85, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289913-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division I, Group B tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top skaters sorted by points, then goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 107], "content_span": [108, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289913-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division I, Group B tournament, Awards 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, 47], "section_span": [49, 107], "content_span": [108, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289913-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division I, Group B tournament, Awards 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, 47], "section_span": [49, 111], "content_span": [112, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289913-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division I, Group B tournament, Awards 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, 47], "section_span": [49, 111], "content_span": [112, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289914-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division II\nThe 2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division II was an international ice hockey tournament run by the International Ice Hockey Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289914-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division II\nThe Group A tournament was held in Dumfries, Great Britain from 2 to 8 April, the Group B tournament in Bra\u0219ov, Romania from 1 to 7 April and the Group B qualification tournament from 13 to 18 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289914-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division II\nSlovenia earned promotion in Group A, Chinese Taipei won the Group B and Ukraine the qualification tournament, both teams got promoted for the next year, while Australia and Romania were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289914-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division II, Group A tournament, Match officials\n4 referees and 7 linesmen were selected for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 85], "content_span": [86, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289914-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division II, Group A tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top skaters sorted by points, then goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 108], "content_span": [109, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289914-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division II, Group A tournament, Awards 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, 48], "section_span": [50, 108], "content_span": [109, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289914-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division II, Group A tournament, Awards 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, 48], "section_span": [50, 112], "content_span": [113, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289914-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division II, Group A tournament, Awards 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, 48], "section_span": [50, 112], "content_span": [113, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289914-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division II, Group B tournament, Match officials\n4 referees and 7 linesmen were selected for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 85], "content_span": [86, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289914-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division II, Group B tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top skaters sorted by points, then goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 108], "content_span": [109, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289914-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division II, Group B tournament, Awards 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, 48], "section_span": [50, 108], "content_span": [109, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289914-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division II, Group B tournament, Awards 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, 48], "section_span": [50, 112], "content_span": [113, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289914-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division II, Group B tournament, Awards 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, 48], "section_span": [50, 112], "content_span": [113, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289914-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division II, Group B Qualification tournament, Match officials\n3 referees and 5 linesmen were selected for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 99], "content_span": [100, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289914-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division II, Group B Qualification tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top skaters sorted by points, then goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 122], "content_span": [123, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289914-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division II, Group B Qualification tournament, Awards 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, 48], "section_span": [50, 122], "content_span": [123, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289914-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division II, Group B Qualification tournament, Awards 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, 48], "section_span": [50, 126], "content_span": [127, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289914-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Division II, Group B Qualification tournament, Awards 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, 48], "section_span": [50, 126], "content_span": [127, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289915-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Final\nThe 2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Final was played on 14 April 2019, at Espoo Metro Areena in Espoo, Finland. The United States defeated Finland 2\u20131 in a shootout, to win its fifth consecutive and ninth overall title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289915-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Final, Background\nSince the first IIHF Women's World Championship in 1990 and the first women's tournament at the Winter Olympics in 1998, the American and Canadian national teams have played in the finals on all occasions except for the 2006 Winter Olympics, where Sweden played Canada after eliminating the United States in the semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289915-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Final, Background\nFinland stunned Canada in the semi-finals, beating them by a score of 4\u20132, their first-ever semifinal victory and advanced to the gold medal game for the first time in IIHF Women's World Championship history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289915-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Final, Disallowed goal controversy\nDuring the final between the United States and Finland, it appeared Finland had won 2\u20131 after Petra Nieminen\u00a0scored what appeared to be the game-winning goal in overtime. It would've been Finland first World Championship. However, since Finnish defender Jenni Hiirikoski was pushed towards American goaltender Alex Rigsby just outside of the crease, the Video Goal Judge initiated a video review while the Finnish players were celebrating on the ice. The goal was reviewed for over ten minutes and eventually overturned. The IIHF released a press statement the next day citing rules 186 and 183ii as the reasons for overturning the goal. The two rules read:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 71], "content_span": [72, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289915-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Final, Disallowed goal controversy\n-According to IIHF Playing Rule 186 v. Goaltender and Goal/Goal Crease Disallowed: An attacking skater who makes contact other than incidental with a goaltender who is out of his goal crease during game action will be assessed a minor penalty for interference. If a goal is scored at this time, it will not count.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 71], "content_span": [72, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289915-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Final, Disallowed goal controversy\n-According to IIHF Playing Rule 183 ii. Protection of a Goaltender: Incidental contact is allowed when the goaltender is in the act of playing the puck outside his goal crease, provided the attacking skater makes a reasonable effort to minimize or avoid such contact.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 71], "content_span": [72, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289915-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Final, Disallowed goal controversy\nDespite the goal being disallowed, Rigsby was issued a two-minute penalty for tripping and Hiirikoski was not issued any penalties. Neither team was able to score in the remaining minutes of overtime, with the Americans successfully killing off two power-plays. The United States went on to defeat Finland 2\u20131 in the shootout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 71], "content_span": [72, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289915-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Final, Disallowed goal controversy\nFinnish goaltender Noora R\u00e4ty\u00a0finished with 51 saves on 52 shots and Rigbsy with 26 saves on 27 shots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 71], "content_span": [72, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289915-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Final, Disallowed goal controversy, Reactions\nFollowing an initial period of uncertainty as the goal was being reviewed, the final decision to overturn the goal sparked a number of strong reactions from players, staff, and fans. Finnish NHLer Kasperi Kapanen spoke out against the decision, stating that \"I think they kind of messed it up,\" with retired Canadian Olympian Hayley Wickenheiser agreeing, stating \"That. Was. A. Goal.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 82], "content_span": [83, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289915-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Final, Disallowed goal controversy, Reactions\nRigsby defended the decision, stating that she had immediately known the goal was illegal, and that \"I was the one who got body-slammed. But the ref thinks I tried tripping the player when I was on the ground, and somehow I end up with the penalty. Funny how that went.\" She, however, still praised Finland, stating that \"This is the best Finnish team we\u2019ve ever seen.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 82], "content_span": [83, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289915-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Final, Aftermath\nAfter the game, the Finnish ice hockey association announced that it would be giving the players the \u20ac7000 bonus for winning gold instead of the \u20ac5000 bonus for winning silver. Unlike the men's World Championships, however, there was no IIHF bonus for the players for winning either medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 53], "content_span": [54, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289915-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Final, Aftermath\nFinnish broadcaster Yle released viewership numbers of over 2,3 million people watching the finals on TV in Finland - more than half the country's population. The 2019 Finnish parliamentary election was held on the same day as the finals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 53], "content_span": [54, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289915-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship Final, Aftermath\nAfter the finals, Finnish legend Riikka Sallinen, considered among the greatest hockey players of all-time, announced her permanent retirement from the game. Finnish veterans Linda V\u00e4lim\u00e4ki and Venla Hovi also announced their retirements after the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 53], "content_span": [54, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289916-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship rosters\nEach team's roster consists of at least 15 skaters (forwards, and defencemen) and 2 goaltenders, and at most 20 skaters and 3 goaltenders. All ten participating nations, through the confirmation of their respective national associations, had to submit a roster by the first IIHF directorate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289916-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF Women's World Championship rosters, Group A, Russia\nA 26-player roster was announced on 21 March 2019. The final roster was revealed on 31 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289917-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship\nThe 2019 IIHF World Championship was hosted by Slovakia from 10 to 26 May 2019. It was the second time that Slovakia has hosted the event as an independent country, as was the case in 2011. The host cities were Bratislava and Ko\u0161ice, as announced by the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) on 15 May 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289917-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship\nFinland won their third title by defeating Canada in the final. The Finns had 18 first-timers for the 2019 IIHF World Championship and were widely regarded as an outsider to win any medal at all. Despite this, the Finns won their third World Championship, and lost only two games in the tournament (against USA, and Germany). Russia secured the bronze medal after a penalty-shootout win over the Czech Republic. This tournament was also the first time since the 2006 IIHF World Championship that both promoted teams (Great Britain and Italy) stayed in the top division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289917-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship, Rule changes\nIn December 2018, the IIHF announced changes to the overtime procedures beginning at this tournament: all overtime periods would be 3-on-3 regardless of round (rather than progressing from 3-on-3 to 4-on-4 and 5-on-5 over the course of the tournament), and the gold medal game would no longer go to a shootout; play would continue in 20-minute periods of 3-on-3 until a winning goal would be scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289917-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship, Rule changes\nIn the semifinals there was no set bracket. After the quarterfinals, a re-seeding took place with the highest seed plays the lowest remaining seed. Seeds were determined by performance in the preliminary round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289917-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship, Seeding\nThe seedings in the preliminary round are based on the 2018 IIHF World Ranking, as of the end of the 2018 IIHF World Championship, using the serpentine system. On 22 May 2018, the IIHF and the local organizing committee announced the groups, in which Slovakia and Norway switched places so that Slovakia would play in Ko\u0161ice and the Czech Republic and Austria would play in Bratislava.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289917-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship, Rosters\nEach team's roster consists of at least 15 skaters (forwards, and defencemen) and 2 goaltenders, and at most 22 skaters and 3 goaltenders. All 16 participating nations, through the confirmation of their respective national associations, had to submit a \"Long List\" no later than two weeks before the tournament, and a final roster by the Passport Control meeting prior to the start of tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289917-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship, Officials\n16 referees and linesman were announced on 1 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289917-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship, Preliminary round, Group A\nGroup A matches were played at the Steel Arena in Ko\u0161ice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289917-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship, Preliminary round, Group B\nGroup B matches were played at the Ondrej Nepela Arena in Bratislava.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289917-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship, Playoff round, Seeding order\nThe semi-final pairings were determined according to the seeding after the preliminary round. The seeding is determined by following criteria in the order presented:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289917-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship, Final ranking and statistics, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top skaters sorted by points, then goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289917-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship, Final 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, 75], "content_span": [76, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289917-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship, Final ranking and statistics, Goaltending leaders\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, 28], "section_span": [30, 79], "content_span": [80, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289917-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship, Final ranking and statistics, 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 79], "content_span": [80, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289918-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division I\nThe 2019 IIHF World Championship Division I was an international ice hockey tournament run by the International Ice Hockey Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289918-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division I\nThe Group A tournament was held in Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan from 29 April to 5 May 2019 and the Group B tournament in Tallinn, Estonia from 28 April to 4 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289918-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division I\nBelarus and Kazakhstan gained promotion to the top division, while Romania was promoted to Group A next year. Lithuania and the Netherlands were relegated to Group B and Division II by finishing last in their tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289918-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division I, Group A tournament, Match officials\n7 referees and 7 linesmen were selected for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 76], "content_span": [77, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289918-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division I, Group A tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top skaters sorted by points, then goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 99], "content_span": [100, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289918-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division I, Group A tournament, Awards 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 99], "content_span": [100, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289918-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division I, Group A tournament, Awards and statistics, Goaltending leaders\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, 39], "section_span": [41, 103], "content_span": [104, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289918-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division I, Group A tournament, Awards and statistics, 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 103], "content_span": [104, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289918-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division I, Group B tournament, Match officials\n4 referees and 7 linesmen were selected for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 76], "content_span": [77, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289918-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division I, Group B tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top skaters sorted by points, then goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 99], "content_span": [100, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289918-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division I, Group B tournament, Awards 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 99], "content_span": [100, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289918-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division I, Group B tournament, Awards and statistics, Goaltending leaders\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, 39], "section_span": [41, 103], "content_span": [104, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289918-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division I, Group B tournament, Awards and statistics, 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 103], "content_span": [104, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II\nThe 2019 IIHF World Championship Division II was an international ice hockey tournament run by the International Ice Hockey Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II\nThe Group A tournament was held in Belgrade, Serbia, from 9 to 15 April, and the Group B tournament in M\u00e9xico City, Mexico, from 21 to 27 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II\nSerbia and Israel won the Group A and B tournaments, and were promoted, while Belgium and North Korea finished last and were relegated. Israel's Eliezer Sherbatov was the scoring leader, with 15 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group A tournament, Match officials\n4 referees and 7 linesmen were selected for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 77], "content_span": [78, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group A tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top skaters sorted by points, then goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 100], "content_span": [101, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group A tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nBryan Kolodziejczyk || 5 || 2 || 7 || 9 || +2 || 0 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 100], "content_span": [101, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group A tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nIvan Jankovi\u0107 || 5 || 3 || 5 || 8 || +3 || 0 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 100], "content_span": [101, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group A tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nSam Verelst || 5 || 4 || 3 || 7 || \u22123 || 2 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 100], "content_span": [101, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group A tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nMarko \u0160aki\u0107 || 5 || 4 || 2 || 6 || +7 || 0 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 100], "content_span": [101, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group A tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nShaone Morrisonn || 5 || 2 || 4 || 6 || \u22121 || 26 || D", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 100], "content_span": [101, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group A tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nAlejandro Carbonell || 5 || 1 || 5 || 6 || +3 || 2 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 100], "content_span": [101, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group A tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nMirko \u0110umi\u0107 || 5 || 1 || 5 || 6 || +4 || 0 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 100], "content_span": [101, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group A tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nJosef Rezek || 5 || 4 || 1 || 5 || +2 || 2 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 100], "content_span": [101, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group A tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nAleksa Lukovi\u0107 || 5 || 3 || 2 || 5 || +5 || 2 || D", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 100], "content_span": [101, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group A tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nMarko Sretovi\u0107 || 5 || 3 || 2 || 5 || +5 || 0 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 100], "content_span": [101, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group A tournament, Awards 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, 40], "section_span": [42, 100], "content_span": [101, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group A tournament, Awards and statistics, Goaltending leaders\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, 40], "section_span": [42, 104], "content_span": [105, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group A tournament, Awards and statistics, Goaltending leaders\nVilim Rosandi\u0107 || 304:21 || 8 || 1.58 || 146 || 94.52 || 1", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 104], "content_span": [105, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group A tournament, Awards and statistics, Goaltending leaders\nAnthony Kimlin || 302:53 || 10 || 1.98 || 178 || 94.38 || 1", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 104], "content_span": [105, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group A tournament, Awards and statistics, Goaltending leaders\nSun Zehao || 180:00 || 10 || 3.33 || 127 || 92.13 || 1", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 104], "content_span": [105, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group A tournament, Awards and statistics, Goaltending leaders\nArsenije Rankovi\u0107 || 298:41 || 13 || 2.61 || 140 || 90.71 || 0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 104], "content_span": [105, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group A tournament, Awards and statistics, Goaltending leaders\nAnder Alcaine || 309:58 || 14 || 2.71 || 143 || 90.21 || 0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 104], "content_span": [105, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group A tournament, Awards and statistics, 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, 40], "section_span": [42, 104], "content_span": [105, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group B tournament, Match officials\n4 referees and 7 linesmen were selected for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 77], "content_span": [78, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group B tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top skaters sorted by points, then goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 100], "content_span": [101, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group B tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nEliezer Sherbatov || 5 || 7 || 8 || 15 || +9 || 0 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 100], "content_span": [101, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group B tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nEvgeni Kozhevnikov || 5 || 5 || 9 || 14 || +6 || 12 || D", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 100], "content_span": [101, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group B tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nSergei Frenkel || 5 || 6 || 5 || 11 || +7 || 8 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 100], "content_span": [101, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group B tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nMatthew Schneider || 5 || 5 || 5 || 10 || 0 || 2 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 100], "content_span": [101, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group B tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nH\u00e9ctor Majul || 5 || 6 || 3 || 9 || +3 || 4 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 100], "content_span": [101, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group B tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nHong Chun-rim || 5 || 6 || 2 || 8 || \u221212 || 2 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 100], "content_span": [101, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group B tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nMiloslav Ra\u010dansk\u00fd || 5 || 6 || 2 || 8 || +5 || 16 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 100], "content_span": [101, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group B tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nAxel Orongan || 5 || 3 || 5 || 8 || +4 || 4 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 100], "content_span": [101, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group B tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nRobert Sigur\u00f0sson || 5 || 3 || 5 || 8 || +7 || 2 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 100], "content_span": [101, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group B tournament, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nOliver Obolgogiani || 5 || 2 || 6 || 8 || +1 || 8 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 100], "content_span": [101, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group B tournament, Awards 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, 40], "section_span": [42, 100], "content_span": [101, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group B tournament, Awards and statistics, Goaltending leaders\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, 40], "section_span": [42, 104], "content_span": [105, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group B tournament, Awards and statistics, Goaltending leaders\nRichard Parry || 239:08 || 12 || 3.01 || 131 || 90.84 || 0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 104], "content_span": [105, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group B tournament, Awards and statistics, Goaltending leaders\nNir Tichon || 302:56 || 16 || 3.17 || 146 || 89.04 || 0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 104], "content_span": [105, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group B tournament, Awards and statistics, Goaltending leaders\nDennis Hedstr\u00f6m || 235:17 || 11 || 2.81 || 97 || 88.66 || 1", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 104], "content_span": [105, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group B tournament, Awards and statistics, Goaltending leaders\nAndrey Ilyenko || 298:44 || 26 || 5.22 || 182 || 85.71 || 0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 104], "content_span": [105, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group B tournament, Awards and statistics, Goaltending leaders\nAndr\u00e9s de la Garma || 261:51 || 25 || 5.73 || 157 || 84.08 || 0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 104], "content_span": [105, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289919-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division II, Group B tournament, Awards and statistics, 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, 40], "section_span": [42, 104], "content_span": [105, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III\nThe 2019 IIHF World Championship Division III was an international ice hockey tournament run by the International Ice Hockey Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III\nThe Group A tournament was held in Sofia, Bulgaria from 22 to 28 April and the qualification tournament in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates from 31 March to 6 April 2019. Both Kyrgyzstan and Thailand made their debut in the World Championships, with each winning their first game (Kyrgyzstan won all five of its games, but the first four were changed to forfeits due to an ineligible player).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III\nBulgaria earned promotion to Division II, while the United Arab Emirates won the qualification tournament and were promoted. South Africa finished last and were demoted to the qualification tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III, Match officials\n4 referees and 7 linesmen were selected for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 72], "content_span": [73, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top skaters sorted by points, then goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 95], "content_span": [96, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nMiroslav Vasilev || 5 || 10 || 6 || 16 || +10 || 22 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 95], "content_span": [96, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nWeng To || 5 || 7 || 8 || 15 || +3 || 2 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 95], "content_span": [96, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nIvan Hodulov || 5 || 10 || 4 || 14 || +10 || 18 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 95], "content_span": [96, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nLin Hung-ju || 5 || 5 || 7 || 12 || \u22122 || 12 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 95], "content_span": [96, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nMartin Boyadjiev || 5 || 2 || 7 || 9 || +8 || 6 || D", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 95], "content_span": [96, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nShen Yen-lin || 5 || 2 || 7 || 9 || +1 || 0 || D", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 95], "content_span": [96, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nStanislav Muhachev || 5 || 5 || 3 || 8 || +10 || 0 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 95], "content_span": [96, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nAlexei Yotov || 5 || 3 || 5 || 8 || +7 || 0 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 95], "content_span": [96, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nBegench Dovletmyradov || 5 || 4 || 3 || 7 || +2 || 2 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 95], "content_span": [96, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nColm Cannon || 5 || 3 || 4 || 7 || +2 || 4 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 95], "content_span": [96, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nUthman Samaai || 5 || 3 || 4 || 7 || +1 || 6 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 95], "content_span": [96, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nAleksandr Vahovskiy || 5 || 3 || 4 || 7 || 0 || 6 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 95], "content_span": [96, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III, Awards 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, 41], "section_span": [43, 95], "content_span": [96, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III, Awards and statistics, Goaltending leaders\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, 41], "section_span": [43, 99], "content_span": [100, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III, Awards and statistics, Goaltending leaders\nDimitar Dimitrov || 300:00 || 7 || 1.40 || 138 || 94.93 || 1", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 99], "content_span": [100, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III, Awards and statistics, Goaltending leaders\nMarcus Anselm || 292:18 || 19 || 3.90 || 160 || 88.12 || 0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 99], "content_span": [100, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III, Awards and statistics, Goaltending leaders\nKeremli Charyyev || 266:32 || 18 || 4.05 || 147 || 87.76 || 0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 99], "content_span": [100, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III, Awards and statistics, Goaltending leaders\nTolga Bozac\u0131 || 272:26 || 14 || 3.08 || 114 || 87.72 || 0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 99], "content_span": [100, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III, Awards and statistics, Goaltending leaders\nHou Ta-yu || 224:52 || 22 || 5.87 || 134 || 83.58 || 0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 99], "content_span": [100, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III, Awards and statistics, 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, 41], "section_span": [43, 99], "content_span": [100, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III qualification tournament, Match officials\n4 referees and 7 linesmen were selected for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 97], "content_span": [98, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III qualification tournament, Statistics\nAll statistics from Kyrgyzstan's first four games were not counted by the IIHF, including their opponents scoring and goaltending details.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 92], "content_span": [93, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III qualification tournament, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top skaters sorted by points, then goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 109], "content_span": [110, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III qualification tournament, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nArtur Zainutdinov || 5 || 13 || 5 || 18 || +13 || 4 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 109], "content_span": [110, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III qualification tournament, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nJuma Al-Dhaheri || 5 || 6 || 8 || 14 || +18 || 2 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 109], "content_span": [110, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III qualification tournament, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nKhalifa Al-Mahrooqi || 5 || 6 || 4 || 12 || +16 || 10 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 109], "content_span": [110, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III qualification tournament, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nHideki Nagayama || 4 || 3 || 7 || 10 || +5 || 2 || D", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 109], "content_span": [110, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III qualification tournament, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nMirza Omer || 4 || 2 || 8 || 10 || +6 || 8 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 109], "content_span": [110, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III qualification tournament, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nTang Shin Ming Jasper || 4 || 3 || 6 || 9 || +5 || 4 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 109], "content_span": [110, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III qualification tournament, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nMohamed Al-Kaabi || 5 || 6 || 2 || 8 || +4 || 38 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 109], "content_span": [110, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III qualification tournament, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nArtyom Karkotsky || 5 || 4 || 4 || 8 || +2 || 16 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 109], "content_span": [110, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III qualification tournament, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nWong Ka-ho || 4 || 3 || 5 || 8 || \u20132 || 2 || D", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 109], "content_span": [110, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III qualification tournament, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nKan Siu-him || 4 || 4 || 3 || 7 || +3 || 2 || F", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 109], "content_span": [110, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III qualification tournament, 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, 41], "section_span": [43, 109], "content_span": [110, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III qualification tournament, Statistics, Goaltending leaders\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, 41], "section_span": [43, 113], "content_span": [114, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III qualification tournament, Statistics, Goaltending leaders\nKhaled Al-Suwaidi || 240:00 || 13 || 3.25 || 92 || 85.87 || 0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 113], "content_span": [114, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III qualification tournament, Statistics, Goaltending leaders\nAmel \u0106apin || 201:45 || 20 || 5.95 || 126 || 84.13 || 0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 113], "content_span": [114, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III qualification tournament, Statistics, Goaltending leaders\nKeung Emerson || 140:00 || 10 || 4.29 || 54 || 81.48 || 1", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 113], "content_span": [114, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III qualification tournament, Statistics, Goaltending leaders\nCheung Ching-ho || 100:00 || 8 || 4.80 || 43 || 81.40 || 0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 113], "content_span": [114, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III qualification tournament, Statistics, Goaltending leaders\nPattarapol Ungkulpattanasuk || 184:36 || 18 || 5.85 || 96 || 81.25 || 0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 113], "content_span": [114, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289920-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Division III, Division III qualification tournament, Statistics, 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, 41], "section_span": [43, 113], "content_span": [114, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289921-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Final\nThe 2019 IIHF World Championship Final was played at the Ondrej Nepela Arena in Bratislava, Slovakia on 26 May 2019 between Canada and Finland. It was the fourth final between the two teams with Canada having won all three previous finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289921-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Final, Match\nThe first period was mainly filled with penalties, as there were multiple fouls throughout the period. This gave Canada several power plays, but did not result in a goal. Nevertheless, the first goal of the match was scored by Shea Theodore for the Canadian team after getting a loose puck, which was the only goal of the period. Early in the second period, Finland earned a power play, which led to the game-tying goal from team captain Marko Anttila.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289921-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Final, Match\nIn the third period, Anttila scored another goal for Finland to make it 2\u20131. With five minutes remaining, Harri Pesonen scored another goal for the Finnish team to make it a 3\u20131 lead, which stood until the end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289921-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Final, Match\nFinland won the title for the third time ever, which was also their second win in Slovakia-the first being in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289922-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Group A\nGroup A was one of two groups of the 2019 IIHF World Championship. The four best placed teams advanced to the playoff round, while the last placed team was relegated to Division I in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289923-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship Group B\nGroup B was one of two groups of the 2019 IIHF World Championship. The four best placed teams advanced to the playoff round, while the last placed team was relegated to Division I in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289924-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship playoff round\nThe playoff round of the 2019 IIHF World Championship was held from 23 to 26 May 2019. The top four of each preliminary group qualified for the playoff round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289924-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship playoff round, Qualified teams\nThe ranking from preliminary round is stated in brackets. This ranking was used for seeding in the semi-finals to ensure that the strongest remaining team faced the lowest ranked team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289925-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 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 16 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, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289925-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship rosters, Group A, Finland\nA 28-player roster was announced on 27 April 2019. The final roster was revealed on 5 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289925-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship rosters, Group A, Germany\nA 27-player roster was announced on 30 April 2019. The final roster was revealed on 8 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289925-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship rosters, Group A, Slovakia\nA 28-player roster was announced on 3 May 2019. The final roster was revealed on 8 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289925-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship rosters, Group B, Austria\nA 29-player roster was announced on 29 April 2019. The roster was cut down to 26 on 6 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289925-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship rosters, Group B, Czech Republic\nA 36-player roster was announced on 28 April 2019. The final roster was revealed on 5 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289925-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship rosters, Group B, Russia\nA 30-player roster was announced on 29 April 2019. The roster was cut down to 27 on 8 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289925-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship rosters, Group B, Sweden\nA 18-player roster was announced on 30 April 2019. The final roster was revealed on 6 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289925-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Championship rosters, Group B, Switzerland\nA 29-player roster was announced on 28 April 2019. The final roster was revealed on 4 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289926-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I\nThe 2019 IIHF U18 World Championship Division I were 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 represented the second and the third tier of the IIHF World U18 Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289926-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I, Division I A\nThe Division I A tournament was played in Grenoble, France, from 14 to 20 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 57], "content_span": [58, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289926-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I, Division I A, Match officials\n4 referees and 7 linesmen were selected for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 74], "content_span": [75, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289926-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I, Division I A, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top ten skaters sorted by points, then goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289926-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I, Division I A, 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, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289926-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I, Division I A, 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, 43], "section_span": [45, 90], "content_span": [91, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289926-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I, Division I A, 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, 43], "section_span": [45, 90], "content_span": [91, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289926-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I, Division I B\nThe Division I B tournament was played in Sz\u00e9kesfeh\u00e9rv\u00e1r, Hungary, from 14 to 20 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 57], "content_span": [58, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289926-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I, Division I B, Match officials\n4 referees and 7 linesmen were selected for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 74], "content_span": [75, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289926-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I, Division I B, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top ten skaters sorted by points, then goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289926-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I, Division I B, 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, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289926-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I, Division I B, 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, 43], "section_span": [45, 90], "content_span": [91, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289926-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I, Division I B, 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, 43], "section_span": [45, 90], "content_span": [91, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289927-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championship Division II\nThe 2019 IIHF U18 World Championship Division II were two 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 Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289927-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championship Division II, Division II A\nThe Division II A tournament was played in Elektr\u0117nai, Lithuania, from 7 to 13 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289927-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289927-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championship Division II, Division II B\nThe Division II B tournament was played in Belgrade, Serbia, from 25 to 31 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289927-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championship Division II, Division II B, Results\nAll times are local. (to 30 March: Central European Time \u2013 UTC+1, 31 March: Central European Summer Time \u2013 UTC+2)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 68], "content_span": [69, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289928-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championship Division III\nThe 2019 IIHF World U18 Championship Division III was an international ice hockey tournament run by the International Ice Hockey Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289928-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championship Division III\nThe Group A tournament was held in Sofia, Bulgaria from 25 to 31 March and the Group B tournament was held in Cape Town, South Africa from 9 to 12 April 2019. Luxembourg made their debut in the World Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289928-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championship Division III, Group A, Match officials\n4 referees and 7 linesmen are selected for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289928-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championship Division III, Group B, Match officials\n3 referees and 4 linesmen are selected for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289929-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championships\nThe 2019 IIHF U18 World Championship was the 21st such event hosted by the International Ice Hockey Federation. Teams participated at several levels of competition. The competition also served as qualifications for the 2020 competition. One national team, Luxembourg, returned to play in the World Championships for the first time since playing in the 2000 European qualification tiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289929-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championships\nSweden won the title on home ice. It was the nation's first U18 World Championship. Defending champion Finland finished in seventh place and without a medal for the first time since 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289929-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championships, Top Division, Match officials\n12 referees and 10 linesmen were selected for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289929-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championships, Top Division, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top ten skaters sorted by points, then goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 76], "content_span": [77, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289929-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championships, Top Division, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2212 = Plus\u2013minus; PIM = Penalties In MinutesSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 76], "content_span": [77, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289929-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championships, Top Division, 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 80], "content_span": [81, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289929-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championships, Top Division, 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 80], "content_span": [81, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289929-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championships, Division I, Group A\nThe Group A tournament was held in Grenoble, France from 14 to 20 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289929-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championships, Division I, Group B\nThe Group B tournament was held in Sz\u00e9kesfeh\u00e9rv\u00e1r, Hungary from 14 to 20 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289929-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championships, Division II, Group A\nThe Group A tournament was held in Elektr\u0117nai, Lithuania from 7 to 13 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289929-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championships, Division II, Group B\nThe Group B tournament was held in Belgrade, Serbia from 25 to 31 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289929-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championships, Division III, Group A\nThe Group A tournament was held in Sofia, Bulgaria from 25 to 31 March 2019. At the time of the tournament Iceland was awarded second place, this was corrected on April 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289929-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World U18 Championships, Division III, Group B\nThe Group B tournament was held in Cape Town, South Africa from 9 to 12 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289930-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Women's U18 Championship\nThe 2019 IIHF Women's U18 World Championship was the twelfth Women's U18 World Championship in ice hockey. It was played at the Obihiro Arena in Obihiro, Japan from 6 to 13 January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289930-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Women's U18 Championship, Top Division, Relegation round\nThe third and fourth placed team from Group B will play a best-of-three series to determine the relegated team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 72], "content_span": [73, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289930-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Women's U18 Championship, Top Division, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2212 = Plus-minus; PIM = Penalties In MinutesSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 83], "content_span": [84, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289930-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Women's U18 Championship, Top Division, Statistics, Goaltending leaders\nTOI = Time On Ice (minutes:seconds); GA = Goals Against; GAA = Goals Against Average; SA = Shots Against; Sv% = Save Percentage; SO = ShutoutsSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 87], "content_span": [88, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289930-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Women's U18 Championship, Division I, Group A\nThe Group A tournament was held in Radenthein, Austria from 7 to 13 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289930-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Women's U18 Championship, Division I, Group B\nThe Group B tournament was held in Dumfries, Great Britain from 6 to 12 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289930-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 IIHF World Women's U18 Championship, Division I, Group B qualification\nThe Group B Qualification tournament is being held in Jaca, Spain from 12 to 18 January 2019. For 2020 it was decided to create a Division II and split the teams into two groups. The teams that did not make the semifinals were essentially relegated to Division IIB.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 75], "content_span": [76, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289931-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IKF World Korfball Championship\nThe 11th IKF World Korfball Championship was held in August 2019 in Durban, South Africa and won by the Netherlands. The International Korfball Federation awarded the hosting rights for the tournament to South Africa on 7 November 2015, ahead of the bid by New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289931-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IKF World Korfball Championship\nIn October 2016, the number of teams participating was increased from 16 to 20. The four extra places were awarded to the Americas (1), Africa (1) and Asia & Oceania (2). The Americas are now allotted 2 spots, Africa 2 spots, Europe 10 spots, and Asia and Oceania 6 spots (with a minimum of 1 for Oceania). Due to withdrawals, in the end there will only be 1 team participating from the Americas and Africa (each), leading to 11 for Europe and 7 for Asia & Oceania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289931-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IKF World Korfball Championship\nThis tournament also acted as the qualification tournament for Korfball at the World Games 2021, with eight teams qualifying for the World Games. The IKF aimed to have teams from up to four continents present at the World Games, therefore the top eight finishing nations qualified, with the exception that when a team finished in the top eleven as the highest finishing team from a top four continent not already having a qualifier, then this team would have qualified instead of the last placed team from an already qualified continent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289931-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 IKF World Korfball Championship\nThis de facto meant that the top five finishers were always certain of qualification, while the outcome for the teams in places six through eight depended on the continent of origin of teams up to place eleven. Additionally, Catalonia was ineligible for qualification as the World Games are contested by national instead of regional teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289931-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IKF World Korfball Championship, Teams, Qualification\nIn February 2019, the IKF announced that both \u00a0Dominican Republic and \u00a0Zimbabwe withdrew from the tournament despite both having qualified for the first time ever. First reserve of the Americas (\u00a0Brazil) was unable to step in and ultimately the first reserves of Europe (\u00a0Slovakia) and Asia (\u00a0Macau) were invited and accepted the invitation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289931-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 IKF World Korfball Championship, Teams, Draw\nFor the draw, the teams were allocated to four pots based on the IKF World Korfball Ranking of December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289931-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 IKF World Korfball Championship, Teams, Draw\nPot 1 contained the best five teams (which were automatically assigned to pools A through E), pot 2 contained the next best five teams, and so on for pots 3 and 4, with the exception of Suriname which was placed into pot 3 instead of 4 as the IKF specified that each continental champion would at least be positioned in pot 3. Finally, it is not allowed to have four European, three Asian or two Oceanian countries in the same pool. In case this happens during the draw, the relevant country will change position with the country drawn after. In case this is not possible, the change will be made with the country that has been drawn before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289931-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 IKF World Korfball Championship, Teams, Draw\nNetherlands (1, CH Europe)\u00a0Chinese Taipei (2, CH Asia-Oceania)\u00a0Belgium (3)\u00a0China (4)\u00a0Germany (5)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289931-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 IKF World Korfball Championship, Teams, Draw\nEngland (6)\u00a0Czech Republic (7)\u00a0Portugal (8)\u00a0Hungary (9)\u00a0Australia (10)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289931-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 IKF World Korfball Championship, Teams, Draw\nHong Kong (11)\u00a0Catalonia (12)\u00a0Poland (13)\u00a0South Africa (15, CH Africa)\u00a0Suriname (21, CH Pan-America)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289931-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 IKF World Korfball Championship, Teams, Draw\nNew Zealand (16)\u00a0Slovakia (17)\u00a0Ireland (20)\u00a0Japan (24)\u00a0Macau (30)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289931-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 IKF World Korfball Championship, Group stage\nCompeting countries will be divided into five groups of four teams (groups A to E). Teams in each group played one another in a round-robin basis, with the top three teams of each group and the best fourth-placed team advancing to the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289931-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 IKF World Korfball Championship, Venue\nTwo venues are used to host all games this championship. Both are located on the Westville campus of the University of KwaZulu-Natal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289932-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IMSA Prototype Challenge\nThe 2019 IMSA Prototype Challenge is the fourteenth season of the IMSA Lites series and its successors and the third season as the IMSA Prototype Challenge. It began on 5 January at Daytona International Speedway, and concluded on 11 October at Road Atlanta. The IMSA Prototype Challenge series is for future IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship drivers and veteran drivers alike. Entering its 14th season, IMSA Prototype Challenge shifts to a single-class, endurance race format in 2019 with six races held on North America\u2019s most premier road courses. The series will continue to feature the global-spec LMP3 prototypes. The endurance format pairs two-drivers per car in a six race season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289932-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IMSA Prototype Challenge, Calendar, Race schedule\nThe 2019 schedule was released on 2 August 2018 and features six rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289933-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IMSA SportsCar Championship\nThe 2019 IMSA SportsCar Championship was the 49th motor racing championship sanctioned by the International Motor Sports Association (IMSA) (which traces its lineage back to the 1971 IMSA GT Championship). It was the sixth season of the United SportsCar Championship and fourth to be held under the name as the WeatherTech SportsCar Championship. It began on January 26 with the 24 Hours of Daytona, and ended on October 12 with the Petit Le Mans. The 2019 season marked the 50th anniversary since the founding of the International Motor Sports Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289933-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IMSA SportsCar Championship, Classes\nThe Prototype class, which previously combined Daytona Prototype International cars alongside Le Mans Prototype LMP2 cars, was now split into two separate classes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289933-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IMSA SportsCar Championship, Schedule\nThe 2019 schedule was released on August 3, 2018 and features twelve rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289933-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IMSA SportsCar Championship, Entries, Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2)\nIn accordance with the 2017 LMP2 regulations, all cars in the LMP2 class use the Gibson GK428 V8 engine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289933-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 IMSA SportsCar Championship, Championship standings, Points systems\nChampionship points are awarded in each class at the finish of each event. Points are awarded based on finishing positions as shown in the chart below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289933-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 IMSA SportsCar Championship, Championship standings, Points systems\nPoints are awarded in each class at the finish of each event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289933-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 IMSA SportsCar Championship, Championship standings, Points systems\nTeam points are calculated in exactly the same way as driver points, using the point distribution chart. Each car entered is considered its own \"team\" regardless if it is a single entry or part of a two-car team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289933-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 IMSA SportsCar Championship, Championship standings, Points systems\nThere are also a number of manufacturer championships which utilize the same season-long point distribution chart. The manufacturer championships recognized by IMSA are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289933-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 IMSA SportsCar Championship, Championship standings, Points systems\nEach manufacturer receives finishing points for its highest finishing car in each class. The positions of subsequent finishing cars from the same manufacturer are not taken into consideration, and all other manufacturers move up in the order.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289933-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 IMSA SportsCar Championship, Championship standings, Points systems\nThe points system for the Michelin Endurance Cup is different from the normal points system. Points are awarded on a 5\u20134\u20133\u20132 basis for drivers, teams and manufacturers. The first finishing position at each interval earns five points, four points for second position, three points for third, with two points awarded for fourth and each subsequent finishing position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289933-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 IMSA SportsCar Championship, Championship standings, Points systems\nAt Daytona (24 hour race), points are awarded at six hours, 12 hours, 18 hours and at the finish. At the Sebring (12 hour race), points are awarded at four hours, eight hours and at the finish. At Watkins Glen (6 hour race), points are awarded at three hours and at the finish. At Road Atlanta (10 hour race), points are awarded at four hours, eight hours and at the finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289933-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 IMSA SportsCar Championship, Championship standings, Points systems\nLike the season-long team championship, Michelin Endurance Cup team points are awarded for each car and drivers get points in any car that they drive, in which they are entered for points. The manufacturer points go to the highest placed car from that manufacturer (the others from that manufacturer not being counted), just like the season-long manufacturer championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289933-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 IMSA SportsCar Championship, Championship standings, Points systems\nFor example: in any particular segment manufacturer A finishes 1st and 2nd and manufacturer B finishes 3rd. Manufacturer A only receives first-place points for that segment. Manufacturer B receives the second-place points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289933-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 IMSA SportsCar Championship, Championship standings, Drivers' championships, GTD\n\u2020 Points only counted towards the WeatherTech Sprint Cup, and not the overall GTD Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 85], "content_span": [86, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289933-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 IMSA SportsCar Championship, Championship standings, Drivers' championships, GTD\n1 Originally finished 2nd in class, but demoted to last after violating minimum drive time regulations.2 Originally finished 14th in class, but demoted to last after violating minimum drive time regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 85], "content_span": [86, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289933-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 IMSA SportsCar Championship, Championship standings, Team's Championships, Standings: GT Daytona\n\u2020 Points only counted towards the WeatherTech Sprint Cup, and not the overall GTD Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 101], "content_span": [102, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289933-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 IMSA SportsCar Championship, Championship standings, Team's Championships, Standings: GT Daytona\n1 Originally finished 2nd in class, but demoted to last after violating minimum drive time regulations.2 Originally finished 14th in class, but demoted to last after violating minimum drive time regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 101], "content_span": [102, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289933-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 IMSA SportsCar Championship, Championship standings, Manufacturer's Championships, Standings: GT Daytona\n\u2020 Points only counted towards the WeatherTech Sprint Cup, and not the overall GTD Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 109], "content_span": [110, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289934-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IPSC Rifle World Shoot\nThe 2019 IPSC Rifle World Shoot II was held in Karlskoga, Sweden between 3 and 10 August. The match consisted of 30 stages over six days, and over 650 competitors Jarkko Laukia from Finland took gold in the Open division, which was the largest division of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289934-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IPSC Rifle World Shoot, History\nOriginally, the 2018 IPSC European Rifle Championship was to be held in Karlskoga in the summer of 2018, but had to be postponed to 2019 due to the 2018 Sweden wildfires. After an application to the international association for practical shooting, the Match Category was upgraded to a World Championship, making the match one of the largest shooting competitions ever held in Sweden. The match had a capacity of approximately 750 competitors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289934-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IPSC Rifle World Shoot, History\nKarlskoga is known for being the home town of Nobel Prize founder Alfred Nobel. The venue of the match, Villingsberg's shooting range (Villingsbergs skjutf\u00e4lt), is owned by the Swedish Armed Forces, and the yearly Swedish Defence Forces' Practical Rifle Championship was also held in conjunction with the World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289934-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IPSC Rifle World Shoot, Results, Open\nThe Semi Auto Open division had the largest match participation with 531 registered competitors (79.4\u00a0%). Jarkko Laukia from Finland won the Open division after having worked up a solid lead early in the match. Laukia was one of the favorites before the championship along with his experienced Finnish teammate and reigning European champion Raine Peltokoski and reigning world champion Teemu Rintala. Peltokoski managed to close in much of Laukia's lead during the final day of shooting and finished second place at 98.57%. Third place was taken by Vadim Mikhailov from Russia at 94.62%, passing reigning champion Teemu Rintala who ended up in fourth with 94.41% (0.21% behind Vadim).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289934-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 IPSC Rifle World Shoot, Results, Standard\nThe iron sighted Standard division had the second largest match participation with 97 registered competitors (14.5\u00a0%). Sami Hautam\u00e4ki won Standard with a decisive margin of near nine percent down to the next Standard competitor. In the unofficial Combined Scoring Across all Divisions, this would have put Sami at an impressive 22nd place with 86.07% of Open division winner Jarkko Laukia. The fight for the remaining podium places was a close race until the end, and ended with Joseph Easter from USA taking second place at 91.08%, while reigning champion H\u00e5vard \u00d8stgaard from Norway took third place at 90.16% of the winning score, only 0.9% behind second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289934-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 IPSC Rifle World Shoot, Results, Manual Open\nThe Manual Action Open division had the third largest match participation with 29 registered competitors (4.3\u00a0%). A triple Swedish win in the Manual Open individual classification was ensured by Swedish shooters Jiro Nihei, Stilianos Simeonidis and Erik Bj\u00e4lkvall The Manual Open division was a close race until the last days of the match, and the top 5 being competitors finished within about 2.3% of each other. The Swedish team, consisting of the three plus Dan Liljestr\u00f6m, also took gold in the Manual team classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289934-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 IPSC Rifle World Shoot, Results, Manual Standard\nThe Manual Action Standard division had 12 registered competitors (1.8\u00a0%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289934-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 IPSC Rifle World Shoot, Shoot-Off side event\nThe shoot-off side event is an audience friendly one-against-one elimination cup held on 10 August, the day after the Main Match was finished. The top 8 overall finishing athletes from the Main Match as well as the top 8 category athletes within in each division were eligible for qualification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289934-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 IPSC Rifle World Shoot, Shoot-Off side event\nThe Shoot-Off was broadcast live online on Facebook, and was recorded by Sveriges Television, the Swedish national public television broadcaster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289935-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ISA World Surfing Games\nThe 2019 ISA World Surfing Games were held at Kisakihama Beach in Miyazaki, Japan, from 7 to 15 September 2019. The event was organised by the International Surfing Association (ISA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289935-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ISA World Surfing Games, Olympic qualification\nThe event contributed towards qualification for the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo, where surfing will make its debut as an Olympic sport. In both the men's and women's competitions, the highest-placed eligible athlete from each of Africa, Asia, Europe and Oceania gained provisional qualification for the 2020 Olympics. The Pan American Games provided the continental qualification places for the Americas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289936-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ISSF Junior World Cup\nThe 2019 ISSF Junior World Cup is the annual edition of the ISSF Junior World Cup, governed by the International Shooting Sport Federation", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289937-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ISSF World Cup\nThe 2019 ISSF World Cup is the annual edition of the ISSF World Cup in the Olympic shooting events, governed by the International Shooting Sport Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289937-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ISSF World Cup\nThe World Cup series also acted as the qualification tournaments for the 2020 Olympic Games. India emerged as the most successful nation in the series, topping medal table in all Rifle-Pistol World Cups and Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289938-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ISU World Team Trophy in Figure Skating\nThe 2019 ISU World Team Trophy is an international figure skating competition that was held from April 11\u201314, 2019 in Fukuoka, Japan. The top six International Skating Union members were invited to compete in a team format with points awarded based on skaters' placement. Participating countries selected two men's single skaters, two ladies' single skaters, one pair, and one ice dance entry for their team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289938-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ISU World Team Trophy in Figure Skating, Records\nThe following new ISU best scores were set during this competition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289938-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ISU World Team Trophy in Figure Skating, Scoring\nSkaters competed in both the short program/rhythm dance and the free skating/free dance segments for their team. Each segment was scored separately. The points earned per placement are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289938-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ISU World Team Trophy in Figure Skating, Scoring\nIf these results do not break the tie, the competitors concerned will be considered tied. The team points will be awarded according to the placement of the skaters/couples in each discipline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289938-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ISU World Team Trophy in Figure Skating, Scoring\nIf these criteria fail to break the ties, the teams will be considered as tied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289939-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ITF Men's World Tennis Tour\nThe 2019 ITF Men's World Tennis Tour is the 2019 edition of the third tier tour for men's professional tennis. It is organised by the International Tennis Federation and is a tier below the ATP Challenger Tour. The ITF Men's World Tennis Tour includes tournaments with prize money ranging from $15,000 up to $25,000. The ITF Men's World Tennis Tour is the product of reforms designed to support talented junior players in their progression to the senior game, and target the prize money effectively at professional tournaments to enable more players to make a living.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289939-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ITF Men's World Tennis Tour, Statistics\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:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289939-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ITF Men's World Tennis Tour, Statistics\nTo avoid confusion and double counting, these tables should be updated only after all events of the week are completed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289940-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ITF Men's World Tennis Tour (April\u2013June)\nThe 2019 ITF Men's World Tennis Tour is the 2019 edition of the second tier tour for men's professional tennis. It is organised by the International Tennis Federation and is a tier below the ATP Tour. The ITF Men's World Tennis Tour includes tournaments with prize money ranging from $15,000 to $25,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289941-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ITF Men's World Tennis Tour (January\u2013March)\nThe 2019 ITF Men's World Tennis Tour is the 2019 edition of the second tier tour for men's professional tennis. It is organised by the International Tennis Federation and is a tier below the ATP Tour. The ITF Men's World Tennis Tour includes tournaments with prize money ranging from $15,000 to $25,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289942-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ITF Men's World Tennis Tour (July\u2013September)\nThe 2019 ITF Men's World Tennis Tour is the 2019 edition of the second tier tour for men's professional tennis. It is organised by the International Tennis Federation and is a tier below the ATP Tour. The ITF Men's World Tennis Tour includes tournaments with prize money ranging from $15,000 to $25,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289943-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ITF Men's World Tennis Tour (October\u2013December)\nThe 2019 ITF Men's World Tennis Tour is the 2019 edition of the second tier tour for men's professional tennis. It is organised by the International Tennis Federation and is a tier below the ATP Tour. The ITF Men's World Tennis Tour includes tournaments with prize money ranging from $15,000 to $25,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289944-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour\nThe 2019 International Tennis Federation (ITF) Women's World Tennis Tour is a second-tier tour for women's professional tennis. It is organized by the International Tennis Federation and is a tier below the Women's Tennis Association (WTA) Tour. The ITF Women's World Tennis Tour includes tournaments with prize money ranging from $15,000 to $100,000. The ITF Women's World Tennis Tour is the product of reforms designed to support talented junior players in their progression to the senior game, and target the prize money effectively at professional tournaments to enable more players to make a living.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289944-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour, Statistics\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:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289944-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour, Statistics\nTo avoid confusion and double counting, these tables should be updated only after all events of the week are completed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289944-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour, Retirements\nFollowing is a list of notable players 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 2019 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289945-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour (April\u2013June)\nThe 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour is the 2019 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 World Tennis Tour includes tournaments with prize money ranging from $15,000 up to $100,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289946-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour (January\u2013March)\nThe 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour is the 2019 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 World Tennis Tour includes tournaments with prize money ranging from $15,000 up to $100,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289947-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour (July\u2013September)\nThe 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour is the 2019 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 World Tennis Tour includes tournaments with prize money ranging from $15,000 up to $100,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289948-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour (October\u2013December)\nThe 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour is the 2019 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 World Tennis Tour includes tournaments with prize money ranging from $15,000 up to $100,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289949-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Challenge Series\nThe 2019 ITTF Challenge Series is the third season of the International Table Tennis Federation's secondary professional table tennis tour, a level below the ITTF World Tour. From this season, the ITTF Challenge Series will be split into two tiers: Challenge Plus and Challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289949-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Challenge Series, Schedule\nThe tournaments in the 2019 tour have been split into two tiers: Challenge Plus and Challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289949-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Challenge Series, Schedule\nBelow is the 2019 schedule announced by the International Table Tennis Federation:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289950-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Men's World Cup\nThe 2019 ITTF Men's World Cup was a table tennis competition held in Chengdu, China, from 29 November to 1 December 2019. It was the 40th edition of the ITTF-sanctioned event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289950-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Men's World Cup, Qualification\nA maximum of two players from each association could qualify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289950-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Men's World Cup, Competition format\nThe tournament consisted of two stages: a preliminary group stage and a knockout stage. The players seeded 9 to 20 were drawn into four groups, with three players in each group. The top two players from each group joined the top eight seeded players in the second stage of the competition, which consisted of a knockout draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289950-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Men's World Cup, Seeding\nThe seeding list was based on the official ITTF world ranking for October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289950-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Men's World Cup, Preliminary stage\nThe preliminary group stage took place on 29 November, with the top two players in each group progressing to the main draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289950-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Men's World Cup, Main draw\nThe knockout stage took place from 29 November to 1 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289951-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Pan-America Cup\nThe 2019 ITTF Pan-America Cup was a table tennis competition that took place from 1\u20133 February in Guaynabo, Puerto Rico, organised under the authority of the International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289951-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Pan-America Cup\nMen's singles and women's singles events were held. Brazil's Hugo Calderano retained the men's singles title he won for the first time in 2018, while Adriana D\u00edaz of Puerto Rico won the women's singles title for the first time. The winners and runners-up in each event qualified automatically for the 2019 Men's and Women's World Cups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289951-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Pan-America Cup, Men's singles, Seeding\nPlayers were seeded according to the February 2019 ITTF World Ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289951-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Pan-America Cup, Men's singles, Group stage\nThe preliminary group stage took place on 1 February. The winner of each group advanced to the main draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289951-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Pan-America Cup, Women's singles, Seeding\nPlayers were seeded according to the February 2019 ITTF World Ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289951-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Pan-America Cup, Women's singles, Group stage\nThe preliminary group stage took place on 1 February. The winner of each group advanced to the main draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 55], "content_span": [56, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289952-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Team World Cup\nThe 2019 ITTF Team World Cup (also known as the ZEN-NOH 2019 ITTF Team World Cup for sponsorship reasons) was a table tennis competition that took place in Tokyo, Japan, from 6 to 10 November 2019. It was the 12th edition of the ITTF-sanctioned event, and also served as one of the test events for the 2020 Summer Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289952-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Team World Cup\nChina won both events, defeating South Korea in the men's team final and Japan in the women's team final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289952-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Team World Cup, Qualification\nThe host nation Japan, and each of the current continental team champions qualified for both the men's and women's events, with additional places awarded to the highest-placed teams at the 2018 World Team Championships that had not already qualified through continental events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289952-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Team World Cup, Men's team, Seeding\nTeams were seeded based on the latest ITTF World Team Ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289952-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Team World Cup, Men's team, Group stage\nThe group stage took place on 6 and 7 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289952-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Team World Cup, Men's team, Knockout stage\nThe knockout stage took place from 7 to 10 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289952-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Team World Cup, Women's team, Seeding\nTeams were seeded based on the latest ITTF World Team Ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289952-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Team World Cup, Women's team, Group stage\nThe group stage took place on 6 and 7 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289952-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Team World Cup, Women's team, Knockout stage\nThe knockout stage took place from 8 to 10 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 54], "content_span": [55, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289953-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Women's World Cup\nThe 2019 ITTF Women's World Cup was a table tennis competition held in Chengdu, China, from 18 to 20 October 2019. It was the 23rd edition of the ITTF-sanctioned event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289953-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Women's World Cup, Qualification\nA maximum of two players from each association could qualify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289953-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Women's World Cup, Competition format\nThe tournament consisted of two stages: a preliminary group stage and a knockout stage. The players seeded 9 to 20 were drawn into four groups, with three players in each group. The top two players from each group then joined the top eight seeded players in the second stage of the competition, which consisted of a knockout draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289953-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Women's World Cup, Seeding\nThe seeding list was based on the official ITTF world ranking for October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289953-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF Women's World Cup, Preliminary stage\nThe preliminary group stage took place on 18 October, with the top two players in each group progressing to the main draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289954-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF World Tour\nThe 2019 ITTF World Tour is the 24th season of the International Table Tennis Federation's professional table tennis world tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289954-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF World Tour, Schedule\nThe tournaments in the 2019 tour have been split into two tiers: World Tour Platinum and World Tour. The Platinum events offer higher prize money and more points towards the ITTF World Tour standings, which determine the qualifiers for the ITTF World Tour Grand Finals in December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289954-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF World Tour, Schedule\nBelow is the 2019 schedule announced by the International Table Tennis Federation:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289954-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF World Tour, Grand Finals\nThe 2019 ITTF World Tour Grand Finals will take place in Zhengzhou, China, from 12\u201315 December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289955-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF World Tour Grand Finals\nThe 2019 ITTF World Tour Grand Finals was the final competition of the 2019 ITTF World Tour, the International Table Tennis Federation's professional table tennis world tour. It was the 24th edition of the competition, and was held from 12\u201315 December in Zhengzhou, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289955-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF World Tour Grand Finals\nThe competition featured events in five categories: men's singles, women's singles, men's doubles, women's doubles and mixed doubles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289955-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF World Tour Grand Finals, Qualification\nPlayers earned points based on their performances in the singles and doubles tournaments at the 12 events of the 2019 ITTF World Tour. The top 16 men's and women's singles players, and the top eight men's, women's and mixed doubles pairs who satisfied the qualification criteria will be invited to compete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289955-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF World Tour Grand Finals, Tournament format\nThe singles and doubles tournaments consisted of knockout draws, with 16 players starting each of the singles events and eight pairs starting each of the doubles events. The seedings for the tournament draws were based on final tour standings, not the official ITTF world ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289955-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF World Tour Grand Finals, ITTF Star Awards\nThe 2019 ITTF Star Awards ceremony was held at the JW Marriott Hotel in Zhengzhou on 11 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289956-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF-ATTU Asian Cup\nThe 2019 ITTF-ATTU Asian Cup (also known as the 2019 Lion ITTF-ATTU Asian Cup for sponsorship reasons) was a table tennis competition that took place from 5\u20137 April in Yokohama, Japan. The event was organised by the Japan Table Tennis Association (JTTA), under the authority of the International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF) and the Asian Table Tennis Union (ATTU). It was the 32nd edition of the event, and the fourth time that it had been held in Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289956-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF-ATTU Asian Cup\nMen's singles and women's singles events were held, and the three medallists in each event qualified automatically for the 2019 Men's and Women's World Cups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289956-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF-ATTU Asian Cup, Qualification\nIn both the men's and women's singles events, the reigning Asian Champion and Asian Cup Champion have been invited to take part, along with the 10 highest-ranked Asian players in the January 2019 ITTF World Ranking. The final four places were awarded to regional representatives from Middle Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia and West Asia. Qualification was subject to a maximum of two players from any association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289956-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF-ATTU Asian Cup, Format\nThe first stage of both the men's and women's singles competitions consisted of four groups playing a round robin system, where each player played the other players in their group once. The top two players in Groups A, B and C qualified directly to the second stage. The third player from Groups A, B and C joined the winner of Group D in play-off matches to decide the final two places in the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289956-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF-ATTU Asian Cup, Format\nThe second stage consisted of a single knockout draw to decide the top eight positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289956-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF-ATTU Asian Cup, Men's singles, Seeding\nPlayers were seeded according to the April 2019 ITTF World Ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289956-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF-ATTU Asian Cup, Men's singles, Main draw\nThe main draw took place on 6 and 7 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289956-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF-ATTU Asian Cup, Women's singles, Seeding\nPlayers were seeded according to the April 2019 ITTF World Ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289956-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF-ATTU Asian Cup, Women's singles, Main draw\nThe main draw took place on 6 and 7 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289957-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF-Oceania Cup\nThe 2019 ITTF-Oceania Cup was a table tennis event that took place from 25\u201326 May in Bora Bora, French Polynesia. The competition was organised by ITTF-Oceania, under the authority of the International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF). It was the 11th edition of the event, and the first time that it had been held in French Polynesia. Men's singles and women's singles competitions were held, with the winner of each event qualifying automatically for the 2019 Men's and Women's World Cups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289957-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF-Oceania Cup\nThe ninth edition of the Pacific Cup was also held during the event, with players from Australia and New Zealand excluded from competing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289957-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ITTF-Oceania Cup, Players\nA total of 16 players were invited to compete: eight men and eight women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289958-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ITU Triathlon Mixed Relay World Championship\nThe 2019 ITU Triathlon Mixed Relay World Championship was the 11th edition of the mixed relay world championships and the 7th to be held in Hamburg, Germany. The race was hosted on 7 July 2019 to coincide with the 2019 ITU World Triathlon Series Hamburg race, and featured 32 men and 32 women representing 16 countries. The race was around the Binnenalster, an artificial lake in central Hamburg. The race followed the standard mixed relay format, where each athlete would swim 300m, cycle 7\u00a0km and run 1.7\u00a0km before tagging their next teammate to do the same, with the specified gender order of female\u2014male\u2014female\u2014male.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289958-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ITU Triathlon Mixed Relay World Championship, Course\nThe event was contested in the city centre of Hamburg, for the relay each of the four athletes would complete the same course one after another. The 300m swim is an out and back course in the Alster. Due to the location of the Reesendammbr\u00fccke bridge athletes were required to pass under the bridge both going out and coming back. After the swim a short run to the transition area was required. The cycle consisted of two 3.5\u00a0km laps along a flat and technical circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 57], "content_span": [58, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289958-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 ITU Triathlon Mixed Relay World Championship, Course\nThe course held two 180\u00b0 turns as well as many 90\u00b0 turns with the laps mainly following the shore of the artificial lake Binnenalster. The cycle finished at the same transition area, leading to a 1.7\u00a0km run costing of two laps of differing lengths (0.95\u00a0km and 0.75\u00a0km). Both laps where mostly flat and crossed the Reesendammbr\u00fccke bridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 57], "content_span": [58, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289958-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ITU Triathlon Mixed Relay World Championship, Course\nThe course was designed to be as spectator-friendly as possible, with the race being the most popular on the ITU's calendar pulling in crowds of over 250,000 gather most years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 57], "content_span": [58, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289958-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ITU Triathlon Mixed Relay World Championship, Qualification\nThe qualification was organised by the ITU however a nation wishing to compete must send a bid to the ITU at least 60 days before the competition. From all bids the ITU gives automatic qualification to the host nation, which as for the past six years has given immediate entry for the German team. The ITU also gives the top 11 nations (excluding the host) from the previous years championship automatic qualification. Then the best placed teams in each continental championship to not have already qualified gain a spot. After this all the remaining bids are listed in order of their results form their continental championship and the remaining spaces are filled from the best placed team. If any team should withdraw from the championship the best ranked team from their continent not to have qualified will replace them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 64], "content_span": [65, 889]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289959-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 ITU World Triathlon Series\nThe 2019 ITU World Triathlon Series is the 11th season of the World Triathlon Series, the top level international series for triathlon, since its establishment in 2009. The season consisted of eight pairs of triathlon races for both a men's and woman's competition, beginning on 8 March in Abu Dhabi, and concluding on 1 September with the grand final at Lausanne, Switzerland. The season also contained five mixed relays as part of the Mixed Relay Series which offers national teams qualifying points for the mixed team relay event at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289959-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 ITU World Triathlon Series\nMario Mola and Vicky Holland began the season as defending champions from the 2018 season. Mario Mola was hoping to defend his title and become the first triathlete to hold the title for four years in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289959-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 ITU World Triathlon Series, Overview, Calendar\nThe 2019 ITU World Triathlon Series visited ten cities, including a test run of the 2020 Olympic relay course as part of the Mixed Relay Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289959-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 ITU World Triathlon Series, Overview, Point System\nFor every race a triathlete finishes they are awarded points based on their position across the line. For a normal world series event first place is awarded 1000 points and every subsequent place is awarded 7.5% less, for the first forty triathletes, for the grand final 1250 points are awarded once again decreasing by 7.5% for each place but this time awarded down to 50th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289959-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 ITU World Triathlon Series, Overview, Point System\nHowever any triathlete outside of the time cut will not be awarded points even if they finish in a scoring position, the time cut is determined by adding 5% to the winner's time in the men's event and 8% in the women's event. A triathletes final score is the sum of their points from the grand final and their best five races of that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289959-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 ITU World Triathlon Series, Series, Abu Dhabi\nThe 2019 series began with a sprint distance race in Abu Dhabi in and around the marina on Yas Island. It was the 10th time the race had been held there and the 5th time a sprint distance race was held. The swim course was held in the harbour one 750-metre laps, before heading to transition outside of the Yas Marina Circuit. Athletes then biked five laps of a 4\u00a0km course that ran along the Formula 1 circuit. After the bike section, the competitors proceeded to complete two laps of a 2.5\u00a0km run circuit over part of the F1 track and part of the marina before finishing the triathlon at the Marina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289959-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 ITU World Triathlon Series, Series, Abu Dhabi\nThe competition field for the race included both defending champions Mario Mola and Vicky Holland, as well as most of the top ten athletes from last year's the overall rankings. Also competing was debutante Alex Yee who had won the most recent World cup race in Cape town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289959-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 ITU World Triathlon Series, Series, Abu Dhabi\nIn the woman race a small split appeared in the swim which was pushed on the bike such that by the halfway point of bike course, a breakaway of seven was fully established. The group included Americans Zaferes, Spivey and Knibb, along with Learmonth of the UK. The breakaway pushed their advantage such that they had a lead a minute on the chasers by the time they hit the second transition. Zaferes was first out onto the run and lead for the rest of the race pulling away from everyone else to win alone. Spivey floated in between first and the battle for third. Meanwhile, Knibb and Learmonth were neck-and-neck for third and finished in a sprint finish which Learmonth won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289959-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 ITU World Triathlon Series, Series, Abu Dhabi\nOn the men's side, whilst a split appeared in the swim and at the start of the bike leg, over the full course of the bike leg the entire field slowly regrouped such that the entire field entered transitioned at the same time. New Zealand's Hayden Wilde initially tried to create a gap on the run, but was soon chased down by the leading pair of Yee and Mola. The pair stayed together and in the lead until with 500m to go Mola upped the pace to claim first with Yee following up in second. Third across the line was Spaniard Fernando Alarza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289959-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 ITU World Triathlon Series, Overall standings\nIn the individual events, the athlete who accumulates the most points throughout the season is declared the year's world champion. The final point standings are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289960-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IWBF Men's European Championship\nThe 2019 IWBF Men's European Championship was the 24th edition of the European Wheelchair Basketball Championship held in Wa\u0142brzych, Poland from 28 August to 9 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289960-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289960-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289961-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IWBF Women's European Championship\nThe 2019 IWBF Women's European Championship was the 17th edition of the European Wheelchair Basketball Championship held in Rotterdam, Netherlands from 30 June to 7 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289961-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IWBF Women's European Championship, Squads\nEach of the 6 teams selected a squad of 12 players for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289961-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IWBF Women'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, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289962-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IWF Fuzhou World Cup\nThe 2019 IWF World Cup in weightlifting was held in Fuzhou, China from 23 to 27 February 2019. It was also a qualification event for the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289962-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IWF Fuzhou World Cup\nThere was 1 men's world record, 8 women's world records, and 6 junior world records set during the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289963-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IWF Shengxin World Cup\nThe 2019 Shengxin IWF World Cup in weightlifting was held in Tianjin, China from 10 to 13 December 2019. It was also a qualification event for the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289963-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IWF Shengxin World Cup\nThere was 1 men's world record, and 1 women's world record set during the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289964-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Iba local elections\nElections were held in Iba, Zambales on May 13, 2019 during the 2019 Philippine general election to decide upon the positions of mayor, vice mayor, and councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289964-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Iba local elections, Candidates, Mayor\nThe incumbent mayor is Jun Rundstedt Ebdane, who has held this position since 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289965-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Iberia Cup\nThe 2019 Iberia Cup was a Twenty20 International (T20I) cricket tournament held in Spain between 25 and 27 October 2019. The participating teams were the hosts Spain, along with Gibraltar and Portugal. The teams competed for the Iberian Cup, which was contested in the 1990s, and was last played in 2008 as a double match series between Spain and Gibraltar. Gibraltar and Portugal played their first matches with T20I status during the tournament, following the decision of the International Cricket Council (ICC) to grant full Twenty20 International status to all its members from 1 January 2019. Spain won the series with a 100% record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289966-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ice Speedway of Nations\nThe 2019 Ice Speedway of Nations was the 41st edition of the FIM's Ice Speedway World Championship for national teams and the first in its re-branding as the Ice Speedway of Nations. The event was held at the Anatoly Stepanov Stadium Togliatti, Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289966-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ice Speedway of Nations\nRussia won their 17th consecutive world title and also won the title for the 37th time (including Soviet Union) during the 41 years that the championships have been held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289967-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Icelandic Cup\nThe 2019 Icelandic Cup, also known as Mj\u00f3lkurbikarinn for sponsorship reasons, was the 60th edition of the Icelandic national football cup. The 2019 Icelandic Cup final was played on 14 September at Laugardalsv\u00f6llur. The 2019 winners and current holders of the cup are V\u00edkingur after beating FH 1\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289967-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Icelandic Cup, Calendar\nBelow are the dates for each round as given by the official schedule:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289968-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Icelandic Super Cup\nThe 2019 Icelandic Super Cup was the 48th final in the Icelandic Super Cup, an annual game between the 2018 \u00darvalsdeild champions and the 2018 Icelandic Cup champions. The match was played at Origo v\u00f6llurinn in Reykjav\u00edk on 18 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289969-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Idaho State Bengals football team\nThe 2019 Idaho State Bengals football team represented Idaho State University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Bengals were led by third-year head coach Rob Phenicie and played their home games at Holt Arena. They were a member of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 3\u20139, 2\u20136 in Big Sky play to finish in a five-way tie for ninth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289969-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Idaho State Bengals football team, Previous season\nThe Bengals finished the 2018 season 6\u20135, 5\u20133 in Big Sky play to finish in a tie for fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289969-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Idaho State Bengals football team, Preseason, Big Sky preseason poll\nThe Big Sky released their preseason media and coaches' polls on July 15, 2019. The Bengals were picked to finish in seventh place in both polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 73], "content_span": [74, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289969-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Idaho State Bengals football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013Big Sky team\nThe Bengals had three players selected to the preseason all-Big Sky team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 77], "content_span": [78, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289970-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Idaho Vandals football team\nThe 2019 Idaho Vandals football team represented the University of Idaho in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Vandals played their home games on campus at the Kibbie Dome in Moscow, Idaho, and were members of the Big Sky Conference. They were led by seventh-year head coach Paul Petrino. They finished the season 5\u20137, 3\u20135 in Big Sky play to finish in a three-way tie for sixth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289970-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Idaho Vandals football team, Previous season\nThe Vandals finished the 2018 season 4\u20137, 3\u20135 in Big Sky Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289970-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Idaho Vandals football team, Preseason, Big Sky preseason poll\nThe Big Sky released their preseason media and coaches' polls on July 15, 2019. The Vandals were picked to finish in eighth place in both polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289970-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Idaho Vandals football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013Big Sky team\nThe Vandals had two players selected to the preseason all-Big Sky team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289970-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Idaho Vandals football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013Big Sky team\nOffense \u2013 Noah Johnson \u2013 GuardSpecial Teams \u2013 Cade Coffey \u2013 Punter", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289970-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Idaho Vandals football team, Game summaries, Weber State\nThe loss was the 52nd for head coach Paul Petrino at Idaho, the most in Vandal history, passing Skip Stahley, whose record was 22\u201351\u20131 (.304) in eight seasons (1954\u201361).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289970-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Idaho Vandals football team, Game summaries, at Portland State\nIdaho was shut out by a Big Sky opponent for only the second time (1986) in over thirty years of league play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289970-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Idaho Vandals football team, NFL Draft\nNo Vandals were selected in the 2020 NFL Draft. Jake Luton of Oregon State, a Vandal quarterback as a redshirt freshman in 2015, was taken by the Jacksonville Jaguars in the sixth round, 189th overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289971-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Iditarod\nThe 2019 Iditarod is the 47th iteration of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race held in Alaska. The race began on March 2, 2019, in Anchorage, Alaska, and ended on March 18, 2019, in Nome, Alaska.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289971-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Iditarod\nFifty-two dog mushers participated in the race, among them former Iditarod champions Joar Leifseth Ulsom, Mitch Seavey, Martin Buser, Lance Mackey, and Jeff King; other veteran mushers such as Aliy Zirkle and Nicolas Petit; and ten rookies, including Blair Braverman. On March 13, Peter Kaiser finished in first place, completing the course in nine days, 12 hours, 39 minutes and six seconds. Kaiser was the first Yup'ik native to win the Iditarod. Joar Leifseth Ulsom, the 2018 champion, came in a close second, finishing only twelve minutes after Kaiser. Jessie Royer placed third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289971-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Iditarod\nNicolas Petit, an early frontrunner in the race, dropped out on March 11 after his dogs refused to run farther. Along with Jessie Royer, Aliy Zirkle (fourth place) and Paige Drobny (seventh place) made history as the first three women to collectively finish in the top ten places of the Iditarod.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289971-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Iditarod, Issues\nThe Iditarod Trail Committee's lead drug tester resigned prior to the signup, under pressure from some of the competitors. Companies Jack Daniels and Wells Fargo dropped their sponsorship of the race, possibly due to pressure from animal rights' activists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 21], "content_span": [22, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289971-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Iditarod, Issues\nThe general warmer climate of Alaskan winters over the past several years has mounted concerns that there is or will be a lack of snow for the race to utilize.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 21], "content_span": [22, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289972-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Idol Star Lunar New Year Athletics Bowling Archery Rhythmic Gymnastics Penalty Shoot-out Championships\nThe 2019 Idol Star Championships Lunar New Year Special (Korean:\u00a02019 \uc124\ud2b9\uc9d1 \uc544\uc774\ub3cc\uc2a4\ud0c0 \uc721\uc0c1 \ubcfc\ub9c1 \uc591\uad81 \ub9ac\ub4ec\uccb4\uc870 \uc2b9\ubd80\ucc28\uae30 \uc120\uc218\uad8c \ub300\ud68c) was held at Samsan World Gymnasium in Incheon was broadcast on MBC on February 5 and 6, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 107], "section_span": [107, 107], "content_span": [108, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289973-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Il Lombardia\nThe 2019 Il Lombardia was a road cycling one-day race that took place on 12 October 2019 in Italy. It was the 113th edition of Il Lombardia and the 37th event of the 2019 UCI World Tour. Bauke Mollema of Trek\u2013Segafredo became the first Dutch winner of Il Lombardia since Hennie Kuiper's victory in 1981. Also, for the first time since 1990, there were no Italian riders in the top 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289973-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Il Lombardia, Teams\nTwenty-five teams, consisting of all 18 UCI WorldTour teams and 7 UCI Professional Continental teams, of seven riders participated in the race. Of the 175 riders that started the race, 109 riders finished.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289974-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Iligan local elections\nLocal elections held in Iligan City last May 13, 2019 as part of the Philippine general election. Registered voters elected officials for the local posts in the city: the mayor, vice mayor, the one congressman, and twelve councilors. At the end of filing of certificates of candidacy (COC) last October 2018, a total of 54 hopefuls have filed their COC for city's 15 elective positions: 4 are running for congressman, 4 for mayor, 3 for vice-mayor, and 13 for city councilors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289974-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Iligan local elections\nOn May 14, 2019, the incumbent mayor, vice-mayor, and congressman were declared winners by the city board of canvassers at the session hall of the Sangguniang Panlungsod. There were 184,058 eligible voters in the city for this election, and there were 133,537 votes cast, giving a voter turnout of 72.55%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289974-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Iligan local elections, Lone District Representative\nFrederick Siao (NP) is the incumbent. He was reelected for his second term as district representative.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289974-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Iligan local elections, Mayor\nCelso Regencia (PDP-Laban) is the incumbent. Regencia won via landslide against businessman Marianito Alemania (NP) and reelected for his 3rd and final term as city mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289974-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Iligan local elections, Vice Mayor\nJemar Vera-Cruz (PDP-Laban) is the incumbent and reelected for his second term as vice-mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289974-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Iligan local elections, City Councilors\nBelow is the result of election for city councilors. Parties are stated on their certificate of candidacies. A total of 41 hopefuls ran for 12 city assemblymen posts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289975-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ilkley Trophy\nThe 2019 Ilkley Trophy was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor grass courts. It was the fifth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour and the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Ilkley, United Kingdom between 17 and 23 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289975-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ilkley Trophy, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 68], "content_span": [69, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289975-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Ilkley Trophy, Women's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 70], "content_span": [71, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289976-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ilkley Trophy \u2013 Men's Doubles\nAustin Krajicek and Jeevan Nedunchezhiyan were the defending champions but only Nedunchezhiyan chose to defend his title, partnering Purav Raja. Nedunchezhiyan lost in the semifinals to Marcus Daniell and Leander Paes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289976-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ilkley Trophy \u2013 Men's Doubles\nSantiago Gonz\u00e1lez and Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi won the title after defeating Daniell and Paes 6\u20133, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289977-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ilkley Trophy \u2013 Men's Singles\nSergiy Stakhovsky was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289977-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ilkley Trophy \u2013 Men's Singles\nDominik K\u00f6pfer won the title after defeating Dennis Novak 3\u20136, 6\u20133, 7\u20136(7\u20135) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289978-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ilkley Trophy \u2013 Women's Doubles\nAsia Muhammad and Maria Sanchez were the defending champions, but lost in the semifinals to Ellen Perez and Arina Rodionova.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289978-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ilkley Trophy \u2013 Women's Doubles\nBeatriz Haddad Maia and Luisa Stefani won the title, defeating Perez and Rodionova 6\u20134, 6\u20137(5\u20137), [10\u20134], in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289979-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ilkley Trophy \u2013 Women's Singles\nTereza Smitkov\u00e1 was the defending champion but lost in the quarterfinals to Monica Niculescu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289979-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ilkley Trophy \u2013 Women's Singles\nNiculescu went on to win the title, defeating T\u00edmea Babos in the final, 6\u20132, 4\u20136, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289980-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Illinois Fighting Illini football team\nThe 2019 Illinois Fighting Illini football team represented the University of Illinois at Urbana\u2013Champaign in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Fighting Illini played their home games at Memorial Stadium in Champaign, Illinois, and competed in the West Division of the Big Ten Conference. They were led by fourth-year head coach Lovie Smith.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289980-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Illinois Fighting Illini football team, Previous season\nThe 2018 team finished the season 4\u20138 overall, 2\u20137 in Big Ten play to finish in last place in the West Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289980-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Illinois Fighting Illini football team, Preseason, Preseason Big Ten poll\nAlthough the Big Ten Conference has not held an official preseason poll since 2010, Cleveland.com has polled sports journalists representing all member schools as a de facto preseason media poll since 2011. For the 2019 poll, Illinois was projected to finish in last in the West Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 78], "content_span": [79, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289980-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Illinois Fighting Illini football team, Schedule\nIllinois' 2019 schedule began with three non-conference games, starting with Akron of the Mid-American Conference at home, a road game to UConn of the American Athletic Conference, and then at home again for Eastern Michigan of the Mid-American Conference. In Big Ten Conference play, Illinois played all members of the West Division and draws Michigan, Rutgers, and Michigan State from the East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289980-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Illinois Fighting Illini football team, Game summaries, Wisconsin, \u201cKAM'S Miracle\u201d\nOn October 19th, during the Homecoming Weekend, the Fighting Illini upset the undefeated No. 6 ranked Wisconsin Badgers on a 39-yard game-winning field goal by James McCourt. It was Illinois' first win against a top ranked team since 2007, when they had upset No. 1 ranked Ohio State in Columbus with a score of 28\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 87], "content_span": [88, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289980-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Illinois Fighting Illini football team, Game summaries, Wisconsin, \u201cKAM'S Miracle\u201d\nThe weekend also marked the last nights of beloved campus bar KAM'S. KAM'S had been a popular bar on campus since 1975. In September 2019 it was announced that KAM'S would be closing on Sunday night of Homecoming 2019. The victory coincided with this closing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 87], "content_span": [88, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289980-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Illinois Fighting Illini football team, Game summaries, at Michigan State, \u201cThe Comeback In East Lansing\u201d\nIllinois started the road game off rough, giving up 14 points and only scoring a field goal in the first quarter. By halftime, they were losing 28\u201310 and at one point in a 28\u20133 deficit in the second quarter. After Halftime, both teams struggled in the 3rd quarter, scoring only 3 combined points. But the comeback started in the 4th quarter on which the first play was an Illinois touchdown on a 46-yard Brandon Peters pass to wide receiver Josh Imatorbhebhe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 110], "content_span": [111, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289980-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Illinois Fighting Illini football team, Game summaries, at Michigan State, \u201cThe Comeback In East Lansing\u201d\nThen on the next Illinois possession, Reggie Corbin ran it in the end zone from 6-yards out to make the score 31\u201324. On the next Spartans possession, Michigan State's quarterback Brian Lewerke couldn't handle a bad snap and Illinois recovered the fumble at Michigan State's 8-yard line. Peters then tried throwing the game tying touchdown pass but it was intercepted in the end zone by MSU. On the ensuing possession, Lewerke threw an interception to Illinois defender Sydney Brown for a 76-yard touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 110], "content_span": [111, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289980-0006-0002", "contents": "2019 Illinois Fighting Illini football team, Game summaries, at Michigan State, \u201cThe Comeback In East Lansing\u201d\nBut the score remained untied when Illinois kicker junior James McCourt missed the PAT to make it 31\u201330. Michigan State then drove down the field but only managed to kick a field goal to make the score 34\u201330, MSU leading with 3:17 remaining in the 4th. Illinois drove down the field, completing a 37-yard throw and catch by Peters to Imatorbhebhe and drove to the MSU 4-yard line. The Spartans defense then held and stopped the Illini on 4th and Goal but a defensive pass interference kept the game alive. Brandon Peters then completed a 6-yard, game-winning touchdown to tight end Daniel Barker with 5 seconds remaining. Illinois stopped Michigan State on the kickoff, sealing a Fighting Illini win. The victory clinched a bowl game for the Illini, their first since 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 110], "content_span": [111, 884]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289981-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Illinois State Redbirds baseball team\nThe 2019 Illinois State Redbirds baseball team represented Illinois State University during the 2019 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Redbirds played their home games at Duffy Bass Field as a member of the Missouri Valley Conference. They were led by head coach Steve Holm, in his 1st season at Illinois State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289981-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Illinois State Redbirds baseball team, Previous Season\nThe 2018 Illinois State Redbirds baseball team notched a 22\u201328 (9\u201312) regular season record and finished tied for sixth in the MVC Conference standings. The Redbirds reached the 2018 Missouri Valley Conference Baseball Tournament, where they were defeated by Bradley and Dallas Baptist. Illinois State did not receive an at-large bid to the 2018 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289982-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Illinois State Redbirds football team\nThe 2019 Illinois State Redbirds football team represented Illinois State University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by eleventh-year head coach Brock Spack and played their home games at Hancock Stadium. They were a member of the Missouri Valley Football Conference. They finished the season 10\u20135, 5\u20133 in MVFC play to finish in a three-way tie for third place. They received an at-large bid to the FCS Playoffs where they defeated Southeast Missouri State and Central Arkansas to advance to the quarterfinals where they lost to North Dakota State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289982-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Illinois State Redbirds football team, Previous season\nThe Redbirds finished the 2018 season 6\u20135, 3\u20135 in MVFC play to finish in a three-way tie for sixth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289982-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Illinois State Redbirds football team, Preseason, MVFC poll\nIn the MVFC preseason poll released on July 29, 2019, the Redbirds were predicted to finish in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289982-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Illinois State Redbirds football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013MVFC team\nThe Redbirds had four players selected to the preseason all-MVFC team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289982-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Illinois State Redbirds football team, FCS Playoffs\nThe Redbirds were selected for the postseason tournament, with a first-round pairing against Southeast Missouri State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289983-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Illinois vs. Wisconsin football game\nThe 2019 Illinois vs. Wisconsin football game was a regular season NCAA college football game between the Illinois Fighting Illini and the Wisconsin Badgers that took place on October 19, 2019 over homecoming weekend at Memorial Stadium in Champaign, Illinois. In a major upset victory, unranked Illinois overcame a 30.5 point spread and defeated heavily favored Wisconsin, 24\u201323, to claim their first conference victory of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289983-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Illinois vs. Wisconsin football game, Background\nThe game took place over the University of Illinois's 109th Homecoming Weekend. Illinois had not won a Homecoming game since 2014. The Wisconsin Badgers had an undefeated record that included an impressive victory over No. 11 Michigan, and entered the game ranked No. 6 in the country in the most recent AP poll. The Badgers were considered a contender for the college football playoff and star running back Jonathan Taylor was widely considered a candidate for the Heisman Trophy, having finished sixth and ninth in Heisman Trophy voting during his first two seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 53], "content_span": [54, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289983-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Illinois vs. Wisconsin football game, Background\nThe Illinois Fighting Illini were unranked and coming off a 4-game losing streak. They had a record of 2-4 overall, including a 0-3 conference record and a loss to Eastern Michigan. They had not defeated a ranked team since 2011, and were 30.5-point underdogs to Wisconsin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 53], "content_span": [54, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289983-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Illinois vs. Wisconsin football game, Game Summary, First quarter\nWisconsin struck first with an 18-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Jack Coan to Jake Ferguson to take a 7\u20130 lead with 9:45 remaining in the first quarter. Neither team would score for the remainder of the quarter, with Illinois missing a 40-yard field goal with 1:13 remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 70], "content_span": [71, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289983-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Illinois vs. Wisconsin football game, Game Summary, Second quarter\nWisconsin's Collin Larsh converted a 24-yard field goal with 12:02 remaining in the quarter to put Wisconsin up 10\u20130. Illinois got onto the board with 5:53 remaining in the quarter on a 48-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Brandon Peters to Donny Navarro to make it 10\u20137. Wisconsin extended their lead to 13\u20137 with 1:47 remaining in the half on a 44-yard Collin Larsh field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 71], "content_span": [72, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289983-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Illinois vs. Wisconsin football game, Game Summary, Third quarter\nAn Illinois fumble early in the third quarter gave Wisconsin the ball on the Illinois 15 yard line. The Badgers quickly capitalized and Jonathan Taylor scored a 5-yard rushing touchdown to extend the lead to 20\u20137 with 10:31 remaining. Wisconsin was unable to extend their lead on their next drive after a missed 37-yard field goal. With 0:48 remaining in the third quarter, runningback Reggie Corbin scored Illinois's second touchdown on a 48-yard rush to make the score 20\u201314 heading into the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 70], "content_span": [71, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289983-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Illinois vs. Wisconsin football game, Game Summary, Fourth quarter\nThe Badgers extended their lead to 23\u201314 on a 20-yard Larsh field goal with 9:46 remaining in the game. The Fighting Illini were unable to capitalize on their next possession and turned the ball over on downs to Wisconsin. However, a critical Jonathan Taylor fumble inside the 20-yard line with 7:12 remaining gave the Illini possession again. This time, the Fighting Illini were able to score on a 29-yard touchdown pass to Josh Imatorbhebhe to narrow the score to 23\u201321. Wisconsin regained possession with 5:43 remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 71], "content_span": [72, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289983-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Illinois vs. Wisconsin football game, Game Summary, Fourth quarter\nThe Illini were unable to stop Wisconsin on their first set of downs as the Badgers advanced to gain a first down with 3:31 remaining. However, on the subsequent 3rd and 5, Jack Coan's pass was intercepted by Illinois's Tony Adams on the Illinois 47 yard line with 2:32 remaining. Illinois had advanced the ball to the 24 yard line with 4 seconds left when they called a timeout. Wisconsin had used all of their remaining timeouts and were unable to ice the kicker. Illinois's James McCourt converted a 39-yard field goal as time expired to win the game, 24\u201323.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 71], "content_span": [72, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289983-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Illinois vs. Wisconsin football game, Aftermath\nIllinois fans rushed the field for the first time since the Fighting Illini defeated Michigan in 1983. Head coach Lovie Smith called the game the team's \"signature win\" with some commentators speculating that the game singlehandedly saved his job. Popular campus bar Kam's closed its door for the last time the day after the upset. The watering hole had been open since 1975 and was a favorite of University of Illinois students. A local apparel shop quickly printed shirts proclaiming, \"It's a Kam's Miracle!\" In the immediate aftermath of the game, SportsCenter declared it the biggest upset of the season. By point spread, the game is considered one of the largest upsets in college football history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 52], "content_span": [53, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289983-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Illinois vs. Wisconsin football game, Aftermath\nWisconsin went on to appear in the 106th Rose Bowl Game, which they lost in a tightly contested battle to the Oregon Ducks. Illinois finished the regular season 6\u20136 to become bowl eligible for the first time since Lovie Smith became the head coach. The Fighting Illini lost to the California Golden Bears in the Redbox Bowl, 35\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 52], "content_span": [53, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289984-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Imo State gubernatorial election\nThe 2019 Imo State gubernatorial election in Nigeria occurred on March 9, 2019. PDP's Emeka Ihedioha polled 38.29% of the total votes, defeating APC's Uche Nwosu who got 26.66% of popular votes, and several minor party candidates. Out of 27 LGAs, Ihedioha won in 11, while Nwosu won in 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289984-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Imo State gubernatorial election\nIhedioha emerged winner at the gubernatorial primary after defeating Samuel Anyanwu. His running mate was Gerard Iroha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289984-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Imo State gubernatorial election\nOf the 70 candidates who aspired for the governorship seat, 66 were male, four were female.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289984-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Imo State gubernatorial election, Electoral system\nThe Governor of Imo State is elected using the plurality voting system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289984-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Imo State gubernatorial election, Primary election, PDP primary\nThe PDP primary election earlier scheduled for 30 September 2018 began by 4:00 pm on Monday 1 October and ended about 4:30 am Tuesday 2 October 2018, held at the Kanu Nwankwo Sports Centre, Owerri. Over 3,000 delegates were present from the 27 LGAs of the state. Former Deputy Speaker, House of Representatives, Emeka Ihedioha emerged winner with 1,723 delegate votes defeating closest rival, Samuel Anyanwu, Senator representing Imo East with 1,282 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289984-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Imo State gubernatorial election, Primary election, PDP primary\nThe exercise was declared to be peaceful by the chairman gubernatorial primaries committee in Imo State, Emma Nwala, with jubilation in the air due to the election's conduct (although the delegates election was said to have been marked with irregularities). However, Anyanwu was said to have rejected the result and called for the cancellation and rerun of same. The only female contestant was also reported to have taken legal action against the winner. Other contestants include Athan Achonu who polled 63 votes, Prof. Jude Njoku 21 votes, Chukwuma Ekomaru (SAN) 7 votes and Chukwuemeka Ezeji 1 vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289984-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Imo State gubernatorial election, Primary election, APC primary\nThe APC primary elections in Imo State was as reported, \"unsettling the party\". This could be traced back to few weeks before the election. It was held from 30 September to 1 October 2018 \"amidst confusion\". Two of the ten contestants, Uche Nwosu and Hope Uzodinma, were declared winners, consecutively, leading to a state of confusion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289984-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Imo State gubernatorial election, Primary election, APC primary\nUzodinma was declared winner by the Chairman of Imo State governorship primary electoral committee, Ahmed Gulak, and said to have polled 423,895 votes, Prince Eze Madumere 128,325 votes, Ugwumba Uche Nwosu 10,329 votes, Sir George Eche 16,597 votes, Engr. Chuks Ololo 13,645 votes, Sir Jude Ejiogu 12,369 votes, Peter Gbujie 12,329 votes, Barr. Chima Anozie 11,071 votes, and Chris Nlemoha 9,253 votes. Nine of the 12 committee members, however, were said to have \"disowned\" him and declared Uche Nwosu winner. At the party's Secretariat in Owerri, nevertheless, the result, as announced by the committee secretary, Hon. Henry Idahagbon, had Uche Nwosu polling 455,655 votes, Air Commodore Peter Gbujie (rtd) 9,351 votes. The APC governorship primaries in Imo State was thereupon suspended from the party's national headquarters, with no reason given.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 920]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289984-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Imo State gubernatorial election, Primary election, APC primary\nVanguard Nigeria reported the electoral committee chairman, Ibrahim Agbabiaka, announcing Uche Nwosu, the former Chief of Staff to Imo state governor Rochas Okorocha, as winner of the 2018 governorship primary in which he contested alongside nine others, at about 3:20 AM, having said to have polled 269,524 votes, Chuks Ololo 6,428 votes, Peter Gbujie 4,855 votes, Eze Madumere 2,646 votes, Jude Ejiogu 3,456 votes, Chima Anozie 3,248 votes, George Eche 2,454 votes, and Chris Nlemoha 925 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289984-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Imo State gubernatorial election, Primary election, APC primary\nThe results were not, however, accepted by a coalition of aspirants called the Imo Allied forces, headed by Senator Hope Uzodinma and Eze Madumere, who claimed they were excluded from the process, even though the electoral chairman said, as he announced the results that all nine governorship aspirants were part of the process. Gulak, who earlier announced Nwosu won later returned to support the results announced by Agbaziaka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289984-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Imo State gubernatorial election, Primary election, APC primary\nThe aggrieved party confessed to going to court to \"stop\" the primaries. Five of the aspirants later in October 2018 gave support to Uzodinma as being the winner, alongside a court ruling which went in his favor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289984-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Imo State gubernatorial election, Primary election, APC primary\nUche Nwosu later in December 2018 dumped APC and went ahead to become AA's gubernatorial candidate for the state, but not without having to contend in a legal battle with Myke Ikoku, the party's earlier nominee for the race, and other issues. Rt . Hon. Acho Ihim, Speaker of the House of Assembly of Imo State, who led a mass deflection alongside 17 others into the party, became his running mate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289984-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Imo State gubernatorial election, Results\nA total of 70 candidates registered with the Independent National Electoral Commission to contest in the election. PDP ex-lawmaker governorship aspirant, Senator Emeka Ihedioha, won election for a first term polling 273,404 votes, defeating AA's Uche Nwosu who came second with 190,364 votes, Ifeanyi Araraume of APGA third with 114,676 votes, Hope Uzodinma of APC fourth with 96,458 votes, and several minority party candidates. The AA candidate's candidature was later invalidated by a court, for violating the section 37 of the Electoral Act 2010 (as amended) by obtaining nomination from two parties, APC and AA. Likewise, the APC was said to have no candidate for the election, hence, the PDP candidate's victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 46], "content_span": [47, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289984-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Imo State gubernatorial election, Results\nThe total number of registered voters in the state was 2,221,008 while 823,743 voters were accredited. Total number of votes cast was 739,485, while total number of valid votes was 714,355. Total rejected votes were 25,130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 46], "content_span": [47, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289984-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Imo State gubernatorial election, Results, By local government area\nHere are the results of the election from the local government areas of the state for the two major parties. The total valid votes of 714,355 represents the 70 political parties that participated in the election. Green represents LGAs won by Ihedioha. Blue represents LGAs won by Nwosu. White represents LGAs won by others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 72], "content_span": [73, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289985-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Incarnate Word Cardinals football team\nThe 2019 Incarnate Word Cardinals football team represented the University of the Incarnate Word (UIW) in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season as a member of the Southland Conference. The Cardinals played their home games at Gayle and Tom Benson Stadium in San Antonio, Texas. They were led by second-year head coach Eric Morris. They finished the season 5\u20137, 4\u20135 in Southland play to finish in a tie for 6th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289985-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Incarnate Word Cardinals football team, Previous season\nThe Cardinals finished the 2018 season 6\u20135, 6\u20132 in Southland play to win a share of the Southland Conference championship. They received an at-large bid to the FCS Playoffs, where they lost in the first round to Montana State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289985-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Incarnate Word Cardinals football team, Preseason, Preseason All-Conference Teams\nOn July 11, 2019, the Southland Conference announced their Preseason All-Conference Teams, with the Cardinals having five players selected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289985-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Incarnate Word Cardinals football team, Preseason, Preseason Poll\nOn July 18, 2019, the Southland announced their preseason poll, with the Cardinals predicted to finish in third place. UIW also received one first place vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 70], "content_span": [71, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289985-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Incarnate Word Cardinals football team, Schedule\nUIW announced its 2019 football schedule on February 13, 2019. The schedule consists of 6 home games and 6 away games. Source:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289985-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Incarnate Word Cardinals football team, Postseason honors\nThe following Cardinals received postseason honors for the 2019 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289985-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Incarnate Word Cardinals football team, Postseason honors\nAll\u2013Southland Conference Third\u2013TeamOL Terence Hickman II \u2013 SeniorOL Brandon Floores \u2013 SeniorLB Kelechi Anyalebechi \u2013 SophomoreDB Jaylon Jimmerson \u2013 Freshman", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289986-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indanan bombings\nThe 2019 Indanan bombings occurred on 28 June 2019, when two suicide bombers detonated their explosives in two areas of a military camp in Indanan, Sulu, Philippines killing three soldiers and three civilians. The Philippine military confirmed it was two suicide bombers that caused the attack. They also believed that the attack was conducted in a similar manner to an attack on a cathedral in Jolo in January 2019. The military also blames the Abu Sayyaf for the earlier attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289986-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indanan bombings, Bombings\nThe attacks took place at a tactical command post of the 1st Brigade Combat Team of the Philippine Army in Barangay Kajatian. The first bomber detonated their improvised explosive device while being inspected at the military facility's gate while a second bomber described as an individual with a short stature wearing black and a bonnet ran into the camp shortly after the first attack. Soldiers fired shots at the second bomber who dropped to the ground causing the bomb he was wearing to detonated. The bomber was believed to be heading to the camp's barracks where there was an ongoing ceremony at the time of the attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289986-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indanan bombings, Bombings\nAside from the two bombers, the blasts killed six others; three soldiers and three civilians. 14 other soldiers were left injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289986-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indanan bombings, Perpetrators\nOne of the perpetrators of the bombings was a 23 year old Filipino militant who was a member of an Abu Sayyaf faction led by Hajan Sawadjaan. The individual was identified as a first case of a Filipino national carrying a suicide attack in the country which is a cause of concern by authorities. The Filipino militant was the one responsible for the first explosion at the military camp's gate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289986-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Indanan bombings, Perpetrators\nThe other bomber was characterized as a person with Caucasian features and of Moroccan descent. The identity of the second bomber was a presumption by the military from visual assessment of troops and the viewing of old videos of two Moroccan boys under the custody of Sawadjaan after their father detonated himself in the 2018 Lamitan bombing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289986-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Indanan bombings, Perpetrators\nThe Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant also claimed credit for the bombings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289986-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Indanan bombings, Reactions, Domestic\nPresident Rodrigo Duterte conferred posthumous recognition to the three soldier casualties. The soldiers who died as a result of the attack were awarded the Order of Lapu-Lapu, Rank of Kalasag. He also paid a visit to 14 soldiers injured from the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289986-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Indanan bombings, Reactions, Domestic\nDefence Secretary Delfin Lorenzana voiced concern regarding the frequency of suicide bombings in the country after the Indanan bombings followed the 2018 Lamitan and January 2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings which were believed to be suicide attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289986-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Indanan bombings, Reactions, Domestic\nPersonnel of the Army 1st Brigade Combat Team stationed elsewhere were deployed in Sulu to boost security efforts in the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289986-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Indanan bombings, Reactions, Security analysts\nSome security analysts from outside the Philippines noted of the attack. Zachary Abuza of the National War College in Washington described the Indanan bombings as an escalation but added that it is also a \"sign of increased radicalization\" while Sidney Jones said the incident brought a \"lethal new ideology\" in the country. Jones described that the influence of the noted that Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant's influence in the Philippines \"remains strong\" citing the recent suicide bombings in the country and recent propaganda videos of the group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289986-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Indanan bombings, Reactions, Security analysts\nBut Dr. Rommel C. Banlaoi, Chairman of the Philippine Institute for Peace, Violence and Terrorism Research (PIPVTR) and former Professor of Political Science at the National Defense College of the Philippines, argues that a suicide bombing involving a Filipino is no longer surprising as the Tausugs in Mindanao have the long history of suicide attacks during the Spanish and American colonial occupations. Dr. Banlaoi also warns that the successive incidents of suicide bombings in the country are indications that suicide terrorism is the newest face of threat in the Philippines and everybody should do their part to counter it. As early as 2006, Dr. Banlaoi was already warning about the possibility of suicide terrorism in the Philippines involving a Filipino.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 817]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289987-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indelimane attack\nOn 1 November 2019, a mass shooting occurred at an army post in M\u00e9naka Region, Mali, killing 53 soldiers and a civilian. Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289988-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Independence Bowl\nThe 2019 Independence Bowl was a college football bowl game played on December 26, 2019, with kickoff at 4:00\u00a0p.m. EST (3:00\u00a0p.m. local CST) on ESPN. It was the 44th edition of the Independence Bowl, and one of the 2019\u201320 bowl games concluding the 2019 FBS football season. Sponsored by Walk-On's Bistreaux & Bar, the game was officially known as the Walk-On's Independence Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289988-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Independence Bowl, Teams\nThe bowl featured the Louisiana Tech Bulldogs of Conference USA (C-USA) against the Miami Hurricanes of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). It was the fifth meeting between the two programs and their first meeting in a bowl game; Miami had won each of their previous four meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289988-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Independence Bowl, Teams, Louisiana Tech Bulldogs\nLouisiana Tech entered the bowl with a 9\u20133 record (6\u20132 in conference). They were co-champions of the West Division of C-USA; UAB advanced to the C-USA Championship Game due to their regular season win over the Bulldogs. This was Louisiana Tech's fifth Independence Bowl, tying them with Ole Miss for the most appearances in the game. The Bulldogs had a record of 2\u20131\u20131 in prior editions of the bowl, most recently with their 2008 team winning that season's Independence Bowl over Northern Illinois, 17\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289988-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Independence Bowl, Teams, Miami Hurricanes\nMiami entered the bowl at 6\u20136 (4\u20134 in conference). They finished in a three-way tie for third place in the Coastal Division of the ACC. The Hurricanes started their regular season with two losses, won six of their next eight games, and then finished with two losses. The 2014 Hurricanes appeared in that season's Independence Bowl, losing to South Carolina, 24\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289988-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Independence Bowl, Teams, Miami Hurricanes\nMiami was missing several key players for the game, three due to injury and four due to NFL draft considerations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289988-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Independence Bowl, Game summary\nThe Bulldogs' win made them the first Group of Five team to shut out a Power Five team in a bowl game in either the Bowl Championship Series (1998\u20132013) or College Football Playoff (2014\u2013present) era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289989-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Independence Cup\nThe Port Vila Independence Cup is a cup held in Port Vila in July. The final match is played on July 30, Vanuatu's independence day. The cup is played by eight teams that played the previous Port Vila Premier League season. So, the 2019 cup was played by the teams that played 2018-19 Port Vila Premier League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289989-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Independence Cup, Teams\nThe 2019 Port Vila Independence Cup was played by the eight teams that played 2018\u201319 Port Vila Premier League. That was the last official tournament of Amicale because the team ended its football activities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289989-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Independence Cup, Quarter Finals\n21 July 2019Galaxy 4x0 ShepherdsTupuji Imere 3x2 Erakor Golden StarTafea 4x3 Yatel Ifira Black Bird 1x0 Amicale", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289989-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Independence Cup, Semi Finals\n27 July 2019Galaxy 0x1 Tupuj ImereTafea 2x0 Ifira Black Bird", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289990-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 India Open (badminton)\nThe 2019 India Open (officially known as the Yonex-Sunrise India Open 2019 for sponsorship reasons) was a badminton tournament which took place at K. D. Jadhav Indoor Hall in India from 26 to 31 March 2019 and had a total purse of $350,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289990-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 India Open (badminton), Tournament\nThe 2019 India Open was the eighth tournament of the 2019 BWF World Tour and also part of the India Open championships, which had been held since 2008. This tournament was organized by the Badminton Association of India with sanction from the BWF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289990-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 India Open (badminton), Tournament, Venue\nThis international tournament was held at K. D. Jadhav Indoor Hall in New Delhi, India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289990-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 India Open (badminton), Tournament, Point distribution\nBelow is the point distribution table for each phase of the tournament based on the BWF points system for the BWF World Tour Super 500 event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289990-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 India Open (badminton), Tournament, Prize money\nThe total prize money for this tournament was US$350,000. Distribution of prize money was in accordance with BWF regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289991-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 India alcohol poisoning\nIn February 2019, nearly 100 people died after drinking contaminated alcohol in two neighboring states of Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand in India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289991-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 India alcohol poisoning\nIn Uttarakhand, 32 people died after consuming illegal liquor served to them as part of a mourning ritual. Authorities say they believe the two incidents are linked, with mourners probably having made the journey from Uttar Pradesh to Uttarakhand to transport liquor to sell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289991-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 India alcohol poisoning\nDeaths from illicit liquor are common in India, where illegally manufactured alcohol is often consumed for reasons including poverty and geographic isolation. Bootleggers have been known to add methanol, a toxic substance used in antifreeze, to such brews; it can also be present because of a mistake in the distilling process. According to the latest figures from India's National Crime Records Bureau, 1,522 people died of drinking spurious liquor in 2015 \u2014 nearly all of them men.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289992-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 India doctors' strike\nOn 11 June 2019, following the assault of two junior doctors at Nil Ratan Sircar Medical College and Hospital (NRSMCH) the previous night, junior doctors in Kolkata began protesting and demanded that the Chief Minister of West Bengal, Mamata Banerjee, should intervene and provide adequate security to medical professionals. The protests caused a collapse of healthcare facilities in the state. Protests continued through 13 June, despite attempts at mediation, resulting in the chief minister issuing an ultimatum to the protesting doctors. The doctors ignored the ultimatum, asking the government to meet their demands for security and for the chief minister to give them a public apology.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289992-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 India doctors' strike, Background, Historical incidents\nAccording to an Indian Medical Association survey, due to the increasing reports of violence against doctors, the main source of stress for doctors was fear of violence, followed by the fear of being sued. 62% of the doctors who answered the survey reported that they were unable to see their patients without any fear of violence, and 57% had also considered hiring security staff at their workplace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289992-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 India doctors' strike, Background, Historical incidents\nWhen healthcare workers were assaulted, they frequently resorted to peaceful strikes, which sometimes included termination of ward and emergency services. During such protests, it was not uncommon for the public to attack the protesters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289992-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 India doctors' strike, Background, Historical incidents\nIn a tertiary care hospital in Delhi, 40% of the doctors reported being exposed to violence in the last year. The point of delivery of emergency services was the most common place of violence and verbal abuse was the most common form of violence. The most common symptoms experienced by the doctors who were subjected to violence were anger, frustration and irritability. Out of those who were exposed to violence, only 44% reported the incidents to the authorities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289992-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 India doctors' strike, Background, Historical incidents\nInstances of assaulting medical professionals in government and private hospitals is common in West Bengal and India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289992-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 India doctors' strike, Background, Historical incidents\nIn an incident in early June 2019, a case was registered against a 17-year-old boy and his friend for allegedly assaulting a doctor at a hospital in Maharashtra after his father died during treatment. Even earlier in April 2019, the administration of the Kaushal Sharma Hospital filed a police complaint against the relative of a patient who slapped a doctor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289992-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 India doctors' strike, Background, Origin of protests\nAnother of these incidents occurred on the night of 10 June 2019 after Mohammed Shaheed, a 75-year-old patient from Tangra, Calcutta, passed away at NRS Medical College. Eleven relatives of the deceased were upset over the patient's death and alleged that he died due to medical negligence. They claimed that the body of the deceased was not handed over to them on time. Staff at the hospital stated that the relatives also misbehaved with junior doctors. Shortly after, a mob reached NRSMCH at around 11 pm (UTC+05:30) and fought with the junior doctors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289992-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 India doctors' strike, Background, Origin of protests\nThe clashes turned the premises into a \"battleground\" at night and the morning after as doctors at the facility alleged that over 200 people arrived on trucks to assault doctors and destroy hospital property. Another account states that the people arrived in cars wearing helmets to attack doctors at the hospital. Two intern doctors, Paribaha Mukhopadhyay and Yash Tekwani, who were dealing with the protests by the deceased patient's relatives, were injured in the ensuing clashes. Yash was admitted at NRSMCH with Paribaha being admitted in an intensive care unit at the Institute of Neurosciences in Kolkata after they both suffered head injuries. Paribaha suffered a deep dent in the frontal bone as suggested by a CT scan image uploaded by doctors at the hospital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 829]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289992-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 India doctors' strike, Protests, Day 1: 11 June 2019\nOn 11 June 2019, at least 50 intern doctors closed the gates of the NRSMCH to protest against the attack on the two junior doctors and demanded that the Chief Minister of West Bengal, Mamata Banerjee, takes adequate action and provides security to doctors. The doctors alleged that the police took no action after the two junior doctors were assaulted the previous night. The West Bengal Doctors' Forum proposed to stop all work at the outpatient departments of all state-run hospitals in West Bengal from the next day. A member of the forum also added that emergency services would remain active at all hospitals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289992-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 India doctors' strike, Protests, Day 2: 12 June 2019\nAs protests entered the second day on 12 June 2019, patients across West Bengal were left without healthcare as junior doctors continued with the strike. On the same day, the agitation of intern doctors at the NRSMCH spilled over to all thirteen state-run hospitals and medical colleges in the city and at least six other district hospitals, causing disruption of regular medical services. Affected hospitals included the Calcutta National Medical College Hospital, Calcutta Medical College and Hospital, SSKM Hospital, R G Kar Hospital, and medical colleges in Murshidabad, Midnapore, North Bengal and Bankura.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289992-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 India doctors' strike, Protests, Day 2: 12 June 2019\nAll departments, including outpatient departments and pathological laboratories were shut down following the protests of the junior doctors. Protestors said that work will not resume at the hospitals until full protection is given to medical professionals. Contrary to statements by the Doctors' Forum, emergency wards in at least three state-run hospitals, NRSMCH, SSKM Hospital and Burdwan Medical College remained closed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289992-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 India doctors' strike, Protests, Day 2: 12 June 2019, Mediation\nWest Bengal Medical Council (WBMC) president and AITC MLA Nirmal Maji told Press Trust of India (PTI) that officials were trying to convince the doctors to resume work. While the protestors requested direct intervention from the chief minister, Mamata Banerjee, only her deputy, Chandrima Bhattacharya, Minister of State for Health, visited NRSMCH. There were meetings between doctors and representatives of the state government. A spokesperson for the government stated that the Chief Minister was herself monitoring the situation. Mamata Banerjee's nephew, MP Abhishek Banerjee also appealed to the doctors to resume work. However, mediation was not successful and protests continued.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 68], "content_span": [69, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289992-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 India doctors' strike, Protests, Day 2: 12 June 2019, Planned protests\nMedical associations across the country threatened to strike on June 14 to protest over the rising violence against doctors, which is predicted to hit medical services across the country. All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) Resident Doctors' Association declared a boycott on June 14 in line with the directions of the Indian Medical Association (IMA) which directed all its state branches to stage protests and wear black badges on the day. The IMA asked state presidents and secretaries to organise demonstrations at their respective district collectors' officers between 10 am and 12 noon. The Delhi Medical Association (DMA) also called for a full medical strike on the day to protest against the assault of the doctors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 812]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289992-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 India doctors' strike, Protests, Day 3: 13 June 2019\nAs protests entered the third day on 13 June 2019, all outpatient departments of government hospitals remained closed, with only senior doctors manning emergency wards and outpatient departments at SSKM Hospital in Kolkata and Burdwan Medical College. Despite the ultimatum, protests continued with junior doctors stating that the agitation will continue until their demands for security and a public apology from the Chief Minister are met. Resident doctors at the AIIMS in Delhi worked on 13 June with bandages on their heads as a symbolic protest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289992-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 India doctors' strike, Protests, Day 3: 13 June 2019, Ultimatum\nOn 13 June 2019, the Chief Minister of West Bengal, Mamata Banerjee issued an ultimatum to the doctors on strike to return to work within 4 hours (by 2 pm local time). She made the statement while visiting the state-run SSKM Hospital to talk to the junior doctors on strike. Speaking about the doctors, she said, \"They are outsiders. The government will not support them in any way. I condemn doctors who have gone on strike. Policemen die in line of duty but the police don't go on a strike,\" further adding that the strike will not be tolerated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 68], "content_span": [69, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289992-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 India doctors' strike, Protests, Day 3: 13 June 2019, Resignations\nAt late night, the principal and medical superintendent of NRSMCH, Professor Saibal Mukherjee and Professor Sourav Chatterjee stepped down from their positions. They submitted their resignation via email to the state director of medical education.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 71], "content_span": [72, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289992-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 India doctors' strike, Protests, Day 4: 14 June 2019\nOn June 14, 2019, the DMA organized a statewide medical strike in Delhi. Resident doctors at AIIMS New Delhi and Safdarjung Hospital boycotted their work. In Maharashtra, around 4,500 resident doctors suspended outpatient departments, wards and diagnostic services from 8 am to 5 pm. Emergency services at either places were not hampered. Doctors also staged a protest at the Nizam's Institute of Medical Sciences in Hyderabad. Protests in West Bengal went into the fourth day as outdoor facilities, emergency wards and pathological wards of many state-run hospitals remained closed. More than 700 doctors resigned from state-run hospitals, with dozens of doctors from Darjeeling and Kolkata resigning to protest the violence against doctors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289992-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 India doctors' strike, Protests, Day 4: 14 June 2019, Planned protests\nThe IMA called for a nation-wide strike on 17 June 2019. The association also stated that it will ask Union Home Minister Amit Shah and Prime Minister Narendra Modi to bring a central law to prevent violence against doctors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289992-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 India doctors' strike, Protests, Day 5: 15 June 2019\nAs protests entered 15 June 2019, the doctors were protesting for the fifth straight day. The Federation of Resident Doctors' Association stated that 15 hospitals in Delhi held protests. The AIIMS Resident Doctors' Association issued a 48-hour ultimatum to the West Bengal government. Around 246 resignations were given by doctors working in various government hospitals in West Bengal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289992-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 India doctors' strike, Aftermath\nAs of 14 June 2019, five people have been arrested in connection to the assault of the two junior doctors. The Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee stated that the bail prayers of the arrested were rejected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289992-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 India doctors' strike, Aftermath\nThe incumbent Chief Minister of West Bengal, Mamata Banerjee alleged that the protests are the result of a conspiracy between the Left Front and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). She stated that she held the BJP responsible and accused BJP party leader and Union Home Minister, Amit Shah of \"creat[ing] confusion and communal tension in the state\". The state BJP chief, Dilip Ghosh then alleged that the Chief Minister is not taking action against the people who assaulted the doctors, because they are \"her voters\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289993-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Air Force An-32 crash\nOn 3 June 2019, an Antonov An-32 twin engine turboprop transport aircraft of the Indian Air Force en route from Jorhat Airport in Assam to Mechuka in Arunachal Pradesh lost contact with ground control about 33 minutes after takeoff. There were 13 people on board. After a week-long search operation, the wreckage with no survivors was found near Pari hills close to Gatte village in Arunachal Pradesh at the elevation of 12000 feet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289993-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Air Force An-32 crash, Passengers\nThere were 13 Indian Air Force personnel, eight crew members and five passengers; on board the aircraft. None of them survived the crash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289993-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Air Force An-32 crash, Search operation\nThe Antonov An-32 twin engine turboprop transport aircraft was en route from Jorhat Airport in Assam to Mechuka Advanced Landing Ground in Arunachal Pradesh on 3 June 2019. The aircraft took off from Johrat at 12:27 pm IST and lost contact with ground control at 1 pm IST, about 33 minutes after takeoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289993-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Air Force An-32 crash, Search operation\nAfter eight days of search operation that had been hindered by poor weather, on 11 June 2019, the wreckage of the aircraft was found near Pari hills close to Gatte village, 16\u00a0km north of Lipo in Arunachal Pradesh, at 12,000 feet elevation. The Indian Air Force had previously offered a cash reward of \u20b95 lakh (US$7,000) for anyone who could share information on the aircraft. A fleet of Sukhoi-30, C-130J and An-32 aircraft and Mi-17 and ALH helicopters as well as the Indian Army, the Indo-Tibetan Border Police and the state police forces were deployed for the search operation. The Indian Navy's P-8i aircraft was also deployed. ISRO's Cartosat and RISAT satellites were also used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289993-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Air Force An-32 crash, Search operation\nOn 12 June 2019, a team of 15 rescuers were airdropped near the crash site, but were unable to reach the location due to rough terrain and bad weather. The next day the rescue team reached the site and reported that there were no survivors, and that they had recovered the aircraft's flight recorders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289994-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Ocean Island Games\nThe 2019 Indian Ocean Island Games, officially known as Jeux des \u00eeles de l'oc\u00e9an Indien Maurice 2019 or simply JIOI Maurice 2019, is the 10th edition of this multi-sport event for athletes representing the National Olympic Committees of Indian Ocean island nations. It was held in Mauritius from July 19\u00a0\u2013 28, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289994-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Ocean Island Games, The Games, Participating IOCs\nOver 2,000 athletes, from 7 countries, participated in the 2019 Indian Ocean Island Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289994-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Ocean Island Games, The Games, Sports\nA total of 14 sports will be represented in the 2019 Indian Ocean Island Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289995-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Open\nThe 2019 Indian Open was a professional snooker tournament. It was due to take place between 18 and 22 September 2018 at the Grand Hyatt Kochi Bolgatty in Kochi, India but was postponed due to the 2018 Kerala floods. The rescheduled Indian Open was played in Kochi from 27 February to 3 March 2019. It was the fifteenth ranking event of the 2018/2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289995-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Open\nQualifying took place on 15 and 16 August 2018 in Preston, England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289995-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Open\nJohn Higgins was the defending champion, having beaten Anthony McGill 5\u20131 in the 2017 final, but he lost to Matthew Selt in the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289995-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Open\nSelt went on to win his first ranking title, beating Lyu Haotian 5\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289995-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Open\nZhou Yuelong made the first maximum break of his career in the fourth frame of his first round loss to Lyu Haotian. It was the 150th maximum in professional events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289995-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00289995-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Open, Qualifying\nThese matches were held between 15 and 16 August 2018 at the Preston Guild Hall in Preston, England. All matches were best of 7 frames.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289996-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Premier League\nThe 2019 season of the Indian Premier League, also known as IPL 12, was the twelfth season of the IPL, a professional Twenty20 cricket league established by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) in 2007. At one point other countries were considered to host the tournament, due to the Indian general elections but eventually the tournament was played entirely in India with the season commencing on 23 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289996-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Premier League\nIndia's opening match at the 2019 Cricket World Cup was postponed from 2 to 5 June as the BCCI were directed to maintain a mandatory 15-day gap between the conclusion of IPL and India's subsequent international fixture as per Lodha Committee's recommendation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289996-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Premier League\nDelhi Daredevils were renamed as the Delhi Capitals, the franchise announced on 4 December 2018, and also released a new logo. Chennai Super Kings were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289996-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Premier League\nMumbai Indians defeated the Chennai Super Kings by 1 run to win the final for their fourth title. David Warner won the Orange Cap for the leading run-scorer of the tournament with 692 runs. Imran Tahir, of Chennai Super Kings, was awarded the Purple Cap for finishing as the leading wicket-taker of the tournament with 26 wickets. Andre Russell of Kolkata Knight Riders was named the Most Valuable Player, and Shubman Gill also of Kolkata Knight Riders was named the Emerging Player of the Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289996-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Premier League, Personnel changes\nThe transfers and the retention lists for the season were announced in November 2018. Gautam Gambhir, Yuvraj Singh and Glenn Maxwell were the prominent names among the players being released. Jaydev Unadkat, the costliest Indian player in 2018 auction, was also released. The player auction was held on 18 December 2018 at Jaipur. Jaydev Unadkat and uncapped Varun Chakravarthy were the most expensive player at Rs 8.4 crore. Sam Curran was the most expensive foreign player at Rs 7.2 crore. Prominent players like Cheteshwar Pujara, Brendon McCullum, Mushfiqur Rahim and Alex Hales remained unsold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289996-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Premier League, League stage\nThe full schedule of the 2019 season was published on the IPL website.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289997-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Premier League Final\nThe 2019 Indian Premier League Final was a Twenty20 cricket match played between Chennai Super Kings and the Mumbai Indians on 12 May 2019 at the Rajiv Gandhi International Cricket Stadium in Hyderabad. It was the culmination of the 2019 season of the Indian Premier League (IPL), an annual Twenty20 tournament held in India. MI won the match by a single run and claimed their fourth Indian Premier League title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289997-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Premier League Final\nThe final was originally intended to be held at the M. A. Chidambaram Stadium in Chennai. In April 2019, however, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) confirmed that alternative arrangements had been made, citing a long-standing issue of three closed stands at the original host stadium. Later in the same month, the Rajiv Gandhi International Cricket Stadium was confirmed as the venue for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289997-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Premier League Final\nAfter winning the toss, MI elected to bat first. MI scored 149 runs for eight wickets in their 20 overs, Kieron Pollard top-scored with 41 runs. Chennai bowler Deepak Chahar took three wickets in the innings. In response, Chennai was guided by Shane Watson, who was the highest scorer of the match with 80 runs. Some tight bowling at the death, saw Chennai falling one run short with 148. Mumbai Indians' Jasprit Bumrah was awarded the player of the match for his spell of two for 14 in his four overs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289997-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Premier League Final, Road to the final, Group Stage\nMumbai Indians were ranked first in the league table, though their campaign started with a loss (by 36 runs) to Delhi Capitals. After getting defeated by Kings XI Punjab, they went on to win their next three matches against Super Kings, Sunrisers and Kings XI. Mumbai had a successful second half of the league stage with five wins out of seven matches. In the group stage, they won nine matches out of fourteen and qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289997-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Premier League Final, Road to the final, Group Stage\nChennai Super Kings started their season campaign with a seven-wicket win over the Royal Challengers Bangalore. Chennai had a successful first half of the season with six wins out of seven matches, which included an opening three consecutive wins. Their run was finally ended by Mumbai. The wins displayed a mixture of both batting and bowling strength, with MS Dhoni taking the main batting role in his team, actively supported by Shane Watson and the bowlers Imran Tahir and Harbhajan Singh. Chennai finished the group stage with nine wins from fourteen matches, and were ranked second in the league table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289997-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Premier League Final, Road to the final, Group stage series\nMumbai Indians won the two group stage matches between the finalists, winning the first group stage series match by 37 runs. Suryakumar Yadav scored a half-century and Hardik Pandya scored 25 runs from 8 balls (Mumbai scored 45 runs in the final two overs) to set Chennai a target of 171. Chennai did not start well, and despite Kedar Jadhav scoring 58 runs and forging a 54-run partnership with MS Dhoni, they finished well short. Both Hardik and Lasith Malinga took three wickets, while Jason Behrendorff took two wickets for Mumbai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289997-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Premier League Final, Road to the final, Playoffs\nThe playoff stage of IPL was played according to the Page playoff system and provided Mumbai and Chennai, being the top and second-ranked teams, with two chances for qualifying for the Final. These teams first faced each other in Qualifier 1, with the winners qualifying directly for the final; the loser of Qualifier 1 would then play against the winner of the Eliminator in Qualifier 2, with the winner of that match qualifying for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289997-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Premier League Final, Road to the final, Playoffs\nThe Super Kings won the toss in Qualifier 1 and decided to bat first. The team lost Faf du Plessis early, and Shane Watson and Murali Vijay played cautiously in the beginning, but the Super Kings lost Watson to Krunal Pandya. The Super Kings made runs from their middle-order, with Ambati Rayudu and MS Dhoni scoring 42 and 37 runs respectively, to see the team amass 131 runs for the loss of 4 wickets. Rohit Sharma opened with Quinton de Kock to start the chase for the Mumbai Indians, but both departed early. Though Suryakumar Yadav started slowly, he hit out later against Super Kings bowlers to reach his half-century. After Ishan Kishan's departure, Hardik Pandya joined Yadav to complete the chase for the Mumbai Indians and secure their progression to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 834]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289997-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Premier League Final, Road to the final, Playoffs\nDelhi Capitals won against Sunrisers Hyderabad in the Eliminator to set up a match against Chennai to decide the second finalist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289997-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Premier League Final, Road to the final, Playoffs\nIn Qualifier 2, Chennai captain MS Dhoni won the toss and elected to bowl. Delhi lost their both openers early and Rishabh Pant did not receive support from Delhi Capitals players, as wickets kept falling from the other end. Pant scored 38 runs before getting out in the 19th over. In the last over Ishant Sharma helped the Delhi Capitals to finish with 147 runs. Chasing 148 to win, Chennai openers Shane Watson and Faf du Plessis batted slowly and did not score many runs in the first couple of overs. In the final two powerplay overs, du Plesis took charge and changed the momentum of Chennai batting. The two openers put together an 81-run partnership and Chennai successfully chased their 148 run target with the loss of four wickets and qualified for their 8th IPL final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 839]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289997-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Premier League Final, Match, Summary\nMumbai captain Rohit Sharma won the toss and elected to bat first on which he said, \"This is a big game, that's what we prefer to do. We want to bat first, and set down the runs on the board.\" Chennai captain MS Dhoni said, \"We were looking to bowl first. If the result is in your favour, then it\u2019s fine, otherwise, they\u2019ll say the guys are fatigued.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289997-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Premier League Final, Match, Summary\nRohit Sharma led Mumbai Indians has become the IPL champion for the fourth time. Mumbai beat Chennai Super Kings by 1 run in a thrilling title match. Mumbai team has become the most successful team of IPL by winning the fourth title. After Mumbai, Chennai is led by MS Dhoni at number two in terms of winning the title. Chennai team has won three titles of IPL. Mumbai presented 149 runs in the final match played at the Rajiv Gandhi International Cricket Stadium in Hyderabad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289997-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Indian Premier League Final, Match, Summary\nIn reply, the Chennai team could manage, only 148 runs in the loss of 7 wickets in 20 overs despite the brilliant innings of Shane Watson (80). Watson hit 8 fours and 4 sixes in his 59-ball innings. Apart from this, Faf Duplessis (26), Suresh Raina (8), MS Dhoni (2), Ambati Rayudu scored 1 for Chennai. Rahul Chahar, Lasith Malinga and Krunal Pandya took one wicket each for Mumbai. There were four final matches between these two teams, out of which Mumbai won three while Chennai managed to win once.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289997-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Premier League Final, Match, Scorecard\nFall of wickets: 1-45 (de Kock, 4.5 overs), 2-45 (Rohit, 5.2 overs), 3-82 (Suryakumar, 11.2 overs), 4-89 (Krunal, 12.3 overs), 5-101 (Kishan, 14.4 overs), 6-140 (Hardik, 18.2 overs), 7-140 (Rahul, 18.4 overs), 8-141 (McClenaghan, 19.4 overs)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289997-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Premier League Final, Match, Scorecard\nFall of wickets: 1-33 (du Plessis, 4 overs), 2-70 (Raina, 9.2 overs), 3-73 (Rayudu, 10.3 overs), 4-82 (Dhoni, 12.4 overs), 5-133 (Bravo, 18.2 overs), 6-146 (Watson, 19.4 overs), 7-148 (Thakur, 20 overs),", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289997-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Premier League Final, Post-match\nMumbai received \u20b920 Crore rupees and a trophy for being the champions. Rohit said:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289997-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Premier League Final, Post-match\n\"Today we played some fine cricket. At the start of the tournament, we wanted to cut the tournament into two halves. Good to see we qualified in the top two in the league Stage and all credit to the whole squad of my team, not just the XI. Even the support staff too.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289997-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Premier League Final, Post-match\nChennai's Imran Tahir was given the Purple Cap for getting the highest number of wickets in the league. He took 26 wickets and broke the previous record for most wickets for spin bowler of 24 wickets held jointly by Harbhajan Singh (Mumbai Indians, 2013) and Sunil Narine (Kolkata Knight Riders, 2012).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289998-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Rajya Sabha elections\n2019 Rajya Sabha elections were held on 7 June, 5 July and 18 July, to elect the retiring members of the Rajya Sabha, the Indian Parliament's upper chamber. The elections were held to elect 2 members from Assam on 7 June 2019, as well as 6 members from Tamil Nadu on 5 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289998-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Rajya Sabha elections\nThe elections resulted in the ruling BJP maintaining and increasing their majority with a net gain of 10 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289998-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Rajya Sabha elections, By-elections\nAside from automatic elections, unforeseen vacancies caused by members' resignation, death or disqualification, are unless a few months before the expected natural expiry of the term of tenure, filled via by-elections, which for the Rajya Sabha often take some months to organise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289999-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Super Cup\nThe 2019 Super Cup was the second edition of the Super Cup and 40th season of the main club knockout football competition in India. The competition is sponsored by Hero MotoCorp and is officially known as the Hero Super Cup. The competition began with the qualifiers on 15 March 2019 at Kalinga Stadium in Bhubaneshwar and was concluded with the final on 13 April 2019. Bengaluru FC were the defending champions, but lost to Chennai City F.C. in the quarter-finals. FC Goa won the title by defeating Chennaiyin FC 2\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289999-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Super Cup, Teams\nA total of 16 teams are participating in the competition proper. The top six teams from both the I-League and Indian Super League qualified for the Super Cup automatically while the bottom four sides have participated in the qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289999-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Super Cup, Qualification round\nAfter the conclusion of the I-League and Indian Super League seasons, the All India Football Federation announced the draw for the qualification round of the Super Cup. Before the qualification round, seven I-League clubs \u2014 Minerva Punjab, East Bengal, Mohun Bagan, NEROCA, Gokulam Kerala, Aizawl, and Chennai City \u2014 announced they would withdraw from Super Cup, citing \"unfair treatment to I-League clubs.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00289999-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Super Cup, Round of 16\nChennai City F.C. had announced they would withdraw from the tournament along with other I-League clubs but eventually decided to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290000-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Super Cup Final\nThe 2019 Indian Super Cup Final was the final match of the 2019 Indian Super Cup, the second season of the Super Cup. It was played on 13 April 2019 at the Kalinga Stadium in Bhubaneshwar, Odissa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290001-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Super League Final\nThe 2019 Indian Super League Final was the final match of the 2018\u201319 Indian Super League season, the fifth season of the Indian Super League. It was played between Bengaluru FC and FC Goa, on 17 March 2019 at the Mumbai Football Arena, Mumbai. It was played to determine the winner of the 2018\u201319 season of the Indian Super League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290001-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Super League Final\nBengaluru FC won their maiden Indian Super League title defeating FC Goa 1\u20130. Rahul Bheke of Bengaluru FC won the Man of the Match award for scoring the solitary goal in the 117 minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290001-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian Super League Final, Background\nThis was Bengaluru FC's second consecutive Indian Super League final after making their debut at the 2017\u201318 season. Bengaluru FC previously lost the final against Chennaiyin FC 2\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290002-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian floods\nThe 2019 Indian floods were a series of floods that affected over thirteen states in late July and early August 2019, due to excessive rains. At least 200 people died and about a million people were displaced. Karnataka and Maharashtra were the most severely affected states. People died but many were rescued with the help of the Indian Navy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290002-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian floods\nIt was the heaviest monsoon in the last 25 years. More than 1600 people died between June and October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290002-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian floods\nThirteen states of India were affected by floods due to heavy rains in July\u2013September 2019. News reports later stated that there were 500 people missing and 1000 killed with many people losing their homes .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290002-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian floods, Kerala\nMalappuram, Kozhikode, Wayanad, Ernakulam, Idukki, Thrissur, Palakkad, Kannur and Kasargod districts are worst affected. Over one hundred thousand people were evacuated to a total of 1111 relief camps, 101 died and seven people went missing. Kochi Airport was closed due to water logging.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290002-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian floods, Gujarat\nCentral and South Gujarat were worst affected due to heavy rains. 26 of 30 sluice gates of Sardar Sarovar dam on the Narmada river were opened to release water. Vadodara city was flooded. 18 teams of NDRF (National Disaster Response Force) and 11 teams of SDRF (State Disaster Response Force were deployed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290002-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian floods, Karnataka\nNorth, coastal and Malnad districts were worst affected. Other affected districts include Bagalkot, Vijayapura, Raichur, Yadgiri, Uttara Kannada, South Kannada, Shivamogga, Kodagu and Chikkamagalur. At least 24 died.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290002-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian floods, Karnataka\nMore than 2,00,000 people were evacuated and more than 2200 rescue personnel were deployed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290002-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian floods, Maharashtra\nThe floods in Six districts of Western Maharashtra affected over 4.24 hundred thousand people. About 4,00,000 people were evacuated and 30 people died in the rain-related incidents. The government announced the flood relief compensation of Rs 15,000 to each affected family in cities and Rs 10,000 in villages. The flood gates of Almatti dam were opened and the NH 4 (Mumbai-Bengaluru National Highway) was closed after landslide stranding about 18,000 vehicles on highway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290002-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian floods, Maharashtra\n70 teams comprising NDRF, Navy, Coast Guard, and State Disaster Response Force (SDRF) personnel were deployed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290002-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian floods, Maharashtra\nIt was the second-heaviest rainfall in Mumbai in the last 25 years, according to a tweet by Maharashtra's ex chief minister, Devendra Fadnavis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290002-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian floods, Maharashtra\nMaharashtra has a huge & heavy rainfall in 2019, Affected district Kolhapur, Sangli (which was the worst), Satara, Thane, Palghar and Pune.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290002-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian floods, Madhya Pradesh\nHeavy rains flooded the Narmada river. Sluice gates of seven out of 28 dams in the state were opened to release the waters. Around 1000 people were evacuated. One death was reported while several others are missing. Dhar and Barwani districts were the most affected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290002-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian floods, Tamil Nadu\nThe Nilgiris district was the worst-affected. More than 1700 people were evacuated and around 500 personnel of NDRF and SDRF were deployed. At least five people died and the state government announced a relief of Rs 10 hundred thousand each to their families.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290002-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian floods, Goa\nPernem, Bicholim and Bardez talukas were the worst affected in Goa. Several villages in North Goa were inundated due to heavy rains and water released from the Tilari dam. In this disaster, 150 families were evacuated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 23], "content_span": [24, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290002-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian floods, Odisha\nOdisha was flooded by heavy rains in the first week of August. From this, three died and two went missing in the floods. About 1,30,000 people in 1012 villages and 5 cities in 9 districts were affected. Kalahandi and Rayagada districts were the worst affected in Odisha. More than 14,000 people were evacuated to shelters from low-lying regions. More than 2000 houses were damaged. Seven teams of SDRF and fire personnel were deployed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290002-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian floods, Andhra Pradesh\nOver 74,000 people in East Godavari and West Godavari district were affected due to flooding from the Godavari river. 17,632 people were evacuated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290002-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian floods, Pune\nIn September, heavy rainfall in the city with more than 16 centimeters of rain, causing the Khadakwasla dam to hold excessive water. Water discharged from the dam caused the Mutha river to overflow and flood the area. Nazare dam near Saswad also experienced heavy rainfall, leading a similar high discharge of water into the Karha river and flooding its immediate area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 24], "content_span": [25, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290002-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian floods, Punjab\nFollowing heavy rains and release of water from the Bhakra Dam, the swollen river Sutlej and its tributaries flooded villages in several areas, causing extensive damage to crops, especially paddy, and houses in low-lying areas. The total value of the livestock loss till now has been pegged at \u20b9 1.2 crores and infrastructure worth hundreds of crores has been destroyed by now including personal properties, bridges, canals, roads, and public buildings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290002-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian floods, Punjab\nOver 300 villages have been affected by August 31, 2019, and few villages in the Ferozepur district are still facing a flood threat after a major portion of an embankment in the catchment area of the Sutlej river was washed away due to Pakistan's release of water into the Indian territory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290002-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian floods, Assam and Bihar\nHeavy-to-very-heavy rainfall events during July 5\u201316 resulted in severe flooding over Bihar and Assam and caused huge damage in the form of life and property. Discharge from Kosi and Brahmaputra rivers combined with heavy cumulative rainfall from multiple rainy episodes during July 5\u201316 resulted in severe flooding over Assam and Bihar causing losses to life and property. Bihar suffered floods again in September\u2014October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290002-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian floods, Relief and rescue\nMore than 5,300 personnel of the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) were deployed for relief and rescue missions along with personnel of State Disaster Response Force (SDRF) and local police in each state. Several columns of Indian Armed Forces were also deployed. The NDRF rescued over 42,000 people in six states (Kerala, Karnataka, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh and Gujarat).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election\nGeneral elections were held in India in seven phases from 11 April to 19 May 2019 to elect the members of the 17th Lok Sabha. Votes were counted and the result declared on 23 May. Around 912 million people were eligible to vote, and voter turnout was over 67 percent\u00a0\u2013 the highest ever, as well as the highest ever participation by women voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election\nThe Bharatiya Janata Party received 37.36% of the vote, the highest vote share by a political party since the 1989 general election, and won 303 seats, further increasing its substantial majority. In addition, the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA) won 353 seats. The Indian National Congress won 52 seats, failing to get 10% of the seats needed to claim the post of Leader of Opposition, and the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance won 91. Other parties and their alliances won 98 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election\nLegislative assembly elections in the states of Andhra Pradesh, Arunachal Pradesh, Odisha and Sikkim were held simultaneously with the general election, as well as by-elections to twenty-two seats of the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Electoral system\nAll 543 elected MPs are elected from single-member constituencies using first-past-the-post voting. The President of India appoints an additional two members from the Anglo-Indian community if he believes that community is under-represented.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Electoral system\nEligible voters must be Indian citizens, 18 or older than 18, an ordinary resident of the polling area of the constituency and registered to vote (name included in the electoral rolls), possess a valid voter identification card issued by the Election Commission of India or an equivalent. Some people convicted of electoral or other offences are barred from voting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Electoral system\nThe elections are held on schedule and as per the Constitution of India that mandates parliamentary elections once every five years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Election schedule\nThe election schedule was announced by Election Commission of India (ECI) on 10 March 2019, and with it the Model Code of Conduct came into effect.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Election schedule\nThe election was scheduled to be held in seven phases. In Bihar, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal, the election was held in all seven phases. The polling for the Anantnag constituency in the state of Jammu and Kashmir was held in three phases, due to violence in the region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Issues, Allegations of undermining institutions\nThe opposition parties accused the NDA government of destroying democratic institutions and processes. Modi denied these allegations, and blamed Congress and the communists for undermining institutions including the police, the CBI, and the CAG, and cited the murder of BJP activists in Kerala and Madhya Pradesh. The Congress party, along with other opposition parties and a group of retired civil servants, accused the ECI of being compromised, and implied that they endorsed the model code of conduct violations by Narendra Modi and other BJP political leaders during their campaigns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 87], "content_span": [88, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Issues, Allegations of undermining institutions\nAnother group of 81 retired civil servants, judges and academics disputed these allegations, made counter-allegations, and stated that the ECI acted fairly and similarly in alleged violations by either side. The group stated that such political attacks on the ECI were a \"deliberate attempt to denigrate and delegitimise the democratic institutions\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 87], "content_span": [88, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Issues, Economic performance\nAccording to The Times of India, the major economic achievements of the incumbent NDA government included an inflation rate less than 4 per cent, the GST reform, and the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code. Its programs, in recent years, that have positively touched many among the Indian masses, include the Jan Dhan Yojana, rural cooking gas and electricity for homes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 68], "content_span": [69, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Issues, Economic performance\nAccording to the IMF, the Indian economy has been growing in recent years, its GDP growth rate is among the highest in the world for major economies, and India is expected to be the fastest growing major economy in 2019\u20132020 and 2020\u20132021, with real GDP projected to grow at 7.3 per cent. The GDP growth data has been disputed by a group of Indian social scientists, economists and the political opposition's election campaign, while a group of Indian chartered accountants has defended the data, the GDP calculation methodology, and questioned the motivations of those disputing the recent Indian GDP statistics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 68], "content_span": [69, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Issues, Economic performance\nThe opposition's election campaign has claimed that both the demonetisation and GST law have \"seriously hit small business, farmers and casual labour\", states The Times of India. The incumbent has claimed that they inherited a country from the previous Congress-led government that was \"a legacy of policy paralysis, corruption and economic fragility\", and that the BJP-led government policies have placed India on better economic fundamentals and a fast gear.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 68], "content_span": [69, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Issues, Economic performance\nModi claims that his government pursued demonetisation in the national interest, his government has identified and de-registered 338,000 shell companies, identified and recovered \u20b9130,000 crore (US$18\u00a0billion) in black money since 2014, and almost doubled India's tax base. The Congress party disputes the incumbents' claims, and has alleged that BJP offices have \"become hubs of creating black money\", and seeks a judicial inquiry into the Rafale deal with France and BJP's role in corruption.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 68], "content_span": [69, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Issues, National security and terrorism\nIn response to the 2019 Pulwama attack, the Indian Air Force conducted airstrikes inside Pakistan \u2014 for the first time since the 1971 Indo-Pakistani war. The ongoing conflict with Pakistan became a significant factor in the election. The opposition parties accused of politicising the army, whilst the BJP countered their accusations by stating that such allegations raised by them were adversely affecting the morale of armed forces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 79], "content_span": [80, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Issues, National security and terrorism\nAccording to the Pew Research Center, both before and after the outbreak of recent India-Pakistan tensions, their 2018 and 2019 surveys suggest that the significant majority of the voters consider Pakistan as a \"very serious threat\" to their country, and terrorism to be a \"very big problem\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 79], "content_span": [80, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Issues, Unemployment\nAccording to the Pew Research Center, a majority of Indian voters consider the lack of employment opportunities as a \"very big problem\" in their country. \"About 18.6 million Indians were jobless and another 393.7 million work in poor-quality jobs vulnerable to displacement\", stated the Pew report.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Issues, Unemployment\nA report on unemployment prepared by the National Sample Survey Office's (NSSO's) periodic labour force survey, has not been officially released by the government. According to Business Today, this report is the \"first comprehensive survey on employment conducted by a government agency after Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced demonetisation move in November 2016\". According to this report, the 2017\u20132018 \"usual status\" unemployment rate in India is 6.1 per cent, which is a four-decade high. The government has claimed that the report was not final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0014-0001", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Issues, Unemployment\nAccording to the International Labour Organization (ILO) \u2013 a United Nations agency, unemployment is rising in India and the \"unemployment rate in the country [India] will stand at 3.5 percent in 2018 and 2019 \u2013 the same level of unemployment seen in 2017 and 2016\", instead of dropping to 3.4 percent as it had previously projected. According to the ILO's World Employment Social Outlook Report, the unemployment rate in India has been in the 3.4 to 3.6 percent range over the UPA-government led 2009\u20132014 and the NDA-government led 2014\u20132019 periods.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Issues, Unemployment\nOpposition parties claimed in their election campaign that the unemployment in India had reached crisis levels. The NDA government has denied the existence of any job crisis. Prime minister Narendra Modi claimed that jobs are not lacking but the accurate data on jobs has been lacking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Issues, Unemployment\nThe opposition has attacked the NDA government's performance with the NSSO reported 6.1 percent unemployment data. Modi and his government have questioned this job statistics report, stating that \"most surveys that try to capture unemployment rate are skewed since these did not cover the unorganised sector, which accounts for 85\u201390 per cent of jobs [in India]\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Issues, Agrarian and rural distress\nThe Congress party campaign highlighted \"agrarian distress\" as an election issue. The BJP campaign highlighted that the Congress party had been in power for five generations of the Nehru dynasty and its past promises and campaign issues have been empty. It claimed that the recent farmer loan waivers by Congress have not reached \"even 10% of the farmers\" nor has it helped the financial situation of the farmers. BJP highlights that its \"Kisan Samman Nidhi\" helps the small farmers at the time of seed planting through a direct deposit of \u20b96000 to their accounts. The opposition accused this as being an attempt to lure voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Issues, Agrarian and rural distress\nAccording to The Times of India, a group of farmer associations demanded that the 2019 election manifesto of competing political parties should promise to \"keep agriculture out of the World Trade Organization (WTO)\" and that the interests of Indian farmers must not be compromised in global trade treaties. They also demanded loan waivers and income support for the agriculture sector. According to the Business Standard and the United Nation's Food and Agriculture Organization, India has witnessed record crop harvests in recent years including 2017 when its farmers grew more foodgrains than ever before. However, the farmers consider the \"low remunerative prices\" they receive in the free market to be too low and a need for the Indian government to establish higher minimum support prices for agricultural products. These farmers consider this an issue for the 2019 general elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 965]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Issues, Dynasty politics\nThe BJP highlighted that the Congress party has relied on Rahul Gandhi for leadership since 2013, its lack of internal party institutions and claimed that whenever Congress has been in power, the freedom of press and Indian government institutions have \"taken a severe beating\". During the election campaign, its leaders mentioned the Emergency of 1975, the nepotism, corruption and widespread abuses of human rights under the Congress rule in the past.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 64], "content_span": [65, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0019-0001", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Issues, Dynasty politics\nCongress-led alliance leader H. D. Kumaraswamy \u2013 the son of a former prime minister of India and the former chief minister of Karnataka, countered that \"India developed because of dynasty politics\", stating that \"dynasty politics are not the main issue, rather country's problems are\". The Congress alleged hypocrisy by the BJP, claiming that the BJP itself forms alliances with dynasty-based parties such as the Akali Dal in Punjab, and that family relatives of senior BJP leaders such as Rajnath Singh and Arun Jaitley have been in politics too.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 64], "content_span": [65, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Issues, Dynasty politics\nAccording to an IndiaSpend report published by the BloombergQuint, the smaller and regional parties such as the Jammu and Kashmir National Conference, Lok Jan Sakti Party, Shiromani Akali Dal, Biju Janata Dal and Samajwadi Party have higher densities of dynasty-derived candidates and elected representatives in recent years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 64], "content_span": [65, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0020-0001", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Issues, Dynasty politics\nWhile both the Congress and the BJP have also nominated candidates from political dynasties, states the report, the difference between them is that in Congress \"top party leadership has been handed down from generation to generation within the same [Nehru Gandhi dynasty] family\", while there has been a historic non-dynastic diversity in the top leadership within the BJP. According to the report, while BJP has also nominated candidates from political dynasties, its better public relations operation \"can leap to its defence when attacked on the same grounds\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 64], "content_span": [65, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0020-0002", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Issues, Dynasty politics\nIn contrast to the IndiaSpend report, analysis of Kanchan Chandra, a prominent professor of Politics, of the 2004, 2009 and 2014 general elections included a finding that the Congress party has had about twice or more dynastic parliamentarians than the BJP at those elections, and higher than all major political parties in India except the Samajwadi Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 64], "content_span": [65, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0020-0003", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Issues, Dynasty politics\nMany of these dynastic politicians in India who inherit the leadership positions have never held any jobs and lack state or local experience, states Anjali Bohlken \u2013 a professor and political science scholar, and this raises concerns of rampant nepotism and appointments of their own friends, relatives and cronies if elected. The BJP has targeted the Congress party in the 2019 elections for alleged nepotism and a family dynasty for leadership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 64], "content_span": [65, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Campaign controversies, Income tax raids\nIn April 2019, raids conducted by the Income Tax Department found bundles of unaccounted for cash amounting to \u20b9281 crore (US$39\u00a0million), along with liquor and documentary evidence in premises of people with close connections to Madhya Pradesh chief minister Kamal Nath of the Congress. Modi has highlighted this evidence to attack the Congress in its election campaign, alleging corruption is part of Congress party's culture.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 80], "content_span": [81, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Campaign controversies, Social media abuses and fake news\nAccording to The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal, the election attracted a systematic attempt to spread misinformation through social media. Facebook said that over a hundred of these advocacy accounts spreading disinformation were traced to \"employees of the Pakistani military public relations wing\". Some others have been linked to the INC and BJP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 97], "content_span": [98, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Campaign controversies, Social media abuses and fake news\nPolitical parties spent over \u20b953 crore (US$7.4\u00a0million) with the largest spending by BJP on digital platforms for online ads. The BJP placed 2,500 ads on Facebook while the Congress placed 3,686 ads. According to a study by Vidya Narayanan and colleagues at the Oxford Internet Institute, social media was used by all the major parties and alliances, and all of them linked or posted divisive and conspiratorial content and images. According to Narayanan, \"a third of the BJP's images, a quarter of the INC's images, and a tenth the SP-BSP's images were catalogued as divisive and conspiratorial\". The Narayanan et al. study added that \"we observed very limited amounts of hate speech, gore or pornography in either platform samples\" by BJP, Congress or SP-BSP, but the election did include proportionally more polarising information on social media than other countries except for the US presidential election in 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 97], "content_span": [98, 1017]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Campaign controversies, Social media abuses and fake news\nAbout 50,000 fake news stories were published during the recent Lok Sabha elections and shared 2 million times, according to a study conducted by fact-checking startup Logically.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 97], "content_span": [98, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Campaign controversies, EC actions under Article 324\nElection Commission curtailed West Bengal campaigning by one day, after a bust of 19th century Bengali icon Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar was vandalised during 7th phase poll violence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 92], "content_span": [93, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Party manifestos, Highlights of the Congress manifesto\nThe Congress released its manifesto, titled Congress Will Deliver on 3 April. Some of its highlights:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 94], "content_span": [95, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Party manifestos, Highlights of the BJP manifesto\nThe BJP released its manifesto sub-titled Sankalpit Bharat, Sashakt Bharat (lit. \"Resolute India, Empowered India\") on 8 April. Some of its highlights:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 89], "content_span": [90, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Campaign finance\nSeveral organisations offered varying estimates for the cost of the election campaign. The Centre for Media Studies in New Delhi estimated that the election campaign could exceed $7 billion. According to the Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR), an election watchdog, in the financial year 2017\u201318 BJP received \u20b94,370,000,000 (US$61\u00a0million), about 12 times more donations than Congress and five other national parties combined.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Campaign finance\nThe electoral bonds in denominations ranging from 1,000 rupees to 10 million rupees ($14 to $140,000) can be purchased and donated to a political party. The bonds don't carry the name of the donor and are exempt from tax. Factly \u2013 an India data journalism portal, traced the electoral bond donations for 2018 under India's Right to Information Act. According to Factly, electoral bonds worth about \u20b910,600,000,000 (US$150\u00a0million) were purchased and donated in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0029-0001", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Campaign finance\nAccording to Bloomberg, this accounted for 31.2 percent of political donations in 2018, while 51.4 percent of the total donated amount were each below \u20b920,000 (US$280) and these too were from unknown donors. About 47 percent of the donations to political parties were from known sources. Between 1 January and 31 March 2019, donors bought \u20b917,100,000,000 (US$240\u00a0million) worth of electoral bonds and donated. The spending in elections boosts national GDP, and the 2009 election spending contributed about 0.5 percent to GDP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Campaign, Campaign finance\nAccording to Centre for Media Studies, the BJP spent over Rs 280 billion (or 45%) of the Rs 600 billion spent by all political parties during the polls. Congress questions BJP over its poll expenditure", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Parties and alliances, Political alliances\nWith the exception of 2014, no single party has won the majority of seats in the Lok Sabha since 1984, and therefore, forming alliances is the norm in Indian elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 72], "content_span": [73, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Parties and alliances, Political alliances\nThere were five main national pre-poll alliances. They are the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) headed by the BJP, the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) headed by the INC, Mahagathbandhan (or Grand Alliance), or MGB, Federal Front headed by All India Trinamool Congress, and the left front of Communist-leaning parties. Given the volatile nature of coalition politics in India, alliances may change during and after the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 72], "content_span": [73, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Parties and alliances, Political alliances\nThe INC did not form alliances in states where it is in direct contest with the BJP. These states include Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Rajasthan, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, and Chhattisgarh. It formed alliances with regional parties in Jammu and Kashmir, Bihar, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Jharkhand, and Kerala.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 72], "content_span": [73, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Parties and alliances, Political alliances\nIn January 2019, Bahujan Samaj Party and Samajwadi Party announced a grand alliance (Mahagathbandhan) to contest 76 out of the 80 seats in Uttar Pradesh leaving two seats, namely Amethi and Rae Bareli, for INC and another two for other political parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 72], "content_span": [73, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Parties and alliances, Political parties\nMore than 650 parties contested in these elections. Most of them were small with regional appeal. The main parties are the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and the Indian National Congress (INC). This was the first time that BJP (437) contested more seats than Congress (421) in the Lok Sabha elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 70], "content_span": [71, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Candidates\nAltogether 8,039 candidates were in the fray for 542 parliamentary constituencies, i.e., 14.8 candidates per constituency on an average, according to PRS India, an NGO.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Candidates\nAbout 40% of the candidates fielded by Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party had a criminal case against them. Key opposition party Congress was not far behind with 39% of the candidates with criminal charges, according to Association of Democratic Reforms analysis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Voter statistics\nAccording to the ECI, 900 million people were eligible to vote, with an increase of 84.3 million voters since the last election in 2014, making it the largest-ever election in the world. 15 million voters aged 18\u201319 years became eligible to vote for the first time. 468 million eligible voters were males, 432 million were females and 38,325 identified themselves belonging to third gender. Total 71,735 overseas voters also enrolled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Voter statistics\nThe residents of the former enclaves exchanged under the 2015 India-Bangladesh boundary agreement voted for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Voter statistics, Electronic voting machines and security\nThe ECI deployed a total of 1.74 million voter-verified paper audit trail (VVPAT) units and 3.96 million electronic voting machines (EVM) in 1,035,918 polling stations. Approximately 270,000 paramilitary and 2 million state police personnel provided organisational support and security at various polling booths. On 9 April 2019, the Supreme Court ordered the ECI to increase VVPAT slips vote count to five randomly selected EVMs per assembly constituency, which meant that the ECI had to count VVPAT slips of 20,625 EVMs before it could certify the final election results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 87], "content_span": [88, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Voter statistics, Voting\nIn the first phase, 69.58 per cent of the 142 million eligible voters cast their vote to elect their representatives for 91 Lok Sabha seats. The voter turnout was 68.77 per cent in the same constituencies in the 2014 general elections. In the second phase, 156 million voters were eligible to vote for 95 Lok Sabha seats and the turnout was 69.45 per cent, compared to 69.62 per cent in 2014. For the third phase, 189 million voters were eligible to elect 116 Lok Sabha representatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0041-0001", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Voter statistics, Voting\nAccording to ECI, the turnout for this phase was 68.40 per cent, compared to 67.15 per cent in 2014. In the fourth of seven phases, 65.50 per cent of the 128 million eligible voters cast their vote to elect 72 representatives to the Indian parliament while the turnout for the same seats in the 2014 election was 63.05 per cent. The fifth phase was open to 87.5 million eligible voters, who could cast their vote in over 96,000 polling booths. In the sixth phase, 64.40 per cent of the 101 million eligible voters cast their vote in about 113,000 polling stations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Voter statistics, Voting\nThe final turnout stood at 67.11 per cent, the highest ever turnout recorded in any of the general elections till date. The percentage is 1.16 per cent higher than the 2014 elections whose turnout stood at 65.95 per cent. Over 600 million voters polled their votes in 2019 Indian General elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Opinion polls\nVarious organisations have carried out opinion polling to gauge voting intentions in India. Results of such polls are displayed in this list. The date range for these opinion polls is from the previous general election, held in April and May 2014, to the present day. The ECI banned the release of exit polls from 11 April to 19 May, the last phase of the elections. The commission also banned the publication or broadcast in the media of predictions made by astrologers and tarot card readers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Aftermath, Reactions, National\nIndian National Congress party leaders such as Rahul Gandhi and others conceded defeat and congratulated Modi and his party. Other opposition parties and political leaders such as Sharad Pawar, Mamata Banerjee and Omar Abdullah, congratulated PM Modi and BJP for their victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Aftermath, Reactions, National\nOn 20 November 2019 the Association for Democratic Reforms filed a petition with the Supreme Court of India over alleged ballot-counting discrepancies in the Lok Sabha voting and seeking a probe by the ECI.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Aftermath, Reactions, International\nThe leaders of Afghanistan, Argentina, Australia, Austria, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Botswana, Brazil, Bulgaria, Burundi, Canada, China, Comoros, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia, France, Georgia, Germany, Ghana, Iceland, Indonesia, Iran, Israel, Italy, Jamaica, Japan, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Kuwait, Kyrgyzstan Latvia, Lesotho, Lichtenstein, Luxembourg, Madagascar, Malaysia, Maldives, Malta, Mexico, Mongolia, Myanmar, Namibia, Nepal, Netherlands, Nicaragua, North Korea, Nigeria, New Zealand, Oman, Pakistan, Palestine, Portugal, Qatar, Russia, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, Seychelles, Singapore, South Africa, South Korea, Sri Lanka, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Switzerland, Tajikistan, Thailand, Turkmenistan, Uganda, Ukraine, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, United States, Uzbekistan, Venezuela, Vietnam, Zambia, and Zimbabwe congratulated Narendra Modi and the BJP on their victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 65], "content_span": [66, 965]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290003-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election, Aftermath, Impact\nThe benchmark BSE Sensex and Nifty50 indices hit intraday record highs and the Indian rupee strengthened after the exit polls and on the day the election results were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290004-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Andhra Pradesh\nGeneral Elections were held in Andhra Pradesh on 11 April 2019 to elect representatives for 17th Lok Sabha .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290005-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Arunachal Pradesh\nThe 2019 Indian general election are due to be held in India on 11 April 2019 to constitute the 17th Lok Sabha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290006-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Assam\nThe 2019 Indian general election held in India between April and May 2019 to constitute the 17th Lok Sabha. The elections could be held at an earlier date if the Council of Ministers recommends dissolution of the 16th Lok Sabha to the President of India. However, the government has publicly announced that the elections will be held according to schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290007-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Bihar, Alliances\nCPI (M-L) (4) \u00a0\u00a0 SUCI (5)\u00a0\u00a0CPI (1) \u00a0\u00a0 CPI (M) (1)\u00a0\u00a0AIFB (3) \u00a0\u00a0 RSPI (1)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 48], "content_span": [49, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290008-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Chhattisgarh\nThe 2019 Indian general elections held in India between 11 April and 23 April 2019 to constitute the 17th Lok Sabha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290009-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Delhi\nThe 2019 Indian general election were held on 12 May 2019. Along with all other states, results in Delhi were declared on 23 May 2019 to constitute the 17th Lok Sabha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290010-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Goa\nThe 2019 Indian general election are due to be held in India between April and May 2019 to constitute the 17th Lok Sabha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290011-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Gujarat\nThe 2019 Indian general election were scheduled to be held in seven phases between April and May 2019 to constitute the 17th Lok Sabha. The Election Commission of India announced the polling date for all the 26 Lok Sabha constituencies in Gujarat and it was held on April 23 during the third phase of 2019 Indian general election. The results were declared on 23 May 2019 across the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290012-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Haryana\nThe 2019 Indian general election are due to be held in Haryana in single phase on 12 May 2019 to constitute the 17th Lok Sabha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290013-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Himachal Pradesh\nThe 2019 Indian general election held in India on 19th May 2019 to constitute the 17th Lok Sabha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290014-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Jammu and Kashmir\nThe 2019 Indian general election in Jammu and Kashmir was held for 6 seats in the state. The voting process was held in five phases on 11, 18, 23, 29 April and 6 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290015-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Jharkhand\nThe 2019 Indian general elections were held in India between 29 April to 19 May 2019 to constitute the 17th Lok Sabha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290016-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Karnataka\nThe 2019 Indian general election were held in Karnataka on Two phases- 18 and 23 April 2019 to constitute the 17th Lok Sabha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290016-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Karnataka, Voter's Turnout\nFirst phase election on 18 April with highest voting recorded in Mandya of 80.24% and the lowest is recorded in Bangalore South of 53.48% as per the official announcement from Election CEO of Karnataka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290017-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Kerala\nThe 2019 Indian general election was held in Kerala on 23 April 2019 to constitute the 17th Lok Sabha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290017-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Kerala, Alliances and parties\nThe key alliances that fought for representation of Lok Sabha seats in Kerala are the UDF which is the Kerala state legislative alliance aligned with the UPA at the national level and the LDF comprising primarily the CPI(M) and the CPI. National Democratic Alliance (NDA), which had not won any seat in the state, placed candidates in all constituencies. A new force in the election is the Left United Front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290017-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Kerala, Alliances and parties, Parties not in any Coalition\nAam Admi Party, who had contested in the 2014 elections decided not to contest this election so as to not split anti-BJP votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 91], "content_span": [92, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290017-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Kerala, Bogus votes detection and re-polling\nThe Election Commission of India ordered to conduct re-polling on 19 May 2019 in 3 booths in Kasaragod and one in Kannur constituencies after confirming bogus votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290017-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Kerala, Results, Votes by State Legislative Assembly constituencies\nAccording to the ECI, the details of the valid votes polled in the state legislative assembly constituencies of Kerala are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 99], "content_span": [100, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290018-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Madhya Pradesh\nThe 2019 Indian general election were held in Madhya Pradesh in 4 phases- between 29 April and 19 May 2019 to constitute the 17th Lok Sabha. Results declared on 23rd May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290019-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Maharashtra\nThe 2019 Indian general election in Maharashtra held in April 2019. These were held for 48 seats in 4 phases; 11 April (7 seats), 18 April (10 seats), 23 April (14 seats) and 29 April 2019 (17 seats).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290019-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Maharashtra\nThe major contenders in the state are the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) and National Democratic Alliance (NDA). UPA consisted of the Indian National Congress and the Nationalist Congress Party whereas the NDA consisted of the Bharatiya Janata Party and the Shiv Sena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290019-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Maharashtra\nIn February 2019, BJP and Shiv Sena again announced alliance with 25 seats for BJP and 23 for Shiv Sena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290019-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Maharashtra\nIn March 2019, Congress and NCP also announced their alliance with each contesting 26 and 22 seats respectively. Of the 26 seats of INC, 1 seat each would be given to Bahujan Vikas Aaghadi (BVA) and Swabhimani Shetkari Saghtana (SSS). Similarly, NCP would also forgo of two seats; one each to SSS and one to Yuva Swabhiman Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290019-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Maharashtra, Result, Constituency wise\nKeys:\u00a0\u00a0BJP (23) \u00a0\u00a0SS (18) \u00a0\u00a0 NCP (4) \u00a0\u00a0INC (1) \u00a0\u00a0 AIMIM (1) \u00a0\u00a0 Independent (1)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 70], "content_span": [71, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290019-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Maharashtra, Result, Constituency wise\n1 Resigned from seat on 14 September 2019 to join BJP, lost subsequent by election to Shriniwas Dadasaheb Patil of NCP. Region-Wise Breakup:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 70], "content_span": [71, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290019-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Maharashtra, Result, Results Analysis\nMaharashtra Lok Sabha Election Results 2019 - Constituency Wise And Party Wise Result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290019-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Maharashtra, Result, Results Analysis\nMaharashtra Lok Sabha Election Result 2019 - BJP - Shiv Sena alliance wins 41 out of 48.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290020-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Manipur\nThe 2019 Indian general election in Manipur for two Lok Sabha seats was held in two phases on 11 \u2013 18 April 2019. Voters turnout in first phase was 84.21% and the second phase was 81.16%", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290021-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Meghalaya\nThe 2019 Indian general election in Meghalaya for two Lok Sabha seats was held in a single phase on 11 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290022-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Mizoram\nThe 2019 Indian general election are due to be held in India between April and May 2019 to constitute the 17th Lok Sabha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290023-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Nagaland\nThe 2019 Indian general election are due to be held in India between April and May 2019 to constitute the 17th Lok Sabha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290024-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Odisha\nThe 2019 Indian general election for the 21 Parliamentary Constituencies were held in four phases to constitute the 17th Lok Sabha. The Legislative Assembly elections were held simultaneously with the General Elections in the state. Major political parties in the state were Biju Janata Dal, Indian National Congress and Bharatiya Janata Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290024-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Odisha, Results\nThe results of the election were declared on 23 May 2019. The elected public representatives are mentioned below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290025-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Puducherry\nThe 2019 Indian general elections was held in seven phases from 11 April to 19 May 2019 to constitute the 17th Lok Sabha. The general election in Puducherry was held on April 18, 2019. The UPA, fielded V. Vaithilingam, of the Indian National Congress, while the National Democratic Alliance fielded AINRC candidate Dr. K. Narayanasamy. Makkal Needhi Maiam fielded Dr. M. A. S. Subramanian and Naam Tamilar Katchi fielded N. Sharmila Beham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290026-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Punjab\nThe 2019 Indian general election in Punjab was held on 19 May 2019, making it seventh and the last phase of the election. Counting was held on 23 May 2019 and result was also declared on same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290027-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Rajasthan\nThe 2019 Indian general election were held in Rajasthan in two phases- 29 April and 6 May 2019 to constitute the 17th Lok Sabha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290028-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Tamil Nadu\nThe 2019 elections for Tamil Nadu's 39 seats in the 17th Lok Sabha were held on 18 April, in the second phase of the 2019 Indian general elections. The United Progressive Alliance, led by the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam, won a landslide victory, taking 38 of the 39 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290028-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Tamil Nadu\nECI has announced that the by-election (2016\u201321 Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly by-elections) for 18 assembly constituencies together with the general elections (18 constituencies polling date \u2013 18.04.2019 and 4 Constituencies \u2013 19.05.2019). The counting of votes was held on 23 May and results were published on the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290028-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Tamil Nadu\nThere are 39 Lok Sabha constituencies in Tamil Nadu, with an average of 1.51 million voters in each one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290028-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Tamil Nadu, Voters Turnout\nHighest turnout in Dharmapuri constituency of 82.41% and the lowest is in Chennai South constituency of 57.07%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290029-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Telangana\nThe 2019 Indian general election were held in India on 11 April 2019 to constitute the 17th Lok Sabha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290030-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Tripura\nThe 2019 Indian general election were held in India on 11 April and 23 April 2019 to constitute the 17th Lok Sabha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290031-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Uttar Pradesh\nThe 2019 Indian general election in Uttar Pradesh was held between 11 April and 19 May 2019 to constitute the 17th Lok Sabha. The election results were declared on 23 May which saw the BJP led Alliance winning majority of seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290032-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in Uttarakhand\nThe 2019 Indian general election were held for the 5 Lok Sabha seats in Uttarakhand on 11 April 2019 to constitute the 17th Lok Sabha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290033-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in West Bengal\nThe 2019 Indian general election were held in India between April and May 2019 to constitute the 17th Lok Sabha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290033-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in West Bengal, Candidates, Trinamool Congress\nOn 12 March 2019, party president Mamata Banerjee announced the party candidates for the election. 41% of the candidates were women. Notable exclusions from the list were the party's general secretary Subrata Bakshi and Sugata Bose. Bose did not get permission from Harvard University, where he is a professor, to contest the election. Notable inclusions were Bengali actresses Mimi Chakraborty and Nusrat Jahan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 75], "content_span": [76, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290033-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in West Bengal, Impact\nThere has been a major political shift from the left to the right in the 2019 general elections in West Bengal. The Statesman says, \u201cMaking an aggressive penetration in Bengal for the first time since its inception in 1980, BJP alone has dramatically increased its vote share close to 40 percent this time. Thus, it has virtually made the CPI-M into a mere marginalised political party and at the same time the saffron party set a strong challenge before the Trinamool Congress hardly two years ahead of the Assembly elections scheduled in 2021 in the state.\u201d This obviously is the most important impact of the general elections in the state visible in the voting pattern right across the state, irrespective of who won or lost a particular seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290033-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in West Bengal, Analysis, Postal Ballot wise lead of Parties\nTMC won 3 out of 3 assembly seats in the next assembly by-elections in November 2019. Even the seat of State BJP president Dilip Ghosh which fell vacant due to Dilip Ghosh's win in Loksabha election, Kharagpur Sadar was won by TMC by a lead of 22,000 votes. TMC was trailing in that seat by 158,000 votes in 2019 general elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 89], "content_span": [90, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290034-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indian general election in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands\nThe 2019 Indian general election in Andaman and Nicobar Islands, held for 1 seat in the Island. Congress candidate Kuldeep Rai Sharma won the election from the only seat. Sharma defeated BJP candidate Vishal Jolly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290035-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana 250\nThe 2019 Indiana 250 is a NASCAR Xfinity Series race held on September 7, 2019, at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Speedway, Indiana. Contested over 100 laps on the 2.5-mile (4.0\u00a0km) speedway, it was the 25th race of the 2019 NASCAR Xfinity Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290035-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana 250, Background, Track\nThe Indianapolis Motor Speedway, located in Speedway, Indiana, (an enclave suburb of Indianapolis) in the United States, is the home of the Indianapolis 500 and the Brickyard 400. It is located on the corner of 16th Street and Georgetown Road, approximately six miles (10\u00a0km) west of Downtown Indianapolis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290035-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana 250, Background, Track\nConstructed in 1909, it is the original speedway, the first racing facility so named. It has a permanent seating capacity estimated at 235,000 with infield seating raising capacity to an approximate 400,000. It is the highest-capacity sports venue in the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290035-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana 250, Background, Track\nConsidered relatively flat by American standards, the track is a 2.5-mile (4.0\u00a0km), nearly rectangular oval with dimensions that have remained essentially unchanged since its inception: four 0.25-mile (0.40\u00a0km) turns, two 0.625-mile long (1.006\u00a0km) straightaways between the fourth and first turns and the second and third turns, and two .125-mile (0.201\u00a0km) short straightaways \u2013 termed \"short chutes\" \u2013 between the first and second, and third and fourth turns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290035-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana 250, Practice, First practice\nChristopher Bell was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 53.502 seconds and a speed of 168.218\u00a0mph (270.721\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290035-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana 250, Practice, Final practice\nJustin Haley was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 53.499 seconds and a speed of 168.227\u00a0mph (270.735\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290035-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana 250, Qualifying\nKyle Busch scored the pole for the race with a time of 53.445 seconds and a speed of 168.397\u00a0mph (271.009\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290035-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana 250, Race, Summary\nKyle Busch started on pole, with Joe Gibbs Racing teammates Brandon Jones and Christopher Bell following closely. Tyler Reddick and the trio separated themselves from the rest of the field. On lap 15, Austin Dillon stalled on the backstretch access road after pitting issues. Busch fell behind after having to pit twice as not all lug nuts were tight on the car. Bell took the lead on the restart, but David Starr blew an engine soon after and brought out the next caution. After the next round of stops, Jones inherited the lead and held off Busch and Austin Cindric to win Stage 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 31], "content_span": [32, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290035-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana 250, Race, Summary\nAfter the restart, Brandon Brown spun and brought out the caution again. Busch took the lead and led until lap 50, where Justin Allgaier began approaching quickly and finally passed him three laps later. Allgaier pulled away from Busch and won stage 2. He also traded the lead often with Busch after the restart. Reddick also joined the battle until the next caution, where Josh Williams and Justin Haley strategically took the lead on the restart. Reddick and Bell were able to pass them as they struggled with maintaining the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 31], "content_span": [32, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290035-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana 250, Race, Summary\nBusch raced his way back to third, and Cindric and Jones made contact, resulting in Jones spinning with under 15 laps remaining. The final caution and red flag happened when Bell and Reddick started next to each other; Bell got loose and slid into Reddick, causing both to slam hard into the wall. After the cleanup, Busch and Allgaier started in the front. Busch quickly got ahead of Allgaier, but couldn't pull away, while Allgaier also couldn't catch up. Busch ultimately managed to hold off Allgaier and won the race, taking his 96th Xfinity series win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 31], "content_span": [32, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290036-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana Fever season\nThe 2019 WNBA season was the 20th season for the Indiana Fever of the Women's National Basketball Association. The Fever opened the season on May 24, 2019 against the New York Liberty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290036-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana Fever season\nThe Fever had a promising start to their season, winning three of their first four games. However, from there they lost eight of their next ten to finish June with a 5\u20139 record. July proved disastrous for any playoff hopes the team had. Six losses in the month were book-ended by two wins. One bright spot from July was that Erica Wheeler was named WNBA All-Star Game MVP. The Fever's form improved into August where they posted a 4\u20135 record. Winning their last two games proved too little too late, as they missed out on a playoff spot for the third straight year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290036-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana Fever season\nAfter the season, it was announced that General Manager and Head Coach Pokey Chatman would not return for the 2020 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290036-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana Fever season, Transactions, WNBA Draft\nThe Fever made three selections in the 2019 WNBA Draft, which was held on April 10:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290037-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana Hoosiers baseball team\nThe 2019 Indiana Hoosiers baseball team were a college baseball team that represented Indiana University in the 2019 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Hoosiers are members of the Big Ten Conference (B1G) and play their home games at Bart Kaufman Field in Bloomington, Indiana. They were led by first-year head coach Jeff Mercer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290037-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana Hoosiers baseball team, Previous season\nThe Hoosiers finished the 2018 NCAA Division I baseball season 40\u201319 overall (14\u20139 conference) and fifth place in conference standings. Following the conclusion of the regular season, the Hoosiers were selected to play in the 2018 NCAA Tournament, beginning in the Austin Regional. The Hoosiers would eventually lose in the final round of the Austin Regional to Texas by a score of 2\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290037-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana Hoosiers baseball team, Previous season, MLB Draft\nThe following Hoosiers on the 2018 roster were selected in the 2018 Major League Baseball draft:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290037-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana Hoosiers baseball team, Preseason\nOn June 25, 2018, Mississippi State confirmed that it had hired Chris Lemonis as their new head baseball coach, formally ending Lemonis' tenure with the Hoosiers. Lemonis compiled a 141\u201391\u20132 overall record, 55\u201337-1 conference record and three NCAA Tournament appearances, while head coach of the Hoosiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290037-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana Hoosiers baseball team, Preseason\nOn July 2, 2018, Indiana University Athletics announced the hiring of former Wright State head coach Jeff Mercer, to the head coaching position for the Hoosiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290037-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana Hoosiers baseball team, Preseason\nOn July 18, 2018, Mercer made a notable acquisition to the Hoosiers' coaching staff with the hiring of former-MLB third baseman Scott Rolen as Director of Player Development.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290037-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana Hoosiers baseball team, Preseason, Season projections\nComing off of an NCAA Regional appearance in 2018, the 2019 Hoosiers were projected to finish fourth in conference play by B1G coaches; however, other media outlets predicted the Hoosiers would finish as high as first in the B1G. The Hoosiers were ranked or received votes for rankings in two of the six major preseason polls and rankings. Indiana was ranked #37 in the NCBWA poll and received votes for ranking by Collegiate Baseball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290037-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00290038-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana Hoosiers football team\nThe 2019 Indiana Hoosiers football team represented Indiana University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Hoosiers played their home games at Memorial Stadium in Bloomington, Indiana, and competed as a member of the East Division of the Big Ten Conference. The team was led by third-year head coach Tom Allen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290038-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana Hoosiers football team, Spring Game\nThe 2019 Spring Game took place in Bloomington on April 12, 2019 at 7:00\u00a0p.m.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290038-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana Hoosiers football team, Previous season\nThe Hoosiers finished the 2018 season 5\u20137 overall, 2\u20137 in Big Ten play to finish in sixth place in the Eastern Division. The Hoosiers would fail to become bowl eligible, with Indiana's last bowl appearance coming in 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290038-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana Hoosiers football team, Offseason, Coaching changes\nOn December 27, 2018, the Hoosiers announced the promotion of Kane Wommack from Linebacker's Coach to Defensive Coordinator; however, Wommack will continue linebacker coaching responsibilities. On December 30, 2018, Hoosiers' offensive coordinator Mike DeBord announced his retirement from football. On January 21, 2019, former Fresno State offensive coordinator Kalen DeBoer was announced as the Hoosiers' new offensive coordinator.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290038-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana Hoosiers football team, Preseason, Preseason Big Ten poll\nAlthough the Big Ten Conference has not held an official preseason poll since 2010, Cleveland.com has polled sports journalists representing all member schools as a de facto preseason media poll since 2011. For the 2019 poll, Indiana was projected to finish in fifth in the East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290038-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana Hoosiers football team, Schedule\nThe Hoosiers' 2019 schedule will consist of 6 home games, 5 away games and 1 neutral site game in Indianapolis, Indiana. The Hoosiers' first non-conference game will be at Lucas Oil Stadium, in Indianapolis, against Ball State of the Mid-American Conference (MAC), before hosting the remaining two non-conference games; against Eastern Illinois from the Ohio Valley Conference (OVC) and against UConn of the American Athletic Conference (AAC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290038-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana Hoosiers football team, Schedule\nThe Hoosiers are scheduled to play nine conference games; they host Ohio State, Rutgers, Northwestern and Michigan. They will travel to Michigan State, Maryland, Nebraska, Penn State and Purdue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290038-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana Hoosiers football team, Radio\nRadio coverage for all games will be broadcast on All-Access and on various radio frequencies throughout the state. The primary radio announcer is long-time broadcaster Don Fischer with Play-by-Play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290039-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana Hoosiers men's soccer team\nThe 2019 Indiana Hoosiers men's soccer team represented Indiana University Bloomington in men's college soccer during the 2019 NCAA Division I men's soccer season and 2019 Big Ten Conference men's soccer season. It was the 47th season the university fielded a men's varsity soccer program, and the 29th season the program played in the Big Ten Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290039-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana Hoosiers men's soccer team\nIndiana entered the 2019 season as the defending Big Ten Conference regular season and tournament champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290039-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana Hoosiers men's soccer team, Background\nThe 2018 Indiana Hoosiers men's soccer team represented Indiana University Bloomington in men's college soccer during the 2018 NCAA Division I men's soccer season and 2018 Big Ten Conference men's soccer season. It was the 46th season the university fielded a men's varsity soccer program, and the 28th season the program played in the Big Ten Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290039-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana Hoosiers men's soccer team, Background\nDuring the regular season Indiana completed the league double by winning both the Big Ten regular season, and the 2018 Big Ten Conference Men's Soccer Tournament. The Hoosiers were seeded second overall in the 2018 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament, where they reached the College Cup before losing to eventual national champions, and fellow Big Ten side, Maryland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290039-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana Hoosiers men's soccer team, Background\nIndiana defender, Andrew Gutman, was named the winner of the Hermann Trophy, the top individual award a men's college soccer player can earn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290039-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana Hoosiers men's soccer team, Preseason, Preseason Big Ten poll\nIndiana was predicted to finish 1st in the Big Ten Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 74], "content_span": [75, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290039-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00290040-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana State Sycamores baseball team\nThe 2019 Indiana State Sycamores baseball team represented Indiana State University during the 2019 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Sycamores played their home games at Sycamore Stadium as a member of the Missouri Valley Conference. They were led by head coach Mitch Hannahs, in his 6th season at Indiana State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290040-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana State Sycamores baseball team, Previous Season\nThe 2018 Indiana State Sycamores baseball team notched a 29\u201322 (11\u201310) regular season record and finished tied for third in the MVC Conference standings. The Sycamores reached the 2018 Missouri Valley Conference Baseball Tournament, where they were defeated by Missouri State in the semifinals. Indiana State did not receive an at-large bid to the 2018 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290040-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana State Sycamores 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, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290041-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana State Sycamores football team\nThe 2019 Indiana State Sycamores football team represented Indiana State University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by third-year head coach Curt Mallory and played their home games at Memorial Stadium. They were a member of the Missouri Valley Football Conference. They finished the season 5\u20137, 3\u20135 in MVFC play to finish in seventh place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290041-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana State Sycamores football team, Previous season\nThe Sycamores finished the 2018 season 7\u20134, 5\u20133 in MVFC play to finish in a tie for third place. Despite being ranked in the top 25 at the end of the regular season, they were not selected to participate in the FCS Playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290041-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana State Sycamores football team, Preseason, MVFC poll\nIn the MVFC preseason poll released on July 29, 2019, the Sycamores were predicted to finish in fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290041-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana State Sycamores football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013MVFC team\nThe Sycamores had five players selected to the preseason all-MVFC team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290041-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana State Sycamores football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013American team\nThe Sycamores had one player, Jonas Griffith \u2013 LB, selected to the preseason All-American team. Griffith was also named to the Buck Buchanan Award-watch list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 82], "content_span": [83, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290041-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Indiana State Sycamores football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013American team\nRyan Boyle was named to the \"College Football Performance Award\" Watch List.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 82], "content_span": [83, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500\nThe 2019 Indianapolis 500 (branded as the 103rd Running of the Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge for sponsorship reasons) was an IndyCar Series event held on Sunday, May 26, 2019, at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Speedway, Indiana. The premier event of the 2019 IndyCar Series, the event ran 500 miles (200 laps). Simon Pagenaud won the race from the pole position, earning Team Penske's record-extending 18th Indy 500 victory. Pagenaud led 116 laps, taking the lead for the final time with just over one lap to go. He became the first French-born winner since Gaston Chevrolet in 1920, and the first pole-sitter to win the race since 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500\nThe month of May activities formally began on May 11 with the IndyCar Grand Prix on the combined road course. Practice for the Indianapolis 500 began on Tuesday, May 14, and time trials were held May 18\u201319. Carb Day, the traditional final day of practice, as well as the annual Pit Stop Challenge and Indy Lights Freedom 100, were held May 24. Simon Pagenaud became the second driver in a row to sweep both the IndyCar Grand Prix and the Indy 500 in the same year. Pagenaud also won the pole position, the record-extending 18th Indy 500 pole for Team Penske.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500\nWill Power, the winner in 2018, entered the race as the defending champion. During the Last Row Shootout on May 19, former Formula 1 World Champion Fernando Alonso, attempting his second Indy 500, was bumped from the field, and failed to qualify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500\nThis would be the final Indianapolis 500 held under the ownership of the Hulman/George family. On November 3, 2019, it was announced that Penske Entertainment Corp., a subsidiary of the Penske Corporation, owned by Roger Penske, had purchased the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, the IndyCar Series, and IMS Productions. The sale was finalized in January 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Race background, Track changes\nA recycled polyethylene (RPE) binding agent was applied to the oval track surface; six drivers participated in an aero and tire test at the track in October 2018 following the application.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 53], "content_span": [54, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Race background, Qualifying changes\nA revised qualifying procedure was announced, modifying the Two-day format utilized from 2014 to 2018. Qualifying will continue to be held over two days (Saturday, May 18 & Sunday, May 19), but bumping will be moved back to Sunday. Both the familiar Fast Nine Shootout and a new Last Row Shootout will be held Sunday. Cars will continue to use the traditional four-lap qualifying attempts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 58], "content_span": [59, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Race background, 2019 IndyCar Series\nFive different drivers won the first five races of the 2019 IndyCar Series season. Josef Newgarden won the season-opening race at St. Petersburg. Series rookie Colton Herta won the inaugural race at Circuit of the Americas, in doing so became the youngest driver ever to win an Indy car race. Takuma Sato then won the race at Birmingham, and Alexander Rossi won at Long Beach. The month of May opened with Simon Pagenaud winning the IndyCar Grand Prix, his first win since 2017 and third win in the event. Entering the Indianapolis 500, Josef Newgarden led the championship points standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 59], "content_span": [60, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Race background, 2019 IndyCar Series\nFor the first time since 2015, no oval races were held prior to Indianapolis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 59], "content_span": [60, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Race background, Sponsorship\nOn January 31, 2019, it was announced that the online financial services company Gainbridge would become the new presenting sponsor of the 500 under a four-year deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Entry list\nThe official entry list was released with 36 car/driver combinations. All chassis are Dallara IR12, with Firestone tires.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Schedule\nAn open test on the oval was scheduled for and held April 24, 2019 followed by a private manufacturer's test on the combined road course on April 29.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Schedule\n* Includes days where trackactivity was significantly limited due to rain", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Testing, August 2018\nOn August 6, 2018 a private test was conducted at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway oval by Firestone. Two teams, one each representing Chevrolet and Honda, participated. Team Penske with driver Will Power tested for Chevy, and Chip Ganassi Racing with driver Scott Dixon tested for Honda. The test was focused on further development to the UAK18 universal aero kits which debuted in 2018. After some criticism during the 2018 race, improvements were made to the front wing endplate and underwing panels to address stability issues. Speeds were not announced, and no incidents were reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Testing, October 2018\nA series-conducted test was scheduled for October 17, 2018 at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Six teams tested with six cars, further developing aerodynamic specifications for the UAK18 universal aero kit as well as Firestone tires. In addition, the drivers were able to experience for the first time the performance of the Speedway's pavement, which was recently upgraded with an application of the asphalt binding agent Recycled Polyethylene (RPE).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Testing, October 2018\nNo speeds were announced, and no incidents were reported. Following the test, the participants expressed that the track had more grip, and the new tire was more consistent than the compound used in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Testing, Oval test \u2014 Friday April 19\nThree Indy 500 rookies took part in an oval acclimation test at Texas Motor Speedway on April 19. Ben Hanley, Colton Herta and Marcus Ericsson took part in the test, which was conducted by IndyCar officials. The test provided the drivers with high-speed oval experience prior to the start of the Rookie Orientation Program. Conditions were reported as windy, and no incidents were reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 59], "content_span": [60, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Time trials, Bump Day/Pole Day \u2014 Sunday May 19, Last Row Shootout\nThe six cars that failed to qualify on Saturday participated in the Last Row Shootout. Each car was permitted one qualifying attempt to fill positions 31-32-33. The three remaining cars would fail to qualify. Rain delayed the start of the Last Row Shootout until 4:30 p.m. The teams had been permitted only a brief practice session Sunday morning before weather moved into the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 88], "content_span": [89, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Time trials, Bump Day/Pole Day \u2014 Sunday May 19, Last Row Shootout\nAfter struggling during practice, and after managing only 33rd on Saturday, Sage Karam set the fastest speed of the session. After crashing and failing to make the top 30 on Saturday, James Hinchcliffe also qualified solidly. Fernando Alonso of McLaren found himself sitting on the bubble with only one car remaining in line. Second-year driver Kyle Kaiser of Juncos Racing was the final driver to make an attempt. Going into the month, the sponsorship for the Juncos team fell through. They suffered a crash in practice on Friday, and ranked last after Saturday's qualifying session. With zero practice laps on the day, Kaiser dramatically bumped out Alonso by 0.0129 seconds to make the starting field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 88], "content_span": [89, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Time trials, Bump Day/Pole Day \u2014 Sunday May 19, Last Row Shootout\nAll three cars that failed to qualify were associated with Carlin (the McLaren entry was affiliated with Carlin). Charlie Kimball was the only Carlin entry to make the starting field (he had qualified 20th the day before and as such was not involved in the session). Despite an adequate budget, McLaren's effort with Fernando Alonso was riddled with mistakes, missteps, unpreparedness, and in hindsight was described as a \"comedy of errors\". During a test session at Texas, the team discovered they did not have a steering wheel. Later, a series of electrical issues cut into much-needed practice time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 88], "content_span": [89, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0018-0001", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Time trials, Bump Day/Pole Day \u2014 Sunday May 19, Last Row Shootout\nWhen Alonso crashed his primary car during practice, his backup car was not available because the team had sent it back to the paint shop when they realized it had been painted the wrong shade of orange. The painting gaffe cost the team two days of track time. One practice run on Sunday was aborted when the team realized they had made errors in their chassis setups from converting from imperial to metric units.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 88], "content_span": [89, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Time trials, Bump Day/Pole Day \u2014 Sunday May 19, Firestone Fast Nine Shootout\nTeam Penske won their record-extending 18th Indianapolis 500 pole position, as driver Simon Pagenaud took the top spot in the Fast Nine Shootout. Three-time polesitter Ed Carpenter was the third car out and set the pace early on with a four-lap average of 229.889\u00a0mph. Carpenter's fourth career pole, however, was not to be, as Pagenaud narrowly edged him out by 0.07 seconds. After a disappointing run by Will Power, which saw him drop from 2nd on Saturday to 6th on Sunday, Spencer Pigot was the last car with a chance for the pole. Pigot's first lap was quick, but his four-lap average dropped off and he qualified third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 99], "content_span": [100, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Time trials, Bump Day/Pole Day \u2014 Sunday May 19, Firestone Fast Nine Shootout\nEd Carpenter Racing qualified 2nd-3rd-4th, one of the best combined time trials result for a three-car (or larger) race team. Penske Racing qualified 1st-2nd-3rd in 1988, and 1st-3rd-4th in 2010 and 2018. Andretti Autosport also qualified 2nd-3rd-4th in 2012-2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 99], "content_span": [100, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Time trials, Bump Day/Pole Day \u2014 Sunday May 19, Firestone Fast Nine Shootout\nBecause of the earlier rain, the scheduled practice after the Fast Nine Shootout was cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 99], "content_span": [100, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Post-qualifying practice, Pit Stop Challenge\nThe annual Pit Stop Challenge was held on May 24 following the Freedom 100 Indy Lights race. Victory in the event went to Arrow Schmidt Peterson Motorsports with Marcus Ericsson's No. 7 car. The team bested Chip Ganassi Racing's No. 9 car in a best of three shoot-out. The victory marked the first time since 2004 that a team other than Chip Ganassi Racing or Team Penske had done so.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 67], "content_span": [68, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00290042-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Starting grid\nR\u00a0 = Indianapolis 500 rookie\u00a0W\u00a0 = Former Indianapolis 500 winner", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Race summary, First half\nRace day saw a high temperature of 82\u00a0\u00b0F (28\u00a0\u00b0C) with overcast skies for most of the race. Despite forecasts of thunderstorms throughout the day, the race was unaffected by precipitation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Race summary, First half\nThe start saw Simon Pagenaud pull out to the lead, with Ed Carpenter and Will Power behind. The first green flag run was short lived, with the first caution period coming after just four laps, when Colton Herta came to a halt at the exit of turn 4; a gearbox failure causing a quick end to the rookie's race. Racing resumed on lap 10, with Power moving into second place ahead of Carpenter, with Spencer Pigot running fourth. This order would remain intact until the first stops of the race, which began at lap 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0026-0001", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Race summary, First half\nAfter the stops, the top 3 remained the same, while Josef Newgarden moved to fourth. During the pit sequence, H\u00e9lio Castroneves and James Davison collided in the pit lane, resulting in Davison spinning. Castroneves was handed a drive-through penalty for the incident. At lap 54, Ben Hanley became the race's second retirement, as a broken halfshaft brought an end to the DragonSpeed car's day, though Hanley managed to bring the car back to pit lane without the need for a caution period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Race summary, First half\nThe second round of stops came beginning at lap 62, though just before this, Carpenter managed to get back around Power for second. Scott Dixon led his first laps of the day during this period, having saved enough fuel to stay out until lap 71. During this pit sequence, Jordan King was involved in a pit lane incident where he slid long in his box at hit one of his tire changers; the crew member suffered a leg injury and was transported to a local hospital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0027-0001", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Race summary, First half\nJust as the pit sequence ended, the second caution of the day came, as Kyle Kaiser crashed his car in turn 4, ending the day for the Juncos Racing entry. During the caution, Power was moved to the back of the field as a penalty for hitting one of his pit crew members during his previous pit stop. The running order now ran Pagenaud, Carpenter, Alexander Rossi, Newgarden, and S\u00e9bastien Bourdais.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Race summary, First half\nRacing resumed at lap 78 with the running order remaining largely the same until the next round of pit stops, starting around lap 99. Rossi led his first laps of the day during the pit sequence after managing to stay out until lap 106, but a slower pit stop dropped him back behind Newgarden and Bourdais. Scott Dixon led again, staying out to lap 111.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Race summary, Second half\nDespite the slow stop, Alexander Rossi quickly climbed back up the order, and by lap 112 was in second place and fighting with leader Simon Pagenaud. The two remained close until the next round of stops, beginning at lap 128. Rossi suffered an even slower pit stop when he came in on lap 136 when the fuel nozzle failed to engage properly. Rossi was saved from falling well off the leader by the race's third caution flag. Behind Rossi, Marcus Ericsson spun coming into the pit lane, making contact with the wall with the nose of the car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0029-0001", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Race summary, Second half\nThough Ericsson's car was not damaged enough to end his race, the car had stalled and needed retrieval, necessitating the caution period. Those who had not yet stopped, including Scott Dixon, were forced to pit during the caution, placing them behind those who had already stopped. As the field prepared for the next restart, the running order was Pagenaud, Carpenter, Newgarden, Bourdais, and Rossi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Race summary, Second half\nRacing resumed at lap 148. Soon after, Josef Newgarden passed Carpenter for second and then successfully stole the lead away from his teammate Pagenaud. Pagenaud elected to stay behind Newgarden for several laps in an effort to conserve fuel and make it to the end on only one more pit stop. This lasted until lap 168, when Pagenaud passed Newgarden back just before pitting again and triggering the final round of pit stops. During the sequence, Rossi was able to jump past both Newgarden and third place Ed Carpenter thanks to the advantage of an undercut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0030-0001", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Race summary, Second half\nSoon after, Rossi passed Pagenaud for the virtual lead of the race while an off sequence Spencer Pigot led. Just as this happened, caution came for the fourth and final time of the day for a multi-pile up in turn 3. Graham Rahal and S\u00e9bastien Bourdais made contact entering the turn, causing them to crash. Behind them, Felix Rosenqvist, Zach Veach, and Charlie Kimball also lost control of their cars trying to avoid the incident. Of the five cars involved, Kimball was the only one able to continue on with the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0030-0002", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Race summary, Second half\nScott Dixon also received minor damage in the incident. Due to the lengthy necessary clean up, the race was red flagged. Bourdais was deemed to be at fault for the incident, and was handed a 30-second avoidable contact penalty, relegating him to a 30th place finish, placed behind all other drivers involved in the crash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Race summary, Finish\nAfter roughly 18 minutes, cars returned to the track, with the top five following Pigot's pit stop being Rossi, Pagenaud, Carpenter, Newgarden, and Takuma Sato, who had finally recovered from trouble during his first pit stop. Racing resumed at lap 186, with Pagenaud immediately passing Rossi in turn 1 to reclaim the lead. The two exchanged places again the next lap before Pagenaud again reclaimed the lead, with the battle cooling down for a few laps. Behind them, Sato managed to pass both Carpenter and Newgarden, placing the former winner suddenly in contention for victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0031-0001", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Race summary, Finish\nWith three laps to go, Rossi retook the lead of the race, but one lap later, Pagenaud moved back around Rossi with a pass into turn 3. Despite Rossi's efforts to reel him back in on the final lap, Pagenaud held on to take victory. The final margin of victory was 0.2 seconds, the seventh closest in the history of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Race summary, Finish\nPagenaud's victory marked the first time since 1920 that a French-born driver had won the race. It was the elusive first Indianapolis 500 win for longtime IndyCar sponsor John Menard, Jr. It also marked the first time since 2009 that the pole sitter had won. For winning, Pagenaud earned $2,669,529 out of a total purse of $13,090,536. Rookie of the Year honors went to Santino Ferrucci, who finished seventh in his Indy 500 debut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Box score\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, 32], "content_span": [33, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Broadcasting, Television\nNBC televised the race in the United States, having assumed the broadcast rights as part of a new, three-year deal to televise the entire IndyCar Series, replacing ABC for the first time since 1965 (NBCSN held cable rights over the previous contract, but selected races, including the Indianapolis 500, were part of a separate package sold to ABC). The race was called by NBC's commentary team of Leigh Diffey, Townsend Bell, and Paul Tracy. Mike Tirico served as on-air host for pre-race coverage, joined by Danica Patrick and Dale Earnhardt Jr. as analysts. Dillon Welch, whose father was a former ESPN pit reporter for the Indianapolis 500, was also a reporter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Broadcasting, Television\nPortions of pre-race activities were exclusive to NBC Sports Gold's IndyCar Pass subscription, including most practice sessions and all of the first day of qualifying with the final hour simulcast by NBCSN along with the entirety of Carb Day also simulcast. Bump and Pole Day were exclusive to NBCSN; while NBC had a scheduled window, the session was delayed due to rain, and NBC had commitments to air an NHL playoff game. The season-long broadcast team of Jake Query, Anders Krohn, and Katie Hargitt covered the Indy Lights Freedom 100. NBCSN broadcast a two-hour pre-race show and a one-hour post-race show on race day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Broadcasting, Television\nThe 2019 Indianapolis 500 saw an average of 5.4 million viewers, and a 3.9 overnight rating\u2014a 15% increase over the 2018 edition (which was the least-viewed 500 since the introduction of live flag-to-flag coverage).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Broadcasting, Television\nNBC Host: Mike TiricoNBCSN Host: Krista VodaStudio Analyst: Danica PatrickAnalyst/Features: Dale Earnhardt Jr. Features: Rutledge Wood", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Broadcasting, Radio\nThe race was carried by the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio Network. Mark Jaynes served as the chief announcer or \"Voice of the 500\" for the fourth consecutive year. For 2019, the booth announcers moved to a new location. The IMS Radio Network took over the studio formerly occupied by ABC television, on the second floor of the Pagoda renamed the Sid Collins Booth. NBC took over the booth high atop the Pagoda which the radio crew used to utilize.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0038-0001", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Broadcasting, Radio\nAs a result, the chief announcer no longer had a clear view of turn one, and the separate turn one announcer (which was left vacant multiple times in the past several years) was brought back once again. Nick Yeoman took the prestigious turn one reporting location, as Jerry Baker was now permanently retired from the crew but was working with the public address department.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290042-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00290042-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis 500, Broadcasting, Radio\nTurn 1: Nick YeomanTurn 2: Michael YoungTurn 3: Jake QueryTurn 4: Chris Denari", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290043-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis City-County Council election\nThe 2019 Indianapolis City\u2013County Council elections took place on November 5, 2019. With all 25 seats up for election. Before the elections Democrats held a 14\u201311-seat majority. Primaries for the council were held May 7, 2019. Following the elections Democrats expanded their control of the council with a 20\u20135 majority. This marked the first time in Indianapolis history that Democrats would hold a super majority on the council. In the Indianapolis mayoral election held at the same time, Democrat Joe Hogsett beat Republican Jim Merritt 72% to 27%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290044-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis Colts season\nThe 2019 season was the Indianapolis Colts' 67th in the National Football League (NFL) and their 36th in Indianapolis. It was also their second season under head coach Frank Reich and third under the leadership of general manager Chris Ballard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290044-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis Colts season\nFor the first time since 2011, quarterback Andrew Luck was not on the roster, as he announced his retirement on August 24, 2019. A four-time Pro Bowler and the top pick in the 2012 Draft, Luck led the Colts to four playoff appearances (2012\u20132014, 2018), an appearance in the AFC Championship Game in the 2014 season (the franchise's only time doing so in the post-Peyton Manning era), and won the NFL Comeback Player of the Year award in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290044-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis Colts season\nA four-year cycle of injuries and rehab that dated back to 2015 had \"taken his joy of this game away,\" which led to his decision of retiring. This would also mark kicker Adam Vinatieri's last season in the NFL, after playing 24 years in the league, as he would spend the entire 2020 season in free agency before retiring on May 26, 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290044-0001-0002", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis Colts season\nA four-time Super Bowl champion with the Colts and New England Patriots, Vinatieri is considered one of the greatest kickers of all time and made memorable game-winning plays with the Patriots in games such as the Tuck Rule Game and Super Bowls XXXVI and XXXVIII. Vinatieri was also the last remaining active player whose career began in the 1990s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290044-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis Colts season\nDespite a strong 5\u20132 start, the Colts would go on to lose 7 of their next 9 games, being eliminated from playoff contention after a Week 15 loss to the New Orleans Saints. This late-season collapse was partially a result of injuries to key skill players such as QB Jacoby Brissett, WR T. Y. Hilton, RB Marlon Mack and TE Eric Ebron. They also failed to improve or match their 10\u20136 record from the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290044-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis Colts season\nDespite the disappointing season, the Colts managed to defeat the eventual Super Bowl champions the Kansas City Chiefs and limit the Chiefs offense to only 13 points, which at the time was the least points allowed to the Chiefs since Patrick Mahomes became the starter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290044-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis Colts season, Preseason\nThe team was rocked by the decision August 24 by starting quarterback Andrew Luck that he would immediately retire from professional football due to chronic injury problems and the emotional and mental strain they had extracted. Luck, the 2018 NFL Comeback Player of the Year, had been battling a mysterious and slow-healing leg injury, described by the team variously as a \"calf strain\" and a \"high ankle issue.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290044-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis Colts season, Preseason\nLuck, a 7-year professional with four appearances in the NFL Pro Bowl, indicated that he had been contemplating leaving the game for a week-and-a-half or two weeks prior to his announcement; he had been speaking with team officials about the matter all week. In a news conference Luck indicated that his recurring injuries had \"taken my joy of this game away.... After 2016, I played in pain and was unable to practice, I said I wouldn't go through that again.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290044-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis Colts season, Preseason\nThe team moved forward with former New England Patriots backup Jacoby Brissett, a third-year Colt, as its designated starting quarterback.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290044-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis Colts season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Jacksonville Jaguars\nThe Colts would defeat the Jacksonville Jaguars for the team's 300th win in the Indianapolis era with a record of 300\u2013267.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 97], "content_span": [98, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290045-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indianapolis mayoral election\nAn election for Mayor of Indianapolis was held on November 5, 2019. Joe Hogsett, the incumbent mayor, sought and won reelection for a second term in office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes\nThe 2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes were a series of armed clashes consisting of cross-border airstrikes and exchanges of gunfire between India and Pakistan across the de facto border in the disputed Kashmir region, which is subject to extensive territorial claims by both countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes\nThe heightened tensions stemmed from the 14 February 2019 Pulwama attack in Jammu and Kashmir, which killed 40 Indian Central Reserve Police Force personnel. Responsibility for the attack was claimed by a Pakistan-based militant group, Jaish-e-Mohammed. India blamed Pakistan for the attack and promised a robust response, while the latter condemned the attack and denied having any connection to it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes\nTwelve days later, in the early morning of 26 February 2019, India carried out a cross-border airstrike near Balakot, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes\nPakistan's military, the first to announce the airstrike that same morning, claimed that Indian warplanes had crossed the international border and dropped their payload in an uninhabited wooded hilltop area near Balakot in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. India, confirming the airstrike later that day, characterized it to be a preemptive strike directed against a terrorist training camp, and claimed that it had caused the deaths of a \"large number\" of terrorists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes\nThe second airstrike, a retaliatory one by Pakistan, was conducted in the daytime on February 27, inside Indian-administered Kashmir. A dogfight between Indian and Pakistani fighter jets during this airstrike resulted in the downing of an Indian MiG-21 Bison by the Pakistan Air Force, following which its pilot, Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman, was taken prisoner by the Pakistani military before being returned to India on March 1. An Indian Mi-17 helicopter was brought down by friendly fire in which all six airmen on board were killed; this was acknowledged by India on 4 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes\nAnalyses of open-source satellite imagery by the American Atlantic Council's Digital Forensics Laboratory, San Francisco-based Planet Labs, European Space Imaging and the Australian Strategic Policy Institute concluded that India did not hit any targets of significance on the Jaba hilltop site near Balakot in Pakistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes\nOn 10 April 2019, one and a half month later, a group of international journalists, who were taken to the Jaba hilltop in a tightly controlled trip arranged by the Pakistani government, although unable to make a knowledgeable evaluation, found the largest building there to show no evidence of damage or recent rebuilding efforts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Background\nIndia and Pakistan have long been at odds with each other, having engaged in several wars, conflicts, and military standoffs. The roots of the continued tension are complex, but have centred mainly around the erstwhile princely state of Jammu and Kashmir. After the 1947 Partition of India, the newly formed independent states of Pakistan and India squabbled over it, which led to the Indo-Pakistani War of 1947\u20131948 and a subsequent sharing of the state. The settlement was non-agreeable to both the parties and since then, this had become an ongoing intractable issue leading to a war in 1965. The nations also partook in another war in 1971 which led to the formation of Bangladesh. Both countries developed nuclear weapons in the 1990s and this had a sobering effect on the next major conflict \u2013 the 1999 Kargil War.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 871]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Background\nAs of now, the Line of Control demarcates the areas of administration: Pakistan administers the territory to the northwest of the line; India administers the territory to the southeast. Since 1989, a militant-fueled insurgency has raged in Indian-administered Kashmir, driven by a desire for either independence or union with Pakistan. The United Nations has stated Pakistan was providing material support to the militants and stated India was committing human rights violations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Background\nThe standoff occurred ahead of the 2019 Indian general election. After the Pulwama attack, Pakistan's PM attributed Indian government's desire to retaliate against Pakistan to the upcoming election. The Indian government rejected the allegation. Many analysts have stated that a military response to Pakistan would improve the electoral prospects of India's ruling party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Military events, Pulwama attack\nThe 2019 India\u2013Pakistan military standoff was a result of a militant attack in February 2019, when a Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) convoy carrying security personnel on the Jammu-Srinagar National Highway was attacked by a vehicle-borne suicide bomber at Lethpora in the Pulwama district, Jammu and Kashmir, India. Over 40 CRPF personnel and the perpetrator were killed in the attack, which Jaish-e-Mohammed took responsibility for. The attacker was identified as Adil Ahmad Dar, a militant from Jammu and Kashmir, and a member of Jaish-e-Mohammed. This was the deadliest attack on Indian forces in Kashmir since 1989.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 70], "content_span": [71, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Military events, Balakot airstrike\nOn 26 February 2019, the Indian Air Force conducted airstrikes at Balakot in Pakistan. The strikes were subsequently stated to be \"non-military\" and \"preemptive\" in nature; targeting a Jaish-e-Mohammed facility within Pakistan. The Indian government stated that the airstrike was in retaliation to the Pulwama attack and that \"a very large number of JeM terrorists, trainers, senior commanders and groups of jihadis\" were eliminated who were preparing for launching another suicide attack targeting Indian assets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Military events, Balakot airstrike\nIndian media reported to have confirmed from official sources that twelve Mirage 2000 jets were involved in the operation and that they struck multiple militant camps in Balakot, Chakothi and Muzaffarabad operated by Jaish-e-Mohammed, Lashkar-e-Taiba and Hizbul Mujahideen, killing about 350 militants. The exact figures varied across media-houses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Military events, Balakot airstrike\nPakistani officials acknowledged the intrusion of Indian aircraft into the country's airspace but rejected the statements about the results. They stated that the Indian jets were intercepted and that the payloads were dropped in unpopulated areas and resulted in no casualties or infrastructural damage. Pervez Khattak, the Pakistani Defence Minister, stated that the Pakistani Air Force did not retaliate at that time because \"they could not gauge the extent of the damage\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Military events, Balakot airstrike\nBusiness Today India stated that the area around Balakot had been cordoned off by the Pakistan Army and evidences such as the dead bodies were being cleared from the area. Praveen Swami writing for Firstpost said that Indian intelligence estimated a figure of about 20 casualties and that there were five confirmed kills per burial records. He also said there was a JeM rally in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa on 28 February, wherein Masood Azhar's brother, Abdul Rauf Rasheed Alvi mentioned India's attack of their headquarters and vowed revenge. In another piece he stated that RAW analysts estimated 90 casualties including three Pakistani Army trainers, based on intercepted communications. Swami also said there was a lack of witness testimony to independently assess the validity of above statements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 868]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Military events, Balakot airstrike\nThis airstrike was the first time since the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971 that aerial attacks had been carried out across the Line of Control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Military events, Balakot airstrike\nVillagers from the area said that four bombs struck a nearby forest and a field resulting in damage to a building and injuring a local man around 3:00 AM. On 28 February 2019, Pakistani Reuters reporters Asif Shahzad, Abu Arqam Naqash reported that the structure and its vicinity (of the bomb site) to be intact from the rear, however on 8 March 2019, the Reuters media team was prevented for third time from climbing hill to the closely guarded madrasa site in Balakot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Military events, Balakot airstrike\nSome diplomats and analysts have raised doubts about the efficacy of the strike, stating that the terrorist groups along the border would have vacated the area, after the Indian Prime Minister vowed to retaliate against the Pulwama attack. The local people varied as to the purpose of the facility. Whilst some stated it being an active Jaish training camp, others stated it to have been a mere school for the local kids and that such militant camps had used to exist far earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0017-0001", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Military events, Balakot airstrike\nSatellite-data analysis by Nathan Ruser, from the Australian Strategic Policy Institute said there was an absence of any apparent evidence to verify Indian statements. Michael Sheldon, a digital forensics analyst at the Atlantic Council, did an independent investigation on the issue, in which he said that no damage was caused to any infrastructure around the target site. He concluded that \"something appears to have gone wrong in the targeting process\", which was mysterious in light of the autonomous nature of the missiles reportedly used. However, Pakistan had to close the site for one and a half month or 43 days before opened to foreign delegates and media.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Military events, Balakot airstrike\nThe Indian officials stated that synthetic aperture radar showed that four buildings had been destroyed. Vice-Marshal RGK Kapoor of the Indian Air Force said on 28 February 2019 that though it was \"premature\" to provide details about the casualties, they had \"fairly credible evidence\" of the damage inflicted on the camp by the air strikes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Military events, Border skirmishes\nHeavy skirmishes between Pakistani and Indian forces occurred along the Line of Control on 26 February, with small arms and mortar fire being exchanged. Pakistani officials reported that at least four civilians were killed, and eleven were wounded. A 55-year-old woman and her two children were killed in the Nakyal sector. In the Khuiratta sector, a 40-year-old woman was killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Military events, Border skirmishes\nThroughout 27 February, heavy exchanges of fire between Indian and Pakistani forces continued along the Line of Control. Ten Indian soldiers were injured along with two residential houses being destroyed in the skirmishes. The Pakistani Army stated that on March 1, two of its soldiers were killed by firing from the Indian Army at the Line of Control. Shelling across the Line of Control killed a Kashmiri woman and her two sons after a shell landed on their home, with another civilian being critically wounded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0020-0001", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Military events, Border skirmishes\nOn 6 and 7 March, Pakistani and Indian forces exchanged heavy artillery fire along the line of control, with Pakistani forces using 130\u00a0mm and 105\u00a0mm artillery and 120\u00a0mm mortars. In response to the Pakistani artillery fire, the Indian army began utilizing 155mm FH77B Bofors cannons against Pakistani positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Military events, Retaliatory airstrikes, capture and release of pilot\nOn 27 February, Pakistani military officials announced that Pakistan had carried out an airstrike against multiple targets in Jammu and Kashmir. A military spokesman claimed that the Pakistan Air Force (PAF) was able to lock onto Indian military installations, but opted to drop weapons into open areas instead, \"to avoid human loss and collateral damage. Pakistan's Prime Minister Imran Khan said that the airstrikes only aimed to \"send a message\" and appealed for negotiations to avoid a full-blown war.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 108], "content_span": [109, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0021-0001", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Military events, Retaliatory airstrikes, capture and release of pilot\nThe spokesman further said that the Pakistan Air Force had shot down two Indian aircraft after they encroached on Pakistan's airspace, one of which fell in Pakistan administered Kashmir while the other fell in Indian administered Kashmir. It was also stated that Pakistan Army had captured two Indian pilots, one of whom was said to be injured and taken to the Combined Military Hospital. But a subsequent statement revised the count down to one\u2013Abhinandan Varthaman, a Wing Commander. The other pilot Pakistan Army claimed to have captured and taken to the Combined Military Hospital is claimed to be the downed F-16 pilot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 108], "content_span": [109, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Military events, Retaliatory airstrikes, capture and release of pilot\nIndia rejected this version of events and stated to have \"successfully foiled\" Pakistan's attempt to \"target military installations\". An Indian Air Force (IAF) official statement hours after the airstrike stated that bombs had been dropped on Indian army formation compounds, but there was no damage to military installations. The Indian military later stated that three Pakistan Air Force jets had crossed the Line of Control (LoC) from Nowshera, Jammu and Kashmir and had dropped bombs over Nadian, Laam Jhangar, Kerri in Rajouri District and Hamirpur area of Bhimber Galli in Poonch, before being pushed back by six Indian airforce jets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 108], "content_span": [109, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0022-0001", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Military events, Retaliatory airstrikes, capture and release of pilot\nThere were no damage or casualties. Raveesh Kumar from the Indian Ministry of External Affairs also stated that a Pakistani aircraft of the sortie was shot down by the Indian Air Force in the process. Indian defence sources initially contradicted Pakistan's statement of capturing a pilot but subsequently the Indian Ministry of External Affairs confirmed that an Indian pilot was missing in action after a MiG-21 Bison fighter plane was lost while engaging with Pakistani jets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 108], "content_span": [109, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Military events, Retaliatory airstrikes, capture and release of pilot\nThe retaliatory air strikes coupled with the capture of the Indian pilot led to a heightened state of military alert. Tanks were deployed to the border in the Pakistani side whilst several Kashmiri residents reportedly fled their homes and painted their homes with red-cross signs to avert air-strikes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 108], "content_span": [109, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Military events, Retaliatory airstrikes, capture and release of pilot\nPakistan released the captured pilot on 1 March, describing the move as a gesture of peace. The Indian Air Force though stated that the pilot's release was an obligation under the Geneva Conventions. The Indian media also criticized Pakistan's release of his photographs and interrogation videos to be against the protocols of the convention. A video published by the state just prior to his release that showed him praising Pakistani Army and condemning Indian media was criticized for being heavily edited.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 108], "content_span": [109, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Military events, Naval intrusion\nOn 5 March, the Pakistani Navy claimed to have successfully warded off an intrusion attempt by an Indian submarine into its territorial waters and released a video of a surfaced submarine. The Indian Navy subsequently rejected these statements as \"false propaganda.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 71], "content_span": [72, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Other incidents, Closure of Pakistani airspace\nOn 27 February, Pakistan cancelled all commercial flights and closed its airspace until the midnight of 28 February. A NOTAM was issued by the Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority to close the airspace. Airlines were required to reroute or cancel their flights with routes planned over Pakistan. On 1 March, the NOTAM closing the airspace was extended until 8:00 AM (UTC) on 4 March with 23 exceptions listed. Pakistan's airspace was closed for flights crossing the country's airspace except for arriving and departing flights at major airports in Pakistan. The airspace closure was again repeatedly extended,. The Pakistan finally opened its airspace for all civilian aircraft on 15 July 2019, after 140 days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 85], "content_span": [86, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Other incidents, Closure of Pakistani airspace\nIndia did not close down its civilian air traffic and only the Srinagar airspace was closed for 2\u20133 hours on the day of the skirmish. However the Pakistani flights were allowed usage of Indian airspace only after 15 July when Pakistan opened up its airspace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 85], "content_span": [86, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Other incidents, Closure of Pakistani airspace\nThe airspace closure led to a loss of US$100 Million for Pakistan due to the skipping of its airspace by an average of 400 aircraft daily. Air India suffered loss of \u20b9491 Crore till 2 July, as it had to reroute its flights that were affected by the closure of Pakistani airspace. Similarly private Indian airlines SpiceJet lost \u20b9 30.73 crore, IndiGo lost \u20b9 25.1 crore and GoAir lost \u20b9 2.1 crore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 85], "content_span": [86, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Other incidents, Suspension of Samjhauta Express\nOn 28 February, Samjhauta Express, a train that runs twice weekly between India and Pakistan, was suspended by the government of Pakistan. It was scheduled to depart from Lahore with 16 passengers, who were stranded there. On 4 March, Pakistan, and consequently India, resumed the operations of Samjhauta Express.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 87], "content_span": [88, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Other incidents, Pakistan arrests suspected militants\nOn 5 March, Pakistan arrested 44 members of various groups, including the Jaish-e-Muhammad. Some of those arrested had been named by India in a dossier it gave to Pakistan in the aftermath of the Pulwama attack. Pakistan said those arrested will be held for at least 14 days, and if India provided further evidence they would be prosecuted. Among those arrested were relatives of JeM leader Masood Azhar, including his son Hamad Azhar and his brother Abdul Rauf.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 92], "content_span": [93, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Peace Offer\nBoth Prime Minister Imran Khan of Pakistan and Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi agreed on a peace offer on 22 March 2019 ending hostilities and vowed to fight against terrorism together.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 50], "content_span": [51, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Aftermath, Revocation of special status and August border clashes\nOn 5 August 2019, the Government of India revoked the special status granted to Jammu and Kashmir", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 104], "content_span": [105, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Aftermath, Revocation of special status and August border clashes\nOn 15 August Pakistan and Indian forces exchanged fire over the disputed frontier in Kashmir, leaving 3 Pakistani soldiers dead and two civilians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 104], "content_span": [105, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Aftermath, Revocation of special status and August border clashes\nOn 21 August the Indian-administered Kasmir police informed about a gun battle that left a rebel and a police officer killed. The deceased militant was a member of Lashkar-e-Taiba a terror organization.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 104], "content_span": [105, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Aftermath, Artillery strike\nThe Statesman reported that 18 terrorists and 16 Pakistani soldiers were killed when Indian Army launched artillery strikes on terrorist camps in Neelum valley on October 19 and 20. Mohammad Faisal, however, said that five Pakistani civilians had died.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290046-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, International reaction\nA number of nations, including Australia, Canada, China, Indonesia, Malaysia, Sri Lanka, the United Arab Emirates, and the United States, expressed their concern, with some calling for restraint. Iran and Turkey have each offered to mediate the crisis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290047-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IndieWire Critics Poll\nThe winners of the 2019 IndieWire Critics Poll were announced on December 16, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290048-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Individual Ice Racing World Championship\nThe 2019 FIM Ice Speedway World Championship was the 54th edition of the FIM Individual Ice Racing World Championship season. The world champion was determined by ten races hosted in five cities Almata, Shadrinsk, Berlin, Inzell and Heerenveen between 2 February and 31 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290048-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Individual Ice Racing World Championship\nDaniil Ivanov won the World Championship series to become world champion for the third time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290049-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Individual Long Track World Championship\nThe 2019 Individual Long Track/Grasstrack World Championship is the 49th edition of the FIM speedway Individual Long Track World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290050-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Individual Speedway Junior European Championship\nThe 2019 European Individual Speedway Junior Championship (also known as the 2019 Speedway European Under 21 Championship) was the 22nd edition of the Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290050-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Individual Speedway Junior European Championship\nThe final was staged at Rivne in the Ukraine and was won by Wiktor Lampart of Poland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290051-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Individual Speedway Junior World Championship\nThe 2019 Individual Speedway Under 21 World Championship was the 43rd edition of the FIM Individual Under-21 World Championship. It was staged over three rounds, at Lublin, G\u00fcstrow and Pardubice. Poland's Bartosz Smekta\u0142a was the defending champion having won the title in 2018 but it was fellow Pole Maksym Drabik that won the title, to become the third rider in history to win the event twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290051-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Individual Speedway Junior World Championship, Classification\nThe meeting classification is according to the points scored during the meeting, with the total points scored by each rider during each meeting credited as World Championship points. The FIM Speedway Under 21 World Champion will be the rider who collects the most World Championship points at the end of the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 66], "content_span": [67, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290052-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia Masters (badminton)\nThe 2019 Indonesia Masters (officially known as the Daihatsu Indonesia Masters 2019 for sponsorship reasons) was a badminton tournament that took place at the Istora Gelora Bung Karno in Indonesia from 22 to 27 January 2019 and had a total purse of $350,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290052-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia Masters (badminton), Tournament\nThe 2019 Indonesia Masters was the third tournament of the 2019 BWF World Tour and also part of the Indonesian Masters championships, which had been held since 2010. This tournament was organized by the Badminton Association of Indonesia with sanction from the BWF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290052-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia Masters (badminton), Tournament, Venue\nThis international tournament was held at the Istora Gelora Bung Karno in Jakarta, Indonesia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290052-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia Masters (badminton), Tournament, Point distribution\nBelow is the point distribution table for each phase of the tournament based on the BWF points system for the BWF World Tour Super 500 event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290052-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia Masters (badminton), Tournament, Prize money\nThe total prize money for this tournament was US$350,000. Distribution of prize money was in accordance with BWF regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290053-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia Masters Super 100\nThe 2019 Indonesia Masters Super 100 (officially known as the Yuzu Indonesia Masters 2019 for sponsorship reasons) was a badminton tournament which took place at Ken Arok Sports Hall in Malang, Indonesia, from 1 to 6 October 2019 and had a total purse of $75,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290053-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia Masters Super 100, Tournament\nThe 2019 Indonesia Masters Super 100 was the eighth Super 100 tournament of the 2019 BWF World Tour and also part of the Indonesia Masters Super 100 championships, which had been held since 2018. This tournament was organized by the Badminton Association of Indonesia and sanctioned by the BWF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290053-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia Masters Super 100, Tournament, Venue\nThis international tournament was held at Ken Arok Sports Hall in Malang, East Java, Indonesia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290053-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia Masters Super 100, Tournament, Point distribution\nBelow is the point distribution table for each phase of the tournament based on the BWF points system for the BWF Tour Super 100 event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290053-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia Masters Super 100, Tournament, Prize money\nThe total prize money for this tournament was US$75,000. Distribution of prize money was in accordance with BWF regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290054-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia Open (badminton)\nThe 2019 Indonesia Open (officially known as the BLIBLI Indonesia Open 2019 for sponsorship reasons) was a BWF World Tour 1000 event which took place at Istora Gelora Bung Karno in Jakarta, Indonesia, from 16 to 21 July 2019. It had a total purse of $1,250,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290054-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia Open (badminton), Tournament\nThe 2019 Indonesia Open was the fourteenth tournament of the 2019 BWF World Tour and also part of the Indonesia Open championships, which has been held since 1982. This tournament was organized by Badminton Association of Indonesia and sanctioned by the BWF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290054-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia Open (badminton), Tournament, Venue\nThis international tournament was held at Istora Gelora Bung Karno in Jakarta, Indonesia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290054-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia Open (badminton), Tournament, Point distribution\nBelow is the point distribution table for each phase of the tournament based on the BWF points system for the BWF World Tour Super 1000 event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290054-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia Open (badminton), Tournament, Prize money\nThe total prize money for this year's tournament was US$1,250,000. Distribution of prize money was in accordance with BWF regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290055-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia President's Cup\nThe 2019 Indonesia President's Cup (Indonesian: Piala Presiden 2019) was the fourth edition of Indonesia President's Cup, held by the Football Association of Indonesia (PSSI) as a pre-season tournament for the 2019 Liga 1. The tournament started on 2 March and finished on 12 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290055-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia President's Cup\nPersija were the defending champions, but they were eliminated in the quarter-finals by Kalteng Putra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290055-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia President's Cup\nArema won the finals 4\u20132 on aggregate against Persebaya for their second Indonesia President's Cup title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290055-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia President's Cup, Teams\nThe following 20 teams (18 from Liga 1 and two from Liga 2) participated for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290055-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia President's Cup, Draw\nThe draw of the tournament was held on 19 February 2019 at the Sultan Hotel, Senayan in Jakarta. The draw resulted in the following groups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 36], "content_span": [37, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290055-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia President's Cup, Venues\nUnlike the previous three seasons, all the venues for the group stage were on the Java Island. The five venues that use for the group stage of the tournament were Patriot Candrabhaga Stadium in Bekasi, Jalak Harupat Stadium in Bandung, Moch. Soebroto Stadium in Magelang, Maguwoharjo Stadium in Sleman, and Kanjuruhan Stadium in Malang.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290055-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia President's Cup, Format\nIn this tournament, 20 teams were drawn into five groups consisting of four teams each. The teams in each group would play a round robin system. After the group stage, the five group winners and three best runners-ups would advance to the knockout stage, starting with the quarter-finals. If the quarter-final matches were held in one venue in the previous season, then the matches would be held in group stage winners' home stadium according to the quarter-finals drawing results this season. Two teams qualified for the finals would be played two-legged fixtures and there was no third-place play-off match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290055-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia President's Cup, Group stage\nThe top teams of each group and the three best runner-up teams advanced to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290055-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia President's Cup, Knockout stage\nReferring to tournament regulations, the teams entitled to host the quarter-finals were the four best group winners. Therefore, Bhayangkara, Persija, Persela, and Persebaya were the hosts. The draw for the quarter-finals was held on 19 March 2019 at Sultan Hotel, Senayan in Jakarta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290055-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia President's Cup, Knockout stage\nThere was no extra time rule applied in the quarter-finals. If a match ended with a draw, it would go straight to a penalty shoot-out to determine the winner. Extra time rule and a penalty shoot-out would be used in the semi-finals and finals, if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290055-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia President's Cup, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 124 goals scored in 40 matches, for an average of 3.1 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290055-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia President's Cup, Statistics, Tournament team rankings\nAs per statistical convention in football, matches decided in extra time were counted as wins and losses, while matches decided by penalty shoot-outs were counted as draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 68], "content_span": [69, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290056-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia President's Cup Finals\nThe 2019 Indonesia President's Cup Finals was the two-legged final that decided the winner of the 2019 Indonesia President's Cup, the fourth season of Indonesia's pre-season premier club football tournament organised by PSSI.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290056-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia President's Cup Finals\nUnlike all the previous editions, it was a two-legged match home-and-away format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290056-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia President's Cup Finals\nThe finals was contested between local rivals Persebaya and Arema. The first leg was hosted by Persebaya at Gelora Bung Tomo in Surabaya on 9 April, while the second leg was hosted by Arema at Kanjuruhan in Malang three days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290056-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia President's Cup Finals\nArema won the finals 4\u20132 on aggregate for their second Indonesia President's Cup title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290056-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia President's Cup Finals, Road to the final\nNote: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first (H: home; A: away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290056-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia President's Cup Finals, Format\nThe final was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. The away goals rule would be applied, and extra time would be played if the aggregate score was tied after the second leg and away goals rule. If the aggregate score was still tied after extra time, a penalty shoot-out would have been used to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290057-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia Pro Futsal League\n2019 Indonesia Pro Futsal League will be twelfth season of Indonesia Pro Futsal League that organized by Indonesian Futsal Federation, as well as the fourth season of the futsal competition under the name \"Pro Futsal League\". Sixteen Indonesian futsal clubs will compete for this competition, with four clubs from the 2018 Nusantara Futsal League semi-finalists. Vamos Mataram are the defending champions from the last season. This season will start from 8 December 2018 until the final stage on 7 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290057-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia Pro Futsal League, Teams\nThere are 16 futsal teams that will be competing in this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290057-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia Pro Futsal League, Schedules and venues\nEight venues in eight cities in Indonesia will host 2019 Indonesia Pro Futsal League from the group stage. Group stage will be held from 8 December 2018 until 24 March 2019, meanwhile the knockout stage will be held on 6 and 7 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290057-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia Pro Futsal League, Schedules and venues\nMeanwhile, the schedule of the Indonesia Pro Futsal League 2019 group stage is as follows below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290057-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia Pro Futsal League, Final Four stage\nFinal Four stage will be played on 30 and 31 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290058-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesia national football team results\nThe following article is a summary of the 2019 Indonesia national football team results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election\nGeneral elections were held in Indonesia on 17 April 2019. For the first time in the country's history, the president, the vice president, members of the People's Consultative Assembly (MPR), and members of local legislative bodies were elected on the same day with over 190 million eligible voters. Sixteen parties participated in the elections nationally, including four new parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election\nThe presidential election, the fourth in the country's history, used a direct, simple majority system, with incumbent president Joko Widodo, known as Jokowi, running for re-election with senior Muslim cleric Ma'ruf Amin as his running mate against former general Prabowo Subianto and former Jakarta vice governor Sandiaga Uno for a five-year term between 2019 and 2024. The election was a rematch of the 2014 presidential election, in which Jokowi defeated Prabowo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election\nThe legislative election, which was the 12th such election for Indonesia, saw over 240,000 candidates competing for over 20,000 seats in the MPR and local councils for provinces and cities/regencies, with over 8,000 competing for the People's Representative Council (DPR) seats alone. The election was described as \"one of the most complicated single-day ballots in global history\". Jokowi's 85 million votes were the most votes cast for a single candidate in any democratic election in Indonesia's history, exceeding the record of his predecessor Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, who won 73 million votes in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election\nOn 21 May 2019, the General Elections Commission (KPU) declared Jokowi victorious in the presidential election, with over 55% of the vote. Widodo's PDI-P finished first in the DPR election with 19.33%, followed by Prabowo's Gerindra with 12.57%, then Golkar with 12.31%, the National Awakening Party (PKB) with 9.69%, the Nasdem Party with 9.05%, and the Prosperous Justice Party (PKS) with 8.21%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election\nFollowing the election, reports of the more than 7 million election workers, among which 569 had died during the lengthy voting and counting process, surfaced. Prabowo's campaign team claimed that the deaths were linked to fraud that disadvantaged him. As of 9 May 2019, the election commission (KPU) said the dead included 456 election officers, 91 supervisory agents and 22 police officers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election\nIn the early morning of 22 May 2019, supporters of Prabowo protested in Jakarta against Jokowi's victory. The protest turned into a riot, which left eight people killed by security officers and over 600 injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Background\nElections in Indonesia were previously held separately, with a 2008 elections law regulating that presidential and legislative elections be held at least three months apart from one another. Following a 2013 Constitutional Court lawsuit, however, it was decided that the 2019 elections \u2013 which would have been the 12th legislative election and the 4th presidential election \u2013 would be held simultaneously. The stated intent of the simultaneous election was to reduce associated costs and minimize transactional politics, in addition to increasing voter turnout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Background\nIn the 2014 presidential election, Jakarta governor Joko Widodo defeated former general Prabowo Subianto to become the seventh President of Indonesia. Despite initially having a minority government, Jokowi later managed to secure the support of Golkar and the United Development Party, giving him control of the legislature. In the legislative elections of the same year, former opposition party PDI-P managed to secure the largest share in the DPR, ahead of Golkar and Gerindra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Background\nDespite plans to introduce electronic voting, the DPR in March 2017 announced it would not mandate e-voting in the 2019 elections because of hacking fears and because of the lack of nationwide internet coverage. On 7 April 2017, the KPU, the General Election Supervisory Agency (Bawaslu) and the Ministry of Home Affairs held a meeting with the People's Representative Council's special committee to deliberate a draft law concerning the 2019 elections. The Chairman of the House special committee deliberating the bill, Lukman Edy, announced on 25 April 2017 that Wednesday, 17 April 2019, had been agreed upon as the date for the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Background\nNominations of candidates for the national and regional legislatures as well as candidates for president and vice president were completed in September 2018. The campaign period was from 13 October 2018 to 13 April 2019 followed by a three-day election silence before the voting day on 17 April. The final results will be announced on 22 May. The inauguration of the president and vice president is scheduled for 20 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Electoral system\nThe election was regulated by Law No. 7 of 2017. The KPU, a legally independent government body was responsible for organizing the election. In addition, the vote was monitored by the Bawaslu, which also had the authority to rule on violations of election rules (e.g. administrative errors, vote-buying, etc.). Any ethical violations committed by either Bawaslu or the KPU were to be handled by the Elections Organizer Honor Council (Dewan Kehormatan Penyelenggara Pemilu DKPP), which consists of one member from each body and five others recommended by the government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Electoral system\nVoters were given five ballot papers: for the president and vice president, Regional Representative Council (DPD), People's Representative Council (DPR), provincial council, and regency/municipal council (DPRD Provinsi and DPRD Kabupaten/Kota) members. Voters used a nail to poke a hole in the ballot paper indicating which party pr candidate they wish to vote for, and then dip their fingers in ink as a precaution against voter fraud. Tabulation of the votes was done manually on paper. The KPU is legally required to announce the results of the election within 35 days of the vote, i.e., before 22 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Electoral system, Presidential vote\nTo run for the presidency, a candidate had to be supported by political parties totalling 20% of the seats in the DPR or 25% of the popular vote in the previous legislative election.:Art. 222 Political parties were allowed to remain neutral if they were unable to propose their own candidate. However, if a neutral party(s) was able to endorse their own candidate, they were required to do so, or face being barred from participating in the next election.:Art. 235", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Electoral system, Presidential vote\nThe voting procedure followed a two-round system, with voters simply choosing one of the candidate pairs. A winning candidate was required to win a majority and at least 20% of the votes in over half of Indonesia's provinces. If no candidate pairs had fulfilled the criterion, the election would have to be repeated with a maximum of two participants.:Art. 416", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Electoral system, Legislative vote\nMembers of both the DPR and the Regional People's Representative Councils (DPRD) were elected from multi-member electoral districts through voting with an open list system, and seat distribution is done with the Sainte-Lagu\u00eb method in contrast to previous elections which utilised the Hare quota. There was a gender quota requiring at least 30% of registered candidates to be female.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 68], "content_span": [69, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Electoral system, Legislative vote\nA 4% parliamentary threshold was set for parties to be represented in the DPR, though candidates could still win seats in the regional councils provided they won sufficient votes. There were 575 DPR seats contested \u2013 up from 560 in 2014. Nationally, there were 80 DPR electoral districts, with 272 provincial and 2,206 municipal electoral districts. Candidates for the DPD were not allowed to be members of a political party. Four members were elected for each province \u2013 a total of 136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 68], "content_span": [69, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Voters\nThe voting age for the election is 17, or less if already married. Indonesians living overseas could vote in either the embassies and consulates, mobile polling stations, or by post, with the voting taking place on 8\u201314 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Voters\nOn 5 September 2018, the KPU announced there were 187 million registered voters \u2013 185,732,093 in Indonesia and 2,049,791 voting abroad. They were to vote at 805,075 polling stations in Indonesia, with mail-in votes and 620 polling stations outside the country. A large number of polling stations (which was updated in April 2019 to 810,329) meant that there was an average of 200 voters per station, compared to 600 in the 2014 election. Around 17 million people are involved in some way in running the election, including the election officers, polling station guards, and registered witnesses from the candidates and parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Voters\nLater on, 670,000 names were removed following complaints of duplicates in the voter registry, lowering the total voter count to around 187.1 million. Further investigations resulted in over 1 million duplicate voters discovered in Papua alone in October, out of the initial voter registry of 3 million. Bawaslu commissioners in early September estimated that there would be around 2 million duplicate voters, while opposition party Gerindra stated that they only had 137 million voters in their internal registry, and claimed that they found 25 million duplicate names in the registry. The figure was later updated to 192.8 million voters, including 2 million overseas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Voters\nDue to various logistical issues, namely with the distribution of ballot papers, 2,249 polling stations had to conduct follow-up voting. A repeat vote was also recommended in the Kuala Lumpur embassy due to suspected voter fraud and a follow-up election in Sydney due to the voting station there closing early.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Contesting parties\nA total of 27 political parties registered with the KPU to run in the election. On 17 February 2018, the KPU announced that 14 parties had passed the verification precedes and would be eligible to contest the legislative election. The PBB subsequently appealed to the Bawaslu, which ruled it could participate, making a total of 15 parties. The PKPI's appeal to Bawaslu was rejected, but an 11 April ruling by the National Administrative Court (Pengadilan Tata Usaha Negara) decreed that the party was eligible to contest in the election. A further four parties contested in Aceh only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Presidential election, Candidates\nIn July 2017, the People's Representative Council (DPR) confirmed that only parties or coalitions with at least 20% of seats in the legislature, or 25% of votes in the previous election, would be eligible to submit a presidential candidate. Requirements for presidential/vice-presidential candidates were similar, with only either Indonesia-born lifelong Indonesian citizens or naturalised citizens who were born abroad and obtained foreign citizenship outside their own will being eligible to run with a minimum age of 40 and a requirement to \"have a belief in the One and Only God\". If the candidates had spouses, they also had to be Indonesian citizens. A criminal record resulting in over five years of incarceration or an active bankruptcy bar a candidate from running. A term limit of two terms prevented incumbent Vice President Jusuf Kalla from running as a vice-presidential candidate.:Art. 169", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 971]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Presidential election, Candidates\nExcept for the PAN, all parties in the government coalition supported a second term for Jokowi. In total, nine parties running in the legislative election supported Jokowi, with the coalition having met formally by May 2018. Of those nine parties, Perindo and PSI were participating for the first time. Shortly after Ma'ruf was declared as Jokowi's VP candidate, Jokowi's coalition member party PPP leader Muhammad Romahurmuziy stated that the coalition, dubbed Koalisi Indonesia Kerja (lit. \"Working Indonesia Coalition\"), was final, and would not accept any more parties. In total, the coalition gained over 62% of the votes during the 2014 legislative election and controlled 337 of 560 DPR seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Presidential election, Candidates\nAside from Gerindra, parties backing Prabowo did not confirm their support until late: PAN and PKS on 9 August 2018, Demokrat and Berkarya on 10 August, the registration day, though the coalition had existed prior. PAN withdrew from the government coalition, resulting in the resignation of bureaucratic reform minister and PAN member Asman Abnur. The pro-Prabowo coalition was named Koalisi Indonesia Adil Makmur (lit. \"Prosperous and Just Indonesia Coalition\"). There are five parties in the coalition \u2013 including Berkarya, a new party \u2013 which won 36% of the 2014 legislative vote and holds 223 of 560 DPR seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Presidential election, Candidates\nTwo parties \u2013 PBB (participated in the 2014 election, but did not gain a national legislature seat) and the Garuda Party (a new party) \u2013 initially did not endorse either candidate. The latter's secretary Abdullah Mansyuri stated the party was focusing on the legislative elections, while PBB chairman Yusril Ihza Mahendra said neither Jokowi nor Prabowo's camp invited PBB. Later on, however, he would join Jokowi's campaign team as its lawyer. On 27 January 2019, PBB officially endorsed Jokowi. The Aceh Nanggroe Party \u2013 which held 3 of the 81 seats in Aceh's provincial council \u2013 also endorsed Jokowi in January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Presidential election, Candidates\nRegistration for presidential candidates was opened between 4 and 10 August 2018 at the KPU head office in Jakarta. Neither candidate declared their vice presidential pick until 9 August 2018. Both picks were considered \"surprising\", with Jokowi selecting senior cleric and politician Ma'ruf Amin despite early reports that former Chief Justice of the Constitutional Court Mahfud MD would be selected. Prabowo's last-minute selection of businessman and Jakarta vice-governor Sandiaga Uno \u2013 close to midnight on that day \u2013 was also unexpected. Sandiaga was not mentioned in the early phases of the selection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Presidential election, Candidates, Others\nOther individuals who expressed an intent, received political support, or were touted as prospective presidential candidates included son of former president Yudhoyono and 2017 Jakarta gubernatorial candidate Agus Harimurti Yudhoyono, former MPR Speaker Amien Rais, Governor of Jakarta and former minister of education and culture Anies Baswedan, all of whom subsequently endorsed Prabowo, and incumbent Vice President of Indonesia Jusuf Kalla, who later expressed support for Jokowi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 75], "content_span": [76, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Presidential election, Campaigns\nThe official campaigning period lasted around six months, starting with a \"peaceful campaign\" declaration on 23 September 2018, and the final day on 13 April 2019. Before the start of the campaign, both parties submitted their campaign teams to the KPU; Jokowi's being led by businessman Erick Thohir while Prabowo's was led by former Indonesian National Armed Forces commander Djoko Santoso.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Presidential election, Campaigns, Debates\nThe KPU scheduled five debates to be held in 2019, the same number as in 2014. DPR member and PAN Central Committee chairman Yandri Susanto proposed that the debates be held in English, but the KPU decided that the debates would be held in Indonesian. The debate questions from the KPU were provided in advance to the candidates. The Prabowo campaign team criticised it as belittling the candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 75], "content_span": [76, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Presidential election, Campaigns, Debates\nThe first debate held on 17 January 2019, focused on legal, human rights, terrorism and corruption issues, and was moderated by Ira Koesno and Imam Priyono. Both candidates described their visions during the early stages. Jokowi admitted the difficulty of solving old human rights cases and promising to strengthen law enforcement institutions. Prabowo shared this sentiment and called for an increase in the salaries of civil servants to reduce corruption.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 75], "content_span": [76, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Presidential election, Campaigns, Debates\nThe second debate was held on 17 February 2019, with topics covering energy, food, infrastructure, natural resources and the environment, and was moderated by news presenters Anisha Dasuki and Tommy Tjokro. This time, both candidates utilised more numbers and statistics. In one segment, Jokowi questioned Prabowo on his stance about unicorn companies, briefly confusing Prabowo and led to internet memes related to the animal unicorn. On the topic of agrarian land reform, Jokowi pointed out Prabowo's ownership of 340,000 hectares (840,000 acres) of land. Prabowo stated that he held the land under cultivation rights instead of full ownership and was willing to return it to the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 75], "content_span": [76, 764]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Presidential election, Campaigns, Debates\nThe third debate, involving the vice-presidential candidates, covered education, health, labour, social affairs and culture, and was held on 17 March 2019. On 30 March 2019, the fourth debate was held, which was centred around defence and foreign policy. The fifth and final debate was held on 13 April 2019 and focused on economics, public welfare, industry, trade and investment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 75], "content_span": [76, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Presidential election, Campaigns, Social media\nWith millennials making up around two-fifths of Indonesia's population, there were significant efforts by both sides to appeal to the age group. One example of a major social media-centred campaign, dubbed #2019GantiPresiden emerged, initiated by PKS politician Mardani Ali Sera. It included holding rallies in multiple cities until they were disallowed following clashes with Jokowi supporters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 80], "content_span": [81, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Presidential election, Campaigns, Social media\nBefore the campaign period began, observers had expected rampant hoaxes and fake news coming through social media and WhatsApp. One observer noted that the government was limited in its impact in handling the issue, as it may be framed as favouring the incumbent. One particular case involved activist and Prabowo campaigner Ratna Sarumpaet. She falsely claimed to have been assaulted, initially causing many prominent opposition politicians to voice support. However, she admitted that she had lied following a police investigation. She was prosecuted as a result and forced to resign from the campaign team, and Prabowo personally apologised for spreading the hoax. Both sides formed dedicated anti-hoax groups to counterattacks on social media, with the Indonesian government holding weekly fake news briefings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 80], "content_span": [81, 895]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Presidential election, Campaigns, Social media\nAmid public apathy toward mainstream parties and candidates, a pairing of spoof candidates, \"Nurhadi-Aldo\" (abbreviated as dildo), gained popularity on social media, with 400,000 Instagram followers within the first month of its creation. The account parodied typical political aesthetics and utilised vulgar acronyms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 80], "content_span": [81, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Presidential election, Campaigns, Finances\nOn 23 September, both campaign teams submitted an initial budget. Jokowi's campaign team reported an initial balance of Rp 11.9 billion and Prabowo's team Rp 2 billion. Indonesia Corruption Watch observers deemed the initial numbers \"unrealistic\" (Jokowi's team spent Rp 293 billion in 2014, while Prabowo's spent Rp 166 billion). Representatives from both teams responded that the balance was just an initial balance, and would increase throughout the campaigning period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 76], "content_span": [77, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Presidential election, Campaigns, Finances\nFor the Prabowo Subianto campaign, in particular, Uno paid for the majority of campaign fees, with his contribution comprising 70% of the reported campaign funds (Rp 95.4 billion out of Rp 135 billion). Uno stated in an interview with Bloomberg that he spent around US$100 million on the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 76], "content_span": [77, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Presidential election, Polls\nBy late 2018, Jokowi was ahead of Prabowo in most surveys. The table below gives detailed survey results from a variety of organizations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 62], "content_span": [63, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Legislative election, Candidates\nAll legislative candidates had to be Indonesian citizens, over 21 years old, senior high school (or equivalent) graduates, and have never been convicted for a crime resulting in a sentence of 5 years or more. In addition, the candidates for the People's Representative Council (DPR) or local legislatures had to be endorsed by a political party and were required to resign from their non-legislative government offices \u2013 except for the president and vice president \u2013 or their state-owned company positions. Legislators running for reelection or another body through a new political party were also required to resign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Legislative election, Candidates\nFor the DPR, there were 7,968 candidates \u2013 4,774 male and 3,194 female \u2013 contesting the 575 seats for an average of 13.86 candidates per seat available. Just three parties \u2013 Nasdem, PAN and PKB \u2013 used their entire quota of 575 candidates, with the PKPI registering only 137 candidates. Formappi, an NGO, found that 529 out of 560 (94%) incumbent DPR members were running for reelection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Legislative election, Candidates\nThe election for DPD members required candidates to be a non-partisan, with a total of 807 candidates competing for the 136 seats. The incumbent speaker, Oesman Sapta Odang, was briefly removed from the candidacy list for not resigning from Hanura, though he was restored when he submitted a resignation letter. Although all provinces were allocated four seats, the number of candidates varied from 10 for West Papua to 49 for West Java. Approximately 245,000 candidates were running for all legislative seats across the country. For example, 1,586 candidates were approved to run for the 120-seat West Java Provincial Council alone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Legislative election, Finances\nThe political parties, like the presidential candidates, were required to submit their campaign budgets to the KPU. Aside from donations from sympathizers and members, the parties which participated in the 2014 election also receive money from the government amounting to Rp 1,000 (US$0.071) per vote received. By January 2019, the national political parties have collectively reported campaign donations totalling Rp 445 billion (US$31.6 million).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Legislative election, Polls\nNOTE: The accuracy of political surveys in Indonesia varies significantly, with some having little transparency. It should also be noted that some agencies also act as political consultants and surveys are often paid for by candidates. Caution should hence be exercised in using the polling data below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Results, Presidential results, Overview\nKPU officially announced that the Jokowi-Amin ticket had won the election in the early hours of 21 May 2019. The official vote tally was 85 million votes for Jokowi (55.50%) and 68 million votes for Prabowo (44.50%). The result was subject to appeals in the Constitutional Court; parties disputing the official tallies had 72 hours after the announcement to file an appeal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Results, Presidential results, Overview\nPrior to the announcement of official results, 40 bodies were authorized by the KPU to release quick count results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Results, Presidential results, By province\nJokowi won a majority of votes in 21 out of 34 provinces and the majority of overseas voters. An observer from Cornell University noted Jokowi's dominance in predominantly non-Muslim regions - such as the Hindu Bali and Christian North Sulawesi - despite losing support in heavily Muslim provinces such as Aceh. Jokowi also performed well in ethnically Javanese regions - mainly in Central Java and East Java. Notably, Jokowi won 100% of votes in five Papuan regencies - Puncak, Puncak Jaya, Central Mamberamo, Yalimo, and Lanny Jaya - due to the noken (communal vote) system employed there. Prabowo, on the other hand, won in most of Sumatra's provinces, in addition to the provinces of Banten and West Java.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 76], "content_span": [77, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Results, Presidential results, Rejection\nPrabowo's camp has declared that they would not accept the KPU's official results. On 14 May 2019, he held a press briefing where he alleged that vote-rigging had occurred, and claimed that his campaign team had collected evidence. The campaign team had also requested KPU stop their official vote tallying. Following the unofficial quick count results that indicated a Jokowi victory, Prabowo claimed his internal counts won him 62% of the votes and accused the pollsters of taking sides.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 74], "content_span": [75, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0045-0001", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Results, Presidential results, Rejection\nOne of the campaign team members, Fadli Zon, has indicated that the campaign team would not bring the case to the Constitutional Court (which rejected their appeal in 2014). After KPU's official announcement on 21 May, Prabowo stated that he rejected the presidential election results, and would resort to \"constitutional legal pathways\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 74], "content_span": [75, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Results, Presidential results, Rejection\nProtests by Prabowo supporters are expected on 22 May, when KPU is set to announce the results officially. In anticipation, the US and Singaporean embassies issued notices warning their citizens to avoid the protests. Following arrests of 29 people suspected of planning attacks on the rally, the Indonesian National Police urged for people not to attend the protests. Several opposition figures, such as Kivlan Zen, were investigated on suspicions of treason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 74], "content_span": [75, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Results, Presidential results, Rejection\nFollowing the protests, Prabowo's campaign team launched a Constitutional Court lawsuit, with the first hearing scheduled on 18 June 2019. They had previously submitted a complaint to the Bawaslu which was rejected on the grounds of insufficient evidence. According to Bawaslu, the complaint only included links to online news articles as evidence. On 27 June 2019, the Constitutional Court rejected in its entirety Prabowo team's legal challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 74], "content_span": [75, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0048-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Results, Legislative results\nThe official tally puts the PDI-P in the first place with 19.33%, followed by Prabowo's Gerindra with 12.57%. The next top parties by the number of votes are Golkar, PKB, the Nasdem Party, and PKS. Around half of the elected legislators to the People's Representative Council were incumbents, with two-thirds aged between 41 and 60.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 62], "content_span": [63, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0049-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Results, Turnout\nThe voter turnout for the election was a record, with around 81% of the registered voters participating in the presidential election. It was the highest turnout in Indonesian presidential electoral history, in contrast to the trend of an increasing number of abstentions between 2004 and 2014. Certain areas in West Papua also allowed traditional voting procedures where a single village head represented entire communities, resulting in nominal 100% turnouts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0050-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Controversies\nObservers criticised the decision to hold the legislative and presidential elections simultaneously for being too complicated. Manual tabulation of votes at polling stations lasted until the day after the election itself. Exhaustion and fatigue caused by the long hours resulted in at least 225 election officers dying during the voting or in the ensuing vote counts, in addition to 1,470 falling ill. Vice President Jusuf Kalla has called for the 2024 election to return to the 2014 format of separated legislative and presidential votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0050-0001", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Controversies\nThe 2024 election, under the existing regulations, would be a vote on all elected legislative and executive posts in the country. As of 9 May 2019, the KPU confirmed that 569 deaths had occurred due to overwork; this number includes 456 election officers, 91 supervisory agents and 22 police officers. Besides, 4,310 had reportedly fallen sick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0051-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Controversies\nIn July 2018, the KPU passed a regulation barring ex-corruption convicts, sexual offenders and people convicted of drug offences from running for office. However, the Bawaslu and the DPR objected to the regulation and accused the KPU of violating the 2017 election law. The Supreme Court of Indonesia eventually ruled that the KPU regulation was invalid, allowing convicts to contest in the election. Thirty-eight people who had been corruption convicts eventually ran for office across the country \u2013 26 for regency/municipal councils and 12 for provincial councils.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0052-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Controversies\nThe KPU was also criticised for giving legislative candidates an option not to publish their resumes. Formappi found that around a quarter of the candidates chose not to publish their information, with a further 18% not having submitted any. Some candidates noted that they wished to publish their information, but could not due to technical reasons with the KPU's website.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0053-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Controversies\nBallot boxes for the election were made from waterproof cardboard intended for single-use. The KPU said it would save ballot box costs and allow construction of transparent boxes as mandated by election regulations. Although all parties in DPR approved the decision, Prabowo's campaign team contested it. Uno remarked that there was a potential for cheating. PDI-P Secretary General Hasto Kristiyanto remarked that \"Gerindra was making up reasons for losing\". The KPU later held public demonstrations where a ballot box was sprayed with water and sat on to demonstrate its strength, although KPU officials from various region had reported receiving 70 ballot boxes with water damage, and even the cardboard ballot boxes eaten by termites.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0054-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Controversies\nIn January 2019, it was rumoured by Yusril Ihza Mahendra that Jokowi was considering releasing Islamist Abu Bakar Ba'asyir due to old age and declining health. The move was seen as controversial in Indonesia as part of a growing number of actions taken by Jokowi to appease Indonesia's conservative Muslims ahead of the election. The government later suspended this attempt as Ba'asyir refused to accept Pancasila as his ideology. He instead stuck to his fundamentalist Islam point of view.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0055-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Controversies\nThroughout his campaign, Prabowo was accused of spreading pessimism and using Donald Trump's 2016 campaign strategy of highlighting economic disparity. In one speech in October 2018, Prabowo stated he wanted to \"Make Indonesia Great Again\", much like Trump's 2016 campaign slogan. He also accused journalists of \"manipulating\" the attendance of the 212 \"Mujahideen\" Grand Reunion on 2 December 2018. Prabowo is known to have close relations with fundamentalist Muslims, with Muhammad Rizieq Shihab of the Islamic Defenders Front being one prominent example. Rizieq, who was on a self-imposed exile in Mecca, persistently campaigned against Jokowi and for Prabowo. Prabowo also promised to bring Rizieq home should he be elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 776]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0056-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Budget\nA budget of Rp 24.9 trillion (US$1.8 billion) was allocated for the election \u2013 3% higher than the budget used in the 2014 election. This included spending on \"safeguarding the election from hijacking\". The KPU estimated a Rp 16.8 trillion funding requirement in December 2017, later revising it to Rp 15 trillion for a one-stage election, and ended up submitting a funding request of Rp 18.1 trillion, on top of the Rp 8.6 trillion requested by Bawaslu, in September 2018. Officers at the polling stations are paid Rp 500,000 (roughly US$35) each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0057-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Gallery\nList of presidential and legislative candidates displayed outside a polling station", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290059-0058-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian general election, Gallery\nOfficials of the KPU and representatives of various organizations and parties witness the vote count at Polling Station 100 in North Jakarta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots\nA series of mass protests led by students took place at major cities in Indonesia from 23 September 2019, to rally against new legislation that reduces the authority of the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK), as well as several bills including a new criminal code that penalises extramarital sex and defamation against the president. The protesters consisted of mostly students from over 300 universities, with no association with any particular political parties or groups. The protests were the most prominent student movement in Indonesia since the 1998 riots that brought down the Suharto regime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots\nIn several cities including Jakarta, Bandung and Padang, protesters clashed with the Indonesian National Police (Polri), resulting in the riot police firing tear gas and water cannons. In the capital city of Jakarta, the police confirmed that at least 254 students and 39 police officers are injured or being treated in hospitals. In Kendari, Southeast Sulawesi, two students died, one of them allegedly being shot during the violent clash. Another three protesters died in Jakarta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Background, Revision of Corruption Eradication Commission Law (RUU KPK)\nThe Revisions to Law no.30/2002 on Corruption Eradication Commission (RUU KPK) was ratified by the members of the People's Representative Council (DPR) who serve 2014\u20132019 term on 17 September 2019. Among the parliament, all parties under the government coalition, Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDIP), Golkar, Nasdem Party, People's Conscience Party (Hanura), United Development Party (PPP), National Awakening Party (PKB), as well as an opposition party National Mandate Party (PAN) unanimously approved the bill. The ratification was made in just 13 days since the initiation. The initiation of the bill was made on 5 September 2019 without any significant interruptions. On 11 September 2019, President Joko Widodo issued a presidential letter to the Ministry of Law and Human Rights to discuss the revision along with the DPR. The administration agreed with the revision on 16 September, and the bill was ratified on the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 107], "content_span": [108, 1053]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Background, Revision of Corruption Eradication Commission Law (RUU KPK)\nThe revision was widely condemned by activists and experts for undermining the efficacy of KPK. Corruption is a significant political issue in Indonesia, and KPK, established in 2002, was a part of the reform demands that followed the overthrow of the authoritarian Suharto regime. Since its establishment, KPK has been known for targeting high-profile politicians and business people. The revision calls to reduce KPK's independent status by making it a governmental body, establishing an oversight council to monitor the commission, requiring KPK investigators official permission to conduct wiretaps, among others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 107], "content_span": [108, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Background, Revision of Corruption Eradication Commission Law (RUU KPK)\nPrior to the ratification, there were already numbers of small-scale protests going on in different cities. In Bali, hundreds of people gathered on 12 September 2019 to raise concerns over the bill. On the other hand, counter-protest by the pro-revision groups were also held in front of KPK headquarter in Jakarta. Some participants of the counter-protest reportedly admitted of being paid to participate without much knowledge on the issue itself.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 107], "content_span": [108, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Background, Revision of Criminal Code Bill (RKUHP)\nOn 18 September 2019, the parliament discussed the bill on the revision of criminal code (RKUHP). The new criminal code has been under the creation for the past few decades, intended to replace the Dutch era set of laws. The amendment was previously introduced in 2015 by Yasonna Laoly, the minister of Law and Human Rights. Since earlier this year, conservative Islamic groups have been pushing again for an overhaul of the criminal code.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 86], "content_span": [87, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Background, Revision of Criminal Code Bill (RKUHP)\nThe latest proposal includes several laws based on conservative religious interpretations, including the ban on premarital sex, living together outside of marriage, performing black magic, and abortion without reasons of medical emergency and rape. The vote was scheduled to be held on 24 September 2019, but facing the public outcry, the President announced to postpone the vote on 20 September 2019. However, there were still fears of the parliament pushing for the vote before the end of their term on 24 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 86], "content_span": [87, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Demands\nA student group by the name of the Alliance of Acting People released what is called as \"seven demands\" (7 Tuntutan). These demands are shared by most of the rallies across the archipelago. The demands consist of the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Demands\nThe Executive Body of Students (BEM), a nationwide student organisation, also released what is called as \"seven urges\" (7 Desakan). The student rally in Jakarta on 24 September 2019 put up these demands. The demands consist of the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Protests\nWhile small-scale demonstrations were already held sporadically, mass protests took place on 23 and 24 September, the last two days before the term end of the incumbent parliament members. The protest spread nationwide, including Jakarta, Bandung, Yogyakarta, Surabaya, Malang, Palembang, Medan, Padang, Semarang, Surakarta, Lampung, Aceh, Palu, Bogor, Denpasar, Makassar, Balikpapan, Samarinda, Purwokerto, Tasikmalaya, Kediri, Tanjungpinang, Cirebon, Jombang, and others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Protests, 23 September\nStudents of various universities in the Jakarta metropolitan area responded to calls on social media to gather in front of the National Parliament Building in Jakarta. There was also a small presence of a student organisation, the Progressive Student for Anti- Corruption (MAPAK). On this day, both sides of the pro and anti-bill camps were present at the place. Anti -bill camp increased its number as time progresses, blocking the Gatot Subroto Avenue on the way to Slipi. Large numbers of farmers also joined the event from the afternoon to protest against the Land Bill, marching down from the Merdeka Palace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Protests, 23 September\nWhile there were attempts to block the Jakarta Inner Ring Road, the rally ended without significant altercation. Protesters shout slogans such as \"DPR are fascist and anti-democratic\". The protest in Jakarta was crowd-funded through KitaBisa. The number of protesters reached two thousand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Protests, 23 September\nRallies were also held peacefully in other cities, including Yogyakarta, Bandung, Malang, Balikpapan, Samarinda and Purwokerto. Rallies in Yogyakarta, Bandung, and Malang gathered more than a thousand participants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Protests, 24 September\nGreater Jakarta Metropolitan Regional Police received an announcement for another rally scheduled on 24 September 2019. In anticipation of the event, a total of 18,000 personnel was deployed around the parliament building. Another 252 police officers were dispatched for traffic control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Protests, 24 September\nOn this day, students from the remote area including Bandung and Yogyakarta participated in the demonstration in Jakarta. At 16:00, the crowd was already occupying the Gatot Subroto Avenue in front of the parliament building. Student representatives demanded a meeting with the House leaders, which was rejected by the police. This prompted protesters to throw rocks and bottles into the building, and eventually, attempt to intrude into the site by breaking the fence. The police responded by launching water cannon into the protesters and firing tear gas to disperse the crowd. The clash continued until midnight. There was a reported case of police beating up a limp protester at the Jakarta Convention Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 772]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Protests, 24 September\nThe police acknowledged the destruction of three police and military vehicles as well as three police outposts. They also confirmed the arrest of 94 protesters, injury of 254 protesters and 39 police officers. Among them, eleven are reportedly hospitalised, and three are critically injured. The number of participants in the Jakarta protest reached tens of thousands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Protests, 24 September\nIn Padang, thousands of protesters clashed with the police and security forces armed with water cannons. Protesters eventually overwhelmed the police and entered into the governor's office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Protests, 24 September\nRallies were held peacefully in other cities, including Palembang, Semarang, Surakarta, Medan, Lampung, Aceh, and Makassar. Rallies in Palembang, Lampung, and Makassar gathered more than a thousand participants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Protests, 25 September\nVocational school students from various parts of the Jakarta metropolitan area continued the rioting in front of the parliament building. On one occasion, a molotov cocktail was thrown towards police barricades. The police apprehended 17 protesters, mostly underage students. The police reported that some of the protesters do not recognise the content of the bill, they admitted that they was paid and persuaded by KPK officials who affiliated with Taliban and some elites.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Protests, 25 September\nThe police have confirmed the deaths of two protesters. One is a high school student who died in a traffic accident on the way to the demonstration in Jakarta. The other one, neither a high school nor university student, likely died due to suffocation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Protests, 25 September\nIn Surabaya, the head of provincial legislative council Kusnadi reached out to protesters, explained that he has no authority to overturn the controversial bills and he also disagreed personally to the decisions made by the national parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Protests, 26 September\nIn Kendari, Southeast Sulawesi, two students died after a violent clash between the protesters and police in front of the provincial legislative council (DPRD) building. A student was allegedly shot, and the Indonesian Ombudsman has launched an investigation into the origin of the bullet. Southeast Sulawesi police chief denied the use of live rounds nor rubber bullets by the police force. Later that evening, another student succumbed to blunt force injuries to the skull, after attempts to operate on his injuries failed to improve his condition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Protests, 26 September\nUsman Hamid of Amnesty International demanded the authority for an immediate investigation and accountability. A board chairman of the Muhammadiyah Student League (IMM), to which the victims belong, demanded the removal of the Southeast Sulawesi police chief from its position. Solidarity rallies for the victims were held throughout the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Protests, 26 September\nRallies were continuously held nationwide, including in Surabaya, Magelang, and Ciamis. In Magelang, an employee of the Ministry of Transportation was injured during the evacuation from the riot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Protests, 27 September\nHundreds of students from the Muslim Students Association (HMI) held a protest and burned tires in front of the parliament building in Jakarta and elsewhere, demanding accountability for the two victims in South Sulawesi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Protests, 27 September\nA clash occurred between the protesters and riot police in Makassar, and one protester was hit by a riot control vehicle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Protests, 30 September\nAs the last parliament session was being held, protests are again being held in several cities. In Jakarta, protesters were blocked from protesting in front of the parliament building as it was barricaded by the police. Protests were held peacefully in Mataram, Pekanbaru, Yogyakarta and Kendari.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Reactions\nPresident Joko Widodo denied the possibility of vetoing the ratification of RUU KPK. The Minister of Law and Human Rights Yasonna Laoly also assured that the President would not issue a presidential decree to repeal the revision. Widodo and Laoly both stated that the issue should be settled through the constitutional procedure by filing to the Constitutional Court. Laoly criticised the demonstration and urged not to normalise the forceful amendment of the legislation, citing the risk of legitimising governmental institutions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Reactions\nThe Minister of Research, Technology and Higher Education Mohamad Nasir stated that the President warned university lecturers against student mobilisations. He stated that lecturers, who called upon their students to join the protest or lecturers whose students are found joining the protest would be sanctioned by the government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Reactions\nOce Madril, the head of an anti-corruption study centre in Gajah Mada University, criticised the President's response, stating that he had failed to respond to the public resentment toward RUU KPK. He contrasted with the RKUHP, which was postponed, arguing that the President's lack of willingness to accommodate the voice of people would strengthen the allegations that there is corruptive power behind the legislation, and the President himself is a part of the corruption. Oce also stated that this event had devastated public trust toward President's commitment to eradicating corruption.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Reactions\nThe government of the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia have issued travel warnings to citizens who wish to visit Indonesia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290060-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Indonesian protests and riots, Reactions, Criticism on foreign media coverage\nThe student protests made headlines not only in the national media but also in international news outlets. However, many international news outlets focused only on the contentious Criminal Code (RKUHP) bill, in which one of its articles criminalises premarital sex. This includes the BBC, Deutsche Welle, The Japan Times, Al Jazeera, Reuters, The Sydney Morning Herald, and CNN. These outlets published articles implying that Indonesians were only protesting about \"sex before marriage\" bill or \"sex ban law\", dubbed by The BBC and The Japan Times respectively. This was criticised by the Indonesian media and activists, as the revision of the RKUHP is only one among several problematic bills that the students are protesting. The students have seven demands in total, encompassing several issues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 82], "content_span": [83, 881]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290061-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indoor Football League season\nThe 2019 Indoor Football League season was the eleventh of the Indoor Football League (IFL). The league played this season with ten teams, up from six the previous season, by adding two expansion teams and two teams from Champions Indoor Football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290061-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indoor Football League season\nThe top six teams made the IFL playoffs, with the first round consisting of the top two seeds earning byes, the third seed hosting the sixth seed, and the fourth hosting the fifth seed. In the semifinals, the top seed hosted the lower remaining seed and the second hosting the higher-seeded winner from the first round. The semifinal winners met in the 2019 United Bowl on the weekend of July 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290061-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indoor Football League season, Offseason\nIn August 2018, the IFL announced the first 2019 expansion team, the Tucson Sugar Skulls, owned by Arizona Rattlers' head coach Kevin Guy. On September 7, the IFL announced the Quad City Steamwheelers had joined the league from Champions Indoor Football (CIF). On October 5, the Bismarck Bucks of the CIF also announced their move to the IFL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290061-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indoor Football League season, Offseason\nDuring the previous season, the Cedar Rapids Titans were sold to Roy Choi and the team was rebranded as Cedar Rapids River Kings for the 2019 season. In November 2018, Choi also launched a second 2019 IFL expansion team called the San Diego Strike Force.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290062-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indy Eleven season\nThe 2019 Indy Eleven season is the club's sixth season of existence, their sixth consecutive season in the second tier of American soccer, and their second season in the league now named the USL Championship. The season covers the period from October 21, 2018 to the beginning of the 2020 USL Championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290062-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indy Eleven season, Non-competitive, Preseason\nThe Eleven released their preseason schedule on January 23, 2019. A four-game preseason slate was initially announced, featuring matches against teams from Major League Soccer, the USL Championship, USL League One, and one collegiate program. A fifth game, against Forward Madison FC, was later added to the schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290062-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indy Eleven season, Competitive, USL Championship, Match results\nThe league announced home openers for every club on December 14, 2018. Indy will open at Lucas Oil Stadium on March 30, meeting expansion club Hartford Athletic for the first time. The Eleven will also take part in the home openers for two other clubs, facing Saint Louis FC on March 9 and Charlotte Independence on March 15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 69], "content_span": [70, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290062-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Indy Eleven season, Competitive, USL Championship, Match results\nThe full Indy schedule was released on December 19, 2018. The season will once again consist of 34 matches, with the Eleven playing home and away against each Eastern Conference opponent. Indy will face expansion clubs Birmingham Legion FC, Hartford Athletic, Loudoun United FC, and Memphis 901 FC for the first time ever, and will also play inaugural matches against Saint Louis FC and Swope Park Rangers, who move over from the Western Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 69], "content_span": [70, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290062-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Indy Eleven season, Competitive, U.S. Open Cup\nAs a member of the USL Championship, Indy Eleven will enter the tournament in the Second Round, to be played May 14\u201315, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290063-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indy Lights\nThe 2019 Indy Lights season is the 34th season of the Indy Lights open wheel motor racing series and the 18th sanctioned by IndyCar, acting as the primary support series for the IndyCar Series. Oliver Askew won a tight championship race with Rinus Veekay. Askew won seven races to Veekay's six. Toby Sowery, Robert Megennis, and Ryan Norman each captured a single race win as did Aaron Telitz, who only participated in seven mid-season races, and Zachary Claman, who won the season opener but dropped out of the series after six races due to funding issues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290063-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 Indy Lights\nJulien Falchero also dropped out of the season after four races after expected good results failed to materialize. Jarett Andretti made his first and only Indy Lights start in the Freedom 100 and set fastest lap on his way to a sixth place finish. Dalton Kellett moved onto IndyCar after this season despite only registering a single podium finish in 2019 Indy Lights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290063-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indy Lights\nThe subsequent 2020 Indy Lights season would end up being canceled due to the Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290064-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Indy Pro 2000 Championship\nThe 2019 Indy Pro 2000 championship presented by Cooper Tires was the 21st season in series history. A 16-race schedule was announced on 25 September 2018, featuring five permanent road circuits and two street circuits on the NTT IndyCar Series hosting doubleheaders, and single races at the Dave Steele Classic and World Wide Technology Raceway, a flat intermediate oval. Following the departure of Mazda from the Road to Indy program, it was the first championship run under the new \"Indy Pro 2000\" name instead of the previous \"Pro Mazda Championship.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290064-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Indy Pro 2000 Championship\nAmerican Kyle Kirkwood of RP Motorsport won nine of the sixteen races yet still found himself in a close fight for the championship with Swedish driver Rasmus Lindh of Juncos Racing. Lindh won only three times, but fifth or better in every race and only finished off the podium three times. Kirkwood only needed to start the final race to clinch the championship and was knocked out by an incident on the first lap of the final race, leaving the final points margin of victory a scant two points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290064-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Indy Pro 2000 Championship\nCanadian Parker Thompson of Abel Motorsports won the opening doubleheader of the season but not again for the rest of the season and finished third in points, well back of Kirkwood and Lindh. Sting Ray Robb captured two poles but was winless and finished fourth in points while Singaporean driver Danial Frost won twice and finished fifth, rounding out the season's winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290064-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Indy Pro 2000 Championship\nJuncos edged out RP for the Teams' championship by a significant margin despite Lindh losing out on the championship on the back of Robb's strong performance in their second car. RP's second car was piloted by three different drivers who tallied only two podium finishes between them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290065-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IndyCar Classic\nThe 2019 IndyCar Classic was the 2nd round of the 2019 IndyCar season. The race was held on March 24, 2019, in Austin, Texas. Will Power qualified on pole position, while rookie Colton Herta took his first career victory becoming the youngest IndyCar race winner of all time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290065-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IndyCar Classic, Results, Race\nNotes: Points 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, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290066-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IndyCar Grand Prix\nThe 2019 IndyCar Grand Prix was the fifth round of the 2019 IndyCar season. The race took place over 85 laps on the infield road course at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Speedway, Indiana. Simon Pagenaud, who drove for Team Penske, made a late race pass on Scott Dixon to win his first race since 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290066-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IndyCar Grand Prix, Results, Race\nNotes: Points 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, 38], "content_span": [39, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290067-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 IndyCar Series\nThe 2019 NTT IndyCar Series was the 24th season of the IndyCar Series and the 108th official championship season of American open wheel racing. The premier event was the 2019 Indianapolis 500, with Will Power entering as the defending winner. Honda entered as the defending Manufacturers' Cup champion. Scott Dixon entered the season as the defending National Champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290067-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 IndyCar Series\nJosef Newgarden won his second Drivers' Championship, while Honda won the Manufacturers' Championship for the second year in a row. Rookie of the Year honors went to Felix Rosenqvist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290067-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 IndyCar Series, Contracted teams and drivers\nThe following teams and drivers have been announced to compete in the 2019 IndyCar Series season. All teams use a spec Dallara IR18 chassis and Firestone tires.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290067-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 IndyCar Series, Contracted teams and drivers, Team changes\nOn September 19, 2018, it was announced that George Michael Steinbrenner IV's Steinbrenner Racing would join forces with Harding Racing to form a planned two-car operation under the name Harding Steinbrenner Racing. On February 11, it was revealed that the team's second engine lease was only for the Indianapolis 500.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290067-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 IndyCar Series, Contracted teams and drivers, Team changes\nMeyer Shank Racing, after running a 6-race schedule in 2018, expanded their season to 10 races in the 2019 season with driver Jack Harvey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290067-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 IndyCar Series, Contracted teams and drivers, Team changes\nOn October 17, 2018, it was announced that Ed Carpenter Racing and Scuderia Corsa would team up to field Ed Jones in all road and street course events and the Indianapolis 500.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290067-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 IndyCar Series, Contracted teams and drivers, Team changes\nOn November 10, 2018 it was announced that McLaren Racing would return to the IndyCar Series at the 2019 Indianapolis 500 with Fernando Alonso behind the wheel. On November 26, 2018, it was revealed that McLaren's entry would be powered by Chevrolet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290067-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 IndyCar Series, Contracted teams and drivers, Team changes\nOn December 6, 2018 it was also announced that Harding Steinbrenner Racing will switch to Honda engines from 2019 season beyond after spending two seasons with Chevrolet engines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290067-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 IndyCar Series, Contracted teams and drivers, Team changes\nOn December 17, 2018, it was announced that DragonSpeed would make their IndyCar debut in 2019, in a 5-race program including the 2019 Indianapolis 500. The entry will be powered by Chevrolet and piloted by Ben Hanley, who will make his IndyCar debut along with the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290067-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 IndyCar Series, Contracted teams and drivers, Team changes\nOn February 28, 2019, Dreyer & Reinbold Racing announced that they would once again return to run the Indy 500, retaining driver Sage Karam for the fourth consecutive year. On April 22, the team announced that J. R. Hildebrand would return to drive for the team at the Indy 500 for the second year in a row, this time driving with the No. 48 to honor Dan Gurney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290067-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 IndyCar Series, Contracted teams and drivers, Driver changes\nAfter both running the final race of the 2018 season at Sonoma with Harding Racing, 2018 Indy Lights champion Patricio O'Ward and runner-up Colton Herta were announced to run the full season with the new partnership of Harding Steinbrenner Racing. However, on February 11, O'Ward and HSR parted ways after the team was unable to support a full-season program for O'Ward. O'Ward later moved to Carlin where he will drive the No. 31 car in 13 races, including the Indianapolis 500 as the team's third entry as Charlie Kimball will race the No. 23 car at the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 65], "content_span": [66, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290067-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 IndyCar Series, Contracted teams and drivers, Driver changes\nOn September 28, 2018, Chip Ganassi Racing announced that they had signed Felix Rosenqvist to drive for the team during the 2019 season. He will replace Ed Jones in the No. 10 car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 65], "content_span": [66, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290067-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 IndyCar Series, Contracted teams and drivers, Driver changes\nOn October 17, 2018, Ed Carpenter Racing announced Ed Jones would replace Jordan King driving the No. 20 car on road courses and street circuits. Jones will also drive the No. 63 car in the Indianapolis 500 as Ed Carpenter will continue driving the No. 20 car on ovals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 65], "content_span": [66, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290067-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 IndyCar Series, Contracted teams and drivers, Driver changes\nOn October 30, 2018, Schmidt Peterson Motorsports announced that Formula One driver Marcus Ericsson would join the team for the 2019 season to replace the disabled Robert Wickens, though Ericsson will be racing the No. 7 car instead of Wickens' No. 6, which remains open if or \"when he wants and is able to return\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 65], "content_span": [66, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290067-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 IndyCar Series, Contracted teams and drivers, Driver changes\nOn November 14, 2018, Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing announced that Jordan King would join the team for the Indianapolis 500.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 65], "content_span": [66, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290067-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 IndyCar Series, Contracted teams and drivers, Driver changes\nOn January 30, 2019, Andretti Autosport announced that Conor Daly would join the team for the Indianapolis 500. On August 8, 2019, Andretti Autosport announced that Daly would return to the team for the final race of the season at Laguna Seca.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 65], "content_span": [66, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290067-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 IndyCar Series, Contracted teams and drivers, Driver changes\nOn May 31, 2019, Trevor Carlin revealed that Patricio O'Ward would not be competing at the Iowa and Gateway rounds, but the second Carlin car would be run at those two events. In late June, Red Bull announced that O'Ward would be replacing Dan Ticktum at Team Mugen in Super Formula. With this move to another series, and well-known budgetary restrictions after his crash at Indianapolis, O'Ward's rookie IndyCar season was cut short after only 8 races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 65], "content_span": [66, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290067-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 IndyCar Series, Contracted teams and drivers, Driver changes\nOn July 2, Carlin announced that Sage Karam would take O'Ward's seat in the No. 31 car at Toronto, which was then extended to Iowa. On July 23, Carlin announced that RC Enerson would drive the No. 31 car for the round at Mid-Ohio. Charlie Kimball filled in the final two gaps in the schedule at Gateway and Portland, expanding his planned 5-race schedule to 7 races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 65], "content_span": [66, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290067-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 IndyCar Series, Contracted teams and drivers, Driver changes\nOn June 4, 2019, Carlin announced that Max Chilton would not be competing in the last 4 oval events of the season at Texas, Iowa, Pocono, and Gateway. Conor Daly was announced as the driver of the No. 59 car at Texas on the same day, and the No. 59 car will continue to be run for the full season. It was announced on August 12 that Daly would compete in the last two oval races at Pocono and Gateway in the No. 59 car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 65], "content_span": [66, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290067-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 IndyCar Series, Contracted teams and drivers, Driver changes\nOn August 29, 2019, it was announced that Marcus Ericsson had been called up by Alfa Romeo to be on reserve driver duty at the F1 race at Spa. Conor Daly was announced at the same time to be replacing Ericsson for the round at Portland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 65], "content_span": [66, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290067-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 IndyCar Series, Schedule\nAll races were in the United States apart from the Toronto round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290068-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Innisbrook Open\nThe 2019 Innisbrook Open was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the sixth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Palm Harbor, United States between 1 and 7 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290068-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Innisbrook 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-00290069-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Innisbrook Open \u2013 Doubles\nPaula Cristina Gon\u00e7alves and Petra Krejsov\u00e1 were the defending champions, having won the previous edition in 2015, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290069-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Innisbrook Open \u2013 Doubles\nQuinn Gleason and Ingrid Neel won the title, defeating Akgul Amanmuradova and Lizette Cabrera in the final, 5\u20137, 7\u20135, [10\u20138].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290070-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Innisbrook Open \u2013 Singles\nKaterina Stewart was the defending champion, having won the previous edition 2015, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290070-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Innisbrook Open \u2013 Singles\nBarbora Krej\u010d\u00edkov\u00e1 won the title, defeating Nicole Gibbs in the final, 6\u20130, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290071-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Inter Games Football Tournament\nThe 2019 Inter Games Football Tournament was an association football tournament which was held between 15 and 22 June 2019 in Anglesey, Wales. It was organised due to the hosts of the 2019 Island Games, Gibraltar being unable to run a tournament due to lack of pitches. As football is one of the most popular sports at the games it was decided to hold the matches elsewhere, albeit with the results not officially part of the Island Games history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290071-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Inter Games Football Tournament\nIt was announced on 1 May 2018 that the Welsh island had been chosen as the preferred venue to host. In August of that year 12 clubs put forward their names to hold matches and the draw for both the men's and women's competitions were made on 19 November by Wayne Hennessey and Osian Roberts. The sponsors of the games were Anglesey based Huws Gray builders merchants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290071-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Inter Games Football Tournament, Men's\nThe men's tournament will start as a group Round-robin tournament followed by knock out games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290071-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Inter Games Football Tournament, Men's, Group stage, Ranking of second-placed teams\nJoining the three group winners in the semi-finals, the final semi-final slot is awarded to the best-ranked runner-up. As Group A contained one more team than the other groups, the result of the Group A runner-up against the Group A fourth-placed team is not taken into consideration. This was Jersey's 7\u20130 win over the Western Isles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 88], "content_span": [89, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290071-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Inter Games Football Tournament, Women's\nThe women's tournament will be two groups of three teams. There were originally to be five teams in one group but on 8 February 2019 it was confirmed that Gibraltar would take part as an additional entrant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290072-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Inter-District Championship\nThe 2019 Inter-District Championship (IDC) is the 81st season of Inter-District Championship. It is the last championship of the 2019 Fijian football season. The 2019 IDC started on 8 October and is sponsored by Courts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290072-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Inter-District Championship, Teams\nThe eight teams from 2019 Vodafone Premier League play 2019 IDC Premier Division", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290072-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Inter-District Championship, Group Stage\nThe 8 Vodafone Premier League teams were split in two groups with four teams each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290073-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Inter-District Championship - Senior Division\nThe 2019 Inter-District Championship (IDC) is the 34th season of Inter-District Championship. It is the last championship of the 2019 Fijian football season. The 2019 IDC started on 8 October and ii sponsored by Courts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290073-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Inter-District Championship - Senior Division, Teams\nDespite having 12 teams in 2019 Vodafone Senior League only 8 teams compete in 2019 IDC Senior Division. 2019 Vodafone Senior League had two groups of six teams each. The top five teams from Viti Levu Zone and the top three teams from Vanua Levu Zone play IDC Senior Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 57], "content_span": [58, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290073-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Inter-District Championship - Senior Division, Group Stage\nThe 8 teams were split in two groups with four teams each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 63], "content_span": [64, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290074-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Inter-Provincial Championship\nThe 2019 Inter-Provincial Championship, known for sponsorship reasons as the Test Triangle Inter-Provincial Championship, was the seventh edition of the Inter-Provincial Championship, a first-class cricket competition currently being played in Ireland. It took place from 28 May to 29 August 2019. It was the third edition of the competition to be played with first-class status. North West Warriors were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290074-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Inter-Provincial Championship\nThe tournament was heavily affected by rain, with none of the games being completed. Only six days of play across the eighteen that were scheduled took place. Leinster Lightning were the eventual winners of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290075-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Inter-Provincial Cup\nThe 2019 Inter-Provincial Cup was the seventh edition of the Inter-Provincial Cup, a List A cricket competition for teams from Ireland. It was the third edition of the competition to be played with List A status. Leinster Lightning were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290075-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Inter-Provincial Cup\nUnlike previous editions of the tournament, an extra round of matches took place outside of the normal domestic calendar, with matches played at the La Manga Club Ground, Spain, in April 2019. The tournament was originally scheduled to start on 22 April 2019, but was postponed by 24 hours due to heavy rain. However, the opening fixture was abandoned without a ball being bowled due to a wet outfield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290075-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Inter-Provincial Cup\nLeinster Lightning retained their title, after their match on 22 August 2019 against the North West Warriors was abandoned due to rain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290076-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Inter-Provincial Trophy\nThe 2019 Inter-Provincial Trophy was the sixth edition of the Inter-Provincial Trophy, a Twenty20 cricket competition played in Ireland. It was held from 22 June to 18 August 2019. It is the third edition of the competition to be played with full Twenty20 status. The competition was split into two halves, each branded as a T20 Festival. The first half was played in June, and the second half was played in August. Leinster Lightning were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290076-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Inter-Provincial Trophy\nFollowing the conclusion of the June festival, Northern Knights had won all three of their matches, however, two matches were abandoned due to rain. All of the matches in the August festival were abandoned due to rain, with no play taking place across all three days. As a result, the Northern Knights won the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290076-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Inter-Provincial Trophy, Fixtures, June festival\nThe following fixtures for the June festival were confirmed by Cricket Ireland:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290076-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Inter-Provincial Trophy, Fixtures, August festival\nThe following fixtures for the August festival were confirmed by Cricket Ireland:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290077-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Intercontinental Cup (India)\nThe 2019 Intercontinental Cup (known as the 2019 Hero Intercontinental Cup for sponsorship reasons) was the second edition of Hero Intercontinental Cup, a 4-team association football tournament held at TransStadia Arena in the Indian city of Ahmedabad between the 7th and 19th of July 2019. The tournament was organized by the AIFF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290077-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Intercontinental Cup (India)\nNorth Korea won the title by a 1\u20130 victory over Tajikistan in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290077-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Intercontinental Cup (India), Participating nations\nThough the tournament was supposed to be played by teams from different confederations, in this edition of the Intercontinental Cup all teams participating were from AFC only. All the four teams played each other in a round robin phase and the top two teams played the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290077-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Intercontinental Cup (India), Participating nations\nThe FIFA Rankings of participating national teams, as of 14 June 2019:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290077-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Intercontinental Cup (India), Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 26 goals scored in 7 matches, for an average of 3.71 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290078-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Intercontinental GT Challenge\nThe 2019 Intercontinental GT Challenge was the fourth season of the Intercontinental GT Challenge. The season featured five rounds, starting with the Liqui Moly Bathurst 12 Hour on 3 February and concluding with the Kyalami 9 Hours on 23 November. Tristan Vautier was the defending Drivers' champion and Audi was the defending Manufacturers' champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290078-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Intercontinental GT Challenge, Calendar\nAt the annual press conference during the 2018 24 Hours of Spa on 27 July, the St\u00e9phane Ratel Organisation announced the first draft of the 2019 calendar. Kyalami was added to the schedule. On 3 December, it was announced the nine-hour race in South Africa would be moved from 3 to 23 November to avoid a clash with the Rugby World Cup. The date of the California 8 Hours was confirmed on 18 January. The race was moved from Sunday to the Saturday the day before in order to better accommodate live TV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290078-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Intercontinental GT Challenge, Entry list\n1 \u2013 Car No. 75 was nominated for manufacturer points at Round 1, but was not nominated for manufacturer points at Round 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290078-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Intercontinental GT Challenge, Championship standings\nChampionship points were awarded for the first ten positions in each race. Entries were required to complete 75% of the winning car's race distance in order to be classified and earn points, with the exception of Bathurst where a car simply had to cross the finish line to be classified. Individual drivers were required to participate for a minimum of 25 minutes in order to earn championship points in any race. A manufacturer only received points for its two highest placed cars in each round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290078-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Intercontinental GT Challenge, Championship standings, Drivers' championships\nThe results indicate the classification relative to other drivers in the series, not the classification in the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 82], "content_span": [83, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290078-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Intercontinental GT Challenge, Championship standings, Manufacturers' championship\nOnly the top two cars of each specific manufacturer is eligible for points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 87], "content_span": [88, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290079-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Interim-Union budget of India\nThe Interim Union Budget of India for the year 2019 was presented by acting Finance Minister Piyush Goyal on 1 February 2019. Government introduced Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi and Pradhan Mantri Shram Yogi Mandhan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290079-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Interim-Union budget of India, Highlights\nIn the budget, the fiscal deficit for 2019\u201320 will be 3.94% of GDP. The budget set aside \u20b96,000 (US$84) for farmers having up to 2 hectares of land. The amount is available in 3 equal installments of Rs.2000 each under Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi. \u20b93,000 (US$42) per month pension after 60 years of age to unorganized sector labor under Pradhan Mantri Shram Yogi Mandhan. Subscribers have to pay a monthly amount of Rs.100 if aged 29 years and Rs.55 if a subscriber is of 18 years of age. Income tax relief u/s 87A for income up to \u20b9500,000 (US$7,000). Standard deduction of \u20b950,000 (US$700) for salaried class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290079-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Interim-Union budget of India, Highlights\nIn 2018 Budget, the outlay was revised for six key social schemes focussed on enhancing the welfare of farmers and the poor, in addition to announcing a new scheme aimed at direct cash transfers to farmers. Apart from that allocation across three other schemes focused on rural India have been raised.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290080-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Intermediate League World Series\nThe 2019 Intermediate League World Series took place from July 28\u2013August 4 in Livermore, California. McCalla, Alabama defeated Matamoros, Mexico in the championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290081-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 International Challenger Baotou\nThe 2019 International Challenger Baotou was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Baotou, China between 26 August and 1 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290081-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 International Challenger Baotou, 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-00290081-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 International Challenger Baotou, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as alternates:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 80], "content_span": [81, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290082-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 International Challenger Baotou \u2013 Doubles\nNam Ji-sung and Song Min-kyu won the title after defeating Teymuraz Gabashvili and Sasikumar Mukund 7\u20136(7\u20133), 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290083-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 International Challenger Baotou \u2013 Singles\nJames Duckworth won the title after defeating Sasikumar Mukund 6\u20134, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290084-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 International Challenger Zhangjiagang\nThe 2019 International Challenger Zhangjiagang was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the third edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Zhangjiagang, China between 18 and 24 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290084-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 International Challenger Zhangjiagang, 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-00290084-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 International Challenger Zhangjiagang, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw using a protected ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 86], "content_span": [87, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290084-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 International Challenger Zhangjiagang, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 86], "content_span": [87, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290084-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 International Challenger Zhangjiagang, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 86], "content_span": [87, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290085-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 International Challenger Zhangjiagang \u2013 Doubles\nGong Maoxin and Zhang Ze were the defending champions but lost in the quarterfinals to Ruben Gonzales and Alex Lawson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290085-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 International Challenger Zhangjiagang \u2013 Doubles\nMax Purcell and Luke Saville won the title after defeating Sriram Balaji and Hans Hach Verdugo 6\u20132, 7\u20136(7\u20135) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290086-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 International Challenger Zhangjiagang \u2013 Singles\nYasutaka Uchiyama was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290086-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 International Challenger Zhangjiagang \u2013 Singles\nMarc Polmans won the title after defeating Lorenzo Giustino 6\u20134, 4\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20134) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290087-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 International Champions Cup\nThe 2019 International Champions Cup was the seventh edition of the International Champions Cup (ICC), a series of association football friendly matches. The competition was won by Portuguese club Benfica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290087-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 International Champions Cup, Teams\nA total of 12 teams participated in the competition. On June 12, Fiorentina replaced Roma due to Roma's impending participation in UEFA Europa League qualifiers (which they did not end up playing in).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290087-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 International Champions Cup, Venues\n17 venues for the International Champions Cup were announced on March 26, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290087-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 International Champions Cup, Matches\nThe match schedule was announced on March 28, 2019, and was updated on June 12 after Fiorentina replaced Roma. Each team played three matches, for a total of 18 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290087-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 International Champions Cup, Table\nThe 12 teams were ranked based on results from their three matches, with the best-ranked team being crowned champions. In addition to three points for a win and none for a loss, a penalty shoot-out win was worth two points, while a loss on penalties earned one point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290087-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 International Champions Cup, Media coverage\nAll 18 matches were live streamed for the unsold markets and highlights were also available for all territories around the world via ICC's official websites. The rights may be including both the 2019 International Leagues Cup (La Liga-Serie A cup) matches depending on the broadcasters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290088-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 International Championship\nThe 2019 International Championship was a professional snooker tournament that took place from 4 to 11 August 2019 at the Baihu Media Broadcasting Centre in Daqing, China. It was the second ranking event of the 2019/2020 season and the eighth iteration of the International Championship first held in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290088-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 International Championship\nNorthern Irish cueist Mark Allen was the defending champion, after defeating Australian Neil Robertson in the previous year's final. Allen, however, lost 9\u20136 to England's Shaun Murphy in the semi-finals. Reigning world champion Judd Trump won the event and his 12th ranking championship with a 10\u20133 win over Murphy in the final. In winning the event, Trump returned to the world number one position, that he had last held in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290088-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 International Championship\nTrump and Allen tied for the highest break during the televised stages, both scoring 141, with Trump also making 12 centuries throughout the tournament. Qualifying for the event took place 14\u201317 June 2019 in Ponds Forge International Sports Centre in Sheffield, England. Tom Ford made the highest break of qualifying, with a maximum break, the fourth of his career, in his 6\u20131 win in qualifying over Fraser Patrick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290088-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 International Championship, Tournament format\nThe event was the eighth iteration of the International Championship, having been first held in 2012. The event took place from 4\u201311 August 2019 at the Baihu Media Broadcasting Centre in Daqing, China. The event was the second ranking tournament of the 2019/20 snooker season after the 2019 Riga Masters won by Yan Bingtao.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290088-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 International Championship, Tournament format\nQualifying for the event was held from 14 to 17 June 2019 at the Ponds Forge International Sports Centre in Sheffield, England, featuring one first round match. Matches were played as best-of-11-frames until the semi-finals, which were played as best-of-17-frames, whilst the final was played as a best-of-19-frames.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290088-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 International Championship, Tournament format, Prize fund\nThe championship total fund was higher than that of the previous year's event, with a total of \u00a3802,000 (up from \u00a3775,000). The winner of the event received the same prize money as in previous years, at \u00a3175,000. The breakdown of prize money for this year is shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290088-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 International Championship, Tournament summary\nThe championship began on 4 August 2019, with the first round alongside heldover qualifier matches. Two matches in the heldover qualifier rounds were decided on a deciding frame. Ding Junhui defeated Simon Lichtenberg despite being 5\u20133 behind, whilst four-time world champion John Higgins defeated amateur under 21 world champion Wu Yize despite being 4\u20133 behind to the 15 year old. Judd Trump in his first tournament after winning the 2019 World Snooker Championship scored three century breaks in his qualifier to defeat Jordan Brown 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290088-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 International Championship, Tournament summary, Early rounds (first round\u2013quarter-finals)\nTwo top-16 ranked players were defeated in first round; Mark Williams lost to Jak Jones and Barry Hawkins to Daniel Wells both 6\u20132. Ding Junhui defeated three fellow Chinese players in the first three rounds, overcoming Zhao Xintong, Xiao Guodong and Liang Wenbo to reach the quarter-finals. Defending champion Mark Allen conceded just four frames to draw Ding, having defeated Sam Craigie, Mark Davis (both 6\u20131) and Ali Carter (6\u20132). Allen defeated Ding 6\u20133 to reach the semi-finals. As the sole remaining Chinese player in the competition, some Chinese viewers were reported to have stopped watching the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 94], "content_span": [95, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290088-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 International Championship, Tournament summary, Early rounds (first round\u2013quarter-finals)\nGraeme Dott qualified to play Shaun Murphy in the second quarter-final. Dott defeated Michael White before defeating two world champions in Stuart Bingham and John Higgins to reach the quarter-final. Murphy, who had reached only the Scottish Open final in the previous season defeated Yuan Sijun 6\u20135 and Riga Masters champion Yan Bingtao 6\u20134 before drawing a rematch of the second round match at the 2019 World Championships against Neil Robertson. Murphy defeated Robertson on a deciding frame 6\u20135. Murphy defeated Dott 6\u20134 to draw Allen in the semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 94], "content_span": [95, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290088-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 International Championship, Tournament summary, Early rounds (first round\u2013quarter-finals)\nThree-time world champion Mark Selby reached the second semi-final, after defeating Liam Highfield and Ben Woollaston (both 6\u20133), before playing World Championship semi-finalists David Gilbert and Gary Wilson, defeating both on a deciding frame 6\u20135. World champion Judd Trump reached the semi-finals defeating Zhang Anda, Scott Donaldson, Joe Perry and Tom Ford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 94], "content_span": [95, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290088-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 International Championship, Tournament summary, Semi-final\u2013final\nThe first semi-final took place on 9 August 2019, between Selby and Trump. In reaching the semi-finals, Trump was guaranteed to return to world number one after the tournament for the first time since 2013. Selby won three of the first four frames to lead 3\u20131. However, Trump won the next four frames to lead 5\u20133 after the first session with breaks of 97, 108, 97 and 116. In the second session, Trump won the first three frames to lead 8\u20133 including two more 90+ breaks. Selby took frame 12 before Trump won the match in frame 13 with a break of 72. After the match, Trump commented \"It was probably somewhere near how I was playing to win the World Championship,\" describing his form within the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290088-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 International Championship, Tournament summary, Semi-final\u2013final\nThe second semi-final was a rematch of the 2019 Scottish Masters final between Murphy and Allen. Murphy won the first five frames of the match, with Allen not scoring a single point until frame four. Allen fought back to trail 3\u20136 after the first session. Murphy won the first frame of the second session, before Allen won the next two. Murphy won frame 13 to need just one more frame for victory. Allen won the next two frames to push the match into the interval. Murphy however won frame 15 to win the match 9\u20136 with a break of 66.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290088-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 International Championship, Tournament summary, Semi-final\u2013final\nThe final was played as a best-of-19-frames match held over two sessions on 11 August 2019, refereed by Lyu Xilin. Trump won the first five frames of the match making a century break in frame three. Murphy, however won three of the remaining four frames of the session to trail 3\u20136. On the resume of the match, Trump dominated the remaining frames, winning the next four frames to win the match 10\u20133, completing eight half-centuries in the match. The victory was Trump's twelfth ranking event title, twelfth match unbeaten in a row, and had scored twelve centuries during the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290088-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 International Championship, Tournament summary, Semi-final\u2013final\nThe win was the first time a reigning world champion won the first championship in which they had competed in after the event, since Ronnie O'Sullivan in 2008. In losing the event, Murphy commented that he was \"disappointed\" and that had not played well: \"Judd swamped me, that was how it felt.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290088-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 International Championship, Qualifying\nMatches were played between 14 and 17 June 2019 at the Ponds Forge International Sports Centre in Sheffield, England. Matches involving Mark Allen, Sam Craigie, Ding Junhui, John Higgins, Yan Bingtao, Sunny Akani, Anthony McGill and Judd Trump, were played in Daqing. All matches were the best-of-11-frames.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290088-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 International Championship, Century breaks, Televised stage centuries\nA total of 63 century breaks were made during the televised stages of the tournament. Judd Trump and Mark Allen shared the highest break of the tournament, with both players making a break of 141. In addition, Trump made a total of 12 centuries, eight more than any other player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 74], "content_span": [75, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290088-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 International Championship, Century breaks, Qualifying stage centuries\nA total of 42 century breaks were made during the qualifying tournament preceding the event, including a maximum break from Tom Ford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290089-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 International Darts Open\nThe 2019 International Darts Open was the twelfth of thirteen PDC European Tour events on the 2019 PDC Pro Tour. The tournament took place at the SACHSENarena, Riesa, Germany, from 13\u201315 September 2019. It featured a field of 48 players and \u00a3140,000 in prize money, with \u00a325,000 going to the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290089-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 International Darts Open\nGerwyn Price was the defending champion after defeating Simon Whitlock 8\u20133 in the previous year's final, and he successfully defended his title, by defeating Rob Cross 8\u20136 in the final. It was his second Euro Tour title, while Cross failed to get over the line in his fourth consecutive European final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290089-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 International Darts Open, Qualification and format\nThe top 16 entrants from the PDC ProTour Order of Merit on 25 June will automatically qualify for the event and will be seeded in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290089-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 International Darts Open, Qualification and format\nThe remaining 32 places will go to players from six qualifying events \u2013 18 from the UK Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 2 August), six from the European Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 2 August), two from the West & South European Associate Member Qualifier (held on 12 September), four from the Host Nation Qualifier (held on 12 September), one from the Nordic & Baltic Qualifier (held on 24 August), and one from the East European Qualifier (held on 25 August).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290089-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 International Darts Open, Qualification and format\nFrom 2019, the Host Nation, Nordic & Baltic and East European Qualifiers will only be available to non-Tour Card holders. Any Tour Card holders from the applicable regions will have to play the main European Qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290089-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 International Darts Open, Qualification and format\nMichael van Gerwen and Dave Chisnall, who were set to be the 1st seed and 4th seed respectively, withdrew prior to the tournament. All seeds below Van Gerwen moved up a place and all seeds below Chisnall moved up two places. Jeffrey de Zwaan and Jamie Hughes became 15th seed and 16th seed respectively, and an extra two places were made available in the Host Nation Qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290090-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 International Friendship Championship\nThe 2019 International Friendship Championship was a football tournament for the national teams of Iraq, Syria and Jordan. It was scheduled to take place during the March 2019 window of the FIFA International Match Calendar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290091-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 International GT Open\nThe 2019 International GT Open is the fourteenth season of the International GT Open, the grand tourer-style sports car racing series founded in 2006 by the Spanish GT Sport Organizaci\u00f3n. It began on 27 April at Le Castellet and will finish on 12 October, at Monza after seven double-header meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290091-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 International GT Open, Championship standings, Points systems\nPoints are awarded to the top 10 (Pro) or top 6 (Am, Pro- Am, Teams) classified finishers. If less than 6 participants start the race or if less than 75% of the original race distance is completed, half points are awarded. At the end of the season, the lowest race score is dropped; however, the dropped race cannot be the result of a disqualification or race ban.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 66], "content_span": [67, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290091-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 International GT Open, Championship standings, Teams' Championship\nOnly the highest two finishing cars from a team count towards the Teams' Championship", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 71], "content_span": [72, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290092-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 International Swimming League\nThe 2019 International Swimming League was the inaugural edition of the International Swimming League, a professional swimming league, established in 2019. It comprised eight teams composed of both women and men. The league consisted of seven short course swimming meets which took place in seven cities around the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290092-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 International Swimming League\nThe budget for this first edition was $20\u00a0million. The France-based team Energy Standard won the inaugural ISL title in the Final Match hosted at Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino in Las Vegas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290092-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 International Swimming League, Schedule\nThe schedule consists of six regular-season meets, followed by a Final Match in Las Vegas. At each meet four of the eight teams compete (two from American conference and two from European conference). Two of the meets are 'derby' meet, one for all four American teams and one for all four European teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290092-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 International Swimming League, Schedule, Events schedule\nA total of 37 races were held in each match (the 4x50m mixed medley relay acted as a tie breaker).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290092-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 International Swimming League, Teams\nISL teams can have a maximum roster of 32 athletes for 2019 season, with a suggested size of each club's traveling roster of 28 (14 men and 14 women). Each club will have a captain and a vice-captain of different gender.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290093-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux F\u00e9minins de la Vienne\nThe 2019 Internationaux F\u00e9minins de la Vienne was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the twenty-third edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Poitiers, France between 21 and 27 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290093-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux F\u00e9minins de la Vienne, 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-00290094-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux F\u00e9minins de la Vienne \u2013 Doubles\nAnna Blinkova and Alexandra Panova were the defending champions, but both players decided not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290094-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux F\u00e9minins de la Vienne \u2013 Doubles\nAmandine Hesse and Harmony Tan won the title, defeating Tayisiya and Yana Morderger in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290095-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux F\u00e9minins de la Vienne \u2013 Singles\nViktorija Golubic was the defending champion, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290095-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux F\u00e9minins de la Vienne \u2013 Singles\nNina Stojanovi\u0107 won the title, defeating Liudmila Samsonova in the final, 6\u20132, 7\u20136(7\u20132).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290096-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux de France\nThe 2019 Internationaux de France was the third event of the 2019\u201320 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, a senior-level international invitational competition series. It was held at Patinoire Polesud in Grenoble, France from November 1\u20133. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dance. Skaters earned points toward qualifying for the 2019\u201320 Grand Prix Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290096-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux de France, Entries\nThe ISU announced the preliminary assignments on June 20, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290096-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux de France, Records\nThe following new ISU best scores were set during this competition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290096-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux de France, Results, Ice dance\nThe rhythm dance scores for the last two teams, Marie-Jade Lauriault / Romain Le Gac of France and Allison Reed / Saulius Ambrulevi\u010dius of Lithuania, were revised several hours after the event due to an unspecified error.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290097-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux de Strasbourg\nThe 2019 Internationaux de Strasbourg was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the 33rd edition of the tournament and part of the International-level tournament category of the 2019 WTA Tour. It took place at the Tennis Club de Strasbourg in Strasbourg, France, between 19 and 25 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290097-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00290097-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux de Strasbourg, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry using a protected ranking into the main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290097-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux de Strasbourg, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received a wildcard into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290098-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux de Strasbourg \u2013 Doubles\nMihaela Buz\u0103rnescu and Raluca Olaru were the defending champions, but Buz\u0103rnescu chose not to participate this year. Olaru played alongside Darija Jurak, but lost in the semifinals to Daria Gavrilova and Ellen Perez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290098-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux de Strasbourg \u2013 Doubles\nGavrilova and Perez went on to win the title, defeating Duan Yingying and Han Xinyun in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290099-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux de Strasbourg \u2013 Singles\nAnastasia Pavlyuchenkova was the defending champion, but withdrew before the tournament began.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290099-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux de Strasbourg \u2013 Singles\nDayana Yastremska won the title, defeating Caroline Garcia in the final 6\u20134, 5\u20137, 7\u20136(7\u20133). Yastremska saved a match point Garcia had against her in the third set in the final before winning the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290100-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux de Tennis de Blois\nThe 2019 Internationaux de Tennis de Blois was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the seventh edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Blois, France between 17 and 23 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290100-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00290100-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux de Tennis de Blois, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290100-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux de Tennis de Blois, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw using a protected ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290100-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux de Tennis de Blois, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as alternates:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290101-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux de Tennis de Blois \u2013 Doubles\nFabr\u00edcio Neis and David Vega Hern\u00e1ndez were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290101-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux de Tennis de Blois \u2013 Doubles\nCorentin Denolly and Alexandre M\u00fcller won the title after defeating Sergio Gald\u00f3s and Andreas Siljestr\u00f6m 7\u20135, 6\u20137(5\u20137), [10\u20136] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290102-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux de Tennis de Blois \u2013 Singles\nScott Griekspoor was the defending champion but lost in the second round to Tristan Lamasine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290102-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux de Tennis de Blois \u2013 Singles\nPedro Sousa won the title after defeating Kimmer Coppejans 4\u20136, 6\u20133, 7\u20136(7\u20134) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290103-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux de Tennis de Vend\u00e9e\nThe 2019 Internationaux de Tennis de Vend\u00e9e was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the seventh edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Mouilleron-le-Captif, France between 7 and 13 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290103-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00290103-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux de Tennis de Vend\u00e9e, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 83], "content_span": [84, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290104-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux de Tennis de Vend\u00e9e \u2013 Doubles\nSander Gill\u00e9 and Joran Vliegen were the defending champions but lost in the first round to Sander Arends and David Pel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290104-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux de Tennis de Vend\u00e9e \u2013 Doubles\nJonny O'Mara and Ken Skupski won the title after defeating Arends and Pel 6\u20131, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290105-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux de Tennis de Vend\u00e9e \u2013 Singles\nElias Ymer was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290105-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internationaux de Tennis de Vend\u00e9e \u2013 Singles\nMikael Ymer won the title after defeating Mathias Bourgue 6\u20131, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290106-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali Femminili di Brescia\nThe 2019 Internazionali Femminili di Brescia was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the twelfth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Brescia, Italy between 3 and 9 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290106-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali Femminili di Brescia, 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-00290107-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali Femminili di Brescia \u2013 Doubles\nCristina Dinu and Ganna Poznikhirenko were the defending champions, but lost to Andrea G\u00e1miz and Paula Cristina Gon\u00e7alves in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290107-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali Femminili di Brescia \u2013 Doubles\nG\u00e1miz and Gon\u00e7alves won the title, defeating Anastasia Grymalska and Giorgia Marchetti in the final, 6\u20133, 4\u20136, [12\u201310].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290108-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali Femminili di Brescia \u2013 Singles\nKaia Kanepi was the defending champion, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290108-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali Femminili di Brescia \u2013 Singles\nJasmine Paolini won the title, defeating Di\u0101na Marcink\u0113vi\u010da in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290109-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali Femminili di Palermo\nThe 2019 Internazionali Femminili di Palermo was a professional women's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts at the Country Time Club. It was the 27th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 WTA Tour. It took place in Palermo, Italy between 22 and 28 July 2019. The tournament made a return to the WTA Tour after a five-year absence (2014\u20132018).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290109-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00290109-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali Femminili di Palermo, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry using a protected ranking into the main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 84], "content_span": [85, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290109-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali Femminili di Palermo, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry as a special exempt into the main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 84], "content_span": [85, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290109-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00290110-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali Femminili di Palermo \u2013 Doubles\nKristina Mladenovic and Katarzyna Piter were the champions the last time the tournament was held in 2013, but chose not to participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290110-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali Femminili di Palermo \u2013 Doubles\nCornelia Lister and Renata Vor\u00e1\u010dov\u00e1 won the title, defeating Ekaterine Gorgodze and Arantxa Rus in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20132), 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290111-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali Femminili di Palermo \u2013 Singles\nRoberta Vinci was the champion the last time the tournament was held in 2013, but she has since retired from professional tennis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290111-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali Femminili di Palermo \u2013 Singles\nJil Teichmann won the title, defeating Kiki Bertens in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20133), 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290112-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Citt\u00e0 dell'Aquila\nThe 2019 Internazionali di Tennis Citt\u00e0 dell'Aquila, also known for sponsorship reasons as the 2019 Aterno Gas & Power Tennis Cup, was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the 13th edition of the men's tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. The event took place in L'Aquila, Italy between 19 \u2013 25 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290112-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Citt\u00e0 dell'Aquila, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 91], "content_span": [92, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290112-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Citt\u00e0 dell'Aquila, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 91], "content_span": [92, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290112-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Citt\u00e0 dell'Aquila, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 91], "content_span": [92, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290113-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Citt\u00e0 dell'Aquila \u2013 Doubles\nFilippo Baldi and Andrea Pellegrino were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290113-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Citt\u00e0 dell'Aquila \u2013 Doubles\nTomislav Brki\u0107 and Ante Pavi\u0107 won the title after defeating Luca Margaroli and Andrea Vavassori 6\u20133, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290114-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Citt\u00e0 dell'Aquila \u2013 Singles\nFacundo Bagnis was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290114-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Citt\u00e0 dell'Aquila \u2013 Singles\nAndrea Collarini won the title after defeating Andrej Martin 6\u20133, 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290115-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Citt\u00e0 di Perugia\nThe 2019 Internazionali di Tennis Citt\u00e0 di Perugia was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the fifth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Perugia, Italy between 8 and 14 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290115-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Citt\u00e0 di Perugia, 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-00290115-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Citt\u00e0 di Perugia, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 90], "content_span": [91, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290116-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Citt\u00e0 di Perugia \u2013 Doubles\nDaniele Bracciali and Matteo Donati were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290116-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Citt\u00e0 di Perugia \u2013 Doubles\nTomislav Brki\u0107 and Ante Pavi\u0107 won the title after defeating Rog\u00e9rio Dutra Silva and Szymon Walk\u00f3w 6\u20134, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290117-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Citt\u00e0 di Perugia \u2013 Singles\nUlises Blanch was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290117-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Citt\u00e0 di Perugia \u2013 Singles\nFederico Delbonis won the title after defeating Guillermo Garc\u00eda L\u00f3pez 6\u20130, 1\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20135) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290118-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Citt\u00e0 di Vicenza\nThe 2019 Internazionali di Tennis Citt\u00e0 di Vicenza was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the sixth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Vicenza, Italy between 27 May and 2 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290118-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Citt\u00e0 di Vicenza, 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-00290118-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Citt\u00e0 di Vicenza, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 90], "content_span": [91, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290118-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Citt\u00e0 di Vicenza, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 90], "content_span": [91, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290119-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Citt\u00e0 di Vicenza \u2013 Doubles\nAriel Behar and Enrique L\u00f3pez P\u00e9rez were the defending champions but only Behar chose to defend his title, partnering Gonzalo Escobar. Behar lost in the quarterfinals to Gon\u00e7alo Oliveira and Andrei Vasilevski.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290119-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Citt\u00e0 di Vicenza \u2013 Doubles\nOliveira and Vasilevski won the title after defeating Fabr\u00edcio Neis and Fernando Romboli 6\u20133, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290120-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Citt\u00e0 di Vicenza \u2013 Singles\nHugo Dellien was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290120-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Citt\u00e0 di Vicenza \u2013 Singles\nAlessandro Giannessi won the title after defeating Filippo Baldi 7\u20135, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290121-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Emilia Romagna\nThe 2019 Internazionali di Tennis Emilia Romagna was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Parma, Italy between 17 and 23 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290121-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Emilia Romagna, 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-00290121-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Emilia Romagna, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 88], "content_span": [89, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290121-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Emilia Romagna, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 88], "content_span": [89, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290122-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Emilia Romagna \u2013 Doubles\nLaurynas Grigelis and Andrea Pellegrino won the title after defeating Ariel Behar and Gonzalo Escobar 1\u20136, 6\u20133, [10\u20137] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290123-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis Emilia Romagna \u2013 Singles\nTommy Robredo won the title after defeating Federico Gaio 7\u20136(12\u201310), 5\u20137, 7\u20136(8\u20136) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290124-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis d'Abruzzo\nThe 2019 Internazionali di Tennis d'Abruzzo was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the third edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Francavilla al Mare, Italy between 22 and 28 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290124-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis d'Abruzzo, 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-00290124-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis d'Abruzzo, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 83], "content_span": [84, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290124-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis d'Abruzzo, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 83], "content_span": [84, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290125-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis d'Abruzzo \u2013 Doubles\nJulian Ocleppo and Andrea Vavassori were the defending champions but lost in the first round to Jonathan Eysseric and Andrei Vasilevski.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290125-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis d'Abruzzo \u2013 Doubles\nDenys Molchanov and Igor Zelenay won the title after defeating Guillermo Dur\u00e1n and David Vega Hern\u00e1ndez 6\u20133, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290126-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis d'Abruzzo \u2013 Singles\nGianluigi Quinzi was the defending champion but lost in the second round to Tomislav Brki\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290126-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis d'Abruzzo \u2013 Singles\nStefano Travaglia won the title after defeating Oscar Otte 6\u20133, 6\u20137(3\u20137), 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290127-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis del Friuli Venezia Giulia\nThe 2019 Internazionali di Tennis del Friuli Venezia Giulia was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the sixteenth (men) and fourth (women) editions of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour and the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Cordenons, Italy between 5 and 18 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290127-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis del Friuli Venezia Giulia, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 105], "content_span": [106, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290127-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis del Friuli Venezia Giulia, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 105], "content_span": [106, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290127-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis del Friuli Venezia Giulia, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 105], "content_span": [106, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290127-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis del Friuli Venezia Giulia, Women's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 107], "content_span": [108, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290127-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis del Friuli Venezia Giulia, Women's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 107], "content_span": [108, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290128-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis del Friuli Venezia Giulia \u2013 Men's Doubles\nDenys Molchanov and Igor Zelenay were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [71, 71], "content_span": [72, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290128-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis del Friuli Venezia Giulia \u2013 Men's Doubles\nTomislav Brki\u0107 and Ante Pavi\u0107 won the title after defeating Nikola \u010ca\u010di\u0107 and Antonio \u0160an\u010di\u0107 6\u20132, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [71, 71], "content_span": [72, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290129-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis del Friuli Venezia Giulia \u2013 Men's Singles\nPaolo Lorenzi was the defending champion but lost in the third round to Markus Eriksson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [71, 71], "content_span": [72, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290129-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis del Friuli Venezia Giulia \u2013 Men's Singles\nChristopher O'Connell won the title after defeating Jeremy Jahn 7\u20135, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [71, 71], "content_span": [72, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290130-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis di Manerbio \u2013 Trofeo Dimmidis\u00ec\nThe 2019 Internazionali di Tennis di Manerbio \u2013 Trofeo Dimmidis\u00ec was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the seventeenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Manerbio, Italy between 5 and 11 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290130-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis di Manerbio \u2013 Trofeo Dimmidis\u00ec, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 104], "content_span": [105, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290130-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis di Manerbio \u2013 Trofeo Dimmidis\u00ec, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using protected rankings:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 104], "content_span": [105, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290130-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis di Manerbio \u2013 Trofeo Dimmidis\u00ec, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 104], "content_span": [105, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290131-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis di Manerbio \u2013 Trofeo Dimmidis\u00ec \u2013 Doubles\nRomain Arneodo and Hugo Nys were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290131-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis di Manerbio \u2013 Trofeo Dimmidis\u00ec \u2013 Doubles\nFabr\u00edcio Neis and Fernando Romboli won the title after defeating Sadio Doumbia and Fabien Reboul 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20134) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290132-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis di Manerbio \u2013 Trofeo Dimmidis\u00ec \u2013 Singles\nRoberto Carball\u00e9s Baena was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290132-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internazionali di Tennis di Manerbio \u2013 Trofeo Dimmidis\u00ec \u2013 Singles\nFederico Gaio won the title after defeating Paolo Lorenzi 6\u20133, 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290133-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Internet blackout in Iran\nThe 2019 Internet blackout in Iran was a week-long total shutdown of Internet. It was ordered by Supreme National Security Council and imposed by the Ministry of ICT. The blackout was one of the Iranian government's efforts to suppress 2019 protests. During the blackout, Iranian citizens could only access the National Information Network. Mohammad-Javad Jahromi was sanctioned by the United States Department of the Treasury because of his role in Internet censorship in Iran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290133-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Internet blackout in Iran, Extent\nThe 2019 blackout was the most wide-scale internet shutdown ever in Iran. It was \"the most severe disconnection tracked by NetBlocks in any country in terms of its technical complexity and breadth.\" Although It was a near-total shutdown, top Iranian politicians still had access to the Internet. The 2019 blackout was the first-ever and longest total Internet shutdown in a large country. It was also the first blackout that effectively isolated a whole nation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290133-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Internet blackout in Iran, Extent\nDoug Madory, the director of Internet analysis at Oracle, has described the operation as \"unusual in its scale\" and way more advanced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290133-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Internet blackout in Iran, Extent\nIranians usually use VPNs to access social media, but none of them worked during the shutdown. As a result of that, some people used Toosheh to get news and other Internet-related content.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290133-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Internet blackout in Iran, Extent\nA new study by, Human Rights organization, Article 19 has revealed how Iranian authorities were able to cut off the internet of tens of millions of Iranian people in November 2019. And use another \"local\" type of Internet instead. This study outlines the structure of Iran's Internet and provides a picture of control that is unparalleled anywhere in the world. This consolidation of technologies means that Iran is in a unique position to exercise control over its citizens' Internet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290133-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Internet blackout in Iran, Execution\nIt took 24 hours for MICT to cut off people's access to the Internet. The ministry had to order a range of ISPs and mobile data providers to stop providing users with international network and connect to NIN. Some providers withdrew their routes from the Internet and some continued to announce routes but block traffic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290133-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Internet blackout in Iran, Execution\nAlthough the global network was not accessible, local services including banks, state-run messaging apps, and vehicle for hire mobile apps continued to operate through National Information Network. State-owned web search engines and GPS navigation software were also enabled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290133-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Internet blackout in Iran, Timeline and statistics\nUsers first reported minor outages in Mashhad on 15 November. The disruptions increased in extent and severity with impact also visible on overall connectivity charts. Iran's largest mobile network operators, including MCI, Rightel and Irancell, fell offline on the evening of 16 November. The Internet blocking gradually increased until the country reached the point of total shutdown. There was a partial return of the Internet in eight Provinces (Ardebil, Golestan, Markazi, Mazandaran, Qazvin, Qom, Semnan and West Azarbaijan) at around 7pm on the 17th Nov but by 20 November, national connectivity was at 5% of ordinary levels. According to the Monash IP Observatory, the only area that was not affected by the nationwide shut-down was the historical city of Bam in the Kerman Province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 847]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290133-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Internet blackout in Iran, Timeline and statistics\nOn 23 November, NetBlocks reported that \"Internet access is being restored in Iran and connectivity levels have risen to 64%\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290133-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Internet blackout in Iran, Impact\nIranians couldn't contact their friends and families abroad through the Internet. Hundreds of currency exchanges and travel agencies closed down. Movie ticket sales dropped 60%. Estimates of total damage to the economy range from $1 billion to $1.5 billion. The Washington Post reported that the blackout has had a severe impact on start-ups and small businesses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290134-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Invercargill mayoral election\nThe 2019 Invercargill mayoral election was part of the New Zealand local elections that were held on 12 October 2019 to elect the Mayor of Invercargill. Incumbent mayor Tim Shadbolt was re-elected to his ninth term with a reduced majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290135-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa 300\nThe 2019 Iowa 300 was the twelfth round of the 2019 IndyCar Series season, contested over 300 laps at the 0.875-mile (1.4 km) Iowa Speedway in Newton, Iowa. Simon Pagenaud claimed his third pole position of the season, while Josef Newgarden went on to win his 4th race of the season and 14th of his career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290135-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa 300, Results, Race\nNotes: Points 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, 13], "section_span": [15, 28], "content_span": [29, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290136-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa Hawkeyes football team\nThe 2019 Iowa Hawkeyes football team represented the University of Iowa during the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Hawkeyes played their home games at Kinnick Stadium in Iowa City, Iowa, and competed in the West Division of the Big Ten Conference. They were led by Kirk Ferentz in his 21st season as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290136-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa Hawkeyes football team\nIowa began the year with four straight wins, including an 18\u201317 road victory over rival Iowa State with College GameDay present. After losing games to three ranked opponents \u2013 at No. 19 Michigan (3\u201310), No. 10 Penn State (12\u201317), at No. 13 Wisconsin (22\u201324) \u2013 by a total of 14 points, the Hawkeyes knocked off another rival, unbeaten No. 8 Minnesota, 23\u201319, to start a four-game win streak to close the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290136-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Iowa Hawkeyes football team\nAfter long-time athletic director Bump Elliott and legendary head coach Hayden Fry died in December, Iowa capped the 2019 season with a resounding 49\u201324 win over No. 22 USC in the Holiday Bowl. The Hawkeyes finished with a record of 10\u20133 (6\u20133 B1G), the sixth season with 10+ wins in the Ferentz era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290136-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa Hawkeyes football team\nJunior kicker Keith Duncan was named Big Ten Kicker of the Year and was selected as a consensus First-team All-American. Junior offensive tackle Tristan Wirfs was named Big Ten Offensive Lineman of the Year, and later became the 10th Iowa player of the Ferentz era taken in the first round of the NFL Draft. After leading the Big Ten in sacks his sophomore season, junior defensive end A. J. Epenesa had a career-high 11.5 sacks in 2019, and was selected in the second round of the 2020 NFL Draft. Michael Ojemudia and Geno Stone became the fourth and fifth Iowa defensive backs drafted between 2017 and 2020. Nate Stanley, a three-year starter at quarterback, was also selected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290136-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Previous season\nThe 2018 Hawkeyes team finished the season 9\u20134, 5\u20134 in Big Ten play to finish in a tie for second place in the West Division. They received an invitation to the Outback Bowl where they defeated Mississippi State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290136-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Preseason, Preseason Big Ten poll\nAlthough the Big Ten Conference has not held an official preseason poll since 2010, Cleveland.com has polled sports journalists representing all member schools as a de facto preseason media poll since 2011. For the 2019 poll, Iowa was projected to finish in second in the West Division behind Nebraska.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290136-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Schedule\nIowa's 2019 schedule began with a non-conference home game against the Miami RedHawks of the Mid-American Conference. Iowa's Big Ten Conference opener was the second week against Rutgers. They finished off their non-conference slate with a road game against in-state rival Iowa State, a member of the Big 12 Conference, and then a home game against Middle Tennessee of Conference USA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290136-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Schedule\nIn Big Ten Conference play, Iowa played all members of the West Division and Rutgers, Michigan, and Penn State from the East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290136-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Game summaries, Miami (OH)\nIowa played its first ever season-opening night game. Typical of first games under Ferentz, Iowa started out slow. The offense wasn't clicking for a great deal of the first half, but found a rhythm in the second as Iowa put up four touchdowns. The Hawkeyes had a balanced attack with 252 yards passing and 213 rushing with several running backs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290136-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Game summaries, Rutgers\nIowa went to the air early and often in their Big Ten opener. On his second touchdown pass, Nate Stanley passed Ricky Stanzi for third all-time on Iowa's career passing touchdown list. Ihmir Smith-Marsette had a career-high 113 yards receiving and two touchdowns. The Hawkeyes defense was smothering, shutting out the Scarlet Knights and forced three turnovers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290136-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Game summaries, at Iowa State\nESPN's College GameDay was in Ames for the rivalry game with Lee Corso picking Iowa State to win the match-up. There were two weather delays in the first half which effectively made it a night game. It ended up being a back-and-forth contest with Iowa kicker Keith Duncan hitting four crucial field goals to keep the Hawkeyes in the game. Iowa held the Cyclones on a critical fourth down, however Iowa State still had a chance with over a minute in regulation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290136-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Game summaries, at Iowa State\nAn Iowa state player ran into his teammate attempting to field the punt and it resulted in a muffed ball that Iowa pounced on. With the Cyclones having spent all their timeouts already, the Hawkeyes were simply able to run out the clock and the Cy-Hawk trophy remained in Iowa City for a fifth year in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290136-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Game summaries, Middle Tennessee\nThe Hawkeyes put up 644 yards of total offense (tops in the Ferentz era) as the Blue Raiders were unable to stop them. Toren Young was the most outstanding of the several Iowa backs that were able to play with 131 yards rushing on the day, and Nate Stanley had 276 yards passing and two touchdown passes to Brandon Smith. Iowa dominated ball possession, with almost 12 more minutes and forced the Blue Raiders into several three-and-outs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290136-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Game summaries, Penn State\nThe Hawkeyes wore alternate gold jerseys. Iowa entered the game not having defeated Penn State since 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290136-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Game summaries, Purdue\nPurdue refused to go away in a wild second half. Iowa had to recover two onside kick attempts in order to seal this homecoming victory. The Hawkeyes made the Boilermakers one-dimensional as almost all of their offense came through the air. This marked the 300th combined win of the Fry-Ferentz era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290136-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Game summaries, at Northwestern\nIowa entered the game having lost three of the last four games at Ryan Field. The Hawkeyes were able to shut out the Wildcats for the first time since 1981 and spoil their homecoming. Iowa stopped Northwestern on several fourth down attempts to keep them off the board and did not turn the ball over. Nate Stanley also passed Drew Tate to move up to second on Iowa's career passing touchdown list with his 62nd touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290136-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Game summaries, at Wisconsin\nWisconsin has won seven of the last eight games in this series. This was the first top 20 match-up between the universities since 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 62], "content_span": [63, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290136-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Game summaries, Minnesota\nThe unbeaten Golden Gophers entered the game with CFP aspirations. Iowa was aggressive in the first half and put up three touchdowns. Minnesota was able to drive the ball but failed to score enough and left Iowa City having not defeated the Hawkeyes at Kinnick Stadium since Kirk Ferentz's first year in 1999. The Hawkeye fans stormed the field, fairly reminiscent of a game three years prior when Iowa knocked off a 9-0 Michigan squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290136-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Game summaries, Illinois\nIowa won its sixth straight in this series, and Illinois hasn't won at Kinnick Stadium since 1999. After a Tyler Goodson touchdown run capped the opening drive, junior kicker Keith Duncan contributed four field goals in a game for the third time this season. On his fourth made kick, Duncan established a new single-season Big Ten record with 27 made field goals. The win over the Illini marked the 96th Big Ten Conference win for head coach Kirk Ferentz, tying him with Hayden Fry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290136-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Game summaries, at Nebraska\nAfter being named a Groza finalist earlier in the week, junior kicker Keith Duncan nailed a 48-yard field goal with one second remaining to clinch the victory (and proceeded to blow kisses towards the Nebraska bench). Junior defensive end A. J. Epenesa anchored the defense with 14 tackles, 4.5 TFL, and 2 sacks. Junior Ihmir Smith-Marsette scored two long touchdowns, and freshman Tyler Goodson ran for 116 yards and a touchdown before leaving with an injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290136-0017-0001", "contents": "2019 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Game summaries, at Nebraska\nEpenesa earned Big Ten Defensive Player of the Week for the second time in three weeks, and Duncan was named Big Ten Special Teams Player of the Week for the second straight week and third time this season. The Hawkeyes extended their winning streak in the series to five games overall, and it was Iowa's fourth consecutive road victory against the Cornhuskers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290136-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Game summaries, vs. USC (Holiday Bowl)\nFormer head coach Hayden Fry passed away just ten days prior to the game and the Iowa helmets were without Tigerhawk decals to honor his legacy on the program. Iowa's 49 points is the most in a bowl game under Ferentz, and the Hawkeyes handed USC its worst bowl loss since the 1948 Rose Bowl. Nate Stanley joined Ricky Stanzi as the second quarterback in Iowa history to win three bowl games, and also passed Drew Tate in career passing yards. Ihmir Smith-Marsette scored three touchdowns in the second quarter \u2013 a 6-yard run, 98-yard kickoff return, and 12-yard reception \u2013 to earn the game's offensive MVP. The Hawkeyes held USC to just seven points in the second half, led by the game's defensive MVP, A. J. Epenesa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290137-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa State Cyclones football team\nThe 2019 Iowa State Cyclones football team represented Iowa State University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Cyclones competed as members of the Big 12 Conference and were led by fourth-year head coach Matt Campbell. They played their home games at Jack Trice Stadium in Ames, Iowa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290137-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa State Cyclones football team, Preseason, Coaching changes\nIn January 2019, head coach Matt Campbell announced that Tom Manning would return as offensive coordinator. He had served in that role for the Cyclones in Campbell's first two years in 2016 and 2017, but worked as the tight ends coach for the Indianapolis Colts during the 2018 season. Campbell also announced the addition of former West Virginia defensive backs coach Matt Caponi as a defensive assistant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290137-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa State Cyclones football team, Preseason, Big 12 media poll\nThe 2019 Big 12 media days were held July 15\u201316, 2019 in Frisco, Texas. In the Big 12 preseason media poll, Iowa State was predicted to finish in third in the standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290137-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa State Cyclones football team, Schedule\nIowa State's 2019 schedule will begin with three non-conference home games against Northern Iowa of the Missouri Valley Conference, Iowa of the Big Ten Conference, and Louisiana\u2013Monroe of the Sun Belt Conference. In Big 12 Conference play, the Cyclones will play four home games against TCU, Oklahoma State, Texas, and Kansas; and will play five road games against Baylor, West Virginia, Texas Tech, Oklahoma, and Kansas State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290137-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa State Cyclones football team, Game summaries, at Oklahoma\nBoth Iowa State and Oklahoma lost their previous games. Oklahoma could still be in the playoff chase by winning the remainder of their games and winning the Big 12 conference championship game. Predictions call that the Oklahoma Defense will need to slow the Cyclone offense to win the game. Coming into the game, it is listed as one of the most \"compelling matchups\" for the week by MSN Sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290137-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa State Cyclones football team, Game summaries, at Kansas State\nGame conditions were cold and windy for the 2019 edition of \"Farmageddon\". Iowa State entered the game as the least-penalized team in the Big 12 Conference, but were charged with 8 penalties to Kansas State's 2 when two programs met in Manhattan. The Cyclones also struggled on third down, only converting 1 attempt at 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290137-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa State Cyclones football team, Game summaries, at Kansas State\nKansas State's Joshua Youngblood returned a kick for a touchdown on the first play of the game. That placed him at the top of the NCAA for three touchdown returns in the season this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290137-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa State Cyclones football team, Game summaries, at Kansas State\nDuring the third quarter, each team managed a field goal but very little more happened offensively. In the fourth quarter, Kansas State managed to pull ahead 24-17 with an eight-play drive rushing drive ending in a touchdown with 10:24 left in the game. After that, Iowa State punter Joe Rivera kicked just 17 yards on fourth down, which Kansas State was able to turn in to a field goal and put the score out of reach for the Cyclones. The final score was Kansas State 27, Iowa State 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290137-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Iowa State Cyclones football team, Game summaries, at Kansas State\nAfter the game and 7-5 regular season record, CBS Sports bowl expert Jerry Palm projected that Iowa State will play Kentucky in the 2019 Liberty Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290138-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ipswich Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Ipswich Borough Council elections for the Ipswich Borough Council took place on 2 May: 16 seats were contested - one in each of the 16 wards and also on 26 September when a by-election took place where 1 seat was contested (Alexandra Ward).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods\nFrom mid-March to April 2019 widespread flash flooding affected large parts of Iran, most severely in Golestan, Fars, Khuzestan, Lorestan, and other provinces. Iran has been hit by three major waves of rain and flooding over the course of two weeks which led to flooding in at least 26 of Iran's 31 provinces and at least 70 people died nationwide as of 6 April, according to the officials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 Iran floods\nThe first wave of rain began on 17 March, leading to flooding in two northern provinces, Golestan and Mazandaran with the former province receiving as much as 70 percent of its average annual rainfall in single day. Several large dams have been overflowed, particularly in Khuzestan and Golestan, therefore many villages and several cities have been evacuated. About 1,900 cities and villages across country have been damaged by severe floods as well as hundreds of millions of dollars of damage to water and agriculture infrastructure. 78 roads were blocked and the reliability of 84 bridges was questioned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods\nSeverity of the floods was greatly increased by converting flood routes and dry river beds for urban development without providing proper drainage infrastructure. According to an Iranian official, due to record rainfalls, more than 140 rivers have burst their banks and about 409 landslides have happened in the country. The impact of the floods was heightened because of the Nowruz holiday; many Iranians were traveling and many deaths occurred due to flash flooding on roads and highways. Around 12,000\u00a0km of roads were damaged by the flooding, about 36% of Iran's national road network. The floods caused at least $2.2 billion (2019 USD) in damages, mostly due to losses in the agricultural industry. Further, according to Red Crescent, two million people are in need of humanitarian aid due to the devastating floods.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 838]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods\nCivil and armed forces have been mobilized since 24 March after the command of Ali Khamenei, Iran's Supreme Leader, and vice President, Eshaq Jahangiri, along with several ministers as well as army commanders have traveled to the areas affected by floods. However, the lack of government aid and delayed response at the first days quickly heightened political tensions throughout the nation. Many Iranians including politicians took to social media platforms to criticize the handling of the floods by the government, specifically President Hassan Rouhani. Civilian outrage ultimately led to deadly clashes between protesters and government soldiers. The floods prompted a large outcry against the government rule which was perceived as worsening the floods through destructive measures such as the destruction of natural plant coverage, obstruction of flood outlets, and converting flood routes and dry river beds to residential areas following the Islamic Revolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 986]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Locations, Golestan and Mazandaran\nOn 20 March 2019, massive rainfall in the two provinces of Golestan and Mazandaran in Iran brought about heavy flooding. These floods resulted in financial damages to the people living in these areas and also the deaths of two children. State-run media reports indicated that flash floods had surfaced in 70 villages in Golestan and more than 200 villages in Mazandaran. Iran's Minister of Energy also reported that 360 villages in Golestan province and 193 villages in Mazandaran province had lost electricity due to floods. Coincident with Iran's national holiday, Nowruz,.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 52], "content_span": [53, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Locations, Golestan and Mazandaran\nThe first wave of rain began on 17 March, leading to flooding in two northern provinces, Golestan and Mazandaran with the former province receiving as much as 70 percent of its average annual rainfall in a single day. Several large dams have overflowed, particularly in Khuzestan and Golestan, therefore, many villages and several cities were evacuated. In many areas, homes and lands have been partially or totally submerged for several days. Portions of Golestan province received 50-70\u00a0percent of their average annual rainfall over a five-day period. Some areas recorded approximately 300\u00a0mm (12\u00a0in) of rainfall, equivalent to a year's-worth of rain. These amounts exceed any accumulations in the region in at least 70 years. The flooding in Golestan and Mazandaran provinces is considered a 1-in-100-year event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 52], "content_span": [53, 868]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Locations, Golestan and Mazandaran\nOn 6 April 2019, about two weeks after the flood, the town of Aqqala in the northern province of Golestan, is still covered with lethal flood. Local authorities say \"they have to wait for the water to vaporize\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 52], "content_span": [53, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Locations, Golestan and Mazandaran\nThe governor of Golestan province was also reportedly on vacation outside the country during the floods. Later, he was dismissed by the vice President.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 52], "content_span": [53, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Locations, Shiraz\nOn 25 March, flash floods following heavy rains in Southwestern Iran in the vicinity of the city of Shiraz killed 19 people and injured more than 200 others. Many people were traveling for the Nowruz holiday, and were injured or killed when their cars were swept off of roads. Rain was short but heavy, lasting in two bursts of approximately 15 minutes each; however, the impact was exacerbated by the heavy road traffic at the time. Iran's Meteorological Organisation gave warnings for further floods, as heavy rains were expected to last at least until 27 March. The leader of the Iranian Ministry of Energy has stated that climate change was a contributing factor to the flooding. As of 26 March 2019, 20 of Iran's 31 provinces are either currently flooded or facing the possibility of imminent flooding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 843]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Locations, Shiraz\nAccording to a dissident news organization, local sources reported that as many as 150 people were killed in the floods in Shiraz on 25 March. Official reports, however, indicated that a total of 21 people were killed in Fars Province, which includes Shiraz, by 5 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Locations, Shiraz\nA brief but intense rainfall caused a sudden flash flood that submerged the main highway between Shiraz and Esfahan, trapping many travelers who had been leaving the city after Nowruz celebrations. City officials did not warn the people of Shiraz of the deadly weather conditions resulting in many deaths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Locations, Shiraz\nThe initial investigations of the Shiraz flash floods showed that a water canal adjacent to the Quran Gate was paved over in the early 2000s for use as a road by the Shiraz municipality. The road expansion did not include a sufficient drainage system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Locations, Lorestan\nThe railway between Tehran and southwestern Iran had already been shut down on 1 April following initial floods.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Locations, Lorestan\nHeavy rains on 3 April, have completely overwhelmed several towns in the mountainous Lorestan province. The town of Poldokhtar in Lorestan Province was engulfed by flood water. After the floodwaters subsided, cars and homes remained sunken in thick layers of mud. According to a dissident news agency, an internal police report stated that at least 90 people were killed when floods engulfed the western city of Poldokhtar in Lorestan province. According to the IRGC-affiliated Tasnim News Agency, Heydari said that the conditions in Poldokhtar were \"horrific\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Locations, Khuzestan\nDue to heavy rain fall in Zagros Mountains, Dez River and Karkheh River overflowed and water accumulated in Dez Dam and Karkheh Dam so that Karkhe dam's reservoir located in Khuzestan province, reached to 8400m\u00b3/sec. As dams reached to their maximum capacity, power ministry of Iran managed to release water.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Locations, Khuzestan\nOn 31 March the Government of Iran declared a state of emergency for Khuzestan Province. President Hassan Rouhani deployed \"all available capacities\" to assist victims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Locations, Khuzestan\nKhuzestan's governor Gholamreza Shariati ordered six towns and cities and about 70 villages located along the Karkheh River have to be evacuated, but about Ahvaz, Khuzestan's capital is not an injunction for evacuation. 47 camps in the province have been prepared to house for 30,400 people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Locations, Khuzestan\nIn order to prevent disaster occurrence, the Karkheh Dam, which was at near capacity, was opened to discharge excessive water.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Locations, Khuzestan\nOn 8 April 2019, 20 lifeboats for rescue works in Iran floods was donated by Germany. Khuzestan Red Crescent Society Director Ali Khodadadi said officials will use them for rescue operations in Dasht-e-Azadegan, Shush, Shushtar, Ahvaz and other regions located in the southwestern Khuzestan Province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Locations, Khuzestan\nDuring the second week of April, about 200 villages had been evacuated, with 46,000 people displaced and living in emergency shelters. In total, 6 cities and 210 villages were inundated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Locations, Khuzestan\nIn Ahvaz, 110 patients were evacuated from a hospital for the mentally ill on 8 April, according to a government news agency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Locations, Tehran\nA major rockfall caused by heavy rains on 31 March injured five people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Locations, Kermanshah\nAt least 19,000 people were evacuated from their homes following floods on 31 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 39], "content_span": [40, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Locations, Isfahan\nOn 31 March, Golpayegan Dam located in Isfahan province near the borders with Markazi and Lorestan provinces filled, therefore the people residing in the areas near the downstream of the dam and river banks were warned to evacuate their homes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Locations, Other cities\nOn 25 March, there was a warning because of flood in some 26 provinces of 31 and villages near rivers and dams in several provinces have been ordered to evacuate from rising water. In Hamedan, heavy snowfall was reported to have destroyed buildings. Water levels in Lake Urmia, in northwestern Iran, rose by 42\u00a0cm by 5 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 41], "content_span": [42, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Locations, Other cities\nOn 14 April, Officials warned people living in the east of Iran, because of heavy rains forecast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 41], "content_span": [42, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Causes\nUsing NASA's data, an atmospheric river (AR), named AR Dena, was found responsible for the record floods of March 2019 in Iran. This rare AR started its long, 9000 km journey from the Atlantic Ocean and travelled across North Africa before its final landfall over the Zagros Mountains. Water transport by AR Dena was equivalent to more than 150 times the aggregated flow of the four major rivers in the region (Tigris, Euphrates, Karun and Karkheh). This event was a compelling example of rapid dry-to-wet transitions and intensification of extremes, resulting from the climate change.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Climate change\nAccording to an Aljazeera report, the recent floods arose from climate change and global warming. The head of Iran's meteorology service stated that a decades-long drought has not been solved by the flood.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Damage\nThe flooding caused the destruction of hundreds of millions of dollars of infrastructure and the collapse of at least 314 bridges across the country. Twenty-three of the nation's thirty-one provinces were affected. Agriculture suffered tremendous damage, with losses in the sector reaching 46\u00a0trillion rials (US$1.1\u00a0billion) by 3 April. Golestan accounted for the largest portion at 20\u00a0trillion rials (US$480\u00a0million). At least 25,000 houses were completely destroyed, while another 60,000 sustained some form of damage. 44 public libraries in Iran also suffered flood damage. According to reports from Aljazeera, out of 800 villages affected by the flood in Golestan, 95 villages are yet to recover from it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Damage\nMohamad Hossein Talebian, deputy chairman of Iran's Cultural Heritage Organization reported on 27 March that \"cracks on the ancient reliefs in Naqsh-e Rustam in Fars province are widening in a critical way.\" Social media reports revealed a waterfall made by the floods that has been washing away parts of the monument. In April 1398, the floods caused severe damage to the city of Khorramabad. The construction of a new and non-expert bridge on the Khorramabad River with a very low altitude from the river level has exacerbated and flooded the streets of Khorramabad city. The Iranian authorities say that currently, a projected bill of at least $2.5 billion is needed to fix the damage, according to NBC News.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Damage\nAccording to Talebian, \"The Persepolis remains intact as its ancient water ducts have drained flood water.\" The ancient water ducts also protected the Tomb of Cyrus the Great and saved the internationally acclaimed site from destruction by the floods. Excavations of Great Wall of Gorgan were also damaged due to its close proximity to a dry riverbed which experienced flooding. The floods have damaged the Aq Qala bridge in northern Iran and several other centuries-old bridges in Isfahan and Shoushtar. According to the guardian, the damages have been so severe that the Iranian authorities have stopped foreign journalists from visiting the areas that are affected the worst.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Damage\nOn 15 April 2019 it was reported that a leisure center that belonged to Iran's security forces was one of the \"major structures\" responsible for the recent deadly flood.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Relief efforts\nOn 23 March, Iran's supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, commanded the Armed Forces of the Islamic Republic of Iran to participate in the relief efforts. Civil and armed forces have been mobilized since 24 March and Eshaq Jahangiri with several ministers as well as army commanders have traveled to the areas affected by floods to help people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Relief efforts\nOn 25 March, Shortly after the floods began the Rouhani administration proceeded to ban all third party charities to help the flood relief effort citing that all donations must be made directly to the Iranian government thus preventing foreign aid from reaching the country. On 6 April, as the Iran government has promised, all damages will be recompensed, actually for farmers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Relief efforts\nOn 25 March, Chief Justice of Iran, Ebrahim Raisi stated that \"Any shortcomings regarding the handling of the floods, failure to provide relief and aid to the survivors will be investigated\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Relief efforts\nOn 7 April, according to Iranian Red Cross, \"14,238 units of tents, 58,494 packs of blankets, 32,961 packs of ground sheets, 43,509\u00a0kg of plastic sheets, 3,083 pcs of heaters, 2,851 health sets, 1355 kitchen sets, 227,696 bottles of mineral water, 125,993 canned food, 235,405 loaves of bread, 1,877\u00a0kg of date, 41,992\u00a0kg of rice, 9,485\u00a0kg of edible oil, 3955 boxes of Biscuits, 8,710\u00a0kg of sugar, 11,753\u00a0kg of beans and 84,580 food packages\" have been distributed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0034-0001", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Relief efforts\nIn total, \"537,000 kgs of food and living items have been transferred through 556 flight hours and 1,970 relief and rescue workers were transported\". The relief services include proving basic supports such as food and water \"for more than 257,000 people and proving temporally shelters for more than 98,000 persons.\" In addition, \"1138 persons were transferred to safe areas and 89 persons transferred to the clinics.\" According to Iranian Red Cross, several thousands of vital requirements have been distributed among those affected by floods.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Relief efforts\nOn 9 April, following the Relief efforts in Golestan province, Deputy Commander of Neynava Division of the IRGC Colonel Seyed Mousa Hosseini promised that in order to enliven people, their efforts such as feeding, relief aid, and housing is keeping until normally everyday life appears. Shahid Shoushtari field hospital belong to the IRGC Ground Force and the specialized hospital of the IRGC's Navy have been established respectively in Aqqala and also Siminshahr and Golmishan, about 78328 injured people have been cured. He added that \"In the engineering sector, the IRGC\u2019s Brigade 45 of Engineers built 20 bridges on the road between Gomishan to Bandar Turkmen in less than 60 hours.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Relief efforts\nRelief efforts including clearing rubble, diverting water, building dykes, and distributing supplies are performing by local communities, soldiers and volunteers. On 9 April, volunteer team including 90 trained rescue people from West Azerbaijan province went to flood-stricken regions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Relief efforts\nIn order to help to flood-stricken people, the Execution of Imam Khomeini's Order (EIKO) known as Setad has prepared essential equipment containing fresh food, blankets, drinking water, and even toys for children. Also EIKO furnished facilities (fridges, washing machines, carpets, and other necessary elements) for 15000 families and provided 4,000 cattle of 9,000 killed by the flood for families living in villages. Some temporary clinics have been established to cure wounded and give medicine. The Barakat Foundation performed most of aids as the representative of EIKO. In other hands, the organization ensured, when people return to their normal life, EIKO will be able to \"provide some 3,000 job opportunities\" for citizens. In Khouzistan exposed to flood risk, 140,000 rural homes were insured by Barakat Foundation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 858]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Relief efforts, International aid\nPakistan's National Disaster Management Authority, on the order of country's Prime Minister Imran Khan, sent 32 tonnes of relief goods to Iran. The consignment comprising two shipments contained 500 tents, 3,300 blankets and emergency medical kits. The relief goods were transferred using two C-130 aircraft. Previously Pakistan's Foreign Office (FO) spokesperson, Dr. Muhammad Faisal, condoled with the families of the victims. The spokesperson further claimed that Pakistan is ready to provide humanitarian assistance to Iran in rescue effort. He claimed that people of Pakistan stand in solidarity with Iranian people in their difficult time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 51], "content_span": [52, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Relief efforts, International aid\nThe European Union pledged to donate 1.2 million Euros to help with relief efforts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 51], "content_span": [52, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Relief efforts, International aid\nOn 13 April, The aid convoy including more than 100 vehicles which was sent by Iraq's Harakat Hezbollah al-Nujaba, a major Shia resistance group arrived in Iran. The consignments have been donated to Iran's flood-stricken people living in Khuzestan and Lorestan provinces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 51], "content_span": [52, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Relief efforts, International aid\nOn 13 April Ali Asghar Peyvandi, the head of Iranian Red Crescent Society, said that despite non-cash assistance such as blankets, tents, sanitary wares donated from Kuwait, Turkey, Azerbaijan, France, Germany, Armenia, Pakistan, foreign cash aid has not been deposited to the Iranian Red Crescent account, So far, we have not received even a dollar or one euro. He mentioned that the reason for this is closure of the SWIFT and Iranian Red Crescent account as a result of Sanctions. Also, it is not possible for the Iranians abroad and International Committee of the Red Cross to deposit cash aid to the Iranian Red Crescent account.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 51], "content_span": [52, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Relief efforts, International aid\nIn order to assist people who have been affected by the heavy flood in Iran, the WHO on the 10th of April 2019, has deployed important medical supplies in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 51], "content_span": [52, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Controversy\nPresident Hassan Rouhani was heavily criticized for his delayed response. Rouhani suffered greater scrutiny after it was revealed that he was on vacation on Iran's Qeshm Island in the Persian Gulf and returned to Tehran while the floods had begun subsiding. The lack of aid and the presence of the Iranian government quickly prompted outrage among the victims of the floods. Iranians across the nation expressed their frustration by a Persian hashtag translated as \"Where is Rouhani?\" Iranians also began calling for Rouhani's resignation. \"Mr. Rouhani, you better submit your resignation from wherever you are. Your appearance will only open up people's wounds,\" read another tweet. The governor of Golestan province was also reportedly on vacation outside the country during the floods. Foreign journalists were not allowed to covering the flood-stricken areas according to Atlantic Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 923]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Controversy\nMany Iranians took to social media platforms to criticize the handling of the floods by the regime specifically Rouhani. Swedish-Iranian academic and researcher Ahmad Reza Jalali, currently on death row after being sentenced at the Islamic Revolutionary Court in Tehran, gave an interview to U.S. government-funded Radio Farda attributing the destruction of natural plant coverage, obstruction of flood outlets, and converting flood routes and dry river beds to residential areas following the Islamic Revolution were the causes of the flash floods in Shiraz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Controversy\nIn April 2019, two weeks after the flood, Mohammad Pakpour, a commander of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) told the reporters there had been \"no management\" of the rescue or aid operations in Pol-e Dokhtar and that government officials would not \"dare\" to go the area because the \"people are in a rebellious mood.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Controversy\nMohammad Javad Zarif, Iran's foreign minister, and Ali Larijani, speaker of the Parliament, have condemned the United States which prevents the delivery of relief aid from the International Red Cross by its sanctions against Iran. Zarif said that \"This isn't just economic warfare; it's economic terrorism\". On the other hand, Mike Pompeo, United States Secretary of State, denied accusations and blamed Iran's government for mismanagement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290139-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 Iran floods, Controversy\nOn 12 April 2019, angry flood stricken people in Ahwaz, the capital of southern province of Khuzestan, took to the streets protesting the government's inaction to divert flood into the lagoons of Hour Al-Azim away from towns and villages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290140-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Iranian Super Cup\nThe 2019 Iranian Super Cup was the 5th Iranian Super Cup an annual football match played between the winners of the previous season's Persian Gulf Pro League and winner of Hazfi Cup. Persepolis won the 2019 Persian Gulf Pro League and 2019 Hazfi Cup, so Iran Football Association announced that Persepolis is the 2019 Super Cup winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290141-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Iranian shoot-down of American drone\nOn June 20, 2019, Iran's integrated system of Air Defense Forces shot down a United States RQ-4A Global Hawk BAMS-D surveillance drone with a surface-to-air missile over the Strait of Hormuz. Iranian officials said that the drone violated their airspace, while U.S. officials responded that the drone was in international airspace. Both Iran and the U.S. differ on where the incident actually occurred.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290141-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Iranian shoot-down of American drone\nThe incident occurred amid rising tensions between the two countries and nearly resulted in an armed confrontation. U.S. President Donald Trump initially ordered a military strike against IRGC radar and missile sites before reversing the decision. Instead, the U.S. retaliated with cyberattacks on the IRGC's missile-control systems (which Iran says were firewalled), announced new sanctions against several Iranian nationals, and requested a closed-door UN Security Council meeting to address the regional tensions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290141-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Iranian shoot-down of American drone, Background\nThe U.S. has been flying surveillance drones in support of maritime security and to spy on Iran for many years. To abide by international law, such flights must take place in international airspace. Aside from the frequent legal reconnaissance flights, Iran has protested what it alleges are violations of its sovereign air space.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 53], "content_span": [54, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290141-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Iranian shoot-down of American drone, Background\nIt has said that two U.S. spy drones crashed in Iran, a Shadow 200 (RQ-7), which it said crashed 37 miles (60\u00a0km) inside Iran in Ilam Province on July 4, 2005, and a Hermes drone near Khorramabad, about 125 miles (201\u00a0km) inside Iran, on August 25, 2005. A later program of secret drone flights within Iranian airspace, run by the American Central Intelligence Agency, came to light following Iran's capture of a stealth spy drone inside Iranian territory on December 5, 2011. The program entailed frequently sending stealth drones into Iran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 53], "content_span": [54, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290141-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Iranian shoot-down of American drone, Background\nAccording to the U.S., the drone involved in the June 2019 incident was one of four Broad Area Maritime Surveillance-Demonstrator (BAMS-D) RQ-4 Global Hawks built as predecessors to the MQ-4C Triton, and operated by the U.S. Navy. The drone is believed to be the largest drone in the entire fleet of the U.S military. An MQ-4C Triton has a price of $182 million (including R&D costs).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 53], "content_span": [54, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290141-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Iranian shoot-down of American drone, Background\nThe BAMS-D flies at high altitude, but is not a stealth aircraft. It does not carry munitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 53], "content_span": [54, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290141-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Iranian shoot-down of American drone, Incident\nIranian Major General and IRGC commander Hossein Salami said that the drone took off at 00:14 local time from a U.S. military base south of the Persian Gulf and flying toward Chabahar. He alleged that, on its return journey, it violated the Iranian airspace near the Strait of Hormuz. Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said that the drone was at when it was targeted at 04:05 local time (23:35 GMT, June 19). These GPS coordinates put it at 8.3 nautical miles (15.3\u00a0km) off Iran's coast, within the 12 nautical miles (22\u00a0km) of its claimed territorial waters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290141-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Iranian shoot-down of American drone, Incident\nAccording to Iran, the drone was struck by an Iranian-produced 3rd Khordad SAM located near Garuk, Hormozgan Province. However, citing a Pentagon official, Newsweek reported the missile as a Russian-origin S-125 Neva/Pechora. Iranian forces displayed sections of the drone, which the foreign minister stated had been retrieved from Iranian territorial waters. According to TIME, smoke from the drone was seen as shown in a video by the U.S. military.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290141-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Iranian shoot-down of American drone, Incident\nThe Iranian account of the drone's location at the time of the shoot-down is contested by the United States. The commander of United States Air Forces Central Command, Air Force Lieutenant General Joseph Guastella, said the \"closest that the drone got to the Iranian coast was 21 miles.\" Later, U.S. Central Command issued a map of the RQ-4A's flight path, showing the attack position as several miles outside Iran's territorial waters. They also released an infra-red image of an apparent explosion destroying the RQ-4A taken from another aircraft at , 17.3 nautical miles (32.0\u00a0km) off Iran's coast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290141-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Iranian shoot-down of American drone, Incident\nThe New York Times, citing a senior official in the Trump administration, reported that there were some doubts inside the administration about whether the drone and a Boeing P-8 Poseidon manned aircraft had indeed avoided Iranian airspace throughout their entire flights. Brig. Gen. Amir Ali Hajizadeh, commander of Aerospace Force of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, said that the U.S. was warned twice about the infringement of Iran's territorial limit and stated, \"When it did not redirect its route and continued flying toward and into our territory, we had to shoot it at 4.05am.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290141-0006-0002", "contents": "2019 Iranian shoot-down of American drone, Incident\nOur national security is a red line.\" Hajizadeh also talked about the manned American P-8 plane over Iran's territory, saying \"With the U.S. drone in the region there was also an American P-8 plane with 35 people on board. This plane also entered our airspace and we could have shot it down, but we did not.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290141-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Iranian shoot-down of American drone, Incident\nIranians stated that the P-8 had heeded warnings and moved further off the Iranian coast. The P-8 is a naval aircraft that the U.S. uses for surveillance that is equipped with weapons to destroy ships and submarines. Hours later, the Pentagon confirmed the presence of a P-8 Poseidon aircraft close to the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290141-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Iranian shoot-down of American drone, Incident\nU.S. President Donald Trump later echoed Hajizadeh's statement regarding the P-8:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290141-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Iranian shoot-down of American drone, Incident\nThere was a plane with 38 people yesterday, did you see that? I think that\u2019s a big story. They had it in their sights and they didn\u2019t shoot it down. I think they were very wise not to do that. And we appreciate that they didn\u2019t do that. I think that was a very wise decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290141-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Iranian shoot-down of American drone, Incident\nOn June 25, Russian Security Council Secretary Nikolai Patrushev echoed the Iranian account, stating Russian military intelligence showed that the U.S. drone was shot down in Iranian airspace. Patrushev said that Iran \"has always been and remains our ally and partner\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290141-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Iranian shoot-down of American drone, U.S. response, Aborted military response\nFollowing the incident, President Donald Trump tweeted that Iran had made a \"big mistake\". The Federal Aviation Administration warned airlines of a \"potential for miscalculation or misidentification\" as numerous flights began to be diverted from the Tehran flight information region. The United States also requested a June 24 closed-door United Nations Security Council meeting to address the regional tensions with Iran, according to diplomats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 83], "content_span": [84, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290141-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Iranian shoot-down of American drone, U.S. response, Aborted military response\nSeveral hours later, The New York Times, citing \"multiple senior administration officials involved in or briefed on the deliberations,\" reported that Trump had ordered a retaliatory military strike on several Iranian radar and missile sites, but then withdrew the order. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, National Security Adviser John Bolton, and CIA Director Gina Haspel were reportedly in favor of a military response and objected to the reversal. Vice President Mike Pence initially supported limited military strikes but also agreed with the president's decision to halt them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 83], "content_span": [84, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290141-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Iranian shoot-down of American drone, U.S. response, Aborted military response\nTrump later confirmed that he aborted an attack, tweeting that he was in \"no hurry\" to attack Iran and halted his order \"10 minutes before the strike\" because it was only then that he learned that Iranian casualties were estimated to be 150 killed, which he said was \"not proportionate to shooting down an unmanned drone\". In an interview with NBC News, he expounded on his decision-making process, saying that though the strike package was \"cocked and loaded\", he had not given final approval to the operation and added that no warplanes had taken off before the reversal. He reiterated that he did not want war with Iran and was open to unconditional talks with Iranian leadership, but affirmed that they \"can't have nuclear weapons\" and warned that in the event of a conflict there would be \"obliteration like you've never seen before\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 83], "content_span": [84, 923]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290141-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Iranian shoot-down of American drone, U.S. response, Aborted military response\nA June 22 article in The Wall Street Journal, citing unnamed administration officials close to internal deliberations, reported that, privately, Trump bemoaned the cost of the downed drone \u2013 around $130 million (not including R&D) \u2013 but said that it would pale in comparison in the eyes of U.S. citizens to potential Iranian casualties. One source said the collateral damage estimate of 150 killed came from the White House, not the Pentagon, which two others said guessed lower. The WSJ report also stated that Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Joseph Dunford cautioned against a strike, significantly influencing Trump's decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 83], "content_span": [84, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290141-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Iranian shoot-down of American drone, U.S. response, Aborted military response\nIn leaked diplomatic documents, UK ambassador to Washington Kim Darroch questioned Trump's claim that he had aborted the missile strike because it would have caused 150 casualties, saying it \"doesn't stand up\". \"It's more likely that he was never fully on board and that he was worried about how this apparent reversal of his 2016 campaign promises would look come 2020\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 83], "content_span": [84, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290141-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Iranian shoot-down of American drone, U.S. response, Aborted military response\nOn June 23, Bolton warned Iran to not \"mistake U.S. prudence and discretion for weakness\" and that \"no one has granted them a hunting license in the Middle East. Our military is rebuilt, new and ready to go.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 83], "content_span": [84, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290141-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Iranian shoot-down of American drone, U.S. response, Aborted military response\nOn June 27, a week after the incident, U.S. Air Force Chief of Staff David Goldfein confirmed that U.S. drone operations in the region were continuing unabated despite the shoot-down. The day prior, he also downplayed the regional tensions at the time, saying he did not see a \"significant change\" in the Iranian military's defensive posture or capabilities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 83], "content_span": [84, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290141-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Iranian shoot-down of American drone, U.S. response, Cyber attacks and sanctions\nOn June 22, it was reported that Trump had approved cyberattacks intended to disable IRGC computer systems used to control rocket and missile launches the day of the shoot-down. The cyber strikes were in development \"for weeks if not months\" and handled by U.S. Cyber Command in conjunction with U.S. Central Command. It represented the first offensive show of force since Cyber Command was elevated to a full combatant command in May 2018. Also on June 22, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security issued a warning to U.S. industries that Iran was stepping up cyberattacks of critical industries \u2014 particularly oil, gas, and other energy sectors \u2014 and government agencies, and have the potential to disrupt or destroy systems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 85], "content_span": [86, 813]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290141-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Iranian shoot-down of American drone, U.S. response, Cyber attacks and sanctions\nOn June 24, Trump announced new targeted sanctions against Iranian and Revolutionary Guard Corps leadership, including Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and his office. IRGC targets included Naval commander Alireza Tangsiri, Aerospace commander Amir Ali Hajizadeh, and Ground commander Mohammad Pakpour. The sanctions also targeted the commanders of the IRGC Navy's five districts: Abbas Gholamshahi, Ramezan Zirahi, Yadollah Badin, Mansour Ravankar, and Ali Ozma'i. The sanctions largely froze any assets under U.S. jurisdiction, blocked the targeted leaders from dollar-denominated transactions, and barred international banks from moving money on their behalf. U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said the sanctions would block \"literally billions\" in assets and that Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif would also be sanctioned within the week. Zarif was later sanctioned on July 31.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 85], "content_span": [86, 971]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290141-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Iranian shoot-down of American drone, U.S. response, Cyber attacks and sanctions\nAlso on June 24, Iranian Information and Communications Technology Minister Mohammad-Javad Azari Jahromi said the cyberattacks were firewalled, commenting \"They try hard, but they have yet to carry out a successful attack.\" This followed a report in The New York Times, citing current and former officials, saying the Trump administration was urging U.S. military and intelligence officers to develop new methods for unconventional clandestine operations against Iran, to avoid using conventional military options.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 85], "content_span": [86, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290142-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Iraq FA Cup Final\nThe 2019 Iraq FA Cup Final was the 28th final of the Iraq FA Cup. The match was contested between Al-Zawraa and Al-Kahrabaa, at Al-Shaab Stadium in Baghdad. It was played on 26 July 2019 to be the final match of the competition. Al-Zawraa made their record 18th appearance in the Iraq FA Cup final while Al-Kahrabaa made their first appearance. Al-Zawraa won the match 1\u20130 with a late goal from Safaa Hadi, for the club's record 16th title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290142-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Iraq FA Cup Final\nThe winners of the cup, Al-Zawraa, qualified for the 2020 AFC Champions League preliminary round 2 as well as the 2019 Iraqi Super Cup, where they lost on penalties to league champions Al-Shorta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290142-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Iraq FA Cup 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290143-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Iraqi Super Cup\nThe 2019 Iraqi Super Cup was the 9th edition of the Iraqi Super Cup. The match was contested between the Baghdad rivals, Al-Shorta and Al-Zawraa, at Al-Kut Olympic Stadium in Kut. It was played on 14 September 2019 as a curtain-raiser to the 2019\u201320 season. Al-Shorta made their 2nd appearance in the Super Cup while Al-Zawraa extended their record to 7 appearances. Al-Shorta won the cup on penalties for the club's first Super Cup title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290144-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ireland Tri-Nation Series\nThe 2019 Ireland Tri-Nation Series was a cricket tournament that was held from 5 to 17 May in Ireland. It was a tri-nation series featuring Bangladesh, Ireland and the West Indies, with all the matches played as One Day Internationals (ODIs). The ODI fixtures were part of Bangladesh and West Indies' preparation for the 2019 Cricket World Cup. Bangladesh also played a 50-over warm-up match against Ireland A on 5 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290144-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ireland Tri-Nation Series\nThe West Indies were the first team to qualify for the final, after they beat hosts Ireland in the fourth match of the series. Bangladesh also qualified for the final, after they beat the West Indies in the fifth match. Bangladesh won the series, after beating the West Indies by five wickets in a rain-affected final. It was the first time that Bangladesh had won a multi-team international tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290144-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Ireland Tri-Nation Series, Squads\nIn late April 2019, Taskin Ahmed and Farhad Reza were added to Bangladesh's squad. Mark Adair was added to Ireland's squad, replacing Stuart Thompson, who was ruled out due to injury. After initially naming a squad for their first two ODIs, Ireland named an unchanged squad for the remaining fixtures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290145-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Irish Greyhound Derby\nThe 2019 Boylesports Irish Greyhound Derby took place during August and September, with the final being held on 21 September at Shelbourne Park. The winner was the Graham Holland trained Lenson Bocko. The brindle dog owned by the Lochead-Ponder-Whelan syndicate (Graham Box, Austin Whelan and Len Ponder) won the first prize of \u20ac140,000. The final was considered to have been one of the best in the history of the competition with three greyhounds involved in a photo finish. The winning breeder was Patrick Collins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290145-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Irish Greyhound Derby\nThe competition was sponsored by BoyleSports and the prize money purse was \u20ac300,000, of which \u20ac140,000 went to the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290145-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Irish Greyhound Derby\nDual 2019 English Greyhound Derby and 2018 Irish Greyhound Derby finalists Magical Bale and Clonbrien Prince were early ante-post favourites along with Jaytee Taylor but newcomers Killmacdonagh, Lenson Bocko (late Melodys Dido) and Ballymac Cooper all gained support with the latter topping the list at 12-1. Disappointingly both Priceless Blake and Skywalker Logan missed the event and there was a complete lack of entries from England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290145-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Irish Greyhound Derby, Final result, Distances\nneck, head, 5\u00bd, 5 (lengths) 0.07 sec = one length", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290145-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Irish Greyhound Derby, Competition report\nThe first night of the first round provided several shock eliminations starting with Easter Cup champion Clona Blaze in the very first heat. Clonbrien Prince and Burgess Bucks and also crashed out and Ballymac Cooper and Ballymac Arminta also lost on the night but progressed. Jaytee Taylor and defending champion Ballyanne Sim both ran well to reach round two. The following night saw Wolfe win the first race in a sensational 29.22 and then Kilmacdonagh won in 29.36. Magical Bale and Lenson Bocko sealed their first wins but Lenson Blinder had to settle for a runner-up spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290145-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Irish Greyhound Derby, Competition report\nThe second round started just like the first round with another high-profile elimination when Ballymac Arminta crashed out. Slippy Cian and Lenson Blinder both won their races while Wolfe and Ballyanne Sim progressed despite defeats. Heats 9-16 got underway the following evening (Aug 24) and Totos Park won before a sensational heat 11 saw all three major Derby contenders progress; Kilmacdonagh impressed when beating Magical Bale and Lenson Bocko. Produce champion Grangeview Ten claimed an unusual three dog heat and finally Jaytee Taylor secured a second-place finish and Ballymac Cooper won his heat to see all the big names through on the night.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290145-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Irish Greyhound Derby, Competition report\nThe third round was held on the 31 August and Lenson Bocko claimed the first heat in a very fast time of 29.27; Jaytee Taylor found trouble and failed to qualify. Slippy Cian took heat 2 before the John Linehan trained Droopys Pension won heat 3 to remain unbeaten. In the next heat Murts Boher surprised at 10-1 beating Lenson Blinder into second place with Droopys Hunch and Totos Park going no further.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290145-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Irish Greyhound Derby, Competition report\nHeat 5 was mayhem and Grangeview Ten won the race with Wolfe knocked over and eliminated, the stewards failed to stop the race despite a greyhound turning and passing the hare in the wrong direction, luckily no greyhound was injured. Killmacdonagh and Ballymac Copper battled in heat 6 with the fawn bitch coming out on top by a head, Magical Bale bounced back top form with a win in heat 7 and finally Mucky Brae won heat 8 which saw the end of the challenge of defending champion Ballyanne Sim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290145-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Irish Greyhound Derby, Competition report\nOne week later the quarter finals took place and in heat 1 Lenson Bocko posted an impressive 29.27 and propelled himself forward as the new favourite, the brindle dog had also recorded 29.27 in the previous round but this time he beat the field by seven and a half lengths, Run Happy and Deadly Dynamite took the two distant qualifying places with Grangeview Ten last. Heat 2 saw the surprise elimination of Ballymac Copper who ran under par, Sophies Man took the race followed by Boylesports King and Mucky Brae.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290145-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Irish Greyhound Derby, Competition report\nMagical Bale's class showed once again as he won heat 3 from Ballydoyla Valor and the previously undefeated Killmacdonagh in a very strong race that also saw the end of the challenge from Droopys Pension and Slippy Cian. The final heat was won by Murts Boher from Our Surprise and Music Tooour Ears but Lenson Blinder was eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290145-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Irish Greyhound Derby, Competition report\nIn the semi finals Lenson Bocko consolidated his tag as favourite when winning all the way in heat 1 from the consistent Run Happy with Boylesports King taking the final qualification place. A rare dead-heat in the second heat between Mucky Brae and Our Surprise meant that three greyhounds qualified for the final with a time of 29.32sec because the first heat had also been won in that time. The last to take a place in the final was the dangerous Killmacdonagh who looked so strong in the early part of the competition and with a trap 1 draw in the final looked a real danger to Lenson Bocko; Magical Bale finished fifth and failed to make it through.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290145-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Irish Greyhound Derby, Competition report\nThe final was a five dog heat following the withdrawal of Our Surprise and as the traps rose it was Mucky Brae that broke best but Run Happy and Lenson Bocko were both gaining ground on the run up to the first bend. Run Happy took the lead on the rails as Mucky Brae and Lenson Bocko impeded each other with latter better placed in second place as they came out of the second bend. Poor starts by Killmacdonagh and Boylesports King left them trailing the leading trio on the back straight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290145-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Irish Greyhound Derby, Competition report\nMucky Brae began to fade by the third bend leaving Killmacdonagh no path to contest and by the third Lenson Bocko was challenging Run Happy sitting about a length behind. As they turned for the home straight it looked like two-way battle for the line but Boylesports King was finishing strongly and was also gaining with every stride. Just a few yards from the finish Lenson Bocko finally reeled in the long time leader and won by a neck, the line came too early for Boylesports King who would have won if the distance had been five yards longer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290146-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Irish budget\nThe 2019 Irish budget was the Irish Government budget for the 2019 fiscal year was presented to D\u00e1il \u00c9ireann on 9 October 2018 by Minister for Finance Paschal Donohoe, his second as Minister for Finance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290147-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Irish local elections\nThe 2019 Irish local elections were held in all local authorities in Ireland on Friday, 24 May 2019, on the same day as the 2019 European Parliament election and a referendum easing restrictions on divorce. Each local government area is divided into local electoral areas (LEAs) where three to seven councillors are elected on the system of proportional representation by means of the single transferable vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290147-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Irish local elections, Administrative changes\nThere was one change to the local government areas since the 2014 elections, with a transfer of land from County Cork to Cork city under the Local Government Act 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290147-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Irish local elections, Administrative changes\nReviews of the county boundaries near Drogheda, Athlone, and Carlow (Graiguecullen) recommended no change. A review recommending transfer of Ferrybank from Kilkenny County Council to Waterford City and County Council was rejected by minister Simon Coveney after objections from Kilkenny.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290147-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Irish local elections, Administrative changes\nTwo Local Electoral Area Boundary Committees were established in 2017 under the Local Government Reform Act 2014 and reported on 13 June 2018. The government accepted all recommendations and the boundaries of municipal districts and LEAs were consequently revised by statutory instruments signed on 19 December 2018 by John Paul Phelan, Minister of State at the Department of Housing, Planning and Local Government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290147-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Irish local elections, Administrative changes\nIn 2014, most districts had a single LEA and all LEAs, back then,(except for Cork city) had between 6 and 10 councillors, whereas in 2019 LEAs will had between 3 and 7 councillors and some large municipal districts on the west coast had two LEAs to account for the greater distances involved for elected representatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290147-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Irish local elections, Administrative changes\nUnder the 2014 Act, the municipal districts containing the area of the former borough councils of Clonmel, Drogheda, Sligo and Wexford are designated as borough districts. The Boundary Committee proposed also designating census towns over 30,000 as borough districts, which would include the towns of Bray, Navan and Dundalk. A change to this designation was made by statutory instrument but was later reversed as incompatible with the 2014 act.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290147-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Irish local elections, Mayoral plebiscites\nPlebiscites took place in Cork City Council, Limerick City and County Council and Waterford City and County Council on whether to create the office of directly-elected mayors with executive functions who will act as an ex officio member and chair of the council. These plebiscites were held under Part 6 of the Local Government Act 2019. The proposal was approved in Limerick City and County and rejected in both Cork City and Waterford City and County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290147-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Irish local elections, Election timetable\nThe elections were held in accordance with the Local Elections Regulations 1995 as amended. Relevant dates are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290147-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Irish local elections, Campaign\nFine Gael head office issued a pre-election circular to its candidates on strategy for negotiating post-election power-sharing deals with other parties or groups. It prohibits deals with Sinn F\u00e9in, except where a council shares power across all groups (typically via D'Hondt method allocation of posts).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290147-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Irish local elections, Campaign\nGarda inquiries were launched in relation to an unusually large number of postal vote applications in the Ballymote\u2013Tubbercurry LEA, and alleged irregularities around 200 names added to the supplementary electoral register in the Killarney LEA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290147-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Irish local elections, Campaign\nEllie Kisyombe, a Malawi-born refugee running for the Social Democrats in Dublin's North Inner City LEA, was retained after a review of inconsistencies in her account of her asylum history and time in Direct Provision, which caused several party members to resign in protest. The principal of Cadamstown national school in County Kildare was criticised for a letter to parents praising Fianna F\u00e1il councillors over those of Fine Gael in dealing with the school.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290147-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Irish local elections, Campaign\nTaoiseach Leo Varadkar stated after the poll that news of a personal injury claim taken by Fine Gael TD Maria Bailey in the week preceding the elections had caused reputational damage to Fine Gael.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290147-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Irish local elections, Results by party\nRepublican Sinn F\u00e9in and Independent Left are not registered parties; therefore their candidates appear on the ballot as Non-Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290147-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Irish local elections, Results by party\nPeople Before Profit and Solidarity candidates ran under the electoral alliance Solidarity\u2013People Before Profit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290148-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ironman World Championship\nThe 2019 Ironman World Championship was a long distance triathlon competition held on October 12, 2019 in Kailua-Kona, Hawaii that was won by Jan Frodeno of Germany and Anne Haug of Germany. It was the 43rd edition of the Ironman World Championship, which has been held annually in Hawaii since 1978. The championship was organized by the World Triathlon Corporation (WTC) and awarded a total purse prize of $650,000. For Haug it was her first Ironman World Championship win. For Frodeno it was his third Ironman World Championship win. Frodeno set a new overall course record previously set in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290149-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Island Games\nThe XVIII Island Games (officially the 2019 NatWest Island Games) was held in the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar between 6 and 12 July 2019. This was the second time that the territory has hosted the games, the first being in 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290149-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Island Games\nThe games did not include archery, cycling, football, or volleyball, which had been in all previous games since 1985, due to the lack of venues. They were replaced by tenpin bowling, judo, and squash. Gibraltar's sports facilities were greatly redeveloped throughout 2018. Cycling was subsequently included on the list of events on the Games official website, while the 2019 Inter Games Football Tournament was announced as a substitute for the lack of football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290149-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Island Games, Host\nThe Faroe Islands were initially scheduled to stage the 2019 games, with the 2021 games taking place in Menorca, but in 2014 the hosts were swapped following issues with the Faroese facilities being ready in time. Menorca then withdrew from hosting the 2019 games in July 2015 following a change in government. After the Isle of Man and 2015 hosts Jersey confirmed that they would not apply as replacements, Gibraltar announced in August their intention to host the games, and were officially announced as hosts in April 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 23], "content_span": [24, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290149-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Island Games, Host\nOn 2 May 2018 it was announced that Ynys M\u00f4n would hold an unofficial football tournament to replace the absence of the sport in the actual Games. Islands that are regulars to the Games were expected to attend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 23], "content_span": [24, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290149-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Island Games, Participating islands\n22 island entities of the IIGA, from Europe, South Atlantic and the Caribbean area, competed in these Games. Both Rhodes and Fr\u00f8ya did not participate in this edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 40], "content_span": [41, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290149-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00290150-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Islands District Council election\nThe 2019 Islands District Council election was held on 24 November 2019 to elect all 10 elected members to the 18-member Islands District Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290150-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Islands District Council election\nIn the historic landslide victory, Islands District Council became the only council where pro-democrats gained the majority of the elected seats but failed to take control of the council due to the 8 ex-officio seats. However, the pro-democrats 7 of the 10 elected seats and ousted DAB legislator Holden Chow from his seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290151-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Israel State Cup Final\nThe 2019 Israel State Cup Final decided the winner of the 2018\u201319 Israel State Cup, the 83th season of Israel's main football cup. It was played on 15 May 2019 at the Sammy Ofer Stadium in Haifa, between Maccabi Netanya and Bnei Yehuda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290151-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Israel State Cup Final, Background\nMaccabi Netanya had previously played 4 Israel cup Finals, had won the competition a record 1 time. Their most recent appearance in the final was in 2014, in which they lost 1\u20130 to Ironi Kiryat Shmona, and their most recent victory in the tournament was in 1978, beating Bnei Yehuda 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290151-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Israel State Cup Final, Background\nBnei Yehuda had previously played in 7 finals, winning 3. Their most recent appearance in the final was tin 2017, in which they won 4\u20133 on penalties against Maccabi Tel Aviv.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290151-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Israel State Cup Final, Background\nMaccabi Netanya and Bnei Yehuda had played each other one time was in 1978, Maccabi Netanya won 2-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290151-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Israel State Cup Final, Background\nThe two teams played each other three times during the 2018\u201319 Israeli Premier League season until the final. In the first instance Bnei Yehuda won 3\u20131, in the two other times the games end draw 1-1 and 0-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290152-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Israel Super Cup\nThe 2019 Israel Super Cup is the 24th Israel Super Cup (29th, including unofficial matches, as the competition wasn't played within the Israel Football Association in its first 5 editions, until 1969), an annual Israel football match played between the winners of the previous season's Top Division and Israel State Cup. This is the fourth time since 1990 that the match was staged after a planned resumption of the cup was canceled in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290152-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Israel Super Cup\nThe game was played between Maccabi Tel Aviv, champions of the 2018\u201319 Israeli Premier League and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, winners of the 2018\u201319 Israeli State Cup. Tel Aviv won 1-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290153-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli Basketball League Cup\nThe 2019 Israeli Basketball League Cup, for sponsorships reasons the Winner League Cup, is the 14th edition of the pre-season tournament of the Israeli Basketball Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290153-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli Basketball League Cup\nOn September 28, 2019, Hapoel Jerusalem have won the title for the fifth time after an 84\u201383 dramatic win over Maccabi Tel Aviv in the Final. Suleiman Braimoh was named the Tournament MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290154-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli Basketball Premier League Final Four\nThe 2019 Israeli Basketball Premier League Final Four, for sponsorship reasons the Winner League Final Four, the concluding tournament of the 2018\u201319 Israeli Basketball Premier League. The event was hosted at the Menora Mivtachim Arena, Tel Aviv from June 10 until June 13, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290154-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli Basketball Premier League Final Four\nMaccabi Tel Aviv have won the title for the 53rd time after defeating Maccabi Rishon LeZion 89\u201375 in the Final. John DiBartolomeo was named the Final Four MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290155-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli Beach Soccer League\nThe 2019 Israeli Beach Soccer League was a national beach soccer league event that took place between 14 June and 26 July 2019, in Netanya, Israel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290155-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli Beach Soccer League\nSchedule of matches was published on the official Facebook page of Israeli Beach Soccer League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290155-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00290156-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli Labor Party leadership election\nThe 2019 Israeli Labor Party leadership election was held following the announcement of the resignation of Avi Gabbay as leader of the Labor Party on 7 June 2019, after almost two years as leader, which he led into its worst election result in its history during the April 2019 Israeli legislative election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290156-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli Labor Party leadership election\nThe candidates were Amir Peretz, Itzik Shmuli, and Stav Shaffir. The vote of party members was held on 2 July 2019. Amir Peretz won the leadership election with 47% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290156-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli Labor Party leadership election, Background\nLabor Party leader Avi Gabbay, who faced pressure to resign since he led the party in the April elections to its worst-ever showing, announced on 19 May 2019 that he would not run to keep his leadership of Labor, and that the party will hold primaries to select a new leader for the upcoming September elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290156-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli Labor Party leadership election, Background\nThe leadership election was officially called on 7 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290156-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli Labor Party leadership election, Election rules\nLeadership elections in the Israeli Labor Party happen in a two-round vote, with the two leading candidates from the first round advancing into a run-off. If a candidate wins over 40% of the vote in the first round, he wins automatically, and the second round is cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290156-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli Labor Party leadership election, Candidates\nThree major candidates ran in the Labor leadership election (and one minor candidate, David Landsman). All three major candidates were current Knesset members of the Labor Party. Due to the Labor Party's low standing in the polls, the campaign mainly focused on what parties the Labor Party should unite with to increase its power and remain above the Electoral threshold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290156-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli Labor Party leadership election, Candidates, Amir Peretz\nAmir Peretz is a current Labor Party MK. Peretz led the Labor Party between 2006 and 2007; as leader of the Labor Party he brought the party to 19 seats in the Knesset and it became the second largest party in the Knesset. Notably, he received a large number of votes in Likud strongholds. After the elections, he joined Ehud Olmert's government as the Minister of Defense and served in that role from 2006-2007. After losing the leadership of the Labor Party to Ehud Barak, he left the party to join Tzipi Livni's Hatnuah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 69], "content_span": [70, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290156-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Israeli Labor Party leadership election, Candidates, Amir Peretz\nAs part of Hatnuah, he served as Minister of the Environment from 2013-2014. During the Labor-Hatnuah joint list known as the Zionist Union, he returned to the Labor Party. In the primaries leading up to the April 2019 elections, Peretz fell behind some of the younger members of his party, and was placed sixth on the party's list. After the party's failure in the April elections, Peretz became his party's most veteran MK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 69], "content_span": [70, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290156-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli Labor Party leadership election, Candidates, Amir Peretz\nPeretz declared his candidacy for leader of the Labor Party on 2 June 2019. Peretz's campaign was focused on showcasing his many endorsements by former Labor Knesset Members and other leftist figures, and makes use of his iconic mustache as its logo and the slogan \"Now Amir\". Peretz has declared his intention to remain independent of Ehud Barak's party, and to refrain from uniting with Meretz; instead, he has declared that he wishes to invite Orly Levy's Gesher, Tzipi Livni's Hatnuah, Yuval Diskin, and Gadi Eizenkot to enter a joint list with the Labor Party. Peretz has been criticized by the other leadership candidates of putting his personal interests in front of the interests of the leftist bloc due to his refusal to give up leadership of the leftist bloc to Ehud Barak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 69], "content_span": [70, 853]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290156-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli Labor Party leadership election, Candidates, Itzik Shmuli\nItzik Shmuli is a current Labor Party MK. Shmuli was elected chairman of the National Union of Israeli Students in October 2010. As the leader of the Students Union, Shmuli was one of leaders of the 2011 Israeli social justice protests, along with fellow leadership candidate Stav Shaffir and the social activist Daphni Leef. Shmuli and Shaffir joined the Labor Party in 2012, and became the young faces of one of Israel's oldest parties. During his time in the Knesset, Shmuli was focused on matters of social justice (such as increasing funds for the elderly). Shmuli is a member of the LGBT community, and is an activist for LGBT rights. In the primaries leading up to the April 2019 elections, Shmuli won the first place, with 90% of the vote, and was placed third on the party's list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 70], "content_span": [71, 860]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290156-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli Labor Party leadership election, Candidates, Itzik Shmuli\nShmuli declared his candidacy for leader of the Labor Party on 12 June 2019. Shmuli's campaign uses the slogan \"Believing in Labor\" and was focused on restoring the belief lost in Labor after its failure in the April elections. Shmuli has declared his intention to unite with Ehud Baraks new party \"on his first day in office\" even if Barak received the leading position in such an alliance. Like Barak, Shmuli supports a wide coalition including all the parties in Israel's left-centre bloc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 70], "content_span": [71, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290156-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli Labor Party leadership election, Candidates, Stav Shaffir\nStav Shaffir is a current Labor Party MK. Shaffir came into the public eye as one of leaders of the 2011 Israeli social justice protests, which she led together with fellow leadership candidate Shmuli and social activist Daphni Leef. Shaffir joined the Labor Party in May 2012, and in the 2013 Israeli legislative election, she was elected to the Knesset at age 27, becoming the youngest MK in Israeli history. During her tenure in the Knesset, Shaffir focused on matters of social justice (such as rent regulation), financial transparency, and feminism. In the primaries leading up to the April 2019 elections, Shaffir fell just short of her partner and rival Shmuli, winning the second place. Shaffir was placed fourth on the party's list for the April elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 70], "content_span": [71, 836]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290156-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli Labor Party leadership election, Candidates, Stav Shaffir\nShaffir declared her candidacy for leader of the Labor Party on 7 June 2019. Shaffir's campaign focused on her social record as MK and her youth, using the slogan \"Starting again\" and using Orange as its campaign color due to Shaffir's iconic Ginger hair. Shaffir has declared her intention to create a leftist bloc with Ehud Barak's new party, Meretz, and other leftist forces, but has criticized Shmuli for \"selling the party\" to Barak, and has said that she will take a harder stance on keeping Labor a major part of this bloc. Shaffir has suggested she may leave Labor if she doesn't win the leadership primary; she left Labor on 25 July 2019, and joined the Democratic Union, an alliance of Meretz and the Israel Democratic Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 70], "content_span": [71, 806]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290157-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli airstrikes in Iraq\nThe 2019 Israeli airstrikes in Iraq began as unidentified drone or aircraft bombings of the Iranian-backed Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) bases in Iraq starting on 19 July 2019. The strikes targeted Iranian proxy groups, based in Iraq, as well as IRGC operatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290157-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli airstrikes in Iraq\nSeveral Iraqi, Iranian and Israeli officials have blamed Israel for the attacks, though Israel had initially neither confirmed nor denied its role. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hinted responsibility for the attacks on 20 August 2019, claiming that \"Iran is not immune anywhere\". Israel confirmed responsibility for the strikes on 22 August 2019, which was later followed by a US confirmation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290157-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli airstrikes in Iraq, Timeline, Amirli strike\nOn 19 July 2019 unidentified drones bombed a base belonging to the Iranian-backed Popular Mobilization Forces base in Iraq, close to the town of Amirli. An airstrike wounded two Iranians after it struck a base that housed advisers from Iran and Lebanon, while a second strike hit a weapons depot, causing a large fire and the destruction of several ballistic missiles. The US Central Command CENTCOM denied responsibility for the bombing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290157-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli airstrikes in Iraq, Timeline, Amirli strike\nIran reported on July 30 that the attack had killed a senior Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) commander Abu Alfazl Sarabian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290157-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli airstrikes in Iraq, Timeline, Camp Ashraf strike\nOn 27 July 2019 Camp Ashraf, one of the biggest bases in Iraq, was attacked by what Iraqi military sources described as one or more Israeli Air Force jets. The attack struck a consignment of ballistic missile launchers and living quarters of IRGC officers and PMF personnel. Some sources reported that up to 40 people were killed in the attack. According to Iraqi and Iranian sources the attacks were carried out by Israeli F-35 aircraft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290157-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli airstrikes in Iraq, Timeline, Southern Baghdad strike\nExplosions rocked a PMF weapons depot in southern Baghdad on 12 August killing one and injuring 29 civilians. A spokesman for Iraq's Interior Minister said that an examination of the warehouse showed that the explosion was not caused by an internal failure but by a third party that attacked the warehouse and caused a fire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290157-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli airstrikes in Iraq, Timeline, Southern Baghdad strike\nIraq closed its airspace to all unauthorized flights on 13 August, including to the US coalition. Iraqi Prime Minister also ordered all military camps and munitions warehouses to be moved outside Iraqi cities following the explosions that killed one civilian and wounded 29.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290157-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli airstrikes in Iraq, Timeline, 30th Brigade's headquarters strike\nOn 17 August, unidentified warplanes targeted the 30th Brigade's headquarters, which is affiliated with the Popular Mobilization Forces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 77], "content_span": [78, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290157-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli airstrikes in Iraq, Timeline, Balad strike\nBlasts hit a PMF arms depot on 20 August close to the Balad Air Base. A PMF source said the arms depot was specifically targeted by an aerial bombardment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290157-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli airstrikes in Iraq, Timeline, Al-Qa'im\nOn 25 August 2019 a PMF convoy was hit by two drones near the Syrian\u2013Iraqi border town of Al-Qa'im, killing six, including a senior commander. PMF blamed Israel for the attack. It came as Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah was making a speech in response to an alleged Israeli attack at their stronghold in Dahieh, Lebanon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290157-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli airstrikes in Iraq, Timeline, Hit strike\nOn 20 September, loud explosions were reported at a warehouse near the city of Hit in Anbar Province, northwest of Baghdad. Sky News Arabic reported that after the blast, shells were launched into neighboring areas, indicating an arms depot may have been hit. Al-Arabiya also reported that the warehouse was used to store weaponry and belonged to the Popular Mobilization Forces. al-Arabiya quoted an Iraqi officer claiming there was a drone in the area at the time of the explosions. As result of the explosions, 21 Iraqi militants of the Popular Mobilization Forces were killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290157-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli airstrikes in Iraq, Timeline, Tafuf Brigade strike\nOn 22 September, violent explosions caused by airstrikes took place at a base belonging to \"Liwa al-Tafuf\" 13th Brigade of the Popular Mobilisation Units. An Iraqi security official told The New Arab that drones may have been used in the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290157-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Israeli airstrikes in Iraq, Responsibility\nOn 22 August 2019 Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu confirmed that Israel had been carrying out operations against Iran in Iraq, saying \"We are working against Iranian consolidation\u2014in Iraq as well.\" US officials also confirmed that Israel was behind the attacks later in the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290158-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Istanbul earthquake\n2019 Istanbul earthquake was a 5.8 magnitude earthquake that rocked the south-west of Istanbul on 26 September 2019 at 13:59 local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290158-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Istanbul earthquake\nOne person died due to a heart attack and 43 people were injured. The earthquake was felt in Istanbul, Tekirda\u011f, K\u0131rklareli, Kocaeli and Sakarya.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290158-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Istanbul earthquake, Background\nNorth Anatolian Fault system is a strike-slip fault system located in the northern side of Anatolian plate, which lies between relatively stationary Eurasian plate in the north and the Arabian plate in the south. Approximately 1500\u00a0km in length, the North Anatolian fault system passes about 20 kilometers south of Istanbul. Strong earthquakes occur at certain intervals along the fault.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290158-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Istanbul earthquake, Background\nThe last large earthquakes in the fault system happened in 1999. In 17 August the earthquake in \u0130zmit (7.4 Mw) killed 17.480 people. In 12 November, another earthquake in the nearby city of D\u00fczce (7.2 Mw) killed 845 and injured 4.948.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290158-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Istanbul earthquake, Background\nMany seismologist agree that there is a very high chance for a 7 or higher magnitude earthquake before 2030; which will be caused by the breaking of the North Anatolian fault line under Marmara Sea, just south of Istanbul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290158-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Istanbul earthquake, Earthquake\nThree days before the main earthquake, on 23 September, there was a 4.6-degree shock in the south-west of Istanbul. Two hours before the earthquake, at 12:00 noon, a 2.9 earthquake took place in Silivri.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290158-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Istanbul earthquake, Earthquake\nThe earthquake happened at 13:59 local time at the western edge of the Kumburgaz section of North Anatolian Fault under the Sea of Marmara, at a depth of 6.99\u00a0km as a strike-slip movement. Different sources states the magnitude as 5.7 Mw and 5.8 ML.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290158-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Istanbul earthquake, Damage\nSchools and hospitals were evacuated after the earthquake. Governor of Istanbul Ali Yerlikaya announced the schools were closed for the day. AFAD suggested not to enter to the damaged buildings. A 4.1 magnitude aftershock was reported 25 minutes after the main shock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290158-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Istanbul earthquake, Damage\nThe first announcement by the President Recep Tayyip Erdo\u011fan stated 8 injured. Later announcements stated a total of 43 injured mostly from panic, and one person with known heart illness dead due to a heart attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290158-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Istanbul earthquake, Damage\n188 aftershocks with maximum magnitude of 4.1 were recorded after the earthquake. A total of 473 buildings were reported as damaged to AFAD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290158-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Istanbul earthquake, Damage\nA minaret of Avc\u0131lar Hac\u0131 Ahmet T\u00fckenmez mosque collapsed. Three protected old buildings were damaged in Balat, and later demolished by the municipality later in the day. Take-offs and landings to Sabiha G\u00f6k\u00e7en Airport were temporarily halted, but flight operations resumed after the runway was checked for potential damage and deemed safe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290158-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Istanbul earthquake, Damage\nAFAD reported damage to walls of the city near \u0130stanbul Biruni University, cracks in some buildings in some neighborhoods, damage in two buildings in Sultangazi and Ey\u00fcp, and evacuation of a building in \u015eirinevler.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290158-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Istanbul earthquake, Damage\nMobile phone coverage of T\u00fcrk Telekom, Turkcell, and Vodafone were interrupted nationwide for some time after the earthquake, while mobile internet services and landlines were not affected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290159-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Istria Cup\nThe 2019 Istria Cup was the 7th edition of Istria Cup, a friendly women's association football tournament played in the Croatia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290160-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Athletics Championships\nThe 2019 Italian Athletics Championships was the 109th edition of the Italian Athletics Championships and took place in Brixen from 26 to 28 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290161-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Athletics Indoor Championships\n2019 Italian Athletics Indoor Championships was the 50th 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-00290162-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Basketball Cup\nThe 2019 Italian Basketball Cup, known as the 2018 PosteMobile Final Eight for sponsorship reasons, was the 51st edition of Italy's national cup tournament. The competition is managed by the Lega Basket for LBA clubs. The tournament was played from 14 to 17 February 2019 in Florence, at the end of the first half of the 2018\u201319 LBA season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290162-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Basketball Cup\nVanoli Cremona went to win its first Cup ever by beating New Basket Brindisi 83\u201374 in the Finals. Drew Crawford was named Panasonic MVP of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290162-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Basketball Cup, Qualification\nQualified for the tournament were selected based on their position on the league table at the end of the first half of the 2018\u201319\u00a0LBA regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290163-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Basketball Supercup\nThe 2019 Italian Basketball Supercup (Italian: Supercoppa di pallacanestro 2018), also known as Zurich Connect Supercoppa 2019 for sponsorship reasons, was the 25th edition of the super cup tournament, organized by the Lega Basket Serie A (LBA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290163-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Basketball Supercup\nBanco di Sardegna Sassari went to win his 2nd Supercup by beating Umana Reyer Venezia 83\u201380 in the Finals. Curtis Jerrells was named MVP of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290163-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Basketball Supercup\nIt was played at the PalaFlorio arena in Bari on 21 and 22 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290163-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Basketball Supercup, Participant teams\nQualified for the tournament were Vanoli Cremona and New Basket Brindisi, as Italian Cup finalists, Banco di Sardegna Sassari and Umana Reyer Venezia as LBA Playoffs finalist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290164-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian F4 Championship\nThe 2019 Italian F4 Championship Powered by Abarth was the sixth season of the Italian F4 Championship. Norwegian driver Dennis Hauger dominated the championship, winning twelve out of the 21 races, helping his team Van Amersfoort Racing to become teams' champions. The rookie championship was won by Mercedes junior Paul Aron, who won two races in the overall championship. Hauger's closest challenger Gianluca Petecof won four races, and Roman Stan\u011bk, Joshua D\u00fcrksen and Giorgio Carrara won one race each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290164-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian F4 Championship, Race calendar and results\nThe calendar was revealed on 1 December 2018. Adria International Raceway and Circuit Paul Ricard were replaced in the series schedule by circuits in Hungary and Austria, Hungaroring and Red Bull Ring respectively. The cancelled race from Misano World Circuit was rescheduled to run at Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari in Round 5 as a fourth race. Hungaroring round supporting Euroformula Open and Red Bull Ring round supporting International GT Open. Misano World Circuit other all rounds supporting Formula Regional European Championship", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290164-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian F4 Championship, Championship standings\nPoints were awarded to the top 10 classified finishers in each race. No points were awarded for pole position or fastest lap. Only the best sixteen results were counted towards the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290165-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian GT Championship\nThe 2019 Italian GT Championsip was the 28th season of the Italian GT Championship, the grand tourer-style sports car racing founded by the Italian auotomobile club (ACI). The Champsionship consisted of four Sprint race evnets and four Endurance race events. At each Sprint race event there were held two races. The Season started on 5 april in Monza and ended on 18 october in Monza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290166-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Grand Prix\nThe 2019 Italian Grand Prix (formally known as the Formula 1 Gran Premio Heineken d'Italia 2019) was a Formula One motor race held on 8 September 2019 at the Autodromo Nazionale di Monza in Monza, Italy. The race was the 14th round of the 2019 Formula One World Championship and marked the 89th running of the Italian Grand Prix and the 84th time the race had been held at Monza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290166-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Grand Prix, Background, Championship standings before the race\nMercedes driver Lewis Hamilton entered the round with a 65-point lead over teammate Valtteri Bottas in the Drivers' Championship. In the Constructors' World Championship, Mercedes led Ferrari by 145 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 75], "content_span": [76, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290166-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Grand Prix, Background, Entries\nThe drivers and teams entered were the same as those for the previous race with no additional stand-in drivers for the race or practice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290166-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Grand Prix, Practice\nThe first practice session was affected by rain and saw Charles Leclerc finish the session fastest followed by Carlos Sainz Jr. and Lando Norris. The session was interrupted three times, firstly when Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen spun and got stuck in the gravel trap at turn 11. Sergio P\u00e9rez also crashed his car on the exit of turn 10 and finally when Pierre Gasly beached his car on the kerbs at turn 2. The session was also filled with spins from a number of other drivers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290166-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Grand Prix, Practice\nThe second practice session was dry for the first hour before it started raining and the session once again saw Leclerc set the fastest time but this time it was Lewis Hamilton who was second fastest and Sebastian Vettel was third. The third practice session was delayed and shortened by 10 minutes following an accident during the support Formula 3 race and finished with Vettel fastest followed by Max Verstappen and Valtteri Bottas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290166-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Grand Prix, Qualifying, Qualifying report, Q1 and Q2\nThe first 18 minute qualifying session, Q1, was temporarily red-flagged with 4:34 remaining, when Sergio P\u00e9rez's car lost power on the inside of turn 3. Max Verstappen, already facing grid penalties for replacing power unit components, did not set a time in the session. Verstappen and P\u00e9rez were eliminated in Q1, as were both Williams drivers, Robert Kubica and George Russell, and the Haas of Romain Grosjean. The session finished with Charles Leclerc fastest for Scuderia Ferrari.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 65], "content_span": [66, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290166-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Italian Grand Prix, Qualifying, Qualifying report, Q1 and Q2\nIn the second qualifying (Q2) session, the other Haas of Kevin Magnussen was eliminated, as were both Toro Rosso drivers, Pierre Gasly and Daniil Kvyat. Alfa Romeo's Antonio Giovinazzi was the final driver eliminated in Q2, beaten by his teammate Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen for the last spot for the third qualifying session (Q3) by 0.002 seconds. Racing Point driver Lance Stroll made it into Q3 for the first time in 2019. Lewis Hamilton set the fastest time of Q2 which meant that Mercedes led a session for the first time in the weekend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 65], "content_span": [66, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290166-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Grand Prix, Qualifying, Qualifying report, Q3\nQ3, only 12 minutes long, was red-flagged at 6:35 left when R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen lost control of his car and spun out wide into the tyre barriers at turn 11. After R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen's car was cleared and the session resumed, two of the remaining nine drivers had still not set a time; Red Bull's Alexander Albon, and Stroll. When the session restarted, no team wanted to be the first to send their driver out as Monza is a track where slipstreaming is a significant advantage. As time began to wind down, speculation grew as to who would leave the pit lane first. The Q3 drivers did not make their way out of their garages until there were two minutes left in the session, with Renault driver Nico H\u00fclkenberg leading the pack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 58], "content_span": [59, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290166-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Grand Prix, Qualifying, Qualifying report, Q3\nWhen he got to turn 1, H\u00fclkenberg missed the turn and instead navigated through the run-off slip road past Turn 1. This action led to him being accused of deliberately taking the run-off in an effort to let other drivers past. Stroll and Carlos Sainz Jr, the next two drivers back, slowed their traversal of Turn 1, allowing enough time for H\u00fclkenberg to again enter the track ahead of them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 58], "content_span": [59, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290166-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Italian Grand Prix, Qualifying, Qualifying report, Q3\nBy the time the tight pack of drivers, led by Sainz and H\u00fclkenberg, reached turn 3 on their out-laps, the margin of error allowing for drivers to reach the start line by the end of the Q3 session time was virtually gone. Ultimately, only Sainz and Leclerc successfully completed their out laps. All seven drivers behind them were caught out and thus crossed the line too late to have an opportunity to set a time in the second half of Q3. Sainz, the only driver who made a meaningful attempt, was unable to improve his first Q3 time enough to move out of seventh. The result meant that neither Albon or Stroll set a lap time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 58], "content_span": [59, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290166-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Grand Prix, Qualifying, Qualifying report, Q3\nThere was strong criticism of what had happened in the final minutes of Q3. Red Bull's team principal Christian Horner's interpretation of H\u00fclkenberg's move was that it was \"obviously done on purpose\", and beyond stating that the result was \"all just a bit silly\", interpreted the scenario with a widely reported expletive. Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff described H\u00fclkenberg's chicane cut and the collective drivers' out-lap slowdowns as \"junior class\", and \"not worthy of Formula 1.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 58], "content_span": [59, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290166-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Grand Prix, Qualifying, Qualifying report, Q3\nH\u00fclkenberg, Sainz, and Stroll were called in by the race stewards to be investigated for \"driving unnecessarily slowly\" on their Q3 out laps. The stewards further investigated H\u00fclkenberg for potentially \"leaving the track without a justifiable reason\". H\u00fclkenberg was cleared of wrongdoing with respect to leaving the track. The stewards stated, \"In this case we are unable to determine that the driver deliberately left the track.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 58], "content_span": [59, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290166-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Italian Grand Prix, Qualifying, Qualifying report, Q3\nAll three of the drivers were reprimanded for driving too slowly, which they admitted they did do, and which the stewards concluded \"played a significant role in the backing up of cars at a critical stage of the final out lap for Q3\". The race stewards concluded the investigation of the three drivers with the remark, \"The Stewards strongly recommend that the FIA expedite a solution to this type of situation\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 58], "content_span": [59, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290166-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nThe top four drivers on the grid maintained their positions through turn 1 as the race began, with Charles Leclerc turning pole position into an early race lead. Max Verstappen, who started 19th on the grid, made contact with Sergio P\u00e9rez, damaging his front wing and requiring an early pit stop to replace it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290166-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nOn lap 6, Sebastian Vettel, running a strong 4th, lost control and spun to a stop at turn 9, his car halfway onto the grass. In an attempt to rejoin as quickly as possible, Vettel veered into the path of Lance Stroll, who was in 7th. Vettel struck Stroll, damaging his own front wing, and further causing Stroll to spin out. When Stroll tried to rejoin the track, he in turn forced Pierre Gasly to drive through the gravel run off to in an attempt to avoid Stroll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290166-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Italian Grand Prix, Race, Race report\nVettel was forced to replace his front wing at the end of lap 6, leaving him in last place. Stroll was pushed down to 13th. Race stewards investigated the double-incident. They penalised Vettel with a ten second stop-go penalty, and Stroll with a drive-through penalty. Neither driver would recover to finish in the top ten. Vettel also received three penalty points on his FIA Super Licence for the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290166-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Grand Prix, Race, Race report, Pit stops\nBy lap 19, the top three drivers (Leclerc, Lewis Hamilton, and Valtteri Bottas, in order) were in a pit window to replace the aging soft tyres they started their races on. Hamilton was the first to do so, replacing his with medium tyres. Leclerc pitted on lap 20, but elected instead to use the longer lasting but slower hard tyre. Bottas, who also chose the medium tyre, would not pit until lap 27. All three drivers returned to racing in the same order they'd been in before their pit stops.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290166-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 Italian Grand Prix, Race, Race report, Pit stops\nCarlos Sainz retired from the race on lap 27, after an error fitting his right front tyre in the pits forced him to stop near the exit to pit lane; this caused a brief virtual safety car. Shortly after, Daniil Kvyat's Toro Rosso suffered a mechanical breakdown just past turn 1, causing a second virtual safety car while his car was pushed to safety.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290166-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Grand Prix, Race, Race report, Pit stops\nIn the meantime, Leclerc's lead would be challenged for the remainder of the race by the Mercedes drivers behind him. After Leclerc and Hamilton's pit stops, Hamilton came close on several occasions to overtaking Leclerc, more than once less than one second behind and enabling him to use DRS. Both drivers exchanged occasional driving errors and Leclerc was warned once for pushing Hamilton off track. Hamilton consistently stayed close to Leclerc, but was unable to overtake him for the race lead. On lap 42, Hamilton locked up his tyres at turn 1, allowing Bottas to pass him into 2nd position. Bottas, who had medium tyres eight laps younger than Hamilton's, was able to challenge Leclerc for the lead just as Hamilton had done. Bottas came within one second of Leclerc on multiple occasions in the race's later stages, but, like Hamilton, he could not overtake Leclerc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 928]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290166-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Grand Prix, Race, Race report, Race finish\nThe Grand Prix ended with Leclerc claiming his second consecutive race win and Ferrari's first win in Italy since Fernando Alonso won the 2010 edition of the race. Bottas was less than a second behind to take 2nd, and Hamilton, who made a late-race pit stop for soft tyres set the fastest lap of the race and took the last step of the podium. Renault's Daniel Ricciardo and Nico H\u00fclkenberg finished strong in 4th and 5th positions, promoting Renault into 5th in the Constructor's championship. This also meant that they were only 18 points behind fourth placed McLaren. Alexander Albon managed a 6th place finish for Red Bull, finishing one second behind Hulkenberg. P\u00e9rez and Verstappen, who both started at the back of the grid, ended in 7th and 8th. Antonio Giovinazzi (Alfa Romeo) finished 9th and Lando Norris (McLaren) finished in tenth, the final points paying position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 55], "content_span": [56, 933]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290167-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Men's Curling Championship\nThe 43rd 2019 Italian Men's Curling Championship (Italian: Campionati Senior - Serie A maschile - Anno Sportivo 2018-2019) was held from November 10, 2018 to April 14, 2019 in two stages: the group stage (round robin) from November 10, 2018 to March 24, 2019 and the playoff stage from April 13 to 14, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290167-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Men's Curling Championship\nThe winners of the championship were \"Team Retornaz\" (skip Jo\u00ebl Retornaz), who beat the \"Trentino Cembra\" team (skip Amos Mosaner) in the final. The bronze medal was won by the \"Cembra 88 (Rizzolli)\" team (skip Luca Rizzolli).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290167-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Men's Curling Championship\nThe championship was held in conjunction with the 2019 Italian Women's Curling Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290167-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Men's Curling Championship, Competition format\nFirst was the group stage (Round robin), where the teams played among themselves in a four-round round robin system. If two teams had the same number of wins, they were ranked among themselves according to the result of two their matches; if the number of victories for three or more teams is equal, teams were ranked according to the results of the sum of Draw Shot Challenge (DSC, in centimetres; the smaller value, the higher the rank).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290167-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Italian Men's Curling Championship, Competition format\nThe four best teams go to the second stage, the playoff, using the Page playoff system (two best teams, following the results of the group round, hold a match for a direct bye to the final (playoffs-1). The 3rd and 4th teams played, with the winners going to the semifinals (playoffs-2). The semifinal was between the loser in the first match and a winner in the second. In the finals, gold was to the winner of the 1 vs. 2 playoff game and the winner of the semifinal. Losers in the semifinals and the playoffs-2 game played for bronze medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290168-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Mixed Curling Championship\nThe 2019 Italian Mixed Curling Championship (Italian: Campionato Mixed - Anno Sportivo 2018-2019) was held from November 17, 2018 to March 17, 2019 in two stages: the group stage (round robin) November 17\u201318, 2018 and February 16\u201317, 2019 and the playoff stage from March 16 to 17, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290168-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Mixed Curling Championship\nThe winners of the championship were the team Team Virtus Mixed (skip Stefano Perucca), who won the team Magica Fireblock (skip Denise Pimpini) in the final. The bronze medal was won by the team Sporting Club Pinerolo (skip Lorenzo Maurino), who won the bronze match against the team Jass On The Rocks (skip Alberto Arienti).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290168-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Mixed Curling Championship, Round Robin\n(Qualificazione - Girone unico)Was held in Pinerolo at November 17\u201318, 2018 and February 16\u201317, 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 52], "content_span": [53, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290168-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Mixed Curling Championship, Playoffs\n(Finale)Was held in Pinerolo from March 16 to 17, 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290169-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Mixed Doubles Curling Championship\nThe 2019 Italian Mixed Doubles Curling Championship (Italian: Campionati Mixed Doubles - Anno Sportivo 2018-2019) was held from October 13, 2018 to January 27, 2019 in two stages: the group stage (round robin) from October 13, 2018 to December 28, 2018 and the playoff stage from January 25 to 27, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290169-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Mixed Doubles Curling Championship\n24 teams took part in the championship, with the best 8 teams promoted to the playoff stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290169-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Mixed Doubles Curling Championship\nThe winners of the championship were the Amos Mosaner / Alice Cobelli team, who beat the Jo\u00ebl Retornaz / Angela Romei team in the final. The bronze medal was won by the Lorenzo Maurino / Emanuela Cavallo team, who won the bronze match against the Fabrizio Gallo / Anna Maria Maurino team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290169-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Mixed Doubles Curling Championship\nTeam Amos Mosaner / Alice Cobelli represented Italy in the 2019 World Mixed Doubles Curling Championship and finished in 18th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290169-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Mixed Doubles Curling Championship, Round Robin, Group A\n(Qualificazione - Girone Pinerolo)Was held in Pinerolo from October 13 to December 16, 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 69], "content_span": [70, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290169-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Mixed Doubles Curling Championship, Round Robin, Group B\n(Qualificazione - Girone Cembra)Was held in Cembra from November 30 to December 28, 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 69], "content_span": [70, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290169-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Mixed Doubles Curling Championship, Round Robin, Group C\n(Qualificazione - Girone Cortina)Was held in Cortina d'Ampezzo from December 17 to 28, 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 69], "content_span": [70, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290169-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Mixed Doubles Curling Championship, Round Robin, Group D\n(Qualificazione - Girone Sesto S. Giovanni)Was held at the Palasesto venue in Sesto San Giovanni from October 29 to December 17, 2018", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 69], "content_span": [70, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290169-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Mixed Doubles Curling Championship, Playoffs\n(Finale)Was held as \"double knockout\" in Cembra from January 25 to 27, 2019", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 57], "content_span": [58, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290170-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Open (tennis)\nThe 2019 Italian Open (also known as the Rome Masters or the Internazionali BNL d'Italia for sponsorship reasons) was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts at the Foro Italico in Rome, Italy from 15\u201321 May 2019. It was the 76th edition of the Italian Open and was classified as an ATP Tour Masters 1000 event on the 2019 ATP Tour and a Premier 5 event on the 2019 WTA Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290170-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Open (tennis), ATP singles main draw entrants, Seeds\nThe following are the seeded players. Seedings are based on ATP rankings as of 6 May 2019. Rankings and points before are as of 13 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 65], "content_span": [66, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290170-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Open (tennis), ATP singles main draw entrants, Seeds\nThe following players would have been seeded, but they withdrew from the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 65], "content_span": [66, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290170-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Open (tennis), ATP singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry using a protected ranking into the main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 74], "content_span": [75, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290170-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Open (tennis), ATP doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 74], "content_span": [75, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290170-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Open (tennis), WTA doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 74], "content_span": [75, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290171-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nJuan Sebasti\u00e1n Cabal and Robert Farah were the defending champions and successfully defended their title, defeating Raven Klaasen and Michael Venus in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290172-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nDefending champion Rafael Nadal successfully defended his title, defeating Novak Djokovic in the final 6\u20130, 4\u20136, 6\u20131, to win the Men's Singles title at the 2019 Italian Open. It was his record-extending ninth Italian Open title and a record 34th ATP Masters 1000 title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290172-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nNick Kyrgios was defaulted from his second round match after multiple penalties for unsportsmanlike conduct. As a result, Kyrgios forfeited all points and prize money earned from the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290172-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Open \u2013 Men'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-00290172-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Open \u2013 Men'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-00290173-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nAshleigh Barty and Demi Schuurs were the defending champions, but chose not to participate together. Barty played alongside Victoria Azarenka and successfully defended the title, defeating Schuurs and Anna-Lena Gr\u00f6nefeld in the final, 4\u20136, 6\u20130, [10\u20133].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290173-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Open \u2013 Women's Doubles, 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-00290174-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nElina Svitolina was the two-time defending champion, but lost in the second round to Victoria Azarenka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290174-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nKarol\u00edna Pl\u00ed\u0161kov\u00e1 won the title, defeating Johanna Konta in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290174-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nNaomi Osaka and Simona Halep were in contention for the WTA no. 1 singles ranking at the beginning of the tournament. Osaka retained the top ranking following Halep's loss in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290174-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Open \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nThe top eight seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290174-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Open \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nClick on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290175-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Women's Curling Championship\nThe 43rd 2019 Italian Women's Curling Championship (Italian: Campionati Senior - Serie A femminile - Anno Sportivo 2018-2019) was held from November 2, 2018 to April 14, 2019 in two stages: the group stage (round robin) from November 2, 2018 to March 31, 2019 and the playoff stage from April 13 to 14, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290175-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Women's Curling Championship\nThe winners of the championship were the \"Dolomiti FONTEL Gaspari\" team (skip Diana Gaspari), who beat the \"3S Luserna Luca Lovero\" team (skip Veronica Zappone) in the final. The bronze medal was won by the \"CC Tofane F - Hotel Menardi\" team (skip Federica Apollonio).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290175-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Women's Curling Championship\nThe championship was held in conjunction with the 2019 Italian Men's Curling Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290175-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian Women's Curling Championship, Competition format\nAt the first, group stage (Round robin), the teams play among themselves in a four-round round robin system. If two teams had the same number of wins, they were ranked among themselves according to the result of two their matches; if the number of victories for three or more teams is equal, teams were ranked according to the results of the sum of Draw Shot Challenge (DSC, in centimetres; the smaller value, the higher the rank).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 61], "content_span": [62, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290175-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Italian Women's Curling Championship, Competition format\nThe four best teams go to the second stage, the playoff, using the Page playoff system (two best teams, following the results of the group round, hold a match for a direct bye to the final (playoffs-1). The 3rd and 4th teams played, with the winners going to the semifinals (playoffs-2). The semifinal was between the loser in the first match and a winner in the second. In the finals, gold was to the winner of the 1 vs. 2 playoff game and the winner of the semifinal. Losers in the semifinals and the playoffs-2 game played for bronze medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 61], "content_span": [62, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290176-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian bus hijack\nOn 20 March 2019, a school bus in Crema, Italy was hijacked by its driver Ousseynou Sy, who attempted to set it on fire. Sy, whose origins are Senegalese, said his motive was to avenge the deaths of African migrants in the Mediterranean Sea. Police freed the children before he set the vehicle on fire. In July 2020, he was sentenced to 24 years in prison for forced confinement with terrorist intent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290176-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian bus hijack, Perpetrator\nSy was born in France in 1972, to Senegalese parents. He moved to Italy in 2004, becoming a citizen through marriage to a woman from Brescia. He lost contact with his two children after their separation; he said during his attack that he had three daughters who had drowned in the sea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290176-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian bus hijack, Perpetrator\nSy worked as a bus driver since 2004. His license was suspended in 2007 for drink driving. In 2010 he sexually assaulted a 17-year-old girl, and received an 18-month suspended sentence in 2018. In the aftermath of his hijack, Italy called for regular checks on school bus drivers' criminal records, as Sy's employers Autoguidovie were unaware of his prior offenses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290176-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian bus hijack, Attack\nThe school bus from Crema was returning from the gymnasium with 51 children, two teachers and a janitor on board when Sy doused the aisle with petrol and announced that he was hijacking it towards Linate Airport in Milan. He gave zip ties to the adults and ordered them to tie up the children.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290176-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian bus hijack, Attack\nSome on board managed to ring the police, who attempted to block the bus and to negotiate with Sy. The Carabinieri broke the rear windows to free those on board, at which point Sy lit a lighter and torched the bus. Twelve children were hospitalised with shock, bruising or smoke inhalation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290176-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian bus hijack, Attack\nA 13-year-old boy called Ramy Shehata was hailed as a hero for his part in the rescue. While pretending to pray in Arabic, he rang his father who informed the police. Shehata, whose parents are Egyptian, was not born with Italian citizenship. He was later awarded with citizenship by Interior Minister Matteo Salvini, whose policies are usually anti-migrant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290176-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian bus hijack, Investigation\nInvestigators found that Sy acted alone, and had no connection to Islamic extremism. He had sent videos to friends telling Africans to \"rise up\", and had bought petrol and restraints in preparation. He was of sound mind when committing the crimes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290176-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian bus hijack, Investigation\nIn July 2020, Sy was convicted and sentenced to 24 years in prison. In his statement, he denied wrongdoing and railed against Salvini.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290177-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian by-elections\nThe 2019 Italian by-elections were the elections called to fill seats of the Parliament that were become vacant after the 2018 general elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290177-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian by-elections, Overview\nThe new Italian electoral law approved in 2017 and nicknamed Rosatellum, provides the election of members of Parliament in 232 single-member districts for the Chamber of Deputies and in 116 for the Senate of the Republic. Whenever a seat of this kind becomes vacant, a by-election is called, and a new representative is elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290177-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian by-elections, Chamber of Deputies, Sardinia 1: Cagliari\nThe by-election in the district of Cagliari, Sardinia was held on 20 January 2019, to elect a deputy for the seat left vacant by Andrea Mura, whose resignation was approved by the Chamber of Deputies on 27 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 68], "content_span": [69, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290177-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian by-elections, Chamber of Deputies, Sardinia 1: Cagliari\nThe deadline for the presentation of names for the candidacy to the seat was set for 17 December 2018. Four candidates filed papers for running: journalist Andrea Frailis for the Centre-left coalition, Daniela Noli for the Centre-right coalition, councillor and engineer Luca Caschili for the Five Star Movement, and volleyball coach Enrico Balletto for CasaPound Italia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 68], "content_span": [69, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290177-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian by-elections, Chamber of Deputies, Sardinia 1: Cagliari\nNoli and Balletto were making a second attempt at election to Parliament after missing out in the 2018 general elections: the former was nominated in second place on her list behind the elected Ugo Cappellacci in the plurinominal district of southern Sardinia, while the latter ran in the single-member district of Cagliari for the Senate of the Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 68], "content_span": [69, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290177-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Italian by-elections, Chamber of Deputies, Sardinia 1: Cagliari\nFrailis, not affiliated to any party, competed with the support of the new \"Progressives of Sardinia\" coalition, formation created for the occasion, which unites both the Democratic Party and other formations, such as Free and Equal, that in Parliament formed the previous year two separate groups. Frailis has however announced that in the event of his election he would join the Democratic Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 68], "content_span": [69, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290177-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian by-elections, Chamber of Deputies, Sardinia 1: Cagliari\nThe election was characterised by a very low turnout, equal to 15.54%. The two most populous municipalities registered the highest and lowest turnout: Cagliari with 17.17% and Quartu Sant'Elena with 12.46%. Andrea Frailis, the candidate of the Centre-left coalition, was elected deputy with 40.40% of the votes, while Daniele Caschili and Daniela Noli stopped respectively at 28.92% and 27.80%. It is worth noting that Frailis received maximum votes only in the municipalities of Cagliari, Quartu Sant'Elena and Monserrato, namely the municipalities of the first belt of the city hinterland. These being the most populous municipalities, have determined the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 68], "content_span": [69, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290177-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian by-elections, Chamber of Deputies, Trentino-S\u00fcdtirol 4: Trento\nOn 22 October 2018, elections took place in Trentino to elect both the Governor and the Council of the Autonomous Province. Deputy Giulia Zanotelli of Cles was elected Councillor, and therefore, on 9 January 2019, she resigned from the seat at the Chamber of Deputies, triggering the by-election in the district for her replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290177-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Italian by-elections, Chamber of Deputies, Trentino-S\u00fcdtirol 4: Trento\nCandidates of the Centre-right coalition (League, Forza Italia, Brothers of Italy), the Democratic Autonomist Alliance (Democratic Party, Future, Union for Trentino, Free and Equal, Federation of the Greens, Italian Socialist Party) and the Five Star Movement took part in the election, while the Trentino Tyrolean Autonomist Party did not file candidacies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290177-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian by-elections, Chamber of Deputies, Trentino-S\u00fcdtirol 4: Trento\nThe by-election was held on 26 May 2019, in concurrence with another by-election in the district of Pergine, Trentino, and several other elections of the European Parliament (spanning from May 23 to May 26).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290177-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian by-elections, Chamber of Deputies, Trentino-S\u00fcdtirol 6: Pergine Valsugana\nOn 22 October 2018, Deputy Maurizio Fugatti of Avio was elected as Governor of the Autonomous Province of Trentino; in consequence of that, he resigned from the Chamber of Deputies on 9 January 2019, in order to assume his new office. Candidates of the Centre-right coalition (League, Forza Italia, Brothers of Italy), the Democratic Autonomist Alliance (Democratic Party, Future, Union for Trentino, Free and Equal, Federation of the Greens, Italian Socialist Party) and the Five Star Movement took part in the election, while the Trentino Tyrolean Autonomist Party did not file candidacies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290177-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian by-elections, Chamber of Deputies, Trentino-S\u00fcdtirol 6: Pergine Valsugana\nThe by-election was held on 26 May 2019, in concurrence with the other by-election in the district of Trento, Trentino, and with the several elections of the European Parliament (spanning from May 23 to May 26).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290178-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian government crisis\nThe 2019 Italian government crisis was a political event in Italy that occurred between August and September 2019. It includes the events that follow the announcement of the Minister of the Interior and leader of the League, Matteo Salvini, that he would revoke League's support of the cabinet and ask the President of the Republic to call a snap election. This provoked the resignation of Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte, and resulted in the formation of a new cabinet led by Conte himself.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290178-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian government crisis, Background\nIn the 2018 Italian general election, no political group or party won an outright majority, resulting in a hung parliament. On 4 March, the centre-right alliance, in which Matteo Salvini's League emerged as the main political force, won a plurality of seats in the Chamber of Deputies and in the Senate, while the anti-establishment Five Star Movement (M5S) led by Luigi Di Maio became the party with the largest number of votes. The centre-left coalition, led by Matteo Renzi, came third. As a result, protracted negotiations were required before a new government could be formed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290178-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian government crisis, Background\nThe talks between the Five Star Movement and the League resulted in the proposal of the so-called \"government of change\" under the leadership of university professor Giuseppe Conte, a law professor close to the M5S. After some bickering with President Sergio Mattarella, Conte's cabinet, which was dubbed by the media as Western Europe's \"first all-populist government\", was sworn in on 1 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290178-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian government crisis, Background, Political crisis\nIn August 2019, Deputy Prime Minister Salvini announced a motion of no confidence against Conte, after growing tensions within the majority. Salvini's move came right after a vote in the Senate regarding the progress of the Turin\u2013Lyon high-speed railway, in which the Lega voted against an attempt of the M5S to block the construction works. Many political analysts believe the no confidence motion was an attempt to force early elections to improve Lega's standing in Parliament, ensuring Salvini could become the next Prime Minister. On 20 August, following the parliamentary debate in which Conte harshly accused Salvini of being a political opportunist who \"had triggered the political crisis only to serve his personal interest\", the Prime Minister resigned his post to President Sergio Mattarella.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 864]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290178-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian government crisis, Government formation\nOn 21 August, Mattarella started the consultations with all the parliamentary groups. On the same day, the national direction of the Democratic Party (PD) officially opened to a cabinet with the Five Star Movement, based on pro-Europeanism, green economy, sustainable development, fight against economic inequality and a new immigration policy. However, the talks with President Mattarella resulted in an unclear outcome, thus Mattarella announced a second round of consultation for 27 or 28 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290178-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian government crisis, Government formation\nIn days that preceded the second round, a confrontation between PD and M5S started, while the left-wing\u00a0Free and Equal\u00a0(LeU) announced that they would support a potential M5S\u2013PD cabinet. On 28 August, PD's leader Nicola Zingaretti announced at the Quirinal Palace his favorable position on forming a new government with the Five Stars with Giuseppe Conte at its head. On same day, Mattarella summoned Conte to the Quirinal Palace for the 29 August to give him the task of forming a new cabinet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290178-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian government crisis, Government formation, Approval by M5S membership\nOn 1 September, Five Star's founder Beppe Grillo strongly endorsed an alliance with the PD, describing it as a \"unique occasion\" to reform the country. After two days, on 3 September, the members of the Five Star Movement voted on the so-called \"Rousseau Platform\" in favor of an agreement with the Democrats, under the premiership of Giuseppe Conte, with more than 79% of votes out of nearly 80,000 voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 80], "content_span": [81, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290178-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian government crisis, Government formation, Investiture votes\nOn 9 September 2019 the Chamber of Deputies granted the confidence to the government with 343 votes in favour, 263 against and 3 abstentions. On the following day the confidence was confirmed in the Senate with 169 votes in favor and 133 against.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290179-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian local elections\nThe 2019 Italian local elections will be held on different dates; most on 26 May 2019, together with the 2019 European election, with a second round on 9 June. Direct elections will be held in 3,843 out of 7,918 municipalities; in each of these, mayor and members of the City Council are going to be elected. Of the 3,841 municipalities, 30 are provincial capitals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290179-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian local elections\nThe elections in Sicily were held on 28 April, with a second ballot on 12 May. The elections in Sardinia were held on 16 June with a second ballot on 30 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290179-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290179-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 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 seats for each party is determined proportionally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290179-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian local elections, Results\nMajority of each coalition in the municipalities which have a population higher than 15,000 inhabitants:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290180-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2019 Italian motorcycle Grand Prix was the sixth round of the 2019 MotoGP season. It was held at the Mugello Circuit in Scarperia on 2 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290181-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian protests\nThe 2019 Italian protests was a wave of mass demonstrations and unprecedented wave of massive protest rallies and economic marches led by unions, students and employees demanding the fall of the government of Matteo Salvini and better economic conditions and economic policies to be scrapped. The anti-government movement began in February, in Milan and Turin, protesting economic conditions and began to follow calls for mass demonstrations. Demonstrators marched and chanted using placards and designs, letters, gatherings, meetings and speeches as a tactics to rally and March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290181-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 Italian protests\nRallying and rallies called for supporters was held weekly in February\u2013March, protesting in their hundreds of thousands with yellow vests and workers used vests of different colours against the governmental policies and in support of Deputy PM Luigi Di Maio. Protesters called for the government, to resign and kept on mounting pressure on government officials. Popular protests consorted of carnivals, parades and chanting, clapping and Union-led slogans depicting the government. In the movement, there was some anarchist-style violence, especially during the strikes in Turin, when anarchist protesters threw projectiles at police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290181-0000-0002", "contents": "2019 Italian protests\nOpposition and street protests to Matteo Salvini continued in Milan, where protesters denounced the right-wing government. Large crowds demanded democratic reforms and the populist government to resign while using balloons, phone lights, candles, flags and ribbons. Rallies led by labour unions and millions of ordinary civilians occurred in May\u2013June and September\u2013October, demanding climate action, fall of government and denouncing far-right policies. Protesters used human chains to link them up and in squares, hundreds of thousands protested with using their arms and making signals and symbols with their arms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290181-0000-0003", "contents": "2019 Italian protests\nTens of thousands participated in General strikes in Verona and Rome, on the anniversary of the 1922 Italian general strike and campaigned to denounce violence against women. In some cases, chaos erupted when Riot police would fire Tear gas at protesters in towns amid dozens participate in rallies, and demonstrators would be slashed with batons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290182-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Italian regional elections\nThe Regional elections in Italy took place during 2019 in five regions out of twenty: Abruzzo (10 February), Sardinia (24 February), Basilicata (24 March), Piedmont (26 May) and Umbria (27 October).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290183-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Italy FIBA Basketball World Cup team\nThe 2019 Italy FIBA Basketball World Cup team represents Italy at the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup in China. Italy qualified for the World Cup by taking the 2nd place in the European Second Round Group J. The team has been coached by Romeo Sacchetti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290183-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Italy FIBA Basketball World Cup team\nThe 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup is the 18th tournament of the FIBA Basketball World Cup championship that is organized by FIBA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290183-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Italy FIBA Basketball World Cup team, Background\nThe 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup represents the 18th edition of the FIBA Basketball World Cup where for the first time 32 teams from all over the world compete in the tournament. Italy has not qualified since the 2006 edition in Japan where it reached the playoffs. This year, with coach Sacchetti, the Italian national team aims to achieve at least the Olimpics qualifying tournament, which means qualify to the second round of World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 53], "content_span": [54, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290183-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Italy FIBA Basketball World Cup team, Roster\nThe final 12-man roster was announced on 29 August. Originally Nicol\u00f2 Melli was included as well, but he was ruled out on the World Cup because of his knee surgery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290183-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Italy FIBA Basketball World Cup team, Exhibition games, Trentino Basket cup\nFour teams took part in the Trentino Basket Cup: Ivory Coast and Italy, that were preparing for the World Cup. While Romania and Switzerland were preparing for the Eurobasket 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 80], "content_span": [81, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290183-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Italy FIBA Basketball World Cup team, Exhibition games, Verona Basketball Cup\nAll the four team playing at the Verona Basketball Cup have been qualified for the World Cup: Italy, Russia, Senegal and Venezuela. The tournament is played in a round robin Format and the Russian team won the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 82], "content_span": [83, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290183-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Italy FIBA Basketball World Cup team, Exhibition games, Acropolis Cup\nThe tournament is scheduled to be held from 16 to 18 August in Athens, Greece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 74], "content_span": [75, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290183-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Italy FIBA Basketball World Cup team, Exhibition games, AusTiger Cup\nThe tournament is scheduled to be held from 23 to 27 August in Shenyang, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 73], "content_span": [74, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290183-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Italy FIBA Basketball World Cup team, Tournament, Preliminary Round\nItaly was drawn into Group D with Angola, Philippines, and the Serbia and will play all of its group phase matches in Foshan at the Foshan International Sports and Cultural Center from 31 August to 4 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 72], "content_span": [73, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290183-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Italy FIBA Basketball World Cup team, Tournament, Preliminary Round, Philippines vs. Italy\nThis will be the second game between the Philippines and Italy in the World Cup. The Italians won the first meeting in 1978, which was also the last competitive game between the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 95], "content_span": [96, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290183-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Italy FIBA Basketball World Cup team, Tournament, Preliminary Round, Italy vs. Angola\nThis will be the second game between Angola and Serbia in the World Cup. The Italians won the first meeting in 1990, which was also the last competitive game between the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 90], "content_span": [91, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290183-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Italy FIBA Basketball World Cup team, Tournament, Preliminary Round, Italy vs. Serbia\nThis will be the first game between Italy and Serbia in the World Cup. Serbia won in its last competitive game against Italy, in EuroBasket 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 90], "content_span": [91, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290183-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Italy FIBA Basketball World Cup team, Tournament, Second round\nItaly finished second in the preliminary group and advanced to the second round of the FIBA Basketball World Cup. It will play against two top finishers of Group C, Spain and Puerto Rico, in Wuhan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 67], "content_span": [68, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290183-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Italy FIBA Basketball World Cup team, Conclusion\nItaly ended the championship at the 10th place overall, position that allows Italy the qualification to the Olympic qualifying tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 53], "content_span": [54, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290184-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ivirua by-election\nA by-election was held in the Cook Islands constituency of Ivirua on 21 January 2019. The by-election was called following the death of sitting MP Tony Armstrong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290184-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ivirua by-election\nThe election was contested by four candidates: Agnes Armstrong, wife of former MP Tony Armstrong, for the Democratic Party; former deputy Prime Minister Teariki Heather for the Cook Islands United Party, Daryl Rairi for the Cook Islands Party, and independent Jason Teremoana. The by-election was won by Agnes Armstrong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290185-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ivy League Baseball Championship Series\nThe 2019 Ivy League Baseball Championship Series was held at the home field of the team with the best regular season record on May 18 and 19. The series matched the top two teams from the Ivy League's round robin regular season. The winner of the series, Harvard, claimed the Ivy League's automatic berth in the 2019 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290186-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ivy League Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 Ivy League Men's Basketball Tournament was the postseason men's basketball tournament for the Ivy League of the 2018\u201319 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. It was held on March 16 and 17, 2019 at the John J. Lee Amphitheater on the campus of the Yale University in New Haven. League co-champions Harvard and Yale met in the final with Yale winning 97\u201385. Yale received the Ivy League's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Tournament. Yale lost 74\u201379 in the first round to (3) LSU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290186-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ivy League Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nThe top four teams in the Ivy League regular-season standings qualify for the tournament and are seeded according to their records in conference play, resulting in a Shaughnessy playoff. If a tie for any of the top four positions exists, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290187-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ivy League Women's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2019 Ivy League Women's Basketball Tournament was a women's college conference tournament held March 16 and 17, 2019, at the Payne Whitney Gymnasium on the campus of Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut. Princeton defeated Penn to earn the Ivy League's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290187-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ivy League Women's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nOnly the top four teams in the 2018\u201319 Ivy League regular-season standings will participate in the tournament and be seeded according to their records in conference play, resulting in a Shaughnessy playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 52], "content_span": [53, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290188-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ivy League men's soccer season\nThe 2019 Ivy League men's soccer season was the 65th season of the conference sponsoring men's varsity soccer. The season began in August 2019 and concluded in November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290188-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ivy League men's soccer season\nPrinceton entered the 2019 season as the defending conference champions by virtue of having the best regular season record. The Ivy League is one of three NCAA Division I men's soccer conferences that do not have a conference tournament to determine their NCAA Tournament berth (the other two are the Pac-12 and the West Coast Conferences).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290188-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Ivy League men's soccer season\nPrinceton was unable to defend their title, as Yale won their first Ivy League championship since 1989.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290188-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Ivy League men's soccer season, Background, Previous season\nThe 2018 season was the conference's 64th season sponsoring men's varsity soccer. Princeton won the Ivy League championship with a 5\u20131\u20131 record. In the first round, Princeton played Michigan. The match ended in a 1\u20131 draw, ended with a 14-round penalty shoot-out. There, Princeton lost 10\u201311 on penalty kicks to Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290188-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Ivy League men's soccer season, Background, Coaching changes\nThere have been no coaching changes during the 2018\u201319 offseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290188-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Ivy League men's soccer season, Preseason, Preseason national polls\nThe preseason national polls will be released in July and August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290188-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Ivy League men's soccer season, Regular season, Early season tournaments\nEarly season tournaments will be announced in late Spring and Summer 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 77], "content_span": [78, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290188-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Ivy League men's soccer season, Postseason, NCAA Tournament\nThe NCAA Tournament will begin in November 2019 and conclude on December 17, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290188-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Ivy League men's soccer season, Rankings, Regional rankings - USC Northeast Region\nThe United Soccer Coaches' Northeast poll features teams from the Ivy League, America East, NEC, and MAAC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 87], "content_span": [88, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290188-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Ivy League men's soccer season, Awards and honors, Postseason honors\nAlex Touche, Penn (Jr., D)Enzo Okpoye, Yale (So., M)Ryan Bayne, Cornell (Sr., D)Jacob Schachner, Princeton (Sr., GK)Elian Haddock, Yale (So., GK)Mark Winhoffer, Yale (Jr., M)Joey Bhangdia, Penn (Jr., M)John Scearce, Cornell (Sr., M )Miguel Yuste, Yale (Sr., M)Walker Gillespie, Princeton (Fr., F)John Denis, Columbia (Sr., M/F)Kevin O'Toole, Princeton (Jr., M)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290188-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Ivy League men's soccer season, Awards and honors, Postseason honors\nHenry Baldwin, Dartmouth (Sr., D)Justin Lobe, Yale (Sr., D)Connor Drought, Cornell (Fr., D)Kai Lammers, Penn (Fr., D)Cole Morokhovich, Princeton (Sr., D)Alex Budnik, Dartmouth (So., GK)Uri Zeitz, Columbia (Fr., M)Danny Schiller, Brown (Sr., M)Braden Salvati, Dartmouth (Sr., M/D)Ryan Matteo, Yale (Sr., M)Dawson McCartney, Dartmouth (Jr., M)Matt Chow, Brown (Sr., F)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290188-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Ivy League men's soccer season, Awards and honors, Postseason honors\nOwen Schwartz, Brown (Fr., D)Matthew Swain, Columbia (Sr., M/F)Matthew Glass, Harvard (Sr., M)Alex Charles, Princeton (So., D)Jeremy Haddock, Yale (So., D)Derek Waleffe, Brown (So., M)Brandon Bartel, Penn (Sr., M)Andrew Stevens, Columbia (So., M)Emeka Eneli, Cornell (So., F)Danny Laranetto, Columbia (Sr., M)Harry Fuller, Cornell (Jr., M )Ohad Yahalom, Dartmouth (So., M)Moulay Hamza Kanzi Belghiti, Princeton (So., M)Zach Kalk, Dartmouth (Sr., M)Paolo Carroll, Yale (So., F)Jake Kohlbrenner, Penn (Jr., F)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290188-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Ivy League men's soccer season, 2020 MLS Draft\nThe 2020 MLS SuperDraft was held in January 2020. No players from the Ivy League were selected in the SuperDraft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290188-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Ivy League men's soccer season, Homegrown players\nThe Homegrown Player Rule is a Major League Soccer program that allows MLS teams to sign local players from their own development academies directly to MLS first team rosters. Before the creation of the rule in 2008, every player entering Major League Soccer had to be assigned through one of the existing MLS player allocation processes, such as the MLS SuperDraft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290188-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Ivy League men's soccer season, Homegrown players\nTo place a player on its homegrown player list, making him eligible to sign as a homegrown player, players must have resided in that club's home territory and participated in the club's youth development system for at least one year. Players can play college soccer and still be eligible to sign a homegrown contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290188-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Ivy League men's soccer season, Homegrown players\nNo players from the Ivy League signed homegrown contracts with their parent MLS clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290189-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Iwate gubernatorial election\nA gubernatorial election was held on 8 September 2019 to elect the next Governor of Iwate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290190-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 J&T Banka Prague Open\nThe 2019 J&T Banka Prague Open was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 10th edition of the tournament, and part of the International category of the 2019 WTA Tour. It took place at the Sparta Prague Tennis Club in Prague, Czech Republic, from 29 April to 4 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290190-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 J&T Banka Prague 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-00290190-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 J&T Banka Prague 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-00290191-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 J&T Banka Prague Open \u2013 Doubles\nAnna Kalinskaya and Vikt\u00f3ria Ku\u017emov\u00e1 won the title, defeating defending champions Nicole Melichar and Kv\u011bta Peschke in the final, 4\u20136, 7\u20135, [10\u20137].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290192-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 J&T Banka Prague Open \u2013 Singles\nPetra Kvitov\u00e1 was the defending champion, but chose not to participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290192-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 J&T Banka Prague Open \u2013 Singles\nJil Teichmann won her first career WTA title, defeating Karol\u00edna Muchov\u00e1 in the final 7\u20136(7\u20135), 3\u20136, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290193-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 J.League Cup\n2019 J. League Cup is the 27th J.League Cup, which began on 6 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290193-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 J.League Cup\nThe official title is 2019 J.League YBC Levain Cup (2019 J\u30ea\u30fc\u30b0YBC\u30eb\u30f4\u30a1\u30f3\u30ab\u30c3\u30d7) due to the sponsorship of Yamazaki Baking. The winners would have earned the right to play against the winners of the 2019 Copa Sudamericana in the 2020 J.League Cup / Copa Sudamericana Championship, but it would not held due to the 2020 Tokyo Olympics held at the same time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290193-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 J.League Cup, Format\nJ.League announced the schedule and the matchdays up to the semifinals on December 14, 2018, and full fixture of the matches including the final (on October 26, at Saitama Stadium 2002) on 23 January, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290193-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 J.League Cup, Format\nAll 18 teams playing in the 2019 J1 League will participate. In addition, depending on the result of the 2019 AFC Champions League qualifying play-offs, one or two teams from 2019 J2 League with the best performance in the previous season (i.e., Kashiwa Reysol and V-Varen Nagasaki, the 17th- and 18th-placed teams in 2018 J1 League, respectively) may participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290193-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 J.League Cup, Format, Group stage\nParticipants of 2019 AFC Champions League group stage (ACL) receive byes for the group stage and the play-off stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 38], "content_span": [39, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290193-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 J.League Cup, Format, Group stage\nAs a result, 16 teams will play the group stage. 16 teams are divided into four groups of four teams by the performance of 2018 J1 League and 2018 J2 League (parenthesized below).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 38], "content_span": [39, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290193-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 J.League Cup, Format, Group stage\nEach group is played on a home-and-away round-robin basis. Each match will be played for 90 minutes (without extra time).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 38], "content_span": [39, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290193-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 J.League Cup, Format, Group stage, Group stage tiebreakers\nIn the group stage, teams in a group are ranked by points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss). If the points are tied, the following tiebreakers are applied:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 63], "content_span": [64, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290193-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 J.League Cup, Format, Group stage, Group stage tiebreakers\nIn case of ranking third-placed teams across the groups, the following criteria is used:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 63], "content_span": [64, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290193-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 J.League Cup, Format, Play-off stage\nThe number of play-off stage participants depends on the number of teams advanced to ACL group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290193-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 J.League Cup, Format, Play-off stage\nThe play-off stage is played as two-legged ties of two teams each. The away goals rule, an extra time (away goals rule is not applied for the scores in the extra time), and a penalty shoot-out are used if needed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290193-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 J.League Cup, Format, Prime stage (Knockout stage)\nThe prime stage (knockout stage) is played by 8 teams who advanced to ACL group stage and won the play-off stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 55], "content_span": [56, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290193-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 J.League Cup, Format, Prime stage (Knockout stage)\nThe quarterfinals and the semifinals are played as two-legged ties (same as the play-off stage). The final is a single game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 55], "content_span": [56, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290193-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 J.League Cup, Format, Prime stage (Knockout stage)\nThe video assistant referee (VAR) system will be used during the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 55], "content_span": [56, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290193-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 J.League Cup, Schedule\nThe schedule, except for the final, was announced on 14 December 2018. All matches of the group stage and the play-off stage will be played on Wednesdays.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 27], "content_span": [28, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290193-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 J.League Cup, Prime stage (Knockout stage)\nThe draw for the prime stage was held on July 28 at Fuji TV Odaiba headquarters, Tokyo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290193-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 J.League Cup, Prime stage (Knockout stage)\nFor each tie in the bracket (except the final), the team on top will play the second leg at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290193-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 J.League Cup, Prime stage (Knockout stage), Quarter-finals\nF.C. Tokyo played their home match on NACK5 Stadium Omiya instead of their regular home stadium Ajinomoto Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 63], "content_span": [64, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290194-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 J.League Cup / Copa Sudamericana Championship\nThe 2019 J.League Cup / Copa Sudamericana Championship, officially known as the 2019 J. League YBC Levain Cup / CONMEBOL Sudamericana Championship Final (Japanese: \uff2a\u30ea\u30fc\u30b0YBC\u30eb\u30f4\u30a1\u30f3\u30ab\u30c3\u30d7/CONMEBOL\u30b9\u30c0\u30e1\u30ea\u30ab\u30fc\u30ca \u738b\u8005\u6c7a\u5b9a\u62262019 KANAGAWA), was the 12th edition of the J.League Cup / Copa Sudamericana Championship (previously referred to as the Suruga Bank Championship until 2018), the club football match co-organized by the Japan Football Association, the football governing body of Japan, CONMEBOL, the football governing body of South America, and J.League, the professional football league of Japan, between the champions of the previous season's J.League Cup and Copa Sudamericana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290194-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 J.League Cup / Copa Sudamericana Championship\nThe match was contested between Japanese team Shonan Bellmare, the 2018 J.League Cup champions, and Brazilian team Athletico Paranaense, the 2018 Copa Sudamericana champions. It was hosted by Shonan Bellmare at the Shonan BMW Stadium Hiratsuka in Hiratsuka on 7 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290194-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 J.League Cup / Copa Sudamericana Championship\nAthletico Paranaense won the match 4\u20130 to win their first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290194-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 J.League Cup / Copa Sudamericana Championship, Format\nThe J.League Cup / Copa Sudamericana Championship was played as a single match, with the J.League Cup winners hosting the match. If tied at the end of regulation, extra time would not be played, and the penalty shoot-out would be used to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 58], "content_span": [59, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290194-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 J.League Cup / Copa Sudamericana Championship, Match, Details\nAssistant referees:Abdul Hannan Bin Abdul Hasim (Singapore)Ong Chai Lee (Singapore)Fourth official:Letchman Gopala Krishnan (Singapore)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 66], "content_span": [67, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290195-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 J1 League\nThe 2019 J1 League, also known as the 2019 Meiji Yasuda J1 League (Japanese: 2019 \u660e\u6cbb\u5b89\u7530\u751f\u547dJ1\u30ea\u30fc\u30b0, Hepburn: 2019 Meiji Yasuda Seimei J1 R\u012bgu) for sponsorship reasons, was the 27th season of the J1 League, the top Japanese professional league for association football clubs, since its establishment in 1993.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290195-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 J1 League, Clubs\nA total of 18 clubs contested the league. There were only two changes from 2018, since Kashiwa Reysol and V-Varen Nagasaki were relegated to the 2019 J2 League while J\u00fabilo Iwata defeated Tokyo Verdy in the promotion/relegation play-off. 2018 J2 League champions Matsumoto Yamaga returned to the J1 League after three seasons of absence, while Oita Trinita returned to the top tier after six seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 21], "content_span": [22, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290195-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 J1 League, Foreign players\nAs of 2019 season, there are no more restrictions on a number of signed foreign players, but clubs can only register up to five foreign players for a single match-day squad. Players from J.League partner nations (Thailand, Vietnam, Myanmar, Malaysia, Cambodia, Singapore, Indonesia and Qatar) are exempt from these restrictions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 31], "content_span": [32, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290195-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 J1 League, Promotion\u2013relegation playoffs\nIn the first two rounds of the 2019 J.League J1/J2 Play-Offs (2019 J1\u53c2\u5165\u30d7\u30ec\u30fc\u30aa\u30d5), if the score is tied after 90 minutes, no extra time is played and the winner is the team with the best J2 League ranking. In the final match against the J1 team, if the score is tied after 90 minutes, no extra time is played and the J1 team wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 45], "content_span": [46, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290195-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 J1 League, Attendances\nUpdated to games played on 7 December 2019Source: Notes:\u2020 Promoted from J2.\u3002", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 27], "content_span": [28, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290196-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 J2 League\nThe 2019 Meiji Yasuda J2 League (Japanese: 2019 \u660e\u6cbb\u5b89\u7530\u751f\u547dJ2\u30ea\u30fc\u30b0, Hepburn: 2019 Meiji Yasuda Seimei J2 R\u012bgu) season is the 48th season of the second-tier club football in Japan and the 21st season since the establishment of J2 League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290196-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 J2 League, Clubs\nAfter eight seasons of good success, Kashiwa Reysol had to say goodbye to the first division. The same happened to V-Varen Nagasaki, which came back to J2 after their debut season in the first tier. In their place, Matsumoto Yamaga and Oita Trinita left J2 after getting promoted, while Tokyo Verdy lost the promotion/relegation play-off against Jubilo Iwata. Also another four teams changed category: Roasso Kumamoto and Kamatamare Sanuki left J2, while their places will be taken by newly-arrived FC Ryukyu and Kagoshima United FC will play their first J2-season ever in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 21], "content_span": [22, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290196-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 J2 League, Foreign players\nThe total number of foreign players is limitless, but clubs can only register up to five foreign players for a single match-day squad. Players from J.League partner nations (Thailand, Vietnam, Myanmar, Malaysia, Cambodia, Singapore, Iran and Qatar) are exempt from these restrictions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 31], "content_span": [32, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290196-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 J2 League, Foreign players\nPlayers in bold are players who join midway through the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 31], "content_span": [32, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290196-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 J2 League, Promotion\u2013Relegation Playoffs\nIn the first two rounds of the 2019 J.League J1/J2 Play-Offs (2019 J1\u53c2\u5165\u30d7\u30ec\u30fc\u30aa\u30d5), if the score is tied after 90 minutes, no extra time is played and the winner is the team with the best J2 League ranking. In the final match against the J1 team, if the score is tied after 90 minutes, no extra time is played and the J1 team wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 45], "content_span": [46, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290196-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 J2 League, Attendances\nUpdated to games played on 24 November 2019Source: Notes:\u2020 Last year in J1 League\u3002\u2021 Last year in J3 League\u3002", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 27], "content_span": [28, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290197-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 J3 League\nThe 2019 J3 League, referred to as the 2019 Meiji Yasuda J3 League (Japanese: 2019 \u660e\u6cbb\u5b89\u7530\u751f\u547dJ3\u30ea\u30fc\u30b0, Hepburn: 2019 Meiji Yasuda Seimei J3 R\u012bgu) for sponsorship reasons, is the 6th season of J3 League under its current name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290197-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 J3 League, 2019 season Clubs\n2018 season saw two teams promoted to J2 League: FC Ryukyu won the championship by nine points over second-placed Kagoshima United FC, which confirmed their promotion to the 2019 J2 League season with still one game to play. From second division, there was a double automatic relegation for the first time: Kamatamare Sanuki are back to third tier after five seasons, but they were promoted in 2013 from Japan Football League, when J3 League was planned. The same goes for Roasso Kumamoto, who are back in the third level of Japanese football after more than a decade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 33], "content_span": [34, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290197-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 J3 League, 2019 season Clubs\nAlso, Japan Football League saw the promotion of Vanraure Hachinohe, who came third in JFL and they booked their first professional season in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 33], "content_span": [34, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290197-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 J3 League, Attendances\nUpdated to games played on 8 December 2019Source: Notes:\u2020 Relegated from J2\u3002\u2021Promoted from JFL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 27], "content_span": [28, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290198-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 JC Ferrero Challenger Open\nThe 2019 JC Ferrero Challenger Open was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the second edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Alicante, Spain between 1 and 7 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290198-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 JC Ferrero Challenger Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290198-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 JC Ferrero Challenger Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290199-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 JC Ferrero Challenger Open \u2013 Doubles\nWesley Koolhof and Artem Sitak were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290199-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 JC Ferrero Challenger Open \u2013 Doubles\nThomaz Bellucci and Guillermo Dur\u00e1n won the title after defeating Gerard Granollers and Pedro Mart\u00ednez 2\u20136, 7\u20135, [10\u20135] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290200-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 JC Ferrero Challenger Open \u2013 Singles\nPablo And\u00fajar was the defending champion and successfully defended his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290200-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 JC Ferrero Challenger Open \u2013 Singles\nAnd\u00fajar won the title after defeating Pedro Mart\u00ednez 6\u20133, 3\u20136, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290201-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 JEGS 200\nThe 2019 JEGS 200 was a NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series race held on May 3, 2019, at Dover International Speedway in Dover, Delaware. Contested over 200 laps on the one-mile (1.6\u00a0km) concrete speedway, it was the sixth race of the 2019 NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290201-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 JEGS 200, Practice, First practice\nRapha\u00ebl Lessard was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 23.226 seconds and a speed of 154.999\u00a0mph (249.447\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 39], "content_span": [40, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290201-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 JEGS 200, Practice, Final practice\nJohnny Sauter was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 22.936 seconds and a speed of 156.958\u00a0mph (252.599\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 39], "content_span": [40, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290201-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 JEGS 200, Qualifying\nBrett Moffitt scored the pole for the race with a time of 22.303 seconds and a speed of 161.413\u00a0mph (259.769\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 25], "content_span": [26, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290201-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 JEGS 200, Race, Summary\nBrett Moffitt started on pole and led the first stage of the race, though Johnny Sauter trailed him closely. Sheldon Creed was able to catch up to Sauter and move up into contention thanks to lapped traffic. When Creed caught up to Moffitt, they approached Spencer Boyd and Ray Ciccarelli running side-by-side. The lapped trucks held up both Moffitt and Creed, allowing Sauter to take and hold on to the lead, winning the stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 28], "content_span": [29, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290201-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 JEGS 200, Race, Summary\nCreed got off pit road quickly and managed to lead 59 of the next 61 laps. A caution occurred due to Austin Wayne Self crashing on the front stretch, causing all of the drivers to make their final pit stops for the race. Creed fell behind while Ben Rhodes assumed the lead. Afterwards, Creed spun exiting Turn 2 and hit Todd Gilliland, heavily damaging the front of his truck, ultimately eliminating him from the race after his strong run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 28], "content_span": [29, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290201-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 JEGS 200, Race, Summary\nSauter was able to pass Rhodes for the lead with 30 laps to go, and held off a charging Brett Moffitt to claim his 24th career Gander Outdoors Truck Series victory and his third straight win at Dover.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 28], "content_span": [29, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290202-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 JLT Community Series\nThe 2019 JLT Community Series was the Australian Football League (AFL) pre-season competition played before the 2019 home and away season. It featured 18 matches across two weekends. For the sixth year in a row, the competition did not have a grand final or overall winner. All matches were televised live on Fox Footy as well as on the AFL Live app.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290203-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 JSM Challenger of Champaign\u2013Urbana\nThe 2019 JSM Challenger of Champaign\u2013Urbana was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the twenty-fourth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Champaign, Illinois, United States between November 11 and November 17, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290203-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00290204-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 JSM Challenger of Champaign\u2013Urbana \u2013 Doubles\nMatt Reid and John-Patrick Smith were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290204-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 JSM Challenger of Champaign\u2013Urbana \u2013 Doubles\nChristopher Eubanks and Kevin King won the title after defeating Evan Hoyt and Martin Redlicki 7\u20135, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290205-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 JSM Challenger of Champaign\u2013Urbana \u2013 Singles\nReilly Opelka was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290205-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 JSM Challenger of Champaign\u2013Urbana \u2013 Singles\nJeffrey John Wolf won the title after defeating Sebastian Korda 6\u20134, 6\u20137(3\u20137), 7\u20136(8\u20136) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290206-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jackson State Tigers football team\nThe 2019 Jackson State Tigers football team represents Jackson State University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Tigers are led by first-year head coach John Hendrick and play their home games at Mississippi Veterans Memorial Stadium in Jackson, Mississippi as members of the East Division of the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290206-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Jackson State Tigers football team, Previous season\nThe Tigers finished the 2018 season 5\u20135, 4\u20133 in SWAC play to finish in third place in the East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290206-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Jackson State Tigers football team, Preseason, Preseason polls\nThe SWAC released their preseason poll on July 16, 2019. The Tigers were picked to finish in third place in the East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290206-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Jackson State Tigers football team, Preseason, Preseason all\u2013SWAC teams\nThe Tigers placed two players on the preseason all\u2013SWAC teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 76], "content_span": [77, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290206-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Jackson State Tigers football team, Game summaries, vs. Bethune\u2013Cookman\nBethune-Cookman defeated Jackson State 36-15 Sunday at the 15th MEAC/SWAC Challenge from Georgia State University Stadium. The Tigers' offense started quickly and showcased their ability to create the big play. On the second play of the game freshman quarterback Quincy Casey was flushed to the right and found Terrell Kennedy III wide open along the hash and put the Tigers in the red zone. Senior Adrian Salazar converted a field goal and put the Tigers up 3-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 76], "content_span": [77, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290206-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Jackson State Tigers football team, Game summaries, vs. Bethune\u2013Cookman\nThe Tigers' defense controlled the game throughout the first half and held the Wildcats to 105 yards of total offense and forced four punts. On the Tigers second drive of the third quarter freshman quarterback Jalon Jones found Warren Newman for a 33-yard pitch and catch to put the Tigers up 15-7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 76], "content_span": [77, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290206-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Jackson State Tigers football team, Game summaries, vs. Bethune\u2013Cookman\nDespite the setback, JSU totaled 506 yards in total offense. That was the most since Oct. 24, 2015 when JSU defeated UAPB 37-3 and tallied 469 yards of offense. The last time the Tigers produced 500 yards of total offense was October 26, 2013 when JSU defeated Prairie View A&M 51-38. Nearly half of the 506 yards came on the ground. Senior Jordan Johnson rushed for a game-high 81 yards and scored a touchdown. Junior Keyshawn Harper added 60 yards and freshman Tyson Alexander rushed for 43 yards, including a long of 36 yards. The team finished with 233 rushing yards. Sophomore DD Bowie tallied a game-high 105 yards on five receptions and Newman added 49 yards receiving.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 76], "content_span": [77, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290206-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Jackson State Tigers football team, Game summaries, vs. Bethune\u2013Cookman\nJunior quarterback Derrick Ponder passed for 130 yards and did not throw an interception. All-American linebacker Keonte Hampton added a game-high 11 tackles \u2013 seven solo stops and one tackle for loss. Seniors Quedarrion Barnett and CJ Anderson each sacked the quarterback. Senior Tyler Rogers and junior Jakaiszer Glass each finished with five tackles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 76], "content_span": [77, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290206-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Jackson State Tigers football team, Game summaries, at South Alabama\nOn the road and playing an opponent from the FBS, the Tigers played with the Jaguars from the opening kickoff until the final seconds melted off the clock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290206-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Jackson State Tigers football team, Game summaries, at South Alabama\nSouth Alabama needed a huge second half to escape JSU 37-14. USA scored on its first possession of the game, but JSU countered with a drive of its own. The JSU offense orchestrated a 11-play, 75-yard drive that finished with a 6-yard touchdown pass from Derrick Ponder to Warren Newman. The Jaguars added two more scores (failed on both extra-point attempts) and went into halftime with a 19-7 advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290206-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Jackson State Tigers football team, Game summaries, at South Alabama\nUSA outscored JSU 18-7 in the second half to close-out the contest. Mobile native Keshawn Harper ran with pride and gutted the Jaguars for 77 yards on 10 carries, which accounted for 7.5 yards per carry. True freshman Tyson Alexander rushed for 44 yards and scored his first-career touchdown in the fourth quarter on a 30-yard dash down the USA sideline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290206-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Jackson State Tigers football team, Game summaries, at South Alabama\nOne JSU's goals was to limit USA dual-threat quarterback Cephus Johnson and for the most part did. Johnson, who accounted for over 250 yards of total offense and scored three touchdowns last week at Nebraska, was held to 150 yards and turned the ball over twice. JSU's defense forced three turnovers. CJ Holmes and Tenoa Alex each recorded an interception. Alex also forced a fumble and Jakaiszer Glass recovered it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290206-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Jackson State Tigers football team, Game summaries, at South Alabama\nAll-American linebacker Keonte Hampton finished with a game-high 15 tackles. Tyler Rogers added 10 stops and Quedarrion Barnett made seven tackles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290206-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Jackson State Tigers football team, Game summaries, vs. Tennessee State\nJackson State gashed Tennessee State for 338 yards on the ground and rolled to a 49-44 win at the 30th Southern Heritage Classic at the Liberty Bowl. The 49 points was the most points by Jackson State in the Southern Heritage Classic and ended a six-game losing streak in the series to TSU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 76], "content_span": [77, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290206-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Jackson State Tigers football team, Game summaries, vs. Tennessee State\n\"I'm very proud of this team,\" JSU head coach John Hendrick said. \"It wasn't pretty, but we did not give up and left it all on the field. We faced adversity and responded in a positive manner. We'll enjoy this win and take a week off, get better, and get ready for Kentucky State in the Circle City Classic.\" The first quarter started off with bang. Josh Littles took the opening kickoff back 100 yards, however, TSU responded with a 96-yard kickoff return of its own to knot the game at 7-7. The Tigers' remaining touchdowns in the first half were via the ground game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 76], "content_span": [77, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290206-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Jackson State Tigers football team, Game summaries, vs. Tennessee State\nFacing a third and long, the Tigers dialed up a designed quarterback draw and Derrick Ponder scampered for a 23-yard touchdown \u2013 untouched \u2013 as the momentum began to swing in favor of the Blue & White. With 1:08 remaining in the first quarter, Tyson Alexander scored on a 52-yard touchdown and JSU led 21-7. Jordan Johnson, who rushed for a game-high 141 yards and was named Southern Heritage Classic MVP, scored from four yards out with 1:18 remaining in the half. TSU scored in the waning moments of the half and JSU led 28-17 at the break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 76], "content_span": [77, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290206-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Jackson State Tigers football team, Game summaries, vs. Tennessee State\nThe halftime didn't cool the offenses for either team. TSU opened the third quarter with a field goal and JSU countered with a five play, 39-yard drive that ended with a DD Bowie six-yard touchdown off an end-around. Bowie scored JSU's next touchdown, also a six-yard rush, but on a reverse to open a 42-30 lead. The Tigers final scoring drive of the game took 5:38 off the clock and Ponder found tight end Kyland Richey on a 16-yard pitch and catch. Keshawn Harper finished with 71 yards on seven carries from an average of 7.9 yards per attempt. All-American linebacker Keonte Hampton finished with a game-high nine tackles and added a sack. Tyler Rogers notched six stops and one sack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 76], "content_span": [77, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290207-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jacksonville Dolphins football team\nThe 2019 Jacksonville Dolphins football team represented Jacksonville University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by fourth-year head coach Ian Shields and played their home games at D. B. Milne Field. They were members of the Pioneer Football League (PFL). On December 3, 2019, Jacksonville University announced the discontinuation of the football program, making 2019 the final season of Dolphins football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290207-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Jacksonville Dolphins football team, Previous season\nThe Dolphins finished the 2018 season 2\u20138, 1\u20137 in PFL play to finish in last place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290207-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Jacksonville Dolphins football team, Preseason, Preseason coaches' poll\nThe Pioneer League released their preseason coaches' poll on July 30, 2019. The Dolphins were picked to finish in eighth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 76], "content_span": [77, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290207-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Jacksonville Dolphins football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013PFL teams\nThe Dolphins had two players selected to the preseason all\u2013PFL teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 76], "content_span": [77, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290208-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jacksonville Jaguars season\nThe 2019 season was the Jacksonville Jaguars' 25th in the National Football League (NFL) and their third under head coach Doug Marrone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290208-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Jacksonville Jaguars season\nThe Jaguars signed quarterback Nick Foles to a four-year, $88\u00a0million contract on March 11, 2019. It was also their first season since 2013 without Blake Bortles on the roster, as Bortles signed with the defending NFC champion Los Angeles Rams in free agency on March 18, 2019. Foles suffered a clavicle injury in week 1, and was replaced with rookie Gardner Minshew for the majority of the season. The Jaguars slightly improved on their 5\u201311 record from the previous season, but were mathematically eliminated from playoff contention for the second consecutive season after a loss to the Los Angeles Chargers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290208-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Jacksonville Jaguars season\nThis season, the Jags became the first team since the 1986 Tampa Bay Buccaneers to lose 5 straight games by 3 possessions or more.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290209-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jacksonville State Gamecocks football team\nThe 2019 Jacksonville State Gamecocks football team represented Jacksonville State University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by sixth-year head coach John Grass and played their home games at Burgess\u2013Snow Field at JSU Stadium in Jacksonville, Alabama as a member of the Ohio Valley Conference. They finished the season 6\u20136, 3\u20135 in OVC play to finish in a tie for fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290209-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Jacksonville State Gamecocks football team, Previous season\nThe Gamecocks finished the 2018 season 9\u20134, 7\u20131 in OVC play to win the conference championship for the fifth consecutive year. They received the OVC's automatic bid to the FCS Playoffs, where they defeated East Tennessee State in the first round before losing in the second round to Maine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290209-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Jacksonville State Gamecocks football team, Preseason, Preseason coaches' poll\nThe OVC released their preseason coaches' poll on July 22, 2019. The Gamecocks were picked to finish in first place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 83], "content_span": [84, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290209-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Jacksonville State Gamecocks football team, Preseason, Preseason All-OVC team\nThe Gamecocks had seven players at seven positions selected to the preseason all-OVC team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 82], "content_span": [83, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290210-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jacksonville mayoral election\nThe 2019 Jacksonville mayoral election was held on March 19, 2019, to elect the mayor of Jacksonville. Incumbent mayor Lenny Curry won a majority of votes to win a second term in office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290210-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Jacksonville mayoral election, Candidates, Democratic Party\nWhile Democratic candidates did declare their candidacy, no Democratic candidates qualified for the mayoral election in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290211-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jaintia Hills Autonomous District Council election\nElections to the Jaintia Hills Autonomous District Council (JHADC) were held on 27 February 2020. The votes were counted on 2 March 2020 with the NPP emerging as the largest party alliance in the Council with 12 and its ally UDP with 10 seats respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290211-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Jaintia Hills Autonomous District Council election, Results\nThe counting was held on 2 March 2019. The NPP emerged single largest party by winning 12 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 64], "content_span": [65, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290212-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jalalabad suicide bombing\nOn 7 October 2019, a suicide bomber detonated an improvised explosive device in a rickshaw in Jalalabad as a minibus carrying Afghan Army recruits passed it. At least fourteen people were killed and 37 others were injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290213-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jambyl Ahmetbekov presidential campaign\nSecretary of the Communist People's Party of Kazakhstan (QKHP) and Mazhilis MP Jambyl Ahmetbekov was unanimously nominated as a presidential candidate at the party's 14th Congress on 26 April 2019. Ahmetbekov was the party's nominee in the 2011 presidential election where he earned 3rd place in the race and took 1.36% of the vote. He began collecting signatures on 29 April and was finished by 4 May 2019. Ahmetbekov was officially registered by the Central Election Commission on 6 May. He expressed his confidence in the race claiming his experience and known popularity would benefit him. Ahmetbekov's campaign officially announced the electoral platforms on 14 May and the following day, Ahmetbekov himself presented them in the villages of Korgalzhyn and Shalkar in Akmola Region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 832]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290213-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Jambyl Ahmetbekov presidential campaign, Policies, Economic policy\nAhmetbekov advocated the continuation of economic integration in international relations with neighboring countries, both within the Eurasian Economic Union (EEU) and the Belt and Road Initiative with China. Although he stated that \"economic interaction with the closest neighbors should carry the basis for the growth of the well-being of ordinary Kazakhstanis, not oligarchs.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 71], "content_span": [72, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290213-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Jambyl Ahmetbekov presidential campaign, Campaign\nThroughout the campaign, Ahmetbekov took a populist tone where he blamed the lack of social spending on \"fugitive oligarchs\" in which he referred to exiled Kazakh banker and politician Mukhtar Ablyazov by accusing of stealing all the government budget money. He called for prosecution and tighter legislation to combat the problem. In an interview to Vlast.kz, Ahmetbekov proposed for regulation of certain content on the internet by having Kazakhstan creating its own Facebook, telling that \"no one from the outside would act on us, on our brains! The same fugitive oligarch like Ablyazov. Or his supporters, or his henchmen who process the brains.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290213-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Jambyl Ahmetbekov presidential campaign, Campaign\nOn 20 May 2019, he held meeting with the labor collective of the Kyzylorda Bus Depot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290214-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 James Madison Dukes football team\nThe 2019 James Madison Dukes football team represented James Madison University during the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by first-year head coach Curt Cignetti and played their home games at Bridgeforth Stadium. They competed as a member of the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA). They finished the season 14\u20132, 8\u20130 in CAA play to be CAA champions. They received the CAA's automatic bid to the FCS Playoffs where they defeated Monmouth, Northern Iowa, and Weber State to advance to the FCS National Championship Game where they lost to North Dakota State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290214-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 James Madison Dukes football team, Previous season\nThe Dukes finished the 2018 season 9\u20134, 6\u20132 in CAA play to finish in second place. They received an at-large bid to the FCS Playoffs where they defeated Delaware in the first round before losing to Colgate in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290214-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 James Madison Dukes football team, Previous season\nOn December 7, 2018, Mike Houston was formally announced and hired as the next coach of East Carolina, alongside nine staff members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290214-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 James Madison Dukes football team, Preseason, CAA poll\nIn the CAA preseason poll released on July 23, 2019, the Dukes were predicted to finish in first place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290214-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 James Madison Dukes football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013CAA team\nThe Dukes had six players selected to the preseason all-CAA team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 73], "content_span": [74, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290214-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 James Madison Dukes football team, FCS Playoffs\nThe Dukes entered the postseason tournament as the number two seed, with a first-round bye.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 52], "content_span": [53, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290215-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jamia Millia Islamia attack\nThe Jamia Millia Islamia attack refers to the forceful entry by Delhi police into the Jamia Millia Islamia university during a confrontation with student protesters that started outside the campus on 15 December 2019. Hundreds of police officers forcefully entered the campus and detained more than a hundred students during the confrontation with the protesters. The police used batons and tear gas to disperse protesters. The police also entered the university library and washrooms and in the process of the violence ransacked parts of it. The visuals of students being dragged and assaulted by the police were telecast by news channels. About two hundred people were injured and were admitted to AIIMS and the Holy Family Hospital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290215-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Jamia Millia Islamia attack\nThousands of people protested outside the Delhi Police Headquarters immediately after the attack. Reactionary protests were held in all the major cities of India. The attack triggered widespread controversy and garnered international condemnation. The Human Rights Watch urged the Indian government to order a probe into the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290215-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Jamia Millia Islamia attack, Background\nThe Citizenship Amendment Act protests are a series of ongoing protests in India against the Citizenship Amendment Act, or CAA. The university of Jamia Millia Islamia became a center of the protest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290215-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Jamia Millia Islamia attack, Background, 13 December protest\nOn 13 December 2019, the students of Jamia Millia Islamia University undertook a march to the Parliament protesting against the CAA. They were prevented from going ahead by the police who used batons and tear gas to disperse the protesters leading to clashes with them. Fifty students were detained by the police after the clash. According to the students, police attacked the peaceful protesters with stones and batons, in which several students were injured. The students then retaliated with stones. Police denied the allegations claiming that after the protesters were prevented from taking their march forward they attacked the policemen with stones, after which the police used tear gas shells. Several students were injured in a baton charge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 815]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290215-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Jamia Millia Islamia attack, Attack\nOn the morning of 15 December 2019, more than two thousand students of Jamia joined the protests against CAA in Delhi. Jamia Millia Student Body and Jamia Millia Islamia Teacher's Association (JTA) condemned the violence that happened on the same day in Delhi and stated that no student or teacher was involved in the violence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290215-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Jamia Millia Islamia attack, Attack\nOn 15 December, Delhi Police attacked students of Jamia Millia Islamia including Shaheen Abdullah, Chanda Yadav, Ladeeda Farzana and Aysha Renna at New Friends Colony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290215-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Jamia Millia Islamia attack, Attack\nAt 6:46 pm on 15 December 2019, hundreds of police officers, during confrontations with violent protesters, forcefully entered the campus of Jamia, without the permission of college authority. The police used batons and tear gas on the protesting students. Nearly a hundred students were detained by the Delhi police and released at 3:30 am next morning. The visuals of students being dragged and assaulted by the police was telecast by news channels. Students from all across Delhi joined the agitation. About two hundred people were injured and were admitted to AIIMS and the Holy Family Hospital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290215-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Jamia Millia Islamia attack, Attack, Attack on library\nThe police fired tear gas canisters inside the main library. Students scrambled over desks and smashed windows to escape. In a video, released in 15 December 2019, it can be seen that the students who were taking refuge inside the library were trying to escape from the reading room where tear gas was fired. Later, the police denied entering the library.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290215-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Jamia Millia Islamia attack, Attack, Attack on library\nOn 15 February 2020, the Jamia Coordination Committee released a CCTV footage which confirms that indeed police and para-military personnel entered into the research scholar section of the library and randomly beat up students who can be seen sitting and reading at their respective seats. Another video posted by , an online media platform, shows that the police broke the door of the PG reading room of the library and started beating the students. The students could be seen pleading with the police not to beat them but it was in vain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290215-0007-0002", "contents": "2019 Jamia Millia Islamia attack, Attack, Attack on library\nThe police brutality and vandalism continued and at the end the police can be seen damaging the CCTV which was capturing the incidents. The Quint released another video on 17 February 2020, where it can be seen that police and para-military personnel entered the library and vandalised, breaking chairs and reading desk and damaging CCTVs. It can also be seen that the police lathi charged the frightened students who were trying their best to hide to save themselves from such brutality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290215-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Jamia Millia Islamia attack, Attack, Firing\nOn 16 December 2019, two students of Jamia were admitted to the Safdarjung Hospital with bullet injuries received during the protests on 15 December. One of the victims, M. Tamin stated that he was not participating in the protest and was passing through the area on a motorcycle, when police suddenly started caning the protesters and he was shot in the leg by police from point blank range. The doctors treating him stated that the wounds were gunshot wounds. The police stated that they were investigating the allegations of gunshot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290215-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Jamia Millia Islamia attack, Aftermath\nThe university shut down until 5 January 2020 and the residents were asked to leave the campus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290215-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Jamia Millia Islamia attack, Aftermath, Investigation\nOn 12 January, vice-chancellor Najma Akhtar said that she would approach the court to file an FIR against the Delhi Police. However, no FIR is filed yet. She also assured students that campus security would be improved. An internal probe by the Delhi police revealed that at least three bullets were fired during the crackdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290215-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Jamia Millia Islamia attack, Aftermath, Investigation\nOn 30 January, Delhi Police identified photos of 69 people suspected of being involved in violence and rioting during the protest against CAA in Jamia Nagar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290215-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Jamia Millia Islamia attack, Aftermath, Reactions\nSome celebrity alumni of Jamia, including Shah Rukh Khan, Virender Sehwag, and Kabir Khan were criticized for the failure to condemn the crackdown on their alma mater.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290215-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Jamia Millia Islamia attack, Aftermath, Protests\nProtests were held in solidarity with Jamia students in several major universities across the subcontinent, including IIM Ahmedabad, Banaras Hindu University, Dhaka University, and IIT Bombay. Over 400 scholars from US universities including Harvard, Yale, Columbia, Stanford, and Tufts issued a joint statement expressing solidarity with Jamia students.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290215-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Jamia Millia Islamia attack, Aftermath, Further violence\nA juvenile Hindu nationalist opened fire at a protest at the Jamia Millia Islamia, injuring one student. The event happened on the 72nd anniversary of the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi, also by a Hindu nationalist. He was arrested and charged with attempted murder. The man shouted slogans of \"Jai Shri Ram\" (Victory to Lord Rama) and \"Delhi Police Zindabad\" (Long live Delhi police). Before open firing at the protestors, the attacker shouted \"Kisko chahiye Azadi? Main Dunga Azadi\" (Who wants freedom? I will give freedom).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290215-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Jamia Millia Islamia attack, Aftermath, Further violence\nOn 2 February 2020, late at night when people were protesting, two unidentified men fired shots near gate 5 of the University, the third attack in the area after 2nd attack during the Shaheen Bagh protest. Though there was no casualty reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290216-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jammu and Kashmir airstrikes\nOn 27 February 2019, the Pakistan Air Force (PAF) conducted six airstrikes at multiple locations in Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir (J&K). The airstrikes were part of the PAF military operation codenamed Operation Swift Retort and were conducted in retaliation to the Indian Air Force (IAF) airstrike in Balakot just a day before on 26 February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290216-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Jammu and Kashmir airstrikes\nIt was the first time since 1971 that both countries' airforces had conducted airstrikes on each other's territory across the Line of Control (LoC). India conducted an airstrike in Balakot on 26 February while Pakistan responded by conducting airstrikes in Indian-administered Kashmir. Following Pakistan's airstrikes, Indian Air Force (IAF) jets started pursuing Pakistan Air Force (PAF) jets. In the resulting dogfight, Pakistan claimed to have shot down two Indian jets and captured one Indian pilot. Indian officials acknowledged that one IAF jet was lost. Indian officials also claimed to have shot down a PAF's F-16 jet. Pakistan rejected the Indian claim and said that the PAF did not suffer any losses in the dogfight. One IAF Mil Mi-17 helicopter was also lost due to a friendly fire incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 836]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290216-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Jammu and Kashmir airstrikes, Background, Pulwama attack\nOn 14 February 2019, a convoy of vehicles carrying security personnel on the Jammu\u2013Srinagar National Highway was attacked by Pakistan-based Jaish-e-Mohammed militant group's vehicle-borne suicide bomber at Lethpora in the Pulwama district, Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir. The attack resulted in the deaths of 46 Central Reserve Police Force personnel and the attacker. The perpetrator of the attack was from Indian-administered Kashmir.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290216-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Jammu and Kashmir airstrikes, Background, Balakot airstrike\nAfter the attack, India said it targeted alleged militant camps of Jaish-e-Mohammed in an airstrike on Balakot, Pakistan, and killed a large number of militants. Pakistan condemned the violation of Line of Control and vowed to retaliate. In a press conference, spokesperson of the Pakistan Army, Major-General Asif Ghafoor, said that Pakistan will respond to the airstrike and will surprise India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290216-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Jammu and Kashmir airstrikes, Background, Balakot airstrike\nAdditionally, he rejected India's claims of hitting militant camps and causing any damage or casualties. Ghafoor said that if the airstrikes caused casualties, there would have been blood and funeral prayers, but not even a single brick or any debris was present there. He further stated that anyone can visit the site to verify the claims. However, the site was closed for one and a half month or 43 days before opened to foreign delegates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290216-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Jammu and Kashmir airstrikes, Airstrikes\nOn 27 February 2019, Pakistan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced that Pakistan Air Force had conducted six airstrikes at non-military targets in Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir. Pakistani officials stated that their fighter jets were able to lock onto the target with great accuracy but they were ordered to drop their bombs in an open space where there was no human presence to avoid any human loss or collateral damage. According to Pakistani officials, the strike was meant to demonstrate Pakistan's capability to do without any wanted further escalations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290216-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Jammu and Kashmir airstrikes, Airstrikes\nPakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan said that the strikes were meant to send a message to India. Indian Air Vice Marshal RGK Kapoor refuted Imran Khan's claim, he stated that \u201cPakistan claims they intentionally dropped weapons in open space where there was no human presence, however, they dropped bombs on military targets (for IAF's airstrike on terrorist camps). Therefore the escalation has been done not by us by him [Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan]\u201d. The PAF jets entered into Indian air space over Jammu and Kashmir's Poonch and Nowshera sector to hit targets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290216-0005-0002", "contents": "2019 Jammu and Kashmir airstrikes, Airstrikes\nThe locations struck by the PAF jets were identified to be Nadian, Laam Jhangar, Kerri in Rajouri District and Hamirpur area of Bhimber Ghali in Poonch by Indian officials. Indian officials, however, denied that the target of Pakistani airstrike were non-military targets. Indian officials claimed that the Pakistan Air Force (PAF) jets had deliberately targeted military positions like the Indian army's 25th division headquarters, ammunition and supply depot. According to Indian Air Vice Marshal RGK Kapoor, the Pakistani airstrike missed their intended target. PAF jets were intercepted by an unspecified number of IAF jets. The IAF fleet was composed of MiG-21, Sukhoi Su-30MKI and Dassault Mirage 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 754]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290216-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Jammu and Kashmir airstrikes, Airstrikes, Initial Planning\nAt 8:45 AM, Pakistani airspace was shut down for civilian flights and all commercial flights were cancelled. PAF aircraft took off about 30 minutes later coordinating the timing with the changeover of IAF AWACS. A combination of 25 aircraft including F-16 and Mirage 5 made their way towards Indian airspace but stayed within Pakistani airspace. Some of the aircraft went south towards Rajasthan to act as decoys.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290216-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Jammu and Kashmir airstrikes, Airstrikes, Aerial engagement\nThe announcement was followed by a tweet of Director-General of the ISPR, Maj Gen. Asif Ghafoor, which revealed that the Pakistan Air Force had shot down two Indian aircraft after they encroached on Pakistan's airspace. The ISPR stated that the wreckage of one of the aircraft fell in Azad Kashmir while the other one fell in Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir. One of the aircraft which crashed in Azad Kashmir was identified to be a Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-21 flown by Wing commander Abhinandan Varthaman. He was captured by a Pakistan military unit who were present in the premises.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290216-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Jammu and Kashmir airstrikes, Airstrikes, Aerial engagement\nThe villagers at the ground told Pakistani newspaper Dawn that they saw two jets in flame. However, Indian officials rejected Pakistani claims of shooting down IAF Su-30 MKI jets and said that they were an attempt by Pakistan to cover up the loss of its F-16. Indian sources claim that it is impossible to hide an aircraft crash as of now.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290216-0007-0002", "contents": "2019 Jammu and Kashmir airstrikes, Airstrikes, Aerial engagement\nPakistan's director-general of Inter-Services Public Relations (the official spokesperson of the armed forces of Pakistan) initially stated that it captured more than one Indian pilot and that one was admitted to CMH hospital, but changed their statement after some time and to say only one pilot is in their custody. This was later clarified to have been a \"mistake\" caused by fog of war.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290216-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Jammu and Kashmir airstrikes, Airstrikes, Aerial engagement\nIndian officials initially denied that an Indian Air Force (IAF) jet was shot down. They also claimed that all IAF pilots were accounted for and denied that any IAF pilot was captured by Pakistani security forces. Later, Indian officials acknowledged that one IAF MiG-21 was shot down and its pilot was in the custody of Pakistan security forces. The Indian Air Force also claimed to have shot down one F-16 by Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman from his MiG-21 aircraft. However, Pakistani officials rejected India's claim. Pakistani officials said that \"in today's day and age, it is impossible to hide downing of an aircraft\". On the Air Force day, 8 October 2019, IAF reportedly flew the Su-30 MKI claimed to have downed by Pakistan Air Force.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 813]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290216-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Jammu and Kashmir airstrikes, Airstrikes, Friendly fire\nOn the same day, one Indian Mil Mi-17 helicopter crashed killing 6 Indian Air Force personnel and 1 civilian in the Budgam district. However, after six months of investigation, Indian officials revealed that the helicopter was shot down due to friendly fire incident. The investigation also confirmed that SPYDER surface-to-air missile of the IAF was used to shoot down the helicopter and five IAF personnel were held guilty in the friendly fire case.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290216-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Jammu and Kashmir airstrikes, Aftermath, India\nThe Ministry of External Affairs in a press conference confirmed that the PAF violated the LoC and entered Indian airspace through the Nowshera and Poonch sectors, shooting down one IAF jet and causing its pilot to go missing. India also claimed to have shot down one PAF F-16 Fighting Falcon. A claim which was denied by Pakistan saying no F-16 was used in the operation. Additionally, Indian officials rejected Pakistani claims of shooting down an Su-30MKI. Indian sources claim that it is impossible to hide an aircraft crash as of now.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290216-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Jammu and Kashmir airstrikes, Aftermath, India\nOn 28 February, Indian officials again alleged that two Pakistan Air Force (PAF) jets had violated Indian airspace. According to the Indian officials, the PAF jets were intercepted over the Poonch and Krishna Gati sectors. However, no aerial combat took place and PAF jets returned to their airspace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290216-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Jammu and Kashmir airstrikes, Aftermath, India\nIn April 2019, a joint Indian Air Force-Indian Army BDS unit claimed to have carried out a bomb defusal operation in Mendhar, Rajouri, where they had successfully defused 3-4 unexploded H-4 SOW bombs that had been fired from PAF jets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290216-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Jammu and Kashmir airstrikes, Aftermath, India\nThe Indian Air Force was displeased with the performance of the R-77 missiles since they were outranged by the AIM-120 AMRAAM used by Pakistan Air Force. Hence, they are planning to rearm using the I-Derby ER missile instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290216-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Jammu and Kashmir airstrikes, Aftermath, Pakistan\nDG ISPR Asif Ghafoor later conducted a press conference, stating: \"Since today morning activity has been ongoing at LoC. This morning PAF engaged six targets across LoC from within Pakistani airspace\". He also said that the strikes were carried out to just demonstrate Pakistan's aggressive capabilities. Pakistan asserted that no F-16 was used in the operation. Initially, Pakistani officials stated that two IAF personnel were caught but later corrected their statement and stated that only one IAF personnel was in their custody. Pakistani officials stated that it was the fog of war that led them to believe that there were two IAF personnel in their custody.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290216-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Jammu and Kashmir airstrikes, Aftermath, Pakistan\nPrime Minister Imran Khan addressed the nation saying that the sole purpose of our action was to convey that \"if you can come into our country, we can do the same\". Khan also offered India for peace talks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290216-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Jammu and Kashmir airstrikes, Aftermath, United States\nAccording to Foreign Policy journalist Lara Seligman, U.S. officials with direct knowledge of the matter asserted that the US has recently completed a physical count of Pakistan's F-16s and has found none missing. One US official also disagreed with India's claim that usage restrictions disallow Pakistan from employing F-16s in military encounters with India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290216-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 Jammu and Kashmir airstrikes, Aftermath, United States\nThe Washington Post, Indian newspaper Hindustan Times reported that a United States Department of Defense spokesman claimed that he was \"not aware\" of any such investigation that was conducted and stated, \"As a matter of policy, the Department does not publicly comment on details of government-to-government agreements on end-use monitoring of US-origin defence articles.\" However, The Washington Post reported that like the Pentagon, the State Department has yet to issue any public statement on F-16 count.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290216-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Jammu and Kashmir airstrikes, Aftermath, United States\nIn December 2019, USNews reported that the United States had sent a letter to Pakistan Air Force in August expressing its concern about the alleged misuse of F-16s during the skirmish in February. The letter mentioned the State Department's confirmation that Pakistan had violated its agreement with the US by deploying F-16s and its complement of missiles to unauthorized forward air bases.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290216-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Jammu and Kashmir airstrikes, Exhibit\nA statue of the Indian pilot Abhinandan was installed in the Pakistan Air Force museum in an exhibit named Operation Swift Retort. The exhibit also displays the missing parts and wreckage of the MiG-21 as well as a tea mug.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290216-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Jammu and Kashmir airstrikes, In media\nAn official Pakistani film on the topic was released on 14 August 2019. It was directed, produced and written by DJ Kamal Mustafa. The story of the film is based on the attack, and shows the Pakistan Air Force response to the Indian attack and the capture of Indian pilot Abhinandan Varthaman. It is the only single animated film released in Pakistan in 2019. Operation Swift Retort was a non-profit movie. The Operation Swift Retort film was made entirely in 2 months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290217-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Cup (handball)\nThe 2019 Japan Cup was a friendly women's handball tournament held in Shibuya Tokyo, Japan at the Yoyogi National Gymnasium between 21\u201324 November, organised by the Japan Handball Association as preparation for the home team for the 2019 World Women's Handball Championship and as a test event for the 2020 Summer Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290218-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Football League\nThe 2019 Japan Football League (Japanese: \u7b2c21\u56de\u65e5\u672c\u30d5\u30c3\u30c8\u30dc\u30fc\u30eb\u30ea\u30fc\u30b0(\u7b2c21\u56de JFL 2019), Hepburn: Dai Nij\u016bikkai Nihon Futtob\u014dru R\u012bgu (Dai Nij\u016bikkai JFL 2019)) is the seventh season of the fourth tier in Japanese football, and the 21st season since the establishment of Japan Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290218-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Football League\nStarting from this season, the league reverted to a one-stage double round-robin again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290218-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Football League, 2019 season Clubs\nSixteen clubs will feature in this season of Japan Football League. There were some changes: Vanraure Hachinohe won promotion to pro football in 2018, while Cobaltore Onagawa was relegated. There are two new clubs in the JFL, debuting in this category: Matsue City FC won the Regional Promotion Series, while Suzuka Unlimited FC came second in the final phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290218-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Football League, Promotion from Regional Leagues\nIwaki FC and Kochi United SC won the promotion after coming in the Top 2 of the Final Round of the 2019 Regional Promotion Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290219-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Golf Tour\nThe 2019 Japan Golf Tour season was played from 17 January to 8 December. The season consisted of 25 official money events, mostly in Japan. Other than the four majors, which are played outside Japan, there was one event played in Singapore and one event in South Korea. The SMBC Singapore Open was co-sanctioned by the Asian Tour. The Shinhan Donghae Open was co-sanctioned by the Asian Tour and the Korean Tour. The Zozo Championship was co-sanctioned by the PGA Tour (part of the 2019\u201320 PGA Tour season), the first ever such co-sanctioning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290219-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Golf Tour, Schedule\nThe table below shows the 2019 schedule. The number in parentheses after each winner's name is the number of Japan Golf Tour events he had won up to and including that tournament. This information is only shown for Japan Golf Tour members (does not include the four major golf championships).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290220-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Open (badminton)\nThe 2019 Japan Open (officially known as the Daihatsu Yonex Japan Open 2019 for sponsorship reasons) was a BWF World Tour 750 event which took place at Musashino Forest Sports Plaza in Tokyo, Japan, from 23 to 28 July 2019. It had a total purse of $750,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290220-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Open (badminton), Tournament\nThe 2019 Japan Open was the fifteenth tournament of the 2019 BWF World Tour and also part of the Japan Open championships, which has been held since 1977. This tournament was organized by Nippon Badminton Association with the sanction of the BWF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290220-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Open (badminton), Tournament, Venue\nThis international tournament was held at Musashino Forest Sports Plaza in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290220-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Open (badminton), Tournament, Point distribution\nBelow is the point distribution table for each phase of the tournament based on the BWF points system for the BWF World Tour Super 750 event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290220-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Open (badminton), Tournament, Prize money\nThe total prize money for this tournament was US$750,000. Distribution of prize money was in accordance with BWF regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290221-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Series\nThe 2019 Japan Series was the championship series of Nippon Professional Baseball's (NPB) 2019 season. The 70th edition of the Japan Series, it was played from 19-23 October. The series was a best-of-seven playoff between the Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks, the Pacific League's (PL) Climax Series champion and defending Japan Series champions, and the Yomiuri Giants, the Central League's (CL) Climax Series champion. The Hawks defeated the Giants in a four game sweep to win their third consecutive Japan Series championship, their fifth title in six years; they are also the first team to win three straight Japan Series titles since the Seibu Lions did it from 1990 to 1992.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290221-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Series\nThe Hawks finished the 2019 regular season in second place in the Pacific League. They advanced to the Japan Series after defeating the Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles and the Saitama Seibu Lions in the PL Climax Series. The Giants finished in first place in the Central League, earning a bye in the first stage of the CL Climax Series, followed by a victory over the Hanshin Tigers to reach the Japan Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290221-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Series\nSoftBank beat Yomiuri in four games, the sixth time the Japan Series has ended in a sweep. The first two games were played at the Fukuoka Yahuoku! Dome and the other two at the Tokyo Dome. Yurisbel Gracial was given the Japan Series Most Valuable Player Award and Yoshiyuki Kamei the Fighting Spirit Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290221-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Series, Climax Series\nFor the second year in a row, the Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks finished the 2019 regular season in second place in the Pacific League (PL) behind the Saitama Seibu Lions, securing them a place as host team for the First Stage of the Climax Series, a best-of-three series against the Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles. After defeating the Eagles 2\u20131, SoftBank advanced to the Final Stage, where they competed against the Lions, who won the PL championship. The series is best-of-six and the Lions were awarded a one-win advantage as well as home field advantage for the entire series. For the second time in as many years, the Hawks went into the MetLife Dome and overcame the Lions one-win advantage. The Hawks defeated the Lions in all four games to move on to the Japan Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 32], "content_span": [33, 801]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290221-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Series, Climax Series\nFor the first time since the 2014 season, the Yomiuri Giants finished with the best record in the Central League, giving them a First Stage bye and advancing them directly to the Final Stage. They defeated the third place Hanshin Tigers 4\u20131, securing them a place in the Japan Series for the first time since 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 32], "content_span": [33, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290221-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Series, Series notes\nA Japanese baseball dynasty of the 2010s, the Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks had won the previous two Japan Series and four in the last five years. The Yomiuri Giants had won 22\u00a0Japan Series championships, more than any other team in the Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB). The last time the Giants won the championship was in the 2012 Japan Series, which was also the last time a Central League team had won the Japan Series. The Giants and the Hawks last played against each other in the Japan Series in 2000, when the Giants defeated the Hawks in six games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290221-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Japan Series, Series notes\nKimiyasu Kudo, the Hawks manager in 2019, had pitched for the Giants in the 2000 series and Tatsunori Hara was Giants manager both times. A week before the post-season began, Yomiuri catcher Shinnosuke Abe announced that he would be retiring at the end of the season after 19\u00a0years with the Giants. Abe has been described as one of the greatest catchers to have played in the NPB.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290221-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Series, Series notes\nHome field advantage for the Japan Series alternates between the Pacific and Central leagues every year. For this series, it was the PL's turn to receive the advantage so it was awarded to the Hawks. SoftBank beat Yomiuri 2\u20131 in their only interleague series during the 2019 regular season. For the sixth year in a row, Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation (SMBC) sponsored the naming rights for the Japan Series, so it was officially known as the \"2019 SMBC Japan Series\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290221-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 1\nIn Game 1, the starting pitchers for the Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks and Yomiuri Giants were Kodai Senga and Shun Yamaguchi, respectively. It was Senga's third straight year starting Game 1 of the Japan Series and it was Yamaguchi's first Japan Series start. Both starting pitchers were Eiji Sawamura Award candidates during the regular season. Senga allowed a home run to Shinnosuke Abe in the top of the second inning, but Yurisbel Gracial hit a two-run home run n the bottom of the second inning. Senga allowed only the one run in seven innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290221-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 1\nMeanwhile, SoftBank scored a third run in the sixth inning with a run batted in (RBI) sacrifice fly by Akira Nakamura, and scored four runs in the seventh inning with a two-RBI single by Taisei Makihara, an RBI single by Yuki Yanagita, and an RBI ground out by Shuhei Fukuda. Takumi Ohshiro hit a solo home run for the Giants in the ninth inning to complete the game's scoring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290221-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nRei Takahashi started Game 2 for SoftBank, and did not allow a hit into the seventh inning. C.C. Mercedes, the starting pitcher for Yomiuri, also allowed one hit to SoftBank in six innings. With Kan Otake pitching for the Giants in the seventh inning, an error then a single allowed two players to reach base. SoftBank then scored the game's first runs on a three-run home run by Nobuhiro Matsuda. SoftBank added three more runs in the bottom of the eighth inning on a solo home run by Yuki Yanagita and a two-run home run by Shuhei Fukuda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290221-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nIn the ninth inning, SoftBank's Jumpei Takahashi recorded one out but walked the bases loaded. Yuito Mori, their closer, entered the game and Kazuma Okamoto drove in two runs, but was tagged out running the bases. Abe singled for the Giants to close the score to 6\u20133, but Mori retired the next batter, ending the game. With the win, SoftBank extended their championship finals series home winning streak to fourteen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290221-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 3\nYuri Takahashi started Game 3 for Yomiuri and Rick van den Hurk started for SoftBank. Yomiuri's Yoshiyuki Kamei scored the game's first run with a solo home run in the first inning. Gracial hit a solo home run for SoftBank in the top of the second inning. Alfredo Despaigne hit an RBI single in the top of the third inning, but Yomiuri tied the game at 2\u20132 in the bottom of the third inning with another home run by Kamei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290221-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 3\nShosei Togo relieved for the Giants in the fourth inning, but allowed four runs, including an RBI sacrifice fly by Yuya Hasegawa, a bases loaded base on balls to Yuki Yanagita, and a two-RBI single by Despaigne. Both teams prevented each other from scoring again, as SoftBank won 6\u20132, to move to within a victory of a three-peat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290221-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 4\nTomoyuki Sugano started Game 4 for Yomiuri and Tsuyoshi Wada started for SoftBank. Gracial hit a three-run home run in the fourth inning for SoftBank to open the scoring. Wada struck out six Giants in five innings without allowing a run. The Giants scored their first runs when Kazuma Okamoto hit a two-run home run off of Robert Su\u00e1rez in the sixth inning. The Hawks and Giants both scored another run in the seventh inning. Mori finished the victory for SoftBank by pitching a scoreless ninth inning, earning the save, to cap the sweep.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290221-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 4\nThe Hawks clinched their third straight Japan Series title with the victory. Gracial, who batted 6-for-16 (.375) with three home runs and six RBIs in the series, won the Japan Series Most Valuable Player Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290221-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Series, Game summaries, Composite line score\n2019 Japan Series (4\u20130): Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks (PL) beat Yomiuri Giants (CL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 55], "content_span": [56, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290222-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Women's Open\nThe 2019 Japan Women's Open was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the eleventh edition of the Japan Women's Open, and part of the WTA International tournaments of the 2019 WTA Tour. It was held at the Regional Park Tennis Stadium in Hiroshima, Japan, from September 9 through September 15, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290222-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Women's Open, Point distribution, Prize money\n1 Qualifiers prize money is also the Round of 32 prize money2 Per team", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290222-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Women's Open, 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-00290222-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Women's Open, 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-00290223-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Women's Open \u2013 Doubles\nEri Hozumi and Zhang Shuai were the defending champions, but Zhang chose to compete in Nanchang instead. Hozumi played alongside Makoto Ninomiya, but lost in the quarterfinals to Christina McHale and Valeria Savinykh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290223-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Women's Open \u2013 Doubles\nMisaki Doi and Nao Hibino won the title, defeating McHale and Savinykh in the final, 3\u20136, 6\u20134, [10\u20134].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290224-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Women's Open \u2013 Singles\nHsieh Su-wei was the defending champion, but lost to Nao Hibino in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290224-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Women's Open \u2013 Singles\nHibino went on to win the title, defeating Misaki Doi in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290225-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Women's Sevens\nThe 2019 Japan Women's Sevens was the fourth tournament within the 2018\u201319 World Rugby Women's Sevens Series and the third edition of the Japan Women's Sevens. It was held over the weekend of 20\u201321 April 2019 at Mikuni World Stadium Kitakyushu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290225-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Women's Sevens, Format\nThe teams 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 brackets while the top 2 third place teams also compete in the Cup/Plate. The other teams from each group play-off for the Challenge Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290225-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Japan Women's Sevens, Teams\nEleven core teams played in the tournament along with one invitational team, 2018 Asia Rugby Women's Sevens Series winner Japan:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290226-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese Formula 3 Championship\nThe Japanese Formula 3 Championship is the 41st Japanese Formula 3 Championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290226-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese Formula 3 Championship\nIn August 2019, Japan Race Promotion, the series promoter, surrendered the right to organise a Japanese Formula 3 championship at the end of the season by choosing to deviate from the Formula Regional class and go to a Euroformula Open Championship-based formula, which will require the renaming of the series as Super Formula Lights from 2020 season onwards. The FIA responded on 26 December 2020 by awarding the rights to organise a Formula Regional championship (as it will be renamed) to rival promoter K2, which promotes the F4 Japanese Championship. Their series, the Formula Regional Japanese Championship, is the legal successor series under FIA standards and be the FIA-approved and JAF-sanctioned regional Formula 3 championship in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 784]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290226-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese Formula 3 Championship, Teams and drivers\nFor the 2019 season, the National class was replaced by the Master class, aimed at older drivers not on the FIA Single Seater Pyramid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290226-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese Formula 3 Championship, Race calendar\nCalendar for the 2019 season. All races are scheduled to be held in Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290227-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese Grand Prix\nThe 2019 Japanese Grand Prix (formally known as the Formula 1 Japanese Grand Prix 2019) was a Formula One racing event held on 13 October 2019 at the Suzuka International Racing Course in Suzuka in the Mie Prefecture, Japan. The race was the 17th round of the 2019 Formula One World Championship and marked the 45th running of the Japanese Grand Prix. The 2019 event was the 35th time that the race had been run as a World Championship event since the inaugural season in 1950, and the 31st time that it had been held at Suzuka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290227-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese Grand Prix, Background\nFormally called the \"Formula 1 Japanese Grand Prix 2019\", this Formula One Grand Prix event took place on 13 October 2019 at the Suzuka International Racing Course in Japan. The circuit, which held its first Grand Prix in 1987, has a lap length of 5.807\u00a0km (3.608 miles) and the 53-lap race distance is 307.471\u00a0km (191.054 miles). Going into the race, the lap record, of 1 minute 31.540 seconds, was held by Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen who took it at the 2005 Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290227-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese Grand Prix, Background, Weather\nDue to the weather forecasts relating to Typhoon Hagibis, all the events planned for Saturday were cancelled. This included the Free Practice 3 session and qualifying, the latter of which was rescheduled for Sunday morning, a few hours before the race was due to start.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290227-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese Grand Prix, Background, Championship standings before the race\nHeading into the 17th round of the championship, Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton led the Drivers' Championship with 322 points, 73 points ahead of teammate Valtteri Bottas. Third in the Drivers' Championship was Ferrari's driver Charles Leclerc with 215 points, with Max Verstappen from Red Bull Racing and Leclerc's teammate Sebastian Vettel in fourth and fifth places respectively. In the Constructors' Championship, Mercedes held a 162-point lead over second place Ferrari, with Red Bull Racing in third place. McLaren and Renault completed the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 76], "content_span": [77, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290227-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese Grand Prix, Background, Entrants\nThe drivers and teams were the same as the season entry list with no additional stand-in drivers for the race. However, Japanese driver Naoki Yamamoto drove in the first practice session for Scuderia Toro Rosso, replacing Pierre Gasly. As a result, Yamamoto became the first Japanese driver in F1 since Kamui Kobayashi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290227-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese Grand Prix, Background, Entrants\nThe main title sponsor of Ferrari, Mission Winnow, returned from this race, after it was used by the Scuderia at the Bahrain, Chinese, Azerbaijan, Spanish and Monaco Grands Prix, but was not used at the Australian Grand Prix and from the Canadian Grand Prix until the Russian Grand Prix for legal reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290227-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese Grand Prix, Qualifying\nQualifying began on Sunday morning at 10:00am JST (UTC+9:00), just over 4 hours before the race was due to start. The skies were clear after Typhoon Hagibis had passed the previous day, however, there were still heavy winds affecting the circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290227-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese Grand Prix, Qualifying\nTwo minutes into the session Robert Kubica hit the outside wall at the exit of turn 18 after running wide onto the grass destroying the car's front wing and left-hand wheels and causing significant damage to the survival cell. Kubica was uninjured and the session was red-flagged whilst his car was recovered and debris was cleared from the track. Four minutes after the session restarted Kevin Magnussen spun at the same corner causing him to reverse into the outside wall, damaging his gearbox, front and rear wings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290227-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Japanese Grand Prix, Qualifying\nThe red flags came out again, however, Magnussen was able to continue driving completing a lap and entering the pits. Neither Kubica nor Magnussen were able to set a qualifying time, however, Williams and Haas were able to repair their respective cars before the beginning of the race with Kubica starting from the pit lane after his survival cell was replaced. Charles Leclerc set the fastest time of Q1 whilst Daniel Ricciardo, Sergio P\u00e9rez and George Russell were eliminated alongside Kubica and Magnussen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290227-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese Grand Prix, Qualifying\nAfter setting the 15th fastest time, Nico H\u00fclkenberg's car suffered a loss of hydraulic pressure causing him to be stuck in gear. H\u00fclkenberg slowly returned to the pits and his car was retired from the session. Valtteri Bottas set the fastest time of Q2 with Antonio Giovinazzi, Lance Stroll, Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and Daniil Kvyat being eliminated alongside H\u00fclkenberg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290227-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese Grand Prix, Qualifying\nSebastian Vettel took pole position ahead of Leclerc and Bottas. This was Vettel's first pole position since the Canadian Grand Prix and the fifth consecutive pole position for Ferrari. The team took their 64th front-row lockout, equalling Mercedes's record. The pole position time of 1:27.064, which was set by the German driver, meaning the fastest ever lap made in Suzuka, beating the previous best ever lap of 1:27.319, which was set by Lewis Hamilton during the qualifying of the 2017 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290227-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese Grand Prix, Race\nAt the start of the race Sebastian Vettel, on pole position, moved a fraction of a second too early. He was able to stop before overstepping his grid line, but this led to a poor start and the Ferrari was passed by the Mercedes of Valtteri Bottas almost immediately. Vettel was investigated for a false start, however the stewards later decided against penalising him given that he did not overstep his line and thus the sensors used to detect a false start were not triggered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290227-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Japanese Grand Prix, Race\nMax Verstappen attempted an overtake on the outside of Charles Leclerc through turn 2 for 3rd place, however, Leclerc understeered into Verstappen causing the Red Bull to spin out onto the grass. The collision resulted in significant damage to Verstappen's car and to Leclerc's front wing (also his left wing mirror), although both cars were able to continue racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290227-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese Grand Prix, Race\nLeclerc was instructed by his team to enter the pits at the end of the opening lap, however, he was not aware of the damage to his front wing and stayed out on track as the damaged front wing wasn't affecting his performance significantly. Over the course of the second lap pieces of Leclerc's front wing broke off before the endplate detached entirely on the straight after turn 14, this endplate then hit Lewis Hamilton's car, which was directly behind him, breaking off one of the Mercedes's wing mirrors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290227-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Japanese Grand Prix, Race\nAfter initially informing the stewards that Leclerc would pit at the end of lap 2 the team felt his car was now safe and instructed him to stay out for a third lap after which the race director ordered the car be brought into the pits to change its front wing. On lap 2 the stewards deemed the collision between Leclerc and Verstappen a racing incident with no investigation necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290227-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese Grand Prix, Race\nOn lap 4 Alexander Albon attempted an overtake on the inside of Lando Norris at turn 16. The cars collided and Norris was left with floor damage harming his pace for the rest of the race. The incident was not investigated by the stewards. Norris had also earlier collected debris from Leclerc's front wing in his brake ducts which forced him to pit to avoid a brake fire dropping him to the back of the field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290227-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 Japanese Grand Prix, Race\nOn lap 7 the stewards decided to re-open the investigation into the lap 1 collision between Leclerc and Verstappen, later deciding that the incident would be investigated after the race. Both drivers were by now attempting to come back through the field with Leclerc passing Verstappen for 16th place on lap 9. Verstappen's car was later retired from the race on lap 14 after having only managed to pass the two Williams cars with the team deciding that the damage from the opening lap incident was too great to continue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290227-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese Grand Prix, Race\nOn lap 15 Albon was the first of the front-runners to make a pit stop from 5th place, Vettel then pitted on lap 16 from 2nd place as did Bottas from the lead on lap 17 causing Hamilton to inherit the race lead. Hamilton pitted on lap 21 handing the lead back to Bottas and restoring the order of the top three. Hamilton was fitted with medium-compound tyres with the team informing him that the plan was for him not to make another pit stop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290227-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 Japanese Grand Prix, Race\nThis was despite degradation from previous laps meaning that he was now over 20 seconds behind the race leader. This made it improbable that Hamilton would be able to stay close enough to the leaders for him to take the race lead when Bottas and Vettel made an additional pit stop if Hamilton would have to preserve his tyres to last till the end of the race. Hamilton criticised the decision not to use hard-compound tyres, telling the team over radio \"I'm out of the race now\" after the team admitted that it was likely that Hamilton would have to make a second pit stop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290227-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese Grand Prix, Race\nCarlos Sainz made his pit stop from 4th place on lap 26 emerging behind Albon, meaning the Red Bull had gained a position over Sainz through the pit stops. Vettel made a second pit stop on lap 31 emerging in 3rd place. By lap 34 Leclerc had made it past Pierre Gasly and into 6th place from the back of the field. Bottas made his second stop on lap 36 coming out in 2nd place behind Hamilton. Hamilton was later pitted on lap 42 emerging in 3rd place behind Vettel. Leclerc was unable to keep up with Sainz's McLaren in the closing laps and the team decided to pit him on lap 47 for an attempt to claim the point for fastest lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290227-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese Grand Prix, Race\nOn the final lap Sergio P\u00e9rez attempted an overtake around the outside of Gasly for 8th place at turn 2. The two cars collided sending P\u00e9rez into the gravel. Under normal conditions P\u00e9rez would have been classified in 17th place as the two Williams cars were a lap behind him. However, the chequered flag lighting panels had mistakenly been shown to the leaders a lap early meaning that the results of the race were taken from the end of the 52nd lap. Thus, P\u00e9rez kept 9th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290227-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 Japanese Grand Prix, Race\nHamilton spent the closing laps attempting to catch and overtake Vettel but was ultimately unsuccessful. However, Hamilton was able to claim the fastest lap point. With Bottas crossing the line to take victory, Leclerc, Verstappen and Vettel were eliminated from the Drivers' Championship title contention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290227-0015-0002", "contents": "2019 Japanese Grand Prix, Race\nThis, together with Mercedes outscoring Ferrari, their closest rivals, by 17 points, meant that Mercedes were assured their sixth consecutive Drivers' and Constructors' championships (with the Drivers' Championship winner still undecided between Hamilton and Bottas), a feat never before achieved by a team in the history of Formula One (the previous record was 5 consecutive Drivers' and 6 consecutive Constructors' championships for Ferrari between 1999 and 2004).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290227-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese Grand Prix, Race\nAfter the race, Leclerc was handed two penalties: a 5-second penalty for causing the collision with Verstappen, and a 10-second penalty for driving in an unsafe condition in the following laps. This demoted him to 7th place behind Daniel Ricciardo. Racing Point submitted a protest to the stewards over alleged illegal use of a \"pre-set lap distance-dependent brake bias adjustment system\" by Renault. On 23 October, ten days after the race, Renault was found to have used illegal driver aids and both drivers were disqualified from the results of the race, hence Leclerc kept his 6th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290227-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese Grand Prix, Race\nOn lap 45, Lewis Hamilton scored the new race lap record in Suzuka, with a time of 1:30.983, beating the previous race lap record time of 1:31.540, which was set by Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen at the 2005 Japanese Grand Prix. The win for Bottas was also the first for a Finnish driver in the event since R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen's 2005 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290228-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese House of Councillors election\nHouse of Councillors elections were held in Japan on 21 July 2019 to elect 124 of the 245 members of the House of Councillors, the upper house of the then 710-member bicameral National Diet, for a term of six years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290228-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese House of Councillors election\n74 members were elected by single non-transferable vote (SNTV)/First-past-the-post (FPTP) voting in 45 multi- and single-member prefectural electoral districts. The nationwide district elected 50 members by D'Hondt proportional representation with optionally open lists, the previous most open list system was modified in 2018 to give parties the option to prioritize certain candidates over the voters' preferences in the proportional election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290228-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese House of Councillors election\nThe election saw Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's ruling coalition lose the two-thirds majority needed to enact constitutional reform. The Liberal Democratic Party also lost its majority in the House of Councillors, but the LDP maintained control of the House of Councillors with its junior coalition partner Komeito.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290228-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese House of Councillors election, Background\nThe term of members elected in the 2013 regular election (including those elected in subsequent by-elections or as runners-up) was to end on 28 July 2019. Under the \"Public Offices Election Act\" (k\u014dshoku-senkyo-h\u014d), the regular election must be held within 30 days before that date, or under certain conditions if the Diet is in session or scheduled to open at that time, between 24 and 30 days after the closure of the session and thus potentially somewhat after the actual end of term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290228-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese House of Councillors election, Background\nGoing into the election, the Liberal Democratic Party and its coalition partner Komeito controlled a two-thirds super-majority of seats in the House of Representatives but did not control a similar super-majority of seats in the House of Councillors, necessary to initiate amendments of the Constitution of Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290228-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese House of Councillors election, Background, Pre-election composition\nIn the class of members facing re-election, the ruling coalition of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), K\u014dmeit\u014d and Party for Japanese Kokoro (PJK) had a combined 81 of 121 seats (as of March 2018). The governing coalition would have to lose 30 seats or more to forfeit its overall majority in the House of Councillors and face a technically divided Diet. However, as independents and minor opposition groups might be willing to support the government on a regular basis without inclusion in the cabinet, the losses required to face an actual divided Diet may have been much higher.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 81], "content_span": [82, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290228-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Japanese House of Councillors election, Background, Pre-election composition\nIf the Diet is divided after the election, the coalition's two-thirds majority in the House of Representatives can still override the House of Councillors and pass legislation, but certain Diet decisions, notably the approval of certain nominations by the cabinet such as public safety commission members or Bank of Japan governor, would require the cooperation of at least part of the opposition or an expansion of the ruling coalition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 81], "content_span": [82, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290228-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese House of Councillors election, Background, Pre-election composition\nAmong the members facing re-election were House of Councillors President Chuichi Date (LDP, Hokkaido), K\u014dmeit\u014d leader Natsuo Yamaguchi (K, Tokyo) and Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry Hiroshige Seko (LDP, Wakayama at-large district).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 81], "content_span": [82, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290228-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese House of Councillors election, District reapportionment\nThe following districts saw a change in their representation within the House at this election. One set of reforms were introduced in 2012 and first took effect at the 2013 election. The districts below are affected by the 2015 reforms, which started to take effect in the 2016 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290228-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese House of Councillors election, District reapportionment\nIn May 2018, the government announced that they are planning to introduce a revision into the Public Offices Election Law before the 2019 election. The proposed changes increased the number seats in the House by 6, 2 seats in the Saitama at-large district and 4 in the national PR block. As Saitama currently has the highest voters-to-councillor ratio, the increase would reduce its ratio gap with the least populous district (below the constitutional 3 to 1 limit).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290228-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Japanese House of Councillors election, District reapportionment\nMeanwhile the seat increase in the PR block is aimed to address the absence of representation of prefectures in the merged-prefecture districts (namely Tottori-Shimane and Tokushima-K\u014dchi) and popular discontent in those prefectures. The plan also introduced a ranking system for the PR lists. This essentially changed it from a most open list system into a less open list system, mirroring the one used in the House of Representatives elections. To reduce the chance of the non-representation of a prefecture, candidates from prefectures not running in the merged districts were to be prioritised on the list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290228-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese House of Councillors election, District reapportionment\nUnder the plan, the new Saitama seat and two new PR seats were contested in 2019, while the other three would be contested in 2022.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290230-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese Super Cup\nThe 2019 Japanese Super Cup (Fuji Xerox Super Cup 2019) was held on 16 February between the 2018 J1 League champions Kawasaki Frontale and the 2018 Emperor's Cup winner Urawa Red Diamonds. Kawasaki Frontale won the title in regular time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition\nAfter 30 years on the Chrysanthemum Throne, the then 85 year-old Emperor Akihito of Japan abdicated on 30 April 2019, being the first Emperor of Japan to do so since 1817. This marked the end of the Heisei era and the inception of the Reiwa era, and saw numerous festivities leading up to the accession of his son and successor, Emperor Naruhito. The Enthronement Ceremony took place on 22 October 2019. Akihito's younger son, Prince Akishino, is his brother's heir presumptive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Emperor and Constitution, Background\nIn 2010, Emperor Akihito informed his advisory council that he would eventually like to retire from his position. However, no action was taken by senior members of the Imperial Household Agency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Emperor and Constitution, Background\nOn 13 July 2016, national broadcaster NHK reported that the Emperor wished to abdicate in favour of his elder son Crown Prince Naruhito within a few years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Emperor and Constitution, Background\nSenior officials within the Imperial Household Agency denied that there was any official plan for the monarch to abdicate. A potential abdication by the Emperor would require an amendment to the Imperial Household Law, which has no provisions for such a move.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Emperor and Constitution, National speech\nOn 8 August 2016, the Emperor gave a rare televised address, where he emphasized his advanced age and declining health; this address was interpreted as an implication of his intention to abdicate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 76], "content_span": [77, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Emperor and Constitution, Legislation\nWith the intention of the abdication now known, the Cabinet Office appointed Yasuhiko Nishimura as the Imperial Household Agency's Vice Grand Steward. In October 2016, the Cabinet Office appointed a panel of experts to debate the Emperor's abdication.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Emperor and Constitution, Legislation\nIn January 2017, the Lower House Budget committee began informally debating the constitutional nature of the abdication.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Emperor and Constitution, Legislation\nOn 19 May 2017, the bill that would allow Akihito to abdicate was issued by the Japanese government's cabinet. On 8 June 2017, the National Diet passed it into law, permitting the government to begin arranging the process of handing over the position to Crown Prince Naruhito. This meant the Imperial Household Law was changed for the first time since 1949. The abdication officially occurred on 30 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Emperor and Constitution, Legislation\nHe received the title of J\u014dk\u014d (\u4e0a\u7687, Emperor Emeritus), an abbreviation of Daij\u014d Tenn\u014d (\u592a\u4e0a\u5929\u7687), upon abdicating, and his wife, the Empress, became J\u014dk\u014dg\u014d (\u4e0a\u7687\u540e, Empress Emerita).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Imperial Household Council\nOn 1 December 2017, the Imperial Household Council, which had not met in 24 years, did so in order to schedule the ceremonies involved in the first such transfer of power in two centuries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Imperial Household Council\nThe Imperial Household Council consists of the prime minister, the speaker and vice-speaker of the House of Representatives, the president and vice-president of the House of Councillors, the grand steward of the Imperial Household Agency, the chief justice and one justice of the Supreme Court, and two members of the Imperial family. Prince Akishino, the Emperor's younger son, asked to recuse himself as he would become the next Crown Prince. He was replaced by Prince Hitachi, the Emperor's 82-year-old younger brother. The other member of the imperial family was Hitachi's wife, Princess Hanako.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Imperial Household Council\nChief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga told reporters that the date was chosen to permit the old Emperor to be able to preside over the 30th anniversary Jubilee and to coincide with the Golden Week annual holiday period, turning the changeover from a period of mourning and makeshift ceremonial into a joyous, well-planned festival.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Imperial Household Council\nFinally, on 8 December 2017, the government created a special committee to oversee the events. According to Yoshihide Suga: \"It will deal with the matter properly, taking into consideration the possible impact on the people's lives.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Preparations for the imperial transition, 2017\u20132019\nThe committee met for the first time in January 2018, and the following month announced that a plan called a \"basic policy statement,\" would be released on 3 April. Official farewell celebrations began with a 30th Jubilee ceremony on 12 February 2019, a delay which would avoid any implication of a celebration of the death of the Emperor Sh\u014dwa on 7 January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 86], "content_span": [87, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Preparations for the imperial transition, 2017\u20132019, Golden Week, 2019\nThe government consolidated the Golden Week into a special ten-day holiday block lasting from 27 April to 6 May. Even without the imperial transition, 29 April and 3\u20136 May were scheduled as national holidays in 2019, following the weekend of 27\u201328 April. To mark the imperial transition, the government determined that abdication and enthronement would both be national holidays. Japanese law states that a regular work day sandwiched between two national holidays becomes a public holiday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 105], "content_span": [106, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Preparations for the imperial transition, 2017\u20132019, Calendars\nSince the Meiji Restoration in 1867, a new Japanese Era starts the day after the old emperor dies. However, in Emperor Akihito's case, manufacturers of calendars, forms, and other paper products needed to know the new Era's name in advance to produce wares in a timely manner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 97], "content_span": [98, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Preparations for the imperial transition, 2017\u20132019, Calendars\nWhile the Era names for the Sh\u014dwa and Heisei eras were kept state secrets until the deaths of the previous emperors, that was not possible in this case, because an abdication is unprecedented since the 1885 Meiji Constitution was adopted. In order to prevent divisive debate on the subject, delaying the announcement as late as is practically possible, either the old Emperor's birthday or his Jubilee celebrations had been suggested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 97], "content_span": [98, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Preparations for the imperial transition, 2017\u20132019, Calendars\nUntil the Era name became known, computers and software manufacturers needed to test their systems before the transition in order to ensure that the new era will be handled correctly by their software. Some systems provided test mechanisms to simulate a new era ahead of time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 97], "content_span": [98, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Preparations for the imperial transition, 2017\u20132019, Calendars\nThe new Era name, Reiwa (\u4ee4\u548c), was revealed on 1 April 2019 by Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga during a televised press conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 97], "content_span": [98, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Enthronement Ceremony\nThe Enthronement Ceremony for Emperor Naruhito took place in Tokyo on 22 October 2019, marking the end of the transition period. It was an extra holiday. It was attended by current and former Japanese politicians and more than 3,000 other official guests, which included more than 120 heads of state and government, as well as high-profile delegates from about 210 countries and 9 organizations (the only country not to be invited to this ceremony was Syria).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Enthronement Ceremony\nThe Enthronement Ceremony began at 9 am local time (02:00 UTC) with the private \"Kashikodokoro-Omae-no-gi\" ritual when the Emperor, dressed in white traditional court wear, visiting \"Kashikodokoro,\" the main sanctuary in the Tokyo Imperial Palace where the Sun Goddess is said to be enshrined.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Enthronement Ceremony\nAt 1 pm local time (06:00 UTC), the main ceremony begins. In the ceremony, Emperor Naruhito wore the sokutai and Empress Masako wore the j\u016bnihitoe. He then took his place on the 6.5-metre (21-foot) Takamikura throne alongside Masako at the Matsu-no-Ma (Pine Hall), and gave a speech which emphasized his role as the symbol of the State. The speech then followed by a congratulatory speech by Prime Minister Shinz\u014d Abe and three cheers of banzai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Enthronement Ceremony, Officials and dignitaries\nThe enthronement was attended by nearly 600 foreign delegates. They included 15 kings, 7 queens, 4 princesses, 11 princes, 70 presidents, 6 governors-general, 27 premiers, 2 chancellors, 10 vice presidents, 6 deputy premiers, 9 former leaders, 38 national officials (which featured 18 foreign ministers) and 9 multilateral dignitaries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 83], "content_span": [84, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Enthronement Ceremony, Officials and dignitaries\nThe guests were hosted at the Hotel New Otani in Tokyo, and a state banquet hosted by Emperor Naruhito himself was organized later in the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 83], "content_span": [84, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Enthronement Ceremony, Officials and dignitaries\nThe ceremony was considered to be one of the \"largest gathering of world leaders\" in the contemporary world's and Japan's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 83], "content_span": [84, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Post-enthronement ceremony, Parade\nA Parade to celebrate the Naruhito's enthronement as a new emperor took place on 10 November at 3 pm local time (08:00 UTC) as tens of thousands of people gathered in the city centre of Tokyo waving the Japanese flag. Toyota Century convertible, which the couple used was followed by vehicles with Crown Prince Fumihito and his wife Crown Princess Kiko as well as Shinz\u014d Abe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Post-enthronement ceremony, Parade\nThe procession forming a 400-metre motorcade was started from Tokyo Imperial Palace, passed the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department and the main gate of the Diet building before arriving at the couple's residence in the Akasaka Imperial Grounds on the 4.6-kilometre-long (3-mile-long) route.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Timeline, 2010\nEmperor Akihito informs his advisory council that he would like to retire eventually and asks for their help in arranging this.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Ceremonies\nThe following table lists abdication and enthronement ceremonies in chronological order. Private ceremonies are listed as \"Private\". State acts are listed as \"Public\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Ceremonies\nMusashino no Misasagi (\u6b66\u85cf\u91ce\u9675), Musashi Imperial Graveyard, Hachi\u014dji, Tokyo(Emperor Sh\u014dwa)Tama no Misasagi (\u591a\u6469\u9675), Musashi Imperial Graveyard, Hachi\u014dji, Tokyo(Emperor Taish\u014d)Fushimi Momoyama no Misasagi (\u4f0f\u898b\u6843\u5c71\u9675), Fushimi-ku, Kyoto, Kyoto Prefecture(Emperor Meiji)Nochi no tsuki no wa no misasagi (\u5f8c\u6708\u8f2a\u6771\u5c71\u9675), Higashiyama-ku, Kyoto, Kyoto Prefecture(Emperor K\u014dmei)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Ceremonies\nMusashino no Misasagi (\u6b66\u85cf\u91ce\u9675), Musashi Imperial Graveyard, Hachi\u014dji, Tokyo(Emperor Sh\u014dwa)Tama no Misasagi (\u591a\u6469\u9675), Musashi Imperial Graveyard, Hachi\u014dji, Tokyo(Emperor Taish\u014d)Fushimi Momoyama no Misasagi (\u4f0f\u898b\u6843\u5c71\u9675), Fushimi-ku, Kyoto, Kyoto Prefecture(Emperor Meiji)Nochi no tsuki no wa no misasagi (\u5f8c\u6708\u8f2a\u6771\u5c71\u9675), Higashiyama-ku, Kyoto, Kyoto Prefecture(Emperor K\u014dmei)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290231-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese imperial transition, Ceremonies\nMusashino no Misasagi (\u6b66\u85cf\u91ce\u9675), Musashi Imperial Graveyard, Hachi\u014dji, Tokyo(Emperor Sh\u014dwa)Tama no Misasagi (\u591a\u6469\u9675), Musashi Imperial Graveyard, Hachi\u014dji, Tokyo(Emperor Taish\u014d)Fushimi Momoyama no Misasagi (\u4f0f\u898b\u6843\u5c71\u9675), Fushimi-ku, Kyoto, Kyoto Prefecture(Emperor Meiji)Nochi no tsuki no wa no misasagi (\u5f8c\u6708\u8f2a\u6771\u5c71\u9675), Higashiyama-ku, Kyoto, Kyoto Prefecture(Emperor K\u014dmei)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290232-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2019 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix was the sixteenth round of the 2019 MotoGP season. It was held at the Twin Ring Motegi in Motegi on 20 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290233-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Japanese unified local elections\nThe first stage of the 19th unified local elections (\u7b2c19\u56de\u7d71\u4e00\u5730\u65b9\u9078\u6319, dai-j\u016bky\u016b-kai t\u014ditsu chih\u014d senkyo) in Japan took place on April 7, 2019 with the second following on 21 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290234-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Java blackout\nThe 2019 Java blackout was a power outage that occurred across much of Java on August 4, 2019 11:50 (UTC+7) to August 5, 2019 at 22:00 (UTC+7) (depending on area).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290234-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Java blackout, Areas affected\nAreas affected by power cuts include the Greater Jakarta area including Jakarta, Banten, West Java, parts of Special Region of Yogyakarta, Central Java and East Java. In West Java, areas affected by the power cuts included Bandung, Bekasi, Cianjur, Cimahi, Cirebon, Garut, Karawang, Purwakarta, Majalaya, Sumedang, Tasikmalaya, Depok, Gunung Putri, Sukabumi, and Bogor. In Banten, the area affected was Cilegon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290234-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Java blackout, Cause\nPerusahaan Listrik Negara (The State Electricity Company) initially cited the reason for power outages as disruptions in gas turbines 1 to 6 at the Suralaya Power Plant and some other disruptions at the Cilegon Power Plant. PLN then corrected the reason by citing a disturbance on the transmission side of Ungaran and Pemalang 500 kV which resulted in energy transfers from east to west failing. PLN expressed its apology regarding this.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290234-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Java blackout, Impact\nThe blackout began at 11:50 local time, when Jakarta MRT authorities began to detect the loss of electrical supply, rendering its trains inoperable and requiring people stuck inside to evacuate. Jakarta LRT and KRL Commuterline also suffered from the blackout making TransJakarta the only mass transit transportation remaining in operation at the time of the blackout. The governor of Jakarta, Anies Baswedan made TransJakarta and Jakarta MRT services free of charge until the end of the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290234-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Java blackout, Impact\nIn the telecommunications sector, the telephone network was also disrupted. Disrupted networks included Telkomsel, Indosat, XL Axiata, 3, and Smartfren. Gojek and Grab had problems due to the lack of internet services.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290234-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Java blackout, Impact\nAround 21.3 million people were affected by the power outage. The blackout lasted around 9 hours where at 21:00 local time, power to most of the affected areas has been restored. Power to some rural and residential areas in Jakarta had not been restored past midnight. Some areas initially had electricity restored by midnight or later, only to have it cut off again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290234-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Java blackout, Impact\nAt least eight fires occurred on Sunday night and Monday morning in eight different locations due to the power outage. This probably had happened due to the use of candles as lighting during the power outage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290235-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jayapura flood and landslide\nOn 16 March 2019, a flash flood struck Jayapura Regency in the province of Papua, Indonesia due to torrential rain, with a separate landslide occurring in the city of Jayapura several hours later. At least 113 people were killed in the two events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290235-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Jayapura flood and landslide, Events\nThe flash flooding, which struck the Sentani district of Jayapura Regency, was triggered by torrential rainfall followed by landslide. The event occurred around 21:30 WIT (12:30 UTC) on 16 March, and sudden influx of water was expected to have originated from the Cyclops Mountains, which according to BNPB spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho was likely caused by a landslide forming a dam blocking the headwaters of a river, which then burst resulting in the torrential flow. The floodwaters swept away with it significant amounts of material, including uprooted trees and boulders. An increase in the water depth of the local Kemiri River was reported shortly afterwards, resulting in buildings near the river being inundated. Jayapura regent Mathius Awoitauw stated that the flooding was caused by environmental damage in the Cyclops Mountains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 884]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290235-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Jayapura flood and landslide, Events\nSeparately, around 00:15 WIT on 17 March, a landslide occurred in the city of Jayapura. The second event was similarly attributed to the torrential rainfall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290235-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Jayapura flood and landslide, Casualties\nBy afternoon of 17 March, the Papua regional police had confirmed 70 fatalities, 63 of which were in Jayapura Regency while 7 were in the city of Jayapura. A total of 105 were confirmed to have been injured, with 75 being classified as \"lightly injured\" and 30 as \"heavily injured\". Later that day, the death toll was updated to 73, of which 66 were in the Regency, with 60 reported to be missing. The most-affected area is Sentani, where at least 51 people are reported to have been killed. Most of the victims' bodies were brought to the Bhayangkara Hospital in Jayapura for identification and collection by relatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290235-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Jayapura flood and landslide, Casualties\nOn evening the following day, 89 people had been confirmed killed: 82 due to the flash flooding and 7 from the landslide. 159 injuries (84 classified as \"heavy\" and 75 as \"light\") were also confirmed, with 74 reported missing. By 19 March, the death toll was further updated to 92 dead. On Wednesday, 20 March, the death toll was further increased to 104 killed with 79 missing, and 40 of the unidentified victims were to be buried in a mass grave.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290235-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Jayapura flood and landslide, Impact\nOver 11,000 people from across the regency were displaced due to the flooding, spread across 28 sites, with 11,725 households impacted across three districts. The flooding affected nine villages and damaged three bridges, submerging more than 150 houses. The administrative villages of Dobonsolo, Doyobaru and Hini Kumbi were the most affected. Papua's police recorded that 350 houses were heavily damaged, with additional damages to drainage systems and other public facilities. The Sentani\u2013Kemiri road was blocked due to the flooding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290235-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Jayapura flood and landslide, Impact\nSentani's Adventis Doyo airstrip was also struck by the flooding, damaging a helicopter and a Twin Otter aircraft parked there at the time of the disaster. Operations of the nearby Sentani Airport remained normal, despite its surrounding areas being impacted by the flooding. According to PLN, the transmission of around 5.2 MW of electricity was disrupted. Total damage of the flooding in Sentani topped at Rp454 billion (US$31.8 million).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290235-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Jayapura flood and landslide, Response\nThe emergency response headquarters, which also acted as a temporary shelter, were established at the Jayapura Regent's office complex. Papua's provincial government declared a 2-week emergency response period following the disaster. Kodam XVII/Cenderawasih deployed the equivalent of 2 engineering platoons and 6 infantry companies to aid with evacuation and disaster management. In total, around 1,900 emergency workers and volunteers were deployed to the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290236-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jersey City shooting\nOn December 10, 2019, a shooting took place at a kosher grocery store located in the Greenville section of Jersey City, New Jersey. Five people were killed at the store, including the two assailants. Additionally, the assailants wounded one customer and two police officers. A Jersey City Police Department detective was shot and killed by the assailants at a nearby cemetery just before the grocery store attack. New Jersey Attorney General Gurbir Grewal stated that evidence indicated the attacks were acts of hate and domestic terrorism fueled both by anti-Semitism and anti-law enforcement beliefs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290236-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Jersey City shooting, Shootings\nOn December 10, 2019, a police detective, who was meeting a confidential informant, came across the assailants at the Bayview Cemetery in Jersey City, New Jersey in what was described as a chance encounter. It is believed that he approached the suspects, who were in a stolen U-Haul van that was linked to the murder three days before of 34-year-old Jersey City resident Michael Rumberger in nearby Bayonne, New Jersey. The assailants shot and killed the officer. His body was discovered by a bystander and reported at 12:38 p.m.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290236-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Jersey City shooting, Shootings\nThe suspects then fled in the stolen van and drove about one mile to a kosher grocery store, the JC Kosher Supermarket in the Greenville section of Jersey City, and opened fire upon exiting the vehicle. At approximately 12:21 p.m., while wearing tactical gear, they entered the store and fatally shot the owner, a worker, and a customer. Two other customers were able to escape. In the ensuing shootout, the assailants exchanged gunfire with the police for over an hour until they were shot and killed. A BearCat armored personnel carrier rammed through the storefront, ending the siege.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290236-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Jersey City shooting, Shootings\nThe van was later found to contain a live pipe bomb that had the capacity to kill or injure people up to 500 yards away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290236-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Jersey City shooting, Shootings\nMultiple law enforcement agencies responded to the scene: the Jersey City Police Department, the Jersey City Fire Department Rescue Task Force, the Hudson County Sheriff's Office, the New Jersey State Police, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey Police Department, the New York City Police Department and departments from other neighboring municipalities, and sheriffs from three counties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290236-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Jersey City shooting, Victims\nThe assailants killed 39-year-old Detective Joseph Seals, who had been a police officer since 2006, 33-year-old female store owner Mindy Ferencz, 49-year-old male employee Douglas Miguel Rodriguez, and 24-year-old male rabbinical student customer Moshe Deutsch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290236-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Jersey City shooting, Victims\nTwo officers, one male and one female, were wounded in the shootout and were released from the hospital the same day. A wounded man escaped out the back door of the store. He was treated at Jersey City Medical Center, and released the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290236-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Jersey City shooting, Assailants\nOn December 11, the shooters, both of whom were killed by police during the siege, were identified as David\u00a0Nathaniel Anderson (age 47) and his girlfriend Francine Graham (age 50). Both were African-American.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290236-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Jersey City shooting, Assailants\nAnderson and Graham were suspects in the murder of Uber driver Michael Rumberger in Bayonne the weekend prior to the attack. Rumberger's blood was found on a Bible that belonged to the assailants, and his DNA was on their clothes and one weapon. Anderson and Graham had Googled the meaning of the surname \"Rumberger\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290236-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Jersey City shooting, Assailants\nAnderson and Graham were also suspects in an incident a week before the Jersey City shooting, when on December 3 two shots were fired at a vehicle which was being driven by a person who was clearly identifiable as being Jewish, on U.S. Route 1/9 near Newark and Elizabeth, New Jersey. The vehicle's rear window was shot out. Graham's phone was in the area at the time of the shooting, and it was later determined the ballistics matched a gun linked to the two assailants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290236-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Jersey City shooting, Assailants\nAnderson had made posts on social media that were anti-police and anti-Semitic. His language was linked to that used by the Black Hebrew Israelite movement, which has no connection to mainstream Judaism, the extremist fringe of which includes numerous hate groups listed by the Southern Poverty Law Center. Anderson and Graham bought a number of weapons, and trained to use them in Ohio. Before they engaged in the attack, they researched another possible attack on a Jewish community center in Bayonne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290236-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Jersey City shooting, Assailants, Motive\nMayor of Jersey City Steven Fulop, referring to the market, tweeted that the shooters \"targeted the location they attacked\". He later referred to the attack as a hate crime. Mayor of New York Bill de Blasio called the attack a \"premeditated violent antisemitic hate crime\" and an \"act of terror\". New Jersey Attorney General Gurbir Grewal stated that evidence indicated acts of hate and domestic terrorism fuelled both by anti-Semitism and anti-law enforcement beliefs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290236-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Jersey City shooting, Assailants, Motive\nMedia reported that a handwritten note, which authorities call \"manifesto-style\", found inside the van said \"I do this because my creator makes me do this and I hate who he hates.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290236-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Jersey City shooting, Aftermath\nThe Jersey City Medical Center, twelve Jersey City Public Schools in the vicinity, as well as that of Sacred Heart Church, located across the street, were on lockdown during the incident. That school was taken over by law-enforcement agencies and used during the incident. Between 50-60 children were held in the yeshiva of Khal Adas Greenville next to the market. Public transportation on NJ Transit buses and the Hudson Bergen Light Rail in the area were suspended. The New Jersey Turnpike Newark Bay Extension was temporarily closed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290236-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Jersey City shooting, Aftermath\nPresident Donald Trump was briefed about the incident at the White House. He gave his condolences to the victims and their families via a tweet. Governor of New Jersey Phil Murphy expressed his condolences, his thoughts and prayers for police, residents, and school children, and praise for the slain detective in a series of tweets. Cory Booker, junior United States Senator from New Jersey, and Mayor Fulop also expressed their condolences.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290236-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Jersey City shooting, Aftermath\nMayor Fulop said a trustee of the Jersey City Board of Education, Joan Terrell-Paige, should resign due to a Facebook message she posted after the shooting, in which she said black residents were \"threatened, intimidated and harassed\" by \"brutes of the jewish community\" (sic). She made reference to accusations of rabbis selling body parts. Terrell-Paige, who is African American, further asked whether the public is \"brave enough\" to listen to the perpetrators' message. Governor Murphy concurred in asking Terrell-Paige to resign; she said she is unrepentant. The Anti- Defamation League asked Terrell-Paige to resign citing her \"lack of remorse\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290236-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Jersey City shooting, Aftermath\nFulop said that analysis of the assailants' computers showed that they likely intended to do more harm, that the yeshiva was the probable target of the attack, and that they \"moved more quickly\" with their plans because of their encounter with Detective Seals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290236-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Jersey City shooting, Aftermath\nIn January 2020 Jared Maples, director of the New Jersey Office of Homeland Security and Preparedness, said it was investigating possible funding sources for the attack, but with many lone wolf attacks they \"do not need large amounts of funding to conduct their operations, making it difficult to detect and prevent attacks. The most common tactics in domestic extremist attacks include easily obtainable weapons, such as knives, small arms, and vehicles.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290236-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Jersey City shooting, Aftermath\nThe market was re-opened by its owner at a nearby location in March 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290237-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jersey Flegg Cup\nThe 2019 Jersey Flegg Cup season is the 49th season of the under-20 competition. The competition is administered by the New South Wales Rugby League and mirrors the draw and structure of its senior counterpart the Canterbury Cup. The Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks are the defending premiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290237-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Jersey Flegg Cup, Teams\nThe 2019 season features 14 teams, with the nine based in Sydney, one in Newcastle, one in Wollongong, one in Auckland, one in Canberra and one in Victoria. The Victoria Thunderbolts joined the competition in 2019 from the Queensland-based Hastings Deering Colts competition, while the Canberra Raiders and South Sydney Rabbitohs join after using their Canterbury Cup affiliates in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290238-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jerusalem Volvo Open\nThe 2019 Jerusalem Volvo Open was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Jerusalem, between 20 and 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290238-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Jerusalem Volvo 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-00290238-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Jerusalem Volvo Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 69], "content_span": [70, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290239-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jerusalem Volvo Open \u2013 Doubles\nAriel Behar and Gonzalo Escobar won the title after defeating Evan King and Julian Ocleppo 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20135) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290240-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jerusalem Volvo Open \u2013 Singles\nDanilo Petrovi\u0107 won the title after defeating Filip Peliwo 7\u20136(7\u20133), 6\u20137(8\u201310), 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290241-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jharkhand Legislative Assembly election\nLegislative Assembly elections were held in Jharkhand, India, from 30 November to 20 December 2019 to elect the 81 members of the Jharkhand Legislative Assembly. Results were declared on 23 December 2019. The pre-election term of the Assembly was set to end on 27 December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290241-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Jharkhand Legislative Assembly election, Schedule\nThe schedule for the election proceedings was announced on 1 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290241-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Jharkhand Legislative Assembly election, Government formation\nAfter the defeat of the incumbent BJP government, incumbent Chief Minister Raghubar Das tendered his resignation from the post. He tendered his resignation to Governor Draupadi Murmu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290241-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Jharkhand Legislative Assembly election, Government formation\nIn the evening, during the election results, JMM leader and Former Chief Minister of Jharkhand Hemant Soren addressed the media and thanked the people of Jharkhand for the mandate. He also expressed his gratitude to his alliance partners, Congress & RJD and their president, Sonia Gandhi & Lalu Prasad Yadav respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290241-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Jharkhand Legislative Assembly election, Government formation\nThe next day on 24 December 2019, the meeting of all the 30 JMM MLAs was called, in which Hemant Soren was elected as the leader of the JMM legislature group. Hemant Soren was already the leader and Chief Ministerial candidate of the UPA during the election campaign. On the very same day, Alamgir Alam was elected as the leader of the Congress Legislative Party (CLP).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290241-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Jharkhand Legislative Assembly election, Government formation\nAfter the elections, JVM(P) chief and Former Chief Minister of Jharkhand Babulal Marandi extended the support of his party to the Hemant Soren government, thus providing more strength to the government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290241-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Jharkhand Legislative Assembly election, Government formation\nOn 24 December 2019, Hemant Soren along with the alliance partners, met Governor Draupadi Murmu and staked claim to form the government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290242-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jiangsu Suning F.C. season\nThe 2019 Jiangsu Suning F.C. season was Jiangsu Suning's 11th consecutive season in the Chinese Super League since it started in the 2004 season, and its 11th consecutive season in the top flight of Chinese football. This season Shandong Luneng Taishan participated in the Chinese Super League and Chinese FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290243-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jiangxi International Women's Tennis Open\nThe 2019 Jiangxi International Women's Tennis Open was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 6th edition of the event, and part of the International category of the 2019 WTA Tour. It took place in Nanchang, China, from September 9 \u2013 15, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290243-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Jiangxi International Women's Tennis Open, 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-00290243-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Jiangxi International Women's Tennis Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 90], "content_span": [91, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290244-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jiangxi International Women's Tennis Open \u2013 Doubles\nJiang Xinyu and Tang Qianhui were the two-time defending champions, but lost in the semifinals to Peng Shuai and Zhang Shuai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290244-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Jiangxi International Women's Tennis Open \u2013 Doubles\nWang Xinyu and Zhu Lin won the title, defeating Peng and Zhang in the final, 6\u20132, 7\u20136(7\u20135).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290245-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jiangxi International Women's Tennis Open \u2013 Singles\nWang Qiang was the defending champion, but chose not to participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290245-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Jiangxi International Women's Tennis Open \u2013 Singles\nRebecca Peterson won her first WTA singles title, defeating Elena Rybakina in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290246-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jigawa State gubernatorial election\nThe 2019 Jigawa State gubernatorial election occurred on March 9, 2019. Incumbent APC Governor Mohammed Badaru Abubakar won re-election for a second term, defeating Aminu Ibrahim Ringim of the PDP and several minor party candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290246-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Jigawa State gubernatorial election\nMohammed Badaru Abubakar emerged APC gubernatorial candidate after scoring 3,123 votes and defeating his closest rival, Ubale Hashim, who received 54 votes. He picked Umaru Namadi as his running mate. Aminu Ibrahim Ringim was the PDP candidate with Hussain Umar Namadi as his running mate. 19 candidates contested in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290246-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Jigawa State gubernatorial election, Electoral system\nThe Governor of Jigawa State is elected using the plurality voting system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 58], "content_span": [59, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290246-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Jigawa State gubernatorial election, Primary election, APC primary\nThe APC primary election was held on September 30, 2018. Mohammed Badaru Abubakar won the primary election polling 3,123 votes against 1 other candidate. His closest rival was Ubale Hashim, a chieftain of the APC in the state who came second with 54 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290246-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Jigawa State gubernatorial election, Primary election, PDP primary\nThe PDP primary election was held on September 30, 2018. Aminu Ibrahim Ringim won the primary election polling 2,028 votes against 3 other candidates. His closest rival Tijani Ibrahim came second with 394 votes, Namadi Husaini came third with 154 votes, while Ali Saad, the first civilian governor of the state polled 30 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290246-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Jigawa State gubernatorial election, Results\nA total number of 19 candidates registered with the Independent National Electoral Commission to contest in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290246-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Jigawa State gubernatorial election, Results\nThe total number of registered voters in the state was 2,109,477, while 1,169,924 voters were accredited. Total number of votes cast was 1,163,206, while number of valid votes was 1,139,054. Rejected votes were 24,152.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290246-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Jigawa State gubernatorial election, Results, By local government area\nHere are the results of the election by local government area for the two major parties. The total valid votes of 1,139,054 represents the 19 political parties that participated in the election. Blue represents LGAs won by Mohammed Badaru Abubakar. Green represents LGAs won by Aminu Ibrahim Ringim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 75], "content_span": [76, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290247-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jin'an Open\nThe 2019 Jin'an Open was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the third edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Lu'an, China between 6 and 12 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290247-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Jin'an 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-00290248-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jin'an Open \u2013 Doubles\nHarriet Dart and Ankita Raina were the defending champions, but Dart chose not to participate. Raina partnered alongside Akiko Omae, but they lost in the first round to Cao Siqi and Xun Fangying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290248-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Jin'an Open \u2013 Doubles\nBeatrice Gumulya and You Xiaodi won the title, defeating Mai Minokoshi and Erika Sema in the final, 6\u20131, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290249-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jin'an Open \u2013 Singles\nZhu Lin was the defending champion, but lost in the semifinals to Han Xinyun.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290249-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Jin'an Open \u2013 Singles\nHan won the title, defeating Duan Yingying in the final, 4\u20136, 6\u20132, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290250-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jinan International Open\nThe 2019 Jinan International Open was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the third (men) and second (women) editions of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour and the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Jinan, China between 26 August and 8 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290250-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Jinan International Open, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 79], "content_span": [80, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290250-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Jinan International Open, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 79], "content_span": [80, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290250-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Jinan International Open, Women's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 81], "content_span": [82, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290251-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jinan International Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nHsieh Cheng-peng and Yang Tsung-hua were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290251-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Jinan International Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nMatthew Ebden and Divij Sharan won the title after defeating Nam Ji-sung and Song Min-kyu 7\u20136(7\u20134), 5\u20137, [10\u20133] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290252-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jinan International Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nAlexei Popyrin was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290252-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Jinan International Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nZhang Zhizhen won the title after defeating Go Soeda 7\u20135, 2\u20136, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290253-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jinan International Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nWang Xinyu and You Xiaodi were the defending champions, but Wang chose to compete at the 2019 US Open instead. You partnered alongside Chihiro Muramatsu, but lost in the first round to Eudice Chong and Aldila Sutjiadi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290253-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Jinan International Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nYuan Yue and Zheng Wushuang won the title, defeating Samantha Murray and Eden Silva in the final, 1\u20136, 6\u20134, [10\u20137].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290254-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jinan International Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nZhu Lin was the defending champion, but chose to participate at the 2019 US Open instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290254-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Jinan International Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nYou Xiaodi won the title, defeating Kaylah McPhee in the final, 6\u20133, 7\u20136(7\u20135).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290255-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Joe McDonagh Cup\nThe 2019 Joe McDonagh Cup was the second staging of the Joe McDonagh Cup since its establishment by the Gaelic Athletic Association in 2018. The fixtures were announced on 11 October 2018. The competition began on 11 May 2019 and ended on 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290255-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Joe McDonagh Cup\nOn 30 June 2019, Laois won the Joe McDonagh Cup following a 3-26 to 1-21 defeat of Westmeath in the final at Croke Park. This was their first ever Joe McDonagh Cup title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290255-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Joe McDonagh Cup\nOffaly were relegated from the Joe McDonagh Cup after losing all of their group stage games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290255-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Joe McDonagh Cup\nWestmeath's Killian Doyle was the competition's top scorer with 3-61.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290255-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Joe McDonagh Cup, Teams and venues\nFive teams competed in the 2019 Joe McDonagh Cup - a reduction from six that competed in the inaugural competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290255-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Joe McDonagh Cup, Competition Format\nInitially each of the five teams play the other four teams in single round-robin matches. The top two teams after the round robin games play the third-placed teams in the Leinster and Munster championships in the two All-Ireland preliminary quarter finals with the Joe McDonagh Cup teams having home advantage. The top two teams also compete in the Joe McDonagh Cup final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290255-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Joe McDonagh Cup, Competition Format\nIf the Joe McDonagh champions are a non-Munster team, they are automatically promoted to the following year's Leinster Championship and the bottom-placed team in the Leinster Senior Hurling Championship are automatically relegated to the following year's Joe McDonagh Cup. If the champions are a Munster team, they must win a play-off with the bottom-placed team in the Munster Championship to gain promotion to the following year's Munster Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290255-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Joe McDonagh Cup, Competition Format\nThe bottom-placed team in the Joe McDonagh Cup, Offaly are automatically relegated to the following year's Christy Ring Cup and are replaced by the 2019 Christy Ring Cup Champions, Meath.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290256-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Johan Cruyff Shield\nThe 2019 Johan Cruyff Shield was the 24th 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 Ajax, as both the 2018\u201319 Eredivisie champion and the 2018\u201319 KNVB Cup winners, and PSV Eindhoven as runners-up of the Eredivisie. The match was held on 27 July 2019 at the home of the Eredivisie champions Ajax, the Johan Cruyff Arena in Amsterdam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290256-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Johan Cruyff Shield\nAjax won the match 2\u20130 for their ninth Johan Cruyff Shield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290257-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Johannesburg riots\nThe 2019 Johannesburg riots occurred in the South African city of Johannesburg from 1\u20135 September 2019, leading to the deaths of at least seven people. The riots were xenophobic in nature, targeting foreign nationals from the rest of Africa. Retaliatory actions by rioters in other African nations was taken against South African brands. The South African Institute of Race Relations stated that the riots were similar in nature and origin to the 2008 xenophobic riots that also occurred in Johannesburg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290257-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Johannesburg riots\nThe riot resumed in Johannesburg on the 8 September 2019, when rioters marched on the central business district and looted shops whilst calling for foreigners to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290257-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Johannesburg riots, Riots\nOn 1 September 2019, riots and looting targeting shops owned by foreign nationals broke out in Jeppestown and Johannesburg CBD following the death of a taxi driver allegedly for trying to stop drug dealers. By 3 September, around 189 people had reportedly been arrested by police for looting. 423 have been arrested by 5 September and President Cyril Ramaphosa stated that at least ten people were confirmed to have died, including two foreign nationals. The looting meanwhile spread to the township of Alexandra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290257-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Johannesburg riots, Riots\nAround 50 businesses predominantly owned by Africans from the rest of the continent were reportedly destroyed or damaged during the incident. The mosque located in the Jozi Mall was attacked and copies of Quran were defiled, while every shop in the mall was looted. In Katlehong, residents placed barriers on the roads before looting the Sontonga Mall, stated the Guanteng Police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290257-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Johannesburg riots, Riots\nTwo people were shot dead for trying to loot shops, including one South African named Isaac Sebaku in Coronationville by a Somali shop owner who was arrested and another person in Crosby. Premier of Gauteng, David Makhura, confirmed that a South African was shot over an incident of looting. Police Minister Bheki Cele stated the shop owner was a Pakistani.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290257-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Johannesburg riots, Riots\nNews24 has reported that the police have confirmed two South Africans were shot dead in Brixton and Sophiatown during the riots and a Zimbabwean security guard was shot in Hillbrow. Two victims of unknown nationality were killed in Hillbrow and Jeppestown. Cele confirmed five murders were reported \u2013 two in Coronationville, two in Hillbrow and one in Jeppestown. Two charred corpses were recovered from shops burnt by looters in Alexandra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290257-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Johannesburg riots, Riots\nOn 5 September, the provincial police arrested 74 persons in Katlehong as looting and rioting continued, taking the number of arrests to 497. They also stated that 11 persons had died during the riots, though only 7 deaths are known to have been caused directly due to it. Isaac Sithole, a Zimbabwean, was beaten up and burnt alive by South African rioters in Katlehong. His sister-in-law alleged that a baby had also died in an arson attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290257-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Johannesburg riots, Riots\nFollowing the resumption of rioting on the 8 September Mangosuthu Buthelezi gave a speech calling for calm and a secession of violence. One person died and five were injured during a protest by South Africans against immigrants in Johannesburg whilst 16 people were arrested. Another person was shot in Malvern during the violence. This brought the number of deaths to 12. The police stated that 640 people had been arrested since the riots began. By the end of the riots a reported total of over 680 people had been arrested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290257-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Johannesburg riots, Trucker strike\nThe riots coincided with a nation-wide truck driver strike protesting against the employment of non-South African truckers. It also coincided with the publication of a statement by Human Rights Watch that over 200 people (mostly foreign truck drivers) had been killed in South Africa since March 2018. During the riot a number of freight trucks were torched and foreign truck drivers assaulted in the province of KwaZulu-Natal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290257-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Johannesburg riots, Response\nIn response the Football Association of Zambia (FAZ) cancelled an international soccer match against South Africa taking place in Zambia due to \u201cprevailing security concerns in South Africa.\u201d A Pick n Pay store (a South African-based supermarket chain) in Zambia was stormed following the riots in South Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290257-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Johannesburg riots, Response\nThe Government of Botswana issued travel advisory and warning to its citizens in wake of the deadly riots targeting foreigners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290257-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Johannesburg riots, Response, South Africa\nThe South African NGO Right2Know stated that xenophobia and the resulting riots were partly the result of \"xenophobic populism\" espoused by South African politicians such as Herman Mashaba and President Cyril Ramaphosa. A number of South African celebrities such as Nadia Nakai, Manaka Ranaka, and Cassper Nyovest were also publicly critical of xenophobia and the resulting riots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290257-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Johannesburg riots, Response, South Africa\nAlmost a month after the riots in Johannesburg foreign nationals in Cape Town staged a sit-in outside the local offices of the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNRA). The nationals demanded that the UNRA pay for their fare back to their respective home countries so as to escape xenophobia in South Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290257-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Johannesburg riots, Response, Nigeria\nIn Nigeria all stores and service centres operated by South African telecom company MTN were temporarily shut following retaliatory attacks on the company for the riots in South Africa. Other South African companies also temporarily suspended trading as Multichoice and Shoprite also stopped operations. Nigerian artist Tiwa Savage stated on Twitter that she would be cancelling appearances in South Africa in protest of the riots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290257-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Johannesburg riots, Response, Nigeria\nFollowing the riots President Muhammadu Buhari of Nigeria summoned the South African High Commissioner to convey his concerns about the incident to President Ramaphosa of South Africa. The Nigerian government also cancelled its participation at the African Economic Forum which was scheduled to be held in Cape Town in retaliation to the riots and closed its embassy in South Africa citing security concerns. Nigeria's ruling party, the All Progressives Congress, advocated for the nationalization of South African businesses in retaliation for attacks on Nigerian nationals. South African diplomatic missions in Abuja and Lagos were closed due to threats of retaliatory violence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290258-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Johor Darul Ta'zim F.C. season\nThe 2019 season is Johor Darul Ta'zim Football Club's 46th season in club history and 7th 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, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290258-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Johor Darul Ta'zim F.C. season, Background\nJohor Darul Ta'zim FC won their 2018 Malaysia Super League to become the first Malaysian club to win the league titles for five consecutive seasons (2014\u20132018).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290258-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Johor Darul Ta'zim F.C. season, Background\nJDT still holds an unbeaten home ground in Super League after extending the record up to 81 matches from 3 July 2012 (won against Sabah FA by 2\u20131) until 28 July 2018 which last action they won against Kuala Lumpur FA by 2\u20130).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290258-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Johor Darul Ta'zim F.C. season, Background\nJDT failed to qualify for next round in Malaysia FA Cup after lost to Pahang FA with aggregate 0\u20133 on 20 April 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290258-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Johor Darul Ta'zim F.C. season, Background\nJDT failed to defense their Malaysia Cup as reigning champion after defeated by Terengganu FC I with aggregate 2-3 which played on 20 October 2018 at Larkin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290258-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Johor Darul Ta'zim F.C. season, Background\nIn Asia, JDT failed to qualify for Semi-Final ASEAN zonal after being eliminated in the group stage even though they winning against Vietnamese club - S\u00f4ng Lam Ngh\u1ec7 An on 24 April 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290258-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Johor Darul Ta'zim F.C. season, Transfers and contracts, In\nNote 1: Harry Novillo returned to the team after the loan and subsequently leave the club after his contract ended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290258-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Johor Darul Ta'zim F.C. season, Transfers and contracts, In\nNote 2: R.Gopinathan returned to Melaka United after the loan and on free transfer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290258-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Johor Darul Ta'zim F.C. season, Transfers and contracts, In\nNote 3: S. Chanturu joined Felda United after returning from loan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290258-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Johor Darul Ta'zim F.C. season, Transfers and contracts, In\nNote 4: Mahali Jasuli rejoins PKNS FC for another loan arrangement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290258-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Johor Darul Ta'zim F.C. season, Transfers and contracts, In\nNote 6: Aar\u00f3n \u00d1\u00edguez was released before the 1st transfer window closed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings\nIn the morning of January 27, 2019, two bombs exploded at the Roman Catholic Cathedral of Our Lady of Mount Carmel in Jolo, Sulu, Philippines. Twenty people were killed and 102 others injured. The bombings took place a week after the autonomy plebiscite held on January 21 for the creation of Bangsamoro. It is believed that the attacks were carried out by the Abu Sayyaf, and the Islamic State claimed responsibility. President Rodrigo Duterte responded by issuing an \"all-out war\" directive against the Abu Sayyaf. The bombings were widely condemned by neighboring and distant countries, local and foreign organizations all issuing condemnations and condolences to the victims of the cathedral attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Background\nThe bombings took place a week after the first part of an autonomous plebiscite held on January 21 for the creation of Bangsamoro Autonomous Region (BAR). This region will include all of Sulu Province, including the capital city of Jolo. Jolo is known to be a stronghold of the Abu Sayyaf group (ASG), an affiliate of the Islamic State terror organization, comprising activists from various clans or family-based factions operating under different commanders in the Sulu Archipelago: the group lacks a central command. Sulu was the only province to vote against the Plebiscite, by a margin of 163,526 (54.3%) to 137,630 (45.7%). Despite the results, Sulu Province would still be included in the BAR due to the high majority from other areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Background\nThe proposed Bangsamoro government plans to conduct crackdowns on firearms and local private armies and decommission their weapons once the new autonomous region is established. The Philippine National Police (PNP) believes the attacks were carried out by ASG members in revenge for the deaths of their relatives during the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) military operations against their group. The police further said that the Sulu region has been receiving threats coming from this group. Speaker of the House of Representatives of the Philippines, Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, said poverty was also a contributing factor to the bombings as part of the long-time violence in the Mindanao region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Background\nThe Abu Sayaf Group, or ASG, are known active kidnappers targeting foreigners in the waters of Sulu and Celebes Sea. Abdullah Sandakan, a former Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) militant based in the eastern Malaysian state of Sabah in Borneo island, names the ASG as \"using ransom money that had earlier been paid to the ASG for the release of an Indonesian hostage in their recent kidnapping as a fund for the bombings plot\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Background\nCiting an unnamed Mindanao-based source, it was alleged a \"huge sum\" was paid by the Malaysian owner of the captive's fishing boat to secure the safe release of two Indonesian fishing boat workers that had been held hostage by the ASG (one had escaped his captors) abducted off Gaya Island off Semporna. Abdullah further alleged part of the ransom money was used by the ASG to pay villagers to shelter the bombing perpetrators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Attacks\nThe Armed Forces of the Philippines\u2019 Western Mindanao Command (AFP WestMinCom) released closed-circuit television (CCTV) footage of the bombing with the following timeline:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Attacks\nWestMinCom stated that the second IED was placed inside the utility box of a motorcycle parked outside the cathedral. Wounded individuals were immediately brought to the Integrated Provincial Health Office and Sulu Sanitarium for medical treatment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Attacks\nAccording to the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG), the perpetrators used a strategy similar to the 2002 Bali bombings to inflict additional casualties among first responders. The explosive devices were estimated to weigh not less than two kilograms; with a mobile phone suspected to have been used as a triggering device (recovered near the site). Based on a post-explosion investigation as confirmed by DILG, the explosive devices used were ammonium nitrate pipe bombs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Attacks, Perpetrators and suspects' identities\nThe Islamic State (IS) took responsibility for the bombings, which they said were committed by \"two knights of martyrdom\" against a \"crusader temple\". Philippine military and peace advocates blamed the ASG's Ajang-Ajang faction, citing evidence from military intelligence operatives stating that they had intercepted ASG plans to bomb other parts of downtown Jolo months before. Kamah, a brother of a slain ASG leader, has been tagged as the prime suspect in the bombings. A sub-leader of the ASG named Hatib Hajan Sawadjaan has been named another prime suspect in connection with the bombings plot as their faction too has connections to IS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 76], "content_span": [77, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Attacks, Perpetrators and suspects' identities\nOn February 1, Philippine Interior Secretary Eduardo A\u00f1o stated that two Indonesian suicide bombers were involved in the attacks, and were aided by local Abu Sayyaf who acted as guides. The bombers were mistaken for Malaysians; one of them, identified by nom de guerre as Abu Huda, had been living in Sulu province for some time. The second bomber was alleged to be Abu Huda's wife, who had arrived in the province a few days prior to the bombings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 76], "content_span": [77, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Attacks, Perpetrators and suspects' identities\nThe woman is believed to have been the first bomber inside the cathedral, while her husband carried out the second blast at the entrance. PNP chief Oscar Albayalde explained that the Indonesian bombers sailed Southwest to Jolo from Lampinigan Island (Basilan Province) on January 24 and stayed there for a few days. However, it could not be ascertained whether the two went to the island straight from Indonesia or had been around Mindanao island far longer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 76], "content_span": [77, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Attacks, Perpetrators and suspects' identities\nOn February 4, the main suspect Kamah together with his four accomplices finally surrendered to the authorities following heavy military operations. The four other accomplices were identified as: Albaji Kisae Gadjali (alias \"Awag\"), Rajan Bakil Gadjali (alias \"Radjan\"), Kaisar Bakil Gadjali (alias \"Isal\") and Salit Alih (alias \"Papong\"). The PNP have filed murder charges on 5 of the suspects and 14 other suspects who remain at large (as of November 2019).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 76], "content_span": [77, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Attacks, Perpetrators and suspects' identities\nThe Philippine Interior Secretary. considers the suspect identification process as complete with the arrest of the five suspects and three others including the two dead bombers, although several others remain at large. The prime suspect Kamah denies all charges and any involvement in the bombings. The prosecution holds that eyewitness accounts form an adequate basis for indictment for Kamah and the other defendants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 76], "content_span": [77, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Attacks, Perpetrators and suspects' identities\nIn July 2019, the Indonesian National Police (POLRI) confirmed Indonesian citizens involvement in the bombing. POLRI announced the couple identified as Rullie Rian Zeke (RRZ) and Ulfah Handayani Saleh (UHS) from Makassar, South Sulawesi. The announcement came after the POLRI arrested and interrogated two suspected militants affiliated to Jamaah Ansharut Daulah (JAD)- a group in Indonesia with links to ISIL- who confirmed the deceased couple RRZ and UHS were also JAD members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 76], "content_span": [77, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Attacks, Perpetrators and suspects' identities\nIn May 2019, intelligence by Malaysian Special Branch uncovered RRZ and UHS were earlier helped by two Indonesian militants with links to ISIL working as labourers in Keningau District of Sabah in Malaysia with intentions to travel to the southern Philippines via confession of two suspects arrested by Royal Malaysian Police early in May. A subsequent POLRI arrest and thorough investigation of another group of Indonesian militants in Padang of West Sumatra in June 2019, confirmed the identity of RRZ and UHS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 76], "content_span": [77, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Attacks, Perpetrators and suspects' identities\nThrough deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) test by Indonesian police, the deceased couple family were able to be traced as both being Indonesian deportees from Turkey serving under the direction of an East Kalimantan JAD member named Yoga residing in Malaysia and recently arrested by the Royal Malaysian Police in Sabah. Yoga are the current connectors of Islamist terrorists organization between Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines replacing Andi Basso who is being actively hunted for his involvement in the 2016 Samarinda church bombing in East Kalimantan. Andi Basso is believed by Indonesian authorities to be currently hiding in the Southern Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 76], "content_span": [77, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Investigation and government response, Further details\nCCTV footage of the area depicts a person identified as Kamah, wearing a blue-green jacket and holding a mobile phone. Kamah, brother of deceased ASG leader Surakah Ingog, is seen wandering around the cathedral with several other suspects before the explosion. Kamah is a known bomb maker for the ASG, according to investigation reports released by PNP chief Albayalde. The Philippine Army had released the images of four suspects in connection with the attacks as captured by the CCTV footage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 84], "content_span": [85, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0013-0001", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Investigation and government response, Further details\nThe authorities, including the country's president, did not rule out the possibility that the explosion was the work of suicide bombers. Nevertheless, based on statements to the military by two surviving victims, eyewitnesses saw a woman hiding a bomb inside her bag and left it in one of the pews inside the cathedral where the explosion happened afterwards. Both witnesses, however, could not fully describe the woman's physical features.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 84], "content_span": [85, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Investigation and government response, Further details\nOn January 30, two of the suspects that were earlier identified through the CCTV footage surrendered to police to clear their names; one of them was the suspect identified as the brother of deceased ASG leader. Another two followed suit, fearing the authorities would hunt them down, despite neither being identified by WestMinCom in the video that had been released. These four have been cleared and released although their claims of innocence will still require verification from the PNP, who admit they misidentified one man as Kamah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 84], "content_span": [85, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0014-0001", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Investigation and government response, Further details\nThe PNP also admitted there were security lapses at the Cathedral despite previous threats for the past five years. Several other witnesses recalled seeing a woman who they suspected of bringing a bomb, but the claims are deemed \"not conclusive\" as based on the initial findings of the local PNP Explosive and Ordnance Division (EOD) lab. The EOD laboratory found the bomb did not touch ground when it exploded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 84], "content_span": [85, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Investigation and government response, Further details\nThrough the investigation on the Indonesian bombers arrival background, the PNP stated the couple boarded a tricycle to Caltex Tiam at 19:00 on the evening after their arrival in Jolo. At 19:30, they were supposedly met by suspects identified as Papong, Awag and Radjan and boarded Awag's jeepney. The group then reached Usaw in Barangay Langhub to meet with several other suspects named Kamah, Barak, Makrim and Usman who joined them to Sitio Bastiong. In a forested area, the group is alleged to have planned the bombings together with ASG leader Sawadjaan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 84], "content_span": [85, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Investigation and government response, Further details\nThe Indonesian couple were sent by the ASG on January 26 to carry black trolley bags. They were escorted by Usman, Barak and nine other armed men to Barangay Latihto at 17:10. Despite the claim by Philippine authorities for the involvement of Indonesian citizens in the bombings, an investigation team sent by Indonesia to the Philippines to investigate were at that time unable to confirm that an Indonesian couple were behind the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 84], "content_span": [85, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0015-0002", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Investigation and government response, Further details\nThe Indonesian Embassy in Manila said they remained unclear on the veracity of Philippine Interior Secretary A\u00f1o's statement on their nationals involvement in the attack as DNA and the CCTV evidence had yet to be released to Indonesian authorities for verification. Philippine National Intelligence Coordinating Agency (NICA) also did not see the basis of Minister A\u00f1o's statement. On February 20, the Philippine National Police Crime Laboratory test results showed that four leg bone specimens of two unidentified persons among the bombing victims belonging to a male and female, which bolstered the probable involvement of said couple as corroborated by eyewitness accounts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 84], "content_span": [85, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Investigation and government response, Authority's response and security force mobilization\nShortly after the incident, Malaca\u00f1ang Palace issued a statement that no mercy will be given to the perpetrators. Presidential spokesperson Salvador Panelo stressed that \"We will pursue to the ends of the earth the ruthless perpetrators behind this dastardly crime until every killer is brought to justice and put behind bars. The law will give them no mercy\". The Palace also stated the bombings provided \"more reason\" to retain martial law in the south. President Rodrigo Duterte expressed his outrage over the incidents and visited the site of the bombings the following day. The Commission on Elections stated that, despite the bombings, it did not see the need to place Jolo under its control and defer the upcoming February 6 plebiscite.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 121], "content_span": [122, 865]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Investigation and government response, Authority's response and security force mobilization\nThe Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) condemned the bombings in the \"strongest terms\" and has provided financial assistance to 36 of the over 100 survivors of the bomb attacks, with each victim receiving \u20b120,000. Mindanao Development Authority chairman Abul Khayr Alonto also called the incident a \"dastardly act of insanity\" which \"should not be allowed to instil fear in our peace-loving populace\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 121], "content_span": [122, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Investigation and government response, Authority's response and security force mobilization\nWestMinCom confirmed that President Duterte had issued an \"all-out war directive\" order against the terror groups, with Jolo being put on total lockdown. The Bureau of Immigration had also been put on heightened alert to prevent the entry of new foreign terror elements, while the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board directed all public utility vehicles to implement stricter security; it also advised the public to report any suspicious activity in terminals and vehicles to authorities. During the joint raid conducted by Armed Forces of the Philippines Military and PNP in Barangay Latih of Patikul, Sulu, to arrest Kamah, the suspect managed to escape even as one of his companions was killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 121], "content_span": [122, 836]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Investigation and government response, Authority's response and security force mobilization\nAmong items seized during the raid were a .45 calibre pistol, a sniper scope, two mobile phones and a motorcycle. The military continued hunting for the suspect with attack helicopters deployed in the province, followed by house-to-house searches. Approximately 5,000 elite soldiers have been mobilized, with the military operations resulting in many families fleeing their homes. The continuing military operations resulted in the arrest and deaths of many ASG-linked militants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 121], "content_span": [122, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Other reactions, Other militant groups\nMoro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) chairman Murad Ebrahim said: \"The MILF leadership joined peace-loving individuals in strongly condemning the twin bombing of the Cathedral\". MILF peace panel chairman Mohagher Iqbal condemned the attacks perpetrated against innocent civilians, calling them: \"senseless violence\". He was followed by Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) chairman Yusop Jikiri, who stated that the bombings can: \"only be the responsibility of terrorist, anti-peace, uncivilized and misguided persons\". The MNLF under Emmanuel Fontanilla called upon the government to conduct peace talks with groups including ASG and the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF), even if they are terrorists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 68], "content_span": [69, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Other reactions, Religious community\nThe Catholic Bishops' Conference of the Philippines released a statement expressing sympathy for the victims and their families, condemning the attacks as an act of terrorism. The bishops called for Christians to join with Muslims and indigenous communities to advocate for peace against violent extremism.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 66], "content_span": [67, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Other reactions, Religious community\nPope Francis denounced the bombings, reiterating: \"My strongest condemnation for this episode of violence that once again strikes this Christian community. I raise my prayers for the dead and wounded. May the Lord, Prince of Peace, convert the hearts of the violent and give the inhabitants of that region a peaceful coexistence\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 66], "content_span": [67, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0022-0001", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Other reactions, Religious community\nThe World Council of Churches (WCC) expressed profound sorrow and said \"In the face of this brutality, the human family, all people of faith and of good will, must stand together to recommit to respecting and caring for one another, to protecting one another, and to preventing such violence\". The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Davao has called on every churchgoer to refrain from bringing backpacks and boxes inside churches and chapels due to the threat of violence prevailing in the region of Mindanao in the wake of the bombings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 66], "content_span": [67, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Other reactions, Religious community\nOrganization of the Imam Council of the Philippines (OICP) also condemned the attack, due to its: \"barbaric nature which is forbidden in Islam\", adding that such barbaric acts: \"not only destroy the living of peace, but demolishes the tranquillity of a sound society\". Another Islamic sect, the Ahlul Bait, said: \"such a barbarous act must be condemned in the strongest terms\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 66], "content_span": [67, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Other reactions, Non-governmental organizations\nLocal human rights group Karapatan also condemned the attacks but reminded the government that the incidents should not be used as an excuse to violate human rights further, especially towards government critics. The Makabayan bloc feared that the incident might be used to extend the declaration of martial law to the whole country. Dr. Rommel Banlaoi, Chairman of the non-government think tank, the Philippine Institute for Peace, Violence and Terrorism Research, warns that the Jolo Cathedral bombing will pose as \"a big challenge for the Bangsamoro government.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 77], "content_span": [78, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Other reactions, International response\nVarious countries issued statements condemning the attacks and offering condolences to the affected victims, as well as international organizations including the Asian Development Bank, Association of Southeast Asian Nations, European Union, Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, United Nations, and World Bank. UK's Foreign and Commonwealth Office raised a travel warning for Western and Central Mindanao as well as the Sulu Archipelago following the incidents. The bombings indirectly created negative impacts towards the barter trade between Malaysia and the Philippines with concerns raised from Filipino barter traders over their safety.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 69], "content_span": [70, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Other reactions, International response\nNeighbouring Royal Malaysia Police (RMP) stepped up security in their Sabah's state to prevent foreign terror groups transiting through Malaysian East Coast major towns like Sandakan and Tawau prior to proceeding to the Southern Philippine islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 69], "content_span": [70, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0026-0001", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Other reactions, International response\nMalaysian Deputy Home Minister Azis Jamman instructed all of Malaysian enforcement agencies: the Police, Malaysian Armed Forces, Civil Defence Department and Eastern Sabah Security Command (ESSCOM) to increase the border security since they did not want the repetition of 1972, where many Southern Filipino refugees fled to Sabah as a result of the civil war, considering the many social problems associated with the refugees still being reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 69], "content_span": [70, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Other reactions, International response\nThe Indonesian Consulate in Sabah issued a statement of \"no knowledge\" of any ransom paid by any parties for the release of any citizens from ASG abductors in recent kidnappings, in response to claims made by former JI member that ransom money was used in part of the bombings, adding that the Government of Indonesia did not even communicate nor negotiate with the kidnappers for their release.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 69], "content_span": [70, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0027-0001", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Other reactions, International response\nEarlier on January 16, the Director of the Indonesian Citizens Protection of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Indonesia Muhammad Iqbal also rejected any claim about the use of ransom money, saying the hostages were released through the collaboration of an \"inside network\" between their government and Indonesian \"assets\" in the southern Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 69], "content_span": [70, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Other reactions, International response\nIndonesian Foreign Minister Ms. Retno Marsudi condemned the bombing and sent condolences, and clarified their stance that the Indonesian embassy in Manila and their Consulate General in Davao were still attempting to get definitive information from various parties consequent to Minister A\u00f1o's claim of Indonesian citizens' involvement. Director of National Agency for Combating Terrorism (BNPT) Irfan Idris stated as of February 3, 2019, formal verifications of Indonesian involvement had not been received by Indonesian Head of Police Public Information Section Senior Commander Syahar Diantono nor by Co-ordinating Minister of Interior Minister Wiranto. Indonesian anti-terrorism Detachment 88 team with Indonesian State Intelligence Agency (BIN), BNPT and representatives of the Indonesian Foreign Affairs Ministry had also been flown to Jolo to assist in the identification of the suicide bombers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 69], "content_span": [70, 972]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Other reactions, International response\nOn January 30, Hungary offered Ft 30 million (\u20b11.89 million) as emergency assistance to the victims of the bombings through the Hungary Helps Program. China via its Manila Embassy pledged a total of RMB5 million (\u20b138.8 million) for those affected in the bombings. China, India, Russia and the United States have also expressed their commitment to help the Philippines in their fight against terrorism in their country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 69], "content_span": [70, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290259-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Jolo Cathedral bombings, Related incidents\nA few days after the cathedral bombings, following a televised statement by President Duterte that \"the attacks may have involved a suicide bomber\", a grenade was thrown into a mosque in the village of Barangay Talon-Talon, southeast of Zamboanga City. This resulted in the death of two civilians and the wounding of three others. Beng Climaco, the mayor of Zamboanga City, ordered the military and police authorities to conduct a thorough investigation on the incident which they fear was: \"a consequence of a tension between Muslims and Christians\" resulting from the Jolo Cathedral bombings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290260-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Joox Thailand Music Awards\nThe 3rd JOOX Thailand Music Awards was an awarding ceremony presented by JOOX Thailand, giving recognition to the Thai entertainment industry in the field of music for their achievements in the year 2018. Nominees in 11 out of 12 main categories were voted upon by fans through the JOOX app. Voting period started on 11 February 2019 and ended on 28 February 2019. The nominees in the Karaoke of the Year category were determined by their number of streams via the app.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290260-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Joox Thailand Music Awards\nThe awards night was held at the KBank Siam Pic-Ganesha, Siam Square One, Bangkok, Thailand on Tuesday, 19 March 2019 and broadcast through the JOOX app with an encore presentation on PPTV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290260-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Joox Thailand Music Awards, Awards\nNominations were announced on 11 February 2019. Winners are listed first and highlighted in bold:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290261-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Jordanian protests\nThe 2019 Jordanian protests was mass protests and teacher strikes for a month starting after low salaries and the two-year ban if the teacher syndicate in Jordan. Thousands took to the streets in Amman on 9 September, continuing daily and the street protests aimed for better salaries and wage increases. The strike movement was launched however country-wide and nation-wide and widespread social protests against the government was erupting as well, as part of the protests. The movement consisted of Boycotts, Strikes, Rallies, Demonstrations and Marches. It is also the longest countrywide strike movement in Jordanian history. Hundreds were arrested, tortured or beaten in the street protests. After the month-long strike, the government of Omar Razzaz announced new measures and a pay-deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 819]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290262-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ju-Jitsu World Championships\nThe 2019 Ju-Jitsu World Championship were the 17th edition of the Ju-Jitsu World Championships, and were held in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates from November 20 to November 23, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290263-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Judo Grand Prix Antalya\nThe 2019 Judo Grand Prix Antalya was held in Antalya, Turkey, from 5\u20137 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290264-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Judo Grand Prix Budapest\nThe 2019 Judo Grand Prix was held in Budapest, Hungary, from 12 to 14 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290265-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Judo Grand Prix Hohhot\nThe 2019 Judo Grand Prix Hohhot was held in Hohhot, China, from 24 - 26 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290266-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Judo Grand Prix Marrakesh\nThe 2019 Judo Grand Prix Marrakesh was held in Marrakesh, Morocco, from 8 \u2013 10 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290267-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Judo Grand Prix Montreal\nThe 2019 Judo Grand Prix Montreal was held in Montreal, Canada, from 5 - 7 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290268-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Judo Grand Prix Tashkent\nThe 2019 Judo Grand Prix Tashkent was held in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, from 20 to 22 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290269-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Judo Grand Prix Tbilisi\nThe 2019 Judo Grand Prix Tbilisi were held in Tbilisi, Georgia, from 29\u201331 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290270-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Judo Grand Prix Tel Aviv\nThe 2019 Judo Grand Prix Tel Aviv was held in Tel Aviv, Israel, from 24\u201326 January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290271-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Judo Grand Prix Zagreb\nThe 2019 Judo Grand Prix was held in Zagreb, Croatia, from 26 - 28 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290272-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Judo Grand Slam Abu Dhabi\nThe 2019 Judo Grand Slam was held in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, from 24 to 26 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290273-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Judo Grand Slam Baku\nThe 2019 Judo Grand Slam Baku was held in Baku, Azerbaijan, from 10 to 12 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290274-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Judo Grand Slam Brasilia\nThe 2019 Judo Grand Slam was held in Brasilia, Brazil, from 6 - 8 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290275-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Judo Grand Slam D\u00fcsseldorf\nThe 2019 Judo Grand Slam D\u00fcsseldorf was held in D\u00fcsseldorf, Germany, from 22\u201324 February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290276-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Judo Grand Slam Ekaterinburg\nThe 2019 Judo Grand Prix was held in Ekaterinburg, Russia, from 13 to 15 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290277-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Judo Grand Slam Osaka\nThe 2019 Judo Grand Slam were held in Osaka, Japan, from 22 to 24 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290278-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Judo Grand Slam Paris\nThe 2019 Judo Grand Slam Paris was held in Paris, France, from 9 to 10 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290279-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Judo Perth Oceania Open\nThe 2019 Judo Perth Oceania Open was a judo competition held in Jolimont, Australia, from 3 to 4 November 2019. This event was for this year special included in the 2019 IJF World Tour and valued in points as a IJF Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290280-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Judo World Masters\nThe 2019 Judo World Masters was held in Qingdao, China, from 12 \u2013 14 December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290281-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Junior League World Series\nThe 2019 Junior League World Series took place from August 11\u201318 in Taylor, Michigan. Fullerton, Southern California defeated Guayama, Puerto Rico in the championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290281-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Junior League World Series\nTaiwan's JLWS record winning streaks of championships (6), and games (37), were ended by Puerto Rico in the International Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290282-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Junior Pan American Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships\nThe 2019 Junior Pan American Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships was held in Monterrey, Mexico, June 13\u201315, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290283-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Junior World Artistic Gymnastics Championships\nThe 2019 Junior World Artistic Gymnastics Championships were the inaugural Artistic Gymnastics Junior World Championships. They were held in Gy\u0151r, Hungary from 27 June to 30 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290283-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Junior World Artistic Gymnastics Championships, Qualifiers\nCountries that qualified athletes to the 2018 Youth Olympic Games were eligible to send a full team, other countries had to apply for a wild card. The following countries qualified a team:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290284-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Junior World Fencing Championships\nThe 2019 Junior World Fencing Championships from 6 to 14 April at 2019 in Toru\u0144, Poland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290285-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Junior World Luge Championships\nThe 34th Junior World Luge Championships took place under the auspices of the International Luge Federation at Innsbruck, Austria from 1 to 2 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290286-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Junior World Rally Championship\nThe 2019 FIA Junior World Rally Championship was the eighteenth 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.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290286-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Junior World Rally Championship\nThe Junior World Rally Championship was open to drivers under the age of thirty\u2014although no such restriction existed for co-drivers\u2014competing in identical one-litre Ford Fiesta R2s built and maintained by M-Sport. The championship was contested over five selected WRC rounds with the winning crew awarded a new Ford Fiesta R5 car, tyre package, free fuel and a registration to compete in the 2020 World Rally Championship-3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290286-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Junior World Rally Championship\nJan Solans and Mauro Barreiro won the drivers' and co-drivers' championships, beating Tom Kristensson and Henrik Appelskog by eighteen points. In the Trophy of Nations, Sweden beat Spain by six point to become the inaugural winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290286-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Junior World Rally Championship, Calendar\nThe final 2019 Junior World Rally Championship calendar consisted of five events, taken from the 2019 World Rally Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290286-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Junior World Rally Championship, Calendar, Calendar changes\nThe 2019 calendar was heavily revised from the 2018 schedule. The championship dropped from six rounds to five. The Rallies of Portugal and Turkey were removed from the calendar, while events in Italy and Wales were added in their place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290286-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Junior World Rally Championship, Calendar, Route changes\nOrganisers of the Tour de Corse announced plans for a new route, with up to three-quarters of the 2019 route being revised from the 2018 rally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290286-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Junior World Rally Championship, Changes\nAll teams competed with an identical car built by M-Sport. The team announced that a new model of Ford Fiesta was introduced for 2019, one that was still built to R2 specifications, but featured a new engine and drivetrain. The new engine package was capable of producing 149\u00a0kW (199.8\u00a0bhp) of power, up from the 127\u00a0kW (170.3\u00a0bhp) produced by the engine used in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290286-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Junior World Rally Championship, Changes\nCrews were no longer eligible to score points in the World Rally Championship-3 as the series was discontinued in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290286-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Junior World Rally Championship, Results and standings, Scoring system\nPoints are awarded to the top ten classified finishers. An additional point is given for every stage win. The best 4 classification results count towards the drivers\u2019 and co-drivers\u2019 totals, but stage points from all 5 rounds can be retained. Classification points for the last event are doubled for the drivers\u2019 and co-drivers\u2019 championship, but only if they have started at least 3 of the previous Junior WRC rounds. For the FIA Junior WRC Trophy of Nations, only the highest-placed driver from each event received points for their nation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290287-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Junior World Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships\nThe 2019 Rhythmic Gymnastics Junior World Championships were the inaugural Rhythmic Gymnastics Junior World Championships. They were held in Moscow, Russia, from 19 July to 21 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290287-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Junior World Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships\nFollowing the success of the event, which was measured by the amount of participating nations, The Executive Committee of the International Gymnastics Federation has announced the addition of the junior competitions to the official sporting calendar, which will take place every two years, in odd years. The next competition will be held in 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290287-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Junior World Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships, Group, All-Around\nThe top 8 scores in the apparatus qualifies to the group apparatus finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 70], "content_span": [71, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290288-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Junior World Weightlifting Championships\nThe 2019 Junior World Weightlifting Championships were held in Suva, Fiji at the National Gymnasium from 1 to 8 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290288-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Junior World Weightlifting Championships, Medal table\nRanking by all medals: Big (Total result) and Small (Snatch and Clean & Jerk)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 58], "content_span": [59, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290289-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Justice Party (South Korea) leadership election\nThe Justice Party held a leadership election between 8 and 13 July 2019. It was an election to elect a new leader as Lee Jeong-mi fulfilled her two-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290289-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Justice Party (South Korea) leadership election, Campaigns\nThe leadership election has received media attention due to the presence of Sim Sang-jung, a presidential candidate in the 2017 South Korean presidential election and the former leader of the party, on the ballot. Yang, hailing from the party's left-wing faction, calls for a \"bold, democratic socialist transformation\" of the Korean society. The candidates have engaged in a series of debates that were broadcast on KBS and MBC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 63], "content_span": [64, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290289-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Justice Party (South Korea) leadership election, Results\nOnly dues-paying party members could vote in the election. The voting was held from 8 to 13 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 61], "content_span": [62, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290290-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 K League\nThis article includes a list of related items that share the same name (or similar names). If an incorrectly led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290291-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 K League 1\nThe 2019 K League 1 was the 37th season of the top division of professional football in South Korea since its establishment in 1983, and the seventh season of the K League 1. Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290291-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 K League 1\nIn the 17th round on 23 June, Pohang Steelers were leading Gangwon FC 4\u20130 away after 70 minutes, but Gangwon scored five unanswered goals including three in injury time to win 5\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290291-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 K League 1, 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 at least one player from the AFC confederation. Players name in bold indicates the player is registered during the mid-season transfer window.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290291-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 K League 1, Positions by matchday\nLeaders\u00a0\u00a0Qualification for the Champions League group stage\u00a0\u00a0Qualification for the Champions League playoff round\u00a0\u00a0Qualification for the relegation playoffs\u00a0\u00a0Relegation to the K League 2", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 38], "content_span": [39, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290291-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 K League 1, Results, Matches 1\u201322\nTeams play each other twice, once at home, once away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 38], "content_span": [39, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290291-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 K League 1, Results, Matches 23\u201333\nTeams play every other team once (either at home or away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290291-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 K League 1, 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, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290291-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 K League 1, Relegation playoffs\nThe promotion-relegation playoffs were held between the winners of the 2019 K League 2 playoffs and the 11th-placed club of the 2019 K League 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290291-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 K League 1, Relegation playoffs\nBusan IPark won 2\u20130 on aggregate and were promoted to the K League Classic, while Gyeongnam FC were relegated to the K League Challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290291-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 K League 1, Awards, Main awards\nThe 2019 K League Awards was held on 2 December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290291-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 K League 1, Attendance\nUpdated to games played on 1 December 2019Source: Notes:\u2020 Teams that played previous season in K League 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290292-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 K League 2\nThe 2019 K League 2 was the seventh season of the K League 2, the second-tier South Korean professional league for association football clubs since its establishment in 2013, and the second one with its current name, the K League 2. The top-ranked team and the winners of the promotion play-offs among three clubs ranked between second and fourth got promoted to the 2020 K League 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290292-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 K League 2, Teams\nSince the champions from the previous season, Asan Mugunghwa, didn't get promoted because of administrative reasons, Seongnam FC, the second-placed team of the 2018 K League 2, was granted promotion to the 2019 K League 1. Jeonnam Dragons were relegated from the top tier. A total of ten teams contested in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290292-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 K League 2, 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, 15], "section_span": [17, 42], "content_span": [43, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290292-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 K League 2, 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. Players in bold are players who joined midway through the competition. Note that An Byong-jun, who is a North Korean player playing for Suwon FC, was deemed to be a native player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290292-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 K League 2, League table, Positions by matchday\nLeader & Promotion to the 2020 K League 1\u00a0\u00a0Qualification to Relegation/promotion play-offs", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290292-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 K League 2, Promotion-relegation playoffs\nThe Semi-playoff was contested between the 3rd and 4th placed teams in the K League 2. The winners advanced to the Playoff to face the 2nd placed team in the K League 2, and the winners advanced to the Promotion-relegation playoffs to match against the 11th placed team in the K League 1. The winners of that tie secured a place in the 2020 K League 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 46], "content_span": [47, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290292-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 K League 2, Promotion-relegation playoffs\nIf scores were tied after regular time in the Semi-playoff and Playoff rounds, the higher-placed team would advance to the next phase. The same conditions did not apply for the Promotion-relegation playoffs, which was instead over two legs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 46], "content_span": [47, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290292-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 K League 2, Promotion-relegation playoffs, Semi-playoff\nFC Anyang advanced due to its higher position after the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 60], "content_span": [61, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290292-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 K League 2, Promotion-relegation playoffs, Promotion-relegation playoffs, Second leg\nBusan IPark was promoted to the 2020 K League 1 on aggregate score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 89], "content_span": [90, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290292-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 K League 2, Attendance\nUpdated to games played on 9 November 2019Source: Notes:Attendants who entered with free ticket are not counted.\u2020 \u2020 Team played previous season in K League 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290293-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 K-1 Air Base attack\nThe 2019 K-1 Air Base attack was a rocket attack on the K-1 Air Base in Kirkuk province in Iraq on 27 December 2019. The air base is one of many Iraqi military bases that host Operation Inherent Resolve (OIR) personnel and, according to the coalition, was attacked by more than 30 rockets. The attack occurred during the 2019\u20132021 Persian Gulf crisis and preceded a series of events that eventually brought Iran and the United States to the brink of open conflict.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290293-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 K-1 Air Base attack, Casualties\nAccording to Iraqi Brigadier General Ahmed Adnan, the chief of intelligence for the federal police at K-1, three rockets fell on the Iraqi side of the K-1 base, one on the perimeter fence and about seven on the American side. At least one hit a munitions store on the American side, causing a large secondary explosion. The rocket attack killed an American civilian contractor and injured four U.S. service members and two Iraqi security forces personnel. Not much of the details of the attack was immediately made available and the names of other American military service members wounded in the attack were undisclosed, according to The New York Times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290293-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 K-1 Air Base attack, Casualties\nThe American contractor that was killed, an Iraqi-American named Nawres Waleed Hamid from Sacramento, California, worked at the base as a linguist under the company Valiant Integrated Services. Valiant Integrated Services paid for his funeral and burial at the Greater Sacramento Muslim Cemetery, which took place on 4 January 2020, the day after his body was returned to the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290293-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 K-1 Air Base attack, Alleged perpetrators\nThe U.S. blamed the Iranian-backed Kata'ib Hezbollah militia\u2014a subgroup of Iraq's Popular Mobilization Units (PMU)\u2014for the attack, citing evidence and military intelligence that was not made public or shared with the Iraqis. Kata'ib Hezbollah denied its involvement and no other group has publicly claimed responsibility for the attack. According to CNN, a U.S. official stated that there were many similarities to 10 other rocket attacks in prior months, which they attributed to militias supported by Iran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290293-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 K-1 Air Base attack, Alleged perpetrators\nAccording to Iraqi General Ahmed Adnan, U.S. investigators removed any rocket fragments and one unexploded rocket from the Iraqi side of the base, making it difficult for the Iraqis to conduct a deeper, independent forensic investigation. According to VOA News and The New York Times, a launchpad for Katyusha rockets was discovered in a deserted white pickup truck close to the air base by Iraqi security personnel. Four rockets that failed to launch were found in their silos. The Iraqis sent the pickup to U.S. forces where, according to two unidentified U.S. officials, U.S. investigators found evidence in the truck that helped attribute it to Kata'ib Hezbollah. The officials also cited separate communications intercepts that reportedly showed the group's involvement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 822]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290293-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 K-1 Air Base attack, Alleged perpetrators\nOn 6 February 2020, over a month after the attack, The New York Times reported that Iraqi military and intelligence officials said they had no direct evidence to prove that Kata'ib Hezbollah, which reportedly had not had a presence in Kirkuk Province since 2014, was involved in the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290293-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 K-1 Air Base attack, Alleged perpetrators\nIraqi officials suggested that the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), a Sunni terror group, may have orchestrated it given that the rockets were launched from a Sunni part of Kirkuk notorious for attacks and executions by the group, which would have also made the area hostile territory for a Shiite militia like Khata'ib Hezbollah, and the fact that ISIL had carried out three attacks relatively close to the base in the ten days before the attack on K-1. The Times report also highlighted discrepancies with the Iraqi and U.S. accounts of the attack, including the amount of rockets fired; the U.S. said 31 rockets were fired, several Iraqi officers at K-1 said as many as 16 were fired, and Gen. Adnan said 11 were fired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290293-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 K-1 Air Base attack, Alleged perpetrators\nBy February 2020, the U.S. had yet to share its intelligence with Iraqi officials that it says linked the attack to the militia. Iraqi intelligence officials said it was difficult to assess the U.S. assertions without seeing their intelligence. According to U.S. officials, despite the fact that they closely cooperate on counter-terrorism efforts, the U.S. does not always share sensitive intelligence with Iraq because of Iranian influence and operatives present within the central government that could feed intelligence to Iranian leadership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290293-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 K-1 Air Base attack, U.S. response\nThe airbase attack led to a rapid series of events within the following week, starting with U.S. retaliation in Iraq and Syria, which targeted five Kata'ib Hezbollah weapon storage facilities and command and control locations. At least 25 militia members reportedly died and at least 55 were reportedly wounded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290293-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 K-1 Air Base attack, U.S. response\nIt was followed by a militia attack on the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad, which in turn led to a U.S. airstrike near Baghdad International Airport, killing notorious Iranian general Qasem Soleimani and PMU commander Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290294-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 K3 League Advanced\nThe 2019 K3 League Advanced was the 13th season of the K3 League Advanced. This is last season of K3 League Advanced. By 2020, the Korea National League will be absorbed into the K League or K3 League and rebranding as K3 League and K4 League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290294-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 K3 League Advanced, Competition format\nThe 2019 season ran from March through November. The 12 teams competed in a single division. Each team played each other twice for a total of 22 games. For African swine fever virus diffusion prevention, Icheon Citizen was decided three match disclaimer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290294-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 K3 League Advanced, Championship Play-off\nChampionship Play-off start at 26 October. If scores are tied after regular time, the higher placed team advances to the next phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 46], "content_span": [47, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290295-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 K3 League Basic\nThe 2019 K3 League Basic was the third and last season of the K3 League Basic. Eight teams competed in the league for 21 rounds. Ulsan Citizen joined the league in the 2019 season. For 2020, the former Korea National League was absorbed into the K League or K3 League and rebranding as K3 League and K4 League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290295-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 K3 League Basic, Competition format\nThe 2019 season ran from March to October. Eight teams competed in a single division. Each team played each other 3 times for a total of 21 games. After the regular season, the top two teams were directly promoted to the 2020 K3 League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290295-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 K3 League Basic, Clubs\nIn this year, the number of foregin players limition is changed. Restricting 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 at least one player from the AFC confederation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290295-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 K3 League Basic, Clubs\nPlayers name in bold indicates the player is registered during the mid-season transfer window.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290296-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 KBO League season\nThe 2019 KBO League season was the 38th season in the history of the KBO League. The regular season began on March 23 and ended on October 1. The All-Star break was extended from four days to seven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290296-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 KBO League season, Standings\nDoosan Bears ranked ahead of SK Wyverns due to winning their head-to-head season series 9-7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290296-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 KBO League season, Foreign players\nEach team could sign up to three foreign players, one of whom must be a hitter. In 2019, the KBO League capped salaries for new foreign players at US$1\u00a0million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290296-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 KBO League season, Postseason, Wild Card\nThe series started with a 1\u20130 advantage for the fourth-placed team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290297-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 KBS Drama Awards\nThe 2019 KBS Drama Awards (Korean:\u00a0KBS \uc5f0\uae30\ub300\uc0c1; RR:\u00a0KBS Yeon-gi Daesang), presented by Korean Broadcasting System (KBS), was held on December 31, 2019 at KBS Hall in Yeouido, Seoul. It was hosted by Jeon Hyun-moo and Shin Hye-sun.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290298-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 KBS Entertainment Awards\nThe 2019 KBS Entertainment Awards presented by Korean Broadcasting System (KBS), took place on December 21, 2019 at KBS New Wing Open Hall in Yeouido-dong, Yeongdeungpo-gu, Seoul. The 1st part was hosted by Jun Hyun-moo, Son Dam-bi and Jang Dong-yoon. During the 2nd part of the show, Jun Hyun-moo was replaced by Kim Jun-hyun.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290299-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 KML Play-offs\nThe 2019 KML Play-offs was the tournament to determine the Korvpalli Meistriliiga champions for the 2018\u201319 season. This season saw the introduction of the Estonian-Latvian Basketball League, replacing the KML regular season, with the top six Estonian teams advancing to the KML play-offs. The play-offs began on 9 April and concluded on 22 May with Kalev/Cramo defeating Tallinna Kalev/TL\u00dc 3 games to 0 in the finals to win their 11th Estonian Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290300-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 KNSB Dutch Allround Championships\nThe 2019 KNSB Dutch Allround Championships in speed skating were held in Heerenveen at the Thialf ice skating rink from 26 January to 27 January 2019. The tournament was part of the 2018\u20132019 speed skating season. Douwe de Vries and Carlijn Achtereekte won the allround titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290301-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships\nThe 2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships were held at the Thialf ice stadium in Heerenveen from Friday 28 December 2018 to Sunday 30 December 2018. Although the tournament was held in 2018 it was the 2019 edition as it was part of the 2018\u20132019 speed skating season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290302-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Men's 10,000 m\nThe men's 10,000 meter at the 2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships took place in Heerenveen at the Thialf ice skating rink on Sunday 30 December 2018. There were 10 participants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290302-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Men's 10,000 m, Statistics, Draw\nReferee: D. Melis. Assistant: F. Zwitser Starter: J. Rosing Start: 20:05 hr. Finish: 21:33 hr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 80], "content_span": [81, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290303-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Men's 1000 m\nThe men's 1000 meter at the 2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships took place in Heerenveen at the Thialf ice skating rink on Sunday 30 December 2018. There were 24 participants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290304-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 m\nThe men's 1500 meter at the 2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships in Heerenveen took place at the Thialf ice skating rink on Saturday 29 December 2018. There were 20 participants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290304-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 m, Statistics, Result\nReferee: D. Melis Starter: J. Rosing Start: 14:31 hr. Finish: 16:03 hr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 80], "content_span": [81, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290305-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Men's 500 m\nThe men's 500 meter at the 2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships took place in Heerenveen at the Thialf ice skating rink on Friday 28 December 2018. There were 22 participants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290305-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Men's 500 m, Statistics, Result\nScheidsrechter: D. Melis. Assistant: F. Zwitser Starter: J. Smegen Start: 18:20 hr. Finish: 18:44 hr", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 79], "content_span": [80, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290306-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Men's 5000 m\nThe men's 5000 meter at the 2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships took place in Heerenveen at the Thialf ice skating rink on Friday 28 December 2018. There were 18 participants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290306-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Men's 5000 m, Statistics, Result\nReferee: D. Melis. Assistant: F. Zwitser Starter: J. Rosing Start: 20:05 hr. Finish: 21:33 hr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 80], "content_span": [81, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290307-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Men's mass start\nThe men's mass start at the 2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships in Heerenveen took place at Thialf ice rink on 30 December 2018. There were 25 participants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290308-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Women's 1000 m\nThe women's 1000 meter at the 2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships took place in Heerenveen at the Thialf ice skating rink on Sunday 30 December 2018. There were 24 participants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290309-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Women's 1500 m\nThe women's 1500 meter at the 2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships took place in Heerenveen at the Thialf ice skating rink on Friday 28 December 2018. Although this tournament was held in 2018, it was part of the 2018\u20132019 speed skating season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290310-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Women's 3000 m\nThe women's 3000 meter at the 2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships took place in Heerenveen at the Thialf ice skating rink on Saturday 29 December 2018. Although this tournament was held in 2018, it was part of the 2018\u20132019 speed skating season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290311-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Women's 500 m\nThe women's 500 meter at the 2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships took place in Heerenveen at the Thialf ice skating rink on Saturday 29 December 2018. Although this edition was held in 2018, it was part of the 2018\u20132019 speed skating season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290311-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Women's 500 m\nThere were 20 participants. There was a qualification selection incentive for the next following 2018\u201319 ISU Speed Skating World Cup tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290312-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Women's 5000 m\nThe women's 5000 meter at the 2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships took place in Heerenveen at the Thialf ice skating rink on Sunday 30 December 2018. Although this tournament was held in 2018, it was part of the 2018\u20132019 speed skating season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290313-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Women's mass start\nThe women's Mass Start at the 2019 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships in Heerenveen took place at Thialf ice skating rink on Sunday 30 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290314-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 KNSB Dutch Sprint Championships\nThe 2019 KNSB Dutch Sprint Championships in speed skating were held in Heerenveen at the Thialf ice skating rink from 26 January to 27 January 2019. The tournament was part of the 2018\u20132019 speed skating season. Hein Otterspeer and Jutta Leerdam won the sprint titles. The sprint championships were held at the same time as the 2019 KNSB Dutch Allround Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290315-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 KNVB Cup Final\nThe 2019 KNVB Cup Final was a football match between Eredivisie clubs Willem II and Ajax that took place on 5 May 2019 at De Kuip, Rotterdam. It was the final match of the 2018\u201319 KNVB Cup, the 101st season of the annual Dutch national football cup competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290315-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 KNVB Cup Final\nThe winners of this match would compete in the 2019 Johan Cruyff Shield and play in the 2019\u201320 UEFA Europa League, assuming they haven't qualified for the 2019\u201320 UEFA Champions League. Since Ajax had qualified for the latter, the spot for the winners were reverted to the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290315-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 KNVB Cup Final, Match, Details\nAssistant referees:Charles SchaapJan de VriesFourth official:Allard LindhoutVideo assistant referee:Pol van BoekelAssistant video assistant referee:Angelo Boonman", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290316-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 KPIT MSLTA Challenger\nThe 2019 KPIT MSLTA Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the sixth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Pune, India from 11 to 17 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290316-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 KPIT MSLTA 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-00290316-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 KPIT MSLTA Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290317-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 KPIT MSLTA Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nVijay Sundar Prashanth and Ramkumar Ramanathan were the defending champions but chose to defend their title with different partners. Prashanth partnered Brydan Klein but lost in the semifinals to Purav Raja and Ramanathan. Ramanathan partnered Raja and successfully defended his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290317-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 KPIT MSLTA Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nRaja and Ramanathan won the title after defeating Arjun Kadhe and Saketh Myneni 7\u20136(7\u20133), 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290318-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 KPIT MSLTA Challenger \u2013 Singles\nElias Ymer was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290318-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 KPIT MSLTA Challenger \u2013 Singles\nJames Duckworth won the title after defeating Jay Clarke 4\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290319-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kabaddi World Cup\nThe 2019 Kabaddi World Cup is the inaugural National (Asian) style tournament under the banner. It was originally scheduled to be contested from 2 to 15 April 2019 in Melaka, Malaysia. However, the tournament was postponed and held from July 20-28.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290319-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kabaddi World Cup, World Cup Kabaddi 2019\n, formed in 2018, undertook to organise their showcase event the World Cup Kabaddi for the first time in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290319-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kabaddi World Cup, World Cup Kabaddi 2019\nDue to sponsorship and other technical issues, the tournament that had to be postponed from April to July the same year, with a reduced number of participating teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290319-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kabaddi World Cup, World Cup Kabaddi 2019\nThe tournament was hosted by the Malaysia Kabaddi Federation (MKF)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290319-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kabaddi World Cup, Launch\nThe tournament was by the governor of the Melaka state in Malaysia HE Tun Dr Mohd Khalil Yaakob on November 17, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290319-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kabaddi World Cup, Launch\nPresent at the launch with Mohd Khalil at the Temasek Hotel in Ujong Pasir which were World Kabaddi vice-president Jagjit Singh and state Health and Anti Drug committee chairman Low Chee Leong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290319-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Kabaddi World Cup, Launch\nThe Melaka State Malaysian Indian Youth Council (MYIC) and the Melaka State Malaysian Youth Council were the youth organisations were also supporters of the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290319-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Kabaddi World Cup, Theme Song\nComposer Balanraj from Malaysia penned the theme for the event. Music Arrangements were made by M Jegathees with Sound Engineering by Boy Ragde and the Song Lyrics and Vocals by Vinz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290319-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Kabaddi World Cup, Competition and Results\nCompetition were held for both the men and women's categories. Powerhouses India became doubles champions, grabbing both titles at stake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290320-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kabul mosque bombing\nThe 2019 Kabul mosque bombing occurred around 01:20pm (08:50 GMT) on 24 May 2019 when worshippers and the imam were inside the mosque for Friday prayer. The explosives were placed in the mosque's microphone which was used by the imam. At least three people were killed, including the imam, Samiullah Rayhan, and nearly 20 people were injured. So far, no group or individual has claimed to be responsible for the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290320-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kabul mosque bombing, Incident\nA bombing attack happened in Al-Taqwa mosque in Kabul, around 01:20pm (08:50 GMT), and killed or injured dozens of worshippers who came for Friday prayer. Two people, including a scholar, Samiullah Rayhan, were killed and at least 16 wounded after a bomb explosion. Although the Taliban regularly stages attacks in the area, Nasrat Rahimi, a spokesman for the Afghan Ministry of Interior Affairs said, the Taliban is responsible for the attack. A spokesman for the Taliban\u2019s group denied Rahimi's claim. After Taliban\u2019s new leader appointment, Mawlawi Haibatullah Akhundzada, the number of attack to religious person increased. A district police official, Jan Agha, said the bomb was fixed in the mosque microphone which was used by the mosque imam, Mawlawi Samiullah Raihan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 811]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290320-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kabul mosque bombing, Incident\nSamiullah Rayhan, 36, a father of four children, was an imam at Al-Taqwa mosque. He was a parliamentary adviser and the host of a daily religious television show. His support for the families of fallen Afghan soldiers, condemnation of the Taliban\u2019s suicide bombings, women\u2019s rights, and cooperation between Western military forces and the Afghan government were the main reasons for being targeted in the attack. Firdaws Faramarz, a police spokesman said, the bomb explosion happened near the altar of the Al-Taqwa mosque, a place used by the mosque leader to initiate the prayers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290320-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kabul mosque bombing, Incident\nAccording to the New York Times, Afghanistan's situation is difficult for religious scholars because supporting either the government or the Taliban lead to being targeted by the other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290320-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kabul mosque bombing, Reactions\nPresident Ashraf Ghani condemned the mosque attack as a terrorist act.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290321-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kaduna State gubernatorial election\nThe 2019 Kaduna State gubernatorial election occurred on March 9, 2019. APC candidate Nasir Ahmad el-Rufai defeated main opposition party PDP's candidate, Isah Ashiru, to emerge winner of the contest. APC was said to have won 14 LGAs, PDP nine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290321-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kaduna State gubernatorial election\nNasir Ahmad el-Rufai emerged winner in the APC gubernatorial primary election unopposed. His running mate was Hadiza Sabuwa Balarabe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290321-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kaduna State gubernatorial election\nOf the 38 candidates who contested in the election, 36 were male, two were female.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290321-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kaduna State gubernatorial election, Electoral system\nThe Governor of Kaduna State is elected using the plurality voting system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 58], "content_span": [59, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290321-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kaduna State gubernatorial election, Primary election, APC primary\nThe APC primary election was held at Murtala Square, Kaduna. El-Rufai was declared the winner of the contest unopposed, with a total score of 2,447. However, there were a total of 33 invalid votes, according to the committee chairman of the elections, Mr Matthew Iduoriyekemwen. A total of 3,782 delegates participated in the election from across the 23 LGAs if the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290321-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kaduna State gubernatorial election, Primary election, PDP primary\nThe PDP primary election was kick-started at exactly 2:57 PM at the Kaduna International Trade Fair Complex on Sunday September 30, 2018, and concluded on Monday October 1. Isah Ashiru Kudan, who erlier contested in the 2014 APC primary elections for the 2015 Kaduna gubernatorial election coming out first runner-up, emerged victorious as the PDP flag-bearer for the 2019 Kaduna State gubernatorial election. There were 2,654 delegates from 20 of the 23 LGAs present at the 2018 PDP Kaduna gubernatorial Primaries, whose 39 votes were declared invalid. There were a total of 10 aspirants, two of which withdrew in the process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290321-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Kaduna State gubernatorial election, Results\nA total of 38 candidates registered with the Independent National Electoral Commission to participate in the contest. APC candidate and incumbent governor Nasir el-Rufai won re-election for a second term, beating PDP aspirant Isah Ashiru by a close margin. El-Rufai received 1,045,427 valid ballot votes or 55.32% of total votes, while Ashiru bagged 814,168 valid ballot votes or 43.08% of total votes. The APGA and LM candidates earlier in February 2019 stepped down for the PDP candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290321-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Kaduna State gubernatorial election, Results, By local government area\nA total of 38 political parties were reported by the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) to have aspirants for the Kaduna State Governorship poll. The results of the election by local government area, representing the two major contenders are presented here below. Green represents LGAs won by Ashiru. Blue represents LGAs won by el-Rufai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 75], "content_span": [76, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290322-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kaduna State massacre\nOn February 10\u201311, 2019, 141 people were killed in the Kajuru LGA of the Nigerian state of Kaduna according to the state governor, hours before the Nigerian general election. The dead included 11 Adara people and 130 Fulani. However the Fulani group Miyetti Allah was reported to have published a list of 131 Fulani who had died and it also stated that the bodies of 66 Fulani were recovered while the bodies of 65 other Fulani remained missing. An attack by suspected Fulani gunmen on Ungwar Bardi killed 11 Adara people. An Adara militia in turn attacked Fulani settlements. Miyetti Allah later clarified 66 were buried in graves and 65 remained missing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290322-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kaduna State massacre\nSome sources like the Christian Association of Nigeria, stated that the governor lied. The National Emergency Management Agency denied it. However, some of the graves in which the Fulani victims were buried were shown to the Premium Times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290322-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kaduna State massacre\nLocals have claimed the attack began as part of revenge for clashes in October 2018 between Christians and Muslims in Kajuru which killed 55 people in total. Of the dead, 22 were children, and another 11 were women. Violence around election time is fairly common in Nigeria. Hundreds were killed during post-election violence in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290322-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kaduna State massacre\nAt least 29 people were reported to be killed in an attack in Karamai community of Kajuru on 26 February 2019. The attack was suspected to be from Fulani in retaliation to the earlier violence where Fulani settlements were attacked. The governor confirmed a few days later that the death toll had risen to 40.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290322-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kaduna State massacre\nThe Coalition Against Kajuru killings stated on March 18 that since then 130 people have been killed in a series of revenge attacks over the massacre announced by El-Rufai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290323-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kagame Interclub Cup\nThe 2019 Kagame Interclub Cup was the 42nd edition of the Kagame Interclub Cup, a football competition for clubs in East and Central Africa, which is organised by CECAFA. It took place in Rwanda from 7 July to 21 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290323-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kagame Interclub Cup, Group stage\nThe group stage featured sixteen teams, with 4 teams in Group A, Group B, Group C, and D. Two teams from Group A and B and Group C and Group D advanced to the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290324-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kanagawa gubernatorial election\nA gubernatorial election was held on 7 April 2019 to elect the next Governor of Kanagawa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290325-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kangaroo Cup\nThe 2019 Kangaroo Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the twenty-fourth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Gifu, Japan between 29 April and 5 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290325-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kangaroo Cup, 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-00290326-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kangaroo Cup \u2013 Doubles\nRika Fujiwara and Yuki Naito were the defending champions, but Fujiwara chose not to participate. Naito partnered Erina Hayashi but lost in the first round to Choi Ji-hee and Han Na-lae.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290326-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kangaroo Cup \u2013 Doubles\nDuan Yingying and Han Xinyun won the title, defeating Akiko Omae and Peangtarn Plipuech in the final, 6\u20133, 4\u20136, [10\u20134].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290327-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kangaroo Cup \u2013 Singles\nKurumi Nara was the defending champion, but lost to Zarina Diyas in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290327-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kangaroo Cup \u2013 Singles\nDiyas won the title, defeating Liang En-shuo in the final, 6\u20130, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290328-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kano State gubernatorial election\nThe 2019 Kano State gubernatorial election occurred on March 9, 2019. APC candidate Abdullahi Umar Ganduje won re-election for a second term, defeating PDP Abba Kabir Yusuf and other 53 candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290328-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kano State gubernatorial election\nAbdullahi Umar Ganduje emerged APC's candidate in the primary election as the sole candidate. He chose Nasir Yusuf Gawuna as his running mate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290328-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kano State gubernatorial election\nAbba Kabir Yusuf emerged PDP's candidate in the primary election, scoring 2,421 votes to defeat five other candidates. Jafar Sani Bello scored 1,258 votes, Muhammad Sadiq Wali scored 167, Salihu Sagir Takai scored 95, Ibrahim El Amin scored 52 and Akilu Sani Indabawa scored 33. He chose Aminu Abdussalam Gwarzo as his running mate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290328-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kano State gubernatorial election, PDP primary and court cases\nJafar Sani Bello, one of the gubernatorial aspirants in the PDP primary election approached the Federal High Court sitting in Kano in a suit seeking to Abba Kabir Yusuf, the PDP's flag bearer. The High Court in its ruling by Justice Ahmad Badamasi, stroke out the suit and said the case was filed out of the required 14 days after the primary election and thereby declared it as \"status bar\". Five days before the gubernatorial election, the PDP candidate, Abba Kabir Yusuf was sacked by the Federal High Court sitting in Kano.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290328-0003-0001", "contents": "2019 Kano State gubernatorial election, PDP primary and court cases\nLewis Allagoa, who is the presiding judge of the Court 1, in his ruling, ruled that the PDP did not conduct a governorship primary election in the state. The case was brought to the court by Ali Amin-little, one of the PDP gubernatorial aspirants in the primary election. Twenty four hours before the gubernatorial election in Kano State, the PDP candidate, Abba Kabir Yusuf approached the Appeal court sitting in Kaduna and obtained a stay of execution order to allow him participate in the gubernatorial election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290328-0003-0002", "contents": "2019 Kano State gubernatorial election, PDP primary and court cases\nJustice Daniel O. Kalio who presided over the ruling, granted all the prayers put forward by the appellant and restrained INEC from removing the name of the PDP candidate in the gubernatorial election. A week after the election, the Appeal court sitting in Kaduna dismissed an appeal filed by Jafar Sani Bello for lack of merit and re-affirmed the decision of Federal High Court sitting in Kano presided by Justice Ahmad Badamasi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290328-0003-0003", "contents": "2019 Kano State gubernatorial election, PDP primary and court cases\nJafar Sani Bello, unsatisfied, took the case to the Supreme court and the Supreme court in a case presided by Justice Mary Peter-Odili and others, dismissed the appeal for lack of merit. A month after the gubernatorial election had been concluded, the Appeal court sitting in Kaduna, affirmed Abba Kabir Yusuf as the authentic PDP candidate in the election. Justice Tanko Hussaini who presided over the judgement, said that the Federal High Court judge erred in law by assuming jurisdiction without the plaintiff, Ibrahim Little, joining the necessary party, Abba Kabir Yusuf.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290328-0003-0004", "contents": "2019 Kano State gubernatorial election, PDP primary and court cases\nThe judge also said that Ali Amin-little, one of the PDP gubernatorial aspirants in the primary election, lacked locus standi to institute action challenging the process that he did not participate in. Ali Amin-little unsatisfied, took the case to the Supreme court. On the day of the ruling, Justice Bode Rhodes Vivour-led seven-man panel of judges unanimously affirmed the candidature of the Abba Kabir Yusuf as the PDP candidate in the gubernatorial election and ruled that the appeal brought forward by Ali Amin-little lacked merit and dismissed same. The Supreme court held that Yusuf was not joined as a party in the suit by a contestant for the governorship ticket, Ali Amin-little.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290328-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kano State gubernatorial election, Results\nIndependent National Electoral Commission declared the election inconclusive on March 11, 2019. A supplementary election was now held by the same Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC on March 23, 2019. Abdullahi Umar Ganduje from the APC won the election defeating Abba Kabir Yusuf and other 53 candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290328-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kano State gubernatorial election, Results\nThe total number of registered voters in the state was 5,457,747, accredited voters was 2,269,305, total votes cast was 2,242,369 and rejected votes was 50,861.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290328-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Kano State gubernatorial election, Tribunal, appeal court and supreme court challenge\nMonths after the election, Abba Kabir Yusuf the PDP's candidate in the election, challenged the election at the Tribunal. The Tribunal in a judgement at High Court, in miller road, Kano, for over three hours, read by the chairman of the three-member panel, Justice Halima Shamaki, dismissed the petition by Abba Kabir Yusuf of the PDP seeking to nullify the victory of Ganduje. The Tribunal dismissed the petition for lacking merit. The tribunal ruled that the PDP candidate failed to prove his case beyond reasonable doubt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 90], "content_span": [91, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290328-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 Kano State gubernatorial election, Tribunal, appeal court and supreme court challenge\nThe Tribunal then upheld Ganduje's election and said that the cancellation that followed the Gama Ward election and others which brought about the March 23, 2019 re-run was not only constitutional, but also valid. Many months later, the case was also heard in the Appeal court sitting in Kaduna. Justice Tijjani Abubakar-led five-man panel of Appeal court judges unanimously ruled that the appeal brought forward by Abba Kabir Yusuf and his party, the PDP lacked merit and dismissed the appeal in its entirety and affirmed that Abdullahi Umar Ganduje was elected by the majority of Kano State voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 90], "content_span": [91, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290328-0006-0002", "contents": "2019 Kano State gubernatorial election, Tribunal, appeal court and supreme court challenge\nThe case was also heard in the Supreme court sitting in Abuja. The Supreme court seven-man panel of judges unanimously held that Abba Kabir Yusuf and his party, the PDP did not show the Election Tribunal and the Appeal court were wrong in this earlier rulings. The panel then dismissed the appeal for lack of merit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 90], "content_span": [91, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290329-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas City Chiefs season\nThe 2019 season was the Kansas City Chiefs' 50th in the National Football League (NFL), their 60th overall, their seventh under head coach Andy Reid and third under general manager Brett Veach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290329-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas City Chiefs season\nIn the offseason, the Chiefs released two of their longest-tenured players: Justin Houston and Eric Berry. The Chiefs started the season with a 1\u20133 record at home, their worst record after four home games since 2012. However, they began the season 4\u20130 on the road, their best road record after four road games since 2013. With a Week 14 Oakland Raiders loss and a win over the New England Patriots, the Chiefs clinched the AFC West, extending their team record division title streak to four consecutive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290329-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Kansas City Chiefs season\nThey also clinched the franchise's fifth consecutive playoff appearance, one short of the franchise record of six consecutive from 1990\u20131995. The Chiefs also finished undefeated in the AFC West for the second time under Andy Reid, extending their record within the AFC West since 2015 to 27\u20133. They clinched their second straight bye to the Divisional round of the AFC playoffs due to a Week 17 win against the Los Angeles Chargers combined with a Patriots loss to the Miami Dolphins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290329-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas City Chiefs season\nIn the Divisional round, the Chiefs defeated the Houston Texans 51\u201331 despite falling behind 24\u20130 in the second quarter to give the Chiefs playoff wins in back-to-back seasons for the first time in franchise history. The 51 points they scored was a franchise record for a postseason game. The win, along with the Baltimore Ravens' loss the previous night, allowed the Chiefs to host the AFC Championship for the second time in franchise history. They defeated the Tennessee Titans 35\u201324 in the AFC Championship advancing to Super Bowl LIV, where they defeated the San Francisco 49ers 31\u201320 to win their first championship since Super Bowl IV in 1970.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290329-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas City Chiefs season, NFL Top 100\nThe Chiefs had six players ranked on NFL Network's annual Top 100 players countdown, which was tied for second most in the league. Reigning NFL MVP Patrick Mahomes was ranked 4th, the highest ranking ever by a Chiefs player. Additionally, he was the highest ranked player on the countdown that was not ranked in 2018 and was the second highest player ever that was unranked the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290329-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas City Chiefs season, Roster changes, Players signed\nBelow are players signed in the offseason through free agency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290329-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas City Chiefs season, Roster changes, Futures contracts\nBelow are players that were signed as a futures players, which are typically players that have not played in a regular season. These players usually spent the previous season on a practice squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290329-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas City Chiefs season, Roster changes, Unrestricted free agents\nBelow are players with expiring contracts that can sign with any team without the Chiefs receiving any sort of compensation. Also included is if the player re-signed with the Chiefs or signed with another team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 72], "content_span": [73, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290329-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas City Chiefs season, Roster changes, Restricted free agents\nBelow are players with expiring contracts that have three or fewer accrued seasons with the Chiefs that can receive a qualifying offer from any NFL team, the Chiefs can choose to either match the offer or receive a draft pick as compensation depending on the tender placed by the Chiefs which can be 1st round, 2nd, or original round (the pick that was used to draft the player).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 70], "content_span": [71, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290329-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Kansas City Chiefs season, Roster changes, Restricted free agents\nIf no offer sheet is given, the player will receive a one-year contract with the Chiefs for a salary based on the tender placed on the player, $2.879 million for a first, $2.023 million for a second, or $1.323 million for an original round tender. If a tender is not placed, the player becomes an unrestricted free agent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 70], "content_span": [71, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290329-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas City Chiefs season, Roster changes, Exclusive-rights free agents\nBelow are players with two or fewer seasons of tenure with expiring contracts. If the Chiefs makes a qualifying offer (a one-year contract usually at league-minimum salary) the player has no negotiating rights with other teams, and must either sign the tender with the Chiefs or sit out the 2019 season. If a qualifying offer is not made, the player is an unrestricted free agent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 76], "content_span": [77, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290329-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas City Chiefs season, Roster changes, Trades\nBelow are any trades that included at least one player. Trades that featured only draft picks being traded for both teams, are listed in NFL Draft section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290330-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas City Royals season\nThe 2019 Kansas City Royals season was the 51st season for the franchise, and their 47th at Kauffman Stadium. They had a 1-game improvement from the previous season, but they were eliminated from postseason contention on August 27. The season would prove to be Ned Yost\u2019s final season as manager as he announced his retirement on September 23 with five games remaining in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290331-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas City mayoral election\nThe 2019 Kansas City mayoral election took place on June 18, 2019, to elect the next Mayor of Kansas City, Missouri. The election was held concurrently with various other local elections, and was officially nonpartisan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290331-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas City mayoral election\nIncumbent mayor Sly James, in office since 2011, was term-limited and could not seek the office again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290331-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas City mayoral election\nIn the nonpartisan primary held on April 2, 2019, city council members Jolie Justus and Quinton Lucas were the top-two vote winners with 23 and 18 percent of the vote, respectively. In the general election on June 18, 2019, Lucas got 59 percent vs. 41 percent for Justus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290332-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Jayhawks football team\nThe 2019 Kansas Jayhawks football team represented the University of Kansas in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. It was the Jayhawks 130th season. The Jayhawks were led by first-year head coach Les Miles. They were members of the Big 12 Conference. They played their home games at David Booth Kansas Memorial Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290332-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Jayhawks football team\nThe Jayhawks attempted to end two major losing streaks, but instead extended the streaks. They extended their consecutive losses on the road to Big 12 teams to 45 games. They also extended their streak of consecutive games lost to teams ranked in the AP poll to 38. With a 48\u201324 win over Boston College, KU ended a 48 game road losing streak against power five conference teams. With the Jayhawks seventh loss of the season to Oklahoma State, they became ineligible for a bowl game for the eleventh consecutive season, the last time they were eligible was the 2008 season. They finished the season 3\u20139, 1\u20138 in Big 12 play to finish in last place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290332-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Jayhawks football team\nOn July 8, 2019, Kansas announced that 1st team All-Big 12 running back Pooka Williams Jr. will be suspended for the first game of the season against Indiana State as discipline for his arrest for domestic battery December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290332-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Jayhawks football team\nOn October 6, 2019, Miles fired offensive coordinator Les Koenning. Senior offensive analyst Brent Dearmon was promoted to replace him. Additionally, Dearmon was named quarterbacks coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290332-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Jayhawks football team, Preseason, Big 12 media poll\nThe 2019 Big 12 media days were held July 15\u201316, 2019 in Frisco, Texas. In the Big 12 preseason media poll, Kansas was predicted to finish in last in the standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290332-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Jayhawks football team, Game summaries\nAll-time records for each opponent do not include the results for 2019 and are only for prior to the 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290332-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Jayhawks football team, Game summaries, at Boston College\nThe Kansas Jayhawks came into the game as a three touchdown underdog, but performances by quarterback Carter Stanley (238 yards passing) and running back Pooka Williams (121 yards rushing) combined with other efforts to give the Jayhawks their first road win against a \"power 5\" team in almost 11 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290332-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Jayhawks football team, Game summaries, at Boston College\nBoston College scored first and had the lead 10-0 until the Jayhawks scored on six straight possessions. Kansas took the lead 28-24 at the half thanks to an 82 yard run with 40 seconds remaining before the break to set up a 3-yard score just two plays later. Kansas continued to score in the second half but Boston College could not match the effort. The final score was Kansas 48, Boston College 24.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290332-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Jayhawks football team, Game summaries, West Virginia\nKansas started conference play having just rolled off a win against Boston College, but West Virginia was expected to take advantage of observing the Jayhawks offensive performance the prior week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 65], "content_span": [66, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290332-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Jayhawks football team, Game summaries, West Virginia\nWhen the game rolled around, the Jayhawk offense made two specific mistakes that impacted the game: A lost fumble and a fourth quarter interception. On the positive side, KU averaged 7.4 yards per play. It also appeared that KU kicker Liam Jones faked an injury after a field goal to make way for Jacob Borcila to \"replace\" him at the next kickoff to execute an onside kick\u2014which they recovered but then lost due to a penalty. West Virginia won the game 29-24.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 65], "content_span": [66, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290332-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Jayhawks football team, Game summaries, at TCU\nTexas Christian scored 21 points in the first quarter against Kansas and led 38-0 at halftime, with Max Duggan making his second consecutive start at quarterback. However, Alex Delton still was on record as a team captain and he saw play time in the second half. Headed into the fourth quarter with no score, Kansas had only managed 55 yards on 34 plays. Quarterback Carter Stanley finished 12-29 in passing with 84 yards, but the Jayhawks managed to score in the fourth quarter to avoid being shut out. The game ended with TCU scoring 51 to the Jayhawks 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290332-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Jayhawks football team, Game summaries, Oklahoma\nOklahoma traveled to Lawrence for what resulted in an \"easy victory\" for the Sooners, but Kansas \"outplayed\" the sooners for the bulk of the first quarter. Kansas even scored first with a touchdown after forcing Oklahoma to punt. Kansas then gained 98 yards for their touchdown and led 7-0 in the first quarter. Oklahoma then took control and led 21-7 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290332-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Jayhawks football team, Game summaries, Oklahoma\nOklahoma managed 29 first downs and converted 6 of 9 times on third down, with 545 total yards of offense. Oklahoma also threw an interception for the only turnover of the game. Kansas only managed 18 first downs with 6-14 on third down. They also attempted 2 fourth-down conversions but both were unsuccessful, with a total of 360 yards of offense. Kansas did manage a little more clock time of offense with 30:29 time of possession compared to Oklahoma's 29:31. The final score was Oklahoma 45, Kansas 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290332-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Jayhawks football team, Game summaries, Oklahoma\nOklahoma completed their 22nd straight true road win, which was the second longest streak since at least World War II in major college football when Coach Bud Wilkinson led the sooners to 25 wins from 1953 to 1958.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290332-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Jayhawks football team, Game summaries, at Texas\nThe underdog Kansas Jayhawks stayed with the #15 Texas Longhorns for four quarters of play. In the last minutes, Carter Stanley was successful with a 22-yard scoring pass to Stephon Robinson. The following 2-point conversion throw to Daylon Charlot put the Jayhawks ahead by one point. With 1:11 left to play when Texas took over and put together an offensive drive that ended with a game-winning field goal for the Longhorns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290332-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Jayhawks football team, Game summaries, at Texas\nEven with the loss, several of the Kansas players gave great performances: Pooka Williams rushed for 190 yards and two touchdowns; quarterback Carter Stanley threw 310 yards and four touchdowns for the Jayhawks. For the Longhorns, Sam Ehlinger rushed for 91 yards and managed 399 yards passing with four touchdowns. When everything was complete, Texas won by a score of 50-48.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290332-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Jayhawks football team, Game summaries, Texas Tech\nTexas Tech controlled the game early, racing to a 17-0 lead in the second quarter before Kansas quarterback Carter Stanley scored 2 touchdowns, 1 rushing and 1 passing, in the final 5 minutes of the half to go into halftime down 17-14. Texas Tech would similarly dominate the early part of the second half, scoring 10 unanswered points, before being answered with two long touchdown passes by Stanley to tie the game at 27. After each team scored another touchdown, Kansas would force a Texas Tech punt and then drove to the Texas Tech 22 with 13 seconds left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290332-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 Kansas Jayhawks football team, Game summaries, Texas Tech\nWith the score tied 34 each, Texas Tech blocked a field goal attempt\u2014but when Douglas Coleman of Texas Tech fumbled during an attempt to return the field goal it gave the Jayhawks a second chance with better field position. Texas Tech successfully blocked the first 40-yard field goal attempt and Coleman caught the ball, who then tried to lateral the ball to another teammate. However, the lateral went in the direction where no Red Raider player was and Kansas recovered the ball. Kicker Liam Jones then got another chance to win the game and was successful. The final score was Texas Tech 34, Kansas 37.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290332-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Jayhawks football team, Game summaries, Texas Tech\nThe Kansas offense scored on four of its last five possessions to overcome a 17 point deficit. The win was the first Big 12 Conference victory for Les Miles while as the coach at Kansas, and the first Homecoming victory for Kansas since October 10, 2009. Jones won Big 12 Special Teams player of the week honors thanks to his game-winning kick, while Stanley's 415 yard, 4 touchdown performance made him the Big 12 Offensive player of the week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290332-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Jayhawks football team, Game summaries, Texas Tech\nTexas Tech's coach Matt Wells praised Jayhawk coach Les Miles after the game: \"I think Coach Miles brings credibility to that program. I mean, the job that he obviously did at Oklahoma State and did at LSU speaks for itself. He's had success everywhere he's been. And those kids played hard on Saturday. They really did. They went out and, man, they did. They emptied the tank and had every right to win and deserved to win.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290332-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Jayhawks football team, Game summaries, Kansas State\nBoth Kansas and Kansas State came in to the 2019 Sunflower Showdown coming off wins: Kansas State defeating Oklahoma and Kansas defeating Texas Tech. Both teams come in after solid growth and improvement through the season and enter the game excited for their rivalry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290332-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Jayhawks football team, Game summaries, Kansas State\nKansas State scored a touchdown on its first possession and held the lead for the remainder of the game. Kansas State's offensive line was praised for their control of the line of scrimmage to help the Wildcats rush for 342 yards and five touchdowns. On Defense, Kansas State held their rival Jayhawks to just 10 points. Defensivley, Kansas State also pulled two interceptions and sacked Kansas quarterback Carter Stanley four times. Stanley's passing production was 13-for-23 with 123 yards, a far cry from the over 400 yards against Texas Tech and over 300 yards he put up against the Texas Longhorns in recent play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290332-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Jayhawks football team, Game summaries, Kansas State\nThe Kansas Jayhawks entered the game with high hopes and expectations--\"convinced\" that they would win largely based on performance in their previous two games. However, the Jayhawks only managed a field goal in the first quarter and did not score again until they managed a touchdown in the fourth quarter. That touchdown was the final score of the game: Kansas State 38; Kansas 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290333-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Lottery 300\nThe 2019 Kansas Lottery 300 is a NASCAR Xfinity Series race held on October 19, 2019, at Kansas Speedway in Kansas City, Kansas. Contested over 200 laps on the 1.5 mile (2.4\u00a0km) asphalt speedway, it was the 30th race of the 2019 NASCAR Xfinity Series season, fourth race of the Playoffs, and the first race of the Round of 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290333-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Lottery 300, Background, Track\nKansas Speedway is a 1.5-mile (2.4\u00a0km) tri-oval race track in Kansas City, Kansas. It was built in 2001 and it currently hosts two annual NASCAR race weekends. The IndyCar Series also held races at the venue until 2011. The speedway is owned and operated by the International Speedway Corporation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290333-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Lottery 300, Practice, First practice\nCole Custer was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 31.116 seconds and a speed of 173.544\u00a0mph (279.292\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290333-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Lottery 300, Practice, Final practice\nTyler Reddick was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 31.104 seconds and a speed of 173.611\u00a0mph (279.400\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290333-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Lottery 300, Qualifying\nChristopher Bell scored the pole for the race with a time of 29.807 seconds and a speed of 181.165\u00a0mph (291.557\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290333-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Lottery 300, Race, Summary\nChristopher Bell started on pole and lead all of Stage 1, also gaining the stage points. Austin Cindric pitted shortly before the end of the stage and did not gain stage points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290333-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Lottery 300, Race, Summary\nOn lap 71, Cindric hit Harrison Burton while they were racing each other. Burton then went down on Cindric, but ultimately shot himself into the wall and ended his day. Cindric then had to pit twice during the green flag for tire rub issues. Cole Custer won Stage 2 ahead of Bell and Tyler Reddick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290333-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Lottery 300, Race, Summary\nOn lap 151, Justin Haley drove into Custer, who managed to save his car but lost several positions. On lap 164, John Hunter Nemechek spun, bringing out a caution. All the leaders got one set of fresh tires in the pit stops, and everyone except Michael Annett opted to pit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290333-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Lottery 300, Race, Summary\nWith 15 to go, Chase Briscoe and Bell were in a tight battle for the lead and they approached Garrett Smithley, who drove slightly up the race track. Briscoe and Bell were unsure where Smithley would go, resulting in them both plowed into him. The restart caused another caution as Joey Gase and Noah Gragson were involved in an accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290333-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Lottery 300, Race, Summary\nOn the restart, Brandon Jones grabbed the lead from Briscoe. Reddick passed Briscoe and made up a lot of ground, but ran out of time. Jones took his first win by holding off Reddick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290333-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Lottery 300, Race, Summary\nDue to Jones taking the victory, none of the playoff drivers locked themselves into the final round of the playoffs after the race. Briscoe, Annett, Gragson, and Cindric exited the race below the cutoff line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290333-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Lottery 300, Race, Summary\nAfter the race, Custer and Reddick were involved in a physical altercation; Custer was upset at Reddick sliding them up the track during a restart. Reddick was annoyed when Custer placed his hand on his shoulder, and quickly responded by shoving him. Their crews quickly got involved, and Reddick ultimately received a cut over his eye from being thrown to the ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290333-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas Lottery 300, Race, Final Stage Results\n. \u2013 Driver advanced to the next round of the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team\nThe 2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team represented Kansas State University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Wildcats played their home games at Bill Snyder Family Football Stadium in Manhattan, Kansas, and competed in the Big 12 Conference. They were led by first-year head coach Chris Klieman, who accepted the role after the retirement of long-time head coach Bill Snyder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Preseason, Big 12 media poll\nThe 2019 Big 12 media days were held July 15\u201316, 2019 in Frisco, Texas. In the Big 12 preseason media poll, Kansas State was predicted to finish in ninth in the standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Schedule\nKansas State's 2019 schedule began with three non-conference games: at home against Nicholls of the Southland Conference, at home against Bowling Green of the Mid-American Conference, and on the road against Mississippi State of the Southeastern Conference (SEC). In Big 12 Conference play, the Wildcats will play five home games against Baylor, TCU, Oklahoma, West Virginia, and Iowa State; and will play four road games against Oklahoma State, Kansas, Texas, and Texas Tech.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Nicholls\nKansas State scored touchdowns on their first four possessions and were successful 10 of 12 attempts on third down in 80 offensive plays. Kansas State also managed the clock, being on offense for more than 41 minutes. ESPN Reported: \"The Wildcats looked a lot like Klieman's teams at North Dakota State, winning the battle in the trenches and rotating running backs every couple of plays. The result was a team that was fresher and more physical as the game went along.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Nicholls\nFor Nicholls, this was largely different compared to last year's opener when they defeated the Kansas Jayhawks. The Colonel's Kendall Bussey and Julien Gums both produced second-half touchdown runs to put their team on the board, but it wasn't nearly enough. Despite the loss, Nicholls managed to move up in the FCS coaches poll, going from #11 to #10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Bowling Green\nKansas State's defense set the goal of holding Bowling Green to zero points. They almost missed that goal early in the third quarter, when K-State's Phillip Brooks dropped the first of two punts in the game. That fumble gave Bowling Green possession on the 33-yard line. Then Kansas State linebacker Daniel Green forced a fumble that was recovered by freshman linebacker Khalid Duke. Kansas State continued to hold on defense to meet the goal of holding Bowling Green to zero points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Bowling Green\nThe Wildcats controlled the game on both offense and defense to secure the win 52-0. This was Kansas State's first shutout in more than four years when they beat South Dakota 34-0 on September 15, 2015. Bowling Green only advanced past midfield three times The shutout was Bowling Green's first since losing 37-0 at Virginia Tech in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Bowling Green\nBowling Green managed 140 total yards (79 passing and 61 rushing) and completed just 8 of 19 passes. Kansas State led 31-0 and put up over 300 yards of total offense before the game was halfway through the second quarter. Kansas State ended up with 521 total yards by the end of the game. It marked the 23 consecutive win for head coach Chris Klieman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, at Mississippi State\nKansas State completed its first non-conference road win over a \"power-conference\" opponent since 2011. Leading most of the game, Kansas State found itself trailing for the first time all season late in the third quarter. But early in the fourth quarter, Malik Knowles returned a kickoff 100 yards for a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 78], "content_span": [79, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, at Mississippi State\nMississippi State led in almost every statistical category: more first downs (21-17); more total yards (352-269), more yards rushing (201-146), and more yards passing (151-123). Both teams committed 3 turnovers and 7 penalties and Mississippi State controlled the game clock, holding possession for 33:05 to K-States 26:55.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 78], "content_span": [79, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, at Mississippi State\nSolid statistical production wasn't enough, as Kansas State ended up winning the game 31-24. The following week, Kansas State was ranked #25 in the Coaches Poll and received votes in the AP Top 25 poll. Mississippi State received votes in both polls but was dropped from the Coaches Poll. After the first three games, the Orlando Sentinel named Kansas State as one of five \"surprising starts\" for college football teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 78], "content_span": [79, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, at Oklahoma State\nOklahoma State's Chuba Hubbard ran for 296 yards, averaging 11.8 per attempt in a leading effort to hand Kansas State their first loss of the season. Coming into the game, Kansas State was #7 in team rushing and averaged 280 yards Oklahoma State's defense contributed well to the win as they held Kansas State to just 126 rushing yards, with only 18 of those yards in the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 75], "content_span": [76, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, at Oklahoma State\nKansas State worked on a fourth-quarter comeback, but Oklahoma State was able to control the clock and win the game 26-13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 75], "content_span": [76, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Baylor\nAnnounced a week before the game on the Team's Twitter page, Kansas State would wear white helmets and white pants for the Fort Riley Day game against Baylor. This would be the first time since 2008 that the team would wear any color pants besides grey, when they wore purple pants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Baylor\nBaylor's defense proved formidable and produced two turnovers, while their offense completed a balanced run game. Baylor remained undefeated with the 31-12 win over Kansas State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, TCU\nBoth Texas Christian and Kansas State entered the game having a week off from the regular season schedule. TCU featured quarterback Alex Delton, a former player for Kansas State who transferred to TCU during the off-season. But when the game time came around, Delton only completed two passes for a total of six yards and the bulk of the passing was completed by freshman Max Duggan, who put up 29 passes with 16 completions for a total of 132 yards passing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, TCU\nKansas State gained an early 7-0 lead and never trailed the rest of the way. TCU head coach Gary Patterson said, \u201cI think you have an 80 percent chance of getting beat if you have a punt blocked.\u201d Kansas State did block a punt in this game, as did Iowa State in the previous game for TCU that they also lost. The final score of the game was Kansas State 24, Texas Christian 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Oklahoma\nOklahoma traveled to Manhattan expecting a relatively easy road win but instead were pushed to what experts expected to be a critical loss for the Sooners in their hunt for the national title. The loss ended what was at the time the nation's longest road win streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Oklahoma\nOklahoma's cornerback Parnell Motley was ejected from the game for unsportsmanlike conduct after kicking a Kansas State player. Kansas State's Eric Gallon forced a key fumble on a kick return but in process suffered a severe knee injury and he missed the rest of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Oklahoma\nOklahoma worked toward a fourth-quarter comeback, calling and recovering an onside kick with 1:43 left in the fourth quarter while down by seven points. After the initial call of a recovery by Oklahoma's Trejan Bridges, officials ruled that a player for Oklahoma had touched the ball before the kick went 10 yards and awarded possession to Kansas State. Officials for the conference later reviewed the call and supported the decision. Kansas State then ran out the clock for the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Oklahoma\nK-State's Skylar Thompson threw for 213 yards and ran for four touchdowns. Oklahoma fell four spots to #9 and Kansas State rose seven spots to #26 in the USA TODAY Sports Re-Rank 1-130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, at Kansas\nBoth Kansas and Kansas State came in to the 2019 Sunflower Showdown coming off wins: Kansas State defeating Oklahoma and Kansas defeating Texas Tech. Both teams come in after solid growth and improvement through the season and enter the game excited for their rivalry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, at Kansas\nKansas State scored a touchdown on its first possession and held the lead for the remainder of the game. Kansas State's offensive line was praised for their control of the line of scrimmage to help the Wildcats rush for 342 yards and five touchdowns. On Defense, Kansas State held their rival Jayhawks to just 10 points. Defensively, Kansas State also completed two interceptions and sacked Kansas quarterback Carter Stanley four times. Stanley's passing production was 13-for-23 with 123 yards, significantly less than the over 400 yards against Texas Tech and over 300 yards he accomplished against the Texas Longhorns in recent play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, at Kansas\nThe Kansas Jayhawks entered the game with high hopes and expectations--\"convinced\" that they would win largely based on performance in their previous two games. However, the Jayhawks only managed a field goal in the first quarter and did not score again until they managed a touchdown in the fourth quarter. That touchdown was the final score of the game: Kansas State 38; Kansas 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, at Kansas\nAfter the win and becoming bowl eligible, ESPN analysts Kyle Bonagura and Mark Schlabach both projected that Kansas State will play Notre Dame in the Camping World Bowl on December 28 in Orlando, Florida as a part of their Week 10 predictions Chris Low of ESPN commented that Kansas State is \"going to be a tough out for anybody it faces the rest of the way\" and that \"the Wildcats are as fundamentally sound as it gets when it comes to running the ball and stopping the run.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0024-0001", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, at Kansas\nLow further stated that Kansas State has a great chance to win nine or more games for the season. Kansas State's projected bowl opponents Notre Dame (ranked #15 after this week) \"did not exactly play an inspired game in a come-from-behind win over Virginia Tech\" according to ESPN Analyst Andrea Adelson. However, Notre Dame is projected for a ten-win season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, at Texas\nIn the days leading up to the Kansas State-Texas game, the College Football Playoff committee ranked Kansas State at #16 in the first playoff ranking of the season. This was measurably higher than the #20 in the AP Poll and #22 in the USA Today Poll. On that same day, Texas football quarterback Sam Ehlinger was named a semifinalist for the 2019 Wuerffel Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, at Texas\nThe game started with Kansas State taking a 14-point lead in the first quarter and allowed Texas to score a touchdown, making it 14-7 at halftime. Texas took the lead in the third quarter with ten more points to put it at 14-17. Each team added 10 more points in the fourth quarter to make the final score a Texas win 27-24, punctuated with a 26-yard game-winning field goal by the Longhorn's Cameron Dicker just as the clock ran out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, West Virginia\nWest Virginia's Jarret Doege started at quarterback and threw for 234 yards and three touchdowns. This was the first start at West Virginia for Doege who transferred from Bowling Green, as Austin Kendall had been the starting quarterback all season for the Mountaineers. Doege's biggest throw was a 50-yard touchdown pass on third-and-22 in the fourth quarter to take the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, West Virginia\nKansas State started strong, holding West Virginia to \"three-and-out\" and then Skylar Thompson threw a 68-yard touchdown pass on their first play from scrimmage. Thompson ended up 24 of 39 for 299 yards passing with a touchdown but also gave up two interceptions. On the ground, the Wildcats ran the ball 32 times but averaged only 3.2 yards per attempt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, West Virginia\nWest Virginia cornerback Hakeem Bailey intercepted Skylar Thompson's pass toward the end zone in the closing seconds of the game. The Mountaineers left Manhattan with a 24-20 upset of the Wildcats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, at Texas Tech\nKansas State traveled to Lubbock to play Texas Tech for the 2019 meeting of the two schools. Texas Tech held Kansas State to just six points in the first half, but were unable to continue the success in the second half. Kansas State managed to force several interceptions\u2014something no other team has done for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, at Texas Tech\nIn the third quarter, Kansas State's Joshua Youngblood returned a kickoff 100 yards for a touchdown. After the game, Youngblood credited key blocks from his teammates for the success of the play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, at Texas Tech\nTexas Tech attempted two fake punts and were successful in one of those, but it did not result in a scoring drive. The successful fake occurred in the fourth quarter with Kansas State ahead by 10. Tech was on its own 42 yard line on fourth down with six to gain. The Tech punter Austin McNamara completed a pass to Ezukanma for 34 yards, taking it all the way to Kansas State's 10 yard line. The very next play, Texas Tech was intercepted in the end zone by Kansas State's Denzel Goolsby to stop the drive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, at Texas Tech\nWith one regular season game left to play, Kansas State's Chris Klieman tied the school record for the most wins by a first-year Kansas State head football coach. The Red Raiders were eliminated from bowl contention with the loss. The final score was close: Texas Tech 27, Kansas State 30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Iowa State\nGame conditions were cold and windy for the 2019 edition of \"Farmageddon\". Iowa State entered the game as the least-penalized team in the Big 12 Conference, but were charged with 8 penalties to Kansas State's 2 when the two programs met in Manhattan. The Cyclones also struggled on third down, only converting 1 attempt of 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Iowa State\nKansas State's Joshua Youngblood returned a kick for a touchdown on the first play of the game. That placed him at the top of the NCAA for three touchdown returns in the season this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Iowa State\nDuring the third quarter, each team managed a field goal but not much more happened offensively. In the fourth quarter, Kansas State was able to pull ahead 24-17 after an eight-play rushing drive ended in a touchdown with 10:24 left in the game. After that, Iowa State punter Joe Rivera kicked just 17 yards on fourth down, which Kansas State was able to turn in to a field goal and put the score out of reach of the Cyclones. The final score was Kansas State 27, Iowa State 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Navy\nKansas State and Navy both accepted invitations to the Liberty Bowl, which became the first meeting for the two teams. Kansas State improved its regular season record from 5-7 last year to 8-4 and the Navy Midshipmen improved from 3-10 last season to 9-2 this year with one more regular season game to play--Army-Navy Game. Navy's only losses are to No. 14 Notre Dame and No. 15 Memphis. Navy averages 360.82 yards rushing per game \u2013 49 more than any other Football Bowl Subdivision team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Navy\nAfter the bowl selection announcement, Navy defeated Army in the 2019 Army\u2013Navy Game by a score of 31-7. This advanced Navy's record for the season to 10 wins and 2 losses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290334-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Navy\nKansas State allowed Navy to accumulate 421 yards of offense and only produced 170 yards, a season-low for the Wildcats. Phillip Brooks managed a 64-yard put return for a touchdown. With less than 30 seconds remaining and the score tied, Navy ran a halfback pass play that resulted in Midshipmen's Chance Warren to run for a 41-yard gain to set up a field goal a few seconds later and win for Navy. The final score was Navy 20, Kansas State 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290335-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Karbala bombing\nOn 20 September 2019, a bomb exploded on a minibus near Karbala, Iraq, killing 12 civilians and injuring at least five others. The bombing was one of the worst attacks against civilians since the end of the War in Iraq of 2013 to 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290335-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Karbala bombing, Attack\nAn unidentified man boarded a minibus in the southern Iraqi city of Karbala, disembarking a little later leaving a bag behind. It exploded shortly afterwards, killing 12 and wounding five others. A suspect was later arrested and the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant claimed responsibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290336-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Karlsruhe Open\nThe 2019 Karlsruhe Open (also known as the Liqui Moly Open Karlsruhe for sponsorship reasons) was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 1st edition of the tournament and part of the 2019 WTA 125K series, offering a total of $125,000 in prize money. It took place in Karlsruhe, Germany between 29 July and 4 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290336-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Karlsruhe Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received a wildcard into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290336-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Karlsruhe Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the main draw as a lucky loser:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290336-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Karlsruhe Open, Doubles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pair received a wildcard into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 53], "content_span": [54, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290337-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Karlsruhe Open \u2013 Doubles\nLara Arruabarrena and Renata Vor\u00e1\u010dov\u00e1 won the title, defeating Han Xinyun and Yuan Yue in the final, 6\u20137(2\u20137), 6\u20134, [10\u20134].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290338-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Karlsruhe Open \u2013 Singles\nPatricia Maria \u021aig won the title, defeating Alison Van Uytvanck in the final, 3\u20136, 6\u20131, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290339-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Karnataka Legislative Assembly by-elections\nBy-elections to fifteen state assembly constituencies were held in Karnataka on 5 December 2019, and results were announced on 9 December. BJP, the ruling party, needed to win 6 out of the 15 seats to maintain its majority. It won 12 out of 15 seats. Congress won two, JD(S) failed to open its account, and one seat was won by a rebel BJP leader who contested as an independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290339-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Karnataka Legislative Assembly by-elections, Election schedule, Scheduled\nBy-elections to fifteen state assembly constituencies were originally to be held on 21 October 2019 together with Haryana and Maharashtra Assembly elections. The counting of votes was to be on 24 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 78], "content_span": [79, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290339-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Karnataka Legislative Assembly by-elections, Election schedule, Rescheduled\nThe Election Commission on 27 September rescheduled the by-elections to 15 Karnataka assembly constituencies to 5 December and will declare the results no later than 11 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 80], "content_span": [81, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290339-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Karnataka Legislative Assembly by-elections, Results, Gains by BJP\nThe bypolls were necessitated because 15 MLAs, from Congress and Janata Dal (S), resigned to bring down Kumaraswamy's coalition government. BJP won 12 out of 15 seats. But 3 seats escaped its grasp. Roshan Beg from Shivajinagar had resigned. But BJP did not allow Roshan Baig to join them, and he did not contest the bypoll. Congress retained the seat. From Hoskote, MTB Nagaraj resigned his seat and joined BJP who nominated him from his former seat. But a BJP rebel challenged him, and the rebel won. From Hunsur (Hunasuru), Adagur Vishwanath had won on JD(S) ticket, defeating Manjunath of Congress. He resigned, and contested as BJP candidate this time. But this time Manjunath managed to win the seat for Congress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 71], "content_span": [72, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290340-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Karnataka floods\nOn 1 August 2019, first week, due to heavy rainfall in the Monsoon season, severe flood affected the southern Indian State of Karnataka. As a security measure in the prevailing situation of heavy rains, India Meteorological Department issued Red alert to several regions of coastal and malnad regions of Karnataka state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290340-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Karnataka floods\nThousands of people were evacuated to safer places and relief camps. A total of 61 people have been killed and seven lakh have been displaced. As of 14 August 2019, Over 6.97 lakh people were evacuated. Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa had announced a compensation of \u20b95 lakh for the family members of those who died in the floods.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290340-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Karnataka floods, Causes\nDue to the heavy water discharge from the reservoir, the North Karnataka districts of Belagavi, Bijapur, Raichur, Kalburgi, Yadgir and Uttara Kannada were severely affected by the flood discharge. On 8 August, Karnataka received nearly five times the rainfall it normally used to have, adding to the severity of the ongoing floods in 12 districts that had killed 20 people by 9 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290340-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Karnataka floods, Causes\nExcess rainfall is the main possible factor that caused or intensified floods. According to government officials report any particular region can manage rainfall only up to a point, based on its land use and soil holding. Once that is reached, it floods.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290340-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Karnataka floods, Effects\nAs of 14 August 2019, 61 people had been killed and 15 people were missing due to flood-related incidents across 22 districts of the state as per the data released by Karnataka State Natural Disaster Monitoring Centre (KSNDMC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290340-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Karnataka floods, Effects\nMore than 40,000 houses were damaged in Karnataka floods and more than 2,000 villages were affected. North, coastal and Malanad districts were worst affected. Other affected districts include Bagalkot, Vijayapura, Raichur, Yadgiri, Uttara Kannada, Dakshina Kannada, Shivamogga, Kodagu and Chikkamagaluru.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290340-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Karnataka floods, Effects\nLandslides occurred in many places in Chikkamagaluru, Kodagu, Dakshina Kannada and Uttara Kannada districts due to heavy rains. Connectivity on 137 major roads (National Highway, State Highway and Major district roads) has been disrupted due to floods and landslides.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290340-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Karnataka floods, Effects\nThere was extensive damage to critical infrastructure such as roads, pipelines, tanks, schools, and electrical infrastructure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290340-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Karnataka floods, Damage assessment\nDamages due to Karnataka flood, data released by Karnataka Chief Minister's Office", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290340-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Karnataka floods, Rescues\nKarnataka State Disaster Management Authority, Karnataka police along with the Indian Air Force, civilians, volunteers, fishermen from coastal Karnataka were actively taking part in the rescue operations in flood-affected regions. A joint rescue team consisting of Fire and Emergency, State Disaster Response Fund, National Disaster Response Force and Indian Army evacuated 6.73 lakh people as of 14 August 2019. Nobel officers are tasked to camp in vulnerable villages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290340-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Karnataka floods, Response\nAccording to the Ministry of Home Affairs, Disaster Management Division, from 1 to 14 August, Karnataka received 658 mm of rainfall and because of this many people lost their lives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290340-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Karnataka floods, Relief and monetary aid\nOn 4 October 2019, Central Government had released an amount of 1200 Crores as Karnataka flood relief funds on the request of CM Yediyurappa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290341-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Karnataka political crisis\nIn July 2019, several government members of the Karnataka Legislative Assembly in India submitted their resignations to the speaker, which led to the fall of the then United Progressive Alliance government in Karnataka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290341-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Karnataka political crisis, Background\nIn the 2018 elections to the Karnataka Legislative Assembly, the BJP won the most seats\u2014104, but the Congress Party (INC) and Janata Dal (Secular) formed a coalition government with 120 out of 224 seats. In the 2019 general election, the BJP-led NDA won 26 out of 28 seats in Karnataka while the INC-led UPA won two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290341-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Karnataka political crisis, Resignations\nOn 1 July, two members, Ramesh Jarkiholi and Anand Singh of the INC, submitted their resignations. Over the next few days, 10 Congress and 3 JD(S) MLAs resigned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290341-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Karnataka political crisis, Resignations\nThe reaction of the coalition government was to attempt to convince the MLAs who had submitted their resignations to rescind them. Many of the MLAs fled to Mumbai, and directed the police not to permit Congress leaders to meet them. The government also attempted to induce the MLAs to return by offering them cabinet posts; all 21 Congress ministers resigned on 8 July to ensure that a sufficient number of ministerial berths were available. It also requested that the speaker should disqualify those who had resigned under anti-defection legislation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290341-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Karnataka political crisis, Resignations\nThe speaker, K.R. Ramesh Kumar, did not immediately accept the resignations, on the grounds that he was constitutionally obliged to scrutinize them. Consequently, some of those who had submitted their resignations approached the Supreme Court, which on 12 July agreed to hear the case on 16 July, whilst ordering the speaker not to disqualify any lawmakers or take any other action in this connection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290341-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Karnataka political crisis, Resignations\nAt the 16 July hearing, Mukul Rohatgi, counsel for the MLAs who had submitted their resignations, said that the speaker should be ordered to rule immediately on the resignations. Rohatgi argued that disqualification was a \"mini-trial\", and so a decision on the resignations should take priority over one on disqualification. Rajeev Dhavan, who appeared for the Chief Minister of Karnataka, argued that the MLAs never met the speaker, and so the speaker should rule on their disqualifications first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290341-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Karnataka political crisis, Resignations\nRanjan Gogoi, the Chief Justice, said that the court would have to balance two competing claims: first, the excuse of resignation could not be used to circumvent anti-defection measures; but, second, claims of defection should not be used to prevent resignation. He also said that the court would have to consider the extent to which it is permitted to issue directions to holders of other constitutional posts, such as that of the speaker of the assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290341-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Karnataka political crisis, Resignations, Members responsible for the Crisis\n14 INC and 3 JD(S) MLAs were responsible for the political crisis. 1 KPJP MLA also left the coalition government. After some days, one of the legislator from INC, Ramalinga Reddy, withdrew his resignation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290341-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Karnataka political crisis, Reaction and conclusion\nCongress members in the Rajya Sabha forced adjournments twice in protest, alleging bribery on the part of the BJP. The BJP demanded that the government should resign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290341-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Karnataka political crisis, Reaction and conclusion\nEventually the Congress-JD(S) coalition was reduced to 101 seats, whilst the BJP retained 105. After 3 weeks of turmoil, HD Kumarasamy lost a trust vote and resigned. On 26 July 2019, B.S. Yediyurappa was sworn in as Chief Minister of Karnataka once again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290342-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kashima Antlers season\nThe 2019 Kashima Antlers season involved the team competing in the J1 League, they finished 3rd in the 2018 J1 League. They also competed in the J.League Cup, Emperor's Cup, and AFC Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290342-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00290343-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kashmir earthquake\nThe 2019 Kashmir earthquake struck regions of Pakistan with an epicentre in Azad Kashmir on 24 September at 16:02 local time (11:02 UTC). It had a magnitude of 5.6 Mw and a maximum felt intensity of VII (very strong) on the Modified Mercalli scale. There was severe damage in Mirpur District, causing the deaths of 40 people and injuring a further 850. The epicentre of the shallow quake was near the city of Mirpur, Pakistan. The tremors were felt in the Kashmir region, Punjab (Pakistan), Punjab (India), Uttarakhand and northern parts of India including New Delhi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290343-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kashmir earthquake, Tectonic setting\nKashmir lies at the southern margin of the broad zone of continental collision between the Eurasian and Indian Plates. The rate of convergence between these plates near this location is 38\u00a0mm per year. The main structures involved in accommodating this convergence are large thrust faults, such as the Main Central Thrust and the Main Frontal Thrust. Within the frontal thrust zone, there are many individual thrust faults. Many damaging earthquakes have resulted from movement on such thrust faults, such as the 2005 Kashmir earthquake which caused the deaths of around 87,000 people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290343-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kashmir earthquake, Damage\nThe earthquake caused severe damage to 135 houses in Mirpur District, with a further 319 being partially damaged, most in Mirpur and just four in Bhimber District. Two bridges were reported damaged and parts of several roads were affected, particularly 14\u00a0km of the Main Jatlan Road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290343-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kashmir earthquake, Damage\nAccording to the chairman of Pakistan's National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA), \"In Mirpur, besides the city, a small town Jatlan, and two small villages Manda and Afzalpur\" were among the worst-hit areas. According to him, the main road which runs alongside a river from Mangla to Jatla suffered major damage. According to the officials, the Mangla Dam, Pakistan's major water reservoir, was spared. However, the dam's power house was closed, which resulted in a loss of 900 megawatts to Pakistan's national power grid. At 7:20 pm, power generation at Mangla was resumed, restoring 700 MW to the national grid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290343-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kashmir earthquake, Damage\nAccording to a media report, cracks and fissures had appeared in the Upper Jhelum canal. Flood water had managed to enter the Chak Nigah village in Jatlan town. The canal was subsequently shut as a precautionary measure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290343-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kashmir earthquake, Casualties\nForty people have died and more than 850 injured as per the reports published on 26 September. Of those who died, thirty-three were in Mirpur District, four in Bhimber District, and one more in Jhelum District. Reuters reported, citing architects, that the large number of casualties were due to shoddy building construction methods and weak construction standards in Pakistan. Sardar Gulfaraz Khan, the deputy inspector general of police for Mirpur district, stated that a large number of deaths were caused due to the collapse of old houses in the villages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290343-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Kashmir earthquake, Response\nThe Prime Minister of Azad Jammu and Kashmir, Farooq Haider Khan, cut short a visit to Lahore and went back to his native region immediately after the reports of the damage emerged. NDMA vehicles laden with 200 tents, 800 blankets, 200 kitchen sets and 100 medical kits were dispatched to affected areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290343-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Kashmir earthquake, Aftershocks\nOn 26 September at 12:30, two days after the major earthquake, another earthquake struck Mirpur, which led to a further 67 people being injured and one death reported. It was of magnitude 4.7 and centered at Thothal Mirpur at the depth of 10 kilometres (6.2\u00a0mi).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290344-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kaski\u20132 by-election\nA by-election was held in Kaski\u20132 constituency of Nepal on 30 November 2019, following the death of incumbent Rabindra Prasad Adhikari in a helicopter crash. Adhikari was a 3-term Member of Parliament from Kaski. He was the Minister of Culture, Tourism and Civil Aviation at the time of his death. The by-election was won by Bidya Bhattarai, his widow, with 54.27% of the vote. She defeated her nearest rival, Khem Raj Paudel of Nepali Congress, by 8,403 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290344-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kaski\u20132 by-election, Candidates\nA total of 21 candidates took part in the election. Nepal Communist Party (NCP) selected Bidya Bhattarai, widow of Rabindra Prasad Adhikari, as their candidate. Her primary opponent was Khem Raj Paudel of Nepali Congress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290345-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kassym-Jomart Tokayev presidential campaign\nActing President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev became the presidential nominee for the ruling Nur Otan on 23 April 2019. He received backing from his predecessor and the party's chairman Nursultan Nazarbayev, calling him the \"worthiest candidate.\" On 3 May 2019, Tokayev was officially registered by the Central Election Commission and from evening 11 May, he launched his election campaign where all the platforms were announced on the website with the slogan \"\u0418\u0433\u0456\u043b\u0456\u043a \u0431\u0430\u0440\u0448\u0430\u0493\u0430\" (Wellbeing for all).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290345-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kassym-Jomart Tokayev presidential campaign, Programs, Platforms\nOn 11 May 2019, Tokayev's campaign unveiled platforms in the official website where were divided into three sections as it follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290345-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kassym-Jomart Tokayev presidential campaign, Programs, Foreign policy\nAs a politician, Tokayev had wide experience in foreign affairs by serving as Foreign Minister, State Secretary and the Director-General of the United Nations Office at Geneva. He announced the intention in firmly promote and defend national interests in the world arena as well as strengthen relations with every country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 74], "content_span": [75, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290345-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kassym-Jomart Tokayev presidential campaign, Programs, Foreign policy\nHe also expressed strong support for Russia, calling it a \"strategic ally\" where he vowed to maintain relations as Nursultan Nazarbayev did.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 74], "content_span": [75, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290345-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kassym-Jomart Tokayev presidential campaign, Programs, Economic policy\nTokayev promised for sustainable economic growth rates for Kazakhstan's to reach into the 30 most developed countries. He also supported the taxation system to be simplified through the optimization and unification of taxes. The level of the shadow economy is planned to be reduced to the level of the OECD countries - 15-17%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 75], "content_span": [76, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290345-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kassym-Jomart Tokayev presidential campaign, Campaign\nTokayev visited several regions and cities in his campaign. A well-known businessman and MP of the regional m\u00e4slihat from the East Kazakhstan Region Erzhan Nurbaev urged residents of the Altai District to support the candidacy of Tokayev's in the upcoming presidential elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290345-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Kassym-Jomart Tokayev presidential campaign, Campaign\nTokayev was mocked on social media for the overuse of modification of his official photos, erasing his wrinkles and double chin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290346-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kate Sheppard Cup\nThe 2019 Kate Sheppard Cup is New Zealand's women's 25th annual knockout football competition. This is the second year that the competition is known by the Kate Sheppard Cup, or New Zealand Football Foundation Kate Sheppard Cup for sponsorship purposes, after previously been known as the Women's Knockout Cup since its establishment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290346-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kate Sheppard Cup\nThe 2019 competition has three rounds before quarter-finals, semi-finals, and a final. Competition will run in three regions (northern, central/capital, southern) until the quarter-finals, from which stage the draw will be open. In all, 40 teams entered the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290346-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kate Sheppard Cup, The 2019 final\nThe 2019 final saw Eastern Suburbs win their first Kate Sheppard Cup as well as completing a league-cup double after earlier winning the Northern Region Football League's premier women's division. The final was played at North Harbour Stadium before the men's Chatham Cup final. This was Eastern Suburbs's third finals appearance, having lost twice previously in 2005 and 2017. It was also Coastal Spirit third appearance however while they lost in their first appearance in 2011, they had won the cup before in 2013 in a final that was played at home in Christchurch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290346-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kate Sheppard Cup, The 2019 final\nAn early goal to Suburbs inside the first five minutes to Hannah Pilley was quickly followed up by Tayla O'Brien in the ninth. Pilley got her second in the 25th minute and by that stage Suburbs was controlling the game. O'Brien got her second in the 35th minute which saw Suburbs go into the half up four nil. Suburbs controlled the second half and while they had a few more chances they also kept Coastal scoreless, leaving the final score the half time score. Tayla O\u2019Brien was jointly awarded the Maia Jackman trophy for the most valuable player with Suburbs fullback Erinna Wong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290346-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kate Sheppard Cup, Results, Round 1\nAll matches were played on the weekend of 11\u201312 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290346-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kate Sheppard Cup, Results, Round 2\nAll matches were played on Queen's Birthday weekend 31 May - 3 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290346-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Kate Sheppard Cup, Results, Round 3\nAll matches were played on the weekend 15\u201316 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290346-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Kate Sheppard Cup, Results, Quarter-finals\nAll matches were played on the weekend 6\u20137 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290347-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kategoria e Tret\u00eb\nThe 2019 Kategoria e Tret\u00eb was the 16th official season of the Albanian football fourth division since its establishment. The season began on 22 February 2019. There were 6 teams competing this season. Selenica and Mirdita gained promotion to the 2019\u201320 Kategoria e Dyt\u00eb. Selenica won their first Kategoria e Tret\u00eb title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290348-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Katsina State gubernatorial election\nThe 2019 Katsina State gubernatorial election occurred in Nigeria on March 9, 2019. Incumbent APC Governor Aminu Bello Masari won re-election for a second term, defeating PDP Garba Yakubu Lado and 16 other party candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290348-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Katsina State gubernatorial election\nAminu Bello Masari emerged APC gubernatorial candidate after scoring 5,562 votes and defeating his closest rival, Abubakar Isa, who received 8 votes. He picked Mannir Yakubu as his running mate. Garba Yakubu Lado was the PDP candidate with Salisu Yusuf Majigiri as his running mate. 18 candidates contested in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290348-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Katsina State gubernatorial election, Electoral system\nThe Governor of Katsina State is elected using the plurality voting system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 59], "content_span": [60, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290348-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Katsina State gubernatorial election, Primary election, APC primary\nThe APC primary election was held on September 30, 2018. Aminu Bello Masari won the primary election polling 5,562 votes against 2 other candidates. His closest rival was Abubakar Isa, an accomplished businessman who came second with 8 votes, while Garba Dankani came third with 1 vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 72], "content_span": [73, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290348-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Katsina State gubernatorial election, Primary election, PDP primary\nThe PDP primary election was held on September 30, 2018. Garba Yakubu Lado won the primary election polling 3,385 votes against 5 other candidates. His closest rival was Ahmad Yar\u2019adua who came second with 243 votes, Abdullahi Faskari, the state's former deputy governor and Musa Nashuni, a former PDP gubernatorial candidate in 2015 had only one vote each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 72], "content_span": [73, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290348-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Katsina State gubernatorial election, Results\nA total number of 18 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-00290348-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Katsina State gubernatorial election, Results\nThe total number of registered voters in the state was 3,230,230, while 1,173,780 voters were accredited. Total number of votes cast was 1,720,638, while number of valid votes was 1,683,045. Rejected votes were 37,593.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290348-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Katsina State gubernatorial election, Results, By local government area\nHere are the results of the election by local government area for the two major parties. The total valid votes of 1,683,045 represents the 18 political parties that participated in the election. Blue represents LGAs won by Aminu Bello Masari Green represents LGAs won by Garba Yakubu Lado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 76], "content_span": [77, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290349-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Katusha\u2013Alpecin season\nThe 2019 season for Team Katusha\u2013Alpecin will begin in January at the Tour Down Under. As a UCI WorldTeam, they will be 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, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290349-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Katusha\u2013Alpecin season, Team roster\nOn 9 May 2019 Marcel Kittel terminated relationship with the club on his own request.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290349-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Katusha\u2013Alpecin season, Team roster\nRiders who left the team during or after the 2018 season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290350-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kawasaki Frontale season\nThe 2019 Kawasaki Frontale season was their 15th consecutive season in J1 League. They were the defending champions after finishing top of 2018 J1 League. They also competed in the Emperor's Cup, J.League Cup, Japanese Super Cup and AFC Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290350-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kawasaki Frontale season, Squad\nAs of 14 January 2019. 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, 36], "content_span": [37, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election\nSnap presidential elections were held in Kazakhstan on 9 June 2019 to elect the President of Kazakhstan following the resignation of long-term President Nursultan Nazarbayev in March 2019. This was the sixth presidential election held since Kazakhstan's independence and the third one in the row to be held on an earlier date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0000-0001", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election\nWith the lowest turnout of 77.5% since 2005, acting president Kassym-Jomart Tokayev of Nur Otan won a majority of 71% of the vote, the least amount ever garnered for an incumbent president in Kazakhstan's history which followed by his closest challenger Amirjan Qosanov of the Ult Tagdyry association, whom received 16%, the highest ever for a non-incumbent candidate since 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election\nScheduled for April 2020 of which President Nursultan Nazarbayev's fifth term was set to expire, the snap elections came to being shortly after acting president Kassym-Jomart Tokayev assumed office in result of Nazarbayev's resignation amidst the anti-government protests. Tokayev on 9 April announced early presidential elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election\nNominations took place following the announcement of elections. From there, nine candidates expressed their interests to participate in the race, of which seven managed to become registered, making it the most amount of presidential contests in Kazakhstan's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election\nAmongst the nominees from political parties and public associations were acting president Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, whom became a candidate for the ruling Nur Otan after endorsement from his predecessor Nazarbayev, Jambyl Ahmetbekov from the Communist People's Party, Toleutai Raqymbekov from the Auyl People's Democratic Patriotic Party, Amangeldi Taspihov from the Federation of Trade Unions, Sadibek T\u00fcgel from the Uly Dala Qyrandary and Dania Espaeva from the Ak Zhol Democratic Party, the first Kazakh woman to officially participate in the elections. Amirjan Qosanov for the first time since 2005 from the Ult Tagdyry, was the only sole opposition candidate to appear in a presidential ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election\nCampaigning was focused on the issues of agriculture, environment, labour rights, social benefits, market economy, legacy of Nazarbayev's enacted policies and the current political system in which presidential candidates proposed solutions from furtherdemocratization and decommunization to the development of nation's values and agricultural industry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election\nTokayev's victory was marked as the first peaceful transition of power in Kazakhstan's history, although facing challenge from the public amidst political unrest that took place in the streets of Almaty and Nur-Sultan. According to the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), \"significant irregularities were observed on election day, including cases of ballot box stuffing, and a disregard of counting procedures meant that an honest count could not be guaranteed.\" \"There were widespread detentions of peaceful protesters on election day in major cities\", said the OSCE in their Statement of Preliminary Findings and Conclusions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election\nOn 12 June, Tokayev took the oath of office during a ceremony at the Palace of Independence in the capital, Nur-Sultan. From there, he pledged to protect the interests of every citizen and consider any proposals and initiatives that would be put forward by political and community leaders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Background, Reelection of Nazarbayev and post-economic crisis recovery\nPresident Nursultan Nazarbayev was elected for a fifth term in the 2015 Kazakh presidential election in midst of an economic crisis. From there, he pledged for economic reforms, political stability, inter-ethnic accord and social cohesion. Nevertheless, the Kazakh economy continued following the downspiral caused by 2010s oil glut and devaluation of the tenge to the point of resulting Nazarbayev calling for a snap parliamentary election in January 2016 amidst fears of another oil price crash which would've severely impacted the economy. By the end of that year, Kazakhstan's GDP reached its lowest point of $137.3 billion with a 1.1% growth rate, making it worst performance since 1998.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 105], "content_span": [106, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Background, Reelection of Nazarbayev and post-economic crisis recovery\nHowever, things took a drastic turn the following year thanks in part mainly to the increase of the price of oil and the launch of the Kashagan Field which increased the output production of petroleum. Other economic activity such as in manufacturing, agriculture, transport, and trade sectors also experienced a regrowth. By the end of 2017, the GDP growth rate In Kazakhstan amounted to 4.1% and since then has remained stable from there.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 105], "content_span": [106, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Background, Speculations of post-Nazarbayev succession\nIn September 2016, Nazarbayev reshuffled several cabinet positions and appointed his daughter Dariga Nazarbayeva to the post of Deputy Prime Minister, believed to be due to Uzbek President Islam Karimov's unexpected death who had no clear successor which led to a speculation of Nazarbayev's potential moves in having his daughter to succeed him. In a November 2016 interview to the Bloomberg News, Nazarbayev said that he had no plans in handing over his succession to his children and mentioned that any transfer of power in the country is carried out by the Constitution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 89], "content_span": [90, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Background, Speculations of post-Nazarbayev succession\nIn May 2018, the Parliament approved a bill which granted Nazarbayev the life tenure as a Chairman of the Security Council of Kazakhstan. This granted him the control of the country's policies without holding the presidential office. Chair of the Senate Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, in an interview to BBC in June 2018, expressed doubts that Nazarbayev would seek another term in the election that would've been held in 2020. This created speculation that Nazarbayev was preparing to leave the presidency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 89], "content_span": [90, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Background, Speculations of post-Nazarbayev succession\nSpeculation on Nazarbayev's early resignation rearose on 4 February 2019, when he appealed to the Constitutional Council in regards to the provision on the early termination of the president's powers. Nazarbayev clarified that that the appeal \"absolutely routine issue\", claiming that he was repeatedly asked question on the provisions and that his appeal to the Council was simply an explanatorily issue. In result, Nazarbayev urged public calm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 89], "content_span": [90, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Background, Speculations of post-Nazarbayev succession\nOn 19 March 2019, Nazarbayev announced his resignation, stating that Senate Chair Kassym-Jomart Tokayev would take over as president for the remainder of his term. However, on 9 April 2019, Tokayev announced that a snap election would be held on 9 June to avoid \"political uncertainty.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 89], "content_span": [90, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Electoral system\nThe President of Kazakhstan is elected using the two-round system; if no candidate receives a majority of the vote in the first round, a second round is held between the top two candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Electoral system\nAccording to Article 41 of the Constitution, a citizen of Kazakhstan by birth must at least 40 years old, fluent in the state language and living in Kazakhstan for the last 15 years, can be elected as President.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Candidates\nNine candidates applied to the Central Election Commission to contest the elections. A record seven were registered to run, whilst one candidate withdrew and one was disqualified for not possessing sufficient knowledge of the Kazakh language.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Candidates\nA newly adopted law in 2017 made any contesting candidate to be required to have a higher education and five years of experience in the public service or in elected public office as well as an active participations in management of the affairs of the state directly and through their representatives, apply personally, and send individual and collective appeals to state and local governments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Candidates, Registered candidates\nCandidates were required to collecting signatures of at least 1% of voters, equally representing at least 2/3 of the regions, cities of republican significance and the capital Nur-Sultan. As of 1 January 2019, 11,814,019 citizens were included by the Central Election Commission (OSK) in the voter registration, thus 118,140 signatures would be needed to be collected in support of each candidate. The registration of proxies, as well as the procedure for verifying the authenticity of signatures with the participation of passport authorities, is carried out by Territorial Election Commissions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Candidates, Registered candidates\nTo be registered as presidential candidates, the nominees will need to submit to the CEC a certificate of the state revenue authority on the submission of the income and property declaration by him/her and the spouse as of the first day of the nomination month, i.e. on 1 April 2019, as well as a medical report on the state of his/her health. The candidate registration will last until 6:00 pm May 11 of this year. The candidate registration can be canceled by the CEC in case of detection by the state revenue authorities of the unreliability of information on income and property in the submitted declarations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Candidates, Nominations\nNomination of presidential candidates were held from 10 April to 28 April 2019. According to the Article 55 of the Constitutional Act \"On elections\", only registered public associations and political parties have a given right to nominate their candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Candidates, Nominations\nThe decision on nomination is taken by a majority of votes from the total number of members of the highest body of the republican public association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0019-0001", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Candidates, Nominations\nThe compliance of a candidate with the requirements of the Constitution and the Constitutional Act \"On Elections\" is carried out by the Central Election Commission within five days from the date of submission of an extract from the protocol of the meeting of the highest body of the republican public association after nominating the candidate, together with the candidate's consent to run for presidency and a document confirming that the candidate has paid the electoral contribution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Candidates, Nominations, Uly Dala Qyrandary (UDQ)\nOn 17 April 2019, the public association Uly Dala Qyrandary nominated its co-chair and writer Sadibek T\u00fcgel for presidency. The nomination received no cover from the media and instead were a series of social media posts. T\u00fcgel pledged to promote ideas of spiritual revival and raising of Kazakh culture and focus on the importance of improvements in the socio-cultural sphere that were made possible under Nazarbayev's presidency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 84], "content_span": [85, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Candidates, Nominations, Uly Dala Qyrandary (UDQ)\nAccording to political analysts Oraz\u011fali Selteev, he described T\u00fcgel as the \"1% candidate\" (referring to how much vote share he'd get) whose a \"harmless participant, with no pretensions.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 84], "content_span": [85, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Candidates, Nominations, Nur Otan (NO)\nShortly after President Nursultan Nazarbayev's resignation, some talks arose that Nazarbayev's daughter, Dariga, who succeeded Tokayev as the Chair of the Senate, was expected to run in the election as a way to ensure her father's legacy. However, Dariga stated that she had no plans in joining the race. Other possible contender included Imangali Tasmagambetov.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 73], "content_span": [74, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Candidates, Nominations, Nur Otan (NO)\nOn 23 April 2019, the 19th Nur Otan Extraordinary Congress was held in Nur-Sultan which was attended 1,500 persons, including the 600 delegates. From there, Party Chairman Nursultan Nazarbayev proposed to nominate acting president Kassym-Jomart Tokayev for candidacy, calling him a \"well-deserved candidate\" that would follow \"politics of friendship\" and \"equal rights of Kazakh citizens\". Tokayev was unanimously chosen to be the nominee. From there, Tokayev spoke at the nomination congress, where he praised Nazarbayev and pledged to work hard for the prosperity of the nation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 73], "content_span": [74, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0023-0001", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Candidates, Nominations, Nur Otan (NO)\nThat same day, Tokayev appealed to the Constitutional Council for the clarification on the term of residence in Kazakhstan per electoral requirements during his time of work overseas as diplomat. On 25 April, the Council ruled that the 15 year period of residence also counts the periods of residence outside for Kazakhstani citizens who belong to the staff of the governmental diplomatic service.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 73], "content_span": [74, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Candidates, Nominations, Nur Otan (NO)\nImangali Tasmagambetov, Kazakh ambassador to Russia (2017\u20132019), Deputy Prime Minister of Kazakhstan (2016\u20132017, 2000\u20132002, 1995\u20131999), 5th Prime Minister of Kazakhstan (2002\u20132003)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 73], "content_span": [74, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Candidates, Nominations, Federation of Trade Unions (QRKF)\nAt the meeting of the Executive Committee of the Federation of Trade Unions of Kazakhstan (QRKF) was held at which the issue of nominating candidates for participation in the elections from the organisation was discussed. The members of the Executive Committee approved and submitted for consideration by the General Council on 23 April 2019 two candidates: former Mazhilis MP Muqtar Tinikeev and QRKF deputy chairman Amangeldi Taspihov.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 93], "content_span": [94, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Candidates, Nominations, Federation of Trade Unions (QRKF)\nThe following day on 24 April 2019, the QRKF General Council nominated Taspihov as presidential candidate after Tinikeev recused himself, due to his lack of knowledge of Kazakh per registrational requirement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 93], "content_span": [94, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Candidates, Nominations, Ak Zhol Democratic Party (AJ)\nIn regards to snap presidential elections, the Ak Zhol Democratic Party (AJ) Chairman Azat Peruashev expressed Nazarbayev's intent in letting Tokayev serving his unfinished term as \"a normal international practice\" that \"corresponds to the best models of democratic states.\" From there, he used example of U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson whom served as President after the assassination of John F. Kennedy before being elected. Nevertheless, Peruashev thanked Tokayev for his decision to hold snap elections, noting his commitment for it to be \"transparent and fair\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 89], "content_span": [90, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Candidates, Nominations, Ak Zhol Democratic Party (AJ)\nAmongst the contenders from the party, Talgat Er\u011faliev and Dania Espaeva were seen as the possible frontrunners. Peruashev refused to join the race, stating that the need for the Ak Zhol to have new faces and competition which would encourage the development of the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 89], "content_span": [90, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Candidates, Nominations, Ak Zhol Democratic Party (AJ)\nAt the 15th Extraordinary Congress on 24 April 2019, Espaeva received 49.5% of the delegate vote. A decision at the presidium was made to hold the vote without a second round which resulted in Espaeva garnering 170 votes with 15 against, thus becoming the first woman in Kazakhstan's history to be nominated for presidency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 89], "content_span": [90, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Candidates, Nominations, Ak Zhol Democratic Party (AJ)\nAzat Peruashev, Ak Zhol Democratic Party Chairman (2011\u2013present), member of the Mazhilis (2012\u2013present).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 89], "content_span": [90, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Candidates, Nominations, Ak Zhol Democratic Party (AJ)\nTalgat Er\u011faliev, member of the Mazhilis (2012\u2013present), chairman of the Union of Builders (2010\u2013present).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 89], "content_span": [90, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Candidates, Nominations, Nationwide Social Democratic Party (JSDP)\nThe Nationwide Social Democratic Party (JSDP) subsequently after Nazarbayev's resignation issued a statement which called for fair and open presidential and parliamentary elections, a national dialogue between the authorities and society on the constitutional democratization of the political system, and to ensure the security and stability during peaceful transition of power and after. On 22 April 2019, the JSDP Political Council announced that it would convene in a party congress and proposed Ermurat Bapi as a possible presidential nominee for the JSDP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 101], "content_span": [102, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Candidates, Nominations, Nationwide Social Democratic Party (JSDP)\nOn 26 April 2019, the party at the 14th Congress in Almaty announced that it would backdown and not participate in the presidential race in which according to JSDP deputy chairman Ashat Raqymjanov, due to integrity of their holding and the short time given to prepare and conduct the campaign citing large financial strain. He noted that the party would focus its attention in the next parliamentary elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 101], "content_span": [102, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Candidates, Nominations, Communist People's Party (QKHP)\nThe Communist People's Party of Kazakhstan (QKHP) announced its interest to participate in the election at the party's Politburo meeting. Parliamentary leader QKHP Aiqyn Qongyrov called Tokayev's move as a \"logical decision\", citing that \"people need stability, so that there will be a person who will run the country in the next five years.\" Qongyrov was highly seen as a possible front-runner from the QKHP. In an interview to Tengrinews.kz, Qongyrov expressed his interest to run for presidency, noting he would rule out his choice based on the party's decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 91], "content_span": [92, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Candidates, Nominations, Communist People's Party (QKHP)\nAt the 14th QKHP Extraordinary Congress, Secretary Jambyl Ahmetbekov, who previously contested in the 2011 presidential election was nominated again by the party in presidential race on 26 April 2019. Qongyrov at the congress, stated that each presidential nominee from the QKHP receives more and more support in which he used examples from the past races starting from 2005 where the party slowly went up its ranking in terms of vote place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 91], "content_span": [92, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Candidates, Nominations, Communist People's Party (QKHP)\nAiqyn Qongyrov, QKHP parliamentary leader (2018\u2013present), QKHP Secretary (2013\u20132020), member of the Mazhilis (2012\u2013present).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 91], "content_span": [92, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Candidates, Nominations, Ult Tagdyry (UT)\nAt the press conference held in Almaty, the public association Ult Tagdyry (UT) nominated Amirjan Qosanov for presidency on 26 April 2019. Despite not being part of the organisation, Qosanov called it an \"honour\" and, if elected, proposed to hold a constitutional meeting. His nomination by all UT members except for the chairman Dos Koshim who abstained the vote, but called it worth in nominating a candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 76], "content_span": [77, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Candidates, Nominations, Union of Builders (QQO)\nFailed Ak Zhol Democratic Party (AJ) nominee and head of Union of Builders of Kazakhstan (QQO) Talgat Er\u011faliev nominated himself as a presidential candidate for the QQO association and submitted his documents to the Central Election Commission (OSK) for registration on 27 April 2019. However after pressure from Ak Zhol and its chairman Azat Peruashev whom Er\u011faliev met with, it was announced on 28 April that Er\u011faliev would be withdrawing from the race and instead support Dania Espaeva's campaign which received positive remarks from Peruashev himself, calling Er\u011faliev's act as \"solid\" and \"masculine\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 83], "content_span": [84, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Candidates, Nominations, Halyq Demografiasy (HD)\nOn 26 April 2019, the Halyq Demografiasy public association nominated its head Jumatai Aliev as candidate for presidency. Aliev submitted his documents to the Central Election Commission (OSK) on 28 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 83], "content_span": [84, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Campaign, Kassym-Jomart Tokayev\nIn the start of the campaign, an official electoral programme published in Tokayev's website under the title: \"Well-being for all! Continuity. Justice. Progress.\" which consisted three sections of the platforms with total of 170 outlined tasks. In \"Succession\", it emphasized strengthening of independence, sovereignty and national security\u2013that is stability, civil peace and harmony. Tokayev called for an increase in incomes and improve the quality of life of the country's citizens. In \"Justice\", Tokayev stressed the need in creating opportunities for every citizen in order to achieve personal success and improve their well-being. In the \"Progress\", called for the creative change in society with Tokayev proclaiming progress as being \"our idea.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 819]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Campaign, Kassym-Jomart Tokayev\nHe pledged to continue his predecessor Nursultan Nazarbayev's policies in implementing the social programs, setting path for Kazakhstan's entry into the top 30 most developed countries in the world, to further implement Five Institutional Reforms\u2013Plan of the Nation programme which would bring the nation to a new level of sustainable development, strengthening domestic political stability and social cohesion and stimulating the business activity of the population as well as eliminating intolerance and extremism, strengthen domestic political stability and social harmony, develop civil society, protections of rights, freedoms and legitimate interests of citizens, guaranteed safety of every person, protection of private property, support of domestic business, ensure the security of investments, stimulate the business activity of the population, protect national interests in the political, trade, economic, cultural, humanitarian spheres and implement a balanced, constructive foreign policy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 1068]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Campaign, Kassym-Jomart Tokayev\nTokayev was mocked on social media for the overuse of modification of his official photos, which allegedly erased his wrinkles and double chin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Campaign, Amirjan Qosanov\nAmirjan Qosanov became the first opposition candidate since 2005 to contest the presidential race. He called for more political freedoms, national identity, stronger sovereignty, friendlier economy to people, development of various regions throughout the country. Qosanov brought up several environmental issues which included the drying of Aral Sea and the city of Semey which suffered the impacts of nuclear testing in Semipalatinsk during the Soviet Union. Qosanov pledged to continue the nation's multi-vector foreign policy although he expressed his support for stronger relations with European Union. He also ran on a platform in fighting against corruption, reducing the powers of the president, allowing direct elections of \u00e4k\u0131ms (local heads), making Kazakh economy less dependent on raw resources, and prohibiting the construction of nuclear power plants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 926]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Campaign, Amirjan Qosanov\nQosanov was the only candidate to criticised the government. In spire of that, he received backlash and accusations amongst other opposition groups for allegedly collaborating with the authorities such as having campaign staff with record of having pro-government views and to some extend being supporters of it in which Qosanov dismissed these claims as being \"rumours\". It was viewed that Qosanov wouldn't win the election and instead was being used to legitimise it whilst the opposition called for boycott rather than to support Qosanov in the polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Campaign, Dania Espaeva\nAk Zhol presidential nominee Dania Espaeva outlined three challenges for her campaign: a market economy, democracy and social justice. Espaeva ran a pro-business platform. Proclaiming herself as \"a firm supporter of small and medium-sized businesses\", she promoted competition and entrepreneurship and called for a reduction in banking interest rates, end in de-offshorisation and tax rates for important industries such as in mechanical engineering as well as creation of new industries in rural areas. In regards to corruption and low public trust in judicial system, Espaeva obliged to protect citizens from extortion of businesses by the authorities whom she called for them to be held accountable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Campaign, Dania Espaeva\nEspaeva emphasised Kazakhstan\u2019s independence as a key value, telling that \"our people, our land and its wealth that we inherited from our ancestors, our state language and the unity of our multinational society.\" She supported decolonising the public through renaming objects, streets and settlements, required exams on knowledge of the Constitution of Kazakhstan, history and state language for granting Kazakh citizenship, supporting Kazakhstan\u2019s traditional religions and protecting society\u2019s spiritual sphere from foreign influence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Campaign, Dania Espaeva\nThroughout the campaign, Espaeva was compared to Margaret Thatcher in social media due to her speeches and proposed policies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0048-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Campaign, Toleutai Raqymbekov\nToleutai Raqymbekov, presidential nominee for the agrarian Auyl People's Democratic Patriotic Party, campaigned on two issues: agriculture and tradition. He stressed the issue in Kazakhstan's society where young people are forced to leave villages and move into the cities, creating an unequal composition of the country's population between rural and urban areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0048-0001", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Campaign, Toleutai Raqymbekov\nIn order to solve this, Raqymbekov proposed to minimise the inequality between urban and rural population by developing rural infrastructure and implementing improvement measures for living standards in village residents by teaching them practical skills to organise their own businesses with a provided access to \"long and cheap money\", optimising social assistance, improving medical services and determining the main rural development trends and needs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0049-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Campaign, Toleutai Raqymbekov\nRaqymbekov mostly campaigned for rural issues and proposed solution in improving agricultural economy by which would help Kazakhstan to compete worldwide with its important exports and noting it would create more jobs in the villages by attracting young specialists and prevent the fleeing into urban cities. He also stated that a modernised Kazakhstan wouldn't be possible taking into account the history and culture of the people, understanding the origins of ethnic development, and its primary spiritual and moral values of culture.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0050-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Campaign, Amangeldi Taspihov\nAmangeldi Taspihov's election platform included five main directives of which were: creating business reforms, ensured safe workplaces, increased workers\u2019 rights, establish higher salaries and the fifth is to re-examine regulations concerning migrant labour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0051-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Campaign, Amangeldi Taspihov\nTaspihov sought to earn support from middle class by campaigning for safe working conditions, labour rights protections and decent living wages for people earning average. He also called for regulation in the job market by having any foreign worker's job whose visa stay has expired by replace by Kazakhstani citizen as well as improvements in education system to train new specialists to work without needing migrant workers. Taspihov took Auyl nominee Toleutai Raqymbekov's similar stance in creating more jobs in rural areas to prevent the outflow of the population. He proposed to develop a Safe Labour state programme that would force employers to create safe workplaces and in turn, they would receive tax benefits and subsidies for infrastructure and that any employer caught violating the code, would be faced with criminal charges.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 904]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0052-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Campaign, Jambyl Ahmetbekov\nCommunist People's Party of Kazakhstan (QKHP) nominee Jambyl Ahmetbekov's main platforms were on labour and political rights. Ahmetbekov campaigned through populist approach by calling prosecution of oligarchs living abroad, mainly referring to exiled Kazakh businessman Mukhtar Ablyazov whom he accused of stealing government's budget that's used to fund social services. He expressed his support for free education, healthcare, pension payments, and a guaranteed right for work, rest and housing and noted that attention would be paid towards spiritual sphere, science, culture and morality. Ahmetbekov also called for higher taxes on the rich and an end to poverty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0053-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Campaign, Jambyl Ahmetbekov\nAhmetbekov criticised westernization, claiming it brought harm to Kazakhstan's society such as pornography and gambling addiction. In combating the situation, Ahmetbekov proposed for Kazakhstan's own version of Facebook in which certain deemed \"harming content\" would be regulated in spite of his earlier oblige to support freedom of speech, democratic organisations and movements and opposition media in his electoral programme.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0054-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Campaign, Sadibek T\u00fcgel\nSadibek T\u00fcgel based his campaign on conservatism and nationalism where talked about the preservation of nation's values and traditions by rejecting western culture. He proposed in implementing a ban on night clubs and marriage to foreigners. T\u00fcgel discussed the issues of Kazakhstan's demographics which he obliged for young people aged under 25 to start families.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0055-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Campaign, Sadibek T\u00fcgel\nIn political issues, T\u00fcgel\u2019s platform consisted of nine main points: protecting people\u2019s honour and dignity, improving the country\u2019s demographics, supporting Kazakh diaspora whom are willing to return, strengthening the role of the Kazakh language, modernisation and development of Alash Autonomy ideologies, end in corruption, fixation in unemployment, death penalty for corrupt officials, nationalisation of resources, as well as a referendum for new Constitution. T\u00fcgel positioned himself as reformer and called for democratization within the political system such as the direct elections of \u00e4k\u0131ms (local heads) in all levels, a national unicameral Parliament in which the candidates for MP's could self-nominate themselves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0056-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Campaign, Others\nDespite not nominating its candidate, the Nationwide Social Democratic Party (JSDP) called for boycott of the polls as a protest, in which the party members claimed that it is the participation of \"puppet\" candidates proposed by pro-government parties to help secure an election victory for acting president Kassym-Jomart Tokayev from the ruling Nur Otan party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0057-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Campaign, Others\nMukhtar Ablyazov, leader of the banned Democratic Choice of Kazakhstan movement, supported the initiative in boycotting the elections, calling them \"illegal\" and in response, he urged everyone to attend mass protests all over the country during the election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0058-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Campaign, Others\nOn 1 May 2019, at the International Workers' Day, dozens of Kazakhstani citizens took the streets calling for the release of political prisoners and boycott in the upcoming presidential elections. An estimated 80 persons were detained that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0059-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Campaign, Others\nAn organising committee of the People's Kurultai consisting of the Kazakh opposition was formed in the city of Kyiv in Ukraine. From there, the participants called for boycott in the polls, stating that the election is \"illegitimate\" and that according to political activist Aidos Sadyqov, the purpose of the authorities for elections is to create an \"illusion of democracy\" within the country and to show the West that there are so forms of alternative choices contrary to more dictatorial countries such as North Korea and neighboring Turkmenistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0060-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Campaign, Others\nErmek Narymbai, leader of the \u015eyndyq-Honesty movement took a different stance regarding the elections. He urged people to vote for opposition Amirjan Qosanov candidate, citing the reason as way to vote against ruling candidate Kassym-Jomart Tokayev although admitting at not being supporter of Qosanov. As for people boycotting, Narymbai called for them to observe the polls which would help them to record the number of participants in the boycott.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0061-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Debates\nOn 14 May 2019, a televised debate was announced between the candidates. It was held on 29 May and was broadcast live on the Khabar TV channel. The cost of the event amounted to 41 million tenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0062-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Debates\nFour presidential candidates: Jambyl Ahmetbekov, Amirjan Qosanov, Amangeldi Taspihov and Sadibek T\u00fcgel participated in the debates and the rest of the three candidates were represented by Azat Peruashev for Dania Espaeva, \u00c4li Bektaev for Toleutai Raqymbekov, and M\u00e4ulen \u00c4\u015fimbaev for Kassym-Jomart Tokayev. The debate was divided into three rounds. In the first round, all participants were asked about the development of the education system in Kazakhstan, in the second round about social modernisation of Kazakhstan, and in the third round, the candidates were allowed to ask questions to two other participants in the debate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0063-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Controversies, Preparations and claims of voter pressure\nAs part of the collection of signatures by candidates, violations were observed. In one of the higher educational institutions, it was proposed to sign the sheets on which the candidate's data were not indicated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 91], "content_span": [92, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0064-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Controversies, Preparations and claims of voter pressure\nIn May 2019, The Village agency published an article about receiving anonymous complains by university students in being pressured to vote. According to the statements, many of the campuses postponed the educational semesters to June in expense for students to show up at the polls, otherwise they'd face possible expulsion or systemic academic problems. The Village correspondents attempted to contact the universities for response to the issues in which only the Almaty University of Power Engineering and Telecommunications admitted that the semester postponement\u2013was in fact\u2013due to upcoming elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 91], "content_span": [92, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0065-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Controversies, Political pressure and crackdowns\nAccording to the Kazakh law, it is prohibited to conduct polls that do not meet the requirements. Such violations include conducting them on social media, which two citizens were fined for.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 83], "content_span": [84, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0066-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Controversies, Internet blockages\nOn 9 May 2019, at the Victory Day, reports of internet blockages occurred with many news website such as Radio Azattyq and Ferghana Information Agency being inaccessible to the public as well as social media sites such as Facebook, Telegram, YouTube and Instagram. This move occurred allegedly after exiled Kazakh banker and leader of the Democratic Choice of Kazakhstan called on people to protest that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0067-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Controversies, Internet blockages\nJohann Bihr, head of Reporters Without Borders' Eastern Europe and Central Asia desk criticised the incident, telling that \"There is no justification for this massive obstruction of the Kazakh public\u2019s right to information.\" He called on the Kazakh authorities to abandon the \"repressive practices from an earlier era\" for their reformist discourse to viewed credible, noting that internet censorship is one of the reasons why Kazakhstan is ranked 158th in the Press Freedom Index, a position which gives the nation a \"bad international image\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0068-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Controversies, Invitations\nA few days before the elections, all residents of the Republic of Kazakhstan, according to the rules, should have received from the city and regional election commissions a personal paper invitation to the \"Presidential Election-2019\" with the name of the voter, address and number of the polling station. However, for unknown reasons, many residents of the largest city in the country Almaty did not receive their invitations to the elections for the first time in the entire history of elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0069-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Opinion polls\nOn 6 May 2019, the Central Election Commission (OSK) published a notice regarding the reports of political polls being conducted online. The OSK noted that in accordance with the law, it is prohibited to publish reports of electoral polling five days prior to election day and that the right to conducting them was reserved only for two organisations: Qo\u011famdyq P\u0131k\u0131r Institute and the Jastar Research and Development Center LLP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0070-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Opinion polls\nAccording to political scientist Dosym Satpaev, polling within the country can be easily distorted in all levels of government. In his opinion, the reason for the suppression of polls is due to prevent the means of struggle between political elites and to create illusion for the public that the government being viewed with positivity with less distrust of election results due to a lack of independent polling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0071-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Observation\nAs of 6 May 2019, several election observation missions have declared their interest. Amongst them were the CIS, the Interparliamentary Assembly of the CIS Member States, Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation and the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0072-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Observation\nOn 15 May, for observers from the NGO's of Almaty and 12 ethnocultural centers of the Assembly of People of Kazakhstan, students of city universities, training was conducted on the basis of the civil platform Amanat. In total, it is planned to train at least 10,000 independent observers under this program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0073-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Observation\nAs of 31 May, the number of observers from international organizations and foreign states is 967 people, and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has accredited 227 foreign correspondents from more than 40 countries of the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0074-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Observation, OSCE\nOn 8 May 2019, the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) mission to observe the presidential elections in Kazakhstan was opened. The team of observers, according to the head of the mission, Urszula Gacek, included experts from Great Britain, Spain, Germany, Belarus, Poland, who would work not only before the elections, but also after. A total of 22 long-term observers were registered in the mission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0075-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Observation, OSCE\nAccording to the mission's interim report on 24 May, the election campaign is subtle and limited to campaign posters and billboards. Campaigning is strictly regulated and candidates can hold public meetings or events only with the permission of local authorities, an application for which must be submitted 10 days before the planned event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0076-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Observation, CIS\nOn 20 May 2019, the mission of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) was opened. According to the CIS executive secretary, Viktor Guminsky, it was assumed that the mission from the CIS will include about 300 observers. They will represent all the countries of the commonwealth. To date, about 90 representatives of the Commonwealth countries have already applied for accreditation. These applications continue to come in. So far, applications have been officially received from four countries: Russia, Belarus, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan, as well as from the IPA CIS. Long-term observers will work with about 20 people from the diplomatic corps accredited in Nur-Sultan, as well as the CIS executive committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0077-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Conduct, Violations\nDuring the election day, the Prosecutor General's Office identified 19 revealed violations, and initiated cases of an administrative offense. Of these, 12 violations were related to the issuance of ballots by a member of a precinct election commission to citizens for voting for other persons, 6 violations were related to the fact that some voters wanted to vote instead of another voter. Independent observers and journalists recorded numerous election violations such as stuffing, use of disappearing ink, and voting for other people on video.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0078-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Aftermath, Protests\nAfter preliminary results were announced, protests were reported in both Nur-Sultan and Almaty, the largest city in Kazakhstan. Deputy Interior Minister Marat Kozhayev announced that 500 people had been taken into custody, while Mukhtar Ablyazov, the leader of opposition group the Democratic Choice of Kazakhstan, claimed that there were \"thousands of protesters\" in the Astana Square of Almaty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0079-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Aftermath, Protests, Response by authorities\nAccording to the Kazakh government, the protests were caused by attempts to destabilize the social situation on the part of radical elements by organizing and conducting unauthorized actions. The authorities considered the protest actions agitated by foreign \"leaders of extremist organizations\", referring mainly to the former Kazakh politician and opposition leader Mukhtar Ablyazov and his movement Democratic Choice of Kazakhstan, which was declared as an extremist organization in March 2018. Ablyazov was the first to call for boycott in the election and instead hold a protest. In 2009, the Kazakh authorities charged Ablyazov with abuse and fraud and removed him from his post as head of BTA Bank, causing him to flee the country and was eventually convicted in absentee in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 79], "content_span": [80, 874]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0080-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Aftermath, Protests, Protesters' response\nThe protesters considered the elections to be unfair and undemocratic, and their results were predetermined. They also protested against the change in the name of the capital and the current government, which, in their opinion, is still in the hands of ex-President Nursultan Nazarbayev, and that his successor Kassym-Jomart Tokayev is only his \u201cpolitical puppet\u201d. Ablyazov's supporters believed that the falsely accused him of fraud in order to arrest him due to political reasons and why his movement was declared as illegal in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 76], "content_span": [77, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0081-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Aftermath, Protests, International observers\nInternational observers from the OSCE considered that the elections did not demonstrate a democratic authenticity with reported cases of ballot stuffing and that Kazakhstan still needs significant political, social and legal reforms to strengthen democracy, human rights and freedoms, they stated that they are always ready to cooperate with Kazakhstan for carrying out such actions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 79], "content_span": [80, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290351-0081-0001", "contents": "2019 Kazakh presidential election, Aftermath, Protests, International observers\nThe observers from the CIS stated that they did not observe any protest actions and detentions, while the OSCE, on the contrary, watched the protests and considered the actions of the Kazakh authorities to be clear violations of the foundations of freedom and democracy and disrespect for their own people. The OSCE observers stayed in Kazakhstan for another week due to concerns about the fate of the protesters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 79], "content_span": [80, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290352-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakhstan Cup\nThe 2019 Kazakhstan Cup was the 28th season of the Kazakhstan Cup, the annual nationwide football cup competition of Kazakhstan since the independence of the country. FC Kaisar defeated FC Atyrau in the final on 6 October 2019 to win their second Kazakhstan Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290352-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakhstan Cup, Semifinals\nThe four winners from the Quarterfinals were drawn into two two-legged ties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290353-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakhstan Premier League\nThe 2019 Kazakhstan Premier League was the 28th season of the Kazakhstan Premier League, the highest football league competition in Kazakhstan. FC Astana defended their title, winning the championship for the sixth season in a row, whilst FC Atyrau and FC Aktobe were relegated and FC Taraz survived a relegation playoff against FC Akzhayik.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290353-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakhstan Premier League, Teams\nFC Kyzylzhar and FC Akzhayik were relegated at the end of the 2018 season, and were replaced by FC Okzhetpes and FC Taraz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290353-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00290353-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00290353-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00290354-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakhstan President Cup (football)\nThe 12th Kazakhstan President Cup (Kazakh: \u049a\u0430\u0437\u0430\u049b\u0441\u0442\u0430\u043d \u0420\u0435\u0441\u043f\u0443\u0431\u043b\u0438\u043a\u0430\u0441\u044b \u041f\u0440\u0435\u0437\u0438\u0434\u0435\u043d\u0442\u0456\u043d\u0456\u04a3 \u041a\u0443\u0431\u043e\u0433\u044b) was played from August 24 to August 28, 2019 in Nur-Sultan. 6 youth teams participated in the tournament (players were born no earlier than 2003.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290354-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakhstan President Cup (football), Venues\nAll matches took place at House of Football in Nur-Sultan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290354-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakhstan President Cup (football), Format\nThe tournament is held in two stages. At the first stage, six teams are divided into two qualification groups (A and B). Competitions of the first stage were held on a circular system. The winners of the groups advance to the final, while the group runners-up meet to determine third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290354-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakhstan President Cup (football), Statistics, Prize money\nAccording to FFK, the prize fund of a tournament will make $15,000. \"The teams which took 1, 2 and 3 place will be received, respectively 7,000, 5,000 and 3,000 $.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 65], "content_span": [66, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290355-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kazakhstan Super Cup\n2019 Kazakhstan Super Cup was a Kazakhstan football match that was played on 3 March 2019 between the champions of 2018 Kazakhstan Premier League, Astana, and the winner of the 2018 Kazakhstan Cup, Kairat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290356-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kebbi State gubernatorial election\nThe 2019 Kebbi State gubernatorial election occurred in Nigeria on March 9, 2019. Incumbent APC Governor Abubakar Atiku Bagudu won re-election for a second term, defeating Isa Galaudu of the PDP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290356-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kebbi State gubernatorial election\nAbubakar Atiku Bagudu won the primary election after he was returned as the sole candidate. He picked Manasseh Daniel Jatau as his running mate. Usman Bayero Nafada was the PDP candidate with Charles Yau Iliyas as his running mate. 32 candidates contested in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290356-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kebbi State gubernatorial election, Electoral system\nThe Governor of Kebbi State is elected using the plurality voting system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290356-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kebbi State gubernatorial election, Primary election, APC primary\nAbubakar Atiku Bagudu won the primary election after he was returned as the sole candidate. He picked Samaila Dabai Yombe as his running mate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290356-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kebbi State gubernatorial election, Primary election, PDP primary\nThe PDP primary election was held on September 30, 2018. Isa Mohammed Galaudu won the primary election polling 1,072 votes against 3 other candidates. His closest rival was Umar Tafida who came second with 720 votes, Buhari Bala came third with 322 votes, while Abubakar had 28 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290356-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kebbi State gubernatorial election, Results\nA total number of 32 candidates registered with the Independent National Electoral Commission to contest in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290356-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Kebbi State gubernatorial election, Results\nThe total number of registered voters in the state was 1,789,975, while 820,078 voters were accredited. Total number of votes cast was 814,084, while number of valid votes was 793,388. Rejected votes were 20,696.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290356-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Kebbi State gubernatorial election, Results, By local government area\nHere are the results of the election by local government area for the two major parties. The total valid votes of 793,388 represents the 32 political parties that participated in the election. Blue represents LGAs won by Abubakar Atiku Bagudu. Green represents LGAs won by Isa Mohammed Galaudu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 74], "content_span": [75, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290357-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kedah FA season\nThe 2019 season was Kedah's 11th season in the Malaysia Super League since its inception in 2004. The season covers the period from 1 February to 21 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290358-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kehoe Cup\nThe 2019 Kehoe Cup was an inter-county hurling competition based mainly in the province of Leinster in which Antrim from Ulster also took part.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290358-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kehoe Cup\nThe Kehoe Cup is ranked below the Walsh Cup (tier 1). Five county teams competed \u2013 Antrim, Kildare, Meath, Westmeath and Wicklow. It took place in December 2018 and January 2019. Westmeath were the winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290358-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kehoe Cup\nThe Kehoe Shield was revived in 2019. Three teams competed \u2013 Louth, Longford and DCU St. Patrick's Campus. Louth were the winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290358-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kehoe Cup, Kehoe Cup, Kehoe Cup Format\nThe competition begins with a double-elimination format. The semi-finals and final are knockout. Drawn games go to extra time. If the score is still level after extra time a penalty shoot-out is held to determine the winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 43], "content_span": [44, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290358-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kehoe Cup, Kehoe Cup, Kehoe Cup Format\nThe structure of the competition is explained in each of the rounds below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 43], "content_span": [44, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290358-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kehoe Cup, Kehoe Cup, Kehoe Cup First Round\nOne team is given a bye to the playoff round. The remaining four teams meet in two matches \u2013 the two winners progress to the semi-finals and the two losers enter the playoff round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 48], "content_span": [49, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290358-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Kehoe Cup, Kehoe Cup, Kehoe Cup Playoff Round\nIn the first playoff match the team given a bye in the first round plays one of the two teams that lost in the first round. The winners progress to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 50], "content_span": [51, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290358-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Kehoe Cup, Kehoe Cup, Kehoe Cup Playoff Round\nIn the second playoff match the team that lost the first playoff match play the remaining team that lost in the first round. The winners progress to the semi-finals and the losers are eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 50], "content_span": [51, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290358-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Kehoe Cup, Kehoe Cup, Kehoe Cup Semi-Finals\nThe two winning teams from the first round play each other and the two winning teams from the playoff round play each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 48], "content_span": [49, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290358-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Kehoe Cup, Kehoe Shield, Kehoe Shield Format\nEach team plays the other teams once, earning 2 points for a win and 1 for a draw. The top two teams compete in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 49], "content_span": [50, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290359-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Keio Challenger\nThe 2019 Keio Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the fourteenth (men's) and third (women's) editions of the tournament and part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour and the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Yokohama, Japan between 25 February and 10 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290359-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Keio Challenger, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 70], "content_span": [71, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290359-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Keio Challenger, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw using a protected ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 70], "content_span": [71, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290359-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Keio Challenger, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 70], "content_span": [71, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290359-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Keio Challenger, Women's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 72], "content_span": [73, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290359-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Keio Challenger, Women's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 72], "content_span": [73, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290360-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Keio Challenger \u2013 Men's Doubles\nTobias Kamke and Tim P\u00fctz were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290360-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Keio Challenger \u2013 Men's Doubles\nMoez Echargui and Skander Mansouri won the title after defeating Max Purcell and Luke Saville 7\u20136(8\u20136), 6\u20137(3\u20137), [10\u20137].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290361-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Keio Challenger \u2013 Men's Singles\nYasutaka Uchiyama was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290361-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Keio Challenger \u2013 Men's Singles\nKwon Soon-woo won the title after defeating Oscar Otte 7\u20136(7\u20134), 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290362-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kelly Cup playoffs\nThe 2019 Kelly Cup playoffs of the ECHL began in April 2019 following the conclusion of the 2018\u201319 ECHL regular season. The Kelly Cup was won by the expansion Newfoundland Growlers in six games over the Toledo Walleye.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290362-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kelly Cup playoffs, Playoff format\nAt the end of the regular season the top four teams in each division qualifies for the 2019 Kelly Cup playoffs and be seeded one through four based on highest point total earned in the season. Then the first two rounds of the playoffs are held within the division with the first seed facing the fourth seed and the second seed facing the third. The division champions then play each other in a conference championship. The Kelly Cup finals pits the Eastern Conference champion against the Western Conference champion. All four rounds are a best-of-seven format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290362-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kelly Cup playoffs, Playoff seeds\nAfter the regular season, 16 teams qualify for the playoffs. The Cincinnati Cyclones were the first team to qualify during the regular season on March 6, with the Florida Everblades qualifying shortly after on March 8. The Cyclones were the Western Conference regular season champions and the Brabham Cup winners with the best record in the ECHL. The Everblades earned the top seed in the Eastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290362-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kelly Cup playoffs, Statistical leaders, Skaters\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2013 = Plus/minus; PIM = Penalty minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290362-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kelly Cup playoffs, Statistical leaders, Goaltending\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 240 minutes played. The table is sorted by GAA, and the criteria for inclusion are bolded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 57], "content_span": [58, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290362-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kelly Cup playoffs, Statistical leaders, Goaltending\nGP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; OTL = Overtime 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 57], "content_span": [58, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290363-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ken Galluccio Cup\nThe 2019 Ken Galluccio Cup will be the 11th edition of the Ken Galluccio Cup, the European men's lacrosse club competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290363-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ken Galluccio Cup, Competition format\nThe eight teams were divided into two groups of four, where the two first qualified teams joined the semifinals. Groups were drawn on 10 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290364-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kennesaw State Owls football team\nThe 2019 Kennesaw State Owls football team represented Kennesaw State University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by fifth-year head coach Brian Bohannon and played their home games at Fifth Third Bank Stadium in Kennesaw, Georgia as fifth-year members of the Big South Conference. They finished the season 11\u20133, 5\u20131 in Big South play to finish in second place. The Owls received an at-large bid to the FCS Playoffs. They defeated Wofford in the first round before losing to Weber State in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290364-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kennesaw State Owls football team, Previous season\nThe Owls finished the 2018 season 11\u20132, 5\u20130 in Big South play to win the Big South conference championship for the second consecutive year. The Owls received the Big South's automatic bid to the FCS Playoffs. The Owls earned a No. 4 seed and a first round bye. They defeated Wofford in the second round before losing in the quarterfinals to No. 5 South Dakota State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290364-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kennesaw State Owls football team, Preseason, Big South poll\nIn the Big South preseason poll released on July 21, 2019, the Owls were predicted to finish in first place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290364-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kennesaw State Owls football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013Big South team\nThe Owls had six players selected to the preseason all-Big South team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 79], "content_span": [80, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290364-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kennesaw State Owls football team, FCS Playoffs\nThe Owls were selected for the postseason tournament, with a first-round pairing against Wofford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 52], "content_span": [53, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290365-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kent State Golden Flashes football team\nThe 2019 Kent State Golden Flashes football team represented Kent State University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. They were led by second year head coach Sean Lewis and played their home games at Dix Stadium in Kent, Ohio, as members of the East Division of the Mid-American Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290365-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kent State Golden Flashes football team\nTrailing 6\u201327 at the fourth quarter against Buffalo with a 3\u20136 record, Kent State proceeded to score 24 unanswered points in the last eight minutes of the game to win 30\u201327, and followed that victory with two additional wins to reach bowl eligibility for the first time since 2012. Kent State were then invited to the Frisco Bowl where they defeated Utah State with a 51\u201341 score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290365-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kent State Golden Flashes football team, Previous season\nThe Golden Flashes finished the 2018 season 2\u201310 1\u20137 in MAC Play to finish in last place in the East Division for the second year in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290365-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kent State Golden Flashes football team, Preseason, MAC media poll\nThe MAC released their preseason media poll on July 23, 2019, with the Golden Flashes predicted to finish in fourth place in the East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 71], "content_span": [72, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290366-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Attorney General election\nThe 2019 Kentucky Attorney General election was conducted on November 5. Primary elections occurred on May 21, 2019. The general election was held on November 5, 2019. Incumbent Democratic Attorney General Andy Beshear declined to seek reelection to a second term to instead successfully run for Governor. Republican nominee Daniel Cameron won with 57.8% of the vote. He became the first Republican elected attorney general of Kentucky since Eldon S. Dummit in 1944, and the state's first black attorney general.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290366-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Attorney General election, General election\nThe general election took place on November 5, 2019 following the May 21 primary elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290367-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Bank Tennis Championships\nThe 2019 Kentucky Bank Tennis Championships was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 24th (ATP) and 22nd (ITF) editions of the tournament and was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour and the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Lexington, United States, on 29 July\u20134 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290367-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Bank Tennis Championships, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received a wildcard into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 89], "content_span": [90, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290367-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Bank Tennis Championships, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as a special exempt:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 89], "content_span": [90, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290367-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Bank Tennis Championships, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as alternates:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 89], "content_span": [90, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290367-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Bank Tennis Championships, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 89], "content_span": [90, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290367-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Bank Tennis Championships, Women's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received a wildcard into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 91], "content_span": [92, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290368-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Bank Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Doubles\nRobert Galloway and Roberto Mayt\u00edn were the defending champions but only Mayt\u00edn chose to defend his title, partnering Jackson Withrow. Mayt\u00edn lost in the final to Diego Hidalgo and Martin Redlicki.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290368-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Bank Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Doubles\nHidalgo and Redlicki won the title after defeating Mayt\u00edn and Withrow 6\u20132, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290369-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Bank Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Singles\nLloyd Harris was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290369-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Bank Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Singles\nJannik Sinner won the title after defeating Alex Bolt 6\u20134, 3\u20136, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290370-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Bank Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Doubles\nHayley Carter and Ena Shibahara were the defending champions, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290370-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Bank Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Doubles\nRobin Anderson and Jessika Ponchet won the title, defeating Ann Li and Jamie Loeb in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20134), 6\u20137(5\u20137), [10\u20137].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290371-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Bank Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Singles\nAsia Muhammad was the defending champion, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290371-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Bank Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Singles\nQualifier Kim Da-bin won the title, defeating Ann Li in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290372-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Derby\nThe 2019 Kentucky Derby (officially, the 2019 Kentucky Derby presented by Woodford Reserve) was the 145th running of the Kentucky Derby, and took place on Saturday, May 4, 2019, in Louisville, Kentucky. The field was open to 20 horses, who qualified for the race by earning points on the 2019 Road to the Kentucky Derby. The Derby is held annually on the first Saturday in May, at the end of the two-week-long Kentucky Derby Festival. It is a Grade I stakes race for three-year-old Thoroughbreds at a distance of 1+1\u20444 miles (2.0\u00a0km), and has been run at Churchill Downs racetrack since its inception in 1875. The purse for 2019 was increased from US$2 million to US$3 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290372-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Derby\nThe race was broadcast by NBC, with coverage by NBCSN of undercard races beginning at 12:30\u00a0pm EDT and main network coverage of pre-race activities starting at 2:30\u00a0pm EDT. Cleveland Browns star quarterback Baker Mayfield provided the \"Riders Up\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290372-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Derby\nAlthough Maximum Security crossed the finish line before long shot Country House, Maximum Security was disqualified and the victory was awarded to Country House after Maximum Security was judged to have cost War of Will and Long Range Toddy a better placing in the race when he swerved into their path, causing them to check strides.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290372-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Derby, Qualification\nThe Kentucky Derby is only open to three-year-old Thoroughbreds, thus entrants in the 2019 race were foaled in 2016, mostly as part of the North America foal crop of roughly 22,500. The field is limited to twenty horses who qualify based on points earned in the 2019 Road to the Kentucky Derby, a series of designated races that was first introduced in 2013. This point system replaced the previous graded stakes race earnings system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290372-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Derby, Qualification\nMost positions in the Derby starting gate are earned on the main Road, consisting of 34 races in North America plus one in Dubai. The seven major preps for the Kentucky Derby are the Louisiana Derby, UAE Derby, Florida Derby, Wood Memorial, Blue Grass Stakes, Santa Anita Derby and Arkansas Derby. Each of these races provided the winner with 100 qualifying points, essentially guaranteeing that horse a berth in the Derby provided the owner pays the required nomination and entry fees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290372-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Derby, Qualification\nThe first three of these major preps were run in late March and were won by By My Standards, Plus Que Parfait and Maximum Security respectively. The next three major prep races were run on April 6, and were won by Tacitus, Vekoma and Roadster respectively. The last major prep was run on April 13, and was won by Omaha Beach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290372-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Derby, Qualification\nOne qualification position is also available via the European Road to the Kentucky Derby, and another via the Japan Road. In 2019, none of the offers for the European Road were accepted and the top three finishers in the Japan Road declined their invitation as they had not been nominated to the Derby. The connections of the fourth-place finisher on the Japan Road, Master Fencer, decided to accept the offer, marking the first time that a Japanese-bred horse entered the Derby via the Japan Road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290372-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Derby, Field\nThe cutoff to qualify for the Derby was 40 points, the highest such total since the points system was adopted. The post position draw took place on April 30, after which Omaha Beach was installed as the 4\u20131 morning line favorite. However, he was scratched from the race on May 1 due to an entrapped epiglottis, which impaired his breathing. Because of his withdrawal, Bodexpress drew into the field as program number 21. With the subsequent scratch of Haikal (originally post position 11) combined with Omaha Beach (originally post position 12), horses with higher program numbers moved over two place in the starting gate\u2014for example, Code of Honor (saddle cloth 13) started from post position 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290372-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Derby, Field\nTrainer Bob Baffert, whose five Derby wins include Triple Crown champions American Pharoah and Justify, had three of the leading contenders: Champion Two-Year-Old Game Winner, Santa Anita Derby winner Roadster, and Arkansas Derby second place finisher Improbable who would go on to be the 2020 Champion Older Dirt Male after three Grade One wins. \"This year is different,\" said Baffert. \"With [Justify and American Pharoah] I knew I had the horse and felt like I needed a little luck. Now I've got three nice horses, and there's a lot of parity. It's wide open.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290372-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Derby, Race Description\nA crowd of 150,729 turned out for the Derby. The rain held off until late afternoon, but then drenched the track, turning the track condition sloppy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290372-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Derby, Race Description\nMaximum Security went off as the second favorite (behind Improbable) at odds of 9\u20132 based on his frontrunning win in the Florida Derby. As expected, he went to the early lead, running a very fast opening quarter of 22.31 seconds. Jockey Luis Saez then slowed down the pace, as they completed the half-mile in 46.62 and six furlongs in 1:12.50. As they rounded the final turn, the field began to bunch up as other contenders mounted their closing drives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290372-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Derby, Race Description\nWith about 5\u204416 of a mile remaining in the race, Maximum Security swerved out from the two path (ie, two positions away from the rail) into the four or five path. In the process, he made contact with War of Will and also interfered with Long Range Toddy and Bodexpress, causing all three horses to check strides. Saez, who later said that Maximum Security swerved in reaction to noise from the large crowd, quickly corrected course and returned to the two path, bumping Code of Honor who had been gaining ground on the rail. Maximum Security fought back and again drew clear of the field, crossing the finish line first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290372-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Derby, Race Description\nMeanwhile, Country House had broken from an outside post position and settled into mid-pack, carried three wide around the first turn. Going into the final turn, he was still in ninth place but rapidly made up ground while again moving wide. He was close to Maximum Security when that horse veered out, and was carried wide by Long Range Toddy. He could not respond to Maximum Security's rally, but held off the rest of the field to finish a clear second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290372-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Derby, Race Description, Objections\nAfter the race, the jockeys of Country House and Long Range Toddy each filed an objection to the result. The rules of racing in Kentucky provide for the disqualification of a horse if it shifts its position in a manner that impedes another horse, costing the other horse a better placing in the race. Although Country House was not materially harmed by Maximum Security's swerve on the far turn, at least three other horses \u2014 War of Will, Long Range Toddy, and Bodexpress \u2014 were severely affected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290372-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Derby, Race Description, Objections\nDuring a 22-minute review, the stewards determined that \"Maximum Security veered out into the path of #1 War of Will, who was forced to check and who, in turn, impeded #18 Long Range Toddy, who came out into #21 Bodexpress, who had to check sharply, making contact with #20 Country House.\" The stewards upheld the objections and disqualified Maximum Security to 17th place, after Long Range Toddy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290372-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Derby, Race Description, Objections\nThe disqualification is the first in Derby history to remove the first-place finishing horse for an on-track infraction; Dancer's Image was disqualified days after the 1968 Kentucky Derby for testing positive for an illegal medication.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290372-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Derby, Race Description, Objections\nThe ruling proved controversial, with Maximum Security's owners blaming jockey Tyler Gaffalione on War of Will for causing the incident. War of Will's trainer, Mark Casse, responded that the interference by Maximum Security was worse than he originally thought and that he too would have filed an objection if War of Will had finished in the money. The stewards later issued a fifteen-day suspension on Maximum Security's jockey, Luis Saez, for \"failure to control his mount and make the proper effort to maintain a straight course thereby causing interference with several rivals\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290372-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Derby, Race Description, Objections\nIt was the first Kentucky Derby win for trainer Bill Mott, who commented that it was \"bittersweet\" to win the race in such a manner even though it was normally a routine matter to disqualify a horse for such an incident. NBC analysts Randy Moss and Jerry Bailey were quick to say they thought that Maximum Security was the best horse and that \"the best horse won\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290372-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Derby, Race Description, Objections\nAt odds of 65\u20131, Country House became the second-highest-priced winner (behind Donerail in 1913) in the 145-year history of the Derby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290372-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Derby, Results\nNote: The margins listed above are based on Maximum Security's first-place finish before disqualification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290372-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Derby, Results\nTimes: 1\u20444 mile \u2013 22.31; 1\u20442 mile \u2013 46.42; 3\u20444 mile \u2013 1:12.50; mile \u2013 1:38.63; final \u2013 2:03.93. Splits for each quarter-mile: (22.31) (24.31) (25.88) (26.13) (25.30)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290372-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Derby, Results, Wagering\nWagering on the Kentucky Oaks day totaled US$60.2 million, including US$19.4 million on the Kentucky Oaks race. Wagering on the Kentucky Derby day totaled US$250.9 million, including US$165.5 million on the Kentucky Derby race. Wagering across the Kentucky Derby Festival totaled US$343.0 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290372-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Derby, Subsequent Grade I wins\nSeveral horses from the 2019 Derby went on to win Grade I races later in their career, including Maximum Security, who was named the champion three-year-old colt. However, Country House never raced again due to a career-ending bout of laminitis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 44], "content_span": [45, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290373-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky State Thorobreds football team\nTemplate:2019 Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference football standingsThe 2019 State Thorobreds football team represents Kentucky State University in the 2019 NCAA Division II football season. The Thorobreds play their home games at Alumni Field in Frankfort, Kentucky and compete in the West Division of the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (SIAC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290374-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Wildcats baseball team\nThe 2019 Kentucky Wildcats baseball team represented the University of Kentucky in the 2019 NCAA Division I baseball season. For the first season, the Wildcats played their home games at their new stadium, Kentucky Proud Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290374-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Wildcats baseball team, Preseason, SEC media poll\nThe SEC media poll was released on February 7, 2019 with the Wildcats predicted to finish in sixth place in the Eastern Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290374-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Wildcats baseball team, Schedule and results\n\u2020 Indicates the game does not count toward the 2019 Southeastern Conference standings. *Rankings are based on the team's current ranking in the D1Baseball poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290374-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Wildcats 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290375-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Wildcats football team\nThe 2019 Kentucky Wildcats football team represented the University of Kentucky in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Wildcats played their home games at Kroger Field in Lexington, Kentucky, and competed in the East Division of the Southeastern Conference (SEC). They were led by seventh-year head coach Mark Stoops.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290375-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Preseason, SEC preseason poll\nThe 2019 SEC Media Days were held July 15\u201318 in Birmingham, Alabama. In the preseason media poll, Kentucky was projected to finish in sixth in the East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290375-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Preseason, Preseason All-SEC teams\nThe Wildcats had four players selected to the preseason all-SEC teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 72], "content_span": [73, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290375-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Schedule\nKentucky announced its 2019 football schedule on September 18, 2018. The 2019 schedule consists of 8 home and 4 away games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290376-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky elections\nA general election was held in the U.S. state of Kentucky on November 5, 2019, with all executive offices in the state up for election. Primary elections were held on May 21, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290376-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky elections, Governor and Lieutenant Governor\nThe 2019 Kentucky gubernatorial election took place on November 5, 2019, to elect the governor and lieutenant governor of Kentucky. The Democratic nominee, Kentucky Attorney General Andy Beshear, defeated Republican incumbent Matt Bevin by a margin of just over 5,000 votes, or less than 0.5%. Bevin conceded on November 14, after a recanvass took place that day that did not change the vote count. Libertarian John Hicks also qualified for the ballot and received 2% of the vote. Statewide turnout was just over 42%, much higher than for the 2015 gubernatorial election. The result was a major swing from 2016, when Donald Trump won the state by 30 points and Republicans gained a supermajority in both chambers of the Kentucky General Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 57], "content_span": [58, 804]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290376-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky elections, Attorney General\nThe 2019 Kentucky Attorney General election was conducted on November 5. Primary elections occurred on May 21, 2019. The general election was held on November 5, 2019. Incumbent Democratic Attorney General Andy Beshear declined to seek reelection to a second term to successfully run for Governor. Republican Daniel Cameron defeated Democrat Greg Stumbo in a landslide. He became the first Republican attorney general of Kentucky since 1948, and the state's first black attorney general.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290376-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky elections, Secretary of State\nIncumbent Democratic Secretary of State Alison Lundergan Grimes was ineligible to run for a third term due to term limits. This was the only statewide race in Kentucky in 2019 besides the gubernatorial election in which the Democratic candidate came close to winning and the only non-gubernatorial statewide election in KY, LA or MS where the Democrat achieved more than 45% of the vote in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290376-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky elections, Judiciary, Supreme Court, Results\nBoth candidates were registered Republicans, but the election was conducted under a non-partisan format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 58], "content_span": [59, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290377-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky gubernatorial election\nThe 2019 Kentucky gubernatorial election took place on November 5, 2019, to elect the governor and lieutenant governor of Kentucky. The Democratic nominee, Kentucky Attorney General Andy Beshear, defeated Republican incumbent Matt Bevin by just over 5,000 votes, or 0.37%, making this the closest gubernatorial election in Kentucky since 1899 by total votes, and the closest ever by percentage. It was also the closest race of the 2019 gubernatorial election cycle, in which all of the races involved margins of victory that were under ten points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290377-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky gubernatorial election\nBevin conceded on November 14, after a recanvass took place that day that did not change the vote count. Libertarian John Hicks also qualified for the ballot and received 2% of the vote. Statewide turnout was just over 42%, much higher than for the 2015 gubernatorial election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290377-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky gubernatorial election, Background\nMajor-party primary elections occurred on May 21, 2019. Incumbent Republican Governor Matt Bevin was renominated by the Republican Party, and Kentucky Attorney General Andy Beshear won the Democratic nomination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290377-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky gubernatorial election, Background\nBevin announced on January 25, 2019, that he would run for a second term, choosing State Senator Ralph Alvarado as his running mate over incumbent Lieutenant Governor Jenean Hampton. No Republican governor of Kentucky has ever been elected to more than one term, even after the state's constitutional prohibition of governors serving consecutive terms was repealed in 1992. The only Republican before Bevin to run for reelection, Ernie Fletcher, was defeated by Democrat Steve Beshear in 2007 (Steve Beshear is the father of Bevin's Democrat challenger, Andy). Bevin is only the second Republican governor of Kentucky in the last 50 years. Andy Beshear is the first governor of Kentucky to be a direct relative of a former governor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290377-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky gubernatorial election, Background\nBeshear had the support of 2020 Senate candidate Amy McGrath, his father and former governor Steve Beshear, former governor Paul Patton, and representative and primary challenger Rocky Adkins, all well-known Democrats in the state. Bevin had the support of President Donald Trump, who remains relatively popular in the state, particularly in rural areas. Trump and US Senator Rand Paul held a rally in support of Bevin and Republican Attorney General nominee Daniel Cameron the day before the election. Many considered the decisive factor in this election whether voters would vote based on local issues, as Bevin and his policies were deeply unpopular, or as a referendum on Trump, with whom Bevin closely aligned. The former would be more favorable for Democrats, the latter for Republicans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 842]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290377-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky gubernatorial election, Background\nBeshear won thanks to overwhelming support in Louisville and Lexington, Kentucky's two main population hubs, and their suburbs, as well as major vote swings in the Republican-leaning Cincinnati suburbs and lackluster performance by Bevin in counties that have recently become Republican strongholds, particularly the coal country of Eastern Kentucky, where Beshear won multiple counties that overwhelmingly voted Republican in 2016, but were traditionally Democratic. Voter turnout was high across the state compared to past Kentucky elections, with a statewide turnout of about 42%. Fayette County (Lexington) saw a 20% increase in voter turnout, and Beshear received over twice as many votes in the county than the 2015 Democratic nominee for governor, Jack Conway. Unusually high turnout was seen as a major factor in Beshear's win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 884]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290377-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky gubernatorial election, Background\nBeshear's win coincided with Democratic momentum nationwide in elections in 2017, 2018, and 2019, following the election of Donald Trump in 2016. However, Republicans won all other statewide offices in Kentucky, including the attorney general and secretary of state offices which Democrats held going into the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290377-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky gubernatorial election, Background, Recanvassing\nBeshear declared victory after the initial vote count, selecting J. Michael Brown to lead his transition team. Bevin refused to concede and requested a recanvassing of the vote, which took place on November 14. A recanvassing is a reprint of the voting receipts from each voting machine and is done to make sure county officials recorded vote totals correctly. It is not a recount, which the Kentucky State Constitution does not permit for gubernatorial races. The recanvass resulted in only one change, an additional vote for Independent candidate Blackii Effing Whyte, and Bevin conceded that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290377-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky gubernatorial election, Other candidates, Libertarian Convention\nThe Libertarian Party of Kentucky is currently recognized as a \"political organization\" under state law, a status that grants the party ballot access, but denies it a state-operated primary. Libertarian candidates were nominated at the party's nominating convention, held in March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 78], "content_span": [79, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290377-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky gubernatorial election, General election\nLosing by a margin of less than 0.4 percentage points, Bevin did not immediately concede and requested a recanvass, or review of counted votes, which was held on November 14. According to the Kentucky state constitution, the swearing in of a Kentucky governor must be held on the fifth Tuesday following the election (December 10). While a recount law does exist in Kentucky, it does not permit recounts for gubernatorial elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290377-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Kentucky gubernatorial election, General election\nShould a candidate contest the election results, the state legislature would determine the winner after hearing a report from a randomly selected 11-member committee from the House (8) and Senate (3). This process, which is enforced through the Goebel Election Law, has only been used once, during the 1899 Kentucky gubernatorial election. Kentucky Senate President Robert Stivers and some other Republican members of the Kentucky state legislature expressed skepticism of Bevin's voter fraud claims and on November 7 urged Bevin to concede if the recanvass did not go in his favor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290377-0009-0002", "contents": "2019 Kentucky gubernatorial election, General election\nOn November 11, U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Kentucky Republican, announced that \"all indications are\" Beshear would be the next governor. The recanvass did not result in any changes in the vote totals for either Beshear or Bevin, but found an additional vote for write-in candidate Blackii Effing Whyte.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290377-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky gubernatorial election, General election\nWith the recanvass producing no change in his vote total, Bevin conceded the race on November 14. Beshear was sworn in as governor on December 10, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290377-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky gubernatorial election, General election, Results by congressional district\nBeshear only carried two of the state's six congressional districts. However, Beshear was able to win the election by swamping Bevin in the 3rd and 6th districts, which encompass Kentucky's two urban centers, Louisville and Lexington, and their close-in suburbs. Bevin won the 1st, 2nd and 5th districts, which represent the more rural areas of the state. The only urban district Bevin carried was the 4th, dominated by the eastern Louisville suburbs and Northern Kentucky, the Kentucky side of the Cincinnati area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 89], "content_span": [90, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290377-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Kentucky gubernatorial election, General election, Results by county\nBevin carried 97 of Kentucky's 120 counties. However, Beshear swamped Bevin in urban areas. Beshear carried the state's two largest counties, Jefferson and Fayette\u2013home to Louisville and Lexington, respectively\u2013with over 60 percent of the vote. He also narrowly carried the state's third-largest county, Kenton County, which is normally very Republican.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 73], "content_span": [74, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290378-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kenya bus shooting\nOn 6 December 2019, at least 11 people, including seven police officers, were shot dead on or outside a bus in Kenya. The Medina Bus Company vehicle and its passengers were attacked on a road in a rural area between Wajir and Mandera in northeastern Kenya. Al-Shabaab claimed responsibility for the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290378-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kenya bus shooting, Background\nThe Islamist militant group Al-Shabaab has been opposed to Kenyan involvement in the Somali Civil War. The terrorist group has previously attacked the suburb of Westlands during the 2013 Westgate shopping mall attack, which left 67 people dead. In 2015, Al-Shabaab terrorists were involved in mass shooting of Garissa University College students leaving 147 dead and many others injured. In 2019 two attacks occurred in the same month of each other, including the attack on January 15, 2019 an attack on a hotel in Nairobi which killed 21 individuals. The second attack happened in less than two weeks near a Kenya Cinema bus stop which injured two individuals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290378-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kenya bus shooting, Attack\nGunmen associated with Al-Shabaab killed 11 people including seven Kenya Police officers on a bus traveling through Wargadadud and Kutulu in Wajir, Kenya.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290379-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerala Legislative Assembly by-elections\nSix assembly by-elections were held on 23 September and 21 October, 2019, to the six vacant seats in the Kerala Niyamasabha which consists of 140 constituencies in total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290379-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerala Legislative Assembly by-elections\nBy-election took place in two phases. The first phase was conducted on 23 September for Pala Constituency. The remaining 5 assembly constituencies (Manjeshwaram, Ernakulam, Aroor, Konni and Vattiyoorkavu) voted to elect their representatives on 21 October. The counting of votes was conducted on 27 September in Pala and on 24 October in the other five constituencies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290379-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerala Legislative Assembly by-elections, Schedule for the by-elections, Pala\nThe first phase by-election was held for the Pala Constituency in Kerala.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 82], "content_span": [83, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290379-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerala Legislative Assembly by-elections, Schedule for the by-elections, Manjeshwaram, Ernakulam, Aroor, Konni and Vattiyoorkavu\nThe second phase by-elections were held for the remaining 5 vacant assembly constituencies in Kerala.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 133], "content_span": [134, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290379-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerala Legislative Assembly by-elections, Electorates\nThere were 11,36,616 electorates from the six Niyamasabha constituencies where the by-elections were held. Constituency wise details are given below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 58], "content_span": [59, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290379-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerala Legislative Assembly by-elections, Alliances and parties\nThere are two major political coalitions in Kerala. The United Democratic Front (UDF) is the coalition of centrist and center-left parties led by the Indian National Congress. The Left Democratic Front (LDF) is the coalition of left-wing and far-left parties, led by the Communist Party of India (Marxist) (CPI(M)).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 68], "content_span": [69, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290379-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerala Legislative Assembly by-elections, Alliances and parties, LDF\nThey are a coalition of left-wing political parties in Kerala. It is one of the two major political coalitions in the state, the other being the UDF, both of which has been in power alternatively for the last two decades. After winning a majority of the seats in the Niyamasabha elections, they are currently in power. The coalition consists of CPI(M), CPI and a variety of other smaller parties. LDF fields four CPI(M) candidates, an NCP candidate and an independent to fight in the by-poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 73], "content_span": [74, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290379-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerala Legislative Assembly by-elections, Alliances and parties, UDF\nIt is an alliance of central-wing political parties in the state, created by the prominent INC party leader K. Karunakaran in the 1970s. UDF fielded four INC candidates, an IUML candidate and an independent for the vacant constituencies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 73], "content_span": [74, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290379-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerala Legislative Assembly by-elections, Alliances and parties, NDA\nIt is a coalition of right-leaning political parties in India. NDA gave all the six seats for the BJP to contest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 73], "content_span": [74, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290379-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerala Legislative Assembly by-elections, Constituency-wise Candidates\nThe LDF fielded four CPI(M) candidates, an NCP candidate and an independent to win the seats. UDF fielded four INC candidates, an IUML candidate and an independent. NDA fielded six BJP candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 75], "content_span": [76, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290379-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerala Legislative Assembly by-elections, Exit Polls\nThe Manorama News and the Mathrubhumi News published their exit poll predictions in the constituencies where the election was held on 21 October 2019. Asianet News had published their exit poll predictions for Pala, where the election was held earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290379-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerala Legislative Assembly by-elections, Polling day\nPolling took place on 23 September 2019 in Pala and on 21 October 2019 in the remaining five Niyamasabha constituencies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 58], "content_span": [59, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290379-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerala Legislative Assembly by-elections, Results in a glance, By alliance\nBoth the LDF and the UDF won three seats each. The NDA could not win any seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 79], "content_span": [80, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290379-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerala Legislative Assembly by-elections, Results in a glance, Party-wise\nEach of the CPI(M) and the INC won in two seats. The remaining two seats were bagged by the NCP and the IUML respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 78], "content_span": [79, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290379-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerala Legislative Assembly by-elections, Detailed results, List of the newly elected MLAs to the 14th Kerala Niyamasabha\nAs a result of the 2019 Kerala Legislative Assembly by-elections, six new members were elected to the Kerala Niyamasabha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 126], "content_span": [127, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290379-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerala Legislative Assembly by-elections, Detailed results, Assembly seat share post by-elections\nAfter the 2019 Kerala Legislative Assembly by-elections, the composition of 14th Kerala Legislative Assembly changed as per given below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 102], "content_span": [103, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290379-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerala Legislative Assembly by-elections, Detailed results, Assembly seat share post by-elections\nThe Kerala Niyamasabha is composed of 141 seats (140 elected and 1 nominated). After the by-elections, the Government of Kerala has the support of 93 members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 102], "content_span": [103, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290380-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerala floods\nOn 8 August 2019, due to heavy rainfall in the monsoon season, severe flood affected Kerala. As a security measure in the prevailing situation of heavy rains, the India Meteorological Department had issued a red alert in the 9 districts in Northern and Central Kerala, orange alert in 3 districts of Central Kerala, and yellow alert in the 2 districts of southern Kerala. Thousands of people have been evacuated to safer places and relief camps. A total of 121 people have died due to rain-related incidents as of 19 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290380-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerala floods\nAnother deluge had hit the state in August 2018, in which over 470 people died and properties worth US$5.8 billion (\u20b940000 crore) were damaged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290380-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerala floods, Causes\nThe extreme rains were triggered by a depression toss the Arabian sea resulting in intense convection over Kerala. Every year parts of South Asia are hit by a period of heavy rains known monsoons which usually fall between June and September. It is caused by a change of wind patterns over the region. This change causes heavy rains in the summer and long dry spells over the other months. In India, the monsoon rains can provide 70% of the country's rainfall for the year. The rain fall so quickly and heavily that it can cause sudden flooding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290380-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Kerala floods, Causes\nThe rationale for the anomalous rainfall in 2018 might have recurred the extreme events in 2019; i.e., the High-Frequency Mixed Rossby-Gravity Waves in the Mid-Troposphere which were triggered by the synoptic disturbances of the tropical Pacific. These high-frequency waves manifested as cyclonic and anticyclonic circulations and dilated the wind \ufb01eld to establish zones of convection in the tropics, as they propagated across the Indian Ocean basin. Although the Madden-Julian Oscillation phase with 20\u201340 days period has favored convection in the tropics, the high-frequency mode correlates better with the anomalous precipitation during the intervals of extreme events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290380-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerala floods, Causes\nUnrestricted mining operations in places have contributed to environmental degradation. Scientists who have conducted research on the disaster-prone areas have warned that soil-piping is a major cause for the landslides witnessed in these places and the high ranges of Kerala will likely be worst hit if this continues. Also known as 'tunnel erosion', soil piping is the subsurface erosion of soil caused by percolating waters to produce pipe-like conduits below the ground, especially in non-lithified earth materials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290380-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerala floods, Impact\nAs of 19 August 2019, 121 people have been killed due to the floods across the state of Kerala. Over 2 lakh people have been directly affected by the flood, and have been shifted to 1318 relief camps in different parts of Kerala. Airport authorities suspended operations of the flood-affected Cochin International Airport till 15:00 (IST) on 11 August 2019. The data from the Kerala State Disaster Management states that, as many as 1,789 houses had been damaged fully in between 8 and 19 August, while the number of partially damaged houses is 14,542.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290380-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerala floods, Impact\nThere have been 80 landslides in the span of 2 days, as said by the Chief Minister. Many people who are feared to be buried alive under them are being rescued. It is still a critical situation as the calamities interfere with the rescue operations. Districts that have been severely affected include Wayanad, Malappuram, Kozhikode, Kannur, Palakkad, Thrissur and Ernakulam districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290380-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerala floods, Rescue\nKerala's State Disaster Management Authority, Kerala police,Kerala Fire & Rescue Services along with the Indian Air Force, Indian Navy, civilians, volunteers like Seva Bharati, White Guard Volunteers fishermen from coastal Kerala are actively taking part in the rescue operations in flood-affected regions. However, inclement weather with heavy rains and landslides are hampering the rescue operations in the hilly regions of Wayanad, Malappuram, and Kozhikode districts. 83 National Disaster Response Force(NDRF) teams were deployed in addition to the 173 teams of Army, Navy, Air Force, and Coast Guard to take part in the relief operations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290380-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerala floods, Rescue\nAnimal rescue was carried out by local NGOs and activists on ground mainly in places like Wayanad and Nilambur. Notable work was done by Sally Varma of Humane Society International/India in Nilambur where around 500\u00a0kg of dog food and more than 5000\u00a0kg of cattle feed and 2500\u00a0kg of goat feed was distributed to the starving animals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290380-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerala floods, Relief and Monetary Aid\nImmediate financial aid of up to Rs 10,000 each for all calamity-hit families which had suffered losses in the torrential rains. A sum of Rs 4 lakh would be given to those whose houses had been fully damaged or had become uninhabitable and Rs 10 lakh to those who had lost their houses as well as land in the rain fury and landslides, Chief Minister's cabinet meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290380-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerala floods, Relief and Monetary Aid\nIn August 2019, Public has been very generous contributing to Chief Minister's Distress Relief Fund. As on 15 Aug 2019 at 1940 hrs income is 4368.2 Cr (INR).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290381-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerch Strait liquified gas tanker fire\nThe 2019 Kerch Strait liquified gas tanker fire was a major incident that occurred on 21 January 2019 when two ships, Kandy and Maestro, caught fire while transferring liquefied gas from one vessel to another in the Kerch Strait. The incident subsequently killed fourteen crewmembers and six went missing, including Libyan, Turkish, and Indian sailors, while twelve men jumped into the water and were rescued by the Russian Navy. Kandy was carrying a crew of seventeen, while Maestro was manned by fifteen crewmembers. At the time of the incident, both ships were carrying 4,500 tonnes of fuel. The ship-to-ship fuel transfer resulted a fire explosion and spread across the both ships; Tanzanian-flagged Turkish ships' Maestro and Kandy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290381-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerch Strait liquified gas tanker fire\nThe Russian multi-purpose salvage vessel Spasatel Demidov led the fire-fighting effort but despite dowsing both ships, the fire continued to rage for five more days. The crew rescue operation was conducted by ten ships, including a Russian rescue vessel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290381-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerch Strait liquified gas tanker fire, Background\nFollowing the United States trade policy, the Russian oil company Maktren-Nafta denied access of the gas-carrier tanker Maestro to the liquefied gas terminal at Temryuk, as Maestro was listed on a United States sanctions for transporting fuel to Syria. Unable to upload liquefied gas at Temryuk port, Maestro was illegally loaded by ship-to-ship transfer from Kandy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290381-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerch Strait liquified gas tanker fire, Background\nMaestro and Kandy caught fire in the Kerch Strait, separating the Sea of Azov from the Black Sea. Both cargo ships, old and in poor condition, were believed to be actively involved in illegal trade, reportedly carrying out ship-to-ship cargo operations within jurisdictions affected by the U.S. trade ban, carrying crude oil from Iran to Syria. It was further noted that on 21 January Kandy had loaded 30,000 barrels of liquefied petroleum gas from Temryukskiy port, with her destination declared as Lebanon, but with no satellite tracking device aboard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290382-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerry County Council election\nA Kerry County Council election was held in County Kerry in Ireland on 24 May 2019 as part of that year's local elections. All 33 councillors were elected for a five-year term of office from 6 local electoral areas (LEAs) by single transferable vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290382-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerry County Council election\nFollowing a recommendation of the 2018 Boundary Committee, the boundaries of the LEAs were altered from those used in the 2014 elections. Its terms of reference required no change in the total number of councillors but set a lower maximum LEA size of seven councillors, exceeded by three of the four 2014 LEAs. Other changes were necessitated by population shifts revealed by the 2016 census.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290383-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerry Senior Football Championship\nThe 2019 Kerry Senior Football Championship was the 118th edition of Kerry GAA's premier gaelic football tournament for senior teams in County Kerry, Ireland. The tournament consists of 17 teams (8 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, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290383-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerry Senior Football Championship\nThe championship has a back-door format for the first two rounds before proceeding to a knock-out format. Generally, any team to lose two matches will be knocked out of the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290383-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerry Senior Football Championship\nThis was Kilcummin's return to the senior ranks after only a one year absence, meaning they will no longer provide players to the East Kerry District panel for this season. An Ghaeltacht (who were relegated to the I.F.C. for 2019) will provide the West Kerry Divisional side with players for the S.F.C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290383-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerry Senior Football Championship\nDr. Crokes were the 2018 champions after they defeated Dingle in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290383-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerry Senior Football Championship\nRathmore lost their 20-year senior club championship status after a surprising no show in the second half against neighbours Kilcummin. Rathmore\u2019s exit is all the more surprising in a season where they had beaten Dr. Croke's in the Senior Club Championship and topped Division 1 of the County League. However All-Ireland Intermediate champions Kilcummin had no desire to join the band of clubs who went up to senior only to come back straight down the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290383-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerry Senior Football Championship, Format Structure Change\n8 club teams and 9 divisional teams (17 in total) will take part in this year's S.F.C. It was decided that only 8 divisional sides would take part in the competition proper so the 2 lowest ranked divisional sides from the previous 5 years would play off in a qualification match with the winner entering the draw for the 2019 County Championship proper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 64], "content_span": [65, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290383-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerry Senior Football Championship, Format Structure Change\nRelegation (See below): The club team to be relegated from the Senior County Championship will be the same team to be relegated from the Senior Club Championship (The 8 senior clubs play off against each other in two pools in the Club Championship. The two teams that finished bottom of the Group Pools enter a relegation final. This loser will be relegated to the I.F.C. for 2020. Should a club reach the final of the County championship they will be exempt from the Relegation process in the Club championship).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 64], "content_span": [65, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290383-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerry Senior Football Championship, Format Structure Change\nThe winner of the 2019 I.F.C. will be promoted to the 2020 Senior County and Club Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 64], "content_span": [65, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290383-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerry Senior Football Championship, Team Changes\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2018 championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 53], "content_span": [54, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290383-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerry Senior Football Championship, Participating Teams\nThe teams taking part in the 2019 Kerry Senior Football Championship are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290383-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerry Senior Football Championship, Championship Qualifier\nIt was decided that only 8 of the 9 Divisional Teams would play in the Senior Championship proper. To determine which team would be excluded, all divisional teams placed into an open draw. Two of these divisional sides were drawn to play in a Qualifying Round. The winner would proceed to Round 1 of the championship proper while the loser would exit the championship until the following year. The ranking system of previous years was abolished.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290383-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerry Senior Football Championship, Rounds 1 to 3, 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, 63], "content_span": [64, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290383-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerry Senior Football Championship, Rounds 1 to 3, Round 2, Round 2A\nThe eight winners from Round 1 play each other in this round. The winners proceed to the knock-out quarter finals while the losers play in Round 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290383-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerry Senior Football Championship, Rounds 1 to 3, Round 2, Round 2B\nThe eight losers from Round 1 play each other in this round. The winners proceed to Round 3 while the losers are eliminated from the championship having lost two games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290383-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerry Senior Football Championship, Rounds 1 to 3, Round 3\nThe four Round 2A losers (who won a game and lost a game) play the four Round 2B winners (who lost a game and won a game) in this round. The four winners progress to the knock-out quarter finals while the losers are eliminated from the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290383-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerry Senior Football Championship, Knock-Out Stage, Quarter-Finals\nThe four Round 2A winners play the four Round 3 winners in the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 72], "content_span": [73, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290383-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Kerry Senior Football Championship, Relegation\nThe club team to be relegated from the Senior County Championship will be the same team to be relegated from the Senior Club Championship. The 8 senior clubs are placed into two groups containing four teams during the Club Championship. The teams to finish bottom of both groups will face off in the Relegation Final, with the loser being relegated to the I.F.C. for 2020. Should a club reach the final of the County championship they will be exempt from the Relegation process in the Club championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290384-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Khash\u2013Zahedan suicide bombing\nOn February 13, 2019, a suicide bombing on the Khash\u2013Zahedan road in Sistan and Baluchestan Province of Iran killed at least 27 Revolutionary Guards and wounded another 13. It was one of the deadliest terrorist attacks in Iran in years. The Salafi jihadist militant organization Jaish ul-Adl (\"Army of Justice\") said it carried out the bombing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290384-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Khash\u2013Zahedan suicide bombing, Bombing\nThe bomber targeted a bus transporting military personnel on the Khash\u2013Zahedan road (Road 95) in Sistan and Baluchestan province, near the border with Pakistan. The area is a refuge for militant separatist groups and drug smugglers. The bomber detonated a car full of explosives near the bus, killing 27 Revolutionary Guards and injuring 13. The soldiers were coming back to their cities after carrying out the border mission by the bus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290384-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Khash\u2013Zahedan suicide bombing, Bombing\nJaish al-Adl, a group connected to Al-Qaeda and involved in some of the recent terrorist activities in southeast Iran took responsibility for the suicide bombing. In October 2018, 11 Iranian border Guards were kidnapped by the group, only 5 of them were released.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290384-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Khash\u2013Zahedan suicide bombing, Bombing\nThe Senior Revolutionary Guards commander of Iran claimed that the suicide bomber was a Pakistani national and one other member of the militant cell that planned the attack was also Pakistani. Furthermore, he claimed that three other members of militant cells were Iranian nationals from Sistan and Baluchestan. Out of those three Iranians, two were arrested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290384-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Khash\u2013Zahedan suicide bombing, Reactions\nAli Khamenei, Supreme Leader of Iran declared that \"It is evidently certain that the perpetrators of this crime are connected to the intelligence services of some of the countries inside as well as outside the region.\" Iranian president, Hassan Rouhani claimed that Israel and United States of America were behind the attack on Iranian Revolutionary Guards bus. He also vowed revenge against Jaish Al-Adl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290384-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Khash\u2013Zahedan suicide bombing, Reactions\nIran's Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif linked the suicide bombing targeting the country's elite Revolution Guard to an ongoing, U.S.-sponsored Mideast meeting in Warsaw. Zarif tweeted Wednesday night: \"Is it no coincidence that Iran is hit by terror on the very day that #WarsawCircus begins? Especially when cohorts of same terrorists cheer it from Warsaw streets & support it with twitter bots?\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290384-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Khash\u2013Zahedan suicide bombing, Reactions\nIran's Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi met with India's External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj and referring to both the 2019 Khash\u2013Zahedan suicide bombing and the 2019 Pulwama attack, he stated: \"Iran and India suffered from two heinous terrorist attacks in the past few days resulted in big casualties. Today in my meeting with Sushma Swaraj the Indian FM, when she had a stopover in Tehran, we agreed on close cooperation to combat terrorism in the region. Enough is enough!\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290384-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Khash\u2013Zahedan suicide bombing, Reactions\nIranian Major General Mohammad Ali Jafari alleged that United States and Israel ordered Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates to carry out the attack. He also asked Pakistan to conduct crack down against armed group Jaish al-Adl before Tehran \"takes it revenge.\" Pakistan offered Iran cooperation in investigating the bombing, and expressed sympathy for the victims of the attack. A Pakistani delegation was due to travel to Iran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290384-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Khash\u2013Zahedan suicide bombing, Reactions\nBahram Qassemi, Iran Foreign Ministry spokesman declared \"Tehran will avenge the attack\" and said it would not tolerate what it saw as Pakistan's \"inability to stop cross-border attacks in Iran.\" Ali Larijani, Iran's parliament speaker blamed Pakistan for the attack, saying that the attack was \"planned and carried out from inside Pakistan\". Muhammad Beghari, the military commander of Iran, told Pakistan to \"either confront the terrorist groups or allow Iranian forces in.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290384-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Khash\u2013Zahedan suicide bombing, Mourning\nThe mourning for the victims was held one day after the attack in Isfahan, Iran. The bodies of the victims were flown to Isfahan where press representatives and the affected families were waiting. The mourning ceremony was widely covered by media in Iran and the interview with families of the victims went viral in Iranian social media.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290385-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Khasi Hills Autonomous District Council election\nElections to the Khasi Hills Autonomous District Council (KHADC) were held on 27 February 2020. The votes were counted on 2 March 2020 with the Indian National Congress emerging as the largest party in the Council with 10 seats while the NPP and its ally UDP emerged as the ruling coalition with 7 and 6 seats respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290385-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Khasi Hills Autonomous District Council election, Results\nThe counting was held on 2 March 2019. The INC emerged single largest party by winning 10 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 62], "content_span": [63, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290386-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial election\nProvincial elections were held in constituencies of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa belonging to areas previously located in Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) on 20 July 2019. After the election, the new members joined the already elected members from the rest of the province to complete the formation of 11th Provincial Assembly of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290386-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial election, Background\nOn 31 May 2018, the former president of Pakistan Mamnoon Hussain signed the landmark Twenty-fifth Amendment to the Constitution of Pakistan which was already passed by the National Assembly of Pakistan and Senate of Pakistan earlier that year. The amendment called for the integration of FATA into Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. It also outlined that provincial elections will be held in areas of former FATA within one year of 2018 Pakistani general election. To fulfill that requirement, the new president of Pakistan Arif Alvi directed the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) in late 2018 to conduct the elections in May 2019. ECP started the work to delimit the constituencies. During the delimitation exercise, sixteen new constituencies were created to elect the members on general seats and four reserved seats for women and one for Non-Muslims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 899]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290386-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial election, Background\nOn 6 May 2019, it was announced that the election will be held on 20 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290386-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial election, Background\n285 candidates of different parties including two women candidates ran for elections out of which 202 were Independent candidates. Over 2.1 million voters used their right to vote for the first ever provincial elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290386-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial election, Background\nA total 1896 polling stations were created across the tribal districts out of which 450 polling stations have been declared sensitive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290386-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial election, Background\nPolling started in morning 8 till evening 5 without any break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290386-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial election, Results\nAccording to official Results Independents won 6 seats, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf won 5 seats, Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam F won 3 seats, Jamat-e-Islami and Awami National Party won 1 seats each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290386-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial election, Aftermath\nAfter the elections, five out of the six independents joined political parties. Three joined the Balochistan Awami Party (BAP) and two joined the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290386-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial election, Aftermath\nFollowing this, PTI was declared to have secured two of the four reserved seats for women and the one reserved for minorities. Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (F) (JUI-F) and BAP each secured one reserved seat for women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290387-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kids' Choice Awards\nThe 32nd Annual Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards was held on March 23, 2019, at the Galen Center in Los Angeles, California (the sixth ceremony at that venue). It aired live on Nickelodeon, and live or tape delayed across all of Nickelodeon's international networks, with DJ Khaled as host. The hip-hop group Migos performed at the ceremony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290387-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kids' Choice Awards\nTwo series starring Jace Norman were the lead-in and lead-out around the ceremony. A new episode of Henry Danger led into the ceremony, with a sneak peek of the \"A-block\" of the first episode of the hidden camera prank show The Substitute slotting in between the KCAs and the lead-out (the same Henry Danger episode that led into the ceremony).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290387-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kids' Choice Awards, Presenters\nThe list of presenters and performers for the ceremony were announced on March 14, 2019, with the Orange Carpet appearances announced the following day. The Orange Carpet portion of the ceremony was live streamed on Nickelodeon's social networks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290387-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kids' Choice Awards, Winners and nominees\nThe nominations were announced on February 26, 2019, by Double Dare host Liza Koshy via a nomination broadcast live on all Nickelodeon's social media platforms and channels. Voting ended on March 22, 2019. The winners are listed below, in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290387-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kids' Choice Awards, International nominations\nThe following are nominations for awards from Nickelodeon's international networks, have the categories and awards presented during continuity during their individual airings of the main American ceremony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290388-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kids' Choice Sports\nThe 6th Annual Kids' Choice Sports was taped on July 11, 2019 at the Barker Hangar in Santa Monica, California, and was broadcast on August 10. Hall of Fame Athlete and talk show host Michael Strahan hosted the show for the second time. Strahan previously hosted the inaugural show in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290388-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kids' Choice Sports, Sports Council\nA Kids' Choice Sports Council was formed to \"lend their expertise and experience to help inform the awards show, consult on the nominee process and give feedback on categories.\" Committee members are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290388-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kids' Choice Sports, Nominees and winners\nWinners are highlighted in bold. Nominations were announced on June 6, 2019, and winners were announced on July 12, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290389-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kildare County Council election\nA Kildare County Council election was held in County Kildare in Ireland on 24 May 2019 as part of that year's local elections. All 40 councillors were elected for a five-year term of office from 8 local electoral areas (LEAs) by single transferable vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290389-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kildare County Council election\nFollowing a recommendation of the 2018 Boundary Committee, the boundaries of the LEAs were altered from those used in the 2014 elections. Its terms of reference required no change in the total number of councillors but set a lower maximum LEA size of seven councillors, exceeded by three of the five 2014 LEAs. Other changes were necessitated by population shifts revealed by the 2016 census.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290389-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kildare County Council election\nFianna F\u00e1il remained the largest party with 12 seats although they saw a slight reduction in vote share. Fine Gael increased their vote share by over 2% and also gained an extra 2 seats to have a total of 11. Labour retained their 5 seats on the Council. The Social Democrats benefitted from the presence of Catherine Murphy in the County and saw 4 gains with the party winning seats in Clane, Leixlip, Naas and Newbridge. The Green Party returned to the Council with 3 seats; its 3 gains coming from Celbridge, Maynooth and Naas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290389-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kildare County Council election\nSinn F\u00e9in lost 4 seats overall as its vote share fell by 67% and the party only came home with 1 seat. Partly due to retirements Independents saw a net loss of 5 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290390-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kildare Senior Football Championship\nThe 2019 Kildare Senior Football Championship is the 126th edition of the Kildare GAA's premier club Gaelic football tournament for senior graded teams in County Kildare, Ireland. The tournament consists of 16 teams with the winner going on to represent Kildare in the Leinster Senior Club Football Championship. The championship had a different format this year, employing a random draw for the first round, followed by seeded groups and a knock-out stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290390-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kildare Senior Football Championship\nMoorefield were the defending champions for the second year running after they defeated Athy in the previous years final. They were looking to do the first 3 in a row since the great Sarsfields teams of the 50's and looked good only for Barry Coffey to score an equalising point in injury time to send the final to a replay. Their title challenge was undone when Newbridge rivals Sarsfields defeated them 2-15 to 2-9 on 27 October 2019 at St. Conleth's Park. This was Sarsfields' 25th S.F.C. crown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290390-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kildare Senior Football Championship\nThis was Two Mile House's debut in the senior grade after claiming the 2018 Kildare I.F.C. however they were relegated back the I.F.C. for 2020 when losing their Relegation Final to Raheens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290390-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kildare Senior Football Championship, Team Changes\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2018 championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 55], "content_span": [56, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290390-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kildare Senior Football Championship, Format\nThe 2019 Senior and Intermediate County Championship follows the same format as 2018. 16 teams play in eight first round games after which all 16 teams will go into four groups of four with two winners and two losers from the opening round in each of those groups. After which the teams that finish first and second will qualify for the knockout stages while the four bottom clubs have to fend off relegation in a Relegation Semi-Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290390-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kildare Senior Football Championship, Group stage\nAll 16 teams play in the group stage. There are four groups of four, with each group consisting of two First Round winners and two losers. The top team in each group go into the Quarter-Finals, 2nd and 3rd in each group proceed to the Preliminary Quarter-Finals while the bottom team of each group entered a Relegation Playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290391-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kilkenny County Council election\nA Kilkenny County Council election was held in County Kilkenny, Ireland on 24 May 2019 as part of that year's local elections, with all 24 councillors to be elected for a five-year term of office from 4 local electoral areas (LEAs) by single transferable vote. Following a recommendation of the 2018 Boundary Committee, the boundaries of the LEAs were altered from those used in the 2014 elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290391-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kilkenny County Council election\nFianna F\u00e1il gained 1 additional seat to increase their numbers to 11 while also increasing their vote by 4%. Fine Gael gained 2 seats and also increased their vote by 2%. Labour and the Greens retained their previous position but it was a disastrous election for Sinn F\u00e9in. The party lost all 3 seats, including Sean Tyrell, the partner of Kathleen Funchion TD and saw a significant drop in their vote-share. Breda Gardner, a sitting Independent who also contested the Ireland South European Parliament constituency unsuccessfully, failed to retain her seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290392-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kilkenny Intermediate Hurling Championship\nThe 2019 Kilkenny Intermediate Hurling Championship was the 55th staging of the Kilkenny Intermediate Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Kilkenny County Board in 1929. The championship began on 21 September 2019 and ended on 27 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290392-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kilkenny Intermediate Hurling Championship\nOn 27 October 2019, Tullaroan won the championship after a 3-18 to 0-21 defeat of Thomastown in the final at UPMC Nowlan Park. It was their second championship title overall and their first title since 1988.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290392-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kilkenny Intermediate Hurling Championship\nPaul Holden from the Young Irelands club was the championship's top scorer with 2-40.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290393-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kilkenny Senior Football Championship\nThe 2019 Kilkenny Senior Football Championship was the 126th edition of the Kilkenny GAA's premier club Gaelic football tournament for senior graded teams in County Kilkenny, Ireland. The tournament consisted of 12 clubs with the winner going on to represent Kilkenny in the Leinster Intermediate Club Football Championship. The championship is conducted in a straight knock-out format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290393-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kilkenny Senior Football Championship\nMullinavat were the defending champions for the second year running after defeating Muckalee in the previous year's final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290393-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kilkenny Senior Football Championship\nThis was Tullogher-Rosbercon's return to the senior grade after claiming the 2018 Kilkenny I.F.C. title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290393-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kilkenny Senior Football Championship\nOn 11 August 2019, Mullinavat claimed their 4th Kilkenny S.F.C. crown when defeating Railyard by 1-13 to 0-10 after a replay in the final at Nolan Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290393-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kilkenny Senior Football Championship\nJames Stephens were relegated to the 2020 I.F.C. after conceding a walk-over to Glenmore in the Relegation Final. This ended their 12 year tenure in the senior ranks since their promotion in 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290393-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kilkenny Senior Football Championship, Team changes\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2018 championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290394-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kilkenny Senior Hurling Championship\nThe 2019 Kilkenny Senior Hurling Championship was the 125th staging of the Kilkenny Senior Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Kilkenny County Board in 1887. The championship began on 21 September 2019 and ended on 27 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290394-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kilkenny Senior Hurling Championship\nOn 27 October 2019, Ballyhale Shamrocks won the championship after a 2-21 to 1-15 defeat of James Stephens in the final at UPMC Nowlan Park. It was their 17th championship overall and their second title in succession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290394-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kilkenny Senior Hurling Championship\nT. J. Reid from the Ballyhale Shamrocks club was the championship's top scorer with 1-34.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290395-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kilkenny Senior Hurling League\nThe 2019 Kilkenny Senior Hurling League was the 28th staging of the Kilkenny Senior Hurling League since its establishment by the Kilkenny County Board in 1992. The league began on 6 April 2019 and ended on 22 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290395-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kilkenny Senior Hurling League\nOn 22 September 2019, Dicksboro won the league after a 2-15 to 2-14 defeat of O'Loughlin Gaels in the final. This was their fourth league title overall and their first tile since 2-17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290396-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kim Kim River toxic pollution\nThe 2019 Kim Kim River toxic pollution is a water pollution incident that occurred on 7 March 2019 caused by illegal chemical waste dumping at the Kim Kim River in Pasir Gudang of Johor in Malaysia. The illegal dumping released toxic fumes, affecting 6,000 people and hospitalising 2,775. Most of the victims were school students\u2014110 schools located near the river were subsequently closed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290396-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kim Kim River toxic pollution, Background of pollution\nThe incident started on 7 March 2019 after several students and canteen workers from two schools near the river began to fall ill and complaining of breathing difficulties. Both schools were ordered to shut down and all the victims were sent to Sultan Ismail Hospital while investigations were being carried out by state health authorities over the cause. Twenty-one people were warded at the hospital with some being admitted into the emergency unit and intensive care unit (ICU). Some of the students brought to the hospital were already fainted and with symptoms such as vomiting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290396-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Kim Kim River toxic pollution, Background of pollution\nThose who were not seriously affected were given outpatient treatment and allowed to return home. During recovery, some of the seriously affected victims shared their experience of suddenly being ill after inhaling unpleasant odour in their school compound. The number of victims hospitalised over the toxic fumes rose to 76 on the following day and on 9 March 2019, five police reports have been made on the issue with police began investigating the case.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290396-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kim Kim River toxic pollution, Background of pollution, Further spread of toxic fumes and water pollution\nOn 11 March, the second wave of air poisoning took effect with further 106\u2013207 victims hospitalised before escalating into more than 1,000 victims with eight admitted into the ICU. The spread of the toxic fumes was aided by hot weather combined with strong winds, which made more people sick. The Malaysian Fire and Rescue Department director-general Mohammad Hamdan Wahid explained that the further spread of toxic fumes could have been prevented if the illegally dumped chemicals found earlier were immediately removed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 110], "content_span": [111, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290396-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Kim Kim River toxic pollution, Background of pollution, Further spread of toxic fumes and water pollution\nHowever, the authorities did not dispose the chemicals after concluding it was no longer reactive, allegedly due to the costs involved. Until 19 March, further 76 police reports have been made. On 20 June, about 3 months since the pollution first discovered, a number of students from schools in the Pasir Gudang area began complaining of nausea, dizziness and experienced vomiting which eventually led to the temporary closure of the schools in the area. The authorities later confirmed it as the third wave of air poisoning resulted from the river pollution, which were not fully cleared.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 110], "content_span": [111, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290396-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kim Kim River toxic pollution, Background of pollution, Further spread of toxic fumes and water pollution\nIn August 2019, residents in Acheh's Well Village near the Daing and Kopok rivers (tributaries to the Kim Kim River) complained that the water in both rivers have turned black and oily with unbearable foul stench which were believed to have spread from the chemical pollution of the Kim Kim River. A resident interviewed on the issue said the rivers were once homes to various crabs, freshwater fish and shrimps with children used to swim in, but everything has been damaged since the pollution turned worse in April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 110], "content_span": [111, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290396-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kim Kim River toxic pollution, Investigation, clearance works and arrestment of perpetrators\nThrough investigations, it was believed that the chemical wastes were dumped from a lorry tanker into the Kim Kim River in wee hours, on the same day before the victims fell ill. Agencies dispatched for the cleaning-up operation of the polluted river collected 2.43 tonnes of chemical waste on the day the incident was reported. The cleaning works, however, worsened the chemical reaction, as the contractor engaged was not experienced in dealing with chemical wastes. A Chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear (CBRN) team from the 12th Squadron of the Royal Army Engineers Regiment of Malaysian Armed Forces was later dispatched to assist in the chemical cleaning efforts together with a Hazmat team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 97], "content_span": [98, 806]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290396-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kim Kim River toxic pollution, Investigation, clearance works and arrestment of perpetrators\nThe Johor Department of Environment (DOE) arrested an owner of a chemical factory in Kulai on 10 March followed by another arrest involving shredded waste factory owner and one of its workers in Taman Pasir Puteh on the following day after a series of investigations. With the arrests, the DOE completed its investigation papers and were sent to the public prosecutor for further action, with the investigators also have identified the illegally dumped chemical as marine oil that emitted flammable methane and benzene fumes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 97], "content_span": [98, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290396-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 Kim Kim River toxic pollution, Investigation, clearance works and arrestment of perpetrators\nThe oil is categorised as a scheduled waste and needs proper disposal due to its hazardous nature. On 17 March, nine more people were arrested by the police in connection to the case; two arrested in Johor Bahru while seven were arrested outside the Johor Bahru area. Two key suspects, believed to be instrumental in arranging for the transportation of the toxic substances, were arrested on 19 March, bringing the total arrests to 11 with one suspect later released under bail after he is proven to be unrelated to the case. The cleaning operation of the 1.5 kilometre stretch of the affected river was completed in the same day, where a total of 900 tonnes of soil and 1,500 tonnes of polluted water were cleaned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 97], "content_span": [98, 813]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290396-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Kim Kim River toxic pollution, Investigation, clearance works and arrestment of perpetrators\nSeveral other identified toxic gases emitted (following the interaction of the chemicals concerned with water and air) include acrolein, acrylonitrile, ethylbenzene, hydrogen chloride, D-limonene, toluene and xylene, which if inhaled, can cause headache, nausea, fainting and breathing difficulty. Two main suspects (a Singaporean and a Malaysian) were charged at the Sessions Court in Johor on 25 March for illegal disposal of chemicals into the river and their company, P Tech Resources was slapped with 15 charges to which they pleaded not guilty. Both have been charged earlier in the same court for conspiring with a lorry driver to dispose the scheduled wastes into the river.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 97], "content_span": [98, 780]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290396-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Kim Kim River toxic pollution, Government and health authorities response\nJohor's Sultan Ibrahim Ismail urged for an immediate action against the perpetrators involved in this pollution that endangered public lives while expressing his appreciation for the medical teams which had been working tirelessly to treat the victims in hospital. The Sultan has pledged a total of RM1 million (around US$250,000) towards helping rescue agencies and authorities to gather the necessary means and equipment to resolve the matter, meanwhile expressing his view that the incident shows the need for a government hospital to be built in Pasir Gudang.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290396-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Kim Kim River toxic pollution, Government and health authorities response\nPrime Minister Mahathir Mohamad and Deputy Prime Minister Wan Azizah Wan Ismail visited victims of the pollution at the hospital in Johor Bahru on 14 March, and said that the situation was \"under control\" where residents are not necessary to be evacuated from the area and also that there is a need to review the country's Environmental Quality Act 1974 in light of the serious pollution. The federal government has approved an allocation of RM8 million for river purification works and has ordered various agencies including the police, military and Hazmat teams to support the situation in the affected area. They explained that there was no request for a state of emergency received from the state government of Johor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290396-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Kim Kim River toxic pollution, Government and health authorities response\nJohor's Menteri Besar Osman Sapian were in the opinion that the situation is under control without the need to declare a state of emergency in the area with the state government has approved an emergency allocation of RM6.4 million for cleaning up the affected river. Malaysia's Environment Minister Yeo Bee Yin stressed that investigation will be carried out to bring those responsible to justice and explained that the RM6.4 million is mainly used to clear the 1.5 kilometre stretch of the affected river with further cost expected to balloon to over RM10 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290396-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 Kim Kim River toxic pollution, Government and health authorities response\nThe state government also dismissed claims that its agencies were slow to react over the incident. The State Health Department had also warned the public not to circulate fake news, with an ongoing one saying deaths had been resulted from the pollution. On 1 June, Malaysia's Health Ministry formed a medical team, which consists of officers from the Institute for Medical Research and Johor Health Department, to examine a total of 6,000 victims affected by the pollution .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290396-0008-0002", "contents": "2019 Kim Kim River toxic pollution, Government and health authorities response\nMalaysia's Water, Land and Natural Resources Minister Xavier Jayakumar Arulanandam urged every state governments to take serious measures to overcome river pollution as climate change could cause the country to experience long periods of drought in the future. The ministry also drafted a Water Resources Bill to clamp down on water pollution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290396-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Kim Kim River toxic pollution, Government and health authorities response\nNeighbouring authorities in Singapore continue to monitor the situation following the reports of more illegal waste dumping sites found in Pasir Gudang. Various Singapore agencies have been conducting regular checks with a minister explained that they were taking the matter very seriously as what happened in Malaysia can affect Singapore significantly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290396-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Kim Kim River toxic pollution, Government and health authorities response, Criticism of government response and lawsuits\nJohor's Crown Prince Tunku Ismail Idris took the matter to Twitter to express his opinion that the government should have instead declared a state of emergency on the day it first occurred and relocated residents to a temporary place until there was a guarantee that the area was safe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 125], "content_span": [126, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290396-0010-0001", "contents": "2019 Kim Kim River toxic pollution, Government and health authorities response, Criticism of government response and lawsuits\nFormer Prime Minister Najib Razak called out the state government's slow response on the pollution and the refusal of the Pakatan Harapan (PH) government to allocate more funds to clear the affected river, and these actions were seen as if they prioritised money, rather than the lives and health of the people. Malaysian Chinese Association (MCA) Deputy President Mah Hang Soon said that the incompetent preventive measures escalated the hazard levels in the involved area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 125], "content_span": [126, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290396-0010-0002", "contents": "2019 Kim Kim River toxic pollution, Government and health authorities response, Criticism of government response and lawsuits\nIn July 2019, a boy was reported to have developed Parkinson's-like disease of myokymia after being exposed to the pollution, although this was denied by Malaysia's Deputy Health Minister Lee Boon Chye who said that the boy was born premature and had a history of fits since he was four. A group of 160 victims of the pollution then began to filed a suit and taking the Johor Menteri Besar along with the state government to court to seek monetary compensation for the boy and other damages caused by the illegal dumping of toxic chemicals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 125], "content_span": [126, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290396-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Kim Kim River toxic pollution, Government and health authorities response, Other responses\nA chemical company Lotte Chemical Titan Holdings Bhd had denied rumours that they are involved in the pollution of Kim Kim River. In a statement to Bursa Malaysia, Lotte Chemical Titan stated in detail: \"The company hereby denies rumours and wishes to announce that it has no involvement with the incident\". Malaysian singer Indah Ruhaila expressed concern over the incident as her parents live in the affected area where she also persuaded her parents to leave their homes, worrying of the reoccurrence of the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 95], "content_span": [96, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290397-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 King Cup\nThe 2019 King Cup, or The Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques Cup, was the 44th edition of the King Cup since its establishment in 1957, and the 1st under the current format. It started on 1 January and concluded with the final on 2 May 2019. As winners of the tournament, Al-Taawoun qualified for the 2020 AFC Champions League group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290397-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 King Cup\nAl-Taawoun won their first title after a 2\u20131 win over defending champions Al-Ittihad in the final on 2 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290397-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 King Cup, Format changes\nOn 9 February 2018, the Saudi FF announced that the number of teams were increased from 32 to 64 teams to accommodate the increased number of teams in the leagues. All Pro League, MS League, and Second Division teams will compete in the tournament under the new format as well as the four winners from the Third Division playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 29], "content_span": [30, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290397-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 King Cup, Participating teams\nA total of 64 teams participated in this season. 16 teams from the Pro league, 20 teams from the MS League, 24 teams from the Second Division and 4 teams qualifying from the preliminary stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 34], "content_span": [35, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290397-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 King Cup, Round of 64\nThe Round of 64 matches were played between 1 and 5 January 2019. All times are local, AST (UTC+3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 26], "content_span": [27, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290397-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 King Cup, Round of 32\nThe Round of 32 matches were played between 14 and 18 January 2019. All times are local, AST (UTC+3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 26], "content_span": [27, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290397-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 King Cup, Round of 16\nThe Round of 16 matches were played between 21 and 23 January 2019. All times are local, AST (UTC+3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 26], "content_span": [27, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290397-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 King Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe Quarter-finals were played on 1 and 2 April 2019. All times are local, AST (UTC+3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 29], "content_span": [30, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290397-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 King Cup, Semi-finals\nThe Semi-finals were played on 26 and 27 April 2019. All times are local, AST (UTC+3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 26], "content_span": [27, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290397-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 King Cup, Final\nThe final was played on 2 May 2019 at the King Fahd International Stadium in Riyadh. All times are local, AST (UTC+3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 20], "content_span": [21, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290397-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 King Cup, Top goalscorers\nNote: Players and teams marked in bold are still active in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 30], "content_span": [31, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290398-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 King Cup Final\nThe 2019 King Cup Final was the 44th final of the King Cup, Saudi Arabia's main football knock-out competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290398-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 King Cup Final\nIt took place on 2 May 2019 at the King Fahd International Stadium in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia and was contested between Al-Ittihad and Al-Taawoun. It was Al-Taawoun's second King Cup final and Al-Ittihad's 18th. This was the first-ever meeting between these two clubs in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290398-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 King Cup Final\nAl-Taawoun won the game 2\u20131 to secure their first title. As winners of the 2019 King Cup, Al-Taawoun qualified for the 2020 AFC Champions League group stage and the 2019 Saudi Super Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290398-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 King Cup Final, Venue\nThe King Fahd International Stadium was announced as the final venue on 30 April 2019. This was the sixth King Cup final hosted in the King Fahd International Stadium following those in 1988, 2008, 2009, 2010, and 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290398-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 King 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, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290398-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 King Cup Final, Background\nDefending champions Al-Ittihad reached a record 18th final after a 4\u20132 win against Pro League champions Al-Nassr, beating them for the second time in a week. This was Al-Ittihad's second consecutive final, and sixth final since the tournament was reintroduced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290398-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 King Cup Final, Background\nAl-Taawoun reached their second final, after a historic 5\u20130 away win against Al-Hilal. They finished as runners-up in their previous final appearance, losing to Al-Nassr. This was Al-Taawoun's first appearance in the final as a top-tier side, as they were a second-tier side in 1990.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290398-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 King Cup Final, Background\nThe two teams met twice in the Pro League, with Al-Taawoun winning the first match 5\u20133 in Buraidah. The second match ended in a 0\u20130 draw in Jeddah. This was the first meeting between the two sides in the King Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290398-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 King Cup Final, Road to the final\nNote: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first (H: home; A: away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290398-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 King Cup Final, Match, Details\nAssistant referees:Hern\u00e1n Maidana (Argentina)Juan Pablo Belatti (Argentina)Fourth official:Fernando Echenique (Argentina)Video assistant referee:Anderson Daronco (Brazil)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290399-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes\nThe 2019 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes was a horse race held at Ascot Racecourse on Saturday 27 July 2019. It was the 69th running of the King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290399-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes\nThe winner was Enable, a five-year-old bay mare trained at Newmarket by John Gosden, ridden by Frankie Dettori and owned by Khalid Abdullah. Enable's victory was the sixth in the race for Dettori, the fourth for Gosden and the third for Khalid Abdullah. Enable became the third horse after Dahlia and Swain to win the King George twice, and the first to win the race in non-consecutive years. She was the second five-year-old mare to win the race after Park Top in 1969.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290399-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes, The contenders\nThe race attracted a field of eleven runners, five from England and four from Ireland, one from France and one from Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 62], "content_span": [63, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290399-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes, The contenders\nThe favourite for the race was Enable, a five-year-old mare who had won the race as a three-year-old in 2017 and had won two editions of the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe in the interim. On her most recent start she had won the Eclipse Stakes. Her main threat appeared to come from Crystal Ocean who had been narrowly beaten in the 2018 edition of the race and had won the Prince of Wales's Stakes on his last appearance. Crystal Ocean was rated the best racehorse in the world in the July edition of the World's Best Racehorse Rankings. Another major contender was the improving five-year-old gelding Defoe who had won the Coronation Cup and the Hardwicke Stakes in his last two starts. The other two British-trained runners were Salouen, who was contesting the race for the third time and the Ormonde Stakes winner Morando.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 62], "content_span": [63, 884]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290399-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes, The contenders\nIreland was represented by the four-horse entry from Aidan O'Brien's Ballydoyle stable headed by the Epsom Derby winner Anthony Van Dyck. The other Ballydoyle contenders were Magic Wand (Ribblesdale Stakes), Hunting Horn (Hampton Court Stakes) and Norway (third in the Irish Derby). The French challenger was Waldgeist a winner of three Group 1 races while Japan's entry was the 2017 Japan Cup winner Cheval Grand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 62], "content_span": [63, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290399-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes, The contenders\nEnable was made the 8/15 favourite ahead of Crystal Ocean on 7/2, Anthony Van Dyck on 7/1, Defoe on 10/1 and Waldgeist on 12/1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 62], "content_span": [63, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290399-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes, The race\nNorway took the early lead and set a \"blistering\" pace from Magic Wand, Hunting Horn and Anthony Van Dyck. Crystal Ocean and Waldgeist raced in mid-division while Enable, who had been drawn on the wide outside settled towards the rear of the field. The leading group began to tire approaching the final turn and Crystal Ocean moved up on the outside to take the lead in the straight, closely followed by Enable and Waldgeist. The last quarter mile saw a sustained struggle between Crystal Ocean and Enable before the mare prevailed by a neck. Waldgeist was a length and three quarters back in third with the others finishing well strung out. Salouen got the better of Hunting Horn for fourth, with Cheval Grand taking sixth ahead of Norway while the remainder were tailed off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 56], "content_span": [57, 833]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290400-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 King's Cup\nThe 2019 Annual King's Cup Football Tournament (Thai: \u0e1f\u0e38\u0e15\u0e1a\u0e2d\u0e25\u0e0a\u0e34\u0e07\u0e16\u0e49\u0e27\u0e22\u0e1e\u0e23\u0e30\u0e23\u0e32\u0e0a\u0e17\u0e32\u0e19\u0e04\u0e34\u0e07\u0e2a\u0e4c\u0e04\u0e31\u0e1e 2019), commonly referred to as 2019 King's Cup, was the 47th King's Cup, the annual international men's football tournament organised by Football Association of Thailand. It was held in Buriram, Thailand, from 5 to 8 June 2019. Two matches were held on 5 June, the winners of which qualified for the final. The two other teams played the play-off for the 3rd spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290400-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 King's Cup\nAs hosts, Thailand participated automatically in the tournament; they were joined by the CONCACAF team Cura\u00e7ao and AFC teams Vietnam and India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290400-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 King's Cup, Venue\nAll matches held at the Chang Arena in Buriram, Thailand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 80]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290401-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 King's Cup Sepaktakraw World Championship\nThe 2019 King's Cup Sepaktakraw World Championship is the 34th edition of the sepak takraw's premier tournament King's Cup World Championship, organized by the Takraw Association of Thailand and the International Sepaktakraw Federation (ISTAF), during August 25 \u2013 September 1, 2019, at Fashion Island, Bangkok. Thirty-one ISTAF's member countries with a total of more than 500 players participated in the tournament, which featured both men and women categories. The tournament was live broadcast from August 27 to September 1 on Mono 29, Mono Max, and Mono Plus, the satellite television channels in Thailand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290401-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 King's Cup Sepaktakraw World Championship\nThe tournament consists of 281 total match plays, which were divided into two divisions, namely; the Premier division (PM) and the Division 1 (D1), each division consists of 3 events, including; Double, Regu, and Team. All stated events were separated into 2 categories viz; men's and women's. However, no division 1 was assigned for the women category because of the limited quantity of women team participate. Due to the mentioned reasons, the hoop race was likewise conducted on only two events, including men's and women's, with no separated division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290401-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 King's Cup Sepaktakraw World Championship\nThailand was the greatest conqueror of the tournament by acquiring six gold medals from all regu and team categories in the premier division, as well as, the hoop categories, followed by Myanmar, which gained two golds from men's and women's double in the premier division. India, Iran, and Singapore, each obtained 1 gold in division 1; men regu, men team, and men double, respectively. Like the previous edition, the winner of each category in division 1 will automatically advance to the Premier Division in the forthcoming tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290401-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 King's Cup Sepaktakraw World Championship, Participating countries\nThe Thirty-one ISTAF member associations, mostly from Asia\u2013Oceania, are ranked and allocated into the groups based on their performance in the previous edition. The winner of each category in Division 1 of the 2018 edition was automatically placing on the Premier division. France and Macao were early expected to take part in the tournament but withdrew for undisclosed reasons. Afghanistan made its debut in this edition with the Men's Double (MD) event after becoming the ISTAF membership in early 2019. Thailand did not compete in both men's and women's doubles, in order to give others chances of winning medals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 71], "content_span": [72, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290401-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 King's Cup Sepaktakraw World Championship, Hoop event, Men category\nThe ranking round of Men's Hoop events was conducted on the first day of the tournament. The four highest-scoring teams will progress to the final round. Nevertheless, as of twelve national teams which inquired to compete, four of them later withdrew from the event for undisclosed reasons namely; Brazil, Oman, and Nepal. Meanwhile, Brunei, the Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam, secured their place in the final round, the scoring result was listed below;", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 72], "content_span": [73, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290402-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 King's Cup squads\nThe 2019 King's Cup is an international football tournament that is currently being held in Thailand from 5 to 8 June 2019. The 4 national teams involved in the tournament are required to register a squad of 23 players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290402-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 King's Cup squads\nPlayers marked (c) were named as captain for their national squad. Number of caps counts until the start of the tournament, including all FIFA-recognised pre-tournament friendlies. Player's age is their age on the opening day of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290402-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 King's Cup squads, Cura\u00e7ao\nThe final squad was announced on 2 June 2019. Caps and goals are as of 12 October 2018 after the match against US Virgin Islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290402-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 King's Cup squads, India\nThe final squad was announced on 2 June 2019. Caps and goals are as of 14 January 2019 after the match against Bahrain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290402-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 King's Cup squads, Thailand\nThe final squad was announced on 4 June 2019. Caps and goals are as of 25 March 2019 after the match against Uruguay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290402-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 King's Cup squads, Vietnam\nThe final squad was announced on 31 May 2019. Caps and goals are as of 25 January 2019 after the match against Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290403-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 King's Lynn and West Norfolk Borough Council election\nThe 2019 King's Lynn and West Norfolk Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of the King's Lynn and West Norfolk Borough Council in England. It was held on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290404-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kirklees Metropolitan Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Kirklees Metropolitan Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Kirklees Metropolitan Borough Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290405-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kisk\u00fat Open\nThe 2019 Kisk\u00fat Open was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor clay courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Sz\u00e9kesfeh\u00e9rv\u00e1r, Hungary between 14 and 20 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290405-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kisk\u00fat 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-00290406-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kisk\u00fat Open II\nThe 2019 Kisk\u00fat Open II was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor clay courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Sz\u00e9kesfeh\u00e9rv\u00e1r, Hungary between 21 and 27 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290406-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kisk\u00fat Open II, 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-00290407-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kisk\u00fat Open II \u2013 Doubles\nGeorgina Garc\u00eda P\u00e9rez and Fanny Stoll\u00e1r won the title, defeating Nina Poto\u010dnik and Nika Radi\u0161i\u010d in the final, 6\u20131, 7\u20136(7\u20134).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290408-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kisk\u00fat Open II \u2013 Singles\nDanka Kovini\u0107 won the title, defeating Irina-Camelia Begu in the final, 6\u20134, 3\u20136, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290409-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kisk\u00fat Open \u2013 Doubles\nIrina Bara and Maryna Zanevska won the title, defeating Akgul Amanmuradova and Elena Bogdan in the final, 3\u20136, 6\u20132, [10\u20138].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290410-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kisk\u00fat Open \u2013 Singles\nNicoleta Dasc\u0103lu won the title, defeating Irina Bara in an all-Romanian final, 7\u20135, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290411-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kite Awards\nThe 2019 Kite Awards (Vietnamese: Gi\u1ea3i C\u00e1nh di\u1ec1u 2019) is the 27th edition of Vietnam Cinema Association Awards, also the 18th edition since the award is officially named Kite. It honored the best in Vietnam film, television works of 2019. Affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, the award ceremony, which was originally planned to be held on March 15, 2020, then delayed to April 15, ended up being split into 2 small ceremonies at Hanoi on May 12 and Ho Chi Minh City on May 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290411-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kite Awards\nThis year, a total of 113 works participated in the award, including: 16 feature films, 13 TV drama series, 34 documentaries, 12 science films, 15 animated films, 17 short films and six film studies. The organizers do not announce the shortlist of nominees, but consider the prizes on all the above works and decide the winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290411-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kite Awards\nThe Happiness of a Mother won the most awards with seven, including Golden Kite Award for Best Feature Film. In television, not unexpectedly, the hit show of the year Come Home, My Dear won the Golden Kite Award for Best Drama, also were the most awarded with three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290411-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kite Awards, Controversy, Wrongly announced the Promising Actress\nA mistake of the organizers caused the announcement of the \"Promising Actor in a Feature Film\" award to be confused. The award originally belonged to child actress Ng\u00e2n Chi, but before that, according to the press release, the award belonged to actress Oanh Ki\u1ec1u.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 70], "content_span": [71, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290411-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kite Awards, Controversy, The winning of The Happiness of a Mother\n\"The Happiness of a Mother\" has never been considered a strong or brightest candidate among the 16 films competing for the award. The film was even boycotted by the audience before it was released because it was related to the controversy of the main cast. Therefore, the fact that the film won the top prize and won 6 other individual awards raises many doubts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 71], "content_span": [72, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290411-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kite Awards, Controversy, The winning of The Happiness of a Mother\nDirector Hu\u1ef3nh \u0110\u00f4ng was also surprised because he did not think his film would win so many awards, especially the Golden Kite Award for Feature Film. However, he denied \"spending money to buy prizes\" as rumors behind his back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 71], "content_span": [72, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290412-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Klagenfurt Open\nThe 2019 Klagenfurt Open was a professional nine-ball pool tournament and the sixth of seven Euro Tour events of the 2019 Euro Tour season. The men's event was be held between 11 and 13 October, whilst the women's event was held from 13 to 14 October 2019, held at the Sportpark Klagenfurt in Klagenfurt, Austria. The event featured a total prize fund of \u20ac38,000, with the winner of each event winning \u20ac4,500.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290412-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Klagenfurt Open\nMario He was the defending champion of the men's event, having defeated Mark Gray 9\u20138 in the final of the 2018 Klagenfurt Open. He reached the last 32 of the competition, before losing 9\u20131 to Eklent Ka\u00e7i. Greece's Alexander Kazakis won the event, defeating Dutch player Marc Bijsterbosch in the final 9\u20138. The defending champion of the women's event was Austrian player Jasmin Ouschan who defeated Ana Gradi\u0161nik in the 2018 final. Poland's Oliwia Czuprynska won the event, defeating Ouschan in the semi-finals, and Belarusian Marharyta Fefilava in the final 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290412-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Klagenfurt Open, Tournament format\nThe event was held from 11 to 13 October for the men's event, and 13 to 14 October for the women's event. The event was played as a double elimination knockout tournament, until the last-32 stage for the men's event, and the last-16 for the women; where the tournament was contested as a single elimination bracket. Matches were all played as race-to-nine-racks in the men's, and race-to-seven-racks in the women's event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290412-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Klagenfurt Open, Tournament format\nThe defending champions for the event were Austrian players Mario He and Jasmin Ouschan, who defeated Eklent Ka\u00e7i and Oliwia Czupry\u0144ska respectively in the finals of the 2018 Klagenfurt Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290412-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Klagenfurt Open, Tournament format, Prize fund\nThe tournament prize fund was similar to that of other Euro Tour events, with \u20ac4,500 awarded to the winner of both event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 51], "content_span": [52, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290412-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Klagenfurt Open, Tournament results, Men's event\nThe following matches are from the round of 32 onward. Players in bold denote match winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 53], "content_span": [54, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290412-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Klagenfurt Open, Tournament results, Women's event\nBelow is the brackets from the single elimination round. Players in brackets denote match winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 55], "content_span": [56, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290413-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Klasika Primavera\nThe 2019 Klasika Primavera was the 65th edition of the Klasika Primavera, a one-day road cycling race, held on 14 April 2019. It was part of the 2019 UCI Europe Tour as a category 1.1 event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290413-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Klasika Primavera, Teams\nNine teams started the race. Each team had a maximum of eight riders:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290413-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Klasika Primavera, Result\nThe race was won by the Colombian cyclist Carlos Betancur of Movistar Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290414-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Knowsley Metropolitan Borough Council election\nThe 2019 Knowsley Metropolitan Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2019 to elect members of Knowsley Metropolitan Borough Council in England. This election was held on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290415-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Knoxville Challenger\nThe 2019 Knoxville Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the sixteenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Knoxville, United States between 4 and 10 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290415-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00290416-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Knoxville Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nToshihide Matsui and Frederik Nielsen were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290416-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Knoxville Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nHans Hach Verdugo and Adri\u00e1n Men\u00e9ndez Maceiras won the title after defeating Bradley Klahn and Sem Verbeek 7\u20136(8\u20136), 4\u20136, [10\u20135] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290417-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Knoxville Challenger \u2013 Singles\nReilly Opelka was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290417-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Knoxville Challenger \u2013 Singles\nMichael Mmoh won the title after defeating Christopher O'Connell 6\u20134, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290418-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kobe Challenger\nThe 2019 Kobe Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 5th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Kobe, Japan between 4 and 10 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290418-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kobe 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-00290418-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kobe Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw using a protected ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290418-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kobe Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as alternates:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290419-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kobe Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nGon\u00e7alo Oliveira and Akira Santillan were the defending champions but chose to defend their title with different partners. Oliveira partnered Brydan Klein but withdrew in the first round. Santillan partnered Bradley Mousley but lost in the first round to Nam Ji-sung and Song Min-kyu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290419-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kobe Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nPurav Raja and Ramkumar Ramanathan won the title after defeating Andr\u00e9 G\u00f6ransson and Christopher Rungkat 7\u20136(8\u20136), 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290420-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kobe Challenger \u2013 Singles\nTatsuma Ito was the defending champion but retired in the second round to Tseng Chun-hsin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290420-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kobe Challenger \u2013 Singles\nYosuke Watanuki won the title after defeating Y\u016bichi Sugita 6\u20132, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290421-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Koblenz Open\nThe 2019 Koblenz Open was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the third edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Koblenz, Germany between 14 and 20 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290421-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Koblenz 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-00290421-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Koblenz Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw using a protected ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 61], "content_span": [62, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290421-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Koblenz Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw using their ITF World Tennis Ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 61], "content_span": [62, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290422-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Koblenz Open \u2013 Doubles\nRomain Arneodo and Tristan-Samuel Weissborn were the defending champions but only Weissborn chose to defend his title, partnering Sander Arends. Weissborn lost in the first round to J\u00fcrgen Melzer and Filip Pol\u00e1\u0161ek.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290422-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Koblenz Open \u2013 Doubles\nZden\u011bk Kol\u00e1\u0159 and Adam Pavl\u00e1sek won the title after defeating Melzer and Pol\u00e1\u0161ek 6\u20133, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290423-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Koblenz Open \u2013 Singles\nMats Moraing was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290423-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Koblenz Open \u2013 Singles\nGianluca Mager won the title after defeating Roberto Ortega Olmedo 2\u20136, 7\u20136(8\u20136), 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290424-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kogi State gubernatorial election\nThe 2019 Kogi State gubernatorial election occurred on November 16, 2019. Incumbent APC Governor Yahaya Bello won re-election for a second term, defeating PDP Musa Wada and several minor party candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290424-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kogi State gubernatorial election\nYahaya Bello emerged APC gubernatorial candidate after scoring 3,091 votes and defeating his closest rival, Babatunde Irukera, who received 109 votes. He picked Edward David Onoja as his running mate. Musa Wada was the PDP candidate with Samuel Aro as his running mate. 23 candidates contested in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290424-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kogi State gubernatorial election, Electoral system\nThe Governor of Kogi State is elected using the plurality voting system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 56], "content_span": [57, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290424-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kogi State gubernatorial election, Primary election, APC primary\nThe APC primary election was held on August 29, 2019. Yahaya Bello won the primary election polling 3,091 votes against 9 other candidates. His closet rival was Babatunde Irukera, a chief executive of the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission who came second with 109 votes, while Hassan Abdullahi Baiwa, member house of representatives came third with 44 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290424-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kogi State gubernatorial election, Primary election, PDP primary\nThe PDP primary election was held on September 3, 2019. Musa Wada won the primary election polling 748 votes against 4 other candidates. His closest rival Ibrahim Abubakar came second with 710 votes, Idris Wada, a former governor came third with 345 votes, while Dino Melaye, a Nigerian senator polled 70 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290424-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kogi 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, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290424-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Kogi State gubernatorial election, Results\nThe total number of registered voters in the state was 1,646,350, while 636,202 voters were accredited. Total number of votes cast was 624,514, while number of valid votes was 610,744. Rejected votes were 13,770.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290424-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Kogi State gubernatorial election, Results, By local government area\nHere are the results of the election by local government area for the two major parties. The total valid votes of 610,744 represents the 23 political parties that participated in the election.Blue represents LGAs won by Yahaya Bello. Green represents LGAs won by Musa Wada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 73], "content_span": [74, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290425-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kohistan mine collapse\nOn 6 January 2019, it was reported that a mine shaft in the Kohistan District of Badakhshan Province, Afghanistan had collapsed, killing 30 people. The makeshift shaft was reportedly being used to mine gold. Afghan government sources noted that the mining operation was unregulated and illegal, and that most of the miners were local villagers trying to supplement their incomes through rudimentary gold mining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290426-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Konduga bombings\nOn the evening of 16 June 2019, three suicide bombers detonated their explosives in Konduga village in Borno State, Nigeria, killing 30 people and wounding over 40. The first bomber targeted football fans who were watching a game on television in the hall. He was blocked from entering the hall by the owner. A heated argument ensued, during which the bomber detonated his explosives. This attack was the most deadly suicide bombing in 2019 in Nigeria. Soon after, the other two - both of whom were female - blew themselves up nearby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290426-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Konduga bombings\nKonduga had suffered previous attacks, including massacres in January 2014 and in February 2014, a triple suicide bombing in February 2018 and a suicide bombing at a mosque in July 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290426-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Konduga bombings\nOn 27 July 2019, a group returning from a funeral in Nganzai, Borno State, were the victims of a mass shooting. At least 65 people were killed. There was no claim of responsibility, but Islamist group Boko Haram often carries out massacres, most often in Borno.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290426-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Konduga bombings, Responsibility\nThere was no claim of responsibility, though the Konduga attack bore the hallmarks of Boko Haram. One of the group's bases is in nearby Maiduguri. BH regards football as un-Islamic and a corrupting Western influence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290427-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Korea Masters\nThe 2019 Korea Masters (officially known as the Gwangju Korea Masters 2019) was a badminton tournament which took place at Gwangju Women\u2019s University Stadium in Gwangju, South Korea, from 19 to 24 November 2019 and had a total prize of $200,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290427-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Korea Masters, Tournament\nThe 2019 Korea Masters was the twenty-fifth tournament of the 2019 BWF World Tour and also part of the Korea Masters championships, which has been held since 2007. This was the last tournament to be counted in the 2019 BWF World Tour Finals rank. This tournament was organized by Badminton Korea Association and sanctioned by the BWF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290427-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Korea Masters, Tournament, Venue\nThis international tournament was held at Gwangju Women\u2019s University Stadium in Gwangju, South Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290427-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Korea Masters, Tournament, Point distribution\nBelow is the point distribution table for each phase of the tournament based on the BWF points system for the BWF World Tour Super 300 event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 50], "content_span": [51, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290427-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Korea Masters, Tournament, Prize money\nThe total prize money for this tournament was US$200,000. Distribution of prize money was in accordance with BWF regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290428-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Korea National League\nThe 2019 N-League season was the 17th and final season of the N-League, the third tier of football in South Korea. The season started on 16 March 2019 and finished on 9 November 2019. Gyeongju Korea Hydro & Nuclear Power FC were the defending champions. After this season, the league ceased to exist and its clubs were integrated into the expanded K3 League for 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290429-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Korea National League Championship\nThe 2019 Korea National League Championship was a cup competition of the Korea National League in South Korea. The 16th edition of Korea National League Championship was held from May 19 to June 2 in Seogwipo, Jeju Island. All of the Korea National League clubs participated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290430-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Korea Open (badminton)\nThe 2019 Korea Open was a badminton tournament which took place at Incheon Airport Skydome in Incheon, South Korea, from 24 to 29 September 2019 and had a total purse of $400,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290430-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Korea Open (badminton), Tournament\nThe 2019 Korea Open was the nineteenth tournament of the 2019 BWF World Tour and also part of the Korea Open championships, which have been held since 1991. This tournament was organized by the Badminton Korea Association with sanction from the BWF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290430-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Korea Open (badminton), Tournament, Venue\nThis international tournament was held at Incheon Airport Skydome in Incheon, South Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290430-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Korea Open (badminton), Tournament, Point distribution\nBelow is the point distribution table for each phase of the tournament based on the BWF points system for the BWF World Tour Super 500 event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290430-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Korea Open (badminton), Tournament, Prize money\nThe total prize money for this tournament was US$400,000. Distribution of prize money was in accordance with BWF regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290431-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Korea Open (tennis)\nThe 2019 Korea Open (also known as the 2019 KEB Hana Bank Korea Open for sponsorship purposes) was a professional women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 16th edition of the tournament, and part of the 2019 WTA Tour. It took place in Seoul, South Korea between 16 and 22 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290431-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Korea Open (tennis), 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-00290431-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Korea Open (tennis), Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry using a protected ranking into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290431-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Korea Open (tennis), Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry as a special exempt into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290431-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Korea Open (tennis), Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the main draw as a lucky loser:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290431-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Korea Open (tennis), 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-00290432-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Korea Open \u2013 Doubles\nChoi Ji-hee and Han Na-lae were the defending champions, but lost in the quarterfinals to Laura Pigossi and Wang Yafan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290432-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Korea Open \u2013 Doubles\nLara Arruabarrena and Tatjana Maria won the title, defeating Hayley Carter and Luisa Stefani in the final, 7\u20136(9\u20137), 3\u20136, [10\u20137].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290433-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Korea Open \u2013 Singles\nKiki Bertens was the defending champion, but chose to compete in Osaka instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290433-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Korea Open \u2013 Singles\nKarol\u00edna Muchov\u00e1 won her first WTA Tour title, defeating Magda Linette in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290434-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Korean FA Cup\nThe 2019 Korean FA Cup, known as KEB Hana Bank FA Cup due to sponsorship reasons, was the 24th edition of the Korean FA Cup. In this year, video assistant referees (VAR) system is used Semi Final and Final match. Daegu FC were the defending champions, but were eliminated in the round of 16 by Gyeongnam FC. As the winner, Suwon Samsung Bluewings qualified for the 2020 AFC Champions League Group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290434-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Korean FA Cup, Preliminary rounds\nThe preliminary rounds consisted of three rounds. The draw was held on 22 February 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290435-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Korean Series\nThe 2019 Korean Series is the championship series of the 2019 KBO League season. The Doosan Bears, as the regular season champions, automatically advanced to the Korean Series, where they faced the Kiwoom Heroes. The series ran from October 22 to October 26.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290435-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Korean Series\nThe Bears swept the Heroes in four games to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 77]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290435-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Korean Series, Background\nThe Doosan Bears won the 2015 and 2016 Korean Series. They lost the 2017 Korean Series to the Kia Tigers. and the 2018 Korean Series to the SK Wyverns. The team won the pennant race to advance directly to the Korean Series in dramatic fashion. Trailing the SK Wyverns for second place for most of the year, Doosan was 9 games back of SK by late August and even fell back to third place behind the Kiwoom Heroes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290435-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Korean Series, Background\nAfter a rally which started in late August and following a late-season collapse of SK, Doosan was able to secure the pennant on the last game of the season. During this last game against the NC Dinos, Doosan overcame a three-run deficit in the eighth inning to finally win by a score of 6\u20135 in extra innings. With this victory, Doosan achieved the same record as the Wyverns, 88\u201355\u20131, but was ranked above SK due to winning the regular season head-to-head record 9\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290435-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Korean Series, Background\nThe Kiwoom Heroes, were founded in 2008, and have never won the Korean Series, despite appearing in the 2014 Korean Series and reaching the postseason in 6 of the past 7 seasons. 2019 marked the first year of the team's partnership with Kiwoom Securities, having been known as the Nexen Heroes the previous year. Kiwoom trailed SK and Doosan for most of the year, and finally settled for 3rd place in the regular season. In the semi-playoff, the Heroes beat the 4th-place LG Twins in 4 games, and swept the defending champions SK Wyverns in a rematch of the previous year's playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290435-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Korean Series, Background\nNexen faced Doosan for the third time in the postseason, with Doosan winning their two previous confrontations in the semi-playoff round in 2013 and 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290436-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Korean Tour\nThe 2019 Korean Tour was the ninth season of the Korean Tour to carry Official World Golf Ranking points. The season consisted of 15 official events Three events are co-sanctioned with the Asian Tour, one of which was also co-sanctioned with the Japan Golf Tour. All the tournaments had prize funds of at least 500 million won (approximately US$500,000). Nine had prize funds of 1 billion won ($1,000,000) or more.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290436-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00290436-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Korean Tour, Genesis Points table\nThe Order of Merit used a points system, called Genesis Points. Points were awarded based on the player's position in each event. 1,000 points were awarded to the winner, 600 points for second place, down to 5 points for those finishing outside the top 60. All 15 events had the same points. Moon Kyong-jun did not win any tournaments but had 7 top-10 finishes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit\nThe 2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit was a one-day summit held at the Korean Demilitarized Zone between North Korean chairman Kim Jong-un, U.S. president Donald Trump, and South Korean president Moon Jae-in, following the 2019 G20 Osaka summit. Trump briefly stepped over the border at 3:45 PM (GMT+9) on June 30, marking the first time a sitting U.S. president had set foot on North Korean soil. It was also the second time since the end of the Korean War in 1953 that a North Korean leader entered the South's territory, following the April 2018 inter-Korean summit. Senior White House advisors Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner (Trump's daughter and son-in-law), also attended the summit, with Ivanka Trump and U.S. envoy to South Korea Harry B. Harris Jr. holding a meeting with Kim later broadcast on North Korean TV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 860]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Background\nA number of other sitting U.S. presidents had previously traveled to the Korean Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) and seen North Korea through binoculars, but none had previously met the leaders of North Korea or actually traveled within North Korean territory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Background\nTrump and Kim held talks on February 27 and 28, 2019, in the Vietnamese capital of Hanoi, regarding the nuclear issue. At Hanoi, North Korea sought the removal of all significant economic sanctions; in return, it proposed partially reducing its capacity to construct new nuclear weapons, while retaining its existing nuclear arsenal. Trump, meanwhile, offered economic aid to North Korea in exchange for denuclearization. The two countries did not come to agreement, and talks eventually collapsed. In the aftermath of Hanoi, North Korean state media \"angrily denounced the U.S. position\" but \"refrained from criticizing Trump directly and even referred to the positive relationship between the two leaders, a sentiment consistently echoed by Trump himself.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 807]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Background\nOn June 12, 2019, Trump told reporters that he received a \"beautiful letter\" from Kim that was \"very personal, very warm, very nice,\" praised Kim's leadership, and said that the letter was a sign that talks would resume. Kim received a reply from Trump on June 23, 2019, which Kim praised as \"excellent\"; North Korean state media stated that \"Appreciating the political judging faculty and extraordinary courage of President Trump, Kim Jong Un said that he would seriously contemplate the interesting content.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Announcement\nOn June 24, 2019, the Blue House confirmed that Trump would be making a visit to South Korea on June 30 and that the White House was trying to schedule a visit to the Korean Demilitarized Zone. On the morning of June 29, Trump, who was attending G20 summit in Osaka, Japan, tweeted, \"If Chairman Kim of North Korea sees this, I would meet him at the Border/DMZ just to shake his hand and say Hello(?)!\" Five hours later, North Korean Foreign Minister Ri Yong-ho asked the U.S. to issue a formal notice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0004-0001", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Announcement\nOn the evening of the same day, Ri Yong-ho met with Stephen Biegun, the U.S. State Department's Special Representative for North Korea, at Panmunjom, in preparation for the summit. During the South Korea\u2013U.S. Summit, South Korean president Moon Jae-in announced that Trump would be meeting Kim during his visit at the DMZ. Moon predicted that a handshake between Trump and Kim at the DMZ would be a \"milestone\" for denuclearization efforts on the peninsula.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Announcement\nAlthough the meeting was billed as a spontaneous or impromptu meeting, Kim and Trump had exchanged letters earlier in the month. Andrei Lankov of Kookmin University \"said it was inconceivable that the leaders of two powerful nations had arranged a meeting at such short notice. He described it as a 'show' designed to send a political message without raising expectations about actual progress.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Announcement\nAccording to the book of John Bolton, the U.S. national security adviser at that time, Trump didn't want Moon to join him during his third meeting with Kim in the DMZ.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Summit\nFollowing the conclusions of the 2019 G20 Osaka summit in Japan, on June 30, 2019, Trump and South Korean president Moon Jae-in visited the DMZ before the meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un. Kim invited Trump to cross the border line, and Trump briefly crossed in North Korea before crossing back into South Korea together with Kim. Trump thus became the first U.S. president to enter North Korea. Before crossing into North Korea, Kim told Trump in Korean, \"it's good to see you again\" and \"I never expected to meet you at this place\", and shook hands with Trump.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Summit\nTrump said it was \"my honor\" to enter North Korea. During their meeting, Trump also invited Kim to the White House, although later acknowledged that this would probably not occur in the near term. Trump said of Kim: \"A lot of really great things are happening, tremendous things. We met and we liked each other from Day One, and that was very important.\" Moon later joined Trump and Kim, and the three spoke for a brief moment before Kim and Trump held a 53-minute-long private meeting inside the Freedom House.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Summit\nTrump's top advisor Ivanka Trump, senior advisor Jared Kushner, Secretary of the Treasury Steven Mnuchin, and United States ambassador to South Korea Harry B. Harris, Jr., accompanied Trump to the DMZ. Ivanka Trump joined the president in his meeting with Kim. Moon did not attend; the North Korean Foreign Ministry had announced a week before that he was not welcome, telling South Korean authorities to \"mind their own business at home\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Summit\nIn remarks after the meeting, Kim said, \"By meeting here, which is a symbol of division, the symbol of a hostile past...we are presenting to the world that we have a new present, and this is announcing to the world that we will have positive meetings going forward.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Aftermath\nFollowing the nuclear summit, both sides had announced the resumption of \"working-level\" nuclear talks. U.S. secretary of state Mike Pompeo said that Trump administration negotiators would meet North Korean counterparts to resume denuclearization talks in mid-July. U.S. special envoy to North Korea, Stephen Biegun, would lead the U.S. negotiators; the North Korean lead negotiator has not been appointed, although senior diplomat Choe Son-hui was viewed as a likely choice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Aftermath\nDavid E. Sanger and Michael Crowley, in an analysis for The New York Times, wrote that in the lead-up to the meeting, Trump administration officials had been internally considering the prospect that a new round of U.S.\u2013North Korea negotiations could lead to the U.S. accepting \"a nuclear freeze, one that essentially enshrines the status quo, and tacitly accepts the North as a nuclear power,\" rather than complete denuclearization.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0011-0001", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Aftermath\nUnder this possible outcome, North Korea would halt the growth of its nuclear arsenal, but would not dismantle any of the estimated 20\u201360 existing nuclear weapons already in its stockpile, and would not curb its ballistic missile capabilities. Biegun said that commentary about possible outcomes was speculative and said he was \"not preparing any new proposal currently\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Reactions, South Korea\nThe meeting was \"broadly welcomed in South Korean political circles,\" including from the ruling Democratic Party (whose chairman called it \"another milestone toward peace on the Korean Peninsula\") and the conservative Liberty Korea Party, the main opposition party. The chairman of Liberty Korea Party announced that \"it is a good sign for breaking the deadlock in the nuclear talks.\" Myong-hyun Go, Research Fellow of the Asan Institute for Policy Studies which is one of the top 5 think tanks for foreign policy and defense area in South Korea, analyzed DMZ summit as a positive direction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Reactions, South Korea\nGo emphasized the crucial role of South Korea, President Moon between Trump and Kim as a negotiator. Go also said a small deal between the United States and the DPRK, similar to the Iran nuclear deal, might be feasible if Trump concluded that it was more realistic a big deal. However, Andrei Lankov of Kookmin University stated that both Kim and Trump \"needed something that is strong on optics but weak on substance\" and that the DMZ meeting was intended to convey a political message without raising expectations about progress toward an actual agreement on the North Korean nuclear issue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Reactions, North Korea\nNorth Korean state media praised Trump's visit as \"historic\" and \"an amazing event\", and extensively covered the event for KCNA, the state TV network, and Rodong Sinmun, a state newspaper. Kim was quoted in the Rodong Sinmun as saying that \"a dramatic meeting like today could take place in one day due to positive friendly relationship with President Trump.\" Anna Fifield of The Washington Post and Nic Robertson of CNN described the meeting as an important propaganda victory for Kim. However, Foreign Ministry adviser of North Korea Kim Kye-gwan announced that meeting with Trump only served U.S. Interests and pride of U.S. president. DPRK would be interested in another summit with Trump only if U.S. offers mutually acceptable terms between two countries to salvage nuclear diplomacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 852]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Reactions, United States\nDuring a news conference with South Korean president Moon Jae-in, Trump falsely claimed that \"President Obama wanted to meet and Chairman Kim would not meet him. The Obama administration was begging for a meeting.\" Former Trump administration deputy national security advisor K.T. McFarland compared the Trump\u2013Kim DMZ meeting to the Nixon\u2013Mao meeting in 1972, dismissed critics of the meeting, and said \"If Kim doesn't deliver on this, I think he may have potential problems within his own leadership cadre.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Reactions, United States\nA number of Democratic members of the U.S. Congress, candidates for the Democratic nomination for president in 2020, and general critics of Trump criticized his decision to meet with Kim. The Joe Biden campaign denounced Trump for \"coddling\" dictators while making \"numerous concessions for negligible gain\"; candidate Elizabeth Warren tweeted, \"Our president shouldn\u2019t be squandering American influence on photo ops and exchanging love letters with a ruthless dictator.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Reactions, United States\nCritics also took exception to the president's decision to meet with Kim two years after the death of Otto Warmbier, an American college student who was arrested and imprisoned by North Korea after being accused of Subversion (through attempted theft of a propaganda poster), and suffered a fatal brain injury in North Korean captivity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Reactions, United States\nU.S. foreign policy analysts were generally critical of the meeting. Jean H. Lee, the director of the Center for Korean History & Public Policy, wrote that, \"There's a reason why past presidents chose not to go to North Korea while in office: Such visits grant enormous legitimacy to the Kims.\" Samantha Vinograd, a member of the National Security Council during the Obama administration, said that by meeting Kim at the DMZ without preconditions attached, Trump was signaling that North Korea was \"a normalized, nuclear power.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0016-0001", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Reactions, United States\nAnalyst, columnist, and frequent Trump critic Max Boot wrote that the DMZ meeting was \"symbolism utterly devoid of substance\" and argued that Kim had taken advantage of a \"gullible\" Trump to improve his own legitimacy. Commentator S. Nathan Park, however, viewed the third Trump\u2013Kim meeting as a positive trust-building event that could be viewed as \"necessary to get the working level talks back on track.\" Park wrote that although \"one must be clear-eyed to the reality that a tangible result has not yet materialized in Trump's North Korea diplomacy,\" patience could lead to more concrete impacts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Reactions, China\nChina\u2019s foreign minister Wang Yi called the Kim\u2013Trump DMZ meeting a \"rare opportunity for peace\" and said that Paramount leader Xi Jinping had urged the U.S. to \"show flexibility\" by easing its sanctions against North Korea in gradual \"action-for-action\" phases, rather than offering sanctions relief only upon complete nuclear disarmament. Cheong Seong-chang of the Sejong Institute, a South Korean think tank, said that in meetings between Kim and Xi in North Korea, \"Xi pledged economic cooperation and a security guarantee to North Korea in exchange for Pyongyang's continued effort on denuclearization negotiations.\" Koh Yu-hwan, a North Korean studies professor at Dongguk University in Seoul, agreed that Xi had facilitated the Trump\u2013Kim meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 808]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Reactions, Other\nJapanese Prime Minister Shinz\u014d Abe said that \"Japan has been supporting the U.S.-DPRK negotiation process since their Singapore meeting.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Reactions, Other\nThe Catholic leader Pope Francis praised the summit as \"a step further in the walk of peace\" for the Korean Peninsula and \"the entire world.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Reactions, Other\nQatar's Al Jazeera assessed that the DPRK-U.S. summit meeting at the DMZ provided a meaningful stepping stone for Trump's negotiations and created an opportunity to resume the nuclear negotiations with North Korea, which could be an essential milestone in U.S. diplomacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Post-summit developments\nOn October 5, U.S. and North Korean officials held working-level nuclear talks in Stockholm, Sweden, but did not reach any agreement. The U.S. side proposed helping North Korea develop the Wonsan-Kalma coastal tourist area (near the Kalma Airport). After the Stockholm meeting, Pyongyang's chief nuclear negotiator Kim Myong-gil said further talks would depend on will of the U.S. Swedish Special Envoy Kent H\u00e4rstedt expressed cautious optimism that the talks would continue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0021-0001", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Post-summit developments\nIn November, North Korea's U.N. Mission announced that the country has gained no progress from U.S although two leaders committed to establishing a new relationship during the first US-DPRK summit. Vice Minister of DPRK Choe Son-hui said another US-North Korea summit would be feasible if the U.S. removed \u201chostile policy\u201d toward Pyongyang. North Korea has called for an end to joint military drills of USFK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Post-summit developments, Revitalization of the senior officials channel to DPRK\nOn September 10, Trump sacked National Security Advisor John Bolton, saying he strongly disagreed with Bolton's suggestion about applying the Libyan model to the North Korea nuclear deal and mentioning Muammar Gaddafi. Donald Trump selected hostage negotiator of DPRK Robert O'Brien as the new U.S. national security adviser. Some of Senate Republicans including Lindsey Graham praised Trump's pick and mentioned, He's got great negotiating skills, and \"he would be a very sound policy adviser.\" North Korea envoy Stephen Biegun was confirmed as deputy secretary of state which is Pompeo's number two. While Pompeo was recognized as a protector of Trump, Biegun is unknown for his partisanship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 118], "content_span": [119, 814]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290437-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 Koreas\u2013United States DMZ Summit, Post-summit developments, Request of working level talk to North Korea\nOn December 11, 2019, during a U.N. Security Council meeting, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Kelly Craft announced that the U.S. was ready \"to simultaneously take concrete steps\" with a flexible approach for a 'balanced agreement\"/nuclear deal with the DPRK. Craft at the same time warned North Korea that its \u201cdeeply counterproductive\u201d ballistic missile tests risked closing the door on prospects for negotiating peace. Craft emphasized that the Security Council would be ready to \u201cact accordingly\u201d by Security Council action if North Korea resumed \u201cserious provocations\". Craft while chairing the UN Security Council requested North Korea return to the negotiation table in order to take concrete, parallel steps toward an nuclear agreement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 108], "content_span": [109, 859]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290438-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Korea\u2013Thailand Pro Volleyball All-Star Super Match\nThe 2019 Korea\u2013Thailand Pro Volleyball All-Star Super Match presented by Mitsubishi Xpander will be the 3rd staging of the Korea\u2013Thailand Pro Volleyball All-Star Super Match, the annual friendly tournament between Thailand women's national volleyball team and Korea Republic women's national volleyball team. The first match will be held in 5 April 2019 in Nakhon Ratchasima and the second one will be held in 7 April 2019 in Bangkok.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290439-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Korn Ferry Tour\nThe 2019 Korn Ferry Tour was the 30th season of the top developmental tour for the PGA Tour in men's golf. The season began under the Web.com Tour name but changed in June to the Korn Ferry Tour. The season ran from January 13 to September 2 and consists of 27 official money tournaments, four of them played outside of the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290439-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Korn Ferry Tour, Schedule\nThe table below shows the Korn Ferry Tour's 2019 schedule, which included five new tournaments. The numbers in parentheses after winners' names show the player's total number of wins on the Korn Ferry Tour including that event. No one accumulates many wins on the Korn Ferry Tour because success at this level soon leads to promotion to the PGA Tour. Any player who wins three Korn Ferry Tour events in a season earns their PGA Tour card immediately.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290439-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Korn Ferry Tour, Points leaders\nThe table shows the final top 10 points leaders for the 2019 Korn Ferry Tour regular season. For the list of the 50 golfers given PGA Tour memberships for the 2019\u201320 season, see 2019 Korn Ferry Tour Finals graduates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290440-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Korn Ferry Tour Finals graduates\nThis is a list of golfers who graduated from the Korn Ferry Tour and Korn Ferry Tour Finals in 2019. The top 25 players on the Korn Ferry Tour's regular-season points list in 2019 earned PGA Tour cards for 2020. The Finals, which concluded on September 2, determined the other 25 players to earn PGA Tour cards and the initial priority order of all 50.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290440-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Korn Ferry Tour Finals graduates\nAs in previous seasons, the Finals featured the top 75 players on the Korn Ferry Tour regular season points list, players ranked 126\u2013200 on the PGA Tour's regular-season FedEx Cup points list (except players exempt through other means), non-members of the PGA Tour with enough regular-season FedEx Cup points to place 126\u2013200, and special medical exemptions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290440-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Korn Ferry Tour Finals graduates\nTo determine the initial 2020 PGA Tour priority rank, the 25 Korn Ferry Tour regular-season graduates were alternated with the 25 Finals graduates. This priority order was then reshuffled several times during the 2020 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290440-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Korn Ferry Tour Finals graduates\nScottie Scheffler was fully exempt for the 2020 PGA Tour season after leading both the full-season and the Finals points list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290440-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Korn Ferry Tour Finals graduates, 2019 Korn Ferry Tour Finals\n*PGA Tour rookie in 2020\u2020First-time PGA Tour member in 2020, but ineligible for rookie status due to having played eight or more PGA Tour events as a professional in a previous season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290440-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Korn Ferry Tour Finals graduates, Results on 2020 PGA Tour\n*PGA Tour rookie in 2020\u2020First-time PGA Tour member in 2020, but ineligible for rookie status due to having played eight or more PGA Tour events in a previous season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290441-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Koser Jewelers Tennis Challenge\nThe 2019 Koser Jewelers Tennis Challenge was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the thirteenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Landisville, United States between 5 and 11 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290441-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Koser Jewelers Tennis Challenge, 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-00290442-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Koser Jewelers Tennis Challenge \u2013 Doubles\nEllen Perez and Arina Rodionova were the defending champions, but lost in the quarterfinals to Vania King and Claire Liu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290442-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Koser Jewelers Tennis Challenge \u2013 Doubles\nKing and Liu went on to win the title, defeating Hayley Carter and Jamie Loeb in the final, 4\u20136, 6\u20132, [10\u20135].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290443-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Koser Jewelers Tennis Challenge \u2013 Singles\nMadison Brengle was the defending champion, and successfully defended her title, defeating Zhu Lin in the final, 6\u20134, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290444-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kosovan parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Kosovo on 6 October 2019. The main opposition parties received the most votes, led by Vet\u00ebvendosje and the Democratic League of Kosovo (LDK). Vet\u00ebvendosje leader Albin Kurti became Prime Minister, forming a governing coalition with the LDK on an anti-corruption platform. He is the second Prime Minister not to have been a fighter of the Kosovo Liberation Army during the 1990s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290444-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kosovan parliamentary election, Background\nOn 19 July 2019 Prime Minister Ramush Haradinaj resigned after being summoned for questioning by the KSC in The Hague, Netherlands. The constitution requires the President to designate a new candidate to either form a government, or hold new elections in between 30 and 45 days after consultation with political parties or coalitions who hold a majority in the Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290444-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kosovan parliamentary election, Background\nOn 2 August 2019, President Hashim Tha\u00e7i asked the PANA Coalition to propose a new candidate to form a coalition government. However, other political parties opposed the move.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290444-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kosovan parliamentary election, Background\nOn 5 August 2019, the Assembly of Kosovo agreed to hold an extraordinary session on 22 August, planning to disband itself so that elections could be scheduled. Subsequently, on 22 August 2019, MPs voted to dissolve parliament, with 89 of the 120 voting in favour, necessitating elections within 30\u201345 days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290444-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kosovan parliamentary election, Electoral system\nThe 120 members of the Assembly are elected by open list proportional representation, with 20 seats reserved for national minorities. An electoral threshold of 5% was in place for non-minority parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290444-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kosovan parliamentary election, Parties and coalitions\nOn 7 September the Election Commission published the official list of the 25 participating parties and coalitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290444-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Kosovan parliamentary election, Results\nThe initial results showed that the pro-government NISMA\u2013AKR\u2013PD alliance fell only a few hundred votes short of meeting the 5% electoral threshold and lost all 10 of their seats. However, the Kosovo Election Complaints and Appeals Panel subsequently ordered around 3,782 votes originating in Serbia to be removed from the vote count as they had been delivered by Serbian officials rather than by post. The removed votes allowed the NISMA-led alliance to cross the threshold and win six seats, a reduction of four from the prior election. Vet\u00ebvendosje and the Independent Liberal Party (which lost its parliamentary representation) were the only other parties to see a reduction in their seat totals. The Democratic League of Kosovo, Democratic Party of Kosovo, AAK\u2013PSD alliance and the Serb List all gained seats. Voter turnout was around 45%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 888]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290444-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Kosovan parliamentary election, Aftermath\nAfter the election, Vet\u00ebvendosje leader Albin Kurti formed a coalition with the LDK. However, the government collapsed on 25 March following a motion of no confidence. Following the vote, the LDK formed a new government with the Alliance for the Future of Kosovo, the Social Democratic Initiative and the Serb List. However, due to the Constitutional Court's ruling and a deputy's conviction, the government collapsed again and another election will be held within 40 days starting from 22 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290445-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kosovar Supercup\nThe 2019 Kosovar Supercup should have been the 28th edition of the Kosovar Supercup, an annual football match played between the winners of the previous season's Football Superleague of Kosovo and Kosovar Cup competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290445-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kosovar Supercup\nThis year the Kosovar Supercup will not be held, due to Feronikeli winning both the 2018\u201319 Football Superleague of Kosovo and the 2018\u201319 Kosovar Cup, making them automatically the winners of the Supercup. Instead a friendly match will be played between the winners and the runners-up of the 2018\u201319 Football Superleague of Kosovo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290446-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kowloon City District Council election\nThe 2019 Kowloon City District Council election was held on 24 November 2019 to elect all 25 members of the Kowloon City District Council. It was part of the 2019 Hong Kong local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290446-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kowloon City District Council election\nThe pro-democrats scored a historic landslide victory in the election amid the massive pro-democracy protests, taking control of the council by securing 15 of the 25 seats. The Democratic Party emerged as the largest party, overtaking DAB with 10 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290447-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kremlin Cup\nThe 2019 Kremlin Cup (also known as the 2019 VTB Kremlin Cup for sponsorship reasons) was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 30th edition of the Kremlin Cup for the men and the 24th edition for the women. The tournament was part of the ATP Tour 250 series of the 2019 ATP Tour, and of the Premier Series of the 2019 WTA Tour. It took place at the Ice Palace Krylatskoye in Moscow, Russia, from 14 October through 20 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290447-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00290447-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00290447-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00290447-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kremlin Cup, WTA 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, 64], "content_span": [65, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290448-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kremlin Cup \u2013 Men's Doubles\nAustin Krajicek and Rajeev Ram were the defending champions, but chose to compete in Stockholm and Antwerp, respectively, instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290448-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kremlin Cup \u2013 Men's Doubles\nMarcelo Demoliner and Matw\u00e9 Middelkoop won the title, defeating Simone Bolelli and Andr\u00e9s Molteni in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290449-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kremlin Cup \u2013 Men's Singles\nKaren Khachanov was the defending champion, but lost in the quarterfinals to Andreas Seppi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290449-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kremlin Cup \u2013 Men's Singles\nAndrey Rublev won the title, defeating Adrian Mannarino in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290449-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kremlin Cup \u2013 Men's Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290450-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kremlin Cup \u2013 Women's Doubles\nAlexandra Panova and Laura Siegemund were the defending champions, but they chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290450-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kremlin Cup \u2013 Women's Doubles\nShuko Aoyama and Ena Shibahara won the title, defeating Kirsten Flipkens and Bethanie Mattek-Sands in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290451-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kremlin Cup \u2013 Women's Singles\nDaria Kasatkina was the defending champion, but lost in the first round to Dayana Yastremska.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290451-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kremlin Cup \u2013 Women's Singles\nBelinda Bencic won the title, defeating Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova in the final, 3\u20136, 6\u20131, 6\u20131. By defeating Kristina Mladenovic in the semifinals, Bencic qualified and earned the final berth for the 2019 WTA Finals, overtaking both Kiki Bertens and Serena Williams in the WTA race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290451-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kremlin Cup \u2013 Women's 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-00290452-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kremlin World Cup\nThe 2019 Kremlin World Cup was an international professional\u00a0pool tournament held between 17\u201321 September in Moscow, Russia. The event is the 2019 entry in the Kremlin World Cup, played in the pool discipline of 10-Ball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290452-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kremlin World Cup\nNiels Feijen is the defending champion, having won the previous year's event, defeating Alexander Kazakis in the final 8\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290453-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kristiansund BK season\nThe 2019 season was Kristiansund's third season in the Eliteserien, the top football division in Norway, where they finished 6th and reached the Fourth Round of the Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290453-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kristiansund 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290453-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kristiansund 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290453-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kristiansund 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290453-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kristiansund 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290453-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kristiansund 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290454-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kuala Koh measles outbreak\nThe 2019 Kuala Koh measles outbreak was a measles outbreak that occurred among the Orang Asli sub-group of Batek people in Kuala Koh Village in the state of Kelantan, Malaysia, from May until July. Following the sudden deaths of several villagers, the disease became a mystery among the villagers and public for nearly a month until it was identified by the Malaysian Health Ministry in mid-June as measles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290454-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kuala Koh measles outbreak, Background of the disease\nThe sudden deaths of 14 Orang Asli villagers in Kuala Koh Village was at first considered a mystery with two of the victims dying from pneumonia complications between 2 May and 7 June, while the remaining victims' causes of death remain unknown as their bodies were buried by locals prior to reports of the outbreak. On 8 June, a further 83 villagers presented pneumonia with two of them, a 36-year-old woman and three-year-old baby, in critical condition. Thirty-seven of the villagers received outpatient treatment with 32 treated at Gua Musang Hospital, 11 at Kuala Krai Hospital, and another three at the Orang Asli Health Homestay. Another died on 16 June, bringing the total death toll to 15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290454-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kuala Koh measles outbreak, Background of the disease, Villager claims\nOne of the villagers claimed that the deaths are caused by mining activity that is situated near the village. He revealed that his two daughters have been experiencing breathing difficulty for days and could not sleep at night; his neighbours also suffering from the same disease, some of which have died. Despite knowing the nearby mining activities causing pollution to their water source, another villager claimed they have no other choice than to use the water for their daily activities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290454-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kuala Koh measles outbreak, Official response, investigation, and conclusion\nOn 9 June, the Malaysian federal government through Deputy Prime Minister Wan Azizah Wan Ismail said they are investigating the cause as well the allegations of water pollution and promised stern action will be taken against the culprits if it is indeed found the deaths were caused by contamination on their water source. A similar statement was echoed by Water, Land and Natural Resources Minister Tengku Zulpuri Shah Raja Puji during his visit to the affected community. On 11 June, Deputy Prime Minister Wan Azizah called an emergency meeting for the unexplained deaths which was attended by a minister in the Prime Minister's Department, Waytha Moorthy Ponnusamy, Health Minister Dzulkefly Ahmad and Energy, Technology, Science, Climatic Change and Environment Minister Yeo Bee Yin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 869]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290454-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kuala Koh measles outbreak, Official response, investigation, and conclusion\nBased on samples taken by the Environment Department from the manganese mine and water catchment areas close to the villagers settlement, the results on 12 June showed the water is free of hazardous contaminants and meet the standards for raw water. On the same day, the affected area was declared by police as a \"red zone\". Through further laboratory tests on 37 villagers in the area with similar symptoms of illness, the disease was finally confirmed to be measles on 15 June. Until 20 June, a further 43 measles cases are confirmed among the community with three more respiratory illnesses also being reported in the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290454-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kuala Koh measles outbreak, Official response, investigation, and conclusion\nThe Malaysian Health Ministry said the cause of the spread among the Orang Asli community is due to low coverage of MMR immunisation which is attributed to the relatively low immunisation rate among the community with their nomadic lifestyle. Health Minister Dzulkefly Ahmad explained that although 61.5% of the villagers received their first measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) shots, only 30% of them had their follow-up shots. Since the outbreak was announced, 113 cases has been reported in the affected area with a total 43 confirmed cases. Despite the relatively low deaths reported by the findings of Health Ministry, the latter was unable to confirm the post-mortems results on the skeletal remains of several more victims. The \"red zone\" declaration was lifted on 8 July after the area was declared safe for the public.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 908]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290455-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kuala Lumpur FA season\nThe 2019 season was Kuala Lumpur's 41st season in competitive season and the 2nd season in Malaysia Super League since being promoted after winning the 2017 Malaysia Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290455-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kuala Lumpur FA 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290455-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kuala Lumpur FA 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290455-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kuala Lumpur FA season, Competitions, Malaysia Super League, Matches\nThe Malaysian Football League (MFL) announced the fixtures for the 2019 season on 22 December 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 73], "content_span": [74, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290456-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kuala Lumpur League\nThe 2019 season is the 90th season of the KLFA League, which is a Malaysian football competition featuring semi-professional and amateur clubs from Kuala Lumpur. Tentera Darat FA are the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290457-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kulgam massacre\nThe 2019 Kulgam massacre refers to the killing of seven Bengali Muslim labourers in the Kulgam district of Jammu and Kashmir, India by foreign-based terrorists. The attack was carried out by members of Hizbul Mujahideen, after being planned by Hizbul Mujahideen commander Ajaz Malik.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290457-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kulgam massacre, Attack\nThe 2019 Kulgam massacre occurred when terrorists entered a home housing Bengali Muslim labourers in the union territory of Jammu and Kashmir. These men came to Kulgam to work in the apple orchards there. The terrorists, who are suspected of being Kashmiri separatists, lined up the men and killed seven of them. One of them named Baharaduddin, survived after being left for dead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290457-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kulgam massacre, Consequences\nThe chief minister of West Bengal, Mamata Banerjee, identified 130 labourers still working in Jammu and Kashmir and is supporting their return to their home state for safety reasons, although some of them are opting to remain in the union territory. The bodies of the victims were returned to their families by the Ministry of Home Affairs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290458-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kullu bus accident\nOn 20 June 2019, an overloaded bus fell into a deep drain in Dhoth Morh, tehsil Banjar, Kullu district in Himachal Pradesh. At least 44 people died and 34 others were injured in the accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290458-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kullu bus accident, Accident\nThe private bus registration number (HP 66-7065) was running on Kullu-Gadagushaini route. Two kilometres from Banjar bus stand, it fell into the deep gorge on a sharp turn at Bhiyoth. As the bus was travelling on an uphill section of road, near Dhoth Morh, it came to a bend where it fell down the gorge in Banjar nullah. The death toll rose to 44 and the injured were taken to Banjar hospital in ambulances. The injured were getting treatment at Banjar and Kullu hospitals, whereas seriously injured were sent to PGIMER, Chandigarh. Most of the victims were students of Government Degree College, Banjar going back to home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290458-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kullu bus accident, Investigation\nThe Chief Minister, Jai Ram Thakur Himachal Pradesh, ordered a magisterial inquiry to be conducted by the Additional District Magistrate, Kullu. Thakur said that stern action will be taken against the bus owners if found guilty of overloading.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290459-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kunming Open\nThe 2019 Kunming Open was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the eighth (ATP) and second (WTA) edition of the tournament and part of the 2019 ATP Challenger Tour and the 2019 WTA 125K series respectively. It took place in Anning, China, from 15\u201328 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290459-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kunming Open, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 67], "content_span": [68, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290459-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kunming Open, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 67], "content_span": [68, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290459-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kunming Open, Women's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 69], "content_span": [70, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290460-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kunming Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nAliaksandr Bury and Lloyd Harris were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290460-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kunming Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nMax Purcell and Luke Saville won the title after defeating David Pel and Hans Podlipnik Castillo 4\u20136, 7\u20135, [10\u20135] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290461-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kunming Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nPrajnesh Gunneswaran was the defending champion but lost in the final to Jay Clarke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290461-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kunming Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nClarke won the title after defeating Gunneswaran 6\u20134, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290462-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kunming Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nDalila Jakupovi\u0107 and Irina Khromacheva are the defending champions, however Jakupovi\u0107 chose not to participate. Khromacheva was scheduled to partner countrywoman Olga Doroshina, but the pair withdrew after Khromacheva sustained a viral illness.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290462-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kunming Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nPeng Shuai and Yang Zhaoxuan won the title, defeating Duan Yingying and Han Xinyun 7\u20135, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290463-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kunming Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nIrina Khromacheva was the defending champion, but retired in the first round against Yang Zhaoxuan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290463-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kunming Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nZheng Saisai won the title, defeating Zhang Shuai in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290464-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kuomintang presidential primary\nThe 2019 Kuomintang presidential primary was held after 22 May 2019 through a series of nationwide opinion polls in order to determine its nominee for the President of the Republic of China in the 2020 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290464-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kuomintang presidential primary, Background, Early contenders\nIn late 2018, the four heavyweights in the Kuomintang, incumbent party chairman and former Vice President Wu Den-yih, former party chairman and 2016 presidential candidate Eric Chu, former President of the Legislative Yuan Wang Jin-pyng and former President Ma Ying-jeou emerged as the potential candidates for the 2020 presidential election. On 26 November 2018, former Deputy Secretary-General of the Presidential Office and incumbent Taipei City Councillor Lo Chih-chiang became the first candidate who announced his candidacy on Facebook. He later withdrew his candidacy on 7 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290464-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kuomintang presidential primary, Background, Early contenders\nOn 25 December 2018, former Kuomintang chairman and 2016 presidential candidate Eric Chu announced that he would run in the 2020 presidential race when he stepped down on 25 December 2018 as Mayor of New Taipei City, becoming the first big-name politician to throw his hat in the ring. It was followed by National Taiwan University professor Chang Ya-chung who announced his candidacy on 7 January 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290464-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kuomintang presidential primary, Background, Early contenders\nIn the December 2018 mayoral elections, the KMT received a massive victory by capturing 15 of 22 municipalities and counties, with former legislator Han Kuo-yu elected as Mayor of Kaohsiung, the deep-green Democratic Progressive Party-held city for the past two decades. The sensations created by Han during the campaign sparked speculations whether he would become the presidential candidate for KMT in 2020. The richest man in Taiwan and the founder and chairman of electronic company Foxconn Terry Gou was also reported to be interested in running in the election as a pan-Blue candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290464-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kuomintang presidential primary, Background, Early contenders\nOn 27 February, the party passed a resolution decided its primary to be based on a 70-30 weighing of public opinion polls and party member votes, although it has not ruled out the possibility of drafting the strongest candidate in an all-out effort to win back power, which was seen to be reserved Han Kuo-yu, the party's best performing candidate in the polls. On 7 March, Wan Jyng-ping announced his candidacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290464-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kuomintang presidential primary, Background, Early contenders\nControversies over the primary method continued, as party chairman Wu Den-yih proposed to only allow KMT members to decide the party's presidential candidate which drew criticism, with some questioning whether he aimed to rig the game for himself. Wu later declined to run on 11 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290464-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Kuomintang presidential primary, Background, Gou runs\nTerry Gou announced his presidential bid by joining the KMT presidential primary on 17 April, citing sea goddess Matsu instructing him to come out and do good for the suffering of the people, and bring peace and prosperity to Taiwan in his dream. As his party membership was frozen after he had not paid the annual fee so a long time, Wu restored Guo's KMT membership by awarding him an honorary member certificate in order to enable him to run in the primary. Guo also stated that he would not accept to be drafted to run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290464-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Kuomintang presidential primary, Background, Gou runs\nHan Kuo-yu, Gou's potential rival, announced on 23 April that he was \"willing to take responsibility\" for the development of Taiwan but was \"unable\" to participate in the party's primary in its current form. He expressed his disapproval of the \"closed-door negotiations\" within the party and called for reform. Han's announcement sparked internal strife between Han supporters and the party authorities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290464-0007-0001", "contents": "2019 Kuomintang presidential primary, Background, Gou runs\nIn order to settle the differences, the party adopted a resolution to put in place special guidelines to include all its presidential hopefuls, including Han, in its primary on the next day, and also switch the primary method from 70-30 weighing of public opinion polls and party member votes to fully being determined by opinion polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290464-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Kuomintang presidential primary, Candidates, Withdrawn candidates\nThe candidates in this section have withdrawn or suspended their campaigns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290464-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Kuomintang presidential primary, Schedule\nOn 15 May, Kuomintang Central Standing Committee decided to change the format of the primary to a single nationwide opinion poll and to name its candidate by late July. The public opinion poll would be commissioned to five different polling institutions, each with a sample size of not less than 3,000 respondents. A list of candidates will be announced on 10 June, followed by a series of televised forums across Taiwan from 23 June to 4 July in which the candidates would introduce their platforms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290464-0009-0001", "contents": "2019 Kuomintang presidential primary, Schedule\nThe nationwide opinion poll would be held from 5 to 15 July and the results would be released the next day. After that, the results will be submitted to the Central Standing Committee on 17 July for approval. The presidential candidate would be formally announced on 28 July at its national congress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290464-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Kuomintang presidential primary, Schedule\nThe Kuomintang announced five primary contestants on June 10, 2019: Chang Ya-chung, Chou Hsi-wei, Eric Chu, Terry Gou, and Han Kuo-yu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290464-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 Kuomintang presidential primary, Results\nResults of the primary were announced on 15 July 2019. Han Kuo-yu received 44.805 percent of the vote, followed by Terry Gou at 27.73%, and Eric Chu's 17.90%. Both Chou Hsi-wei and Chang Ya-chung polled in the single digits, at 6.02% and 3.54% respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290465-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kurume U.S.E Cup\nThe 2019 Kurume U.S.E Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor carpet courts. It was the fifteenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Kurume, Japan between 13 and 19 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290465-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kurume U.S.E Cup, 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-00290466-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kurume U.S.E Cup \u2013 Doubles\nNaomi Broady and Asia Muhammad were the defending champions, but Muhammad chose not to participate. Broady partnered alongside Ayaka Okuno but lost in the first round to Emina Bektas and Tara Moore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290466-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kurume U.S.E Cup \u2013 Doubles\nHiroko Kuwata and Ena Shibahara won the title, defeating Erina Hayashi and Moyuka Uchijima in the final, 0\u20136, 6\u20134, [10\u20135].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290467-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kurume U.S.E Cup \u2013 Singles\nAyano Shimizu was the defending champion, but lost to Sakura Hondo in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290467-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kurume U.S.E Cup \u2013 Singles\nRebecca Marino won the title, defeating Yuki Naito in the final, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20130).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290468-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kuurne\u2013Brussels\u2013Kuurne\nThe 71st edition of the Kuurne\u2013Brussels\u2013Kuurne cycling classic was held on 3 March 2019. It was part of the 2019 UCI Europe Tour and ranked as a 1.HC event. The route was 201.1\u00a0km (125\u00a0mi), starting and finishing in Kuurne. It was the second and concluding race of the Belgian opening weekend, the year's first road races in Northwestern Europe, one day after Omloop Het Nieuwsblad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290468-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kuurne\u2013Brussels\u2013Kuurne\nThe race was won by Bob Jungels of Deceuninck\u2013Quick-Step , followed by Owain Doull in second and Niki Terpstra finishing in third. 165 riders started and 70 riders finished the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290468-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kuurne\u2013Brussels\u2013Kuurne, Teams\nTwenty-five teams were invited to start the race. These included seventeen UCI WorldTeams and eight UCI Professional Continental teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290469-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kuwait Super Cup\nthe 2019 Kuwait Super Cup was between league and Emir Cup champions Kuwait SC and Crown Prince Cup winners Qadsia SC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290470-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kwai Tsing District Council election\nThe 2019 Kwai Tsing District Council election was held on 24 November 2019 to elect all 31 elected members to the 32-member Kwai Tsing District Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290470-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kwai Tsing District Council election\nThe pro-democrats scored a landslide victory in the 2019 election and regained the control of the council by taking 27 of the 31 elected seats. Notable defeated incumbent included legislator Alice Mak of FTU in Wai Ying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290471-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kwara State gubernatorial election\nThe 2019 Kwara State gubernatorial election occurred on March 9, 2019. APC's AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq polled 73.12% of the total votes, ahead of PDP's Razak Atunwa who got 25.31% of votes trailing behind by a margin of 216,792 votes, and several minor party candidates. APC won in all 16 LGAs of the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290471-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kwara State gubernatorial election\nAbdulRahman AbdulRazaq from Kwara Central senatorial district emerged winner at the gubernatorial primary after defeating Yammah Abdullahi. His running mate is Kayode Alabi from Kwara South senatorial district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290471-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kwara State gubernatorial election\nOf the 35 candidates who aspired for the governorship seat, 33 were male, two were female (although there were initially three females).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290471-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kwara State gubernatorial election, Electoral system\nThe Governor of Kwara State is elected using the plurality voting system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290471-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Kwara State gubernatorial election, Primary election, PDP primary\nThe PDP primary election was held 30 September 2018. There were about 2,227 accredited delegate voters present from 193 wards across the 16 LGAs of the state. Razak Atunwa emerged winner with 1,555 votes defeating closest rival, Mohammed Shaaba Lafiagi who polled 578 votes. In the course of the contest, eight out of 10 aspirants stepped down, leaving just: Hon. Razak Atunwa and Senator Mohammed Shaaba Lafiagi, both lawmakers. Those who withdrew include: Mal. Bolaji Abdullahi, Prof. Suleiman Abubakar, Alh. Mohammed Ajia, Dr. Ali Ahmad, Hon. Haman Patigi, Alh. Ladi Hassan, Hon. Zakari Mohammed and Alhaji Saka Isau (SAN). The exercise was partly disrupted by thugs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290471-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Kwara State gubernatorial election, Primary election, APC primary\nThe APC primary elections in Kwara State was held via direct primaries between Saturday 5 and Sunday 6 October 2018. It was initially put on hold. AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq emerged the winner having polled 29,098 votes to defeat his closest opponent, Yammah Abdullahi with 22,116 votes and 23 other contestants as the party was reported to have officially handed out the names of 25 governorship candidates. Amongst which are Alh. Lukman Mustapha 14,233 votes, Prof. Oba AbdulRaheem 23,298; Alh. Hakeem Lawal 18,758 votes, Alh. Mooshood Murtala 9,511 votes, Isaq Modibbo Kawu 5,060 votes, Alh. Yakubu Gobir 2,420 votes, and Tajudeen Makama Audu 3,127 votes. Mohammed Belgore (SAN) and Alh. Yahaya Seriki stepped down in support of AbdulRasaq, while Saliu Mustapha and Mashood Mustapha were disqualified. The election was later in May 2019 nullified by the court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 930]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290471-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Kwara State gubernatorial election, Results\nA total of 35 candidates registered with the Independent National Electoral Commission to contest in the election. APC governorship aspirant, AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq, won election polling 331,546 votes, defeating PDP's Razak Atunwa who came second with 114,754 votes, and several minority party candidates, with an early lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290471-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Kwara State gubernatorial election, Results\nThe total number of registered voters in Kwara State was 1,376,372 while 464,393 voters were accredited. Total number of votes cast was 463,427, while total number of valid votes was 453,433. Total rejected votes were 9,994.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290471-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Kwara State gubernatorial election, Results, By local government area\nHere are the results of the election from the local government areas of the state for the two major parties. The total valid votes of 453,433 represents the 35 political parties that participated in the election. Blue represents LGAs won by AbdulRazaq. Green represents LGAs won by Atunwa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 74], "content_span": [75, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290472-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kwibuka Women's T20 Tournament\nThe 2019 Kwibuka Women's T20 Tournament was a women's T20I cricket (WT20I) tournament held in Rwanda from 18 to 23 June 2019. This was the sixth edition of the annual Kwibuka Tournament, first organised in 2014 in remembrance of the victims of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290472-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kwibuka Women's T20 Tournament\nThe participants were the women's national sides of Rwanda, Uganda, Mali and Tanzania, with the latter two teams making their first appearance in the tournament while defending champions Kenya withdrew due to lack of funding. This was the first time in the tournament's history that the matches were recognised as official WT20I games as per ICC's announcement to provide full WT20I status to all the matches played between the associate teams after 1 July 2018. All the matches were played at the Gahanga International Cricket Stadium in Kigali.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290472-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 Kwibuka Women's T20 Tournament\nKenya had previously won the title three times (2015, 2017, 2018) while Uganda had won it twice, the inaugural edition in 2014 and also in 2016. Tanzania Women won this year's edition by winning all of their matches and thus remaining unbeaten, while two Ugandan players, Rita Musamali and Joyce Apio became the highest run scorer and wicket taker respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290472-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kwibuka Women's T20 Tournament\nIn the 2nd match of the tournament, the Mali women's team was bowled out for six runs in nine overs by the hosts Rwanda, making it the lowest team total in a completed WT20I match. The Rwandan side chased down the target of seven runs in just four balls to win the match by ten wickets with 116 balls to spare. In the fifth match of the tournament against Mali, Uganda went on to score 314/2 in 20 overs, making it the highest team total in Women's Twenty20 internationals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290472-0002-0001", "contents": "2019 Kwibuka Women's T20 Tournament\nIt was the first time in a T20 international cricket match, male or female, that a team had scored 300 runs. The Mali team were bowled out for 10 runs in 11.1 overs, the second lowest team total in WT20Is. The margin of victory (304 runs) was also the biggest ever in a WT20I match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290472-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kwibuka Women's T20 Tournament\nThe seventh edition of the tournament was scheduled to take place in June 2020, but was postponed until the following year due to the COVID-19 pandemic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290473-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kwun Tong District Council election\nThe 2019 Kwun Tong District Council election was held on 24 November 2019 to elect all 40 members to the Kwun Tong District Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290474-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kyalami 9 Hours\nThe 2019 Kyalami 9 Hours was an endurance event that took place on 23 November 2019 at the Kyalami Grand Prix Circuit in Midrand, South Africa. This event served as a revival to the Kyalami 9 Hours event which was last held in 2000, and also served as the final round of the 2019 Intercontinental GT Challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290474-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kyalami 9 Hours\nThe race was won from pole by Frikadelli Racing Team and drivers Nick Tandy, Dennis Olsen and Mathieu Jaminet. Frikadelli's #31 Porsche 911 GT3 R finished 6.745 seconds ahead of Walkenhorst Motorsport and their #34 BMW M6 GT3 shared by Mikkel Jensen, Nicky Catsburg and Christian Krognes. GPX Racing secured third place a further 2.290 seconds down, in their #20 Porsche 911 GT3 R driven by Kevin Estre, Richard Lietz and Michael Christensen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290475-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kyrgyz Premier League\nThe 2019 Qyr\u011fyz Premjer Ligasy (Kyrgyz: 2019 \u041a\u044b\u0440\u0433\u044b\u0437 \u041f\u0440\u0435\u043c\u044c\u0435\u0440 \u041b\u0438\u0433\u0430\u0441\u044b) or 2019 Kyrgyz Premier League was the 28th season of the Kyrgyz Premier League, Kyrgyzstan's top division of association football organized by the Football Federation of Kyrgyz Republic. The season started on 6 April 2019, with eight teams participating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290475-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kyrgyz Premier League\nStarting from the 2019 season, the league was rebranded as the Kyrgyz Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290476-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kyrgyzstan Cup\nThe 2019 Kyrgyzstan Cup was the 28th season of the Kyrgyzstan Cup, the knockout football tournament in Kyrgyzstan. The cup winner qualifies for the 2020 AFC Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290476-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Kyrgyzstan Cup\nThe draw of the tournament was held on 13 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 71]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290476-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Kyrgyzstan Cup, Round of 16\nThe round of 16 was played on 29 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 75]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290476-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Kyrgyzstan Cup, Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 11 August 2019, and the second legs were played on 25 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290477-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Kyrgyzstan Super Cup\nThe 2019 Kyrgyzstan Football Super Cup (Kyrgyz: \u041a\u044b\u0440\u0433\u044b\u0437\u0441\u0442\u0430\u043d\u0434\u044b\u043d \u0444\u0443\u0442\u0431\u043e\u043b \u0421\u0443\u043f\u0435\u0440\u043a\u0443\u0431\u043e\u0433\u0443) was the 9th Kyrgyzstan Super Cup match, a football match which will contest between the 2019 Top League and 2019 Kyrgyzstan Cup champion, Dordoi, and 2019 Top League and 2019 Kyrgyzstan Cup runners-up Alay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290478-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 L'International Gymnix\nThe 2019 L'International Gymnix competition was the 28th edition of the L'International Gymnix competition. It was held in Montreal, Canada from March 7\u201310, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290479-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 L'Open 35 de Saint-Malo\nThe 2019 L'Open 35 de Saint-Malo was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the twenty-fourth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Saint-Malo, France between 16 and 22 September 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290479-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 L'Open 35 de Saint-Malo, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 72], "content_span": [73, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290480-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 L'Open 35 de Saint-Malo \u2013 Doubles\nCristina Buc\u0219a and Mar\u00eda Fernanda Herazo were the defending champions, but Herazo chose not to participate. Buc\u0219a partnered alongside Di\u0101na Marcink\u0113vi\u010da, but lost in the quarterfinals to Lou Brouleau and Ioana Loredana Ro\u0219ca.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290480-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 L'Open 35 de Saint-Malo \u2013 Doubles\nEkaterine Gorgodze and Maryna Zanevska won the title, defeating Aliona Bolsova and Tereza Mrde\u017ea in the final, 6\u20137(8\u201310), 7\u20135, [10\u20138].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290481-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 L'Open 35 de Saint-Malo \u2013 Singles\nLiudmila Samsonova was the defending champion, but chose to participate in Osaka instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290481-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 L'Open 35 de Saint-Malo \u2013 Singles\nVarvara Gracheva won the title, defeating Marta Kostyuk in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290482-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LA Galaxy II season\nThe 2019 LA Galaxy II season was the club's sixth season of existence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290482-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 LA Galaxy II season, Competitions, USL Championship, Regular season\nThe first match of 2019 season was announced on December 14, 2018. The full regular season schedule was released on December 19, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 72], "content_span": [73, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290483-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LA Galaxy OC season\nThe 2019 LA Galaxy OC season is the club's second season, and second season in United Women's Soccer. LA Galaxy OC play their home matches at Championship Soccer Stadium in the Orange County Great park in Irvine, California. The team finished 2nd in league play and won the UWS National title defeating Calgary Foothills WFC 1-0 in the final on July 21, 2019 at Mount Royal University in Calgary, Alberta, Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290484-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LA Galaxy season\nThe 2019 LA Galaxy season was the club's twenty-fourth season of existence, their twenty-fourth in Major League Soccer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290484-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 LA Galaxy season, Players, Transfers, Draft picks\nDraft picks are not automatically signed to the team roster. Only those who are signed to a contract will be listed as transfers in. Only trades involving draft picks and executed after the start of 2019 MLS SuperDraft will be listed in the notes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 54], "content_span": [55, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290484-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 LA Galaxy season, Competitions, Major League Soccer, Regular season\nThe first match of the 2019 season was announced on December 20, 2018. The full schedule was released on January 7, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 72], "content_span": [73, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290484-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 LA Galaxy season, Competitions, Leagues Cup\nThe tournament and schedule was announced on May 29, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290485-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LBA Finals\nThe 2019 LBA Finals was the championship series of the 2018\u201319 regular season, of the Lega Basket Serie A (LBA), known for sponsorship reasons as the Serie A PosteMobile, the highest professional basketball league in Italy, and the conclusion of the season's playoffs. The third placed Umana Reyer Venezia possessed home advantage (with the first two, the fifth and the seventh games at the Palasport Taliercio) and the 4th placed Banco di Sardegna Sassari contested for the title in a best-of-7 showdown, from June 10 to June 22, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290485-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 LBA Finals\nThese were the second Finals for both Venezia and Sassari of their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290485-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 LBA Finals\nUmana Reyer Venezia won their 4th title by beating Banco di Sardegna Sassari in game 7 of the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290485-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 LBA Finals\nAustin Daye of the Umana Reyer Venezia was named MVP in the league's Finals series of the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290486-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LBA Playoffs\nThe 2019 LBA Playoffs, officially known as the 2019 LBA Playoff PosteMobile, was the postseason tournament of the 2018\u201319 LBA season, which began on 7 October 2018. The Playoffs started on May 18, 2019, and finished in June 2019, with the Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290486-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 LBA Playoffs\nUmana Reyer Venezia won their 4th title by beating Banco di Sardegna Sassari in game 7 of the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290486-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 LBA Playoffs, Qualified teams\nThe eight first qualified teams after the end of the regular season were qualified to the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 34], "content_span": [35, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290486-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 LBA Playoffs, Quarterfinals\nThe quarterfinals were played in a best of five format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 32], "content_span": [33, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290486-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 LBA Playoffs, Semifinals\nThe semifinals are played in a best of five format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 81]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290486-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 LBA Playoffs, Finals\nThe finals were played in a best of seven format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 75]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290487-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LCK season\nThe 2019 LCK season is the eighth year of the League of Legends Champions Korea (LCK), a professional esports league for the MOBA PC game League of Legends.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290488-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LCS season\nThe 2019 LCS season was the second year under partnership and seventh overall of the League of Legends Championship Series (LCS), a professional esports league for the MOBA PC game League of Legends. 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.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290488-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 LCS season\nThe three teams that qualified for the World Championship in 2019 were Team Liquid (summer champions), Cloud9 (most championship points) and Clutch Gaming (regional finals winner).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290489-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LEN Super Cup\nThe 2019 LEN Super Cup was the 38th edition of the annual trophy organised by LEN and contested by the reigning champions of the two European competitions for men's water polo clubs. The match was played between European champions Ferencv\u00e1ros (winners of the 2018\u201319 LEN Champions League) and CN Marseille (winners of the 2018\u201319 LEN Euro Cup) at the Piscine Pierre Garsau in Marseille, France, on 2 November 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290489-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 LEN Super Cup\nFerencv\u00e1ros contested the match for the third consecutive year, the first in this streak as Champions League's title holder. The Hungarian team won its second consecutive Super Cup, the fourth in total, managing to come back from a 4-goal down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290490-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LET Access Series\nThe 2019 LET Access Series was a series of professional women's golf tournaments held from April through October 2019 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, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290490-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 LET Access Series, Tournament results\nThe table below shows the 2019 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-00290490-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00290491-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LF6\n2019 LF6 is a near-Earth object of the Atira group. After 2021 PH27, it has the second-smallest semi-major axis among the known asteroids (0.555 AU), beating the previously-held record of 2019 AQ3. It orbits the Sun in 151 days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [8, 8], "content_span": [9, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290491-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 LF6, Discovery\nDiscovered at only 19th magnitude, it is very difficult to see, never getting far from the sun and twilight. It only occasionally brightens above 16th magnitude. Discovery was made using the Zwicky Transient Facility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 19], "content_span": [20, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290491-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 LF6, Orbit and classification\nIt orbits the Sun at a distance of 0.3\u20130.8\u00a0AU once every 5 months (151 days; semi-major axis of 0.56\u00a0AU). Its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.43 and an unusually high inclination of 30\u00b0 with respect to the ecliptic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 34], "content_span": [35, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290491-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 LF6, Orbit and classification\nThe asteroids 2020 AV2 and 2019 AQ3 are the only known asteroids with closer aphelions. The orbital evolution of 2019 AQ3 is similar to that of 2019 LF6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 34], "content_span": [35, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290492-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LFA Primeira\nThe 2019 LFA Primeira is the fourth season of the Liga Futebol Amadora Primeira Divis\u00e3o. The season scheduled began on April 27 and finished on September 29.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290492-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 LFA Primeira, Teams, from Primeira\nDIT F.C. and Cacusan were relegated to 2019 LFA Segunda after finished 7th and bottom place of 2018 LFA Primeira.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290492-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 LFA Primeira, Teams, to Primeira\nAssalam and Lalenok United promoted to 2019 LFA Primeira after securing place as champions and runners-up in 2018 LFA Segunda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290492-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 LFA Primeira, Foreign players\nRestricting the number of foreign players strictly to five per team. A team could use four foreign players on the field each game. Name on BOLD was foreign players who registered in mid-season transfer window.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 34], "content_span": [35, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290492-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 LFA Primeira, Season statistics, Hat-tricks\nNotes:(H) \u2013 Home\u00a0; (A) \u2013 Away4 \u2013 player scorer 4 goals6 \u2013 player scorer 6 goals7 \u2013 player scorer 7 goals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290493-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LFA Segunda\n2019 Liga Futebol Amadora Segunda Divis\u00e3o (often referred to as the LFA Segunda Divis\u00e3o) is second-highest division of the Liga Futebol Amadora and second-highest overall in the Timorense football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290493-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 LFA Segunda\nThe competition started on April 30 with the match between Aitana FC and Porto Taibesse and ended on July 19 with a final match between Aitana FC and DIT FC. The DIT FC team was the champion, as they beat the Aitana FC team with a score of 3 a 1. The two finalist teams were promoted to the Liga Futebol Amadora Primeira Divis\u00e3o.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290493-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 LFA Segunda\nThe two teams that had the fewest points Cacusan CF (Group A) and AS Lero (Group B) were relegated to Liga Futebol Amadora Terceira Divis\u00e3o.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290493-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 LFA Segunda, Matches, Round 1\n[ Apr 30]Aitana FC 3-1 FC Porto Taibesse [May 1]Lica-Lica Lemorai 2-4 AS Lero [May 2]FC FIEL 1-1 Cacusan CF [May 3]Santa Cruz FC 0-4 DIT FC [May 9]FC Nagarjo 1-1 Sporting Timor [May 10]FC Zebra 2-5 Kablaki FC", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 34], "content_span": [35, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290493-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 LFA Segunda, Matches, Round 2\n[ May 16]FC FIEL 2-0 FC Zebra [May 17]DIT FC 5-1 FC Nagarjo [May 30]FC Porto Taibesse 2-2 Kablaki FC [May 31]Lica-Lica Lemorai 3-0 Santa Cruz FC [Jun 1]Cacusan CF 1-5 Aitana FC [ Jun 2]Sporting Timor 4-0 AS Lero", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 34], "content_span": [35, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290493-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 LFA Segunda, Matches, Round 3\n[ Jun 4]FC FIEL 1-2 Kablaki FC [Jun 5]Aitana FC 5-0 FC Zebra [Jun 6]Cacusan CF 1-2 FC Porto Taibesse [Jun 7]FC Nagarjo 7-0 Santa Cruz FC [Jun 8]Sporting Timor 2-3 Lica-Lica Lemorai [Jun 9]AS Lero 3-3 DIT FC", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 34], "content_span": [35, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290493-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 LFA Segunda, Matches, Round 4\n[ Jun 10]Kablaki FC 4-2 Cacusan CF [Jun 11]FC Porto Taibesse 2-1 FC Zebra [Jun 12]Lica-Lica Lemorai 0-5 DIT FC [Jun 13]AS Lero 2-4 FC Nagarjo [Jun 14]Aitana FC 0-0 FC FIEL [Jun 18]Santa Cruz FC 1-0 Sporting Timor", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 34], "content_span": [35, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290493-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 LFA Segunda, Matches, Round 5\n[ Jun 19]Kablaki FC 0-3 Aitana FC [Jun 21]Lica-Lica Lemorai 2-5 FC Nagarjo [Jun 24]FC Porto Taibesse 2-1 FC FIEL [Jun 25]Santa Cruz FC 2-0 AS Lero [Jun 26]FC Zebra 3-1 Cacusan CF [Jun 27]DIT FC 1-1 Sporting Timor", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 34], "content_span": [35, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290494-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LFA Super Ta\u00e7a\nThe 2019 LFA Super Ta\u00e7a is the 4th staging of the LFA Super Ta\u00e7a. A cup played in a single game between the two best teams in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290494-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 LFA Super Ta\u00e7a\nParticipants are classified through two main competitions: Liga Futebol Amadora Primeira Divis\u00e3o and Ta\u00e7a 12 de Novembro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290494-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 LFA Super Ta\u00e7a\nThe match of this edition of ST was played on October 18, 2019 at the Est\u00e1dio Caf\u00e9 Ermera in the city of Ermera, in East Timor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290494-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 LFA Super Ta\u00e7a, Teams\nThe cup was disputed by two teams: one classified through the 2019 Liga Futebol Amadora Primeira Divis\u00e3o and the other through the 2019 Ta\u00e7a 12 de Novembro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290494-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 LFA Super Ta\u00e7a, Teams\nThe Lalenok United team was champion of the two qualifying competitions, so the SLB Laulara team, which was runner-up in the Ta\u00e7a 12 de Novembro, was given the right to compete in the Super Ta\u00e7a.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290495-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LFA season\nThe 2019 LFA season was the fourth season of the Liga de F\u00fatbol Americano Profesional, the top American football league in Mexico. The regular season began on February 22 and concluded on April 14. The playoffs commenced on April 26 and concluded on May 12 with the Condors defeating the Raptors to win the Taz\u00f3n M\u00e9xico IV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290495-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 LFA season, Preseason events, Expansion and stadium changes\nTwo new teams joined the league for the 2019 season: Artilleros Puebla, based in Puebla, and Osos Toluca, based in Toluca, State of Mexico. This expansion raises the number of teams in the league to eight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 64], "content_span": [65, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290495-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 LFA season, Preseason events, Expansion and stadium changes\nDuring the first LFA season, the Estadio Jes\u00fas Mart\u00ednez \"Palillo\" hosted all the league's teams. Nevertheless, 2019 will be the first season in which none of the teams would play there, due to the fact that the stadium is now working as shelter for Central American migrants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 64], "content_span": [65, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290495-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 LFA season, Preseason events, Draft\nThe 2019 Draft was regional, that is, each team chose players graduated from universities in their region. In the case of Artilleros Puebla and Osos Toluca , being unique teams in their region, they had no competition in their player selections. The Draft was held on January 12 at the FES Acatl\u00e1n facilities . There were nine rounds, 6 normal and 3 complementary. The selections were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 40], "content_span": [41, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290495-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 LFA season, Preseason events, CFL-LFA draft\nIn November 2018, the LFA signed a non-binding Letter of Intent with the CFL to share resources and to allow for at least one CFL game to be played in Mexico, as well as lay the ground work for special Mexican-specific editions of the CFL Combine and CFL Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 48], "content_span": [49, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290495-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 LFA season, Preseason events, CFL-LFA draft\nOn January 11, 2019, 51 players from the LFA and Mexican college ranks were announced as participants in a combine to beheld on January 13 and a 27-player draft to be held on January 14, 2019. Each CFL team sent scouts and were reported to likely receive four picks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 48], "content_span": [49, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290495-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 LFA season, Preseason events, CFL-LFA draft\n27 players were chosen from an invited pool of 51 Mexican players: 34 from the LFA and 17 seniors from Mexican university teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290495-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 LFA season, Regular season, Standings\nNote: GP = Games Played, W = Wins, L = Losses, PF = Points For, PA = Points Against", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 42], "content_span": [43, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290495-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 LFA season, Taz\u00f3n M\u00e9xico IV\nThe Taz\u00f3n M\u00e9xico IV was held on May 12, 2019 at 3:00 p.m. at the Estadio Azul in Mexico City, with a record attendance for the LFA of 18,000 fans present. The commissioner of the CFL, Randy Ambrossie, was the great guest of the event and together with Alejandro Jaimes, commissioner of the LFA, and Gabriel Soto, they started the fourth edition of the Taz\u00f3n M\u00e9xico. \u00c1lex Lora performed the national anthem.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290495-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 LFA season, Taz\u00f3n M\u00e9xico IV\nThe Condors became LFA champions, after beating the Raptors by a score of 20-16 in a somersault game and it was the most cardiac edition in the history of Taz\u00f3n M\u00e9xico, decided in the last 30 seconds of the game. The MVP of the match was Diego Arvizu \"El Comandante\" (QB) Condors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290495-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 LFA season, Awards\nFollowing the season, awards are shown the best of the 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290496-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LFF I Lyga\nThe 2019 LFF I Lyga was the 30th season of the I Lyga, the second tier association football league of Lithuania. The season began on 22 March 2019 and finished in 27 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290496-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 LFF I Lyga, Licensing process\nThe Lithuanian Football Federation initially granted applications for 2019 LFF I Lyga licenses: FK Banga Garg\u017edai, FK Nev\u0117\u017eis, FC Pakruojis, FC D\u017eiugas, \u017dalgiris B, Stumbras B, Riteriai B (Trakai B).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 34], "content_span": [35, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290496-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 LFF I Lyga, Licensing process\nAfter the appeal, on 28 February 2019 Lithuanian Football Federation granted licenses to FK Vilnius (Baltijos Futbolo Akademija), FK Minija Kretinga, DFK Dainava, Vilniaus Vytis, FK Atmosfera (2012), FC Hegelmann Litauen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 34], "content_span": [35, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290496-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 LFF I Lyga, Licensing process\nThe final decision on the number of teams in 2019 LFF I Lyga was made by the Lithuanian Football Federation executive committee meeting on 15 March 2019. Exceptions were applied to FK Jonava (financial criteria were not met), FC Kupi\u0161kis (sporting criteria were not met) and FA \u0160iauliai (legal criteria were not met) and the teams were allowed to start in the 2019 LFF I Lyga championship, pending criteria to be met by June. The 16 team championship started on 22 March 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 34], "content_span": [35, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290496-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 LFF I Lyga, Licensing process\nThe applications for the 2019 LFF I Lyga licenses were also received from FK Sveikata Kybartai, FM Ateitis and FK NFA but licenses were not granted. FK Utenis Utena shareholders voted to withdraw from participation in 2019 LFF I Lyga, and the club will participate in 2019 LFF II Lyga. FK Koralas Klaip\u0117da was dissolved in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 34], "content_span": [35, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290496-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 LFF I Lyga, Final standings\nAfter FC Stumbras ran into financial difficulties in June the Lithuania Football Federation made a decision to withdraw their license from A lyga, and Stumbras B from I lyga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290496-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 LFF I Lyga, Final standings\nFC D\u017eiugas Tel\u0161iai earned promotion to A lyga, subject to meeting licensing criteria. FK Banga Garg\u017edai earned a play-off with A lyga 7th placed FK Palanga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290497-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LFL US season\nThe 2019 LFL US season is the tenth and final season of the Legends Football League (LFL) in the United States. It began April 5 and concluded on August 10. This season marks the league's tenth anniversary season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290497-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 LFL US season, Developments\nShortly after the 2018 season ended, the LFL originally elected to hold the 2019 Legends Cup in South Africa's capital city of Johannesburg at Ellis Park Arena. However, this never took place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290497-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 LFL US season, Developments\nIn November 2018, defending champion Chicago Bliss head coach Keith Hac and his entire coaching staff resigned in protest of league policies and decisions. Three weeks later the league hired Danville coach JaDae Maguire as a replacement. Maguire did not mesh well with the Bliss and his tenure was short before a new coach, Sidney Lewis, was brought in. In addition to retirements at the end of the previous season, Chicago saw an exodus of many remaining players leaving them with only four returning starters. Chicago would finish the season 0\u20134, their worst record ever and only their second losing record, and failed to make the playoffs for only the second time ever.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290497-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 LFL US season, Developments\nOn December 21, 2018, Chris Michaelson, who previously served as the head coach of the Seattle Mist, returned to that franchise as head coach once again. He spent the 2018 season serving as offensive coordinator of the upstart Nashville Knights. For the purpose of rebuilding the Mist franchise to its previous form, Michaelson replaced interim coach Eric Bellamy, who had been named the Mist's interim coach for 2018 after Michelson's supposed retirement in the off-season following a Legends Cup-winning season in 2017. Michaelson previously served as the Mist head coach from 2009 to 2017, leading that franchise to two Legends Cup championship titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290497-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 LFL US season, Developments\nIn early 2019, the LFL announced a new broadcast partner in Honduran television network TDTV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290497-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 LFL US season, Developments\nOn June 19, 2019, the league announced a change in the playoff format. Instead of the two best teams from each conference playing for their respective conference titles, the league would abandon the conference titles and pit the top four teams with the best records in an elimination tournament. The team with the best record would play the team with the fourth best record while the teams with the second and third best records would play one another.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290497-0005-0001", "contents": "2019 LFL US season, Developments\nThe immediate effect of this change mid-season was to scramble the playoff standings; Chicago was immediately statistically eliminated, Omaha, which had needed only a victory over winless Denver, suddenly needed to also defeat Atlanta, and Los Angeles could still make the playoffs if Austin beat Nashville in the regular season finale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290497-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 LFL US season, Playoffs\nSemifinals were played on August 24, 2019, at Toyota Arena in Ontario, California. Legends Cup 2019 will be played on September 7, 2019 at the Accesso ShoWare Center in Kent, WA instead of South Africa as originally planned. In the 2018 State of the League address delivered by Commissioner Mitchell Mortaza, the 2020 Legends Cup was expected to be the first of upcoming Legends Cups to be played abroad in international destinations; however, that was scrapped when the league decided not to hold next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290497-0006-0001", "contents": "2019 LFL US season, Playoffs\nThe schedule on LFLUS.com was updated on June 19, 2019 to show the Legends Cup had been moved to Accesso ShoWare Center in Kent, WA. On the same day, the league announced the playoff format would change, with the conference championship title removed. Instead, the top teams from both conference would be ranked 1-4, with 1st facing 4th and 2nd facing 3rd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290498-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LINAFOOT (Chad)\nThe 2019 LINAFOOT was the 3rd season of the LINAFOOT, the top Chadian league for association football clubs since its establishment in 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290498-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 LINAFOOT (Chad)\nUnlike the 1st LINAFOOT edition (in 2015) organised as a full national championship and won by Gazelle FC, this edition was organized under the play-off formula.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290498-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 LINAFOOT (Chad)\nElect-Sport FC won their sixth Chadian title. Goyam C\u00e9sar (Avenir Sarh) was the league topscorer with 10 goals; Brahim Ngaroudal was voted the best player; Adoum Deffallah (Elect-Sport FC) was voted best goalkeeper; Francis Oumar Belonga (Elect-Sport FC) was voted the best coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290498-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 LINAFOOT (Chad), Teams\nA total of 12 teams competed in the tournament. Four teams qualified from N\u2019Djamena:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290498-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 LINAFOOT (Chad), Group stage\nThe 12 teams were divided into two groups of six teams. The top team of each group qualified for the final. The group stage matches were played from 9 to 22 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290499-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LIU Sharks football team\nThe 2019 LIU Sharks football team represents both the LIU Post and LIU Brooklyn campuses of Long Island University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They are led by 22nd year head coach Bryan Collins and play their home games at Bethpage Federal Credit Union Stadium. They play as a first\u2013year member of the Northeast Conference. This is the first season that the LIU Sharks are competing as a team following the merger of the two LIU campuses' athletic departments in the summer of 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290499-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 LIU Sharks football team\nThe Sharks finished winless in their first season. A month after the season ended, starting quarterback Clay Beathard was stabbed to death in Nashville, Tennessee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290499-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 LIU Sharks football team, Previous season\nThis is the first season that the LIU Sharks are competing as a team. Their immediate predecessor, the 2018 LIU Post Pioneers, went 10\u20131, 9\u20130 to finish in first place in the Northeast-10 Conference. They made the NCAA Division II Playoffs where they were defeated in the first round by Slippery Rock. They finished ranked at #21 in the Division II Coaches' Poll and received the 2019 Division II Lambert Cup from the Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) and Metropolitan New York Football Writers, signifying them as the best football team in the East in Division II football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290499-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 LIU Sharks football team, Preseason, Preseason coaches' poll\nThe NEC released their preseason coaches' poll on July 24, 2019. The Sharks were picked to finish in 8th (last) place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290499-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 LIU Sharks football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013Northeast Conference team\nThe LIU Sharks were the only conference team to have no players selected for the 2019 All\u2013Northeast Conference Football Preseason Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 81], "content_span": [82, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290500-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LKL Play-offs\nThe 2019 LKL Playoffs featured the eight best teams of the Lietuvos krep\u0161inio lyga (LKL) basketball league in Lithuania, competing for the championship spot. This was the LKL playoffs' 25th edition. \u017dalgiris achieved their 21st title overall, ninth consecutive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290500-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 LKL Play-offs\nThe quarter-finals and semi-finals were played in a best-of-three format, with the higher seeded team playing the first and (if necessary) third game at home. The finals were played in a best-of-five format, with the higher seed team playing games 1, 3 and 5 (if necessary) at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290501-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LPGA Tour\nThe 2019 LPGA Tour was a series of professional golf tournaments for elite female golfers from around the world. The season began at the Four Season Golf Club in Lake Buena Vista, Florida on January 17 and ended on November 24 at the Tibur\u00f3n Golf Club in Naples, Florida. The tournaments are sanctioned by the United States-based Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290501-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 LPGA Tour, Schedule and results\nThe number in parentheses after each winners' name is the player's total number of wins in official money individual events on the LPGA Tour, including that event. Tournament and winner names in bold indicate LPGA majors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 36], "content_span": [37, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290501-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 LPGA Tour, Points leaders, Rolex Player of the Year\nPoints were earned based on top-10 finishers, available points for regular events were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 56], "content_span": [57, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290501-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 LPGA Tour, Points leaders, Rolex Player of the Year\nPoints are doubled at each of the LPGA's five major championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 56], "content_span": [57, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290502-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LPGA of Japan Tour\nThe 2019 LPGA of Japan Tour was the 52nd season of the LPGA of Japan Tour, the professional golf tour for women operated by the Ladies Professional Golfers' Association of Japan. The 2019 schedule included 39 official events all played in Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290502-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 LPGA of Japan Tour\nLeading money winner was Ai Suzuki with 160,189,665 \u00a5 while Hinako Shibuno won the tour's Mercedes Ranking. Jiyai Shin finished most often (18 times) inside the top ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290502-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 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. All tournaments are played in Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290502-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 LPGA of Japan Tour, Schedule\nEvents in bold were majors. The Toto Japan Classic was co-sanctioned with the LPGA Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290503-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LPGA of Korea Tour\nThe 2019 LPGA of Korea Tour was the 42nd season of the LPGA of Korea Tour, the professional golf tour for women operated by the Korea Ladies Professional Golf' Association. The season began at Twin Doves Golf Club in Vietnam in December 2018, and ended at Woojeong Hills Country Club in Cheonan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290503-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 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-00290504-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers baseball team\nThe 2019 LSU Tigers baseball team represents Louisiana State University in the 2019 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Tigers play their home games at Alex Box Stadium. They, along with McNeese State and Southern, were the only three teams in the state to make the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290504-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers baseball team, Preseason, SEC media poll\nThe SEC media poll was released on February 7, 2019 with the Tigers predicted to win the Western Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290504-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers baseball team, Schedule and results\n*Rankings are based on the team's current ranking in the D1Baseball poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290504-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team\nThe 2019 LSU Tigers football team represented Louisiana State University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Tigers played their home games at Tiger Stadium (nicknamed Death Valley) in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and competed in the West Division of the Southeastern Conference (SEC) where they were led by their third-year head coach Ed Orgeron.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team\nLSU began the year ranked sixth in the preseason AP Poll, and were projected to finish in second in the SEC West behind Alabama. The Tigers secured an undefeated regular season that included wins over top-ten-ranked teams Texas, Florida, Auburn, and Alabama. In the SEC Championship Game, LSU defeated Georgia to win their first conference title since 2011. LSU was ranked No. 1 in the final College Football Playoff rankings of the season, earning them a spot in the national semi-final game to be played at the Peach Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0001-0001", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team\nThey dominated fourth-ranked Oklahoma in that game, 63\u201328, to advance to the CFP Championship Game. There, they defeated the defending national champions Clemson, 42\u201325, to secure LSU's fourth claimed national title in school history, the second undefeated champion in the CFP era, and the second 15\u20130 season among any team in the modern era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team\nLSU's record-setting offense was led by senior quarterback Joe Burrow, who won the Heisman Trophy by the largest margin in the history of the award, and broke several NCAA FBS records, including most touchdown passes (60), and highest passer rating (202.0). He was accompanied on offense by 1,400-yard running back Clyde Edwards-Helaire, and two 1,500-yard receivers, Ja'Marr Chase and Justin Jefferson, with the former winning the Biletnikoff Award as the best wide receiver in the country. The Tigers' offensive line won the Joe Moore Award as the nation's best offensive line unit. LSU's defense was anchored by two All-American defensive backs in Jim Thorpe Award winner Grant Delpit and true freshman Derek Stingley Jr. Linebacker Jacob Phillips led the SEC in tackles. Head coach Ed Orgeron was awarded several national Coach of the Year honors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 881]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team\nOn the season, the Tigers outscored their opponents by a combined total of 726 to 328. Owing to their dominant performance against a historically difficult schedule, several pundits have called the team the greatest in college football history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Previous season\nThe Tigers finished the 2018 season 10\u20133, 5\u20133 in SEC play to finish in a tie for second place in the West division. They received an invitation to the Fiesta Bowl where they defeated UCF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Preseason, SEC media poll\nThe SEC media poll was released on July 19, 2019 with the Tigers predicted to finish in second place in the West Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Schedule\nLSU Tigers announced its 2019 football schedule on September 18, 2018. The 2019 schedule consists of 7 home and 5 away games in the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Georgia Southern\nLSU opened the 2019 season with a home non-conference game against Georgia Southern of the Sun Belt Conference. LSU won in a rout, 55\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Georgia Southern\nLSU received the opening kick-off, and scored touchdowns on each of their first five possessions. In the first quarter, the Tigers scored via a 13-yard pass from Joe Burrow to Ja'Marr Chase, a one-yard run by Clyde Edwards-Helaire, and a nine-yard pass from Burrow to Justin Jefferson. To start the second quarter, they scored with two touchdown passes from Burrow to Terrace Marshall Jr., first from eight yards out and then from three yards out. Georgia Southern converted a 47-yard field goal with 5:13 left in the second quarter for their only points of the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0008-0001", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Georgia Southern\nIn the final minute of the first half, Burrow threw his fifth touchdown pass of the day, and third to Marshall Jr., from 11 yards out. This tied the LSU school record for single-game touchdown passes. Burrow was given one possession at the start of the second half to try and break the record, but the drive ended in a 39-yard field goal, and Burrow sat the remainder of the game. Backup quarterback Myles Brennan led another touchdown drive in the third quarter, ending in a two-yard touchdown run by Lanard Fournette. In the fourth quarter, kicker Cade York converted a 48-yard field goal to end the scoring for the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Georgia Southern\nJoe Burrow, who completed 23 of 27 passes for 278 yards and five touchdowns in just over one half of play, was later named SEC Co-Offensive Player of the Week (with Alabama's Tua Tagovailoa). Regarding LSU's upgraded offense, Burrow said after the game, \"I wanted 60 tonight. We\u2019ve definitely come out of the stone age.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, at Texas\nLSU's next game was a non-conference road game against ninth-ranked Texas of the Big 12 Conference. The Tigers won in a shootout, 45\u201338.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0011-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, at Texas\nAfter forcing a Texas three-and-out to open the game, LSU scored on its first offensive possession via a 36-yard field goal by Cade York. In the second quarter, Texas took the lead with a 55-yard touchdown pass from Sam Ehlinger to Brennan Eagles. LSU responded with a six-yard touchdown pass from Joe Burrow to Justin Jefferson. With 1:41 left in the half, LSU added three points with a 33-yard field goal. Texas was forced to punt on its next possession, and LSU scored another touchdown in the final minute of the half with a 21-yard pass from Burrow to Jefferson. The score was 20\u20137 LSU at half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0012-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, at Texas\nOn Texas's first drive of the second half, they scored on a 19-play, 86-yard drive that ended with a two-yard run by Sam Ehlinger. This was the first of nine consecutive scoring possessions by the two teams. LSU scored next with a 40-yard field goal by York. Texas responded with a 20-yard touchdown pass from Ehlinger to Jake Smith to bring the score to 23\u201321 LSU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0012-0001", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, at Texas\nOn the first play of the fourth quarter, LSU's Joe Burrow completed a 26-yard touchdown pass to Terrace Marshall Jr. Texas pulled within two points again when Ehlinger completed a 44-yard touchdown pass to Devin Duvernay. LSU extended the lead with a 12-yard touchdown run by Clyde Edwards-Helaire, and then held Texas to a field goal on their next possession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0012-0002", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, at Texas\nWith 2:27 remaining in the game, LSU scored the game-sealing touchdown on 3rd and 17 from their own 39 yard line with a 61-yard pass from Burrow to Justin Jefferson, and converted a two-point try with a pass from Burrow to Ja'Marr Chase to make the score 45\u201331. Texas drove 75 yards in just over two minutes and pulled within a touchdown with a 15-yard pass from Ehlinger to Duvernay with 22 seconds remaining. Their ensuing onside kick attempt failed, and LSU kneeled out the remainder of the clock to win the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0013-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, at Texas\nJoe Burrow completed 471 passing yards and four touchdowns in the game, and was named Walter Camp National Offensive Player of the Week and SEC Offensive Player of the Week. His 471 yards were the second most in school history and most since Rohan Davey threw for 528 against Alabama in 2001. Three Tiger players finished with more than 100 yards receiving, a school first: Justin Jefferson, Ja'Marr Chase, and Terrace Marshall Jr. Kicker Cade York, who was 3/3 on field goal attempts, was named SEC Special Teams Player of the Week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0014-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Northwestern State\nFor its third non-conference game of the season, LSU returned home to play in-state FCS foe Northwestern State of the Southland Conference. After a closer-than-expected first half, LSU pulled away for a decisive 65\u201314 victory. It was the 800th win in LSU program history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0015-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Northwestern State\nNorthwestern State received the opening kickoff, and their first drive ended with a failed fourth-and-seven attempt from the LSU 35 yard line. LSU's opening drive advanced to the Northwestern State eight yard line, but they settled for a 26-yard Cade York field goal. Northwestern State took the lead on the next drive with a 17-yard touchdown pass from Shelton Eppler to Quan Shorts. LSU responded with their own touchdown drive to reclaim the lead early in the second quarter via a four-yard run from Clyde Edwards-Helaire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0015-0001", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Northwestern State\nLSU scored again shortly thereafter with a 14-yard touchdown pass from Joe Burrow to Terrace Marshall Jr. Northwestern State responded with another touchdown drive, ending with a 26-yard pass from Eppler to David Fitzwater to bring the score to 17\u201314 LSU. LSU's Edwards-Helaire scored again, this time from three yards out, with 3:27 remaining in the half. LSU's first play of its next possession ended with a Joe Burrow interception that was returned to their own 17 yard line, but Northwestern State missed a 35-yard field goal attempt to end the half. Some boos were heard as the home team headed to the locker room, with the score 24\u201314 at the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0016-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Northwestern State\nIn the second half, LSU removed all doubt by scoring touchdowns on each of their first four possessions and holding Northwestern State scoreless for the remainder of the game. The Tigers scored first with a five-yard touchdown run from Joe Burrow, then a six-yard touchdown pass from Burrow to Marshall Jr., then a four-yard touchdown run from John Emery Jr., after which Burrow was pulled from the game. Backup Myles Brennan led another touchdown drive, ending with a one-yard score by Tyrion Davis-Price, making the score 51\u201314 at the end of the third quarter. In the fourth quarter, the Tigers scored on a 54-yard punt return touchdown by Trey Palmer, and a two-yard touchdown run by Davis-Price.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0017-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Northwestern State\nJoe Burrow completed 21 of 24 passes for 373 yards, two passing touchdowns, one interception, and a rushing touchdown. He became the sixth LSU quarterback to ever throw for 300-plus yards in consecutive games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0018-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, at Vanderbilt\nTo open the conference schedule, LSU traveled to face cross-divisional foe Vanderbilt for the first time since 2010. LSU won comfortably, 66\u201338, scoring the most points in regulation against an SEC opponent in school history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0019-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, at Vanderbilt\nVanderbilt received the opening kickoff and capitalized with a five-yard touchdown run by KeShawn Vaughn to open the scoring. LSU responded with their own touchdown drive, ending with a four-yard pass from Joe Burrow to Justin Jefferson. On their next drive, LSU needed just one play, which was a 64-yard touchdown pass from Burrow to Ja'Marr Chase. The Tigers scored twice more in the first quarter to make the score 28\u20137, first with a nine-yard run by Clyde Edwards-Helaire, and then with a 25-yard pass from Burrow to Chase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0019-0001", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, at Vanderbilt\nIn the second quarter, the teams traded field goals, first with a 41-yarder by Vanderbilt's Ryley Guay, and then with a 25-yarder by LSU's Cade York. With 1:56 left in the half, Burrow and Chase connected for a touchdown once again, this time from 51 yards out. In the final minute of the half, LSU received the ball pinned at their own five yard line, and Vanderbilt's Elijah McAllister recovered a Clyde Edwards-Halaire fumble in the endzone for a score, making the score 38\u201317 at the half. Joe Burrow had 357 passing yards at half-time, a school record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0020-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, at Vanderbilt\nTo open the second half, LSU's Micah Baskerville returned a Vanderbilt onside kick attempt 46 yards to the one yard line, after which Burrow threw his fifth touchdown pass to Racey McMath. Vanderbilt responded with a 52-yard touchdown run by Ke'Shawn Vaughn. LSU then scored again with a 16-yard touchdown pass from Burrow to Ja'Marr Chase, Burrow's sixth of the day. Baskerville then blocked a Vanderbilt punt attempt and recovered the ball for a touchdown to make the score 59\u201324 midway through the third quarter. Later in the third quarter, Vanderbilt scored again with an 18-yard pass from Riley Neal to Kalija Lipscomb. In the fourth quarter, LSU scored with a six-yard touchdown run by John Emery Jr., and Vanderbilt scored in the final minutes via a 47-yard pick-six thrown by Myles Brennan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 859]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0021-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, at Vanderbilt\nJoe Burrow's six touchdown passes set a school record. He completed 25 of 34 passes for 398 yards, becoming the first player in school history to throw for 350 or more yards in three consecutive games. He was named SEC Offensive Player of the Week for the third time of the season. Ja'Marr Chase had 10 receptions for 229 yards and four touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0022-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Utah State\nAfter a bye week, LSU played its fourth and final non-conference game at home against Utah State of the Mountain West Conference. LSU won in a blowout, 42\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0023-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Utah State\nLSU received the opening kickoff and scored on the opening drive with a seven-yard pass from Joe Burrow to Derrick Dillon. On the next drive, a Burrow pass was tipped and intercepted by Utah State's Cameron Haney and returned to the LSU 7 yard line. The Aggies settled for a 30-yard field goal three plays later. LSU turned the ball over on downs on their next drive, and Utah State once again kicked a field goal, this time from 47 yards out to bring the score to 7\u20136 at the end of the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0023-0001", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Utah State\nEarly in the second quarter, Burrow scored a one-yard touchdown run. Burrow threw a 25-yard touchdown pass to Ja'Marr Chase with 4:55 left in the quarter, which brought the score to 21\u20136 at half-time. In the third quarter, Joe Burrow threw a four-yard touchdown pass to Justin Jefferson, and then a 39-yard touchdown pass later in the quarter, again to Jefferson. On Burrow's last drive of the game before being benched, he threw an eight-yard touchdown pass to Thaddeus Moss to make the score 42\u20136 early in the fourth quarter. Both teams failed to score for the remainder of the game, with LSU missing a 53-yard field goal attempt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0024-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Utah State\nJoe Burrow completed 27 of 38 passes for 344 yards and five touchdowns to along with 42 yards and another touchdown on the ground. He became the first LSU quarterback to ever throw for 300-plus yards in four consecutive games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0025-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Florida\nOn October 12, LSU played cross-division rival and seventh-ranked Florida at home, pulling away in the second half for a 42\u201328 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0026-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Florida\nLSU received the opening kickoff and advanced to the Florida 26 yard-line, but Cade York's 44-yard field goal attempt was no good. LSU's next drive started with a 57-yard run by Clyde Edwards-Helaire, and ended with a nine-yard touchdown pass from Joe Burrow to Ja'Marr Chase to open the scoring of the game. Florida responded with their own scoring drive, ending with a five-yard touchdown pass from Kyle Trask to Trevon Grimes. In the second quarter, LSU and Florida each traded two touchdown drives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0026-0001", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Florida\nLSU scored with a seven-yard pass from Burrow to Justin Jefferson, and Florida responded with a one-yard touchdown pass from Emory Jones to La'Mical Perine. LSU then scored via a 39-yard run by Edwards-Helaire, and Florida closed out the half with a six-yard touchdown pass from Trask to Van Jefferson with four seconds remaining, bringing the score to 21\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0027-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Florida\nFlorida took a 28\u201321 lead on the opening possession of the second half with a two-yard pass from Kyle Trask to Van Jefferson. LSU tied the game up again with a five-yard touchdown run by Edwards-Helaire. A 33-yard touchdown run by Tyrion Davis-Price on LSU's next possession regained them the lead. Midway through the fourth quarter, Florida threatened to tie the game again, advancing to the LSU 16 yard-line, but Trask threw an interception in LSU's endzone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0027-0001", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Florida\nThe Tigers put the game out of reach on the next possession with a 54-yard touchdown pass from Burrow to Ja'Marr Chase to bring the score to 42\u201328 with 5:43 remaining. Florida advanced to the LSU two-yard line in the final minute, but turned the ball over on downs, after which LSU kneeled out the remainder of the clock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0028-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Florida\nJoe Burrow failed to throw for 300 or more yards for the first time in five games, finishing with 293 yards and three touchdowns on 21-of-24 attempts. Clyde Edwards-Helaire had 134 yards and two touchdowns. Ja-Marr Chase had seven receptions for 127 yards and two touchdowns, and Justin Jefferson had 10 receptions for 123 yards and a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0029-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, at Mississippi State\nNext, LSU traveled to Starkville, Mississippi to play divisional foe Mississippi State. LSU won in another rout, 36\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0030-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, at Mississippi State\nLSU advanced to within the Mississippi State 10 yard-line on each of their first three drives, but had to settle for field goals each time. Cade York converted from 20, 23, and 25 yards to make the score 9\u20130 midway through the second quarter. Mississippi State made the score 9\u20137 with a 12-yard touchdown run by Garrett Shrader. LSU quickly re-asserted itself with a 60-yard touchdown pass from Joe Burrow to Racey McMath, then an interception of Mississippi State's Garrett Shrader by JaCoby Stevens, and another touchdown pass from Burrow, to Ja'Marr Chase from eight yards out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0030-0001", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, at Mississippi State\nThe score was 22\u20137 at half-time. In the third quarter, LSU scored twice more, with a 37-yard touchdown pass from Burrow to Derrick Dillon, and then an 18-yard touchdown pass from Burrow to Justin Jefferson, after which the score was 36\u20137. Neither team scored again until Mississippi State scored a touchdown in the final minute of the game, a 24-yard pass from Shrader to Stephen Guidry, to make the score 36\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0031-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, at Mississippi State\nJoe Burrow completed 25 of 32 attempts for 327 yards and four touchdowns. He passed LSU's single season passing touchdowns record (29) during the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0032-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Auburn\nLSU returned home on October 26 for a top-ten showdown against ninth-ranked Auburn. LSU's offense struggled against Auburn's defense, putting up a season-low 23 points, but pulled out the win, 23\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0033-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Auburn\nAuburn struck first with a 30-yard field goal by Anders Carlson. Early in the second quarter, LSU took the lead with a 20-yard touchdown pass from Joe Burrow to Terrace Marshall Jr. Later in the quarter, Auburn's punt to LSU's Derek Stingley Jr. was fumbled by Stingley and recovered by Auburn on the LSU 22 yard-line. Auburn took advantage of the turnover by scoring via a one-yard touchdown run by Bo Nix. LSU tied the game at 10\u201310 with a 20-yard field goal by Cade York with 33 seconds remaining in the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0034-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Auburn\nIn the third quarter, Auburn took a 13\u201310 lead with a 23-yard field goal by Carlson. LSU's next two possessions ended with a failed fourth down attempt on the Auburn 2 yard-line, and a Burrow interception. LSU regained the lead late in the third quarter with a six-yard touchdown run by Clyde Edwards-Helaire, and then in the early fourth quarter, a seven-yard touchdown run by Burrow. Most of the fourth quarter was a defensive struggle between the two teams, with the teams trading six consecutive punts. With 2:32 remaining, Auburn pulled within three points with a five-yard touchdown pass from Nix to Seth Williams. Their onside kick attempt was recovered by LSU's Derrick Dillon, and LSU was able to wind down the remainder of the clock to win the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 813]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0035-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Auburn\nJoe Burrow finished the game with 32-of-42 attempts for 321 yards, one touchdown pass, one rushing touchdown, and an interception. This was his eighth career 300-yard game, a school record. Clyde Edwards-Helaire ran for 136 yards and a touchdown on 26 attempts. Ja'Marr Chase led the team with eight receptions for 123 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0036-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, at Alabama\nAfter a second bye week, LSU traveled to Tuscaloosa to play rival Alabama. Heading into the game, LSU was ranked No. 1 and Alabama No. 2 in the AP Poll. The season's first College Football Playoff rankings were released on the Tuesday prior to the game, with LSU ranked No. 2 and Alabama ranked No. 3. Alabama quarterback Tua Tagovailoa, who was only 20 days removed from a minor ankle surgery, was making his return, and the battle between him and Joe Burrow was expected to play a major role in the Heisman Trophy race. Adding even more aura of spectacle to the game was the attendance of President Donald Trump. Alabama was a six-point betting favorite heading into the game. LSU won the game in a shootout, 46\u201341.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 775]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0037-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, at Alabama\nOn Alabama's opening possession, the Crimson Tide advanced to the LSU 8-yard line, but the ball slipped out of Tua Tagovailoa's hand for a fumble, recovered by LSU's Ray Thornton. LSU responded with a touchdown drive ending with a 33-yard pass from Joe Burrow to Ja'Marr Chase. Alabama gave LSU a short field again when they fumbled a punt snap on their next drive, after which LSU scored via a 40-yard field goal by Cade York. Alabama got on the board late in the first quarter with a 77-yard punt return touchdown by Jaylen Waddle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0037-0001", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, at Alabama\nEarly in the second quarter, LSU scored with a 29-yard pass from Burrow to Terrace Marshall Jr. Alabama pulled within three with a 64-yard touchdown pass from Tagovailoa to DeVonta Smith. After a 45-yard field goal by York with 4:20 remaining in the first half, LSU scored again with a one-yard touchdown run by Clyde Edwards-Helaire with 26 seconds remaining. Alabama's Tua Tagovailoa threw an interception on their next play, returned by LSU's Patrick Queen to the Alabama 26-yard line. LSU was able to score after a 15-yard penalty on Alabama and then a 13-yard pass from Burrow to Edwards-Helaire to make the score 33\u201313 at half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0038-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, at Alabama\nIn the third quarter, Alabama scored with a 15-yard touchdown pass from Tagovailoa to Najee Harris. Early in the fourth quarter, Harris scored again on a one-yard run, to make the score 33\u201327 LSU. LSU then scored with a five-yard run by Edwards-Helaire, but Alabama pulled within a score again with a five-yard touchdown pass from Tagovailoa to Jerry Jeudy with 5:32 remaining. LSU went up 46\u201334 with 1:37 remaining with a seven-yard touchdown run by Edwards-Helaire, but Alabama scored on their next play with an 85-yard touchdown pass from Tagovailoa to DeVonta Smith with 1:21 remaining. Alabama's onside kick attempt was recovered by LSU's Justin Jefferson, and, after a first down run by Edwards-Helaire, LSU kneeled out the rest of the clock to win the game, 46\u201341.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 829]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0039-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, at Alabama\nLSU's 46 points were the most ever scored on Alabama in Bryant\u2013Denny Stadium in regulation. The win also snapped an eight-game losing streak to Alabama by LSU. Joe Burrow finished with 31-of-39 attempts for 393 yards and three touchdowns. He earned his second Walter Camp National Offensive Player of the Week honors for the performance. Burrow was named SEC Co-Offensive Player of the Week, sharing the award with teammate Clyde Edwards-Helaire, who had 180 total yards and four total touchdowns (three rushing, one receiving). Ja'Marr Chase had 140 receiving yards and a touchdown in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0040-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, at Ole Miss\nLSU next traveled to Oxford, Mississippi to play Ole Miss in the Magnolia Bowl. LSU won by a score of 58\u201337.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0041-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, at Ole Miss\nLSU opened the scoring on their opening drive with a 34-yard touchdown pass from Joe Burrow to Ja'Marr Chase. After each team traded missed field goal attempts, LSU scored again with a four-yard run by Tyrion Davis-Price. Two more second quarter scores by LSU, the first a 51-yard pass from Burrow to Chase, and the second a 12-yard pass from Burrow to Justin Jefferson, made the score 28\u20130. Ole Miss got on the board in the second quarter with a five-yard touchdown run by John Rhys Plumlee, and LSU converted a 33-yard field goal in the final seconds of the half to make the score 31\u20137 at half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0042-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, at Ole Miss\nOle Miss scored on the opening possession of the third quarter with a 46-yard touchdown run by Plumlee. After a 27-yard LSU field goal, Ole Miss scored again with a 60-yard run by Plumlee to make the score 34\u201323. LSU responded with a seven-yard touchdown pass from Burrow to Jefferson, and then converted a 52-yard field goal after an Ole Miss interception to make the score 44\u201323 heading into the fourth quarter. Early in the final quarter, Joe Burrow threw an interception, and Ole Miss scored on the next play with a 35-yard run by Plumlee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0042-0001", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, at Ole Miss\nBurrow threw another interception on the next drive, but the LSU defense forced a turnover on downs. LSU scored with a 61-yard touchdown pass from Burrow to Chase on the next drive. Ole Miss scored its last points with 3:19 to go with a 55-yard pass from Matt Corral to Elijah Moore, but LSU scored once again on the next play with a 49-yard touchdown run by Clyde Edwards-Helaire, which ended the scoring at 58\u201337.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0043-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, at Ole Miss\nJoe Burrow set a career high with 489 yards to go along with five touchdown passes. He passed Rohan Davey's LSU single season passing yards record during the game. Burrow also completed 17 consecutive passes at one point, setting a school record. Ja'Marr Chase had 227 receiving yards and three touchdowns, and was later named SEC Offensive Player of the Week. Clyde Edwards-Helaire had 172 rushing yards and a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0044-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Arkansas\nFor the second-to-last game of the regular season, LSU faced rival Arkansas in a battle for the Golden Boot, and with an opportunity to secure LSU's spot in the SEC Championship Game with a win. LSU did just that with a 56\u201320 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0045-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Arkansas\nLSU scored on the game's opening drive with a 37-yard touchdown pass from Joe Burrow to Ja'Marr Chase. Arkansas converted two field goals, from 24 yards and 47 yards, to make the score 7\u20136 midway through the second quarter. LSU scored touchdowns on their final three possessions of the first half via a two-yard run by Tyrion Davis-Price, a 27-yard run by Clyde Edwards-Helaire, and a 10-yard pass from Burrow to Justin Jefferson, to make the score 28\u20136 at half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0046-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Arkansas\nArkansas opened the second-half with a missed 45-yard field goal attempt. LSU fumbled on its first possession, but then the Tigers scored on four consecutive possessions, with a 50-yard pass from Burrow to Chase, a 26-yard run by Edwards-Helaire, an 89-yard run by Edwards-Helaire, and a 39-yard run by John Emery Jr. The score was then 56\u20136 early in the fourth quarter. Arkansas then scored with a 24-yard pass from Mike Woods to Jack Lindsey, then recovered an onside kick attempt and scored with a two-yard run by Devwah Whaley to end the scoring on the day at 56\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0047-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Arkansas\nClyde Edwards-Helaire had his fourth consecutive 100-yard game by running for a career-high 188 yards and three touchdowns. Joe Burrow passed for 327 yards and three touchdowns. Ja'Marr Chase added 144 receiving yards and two touchdowns. Linebacker Jacoby Stevens, who had a career high three sacks and four tackles for loss, was named SEC Defensive Player of the Week. Safety Maurice Hampton, who was making his first career start in place of the injured Grant Delpit, had six tackles and was named SEC Freshman of the Week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0048-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Texas A&M\nLSU's regular season finale was against Texas A&M. The previous meeting between the two schools tied the NCAA record for most overtimes (seven) and set the FBS record for most combined points in a game (146), in which the Tigers lost to the Aggies, 74\u201372. The 2019 game was not nearly as close, as LSU secured an undefeated regular season with a 50\u20137 blowout win. Quarterback Joe Burrow, in his final home game as a Tiger, made a pregame introduction to great fanfare wearing a jersey with the name \"Burreaux\" on the back, paying tribute to the French heritage of the state and university.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0049-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Texas A&M\nLSU jumped out to a 31\u20130 lead by scoring on each of their first five possessions. The Tigers received the opening kickoff and scored in six plays with a five-yard touchdown run by Clyde Edwards-Helaire. Their next drive ended with a 12-yard touchdown pass from Joe Burrow to Justin Jefferson. Late in the first quarter, they scored again with a 78-yard pass from Burrow to Ja'Marr Chase. In the second quarter, LSU scored with a four-yard touchdown run by Tyrion Davis-Price, and a 51-yard field goal by Cade York. The score was 31\u20130 at half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0049-0001", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Texas A&M\nIn the third quarter, LSU's Cade York converted a 50-yard field goal, and then Texas A&M scored their only points of the day with a one-yard run by Isaiah Spiller. LSU responded with an 18-yard touchdown pass from Burrow to Chase, then intercepting a pass from Texas A&M's Kellen Mond, and scoring another touchdown, a 58-yard pass from backup quarterback Myles Brennan to Racey McMath. Late in the fourth quarter, the Tigers pinned the Aggies at their own 1-yard line with a punt, and then Neil Farrell Jr. sacked James Foster in the endzone for a safety to end the scoring on the day at 50\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0050-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, Texas A&M\nJoe Burrow had 352 passing yards and three touchdowns in the game, and in the process set the SEC record for single-season passing yards previously held by Kentucky's Tim Couch, and tied the SEC record for single-season passing touchdowns, shared with Missouri's Drew Lock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0051-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, vs. Georgia (SEC Championship)\nLSU, as undefeated champions of the SEC West Division, faced off against 11\u20131 East Division champion Georgia in the SEC Championship Game in Atlanta. Heading into the game, LSU was ranked second and Georgia fourth in the College Football Playoff rankings. There was widespread speculation that both teams could possibly make it into the playoff, depending on the outcome of the game. LSU was considered a 7.5-point betting favorite. LSU removed all doubt about its resume by winning comfortably, 37\u201310. This was LSU's 16th conference championship in school history, its 12th in the Southeastern Conference, and first since 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 77], "content_span": [78, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0052-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, vs. Georgia (SEC Championship)\nAfter a Georgia punt on the game's opening possession, LSU opened the scoring with a 23-yard touchdown pass from Joe Burrow to Ja'Marr Chase. LSU scored again late in the first quarter after a Georgia missed field goal attempt with a seven-yard pass from Burrow to Terrace Marshall Jr. Georgia got on the board early in the second quarter with a 39-yard field goal by Rodrigo Blankenship. LSU's Cade York converted his own field goal, from 41 yards out, with 2:22 remaining in the half. Georgia's next possession ended in a Jake Fromm interception to Derek Stingley Jr., but LSU's 48-yard field goal attempt missed with 14 seconds to go kept the score at 17\u20133 LSU at half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 77], "content_span": [78, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0053-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, vs. Georgia (SEC Championship)\nLSU's opening possession of the second half ended with a 28-yard field goal by York, and Georgia's ensuing possession resulted in a 37-yard miss by Blankenship. LSU then quickly widened its lead with an 80-yard drive that included a 71-yard pass from Burrow to Justin Jefferson and ended with a four-yard touchdown pass from Burrow to Marshall Jr., followed by another interception of Fromm by Stingley Jr., and then an eight-yard touchdown pass from Burrow to Jefferson to make the score 34\u20133 at the end of the third quarter. In the fourth quarter, Georgia scored its only touchdown via a two-yard pass from Fromm to George Pickens, and LSU scored with a 50-yard field goal by York to end the scoring at 37\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 77], "content_span": [78, 789]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0054-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, vs. Georgia (SEC Championship)\nJoe Burrow's performance, with 349 passing yards, four touchdowns, 41 rushing yards, and a 16-yard reception, was described by the Associated Press as \"completing his Heisman Trophy coronation\". He was named MVP of the game. Justin Jefferson had seven receptions for 115 yards and a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 77], "content_span": [78, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0055-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, vs. Oklahoma (Peach Bowl)\nIn the final College Football Playoff rankings of the year, LSU moved from second to first, passing Ohio State, who had beaten Wisconsin in the Big Ten Championship Game, 34\u201321. LSU's opponent in the CFP semi-final, the Peach Bowl, was fourth-ranked Oklahoma, champions of the Big 12 Conference at 12\u20131. LSU entered the game as 13.5-point betting favorites. LSU exceeded those high expectations by destroying the Sooners 63\u201328.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0056-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, vs. Oklahoma (Peach Bowl)\nAfter an Oklahoma three-and-out to open the game, LSU scored in three plays with a 19-yard touchdown pass from Joe Burrow to Justin Jefferson. After trading three-and-outs, Oklahoma responded with a three-yard touchdown run by Kennedy Brooks. The score was tied at 7\u20137, but LSU put the game out of reach by scoring touchdowns on each of their next seven possessions. Before the end of the first quarter, they scored via an eight-yard pass from Burrow to Terrace Marshall Jr., and a 35-yard pass from Burrow to Jefferson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0056-0001", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, vs. Oklahoma (Peach Bowl)\nIn the second quarter, LSU scored with a 42-yard pass from Burrow to Jefferson, then a 30-yard pass from Burrow to Jefferson. Oklahoma temporarily stopped the bleeding with a two-yard touchdown run by Jalen Hurts, but LSU responded with a 62-yard touchdown pass from Burrow to Thaddeus Moss and a two-yard pass from Burrow to Marshall Jr. before the half. The score at half-time was 49\u201314. Joe Burrow had seven touchdown passes in the first half, which tied the all-time NCAA full-game bowl record, and Justin Jefferson's four touchdown receptions also tied the all-time full-game bowl record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0057-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, vs. Oklahoma (Peach Bowl)\nLSU opened the second half with a touchdown drive that ended with a two-yard run by Burrow, his eighth touchdown of the day, after which he and most other offensive starters were benched. Oklahoma's next possession ended with a 12-yard touchdown run by Hurts. After a missed 46-yard field goal attempt by LSU's Cade York early in the fourth quarter, Oklahoma scored again with a one-yard touchdown run by T.J. Pledger. LSU scored once more with a six-yard touchdown run by John Emery Jr. with 3:59 remaining to end the scoring at 63\u201328.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0058-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, vs. Oklahoma (Peach Bowl)\nJoe Burrow had 493 passing yards, seven passing touchdowns, and a rushing touchdown in just over one half of play; he was named Offensive MVP of the game. Linebacker K'Lavon Chaisson was named Defensive MVP after finishing with two sacks and six tackles. Justin Jefferson finished with 14 receptions for 227 yards and four touchdowns in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0059-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, vs. Clemson (National Championship)\nBy winning the Peach Bowl, LSU advanced to the College Football Playoff National Championship to play the winner of the Fiesta Bowl, third-seeded Clemson. The game was played at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome in New Orleans, mirroring LSU's previous appearances in national championship games in 2012, 2008, and 2004. Clemson was the defending national champion and on a 29-game winning streak, but LSU was considered a 5.5-point betting favorite heading into the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 82], "content_span": [83, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0060-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, vs. Clemson (National Championship)\nTo open the game, both teams were forced to punt on each of their first two possessions. Clemson opened the scoring with a one-yard touchdown run by quarterback Trevor Lawrence. LSU evened the score with a 52-yard touchdown pass from Joe Burrow to Ja'Marr Chase. Early in the second quarter, Clemson regained the lead with a 52-yard field goal by B.T. Potter, and then extended the lead on their next possession with a 36-yard touchdown run by Tee Higgins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 82], "content_span": [83, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0060-0001", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, vs. Clemson (National Championship)\nLSU scored touchdowns on their next three possessions to close out the first half: first on a three-yard run by Burrow, then a 14-yard pass from Burrow to Chase, and then a six-yard pass from Burrow to Thaddeus Moss with 10 seconds remaining in the half. The score was 28\u201317 LSU at half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 82], "content_span": [83, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0061-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, vs. Clemson (National Championship)\nIn the third quarter, Clemson pulled within three with a three-yard touchdown run by Travis Etienne and a successful two-point conversion via a pass from Lawrence to Amari Rodgers. LSU extended the lead with a four-yard touchdown pass from Burrow to Moss late in the quarter. Early in the fourth quarter, LSU scored again, with a 24-yard touchdown pass from Burrow to Terrace Marshall Jr. to make the score 42\u201325. LSU's defense held Clemson scoreless throughout the fourth quarter to help seal the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 82], "content_span": [83, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0062-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Game summaries, vs. Clemson (National Championship)\nWith the win, LSU finished as undefeated College Football Playoff champions, and were later crowned unanimous national champions by the polls. This was LSU's fourth claimed national title in school history, and first since the 2007 season. It was their first undefeated season since 1958, and the second ever 15\u20130 season by any FBS team in the modern era (after Clemson the previous season). Joe Burrow had 463 passing yards and five touchdowns in the game, and was named Offensive MVP. Linebacker Patrick Queen had eight total tackles, including 0.5 sacks and 2.5 tackles for loss and was named Defensive MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 82], "content_span": [83, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290505-0063-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers football team, Players drafted into the NFL\nThe 2020 NFL Draft was held remotely (due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic) from April 23\u201325. LSU had the most players selected in the draft with 14. This tied the NFL Draft record for a single school during a seven-round draft. LSU also had the most first-round selections of the draft with five, including first overall pick Joe Burrow. LSU also tied the 2016 Ohio State Buckeyes with ten draft picks taken within the first three rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290506-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers women's gymnastics team\nThe 2019 LSU Tigers women's gymnastics team will represent Louisiana State University in the 2019 NCAA Division I women's gymnastics season as members of the Southeastern Conference in their 44th season of collegiate competition. The Tigers' home meets will take place at the Pete Maravich Assembly Center in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. They will be led by head coach D-D Breaux in her forty-first season at the helm of the program. The Tigers will look to build on a fourth place finish at the 2018 NCAA Women's Gymnastics Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290506-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 LSU Tigers women's gymnastics team, Previous season\nThe Tigers finished the 2018 season with an overall record of 33-5. In the postseason, the Tigers won the 2018 Southeastern Conference Championships\u2014their third conference title. Subsequently LSU entered the NCAA Regional competition as the No. 2 national seed, winning the Raleigh regional and advancing to Nationals. At the National Championships, the Tigers finished second in the first semi-final and advanced to the Super Six where they eventually finished fourth. Seven members of the 2018 Tigers cohort received All-American honors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290507-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LTP Charleston Pro Tennis\nThe 2019 LTP Charleston Pro Tennis was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the third edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Charleston, South Carolina, United States between 29 April and 5 May 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290507-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 LTP Charleston Pro Tennis, 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-00290508-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LTP Charleston Pro Tennis II\nThe 2019 LTP Charleston Pro Tennis II was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the fifth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Charleston, South Carolina, United States between 30 September and 6 October 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290508-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 LTP Charleston Pro Tennis II, 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-00290509-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LTP Charleston Pro Tennis II \u2013 Doubles\nSophie Chang and Alexandra Mueller were the defending champions, but lost in the semifinals to Vladica Babi\u0107 and Caitlin Whoriskey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290509-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 LTP Charleston Pro Tennis II \u2013 Doubles\nAnna Danilina and Ingrid Neel, won the title, defeating Babi\u0107 and Whoriskey in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290510-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LTP Charleston Pro Tennis II \u2013 Singles\nGabriela Talab\u0103 was the defending champion, but lost in the first round to Alexa Glatch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290510-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 LTP Charleston Pro Tennis II \u2013 Singles\nCaroline Dolehide won the title, defeating Grace Min in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20137(5\u20137), 6\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290511-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LTP Charleston Pro Tennis \u2013 Doubles\nAlexa Guarachi and Erin Routliffe were the defending champions, however Guarachi chose to compete at the 2019 Grand Prix SAR La Princesse Lalla Meryem instead. Routliffe played alongside Allie Kiick, but lost in the semifinals to Madison Brengle and Lauren Davis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290511-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 LTP Charleston Pro Tennis \u2013 Doubles\nAsia Muhammad and Taylor Townsend won the title, defeating Brengle and Davis in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290512-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LTP Charleston Pro Tennis \u2013 Singles\nTaylor Townsend was the defending champion, and successfully defended her title, defeating Whitney Osuigwe in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290513-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 LTi Printing 250\nThe 2019 LTi Printing 250 is a NASCAR Xfinity Series race held on June 8, 2019, at Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn, Michigan. Contested over 125 laps on the 2.5-mile (4.0\u00a0km) D-shaped oval, it was the 13th race of the 2019 NASCAR Xfinity Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290513-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 LTi Printing 250, Background, Track\nMichigan International Speedway is a moderate-banked D-shaped speedway located in Brooklyn, Michigan. The track is used primarily for NASCAR events. It is sometimes known as a \"sister track\" to Texas World Speedway, and was used as the basis of Auto Club Speedway. The track is owned by International Speedway Corporation. Michigan International Speedway is recognized as one of motorsports' premier facilities because of its wide racing surface and high banking (by open-wheel standards; the 18-degree banking is modest by stock car standards).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290513-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 LTi Printing 250, Practice, First practice\nChristopher Bell was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 38.143 seconds and a speed of 188.763\u00a0mph (303.785\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290513-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 LTi Printing 250, Practice, Final practice\nChristopher Bell was the fastest in the final practice session with a time of 38.091 seconds and a speed of 189.021\u00a0mph (304.200\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290513-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 LTi Printing 250, Qualifying\nPaul Menard scored the pole for the race with a time of 37.237 seconds and a speed of 193.356\u00a0mph (311.176\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290514-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 La Course by Le Tour de France\nThe sixth edition of La Course by Le Tour de France, a women's cycling race held in France, took place on 19 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290514-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 La Course by Le Tour de France, Route and organization\nThe race started and finished in Pau, taking in five laps of a hilly circuit covering 121\u00a0km. It was held before stage 13 of the men's 2019 Tour de France, which used one lap of the circuit as an individual time trial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290514-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 La Course by Le Tour de France, Route and organization\nThe event was organised by ASO, which also organises the Tour de France. It was the 15th race of the 2019 UCI Women's World Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290515-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 La Dr\u00f4me Classic\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Severo (talk | contribs) at 22:14, 16 April 2020 (fix template problem). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290515-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 La Dr\u00f4me Classic\nThe 2019 La Dr\u00f4me Classic was the 6th edition of the La Dr\u00f4me Classic cycle race. It was held on 3 March 2019 as a category 1.1 race on the 2019 UCI Europe Tour. The race started and finished in Livron-sur-Dr\u00f4me.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290515-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 La Dr\u00f4me Classic\nThe race was won by French rider Alexis Vuillermoz of AG2R La Mondiale, ahead of fellow French riders Valentin Madouas of Groupama\u2013FDJ and Warren Barguil of Ark\u00e9a\u2013Samsic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290515-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 La Dr\u00f4me Classic, Teams\nNineteen teams of up to seven riders were invited to the race. Of these teams, two were UCI WorldTour teams, sixteen were UCI Professional Continental teams, and one was a UCI Continental team. 102 of the 128 riders finished the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290516-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 La Fl\u00e8che Wallonne\nThe 2019 La Fl\u00e8che Wallonne is a road cycling one-day race that took place on 24 April 2019 in Belgium. It was the 83rd edition of La Fl\u00e8che Wallonne and the 19th event of the 2019 UCI World Tour. It was won for the second consecutive time by Julian Alaphilippe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290516-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 La Fl\u00e8che Wallonne, Teams\nAs La Fl\u00e8che Wallonne was a UCI World Tour event, all eighteen UCI WorldTeams were invited automatically and obliged to enter a team in the race. Seven UCI Professional Continental teams competed, completing the 25-team peloton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290517-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 La Fl\u00e8che Wallonne F\u00e9minine\nThe 22nd running of the women's Fl\u00e8che wallonne was held on 24 April 2019. The race started and finished in Huy. The route featured seven categorized climbs, including two ascents of the Mur de Huy. The finish line was on the top of the final ascent of the Mur. It was won for the fifth consecutive time by Anna van der Breggen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290517-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 La Fl\u00e8che Wallonne F\u00e9minine, Route\nThe race started and finished in Huy, following the same route as the 2018 race. The final 30\u00a0km loop was covered twice, totalling 118.5\u00a0km.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290517-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 La Fl\u00e8che Wallonne F\u00e9minine, Teams\nTwenty-four teams participated in the race. Each team had a maximum of six riders:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290518-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 La Liga-Serie A Cup\nThe 2019 La Liga-Serie A Cup was the inaugural edition of a competition between two teams from La Liga and Serie A. Barcelona from La Liga and Napoli from Serie A respectively, were the inaugural participants of this event, and played a two-legged series in the United States with the first leg held on August 7 at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami, Florida and the second leg held on August 10 at Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor, Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290518-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 La Liga-Serie A Cup, Format\nThere is no Away goals rule since both games were played at neutral venues and in case of a tie after 90 minutes a penalty shootout would take place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290519-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 La Tropicale Amissa Bongo\nThe 2019 La Tropicale Amissa Bongo was a road cycling stage race that took place in Gabon and Equatorial Guinea between 21 and 27 January 2019. The race was rated as a 2.1 event as part of the 2019 UCI Africa Tour, and was the 14th edition of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290519-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 La Tropicale Amissa Bongo, Teams\nFifteen teams started the race. Each team had a maximum of six riders:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290520-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies European Tour\nThe 2019 Ladies European Tour was a series of golf tournaments for elite female golfers from around the world, played from 10 January to 8 December 2019. The tournaments were sanctioned by the Ladies European Tour (LET).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290520-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies European Tour, Schedule\nThe table below shows the 2019 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-00290521-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies Open Hechingen\nThe 2019 Ladies Open Hechingen was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the twenty-first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Hechingen, Germany between 5 and 11 August 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290521-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies Open Hechingen, 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-00290522-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies Open Hechingen \u2013 Doubles\nPolina Monova and Chantal \u0160kamlov\u00e1 were the defending champions, but Monova chose not to participate. \u0160kamlov\u00e1 played alongside \u00c1gnes Bukta, but they lost in the first round to Katharina Gerlach and Julia Wachaczyk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290522-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies Open Hechingen \u2013 Doubles\nCristina Dinu and Lina Gjorcheska won the title, defeating Olga Danilovi\u0107 and Georgina Garc\u00eda P\u00e9rez in the final, 4\u20136, 7\u20135, [10\u20137].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290523-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies Open Hechingen \u2013 Singles\nEkaterine Gorgodze was the defending champion, but chose to participate in Warsaw instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290523-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies Open Hechingen \u2013 Singles\nBarbara Haas won the title, defeating Olga Danilovi\u0107 in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290524-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies Open Lausanne\nThe 2019 Ladies Open Lausanne was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 27th edition of the tournament (the first to be held in Lausanne), and part of the International category of the 2019 WTA Tour. It took place at Tennis Club Stade-Lausanne in Lausanne, Switzerland, from 15 July through 21 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290524-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies Open Lausanne, 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-00290525-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies Open Lausanne \u2013 Doubles\nAlexa Guarachi and Desirae Krawczyk were the defending champions, but Krawczyk chose not to participate. Guarachi played alongside Erin Routliffe, but lost in the first round to Cornelia Lister and Renata Vor\u00e1\u010dov\u00e1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290525-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies Open Lausanne \u2013 Doubles\nAnastasia Potapova and Yana Sizikova won the title, defeating Monique Adamczak and Han Xinyun in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290526-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies Open Lausanne \u2013 Singles\nAliz\u00e9 Cornet was the defending champion, but lost in the final. Fiona Ferro won her first career WTA Tour singles title, defeating Cornet in the final, 6\u20131, 2\u20136, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290526-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies Open Lausanne \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nNote: Anastasia Potapova, who entered late and played in the qualifying tournament, would have been seeded 7th if she had entered the tournament prior to the initial entry cutoff date of 3 June 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290527-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies Open Lugano\nThe 2019 Ladies Open Lugano (also known as the 2019 Samsung Open presented by Corn\u00e8r for sponsorship reasons) was a women's tennis tournament played on clay courts at TC Lido Lugano. It was the third edition of the tournament and part of the International category of the 2019 WTA Tour. It took place between 8 April through 14 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290528-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies Open Lugano \u2013 Doubles\nKirsten Flipkens and Elise Mertens were the defending champions, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290528-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies Open Lugano \u2013 Doubles\nSorana C\u00eerstea and Andreea Mitu won the title, defeating Veronika Kudermetova and Galina Voskoboeva in the final, 1\u20136, 6\u20132, [10\u20138].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290529-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies Open Lugano \u2013 Singles\nThe singles tournament at the 2019 WTA 250 Ladies Open Lugano in tennis was played on clay and contested between 50 women on 8 \u2014 14 April 2019. Elise Mertens was defending champion, but abstained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290529-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies Open Lugano \u2013 Singles\nPolona Hercog won the title, defeating Iga \u015awi\u0105tek in the final, 6\u20133, 3\u20136, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290530-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies Tour of Norway\nThe 2019 Ladies Tour of Norway is the seventh edition of the Ladies Tour of Norway, a women's cycling stage race in Norway and part of the 2019 UCI Women's World Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290530-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies Tour of Norway, Teams\nNineteen professional teams, and one national team, each with a maximum of six riders, will start the race:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290531-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies' National Football League\nThe 2019 Ladies' National Football League, known for sponsorship reasons as the Lidl Ladies' National Football League, is a ladies' Gaelic football competition taking place in early 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290531-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies' National Football League\nCork were the champions, defeating Galway in the final to win a record 12th league title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290531-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies' National Football League, Format, League structure\nThe 2019 Ladies' National Football League consists of four divisions of eight teams. Each team plays every other team in its division once. 3 points are awarded for a win and 1 for a draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290531-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies' National Football League, Format, League structure\nIf two teams are level on points, the tie-break is:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290531-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies' National Football League, Format, League structure\nIf three or more teams are level on league points, rankings are determined solely by points difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290531-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies' National Football League, Format, Finals, promotions and relegations\nThe top four teams in Division 1 contest the Ladies' National Football League semi-finals (first plays fourth and second plays third).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 81], "content_span": [82, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290531-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies' National Football League, Format, Finals, promotions and relegations\nThe top four teams in divisions 2, 3 and 4 contest the semi-finals of their respective divisions. The division champions are promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 81], "content_span": [82, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290531-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Ladies' National Football League, Format, Finals, promotions and relegations\nThe last-placed teams in divisions 1, 2 and 3 are relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 81], "content_span": [82, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290532-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Lafayette Leopards football team\nThe 2019 Lafayette Leopards football team represents Lafayette College in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Leopards are led by third-year head coach John Garrett and play their home games at Fisher Field. They are a member of the Patriot League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290532-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Lafayette Leopards football team, Previous season\nThe Leopards finished the 2018 season 3\u20138, 2\u20134 in Patriot League play to finish in a three-way tie for fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290532-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Lafayette Leopards football team, Preseason, Preseason coaches' poll\nThe Patriot League released their preseason coaches' poll on July 30, 2019 (voting was by conference head coaches and sports information directors). The Leopards were picked to finish in sixth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290532-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Lafayette Leopards football team, Preseason, Preseason All-Patriot League team\nThe Leopards had four players selected to the preseason All-Patriot League team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 83], "content_span": [84, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290533-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Lagos State gubernatorial election\nThe 2019 Lagos gubernatorial election was conducted on March 9 to choose the Governor of Lagos State. The election was held concurrently with various state level elections. Incumbent APC Governor Akinwunmi Ambode lost to the APC flag bearer Babajide Sanwo-Olu at a direct primary election in October 2018 and hence ineligible to run for second term under APC. Babajide Sanwo-Olu won in a landslide against Jimi Agbaje of the PDP who had previously run unsuccessfully for Lagos state governor twice. From 1999, Lagos state has been governed by AD, then ACN, two parties which subsequently formed part of the coalition that birthed the APC in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290534-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Lagos school collapse\nOn 13 March 2019, a three story building in the Ita Faaji area of Lagos, Nigeria suffered a structural collapse, killing 20 people and leaving over 40 trapped. A school, housing 100 students, was located on the third story of the building, leading to the story gaining significant coverage in local and international media.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290534-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Lagos school collapse, Background\nAccording to Akinwunmi Ambode, the governor of Lagos State, the primary school and nursery had been operating illegally in a residential building. Ambode stated that many buildings in the area were certified \"distressed\" and had been marked for demolition, but that landlords resisted the efforts of the government to demolish the buildings, opting to refurbish them for further use. A resident of the area stated that the building in question had been marked for demolition twice before the collapse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290534-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Lagos school collapse, Collapse\nThe collapse occurred in the Lagos Island district in Lagos, Nigeria at mid-morning on 13 March 2019. The collapsed building\u2014which was slated to be demolished\u2014was in poor condition, but was illegally being used to house commercial businesses, residential apartments, a primary school, and a nursery. The collapse of the structure killed several people and left over 60 people trapped in the rubble; many of those trapped were children from the third floor primary school. Over the next few days, rescue efforts succeed in recovering 45 people from the building, while another 20 were reported as having died in the collapse. According to neighborhood residents, the building was known to be in bad shape, and Ambode confirmed that the bottom two floors of the building had settled. Residents reported that only the absence of many students (who were participating in an out-of-school sporting event) prevented the death toll from being higher.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 980]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290534-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Lagos school collapse, Effects\nFollowing the collapse of the building, the State Building Control Agency (LASBCA) conducted integrity testing on buildings in the area and found that 150 buildings were in certified structural distress. The LASBCA procured court approval to demolish 80 of these buildings, and began demolition efforts two days following the collapse, giving little warning to residents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290535-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Laguna local elections\nLocal elections was held in the Province of Laguna on May 13, 2019 as part of the 2019 Philippine general election. Voters selected candidates for all local positions: a town mayor, vice mayor and town council, as well as members of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan, the vice-governor, governor and representatives for the four districts of Laguna, including Bi\u00f1an lone district and the newly created Calamba lone district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290535-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Laguna local elections, Provincial election, Congressional Elections, 1st District\nIncumbent Arlene Arcillas ran for Mayor of Santa Rosa. Her party nominated incumbent Santa Rosa Mayor Dan Fernandez and ran unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 87], "content_span": [88, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290535-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Laguna local elections, Provincial election, Congressional Elections, 2nd District\nIncumbent Joaquin Chipeco, Jr. ran in the newly-created Lone District of Calamba City. Ran for the position are former Euro general Jaime Caringal, former PAGCOR chief Ephraim Genuino, former Cabuyao City Mayor Isidro Hemedes, Jr., incumbent Board Member Ruth Mariano-Hernandez, Tirso Lavinia, and retired district judge Rosauro Revilla.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 87], "content_span": [88, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290535-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Laguna local elections, Provincial election, Congressional Elections, Calamba City [Lone District]\nJoaquin Chipeco, Jr. from the 2nd District ran for the new seat unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 103], "content_span": [104, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290535-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Laguna local elections, City and municipal elections\nAll municipalities of Laguna, Bi\u00f1an City, Cabuyao City, Calamba City, San Pablo City, San Pedro City and Santa Rosa City elected a mayor and a 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, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290535-0005-0000", "contents": "2019 Laguna local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, San Pedro City\nIncumbent Lourdes Cataquiz ran for reelection. Her opponent was incumbent Vice Mayor Iryne Vierneza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 87], "content_span": [88, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290535-0006-0000", "contents": "2019 Laguna local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, San Pedro City\nIncumbent Iryne Vierneza ran for Mayor. Her party nominated Art Joseph Francis Mercado, nephew of former 1-UTAK Party list Representative Homer Mercado and son of JAM Transit operator Alita Mercado. His opponent was Delio Hatulan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 87], "content_span": [88, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290535-0007-0000", "contents": "2019 Laguna local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Santa Rosa City\nIncumbent Dan Fernandez ran for Congress. His party nominated incumbent Congresswoman Arlene Arcillas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 88], "content_span": [89, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290535-0008-0000", "contents": "2019 Laguna local elections, City and municipal elections, 4th District, Pangil\nIncumbent Mayor Oscar Rafanan of sought reelection against, former Mayor Jovito Reyes, Alfredo Acaylar, Arturo Capito and incumbent Vice Mayor Alfredo Pajarillo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 79], "content_span": [80, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290535-0009-0000", "contents": "2019 Laguna local elections, City and municipal elections, 4th District, Pangil\nIncumbent Vice Mayor Alfredo Pajarillo of Partido Federal ng Pilipinas ran for Mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 79], "content_span": [80, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290535-0010-0000", "contents": "2019 Laguna local elections, City and municipal elections, 4th District, Santa Cruz\nIn a bid to reclaim his old post, former Mayor Ariel Magcalas is seeking for a comeback trail as Mayor of Santa Cruz, Laguna. His opponents are former Congressman Edgar San Luis and Incumbent Board Member Joseph Kris Benjamin Agarao.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 83], "content_span": [84, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290536-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Lahore bombing\nThe 2019 Lahore bombing was a suicide bomb attack that occurred on the morning of 8 May 2019 outside Data Darbar in Lahore, Pakistan. It killed at least 13 people (including five policemen) and injured at least 24 others. CCTV footage of the blast showed the bomber targeted an Elite Police mobile parked outside the shrine. Hizbul Ahrar - a splinter group of Jamaat-ul-Ahrar and Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan - claimed responsibility for the attack. On 9 May 2019, security forces arrested four suspects during a raid in Lahore's Garhi Shahu area. On 10 May 2019, the provincial government formed a joint investigation team (JIT) to probe the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290537-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Lale Cup\nThe 2019 Lale Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the seventh edition of the tournament which was part of the 2019 ITF Women's World Tennis Tour. It took place in Istanbul, Turkey between 8 and 14 April 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290537-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Lale 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-00290538-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Lale Cup \u2013 Doubles\nAyla Aksu and Harriet Dart were the defending champions, but both players chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290538-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Lale Cup \u2013 Doubles\nMarie Bouzkov\u00e1 and Rosalie van der Hoek won the title, defeating Ilona Kremen and Iryna Shymanovich in the final, 7\u20135, 6\u20137(2\u20137), [10\u20135].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290539-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Lale Cup \u2013 Singles\nSabina Sharipova was the defending champion, but lost in the first round to Jana \u010cepelov\u00e1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290539-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Lale Cup \u2013 Singles\nVitalia Diatchenko won the title, defeating Ankita Raina in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290540-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Lamar Cardinals football team\nThe 2019 Lamar Cardinals football team represented Lamar University in the 2019 NCAA Division I FCS football season as a member of the Southland Conference. The Cardinals were led by third-year head coach Mike Schultz and played their home games at Provost Umphrey Stadium. The Cardinals played a twelve game regular season schedule in 2019. The schedule included three non-conference and nine conference games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290540-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Lamar Cardinals football team, TV and radio media\nAll Lamar games were broadcast on KLVI, also known as News Talk 560.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290540-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Lamar Cardinals football team, Previous season\nThe Cardinals finished the season with a 7\u20135 overall record. They were 6\u20133 in Southland play finishing in third place. They received an at-large berth to the FCS Playoffs, where they lost in the first round to Northern Iowa 13\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290540-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Lamar Cardinals football team, Preseason, Preseason poll\nThe Southland Conference released their preseason poll on July 18, 2019. The Cardinals were picked to finish in fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290540-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Lamar Cardinals football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013Southland Teams\nThe Cardinals placed three players on the preseason all\u2013Southland teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 76], "content_span": [77, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290541-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Lancashire Thunder season\nThe 2019 season was Lancashire Thunder's fourth and final season, in which they competed in the final edition of the Women's Cricket Super League, a Twenty20 competition. The side finished bottom of the group stage, losing nine of their ten matches, with the other ending in a tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290541-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Lancashire Thunder season\nThe side was captained by Kate Cross and coached by Mark McInnes. They played two home matches at Aigburth Cricket Ground and one apiece at Old Trafford, Stanley Park and Chester Boughton Hall. Following the season, women's domestic cricket in England was reformed, with the creation of new \"regional hubs\", with Lancashire Thunder replaced by North West Thunder, which retained some elements of the original team but represent a larger area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290541-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Lancashire Thunder season, Squad\nLancashire Thunder's 15-player squad is listed below. Age given is at the start of Lancashire Thunder's first match of the season (6 August 2019).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290542-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Lancaster City Council election\nElections to Lancaster City Council were held on 2 May 2019 at the same time as other 2019 United Kingdom local elections. Local elections are held every four years with all councillors up for election in multi-member electoral wards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290542-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Lancaster City Council election, Council composition\nPrior to the election the composition of the council was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290542-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Lancaster City Council election, Council composition\nThe 2015 election returned no overall control, but a series of defections and by-election wins have maintained a majority for the Labour Party afterwards. The composition of the Council immediately after the last election was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290542-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Lancaster City Council election, Council composition\nFollowing the 2019 election, the council was returned with No Overall Control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290543-0000-0000", "contents": "2019 Lao FF Cup\nThe 2019 Lao FF Cup is the second edition of the Lao FF Cup, the knockout football tournament in Laos. The tournament returns after last held in 2014. It is scheduled to start on 13 July 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290543-0001-0000", "contents": "2019 Lao FF Cup\nThe draw of the tournament was held on 3 July 2019. A total of 14 teams compete in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290543-0002-0000", "contents": "2019 Lao FF Cup, First round\n13 July: QUEST UNITED 1-1 VIENTIANE FT ( PK: 5-4 )", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 79]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290543-0003-0000", "contents": "2019 Lao FF Cup, First round\n14 July: VIENTIANE CAPITAL FC 0-0 BEARS LAO FA ( PK: 4-2 )", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00290543-0004-0000", "contents": "2019 Lao FF Cup, Quarter-finals\n21 August (postponed from 10 August): KPS FC 0-15 LAO TOYOTA FC", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 95]}}